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SAIGON (U PO - President
Nguyen Van Thleu and hls tnp
peace negotiator in Pari11
offered the Vlet COni amnesty
and a place on &amp;Kith Vietnam's
ballot toda.Y l! they qult fighting
and change thelr name.
"Those oow !igllUng against
us who renounce violence,
respect the laws and !alth!ully
abide by the democratic pro&lt;e&amp;ses will be · welcomed as run
members
or the natimal
community," Thieu said ln his

••
•

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state of the nation address.
That woold include "!Uti
political rights," he said.
His tol) man at the VIetnam
peace talks, Pham Dang Lam,

,

told a Psrls newspaper that the
Salll"'l government Is willing to

face the Viet Coog in election• 'b.lted for war," Lam said in the

provided the Communists stol) copyrighted Le Figaro interfighting and cl)ange their name. view. 11 And we are ready, aa
soon as the fighting stops, to
Moves Closer
The qro statements moved accept ge~eral electioos- under
the S&lt;,luth Vietnamese govern. international control lt necessa~
ment ~et closer to accepting the ry- whatever the results J1183
Vlet Cmg as a pollU&lt;al Ioree tn be."
He added: t•Nothing prevent&amp;
be reckoned with, something
the
memhers ol the (Viet COng)
Saigon adamantly has refused
!rom
taking pari ln general
to do in the past
elections
if they change their
Thieu rejected IU\V peace
proposed by the COmmunists In label."
Thleu in bls speech tn the
Par is, wamed politicians in his
natlon'll
national assembly pro.
government against criUdzing
posed
a
two~rl;y system lor
him too strongly and sald the
VIet COni and Nortb Vietna- Sooth Vietnam and oultined a
mese bad ~een beaten oo the peace praposal containing sb:
points already presented by
battlefield. '
11 We
sincer ely hope the Lam in Paris.
He promised that his governpolltlcal struggle will he subsU-

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OuR
€MP\'\A'SIS SI-:\OULD e.E OkJ. RE•
HABILil:'lt\IG. THE CR/MI~F\l. !
MILLER 'W ALKSPLANK'- Ohlo's10thDlstrlct Congres&amp;man, Clarence E. MUler, (on plank) inapected coostruction work
on the new Ohio River Brldge between Herxlerson, W. Va., and
Kanauga saturday afternoon. This picture was taken on the
West Virginia side of the river, after Co~. MiUer, and West
VIrginia State Rood commiiSloner WUllamRitchle&lt;rear)along
:; wlUl John T, (Jack) Dorsey, district sq&gt;ervisor in charge ol re" coutrucUon, West Virginia Highway Commission, viewed work
~- on the West Vlrglnla land and river piers. The 1,95o-toot span,
provldl~ there are no delays, is e:tq)ected to be com.pleted bt

'Wbntrideu.
Here's a panty that stret

Inserts at the back of the 1
t~,

love about this panty. The1
I

panel for extra tummy

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C(

elastic Is a breeze to care 1
light as a caress. White.

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solving the nation's problems

shonld join with me and those
who oppooe my ideas should
unite and reorganize to form a
constructive OPJ)O&amp;ition group."
~poslUon

PariY

made It
opposition party

He

clear the
could not
Include Communists. II would
consist, Thleu said, of perBORS
who "disagree with my pollcles
in method and not ideology
because the

COmmunists are
\

-Called on Nortb Vlelllam tn
"give

up

its

attempts

to

concper the ReJ'Ibllc o! (SWth)
Vletnam by force. 11
- Prom! sed that mce North
Vietnam has withdrawn its
troops !rom South VIetnam and
stopped ln!lltraUon, he will ss~
his allies to remove tHeir
forces, U.S. soldiers included.
- r -·· m North Vt.etnam to
, trOOps from Laos

-Said the reunlflcaUon ol
Nortb and South Vietnam shcluld
be decided ''by the free choice
o! the . entire popllatloo ol
Vle1nam through demOCratiC
processes."
- Callecl lor an •'flllectlvo
eystem" ollnt8rnational control
and reliable lntemaUonal auarantees against the resumption
ol fighting.

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Devoted To The lnter~ls Of The Meigs·MfJBOII Area

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you walk or bend

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PU~ISHM£~T.l J. &amp;LIEV~

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only ones Who di.ee in and ~· and ""'P •1111
ment "will not hand the - l e the
ldeoiOSY."
•
the. clll!itrleo u ,...,._ , IIIII. ·
ol Vietnam lnt.o the.hands o! the
mterrupted by appiiiUie oev- staelni ar~ roi- ~ !!"
Communists directly or ineral times, the Sooth Vletila- South VltiiWn.
1.
directly."
mese president called hla peace
- Deelsrecl tho policy II
"a reasonable and ••natiOnal recondUatian," wei.~
or the two.parl;y eystem. platform
solld beals !~r the reslotaltlll ol coming as. full c!Uzens
Thieu said those uwho agree
peace In Vietnam." In his au Who rei10WICO vtolehce ....
wllh me and my methods ol point&amp;, Thieu:
respect. the laws.

•

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l: QOU'T REII.U.Y' ll-lttJK. YOLJ . ·
CAI...J AC~IE\IE: ~kl!('T'HI~. 11-{RI,} ..

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romised

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MONDAY. APRIL

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

VOL. XXI NO 243

December this year. Work on thetworlverpienls expected to
be completed sometime in June. The bridge's superstructure

I 11-1\II.IK WHAT l-IE tvEEDS MOST
IS PAl'! Em' UtvDERSTAtvDitVG ADMltVISTERE.D IIJ AIV ATMOSPHERE FREE
OF ECOWMIC PRESSURES !

· will contain 8,000 tons or steeL

Wk.J'T l.rOJ
AGRE~?

YES, I OO!

~....;. . . r:"::li'······

to
make

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

Plastic
..
.Heart •.s
R: epIaced

A report that Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Reynolds, ca-ve-St.,
Pomeroy, were announcing the

birtb o! twins, aboyandagirl,
was given falsely. The report
appeared in the Ap:ril 6 issue
o! the Sunday Tlme..SOntinel.

•

The

false birth report,
phoned to offices of The Dally

Sentinel In Pomeroy by an .mkoown source, said Mr. a n d
Mrs. Reynolds had given birth
to the twins at the Gallipolis
Medical Center. The phoned

