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Sorry about tl;latl

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The weary members o
mately 1,000 orders - lu
dining any more sales!
The ladies have beE
arowxl midnight tryil'@ to tu

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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MEIGS COUNTY PROSE
crt~

at Lonlon.

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Forty • two area offlc'
school to hear Bernard on th
denee."
The staff o! SlqJt Marti
tification and Jnves~tion,
dation for Fultz' e! orts Tht

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SENIOR PLAY ClEf - The Senior Class of Meigs High School LamiJ11, Judy Cottrill; second row, Teresa Clacl, Mary Holman, Skip

WW present a threH.ct comedy, ••Mamie's Getting Married", Fri. Logan, John Krawsczyn, Van Johnson, Glen Crill!&gt;, Ron Reuter, Chuck
do.Y nigh~ AprU 11, at 8 o'clock. The productlmls wder the dlrec- Vaughan, Mike Buskirk, Jack Robinson, Mary JaiM! Jenkinsoo IIIII
MrL 'I'he:odollla Frocker. Members of the cast are front Mrs, Frecker. Absent are MlkO Mullen IIIII Dorothy NeutzUng. Stage
tow, 1 tor, Connie Bachner, J1nice Smith, Marta Hubbard: susan managers are Larry Taylor and Dalii\Y Yarbrough. -Sentinel Photo.

&amp;1011

TUESDAV IS

APRIL FOOLS DW! 1-----....

COWMBUS - One of u
sion's brlglrtellt personall
Virginia Graham, 11111 be
lighted before a state-wide
lence ol more than 700 c'!'
lighters when she
day at the American
cleQ'' s lith Annual

~

House Destroyed

Escape Fire

l!y United Press lnten•tlonal

Enemy bose smtuhed by V. S. forces
SAIGON - U. !l. SOLDIERS ABOARD TANKS alii bullet-spray.
IQI armored vehicles smaohed Into a North VIetnamese base and
overran it In rubber plantatloo country northwest of Saigon, military apoluoomen aald ~- Charging through a fUsillade of Com·
munlat ·maehlnegun fire IIIII antitank rocketa, the American ~r&lt;q&gt;­
ere and dive-bomber&amp; a..,.....Ung them kiUed 38 North VIetnamese
lathe MlcheUn Plantadmo battle 45 miles from downtown Saigon.
It bi'OIIght to 444 the number of Cllllmunlsts killed in the past
two weeks of an a11led drive to root them Ult o! camps lhreatanlng
l!al&amp;vn. Eight Americans died and II were wowxled In the llglotlng,
' eoaununlquea said. The report climaxed. weekellllnwhich the reds
shelled Saigoo IIIII fired on a U. S. plane from the border demllltar·
!"Ill IIllO (Dap;) .,. ,two ,vlq!atl,o~ of the JOoA]led uoderstallling that
lqjOed the -bi!W;afNorth VletMm eatirely last Nov. 1.
·

Cancer Assembly

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Sooth still willin8 to talk peace

Fire swept anll..roamhomelo-cated oo the Leading Creek Road
late Saturdey night !orclng its
nine occupants - Mrs. Evelyn
Thomas alii eight children to scurry to safety.
Middleport Fire Chler B o b
Fisher said volunteer firemen
!r001 tllot department remained
on the scene rrom 11:28 p. m.
until 6 a. m. Swxley,
Fl sher
said the two-story
structure would ha"' to be considered a total lou, boot he d~
-::lined to make an estimate. Most
ol the contents of the hm~e were
saved, according to Fisher.

.
PARIS - SOtn11 VIETNAMESE NEGOTIATORS oald ~they
were still ready to open aeeret talks 111th the VIet Cong to try to
The fire ilj)parently started
end the Vletnamo War desplta outrpoken Cmnmunlst de111nciatlon from an Wldetermined source in
oleuch an ofler laot week.
the basement of the big frame
An allied aouree aald the South Vietnamese delegation did oot structure. It seemed to have
e01111dor the de111nelatloo a "reJection." A VIet Col'@ IM!gotiator had started in the vicinity of a fur·
aualled the proposal as a 11 crafty trick."
nace, Fl!iher said.
French dlplomata aaw the new Salgoo declaration o! readi~M&gt;ss
The fire reportedly raced Iii
to enter secret talks 11 ua sort of renewal" of President Nguyen !rom the heselilent throughpartl·
Van Thleu's ofler for ouch talkL Thleu had sold the possibility o!
the talks was 11a light at the end or the tunnel"

THAT
BEL

•

Nixon Meets

Southern Europe rattl&amp;, shakes

deGaulle at

351V-8

·ooPI

Sports Appearance

Group. Wheel Coven
Radio, W/S/W Tires,

I WANT 'it)U T'KNOW

THAT'S MORE
LIKE IT! NOW

I DID """ (:ALL

VOU 'Miai,IR' OOPI

WHAlCH.t.
WANT?

Hl&amp;h Back Bucket Si

.

SAY IT,
IT!

1
I

THAT DON'T" MAKE ANY
DlFFERE:NCE!

WHAT MAKES YOU

YOU

THINK 'I'OU SHOULD

IIIDI:JRESSED' ME AS I
SHOULD BE ADDRESSED!

BE APDRESSE!l
AS 1MISTER'?

BECIWSfi I'M

Funeral Kept in
Simple Tradition
Expressing Faith
In Merciful God

IMFOR'IliiNT,
lHA'S WHV •••

Uons into the attic of the residence. Mrs. Thomas and the chlldren were awakened by intense
smoke al¥1 made their way out of

the structure without injury.
Fisher said this morning he
has caUed the state fire marshall's office investigator Frank
Eisnaugle of Jackson to assist
in determining the cause or the
blaze.
Six or the youngsters were children or Mrs. Thorna!i's and two

were

gra!XIchildr~n.

The Thomas · chllcken, lor
which clothlna is being sooght by
nelghbora, lnclud.e girls ages 6,
11, 12 and 13 an::lboys,ages8and
14.

The family has been moved to
the Karr pr~erty, also on Leading Creek Road.
Middleport emergency-rescue
squadmen were also summoned
at 4:08 a. m. to the Story's Ram
residence of Raymond Fife aOO
transported Albert Fi!etoHoizer
Me&lt;Ucal Center HOflllltel where
he was admitted as a medical pa·
Uent.

liked
American President ot thla century, waalnkeep!Qiw!th his own 111ah
lor a simple religious eorvlee el!Pre1111111 Cfllllldeat lolth In the everlasting mercy of God.
The ritual called lor noeuiOIIY, oomUitarypageentry, 111 wlll'idly
pomp. But the congreptlon aasembled in Washington Natlonol cat1oeo1o
rai bore witness to Elaenh!Mer'a IUuotriUIB place in history ao the
genenl who led the allies to victory in World War U 81111 11 the
peac~ovtng President who oettled the Korean coolllet.
Predddents, prime mlnlotera and ldngo came to Join Preoldant
Nixon, former President L,yoodoa B. Johnlan 1nd other u. S. leaders
In diiiYing last respocta to Elaeat-or, who died Friday at the
age ot 78.
Be!ore being boriMO to the children, and I've always loWid
Episcopal cathedral (at 4:30 my country."
p.m. EST) for the hall-hour
Mro. Eleonh.,..r, whose pLDProtestant r u n e r a l service, lie ordeal wlll contirale through
Eiaenhower's body had reposed the burial at AbUene, Kan.,
in state tor nearly 24 hours in W e d n e s d a y, was escorted
the rotunda of the U.S. Capitol. thl'OIJBh the limen! rites by her
There, last Sunday allarnoon, son John- Nixon's newly-ep' President Nixon eulogized him pointed u.s. ambasaador to
as a ''goo:! and genUe and kird Belglum-and other memben ot
man" who hated m one aiXI the family.
was hated by no

one.

~&lt;He personJfied the best In
America," said Nixon, who
served under Eisenhower as
vice president !rom 1953 to 1961.
"It was the character of the
man, oot what he did but wllot
he was, that so "''lltured the
trust and al!eetloo o! his own
people alii the people of the
world...
. -. ·~He .._ was. . 1 ~- Rf(Jilu~t Qf
America's aoillllll of ito Ideals,
driven by a CCII!IIulsloo to do
right IIIII to do well •. a man of
deep faith who beiieWid In God
alii trusted in his wllL .. a man
who truly loved hls country IIIII
lor whom words like ! r and democracy were oot cliches
but llvi111 truths.
"He made Americans proud
of their preolden~ proud of their
country, proud of themselves."
Mamie Elatnhower, Ike's wife
and "sweetheart" lor more than
52 years, cried aoft1y in her
hankerehief when Nixon aald
Eiseahower ]ILit be!ore his
deeth Friday had told her:
"I've alwaya loved my wife,
I've always loved my children,
I've alwayo loved my grand-

White House

Moment of
bute
Tri

:::/o:er~:=:u;~·;

ST!J;:( HEALTHY,
YOU'I) BE II ER./

ruec1.

Filed

At

one

point,

as

Nixon

referred to Eisenhower as one
of history' a few authendc
heroes, John looked down
soiicltiooaly at his mother, who
called her husbm:l her whole
ll!e. He foolll her left llond,
tucked wder hla right elbow,
ani patted lt twice. But she
took no heed, contl111ing to
stare atralght ahead at the
casket.
Not alnee the 1963 fllnirai ol
Jolm F. Kennedy hod 10 1111111'
world leaders aaeombled InWashlncton, AmoiW them wore
Gen. Charles de Gaulle, Prealdelll ot Fronce; Admin! Lord
Louis Mountbotlen, npreaenting
Britain's Queen Elizabeth; Maraha! Vaelly L Chiukov of the
Soviet Union; King Bao.douln of
Belgium; Prince Bemoan! of
the Netherland&amp;; Shah Reza
Pahlavi of Iran; Prime Minister
John Grey Gorton of Auotnlla;
President Ferdl- Mareoo of
the Philipplnea; Olaneollor Kurt
Geo1'8 Kleslnger of Weat
Germaey, former Primo Mini,.
ter Noboauke Klahl ot J...,.,
Prime Mlniotar Pierre Elliott
Trudeau of C.Mda.

Victoria Tyler
Di
es on Monday

Face 6 Charges

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TEN CEN,.

,.Yil'

They feel close to Ike

Proud to be
From Abilene·
ABILENE, t.., (UP!) - The world puaed by just be)'OIId 11M!
IIIIJ'th end ol town. There, oo lntara1ata Highway 10 tho can 1 a • ,
tnocko hurry aloag with .. urpnt bun, for tar plaeea W. · '.
Demor ml Tapoloa ml Kana1 Clt,y.
''
Here, lneldo a INICtll'e Wl'IPIII'W of •lll"l'OIDihv alopoa ot b-a . ~
Kansaa earth and new ...- patches of wlntar - t , U.a eV81'7bod,y' o hmoetown.
,
When tho man fr&lt;lll AbO-, Dw1!iht D. Eiaemowor, come• f11a1o.
ly
h1111e
nlllo~ ho wW be ·~ frlendo as "-""' be ~
..._., - - I'
left.

Tue....,

From the Wagon Wheel Cafe
down by lt,e lrelgbt depot.
where the Ilimen! tnlln wiU
reach journey's ell!, to the
cemetery oq tJoO, hill, where lola
father Davia IJIIf hla mother Ida
are burled, the town lila
rGIDied as a boy Ia 1Wl ..Uly lola.
uthiyJail clo11 to U.," one
man llid ot tiHI - • • here.
"He Wll ~aya 10 proud to be
from Abll-."

W0 ID80 l£aps
Off TrOCk,

Is Killed
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va.
- Mra. Carl (Elm) Gililaple,
22, ol &amp;ou11o lJde, waa dood mo
arrival !lmday n111ot at l'lell·
1111 Valley llllljlitlll followlna an
8:30 p.m. truck aeeldent about
18 mlleo lOUth of here oo Stale
Seeoaanly 29 (Utllo 18 M lle
Creek).
Sl&amp;ta pollee IIIII the viollm
_lnatruekdrlvby Carl L. Gllllaple, her ~~a ..
bind.

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WASHINGTON (UP!) - AI Pre.- N1m1 ~ ldla
m.WWol~""ln tho huJhod Clpllol ,.,.,..., SllndQ ~ 11j 11;
amne
_..,,t D. E!MMOIJor'• last 1ltal&amp;htl were ot ~
die• for the ....., dlviiiiGn otour time.
'
In I wlce that cracked occaaa-Ily- omolloa, --~ "t
said of the m.. whllll he aerWid tor oi&amp;bt yeora 11 vleoo ,pr'!f•"•,:
dent:
"He was aenulnel¥ punled by !re~~ZJIIIII b7 hlotota~=; ;
he wa1 .' -'&gt;le o! It hlmaelf.. He coald
qulta ""
It In olhora.
·
.
"The last Ume I aw him Oast week at Walter Heed .JIGto ·
pl110 thll was what he talked about. He wa1 IIUIIIeol b, 11o1 •i
hltred he had """" In our tlmea. ADd he laid tho tldQI lioi.•
llllt'ld needo moot ~ Ia OlllentandiQIIIId .. abUit.Y to ,
tho- ponoo'• point ot Ylew IIIII aotto heta him becaulitlll '.
dl~a.
.
"'nat wu Dwi&amp;ht EiaenhoWer."
"

N....

Poll••

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Biograph"' Announced p:::r.:ed~U.:..U:~.:

aa~cl.dlataheeSalur·

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'I'UIOdlr will! 1 cll•ra .~ -

201 to

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Rendered
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Pomeroy Women.

••• SO . IF viWANT.t.

