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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~
....,...
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

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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

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ELBERFELDS IN PO

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

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·

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,

.

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-7m&lt;tr

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

I

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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.

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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

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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.
'

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means "lover of hones."

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~

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.

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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

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~' 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.

.,

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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

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·r

' Jr

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To bomb or not to bomb-tllat Is thO No.
1 question now facing Presid~nt Nixon.
Whether North Vietnam's spring offen·
slve. with it~ rocket attacks against South

Vietnamese cities, does or does not constitute a violation of prenegotiation un4erstandings between Washington and ~anoi,
there has definitely been injected a new
note of acrimony and futility into the un~
productive Paris peace talks.
Undoubtedly, the total bombing halt of
North Vietnam ordered by President ~ohn­

son in his next-to-last month in office made
things easier for the enemy in mounting
his current assaults. Undoubtedly more
American soldiers have been killed in the

past ~ weeks than would have been killed

had the supply lines from the north not
been immune to aerial interdiction. ..
But it is also true that four years of almost continuous bombing of the north did
not prevent American battle deaths £rom
inching up from 5 to 10 to 20 to more than
30.000. The new President is assuredly not
prepared to begin trading _anot~e~ 30,000
lives for four more years of mdec1s1ve conflict, with or without bombing.
Not only military but political considerations argue against a resumption of the
bombing. e i t he r on a limited. reprisal
basis or as a matter of routine. It is quite
possible that Hanoi hopes to provoke the
United States into such a response in order
to reap the benefits of the inevitable outraged public opinion, one of which would
be terrific pressure on the President. at
home and abroad, to settle the war on any
term s ~but just settle it.
Ideally, what the United States ought to
do. independent or the Paris talks and in-

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dependent of the enemy's activity on the
battle!ield, is begin the slow. staged with· ~r~wal of American troops, replacing them
with Souttt VIetnamese.
Evidence that South Vietnam had at
last acquired the strength to begin laking
over the war would do more to make' the
NOrth Vietnam~se reas·onable in Paris·
than any degree of reapplication of U.S.
airpower.
But if after four years this is not feasible, if after four years of massive American assistance South Vietnam CIU1not yet
be gradually phased Into shouldering milore
and more of tbe burden of the flgh ng,
then it would seem to matter tittle w'hether
we bomb or not.

1 WHAT'S

''

,cenae.

" ~ h\&gt;W

·, '

Stay Tough on Hitchhikers
..
. ..
"

Q-My grandoon is 17
months old. Will it retard
his development if he
doesn't take vitamins and
doesn't get such fonds as
eggs, meat, vegetables and
fruit in, tead of pickles hot
dogs and polato chips? '
A-Tile oaly vHamla supplement a 17-month·old infant needs is vitamin D and
this is now present in aU
fortified milk. The rest of
his vitamins should be supplied in a balanced diet
which should inclnde on~
egg, fruit and vegetables every day and liver once a

week.

Most children like hot
dogs (no mustard) and di·
gest this kind of meat very
weU. Potato chips and an
occasional pickle won't hurt
him If be gets the other
foods ' btl needs. There are so
many different kinds of mal·
nutrition that only his pedia·
trlclan, whom be should be

'

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It's hard~ 'sometimes, to ·pass by a youilg
fellow standlii'g on the edge of a highway
or at a· freeway interchange. Maybe be's
a college kid trying to get back to his
school or a soldier hurrying back to his
post.
The ndds, however, show that the hardhearted driver is the wise driver.
Of 100 hitchhikers stopped in Arizona recently, only four were lound to be without
previous or current dilflculties with the
authorities, reports .. Travel Talk " published by the Nebraska Game Comnusslon.
Along one stretch of highway, the survey
revealed that 84 had criminal records and
12 others were either juvenile runaways or
serv1cemen absent without leave.

Br WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
seeing at regular intervals,
could say whether he has
one of them.
Q-My lee11-11ge son drinks
milk at every meal but he
~lso averages about a quart
of cola a day. ls·thls hard on
his kidneys? What would be
a safe amount for him to
consume?
A-DiffereD! persons tolerate different amounts of
caffeine. Cola drinks contain about six milligrams

per ounce and coffee three
times as much . These drinks
act as a mild diuretic (in·
crease the produetion of
urine by the kidneys) but do
the kidneys no harm. Excessive amounts have, however, been known to damage
the heart. I would advise
that your son cut his cola
consumption in half and for
the other half substitute
fruit juice.
Q-My 11-moatlHid grand·
son has had diarrhea for sev·
era! months. The pediatri·
clan is giving him penicillin
and olh4!f drugs but the diar·
rhea keeps on. What treatment do you advise?
A-A sludy should he
made to determine the cause
-baciUary or ·amebic dysentary, food allergy or celiac
disease. The treatment
would depend on the cause.

FO~IIUE· ..

c;v,o 'Ttl see ..w
8.t.CK! I KNOW

M'I'SeLF" •

~ IJtP? Wli14,
5eE MY OOCTOP." ·
HE'51HIIIHT THiRI!
15.. DR. &amp;P5Cf.i... :I'LL
CAl.~ UP AAO MNJ/1 All

I.PPOtii!'MeNT' FQit

do fOUWIY&lt;&gt;Ul'

' '

'Joti ~ck

tJ)Q found 01

~UI• ll)IIOI )\:o wi're' ~·· ~· li!Joll

qil :1 lliifio ol·~t&gt;J'I!•\1- ,

•

our.• ,

unl•••."•

;!

counts," a jubtlali: Bill Lucas, encc championship at Granville.
Central State coach, said aner
'1lle two teama ~hared identi·
the game. "lr we hsd played cal 11·2 r ecords at die end o1
just an ordirary opponent, we the regular season. Wittenberg
might oot have dooe nearly enters Mideast NCAA regional
quJte so welL"
competition at Ashlan:l College
Larry Baker sank a rebowxl Thursday nlghL Tlie Tigers are
at the buzzer to give Witten- now til-4 with add!tiD!I o! 1)0!11berg a 68-66 win o~er Bald~ seaSOI'I games, The Yellow Jack·
Wallaee and tho Ohio Confer· ets finished at 17-10.
Wittenberg held a 36-29 halftime lead, but a lull court
press by tho Jackeis put s.w
back in contention al"ll later a
61..15 lead.
The Tigers rallied to a 6~6
tie with 1:53 to go and as the
Berea team stalled for the last
shot, Baker tapped ln the wlnn!rw lloskeL

courae ~!!e, 'hU \ ~~. !'~UCei'ent".. char;kS: ~~·~ r.e ' ~ ." for.-~~)
p~ceaallloneci(tttemw~~~ltt·l yeart~_- Mex"l~o. · . . ,..· , ~r
Uo ,bistro wborl/ ,... ai&lt;I!P!ld.lor So that's h,oil. I bo¥8 0116· Alld .,
drlnk.o. OUr husband~' W~ to my terribly rUI)IIir mote won't lOt .::

look around •~ more, bUt we.
girls had' Uroil, !eet, so we ~
w.e'd walt over llllr'tequllla unUI
they r.oturned. .
·
·
,
Perhapi·· you !mow wbot we
didn't: Uneacl&gt;rted !emales in

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - TeMiol Butch
Buchholz and wile expect the
diapered result or their love
mateh in April .... 'l1le VIctory
Dinner for Nixon and Agnew April 22 at the Washington Hilton
wlll have Lester Lanin's music
and he's already been briefed
that the Prez• favorite choon Is
.. Just in Time" and ~fro's Is
usomewhere My Love" ....
Seems NBC's Sander Vanocur's
only been minding !ilirley MacLaine for her hubby Steve Parker .... &amp;eve is moving back here
from Japan.
F rom her performance on TV's
"The Experiment," we'd aay
Ttaha Sterling could be this
year's young-acting sensation ....
-9\e;s Bob Sterlin~s and ·' Ann
Sotherr1's

me rorge~ lt. _.., ~
~
Wbot ·do Y.iiil' do with a 111f11 ':
like thor? - PURl! Pll&lt;iSrtTlJTE ..'
D..r Pure: :·.
, ')
lAugh alonlll thlilk thlo to tht ··~
best story of ~ HIIOIINnd ;»: ,
.
'
certaln . Mexican. bars are con- lleve me1 moat Coc:kiall MrUea
sldered "aolldt,ora," and· this need all the "'""' ~s.;lbOY ~•r·;1
~;,quires a 'license south o! the get!
· · '• ··'
; ·· · ·.
border. We trtoil to tell tho gen- • , .But sqy Ooit o!~clo ,$ tt l.::
yearl - H.
.. .~.,.
·'
Dear Helem
In her movie .. .. 11!~ lovely old
Your eolumn on tbo "Hairy
Rodgers &amp; Hammerateln movte ·p'robilm" lnakes me wlllt 10 '·
"Slate Fllr" wiU be tranalated start crussde: To' maki the'
to lllage form this summer 1n st. world lllle tor boaf.t.d in.,;
Louis .and Konsss Cl~ and will My husband 1'1•111 Oil a w!J4~ .
llllir Ozzle Nel1011 and Harriet . neis canoe trill' wlth !bi' B"o y'l ~
liUJlard .... Oacsr'o sooJ!nuny ScOUII last suriunir and lri•l ~
will direct and Dick ltoclgej'a beautlllll beard. Like Y&lt;&gt;W' "'!'"'- ,
will superYise and II all goea T.J., we had tho.oalne reactloil;,. !
11oll It milbl land on iklw!'. 1 loved It - til !act moot ot ~~1;
..... I waa a 111Mlder!ul ftlm de- friends commeited ·on, Its til,. !
Sl1lte Dick Hilmes .... Its UUe tingulahil1fl q-.llttes.
Jlifhuoband
·~
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.
tune W1\f 011e o! the quietly lun- wore It to tho ofllee "'I' ,...ko.,., ,
ny putona o! all lime ("Oir and waa finally told by •ai,. cifl\· .,'',
State Fair 11 the best Stale Folf cer qf tho compjl\Y tift It "I~ &lt;\
In the Sate").
unot becOmlr.,·tO hla.Poalt.loh. ·~ -~
I was Tiild, Then !.decided. 11 ~!
muat be jealousy·, 1~UH' n\j . ;
huW.nd reoily looked.'llke the~}
proalilent or the C!I'IIIU!'tlon. ·Ill ·::
!act, the ·Counder DID ·wea~ :• '1

RECOGNIZE SENIORS - Nine seniors were among the
Southern High School students recognized for their cODtrlbution
to the Purple Tornado athletic program duri1111 an All-i'jlorts
"'-! Tuesday night. They are, seated left to right, Junior

kle was glittered by M. K. Doug-

cally In an Eaatslde pull- over

. .,.,.,l..
. ~
,.......

' M

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D.

m~ncy,'but

youngish and
tend,
ing toward
It llmne•h;e- ~;
,
specUuily
to the
.onetl"le
fl~ebrand (turned e~'iJ!ment.
man) from Minnesota.
i ...,. . .
'~ 1&gt;
·
•
What made ihe evening lnletesting W$1 ihat juit two top ·
state party flg~res were p~sent ~nillbeY were of slr4)llgly, ·
contrasting types. One was state Tt:e•urer &gt;'\dial Stevenson Ul and the other Lt; Gov. Paul Simon. · ''·.' ·.

N~~~~:~·~~~~tr.~~~~l'o/'~rg:;;

Stevenson, to judge· from t1&gt;e
cided to cast his lot'-::an.d be Is VtiY
office- with the doctrinaire liberals. He seema
clded that they, reln!Otced by 11111ny'restlesso·~~;fn:~
cans, hold the ~ey to major electo.r•l yictory a
has

as a

tants,

..,...him
' to
Simon
ani
gotns

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~i~~~~1~I~i\~

;

i~~~~~~~ ...:.....,_

l.el8)':

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... Mainly becauae II yoo don't,
they'D be calli~ yt&gt;i "Unemployed.:,.
'
P.S. Your oxecUtlvea ahQuld
I liarn llbl!l 1ebool (itblctPati hiYe •
(jho bard way), Rigid . rulea 1ft.' '
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rebllllon, but a quiet word J
.. the, olllee .....,~
· wo~ ·'
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to.

ROHR SPEAKER- Wllllam Rollr,OhioUnlversit,yathletic
director and former Bl.g Ten cage coach at NorUtwestern Unlveralty, poses with Soothern High W"sit:y COiches and Athletic
Booster omclals alter delivering a talk at the Tornado AU·
Sports Banquet Tuesday nlghL From len are Bob Ashley, head

.'&lt;
y '

·,"f

football coach 1111 athletic director; Russ Harper, baseball
coach; Mr. Rohr, Bill Hill, new Booster President, alll Elson
Spencer, outgoing Booster president and emcee of the banquet,
- Sentloel Photo.

Winning Attitude Vital in Athletic Programs
BY BOB WINGETI
11
The main obJective of athletlea is to project a winning altitude and anyme who attemJl(a
to dilute such an atm Is wroog, u
eal~ Ohio Unlverslzy Athletic Director WW!am Rohr at I h e
SoutherD lllih School All-Sports
~ut Tuesday nlsi&gt;t.
Rohr, talking to the i1)'IIIJIUIum lllled by Tornado supporter• who turned wt for the dinner, urged fans to support the

Candidates

Presented

WORlrt '

·,

. :
··. ,-.~

'

WASHINGTON (NEA)
More than a few militant Democratic Uberals are getting
a little far alleld from their party's mainstream. And they
appear to be aitracting some ambitious political-figures
who may want to seek major oflice in ihe future.
In certal1&gt; recent gathermgs, some of these doctrinaire
liberals have sounded like just oomewhal more polite
counterparts of the ranting hysterics who are currently liedeviling the n~tl~'s campuses.
.
AI an already reported m~etlng between some self-styled
• • •
party reformers and leaeling Demotrattc regular8, &gt;Warn
Walmsky, aide to the late. Sen. Robert F. ·Kennedy, inslsIf I/OU'd be lm'own for
. tently demanded that Democratic National Chairmin Fred
lieeping promise•. glw
Harris set some sort of deadline for reopening ca... In·
them out 1poring!y.
volving the disr,uted seating of national commUieemen In
.GeorgiB and A tibama. ·
· The Walinsky side of the exchange evidently had about It
the peremptory tone of the "non·n~ollable demanda"
being thrown on university presidents desks across the
country. .
·
·
Some in the militant groilp, having failed to pt Iowa's
'Sen. Harold Hughes name!~ chaltman of a Jll!rlf refot::m
committee .and ll!en faUed. to persuade. him to stay off .tlie
committee altogether, qwcldy began Jll'lvate, tinll&gt;inll at
. SeQ. George McGovern of South D~llola' •for· taldng' the
. chairmanship. Letters have bi'al!!led bin) ·a "trailor" to
ihe cause of rel!l roforrp.
,.
'''• ·
' ·
A good mali~ .Democralic regdlars, th0t9Ughly·~mlt·
led by ....,. withe Idea of mejor party relorJII, IIU~tll¥8
party ptotesters.Jn the .. rule-or-ruin" categoqt,J. /1 l · ....:, ·
'In tile re(lllars' ,view, .... ptoiHieri set.'~·:ll!lf. 'li't
'.
purity 111111.. by e.t!!tsd wllllregalltf n.IPl'~li!lillt•; ·
offer reform on the ~-1 ~~~ hy wWch..":~'-aiJ .: .
achieved Ill all wftlb.ol Ufe. Tiley wplllll! • - ~ ~
,
I
once-&lt;&gt;r ootid,...
. . . '
j . . •".
On a mid-February Monday evenmg im~ndild,.'ill.,
,·.,.'
a Democratic Study Group. of the !Uinola
lslltur! me~ • • '
to hear former Vice Presk\ent' Humptlrey:
lfO\IP was . ,

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Jim
Cleamons Is a oomplete basketball (lla,yer.
The Ohio State supar._oomore ean score, rebound, look
lor the open teammate and play
defense.

higher out In tho ....... halt,
then went all eourt, • Tqlor
added.
.
UnW recently, C)ealnono W
played forward, . - he' s brlq..
Inc the ball do1ln the ootir 11
a guard,
,
"Now he faces a dlfl'tfllll.
kind o! de!enslve man. He was
a lot qolcker than (llockdalo
(Jell')," the &amp;ckeye coeeh add.
ed.
While "Jirnm,y hoi rtven us
more points than we loll 11&amp;
could rightfully - c t frGn
him, he'll have to acore mon
next year," Taylor Aid. Cleamons hoo scored 3M points In 23
games.
Taylor started lour juniors
and a sophomore aplnll Jnoiana. SOrenson, Flnne,y, Don Andreas and Craig Barclq were
the )lnlors.
This could very wel\ be tho
Buckeyes' starting lineup noxt

Cleamons and Sorenson hit 13

TRADE-IN
BARGAINS

'Tho Aoxlliary, Legion Post
602, Racine, hold their meetIng a! Legion home.
Palt president Leora Young
prellded and Linda Grlndota!!,
last year• a Girls Stater, presented Mlclte.Y Wolfe, San~y Sellon,
Pat Dumao, Sl1aron Pyles, Barbara Leacllngham end Dottle Wilcoxen who are the candidates
for G!rlo state this year end
11111 be voted on at the March
meeting.
Louise stewart gave them a
tow pointer&amp; In regen! to f11'1 ·
ernment and how the offices are
choHn st Glrla State,
A 1111 was made to the Bear!
Fund and DOI)piea were ordered.
Plano were also made lor tha
50th ...,lversary party for the
Leaton to be hold Marcb 15,
The mid-winter conferenee•••
tllacussed. Marie llo1d and Laulae Stawart pion to att;nd. A
Foreign 114Jiallona Pl"'ll'*' Wia
plamed In April with a ' speak.

er.

•

i1 her lllllalatlve report, Lou·
l»llowatlljiOkeon ,..el-l) bWo
babw prooented In tbo Ohio Ler·
IJ!ature. !lla Ia the ~le il n d
1
'
Un!J.~flnlll.
prot Yoa~ Am,rlcentlm
chairman, pre,..ted • PJ'Oil'lm
aad concluded IIIII) • question
ancf 1 IDIWII' period. ) ~IIIGI
,..., i(,rtto Walker ,lnii·LoUlH '

a.trart.
.
.

~
I

.

athletic functions of the school
by attend them and challenged
the players to demonstrate sellmotivation, desire and loyalty in
u.. sports programs o!lered.
In his sixth year as OU atbletlc director after coaching at
Northwestern and Mlsnd Un!verslties, Rohr stressed, however,
that athletics are secondary to
,.God and Grades.'•
Touching oo the subject of college revolta and sit-Ins, Rohr
eald he feels that the black milltanta and groups such as the students tor Democratic Soc:le1iY are
only mloorlty organlzallons that
mske up aboort five per cent of
total college enrollment.
lntrnduetion of Mr. Rohr was
made by Russell Harper, baaeball coach and aoslatant !ooU&gt;all
coach, atter Master or Ceremm.
lea El11011 ~ncer welcomed fans
and observed that the banquet
,,., the beat attended ct any In
recent PUrple Tornado history,
Among goests Introduced were
Bllly HUI, AlhleUe Booster pres!dent; Ed Wlll!Rer, vice president; Mrs. Dorothy Smith, secretsry, and Mrs. Mae Gueltlg,
treasurer. Others recognized tn~
eluded ~. of Scbools William
Hughes, school board members
Robert Harden and Howard Ervln; !llerll! Rober! C, Bartemach, C&lt;MUtzy Commlsatoner
Ralph W,' Olra; Robert Wingett
o( The Dally Sentinel, atldllubert
Prlee, achool sports !ollower,
or IWtland.
Appreclalten was al oo extended by Athletic Boooter ofllclala
and coaches to a !limber ot per~ who helped wltll lhe pro.

gram dUring the past year.
Duane Wolfe presented thejunlor hisi&gt; football, basketball end
cheerleader awards; Lawrence
(LIItle Fooz) Wolle gave letters
awards to members or h i s
freshman basketball team, and
Hilton (Big Fooz) Wolle, presented reserve baske1ball letters.
James Adams, head basketball coach, awarded the varalt;y
basketball and cheerleader awards, and Bob Ashley and Mr.
Harper jointly presented lootball letters and trqlhies.
The Rev. Dale McClurg offer·
ed the Invocation and benedlctlon.
The hmored athletes, managars and cheerleaders were:
Joy Theiss, Janice Manuel,
!llaron Pyles, Rita Salser, Irene
Cooper, Jan JWI, Robin Morrow,
Carol Michael, Roma Nease,
Cindy Gooch, Valerie Johnion,
Nancy Crow, Jill Warner, Leanna Nease, Roberts Tea!ord,
- . a Nease, Beverly Ervin,
Diana Norris,JodyRoberts, Martha Yoat, Chriot,y Yost, Tru&lt;b'
Maslonka, Melanie Boogie, Terri
l' errell, !itaron Ervin, Rhmda
Ervin, Bett,y ~after, Gale S:laler, Debbie Jomson, Mary &amp;nlth,
Pat Dumas, Chrlst;y Davis, Pam
Hill, Renee Burke, Noncy Olrs,
ReekY Pro!!ltt, CantiY llobad&lt;,
Beth Theiss, Jean McTurner,
Debra West.

