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                  <text>8 -

Tho

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'
,
'
'
'
Oliver
fr&lt;lli .;.. 'b
.

' ~

Ruth Gordon for "Rosemarta
'

But It was the stun111111 tla
¥tween the queenlY Hepburn
and the raucou stret..nd that
captured the imagination of
Hollywood.
Miss Hepburn ftrst won the
awanl In 1932 lor "Mornirw:
Glory" and rOUowed that

trllJiliPl\ last year with her role
oppo~it&lt;i the late ~encer Tracy
~

I

.

.

-·
:;-iftat

.

10 tAlp aU oihor· 1111111 In tho
amual c-titloQ.
Best a~ actor- ud
actress laurels to a pair o(
oldtimera, Jack A1bortaGn tor
"The SWJect was Roses" and
&lt;

~

'~

(Caotl;u.,a

Baby• .,

~.,Plane

n,.lb' ~;·· .!k!,diA
. ~~~

Shot Down Far Outside -Korean

WASHINGTON (\WI) - The Der~nS. Department said to-

·; da.v "'all evklenl·e now available•• Indicates a missirw U.S. re-

··,.,-conatssan.;e plane was shot down by North Korean aircraft and.
It was 11 far out1ide" North Korean airspace when attack-

PolitiMl•hell ~~
COLUNBU'I - GOV.. JAI,IFS ;.;. ·

~.

z:~ ect.

'.

,, .

·:,: ·
The unarmed Navy electronic Intelligence plane with 31
·:. abaord haa been miiBing since about midnight Monday and the
;,North Korean Communists claimed it was shot down after vi~&gt;­
..~ latbtg Uwir air space.
~
But the Pentagon declared in a statement at 11 a.m. EST:
"'! "from a variety oC sources, some of them sensitive, we are
- able to confirm that at all times during lts mission the air:..:~ craft was far outside any claimed territorial airspace of North.

lateit move for~
'
nt I " Hille late ...,.,.. " ,...,.slltlte
terit;v In ~tate - ~·
•; a
. , ''lr"'' ~\-'-'=
Democrats ..lei ~. Rhode~, In a ourpri-. 1IIOVI -IY
ll)ted otato Flnaneo lllreetor IJCIIIUd 'Colllet to reYiow tho lo~:!i·
ilacel 811&gt;1111011. &lt;
• •
' ·._-$ '
'
' .. , !•
•'We may lind It neeesaary to lnvoi&lt;O new auslerit;v mMall{lll
to make sure that atale~ 1t110ndinl Is kept In n... with lnc&lt;lno," tho
goveraor aali:L ..lttte aUatertt¥ move was tate ln e_oanna:," Rep. VlllIIam E. Hlnlr, Jl.New flilladelphla, aald. "But 11!11018 lwoulcl I~
port it. n SU. WWlam B. N)'e, D-~ J8ld "auaterl! is l CC.
venianl word that lets yau back down frolll reipollslbUity.

-,r1._

•

,.· Now You Know

DQnol4 lbl'lh.
Mra. ·r.;~"Vwi~eullllil,· and ,..._
in "Guess Who's Coming to
Robert :Merlc:e ofCindlllatiWIIft
Dinner."
-~ au~ats of !olios Frloda
She ls only the second actress
Fao1UIIe. 1
in history to win the award in
. Mr. l!ld Mra. wnnam Fftd
successive years. Luise Rainer
sm1111, sr. o1 llnolbur1 and Mr.
was the first In 1936 and 1937
and Mfa, uiwrence Bauatunan
with "The Great Ziegfeld'• and
and Jelrre1, ~ &amp;ulda,y
40 The Good Earth."
(Continued !rom- ll
•
Vt~IU,. re!Jtl'rea In Cbarlealn&amp;le
shot at a high altitude •
1
Sil'€:er Streisand, who was
Mr, and MI'a. Slllllb were Eas·
born ten years after Miss
"
tor Visitors ol their son-Ill-law
'
The plane's home baee,
Hepburn won. her first Oscar,
~ datqlltor, Mr. and Mra. Ted
Atlflll,
Is
lOcated
In
tho
Tol&lt;yo
.
made her film debut in "Funny
~·· . and children, 'l'olll .... area, aboot 30 miles trun the
GrU," playing Fanny Brice arxl
Jill, Defiance._
reprising the role that made her Dart.:filled beehive slwt geu 238 RedtJ
'
· Sill. and Mrt. Jobn T. llrYIII capital and aboot 15 utlloa frllll
a star on Broadway.
SAIGON - COMMVNIST SOLDIERS CREPT Into SOuth V I - JuniOr Holo!Dger and opMed bJ .... dauiblor. Taml, Grud Yokobama.
The p~ne carries ao tnuch .
Sir carol Reed won the rrom cambodlan bivouacs today and In human wa"!s attac~. a~· prayer and Bee~ and treas..
Forks, N. D. were aueata ·last sophlatlcal.ed equipment, awr·
Academy Award for best s, ootpost whose defenders turned them back wl\h ~lve artil· uror reporla.
,
week of Mr. and Mro. .fohn llr:Y·
director for the colorful musi.. lecy round&amp;, klllitV 238.
'!be recent OilS 11mt, tho 111'11 an and dau&amp;llter, Doltla. Sst. ces elqllalned, 0.1 It takas an
'
cal, '.'Oliver! "
'
UPI correopondent Not Gibson reported lrml the battlasround time a projeot of tbla .kind waa llr:YIII Ia otatlGaed at Grud utllallllly large number of mop
"The WiOOrniUs of Your
33 mlles west-northwest of Saigon that 13 Gla died and throe were o~aored bJ tho club, waa a Forka with tho u. S. Air Force. to ojlerate IL There are
i
Mind'' from 11 The Thomas
woopded in the batlle for Patrol BaseD-3, buUI Monda1, 1,000 aueceao. More llld&lt;etl and Be- Jolnlnl the Br:Yan famlllaa dur· dl!fereftt verolona of the EC121,
•
~
Crown Affair" was voted best yards from tho cambodlan border, Levelq their -ltzer.a, the Aot wao diiCIIIaed, ud a &lt;01·
with dif!trent crew require111g lite week !or a .tall wore Mr.
..;. •'
song of the year as hun:lreds of
250 Americans, ootllllllbered three-to-&lt;&gt;ne, UDleaahed • barrige or tee brook roullll"''l In Marl~ ud Mrl, AllportBrJan anddau&amp;ll· menta aod mlaolona.
stars and celebrities filled the the dart - ftlled "beehive" rounds shotgurl-atyie Into the wa..s of !lmda1, April 27, waa .....t.ctiro o1 ~olabul'l, and Mro.
!'
Dorothy Chandler Pavilion of
I
Communist t.roops, Gibson said.
ed.
.
.
Slan111 Br:Yan and children, and
t!te Los Angeles Music Center
(Continued trun I) '
j
N.W mombera welcomed Into Mrs. Cuialln!&gt; Buaaell who Ia
for the two-hour ceremony.
O'GraJy's theory about the governor
the club were JloY, Wnllam Air- vlallllis In Columbuo with rela- alao observed that the CAP baa
Champion Directs
I
DAYTON - EUGENE P, O'G!WJY, chalnnan of the Ohio Dem- ..,. Pomeroy: Mr. andMro. Jaek tives. Mrs. Busaallla In Col~­ b~t $911,319 into tho coun~ .
'
.
Gower Champion directed the ocratic hrcy, said Monday Gov. James A. Rhodes would not run
cy
alnceIto
Inception
here
throe
Chapman, Mr. ~ .Mta.' 0 II n
Casti)&amp;ced show with greater ror the u.s. Senate because he ia"loalng cmtrol" or the state GOP. Wolf and BoiQ' WUidn, MI..,; bua awatuns the returJI of her years 114"
bullbiad SP t Ronald w. JluoInformality than the awards had
Wendell Hoover waa asked to
O'Grady IDid a student audience at the University of DayiDn that Mr. and Mra. Joe YCllltll and aall llho reeently roturnod from
seen in previous years. There there was a ••growing finaneiJI crisis" ln Ohio which ~tean be ~id Glenda !ilarp; of ·!lew Haven,
cheek
Into the matter of the C&amp;O
Vlei!Wn, The John Bf1811 fam.
was no single master of at Rhodes' doorstep." He said the GOP was aware of the crlala atxl
llallroad
propoabw to cloaa the
and carl Cline of Rlplv.
.
111 violted Euler weekend In
ceremonies and tuxedoes retrelght
depot
omee and brltV a
Refreahmento and a aoclal hour Columbus with relatives.
''they are afraid they will have to share the blame."
placed white tie ard tails.
reJ)Ort of his findllll• back to
wore enJoloed bJ Mr. and Mto.
Presentill:" tile awards were Ohioan's heart used in transplant
the
next aooalon. Several memEmU i;ynOII, Mr. and Mra, Jun.
five hosts and ho5tesses: Frank
b8rs
!ell the chamber ahCIUid go
HOUSTON - DOCTORS AT METHODIST HOSPITAL here Mon- lor Holalnger, 10111 Brad and
!:iinatra, Jane FoiXla, Walter day tranoplanted the heart of David Fearlog, 30, an auto raclqt ac·
on
recocd
oppoalntl thoraUroad's
Paul, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Pierce
Matthau, Sidney Poitier, Ingrid cident victim from Toledo, Ohio. into the body of a Missouri mab.
move tO be aired at a hearlrw: In
and ilanlb'. Mr. and Mra. Joe
Bergman. Burt Lancaster, Na..
May on grounds that it wCIUid be
Fearing a metal company foreman. was down to Houston's St. YOIIII8 and !i!Ol'l')', BeUy WDActivity
talie Wood, Diahann Carroll, Luke Hospi~l early Mon:lay after the raci11t car accident. Hll wife. Idn, Olin Wolf, Mr. and Mro. In
a cllaadwntage to preaenl buol•
Rosalind Russell am Tony Robin, and severo! mecllcal technicians acCOIIIjl&amp;nied him on the prl· Brookl Echrarda and llllrley,
Thlrt;v • nve arresta were ness, aill could baQer fUture
Curtis.
vale airplane DlghL Dr. Michael Jleb!r.key's teem tranl!llanted Fear· Gleoda !l!arp, Bill Roush, James made aod eight acclclenta lnvea- poasibUIUea ol attracting IndueBob Hope appeared to present
.
Paulay, Mra. Jack Chapman, SCClt tlgated.ln !olar&lt;h by the llllddle- try. }
ing's heart Into the body of Ted Clarllbera, t4.
Martha Raye with the Jean
ft
waa
alao
decldnd
to bu.Y nine
'
and Lori, John Kearns Mr. and port P..lce Department accllrtl,.
Hersholt Humanitarian Award Sirhan Sirhan's fate in jury's handtJ
Mra, Frank Oldaker, Pl.tiijp and lng to' tile monthly .report !lied 3-11. high Christmas deeoratlcJIIs
for her efforts to entertain
at a re&amp;lced coat Or P5 ..ch.
LOS ANGELES - A JURY OF 12 American citizens deliberat- )lacy, David Lipscomb, Mr. and
United states servicemen in ed tolay whether Sirhan B, Sirhan was a mental case or a vicious Mrs. Doug Hemalll)', Richard MondaJ night with Middleport AttenditV, In addition to the
COIIICII bJ Pollee 011el Paul a - namea; wore- -- rucbtirtl ·
Vietnam. She was the ftrst
APRIL14 TO *BRif 3~.
assassin bent on the murder of Sent. Robert F. Kennedy.
Duckworth and Apoa ~•. '1l!e Para"""
woman to receive the honor.
~h~'
l!Oulah
it-o~
Fred
A verdict of first or aeoond degree mur42r - one carqlntla next meettili ~~ be All~ U. , . Arreola Im:lilleil17 for opeedThe best foreign lang111ge possible death sentence and tfiO'· ~r alsurlng life - .... e~
Morrow, John WilHam Bla-r,
~h
1111; foor, driVIng wblle lmAlxl- Bob Jacoba, Bob Winget~, · Jac~
film award was presented to the
shortly,
cated; two, runniDg stAll&gt; algno;
colors: Ho!ltJ
U. S.S. R.'s Mosfilm production
two, I'UI1IIIng red llghta; 1110 lm• carsay Ill!! .Marge Hoffner,
" War and Peace."
~rd~jlreJ.
proper parldns; .... Improper
Although the tie between Miss
FUNERAL ANNOUNCED
COLUMBUS (IJPI) - N ell .
backlrw:; blr, lmoxlcalloll; ora,
Hepburn and Miss streisand
MASSILLON, Ohio (IJPI) 3 PAIRS FOR $2.90
Armstron&amp;'• lather aald Mon·
GAUGES - . GaUlitoll.. 11.9
lllegal em.ust' one, wrq W8f
was a breath-tairlng bit ·of Funeral semces have b e en day his son waa as calm aboot
Y01uave $1.1~
on on&amp;.way street; one, assured and 19,2 runnlrw: 24 teet; Pt.
drama, it was not without scheduled here Wedneaday lor
pJitV to the 1110011 as he would
6 PAIRS FOR 5.80
CLIFTON, W, Va. - Mro. clear dlatanc:e. Parklrw metsr Plioaant, 2f.58; J?pmeroy ·14·
precedent.
Mrs. Katherine Brown, 58, wife
be about .tsiU,. a nel(lbborlng
soil, 21.88; Hinton, L31 ai&amp;L:
Youuve$ •
Charlotla Ann Bemutl, 45, Bex· recelpta totaled $842.50.
There was one other tie for of Paul Brown of the Clnclmatl
city.
KanaW!!a
Falla,
4.10
l'allbW;
best acting laurels back In 1932. Bengal&amp; of the American FootArmstml&amp; 38, the dvUian iey, Ohio, died lolonila1 In Unl·
Charletton, 18.39 r.Jnil&amp;, LollWallace Beecy and Frederic ball Loapo, Mrs. Brown ¥
verslt;v 8081&gt;ital, Columbus.
astronaut from Wapakmell,
don,
aod Wlnlleltl are
$2.50 Kayse.r Pan ose
March gained a stand-off; &amp;mday at Scripps Memorial HosMra. Bennett, a rati.e of CUIDAIIAGE ESTIMATED
Ohio, hao been tapped bJ t h e
011
the
alll.
'
Beery for "The Champ'' and pital In La Jolla, Calif., of an
too. l'ed resided , til Col~bus
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (VPO·
:onsalefor$1.99
Space Agency tD become t h e
March ror hls title role in "Dr. apparent heart atiack.
the
....
,
25
years.
She
was
a
J
obn
M.
Morris,
011110r
ril.
the
To RECEIVE LOAN
first Amerlcau to aet loot on
JekyU aod Mr. Hyde."
!omer OIJII)IOYee or
Westing· ftre • ewept A. G. Sharp 1Aqft6er
th'
WASQiNGTON
~- Col~·
the moon. He will ~
the Apollo II mission making hoose Electric Corp; In ColiDD· eo., ~ eaUmated loaa at bus, Ohio. will pt a tl,94t;587
osi.,Y ,ptfWI~
bua. She .... the dau(lbtor or
$800,000. '!be three ·alarm lire loan
the . . - o1 ·
DIVORCE GRANTED
the !lrat moon landing JUly 20.
late Benjamin A. and Vlrg!Dia of lllletermlned origin ~rol&lt;e 0111 llOUIIq and Urlltln lloYOiqiment
George Kau!f, Rt. 2 Racine,
Patrick RedmaD.
at tho dGWntown lumber yard for 'the,purchaao &lt;11081..,-renl
TONIGHT THRU TIIURSDAY
ha.a been awarded a dl.vorcerrom
She
Is
sutvlvecl
b.i'
her
huaSunday.
home a.'
Eleanor Frances K a u f C m
APRIL 15-17
band,
Hennan
N.,
and
an
elghtMEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
grounds of gross neglect of cllty
CANDY
--~----~~~~--~--~~~
year-dd dau(lbtor, Cathy Ann:
Admlaslons - None.
(Technicolor)
and extreme cruel\!',
five
staters,
Mrs..
Nancy
Prince,
Discharges - James Clark,
Charles Azlll vour
Loahla Mitchell, John Ml!chell, Clifton; Mrs. Mary LouiH Bur·
Marlan BraOOo
ton and Mrs. Keith Atldnson, bolh
Tom Wallo, Larry Powell.
COLORCARTOONS:
FIRE DOVSED
o! Colwnbus; Mrs. ~ Gll&gt;Think or Sink
Middleport Firemen aoswered
ther, Middleport. and Mrs. IJor..
"
Nudnill on the Beach
a call at 1:58 p,m. Monday to
tha Noble. New OrJMna; tlu'ee
(This is an Adult picture. ..)
Grant St. where thay extlngulohWORKERS KIIJ.ED
brothers, Pat HedJna1lo llllddle(One admi ssion only: $L00)
ed a brush fire near the Sayre
',
AKRON (IJPO - Two men port; Jack ltedman, Houston. Tex.
SHOW STARTS 7 P,M.
residence.
were kllled lolonila1 when a hole aod J, a lledman, Texla; eight
they wore dlal~W: at a COII!Itru&lt;- nieces, alii a nephew.
tlon site caved In and burled
Funenl aentceo will be held
them alive. They ware Leator Thursday at 10t30 a.m. !MD tha
Obllak, 37, of Atwater ud Paul Woodyarll Eaot Ftl!\0-.1 - e ,
Kemmery, 45, Lakemore..
2300 East LMtVIlcn A"', Columbua. Frl~• 11111 call at the
!Unenl htil\e7 to 9 Tueldal',allll
INCREASED DEDVCTION
011 Wednesday ·2 to 4, aNI 7 to 9.
w.ISHINGTON (UPO - SelL Gnvea14o services will be
StAlphen 111. y 00111 , Jl.Ohlo, Mon- held 1bur141¥ ai3 p.m. at Kirk·
day lntrnduced legislation rala· ' land Memorial ·Gifdena, PL
irw: an Individual's Income tax Pleaaant, wllh the Rev•. Max Don,
deduction from $600 to $1,000. ahue omclating. '

WASIIINGTON - THE REPVB.!JCAN NaliCJI'II qonmlttoe Is
Implicitly ondorabw President Nixon's antlbolllstlc mla.Uo plall,
although Its new chairman, Rep. ~~oPra C. B. Morton of Maryland,
Lis arguing AIIM policy shCIUid not be a 1101'1i..n Issue. The CCIIII1nite~fS
toe ga.. a brood endoraemeni to Nlxon.acbnlnistratloo foreign and
.. ,
domestic' moves MOIIdoQ' after oloetlng Mormn· to succeed Ray c,
Bliss as GOP rational cbalrmaiL
:
,-'
J
Ita aeSBion waa the q,enlng of a tour-&lt;JaY round of Republican
meetings to prepare tor lite1970 otate'and c01181'aasioral ei,.UODI. .
The ratlwal commltiae adopted a resolution aayiog that lite )'011111
.
.
Nixon administration had "moved quickly and decisively to re.verse
the policy of drlftlng Into crlals that baa burdened the American peoSYRACUSE .,. '!be rOBUit,r
pie !or far too long."
' meeUIIII of tho Trt.count1 C. B.

NeW M . :. .
"''elcomed
·. bv
·Tri•W Qub'
~~b

~PY .

'.
•

VOL. XXI NO 250

.

•

'it., nl8htFarrb¢H! spoke at the annual !lleetlng of lite Meigs Count;y
Tllberculo•ls and Health Asso~latlcJII held at lite Pomeroy United Mal!1ocllst Clllrch,
- Farrlnglon Bald that the (hosPital&gt; •'Project 18 in" - pre' .Umably referring to lite re&lt;J~est
!W lundlng - and litat "approval
li.expected soon."
-~ He estimated .the total project
Clio! at $600,000, noting that fedtl'~ aid wlli be awroxlmately
, M17,800 Wltlo the local !!hare
btlntl $182,200. 'Ibis representa
68.6 per cent In federal cootrl.
iiitl.na,
Farrlnstm pointed out.
., '
•-'!be speal(er commented on the
' .;;..... or tho Tri.COU.ty Prac1 tll:ll-19Ur• SChool-and aald !hat
' llri aginey I~ neaotlatlng wllit
Qllla County heallit agencleo
llld tho Holzer Medics! Center
on the pooolbUIQ' of eventually
eatabllshlng facUlties for trainIn&amp; ~censed practical mrses

Police Arrest 35

March

SPRING·SALE ·

Dies Monday

Now on Sal• In

u.

u.

MEIGS lHEAliE

ftea. sus Wondel'lec Aallon
In your
tanrlte
S.w.et - Niilllr~l•
Debonair - Mothwhil' .. :willow -

there,

"II will be two years probabefore anything deveiOJ)B
there,!' be said,
Farlinglon deocrlbed tho work
o! the Ohio Vallay Haalth ServIces j!ounctation, Inc, as a health
domoqatraUon project In a seven county area fUnded under the
~chla Act. He said his agen0, Ia .conceroed wllit the Impact
oil', haalth
In tho regloo lhroollb
.

bly

, 99¢A PAl

...,.,at
!tam

Main Floor ,

l_n

$

.

We invite you to come in and talk with one
of the officers in our Savings Department
about a savings plan. His advice will help
you select a plan suited lo your income.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

,.,

PAm JOHNSON'S

GREAT BUY IN PATENTS

GIRLS &amp;
BOllE
YII.LOW

I

\

provision of health services, not- programs for the seven county
Ing that through surveys, a total area. OVer $2,000,000 wen! to
of 32 major health gaps have been the !helterlng Arms Hospllal at
de!lned. He spoke or the prob- Athens, currently under conlema Involved In llnanclng health struction. in addition to ottaer
care, particularly when being re- federal aid tolallng $1,178,000,
ceived on an outpatient basis. He
Plans for sc~ all school
said the main object or any heallit children in the l'eglon in a comservice slloUid be to keep peo. prehensive speech, hearing; and
pie on their jobs and not lying visual conservation program
around In a hospllal, because were a.nnoonced by the speaker.
thil is what they have to do to Emphasis will be on early dereceive financial aid,
tection o! defects and preventaHe spoke or the envlronrnen· tive senlces, he pointed out,
lal heallit problems of the reFarrlncton doacrlbed tho .,..
gion, of sub-standard hooslllg,
which he deserlbed as HworH
than m.Wr ghettos, n and of th•
private" well supply with uoo
per cent being subject to cmtamlnation."
The speaker complimented the
CCIIIII1 on the Cheater - Tupper•
Plains water SJ!Item which Ia
under conatnaction.
Ue cited a need for better communication a between heallhaaon.
'
cle~ and annoliitcGd a lillill1 ,.
planning and cancer deteCtlcJII
conferOIICe to be held on April
23 at Rio Grande College, Dr.
Keith Brandeberry of Holzer
Mecllcal Center will serve as ill
program director.
On family planning needs or
the region, Farrington said that
there are 28,100 !amlllos In need
of assistance In this area. He
BONNIE POOLEY
spOke of the need lor mental
health facilities In Meigs, Galita and Jackson coonti.es, and
of tho work of the mental r ..
tardatlcJII evaluation unit.
Farrlnglon credited his agency with being responalble for
Taking part In the competl·
securl111 $17,000,000 In health lion lor the title or Miss South.
em Ohio In Pomeroy on Saturday, April 26, wlli be Bonnie
&amp;lsan Pooley, a junior at Ohio
Unlverslt;v.
The daughter of Mr, and Mrs.
Walter c. Pooley of Hamllton,
Mill Pooley studied all t,ypes of
danclntl for six years and has
served as a dance instructor for
three years.
A French major planning to
teac~ Miss Pooley ia an activo member of the angel lllght
at Ohio Unlverslt;v and was first
rumor-up for the Mllltary Ball
queen.
In the talent competition of
lite Miss Southern Ohio Papant,
to be held at 8:10 p,m_ In t h e
Meigs Junior High School at Pomeroy, Mlsa Pooley will pre&amp;ent
an Hawaiian dance.

Miss Pooley

h Candidate

Or the

•

l

TEN CENTS

might be raised, persons close to
the sltuallon auld today a subcy General Hol!)lltal facilities, •tantlal portion of the local share
and of the Jackaon and Hock- is on hand from the revenue
Ing poblic health centers, He taken In by lite hospital so tar.
said the need for health career The remainder is no problem,
developmanl training facilities It was pointed oo~ allitoo(lll they
were not certain which direction
wllitln the region was acute,
Farrington was IntrodUced by the hospital hoard would go. With
Wallace Bradford, president, and such a substantial amoont 011.
was given a gift at the conclu- hand toward the local share,
the remainder could be borrowolon o! his lalk.
ed and be paid back !rom fuAllitough the speaker made no ture revenue, it was suggested,
reference to how the local share

agency ln renoY ation and

Buckeyes
Pull Out
OfSEOAL
Dick llubbarcl, preslo2nt ol the
Nelsonvtile-York District Board
&lt;1 Education, announc:ed ~
the Nelaonvllle-York Buckeyes
wUI leave ibe SOUtheastern Ohio
Athletic Leape after the 1969.
70 school term.
Hubbard said the ooclslon to
leave the SEOAL "was a very
dJfftcult one:• The board voted on the ISIIUe last night, ft
had been dlacuseed earlier this
year by area residents.
Nelsonville-York lothe smallest of eiSht schools In enrollment porllclpating In the league
oosplw a conaolldatlon between
Nelaonvlllo and Buchtel - York
school districts two yeers ago,
Nelsonville was a charter
member of lite SEOAL when the
league was formed In 1925, AI.
!hough the GrOJ-S never won
a football champlonahli&gt;, nor
many grid games, they did fare
well In basketball down througJt
the years with fwr champion.
ship teams and a .....~ost mark
of 235..258. Ill 1952, the Gr!IYhounds adVanced to lite CtaiB A
Slate llnals before boWing to
LocklaDd-W11111e.
ft waa reported the Buckeyes
have been Invited to Jain the TriVaiiOJ ConfertiiiCe, Travel d I stance won•t be as great a.a it
waa In tho SEOAL, and t h e
ochools - Warren Loca~ Belpre, Fecteral.llocklng, and Fl.
Frye are aiJout the aize of Nelsonville-York,
SEOAL of!lclalo are In
the process of finding a replacement for the Buckayeo. VInton
County hao Indicated 111 Interest
In the SEOAL. SO baa Ook IIIII and
Warren Local.

FIVE.IJAY FORECASf
By United Press lnlernational
Temperatures In Ohio will
a'Ver&amp;~e much above normal
Thursday througJt Monday with
highs averaging In the low to
mid 70s and Iowa In the low to
mid..SOs. A liWe cooler over
the weekel)t. ~ere Thura-