col~

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Car Hits Bridge Rail

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STRONG EARTHQUAKES SHOOK PARTS o! southernEID'opeand
the Middle East todioy causing hundreds of resldenta to nee their
b..,..alnpenle,
A llllllbor of atruclur•s were damaged or destroyed M there
wore 110 lllllll8dlata roporta o! lalalltles. The Selsmologicallnstitute
o
at Uppaala, SWedon, oald a strong quake occurred of! the Saudi
WASHINGTON (IJP()- French
Anblan coast In tho
pui of the Red Sea measuring about 7
1
President Charles do Gaulle met
1.1
•
&lt;!II the -~~~ Ri.chter Seale.
withPresldentNixonattheWhite
Houae tode,y.
Gover/101" to join memorial service
In ivashin&amp;toro for the ~era!
CINCINNATI - GOV. JAMES A. RHODES alii other omclals
wiU participate In a memorlalaervlce lor Gen. Dwight D. EisenhtliNr : ..
WASHINGrON (IJPO _Gray
~· Tllloaday mornlngwhenthetrllnbearlngthelate president' a body French president arrived at the
and erect In the chlllsprlngwinl,
'.1
IIIII bepn rolllnia backward to Ablleae. Kaa. 1 make• a stopover.
White House - h entrance at Omar n. Bradley, general of the
NEW YORK (UFO - United White Houae. lnaddltlon, tho book the brakel failed.
.. Earl T, Banoea, In charge of arrangements lor the service, 9:58 a.m. (EST) for the 10 o'clock Army, lifted his hand In a Ql&amp;- Preas lnteroatl,..l alii Amorl- will contain exeerpta from mNrl. GIIUaple IOQIII from tho
IIIII tloat In do!erenee to the Eleonhower family's wishes the mem- qopoinbnent,
verinll alute.
Clll Heritage Publishing Co., Joe., orable EioenloOIJer opoeehea 81111 veblele loward a hilh bank Into
Orial PJ'IIlll'llll w1U not be held at tralruolde, but wiU be In tho notuoda De Gaulle stepped from lois
Before him Inched the flll8 • a111101111Ced ~ that they will proclamatlooo.
which the truck owerted, crush·
of Union Terml..t.
black Citroen ooto a red carpet draped casket ol Dw11iht Davl~ shartly )I!Koiiah a memarlal blThe 1nnouneemont asld the IQI her to doallo.
and was sreeted by Nlmo. They Ei.-er- claaamate, com. OSJ'IIIb)' of former President fint coplosoflthepreoaeawillbe
Damap to the truck waaosticloatted briiii.Y while belrll pioo&gt;. rade and five-star general.
llwlcht D. Eleonhtlwer.
rel8rved lor readers IIIII U - at $150,
tocraphed, ttoen De Gaulle tllrned
The moment of trlillte, snatchThe book will be har&lt;kover en of UPI aoioacribiQI new_.
The remolna he" " - removabruptl,y and walked Into t h e eel by leleviiiiGn camera&amp; In the and be readY for dlatrlalllm In en alii broode~stero. A boofo. ed to tho Molor-91ov.,. Fmwsl
White uou.. , trailed by Nlxlln. silence ol the eeremany ootalde aboul three weeka. Ita title will otore edltloo aloo will bedlatrli&gt;- Homo from where 10rvlcu wiU
: One perooo wao IIUuted In an the bridge.
The two ....rerred In the prt. the Natlmal Cathedral !luoda,y, be: "EisenhOIJar: American uted, lollowlng Initial ahipmenta be . _ e d Tuoeday.
accldira at 8:ll5 p.m. lillllrlliJ
Dowell was cited to Galllax&gt;- vate living.quarters of the Wblte lVBS • special kind of """- Hero."
to UPI aoioacribora. Amoune•
from the man who to now the naTh a memor lad volume wW ment of orderliW procedureawiUm
lw,.
»ecau;······•moeooe~~~~o···oooo
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1111 !Jtlle K.YPr Rd., ~· Us Municipal Court April 2 m Houae.
ill a mile north ot Rt. 1, accont- a charge ot l11111fe operation.
11oo Mala• ba...
White J!oueo ol!iclale dea...U.. tlon's only ,aurvlvlng five · ,star eoallln 144 - · ol taxt lllllplc· be mode IIMII by tho Ohio VallCar a driven by Kalhr_,
lni to the State Highway Patrol.
ball 111m - , aehoduled
,.. Jo ed the De Geulle vlelt aa a cour- genera1 ·
tw'es, 1111111' in COlor, covering Publishing Co.
Calvin R. Dowell, 22, Mlddli- Zimmerman, 18, Coal GroYe, teay call.
for today at - e aplnat Vln1n the CJO!et of hla quarters at the story ot Eieemawer'o ..,.17
, port, tRd!ered laceratlooo In the llld Cherles W, Fr..,non, 28,
toa ~ Hlllo SChool hla
Ft. Myers, VL, earlier In the ll!o, hlalong military llldpotilc
crash ~ waa ~lit Holzer Choapoalte, aides~ ott a hili"
- peolpoooed.
weekend, Bradley, now 76, r• career, aniblo retlnaoeat,...a.
liledleal Center, First Ava., llld crest ot Rt. 218, one IIIII two •
C.eb Run-.. llid the
called the man he came to town It wW Include llltlcdad taxt IIIII
releaHd.
Ita
......linwiUatartTue•
- . . mne• roowto ot m. 553,
to help bury:
picture coverage ot hi• atata a.The patrol aid Dowell was at 3:30 p.m. 9Jnday. Both care
1111 at hmoo oplnat I . . "He Wll eminently suited to ...rot,
loeadld · north. lila car struck a ware 1oeavl17 damage,1. No charge
Tilo ......... wW tnlwl to
be an allied commander. It's aot
The frlllll c:onv wm carry 1
brldp ~ There wtl !otiYJ was
Local
easy sometimes, and )'011 may tOUJ'oCOior picture ., Ellemower
&amp;map to ·the car and 11\lnor to
Carl driven by John lL Lewrecall lhat ooe of our eonlor In hi• 11 .,..1 tar pntril'o ~ VletXJria T)olar, 77, Rt. I, Duo
JIIQ the with Vlntoa 11
Ia, 58, Belpre, and Gerald D.
commanders alter World Wor I form.
tor, died Yondar monoiJWinVet- lolilloo11our• •
Two PomeroY women are tac- aald thet 'God pray lloat 1n 1111'
u-orlal
Qa~
in
· ' "•o• R•• In e, -"'•·•
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Am- ita more ~n l251U•• e!'lna .....
,
llllololtaL Sloe
8:t5 a.m. !londay on Rt. 124, 1ng between them alx chirps
-•
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w
Hod I _
.... he •···FlVI.DAY 'fORECAST
.!"',·. , ~,· at
,
. " ' .•. --id"nl
lib&lt; tonthl ol a mlle wostof~-- fotlowlna an apparent fight at the tuwre wor we don't liave alllea.• tnltiOIIJ wiU be a tllleclal plco
•• p . . - n
r ,,...
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....,.p Hl-7 Nita Club 11801' HobiiXI Sat- Ol coureo we don't feol that way lure lOll&amp;!' '"' the Aldl-, Ka,.. -~ Charlea, tloroto ..,brothora,
w..-...._.lnOblo
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No. 31.
,
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now. The more olllea - lone e. II - .·"'-aide ~ tho Wor•• ani lloo oi&amp;IAri.
..
, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . lol'~'•
The Pltrol asld bdtao vehlelea --.. ,,.....
tho
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!Ill II aunl""""'- 1
'""-I
iial~ for IIIIOU:O f&lt;ilnll,. ...., heided north When Lewia Ml\ry Allee Samuela was
-..r yoo are.
I;'/or D hero llld 3Wo Prelldenl
.... ., - - • • • • br....., fttRaday, and
1
IIM!IWII..r...,...,.tho
lilri
char..,a with i'lllliatlnl arrest,
"But Ike waa --.rut In ot the United Slata1 waa niHil. Ill. ' lluter.
iliiJ .b1 l',..II'O.Y·
alter a atleqlpted to paaa llld Nea" lntoxleatloin 4JOd dlaturbing t h 1 thll he aot eYel')'boolr to '"-'k There alao will be pictures of 1&gt;f'lllll'll eeniCII wW bo held wed
....... , ld
.
llarted to make alert !urn. No
.
lllptber.~
n. .... otlowWcrldWarDc- WeciNodayatlp.m.,.~lioo'*"'
,. ,-c ·ace ont 011 W, Main st. - waa· InJUred, llld .., char.. pea., and chai'P~'!Il~catlon ·- · ._ "'"'
~ tla "'-at u · ...w. """ ~
ltllo2o p, m.
·
- and obltnoctiQI anil reailtlnl 1
...... word• were ror "lb." bot acenea.
·
""" "'"-••
1
. •• Howaid
l..q failed
otamaee ""' ·
or ware flied against. the mll1tirJ D11D with wllom
It wW ._,.a florwanibyBruce
JIW.
....... hi. •...-..1-'- ,.___. ... It
Ma
•ton, ...._. - ... M~
. . BradltJ emetod Will 1'111111111 CIIIGII, Pulltltr ,.........._
""' •a
walllrJ,
"' ... ·
'""""' ..,.... "'"'
"""' "" ~""" ItII. But he
.· oliO ......e ot Ela• ....,.....,... llutar, F'riendlllll)'eallillll&amp;'ll
~Into the1 rear of~ ear aao- MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL lrito c:ullody b7 Melga, Depuly
.,....
hiltlll'lan ..-1 'H11191: .idltor ot
·l ied
Patrie~ A. Smliao, 1..q '. · .-oMiilliJQN$ SATURDAY_ Sherlflllobort Beq10. Bath were ........r thepolltlelall:
A.,.rleaa Hili~ ,'l!o!i'..ra- a.m.'l'uoldaJatthetWra!'- ·
IIGIIaiil U..t1i11 atopp;dtomake v..trl Ni" a. ·
he oo perSOpal ,re•..n...
In t1orae cl4oaoed ~.. u..·will boiQ'KalinltliDaYia,bl•
tilam:'
·, '
· ·
· ce ·~· . cine. .
T~ oherlll'o''...,. _ _ _ .BradltJ IUIIIIIIIdupwlllt~
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' · , . . . . DISCRARGES Sli-TURJ)AY-'"·"·lh0 """
l&gt;t
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the
aliO'Itftltad .cor- ,...,_.
na- thoilabl lola . ~ -,~ ,ni·~.,.....
~L :rEIIP$
. lfCil'lld t0 ~ llmltllcar and DOlle
ADMISSIOtjS SUNDAY~ None. riollua ~r, 114,"' a£ li P - reqow lllldlor:
, , ' \ i' ' . - ' ·
·
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1'he -.....~ lnl'li!amlr'a
. , lil 1""""a. No!, l~a 'fltrere- . · D'"~uARG·ES ···~~Av _ 1an:1,· 1111, 1naxeeutl
, on tor line•.. · .:·-.' wal(ven frlendlt: 'Ho
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TheiiL
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cO.ta.
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' .,.. ll:lelidl aulll. EVOIJIIodJ PrntdoiHilal · .._ . . .Mtl to lltll L m. lio!IIJ tMI 82 ...
" : .,,, '
liked
him... .
EJ~·· 1110 . . . " .. . - · · ............1tldu.
' .~

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Radio, W/S/J
T1res,Crulsto
VlslbilitJ Gill
· Optional Equl

MONDAY, MARCH 31, 1969

WASHINGTON (UFO - It waa tho do.Y for ll.)'ing farewell to the

Winners otier Cano

v.a Entlne. '

1 .,

"good ard pnUe a!-.1 klncl man" called Ike.
The lloneral of Dw11iht David Elaemower, 11101t unlveroalb

WHAT WITH THE NE\1
ens, probably few Meigs r~
lapidated horse barns on the
The long narrow row o
33 were an eyesore. They ha
The Meigs Fair Beare
large new block barn which i
lt'll be quite an improv~
ture will be ready !or the I~

~

ation Says Farewell to the Man C~iled, lid~~

••

Incidentally, Mrs. Ada
need additional plastic cont
with that problem, just call l
speaker Thursday at a

\ ;;;

DeVoted To 1Jae ll&amp;lerelt. Of 1Jae Meigi·MfiMHI ..hu

VOL.

flU the baskets•

,,

·I
lfl

1. \

'

ate the baskets from plastl

I

. ,.

~

.,

This project is real wC

u

'

0

Last year lhe gro14J prbeen limited this year, so 01

(

e

'

The smallest known marJUJ)Ial
Ia the Planlple 9JbUIIoalma, a
llat-okulled moueo o1 western
Aullralla Which reaches a length
ot lea• than three Inches.
. 1

lC you haven•t placed •
Auxiliary or the Syracuse f
out of luck.

•

Now You Know

'.

dada.~ ~1ntJofiiH ell~

w-

'

._w•-v•-

w_..,_,._...,...

Ben:"

c

.

I

,

' ,! I

.

\

'

'

'1t'a a f..Ung that he

rea1l1 "

meant l~" seld Mayor Deltoa " .
B. Hadel, "when he used to •
CIIJI8 lack ani aay it was belllili ,
hmoo qaln. That ~
trust he had In ua and t1oe
!eellng he had fm- f)OQIOie here . '
tl'lnamltted ltaelf 10 that
everybody in town leola 11M .
tho)'.. met him jllftormiUJ. .

"Tioll rubs otr oo ~...-~=~~
Thil trust pta to "'
dllll't care a yoo
Impressed me aboul the 111111 '
wu that he fell a freedcxtl loon
he felt 110 place else.
"I aot tho shock of my lita ..
one ~ when he wu -~-.~
Prealdent ani I """ aoiJW to '
work about 8 o'clock 81111 theN
he was all llooo walking doom
by the corner of Cedar llld ,
Secood street Just looldJ11 at
thirvs.•·
Zeke Storer came Ult fr&lt;lll ·
Sunday aervlces at tho Firat
Presbyterian Church llld membered:
u'There was a spot lnllde U.
old Callahan' • conlectloaei'J,
the place la aone - · tllot ""
used to call 'Ike'a cornar." Ia
hia early miUtary days when lie ·
would return hmno, that'a ,
where he'd alt ani visit will! ·
Callahan IIIII Paul l!o,yer lid
his other croale&amp;."
You drive Into thlo town .of . '
8,000 -een olli • laahiGIIIIjl
wblte frame houoea 111th lola
YlrdL They Une tho maln:Jrar.
Buckeye Avtllle before It
becCIOIOI the bualnooa 10et1a
In front or one ot then loouMI,
a woman oo hor way to chareh ·
remembered Ike'• motblr:

WheD the DIWI ant CIM
during tho war tllot he ..U .·
Plli111 t1oe fl,...tar ,...., .·
11

raM.
Mro.

my aunt

Emma llload

Eleonhower
thauglol about theL She ~~·
'Oh, It's all rlgtot-luat
•• he's IOod to tho
That's how 1hlwu. u

�..

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H·uman · Man

.

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3 - The DalJ.y Sentlool,

Middlcporl-l'omc~oy,

•

•'

GRIM IN DEFEAT, Gen. Gualav Jodi center chlol of
staff, slgas Germany's uneoadltlonal surrender.'
.
Wben the Germans had
signed the document of surrender in the SHAEF war
room, they were led under
escort to Ike's businesslike
little office, located in a classroom where we awaited the
confrontation, standing behind
the klieg lights and Army

Signal Corps motion picture
cameras set to record the
scene.
General Eisenhower sat
quieUy at his desk, Ranked
by aides.
Officers conducted the German delegates before him.
They stood, a wilted, dejected

JUBILANT IN VICTORY, Geaerala El~eahower and S.afoparov eelebraled lhe German aurrendor wfth a bear

••I·

trio, facing the man who had
brou~ht down the Third Reich
in rwn. They were Col. Gen.
Gustav Jodi, chief of staff and
longtime frlend of Adolf Hitler, Adm. Hans Georg
Friedeburg and Jodi's aide
Maj. William Oxinius.
'
Ike turned to Maj. Gen.
K. W. D. Strong, his intelligence chief and a nuent German speaker. "Do they know
what tbey have signed?"
Without waiting for translation, Jodi nodded: "Ja."
The supreme commander
then rattled off a serles of
te~hnical instructions dealing
wtth the manner in which the
surrender was to be implemented. Then he snapped:
"Take 'em away."

EDITORIAL
.

'

J'

- (.r l'

l:ke Was There.

.. ...

· If the essence of Dwight David Eisen·
bower could be summed up in a one-word
epitaph, it would be simply • "Ike."

Here was the profe&amp;sional soldier who

~se

from relative obscurity at the beginnang of the greatest war in history to
supreme command of the greatest assem-

blage of_ armies in history, who later
s~rved

h1:S

~~untry

for eight years in the

highest position of responsibility any man
can attain.
Yet he was always "Ike."
Looking back from the turbulent present,

the years of the Eisenhower administration
seem calm and stable. They were not. but
if they seemed so then as weU as now. it
was only because of the presence of thi s
immensely popular president in the White
House. There was something about this

most 1,1ncommon common mao that in-

I

'

spired confidence and faith that no matter
how beset the nation was by crises and
chaUenges, nothing dire would happen as
long as Ike was there.
Beset the nation waso
Those were the years when the cold war

was really frigid - when a man named
Khrushc~ev came to power ln Russia to
strut the world's stage for a time with his
rhetoric of nuclear diplomacy and ballistic
blackman; when a man named Ho Chi
Minh was mauling the French in Indochina; when a man named Joe McCarthy
was finding Communlsts in every State
Dep~rtment clo.set and setting neighbor
suspiCIOUSly agamst neJghbor; when a man

named Faubus in Little Rock , Ark .. was
the gravest federal-state crisis
smc~ the Civil War ; when a U.S. vice
president was being spat upon in South
America; when the world hovered on the
edge of Armageddon aS war broke out in
the Middle East: when freedom-loving
men everywhere agonized as Hungary waS
ground under the heel: when the nation
P.lunged briefly into its worst recession
~mce the 1930s; when Americans indulged
m an orgy of self-doubt because Russia
~ad launched something called a Sputnik
mto space; when words like "agonizing re·
appraisal," "brinkmanship," " U-2," "summit" and "missile gap" were part of the
yoca~ulary of reproach against the adminf~menting

POST-PRESIDENCY ROLES were genUeman farmer golfer a d Jd
ta
President Jehn10n made a coaapleuous point of teeklnj bls pred:Cea:.r~! :o.!:i.••·

Officers took 'em away and
my notebook records that Jodi
tripped on a camera cable in
the bUnding light Illuminating
his disgrace.
Ike sat there for a few
moments - moments which
ticked on silently and seemingly for an eh!rnity. The
kUegs bathed his balding dome
and etched shadows on his
grim visage. He was obviously
rapt in profound thought.
Then he leaped to hls feet
grinned broadly and em:
braced the Russian general,
Ivan Susloparov, in a victory
bear hug which seemed at that
moment to have more slgnifl.
cance tban ever was realized
by postwar United States relations with the Russlan ally.
Four years later, in a re.
!axed U!te-a-tete wlth Ike In
his presidential office at Columbia University, I asked

him what his thoughts had
been In those pregnant moments just before he noeeived
the German surrender-were
they of victory, home, the
future?
Well might the architect of
thls most notable of victories
have dwelt at that moment
upon Its uniqueness and glory.
What other general had led a
motley intematlonat army to
a more decisive end than this
-the debacle of Nazi might ln
leso than a year from the D·
Day landings in Normandy?
Eisenhower had been
slouching in an easy chair
with one leg thrown over
arm, as we had chatted about
personalitios and events as we
had seen them-he from tbe
supreme command and 1 from
the worm's·eye view of a correspondent.
At my question he smiled
leaped to his feet and com:
menced to pace.
&lt;~You know," he saJd, "I
haven't thought about it unUI
now. But what was going
through my mind was this:
Thls man before me, who
looked on the surface Uke any
other human being, had collaborated with Adolf HJUer to
klU 40 million people."
Thu1 worked the mllld of tbe
man, Eisenhower, who
"looked on lhe surface like
any other human belllg," Ill
hll moment of .p-eate1l 11111facUoa, a -moment wbleb
ollea said trauee1ded lor blm
aU the other creal day• wldclt
were lo befall blm.