Morarity, Mike Stawart,
Bruce Teaford, Jim Wh it e,
Dana Aldridge, Rook c row, Gary
Eynon, But Hoback, Roger O...rs,
Terry Prol!!lt, Randy Roberts,
Dan Smith, Bob Smith, Dr.e ~­
eer, Roonle Wagner, Gerald Hen.
dricks, Sam !iialn, Jim Ables,
Pat Arnold, Neil Baker, BilJCleland, Paul Forbes, Jm Grueser,
Jerry Hubbard, .!leve Jenkins,
Alan Pugh, Rick &amp;dder.
David White, Stave Wlnebrenner, Charles Yost, Larry Athertoo, Jay Hill, Paul Justice, KevIn Stutler, Jeff Dmohew, George
Norria, Mike Nease, Rodney
Nelgler, Bobby I;ynon, David
Thels1, Norman CUrfman, Fred
Mlller, Ronnie !WI, Ralph QlolU&amp; JoiUI Jenkins, Ran&lt;~)' Forbes,
Barry '11lelsa, Charles KnightJng, Rodney Holman,DumyHOUd·
ashell
Mike Weshlnsl&lt;y, Vema Ord,
Dick Sauvage, Bill Baumprnor,
RantiY Pro!!ltt, Stave Stu!er, Bob
Diddle, Gary Norris, Roy Jolmson, Bill lUll, lJam.y lUll, Bar·
ry 11ar1, Gary Hart, Frank lhle,
Roger Nease, Art IUU, Lewis
Van Meter, Bndd,y Pyles, J 1 m
Hubbard, Bob Hysell, DougRees,
Bret Bart, Bruce Hart, John
Eichinger, Randy Pyles, Kenny
9tuler, Nick Dtle, Mike Roblnson, RIIJKiy Llpacomb, Bob MllIer, Jet!. lUll, David HUI, Pete
Sayre, RIIJKiyWarner, Wayne CleMarty

CUPO- Last

Fri~

College Scores

REGULAR GAS

9

IHIII

expansion

club,

plcked

lCI

Clendenon in lhe expansion
draft, along wlth Jesus AloiL
Then the Expos traded Alou and
Clendenon to Houston for Rusty
Staub. And, then, Clendenon
said he was becoming a vice
president ror Scripta, a job
emphasizing public relations.
Bowie Kuhn am Warren Giles
worked on the probelm Tuesday
without success. Houston's Spec
Richard son and Montreal's John
McHale were due in Atlanta
tod'lf to toke a go at IL
Their chances rest, IJlparently, on this: Scrlpto might allow
Cleooenon to play ball an:! work
part time for one season, am
Clende!IOII might do that, 1 deal
acceptable to Houston.
Slid Clendenon, an Atlanta
native, ••J[ I had known about
the dlfOculty my retirement

9

Albany SL (NY) 62 Oswego 54
CANINE COPS HONORS
Pro~dence 91 Brown 74
(UPO - J o h n
COLUMBUS
Dartmouth 83 Harvard 71
Canine,
Ohio
University's
junior
Alfred 99 Rochester Tech 86
guard,
finished
in
a
flurry
with
Grove Cit,y 99 Lock Haven78
58 points In his last two games.
New Haven 99 R.L Coil 92
The performance earned CaPurdue 116 Michigan 87
nine
honors today as Mid-Amer·
Ohio st. 108 !IIliana 86
ican Conference Player of t It e
Nrthwstn 72 Wise, 70
Week.
Brodley 64 C!n. 61
Canine scored as career-high
Minnesota 1l ICM"a 65
30
points against NMhern Dl!lUinols 71 Mich. SL 57
nois as he cormected on 12 of
Baylor 65 Texas Tech 63
23
field goal attempts and six
TCU 9! Texas A&amp;M 71
straight free throws,
Arkansa s 69 Texas 65
Rice 96 SMU 90
THE DAILY SENTINEL
Arizona S~ 95 UTEP 82
!£VOTED TO INTE REST Or
A IlEA
Tournaments
Rl CH/o iUJ ~ 01\ EN, PUBLC&gt;ti£H
N.\IA
OfOatOr T.,nehl.ll, Editor
Publllhed dill) exo~p! Sl!urdaj b~ T ho! Ohio
(Dislriet 21)
\' all~~ Pub!llhllll: C~p&amp;n). 11 0 Mtohll.no c St. .
Indiana Central 98 Hanover 94
Pomero,-, Ohln, 45765. Bou l~ u om e ~ t'hone
lo(E~IoiAliON

t!I Z.ll~ ' ·

(ot)

(l)lslrlct 31)
Sootham!lton 92 Marlst 85
())I strict!)
Howard

Pn.

73

r&gt;eu.,..,.l •herll "' 't: ~., , ..,tall _.. lklltl,....
a ll t-&lt;.ollogher, 11'1&lt;. , 12 E,u&gt;
'iub•~npl O&gt;fl

(Tex.) 69
(Diolrlct 23)
E. Mich. 99 Mich. Luth. 87
(District 22)
Central SL (Ohio) 68 Ohio
Nrthn. 50
(l)istrtct 20)
Millikin 101 Quincy 91
Ohio Conference
Wittenberg 68 Baldwin-Wallace
66

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HAVING ILLUSIONS

00"1

· SUPER ETHYL

SL Peter's 113 Siena 67

GRILL &amp; WARMER

"When Jimmy starts to move

he's klnda tough to handle.
You've gotUl holler help In an
isolated situation," Olio State
Coach Fred Taylor said .
"When we clear an area for
him he goes right and left
equally well. You almost have
to grab him to stop U.e drive."
In order to stop Cleamons,
'• Indiana picked us up a little

The trade winds blow from
the southeast and the north·
east.
OPEH TOOAY _ _ _ _ __

You 'll feolltke you're flooling

.fiNI$HIIfG

SEitviC.E
In AU - dlit At 5

That was before they found
out Clendenon had just wrought
one of the most complicated
snafus in baseball hi story.
Today, everyone is upset,
Including Clendenon, the Hou ston Astros, the Montreal Expos,
the Atlanta Braves, Nati001l
League President Warren Giles,
Baseball C&lt;rnmissioner Bowie
Kuhn, and S&lt;rtpto, lne.
The 32-year-old Clendenon, by
retiring t'rom baseball, ""set
five appleearts, not countlQg his
and Scrlpto's, by snarllog an
off - season expansion c J u b
trade,
Montreal' s EJQJos, the new

~,.:;::::;.:.~Ron:,.,!;::,:~~land~:and~Da=ve~!ll=ui~er~.:=:~
•

GIVE US ATRYI

AT
H&amp;R
FIRESTONE STORE

. · .· .·.~· ~

Don well .

Anyone ·fo~ 1 march on !fall~ . ;

that women's skirts should be
more than two 'inches above tbt
knee, a~ ·they warnt4 uB ,.,.,
clally about bendllW ovar., N""
• • •
reallyt When I llove to laid at
No, Gwendolyn, horsellnl· the knee at the halldrlnklrwfoun.
ment isn't what you use · ' tatn or low rues, and cv17 1
tope measure !I bon I aho(l lor 1 .
dress- It' I iOio8 too far.
We took I l&gt;Gll.'l llll Cound that .,
nln&amp;-tenths o( tho !eUCMS 1ft our
ofllce like mlnl..klrto, ,.; 11hy
should "' have to kow- to • ·'
when you looe your voice lew prildi•h eitecullvea?- CALL ' ·
ME ULEQGY"
II:
temporarily. ·

they scored 100 or more pointe.

was goill: to cause baseball, J
day when Don Clerdenon said might have done thlngs differhe would I'll' down his big bot en!ly."
and take a public relations .iob,
He didn't elaborate.
nobods figured it would upset
things much, and they wished

t

-

'l1le Buckeyes, who led 50-40
at the halt, marked their first
pme of the season in which

~

He played 36 minutes and 36
seconds Tuesd'IY nll!hl against
ol 16 Door attempts aoo Jody Jndlana, scored a career...Jdgh
Finney was six for 10 berore 37 points, pulled down 12 releaving the game with seven bounds and paslljld oil for three
minutes to play.
baskets in the Buckeyes' imBrodley downed host C!nch&gt;- lll'ess!ve 108-86 Big Ten runaway
nsti 114-61 In Ml ssouri Valley win &lt;nrer Indiana.
Cooterence play,
In addldoo, the Columbus
Cincinnati took the early lead, Linden·McKinJey alumnus limit·
but Bradley reeled o!f 11 ed high-scoring ~ Cooke of InB-W's Harvey He~~son aiKI slralght points to lea&lt;i 29-22 at diana to just five J&gt;Oints In the
Baker each scored 20 points.
intermission. Arter an early first half as Ohio &amp;ate surged
Ohio State Wins
glv...,...take second hal~ Brad- to a 50-40 lead.
Ohio State lilted Its season ley surged away for good.
While Cooke finished with 15
record to 16-7 am beltered its
Jim Ard lq&gt;ped Cincinnati points - seven below his aver·
Big Ten slate at 8-5 by a 1011-86 (now 1!-11 and 7-8 in the loop) age - he didn't hurt the Buckwin over Vi siting Jo:llana.
with 19 points.
eyes with his outa!de shooting.
However, Kermy Johnson, tmi~
ana's burly 6 - root - 6 center season.
Ohio State eanned a alullna
rammed in 3! points - Includ59.7
per eent o! lis floor shoUIng 22 J)Oinls In the second hall.
TAMPA, FlL (UP!) - Pete Rose, t h e Cincinnati Reda'
Dave Sorenson, Ohio State's 43 lor 72.
star ouUielder, Is st.Ul balking on cmtract terms
smooth - working JWUDr center,
Reda' General Manager Bob How sam said he Wked to Rose
tossed
in 29 points whUe Jody
who Is s!lll at his Cincinnati home, Tuesday but "we s!lll
Finney, a jwlior guard, added
caJft get together. tt
'
15 to keep the Buckeyes' hopes
The National League batting champ is reportedly asking
alive for a second place finish
lor $88,000,
In the Big TelL
Jack Fisher, the club's other holdout, hJddled twice with
Ohio Stale is 8..1 In oonference
the tewn ol!lclals Thesday, but did not sign, He hinted he
play with one game remaining,
might return to hi• home.
a saturday anemoon home enTony Perez, Tommy llelrtis and Jim Merritt were new
counter against Michigan,
arrivals at s)&gt;ring camp Tuesday.
Cleamona and Sorenson each
.·.··:···:···
..•·•·•·· ....... . - .
~~:~:~:;:::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;!;~:;::~:::::=~*:::;:;:;:;:;::~::.:.-.-:::::;~:~;z-:;;~;::;;:-.::~?X.::
connected on 13 or 16 floor
• • ,•,•,•,·,·.·,·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·,·, .•:.•!•!•.•!·!•!•!•!•!•!·~..-,.:::~~ .• . :~-::m:?-');'?:!?.~-:,;.~:r.~....:~:
shots. Cleamons hsd 19 points
at ha.lttime, Sorenson 17.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Cleamons was simply too
quick lor Indiana, which fell to
5-8 in Big Ten play.
ELEC. SANDWICH

ATLANTA.

.:

NEA Washington Conespondent

1

•

c•e--1.;.;/ndiana, 108
. -8·6

SOphomo: e rorward Jim
moM e:q:~loded for a career-bigh
37 poin!s and Dave Sorenson
added 29 to power the hlgb-seorhw win.

Baseball Has Biggest
Snafu In It's History

~~'-.. \,f

..

~ ~·

Br BRUCE BIOSSAT

date.

i

Slroei? - M)!S. L E, :
,Helent
·
·

Instant Party 'Rif&amp;1in
Of Militant Dem Liberals

Same show, the other acting Spar-

- parked his tennis rackets at
the Sign or the Dove checkroom
between calories.
Joey Heatherton and Barbara
Huttln' s rich-rich son Lance R..
ventlowtook lnalltheVegasfioor
alloWs together .. .. Whoever the
galls l'hll Slivers is dstlngmust
look an awful lot like ballerlns
Marla Tallchlef _
k
t. we eep 118,
ti"'l Items - liut she jusl ion t
Marta, but someone who looko
amazingly like the pirouetting
dsuler.
Bamed In Bootm Ia obsolete:
"The Green Slime" movie was
banned by an airline .... Duotin Hollman's conserYing h t s
energy- juat slgnslnltlalawhen
fans ask his autograph .... Basketball alar gut Cooled emphatl.

beard.,

BRUCE'SIDSBAT
,..

Brewer, Mike Stewart an:l Jim White, all presented trq,hies
for receiving All...SVAC recognition in lOotbal.l., and standing,
Jetr Donodhew, Bruce Teaford, Roo Cozart, Steve Shuler,
George Norris and llallly ProiDU. - Sentinel Photo.

.

BARBS

''

MORE!!

'l

By PHIL PASTOlET

1

las, son or Kirk Douglas ....
Comparisons are odious, so
here'a an ode: M. ~.'a a 1o t
more promising an actorthanhls
dad was on Bdwy . in "The Wind
Is Nlnezy" almost 25 years ago,
Orson Bean now Is turning
up at gatherings o! the Conservative Party .... Actors Ben Gazzara and Jerry Orback check
their pool cues at Frankie &amp;
Johnnie's before dinner and pick
them up after 11 on ~e way to
their midnight games at neart&gt;y
McG!rr'a BUllard Parlor
Chariton Heston'• rar more ~hi~

ling Mou Is returning to speed
racing In llaly .... Sieve Mc~eeo
plays for aympathJIQ"Relvera''
- a pr&lt;~stltute bella him around
.... The da111le lhow biz prostle
alwaya hal a heart of tmld but
the real ones on Bdwy. come
equ1JII)ed with knives, razors, or
••anything they can elash with"
a COil told us .... We lorecaat
the big CBS lq&gt; • level ohalteup
weeks ago.
I
Uz Taylor didn't leave her
cae'ssra• Palace suite In Ve111
for ~Inc exceptto!llmoc-•

the head with a chair.
Orson Welles had a Method
in his acting decades before Lee
Strasberg invented Marlon Brando - now ratter than Gleason;
Orson played his drinking scenes
in ''The Southern Star" fiick guz.
zling real scotch, brandy and vodka .... The crudity o! nudity;
Richard Harris and Corinna 'fosopei In '• A Man Called Horae"
~t married In the buff .••. All
those little timesavers mountup.
He ••retired" af'ternear-traglc
crash injuries but ehamp SUr-

cxq!.d!iite' sprig •;:; .

.®

WIW'IOU WIH'f
'TliROIJ6M .. ·I HAD
A'TtliJCil OF rr

· two hour..,...r,

•"'

\

Graham Rus sell, &amp;4: sopho-more forward. finished with 18
points to lead the Marauders
anJ helped them overcome an
Intermission 26-Z6 tie.
Bill Quayle and Dan Footer
scored 11 polnts -apiece t.o pace
the Polar Bears.
"When It COunts"
"They come thrOQih when it

tutl"" w!i!ii&gt;ol!·~ Ucense, .iqd,our "·· i.
. 'bty~ lbotlt II at;OV!f~ ""'coc,ko case w,...dll•t, ~~ ,.., wiit:I:~P,
tall ilirttl 'llo ~voli wants to f4lllDIIhW wl\ekl · ·.&lt;.
&lt;~1. ·
~·· It .,t;,d ha~ ' It over
\fell; -WI couldd't oi.\("G,'i6r,ioi ,
,bed, ilke our ~nte ' did ngllt~tt. ani! wo ~~ldid\eoojqle ,· '
· counlry;
paid' 14irj'Jli' .
w)th.thelr morr.IU. !lcensol
,'11le itorYI won; 1 mtghqs 1y big llno. So~~~ to do'l . ;n.
"'"· •tell You .lietorb ~hat blab'Ill• 'thtef ot pollee,WJI:. -y10
be.-.th mon or· mi!IO does. haip!ul. He oold II we'd · ·~ •
Wo, ftew to.~xlco rOr 1 mini-- buy ' prostl!ll~s 11 llctrile fqr l
vacaUon wtth aOothor 'to&lt;Vle. 0!: about ~5 each, he'll dfoP i h[o ~

Ir-----}:{;dt;;;;Tht~ifii);;J;:JR.;;;;;-;r;;;,:~--;;:-----l
Do It
HEY,

,

t•

a

been content to let the United States carry
the burden of the defense of the non-Communist world, lnclnding that of Europe itseU-and, consequently, the burden of mistakes that may have been made.
· There should be no need for 235 000
American troops in Europe. The numbe'r is
both excessive as a Sfmbol of moral commlttnenl and insufficient as a block to a
Soviet juggernaut.
But De Gaulle excepted, most Euro·
peons, despite their complaints, shudder at
the thought of facing life without the shield
of U.S. power.
The Nixon administration has liow offered Europeans the ~pportunity to speak
With an equal vo1ce m the determination
of how tllat power is e1erclsed. The question is whether they really want the responsibility.

New Mumps Vaccine
Proves Effective

.

:.~. ;1\!' \.JIIce w.~ tlia~ ~·8 (¥~ '

Catnip is the latest discovery of those
whose search for chemical kicks seems
never-ending.
Unlike dried banana peels, inhaled or
ingested catnip does appear to have some
sort of intoxicating or hallucinogenic ef·
feet. The human cool cats who use it still
aren't as smart as the original catnip fanciers, however .
Cats have so arranged the order of the
universe that people exist to take care of
them . Those young people who start down
the psychedelic road. whether it is with
catnip. glue-sniffing, morning glory seeds,
mariJuana, LSD or anything else, may
eventually turn themselves into animals,
but nobody is going to want them, even as
house pets.