lli' or -l'tlillll', •oveaialn..half

to one inch.

~~~;::$?.

District
Post to

Mrs. Vale
Mrs, Nellie Vale, a Meigs
County school supenisor, was

named to a two year term as
chairman or the Southeast District School !ilpervlaors at a
meeting held Monday at the "Middle School" in Belpre.
Mrs. Vale, Mrs. Greta &amp;rtUe, also a Meigs County school
supervi110r, and Mrs. Walter
Rife, Gallla Count;v school supervisor, attended the meeting
which had for a theme, .. T h e
Middle School, H
Robert Miller, superintendent
&lt;1 the Belpre Schools, gave the

addreu of welcome and there

"

Dinner

A delegatioo of Melia Couoty NFO member&amp; attended the
Gallla Councy NFO ... _ dl~&gt;­
ner at Greene Local School, Saturdl1 evenitV April 12, where
at laaot 250 peraona heard Rl·
cardo Avila, NFO daley assistant trun Indiana discuss completion · of contnot negotiations
with aeYOnl It,rs~ milk procea-

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LAGHORN
lUCK

J(loes Heads TB&amp;H,
Sltcceeds Bradfo~d
Election of new omcers, the
reslgration of Mrs. Kermeth WUcox, executive secretary, and a
resume of services over the
past year highlighted the annual
dinner meetlng Tuesday night of
tho Meigs County Tuberculosis
am Health Association.
Manning Kloes was elected
president, succeeding Wallace
Bradford. Other officers named
were Clarence Headley, vice
president; Mrs. Bruce May, secretary; Miss Frieda Faehnle,
treasurer; Mrs. Manning Kloes 1
repre1entative dlrector, and
Mrs, Dwight Wallace, alternate
repre5entative director.
Named to the board oC directors were Mrs. Carl Kautz, Mrs.
Dan White, Mrs, Dean Ba.rnitz,
Mrs. Clarence Headley, Mrs.
Guy Neigler, Mrs. Bert Bodimer.
Mrs. Glenn OUl, Mrs. Tom Martin, Mr, and Mrs, Wallace Bradford. Paul Baer, Mr. ard Mrs.
Richard Chambers, Mr. arw::l
Mrs. J, S. Davis, Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead, Dr, and Mrs.
Jerry Matheney, aDd Mrs. Mil ..
elrod Betzlng.

$500 for professional education ed to all students.
She noted that 30 vol..-n
and training, $238.26 for patient
services. $114.03 for public in- assisted in the testing of 3.477
formation, $663,12 for lund rals· persons.
It was reporteil that 38 larp
ing and $129.19 lor administrax-rays were paid for by the aation arxl general expense.
sociation during the year. A
The gross 1968 Christmas seal nurse tvss also been hired this
sale. Mrs. Wilcox reported, was year to administer tuberculosl•
$3,597.25, with $755.42 going to work in the county.
the state and national organiza..
Mr. Bradford thanked Mra.
Wilcox for her work with the ortions.
During the past year, accord- geni2ation and noted that her
ing to the report of Mrs. Wil- r esignation Is etrectlve as ot
cox, there were six patients at July l He appointed Paul Baer,
the SouU1east Ohio Tuberculosis J. S. Davis and Mrs. Clarence
Hospital from Meigs County. Headley to a committee which
Four are there now, one is de- will review the applications for
ceased, and one has been trans· nursing scholarships to be
ferred to Coh.onbus. She spoke awarded this spring.
of the gifts on birthdays and
Christmas provided the patients,
Two $250 scholarship• are beof the tray favors and napkins ing otrered for which to date, six
sent for three holidays, aTKI of applications have been receivthe donation made toward the ed. Meigs Councy high school
purchase of a kiln Cor the use seniors have until April %5 to
of the patients.
a~ly for thei!L Diane Holliday
A contribution was also made of Rutland and AM Holter of
to the ~rlngvlew Hoopllal lor Eastern receiyed. the 1968 sc~
mentally ill tuberculosis pa.. larshlps.
Bradford, who has served aa
tients.
Utkler commtmity service, president ror the past se'VV&amp;l
Mrs. Wilcox reported that tuber- years, e~ressed his IIIPreclaculin skin tests were offered to tion tor the assistaneeglwnhlln.
aU students in the county, ard The dinner l'(as oerved bJ tho
that literature on tuberculosis United Melitodlst Cl&gt;trch women
and the skin tests was distribu~ precedltV the annual meetbte.

Brass Choir Concert is Friday

..,

}~

1969-10 OFF1CERS for the Melga County Tuberculoola allll Health Aaaoclallon al
Tue&amp;da.Y night's annual meeting. They are, left to right. Miss Frieda Faehnle, treasurer; ~
nirw Kloes 1 presidenti Mrs. Bruce May, secretary; Clarence Headley, vice president; ard Mrs.
Dwight Wallace, repreaeatadve director. alternate. Mrs. Maaniag Kloes, the repreaelt&amp;Uw director, was not preseM for the picture.

were conWcted tcurs ot. the Bel..
Miss Faehnle, treasurer, reo.
pre uMiddle School."
ported
assets of $7,651.51at the
A luncheon was held at the
end
or
March. E&gt;penaes totaled
Redwood Restaurant, During the
$2,604.10,
Including $746.09 lor
afternoon aeaslon Dr. Karl Weimer of Ohio Unlversit,y'a col- the community service, $213,41
lege of e&lt;llcatlcJII, was the speak- for public health aod education,
er, using ~"'be Mldllle School
Concept" as his topic.
Preolding overthemeetil!iwas
Robert Reed, superintendent of
the Washington Councy achoola
The brass choir, directed by
who will be succeeded by Mrs.
David Bowen, wlU q:1e11 a public
Vala. Eighteen achools are Inconcert at 8 p,m, Friday In the
cluded In lite district,
Molge High School Aillltortwn
In Middleport.
The choir will present "Oiorale" tram Prelude, Olorale and
MeigM NFO Group
Fugue; them &amp;CIIl ' 4 An American Rhapaodie"; •~Two A,yres"

Attend~

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extension f1 the Lawrence Coun-

the popular "carousel" and
"Brigadoon" alq with ushe~
aSIWB.h" alii "Wue Tarwo" concludl~ wllit "Burnished Brass
!olar&lt;h."
Concert band personnel in-

nie Grueser, Shelley Hall, CGDnle LaMing, Connie Radford.
Fred Rayburn, Vickie SUtton. Kathy WehrutV, Debbie Wlaec:up.
HORN - JeMi!er Goble, MoJ..
anie Hackett.
ciLdea:
TROMBONE - Bill Bormarl,
FLUTE - Wendy Carper, car- Kent Kloos, Mark Miller, SUllo
olyn Maples, Pol!liY Story,
Rusche!, Carolyn Tracy, Marli1n
am. uprayer" frqm 11 RieJlll, II
BASSOON - Pat Harris.
Tracy.
Eb CLAIUNET - Ann Ohlin- BARITONE - Bob Blacbton,
Directed by Glen Shaw, the
Ecklie Brown, Pat Greas.
concert band will play aeleetlons ger.
IIA8i CLAIUNET - Marge
TUBA - Nathan Roblne!te.
from 11 Lll' Abner.'' u Air f o r.
Balli~ .. two woodland sketches,
Riggs.
PERCVSSION - Ed11
CLAIUNET
Nancy
J!!t!llliln.
wards,
Steve
Holf!llan,
11111111
.. To A WUd Rose" arwf TO A
Water Lily" aod a Welsh folk an, Sheila Folmer, JW 'lilrrla, King, Paul Rice, &amp;tole Soulab:J.
Kq,. Pam
Bra• choir memben an:
lulta compooed &lt;1
•'Jenny Kim Johnaon,
11
11
Manley,
Cellne
McGOwan,
Mary
TRUMPET
- Karrott Grlllltb,
JGI1t8," All Through tbe Nl.ght
Mklklf!,
He
..
,
Dobbie
OhJobn
Lohse,
Pat
~.Sine
I nd "Men ot' Harltch."
Folll!f'l111 lntormlsalono tho Unger, Kro~ Price, EUen Rice; li!Hor, Marla' Grueaer, Kdlr
band will presenl tMIIllber• fl'tllll Mello.. Rizer, Bei!Qi Scaai, Wataon.
SUJie Soulsby, S)olYia•
UO!IN - llotlf
ilollllllo
Becloy Trllllell.
' ' "'tor, MarleaO ' ~' .IUiee
ALTO SAX - ,Dt!bblo Hawlf1;
, ~
Dobbie HUMell, MartanntKIC~t~o
. ·'•·
Dobblo J;anay, 1\larcy. &lt;lw1ona,
Ricky Pierce.
, '
TENOR SAX - SteYO ~
TRIJ,MPET ~ r""!"Amti;Cot\.
. mi, NJney
-- ~{·
.

Dla"'

J-

Sir....

W,.,,

/4alional
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MIDDLEPORT, .OHIO

.Insurance

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lows from the upper 401 to tho
,middle 50a. Variable cloudlneoa
and not nwch change In temperature Thuraday, Scattered show·
ers west in the forenout, spreading over eastern sections In the
afternoon.

WEDNESDAY. APRIL 16, 1969

WHITE

1

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''\ ',.!"(.
..

Devoted To The lnlereltl Of The Meigs·MaMJn Area

··"'' '"\....

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Weather

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: Ground wUI be broken tblo faU
tor tho prOJ&gt;Oaed 40 bed long.
~rm care wing ol Veterans Me~9rial Haspltal, J, E, Farrington, executive director of the
oido Velley Health Services
Foundation, Inc., precllcted Tues.

~

River Gauges

.

Partly clood.Y toalglt with tho ~

Jlredict New Hospital Wing
~round Breaking by Autumn

CofC

Mrs. Bennett

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J:::;: ::~

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,.entap.

en tine:

f{~MEROY.MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

'

•
ed to be pieces or mi ssing U.S. Navy reconnaissance plaN.
urhe Soviet ship said ln reaponse to que•tionl that it l1ld
not recovered or seen any SID'vivora,11 the
IIPL ,
Two Rus sian ships joined in the search arll reacui cptntlon at U,S, requesL The Russian port of Vladivostok iullly·
about 150 miles from where the plane appareltl,y went dmnL ~·
The Defense Department report this mornins saki:
11
Direct communication has been established between' OM· .
of the Soviet destroyer • t,ype !~hips In the search area a1111J
U.S. aircraft from Korea.
"The Soviet ship said in response to questlaos that it had
not recovered or seen any survivors, but that it had picked liJ
what It reported to be aircraft parts.'"

high goverMtent authorities in the state and Defense Departments, the Joint Cble!s of Staff and the White noose. Each of
these missions constitutes a lawful use of international airspace."
The 11 o'clOCk statement was the first otftclal acknow..
ledgement by the United Slates tl'o.t the ECL21 was shot down,
as North Koreans claimed. Prevloosly, lite Pentagon said only
that the plane was mlsalng,
The department would not elaborate on what cype 11 sources"
enabled It to tell that the plane stayed outside North Korea' a
claimed 12 • mile terrltorlallimiL
The Defense Department announcement shortly before 9
a.m. EST 8814 a Russian shli&gt; reported picklngq~ what awe«r-

y

a.1

·' Cuban Premier Fidel Castro
:11uz waa educated In Jeault
·;Jchoola In SanUago and Havana,
' and had a successfUl law prac·tice after gpaduaUI!i from Ha::-vana Unlveralt;y.

GOP Committee baeD ABM plful

SElEO ASAVINGS PLAN
SUtnD TO YOUR OWN NEEDS

'

Korea.''
"All evidence "'"'available tops, lncludlog Norlit Korean
claims and debris alghlll!il leads "' to believe, that the air·
cran was shot down by Norttl Korean aircraft. Aa of thla boar,
regretfully, there has been no report of survJ.vors." Earlier
~. the Pentagon announced a SOviet ahli&gt; reported picking
~ some alr.craft wreckage In the Sea of Japan but there was no
sign of survivors• .
The later announcement said:
11 lteconnalssance missions of this Q'pe have been ftown
for more than 20 years in t~e Sea of Japan. There was nothing
unusual about this mission.
"In recent year.s, these missions have been approved by

Watersf l ·~;

f

·:P,

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''We'll .B!lck You , Up All the Way, Mon Ami!"
.,

Safest Drivers? The Aged!
Old age brings enough proble~ without
society adding others for no good reason.
It has loa&amp; been aasumed by many traf·
lie safety officials and insurance com·
panies as well as most laymen that ad·
vanced years brought decreased ability to
drive a car safely. The older driver was a
hazard, who needed to be ,..,..,.amined
after he passed a certain age and perhaps
be restricted.
.
A massive s!udy has demOlished this
myth entirely.
Spcmsored by the University of Denver
and the Administration on Aging of the
U.S. Department of Health, Education and
WeHare, the study examined the records
of drivers in 30 slates and the District of
Columbia. This was not a sampling but a
study of the TOTAL driver population in
the 31 jurisdictions for which data was
available.
It was found that:
• Although senior drivers (65 and over)
represented 7.4 per cent of at: drivers in
the slates surveyed, they were involved
in only 4.8 per cent of accidents.
• Senior drivere averaged 'if1 per cent
fewer accidents than would exist if their
proportion of accidents were in exact ratio
to their proportion of the driving popuistion.
• Senior drivers averaged loweat of all
age groups in frequency of injury-preducing accidents-40 per cent below their proportionate share of the driving populstion.
• In only one category-falallty-eausing
accidents-was the senior driver's average
just alightiy lower than their proportionate

expected.

011 Perrier tried from tho N. Y.
Regency to get a quick-jet horne
to Parts and when oo reservatloos for hlo four pooches could
be liiDIIed, alriiJ' chartered a
wiMIIe prlnte Jot so they could
bark up the riShl Ports tree.
Girl blpples suddenly a r e
........ up as N.Y.
~ lhol driVIJW'' IIIld··th.,-U get
IIJ,ay, too. ••.• 'lbe u:llccubus"
MJ:-ll.lm deacribes the cbarac.
tor being pJi.yed 1&gt;7 Janlne Roy-

l

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-s . .

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DNI u a "dlsj)laced n,:rmd1o

4

Alan K I n g
atrlkea you •• llmny '"' the Ttll1
AWII'da TV lbow, fine; U IIIII,
blame writer MoJV Ferrell, hired 1&gt;7 Alex Cohen to punch 1111
Klnr: sense at lunacy .... NlxOII'a 1101ta1 boosts probabl)' will
be • 7 cent 111m[&gt; combining lllrf.lco IDd air man [llua • 15
per cent hoollln 4111 Claas Mall.
Pb:wags call VlBOInocrophlle" •••• If

Col...,,.

IIIfr Nlbokov'a 11 Ada" oow being
filmed "Lolita' a Qoandmother."
•M• Two Imminent fllcka sre titled '"The Twelve Chairs" and
'-Ihe 1blrteen Chairs" so let•a
table an O[Jinlon Wllil the7 come

COlt .... Aothao.Y Newloy rosUy
desenes 10 awanl for llllidng
the wont movie c1 tho dec:ade

Leslie Caron's pride is her

$125,000 Modigllani ac whlle off
honeymooning w I t h Michael
Laughlin she had to hire (at the
lnlllranee flrm's inaJstenee) a
aluer to guard it .... Princess
Meg's atepmom.in-law Jemrller
.Arrnstrong.Jones hou8hl h e r

ftrst racehorse uGay Palm,"
a lllx-yesr-old .... lledy Lemarr
at the Personality shoW: "When
I re&lt;all my marriages, I die
- rve had so IIUU\V."
Joey Bishop gets "The Nlxoo
!ldli&gt;'' st the IRiton Plaza whOif
he beams his cbattercast fromMiami Beach In SeJll. -· Jake
LaMotta'! '"Raging Bull" autoblog busts out June I from Prentice - llaU ..•• Elvis Presley's
"Charro" tit~.e tune is expect..
od by RCA to be his 33rd golden hotcake.
mgr!d Bergman (In G o o d
Housekeeping) reportsH'wooclafter her 20-year hiatus "hasn't
changed much, u the IKkllatlon

still there but so Is the terrible
studio fOOd and lack of beer:
"I bring my own beer and wine
from m,y hotel."

MDdest: Richard Harru clicm't
mind being rude in "MMD called

Horse," because, •'I've
the fliure for lt." .•••

got just
The off -

OXI&gt;IIeit sexi)ioy "Geese''
actually promises to field a softball teamwlthtwoac!ressespla,ylng topless .... ~ In onother
seaaon, not when Jawn LiiJdll)''s
Bdwy.

DOCTDRIS MAILBAG

Heavy Coffee Drinking
Is Bad for the Heart

Q-1 ave lleud that If
percolated coffee IJ warmed
over It will cause hordenln•
of tbe arterleo. Ia iiiii-iliie?
A-Nt.
Q-1 drDt a lot o1 tea. Is
tea ciJIIStipating?
A-No.

Q-.be lew-ealorle colas
habit forming? Do they real·

1¥ ea~~~e a loU of weight?

''

A-All ala drllb contain
•boiii!IM-Iblrd 11 mucb cafrdae u au equal amount ot
COffee. Caffeine IJ not babll
farmlnJ in tbe ltrlcteat 11at Jlll)tt periOiis wha reculul7 ·~~~e drlnkl that contUJ
cafftlllf become dePODdeDt
. 1111 tlllm. lmr-ealorli footll
.. ... ....... ot any kind willilot

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weight. Their only claim Is
thaf they will not help you to
gain.
'
It-In a reeelll eohunn you
recommended a course m
progressive relaxation for
persons who are overly
tense. What does it consiat
of?

A-Tile orlllaal work on
thls subject is cove!'ed in a
book by Dr. Edmund Jacob·
son, entitled "You Must lie·
lax." Although .thla book I•
now out of print, it is available in some public libraries.
Boob on this sub).ect by one
of Dr. Jacobson s co-work-

er .... When are they now? For-

mer prlzeflgltlar Fred Apostol!
sells I'IC7Velties 1n San Francisco
•••• How ya goma keep 'em doWn

on the !arm? In 1910 35 per
cent of the U. S. populatioo lived on farms, now less than 7
per cent .... Brlcktop, puohlng75,
~

&amp;utern Local
Social Notes
Mrs. Starling Massar, Diana
aoo Olarles, accompanied her

JNU"ents, Mr, and Mrs, Dinsmore
Boyles o! Alfred lo Grantsville,
W. Va., recently wherethey"ere
dinner guests or Mr. and Mrs.

BARS S
By PHIL

~ASTORET

Anyone wUh a set more
than eight years old is al·
ready well·acquainted with
pay·TV.

• • •

Americans account for

a per capita consumpllon
of

m

pound! of choco-

late annuol!J1-710t countmg tile several million
tons ""eared on small
bOI/8' faces ..

• • •

Considering the life our
pooch leads, going to the

dogs presents some deftn!te
allurements.

11IE DAILY SENTINEL
Da'OTIOlOlHTIIIIPJ' U'

..... ....

'-111108-lWiON AlEA

true?

•-Y

Vann's Views on Vietnam
Vex Policy Making Powers

The singer Johnny Tlllotsons
OX)&gt;eCI a mid-May Utile croon-

ers, Dr. S. W. Gutwirth, are

A-An eUaek of German
mea ole 1 occurring in the .
ftrst tbree month• of pregmay cause aome type
of birth defect In the newbor1J. There is at ptesent no
e v It! en c e that ecy other
vlrua dllease in the mother
will cause any mental or
pllylical clefects In the baby.
Balde1, practically OVIIry·
OQe .. 1111Ce(111blo to the
horpel virus.

·~

fO/ZCES

llc'a right along been for Law

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atefi4KOI. &lt;MIN, l'tl81JIRU
~

-rwllthlllllllb'•KIIIt lilllardlrlir n.OIIIo
V.U., PIMitl\lnl C4111puJ, IJO U.Ct.lle ....
. . . .1'(1)'. Ofllo, 11789. lllil.... 011........

tt.t.t's.t.ld
'"· r.tiiOI'Ial
"'"' "uur.
~I&amp;• PGIIII•IItlfaiP-I"'If,OIIkL

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.. I~II&amp;Pr, lne., U EI.Jt thtll.,""' YOI'tl ·

cu,, ...... y...

~ Bt.ll Dlllw.nlll "

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.... .._. tVrlw llnlw .,,...... 0.
tt.a. ... llllb 011 ,.... ..... lbl

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A mORN in lhe side of those who determine u.s. poUcy
in Vietnam, John Paul Vann tails 'em as he 1ee1 'em.
He baa made some enemies by refualnc to become a yn
man, but his co;.::J.• has earned blm olliclal State
Deparlmeal reco
on.
"John Paul Vann/' the ci·

tation f&lt;Yr the first Christian
A. Herter award read,
" . • • i.!1 a controversial fig-

ure. A man who insisted on
mnintaining his independence and integrit~ at all
costs . . . and whose judg.
ments have been repeatedly
proven right by time."
By NOEL GROVE
NEA Staff Correspondent
WASHINGTON- (NEAlHe looked ouL of place in
the State Department's draperied reception room, even
with a cocktail in his hand
and a small crowd of admirers lurking nearby.
The suntan was etched too
deeply to have been picked
up on the aid slopes at
Stowe, and the restless
something in the eyes went
beyond that of a cocktail ca·
nine on the prowl for government secretaries.
"I can't wait to get back,"
said John Paul Vann,, a for.
elgn service officer In Viet·
nam with the Agency for
International Development.
But he also glanced appre.
ciatively at a miniskirt as It
Rooted by.
He dlda'l have loDI to
walt. Five boan later a
plane lifted him aw1y fro!IJ.
Washingtoa ~•ll )ll!lle1
and minlakiri'i and back to
black pajamao, rlu paddlea
and ceaslanl daDJer.
II was a brief trip to
Washington, just. long
enough to receive a $1,000
tax-tree award from the
State Department for dOi!li
what he does best-being a
tbom In the side of U.S.
policy·makera In Vietnam.
That should' ·be a comfort
to those who are convinced
that goyemmelll policy In
the field is carried out )&gt;y
yes men. The 44-year-old
Vann ·admlts, however, that
his case Ia an exception.

_ ....

..... ..a~a.w. t$ _ , ,., -*1 -,... 'lllhii'ICIIt tM 01111 s.~1111 omo:e, t&amp;to. su

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f/IENCH

OEFEIIf~

&amp; Order.

excellent, too.

Il-l am a girl, 18. Recently I read that women who
are suscertlble to the herpea
vlrua tha causes cold sores
are very Ukely to have mentally retarded babiea. Ia this

'

for r....tecUon .•. • Ba-

Emanuel Hersman. They also
visited Mrs. Florence Sturm aJXI
Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Hawkeye
ani daUihters.
Mi111 Sharon Frecker of Galll·
polis visited her grandmother,
Mrs. Mary Reed.
Mr. Earl Summerfield aDd son
of PeMsyhanla visited his mother, Mrs. Edna Summerfield aJXI
other relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. L 0. McCoy at.teJXI.ed an open house receptim
for the 50th wecldl~ aMiversary
of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Looh at
Burnsville, W. VL, saturda,y.
Mr. ani Mrs. DIIB Mccain of
near 1..o1v Bottom anllllra. Mary
Reed were dlmor guests of Mr.
aiXI Mr11. Norman Mccain and
daughters, Easter.
Mrs. Oscar Babcock of T...pers Plains spent saturdal' night
with Mrs. Leota Massar.

'

"Face lt/' he said, 11 di..,
agreeing with your superior•
Ia not .the aurest way to get
a promotion."
1
Vann, however, baa t fat

job with industry awaiting
him if the Stste Department
ever has enough of his re·
belliousness, which aUows
him to he the kind o1
"devil's ;:tdvocate" the public would like its civil servants to be, but which thev
rarely are. But It doesn't
account for his defiance he!or~ the industry offer, For
all the seven years he spent
In Vietnam-part of that in
the military-he has sorely
tried government patience
by shooting holes in policy
balloons.
When U.S. Involvement
was still advisory and officialdom claimed Asian boys
could handle the problem,
Vann, then a lieutenant colonel, insisted the aituatlon
was grim and the outlook
dark. Wilen he returned to
the Pentagon after serving
!tis tour of duty be tried to
leU the same story there,
but he felt his views were
being restricted. He retired
from the military after
nearly 20 years of service so
he could speak out publicly
about Vietnam,
Aa director now of some
2,200 members of ·Clvll Operations and Revol~ltlonary
Development Support. teams
In Vlelna1f1, Vann IJ'. COD·
stantiy on the move, sleepIng in viUage bamleta, gath- ·
ering Information on ·local
situations from hls own vast
network of native Informants. His long experience offers him a knowledge of the
country few can match.
Some of the mistakes mm
by our side appall hbn.
"New men come in here
and do things like tear d\)Wn
a na~ they think Is Viet
Cong, he said, "wheD.:actualty It's a Buddhist fiag. Or
tbey'll arrest men they
think are •.. the enemy and
they turn out .to be members
ofidethe
Popular Forces-our
II •
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Early in .1968 he caUJed
tempers to boll with his re·
pealed Insistence that the
· enemy most others claimed
was being beaten Jn fact
planned a widespread attack

AprU ,,,,1~9

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J. '

VITO STELLINO
Franelsco 11-10 ·in a 12 lmllli
UPIIP&gt;rtl iVrllar
!lll'U88Ie.
,
1
Alex JGiui1011 lets the pitcher•
''The thing .ai!O¥t Alex, l•·lhll
do the worryloq:.
' he. never worries," teanunato
The unfl_.u slugger cit the ' Pots Rose said altir tho 11om••
Clneinoati Rods, who rarely '
imrlos h!ill." Obvlw•
mekoa comrnenta . about any- IT, OI&gt;PC!tlni ptfdljoi-1 dOll'!.
tbinL' was si It apln Tueldat• . , . KMws Aboui!Jittlng
nlaht 11 he lei hlo bot do hla · Jolll•. waa · lbeWiili·. how
talk!na with two homers, a llll&lt;h he knoW~ obotit hitting in
linlle aild a !rlple and five the lllll!leat, with. the GWiU as
RBJa aa the Redo Ciutlaated SID he knocked In Rve at the 'Redo

"t.c.a.tn.

r.

of his own.
waters.
'
AD enraged U.S. offkial
Even now Moscow is careful not to clabn that Nixon, ·
alarted llae machlaery to ·
by proposing the ABM, seeks to escalate the nuclear arms
have Vana thrown 011t of
race.
,~
VI e tn am for his clabns.
Taking their cue from Fulbright, the Russians have dis-.. "
Somelblng happened I b a I
covered a new convenient "ugly American" in Secretary of •.
atoppod him. They called It
Defense Melvin R. Laird. It was Laird who was castigated
tbe"'l'et olfeD!IIve.
by Krasnaya Zvezda, newspar,er of the Soviet Delense •·•
His aiSeiSments to his SU•
Ministry, for spreading "fables' about Russin's awessive·"
periora have bordered 011 ir·
plans.
reverence. Even before Tel
The Russians, It ·shoold be stressed again and again, . :
a top adminlatratlon official
are
pragmatists where their national Interests are threatcaUed him Into the White
ened. The Red Chinese are threatening them in the Far
HOIJIO for consultation on
East and the Czechoslovaks continue to resist Soviet dom- ·
one of hls periodic returns
inatlon in East Europe.
to the States, and said,
Ulder the clreWIIIIallceo, the KremUD ruler• aeet1 a•
"Wouldn't you agree the
~lion
of telllfoD in the Well and the Mldtlle East. They
war as It Is being fought on
~~.~J.!1J!D'!lll !!!~tlaiJ•!th tbe Ulllted States. Tiley even.:
a unit basis .will be over lly
.... - 1 they woilld lite to have ,..,. llefere the M next July?"
meeiiD« of world Commnnlall JaDe 5. . . .
. .". ,, "'"
"I suppose.' ,a," Vann told
The KremUn Is clearly not impressed with the senatorial....
him. "I thiJik we can hold
doves and the academic Cassandraa who incldel!ii!UY. , .
out till then."
predicted not so long ago that RUJaia woUid not negollilte
He was long ago an advowith the United Statu wblle the war continued in Vietnam
cate of increaalng authority
Have Americans already forgotien their dire prediction? •
at the province and viUage
A substantive debate ezploring the ABM plan is, of
level for dealing with local
course, essential. Those who argue that Russia will he
problems, when policy
"provoked" are hardly Communists or fellow-travelers.
streased a strong central
By. the same
wbo insist that Moscow has
Saigon government.
mnre
bnporlant
concerns
ahould not be castiVann remains in Vietnam,
gated
by
the
as
tools
of the "miUiaryworking to bolster a govindustrtal
ernment he insista Is preferred by the Vietnamese,
and one which he readily ad·
m!ts lakes shameful advan·
lage of the United States. He
said, "As long as we'll do
their flghtln~ for them,
they'D let us do 1t."
His own role exposes him
to constant danger. ••rve
been shot twice and blown
up once," he noted. The Viet
Cong put a handsome price
on hls head.
BEWARE OF MARRIED
1lhol you reall.J WIIIIID,
He doesn 'I think It's there
MEN BEARING GIFTS
be rid at tills IIIIi!- he'•-.lrJ
any more. "The complexion
Dasr ~en:
to l&lt;lmpt almost 11111 lonol1 ell,;·
of the war has changed so.
rm a cllvoreeo and not obout vorcee. llllyou'dbettergetoomto.'
The maJority of the fildtting
tp break up a marriage. But what 1r011 In your haclibooe balore blr
is now being done by North
con a llirl em when a man !teet&gt;&amp; lmlble hltll What kind 1 couJclwv
Vietnam, and the Viet Cong
.......,. her slfto?
n't IIUSII, but rn,y advice eolum.,.;;
organization and communiTh11 manu either rlehorcra- 1st's wam1na 17fJ(am points to'
cation just isn't what it used
to he in any given local sitZ'Y. maybe both. I mat h1m at a "dlnpr,,. Ulat'a all, and 1 don't
uation."
!lllV aed let him lake me harno. mean rcut1no other-liOIIIIII pfd&gt;-,:
"I haven't heard of a price
That was before lloamed he hu . lema.
.
~,
being on mr, head for quite
six chlldren and a wlto. Be wao
Store the 11111 under hlo 1111111.&gt;
awhile now. '
hOliest obout 11, and DOl In a werel!ou,eandtell hbnilttut:•
By either the Viet Cong or
wanting a divorce for buolneu t11ey sre _ before you cluo;lae ,
the U.S. government.
...._s.
phiJIIa oaunbon I this doean't ;
I said I woui&lt;WI see him a- COlli him, ~I' j
Pin, and then tho;pre-stort- _ R:
•.• ,.
od comtror. Flrlllt wu.tullllow- Dasr Belen:
era and CIDO!f. ButDOWit'IUptoa 1f1 hUiblnd seomo to think •
tape recorder, Jewelry, and a rm 111roaten1ng bla freedom 11 J
PGrtlblo color TV. 'fodq, Wilt. 1 - to ~ when ht'U ·JJe.•
IDe for mo when I lilt horne from late for .a-. SomeUrnas ttel
work, wa1 a mbok lillie and two . RJpl for 1 beer lifter - ~
llllbtauwu. rve DOW· told DIY ond he can be two or tbreo .....,,,
landlord (who ralaed his &lt;~~'• 111111. The dlmer Pveworkedbirf~
llrowo to 1be celllnl) DOl to lip over Ia rulsed, · aed I'm a!rsid&gt;·
for any more ...,.,._., But what he'I been In 'Ill aecldW, ao: 1
can I do wltb a wiMIIe bedroern blow ~- Then aomllholr, 1 .a~
fUll ot sift• lhll I WDII't use? ~ IIIOiocbll!i. and there halltia'i·'
I don't knoW IIIII mali'I ad- forpvlq ME.
... ,:
dreaa ur any numw frlmla who
Yet, '!!lao 1 111 .~hos&gt;Pina· · ··•
The western world's first
Wl&gt;dd live It 11&gt; me, and bealdos ,at l!ela1od, he ..ceo the
college, founded by Plato
lhll would REALLY llx thinp If till I come horne ond - 11111n,
circa 387 B.C., began clanI - all lhoaopn-fo(U IladupiP)Iollzllls. i
·
ea without 10 much aa an
home.
I
ptber bi1 wlta ,u "'1 . HOw, como ~ busli!inl .,...,
administration b u II dIn g,
huv7, ... lbe ....Ud...,. tbt i"elll... awltarirrlelahoathim
The World Almallac notes.
clotllea- for hlr.
jail u IJIIefj as be Wllrrlodallollt
Sequestered in iree-thaded
Be callametfll71iabL fbee 11111? - · 'MiiS. 'FllsimiJDGET
gardens ~~~rod to In ob111m to .tab tho ~ - , bat (itE SI,Y$
SC\lr~Hieio Ill jlle Trojan
War, !lkademos, academy · · ha NJ'I, ·~ If ,W'U ~taft Deat Nn. F: · . ,.. ;·\
students were engaged ·Iii
wilh me. llamolwwl~ ...., ~a man
cliscour.e by eocratu be- -cllllierlt-.id
..... aultboiWIIJ. Clift ~· .... ..,
neath the· brllllar)t Greet.
Be
Nl'l
be
tl1!ql
lila whit he ha a,.rU a
Jrafll ·
sky. Horace adiDoolohed:
.
.
.
,
•v•••IIy,
and
l'aufrsld
Ia
lib
a
.
·
.....;
1
"And see~ for trutll In ·the
be IIUII'Ile rflbt,
for a Dlltcll.
~
grovel of Academe."
Be tudaite1 and &amp;e&amp;rll me,
YCOI lhould both develop tbe ll
boil rrn not In !Go• wtlb him and 181- habit.
f
I daa't 111111 to iotr llliw do
.,.._
~ 41rile In the ~
·
,
.IOU a1ot doelll't Nl' )'Oii•ve IIIII 1 •
The Vlralnla creeper has 101 rN at~· w• 0 om-- rlilc lli the nose.III!JrWn,.i111
five leaflefi and the polaon - . ,..? - ·· l'III!&amp;EiiT - "I loYe JOU too mueh to ·
Ivy bas three.
TENSII
you worey." - IL
;

WORLDAJUC

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t.i :

f ,.)

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By

NEW YORK (NEAl .
The debate over the antiballistic missile aystem (ABM) ,
threatens to become as divisive as the Vietnam oontro- :
versy, which already bampers rational discussion of vital
and complex lntemationai Issues.
·
,
More Important, tho critical need for technological im· .
rovement in the U.S. secur)ty system may be .d~orted or ~
gnored for fear that President Nixon's ABM Safeguard
,Jau will be seen by Moscow as a "provocatlon11 and thus
mpede arms control negotiations with Russia.
Tlleie are aome coiiCiuliono of tile Freedom House PubliC
Affaln Committee ..aded by former Sen. Paul H. Deu.....
A ooaparlflan orculziHon devoted to the atre.gtbeldJot
of free inatituUons, Freedom H011se IJ, as uaul, a velee
of rea1011 in a debate lUI Ia beeomin« emotional and
poUUdzed.
.,