the

·•e·

EISENHOWER

Blanl{~

By VITO STELUNO
UPI Sprts Writer
On a sunny October afternoon
in Los Angeles tn 1965, the
llbled 'career of Sand) Koulox
en:led ln defeat ln the secooo
game of the World Series.
But tile two GUYS In the
headlines that day (no one knew
at the time that Koulax would
never pitch again) were Jhn
Palmer alii Wutle Davis.
Palmer pitched a four-hit
shutout for Baltimore and Davis
undennlned Koulax's pltchlng
effort by making three errors in
one JMlng.
Neither Palmer nor Davi~ has
been in the headlines much
since. Palmer has never done
al1)1hlng to match thai pilchlng
perrormance and Davis has
seldom done anything spectac~;
lar enough to overshadow the
bluOOers ot that game,
This past weekeOO 1n Florida,
Palmer and Davis were again
In lhe apotlighl Again tills time,
things went well for Palmer and
were a disaster ror Davis.
Palmer, plagued · with arm
trouble the past two seasons

during which he's won just
three game&amp;, Pitched eight
scoreless Innings of three-hit
ball as the Baltimore Orioles
blanked PIU.burgl&gt; s-tl
Davis, who hit onJ.y ,257 alii
,250 ln 1967 allll968 but seemed
to be ftnali.Y living "' to his
potential this spring, suffered a
hairline fracture of the right
arm Saturday nlght when he
was hit by a Claude Raymoftd
pitch. He was replaced by a
rookie
named Bill Russell
Sunday as tile Dodgers lost to
I he Braves 4-2.
In other games Sunlay,
Cincinnati outlasted Houston 6-4,
St. Louis topped the PhUlies 5-3,
Boston edged Detroil 6-5, tho
While Sox Jurned back Minnesota 6-4 1 Waahington beat Kansas
Cicy 5-l, Montreal nipped tile
Dodger B tesm 7-6, san
Francisco outlasted Clevtland
l:l-11, the Cubs drubbed Oakland
8-3, Seattle blanked tile callfor·
nla B team 2-{1 and california
topped San Diego 5-3. Tho
Yankee-Met game In Fori
Lauderdale was rained out.
Among the highlights Sunday

were the hitting ol Pete Rose
and Tony Perez oC the Reds
with three hlts each; seven
iMlngs of no-hit ball b)' the
Braves MUI Pappas and Cecll
Upshaw; a two-run gamewinrdre homer by the Carda'
rookie first baseman Joe Hque
ott Chrla Short; a gome-wlmi~
pinch triple by Duane Jost!i)hson
ot the White Sox; a grand slam
by Celilornla pitcher Rlli.Y
May; and Rlchie Allen had a
typical day as he made an error
to set up three unearned rillS
but drove in the Phlla' three
runs wttll two hits lncludi~ a
475-!oot homer.
Palmer looked like he was
gol~
to become 000 of
bo.seiJaii'B great pitchers "hen
he beat Koulox In 1966 and
be&lt;ame the youngeat pitcher In
World Series history to toss a
shutout at age 20. Those were
the days when he wa&amp; called
"Pancake" for his habit ot
eating pancakes for breakfast
before his pitc:hlng aaslgrments.
He was 15-10 that year.
But since then he's been
plagued with arm trouble. He

won only three games in 1967
and didn't pitch an inning in the
majors last season.
Thls RPri~ he's worked 28
IMlngs, all..,ing 22 bits and
aeven runs atkl he flashed his
old form SUnday aa he set - ·
the Pirates on only tiJree hits.
DaYis always looked like ho
had all the locils to beoome a
·~eratar but he never seemed
to lul1llt hls potentiaL His
biggest ram~ was swiiwl~ at'
bad pitches as he almost never
got a walk.
CHECKS 'll!OmiES - B.
Bot thia apring he seemed to
K.
Armes, who WQ1 the Pu,ppy
have flrall)' matured, he was
Class
or the Ohio &amp;ate Foxwal~ for the good pitches to
lnmters
Aasoclatlm bench
hit and was teadl~ the Dolgera
show
Friday
night at the RCIY •
wlth a ,325 average and had
al Dak Park archery buildstolen live bases. But J'I(M he'll
In&amp;
Ia looking at some ol the
be sidelined for tiJree to lour
trophioa
In the event, appar.
weeks and manager Walt Alston
•
entl,y
wondering
which he wruld
said, "the sad part is tlat Willie
receive. 'lbe event concluded
wlll have to start all over again
wttll field trials oo Saturday
when he's able to work out
and
&amp;Jnclay. B. K., son ol Mr.
apin."
and Mrs. Roy Armes, Jr., atleoded the bench shoW with his
Davis was disturbed at
grandfather, Roy, &amp;-.• Min..
01
Raymond's pitch. There was
er8'1!11e.
- Sentinel Pbo.to.
just no excuse Cor that pitch,"
he claimed.

125-118, on Philaclelphia'• home noor and the
Krlcks went w BaiUmore where
they rallied w whip the Bullets
119-116.
PhUadelphla staged a desperate rally in the 0na1 nve
miootes to close from 112-IOlto
119-117 wltll 1:47 left, but Sam
Jones alii Jdm Havlicek each
made two !ree throw a to keep
tho Celtics safe. Jones and
Havlicek Onlshed .the night wlth
55 points between them, with
margin-over the " startled Los Joooa taldlW the honors w!tll28.
PhUaclelphla's Btiiy CwvrlngAnieles Lakera.
The Celllcs puniahed the 76erll

By United Pro" lnterMUonal
The underdog&amp; coralnue to
have a bsJI in the NAtional
Basketball Aasa&lt;latlon playoffs.
Both the wlse old Boaton C.ltlca
and the brash· New York
Knlckerboct&lt;ers hold 3-0 toad• in
the besl of seven .....,.Utlons
over the llvored Philadelphia
76ers and Baltimore Bulleta. In
. the West, the San Francisco
Warriors were waiting for
lontght In hopes of plckiJW It&gt;
their tllird wln- and a 3-0

Bench. : t he Golden Bov
.J from Binger

Henry Captures
National Tourney
'

MIAMI (IJPO- College rivals
Bunky Henry alii Bob Murphy

and Stockton 6~9-70-75- 280 to
collect $7,200.

"got the order mixed lt)N
during a ragged J'OLDII and it

Henry's victory was another
ln a aeries of 111ittle man"

cost the pudgy Murphy $26,350
In the $200,000 National Airlines
GoU Tournament.

victories on tile Florida leg of
tile PGA tour tills year. Flrsttime winner Tom Shaw took the
Doral, Ken Still the Citrus, and

Henry. a golftng rookie trom
Valdosta, Ga., whose prior
clalm to sports rame had been

TAMPA, Fla. (UPO- Base- record for most games caught
ball's newest Gol'den Boy is a by a rookie, 154, Koosman's 19

pleasant, plnk-cheeked kid from
Binger, Okla., whose biggest
regret ls that he never got to
see Mickey Mantle play,
"The closest J ever came was
last HPrlng.'' says Johnny
Bench, CtnciiVllltPs red hot 21year.-oJ.d catcher tor whom the
Reds wouldn't take a million
bucks in cold cash right now.
"The Yankees came over here
for an exhibition game with us
but MICkey didn't play that
day."

There are three reasons why
Bench would 'reel more oC a

kinship

with Mantle than
usuall)' exists between one
bsUplayer and another.
•Bodl come ..from Oklahcrna,
Bt~r iiel~ ·oven itnaller than
Commerce; Bench already ls
be!Jw pegged as the brightest,
m~st exciting prospect to hit
tt~e scene since Mickey and it
was the ex-Yankee Qerstar
who triggered the bo.sebsU
career ot Clncy's new No. 1

wins come out exactly the way
they did- second.besL
II yoo tine "' all the
unbeliew.ble comments made
about Bench erxl to end, he
could retlra right now with the
· biggest ooo-year scrapbook in
history.
He has no intention or doing
so. He's a rarity in this day and
age ln that he can handle all the
raves. They don't go to his
head. He's succeedi'* at the
toughest Job of all. Tougher yet
than coping with that good
major league pitching. He's
keeping his equilibrium and
some or the game's greatest
stars had trooble doing that ln
the past.

Onl,y lhe other day, Rube
Walker, the Meta' coach,
noticed Beneh across the field
and said to one ol the Reds'
coaehea:
"There goes the ftrst$200,000
ballplayer."
Earlier this spring, Bench
sent a baseball over to be
autographed by Ted Wlltlams.
The new Washington msnager
provided the slgnsture and later
found out Bench had asked for
il
••was that ball ror him?" he
asked a newamarL "Can you get
it back for me? 1 wanna write
something else on it.''
The ball was returned to
WiUiams and he Inked tile
words; "To a tuture Hall or
Farner for sure."

Buckeyes Begin
Spring Practice

Sophomore Brian Donovar
could make • posatbte awitel
trom oO'ensive gant to center,
replacliiJI John Mulbach.
llayoa Is considering shl!tlllf
vetersn Mike Rad)ke from end
to linebacker to take over !rom
Mark SUer.
Ttiree starters wUI be among
HUNTINGTON, W. VL (UPO
-A Cleveland englneerl1111
ftnn has been contral:tect by
Marahalt unt..ralt,y to determine the cost of a propo&amp;ed
reDICMieltllll protJi'l!n for the
•cliool's Falrftelcl Stadtiun
,here.
·
OaJ!orn EJWI~r!Jw Co. wiD
be J)ltd $5,00(1 ,10 maht .lhil
' otud¥, which •II! IDdude Ia.......~ tbe oiadlum'a .ileat.
lng· -clt.Y trom n,ooo ·1o
D

~.ooti.

'

five who will mias spring action. Included in that number
is SO,Phomore star quarterback
Rex Kern, recovering !rom a
shoulder operation.
Others recovering from oper·
ations are defensive tackle
Brad Nielsen and hattback Tim
Wagner. Veteran defensive hslfbsck Mike Polaski and IIJ)llt end
Kevin Rusnak wlll be playing
bo.sebsll while their fall teammates are on the gridiron.
FIUing In at quarterback will
be Ron MaclejoWaki who subbed
msi\Y limos lor the oft-illiured
Kern during the past season.
One of his lovorlte catching
targets, end BUI Long, Is gone.
"'Mace" will have to rely on
Don Lambka, a 195-jlound freahman who also is a linebacker
posslbllit,y.
AJMJihor regular among tllo
mlaslng wut be cl&gt;oCIIPialn Dirk
Wonlen, lolled In the Purdue
game, and replaced b~ sophoPOMEROY LANES
more Doug Adams.
MONDAY MIXED LEAGUE
llayes said the tw-eek caliMarch 24, I !H;9
fornia tuneup before the Roae
Pta.
Bowl Game wben OSIJ delealed No. 4 . • • ,. .......... 59
Soother• Calllornla was tanta· No. 6. , , , ........... 58
· mount to spr!Jw practice.
No. 1 • . , . • , ........ 52
The Bucks are llvored to re- No.2 ..•••••..•••••. «
peat aa Big Ten cham¢ons and NNo. 35 ..•.... , ........ 40 i
as the Ulp team In the MUnn.
0.
•
35
.Tbey have !'(Ill 11 straight conTeam high series - No. 6,
ference games and 14 overall. 1905, Team High Gomo- No. 4,
101. High Three Game Ind. - w.
Boyer, 568, and J. Bo,ylea, 522;
JAPANESE WINNER
Hlsh St~le Ind. - C. Bo,ylos,
SAPPORO, JljlOn (UPI)2U and M. Searls, 199.
Hit'O)'Ukl Eblhara of JljlOn
scored a u111nlmoua !$-round
decision over BrasU'a Jose
Severino SUndal nlsht to win participating In hla fifth tide
the •cant World Boldng bout, received ldentlcal 76-66
Auoelatlon version or the scores (rom the referee am two
judges.
IOlwelaht ~lonshlp.
Eblbo.ra, the iormer el'amplon
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STILL
In politics, Eisenhower llste.. lo Rep.
lieratd
tell, and Sen. •;veretl IJlrksen In lOOP pollcr
dl&amp;cuulon Jut year.

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Davis-Warner lni..

Weekend
Spo rlS
Summary

COIVDT OPD AliAS lifO

~~&amp;
SCORES

"*""·

Pomeroy Cement Block Co.

INCOME TAXES ? . .

No need to warry if Uncle Som soya ,.;,u'•••.,,~~;·~1~•

'

little

short rhla time. You supply the •
and we supply the money. You may ::1.•• to get rome extra co.sh too, for your oW:n
· ·
. . u._. Give uo a ' call.

'.:t;·

SHAlES ~
"CONES •: .$UNDAES .
IANANA'!sPLITS: ,.
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points, alii control*! fie
boards witll 19 rsln ihr ·
Frszier ended with 28
Dave DoBusschere with ft 1111 '
Bradley witll 22. Kevla k 1111
ry paced Baltimore w!tll 2t tllill
Monroe had 21.
,,. " •
The Knicks and 111111......
resume play Wednooday .JIIIIII
ln New York.
The fourth playoff ...... •
progreso- AU.nta veroua 8u
Dieg~ sees the third . . .
played Tuesday night In SM
Diego, with AU.nla hold!IW a J.

He was three \II on Murphy
By Untied Press Internatlooal
going Into lhe 13th hole. That'a
The Indiana Pacers""" t he
where he went Into the drlnk
Eaalern Division title o1 the
twice.
American Basketball Assocla"I guess you can call lt an
ti.on U1e easy wa,y ~ night,
easy eight for that one," said
The Pacers were idle but won
Henry, meeting the press with
the crown when Western Divihis pretty wife. Katie, alkl twoslon champion Oakland knocked
year-old son, Brad. ''I hit my
What Would Happen
Kentucky out or the Eastern Dl- real name- SELDOM USED-is secol'¥1 shot with a three wood
vision race by topping the Colo- George.
and landed right in the water. I
II A Fire Destroyed
nels 119-112. Oakland won all
"Murf and I were on the dropped it out and then hit the
YDII Home?
six games from Kentucky thl&amp; practice tee this morning and ball right over the green into
season.
we agreed we should finish one- another water hazard. I took
Could you afford to buy 0 ·
In the other two games, the two in this thin,g," said Henry. two putts on the green."
new home or rebuild your
New Orleans Bucs won their "He said 'Yeah, it would be
At Georgia Tech in 1964--67,
home:?
You probably hove
12th straight game by defeat- good, but let's not get the order Henry kicked 50 consecutive
"fire
and
extended c:overing the Los Angeles stars 12:J.. mixed up.' "
extra points to set an NCAA
age
..
insurance
with your
111 to clinch second place in the
Murphy, the 26-year-old native record which has since fallenmortgage,
but
is
this enWestern Division and Miami or Bartow, Fla. who created a
"I'd never been ahead on the
ough?
This
insurance
beat Mlmesota 126-118.
~nsation in golfdom last year
final bole In a pro tournament,
might only pay off IM
Doug Moe scored 31 points when he won more than $105,000 so I guess I felt a llttle
mortgage . See us for ad-J:r:&lt;·~
for Oakland whl.le Loui~ Damp- as a rookie, carried a five- ' nervOus," he Mid about going
VICe.
ler had 29 in the losing cause stroke lead over Henry into the into the 18th hole. "When I
for Kentucky.
Onal round as the leader at 1:&gt;- bogeyed II I tllougtrt I'd had il"
under par. But he hit lnto the But Murphy, meanwhile, had
sand foor times Sunday for a 76 bogeyed the 17th.
Phono 992-2966
and a [our-way tle lor the
"I felt shaky at every tee,"
secc:n:l-place money.
Henry added
114 Court St.
Abo one-stroke behllll the
wiMer and collecting $13,650
each were Australian Bruce
Crampton, Dan Sikes, who
eagled the 205-yard 15th hole
and californian Dave Stockton.
Saturday
Henr~ posted a 69-73-66-70REMAINS UNBEATEN
278 In the !our-&lt;la,y lourllUitent,
ARCADIA,
calit (UPI}- the second richest s!Alp on the
Majestic Prince remained un- PGA tour. Murollv l'ad a 6~6beaten in six career starts with 68-76-279i Sikes 70-76-72-279·
a seven-length victory in the
$132,200 Santa Anita Derby at
Santa Anita.
DERBY WINNER
HALLANDALE, l1a. (IJPI}Top Knlghl ran a'II'BY !r110 tile
field in the stretch to win the
$121,800 Florida Derby at
Gulfstream Park.
QY Uniled Press .,ternatlonal
GIMENO WINS
East
NEW YORK (UPO- Amres
W. L. Pet. GB
Glmeno ot Spaln oullaaled
Arthur Ashe of Richmond, VL, x-lndlana . , . 44 33 .571
6-1, 6-2, 3-6, 6-8, 9-7, to win the Miaml • . ' • ' f1 3.1 .539 2~
.\ladl&amp;OII Square Garden Chal- Kentucky . . . 40 3.1 .533 3
lenge Trophy Open temls Mime- . . , 36 U ,468 8
New York ...• 17 59 .224 26'h
tournunent.
lltJor .. Glltdoorl u tt lhOUitl bol ~ West
BIANCHI KILLED
oller cultOm atyllnl In a "'-1 IIIII' of ....
W,
L,
Pet.
GB
LEMANS, France CUPOlftll - - cot- to matcll IIIJ home
Italian racil'lg driver Lucien x-Oakllllld • • • 58 18 .763
Add I toucll of lwtaftlniU to pltlot wftit Nanco'l
New
Orlean•
..
45
32
.584
13~
Bianchi was kiDed when hla
IICiuiiiN
V.LIII rtps-vtnyt IIIUCtural ,.,-. YDenver •••... 43 34 .558 15~
Alii Rmneo smashed inte a
ltotM
lllcomH
mora bllutlful ••• mora luaabll •••
clump of trees and dlsintegraled Dallas ... , .• 411 35 .533 17'11
... PI'I*IY ¥111111 ... up with IIMcO - . . . .
durllw a practice run lor the Le Los Angeles •. 33 43 .434 25 .
Clfl Ul tocfiJ llr I lnltllfltl...
- - .•. ' . 22 54 .289 36
Mans 24-!lour nee.
x.Cllnched title
~~ TRIUMPHS
!llndl,y'a Resultl
MIAMI (IJPO- Rookie l!unk,y Mlamll28 M!nneaola 118
Henry won tho .,000 NAtional New Orleans 123 Loa Angelea
Ill
Alrllnes Open aolf lourllUitett
oakland
119 Kentuck,y 112
deiiJ)Ite two bo&amp;el's and a triple
The Departmenr Store of Building Since 1915
(OnJ.y gamea acheduled)
bogey on his final round.
TWO STROKE WINNER
PORT MALAMAR, Fla.
(UPI) - Kathy Whitworth beat
Mickey Wright by two strokes
to win the $17, 500 Port Malabor
lnYitatlonal JIO)I ·. ...,.mont and
register her third conseeuttve

a

McCLURE$

"·

Y:ork.
·•.
Reed .... high gun 'wltlt ..

tournament with an eight on a
slngie oole.
"Bob and I played against
each other rlght through college
when he was at norlda and I
was at Georgil Tech,n sald
II en r y, whose grarxlmotber
nicknamed him uBunky" after
a comic strip chancter. His

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starting forwardl, , . •
erltlcal fourth pme ~•..,;!\
Bostoo. Walker . . .
llpment In hla 'ri&amp;M ..._.
durlJW !!rat IBU ac*"
· '1'he Knlcks sqiJ8Iidlr:lill'a ,. ..
point load and ~ 1 . .
Bullets by 80-70 diii'IIIJI·Iilp..._.
perlod, but the QIP ....._
. alii raboundlng o1 Will'- 1 . . . .
brought them bo.ck to lo-&amp;Ur II* the 5:17 mark of lbo ,,..
period. Walt Frazier ... 1
York in front. 115-llf,11111rllll
left, and .the Knicks · .,...
leading 117-116 with 35 I..Z $
remaining to clinch It 1M ...

