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                  <text>3 - '11lc Daily Sentil'lel, Mlddlep~rt - l'omca'O)', 0., March 3, 19GU

Can. fAlllide On Butternut
Two cars were moderately
damaged, e111 both drivers were
cited to inayor•s court, in an acoldenl&lt;ll Butternut Ave, In Porneroy Soturday nlghl
Pomeroy pollee said a car
driven by SlatUI Salser, 2f,
I'Omeroy, pulled !rom the Dis-

FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In AI 9 - Out At 5

Ro•lnson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

WASIIINGTON (UI'll-l't!&gt;sident Nixon waS back \O.,t~
abled American Veterans park- White House ~ convl~ .
· lng lot Into the path ol a car that his eight-day Eur~
driven by· Charles DaUey, G24. tour helped oolidlly tho western
also ol Pomeroy.
aUionce e111 ilq)r- J)l'OsJJecto
There wore no l!Utrles. Dan- fOr reducing Elst-West tensions,
ey was cited to court for speedIns; elll the other driver was
The President leld a erowd ol
cited ou a charge ol lalllng to shiveri~ welcomers at nearby
yield right ol way.
Andrews Alr Force Base
In another accident on West ' Swlday
ntght he relurned
Main st. at 4 p.m. !lmday, po- confident America lbd her
llee said that a car driven by Eurq:~ean allles "are gOing to
-Patricia Bentz, 22, Minersvtue, be able to develop some new
pulled !rom In lront of tl&gt;e for- ulllerstandlngs with those who
mer Legion Service station into il'l the past have (Q)Oied ua on

the path

of

a car driven

by

John Fowler, 43, Pliny, W. Va.
Moderate damages were incurred and the drtver of t h e
Bentz car was cited on charges
or driving left of center. There
were no fn.iuries.

the other side or the world."
Nixon said he was most
Impressed by the unew sense ot

Orville Hobbs ·

90 Mill St. MldcU• ort

James Eblin

.

lloo. Thn Sot.

IllY JUNE'S
BEAUTY SHOP
Phon• 992·3667

'rOIII lilT AJIURANCI II

~-~

Folllld Dead
James Eblin, Union-Ave., Pomeroy, was found dead this morning at his home of an apparent
self-inflicted gunshot wound.
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach said Coroner R.
R. Pi ckens ru1ed death was
caused by a self-indicted gunshot
wourd. Or. Pickens IOOicatedEblin had been dead about two days.
Sheriff Harterbach said a .12
gauge shotgun apparently was
used bl' the deceased. The bods
was taken to Ewing Funeral Home
where arrangements were perding this morning.

MEIGS THEATRE
What Would Happen
If A Fire Destroyed
Your Home?
Could you afford to buy a
new home or rebuild your
home? You probably have
"fire and extended coverage" insurance with your
mortgage, but is this en·
augh?
This
insurance
might only pay off the
mortgage. See vs for od·
vice.

Davis-Warner Ins.
Phon• 992-2966
114 Court St.

Pomeroy

TONIGHT AND TUESDAY
MARCH 3 • 4
Walt Disney's
THE HORSE IN THE
GRAY FLANNEL SUIT
(Technlcolor)
Dean Jones • Diane Baker
Walt Disney's
WINNIE THE POOH
alii THE BLUSTERY DAY
(Technicolor)
An 1Ul • cartoon featurette!
Meet your favorite cartoon
Characters: Winnie the Pooh,
Piglet, Rabin Kanga, Tigger,
Rabbit, Owl, Little Roo. Ta·
ken l'rom the books written by
A. A. Milne. AL"-NOOH. says
WIMiel
Running time; 2lh how-a.
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

2 Barns &amp;troyed
By Fire on Sunday

Dies Saturday

''-...\\11•'•

"?1\t;
o,,.
.....,.. .,....,....._...

trust" he detected durillJ his
travels to five naUons last
week,
"I sensed. •• a new trust oo the
part ol the · Eurcpeans In
themselves, growing out or the
tact thai they've had a
re~kable recovery, economl·
cally alii politically as well as
tn their mUituy strerwth since
the devastation of World War
D, n he said.
•• And also I sensed a new
trust In the Ullltocl SlatSI
growing out ol the !act lhat
they reel there ore open
channels of communications
with the United states and a
new sense of consultation with
the United States. u

Losses were set at $2.000 as
the resuJt of a tlre which
PT. PLEASANT - Orville destroyed two barn&amp; early SunHobbs, 44,ofGalllpolloFerry, W. day morning on property owned
Va,, was dead on arrival Satur- by William Reuter on Bald Run.
day night at a Point Pl·eaaenthooThe Pmteroy Fire Department
pitat. Funeral services will be was on the scene. There was no
conductocl Wednesday at 2 p.m. insurance. Cause at the blaze
at the United Christian Chureh at was not determined.
Simmons, W, Va. Burial will be
in the Simmons Creek Cemetery
near there.
Born May 30, 1924, he was a
son or Allord Hobbs of Gelllpo..
BY BERTH A PARKER
lis Ferry and the late Rebecca
Sabbi.th School attendance at
Alice Thomas Hobbs. A veteran
the Free Methodist Church Feb.
of World War D. he received a
23 was 129. Offering was $44.33.
JJ.Irple heart, two oak leaf' clusemr. St.pt. Rev. H. L. Jones
ters, four bronze stars and a
will preach at the local church
silver star.
at 10:30 a. m. March 2ncl.
Survivors include a son, steMrs. Ethel Evans, Pomeroy,
ven Hobbs and a daughter, RobMrs. Martha Russell, Bradbury,
in Hobbs, bothathome;twobrothvisited recently with Mrs, Georers, Claude and g,_irley Hobbs,
gla Diehl.
both in Indiana, and four sisters,
Mrs. Thomas Dorst and chiJMrs. Mable Withrow ol Cedar
Clren, Milan, spent a week with
Grove, W. Va., Mrs. Katherine
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jame s
S:ewart or Belle, W. VL, Miss
Gilmore.
Florence Hobbs and Mrs. CoMiss Edna Carmon of Rock
zette Hancock, both of Gellipo.. Springs visited recentlY with her
Us Ferry.
uncle, William Carmon.
The body Is at the Mohr-SteMrs. William Jacobs, daughvens Funeral Home at Point ter, Mrs. Jimmy Arnold, and baby
Pleasant and will be taken to the
of Columbus visited with Mr. and
home Tuesday whererriendlmay
Mrs. Pearl Jacobs and Mr. and
call after 2 p.m.
Mrs. James GUmore.
Roy HowelL spent a weekend
with hls family . Mr. Howell has
RETURN TO JOBS
been transferred from ll'lllana to
BARBERTON, Ohio (UPO Chicago.
The 1,500 members ol Loeal 1,
Mrs, Edna Faulk entertal ned
Allied Chemleal Workers Union. with a farewell dimer in honor
returned to their Jd&gt;o at the Pitts- of her gral'llson, RFC Roger T,
burgh Plate Glass Co. here to- Klein, who will leave soon for
day after agreeing to negotiate Vietnam. Those presert w e r e
Jd&gt; jurisdiction d!Bjllrte which Mr. and Mrs.. Roger Klein and
triggered a wlldeat strike Feb. son, Roger Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
24.
Thomas lAne and Christal, Mr.
alkl Mrs. Charles Faulk alii SheIla and Charles, Mr. and Mrs.
Grover Klein, Barbara, Keith,
ani Wayne, and Pete Wolf. Mrs.
Jolin Hook alii daughtar or Jacksonville were afternoon callers.
Miss Susan Johnson or Mason
was a Sunclay guest at the Merlin
Tracy home.
Orville Allen has been released from Holzer Medical Center.
Mrs. Gerald Pullins has been
discharged from the Holzer Me~
leal Center,
Mr. a!V:I Mrs. Ed Bauer or
Marlon ard Miss Polly Karr- of
Colwnbus recently spent a,.weekend with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Karr.

Liurel Cliff

NOTICE I
NEW

STORE HOURS
Tiny's Bargainland
EFFECTIVE:

MIDDLEPORT

MONDAY,

In no time at all it will be
March, and for a glorious
seven days we can practice

RCH 3

thru SAT.
10:00
to 8:00 P
Sunday 12 Noon Ti16:00

our beloved avocation openly
during National Procrasti·
nation Week.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Pomerol' emergency squad
was caUed to-the Charles Snyder
residence on Union Ave. sumay
morniilg from where carolyn
Reeves, experiencingdltncult)' In
breathing, was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital alii admitted.

------------------------~-----

TINY'S FOODLAND
MIDDlEPORT

HOURS WILL BE THE

HAVE YOU HEARD?
Baket's Radio

E

Auction
Wod. 8:45 A.M.

WMP0-1390

Monday thru Saturday

0• your dlol
Buy •t your prlo::o-

Cholra .. ToJ.I.. -

9:00 til 9:00
Sunday 12 Noon Until 6:00

L•mp• - Mirror• ..

Clothe• Ho1111p•u -

Wall Ploqu•o ..
M•Hr•n•• .. Rvg1

s.. ,.

Car4 Ta•l•• ..
Stoolo .. Radial ...

r.,.. RK•rftf• Pill-• .. L•wn
lllurnltur• ..

Shlf .. Toy

loo•

ca.., ..

Do1kl- Th••• Dl'a
a tow of tt.o Ito''"
havt~ uld Oft
tho Rodl• Auction.

w•

[

UIVt:H

N~;Ws

J

GAUGE:; - Gallipolis, 11.9
e111 14.1 l'lllllllng 7 l'eet or rollera; PC. Pleasant, 24.08; Pomerll,) · - MaaOn, 20.36; Hlntoa,
I. 43 Iaiii~;
Kanawha Falls,
4.40 rising; Charleston, 18.16
stat.; l.oodon, Marmet alii WlnOeld
on the silL
BOAT MOVEMENTS:
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS - Philip
Sporn down 12:30 a. m.; Andrew
P, calhoun oo&gt; 2:10 L m.; Val·
vollne down 4:10 L m.; H. E.
Bowles "' 5:45 a. m.; Jane T. up
6:30a.m.
KANAWHA IUVER- Marmet,
Jerry Bonortb tet 6:05 L m.;
Winfield, ElgercHII oo&gt; 11:40 p.
m.~ Beaver down 2:45a.m.; Alan R. MarrUI UP 5:45 a. m.
omo JUVER- Lock 14, Albert
F, Holden oo&gt; 5:20 p. 'ln.; Constructor It)~ a. m.; Esso
Pemaylvanti!ffOwn 2:35 a. m.;
Lock 15, Paul D. ~ 6:30 a.m.;
Lock 16, Valley Voyager down
6:15 ._ m.; Lock 17, OVEC oo&gt; 4
a. m.; Stevensoo ~ 7:10 a. m.;
Belleville Loclui, Onward oo&gt; 2:05
a •. m.; Polly R. 1t) 5:35 a. m.;
Vulcan up 5:45 a. m.; Lock 21 1
John J. Rowe up s.a. m.; Lock 22,
Harritn M. up 5:30 a. m.; Racine Locks, Edward S. Bosworth
down 1:45 a. m.; Duncan Bruce
down 3:05 L m.; Mark Eastin L1J
5:30 L m.; Greerwp Locks. Irene
Ch!Xin down 5:30 a. m. i Kathleen
K. dawn 5:50 a. m.; Jacob G.
down 7:30 L m.; Meldahl Locks•
Lelia C. Shearer down 2:05p.m.;
Franklin B. down 10:40 p. m.;
Franklin Pierce up 1:05 a. m.;
BOOby Joe up 3:45 a. m.; John
Ladd Dean down 4:20 a. m. i Ravenswood 11JJ 5:20 a. rn.; Etna-Loulsville down 6:10 a. m.

are

Damage Only Minor

Gets Contract

'·::-::..:.;.;.;.:.:-:·:
; ... "
..•.·.•.•.•.•.· .•.• .•.·.·.·.•.·.· .::

MeARTIIUR .::" lOth Dllllr!d

'

Consresaman Clarence E.l\llller
wahocentl.v advl.aedbythe ArmY
Procurement Ageney thai the Reel
Diamond Plant, ofthe Austin Fl&gt;wder COmpany here, has been se.lectecl to portlolpate In the production of a $2,127,000 Ollllrael
lor the 'II18DIIaclure of 35,16f
kill, demoUtlon, banplore torpedo MIA2.
The lnadlng . .... assembly or
the kits Is to be dolle at the Red
Diamond Plam. This eomprlae•
lljlpi"GIImately 30 per cent or the
total cost or the conlrael T h e
balance ol the contraet lor the
manulaeture or the hardware
components has been awarded to
Scyllne lhdullrlea or Fort Worth,
Texas.
I Is antlolpated that lite oontraet award will reQuire thetemJ)OI"ary addition ol 15 to 20 1111:
ldUed employees at the McArthur laciUQI. Start up time lor
the Jd&gt; Is expeetocl to be IIJlPl'll!X·
imately three montha and the
contraet will take approximately
ab: momhs to complete.

Three

Defendant~

W.\SIIINGTON (UPO - PresIdent Nixon Intends to reOrganize at least halt ol the
goverrunent'a 12 cabinet depart,..
menta In search or greater
•lmpllcity and effitiency, it was
dlselosed today. Some programs
- Including lhe Joll Corpsprobably wlll be eliminated.
Nixon's plans were revealed
by a White Houoe olficiol who Is
close to the Chief Exec uti ve•s

(conUnued !rom Page 1)

Zanesville, George ·D. Dressler, 24. ZaneaYliie, klllid In a one-ear
aeeldont on Muklrwum Couni.Y Rd. 108, about two mlloo 011t ol
ZaneoviUe, Salunky.
NEW LEXINGTON, Robert HOOJ&gt;s, 21, hwnee, kiUeclln 1 ...,._
car cl'llh on Ohto 97, lbout seven miles south ot here. ~.

Funny car proved not ai all hilariolUI
COVINGTON, GA. (Upl) - IT'S CALLED TilE "lumy ear" In
drq racing ~rcles bee&amp;DIJO a special rear-axle eonstructlon permila It tO rear batk alii do lrlcka on two wheels. The lwiiY ear Is
light. leu than 1,000 pouad11, and very fast, reaching apeeda of
close to 200 miles an hour.
Sunday It was the llll!trwnent In one or the worsttragodles In
u. S. auto racing history. A brlgb~ orange lUnny ear, drl-by
veteran raeer llowlton Platt or Atlanla swerved out or near
the ftnioh line ol a rural drag nee &amp;trill In North Georgia alii
slammed Into speetators lining 1 ehaln link lenco. Elevoo persous
were ldlled and about 50 othert Injured.

Ora IL White

Car Turns Over,

Dies Sunday

Driver Uninjured

Ora llerbert White,

66, died

Sunday allernoon In Veterans Me-

morial llospital. Mr. White was
boro Jan. 17, 1903 In West VIrginia.

He lo aurvlved by hlo wife,
two. daughters, M r o.
Pauline Barr. ReediiVWe, a n d
Mro. Linda Holter, In Calltor-

Martha;

Forfeited Bonds

Nixon Forging P/qfns for New, Streamlined Government ..

,JVews•.. in Briefs

de!endants lolfelted nla; three brothers, T. W. Wlilte,
bonds and a lourth was lined In Long Hottom; Eben White, Teayo
the court or Fl&gt;meroy Mayor Valley, W. Va., and Woodrow
Charles Logar Saturday nighl White, &amp;. Albanl!il; one 11ister,
Forleltlng bonds were Leon- Mrs. Edith Kyle, Colwnbls;
ard Lyoos, Pomeroy, $33.70, three grandchlldren. and severapeedingi Clintm Donovan, Pom- al nieces and nephews.
Funeral aervlcea will be Wederoy, $25. passing over double
nesday
at 1 p.m. !rom the Ewyellow line, and Keith Freneh,
Ing
Chapel
with the Rev. Vern&lt;~~
Middleport, ~0, reekleu operatton. Fined $5 and coots on Dolin omelatlng. Burial will ba
a reckless operation conv1ction In White cemetery, B a s h a n.
Friends may cell anytime.
was Harry Clark, Pomeroy.
Three

thinking but who asked that his
name not be used. This oUJcial
!laid Nixon's goal is to bring the
unwledly federal bureaucracy
under tighter White flouse
cortrol.
He said the proposed reforms
would be accomplished uncl{t
the presidential reorganiza.tion
btU now pending in Congress:
Unier . the authoricy, which
eJQlired at the end of 1968, the

dent.
gress than an,y other president.
The UPI informant said it
was too soon to say whether the
reorganization wU1 be that
ambitious. But he said Nixoil
wants to he sure (!) thet
various federal PrCJgrllJll!l are
worth doing at all; (1) whether
there Is a better WQ' of doing
tjlem, and (3) whetht\1" the
goverMlent is getting Us

'.

CORRECTION
The Rev. E. J, Hulklley, Colwnbus. is conducting evangelistic
services at the Rutland Church
or the Nuarene through Sunday,
March 9. Services, q&gt;en to the
public, are held at 7:30 each evening alii will be held at 9:30 a.
m. Sunday morning.
TO SELL

RU~AGE

The Young Adult class of the

Pomeroy First Baptist Church
will hold a rummage sale Tuesday
through Thursday from 9 L m.
to 4 p. m. In the Klngstand Bldg.
on Court St., Pomeroy.
BREEDERS TO MEET
The Southeastern Ohto Guernsey Breeden Assa will hold its
annual

wlntermeeU~VandDOtluck

dinner at the Southern High School
In Racine at 7:30p.m. Thursday.
Members and frierlls are invited.
SOUP ON SALE
The youth group of the B~
bury Church of Christ wUI hold a
"""' sale Saturday. The price Is
60 cents a quart. Orden will be
lllkon through Wednesday on
phones 992-5178 or 992-5681.

:•~

DECORATING IN11!:RIOR - Tho - Farmers Bonk &amp; Savings Company building Is lha scene
ot intense Interior decotltlQJ work as moving day comes closer. Chester Van Meter, foreground,
~ GUbert ~ ... ~ ol Ell!!lrlelda, are laying some o! the ftttradive carpeting lhat eovorl the Ooors. -

s.iiitlJiei Photo.

New Bank Op'ens March 31
:

Dooro of the beautilul new
building or The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Comparzy ln Pomeroy
wUI swing open to the public on
Monday, March 31.
Theodore T. Reed, Jr., blnk
president, aald the bank will be
opened ror business after certain ~quipment and recorda are
moved on the weekend of March
29 alii 30.
The new bank building, locat-ed between West Main arxl West
Second Sts., is completed except
ror certain interior decoratloos,
installation of new furniture alii
of ecldltlonal equlpmenL
Employees or Elberlelds Department Store are la,ying the
}al!lt ciJ])eting throughout the first
Roor and The Fabric
workers are busy hanging drlfiJBS.
Karr Construction ConJ.9an,y,
Chester. general contractor. is
all rut readJ! to end
part or
the project. The architecture o1
the 54 x 102 n. belldl~ lo
uEar)y Pomeroy,''

Beautiful dresaea by .. Kate Greenaway" "Bow Age" - "Gort Girl" - usehooltim·
er'' - Colts by "MDrgan Girl"- ••Yor"- ster.. - .. Reisman Rothman" - Waahable
knit suits aad coordinate aportawear by "IDranta Knit" - Sportawear in separate• and
coordinate gr.ot~~s by ••stmon Mogllner" Blouses by "Sea Creat" - Skirts by usea
Isles" - Chubby girls drenes ancl sport&amp;weor by "L. Glddlll8" - - Sportawear by
"Russ Togs for Girls" - just a beautUul
Une ol wearing apparel lor girls or all ages
from tots to teens -

Makt Your Selectlans Now...

swchedule

HANGING CURTAINS - ArtiHtr of tilt•n~c Sbq&gt;
In FOmeroy lo hanglrw eurtalno alii. drtpeo at the oilw blllkll~ollha Farm..a -lrSaviiWI ·~-Tho drapes have
.been !Udo' IIJ Tile Fabric 8luJp llnlL - .Sentinel P11oto.

not work.ootthe

Named to
Full Term
.

Its

CO PLETE INSTA-LLATION
FREE ESTI TES
• BATHROOMS
• SEPTIC TANKS
• HEATING SYSTE S• AIR CONDITIONING

wlill

a ton Is

91"'

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

·
l • •
Reed
. .. ~omtng

Kermit Walton, Pomeroy blalnessman, was named to a five
year term on the Metp Count;y
Board of Health Monday lllght
by the Malgs GounQI fllbllc
llealtl&gt; Advisory Council.
Waltoo has been serving on
the board, filling the unexpired term of Charloll fllralnger
who moved 80IIIOtime ago !rom
Pomeroy, This marks Walton's
llr st lllll term elecltou.
The council also named officers for the next year. T h e
group lnellldes Charles Blosell,
Cheater Townahip, president;
Pomery Mayor Chulea Logar,
vlee president, alii ~cuae
~r Herman London, seere-.
tary,

\;

eountll

The
11 .eompoaec~ or
prealclpa or each.,board oltown' '· ' ilhlp-· ~steesf and thl! mayvrs of
0 01dlim!n In the tottnlJ'.
Other•' otteli!llriB ·~t nllht'•
, m0011na II. tlie hJ!~ depart'Qleodore T. lltocl, Jr., Pnli'
ol!tces In' fOmeroy lneludlllont of The Farmera Bank ..;::iii.
and r oc1 R..
10
.., mond CotterlU t .....
loA1'
Sovlng1 COIIIjlllll', Fl&gt;morey, ""' Tcnmahlp; Jame• Gulolil Cobe In Waahlnatm llt11 wiOk aa lwnbla; Dale Wright, R~tlelll
a mentber oldie olflclal c!,I!IOIIII· TOWIIahJi&gt;; Wortby ll:(l&amp;ht Salem
Uou It 20 Oblo -~·· lnclud- TownahJi&gt;; lliafor Cbarles PYles,
ln8.all ol!lcera alii member• It Raelne; Oscar Babcoek, o 1 1 v e
the CouneU ol Admlnlltratloll at TV!ritahi!l; 0. J, Pannldgt.on, Orlite Ohio Bankero AIIIOelalla!. Township; Mayvr Ell Den. Thlolo an llllllli ter!~aotvlo- nilm, IIIIUind; Dr. Sellm Blazeltattono with c:i~niriaalnan ind wlt1, health eotiunlasiouer; Mrs.
._..!lOry .,......•. to dl~t~~oo Arthur !lrauss, admlnlatratlve
~rrenl bonlilnl m~s alii the aoalotant at the health depart-~ IIIIo at the oCIOIIOII\)". mont, e111 Porry Rlgga, deportCon!orencea a r e ••hedulotl ·lllul illidurlan.
wlth' Uto ~ei- It the q.f:
·The 1f0111&gt; dlllcusaed the anraney, diroe1l!r Of .the F .D,LC., nua1 report of the health departthe Walimiaton omce It T b e
the recently eompletocl iu.
Amorl0111 Buker• Aa-tlon, bereulooil akin testing Iirneram
,the rrea.,u-y Department, and inCI the lawa pertalrJing to the

Banking Group
· ··

ll!4lilt

Reports to the nation 1011ight

JUST RECEIVED
ATRUCK LOAD OF
NEW FURNACES
SPECIAL CASH &amp; CARRY
169.95
120,000 BTU GAS FU.NACE

.

W1\SIUNGTOli - PRESIDENT NIXON·.brlolad Republican alii
Demoeratle congreuionolleodoro iodal' ou his elgilt.dl.vle'1"imet"!I!W trill tA&gt; ElllWB. Tonight he reports on hlo tour to tht\11111011 ,ta
an hour - 1011(1 nows eonlereoce lroan \he WhiiAI HOW!•·
·
The session with congreulonol leodon and chairmen or .k8y
ecmmlttees or the !louse alii SeMta aut ulllerway at 8:35 ~~om. In
the eal&gt;lnot roont. AWhite House
said the,l the P""" wfo
mueh the same as that whleh NIJI!II brlaled b,lore his Feb. 23 •
Marth 2 trip to live EurwUn ntltiona ""'!the VaUean.
'·

"'*""man

Black Lung Strike u 'Preadi~~g
CHARLESTON, iv. VII. - A Jf.llAY STjUKE ol about 20,000
west Vlfllnla ~ minora, dellllntllrw a otronc ·~l!lack lung" ~Ill In
the state IOI(Islalure, ..,r_. l(,.xlay who~ l'OYIIIJI pleketo shut down
· two minoa In neighboring Pinnaylvanla.
,
The _.,.nt trli80r !¥U ~eat Vlralnla'o S,O.toJudlelory Committee roportlng to the lloor a dU'IIfd b!ll w11Ith pWIUlocl many ot
the grovlaloua In the Hciule • p&amp;laecl liiU \0 llbeni!Je 'lorlcmen'•
laws.
,: ·.
.

._.,.uon

1

POMEROY, OHIO

e

Fair and little chan~ In tem·
perature today, tonight, and Wednesday. High ~ In the upper
3()s and 40s. Low tonight In the
upper teens and 20s.

TEN CENTS

TUESDAY. MARCH 4. 1969

Emphatic concern over the new
40-hour police department work
schedule was expressed by Mayor Charles Legar Monday night
at a meeting of Pomeroy Village
council. He said he expects to
••wash his hands" of the problem.
The mayor, who had not given
the prq&gt;OS&amp;I hi s blessing when it
was pre s,ented by Chief Jed Webster at the Feb. 17 s.e ssion of
counCil, said problems had al·
ready arisen. Some patrolmen
apparently are dissatisfied with
their assigned hours.
The new schedule, drawn up to
give policemen a reduction in
weekly time from 48 to 40 hours,
went into effect Mar ch 1.
Council, however, told Mayor
Legar it is the responsibilit.Y of
Chief Webster to solve the problems and amended minutes of
their last' meeting so that the
new schedule' wl11 be used on a ·
60-day trial period.
Mayor Legar, maintained the

GET 50 GRANo
Ohio (UPI) - Thieves broke _ . a lllle In t b e
U. S. FOot Ol!lee here during the
weekelll and made oft wlllt more
lhan $50,000 In eaah elll otamps,
pollee reported ~PI~A,

'•)

PLUMPING &amp; HEATING

e1

Weather

.

Mayor Says Police Schedule
In Ponieroy Not Working

Come to Elberfelds
(lnd ~1?~ the
Beautiful Display
of Wearing
Apparel For
Girls Of All Ages•..

-----A NOLO BROTHE

. pita&gt;0

~;,~~&lt;~'~:~:;of
l ' ot~-~ .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

In Auto Collision
Minor damage was caused to
both cars in acolllsionontheprivate property of Jack's Nlte Club
locatocl off Route 143 Sunday at
2:15 a. m. A car driven by Garrett Knorr, 57, RL 2, Albany,
struck a parked vehicle belong1118 to Palma L. Goodwin, 40,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy.
There was damage to the left
door of the Goodwin car and to
the left rear fender of Knorr's
auto. No charges were (i]ed.

"".~&gt;

:0:~ &lt;;".£)

IWvoted To The lntere~~ts Of The Meig•·Mason Anm

VOL. XXI NO 219

Thomas R. Foster, 21, Rt. 1
Bldwel~ eseaped unlnJurecl bl:t
his car was heavily damaged'
tn a one..ear accident at 11:40
a.m. Saturday on Rt. U3, nino- · of a mile northwest ol
Rt. 692.
The State Hlgbway Patz-ol aald
Foster, headed IOUtheaat, wetrt
oft the highway, otruck an embankment elll his car overturoecl onto Ita lqJ. Foster erawlecl
out a baek door windoW at the
vehlele. No eharge wa• flied.

-~

at y

The l011est limit In om&gt;
meraUoo II among the primitive
Yancos, 111 Amazon tribe that
eannot count beyond poettarrar
or lncoaroac, their word r o r
"•three."

Corps, whleh, receit.l)' Wa's 1&gt;rogram ltsell Is ·ulller · oharp
moved from the Office of ~inlslration scruUny,
Economic Opportunity (OEO) to
UPI was told that the ehlot
the Labor Departme~. even- critieism here wu that Model ·
tually will be uphased ouL''
Cities bypasses state golel'•
Nixon aides also were saJd to ments and give11 toQ mUch
be skeptical or the communit.Y power to Washington. 'IIJf you
actiort programs still lett with wantocl to weaken the 'leclerwl
ttle OEO, Ir these survive, it system, you couldn't think ot •
wu said, they probably will better way to do 'it," the otnclal
wind UJ1 under the Model Cities said. " Ma)'be we shoUld, but
program, although the ci ties only with oor eyes f:llOO."

money's worth.
The Wblte !louse aJde said
To this end, he said, Nixon Nixoo's reorganitatioo plans
soon wUl set up a White House wiU · cover at least half the
group on government reorganl- regular Cabinet d~tments,
zatiOO. The source said the lncb.dl~ Health, Education 11'11
gr..., will not be as broad ao Wellare (HEW), Houol~ alii
the Hoover Commission of the Urban Development (HUD),
Truman administration, whlcb
~. Commerce, Agriculture
proposed a· wholesale reorP.r
·~rior.
zatlon or !edenl activit'
•
l!e did not go into
~..S
"e most part, he did
beatuse "we can't wal,.
long.'•
#&gt;
'~ lo. •ntipoverty Job

•

Now You Know

Garriloo pu~ BeW Chqrge liB si!q~ ·

NEW ORLEANS - D!Sr. A'17Y• .Jilo! GAftRISON, thwartocl by
In hlo atteqlt to prove•Cla:Y Shaw eonaplred to ossas1lnate
Jolin F. KennedY. laollll!ll perJury •h&amp;rse• l(lllnat the Now Orl01ns

a .Mirl'

\

....,.......an.
'
.
••()utllgeOU••" l'flaw t•ed. St,aw was aCCIIlued Slturday otcon..