This writer, Uke the majority of Americans, is not in il
position to decide whether a new antiballistic missile ·•
system Is vital for the nation's defense against a nuclear
attack by Russia or lied China.
.
If after a calm and objective debate it is established
that the ABM Is not essential to national security, the.. It
is certainly not worth the expenditure of money that could •
be allocated to domestic needs.
.
However, It is possible that the ABM advocates and ~e ~
much-maUgned Pentagon olflclals have a deeper understanding aDd clearer view of America's security needs than ,
professfonal "doves" Ute Senators J. W. Fulbright and 'Edward Kennedy.
Opposillollto lbe ABM, aa the Freedom House statement ...
said; 1bould Dot develop into a oweeplng allack on the ·•
mWtary 11 aa lnliltutloa.
The military and the producing induslriea must not·•
dominate the dehate but neither should they be ·regarded •
as "the enemy." 8oth have an essential rote in defending,..
all the people of the United States.
.
Whatever the merit of the scientific or purely strategic ••
aspect of the ABM controversy, there is no doubt that fear •
that the system wtU provoke the Russians Is unfounded. , .~
As a matter of fact, the Soviet press and radio reacted
much more calmly and objectively to Nixon'&amp; !IIIDOUDCement of the ABM plan than some American senators.
It was only after the doves of the Senate Foreign Rela- '
lion Committee expressed (In front of television cameras, ·
of course) "concern" over Moscow's reactiou that the ·
KremUn rulers decided that they coold gain dlplomailc ·
advantage by fishing in Washington's muddy poUtical .

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FRED DOWN
UPI Sports Writer
The New. York Yankees
IIIJIIear to have COllie oe&gt; wltll
0110 ol thOir old tash!OIIed
rookies: One with muscle.
Muaele Is what the one-lime
lordo or baseball hove lacked
alnce the grand collapse ofl965
ani the descent Into the collar
In 1966. '
Bobby Murcer, Whose power
already has begun to excite the
Yankee . fans, hrooght hack
mernorieo . of another era
Tuesday when he drove In four
runJ with a homer. slrtJ,e arll
dcUJie In an 8-2 victory over the
Waohllwton SeOBtoro.
Home Opener
Tha vlclory In' their horne
gave the Yankees a ~
aeason record 1anl acldldonal
cCJD!14ence that they can make
a "!198clsbl~ showing this yeor
in the American League's strong
Eastern Division. The Yankees
are. -ed with the Detroit
Tiprs, Baltbnore Orioles, Bos·
ton Red Sox, Cleveland !IIIIana
ani SeOBtors In what Lee
MacPhsU, their geoeral manager, · calla ''the atroogest division ln IIJ)I aport."
The Orioles walloped !It• Rod
~ 1o-5, the lnllans shaded the

.

Tigers, 3'2, In 10 Innings for
tlielr first victory of the season,
and the Minnesota TWina
defeated the Oaklanl Athlstica
in Tuesday's other AL gillnea.
In the NaUooal League, the
St. Louis C8rdlals nipped the
Montreal EJ&lt;IIos, 4~, . the Chicago Cubs doorned the Pittsburgh
Pirates, 7--4:, Hooston beat
Atlanta, 4-2, the New York Mets
toppled the Philadelphia PhDIlea. &amp;-3, Clnclrmatl outlasted
san Francisco, 11-10, In 12
!mingo and Los A~eleo wal·
loped the San Diego Padres, 14-

.

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u.o.

,

Dodgero

.iOblonJ

Lewi

OSU. .Cnue· .Caru A'nnounce
···
d

Ev

;_,

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y

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l

Pre11ftirenali9,I!IIJ ' ~ lliJn 111 Thoii"itli¥,
Tile, Atlaota l!fwb, t.d 111· could by f17111- ·' .

Podres ouaered the toas
Claude Oeteen (2-4)''
plicbed a tbree-llltter for the
triumph.
Tom Griffin slilpped Atianta By Ull!le!l ' Pre.. .l,..r,.~
011 four hlla ond struck out 12
NATIONAL .UAGUE
before being forced COli in the
Eas~
ninth With a bHoter '"' his , .
W L, PeL GR
ptchlng bond OS Houston Chicago. ·~· • •1 I " ,87~
the BraveS. Jack Belllnilolm PIUaburllh, ••• $ 3 .625 2
came 011 with ..,. out In the s~ Louis •• ~ -4 t .500 3
ninth and the haoes looded and Montreal • • •• 3 5 .375 4
preserved the trlurn!lh.
New Yorl!. • ·'• 3 S ,375 '4 ·
Ph1Ja. .• ,.;,2 6.250 5
New York snapped a 3~ de
West
with a three-run slghth lmlng
W L Pet. GB
on a baseo-loadtd bdleld single Atlanta • . • •• 6 2 •750
by 8Jd Harrelson and a two-nm Los ArWeles •• 4 3 .571 11h
pinch double by Ed Kr&amp;ne[IOOI San DiegO • •• 3 4 .429 2'h
· the key blows. Rookie Gary San F~an. ••• 3 4 .429 2'h
Gentty went seven Innings to Cinc!IIJBt! ..• 3 4 .429 2'h
pick up hla aecond c011aecutive Hooston , , ••• 3 5 .375 3
victory.
Tuesd0¥'s Results
ChicagO 1 Pittsburgh 4
SL Louis 4 Montreal 3
New York 6 Phila 3, night

ABA Playoffs
Go Full Route

·w6'*1f'il'aueilii

•

while

AKRON, Ohio (UPD-In a rolling northeast Ohio country- water· comes into play, the
water at the new Firestone
few years, a new golf course side.
wlli be ready to challenge the
The one fascinating re.ture of course was not used just as an
skill of the world's nneat the new south cCMD'ae is Its 10 added feature which can often
golfers.
waterholes. •• !lve oo the front lodt like an afterthought."
Firestone's new- head pro
It will be the slater of a 7,160- side and five on the hack.
Bobby
Nichols, a former PGA
yard courae which has tested
FairwaYs, greens aiXI tees jut.
the power and preclsloo or the out into, across anc1 almg the c::hampim, has made a walking
pros since 1960.
Tuscarawas Reservoir. S t x tour of the new course an:l feels
0.
The
new
Firestone
Country
br!dgea
wlll connect the penin- "this ~ become one or the
Snlils Winning streak
world's great championship golf
Don Buford drove in four runs Ciub South course, located ju11t sulas.
HJn deslgnine the new Fire· courses."
with three single• ani Frsnk. across ·the road trt1n the north
layoot,
will
be
ready
for
stone
Country
Club North
Roblneon hU a three-run homer
for the Orioles, who snapped the member play Ws summer.. In a course, the size of the NORTON RETmES
HOUSTON (UPn
.,... Jim No rRed SOli' four1!11me wlnplng few 'vears, Firestone officials Tuscarawas Reservoir provided
plan
to
slage
a
professlo181
us
with
the
perfect
opporiUn!cy
ton,
three-lime
Arnerlcao
Foot..
s!reak. .Bufo~'• third hit drove
tourniment
on
the
7,13!).yard
for
utilizing
It
as
an
!ntegr!ol
ball
League
all-stsr,
announced
In tWo runs In the eighth to
• Part of the layout," Jones said. his retirement from the Houston
brook a 5-5 · tie and Robinson course.
Oee.i.gner
Robert
Trent
Jones
f' As in many COI,ll'ses where
ouers Tuesday.
settled the Issue moments later
with his !ourth horner. Mike carved both coorsea out of the - - - - - - - - - - Norton. the ·last of the original
Oilers, was ae1ected as an aU~
Andrews homered for the Red
TO
JOIN
EXPOS
star
defensive back In 1962, '63,
Sor;
OAK
HILL
HOSPITAL
NEWS
MONTREAL
(UPO - Donn and 1 67 •
Singles by Max Alvis and Cap
Blrth11 - Mr. and Mra. ThUJ'.. Clendenon, the buslneuman
Peteroon followed by Jose man
Edward TomlinSCIII, Rt. 5, t.seball player whose nretireC8rde181's sacr!ftce fiT with one Jackson, daughter, Kathleen Mll- ment" led to a d!8jluto between OLIVER ASSIGNED
oiJt IIi the I Olh !nnl~ drove In
rle, April 5; Mr. ansi Mrs. Ken- the Montreal EJIIIOS ani the HouNEW YORK (UPD-utll!cy
the 1Mian1' wiming run. neth Charles Belcher, 532 MD- ston Astros, Ia scheduled to join bdlelder Nate Ollvor was
VIcente Romo shut COlt the lawn, Oak !WI, daughter, Julie tlle eJIIIIlns!on Expos In Philadel- assigned to &amp;fracuse of the
Tigers on foor hlta during the Ann, Aprll 6; A-1C David Al~erl phia today.
International League Tuesday
.last four innings to receive Valentine and Mrs. Valeutine,
General Manager Jim FaMing by the New York Yankees.
credit lor the win. Joe Azcue Rt. 2, Chillicothe, 1011, David of tlle EliiiOS said Clendeoon will
The acquisition ci Jimmie
h0111ered for the lrdlans ani
Albert, Jr. Aprll 7; Mr. ondMrs. be activated when the Expos are Ball from the Cl,evelaed lndlaos
Willie Hurion connected for the Thomas Sal,yer, Jr., 56 Vaughn sure he has' worked into condi· led the Yankees to send Oliver
·
T!gero.
·
SL, JaCk""\,.""'-.f.!PrU •
t!on.
to the minou.
1!7..lll!iled ..l'reulnteroat!onal . Home · runs by ·Rich ~~e,
~&lt;r&amp;ullitlt. '
··
·
··
"r.
.
. · .. I; '' ~~
llj&lt;·tbe•morests.of&lt;toinceo, all ·" 1: · '"'hd ''''·lnci ·iJl ··.·&gt;,
eaed M:rp ~
'..J
four )American BasketboD llllilo- ··~:~··:O~~Il.d;t;J1;!.-&lt;m:.flll1•'as Vltltl&lt;e
Jaek..ioi I$enver ~;· Sou~
--o ·
clalloot plaroff aerleo ·have gone !he TWins riiUleil rol'illlhetr
COLUMBUS (UPD - Three Dec. 8- Northern Rlino!s.
the lUI!.oOYen pmeo.
runs In ths last three IMlngL Webster; Jolin Arden Cjlehral),
Dec. 13- Ohio UniversU;y.
The Oaklanl Oaks ani the Jim Kaat W.nt 8 2-3 !Mings for \laekiOII; Oac:ar Dl,y, nt. 4:, Oak flrat.tlme opponents have been
Denver Rockets wlll settle their the win while Jim Hunter, who !WI; Charles Miller, Oak !WI; included on next seasoo's Ohio Dec. 20- at Alabama.
bottle tonight at O&amp;kland. The shut out tho Twlna for tile first Edward Allen, Wellston; Arlls State Univers!t,y basketball Dec. 22- at Tulane.
French, JaekiCII; WII II a m schedule amoWiced Tuesday by
Dec, 27- Fresoo State.
lndlana ~acors ani the Keo- sill Innings, suffered the loss.
tuciQ&gt; Col0110ls, the Dallas
Dee. 29-atTexasChrlstlao,
Pierce, Radcliff; Frw Lewis, Coach Fred T&amp;,ylor.
Choparralo ani the New Or~
Oak lUll; Wilbur Cardwell, EwThe Buckeyes will meet AlaJan. 19- West Virginia.
1ean1 Buceaneera wiU take to NBA PLAYOFF STANDINGS
lngtoo; William Rail!&gt; andMIUsrd barna, Fresoo State and NorthJan. 26- Georgia Tech.
the court&amp; Thursday night. The By Untied Presa IJternatiooal Horner, SOUth Webster; Joyce ern Dlinots in non-oonference
Big Ten
Minnesota Pipers ani the
Best of seven
Davis, Waverly; .Lily Fey, Oak acllon aa pert of their 24-game J :1--MiMMiami F1or!dlana will c""'lude
Division Fl181s
Iilli; Ora Click, Rt. I Oak Hill; csrd.
J:::: 10- at ~inoi~.
the · arat , round playol!o by
EaM
Frances Hutton, Jackson; F:::
The 1969-70 sea11011 openallec.
Jan. 18- Michigan.
oi,.IIU'I,ng of! saturday nlghL
W, L. Pet. cos Hawk, Wellston; Mayme
I when the Bucks !ravel to Jan. 17-Northweatern.
IDdlaiB evened ita serleo with Bqston ••••••••3 2 ,600 mas, Mildred Jenkins, ondJolul Wake Forest. Their first Big Jan. 24-at MIMeiOta.
Keatuoiki 1!y racing to ·, t07-tl9 New York •••.• , 2 3 .400 91e~, Oak Hill; R113mond KeJ .. Ten .Conference 1 game will be Jan. 31-at Northwel!ltern.
victory Tuesday night, conUnuWest
ly, Camonsburg, Pa.; Clifford Jan. 3 when OSU hosts MlnDe- Feb. 7- PUrdue.
11!1 ' the Pacer c0111thsck from a , Los ~eles •.•••• 2 . 1 .667 Evans, Rt. 4, Oak !WI, andBren- - .
Feb. 10-at Michigan !late.
3&gt;) deficit In the oer!ea. ·Indiana Atluta .• · • • • • • .I 2 .333 da Cook, Cuallno.
WlsciJIISin enda the Buekwes'
Feb. 14- at lndlona.
o;t81'CIJ!I• the· 11onte-eour1 Jlhx
Tuesday's Results
Patll\ftlarURell~~- ~~s regular s8880n with a confer- Feb. 21-Iowa.
bz ovorperlng the Co10110ls Ailanla 99 Los ArWeles 86
s,k
""wq, a a • once match here.
Feb. 24- at Wlaconsln.
enl holdl~ them to only 17
(Only pme scheduled)
ott, Dand Davis, .Katb1 Rawlins,
The schedule:
Feb. 28- Michigan State.
pelnto In the 11181 period. Roger
Marel SIOIII, Charlea Sllao, EveNon-Conferen.O
March II- at Iowa.
Bi-olm had · 25, Fred Lewis 22
l,yn Davia, Harry Waroer, John
Dec. 1~11 Wake Forest.
March 7- Wloconoln.
ABA PLAYOFF STANDINGS
Hager, Lana Kelley, CSrl MeDec. &amp;-at Butler.
aold Mol Daniels .20 for InllaiB,
Willie onl,y Louis lloJrqlier was By United Press lntsrnado181 Cqy, Haymond c. ~. Ruth
Morgan, Laura Salyer, and AlBest of Seven
ltDI for Kentucky. Da!qolo.r wao
Division Semllll8ls
Ice Melofa!mloa.
...,. hlch lnln with 'n but his
East
D.lao shot only 36 per eent
from the field.
•
W. L. Pc~
, Dallas had an ea07 dme with l&lt;entuck;v • • •• , • 3 3 .~oo
New Orleano, raelrtlf off wit~ a lndlut ••••••••3 3 ·.500
138-118 triurq&gt;h. · Glen Cclllba Miami • • • •·• · · • 3 3 •500 Tuesday 1&gt;7 PGA Prelldeol Leo
_....., In 40 ""'"'s lOr the Nlmesota, • , . , • 3 3 .500
~-~l"N-1"' ·
Fraser.
a..tn, wl1o IKIW race the .
Weal ;
The 1958 U.S. Open waa held
.~ of Pia11~ the IIIBI
•W. 1.. PeL at Southein IWI1 OJtd the U.S.
In .New Orlea.ns, ,where ~nd • • , • • 1 • 3 3 •600
~Amateur ·Wao pla,y~ oo ·~
''-IIIIi have .won only ""'" thlo D.....,. • • • ' • , ., 3 3 .500 aame
oourseln 1~. ,
New orleans. •••• a· ·a .GOO
·· ·
,.
had a tight !It 1n Dallas ...... ~ 3 · a .·.~oo ;· , ....~,..-·
· ..._.,.._t""'~-~~-----------~-"'1
with Miami, bat
. Tuoilda.Y'I&lt;Rssuill•· . ·' · •'
.-Hawkins' 33 points lndlana !07 Kentucili¥ ~ .
tbo Piper• to , 105-100 !liltanae ~~~w CJriOIJII.Uf
had puUed even M..... 1~5 JiiiJmllOO ·
' •: . , ,.,
mlllltlta, to ·

.'.

lJy •J.lnlteil

drubbed SID Dlell!.

New Course Almost Completed

;1,~

&gt;Hawks Topple

t

flrat .10 runa and then led oil the ' 4mlnp 11 George Cut..r lmk
12th with a lrl,l!)e. l\!18J": two ~ , irl, p •
Goylord Percy
lnlen!IIJIIII walks, b• •.scored m lu(terod l!&gt;e loso in ~ aprprls!ng
JoiaN .Bench'l single.
reuer .Ole.
· ·· '
Ei-ere In ihe·· NaUooal
· '' Two-Run Homer
~. 11; LA&gt;Ida edged MaoDiln Youna's ~ homer
treil; t-3, ChlCIIJI outlaated in the .oeeond Inning aed a twoPltilburlli. 7-4, Nell York " nin doWhl by pl~er Joe
turned back . l'hlladelplda, 6-f, , ~elm&gt; !'ere the kO¥ ~toirl In
Houston ~ A!lat!la, t./1, aed. Clrlca&amp;O'a victory rwor PlttoLos Angelos drullbed Soli Dlqo.'. ·bolt&amp;h. Billy Wllilarns a 1 s o
•f •
holl)ered for the Cllba.
in tbo. !jireo Amort•~ ~. Lou llfOek slngl~ heme Dal
games, i!altintore ..Wuued · Maxvlll from seeOIId base with
' ni!IPed 0110 out in the ninth to paee SL
Boston, 10-6, ainliQI:I
Detroit, 3-2,, In 10 lmiiiP·al),d .Louis past Montreal; R11
Mime~ ~ ~. 3-4.
·waol.i&gt;um pitched eight lmlnga
~e ~· ciilleeted . 20 hits at loiitohll.. hall to gain the
wltb Johnson add Bobb7 Tolu YlctorY..
J&gt;l&lt;kinl l!ll· ,...;. eaCh and the
~ Koseo cracked. the flrot
Giants, added 12 inote in the grand slammer of hla ~r tO
aiOIIPY hili ·oxe!Ung ""'" lhol cUmax a llx-"'1' oUtburst In the
also featured five errora. No tltlh and also cb411ed In two
pitcher ialted longer .than !lYe more runs In the eighth as the

-

·Yankees Swamp
Senators, 8-2
By

\·.

''

.""\~!

·

.{Reds Qlitsl~g · Giafi,ts 'Utl2_' 1ttnings

r

r.

hama John even has discovered
finally in this SJI1ing ol his campaigning dlocontent that the pub-

ly WAYNE G. IKANDSTADT, M.D.
lt-Abnl how muy cups
of coffee can a woman in ber
late 1101 safely drink in a
dey? How would an ezceaa
affect ber?
A-ForiiiOIIerate coffee
drinking, you can allow yourself tbree or four cups a day;
10 or more will Irritate your
heart and cause s kl p p e d
beats. Even live cups a day
over a period of years will
lncreuo: the risk of coronary
heart disease. It may also
cause Insomnia, headache
and nervous tension.

·.

_,.

plans a London ptJb,

'

By LEON DENNEN
NEA Foreign News Analyst

• In slate alter slate, senior drivers
had the lowest at'Cident involvement record of all age groups, and the larger their
share of the population, the better their
record seemed to be.
In Minnesota, for example. where senior drivers represented 12.:/8 per cent of
the driving public (highest of any slate
surveyed) , they are on record with the
best accident·avoidance performance of
any age group.
The senior driver "is abnost error-free
wit!t respect to some of the most disastrous dnvlng errors," says Judge Sher·
man G. Finesilver, who headed the study.
"Speeding, drunk driving and 'laUgating' are accident-producing causes, or
errors, of which senior drivers are almost
never guilty."
AOA Commissioner William Becbill
hails the study as "a breakthrough which
hopefully . . . will lead to a cessation of
arbitrary practices and attitudes directed
to older drivers and ultimately create
fairer, more enlightened praclices In Ucensing and insuring of older drivers.''
Already, the findings have moved WashIngton, D.C., to revise Its previous requirement that drivers take mandatory re-examinations upon reaching 65. The new reexamination age has been set at 70.

running

.

)1..,. 1be Do~, ~~·•. M!ddl~~~ . p.;

THEGLOBALVIEW

Objective Debate Vital
On Merits of the ABM

total of the driving populstion. 1bls IS
explained by the f~~et that older persons
are less able to recover from injuries than
younger ones.
But their fatal accident record was still
7 per cent less than could be statistically

BY JACK O'BRIAN
in HHieron.vmus WhatzJt." ....
NEW YORK - Bob Hope's The Clloek Full 0' NUts chain
bro(her underwlllt surgoey and opena three new big restauruta
. Bob'• 0¥01 · . . . acting up aplD wilhiD weeks and many more to
•••• Don KnoUo gets to pl07 a come.
rleh swi.U.' bachelor ln "The
Love God" with a $15,000 war. dnJI&gt;e ••• Juno-crad engineers,
chemists, etc., eon get $800 per
month lftd sun lots ci jobs sre
IJ)1ng lle!IEini ..•. France's Bsr-

'

.J

Cln U San Fran 10, 12 ins.

Houston 4 Atlanta 2, night
Los Angeles 14 san Diego 0
.Today's Probable Pitchers
All Times EST
Montreol (Grant 1-4) at Philadelphia (Johnson 0-1), 7:35p.m.
New York (Koosman 0-ll at
Pittsburgh (Moose 1-4), 8:05p.m.
Chicago (Jenkins 0-1) at SL
Louis (C8rlton 1~). 9 p.m.
Allanta (Rood 1-4) at Houston
(Lemaster 0-1), 8:30 p.m.
San Diego (Kelley 1-4) at Los
Angeles (Singer 1-4), II p.m.
(Only games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Montreal aU'hlla, night
Netw York at Pttts, night
Chicago at SL Louis, night
Atlanta at Hooston, night
san Diego at san Frsn.
(Only games scheduled)
AMEIUCAN LEAGUE
East
w L Pet.
Boston · • • · •5 2 .714
Baltimore · • .5 3 .625
New York • • • 4 3 .571
Detroit • • • • • 3 3 .500
Wash!~ · • •3 5 .375
Clevelanl · · · 1 5 .167
West
W L Pc~

Walt ~nl and Zelmo ,~, , Down two .,_. to ·.
.a re atlll 'alive iJI the Wootern.
"lii&gt;&lt;ll
Division NaUooal , Baa~ the llawka riJI&gt;ed 'll!o .. ...... :":""•R
Auoctstloh playoffa, anti 11 tl1ey 99-86, Tueid~T n!CM IIi .W•
can 1hanllo the Los' ~~ . ,with lli!aiY llll!liW 17 f1l, ~c ~
Lalters on ihe HaWko ! bola. points in tho laa· hell. !Me
.
• ' ·.
fighting off a .W. x.w . .....
·
.
.
.·
lleacy, for the .ill'st tiJN,
~
ALi.8rAR GAME
..
, 1968-69 ......!pi, · liiJ ~ 10
HOUSI'ON (UPD-IIIlt ·Wood- ac..., appreelabl.!: acalalt Wilt
ward, ·president at tbo AD!erl• ~~zartllain. ho :......::. , _;tb 19
eon F.-11 )Aaaue, ~
"""
• W "'
T\oesday thet ' the AFL Al!..lltlr polntl, teamed wltll
In
pine will be pliJed In lbe tbe fourth "'"""'" ~
Allfrodome Jan 17, 1910.
that Insured 11!,1 ~·­
Houston Oller ticket hot48n aeries retumlow .to .If~' &lt;\lll8ln
i.'
wiU get first optkln oo tickela on Sunda.Y af!4r ~·
•J
for the Iiame.
fourth pme bore.
Lou HudaiJII h el d Jttr)'
West to 13 [IOiru, ai J"'BOston (Brett 0-0), 1:30 p.m. Egan got 19 to top LA I&lt;OI"Ioq:.
'
'
Wa&amp;hli111on (Moore J-4) at New
In the Eaotem D!Yiotoo, tho
York (Stottlemyre ~ 2 p.m. New York Knicka who, like the
Ken.sas Clt,y (Morelanl O-Il at Hawks, tlropJied the ftut teo
Chicago (Horlen 0-1), 3 p.m. games of their. oemlft181 ser!N,
Detroit (McLain 1-1) at Cleve- were ~~ roady to meet tho
land (Siebert 0-0) 7:45 p.m.
Boston Celtiell"ln the sixth game
CBI!fornla (Brunet 1-4) at oak- of their o!ruale Friday nl&amp;hlln
land (llobSIJII 0-1) 10:30 p.m. Boston. The !our-&lt;lay reat could
Minnesota (Perry 0-1) at Se- prova moot helpfld to tho qlow
attle (Bell1-4), II p.m.
Celtics, ...-llcularly to Larry
Thursday's Games
Siegfried, tho reaerve (IUird
Da!rolt at Clevelanl
who pulled a hamstrlro&amp; Jllllselo
Wuhington a,t New York
In his right leg durlow Boetoll's
Baltimore at Boston
loss to the Knlcka llaoldoY }
(Only games scheduled)
night.

I!

:s-u

ll

ATTENTION ALL
BOWLERS
NOW IS TIME FOR YOU
TO REGISTER FO. SUMMER
LEAGUES I
Our StHDmer Leaaues will . start
the week of May 11, 1969 and will
run 12 to 15 weeks, choice of

each Lea1ue.

GB

LEAGUES ARE.

'h
I

rtfl' -. w _.._a

11h
2'h

.-u.r

a

I4P$ • ..,, ....,._.._...

GB

Tuesday Ah.rnoon -Ladies
Tuesday Hite - Men
Thuo~day · .tlito - Ml•t:&lt;l

·• ·
Frhlay.-Miw - · Junior ,Mix•d·

ltJIF(s:J~--

tbollad· llir

.,

' ·~·

..

'

· , , wJtrnl
.·;, "' ::
'.

~

IT'S ABALL TO BOWL!

MASON

MASON BOWLING
CENTER
773-5791

.J;l!.l~============::;=;====::
...~• • • • .. , . . , .1.. Ulft-IJ•

r•'llil5ifl

, .

~

•51

·u
••

f
$ 0 "A

.Ia.,,....

-uTili' T..l

~

4-Piy Ny/1111 Ct~rtl Tires

~

clut.ch 'hal~

a u

Sunday Nlto - Mlxod
Monday Nito - 3 Man Toam ScratchJackpot

3'h

Kansas Clcy .. 5 2 . 714
C81tforltll· ; ; . 3 a··.w.".-:ua·
1
Seettie . . . . .3 3 .500 1h
Chicago •.•.•• 3 3 ,500 l'h
Oaklanl ..•• 3 4 .429 2
Minnesota ••. 2 4 .333 2'h
Tuesday's Results
Raltlmore 10 Boston 5
Cleve 3 Detroit 2, 10 ina
New York 8 Washlngtoo 2
Minnesota 5 Oskland 4
(Only games scheduled)
Today's Probable Pitchers
All Times EST

.'

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.j

&amp;.:
.

n

.,.• •

�.'

EAGLE SENIORS - lndlvldull llqlhlea wore preaeatal
senlon who participated in Eastern High varslzy sporll thla
school y•r wben the IIIIIUil All-Bporta BaiiQ.IIOI was held Tueo-

' ·~

•

•

l
''•

!,.

'

H(atory
·' 7~ vtlliWailhlniton.
•·
And, at thil
there'• an
addild Incentive seeing our natlorila ~ipltal. Considered one of
the worJd'a moat beautlllllcltlea,
Waohlngton In the springtime
takes on an extra dimension of
warmth rnd chlrm.
··Shade treea along the broad
avenue1 seem .to leap Into bloom
a,lmo,t .overnight; masnolla nne!
do~ trees ·add •lvld aplaah"'
eo o!.. eolor to the amaU c I t y
..!, •
'parklj grasa turns green on the
" J · Mall lltd Elllpae, end )he mar·&lt;•' '' ble ahd brick of alately memor~..
lala and inoDunlents ·are soften.
ed by the famous cherry bloa~:
· 10111_treea.
But Walhlngton Ia more than
cHerey bloaaoma and parks. lt'a
a llvlna dlaplay o! American hiotory that encompasaes'a llpha•s
o! our . growth as a 1111tioo. Our
0

-..a to risllt aro RIJKarr,1'1llil!IUclde7, Bob Wood,
Ric- LodWick, Dll~ Mora and Stew Enrla. Pat Morrissey
was abae&lt;L - SeniiDoli'lloto.

d8J lll&amp;ltt.

"i,

Snyder Hits 5_Per Centers
wtn, David Mora, Bob Wood, Tom
Buckley end Pat Morrissey (abHeed Ohio Unlverolt;r Basketball Coach Jim Sllyder told East- aent), all seniors, receiving troStettler, a )llllor; Dan
ern High Scbool athletes TUes- phlos;'Jim
Grueoer, Bob Ritchie and Mike
da;J nllbt It tho 11111al AU-Sports Borin&amp; aecood letters; Rd&gt;ert
partlclpe~ In athletlca rB&lt;~~~res them to aecept chal- Henaley, Daryl I'IJoler, Demle
BY BOB WINGETT

i ...,..I

l

1-• nne! obligations.

becy, Tim Roo!, Rick Sanders,
~ YOUII&amp; D8D11Y Roach, stove
Kirkman, Alan Holter, T I m
Qlmph, Jim Buckley, Larry Blkor, Mike~ and Bob CaldweD.
Head lllakelball Coacb Dan

RECEIVE 'tOP AW.ARDS - Th8 tGp Eaatero 11is11 Sporta award lor tho lHWB lchool year
went to these four athlete• TueldaJ nllblat the armal ~ IIIIIQiet. Ray Karl', Iran _
rlshto waa tGp IJqlhJ wlnaer, with eight. Included..._.,.. 11'0 awarda·preiOnted him irere llqlhlea
for belt ol!enalw - U player of tho 111ot aeuon, beat loul •hooter o! tho 198Wt·baaloetllall
· · "Mother ~tea" .....
team, and aelected aa recipient of the cage ltlllld Eallt award "MOST VAWABLE PLAYER.''
Vlrldnla Is ollen called
Lell to right, are Junior Jim Stettler, who weo awarded I IJqlhJ •• the beOt·defallllw rmlall
"Mot6er of Slatei" frotil IIi
pla1er of the 1968 aeaioa; Bob RltchiO, a1ao a ;Junloc', selected fO\' thi Eqle award "MVP~ In
fact that sevetal .sta!A!a hate
foollllll; Karr, who Ia a aentor, and Freshman Denala Elchbwer, beat ............ of the Eqloa'
been formed out of ita ori.Ci·
19611-89 varalcy cap team. - Sentlnal Photo.
·
nal territory.
· ••
•

.r

Ia Freckor, Wimle Marcln!&lt;oaad
the home .....,mica lllrls. DIDnor .mu1lc was ~dad by BDl
Allen, anddecoraUOna were made
by lite cheerleoders nne! Gerden
Clubs o! the communities.

Coach Klncald.GI!etedthe!Dvo-

.\lie

~·

:.~:"':!~~::.~: ::·~~:!~.!r~~

•

..,.Manager

i

j

GET T.'HE BIG DO.ILLAR'S " 70R
__'T'H
Grade ASmall
EGGS
Campbell's
7
So
Vegetable
1.00~
up
.............
_
..
3 doz. $
Early June
7
303
1."0~
Argo
Peas
··-············
,
, ,
.
A!'P
7· 303
J.OO
Green Beans ••.••• -.........
_

,., '

P.••

~o.l

cans

·

.

.,.

,

\,

Sweet

cans

.

Cut'

'2;

cans

Haft's Whole

Yel1ow Corn •••• !:::~ •••••••• 7· 1.00
·f
So~heni Gem
. 5
a oes •••••••• ~o•••••••.... cans 1.00
303
cans

303

h;

-~1':!1'11

'

IS

PIES

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..........::~:

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EACH

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....... #•••~ ;.
'

.ftEUIDRIID .
c I

Ri&amp;lll
Rosamd
To
Lllllt..
Qlllltillll

'··

Zoz.

YELLOW·
HEAD TABLE- Jim 51Vdei', bead ..cti oftlle Ohio Unlnralt;y Bobeat balloetllall - . l1lllll
from left, dallwred an lq&gt;renl.. a;-h Tueaday nllbl at the .-1 Eaaten Eqlea ~
Seated, left to rl8lrt. are Dll~ a.dw.U, Alit. C&lt;ach; 111111 Kln&lt;ald, head W
and
traek caach; Mr. Sll)oder; lloD w~ bead lialketball and baoebeD caach; John Riebel, Sr., dlatrlct s._, and Clarles TayiCII', high achoolpriDcipoland ma1!A!r of ..--teo. - Senllnol Pbolo.

ONIONS

w

QUICK QUIZ
Q-WIItn were bGUoolll
firAt uucl ill warfare?
A-In l'IM, b)' tbe. French
revolutionists. N a p o I e o n
made tbe balloon corpa il
part ol tile French army, but
It dld not aee much service.
Q-ln tilt Book of ~wkJ.
lion, what doe1 the ncl
horae rpobolite?
A-Siilugbter.

Q-Wf!pl II regarclecl 41

thee"foolproof
iMIIII
1

""""of·

~g.Notwo

A

penonaliave Identical prints
. . .tbe pattem of linger·
piinll eannOt be altered.
'

I

•

•

q.....WI!Gt il the frmlng
po111t _of tllcoholr .
. A-312 desree• below zero.
Q-Who war the flrll
Negro .rectecl to the U.S.
Coll1/fess?

Jar

Effective Aprll17·1a;19 ·

BARBECUE
·SA:UCE

Luncheon Moot

,

~T

lhe~bCOn8fOSII.

Anoaur

Q-Who ill the 0111~ cll4p.
lllill in the hittotv of .1 M

ATOES
10 ~~~ 494!·

armed forces to be 01DUI'llccl

the Congresalollal Medal of
H"ffdr1
-A-Capt. Joaepb T. O'Cal·

)aban. The USS O'Callabau,

commlaalonecl In 18e8, II
111meclln b1s honor.
'

...

t:,oz.

KRISPY ·.·.

·, , .
lb. bor 39c ·,
· ·

,BEsT GRAD~

.

22 oz.

:ICE CREAM ' .
.

,_

&gt;' -

'

~~ ..,.
79
I
"·crt...
'

' ..

f•'•. lb. stt
' lb.

:2ft.

WESTERN AUTO'S

A SAlE TOO BIG TO Miss·
.

.

THURSDAY-FRIDAY
AND ,SATURDAY

murder."
Thla mornln(a oeslloo or the
National Securib' Council, pn&gt;o
vloualy scheduled to discuss grounds lbat this would mahe It
lmJosalble to recover the
other malton, was certain to be
devoted alinoet entlrily to the crewmen alive. He. alao1JIIde It
clear that he did not ' want to
tragedy, In which 31 crewmen
-rontl,y lost their llvell.
risk starting another war In
The Penta8'11 cOIIIlllled to llat Asia while trying to scale,down
the one In VIetnam.
the plane as "ml1alng." But
This time the IIvas ol the
VIce Prealdent ~lro T. Agnew
ah! other high o111clal• Bald crewmen appeared to be no
Oatl)o It waa ohot down by two eooaldel111on, OIDclals lh!leatSovlet-llullt MIG planes tar ed there wu no chence they
, !rem North Korea• ljnT\IilrJ, mlsht have IIW'viwd the 42
degree watera In lite northern
Agnew said Ill Mancheater,
N.H., Tuesday night that the Sea o! Japan, oven II thay sot
plane wu more than 100 °~ ol the~lane alive.
nautical ml\"~- ,!JIIta.!4.e l'!ortlt. .:"'r~~ - ( '~1~~,._the

APRIL-17-18-19
FREE GIFTS
FOR EVERYONE

WIZARD HOMESTEAD

Paint Specialsl

1

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~

. !:!"" '' "';:

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Enemy Shells
Towns, Clunps

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· · ··White

""it
., •.

,.I

...

p.LATII

3·9·c,

.

'

•

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Ptlilt.

...

'fteBcn.., ........
Roal111dlaa' P-1
• No tbilmillll
• 7 dooorat«"'lonl
0 Drloa 11130 mi~ -.
• Qalloq~l!P!IIi .

460-- . '
'

"

I ''

'

WOK AT THIS

79 -....... 33
._
_
.
.......
Gallon

$4.49
NEW 4-Pc. Plastic Web Patio Group

Interior Latex

WW PRICE!

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

While. Pl...

otlf.A.I

•

With New, E~lluive FoUing .
Web and Aluminum Settee!

NEW Wizard "Mark 60"
3111-HP, 22-Ineh Power Mower
-Hoodlo F.ilds lor Easy,
· S,ac.,S.vlog StooJGgo

.

66
EACH

Sllnsbine

CRACKE~

33~

'

,. -/·

OPIII Pll

TRHT

A-John W1111a Menard of
New Orleans, elected In 11188
on tbe RepubUcan tlctet to

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Preslllent Nixon meeta fOdl3 with
t&lt;v · mllllley aad ~lcmatic
advlaera to dlacusa wl\&amp;1 action,
If 1111', con' be · taken apinst
CommUDllt North KOrea lor Ita
ahootiJW dOwn ol an unarmed
American re.....tsaance plane
-an Incident described by one
U.S. · omclal u "deUbarate

Momotlal, ,.ln the,lb'lo.'o! an tlip ,Nitlonal Cowndon altarply . lied •1 the etrateslc cooslderalll&lt;lent Greek ' temple, Ia a pm criticized Prealdent Johnson tor 11' : ,~~~rUnlmentloned.
aot the eherey treea on Ieith!&amp; a "roUrib-rate mutlley
r.., .._ 0
ted statea
the bank of the Tidal Biola. !lOWer · Uke . Korea" ae11o the • apparently ha4 not yet decided
America'• .~ot rauioul real- U.S. ln!A!Dipnce ~hlp Pueblo, whether to asree to a Comm"'
- .•• ~ ~ lf&lt;!Uao, Ia open lay laced the problem or how nlat . ~ (\DrOll! dl!lllllld lor a .
lor YlaltOro b e - 10 and 12 to deol with. a aim Dar- but not .mooUn, Friday at Panmunloan
eveey mol'llll!l .Olt&lt;oJIIIlllldayo, ~cal-act.
of the 1&lt;~01118 . wanted lha
~· nne! bolldaya. JUatoey
JUa polldcal &lt;tJJXIIIOIIta oholled meetiJW aa a slap lr&lt;~n which
1 will ,come alive lor' )'&lt;01 Bl yru no incllration to harress Nlmn ~ ril~~lt ,~t;. eborgoawalk throusb the carellll)f "" ~ !&gt;Y ,; ~uotlrw back his ~ 0
P vate..,
t not yet
. otored ......,. "coniiiDlna fUr!ll., gra~. )lut lt was clear that ~ by American ol!lclala
.thai tho lumberlrw propellorlure and .lnementoo o! all oar he was hemmed In by tho same
preoldanta.
lack or manouvero that prevent. driwn Navy reconnalsaance
Wa~ 11 a town. Where ed Johnoon rr~ taldll&amp; mllltl.ry ~lane in\J'uded dOI!P Into North
put nne! present mingle coo1tant- action to try to recover the .....,. ali'opace, 1
q. In hiatorlc balla, you may Pueblo.
hear a ~eh that will be print.
AI that time Jabnaon ruled
o4 Ill the tellbooks of tomor- out mllitacy retali4tlon on the

29t :.
'

... ,, .: .: '

'

Action

IClll

RACINt

CROSS SONS
...

Studi~s ,

...

NlxQII;

N'IE

....

Nixon ·

·prlnclpl,_
••-atlog"'""'-""alliin •'KIIi'elii'teiTl!O~·mllll8ct::•·
.,...,..,.~.,..,1'
.-~\"'x .•a....tl!. ·
o. Tile sracel\11 Jelrerwho tall ·Atlilot at the -·~ tll!il.! hb!lsol( lghl,.

1 '10'~

'"'

HOlSUM. fRUit FILlED ,

orlglni· as a democracy come
alive when you aee the or!Binal

Declaration o! ' Independence,
Conlllllution and BUI o! Righll
displayed In the Natlooal Arcblveo, and then vlalt the Clpl.
tol iO watch a aeaalon of t h e
House o! Representatives or o!
the Seua!A!.