Sunday

Johnny Bench has ool.y one
full year ulller hls belt and at
his age he might be forgiven ~
such tlllnga as Walker said and
Williams wrote had a terdency
to make htm swagger a bit.
But they haven't al'¥1 he
doesn't. He•11 conducting himself
the same w&amp;,y he did a year ago
when everybody was saying big
things about him, too.
••t appreciate what's been
said "ery much," he says,
lookirw down at his spiked shoes
the same way Mantle did when
he rtrst carne up, "but all those
things won't help me hit
tomorrow. That's something I
have to do ror myselt"
As In ManUe's case also, it
was Bench's father, Ted, who
helped him most in his
formative baseball years. Uter
two other ballplayers, Link
Curtls and Steve Boros, did.
Curtis, a teammate at PeninsuIa of the carotins League,
helped Johnny with his confidence, aJXl. Boros with "a
whole loua things about life"
when both were with Buftalo.
Without getting lC) on any
sc.pbox. Johnny Bench lets you
know h• has every intention of
being one of bo.sebo.U's greatest
catchers ever.
You ask him what i[ he
doesn't make II, and he s!Alps
yoo right there by teUlng YOU
straight out: "I'U make it."
The great state oi Oklahoma
has never produced a President
or tile United States but
bssebo.II people don't hold that
against i~
WI'at other state has come up
with fellows like Carl H.-U,
the two Waner brothers, Dizzy
Dean, Mickey Mantle. .. and now
Jolmny Bench'/
Besides, as the Reds' catcher
says:
'"This is better than beirw
President, anyway."

Local Bowling

.Jill!l ...

ham lopped all -~
but .the 76era may . . . . . .
Chet Walker, 000 ol lfillf

Ray F1oyd, whose last wln was
al Ml,._olls in 1967, cajltured
last week' a Jacksonville Open.
0 edge.
With only $1,485 In his pocket
for hls first year on the tour,

kicking footJ.Ds,
MurIdle Pacers
by one stroke Sumay to
win the Orslillace $40,000,
Cop Division despite a dloaster al tile 13th
. hi. :':Hi:ee~may::r:trbeh~l~etl:;:lghmanw~tetor
=·~s while
: r : . ;:~t :~h 00~;:
£"L
"'
..
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,
.
"Murf the Turf"
\__.uampiOnS p ever wln a
PGA Murphy was swinging at

~~

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Jimmy Colbert the Monsanto.

major

6-loot-3.

The general ·and his lodv, on illustrious
to · .
couple \ mo'. re familiarly known
.
the world PS "l,ke ond Mamie."

Sunday,

dUJq~ed

Today's Sport Parade

Strtclly by accident.
COLUMBUS (UP0 - The
"I was five years old and nation's No. 1 college tootball
watching a ball game on TV team began dragging out lts
when I saw Mickey Mantle and footbo.U gear tnday as Coach
heard he wa 1 trom Oklahoma," Woody Hayes prepared to put
Bench recalls. "I made a., my his champs tllrough the first
mind right there I was golng to day ol sprlng practice.
be a bsUplayer and mske tile
The warm\JII pericxl Cor the
maJor leagues."
Bucks wlU elll May 3 wttll the
Jolmn,v Banch made it even intra-squad preview game,
bigger hla first year than
For once, Hayes has no tro.
Mickey Mantle did. They sent bte oo deciding who wilt ftll
Mantle . bo.ck to the minors the w.cant spots. He has 18 re-during hla first sea&amp;OII but turnine starters, 40 returning
Banch msde the All-Star team lettermen and 14 freshmen to
last season and was named count on, and rew spots to filL
National League Rooki&lt;Hif-theThe only &gt;acancles crealed
Year.
by graduation were offensive
Some ari\IOd thai Jerry tackle slots, of!enslve center
Koosman, the Meta' 19-game and llnebo.cker,
Chuck Hutchinson at 245 and
"!Mer, shoulcl have gelten the
rookie acc:olade, but when you Dave Cheney at 230 are likely
conalder Bench bstted .275, proopects to nu tile holea ereknoctied In 82 I'WlS, hit 15 alec! by tackles Dove Foley and
hcnera and set a maJor league Rufua Mayes, both tlnt.-round
draft choices of tile proa. Both
Hutchlnsoo and Cheney atand

Yet they SEEMED Hke calm years, because Ike was there .
Now the general has lost his last battle
after besti.flg the scythe-bearer in encoun:
ter after encounter. He went down fighting.
he surrendered reluctantly. More than thai
can be asked of no soldier.
Dwight D. Eisenhower is not rated as
one .of Americ~·s. great or even strong
presidents. and 1t Js nollikely that another
ge.nerat.ion of historians will differ with
lh!s estimate. Of one thing we can be certam. however :
H, i~ their stu~y of this man . his life
and h1s accomplishments, Americans of
l~e future. can come at all close to knowing
him ~s h1s contemporaries did. they will
call h•m "Ike."

Pirates, 5-0

phy

boy.

Istration.

Celtics, Knicks Triumph'

Reds Win, 6-4

Orioles
•

o .. March 3!, 1969

, DAII¥ ISU

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' LOANS Ill' tO $Mao
Available Throveh OVr 12S ·I~ DiM

C-M ;compa...,

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The' Dally Sentln~:l, Middlepm·to:l'tlncl'Ol', n .. Mnrrh

:lt,

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1969

Ground
Rules·
:
upon
Stau er' UniOn, Agree
.

PT. PLE.\SANT - Ground
rules apparently .designed to
1mooth negoUatlons - not an
agreement ondlfl'erences- were
amouncecl Saturday nlgbt In the

•
•
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buUer

~

atrlke whi&lt;h besan Feb. 16.
Repqrt1 that uan agreement
has been reached" proved pre-

I

Chemical

Company

mature when stauffer Plant Man-

ager T. R. Friar Issued a prepared statement to news media

(

NeaQ!io~ ioword ia aellleat Pleaaant Polilt Resort Satur- action IIC)Ugbt In e!reult court
dll)' night that ootllned an appar- aplnot maso plc!&lt;etlng and oilier ment m., beSID' '111Urodi.Y at 3
ent circuit court endoroed coo- alleged Illegal acto) will beproo- p.m. In -~ meatlna at Pleaaant
cord between staul!er and Local eculed by staul!er Chemical Co. l'lllht Reoort colltd between the
Company attornqs had gone ~ ~ Howird Steele, comUnion 859, United Rubber, Cork,
Linoleum and PlaJtics Workers Into court before .Jildge .iameo iniP!anor tit the Federal Media·
Lee Thompson Frl~ In que&amp;i . ~ 'llld CiincU!ator¥ Apney,
of America 'AF L.CIO.
o!
the Injunction. Privata oes- ·• ·Moa.ma In Friar'ipobUe state·
The ureetnent apeelfied ille-.
olons
with the judge conllmled , ~; or from the union, howevgal unlonaclivlt;vwhichwlllnotbe
permitted and stipulated that none throullfl Frl~ and mu&lt;h ol Sat- or, tnieoled a ae!llemat would
o! the delendanta named In CivU urday. The otatement laBued Sat. be read.id Tburodl)', or even
auarOIIIeed that one or both ol
Action No. 2350 (an illiunction urclay night wao the resulL

li

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a

· Parochial School Aid Proposed

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the psrtlea ...Wd bavo repro...,_
tatl.ves there.

Friar oa1d 38 plarieaemployeea have lJeetl maintaining Pf"'
doctloo and have been arriving
and loam lbe plant by hellcopter.

Saven female clerical workera have net been able to cross
the picket llneo for clays, he said.
In the momoranclun ol agree-

[, RIVER NEWS

J

mont amounead by Friar theae
po1n1a were made:
staul!er and the Union by negotiation bave agreed upon certain rules Of conduct to govern
them and their members and em ..
ployeea during the doratlon of
the strike In an etrort to redoce
friction be!Wsen them and prevent violations ol their respective rtgbta.
Union agrees to refrain from:
- AIIB&lt;kln&amp; aaoaultlng, CDercing, lllreatenlng, orintlmldatlng In lilY mamer IIIII' employee
or other person now working or
desiring to work for stautter ,.
now or in the tuture, at ita Gallipulis Ferry, WestVIrglnln Plant,
or doing buolnesa or desiring to
do buolness with staul!er at said
Plant,

gregatlng or plckellng In, at,
around or about stauffer' a P~
ert;v and premises In numben
in excesS ol a total o( seven per ..
son•. and not to exceed four perSOM at any one gate or entrance
to the plant; provided, hoWever,
that the Unim mlij" have up to
six perscma at ond abwttts headquarters trailer.
·
- Refrain rrom certain other
picketing practices.
- Doing IIIII' unlawfUl aet to
prevent staul!er from conducting
Its bualneas In a )awfUl manner,
staul!er agrees that:
- n will not prooeoute or

...

Elaht ehlldren were confirmed, twO were bapCIZed and nine
adults wero rocolved Into memberobip dorlnl Palm lblda¥ aervteOI atthaTrlniiJUnlledChurch

11111 or Intimidating au· u n I 9)1
members present ai or ab91J!
staul!er'a property' or preml'lf!l
In accordance with tbli - ••
ment.
...
- n Ia further qreed tha'lft
the event that OilY minor vloliliona ot Ibis agreement oeelofo,
or are claimed to ~ve occlired by either ol·the pol1101, ltio
part;v complaining ol them lli!ill
promptly Mill) the other, 11111;*"
.......st ef[orl ~ be madt;w
the psrtlea, apd thel&lt; r~·
live repreaent&amp;tlvea, to
or settle such .matter betwftll
them before ta1dnl other acUm
with respect to sueh mlqor v\,!-

wore -

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MARY 'JUNE'S
SHQP

BAKER

BBAIJTV BRIEFS

It

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OPTOMETRIST

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HAVE THAT

..

SINKING
FEELING

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troubles. We'll prepare, dou·
bl•-ch.c~ ond guorontee the
of your return. Our

Easter

CKcurec:Y

ar

Family Affair
SHOES F~;-i. EN11Rt
FAMILY . _
·

Late loo~ . . .

oomfon ..

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about your

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........ llr., Nl:l.

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dlo!,RI...... G.

Al'am, am.

Mro. Jalln . G,.

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JNI'Inl!f', lllr7
. Cecil R. Kllelj

l

' por,~ 'L,

·. Cl!'i G. ~ ~ "· .'!~
.
llatold E. ~ ~..

low. low pi'i•~:l
'

5 p.m.

. llrL

...... CllariH

•.~·.""

You know the routine, Late night call, you
to ansWei
phone
. '""
CRASH! Pandemonium. Well you can prevent it:'lrom ever hapJll!ning apin: 1\;t ·OUr ,;,
Starllte• phone with its glowing dial t~at will' guide your aim in the dark. '
, '' ·;' t
And make a cat happy, .
{
, .. '' ,,
·

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...

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"Chri 81' 1 Footalepo on I h e
Flroi Glad Euler DB!'" wal tho
~ medltadon u&amp;ed by·Mro.
Hlil'l' tee Rialillf at a mlodnl
of ibe One-Won-One Cia II of the
PomOiQY Firat Bapllal Church at
TUESDAY
the J19me ol Mr, and Mrs. George
. SPECIAL MEETING, ~atarn . Sldmar Tburoday nl&amp;ltt.
Band Booster,,. Tuesday, 7:80
Mro. Balley opened her """"'
p,m. at high 'ioehool. Concert band tiona ~ having ea&lt;h memberparents especially aeked to be' In allen! - e r while abo read
present. Maxlnl Whitehead, pre- a prayer alldng for deliYef.aace
oidant.
from the .. ol habits and
STATED MEETING, Middle- euatomallld gtytng tbankaforthe
port Muonlc Lodge 383, F, and forgtveneoa ol treopoa&amp;el and
A.M., Tueodi.Y evening. 7:30, Re- alno. Silo read a poem, · ''T h e
Firat Eaoter Uly."
freahmenla. Carl Taylor, wor,
,...,,
Mro. Skinner presided at the
ahl..
~ msatar, Invites all Mae- meellng In the absence ol Mra,
terMaBORB,
MEIGS T
~~•
Allilrey Young. The teaeher'a
EMPLE, ,, •• an Sis- thought given by Mra. Carol Cook
tero, apvlng psrt;v, 7:30 p.m.
ate
Tues&amp;ly at the haJJ; menMr 8 was on the Gene
creation story
ot all templeo of the dlatrlct In~ Col, Frank Borman on
vlled.
.
POMEROY CIIAPI'ER 186, Or.
der ol the Eastern star, 7:45
p.m. Tueodl)': &amp;I the Maoonlc
Temple.
~IETY of Christian Service, Fl!terpriae Untied
Metbodlat Choreh, 7:30 Tuesday
nlllfll at the home of Mrs. Frances Carleton.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY
SHAKESPEARE
Club, 1:30 p.m. WetlnesdaJr. Mro.
CARR I•&amp;
Louis Relbel'a home. Devotions
ITS TOOLS
by Mra. Dale Smith and the
INBID.I
program by Mra. Jed Webster.

ATTEND
Mr. and !ln.
and children,
Barbota,Wei'ela
for the wedding &lt;I(
niece, I!Aithi
tor of the Rev. and
liam MeOmbor. Roy
voy accompanied the FiiiCjl . . .
ll.v
for a vtait.

Sr,

AMATEU9 GARDENERS Club,
Wednesday, 8 p.m. aoelal room
o! the Columbus and 9JUthern
Ohio Eleetrle Co.j Mrs. N an

Moore to preBOJt the program.

Teen-Age Democrats
To Meet Thursday
POINT PLEASANT - The
TAD's, Teen-Age Democrats.
wilt meet ThUrsday night at 7:30
at the Carpenters Union Hall on
Jackson Ave., Aprll3. All mombero and woold-be members are
urged to attend.
There will be an ele,ctlon of
ollicero and allowing o! a film
on the use of drW&lt;s. esoectal.
ly LAD, "lnal..,t," which will
be loaned by Lawrance Mohr.
MEETING POSTFONID
A meet!•• ·~ the '"ddleport
·~ ••
""
Literary ClubamouncedforWednesday haa been poalj&gt;oned.

.,.

COMPLETE
WITH DELUXE
8-PC. TOOL SET
"EW

EUREKA - pJU')\_(CU,,
VACUUM CLEANER

INGELS FURNITURE ·.
OPEN FRI &amp; SAT NIGHTS

.,~"W~or~th)'~i~o~th~e~Lam=~b-Th=at~W~a~•~::~::::=~--~~~~~~~~~·~~~·~~~~~~~~~

:2~:9~0~a~.m~.~;~AI:l:led=·Aa~'lll=and~do~~wn~~~~~~~~·~-~~L~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:

.N• W.

=•· .,. - -..

••

FURNITURE ~:

O.D.

the oehoOio. To open the meeting Bhe read scripture from 111allh and Mro. Audrey M!Uer

News, Events

,---·

Our Starlite phone glows in the dark.
So you won't answer the cat.

Filma oo alcoholism w e r e
llhoWn dorlnl Frldl,y nl&amp;ltl'l
meetlnl o! the Middleport Wom.
en'o Chrlallan Temperance u...
tm at the l!8atb United Methodist Qmr&lt;h.
Entitled, "Alcohol and Social
Prcitlems" and "Alcohol uxt
Peraonallt;v'' the ftlma were pre.
oontOd by Mrs. Nan Moore, PfDgram leader,
The propoeed counaellng service for lolalp count;y residents
wltll alcohol problema lobe oponoored by the Ohio Depertrnent o!
Health waa diaeuased. It waa re..
ported thai the Rev, Gi"' Hlleo
ol tho l'l&gt;mero.r United MetbDdlat Church had been &amp;elected to
head up the local program and
will be given three week• o!
tralalntllaU. tbio aprlnglnpreJ&gt;o
aratlon for llle wvrk.
Mro. Joe Turner, prelldent,
thai the booklet "The TriJ&gt;o
le Threat," baa been placed In