THE WELL CHILD®

1

. ti'!! .!t.~ts kll)d ol ojil .when he

New Garden-Variety Kick

The stated purpose of President Nixon's
visit to Europe was ''to inquire, not to in·
sist; to consult , not to convince; to listen
and learn."
He pledged to consult with America's
European allies before and during hopedfor negotiations with the Soviet Union,
·• not only because they have a right to he
heard but because we want their ideas.
And I believe we have a right to expect
that consultation shall he a two·way
street."
The new administration's foreign poUcy.
European department! has be~un on a
most auspicious note. It remams to be '
seen, however, how much traffic in ideas
and influence flows westward over that
two-way street in the next four years.
Europeans have understandable griev·
ances against the United States ~ griev·..ances which Charles de Gaulle, president
of ex·NATO member France, bas long at·
templed to exploit, so far without mueh
SfCCest-c.:A.&lt; Ni1on . said, too often the
IJniled bUies has talked at Its parlllers
ltstead ot with theltl' or mere!)' infon!led·
tHem of. decisions "Iter they Were made.
But this has not been due to any particu·
lar "arrogance of power" on our part but
simply because we are a single! unified
nation with a stren~h far greater Ulan the
sums of our indivtdual political subdivisions. Europe remains a collection of cui·
tural as weU as political subdivisions, separated by language , history and customs. ·
Despite great strides in establishing various "communities"- in trade, raw materials, labor, transportation and atomic
energy-Europe remains merely a name
for a C&lt;&gt;Dtinent, not a political entity.
The 13 European NATO members have

~~~?J~~~~~i;:~

A'NICEGIRL

~ :::;:~;

the". .
, . rr.Jri I P.erfeetly moral house- -way~- '
, . !!l~ .- · with 1 proaUtute'a !t.' •1\'hen: ~~~~..•

Equal Voice for European Allie$

The liew live but weakened mumps virus vaccine
should be given to all childre:n over one year of age
who have not had the dfsease. More than one million
persons bave received this
vaccine and no significant
side ·effects have been ob·
served. It should not be
f:iven to anyone who is al·
~rgic to eggs or to neomy.
em, an antibiotic that is
added in a small amount to
the vaccine. II should not be
given to pregnant women or
persons with fever or leukemia. It gives effective
protection against mumps in
95 per cent of those who receive it.
·

By United Pres&amp; Internstlonal years - by defeating Ohio
Those Cenlral State Maned- Northern 6fl..IO Tuesday night
era who ~idn't uJ11ack their for the District 22 championsuitcases after last year's sue- ship at Wllberforce. They won
'"" at thO NAIA championship the nnsls In t965 olll1968.
in Kansas City, Mo., were
Central State, which takes a
wise. They're on their way 21..() record Into the tourney,
weat aaatn this year.
outgunned Northern 20.10 durl1111
The Marauder&amp; won the trt.p an eight minute span to take a
their Ofth in the last six commandi"'l 57-41 lead.

.

Shall U,S'. Keep Rt!in on· Bombs?

I

The Dally Sentinel, Middleport · Pomero)·, 0 ,, Ma rch 5, 1969

Marauders Win 68-5·0, Cop District Title~

I

"
I

,

'
I
'

Anlltrica'o Largolf Tax S.rvlco with Over 3000 OHicoo

304
EAST
MAIN
: ,,
.
~19Y , 0HIO

tllrl h•;Jt1t *•"'' hi 5 p.m.
• •·•· •·· No AltPol ·" Naswr ·
' • .14io'oMJ.,

.

Hogg &amp;'Zuspan
ials Co.•

'

�•

Legislat~-re ·. . . at a Glance --• '- Tho Dall~ Senllnol, Middleport - p..,.I'O)', 0., Marrh 5, 1969

-'&gt;ii.&gt;.~*

wASIUNGTON

HB262, lolamlng, deU,..tea pounda.
118271, Creasy, create1 a
ltcll l!d¥1aora b atnglt llld
atate educational practices
mutllple cl\1' hOalth dtatricts.
' Hugbeo, JII'OYideBO board.
HOUSE
HB263, R.
SENATE
BUll Passed
eoat iJl living Increase for alate
Bill• Pooted
HBill, Folcar, 111bstltutes employoo.
Am. SBt, WeisedKtm, re~
-...t of Regents member on
IIB264, Albrill&lt;ln, provides
quires
mandatory OJlll!linotion
severance
pay
to
pibllc
acbool
Olllo Peace otrtcer 1\'atntng
lor
TB
for students and school
C«mcU witll a member repre- teachers who reUre'.
oonttng the Jllbllc. Vole: 95~.
HB265,
Heintzelman, in- emplo,yoo. Vote: 3~.
&amp;n. SB49, Cook, chlnpa
HB72, Norris. permits High.. creases from seven to 15 the
n.y Petrol to aid local law en- number of members on a city name ot Child Welfare Board
for&lt;:ement in disordera. Vote: planning commlsoloo tn those to Chlldren Services Board.
cities having a 'board of park Votes: 33~.
73-23.
Resolution Offered
Reoolutloo Adopted
commlssi&lt;l'lera.
SJR14, Hoicomb, prov!dea for
HRH, McDmald, commends
HB266, Schmidt, prohibit• opthe League ol Ohio ~rtamen eration on airport runways of pJbllc vote on exemption at
Ohio from fedorol ds.YUI!bt ssvon its 6lst birtbda.v. Voice vote. motor vehicles.
Bills lnlr&lt;xhlced
HB267, Nixon, increases va· lngs tlme requirement.
Bills lntreduced
H8258, Sweeney, p!'OY!des If catloo tlme with fu II pay lor
SB154, Cook, permits 11011,trial judge ls unable, another state employes.
HB268, Nb:on, gives OOW!zy proftt corporation to dtatrlbute
judge may handle motion to
place a delendant oo probation. employes !Oilr weeks vacation Its profits to other non-prottt
HB259, Young, provides pro- after 15 years service and six corporations without them lo...
lng their tax.exempt atatus.
visional teaching certificate Cor weeks after 30 years.
SB155, Ocaoek, provide&amp; for
HB269,
Hollington,
Increase•
(l.lallfied Peace Corps workers.
HB260, Murdock, provides li- !rom $100 to $200 the amount licensing regulations &lt;i private
censing for perBOrts who collect of special ADC subsidies for commercial schools.
SB156, Arono!t, sets regula.
or dispose raw rendering ma- school districts containing the
tlons
governing use of land
terial on a commercial basis.
required number of ADC chUdHB261, Hiestand, autllerizes ren.
contracts.
58157, Dennis, prohibits ficounty commissioners to under
HB210, McLin, perndts clUes
take maintenance service fOr a to charge fee and llcense pets, nancial firms from collecting
regional airport commission.
use funds for mWlicipal dog loan cllarps and interest ex.
COWMBUS (UPI)- A glance
II aellv~ 'rueoday In tile Glnorll Aosembly.

II)' United PresslntemaUonol

Mlgbzy Rick Mount helped
Big Ten champioo Fllrdue
maintain its wtmlng rouch
tuesday night in a recordaettine 116..87 victory over
Michigan.

The Boilermakers, who will
play the winner of the Notre
Dame-Miami (Ohio) game in
the Mideast Regional ot the
NCAA championships, equalled
their highest offensive performance at the PUrdue Arena
qainst MJ.chlpn. Purdue had
set the scoring mark against
North Dakota earlier In Ute
aeaaon.
Ml:ult, a small, junior back.
court man, ftred in a season
htl!b 4.1 points to lead Purdue to
tto 19th victory 1n 23 games.
Mmmt, who hit 18 field goals
and made nbte or 12 tree
tbrows, made up ror the
abaence ~ the BollermakefJI

No.2 1corer, Herm GUiiam.

Jlm Cleamons' 37 points led
Ohio State past Indiana. Dave
Sorenson helped the &amp;lckeye
attack with 29 points; Ken
Johnson led the Hoosiers with
34.
Dave Scholtz' 26 points set a
career scoring record at Wlnois
in the Dllni's victory. Scholz'
final field goal with 19 seconds
. re~. gave ,him 1,451 points
for his varsity career.

Ashland Crowned Small
College Champs By UPI
NEW YORK (UPI) - Ashlllld
College, architect of college
taaketball's most dreaded de·

aOih schools received nine first-

place votes. Fairmont, ronnerup
in last seasoo's NAIA tour·
ftnso, clooed the books oo Its narnent llld first to ~try for
lftllell J'Ollll)ar.... IIOit cam- thit year's playoO's, ftnished the
potgn ln blatory today by being regular sea11011 with a 25-1
Dlllled United Press Interna- re:eord.
Aobland gained tile tllp
tional &amp;moll college basketbatl
poatttoo In the ratings ooty two
dJomploo for 1968~9.
Ashlllld, tile amall Obio weeks ago, maYlng pall KenIIChool which buUt a national tucky Wesleyan. The Panthers,
nprtattoO on Its abutcy to atop winding up 20-5 in regular
tile OIII)OIItloo !rom scoring, 808800 play, ltnlshed lhtrd In
wa1 named UPI small eollege the llnol bollotlng.
Alcorn A.&amp;M., boasting a
c!Jaq&gt;llll on the biola ot Its No.
I rmctng In tile final weekly perfect 25~ mark, wound up the
No. 4 !elm while stcacly
ratlnp of the 1968.$1seosm.
Southwell
Mls11011ri (20-1) was
1be Eagles, who complled a
23-2 reiiJ]ar season recordwhtle fifth and Nevadl Las Vegas (20Umitlng tile opposition to an 6) sixth.
Soolhwest Louisiana (20-7}
annge fl. 31 J~Gints a game,
odgtd high scoring

Fairmount

voted the No.
followed by Cheynsy
was

7

team

SCORES
By United

Press lnternat1onaJ
Eaat

United Press lntemattooll
East
W L Pet. GB
W L Pet. GB
Boltirno&lt;e . ... 51 18 .739
Miami. . .... 34 2' .557
Pldladelphta • . 49 23 .681 3'h Kentucky . . , . 32 28 .533 1'h
New York .... 48 %4 .667 41h M!Mesota .... 32 29 .525 2
Boaton ....•. .42 29 ,592 10
Indiana . . . . .. 34 32 .515 2'h
Clnclnnotl •.. .36 36 ,500 16'h New York . • .• 16 45 .262 18
Detntt. . .... 27 45 .S75 25 1h
Weal
Milwaukee . . . .23 48 .324 29
W L Pel GB
West
Oakland • ••. . 47 12 ,797
W L Pet. GB Denver •.•... 37 26 .587 12
Lot Angelo• .. 47 25 .653
New Orleans .. 32 31 .508 17
Atl- .. . . .. 43 29 .597 4
Dallas .. .. .. 30 31 .492 18
Sin Fran ..... 35 38 . 479 12'h Los Angeles .. 25 36 .110 23
Sin Dle~ .... 29 41 .414 17
Hoostoo ..... 19 41 .317 28 1h
Clltcogo .. . .. 29 42 ,408 17ih
SooWe . .....27 46 .370 20'h
..•• ,15 57 .208 32
Seatde 130 San Diego 116
Tuelldi.Y'a Ro11Uits
(Only games scheduled)
Now York 102 Delroit 99
Wednesday's Games
Clltcogo 114 Pbtladelphta 113
New York at Detroit
CincD&amp;tt 1t1 "-lx 122
Chicago at Milwaukee
BltttJnoro 116 Loa Angelea 108 Baltimore at San Francisco
Sin FrandiCO 99 Boatoo 95
(On!¥ gameo scheduled)
By

Returns

128 MILL ST. ..MIDDLEPORT

~ Ullited

Pmaa Jntoroatlonar
A 40.member Oblo Farmero
delogatlon haa returned
from, Waahlnston following confolionce• with ~ ot
Ali'fculturo ofllclaia llld mombel;• of tile llou.. ' ond Senate.
JoiOI1h W, Ftobtoi', ot Ox!onl,
chairman ol tile Olllo Farmera
unton, said tile Oblo delegalkiu
met with Undersecretary ot Ac-

VALUES
··
--ReJ.98c-7 Oz.

u.ilnn

-···-

Phtllp Campbell, -

~
'Jbiu'

The student curmoil in the schools hasn•t been helped 110' by a
recent ~reme . Court decision which ripped away yet another layer
of local jurisdiction in favor of goverrment by judicial edict
An Iowa school district's ban against students wearing black
arm bands In class as a protest against the Vietnam war was ruled
unconstltuticnal by the Court.
Justice Abe Fortas delivered the majority opinion with the reasoning that "apprehension or disturbances" is not enough to over~
come the right of (recdom of expression.
This decision was strongly protested by Justice Hugo L. Black
who remarked, "This opinion, I regret to say, does not foreshadow
more domestic tranquility."
Black charged that what the court was saying is that the Constl..
tution denies that local communities know what is best for them. He
called this a ' 1 strange procedure."
The court has ne\'er before been asked to "interfere with the
discipline of public schools," Black added, and the decision "reaches down into the schools, and this is too much for me."
Justice Black continued:
" •.• if the time has come when pupils or state -supported
schools, kindergarten, grammar school, or high school, candefy arxl
fiaunt orders of school. officials to keep their mirxls on their school
wor~ it is the beginning of a new revolutiooary era of permissiveness in this country fostered by the judiciary.''
"I have ~lways ha.d the idea," stated Black, "that the schools
were to educate children aoo not children to educate teachers; but
that seems to be an out-of-date concept"
Justlce Black also insisted after the ruli11: many students "will
be ready, able, and willing to defy their teachers of practically all
orders."
The Supreme Court decision, in my opinion, opens the door (or
further unrest and disruption in our schods. It wUI make it more
difficult for schools to censor student publications or to purge school
libraries or curriculum of objectionable material. Principals ard
deans may also encounter legal difficulty when they attempt to discipline student protestors.
It has been my observation that the vast majority of our high
school and college students are interested primarily in getting 1
good education am being responsible citlzena.
There Is a small minotlty, of course,-that for various reasons,
choose to create confusion an:! interfere with the function of the ed1Joo
cstional Institution which they attend.
The Supreme COurt, in upholding this minority, exhibits gross
discrimiratlon and disregard for the majority of students who seek
an education urv:ler tran:tuil and orderly conditions,
Instead of knocking down oor school administrations, the Supreme Court should be backing them up with declstons sqJporting
strong discipline and decorum regulations.
Past decisions by the Supreme Court have taken God, prayer
and Bible readi~ out of our schools. Now, the Court has helped to
remove discipline.

14. Oglethorpe (21-5)

College Ratings
NEW YORK (UPO- The linal
U n I t e d Press International

20

15. (Tiel
American Intl(17..1)
19
South Dakota St
17. Eastern N.Mex. (I) (17-1l18
18. Linfield
15
19. DePauw
12

small college basketball ratings
for the 1968-69 season with first
place votes am won-lost records
20. (Tiel
in parentheses:
lrdiana Po. (21-2}
8
Teams
Points
8
Northern
Iowa
(14-9)
I. Ashlard (9) (23-2)
270
2. Fairmont st (9)(25-1)
267
3. Ky. Wesleyan (4) (20-5) 224
4. Alcorn A&amp;M(4)(~)
178
The first 51 wildUfe refuges
5. S. W. Missouri (3) (20-4)168
in the United States were set
aside by President Theodore
6. NYda Ls Vgs (I) (20-m 137
Roosevelt, an ardent conser7. S. W. Lootslana (I) (20-1)129
vatloolst.
8. Cheyney St (25-2)
113
9, S, F. Austin (22-3)
82
10, Control St (18-6)
58
11. Howord Payne (2)(24-3) 48

Tuesday's Results
Dallas 122 New York 119
Denver 126 Mlnne- 120
(Only games ocheduled)
Wedneaday's Games
Dollas at Indians
New York at Kontucky
Oaklllld at IIIUaton
MlnneliOtl at Lol Angeleo
(On!¥ games acheduled)

3 ROOMS
New Furniture
OILY $'299
sa.oo ..........".

47

43

"Handy Man Type"
there are many skilfed busihess service specialists
listed in the Want Ad columns. Consult the 'filc·it 1
expert• in the WHO DOES
IT classification .

Ph. 992·2156

THE
DAILY SENTINEL

.

~

Re1. $1.19.-14 OL

LYSOl
SPQY

Listerlne
,Antiseptic

63C

67~

·

-

38e

iach

1

..

. It .... ,Oollllad out

SARA DEE-LADIES'
FOLDIMG VIMYL

Cor or llauoohold

lor 'canines to be tied or Oil a
l•lli hove boen ~~-and here~~ linea'ai at r.iaat f5 wt11 bo
levlad IIII!.D81 ownora who fat!
_to ~li wtth the n. .
RJI&amp;a al.O. dectdOdtopurrhase
.

HISKBROOMS

olllcf.
.
Aiteadlng were Mayor 'lbclmaa

T.V. SLIPPERS

100" Bro001 Corn

4ae . .

.

• 1\feepor b

'(

,

·
·

·

l
Big Sin. Handy For

. Auort..l Colors, S,M,L,XL

¥ ........

•

lrwa :or tile dog ordlnonce calling

•

'1

income.

.

_,_..
. ....
_ or·town counctl.

$ J1
PILLOW
....h

300 Exira·Plaid

HAWN - . A ihiii'Otop

illae1ilal111 ollbt .atr11 clqtprGb.
Iom .oc""led much
ot i receat
'

)

"ROYAL" JUMBO
Foa111 Filled Bed
r

Reviewed
• tiEW

For Co11fort
In Home, Garden
or Stodlum

·

-t

usJng' '"papert• farm loaaea
to reduce tax Uabutzy on other

.'

14" x 9" x 2"-For Sitting Tool ·

reCODUI1eoded • ••60

by

•
•

YEST~ad ..

price rate.

per ~uahel prke - r t , an Increal¥' ot 10 cents par buabel
aver !tile present !lqJ1I10I't rate;
part!clpatlon ln
llld feecl
grain i proerama as a eondlUon
ot ~ price oupport; and
~tloo against supporting
~· unleu preduced oo
land under cultlvatlon for at
least three years,
During t h e coogresslnnal
vt atts reconunenclattooa ot the
member! Included the funding
by Coogre88 ot the farm programs 1 so they can be operated
at tile maxln\1lln level authorIzed
Congre88; adoptloo of
farm iiargatnlng enablln6 legiolatton; adoption ol tile Fair
Farm Budget Act to prt Department or Agriculture spendIng In proper porapecttve; and
restoration and OlQlBIIIi&lt;m of
funds lor tile agricullure oooservatJm. program and ·the apedol milk programa.
The Farmers Union «lao
urged adoption of tile Metcalf
btu to cloae a tax loopbole
which 1IQW epables wealthy ...,_
farmers to eocape aboot $200
mlllton a year In Income taxea

'.,

FOR,·MARCii
. . ....._7-1

Disinfectant

01lto- n.....ret
M. YCIOIIIII llld lleplbUcaa WOllam B. - and
called on 24 Ohio membera ot
the Hooae.
:rn • conference with campbell, Ftdltor !!aid, members ot
. egatioo strongly prolootod
reductloo In the OD,Yboan

Hamlltoo Garfield 91 MI. HealthY
39
GreenhUia 69 Hamlltoo Badin 60

C..lllt ,.,..

~roup

~

(At Ooford)

&amp;rn&amp;

•

.....tor. from

state (25OHIO HIGH SCHOOLS
2), S.F, Aullin (22-3) and
BASKETBALL
RESULTS
Control state (18~). Central
tllp hmors.
By
United
Pres•
International
12. P~t Somd (I) (22-3)
The 35-member UPJ Coaches State, last year's NAIA. chamAA
Tournaments
Class
13.
GaMCn (22-5)
Roling Boord gave Ashland a pion, completed Its final week(At
Columbus)
IDtsl ot 270 polnta booed oo a 10- end by upsetting Ashland 44-38
COIS. Linden 75 COis. Eastmoor
t-8-7~-5-t-3.:2-1 breakdown while lut fell in the following game to
If Your Husband
67
Falnnoot received 267 points. Bellarmlne.
Isn't The
Columbus East 94 Londoo 51
lbte of Weal VIrginia by three
points In tile tll!bteot battle for

.

rt&lt;Uiture

102-99 Tally
By GARY KALE
UPI Sports Writer
The New York Kni c k s
sprayed Detroit with a dose of
DDT in way of rejoicing once
more the celebrated trade
between the two teams.
It all adds up to the "Dave
DeBusschere teamwork" pattern that existed since the day
the Knicks traded Walt Bellamy
and Howard Komi ves to the
Pistons for the part-time
Chicago White Sox pitcher who,
to the everlasting gratitude of
New York Coach Red Holzman,
decided to forsake basebaU for
a lull time job in professional
basketball.
DeBusschere scored 21 points
as the Knicks beat Detrolt 10299 Tuesday night. He also
contributed nine rebouOOs.
The Knicks have a 30-7 record
since their Dec. 19 trade tor
DeBusschere and the last
victory was a milestone lor the
club. New York set a record of
48 triumphs in a single National
Basketball Associationseason.
In other NBA games Tuesday,
Cincinnati routed Phoenix 141122, San Francisco beat Boston
99--95, Baltimore defeated Los
Angeles 116-106 ard Seattle
trimmed san Dlego 130-116.
The Knicks were only 18-17 on
Dec. 19. Now the)''re in third
place, a game back o( seeondplace Philadelphia, alii ever
hq&gt;eful of catchirw Baltimore
for the Eastern Division title.
Jim Washington's desperate
jump shot at the buzzer gave
the Chicogo Bulls a IH-113
verdict over Philadelphia, their
first against the 76ers in four
games. Washlngton hlt lor 30
points, one less than team
scoring leader Bob Boozer.
Hol Greer ard BUiy CIOUI!~
each collected 24 points tor
Philadelphia.

·I

Ushed lnstitutiol'ls, apinst the way the tmlversUiea are nm
llld yet not having o sense of purpose, a senoe of direellon,
a sense d. idealism.''
Tbla, too, waa ''Part of tile probl~ here In tile United
Sates, u Nixon conUmed..
"And 1 think that much or tile reapoootbutzy reata not oo
tile young ~e. for mt I&lt;Mwing what llle.Y're for, but oo
older -le, for not giving them the vlatoo llld thO senao
of purpose llld tile tdeallam that IIIey ahoold have."

Pistons By

rutnots deloated Michigan state
71-57, Minnesota edged Iowa 7165, Northwestern beat Wisconsin
72-70, Bradley edged Cincimati
64-61, TCU blasted Soothwest
Cooference champion Texas
A&amp;M 94-71, Arizma State beat
University of Texas, El Paso 9682, Arkansas beat Texas 69-65,
Rice defeated SMU 96-90, and
Baylor upended Texas Tech 6963.

&amp;Jn&gt;po, ~

Tho Pmat- !laid hlo etghto&lt;la,y trip to Ell,_ had lhla to be the cU,: "A 100118 goaerallon agatnat the eatab- ·

Knicks Bump

In other college action, Obto
state downed tndtsna 108-86,

(UPI)

ot

House news cootereoee.
.,'lllla Is not unusual b"eCillle ti.a is perhaps aomethlna:
thai Ia commoo to ,.ung - l e genorolly •••"

ceeding Ute usuary limit.

Mount Scores 45 As
Boilermakers Romp

Farmer

YdJih Ia yrulh, be It the YGII!h
Nbal muoed Tues. - nll!bt. •'Tiley . know what llle.Y'I'!l oPtnst, but t11ey find
dtfllculty In I&lt;Mwing what tlley'ro for," Nbal told a Whlto
of America or

•

'

\

.

~-

SIZES

14 io

WlloleHa•s 18 lbt.• • •
center Ha• Slices ••

"

NAME
BRAND

1. 99 to
2.99

DOMESTIO
i'

' When we package meat,
. w~ P,Ut t~e best side M\vn.

14.88

WHERE SHOES ARE
SEMSIBL E PRICED

·

9.99
12.99
to

'

WANT TO OPERATE YOUR
OWN BUSINESS?---·'
Sears, Roebuck and Company is now lookina for
an individual or husiand·wife team to own and
operate a Sears cataiope merchant store In Pomeroy, Ohio.

SURFERS
Si••• ito s.u4

As a Sears authorized cataioaue sal-s merchant:
1. You are the exclusive catalo1ue merchant in a
specified market area.
.
2. You sell merchandise from any Sears cataioaue
and from the stock of Sears appliances on
JOII' sales floor.
,
3. You are offered a complete trainlnl propam
and a consultlna service,
4. You receive eJperl bulldine and site selec:·
lion assistance.
5. You pay no franchise fee and your investment
is up to $4000.00.
Please send name, address, telephone number,
and business resume to:

Sears, Roebuck an• Co.
Dept. 385, APG
925 S. Homan Ave.,
Cliicalo, illinois
' !.

00

MAYS -

2$

••

lb.

97~
if

'iliat'aoUI' pO~cy...that'a opr praetlce. .
That'a jlltlt one more 1'ell80n you call buy

·.Sujxm·Right Mea~s with C'Onlidenee.
•'

' "'

IREAm; THIGHS
OR DRUMSTICKS
lb.

FriH fllli S~cb • • ...

''

•'

59~·

•

i' ·; u.s. tto.' Sl• A .MAINI

Tender

.,POTATOES
~rt .•lt. · •
/c .,_.,.

·
·
·
·
.
•v 8..8
.

~·····

.

.

,.

511-lb.lag

SPECIAl. LOW
PRICJI

lb.

10c

Caltbage
&amp;QAT
WITH HAM

leedless Grapefruit ·
LARGI
WHITI 6 for 4gc~

,·

..
,
e.D
. ; ,. :-·
WHOLE

n•

'

.

., '

.

SweetPeas •••••••
, CRIAiol smo
Peas wllll Onions •••
• • • • .t:::- 51 Sliced
Beans • •
, . .. -sl
••

qotiu
., . ,, , ,e''
.:

.

.

~~

••

WHOU"ICUNEL Ol

$ 99'

Sizes

SPOMGE

,

rnsla lryer

.::: 85c

r.e•b c:•ops
...etc
.

)

New Solid Sprl~t Colors

10 to 18

..

Breatle• Pert!HI ~~ • 2.~•. 19c
01'111111 w•iti•c • •5~$1"
Seaftell Dl•..,. ~=
sse

CU'i SHOULDER

.

Capri PcnJts
~~~
Flidlery

ALL 7" CUTS
ALL ONE PRICE!

Lenten Values!

age

lb.

(

P•manent Press

Proportioned

a.Stc
• • • a.42•

r

pair

lt.

Colqro &amp; Fancr Patlttn•

FULL BUTT
HALF

.

PRE·SEASDN SALE OF
LADIES' NEW STYLE

JAf!tJCAS$

'· ill gijai'wlteed tel be eqUal fo

• i·.

Twoodo &amp; Solid•
Colo.. - Mow
Stylta. Silta
3tab, 7ta 14

Middleport, 0.

·

·. OJ' biilt!r than the side you C8JI - ·

COATS

THE SHOE BOX

BLADE

.

,_ :- !JJ.e~le or:~ meat you CW~'t see

1 99

'

Roaitlnc Chicleell:.~ 1t , ,.. 4Cc
DELICIOUS 2 INI.S1It••• Dl BIIJS ' VA.IETIES
'"""

:Let·O·L•••

GIRLS' NEW
SPRING

SHOUFORTHE
. ENTIRE FAMILY

'

..

Sllank Portions •
Bull Pol'llou • • • •

Beef Rib Roast

Delmo•lc• Steeb •
Beef Short Rl•• L~~~

COATS
to .

h

'

"

NEW
SPRING

Greon-Wlilto
and Pink

c

.~·

. 'l'hnefltod In tho
CloriiTuea-

. ·

6 ; 1'

.

LB.

·'

.. "

.,__

"Super-Right" Meats!

cti,O,ns

$

Two..lo-Solid
Color• In Mow
Blonolod Fobrics
Movy-Block

on

NO CENTER SLICES REMOVED
EXCEPT BY REQUEST

ES

Sizes
3to 6x
7to 14

OF $10.00 •

,..o~~;baoct b)

FULL SHANK
HALF

~

..

WEDNESDAY MIXED LEAGUE
Week of Februory 26,1969
Points
Yippies . • . . •••• . ••••• 34
Alley Cets ............. 33
Filling Stars • • , ....... 25
Spimers •••••••• , ..• 20
M-C'&amp; • • • .••••••••• 16
Inter robangs • , • • • . • • • • 16
High Ind. Game - Jr. Pbelps
223 ard Bett,y Batey, 180.
High Ind. Serles - Jr. Phelps
583 ond Botcy Batey 477.

'

!&amp;copt itt""

Cooked Hams

Super-Right
Smoked

LADIES' NEW SPRING

Local Bowling

(I

WITH PURCHASE

iowl
Coupon Valid Thru Mareh lith. In
Aft Co~mbuo Ow. AI P Stor"
One coupon rtdHmed with uch $10 purchtse

I

·

BIG BUYS

e

The Latin term, Incunabula, denotes books printed
prior to ~ . ll. 1500. , .
•..
... &lt;+.h

•

Extra,Plaid

-.

'

New! For Sprint and Easter! .

JUMIORS
MISSES
WOM£145

(I

All Columbu1 Oiv. A &amp; P Storet
One coupon redeemed with ueh $20 purth•se

Mtw Fobrlco

, .,~

IExcopl item• "'ohiba'!'f by low)

Coupqn V,lid Thru M"rch l ith. In

Gr!Dir..d, Bocordor H I t n
1, Sewer Cmmrlslioner
D1lam Ktmea llld Calnctlmon
acl('He.,, Lewto~,Giry
. 1111, R. G. G.,ono.aill Arthur

,Thlbtt.

WITH PURCHA$~ OF $20.00

care-·-~-----.

tile clzy building

\Fitelil''

I

pair

· BAnEIIES.

.........
. . . ....
)

t

1
~
•.-. ' "

_,_
sa r ..... GJoeea haas ~!!:..

11-.

"·.,.

• •
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Fl'o•ea C:l'e••ed Spl*cla • • 3 ...... )

•. •• 3.... s.1
VIGITABLIS
Ua .........
.
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.
. · 3;.i....SIOO
:

t=••
t=••
s=•a
-·
. a....sa
' .