· All o! America's archlteotural
~lea are visible In Waabtncton
and the surrounding area, 1'1111•
Ins !rom tho aorene "COlonial pU.
lara o! Ill; Vem&lt;in to the moilern
,and oteel ol!lcea ~soYtrllllleril buUdlnp.
-.; IUatory la relloctec!ID tho cob·
bleslooed otreell o! GeorPI&lt;nin
ind ~ID!Idria, In lite wlncllni,
~imlc ;vlatas of the George
WaabiDgtoo Memorial Parkway •
and . otlte r lamed thorou"'lareo.
Wallhll!iiOn olao reflects the
.....__
....,_ America hal paid to her
ll'tll leadOre, each memorial or
aiatue a dllllnetlvo ~~Ymbol. Tallof aU I~ the Washillllon
elt
u-.
-~mont, a 55S.(oothighobllsk,
. with a _maplftcent view !rom the
top of the clb' • The lmpoolng
Lineoln "Memoria) with Ito hernlc-alze etatueo!rur16thPrellde nt I1 the -·moot plllUlar ohrlile
In Wuhlngton. Theodore Roosevolt boa a whole llland Ill the
l'lllomac named lor him, .com-

~~.~·EltonW~wboae-~~~c~~~::~~d~==~~--------~-----~--~~-----~----------~~-~··
;~~
1

!18ele (absenO, Rick Wltllama, 11-7 alote lor the 196U9 see·SIQ&lt;der, who has beaded t h o Joe Grll!lth, Tom Karl', Dave soo, preaented trophies 1D Ray
Bobcatl cage PfOII""'" 20'yearo,
nne! played hll college aporta
there, cclticllnd what he call- David Mora, Alan lloi!A!r, Ran· and awardo to Bob Ritchie, Del·
ed •IPJ'be fl:re per centers on the dJ' YOIIIIII, Rick Sanders, Rmald nte Elehlnaer, Howle Caldwel~
OU Clmpla."
Smith, Raymond Cline and John Tom Karr, Dave &amp;nlth, MlkeBor"When I- 800 theae people with Cline, letters; Mike - • and In&amp; Rmald Smith,
the lou&amp; hair, ~ make me alck David lolllbone received rootba1l Jim YOWlS.
.
to my otomach," said Sllyder, manager letter•.
Ray Karr, a 5-10 IIOIIiDr, ...,
"Pm not ap.lnst the long hair
l!ob Ritchie, a jUDlor, was pre. the l!alllo award "ldVP"In boolllolf, rm agolnst whallt otands aentec1 the Eagle award "ldVP'' kelball for tile put aea8CNI. Karr
In looti&gt;all lor the 1968 11111011; alao recalYed lr&lt;lpblea lor befor. ••
"Pm proud athletel ~ have Jim IJettler was awarded I h e lng the boot foul of the
to d&lt;l this 1:fpe of lblng to pi ''Belt Detonalvo P1101er" llqlhy, team nne! the best defeulve play.
attention," Aid Snyder, Wbo ur- nne! Ray Karr received the''llelt er, whlle Dennis Elcblnger, a
pd the Eagle athletes to be bum· Offen1lve Pla,yer" award.
b'eshman varsity plQ"er, was
Recognized
I
o
r
besebell
aproaented
a trophy lor being the
ble at all times. SIQ&lt;der alao
empboalzed that as long as hell wards were Ray Karr, Bob Ritch- top reboundar.
besketball coach It OU, t be le, Mike ~. Bob CaldweU,
Other trophies, lor SV!C roc..ayers WOII't be I'UIIIIiDi thepro- Mike GorreU, Dale Boalon, Tim osnltioo In either lootball or baasrom and l!likiJW demande lltet Root, Gordon lloi!A!r, Rick 8al&gt;o kelllaD, went to Jim Stettler,
are out o! line with the b 01 t dera, Howle Calclwell, David Rllchle, Elchlnaer end Karr.
Smith nne! Terey Stelhem.
&amp;ljl!. John D. Riebel, Sr., pretaltoia o! aocleb'.
Coach Sllyder aloo urged EastTreck men booored were Tom sented reserve cheerleader aern athletes to remember that Karr, Jim Bucklay, Dennla Elch· warda to Rhea Mora, Melanie
Y&lt;lUII&amp;9I' boya - the future Ea- !Jver, JlmAmsbaey,RogwKarr, DeiD, Pattie Holotnger and Di111• players - are watching when nan Grueaer, Larey Stalnaker, ana Gnleser, and varalf;)' cheerthey don't ~ct themselves Sam Brown, Tim Gumpf, J.o h n 1-r awards to Karen
i;, ~ly.
• c~ ~vld .&amp;nlth, ~ carr, ""' 9lelta T..:l',
I"
"AlliloUco Gl!fr ioO!the basic': Bob Rl~~~ Rlchard,~$fl&gt;f&gt; ''*'enda ~cer•
, !oundatll&gt;n lor "lilaldiis )'&lt;01 rwt" Grlllllh, Daryii'IJolei;·R'andY bau&amp;b nne! Ruth '·Am
1' people," &amp;IYdar advlled. He ...,_ YOIIII(, Howard Bohr, Rick Wit·
Bob Ritchie, as alated by Karsratu11tec1 thi parent1 attending llama, Alan Hoi!A!r, Rick Sandara en 9uni&gt;hrll!", prelellled gifts
for the 1ntere1t thay have in their nne! RayJriCIICI Cline.
to Coachea Cbadwall, Klneald
)'OUilllterl.
Reserve baaketba1l player• and Wright In behall o! the LetAW.ARDS
presented award• were T o m tormen'o Club.
Varalzy lootball awarda were Karr, Howle CaldweU, · Dave
The b _ . waa prt110red by
p-e-.cl by Head Coach 111111 Smith, Mike Boring, R o o a I d IDa llaaar, Hubal Caldwell, Mer·
111-'d to 1110' Karl', Steve Er- Smith, Rick WUUamo, Jim Ami- lba Keller, Leola lias•, Arvll-

I

'

..

•

o'•

"'
i'

-

· 12-Ft. flower ll11
Gardea loll

�·7 - Tho Dolly Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy;

''·tr;i"...''".' '

'

o..

Le~y

April 16, 1969

~· tuncheon·

ert tute,.trea~reri Mra. Homer
•t.laftln; eu~; !.Ira. Flor•
'once Ntberl, "correipori!IIRB see-

Is ijeld
11 A~, Resort

rotary, and Mro. Ralp!l Ratke,
oecrllar)'.

AlitOn.ll the out ot town guests
were Mrs. Irving Kerr, Jr., Pm;neroy; Mrs. Rogert Hogan, !I1IJll..
lngton, regent of tho French COlPOINT PLEASANT - T h e ony Chai!tor, Gallipolis; Mre.
,• . ' 68th annlverasry IIBiclleon &lt;t tho
llirY Vlr&amp;lnla O'Brien, Galll~" Coll!llel Charles Lewlo Chaptei' pOlla; Mra. ,M/ T. F~tllng, Sr.,
'' · ot
Soctacy ot, the Gallipolis; Mrs. Charles lloJ •
. llaaglllero ot tho Amerlean Rev- zer, Gallipolis; Mrl. !'lUI E.
·""' olttllon wlo field In tho bosutltul w-r. WJEH, ()alttpolls, and
.:&amp; Dome Dtlllni room of tho Pleas- Mra. Artlllr Eapenoclleld, Rio
'll'~ ant Point Reaort Saiurday, ApGrande.
~\· r1112 , at 1 p.m.

I

the Notional

,
.Ill
-

•'

~:.-· .,.

,,~- ~.

!tj

•

~ ••• tl!f, '1!1111} 1atJAo ~
board the No\')', pl-. Tho.
K:lne COJ'PI .1114 ho ...........

*"

edbt'
~..-:~
Tbe otb"" two.-' I'N,_ · ,

as ,Fil&amp;llt Enll'!""')lall~,c­
nor• Jr., Da;ytop, the 1011 of Mr.
and Mro. lllllarcl
!r.,
and Communlctllorl4 ~~
2.C 9ietlben J.-. '1'\tll* &lt;If ~
,per Saadullo', !he ... ot Jlr.
and Mrl. Dale LGu!• 'll\fMI'•
COIIDoro' wire IIIJI)ebllqllvt
In Jljl8ll.
'
..

eo.-;

It 'Is estllnall!d ·there ' are
91 Buddhist churches· in the

United States, wllht a 1nem·
bershlp. qt .a~~pt¢~ l!II.IIOQ,, .

.

::m.::

r.:K..:
:~~::~et:o:·~::..:;:; Bridge Is progrosa~Jw .
IIIlO ltnlcture Is lhown above, complete with Ita clnv leal'
of this year. Tile foorthe Ohio river, the right In Hinder..,. w Va. and :left Qroeches on both lidos or
artlll'o oonceptloo ol the finished rodu' .
'
near Kanauga, Cillo, In this
E. Lionel Pevlo eo ..KJ
P
ct. Destgnoro of the bridge were Now York ftrml
lllt'inB hlo lj)Oedod ...;:rn,.ctl:.ward, Needles, TamJlllll &amp; Bergendolt, Good weather this

PRODUCE SPECIAL! '·

new Olllo River bridge between Henderson, W, VL, and
Kanouga htgl!llghted Tueoday
nlgflt's GallipoUs Lions Club
mooting at Oscar's.
Guest Sj)eakors were George
Baker, project engineer, AI Johnaon O::S~ion Company, MiJloo
DeiPOI , rm., arxl Ed Goza,
proJect s"'"rlntendent, also of
tile AI Johnson Conatruetlon Co.
Work on the river pier near
tho West Virginia shore began
laat July. Without any delays, it
sbauld be c-•lalod u-·~ .c.
middle of ~ . 'r-~u:-o.,

'l,
I

:Soo•
'
•,

-'1' on

Ohio Rlver pier alril' got underway In JuJy laat yeal, but due to a "blow
In" on ,_..._., De
3
k
~- ~ ~,
c. 1 , wor
oo this pier Ia ruMing behind
oohodule. It ts e~""
.,...._ to be
:leted aroond JWIO 15, protlmatedth~ are no dela,ys, Es-

of the Ohio River

I

'

I

pier Is $775,000.
concrete PClUl'&amp; are reto CCJIIIIIIete each pier.
Baker aai.d workers were to be-gin tho third pour on tho West
Vlqlnta rl- pier today, Seooncl pc:m' on the dhio mver pier
Ia scheduled later this week.
When OOII!j))eted, 43 feet of
tho rl"'!f plero wiU be under·
and 64 feet wiU be above
normal pool stage, ~eaning

~

,~ute

frlllldb'.

8 - ~ at a So-

sZr .

' , ·,

'I

~ '~l-

,.

~ -~!W, ~

J1-~Ue.

\.

;~'

. '

·

.
Castleberry

··~

:'

!!~ ~j

.

dOL

····~···············,. ••••••••

., . . -

Joy ·Brand ~hunkf
·· "

"

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Dalinty . ·

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1\.·~
,

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4

KUINIX TOWILl

3

JUMIO
lOW

$100

'IISStll • .4::! SliP·.
Delsey • IA1HIOOM
• 4::"': 1100
'IWICINS
.Kitenex ,.DIM•
Kotex48's • •

••

•

25

APRII:.l)..;i&amp;-;.19
.
.. !

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'· 5'··f.WIM~~··'·

·

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Open f!lop. thru Sat. 9~ 9 : .

CLOSED SUNDAY .

SpH!oll Slod Up Now!

SpHloll Sloe• Up Now!

.lunl Mary's
rreeslone Peaches

LIBB1''1
CATSUP

SLICED
OR
HALVES

3o.oz.39c

'·'

can

.
.
' Tropicana OI=·~NK
-

Libby Beets vA•,'ene•

5

;lb.

lrar

•

IVORY

SOAP.

• •

WHh tltla Coupon ontl • $5.00
ar mOll purcha•, 1 por Cuatom•
Volld thru April 19111
In all Columbus DIY. A1 P Slolll

&gt;:~

,

1:

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'·

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,0

•

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rrenclr ·J IIii..

bt1a. . ~I

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'

A&amp;P
BRAND

5

Marvel Ice Cree•
•

L59c

Va...

Cto.

PAY

MORE?

SNOBALT

PUERTO RICAN

C.IULIILOWIR

PINIAPPLII
LARGE
SIZE

-ltc

-39'

1000
EXTRA PLAID
STAMPS
fa .. this Strip tD YOIW Fl'tlftdiJ Mlb ..,_ ,.._.....,.

CHECK ITEMS YOU IUYI

Spanish Bu Cake • •
Cherry Pies .~:. • • -..:--5t
Wheat Bread -g:~~: . .4~:: '1 00
Oh! 0~! Cookies • •
SPECIAL LOW PRICEI

' .( '(,;;. ~~~ "'"'""'"..

~:

Ll.
lA&amp;

WHY

.4,.;a$., .,(M)
.

, Ptr~Y. ~."~l.ne
,.,~

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1-23

Spocloll Stoc• Up Now!

'

lb.

sgc
4

f"*lt - ' 111•"""
' ' .. ·.,.
' '"·
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..a.. ·' · ~~..,;~~~..-..~~.oli_..~_.-!"i

!~ .:~ol!~· lc~,~lr~~·_.:.!;

• lb.s

Call

1-lb.
loaves

oorreo;ondlnl ltcrt11117, loin.
fiH: ,LololaJi,twl.ll iJ!IIP~FllamoJ!tlrf,
i\.',• •M,o.
~•• ~.. Thl otate' of olrtoera
, r; · ,cljited ·-~oljo, A ioclal . . &lt;•,
f ol,lflll.t.l oerVf!i ,b.Y
l-,1, .J!Orl I,Oii tho · ~1nii ,A111 n...n; •,
0'~ ltiOit!- ' Mi'o. ·c.' l!, .... ~ :···,
.· 1 chllrman, and 1 Mra. Gerland , ·

-

Ht.lr

3 30-oL$1 00

MADE WITH POTATO F\.OURl

'Q&gt;ore

.

1

.lunl Mart'•
rnall Cocktail
..

Polalo Bread

r.

.

1

lel1101lco Steaks • • , •
Bro••• Chuck ~~ • • • •
Bonel• leal Fill' Stew • •

JANE PARKE~

·t

.

I

I

Beef Rib Roast • •

Jane Parker Buys!

f .

.

SHOULDER

Valencia Oranges • • •

12 PERSONAL SIZE lARS

UUed "Behind every m a n,
there's a woman." A muiical
pl1Jlll'llm was presented 1&gt;1 Mrl.
Dovld -hens, Mrs. Walter
Mattox and· !Ills• susan Boyle.
Mrs. Stephens gave a plano ael.ecdoo b.Y Bnhmo, and Mro.
Mattox oaaw oeveral IIJIII muol~
cal alra aceompontod 1&gt;1 Mrs.
Staphens. Mill suoan Bqvle and
Mro. Stephens pve i two ·plano
~.- , prooentatton of ln8JIIrlnr muotc.
Tho Draoldent conducted a
.
bullneu
meolfng fealurlaw ,...
1
•
tine reporla of acttvttleo. '
Mro. Farley said the-m.,.tl,.
~
next monlh ,.w b.. talk by
Mro. R. E. (Marla) Molt.. of
~- · 'Huntlngtoo, who wlll dlaeun
~
"Colla 'l'oda.Y." Also at the May
', moetltrs
wW be lnltaUa·
~. tton of olbcen for tho O&lt;IDIJW
~.:: yw.
'
:''
Tho r•pol'l ot tho nominating
~ommlttoe offtraclt olate 11 Col·
ffi' .Jowo: phakl!otil Mr., wwwn
~~. H. vanlt~ ~cepreattlo'!(lfrs.

f

OOUND lONE

CALIFORNIA-SUNKIST -JUMBO 5bs'

f

I

gsc

KIN&amp; OF THE ROAST- A 7" CUTS

'-~--------------J
rAe
,_ . 4.._!-loo Elbow
Macaroni :A~~ . • 3pq.iRJ.3'!:lt Nestles 5• Candy Bars 5;:s1oo

pnsented a· humorous skit en-

'

The contract si!P'ed to for
throe yoers withaiiJIIunlan &amp;bop.

....

14·aL$100
btls.

TASTY

Mro. 0. L. FltzRindolph Introduced Mrs. James Crlckord
ond Mr&amp;. Nancy Lllborry of tho
Hunlilvton w....n•s Club who

SPECIAlS .01

the-ecom-

Jilllllity.

BIG BUYS on A &amp;P Groceries!

FRf!SH

prestdlnt~o

' ·

remolD

Chuck Steaks ~:"~~ , • , , a. fie
Rl~ Steib ~:e
lb. s1~

CARAMEL
NUT FUDGE

PT. PLEASANT - Tho Point
Pl•sant w...,.n•a Club ei\IOYed
1 program of dnmo and muolc
Frlda.Y at t h o Preobyterlln
Church, with Mrs. Relva Farley

:!•..

,: I ·. .-~.,,;::ii&gt;\{_~~~'
ttl;(...,~!

1 ~ ··~·~

-.

.•

1

.

-

-

the

L:".\'

bll ~ ,[

·t,

Prices Effective

'
'

'SWia ste-L

BIG BUYS on Fresh Produce!

~~- ::=~=:.~~~-'
' It ' treaoulir, '·Mr&amp; lliiwf• Ba~Hiift; ·

. c 1· '· ,

f.

.x.
~ -1'

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f*

.

Soup..:.... 2-25C

Yoo,WE LIKE" ·"'

lttght .-o.....lto u.. tt quonttttoo
. We accept Fed.
SI!JW~ 1 ~

.. ·

~mato

•

KUINIX TIIIUII
::~ 5 1 00

Drama, Music
Program Given

''The SloJ•, Wiill --Alh!l~ ,-. .. ,

·

= Eggs :~~~ - .
,-:
··a:···&gt;, ~ ~ ~ · · ·~~. 2··
Bo:.g·:~;· 'do
-&gt;,:;..,' .,,. ••:......... ...... ~ '

·=-

STH ond PEARL STS., RACINE

'

--

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
.Admfaslono- James stewart,·
West Columbia; Roao Morrla, ,

lb.

8111111 DIIHI'I mtmES
l9c
,
5.!;Sl19
•111•1 • • •

Drs••

r ••,
c••Jce

lb.

CHUCK

PLUMP

Instant Coffee Buy

'

no/mt

'.l.ril-~1

~

bxs:

ol Joag - · Lebollon Station.

ASKS DIVORCE
Mary Jane Herald, 5114 Lin· port
M Dalll"':t'
ootn St., Middleport, hlo flied 1r ;
c
'
.....
••
.,.ytlon
lor dlvotco from Frank
Dlaehar-s - Gl- ~--~•,
Hora1d. Jr ., .....
,
•·
--- .........
....,...eport,
charg· . ,..._ Weaver
Kathleen
~-•lng exlrOtllO cruel~ and Mek- .,.-.
'
"""'•
~ II)' now traditional q oullody of three minor chi!·
WUJs, Beth eaooell, Mlna
trtWp!- A dozen atuden!o .drOll.
Ullt a villi outlido a clwroom
LADIFS DAY
llullil1il(,
.caUlng
on
olhera
to
jOin lhim. Tibiae were plied
l-EAGUES TO ORGANIZE
Ladlea . 1111 at tho ~ .
w1111
An orpn12atlonal meetlug of Golf CourM will . b081n at tO'
and a tho .............
•---"'le
,_., ~3. Ev·
..._ otrlko
·-~IIIMaiUro
~
..,,
........
,.. Ba... o.m. W- &amp;4ay, ""'"
.1 ~ w•th tho word baD AIID. ,will be hold at the . erl!ono Ia lnvllod.
~ IIIII from a - · ~ouse Mmlelpil Pork meet' ~ ·lllilatrlke 11'01111, aprent. q haUoe Tlllro4ay it 7:30 p.m.
MARRIAGE .(pPIJCA'TJO~
· 11 ' IJIIW"' I&gt;J .....,.. """"· All pefiOIII wlio are inler!'fled
.\)bert Ll!ll'enCe .........
. ·~
2'-.-ID tho ~colt from . In the Boys' I.Mii!O and 1'01\Y
•.,.. .,....
. llx, IOid
tho Leotue
prGttalltl an urtted Ill
.¥!
1ta1. Ill.~ed
Ita ,pilr,
.,,.
·. ,
.~vo!ll Newt•, 72,
-•

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t

Several Varieties To Choose Fram

Em,ploJeea baled at tho two
lo Sai'gont,
are Elbert Taylor of Rt. 1, Porn.
OJW, Meigs •Station, and H. R,
~er of Portland and c. E. Leo '

•

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tho Welllern Dlatrlct, ootho state
honor roll; )(ra. Jolin R, Kalil!,
stata cltalrman of
Flag of tho
IJalted States; Mro. Charlel Prol·
!Itt, Jllal otate president of tho
State J!egonls' Club; Mrs. Char·
teo ~rw, hlotorlau; Mrs. Rob-

:;

the Compony wiD ., _ J1!o1e 11
live with ond that It will bi. or
ereat benefit to tho ....-~~era.
The setUoment ~ 11011111
workero a 22 per eettt bo.
crease. tlclllded aro hoalllt _.
welfare and retlr_.,t.llld • ·
eranoe bentiltl; 1!11 I n program, and !Ill ~. ·drug- prograil) lllioa'elft _ . ,
me,y )lUI'ohaiO Meded dntl ,....
scrliltlons lor $1.
.
Goolll said Corl ·!~~maD will
In Point l'leo- for a
time to bring thingo bock to - mal at the raclorr and In till
production llowlng again. Veil
stated that the settlement of tho
llrike will honoflt

BONELESS ENGUSH
or CROSS RIB ROAST

c

• • tb.59c

.Oiherl at tho opoaker•' table

,.

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Lesser Amounts, At Rec. 2for 43c

"'aal-· In addition

I

ant bl&amp;ll School.

f

Crackers .....~~~....•....•r~ 35C
Holsum Bread....&amp;::s~~ 1.00·
Nabisco Cookies.2 25C
• ·.... .;..ell House...l:.1.29
Ba-ke'd.a-e·an·s·......
. -5
/ c•·l .·o.o~.
~ot Dog sauc·e.... 5...1.00

- . Saramt pointed out.

'

Fig~

Fresh POrk Roast 36~
,
COOked
Hams
~·
53~,
.....
2=
aenteis r.~t' '" 49c

... ...... ~i. w. lll.f Prolfltt, pro.
~ram ~ and cllreetor ol

·.

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Prem11111 Saltine

oember, 1968, when t11e dlatrlct
achieved an outtllandiDg mark of
3,0112,099 001110cutlve man boan
worked by Ul ~... wllllout 1 cJisabllng fnjuey, Tho no •
ltlluey record remains Intact to

rnatt•~y

and Sai'ah Lewis, Point Pleao-

•
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~-

. Save! Fui-Valu Buys!

- · Melp Slatlon - - . . In
ebargo, Aid award wu for the
period from April, 1958, 1o De·

Lalli . .,..r Road

...~ PVIal Flouant Hlab SchooltBeo·
:~ kit fl;ler. uaman llli!l SchOOl,

'.

boeo honored b.Y tile American
Gu AaSD. for haVIng more titan
10 Jo&amp;rl of operatlm a cJlsabllnr ompiOJeo fnjuey.
llol'le M. Sarpal, Rt. 2, Porn-

Boneless
Beef Roast

.
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"Super-Rigltf' Quality-Tender, Juicy - No Waste

Z- contest. Hls teacher, also at

HOLSUM BUNS · _

-Fu·I·Valu Markel
.

=::;on~::eol0lroa4,

confer-,
atqlllled stanford ol!lclalo "do
wW tbfo' did at Harvard- go in
11111, -pt thorn out...
1
~-"' Harvard, tile fourth •··
- ot
w• alrlke Tueldt¥ ...

· Cl'llatlllo

•

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
April 15, 1969
ADMITTED - Mrs. Charles
Fetty, Pt. Pleasantj Mrs. Mark
Loudermllt, Rutland; Wa I t e r
Plants, Apple Grove; Mrs. Florence Vernon, Letart; Michael
Jones, Pt. Pleasant; Larry D.
Pyles, Jr., PL Pleasant.
DISCHARGED - John Re~~o
.dolph, Mark Flint, Harvey Steele,
Walter Selb.Y, Wallace Allen,
Mrs. Charles McDaniel, Jewell
Debolski, George Stone.
BIRTHS - Mr. and Mrs. Char·
les Fetty, ~ Pleosant, a dough-

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POINT PLEASANT - Nego\1&amp;- land and Eleanor CiJbb, ¥ a
tlono at the Qlilt~ Msnufac- mooting ' beld at tile Corpentorl
turing Co. ended '1\iesday In a· Ul)lon Hili '1\iosday aflernoon,
signed contract.
April 1o, three weekalo the da.Y
sioner.
BeadtnB
the
nogttlatlons
wore
.
slneetho atrlke started.., Marcb
Total cash assessment for
Martin Vest, State Director of 25.
public utilities, reaJ estate and
VIrginia and Carl Sigman, Un·
Goolll, Veot and Sigman, afpersOIBI prOPerty Is $16,000,·
ton
Organizer,
working
with
tho
ter
roedlng tho contract, roc4oO, producing $42,133 to the
local committee oonolsllng of ommended accepti!lc It, It was
cit,y in taxes.
Martha Cochran, VIrginia Hoi· also roeommondod 1!11" ace..,..
-Present were Mayor D. B.
tance by the local committee.
Morgan, CIIJI Clerk Patty Bur·
Goolll stated that this eondette, CIIJI Attorney Raymolld
tract Is one will! the Vnlon and
G. Musgrave, Jr.• and Council·
Moving Moon
men Wallace Smith, James
From the way the moon roFisher, Robert Holland, Jim
VISITS MOTIIER
tates and from the gravitaWiggs, Don Waldie, Jack Junitional pattern between earth
NEW HAVEN - Mr. and Mrs.
per, Jack Fowler an:l R H. , and the muon, astronomers
Robert Beach and tamih of AI·
Melrose.
feel certain that the moon is len Park, Mich., spent the Easter
now rarther away from us
:W~.«Y~::~:::::*~«:!:W.«'~~
than it was at an earlier holidays with her mother, Mrs.
Lurema Weaver, and other relater; Or. a!'KI Mrs. Orlanda Ca· time, and"" is drawing farther
thes in the Berd area. '
bula, P~ Pleasant, a daughter. away year by year.

11

~ Ordinance, la Mrs. Freda Jor ..
,.,..
•1 dan. Both teacher• were lntro'
•i
cDced. Mro. Beverly Cottrill,
~4 TlinmY'I mother, wu presented
piD.
'·'•
Mro. J. M. FogleiCJt!l, chair·
•
man or tho DAR Gclll4ii Quaeldl\
· presented award&amp; ti·i0clll'l(lult;1

' .............

er comprenor stat:Sana, have

L:

RACINE

,OUR BAKERY SPECIAL!

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Safety Record
Is Recognized

pooe."
On oCher camposes:
Pemsylvanla - DloiOIII!ng
studonta at Albright College In
. Reading TueedaJr oontlruod a
''llucb'-in" tn tile campoa
library for the third da,y
Albright Prell- ArtJur
Schultz told tho 700 protesteri
he would not reapon&lt;l to
coercion. Students hold a 111-m
at tile Lo SaUo Collep
Admlnlotratton Building In Philadclphla Tuesday, demanding
an end tn oolllj!U)aory military
tralniJig. Tho Colhollc college Ia
one of tho few where 111ch
lralnln&amp; Is .UU mandatory,
Now York- Studenta at eolumbta Unlvoral~'l llaJIJIJioll
Hall ended a U-boUr lit-In thla

!loll ol Harvard Unlvorlicy'o
4,800 undorgracDatos wore expeeted to otay awsy !rom
cluoeo today In
llfth da,y ot
• bweott proteotlnc tho ochool'o
use of force last week In
breeldnl up a ott-ln. Two4lrdtl
IIIIYed out '1\iolday.
t1 C a I If o r nl a, Slanfonl
Unlveralcy otflclola refUsed lo
heed GoY. Ronald Reagan's
-otlon that Stanford follow
~-· lead and use poUco to
remove deftKIIalratoro holding
aa elo&lt;tronlco lob.
Alwt 100 protasters have
held the lab for six da,)'o, calllnr
for on end to war-related
rt~Mrch at tho 11,300-otudent
l&lt;hool. Tho demonotrttllon his
oo far been peacefUl and oven morning.

the

Rabt~=

:.s::';;.~~

:tor,
Harvard Undergrads
Avoid Classes Again
Ill' Unltod Pross lntornatlonal

•
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r.o:

Rebetts, Mf., Racine flif.11fal

If

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n,.,•., lftJ,•IIJ lA• 111,1 :
p., IJtJI/1,
t..,

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c·~~ 0~: ::~~

J"*' 1 ·-.~-

rorlmaU"J.Isif.::.li.
000. 11'098~ of : s pier to

Once the mer plero are com· tlon sites earlier in the year
pleted, work will begin on the Baker said no debris from ~
steel superstructure.
Sllvor Bridge dloastor his been
The two river piers contain spotted in the construction ar..•
1,300 tons of temporary steel
Baker oln
(o82 tons [or pill and 721 toos Journal P loci out that trade
for bracing), Als:tho two piers the
wlJI contain 644 tona or perma- which claimed the Uvea or 46
mert steel, 6,671 cubic yards persons 011 Dec 15 1967
ol concreto and 120 000 boord
A lengthy '
foot of lumber to b:.Ud 36 800 period follow:• :.. · speakanswer
square ~ t f G
•
era
Same~ 5~0 om;,~ rd f were Introduced by Hobart Wll·
dirt .. s ~n e:V:~a
d:e so~·~!;• :o:•mdlchairma~
·-•·
e nnor mooting.
,P,1·~ """"'ell.
. -• . . J reoldent Kollh Thomas
.
· ·
laid the AI JohllliQ!It:Con..
to tho. lata
structlon Co., has 70 workers on the club's sixth president. Mr
ducy (Including eij!ht cCJIIIIIBill' Boudlnot died t hi hml '
men) wtth an avorego total JIOY· Logan laot rm: '
e In
rollin excess ol $000 000
called ,
lday, Thomoo
• ·
.or a moment of sUent
M
ost or the materials (except pnyer
steel) a r e being purchased
rOO.:.. el
l···'ly
sootftcer
gave the
second
""" • ...
·-ny of the workers re- rosdlns ofs new
candldo
side In tho Tri-state area. More for the 1969-70 tenn.
teo
workers are e&gt;~~ected when work
Charles M. Neal tho clob' 1
on the superstructure begins in niM'est uerandpa" • sed
Juno.
.
pas
out
1
Baker said state officials Inlrvoduced DIU Lamb
spoet the structure at varlousl1&gt;o
Th!rcy 1
tenala, ,and that other than the session. ·S x atterxled last night's
"blow In" of tho Ohio coffer·
dam last December, and shme
labor problems, work on the pro.
ject is progressing at a recon:f..
brooking poco.
Some problems were encount.
ered by swift current• durlq
Tile Ohio Fuel Gas ~ .·
constructJon of the cofferdams, Soulhom Compreoaor Dlotrlct,
which Includes Molga Stallonaear
PomeJW and tho Lebollon Station near Porlland, and 1f otb·

'

BIG BUYS on Super-Ri ght Quality Meats!

Jrt.-llon of Awards wu
81Vtl!. b.Y rMl:o. Ei!Pne Slarrot,
cllafi'Mo Cl\alrman ol Amerloan
mlllni ¥On1ho to Ttmoii&gt;.Y COtttlll. Gllf 'lrlde, wlmer ollhe
~~
.' dsontholocal,state
•llf:'jt , · lovell. Tlmrn.Y'•
awli'da ·:
a oterlln&amp; aUver
medal
{two books, 'tN'aval
Battle• ~.!~roes," and "Her'11M• ol 'f"' American Revolution "
.
nmm,d teacher at Onjlnance
• School is !fbel COsten._ _ __
:;
Max Nibert, not preoent, wao
..; alao a winner ol the tnotory

r···~·········~

Ill' HOBART WILSON, JR.
it WUJ oe lj)proxtmatoly 107 leet· along with high water In JaiiiA
progress
report.
on
construe!loll of tho two river piers lor fro
I m bottom to toP ot the river ary. Too, a c""'le ol towboots
the
P ers.
.
almost rammed pier construe-

POINT PLEASANT - Clt,y
COWicU ·Tuesday nlgllt In ftve
minute• approved tho cicy budget of $203,!33lor nacal!96970. It alrea.dl' had beenlj)prov·
ed b.Y tho State Tax Commls·

at 7:30 p.m. at the lxlord of odilcation oCfices.
A tentative meettr~ or tho
school board was set for April
24.

nrm

Natloaal Allihem.

WE LIKE'"

17(

The luncheon committee ln
charge o1 arrangements for the
90 members and guests presant were Mrs. MUtoo L. Miller
and Mrs. Jolut Collins.

priDO, ana. '-1 Walked Where
. Je..a Wanc.d," with Mrs. c.rt
G..- II ' tho plano. Mro. Lou·
Ia Bate•..., was planlll for tllo

"YOU

CELERY

Two River Piers Topic

Hersehel Hender11011,
~~;/ Drat vice rea;eat. IntrodUced her
- mother, Mrs. E1la Eads, whoae
90th ~ was last Septem- ·
. • , ber, •• the oldest member pros· " 1' ent.
· :l&lt; Attorney A. Keith McClung
••, · ~• from Charleston, new partner of
.,-; 1 the law
of lively and Fran.r..t~ cell, was the featured speaker,
.':1'.' Cll "AmericiJdpn!'
M&lt;Ciunll Ia tho aon ol tho
•• ' tote Floreilce Juhllnr McChutg,
.. ,,, ltata rogant 1900-1953, and II
· ~. alao tho IIOjtlew or Mro. Mil.,., loll Miller and Mrs. s. c. wu.
,,.; holm or Point Plealanl.
Tho l n v - waa &amp;)von by
,.., Mrl. lll.fiJIOIId t.fuQ~:aYO, chaplaiJt; the rllllal 1&gt;1 Miss Lelah
June POwell, regent, and tho wei·
come by Mro. Her HI Honderoon,
putlf,lte "!atorlan.
Mrl, Ct.ster A. Rouih, ao-

More Than A Slogan ••

Fresh and Crisp

'ial'l8
bun ell

'

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Mr1.

Rate,s Approved .

POlNT Pt,EASANT. - 'l)ie MA·
aon Councy Board of Education
In a otalllatoey se8Sion Tuesday
nilht. Qroved !e.,- ntes unanlmousl,y.
Thlo over by 8:40 p.m., Earl
Keeter, presldert, called a special moetlqj at 9 p.m. to ask
authorization for SUpt. L Rrooks
Smith and Lowell Cook to start
proceedlngs tor c&lt;nlemnation of
pr"'"rty for tho new vocatlonol
school and to hire surveyors
for tile prOPOrtjr,
The PrOPerlY Is adiaeentlotho
- Junior high school oo the
north side of Route 62, knoWn
as the Jack Burdette tarm, estl·
motod to be 41acres, 10ofwhlch
to hillside.
A meeting of tho Vocatioml
Advisory committee was announced for Thursday, April 17

Quality Mfg~ Strike Enth Tp,e$00J

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6tx01• COOI&amp;IIIG OD.
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,(',.,•:, ~~ w~~

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8 -

The O.lly Senlinel, Mlddloport-l'omeroy, o., April 16, !96il

Syracuse News, Society.

Citizens' Group Urges Upgrading of WahaJYa
Pleasant Reglstar and about 15
c::itizens were present. This
meeting had been arranged b&amp;cause of a number of items or
controversy had been brought to
light In previous meetings wltb
the school admlnistratiOI\
Prior to att.encUng this meet..
lng the citizens had Investigated
what 11 would mean to belong to
North Certral. Since 11 81Jpe&amp;red
so good, this Is what we decided
to shoot for.
With this view in mind the
citizens at tbe meeting lndicat·
ed to the school officials present that they would be satisfied
II Wahama was brought up to
North Central standards and re·
ceived membership. Mr. Smith
assured those present that the
school administration would do
everything possible to get Wahama Into North Central Mr.
Stott · made tbe statement that
Wahama would possibly be ready
for admittance in the school year
70-71. At tbis point lt shoold be
brought to light thai neither Mr.
Smltb nor 11\Y o( !he other school
olficiaJs disagreed with Mr.
Scott.. The citizens had made
enough of an investigation or the
stan:lards to know that Mr.
Scott's statement was a case or
utter ignorance, or complete COftoo
fidence in the Mason County
School System, It would have
taken a S\llerhuman effort by the
school administration to have
made this goal,
To insure that the school ad·
ministration pursued the subject
the citizens asked permission of
Mr. Smith to appoint a progress
committee to report progress on
obtaining North Central Accredidation to the people in the Wahama area.. Mr. James GUbert,
Mr. Lawrence Foreman, Mr.
Charles Yeager and Mr. Robert
Gurtis were appointed to the com-

Mr. and Mrs. Gene R. nice have found their move from Middleport to st. Petersburg, t1a.,. to be working out well.
'Ibelr elder son, David, has now been discharged from the air
force after three and a half years' service and was a sergeant at the
time of his discharge trom the Altus Air Force Base in Oklahoma.
Dave is now working in the sports department of Montgomery Ward
in St. Petersburg and next month will enter St. Petersburg Junior
College.
Bob, younger son, will graduate from Lakewood High School in
June and ls plaMing to enter the air force this summer.
The Rices' daughter, Debbie, is a first grader at Bay Vista
Grade School
The family is planning a visit to Meigs Count~' in AugusL
BRYAN AND SHEHRI MARSHALL, children or Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Marshall, victims of cystic fibrosis. have received 88 cards
since a story recently appeared about them in this newspaper.
The youngsters enjoy the cards tremendously. You may send
them to Hemlock Grove.
UP SOUTHERN HlLL SCHOOL WAY, students under the direc-

tion of Mrs. Lee Lee are digging into rehearsals for their anrual
variety show. The show is generally held on a Saturday night. However, this year it has been moved to a Friday. The date? May 9,
AND ROBERT MORRIS, PRINCIPAL of the Pomeroy Elementary School, is quite pleased with the response of the public Saturday when the school patrol condu cted t.ag day to raise the remaining
furxls needed for the trip to WashingtOn. The youngsters went "over

the top."
PHOTOGRAPHED I!'\ THE APRIL 11 issue of the Ohio Northern
General News - a paper dealing with telephone company employees
- is Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell who is business office s141ervisor of
the Pomeroy commercial departmenL Mrs. Mitchell was one of 80
women presented charms ror service to the telephone company,

Tiler• has been a revision by
mlttee. T~ey In turn appointed
Mr. Neil Hll)'maker as secre. the school administraUon aa to
the target date. llljas been movtary.
As of this data (10 months af- ed bock two year~ to !he school
·
ter the cmnmlttee was formed) year 72-73 from 70-71,
'The committee Is quite puzthe committee can report some
zled
as to hoW this date can be
progresS is being made:
realistic
olnco tbo school ad1. A contract has been awardministration
has not bothered to
ed for the conslructlCI'I of a sci·
once lab. This will be Installed do a lormal evaloatlon or devel·
where the commercial room Is op a formal plan to accomplish
now In the senior High. This this goo! or 7Z-73.
The committee will make every
contract does not include the lab
effort to do a progress evaJua..
equipment.
2. The board has approved the tlon every 4 months from now
installation or smoke barrier&amp; until Wahama Is \idmltted Into
tbe North Central AaSO&lt;tatlon.
In the senior High.
The Commillee would Uke to