Apple Grove

Storys Run

BUY
FLEX·

Show Alcoholism Films

Preaentlag the opeclal muale will be tha choirs of the Heath
United dtreeted by Mra, Fultz, the Middleport Cllirch of Chrlat diMra. Oliver Ml&lt;hael I e f t
gave prQer. Mra. Miller waa at
rected by Mra. IIAIIIIIOth Sclteo, and the a.ptlat Chur&lt;h directed by Tbursclal nigbt for Memphla,
the
plano for gruup alnglng of
llro. Fraacea Bearha. The Rev. Max Domhue wUI be tha -'&lt;or. Tenn. for an -ed visit with
''What a Friend We Have In
hit mother, Mn. w. -w. Bennett,
Jeaua.~
LOOKING FORWARD to tho "DB)' For Homemakers''?
and her brotb~ra. c. w. BenSaveral round - robin card o
lolaqaret Grtmtba, home ecooomlca extension agent, ....,.,.., 11011 and WWiam W, Benllolt,
were
olgned for ohut-tns. Ml"
that It will be scheduled smnetlme alter Eaotsr. Slle'o ouw In the and their famlllea. Mra. MlchBII
Marpret sauer thanked the
procosa of aecurlng speakers for tho three oectlooa which will be went eopeclall.v to be with h e r
poup
for remembrance during
otr.red. You mil)' remember thai last year tho&amp;e attending were gl"' mother who ta Ul.
hor
recent
hoapltallzatlon.
tD 1 cholc:o ot two ol. the three Interest areas. It was quite auccea~
Ml11 GeiUrvieve std&gt;vt waa
Cookies
and
cof.fee were ser1111, IUid will be carried rut the oame Will' thia year,
the weekend guelt of Mr. and
ved by Mroc Moore to Mro. Iva
Mrs. Claode Husted. Sle reoWee
Turner, Mro. Elizabeth Slavin,
INTERESTED IN BUYING ONE of theae decorative mDk cans to with Mr. and Mra, Ralph BrowMrt, IBabelle Wlnebremer, Mrs.
put yoor umbrella• ln'1 They come antiques, enameled, decorated er at Porlland.
Nora HamilUln, Mrs. Hazel
will! decals or orlslnal deoiBJIO, however 7011 wont. Orders for the
Mr. and Mra. Bob lloefli&lt;h
Board, Mro. Bet1,y Cline, and
CIDI mil)' be placed with Mro. Richard Karr, Mldcllaport, anytime and JIIJilO were weekend peats
Mrs. Beulah Wbfie.
aJltr 5 p. m. Her telephone IWIDlber Is 992-5367. These are the cans o1 Mr. and Mra, Mike llam'!bleb are being decoroted by XI Gamma Mu Chapter 111 the mer, lAU Am and Kimberly,
Annqunce Services
Slama Phi Sorortt;v for the nee market to be hald laU. this OPring. Co1um1Ris. Tho,vvlslledwltbMra.
· Alma Tbompaon, • aur&amp;lcal poYRS. ~. E. HARLEY will celebrate Eaoter In Atheas with her tlfllllll Doctor's lloQital
At Trinity United
lOll IIlii llunlly at the home ol Mro. Marpret Davia.
•
Dr. and Mra. Jmal!8rley and son, Jim, 17, will be coming from
Holy Week oervleea at the
SprJngflelcl, llld will be joined in Athena by their daughters, Fraacea,
Trlnlt;v United Church &lt;Jf Chrilt,
a ,p.Ior at Ohio Unlwrslt;v, and AM, who gradualed.from Ohio UnlPomeroy, have bsen amounced.
varslt;v last year and to """ taldag training in patholiJtiY at John Hq&gt;o
Mro. Lester Roullb and assl&amp;tud
lolaunclY TburodO)' wiU be 00.
kino Unlvarslt;v,
Mr. Roollb In &amp;eltln&amp; cabbege, served withtablecommuniO[I oerMr'.:_Ema Roulh, Mrs. Glad)' a \'lees at 7:30 p.m. "Sanctu11"
Sdelds, and lfra. RendaU ROO. from st. Cecelia'• Maaa will be
BY MRS. HERBERT ROUSH
erta called oo Tall Boston ibt- preaenled by the choir with Mra.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Early
Rooah
clay
at Sl. Joseph Hoopltat, Park- Marvin Burt aa tha soloist.
beauty regimen oullod just
and
Mrs.
RQY
!luck
calltd
at
eroburg.
Frida!' nigbt at 7:30p.m. Good
lor her. Trial and error 11
the ollly way you learn hasle the Hodley Funeral Home, New
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Foster Friday aervtees will be conductthln(o abeat yooraeH, but Matamoras, TUesday evening to are ill,
eel, and the Easter sunrise servallor they're learaed, keep view the remalno of Mro. Edith
Mrs. Grad1 Craig o! New liB- lee will be held at 6:30 a.m.
them In mind and applY Heiney, Aftentllng funeral serv- VBII Helgbta ealltd 011 her par- At thai aervtee the choir wiU
lbem-and 110\ldng else!
·•·· "Early In the Mom!••"
lees at the Hod!oy Funer al Home ent s, Mr • and ... Fl-,. Nor
·~
for
Mra.
Heln111'
were
Mrs.
Dolria.
Worahip
will
be
at
10:25
a.m.
•
ly Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas
Mr. and Mrs. Rerochel Norrio with special mualc by the choir
Llberl)r .is. ttbebe only tblng Hlll, Mra. Dale lUll, Junior ealled on llle latter's mother, from llandel's Meoalab lnclud1
1"1 the "Hallelll,iah Chorus" and
unless you Wolfe, Mrs. Leo TIIJ'Ior, Sandra Mrs. Edna Stl lea, ..o...
"""" s a pa..
to give It to olh·
Slain."
Alien White, and POUy, Mra, Ruth DonohUe, pi
Mra. Don F~. Mr. and Mro. tlent
tal. at Veteran• MemorW Ros. I &gt;' Hey Helney;Vo'.oanct~.ii Floll'41" U.. and , Mr8u o·l!l&gt;m Manuel"•
Forra and Mrs. Greg Theodore. ol ~acuae spent SWiday with
•
Mr. and Mra. Early Rooah en- Mr. and Mrs. Lealer Rouoh.
terlalntd recently In honor o!
Mra. Arnold llupp, Mrs. Jameo
their daughter Eileen's b!rlhdal. llupp and Jimmy and Edward
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Rey Hupp spent a week with Mro.
Buck and Pam.
Kemetb Baas and daugbters at
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Pearson Albany, Ga.
took Obey Laodermllt to HuntThe w.s.c.s. of the local MetbIngton MondO)' where he waa at1- ndllt Church held a potluck dinmilled to VoteranalloiPital there nor at the home of Mrs, Dallas
lUll recantl,y and -ed carfor medical treabnent.
Mra, Veab Wolfe, Mro. Jolin pet roga. Attellding were Lucille
Ord and daualrter went to Mlddl.. Rhodea, Beaate Paraona, Maqle
town, 0. ThUrsday where Mrs. PwBh, lolabel Rouoh, Dolly Wolfe,
Wolle will visit bar ion, Aarm, Bertha Robinson and Domta Hlll.
till Saturda.r. Tbea Mra, Wolfe
and aon wUI BJ&gt; to Dixon, m.,
for
a Ylslt with their daughter
New Zenith "Zenelte" can m.1ke life fun .lj~Jin Precision ampllfi.
and slatar Odesoa.
c;alion from :! Mir:ro·ltthilt:l cir~-u tts . Wl•iMh\ only 1/fo ounce o~nd
I(Uod for mrn;t mild fuue· ~ - Coml• in rw a dl•mnn,tr.,ttlm ol Zenith'i
Mr. and Mrs, Early Roush,
Rj!W Zl•llcllt&gt;, II nuv he ju\1 ti'lhl fm youl
Mrs. Veab Wolfe, Mrs. Ruo- [HOSPITAL NEWS]
eetl Roullb and Naney, Glad1s
Sdelds, Florence Adamo &lt;alltel on Mrs. Herbert Roush.
Holzer Medleal Center, First
Mr. and Mro, Russell Roullb Ave. Vlsltlni bouro 2-4 and 7.8
and family, Mr. and Mro. Dana p.m. Plrellta only 011 Pediatrlea
Lewla, Mr. Mdlolro, Dorsa Par- Ward.
_ . ealltd at the home of Mr.
Admlaalons
I 100 ...
MearlllfAIOI.
and Mrs. Pole Dural Saturda1
PUbUcatloll ol admlaslons Ia
evealng at Rav01111100d, w. Va. problblled Willi further notice.
:J,... Mill tun ...,,II ~lid''" litwttutt
to aee Mr. · and Mra. Cheater
~ Pllnl ...... fM It IIMie lo ..,.1111'1111 I dltn·
Blrtbo
Durst of NUeo.
Mro. Dan C, Amlld, GobanMr. and Mra. Charles Gaaldll na, danpter, 10:12 p.m. Satur..
of Mlddlep&gt;rt opent the w - do,y; Mro. Ernest F, Morrow,
at tbelr cabin here.
258 State St., son, 11:35 a.m.
Mr, and Mrs. 11011 l!lfllo ol lbldllo; Mrl. l'alll w. Jarrell,
Smllo, 0. open! a few clays with Rav......,., daualrter, 2:29 o.m.
the .._ . parents, Mr. and
Dlaebarps
Mra. Cbeatar o. Bmlott, Mro.
Flqyd C. Bonnell, Mro. Verne
'
Blazer, WWiam C. Boord, Mrl.
Jilt
litw111 IIIII Opt11 fw. luslntts
Jolin
L. Brown, Mra. llarVIQI J .
llmpapor advertislng can
Bulb, !fro. Looll M. CaD, JeD.
makt a Wv di11t11111e ... Gik
o1tor L. Coleman, Mro. Fnnil1111 Faoller, lfrl. Alberta B.
4111' suuesslul bullnessman.
Goodman, lfro. ArthUr A. 1!811,
Hs's !tamed tfrotlth Ppeillfrl. Grace lllx, Mra. Anna
ence that lbt Mit way 11 ·
11M Jealdno, Lafe _.,., lfra.
Libel ~. !fro. Jaeab w.
llllh ,_.,. an4 ltrinti in
IAI, WIIUr G. IJndamood, Lawcushlmels Is ltnugh 11111$liiiiiJ, !fro. Loo F. llc. papor •vllllsf!lll.
Caalbo, a,ora. MeG~. Jol1n
,..
""~· !fro. '11loliw B. .
Set far ~rstlf.,.newspapor
........
1111"Gtlv Mlllllr, • .,
. advt!liilng pays far Itself
B, OW.., Tllla M. 9oMia,lfro.
~7 In
lilies, lnlieased
;. ; ..,uta !!., ·~ ... ~
' II J lw, Mr.. Glcqe· !allli,
. ;~. , ... ~fldl ..•
WWiam L. ~CII' · Mrl.
'

Ro•lnson's Cltaners

4

"Jili!e

black bowo with thalr white robea.

......

BUY THE VERY BEST

•I

Pemles for ada!lled children
were taken bY the aoolytea, D..
vld Harrll and James Rosen- ·
bawn, A Palm !lmda,y .....,_
waa &amp;l•ob by llle Rev. Mr.
Perrin and tha aervlce concludtd wltll
On, Ride On,"
the benedlollon, the ••Amen~ with
eblmoa and the poollude.

a

ABOllT CHILDREN'S CHOIRS, three Mldclleport ones wUI be
olnglng at the communlcy Good FrldaJI aervtee to be staged by the
Mlniatartal Asaoclallon at the Firat a.ptiat Chur&lt;h at 7:30 FrldaJI

SHIRT
FINISHING

Assembly Honors General

Mu'"

Jn the afternoon clus were
Nancy
Crow, lnpid !!8wley, DobTh&amp;re """ palm, ll&gt;:an\:hes for eV817bocb' at tha Heath tllllled
llethocll1t Clmteb Palm SWiday service. illiao a opoetal projoet of bie K-.d1, Corel Lawla, Mike
the children'• choir directed by Mro. Bernard FUltz.
Glimore, Kem,y Hiarria, Joe RoeFor IIUJIIjhl """• the children have fllthtu071tvea pmdea for enboum, and Mart;v Saell&amp;. EupabDa at lllstr rqular reboaraal ae11lona, Sunda1 morning the alter pno Hiallley and Ingrid lllwlo,v,
wu ,.tornect with vases ol palma. A duster ar.......,eDI of polma chU- ol Mr. and Mra. JWaene
wu featured In fnlat of the pulpit and from that the children pu&amp;ed Hawley, reealvtd theriteao!bapthe palma to tbo1e In the congreptlon.
tlam.
11 The Palms" WIJ the aathem preaenttd by the cldldrea who
Roeelvtd Into tha membermlp