••lrl- wlti&gt; Lee IIU•0¥• 01W~ Jill.David W. Forrloto ilaaaulnite
- ·~
(~ on Page 8)

'

President could overhaul federal departments alkl .PToerams
unless either . tbe House or
Senate reJected the plolt·wlthln
60 days.
• 'Senate · llepubllcan Leader
Evereu M. Dirksen or DUnois,
who steered the measure to
Senate passage last week,
predicted that Nixon woold send
more reorganization plani to
Co111r·ess than any ·other pres(..

•

111...,

liMo FO!Wal !leoorvo ~411!10111 ot aoU&lt;lwutla.
A IPOejal dlmer '-ln8

Ohlo'a Coniraalflloal ·c~etopllon
will lie held on Mar&lt;b f at the
Madi'!OU lliltel.
,.
. /" .
LODGl;: TO !o!p:T
.
Worablj)llll Malle\" llal-twtll'
Curd a""'!"nt;icl
LOdce
No. 164 F&amp;A!.l wql hold Ito regwar molll!dY&lt;meed~ Wotllteoday, Maicb '5at7130 p.m. at the
Pomoi'QY Masonic TernPitl, AU
master · ~- ore lnvlteo!- ReCreohmenlll will be aorved.

!omti'QY

·

way it is currently set up and
said he intends to wash his hands
of it.
Council, in other activity, approved the second reading of two
ordinances related to the sewerage aystem. One of proposed ordinances calls for the regulation
of use on public sewers and drains
in the sewerage system area and
the other relates to the creating
of the position or a sl.¥)erintend·
ent or sewerage, and the derln-

ing of his duties.

Tracy Whaley and Mrs. Eskew, Lincoln Hill residents, ap..
peared before council and asked help of the village in exten:ling Vale St. a short distance so
they would have access · to the
back portion of their prq&gt;erties,
Councilman Robert Hysell was
named by Mayor Legar t.o work
out arrangements with involved
property owners. Both Whaley
aOO Mrs. Eskew agreed to as-

sist with costs that might be involved.
Mayor Legar also reported a
blanket bond has been obtained
to cover all employees of the village except elected officials at
a savings of $170 over a threeyear period.
A letter of'invitationfrom Drew
Webster Post No. 39, Amer'ican
Legion, wi.s read asking council·
men to attelli the 5oth anniversary or the post on March 13 at
1

the Pomeroy Elementary school.
It was also decided to enter
Into a new contract with tlte Ul).

employment Service to permit
use of the councU chambers u~
til 1971 at a $50 monthly rental
rate.
Attending were Mayor Legar,
Clerk Jane Walton, Treasurer
Elma Russell alii Counellman
Leslie Fultz, presidentj Don Collins, Franklin Rizer, Robert Hysell elll Lou PouliJL
'•

••

-..-.--, ~~

Hearing• oo properly filed
complaints against real estate
tax reappraisals will be heard
Mareh 18-19 In Meigs County
auditor Gordon H. Caldwell's
caurthouse office.
Caidwell said certilled letters
are being sent to each person
having liled complaints. Only
oomplalnts Wed on property
forms obtained from the audi~
tor's olltce will be heard. according to Caldwell.
He aald the deadline lor liling complaints was Feb. 20, the
date or the dosing of collection
~ the tax books, in accordance
with lite Revioed Code Sec. 5715.19.
He stressed that verbal complaints will not be heard and ur.
ged persons to appear at h i s
courthouse promptly at the Urnes
states within the certified letters so scheWling c:an be maintained.

Three Gas Co
Men Honored
Three employee• or the Ohio
Fuel Gas Company !rom t h e
Meigs County area have been
reoognlzed fO&lt; having achieved
a total or 37 Years of ae~ident­
lreo driving In company vehic les, acoordlng to R. George
Claar, Colurtwus, salef¥ manag~
er tor the gas c:omPan,y.
Claar said the local award
wbmers are among 408 Ohio
Fuel ompl03ees from throughout the stele who have driven
a total ol 4,680 years without
an accident.
Loeal award wlmers and the
111mber ot yeara they have driven without an acoldont Include:
Dlsone M. Fink of Rudand, 17
years; Marvin E. Murphy, Route
1, ReediiVllle, 16 years; aDd Allen D. Blaho!&gt;, Route f, Pome1'0)', four years.

Fiddlers are "out" - yooth
At least as far as the Meigs
County Fair Is concerned.
Meeti"8 Monda.Y night, the
Meigs Coonty Fair Board agreed
to stage a full-scale eveni~ program this year featuring accomplishments of you~ people of the
county. They also agreed to discontinue the annual Ohio State
Old Time Fiddlers' contest.
C. E. Blakeslee, active in Junior Fair activities, met with
the board and discussedplans for
the evenillt youth event on Wednesday, Aug. 13.
The annual style revue, tbe
livestock parade, games and contests and other events are planned for the evening youth show.
This will mark the first time in
years that young people have been
given an evening on which to display their accomplislDnents. For
a number of years the parade,
style revue and related activities have been held on Saturday
morning.
The Ohio State Champlooohip
Old Time Fiddlers' cmtest is
being dropped alter havl"8 been

Eblin Services

Being Held Today
Funeral services for James
Eblin, Union Ave., Pomeroy, who
was IOWid dead Monday at his
residence of an apparent self lnflletocl gunshot wound, will be
held today at 3 p.m. !rom Ewing
Chapel.
He was preceded In death by
his parents, two brothers and a
al~er.

~rvlvors

include a sister,

Mrs. James P, Snider, Pome-

f

Death is
Deterrent
To Crime
COLUMBUS (UPO - The
secretary of the Ohio Fraternal
Order ol Pollee Monday nigh!
"'urged the S e n a t e Judiciary
Committee to keep the death
penalty in Ohio.
Thomas A. Martin or Cincinnati said the death penalty was
"the best deterrent we have"
to crimes or passion.
Martin also suggested if the
legislature was to consider remov1ng the death penalty from
Ohio la'Pi, "make the decision
here, in this chamber" and oot
have the electorate decide It at
the polls.
ulf it is left up to the voters,
too much emotion wUl become
involved, .. Martin said.
The committee held its third
hearing on the resolution to
place the question or aOOJishment or capital punishment on
the November ballot.
statute or Vote
The death penalty could be
eliminated from Ohio law either
by a statute enacted by the
General Assembly or a constitutiorral ameMment approved
by the voters•
Sen. Oliver Ocasek, 1)-.fuon,
has pl'q)osed 1 resolution to
make the issue a constitutional

five brothers, Walter, Sleven, Lawrence and Robert, all at
Pomeroy, and Arthur, at Lancaster. Tho Rev. a.~neGIUwiU
olllclate. Burial will be In Howella lWis cemetery, Pomeroy. question.
l'Ofi

S~nsenbrenner
•

staged as an evening event for
two years at the Meigs Fair, The
first year it was staged it drew
a record crowd and Cur1)' Herdman. who died later that year,
was crowned champion of tbe
event.
However, last year atterxlance

Progress to

Be Reported
Every&lt;~~e Interested In helping
Malgs County plan for the Illlure Is Invited to attend t b 1
Progress Report meeting at the
TrlnlQI United Church of Christ
in Pomeroy !rom 10 a.m. until
3 p.m.lhio Wednesday, said Thereon JohnSCII, chairman at the
County Reuuce Develapmat
m·eetlng.
Jotmsoo, chairman of t b e
Cooney Resource !level_.
Committee, said perQII Pfltont will receive a brte! - mary It the extenslou..........,
a datBIIed ' - ' of the eooapthenslve water e111 aetllJII p1oa
lor the couney, and the JD'II·
ent stage ol the .,.,.,.,._,,
plan.

Is Legion ,Speaker
ij

.

.,, ~lttees lor the annual
,lilrthdai party to be held at tho
VETERANS' MEMORIAL
l&gt;omoroy Elem~ Sc:hool on
: IIOSPfrAL . .
.
Mai-eh 13 wore tiomed by Com• Ai&gt;MITIED - EaiJ. EdW.ta's,
mander Don llimnel Monday night
Rulland; cEnld. C:to, ~YIIIt;
Koa:KasteraO!Ii P~ji!itro.v· Sharon when Drew Webster Po8t39, Am·
Butidoi, Jltidlll~ Ka~ qGI. erlean Legion, met. ·
A dlliNr lroan 6 to 7'p.m. 0pre11~ 1 ~n Pliolna. , .
DISCHARGED'1_ DOnna Rime. parotl b.Y the· Lodleo Awdllarr,
wiU open·the &amp;Mull blrlltday ob.'
,;,
sor.,nee. At ?:39 p.m. a pollllc
, ,. 1-QCAL TEMPS '·
· 'l'lt!t ~ In ~y's Ptosram Will be held wit!&gt; Mayor ·
d o - llOslnesa dlatrld was M. E. Sena~rormor qt eolll!ll,38 desreeo at 11:25 a.m. ~. bos •• BPOiker. He,~I be ••·

declined 'Pihen the aecolll emtest was held
It Is reported that the l'om&amp;roy Chamber of Commerce will
consider taking lC&gt; the annual
evem as part or the Big Bellin.catta activities. However, the
matter has oot been ronnall,y be-.,.
fore the Chamber.
This year's "YouthNtght.. wW
coincide with the amual ••kiddie
day" which is staged on the midway each year. On the midway
I his year will be Pugh Attrectloua
of Lancaster.
The Fair Board h a s agaln
scheduled the Big Belli Minstrel
Assa for two presentatlma of
the group's annual summer must..
cal. These again w i 11 be on
Thursday and Saturday nights.
The annual horse pulling ctmtest has been scheduled ror Friday evenJng and onTuesda,yev~
lllll the pony puUi118 contest wDI
be held as the eveni~ attractioa.

companied here by the Columbus
Salet.r Dlreeter Fred Simon, 1
brother or P11110rvy's Paul Sl·
mon.
The dlnnar Is ...,.n cmly topost
membera, auxiliary membero
elll their lamUlea.

9 Ed SUllivan Show. Members Hwttington llcepltal ond ~
were urged to view the s..... Al- NesulnJad, Jr., waa l'tltOrtedW
oo a dlmer meotlrw,.........,._ aloo.
eel lor APril 13 In Lanco.oter,
A peot Jar '· the ovenln&amp; -....
This Is lor several ,dl&amp;l\'1&lt;18 In John IQeln who Ma l'HIIllllld
whleh Is lncluclecl the POmeroy In the lll'llll4l,lortu.
post ellll1 bOiiv held lnto!Wnctlou with the 50th annlveraaey.

CommaiOier Htmnel preaen!Aod
Tt!o Febl1lll')' aeUvlties - a
a letter !rom the NaUonal Com·
molller re...-ung that a JPOCtal record bop .... dante (or memtrl- to ihe American Ledon. bers elll their wive~ '- 'W e r e
w!U•b Is obaervlng Ito 50th·Y.'!l•· r-tecl oucte1slid:l~ lit. o n
Will be prea011toc1 on the Mareh Roulh WII reported W'1tn Clbell-

a

�,. ' '
X&lt;~·;.tt;'Mf?'.-;-;-.:w&amp;.:x:~x4·

'L

Q., TueadQ, Mardl4, 1969

CIUOIES

istrators.
"We can't expect the property tax to do
any more for the schools, 11 he wamed. "ID
CaUf~rnia it is totally out of band. Property lS typ!Catly taxed by six or seven
jurisdictions. I know several pieces taxed
by as many as 19 jurisdictions."
So who is going to do U.. more for tho
schools tbat must be done! The nation is
certainly wealthy enougb to meet tile cbal·
tenge. The key is proper distribution of
the burden.
Possibilities include shllting tbe major
responsibility for education to tile states,
where the Constitution originally placed
it; massively increased federal aid, pos·
sibly block grants to tile slates as sug·
gested by Presldeni Nixon, and a more
equitable sharing of tax sources among the
three levels of government.
Local government, hardest hit by rising
costs of public services is tied to the least
flexible revenue som, tho property tax,
while tbe most flexible Is virtually a fed·
eral monopoly. More than 90 per cent of
the take from income levies flows into
Washinldon, with the states absorbing
most of tile rest.
Fortunately, Washington Is aware of tho
problem. Several education proposals wiD
be coming up In tho 9lst Congress and can
be expected to stir considerable debate,
hopefoilly making at least a start toward
a solution.
Whatever tbe eventual formula, and
there must be one, It must take tile pres·
oure off tbe property tax, wblch bas
clearly reached the end of tho line.

Certainties are rare in forecasting the
shape of things to come. particularly in

the realm of public affairs, but we can be
sw·e of at least one thing right now. We
are going to be hearing a great deal about
education in the months to come.
And it isn't revolution on the campus
that is the really big, and bad, news but
the grim dollars-and..cents dilemma of
local school systems across the country .
Already we have seen a few temporary
shutdowns for lack of funds. These are not

"' i~olated

hard ship cases but warning sig·

nals of a developing crisis tbat will rapidly
become general umess and until someLmng
is done about .the basic p rob 1e m- the

necessity of meeting ever-climbing costs
of an expanding educational structure
from a traditional source or funds. the
local property lax,. that lu&gt;s reached the
point of diminishing returns.
Tbe nation's school budgets have
doubled in the past decade, jumping more
than 8 per cent this year alone to a record
133.7 billion. Of this tolal, the towns and
cities, from their property taxes, must
come up with 52 per cent, with states and
the federal government picking up the rest
of the tab 141 and 7 per cent respectively) .
Yet local taxpayers, with some good rea·
son, are displaying increasing reluctance
to pile more taxes on themselves. In last
fall's ele&lt;:tions, more than 50 per cent of
Local bond issues and tax increases were
rejected. double tile rate of previous years.
California's Sen. Alan Cranston pin·
pointed the reason in a recent address to
the American Association of S.'hool Admin·

Why is it that we can be·
come nationally aroused by
a single murder but be com·
pletely passive about 55,000
horrible deaths on the ~lgh·
ways each year?
...

-G or do n 'A. Christenson,

., ,

e.-u.

u

,

..,

••• -

...., · -

~..-._..-~···

Ricoord Nizon oa Presi·

• .,.

, .,.

We already have in oper·
atlon the most el!lclent tax·
gathering machinery in the
world, but our problem is
that, after it is collected, we
are not puttlug tbe tas revenues where the problems
are.

questlooo
to YQUTH MIKEll FOR IT, oare
of Helen Help US! this newspa-

Ro&lt;kefelltr, calilng for a

chllnge In the oysttm of
federal aid to the stattS.

~

:...Prof. Sidney Hook of New
York University, an.nou11C·
ill{l fOTIII&lt;IIioo of a na·
tio!lal group caUed Organimtion of Unio&lt;Tiily Cen·
ltro for Ratio!lal Alltrna·

-

crease frmn $1,680 to $3,000 the

cause is unknown.

Penicillin Effects
Vary for Allergies

'

don shoWroom .... Audrey Hepburn poU!ely n&lt;Hhanked the of-

fer to star in uLklts 3, tbristlans
0" opposite Jim Brown, g r 1 d

great apprenticing the tllm • star

trade .... xavier Cupt did t h e
!Dim alone (ot the Direetolrel
and wire Olaro's done TV alone (Merv Grlllln's) and fotlui
here what's caotlng ....
Mike Douglas' absence from h1a
TV show was caused br a bed-

would seem like a short.

cial Security coulcl oorn without

Preas mternatlonal

Mime- . • 32. 28 .533 1*
... 32 28 .533 Jih
lndtana • " • 34 32 .515 2~
New York . .. 16 44 .267 17'h
West
W. L. Pet. GB

per,
SHE CAN MAKE OUT
WII'HOIJT MAKE-OUT.
Dear llel"':
Why Is It that -

Oakland ••••• 47 12 .7WI
Denver ...•.. 36 26 .&gt;Ill ~«•n
New Orleans . , 32 31 .508 17
Dallas ....... 29 31 .483 18'h
Los Angeles ... 25 36 .410 23
lk&gt;uston •••••• 19 u .317 28'h

a guy
- · 1 etrt out, ho lhlnkl tra
bls duV to 110 park and make·

out?
None fl. the IJIYS arwnd here
even Jl)an their dates. Do you
think !beY woold take a slrl to
a IlhoW, borl)e back rldin&amp; ID I
oarnlval or game, IX&gt; the boacb,
to dbmer, skating. , bowllll&amp;. or
to a darice? EYen a good wall&lt; 11.1

the Lauih-

20 kids .... When did he get

to Copenhagen for his finest dish
- Pia staal, no relative yet
•••• But soon ._.. &amp;e•a the top
N. Dlropean model inoluding the
Scandinavian.
Warner Bros. doee nothing
small: takes over the wbole Grand
Babama lllanda and will colleot
newsbawks from all over the
110rld.. to peekattbelrnext-aeason
procluot .... an 110 thanka, Elliot
- we never 110 on juDkets ....
Artllir Treacber remalni one of
oor all tlma favorite fim - pbUOllOPbera: "Pm all for tbe yrung
taking over and thank God lwoo't

time 10 tum out all that deedieUon of brtUialll water colors will bsch?
Sean Connery'• simple trlok
be at the Hammer Gallery ....
to
110 incogniiD: dolla his wig
Peter Fonda, elder statesman
ol the juvenUe set, speska nobly .... TV Irritant Alan B u r k e
but carries a dirty . atlok: ''The claims he'o fl. noble ancestry,
FO~epber'' Ia his next DKMI- - r e tag Alexander Van Stern...,le .•• Actor Hush Marlowe berg ..... Ya wohi .... Kathryn
and wile RDll0Dl81'Y Tory had I Gray8Clii.Jobnny Johnston's aprlg
baby boy, their tiiird .... Graf- Pattl, 20, launched her .::OWn
fito 011 the sidewalk outside La screen ·career.
The 1950 U. of Dllools class
Strada East (great postaO: "Joham Sebastian Bach DlcWt Be- had a bumper show biz crop:
lieve In Birth Control," an In· Screen Gems producer Bob Cla- be here when they do.''
telleolllal scrawl - 01' IJo bad ver, 11 Laugh-ln" clown Ar t e
'
'
Dang Kingman's next exblbl·

~.

TmED oF rr · ..

"He Seems Surprised We Speak English!" ·

IWIIDlOIIS

'

TIRE

Ung a divorce, Is It correct to
return wecldlng gifto? - NEDI-

ING ADVICE
Dear Needlnll:
If you bave used the gifto,
!beY ean't be returued. The7
BIDdd be divided acconllni to
whloh olde fl. the falnll.y' - or
Who.. friends- pre-..! a-.
A reeonoUlatlOil woold IIOiYe
this problem - and others. Have
you tried?- H.
Dear Helen:
I am a pla,ybo,y, or at leaot
oonolctered so by 1101110 ~
I am out for aiiDOd UmeandblYe

no intentloo of getltni ..rt..,.,

I DO h&amp;\'e pride. I liiY8I'
force lll1,l'thlng. I otil1 take wbal
to offered.
Now, alter taking tl!la "IIIII"
from a girl, ohe lo char~ me

But

Whether tl!la girl-111011111',
or ber· parents want menp,
;you'd better see a Ia~. - H.
"Dear BelBII:
~you oan help me.laeom
ID··remember relldlnl year11110
titat the man who plaJa !q!orman .. TV ldlled hlmaell. an
~e aa,y Pm &lt;riZl becau..,
they ... him rvery dQ. Am I
rlt!ht or lll'OIIi? - BONNIE
Dear Bolllle:
. You're rlgbt. Jt ••• a 11tt11
over 10 yeara 1110 that TV'1 1&amp;perman killed hlmeetl. H11 Ill1DI
was Georp Reeves. Yourfrlendl
are seetDg him Oil old re....,o.
-IL

Vegetating, eh? LBJ still Ia
guarded by 26 Secret Servlto
men .... Brilliant comic - writor Mel Brooks and his wile
Ame Bancroft are partnera with
Ground Floor boteOiarlesCbevUlot in a new lmportod • wine
ftrm .... Petula Clark sot f250,.
000 ror ''Goodbye, Mr. Qdp•"
llld Is being IUed for Just that
tldf sum by VOIIUe lle&lt;orda whloh
olalma a flv"'l'ear wax poet hal
been cracked by the lilting IJme,y.

Vondallzocl midtown phoneapt
no corporale lhrug: coots t h e
phone firm mWim a iear for
repairs .... Let~• h&amp;\'e a wrd o1
con-ctiYo needling for t b e
phone CORI[NIIQ': Too ffiiiiY o( itJ
ln!ormattm plo are apotbetle,
ln10lent and lllelrlclent .... Fear!
Buok'a new dream Is a TV .....
los boHd Oil her writings and U
all Pearl' a wrltfnp wereiDstart

•4

unreel Inc: on TV. ••Peyton Place••

I

'

ers eligible for SOolal Security
benefits.
Miller llirodueed similar leglslstlon In the 1st Seaslon of the
90th CoQgreis to increase ear.,.
ing limitations for Utose receivhw SOolal Seourlcy benefits. The
llli!tationa on eamliWs at that
tlrri'e was $1,500. Leglslatlonwas
voted UIJOD to lncrease the cell!~ from $1,500 io tile current
level of $1,680, however, Mr.
Miller eontends this allolment
is oot enough.

2nd

' , I·

ware of minora bearing ••&amp;lftl...
The7 MIGHT be IIOid , dlp'a,
Who -all abclut -tory rape.

boalled.

YORK (UP!) ' - ThO 12. (tie)
United Press International maJor · •ollaP basketl&gt;all ritlrcs
with first place wtes am woi\..
l01t records ln ~rentheses
(13th week):
Teams
I. UCLA (35) (24~)
2. Santa Clara (23-1)

3. North C&amp;r&lt;IIlna (22-3)
4. Davidson (25-2)
5, LaSalle (23-1)

9,

lluquesne

(19-3)

WANTED TRAINEES&gt;:.;- ~~., ·. · .·
MEN &amp; WOMEN A_RE URGENTLY HEEDED 'TO TiAIM . ' -·i;·,
AS
I B.
. ., ' .;;:.
Computer Prolfammlna and Machine Ttalftleit\ ..

Persona aoloctotl will be trolnod In a ,...;.,.. .wii't~i.

With Mo.tchln1 Enamola

•' .

i••·

need not lnterfer• with ~r•~twnt
If y~ t•D, IIfi~ '. !! ,,
training can ·L, financ,.cl. Write toda.J. PI•••• 1-. , " '

clud• home phon.-, numb., ancl ao-.

_

IBM.MACIIINE TRAINING

&gt;

. · ,' · · . · -. ·

.

'•

THE DAILY SENTINEL, Box'"·T; Po•a,.p,;O. '
"

•

-

c

-

.

'

Dallu at New York
Mime- et Denver
(Only gamu scheduled)

"~~~.~

- PLAYB()Y IN TRQUBLE
Ileal' Pla,yboy:
Jr abe Ia under a1110, and ;you
aren't, ;you're in troublel Be·

tboemotlbn .... A&amp;eoCVuJ.
prlty: Rip Tom's pt~cene
In "Coming Apart,.. !llmlng In
the gutters of N. Y., Involves
neddng with the rounclleet and
then the dlaroblng scene- where·
UJlOII uahe" turn&amp; out to be a
boy .... The he-abe role lo pla,y.
ed by ballet dancer R o b e r t
IDankshlne Who ~sit..,_..,
beaotlfully, the llllow'o siBII

'

-: !fEw

(Qnq gam&amp; lcbeduled)
TueacJa1ts Games

wltlt rape. Wbat sbould I ~?

ty•• we suppose Edllle Fisher will

• .

Monday's Results
Kelituoky 127 Hooston 118

Dear SATOI:
I'Oilsh up your "No Parking''
Have a late~ate Lindy rumor:
buttm
and let the IPIYS know the
The Times buying Variety? ....
Gore vidal's aeript for his own dlllerence - n a cbeoi&gt; datil
pomovel "ldyra Breckenridge'' and a date that cheapens. SO l q
was diplomatically sealed by as ;you ACCEPT "submarino
20th - Fox llld another's be- buntl" you'll pi JICJIIdni betIng structured .... !lirrounded ter.- IL
by all his goodies, owner Mark Dear llelllll
When a CCJ!Ill[o has been marStahl of the Dover Dell (Eaotolde U1ted - plnkJ delicatessen) ried otil1 llYt - · llld !beY
dlcm't stahl around but jetted _.-ate wltii lntontlmo &lt;1. _.

to his very m
brother Bob llowd In ChiC811P.
Now that Liz Taylor'o come out
so publicly against "promlooulaide

by

NW Loui&amp;i- Jl . ·
Wichita 111. · 95 ~ f11

losing lll)'portolth08epa)'11lents.
10 Villanova (21-4)
The exemption woulcl cover old
11. Oralie (21-4)
age survivon, widowa; and oth-

lns.

'-------------------.J

BY JACK O'BRIAN ·'
NEW YQRK - Btulooalre ,lean
Paul GettJr'o Irked that son Dlgene's In the H'wood Dim biz
.... Carpet t.reoon Ed Fields pod.
died so mflll)' of bls IIIDcy rugs
ID Brltlobers he's aplning a Ull-

TV sbow

year

Kl!naaa II!- so )rlla..t 11
.
New lla.fl CGI1 Q 3 z , . If

6. Purdue (1&amp;.4)
amount ot adciiUonal lU1III&amp;l t...
' 7. Kentuct&lt;r (20-4)
cmne an lndl vidual recel vlng So8. st. John's (NY) (22-4)

lPll--

There is a danger to aca·
demic freedom when you
substitute tbe methods of
violence for free luquiry.

live•.

Q-What II the eau10 and
appearance of acne rosea?
Can it be cured?
A-The cau10 of tbls dis·
ease, also called rosacea, is
unknown but it is often ag.
ly WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
gravated by emotional upsets, exposure to beat or
lions,
gonorrhea,
syphilis,
cold, a I coho I, spices and
Q-Caa pelieflll• be taken
gas ganp-ene, anthrax and drinks tllat contain caffeine.
for a long period!
dlphthena.
It is cbaracteri2ed by red·
A-Yes. It is sometimes
ness of the center of tho face
given daily for five years
Q--My 10u Is takiDC tetra.
which may be associated
alter an attack of rheumatic cycllne tablets. What are
with oily skin and pimples.
fever but for most infections they for? What side effects
Most victims outgrow it but.
prolonged use is not neces· may tbey bave?
meanwhile, the best treat·
sary.
ment is strict avoidance of
A-Tbla autlblotlc is given
aggravating factors and tile
for
typbus,
Q
fever,
spotted
Q-WIIat effoet could a
application of an astringent
fever,
bacilfever,
undulant
penicillin shot have on a perlotion !bat contains sulfur.
lary
dysentery,
tularemia
.
IOD who was allergic to the
For severe cases, a skin
and
several
other
diseases.
drug?
specialist
may use electro)y.
They may cause sore tongue,
A-The effeclo vary from a vomiting, diarrhea, skIn
SIS to destroy the dilated
mild case of hives to severe rash, lever and uremia in
blood vessels In the skin.
shock. The reaction is les.s persons who are sensitive to
.severe when the drug is the drug.
QUICK QUIZ
liven by mouth than when it
Q--My aoa, 11, is worrying
li injected into tile muscles.
Q-Which fedora~ depart·
about a lump on his fore- men!
hllB adopted a new emhead. It was X rayed and
Q-For what lnfeeUoDI is
blem.?
the doctor said it was noth·
A-Department o I the
V CW!n K prescribed?
lng to worry about. Wbat Treasury.
A-This Ia a form of penl·
could be the cause?
cWin modified to make it
A--8fact the doctor saw fit
Q-Whllt does a ,.now
effective when tak••n by
to have the tumor X rayed, fl4g nadicate when fil/lflQ 'If'
moutll. The penicillins are of
I assume it was not a fatty bocird 1hlp?
,greatest value in combaUng
tumor
or a wen. There are
A-The yellow flag is )he
pneumococcus pneumonia,
aeveral
types
of
benign
tuquarautlne
flag of au na·
scarlet fever, rheumatic
mor
of
the
skull
and
their
tiona.
fever, staphylococcus, lnfec·

Hado's

a

Jobnson (he's a thf.rd of the reasOn we watch it, the other two- a muaeum, or an lnvltatlm. to
thirds are not Rowan and • or help him wasb his oar 'MIUid be
Martin), HUllb He!Der of t h e
llljllare Playboy set, JollinY Des'lbere are lots of ~ that
mond of the singing mikes, pro- dOll'! coat mud! . _ , and
cmcer Jay Hamlck and Barbara they're a lot more fim !ban sitBain of "Mission: Impoaslble," ting in a oar IDr two or three
whom the others remember as hour&amp; glued to eaoh otberf
Wbat can be done to pt t b e
Milly Fogel ... . Arte Johnson Is
being groomed for his own next- point over to bo):a?- SICI'(',i\!;ii".'N:.