However even with the 3devel·
opments above, the committee is take this opportUnity to publicly
not entirely satisfied with the eJII)ress our thanks and appreprogress being made, Mainly be· ciation to the teachlow staff at
cause of the followiJW 3 reasons, both tho Junior High and senior
which to the best oi our know- High ol Wahamll lor !he ftno job
ledge exlsL
1. There has been no formal
evaluation set down ln black and
white, except a prellmirary one
arrived at by the committee and
Mr. Foley at their initial meet·

they dld this year. We real lie
that Wahamll Is far from btlnB
an ldaol achool to teach inUIII we
are sincerely endoa\'01'1118 to gel
II l4)gl'&amp;ded to the point where a
teocher mlghl be prOUd to IIY
••t teach at Waham&amp;.U
, This is gdng to lake tho concerted efforts of the M a • on
CountY School Admlnlatratlon,
the facult,y, the student&amp; and tho
citizens of Wahama.
The commtllee would also Uko
to say to the teachers, we •ould
be quite happy and pleaaed to
have yoo back with ua again next
year.
James GObert
Robert Gorlla
Lawrence Foreman
Charles Yeager
Nell Haymaker, seer&amp;-

.

spent a weekend with hie moth-

' RY ADA SI.A.L'K
. er, Mrs. Ada
SYIIACliSE - ~oc, 5 lloberl

In attendance, reaches the ""'"
Dear Editor:
I am not able to get out much, saved, and infiuences them to consider the present relationship of
. no way to r;:o, or oo one to care
their
souls to God.
only the good Lord, and therl' are
.
Visitation
' changes attitudes,
plenty mort! just like me.
wms
people
to Chrlsl and His
Visitation strengthens t h c
home you vist, visiLation is the churchj brings joy and fellowship
or
most effecth·e wa,y to help people not brought in any other way.
People used to visit and still got
know they arc cared for person.their
work done the hardway,but
allyi keeps peOple more regular
no one has time anymore to even
call on the phone,
But every one will take time to
die. The formula for a church to
beCome a vanishing church Is to
abandon visiting, which most
(Contirni~ from page 11)
folks have done..
.-::olor photo from driver license.
Margaret ·Bailey
HB 64"1, Riffe, allows experxll·
Syracuse, Ohio
ture of gu tax and mOtor ve..
hlcle licen••.. !~es for lighting of
streets and ·tir"ldges,
.
A
liB 642, Ma~tlcs, provides that
need may bei" shown in number ·" -.! SB 275, Collins, requires city
of municipal jldges allowed ' lr- school boards to share in t h
8
respactl ve ol 'tatutory llmlta- cost or admlnistratlng civilaerv1 tions.
l· :
ic::e.
liB 643, ~~tics, proposes a
SB 276, Collins, sets educaWnew · section ori gerwinene.lis ot tlonal quaHfications for schoOl
' documents
".·of the truth of bus coordinators.
matters or tacL
SB 271, Bowen, exteOOs the
HB 644, Quilter, provides oev- hazard protection or uninsured
eran.-::e pay -(qr retiring teacb. m«orlsts insuran&lt;:e to Insured
ers,
·~~
motorists Ln certain ins-lances.
' l
Resolution Offered
HB 64&gt;, fack, eliminates
permisSiW ·
and motel tax.
SIR 18, calabrese, a II 0 w s
B s Passed
bingo for religious, charitable or
Am. JIB ·.:' _5, R. Hughes, re- OOJloJirofit organizatlons.
quires · 60-da'Y 1wait before re..
Senate Concurs 1n
submis; ioh ;£brL school district
House Amendment
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bourdary
prq;Jvsal.
Vote: ~2-J.
Am. Sub. SB 4, Weeks, limits
(Wilkowski), · '
the time within which assessHB 233, Cruze, increases in- ments may be taken for collec..
vestigative powers of local law t"
nd
JOn a
recO\Ier)' of municipal
· enforcement offic.ials. Vote: 93-- im'Ottle
taxes. Vote: 30...0.
(Ru!So),
SENATE
Bills Passed
Bills Introduced
SB 78, Maloney, provides for
,
SB 272, Tart, r.enuires
a hear- diversion or the excess collec..
at
the
termiratlon
or
the In- tion
dei~ini,le
ed of gasoline taxes to be
Conference Committee
(}ulck in Columbus, Friday, They
Appointed
were ac&lt;:ompanied home by their
confinemert of a Person ua to pay of 1964 bond iuue
high
I
SB 66, Ocasek, extends lend- daughter, Sharon Sue, who is emcommitted to a state mental in- or
ways, Vote: 22-10.
who is disqualified
Am. HB 17• Davidson, prohlb-o ing authority to water and sew- ploycd there. They also visited
1ts non-residents tram exercis- er districts. Committee: Malon- the Edward Chapman family In
probation.
SB 273, Taft, provides that ill!:, training or running dogs In
Oc k N1
Pickerin..ton.
is not included in bar~ Ohio.
An amendment adds ey, ase • ye.
•'6• Mrs. Doyle cabbs and
Mr. and
between employes aqt~t.._.'ll!te~r~\~Y ~ take,, care. of . ,
son 0 1 J
nd M
organization.
s
~~til~
kW~~
.• ·,, "' M:. ~.'. , • · . ... ~~ ·~·
' .., oy e,
...l ·• aoff, •Pafkeribu~g
J.~a....nd M~s.
';!.
jl;
.:1' Eriffl•·
- ?!
"'\ ,.,~ ' .. """'~
neddie
Boyd
11
SB 274, Collins, provides $3 ~ 30.~t bilLti)..O:
...,.. ·~ :::::~.:';,.··:;',:~;.,::-_,n~e·,~!',·...,tY•..,;,.' '~'were · Easter sunda.)· .:;ul-sts of
d
ed
r "'llllon BIJproprlatlon (Qr faclli:
SB 14&gt;, Holcomb, ellmlnates QuIcK QuIz t he1r
. parents, Mr. and Mrs. Witfor the Lawrence COunty
eca 1 requlr
on auto license
liam Eichinger. Mrs. &lt;iibbs and
College aOO Technical plates when counties charge $5
Q-Has the Nobel Peace son remained for a rewda)"s visit..
nstitut•e.
vehicle li.-::ense ree. Vote: 32-0.
Prize ever been awarded
po.9thumously?
.
Mrs. Lela Weir ard son,GregA--Only once, to Dag Hem- ory, of Marion were Easter weekmarskjold of Sweden in 1961 . end guests of her mother, Mrs.
Ada Slack. Accompanied by Mrs.
·
Q-Do the tides keep lime Slack,' they wer• Sunday dinner
· with the moon?
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harley E.

.

,,
:•.

.·.
·.·

Revlew

.

Ml''

''

''

j

.,

WE NAMED IT"'
BAKER'S

ANTHONY
Plumbil!g-Heating

,.

.'

SIIE CAU IT .uiW
SIIEWI.HII-1

or

auaan BHOP

Your Dopendeblo
Dooltr For

PLUMBING
AND

HEATING

BAKER

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Phono WY 2-2550

•

•

Announcing the first car of the '70s
.
at 1960 prices.
·

'

(You donl have to read tt all-but itS nicetokno.v itS all there.)
coro look Ukt othor ..,._ lui whon t11o
tJIII out thal-lng rotlly dlft-nlll Oft
the ..,., rumotw run wild. F.w Clrl Mv• cauud
u much
u Maw.-lck. Ford't new enlry In the
-H cor fltld rlult t11o oconomr lmpafllln prtco
•. , but la9l llltmln - · portormonco, Pl...,._
gor , _ ond lugWo'M- bemlllnltd will ~ obooit Movorlck. - · lor
... tint time, ...,. ........ lftiWiflo
-

11•

Racine

DESPITE MODERN MECHANIZATION, these German
mountain troops still honor mules as the most reliable
means of carrying equipment and supplies over rugged
terrain. Here, they desund a steep embankment to be
ferried across a river during a recent lteld exercise In
lhe Bavarian Alps. The troops have a mixed stock ol
238 mules and sma!l.grown Alpine Hantnger horses.

RIVER NEWS

!

GAUGES - Gallipolis, 12.0
and 18,4 running 21 feet &lt;i rollers; Ft. Pleasant, 24.57; Pomeroy-Mason, 21.77; Hinton, 1.72
stat.; Kanawha Falls, 4.60 rising; Charleston, 18.15 falling,
London, Marmet, and Winfield,
are oo the sUI .
BOAT MOVEMENTS:
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS - PhilIp lijJom down 10:25 p.m.; City
&lt;i st. Louis down ll :55 a.m.; Onward up 3:35 a.m.; Joseph E.
Walker down 3:40 a.m.; Luther
Herdman down 5:30 a.m.; Beckjonl doWn 6;50 a.m.; Semet up
7:5.5 a.m.
KANAWH.\ RIVER - Marmet,
Ouachita up 6:30a.m.; Winfield,
Fort Dearborn down 8:50 p.m.;
Mt. ~ up 12:35 a.m.; George
T. Prlc::e down 1:15 a.m.; Elgerclltr up 3 a.m.; Solva,y up 3:30
Lm.; W. H. ~aver, Jr. down
5 a.m.; 0. F. Slearer down 5:50a.m.
OIDO RIVER - Lo&lt;k 12, Expreaa down 12:55 a.m.; Lo&lt;k
13, OVEC down 11:50 p.m.; Lo&lt;k
14, Robert P. Tlboll up I :30
p.m.; S. M. Jenks up 4:20 p.
' Iii.; Peggy Downey up 8:10 p,
m.; Alton Zephyr up 2:05 a.m.;
bllua up 2:25 a.m.; Lock 15,
Jo!!boot up 2:25 a.m.; ·Ba¥w
~ up 4:15 a.m.; Foremost
liP ,,.4:15 a.m.; Lock 16, Sleet

Pioneer up 6 a.m.; Lock 17,
Robert G. West up 6:25 p.m.;
Polly R, up 3:40a.m.; st. Marys
down 4;30 a.m.: Belleville Locks,
Paul D. up 8:15 p.m.; A. V.
Criss up 5:20 a.m.; National
down 5:40 a.m.; Esso Arkansas
down 6:25 a.m.; Racine Locks,
Kathy R. up 2:05 p.m.; llllncan
Bruce down 1U:35 p.m.; Greenup Lo&lt;ks, II. E. Bowles down
4:10 p.m.; Ravenswood up 4:55
p.m.; Western down 5:45 p.m.;
Red Bird down 11:3&gt; p.m.; Jolm
Fox up 4:30a.m.; L. Fiore down
5:15 a.m.; Andrew P. Calhoun
up 5:50 a.m.; Allied-Ashland up
6:30 a.m.; Valley TranSjlOrter
up 6:50 a.m.; Steel Ranger down
7:25 a.m.; William Pitt down
8 a.m.; Meldahl Locks, Etna ~
Louisville down 4:10 p.m.; In·
nder up 5:20 p.m.; A. D. Ha.Y·
nes, D down 5:5&gt; p.m.; Bobby
Joe down 9:20 p.m.; Steel Clipper down 12:25 a.m.; James R.
IUnes down 4 a.m.i &amp;evenaon
up 6 a.m.
fo~mperor's

1AO
Octavius. Roman emperor
ol 29 B.C. , had a private zoo
t_ontaining 420 tigers, 260
lwns and 600 other African
animals, including cheetahs.
panthers. elephants and 36
t:rocOOiles.

Mr. and Mrs. LarryGrtmmand
son, Mark, spent two weeks with
his parents, ~r. and Mrs. Roder..
ick Grimm. They are moviJV to
Columbus where he has employ·
ment after beingdischar~ from
the service.
Mr. and Mrs. RobertRoushard
Nancy of Columbus were weekend
guests or her parents, Mr. arxl
Mrs. OWen Watson.
Mrs. Ray McDade of Letart
Falls was a weekend guest of her
son-ilr-law and daughter, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale McGraw aOO Gar&lt;:ia.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Martschand
BUly of Oneida, Ky., spent over
Easter weekend with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Fred cadle and Harold.
Clyde Cross of Colwnbus visited reladves here Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs.. Darcy Potter of
Brian, Ohio, spent Easter weekend wtth her mother, Mrs. Lovey
Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Brian Sim»soo
and children of Woodslleld spent
Easter with their _parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Chester Simpson and
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Badgley.
Mr. and Mrs. floyd Farra, Jr.
and children or Colwnbus spenl
the weekont wltb Mr. and Mrs.
Floyd Farra, Sr.
carol AM WUco:xen, student at
Ohio State, spent Easter with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs, Martin
Wilcoxen.
Nancy Yoat, student at R l o
Grarxle, spent Easter w.cation
wlth her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene YoaL
Mr. and Mrs. RoderlckGrlmm
vlslted recently with their son.
Mr. arxl Mrs. Laurence Grimm
ant daughter at Pala•kala.
Eastar guests or Mr. ant Mrs.
Jerry Powell were Mr. ani Mrs.
John lhle ol Morning Star, Mr.
and Mrs. Austin Wolfe and son of
Syracuoe, Mr. and Mrs. Ed !hie
ant family ant Mr. ant Mrs. Roger llill, locaL
Mr. and Mrs. Philip Roberts of
GaUlpolts spent Easter wltb hls
mother, Mrs. Francis Roberts.
Mrs. Roy Hendricks, son, Ronald acc&lt;l!IIPanied her gues~ Mrs.
Mike McGee and daughtar, JeJ&gt;o
nlo, to !heir home at Union Fur•
mce and spent aeveral days.

-lly.

a. Whr did rou build t11o Mowlfidt?
A. We think of Ma~~erick as another one ol Ford Motor
Company's answers to the gold drain . Now Ameri·
cans who want small car economy don't have to
send their U.S. dollars overseas.
did rtU coil DMovortcll?
A. You know whet a maverick is. A maverick breaks the
rules. A maverick is dilferent. Maverick plugs the big
gap between the compacts and the imports. 11 has a
wheelbase eight inches shorter than a '69 Falcon.
eight and one -half inches longer than a VW 1500.
Nothing else like it.

Q. Why

a. Wllr dill rou "'""' • a.1o olzo?
A. Maverick pinches pennies. not people. We gave
Maverick more leg room . More shoulder room. More
luggage room. Good example: the trent seat of a
Maverick offers you nine inches more shoulder room
than the front seat of the leading economy import
and tis trunk can handle all the luggage for a !amity
of four, including a set of golf clubs

Q.dol got lor tllo prtoo7
A. You get your money's wonh. A complete. built-torAmericans kind of car. Room . Hot styling. Colorkeyed Interiors. Even the heater is included. Some
economy car Interiors are about as luxurious as a
park bench . Not Maverick's. You get plush seats.
Cloth and vinyl upholstery wilh uniQue tartan plaid
cloth inserts. You also get safety features like smart
pull-outdoor handles. Strong safety door locks. Twospeed electric wipers. Safety belts. Head restraints.
Plus conveniences like armrests. coat hooks, lighted
heater controls ... important liltle things that add so
much to your driving comfort

Q.--.,._,

A- You can get ·em if you want 'em. You can order inte·
grai air conditioning. (It'&amp; buill in, not hung on.}

01her opllons include 3-speed automatic or tow-cost
semiautomatic transmission, and a hetty 200 CID Six.
But loti of people won't put an extra cent Into this

car. Because it's all there. A complete car all ready
to drive home.
Q.-ldndol ... mlllogl-lgol?
A. Tt1at depends on you as well as the car. You can get
as much as 25 or 26 miles per gallon-if you have an
educated toe and the right road conditions. If you
have a lead toot, or do a lot of city driving, you will
get a lol less. In tests by professional drivers at our
tracks, where we do our best to duplicate actual
driving conditions, Maverick averaged 22.5 mpg.
Q, - l d n d o i - - M I - hiVt?

A. Maverick's Six lets loose 105 galloping horses.
Thal"s 52 more than you get in the 4-cyllnder v-N
1500. Maverick can cover 417 feet in ten aeconds
from a standing stan. That means you can get up to
highway speed in a hurry. When you enter a 70 mph
turnpike, you won't fee\ like a retired bookkeeper
thrust into the middle of a pro loolball game.

11 H hn on tlgfol loch tongor who111110 lhlrl ...
Ieiding lonport, H. U I I - ond porlltollly7
A. Mav8nck can U·turn in a tighter circle (35.6 teet)
than the leading economy import {36.0 feet) . Maverick can slant through traffic like a halfback. It can
turn on a d1me and give you nihe cents change. If
you've been driving any other American car, you'll
find Maveric~·e neat size adds up to SV2 teet to any
parking space.

Q.

COn Drotroltrtlllrllulldl - • _ . , ctrlllll'l
IGugh IIIII long lllllftt?
A. It's not easy, but we did it. Maverick's unitized body
construction makes il light, strong and durable. ~t's
welded like a battleship. Rustprooling compound
goes Into deep crevices that never see the tight of
day. Then all that strength is covered with four coats
of paint -for lasting beauty. Result: one tough little
car thai's put together to stay together. (The aervlce
schedule in the Maverick owner's manual goes up to
108,000 miles or n!ne years; that ought to 1ell you
something abOut Its rugged durability.)

Q.

-?

Q.-]llllllnd
A.
is designed to be unusually easy to serMa~erick

vice. You're dealing with made· in-America parts and
6.000 easy-to-find Ford Dealers. Fast repairs and
easy replacements mean extra savings in both time
and money.

Ill_,

IIIII uponotro 1o
molnllln-roolly llllparl1
A. Delinltely. Maverick oil. changes come only every
6,000 miles end chassis lubrication once avery

Q. II -

•sC opa
. IC hUr C hWOmen
,
P
[
,.,,,~..,n 93r d
. Conrerence oc:ur,~~'·th~~~c:,.~~~~a~~:

36,000 miles. The leadmg economy import recom-

mends oil changes every 3,000 miles (twice u oflen
as Maverick) and chassis lubrication every 6,000
miles (six limes as often as Maverick!). Thole are
just a lew examples of the many ways Maverick
lessens incorwenience and lowers operallng coat.
Q,COnldoMJ _ _ _ _,
A. Yes, if you have an average amount of mechanical
abltily. The Maverick owner's manual contains 24
pages of detailed diagrams and easy-to-follow Instructions for roullne maintenance jobs you can do
yourself, If you wish. You'll lind it easy to change
spark plugs, replace Ignition points . . . plus many
other do-lt-yourself repairs and replacemenll.

·

"Dynamics and consequences
The Urban Situation For· Me
1 Am" • the theme'
18
tlle
conference
lor the 93rd
"lu•ual
·o
meeting or the ~lseoChurchwomen of the Diocese
Southern Ohio. Dr. Thomas
Bennett, Professor of Adrnlnand Director of Gradu~ies In George Wutlams
Downers Grove, m.,
lead the Conference.
than 400 clergy and lay
epr-eserltatlives (rom the 83 parp slhes in !he area wlll meet Frland Saturday, April 18 and
at the 91eraton-Columbu.s MQ..
Hotel. Attentlng from GalCounty will be Mrs. Thomas
Rev. and Mrs. A, II. Mae' and Mrs. Richard Mac.
ljlenzie,

0. COn •-11-llloolt? And haw oo1t lloolt?
A. This small car incorporate&amp; the telest advances In
engineering. M.averlck'a braket are as big as a etan·

dard c:ompacl's-deslgned to stop cars weighing
hundreds ot pounds more. Maverick givee you
weight ... power ... stability. Designed for Ameri·
can driving conditions.

..··

A. Here's where Maverick's longer, wider stance really
pays ofl. You get e smoother. quieter ride. Mav·
erick's tight, strong, unitized body helps eliminate
squeaks and ranles. Special jnaulatlon blocks out
road noise. The people who brought you a Ford that
was quieter than a Rolls-Royce now bring you a
small car that dOesn't sound like a powsr mower.
Q.ll- .. -

. . In tlloflct ....

""""'"'....

Southern Ohlo wUI close !he confe r 011 ce and celebrate H o 1 y
c
ni
ommu on Saturday noon In
Trl0 I\Y ~lscopal ChUrch.

..

.~

'' '

-II

'· '
'~'.

Jotmsonandchildreno(WolrPen
R"::;. and Mrs. Franklin llendrh
and daughter, Barbara, Dana and
Suzanne H nd ·
t Sund
·
e r1x spen
a)·
witll Mrs. Walter Smith or llartlord

GIVE A BULOVA
and any occasion
becomes a
special event

SHIRT
FINISHING

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9 - Out At 5
Un

O~o~r

Free Parking Lat

obi~ISon's
216 E. 2nd, P0t11-y

90 Mill S1,, Middleport

128 MILL ST.-MIDDLEPORT-VALUES FOR APR. 17-18-19-

fa ous Brands At Discount Pr
DISCOUNT VALUES I

CIRCLE-STITCHED, PADDED
"FAMOUS MAl D"

BRASSIERES
nr~;-,;,,:,:;: VALUES I

8" x
PLASTIC FRAMED
OILETIE REPRODUCTION

WALL PICTURES
Authentic reproduction of master
pictures 1 suitable for hanging in any
room in the home.

Jumbo si1e 1 assorted decorator col·
ors, warranted not to crack or break

SALE!

BIG ASSORTMENT
USEFUL HOUSEHOLD

PLASTICS

THURS., FRIDAY
SATURDAY

Soap dishes 1 salad bowls, cups, 6"
covered refrigerator bowl 5 and
drainers.

Your
Choice

.
A. Sk&gt;wer depreciation Is one money-in-tht·pocket
ad·

. Onlr

V_!lnt~e.

Maverick's 1970 model designation means
It keeps lt8 trade-in value higher, longer. (Maverick
is built to be a good Investment from the minute you
buy it to the minute you salllt.)
Better come taka a look at this one. You'll find 11
wh"re the action is .. . right in there with other great
Ford values like specially equipped Ford Qalula
500's ... Fairlenes ... Musllngs and Faicona.

.. '

You'll find them at your Ford Oeater'a . .. the ptQ
you've got to go to see wha1'1 going an.
Foron--t/11--olllloFonl Mo•trldt. send $1.00 to Ma•orlck, P.O.
Box 5397, Dtpertmen1 &lt;4:,0 Dttroll, Michigan
48211 . j0ffin endt July 31, 1969.t

..'

'

-.

...' '

Mrs. Wynne M, Silbernagel,
tre•lclent IJf the ExeouUve Boord
the ~lscopal Churehwomenof
Dloceoe of !bulhern Ohio,
preside. M~s. Paul T. Key,
Jcotum1bus Regional Chairman, Ia
charge of all arrangement,,
Dr. BeMett was born ln West
and received hlo B, A.
degree from Wef! VIrginia University. He la!er received his
Ph. D. from lhe Unl~ersit,y ()(
In !he History and So()( Rellgloo and Jointly
In Soelll Work .. AdmlnPrlor to 'coming 1o
Wllllamo College, he Wll

Unlversit,y.
Addttlooal acailemle exl&gt;ertincludea that of Pi'ofessor
Phllosot&gt;h.Y •t WlllaniettO Unl\Salem,
Dean· of
Faeu~ ()( ·K~l . Coll~,
1111.; and Proft'""" ()(
aU'alrmont state CoiW, Va.
Bennett Is

·ore:i

The J)lac?e you've got to go to
•

with Mrs, lte.,.a Main, daughter, Mr1i.. tiara La~enderandlilllerl:.. ,
.Janie·, and ttQI'I, Tony.
Linde anV Mar,)', and other rela•
, . ··
· Mr. and Mn• .James Lavender ' Uves.:
11
and children o!S.ulk Villab.. ,lll.,
Ills• Frollkle Mumaw Is ill at
Npent a week with his mother, her home.

EACH

•

DISCOUNT VALUES!

DISCOUNT VALUES!

WIDE ASSORTMENT
NEW 1969 SPRING

9-CUP AUTOMATIC
MIRRO ELECTRIC

Dress Prints

PERCOLATORS

Nine cup capacity witti automatic
brew control, makes your coffee
mild, regular or strong.

LUOTE

HOUSE PAINT
•Contains its own primer
11.Last.s longer than ever, befq.,r e
•C.Iean tools with 10op find ·wciter

•Choie• of coloro. R111- 7.95 Cal.

lssc~~~.:Prolessor of Behavioral
at George Waaltlng.

•

50 minutes later each day
. on the previ·
d 1
thand.theyThdid
Ous
Y·
ts
correspon
th
•
d ·1 s o
e moons average a1~ re·
tardallon or Its dally · elay
· nsmg.
· · '
m

'""

Q. _ _ _ _ ,

end "iul his parents, Mr. ancl
Mrs. CllnLOn Piertt: a..S Tina.
Mr. and Mrs. llerbert l'arker
and Mts. Helen Dame"ood spent
Sunday with Mrs, Edm Summet·
field or Lo~ llottom It D.
Mrs, Mlchael t:antrell ((;onnie
Leadingham) spent the weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Vlntoo Burnett of !:alltpollo. Mr.
Cantrell Is servill{l with the United States Air l··orce in Greenland.
Mr. and Mrs, Dale Hubbard of
Suitland, Md,, were weekend visitor s of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Edison Hubbard arxl other
relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernie Burke and
son, Chris, or Bucyrus, spent sevt~ra1 da,ys wiU1 Mr. arxt Mrs. Donald llubbard and daughter, Don.
na,
Mr. and Mrs, Willis Loadingham and daughters spentSa.turda.!-·
in Franklin Furnace where they
vislted his mother, Mrs. Rosa
Leadingham, and in Portsmouth

·1 .

. u.. _,

·: FORD
-

~,.ck.

Mr. aflil• Mro. Jam.. I~ lla,yman and &amp;on, James, Dayton,
were weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. llobertllyseli.
Mrs. Mar)' Flanagan is conI! ned to lloher Hospital with a
broken hlp which she received
in a tall at her home.
Mr. and Mn. William Brown
spent a week with their daughter, Mrs, Dorothy Jenkl, LouIsa, Ky.
Mr. Blll Hysell of Columbus
spent a rew days with his moth·
cr, Mrs. Oma llysell, and gran::l·
mother, Mrs. Mae Cowie.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mllls of
New Brighton, Pa. were Wl."ekend
guests or her mother, Mrs. Oma
Winebrenner. Mrs. WinebreMer
returned home with them for a
three weeks visit with her children there.
Bruce Cottrill was an overnight guest of Mr. and Mrs. Ed·
ward Chapman and Eddie J r, or
Pickerington.
Mrs. llalph Noble of Charleston
spent a weekend with her daughter ar¥1 son-In-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Archie Lee.
Mrs. M,yla Hodson and ~ec. 5
Robert E Hodson acconvanled
by her sister, M;s. Vella Gerlach, Letart, W. Va. 1 visited ro-cently with Mrs. Christina Marshall and family and Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Jludson andfamllyoCParb, Pa.; Mrs. Cordia Howell and
ramlly and Mrs. Nettle llawk,
Wellsville; Mrs. Estella Rector
and Mr. and Mrs. O'Dell Rector
and ramily and Mr. arxlMrs.Delbert Rector, Carrolton.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Harden
and son, Erie, or Marion, were
weekerd guests of his parents,
:bb~~ Mrs. Robert llarden and

E. Hudson has re-enlisted In the
\l, S. Army and has .:one to i•'otl
Dlx, N. J., from where he will go
lo (lermany for a tour of duty. ne
spenl a Jeave here with his grarxl·
mother, Mrs. M)tla lhxlson, and
his parents, Mro ar¥1 Mrs. Wll~
!lam llos&lt;har ant romily or Letart FaJls.
Mrs. Laura Leithelt hati returned La her home here alter
sperding the winter with her
daughter and son-in--law, Mr. and
Mrs, liarold Amspoker, of ~
lumbus, ~ught.er ard AOn-in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Jovan and
family of Parma, and daughter,
Kathryn Peters, Arcadia. Mrs.
Jovan accompanied her home and
spent the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Wllltam Etch·
Inger and son, John, spent a Sunday with thelr daughters arxl sonsin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Gibbs
and son and Mr. and Mrs. Freddie Boyd, Parkersburg.
Marie Houdaahell of Athens spent a weekenl with her
parents, Mr. aiKI Mrs. William
HoudashelL
Mr. and Mrs, Andras Turnbull ol Lancaster visited Mr.
and Mrs. Orville Crooks ant
other relatives,
Mr. and Mrs. James R. White
al'lll daughter, Mary Beth, or Dun.
bar, W. Va., called on his mother, Mrs. Agnes White, local,
and her mother, Mrs. Rose
Schwarz, Mason, W. Va.
Mrs. Helen Bramner of Pittsburgh, Pa., spent a week with
her mother, Mrs. Mae Cowie
and sister, Oma Hysell. .
Mr. Thomas Quick spent a
recent weekend with hls father,
Mr . .James S, Quick, and other
relatives.
Mr. James Harden of Washlngton, D. C., spent a weekerxl
Mr. and Mrs. John Crooks and
with his parents, Mr. and Mfs. daughters of Columbus spent a
Robert Harden, am sister, Deb- weekend with his parents, Mr.
bie.
and Mrs, Onille l:rooks and othMrs. fdarie Lawrence aOO Mrs. er relatives.
Ma 1
Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Mills ol
tt e Lawrence of ~Iller visIted Mr. and Mrs. Harry Potts. Columbus visited with Mrs, Oma
Mr ''n•ene Slack orS&amp;ndl ·tt
fly sell and Mrs. MaE" ('...... ie.
, c."'')
'VI c
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Cu~-:-ill
visited brieflJ with Mrs. Thomas

.~

tary

lng.

2. There has been no format
plan set down In black arxl white.
3. There has been no money
allotted ror the prole&lt;L
There has been 3 meetings
held between Mr. Foley and the
committee.

'

Mr. and Mrs, Franklin lmtJod.
en and children were Eaatcr Sunday guests or her parents, Mr.
ant Mrs, llobert Worth or llartrord.
Myla lludson, accompanied by
Mrs. William lloschar, son, Hobert, and daughter, Lynn, or Letart
Falls to Charleston to· attend a
wrestling match.
Mrs. Lily Duffy is a patient at
Veterans Memorial flospital.
Mr. and Mrs. .Jerry .John~:~on
or McConnelsville were Easter
Guests or her father, the llev. L.
II, stebbins, and daughter, candlce.
,JohMY Eichinger spent a week
end with Denzil Wiggens ofParkersburg.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Davis and
daughter, Lisa, t:olumbus, spent
the weekend with her parents, Mr.
ard Mrs. Carroll Neigler and
daughters.
Edward Iloudashelt of Cleveland spent Easter weekend with
his parents, Mr. aOO Mrs. William Uoodashelt..
Mr. and Mrs. ROOert Parker
and son, Bobby, and daughter,
Kelli, or Marietta were saturday
night guests of his parents, Mr.
and Mrs, Herbert Parker.
Mr. and Mrs. FrankltnHend·
riz, Mrs. Clinton Pierce and
Tina, Dana Hendrix, and Bruce
Teaford were inWheeli~, W. Va.
on business Friday.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Pierce
aOO daughter and son of Elyria
;·;~!',. hP.re fnr thP l''!11c;ler week.

'

··8~~,
''

llLLOI

Jones Boy's big assortment of Print•
ed Cotton Fabrics in new spring
patterns ond colors.

99
each

•

MARVELITE PLASTIC

. pc. Graduated Sizes

JCE CUBE
YS

Plastic Mixing
BOWL SETS..,

·s·a·c
~~··'~· ..
.

-

·.

'

'

�'

'

.... '
10 - Tile Dally Sonllaol, Ml4di_....,OIIIIIrll!', 0., AprU

1~,

{:.'.

&lt;:

1969

:~ ~1 .- The Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0., AprU 16, 1969

•

ax1
our
or on

rPproc4ia.l $chpol· €risis Sta-tewide Education Proble·m
•

~ taclni a financial !amine whlc~ .eaorts by catholics and tl!o'

ro ecion

; tor tholr ochaola. Em-ollment In
: parochial ochao11 COOillnues to
; decline lleadll)' beciUIO of fl.

·,,

: nanclal burdeno, and lniiQ' ed-

: ueatoro In lho otate bollove
: scboola mull clooe, If the Ill
: dollar . Ia not ahared. Tbll Ia

Why are smart folks over 65 now haatenina to Jl'rotect
themselves with the Presidential E:r.tra Caah Plan in
addition to what Medicare will do for them!
Even thoUI(h Medicare il a rreat boon .to folkl over 66,
ll will not, of coul'IO, paJ all the billa that qulcldy pile up
u a reault of illness or accident. ·
llegordl•a af yout0f18,
you still need addlt'- ,.oltlo prot...lon.
we have deairned this plan .. the im~rtant addition to
whatever Ia paid by Medicare - or health inauranee JOU
have In anr other companies. Remember, all cheeks
wil be aent directl7 to 7ou (not to the doctor or hoapital),
to give 70u that ••extra" help jult when you need it most.
Ute the tax-free cash any way !'OU Jee ftt. And JOU will
be glad to know the checks will be bllf' onealln addition to
what ia paid by Medicare, Preaident1al pay• you $70.00 a
week tor ftrst 13 weeka, and a full $100.00 weekly while
hospitalized thereafter , . , for an additional 91 weeks, It
necessary! You can r~ec~ive: 111 much at 110,010.00 /or
e:t~cla nno illn111 or injK'l' w,\en lw1pitt~lWed I

.• • Poya you $100.00-o·w•l&lt; tox..free coah
wlteftever rou aN llosplraflzed.
What a bleaaing it ia when you know you have an e:r.tra UOO.OO

cash coming in every week-begin11ing the ver:v ftrat day you
enter the hospital.
Now, Presidential's economy plan enablea you to enjoy this
protection at once. Because it wlll NOT coat you 120.00. It will
NOT coat you $10.00- or even $6.00. Your apeeiallow price is
juet 25¢ for the first month's coverage for 7our entire family.
Then continue at reeular low Preaidential rates.
Tlte added protectl011 you NffDI
All benefits of this Presidential $100.00-A-WEEK Hospital
Plan are paid directly to you, in tax.free caah, 1n addition to
whatever you may receive from your insurance with any other
company! Spend the money as you see fit - for hospital or
doctor bille, mortgage payments - or an7 neceaeary but costly
extras not fully covered by uatu:U hospital policies.
Everything coste more these da71 (n.eed we tell you!) and
hospital ~are is certainly- no exception! While 7 out of 8 Ameri·
cans have BOrne lto1pita.l inaurame, mo.t han found it doea n(lt
cover all bills that pile up when 1icknes1 or accident strikes.
That'• why Preaidential developed low-coat Extra Cuh
tion that helps you pay hoapital coata or other expenae1
You get your $100.00 per week ·-TAX FREE -from :vour
ftrat day in the hoapital, and aa long as you are confined there1
even for Zyean. if neceuary. AM, when you and your jn11are.a
apouae are hoapitalized at tlt.e tatu time for an «etidntal itti•'11, Presidential p&amp;JI out an EXTRAORDINARY DOUBLE
CASH BENEFIT. Y010 receiYO not '100.00, but ,200.00 a
week. Your tpoute reeelvea not $100.00, but $200.00 a week.
That'a$400.00 in all, iw. CG.IIa psrment. to )'tm . eve,., wee~k while
you both remain in the hospital ... even for as lonr u 2 whole
yeara!

rrotec-

for older folio-greater prot•ctfan than yo•
ever would ltan tltougltt paulblel
Right now, would advancing age prevent :vou !rom pttlnr
hoepital inaurance, or income protection with another eom·
pany? Or It you ~ould get a policy el~ewhere, would J0\1 have to

PAYS illness,
up to $10.400.00 CASH lor esch accident or
startins the very first day in the ho•
pita I.
PAYS atup tothe$10,010.00
CAS~I 11 you're 65 or overrate of $70.00 A WEEK lor first 13

weeks, and a full $100.00 weekly while you remain in the hospital thereafter, (for 91 more
weeks if necessary) ... in addition to wh.tever
Mnefits you rec11ve from MediCIIll.
IAVS up to $41.600.00 CASH when both hulband