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'

'

Massachusetts lnstitute•of TeCb:o
noiCWY _professor• lor a one-do)'

research strike, hurxlreaa of
slUdenll and teachers acroas
the nation held somln1n
rue~ on the governmenea
emphasis of military needs in
alloting research funds.
campus demonstntioos took

a more camiliar turn at Florida
State University T u e s d 1 y,
where helmellld pollee carrying
fixed bayonets on their carbines
arrested 60 students of a group
or 400 holding a raUY In
violation of an injunction.
At Sarah Lawrence College,
an all-girls school in Bronxville,
N.Y. , 60 students- all but tour
of them women- took over the
Adm~strstioo
today to protest

Building early
a tuition hike of
$350 which goes lnto effect next
' September. The demonstration
was led by the campus Students

CUPO-

President Nixon,

ccq~li~ ~ti­

mism for world peace With a
harsh warning to Hanoi, has
come to the "cautious conclusioo" the Russians may yet
tum out lO be peacemakers in
both the Mideast arxl Vietnam.
In a 55-minute news conference televised from the White

House Tuesday

nigh~

Nixon
tlelded a barrage oC forelgn
policy quesdons and, for his
countrymen arxl the world to
hear, made these points:

-The United States "will not
tolerate" increased hostilities in
VIetnam during the peace tolks
and will make "an a,pl"q)riate
response" if the Commw1lst
otfensi ve conthmea.
-His European trip was a
"precedent" to summit talks
wtth the Russians "at a later
time;."
11
Use Its Influence"

- The Soviet Union will u use
ita inO.uence" to ealm the West
Berlin situation rather than hurt

the prOOI&gt;Ocla lor summit talks.
-Then , Is, 1JD " - t op~­

mism" cor improved relationS
with
Red
China
in the
immediate Cuture.

-He has reached ''the
cautioos conclusion that the
Soviet Union will play a
peacemak1"8 role nol only In
tho Mldioas~ but In Vletmm."
-The idea of sendipg a
permanent envoy to the Vatican
is being "considered."
-He wUl make a decision on

the tate

ot the oontroverslal

antibl.llistlc missile system the

first of next week.
- 'lllere has been "substantial
progress" t.o.rard a Middle East
&amp;ettlement and it ••seems
lll&lt;ely" there will be lour-!&gt;OWer
distussloo.s, In the United
Nations, on the trDI.Dlespot.

- There are "m plans" to
wlthdnw any American trC)q)s

trmn Vietnam
future.

in

near

the

Conference Restricted
The news conference was

l

J

RIVER NEWS

GAUGES - Gallij)olls, 12.2
ani 13.6 running 7 1eet ot rollPom~

era; PL Pleasant, 24.18;

eroy- Mason, 20.49; Hinton, 1.53
tailing; Kanawha Falls, 4.23 stat.;
Charleston, 18.02 staL Lcnkm,

llarmetllld Winl!eld are on tho
snL
BOAT MOVEMENTS:
GALUPOLIS LOCKS - Jelf·
ta.t down I a. m. i Steel Clipper
up 2:45 a. m. i Peace down 5 a.
m.; Bobby Jo dawn 7:30 p. m.
KANAWHA RIVER- Marme~
down 12:55 a. m.; Winfield,
Nation&amp;! up 4:30 p. m.; Polly R.
1C) 2:10 L m.; Alan R. Merrill ~.G)
5:30 L Ill.
0100 RIVER - Lock 14, AJ&gt;o
drew P. Calhoun ~ 7:30 p. Dt.i
Jane T. ~tJ 9:30 a. m.; Franklin
Pierce up 7:45 L m.; Loc~ 15,
St. Marys down 4:55 a. m.; Peg8)' Downey up 5:50 a. m.; Lock
16, Mark E:tislin down 5:25 L m.;

H. E. BowleslC)6:40a.m.;Belle-vWe LA&gt;cks, Eastern up 4:30Lm.;
Valvollne up 4:35 L m.; Tammy
L White up 5:15

a. m.; Racine

Locks, John Pushak down 9:55
p. m..; WUUam lt Shaver, Jr.
doWn 10:55 p, m.;Elgercli1fdown
1:20 L m.; Green141 Locks, Miss
Luck;y up 5:30 p, m.; Elisha
Woods down 12:20 a.

m.j

Rav·

enawood dowa 4:15 L m. i Fort
lloorborn up 6:20 a. m.; Melclohl

Locks, Oleander dCMn 3:35 p.

m;; Aohland clown 4:15 p. m.;
V.Uoy Voyqer down 8:25 p. m.;
POMO)'Ivania down 11:10 p.
11. ; Luther Herdman: down a. m.;
llatl111 H011oteoc1 up 7 a, m.
£110

~(

••

'

-~

. Maey

I

.

'

'

.

;c

JAMES A. lii{ODiS,
, hla m"'"" \!lib Jllp
Gen. Pa111 w•.~ 10.~ .

·

a.e

over

'lbursdt.r,

T.

systmn

-rn

••

I

Dies ·at H lzer

•

,~

..

lltoWd ~ -

~-...._, .·

1110011•

:·r

Mi-• .and !.iri
: week ·,~ay ~~ !1111"4~. ' · · ,
.·
Wh)le In Flofllla, lo!i"· atill:~ Mto. lli'J&gt;'\Otler -are' plaiUII.,g · to'~•lt '"""" ot , 4~ .a~~te '"hlch ')iw
Edit!" Ebersbach•who Is ..., qonllned lrrthelntenslve care ward of. roi&gt;r oi five lllte"'!is to amOnl
a hMpitolln Venice, Florida. the EberS.,.~hs are, of course, Corm- It deteaw.l.
er POmol"O)' reo~ents;
'
·· The lone alnonlment 'liP'
proved (76 ; 20l''wciilld prohfblt'
SPEAKING OF ILLNESSES, JOHN ~OHLER hi.J been refurned us~' of Patrolmen ·In Ia~, disto his home at Middleport Roote "1 alter having beion COII!Iped to" pule'"
".
Riverside Hospltolln Columbus lor tr~almentolpldebltia of·\he right
·Floor c:onslderallilll of the bill
leg., He Is expecllld to be retorned to the hospital 'tor mor\ treat- was · delayed two · houl-8 when
menUn the near Mure.
both parties caucused to j&gt;te-·
· pare amendments sugpsled 1&gt;1
. . IJP RACINE wAY, MRS. LEE LEE, vocal music superVIsor of lobbyists.over tho week'!nlo
,
the Southern Loc:lli School District, again at!Aonded tho annual meetOrganized labOr "'posed the
1111., the Ohio Mualc t.duciofors Assodatloo held In ColiDilbos at the biD because there. waa 110 stipo
slieraton.
·
'.
'
Ulatioo prevoollng ilse ~~ . the
. . "Amq the guests at the altair were'SUinKenton ani "poe" Sev- pairol ' In labor dispides, 'even

'

~ "lmap c:lOarlr shoWed lite
two pllota, bot lillie oloe CCJiild ..

tie dloUn&amp;ullhed In~ darkenlld ·
clb!i of ibO welrd~ooklrig sillP
designed 111 laDd men on the
lllOOit, - r i them lhei-e ror 2t
- · MCI then (eny lbem back
to lite -erslilp.

SiX ·Fined
in .
.
Miiyvr's COurt ·

as

Tue~ifot· oottrl acU)'Il;y &lt;J(
Mlddl
lfl,vW C, O. Flab-

&lt;J-

·,.~~·

•'

-lr·

w.•.va.; nillnlngr"od~

$10 llld coils; Leater W? llale,
76, Bidwell, Improper bac:ldna;
$10 llld oOato; Ciao Kerno, 52, ·
Mlddl01&gt;011. _...., $15 and
costs; Claude L. Cumlnlham.
58, !\)Tac:use, speodlag. $10 and
collla, and Ml~ 'R. Beaclt,
22, Middleport, IIJlOedinr. $15 and
COtta.
Forleltlllg boodo iJf 1125 eadl
lor .........., were .rom J. Ssbo,
37, Pomoro:J, and RalPh 0; Miller, Jil, 25," Colorado !tJrinp,

'
ERNEST JOHNSON, A FORMER RESIDENT ot both Middleport
' ani. Cheshire, was movM Tuesday !rom camden Clark Hospltolin
'· Parkersburg to Grant Hospltolln Columbus.
'
Mr. Jolmlon his been coonned to theParkersborrhospltolsinc:e
Jan. 3 when he am several member• ·or hls family were overcome
, lpPUeolly by carbon monoxide at the home of a son, Ronald, wllo
' : died as a result.
•
,..
Ernest's wlle, Mary, was only receJily-relea~ed trom the hos• pltol following the lncldenl With her during ber fiusband's coon""'
:· moot at the CoiiDilbos hi!apltol Is her slater, Mrs. James Cornell,
·; of Pomeroy. Mrs. Cornell waataken to Belpre Monday nli!ht by Mr.
'" and MrL Anon Stobart.
.
'
. . sp tai;, Mr. jCJimlon hlo been. ,..blo to talk following the Jan.uary 3 o&gt;~&gt;~ence.
.

Colp.

:
1

TIIATCANT 8£ HEAT

pkg.

LEAHAHD

·
I

Boord.
'·
-Passage ofa Houoe bD1 ..,
moving a, Botnl of 111111111
member !rm&gt; the•
Officer Trilnll!l Councll lid..,
placlqr him with a pdlllc rspoo
reseollll&gt;e.
·

Ohio ,,_..

War' I Flrlll Sl..lq·'"'ft
su~::"tnftr~~r~m:Jf:"~1 ; : ,
the U.S. destroyer Reubori
James, sunk by a Germu
submarine 1n Oc!Aiber; IMl,
off the coast of lrelalld, despite the fact that tbe United
States was not at war wltll
Germany.
,

..: ,. :

. . ':' ·

.:

E,liNG PROBL J·

ber II ever _.nled, II will be
In the sameundomocrlilcwaythe
FiNt
~
CJther was chosen.,
;
320 North" Third Ave1110
l""'k around, Mr. Crlljl, and
:
MlCiillopQrt, Ohio 45760 you ·will see thst moat Demo•
March 2, 1969
"crais In Melp COIIJll,y are Demc
1 oerata hec:ause ol the ,.tlonal ,
the Editor:
~ I am writing to olfer """'"'Ill pari)' !IIIII In spite ot the ,'local
, 111 the letter of Deil&gt;oc:rat Chllil"· unit. 1 cannot help bot feel this
: IliaD Jack CrliP b) Stnday's pa. · lo .." Wt&lt;Jnr. People mulll· want to
per. His Iotter, for ail Ita In- be a part or our party attheloclli
. accura,cles, l"'i • slowlni piece lm!; 1lt0)' 0111111 have .........
~ tl II~• . ID tlct, I would aiJt words.
alve lt". llrlt prlie lor fiction.
In my judgment, any 70Uil8
. , He mina&amp;ed cloverly ~ oote J\OriiOII wllo servee oo the Exec, that the 10UIII! member• ot the uUve Comrnlttee.as It ..., exlats
• EI&lt;Ocutlve COmmittee llboulll--be will slmp!J be ~eOcl.
,
·~s)IOIIslble lndlviwall who
1lterorore I repeat- I bave
, ,,'llbould have a desb'e to ....., ,. Ill~ llld. We need' a~
.',lr&amp;t their COIIItry indlll lleel\lo Allaoelatlon, operaiA!d b7 and,lor
and aec:ond their pari)' l! But·die , 111tdenta. It can do .U the lhlnga
·wordl
are · J~,choloslata
, the
EI&lt;O~tlve
Coinmlttoe
cannot.
'
'
' ;
.
'
- '
,, .
; wl ·~oocled." Thy li'IIPr an · , It Will Dot c:tlllle ·Into belngunleos
· -metlc re..,ooae; -~aiecaJ.'. ',~efi -~ 111 try to oet
. culaied to be!loW virtue illl the It tap, t"Wwld
try,
: uoer and calli their lnteocl8cl- ~
someooe, hot ~a&amp;aQiy me.
; !Ill In the "role of YluaJn., A 1 k ~ !Ort IIOllll.oae. 111111. ·
·
• Paul~ard
l iGuroelt, lhou&amp;ll, le lllrrei)IOIIo ·
;· .~-: ~e and UDPllrlcillt·)'l,111111k,~ ~- Busy
·Nothing
toquesUan?
,..
.. "',
,.__ ,
• "liut the wordl come OliO)' io
c.,,.,,*.,Bndonton; Fla.31505
·• .•; ... w11o has mllllsed them 10
. ·•
&gt;!olarc~ 1,1969
,
; 1~ 11 man could (lrOereaa, o. ,
Sirs:
, even lli&gt;idlll on ....,;ts al-, It
!"lilt to let Ypu .know I ~~oor
. ..0Wd no1 be so bad. 'But we have ~ every clay aril pass It on
'! ~ to live 111 a dlat ~,WonJi; tl._oihor• frOOI ·~ige and~aot\
,.-If,..., not he dono.
·
. ,~iii Yoo •have no boo!
j ,' 1 will remember ~ hla letter, """"'tqwn \"'*sls~artofretiiiid­
IOIJit time to come, for wllai
II,Oo,'·lieally_t&lt;eeps one
. dole not say. 01 COW"IO, hii 14&gt; ~
1'hlJe apanllng lflnler
not attack lhe Pr&lt;iW&amp;ed '" !D fill;.ldod keep h\ISY- Illbun.
Association beciuli
to keep . up dollll ·'
' . · It's barll
';
11 danger ol
1
it - ,
.
did he
wby
lllonda{, ilid l'rl. . .

~- ~L 992-2635 tODAY ·

.

Right ruorvtd to limit quantllloa

• .

We accept Fed. Food Stamps
Prices Effective

MARCH 6-7-8

Open Mon. thr. Sat.9. to 9

lb.

Fu:tion,'PrVe

2 - ~~~.79•
B. AiiO·N ~ lLteeo·· · ·· .
~ ··········~·······

"

CLOSEOUT

ANTI·

FREEZE

'

o

pkg.
10

WITH OUR
FUL-VALU BUYS

'Dolng·

J«dd'•

•t,

v..,.,

'

"'

'

.

OUAt11Y

"111.111111W •

····• ,-:

I

'J·i · '·• r

"~'.I

I

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~s.

"'Y

wife· ~~

~ liol~

' '

sho ~"'~ .
·toi.Diwer

PRE· WHIPPED
DESSERT TOPPING

99~

3 :~·1.00

••

.U~lsum

Plllibury E- Light

DONUTS
pkgo of 12 only 39C

a·read:r:;!~~~c. 7:~.~·: 1. 00
•

.

·

Bd,tte.rmU k Biscuits •• .12 c••·l. 00
8 1 00
--'~-

'

..
••••••••••••••••••••• •

,Early
SWtet Gordon
G..... .

•

con•

···~···············
251b.1
..' 9" ,.
_.....
bag
.
1'0. .L

"

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FIRM

·'1/od-

;;~,~, ~atte~.mooni: ~fli ~~~~ ·

I'OR(( '

COOL WHIP

if's the
RIOUT SYSON for SA

••. j

'naar

FROZEN FOOD BUYS!

CUBED
·STEAK

1

Iii&lt;#&gt;.

PluMIIillf-ll.tlll''

il~~~

1'1· 9

'

Nf

~~«~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.

PRESTONE
ANTI·
1 39 gal.
FREEZE o
PENN CHAMP

: To

em.

.ClOSED SUNDAY · ''"'

SALFl

'

..

"Tiw. Store With A. Hart"

.

olo'

"'-WY2·2550

(3$.41) which •odd ~ doo
......, of the" " Child W:olllln ,
Board to ChildreaSaryt_, '

5TH and PEARL STS,, RA.CIME

lb

OHIO VALLEY

..M

~

•

-I'Js-' of a Sa- IIIII

MARKET

pk.g.

'Br}lsh F'ue DoUJied

PlUMBING
· HEATING

-'"011erlrif ,Jr....- llllWID . .

Serato.

fu/- J a/11

GROUND
BEEF
31b.l 69

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Area

loss

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RACINE

Because We Grind It
Fresh From Lean
Choice Beef

.JOWL

RE

!lou~ ,,,

FRESH and TASTY

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Tournament .

ServiCes Set,

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THERE ARE PAINTINGS, PAINTINGS iyerywhere at ihe Pom• erny Naliooal Bank wllere Diemherli'of the D' Artiste Glilery •Of Mid, clleport are afllllll ari at! Show.
:
Sooloooe"asked If tho palnllnga are for aile. Well, lt'sllk~th!s.
o. · some are, and some lren't. It's up to the artl'sl So if there's a particular ..lntlng you're lnteresllld !D. just ask Mrs. Maxine Grl111th
. at the bank. ShO'U chock with G1e artist. ·

BaaU A&lt; Darat, f&amp;, OliiDIIboa.
charpd with DWl wu·llned $100
and CC)sts and - t o three
days In Jail; Jain6olj. i!llas, 30,

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""thor-

Set

the

Alway~ Cho.ice Quality-Always LOW PRICES!

AND, AT EASTERN
SCHOOL, Gary Parsons, guidance
., c~ns_el~, repon- · • · siJ!l.'~
schOQI. toured the ·
· Kaiser AliDilinmif ,P.Ianl at
pari ot a pro, gram to flllllliarlze sllldellls
lnluatries In the areL

Six per11011s wore lined lllil

Letart,

Barker

tlonal Guard woeld _take up to
six houri, wltnessealllltL
, &gt;\ · a~llar !II e a a • r e was
passlid b1 the 1!01110 In the lut
General AssemblY, bot 10as
kUied In the s. ..te.
FAucattooBWPasses
In the senate Tuesday, the
llrst education measure ot the
sesolon aot a 33-0 Vola ani was
sent to the Hoose for action.
Sen. Claia E.· Welse~ IIDayton, Introduced the bW
which wouJl! .require pupils and
school emjJI.,Yes to be examined
for ani lnnoc:ulaled against
communicable bllerculosls.
jllrs. Weisenborn pointed out
Ohio does nol have &lt;01111late
coverage In TB lnnoculatioos
preseolly and the bW would
give 98.9 per cell! coverage.
Other action TllOsday included:
-Introduction of 14 bills in

erson,
bolh,popular
orchestra
"Leo • ..;_ _ _ _
:· Is
enilrossed
In plans
lor her leadeh,
alllltllll veri~ he;
showreturn,
at theMrs.
Southern
'" High School plus the staging of operettas at grade schools.

""' either• rorrelled boods 'm
er.

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,_JI!IIIIiill-------oil--------------------------------------------•

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lbey lliso qJIJOieclthe , Th6 . bill-' woUld ~the
measwo becauae It did \iotpro- . p. . .'s _.r 10 eolorce crlmYlde spec!llcllib' who woeld _
he : lnlll law• In th,.._ll!!led ~·
severu·
In chli"ge ot·the ..ltd wben It·. ~lvll disorders or liJI!uTecUoo
"'' called ·to. tllllil.
•
when ordered 1&gt;1 !he rovornor
, at the request ollocll
{)reg
Servi~
ll!es.
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Present law provldf" the PIPI. PLEASANT -- Funeral
!MviYIJif are Ids wile, Cora tro1 may, ,'flOII order •of .. the
aervico ror or,.. :M. ilarkor; Cook Barkari l1n&gt; - · WOllam goyoroor, arrelll qlrenlers of
79, retired ·tar,mer tl. Oliltpo. tl -aide and Oren, Jr., of criminal laws If the ollense oc111 Ferry, Is oc:lle&lt;Uied 11uro- Leoll; lollr daughters, Mro. Dill- curred on or resulllld In damday 2 p,m. In ;lbe A!oibr-ll!fvOIIII a, Bowser, IJenlorson; Mrs. Bin- age to alate properl)' or persons
Funeral 'Home w1lll U.. RevI wu. da Casey llld Mrs. Bernice Cao- on state proper!)'.
11am Bud llat4eJ,I «tldatlng, 0)', both d Gaulpollo FerrY, and
Primary aim of the leglsla·
Burllli will be In ~crest come- Mrs. Elwancla Oldaker, Ook lioo was to rei Immediate astory.
R!~,'
iln-81\slllei"~, Mrs. slstance to loclli authorities InMr ; ·Barker died lolcolda.Y niJhl F11e Riddle and Mro. Rub)' volved In riot sltuationo.
Ia Cabell • Huntlnllon llolpltol, Franklin, both tl Nitro, W. VL,
During testlmooy befoce the
ltintiDgloo, w. Va. alter a lin· and Mrs. Goldla Cook, llmllt&gt;i· Hoose Judiciary , Cm&gt;intllet!,
gering Ulne.
ton; 21 · ll"andchildren and 10 witnesses said 200 patrol oM·
lie was bo • . vn Nov. 26, 1880 great.gllldchlldren.
cers, trained In riot control
In Boooa County, W. Va, a son
Frlendo may C4l1 at the ftmer. te&lt;:hniques, could be pi&amp; Into
o1 the late John 1111d Sarah Kirk al bome rrom 2 until 5 p.m. such an area within l'h l!oors.
Jlirker.
and 7 until 0 p.m. today.
Moblllzalion ot the Ohio Na-

'""""" . other .O.t10ns ot thtJ
state ooqe ·I~ ouch a use.
. Sherttrs, .~I!O'" ""'-sure '·
coolnl)' ohOrltra notlo
fled representa!lvea ' over the

Advance in

u

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tli&gt;ol· .stvl..t the stite ·Hislll'ay
PatrolllOiler \O·,asflstldcal..,..'
thorltie•, in rloto waa .ant W tjle
s.;.;.le toda)! alief ;,.,.,011 the
Ohio uooloe ''/3.23 Tuesclay ,iller-

'ilooo). s , .;"'"
~- · '/.'
tor a - Sponsored 1&gt;1 .18 represent..
, '. ,,
lives, lila ~W g.t more than an

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7
9/t
BEEF
BOILING
e~e:!~ •••••••••••••.
'r
/t
55
SLICE·D BACON...................:' "

Academy Girls

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::dwr.mk ulPD- i.eels1a-

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;;:;;..~ the
"J:Iie teleealll led
, '.'
1 ~·
lunar . ~le u
C8J!!Ora dellflllGd I!" la~.llllbla ·, .
to Oalll baclt a telepiiiOII ,.,_.
.ill lhe men walklni '"' U,

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,S~rJ,9J~,:1P:Prli~~~ Patriil :AssiSt Riot A~~, .

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Dies·Tu~Hay ..