The love songs about the
moon should be rewritten
about tbe earth becliiiO It is
much prettier.
-Astronaut Frank B.,..,.,

'

WASIIINGTON - i901" Dlotrlct

~ot&lt;r

a brush off.
Send your teenage

' I

Co~W81Sman Cll.fenoo E: Miller today introduced blllln the
House o1 Repreaenlatlles to t...

East
W. L. Pet. GB
Miami • . • . 34 27 ,557

-NtiD York Gov. Net.on A.

· Althoulh the Ludlow experience maf not
be to tilelaste, nor wltllln tile capabilities,
of every community, it does show what can
be done. It does demonstrate tbat tbe usual
pattern need not be tile inevitable one.

DDCTDRIS MAILBAG

on

.

-~

;•

Raise ln~me
Of Pension4lrs
,..

By United

YOOTH ASKED FOR IT!
lbis eolumn Is 1Dr yrung peo. Jl)e, their probtemo and Jl)easures, their troubles and fun. Ao
with the rest of HOlen Help Us!,
It welcomes laushs hrt won't
dodge a serious questloo with

Crelllf:Jtoo '.79 NGtn 1,IIIIIt 'It

_:relll08lte 70; Ya , . 1. . If

College Ratin~ ,.

I

Miller 'Wotrld
·
.
~·

BfRRrS WORlD

dent.

,....

.

&lt;~

,u.,,..._,. • ,

llulce••

. . .'. .

!or

.. '

«,

Soul;llorn m; J$ . . . • •
t2 Ge!O~ff
.
wiu Fonst 87 Yi11111tt t4

St

fl'!ldo 75 West Vlr;lnla 57
Gl'l)', Who stored 21 goals aDII Ma11. 76 Nllll 111111&gt;IIhlr.• 50
. - 28 111hta
lhe Bl118oi f~ir181&gt;Dickon U2 WI,JliOr$3
!ann club, prevloUob - ilur 1&amp;1 99 Mlaals&amp;lppt St. 89
&amp;etlan with the · Loo AIWeleo Mlsoloslppl 78 Alsboma 72
Khwa. !\L Louis made room !or Ktnluckr 90 Auburn 86
Gl'l)' by · sendlnc deleoseman - Tu1one 101 Valparlao 90
B.Dl Pll&amp;er Ia ~~ City.
t
-~-~w-m--H.""'""
VHOW~Q.«_~~...,_,r.»,:"

law P."ofessor at the Uni·
verS!Ip of Oklahoma. to a
Woah1ngton safety inquiry.
1 ------------------..,

I don't think he's stum·
bled, and he's not made any
blunder of any consequence.
He's moved along cautious·
ly and prudently. There's no
real program yet, but you
bave lo give a new President
time to generate one.

M01111ay· 1 fr~ the ~· ·.clcy li81"?,"m n ·&amp;M~ ~lnl

!elm In ·*"e Central lljiekey
. Leque.
,
' ·

• Swlag U.S. billtle deatlla upwarjl'marlledly.
.WASHINGTON INEA)
• Convlace maoy Amerk!aDI !,be Viet Cong·North Viet·
Paradoxically ln8uentlal offlc.lals known .for tllelr hawk·
namese
forces are gaining otranl!lh.
Ish vl.Ws are privately urging President Nixon not to bomb
North Vietnam In retaliation for II• Chi \lllnh's current · • "Prove" to the w•t,weary here that Nlzon lo not dolnl
all be "an \Q.gelpeae~ at Pario . .
ofl'enslve.
These hawks believe tho winter.. prlnC "oleDIIYe," If It
There's no question that Ho's city attacks and his use of
the DemlUtarlzed Zone violate the terms President Johnson results In a Nixon decision to bomb the itorth, eould ICbleve
all three of tllese ends.
laid down when he ordered tile bombing halt.
In particular, bombing of tile North would be "convlllelng
It could be argued wltll considerable justice that if tile
United States is to convince Hanoi and Saigon we won't oell proof" to many tllat Communlot force• in VIetnam are 111
out Soutll Vietnam, we should not have taken a strong ·pub· strong tllat tho administration bellevel the O!IIY way out Is
lie stand that violations would mean tile resumption of to begin again tho air war over Ho's cOWttrY.
bombing-and then back down when Ho applies the pres·
This could well cause an uproar comparable to that Jolin·
son
faced .
.
sure.
Bill tho hawb .,.,ing Nixou to go alow (men with couold·
These hawks believe, therefore, tbat we lbould treat the
erable experleuce u Commualsl guerrUia tacllca) lhlak latest "offensive" as just another series of battlu In which
l'ftallatloo Ia wbat Ho desires. These men beUeve Ho wanll the VC·North Vietnamese were soundly troltiiCed deiJIIte
Nixon to bomb Hanel.
months of preparation and an arms bulld·UP made eUler
They point out Ho's major problem today Is to get .mov· by the bombing halt. (This assumes, of courM, that tha
ing again the antiwar agitation bere that was applied to Communists wUI be beaten as thoroughly mWtarlly in tbel)e
battles as they were at Tel a year ago.)
Johnson.
Of late, things ba~e been relatively qulel on tile stop·tll•·
Vietnam war' front. Ti&gt;'l!et tliat agitation steamed up sufll·
clentty to wring major lJ.S." concessions, Ho must:

Man believes that time
never seems to end, and
then he realizes tllat it be·
trays him with death, which
reduces to nothing, to ashes
all our uncertainties, every
one of our riches.
-Pope Paul.

-Hubert Humphrey,

lined streets, tile experts In urbanology
wrote U off, predicting on tile basis of past
experience that Ludlow would be almost
completely black by 1965.
The accepted "tipping point" for a
cbanglng neighborhood-40 per cent black,
when whlte withdrawal usually becomes
fli~t-was reached early , But tllen some·
thmg happened. The rate of cbange sud·
denly slowed and~ tllanks largely to the
efforts of the Luwow Association to halt
panic sales and attract new white as well
as black residents to the area, something
like stabilization was acbleved and has
been maintained. The community's racial
divisivn currently is estimated at 57 per
cent black and 43 per cent white.
Slabili2ation, not backtracking a decade
to an aiJ.white Ludlow, is tile aim-a ra·
cially mixed and balanced community
Association leaders admit they have noi
won, and do not expect to win, any lasUng
"victories." To relax the effort would
;. mp:mtt
· nJ:aPid, ~!'!.!!!!'.!L~.:\l)1l!~(o,b~k '

-

By RAY ClOMLEY, NEA Washington· Corrt~pondent

minister of defense.

'
ll!lno!Oor 72 ~

lrc r~ wlitK Terri .Gray wu . B.Y. Unit.eOI :Preaa ~~~
, proo,noted ta the St. ~- ~1!01 1.ons lslo,dl u. !% Sethi! Hoii"IIG , l«&lt;riiUOuio "

Don't Bomb Hanoi, Nixon Told

We can withdraw our
forces from the Far East but
we cannot tow the Brltliih
Isles away from Europe.
- Denis Healey, Britain's

Usual Does 1)4ot Mean Inevitable
The usual pattern makes a familiar and
disheartening !" ·ory.
One Negro family moves into a neighborhood and then another and another.
The reaction of the neighbors may vary
from exodus in panic to orderly withdrawal, but the eventual result is the
same. "Integration" lasts only as long as
it takes resident whites to dispose of their
homes and move to greener- or whiter\, pastures. And another black ghetto has
# been created.
The story out of an Oblo neil(hborhood
is not the usual one, however. Tfie Ludlow
Community Association reports that last
year more new white resldents than black
moved into its !().street neighborhood lo· •
cated parlly in Cleveland and partly in
adjacent Shaker Heights.
Of tho :Ill homes that changed hands dur·
ing the year, 15 had been owned by black
families and 11 by white. The new owner·
ship lin~ for the same 26 homes is nine
bw
·
17 1hite-&amp;9 iJ!cre~se of six
w . ~!'lilies .
1 ·
·
··
I is a small change but an important
one in Ludlow's decade-long effort to
break free of tile pattern. When the first
Negro family moved into the area of comfortable, even expensive, bomes on tree-

Hawks Wary of Reds' VIet Drive

One of the most obvious
and painfUl ironies In our
present national v lew of
crbne is that tbe average
citizen sometimes seems pr..
pared · for any 10lution eJ:·
rept one Which e0flt.4 woney.
-McGeorge B u n d y, Ford
Fou1tdaUott. e.tecutive.

lox Dollar Pinch On Rising School Budgets

,.

RAY CI=IOMLEY

TIMELY

College Seoret&gt; .

GRAY PllOMOTEt;l
•
. ST. l,;()Utt; tt!PO~ 11.~~-

Our papul•r 4-ply nrl•• ceril tl .. wldl hlgiJ ,..,.,....,
MIP·II'CIInd tltld, 1._ ~~~~~~ f.lrmo11 SUP·R-TUF•
ritlllllr
ktiiiiiii•ICII...,. lltlewlllllllliltl.

•n•

-•. ·

�.

.

.

ENJ~ Q., N~.
. ~tit~ 1869
!

'

•

Ted's Return Will-:, B·e'
,,

)

.

NEW YORK-iNEAi-lt is ~enerally accepted that Ted
Williams has ~iven his llle to baseball. That ls nol true.
He lias given his life to being Ted Williams. It just so
happened that striking a basehall was lhe eodeavor ht
devoted himself to.
•
But for all his success at it, he remained
Ted Williams. He seemed never to compromise himself.
Mercurial, impulsive. irrational, charm-

-

ing. charitable. sullen, joyous. A midure

•

r

manager; it all depends op how lhiB·
.
,
No ~reatba,..ball player has been a suceessful; let,alone ·
great, b8sehall manager. !'iPt Ty Cobb, not Waller John·
son, not 'Rogers Homsby. A ~ommob belle! IS tblit they
expeeted too mueh from their players; it was dlfflcult 11.
not impossible lor them· to comprehend or accept .lhe fact'
that others could nqt perform-or drive themselves-:-the
way they did as players. '·
"Peop'e alWayo aahl ibal It r,a• my aalural abl!\iY ·aad
good eyeoiKhl (Ztl-1511hal were \be ..,asou for my oueeeo0
ao a hitter," oald WUIIamo. "Bullhev never lalt; about tile
practlee. Practice! Praetlce! PractiCe! D~;~mmlt, you gotta
re,na~kabole n:otur.al reso.lli'Ce Is harnesaed.

cated to his profession, which he elevated

to an art.
So It is a good

&lt;

~. of Immense help orimmepse harm

mass of contradictions. He was consistent.
however, in being- individualistic and dedithin~

that Ted Williams ·
has, after several years of retirement
from active play, returned to baseball as manager of the
Washington Senators. .
There seems a growing grayness to baseball and ba&amp;e·
ball players now. Baaeballlo oullerlng, oeeordlng to people
like Manhall MeLuhan, lrom being out of step with today's
fast-pared socletyi passe-too slow for TV. And ba&amp;eball
players are now as interested In pensions as pennants.

prarttee.''

Williams' presence will stimulate the game. as it did
when "The Kid" was the incomparable hitter and enfant
rerrible of the Boston Red Sox. Truman Capote once de·
scribed the entrance of a certain woman into a room as
··a delicate happenin_g." Williams' entrance, into a room
or a du~out. is an electric happening. Even now, at age 51 .
Everyone. within degrees, cares what others think of
him. But a Ted Williams cares less than others ioutward1), anywav 1. His supreme confidence in his supreme abilities is an important £actor. "l've found that you don't
need to wear neckties if you can hit." he said.
A fan once remarked: ··Ted Williams is what every man .
wou!d like to be- so l!ood at his work that he can tell his
boss to go to hell."

•.

.'
''

"For me/' wrote novelist John Updike, "Williams is the
classic balJplay 0r .rot..thelg~~me on a hot ~ugust weekday,
belore a small crowd, when the only thing at stake IS lhe
tissue-thin diflerence between'll"lhin~ done well and a thing
done ill .... No other player visible to my generation con·
centrated within himself so much ol the sport's poignance,
so assiduously refined his natural skills, so constanUy
brought to the plate that intensity ol competence !hat
crowds the throat with joy ."
If he impat:ts j. ust some of his dedication to his players,
Ted Williams wi I be a good ' thln~ lor the Washington Sen·
'a tors.
.

... ..... .......•••••..•......

·• ••• ••• • • • • ··- tr···-·········-·····-·········· ···

:i:!

4

......

,

side In district tournsmont play.
For instance, if secord-rlted
canton McKinley· (21).1) and No.
5 r.larllngton (21..0) survive their
ft.rst.-rouiiJ canton District tests
as e)ll)eeted, they'll meet in the
finals.
Marllrwtm meets Cloverleaf
(15-6) Wednesday while CIJKon
McKinley races Clinton Lehman
(18-3) on Tlursday, a team lt
de!Mtef; by 15 polllts not long

.,

CLASS AA
1. Columbus East (19-0l vs.
London (19-1) Wednesday at Columbus,.
2. canton McKinley (20-1) vs.
cantoo Lehman (18-3) Thursday
at canton.
4, Toledo Libbey (1!&gt;-1) vs.
Slnclusky (2()..2) Friday at Toledo.
5, Marlington (21-()) '" Cloverleat (15-6) wednesday at ea~

ion.

Rutgen and West Texas State.

These lour joined Boston
College which became the first
team 1o accept a bid last week.
Temessee and Baylor are

the better New York City-area

which are usually cslled
upon lo roond out the Oeld
because of thelr crowd-drawing
ability,
After the probably addition of"
another lour or llvo teams
loday, tho NIT figures 1o walt
IUltil tho completion of all
eonterence races at the end t1
the week, before issuing its
remaining Invitations. Almost
automatic choices for the
touroey are ty runners.upln tho
Mlsoourl Valle,y, Atlantic Coos~
Big Eight and Western Athletic

teams

6. zanesville (tl!-0 vs, Bellalre St. John's (26-1) Thursday at Steubenville.
7. Jlamll""" Qarli'!ld (1e4) ,&amp; . .
. .. , .
· .'·
•..
:.,;
""
vs. 'Cincinnall M~ Healthy (Ill- · "' · ·
· ·
·
ago. f
:
'·
Fourtll-nted AJ. power Toledo 9) Tuesday at Oxlord. ,.
8. Slndusk,y (26-2) vs. Toledo
Libbey (19-1) and No. 8 Slnduskf (20-2) meet head-on Friday Libbey (l!&gt;-1) Friday at Toledo.
The Kingsbury Missl0111ry Club Mr. and Mrs. Virgil carl and
at T&lt;iedo.
9. Columbua SOOth (15-2) met ol the carleton Church had its sons am Mr. and Mrs. Dwight
SIJdl&gt;.nted Zanesville (18-1) Grove City (15-4) Mmday at
regular meeting at the church Carl end family visited recently
~eel Allen HOl'Jllllk and Bell· Columbus.
at which time the evening was with Mr. andMrs.GuyThomaand
alre St. John (:!Il-l) Thursday 10. East Liverpool (1!&gt;-0 vs. spent in sew'ng. The devotionals family,
II sandusky. Hori\Yik has carrollton (1:&gt;-5&gt; Thursday at were taken from n Timothy wtth
Mr. and Mrs. Elmo Smith and
&amp;COred more lhlll 2,300 points In Steubenville.
sons
had as recent visitors Mr.
Mrs. Delores King in charge. A
CLASS A
hts prep career and averaged
special. reading, "Fishing in A and Mrs. Glendale Skidmore.
2. Zane Trace Ross (23-0) vs. Tub" was presented by CoUoe
46 point! a pme this seaSOD.
Richard Heilman, a tanner
' In Claas A pairings, nlnth- Fodenl Hocking (16-5) Wedneo- Hudson. Mrs. Janoth Deal gave resident of this comm.unU,y. fell
l'IIIJ.ted Bloomville (21-0 muot day at Chillicothe.
the secretary report. Thecloslng at tho honte of his daughter r&amp;bnoo" delendllll! -.ey cham- 3. Fort Recovery (2Z-O vs. pflYer was by Mrs. Neva King. cently suffering a badly sprained
pion Manofteld SL Peter's (17~ Ft. Jomlngs (19-5) Friday at The entire gr&lt;q:~ honored Mrs. knee. He is a patient at Meigs
Friday at Gillon lo keep Its ti- Lima.
Janoth Beat on her blrtlday by General Hospital.
4. West Musldngum (1!&gt;-0 vs. singing 11 Happy Birthday.'' fte..
tle iq&gt;es lit YO,
Mr. and Mrs, VIrgil Carlond
If No. 3 Fort Recovery (2Z-I) Sk,yvuo (17-S) Thursday at New rreshmenta or birthday cake. cof. soos were eveningvisitoraotMr.
and 10111 rated st. Henry (21-1) Concord.
fe;, sarxlwic:hes, mint&amp; lo:l Kool· and Mrs. Larry Farley, Loov
6, Bridgeport (20-0 vs. Hiland
ocore ~ - round district
wl111 at Uma, they'll meet each (15-'1) Wednesday II Sleube"'
viDe.
other In the championship.
7. Caraway (1!&gt;-2) vs. ML
Fort Recovery hosts Fort JenDbva (19-4) and st. Henry e"' Pleasant (20-1) at Steubenville.
9. Bloomville (21-ll vs. Mans- · Miller Cl~ (ls.s) Frlda,y
neld
St. Peter's (17-6) Friday
aigh~
Four members of United al Galton.
Press Jnternatioral.'s tcv ten 10. St. Henry (21-ll vs. Miller
.... alreldy lallen by the way- City (1s.s) FridaY at Lima.
dde, lncludlfll! tq&gt;.rated -er
Prize WIDnen
strasburg. The Tigers were
Joined by DIXie (No. 5) liD COir
Despite HIt I e r ' s anti·
lias Western Reserve (No. ,8). SemitiC laws and terrorism
Third-rated Lima Bath wu against the Jews in the
the only Class AA cll!blo suffer 1930s, the~· eonstltuted 29
per cent of Germany's Nobel
Metional defeat.
Prize winners, according to
Here Ia the District picture the
Encyclopaedia BritanIncluding UPI's Top Ten teams: nica.

BEFORE APRIL 1

.

Mrs. .Sadie cart, Mrs. Faye les sayre recently,
Pratt, Mrs. LoW se Harrison,
Mrs. Hazel Arnold ani Lester
liD
E\'Oline &gt;hlted with Mr. and
Mrs. Helen Dais, Mrs. New Kbv,
Mrs. Wlrmle White, Mrs. Eliza- Mrs. l'lltrlck WUUama and son,
beth Murray, Mrs. Delores Kq David, at Chester.
Miss Linda Beat ancl Mlss Grace
lroquo'- Society
King.
The
Iroquois Indian sociMr. and Mra, Maartln Smart
ety
came
close to helng a
of Columbus l'isited wilh Mr. and
matriarchy.
The clan wa1
Mrs. Roger Y~ over a recent
based on deseent through
weekend. They also vl&amp;ited with the women who owned erops
Mr. and Mra, Wayne Beat and and houses. Although they
family liD Mra, Homo Beal. did not actuaUy rule, the
Mr. and Mrs. sanford WeD ol women chose the rulers and
Athens VIsited recently wlth Mr. had the power ol reeau il •
and Mrs. John Dean and sons chiel did not live 1'1' to ex·
pectations. ·
liD Mrs, Leoora Dean.

SAVE

5

50.00

THE omo UNIVERSITY SYMPHONIC Band will make nine sppearances
on ite 1969 spring concert tour beglnnirw MoOOay, March 17. Gene P. Th~~U­
kill dli-ector of unlveraity bands, and hls 72-member symphonic unit oPen
tw~ appearances March 17, the first at Wahama High School, Mason, ••

with

Washington
White Paper

the~·..:•:.-.

=:

BY WILLIAM S. WHITE
WASHINGTON - From t h e
whole range ot home issues,
President Nixon has chosencampua disorders lor hio ftrst truly major commitment tD action
In the domestic Oeld.
The Preslderi' a denunciation
of student rioting, made In a letter saluting the strong line taken
by Father Thaodore Hesburih ol
Notre Dame University, was In
faol the algnallor a push lnvolv.
tng in one way or another the Adminlstration•s total resrurces.
The long and ohort ol II Is that
the government has selected the
frenzy of the campuses lor a display or a groat deal more than

2-PIECE

SUITE

$67

looking to repeat its previous second NIT appearance.
NIT appearance In 1967 when It
swept lo the championship with
lcto 1
St Peter' ·
r.es
Rutgers and
r(Jletle.
Temple, . . 'Is nostrangerto
the NIT, iilaklng lis eighth
appearsnee 'and third In the last
~HOES FOR THE
four years.
ENTIRE FAMILY
West Texas state, a surprise
dlOiee, earned lts NIT bld by
posting an 18 _7 reeord, Including
wins over 12th-ranked Colorado
WHERE SHOES ARE
Stale, all ol whom will be
SEMSIBL E PRICED
appearing In the National
Middleport, 0.
Collegiate 'Aihlstic Auoelallon

v

i.e,. ,

s,

mere moral disapprobation of

academic hoodlumiom.
Not only has Mr. Nixon asalgned the tq&gt; member ol his Admlniotratlon, Vlce-Preoldent 51&gt;1·
ro Agnew, to monitor the issue,
In oooperstion with the nation's

NAME
BRAND

Govemors, among othen. T h e
entire Cabinet, save ro:r Secretary of State William Roger&amp;,
hao liso been brought into the
picture.
By . necessity, however, t h e
real buck stops at the desk of
Attorney General John Mlfcholl.
Mitchell, though tUlly conscious
of tho essential constitutional
llmltallons on tho Federal fP'·
ernment's power to deal with lo-

Society News

THE SHOE BOX

)
I '

an..-

Itinerant revolutionaries going
from campus to campus will draw
Nixon administration's
double w,hammy
.·
it a Federal crime --. a felony
._ to cross state lines for the
purpose or Inciting lo riot or
Jllblic dleorder. To make a case
here ls admlttedlynoteasy, since
effective prosecuting actuaUy re-

Carpenter
News, Notes

1-

subYerting the Vietnam war polIcy, the military draft and the
like.
It Is to these typos - and
really only to these types - that

the Attorney General intends to
apply the sanctioos of the Safe
!:lreets Act. The reasoning is that

tr out-and-out revolutionaries can
be brought tD trial, under tho IIIII
daylight of due process, It ean
be shown that tho undoubted right
of peaceful protest and dissent II
being perverted In!&lt;&gt; obviously
lawless disorders wholly removed from any student's legitimate
academic concerns.
The end purpose, In short, is
lo separate the truly bad leilows from authentic students who,
in any row with theuniversltyad-

Daughter Observed

Is Entertained

mlnlstration, are prone to aide

with those one believes are one's
own.

When Mitchell, a tall, urbane
lawyer late oC Wall Street, dis-

cusses these matters, his coocern Cor gellllne civil liberties
is as sensiUvely obvious as is
his firm determination to break
thelongproeessbywhichnonstudent revolutionaries have been
able to beclood the real issues
on many camp.~ses.
. .,TIJ~-~olr&amp;ll.oo.'s...IOUJral
mollvallons 1n· ill'llllo"lltt''twu,
Tho llrst Is olmply that sound
pub)lc policy manllestiyrOQJlres

..

'••

'

•

,'t

.. ,

\I

'

..

·.~

,.

MASON - Mrs. Jack Hiley,
Mason, entertained recenUy the
Loyal Helpers Class or the AIM

bright United Methodist Church
at her home.

Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mason.
read scripture rrom Philippians.
&amp;loopy.
Readings were al$ogivcnby Mrs •
Games were played. lee Brooks Edwards, Mrs. T. R. [)a.
cream, cake and beverages were
vis, Mrs. Lillian Grimm, Mrs.
served by Heidi, and Linda Ea- John
Roach, M r s. Alburtice
son, Beth Wilson, WallY Raynes, Young, Mrs, Charlctt.e
Lisa Kenney, Tena Gibbs, BridMrs. Homer Johnson, Mrs.
~ Johnson, Angella Johnson,
lard Clay, Mrs. Glen Thmnpsoo,
Renee Keeney, Grant Hysell and Mrs. Vorlie Workman and Mrs,
Cheryl Huber,
William Newton.
"
Games were vlayed and priz..
os won by Mrs. Willard Clay and
The Almanac
Mrs. John Roach.- Mrs.. Dorothy
By Uolted Press International
Cartwright, received lhe door
Today Is '!Uesday, March 4, prize. Attending the meeting were
the 63rd day o! 1969 with 302 lo the above listed persons and
follow.
The moon is full.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus
and Saturn.
On this day In hl-y:
In 1791 Vermont became the
14th' state,
In 1801 the third president ol
the United &amp;ates, Thomas
Jefferson, became the first
chief executive to be inaugurated In Washington.
.. 1963 the &amp;lpreme Court
ruled against rallroad '"feather-

bedding."

f:all Answc!n~l

Sunday

The l!aclne Emer- ~
answered • eall f!uK1ay !llllil
1o the non Petrel residence"""'
Ben Petrel, Jr., 22, wa11IL Ill
was transported to the I!Dlzao
Medical COllier Where 110 :wu
sdmltted as a medical , . - .
Monday momlilg the ·~
Fire Department joined llle !faohan Fire Department tD ~I
blaze at the Car] Poisser nil·

p;.;;o;.-;;;;;;

IHI....I

'

•

fiNISHI~

IIV

SAME DAY
SERVICE .

In AI 9 - Out At 5
(IHitrl

66 Buick Wildcat Z Dr. H.T.. ............ $1895
White over green, beige vinyl int., PB, PS, radio,
auto. trans., new w/ s / w tires, low mileage, locally
owned. Reol sharp.

KARl &amp; VANZANDT MOTOR WES
"You'll Like Our t.luality Way of Doinl BUllae."
Cadillae-Oidamoblle
f t......
992·5342
Po.,...,, U1PU

THE
ELEITRII
HEAT PUMP

with the protestors on the gener.
al human Inclination tD go along

J

c•

.

an end to the destruction ol civutt;y in tortured universities.
The second is a lively awareness
that ol all the oomplox olleellngs bound up In the phase HJaw
and order," perhaps the most
sensitive lo the IIUbli&lt; Is the
spectacle of obscene violence
.In halls o! Ivy where until lately this sort o! thing had boon as
remote as the moon used to be.