ft I
and wife are hospitalized at aame time for ac·
cidental Injury, for as tong aa both remeln In
the hospital-lit the rate of $400.00 A WEEK.
ftAVS up to $2,00~.00 CASH lor complete accidental
r"l\ I
loss of limbs or eyesight
ftAVS $100.00-A·WEEK CASH lor each presnoncy
rft I
requirina:a ho1pitatstay, Mien both husband
and wife are insured for the entire pregnancy
and have Coverage for Children and Maternity
Benefits.
up to $6,240.00 at the rate of $60.00 A VIEEK
when a child soes to the hospital for any acti·
dent or illness (when COverage for Chlldr~m
has been added to the basic plan).
age limlt- no medical examination required
- no salesman will call.

P

PAYS

NO

maf

pay a bii premium for it? Your 11Jife saver" could be thla
wonderful Preaidentlal Extra Cash Plan- because Presidential
welcomes folks o! all agea inOO it1 Plan. Even i1 you're 6&amp; or
over, even if_~u're OVER 100- when you go to the hospital
you collect flO.OO a week fo1• 13 weeki and a full $100.00
weekly while you remain in the hospital afterwards ..• even
for u long u 2 years!
We con ..,., co.,..l your policy I
And you can COUftt on Presidential'• wonderful protection
no matter how old you get or how many timet you collect frOm
u1. It is written into your policy that we cannot cancel your
protection after rou've made a lot of claims, or become old-or
both. It lo GUARANTEED RENEWABLE FOR LIFE I
And that•s not all. Suppoae you have a rrowtna family-thla
special Preaid•ntial Plan (HP 85L.S68) •. .

••• Poya.l!!!!!_OO.OO-o·-• caah
lilifiriilty hnefltal

Cash Hospital Plan
MR.

NA MEMISS
MRS .

.--- - --..=-- - - --...:.:==.-------.-=--_;·
Mkldlt lnUitl
First

ADDRESS
StrHt or fiD

CITY
DATE OF BIRTH
Month

•••

9-731-9-61

#

STATE --~---- ZIP· _ _ __
AG t.__ _ _ _ SEX Male 0 Female 0
Year

OCCUPATION __________________~----~--------------------list all dependents to be covered under this Plan: {DO NOT include nante the! appears abOve. Use separate sheet if nat:essa;y.)
RELATIONSHIF

SEX

DATE OF BIRTH
MONTH DAY
YEAR

Medical Costs Skyrocketing!

AGE

I
2
3

costa.

It woold co,a!, 1axJ&gt;01ero
.. an
·,
'
added $230 million per year In
IIOiqlUbllc a c h o 0 l operating
B,y EDWARD V. DIPIETRO , costs.
, ')
COLUMBUS (IJPI)-11 Ol!lo's · · The posslbllltj; Is not tar382,000 C&amp;lhollc school 1tudenta fot&lt;hed. The financial dilemma
were to be lll&gt;oorbed Into plbllc o1 the Catholic school systemo
achools tomorroW, the .. - could create such a coodltlon
would be faced with a •764 mU- within a decade.

ete4 nwrnbll'l of your flmi!Y • n tbQ lrt h:o~P~b!you collect c11111 even If )'OU'rt In tiM hOIJPIUII for only one dayl

I.-=

Z.do 1 -l2.tltlOAIO far aoclda:olll
We PlY JOU $l,OOO.lM)ertn Cllh tar compllltt tOCII...... loti ol

'"'-?:' 1nd $2.0IXI.OO utrl
lrt.::'~ =:-=-~ ~ ~r.:!,O:,:et'eoc::

ane htnd or on1 foot or IIPt of

H lotW _,.._llllllo-llftllll op'nl

You diU collect J'!IUF IJDOAR»+wed utrl CHili 10 the lui mol·
mum of tJ0.400.00. You ntH only_to' htv• ,.....,... fuU nonntl
acttv!Uel for jUif: JIO dlr.-ttwln If fOU Itt hotDitlllzH for the

lndu: 1957-119 ·100

.,.ln.
..,"*''..,.lellbl-llolp

............'! .
You ctrttlnlr dot w. arw,,. Pl:r pl!l the ful ttoa.oa • ,..._ .
ell tflt WIJ to ttt. m1urtmum
110.400.00 onh. And even If
rour billa tdd up 1o jutt p.rt of thlt amount. ~ ttfll
IIWf')l dolltr of~~~ .We Cllll't-ttr·frttl Th•t'• whr thll pol
•
•n ut,.. c,.ll Cll•n. It'• psrftctly pot"blt uftdtr thl1 tn
for ,..,u to come out of tM holpl\lll Wffh edre dollsN you an
u• fot bills. rHt, or •nr.hlnl tiM. And If ,ou •lrMilr havt
some ht•lth or ~I nau,..,u-..11 lht Htttr for you . ...
csuu we Plr you ttt~r. on top of whllt t~ PlY yau I Oft
t~ or 111.11 CroU. Mstqr ~ltlll~:&lt;~l, W~trkmtn'l COmPfi'IHtlon, or

!i:

wMttver lnlursnc. pOIIciP ~ hiVt with other co.,.,.nttat

,.,.,._

-

far ..,

cllll4hn. ""'' And ••• far

You coll.ct MO.OO..-wttk CIISh a~mt )'0\lr ehlld PH 10 thl

hotlpltsl, whtln

eov. ..... for ChUdrtn Ia lddtd to bale plan. A

·msldmum of 11.240.00 uctt tim• tnr dt,.ndtnt. unmtrrild
child (qta l month throulh 18 fltrl old) Ia In thll ha:IPfbl.
tor alclln.n Of' ln)tlrf. And It you hsv. t lfQWII'II flmllr-•
soon .. your newborn child'• on. month olcf, tte 10a ll -.....
-lllftomlflc•lly .. • 1t no addltlonlf coat to )IOU.

11W.
01
I. ~!'.:n~•::h'J~o:·r:!'~:.n~!'/C:.f.
..,.,0o110"",'!11tn
CweriP for Chlklrtn 1nd Mlter'nlly lensflts IN added to tht

bealc plsn. You coiJtot msldmum enh btntfttl of 110.400.00for p,..,..ncy, childbirth or miK~rrl... thlt NSuftl fn I hoto
pttll ttar. (Both perentt have to H tnrollect In thl1 plsn for
tnll,. prwJI'IInCJ period.)

....

f.Alo- - I mttlll oaltocl,l t - . 110.100.00 ...
, aaftiUIItaasa-.oor

ilo'·'

......, '"""' '"" 1\tmemtt.r,

we .,.r ...., not just for "u, but for
mtmbtr or )'Our ftmilr. So r rou or rour tpoUII
• ... ~tD~ptt~;llud mort thtn onot , •. or evsn 1:tot11 of _rou mo,.

•,

.. ....

:

~

·'· :., ... .

I I

.'

5

0 Cllat:k here if you want Coverap lor·your Children.
0 Chtclt ltert if you want Coveraae lor your dtndran and llll.lrni~J Benefill.

Elwell and 'Fither Mc·

resontative for the catholic
Cm.ference, an aaeney formed
to oeeh Increased stale aid,
said enrollment In Catholic
schools decreased by 24,000 students during the past two
years. He attrllllted one cause
o1 the decline to higher tuition
rates, which the schOols have
increased to meet rising costs.
"If the present rate oC de-

eline contblue1," YOII1f tald, '
"by the 1971.?2 ochool .,.., , .
MJuld have 1 cinp In 1111'011.
ment ol 70,000, Tbla alcile lit
!oday'o costs would COlt 1111
otate of Ohio $40 mlUlori 11- '
to 8CNcate these NUJ. Ctthollc
school conotructlon hal ~­
aboUt reached a standstill.
"U' Cathollc scmola clole,''
he said, "lt would cost ~­
ers in Ohio about $230 mWlm
in IIOiqlUblle school operltfna
costs. That's )1st the Initial
cost. Coolllroctlon costs oC aow
schools would run $2,000 per
pupU, II the Ill dollar Ia DDt
shared, C&amp;thollc achoolo wiU
just have to elose.,.
NEXT: State aid

Hogg &amp; Zuspan In Mason, Has

New Shipments
Ready For You!
Complite Line

FRA lNG
LU BER

.~ ~ .'' .I

.

DOORS-WINDOWS
PLYWOOD-PANELING

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

773·5554

We Deliver

MASON

' .

' I-'

· tvef)' ~l'ld

thlln onct~ •.. or If • child
could end up coUsetin1
wholo ......

tttt

tick 6r hll an sccldlnt-wou

120BJOD.oo or morel And thtt't 1'101: tht

-ldontlal

I VOl . . -

.... 10 E X T -

•••

NAOY DOUILE-CASH lEN IT. H ;ou ond ,.., ....... ·
sre botflln an socldent tnd_ao to Ult ltol.oltal.t tiM urne tlmt
• • • PrnldenUtl ,.,.. ,au MOO.OO .......k tlx frM uiiL Tills
amount It paid fOr 11 10111 II Mth of )'OU r.rnlln In thl ltOIDital.
Even for 2 rur"ll 'lou rteilvt up _to • mu.lrNIM of f4l,IOO".ooto ,.,. tor Cloctot tnd holplhl blllt .,d otiMr expti'IIH I'Mf.lltlnl from ant tccldetlt slolltJ Wt hoptlllntntl 1nd IOGhltnts
don't etrtlce ""r home-but 1ttould 10methlrw h.,.,, Isn't 1
rMUurtnc to knOw lQU'N so well prolect4cl1' .

71tt N• VOlt Tl-., lM.I, JHJ

Gori. ftpna n ..al your pnaent hlaltlt prolecllon ••• D1aJ
no lonpr prolect you aralnat todQ"a riiJini medleal.-l
Don't 1u.. your loved OJIU dofenoel-1 Aet at ones to add

covonae that proridu to a mulmum of UO,COO.OO haalth
pn~leetlonfor on! 26ftor theftnt mootbfor mtlrdamUJ.

a. en,....,..
ow--•fttoanrWIJI,._I
VHI SPtncl tM monsy any WQ JOu CtiOoaL U.. It to •

.rou

t . _ l _ _ ..... _ , . . _ _

Certtlnlr 'MOTI fvff)' doll1r wt lend you fi100S tb.free.
10. All! I - , _ .. ...,-~- .......... ...,

AT

In ..............,. ~~~·-tuliJ_.,p

Moire JI'DUf' declolon -•fully.

Think how colllJ 1 hospital conftnament will be. lnwrine PIJ·
tnr for lhote lndlopeno&amp;ble doetor, aurrtcal and nuralllf HrY·
ieee that are not covered by _your prtaent lnl\ll&amp;nc:e.
Would rou be able le at!ord the qulst and prlncy of a
printe room and a private 'ilUne, aho\lld you 10 deatrtf Or a ·
telephone to keep in toueb with loved onH! Or tha -tal of 1
TV oet 1e llelp pua tltelonelr houral Who W011ld paJrour blUo
that keep on eomJna in at hornet Many folk1 h&amp;ve.lolt tllelr
life uvinga. their ean, eva. their home~ tr"Jin« to tneet tueb
expenHL And no one bows wbQM tarn It will be nut.
W/w you must CICf ltefon file....,. ahown on y -

,..,_,

clodor, and nul'llf!l biiiB. U11 It te .-, for rent. fOOd.
clothln• Or put H In tht tiiWik to NpiiCI any . . . _ tptnt
11ur1nc JOUI hoiCittlllatlott. All uatt oomtt .,.,.,..- to rou
(not to iloctor or holpittl unteH you requtlt It) 10
111M
deddt flow It 11 to bl .,.,U
.
ho~DftJI.

Y•, _rou INI AI P"'mlurrtllhtt GOitll dH tftlr ~ ~
hi IMI.Ied-arw In thli hotplt;tl jUil ~
...a or moN ••• do not "'" to M tNidl Ytt. '"" If wou .,.
to whOm tht bale: POilcr

u.

In for monthl, a ,_..r, or lonprt 'W. PlY all pntmlumt for JOU.
and for •H cove;ect nttmiMra or )'OUr tamnr, tao~lle JIMI
hotpftsllztd. You trtn't u~ to Plr
eHfltr.

,.,.,,n

ut

lnreflmHt•Appllcotloa-f•ll a , _ day• from today.
Whr do .,, ctve you aa llctle Ume to applJ tor your lnouranea
policr-only a few daJd Beeau11 we muat receive your EnroDmeni-Appllcatlon lha aame time as alllha otbera In order to
paeo on lo JOU tlta aavlnp that como from proeoulllf ID&amp;IIJ

EIGS COUNTY'S NO. 1 DEALER

1970FORD

•.
...•

trot

"

polloleo at one time.
·
We matl rou the poliq 11 eoon 11 " ' receive yov.r enroJImonl !onn. When the pelieJ orriYOo,·oxamme It In the pri•acr
of your own home. TU:e all the time you need. It'• a verr short
document, and you'll be pleuan.tly •urprilld to dt.oover tUN
to NO FINE PRINT. Thao - ahow It, I! rou wlah, to aomtODI
you trust. PerbaPJyour lawyer, aceoontant. or doetoi. Better
atill - 1how It to your own insurance maa. ••• nen ~ ht
may very well be workllllt' for anolhar companrl 11 bO Is a
poroonal frland, he hao your beat lnlensta In miDcL So rou
ean believa blm whan he telil you there Ia no helter berfoln
anUable ansrwhere- at 8llJ price!

a

kind of cu.

COME TO KEITH GOBLE FORD APRIL 17 TO SEE THE NEW 1970 MAVERICK
DISPLAYED IN THEIR NEWLY REMODELED SHOW ROOM:

Money·badr ..,.,...,.. "' ca• you clttt,.. Jl'- """"·

Standard power team features a 3-speed, fully synchronized manual transmission, with e
170-cu. ln. Six that doesn't sound like a power mower. You get ample zip for any size trip,
extra margin for safe passing when nee4t4.

Even after rou mall Jour Enrollment-Applleatiollbolow...after you eUoJDlne tlte policy In JOUr own homO and Wit: I&amp; onr
wllh •n1one yoa wllh ••••.,.. after all thll you an still fno to
return lhe policy~ wltbln 15 dayo and JOUr Ql!llrlor wiU be . .
funded at onea. There wiD be no oblllatlon wb&amp;-r.
MeanwbUe! all durillll tha 15 dar• you are makln1: up ,.....
mind - you' I bo prolecled bJ f100.01.l-A· WEEK .elltra Cull
bol!eilte jult ao I! you had already aald "YI•·" That'• rltlht, J11!1
wUI be covered alllbla dma for anr accident or Ulnaao wlilcb
pull you in the hospital, enn I! you ftnalll' doclda lo return the
peliey.
Howner, after rou've 1H111tbe policy for :vouneU rou. wlD
a~:~relr &amp;rre£ that thlll1 • tremendOUJ value lllld.:rou11wllllt to
eontlnue lhla '100.00-A-WEII!K caah proleellon.

BUILt RIGHTI .. SIZED RIGHTI .. PRICED RIGHT'!

Hill All THI WONDfiiUi LOW UTIS
Tha followlllf rato ehatt lll&gt;awa bow littil II costa after tho
ftnt month to e..,... JOurHlf, JOur opowt, and any ..tall
dependeota. Each parson mutt tio 16 yeara old or ooer, and
PIJI (par peraoa) lho rate akown for bta or har
All 11.Enrollment
MonllhlJ..IP.i!ri!!."m
1&amp;-44 •....... .... • . •• .......

•

41549 ......... .. .......... ..

4

Bishop

) c

""'' lllnttl you btltn o collect •II over

s. Do ~ ~ ... -

community and the state, we

.;

1.-wll .., ..... lilY ... t ....... llolplllll
tlOG.OG PI' wtek.,.to thi full m1111mum ~ $10~.00 - • -(11
·
you're CW~r fl. you collect. to • mutmum of 1 010.00
beneftta on top of 1111 Medlotrt Hn.rHe. f7
1~
first 1!1 wtb end $100.00 WHid)l wtlllt )'OU rem11n
n•
uoull)l' ho.,..illtcl tfttrwlnll, tor • m1xlmum of Ill allldltionlf
...uo You collect ct~h ~ Jult for rourttlf, but f!~-~u, ...
-·

'*'"

and l!llementaey schools are op.
. orating at a deficit. For some,
the otluatlon Is serious and the
. outlook gloomy.
"Bordorllne Financing"
"About three.trurtha of our
1 c h o o I s are borderline fl.
nanclng," said Mmsl11n0r Rlchard McHale, superintendent ~
schools In the Cleveland C&amp;th-

ol 38

hlsh schools In the diocese have will have to make a aubatantlal Hale aald enrollments have
an operating dollclt ol more cutback, •• he said. "The ftnt dWindled ~ause of lack of
than $1 mllllm. This Is seri- major cutback should come !undo with which to build new
during the 1970·71 school year. schools or expand existing ones,
ous."
Father McHale aald the dio- Wo canoot malntaln the school causing a limiting of cla11
cese has coooolldaled aome of system at its present size."
sizes, and a dearth· ot money to
Bishop Clarence E. Elwell of attract teachers.
Its scbools to ease the financial
the Columbus Diocese, where
burden.
David Young, leglolallve re~

.-

Ttll pov 11ow ,.,...,lofoiXTIA illUH'•HOJm.U NAN
glvoo pov tllo ;r.toclleol yoil nttcl- -lif•tl, low -

4.lfl,_,.. _ _

Malll' Catholic blsh schools olic dlneese. "About 24

.

THISE 19 QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

(SIIftl: U.S. IQt. If ..... UlciiiOil l Wlllnl

'i

Ordinary hospital insurance may take care of part of your
e:r.peneea when JOU go to the hoapital to have a baby. But .what
policy can you think of that fiVel you eaah to help buy all
the thtnp you need for the new babyT Now, if both huaband
and wife are insured for the entire pregnancy and have added
Coverap !or Children and M.atemlty Beneftt1, you get extra
cash to UN any way you want. If a pregnancy, childbirth or
even miac:arriage puta you in the ho1pltal for one day, iln
daya, 10 da7s - aalonc as nec:euary - you get 1100.00 a week
for ewry day of your c:ontlnement, up tf&gt; J VfSrl if -nece11Af11 I
All tfleae added coah HINJflfl.
Yeo, in addition to '100.00 a week tor hoopllallaatlon or '100.00
a week matemlty benefttl ... you pt all thla:
Ad..,. euh bene8ta: Up to 12,000.00 cash !or accideotallog
of limb• or eyeaj«ht, when thtl los• oecura anJtime withln 90
daya of the ftCCidmt. The lou oft. Hmb or eyeafgbt i1 a terrible
thi~! Nothina can repla~e the lou, but a check for $1,000.00 or
~21~.00 brinr• peace of mind during the period of adjustment.
AUed euh bes.e8tl.: ChOOM Coverage for Children (with or
without Maternity Benefttl) and aU your dependent, unmarried
ebiJdren from aeea one month through 18 yean. will be covered,
tool Presidential pare up to ,6,240.00, at tlte role of ,60.00
a week, when your younptflr i1 hoaf,italized . • . for tonsilitla.
apDeDdicitia or any other illness or in ury. Yea, you will receive
100.00 a ·woek cub, week after week while the child is in the
hoapital, eftD for aa many as 104 wnk•l
W• Jlfl'l your premium• wloen you are -able.
Aa a apeCial conalderation to you, if JOU - the peraon to whqm
the buic poUcr i1 baued - are hoepitaliud juat 8 weeka or
more, all premium• for 70u and all Covered Memben that come
due while you are oltllln the boapital after lhlo period wUl be
paid by Presidential. And your protection continues u it JOU
were p&amp;Yina the premium• youraelf I Then if you leave the
hoapJtal~ana muat retum for t.hll aame eondltion before )'011
have resumed full normal aettviti'lll for 180 daya. Prelldential
will qain PAY ANY PREMIUMS WHILE YOU ARE IN
THE HOSPITAL-TO A MAXIMUM OF 2 YEARS-lor the
total confinement! This meau you pay no_premhuna, :ret your
full Jl'rotection remaina In foree - JOU eollid a maximum ot
$10,400.00 for the confinement!

(Pt.,.• Print)

THIS UMmDINIOUMfNf O,IIINDS SOON
Only 25f ""' fltlt Montlt - Moneyohdr G.,..,.._,
You ean now have your first month's protection for rour entire
family for only twent7-ftve cent• I But you mult act immediately. Your request for this wonderful Extra Cash Hotpltal
Plan mu1t be mailed on the convenient EnroJJment-Applieatlon
NOT LATER THAN MIDNIGHT of tlte data ohown.
This mldniwht expiration hour cannot be extended. If JOUr
enrollment form Ia mailed later, it cannot be acet!:pted.
TfleH are flte ONLY exclarl0111l
Your Preaidential policy coven every c:oru!elvable kind of lickness or aecldent exeept condition• caused by war or any act of
war; any mental disease or disorder: where care ia ln. a U.S.
Government hospital; pregnancy, aeept u provided under the
Maternity Benefit prorision • and expenses resulting from any
sickness or Injury you had l,;fore the Effective Date of your
policy., . during the ftrat 2 yeara only.
Thia Jut item Ia a real help if you already have a health
problem. If you are sick. before you take out this po1icr, rou
will even be covertd for that condition after the poliCJ baa been
in elect for 2 years. Meanwhile, of coune, nery new condition
is covered immedlatelrl
Haw can 25~ IHiy to muclrf
You ean buy ordinary insuraDOI! at anr, time and pay the reru·
lar rates, tf you wish. But President a1 ean now provide you
and your entire family with tu·fne Extra Cull Protection
for ju1t 2&amp;, the ftrat month. Onlr IJ~ca"'' 'Kif nroU 4 lo!f'
1tum6•r of ,,opt, at cme: timt~ - direct br t~~GiJI This hiabiJ
'efficient "Maas Enrollment" method cuta eo~tl to the bone and the s~vinga are puaed on to you I

capital

JReview of Ohio House, Senate Activities

'

ACT NOW-YOUR ENROLLMENT-APPLICATION MUST BE MAILED BY MIDNIGHT SAT., APRIL 19, OR IT CANNOT BE ACCEPTED
family tomorrow . .. next week . . . next month. Sad to say, nry
few families have anywhere near enough coverage to meet
today's soaring hospital costs. These coats have doubled in joat
a few short years. They are expected to doubt~ agaiftin the few
years ahead.
Stop for a moment. Think how much a long stay in the bo...
pi tal will cost you or a loved one. How would you ever pay for
costly, but necessary, X· rays, doctor bills, drugs and medldnuf
What would you do if your pay check stopped, but living expenses kept on going the same aa everT The same rent, P"-one,
food, all the day-to-day expenses that never atop.
What is the average breadwinner to do! We believe we han
the answer in the famous Presidential Extra Ca~h Hospital
Plan that

lim expenditure tor

"Without increased support 28,961 pupllo are enrolled In
for C&amp;thollc education from the Catholic schools, aald, "II all
our scholls closed, In Franklin
County alone It wuuld mean
adding almost 1,000 teachers, If
present pupU - -teacher ratios
were maintained. ••
.. At $600 per p.~pil per year,"
.: COLlJl,II!US (IJP0- A glance
Bishop
Elwell said, "it would
a physician certl(y that a person records to be kept which the er Dec. 31.
led liability payment because
mean
$11,737,200
In FranhUn
HB607, Polcar, provides equa1 of insurer insolvency.
:: al actiVIty Tuesday In the Ger&gt;o Is mentaUy Ul before cmunla- Ohio Civil Rights COmmission
County,
and
$17,376,600
Cor the
• oral A11embly.
deems necessary as part or an employment for sexes in similar
HB 621, Reichel, requires
slon,
'
work assignments.
Controlling Bosrd opprovol for entire 23 counties or the dio·:
HOUSE
HB sss, Mallnlrw, requlres1 el1forcement order.
HB 608, Pol car, provides tor transfer of land to Highway lJe.. cese. This Is without adding the
HB 597, Volnovich, provides a
alate Liquor Department to pro~¥ lnlroduced
: HB S'IS, · Panno, sets 5 do,y vide to munlc(IJolltlea a list of direct oppeal to courts !rom referendum on municipal emer- partment ir value exceeds $10,- capital expenditures for added
bulldl.ngs."
:; time llmlt for certlncadon of the places of residences of each suspension aOO revocation ot gency leglslatlo!L
000.
;.ftre dlljiVtment civfi service ... B!&gt;Pllcant for a liquor permit for driver's license.
FIB 609, Polcar, revises unHB 622, Reichel, eliminates
: caney In - r ranks.
the past five years.
HB 598, Volnovlch, provides employment compensation pay- minimum sentence for children
~ HB 574, Scherer, permits wldliB 586, Tracy, creates de- direct oppeal to crurta from ment scale in certain cases.
committed by Youth COmmls· school students.
: er ,passenger buses on certain partment of transportation.
HB 610, Fr'aser, requires reg- sian.
registration and license suspeJ&gt;o
HB 633, Celebrezze, establish: roads.
HB 623, Lancione, exempts es procedures for a tenmt to reoHB ~87, Mrs. Jones, creates a 1iOn or revocation under the Fl· istration or proressloml engt..
HB 575, While, stipulates In stale boord of cosmetolOSY.
nanclal ResporullbUicy Law.
neers and surveyors.
school buses from motor vehicle cover a security deposit and re: detail who must have peace of,
HB 611, Polcar, provides for fuel tax.
quires a laOOlord to spell out
HB 588, Mayfield, provides for
HB 599, Volnovlch, aU'"'s lr&gt;o
: fleers tralntnn council ,diploma. a alate Board of Education ap- JuncUve action against uae of elecuOn ot park e&lt;mmissioners.
HB 624, Lanclone, exempts purposes for which a deposit
· HB 576, Fisher, eslabllahes polntod by the governor with waters supplied by state Reser·
HB 612, Polcar, prohibits new coal and fuel oU for use ln own.. will be used in advance.
market development prOII'IIIl Senate cooaent lDateod of an voin, authorizes contncts for mwdclpal judgeships In area er«cupied, single familY dwellliB 634, Batchelder, revises
. for cartoln asrtcultural prod- elected board.
peralty for malicious de5trucsale of such waters and pr~ where mayor's court is conc:klct-- ing from sales and use tax.
' ucts.
ed.
HB 589, McNamara, permits Yides for notice ot hearl~
HB 625, Baker. prohibits im- tion of tratfic or railroad safe: HB 671, Hinig, gives univer· mergers ot muolclpol corpora•
HB 613, Pol car, permits sale personating county sheriffs, sets ty control signals to provide for
HB 600, Murdock, c h a n g e s
: slty brancbeo authority to Issue tlons with voter opproveJ.
restoration an:t additional maxideflDltion or brealdnk and enter- of special heavy equipment by a penalty.
: borxls alli notes for certalll
HB 626, Mastics, requires mum fine or $250. Penalty now
HB 590, McNamara, provides ton to permit prosecution where dealers.
: proJecta.
HB 614, Davidson, makes $3 flash.ing yellow lights in school is a maximum fine of $50 and
for merger of munlclpol corpor. entry was made, but no break.
mUllan capital lm,provements zone upon request.
HB 57~ White, permits bord atlons through election of a ire actually occurred.
10 days in jail.
: Issues Pllced on ballot by school coounlSBlon to draw up terms
HB 635, Polcar, allows driver
HB 627, Palcar, requires coon..
HB 601, Murdock, requires fln- apprq&gt;riation for Lawrence
:.district for special number of of the merger.
gerprinta to be included in writ,. County Branch College and ty sales tax Issues to go before training courses to be let for
·.years.
Technical Institute for next bl· voters for approval
competitive bidding when the
HB 591, Cruze provides for ten judgments against felons.
~ HB 519. Cbrlstlansen, permits creatioo and regulation of eloae
HB 628, Celebrczze, reqUires total cost or the course exceeds
liB 602, Murdock, authorlzes eMlum.
0
--J (
HB 615, Cruze, permits au- driver education teachers to be $100
-~ county C•~;~nuss oners to pur.
corporatlona.
townablp boards of park com·
''Clase liabUity Insurance for emliB 636, Poda, prohibits t h e
HB 592, Cruze provides added missioners to levy ~ to one thorization for Highway Patrol high school graduates and have
'ployes ln._ 1perrormance of du- penalties for orpnlzed and pre&gt;- 'mill tax tor a tlve-year period. to employ driver•s llcense at least two semester hours or operation of motor vehicles by
;:ttes. .
.,
college.
unlicen5ed driven on private
HB 603, Murdock, extends to clerks.
fesslooal ottenders.
HB 616, Hollington, permits
HB 580, Galbraith, make s
IIB 629, Celebrczze, outlaws property frequented by the pubHB 593, Cruze, amends code pollee officers the rlght of colcounty coroner oppolnted poe(,. to increase permlssable oceupa- lecttve bargaining and estab- Sunday salet ot liquor on local games operated to attract trade lic.
· ·um by county commissioners.
HB 637, Pottenger, permits
or give competitive advantage
tlooa for persons under rs.
lishes a procedUre Cor arbltrat- option basts.
·&gt;
• HB 581, Galbraith, makes
HB 617, Ostrovsky, increases in sales.
the importation or one quart of
HB 594, Cruze, eliminates re- l~ disputes arts!~ out of such
"oilerH! oppblntlve office by coor&gt;o quirement that a dspul)' regis- cdJective bargaining.
penalty tor forgi~ motor veHB 630, Celebrezze, perm its liquor by an Ohio resident into
1Y cmunlasloners.
certified school nurses to teach Ohio for persoral use in an,y 30trar transmit a dopllcate C\lllY
HB 604, Pol car, ameMs code hicle titles.
HB 582.-. Hesdley, lijlproprla- of a license a,pplicatton to coun- relative to construction or reHB 618, Os~ovsk;y, increases health education.
day period.
penalty for concealing the iden..
tes $1.2 lllllllon for channel be- ty auditor and changes date by pairs of municipal streets,
HB 631, Celebreue, makes
HB 638, Pottenger, defines illwi\On Ml.t Lake and Miller which a resolution must be cer..
HB 605, Polcar, revises peti.. tit;y of a motor vehicle.
parking lot operators Hable ror legal possession of liquor.
'l,ake In SUinmlt County,
HB 619, Ostrovsk;y, provides damage to autos.
titled to the registrar.
tlon an:t referendum procedures
HB 639, Tulley, creates the
for
issuance
o!
jUnk
motor
ve-... HB 583, Welker, requires
liB 595, Mayfield, prohibits in municipalities.
HB 632, Celebrezze, allows Mentor Municipal Court within
,slate ~ provide $5,000 IHe lJ&gt;o ~rther annexatlon proceedings
measurement or time by public the corporate limits o( MentorHB 606, Polcar, requires re- hicle certificates.
HB 620, Reichel, provides uflo. transit in determining w~ether oJ&gt;othe-Lake In Lake Cowrty.
surance policy Cor each !Uil-tlme wlthl~ one year after electors duction of property taxes in muinsured
motorist insurance ror school boards must p r o v i d e
HB 640, Johnson, eliminates
vote against .armexatlon.
nicipalities which have income
. alate enwlf[e.
HB 58._~ .F}orrls, requires that
HB 596, Manning, requires taxes or 1 per cent or more aft• insured motorists unable to col- transportation or non .. public
(Continued on pege 9)

Just 25¢ enrolls your entire family for the first month
IF YOU ARE 65 OR OVER YOU WILL
COLLECT UP TO $10,010.00 CASH IN
ADDITION TO MEDICARE BENEFITS

the first ol two arUclea on the

: could brlni about a quick death stale to reach a solution.)

At last- a hospital plan that guarantees never to canceryour protection no matter how old you get or how many claims you make {:{ Pays all
cash direct to you (not to the doctor or hospital) {:{ Pays In addition to any other companies' coverage you have -Including Medicare {:{ No
age limit-no medical examination required {:{ No salesman will call

N t.:

(IDJTOR'S· NOTE: Roman

&lt;7cathollc: NleatQrs ln Ohio are problems facing the school• and

{r Pays you extra cash at the rate of *100.00 a week for as long as 2 full years ..• for each hospital stay. {r Guaranteed reneWable for life.

out of two !amilie11 will have someone in the ho1pital this
0 year!
It could be you- or some belond member of your

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~54 ..... .. .. . . .. . . ..... .. '
SS.!lt ........... . ........ . ..
~69 . . .. .. ................ .

.l

70-74 ..... • •••••.•..•...•.•
75 and over . •• . . •••••· •.•••••

',,

To the beshf my knowled&amp;e and belief neither I nor any person listed above has been refused or had Clricell'd any health,
hospilll or life insurance coverqe due to rnsona of !Malth. I hereby app)y lor the Extra ~ Hospital Plan. I understand
lhall, and any person listed lbove will be covered under this Policy for a riCurrence of ;ny injuty or sickness I {Wiil had .
before the Effective Data of this Polley after two years from £Hective Date, but not before; 111d that this Polley shfll not be
In force until the EHectlve Date shllWI1 in the Policy Scltetlule. I am enclosing $.25 lor the fi~?l month's Pflllllllll for .
· age lor myself and all other Family Members listed above.
·
Si111ature X
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MAIL INIOUMINf...vftkATJON

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· . 12 - '11111 DollJ senl!nel, Mlddloportol'&lt;liiiOroy, o., A»rD 15, 19&amp;9

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'Property
AIWt E. Goecltlll,lda s. loin to JlmDI,l' K. Nelaon, llGIIa
J. Nolaon. LS acn, Qteal8r.
Ollie&gt; Power CG&gt; to Slate of
Ohio, rlahl ol IIOI't Sl)labuey.
Ohio P"""rCG&gt; toSiateofOhlo
rllfll of way, Slllabuey.
R. C. Cook to Ohio UnlveraiQ'
Fund, 2.20 acre, CGI1111bla.
Wayne Samuelllllchoel to Joseph Richard Fielda, Rita J01ce

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BRING YOUR TEN~ :ii»E A WIIH!R, Nil BE A WINO
YOURSELF BY SHCPPING

FOODLAND
THE "HOME PLATE" OF 4000
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES

IofASO~

BOWUNG CENTER
Wook ElldiJig AprD 12, 1969
SUNDAY IIIIXED LEAGUE
L 4-F's; 2, G&amp;A; 3. P&amp;W; 4.
Lucllers; 5, LIIIY-4; 6. Sbom•

l!llh Game -

Gooclrlch, 177; Hllfl Serioa-P.
Ferguson, f85, (Men) Hllh Gule
-c. Ferguson. 230; Hllh Sert..
- C. Fergu0011, 599.
:MERCH~TS LEAGUE
I. W. VL Natiooal Guard; 2.
G. 0. Rouoh &amp; SOns; 3. Slsk; 4.
llaeoo Co. Bank; 5. Sidor's &amp;vply; 6. W.O.W.; 7. -eote; S.
Millet's Ins.
llllh Gulo IIIII Series - D.
Clark, 252, 560.

INDIJSrRIAL LEAGUE
L Burloll'o Sulloca; 2. Coca·

Cda; 3. TomRuo-s;4. Waddell &amp; Reed; 5. St. Josejilllllll A.
B. C. Cleaners (tie); 7. Hickman
and J.K.Iol. (tie).
!llgl1 GuDe - J. SIIUllng, 222;
Hllh Series - W. Dllddill8, 586.

STEELWORKERS LEAGUE
L Stlllprs; 2. ~uta &amp; Bolla; 3.
'IIWer&amp;i f. Duds: 5. Ferros and
~s (tie); 7. Bcmbors; 8.
Sldpo.
Hllfl Gome - E. Perry, 2!9;
Hllh Serleo - L. Salser, 564.

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Sliced Dills
P.D.Q.

Chocolate Beads
PETAL SOFr

Liquid Deter1ent
KRAFT PHILADELPHIA

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Lol•••·CROPS.
to

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Lincheo•··
TBNDERBEST
Pork C1lle Steak

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1~000
-.

1,000

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CASES

CASES

FLIP·
TOP

TENDE&amp;BEST

~:·

39c
1
~.~.. 45c
Qt. $1
3 btls.
8oz. 35c
pkg.

Cream Cheese

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PBICES EFFECfiVE THRU SAT. APRIL 19, 1969
AUNT JANE HAMBUBGER

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~--------------_J Fresh Ground Meat loaf

D.

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WELCIM: IN 1liE BIG 1.EAGl£ SEASCN WITH BIG 1.EAGl£
SAVINGS AT FOOOI.AND. Sli'PORT YOUR FAWRITE fENol,
TI£N N'TER Tl£ Gfllo£, t£AD .FOR HQfE PLATE WHIOt IS