GAUGES - GalllpoliJ, lll.u
and t7.2 l'UMing 16 feet of rollcause any criminal prosecution
era; Moa181&gt;J110fl', Pl. Pleasant.
...
of IIIII' kind against IIIII' of the latlon.
all c&lt;lUIIf;V lneome tax coliectlooa 24.32; Pomeroy-Maoon, 21.00:
COLUMBUS (UP0 - 0 b I o In the state from kindergarten to er education lD die nation."
defendants named In Civil Ac.. No state in the nation reeog- for -lion and all alate IIKIIl• lllllton, 1.111 falling; KanaWha
would become the !lrst state In pool-graduate work.
tion
No. 2350, peodlng In the
Jntrocluellon o! the key bill nizeo all schOOl aged children ~ for edoeatlon and divide the Falla, 5.67 falling; Charleston,
the nation to oiler direct student
Circuit
Coort o! Mason Count;v,
total by the liU!Iber ol achool 19.19 riling. UJIIdon. on t h e
aid to parochial IChOOIS under was 'set tor the Ohio House of nearly oo O(llally ao we propose aged students in llle c&lt;lUIIt;v.
for
or
on
accowrt of an,y activ..
sbl; Marmet, nmntng one-hall- Standing, assembling, conthe ~ealion bill dra!led by Gov. Repreaentatlvea Tuesday. State to .do, •• he added. uThe concept
it;v or alleged misconduct on a
That would eatabllllb a per fool of rollers; Winfield, running
Finance Director Howard L. Col- Ia revolutlooary and woold moke
Jamea A. Rhodea.
SAME DAY
picket line engaged In by them,
pupil subald.Y and eacb stu- 2 feet ot rollers.
Combined with other admlnle- lier said the effeetsofouchaprD- Ohio first."
or
IIIII'
o!
them,
at
IIIII'
time
priBOAT MOVEMENTS:
SERVICE
Under provisions of Rhodes' in a nonpobllc ochOOI would have
PT. PLEASANT - Phllilp P. or to the execution of th.ls agree·
trallon proposalo, Ohio would gram would •'do for education In
that
aubolciY
101
aolde
for
him.
GALLIPOLIS
LOCKS
Jane
In At 9 - Out At 5
Spurlock, 6, died here Sonclay ment.
after student aid to every person Ohio wbal the GI bill did for high- edocotlon proposal, c:ourrt,y coun.
Then, count;v edocstlon coun- T. down 4:30 p.m.; Elaine G.
eUs ol education would distribUte
mornlnjal the homeofhlsgrandu.. Our ,,.. llo•klnt L•t
Stautter and ita management,
ella coold either hire the teach- up 5:15 p,m.: S. M, Jenks up
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Phillip aupervl"sory, professional, tech..
era for a private school andre- 10:30 p.m.; Solv&amp;,)' up 1:25 a.m.j
McGuffin, where he had resided nical, and other non..bargalntngquire them to teoch otate-dlrect- steel Clipper down 2:20 a.m.;
216 E. 2rut, IIIDfHI-r
the past two years. He had be- unit employees, will retrain from
ed subjects, or - m the stu- Brimstone Ull 4:30 a.m.; BobbJO
90 Mill St., Ml ..cll•,_,.
come seriously 111 last May. harrasslng, coercing, threatendent oubald,y to the parent for Jo dolm 5:25 a,m,; J. S. LewHe was born July 24, 1962,
apJ&gt;Iicatlon to tuition fees at the 11 down 5:40 a.m.; Esoo Penn·
in
Gallipolis, son of Richard A.
school ol hiB choice.
lflvanla up 6:35a.m.; Jlm9JUth·
COLUMBUS (UP0 - The e;qJlain the blll was called for than 59 days a year.
Spurlock and Mrs, Peggy ~ur­
One oC the key bills t4) for a
The IIICJIIO)' oould not be uaed em down 9: !5 a.m.
I 0 I
General Assembly convened at early Tueiday morning.
lock Tredway, both ol PL PleasKANAWHA RNER- Marmet,
The blll would make Ohio the Cinal reading Tuesday was Sen. to pay for rellglous Instruction
4 p.m. today to honor former
ant, formerly of MlddleporL He
Preoident Dwl!lht D. Eisenhow- ftrat state in the nation to offer Michael J. Maloney's measure and oould on!¥ be used for cur- Fort Dearborn down 12:30 a.m.; was a member ot the 0\urch of
direct l!ltuclent assistance to pa- to delay until ·1972 a sll)reme · rent operating experttel. Non- Alan R. Merrill don 1:30 a.m.: the Nazarene and was a tlrst grader.
Reoolutlma were to be a&lt;lopt- rochial schools. It also would court ruling to the Board of public schools, which do not get o, F. S.earar up 6:30 o.m.; er at the Ordnance School
ed by both hoo&amp;es during a give county commissioners per- Tax Appeals ordering uniform money from propert;v tax IJIIUage, Wln!leld, loll. state up 2:40 o.
other survivors are a sister,
memorial trlbetetothe34thPres- mission to levy an income tax, property tax assessment and wou1d pi the flratatateandc:um- m.; George T. Price up 5:50 Dee Dee ~urlock, and two-half
t.Y income tax eAication money. p.m.; Jetrereon up 7:30 p.m.; sisters, Patsy Spurlock and Jes·
ldent and World War U hero. and would increase revenues valuation.
The
Cincinnati
Republican
inPublic ochooll woold get the Jenny A. Green down 8 p.m.;
Formal leglalaUve work was from Ohio's 4 per cent vendors'
sle Sue Tredway, and a half-broth·
troduced
the
bill
as
a
means
of
remainder whleh would be add· .....,..c
~·- IIIJ up (-'"
"" a.m.; H• E• er, Rlek)' Spurlock, all of Pt.
to be delayed unW Tuesday in e x.eise tax.
The Senate Education, Health stopping "financial chaos•• U ed to property tax millage lnvar- Bowles up 4:25 a.m.; OUachita Pleasant; Gary L. Tredway, his
b«h chambers, where a half
the S~reme Court ruling were lous diltrlcts ror currentoperat- Ull ,,.
_. •5 e.m.
do&amp;en biUs were to be consid- and Welfare Committee today
step.father; paternal grandpareCCected
immediately.
ing
expenses,
O!UO
RNER - Lock 13,
was to consider bllls creating
ered todll)'.
ents,
Mr. and Mrs. Hlbert Spur·
The idea behind the bill was OVE c down 1 a.m.; Lock !''•
However. committee study two new state colleges by sept.
lock, SL Albansi his maternal
to give every Ohio •IUdent an R. H. Boa-a&gt; n up 5:25p.m.;
seuions were to be held as 1, 1971. They would be the presfi1111HI (J(Ihii'WI lnsllt Gfl mattri'ols .t
opportunit;v to get an _ , edu· Reekjord up 1:20 a,m.; ORCO grandfather, carl B. Rutherford,
ent
branches
or
Ohio
State
Unischeduled last week when the
and the great-grandmother, Mrs.
1M fi1111t quality to lnOKh rh1lr lkUiecl
cation
and
give
them
the
choice
Ull
3:20
a,m,;
Altm
Zepi!yr
up
lqlalature conduded Its 12th versity at Lima and Mansfield.
...c~rkmontt11p. Ftomn ore of top quollty
of getting It where they wanted. 6 a.m.; Qusen Clt;v up 7:30 a. EUo M. Hyatt, both of PL Pleas·
College Student· Grants
wort week.
kiln-dr•d hardwood.' ~I.-dowelled oncl
Rhodes bUI would provide for m.; Lock 15, Diane Bonrorth ant.
Also up for initial hearing in BY GLENNA SHULER
With the rescheduling of bOis
eomer bl~ked for 11tro slrtngtll ol'ld IIObil·
Funeral services wUI be held
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
Elmer
Ode
were
hiring profeoslonal tea&lt;hera to up 5:30a.m.; Gilda McCool down
~ for flli01 readmg, legislators that committee was to be a blll
ily. Tht beovtiful upholftry of Fl1111fftl furnat 2 p. m. Tuesday In Crow-Husin
Ironton
to
pay
respects
to
Mr.
teach
ln the prlYate schools, or 8 a.m.i Foremolt up 6:45 a.m.i
wW consider U items Tuesday. providlng grants for full time
Iture !• the retvlt of up~rt ol»ntlon ..
sell Funeral Home with Rev. H. A.
John Ford. Mr. lhle wu a for
provide
private
schools,
through
Lock
16,
RB!'mond
Thorpe
down
undergraduate
students
in
an.}'
detail.
dtft hoi\Cfllng of tN tint Fle11stNI
Easter Recess
mer employee of the Ford com. the parent scholarsllip, llle IIIOii- 5:30 a.m.; Lock 17, National Wllcox and Rev. Guy Gendenning
qhto
caUege
or
universit;y.
fabriCs,
ond tkillfvl tailoring,
'lbe work thl&amp; week was to
omclatlng. Burial wUI be In Kirkpany.
ey
to
keep
teachers'
salaries
up
up
11:15
p.m.;
Stev"'IIOI
down
·
_
.set
for
hearing
in
the
House
be done in three days, with
land Memorial Gardens. Frtems
Keith Bradbury of Columbua
1:20 a.m.; Belleville L o c k o,
lawmakero aotng home Wednes- State Government Committee spent a weekend with Mr. and to atlraet profesatonala,
Other administration bills Irene choUn up t:25 a.m.; Penn- may call at the funeral home this
~ WIIU next Tuesday for an was a bill defining members of
"
,,.
wou1d eatabllah a student auJ&gt;. sy1van1 a Ull 3 a.m.; Lock 22, afternoon and:e:ve=nl:ng.;~:-,
the pollee and Ciremen's disabil· Mrs. Perry Bra&amp;ury.
Eisler break.
Mr,
and
Mrs.
Ronnie
Lea&lt;h
and
aid1
for
lilY
quallfiedcollef!O
stu.
Jellerson
up
8:15
a.m.;
Lock
Formal introduction of Gov. ity and pension furd. A second children of North Carolinai Mr.
Junes A. Rho:les' education-tax btU to be discussed would per· and Mro. Jay McGhee and chil- dent, whether he atlended a state 23, Eastern up 1:55 a.m.; Dun·
bW, orll(lnllly aet for todll)', mlt a retired publlc employe dren of ColumbUs; Mr. and Mrs. UII!Veralt;v or a privAta. "\"l'leo:" 'ciift 'linu•; ' up · 3 i.lh.; Pel!l!l' '
That oubsld1 would be determln- llowne7 up 3:10 a.m.; Reolne
all~ baa been delayed until elected to public office to draw
Joey
Leach
or
Wheelersburg;
Mr.
ed
on a family Income adjusted Loeko, L. Flore up 5:20 a.m.;
TM&amp;du. A news conference to pensions if he worked no more and Mrs. Donald Leach and chilaccording to federal Income tax Polly R. up 7:25 a.m.; Greendren, local, were recent week- standards.
up Locka, AndreW P. Calhoun
end guests of Mr, and Mrs. JosAnother propoaal, comlllglater up 7:45 p.m.; Jolin Ladd Dean
eph Leach, Charles and Arthur. this week,...Wdglveochmlsape- down 12:30 o.m.; Mark E. up
Oooo
Th.. s.t.
This was the first time the fam. ctal state student aublldles for S:30 a.m.; Meldahl J..Dcka, CyTv••· Inning a,. Appolntt..nt
lly had all been together for 15 aclllt education eouroea, prlmar· preao up 10 p.m.; A. D. Haynes,
years.
IJy tbooe In j(lb.orlented areas. D doWn 12:•5 a.m.;. Indiana up
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Swar11
and Mrs. &amp;lsie Veith, all of Mid- "Tho
cation coocept
oo everyIakid
hB8 the oame
upgrading
edo- 3:20 a.m.
dlellQrt; Mr, and Mra. Bobby opportunlt;v and that every adult
Veith and sons of Turkey Run will have job training," Collier
..
•
•
were recent &amp;mda,y vlaltora ot said.
•
•
Mr. and Mrs, John Veith and
Coat 111 the program would be
Mr. and Mrs. Don Leach and $11 miUion a 111011th more than
children. Bobby Veith hall em- ,_ opent, while capital Improve.
ployment at the Vanadium Plant. ment proJects and other _..u.
Mrs. Mary Wells, Middleport, turea would non the O..re to
,.
open! a clay with Mr. and Mro. more than $2 bUllon In the next
•
Alex 9wler.
twoyeara.
Mr. and Mrs. Kemtlh Saarla
Ohio spenl $1,2 blllloo In the
o1 Colwnbua spent a weekend 1967-1969 pertod on edocatlon
••
••
with Mr. and Mra. Paul Saorla. operation from Ita generiiiUndl,
••
••
Mr. and Mrl. 1Jo7d King and Rhodeo' proposal would hike that
••
••
children, Mr. and Mro. VIrgil to nearly $1.6 bll1lon In lito next
••
••
Carl and children, all of Kings••
two years.
••
bury; David Rees of Baldmore;
••
Ali the other billa will be sep••
David Werner of Circleville were arate tax leglalallons, but will
recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. earmark moat ollho rev01110 for
••
,•
••
••
Clyde Harrison.
local aehool oporatlon.
••
••
Mrs. ROOert Conkle spent a
!tlonoora 111 ·the vartoua bWi
••
,.
day recently wlth her mather,
aa,y th~ r~ more 111011111' II
pFt11E HOORS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT NOON ON
••
Mrs. James Lambert at Brad· needed, but add thef want to
••
'rHURS.l - EAST COURT ST.• poMEROY
bury. Other vtattoraln the Lam- apreed rut the tueo to cover
••
••••
bert home were Mrll. Otarlea
more
'
•
rather
thiD
limit
Pyles, Mrs. Larry Py!ea and educatloll relldorcea at the 1oeal ·
••
••
••
two eh!ldren, Mrs. VIrginia Wal••
level ill prope•l¥ tueo.
••
lis and Peon)' !.3'M, all o! Pl.
Rap. Robert E. Netzll1)', R••
••
Pleasant.
Laolra, will alrer hlo. ~ ..
••
••
tlon bill next week, he llald,
••
•• •
It would reAu:e ...,me f1 the
••
''
••
pre- on-' and llurderl-.
•'
••••••
taxes" - prlmaril)' tbe - r WINS SILVERSTONE
••
tax.
SILVERSTONE, E n gl a n d
••
'
••
Netzley hU incorpOrated a
(UPO - Veteran Jack Brabhun
t
••
••
of Auotrolla drove hia llopce&gt;o unitlle methOd of plilnl at least
.·!
••
a
I
par
eeot·
COIIIIV
illcOme
tax
Brabham over a ntn-ellcked
:r
courae at an average epeed of - part by ,._at, the rest by
••
107 ""h Sunday to win the vote.
••'"'
IUa propoaal Wliuid permit a
suvaratooe Jnternatl...l For••
oehool dlattlct to odopt a 1 per
mula I race.
Brobbam, who ,.m be •3 cent personal ....... tax Ollila
Wednesday, crossed the nnillb district roli-.. That woulcl
line with a dead Olllline 100 force couni;J' COIRI!Ila.*•r• to
••
Soil on down to your l)eorby
.,........
J1Ut
a t per cent bUIU..aa tax 111
yards
ahead
of
Auatrla.la
Jochen
••
H I I ILOCK oHice-ond .ay
I vole.
Rindt.
"lon Voyovt" to your to•
•' ••

rln wu foliO!Md with a choral
reoponae bf 1M senior eholr.
Tho ywtb cliotr tllree!ed by ),lro,
Mar¥1D Bui1 liD&amp; "The Palman
and tha llltbelri ol the aeiilor
choir ,... •'Thio·Ktng ot Kinp."

were Mr. and Mra. Rubert Fett;v, WOllam FollY, Vleld Fettr
Enoch, Mr, and Mro. Jolin
aer, Jack Saeltc, and Mr. and
Mrs. Clarence Headley. Membero of the eonflrmatlon dau
will reeelvo their flrlt edm·
munlm on Eaatar !lmda,y. Each
one waa preaented with Bible
and a certl!lcate.
An organ prelude by Mra. Btn
Neulzllnl opened the '""lee. In
the procoaolonal were membero
of the &amp;enlor choir, the youth
cbelr and the COI1IIrmallon elall.
The inlr&lt;llt by the Rev. Bill Par-

'ot Chrlal.

""'*

Dies Sunday

;

Receive Nine Memberships

/Glad Easter'

'

~. ~~~~~~~t ·l
BiMIFI;,-_..._.;,;

~..~~--1!1111111111.-.~.....~~,..~~~ '•"f;=~~~=-~·

·.

·.~lit,.

992·2635

•

a
a

to

one.

�·-

.'

..

. '
' '
The lioU.r ~nllnel, Mkkll_.t"'-roy, 0., Ma~"t·h ·31, 1969

'

WANT AD
INFORMATION

· OF

.llllALIJY

Will . Ito MttpfH ulllil 9 a.m . lor
Dty of Publication

REGULATIONS

n.. P .. litt.r ,,,.,.,, the right
.. Hit or rojut 11ny od1 doo-d obt-ctionel. Tl• pulloli,Mr will not
M rospon1ible F. more thon one
IMorr.ct inaortlan.
RATES
for Wont Ad Servin
· 5 c:onls pet Word oM lnteftion

MiniMuM Chor.. 7Sc
per wOfd throe COMOCU•

C:OI'Ifl

ttn lntattlonl .
11 collf&amp; ,.., Word tit co11 ..c:uri•o
llltltf'tlons .

c."'

15 per
Oitcoutlt on paid aOs
1M otis fHIItl witltin 10 lllayt .

CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBITU ..:RY
$1 .50 f., 50 wOtd
HflltioMI word 2c .

mi,jlllufl'l.

Eo .

BliND ADS

,,......"'.

.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

DEADLINES
5 p .M. 0.,. B•f•• Pu\liution
Mo...lo~ Doa411M 9 o.1111.
Conct~llotitfll &amp; Corrnilont

12

1963 BUICK SPECIAL 2 OR ................................... $695
Auto. trans., radio &amp; heater, good tires, runs out fine.

.Pomeroy Motor Co.

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB
FRI.

&amp; SAT. NIGHTS

10 Til2

MUSIC BY
GENE NUTTER &amp;
TilE MIXERS
WILL 00 lOlling at home Qetl, poekels, pegging,
bemmlng, allerallons, ole.
Mn. P'reddlo '111abet, Muon.
Phone '/'ls.S851.
4-11-tfe

VACANcY for two elderly peo.
pie. Prefer private paid patleDII. PltoDe Muon, 773-5185.
~

ANYONE using a bed, lllllbr
or w!leelcltalr belonging to
D.A.V. Chapter 53, Pomeroy,
pi- caD Jacob '1\Jmer.
COIIIIIWider, Pho!le
We just want to \mow when
!boy are.
S-2'1-11&lt;

--1.

Wenttcl To Buy
ANnQUES, diAbea, furniture.
ddaa eablnetl, old pbono11'1)1111, clocb, mil&lt;. Lee
lludlllll, tat Legion Terrace.
S.WOip

---

SMAIL FARM, IS .....,. ap,

IIIJOd boule, a.e.ter area pre.

krred. Raymond Boalrlgbt,

1als ll'ollom, ObiD

U'74S,

---

s.Nltp

FARII Wl'J'HIN 10 mDs ol
rtnr. 111111 !lave 10 acres of
1111 Jallll aad pel ...ter.
" - XI-M.
~&lt;

MelpWented
BAR lfAID and partlbne waJt.
rea. PhoDO 19UM3. 3-21-«p

"'·"

For Sale
IIAY, Joe Wippel, near Five
Points. Pllone 99UI10.
s.~

Business Services
READY - liiiX &lt;onerete dell•·
•...t rtghl to your pmJe&lt;l.
Fast and easy. Free estimates. Phone m-3i84, Goeg.
leln Ready • Mix Co., Middle.
port, Ohio.
I 10 lie

Brodericlt, Rock
Sprlnp, llong Hollow Road.
Pllooe 99U214.
$,tHie

For Sale
POODLE PUPPIES, AKC TO)'
miniature, $75 and up. Stud
servi&lt;e and grooming. Phoae
992-5443.
11 3 lie

POTATOES, Phone 843-DM
Clarenee Proffitt, Portlaad.
SOV'I'III!:RN plants, cabbage,
19-11-lfc
lomatoes, pepper and
potatoes. Order oow. Charles
~ PAYMENTS of $5 or 137 euh.
R. Harris, Portland, Phone
Must sell 11169 sewing mll&lt;h·
IIIS-21ll13.
S-11-lltl:
1ne. Fully equipped to zig zag,
make buttonholes, sew on 1958 FORD, lwo-door, escellmttons. • ..,. Five lll1llltbs old
lelll c:ondiUon, $2110. Roy
Call 992-2836.
li-25-Bte
Arms, Mlnemille, Phone
Jlll2.3181.
S.27.1fe
STEREO AM &amp; FM. 11169 mod·
SMITH AUTO SALES
KAMAUGA, OHIO
el walnut console These sell ALMOST new tlrree bedroom
are bought new from overhouse, blrdt ldlclten, full
•locked
company.
Will
seU
I!ID VOLKSWAGEN, vinyl top:
basement, less than 5 mlles
neat IHtle oil!. Call 9II'J.6T73 on payments or S5 per montfi from Pomeroy on Stale Road.
or wiU seU lor $87 cash. Try
aftor 5 p.m.
~
Phone 7U-5CI\2.
S-fl-4tp
It In your home. Call 992S-25-!te 11163 FORD Falrlane, 11'1', VB,
2836.
4-speed trans·, extra clean.
Per Mo.
Ph. 1192-8.
3-4-lfc
It's Time To Compare
64 Chevrolet ... $31.66
l~npala V8 4 dr, S.dan. Spat•
Our Prices On Our
l•u original all whit• finish .
Foctory air condit ioning. lm•
Real Estate For Sale
Quality Merchandise
InOCulate ln1id• ond out, AT,
PS &amp; PB .
O'BRIEN &amp; CROW
With Others' Prices
REALTY COMPANY
YOU REALIZE YOU
64
Pontiac ••••• p5.62
\IIDDLEPORT
- RESTAIJB.
Grand PriJI 2 dr. Hord op. A.ir
SAVE MORE AT
eondltlon•d. Suptrb condition
ANT
READY
FOR
BUSINESS
OUR STORE
ln•l• ond out . PS, PB &amp; AT.
- ercellent location, nice
Full oper~:~ting co"1u l.
equipment,
oan be a money
Bryants Dollar Shop
maker
for
the rljlllt party,
106 Court St. Pomeroy, 0.
64
Buick ..... 'r.$31.66
Wildcat 4 b. Hard op . ExtfG
&lt;all for particulars.
992·5896
nice all vinyl uphol•t•ry. U"•
POMEIIOV
- LARGE ffiiMF:
naw white fini1h with dark blue
top. PS. PB &amp; AT .
- excellent lo&lt;aHon. &amp;everal
SIX ROOM house, 1wn lots.
bedrooms. 3 baths. nne for a
Call Jacob Turner, 9112-31181 .
BLAETINARS
lal'l[e
famfly. 118,000
3-27-Btp
PONTIAC
BUICK
IIIIDDLEPORT
LARGE
GMC TRUCKS
Sb."T OF PLOWS and &lt;om pi&lt;k- HOME- 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
POMEROY
er, &lt;all 247-1161.
S.218to utDity room, olooe 1o shoppin~. tlO,OOO
WE
BUY. SELL AND RJI!NT
SOY BEAN HAY, &lt;aD Myrtle
For lent
HENRY CLELAND
Gllftlner, HI. I, Rutlaad after
Pbolleiiiii-Ufl
rovR ROOMS aad bath, no 5 p.m. 742-!IIM.
3-21-llp
ehlldren. Close ln. 1511 moll!lt.
PIIOIIe m.Qil,
~ 1910 CJIIEVROLET Biscayne, 6
ROONEY DOWNING
standard, noo, :11 lnoh .....
Real Estalo Bral&lt;er
FURNISHED and unlurnlahed tary mower for Gravely, $35.
aparlmenll. Close to ..hoot. Charles Gril!lth. one mile
Phone lft.Z3U
Middleport, Olllo
north ol Five Points on Rt.
PboDe - ·
111-11-tf&lt;
2-25-3111&lt;
7. Phone 992-6716.
S.21,'1te
'l'RAILER WI'S, Bob's JlobUe
Court, Syracuse, Ohio on State EXCELLENT. elfident and ec.
Rl. 124, Phone IIIH151.
onomit!ll\, that's Blue Lustre
1-11-llc ,·.rpet and upholstery clean·
•• . Rent el&lt;!ctric shampooer
FI1RNl!UED bouse In Po- •t. Bater Furniture. 3-31-ete
l'Q)', flw roOms aad · bath.
GEO. HOBSro:ITI!:R, Broker
cau evenlllp. ll9J.,I262,
LUMP, EGG, STOKER. coat !..ACINI!: AREA - 7 room brl&lt;k
~c
screened, no dust, oiled If
bath, fOI'Ced air furna&lt;e, !'
wanted. Ja&lt;®s Coal Co., Rut.
bedrooms, full basement, ga·
FURNISHED TWO BEDROOM
land npple, phone 742-4951 !JT
rage, nice lot. flt,OIIO.OO
aporllllellt. Middleport. Pllone
III'J.Stal.
3-21-Uk POMEROY - 6 rooms, bath,
furna&lt;e, 3 betlmoml, 1\r.18W6'14.
"'""
REMOVE EXCE!!S body Duid
pl..,., garage. Well worth
ONE FOIJB.room ap811ment
with Fluldex Tablels, only
$5,tiGO.OO.
fumlsbetl, grmmd floor ; also
$1.49 at Nelson Drug. S.l4-451p RARIIISONVILLE • AREA Inlier loti and garden and
165 acres ol nke laying land.
camp Bites on the river. Ma· ELI!lCTROI.UX V8C!UUIII &lt;leanGood bam and other build·
rlon Reynolds, Mam, Phone
er complete with atla&lt;h·
iDgS. Double airplane hang773-5147
3-19-lfo
ments. Conlwbider and paint
er. E&gt;reellent sprinc!, 2 ponds,
spray. Repossessed but guart room bouse, bath, furnace,
t:IOill' TENTHS acre ~
lr!lteed In lib """ condition.
new birch kittiten. f21,000.00.
bale and farming land. l'bone
Pay of! fS?.G or terms If III!:LEN or VIRGB. TEAFORD
T4UIIL
141f&lt;
desired. Phone • • ·
A8SOCIATI!8
• SVRAaJIIB

---•-m

DA11UI/2

HOIST ETTER
REALTY

SEWING MACIIINES, repalr
service. all malrea. WV Z.
2284. The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. Auihorl!ed Singer Sales
and Sen-Ice. We Sharpen
Scl.uors.
S-29-tfe

·:··

Mason, W. Va. Phone 7'13-5543,
f.t.lfc

For The Fastest ·
DA.vI ..•.·or' ·
Service
.