Charley Jones, 78, oneorour
Mr. and Mrs. CUfton Fraley,
oldest and most respected ciU- Jr., and son, Mallory, W, Va.,
zens, passed away at Pleasant are spending some time here
TUESlAY
· Valley Hospital, following a with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
. !IEGl,I.MlJ. §I;A:f~.-~!!8&lt; .Jtro!ol., J)lq~.(!'.Qtll AAJ:V4&lt;!.•"- . C!f!Jir.~n!oes. , , • - -.. •· lio
~ _
Mlddj~ l.Odi'!· ieB;;~M, 'Ulld!ld'tlii 'IIIIIOI'II'II'll8111!lv1111J ·"-Mrs. ·j!llen F•ct!l'l'!"Wit . sTuesdlil, . 7:30 p.m.; .retreah- were Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fall, tess tD lrlends and relatives lor
¥ow meetJni, Maater Thor carsey and daughter, 1.00- a Staoloy Par~ on ThursdareveMaaoho b!Yited.
lsa and M. A. Epple.
nlng, Those attending were Paula
POMEROY CHAPTER 186, OrMr. ani Mrs, Jake Leo o1 Ra- Miller, Darla Facemyer, Ruby
der of tbe EuternStar,7:45 p.m. cine were recent visitorsor:Mra. Jordan, Rorxla Ice alii chlldren,
Friends here have learned of
at the Pomeroy Masonic Tem- Katie Wilson.
Denie Perry, Amy L&lt;Mther, the birth of a daughter, Mary
ple, Tuelday; JnittDfton.
•
Mrs. Nellie Borg11n took up Hazel, Dunigan, Louise Ellil, Elizabeth, to Rev. ai'Kl Mrs. HowW,S.C.S., Enterprise Unit\d money tor the Heart F'wli.
Hazel CUlwell, Elizabeth Jordan, ard Mayne on Feb. 19. The little
Methodist Church, 7:30 Tuesda,y
Recent visitors of Ava Gilkey Sharon Pickett aOO daughters, one has three sisters. Rev. Mayne
night at the home of Mrs. Don were Mr. and Mrs. M. A. Ep- DoiU8 Facemyer • local, and the is pastor of the AI~ Charge
Humel.
pie. Mrs. Minnie McGrath,. Mrs. demonstrator, Gladene Ryan, The or the United Methodist Church
Henry Waggoner,
Margaret Plains.
which includes Temple Church.
WEDNES&gt;AY
Douglas, Mrs. Howard Gllkey
Faye Jordan and Ida DeMI!on
Murl Galaway went by ambu·
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S C I u b, alii daughter, Jackie Clinton Gil- spent Wednesday night and Thurs.. lance to University Hospital in
Wednesday night In the dwrch
key, Alblny.
day with Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Columbus on saturday for obauditorium following Lenton • ·
Mr Tom Wells a patient at Jordan and called on their cous- servation and treatmenL
vices.
Meig; General is ~e lmprov- in, Maude Jones, in Albany on
Mr. and Mrs. Dean Blackwood,
MIDDLEPORT
LITERARY
ed tnd expects to be released Thursday afternoon.
Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Ray Myers,
Club, Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. at
in about a month.
Mr. and Mrs. Errol Pickett aB1 Mr. and Mrs. DonWilsonan:l
home of Mra. Nan Moorei Mrs.
A large crowd attended the and daughters, Dayton, visited Pamela met with Mr. and Mrs.
M. L. French to review ..Adlfuneral of Mrs. Etnml Bright Laura Krebs and son, Mr. and Earl Starkey on Friday evening.
rondackl Country" and M r a.
at the Presbyterian Clturch. Mrs. Mrs, Victor Perry and other rei· The men are trustees or ML UnHJU'Old Sauer, .,Stipe of a Year."
Brighl, sultertng with a heart atlves here.
ion Church and Mr. Starkey Is
SOUP SALE by youth ol t h o aUmeTt. had been sick 1 long
Mary Massey, Spring(ield, treasurer. An audit of the chlll'ch
Bradbury Church ol Cl!rlot, Sot. time.
spent the weekend here wlth her books was conducted.
urdayj 60 centa a quart. Orders
Mr. Virgil Atldns, whose Ul- parents, Mr. and Mrs. Brqdford
Revival meeting wUI begin on
to be placed by Wednesday at ness has been mentioned before, Massey.
Moncla.y evening, March 10, at
992-5178 or 992-568L Will deliv- lo slightly lmprovlrw at Unlver•
Friends here have learned that 7:30 p. m. at the M~ Union
er.
olty Hospital In Columbu"' He Mro. GraeeHunterofnoor Albany Church. Rev. Evan Edwards of
TI!UIIIJIA)'_
was the raolplent of two pints ol lo • patient at Mount St. Mary' a Atheno .,.w be tho o&gt;ango)ls~
MIDDLEPORT EVANGELINE blood Monday. Mro. Atkins re- Hoopltal In Nelsonville.
Guosll of Mrs. Hael Burke
~ ~72.,0rdoroftheEI!Itera 11111as In Columbus.
Mr. and Mra. Lawrence Bowen duri!W the weekenl were Donald
Star, 7:30-.~ nlgbt at the
Mr. Ole Whale,y has been re• and llmlb and Mr. ani Mro, Burke, Bryan and Jimmie, ani
Muonie T-.,.e; .olio,oer lor the turned 1o his homo from 1 Par· Ralph Woodrum ol the Athens Mr. and Mrs. O)llo B. B!D'ke f&gt;!
kitchen to~,; ' '"
kersbutg hoopltal.
area vlolted with Mr. and Mrs. Cincinnati; Mri!'llebron Burke
MEIGS couNrt' 1\!notlcanRed
Mr. Rlcbard Hollman Is a pa- Alva RltlO on Sunday.
andi!r Pjtrlda:liol daugiiCroaa a.e,pter bolfd. mefllll&amp; tlef\1 at Meigs Gonerol, the reMr. and Mro. Ray Stout and \or
~l,lllcliiotllurke
8:30 p.m. Tbutodl,Y at Vel!lrailo sullolalall.
family of CllarJ,oton, W. VL, 'H
W I); · ~ifoOJ. Mar:
Memorial Hospital.
· Mr. Llucoln Ruosell lo l P8- wer~ suests ol his pareRs, Mr. ' shsll iitiikl.; 1~ at.OUi Ath• ·
pAST CHIEFS. Mapllla T- tlenl a1 Vetenns Memorial with .. ani Mro, Robert Stout.
..
ORI, aJcj Mr. aNt Mr~ ~rl
Mr. and Mrs. Clrloo Slha and K-lt&lt;&gt;n and family of All*lly,
pie, Pythian Sisters, Thurodl,Y~ a vlril&amp;.
7:30 p.RL at home ol Mro. El'!IO
Mrs. Ruby Halliday dois not iamily of Snowvlllo llXI Dr, and Other. recent lJUOIII ol M r o.
Jesse.
.
.._ .much Improvement. Mrs. Mro.lrwln Unger and cbUdrenot Burki "ore Mr. odd Mr&amp;. Roger
MEETING OF MEIGS L 0 cal ~ua Atkins ·lfXI ~Ira. Sl1aron Aihena woreSuiii!IIYdinnersueats Burilt .'and family of Charleston,
Sch!Xi Dl&amp;trlct Ohio Aoaocl&amp;tlon .lewsll are caring lor IIOr.
of Mr. ~nd Mrs. GoneJerroraond w. y&amp;.
ol Publle School EmjJioyos, 7:30
Mrs. Lola cain spent the-to- family,
.
loin. Con Ator vlalted&gt;her sonp.m. Thursday at Meigs Junior end with Mr. liD Mrs. OOe .· Amolltltheatatte~thestyle . i~wand~ter,Mr.~Mrs.
High School; Dole Melnl,yro, Williams.
Show and Teo lfi!OIIIIored by tho ~ Whltii!Wtoo and daughters
sch!Xi -loyoos retirement
Mr. ani. Mro. Roborl ~k Future .Homemaker&amp; Cla11 at ind eiftecl at the homo ofMr, and
representative, speaking; oil non- vlolted F, 0,' Whale}' lo ~Wn- Alexanler · High .School recently 1Nra. Joo McWhorter,
cortl!ted employes Invited. Jl&amp;. ~· ·reoentb:., ~·· Whaley. •'"" were Mr. and Mrs. Lavern Jor. ,. Mr, ani Mrt, Olllo Burke vlsltfreshmOniHIIII,do4!!' prize.
poets heart IUI'I,trY ·at ,Cleve- 111'!&gt; Mrs. Lew•s Smith, Mro. 1 ed .herparento, Mr.andM'rs, Lyle
SOUTHEAS'lt,lu,i OIUOGuo.,.. ~ Cllnl.c In the ~ lulure. Froda Heyd, Mr. and Mrs. Leo"'t Clwi&gt;lllO!I durlrw.part o1 the time
sey Breeder• At~n, 11-': wl"'
Mr. and Mrt.t• J!uil DoUglas ard4!rooko and RodneY., ·'llzel ·they were In .this area the past
ter meeUng and potl~ck dliller, vlol.,..·.hlo •mother, Ella Dou8- Dunigan, Mro. Clay J~,~· wOekenl.
7:30 p.m.. Thursdayl jlouthetn. lis; Ill~ 1\ tho Veterans Mom- Barbara, Mrs. ~ ·~
Mr. and Mrs. John Mathias,
High Sch!Xi, Racine. Member• oi'taJ 11""1~. Mrs. PouKII• iulo and daughter and Wol!"r, 1~• daughtars, Vallie and Tonda, or
a,n1 lrlenla Invited.
lerilera roeent heart •ttae~ ani who represelied lho ~re Baltimore, Qhlo, visited her
LAUREL cUFF Ballor Health 1o Under CIJ1gen mOil .r the' Farmsrs at the event. Glrlo Who eouolna, Mr•.and Mrs. Joe MeClub, 7:30 Tlursday at the bonlo lima. · ·
· , . . participated were Kay Elllo, Whorter and daughters.
ol Mro. Gone Thompson. · , . ,, Mrs.' Elole w_.., visited Kathy J.owlhor, carla Brooko,
Weboter Fleomyre Is confined
Bricklayero locli 31!, I p.m. Elliol!iiPie Tiooidl)'; · ·
Rullr Ann, Jordan, Nancy Smith, to a hospital in Huntington, W,
Thursday, at the foonero.Y. to~ce TIJrner; ·~~- oon of carolyn Hoyd ani Helen ,Peck. VL for oboorvation and treat·
lion hall. Relrellh...,., wW ba ..the late H..rard Tlirnor, paosoil · Vlns Rutherlont ol col~bes mont.
served by Etza GilmOre.
away recenlly In Akron, Ohio, spent ·Tuesday niBJlland WednesKatherine Lawoon spent Sltur•
FRIDAY
.
from 1 heart attack.
day with her mother, Mro. Faye day and SUI)lay In Dayton as a
MEN'S Brotherhood, Enter- . Mro. n... Wolah II reported Jordan.
dolepte I r o m Alhono tD the
prise United Molhecllol Clntreh, . ill ant e&lt;Jnililo\lln the hoopltal
Mr. and Mrs. wuu..,. Lawson, Ohio Women' a .Bowllni Asoocl,i.7,30 FridaY night it the .bonle o1 lor heart tro!&gt;ble.
Mike, Pat, and Glen, Walter J.,.. lion Stale meetlll!.
·
.Eldon W.Oks.
Mrs. Tom weui ' visited Mr. dan, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mat~ BA)IE ' SALE, POmet'OJ Ele- · and Mr&amp;. ·Arthur GOOilln recent- tox and lllarlo .See! ol the Temple
mentarY P. T.A. Frljla,ya' DUke ])', , &gt;' ,,
: ..;~. ·' \
Church ~··IOrvl&lt;e' \ll•!ho
World's ~ardest Umber Is
Cli&amp;JIIrl.
·
, ·~
,1 ,
~ .Mlnl~, ~ ~&amp;
black · Jronwood 11'0111 the
SHRINERS. DAJ'lCE oeaolon,
'On Tilasday eveni!W- Rev, Ft'lnk West 111\!leo, 'th~ sQtithi!rn tip
....
A&amp;
lllaoQoile
Tern·
Tljere
are
~~ut
32
ski
runs
P~eo ol Philiijlpl, w•. Vt.i ol f~ld8, y,U.ata~· •l!d Brit·
7
Friclll'o ·•r 1 Wowl-'· , In Verm911ts qreen Mo'ln- ! hold'""
lVII yl 0 there.
pllbl..mtnt "n . ~- , • talni.
, f
·
,, .
:-··
l"'~nv
·" f c • -, ~ ''~ l{anelurJs:

menta

Aspecially-equipped
Buick Skylark CustOm
Sport COupe at
special savlt1gs.

pe-

Va., in aa
1'1111 ....... II 7:30 the- wDl be II
Charleston High School, Oiarleston, W. Va. Ernest E. Bastin. assistant pr~
feasor of muslc at Ohio University wiD be the featured soloist on the band
tour, He will perform Hwnmell' s "TrUJq)et Concerto."

quires the hardest job or proof In
all the crlminallaw; that is, the
marshalbtg of unassailable evidence of what amounts to a conspiracy. Still, the thing eon be
done, and Mitchell Is resolutecal dleordera, is nevertheleas ly determined lo do lt.
The Federal Bureau of Investar from weapmlesa here. He is
tigation
has long since been afirst of sll making cooperative
arrangemento with the Gover- ware that whUe some student
nors and local ot!lclals to give udemonstratlons" are strictly
to them Indirect assistance wherM home-gown, some others are
ever he lawfully can. More fomented by leap-lrogging non.
Importantly, he Ia pro.(lOI'ing tD student and thoroughly a d u I t
exerclae one undoubted Federal "actl.vlsts" of the Far Left who
authority that has nover thuo lar go from caJillllB to Catnp!S to
exploit fancied or real academbeen Invoked,
This is a section of the Safe ic grievances and to turn them
streets Act or 1968 which makes into violent campaigns aimed at

Harrisonville

"

Aid were enjoyed b,y Mrs. Calloe BotloRL
Mr. llXI Mrs. Charles King
Hudson, Mrs. Janeth Deal, Mrs.
Allee King, Mrs. Virginia Dean, visited wlth Mr. and Mrs. Char--

AIR CONDITIONING

ORDER
NOW

(NCAA) tourney.

:dust~ ~~v~. re:~: a~r= ~~~: ::;.':\ wh~~:·:;;~ ::.•~4~ ~: ~~=:

..
teams hoping to receive b1ds
lrom the National Invitational
Tournament &lt;Nm t,odaY as the
lXlSt-sea&amp;Oil basketball classic
DlO'Ied closer lo filling Its 16team field,
Eleven ol"""ngs remained for
the 32nd amual NIT, March 1322 at Madison S.,.are Garden,
following Monday's selection 0(
former champions SOOUlem
Dllnois and Temple along with

Kingsbury News, Notes

r

~~

conference•. a11 of which are 6.foot-7forwardSimmloHUl.
NEW YORK (UPO- TOMes- runners"'p In . the Southeastern still in doubt.
Rutgers, in the midst o1 its
aee, Baylor, Fordham, Long and Southwest conferences,
Southom·Diinois, led by senior finest •son in history, wlminl

I

COLUMJlUS (UPO - By the
time the smoke clears this
weekend, several of the state's
tq&gt;.rated Class AA IJll A powera wiU have fallen by the wa,y..

········

ll Openings Remain In NIT Event \i

,01n-Ranked
,.,eams
.,
~ r
~
To Fall This Week ::;:~. ~~v~ty

.I-

·

·.· ··········-·. · ··-·.···-·.·· ·- · ··········· ··· ·· ········· ··· ·············:-· ·······:·:·:·:~-······:···:oe.;·-.;~-~::;tl:·;·;·:•:-;·~:o;•;.;.;-;_
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'

.:::::~~:~=~:::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~:~::::::::::::::~·: ••: ••• :·:-w:·:·=·=·:·:·.·=~~:.:.. ·.:•.-:.:;:.:-:.:~

Church Class ,

MASON - Mrs. Paul .Huber,
Mason, entertained recently with
a party In honor ol her daughter, Heidi's siith birthday at the
!Iuber home on Third Stroe~
Tho teble cover and plates rea·tured Charlie Brown and his do&amp;

lr IRA IERKOW, N£A ·Spiorts'Editor .I

of adjectives described Ted Williams. A

Sixth Birthday of

Q
A

work?
A heat pump 1s a rdri,'!:nation machine
which , by automati cally reversing itself, heats .1s well
as cools. 1t IS a singie unit that uses only air anJ electricity (iuM like your electric refrigerator)- no fuet
no water.

Q

Vl hat makes it Jlffercnt from other yt:ar
'rounJ air conditioners~

A

Pnncipi1lly thts -- the heat pump IS all electric . It cools without water and heats without
burning fuel of any kind~ .. . makes efficient usr of
electricity only. It is a dream of electrical living come
true - clean, convenient and safe. ·

Q
A

~m~

Q

Will the heat
make a difference in the
way we live and worki\

It certainly will' Here are only a few of the

benefits you will enjoy with a heat pump. Comfort
... air at just the right temperature- filtered and
clean-gently circulated the whole year 'round. Clean·
liness .. . reduces dirt, dust and odor contamination .
Convenience .· .. one thermostat setting maintains the
desired temperature range- automatica1ly- all year
long. Safety . . . no flame to worry about. Investment
... boosts property value and protects investment over
the years.

Q
;. ,A

A

Yes Since a heat pump is an air movement
system usmg hath incioor and outdoor air in Its ope.rat!On , lt supplies fresh a1r automatically.

Q

What about inuial cost ;

A

Gent:rally speaking, the cost of a heat pump
is comparahle to that of a· central heating system plus
a central cooling system. Factors such as size and con·
struction - and the proposed location of the heat
pump enter into the determination of initial cost. Call
the Elcctnc Company. We will have one of our rec·
ommended electric heating-cooling dealers give you
a "dollars and cents" f1gure

Q

What about operating cost?

A

Is the heat pump truly automatic?

YES! Set the automatic thermostat to your
liking, air conditioning comes automatically, no mat·
ter what the season. You don't even have to fltp any
switches. Switchover between heating and cooling is
completely automatic-from season to season, within
the same day, or even hourly. On a cold mornmg, for
example, you'll get heating. But if the weather should
suddenly turn uncomfortably warm after the sun
comes out, your heat pump will reverse itself . .. to
provide cool c~ automatically.

A

What about fresh air-indoors ~

just what is a heat pump and how docs it

How big an area will a heat pump cool and

heat?

Qf cou!Se. the type of construction is impor·

tan·t here ... suChJactors as insulation, glass area ,
shading, .'and so forth. However, heat pump models

are avallallle, that will cool and heat homes of five to
eight rooms and larg~r. for Jqdustry, heat pumpf meet
&lt;lacting cOrnlllercial customer needs ... eitheNingly
, or in multiples to provide complete, customized, zone·
by-zone comfort wherever it is needed.

Surprisingly low, thanks to the fact that a
heat pump requires no water for cooling, and delivers
more than two units of heat for every heat unit of
electricity it uses. The Electric Company has a spe·
cial low electric heat rate and can furnish specific
annual operating figures for heat pumps.

Q

Will th e heat pump increase construction

A

No On the contrary, many savings can be

costs?

realized. For instance :
No connection to chimney flue is required . No

fuel

storage tank or gas connections are required. No cooling tower is required. No attic fan or other forced ven~
tilation is required.

Q
A

Can a heat pump be installed in both new
and extsting homes, offices or factories~
Yes. If you already have a satisfactory warm
air duct system the existing ductwork can usually be
used with the heat pump-helping to save you money.
Call the Electric Company and we will have one f)f
our recommended electric heating·cooling dealers ap-.
praise your present duct system.

Q

Is the heat pump newl

A

yea~

No. Heat pumps arc backed by many
of testing, Jcvelopmcnt-:md constant improvement.
Heat pumps were introduced back in 19.11. These in·
stallations in all parts of the United States havo been
checked and double checked. A heat pump has been
developed that is a practical, dependable air condi·
tio~er and heating unit that provides the iinett in '
year 'round comfort, automatically ·a nd edmomically•

Po~ more Information ftU ~ut a~d ~aU tho ooU..ddresood, po•tac• paid md In your Mmh eleCtric ...;,~ ~

. . ·; Qtff.SYSIEM HEATS ~ COOLS ' : -:~,~~~~~~
D

' 'n'"'··

•'Sl',

. l COLU'MBUS ANb SOIJTHERJ;j OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY
.

�i!

I

'' '

'

Parental Responsibility
Law Approved
By Senators
.
.

COLUMBUS (UPI)- ParelUI
rellj)ODiibility lor ossaults by
Juveri.les would be set at $2,000
under 1 but passed Mondl,y
nliht by the Olllo SeDite.
Sellltors approved the measure by a 29--1 vote and sent it
to the House Cor consideration.
A companion bill WI&amp; approved by the same vote last

week. That bUl would raise

from $800 to $2,000 the amount
which could 1lle collected from
parents tor 'O.etr minor chll~
dren• s vandalism.
Both bills were sponsored by
Sen. Stanley J. Aronoff, Jt.Cl"'
clnnati.
Two bills were passed by the
House Moiday night as the
General Assembly q&gt;ened its
ninth work week.
Legal Residence Ruling

One bill approved 88-0 would

provide tho lepl reoldence ond
school reoklence ot 1 child
placed by the Oblo Youth COm·
mlssloo would be the piece the
child waa resldlrw ln accordance wlth the placement order,
TeotlmOIIf before the Houoe
Education COmmittee lndlceted
tbe bUI would seve foster parente from pay!JV 1 tu!Uon fee
for the child . to attend school
In the district in which the to..
tar parents lived.
A seC&lt;JIId bW owroved In the
House Monday nJght would r&amp;o
quire county commissioners to
give written notice of dna!
hearlJVS on public road vaealloaa. The ootice would have to
be at least 20 dill's prior to the
final hoarilv and mailed to tho
property owners.
Sen. Clera E. Weisenborn, Jt.
Dayton, Introduced a but Moo.

Lander Linkup in
Good First Try
SPACE CENTER, Houston
The two parts o[ the
American spaceship that will
try ror the moon in July joined
in space for the first time
Mond.a,y in preparation for ma»proving the unit that wUI carry
men from moon orbit to the
dusty gray lun1r surCace.
It was considered one of the
. most crucial- arxl yet mundane
- parts of the entire Apollo 9
miuioJL
"If we don't get the things
hooked together, we don't have
a mission," said astronaut
David R. Sc&lt;tt in an interview
prior to the Olght.
Even More Crucial
And the reverse procedure,
relinldng the two Wlits alter the
lunar lander has separated arKI
visited the moon. will be even
more cru&lt;:ial for the two men
inside lt.
If the lunar tamer cannot
hook ll&gt; with the cOlTUDOIIi ohlp
then-- circling the lnoon a
(UPJ)-

Francis Rhodes
Dies on Monday
Frsncla Leroy (Roy) R-s,
Rt. 2, Racine, 70, died Monday

.. t

In Holzer Medlcsl Center. Mr.
Rhodes was preceded in deatb
by his wile, lntn.
He La ourvlved by those children, Gory Rowe, New Brlgbton,
Pa.; Robert. Racine; lreDe
1bompiCil, Fremmt; Dorott!y
Forbes, Minersville; Charlea,
Mallalleld; Norman, Millwood, W.
Va.; Wayne, Athena, and Yolan
SeUer!leld, Racine; one brother, Floyd, Middleport, and a slo·
tar, Ethel Moran, Athens.
Funeral senices wW be held
11wrsda¥ at 1 p.m. from Ewlng Chapel with burial In Letart
cemstecy. Friends mill' cell snytime.

William Bolin
Dies on Monday

.'

WWlam W. (Red) Bolin, 15,
Swth Second Ave., MldcDeport,
died Monday evening.
Mr. Bolin was born March
25, 1923 In Middleport. He wss
preceded In deoth by h I s
mother, Cbsrlotte WUllamson
BoUn. He was a meiOOer of

World War Two. He worked as
a boiler maker for a conatructloo firm.
He is ounived by his wife,
Nora; three daughters, J a n e t
Louise, Lisa Jo, and Carren;
foor IKIIS, Michael, Mark, Rus~
aell anf Darren, and his father,
WWlam A. (Tad) Bolin.
Funeral services will be held
Wednesday at 2 p.m. from Raw-

lln8• Coats Funeral Home wi.th
the Rev . Charles Simons olllclatlng. Burial wlll be In Middleport Hlll cemetery. Friends 108¥
call at tile 1\merol home anytimo.
REMOVED TO HOSPITAL
Be n Kesterson. Welshtown
HUt, was taken to Velel'llns Memorial Hoapllal Monilll!' afternoon
by the Pomeroy E-R squad. He
wso ldmltted.
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport emergency
IQUid lftlwered 1 call to Oliver
s~ Uondoy evening rrom where
ShlrOb Buckley, 16, was taken to
~ t&lt;&gt;o • • • MemorlJI Hoopi tal and
admllled • • medical paUen~

dill' nli!ll whlcb WClUld praiUblt
purchase of doc• !run cOU!IIy
wardens for reSile to lutltoIlona.
PreseN: law does not torbld
'nch Illes.
Ellin Teacher I'll!'
Two other bills were lntroducecl In the Se- Monday
night. They would:
-Provide lddltlwW pay for
teochers who have llldlllwW
dulleo or lldclltlonol pooltloDI
and require separate caortracts
ror such work.
- Increaae COWities' oovoted
debt Umitation fran 1 per cent
of the ftrst $100 million . on
eouncy llx dli)Ucetes to one per
cent Dl the entire dltlllcate.
A hllf dcnon bUts were olror~ in the House Mondl,y nli!l~
Todll\', the House wsa to YUle
on a bill glvlov locollllthorllles
power to seek help from the
state Highway Pllrol In riots,
ci vii disorders u.:l inaurrec-tions.
Aloo ~;~ for a YUle ill the
House was a bill to provide for
a public representatiw oo the
Ohio Peace Officer TrolniJv
COWicil.

senators were to vote on a
bill to provide lor the protection of Ohio school children
from communicable tuberc~
losls by mandatory examlllltion

quarter million miles from
earth- the crewmen would have
to go through a risky space
tr8118fer, outslc:le the vehicles, to
and bnmunizatlon.
get back home.
That is wby Aj&gt;ollo 9 and
Apollo 10 were planned- to test
with men that the equipment
actually does work and that the

20 Inducted

docking operations can be
performed.
"We are hard docked," Scott

reported in a IRIIIer-&lt;lf-lact
voice when the dollcste llq
wu cmnpleted Molds over the
Pacific Ocean.
DellcaU.Operatlon
The spacecraft bod Just gone
through a dellcau. operation,
gently nuzzllov an arrow-shapad
probe on Its nose Into a 31-lnch
!unnol..heped target called the
"grogue'' on the top of the
lunar Ialiier.

At Ft. Hayes
TweniY Molp cOUIIIy men lett

for Fort Hayes In Columb.ua, to·be inlllcted Into the arm.
eel rorces. Ten others went there
lor pre-Induction pbystcal exsrnlnatlons.
The Meigs COUIIIy Selective
Service said scheduled for Inmellon today aro Max L. Knopp,
Bllly s_ Lunsf,....O Harcy c. &amp;Jr.
........
faee, Jr., Michael J. Walker,
liDward L, Harber, Cbsrlea w.
Allor the connection was Radford m, Mathew J. Phllllpo,
c o m P I e to d, the spacecraft Paul M. McElroy, Cecil E. Mldbscked slowly away from the -· kUI, RoberfR Sigman liGitindE.
third stage or the Siluro 5 Esotmau, ~ L. Darst, Paul
rocket that carried tile lunar E Ervin a.&amp;rles A &amp;lodgrae:s
lander into orbit in a special ~rge W, Young,· Robert
section between the spacecraft Meeks Jack L Mowery Darrell~
and the rocket isel~
- · Arth..;. D. ~ a n d
Before the mlssu11, Scott bod Daniel E. stanley.
pointed out that the prnbe and
Undergoing pllyalcal uaminathe drosue bod to work, becouse tlooo were Jerry N Arnold, Carl
"there Js no bac}q)."
R. · Holter, Frank ·A. KriWtter,
T h e system ljlparently per. Ronald N. Cheadle, Robert 111.
!ormed well on its Orst Mlrp!ly John c &amp;lyre Arde
cheekou~ although a n o t h o r L. ~. Michael L. 'wrt~
docking Is yet to be performed. Timothy D. Michsel, Chesler v.
~ce agency personnel were King.
excited about the Will' the
A transfer !rom the local
locked-together units worked board to llyattsv!lle MeL, was
wben the blg spacecraft rocket John D. Morresoy. '
engiDe was fired for the first
time Monday.
today

.'

"r

Gll C·EI
NEW

)
: ~!ii~l~!1i1l~~!~ii~i!l~~1~1jf:;~~iif:!1iiji~lf:jijl jlJ~m~j~i~1;i~~;~;!i~j~;:~i~;;;~;~~;~:~:~~! ;~;u~;~:mJ;ml~f:;~~jf:f:f:1j;~1r:

Church Board to Meet
PT. PLEASANT ~ The montJ&gt;. to 1l11t In the event~ worship
ly bualneoa meeting of the ad- service. The pubJlc Is invited to
ministrative board wUI be held hear the si~ers, who are weH
In llelghts United Methndlst luxMn Jn this area.
Church Tuesdlly night at 7:30
The same Sunday, Wilbert and
o'~lock with the pastor, Rev.
Mary Margaret E-'rum, parents
Charles Frum, presldlrw.
of Re~. Frum, will observe their
Wednesdll!' nipt, the regular 60th wedding anniversary at their
prayer aervlcee will be held at home in ShinnstoJL Rev. Frum
7:30 p.m. and Choir members plans to visit his parents that
plan to practice later the same Sunday arxl a visiting pastor wm
evening. Junior Choir pracUce speak ln his absence. ,
Ia scheduled for Frldll!' after·
Ladles or the women's Society
noon at 4 p.m. .
of Christian Service. arc asked
Announceme.- was made Sun- to check their book shehes to
4111' that tile World Day o! Prill'· see lt they may have copies o(
.er .service will be held in the the books from theWSCSlibrary.
Bellomeod u n l t e d Methodist MemberS hav.lng such books are
Church Frklll\' at 7:30p.m.
asked UJ contact Mrs. Leonore
SUndll!' niaht, March 9, the Asbury so that the library recServants Quartet, or . Parkers- ords can be brought up to date.
burg, will visit the Heights church

'

(Qiollm...S- ~ I)

Kennotl)l. The Jury YOlo woo ,...,..,..., Gorrllm'o W.at cbarpo
Monday ollop Clay lied ... the wlflloll 1111!11 Will!! h.• .Wd.he ......
met Oowald tir Ferrie.

STORE HOURS
Tiny's Bargainland

Admii-ah 6etting ~ on blfB'
CORONADO, CAIJF. - FtvE.ADMIRALS uked more queotlons
toda,y about the ''bup" In the USS Pueblo' a parformaac:o when hal'
crew went to botdo - - aplnot tho North Koreon 1101)". Te.U·
mOll)' by onlloted men llont!ll!' oaserted:
The m1n who ,.. auppoaed to load tho fonrard moclllne II"" hid
uno idea" haw to pt ammUDltiOD torlt;no order was iuued &amp;omake
the ohlp weterllah~ and 1 Ueutellllll's augpsUooo were openly disregarded by an enlisted man In the otftcer's presence.