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. 9oe N 11om Fsb. 6, 1951
.' In, doJJ4iollo, and was prec:ed&gt;
'
•.ll;l;::;,
tor I&gt;Y \be lhlOo MIT~•
~~ked ~·
·.,t 1n c1oa111 1&gt;1 her Iauter, .to
pr1J14!st
lhe·.
,
.,verran-a;rote
.
.
A. Cupemer, In 1966.
~
!!'
N, Y., ·bulldiJWs In ' ,sclentinc: re""'\:c:h': w 1 • ~' '
hl.vo, _been recelvlrlr I1(&gt;0l"ll frail~ ~·liiCTIIIIIIll '
la IIII'V!ved 1&gt;1 her ~at · ,'two ,,
were UQder .c:umtered at the ~,. , 'il~ In tho 111rc:ctlcs neld, that ~problem II rtPIIQY ~." ,.., Fa,e P11maJt can;enter; a
Clllltrol by.
sludel1ta. At Nationil LabOratory near "Chhia- ·, Rhodel· ~ !Jlteodaf. "Thooe riJI011a· ,~c:ate. that the pnilllem Ia idllllr, · )boa, CooDii Jo Aelker,
tho 5,000...111dent Universll)' of ,., with a 16-l!our """'"101•'!.!&gt;1 · m• .W ~ colleiiUA\110 hl(h ac""!'!a~•-l!lll&gt; lflde .~a." ~ ll&amp;\leoi; l1n&gt; btatbero, J..tro
RoChester, 38 members ol the ISO sdeltlsts. The worlr,fnnets r.-·&lt;.Lit
' •'t• .
btl J . , ' . " ' - - ,
.
· "t1 ~ - ~,en, Now· Haveu, ajid
Black Sltldents Unioo took
go/; S\11!1' s_.-t tr&lt;m HarVard
"'''" a~ IRg IU e 0 ~$"'""' · ·
.
hoJ: Piltemai ll"alidmother Mrs.
WASIDNGTON- THE NIXON ADIIINISTRAT!oNHAS~ F. A, '¢ari;der Fl.· Pl.:.llllll
thO tqJ two noors of the four· ani-tOn Universities.
story Frederick Douglus Bollda eraclalown "" the ''s...U. tormo'' ot school HIP"IIItloodau
Funeral . aai'VI.;o will be held
· seminars Held
However, seminars were .beld Northern and Welllem~states. Sicrelley-J!oberl H.· ~ of~, st the Firat Qurc:h Ill Goo!.
ing Tuesday nlgllt, asking 15
black prote1sors, 100 blllck at schools such II' Clrnqle Elfii';IIIOII and Weltue 81111o1mced u,e· "·~ Title Vl·ll· Now HaYtD,
li 1:36.
freshmen In Seprember, a $L5 Mellon In Plttsbutgh, lbe once prosram" Tuesday Ia a report to C&lt;qross. Tille VII*"• (ad- p.m • .with U.. a ... Dave Flelda
million ..,proprlation tor black UniversitY ot !olacylanl0 • SlaJ&gt;. ·oral llnlnclal assistance to any !)1"0BrOIII or actlvll)' that dl~crlmln- Cllllclallng."" Burial wlu be ID.
studies, $25,000 for books and a ford New York Unlversll)', ties. Ill t!le basis of c:Gior, rtf' oi'"natlCIIII Orlaln.
.
Klrldllld ~ . Gardens.
Fordham,
Columbia,
the
state
Fllic:h
told
C&lt;qreos
thoiie
are
IIOijl!i
.of
1M
"s...U.
tonouw.
of
Frleucls mat can st the FO&amp;Ieblack recruiter all! coordinator.
At Colgate-Rochester Dl&gt;lnil)' Universll)' of Ne!W York at school oesreptloo: GerrymlJitlerbw of~ at!Aonlanee IOiioo, u- ..., Funerlli Hoine rrom 7to 0
School, a gr~qt ol Cewer than 20 Stony Brook ani MIT.
· · iiii!IIDOill of Nesro teachers to pr-lnUtll' ~Ill" acbqola, m1 a1- this evsnlng.
At Florida State Uni.Jsll)' in . ·looriOB sebitantlal dll!erem:i!s In ~lures. iler Jllt)U ..._.
Negro seminarians remained in
control or the main buUding Tallahassee, the arrests CJIIIO ' p-1111111)' Negro schools and ~ white ac:hools. Dlothey took over Sunlay, demand- aner
actlrw President J; triCia wllere ·~ law vlolatloaa exlllllDclude Wichita, ku.; .
Fl't~Atri'ck
ing mote black facull)' and Stanley Marshl.ll asked (or an Ferndale, Mich.; Mlddlelown, OhiO; MeKeesport, Pa.; Unl• Town-radministrators. School otoeWs t.wnction banning rallies Ceil· ah!P, K J.; and Peml HDJs, PL
said the school woold be closed lowing a gathering by SllS ., __ ,.
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moving e!Ulward
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until at least Thursday. The 20().. members on the 15,000-llluilent illlfiW
campus- ani before national
A STORM SYSTEM BLANKE11NG THE SOUTHERN Rock;y Jlnw,.
SDS officer Fred Gordon was to taina With snow l'ltOWd •Btwarct todQ. Hea')' IIDr Wlrnllll&amp; were
'11lomlls w. Flapatrick,61,RD,
speak.
posllld !rom the mowllalns IIIII northeaitem o\rlz... Into
AlbtuQ', died Tueodaf In Holzer
At other campuses Tuesday: and eastern New Mexico, and to IIOUthealtern Colorado and Kaaaaa. Medical c0nler. lie was borD Oct.
Campuses Reopened
Four Inches or more of s""" was -~ In much ot the bel4 17, 1007, and Wll preoeded In
New Jersey- The three cam- c_...ed 1&gt;1 the threat or· atrcq winds [II"Qduclns eliteulvo clrl~ death 1&gt;1 his mother, Debbie
puses or Rutgers Universll)' lrw and blowing s-. Late today the storm WIO eliPfcllldto ......... Booda Fltz..trick, and a brothrestricllld to foreign pollcy (Camden, Newark ard New date Into' one l!l8in system arM! move IDto Texas. IPI'eldiiW ri.l.n
er, Ebner.
·
matters, and ot those, the war Brunswick) were reopened 1&lt;&gt;- across TeD&amp; and.,_ frail Oldahoma and the Central Plains 111 the
He w11 a farmer, owning and
dominated the seasiOIL Nixon day after being closed lor two Upper MlsslssiJ&gt;pl Volley.
operating an apple orchard and
said the recent Communist days ot "crisis meetings"
warehouse. He waa a member of
offensive "technically" could be involving students, faculties aiM! Four pli.wners escape jail
Orphans Frlenls Lodge, F&amp;AM,
ln vidation or the wxlerstandlng administrators.
COLUMIIUS- FOUR PIIL'iONERS AT THE Fraaldln Cllunt1Jiil Wilkesville, and of the Wllkeson which the Paris peace talks
Michigan- Representadves of o¥0J~M&gt;Wered lour depoties \lie t.adly and osctrped. One • ._,., vDie Grange.
are based. He said the matter the U.S. Justice Department Harold Thclq&gt;son, 26, Collllllbus, waslqiii&lt;Ohoaded In the ' . He Is iurvlved 1&gt;1 Ids wlte,
was being examined "very and the Michigan Cl&gt;ll Rights area lboot .20 ml-s after the jail break. .
Opal Graves Fltzpotrick; two
carefully.''
Commission were due on the
Tho others, Identified as W.lllllm C. ~ 22, Clml Wln- children, Jolmny, CoiiDIIbos, ani
But Nixon said he was 11 not Ferris State College caii'Q)us at cho-; Eugene WWiams, · 26, -liVIIIe, and William D. ADderMrs. Gary (Bomle) Huston,
goir~ to threaten" Hanoi and Big Rapids to probe tho arrest son, 24, St. Paul, Mlm., romaiQod at larae.
WellsU.; two gnndchiJdreDi his
.
'
would hold "a rmnber of or 263 students In a lock·ln. U,S,
A. E. Fltz..trick, at the
father,
opdons," including a resumption Rep. John CQI\Vers Jr., asked Cat and nwwe ganu! in Berlin
Huston Nursing Home near Hamof bccnbing in North Vietnam, lor the investigation to see ll
BERLIN- THE RUSSIANS, IN RETALIATION lor the Weill Ger- den.
1
ln reserve.
the students' civil rights were man presidential electioos belqr held In Weill Berlin, IGjlay cloaed au
Maamio aervtc:ea will be held
Nixon discussed· in detail the &gt;Jolated.
roads leading out of the ell)'.
today at 7:30 p. Ill. II the Slr&lt;q
two-faced aspects of Ru:ssian
Ohio- Black studelts at HirBefore dolling orr lilian! routes the Rus•lal!! played a cat and and Son Futierlli Home In Wllkelforeign policy, in both the am College- which has 1,100 mouse game on the main hl&amp;fnvay to Helmsllld, cloalng and ~ It
vWe, 1rxl funei'al services On
Mktile East and Vielmm- a students- enled a 12-hour slt~n 181110)' pleased, halting clvlllanand.Uiedmllllleytratnc, The acUoo Thutsday at 1 p, m. rrom the (II.
policy he called "ambivalent!' alter the school promised came after 1,036 members ot the West German electoral coll.P doneral ~llo Olllclllhl1! ''' the .
~&lt;The SoYief Unfoil does iioi consideration Qf demands.
lled Russian and East German threats and mst here to begin vot1111 tunoral oervtce · will be Eldere
want a controntatl.on with the
on a successor to PresldeM Heinrich Luebke.
James r,..mt ..s, Robert Smith
United States, any more than we
ani Frtnklln·Eberta. Burial wDI,
Asaauination attempl foiled
wart one with them, because
be In Meatorial Gardeils neir
each ol us knows what a
SAIGON - SOU1ll VIETNAMESE POIJCE In a roonl.. gun Athens. Frienls may call any·
confrontation would mean," he
battle In c1ow.-n Saigon tiroltii up ateUortatattempt to aaaasslllale time,
said.
Prime Mlniste~ Tran Van Huong toda)'. Huong. 65, was not hurl. Tho
He slid a delerloration ol the
police captured tWo ot the three terrorlsta who with a pistol ani a
situations In both Vietnam and
m~ tried to k1ll, the prime mini-. One waa,dro,sed In~~ :
the Mlddie East would result In
Vlet1!Untoe &amp;rJDY ~form.
-·· • such a confrontation and this
It was the fourth -ck oo a public: oltlcialln lhree montbs.
possibility brought on his
Tueoday, terrorlsts shot to death Dr. Tran Ani!, the acting dean of
Gallia Academy, the oomber the Saigon Uniwrslty faculty of medicine. s..rih Vlelnlmese heJicl.
"cautiws conclusion" about a
two seeded team, advanced to the quarters did nol classlr:r Duong's aolllllants as Viet eo,., although
peacemakl'1!' role !or Russia.
seml-finllls by defeating North plans lor the Communlsta'll-day-&lt;Jid nalioowideolfenolvereportedly
Gllilla 40 to 22 in the first game clUed lor terror sqUids to hit Saigon.
of the Meigs ln&gt;ltational Girls'
(HoSPITAL NEWS
Basketball Tourney at Rutland Garriwn •til~ on fu-ing line
?4on1a.Y eveni~Wo
NEW ORLEANS - FOLLOWiNG UP CLAY L. SHAW'S
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER,
Gailia Academy's Martha ac:y trial acqultlll with a oeho &lt;J( lop! cbarges, DiaL AUy. Jim GarFirst Ave. Vl&amp;itlrw hours - 2-4 Cornwell Jed all Scorers with 23 rison accused hi&amp; ro,mer research assistant with Illegally aiding
arxl Ml p. m. Parents only on points. Other scorers tor Gallia Shaw's lawyers In their defense.
Pediatrics Ward.
Academy were Pam sanders with
Ganisoo charged 111mlas · BetheU Tueoday with sUI&gt;III¥IOB
ADMISSIONS
12, Jenny Alberti 2, Nancy MAJ· Shaw's attornen !'(th ~ secret Uot of prosecutloo wilneases prior
Publicadon ot admls5ions is nard 2, an:l Bev Bennett 1. Their to Sbaw'a trial oo c:hlqes or Cllll&amp;jllrlqJtomurder President Jcllm F.
prohibited untll further ootice.
coach is Betty Miller.
Ke!VIOdy. Belholl, a Yi&gt;lat Enlli&amp;lfpan who eame here to •11111 Juz
BIRTHS
Scoring lor North Gallla were before signing .0 with thO district altorn0)'0s otnce, WI GarriiC&gt;I'I
Mrs. Loonie McClellan, 0 a k Debbie Bennett 12, Trucllllenry stall ~st faiL ·
·· ' , ,
HOI, son, 8:35 L m., Tuesday; 9, ani Emma Lopn L Dottle Me..
Mrs. DeMls M. Marks, PL Pleas. Mahon is their toach.
ant, son, 1:29 P. m. Tuesday;
Meigs will goagainstSootthern,
,, : Long lloUow
Mrs. GleiUI A. Roush, New llav- tho C9'JI"Ih seeded team, today at
en, son, 7:41 p. m. Tuesday. the Rutlatxl gym at 4 p, m.
DISCHARGES
•
Tornament play will resiDile
Mrs. -Aute Johnson, 69, Third
Mrs. Larry L. Clelanlanlln- Saturday, March 8, at 7 p. m. St., Mason, died TuesdaJ 'ln.lhO
A·bntsh lire oo the Lollllllol!ant soo, Mrs. Gilbert E. Helll")' with Athens playing the Meigs Pieullt ValleY"Hoopi.S. Mro.
'fOod, RD, PlmlerOY, lbreatani Infant son, Mrs. Charles R. Frosh. Immediately . !ollowlng Johnson was born J~ t, 11Bt, 1 homo Tueoday but w a •
Weethee andinfantson,Mrs. Ter- comes the Kyger Creek vs. Lo- In Mason County, the ~r brouPI ttndei - 1 before liQO
ry R. ColliDIIs, Mrs. Paul A: Ed- gan game. Lopn Is the third or Ute late Charles and Elzba Dla,ier damaie oecurred.
elman, Arndt A Gee, Mrs. Ray.. · seed.
Russell Garren.
J'Qmoio.r File Cblet Henry
mond Hays, Jackie L. Hughes,
The seml-tlnal matches will be
MrL Johnson Is SW"vived by · Werey ;11114- llle blase UlreatonDonald W. Leach, Mrs. Clrl E. played oo Frillay, the Hili; at her husbanl, James; two dalll!h- ed a hila•·OCCUJied 1&gt;1 DoroiiiY
Milone, Pearly R. Marcum, Or- 7 p. m. The eonsolltion game ters, Mrs. Lola Kovallck, Gr.- Colllne and bolmed. off _.....
vWe MOrtin, Cllllord Mon1gQm- ani &amp;nils will be played oo Sat- haMa, Ohio, and !(rL Mal\el maiel1 ~ ,t"eree of laild. Nalab- '
ery, Mrs. Robert L. Ross, Mrs. ..-...
.... ~., MarC h 151 I t 7 p. m.
r_,..., koJI the ~
George C. Shrewsbury, James E.
Local merchants donaU'* tro- Cain, !llruoll, Fla.; two - · Paul, Bea..rtown, Ohio, and F~j&gt; ~ 4oinl '~ damall Ill the
Silk, Mrs. Mary Jane Slem, Mrs. phies are Francis Florist, Lou's res~ of Mason; a brother, G..,.... bllioie bed.re arrlvlli tl - .
John C. Spearry, Mrs. Stanley Ashland, Pomeroy Bowling or Garren, Mansneid; live
"1'0¥ ~ w11o were called Ill
L, Spires, Mrs. Charles L Thax- Lanes, Citizens NatiOIWl Bank ters, Mr&amp;. Viola FAww1llo
1~:55 LDI.
ton, Morris E. Young, Mrs. and Br&lt;W~n's service Station alit ton, ani Mroo Stella~. Mrs.
George E. Love, Gaither Miller, Trailer Park.
Jewoll Cole, MrL Rellltl SCOI!
.(
Elijah Bunch, Harold W. Marlin
!,
ani MrL Grace Wooes, ·au.ot ·
arxl Mrs. Clarence 1 Clsto.
$4,800
Estimated Columbo&amp;.
•.
Fllleral
servlcea
w;IU
be
hijjJ
PT. PLEASANT - Tho' loclli
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL fire dePirtment answered an
Friday at 1:30 P&gt; m. from liiO
Daponolable
March 5, 1969
F.P,IOOB Funeral: ~orne wilil
alarm at 5 p. m. Tuesday to the
DHiorFor
ADMITTED - Dorothy IJ&amp;. store room In the rear ol the Pt.
lbe a.y. ~ell E. ~y olll·
"
V~ult, Leoo; Tracy Simpkins, PL Pleasant Register plant at ~~~~
clallqJ. Burial will be In Fllir·
FREE ~
Pleasant.
vliow Cellletery. Frienlsmaycall
and Main Sta., where dlm8&amp;e
ESTIMATES
DISCHARGED - Lowell Shobe, was estimated at $4,800 when aner -~ p. m. Thurodaf.
AND
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Lesage; Mn. Vernon Roush, Ma- m81U' rolls of pa»er were
LOCAL ~S )'
son; John Long, Pl. Pleasant; destroyed blthe blaze. TheblaEO
111e temperature inPomerots
Thomas Harvey, Pt. Pleasant; is believed to have beell ca...d doii'--~
~~i bu1lneas district at ''
Mrs. Jay Stone, Leon; AllleJohn- !rom sparks trom burnq traab:: · ili15a. m. toda)'was."43dogreel . .~. .,.._. . . ._ _. .
son, Milson (expired).
Seven firemen as1111ered the CI1L unlit . . aldea.
The firemen answered a cAll at
George Mason Movie 5:30 p. m. to the old Noli Roild'
where theJ extlngultol&gt;ed 1 P..sa
fire alcq the Now YGrit'Conlral .
To be Shown Friday rallnlld trackL CluiO' of the
blaze was not &lt;~e~erm!bed 1n1 ·
PT. PLEASANT - A movie on damage-~111\11111".
.,.
the ure ot George Mason, tor
' '
whom the county ot Mason was
named, will be shown Friday at
7:30 p. m. at the meeting or the
Masoo County HlstorlclliSOclel)',
according to Dr. W. J. Artrip,
president.
Tho meeting will be held at the
loclli dty boildlng ani members
and.1ntereated persOns are urged
totllltnd.
&lt;J(

Nixon Likes Soviets
In Peacemaker's Role
WASIDNGTON

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t'Jil ~. It, ~
, N.-H&amp;Y!!IIo'~'f1! 0 ~albomo
· ·· • .toilnflll an lllneao ill lf'JelrO, ·

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,

s-1)1 acho1'il has u\;,~ .
Thq "reilaifch"~~a!i~"'

'

~·

'

~

111 United Pre so lnter!'"li~:' ,'
· Heedt!W the cllil 9! t b

'.~

.'
'

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·..

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.,

BANAN,AS.~~E: •••• 7,b.1. 00

NEW CAIBBAGE ••••• ~·~l04

'DISHES
·
IW •tron
,l . . ,
'

'

-.

.

'

�'
.
.
''
Tb'o Doll)' Solitlllol, Mlcldlopon ·- ' - • o., March 5,111611

11 ...

.

•

•.

i

''

A:LITILE .,'H:OMEWORK': Watcliqig Want. Ads.Bripgs.'tc&gt;p :Gtade·
WANT AD

S p.M.

,lNFORII.lTI!)H
bUD~I~EJ
p.~

-.war

t... . . ... .-vr.•

1•

,

ltln Nli~~:otlon
DH4tl• t . ....

c,-.lleti~M~I

I ·CerNCflettl
Will N acdP"4 -t11 f • ·• · f.,
O.r of Pwbfk:etlon
·
REGULATIONS
T'hl P'v511thH ,.,.,.,., tM ri1ht
.. Hn .-·raj.ct onr tit tl.... ~~~ ft.
tfctioMII. n. ,._llstwf will Mt
1M roc,.nllhlo f., 11101'0 thon o•
hiCOtfHI ln1artlon .

Jl

Company official car.
engine, auto. trana., power st•ring, rodio, bucket aeah and con1ole. Black

Mini""'"' Ch.rto TSc
lllrltl por word thr00 C-OCI,I•

tin ln. .rtlonl .

11 unll por Word si• un1ecutlwo
ll'lltrtlont .
25 ,_, cent DIICOIII!f 01'1 ,.itl otl1
aNI ocl1 pa id within 10 da,-1 .

CARD OF THANk'S &amp; OBITUARY
S1 50 lor 50 word mi ni"'um. Ea .
,4. .• ,,,.., word 2c.

BLIND ADS
A~ditlonal

vinyl roof. Cloonl

1965 PONTIAC ....................................- .... - ..- .• $1695
Safari Station Wagon, local 1 owner cor, white over
dark blue finish. Clean interior, like new w-w tirts,
. . a~tomatic, power steerint and. brakes. Radio.

·Pomeroy Motor Co.

OFFICE HOURS
1:30 ' ·"' · to S:OO p.m. Dolly

ltU' a .m. to 12 :00 Noolt S..twdoy

IN LOVING memory of Harry
JUDior Sn)'der who pused
away one year Ill" Marcil
5th, 1111.

thou8lrt that death

With lillie
w~ts

110

near,

We ,Jd nol kDow U&gt;o paJn you

Wentecl To Buy

For Sele or Trecle

i

Marcil 5111.
For the lftCiolll jnel of
mother
if God'• miral:uiOIII key

I

By wbich lba touch of lba
IDIIIer
....._
,._.,. eleml'....,. 011 _,....,
.,.
Sadly milled .., ...
Family·
S+ltp

Cerd Of Thenkl
. WISII to tban1: ...,_ wllo
MDI aet ...U card! and letlen to me willie I wu a paUoul at Rmnkle Matllodllt
lbpllal iD O&gt;l..mu., Ohio,
llllfl!lins wllb phlabllela.
Wilen licit, go lo Rl"'""lde
M. E. Ho~pltal, 11'1 tbe best
In the -'d. ,_.. You. llld
lillY God bitlis you aU.
Jobn Molder. Rt. I,
llcm 210, Mlddiep.lrt, Oblo
S+llc

ANTIQUES, furniture,

For Sale

For lent
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartmenls. Close IAl 1&lt;bool.
Pbone 89U434.
10-lf.lle

SEE NlliGLER Bu.lldmg llpp)J !or l&gt;uilolq your home,
Lq time loin available.
,.~.

bemm'ng, alti!raU\1111, ele.
Mrs. Freddie Thabet. Mason,

Phone 7'13-5151.

4-:!1).11•

on n- Pontiac from one of our
mut f111ithful cu1torn•u. Low
11111•.,•· EJiftro shorp. PS, P8 &amp;
AT .

of the shar~1t "66• In Tri•Stot•.
Low mlleat• · One ear.ful local
owtter. PS, PB &amp; .H.

68
Buick ......... $ave
Cu1tom LoSahro ol dr . Sedan ,
tory Air CondltlonH . Beautiful
gold flnl1h with all vinyl uphol•

1t•y. Thll cat ha1 n.v.,. h.. n
tltlod . AT, PS &amp; PB .

BLAETINARS

BUICK
PONTIAC
GloiC TRUCKS

VACANCY lor two elderly peo. .__'_POMEROY
_ _ _ _ _..

ple. Prefer private paid p&amp;·
1!8&amp; JI'ORD v.a alaildanl, two
tlonla. Phone "'-'· '17UIIS.
door sedan. CaD-·
l~c

''

'

SALE.
Friday,
Gearp'a Audloa Houoe, Jlul.
lalld, ,_ and IIHII JDm:b.
llldlle. ~nil ,.,.
- . Open from 10 a.m. IIU
llle lime for eonslpmeuls.
Slle •tarts at 7 P.D'L 3-.5-atc

wouw

ille penon who took
1111 of my clolhea pleue return lbem at Duds ODd lkldl
In lllddleport. Need aU of
h dotheo (can lclenUf7
lhom), token '1111nday, Feb.
20. wm Ill ve reward c aII
lllodnllle 3'/2.1111 M-llp

j'

MtlliC e&lt;~ery FrldiJ ODd w.
111'1111 II Jldt'1 CUI on Rar·
rllomtlle 11M dlf Rt. 7.

wac

.....
..... .....
too-

.

lloltl,
dim, · · 1111111
fan.
cy
•lltdlea.
,....
ttm . pay·
menta cl 15.10 per monlh or
pay blllnce of .11.11. 1'!:7 H
Ia ,.. bGme· Call 1111-8().

amroABUA
.....

JIIIPI!Itl, can

1+111!