...
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the ..
beautif1

: HOUSTON (UPO - Dr. Denton
K,' Cooley took a man-made dac-

torso
more so

. ~come,"
_i,'l all .~mlatlc-~·
t \tJ -8 Cooley told oUter doc·

$JJ

~~~

rOil ard plastic heart from the
cllest of an Ulinols man today
~·

chest or Haskell Karp, 47, or •
Skokie, ill.
~The heart transplant was another medical first for Cooley,
~o has performed more of the
operations . than any other physician. It was the first time a com~
'
plitely
artificial device was replaced by a living heart In a human body.
The famed surgeon, who only

I DUNNO WHETHER.
'IOIJRE BUND, OR .
..JLJSr DUMB ••• .

DON'T 'rOU
REALIZE I'M
~I(JNG?

llam

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fwo Minor
Accidents

list Friday stunned the medical
world by implanting a synthetic
heart lnto Karp, started the tedi-

Instead of f/tUtening

Landers and Romld

Reynolds, all of Pomeroy,
were the graOOparentA •

Lawrence, Mass., woman.

tors as he stltched closed the

THE LINE-UP - Middleport Volunteer Firemen had a hard time holding back the large
crowd of youngsters Sunday afternoon as the time approached for the start or the annual Middleport- Pomeroy Rotary Club Easter Egg Hunt. Approximately 500 children took part. Below, a moment later 1 it was every youngster for himseli.

report said Mr. al'll Mrs. Wil-

a(ll replaced it with the healthy
f~yod-given" heart of a 4Q-year·

IPJI

TOP WINNERS - carl Horky, chairman o! the Middleport- Pomeroy Rotary Club Easter
Egg HWit Committee, center, backgroun:l, gives $10 to Michael Ray Stewart. tZ.year-ald aon of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Stewart, Rt. 2, Cheshire, a pttJU at Rutlalli elementary school, for ftDdln&amp;
the golden egg during the annual event held Sunday allernoon at Middleport Municipal Park. Linda
Gerard, 11-yesr-old daughter ol Mr. sed Mrs. Olarles Gerard, 329 North 'lblrd-Avo., Middleport.
who attends Middleport elementary school, receives $5 for filliing a silver egg. ~part ln
the presentation with Horky are WDbur Theobald, Rotary Club president. left, and Middleport May~
or C. 0. Fisher, right.. - sentinel Photo.

Reported
Two minor accidents were re·

ported Saturday by Meigs COUnty lillerl!! Robert C. Hartenbach's

Offer $200
•
Reward for Charge 3 zn
Rustlers

ous task or replacing it with a Department.

girdle gives you ft18hi0
flat 8eams so you can
becoming style has p

The first occurred at 1:45p,m.
human heart about 8 a. m. (EST)
in a delicate operation at St. on Old Route 33 and involved
vehicles operated by Jacqueline
Luke's Hospital
. Cooley replaced the artificial Ama Radford, 27, RL 1, Pomehlllrt with the human donor organ roy, and George Albert EastBy the United Press lnterootional
ln .J&lt;arp's chest at 9:30 a. m. al'll man, 62, Rt. 1, Pomeroy.
Authorltiell said Radford was Super.•litiorr .UI. jimrll.'· l'll(lllll't•tl
s~rted It beating wlth one electurning
into a priVate drive when
tric shock.
SAIGON - U. S. GREEN BERETS TODAY reported co111Plering
Eastman,
driving apick..uptruek,
-' jlt started beating with good
S~rstition Mountain and seizing power generators, beds. movie
rhyuun, '' a hospital spokesman attempted tn pass and struck the proJectors, loudspeakers arxl typewriters from the caves that for 20
left rear fender or the Radford
siid.
car.
No injuries o'r arrests were years had been home lor a Viet Cong battalion.
';cooley anished stitching shut
The mountain of rock whose guerrilla residents had fought of!
Karp's chest at 10:15 a. m. .,It's reported.
The other accident occurred repeated allied offensives in recent years rell Sunday to the Green
beJ'n supporting his circulation
Berets and the Vietnamese mountain men who work with them. They
for 30 miootes an:l I am optimi5- ' at 11 p.m. on t'le private propplanted
a South Vletllllllese !lag 12 !eel b' 23 !eet on its swnml~
UC about the outcome," Cooley erty ol Hidden Lakes, oil liltton Twp. Read 202.
ll&amp;ld.
A car driven by Peter Wheel- .'iirhrm ."iil'lum 111 lfw )11r:,· ''·" fl·itluy
Tbe human donor, nown to
LOS ANGELES - THE STAR WITNESSES at the murder trial
Houston in a tnuch.ond-go filght er, Columbus, went out o( con..
of
Sirhan
a Sirhan were the psychiatrists, not the hOBt ()( hotel emmarred by mechanical problema trot when the Ue rod ends broke ployes aod poUdcal aides who saw Sen. Roberi F. Kennedy slain.
aboard the private plane, died at as he was leaving the lake area With the agreement between the defense aOO prosecltion that Sir~
and the vehicle went over an
~ Luke•s less than 90 min~
embankment.
There were no in~ han shot Kennedy, the issue in U1e trlal became not the physical act
utes after she was rushed to the
but the mental capacity of Sirhan to commit the act as it is deOood
hospital still ln '"Very, very crit- juries or arrests.
by the law.
ical" condition Crom what the
When the jury retires Friday to weigh 14 weeks or testimony
doctors called uirreverslble" Hack l'nymcnl~ nrc
from 89 wttneasei, it must decide whether the 25-year-&lt;~ld Arab, ~as
brain damage,
mentally capable of premeditation - the "with malice aforcthoughu
The woman, whole name was
that must be proven tn court for a murder chante to stick. Follownot lnunedlately disclosed, _was Sought in Luwsuil
q brief testimony today (rom the prosecution's fi111.l witness,
accompanied by a 22-year.old
three daya of closing argumcntsan::J. instructions from: Superior Court
daughter and left two teenage
A civil suit for $1,323 in back Jlllge Herbert V. Walker, the jury will beglAdeliberatlng a verdic~
doJighlers behind In Massachu- sl.l)port payments has been filed
in Meigs County Common Pleas
setts.
bm·e OO'&lt;IIItl ••• :J6-irwf1 111111111 •••••
The landing had to be made Court by Lois Jean Adkins, F..ast
FORT LAUDERDALE, FLA. - ONE BARE bosom among 25,000
wlihollt !laps and the plane roll- LyM, W.Va., againstJame!IRay frolickins college student&amp; iln't much o1 a protest demonstl'atlon.
ed free tor 11,000 feet aloog Parsons;, Long Bottom, claiming
But despite all the publicity by the Sexual Freedom League, only
thO sprawling runwey ol the gi- 44 morths or suppor~ for rninor one blklnl ,- lq&gt; dropped on sun-splashed Fort Lauderdale beach Sunant strategic Air COnunand hase children Is due her.
day, an:l tbat may have been an accident. The league's nude wade-in,
bolore lt coasted tn a halt juSt
Also in Common Pleas Court, a 1110 to speak·, was a bust, "A 36-inctt bust, to be exact, •• &lt;JI)ined one
oliort o1 the end o! the nmway. petition for divorce has been filed
:'Her filghl tn Houston was de- against Barton E. Pearson b)' policeman.

smooth look from you

stoptuggiJ

roo
~·a: A
GUY. YEAH ...

stopp~

discover
'' •

!' .• ~ ·.'~.·.'· '

the blissful
comfort of

o,,.

BESl
MJPII!\y~!l(

laiecl about' three hours while
llliither stand-by plane was n•.,..
tl'llin Houston to Barksdale. The
piW landed here ahout 5 a.
nr;1 and the donor reachedthehos~
p\lal about &gt;:30 p.m.

.:$S
· rtTt. mrll'l Ill 1M l!llola

fOlia fOil botld. ...U: .,.,
tlrdiel that criop up or

comfort

MAltiUAGE AI'PIJ(;A'I10NS

.:James tdward .Baor,· 19, Pam·
i'i&amp;o, student, and susan Marte

of I I

_rlfhl.'

with

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Olll!~er, 19, clerk-twist, Mlddliliort; Daniel Oliver Toban, 20,
P~OI'OJ' liD, 1:. S. Air ~·orco 1
arjl ' All co ~ ..ij-n ·Smlth, '20,
C~stt!r,

•

•

secretary.

Ruth Ann Pearson, charlnggross
neglect of duty and elrtreme cruelty. Three m~nor childre-n are in-

,&lt;;..'(·~

11111'1'1111'

d•:/i•trl ji1r .\i.wm .I liM

WASIIINOTON - PRESIDENT NIXON'S PROPOSED "Safeguard"
antlblllllstlc mlsslle (ABMl system wlll be scuttled by a "nerrow
volved.
margin" when lt comes \II lor a vote ln the Senate, according to Sen.
Georao McGovern, 0-&amp;.D.
McGovern sald the proposal -' to deploy oocleartlpped missiles
MRS. BENNETf IllES
Mrs•. Bernice "'- Benoett, 81, to protO&lt;! the llaU!!~~'• ~nlhe mlsslle eystem - has ,upport trom
wife o! Wllllam c. BOnnell ot •'not more Ulari 30 or 35" aerators .at the mcinel'lt.
Cheshire, was · dead at 8 a. in.
TAKEN TO liOSPITAL
Monday 1t her home ort arriv&amp;l
The Pomeroy emcrge;ncy Clar~ w1s taken to Vetei"ane
of the Mlddlc~rl Emergency
squad
anawtred a call to t h e ; MOmOrlal Jlo!Pllal. llo hnd suiSquid to take her to the hooPllal.
Clark
1\01110
In llvi'!.IOIIYille !jat- ~ tared .'• P91olble ·_heart attack,
Arni~J~tnionts wlU II!' arili!Wlcud
• .- ~ ·
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by Miller' a llomo lor t'UnoraiL urdiJ · nlllht &lt;!rom where .Jarnea · 'oquadmen lilld
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Elmo Norman at Vinton is offering a $200 reward for inCor~
mation leading to the arrest of
the person or persons who stole
a white fa&lt;.-e Hereford heifer off
his farm on Rt. 160, one mile
norlh of VInton.
The Gallia Co\UltySheriffsDepartment was notified of the theft
at 4:20 p. m. Sunday. 1t was one
of several investigations made by
deputies over the weekend.
Lawrence Green of Bidwell no-tified tile sheriffs department
Sat.urday that someone shot one
or his white face Hereford cows
in the face. The animal was ap..
parently blinded by the shotgun

blast. Empty shotgun shells aod
an empty shell box were foun:l on
llreen'8 farm on the 0. J. Whlte
Rd.
AI 10:20 p. m. Saturday, Carl
McClure, Pt. Pleasant, reported

the theft of a stereo tal)e player
and 20 tapes and also a tachometer !rom his 1968 l'urd Mustang
at Skyline Lanes Bowling Alley.
The pla.y
, er and laPCS were valued
on$17~200.

Early Saturday mornirv, Gene
Oller o! Middleport reported the
then o! lour Mag hubcaps trom
his 1963 Oldsmobile which was
parked at the Blue Willow night

club. The theft was reported at
2 a.m.
Melvin Ours, Park Central Ho-'tel, reported the theft or a .32
caliOOr pistol from hl!! room.

The sherifrs offic:-e received the
report al3 p. m. Sunda,)'.
LOCAL n ; MPS
The temperature In Pomeroy's
downtoWJ'I business district at

11 i30 L m. todaY was 56· de' ~\tfU\Y sk)es,
'
Krees under

Otarges have been filed against
two men oC RD 1, Long Bottom,
ard a third, of Columbus, follow·
ing incidents in the Bashan and
Pomeroy areas early Swlday,
Meigs County SherHr Robert
C. Hartenbach said the trio allegedly blew the fire siren at
the Bashan Volunteer Fire ne.
partment bullding causing members to respond an:l also stole
a quart or oil, a bulXIle of newspapers, alli a tire from lhe LaOO.mark Service Station.
The three were taken into custod)' by Pomeroy Police Sgt..
George Hicks, assisted by Middleport Chief Paul Parsons, later in the morning,
Sheriff Hartenbach said hi s de~

Weather

Two Incidents

partment is filing disturbing the Wayne Milhoan, both otLcqllcJt.
peace charges against Gary Al- tom, in connection with the Babert Jordan, 21, ColumbuSi John shan incident..
Hartenbach ..td petty larceny
David Uppole, 19, an:l William
charges have been r.led against

Jordan lor the alleged the!! whUe
both Uppole aod Milhoen are be-

Lancaster Gl
To be Charged

ing charged In Pomeroy with aid-

ing and abating a petty larceny.
The men have been released
from jail pendirt: appearanee in
A Lancaster serviceman will County Court.
be re'b.lrned here by Pomeroy
police Tuesday to face auto larcony and posoible other charges,
Chief Jed Webster sald.
Nikki Mcinturf, about 22, Lan-

5 [)el'.tendants

caster, stationed in the armed
force s at Fort Jackson, N. C.,
is wanted in connection with the
theft of a car from Lou's A sh~
land Service Station on Pome·
roy's West Main St. Friday morn-

Ordered Fm·ed

·

Five de!enclants were ~ond
!our others !or!elted bond! lathe
court ol Pomeroy Mayor Cbarles Legar S&amp;tur&lt;lay'nlght.
Fined were John Powell, Ra·
cine. $10 and eost1, reckleas
operation; Howard Long, Point
Pleasant, $5 and coato, Ulllr·
ed Clear dlstlnte; Jkllald carr 1
Pomeroy, $10 and COlli, 1m1111
directlon on a one-W87 atreet;
Herbert Martin, PolnerOT, $5

ing. The car, a 1964 mOOel be~
and warmer today. High longing to Frances Imboden, Rut~
in the 60s except near 50 close land, was parked near the stato Lake Erie. Clear and a little tim waiting to be serviced.
warmer toolght. LoW in the 40s.
Chief Webster said the serv·
~ and warmer Tuesday with iceman went to his father's home
a high In the 60• north aod 70s tn Lancaster and that the father
south.
turned the young man over to
and costa, dlsturbine the peac:e,
mllltary authorlUes In Columaod Emmett Welch, near Pombus.
eroy, $.10 and coote, lntoxlcaVETERANS MEMOR~
HOSPITAL
Uoo.
For!oltlna: boncla nre Vallie
Admissions saturday - D e 1bert Milam, Middleport; Char&amp;archer, Belleville, $50, per·
les SCOU, Middleport; Ava Gilrnltllng an unlleonlld c1r1vtr 10
operate hlo i11!*Jr vllllolo, llld
key. Harrl11onvUle.
Lloyd Nelson, 23, East MainDischarges Saturday - Vir poalfd ... ~lll!la - · St.,
Heynoldsburg, o•• was ad- ~5
ginia McCUne, Margaret Ca11to,
es; VlrJil .PIIQ!lpl, ~rot'.
Judith Steinmetz, Nollle Boring. mitted at Veterans Memorial $15, . -·~ ~· _111.....-.t
Admlssloos &amp;mdey - Carmen Uqspllal Sunday anernoon
~.~.'-'Iii. .-.
Jewell, RuUand; William Man- treatment or an accidental gunoo InK;. 1!\1!1 G. . .l )'9
-~
·
ley, &amp;Yracuaci lloyd Nelson, Rey.. shot wound.
"""' fj;Q, 1lo P::llll!l
The Meigs COOnt,y Sllerl~s
noldl!lburgi Kay Dodderer, Porn~
eroy; Sylvan Cleland, Lancaster; t&gt;eparLment said Nelson tihothhnHelen Icenhower, Pomeroy,; Gil- sol! In the loot while· IO.dlrq; a
.12 PUSO shQ4.•uo.' Ubop{tal ,or'.bert COOper, Athens.
· .
lllscharges &amp;mdey- Margar- !lciils listed Nelson's conilltlqn
today as utlol'actory.
et Vadlsh.
·
'
'
&amp;mny

Accidental Wound
Being Treated

f.U

.

*mliiio.

.

"

·-

'

'

,,
'

�''

.

2- n.t llalb' se!lllnel, Potneroy·Middleport, 0., Monliiy, April 7 1969
'

'

'

3 - The Dilly Sentinel, Parnoroy•Mlddleport, o.. MondaY, AprU 7, 1969

The Handyman
-

.

Discuss
Sexy vs. ·
Unsexy
Teeth
By WILLIAM
LAWRENCE, D.D.S.
Sexy teeth? A group t
dentists discussed this re
ceotly and profoundly concluded that, with or without
teeth, some w o m e n look
sexy. While no man has ever
been he a r d exclaimlng,
"Boy, does she have sexy
teeth!", it has orten been

said ahout women that they
"turn you off (or on), as

soon as they open their
mouths."
Why? Here are some or the
dentists' suggested reasons:
Uosexy teeth are:
• Teeth that don't show
when lalking, smiling, laugh·
in g.
• Teeth that s h o w too
much. Specially those that
Dash on and off even when
a woman says, '~Yes. I've
read 'Portnoy's Complaint'"
• Cavities in front teeth.

.. .

• Teeth crumbed up with
lood d e b r I s and tobacco

..AIB"b .

stain.

~~

• Tobacco-slained 1o we r
teeth that show when talking.
• Front t e e I h smudged
with lipstick.
Sexy Ieeth are :
• Teeth that show when
talking and smiling, bul only
a little, with a promise of

waterfront ... Today it Is t h e by corporate name Resorts Inter~
In the gambling casino on Paradise Is· national, Inc., Cor mil\)' years
o~d and fairly recent Bahamas land, nee Hog IJI3nd, whose name
was known as Mary Carter Paint
d'ays the hub of lourir;t activity has been changed for many rea- Co, ... In this corporate image
was the straw markets on Bay sons.
of a nice old lady tinting h e r
!ireet and along the colorful
The owner or Paradl se Island, parquetry, for many years it had
been a respectably small corpor~
ation headed by an old New Jer.
sey Irish ramlly named Crosby

• Crooked teeth - just
enough to he tnterestilng.
Further talk disclosed a
sense . of frustration w i t h
women denture patients who
i n s i s t on natural-looking
lalse teeth as long as they're
young and sexy. "But how
can you put sexy 18-year-old
teeth in a woman three times
that age and still make them

.... The Croabya stili keep the

titular heads or the firm in their
brotherly names but dear old
Mary Carter spilled her paint
Into other hands, other brushes,
in the quite proper ploy called
~&lt;spinning It off."
James of the Crosby s when
WHEN ONE DOOR OPENS,
queried Why the name change,
ANOTHER CLOSES
if he learns to apprecia(e you as replled "We traded a paint firm
D8ar Helen:
an equal .... Andbesureheknows for a money machine ...
~,'ll' . ~!I!!!Jl.l!i!:d!lt!:l9&gt;l!liY!!tl· - H._~""""".,;,.. The mooey machine ia the
~gh high school. We went Dear Helen:
gambling casino, second largest
steady, but 1 always loved h.im
Is it proper to tip delivery ln the world: only the casino in
more than he loved me. He knew men who bring in new rurniture Buenos AJres is bigger but cbes
I'd take arzylhing just to keep or in11taU equipment such as not handle anywhere the cash
him, and many times I was left washers, etc.?- G. 0.
so merrily skimming into the
sitting at home because •'some- Dear G:
Resorts lnternaUonal bank acthing else came up."
Truckers and Installation men counts with amazing monotorzy.
The inevitable happened. We are well paid by thelr compa.- Rumors set the annuaJ gaming
had to get married when [ was nies. The oiler or a tip might take last year as $15,000,000.
18, he barely 19. Af'terfive years, em!:Jarrass them. - H.
The fellow who runs the caJ'm still a doormat, or was, un~ Dear Mrs. Bottel:
sino, an Ivy League t;ype namtil six months ago when I took
You are unfit to write a col- ed Edward Cellini, like the Flora job at Dick's insistence. Bills umn! You are nothing but a rna- entine sculptor..goldsmlth..genius
were piling up and his hobbies licious promulgator or evil, when of the same surname whose inaren't cheap - car racing and you lncite these rioting kids to fluence on the Italian Renaismotorcycles. 1 hated to leave write their Congressmen to get sance was considerable, haa no
our daughter, but it seemed nee~ the vote. The crazy jerks need police record that would pro.
essary.
no newspaper to egg them on. hibit his quiet, suave, perauaAt my work I became a PEH· If you had the mentality of a sively attractive presence in the
SON. People appreciated me, men cretin you'd agree they are good casino; in fact in most of the
gave me compliments. I could Cor nothing but trouble, with their highly social drawing rooms and
acb.Jally talk to them Without be· long hair and obscene clothes and terraces of this fantastically rich
lng criticizes or belittled as talk; their narcotics, erotics and lltUe resort which beckons roy••IJtupid."
~loathsome rebellion against all aJt;y, nobility, society cum nou.
Again, tlle inevitable happen· authority. or aU times in history, veau to the sun, fun and eatab~
ed. A wonderful guy singled me now is the worst to promote the lished delights.
out. We kidded aramdi he took 18-year..old vote!
The crw.pien are rrom Eng.
me to lunch a few times, but he
I offered to write a column land, France and ltaly mostly,
is married too,andwhilewewere FREE for our paper, telling trained abroad for their trad.J.
both unhappy in our private lives, things as they should be told tionally decorous drudgery .... ·
we were strictly honorable.
and the Cools turned me down. The 11illspectors," a Nassau euHowever, someone saw us and I'll bet they even pay you for phemism for what Las Vegas
told my husband. He made a big yours, though 1 don't see how joints call ..pit bosses," are qui.
'"- tcene and insisted I quit work anyone could be that stupid.
etly businesslike American •
immediately.
All oC your views show a de- gambler types .... They keep
Now I'm home, trying to cope praved mind. You seen to favor firmly polite watch on the 36
with bills while my husband is abortions, sex education, teen- tables of u21" and roulette.
out . four times a week with his agers against their parents (who
Dice "Inspectors" drape themi'aci.l"lg and other interests. I'm should beat them more, not less) selves comtortably If hardly int~Ji not only belittled now, but also and tbe other day you had the conspicuoualy though never men~
, . told I'm a harlot. From being a nerve to applaud a 69-year~ld acingly above all crap tables
" wife who did everything to please sexpot who actually carries on in what only can be called a
her· husband, rvc changed into a wlth her husband! Sex should be J11lpit - very much a pulpitWife who has awakened and sees for procreation only. Otherwise shaped affair from which they
how much .c;he has missed. I used it's fornication. ·carnal lust is keep coocentrated attention.
to think Pd die if he !ert me. for animals. My hu!lband now aThey watch .Players and dice
Now rm happier when he's gone. grees with me.
table workers with equally atout..daughter seems happier too. Don't you know all these de- tenttve politeness and nothing
·i&lt;
What does my husband feel ? pravities are being infiltrated escapes their trained glances
J. thJnk he's bewildered by the into our minds by the commies •... The height of the dlce.p.dthange that has come over me. who jump for joy every time an- pits hal a scientifically deter.
He':a the same Uloughtless, selr~ other womanish boy burns hils mined purpoae, opthalmaJog1cai
Jlh ; "boy" r suppost I made draft card? J wouldn't be sur- as well aa logical: the 4 "1nspechim become, and he can't seew?ly prlsed H you were for that oth. tors" at that altitude enjoy huge~
.t react so differently, But he er Communist plot to weaken ly increased peripheral vision
makes little effort to improve. and destroy us: Fluoridation or not duplicated at the lower, or
I dOubt that he ~an . Haven't l our water supplies! - A PA- baby - needs .. a .. new - pair terved m."f time? Should r just TRIOT
of -shoes elevation.
- quietJy leave? - TOO LATE Dear .Pat:
Unlike Las Vegas, there is oo
' WE GET SMAFIT
... . That too!
boisterous Far West exuberance
Dea'r TLWGS:
My, my, (had no idea (was .... The slr:e of the room, its
In .vour eagerness for a neJ¥ such a depraved and sexy Uttle acoustics, its deliberately mut.
life, don't forget that each time devil. Thanks ror giving t h e ed mood and lighting discourage
a door, another usual- Bottel morale a great big boost. and absorb loud noises, even
blows shut. A divorce ma.v - U,
when uttered .••• We watched a
you, but it will ~lso close
This column is dedicated to man in the final throes of exsaret,y or marriage - family living, so if you're hav- hortatJon to the dice whose namtwo-parent security for your Jng kid troWle or just plain boyant verbal excesses oould not

troobi•. let Helen help YOU. be heard clearly 30 feet away ...

• your husb&lt;~nd is bewilder~ She will aJso welcome your own
the change in you - now 1 s amusing experiences. Addrelll
ou fUnc to shoW him that change 1Jelen Bottel in care otthlsnews~
the better. Let him know paper.
ai''•·our c.JooFmat days are over,

And he tried.
The ca1Jno Is luxury-deep In
every detail .•.• Even endless
pirtJall machines decorating the
waiJs and st~ndlng rows have al-

look natural?"
Many women bring snap·
shots to their dentist. One
w o m a n, nee circa 1900,

brought a picture or a gor-

geous gal so her dentist

could copy the teeth lor her
new denture. "But this isn't
you. It's Gina Lollobrigida."
"So what's wrong with her
teeth?" she angrHy cried.
JYh~r~ . will. it .au end? O!!"
dentist asked. "Then, halt m
jest, he told or routinely putting baby teeth in dentures
or his elderly women pa-

tients.
In somewhat younger patients, he selects creamy

white, teen-age t e e t h and
leaves one front tooth higher

than the others to make it
took like a tooth not yet rutty
erupted.
In one special case he even
put orthodontic bands on the
lront teeth to give them a
real teen-age look. Trouble
was the patient kept return·
ing to have the bands ad-

justed.
most apologetic lighting effects:
the whirling fruit symbols are
alight but moderately .... The
carpet beneath players• ·reet Is
waH-to-walL and thick, as in de
luxe shiny - magazine ads ....
There are a hair dozen restaur.
ants of widely varied cuisine:
French, ftelian, Bahamian, Poly.
nesian coming shortly, p I a i n
American.
There is a giant nightclub ad~
joining (Jack E. Leonard and the
protean Caterina Valenta were
starred there duriDJ our recent
visit) plus a jumping 11 lounge"
with jazz and Bahamian rock
whose excesses neverquftereach
bother110mely the eustacean tubes
of

the gamblins (llblic hard by.

The fantastic take in the Ca.
sino comes from Nassau vial·

JACKSON, Miss. (NEAl
Gov. John BeD Williams' "regulars" and the nationally
recognized "loyalist" Democrats are moving toward an
early collision-with the courla the likely arena or battle.
The Williams wing Is unquestionably the most estranged
element or the Democratic party in the entire United
Slates. vet the loyalists candidly acknowledge that he and
Mississippi's two senators, James Eastland and John Sten·
nis, "still call the shots" in the state.
The loyalist leaders, Negroes Charles Evers and Aaron
Henry, do not Intend, however, that this supremacy shall
go unchallenged lor tong.
There could be an early court test to decide which group
is entitled to bear the label "Democratic." The loyallats
are eager lor it, and Williams says he wants it, too.
But If that issue somehow is not dealt with quickly, the
clash will surely come no later than next spring.
Stennis setb re-election Ia 1871. Ia Mlallssippl, sach a
caadldate (the same Joel lor U.S. House candidate• I must
"'ualllf' before tile lta&amp;e'1 party ez:eeaUve C!OIDtnlttee.
The queotloa tbla time wW be: Wltlcb one?
Henry as slate chairman heads the loyalist committee.
Williams named his own under leadership of Leon Bramlett, Clarksdale.
Evers says flatly that il Stennis tries to "qualily" with
the Williams committee, the loyalists will go to court im·
mediately to bar him !rom running as a Democrat. The
five congressional candidates would be slmilarly tested if
they took that course.
The matter is not an easv one lor Stennis to resolve. The
word here is that he has been having lalks about It with
Democratic National Chairman Fred Harris. The latter,
indeed, Is trying to slraighten out the whole Mlsslsslppi
mess so a 1972 Democratic presidential nominee will have
some hope of carrying the slate. Hubert Humphrey drew
just 23 per cent of Ita 1968 vole total.
Right now the two contending factiOns are mUes apart.
Williams in an earlier Interview sald he and his aupport.ers

(powerl fi'Oitl lbeO. le&amp;lilly IIIII pollllellly."

Draft law1s Objector Clause
AHo~ked as Discriminatory
In 1965, In the case of Seeger vs. the
United Slates, the U.S. Supreme Court
ruled that disheliel in a "Supreme Being"
did not automatically diaqualily an !nat.
vidual from claiming conscientious objector status.
Sincere, strongly held personal beliels
leading one to oppose war and the dralt

deserved as much consideration as the
same opposition predicated on belief in

God.
_In alarm, il not in anger, Congress reviSed the Selective Service law in 1967
substituting lor belief in a Supreme Being
the phrase, "by reason or reli~ous train·
ing and belie!." It also speclltcaUy ruled
Out: objection' based ·on "essentiallY .pol!IJr ,., ,

cal, sociological or philosophical views, or
a merely personal moral code."
A Federal District judge in Boston has
now declared this revised section of the
taw unconstitutional, and alarm, if nol
anger, can once again be expected to
ensue should the Supreme Court uphold
tlle decision.
"In the dralt act," declared Judge
Charles E. Wyzanskl Jr., "Congress unconstitutionally discriminated a gaIn s t
atileists, agnostics and men who are mo.
tivated by prolound moral beUels which
constitute the central convictions of their
beings."
He concluded that in granting special
!latus to the religious conscientious obJector but not to one John Sisson Jr., a
22-ye"!-old Harvard graduate who relused
IndUction because or personal antiwar be·
liefs, the act violated the Firs! Amendment
provislon that "Congress shall make no
law respecting an establishment or religion."

"When the law treats a reasonable

conscJentious act as a crime " wrote

the

judge in a 21-page opinion, "it subverts its
own power.lt invites civil disobedience."
In anticipation or objections that thi$
will make it "easy" to escape the draft
by pretending to leellngs that are not
genuine, he argued that "often it Ia harder
to detect a fraudulent adherent to a religious creed than to recognize a sincere
moral proteslant."
Undertones of Vietnam war dlasent or
the unresolved question or the legitimacy
of opposition to a particular war but not

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

war in general, muddy wnat Judge
Wyzanskl calls "a clash between law and
morality:· He indicated that be might
have ruled dilferently had Sisson been
drafted to light in "a delense of the borneland" in which the entire country was
being mobilized.
In view ol !Is Seeger declslon, however,
it la expected that tile hifh court wUI rule
against the government s appeal of the
decision he did make.
As the New York Times commented,
"there Is no reasonable basis under the
Constitution on which the government can
say that It will respect the conscience of
a .religious believer but will violate the
e&lt;&gt;nscience of a' nonbeliever."

Muttering in the Ranks
Ten enlisted men slattoned at Fort Jackson, S.C., and associated with something
called "G.I.s United Against the War in
Vietnam," are suing the Army to obtain
the same rights to peaceful assembly,
protest and freedom or speech as are
guaranteed to civilians under the First
Amendment.
Named in the suit filed In U.S. District
Court in Columbia are Secretary of the
Army Stanley R. Resor and Brig. Gen.
James F. Hollingsworth, commander of
the base.
·
The general has refused lo permit G.l.a
United, recently organized at the camp, to
stage a base-wide anUwar rally. Seven of
the 10 plainUffs, moe! of whom are re·
portedly members or minority groups,
race court-martial or other disclplloary
proceedings.
Leaders of G.l.s United charge other
haraosment In the rorm of aummary
transler to other bases or shipment to
Vietnam.
This is one thicket the court would be
wise to slay out or, II it can. But how·
ever it rules, or if It does not rule the
resolution of the Issue will not redound
to the long-term benefit of the Army.
The Fort Jackaon suit, called "without
parallel In American military history " la
reflected by agitation on at least oeven
other poall wilere newspapers clandeotlnely printed by aoldlers have appeared.

BERRfS WORLD

the new Brltamla are cr:rmect.ed to the casino b)&lt; large paa-

aagewsya from their lobbies ...