MIDDLEPORT

EFFECTIVE:

Sirhan Sirhan Oaims
Remembers Nothing

ONDAY,

RCH 3

thru SAT.
to 8:00
10:00
Sunday 12 Noon Til6:00

LOS ANGELES (UPI)- Sir- lem he woo a """"" boy
ban B. Sirhan took the ootb of a and becollllq 8111! with fear.
wttnosa with a clalched nst
Slrban took deep papa "'
railed In tho air ... tllen IIIII broath before m.Udng to the
colmly he sbol SO.. Robert F. wlfllooo. stand In the fortnaoKOODedy.
like - ·
In tho next breath be said:
Said ~:
"I was ont aware ot
"Sirhan, you are eharaed In
anything."
camt one ()( the lndl- with
Tho de(ense pula Its case on tho olrense ot murder. It Ia
the table In the first few allepd that 111 the 5111 4111' ()(
minutes of tho _...,.. ()( June, 1968, you sbol and klUed
the 24-,vear-old Arab Immigrant Robert Francis Kt11Redy, a
Mmday on tho wltneao stand at human being. Did you on or
hlo munler trill.
about tho 5th ()( Jtme shoot
Sirhan was on the stand all Robert KeonedY"I"
day today under direct examln·~Yea, I cH.d,'' EJ.rhan replied.
atlon from vetersn er1m1na1
Not Aware
lawyer Grant Cooper wbo oald:
Thea Sirhan wao liked
"I haven't even warmed up whether Ita also shot Paul
yet."
Schrade, a United Auto Workers
Apologized to Judge
executive who was In tho
Sirhan, who IIJO}oglzed to Kemedy party.
~rlor Court Judge Herbert
"II tho lndl- says I ohol
V. Walker lor his emoUOilll him, I mwrt have," Sirhan said.
outburst last week, al10 coneed"I was not aware ot
ed he wroto dozens Dlllme In 1 an.rthlng. •
that "Robert F,
Mre. Sirban told ot her son
Kemedy nwst die.•
wltnooslng terrible - • In
The Jury -ed In faoclnatloo Jeruaalem Including a truck!Oid
11 Sirhan !lnally testified st bls of Arab girls witll their broaots
trill. He was calm, neatly alaohed and loraeU soldlera
dreaoed In a llllht blue Rill but clapping thstr hands and IJ01Ing
be gripped the front "' the that was What haWened to
witness box and teoned forward these who would ont leave their
In lntenolty as he said tho homeo.
"Jews kicked ua out of our
Srhau was expected to be on
homes."
direct examlnation all of toda;y
Slrban wsa celled altor hls and to remain on tho wltneu
mother had told ()( hlo being stand throu&amp;ll Wednesdl,y.
exposed to atrocities In Joruoa-

Services For
L~dCasto

Announced

TINY'S FOODLAND
MIDDLEPORT

E

day thru Saturday

note-

9:00 til 9:00
Sunday 12 Noon Until 6:00

'•

•

r: Student

Ault Leads
(
J
RIVER NEWS
Ch
·
GAUGES - Gallipolis, 12.0
arger
Win
and 13.2 running 5.5 leet o! roll-

ers; Pt. Pleasant, 23. 97; p""'t:'lt The Middleport Chargers edgroy - Maaon, 20.26; Hlntm, 1.48"c ed Bradbury 2S.27 in I double
stat.; Kanawha Falls, 4.22 rls- overtlme and salisbury dropped
lJV: Charleston, 18.08 rislov. tile Middleport Celtics 17-7lnthe
BOAT MOVEMENTS:
Drat round Dl the Little MarauGALLIPOUS LOCKS _ Luth- dar 5-tilh grade beskeiiJall tourer Herdman dowo 3:50p.m.; Peg- rwnent at RutlarMI's gJm Mongy Downey up 12:50 a.m.; Volley 4111' nli!IL
Voyager down 2 a.m.; ElgercUtr
Perk Ault's scoring paeed the
down 1:30 a.m.; Bobby Joe up 5 Chargers while Dave Varian top..
Lm.; TUilii\Y L. l\llllle down 5,. peel Bradbury. Salisbury A, the
40 a.m.i Peaee IC'-5:45 a.m.; Es- team that won the league of 5so PennsyJva-nia down 7:45a.m. 6th grade squads, was led by Tim
KANAWHA RIVER _ Marmet Colburn whUe Steve Walburn led
Jerry Bosworth dawn 3:30 p.m.~ the CelUcs,
Morris Harvey down 3:25 p.m.;
One game is scheduled this
WinCield, · Beaver 111 1:15 a.m.; evening, beginning at 6:30p.m.,
Jetrerson down 1:45 Lm.; Alan Pomeroy vs. Salisbury B.
R. Merrill down 4:25 Lm.; ll E.
Two games are on tap Wed.DesBowlos down 7:15a.m.
4111' night when the Middleport
OIDO RIVER - Lock 13, Fore- Cbsrgers go aplnst Salisbury
moat down 8 Lm.; l«kU,Har- the winner of the Pomeroy vs.
riet M. ~ 1:25 p.m.; Stevelllon Salisbury contest.
.., 9:55 p.m.; OVEC ll&gt; 5:20 p.
Tile conoolaUoo contest wUI
m.; Vulcan ll&gt; 1:15 a.m.: John J. be played 116:30 p.m. Thursdl,y
Rowe 14&gt; 3:50a.m.; Lock 15, Of&gt;. and the cbomplonshlj) match Is
ward ll&gt; 3:50 Lm.; Steel City scheduled to begin 11 7:30p.m.,
up 6:55a.m.; Lock 16, JOOn Pu-- tourney mar.gerCarlWolfesaid.
shak down 4:15 a.m.; Mark Ea- Imlvldualond team trophies wW
sdn up 6:2$ Lm.; Lock 17, Jetf~ be awarded the lint three team&amp;
bolt down 11:10 p.m.; Paul D.
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
down 3:10 a.m.i Ardrew P. calADMITTED - Verdle Smith,
houn ~ 3:3S a.m. i Eastern down
Reedsville; Bernie Edwards,
6:15 Lm.; Belleville Locks, Jane
Reedsville; George Nesaelroad,
T. "' 2:15 a.m.; Lock 21, Betty Jr., Pomeroy.
Waxler down 7 a.m.i Lock 22,
W. H. Shaver, Jr. down 5:25 a.
m.; Racine Locks~ Natl~ down
2:40 a.m.; Franklin Pierce 1.11
5:25 a. m.: Greenup L o c k s,
Olearder down 6;45 p.m.; Ravenswood qt 7:35 p.m.j Eliaha
Wood• up 12:55 a.m.; Ashlend
down 7:50 Lm.; Meldahl Locks,
Irene ChoUn down 1:30 p.m.i
Kathleen K. down 5:15p.m.; Phil2. STOP
110
Ip Sporn ~ 11:10 p.m.~ Mlso
Luc1&lt;1 "' 1:~ a.m.; Jocob G.
down 2:15a.m.~ Steel Clipper ll&gt;
6:20a.m.

I

I

Unrest
StaUo troopers omsshed the
main Klaas door ()( tile ocbool
auditorium at Ferris StaUo
CoUe110 In Big Rfllld8, Mich.,
Monday night and arreated
about 250 bleek - . . . and
white supporters who rt6Joed to
leave after being ordered to
halt their lock-ln.

S c h o o I olllclala Indicated
those ar~"Oated laced pooslble
expulsion from the 8,200scbool, whlcll boa 300 Negro

a.em

Qwod Armory,

3 EASY WAYS TO
PLACE YOUR WANT AD.
1. BV PHONE - 992·2156
IN MECHANIC ST.
3. BV IIAIL - BOX &amp;68, POMEROY, 0.

THE DAILY SENTINEL

•

PT. PLEASANT - The actlvlt;y report of the Muon County iilerl!f Department for I h e
month ot February has been released by ii&gt;erllf Troy llulfman.
The department members trav.
eled 5,107 miles In the line o!
duty; lnvostlgated 9 aecldento
reoultlng In personal ~!')' to
two peraons and property damage estimated at $1,975; mode

PT. PLEASANT - The local State Road COmmission
malnterance and labor work-ers have joined the nearly 4,·
000 other workers across West
VJrglnla gotng on strike Monday,
PJcket Uries were set ~ at
tile locol Stele Road garage,
Stele Road Commission Dl the
construction office for the new
bridge on Jackson A't'enue arxl
also at IJJe construction field
office in HeOOerson, site ofthe
bridge. MoodilY t h e office
workers were allowed to cross
the picket lines at the various
oUices.

three road law arrests and 4

other misdemeanor arrestsi served 161 court papers Dl both
crlmlnal and ctvil actions; received 4 warrants and served 4
and booked 61 persons In the
COWI\Y jail .Urlng the month.
Members of the department
In aojdltlon to Sherll! llul!man
are DepuUes Millard Halstead,
Robert Uhl, Floyd stover lind
Sidney H\lddleston.

'TUHE·UP
'SHOCKS
' BRAKES

' SEAT COVERS
FLOOR MATS
' BATTERIES
' TIRES

.,,'

Fintt Concert of

ASK ··To WED

Season Aunounced

PT. PLEASANT - Three COU·

PT. PLEASANT - The Point
Plesoant ll!gh Sch9ol Senior bend
will present ita ftrst concert ol
the season on March 30 beginning at 2 p.m. In the blgh school
auditorium.
The selections for the alternoon wlll Include "The hnpresaarlo Overture"' by Mozart;
•• Tancredl Overture" by Rossini; "Mancini Medley" by Hen ..
ry Mandnl; "OVerture: Fanfare
and (;aprlcclo" by Willis Schaefer; ~· Allehuia" bY Mozart, ~
"E, A.urOOs U.num•• by F r e d
Jewell.

Actions Filed

In Two Cases

pies have made appUcatlons for
marriage licenses in the office
of the county clerk. Applying
were Larry Lee Roach, 2S, Pt..
Pleasant, and Carolyn &amp;le Simpkins, 18, West Columbia. wu.
Jlam Jennings Halley, 22, Che·
lhlre, Ohio, and Mary Frances
Eagle, 20, Reedsville, Olllo. Ros-.
ate Adam Thaxton, 57, Leon, and
Leoo.
Venm

~ McKe~er, 48·-~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~l
•

•

Three Cases Nolled

PT. PLEASANT - A civil
action and a civil appeal from
Juotlco Dl Poace Court has been
flled bt the office of the clrcult clerk. The action Is otyled
HUda Dabney vs. ·Kenlucky Cen. trll LUe lnaurance Company with
the plalntll! demanding judgment
against the defendant In the amount n1 $830 with Interest and
sta
co.
The appool Ia styled Masoo
CouniY Chcyoler-Plymouth Conter va. VIolet R. Pslnter with
tho p!alnll!f beln~ aworded jwlgment in the Justice or P e a c e
court and tho de!endant appeal1n11 the verdlcl to the circuit

PASS
ITONl

In Circuit Court
PT. PLEASANT- Orders were
entered In the o!llce ot the circuit clerk to nolle three crimInal actions, all me to the fact
that the 1ndi ctmenta were over
two years old in each actlbn
and the defendants had nev~r
been apprehended. Each concerned the charge of contributing to
dellnquenc::y of a minor, and were
otyled State Dl W. Va. n. MarJorie S\)Urgeon and two st;yled
StaUo Df W. Va. VI. 0on Bercy.
An order wso entered In tile
clvD action of Boord ()( EcUcatlon ()( \laaon Count;r vo. Amalpmated Tranolt Union et lis,
declaring the acUon to be !Ully
aettled, compromloed and adjuated.

court.

News Notes

•

••

a Jtearint1room

P.••

In Busy Month

Mn. Grace Hensler, daughJoseph Rex Osborn, Adm., Win
ter
I Mrs. Millie Coen, aoo Mrs.
Fred Oaboril, dec., iO Ohio Val·
Nellie
Vale were recent Wedley Mfg. Co., Olive.
nesday
evening guests of Mr.
Oaby A. Martin, Mary A. MarTim Willcox was taken to Unilin to Colmnbts Gao of Ohio, &amp;. and Mrs. Jarrot Bobo and son,
Henry,
They
spent
the
evening
verslty
Hospital where he underW, Slllsbury.
auembling
dati
for the history went eye surgery for an e y e
Denver HysoU, Frances !lyseD to John Tucker, Enen Tuck- of Columbia Cllljlel ChurciL tranaplant. His condltloo Is satThe church is one hwdred years ls~ctory at thi.s time.
er, ,75 A., salisbury.
old
tha year and a cslobratlon
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Barr and
Hilda Hun!, Junior Lee Hunt,
is being »laMed for the occas.. children called on her parents,
Murl T~~Ylor t4 Earl Rlehlrd
Mr. arKI Mrs. Howard Thomlan:l
Hunt, Gleo:la Kay Hunt, Parcel, ion in the summer.
Twenty membersorthecongre- her gra!'q)arents, Mr. am Mrs.
Chester.
lllrence Prollllt, Myrtle Prol- gallon of the Chlllel Church at· Harley Johnson, recently.
an to Hunting OU CO., R-W, Leb- tended a b&amp;ptlzlng at the N e w Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr and
Marshfield Church on Sundll\' all- oon, Shawn, o! Oak Hili apent
anon.
ernoon.
Slturda,y lfternoun with his parCllorles H. Harrla, W~~Ynita C.
Mr.
John
Whi!A&gt;
ro"'flns
a
PI• ents, Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr.
Harris to Huntlllg OU Co., R-W
llent In Veterans Memorlll Ho..
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Wright (BetAsree, Lebanon. f .pita!
In
Pomeroy,
ty Morris) of Dublin, Va., are anLyle W. HyseD, LooM R. .HyMra. George Lowiher was i nnunclngtheblrtllotadaughteron
sell to C. C. Howard, Leta Howrecent
patient at Mt. St. Mary's Sunday, Fob. 23. "!'he baby Wlllcb
ard, Parcell, SdiJio.
weigh~ G lb., 8 biz. has been
Wallie M. CottrUI, dec., to Hoopltal In Nolsonv!Ue.
' G. A. Radekln named Debra Sue, She bas a br0o
Mr.
and
Mrs,
Mary C. Cottrill, Cert. for
and daughter, Tina Marie, ape~·· ther, D&amp;niel, 3....-.l'i~ - ~ Mr~ _,., ~ ­
•
Trans.
Walter W. Morris, Helen L. a Seturdll\' oveniov with her sl,.. Bruce Morris aro grandp&amp;reta.
Mr. and Mrs, Blair CldwollaMorris to Clrl C. McDonald, tor and brother-In-law, Mr. and
Mra.
Frank
Johnson,
Pomlroy.
der
alii sons or seaman spent a
Dorothy McDonald, 4'4 A., Or·
Mra. Etllel Radekln wao a .sun- weekend at the home of her pardi.Y dinner guest of her niece, ents, Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr.
Mrs. Nellie Vole, and Mrs. FonMiss Sblrley Ledlle apo.lt-.a ·
nje PeW~
Weekend wlt11 her mother; Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Thompoiln Emma Lodlle.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fett.Y
of !lladlns were w~ekend IIIIOO!s
of her m.Xber, Mrs. Ertle Hl)Oio. or Bucyrus ,apent a weekeld wUh
ier, and alster and brother-1~ hla pafents, Mr. and Mr&amp; Lie ~.
lew,
Mr. ond Mrs. Marvin WU- Fett.J&gt;.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Frank sarver,
Ronnie Gorby has ~oymeot
John and Eddie of Beverly were aon.
The
Friendly
Nelahbors
Club
In
Marlelll.
recent weekend viaUors o( Mr.
met
for
their
February
meeUJV
ond Mrs. Howard Thoma a n d
with Mrs. Bellrlce Rl!ilberl In
PatrlciL
Mr. and Mra. !.arry Barr, Dav- Pomeroy, Aile~ 1 covared dish
luncheon, lbe
ellloyed apklond Mollosa Rello, LIJVavilla,
prQPrlote
reodlngs
of
the month QUICK QUIZ
wore MondaY vloltora of Mrs.
and a silent auction.
Q-8111 anv Amelieatlo
Howord 1boma and family.

Ferris StaUo bod been lanse
Iince white and black .-nts
loulbl last Thursdl,y and
Frldll!', reiUIUng In 221njurles.
In Rochester, N.Y., a small
band ()( Negro somiDarlana who
oc"4)1ed ~irons llaU at Colgate
Rochester Divinity School lb!4111' prevented other sludeah
from .-ng elesaeo Mmday.
Dr. Gene E. Bartlett, tile ocbool
prealdem, said "aboolutezy oo
over action• would be taken to
remove the blacks.

stu-·

~fwriff Dept.

day; Mrs. Felton Castle, Vlntm,
daughter, 3:24p.m. Monday; Mrs.
':,Lorry Luekeydeo, Pl. Pleasant,
"""· 4:55 p.m. Mondll!'; M r s.
Theodore R. WU!ord, Long Bottom, daughter, 2:16 a.m. Thea.
day; Mrs. Marvin Dep~e, Well-

ston, son, 2::;3 a.m. Tuesday; Mrs. Winona llaltorman, Eric
Mn. Charles W. May, Gallipo- A. llarrls, Jolm L. Jonea, Mrs.
Gacy L. Massie, James E. Reed,
lis, son, 4:41 a.m. Tuesday.
Mrs. Frank H. 7.erkle, Mrs. DorAdmlssloos
othy
Blair, David Stlmp8tll, Mra.
Publlcatloo of Admlsslono Ia
B. Fraley arM!ln!antdalllh·
James
prohibited until !Urther notice.
tar,
Mrs.
WaymerE.Newmanand
Discharges
Richard Ba88, Mrs. Melts Fll- Infant SOil, Mra. Bert Smith and
llqger, Mrs. Thomas L, Fitch, Infant son.

Social Notes Langsville

lllldents.

Ev!hted
' Chlcqo,
At the Unlverslt;y
()(
students and security poUee
scullled alter two Bllldents...,..
evicted from
where a nudent dloclpiiDary
committee woo hearing tile
besaa ()( students Involved In 1
demoostrattoo Jut week at tho
home ()( Preoldl!nt Edward Levi
and tho ~~~~~~~e Club.
The sludentl at Ferrlo StaUo
had barricsded tllemselvea Inside tho audltorlum wltb chains
and chairs and re61oed to heed
repeaiM warningo by ochool
ol!tclala that they woold be
arrellled II 1l1ay did ont leave.
El&amp;btY.Ove lroapero and other
police omslhed tho
door
and herded the studentt !Do
busea and took
to tile

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. Vlsillni boura 2-4 and 7~
p.m. Parents only on Pediatrics
Ward.
Births
Mrs. Ernest Bartrum, Jackson, daughter, 10:S9 a.m. Moo-

Point Hoek

New low-priced
LTD-now at
Ford Dealers

By United Pre" 1n1ernat1ona1

National

I

PT, PLEASANT - . Funerol
oervlce lor Lloyd Preston Cas.
to, 79, of Loon Route I, will be
held Wednesdi.Y 2 p.m. at t h .e
Creatm United Methodist Church
with the Rev. Gerald Sll\'re and
the Rev. WIU!am &amp;llllvan o!llclatlng. Burial will be In the Cres1on cemetery.
Mr. Cosio died !lmdajo In a
Ripley hospital after a short
Ulness, He bad operated a gen.
eral store In the Gunvllle com.
muniiY o! Maoon CouniY for the
past 24 years. He was born
Nov. 25, 1889 at Rockcastle,
W. Va., the son of the late
Jolm (})oc) Casto and Robecca Barnette Cosio.
Slrvlvlng are hlo wile, MJn.
Die Baker Casto; a 1!1011, Denver Casto of Leon, and a doughtar, Mrs. Hazel Flowero of Columbuo; three brothert, Orv!Ue
of Leon; Oabel of COVIngton, II)'.,
and Floyd ot Medina, Ohio~ live
olotera, Emma RoUlno, Leon;
Ocle BeD ()( Ludlow, Ky.; DorotliY Harrla Dl Leesburg, Ohio;
Lillie McKinney, Galllpolll, and
Elbi.l Swlek, Brot4wood, Ohio;
stepmother, Mro. Mary Jane Castct; Park.er~ra:;- - seven grand·
chUdren, and two groat-grandcblldren.
Frlands mil!' cell at tile reo!donee alter2 p.m. Tuesdi.Y.

-----------------------------·

HOURS WILL BE THE

1- The Qally Sentinel, Pomeroy-Middleport, 0., Tuesday, March 4,

Wolfpen

News, Notes

Special new LTD
It a epaclallow price:'

Big o Qulot o Luxurlouo LTO • Doluu
ltlndlrd equipment lncludn a 302-c:u.ln.
Opl'-10 oull peroonol tutol.

Pop-Option S.le on Falrlanas
with popular o~Wons:

gr;,..,

oVJnrl_..., roolo Quol racing mlrroro

o Pin llrlpe o Doluu-lcovorooWhltowollo
0

Fall Cllpellng

S.ve on apeclal Multanga
with Popo()ptlona:
o Slmulotad flood a i r - o Spec Ill E78
Wllltowallo o Dual roclng mlrrota
o Pln llrlpo o - ""'""

Ohio is Ford Country. See your Ford Dealer.
I

KEITH'

·E FORD,
I

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'•

1

Mr. ond Mro. George Warner
100 Gordon and itlchard and Mr.
am Mra, Earl Winoo ()( COiumbus, Mr. and Mrs. Dolo Warner
am.!lurdly, Mr. and Mro,Eupno
1ba~q~OOR and fimtly .ad Mr. Ted
Worner ond fimll1 wore SUnday
vtaltoro ot their parents, Mr. and
Mco. ll E. Warner.
Mr. IIIII MeEirAY WSI artcent
saturdaY ovenill8 vllltor ()( Mr.
ond lira. E1111eno HlnlliiJandlllm·
tly.
Mr. ond Mrl. JII!IOB Roovot
and Linda were Sityrdlf ~Yinl"i
vtottor• or Mr, and Mrs. 'Robert
litO"' of p,...rOJ.
.
¥'· .,t ~~ llllborl Mtirphj&gt;
and Doltlili· Sill ol Mlddloriort
uro 8tt111i1J alii- vloltorl
,

E·

bred horie et&gt;Or

Englllh Derbur

of Mr. and Mra, J. R. MIUJihy

and fan)!IY.
Mr. ond ltlrs. Doyle Knopp,
Kall, Kevin IIIII Charles, Lsville, were Friday and Slttlr"da¥
vliltoro Dl Mr. ond Mrs. Charity
Smith. .
·· · ·
Jo Smith was a weekend vlalti&gt;r.ot Linda Sholar whQo herporanta were In Michigan Yloltlov hit
brother wll!llolll.
Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy JO].I\"1ley and llmlly vlolted roli!fveo
In ca~ over the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Winos "'
Ctilumbuo wore 11eekend vltltora
' oi bef P.rents,- 1\ir. · ...s' Y..o. ·
Gtoqo Worner, Rlcbird 1 n d

GoniOn.
'

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UJOn

the

A-Yu, cne-lroqno)l Iii
1881.
.
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Q-8111 1he t111llon'1

tapo

ikr! 11t1 officio~ flolllff7
A-Yeo, I he Alllerlcan
Beauty Role...
o-:-H111 G!IV lume ellet" .,
lhe ll"lple Ct"OIOII for .
fllliel7
.
A-Ye•.· Dark Mlrap.

UJOII

='1o"•"

Q-WIIfch II lhe 011111

.

'!';.!,f./or,,.a .

A~ "!1ft -,.. ·
·

· Q-'-WIIfch 1110a tilt /lflt

•lllbuall' ..
A-Lolldali Kn&amp;WM!• .'' ·

dlr 1o llave

1

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"R. H~ RAWLI,NGS ·. SONS CO.
"l

•\

'J

,'Y&gt;

•

,,

... ,

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\\

.MILL &amp; SECOND $TUEll:
)AIDDllPOIT, 0.

�'·"'···· · ·· · ···· ··-..· .

.,

···-- · ~·-... ····-

.............

~~· · ~ - ...-

. .. .... · ·· - - · ··· .... · --- -

.... ~ ... -

..........~---~-- .........~ ... ~

iP

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.......

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•

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•"-~ Ua1ty !'ll'iltincJ,I'omc.•rUJ-Middkpol't, 0., 'l'ucsda,), Ma.·ch .f, t9ti9

.... -·

1-.tl.l.\·-s ~tiiVr~BS
.
.
Slw W1Utll'l lit \\'ush

Gayle-Ryan Vows are Read

,,nmb'" Wool Coni(orler
Br

•oLL Y CRAMER

.
-Polly's Problem""'"'" :...,
,

'"""

,. some re.aCier how to wash a lamb's wool comforter. I

i:·"'

have had mine a few years and have never washed it.
The cover is brown sateen on One side and gold sateen ~::
on the other. It ls very pretty and so nice and warm
but I do feel it should be wastied.-MABEL
J

RtiiM1iiiJ!III!l!llr''"

DEAR POLLY-! have to put warm. wet compresses on
an incision which is very painful. This was so messy that
1 would get my clothes wet. I started using a folded, wet
washcloth, placed plastic wrap on top, then filled a hot
water bottle to put on top of that. The compress stays hot
and wet for an hour, and I do not get Wei from frequent
wringing out of the wet clolh.-DOROTHY
DEAR POLLY-Older folks, or anyone having trouble
getting out of the bathtub
after a bath, should obtain
a m e t a I step stool with
chrome legs. Cut about five
inches off the legs with a
pipe cutter. Replace the
rubber tips on the legs and

'.

use this stool to sit on while
in the tub. It is s·a much

easier and safer to get back
on your feet.-BERT
DEAR POLLY --I think
that if Mrs. D. Z. will wet

·.·•·.

............. ... .......... ...... .

""

a piece of white cloth with rubbing alcohol and rub on the

ball point ink and lipstick stains on her kid gloves the
stains wUJ come · off. This is the only remedy that has
worked for me on ball point ink spots. I work in a hospital
and we are always getting ink on our white uniforms. ~1
used this on a wool sweater of my husband's that had a lot
of such marks on one side of the front. If the marked item
has been laundered or cleaned this will not work . It must
bf done first.- MRS. B. K . C.
DEAR GIRLS-This worked well for me on FRESH ball
point Ink and Upsliek stain&amp; on wbfle kid gloves. Wheo lbe
tleaoed opob dried, my gloveo were a bU gray awl still bul
rubbing well with lhe ftagertlps remedied lhat.-POLLY

.....

Attend Chillicothe Men's Congress

:ii

The It e v. William 1\irson,
llaloh ~nccr, allli Eldon W..ks
ol the Enterprise United Meth~
dist Church, Pomeroy, w e r e

NEW IIAVEN- Mr. and Mrs. bridal bouquet o! white cama- navy blue and carried ·wblie blue
John Brabham are amounclng tloos with blue tips, and mal&lt;h- upPed carnations with b 1 u e
the marriage of their daugh- lng streamers.
streamers.
amq the almost 400 men atter, Mlss Rhonda Gayle, to ~
llfrs, Robert Bulcber, organ- , Michael
MaSCXI, brolh- tending the 18th Annual Men's
·Patrick Joseph R¥an. son of Mr. 1s~ Point Pleasailt, played the er ol the groom, served as beot
Congress of the Ohio Southeast
and Mrs. Edward A, R¥an. of wedding march.
man. Ushers were James Ryan,
. Cooterence ·United Methodist
Maoon.
Floral arrangemants of white brother of the sroom. and Gary 'church Saturday In Chllllcothe.
Rev. Father II. A. R¥an per: glada, blue tipped asters with · Aroold, both of Mason.
"Winning men to Christ" was
formed the double ring ceremon,y greenery were used alons with
For her daughter's w$1dlng1
the
theme oftheconferenl-ewhJch
Feb. 7, at 11 a.m. at the Sl. lighted Wldelabrao On each side Mrs. Brabham wore a blue suit
bepn
with an 8 a.m. commuJlw
Joseph Catholic Church in !pia- oilthe prayer bench al the open with black accessories. T h e
son.
church Wedding.
groom's mother was attired in a ion, breakfast, and a meditati~
period conducted by the Rev.
The bride, given in marriage
Miss Rita Brabllaml olater of beige dress with brown accesby her lather, wore a whl,le the bride, was ma)d of hooor • . sories. Both mothers' Dowers Raymon:l Welch, pastor of the
street length A.Jine crepe dress iile wore a light blue street were whJte camatlms with blue
with chantilly lace and a shoul- ll!llllh A~lne dress with match- llpo,
Miss Bumgarner's
der length velt. Silo carried a ing riO. Her acceasories were
Assisting at the receptloo held
at the Bachlel United Methodist
Wedding Date Set
ChUrch~ New Haven, were Mra.
Marshall Wren, Mrs. Ritchie
W, Va• . - Plans
Bird, Mrs. William Marahall, havLETART,
bee
leted
MASON- "You- Your Weight ,perware.
Mrs. Jack Needs, Mrs: Dmal~
e
n .comp
forthewed ..
and Your Food," was dlacussed
Mrs. Joll1 McDaniel~ scrap- RC&gt;•sh and Katlzy Roush 1111 Ot ding of Peggy Elaine Bwngarner,
when the Maam Homemakers met book chairman, SU88'&gt;81ed that New Haven.
'
daugitler ol Mr. aDd Mrs. Edrecently With Mrs. catherine following Achievement Day this
For their wedding trip to Roo- ward Bumgarner ,ID Mlchael Neal
Swatzel as hostess at Iter son's :rear. ""'k shoold besln Cit com- ooke, Va~ . tlle bride wore a~ . Slms, son or Mr. and Mrs.Bnlce
home attended by 13 members poling the book lor 1961!,!70. The A~lne dress, lrlmmed wlth!'Mie lima, Palestine, W.Va.
and a guest.
The vows will be said April
group volfd to rontrlbule $5 to lace with whl h 1111 sed b •
c
eu
rown 11, 1969 at 6;30 p.m. in tile
Several diets were Ustecl by tile Heart Fund,
accessories and wore flmrers New Hav
United ..,........__~
club members which were high
Games were pla.Yed and priz- !rom her bridal bouquet,
en
-·-st
ln ;tlories. Each member potnt- es won by Mrs. John Roach,
The new Mrs. Ryan graduated Church With a re~ption in t h e
0&lt;1 oot
to eliminate some Min Emma Forthe and Mrs. !rom Wahamalligh School CJ
church social room !ollowlng the
d. '66
d until
nti_ ass ceremony. The graciws custom
of the calories.
Lawrence Roosh.
Devotionals entitled, "M a n
Refreshments were served by empl.;edanby the ~:: v~;::: ~open church will be observ:
Does Not Uve by Bread Alone," Mra. Swatzel to Mrs. Ray Fox, Telephone Company at New Ha•
was presented by Mrs. Roberta Mrs. Roberta Youn&amp; Mrs. J, ven.
MoreComfortWearlniJ
Young, Clifton. Another read- Marshall, Mrs. John R o a c h,
~..~ R¥an. a 196.1 graduaae of
ing, "Watch the Oil," was also Mrs. Evelyn Stewart, Mr s.
Wahama High School, recently
To overcome dLI!comfort wben
given. Mrs. Ray Fox concluded George Hudsoo, Mrs. John Mc- returned !rom v1etnam where he dentures
Blip, allde or loosen. JusL
sprinkle t.IUlle PASTEETH on your
with prayer, The president, Mrs. Daniel, Mrs. Laurene Lewis,
was with the 34th Engineers, He Pllltell. FABTEETH holdll '1enturea
Ray Fox. presided. The group Mrs. Clara WUIIams, Mrs. Elizfirmer. You eat better, feel more
will return to Ft. Hood, Texas
comfortable. FABTEETH Is alkullur
voted to attend a dinner at Ap. abeth Jeffers, Mrs. Dorothy Cartwon'leour. Helps check plate odor.
for the remainder ~ his mili.