MIXED HAY, allo lour .-s
. _ lor rent, Jdm J. Role,
'PIIone IHI-2111.
~

.""'UICIAL
..-

Every Doy At The Mew

Bryants Do.llar Shop
GET THIS $ DEAL
Hoodod R..,.. 2.99
SWEAT SHIRTS ._.... 1.110

Bryants Dollar Shop

106 Court St. PoMeroy, 0.
992-5896

,_

--- : ;;;

..U0 the

...,.n

fotlowiN

C.

tcRIDVLI I

l'amN Bnond Stereo. '1'111;
let bu 4 lpeOd lnler!nlx
dllngar. p,werfuu AM.nl
radio. 'l'llll 1111 IIIII ill C!llltoll.
Pay anlJ $101.11 or
per

11LE BUSINDS
ROOM - toilet cemenl floor
with We. tii.IGII.IIO
('AIJ. VS FOR YOOR NEED8

IN REAL EBTATE
IIINRY tLI!UND

Olllce-Ret.- . . .

r.. , ,

.

.

MCOIE'S

1:14 •• MAIN

---·-111

SMITH AUTO SALES
ONIO

I

1

lool - · ""-' "

7'd~A~J4~
ProlllrVPersoul
'l'u &lt;Grill)

...,...
-~

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Jatmclble Pfllonal

P'iDU

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ICIIImU
IIUNICIP.U. _ , . . .
BYPioaAII

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Tot.! XWlldPII

J:SO A.M;
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

11.-

IMII.I4

..

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A.~N~ameo.t

prisents

llAinNAIS
PH. !19:1-2143
....__
Ji_.------·-;;;,;-,;,;;"'..a

.....
........ . . . . . .......
_........__ .....

8peetal

INFORMAtiON
NEWt
LOCAL REPORts
DAILY ·

ot!Mr Loe•J Tnu ..

lbnw4 ,.....

WMPO

-

tbe Lirlea TN:lt ,..
Bull&lt;i&gt;•r waiOr To Tilt
!iDaJiut " - t:'ort,
.
F~m~

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.

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. F ~~tnd
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106 I. lololo Po..r.y, O.

.

Colltlll.uniQr

...... ..

"':C

VJI-10 COUlD 1-11\VE HIS
CI\KE I'ND EAT IT, TOO!

Keeping Meigs
Gallic and
Mason Area
· Informed · 'As
Well A~ '

--- -... .............. .........
..........
......
-·
..
HOBSTETTER
-REALTY
......
_
.
-................. . ............... .._ .......... ....... c .....
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-- -- This-----Day...
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In History
=.:
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.
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GIMnl ao.ua.M

RODNEY DOWNING
Real Elllolo Brobr

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

Pbolle en.ua
Mlddleporl, ow.

. •. .

............Reviled"""'

A.ppnJidatlou
ColllPI»&gt;Uoft 1

Countr llnltlt .. •.. .. ..

"""""'""'
HPI:CI.U. IKVDn.ll
.,_
lhtnten•aee

CURTISS CATn.E

I

IM.ll

•Dd

Ita.. IUMhwr.' I'Wul · •
C.np: II J ..... · . ..... .
1~

""'""...._

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AB1MJ11D

A'ND II'I'III'A,_
At"IVAL VALUI
,.AXA&amp;I

or

~..at'DIY

" ' of ~ 11. 0 .

•...

......... ., ·"'•••••
To Ad\lal Value

to JtH Hilt

Service. J'boae Part« 1ft. . l'l&amp;dal
. . •. .. I -I ,CIOOAO
Asnsn•at
%1M Pomeroy .. trl.ull CooJ. ...... .... ... .. .. .. . • - ·

_,ft'_.

1.-lWOie

SEPI'JC IIDitl clelllell. lllller

.

TOIII .,.. -

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tilt 8flh ..., of191lt with lOt
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t.m.n
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.WIWD' AMP am~&amp;'I'IID
ACTUAL 'iALUI fl' 'l'nwc

au.mwn
_,,._,.

AI of . . . . . . IL J.- .
Aue..tl VIJu
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ll!u.dtd . . . .
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..

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.....,

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Average field of maple .
per tree II two or
per 111111011•

Tilt - . , llaro are v ondllolum.

Oil IIIIa da.Y In hlllor1:
.. 1770 tbe Bollm Mu.....
oecurrad u Br1111~ lnOpl,;·
lllllll'ed Ill -.;,· ldu~ ttv.~

clviJiaDL
.. ltU tbe Sorllll Unloll••
lllllliiiiCad ille Preinlora Joloi :
lblln hid - II tbe .,_ c173, ;
cia .., ...... '-rllap;
~

.. lHI a Brllll1ti , .,Ujlner .

a...aM. ~-4'11011'
AI of DtcuaW 11, s-

,...................
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QIIII&amp;AL-...
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Church Class
.

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li. Cor port

8.Laoc~~

20. Ever:
pooL

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' 10.IIIIdu, ..

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allbr.
11. Vllllcle

I&amp; B:qlloll
rt.nr:
pOa.

' molber

:ll.l'lluollll
•linr
, :lf.llellllll

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form four ordinary wordt.

GUV1NOR !

of

n.:uc

!IO.lfnl-

IT WAS ALL
PA~T OF MV
PLA."'-'1

Dl"'lln

..cloty
18.8jlorl
10. 8J1111&gt;ol

17.,uiorleul '
!ftOIII

u......,..._r.urJumbla.
one ·letter to eMh equare, to

27.Sym1&gt;ol
of a

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porto

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volume

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New.._ t11t etrelod ..._.

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Y. CROSSWORD
,,KlDimum

······~ ifr'( .. . ._\

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an

· - - crubad Into ~· ' lbll! :
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FliJI. klllllla 124!111'10111. '.

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IVIIII.UY (II PD'I' BY nN

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rae au"'"'*

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Tilt . _ Ia
Ita 8111
llbau and lall quarter.

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Nri BofiOd Debt

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MACIIINES. rJ1111r
lmiee, all mekt11. WY i2214.. Tile Fabrle Sllop, PomII'Of. Authorized Sinrer Saila

Sci-..

• r

.:U..u .... ...... ..... .
....,_. ru-. .._......,.,._.

SEWING

We lllllf(lell

w.. ........... .... .,.. -·-"*'"'·- .",, ~- ·~fl:

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. . . .1

BUDGET PRICE fumllure 1111
our third Door budget llhop. ·
Baker ll'urnllore, Middleport.
ado.
..

alld Service.

Entertained

au

J:N"'''I.~,.,.....

·-...

..

AI .C DeoeiDMr II, U.

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APPROPRI4TJO'i'l,
AND INClramiLA.PfCa BY J'VNDI

wonme..

11,1\W.II

171.01

..,. Proii'UD

TIIERJI! wiD be • «"" lboal,
CIGARETI'E Yendin( maeiiiDii
lbldly, llealml" at 11111111 at
ELilCniOUJX YICIIIIIII eJMn.
llld 111!r91ce. ABC E~.
1111 Forbd Run ~ lliiiiD
For Slit
er. Hal ~~~row...., 111p,
Me-,
W. Va. Phone 77MMI.
N. llvleyoDe Ia wteame. POOJcE P:J?'.';'£8. AKC Toy complete let of
at.
S4lte
mlrJa!ore. 1"5 •nd up. Stud
taciMtafJ IIIII .........
Hrvlce
and
lfOOII!Ing.
Phoao
RAM SHOOT fi)OI1IOred b)' U&gt;o
pel(ect condltloa. 1'1)' olf
11J.1141.
II I tfe
Riel• Fire Dopa..-111 at IIJe
~ cl $31. 'l'lrml· l'bont
BOV hOI farm, lluhan Road,
1111 II.
U41o
Sunda¥. March 9, alarliJ&gt;il at
10-JISI REP01l811l118ED SiDpr cablnel
I p, m.
3-/;.4tc
Prulllll, Porlland.
lt-IH!c
model '"""" Jllllillne; MjUip.
Lost
. lnl!!f'•liee
ped "' . . .... embroider'
AU'IOJIOIIILII: Jnllll. ._
battldlolel, eto.
lAm, tine s..,te papain 111e 11ft IDEA corn plebr, 1111
J-di'C 011111 ...... Phone Olmlllet JIIIJII]a IIIII 1• lee to pmty IUIIIIIlag the -lied? i.Git ,.,., .C1llll'at.
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1+3\p
Pard hleon. l'lloao 117-lln.
or'l lleonae? call ........
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PHONE!$2·2094

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II IIAMBUlR comertlble, rebuDI motor, weUem, n
Rambler llatlm WIICJil. I'IICII1e
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atlm llfii'VIce. Jadl'l Reirlc·
erallon, New Raftll. boat

OHIO RIVER 1rG111 loll 011
Route Ul beiW081 8yraOUIIO
ODd Racine, Oblo. 100 """
long ODd 100 feet wide. Prtood
"' Nil. Phone Ill • .

1'0111!1101'

DADBOI!N $1.11\IOWITCHES!!

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RACINE -

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WLTY COMPANY
I"'MDDOY - 4 ruom lurnllhed ....... 2 bedrGomlt, balh.
part buemeot. $3,110.00
POMEROY - BRICK IIVSI·
NI!SS ROOM - I apar1metlls,
all In good condition.
11,500.00

r.,u~,.··· hilt ., • •••
tire

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DOLLAR BARGAINS

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1'1"8 inelpelllive to clean fUll
and upllo111eey with Blue
lATE ISM Volkswagen. Contad Jack Handley, lf'/5 Lin- Laatre. Rent eleetrlc llham.....
• • tfc
pooer ... Tiny'• Batglinlond.
coln His., Pomeroy. 3-Htp
»ttc READY • MIX conerelo !loUv1 .......
CAIIPETS,;;;-:A-;JI1UOHT;;;;;;;_ lhte ered rlgbt to JOII' proJect.
Ful and tiiJ'. l'no tllllhom a belllllr.J llatU with
lllllln. Phone . . . . Gal&amp;- llatch;;.S_ _ __
llue IMotn!. Rent electrle leln Ready • Mix Co., MiddleBabl Jl'urnl. part, Ohio,
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SAVE !lAVE SAVEl Save your
lawn, your Ume and your
bock. We have 1 ,_ trench·
er IAl &lt;118 your water line
ditch. Henry Babr 1115-31181 or
RA&gt;ger Bahr IIIJ5.3958. 2-7-381~

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fiLL DO aewlng at home lllppon, po&lt;kels. pegging.

•

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Bill ZIG ZAG, ._ IIIOiit - ·
log machine .wllb toueb of
dlal. You eail .make button

TRAILER LOTS, Bob'a !IobUe
~25-341tc
Court, SyriiCUBe, Ohio on Slate
Rt. 12f, Pbone IIIJZ.2IIIit
GRAVELY traclon, lour rea.n-lfc built llld lour u II. Prices
start al 160. Phone II9UIIl
HARMONY apartmenlo - 3
u.41le
ODd 4 1'0011111, fumllbed, new
wan., HIIOI!I, lumlbn, prl· CL£AN your ...U. In an hoor GEO. HOBSTEI'I'I!II. llnbr
vato parting. Out of aU lloodl, wllttout aft the old la!blclaed POMIIROY - I nom brick,
........ Ronti...Uc~$1.
3 blocU from Pomeroy past
bath, hot willet lulnacee,
Baker
Furniture.
~
ba8mlont, llreplaee, waD to
olllee, IIU3t2 from 10 a.m.
to I p.m.
Ullc
wan earpellng. taOO.OO
GENERAL ELI!lCI'RIC ....,e, MIDDL£POIIT - 7 1'001111,
· TRAILER, 10 • 50. two bedvery good condltlm, 165, Bell
..Ill. lumace, prage, pordlrooma. Pllone mzst~.
llld Howell I mm camera, I
... and 3 loll. fl0,500.00
2-2'1-4!&lt;:
mm projeelor. ... 111m edJ. SYRAWSE - a rootllll, bath,
tor a mm, - a11cer a. mm f~~maoe, MID doon, wJn.
11111
II nilll, morie IIPI. I
dowa. 3 1011.
Auto Sales
mm 110 Phone JID.3'IIIS altl!r
WANT TO SI!U. CALL V8
3:311 p.m.
3-f.M&lt; BELEN ar VDIGlL TEAFORD
67
Pontiac ...... t2295
SYRAWSE
-~~~~
Catalina Con¥. Coupe. frad ... ln

66
Buick ....• ... $f795
L•S•bre C~o~•to~n 4 dr. S.don. On•

Notice

ltPOIIIOY

SI'EQAL .
SMOVITIRESALI

Jock 'II. C.rooy,

Real Estate For S.le

Pets For Slit

dllhet. M:NIA'nlBE Sclmauw Jllllll,
bad.
mlacellaneous. Mrs. Howard
no odor or ~- Tempor.... only you paased
ary ahoiB and 'IOill'llied. Phone
Cec:O,
IIIII
W.
Main
St.,
Pomeaway 110 audden
after 3 p.m. weekdays, lllfl·
I'OJ.
14-lfe
Nol even time lo ay your
31211, HoeidJrlport, Ollio.
1811 goodby.
24-101&lt;
HelpWented
But God bas given 111 strengllt
r ·,MPJONJ!: to belp with Invalid.
"' bear It
MANCIIESTERS, Dacblllmdll,
Plloae 11112-3'1511.
3.,l.,1le
And courage to bear the
MID. 9clmalaon. Poodlel,
blow.
!'lip, Mimi Breeds ODd
worll!and
No one will ever kmw how EXPERIENCI!f)
Spayed Weotle, Bart.oo
we mill you, June, •••· needed lor mlltlng, doing var.
Kennell. Follcnr dlred!oal.
illd 11rm labor. can provide
kwe you.
114 righl, O&gt;oiYIIIe, Oblo.
home. Pllone 1192-31113 or 919Sadly mls8ed by dad llld
Phone
111!1.-.
S+71c
2'121 or COiltaot Oils Knopp,
•Isler, Ida !NIIIvan
RD, RaclDo.
3+31c
S+lle

IN WVING 111&lt;1110&lt;}' cl our
beloved mother' arao&lt;lmolber'
lllld great-grandmolber, Mrs.
J. B. (Lucy) Hayti, who
poiSed away one year 1180,

Aa lew ••..

ANTIQUES. d!Jbes, fumllw'e. INTI!IRNATIONAL Metro vu
clUna ealllnels, old pllonoInd. dual wbeell. 14-foot.
moolh. Call · - · 3-f.M&lt;
grapbs, clocks, mlec. Lee
long Inside, bulJt.ln camper.
MIXED HAY. 311c a bale, phone
RUill!ill, 108 Legion Te!T~.
good, ODd good !Ires.
Ill 33111.
l4-llc
S.2-301p
Pllone IIUIII.
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SI40• SO

Monrl!lodola

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Bus.in.ess

CHAIN SAIS ·

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•

The .Great
.

.•
Declstons
'

B.l' JOSI!PH W. GRIGG
LONDON

(UPO~

An

Amerl·

·..Western EuroPe, United States
'

Heading for New Relatiomhip

tibe c1re1m or a onlted E.....,.
been llrtiber from realization.

ani U.t "tibe future ~ ~ CCU!Ibieo E~ · to tcqpinl I . . . _
!reqi!Oidy oponly oppcotna U.S. cf the West '"" "" ~r be 1n · -\Y" ·11 1 un!fted foml with
htereats.
·
exclu.aiveb: ~egtan dealp.'i , 1· :·~ce" ••· louc~Jaa q.t .ofiiMi
l~e has doni so m'Uit.VIl~ 1!1 IDd ~:here fDU&amp;t 1 a ~••treo~- tJ~state"
~·.
NATO, polltlcall7 In hlockbw ·' thlinllW one!• revl zing or.tibe
-'lllf! prdlltni cif Jutllmw llr '
Brlllln's COinmon Market bid EUl'Gp811&gt;-Amerlcan communi- to IV 'In oeoldnt1 to ptcoilcite
and llnanclall7' by seekbw to t,y." It ,.., .In lhl~ mood that he poacotukooxlateilce ·Ruoun&lt;lermlno tibe dollar and the arrarwed hla ~ Weal ala IIIIer llie
!'hid.
British pound.
EurcpeiD fAlW' of l'eb. :IS-March cllacloaed that tho ·SOVIIt Union' a
In 1968 De Gaulle sul!ered ·a.
,
toloronce· to&lt; chllWe In Ellllen!
three grievous solbackl to his
But the onl~ WootorJ~ EuroPe Is strlcllJIIImiiAid.
pride.
Europe Nixon believes lh'
On the ftrot of those two
French Strikes
United SCtteo must deal with uo political losuoo, Nixon .,....,
~ The •llonwlde French as an oqoal partoer lo not thoro with tho Jollnooa lldmlnlotrostrikes and Paris street riotllll -yet.
·
tlon's 'View that wdllcatlim. of
In II"!BPrbw humiliated him.
B.l' STEW ART !JENSLEY
Woo! Eur-• pollclas and
~The Invasion of Czecbos!C&gt;- wASIIINGTON (IJPO ~ The oblectloee Is oital to trlve thot
vakl&amp; In August knocked the Nixon lldmlnlatratloll to ieoldng trea ~ wolgbt with the
props from under hla policy of a potltleal-mUitlrf '·(DmtutA for United SCttes In tho tllltnee.
seeklng closer lies with Moaeow Its relations with . tibe west The hi!lardsan eon-u111 thtt
as a means o! sapping Eur-n allies whleb - · tho toochlr-oludent relaUonahlp
Amerloan lnlluenee to Europe, tnt&lt;&gt; account not onlY: sborWarm which baa existed Ia eliding ani
· ~Tho crlslo of the French neeesaltles but 1~ objec- U.t thla Ia a healthy devslcp..
!riO&lt; last November till the tlvea.
menl.
loss of ontKhlrd or Fraoce's
The two are """"lomentaey
On the oeoond polltlcollsaue,
geld stoelqrile doprlved hiJD of but not nocesoarllJ ldOntlcol.
tibe .POBltlcn cif tho new
his lbwnclal club for uoe
NOif thot Prealdent' Nixon Ills Proalclont Ia not )'01 c:lear. The
apillat tibe United Sllteo.
c0111ulted with the jsedero cif NATO fo&lt;algn mini otero at their
But De Gaulle Is an obslillate NATO, be and his ~ odvlsers meeting laat JIUIO In I. . . .
man. Despite these re"'rooo, are In a position to ;work with virtually Invited tho Ruosllno
few see ll1l' llkellhoed be will more precision In : deftning ani other members of tho
change his mind on the isauea tuture programs.
Communtat Waraaw Pact to
that are really vital to him.
111e Prealdent'a pledp to talk about 1 boltncocl reductloo
In sum. ao long ao De Gaulle •II&gt;IJOI'I and otre"'lhen NATO of forces oo both oldea of tho
Is determlnecl w maintain his concerna prlmarlly tibe mUittry Iron Curtain.
The lnvaaloo or Czeebotllova·
role of chaUenger of tho United structure and efficiency or the
States, European leaders see alliance. It leaves aSide two lda by the Waraw Pact
little hope of creallncr l major political queotiCXIB whleh countries two month• later
workable new reJatlonshij) ~ loom largo In the ruturo of chiDed this Idea. It tlao etlled
tween the United States and 1 Europe. These are:
into queatlon the wisdcm of
resurgent Western Europe.
Unified Force
policies being puraued by SCMne
. President Nixon has warned
-The need for Western of the maJor Western pmt'ers

meant bolldng,

'

oot !lgn the trell!' cif Rome, blow NATO has sul!ered wu
Instead, In 1960 she loi'med a when De Gaulle In 19M pulled

rim trading gnq~ onder her
own !Oidersbtp.. tho ~n
Free Trade Assoelatioo (EFT A)
or uouter seven," conslsthW of
herself, Austria, Denmark, NorWestern Europe has become too way, Portugal, sweden anti
lbe nigh&gt;
That booming city oi nearly strOJII to put up uncoq~lainiiW17 Switzerland.
In 1961, In one or the most
1.1 mUlion population has with the American-European
beccme not only the home of relationship of the 1950s, whJch dramatic policy switches in her
tbe European Common Mflrket was essentially a relationship ol long history, Britain applied for
ard the North Atlantic Treaty leader and led, but is still too Common Market membership, _
But it was too late.
Organization (NATO) but the weak- in wUI, if not in material
In Jaooary, 1963, De_Gaulle
crossroads or Western Europe. resources- to sustain any coher·
Every night Its hotels are ent alternative to that relatlm- shockocl Britain, · Europe alii tibe
United States, too, by abruplly
jammed with officials trmn the ship."
vetoln,g
Britain's entry.
six Common Market oountrlesChances I...cd:edRosy
He
did
so on the grourd that
France, West Germany, Italy,
Yet 10 years ago chances for
Britain was not yet 41 ready.''
Belgium, Netherl&amp;R:Is and Lux- European unity looked rosy,
embourg - and businessmen
The Treaty of Rtme, signed economically or politically. But
trom these and. every other March 25, 1957, went into eRect his real objection, as it soon
cOUJi:ry of Western Europe.
Jan. 1, 1958. It created the six· became clear, was that Britain,
Out at the Brussels suburb of nation E u r o p e a n Common in his eyes, was too closely
Evere, ha)f-way to the city's Market, a fledgling economic linked with the United SCttes.
bustli~ international airport, giant with an area of 543,000 And he already was getting set
tibe !lags o! tibe 15 NATO square miles alii a combined to try to squeeze the United
member countries tly in a populatloo of more than 180 states out of Europe.
New Bid
brave show or Allied unity in millions, able to look the United
In
May,
1967, Britain's
front ol a bleak, sprawling States an:t the Soviet Union in
present
labor
govermnent
headcomplex of prefabricated build- the eye and trade with them on
ed by Prime Minister Harold
ings. These have served as the equal terms.
alliance's political heldqUirters
Already it is the world's Wilson made a new bid for
membership, Once again De
atnce it was eased out of France largest single trading bloc.
Gaulle's
icy "non" vetoed it.
In 1967 by President Charles de
In JulY, 1968, the Common
De Gaulle, sources in London
Market coontries climaxed a
Gaulle.
said
Feb. 21, has now proposed
In Line Togetiber
decade of progressive tariff..
creation
of a new European
ln the NATO cafeteria Ameri- slashing by aboliohln,g all tariff
can am canadian officers stand barrlers between them and economic and political arrangein line with mlni·skirted British turning themselves into ·a ment which would include
Britain ancf eliminate the need
secretarlea, Danish and Dutch customs union.
dlplom1ts, Turkish olflclals and
Yet, impressive though these lor the U,S.-Ied NATO.
The plan, as reported in
achievements are, they are onb"
paunchy German colonels.
The impression all this llmltocl. The dream of a onlted London, would include a four
conveys is of unity-a booming, Europe seems to have been power directorate composed of
forward-marching Western Eu- halted by ins~C~erable road-- France, West Germany, Italy
and Britain.
rope and a united Western blocks.
The Frem:h accused the
Britain Holds Back
alliance.
British
of "sensationalizirw'' De
Yet, seldom since World War
Britain, reluctant ·to sever her
D-as rresident Nixon knew traditional commonwealth alkt Gaulle's proposal alii claimed it
when he set ~ his now end:ed Atlantic trading tles in order to was no diUerent than what he
tour o! Western EurqJe-has join Europe, held back and did had proposed pooticly before.
The Common Market was
designed by its fourding Cathers
In _!he 1950s to be oot only an
economic but also a political
community, with a supra·
national government ard parliament.
can budnusman, arriving in Seldom baa tibe AIJinllc alliance
the Belgian capital of Brussels been in more dJsarr11.
late ooo evenln,g recenlly, spent
.. The problem," London's
two houri driving trom hotel to weekly Ec(lll(1hist wrote recent...
hotel before ftndln,g a bed lor cy, uuea in the tact that

France out of tho mUlti!')' side
or the alliance and 'ordered
S"'reme Allied Headquarters
(SHAPE) and all u.s. and other
ADied troopa oul of Frtneo.
By early last summer there
was serious speculatiOn that
France might quit tbe alliance
altogether and that canada,
Norway and possibly other
member countries might tollow
her,
The ~hock ol the SOVIet
invasion of Czechoslow.kia eJXI..
ed such talk, for the time being,
at least. But NATO's -future still
remains a question mark.
Tho United Stites wants the
Eurq:te~.Ds to carry a bigger
share of the common defense
load and costs. The Eurcveans
want a larger say In running
the alliance and in deciding tts
strategy, but balk at picking up
more ol the tab for it.
Over all looms the uncertainty or France's role.
De Gaulle's consistent aim lor
the past 10 years has been to
make France a separate center
of power in Europe, ind!!l'enient
has
or tibe United stetes.