YOUR CAR
'NEEDS

From tho l.arat• Truek
BulliD- RHlotor To Tho
!Onallest H - Core.

ILAEnNAIS'

Complete Froiit-End
and Brake S•vlce

BLAETTNAR'S

NIGHT •• ; CA~L
RAWLINGS SERVICE ·

. , DAY 992-2151
NIGHT 992·7324

PH. 9tla.zt 43

PT. PLEASANT - The law Better Schools o! Ita legal
firm o! Beckett, Burford a n d ri!lhls.
This was amounced by R a y
James, of HWJtlDgton, has been
rotalnecl to advlae the Mason Thornton Saturda,y nlllhl In ..
County CWzens' CommHtBA for open meeting o! the committee

at lite &lt;OIIl'tltcuse attended by
over 100 and parenls and friends
of the achoola, many of them
reported being trom New Haven.

Ed Grimes r.-1 a newspaper
artide 011 the tax suceess In
Lake CGmty, Oblo.
"Lake Count,y had 1lle hlshest
tax rate In lite stale, but In
1968 Its votera &amp;11P1'0Yed aJIOib.
er tax rate rise In November,
a 3 rnlll operallng l""l', lite arti-

THE OUJ "CHERCHEZ
LA SECRETARY" GAME
Dear Helen:
Qless what? The old aecretary and husband problem!
My husband worko In an oflice where tltere are only three
people: Hlmsel!, a married male
friend and a very young, tall,
single, blonde, beautl!ul aecre-

line, and she won't aettle lor a
used model.
May ahe ooon be married and
out ol your hBirl - H.
Dear Holen:
How ean a rnolher tell when
her &lt;hlld Ia really lick and when
she decides sc:hool fa a drag
and she'd ralller sla1 homo, so
Bile has a ''iorrlble sore throat"

cle said.
The scbool board president
there, Lewt1 Schupp, was (ll()ted 81131ng be didn't tltlnk IIIey
had 1111' secret !0&lt; auccess, olh·
er than that the acbool board
malnlalned coll1jllele communi ea.
Uon, including a .-bllahed Pres!dent's report altM each meet.
lng, to lite ciUzertl. Sdwpp noted
tltat !Ito board realized long ago
It muat convince lite -lo tltal
tltelr money Ia belng ·well sponl

tary.

which, after lO a.m., mlraeu-

and well uJed.

They goo! o!1 a lot, pla,y &lt;ards Iousl,y turns Into a TV otmnat noon, kid around. Maey Umes acb" - the kind tltat needs conllll' husband Jlllls ,llken:Jhe llf~ . !Wing clurlJw &lt;01t11110root to lunch, ·and 0. special
'eilila?- FooLED AGAIN!
'
slgrunents. Heeventuokherhome Dear F.A.:
rrom tile Chrlllmas port;y be·
Our daughter lllzle calla lhla

ao:

R. h. RAWLINGS SONS
MIDDLEPORT,.OHIO

.

.., AD lpored - l e are not a
- ' " t1ta1 understand,• S&lt;hiii&gt;P
. aald.
, ,.. .
".!~·
A dlscuslfOi. was held'm Vlr1111 lildera and his work In lite
pall qalnll cornQ&gt;IIon In lite
COllllb' JCh(»oll,
Also, commutdcaU0111 -.1
between porenla andteacheraand
prlnelpalo, and wlllt the reUred
teachers In !Ito area, were ellsl!lllaed.
II was noted tltal ooe ol lite
alma of lite c:ommlttee II for 1
school ustem oporaled on an
above-boml b1Bi1 aa to buBIDOll tranucttons, and to ba riel

'"J)retendicUis."

He tells me all lltese thlnga,
not once tltlnklng that I ml!lhl
not understand.
Listen to what hla !rlend does
to this gal: He thlnko nothing
ol throwing a IUI&lt;h of paper
cllpa down the Iron! ol h e r
blouse, or biting her ear. He
even unsnaps her bra !rom the
beck Bide lhrougll her sweater.
Oh, lr&amp; aD In !un, but rm
-ring U the secreta!')' Is dan-

II your child Jdera an attaek only ooce or twice a year,
he's anormal,rod-bloodedAmerlean &amp;Olclbrlcker, and you c a n
"l!llre" him by amaun&lt;lng the
da,y will be spent In bod - ..,
TV, no snack a, but lots of lov,..
l,y coush medicine.
II he comes doWn wlllt pre.
tendlcltls often, look for the hidden moaning: Wb,y should he hale of 1111' boardlll8Diboraull1Jroflll!'
or fear achool so much tltat he ......, doiJt&amp;.

gerous or just a very naive girl

uses illness as a cop.out? 8.1ch

of 19, who considers :JG.year- children actuolly DO 1\81 momold men completely sale?
Ina sickness at the lllouatll of
II'a bad enouSh to lmqlne Ill another dreaded da,y. Atalk wlllt

these golnga-on, but when Dl1
huaballd comes home evory night
and tella me about Ill lite fun
and pmes lhe,y have at the of.
nee I want to scream, ul..ook,
rm not another 1\JlY you're brag.
gtag to, Pm your WIFE."
II I show Pm bothered, will
It push him Into an aftalr willt
her? - WORRIID SICK
Dear Worried:
Husbanda are 1t1te kids: When
lhe.Y Sl'OP making noise, start
worl')'lng,
Let your man know yw love
hlm -sb to be a lltue jealot11
(a lliiOd eiP) hoosier). Ill! also
usumo privately t1ta1 a beauU·
lui blonde hal 'em standing In

.

S5.55
.,

..t.

-GUARANTE'EDPHONE 992·2094

"••nra..&amp;Aitt
·dCJ6 E. lrtaln Pomeroy, 0. ·

·--·

rsiJT THI'.T ,.,
Li'!TU: IIIIDtcULOUS 1

Timeilo

NOTICI ON .-tLINO Oil INV~V
AND .AitP.AIHMINT
Tlte lttte .t 011 .., Milt&amp; CMIItY
Prolteta Court
To th• Encutor 01' ,Umlrd•.rakW
'&gt;f lhe eal3 te. to IUCh or UW follow·
IIIJ u an reillten\11 of tlw ltate at
Oblo, vil:-thf wnivlnl IJIOUH• tha
ntxt of Ida. u.. benellclaiUII u.nd•
U\e Willi and to Ule attol"n.,. or attli.t Dt)'l rtPreMII"Unl
R7 ol
...

'Wqirl!
itIf,'·
You'll· '
be late

for

colleqel

dortmenuoaed pertOne:

Benld E. SbUIDWI)', OUv• 'l'uwn-

.100M.

thip, M"IP CountJ "Mo.

You an hereby aoUI&amp;td Qat
ln\·entor)' and A.ppraiHIMI!.t
ut.ta ol the atonmenUOMd,
"euedl, late or eald CoufttJ, wu

«

Uall
tbe

,._
ftl·

ad bl tll1l: CoiU'L 8l1d IDWDWl'J' ad
.. ppratHment will be foz.. heulq
1H:tore Uda Court Oil OW liMb cJar
tit Aprl.l, l.Ni, at 10:00 o'doell A.M.
AIIJ penon de.trtD.a t.o llle -...
lluRI thweto mutt file them a\ It-.
IM _.. prtor to the data 11t hr
loWrinf.

B£!ll 'ilf!ZiD liT THE
JHSIDlOO$ DR. zzyz~
CtAHT ~ PCJmU.S.CFA \!IWl'l ...
HI!~

CAVIID llodu 1111 hUMI Pd •-' 01
Court, thil latb i5aJ of Matca

·-·

or na.

\7iiii;::::====;;;;;;;;

The Almanac
By

,

United Prell lntaniatlcinal

Today Is

M~,

Mar&lt;h 31,

the 90th da,y of 1969 rrlllt 275 to
!ollCM,
.
Tile mooo Is approaching Ill

lull phase.
Tho rnornl"i stars are
Mercury and Mars.
The evening ttlus are Venus,
J"'Iter and Soturn.
On thla day in r : ..ory:

In 1840 Presldenl Martin Van
Buren isaued an executive order

·osllbllshi'1! a

!!).hour

work da,y

tor govermnett employes.

Business Services

In

1870

Perth

Amboy,

one

day

1!1er

RADIO IIIII TV repair, 1IIItue ratlftcatlon ol the 15th Amendeal\1, aad antetuw blllllled. ment, Th01111s Peterson Mundy,

lite aehool counselor ml!lhl help
you solve tho problem. - H.
Jolm Harrilon, PltoDe Dear Helen:
Pm devaolaled. By chance I
lJ.I.II!c
friend ol. mtae reCOIIIlzed m,y
Insurance
daughter llllilll Into 1111 o f AUTOMOBILE
lniUTIIICe lien
"family plamln&amp;"' cllnlca. !lie
Ia a Ienior In collep and eaneelled? Loot ,oar opom.
I alwa,ya a...!lhl - ai\IIOd slrl.
or's lkenle? CaD .....
lwrule and asked her -lhla,
I II Itt!
and she aald she was doing vollBIIeer work there, but rve allked otbero and lhe.Y IIIII' lh11 Ia
wlrere unmarried alrla - !rom
The French claimed the
all walka of ute - plintorma- Island of Mauritius In 1715
and caUed It lie tie France.
about blrlb C!GIIIrol.
!lie 11 21, .,_... to 1 line
boy who plano to be 1 - ,
so marrla8e Isn't Imminent.
I bellove t1tat 1111' dlu&amp;llter to telllns the truth, or h11
she loll her morals? - CAN'T
FACErr

clauBhter hllll't loti
her morala - not •• her_..
inlerpnti REAL DXII'alley,
- H.
•.
Thla column Ia -caltid to

IIIDIII¥:llvlnl. so !I 1011're hiiVJng
kid ~ or Juat ~ lr&lt;ltl·
bl,, I~ Helen help YOU. !l!o will
ololo' .........

)'OUr

oWn--

-leuces. Addreas Helen Bot.

-tpaper.
3 ROOMS
lid•

lei In ..... of

.....,.....
•

N.J., became 1lle

ftrst Amerlcan Negro to vote.
In 1933 Congre88 set "' lite

Clvlltan ConservaUm Corps to
provide voeaUonal tralnl'1f and
eOll'loyment lor YOUliB American men.
In 1968 President Lyndon
Johnson aald he would no1 -

DAILY CROSSWORD
AdloM
1. Ctlllrll

.. ,........

renotnl.mtlon and at the 11111e

...

time ordered suoponalon or u.s.
bonlbill(! ol North VIetnam.

A thought lor the da,y:
Char\•• F'lrrar Brow!'" said,
"Let ua all be lllll.PY and live
wlthln our m•l\l, ·a~n if we
hive to borrow lite m-y to do
it."
.. , .
It Ia better til say, "This
one thing I do," lban 1o uy,
Dear Con'l:
"These 40 things I dabble
.on- C!OJnOII tjme when par. ln."-,-Washin!llon
'GJMdden,
01111 sllould bollavto what llllkel clergyman, editor.
'
them feel bell Of lhla )'OU Cll) be
sure: Your

Will SELL

EXPERT
· ·i
Wlllll All1nme11t .

~;ud

cause she was too drunk todttve.

----

f. Collloi&amp;U011
10. Jhlo
rt4 doer
lt.Pnpvorl
~or ftriDC,
U &amp;lUll

tL-col
ume

D. Paced

llinglo-

tree
t.~t

IT.~

Tal.,....,
llld
maUorr

X WONDER W&gt;&lt;ERE THAT BUM

SYLV&amp;STE"It'S WI DIN' OUT! l-IE'S

BEEN A\IOlt:&gt;IN' Mi FiR p;!IV..'

lor of

1.Bookclaop
8. San41lrae

lbr'ewd
18. Dell·

11."-'-

bui'

21. Aheld
22.Bacbe·

Cheml-

.,..bol

Noploo
If; 1111-um

20.June

lbOIIold

a. Bboddf

a., of

til. JaiODd lA

.

t.l'la,ylJI6

11. PanmJ.
lMl
Ul. - If.

''-~

-- -----·

2.Polplurrl
3. lllmla!&gt;

co1

-

21. 1D u.

-t

manner

...,....,., U•ww

u.v-Uorr
spoto

27. Kr. Blrt

30. Not out

31. Llko clouJh
as, Wap
3Uotndobted

u . lllloHomo
lit. CookiA&amp;'
dtrocUorr
31. Spot...

,KlTEa
M&gt;

at. SpoU

NI!VI!If

ap

HAVE ON!!.

as.~.:r .

.

•

::;b:
·;~

:;. ~
lllwoio

IL.~

ot...

ILl!Uddba
ILCII1t)'.
M.lllmW,.Io
·ILJ'omali

,, ..

; ~~.;;
~ .,. =.;,a!'

NCMV~I

NO

.

FIC

luct.

J'

.

nvrWJBAT-

'

VBJ

'
I"

'

'I

'

·~.

•

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,:.,. .-;:
"

'

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I

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j

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ICA.oi.T

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KBID

' C..ltlllllt , ...

~· f. '

WCL.AJ

BVA ICPWJ VBL.ol, II'LAT HTOJIVJ'TI

.,oo ........

"I'm pnna read JQU 'TI!o ThrH Boart.' I hope you
havon't· heard It bef~rtl"

....

'liMA

tO. HlltDrlcol

New·Furniture
·Ofl•••. t 299

GUIDO GIROLAMI

•.

..

I WUZ

SINGLE

our third noor btldget shop.
Baker Furniture. Middleport.
Ohio.
11-lfc

a.-....

~f

i,

IJIWS \NHEN

Bus.inesS · serv. ices~.

·- - -

I,

i

Law Firm. to Advise
Citizens Committee
"""'!

,.......,

=-~ ~,:.

.