Mason Hbmemakers Meet

~

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He listed these as God's love
and plan for your Hie, man's sii'Joo
fulness and separation from God
prevent.ing him from experiencing God's love and life plan, Je-

For Their

BIRTHDAY
Dudley's Florist
59 North 2nd 4vo.
992-5560

.. Lean·, Tender LOIN C

}~E.~N,
M~ATY
.

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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The wholo family will enjoy the fresh-frozen gaad-

•'

neu of a Dairy Valley cone, sundae, molt or shake.
Drive in tonight! Where you always get service with

a smile.

Try Our Oel icious Sandwiches

DAIRY VALLEY

I

BLAC.K PEPPER ................:~: 29e
3
1
00
STEW
can~
'OYSTER
.
FOLGER'S .COFFEE ...........~·~J.39
'TISSUE
8 1 00

Activities of
Club Planned

HILTON'S

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: A wedding shower honoring

_. e e e e e e e • • • • •

'._ . . .

.

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and gave miniature hatchets for

w, Va.

WHITE CLOUD

.

Wamsley,

Mrs. Dtcie

~sh,

Mrs, Dianne James, Mrs.

Jlelelen Bailey, Mrs. M a x l n e

~

• Ids and Mrs. Sarall Roush,
Dljllhers of the bride and groom
"!"pectlvely.
~be 20th amtversary ol t h e
:others sending gifts but un- Friendly Nelglmors Club wiU be
alle to attend wore Lwena Roush observed on March 21 with a
Mts. Margie Fields and daugh: diMer at the Up!Dwner Inn In
1&lt;0', Kathy, Mrs. Jackie Lilly Parkerollurg.
Mrs, Helen Hood, Mrs. F~
MeetJng recently at the home
Uttle, Mrs.. Late Moore, Mrs. ot Mrs. Elwood Bowen, presiVincent Knight, Mrs. Bob Mll: dent, the group made plans lor
ler, Mrs. Cheryl Durst, Mra. the 1111lversary observance and
Efleen Hall, and Miss Lucille to celebrate Easter with reslB~adshaw.
denta of the Meigs CountY In·
~a.

Doris Ully assisted the
brJBtess, Mrs. Deem, with the

flrmary on Mer&lt;h 31.
New officers elected w e r e
.....er.
Mrs. Emerson Well, president;
Mrs. Henry Werry, vice preai·
Agent
dent; Mrs. Tom Werry, aecre~
.;
tary; Mra. Paul Ta,ylor, treasurer; and Mrs. Leon McKnight,
~jured in Wrerk
lund.
::.; MASON - fdn. Audrey J. Em- flower
Reporta of the officers were
..,, Mason County Extension given. The traveling prize was
~nt, received a sprained back won by Mrs. Werry. Camenrere ,
prizeo belnsawarded
neck in a car and truck ac· played to
Mra.
Robert
Arnold, Mrs.
at Nitro, W. Va., recent1(~ The truck which hit her car, Charles Werry, and Mrs. WUltftned over. Mrs. l::mery's car ard Hines. Mra. LeciJ McKnight

~en~ion

*+tent

'(lis demollahed.
,•u,•PICI, Emeey, because ollnjur-

1'•· has mt been able to resume
her duties in Paint PleasanL Her
home dlresa js 7Gravely Drive,

Nitro.

won the door prize. Refrelh·
menu wore served by tile holl-

eu.
I wu aimouneed that the next

•

,., ,

{-.
)"

-,\.

·•

....

"

···········
...........

POTATO
CHIPS

· ·o

"

'•I .. •.

, .
1-A ·a '·· SATURDAY
l6o•.1 • 00
ONLY leileti eeee 7 ln.

FRESH, MUTY

59~

bag
only

Q,CA-COLA
,r

PlES

l~

ounce

(ORN~P. EAS

'6 pqs. l. 00
'

7
,,

,,

·-·-··--·--·-·-··------·
'

".··~11':\·~

CHEWING

,..

'•

'

Scot Lad·
'

,. ·1cE·

V4HIL~4 .
CH~OLATE

HEO,POLITAM

Andrew Ferencz had the
last laugh. "Some ol my ltiends laughed
when we switched to electric heat in our 16·year·old
house ... 'til I showed them how little eleclric heal
is costing us." Kathryn Ferencz loves it. "It's so clean
and convenient-and it's cosijng us ~ery little more
than Jhe gas heal we had, r.l. glad we switched Jo
electric heat." The Ferencz·s of Canton, Ohio ha~e Jots of company. The switch
lo flameless eleclrio heal is breaking all records because ~·!J.!orth so much
more in comlort, yet costs about the same as other luels.lel us show you how
lillie it can cost Gel a tree estimate-lrom us or your Reddy Kilowall Recom·
mended Dealer.

r-----------

I

1

MAIL TODAY ------~-----,

THIS ELECTRIC CAll OPDIER flEE

.

when • Reddy Kilowatt R0&lt;0111· I
1 )nended Deller prepares 1 writt~n estimate of the cost to convert your horne to elec- I
1 lric hut ina. Offer available to our custome•s only. There is no obligation.
~

I

I
I ~-;.

I . . ~~ );
I
I
I

I

I

I

I :'iffli'
:: ~·::· !i!]:!;l
!!ll!.'l
i iii! ~l!i'i
I if' . •'lf
1~o~::!i ,

j,: i ~ '

I

1
1

O~io Power CooiP'Ill

Rm. 4Jl• 301 Cleveland ~ve., S.W.
Canton, Ohio 44102

1

....

I
I
I

'"'
City

'--~----------1

~&lt;;;;;)~

I

j~

I-

~WEB WIIANY
I
l-----------------------------~

I

II(

•

Move ~to ~LAME LESS ;elebtric heat:
. ; .I

meeting wtU be hold at the home
&lt;J! Mrs. Geor811 Buehanan.

''

'

7

r.
Lad.Detergent........~··t:. 59e
.xot
Scot Lad Paper Towels 3~«~1.00. +
Scot Lad Catsup••••••••• 5~~=~·1. 00
I
5
•oo·
Lad
Corn
1Scot
I
1Scot Lad Tomatoes.... ~. 5c·•·l.OO
I
1Scot Lad Apple Sauce•••5 ····1. 00
I
1Scot Lad Peas.E;~'.J;: ••••• 5c•··1.00
I
1Scot Lad Green Beans 6····1. 00
I
I Scot Lad Veg. Soup•••• .8····1.00 ·
iI ·Scot Lad Spinach••••• ~. 6•o••l.QO .
I Scot Lad Maple Syrup•••~.;:
I
II Scot Lad Biscuits•••••••lO •••·
B~ttlos
I S ·t L d p·
co
a
op
•••••••••••••
··"'~~ .
I
.
'

Wholo Komol
Yollow ••••••

Queen~~ S~l

·'

CARTON

.39

Throw 4woy

~

'J

' . '' '

.

.lllnqutt Fruit

Anniversary

Celebration
Is Planned

II

\, . , FR'OZEN FQODS

Mprsha Davia, Mrs. Marlon Oh-

"'ce

e

...

~ss Louise Glass, Mrs. ~ Larry Wehrung, Mrs. Charles
tit' Fields, Mrs, Meggie Fields Hollman, Mrs. Flo Strickland,
~.. Betty Fields, Ml88 Nan~ Mrs. George floCllnan, and Mn.
F~lds, Miss Joyce McCoy, Mlos Elza Gilmore.
Mlss Marcil Uno Jordan
Clbdy, Allee Marie, Betty and
Clarlene Roush, Mrs. Uncia
Slhart, Mrs, Billy Miller, Mra.

aa.

10 I

........•.....

, Gilts were presented to t h e favors. Others attending were
Mrs. Marshall Klng, Mrs. Doo
~wlyweda a n d refreshments
Wfl're served.
CoiUns, Mrs. Doo McKnight,
~ Guests at the shower were Mra. !ilerrie Jolmson, Mrs. wn.
Mrs. Betty McNarma, Mrs. Me- lard Boyer, Mrs. Raymond Baity, Mrs. Jim Noutzllng, M r s.
rj Zerkle, Mrs. Joyee Zerkle

~r,

lOll

••••••••••••••

cussed.
Mrs. Mullen received a birthday gift from her secret pal.

~ord,

"!

·'

~ ~:

I~.• .

IIQMEM4DE

s·

c.. ..

Mrs. Bill McDaniel presld·

frirmer iilaan Fields, daughter
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Fields of

JIJIIes Deem. Mrs. Roush 11 the

~0

-

eel at the meeting. Plans were
discussed for a record hop to
be held on March 28 at t h e
Melga Junior high School. The
coople'o party ID be held in

Games were played with prlz:
es being given to the wiMers,
Carn1ng out a George Waslringt:on's- birthday theme, M r s.
Wells served a cherry dessert

alsan and Randy Roosh was held
r~cently at the home of Mrs.

':?
•

. ARE 1·1as
s:·.· a''~-&lt;
Sp
'
.·
1~ .
·.;.j
,
SAUSAGE
..
. •If:~ ....... ~.: 3· "
.
;~! ·~7, · · ~
RIB
SPARE
.,.. "''
STYLE
COUNTRY

April at the legioo hall was dis:

Roush Couple

·.

.

R. BEE

.

-

t '•

1/4 PORK LOIN•••••••• ~~i~~~
.·-.

CENTE'R
CUTS

'

,;

(,.A;~~·

Family Pack

4 T THE END OF POMEROY BRIDGE

'

-~-

',

) ~·'

' ;;. ':.ft:,.~.~ ;

.

.

. . ' .\&lt; ;.

.

,·1

992-2536

Oenturftl that nt are eJW·ntlal to
health.. See your dentlat r~ularly,
Get P'ABTEETH a tall drug counters.

'

·~:

LEAN

"What fs a Valentine" by
Mrs. WiiUam Alrson; and "Wash~
Calendars to be used in a
ingtm" by Sarah Dill. A prayer poem, ••rm Too Hurried" money~maldng project were distributed by Mrs. Doo Mullen at
clOsed the devotions.
a
recent meeting of the Sew~
The wonder box donated by
_Mrs. Frick was won by M r s. Rlle..S.wlng Club held at t h e
home of Mrs, Edward Wells.

In Honor of

~

'
"
"~··

I .I'

·'

The class decided to sell cards tha Husted, Mrs. Marjorie Bow:
and knives. Mrs. Herbert Dim'l en, Miss Freda Lelvlng, and
led in devotions using "In t h e Mrs. Beulah Utterback,

Shower Given

ROA
lb.

dist Church held at the home or Moore, Mrs. Beatrice Buck
Mrs. Dorotl!y Long.
Mrs. Cornelia Bentz, Mrs. Mar·'

u.t;

'

FLOWERS

·Featured speaker at the after.
noon program was Peter P a u l
John of Lafayette, ln:l., w h o
talked on the foUr spiritual laws,

Two fund-raisingprojectswere Dixon. Several members receiv-

Psalm and Mrs. Eldm Weeks had

,.

Lovo1 Booutl!.l

taken on Wring a recent meet- ed gifts from their secret peJs,
Ing of the Willing Workers Class Retreshments were -served to
ol the Enterprise United Metho- those named and Mrs. C a r I

pruer. Readings were "Febru&amp;1'1 rii by Mrs. Frances Clrle-

-

7

2 Proiects Approved

Service of the King" to open.
Mrs. Paul Frick read the IOOth

.

..'

'' ;

i

tary service.

.

EVERYONE

.FALSE TEETH

wright, Mrs. Lawrence Roush
and a guest, Miss Emma Forthe.

'

&gt;"-.

-s

palachian Power in Pt.. Pleas~
ant, and to take orders Cor Ttlp-

.

a

ll!e.

,)

Mark V·LotVers .the Privet

ChlUioothe First Church, and sus C..:hrisl as God's only provision for man's sin, and the aCthe llev. llalph Hudson.
The welcome was extended by ceptance o! L~rlst as Lord and
the pastor of the host church and Savior through a personal eJPerience.
there was special music by
men's quartet from Otterbein
College, the uupwardway Quartet." Howard M. Jones of LoJlw
don, Ky., spoke on tOO l'hrlsttan

11¥,..

DEAR POLLY-1 would appreciate hearing from

: ~ti.ifJM.f~t~

...........

'•''
·~ ···· · ·;·;•,•,·,··
~'- ~ .......:.:o.......•;o;.•.... ~;n&gt;;.V;~:,o,;.
....
. ...•..••••
•••' ',......
. .•. ...
. .••
·~• •...
...···:·:·:·:·.·:•:
...,. · ············~.·-:""·'·"'-·'·
..·&lt;·"~.N'JN'.'.........Y.NY.o...•~·•"'*''x'~""·
·- ·~*·"
.. ·· ·· · ······ · ····-~·---~~--• -~-:-.··· .··· ·· ····-······-·-:-~·~-·-·-:.
. · ·..· ........
. ........
•• .. x•.••·~
7.

I

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can•1

e

·

16 ••·

. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .illllli . . . . ,............~,,

••

�...... '. ......

•

~\

ill;

+'

'

It- lilt DIIIJ - - - i ' - I ( ' M ' P""~ 0,. ·~, Man-h f, 11169 ·

•,

l•

INFORMATION

.

.'

2 SIGNS
.OF

DEADLINES
5 , .1111. O.y 8efoto P.IICttiOI'I

Monday Dud liM t 0.111 .
Clfet1lotiont &amp; c.,~uont
Will h GCc.pted until 9 a .m. for

The P""lith.r ' ' " ' ' ' ' lht rttht
te •41t or re jOel ony odt lleom10d olt-

lmpcda 4 dr. Local 1 Qwner car, V8 ~nvine, power.
glide, radio and heater, ."ood ~i"res, "blue fi,nish.

..diOMI. The ,ublitMr will not
.. r1ttpon1iblo f., _,. thon Otll
lncamtel irt1trtion.

1964 CtiEVELLE MALIBU .................................. _$995
4 Door. Locol 1 oJwner car, 6 cyl. engine, powergiJde

RATES
For Wont Ad S...~ice

S ullt• per w.,d

o~

ln11Jrlion

tron s.

Mini11111m Chartt 75c
12 cont. ptu wore! three con11cu·
tlwe lnurtion• .
11 ce"h plf Wore! 1i1 eo"lecuti .. e

CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBITUARY
S1 .50 fO&lt; 50 word minimulll . Eo .
eclditianc-1 word lc.
8 LtNO AO S

,,.._,, _

·r u~quoise

int~rior.

over white finish. Spotless clean

2

81o17 trame, a """""· s

'\lf&lt;lraOml, bith, cablnetl Ill

kllchen,' oO: !loon, Ml ' ment ' 13.600
1\li lfiLB orr RT. ·C - II
' ac:res. •ill s~oey . frllme bauoe,
5
· eould ..._ I
. ~~...... """""·
"" •
' bam, 1111111 pond, ""' 111!.

•••-•..o

f!Mt.'
tJOMERoV - Large boule COli·

R&amp;H.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Reo.-·-

OI'EN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

OFFICE HOURS

8:30 o .111 . to 5:00p.m. Doily
tr30 o . m. to 12:00 Noon Soh,rrdoy

C1rd Of Th1nb
WE WISH to thank everyone
who was tind and helplul
during the illness and death
of our husband, !allier and
brother; the staff at Holzer

Almosi any bivai~e can
produce a pearl, but the finest pearls are those produced
by the pearl oyster.

MIXED HAY, also four room
house for rent, John J, Rose,
Phone 949-2822,

CIDHUAHUA puppies, call 84:1-

HospitaL Ewing
F'lmeral 1!164: FORD V-8 standanl, two
2648.
3-4-:ltc
Home. relatives, friends and
door sedan. Call 1192-8517.
neighbors; the Revs. Charles
1-Wtc GENERAL ELECTRIC range,
and Freeland Norris; all
very good condition, $65, BeU
""" sent n.... rs, cards and LATE 1!161 Volkswagen. Conam Howell 8 mm camera, 8
food. Your kindness will nevlac! Jack Handley, 1875 Linmm projector, one film edier be forgotten.
coln Hta., l'llmeny. S+3lp
tor 8 mm, one slicer 8 mm
Mrs. Ben Speneer,
aOO 16 mm, movie light, 8
Betty Jadc1011,
mm $80. Phone 992-3743 after
Brothers and Sisters.
3:30 p.m.
:l-4-6tc
S-4-llp

VACA!!Cf for two eldetiJ people. Preler prloale pold ...
llalll. """"' Mia, 7'/Ull$.
!N-Ue

SMITH AUTO SALE5
.«ANA.l'GA, OHIO

pay balance ol f!I.II5, Try K
in your ~ CaD tn-2S36.

- "--"-';..;·..;·. •: 'J.'!&lt;
Lost
ForSIIe
Ul!T, tlree Be1181e fliiP' In the
POODLE
PlJPPIES, AKC Toy
Iadlng a-..t area. Pbone
miniature, f/5 and up. Sllld

wrtee

. . IIU.

WIIIINToluy

, ONL Ull.95
Pkl• 2.1t ,..._1

MCORE'S

. t~ •. MAIM

llld

sroominl- "'-'
II ,J lie

FA~Y ~:

111119

Famous Brand Sler&lt;o. This'
set has 1 &amp;peed inlermii
cl!an&amp;er. l'owerlul AM-FM
radio. 1'llls set 8181 iD ......
Pay only $101.51 or .f6.26 per
month.

can

11112-211111.

~Wentecl

11-IJ.tfe .

..::'....~ ,.. '·'..:::.::::
Told ........

~~ ruod" .. .., ··~= :
TOTAL

c. c. JIIWIII'OIID

.,

AO,'m.U

lHueral

.......

!mployment Wentecl
QIIIJ) CARE for liOitiDB methin. """"' . . . .

14«11

W•ntecl

·i

M•ns, Womenl &amp; Childreftl
PAJAMAS .......... pr. $1.00

Bryants Dollar Shop
106 Court St. Pomeroy, 0.

992-5896

For Rent

I

Bryants Dollar Shop
NOW

ANTIQIIIS, furniture, dilbol.
1 ~- lin. Howard
Cedi, IIIII W. Main 81., PomeIIIJ.
141fe

'

STOP IH AND STRETCH
YOUR DOLLARS
U THE ALL NEW

........

AUcnoNJ:III
Cllmplllte llmlet

rut and euJ. Free •
mates, Pboae . - , Gatfe.
leiD Ready • IIJI
Middle.
port, Oillo.
I • lie

co.,

BUDGET PRICE lulllllurt CID
our lblnl flocr budget lllop.

IIUft Fundlurt, lllddllport.
Cillo.

..

.

a&amp;VSN\11:

TOTAL

RECEIPTS

ao,TOU5

'OOTAL BECZIPT8
ffi.EVENUE,

NONRE'V'm~Uii

AND TRJ.Niilf"ERS)
TOTAt-BDJINNING

110,701

BALANCI: PLUS
U:C&amp;lPlt . . . , .

TWO-ll«&lt;room ll'llller, 19G'1 Jaguar for sale or lrade for 8 ROOM IIOIJSE, bath, lafll!
fann lractor. M &amp; G Food l&gt;uernenl, bolb fn&gt;nt and bod&lt;
Markel, 3 mliel IIOIIIb of Jlkl.
pordt, 1\li acre ground, Coldleport, Rl. 7.
,_,_.,
lege Ro&gt;d, Syraeuee. l'llone
1ft.58111.
S.l-ltp
PUIINIBHED and uofandobed
lporlmenll. Clollo to IC!bool. JOHN DEERE "G''
PlloDo IIWIM.
l~JI.IIe
CaD 1185-38M.

-I.

TBAP.ER IAlTS, llclb'o lfablle SMALL DOZER, B fool blade,
Caart, BJr-. (loki ... lllle Jeyd. tilt and angle, Pbone
Rt. U&amp;, PlloDo
1111-2201.
»JJil

...

~n.ue

ELECTROLUX VBCIIU!D oleauIWMWY IJ)II'Immll - J er. Has j throw-away bap,
complete set ol cleaning Bl·
nlll, !loan, lurulbn. prj. tadlmenls and guaranteed
Ylle pdlnc. Out oiiJl floodl, 1&gt;01feot condition. Pay oil
J . . lnlm ,..._, poll
balance of $31. Term1· Pbone
,_~_

... ·-Ina
111 • p.m.

u

1.111.

wac

'I'JlAIL&amp;R, 10 I lit, .... bed-.J'IqeMaiJ,
Wf-tle

--·
U&amp;
lila roRD FlirW., liT, VI,
,.opeed lrllll·, ulrl .....
Pb. • • .
1+111:

tll.ltiM

ADIUNI'ft'RA110N . . . t 8JUJ
~
. I IJ,l•AO

lli.MUI

0 ,...,

.
NOTICI OJ

_...__

AHOI~

lit... ef T8..... A. ,...,., DUUMI
NotiM .. ...... . . . . tlld Olft
w, xoan, of B.D. "~
Oldo ... bleD tli1J' .........
cuttbr of fh• E1te1N of T~r A••
IIOol'l, ·n , ...,. ., __ ! 'Ill
1'cnrN!dJt, Mtlll Countr1 Oblo_.
CndlloJII .,. ,..a1Nil • •
clalml WUb Mld Madlr)' wlWJI

--·
-

of .........,

c. lACON
,...... INit el IINI CWIIY

.!OliN

JtiiJlllll ..

Alfred
Spcial Notes '

,o ,...,.
a.-.I

-'

J,•.U

I ._..

o ,......,
!Wi:Ni&gt;mni!li .o ~-'::
DPINDmlll3

~~ 1te8

....,., aamoou:

• l.tll•

MV

~-··­
CAeU.. ad ldettv.J

ODM• ...... ~ •• .

Linde

(Coftt (lalldlq

t I.'IOUO

lttei,Putml

.vu., oteJ

_,.,., ,......
.. !MI. .

&lt;Colt) (AU,

LtbrarJ' B\lll4iql'l

t.IID.OO

am 00
·

· Ullnr7 Julldl..~

.. .... .. ...

101'AL AIDI'I . .... . .

......

TOTAL : ·'· ... : . · · · · · · • ·: •

l,oao.•

MLIIO.OO

t&amp;l.uo..to

gram.

World Day ol ~ will be
oblerved at the chdf~:rrith serv·
lees at 7:45 p. m., 'Frldl\)'. Mar.
7. '!be no;rt regulor meedns wUI
he held at the homo of c.-nevleve
Guthrie onTuesdayeve~-..~r.
18 wjlh Holen Woode •• program

OIUO RIVER fnml loll m
Root. 124 between s,n.....
~~·.
.
and Radne, Oblo. 500 leot
SERVICES
1110 hostess served e lovel1
long and 100 feel wide, Priced
Sunday Schoolollleellllnce Feb. deoserl course In keoplfW with
to seD. l'llone ,.__
23 was 57, The oltarlll! was
Wuhlngton'o Blrtildll)'.
I
Mr. llld 1\irs. S. W, O'Brien &amp;t
ll4«t $18.04. Worthlt&gt; services were.

OIIHMAIICI 110. 1M
AJfll

ORDINANCI . . ITAINifole

TO

THI PAIII:U. . OR noaAII OP
DIIAIUD MOTOI VIHICLII
WH""PU. tiMN .... wHIIlll till
CO!'PGrat. Umltl o1 u.. van.,, of
~. Oblo. cer&amp;ala dJ.aaatW.
ParUaJ11 &amp;malltSe&lt;J, wnoUd, Ju.Uo
114, IIOD-OPtraU.,. dllo.,.._ w 1lfto
llteDHd motGr nlllcl111 lll:ld
......u .... putiq ........
nt NCh mo\or ~lei ttrKii to ilft•
11141 b'dflo Ia tbe ......._ nADI
the YlllM of PdYite pnpv&amp;f, craM
an aa.t ollt.w . . . , ad bulUI
lui_., uti otberwiH 14tetfen
witla tile oollli'OII ID4 'ftl.l 1Miq ef
the 11Vbltc1
NOW '1'RIIIla'C8&amp; 81 IT .......
VSD ~ folloW~ -.,. tbt C.WN!U of
U. Vllbi,P of ......,. 91do,
tblrd1 of all m.mMn 1ltcMd tlMft.

The lOO'e ••• , ·, , •••• 24
Dutton' a Drugs , ••• , • • 24

IY~

IMI' pentn,

MASON BOWLING CENTER
Week EndiJW March 1, 1969
SUNDAY MIXED LEAGUE
(Not Available)

tina

or OOQIUI.tloa IMII .-rll; or no.,
liiJ dJNbled motor YM!ole oa U1
ltnod fW lllatlWJ7 ~OdD AWl .,g.

l.$RCHANTS

..... ... ODD till ~f..., tbeNII,
tl! u.. 1D . , . .
OUfl,
leettoa I. 'l'll.lt lUI Pti'IOilo ftnt. or
eorpot•tJoa hi eoatrol Of ..., nil

ol"

•tor •,.,...

1. W. VL National Guard; 2.
W 4.
0
Panta.sote; 3. W,O~ .;
G. ,
Roush and Sou; 5, Siek; 6. Sld--

troPUtr Wl&amp;latA 1114 .map. .........,

'Ire, &amp;wb' an:1 MIICIII. Co. Bank
(tleJi 8. Mlller'sltla.
Ul..&amp;. Gome
llo\'1• 225•
'ua' 1
• "'
I
Hich Serleo - R. Ml"'!,,l, 574.

,.~lt tbt pnldll1 or etor.,o,
•tor 'i'Uicll OD UJ
111eh reel proPt~!tJ for a .Nriod of
01"

ol aaJ IIINitlod

-

o. ....

'

INfORMAllON
~-NEWS

WHY,PA,I DO

:&lt;'"

P~.,- I~ ~~il'll Clcaedllw,Pt.
'•

IIWI!III! 'ltlU'R!

MY PlEASURE,M155

. presents

tiiALOIIII OF
VICICR I!E5r I

Wl'l&lt;l.f .'!HE INVITATION
Wl\9 RlRWARDED 10
Mf: AT MY JAPANESE
8RANCH OFFICE.

LOCAL REPORtS
DAiLY

AT
7:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND

OAJE Of lHESE D'I'IS
'THEY'RE GOI"-G m
IVT YOU AWAY!

ARE 'ttU TALKI~G
10 'rlJUR!:.EtF /1K;,NIJ,
M€£1&lt;. 1

Keeping
Gallia and
Mason Area
Informed As
Well As

upro
~even

dollars!
Ver4
qood!