Two more hotel&amp; wUI be bulll
and paoaagewaya acldecl to live
the casino rour ferUle cal!lh-ear-

first ball at Wa~hlll[ton, where
th.e Senators, under new Mana·
ger WUliams, basebaU's last
.100 hitler, play host to the New

York Ya-a to initlaiA&gt; the

Francisco will be In Atlanta
tonliht aa an acldecl lciJW to tile
IOOth anDI\'8rsary cake.
Gory Nolan, who woo'l be 21
until next moolh, waa tabbed 11
the Reds' stal'liJV hurler
agalnat Dodger ace Don Drysdale. Nolan, hanqlered by an
arm 11\lUry early laat
bounced back late In the year to
win Dine games. Dryldale, tho
veteran right-hander, aet a
maior league record laat
sea- pitching 58 cooaecutl..
acoreleu inDinga whUe COJilllll·
lng six straight abutouta.

sea-

By STU CAMEN
UP! Sports Writer
Like vintage wlne, the Boston
Celtlcs improve with ego.
Spurred by 35-yeer-old playerccech Blll Russell, tlle Celtics,

who were coming off an
impressive four-game sweep of

Baltimore

Those rambling, r o v In g : ·
rioters lake over what mar
be a legitimate campus pro-;,
test ana turn It into something else.
-Jerri! Leonard, asslstont·
attorney general, report· ..
ing that the Justice De.portment plans to pros•·
cute militants who 1111ve!
from campus to camp1"
fomenting trouble ..
We are now in the post·
lion of the lillie boy who
asked Santa Claus for a vol·
cano-and got II.
~Dr. Robert M. Hutchim,
president of the Cent., ·
for the Study of Demll·
erotic Imtitutiom and for, .
mer president of the Uni; ,
versity of Chicago, on colt·
temporary society.
·"

.

-

Lawleaa acta by a small
segment or the otudent population must not be allowed
to Interfere with the vast ·
number of atudenta who are
seeking to exercise their ed·
ucallooal opportunities.
-Executive committee of
the National Goven1ors
COilfennct.

Clearly, these are not comfortable times for any of us.
But we cannot turn back.
-Stn. Edmund S. Muskle,
D-Maine.

Chairs are one of the
most ancient pieces of fur·
niture. yet they came into
common use only within
the last 300 years. Prior to

the 17th cen!ury, The World
Almanac notes, most peo·

pte sat on benches. stools
and chests. C li a i r s had
been used only b,Y kings.

QUICK QUIZ
Q-Who is the o nl u
Apoot!o to whom Chri$1 appeared 011 tht day of the
r01urrection?
A-Peter.

clerics and aristocrats and
therefore became symbols

or author it~ . The term

''chairman' and thP. re·

quest to address "lhe
chair" reflect the lmpor·

or

tance
chairs.

those who sat on

rytng spokes to its wheela •..•
Another three to five hotels are mo~e within five yean.
firmly planned .... And if the
Dear old Mary Corter indeed
casino Indeed netlod $1&gt;,000,000 has painted herself into a fabuto $20,000,000 last year, the to- louo money machine, while ioolal shoold be double that or lng her former unique name.

Q-Wiutt i:itv ir the head·
Qlillrltra of the Eritopeatt
Commo11 Marktt?
A-Brussels, Belgium.
f{l

1"' ., NL\. Ill(,

"Wh..Urrya sar we do .Omething SIGNIFICANT-let's
fO tear somed;ng ~own!"

q-What il !lie motimum
we111ht af a reuulatlm1 bowl·
ing ball?
A~~txteen pounds.

in

their playoff

opener, Russell wants another

championship and he doesn't
lntonl to let New York stanl In
his way. The second game In

In the ftllll quarter,
sparked the Celtlea' offense.

The

KDicks,

behlnl

Walt

Frazier's career-high 34 points,

had cut a 15-i)Oint Boston lead
to lour at 94-90 but Havlicek
theo sank a drlvirv hook shot
ani waa fouled on the play by
BIU Bradley.
Thirty • two - year · old BaUey
Howell, with 21 points, and 35-

aerle1

Is

at

Boston

Unseld Named

NBA's Rookie
OfThe Year

aeries, Atlanta moved to within
NEW YORK (UJ'O- Westley
one game of winning ita Unseld, the All-America center
Western Division semifi1111l se- from Louisville who propelled
ries against San Diego by the Baltimore Bullets from Iaiii
dowDing the Rockets, 112-101. place In 1968 to the top of the
The two teams meet again National Basketball Aaeocla-

j

'"

late

aeeking their lith Natl0111l
Baokelball Aaaocialloo playoff
championship In 13 years, took
another step towards attaiDing
lhst goo! Sunday afternoon by
beating the New York Knick&amp;, year-old San Jones, with 18,
followed Havlicek in the Boston
108-100.
Unfortunate~)' for the Knlcka, atiack. WU!ia Reed contributed

GUDTEB ..

Living neJt to. you la 11r
some way like sl~eJ!In( wlt~r
an elePbanti 'No matter·flow•
friendly and even-tempered ..
is the beast, If I can call II
that, one is affected by every·:
twitch and grunt.
_,
-&lt;:at~~~dl&lt;m Prime Minuter...
EUiott Trudeau, during re·.
cent vilit to the U.S.

pnng

\

\

'

,,'•

•

NEW

Stand,··-oo

-..

---·

---

local Bowling

0

o I o 0 0 0 o

tonight In san Diego and a tlon•s Eastern Division, today
victory by the Hawks would was named the league's Rookie
place them owoslte Los AI). of the Year by a better thao 2-1

Dick Smith

Smith Wins Middle Stock

geles in the Western tlnals.
The

Lokers

advanced by

ousting San FrandscO In six

margin.

Unseld,

who despite his
COmPOrai!Vely Smail 6.fout-7'i! ·

games. Los Angeles dropped the Inch height managed to fiDiah
first two of the best..of~seven second In rebounding oD(y to
series, but rebouiX1ed with four Loa Angeles' Wilt Chamberlsln,
straight triumphs, the clincher received 53 votes from a panel
••'
coming
saturday night, 118-78,
ol eports writers and S)IUriSCIIt·
..CHESAPEAKE, Ohio- For the er from Ashland, Ky., finlllhed
John
Havlicek's
25
points,
second etralght week Joe Lemley the mooey wb1nera by taking the Including a key three-point play ers. Elvin Hayes, San Diego's
young center, was second with
ol Proctorville captured t h e Little Stock Eliminator title.
25 votes,
street Eliminator I!Ue belore Green's time was 17.69 seconds.
Unseld, who trtuera BaltiNBA PLAYOFF STANDINGS
ll«&lt;O. drag race JMs at Rl~~r­ Runnerup to Utile Stock Ellml·
more's
fall ·breok
al.le·Drlli'Strip. ThO.iolnil(oitline oator, Kenny Ratllt!,. dUll.could- '·By United Press lnterriltionel attaek, devaotatlnl
p!lled
down
1,491
n't catch Green even though he
will 13.55.
Eastern Fins!
rebwnds this season, an aver·
: Paul !tlears, of Logan, w. •turned In an E. T. ol 15.66
Best ol Seven
ego
ol 18.2 per game. But
Riverside Is now ualng cNal
VII., fouled during the final go
Y/ L Pc~
Unsold
refUted to take credit
In the Top Stock runoff giving the lane timing 8(JIIpment to permit Boston • • • • • • • .. 1 0 1. 000
Win to Bill Rardin of Ravenswood, fall, el!lclent running ol lime New York ••.... 0 1 .000 for the atllets' success.
"We had a great year because
trials and ellmlnatloos.
w. Va.
West liemi-Filllls
a
lot of guya worked bard end
Drar racing coollnues next !linDick Slnlth, piloting the H &amp;
Best of seven
did
their jobs, H seld Unseld. "I
W L Pc~
S !l&gt;eed Shop PooUac from Gel- day at Riverside.
Others In the erea taking part Los Angeles . . ••• I 2 . 667 was just part of it. No ooe man
t!P&gt;Us, did it again, Smith qut
in
&amp;mday's activltles were Char- Sen Francisco . , , , 2 4 .333 could be responsJbJe for our
through the qusrter mlleln )!at
12.76 seconds to win the Mid- lea Lambert, Gall!poUa, Roger Atienta . . •..•••. 3 2 •600 success,tt
die Stock Eliminator mooay. Dave Saunders, Galll(lO(is, Charles San Diego ........ 2 2 .400
9iain, ot Racine, was nmnerup Brown. Athena, Bob Bowen, Pom ..
Sunday'a Results
eroy, and Joe Dalley, Galll(lO(Ia. Boston 108 New York 100
In Middle Stock.
Atlanta 112 san Diego 101
BU1 Green, the U.S Olda drlvMonday's Results
Atlenta st san Diego
OD(y game scheduled
..

~iminator

Money Sunday

Indians
Tap Tiant
For Opener

Local Bowling

MASON BOWUNG CENTER
March 29, 1969

INDUSTRIAL
1. Burton's Sunoco; 2, CocaCola; 3, Tom Rue Motors; 4. J.

ABA PLAYOFF STANDINGS

Carmel News
By the Day

SHIRT
FINISHING

Kingsbury
News, Notes

Robinson's Cleaners

Mr. ancl Mrs. Lonnie Hudson
had as recent visitors Mr. aDd
Mrs. Junior Rogers.
Mrs. Hazel Arnold, Evaline
ani Lester visited with Mr. and
Mrs, Alpha Russell at Hysell Run
one day recently.
Recent visitors of Mr. alii Mrs.
sam Damron were Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Domron and !am icy of East
Bank, W.Va., Mr. ani Mra. Ke~&gt;­
neth Holbrook or New Haven, W.
Va., ani Mr. and Mrs. Gary Gibson and son of Albany.
Mr. and Mrs. William King
had as recent visitors Mr. and.
Mrs, Ernest HeUman and son,
George, or Pittsburgh, Mr. and
Mrs. James Cummina of ReYJ&gt;oldsburg, Ohio, and Richard Hell·
man of Hemlock Grove.
Mra. Ruby Tredway, Comeeut,
is visiting with her daughter and
!amil,y, Mr. ani Mrs. Elma Smith
ani 10111. Sunday visitor was Mrs,
Hada Skidmore,
Mr. ani Mrs. John Dean vlalt·
ed Sunday with Mr, and Mra. Paul
Paynter at Clrpentor.
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Boa! of
Athena visited Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Wayne Bea1 and fam.
icy ani also with several frlenda
io the community.
Mr. and Mrs. CbarlesKina:vlaited Sunday with Mr. and Mra.
Raymond Muuer and connte.

DETROIT (UP~ Luis Tlent
bas beeo tapped for mwnd
. 1. 4-F's;2.G&amp;A;3,P&amp;W;4,Lu· Cleaners; 7. Waddell &amp; Reed;
East
chores when the Cievetend Jn..
cKers; 5. Lazy-4; 6, Shamrocks. 8. Hickman.
series A
cl!ans
begin their American
High Game - Haggerty ani
-(Women) High Game- K. WhitW L Pc~ League 1018011 against the
latch, 173; High series- W. Gab- Davli, 237; High series- S. llag- Indiana • • ••••• 0 0 .000
world champion Detroit Tlgara
riiach, ~73. (Men) High Game - gerly, 619.
Kentucky . • •••. 0 0 .ooo Tuesday.
D; Mlller, 225; High Series - D.
Series B
llenoy McLain wU! etart for
STEELWORKERS
MIUer, 576.
W L Pet. Detroit as his club hoots Cleve1. Nuts &amp; Bolts; 2, stingers; 3. Miami , , , ••••• 0 0 .000
land at Tiger Stodlwn.
Tappers;
4. Duds; 5, SWtrcers;
MERCHANTS
0 0 .ooo
Mione.•...
The Tribe ended Ita spring
.1. W. Va. Nations! Guard; 2. 6. Ferros; 7. Skips; S. Bombers.
West
training
......, by Bloi&gt;Pins
High Game - L. James 2!6;
G; 0. Roush ani SOOs; 3. Sisk;
Series A
Montreal
twice
over the week.
4. Mason Co. Bank; 5. Siders Sl(l- High series-G. McFarland, 570.
W L Pc~ enl. Cleveland blanked the Expcy; 6. Pantasote; 7. w.o.w.;
Oakland •••••••• 1 I .500 pos 8-0 in tile finale at Milwau8. Miller's Ins.
Denwr ••••• , • , , 1 I .500 kee, Wis., Sulday and smashed
WEDNESDAY MIXED
High Game- H. Russell, 214;
Surles B
More 'Replays?'
them 7.:1 at Omaha, Neb., Sat1. Try-Hards; 2. White &amp; Nel·
High Series - S. H11110rty, 591.
w
L Pc~ urday.
son; 3. Leftovers' · 4. Hits &amp;
NEW YORK- (NEA)New Orleans . . • •. 1 0 1.000
Larry Brown, Rich Scheln- Seasonal diaries, a Ia Jerrr,
Mines; $, lly-For's; 6. S.,re &amp;
TUESDAY WOMEN
Dallas • • ••••••• 0 I .000 bium lnd Chock Hlllton led the 'Kramer's "Instant Replay,'
1. Lucky Strikes; 2. Toppers; 3. Tennart; 7. G.l Jo's and Sonssunday's Reaults
Indians' Dlne-Nt attack Sulday may become a new sports
Alley cats; 4. Slllltllers and May· ~uns (tie).
Denver
!22
Oakland
119
with two IIIIa apiece. They were lad.
(Women) - High Game - B.
benols (tie); 6. Doodbeata; 7.
Onb'
game ~cheduled
The latest to keep a diary
guided In their asaault by the
Sayre 183; High series - B,
Shamrocks; 8. CJown1.
~··Gamel
is
Tom Meschery ol the NBA
lhree-ltil
pltcblng
ol
Soony
Sie'High Game - B, McFarland, Sayre, 520. (Men) High Game - Dallas at New"Orleons ·
Seattle
Supersonics. He's
bert, Stall wWlama and Larrr
199; High Series - L. !Uchard- B, Tennant, 222; High Series - Mlnne- at Miami
kept one lor each of his tasl
Burchart.
B. TeMant, 562.
son, 493.
live seasons in the league,
Only glmeo ac;hoduled
Oil 8alllrda.Y, the Tribe ex. and is now looking lor a pub.
ploded for fCOlr ntnl Oft nve Usher.
hila In the lf!Yenlh lming for
ill victory over Mantreat. The
THE DAILY SI!N11NEL
tEYOTI:D 1'0 IHTEIDr Of
teama had been Ued 2.:1 going
IIEJGl;.IWON .t.IIEA
Into the aevenlh wilen Max AlNCHAJtD S. CM'!N, Pllll.lll(JI
a..- T«&lt;IINU, ~
vis led oil wltlt a alnsle.
P*llhllll dllb hftllt S.~IIJTIIIICIIIo
Vera Fuller lllllt 111m to third
vao., P\llltlllilw ~r. uo ...._.~st.,
with
.
a
tll!ile
and
HUll
&amp;1yder
·-""· ~... 41-70. ....... ono. .....
No need to worry if Uncle Sam aoya'"you're
ftWitf, E'AIIt.-1111 Pta. i11Wl57.
scored 111m with another .,._
..,_. daM .......lei. ,_IGf, GMt.
o little short this lime. You supply the need Nlll..t ~e~...ru••• rwnHIIIItJ.. t i ...
~. FUller came home m a
tD~. lilt., I~ l!.ul 4ht !L, New Yn
and we supply the money. You may want
CIIJ, New Yon.
alnsle by Larry Brown.
Wl'""tlotl ,.._,, Detl .. nd ., mrltr
to gel some extra (ash too. for your own
&amp;lyder came In oo a fielder's
""'" MiiiMt U ftllll ptr Dill; - )fll' In
...._..at IN Dlllr S..IMI orne., IU.tO. Sll
good use. Give us a (all.
choice wilen tho ••
l'IIIII'Aht, .11.71. 'T1Irw IIIOMIIII,·N.IL lb' lilolar
waa too late. Brown added the . . . . . . . (lrl"lfr ...-.tc.ldl~ 0.
!N.H. • -~~ 0.. ,.., ... l . 5b
fllllrlh run 011 a ucrlftce Ry ....
........ u. Tlnl . . . . 114.00.~
lll'k&gt;l 1101:1-. ~ TllltWIIIMII!tl.
.1&gt;1 Ray Fo••·
'
SUNDAY MIXED

K. M. ani S~ Joseph (Ue); 6. ABC

By United Press International

Want to buy a house? It's easy. Want to
sell your car? It's easier. Want to rent an
apartment? Read no further. Want to
trade coins? Relax! The answer to all of

INCOME TAXBS '?

/· I.

•

LOANS UP TO. ~
' Avolloblo Jhrovgh ·Our ,125
('M Compan~

AND SAVtiiGS COMPANY

{ ;M,t.u.j'

992·2171

POMEROY, 0.
. : 1, .• .

1 •'

N. W.

,OPt.,..

these questions can be easily solved by
using our Want Ads. Using the Want Ads
is not limited to our town. It can bring yQu
an Qpportunity from many parts of ,the
.!l.ew,,,.c..

OaD.

counlry. Find out for yourself I Use . ~r
Want Ads today.
' ,· 1

The Da,ily ·

Ot'nCE 'HOUU.H TO 13, noS (CI.O.'£ liT NOON ON
T'i!Uits;' - t:Aiil' WUtn\ Sf,, l'ONt:iiOY , -

.... 999.2156 '

'

1.
'··

Prell~

Celtics Top Knicks 108-100

11MELY
If it is suggested tbat the
undergraduates of the 111801
have a more adult sense of
responsibility than thoee of
earlier generaliona, the reply is surely that though tbe
student of today may be far .
more serious-minded thatr.
hla predecessors, to lack a
sense of humor is not the
same thing as to poaseaa a;
sense of responsibility.
:.::
-John Sparrow, wardell of
All Souls' CoUege, Oxford
University, on student re·
volts.
""

~-

-J.ue D.,.erl,
...•
wce11wr
fielder WUUe Dovis, lold rooldeo
Ted Sizemore at short, BIH
Sudakls at third and Willie
Crawlord In center In their
opeDIJW 1111!1111·
Ace rllht-hallder J•n Ma·
rlchol wiD be 011 the mound for
the Glama agal""l the Bra..a'
Pal Jarvia. Marlchol won 26
pm.. last seaaoo with onb'
Dine losses. Jarvis was 16-12.
In Sunday'o exh!bitloo tiMlea,
Cincinnati downed Detroit 5-11,
Cleveland llhut out Montreal 8-0,
Philadelphia blanked Baltimore
5-0, Pittsburgh beat Washington

'

.,

117 United

l'lllfellklllal ·...........
YORK (UJ'O-VIke !lao ~ fll Cillo.._
•..-•• Sl. Lout.. ..
_. ._.JH
•••••• Cl'"
upHI 1.-5 favorite ReYiewtr
-...,
Saturdllr to capture the '"~000
6-0, the Clllcago Wlllte sox boat
nJ¥.11
- '.
BALTDIORE (UPI) - . . .
~Stakes at~
the Chicago Cubs 5-11, sao
boolf .led all lhe ..., .to lila a.
Franclaco rljJjlod the Now Ycrk
·'8"
Gamel
Nat
Included
$28,800 Plm1ko Sllket at a.
AKRON,
Ohio
(IJPI)..
Jim
Yankees 8-1 and H0111ien iq/pod
AmerleanLeaate
Godman Rrod ....., ~t Maryland lraek SaaJrdto1.
Boston 8-5.
Eut
llrlkea 011 hla way to a 269
Also, tho New YCR"k !lata
LEXINGTON, K.r. (1)1'1)pme
to win the Firestoneripped Mlnnall&lt;lll 12-i In a
w. L. Pet.
Canodloa
chaqion Vloonpl
sevel&gt;-inDIJW Rut pme of I Balllmora •••••.. 19 5 .792
pulled · up lame In the WbiiDiir
scheduled doubleheader. The Now York , ....... 16 9 .MO
Stakes, and Wllklnl Ill&lt;*, a U.
second game waa caUed In tho Cleveland •••••••• 16 11 .593
I ahol, won the race SldlmiQ'
bottm&gt; of the flfth with the BoltoD. •••• ' ••••• 11 15 .t23
POMEROY LANES
from a Reid ol KontuckJ Doril1
Meta leac!iJW 5-I. Sen DlllfO Detroit. .. .. • .. . . 9 17 .346
Woman's Thursday Alterooon
nomlneoa.
beat Seattle 8-2 before dropping Wublngtcn • • .. . .. • 8 19 .296
League
·the aocolld pme 4..1 and
Weal
March 27, 1969
RIVERSIDE, Gall!. (UJ'OOaklanl downed california 6-6
W, L. Pet.
Woo Lost Tbe UDiverolll fll ~
In 12 lnDinga.
CIIICIIO • , , ....... If 12 .538 Simoo's Mkt, , •... 581/.z 24'/,
Callfornta ...., the lllYorMlmeiOta
12 12 '500 Tilli''S Foodland , • , 47 37
Natlcnll COI181J(aie Ba-D
CallforDia ......... 13 14 .481 Landmark ........ U 40
Seattle .. • . . .. . • . . 9 12 .429 Buckeye P. Chips ••• 43 41
ToumatlliOII SaturdaY b1 oakland .......... 10 14 .417 New York Clothlns •• 35 38 ins UCLA 11-3.
Kaoaaa City....... . 9 15 ,375 Coca-Cola ......... 231/.z 61Jlh
2~ and Dick Barnell 21 lor New
ARCADA, Cattl, (UJ'O- PeNalkloal Lea&amp;ue
High Team Series - Simon's trme captured the U25,000 SaD
York.
Weal
Market, 2366; High lnl. Serio•Atlanta will have to flnl a
W. ,L. Pet. Pandora Collins, 525, High lnl. .llan Copllllraoo llandicllj) at
way to snap Ita loei'lt streak at !l. Loula ••...•.•. I&amp;' 9 .6i0
Senta ADita Setunlay.
Sen Diego If It hopes to end ill New York .. .. . . . . 13 10 .565 Game - Zils Nleri, 209; High
serles agalnat the Rockets Pblla ..••••••.•. 14 11 .560 Team Game - Buckeye Potato
ALBANY, Cattl. (UJ'O- Kinr
Chips, 885.
tonigb~ The Hawks lost all their
Loma
beat a field ol KenlllckJ
Cblcqo .••...... 13 15 .464
games at san Diego during the Mcntrael • . • • • • • • 6 7 . 462
Derby candidates at the wire to
regular season and dropped the PIUiburgh •....• , • 10 15 .400
win the $2', ooo Gold Rulli
third ani fourth playot! oonteata
Slakea at Goldeo Galea 8alllr·
West
on the West Coast after wllllling
day.
W, L, Pet.
the flrst two at home.
Sen Fran. . • • . . 19 7 .731
Joe caldwall, with 26 points, Houaloll • . • . •• 14 13 .519
GREENSBORO, N.C. (1)1'0and Lou Hudson with 20, helped Loa Angalea . • . • . . 13 13 .500
Geoe Uttlor sank a 12- Jllllt
the Hawks to their third victory Cln- ........ 13 14 .181
for a birdie oo the fifth hole fll
aa Atlanta put the game out of Atlanta ••...•.••. 11 12 .478
Mr. anl Mrs. Doyle Mutt! and a sudden-death play&lt;l! among
reach wtth II straight pohta at Sen Diego . . . • • . • . . 8 15 .416 family or Macedonia, o., carl four players and ...., the
the start of the fllllrlh &lt;l\llrler.
Qmday'l Result•
Circle of Columbua and Dixie Greeter Greensboro ()poD toor.
Rookie Elvin llayeo led Sen N. Y. (N) 12 Mlm. 4, Ill, 7 im. Circle of Athens spent the week oament !ltndaY.
Diego with 27 points, follOifed N. Y, (N) va. Mlm. 2nd, cncld enl with Mr. and Mrs. Homer
by Pat RUey with 18.
Clncimstl 5 Detroit 3
Circle.
Should a aeveoth game be Cleveland 1 Mootreal o
Rev. Father Francis E. Mal·
necessary, It will be played at litlualoll 8 Boston 5
oney or MUtonsburgl 0., called
Atlenta Wedneoday nigh~
Phlla 5 Baltimore o
oo Mr. anl Mrs. Allan Taylor
PIUiburBh 5 Waahlngton 2
recently.
!l. LAiula 6 Kanaaa Clll 5
There were 30 present at SuJl..
SAME DAY
Cblcqo (A) 5 Chicago (N) 3 day SchoDilast Sunday.
SERVICE
Sen Fran. 8 New York (A) 1
Mary Watson alii son. stanley,
In At 9 - Out At 5
Sen Diego 8 Seattle 2, Ill, 7 lno. of Racine called at the home of
Seattle 4 Sen Diego 3, 2nd, 7 lno. Betty Van Meter recently.
u.. Ou' litH Perking Lot
oakland 8 Calif. 6, 12 lrm.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Melvin Circle
The Cerleton Sunday School
(ODiy games scheduled)
and doughier of Columbus visited
had its election or oft'tcers re216 1!. 2nd, Pona••Y
Mandai's Probeble Pitchers
Mra. Mary Circle a recentweekcently. Elected were sl.l)erlnten90 Mill St., Mltld'-oport
1968 Woo-Lost Reconl
enl.
dent, Ralph carl~ treasurer, VirIn Parentheses
ginia Deani secretary, Eltzabeth
American Leagoe
Murrayj birthday
treasurer,
New York (Siottlemyre 21-12)
Marlene Harrison; plano player, at Waabln&amp;fon (Pescual 13-12).
LiiXIa Beat; correspondent, Neva
(ODiy game schecllled)
King; teachers - Cradle Roll
Natiooai Leagoe
Clau, Louise Harrison; Sunbeam
Loa Angeles (llryadale 14-12)
Class, Delores King; Busy Bee at Clnclmall (Nolan 9-4).
Class, Colloe Hudsoni standard
Sen Franclaco (Marl chat 26-9)
Bearer Class, Sadie Car1; Help. at Atlama (Jarvia 16-12), night.
ing Hands Class, Olen Harrison..
(ODiy games achoduled)
0

Wednesday nigh~
In the oD(y other playot!

Everyone in our society,
most especially school ad·
mlnislrators, pare n ta and
young p eo p I e ·themselves,
must move with the greateat
senoe of urgency to put an
end to the trarrJc and use or drugs.
-Mauor John Lind.!ay of
New York.

when chlldren jammed all Nas~
sau facilities except the casino,
the Paradise Island Hotel even

The Paradiae laland Hotel end

to· observe a tradition dating
back to 1910- throwing out the

the ·Los Afwelea Dodpra. San

the

of the spring school vacations

bies are where the kids col·
Ject and scream.

alii Ted Williams, two of
Washington's prominent new
arrivals, were the key ligures
today when baseball, newly
structured this year with four
ajjHesm dlvislooa opened ita
tOoth season.
President NiXon was called on

·
American League' season.
,. More than 44,Jl00 peroons were
eJII)&lt;lcted to watch aa the
Preslclent continued the tradl·
tlon llrst obsened by William
Howard Tift 59 years ago.
Williams, undertaking the
otre11110t1s teak of lifting the
sel8tors !ram the American
League cellar, nominated Cam!·
lo Pascual (13-12 last year) 11
his atartlng pitcher, oppos!JV
New York's Mel Stottlemyre.
The Nadooai League's tradi·
tiona! opener at Cincinnati
matched the Reds, baoebaU'a
oldest club 11100 yearo, agalDII

One Mlsslssippl observer believes that the Issue cannot=
beldn to be aettled until some potent elected white public:
orllclal, like Stennis or perhaps U. Gov Charles Sullivan the present favorite to succeed Williams In 19'11, move;:
:
toward .the loyallsla.
At the same lime, It Is contended that such a mov&amp;
would prove lrultless If it did not pull large numbers oC
presentiy unsympathetic whites along. For that to happen It is said, the Evers-Heory faction must be receptive to .
many who sliD may be segregationist in outlook.
"

land .. •• Largest and moat lux-

apace to speak of and the lob-

...

United Preas lnt.r111tional
President Richard M. Nixon

By

carne Ia."

uriously perfect Is the Paredlae
Hole! and VUias, operated by
Loew's Hotels .•.• In tile midst

Other Nassau hotel a have large
numbers of rooms but no lobby

·

The loyallall' problem, ulde from the speclalroadblockl::
thrown up by Williams, la the thinness of .their white supo..
port, There Ia some, lncluciln'g protperoua planters OsCar
and Andl-ew Carr of Clarksdale and yoUJIII lloddlnl Cartor
Ill, Greenville editor and publisher. But the numbers are
relatively rew.
One big bang-up, expressed oftell In private by Mlsslsalpplans anxious for some lort of accommodation, Is the
fact that Evers and Henry are also lOP slate leaders of theNAACP. Ills argued tliat this gives tile ·loyalist leadership
a "civil riibll" out whk:b inevitably makes It dllfk:ult to
win more white support,
·
Some white loyalists think It was a mistake to name ~
Evers and Henry to top party positions, and that prospectS
of gaining white rectults would have been brighter with a
white slate chairman sharlug authorlty with Evers, the na·
Ilona! committeeman.
Evers rejecll the notion that the leadership Is weighted-too heavily .black and lhat Ill concurrent clvU rlghll act
Uvlty Ia a bar:
•
"They're not the Domocralo lr they're aot wiUinc ~:

alreedy built on Peradlse Is-

lis lobi&gt;)' huge.

, ..

say,:
~"
"We're Coble after !Mia . ,' . We're coboe lo take It_·

tors generally but from t h e

tw~ rain .... Ita own res.
taurants are many and various,

.

would not compromlie, \hat the tllltional party bas "forceil''
Mluloslppl to be an Island unto Itself."
~"'
Evers, sPeaking for the loyallall' view of thG regulat1,

guests or the three new hotels

was able to absorb the howling
hilarity or YOIII!islers ·durtns a

.. ,....
.il l b

By llUCE IIOSSAT
NEA Washington Corrospondeot

more.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
NASSAL, BMIAMAS-

......

Miles-Apart Miss. Dems Set to Fight for Patty Tag
.

Weekend S,orts SummtJr:Y

IOOth Baseball Campaign Underway ~m;'

BRUCE .CI88A:T

\

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�·'

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'

4 - The Dally Seatinal. Pomeroy-Mlddlepon. o., Monday, A&amp;&gt;rll 7, ~969
'

NOTICI•

LIOAL
AN ORDINANCI IIOULATINO TMfl
Ull OF "UIUC AND PIIY.A I
SEWI~S AND DRo\iNI, TMI IN·
IT"LLATION AND CONNICTION OP
~UILDINO IIWitl AND TMI Dll•
CHAIGI OF WATIII AND WAITII
INTO TMI PUILIC IIWIR Ill·
TIMJ AND TO P,AOYIDI ,.Nit.L 'filS
•oa YIOLATIONI THIIIOF
lkl 11 onlalaed •• tollow• by lbe
l'uUIL\"11 of t.he VIUaa:e- or Pometo)",
otuu, two-thirdl of all m•mbtrw elec·
1.:11 llll·t-eto concurrto1:
lt.IITICLI I
DeflnltiiM
:,..·,·"u" LUI . "Bulldlnl Sewer" llhau
mc•n UHt elltenllon from tlle butkl·
•'•II or~ull. to the public aewer O•
utiU!t plllt:l! of dllipo.ul.
~liD•I 101. " Combined
t;o!w" 1
~~ •..u mnl\ a •ewer rece!vlna: ~'h.
~uriYce runutf llll ·1 mu!uclpal w•lllt~ •
S.etion 103. "Jndunrtal Walle"
W11U me3n tho' liqLud w ~llu trou.
lllodUI\ri.ll p('(l('e•ea ur dl~\lno.ot l'rOht
~nlt.tan sewa1e.
SaeHon 104. ".MuwcJpal "' ~&gt;-"\"' 1 "
ahall mea11 a combln&lt;~tlon nt the w~
wr-earried wastea trom l"t!IJ(Iomc•• ·
bus lnc1111 bulldinfn. lnalitu tion~ . and
IIUh.lttrtll
e~tabUahmeaU,
toJetbe;r
.,.lth 1uch 11 round . surfacr ~ttd 1tonn
t&gt;aten u may be pre1ent
~r tlon 105 "'MJunicipal W;o.s1ra
workt" ahall mean all tacllltlH for
colll!i"C'Un~ pumplnll. treatl nl a!ld dl•
rotinl of municipal wute~
Sll"l'llon 1011 "Peno n" shall mean
any Jndlriduai. firm, eompany, atao ·
11 n or 1!1'9UP
' i~SUotol. eac\to,ty. CO"rr:.a .r~y · shrt-dcled
ec on" ah all· mean the wastes fron1
garbage'
the preparl!lon, cootlnJ and diiPtn•·
11 of food th at h~ve been !hreddE"d
to~ 1uth degree that all pa.rtlrll'l will
t.w: carried frtl'l)' undu the flow
ronditlon normally prevailing In pub·
1 It! ~n wHh no P&amp;rliele greater
1:1t1 ~ l~ch in IPY dim!nll.on
Section \Oil •· rub hc S r w~r" lh all
mean 1 sewu ill which aU owners of
obuttlng proparti .. he&lt;ve eq..,ol ri!hts,
•1 nd
11 controUed by pubU ~ au hOii·

I

F

i!

ty .
''
Sl!ctlon 109.
"Sanltary 5eWI.ftl
~hall me il n domes'll c waatet contrl ·
buted by reuon of hum~n oceupancy.
Secllon 110. " San ita ry St&gt; wcr" ~hall

mun a sewer which carries munlctpal wut"5 lQ wntrh ll lorm ~urhc e
and fi'Ound waten aN' not !nUn·
t1onally a::l ml tted .
Section Ill "Sewer" shall meaD a

pipe or conduit fur c arr ~· htl munl ctpa.l wutel.
Section 112. "'Storm Sewer" or

"Storm

Dnln~

snail mun a sewer

\' hlcb carMel ttorm Dnln
which carrie. 1 tonn and aurlaee ••·
un and draJnalle cxcludlnll munlr1pll wa1tet.
Section 113. " Su~rlntenden ! " s hall
mean the superintendent of Sewer·•Je u

FfO ~Idf'd

by

ordiD~O \" ~

Section 114. "Vllla&amp;e" lhall mean

thl' VLillfll! of Pomeroy , Ohio
AltJICLI II

u..

s•...,.,,

of public.
Required
Section 201 . IL 1hall be unJaw~l
for any pe rso n to conttrud or m r~ m ·
tatn any privy , pr1vy vault, aeptlc
tanll:. l.'eupoot. or otller fard LI)I in·
t411lded or Uled for the diJPOial of
attwate on ;my prenuses within the
v~re of Pomeroy . pruvided that a
P\lblle sanitary sewer !1 wlthln on ll!
hUndred nom teet or the propertJ'
iJIU!! ol ~aid pre!!We1 .
.Sedlon 202. It 1hall be unlawful
for IQy pen on 111 discharge unital"}
"ware or ltHiu~trlal wutes Into an)'
norm tewer. atorm drain. or com·
blnad Nwer rrom any Pl"flmltel lo.
catet!. within the Vlllate of Pomeroy.
provld.1d that • public 11nltaey aew·
er ll ll"ithln one hundred (lQOl feet
ot tbe pi'Qperty line of
pnm·

aald

iRI. "

S«tlon

ao3. The owner of any
houae , building or prol&gt;@r1Y und for
human oetupucy, emplo)'lllent. ft·
~ rtt a tiDn
llt other purpo1n. located
on IEIJ ' premian Within the VWate
of Pomeroy. 1hall illsta ll .ultabt ...
ro11lii.U)' tacU1Uea therein aDd Jfl.all
conl\e~t •u~ll tacllitll!l directly with
a p~tbllc unitary 1ewer, 1n the man•
ner pn.cribed elnwhere In thiJi or·
dbu.DDI, pn~flde&lt;l that a public nn~~tilrY aewer Ia within one hundred
(lOOt feet of the property line of

•••Section
o In "n"""'·
204 At

such u.me u a pubhe llllitllrY •e"'cr becomee &amp;VIIIable
to any P•emt.e• served by a private
sewaie d&lt;SPOU I system . as provide-d
hl section 201, a direct connection
aholl be made to sa1d pvbl1c unitary
nwer, In the m;m.ner prescribed
olsewhere m th is ord1nance and any
a.pUc l.an&amp;, ceapool Qt slmllar Pri·
vatt s ewage dlspoul h elllty 1IUI.ll
be Jbandontd and filled with IUitable
ma&gt;~rlal

5ecllon ~ - No PtOYIIiOn of t.hlt
rrtlcle ~hall be co11.1trued to Haler
fete ~llb &amp;ny •ddiUonal require·
tnent• that m11Y be JmpOied b)" tht
County Health L:omm1111our.
ARTICLI Ill
u.. of Public S.niterr 11wen
SectLon :ill ! 1\u .,.,,!an bllill a.t~
Cblofll:, or C'"-OII! lu be dl.charlet!..
oJLlO ~ !&lt;Ul&gt;llc ~ •n i L•• J' lii"WI!t. any
ll.orm "'"l.o!l ~L.It111~e "IO!Itet, IIVUILd
Water, &lt;UUI IUUUII . ~ Ul&gt;•UtJi ~ ~ drain•
11e, coolln11 water 11r unpolluted. Jn.
rLIBtLJa l prm:..... .... .. te•
~ • .:no... lOll . ~u J1~111VU IIJilU dlt• .~ . 11 ~
,,
c:. ... r. 11.o u&lt;· diS&lt;:harled ,
, ,J.u 1a Jl•ll.tll&lt;.: »iihU;tl)' • ~wer , 11ny of
1he follaww . ..~~ •~ .,,;o. t~n~ls :
01 Quollne, bt:n~eue , napthll, luel
uLI or other IJymm.. u• ~ &lt;J r e.q&gt; IOiiL~~
Uqllid , IOlld or 111.
(2J" Garba~e thPt h ... not lle"" 11ro·
port)' iiJU-eckted .
~~~
Ashes cln&lt;a a
~.. uo
mud ,
~aw . ahaYinra. m~tal. 11111, ra&amp;a.
t•athen , tar. plas tic~. "' o"'J. pa unch
dulnure, or any other solid or via·
coua ~ub!ihncc ca pable of ca ua1n1 Ob·
lfrucUon to t.he flaw 10 sewen or
otherwlae 1nte rr,.rlng wlt~ the Pto·
per operation• of the mumrtpal wu.
WI worlu
(C) Any noxlou• or malodoroua Ill
or 11.1bstanc"' capable of c1eat mR 11
publlc nui.nnce.
Secllon 303. The admissi on of any
J""Utrlal wa.llte contalnlnt an1 eon•
~tltLtent crltlral to the munl c l p~l col·
J«.uon and treatment of wailea aball
lot aUb jP('I tr, t he r e view Rnd appro.
flll of the superintendent of Sewer·
1\Je Wilen 1n the opimo11 of ~ a l rl
. . perlntt!ndenl. preliln1oal')' treatment
Ot Control of ! UCb Wille Is neCel·
_,-ry, auiloble l~;~ctlitiu 1holl be con·
aLI'Uctcd at no ( O!t to the Village
aec1 ill acconlan&lt;.:ll:! with piau approv·