EXCELLENT Wl', 40 feet
wide and 125 feet deep, on
lllll St., Middleport, &lt;lose to
Paet Olflce, 20 fool alley In
bad&lt;, phone Slft.5251. 3-2'1-Qe

DRIVl!lRS NEEDED. SOtnl tlrl·
..... local aad OVOI'·ihMoed.
llperleace lieJpful but not
IIICIPII'J', We wlll train )'011.
Yoa ean eem l1fl!r 11.12 per
boar' Pllr appllcatlon and In·
terW!w write Nation 'll'lde
~
Safety Dhee!ut. Room Q!,
For
Slle
FLIJFii'Y
soli
and
1Jrttlllt
81'1!
• Bill 4111 Sreet. Trlllll- POODLE DOG, one year old,
cal'pOIB deaned with mue
ptlt'latloll Bid(., anctnnltl,
Business Services
ffllslered with Amerl&lt;an • . Luitre. Rent electric lban&gt;
Olio or l'bone 5JS.IIl.fm.
Club: d&gt;o&lt;olate brmm.
...r SEE NEIGLER Butldlnrl SUP'
1-11-!te -Kennel pooer
fl
.
TinY'•
..
~-.
..,.... ...........
W0-8tt
341.cte . ply for bulldiDI your home .
Call Gill' NeJcler, Raeioe, 0.
A111'0 MI!:CliANIC, good pey, ONE FOUR YEAR old registered
1-21-if&lt;
R&amp;POIIIIJIJSSED Singer sewilll
good wurtlng condltlonl. MuBi
female to)' fox terrier am two
madtlne with ""'nd bobbin, CIIUCK'S Caalt and Carry TV
bave 01111 band toolt. Apply
seven week old p~s. Phone
like lou&lt;h 'n aew; In lovely
:IIIIOD County ~­
Service, save up to one-ball
74:1-4863.
:h'll-2tc
walnut eablnet. EquipPed to
!IIOtllh. Pt. PleiPDI
on repairs. Bring them In and
... .... butionhole, bllntl
J.a«t
save. Chuok's TV, lD Butterbem, ellt:. Pay of! balanoe Of
nut Ave., Pomeroy. S-23-lf&lt;
wAmtESS_for_n_lght_lhlll, m
.
$56.110, or lenni. Guaranleed.
Phone 992-M.
S-25-«&lt;: SEPTIC tanltl &lt;leaned. Mlller
ear hop and griD eooiL Apply
One Of MY Two Places
ln .......... Crow'l Sleak
San!lltlon, Stewart, Ohio,
1!1611 STEREO radlo combina11cu1e.
S-:111-Bt&lt;
Of Business
Phone 662-3f35.
Z.JS.lfe
tion. Handlome walnut console. 'l11ls hal BSR aulclmll·
ForW.orTr•de
Both Doina Excellent
C. C. BRADFORD
I&lt; ,..,.,-,! manger. Take ovar
.\UCftONEEil
anMIOLJ!.'T lmpalll,
Contact
payments of " per month or
Complete 8enln
pay $88.46. Call 1191-21311.
Pb- llt.31111
3-25-Btc
llaetrle. OMo
LtcaDy oWIIItl. can 1191-%472
POIIItiOY r Ohio
Crill llrtodW.
FIVE ""ROOM=:. ""HOUS=I!:=-, newly
belweea
1
irltl' 4:30 p.m. and . .--~----" hcoratetl, ~ loll, clty fa·
I I lie
. , . . M 5 p.m. S-36-lft:
· '{ _
cllltJes. esllbUshed aspa~
.
11t1 ldiiJ' MOON house trau.
aad rbabarb bodl, alto .,ruh Am CONQI'i'IONJNG Refrlser· •
CAIIERO V8, 4 speed:
.,, 'hill ·~ms. 45 " 12,
trees, prlce fi&amp;OO. For ap. Ilion service. Ja&lt;k's Reft!J1M' tlnlllrtl VII, 4 speed. ..... Cill lft.2816 or . eratlon, New Ha•en. bone
Call ......, « IJII.Mtl.
.
....
1101ntmen1 caD a5250. ·
112-20'19.
4 • lie
a.a.tte ~!"· .r
1-rr-«&lt;:
US.l2te

::
I.

•• FeR

BUDGET PRICE furniture on

ONE Rl!lGISTERED Oorriedale
lluck Bileep .,.. year11 and 2 CIGARETTE vending maehlnes
and service. ABC l!:nterprlles,
months old, nke big one. Vln-

eent P.

S.les

DANCE

Jack W. Canoy
Mgr.
992-2181
Open til 6 Dolly

----

OPt:N EVES. 8:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

Notice

WANT ro RENT by May 1,
four-room l'umllhed boule,
bal!t; must bave large gar.
den spaee, bemen Pllmeroy
and Letart Falls. Rent must
be reasonable. Write, Todd
Rhodes, 115 Foreland St..
Plilsblqll. Pl. 152U.
S-21-lttp

POMEROY

1965 PONTIAC ...................................................... $1695
Safari Station Wagon, local 1 owner car, white over
dark blue finish. Clean interior, like new w·w tires,
automatic, power steering and brakes. Radio.

0.111 .

THI!lRE WILL bo a ~ sing
at the Stlvemille Community Chureh, 'l'lnmJday, April
3 al 7:311 p.m. Rev, Ever.(!
·Ailmann and sqero from
McArthur. '111e publie Is wel1!01118.
S..U-3tc

Now Steck Riding
Mowen &amp; Tillon

er steering, radio, bucket seats and console. Black
vinyl roof. New cor title and guarantee.

OFF ICE HOURS
to .5 :00 P·• · Dally
·atY".o.m. to 12:00 Noon Soturd•r
1:30

BURPEE
GARDEN SEEDS
AND ·ONION SETS

l968 CAMARO 2 DOOR ..............................- .........$2895
Company official car. V...S engine, auto. trans., pow•

AtlditioMI Z5c: Cl'larto per Adver- i

*'

.

. . Find Ey~rytliing From Auto's To Yo-Yo's In The Sentip~-::.·:·:Want Ads ~~
. •

'

.'

,

CiTA.-18CPOVC

v.&gt;-

·

~

f.

·

.. _ . . _
•- • l

�VIsit El..rfelds ·Ho1sewares DQIHIIit~t
0" Tht Flr.st Fl•r..
.
For An Excellent Selection Of•••

'WMHINGTON - 'l'akiDJ ld•Mip ot the Easter rvceaa

ae._. 'ed liJ the

CG~greaa, which

bt&amp;lilllbla FridaY,

Repre-

'

stlllaUw C1arenee E. Miner wiD retum to Ohio this weekend
to tour the llllh District eiUI'Itlea ot Hoe~ VInton, Jackalii Galla.
On Saturday Miller wiD bella hla lily'a actiYitlea with an
11*1 .,_ Millon in the Ccllllmillloaer's ollee at the Vinton
Cc!wil Court House from 9 to 10 L m. Fnm McArthur the
COI!p'ea111111n wiD trawl to Jackson wllere lie wiD hold a almi·
lar aea•lon In the Jackson Post omce from 11 to 12 110011.
The •xt stqJ on the Corwreasllian'a ltl.-nry will be the
Gallla Coullcy Court House at Gllllpolla wbere the loth Dlatrlct.
Rlpnaealatlve wiD hold an open door aeaalon.lnthe Jury llocln
from 2 to 3 P. m. At 4 P. m. the CorwresiiiiiiD wiD meet with
repnaentathes o( the West Vir&amp;inla Raad Commission to tour
the site ol the new Henderaon-GaDipolia Bridge.

ISRAEL SAID IT WAS READY TODAY to talk peace with the
Arabs IIIII only with the Arabs. It rejected any outside interference,
lncludb~ big four talks scheduled this week to dlscu~a the Middle
Fast crtals.
The !snell cabinet lsaued a ltltement Sunday nlsht saying only
direct talks between the conceraed parties would establish a true
peace in the Middle EasL "Israelis not and wiD not become the .._
jecl ol power politics or llltnpower politics and wiD not accept any
recommendl;tion which Ia ID conflict with her vital Interests, her
rlibts and her security," the ltltement &amp;ald.

Kyger Creek

Choir To Be

Storys Run
Mrs. Joe Leach received word
~ the death or her uncle, James
&amp;nlth or Jackson. The Leach
family spent an evening In Jack-

son.

and Mrs. Perry BradOn Tv Frloday buryMr.spent
an evening with Mr.

and Mrs. Lealie Hawley and chiidren. They helped Mrs. Hawley celebrate her birthday. Ice
cream and cake were served.
Denise Gaye Sbuler, slx.,yesrold daughter or Ross and Bellllh S!uler, passed away In Hoizer Medical Center after a !engthy IUneu. !lle attended Racine
Elementary School. !ilrvlvors beaides the parents are sisters,
Debra, Martha, Tamlll)' and Barbara, brothers David and Martin, and twin brother Dennis;
grandparents, Mrs. Vivfan Coy,
ltutiand; Mr. and Mrs. Alex Sbuler, Itt. 1 Cheshire; great-grandmother, Mrs. Pearl DemQ~ or
Rutland. Burial was In Miles
Cemetery at Rutland.
Rev. and Mrs. Raymond Fife
and Mrs. Bossie Fife had aa recent !Unday guests Mr. and Mrs.
Clllford Unroe, Ewlngton; Mr.
and Mrs. Guy Priddy or Rutland;
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Keefer and
children of Leon; Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Riggs and children or Letart, W, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. LewIa Fife and daul!llter, Rt. 1 Cheshire.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Leach
and children or North Carolina
spent an evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Donald Leach and children.
Mrs. NeUie Athey or Erie, Pa.
spent a diU' with Mrs. Francia
Conkle.
Mrs. otla Chapman called on
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Searls a day
recently.
Several area residents bsve
been attending revival aerYiees
at Morgan Center church.
Mra. Charles Baker and Kay ot
New Boston; Mr. and Mrs. William Larkin or Hannibal were
here to attend the funeral or their
niece, Denise lbller.
EmmeU '1\'•rren Msnley, 80,
Mrs. Charles Pyles and Ricky
South Second, Middleport, died Higgins or Pl. Pleasant spent a
thla morning In Meigs General ~~e;ently t~ the !Iober!
Hospital..
Mrs.
ule, Pa.;
Mr. Manley was bom March
11, 1889, In Gallla County. The and Clarence Grover, Vanzant
1m ol. the late laaac and Sarah ltd., visited a recent evening with
Manley, be was alao preceded Mr. and Mrs. Robert Conkle and
in death by three brothers and famlly.
Recent visltorsorMr. and Mrs.
three listers.
Clarence
Searls, Terry and StanHe was a member ot the SUwr Run Baptist \(burch, and a ley, were Mrs. Lena Bunce ~
Middleport; Mr. and Mrs. Bemretired coal miner.
&amp;lnlvors Include hh wile, srd Cook and children or BradBertha Marie; rour daughters, burY; Mr. and Mrs. Eugene MllMrs. Martin (Mlclgl) Abbott and Jer and children ol. Middleport_
Mrs. Normall (Anclll) VanMater,
Mr. and Mrs. Alva RICe, Rt.
both ol. Middleport; Mrs. Her- 1 Middleport, spent a dll)' with
man (Audrey)Gall'ney, MasaiDon, Mr. 8lld Mrs. Marlin RICe.
. t Mra. Jack (Corrine) Am~ Mr. and Mrs. John Veith, Mr.
brole, Pomeroy; two aons, Ran- and Mrs. Donald Leach, Mardall E., Monroe Falls, Ohio, cia, Johnny and Roger, spent a
and Cllftord E., Mlddleport; a recent evening with Mr, and Mrs.
brotller Corbett, West Colum- Bobby Veith and sons on Tur·
bia; 1~ grandchildren, eight key RUII.
great.gandchildren, and several
Mrs. Joann Conkle spent a da,y
with her mother, Mrs. James
nlecea aad nephews.
Flmera1 services will be held Lambert at Bradbury.
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Bracllury
Wemeadly at 2 p.m. from RawIIDP Coats Funeral Home with spent a few days visiting Mr. and
the Rev. George Oller olllclat- Mrs. Robert Wood and Camlly
IJII. Burial will be In Gravel at Canal Winchester and Keith
IIIII Cemetery in Cheshire. Bracllury In Columbus.
Mr. and Mra. Kenneth Searls
Frleadl may call anYtime after
were called to Kentucky by the
8 p.m. t.odll.
Illness ot Mrs. Searls' father.
He suffered a stroke and heart
No man is so great as attack.
mankind.-Theodore E. ParMr. and Mrs. Paul Searls spent
ker, American Unitarian
a receat evenins with Mr. and
clergyman.
Mrs. Asel Searls In Mlddleporl
Mrs. William Larkin ot Hamlbal spent a night and day recently with Mr. and Mrs. Alex SwIer. They called on the Ross SalTONIGHT AND TUESDAY
ler family in Racine. Mrs. LarMar. 11, ltl]r. 1
kin also called on Mrs. Frances
COOGAN'S BLUFF
Larkin and John In Rutland and
(Teehdlcolor)
Mr1. Bertha Amos In Meigs Gen·
Clint Eilatwood • Susan Clark
eral HOipltal, and other relaltves
COLOJU;AitTOONS:
In Mlddl.,rt.

The Kyger Creek High School
Women's Choir will present a
special telecast ol. the "Stabst
Mater" by Pergolesl on Good
Frldll.y, at 1 p.m. rrom WCHS
Television, Channel 8, In Charlesion.
The "stabat Mater" Is a cantats Cor two voices based on a
poem written In 1306 by Jaccpo
de Benedetti. It depicts the Good
Friday scene or the "sorrowing Mother beneath the Cross ot
Christ." This setting was written In 1736 just prior to Pergo.
lelli's death and Is believed to
have been bls last work. It was
orlglnolly performed by the castraU choirs ot that c1a.y and will
be performed In the original
LaUn text.
The Kypr Creek High School
Women's Choir Is directed by
John Matheny and Is composed or 32 voices and just recently received a superior rating
In the hlchest classlllcaUon (A-1)
al tbe district contest at Iron·
ton. Last year this cbolr waaone
ol. only seven girl&amp;' choirs In
Oblo to receive a superior rating In the hlchest level or competltlon In the state Cinals - a rare
accomplfshment since the enrollment ol. Kyger Creek High School
places It In the smallest (C-2)
eiasslllcation or schools.
Accompanist lor the choir Is
Drema Han8011. Soloists sreKaren !llamblln, Cindy Francia, and
Jackie Currartte.

West Bend Cookware
.

"Country Inn"

NIGHTS 'TIL 9 PM.
Fired-on
TEFLON II
5 qt. automatic ••COUNTRY KETTLE"
colorful Avocado or golden Hai'Vest exterior
• porcelain·on·aluminull
• scratch·rislstant Teflon
e automatic hilt control
Discover the fun of "dial·ameal" cooking! West ·Bend's
Coun1ry Kettle has automalic
temperature settings from
"warm" and "simmer" to
425•. for use as a roaster,
oven, chafing dish and deep·
fat fryer. Porcelain exterior
in Avocado gre~~n or golden
Country Kettle's heat con. Harvest . . . stain·resistant,
trol minds your meals
disbwasber·salel
automatically'

llllbwlnke!l
Nudlliklove
A l..lli In Bacdad

I

~

billy way on earth to

,l)l_..lply ·happiness is to di·

~w~s~~~:':ut.

V,!j!elt.-Paul Scherer, Swlsa

.

TEFLON*·COATED
West Bend's new pan1ryware . .. all in chic avocado green or new golden Harvest. Trivet symbols
identiJy contents -flour, sugar, coffee, tea. Seam·
leslinish won't chip or fade, wipes
clean.

11" automatic SKILLET

with deep cover for roastln&amp;

Porcelain
on aluminum

Makes perfectly-cooked meals
enier, because you dial the per·
feet cooking temperature every time. Enjoy no-stick
cooking, never·scour cleanup. too, becauae it's Tel·
Jon lined. Super·tough Teflon that welcomes metal
spatulas and spoons! With deep cover lor
,

AUTOMATIC PERK

SPECIAL

OFFER!

I

..

Colorful 8-c:up

IVDCidO 1111n
hiiYIIt
brewsllstr
cofftt •utomatlcan,

o

Dr

o

"Country Inn"

West Bend's new percolator in avocado or harvest
brewa 6 to 8 perfect cups, and keeps it bot, automatically. Serve light shows when coffee's ready.

RANGE SET
o 111111 canister

o s &amp; P shakers

Makes disposing of uaed
cooking oils eaay. Match·
ing shakers each hold 8
ounces. In avocado gr-.n
or golden Harvest.

S&amp; PSHAKERS

8 to 10 cup

Versatile 2 qt.
SAUCE PAN

FLAVO-SELECTOR

PERCOLATOR

with Antique Coppertone Cower

Discover the joys of West Bend's "400
Line" cookware at a bargain price! Favorite 2 qt. size is nice lor vegetables,
soups, sauces, hot cereals, puddings. It's
handsome, quick-heating aluminum with
scratch-resistant hard-coat Teflon finish
-so super-tough you can use metal spatulas. metal spoons! Try it!

Calera lo your taste . . . jUJ.It

set the Flavo·Selector to choose
mild. rich or regular atrenc;rth
coffee. The rest la automatic!
Sparkling aluminum with black
accent•.

• for hand-mlxlnl

18-cup
Stainless Steel

TEFLON*-COATED

t

3~,

1~ and '14 quart 1ize1

Wide rima, tapered aides lor every band-mbdng
tuk. Three sizes are bandy lor ever'ythlng from
beating an egg to serving popcorn. By Weal Bend.

DINNER PARTY
PERCOLAtOR

Brews lrom 9 to 18 cups auto·
motlcally. end keepe II hot auto·
motlcally too. Sparkling atoel. In·
aide and out. lor euy cleaning
and lonq-laatiDq beauty. Brew•

:tlfe A~,

IUIGS THEATRE

ELBERFELD$ ARE OPEN ALL DAY THURS·
DAY AND EVERY WEEK DAY FROM 9 AIUO
5PM AND BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY.

CANISTER SET

Emmett Manley
Dies Monday

'

h,

GRIDDLE 'N SERVER

a cup-a-minute.

e smooth·heating aluminum
• hard-coat Teflon surface
Grills pancakes. fries two or more foods at once
keeps party snacks warm - all automatically .. :
just set the heat con1rol dial! Double coated with
scratch resistant Teflon. so you can use your favor·
ite metal spatula!
•mto• ,, ••,...., 111

RANGE SET

2 qt. BEAN POT

Speedy 5 cup

PETITE PERK

lncludea greaae canilter
that makes dlapoeing of
used cooking oils easy,

frt1~

coffee fait!
• IIHfrlp s•o•t!
• •olished alumlnull! .
•

Ceramic 2 qt. pot with c~
plated heating unit bue . , , .
ailnmen beans. cuuroln, bot
dlahu.
·

"•

Just right lor breakfast
coffee lor two! Fully automatic . . . brews 3 to 5
fresh cups in a jiffy!
Graceful tapered apouL

".

4 piece

CANISTER
SET
• FLOUI
• SUUI
• ContE
• TU

.,'{!·

Canisters with fresh styllnq llalrl Graeeful: iild
elegant in rich anUque brown'and gleaming 4lwilf· '
num- a perfect match lor Weal Bend'I di!Niucti.,.
400 Line Cookware. Each canlater bolda 1'1tandaid
package" quantities lor convenient atorag". ,.. ·

AUTOMATIC
PARTY PERK

teflon-coated
COOKIE SHEET

It

,J,";

12 to 38 cup

MakeJ party-giving eas·
ierl Brew• 12, 18, 24, 30
or ~ cups of delicioua
coffee, automalically. Pol·
l1bed aluminum. with
black accents. ,

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