Entertained

a

.,\,.. .,;. .- ' ', ' ·-. .:"

Of ,. .....,, -

A REMOTE HUI!Tli!G LODC!, TWO
FR1EMD9 ARE REUHtt!D ""

. ,

-~
PLEASANt ~~H~rT,U.
WESDAY
WO!OIEN
,
ADMITTED: Mrs. AllenSe,yre,
m
.,
1. Lucky strikes; a. TQR~en; Pt. Pleasant; Cl.nie Hfuinboth3.
u-"""nota,· 4. Alley Clll; 5. am, Red Houae;· Gene*•
PIIJ'IH*II,. or wbleh bu aot. - . u.
~~~~-- ~-•·nu...
~ - . . a ............ stuaer•; 6. Sllllnrocks; 7, Dellel- dros, PL Pleosort; Mro, W, R.
bn'
I'Qiatnttlaa, mart PUJ'IUIUit
• Clowns.
• -~ ~·
to
. _ ., u. Olllt ..,.... beat1; ..
S.undera, Glenwood; ...,,ue
~
· ,. ..... qr . .lo&gt; ... ""'"'
Hich Glme - F. Lolvi!W all! Jd111, Mldclleport; Mrs. JIID!es
~ B. Bocook, 187; Hlgil Series - Jel!en, Glemrood; Rulli Am
aotor
NlaleiM
t.ucb
..
taam.
S. Hood, 489,
Love, New Haven; Mra. Arltp
booGI, n4taton, IOIJt.On, atc~. .un
.......... lo ... _ .
t.anwu, PL Pleolllll; Sle¥tn
,.::U. 4~t ~ : : ' :
SPORN
Show, Pt. Pleaaant; Paul Rol.........._ .,.., ... 110&gt; ,..
I. D Shift; 2. Trlppero; 3. II&amp;- Uno, Atheno, 0. .
...
" - - ,. rtiUhd
tloa - to Jecll 11111 C Shill (Ue); 5. KillS
DISCHARGED: O.vld Sm
. I"'
01 Nlii
....
a ...,.
or Plno; 6. A Shltl.
Teddy CGttln, llor«hy S 1 y r ·t,
pJoee of -.rap alld aiW1 DOt bioi
H'..,
Gom ·-• Serl
C.
.
..,,
e mm
OtJeSIIeSe,yre,Mrs.CblrlesW~
.n4 .,_..
Searl a, 236 and 610,
sJey, . Marie Fowler, , Mr1. Pul
"tnwiJII
,_.,..
_, 1M·dlarpl.
4LitllollVeblclN
el Ia
~rdabM wttta t1» )lf01'td0• o1
stortera, Mrs. Joe Forbea, BeY..
~ ,.,..., " u. - TUEIDAY INDUSTRIAL
. erly L. Bird, Elr1 Coond, Mri.
. ..,... ~ ,.., o. "" . - ""
I. Coca-Coli; 2. Tom Rue w. s. Biu"''• !(roo Thill-oktn
,::.~ ~ !:; Mocore 11111 J.K.M. (tiel; f.J!Ur. SlqeJt, T., Euaene Sorpnt,
I'IIDtt:lf .j.blclll Pll'liiil or ...,.. •
ton's Sunoco; 5. Waddell &amp; ~; Rlchlrd Frazier, Mrt.' Don
·
~=: :'.:::-~-: 6. A.B. C. Cleanera,?.st.Joseph; Moore and acm.
.
.,. lila "' •
8,"Hickma!f.
. BIRTHS: Mr. iud' Mr-. Jerry
,.~....,.
lfllh G1me 1111! S.rteo - S. Zerkle, Letar~ 1 - Mr. llld .
11
: : - : :m:": mltO'N4 W a... u ..' 22
- '10
.
.
,.. ,....., .,... • ,
•._rf;f/ ' .4 •- • :
Mro. Robert Klns, PL Pleo11nt,
Ronp a.a.d lhall · DOt ... . . _ . .
....
.• dauahter; Mr. am Mra. -~
a::a~1!, ~
STEELWO~
dall Cline, Gallipolis, a son.
oe m7 -. lli1Pa11il of 111 ._...
1. Stl.npl'sl 2. Nuts &amp; Boltaj
anc. wtth tho prowta~oa of IOCtld
3.
ma
"
..,
"""·
. 1'111Peroi.
. ~ StrilWOl'll 5. Fer5odloa e. TIW a. prerttnn 01 •
.c !afl:i 1 n...a 8. &amp;-•
,.,. --• .., ,., roa; v. •:'lr'~'''
• ~·~ &amp;JUIIIIPI'
motar vebk)q ; : ; : . 08 iflon4 ..
erL
. 11 ~·· ·
IIIII; 5. ·Se,yr,e &amp; Temonl{ lj. G.L
""' '""'""
... OCIIItftll
tl! • . ..U~
. . . . ~ High \Game .' - H. Whitlatch;
.1
IIJm
or eorporaUOII
N~Ularl7
Jo's; 7. ScJns.;.().(iun;8. ff1.Fcwe/
o. .., 234; HJcb·!!of!;.e,,.. L. LIJIIer,
Wanien: HJcb GameGU.
..
_ of .......,, .......
- - - •579. .
'·'•
.
........
more, 200; Rich Series - J,
lacUo• 7. Tla&amp; ... Otllel' ord~Ma­
Rlchord&amp;Oil, MO.
·.
"
cu, ot ,.,u of .:irdlAaDetl.. "ta ooa·
- u ....., · ,.,.,• ..,.. _ .
a111 maw "Milk wlklll 11 Mt
an CIPiniUnl eondJUon, or -.tdah bu
.. ,.,.. . . .,. 1or oolnP ., -

"WE'VE GOT aJR
OF IT! BUT

'OH~Rf

FIRST LET Mf TEll
YOU HCW HAPPY I
o'IM TO SlE ltxJ ~

"="'.., "

=

.:::::S

.,. ., . " ''-

.-c:

=

. .,. . . .,.=

.JAIL Y CROSSWORD

. "' ....
.... -.____

.

WED

' ll&lt;'i'\liXED .

Tty:~li

.

Me,. High Gonie -

1. ·,
1· Leftoven; 198; Hich Serlet 3. Hill &amp; Mleaeo; 4. Whlle&amp;Ne1- 545.

ell! ·

~!lh, !p,
•

'

lnd

~··

,, .'

Einoat

12.Wad1Dg

bird
11. Telephotlt

a Odller

'

'

L,: : '·.11'!:.~~:

for

~-

charp

19. Small
nook of

lt. Tnu:Uon

piece
on the

":....;..

....
29. Poker
Wm
21. Owned
29. Meduu
and bet
alattra

IT' S A GOOD W/tll•
TO I&lt;EEP

THERE'S
NO ~USH, I'M
.FOGGING!

rtver
t. Cipher
31. GI'Mk
10. Recornlsed
letter
17. Lawyer'&amp;
33. Ferber

forOilll

Aft- HM WtttM, Ctwll

3.0,..k
letter '
T.Bnrlne
abort

. poet.
18. Alcbldor,

PMIM: rob, If, U.
LHILII P, PULTl
........ , c - 1
CIIAitUI W, U.AI

J11, Lotty

8. Ruutan

14. SbUJI
15. Remnant
1&amp;. Often:

20. 11...,.1

•· Grow old
&amp;. Determine

e~Ie,

wtru

a GUmore,

aau.t paiW .....,.

. SUI!do.yl(~r

a. D!Hmb&amp;l'k

AIJII088
1. IJke clay
II. Lorry
II. Maxim

a

lliK wU1i &amp;M JN¢1• Ill WI -..
....... ltllall ~ad tbl - - .....
br ...., • ., 16Jed,
loetion 8. Tbat. &amp;Ida .,...,.._ ebl1l
.... elMet IDd Ill • ,... 11'.anCI .,.. U.

•••

partt1clp
20. snare,

38. KlnJly
UUe

and

31. Nul to
Nul
&lt;O. l!lxpniiiiDD

othttn
M. ~1P·
llai

dancing
J1rl

receptacle

36. Scorch

28. Pale purple 22. Bubatanee
29. Helmet·
In ltleUae

SS. YOUDJ'

•U, Spawn

21. Wall receu
21. Impetuou•

21. Wine

lhaped

Alm;oo;;,....,......,-•,fflll,....h;:-,

atruc:ture
so.Meuure

A

of land

11.8..,.....

Now .....,...tho eirdad loilen
tof_tho....,.._••

~~~::;:::!::t'~~~ou~q~lll~ad~bJ;Iho ...... - .

3%..........
ottlme
3&lt;. VIper
31, Excavated

r----1 (IIIII]·(III]
v.........,.•• - · - - y -•IT _ ..

Jli.WUdlheep

(o\Mweft ....,...,

... C1tlln

k-letl&amp;t

IS. Illy

""'-' ftoo IIIMIIIo ,_ t/tr,... •.. JW

wtndow

"" - • tA.N-NIW MOON

... Girl !rom

·weotslde

. Stoey"

...Wotor

wbOOI
IT. TapeairJ'

'

... a-... ..
DUl

•JIM
DOWN

......
.......
ur_..,.

U. "Ill WLp'JiJW

tTLKIIDLG

Cll101'

~.~

Nil

IIIVK

L

QILW

ll:rcvM

Iti.GJID 'R l!L 0 UKWI;)KV ' - 7 V 1 D BKV
A,J V F
t
,

DAILY o'm!OQ:~~-·~...i haw to wo.. It:
. ll E Y D '··II ·

~'&lt; ~o ' J.oxo 'i•

X II

· ow , ' ' '

If.

0

·

811111 IItten, • -

IIDfllltt'. tllo'Joollli !0111 tGnoiltlaa. 'CIC tllo -

-~ ... tllo ~

lolt,n ... .......

'

•

on Ill Mlll&amp;

,,

!'

.

• ,

.,.,.

" I • I

ILPKC

~·

.

.

'

-t.

~

·. Yelbra.,'l &lt;liJF,....I.TH11 8PDUT b~ Deft\OVBIIENT

Ill )\BIIQAD I1JlOlf 'IIIII JIAR'l'H,-.JOJIN &lt;cUIIICY ADAM&amp;

(JIIIIollor _ , oiUtloloo .. - . . . Ill~~~~~-... •A IIUIOI

r.. ~ woo 111. 11- fer ~ two D's. tte.
~ "':"'#"

'

AC.n ...... ••-••

abawk'•

'

HEALTHY.'

~~·· '-•••

ot BOrrow
-&amp;2. Harlow
Inlet

grldlt'OD

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

$4-Sie

.....

• . "• c

4:30 P.M.

*""

held 11 10:15 with the Rev, Clo- CG!umbuo utc1 LeonHecoxollowa OLD TOWN FLATS
apelt Tuooday evening all! W"l!&gt;'
112 IIAMBLI!lR convertible, ,.. to.
w.s.c.s.
nolldQ wllli Mr. 11111 Mrs. Horry
buUI motor, m:ellent, II
Mrs. Poullne Pock ~~~ly
The Women's Soc1et)' of Chris- Guthrie.
Rambler slliiOII ,...,.., !'bone
ol Columbuo vlaltod Mrs. ......,
Garnor Grlmn hla beenlllwllh Dalley lnd family.'
19Ul'H.
S-S-11p Iiiii Service held Ito regular
'
m"'lfW oo Tuoodayevenlns, Feb. a beek oilmen!.
Mr. and Mro. Gene COfWo all!
18, otlhe home or Oslellae Foil·
Mr. and Mro. Clair WOode ond
Reall!stlfe For S•le
foml1,y have moved to the Boga
rod, wllli on ottendance of twelve Coml of Clrclevllle opent Tuoo- prq&gt;erty which they have purmemben 11111 two vlsttort. Tho do.y !lfle.._,ondWednoodaywlth chased. Mre. Congo'o grallflpormoetlll(!,lnchorgoofNeUiel'arl&lt;- Mr. 11111 Mrs. WOllam Clrr llld
ert• are making their home with
er, prealdent, opened with t h e tunlly where they took care ot a
alll!lll! of "SllndlnsonlhO Prom- beet Mr. 11111 Mrs. Robert White ~
Mil!l COflO waa In overlght
IJF.O, IIOIIS'I'E'ITEI. ...... lsos." Pro.yer wao led by Helen of Keno 11111 Mr. ond Mrs. Chas.
"""'
of Mr. lnd Mro, Llwrenc:o
J'(IMEROV - S room brldl. Woode. A total of18olck11111 shut- D. Woode, IUlotodlhealoo'IUeo- Jollnoton Ill! family reconlly.
bath, hoi waler fumaeeo , ln callo were reported l1ll!de In do.y lfttr,_ OnWedneodayevoMrs, Sylvlo Clrpe!Ur hlolletn
nbw they called lirlelly m the. In with Ou. Mro. Mlrle Roberta
·basoment, fireplace, waD to the past month.
A cmnmunlc:otionfor the Coli~- Woodeo before returnlne to Clr· called oo her.
wall carpeting. $8500.00
cU
oo HlaherEclucatloowosreld. clevlllo.
MIDDLEPORT - 7 . 1'001111,
DUion Taylor remains ,Uout
Mulene WlnObremer oll!CeDbolb, fu~, garage, poroll- The Ruconc!llltlon fllld wudlocwued at length butnoocllmwu ,~.. Glo!hrle spentawoekOil!lit. lhettm/
eo, and S lola. $10.5011.00
llksn. E1eol'lllf Bo,yles pve 1 r&amp;o .Col...,but.
SYRACUSE - I rooma, bath,
of Mloslono, .
· Mr.·oil! Mrs. Dovld Coli ofGa·
·
rurn,ce, lliinn doon, wln- port
Generilvo Guthrie led the pro-, ..._ vlolled her unclo, Elner• · Taylor 11111 John.
dowi. 3 Iolj, .-oo.IO, ·
gram OD .., A Body of Chrl!ll - A 0011 H~eo, althe Elmwood Nur..
Mr. Ill! ttro. Olu. D. Woode
WANT TO IBU. C.W:. lJI Blloket CUe", with the lntrOdue. Ins IIOD!Olio!ttd~Y oriornooil.
called • ~hWOc.io~TWero
IIELEN • VlllGO. TIW'ORD ·tory dlaliii!UO given ·by fl!"'"J"•
Nr. 11111 Mrs, Joliulf 'hllor l'lolna !IIIII I'll ~..,.. '"""
SVRACIJSII
• 1m Sjlencer 'oil! Thelplll~ropn. . 11111Wiljl9io.,toilliJie;oW.,W. lt the ' E~ ~urlinc ~ 1
l

,,

WILL MAKE

PATRIOTS OF

.....,. =..,""::",: .,:"".....
.1 LtDO.ID

AtrroMOBILI!l IOIID'- ben
eaueelled? Lalt yoar aro-•
or'l lloense? 0111 - - 1 u tre

lfllh'' 1ndlvldllll Gillie - R.
Bollen, 24!; R. Werry, 236; R.
BOII'en, 224.
STANDINGS
Points
Pmne~gy Gw) Club • • • 48
The Top Clts . • • • • • 41
Tljo Big C's • • •• .•••• 40
Pomeroy Golf Courie , , 36

LNAL NOTICI

H•OI ,~.. ~-="

MACIIIN!S, repelr '
serviee, Ill mlbl. WY IIIlM. The Jl'lllrle Sbop, PomllniJ. AalboriJed SIDe• 8lla
and Service. We 8blrpea •
llolaon.
J.»Uc

IMur-

PATRIOATS

0•

Wercy, 545•

•or oner,
Maut. occupaat. JaJH
~ llla1l pan or tton.

TOTAL

'•

.•

.,

UPZNDIT'URlS
TOT.u. EJPIItiDl1"UU8

SEWING

D1W tiiM l&amp;t.ll W

ONE PAIR ol ponies ' J'l1l
old, 52 Inches hiall, good set
of work barnela Ctlll!plet., Ill
for fiZ5. JIIIIIOI Ollloru, lit. I,
ReedS91Jle.
S.Wip

dll6 E. Main

......._...........

. . . 121AU.ll

Deob--.robl fud . . , , . . . . 1MII..
TOTAL
.._ . Al,Jto.tO
TGW J:qra1''"!111
General , .
IU.M1..
l'lllld
1• •
''roTAL . .". . . • •
ai(. ..au
llalaaol Dtc. at, -

~

mo. eau

I'OMIIIOY

ILAEnNAIS-.
PH. 99:1-2113
~
;.a

'l'otal ReetlliU 6: 8! 1· -

IT'S lnezpenaive to clean rup 1WliO llld TV repllr, ~
ellll, .... ~- IDIII!lod,
and upholstery with Blue
Lustre. Rent eleclrh! llham·
Jolm Rln'llcla, fllone pooer $1. 'llny's Bargalnlaud.
IH6

...

Oblo.

•.

.......u

Jml l'ftODUCI'JOH - ' Ill
modem brick plaDI, steady
1IOit, day good hourly
and piece - . pold
.-tlons llld balidaJI. lnlm.
benoflw, he 11aat
boule, bring :roar .... bed
clothes or move to 11!111 nice
1'111'11 area north Ill CG!umbus
~- No age limit. Apply In
penon only. The Galena Sllale 21-INCR RCA TV wl1h a """" t1 HONDA Ill, good condllloo,
Tile llld Brick Co, Galena, lllnd. Phone 'I'IJ.IIfl. ~
~1e.
s.s.stp

•. ,.

... ..., ......

c•.''.' . .

Servlc.

!-C.fle

CARPETS A FIUGliT. Mab
)(()DilliN 7 ROOM boue, bllh,
t11em a beaullful slgbt wl1h
Pl. good ,....,, !1-10ft
Blue Lustre. Rent eleetrlo
tnJIIDII, Ill IIMirrille, Juuc. •hampooer fl. Baker l"umJ.
lion 1JI' llld til. C. V. Bucklure.
J.Ute
loy, l'llune . m.mo. s.attp
FOUR speed 'l'ranomlaloll for
SIX ROOM boo1e wl1h balll,
2811 or 2111 Fonl, oomplele
Wrlglrt St. f7500, Phone 'H2wilb shlftor. CaD li9WUI.
~
S.Wip

ss.ss

,..·

r ••

POMEROY LANES
MOWAY liEND. LEAGUE
Hich TOilll Series - POIIUII'O¥
111111
. , Gun Club, 2f72; The 100'1, 2343;
.. . . .. ~ l/4 ......
'-.PomeroY GGU C&lt;&gt;urse, ~19.
Ouutaacuq·
~ ···"~'~
Buslneu
lfllh 'Teom Gaine - Pomeroy
n-.dtv II, ties . . . I lll.U
CURTISS CA'l'I'LB B:.............. TOTAt,.....Q.QU(·
....
Gun Club, 877; The IOO'a, 840;
TBBABUUII"' ..........-s,
~~m~oe. l'lloae Parm •
Pome!W Gun Club, 824.
DEC.DIBu ai. •• • e.'IOt.eo
From thl Wrat• Truc"k Ul'
"A-II
22M Pomeroy or 111'1.-t Cool· &amp;UMII·r\1\YiCa:axn&amp;
.
Rich lll!lvlduat Serleo - R.
OF CASH !IALr\HtJ:s,
BullcbMr RNI•tor To . ~
.me clll lllallaa. ,.,...., II&amp;C&amp;IPT8 """
1!01!
.... 818; K. Joltnaon, 581; R.
II:DINlllTUIID
l!lnalleat HMitr CGro.

PIGS WANTED. Everett Hoi- POI'ATOES, Pllolll Mlllll
comb, Albany. Pbone MY.e- au- Prolllll, Portllud.
!415.
S-:1-311!
I~JJ.Ue
AfiTIQVIlS, dllbes, fuml1ure, SAVE SAVE SAVEl 111m JIIUI'
dllna cabinets, old pbono- InD. ,_ lime lild :roar
IIJ'IIIILs, clocb, mile. Lee lllck. We bate a - ~
Ruollllll, t• t..p., Terrace.
• lo dil )'OW' water Ifill
S.l-3lllp · diiiD. lleDr)' lllhr •1111 or
Ropr lllhr ..... 1-T-IIIp

. ·'

EmiiENCEI~

........
Jill·····.. .......

Phone - ·

INTH'J.IOUER

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992·2094

N4le

SEPTIC IQb e!Mued 111J1tr
Sanllatlan, Stenrt, Oblo,

SNUFFY

IS WIWDCMIN

..... -.. .W....,

Op•n II i Dally

............ ,,

BIG ZIG ZAG, 1969 model - lng machine wllb toudl of
dial. You can make bultoo
iloles, dam, emb., many lan-

ments of $6.10 per monlb or

3+3lp

. SPECI~I,
SNOW TIRE SALE

'

t

·

.u...

ey stitches. Take over pay-

IIIUIIM.

w•.C.ioty,

)Agr.
. ,. 992-%181

REPOSSESSED Sinser cabinet
Boo.....,.
model sewing maeblne; equiplllclae, 01111
ped to zig zag, embroider,
t;eneral
, . . . . . . . . . . . I f,700.t0
CriiiBIIidftrt
TOTAL . . ,, ...•.... .•. , ll,ttt.to
buttonlloles, etc. Full 1Ul1C811IJC'HI,'DUL&amp; ....m
I 1 lie
tee to party asollllling the
CASH BALANCI:. l&amp;!lilPIW
AND unNDI'I"UBBII IT I'UND
amounl ol$51.73 at $11moolhGZNDAL FUND.
AIR
OONDmOIIING
Ralrl8er·
BALAl'fCE.
ly. Phone 992-21185.
U«e
senlee. Jaot'l Rtfrlg- ~y~ 11111111
SIO,GS.UI
B.
l'lfl.1l:
eraUon, New ~ven. ' - l ••taAilbl• PerwoAII
1 1U.'OOT flat bydraullo dump
ProperiJ Tax (QfOW . llutl.ll
IIC-II'II.
· 4 I lie
redar.t~l S•bllcl)'
1.-..
bed, in good Ctlnditioo. N. G.
SP.tl' of Ohio lvblld)' .
l,llf'I'.GI)
Rose, MlnersvHie. Phone 1111t'lnn and
• MIX Goners~~ deJtr..
ReimbarluloiMII
UUI to COIIC1lf'dall
1710.
1-Wtc READY
100.00
S.UOn J, Tbat
ered rlshl to 'your prvjecl, Olber-Revenua

WILL DO oewlng II bome lippen, pockels, pegglng,
hemming, alieraUono, etc.
Mrs. Freddie Tlllbe~ Muon,
Pbone 77S-5851.
~

I

'

:I GOT A

. PASSEL POST
FER 'IE,

~.

' .

IIGIJN=BY:-::IIOWI=NIIIIG'""

For Sale
3-4-3tc

Auto Sales

SJ4•i\ 50
/ "' low ,,... · ·, I ,!of• , ,
." .
POIERO"'
f'
Jock

WHAT'S URIAH

CLIMBIN' ALL TH'
WAY UP HERE FER?
OUR MAILBOX

•

Many Modeh

·

.•.

·rv·1ces
;

· DIRECi: p~~~~
CHAIN SAIS .

at

'

'

HOMELI'rE ·."

Iaino J lurnl8bed apartuienls,
I'OIIIed consllntJy, llrJnslng
$180.00 per II!OJIJ!I. A GOOD
INVES'niENT AT ll,llt
WE IRJY, SELL. OR RJ!lNI'
, RENIIY aJI:IANI)
Olllce-fiJ.IIII

Cle~ interior; good w.w. tire-s. R&amp;H.

25c Chore• per A.d .. ,,.'

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19U FORD GALAXIE ............................................$995
500 H.T . Cpe. VB engine, automatic. White finish.

lnurtlon•.
25 pot-r cel'lt D11eount on poid ed1
ancl ed1 poicl wirhin 10 dop1 .

A.tlditlo~~t~l

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REGULATIONS

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. O'IIIIJEN " CRDW .

"-~ P!.:C~!!'1 v~.· -·~~·· ~·.--='•~r~·!Co~·=-

Do,. ol Publie.lion

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'h ellltlte For Sile .

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A LITrtE · ~HOMEWORK' Watching· Want": A~s
WANT AD

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1 HEARl' A LOT OF .
CONFLICllN6 ~5~\fl!! I
'lRlEP ll SllCIC ltJ 11iE MI. &gt;'5..
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12 - 1be Dalb' Sl'llti~l, l,omerO)'~Middlepon, o., 'l'ue~, Marcl14, 1009

World DaJ· o! Prayer with the service&amp; in six churches across eial prejudice. Pilot projectsare
theme ''Growirt: Together in the cou~· l''rlday, Mrs. Ben being iniUated to JIOIIOtrate ba,...
Christ," will be obscn'e(l with NeutzJing, president of Church riera which divide communities,
Women United of Meigs

TONIGHT ONLY MARCH l
Walt Disney's
THE HORSE IN TilE
GRAY FLANNEL SUIT
Dean Jones • Diane Baker
Walt Disney's

WINNIE THE POOH

aoo THE BLUSTERY DAY
(Technicolor)

Characters: Winnie the Pooh,
Piglet, Robin Kanga, Tigger,
Rabbit, Owl, Little Roo. Ta·
ken rrom the books written bJ
A. A. Milne. ALL-NOOH, sass

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

women of dlfferent economic levels, racial and ethnic

bacl&lt;grounds IntO dla1011110o Women will be trained to help cbanp
First Baptist. the Naomi Baptist attitudes In churches where raat Ke1-rs Run In Pomeroy, the cism prevails.
Racine United Methodist, t h e
Also new in the pr4Jii'IID ol
Rutland Community Church and Church Women United is theeruio
the Syracuse First U!Uted Pres- menical ministry toward inter•
byterl·an Church.
religious reconciliation in VIetAn international observance nam, with plans for eliP8ndil"€ the
started In 1887 when women nrst work Into other lands or the lndojoined in a single, cymbolic voice

An All - cartoon featurette!
Meet your favorite Cartoon

Running time: 21 2 hours.

brl~lrw

Allred Methodis4 the Middleport

(Terhnlcolor)

Winnie!

Cc:Junb,

annomced todl)'.
Services will be held at the

of pr,yer, the service this year
.
. i ed at rur"-r
15 agam a m
•.nc: clo•g-

ing the gaps _ national, racial,
economi c, an:l reltglous _ that
divide womerL

Offerings collected Friday will
be used for many significantprojects.
New this year is a special national program concerning our

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chinestt peninsula.
Currently in process is the establishment of an ecumenical dialogue team in SOuth Vietnam of
qualiOed scholars drawn trom

the li!e or the Church In such
countries as India. Japan, (:ana..

da, and tl)e U.S. A. Offerings !&amp;ken Frlda,y will be partially designated for the lravel, semtnar;s,
and communications of thls e~u­
menical dialogue team.
Oiferings are also used to help
educate women tn 13 Christian
colleges in Africa, Asia, and [.a..
tin AmeriCii to welcome 40,000
students comh~ Crom abroad
each year to study in the United
states; to S\Vp&gt;rt more than 30
Christian magazines 100 books
lor new literates in 18 countries.
Nationally, migrant farm workers are aided, as are IOOlan Americans In off-reservation colleges, rural pastors and lay leaders needi~ contiooal education;
children in vacation B 1 b l e
school across the land. Adult
services are provided in Braille
for the blirxl and ln ~anish for
persons speaking that Iarwuage,
The same basic service wm
be used by women in 130 countries, terTitories and pretectorates around the world Friday,
With worldwide justice arr:lpeace
as the goals, the emphasis of the
service is on unity.
The theme, scriptures a n d
prayers for this year were p~
posed by women of seven Alri·
can countries, and the unityir18
mour is their well -known spiritual "Kum ba yah."
Participants in the various local services follows.