C•eeb•:

GRAPEFRUIT 4·

5 lb. bag

•
t

I

01

vicioua, violent and emotional-

ly deranpl1 felons."

Murton also said Negro
pr180l'lers "ate only the scraps
!rom tibe tlble alter whites
finished eating."
Murtoo · told tibe Senate
J1R'e!lile Delinquency subcommittee investigating prison conditloos in the ..uon that he was
tlrtd as sll)erlntendent because
he uq up bodie1 o! inmates I
believe were murdered" at the
Cummings Prison Farm.
Murton exhibited ror senators
devices including clubs, whips,
and a grisly electrical device
called the "Tucker telephone"
which ~ said were usec:l on
pri~K~ners,

' mtii.o, violent and emodixlai]y or ·western Europe'S" individual
nations that spurred them to
deranged felons."
create
the Common Market and
"The Negro prisoners lt'ere
segregated in even worse EFTA They dlrl so In an effort
facilities than the whites,"
Murton said. "They ate only ttte
scraps from the table after the
whites finished eating."
At one point, .Murton de..
clared: "When we treat men
like wild animals we tW'n them
into wild aDi.mals.. Our prisons,
in varylllg degrees, are monster.producing factories."
Murton said a 1966 Investiga-

tion oC Arkansas prisons by
state pollee disclosed ••a catalogue of inmate abuae and
official corruption including
death, threats, shooting of
prisoners, gratuitous beatlngs
witfl rubber hoses, black jacks,
brass knuckJes, ax handles,

torture, stoll1&gt;1ngs, lashings,
ki eking, sexual perversions and
other forms ot punlahment.
"Many ot these lmnates were
very young."
Murton said he started to
refonn the state's prison
system but was fired in a
"white wash."

to trade on equal terms with
the United States ard the Soviet
Uoon.
In the same way, it was their

Individual mUitlry weakness
that droYe them to unite against
the threat of overwhelming
Soviet Power. They did so under
American leadershij) in the
North Atlal!tlc Treat,y In Aj&gt;rU,
1949,
I
NATO celebrates its 20th
anniversary April 11-12 at a
meeting of its foreign ministers
in Washington, where the treaty
was signed.
British Defense secretary
Denis Healey warned recently
that NATO ground and air
forces could not hold out more
than a few da)os against all-out
Soviet attack. He said they then
would be forced either to
surrelller or to call America's
intercootinental nuclear missiles
into action.
Jol~mow

Probabl7

tibe

most jolting

Mao Tse-tung, Five Years Later,
Presenting Bill for Territory
place.
center by OUter Mongolia, a
WI thin the last year, each SOviet satellite, the Sovlet8 are
side his accuse&lt;! the other ot said to have approximately
"provocations" but both haw 150,000 of tibelr boot troopo.

""'posed

(llposed w tibem are
to be 450,000 Chinose on a
perimeter runniJW from SIDklang In lbe west w Manchuria
the then SOviet Premier Nikita lntibeoorth.
bilL
Khrushchev accused the Red
These are the lands ol Central Chinese of cau&amp;IJW more than
SllidoJW Province In the Weal
Asia and Siberia which the 5,000 border incident!.
is the center of Red Chh•'•
Chinese claim ttet Czarist
Noteworthy alto was the nuclear development progr1111.
Russia took from them in the speed with which both aldea
· In !962, I r.-teti 60,000
middle 1800's by "unjust trea- reported the clash in the area of Kazaldl and Ulaur ref-a
ty,"
Damansk;y Jsland, some 400 trcm ChiMst t)ppreselcm were
Fur of tibe time the Otlneae miles oorth of vltlcitvostok on reported to have crooaed tho Dl
might attempt to collect tho bill the Uuurl River in one of the River - r trea Into SOviet
by fnrce has led the SOviet conte1ted are11.
KIAkhllln from SIMiang. Tho
Union Into a steady buUdlt&gt; of
It coUld be interpreted either Russians refuNd to ·lend Utem
m.Uitary strensth along its aa a Soviet desire ul divert back.
borders with Red Chi~a, which attention from rising ten1i0111 in
In nearby Taahken~ a SOVIet
hive been de1cribed as the Berlin or to a Red Ollneae
Ioncest all! tensest in the W'orld. effort to pro•lde • sa!et,y mve radio otoUon reaultrl7 transBorder Clashes
oplnst unrest aroused by Mao mits anti-Peking broadUote.
The sov!ets don't eJq~tet an
And u relations between the Tao--Tuna'• cultural revolution.
all-out
e&lt;infr-tlcri with the
two have deteriorated oteodlly
FJite Tnq&gt;o
owr tile last 10 Ytlrs, border
Alorc . the 5,00Qr.mile border, Chine .. 110!'· But In the llpi of
cllsbea have become cOITllllOn- broken approximately at its hlowey they tllrnk It will c.me.
been sparse on details.
Last Sunday's Incident was
the first since 1963 to mention
killed or wouOO.ed. In that year,

DAIRY
BUY!

BUTTE

CRACKERS
l-Ib.
box

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59t

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Dliuru sucu

·Pork lol• Roast "·
· Po~·
Steak u.

C•••

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carton

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59t

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"· .59t

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LENt NSPECIAL';.: FROZEN FISH ' '
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Sp.ore 11•1
i61r srm

ILK•••••••• ~pl. 391- II

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six days of creaUon .

9j.'t

.,· .1-------------------·i!·-ffi1-----·-.Ji;,_

governed by "a group of armed Gaulle,
It was the economic weakness
iomates, some of whom are

Foreign News Commentary

By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign News Analyst
Back in 1964, Red Chinese
Chairman Mao Tse-tung told a
visiting foreign delegation in
Peldng that China had not given
up ita claims to some 600,000
sqUire miles of Soviet territory.
it just hadn't yet presented lt8

II

:G

..

In the Cbrletian world, the

r------------------------------------------,
Fresh and Wholesom..Good For You!
1

Dream Dies
That dream, too, died on a
Murton said boys as young as
roadblock
thrown 14&gt; by De
14 are sent to Arkansas prison

VOL.

word hexaneron means the

POT ATOES •••••••••••••••.
u.s. NO.1 MAINE
20 lb. bag
1 BEST

"

uqnoedlctable Soviet mms.

FLORIDA SUNSHINE FRUIT!
Best Qualftyl
Low Prlcel

Wild Animals in Cage

WASHINGTON
(UPI)- The
former &amp;\llertntendent of ArJcan..
us' state priiiOI'll testified Tuesday that prl.sOneri were treated
.like W'lld animals and that he was
fired because he "dl€' lCI bodies
of inmates I believe were
murdered."
The testimony wu given to a
SO~ate subcommittee by '"'"'
mas 0. Murton. He related tales
of torture alii abuse of
prisoners, some inwlvina yourw;
boys he said were thrown into
the same priSOI'I farms as

.wilit rOaard W Elat.Wool
relatlonahiJio. .'11!"_.,, ·lnc)udtd
JUhiiN1*i !del c! "bulldl,.
bridpa," WeltGei'm&amp;n7'•''os~
polotlk" 10111 Brlllln'a &gt;Vi1&gt;11
Ideas for prconotlng Elot.Weot
rolltlonahiJ)o.
New 1,pp11J&amp;Ch ;'
'l1le NATO llltlllbera have Ytl
tq decide· • · new ljlproteh w
thlo questioo In tibe ll&amp;lit cif U.
revelation IIIII tibe Knmlln lo'
not proporecl w P!lrinlt the
Infection of freodcon _..serecl
by lneroaalnr ocnttcll ,wl!ll tho
West to pin moeb ~ In
Etotern ~
'
On U. mUitley front, tho
lnvaaloo o! Czoeboalovaida 10tutlly eased the prablomo of
otrengthoning NATO. It t.lted
the clamor In Congress, _ . .
headecl by Senate MaJorliY
Leader Mike Manalleld (1).
Mona.), for tho Wlthdr.Wol or
moat of ·the 210,000 ·u.s. troops
In Gertlllll)'.
It spurred the E -' IDles
to IIP'OO to ·seek lnereteed
detenae budaeto ani work 011
making tibelr !or&lt;es cCIIIlllltl8d
to NATO more efficient.
The United SCttes IIIII Ita
aDios have no allornatlve but to
mai!Din and, I! ,IIOBolblo, bee!
op tho military shield . oplnat

MARCH MONEY-SAVERS!

Inmates Treated Like
B.l' WILLIAM B. MEAD

~hallellgiJW

S•ob~

...69¢
..

Meat loaf

.

We reserve the ~ight to limit (')uant't•
..;.
1 tes

'

m.

,I

Swtftalag

.

Ill

lb

PERCH FILLETS Pkr.

I

,.,
m.
,.,
Grape .Jellr

.

IUH

Kelbl« Honer Grah.ns••••••••• lb. b1. 39c

IOOD,UIII

1-lb.39j.

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

:~
.,
NESTLE'S QuI K
PIZZA with CHEESE J!~~e:!i 49C
QUAKER OATS •••••••
.,
BEEF BARBECUE :~::~ •••••!:~.:·59C
DILL PICKL·ES••••••••••••• Jt· 45C
29
.
AXWELL Hous ••••••••••
.HUDSON NAPKINS ••••• ~:.:29C ·
CHOC, DRINK

REG.ORQUICK

~:•·2· 9/-

.EINSTANt 10 ... ,.
COFFEE far

Serve Them
Sauer Kraut
With-----

Camp..ll's Chicken N•l• ·

SOUP

SSt

7 :~51 1. oo·

.

SLICED

PORK LIVER
' 1~·2'1'

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Bold &amp;~A~r sm
Dreft "A., sm

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'Pal•ollv.e

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lhatld :::: 59t

cow · .
Bat• Soap un11 , ., 19"

SHORTENING :·

- I

Wlsl
Lll',EBUOY

Snow Drift Pure Vegetable

Carnival Brand

2 ~~. 99C

,

e Mixes ..,

'

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WienerS

,.r.

6u.
12u.

Nabisco Royal Llllldt Cookies., ••••• lb. 39c
Sunshine Vanilla Waf«s~ •••••••• lb. bx. 39c

HAM

•

PORT-O-ROCKLAND

19~

BOILED

..

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.

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11t

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Now You Ktww

.

·~- -~~·

Wllontbe~Gorda!Chm

11101 lioll&lt;llf one.- at I h e
bDme ol Mn. J. Q, R.-t. MrL
HarYey Van Vrlllkln was · eo-

an ,

jWO,Ie&lt;l.- - ,......
- · -clafto•tlli'dllb.· '

·~,

-hoiteJI.

1110111ber Ill planning theplantlnp
II'CIUnd your house, Mrs. Jones

glooolMro.
ehalrman.
for KodacJm&gt;me
be bet- from
Edward
lollzldlci, rellldu, Olr8inf the club to. lake
14 The hwsetathelmportantobphoa&gt;ar/illhlc lllldes and ontw
them Ill the state CCHIIolll. A lot.
jeet, oot the planting. Look first
ter from Mrl. John Reese, ,...
at the door&amp;, f~ aide, back,
glonal dlrec:tor, IIIIJOUllcecl the
tn that order," she said.
ljJ&lt;ine llleOillle ci Rqlon 11 fD
Mro. Jooes pointed out that tho mass ci the cllimne,y.
In conclusion, Mrs. J o n e 1 be held oo April 10 at the RichIince a few slu'ubs are suft'lcient
to enhaDce Its architecture, plant made ·three OU1180atla!S In se- land Me-st Clm'dl, Athens.
the doorwa,ys first, then look to lecting shrubs - choose those Resenattona are to be sent ln
aee what other planu are need· that thrive Ill the exposure Ill b)' April 8.
Mrs. Howard Nolan will clemeel. Windows may also need fD be wbleh they are fD be plamed,
ehooae
only
shrubs
that
are
abonstrate
making an arrangemeut
aeceoted, she said.
.. Picture windows usually are BOillteiY hardy for the climate, at the APril meeting fD be held
&lt;llhanced b)' low plantings under and think ci the appearance of at the home of Mrs. Ro,y Bel&gt;lng.
A deesert course was aerved
them. Sometimes a ground cover the shrubs yoo cboose at all
times
of
tbe
year.
by
the hosteSses preceding t h e
Ia sumdent planting, wblle at
The poem, "Trees," by Joyce meettn&amp;:.
other times ahn~bs that when
mature will reach to the bottom Kilmer was read by Mrs. Roe- ·
ter.
branched
ahrllb

lllill!tl

9le oald In caoeo wllero a
lolge chimney domlna!&lt;o~ t h e
house, then any shrub with Ito
branches trained to an,y pat..
that pleases will break up

to

Do you need an ego boost,
all you 40 million creative
sewers? Here it is : Pete
Fountalll, a bearded pixie
who play&amp; the greatest jazz

clarinet in New Orleans,

tblnb you're wonderful. So
wonderful that he has dedicaled his latest composition
to you.
For proof, head for the
fabrics section of a big de-

partment store, and cock an

ear for the 1lllllliltal&lt;able lilt
of Pete's music, backed by
his famous Bourbon Street
Ten. You will be heariag his
new nwnber which is being
used as the theme for a lab·
riea·and-!aahions 111m titled
"Music to Sew By." And-if ·
you follow the mualc&gt;-you•n
seo the movie ond Pe~ bim·
self aa he leada a fBIIhion
parade of eight pretty
models around New Orleans.

proval of U. many-splen·
tiAft;tl B ur II D'II t o n falni&lt;ls
i*J'''"' day-througl&gt;eveDing
out&amp;b aa be eJIItrs Into the
splrit ol the li&amp;hlleelDi tour.
As the caplalil of the Mark
Twain riverboat, be lighU
daytime llpll'aleo ID crisp
cbeekl. As a vegetable-von·
dor iD the Flueb quarter,
be nods approval of 'IOft.
silhouello tlftemooll drelses
of genUa wooJ.Iook boltdedo.
AI a wine aleward ID the eel·
lar at Antoine'•, be lllreo the
flowing elect of a loorlangth

abirt dress ID lbeer

tlotfed vollo. As the driver
ol a real frlnpd surrey, be

That's Pete Fountain himself driving the surrey. The.
smiling model is wearing a briUht••m of Burlington's
bonded wcollike check in crisp red, white and blue.
'

likes a two-piece costume of under 35, mlti&lt;Ue.to-upper in·
briJiht rod. whIte-and-blue come bracketl, and very
knowledgeable about challgcbeeks.
But in his real role-owner

of Pete's Place, .ti!Ui c.larlnetlst extraordlnare-he
likeo faoldona that are jus!
u nringin1 u the music.
•
Not lurprisiDgly, Pete's
best audience Ia the group
wbk:h does most of the ereaUve home sewing: Most are

iDg faaliloniLnew developments in fllurlcs, and new
techniques ID oewl!ig. In
short, they are swingerojuat lllre Pete Jlimaelf•.

So take a bow-u a lady
who sews, you're a member
of Pete FOUDtaiD'I clarinet

set.

Plan Planting Project
'

Ten dowering crabs will be
planted in the' Rutland CUDIIIUDit;y, according to plans made at
the recent meeti~ Or the RutlaM

Sole Proceeds
Will Satisfy

Home's Needs
Numerou&amp; needs or

the

Meigs

Count;y Children's H&lt;111e will be

JMt 1hrough proceeds of 1 bake
Ale Saturday at Dudley Florists
Ill MiddltiJlOrt.
Tbe sale Is bel~ sponsored
II, Gn:qt I of the Wc;~nen's Asso;latioo of the Middleport First
Uniled Presbyterian Church.
Piau for it were completed at a
-"ng Monday night. All women ol the church Ire asked to
contribute somethl~for the sale,
wllieh will begin at 9 a. m.
-ling It the home ci Mro.
John Redoviu, lhe session ap.
ened with de.otlons by Mrs. Richard Vaughan who used "Rejoice
lnd Be Glad" 11 her theme. She
read a poem, jjFood For
'J'houKI!t," and concluded w~
prarer.
Mra. Fred lAwl.apresentedthe
lt1dy on a "oman ot the Bible,
StriHhrla, who Itt money become
her God. Mrs. Richard Crooks led
iD the Bible study ol the t!h and
lth c'-"s of Matthew.
A bll&lt;e Slle was held at the
cloae of tho meetiJW and Mrs.
Redovtan served refreshments.

Americans ·moaopolized
the world's whalillg Indus·
lrf durinc the 1111! and 19tb
ceaturies, ~ to the

Encyelopaedia;,Bntannica.

Friendly Gardeners held at the
home of Mrs. Joe Bolin.
Club members wUl plant the
trees smJetime during the week
of March 20, Mrs. FredWUiiamsoo and Mrs. William Willford
were llEllll8d to have the garden
thel'lpy program for the special
education class at the Rutland
Elementary School In llleroh.
Floral pieces for the Rutland
branch ol the Pomeroy National
Bank will be prepared ln March
by Mrs, Wllliamson and Mrs.
Howard Birchfield.
Mrs. Willford q,enedthemeeti~ with g~ reading of the
club collect. Devotions were given by Mrs. Robert S!lOIIdOn all!
members displayed seed catalogs
Jn response to roll call.
The program consisted of
slides entided. "A Master
Gardener's Garden"' and review
or a magazine article on "lnhabitama of the Garden" b)' Mn.
Birchfield.
'lhe tnwli~ prize was WGR
b)' Mrs. B1'11ee Davis IIIII Mrs.
Bruce Ml)" won the door prize.
An auction was held followtngthe
meethw., Refreshments were
served by the hostess.

••

l~

•

' '

,' ':'~~ 1'

''

..,,•'

. .Oose

~io

lnii: llil

!IIIIo.

~

'"

,11 willow ln
b)' 11!111 Nollie

,.

At CBC M~ting
•

.

.._ .

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RE~$Vn.LI! -, RlllOrta

-I

IF YOU ARE INTERESTED In seelnr the bon oo i&gt;n,yer In pllblle
schools lifted, there is sametlliog yoo can do. Let )'our CqresiiDIIII

Sen. Dlrkson has introduced an IIDendment to the CollllituU'"'
of the United !!lOins whjch would permit voluntary parUcipatim Ill
pnyer In public ocbools. A continu!JW landllllde of mail reQeedrw
a deep desire tor a retum to the reeognUloo ot God tn schools and
other public pli~s in •1!18&amp;rf to remln:l Coflreu of the will of
the American -'e.
To make It ·an. easier matter than sittl- down and writinc a
letter, the Youth for the Vol-.;o Pnyer Amelllmont, 4723 RichMr. &amp;lid Mrs. Walter MDrrlo
DlOIII Ave., HOUston, TeXIs, 77027, has prepared a card which were In MinlterOYerthewtekend.
needs only fD be signed &amp;JidmaUOdtoWashington, D. c. 'lbeoe cards to Yialt Mr. &amp;lid Mrs. Dale GootJ.
ore a..Uable """' request at no_charge, althologh amaU do,.dons nif&lt;l &amp;lid Mr. ·11111 Mrs. Ceorp
are appreciated w help defray the .printing coota~.r: ·
·
lladtlm&lt;.
·
A quantity of cards has bean orderod byllll~ Flr.t United - .Jrm CUmlnt!biiD. juniGratOhio
Presbyterian Church Women. We also under~'tift·Lidltl Auxili- . ~ Univeroicy, w a s . _ .
ary of Drew Webster Poat 39, American Leiiaa. are clr&lt;ulaliog 1 lid to Middleport lor a - petidoo of e&lt;Kiorsement for tho' aiilendment wbloh wW be ntalled fD end Yisit b7 Howard Chalker
Rep. Clarence Miller.
ci Granville, bl1 roommale at
O,S,U, AIIO home for the - &amp;lid
with her famib', Mr. &amp;lid
WORLD DAY OF PRAYEii IS FRIDAY, &amp;lid seniceslrill bo held
Mrs.
Ra,y Cumingham, wao Betin six communities about the ~· Mrs. Ben Neutzling, preside.lllrSO at
of Church Women United of llleigs County, will tell the otocy o!the 11 Qlllllngham, obser"""'e ant( tl1i role II playa In unify~JW w&lt;1110n around the world llolzer.
S. A, Rodno)' Karr,
over WMPO Friday at 10 L m.
···
with the U. S. NI.V)' at B a I nbrldp, Mel. and Edward ~....
ot Mrs. Gene Thoaq&gt;11011.
ol Bo11m, Mas•. _.t the weekllrickltyera local 32, s p.m. end bore with Mr•.·.and lllio.
Tlolrlllll1, at the Pomeroy Le- Richard Karr, Jr.
. ·
slm haiL Reireshmenti wW be
.Mark Mo.fer acCOIIIjllllled Jo1U1
served b)' Eba GUmore.
Tamolllil over the -kond to
FRIDAY
•·
bali. ·prle!i&lt;M
MEN'S ' Drd~rhood, Enter-- at .a,.,. llol1linluj Table T-1
prise United Metbodiol Church, Club, 24M Cleveland Ave.
7:30 Frida)' nlsJrt It the bome ot
WEIJNES&gt;AY
Eldoo Weeks.
CATHOLic WOllEN'S C I u b,
BAKE SALE, Pomel'01 EJ&amp;.
. Wedbeillll1 ni1J11 Ill the dJureh
meoury P. T.A. Fri&lt;IQ at llllke
auditorium following Lenion - - Cleanera.
vices.
·
SHRINERS DANCE seialon,
MIDDLEPORT
LITERARY
Frldly, 7:30p.m. Masooic TemClUb, W-lllll1. 7:30 p.m. It
ple basement In Middleport.
home ot Mrs. Nan ~·~ Mra.
II. L, French to review "Adirondacks Country" llld II r •·
Harold Sauer, US1Jipeofa Year•.,
•''
• &lt;.SOUP SALE by youth of t h e
Tim~ly
ByadburY Church of Chris~ sotui'day; 60 cents a quart, Orders
to be Placed , by Wednesdly at
The only food we Jmow ta
9112-9178 tr 992-9681. Will deliv- be cheaper lhil year tban

eo..-.,...