.,

-

~-

by saod

Stl!'erlnten rlenl

' ' ileriton J04o. Storm water and oth·
f,t unpol luted dr11inog1 1ho ll be di 1·
ebaqed to JUeb sewen at are 1111:! ·
lt;nated a&amp; c~m borJet.l ~e wer • or $IOrm
i!"ra or to a natural outlet appnv·
4iil by the S... parint•ndent. Indus·
trial cooling water or unpolluted Pftl·
' 6111 water ma y be di J ch~rRerl upon
appnJVII ol the Sup.erlntendent to a
1t0ft11 1r wer or natu ra l outlet
lt.RTICLI IV
' lulldl"t sawars and ConnJction•
"+.. lleeUon tOt
No unauthoMud per.
1hall uncove r. make anf connee
with or opening IAto. uae. at.
dl5turb any publlr •ewer or
;,.;..;~·~;; thueOJt 1111tbout fl.rat Db·
pe rm1l fro m the

3 ROOMS
Me• Furniture
ONlY $'299
$10.00 ...........11.
Cllnllltllt ,.,..

MAlON

.o)[L'ILI •hall

tiPPikat\on on. a
t~perllll form r~~ornlahet!. by the \'IJ.
l Ll&lt;tt'" Tht- llt'tlllll applli'llllon 1hall be
t~PPJempnted by au 1 plalll, epedfka011111 01· nthrr lnfunm&amp;tion ~on~ldt•r·
ed ,4.rttnent ill the ludtment of tlle
lilull't'rlnt..&gt;n •h·nt A Pt-nnlt and lntper .
tlon fee or rive &lt;q,OO) t1011art for a
rtlldenl 1al "L" ('Ommerdlil bulldlnJ
t~wer pennn Rnd ftltHn Cllii.ODl
uull~0u tur 1n lndultrlaJ bulldin• ae·
wer permit •hall be paul to tbo VllIIIII ,1t the ume the applle~tton U
filed.
i!lcc:tlon 403. Al1 co.ta and tQIIDH
incident to lht' lnstallaUon and eon·
...UOn of the bulltUn• Nwer a"hall
be borne b,. tho owner,
6edlon «14. A aepante an4 Ia·
d~pend('nt bulldlnJ aewer ahall be
-pnwl.ded for nerJ ltllildiofi euept
., here one bulldlnl atanda at tbe
rear or another on an InteriOr lot
and no pr\1'ate aewer II avaU-able
or un be conatnu:ted t.o lbe reu
!Juttlltng thn1ugh 1n adjolnlnt: alle)',
c"urt, yard, or drlvew•y, Ule buUd·
tn.c 1ewel' trom the front bulldint:
may be extended to the r.. r buDd·
lne. and the whole couidel'ld u one
taulldiD( 1ewer.
~ Old bulldlnl 111 w 1n"l
~rtlon 4
with
may be u•ed In ~nn~tkm are r!~~
bmlt1,n ~t~ on\v w en
eyb U.. Su
ou namlnatlon and tnt Y
":
, rmtenrl ent , to meet all
require
menta of thll o.;:!na~~~id\0.11 .ewer
Section 4011
U pipe AS'N
1btll ~ ud Iron to
• . Yltri
•pcnfil'a tl on 1-\74-421 or Ae~J , Pttl:
tred day •ewer PIPe,
1
flcallon [(' 1~51 or tqual ; plutic IIIW•
Staad·
.
er P1pe, u s · Commerelal
ret
1
~rd (L'S218 811 or equ.llic•:~': r;_
~wer pipe, ASTM apet
i43) or &lt;'llU~I. or lither ~~~~a~~~::
Jerlal approved bl' the
pe
, nt ,Joint• 1hall be hllht
proof Jolnt.l tor vitrified e Y
11nd !Pilot pipe sha ll be comprea·
1loll joints u defined by ASTM Spe.
I'Ltw~:,o n 1 i:: -425.) Poun~d Jolh~
lolnta of the sliP 1tal type I a h
ba oc:ceploble. 1f mllt1r1_a.l1 ot er
than cloy are utad far son1ta.ry sew•
H plpf' , the jotnu 1hall meet atand·
ardl equal to thfl dandard• tor elaJ
p1 pe
Seetton 4&lt;JT. The 1izt 1nd 110M
tof 1hc bulldln,ll ~e11rr 1hall be IUb•
,eel w the •PPr.&gt;val of the Soper.
Jllt e nde nt . but in no e ~ent 1hall the
6ia meter be leu th1n JlX (IJ) tnchea.
The ! lope nf ~u t· h 6·1nch pipe lhAll
I)C not less t han nnc·c1ghth II-IIJ Inch
m ;l.t'

ant wa,!!U

:;!

ptr root

Sec tion 408. WhenevN poulble the
J.ulldlnJ 1ewer s hall be brought to
the buil ding ~~ an l'levation below
the baaement fl oo r. No bulldlnl HW·
"r shall be l'~ Ld parallel to or with·
In three (31 feet of any
beart.n1
wall . wh1t:h mu1ht therehy be wea)l.
1111n11d. The depth shall be sufficient
to alford JlT"tectlon from frost. The
l•ulldlng 8ewer tha\1 be laid at unl·
form .c r~ rle and In s trai gh t allrn·
ment ln so far 111 possible . ChaDJ"H
HI dLrel'llnn 1hall be made only with
J"lt'Operl)' curved pipe and flttlnJI:.
Se!'tlon 409 Jn all bu\lulng• In
whtch any building drain !a too low
1n perm1l gn~\IY n o w to the pubUc
~ewer. sanlt1ry u wage carried by
5\lCh dnll'l 1ha tl b~ lifted by IPProV·
al arurieial mean• and dlac'harp4
tr the bulldlnl sewer.
Section 410. All excavatlorui re·
'!Ul rcd for the Installation of a bUUd·
•nR sewer shaH be open trenc:h work
t.nln e otherwise ~ 'l proved by tbe
Superintendent
Pipe
laylnl
and
bscltllll 1hall be prrformed in accordance with ASTM apeetftcatlon
1&lt;:1Z.l9J ex cept that no backflll aball
be placed Ulltil the worll. hu been•
Jnepected
Section 411 All jo1ata 111d COD·
r.eetioru ahall be made JUtiehl and
waterUrht. Jolnlll lhall conform to
the apectrleaUon1 tel forth In Sec·
lion 406.
Section 413
Tbe eonne&lt;"tion of tbe bulldlq
so.·wer Into the publlr sewer Niall
t&gt;e made at tbe "Y" brucb, if ncb
branch JR available a1 a JUit.able lo.
cation. U the publlc ~ewar Ia tweln
1

0,. the Farm Front ,
'

Food, Fiber Costs Up
Because of Inflation
By BERNARD BRENNE!l

UP! Farm Editor
WASIIINGTON CUPO- Continuing inllatloo Is r1111Jli111! I(&gt;
the cost of producing the ~
tlon's food and llber.
The Agriculture Department's
monthly farm price report, fa..
sued last week, shoWed l'lrm
costs up 1 per cent to another
new aU-time record. The report
said costs as of mid-March
were 5 per cent above a year
earlier.
For in:li vidual items, changes

Meigs

Property
Transfers
Ralph R. Henderson, Alberta
HeOOerson, Earl J, Henderson,
Virginia Henderson, Lillian Henderson, Maralynn H. Comolly,
James R. Connoll)', Jeanette H.
Kiracofe, Larry Kiracofe! Yl'onne
Woessner, Edward H. Woessner,
E, W. Dnis, Jim H. Davis, Bob
C. Davis, Norma Davis, BUI E.
Davis, Lois Davis to Eber HeJloo
derson, Corrective Deed, ~banon.
D. W. Newton to Alma Newton.
lots, Middleport.
James M. Bani~, Maxine Bani~ to Jlmmle C. Hani~, Gloria
J. Hanlng 1 2,3 acres, Columbia.
John W. Arbaugh, Ethel Ar·
baugh to Harley Gcxlfrey, Alma
Godfrey, ,32 acre, Olive.
Jnez E. White, dec. to James E.
White, Judson M. White, Dan M.
White, Jean E. Seines, Affid. for
Trans., Middleport.
James E. Whlte 1 dec. to Dan
M. White, Judson M. White, Jean
E. Seines. Amend. Cert. or
Trans., Middleport.
Mabel v. Cleland to Letta A.
Spencer, parcels, Suttor'tt Racine.
Letta A. Spencer to Mabel V.
Cleland, Paul fl. Cleland, pareels, Sutton, Racine.
Earl J. Henderson, Virginia
J... Henderson to McDonough Co.,
35 acres, Lebanon.

have varied; bet virttlally aU
the moves were ln the same
direction.
. March prtces paid for rann
machinery, · for extnl)le, ' were
5 per cent above a year earlier.
AnimAl feed costs were down
slightly, but building materials
were lCl 14 per cent, motor ".,..
hicles ~ 5 per cent, and feeder livestock up 9 per cent.
Costs to Rise
Gcwerrunent economists earlier had . predicted thlt total
Carmi~ costs this year prob-abi.Y wUI rise by $1 billion or
more above the 1968 level because of continuing inflation
arxl Curther increases in taxes,
interest alii insurance.
The cost increases, 6COIK)oo
mists said, w o u 1 d prob&amp;bly
more than offset gross Income
gains for farmers and thus may
produce a dip In net Cann in-come for the )'ear.
Rising costs, eJII)erts said,
bite more deeply into the carmers' pocketbook now than they
did a generation ago because of
technological changes in agriculture,
In 1940 1 the total cost of pr~
duction on an al'erage farm
was made up mainly of items
- such as family labor- which
the farmer lurnlshed but did
not hal'e to buy. Economists
estimate that the typical 1940
farmer had to buy only 46 per
cent of the "iq&gt;uts" used in
producing his crops,
Vulnerable to Setbacks
Last year, however, estimated 74 per cent or the ''inputs"
- seed, machinery, fertilizer,
labor etc.-going into farm production were purchased. This
change makes farmers increasIngly vulnerable to setbacks
when the costs of purchased
goods rise.