MIDOLEPORT
1-11lST BAPTL~T CIIURCII, 2
p.m.
The Rev. Charles Simons, pastor of the host cla!rch, Will be
tile I!IIOikor. Mrs. RlchlniOwen,
1-r, will be asolated with .the
service by Mrs. Arnold Richards, Mount Moriah Blptlst
ChUrch; Mrs, J1111es Criswell,
Heath United llletOOclls~ Mrs.
Dwight Wallace, First:Presb)&gt;·
terlan. Mrs. Fred Gibbs will be

A ~ haolorlns Mro. Ar·
u •••
~-• A-~
lhur B.....
-n. na~
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can Logltoi · Aulllllll'l' prooldout,
was 1 hllldlllht or the mid •
winter canferenee o1 the AJner.
leaD Loglon Auxiliary, Depart.
men1 or Ohio, held at the Nell
llouae 1n Columbus over the
weekend.
other reatures ~ the canterthe organist
ence Included a talk on le~sla..
lion a!lectlng veteran• b7 the
POMEROY
NAOIIII BAPTIST .·cHURCH, Honorable DciWdE. Luken~te:on-sressman !rom the 2tthDI1111'\ct.
Kerrs Run, 2 p.m.
Mrs. Ben Neulzllng, preaident aDd reports 111 rehablH1811on IDd
ol Church Wc:.nen United, will be ho..,l181 projecls o1 tho Auxllthe speaker. Special music will 1113'.
Mrs. Edward unum of Leba·
be presented by 1 choir o! chUdren !rom the Forest Run llai&gt;- nan, department prealdent, predot Church led by Mrs. Margar· sfdld ·at the meetlng. PopJ1Y Day
et Annat:rmw, e~Uat from al' the Son41ok,y Soldiers and
Gallipolis. Mrs. Marvin Burt, SatiOra' Home was announced
Trinity United Oiurch, win sing lor APril 11. ''.lp IIOI!I'Ies, sold
by auxiliary unite III::!lldo•.clurthe African "Kwn bl Yah.''
Mrs. Allen Hampton Is leader lng u., are ·Mildo at IIIe home
lor the service &amp;lXI participating by disabled v~ and t b e
will be Mrs. Thomas Yoorw o! fUnds derived Jll'e uand lor rethe Trinity United Cbursh or habllltatlm projects.
Members were reminded to
Christi Mrs. Fred Nease o1 the
aend
their pemles In for t h e
Forest Run Methodisti Mrs. J,
E. D. Hartinger of G r 1 c e proJect or equipping the Amerl·
Episc01)81; Mn. Karl Grueser, can Legion built hoopltelln MaMinersville United Methodist; Ia.Ysia. Mrs. Albert Baxter of
Mrs. Robert Warner of Pome- Fostoria, foreign relations chair·
roy United Methodlsti Mrs. Don man, Ia 1n the charge o1 the
Hunnel, Enterprise United Meth- project and talked on the role
odist; Mrs. Joseph Cook of Pom- or CARE wiilch now hao an o!eroy First Baptisti Mrs. William lice 1n Columbus.
Mrs. Frederick Ru!lner, deGrueser o! Rock SptiiWS United
partment
!Ioapllal director, preMethodlsti Mrs. T, A. Hennesaented
hospital
chairmen !ncluclsy, sacred Heart cathoUc; Mrs.
ing,
Mrs.
Jack
Jaros, BrecksGlen Hiles of Pomeroy United
ville; Mrs. Harry E. Walsh, ChilMethodlsL
llcothe;
Mrs. Della Frustorfer,
The orrerirw wiU be taken by
Cincinnati;
Mrs. A. A. Fried·
Mrs. Charles Scott and Mn.
BOObie Payne or t h e Naomi rich, Clevelandj Mrs. Charles

Columbus, April 27.:l9. The reg.
latrallcll lee Is $12.
D
Altendance at I'Oppy ay was
uraod by Mrs. Walter Holmes,
Akroil, J&gt;01IPY dlalrman, whoalao
ODS.
IUIIIOUnced delalls or a contest
Nooclo ol the hospltels as lilt- on -.v arrangomenta.
ed by the cllalrmen Include tooth·
Mrs. Howard J. Mace, Wasil·
brushes, paste, ·sbavlng cream, lngton c. JL reported on civil
razor blades, writing .PIIer, .defense, Mrs. Joseph Mattlnat
newspapers, magazines, I a p on community service, and SaDrd&gt;ea, roam rubber cusbl011s, dra Dowersod&lt; ol Van Wer~
hot water bottle cc:rvers, and ltate junior auxUiary chairman,
greeting cards.
181kecl 011 what the auxiliary
Mrs. Rullller lntrocllced Mrs. moans to her.
Jack Valohlaer, chairmanolfteld
Among thedislllliUIBhedi!Oieats
aervlce repre80lll8tlves, Who lntr&lt;&gt;Wced by ~~:~ Logan and
talked on the need lor more vol- escorted to tlle .,.....orm w e r e
· .-ra to provide aasl~ce lllra. William Gill, Minerva, na.
In rehablUtatlon to veteran a lol· tlonal central dlvlalon v I c e
lowing their discharge !rom the president; lllra. James W1111el',
hospital.
Akron, national child welfare
Reporta were aloo !!lYOn by chairman; Mrs. Franklin Bea.
Mrs. WWiam D. MIUer of Porta· vor11011, Gibsonburg, central di·
lhOuth, chapiBin, stressing III40l' vlalon )ulior activities chaireach unit make a bqok ol pray. man; and · Mrs. Lester Ninon,
or; by Mrs. Dean J. Winchell, Canton,
national lel!lalatlve
Dayton, suqeotlng constitution chairman.
and by-law revisions with each
Mrs. Nlnoo spoke on the lagunit to aend a copy to eacH com- glng subscriptions lor the leg.
miltee member; and by Ill r •· lalatlve bulletin, and Mrs. BoaJohn Worrell, Columbus, who verscii asked that names be auboutlined rules for histories to mitted for nursing scholarships.
be &amp;elll to her belore July I.
A lorum on national ae"'rltl'
Mrs. WUllam Stewart or Ath· was featured at the Friday night
ens state legislative ctwrman, session. Assisting Mrs. Ullum
ur~ members to conlact their In tho r!tuallstlc opening lor the
congressmen and senators ask- Saturday meeting were Mrs. wu ..
ing that there be no date cllangos !lam D. Miller, PortiiiiOUih,
for Veterans Day and Memorial chaplain, w1Io pve the lnvocaDay. Mrs. Looter Merritt, past lion; Mrs. Donald G. Miller ol
dOpartment preliclen~ and Mra. Aillanco, Americanism dlalr·
Leo McElroy, West Jel!er11011, man, who led In the ~ledge to tho
preslden4 IIIIIIOUIICed leadership nag; Mrs. Greer McCallister o(
training schools to be hold In Dayton, IIMIIIc chairman, who

racuae Asbury United Methodist
RACINE
Church and Mrs. Richard Wl~~&amp;­
RACINE UNITED METHODIST brenner ol the host church wUI
2 p.m.
be the leaders. Assistants will be
Mrs. M. 0. Dumas will serve the Re~. Pauline Miller of the
as leader of the service. other Syracuse Nazarene Church; Mrs.
participants will be Mrs. Hilton Harry Clark of the Methodist
Wolfe and Mrs. Edwin CozarL (Iormor E.U.B.) and Mrs. We.,.

,.,..,. A LOW COST LOAN HERE
When you buy your next car, new or used,
it will poy you to check our bank Auto Loans.
Rates are low, repayment is convenient, sized
to your income. Finance your car, here.
FREE CUSTOMER PARKING

rr-

l.ili ens lfaltonal. B 1\k

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Welllf.on Church was armouDeed,

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Yes, because •n"se ensembles of

beauties.

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spolta l tit him ·(,{ ·" - ap.
'proaci.eo• to tile wir. · . ·
To Break Dftdlock i
Tho Presldeat ilald thla
referred to "the diplomatic
lnttlatiYe" which ·mllbi be uaed
to break the dOadlock In the
Paris noaotlations-ne~a
!'hlcfi he lelt hacl reached
''l&gt;baae two In which we will
have hard bargaining ·on tho
IIUIIor P&gt;lnts o1 di!!erenco."
Tla!o, Nixon, himaell, seemed
to ba trying severallllllroachoa
to ihe Vlalnam sltuatloo. He
80UIIhl to be llrm about not

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JIOrmlttlng the neil enem,y
o!tenslve to ~ unchecked, llui
he lnaleted he w•• not
threatenlris. He !houl!ht tho·
Soviet' l1nlon ¥q)d like to ....
the war end, llit that someWhat
ambivalentJ.v, Russia was supplying 80 per cent ol · North
Vielnam'o more sophlstlceted
war materiel.
His references k! "appro·
priate response" raised the
question: Did this Include
resumption of bombing?
Flrs4 tho President lhqugbt
the news conference was no

rorwn In which to an!IWor this
line of ln!JIIry.
l,onpr Paasaao
Then lollowed one ol the
longer pasaages or the conference In which the President
......,.. ·us I!!Cplain the dille renee
.be!ween wiiat Russia mi&amp;ht
want to do about the war and
what she ml&amp;ht be able to do In
view ol llor continuing power
strugle with Red Cl\lna.
As for the American

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT.. OHIO

"'~

along with tile . World Day or
Prayer aervlce to be held Frl·
day at 2 p.m. at lhe I o co I Antborty.
•
clllrch.
The st. Patrick's Day theme
Membera were reminded ol no carried oot In table dee~
layolte requirements lor t h e oratlono for rofreohmonlo aor·
Women'• Cooference to be held vod by lllro. Mary I,ymo, lllro. '
at GranvWe In June. The achol- LWian McGhee, lllro. J o c o b
arlhiD 1lmd (or the year total· Tumor, Mrs. Beorhs, lllro. Dana
ed f25.50 It was reported.
Jlamm, and lllra. Fred Glbba.
lllro. David Darat, lllro. Fred lllro. Klooo decora\ed the tables.
llollll1an and lllra. Elizabeth fila.

8. Straps adjust on this cotton knit overall . Blue, yellow, red or navy. 6·9 moa. to 24
mos. $3.50. Under it oil a girl's ohirt with ruffle olnve and col lor. Shoulder loopo,
bock footenero. White ond pink. 6 moo. to 4. $1.89.
Bu1t•r Brown anklets, socks and knee-hi's miJc: 'n match with all tnsembl••·
39c to $1.00.

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Army also

will receive the same

Suits

amoont
Another provision of the will
is thai $5,000 be used lor co""
structing 1 remo:lelllng aJXI furnishing one or more nxxns of
Jones Memorial Cltnic as a
memorial to Mr. Cook and hls

Filed

wile.
This Is to be handled by Ber·
nard V. Fultz, executor,andmuat
be carried out within five years
after Mr. Cook's death. II not,
the money then goes to Meigs

2 Ask Money
In Judgment

County for hospital purposes.
Au of the provisions are con-

Fi~e

11 ngent L;&gt;OII the amount or money
In the estate.

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Courts dlvislon of Meigs
Common Pleas Court.

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CounQr

one, lor $11,000 plus lnterwas !Ued by the Twentieth
Street Benko!Hunlington, W.Va.,

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against Karr Construction Cdn-

Jury

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suits, twoformoney,.,.re

filed Tuesday In the Cork ol

Wyant

Promotion
Comes
ro .Ralph Gibbs

pany, Chester.
The JIOtllion claims Karr Cmstructlon Company paid a aiD-

Seated

BIG MUSKIE-An Engineering Wonder of Ohio

AJury ouom•••ndtwowOOien
was soated at 11!50 a, m. Ieday
let, -~81-dogree·OIIrdef" ·

trial or William Frederick Wy.
IDL

The court was intheprocessol
seeking an alterMte juror at

noon.
MakiiW up the jury are Leo
Story, Marvin Fife, Carl wu..
Uams, Don ,Johnson, Faye Walllce, Francis Benedum, Wal-

contractor, the Stl,rk Electrlc

Company o! Hunlington, W. Va.,
lor work done on a new Marietta
College buildlrw alter ~rw
money owed the firm' bid been
assigned to the ~ntletl! 9treet
Bank to aatlo!y·apromls,..Y:notlr ·
The machine propels itself on entered Into by the Stark Electrlc

Bin
-o Muskie Reconn.
0 · - ized in Ohio

Ohio Power Co.' a surlace mln- gram is to provide recognition
ing and reclamation program, for outstandi~ engineering ac- four huge "shoes" measuring 65
colllucted in four southeastern COill&gt;li shments
mamlactured, feet long aBd 20 feet wide. The
Ohio counties, has ~nprocla~­ constructed or designed in Ohio, hydraulic walking system, which
ed one ol the ~'Seven Engineering according to the OSPE.
contains 26,000 gallons of o i I,
WoOOers of Ohio'' in annual comOhio Power's mining and 1100 permits the dragllne to move in
petition conducted by the Ohio r estoration program was entered steps up to 14 feet in length.
Society of ProfessiOOaJ Engin- in the "Seven Won:lers" competiBig Muskie is beingputtowork
eers (OSPE).
tion In cooperation with the can- for Ohio Power to accomplish two
Primarily responsible for the ton Regional Society of Profes- primary missions:
award Is the cOIDpen,y's mammoth sional Engineers.
(1) To make available millions
earth-moving draglioo, Big MudBig Muskie weighs more than of tons of heretofore non-recoverkte, oow in the final slages of C&lt;~~P 27-mtlfuin pounds, or roughly as able coal left behind by the limi·
struction. The machine, largest much as 150 Boeing 727 jet-liners tations of smaller mining equ~
ol its type if\, the world, wlll or 13,500 automobiles. It has a ment.
uncov~r coal for Ohio Power's 310·1oot boom and can dig to a
(2) To assist Ohio Power in a
generating stations at the rate of depth of 185 feet.
25-year-ald program of convert325 Ions J!Or mioote.
Its 221k:ubic-yard bucket could Ing desolate, eroded and largely
Purpose ol the "Seven Engin- hold 12 automobiles. In order to deserted land intofiourishingforeerirv Woo:tera ol Ohio" pro- drag and lift the 270.too bucket ests, game preserves, and campand Its earth and rock load, the ing, fis hl~ and recreatimal
machine is equipped wtthonemile areas.
of wire ropes five inches thick.

lace Ambe'¥"r, Thomas Holter
Ann Margaret Bailey, Joe .Sill"'
ley, Frank H. Fltcii and Harley
E. JOhnson.
·
SOating ··of a Jury besan thla
lllOrllina'ln the !lrst deilroe murder trial o1 WIJllarrj Frederick
Wyant, 5!, Racine, charged with
the Aui!Oist 17,1968, shotgun slaying or a Parliersburg man.
Wyent, repreaeoted by Pom&amp;o
roy Allomoy Jornea B. O'Brien,
1' Indicted In IIIo killing or 1111- Ohioans Involved
chael Leo Dotsor!, 28, with a ISgauge Shotgun.
11 Is charged that Wyant !tred In Traffie
·the •hot&amp;lm' Into a car driven
.by Dot11011 after tile cleceland
PT. PLEASANT-TwoOhi..na
and Coor compordons vlalted the were involved In a mlsha!&gt; MonWyant home at about 10:50 p.m. day at 3:55 p. rn. on Rt 17 In
m tile nlillt In~.
IJendoroon, W. Va., resulti118 In
Jnveotllators, t the u.., o1 !llll&gt;roximately tsoo property
the i'lcjdont. · llotSCII and hla dlllllll!1l but no personal injuries
~to~a haclM 1D the Wy. and no citations.
•· .ant liome to vtalt liie ac.Uaecl
The accident occurred when a
man•I atepdaught8r. - Barbw-a car driven by lle,lll'l' K. Milam,
Scarberry, '
30, Rt I, Cheshire, Ohio, pulled
The ~ h9mi llhOre the Wyants out to paas just as the vehicle
,.ilded at tho time ol,the shoot- In lriHlt of him driven by Jolm
lng Is located just orr,,l\laln St. Thmlas Baker, 20, Middleport,
· · In Racine. W)'lnl ellegedly !Ired Ohio, atlon!pted to mal&lt;e a left
the ~ about l1ine Umea, tiim. The State Pollee were the
me ol the blasts strll&lt;q IJot. ln,.stlpt~rw o!llcors.
SCI! In lhe back or tho neck.
,

BUSINESS CONDUCTED
Routine business was trans-

Temperatures · ln

Ohio

Tla!rsclay through Monda.!' wUI
average below normal with
highs in the ;lOs in the north
to the low 40s in the south.
Lows will be In the 2Us.
It will be warmer Thursday,
but colder duringtheweekend.
Bai.n or STIO'W about Friday
aoo snow flurries Sunday and
M'on:tay wUI average around a

quar1:er of an inch in the north
tQ a hall to one Inch in the
SOIIth melted.

acted by the Meigs County Board
of Education Tuesday night. Attending were Harold Roush, vice
chairman, who presided, and
members Gordon Collins, George
Perry and Harold Lohse, and
SLCJt. oi County Schools Robert
Bowen.

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
ADMISSIONS - Clycle Henderson, Pomeroy.

DJSCHAJlcGES - Sharoo Buck·
ley, Dosha Hall

Company.
In tfle other, LesUe F. FulU:,
Pomeroy,. am the Ohio C.sualt;y
lnsW"Ince Company, Columbo••

have !lied suit against R&lt;lbort J.
Boles, Pt. Pleasa"~Kt -~ Jamea
carpenter, West Col~, for
damages in a March 5, 1967aecident in which the defendants

are ellegecl to have been 1101U
gent.
The accident, which occurred
on Route 33 at the intersection
or the Long Hollow Road, invulvecl
a car driven by Fultz an:ta bulk
milk tanker truck.

Fullz is seeking damaae• loo
teling $2,100 lor JIOr&amp;onol 1,..
juries and tbe l.nsuranee ftrm ia
aski~ recovery ot $1,433, plus
interest, for automobUec:lillnages
paid.

OTHER SUITS
A partition of real estate action
has also been !lied by Betll
Rous h, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, with WUIiam and Ulsh Matlack, et a!,

defendants.
Phyllis J, Clark,

lU)

3, p..,._

eroy, charging gross negleet f4.

duty and extreme croallj!, IU
filed lor JIOiition !or divorce lt&lt;a
Alva B. Clark, IUl, p...,.roy.
Four minor children are involved.
Another petition lor divrow
by Pearl searles, Mlnersvtne.
is against Nettie Searies, p_..
eroy, also chargiiW gro&amp;a ..,..
iect of duty 1111 extreme ct•lb.

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A
ks
A
~r:....~i= ~ace zc ness . ttac
stronaut
·Common Pl-

·BaCilll Ia 011

No m- children are lnvulvod.

the

In .Tu.nnel Leading to Lunar Lan~r
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TEN CENT$

"' " Five

Alter certain !amUy bequests, late Rev. end Mrs. ll F. Bisilql.
Mr. Cook willed the Heath MethMr. Cook was an active mem·
odist Churcll o!Middleport$5,000 ber of Heath Methodist Church
to be used for the perpetuation lor many years.
of music in the church.· He has
Provided tltat there is enough
willed another $2,000 tobeplaced money in the e sta~.. each 'or the
in ' a trust, the interest from Middleport churches will receive
which and whatever of the princl· $500. These include the Presbypal necessary to be t~sed to pay terian, Bal,ltlst, Church of Chri st~
educatJ.ooa.l expense's for traio- Church of the Nazarene, Ctwrch
lng Methodist missionarie s. He o! Christ In Olristian Union, and
allo has left $500 to the Heath the Mt. Moriah BaplisL
Church to provide for purchase
Middleport VUiagewill receive
of Rowers for special occasions $1,000 to be used lor park pur·
In memory or his parents, the ~oses. The Meigs County Chllj)ter
late Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Cook, of the American Red Cross is to
and hia late wife's parents, 1 the receive $500 aOO: "the Salvation

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Bequests .Made to Churches

olthe caaer~ .

.

-;th ..I•W• Wrlnpr ·W•~ Art Hire

"'~ 4 0

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)., ....
o,;,;o

WEDNESDAY. MARCH 5, 1969

Attomoy.Bemard

lu

and

Thur&amp;Hy and lncrea•q elittrdlness soutliwest with Dlllll perature change.

llirrenclered hlmaelr to

'.

t

------------~~~

/

y

ELBERFELDS IN PO

(I

&lt;

..

Clear and cool again~ Lair
tonight in tho
tee• .,..._
dle 20s, Mostly aunn;y noitl'i ..t

~~ ~

·

Mishap

;.. Sailor Set for young tors. Middy blouse wflh 'boxer-stylolong pants. White/rod '"'d
white/ novy. 6 mos. to 24 mos. $.4.29.
·

-r

lreather

4l

enttn ·t/;~~{%

Derated To The llllereJII Of The Meigs-M1130n Area

~

Opttt llondoy Thru
Thurodoy 9:30 to 5 PM
Open Both Friday ood
Saturdoy Nights Til 9 PM

p.~bHc,

he conceded nationwide !rustra.
tion about thP ·;var, but felt the
people ,.
tJPOrl a pres-

~~~~~~--------------~~~~~~~~~~------------~----~----~----~------------ ~~

I

Psalms In her devcrtkinal program.
Mra, Slavin ~ t he
...e dlt declltatl. . . .~ IQ'
lllro. lll!llaii Wid~ Mrs, Golde
Moul'llini, Mrs. ~ ltln&amp; '
lllra. Wltlla ~, MrS: Pearl
Hufllnaa, and Mrs. · Frances
Bearha.
FOr the program lllra. Nan
MDore related experiences ol
ber trijl to Alaska laat aommer.
llle wao lrttrodueed by M r 1,

.

~

l

.

-7m&lt;tr

designed for quick and easy
chongas • . : . . styled for boby

I

.

Pari~." he told a 'l)Jead'I!Vl!sJ!t
White ll011se neivs corii;O!'I!Il&lt;~.
'''An appropriote reaponae, to
theae lllaCKI will be !D"de lr
they c;on~."
.,, · • ·
Met \l'lthRepoi'\Ors
The President met . With 190
reportert'ln a one-II&lt;urtelevlsed
Con!erence to lalk larply about
his recent lilll'Oiiean trijl,
APinat .. the ·backliround or
contir&lt;Ied Communlsi otrlkes at
All1orican P&gt;sltlOIIi . abd south
Vlelllameae towna, ·however, the
Southeast Asian war tended to

l

premium BeBon(r) cotton are

'.f

tho. !JIOatlon,&amp;Dd...,.
ower seoslon.
. Nixon , ina ' ~C&lt;!d the
~erl\· .#fenalve ~liented ·a
Vlolatitoi o1 lhe 1!11derBiandlng
Wher!'l&gt;y U,S. bombing o1 the'
North JlllS halted laat Ocl. 3"
Deren" ·~;oc.1'1'18ry Melvin R.
Laird was · leaving lor south ·
Vlel!wn IAlcla,y. Nixon asked
him ior an 011-lbe-spot Owralaal
o1 iho sJtuatliin.
· Jn Parlo last lllnda,y NlxOII ·
' met wltb Sooth .. Vlelrlamooe
1VIce Preildant Ngoyen C.O If¥
who later reported that Nixon

NEW HAVEN - Ralph V. alao ' • •1st with safety actl&gt;iGlbbe, Jr,, ol Central &lt;&gt;,peratlng ties lor Control Appalachian Coal
~·· PhiliP SpornPiart hao €&lt;&gt;mpany and !or company om·
been Pr&lt;liiiOted lj) the P.'lat or pi~Q&lt;ees at the John E. Amos
'. oa!Oil ~oordiRJtor ~App.Wchllll · P;~nt, under conotruclioo naor
l ~-"·~ny's· .. ~·;-.C!IIIfloston, W. Va.
·, plfh!f,/ .'': '"''
.~ ··-~ '~ 'G.IIlb&amp; wUI alsobelnvolve_d ..lth '
,' ~ -.,.as ~0\Y III'Orvl!!ll'ol ,JtlllifY actl&gt;itles at all or the
Sporn '1''-nt. The mc&gt;:,:O i~ 'el• cmqiony's hydrHiectticplanti,
~"'
t, o,ceo~ Iii
1r natiYO or HartCord, w. Va,,
Joo P, Gillo, execut!YO Yice ~re· Gibbs served In the Navy Croin
olden!. ol Allpalachlan and vice 19!2 IQ 1946, where he retolved
president and dlreetor ·or Ceo- medical corps trali\lrw. • He was
trai 'C\)oraUng.
a member o! the New York Ya"'
. In , this llliw jloot, Glbb1 wlll.be llee• proresslooal boa~ or,.. C\III&lt;ernocl with aa!ot,y acllvltlea pnlzatlon !rpm 1947 ·to 1950,
lljlcq ~oeii
, or
,• ~ ~om- and ·joined Sporn Plant •• a Ia·
&gt;
•
. ~~ .. ·~ · - 'elec\rlc ~lajlla: borer ~ 2,1952.
.
p-;
i!pcri
Plant
at_
New
~V.O!I.
W.
He
was
malntenanc•
heiP,r
be,
..,
' .
'
.
;·Vt; KAnawha River at G~aow, !Qro being !IIJDed~ safeb' s~r. ·1'•)'a,; Clbln . C!'"ek .• • CObin visor or I~ pia~ In 1956. - .
R~n·v.'GiaBS, JR.
()tMk. W. Va.; ,'Gieal,yn it Qlen , He Is married lnd ba.• a oon
'
l,yn, VI.; Clln~ River at l;arbo, im • daughter, 100 WuFi:oqtln- · JWIO Childs cleugiJier or MrS.
.;.ya,; and the ~ror.l Ar'tJ» Ant,· ue to live at Now Haven.
.. l\laJ'tha ~hllcio, and ·il.ater orwu.
iilttiU011 Ste.m. Planl, He will. lllra. GlbbslstheformerGlorla 111m D. Chlldi, allorlllldiiJoport.

I

.

'

BY BOB HOEFLICH
· for the sel:lliid time in less
thena 'yOU:, Mlddleportchurclles
have beeo uremembered" in the
... lflli ol a resident of the town.
. .. The first occasion was last
, July when the late Fred ShiOet
·.le!t the blilk or his estate tO be
·divided, among the Middleport
·chllrches.
.·
'n!e latest bequest to tho
chu~ches is !rom the late Homer
E. C&lt;&gt;ok, former Middleport bus:lnesaman, whc! died. on Feb. 22.
.His .last 'I'W and teslament has
bee..,.dmltted to the Melga coo..
1Y Probate Court

(.,

I

.

t

I

Now You Know

(

vln wore appointed to the DOm·
lnatlng comml-. Mrs. Gerald
Arithot1lr _,... the mooting with
au organ prelude and the IP'GUP
lUI "Count Your Ble1sinp."
Mrs. Milton Hood ol the Dorcao
Clrcla uoocl scripture !rom the

ONOI.D GRATE

·~

'

ciorrilil;.~

In 29 mllllltes, 50 seconds by
Aklm Aklntolut Manchester Col·
)ego &lt;1. Scienoe and Teclu!ology In
,. E~and'Feb. 28, 1965 - without
• arlnk.
'

I

means "lover of hones."

I

~

whlc~ 't.s IIO\Ibled

all~ ~orenti'tableln

The reputed 'frorld record for
eating P~to Chips· WBS 30 begs

lnvl~

Factory A.tlwri.ed Sales &amp; S...ke

n

otlen.lve

' peace

•

I

0~nDUTYCEMEN

(

The Rev. Eugene Gill or the
Laurel Cli!! Cla!rcll is speaker
lor the evening. The public Is

,.------------------------------------------·----------------------------------------------------1·

38

I

service.

Q-Witat i.t the llltG!Ung
of the name Philip?
A-Tbls Greek name

b

'

)'eaponae."
: He did 'not oa,y what the
Jfaponae WI&gt;Uid be, but tile
fhleC Execull've ~ It ·g...,. ely
11~ lha! Allied liir.,·earanco
""'"limits. ;' ~~
·
: "We will not toleralii attacks
irhlch rellllt In heavier ·caiualflea U. our lll8h at a time that
Ire .are honestly' trying to soek

Laurel Cliff Free Motllodlst
Church members will attend the
Hysell Run Church lor World Day
or Prayer services Friday nliht,
March 7, slartlrw at 7:30 Both
churches are taklrw part tn thia

IIOWiced.

. '

I
I
II

GOW

·Hold Joint Service

Missionary Will
Be Teo Speaker
Tho Rev. Charlea Beadarmel,
miaslonary..t-large or the Ohio
llaptlot COIIYenllGn, will be 111011
apeaker at the amual Fellowlblp
Tea ot the B. H. Sanbom So.
clot,y ol the Mlcldleport Firat
Baptist Cla!rch • - e d I o r
April 7.
Plans for the tea were made
cllring a meeting ol the Society Mllnday nilbt. Mro. Manning
KIQI!I, president, had char&amp;e ol
the mooting. Women !rom churcbes' or the conununltY will be Invited to atlend the !eiiDwlhlptea.
A Rio Grande Aaaoelatlon
meeting on March 20 at t h o

·.

~orlean 0.11UalO; rates bi' ihe
· Sooib or ·llliller ''ill IIPIIroPri!Ue

Congregations Will

with \1fSei'IJ~
infants' wear even
dad can dress them I

RUTLAND
COMMUNITY the Albury MethodlsL
Church, 1:30 p.m.
Special music will be presert.
Mrs. George Wbite o! the Rut- ed by lllra. llllller. Mra. Leonland United Methodist Cburcii ard Bli'o ' aed 'Mrs. Bob Moore
will be leader of the service. She of the Nazarene Churchi the Rev.
will be assisted by Mrs. Everett and ~s. Paul Sellers ot the
Colwell, United Methodist; Mrs. E. u. a; and the Rev. anJ Mrs.
Amos Tillis, Communltyi Mrs. Stutler and Mrs. RusseU Harper
Sherman Butler, Rutland Baptist; o! the Asbury MethodisL T h e
Mrs. Jessie Grueser, Church ol Methodist Otolr will also partiChrist; Mrs. C. 0. Chapman, cipate in the service.
United Methodlstj Victor Braley,
Church of Christ1 and the Rev.
ALFRED
C. J. Lemley, United MethodlsL
MRS. CLARENCE HENDER·
SON is clainnan ol the service
SYRACUSE
to be helcl at the Allred Olurch.
SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED Participants and time or the serPresbyterian Church, 7:30p.m. vice have not, as yet, been a~

'

VOL. XXI NO 220

Elberfelds

deU Stutler, Mrs. VIrgO Teaford, and Mrs. Karl Kloes or

l

"

~' WAsmNGfuN Mi) ::_ Pros~ N~ , 11U11'11ol'th Vlelrlam
f!" llO!ilc6 ·· ~ .fO .'·"llP ! Ito

1

Church.

Mrs. Jor.u Sluvage of the Sy..

CAR1

.

Mrs. Croat Merritt ol ColuiJI.
but, 12th district president, pve
tho welcome and Mrs. Artlllr
Harbach or llla,ynard, aecondvlce
president o1 ·dt~Iortment. reepoeded. state olllcen preaonled wore 1.tra. lllltlam JunJO.
lint vice preoldent; lllr" Helen Sloan, Asbland, treasurer;
lllrl. Ann Eochelm.an, ZIIIOivlile, secrewy.
Dlstrlcl presldema Including
Mrs. Cll!lord Aikins ol Croollsvlllo, El!lhlh Dlitrlct president,
and past department proalclenta
wore ln!J'&lt;Weed.
Roco.,Uons were hold lor two
treasurer eandldltea, Mr11. Nancy Sallaz o1 ClovallUid, and lllra.
Donald Miller ol Alliance.
On :imday the exeeutlvo board
o1 the Ohio llepartmont ·aod the
districl preslclenta and their busbands held a luncheon at the Nell
Houae.

FIOIIOI'O, Do,yloa; Mrs. Ear I
Webster, Son41ok,y•, lllra. Arthur
Harbach, CoJD&gt;rldp; and Mrs.
o.ey Martin, the lbulhoaatem
(!do Mental Hoalth Center, Ath·

RU T L A N D

a

ble.

.,

1, ''

-·

Htirtoi' Wa~neftAtnefiC~~· PatienpeHas Linii.

'

C&lt;Jilducted tho national anthetm;
and Mrs. lleon ..J, Wlncholl cir
Dayton Who led In the pream.

MidWinter
Meeting'
Day
Set
World Prayer
/s Held in Columbus
MEIGS THEATRE

I

'

..,

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