.
TIIUBIIJAY
•
MIDDLEPORT EVANGELINE
Cbailltr 172, Order ol the Ealtern

Star; 7:30 'lbarldq nlllbllt the

mer, Mro. SeoU Folmm:, Jell".· lolaiMilic Temple; ohOwor for the
re,y Folmer, &amp;lid Sllntl7 Jo1111100 ldlchan to be held.
visited with the Robert Joiln100 • MEIGS COUNTY American Red
familY Ill Columbus 9mdQo.
Croll Ollj&gt;ter boord meeting,
Mr. &amp;lid Mrs. Ropr YOUJI&amp; 8:30 p.m. Tllurldq at Voter...
N.,. Cumberland, W, Vs. wore lllomorlal HospitaL
weekend polio of hia DX&gt;ther,
PAST CIUEFS, Mqnolil TomMrs. Alma Young. '!bey also pie, l')&gt;llliln Slsten, Tlllrldl,y, ·
visited- relalivos here.
7,30 p.a at - e ii.llrL ErDa·
Mr. and Mrs. J, A. Sm It b, Je•s&amp;
:
daughter, lolar1 Eileen, &amp;lid ltlll,
MEETING OFMEI!JS Lo~ al
Bob, villited Frlde,y·llllle1ooldl- Schtd DJ•trle~ Ohio A$10t!iatloa
burg with Mr. ant( Mro. $am of flilllc School
Smith, &amp;lid SOiurda,y &amp;lid :imda,y p,.,.; ~
Ill Galtoo with MeKlniey Slnlth Blah ilcl1ool·
who Ia eertoual;r W.
. ~~ :
,lcl·~o.,l ,
Mr. IIIII Mrs. Bob Crow and .·
·
Mrs, llleJme llblmeo, oP,ent llit '
weekend inColumbuo..1114Y...,.
DJOota ol Bobby Crow/.lolro•.Helea Wetzel, and Mr. and l(r,;
Kelley &amp;lid famllr,

. .,,

lalt II biler, II you can call
tllll I food.
.
-Harbm B.diiiiGck, NCIII
Yorlo-N.., lm111 rogfoftal
dlmfor of lbe Burto~~ of

Labor

S~ati~~!f!1__.,.

the

ririiW COli of """'''•

MEIGS .THEATIE
TONIGHT li 'I'IIVRSDAY
Marcb 5 - 6
!lOT OPEN

..

·' _..

&lt;Teehnicoll)&lt;)
I.Lt&gt;cwe· llall - Helll')'

..

...........

NEW-

Meigs Cool&gt;ty Regl,..l Plannirw
Commlssioo, the Meigs county
ResOUrce Development eomnitttee and the lllelp County Extonaion Advisory Cmnmittee.
Two Of the speakers during the
da,y- both local- indicated that
economic prospects for Meigs
Count,y are looking up.
First to note that something
appears to be "cooking economically" for Meigs County was
Pomeroy Attorney Fred Crow,
who admitted he Is "an opti1
mist."

t THE I;O!IPIIEIIENSIVE PLANS ·for water and sewersge d.,elopmenta in llleip County were
unveiled for the first t}lne Wednesday wheil a 11progress" meetl~ was held at the.. Pomeroy Tri.,..
ity United Church of ChrlsL A map related fD the plans, above, I' exhibited by,lefl fD rlgh4 Thoreon Johnson, chftlrman of the Meigs Count,y Resource Develq)lnent Committee; Harold C8rnahan,
ehainnan of ¢e executive commJttee of the Meigs COunty ltegional Planning COmmission who preMrl':ed the plana, and Wayne Roush, chairman of the Meigs County Extension Advisory Committee.

Asks Rzre
. ·Be A b.a ted,
1

.

·

1

Crow predicted ttw.t there wUl

,

be an industrial development in

.

the near future which will employ
between 200 and 300 people. He
stressed the need rour housing.
Later in the day, the second
speaker to mention the economic
promise of the future was Paul

RhOOes that privite morey be put
into use in thetleldofrecreaUon.
He opened Hoyal Oak Park after

PROGRESS WITION
Addressing the some 3S eom·numit.y leaders Informally, Paul
an ad"Vertising campaign in 1965 Smart stressed"the accompHshwith 80 camp sites.
menl.s of a communit-Y within Ita
The place proved popular. Karr self.
wiU open this season with 200
He spoke of the work at Midcamp sites. Each winter letters dleport in the construction of
are sent to 4Jnilies that visited quarters for the Meigs County
the park the prev~ous summer. Wetrare Department and the new
This winter. 1800 letters were Imperial Electric Co. buildi~ in
mailed. There were over 52,000 . the former Pythian Park.
Royal Oak campers in 1968, which
He stressed also the need to
does not include local residents · put money to work and the need
visiting the park just for a day to for upeople wlth a vision" like
swim or fi sh.
Horace Karr.
Karr pointed outthatRoyalOak
PL.'\N UNVEILED
Park has the highest rating availFor the flr st time at Wednesable as a recomrDerrled camp site day' s meeting the comprehenin Ohio from two nrms grading si ve plan for water and sewage
such sites. One company, out or facilities prepared for the Meigs
over 300 camp sites in the state, COunty Regional Planning Com~
gave the highest rating only to mission by Sieco, Inc., Columfour parks while. the second com- bus, IOO., was. elq)lalned - and
pany gave the highest rating only displayed - by Harold Clrnahan,
to three parks.
chairman of the executive com ..
Karr indicated that he was W"Joo mlttee of the commisslorL
able to secure a professional deThe detailed plan was prepared
signer for the park before it was through a grant from the Fannconstructed because so few peo- ers Home Administration. United
ple have tlad previous eXPerience States Department of Agriculin establish ~ ng such an opera- ture.
tion.
The study included all of Meigs
f'or that. reason he proceeded Count)" with theexccptlonofPomon his own to plan all~ design all eroy aoo Mhldleport. Water and
facilities.
sewage requir.ements through the
In closing, Karr pointed out that year 2020 were projected.
large savings are laying idle in
Related to the detailed plans
Melgs COUnty banks, He urged were remarks by Lindsey Lyons,
that these moneys be puttowork. president of the T\lflpers Plains"Personally, I feel that Meigs Chester Water System, oow under
County is the best place in Ohio construction.
to live - If you have a ,iOO,"' he
The system is one of the largconcludecl.
est attempted in the Unltedstatea,

and for that reason, ta 1 pUot
project.
Lyono explained hoW the Melli
portion ol the system - part ol
the system is in Athena Caunly"was rmanced by a 60 percent~
onomic Development Admlniltl"'··' .l.
tion grant which came only to
•:
Meigs County. The proJRIIa
ing held back now because
machinery lor .the water treat.ment plant has nutarriwd. Uawa
are about 85 per cent installed
and the completion date oftllil&gt;lOject is this August, ~ODIIIld.
Another speaker, Geor&amp;e Hargraves, Sll)eriltendent of till -' \
Meigs Local School Distrk4...,.
lined progress at the site ot the
new lllelp HISil School. Ht
stressed that onlY one-fourth ol
Meigs School District sllldellll
attend college &amp;lid DIOIQ' h I 8 h
school graduate&amp; are llndJ,. It
dimcolt to get Joi&gt;sboeauSioflbo
lack of vocational tra.h~.ng..
However, he Slid .Plana tor t1w
new building Include voeatloral
training facllldes.
He also pointed outthatthtbuUding wlll mean nothirw unlea1
the Internal structure Ia chupd
to otter students what they wQl
need after graduation, whether 0!'
noi they attend college. The turriculum is beine: re&amp;tructured at
the present time, he said, illpfll:paradon lor entering the 11111
building.
Crow, speaking on hlghwa,y deVeiOilDlent. said the state baa
premised that the remainder ol
Route 33 between Atheno &amp;lid
(Cooti- oo Pap
. "10).,..

*'

,
The MeiSs Cowley Health DeJohn Zerkle, president of Mid- Mrs. Strauss said there was no
partment mailed ·a letter Tues~ dJeport Councll, said this morna direct law in effect at the pre• day asking the village of Middle- ing he had not read the letter. sent time abou~ burning trash or
port fD af&lt;lp burning at the town• a He said the village will make prbage at a landfill dump. ThOY Smart, president of the Citizens
new land!IJI dump near HobiOII. every possible eiJort to comply pointed out that r,otate oUicials National Bank in Middleport.
The letter, . authorized by the . . .wJth the request of the board or said such a laW would go Into
Touchi~ upon thepfOITOSS of a
board ot' healtll, Was draf~d- health:
elfect on July 1, 1968.
community and what can be ac11 1've told them at the dump
ter numerous comp)aintf fro~
Ray Watts., ehief ot the divi- complished rrom within, Smart
~sldents in the Hobsoo, Brad- ever since It opened," said Zer- sion of sanitation for the state said thlt the county Ls on the
bury and Leading Creek areas Ide, 10 that there "is to be no burn- health department, eonfirmed the verge or· "a great economic dell!ai the burning io a nuisance. lng, but It has been happenlllg." otatemeni concerning wch legal!- vef&lt;lpmenL' '
Mrs. Beulah !lrau11, admlnis- Zerkle said he doesn't blame the ty In a telephone eonversatloo IaHe said Meigs C01111ty Is schedol 'the health people for having complained, ter toda¥.
' ,
uled fD have the largest unders8id the
Perly Riggs, sanJ:tatlal1 00"1- 1 ·Watts, however, added, "No RTOW!d ~ q~ine 111 the world. It
'"l&lt;lr!et . cer saw.l!!!'ttime""u.e,-. - ~ CIIl. areatLa . llli,_ .Mib . wlllk~ Ill tho lfeJI!jlfn
·~
j&gt;iJidi;~,iriii~C:~fit ~· e;;.J; iioouib fiiili•~• ;iii M 'enfii"r -.-'blltll fiil"'hf
garboBe ilii•lld 110\ :btl'bllnted. . direct law P~!~ the ~· m~qJ t(IOration ha• already
Later Tuesday, after eooter- ing until JuLY t, 1968."
· tMn Putefeaed, Smart reported.
rhllr with otllcials of the state
Watio also Indicated bllrning He indicated that the ~011 from
health department, Riggs 8Jid ci trash eould also consUtuie a the hoge mine wlll be taken fD
nuisanCe and It is the resporial- Chesllire by conveyor belt.
bilicy of the board of health to
The two apaakers talked houn
Fi~h&amp;Game Group
take action II such a condition apart during the day..l~m~
should exist.
lng. There was no hint as to
,
,
By United Pre•• lnternodonal
whether they were talkirw about
Elects Roy ArmeH
·Sirfi!;m Sirhan 'B love turned io hate
the same development.
·' ·LOS ANGELES:... SIRHAN B. SIRHAN SAYS he went fD lhe elecThe meeting was marked by
nwnerou&amp; speakers outlining
·tton victor)' (lart.y for Robert F, Ke~ bY. chance &amp;lid with no In- RO)I :Armes was eleded pres!·
upects of their work in the COIJ.Do
tention ollboo!log the aeratDr, He &amp;1\¥1 he saw Kennedy for the first dent Wec:lnesda.v evening by the
ty,
time two dayo beiore at another rally and when he heard him S(IOik Meigs County Fish and Game .
ON ROY ALOAK PARK
&amp;lid alrw with movie stars, "he l-Uke a salnt - I liked him." Assn. at an annual meeting.
Other
officers
elected
were:
Among
the highljpts was areDefeno' 1ttorney Grant CcqJer Wednesday led the 24-year.&lt;Jid
vice
president,
Dr.
Selim
Blaz~
port by Horace Karr, Chester
Arab lmmlaront It&gt; fD the maneni when he &lt;line Into the Ambassacontraetor, lnd owner al"ll operdor Hotel on June t, 1968, and became'dazzled by the bright IISilts wicz1 aoo secretary-treasurer,
No highway faiallties were re- afDr of Ro,yal O&amp;k Park.
for TV. cameru m:l mirrors 1n the corridors. Today Sirhan was to ·Robert Louks.
It was voted to continue re- ported In February by the ·GalKarr sald his ..rk project lotell his murder trial Jury the climactic mmnents - thai he went instocking
of wring neck pheasants lipolis Post, state Hlgllway Pa- cated near Five Po~nts was the
to sort of 1 trance aa:l cllDDQt remember ftring the shots that killed
and quail this year and also to
Kennedy and . . . . - live other per1011~
result or ursi~ by Gov. Jamea
help sponiJOr the annual trout
==•::sJ:r:;:
Waler pwhed down trapped miner
derby In 1\prll at Forked Run ...,th alreao!y brlnp the year• a
R~ervations
total "l five.
LARK, UTAH- SWEAT.SOAKED RESCUE WORKERS puahOd a Lake.
VISI:r SCENE - lllembors of the )Icy, attorney• &amp;lid court olllelala vlllited tl1i ..,... of t11o
'!be patrol lnvesligated 44 acsmall amount of water tbroulh a two-inch plj!e ~ fD William Ver- ' A program to ~ Iarmer a for
August 17 shotgun killing of Michael Lee Dotson, 28, Pafkersburg, who was struck In the baek 0(
..., ~ones, a veteran ntlller &amp;lid
·till trapped.slneelait S,tur- gra•n wh&lt;eh they would put out eldents last mmtl\, a drop fl
the neck with a charge as he drove away from the Wyant home, just otf Main-St. in Racine.
~~~ In 1 cav~ln. "'Time Ia IIDW' very ~,;, aaid Don WWie, for w~dlire in the eount,y, in eo- 13 from Jallllr)'. '11111 Included
'ilt&gt;Oi'lntendent of the mine In ,.mhem \JWj, .."IJe'i bef)Jlalq time •t(IOrat&lt;oo wltlt other organlza- 19 accldonls in which a totO! Of
Misa MargaretGrllft.tha, Meigs
45 persdiii were inJured, Iii Jin·without water aDd we hid to get It 19 ~.i' ,
.
. tiOns, was dlsCllssed.
·
~exlelllioo1118nt,HmneE"'
'!ll'Y. tl1ire were &lt;!DIY eight ln-~
Jqne1, 60,. ~~ atilt ~ lo af ~squu:8 area four lnd
onmlica, remiiMia Ill lllelgs 1
)lry
type aeel-• with onlY li
'· 'one.half miles beneaf!l the ell!rlnce fD Ill" Qqulrrh Mo!lllllln lollne1
" ~ · .\~,MEMORIAL
County 4-H Junior leldera that "\
per11011i ln,Jured.
·
.
owned b)' the Uni,.. State1 Sotelti:";
&amp;lid Minirw Co.
HOsPITAL '•
reservations
the ..Junior ... _
Last month, patrolmen llllde
r..e.der ftclund.q1'' are due March
244 arreels, compared tO ~ 1.2 1. .
. · MinilkirU;
.
1:\,
COLtJMilvs - OHIO ST!Itt IJNJNE~TY fD&lt;Ii9' announced the van1 Arilhon,t LaComb, TuJ&gt;I)Orl Ill JlllllllrY; is.... 321 Wlrl)lnp,
1be l"'UU1tt-lc&gt; Is to • held Friiatlon'a Rrot ROTC
iill laid U. was "anotHer Pialits;· Ti~ Fields, Neir tto- as igalnllt 349 iJI:JariuOtt; c18Jid da¥ &amp;lid SOturda.Y, ~th 14 &amp;lid •
'iltep towards womtn's ·
veili Pearl McBf:tde, Sfr~M;- aoolsted t5 .-nota •• . q&gt;~D· 15 ln Alheno. Reaa!'vllloos mq
,. c;oL l!illieri
Emma Edwards, llle100; Edward pared ·to 68 assilla Ill
be allialned by lnltiJlhordntl or
Patrolmen I...... 1,034 hliurs
' ' •State, siJd .
a "b..,ak- Jlushes, Middleport.
wrltilfl the extenalaa Dftlce. The ·· 1
In February. The lllOIIIiLii: re. ...
. ,,. • II)
.• . ·..
·----r·
.D~HAR·
,...., GE8 · lmotlone
eo•~ 75, ma,y be .Paid b)' 111ar.
. . ' .
port al10 Showed 1!!"614 inoiDr
·' ~Ni•An 's
~. ~ Hilr-, Ea!&amp;Rich- vehicles wore inlpeeted In ZB 14. Mi11 Grlllllha, whO will ierva
·~···l'itrjela Aulherltll, Dtivld
as dean Qf girls, ttillacObrqaaJQ'
daf.l ol Follruilry u ..,._...
SAIGON .. ,'lljaeman, 'l)lra lluilf&lt;o¥.
thOto 624 Ill 3l &lt;111• ol

•

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Patrol Probes

STOREHOURS
Tiny's BargcriniQnd.
.
MIIDI.IPOII
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'

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,YOilRS, lolli(E AND OURS
I'

The unit8d sates and Ita AItUes in Berlbl JrOte&amp;tecfthemove
'bet the Russlail, replied the
:baOCbtte· was .rlece~siry because
,fit Conunwdlt ,mWtary exereila
es In the ar.- through which the
td£hwaY 'passeS.
.
·· Tbe inddlmt lilvolvJng the Am.
lrl&lt;op Army train broupt conllietlng report• .!rom West GerJb!ui-w .U.S. olrtc1als,
,lf(est German cultomsofl'ieers
lital ~t l~lt one .Pistol shOt was
ft~ ·at _Ute train enroute tram
Berlin to 'Frankturt.
But an
spokesman

'

'

n!DAY ., SATURDAY

'

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'

Gerinan.r rOr 'three

'txura belllldQ it 9 a.~.

.'

~N ·o·'y:·1

Quotes

'Un with West

Make,Elberfelds In Pomeroy
.
Your Shopping Center
WEARING 4PP~RU
•

aorirw the meeting .were the

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'

-~:'1·1,~.

, nu,

BERLIN (VPI)- The Coiiiii'Q.
luata closed the West's h1atn
•hJihway to Weii,Berllll for three
'hOur• ~ &amp;lid a U.S. Ar1111
. train wil reported shot at as It
. 'moved aerosa East German.v.
The aetkll came as the Com~
'rrwnl.sta ciatmed crediUOr avoid1111 a smwtlown with the Alllel
1
0'rer the Welt German Prest•donliaJ oloetlon held In the lao,Jated clQ' Wednelday.
. Armed Eaat
IIOidieu
· ~&amp;led off both euda of the "110·.'
~mile roactw~y .liald.ns Weit BK·.

a..,....

·'

,, BY ·BOB HOEFUCII
1'118 boQm llleip Countlans will
hear.80011. won't be SODic.
It -wll~ be econom.iet ranging in
tl1i
seale of the biggest boQm In
0
~ . the hl,story d the county.
,Wlllndlcoted Wednesday
.\ in the annual •1Progress Report"
.meeUrw singed at P-.o,y Trlnlty United CilurChofOuisL Sj&gt;on-

.

·.

FOR YOUJ··,FAMILt __ ..

•'

ill

'Mdtebea41bDme for ita l'obruir1 I"'iiiq, &amp;olno•• wu coo.1
, ·,,
.Aicted b1 the prtli&amp;Jmt, Mra.
.
'WOlter
wbo eommun!cy 11o- i1111t1 ~­
laot~on hal 1101 otllbplot.
WIQ'IIO Klog II" deYOiiou at ed.
.
'"
··
I llleOillle o! tl1i y- ·&lt;)duh
Jlelreahm- ...... sarved 'lz&gt;
C..s o! the Bndtot.f.'Ctal'~ o( .lolr•• &amp;lid Mra. Rooald Olborne,
Chrt.t lofondo1 ni&amp;hL
· · lolr. lnil 111'1. ·Charleo lllim!llllt woo decided fD ebarJ1e the nQI &amp;lid ~~!&gt;bin; Mro. Dtavtr
meetlog time frtiD tho llritiolon; W..,.,, "'l:L III'IIWII ond David;
dl1 to the oeCoad Frida)' Ot each Mr. IIIII_Mro. Warnm Plolloal.
moolh: MrL Nancy !lorria .&amp;lid &amp;lid ~.... Jono &amp;lid JuU Whl't
MrL Bonnie Plckeoa lllrV8d ,.. head.
·1 ' ·
•·
frelhmonta to Mr. &amp;lid lilra. Ben
'lllo !ilxt li&gt;iellng Iiiii boat~
Rife, Carla &amp;lid Be~k,y, Mra. J&gt;lld- Walter Browa bome.
ellne l'alnt,r, lolrl. EdilhFtu'•
. . .
•
,
'rest. .MrL LllldaGrimm&amp;JidScotQu~ B!lt:eiiJiaria,. Wife ol.
tie aDd Vlel\1 Pickens. DtiYOiiooa • Richard · ilie Lloohearled, .
lithe A.\irU meetlog will bll!..n who I'Uled ED~ from 11JII
by MrL Paintar.
~.,a~· wu never ID Eng-

Changed by Clas$ ·· . "'".

'

.'

commlileea - • rleel•ed 1lbtn
!iii'' tho C;B,,G,, mel it the E!'l!aal

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licit

er.

Jo..,

,,

..

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·-- - - -- -

ala-

Jus! wbat opeclal fashlona
does Pete btl rigbt ftu' biB
parade? He beuDI biB ap·

•

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.

·.· .

,..111, ~E~f~~~~!~~~~~:S~~

Meeting ·rime is

By JOANNE SCHREIBER

~:

"

STITOIIN' TIME

Sewing and All That Jazz

·,

bick fD
next

15 that you are endea'Yor~

to enhance the houae, not
llllOther it."

•

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11

lng

.

b)'

c l - oo:rljl4ure· from Galet!oM I '•' .

hl&amp;h. narrow
or U t.t . 8, 1-10,
noedl IOlteDio&amp; Ilion a Ia II Work for the Good ol All."
IIJ'OWing llllllll , leafed, maJ&gt;I' •
A ""'M'unlcatlal wa1 J:8ad

The moatlmportlnt point tore..

'

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and. a P,ra.rer. ,.Let Ua

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dl'ew Guye, ~~8~ ID · t~67. +: .". "·

lor IMw

ol a

'

The (lv8t ,bpok; 'lwsl""s dh·,:c~'·;,; ' .'1..\·
torles,. li:J be, ~~ 1~ ~·~ ~- • f
~
1
computer was '"'n1e Loti Short 'tl"
Cut, •• ~ ~IOSDtftM· nih·el ~· A~••. ,

·~~~~r::t~

Your 'noUN" l'U 111ttlll'le Jll'o, .
._.....,. b)' llro, Jlcllord . Joot•

Aid,

'

'

!

44 Accidents

I

In February

•

=~edlll~

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Need

rau.r

For Junior Roundup

Bro ther

!l"flilli!i

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bJ tiU!,leftfliu~lc, h,ug'l.~

ror

.:~;~y :~ ':J~ :J::

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Woifnded in Viet"pm
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E;. (Eddie) IV'-' · "He ""' oo a eoml!ill _ . . .
iiMI Mro.Herbort 1,' 1ion when hit b)' fr&amp;piiOilta frmn

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.

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,re.itl,.a·~ his
fOI'IIi~r Vl~nla !Jrov-

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"'YI•~a... ' Ially ·~ ...

tl\l',...mual;r w

llatiNI hlil lln&lt;e ~ raOved·

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