Toclay's "modern" methods
of retailing meat are really· old
fashioned, the National Live ..
st&lt;&gt;ck and Meat Board says.
11
Retailing methods Cor other
foods passed meat selltng a
long time ago," the board said
in a newsletter that reported It
~) 1Dene:lv nlo!~~~.ry.?rbr~u~b~ \HOSPITAL NEWSJ .. had agreed to., f1111nce. a.. llP&amp;cial product development r~
ovoiT!k\'!,
tt..· aqwner
aholl 1D the
e1peue in~tall
"Y" branch
Holzer Medical Center, Flrst search at Kansas State Univer..
1.ubllc nwer at tbe location •peel·
flH by the Superlnlendent. Where
Ave
Visiting hourS 2.-4 and 7~ sity.
•he pubhc sewer J! greater than
. •
Researchers will try to find
twelve u21 lncbe• 10 dla.meter, and p,m, Parents only on Pediatrics
no proper!~ locatett "Y " branch la
W d
better methods of illndllng and
avolHable, a neat bole mil)' be cut
ar •
, nto the PUblic ae~cr to receive the
merchandising
frozen meats.
Admissions
bulkllnl uwer, wU.b enley in the
And
the
key
to
future
progress,
downatream &lt;llrectlon at an &amp;llJle ot
Publication of admissions Is
~~~-out torly -tl\·e (45) derreea. A lor·
the meat board said, will be
tY ·fwe 1415 degreeJ dee:ree ell 11111 prohibited until lurther ootlce.
development of frozen products
bfO u1fld lo m.~~u web connectioA,
Births
wit h t he •Pigot end ~ ut so u not to
Mrs. John M. Greenlee, West which are not high in quality
t.~&gt;t.en&lt;l p111t the Inner surface of the
Jtub!Jc Silwer Tbe Invert of the Columbia, daugltter, 8:01 p.m.
but are consistently uniform.
l!ulldtng uwer at the point of con·
"The key is •. . quality conSaturday; Mrs. Elmo S. Pierce,
1 "etlon ahall be at the nme or at a
tL11her elevallan Lhan the Invert; of
trol ..• every steak looking a.&amp;
Long
Bottom,
claulllller,
11:25
tl!a public aewer . A 1mooth, neat
nearly as possible like every
Jomt lhall b1 rnlde . and t.he coa• a.m. &amp;mday.
necUon made terur" and watflrlliht
other steak (or chop, roast,
Dlacharges
r:r tmeatement ID concnte. Specla.l
flttlnl' m•Y be ued for t.hfl eon·
Mrs. EdWard Blake, Terry etc.) whenever the housewife
necUon only wber:t. 11pproved. by the
buys it," the board said,
'iiuperlntendent Only persona lleen· Brewer, Mrs. Harry Bumgarner,

.

. . ..•.·.·. .·... . ....·..........•.· ·.

f'IV&amp;I&gt;AY t'ORtu:~~
By Ullited Proal mtem&amp;tlooal
Temperaillres In Ohio will
average abOve norlllal f r o m
Tuesday throuiib Saturday.
Dally hlsh • reaillngo Will
range !rom ~
50s in
north to the ltPIIOr 60s in south
portloo and Diiht'Ume lows
111011tly from.tlio low 40s lo Ute
lower 50s, Wirmer at the beStnmng ~ the i&gt;erlod, followed by a little cooler weather

upper

and then a ehanae to warmer

again by the weekend.
Precipltatloo will lotal ooehalf to one inch, occurring as
showers on most days ol the
period.

J
GAUGES- Gallipolls,12.laod
25.8 running 60 reel; Pl. Pleasant, 26.62i Pomeroy .. Mason,
26.14; Hinton, 1.96 stat; Kanawha Falls, 5.38 l'llling; Charleston. 19.30 rising. Lo!ldon, on
the alii; Marmet, runnitll 0.25
of a root of rollersj Winfield,
running 3 feet
BOAT MOVEMENTS:
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS - S. M.
Jenks up 5:25 p. In.i Stevenson
up 6:25 p. m.; J. S. Lewis~ 7:45
p. m.; R E. Bowles clown 9:50
p. m. i Robert P, Tibolt down
10:50 p. m.; Semet 141 12:20a. m.;
Invader up 2:10 a. m.; John Pushak down 2:35 a. m.
KANAWfiA RIVER - Lonlon,
Esso West Virginia down 4:55
a. m.; Marmet, Alan R. MerrUI
down 9:50 p. m.;GeorgeT. Price
down 10:35 p. m.; Winfleld, El~
gercllff up 6:30 p. m.; Ouachita
down 7:10 p. m.; FO&lt;t Dearborn
down 6 a.m.

,.\1

8e~uon

co~t­

James Call, Mrs. Raymond c.

03, 1'bt lpplkanl for Ult

Childers, Kerry W, DeWeese,

hulldlnll se,.,er permH •hall notify Ronald L. D111can, Mrs. Phillip
t'tlt tjupertnlepdenc wtlen Ute l,luUQ..
inll 1ewer 11 ready for lnalleetion F. Dye, Mrs. Demls P. Hagy,
a!l4 cllnnecttun to lhe P\lbllo atwer.
Tha conn1et1on Jhall be made under Mrs. Francis Hatten, Mrs. Hen\tot 1upervialoo of the Superinte!ld- ry Houser, Mrs. Marloo C. Hutchtnl or h\t repreaentiiU ve.
lnsoo, Raymond J. ingalls, Mrs.
Se~tlon .14. AU exuv1d0M for
nu\ldlnl ~&amp;wer 1111tallatlon ~hall be Clara J. Lambert, CharJeaE..l3·
adequately guarded with bal'l""kladea
and hJhl s 110 •• tv protel.'t the pub· tie, Mrs. !Ioiiis Mayo, Mrs. Hoi.
lie from hual'd. Streett, ll.dewalka, lis Nuzum, Miss Adrieme
Rue,
ill! kW IIYS and other publiC property
rtiaturbed In the eoune of the work Thelma Saxon, 9lerry R. Sear·
~ IJ.all he re~ lored In a manner nt·
berry, Albert Scholl, Glen T.
llf~tory to the VUiap.
AlTICLI V
Scott, Mrs. WWiam D. Scott,
Powart and lt.utllerlty Of IMpechln
Sflcllon 501 . The Superintendent, Mrs. Vesta Sleoll, Frank G.
ll•aU make and enforce rule• and Smith, Sterling R. illtlon, DougTIIIUia tlons, 1ubject to al-'proval of
coun.eil, esttbllahili.J tbe t.ypu and las Swllber, Charles R, Swishchanrt~rl §t l&lt;; '
ot Jianllary sewqe er, Howard W. tboma, M r s.
and induatrl.al wuta and otbflf mat.
George WUdman, Thomaslmnl,
l d , not specifically cove~ In thU
...rd1ranee, which 1ball not be dl.- John C, COx, Mrs. Besde G.
charg!d Into the pnttary 1ewtrlll!
5~tem and the IJPI!I and cbaracter· Fife, Mrs. Perry A. Grimes,
•ltlu of unitarY ~ewage and indu•·
Mr a. Wa,yne Horf&lt;ll, Mrs. Mary
\till wastu adml•able to the aani·
t.Hy sewen11e u•ttm only liter Pre· F. Thornlml, Mrs. James K. King
u e.atment.
Such ru lu and reJUiaUon• shall and infant ...,, Mrs. Henry C.
appoint three reputable and. quaU· Hooey and Infant clau&amp;llter, Mre.
ne ri pe rhons to lnvtlltigale the appul
and agree to llffltm or reject the Carl Sauvqe and infant 8CI1, Mre.
•·u!lns or the Superintendent.
Harold R. Hazelbaker and lnfant
Section

502.

The

Superintendent

nd other duly authorired employee•
&lt;Jf the Village 1hall be permitted ~o
r ntl!r upou all propertlea for tllc
rurpoaes of ln.pflrtlon. obllervatlon,
·ne a1urement1 . &amp;ampllnl! . and Le1t.
~ntl , I.D accordance with the provt·
!lun• of thil ord!nance
AltTICLI Yl
l'ln•lti81
Section 001 . AnY Ptrton found to
,,e violalillll any prov\11011 of m11
11rdlnance 1hall be acned by the
Villa~~
with writlen notice sta¥nr
tht: natul"f! ur the 1'\olatlon and Pl'il·
,ld illl 3 reasonable t1me limit for
the ull!ractory eorredion thereof.
11le otr,nd er shall. w~ lhm the per·
tod of lime 1l.ated 1n IUCh notk:e,
!lo': rmanently re ne all violation•.
Secllon 1102. Any penon lll"ho aball

or

to•.

vaHdttv' .nd ,.. .
Section 101 . All ordlnancu, or
parll of ordinaae.. Ia c:onlUct wtth
lh'l provlalon of thla ordinance. ahell
be, and Ule lllnt berebJ an, ,...
pealed
Section 'FOll. 'l'ldl DZdlaanee llblll
h . . effect and be in lore. from aad
an.er tbt Ml'lleat data allowed bJ
law.

'
·~·
A Cormer
w,.rden

was .testify..
ill: before Senate investigators
aboot ' brulal !O&lt;tures inRicted
upon prlsooers In some penlte.,.
tiarles
.
The • 50,..tor 8 were
shocked.
They wondered how such
condilioos could exist 1n a
supposedly . humane society.
Why hadn't public oplllioo
forced reforms?
"The public does not care
aboot the men It sonds to
prl.80ftt" replled Tbomas o.
Murton, foniter Arkansas penitertlary superinlendenL

Birthdays of Two

w.

...

IAJfl
~

3·M&gt; i-7 Jto

I

WAL TOM

In urt.n ghettqs, the l'lr..fr·J
finilh,ed baltle for
the II'andly declared butve•~
·
un!ought war against po .
tits hunger . which daily •..kt
mlllloos- or families- YGU •CJI!It.
go on for an hour- llst!N lhilllf,
that peup Ie are 11tll'ed
. -~
,..
hearltll aboo~"
The reasons ' !or thla crte~ .,:
apathy are many. Soll1t 11\tll ,
gOOd wUI have cared 10 1'1'fi:
aod so intensely about 10 mall
thlJW:&amp; that they are Just w011)_
out. They are su!leriQII lrGII)
compus!on fatigue.
t :·
It YGU re wonderll!l wha ~
be done about it, doo't ""'"' 'f
with 1 solutloo that be~

mar:power than they are.
But anyone with eyes to see

"They should. •• "

i,

•

11

~

TAX

we will

•·• [I)~[!I'co.
Amorico's LargNI Tax Sorvlco with Over 3000 OffiCft

"""day thru Saturday - 9 a.M. to 5

- - • N o Appointment N~tssaiJ_ __

. -•
•

Edward Hughes

MR. MERCHANT. • •

Dies Saturday

YOU'V~

GOT TO

SELL'E •
I

make ads with profession~! eye·appeal, you need
professional help. We make the finest artwork,
illustrations and selling headings available to all
our advertisers ... it's just like getting atop.
team of advertising artists and merchandising
Drop in soon and look it over. It can make your

f;]

H~QINGS,

.

CUTS, THEMES AND .
lOW THAT HElP YOU SEll ...

,, Devoted-T~The lnterat.s Of The Meigi-M010n Area .
'

:)

Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tribble and
dallihler, Kim, o1 II. Albans,
W. Va., Mr. and Mrs. - Mike
lilla!er and son, Timln1, ~ Htmtinglon. and Jimmy Hackett or
Columbus were weekond gueats
~Mr. and Mrs. George Hacke«,
Sr. and Mrs. Mary Slater. Mrs.
Yvonne Scally and sons, TomlilY and Jamie, Joined the !amily
lor &amp;Isler dlmer.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Bracllord's Easter weekend l!lleall
wore Mr. and Mrs. AI Clemsoo
and sons, Todd and Sean or Coo-

noaut.
Miss Mary Schaal or Columbus spent the weekend here with
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Bachner.

Mr. aDd Mrs. Harry Henry of
AmesvUie and Mra. Elizabeth
Chase of Dayton were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Lochary and Miss He 1 e n
Lochary. Charles Lochary returned to Wheaton, Md. Sunila,y
after 'llsltlne here with his par·
ents and Mr. and Mrs. L e o
MONDAY
Story and hla wile aDd ehlldren,
POMEROY GARDEN C I u b,
Meg abl Robert, remained for a Mooday, 1 p.m. at home of Mrs.
l~r visit.
Roy Betzlng.
MIDDLEPORT GARDEN Club,
Mr. and Mra. Edward Bauer re- 8 p.m. Monday al the Columbus
turned to Marioo Sunday after a and Southern Ohio Electric C...
weekend visit here with her par.. office; Mn. Max Roller, Mr1.
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles R. Walter Hayes, Mrs. David FarKarr, Sr. Miss Polly Karr is mer and Mles Lucille Sm!Ut,
also the guest of her parents. She hostesses.
has been transferred from the
Riverview PTA Munday, 7:30p.
Columbus office ot Data Processm,
at the school; Easter &amp;onga by
1111!, Inc. to Sanluslcy and will
First and Second Grades; Mrs.
report there Tuesday.
Ada Holler to show slides and
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Brown and talk aboot her European trip.
EXECUTIVE Board or the Wochildren, Kim and Mike, of Port
men's
Auxiliary of the VeterClinton, and Mr. and Mrs. F'red
Brown and daughter, lllandy, ot ans Mamorlal HoB[tilal will meet
Columbus were Easter weekend at 7:30 p.m. Monday night at the
guests of their parems, Mr. alkl hoB[tltaL
Mrs, Virgil Brown.
GROUP 11 Women's Assocla~
tion o! the Middleport First Unil·
ed Presbyterian Church, 7:30
p.m. Monday at the hmne o!Mrs.
Larry Arxlerson, New Haven, W.
Va. Devotions by Miss Charlotte
Davidson; Bible study by Mrs.
Dale Walburn.

• • •
For That Stocking Run
Tbere'o nolblnf as demoralizing te a well-groomed
woman as a rua In her atocting. When lime and pla..
roldlllts buying anolber pair
Cmmedlalely,
use balr epray
ao an Invisible run 1topper,
it work• Just as weD as eloar
naU. polfob aad It doesn't

leave a tra(!e.

Bar~ Mro. LlndaMQerinUillss family by Mrs. l~onl -llor•
.Mary Hayes, SOfJrano~; Mra.. brecht.
Mary Kat&amp;z, Miss Joy Klutz,
Mr. and Mn. George Nease
Mrs. Pat llolter. Mrs. CarOlyn by Betty Nea.se llandley, 1ltom-Thomas, Miss AIUl Jioiter aild as Shaoteen by the ramn, a n d
Mrs, Mary H~~s, altos; l'red by Mrs. Thomas ~lth, )l!r. and·
Blaettnar and Ralph Werry, ten-- MrB. ll T. Proctor by Mr. and
ors. alkl Eugene Hester, .J o h n Mrs. Ralph Graves, ll~r lloltBJaettrar, Jeff Burt and Ben ter by Mra. Ada Holter "!'d Mr,
Neutzling, ban•
and Mrs. Roy Holter, Mr. anll
The sacrament or Holy Com· Mrs. Horace Smith and HO&lt;ac6 ·
munJon was s~rved by Elders Smith, Jr., b)' Mr. and Mrs. '
Marvjn Burt, Don Mayer, Dale Paul Neue; HeiU')' and Mary
Smith and Benny Ewing who were Stralle by Helen Lyons and Mr.
attJred in white robes.
and Mrs. Earl Jenkins; w. 11•.
The lllies were gi'len ·ln mem- and .lva Ebersboch by daughter;
ory of Charles and Ella Ebera- SybU; Oris Guinther ill' Host
t.ch by tho children, MarJorie Guinther and the James GuiJ)!o
Woodard by Albert Woodard, Mr. ther tamlly; Mr. ard Mrs, C.
and Mrs. William Gruoaer.btthe B. Frecker by Ada Holter aild
family; Kimberly ' SUO Crow abl family.
Mr. and Mrs.JoltnBJaet!Jarby
James Swart ill' Mr. and Mrs. AI
Crowj Henry Ewing, by his wife Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hickman, PhU
and son, Ben II. Ewing by the Williamson by h1s wife abl lam- '
Henry Ewing Cam.il)', Mr. a n d Uy, Carl W. Kautz by Mrs. :Mar')'
Mrs. Frank Myer by thelrclaugh- Kautz and f'amily 1 Mrs. C 1 a r a
te~s. Jane C&amp;mpbell by her hus· Gearheart by Mr. ani Mrs. Joe
babl and daughter, Ellrl Young ill' Struble and Mike, Mr. and Mro.
the l'lmily, Charles Frecker ill' E. R Epple by Mr. and Mrs.
his brothers and sisters, Mrs. John Terrell.
Lilies were also given in honor
Emma Werry by Herman, Charof
Mrs. Besse Weed and Mr.
les and Henry Werry, Mr. aJKI
Mrs. John Blaeltnar by Fred and Mrs. Theodore Mora ill' Mary
Blaettnar and l'lmlly, the Seitz .and Joy Kautz.

Church Youth to ·Go
To Teens Convention
Eleven young - l e o! the
Middleport Church or Christ will
liD to Columbus Friday lor the
annual Teena lor Christ Coovenlion to be hold at the lndlanaola
Church of Christ.
The 11 from the locaJ church
will Join approximately 1,000
Ullo teens for the convention
Which this year has "'Born Free"

Exodus which wUI pit Teena !or
RACINE CHAPrER 134, OES,
Christ teams against each other
a Ia College Bowl, testing !mow- Mllnday, 8 p.m. at Masonic Temple: lnlllatory work tor one can.
ledge o1 the Bible,
A contest to select the group dldate; bring articles lor silent
name4ag design which most er. auction.
TUESDAY
fecdl'ely portrays Ute theme for
MEIGS
ATHLETIC ASSN.,
the CO!tl'endon COtJpled with the
1\tesday,
7:30
p.m., al Mel g a
goals of Teens for Quist will
High
School
In
Middlepor~ Meet
al10 be conducted Saturday.
ana
II the theme.
Trophies for both contests will the team night, With baseball
Gol111! !rom the Middleport be awarded at the "Born Free team to be introduced. Refreshchurch Will be steve Gerlach, to Serve" banquet which will be- ments.
Beverly Houdasholt, Rick Trip.. gin at &gt; p.m. Dr. James R. Van
WEDNESDAY
I:The ,!ita:dtlll ~-, ... ille.-&amp;ll\'11 ""~llf'll!e 1!11, Pet1Jl Walter~, JV .,.,K• . Curen, m.l~1~:l~t
i
TRINTIY
.. CIRCL.E,. Trinity
6lapetch, Tho Cciltiiiiiiiii"Lanclacape Auoclauon, The Columbus ij. 1fam Dodsan, Opat:. BerrY, D&amp;t)::" speak a(
Lnlted Church of Christ, 7:30 p.
lied Fiorillo and llte Garden Club Members o1 Central Ohio, 11 ble Triplett, Tina Nlori, Paul lng event.
m.
at the church.
Cutvtingltam,
and
Mark
Moyer.
Also
on
the
Saturday
.Protll'am
wao a voey ol!joyable show and also edlcatlonal.
Eoon I! YGU know veey llllle about !lowers, thia show creates The visiting Teens lor Christ Is a hootenanny with Ken HenwUJ go to the hon,te of ColumbJs derson, Cinchmatl, former edJIn ooe an imtrest to lry !lower arranging,
THUilSIJAY
IamiUes
!ollowlng the Frlda,y tor of the Church of Christ magOr, perhaps 8IIOIJgh curiosity to see II you might have a green
JACK
SLAVIN,
Middleport art.
night service.
azlne for teens.
tllunbi
lot,
1111est
speaker
Thuroday,
The event Will get underway
In addition to the programs
at 6:45 p.m. Friday With a ttlng. lor the teens, a sponsor's work- 7:30 p.m. when Bradbury PrA
spiratioo dlrected by Ed Erskin lhop lor adults will be held on meets; seeond grade mothera
will serve. Nomlnadou of of!lThe Albury United Methodist In tribute to Mrs. Wald IAJuks, or Granger, md. S\&gt;eaker at the S&amp;turday. The Rev. Gary Jon- cers.
Church of ~racuse has beon se- the Don Lisle !amlly lor Mrs. evening service Will be the Rev. kina, First Christian Church•
WOMEN'S AUXILIARY, VeterLucian Robinson of the Garden- Canton, wUI have charge o1 this.
leeted "CIIIrch ~the Week" ill' Norma Lisle, and Mr. and Mrs. side
ans
Memorial Hospital, ThursChristian Church, LexingUte Sally Flowaro Slowo!WTVN- Fred Crow, Jr. lor Mrs. Halon
da,y, 7:30 p.m. at hospital inton, Ky. He Will discuss "Hom . N
TV, Columbua.
Baer.
stead or re11111ar meeting date
Free to~."
lnlormadon on the church and
At tho sunrise service a canIn
dlnJng room (due to hospital
Saturday's activities will beIts actiVIdes was eubmilted to tata was .PretiOnted under the
convention
in Columbus); RutKin with a quiet time lor meditbe televlaloo show by Mro. Roy. dlrecdou or Mra. Ann Sauvage.
land
and
HarrlsomWe
members
taUoo at 8:45 a.m. The general Thomas, a member of the A break!all waa served ill' the al session will be held at 9
on refreshment commJttee; West
Mr. arxt Mrs. BenNeutzlinge~ Vlrglnla members on program
~acuae clllrch ..,.. residing Ellgles Clau ol the church, and
a.m. and workallops Will begin
In .Columbus. This past WHk the $mday school and the morni111! at 9:30 a.m. Fl!teen workshops lertained with an Easter buffet committee.
at their home.
ehurcb receiYed a leiter ~ COII·
SUPPER, 6:30 p.m., ai DAV
With good attendance at have been scheduled tor tho day
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Mar- hall In Pomeroy Thursday, All
IP'atuladoos and &amp;Isler lilnda1 all oervlcos concluded lha Ells- with themes such as .,Born Free
vin Durt, Haman. Melanie, David
a baaket ol roaes !rom WTVN- tor lc:tlvlties.
to IJ:we," uBom Free to Dem- ani Jell, home frwn Bowling veterans lrwlted.
TV IAiomedthealtar. Mra. Thom.
onstrate,., and ,.Born Free to Green Universll,yj Mr. and Mrs.
BUSY BEES at the Trlnlly
• • •
as wao .Present lor Ute sel'Yiee.
Woralllp,b
United
Church or Christ, 9 L m,;
Ray
Riggs,
lllaralynn
and
CaraNo, Gwendolun, an upLllleo decorating the chancal
A
hlghllgl&gt;t
of
Saturday's
acsenior
c~oir rehearsal. 7:30 p.
lyrm Tracy, Miss SybU Ebenper plate ian't necellarU?."
were provided by tho Eaglea
tivities
will
be
a
''Bible
Bowl"
m.
the one on lhe top •hel .
bach, Pomeroyj Mr. and Mrs. Euclan, Patty and &amp;laame Wlnecontest
based
oo
the
Jlool&lt;
o1
DIRECTORS' MEETING, Midgene
Hester and daiJI!hter, JUI
• • •
bremer andtheDeckerandHa,yoa
dleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club,
Elizabeth, South Polrt; and Mrs.
tamJIIN as a memorlalio FoiJ,y
Speaking of oecretiwi.s
7:30
p.
m.
Thursday
at the home
Eugene Hester, Sr., New Haven,
Decksr Cascl, the IAJuks tamJ.Ijo
ia a ta110rite pa~limt.
of
WUbur
Theobald,
preslden~
W.Va.

FULL-WIDTH
FLUORESCENT
CONTROL
PANEL LIGHT
INFINITE
HEAT CONTROL
Gives you any oven tern·
perature for cooking.

Faster· heating Calrod®
surface untts stand up for
easy cleanmg
·~

'" llli'IRIP"' .....
COOICTOP

Recessed cooktop to pre·

vent spill-overs.

EASY-TO-OPERATE
OVEN
Just latch the door. tum
control knob to '"clean",

set the timer and the oven
cleans itself electrically (at
about 7¢ per cleaning)

f·
eutz mgs Give

Buffet on Easter

$965.50 is lri
From Seal Sole

Tho &amp;Isler 8Ml .... of il1e
Melp Count,y SOCiety !or Crip-

pled Children llld Adulta has
reached a total ~ f965.50, Mrs.
Wilbur Theobald, seal sale chalrltlBD, nporta.
Mrs. 'lbeobald urges realdenta
to aat Utelr Cltlllrlltutlone In 110
that the l'wid drive un be concluded. Contributions are to be
maUed io CU.Ua Jonldn8C11, VIne
II., Mlddloport. The &amp;001 set tor
tho 1961 ..., Is $1,400.
Aixtut .1,000 Will be used to
!lnanee a IWitmar _.., clln·
lc, The Soc!e11'1 worklocalb' lo
handled thnlUih Ute M1ddltpirt •
Fomeroy R~ Club.

Big Value! Hotpoint Range
with Teflon~coated oven walls.
Sale Price

$229.95 ...,

Term•

Model RB646 ,. "

Three Birthdays

I

Observed Easter
Three birthday aiHllversaries
wore observed &amp;later Su~
with a dinner part,y atlhe home
of Mr. and Mrs. V. D. Edwards,
Pcmeroy,
Observing hll'lhdayswere Mrs.
EdWards, her son, DaVid, ani her
daughter, Mr.. Wayne Shere. Mr.
and Mro. Sflere, who reside In
M.idland, Mich., whtre he is an
acCjiiUIIant with Dow Olemlcal,
wore weekenl visitors. Jollling
Ute !amJJ,y !ordlnnerSundaywere
Mr. ani Mrs. Earl Shrieves of
The Plains.

HOOD

•

i!!~~~~~j==':-~

•

Oven timmg clock.

* Glass Door .

-~

••et-prlcl41 llotpolnt llllt
'Wll. flsy.Cftttl porctllll MI.
Sale Prlca

$188.00 . .

Tormo

Modtiii.IUI

PRATT &amp; LAMBI!RT

~~

• Blue-gray porcelaln-finiah oven interior
with rounded corners and shelf supports.
• Removable oven door, storage drawer, drip
Plnl. and control k.nobl.

etillllllfed ........... r. DwPont TFE flnltft,

s15
'

Removable Teflon -coated oven walls
sponge clean.

• Removable oven door, storage drawer,
drip pans, and control knobs. Plus rece&amp;~ed,
no-drip cooktop.

• Oven 1iming clock.

,-

SENTI'N·EL

-~ and Morchandl•lng ldtao. Con-

roy•

lahoma, after vlsltitll here with
hJs parenls, Mr. and Mrs, Paul
Nease.
Ann Holter, freshman at Ohio
State University, spent the Easter
wee~m here with her parents,
Mr. ani Mro. lloy llolter.

NAVY

THE 'DAILY

)1,
a i FREt! 11rvlto
to·- ad•ortlson, wo
. ,,
'
p~o . tho liMit, agoncy·lovll art-

.,.

OR PHONE
992-2156
.

Lisa ol Winfleid, W. Va. ftre
weekend Ylal!O&lt;s ol Mr.andMrs.
L, E.,Triplelt.
Mr. and Mrl. Tom Watkins
and ...,., TomJilY and Christo.
pher, ol Columbue, made thalr
&amp;Isler •lsit here laatweoll. They
were IIIOsla ~ her parento, Mr.
and Mrs, Wmtam Slater, and
IIIU for a tlbl.or. Mi.a. Certnxle
Cabeen Joined lha rimD,y tor dJn.
ner.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert 1\tmer,
Michael, Debra, llondra and Cary
of aJeyrus were weekend guests
of hla paranto, Mr. and Mre. Joe
Turner. &amp;lnday VIsitors of the
Turnore were Mr. and Mra.I!Obert McDanial and Robin, Fome-

MISS

specialists working for you at NO additional cost.
ads SING!

(Ed. Nolo: ''Groen 'l'lllmb Notes" wUI be a weok!J' column writ•
ten ill' Melee Count¥ Garden Club members. It Will feature lilts..,
&amp;U'denlng techniques for tho erperlenced 11 well as the novice aardener, BIOQII wiUt ln!ormatloo oo evonts or activitieo or special I•
tereai to green thumb entltuslasta.)
BY MRS. HOMER PARKER
Rutland Frlendl,y Gardeners
A "WonderlaDd ~ Beauf1,•• waa a theme eome true for thoae
IIIIa violtad il1e 13111 Annual Diopatch Charities Gorden and Flower
lhlw In early Mar&lt;ll at tho Llusdte Bulldlna 00 the Ohio state Fair&amp;rOUIItlaln Columbue.
llns hard 1o boiievo thatiJ)riq: httdn'l arrived.
.
llte 15 beauti!ul prd0111 hod beon PI'tiiBl'Od In a .Professionally
dalflnecl area or 50,000 sq. ft. Tho Four Saasmo, al'lttllld Prdlot
lllllnl diVIded Into quarter aectloruo, With each ~ to the
I.Pflna. awnmer, !all or Winter ....... remillded me however, that
It 111s a cold Wintry day oullidel
Ellch sectiAin o1 it had !lowers or blooming sbntbs o1 the sea1011, while lha Winter one was 1110111 reallodc WiUt a cover ol art!ftclal ...,._
The Grovs City Garden Center•e prden dlsplayed el&amp;llt kinds or
....,.... cover lncludlllg ~suckle, pachysandra, m,yrtle and IVJ.
The local point wu a back;rard J&gt;OIId, complete wiUt 1 statue and
llone walkway WiUt over 100 azaleas In allades of pink and red.
The Lewle BoDey
.Presented the tll1tllual In a orlenialllrden
lllllch !oUowed a Japanese theme. II featured a rock waierrall which
formed an oaala-llke atructuro 8tUTCWided ill' sand, exotic shrubs,
and !lowers wiUt a otone Walkwa,y leadlna to Ute weterfall. The
Wallcini lllek, a contorted, twisted lhndl wu a spectal point or interell.
The Marullo Nursery and Gorden Center garden featured a tountaln Mth three sea born a and a eherub IW'rounded by evergreens,
ualeas, begonias, petunlao and fairy roses WiUt a walkway ~ round
aleJ&gt;ping llones berde&lt;ed by ceblan lntermedla yew hedge. Ins
laid lo be tlesicned lor ea,.y maintenance and .Practlcallt,y In any

With Nothing In EltiMir EAI

Everyone knows that it pays t() advertise, but to

'

A weeltly feature or Meica
C&lt;I!DIY GardenClubmomben.

NOWI YOU MAY
HEAR AGAIN

TO

.

Noies ••• ,

Mr1, Albert llondricks and
Dlck Nea11e has retLU"ned to the
chU-, Stevl,, Tamln)', and University or Tulsa at Tulsa, Ok·

.

Ill: ol the scri[!lore and tho collection or pemles for orphans
ani the prese!QIIoo ot' the tithes
aad offering.
11
Eariy In the Morntzw" was
tho elton! allthem and lite Rev.
BUI Perrin used u1 Ha\'eSeen the
Risen I..oi-d,.-111 hls sermon topic.
A feature of the morning worshf.p servlcv "as selections
from 11 The Messiah" by llancleL
These incloded "Jfallelu,iah" and
"Worthy Is the Lamb" cooclllling
with the Amen Chorus. Mrs.
Ntutzllng accompanied the choir
attheorpnwlthMrs. Paul Nease
directing.
Slfld,ug in the choir were Mrs.
Gay Perrin, Mrs. Patricia Young,
Mra. Joan Russell, Mrs, L o I s

-•hlp

TELL'E

Any
uP-holsterer
Who knows
his stuff
1111
tile

'

Memorial lilies gr'oc&lt;id I h o
chancel of the Trillity United
Church of Christ 1ur the Ellster
Sunday services.
.. F..aster Alleluia" • u organ
prelude by Mrs. Ben Neutlll111!,
opened the sunrJse mvtce at 6:30
a. m. with "Jesus ChriJt ill m...
en Today" as the processional
h)'mn. The introit. ehoral response, Lord's Prayer aM dox..
oltv, were fOllowed ill' the' read-

Named Church of the Week

304 POMEROY,
EAST OHIO
MAIN

DAIRY ISLE

Memorial Lillies Beautify··charit:eli,,

Green 'lhumb

The Columbuo Horileulture Society had an oltl-talhlonetl herb garden
In Ml ii'Owth.
llte Columbua Clt,y Parks Dlviolon presented what was probabJ.y
Ute moll eye..atehin&amp; dlspla,y, II featured a aazebo surrounded
by a miniature lake with a mechanized wateropou~ and waa enCircled With • variety or color!ul !lowers, blooming trees and shrube.
A roae garden or 90 planto wao dlaplayed ill' tho Alilerican Rose
SOCiety, whose national head&lt;Juerters Is In Columbue. The eight
odter prdona also wore "'lall.r pretty.
The Columbuo PUblic Schoolo hod a 1110111 Interesting dlsplay
~ ·gourd art objecta and oUored lnlormatloo on IP'OWfng gourds
and Instruction 00 uaes or them. The Columbus area !Iori at Shops
had an outstanding dilplay ol !loral arrangementa suitable tor
vailouo holldayo
other special occasions.
llte latest In gardening equipment, fencing, lawn lurniture, outdoor COOidnr equipment, outdoor lighting, and hundreds o1 t,ypeo of
Oowero and plants were dlopla,yOII tor sale. Free prden store cwJi(las, rose bulbea and flol!m'lng trees were l[iven dally u prize,.

MORE DAYS

McCLURES

~.,

baclcyard,

we make any

DRIVE-IN TO SONNY'S
FOR A SPRING TREAT
NOTHING CAN BEAT

o., Monday, AprU 7, 11169

c...

guarantte

CMAILII W. LIOAJI:
Mlytr

raci&amp;I.Justl~

In 'that brief; bhter
ox-Warden Murton ,put his
· ' on ~· ilat ~
• . 'be
finger
America's mpst "'i,c moral
problem.
,. , .
Not Tn&gt;lal
lnllfference toward the sui'
(eriQII or others
has not be en
regarded, In the past, as a
I)J&gt;lcal American tral~ On the
cootrary. Americans have ta~en
pride In bel111! a cOJqlllsslonate
people. readily aroobed to a
sympathtitic and generous response.
There still are some Amerlcans like thaL If thlre weren't,
charitable enterprises would be
even harder up r... money and

Yet thou hast made him

,,.,,... ,., ., council

Atfttt:

~

·

They''" can't do
ani ears to hear must have about this. Only yw and I
Are Celebrated
noticed that COJqlllSBiOO - a
The birthdays ol April Fra- genuine interest in and concern
ser and ROMie Jacobs were 00. lor the troobles or othera-ls lXI
served Saturday with a !arntly 101110r a coosplcuous feature or
party at Ute home ~ Mr. snd the ratloml mood.
Mrs. Dale Jacobs, Middleport.
This dlspositloo to Ignore,
At the dirmer were Mr, and tune out, shut off UJl)loasant
Mrs. Romie Jacobs and chil- facts seems to be quite
dren, Crystal and Ronald Gene, widespread.
Rutland; Miss Carol Jacobs,
Long List
home tor the weekend from
Prlsoo reform Is on1.Y one or a
Brooklyn, N, Y., Mr. and Mra. IOQII list o! problems U.l the
Em1e Fraser, Scott and AprU, public doesn't want to be
and Uncia and Bryan Jacoba. bothered abooL The smoulderCarol returned to Brooklyn $Inday via plane. S:ie was accom- ing resentment of the ha-., .~:;:::::::::::
panied to Columbus by Mr. and
----OP!ifT
Mrs. Ronnie Jacobs and Mrs.
Dale Jacobs.

LHLII P. PULTZ

.fUIMJOIE CO.

..

siatem~nt,

ICE CREAM

Edward Andrew Hu&amp;lles, 93,
o1 Middleport, died Saturday, April S, at Veterans Memorial HosS.
pital.
He is .sunived by one sister,
Anna Hudson, ~racuse, and five
children, Lorena Sllyder SWilher and Lulu Aleshire, o1 Middle·
porti Oma Demi, Jean Roas, and
Lonnie 1111glleo, In CaiiComia, and
several grandchUdren and greatgrandchildren.
He was .Preceded In death ill'
his parents, wile, and five children.
Funeral services wUI be hold
!rom Rawllnp - Coati Funeral
Home Tuesday, AprU 8, at 2