YOUR NEARBY FOOiliJIIID W£RE YOU AI.IIAYS ~ ~ ,
WITH BIG SAVINGS.

Local Bowling

........
(WIIDOII)

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LOWER PRIDES/

Arl- F. Pars0111, ld;rroD A.
Panons lo Clair F, SbeMfteld,
Lela Shonefteld, parcels, Salem.

I ,

' ~~ - ~ DollJ Sontb)el, r.-~......,. o.: Aj)rtl 18 teel'

JOIN THE B16-LEA6UE SAVERS
. lTH FOODLAND'S

Fields, .83 acre. Chester.

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Meigs

Transfers

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ZESTEE

TENDERBEIT
CENTER CUT

·CO~A

Rib Chops
~

lb.

e STKAWHERRY
e BLACKBERRY

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12 oz.
. ,(AilS

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PRESERVES
PBESERVES
e BLACKBERRY JELLY

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WEDNFSlAY llllXED
L Try Hards; 2. Loftown; 3.
White &amp; Nelson; 4. So1r• &amp; Tel&gt;IIIII !Uta &amp; 1111&amp;101 (tie); 6.
. 111-For's; 7. G.l Jo'o; 8. SmsA
Gollll.

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·ORANGE
·ROOT BEER ·GRAPE
cus
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12 oz.
CAliS

TENDERBEST

Loin End Pork Roast
~ERBES.~ f~ STYLE .

IPA.ERIBI·· ·. ·· · .··~'!

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(Wcmen)- HllfiGemeiiiiiSer·

leo -· B. GUmon, 181, 512.
(Mao) - llllh Game- B. ~
- . 237; Hllfl Series - Bob
Gilmore, 595.

3c off

FBESH

Anl•l Food Cake

CLOROX

eL

PILLSBUBY or BALLARD

8.:Ut!. &amp;h,

Biscuits

Raeine

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FRESH, CRISP

Soeial Events

CELERY

Gal.

BY MRS. FRANCIS MOruuS
Frlondohljl Farm Bureau Fodontllll mol at lbo hcmo of Rev.

and Mrs. Paul Sellon 'lburodly
o~ AprDS. MIAirdlscunllll
'!How Should We Orpulze IUid
Fllllnce OUr Schoall'ln 1118 Rev.
and Mro. Salloro aerwcl refreshments Ill nl• DIOIIIbors IIIII !rur
guest&amp;.

Qt.49&amp;

11c

Rev. Paul Sellers attellled a

mooting Tuesday, AprD S,aiLal&gt;caster of Ute Town IUid Cowltr)'
Cllll'ch Cclmmlsslon.
Mrs. Albert Plj'JQr IIIII Mr.
DoYid Yost -llleclfunerolsorv·
lceo lor Mr. Charles T. loi&lt;Kay
of Horrloonllurg, VL, Friday, AprU 4, IIIII were house peatl of
Mro. M&lt;Kay tor two claY&amp;.
Mro. Dolo Roush and son, KeiUt
ol Awl• Creek, Mr. IIIII Mra.

ftl1m0111 MUler and llro. Ural
'n&gt;omllo of Collllllllls vlolted Mr.
and Mrs. owen Wats111 on Easter

s.my,

Mrs. Rimy Guinther, Pcmeroy,
and Freda Hatch, c.lumbus, vislad Mr. IIIII Mro. A. C. Bradford,

s.my,

Mro. John Flohor IIIII 0011,
~. IIIII Reller Baker of Ak·
I'GI1 spent several days wiUt Mr.
ud Mro. HOIII')' Rouoh IUid llllld-

CRISCO
3

beh.

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&lt;

Rhubarb
·rrots
Potatoes 10
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LIMIT

Y'S

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CAN
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Mr. IUid llro. Albert Wlpllllll
falllllJ of Prospect spont Uto Eastor wookeDd with Mr. IIIII M r •·
a.rloy Smith IUid Mr. IUid Mro.

OUo Boiloy,
OlrlotiDo Lake IUid Mr. IUid
Mro. Wllllun Lake IIIII Lori of
AUto• IIPOnt lolcaiQ', AprU 7,
Willi Mr. oDd llro. Franell IIGrrll.
llr. IUid llro. W, C. Smllb IIIII
Jfll! at Dllton and 'lin. Audrey
o1111 falllllJ o1 Jacklon
ftn Eamr potao!lbolriDQih.
lr, llro. lfarr711Qmon.
j,llr. Kea.lb Swart "' .AkrCII
_ . over Uto Ea- weekend
Wlib hlo mollior, llro. Jam••
ll!art IIIII lbo AI Crow lamlb.
· Mr. IIIII lira. Sam Curtlolllll
Ill Alii ot Lorain IIIII Mr. olld
..... Rlcllud l)urtil IUid Sborrl
ill hlrtiOt'n oPonl over Uto l!ut411.' 11~ wiUt Utolr goroalt,

wu-

Iiiii; .,.. ...... llarey Curtla.
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LADY SUNBEAM

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17 - The Dally SenUnoJ, Mlddleport-P..,oroy, 0., Aj)rll 16, 1969

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Mrs. Drenner Honored
·With Layette Shower

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·-

Mn. L R. Neal, Mre. Jack
Phiiii.PI and Mrs. Dlllshlllaley,
· Jr• .,~ Mon!!a1nl&amp;btwtth
Ro,yal and Select MallfAora,
a la,yotte shower honoring Mrs.
Gerald Dremer or Fomeroy. The
7' 30 Jl. •'-er
ocl meeting,•
Wb held at the N e a!
m,
at lempleWeclneoda,y,
with Royal and
So-

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Asbury Youth FellowshiR' . .

In Behavior,

Don Manla,y, Mro. Vern UtUe,

Plans Spring Activities

Belief Noted

Mrs. John Tyree, Mra. James
Fm:gu·ion, Miss Taliimy Tyree,
Mlas Janet Lee Neal, Mra. Sid•.
ney Uttlo, Mri, lloward Blrch!ield, MISI Ruaaell L!UJe, Mrs.
Robert Haley, Mrs. Ancll Cross,
Mrs. Arthur Miller, Mra. Robert
Rlllle, Mro. Gar!leld Haggy, Miss
Linda llala,y, Mrs. Worley Haley,
Mrs, Fred Tackot~ and Mlas

HT~'s Crisis in

lllr. and Mrs. Guy Forter ol
C¥1al Winchester
were Wnda,).

.

Belief and

Behavior" was the study topic
presented by Mrs. Carl Kautz
when Friendly Circle met Monday evening at the TrlnJiy Unit'

Jllle&amp;ts or Mrs. J. M. Thornton.
Mr. and Mra-. Clarence Karr
and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Karr

Evangelist is

Holding Series

.....

,

..

Of Services

..:

;,

'I

3 Open House

.=~ .'·
~-

'

Events Noted

...

,,

FOSTORIA
AUTOMATIC
STEAM&amp; DRY

DORM EYER

_,

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Being

'

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SHOP

WITH HEAVY
"

DUn CLIPPERS

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SATURDAY

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'• All'

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. 'llJI~ ·

. ·'· ail

MEIGS CHEERLEADERS car

w1sh, S.turda,y, be8innlng at 9 a.
m., at Mldclleport Vlllqe HaD.
!UGH SCHOOL dance.(llri;Y Seturda,y, ·a-u p.m., 11 the Meigs
Junior fllih School AL&lt;IItorlum
·In l'ameroy; Ja,ys will emcee;
.public Ia welcome.

•. ' 'ilUqi

..

OUTH WASH
1~

OZ. BOTTU

•. 1.09

~

BATH TOWELS
~·

LARGE

.

Sllf

'andertetidlnlrfV.

·aoz.

Fundi ·&lt;I 'ibo Aaaoelal!oa were
'lllcuoled 'lnd II lill declcled to
dlvlda tht1 •
Into two ...
- . 011t for the amUal dally
'Yicallon Bible lehool and the olh·
..,. for _,.al work ol tho uao.

·~ ~. ...,lbe a..'.,...
aalieri opened the mellllJW, 01-

_........

cftctro raporta were read .and

U. S. RURAL

MAIL BOXES
EACH

S.

CHARCOAL

BRI'Q. UETS
.

20 LB.
BAG '·

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!

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.

I

,•.•

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If everyone minded
their own business, what
would we talk about at

lunch? ,

If you find it difficull to
get a good night's sleep, con.

be assumed by the ywng peo.

Die.
Following the meeting Franklin Rizer D enterlalnecl with a
Wiener roast lor the )'WDg people at his home. Games and records were enjoyed by the 11'0011·

GIFTS WERE PR,ESENTED
Mrs. Ida Burns and Alfred El·

berfeld pre sented gifts to Mr. and
Mrs. Ben Neutzling on their aoldsider the plight of the fellow
who tried to while standing
up jn a hammock.

en wedding anniversary. Their
names were not listed in an ear-lier account of the altair.

COMPLETE LINE
WIDE SELECTION
ADD SUNSHINE AND
SPARKLE TO YOUR
HOME.

IIIey are once opened
hard to close them
!igl!Uy without fearing the
save the soft, pliable
that bread comes in
put the potato chips
In an opened bag into
one of these plastic bags
and fasten with a twlstie.
No more stale or spilled potato chips at our house.MELBA

~~tf~~~~foi~-~·~~L:una~r~ra~in~b,~o~w s~.~c~on~s~is"u'"ng·'"l~~~,~~--~~

lowing a 6 p. m. potluck dinner
at the church.

and

of vory faint colors, are occasionally seen.

NOW at INGELS

Mission Group Met

their AprJI meetln,g at the home ''"\, Refreshments were served by

a ·no decldocl to purchase and
oreet :lbe ·eJen• to aerve 11 1
welcome from the churcbea ot
..-acuae Gnifll a recent meet•lfll ol the Alooelallon held tithe
•home ol the Rev. and Mra. Paul
A. Sallere.
Ll- "'! ,the lllnl WIU be the
111m._ ·ol .!lli,cliurchesllllllaled
'With lha 'U!IJI~Ial Alaoclallon,
'Plana are to bavo the llln• maclo

FLORAL

"

~· w111 be erected by the
lb'raeuse lllnlaterlal Alaoelatloa of Mrs. Orpha Flelda with Faye l~e ·hootesoes, Faye Carpenter
at the corporotton llmlta or the Carpenter and Cheryle KnJsht and Cheryle Knlght,toRenaJohnVlllqe.

REEF

,,

NEW HAVEN- The Woman's Kenya.
Missionary Socleey ot ;the New
The Pl'qJI'Im was In charge of
Haven F1rst Church ot God held the president, Orpha Fields.

Put Up Signs
,.

pal of ours.

At Mrs. Field's Home

Ministers to

,·

!prlng activiUe• were planned durted by tho yooq( paaplo In
durin&amp; lilnd&amp;Y night's moetlng recognition or Sludont PI¥·
ol the Youth Fellowahip of the
&amp;lnuner Cbunh ~IJIH» wu dilAsbury United Methocllat Church cusled and It was , _ that
or ~racuse.
there is a choice or Otterboin,
The yooth will attend revival Lancaster, and Camp Fr-a
services Thursday night at the Asbur,y this year.
Enterprise United Methodlllt
In a letter !rom Mra. Roral
Church. On lilnd&amp;Y they will go Thomas~ oow residing In Columto Gallipolis for a district spring bus, the 11'0011 was advised that
rally, and 011 April Z7, the morn.
flags are avllflable to cbureh
ing worship sorvit:e will be eonyouth groups through a man IIIIa
knows In Columbus. Jt waa cte..
BAIRBS
clded that Mrs. Karl Kloea, ....,_
selor, would odvlae Mra. ThomBy PHIL PASTORET
as that thO' 11'0011 would lll&lt;e a
This month, . Friday the nag if arn~~pmeiota canbemado
13th comes on Sundayto hove a pole erected In t h e
that's the day his wife's
chur&lt;h Yard. The chore ol&gt;'llomother comes to stay, says a lng and lowering the nag would

. -::~~~=~~:~JJ;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;!

RECORD HOP,~. 8 to 11
p. m.; Rai:lne Junior Rich SChool,
IJ)OOICII'ed by Ladles Awdllacy,
RaCIIII,J'IH; Department. Admls·
lion,· 25 cents.

.

.

.-

alid family ol MillerspOrt were
Maatera dell'eo to be - ·
the 1M loble waa
Smda,y
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
WmNESDAY Home- a atorh with yellow .and white
Charles
Lytle and Mr. and Mrs.
ed Church ot Christ.
-•·rs Club0 .""·~·-~-streamer accents. A dream aala.,..
_ . . , . , at
Fred
Goegleln.
u.~
·
ad, pink and blue ciopclkoa with
In the l!tudy It was pOinted
-••lpal
Park, 10 a,ril. Wed- mlnla1Ure bablea en top, potaU&gt;
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Foster and
out
that the Christian need not
neoda,y. l'olluck dlmor with J0111
Brenda Turner.
REV. WILLIAM ALVEY
children
or Livoola, Mteh. have
be threatened by this crlsla In
Hall, Mila Hlld80t1 and Ada Slack, chips, colt.. and eokewereaerv. Others pre~ tdfta to Mra.
been
here
visiting Mra. J. Edthe world where the Ten C o mholteues~ I!Ub,Jeet ,. 18fe&amp;,y ., ed by the hoatesse1. Gaines were DreMer were lire. George ou.
mandments are not accepted as ward Footer and family and Mr.
Mrs. No1U: the 1_-r, pla,yed with prizes bebig won by er1 Mra. Gene :WIH, Mra. Ronthe moral code and secularism is and Mrs. Ralph Webb or Racine.
MIDDLEPORT
LITERARY Mlu ,Reah Will, Mrs. Fred PuJ. ald Smith, Mrs. 11etcy Berrq.
Mrs. Hattie Paynter, David
the word of the day. Mrs. Kaull
Club Wedpeoda,y at 2 p.m., Eplo- !Ina, Mlao Mary Hall, MisoBren. or, Mrs. Mervin Little, Miss AlYost,
and Mrs. Blythe Theiss
said to do as Jesus said, "Love
eopal Partllll House, with Mrs. da McGuire, Mn William Hall, berla LltUe, Mrs. LUlie Smith,
were
at
!Ieaver FaUs, Pa. satone another," and this love will
and Mra. Russell Ferguson.
Mrs.
Ronald
mock,
Mrs.
CharEverett llayos, hostess; Mrs.
Other guoata at the ahower
give purpose and meaningtoyour urda,y for the funeral d. Mrs,
Bemard Fult&gt; will review "Cenles Wise andFonaK..,., Mrs,"TerRussell 1!4dclllr.
Ute, here and oow.
tral Park," and Mre. Th....., wore Mrs. RObert Clonch, Mrs. ry MIUer, and Mrs. Arthur lklud.
Larry Wlles spent the past
Scripture was taken front the
A revhal is in progress at the
Jomaon will review "Natkl!al
week
here with his parents, Mr.
Park!'
Enterprise United MethocUst 21st chapter ot John. The hymns and Mrs. Orval Wiles. He Is
were "Have Thine Own W a y,
WIND~G TRAIL Garden Club,
POLLY'S POINTERS Church with the Rev, William Al- Lord''
and "Dear Lord and Fa- working at Homestead, Fla.
vey, New Hope United Methodist
Woclneoda,y, Aj)rU 16, at 7:30
p.m. at the home ol Mro. Jolm
Church of Crooksville, as the ther ol Mankind," and there were
Proper
Rinsing
a
Must
Terrau; Jll'Otram will be cnAza..
evangelist with services at 7:30 readings by Mrs_ Donald Hauck,
Mrs. Elza Gilmore, Jr., and Mrs .
m. each eveni~.
lee and ~Ina FIOiferlng Bulbs.
For Fluffy Bath Towels p, There
Bill
Perrin.
will' be special music t~
J!6SWORTH COUNCIL 46,
There was group discussion
night by the Enterprise Chojr;
Ro,yal and Select Mailers, 7:30 ·
By POLLY CRAMER
Thursday by the New Haven Unit_.. on the topic and Mrs. Kautz con..
A series of open houses to acWedneoda,y night; R0111 and ..,_
ed
Methodist Children's Choir; cluded with a favorite poem, quairt the public with its three
lect maater degrees cllllferred,
FrJday by Roger Buckley arxt his "J Dream Many Dreams."
DEAR POLLY-I want to leU Mrs. J . R.•P., who has sWI
THURSDAY
camps will be held this spri~
group from Mt. Herman V, B.
bath towels, lhal according to home extension agents the
Dul'lng the business meeting by the Four Rivers Girl Scout
TWILIGHT GARDEN Club, 7:•
major reason lor this is that the detergents, softeners and
Church; Seturda,y by the Ewing Mrs. Leonard Jewell read the Council.
30 Thuroday nlsht, hMie of Mrs.
so on are not properly rinsed out. Checi the last deep rinse
Sisters
of Crooksville, alkl SuJloo minutes of the last meeting and
The first is scheduled for SunLeverett Roush, Middleport.
just before it spins out. If cloudy, the clothes are not really
day ewnlllf by the FICMero Broth- notes of thanks !rom M r s. day, April 20, !rom 1 to 5 p.m.
1WIN CITY Shrlnettes, 7:30
clean. Run the load through another deep rinse or perhaps
ers of Marietta.
~ Kasper, Mrs. Chester at Camp Rotan, located ofl Rt
p.m. Thursday, at Columbus and
a whole cdycle of clear water only. A lon8er spin cJde may
The
revival
Is
sponsored
by
Krrlght, Mrs. Glenroy Ewing. and 33 just south of Athens. Visjtors
be neede -lor lo\vels and other heavy things.
Southern Ohio Electric Co. sl&gt;the District Youth Fellowship. Richard Nease.
clalromn.
To recondition sWf clothes, a complete washing with
are invited to explore the 1kcre
Amouncement was made of wooded site, walk its nature
water
softener
(aller
a
regular
wash)
can
help
get
them
THURSDAY
the guild meeting to be heJdWed- trails, and enjoytheout~l-doors.
really clean. Drying clean towels in a breeze or in a dryer
ROCK SPRINGS Better Health
Birth of Daughter
also will make them softer-MRS. C. H. M.
nesda,y, April 23, at the church.
The second open house will be
Club, 1:15 p; m. Thursd&amp;Y, home
Mrs. Thomas Young will pre- held Ma,y 25 at CampSendyBend,
DEAR POLLY-Mrs. J. R. P. says she uses bleach and
sent the program.
of Mrs, Hmner Radford; Mrs.
water softeners even when she has a water softener. Her
Plans were made for fund- three miles north of Elizabeth,
Scott Folmer has the Pl'osram.
Announced
would
seem
to
come
from
the
fact
that
the
matn
problem
W. Va., ofJ Rt. 14. The council's
EPISCOPAL CHURCH Women,
raising actlvities. Mrs. Perrin largest campsite, Sarw:ly Bend is
soflener is undersized and not regenerating often enough
IIDICheon, 12:30 p. m. Thursday;
for their water usage.-A. P. L.
urged the members to come by situated on 176 acres of Wooded
Mrt. Herbert EWq., devottona;
Mr. and Mrs. Lorry Haynes and view the .Parsonage construe- hiiJs and meadow laoo bordered
DEAR READER~A laundry laboratory otreasee tile
are announcing the birth of a tion. Cards were sent to Miu by the Little Kanawha River.
Mrs. John Pearson, book review;
facl lbat tile amoulll of detergent used abould be followed
da~lej', Kristina Gall, k&gt;ru Thelma Grueser' a patient at
Mrs. J.E.D. Hartinger, Mrs.
The final open house will be
JUST •• liven on lbe pack1ge. Varlo•• detergents bave
11, at the Riverside Hospital in Holzer and Mrs. Dale Smith, Ill held June 8 at C&amp;mp Oak Ridge,
Fred Crow, Sr., Mrs. Fred Crow,
bleaebeo,
lirllbtenero
and
so
oa
that
aUeetlhe
reaulls.
Fol·
Jr., Mrs, James Titus, Mrs. Na•
Columbus. The baby weighed sevlowlaf dlreellons aa to amou.ols Is very Important. Alao,
at home,
located ore Rt 2 south or Ravensen.POUIII,
nine ounces.
cy Reed and Mrs. Herbert Seth,
experiment wllb tbe number of towels put In the dryer at
Mrs. Pearl Mora, president, wood, W. Va. This camp covers
hoiiiAiaoes.
Grandparents ore Mr. and Mrs.
one lime. Too many or too lew can make a dUference Ia
tOO rolling
lbe
texture
after
dryla(.-POLLY
Everett
Michael of Middleport, Col, Fronk Borman. ft told how paw-paw
MIDDLEPORT CIULD Conserpatch.acres, featuring a
read
"A
Message
to
Eerlh"
by
and Mr. and Mrs. Basil Haynes the Genesis creation story bevoil0. League, annual dinner at
.----•Polly's Proble~~~~~----. of RutJalll. Mrs. Jessie Sisson came a part or man's tllght to
Oacar's In GallipoUs; devotions
ot Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs. the moon.
by Mrs. Don Mullen; new memDEAR POLLY-1 wish someone would tell me how
Flavey Sigman, La~sviHe, and
A sUent auction was held Wrbera to be voted onj report of
to put the buttons on the back of my couch in place. I
want to replace them so I can recover the couch.
Mr. and Mrs. R. K. Haimes of ing the social hour, Daffodils
the nomlnatlllf committee.
'!bank you.-LINDA
Huttonsville, W. Va.
decorated the refreshment taTWIN CITY Shrine Club regu.
ble for a dessert course servllr meeting, 7:30 p, m., Thursday, Middleport club room.
ed by Mrs. Donald Hauck and
PLAN DINNER, MEETING
Mrs. Roy Ma,yer.
Ute
business meet-

t~~

"!j!';"'-'l'
)

~=;lerln&amp;

Modern Crisis

A followahlp dinner WOI «&lt;JQy.
ed by the ·mtnietera lnd tlialr
'WIYH, the Rev, and Mra. A. E.
'llllltr, the, llif!. lnd Mra.
iW1 811at,1fl'~ tllt ·_n.v. 'and M\'a.
....... I!Uiiot, the Rev. Llnlllll
'llollblaa.• anii the Rev. and Afro.

w.,.

serviJW aa hosteues. Erma
Beach was in charge ol clevoUons - the theme being Eeoter.
NeUie Dudding led In prayer.
The

fil'llnce

director,

Iva Fields, Eleanor DaVIs, LucUle

Cailohar4 presented the budget Powell, Pansy Fry, Erma Beaeh,
lor the year and money • Pam Slak and Angle F1olds.
maklrw pro.Jecla were discussed. . .- - - - - -. .- . .
Fa.r•
Carpenter
reported
the
F
tiiOonb\9,
Dinner
.for theonMay
' ·
.

BELTONE

mellllrw, Tho members voted to
10 to 11o1&gt; Evans Steak Houae.
It was reported that the ~lrltual Blrthda,y · Observance would
be held on Ma.r 14 with ~lrltllal
Life Director, Freda Turley, In
charge.
Plans were made to attend the
State Missionary Conventloo,
which will be held ln Charleston
on.l!lay 2 and 3. The convendoo
wm convene with a banQuet on
Frida,y evenlnc. The g101ot speak.
era wUI be Mr. and Mrs. Frank
H. Woot, mlaa!onanos from

h
II
Jobs Doug tars Wi

llallore.
will .... held Go lo Church Sunday
'111•~~
..
~~tthehOiii! C!fi'llltRov, and Mre.
Slllllar ~ 11( '!£:
. ' w111 be·a tal.
"Go to Church SWlda,y~ will
·lair~ l:l..o.ol
,.. mhllitero be observed APrU. 27 by .I!OI!Iel' .
, ' ~I . '·~ · · . ' '
·ell,
IDtornat"""'' •Old.~· nl Jolio· .
IIIII their Iii . .•.,..
'-'..
&gt;\.• ,.. •.
~........ra,,. ,.,~~'"'·· , ,.tor ,· ....
i ..~
...,...
, . . , ,
'hia.J; wlien , IIIlo~Ia !ll~t MDII- .
.
~ \. ·?~' ·J' ,, -"'" '~~- ·'
4Q lqht &amp;t the ~

.,!InD.

'·"

1

•&lt;'tom!&gt;••· · ,

· ·, ·

·•t

'

,

•

'

~ •

Hearing AAfd
Servi(t Center
. .

MR · ALLEN HEROLD
.
WILL BE AT
Jl&amp; N. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
ON
Thurs,, April n 1969
FROM . ' ·
9 ,tM. lo·lZ NOOn .
To repoi~ and service. ·
hearing aldo-

Batlerloa and S.pplloa fo1
:, all makoa .for aalo
MR. HE ROLO wi It be glad
to give you a fr•e hear·
lng teat with ohe latest
Bellone
equip-

COLOR YOUR SUMMER REDWOOD! WITH

Make f!ie most of leisure time this season. John
Hancock genuine California redwood can tum
a drab patio, porch, poolslde or lawn Into a
thing of beauty and utility ••• so economically!
INSIST ON THE FINEST COMPLETE SETTINGS

See how remarkably light and fluffy
these new homemade-looking biscuits are.
They're completely different from any you've ever tasted.

.

*••'

· ·· 1 1""'"""

The Bethel will attend t h
Bi'odbl!ry ·tJI1UI'ch ot Christ
10:15 a. .
.~laauO.
nll'llit' 'w'lio aet. (or
' votediOba&gt;'tfli
ot the Y!Uoaa

1'

son, Mary Sisk, Helen Johnson1
Sue Erwin, Millie King, Nellie
Dudding, VIola Roush, Ama
Johnson, Iva Cailohart, Orp!la

•'

"&gt;.

INGE~S ·

ONLY $:00 PER M9NTH

"

�- - __ J. ____.....

' '

.

- - -·-

-~ -

---.

18 - Tile Doll)' sentinel, Mlddleport..J&gt;cmeroy, 0., April 16, 1969

Find Everything From Auto's To Yo-Yo's In The Sentinel Want Ads
INP:OR .... TION
DEADLINES

2 SIGIIS

S , ..... Doy Bof•o Publlcollon
MoMoy Doodll• 9 • ·•·
Co ..ull .. lon• l C.. rectton•
Will llo H'=optod until 9 o.m. far
Ooy of Publlcot lon

OF
QUALITY

Po•eroy
Motor Co.

n .. P.lith.r fOIOIYOI tM rlthl
to ..dlt or roject ony ad1 . .w.4 oa,.
;.ctloMI . The piiiiiii1Mr will 1\ot
M rotponailtlo lor IIIOfO than oM
lnc•roct lu.nlon.

5 uflf• ,., w.d • .,. ,,.,.,.,,.,.
ChGrt• 75c:

12 conta por word thro1 con,.cu·
tlwo lnaortlont .
11 conla per Word si• ,COftiKut iYo
lnaortlonl .

25 pt1r cent Dltcototn! on paid odt
oM ad• paltl within 10 day1 .
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 IDI' 50 word ffl ini111um . Eo .
edditio~tt~l word 2c .
BLIND ADS
AddltlbMI l5c Chlll'go ,., A.d.,or•

.....

,_

..

MAYBE YOU SHOULD
CONSIDER A SECOND
CAR THIS SPRING .•.

SEE THESE
58 Cadillac 4 Dr .........$69

unlay ot Jack's Cl~ on Har·
rlsonville Road off Rt. 7.

57 Chev. V-8 4 Dr. .... $199

GUN
Racine
rift llepU bnent, &amp;mday.
April !ll, at the Bob Ifill
firm. will be two balf hogs.
Proceeds will go to the new
Dnergeucy Squad \!'Udl:.
4-IJ.Stc

VACANCY lor two elderly peo.
pie. Prefer private paid palleDII. Pbone

Mason.

'/'13-5185.

JH.Ifc

Employment Wanted
INTEiuOR and exterior pointIng and roof - k. Call Gene
Congo, Long l!altom. ~.

4-lr.-14tp

·Help Wanted
MAN OR woman, Midway Mar.
k~. Phone !m-M. 4-11;.3tc
MEN FUR production ...... .In
modem brldt plant, steady
work, day shift, good houl1y
and piece WW'k rates, paid
vacations and holidays, klsur·
.,.,. benefits, free bunk
!Jouse, bring your own bed
clothes or move to this nice
rural area nor11! of Columbus,
Ohio. No age limit. Apply In
pei'I!Oil only. The Galena
fllale Tile and llridl: Co., Ga·
lena, Obio.
4-1$.8t.:
WOMAN to help with llooJS&amp;.
&lt;leaning two days. !'bone
R-3111Z7.
4-ls.3lc

TWO WAITRESSES, apply at
Orcbanl Inn, 'MIII!OII after s
p.m.
4-14-41c

60 Buick 4 Dr. ............$199

60 Chev, '6' -2 Dr. ....$250
61 Ford V-8 4 Door
Air-Candl~oning ........ $395

62 Cadillac
Cpe. DeVille .............. $699

6i Chev. '6'
l111palo Coupe ............ $699

58 GMC lO ton
V-8-4 Speed ..............$395

POMEROY
MOTOR CO.

Your Chevy Dealer
Ope" E•••· Til I

992-2126

:&gt;IAN to cut grass and trim.
Pbone llfUI38.
4-ls.31c

POODLE PUPPIES. AKC TOJ IF CARPETS look dul and
drear, remove tile spots as
miniature, $75 and up. Stud
they appear wllh Blue LUStre.
service and grooming. Phaao
992-5443.
11 s l(e
Rent eieclrlc sbampooer fl.
Baker Fumlture.
4-14-ltc
SOIJTIIERN plants, Cli!Jbap,
tomatoes, pepper and oweot . EXCELLENT condition, used,
potatoes. Order now. Cbarlea
one Kelvinator 13.6 aulormltic
R Harris, Portland, PIIOI1e
delrost double door · re!rlgerIM3-Z693,
S.2'1-181c
utor, $150. One 36 Inch electric range wtth grldle, $511,
LOT !JN MID st., in Mldd1e!&gt;ort
one 7 piece breakfast set,
olooe to (lllllolll&lt;e. 4l).fool
like new, $35 , Pirone 9IN228
wide, 12$ foot deep. heel·
allier 5 p.m., 949-2512 from
lent lot, 20 Coot aUey In back.
9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
4-1~
Phone 992-5251.
~It!!
HOUSE In Racine, 3 bedrooms,
S(JO'M'IE TraDer, ready to go,
balh, owner transferred. For
appointment can IHII-2811.
:1ll4 'Mulberry Ave., ~.
4-15-Qc
Phone 91J2.5167.
4-IHtp
SAVE BIG. Cl01111 nJ111 8lld up.
bolstel'y with Blue lallre.
Rent eledrlc ahampooer $1.
Tiny's Bargalnland. 4-14-eR
FOUR ROOM HOUle In Syra.
cuse, bath, carport, gas fur.
""""· good condltloo; oaD
119U862.
4-1~

Alabama; Dorotlly Lambert allll
John Lamberl, whose place orr...
i sidenee is Route No. 3, Apache

Re•l Estate For Sale
RODNEY DOWNING
Real l!ltale Bnlter
P1loM IIIWIIZ
Mlddleparl, Ollie
4-1~

HOIST ETTER
REALTY

.

---•-m

..... t.IJ*d aullamaUc , .

ord cbaDpr. BellutJfuJ bllld
nflbed oiled walnal eablaet.
Tate ..... PQIIlentl of •
$1.110 weekly 01' pay balmle.
t11Utl. Clll mall. 4-!Uic

SMITH AUTO SALU
UNA.UGA, OHIO

1960 RENAULT, good motor,
phone 111&amp;-mr.
4-lHtp FOUR BRAND 11111r ~
ton, zig zag - - ....
69 Buick Specials
lnell. Clole aut at ttl. Call
At low at ................$2620
JIID.Z8i!ll.
t4MI!
Avollo .. l• In 15!1 HP 6 c:yl. eftoo
glne or 230 Cit 280 HP Yl en•

I!MI lrt $11•clol Dlx., Sk!loolo,
511yllll'k CUstom, Grond port,
-&amp; 5port Wagc:~ns, 2 On., • dts.,
2 4r. Hc:~rd Tc:~pa ; 4 dr, HCII'd
Tc:~p1, Sfg. Wog~~n1 c:~nd Cc:~nv.,.
tlbl••·

69 Pontiac Tempost
As low as ..........S2566.75
c.::~m

6 ~1 . ; 26S HP V8 In Tem•
pe1t, Cuatc:~m S, Lamoni, &amp;
GTO - 2 dra., 2 dr. Hard Tc:~pa,
.. dn., i dr. Hard Tc:~p1, StcJtlon
Wogona, c:~nd Convertlbl ...

69 Pontiac Catalina•
As law as .......... $3157.50
Available In 290 Hc:~raepc:~wer
CIO cu. ln. engine In i dra., i
dr. Hc:~rd Top1, 2 dr. Hard Top1,
Cc:~nvertlllle• and Station w~
gona.

BLAETTNARS
BUICK
PONTIAC
GMCTRUCKS
POMEROY

For Rent

EIGIIT :Aaml, "*lrUCIIII
boule, balb, haomenl, .....
Long Boltom. Water t.p Ill.
A nice eoontry home, . flllU8.
Far Information ed Roedlvllle, lfl4333.

4-lUI!

ALUMINUM FlshiDfl Bon,
tale, deep, llurcly. Buy • lafa
boot for ,.. flmiiJ'• prot.
tlon. b I.oron!o Dl'fll, ~
mile Wl!llt fl. Rl. u Ill
Klngtbary Road.

'4.,

RlllMOVE EXCI!I1I1

bodJ

l1ald

with Flulda: Tablets, oniJ
fUI at Nelton Drill. l-1441p
CHINA Olphoard. Zltrli alee.
Clll 217...
f.f-Ue

luslneu Servbe

Junctlon, Arizona; Helen Guider
and Herbert N. Guider, whose
place of r esidence is 941 Bluewater Drive, Indian Harbor
Beach, Florldai Inez Morris,

whose place of residence is unknown; the unkncnrn Hneal des.

ceiMJants, dlstrlbutees, heirs at
law and next of kin, devisees,

II any o! WIUiam J. Matlack,
deceased, arxl the unknown Uneal
descenianta, distributee&amp;, heirs
at law an:l next of kin, devisees,
II any, of Lydia E. Matlack, d&amp;-

ceased, will take ooUce that on
the 3rd day or March, 1969, Betty Roush as Plainti!l, filed her
petttioo in the eommon Pleas
Court o! Malgs County, Ohio,
numbered as case No. 14,428,
in which you and other de!eritlanl8 are named therein al¥1 furthor alleging that ohe lo seized
In lee simple or anundlvldedonefortieth (1-10) part of said real
estate, to-wit:
Sltlllte In the Township of
OUve, County of Meigs and
state of Ohio, ln Ra~ 11,
Town 4, Section 26 of the Ohio
Company's Purchasei
The East half of an 80 acre
l&lt;t bounded on tho East by
!allis belonging to Jooeph Me-

oo

u.ue

•l'R.AJlJ!lll, llnlwn's 'l\'lller
Park, Mlnemtlle, l'llo111 •
•.
f.f.Uie

W3-lfe I THREE room Apartment,

Peta For Sale

BMTER fiP1IJCW.. 11111811 miDIIture poodles, puppy lrlnllll.
dulled. tel; allo JIUIII, llliJI.
tiel, wirer. Ireland 1Wd KenDell, County Rd. lit, ~.
fllone . . . .
U.llle

&lt;0111pletely modern with builtoven m:l
table lop unit, stalniou lleel
l!ld&lt; wllll dlepoeaf unit, bllb.
complete wllb . , _ IIIII
large clc!OOI, nke1y deeorat«1. Call 9ft.5m for •1111*-

In kitchen, wall

ment.

4-IJ.IIe

NIGHT
••• CALL
.
. .
RAILINGS SERVICE
DAY 99Z·215f ·
NIGIIT 992-73Zt

.... ..... _ . , ,

-

___
........

elM....

lllllllr
Sanltlllon, stewut. Oblo,
,_ .IJ.tft llet
Pbolle Ill ...

c. c. IIIWJli'OBD
AUCI'IONIIIl

OMpllll . . . .

ltMin. OMt

In the prayer of said petition,

plalntlf! prlj'o that her lntereat
In said real estete m•v
- be set off
to her 1n severalty 111111 lor pert!-

tion of said real eatate, accordolng to the respective righla of

PHONE 992·2094

....,., ... &amp; Alii

'

I

'

. I

' ;i

I

AT
J:SO A.M.·

l

GASOLINE ALLEY

12 NOON
3 P..M.
AND

By MRS. HERBERT ROUSH
Clifford Aahley, son ofMr. and
Mrs. Bob A.ohley, Roser Roush,
son or Mr. alii Mrs. Herbert
Rouah, alii Mrs. Kathryn Hill
spent Easter vacatloo fr&lt;ln Rio
thel hom
Gralllo College at
r
es.
Mrs. Bob Roy spant a week
with Mn. Florence Thornton
while her husband, Bob, was attending school at Marlon.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kiesling
or GaUipolis caUed on Mr. alii
Mrs. Lloyd Cununlna Sunda)',

And I don't like
even b4
prett4 ljOunq qiri~ who
have a cruGh on me!

i n~inuation~ , not

4:30 P.M.
~ eebing Meigsi
GaHia and
Mason Area
Informed · "As
Well As
Entertained
lF·,..OADW "· LET HI MSELf

David

BE NABBED

Hf MUSTA

ard Mrs. Dale HUI were on the
sick ltst.
Mrs. Jackie Jenkins of Columbus spent a weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Wlckeroham. . ,
Mr. alii Mrs. Ted Fisher, Jan
and Mark, of Cincinnati, Mrs. Hi·
ram Flsher or Mlnersvllle were
recent guests of Mro. Ferne Hll'man and Wesley Belles, Sr.

~T~MEAN
1HAT PUHJAB'S

~0 IF PUf'1 JA8 DON ' T ~ WHERE TME

TIOAT STRANGE lOOKli'Vl,

B!AD GUYS lOOK "DADO'( IT'S "' GOOD
.aET TtiAT HE'S HEADIN' MY VJA'( HOP1ti'
! llOT .:1 C LU~ ~·C' MON ·AWAY PltQM ·

CHIU2ACTER 1t1 THE o:!.PE·..
I CAH'T QET A
OIJI" OF Hl M ~

THAT BUilDING, SANO'f ... ~E GOT A

FIGURED OUT SOME
~'f 0' BUSTIH ' LOOSE'

!£!!tl ~ ·A HEAD OF US .1

.--.Ill

.

Ot1 THE OUTSlOf
\IMlTlN ' FoR

lttE WORD ...

Mrs. Ruth Paraons returned

home after opellllng the winter
with relative• at East Uverpool.
Mr. and Mro, DaiB Lewlo of
Clifton, W.Va. and Leaterllouah
alii Gary called on Mr. allll Mrs.
Herbert Rouah, sunday.
Roy Dural allll son of Leon, W.

Va., calledonMrs. Ruloelllloulh
recently.
Raymolll Adams or· Warren
spent his Eaater vacation !rem
duties at Warren Hl&amp;h School
with his parents, Mr. allll Mro.
Mar•haU AdamL
Mr. and Mra, Floyd NCilTis
called .on Mr. ard MrL Hcmer
WarnerMr ~Mr· , ~ Harrl
• a,u
S, -••8
I
alii Clara Garlard of MlnoroL- viii e ~nt
Su""••
... ..
.. _...
•-.r wtth Mra.
..
F
u •• _.
~ Ia
""'- II an ..~.
a.rtlaN.
Ylro
erm •....,....n 11&amp;1 ther. Wes- llDiao ... w111o II • ... , t'sst "
10)' BoDes Sr.
::,
MrL Kenneth Blaa allll chll- ~oa • • - ·dren of o-g!a arrived Suodoy
~ ~.:;r:r
lo opend an lndellnlte visit with - ....,, "'"""' - · Mr · ....
-""Mr a. ~· - ....
- - ... o.;,
.....
her pore ..-~,
- ......
"' .._
_,
old
D. Hj
Her lrus- Kennelh .._,
_
..,..
_
- _
. -.., _
• _
•
~n s olatloned 0\'0r-s In ...,_ "'"""' - WID ""
the armed aervlca..
lor ~ • • .._
M .,
Mr. and MrL Ropr Beegle or
~~~- - · · Northflel4 spent thoweekeadwlth .
~~ - Mr. alii lllr~. Marvin Wicker· .
fir , . _
··
3-191 3-261 4-21 ol-91 4·1'6J4•23
ham.