p.m., With the Rev. o. H. cart
o!flclatlng. Frlands may call af.
dauabler, Mrs. WiUiam Hicks and ter 10 a.m. Monday at the funerInfant daughter, Mrs. Lotlie R. al home. a.rlal will be In Rock
Blazer, Jolm J, Dower, Mrs. Rob. ~rings Cemetery.
ert M. GUliland, Mrs. Robert N.
Humphreys, Richard Jones, Janette M. Nicholas, Mrs. James
w. Slane, Mra. George W.
Vaughn, Hart Rucker, Mrs. Frank
M, Pritehett.
continue any Y:loll\ton beyond the
time llmit Jto.sdedi for 14 Sec:Uo•
6'11 •hall be tuiJh• of a m\ldemeall·
or. and upon coa•icUoa thereof,
~hall lie fined in an amount not •• ·
ceedlDAI two huDdnd. fiiOO.OOl dol·
l ~ tl ror each vJolaUOn. ILich day In
wtnc:b ally eueh wto1atlon alull COD·
t1nue •hell be deemed a aep•ratt
l•ffeaM.
SecUon 803. AQ per.on vtolatlDI
any of the proYlllona
Udl ordinance ahall Neoma liable to tbe
vlllaae for any expen...
er
d•mue occutoned tne VUlap 111
ra11011. or auch vtotatton.
AITICLI Yll

LOut~ CA.\'iEI.~
U:r Roll-'•• Writer
n

SHAKES • CONES
t.t~t,TS. •~,, S!JNDAES. " "
BANANA SPLITS

FOURTH &amp; LOCUST
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

.

Prison Reform Lags

OHIO RIVER- Lock 14, Jeff- little less than God, mid dost
him with glory and
boat lP 11:45 p.. m.; Harvey Jor· crown
honor.-Psalms 8:5.
dan up 3:15 a. m.; Lock 15,
Walter Barnes up 12:35 a. m.;
Walter Curly down 6:05 a. m.; Downey ~ 4:40 a. m.; Peggy
Queen City up 6:20 a. m.; Lock Downey ~ 4:40 a. m.; Racine
17, Jetrerson up 9:30 p, m.; Locks, National down 7:45 p. m. i
Steel Clipper ·down 3:05 a. m. ~ Scolt Chotin up 10:20 p, m.; JosOnward up 3:40 a. m.; Aliquip- eph M. Jones up 11 p. m.; Cotpa up 4 a. m.; Be1levil1e Locka, ton Queen down 12:55 a. m.; ValSouthern up 5:50 a. m.; Beck· le)' Voyager down 3:45 a. m.j
jord up 11:20 p. m.;PhllllpSporn Ravenswood down 7:45 a. m.;
down 12:30 a. m.; Duncan Bruce Meldahl Locks, Ellaba Woods
up 12:55 a. m.; Arllrew P, Cal- down 3 p, m.; James Bowie down
houn up 3:30 a. m.; Lady Rose-- 9:35 a. m.; India"' down 10:15
mary lP 4:20 a, m.; Lock 22, a, rn.; Ashland down 10:45 p.m.;
Alton Zephyr ~ I a. m.; Peggy Val&gt;1lllne up 12:15 a. m.

~·~t!!-· · ·~~---······;;;_,J

by the Vllla1e ltl•ll m~
r.t'(.:tionl Jnto a pubUc •ewer.

, Religion in AmeriC41 ·•

5- The DallY SoatlJtel, p...,roy-Middl-t,

:

WIRING .
ALLOWANCE ·

�. ',

.

6 - ..,.. Dlolb Soltlnol, I'Gmeroy-Midilloport, 0., ~• .AprD 7, 1969

ROBIN MALONE

Find Everything From Auto's To Yo-Yo's In The Sentinel
OF

Concollation• &amp; Cer,.ctiont
Will •• accoptod ulll'll 9 • ·'"· for
Day of Put.liur ion
REGULATIONS

QUALITY
White finish, auto. trans.,

t-ctlon.l. lh. pyl,litker will not
H rosponsi;l, 101' - • rhon oM
IMorrect inSert ion.

Mi n i rnurn .

&amp;

1967 CHEV. 8' FLEETSIDE PICKUP ................ $1695
Local owner, clean int., light blue finish, new tires,
radio, rear bumper, 6 cyl. entine.

Pomeroy Metor Co.

Eo .

o441tionel word 2c .

BLIND ADS
tloo-nt.

Forhnt
l'HREE ROOM furnished apart.
meni with bath. Couple only.
212 s. 5th Ave., Middleport,
Phone !I!JZ.5435.
4-4-tlc

Notice

THE SINGING Roar family wi11
be preaching and singing at
tho Church of God, CbesiM.
Obio, '1\teoday, April 8 at EIGHT·ROOM house, two baths,
7:30 p.m. for the youth serin syracuse. Good for family .
vk:e. Everyone wekome.
Jaeob Tumor, phone 1)92.36111.
~

AQUARISTS - Baker's dozen

•nd unfurnished
aoartments. Close to s~bool.
Phone 192·5434.
lfi.JI.tlo

- U food and tonic lor 01·
otte flsb. save 110 pet' cent.
'!be House Ill WU11011 Elolk
Aquarist 9peclaliiies. Ph. 'I'RAILER LOTS, Bob's Mobile
11'15-10«i. Flr8t road below
Court, Syraclllt, Ohio oo State
Pleasant Point Reaort.
Rt. 124, Phone fln.:1151.
1-3-Uitc
a.n.lfl!
WILL DO sewing at home FURNISHED house In Pom..
Iippert, pockets. pegging,
roy. ftvto 1'001111 and beth.
llemmlng, alterations, ete.
CaD evenlnp, fln.M61
Mrs. Freddie Thabet, MBIIDfl,
SM!&lt;
Phone m.5651.
f.M.tfe
ONE fiOtJR.room apartment
VACANCY lor ttro elderly J101&gt;
lurniJhed, ~round noor; aloo
pie. Prmr private paid pa.
trailer lots · and garden and
lie!IU. Phone Mason, 7'/Wll5.
oamp •lies on the river. Ma1~&lt;
rion Reynolds. Maoon, Phone
7'13-5147
S.lt-tle

Employment Wanted

IIOtfSEWORK wanted by the 1'RAII.ER. BROWN'S TRAU...
ER PARK, Mlnersvtne. J&gt;bone
day or week. Eulail Francis.
99%-3321.
4-1...,
Phone f92.5881.
4+3to
W!IL DO oprtng cleenJnc.
Wuh walls and .,.mng, PhOM
~.
4-1-«!&gt;

'· Wem.cl To luv

FARM wm11N 10

mite.

llf

river. Must have 10 """"' at
nat land and good ....ter.
Pllone 217-2452.
J.30.tk

Help Wentld

S2.50 HOURLY -o. a 5 .,.nt
j1G8Icard to you? Easy to
earn $10 to f!S daily diltri·
buting famous Watkins Pro.
ducts to establiflhed Cllllomers in city of Pomeroy. Full
or parttirne. We help you get
started. Write [).96. Walid111
Products, Inc., Winona, Minn.
1(887.
4-7·111:

WANTED
WAITRESS AND
SHORT ORDER COOK

Top Salarr. Interviews
9 to 4. No Phone Calls.

Elperie..,. helpful, bul not
neoessary. We will train )'1111
Yoo can earn over M.i2 I""'
·hour. For application and tn.
tervlew, write Natloo Wide
Safety Dirt'dor, Room 42111,
3117 East 4tll Street. Transportation Bldg., Clnclmatl,
Ohio. or phone 513-111.f6'12.
4-7·211:

· ·. . w.uraESS

lor 4 p.m. to 12
midnight. also car bop and
&amp;rill cook. Apply in penon.
Qw's Stoat llouBe. f.Uie

Jl)lJSEKEEPER needed, lloe
In if desired. Good wmm,

conditions. Li&amp;IJI boulelrorli:

l'llone IIIU2il.

4-:z.tfe

POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
miniature. fl5 and up. 9llld
se"iee and grooming. l'lloae
fln.541S.
11 3 tk

for

Clarence Prallllt, Portland.
10.1fl.l!c

YOU.

POMEROY
Jod W. Cor10y
Mgr.

....,

992-2181
o,.. til 6 Doily

NEW 1!1tMI Zig Zag Sewing Ma·
chine in ori"inel faclury ""r·
1m. Automatic Zig zag to
mate buttonholes, sew on but&lt;
tons, monogram, and make
laney desigM with just th•
twlot Ill a single die!. Left tn
loy away and never boon
used. Balance due only MT
or terms of fl per month.
Pllone fln.21185.
4-l.etc

FOR SALE
TWO FAMILY HOME
5 Rooms and Bath on first

Floor, 5 Roolfts and bath
on Second Floor, 2 Car
Garage and 3 Room Utility Building. Cali 949·
3311 or 949-2153, Racine
0. Could k Income Pr~
perty or For Large Family.

For Sale

Ohio,

a.JJ.Ue

C. C. IRADJI'OIID
AUCI'IONBER

From till Llrp• Truek
!JinaiiNt H_.ur eo..:

"
- IIMII1
Rlclae. OM.
Clllt

Br....... I

I tr.!

AIR CONDITIONING Rofrl8er·
allon servl&lt;t. Jaclc'a Relrlg.
eraUon, New HIIYOD. ,_
ID-IIO'/I.
4 •

*

READY . IIITX concrete deJhoered right to your project.
Foal and easy. Free eallmales. Phone 992~. Goes·
loin Ready • Mil Co., Middle.
port, Ohio.
8 Ill Ito

FOR LONGER wear keep car·
pets cleon will! Blue Lullro. BUDGET PRICE furniture Gil
our third floor budget abop.
Rent electric shampooer $1.
Baker
Furniture. Middleport.
Tiny'• Bargainland.
4-7.«~

ll4tc

Ohio.

REMOVE EXCESS body Duld
with Fluidex Tablell. only SEWING MACIIJNES, repair
service. all makes. WV S.
$1.40 at Nel10n Drug. 3-14-41tp
2214. Tbe Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Autborfzed Singer Sales
11163 FORD FairiBilO, liT, VI,
and Service. We Sharpen
!-speed tram·, extra olean.
SciSJors.
S.!l-lfo
Ph. 9112-2510.
3-4-lk
CURTIS bouse trail.,., 34 1 8,
'"''"~nte
Cully furnished, good condi· AUTOMORU..II: l"IIUI'"""' beea
lion. Contact Irvin MIUer, Ri.
Tmt !"'UU' Oll01'81·
or'g lil'fnse? con • •.
689. Point Rock. Cali !lfl2.6423.
8 11 tfe
f.6.3tc

""""""""?

5 PONIES. tail; f mares, I
goldtng, cart, bridles; two
fine saddles, baKers. First
$400 takoo all. Bob Morris,
Leading Creek Rd. 9112-6403.
U-31c

LI8AL NOTICI
Belled 1ttdl wiD be reeeiftd Ia &amp;be
wo~ ol thll Clerk, on S.Cond IU..t.
of , .....,. OJdo, Wl&amp;ll
ro '('loc:k noo11, Monda)' Jl, 11111, fol'

vw.,.

u

the foUowlnt ~~.
l''or 1500 ton., more or Jell, of
No. toe Alphllt OOMI'ete Jn ~
To be placed OD Y&amp;rleUI 1\ntt. U
d~ bJ
CouaolL
All matel'l•ll and equlpm1at IN
to meet Ohio Departlaat of 11t11ao

STEREO'S 1969 Model Untlalm·
vw....
1&lt;1 Fnight. 5 new walnut
COII!IOiea stereos with lectory
Reel &amp;tete For Sale
"'ill... INCWc:aUODI.
l!UBrBntee. Nationally adverAU bilb . ,a n to bli b7 tht , ~ la
IIODNJ!Y DOWNING
pia~, IU)d. .the Priefl ptt. Jllt. dl.all
tised brandt! to• be I01d ~-·
1nclude ·an MeHN17 c~' ,,..
Rell &amp;tale Brobr
td'klllom ot tJie atl'fttl to bll IUI'l'lorage and lreigllt of $126.88
Phoae IIMM!
flced are oo file La Ute ofliOt ol
each. May be paid at ts.llll
t.be MIJOt 1ft till YUiap ol hiMNJ.
Middleport, Oldo
&amp;.cb bid muA eoatata till 1111
per mont!l. ,... stereo COO·
4-1-Mic name ol ..,.,y per.on. or eompaQJ
ooles have AM-FM radio, 4
latended ba U.. ...... aa4 lie 110eompaaled bJ a boQcl or eerilfled
speed eutomatle changer.
C:beelli 1ll the of 1100.110 &amp;o ....
O'BRIEN It CROW
NtllfactloD oC Vlllq:1 CollDCU, II 1
AFC. jeweled llly1111 and
REALTY COMPANY
1\W".I OLf Ulat If Ul4l bid ll ~.
beautiful band rubbed calli·
A C:ODtr.et will bt IDWind ID\o Ud
POMEROY - 6 rooms, S nice itl
perfOI'JiliDCe PJOpeJ'b'
IIJCIU'M,
net. WW go to the first 5
bedi'OOIIlll, bath, harclwood TheM ctt.eb or boadl wtu be ""
people wl1o oall. WW be d..
klmed at ODOt to au UOIIIIt tiW , . .
ftoors, some remodeUng, a tet~h.ll
bldtter. Hll ctwclr: or bond
Dvered to rour bome witllout
wUl be beld uat.ll U.. coUnrll Gl'
nice place to live. $6,900.0!1. bkl
1.1 propt~riJ' •UClMd liiJ' IWil..
obllgallon lor you to try and
-I APARTMENt'S 'l'bli rtpt 1.1 nMrNiil to . _ ear
make IIUI't you are complete. PO!IIEROY
bldl.
- concrete block building lftd allJane
Wthft. C......
ly aatiafted. Call 192-2831.
YILLA.I 0' POMIIOY
with
5
garages
below.
live
in
SMITH AUTO SALES
4-1...,
6-7; t-11 Me
kAMAUGA, OHIO
cne and rent the other. $6.11110.
POMEROY - 7 rooms, S bedug,u NOTICI
111111 ZIG ZAG Sewing Machine
Bulb
ADn
wt..l ,.._
rooms. batll, basement, large of ruldenc:. t.P1anoa,
l91Ni TRitJIMPII Spltllre COli·
lou.. I Potat PlM•
complete with 8fting table.
lot. IN GOOD CONDmON. IIDL. Wtli Vlr,ut.la It ...,.., ..U.
vertlble, 31,000 miles, om:elThlB makes buttonholes, ma·
ned that on tiM Mb 4IJ' of Alltl.
$12,5110.00.
1111. a.rtoa I . hanoa., 1M1D1 piU.o
lent eondltion, one owner.
ny fancy designl, take over
Ulf ftled bl.l peii.Uon qalut hu u
WE
BuY
SELL
RENT
CaU fl92..6637 or c:ootact Elber
tltfaD\t&amp;bf; lh tH
Common , _ .
paymmta of t5.92 per month
HF.NRY CLELAND
Court of llet&amp;l Oollllt.J', Ohio, 0..
Jolmson, Rt. 4 Pomoruy,
or pay $14.21. Try It in your
No. 14,150 pnJ1Jt.l 10r cllYOI'OI trtal
Pboae IIUIII
Bailey Run Road.
4+3tp
uld Butb AllD PMffOI'I
011
tbl
borne. Call fln.IISI. 4-1-Cir
IJ'QUa.t. of .11'011 ...... ol ...,

----·-.

---

liOU'I'III!lRN plaDts,

65
Mustanr ••••. $1395
VB 2 4r , HJTop. 289 cu. 1".
engine . .t •P · shift . Spotlen oil
whit• flnlth . A jewel.

eallbap,
tomotoea, pepper and aweet
polatoel. Order . -. Charles
R. Harrb, Portland, Pbone
. . ..
S-27-1811:

&lt;&gt;NE AORE building Iota. Pbone
....

64
Buick •••• 'f .$1195
Wltdcot • dt. Hord op. Lill•
whi~

fl"ith o" bo-ttom
dllt'lr: blue tap . Power
llftring , Pow•r bralc••· Auto•
rtew

with

4-Uio

SIX ROOM ' - with two !ott,

C!ell.., ......... goad loolllon.
pbone daytime 7f1.4111. !!Joe.
nil.- maoJ.
t.Me

rnotlc tront .

BLAETTNARS
BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY

For Sale or Tride
:t18'1

OHEVROLET Impllla,
two door hardtop, 21,000 a&gt;
tua1 miles, bougbt car ....
toc:.lly owned. CaD IIIUI71
betweon 9 and f :SO p.m. and
98U7411 alter I p.m. Wfl.lle

ItA CAMERO VI, 4 speed;
lt18'1 Fireblrd VI, 4 speed.
Call ilfU547 or liiU'Hil.

48-INCH, 7·ye•r spoiled geld·
1.... Quiet lor ddldren. Pllone
7f2.4S71.
4-Hie

239 ACRES. 8-room house, s
barn~, 3 farm ponds, free
gas; 40 ..,... creek bottom,
lots ol pasiAire. AY mineral
rli!hts. timber; on blacktop
road, \1 mile from HarriaoD·
ville, 15 miles from Pomeroy,
20 mllea from Athena, fU..
1100. Write Clay McKinney.
RuUand, Rl. I.

'11114 1:r.INIM CNIItJ aDd othlf pro.
I * nllef1 laid et\1111 WOI 111 W

-

1'1Nl'lal 011 or llftlr the 16\b dl7
of JIQ, 1...
lUTON 1 . HAltON

J . I, O'IIIIN,
.......... fer ...........
t 7, f. llo l ll1 f. •• I II t II llCI

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

1-»-tr.!

W1ntecl

=--

......,

·

LI•AL NOTICI
OADINANel NO, . .
AN OADINANCI TO CRIATI THI
POSITION OP IUPIIIMTRIOI..,.
Of! tiWIUOI AND 1'0 DIFINI
THI DUTtll TIIIIIIOP
Be n orttaJDed u loiJoWI b1 the
Cnuadl of tbe Vlllap of PUMI'IJ,
Otllo, t11f0·lhlrdl of all memben eltt·
tad tb1nto coDCWI'lq":·
SecUon 1. TheN i.e hereby Crtlced
the po.t.tkm of SUpef'lMendlllt of
lhwerqe. The d11Ue1 of tJlJI podUoa

llbiU IDCiude, but 11ol: ___..u, be
limited to, tile tollowinJ:
• · Tbe aapel'\'l.ltoa o1 au worll ta
COMICUon with the maintlln&amp;nee and
operaUon of thl eatlni ltnrap 'l"
tom .
lil. Tbe 1Up8n11Jcm of \bt ......
of llccn•n to penou to eJI.JIII 11'1
till \lpptq of ..... Uld ol the
llllUUlce or permltl fOJ" the eonatruc·
Uoft ol blllldlq •wen aDd ltftr
eonned lont, ud die reeordiDI then·

...

c. Tbe lupHtlon ol lbe coattruc·
tlon of 1nllld!DI .......,. aD4 ...,...

COMecUODII.

d . The lllflnoiii.OI'l of tbe proper
of MWIII PUOIPial l&amp;a•

Ol)l!fltloD

tloQ.
e. The WPenUI.on of \lie oper1Hon
of u.. ...... treatment plaD.t ....
the prepaulloD of dally record~ of
oper1Uoa, blcludtal t.he lllblldldoa
or tucb retorde to t.b• Ohio !Hpartm••~ of Healtb .. moDtb1J lllteJTaJI,
f , Tbe ,.rtormUU18 of .uch alber
dllUet u U11 MQo1' aDd CoaacU ol
Nld V1U11e mQ' direct.
Secti.OD J. With \be IPPIOYel of tiN
r.ouncll of
vwa... lbt J(IJor
lball 1ppolnt a compatu.t JllnGil to
thll POI.Itkln. Sl.ld penon lhal1 m~ln·
lain •cc:ura.. aDd compkll IHOI'&amp;I
..t bJa wwll: and lhall wlnaU an lllnual nport to the llaJGr.
S.cti011 :1, Tbe compeiUiailon ot the
lillPII'tDtudellt of lewerap ....U be
u Council IDIIJ dln:ct. and adopt u
• par~ of tlll Balfley OrdiHDn. ldd
compenatlon lh1U be Paid from the

••ki

&amp;I&amp;J1611' ...... I"UDd.

s.cuoa f. . AU other ordlnancft, or
pu\1 of OrdiDinNI, ID eonflid wtlb
uaa pi'OYIJion• of l.bl.l ordlnaaca m.u
"e, and tbt
blnb, an, ,..
peakd.
s.ettoa TIWI o~ aball taM
elfec\ 1att 111 tD fore• from 1114
after the u.rBut date aUowld bJ'

••DM

....

a.

·,
~
"'·
rvt.Tz
.
Prtiltt\eDt of Couaetl

= ··~' ' 1 _ 1.. 1

. _.

Alttdc JANE WAL'ION, O.rlr:
ApproHd:

ca.uu.a w.

UICJAil

MI)'Or

Marcil II, April 1

Mo

.....,
Q-Which II tht pttdotn·
inont brud of betf c:ottlt in

tilt Unittd S!GU11

,.

A-There are more Here·
lords, commercial and· pure.
bred, muketed every year
than ·all . other beef breeds

combined.

Se~ice

DAY or
NIGHT •.. CALL
RAWLINGS SERVICE
DAY 992-2151 .,.,.
NIGHT 992·7324 -

· Complete Front-End
and Brake S.vice

.MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
•

F1lOM NOW ON ,

55.55

VlCTOR , L~l'!l

WMPO

8E~OIIAL5

IN&amp;T&amp;.!l OF

RIVALS.

'INFORMATION
NEWS

.....,., •.. ,.
-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992·2094

presents

Po•roy, 0.

LOCAL REPORIS
DAILY
AT
1:50 A.M.
12 NOON
3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

Racine

Social Events
BY MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS
Tile Happy Huotlero Somda,y
SChool Class ol the United Methodist OnU"chenJo.yoclaalxo'clock
dtnner In tile social rooms o! tile
church on Friday eveq, March
28. Following the dinner, Mrs.
Ralph McKenzie, president, c.,..
ducted a buslneas .ae11ton at
which time cards were prepared
for shut-in members and other
Easter plana were made. Mrs.
Maxine Wingett presented an
Ea•ter Meclltatlon.
Mrs. Helen Younce an! Mrs.
Jacnb Lee ha&gt;e retumod to tlleir
homes rrom Holzer Meclleal CeJ&gt;o
tor.
Mrs. Jean Linlsey an! 8011,

:=~i:r·:=~1Zi:~

RUSSIANS NOW HOOKED
ON PATRIOATS -AND
WILDLY I'R&gt;AMERICANf!

R. II. RAWLINGS SDNS

EXPERT
~ AJI1n111nt

·d06 I. Main

YOKUM SUCCEEDS
WHERE. DIPLOMAT&amp;
FAILII

For The Fastesl 1

YOUR CAR
NEEDS .

BLAETTNAR'S
ILAETTNAIS
·•~-Pl·!l.·"-~-43_. _Po_lllll_roy... ·-------"

Keeping Meigs
Gallia and
Mason Area
Informed 'As
Well As
'

Entertained
c '.

.

.

soo Spencer arol her !athar, Mr. o! Groveport.
Mr. and Mrs. MerieSCin•oeder,
so vi!itlng were their daughter, sona, Steve arol Roo, and daugbMrs. Mary Ctmdllf, and Mary Lou tor, Mae Fern, o! Columbus, visIted with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Francis Morris, Monday,
Mlreb 31.
Mr. an! Mrs. Hency Roush and
Mildred spent a weekenl in Akron
poy; vice prealdent, Marcia carr; witll relatives.
Mrs. Albert Po,ynter and Mr.
secretary, Martie Caldwell; trea·
David
YOIIIIJIOn! Friday In Weiraurer, Tereaa carr; new• reton, W, VL, guests o! Mr. arol
porter, Virginia Cline; arol ret•
Mrs. Oscar Barnett an! Miss
reatlon leader, Cheryl Kuhn.
Grace Po,ynter.
Tile group diocuued projects
Mr. arol Mrs. Robert E. Yost or
and extabllshecl the amwnt ol
New GalUee, PL, were weekerxt
dues. Mrs. Rose Carr an! Mrs.
guests of hil mother, Mrs. Mottle
Ada Grace Depoy, advlaors, asYost, and other relatives.
alated the gr&lt;q&gt;. Mrs. Depoy
Mra, Drusilla HIMIIe ol Columarol Mrs. carr served re!relhbus spent the weekend with Mr.
menl&amp;
an! Mrs, Junior Neliler arol lam·
~encer, who to hospitalized. AJ.

Meigs 4-H News
Fifteen members ot the Meigs
County Better Livestock 4-H Club
(bee0 mot recently at the Coo
lumbwl arol Soutllern Oilio Electric Cclmj)all)'with eclvl1101'B Uo,yd
Blackwood alii James l\lerocllth.
The project lesiOD ns oo feed
an! the Ideal steer. The next
meeting is scheduled lor AprU
16 the gr..., will see the
carcass evaluation llldea.
THE SNOWVIU.E 4-H CLUB,
met in March 11 the Don Wilson
home, Mn. June Stanley, advisor, assisted.

Ten club members decided to
have 1 communlcy projecL Pam
WUIIOil will be the chalnnan o!
this c!lrunittee. The chi! aeiect.od projects.
Ruth Silva was in charge o!
recreation. Refreshments car·
rlecl out the St. Patrick's Do,y
theme with green punch, cookies,
sandwiches an! potato ehljlo. The
next meeting will bo .AprO 11 11
the h&lt;lme of carlos SUVL
THE IUVERVIEW 4-H CLUB,
wlth 16 memben in atterdance,
mot at tbe home o! Mrs. Mar·
prot Brown. Mrs. Brown and
Mrs. Maxine Whitehead uola!ed
the 16 club memben In takirc
their me~surementa andcllacuasing the klrol o1 materill to aecure
tor their pro)trt. Tere11 Smith
alii SheUa Buchanon were in
cterp o! tho Jackel stunt lor
recreation. Paula Hauber and
Connie Dlolly arol Jull WhiiBhead
served retreatunenta.

GEO. BOIISTEITER, llftbr
POMEROY - 2 building Iota,
out of high water. nsoo.110
IIIJDDl.EPORT - 10 rooms, I\!o
~·noM WALL to wail, no ooil
baths, S bedrooms, garage,
at all, on carpels cleaned
carport.
fi0.500.GO
with Blue Lustre. Rent elec·
tric ahampooer fl. Baker Fur. IIAIUIISONVILLI! AREA ....zs~
ocres, 1110 in cultivation, milk,.
niture.
4-Hie
l!!i parlor lor I head, 2 bams,
IZtJ ton silo, drilled weD, 5
TWO REGISTERED Shetland
farm ponds. I room bOUle.
stallions, black ; around 3f.
$SO,IIOO .GO
t1 inc!les In lleiglrth. Lorenzo
IIELEN
or VIRGIL ,TEAFORD
Davis, Killglllury Road, ¥,
ASSOCIATES
....
mile west at new Rt. 33.
SYRACUSE
l+lotc

ALUMINUM Fishing Boats,
A CLEANING woman lor one
sale. deep, sturdy. Buy a sale
lust...- hrviCII
'' day every other week. Write
boot lor your family's protee. SEE NEIGLER Buildint BliPPets
For
Sale
Box 118-C in cere Ill The
!IIJNIA'I'URE Poodle ot.e out,
lion. See Lorenzo Davis. ¥•
ply lor bulldln&amp; your bome.
Deily Sentinel giving quaiHI·
Apups, 5 matrooa, cash sales
mHe west of new Rt. 33 on
Call
&lt;lUl' NelcJer, Raoine, 0.
~allons.
4-Hie
only. Also wire terriers now.
Kingsbury Road.
4+301c
Min. Schnauzers in 3 weeks.
MAN lor farm work,
Ireland Road, Kl'a, Coolville. 1~88 MODEL Cobra E. B...1. CIGARE'M'E vending macllinea
lumlahed. P. M. Caw·
and III!I'Viee. ABC Enterprllel,
Ohio, Pllone 667-3565. 4·2-7t".
plus super·mRII ll!llenna and
Long Bottom, Oblo.
M•onn. W. Vo. Phone '1'/SW.
50 loot co-a• oable. l'llone
!CASTER SPECIAL. small min·
loMe
9f9.2111.
4-44lp
l•turc poodles, P"P"Y trim included. 165: also PUllS, soot· DAVENPORT. chair. dinlntt RADTO ond TV reJ!I(r, boule
lies. wires. lrelond Road Ken·
I'&lt;!Om suite. Pllone 1115·311112 .,.111, lllil lfttenna lnalllled.
nels, County Rd. !ill. CoolVIlle,
Chesler. CbBfles Chaffee, Sil·
John Harrllon, Phone •
l'llone 667'3555.
4-6·101c
ver Ridge Road.
4-4-3tp . JM.Ife

,

Build&gt;..,. llldiiiDr To Thl

Cellflete 11en1e1

tho or4ot of tfto

lnt". Roglot.r for /il1n oach
tln~o JDU l'illt. Wo'l H looklnt

Phone IIJ.2I5.I

Auto Sales

PLEASANT POINT
RESORT
llRlVERS NEEDED: Semi driven, local and over tbe road.

DN

WS.tfe

Sanitation, Stewart,
Phone eaasti.

dar clurln1 our "S,rlne tt.PPt••

f.6.71~
I'UR~lSHED

nut An., Pomeroy.

FUN
PRIZES
REFRESHMENTS

ForSele

POTATOES,

on repairs. Bring IMn In lftd
uve. Clluek'a TV, 1111 Butter-

SEPI'IC lanlll cleaned. Jllller

BIG GAME HUNT
OPEN HOUSE

largalno

D11 il ~

ta 12;00 Nao" Salurdoy

=

.'

CHUCK'S Calli 11M! Carry TV
Sei ilce, •~ up to -all

APRIL 9·10·11·12

OFF ICE HOURS

'lr31J a .m.

Come and see Us
Duri11

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY OHIO

Athlitionol 25c Charge pt~r Achror·

1!1 :30 a .m. to 5 :00 p.m.

Jack Carsey
Says:

Clean interior, good w.w. tires. R&amp;H.

•i•

SO .,..Ofd

SNIFSNif
'

Bu.s'iness .Services

CHUCK'S CUb and Carry TV
Service. Save up to one hall
oo repairs. Brl!!i them in and
save. Chuck's TV, 1112 Butternut.
f.4.Uo

P....,..

1964 FORD GALA XI E.................................... ______ .... $995
500 H. T. Cpo. V8 engine, automatic. '1/hito finish.

RATES

for

Is Out At Landmark

car.

For Wont Ad S.r .. iu
S uttta ptr Word ,..,. insert icu•
Minimum Chorgo 7Sc
12 co~• per word throe coniOCu·
tlwo Intortion• .
11 com• p« Word
conneuti"'
lntort iont .
25 ,., nnt Di•c:oulll on po id ads
oM od1 paid withi n 10 doya .
CARD OF THANK$ &amp; OBITUARY

S1 .50

The Welcome Mat

1963 OLDS F.a5 STA.

Tit. Publith.r rottr&lt;wu tho r11ht
to all it '" rojoct any ocl1 cloo-cl ob-

'

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 p .m. Day S.f•• P'*llcation
MoMay O.alllliM 9 0 ,111.

\I

Want Ads

{··....,; ........

IT AIN'T

MIN! J:.Oiti20 '

B.uslness Services

WANT AD

I

'

OFF1CERS SELECTED by the
Moiga 4-H Pleasure Riders In
their March meetl~ were president, Donna Manuel; vice president, KlrenGri!Dth; secretary,
Slw'on WUson; treasurer, Steve
Powell; u!ecy chairman, Bob
Blackston; health chairman, AI·
mee Huston; reereatlon leader,
Mna Powellt am news reporter,
Lynne Boker. t b e - 11 selling Easter eao ae a IIUlllOYmakillll proJecL A late report Indicates 83 dozen eua are to be
coiO&lt;ecl an AprU 4 by the club
members. The advi1101'&amp; and of..
!leers met on AprU 3 to prepare
the year's program.

·-r.

THE 4-H QUEEN BEES met In
March at adviaor, Pat Bailey's
home, with three adYiaora and
THE JOPPA t:OUNTRY BOYS 18 members otlencllng. SusanCJo.
met at the Mark Groasnlckle bel orol Pam Baller were In
borne with 12 members. Advls· chirp o! rerreshmenta.
on ottendl!!i were Mrs. Jonieo
THE SALEM CENTER GlRUl
Davis arol Mrs. Mldailne Bumot
11 tbe. s.Iom Cettor SChool
ct.nca The members were to
hove. their fteld pack&amp; an! ftrst with ldvi1101'8Kitheri,. MltolleU,
aid kits completed b1 AprO 3, llllherine Colwell, 1101 Bernice
tbey uao RIII'Oad taaoahOid with Garnea; 12 clubmembersrecelv·
an Outdoor Cookerypro)ect. Jim· eel projec~ bookL For the next
my Putman Wa• in ch1rge of meetlrc 1he group will receive
recreation. Relreahmenta were the new book. and pi pallerns
aerVocl by Jolm and Rick Causey, toft~
Joe Buehaoan an! Mille Harris.
THE PORTLAND NEW IDEAL
TilE TUPPERS PLAINS 4-11 4-11 Club met oo Marcb 31 ottlle
Girls hold two meeUrcsln March home of the iilvtaor, Mrs. Ruth
at the borne o! Marcia, sonia, Ebersbaeh. OMcers wore ell~
an:l Tereaa Carr. omcera elect- ad. Tile Jll'(ql de&lt;lded on the
ed were president. r.weD De- lime of the meeliiv• and dues.

•••

li.J,
Mr. an! Mrs. Floyd Walters of
Logan were recent guests of Rev.
alii Mrs. Paul SoUers.
Mr. and Mrs. Mike McGee o1
Union Furnace vi•lted Mr. arol
Mrs. Roy Herolrlcks, Sunday.

DAILY CROSSWORD
~

1. ftll7llmdo

rel&amp;U¥tot
till t:w1lt

AIIIWtr ,, ""'"" '••II•
I 1r.:, flllllillli

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f-! r:_, '.':
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if-' .• . t=&lt;ill -~~-J .J_:"; r r.:.' lll!
:~

THE EDEN GUYS AND GALS
4-11 Club held two meetings In .
February at the Reedsville Aux·
lllal')' Bulldlng. Advisors Coonie
Reed 1nl Warola Klmes worked
with the 14 club members In 1
apaclal dance program alii box

CMTOONIST,

:• : ;I
-' ;:' 1. j

1---' uH·~

.:.J
1'..:., 1-:11.1

;.l,._, I--:C•:

~ -~' .;.,i ll ill

··-II. Wuh

...-.

10. Partlcil
11. Small box
foromall

IW..

12. Bear or
. axle
1f.-.
11. Vlptr

MISS JENNY DEAN was rec·
ognlzed for being tho 1969 Meigs
Counl1 Dairy Prlnceu and the
1968 Oillo district winner In the
4-H dairy program at the March
31 meeting o! the Meigs County
Better Livestock 4-11 Club (lloJ.
steinl. Ten club mombersatlended. Roy Holter 1• advisor. om.
eera and jwdor leaders selected

were, preJid.ent, Jenn,y Dean;
vice pruldent, Ed Parker; sec•
retar)', Melanie Deani treasurer • Geaeva Klrw; news reporter,
Alan Holter; recreation leaders,
Donlso Daon, arol JaDieo Holter;
11!ecy 1-r, David King; health
chlir~Mn, Miry Lou King and
propaal chairman, Grace King.
JUI)ior leaders are Grace King,
Mary Lou King, Alan Holter an!
Ed Parker, Denise Ilea~ an!
Janl&lt;t Holter were In chorge of
recreaUon. Mrs. Roy lloltar
aerved refreshments.

DOW!I'

ilpl

e.u....,

....

04Jt-

1&amp;.

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'"""'"•"'·"' -~..,

:u.

rr. Word

.....
,...... -

'1. Tome:
abbr.

-...

11. LaUn
Ill. Conneetlve

poetry

one letter to ·each ~quare, to
form four ordinary words-

II. Wife of

requirement
One kind
4. Kerry
of jaw
........, •• -.•.,..
3. BIIJ'ht error 16. Drone

8. Iuue forth
11. Behool

lt.1111rly

-

SO.IIalit

n .l'luft

2. lmpollte

a. Below tile

clJlBlOOIDlbrn®~=~==
UniiCramblelhtse foor Jumbles.

1f.Footecl

1. nuttel'll

lt.-'-....t
17.Plllflll

The next meeting wnt bo held
AprU 12 wllen the club Is to
select their projects an! brlrc
their material orol pattern.

to.Oom-

4l.Bnano
d.A.atpapor

wltll

taft or

at. Blfln

01

sa. Kk&gt;k

SI.Oenelll

Jl. -ancbor
(pta
37.-d
lllldarway)

ao.Wben

Lopomlo

38. Old wetrht

I I !J

far wool

IO.Woolmeap

D.J'attea

.

a. C4IIIIIJ7
plaatflbor
a."...._

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~

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f'IA.tllo:lo:

IN

)low llrrUlP the cin:locl ittten
to fonn the aurpri11 aruwer, u
aurrtsted by the......,-·

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IPriot .. SIJRJUEAISIER •I A "r

..........

I

Y'/HICH 'fOlJ ARE S~RE
TO Fli\P AN ITA~I AN.

nm-rn"

tA..I-n tentOI'Nw)

Jua••1..,.1 HU.Y IAIIC PUSION MAIICUP

l&amp;.llbtll out

M.-ltll

a,,a •...., ....,ill.'ril··._

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il.I'XX , W VL,It\0, . II:~SR Wll WVPQKV
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II.WUOHT, Two
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�Injured Man
Dies Saturday

HIDING EGGS - Middleport - Pmneroy Rotary Club
members Cash Bahr alii George Meinhart display part of a
box of plastic Easter eggs placed at Middleport Municlpal
Park Sunday for the anooal Easter Egg HWlt. Over 400 prizes
were made available by local merchants aldprofessiomlpeqJle
for the event

SHOWS EGGS- YoongPIIIllip Hood has carefully placed
the eggs he found In an Easter
basket at the Mlc:klleport-Pome-

roy Rotary Club hunt SundaJ'
afternoon.

MASON - Ualph E. Lltchflel&lt;l, 28, Letart, who was , crlt..
lcall,f bliured In an lilll&lt;linoblle
accident several weeko i&amp;o, died
Saturday evening.
.
Jla. was born SeptOJI.ber 14,
1940, at· Gallipolis Fel'ey, the
son otForude B. andR-Clatch
Utchtietd, New Haven.
lie was an Iron worker empiQ$ed by Kaiser Engineers, a
member ot Masonic Lodge 23,
and Irooworkers local 787.
&amp;trv.lvors In addldoo to ~Is
parents include his wile, Sally
L.; aon, Troy Ralph; two broth.
ers, Marion L. and John F.,
both of New Haven; and a sister,
Mrs. Bomie Louise Baird, Cheshire.
F\Uieral services will be held
Tuesday at I :30 p.m. at the Fo.
glesong Funeral Home with the
Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller officiating. Burial will be In the Graham Cemetery.
Masonic graveside rites will
be cooducted by Clifton Lodge
23, Friends may call at the funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to
9 p.m. today.

~~=~~~:~;::r! Tur.npil{e Killer
p ·
d
~~~·~:::::~::::Proven aranoi ·..
Buckeye Lake Amusement
Park imder a multi ' mUIIon
dollar program to re¥1ve I h e

s~beduled ID open Memorial
Day with a full set ofnewrldeo
and amusementfacllltleaavaU.
able.

--=Marauders

Fifth in
Chesapeake

WASH!NGTON
Speaker

:I

I

John W.

(UPn
McCormack

· prodded President Nixon today
to get rolling with his legislative
proposal s.
While saying he was sttll not
prepared to criticize Nixon "at

this time," McCormack nonetheless issued a statement
saying Nixon's legislath•e performance does not compare
favorably with that of his

Garnet Jacks
Dies Saturday
Garnet Jacks, 64, Rt.l, LangsVille, died Saturday evening In

Holzer Med.lcal Center.
Mi.·s. Jacks was preceded in
dealh by her husband, Richard;
tbi'ee sisters, and two brothers.
9\e was a member of the Apostolic Church of Rutland.
!lie is survived by three daughters and three sons, Mrs. Betty Rupe, Langsville; Mrs. Jane
!i&gt;urlock, Richwood, Ohio; Mrs.
Marvil Lane, Marion, Ohioi Ray,
Brewton, Ala.j Richard. Jr., Minersville; Gerald, Marioo, Ohio;
two sisters, Mrs. Eva Mc{;.tlilken, Ashland, Ohio; Mrs. May
Blair, Kansas: one brother,
PearUe KeMedy,
Pataskala,
Ohioi 24 grandchildren, and six
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at 2 p.m. at the Martin Funeral Home in Rutland.
The Rev. Ira Wellman will offleiate. Burlal will be in Miles
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime.

MEIGS THEATRE
TONIGHT &amp; TUESDAY
APKIL 7- 8
THE BOSTON STRANGLER
(Technicolor)
Tony Curtis - Henry FoOOa

'·

COLORCAHTOONS:
Two !·aced Wolf
What on Earth
SHOW STARTS 7 P.~l

predecessor- Lyndon B. Johnson.
The veteran Massachusetts
Democrat recently : rated Nixoo's performance as satisfactory plus!' But today he said the
Republican President's delay in
seOOing recommeOOations to
Capitol Hill has made it
"exceedingly difficult" for De-.
mocratic congressional leaders
to work out a pla'n for the 91st
Congress.
·'
The annual appropriations
process also has been slowed by
Nixon's failure\ to submit to

Miller to
Join in
Ceremony
WASHINGTON - Congressman Clarence E. Miller will be
In Athens Saturday, April 12, to
particlpare In ground breaking
ceremonies for the Athens Local
Flood Protection Project.
The ceremonies wh1ch a r e
scheduled to begin at 11:30 a.m.
will be conducted ·in the area
Immediately south of Ohio Univenity Peden Stadium.
At 2 p.m. SaturdiQJ", Miller
will meet w1th Mr. Clarence
McKnigh~ Regional Soli Cooservationist tor the U, S, Depart~
ment of Agriculture and citizens
from GalJia and Vinton Counties
to discuss possible plans for watershed development in those
counties. This meeting is sched~
uled to take place at the S o 1 l
Conservation otfice in Athens.
From Athens, the Congressman will travel to Marietta,
where he w111 hold an ••open
door session'' at the commissioner's oft'ice in the Washing~
ton County COurthouse Annex.
The congressman invltj!sall area
residents wishing todiscussma~
ters relating to the federal gov.
ernment to meet with him at this
time.

FLEXSTEEI.:
IF1NE UPHOLSTERED FVRNITllRE

is contempor·
ary living room woup . Note the clean design,
fine walnut trim and tapered legs. Sofa's molded
latex seat cush· ''
ions are reversi·
ble for extra
wear. By Flex·
steel, all are
treated for soil
resistance and
have mate hing
4rm covers.
.

Congress his recommended
changes in the budget proposed
by Johnson, McCormack said.
Most lawmakers were visiting
horne districts, vacation resorts
or points abroad during the
session's 10-day Easter recess
that will run tJ1rough Sunday.
McCormack's statement
pointed up a growing !cell~'@:
among Democrats the grace
period traditionally allowed a
new president by political
opponents has about run its
course.
Except for his decision to
deploy a new anliballlst ic
missi1e system, Nixon in a little
less than three months in office
has escaped heavy attack in the
Democratic"('ontrolled Congress.
Nixon, who took office Jan.
20, has deferred action on
major recommendations whl1e
assess ing existing programs,
House GOP Leader Gerald. It
Ford has praised this course,
saying It displays the thoughtful
approach desired by the American people.

LEGAL NOTICE
NOT!CE ·OF DRAWING
OF JURORS
Notice 1!!1 hereby given that a
public drawing of )lrors will be
made oo the 14th day of April,
1969, at the office or the earnmissioners of jurors in the court
house of Meigs CountY, Ohio,
for the May term 1969 of the
Common Pleas Court ot Meigs
County, Ohio.
Said drawing will be held
at 11:00 o'clock a.m. at the offlee o( the Clerk ol Courts o(
Meigs County, Ohio.
Freeland S. Norris
Lauren E. Hoffman
Commissioners of Jurors

Charles McKay
Dies April3
Charles T, McKay, 82, of 1309
Dogwood Dr., Harrisburg, Va.,
died April 3 at University Hospital in HarrisbUrg.
He was a salesman for t h e
Huntington Wholesale Co. over
30 years and was a freq.wnt
visitor In Meigs Count,y. A veteran of World War I, he moved to llarrisburg following his
retirement. He is survived by
his wile, Sally, and several nJeces, nephews and cousins.
Funeral services were held
Saturday at the Trinity Presbyterian Church at Harrisl:urg, Va.
Burial was in the Woodbine CeJQetery, also at llarrisburg.

Ohio Traffic

Peru Told
Reedsville
News, Notes To Pay Up
Or Suffer

SCHOF1EW BARRACKS, Hawaii - Four-timeiHJecorated Army stalf Sergeant Leorer ll Hudson or Galllpolis. Ohio, and presently of the lsi Infantry Dlvblon
ln Vietnam, will arrive tn H~
lulu, Hawaii, Tuesday noon, Arr
ril 8, as the one millionth man
to leave Vletoom oo Reot alii Recuperation.
Sergeant Hudson wUI be accompanied on his R&amp;R lllght by
three other servicemen representing the service branches.
The four men wiD be met in Honolulu by their wives w h o ar·
rived here the evening ol April&amp;.
Mrs. Hudson arrived at Honolu-lu International Airport from Los

Angeles on Pan American Air·
wayo Flight 827 at 9:05 p, m.
The quartet of Vietnam veterans wUl represent lhe men ot
their respective services who
have participated In tbe R&amp;Rpr"'
gram olnce It began In 1965. Selections of the tour were made
by each of the services In Vietnam on March 21, alii, based on
the representative fp...country
strength oC each service, a draw·
ing was held at lleadqtarters, U,
S. Mllltary Anlolance Commard
Vietnam to determine which ol
the foor would be honored ao the
14
Mlllionth Man."
Sergeant Hudson, 24, 11 the aon
or Mr. ard Mrs. Chester 0, Hud-

I

'

' '

o; '-r~,'.

oPel:!ited

Winner-Take-All Test
Offered to Viet Cong
PARIS (UPD-Sooth Vietnam
said Ieday It Is willing to face
the Viet Cung In elecllooo
providing t h e Cmnmunists
change their label and stop the
flghdng.
Pham Dang Lam, chief South
Vletnameoe negotiator at the
Paris talks on Vietnam, made
the offer :n a '"'yrighted
interview in the French Newspaper La Figaro.
The N a t I o n a 1 Liberation
Front, political arm of the Viet
Co~,
was not lnunedtately
a YBilable for comment.
Lam made It clear the South
VletJilmeae government would
not change Article 4 of tho
nltloo•s conadtUtiOO: It outlaws
Communi am.
uNot.hlng prevents the- members of the (National Liberation) Froot from taldJv part In
general olectloos If they change
their label," Lam said.
The amba8Bador's public pr"'
poaal conflrmed what Saigoo
delegatloo oouroeo IBd beon
sa,ylng privately for days. The

can.c~~

tor

ptablts~pnent

son, Rt. 2, Galllpolia, Ohio. Hels
married to the former Mi51 Mary
Lee Plants, daughter of Mr. alii
Mrs. Leo C, Planla of PL Pleasant. W. Va.
A 1963 graduateofGalllaAcademy High School In Galllpollo,
Sergeant Hudson entered the Army in August, 1967. Hearrlvedin
Vietnam in July, 1968, is presently aoolgned u an Infantry platoon
sergeant with Coorwany A, 2111
Bettallon, 18th Infantry, lot Inlantry Division.
Since arriving in Vtetram Sergeant Huclson hu been awarded
the Brooze Slar Medal lor her"'
lam, the Air Medal, Army Commerolatlon Medal, Purple Heart
ard the Combat Infantryman's
At 11

Keith Goble Ford
992-2196

s. 2nd Ave.

t Now You Know
· A Cemininc nonstop talkinG record wat~ btllleH!d set · b)' · Mr~.
Alton Clapp ort;l'l't'II\'UIC, N. l ', .
J ll 1951'1, who talked ~·ontlooous­
.;,:Jy Col' ~lG hours,54 mh"lllesand 11
seconds,

·-

VOL. XXI NO 3_4~

.........

ot

a two-party ayatem. In the
South. But In hla state of the
nation address be w81110d that
hlo govornmelll "will not hand
the J)eople of Vtelllam Into the
harda ol the Communists
directly or 11\llrcctly."
Talka aimed at ending the
war In Vietnam are In their 12th
week.

DeVoted To

- --·-- -----~P~O~M~ER~O~Y:.::-M~ID~D:::L=:EPO
_::::::.R:..:._T·_:O:.:..H:.:IO
. .::........_

yourtoes.

·

When }lOu want W ktep lookins sreit Supp.ho&amp;a Pantyhole $5 95
Supp.hose Stocklnp, $4.95. tn Mly talhiOn

.

•hades.
. '
BE SURE TO REGISTER

' ··

In tho F.. fidiitlono Djp'litt.iiont lor tho RCA
P-blo. Tol ..lolon "'bo givn·owoySoturdoy ovonlng~ April 12. No purchoot nocos'"" and Y,., nHd ·not bo proaont to win.

ILB•RLN.IM ·NMIIOY

_ _ _ _ __

,y

'··

~-.

,/

~'~

.

n
.

.0

TEN CENTS .

;l'

stnf&lt;::n Doubt
'

for the Clovelard law firm of
Squire, Sanders and Dempsey to
decide what action ihould be taken on bids - about $j00,000
over engineering estimates- to
•
build the Pomeroy sewerage arit.
treatment plant.
Mayor Charles Legar, in a
regular meeting of council Monday night, iOOicated the law firm,
retained as counsel in the mat·
ter of the bonds to build the sew~
erage, is continuing its study of

Mooday.
Mayor Legar indicated the
finn wiU recommen:i whether
or not to accept the bids submitted ard it it Is "accept,"
help decide a way to come It)
with more money.
Council, in other activity, approved a resolution olfering the
American Electric Power company (AEP) the village's support
the
for that ·nnn to pure hase
Columbus an:! Southern Ohio

its letter tD the vtllage that by
purchase of Columbus &amp; South·
ern Ohio It would be able to as-slst in ·rurthert~ the economic
development of the area.
In other acthity:
_ It was decided to transfer
$1 741.22 !rom the parki~ lot
m~ter fund lO the bond retirement ruoo to pay notes arKI inlerest.
_ Mayor Legar's report of

collections totaling $1,130.40 Cor
the past month was approved.
- The police department reported it no longer uses the Honda motorcycle arkl informed
council it could be sold, If found
neces~ary. Council, hoWever,
agreed there may be a future
need for it.

.

, - It was agreed to advertise
for .bids lor a now street ~
partment truck w'ith apecttlci,:
Uons to be approved, by the street
committee.
Attencling were Mayor l.e.gar,
Clerk Jai)O Walton ard Councilmen Don CoUins, Leslie Fultz,
Lou Poulin and Fraaklln Riser.

Marine Score: 35-0
Jn a series of eight skinnhhes
Molllay ranging !rom the
Demilitarized Zone to the
Mekong Delta U.S. ard South
Vietnamese troops killed 159
Red soldiers.
15 Attacks
North Vietnamese aOO Viet
Cong gunners carried out 15
shelling attacks during the night
on Allied military i~s.tallatlons,
but towns and ctties were
spared. However, terrorists
b1 other activity, the cham· threw a grenade into a wedding
ber voted to sponsor the propos- party Moooay at Giao Due, 60
ed Old Time Fiddler's Contest, miles southwest of Sa"igon,
similar to the one held at the killing three members of the
Meigs Fair for the past two wedding party and wouOOing 20.
years, ir arran~ments can be
U.S. BS2s matched the lull in
made to make rt a part of the the ground war. A spokesman
Friday night program.
said the B52s flew five missions
John WilHam Blaettnar, treas- Morklay night and early Tuesurer for Regatta Weekend ac- day against areas near the
tivities, reported that the regat- borders of Cambodia and Laos.
ta llnlshed up ~00 In the black Previously they had been
from the last regatta.
a\'eraging about 10 missions a
In other discussion, it was reday.
vealed The Four Freshmen, a
The Marine sweep southwest
nationaUy famous singing group,
of Da Nang was one of four
will appear on the final even- major offensives now underway
Ing of the three-day regatta. The
in SOuth Vletnam to cut
appearance will be sponsored by Communist infiltration routes
the Meigs County Jaycees with from Laos aM Cambodia.
the C of C cooperating. Jaycees Marines involved in today'a
of!lctals reportl,OOO ti~ketswill fighUng were part ·of Operation
be sold Cor reserved seats to the Oklahoma Hills whkh cuts
twO-hour show to be put on by the . across a Communist route from
group in the Pomeroy Junior High
Laos to the Da Na~ area.
A spokesman said the Maauditorium.
rines captured both the jungle
camp aRJ an adjoining hospital
complex.

SAIGON (UPO- U.S. Marines the Marines suffered no casualcarrying oul an offensive sweep tics.
It was the only ground action
on the plains southwest of Da
Nang kllled 35 Communist reported in South Vietnam
soldiers today in an assault on a today, reflecting a lull In the
bunker QOfnplex, U.S. military Communlsls' six-week-old offel'lospokesmen reported. They said sive.

•
d
R egatta R ev l ewe

• •• of tho water ard the sewage disposal syoremo.

..... .

2 Killed
By United Press lnteroatloml

CAarge3 athletiC$ i3 over-emphasized
· COLUMBUS - THE OHIO EDUCATION ASSOCIATION reported
.. . it found an overemphasis on athletics in the East Liverpool
sclK:d aystem which was udetrimenta1 to the constructional pro-

In Crash
Of Auto

POINT PLEASANT - Mason
':::: 'Itle OEA also aaid school board m~bers should remain "com- County Sheriff's Department h-..
~out of the admlnlstrative field, as provided by law." There- vestigated an accident Monday at
lilli't was made by the OEA's Professloqd Rights ard Responslbiii- 4 p.m. that resulted in two young
IIAI commlulon at the 1'\'quest of the East Liverpool Teachers As- men being killed and one man
lnjlll'ed.
·~lailon.
.
Dead on arrival at Pleasant
. .. . .
...---·~·· -·.
More
for more teeth .. , •
Valley Hospital were steven
~ !SRAEU WARPLANES, RETAIJA11NG againstaJordanianrock- Ralph Stover, 18, and Don LeweiWmbardment of the port of Elath, today hit the Jordanian port ol is caldwell, 20, both from Dela·
~for the llrst Urne, killing eight civilians ard Injuring nine oth- ware, Ohio.
The two young men were sltifi, ·Arab spokesmen sald.
:. ;· About ISO mlloo to the .west, Israeli alii Egyptian troops boWed ttng ~ front, in the "death
Uf.,the second artillery duel acroas the Suez Ca111l this month. Both seat" or a car driven by Jona
•11!04 accuaed the other of starting the shelling. In Amman, Jordan, Elmer Stover, 30, of Gallipolis
t111JltarY spokesmen said two Israeli fighrers used rockets In the Ferry, W. Va., who was treat~ against Aqaba. Among the dead, they said, were a woman, two ed and released from Pleasant
Valley Hospital, with two frac·
bO,-a al\1 two sirlo.
·
tured ribs aOO abrasions.
The single car accident ocMIUiitions in a peace loving nation?
DOTTIKON, SWITZERLAND - A MUNITIONS factory in this curred at the Mill Stone Road.
Stover traveling west toward
mountain communlQ' erlC)ted in explosions aM flames today, sendState
Route 2, lost control of his
Ing ohoc:k waves 12 mlleo ard taking a heavy toll in lives. Pollee said
atleaat nine person:~ were kllled, three ofU&gt;em employes at the plant vehicle which left the road, strik..
ing a tree, and overturni~. The
Several others were listed as m; sslng.
: Another 40 persons were lrUured in the 7:15 a.m. eJploslons boys were c.:rushed against the
Whose shock waves rolled across the countryside and rocked homes tree.
The bodies were taken to the
il.:far as 12 miles away.
Wilcoxen Funeral Home from
where arrangements wUl be Bl'lothe well of patience
• PARIS - PUBUC STATEMENTS FROM SOUTH Vletoomese nounced. Estimated damages
~ VIet Cong delegatlooo to the peace talks agreed on at least one were $1,500. The car was a total
~ Ieday: The nogotiatioos are getting nowhere. Allied negotiators, loss.
Also investigated by the Sherparticularly the United Slates, remained hopeful. Although the Comitrs
Department was an accident
niUnJat side has deROWlced their motives in each of their \'8rious
pOlice oUers, It has yet to state n&amp;tly that It will not partlcipare in at 11:30 a.m. on Route 17 and
Smith SL in lleOOerson. Bruce
aiCret talko,
The Viet Cong quickly dismissed tbe latest offer o! South Viet.- HamiltOn, 68, of Wurtland, Ky.,
riln:eae President Nguyen Van Thieu who earlier had called ror se- attempting a left turn into Tiny's
c!l'»t talks with the Viet Ceq. This week he olfered "'tlooal recon- Foodlal'kl, wa&amp; struck on the rigl'ft
GIUa"oo creation of two political parties ard subsequent electloos rear fetder by the car driven by
t1:111 w..id pit hla government aplnst the Viet Cong, providing they Camilla C. Phillips, 20, ol 718
bJI!omo a leplly constituted part,y ard observe South Vietnamese McCuUoogh Road, Point Pleas-

8ram.''

..

eyes,

The upcoming 1969 Big Bend
Regatta, scheduled Jwte 20.:!2,
was again reviewed by the Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce Monday at its bi ..monthly noon _luncheon session at Bailey's Restaur-

ant.
A change made from previous

regattas is that tho parade this
year will begin at 6 p.m. in~
stead oC the usual early afternoon hour. This time change
was made at the recommendation of parade chairman Tom
Cassell. Other events will be
planned to make up the early af ~
t.ernoon hours of Friday,
The Chamber, with President
BUI Gnaeser in charge of the
business session, also agreed
to charge a Oat-rate fee tor concenloD'J t.ooth ·-. spices. Kermlt
WaltOn, George Hargraves, Jr.
and Jack Carsey were named to
a committee to ~ in charge of
arrangements.

ant.

Damages were listed at $200
Thete were no in.iurles aiKI no
cilatiOOS.

'; LOS ANGELES - TRE PROSECUTION WILL NOT ask the jury
ti&gt;'brlng In a death pe~alty for Slrham
Sirhan lor the admitted
sli,yi~ of Robert F, Kennedy. With the murder trial in its last week
ani! both sideo expected to rest today, Deputy Dlst. Att,y. LJ·m a Bank &lt;A-Sponsors
Cliinptoo told newsmen:
"We wUl tell the jury that either a death sentence or a life sen- Dinah Shore Special
tence would be 81Jproprlate. We wlll not demard the death peoolty.
The Pltmer&lt;le' Nattonal Bank
The jury will have to 4eclde the peJalty."
will be one of the spooiMifl of
The signa were all adding up to a verdict of nrst degree mur- the Dinah Slore TV ii\IO&lt;tal, Sun·
der alii the 25-year...td Arab gol~ Into a mental facility lor tho rest day evening, AprU 13, on NBCQt~ll llle.
TV, Joining Miss Sllore oo this
one hour color SpecW will be
Lucllle Ball, R.Wan. and Martin, and other top flight ltara.
"
Tlola program ts ooe In a..,._
join oo tbe projeet. A eommlttee lrom the post will meet With tlnulng aerie• ot opeclals, aponthe tire department tonight ID sored by the Foundation for Full
Service Banks and Ita parttc!pat.further discuss the projeet
Poat everlaaUng servtee.a w~re lng membera acrosi lite natton.
amounced lor the next regular Last year's shows woa five
meeting. Refrelllomento were ser- Emin.Y oomlnatlons for programved by EI•a GUmore and B o b ming excellence ond four Clio
nomlnatlona for unu5Ual ond efVaughan,
rectlve commercials.

a

Now there's a pantyhose that give• vou IM same happy lace you 11 et
with SUpp-~ Stockings. Supp.hose'l Suprcme•l,j Pantyhose,
.
You aet the SUppo_rt on your h~l(!l. SLJpport wherever else you need 11
w1th a senile control panty, and all . ~oo JCJOk is t&amp;rrilie. The same wa, yqu'll
look when you put on Supp·hose Stoekings. So sheer, they'll live ~r Je,P
all kinds of support and never live )'OU, aw•~ ·
•
They're Jllll what you need tor anyj:hlna ~ou do thlt keeps ~ on

rt....,

warmor - filming In the well by
day .nom~~.~-'!"'
Illite by. OY!Ifljrlg. lAir ldlilltt ·
In the - r IG• anC! soi. LIWo
cooler Jn · tht welt •011 Wedninr
day. lll&amp;lt In the . 601 and 701.

·'

TUESDAY, APRIL 8. 1969

.,t

wl._ •••• .,...

0

- _ _ _:_:.::_:~_.:...__ __ ---:- -- - -

,

,~croulnc rtilo-li • ~ •

'llW lnteres18 Of'l'lw Meiga-Mruon Area

Pomeroy

•:: • If thy brother smite thee on one cheek .•• -

Supp-hose"Pantyhose

•

Weather

/

.ltl!s.

Supp-bose imprcJred their stockings
the onlj way they coold.
also turned diem inm pantyhose.

•

at y __ en tiP
•

=

a. m.,

Thursday, AprU
10, the grOICI wlll be presented
to the Hawaii state Legislature,
will then be luncheon gueats of
Seoote President Da vld C. McClung ard Houoe Speaker Tadeo
Beppu, At 1:30 p. m. they will
visit Governor John A. Burns In
his office, ard then go to City llall
to vialt with Mayor FasL
Sargeant ani! Mrs, Hud10n wlll
leave Honolulu at lOp. m., Thursda,y, Ajlril 10, aboard the Lurline
ao guesta of the M&amp;tsoo Navigation Company lor a lhree-&lt;lay
cruloe to llawall,lllaulanill!auol.
On Saturday, April 12, theY will
be gueats of honor oltheK!Jval\1
Queen of the Merry Mo,.rch Fostlvalln uno.

••

" MRs. HELEN SHULER, left, ard Mro. Mildred Karr, work In the water and oewage depart.... mont omce _ done In walnut paneUng - which loIn a now ad&gt;Jitlon to Mlddlepori Vlllage HaiL
' ""' MrL Shuler anll Mn. Karr are employes of the Board of Public Affairs which oversees ~eration

Saigon government, thfY said,
Ia willing to lake Its clianoe&amp; at
the polls agalnit the NLF to
decide who runs South Vlelllam
polidcally If neither aide can
win mllllarily.
"We sincerely hope the
political atr~G~e will be substl·
tuted for war, n Figaro quoted
Lam 11 saying. "And we are
ready, as IOGII a a the lighting
stops, to accept pneral elec•
tlo111- under lnter111tlonal control If neceasary-whatever the
resulta may be.''
In Saigon, President Nguyen
Van Thleu ~ proposed a olxpolnt peace plan tor VIet...,

am

;·.··~
-

O,eep ;.

Badge.

DON'T MISS THIS VALUE AT . •.

MIDDLEPORT,

. ,.
. . ·,. .
,
vate ochool .JiYStem
by · mO!her; the former Winifred
the cll,y'o Ethical Cut~ Sect- J~ .when the ho)l .was
ety, said Lambright "wu very about 12 years old. 11!0Y are
cooeerned about 508"'gadon ond now divorced.
· dlacrllnlnatlon agal1111t Negroe;,
Fetch it (Lincoln Perry . off·
all1 wry &amp;enriltive to infringe- stage) and Donlld'1 1 mother.
ment On the freedom of all pea- who once Sing with Duke Ell·
pis."
. lrwton, ·were divorced when the
Lambright, who studied poliO. ho)l was lour.
Dr. Lambright said hla •lel&gt;cal science at UQcoln Universlty in Oxford, Pa., after hli dis· aon was umeJU.Il.y · dt~~urbed
charged from the Air Force In 101'11 before this happenecL" Willi196., "was .a sick man who In the past 10 dayl ho threattranslatA!d hi&amp; patho!Otl)' to pot. enecl the llveo ol his wife ard
itics," Johnson said.
his inother1.Dr. Lambri.Jht uid.
The psychologiot said ·his
Joh~ said Lambright car·
oephew was Interested In the rled a gun "to protect hlmsolt"
actiVitles of DIII\Y black Bri&gt;IPO,
Three .rilles ard sooie amlnuard he saw himself as a peace- nltion were In the car ond on
Its hood when the vehicle was
maker amoog them.
"He did not ldentlf,y himself found east of here Saturday. In
whh any one grOICI bUt tried to the back was black militant lit·
keep in touch with all or them," erature.
Jdtnson said. uHe wanted to
'The bodies or Lambright and
keep them I rom ilghdng each hi&amp; wife, a nurse and a nad ve
other."
or st. Louis, were sprawled beJohnson said the exact cause side the blue Pontiac near a
of the shootings was "really a fooc1111Gllno servicing area.
matter of speeulatloJL"
1be .deld were lglatius Kee-Lambright took his· IUie not 111n, 50, a Philadelphia postal
from his larnous lather but from el!ljll&lt;&gt;$t, who was shot throogh
a step-lather, Dr. Middleton H. the head, ard hla wile, Ruby, 51,
Lambright, a thoracic surgeon who wao kiUed when she at.ln Cle&gt;elard, who married his tel!ljlted to grab the wheel.

Millionth Man Draw Goes
To Gallia's Sgt. Hudson

'·

BAKER F·URNITURE

HARRISBURG (UPD- uonaid Lambrlgh4 · 31, saw his
father portray a poor, shu!Oing
Negro servant In the movte.o ot
the !930'o ard 40's. Dl'slllusioned by the progress of his
race since then, the YOUI18 man
ended his Ufe In a l'Qidslde
ditch after killing three other
travelers.
·
l.ambright, ttle son of Negro
comedian Stepin Fetchl4 crulsed along a 24-mlle stretch ol
the Pemsylvanla Turf'lllke Saturd!Q, shooting at other motorlsts ard \dOing two of them. He
then killed his wife, ADnette, 31,
and turned a ,30 caliber carblne on hlmselt Flfleen persons were UUured.
Fetch!~ now 77, was unable
to e&gt;Plaln the Incident..
HI just can't understaOO it,"
Fetchit .said at a Louisville, Ky.
hotel where he is staying. f•He
was such a cool, calm aJKI intelligent hoy,"
The comedian had not seen
his son sJnce the young man
went to a Clevelard night club
three years ago to watch his
father's act.
An uncJe, psychologist Howard Johnson of New York City 1
deacrtbed -r..mbright as a •'par-

The Meigs High track team
plaoed fttth In the Oleaapeake
Relays Saturday with 25'11 polnto,
Chestjle&amp;ke won nrst place
with 70 points, Jackson was seoord with SSlh , lrooton third with
36, Russell, Ky., fourth with
27 ard Rock Hlll, oixth with 17.
John Ritchhart placed first for
Meigs In the 440 yard dash with
a time of S6.8. He also placed
second in the 220 with a 25.6.
Others scoring points for
Meigs Included Allen CUnningham who was second in the mOe
with a time of 4 minutes aiXI
54.8 seconds; Jim Warner, secord In the two-mile run with a
By United Press lnteroatlooal
time of 11 mlnuteSi UaroldWhlte,
At least 31 peraoos were kill- third in the 880 with a time of
ed on Ohio highways over the 2:17.6, aR:I fourth in the h i g h
weekend, ac~ording to a report hurdles was Wayne Well with a anoid" and ua black man who
compiled by United Press In- time of 18. ~ seconds.
was at the eOO of the road and
ternational and the Ohio Highway
Mike Bafr was fourth in shot- saw no hope."
Patrol.
put with 41 feet, 21.7 inches. The
Johnson, project director of
Five persons died in a single Marauder team of Hawley, Rice, New York's project Upward
accident &amp;in day, Three World Grimm and Grate were fift.h in Bound ard an official of a prlWar J veterans and their wives the 880 relay with a time of one
were driving north rrom their mimte and 46.4 secm'Kis.
Westerville homes when tlmir
car crossed a median on Interstate-71 and slammed intoatractor trailer, k11ling five of the
six in the car. Jn SE Ohio:
Dennis Reese, 20, Canfield,
There was $ll7.95 collected
killed in a motorcycle accident
for
the community flower fund.
on Ohio 279, two and a half miles
south of Oak HiJli Mrs. Wanda This project is sponsored by the
WASHINGTON (UPD- PresThacker, 29, Chillicothe, killed Community Builders Club. The
organization
wishes
to
thank
Ident Nlxoo told Peru's military
in a car-truck collision on U.S.
23, abUut two miles north of Chil- those who made donations. Any- government today to expect a cutone in the community who wishes oil of u. S. foreign aid and broad
licothe.
to give to the lund may do so by ecmomtc sanctions unless it a..
TRAINING PLANNED
contacting one or the members. greea In three daJ'• to pay for
A training session for volmMr. and Mrs. Robert Yost of an AmericiiiM&gt;Mied oU refinery
teers to work at the Girl Scout
New GaUilee, Pa., visited with expropriated last year.
Day Camp at Royal Oak Park In
Mr. and Mrs. ErneRt Ruth reThe President's message was
late June will be held tomorcently.
carried to Peru by .1o1m N. Jr.
row - 1\tesda)l - from 10 a.m.
H. E. Kibble has returned home wlri, tbe special envoy Nlxcin
to 2 p.m. at the Middleport Heath
after being a patient at St. Jos- sent to Uma three weeks ago
United Methodist C h u r c h.
eph's Hospital in Parkersburg. to work out a settlement guar.
Mothers of girls are askod to asMrs. Bessie Larkins visited anteeJng the International Pesist at the daJ' camp and to atwith Mrs. Tina Marks, a patient troleum Coi!IJ)IIIll' full COill!IOIIO&amp;tend tomorrow's session. A sack
at Veterans Memorial Hospital don ot' $690.5 million for the
lunch will be held at noon.
in Pomeroy last Sunday.
refinery.
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Meredith
Irwin told Nlxoo SundaJ' In
Admissions Saturday - Viola alii daughter or Columbus spent Key Blacayne, Fla., that be had
Sales, lancasteri Marcus Cham- a weekend V~ith Mr. and Mrs. made Utile headwa,y In his nebers, Middleport.
Walter Brown an:l family.
gotiatloos with the government
Discharges Saturday - R o y
John Hetzer has returned to at Peruvian President Juan VeFrecker.
his home after being a patient at lasco Alvarado and then new
Admissions SundaJ' - James Camden- Clark Hospital in Park- back to Uma for a meeting fx&gt;.
Clark, Pomeroy,
ersburg.
da,y with Peruvian offlclala.
Discharges &amp;tndi\Y - Alice
Mrs. Bernard Smalley a n d
He waa lnllll'ucted to adVise
Ward,
daughter, Columbus, visited with them that the White llauoe Is
Mr. and Mro. Alpha Smith ard obllged by law to halt foreign
other relatives over the weekend. aid and Impose economic saneNOW YOU KNOW
Mr. ard Mrs, Carl Bernhart dono apinst any nat1011 which ..
The Island of Marajo at t h e
spent
the weekend with Airman oelzes American.owned propermootll of the Amazon River in
Brazil has an area of 15,444 alii Mrs. Gary Barnhart ard ty and relusea to pay for It withoquare miles, roughly the Blze daughter at Fort Shaw, S. C. In sbc montlts. That deadline will
-Mrs. Lyle Balderson expire Wedllesday,
of Switzerland.

Takes 31 Uves

Democrats Impatient for
Nixon to Get On With It

' '

.
....

Baseball Se~up To be Reviewed

Approve Bids of Six Firms
Bids of six firms to provide
bituminous materials for t h e
county this year were accepted
by the Meigs Board of Commissioners Monday.
Bidding were Chevron Asphalt,
Byerlyte Co., a department of
KOPpers, Asphalt MaterWs, D. &amp;
F. Materials Co., llall &amp; Barber, and Ashland Oil and RelinIng Co.

Truck Goes Over

Edge of Culvert

The commisBioners agreed to
purchase 15,000 tons or ungr~
ed shot, or pea gravel, from
Tri~te Materials at 35 cents
per ton from the bin or stockpile. A.lso accepted was a bid
to supply 6,000 tons of No. 67
gravel by Tri-State Materials,
and 4,000 tons from Richard•
&amp; Sons. Both had bids of $1.70
per ton.
Attending were Commissioners Ralph W. Ours, Robert Clark,
Board President Charles R.
Karr, Sr., Clerk Martha Cham~
bers and Highway Dept. &amp;tpt. Rolllllld Crabtree.

The Meigs !l!erll!'s department reported a one-vehicle acciMiNISTER SHOT
dent on the Bowman's Rwt Uoad
CLEVELAND (UPO - Muhamat 7:10p.m. Monday Involving an med Yusof, 56, lslaamic minisInternational truck driven by ter, was shot to death here earGeorge Holrer, 42, Rl 1, Min- ly tcx1ay after an argument In an
ersville.
east side drug store. Police said
The department aald Holter get Yusof, a minister at the A1 Ja·
over Cor an oncoming car and his mi Masjld lslaam Mosque here
truck went over the edge ot a had argued with his assailant in
culvert. There was no injury or the drug store shortly before he
arrest and only minor damage to was shot. The aasailant escaped.
the truck.

Meeting is

Some or the Manhers on Areh
POINT PLEASANT - Robert Rollins, Preslo!ent, MasonJackson Labor Council, said that about 60 SRC employes and
sympathizers Morday joined the "March on Arch," from ltiason and Jackson Counties.
A special bus left from the carpenters Union Hall on Jack..
son Avenue Mon::lay morning, an:t was joined by private cars
enroute to Charleston. Rollins said that somewhere between
two arK! three thousand were marching in the protest march
on the State CapitaJ. Some, trying to storm the doors to Goveroor Moorg's orfice, were turned back by State Poi.Jee. Lyle
Kirker, Business manager for the Laborers District CouncU.
finally did get to go in to see Gov. Moore.

Need a vacation'? Doesn't everyone!
The sl§te hao a"!"J'J!)Ced an ~xteoaioo through loW ot Ill_.
Iar "unwinder" package plan at several state _parks.
The special rate plan offers deluxe lodging for three days and
two nights, inclOO.ing six meals, taxes and Ups, for $29.50 a peraon.
double room occupancy.
Use of all !acillties ol the lodges ard parkslo included. O.ecking in tor this plan Is on either a Monday or a Tue~.
h's a pretty reasonable "unwlOOcr" when yoo stop to think of lt.
The clooest ledge offering the deal Is Burr Oak, 17 mUea north ol
Attlens.
The lodges involved offer tennis courts, boating, flshtrc, hi.kirc.
activity rooms, TV in guest rooms aiKilodges and Burr Oak o.Uers
a heated, indoor pool

Set May 1

Mrs. Maxine Griffith, cashier of the Pomeroy National Bank, hal
been lately addressing classes of high schools on bankirw,.
Today Maxine Is in Cohunbus atteOOing a joint meetirc of the
Education,
Public Relations an::l Women'a ~cthitles Committees of
Certificates to Meigs County
donors who have given two or the Ohio Bankers' AssTL held at the Neil House.
more galloos o( blood will be pr&amp;BETTER ORCLE April IS on yoor calerdar.
sented at the annual meeting ot
That's the deadline for nllng your income tax aDd also the deadthe Meigs County O.apter o!.the
American Red Cross to be held line Cor purchasing new license plates.
The superintendent of the State Highway Patrol has warned that
on May 1 at Veterans Memorial
drivers
ramng to display the 1969 tags after 12:01 a.m. on Apri116
Hospital.
Final plans for the annual meet- will be subJect to arrest aOO maximum fine of $50.
ing were made during a recent
MRS. RALPH WELKER, serving as .:~neral chairmao 011 bemeeting d. the chapter's board of
half
of Xi Gamma Mu Chapter or Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, ror the
director&amp; presided over by Dale
Miss
Southern Ohio Pageant. announces that advance tickets ror the
Kautz, chairman.
Kautz said that all individuals event go on sale Thursday.
Han:tling tickets for this year's event - the fifth anroal - tn
and groups who have contributPomeroy
will be the New York Clothing House arxl Swisher and Lohse
ed to the blood donor program in
Meigs County wUI be hooored Drugs while in Middleport tickets are being handled by Bahr Oothat the meeting. He requested that iers ai'KI Dutton's Drugs. A location in Racine will be amouneed ta ..
each chairman - disaster, blood tar.
-..,
The tickets will be sold in advance at a reduced price. However,
program, satet;y service, servIce tu mUitary larnllles and the the advance sale at the store locations will be closed on Friday
Red Cross Youth - BUbmit are~ evening, April 25, the night before this year's pageant.
An innovation this year in the advance sale program, however,
port at the meeting.
will
be the operation of a box orncc until 3 p.m. at the Metes Junior
Mrs. Herman Lmclon, Mrs •
Alan Smith, and Mrs. Kemeth High School on the artcrnoon of the pageant. Advance sale prices
Braun were appointed to a com- will be in effect at the box office.
Meantime, Mrs. Betty Rawlings, serving as pageant CQoGeneral
mittee to handle refreshments
for the amual meeting. Kautz chairman as representative of the Pomeroy CM.mber of Commerce,
alao req.~ested that names of announces that Mrs. Charles Yeago of the Chester area will serve
proapectlve board members be as omcial pageant accompanist for the 15 contestants in this year'•
submitted to him before then. aftair. Accompanist for Big Bend Minstrel personnel who wW be
Cbarleo Boris, newly appoint- presenting between segment entertainment at the pageant wUl be Mr&amp;.
ed area representative Crorn the Olive Weber.
Entertairunent by the grc:q~ will carry oulthe"Hoarta and Flow•
American National Red Cross,
ers"
theme being used for the pageant stage settlngs bel11J pre.
was lntro&lt;mced by the chairman.
pared
..,.. by Mr&amp; Charles Lewis ard tbe Wlrdlng Trail Ganlen
Boris, a veteran overseaa Oeld
dlreo:tor, discussed tbe llnanclal Club. Mrs. Lewis reports thit a pink and red color s_eheme with
goall and p.Dlic service Informa- white accents will be used for this year's pageant.
tion areas of the Red Cro•• Program.
Norman Weber showed t w o
ATHENS, Ohio (UP0 ·- Ver- Cmunlttee, Alden 58kl. He "''
rums, bolh pertaining to the Red
Cro11 activities overseas, entit- non R. Alden, president of Ohio plained tbe $5.8 mWton ll&amp;urt
led "Alr Evac" and "Vietnam llnlverslty, said Morday his was an "abaol.ute m~rum"
anschool needs a $5.8 mlUIOn In- ard tlat an lncreasa oC
Aasipments. .,
lion would be required lor tla
crease in state aid next Ye~tr.
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Alden, who has announced hio 1970-71 ochool yOII',
He said II the fundi wve not
HOSPITAL
&gt;esigratloo elfe&lt;:Uve lnJWie, told
Admitted - Eva Gr-001, a faculty meeting the addldCIIIII granted by the Get'lll'll Alltlll11-.
POmeroy; DorothY JohbiC:Il, Ra· runds were required for aallry bly It wudd he've til ••other
IOUi'cet."
~
' 'cine; Rolli Morris. New -Haven; increases. curriculum dewlop.
One poaolble
•,i t,· ltl"
Blanche llllklns, Ml\ldleport; Pa- ment, lnc,..ulng tha sdlool II•
trlcla Mollrir, Ra....
brary budget, ard caJ!I)III in\- cOIIIO COOI!d ~ an ,.....,.. Ill
. · Dlo&lt;bal&lt;Pd - Gertl'lidt !)rake, provements.
sbli!ent' f - Aldflt. ~ ·• he
~anloe Slltlth, ~~.
A request for the pxtra m,... noted ' tlat 1ht
(:.,;;1 eanmet, '1!1117 Poull)',, ' OY has been made to the 0.'1~
Tl'lllti.• ""tliltit ~
Palrltlt ~.
tloooe n .. nc.e and Eclll&lt;alloll of tlat ··~· • .
&gt;•

OU Needing $5.8 MiUion

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