'
CROSSWORD
3. Conjunction 20. Print-

f. GUdeaiUte

a bird
5. Beige
6.1ntel'e8t

w•

in a cor-

":!'"..."'J::i..":1 ::.,":= ..,

:r·...

.

'
I,

..

...

presents
.
LOCAL REPORtS
DAILY

''86 E. Main Po11orer, O.

the persons theret&lt;&gt;, allllln cote
partition o! said aforesaid doocrlbed real estate, callllll! be 8
DWie without manlfeat InJury to
Easter Sunday guests or MrL
the value thereof, then that said Feme lla7miD aiiiWes!M)'BeUea
real estate mll' be adjudpd to Sr. were Mr. alii MrL Garrett
ooe or more of the partteetothls Circle of llaclne.
auit ..,.. eiectlon, aa provided
Mr. alii MrL Doll Hlfll and
by taw, alii In case ea14 aton~ sono, Roser fBI Gtorae Par10111
oald d..crlbed real eatate It not and Mro. Jeaolo P~rSDIIJ of A.ohadjudged to one or more partlea . land spent Easlar woelreDd with
to lhla ault ""'" eleetlon aa pro. Mr. alii lllrL carroU'Whlte allll .
vlded by law, then that said reol Mr1. Kate Rowe and Ada.-'
OBlate III8J' be oold, free and
Mr, and MrL MadlllllllandRuth
clear lromall)'andalltheclalms, P~raono or ADiancewereSaturrlch!s and lntsreata of each alii daJo gueato ot Mr. allll Mra. Dona
all tho parties to thia suit. Plain- P1r10111.
tltr IUrther prays that the tald 00.
ll!r. and llts. RuiMI1 lloulh
21185.
......
fe-s. alii each of them be alii !ami))', Mr. aiiiiMrL lledoort
relllllred to set IV whatovar. Roush allll RGpr, Mr. ej11,)4j'L
claimo, rl&amp;hla or tntereals!IIO)' Doraa Pars0111, Mra. r..b ~
ard each or them lave 1n laid aDd JoiUilllw wtre Eutor &amp;11reol oolate or be forever borred dt.Y 111011a ot lllr, allllllrL lllno
fr&lt;ln aosertlng same. Furtbtr Lewis at Cllltoll, W, VL
. PlaiDtlf! praya for other proper
Euter aum:IM atnlco Ill 1
rellaL
held at tile loclllflolhodlllelurch
Saldo defendants are required under tho cllreetlon Ill Herbert
to answer on or before tile 2111 Shlelb a1111 Doanla MlruoL
CIOAllm'1'l
•
•1
lilt
tk
II
dll'
ot Juno, 1969,
lllr, sill MrL Roy Buck allll
FJSII BAIT, llliJmDWI llllll nile
IIIII
...net.
ABC
.....
11.11,
CROW
CROW
1o
PORTER
Pem
open\ Easter weoiullll with
crawlen, John KAiebler, Col11-.
11',
YL
I
"
nMifl.
Allor~
lor Plalntlf! ' Mr, allll lllrL Doa Beesio at
lip Rold, ~. I'IIGbe
Mill (4) t-1~0 (5) 7-14 _ 8tc Mutella. Go.
....
f.lutc

•

INFORMAOON'
NEWS

~GUARANTEED­

News, Events

above~ 80~,-lt ~ =.h:Jt~

lave ln saki real estate, or be
!o......,r barred from asserting
same, a1111 lor other prq)Or ,....

WMPO

App}e GfOVe

Mrs. Fe•·ne Hoyman alii lather,
lllnl. VlrgU Roush, Mrs. Ver-

terestl thev' all! each one ofthem

.....ss.ss
All••···

Open: Mon. thru Fri . 11-6
Saturday - 9·6
Sundar - . 11-6

South by the Section and ""the
weot by the west half o! the

north end of an so acre lot No.

UPERI

Car Completely Hand
Rubbed and Thorou&amp;hiY
Rinsed
$1.25

Mrs. Wesley Belle•, Jr., or
Wellston was a recert guest of

TERMITES swiii'IDintl. Tbey 3. Being further described aa
are reproductlvea ldiSed out the Eastern half or the Nortll
of tennlle oolony destroyiJII quarter of sectloo No. 25 in .
wood ln yOII' borne. A Mei(l Town No. 4, Range No. 11,
company, Allied Pets 11'11 The above described premises
Termite Control Servlee, 7 containing 61 acres, be the
Liberty st., Pome'tf¥1, Oblo, same, more or lesa.
Phone 119'U8111.
4-!Uip REFERENCE DEED: Vol. 90,
page 546, lllelgs County Deed
Records.
Alii further plalntif! name• the
other tenan\11 In common and
their spouoes In saki petition and
that the lnteresta of said temnts
CHIJCit'S Cull IIIII C1rry n In cmunon Is described in ..ld
Senlce, up to, -w petition, Plaintif! 6Jrtherclesi1'9S
111 nplln, BriD&amp; 1111111111.11111 . that Blil&lt;l defelllanta and ea&lt;h of
IIVI, Clluct'l !'¥, 1J1 Ba1t1J- them lllll' be required 1o set IV
_. A
p
• - .._ whatevar clalma, rlgbta alii In-

SltPt.lC llllb

S~lce DAY or

MASON CAR WASH

Avoy on the north by lands ot
s. s. Reed, deceased, on the

lng port of the same !JIIIIo
· de- to Joseph Matlack by
WIDiam Finley, AprU 2lot,
1851, recorded 111ay 29, 183 4,
Vol. 15, Pages 28, 29 alii ·30
of the Records o! Deeds of
llleigs County, Ohio.
Abo the following described
parcel of land in the Township
of Olive, Meigs County, Ohio.
Being 21 acres oil of tho

Crill llnil1rft'll
FURNISHED and unlund!lhed TAKE son. •ll'llr/ tile lllue
It tie
apartments. Clooe to ocbool.
,Lustre ftJ from ciJ1)III ml
Phone 99Z-5434,
1..1J.IIc
upbolllery. Relit eleelrlc AIR CXlNDlTtONINO ~
slll1mpooer $1. Sa)'ftl ll'lldllloa nerolee. Jact'l JlefrleBusiness Opportunity 'fRAILER LOTS, Bob's MGblll WIIfll,
Nn lrfwea, 11'. VL
eraUoo, New lflven, . _
OWN YOOR own dry cltiiiiDg
Court, Syracuse, Oblo on Slate
4-!Nie
....,_
' • 1111
business. Ambltl001 man or
Rt. 124, Phone IDSL
woman to late over 8lld 01111
..11-Ue
READY • MIX i!oacnlll den..
trudt and l'DUte. We will
SINGER Sewing Machine In
rl&amp;bl to Jlllll' pnJect. .
deantnc wboleoale. Apply Ill FURNISHED bouse ID J'oo». beautiful Jlght flnlsbed cab!· ered
FIII
IIIII HI)', Free pei'IIOn. A.B.C. ae-n, Mao
net, like new. Fully equ!J&gt;
Tf¥1' Ow 1'0111111 and bCIL
malel. Pbolle ...... CJoltsm. W. Va.
t.-io-Ue
ped to do all laney sewing 11
can evenlugs, 99U2t2.
lela Ru4y - Ml&amp; Co., IQdd!e.
wen as beautiful atralgbt
pari, OldD,
I • tit
WILL SElL one or bolll of 1117
!lllrlllng and zig zag design..
c1eanbrg plants. A. B. C. FURNISHED TWO BEDROOI'II
log, Pay off balance of 9 pay.
Cleanen, Mason, W. Va.
apartment, Middleport. PllaDe menta at " monthly or 150
4-J.D.Ik
cash. Guarllllleed. PboDe JID.
9ft.387t
~

For Sale or Trade

For The Fastest

-aidence la Box 288, Trussville,

ForS1Ie

.

FUU. OR PART lime, eorn
150 to $1110, write Box 1161-L.
In care of Daily Sentinel, f'o.
meroy.
4-IUic

1111 CAMERO VI, 4 lpe«&lt;;
111'1 Flreblnl VI, 4 lpe«&lt;.
Clll tiUM'I or ltUNI.

I
I

ILAITTNAIS

KITCHEN !IIIOke bulldlrlg up
198! RAMBLER, allandard l!bllt,
on your walls. Use Wipe Out
$100. Phone 99UDI. 4-IUte
cleaner to end It aU. Rent
wall washer $1. Bater Jl'urnl. GEO. HOWITeMER ~ '
lure.
4-1~ LETART - · 6 rooms, balb, · 2
porches, drilled well, 4 nice
lots. $6600.110
1111 ~ e»mpiiC trailer,
used three llmee. Slee!ll 4 to CHESTER - Nice 6 1'011119,
.... . WlDJo Oulldller. s,r. bath. lull basement '. screened patio, garage, 3\1 aeres.
l!llle. Pbone lft.SI. See 1111'·
Fann pond. $13,1100.00
time.
4-IHp
MIDDLEPORT - 6 rooms
'
bath, furnace, nice fireplace,
HAY. Ph- lfl-tik 4-J.Uip
paneling, 2 acres. $6.000.00
STEIU!lO PIDIO radio Clllll- HELEN or VIRGn. TEAFORD
. . . .5
bloatlon, repu~~l!lllld, loob ASSOCIATES
jllllt 1llre 1111r. Maltlple l)leQ.
4-l.Wt.c

Avc:~llc:~ble In 170 HP overflec:~d

EXTRA inl'ome opporlunlty.
~able man or woman earn
150 part time 01' $100 lull
time. Set your own hours aDd
ean. what you desire. No e:l·
perience neceonry. Wire
Cbarlie Penn, W. T. Raw·
leigh Co., P. 0. Box ZOI, Qill.
llcothe, Ohio 45601.
4--l.&amp;.lt.:

Jack W. Caraoy
Mor.
992·2181

- --------~
·
For Sale

-··- .IIUSIC every Friday and Sat·

- - --·SIIOOT by tile

POMEROY

-----.-

H~lc

PUBLIC Sale Friday, George's
Auction House, Rutland, new
and used merchandise. Con·
algnments welcome. Open
from 10 a.m. till aale time for
conslgnmonts. Sale sliarls at
4-IW&lt;
7 p.m

-AL-

• 11 tit

Street; Phlladelphla, PL; Wood- I
raw Robin~, whose place of 1 Fn&gt;m tht ....._. Truclc
residence Ia Box335, Woodstock, Bulllb10r - - To .:J'bt
VL; Lulu Madaek, whose place : !tnallost " - CoN.
or residence is 1211 Kenwood, 1 !
Road, Apt. 163-E, Seal Beach, 1
california; carl Matlack alii LouPIL 99~43
Pomeroy
lse Matlack, whose place of re-

Notice

4-1~

oo .....

finish, Powerglide trans. Radio and heater.

Auto Salas

'HERE wUI be a Gun ShoOt,
Sunday, begim1inl! at 110011 at
the Forked Run Spor1sman
Club. Everyone "' wacome.

.,.. ~~aea~et

LUllan Parker 1 whole p11ee of 1
residence IJI 2345 south Front I

POMEROY, OHIO

KETCH HIM

I
:roar . . . \ .

1963 CHEVY II NOVA 4 DR .......................- ........ $995
Local low mi lecige car, spot leu clean Interior. Red

~-·
·

OFFICE HOUR!
8:30 o.111 . tO 5:00 P·!'l· Dc:~ll.,
liJ!Ic:~ .... . tg 12:00 NOCI" Sot~~tdCI't,

MD!!OIIed' Loll

------

OPIM EVES. 8:00 P.M.

'IE MIGHT

.ABOUT SOME
MISSIN'
CHICKENS

AtJT()]IOIIli,B ............ -

and heater.

Po•eroy Motor Co.

GAI\&gt;1E?

RUN OUT TH'

BACt&lt;. DOOR AN'

Insurance

CLIP
THIS
COUPON.

with whit~

1964 CORVAIR ........................................................ $895
Spider, 2 dr. black finish, good tires, 4 spd. Radio

f01 Wont Ad S.r.lu

,,,

new whitewall tire.,t green exterior finish

nylon top, vinyl in¥6rior trim.

RATES

MiniiiiUIII

1965 CHEVELLE ..................................................$1395
Malibu Conv. VB engine, powerglide, radio heater

. 4olail

Pbolle .. -

FER A CHECKER

NOPE .. I CRAVE
TO AST SNUFFY

Business Services

HAl1IUliON'8 TV Stlt.._
Houle Cllilllllllllleaaa •
lllltl Hnlce. Some .....,.
IDtiiiiitd free wlib s-t-.

Bob
Says;

R!GULATIONS

ARE 'IE LOOKiN'

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

Business Services

WANT AD

HOWDY, SHERIFF -·

l,

=

..

-.-

*'

poraUon

Ollli Five

Only five planets were
!mown to ancient astrOilomera-Mercury, Venus,
Mars, Jupiter and Saturn. No
one !mew tbat lbe earth wu
a planet unW lbe e~rly WJOs,
when C opernlcusabowed
tbat the sun wu lbe center
of the solar ayatem and tbat
the earth revolved around lt.

7. Nests o~ ~
a sort
S. Sisters,
brothen.
etc.
9. A IU&amp;hUy
OC(Urrence

12. Cut ott,

~11ll~!1rn®::f..:ti:!Z::J:

er's

meuure

2J . Dove

aound
22. A. rtant
equl4 •
2t. Reglua
Profestor
25. FHrht :
alang
Ye......-•, &amp;Mww
26. Tarawa or
31. Sound of
Bikini
a Chatn
e.&amp;". '
34. A.pselle

uthetop• · 27. What

33.2Jdmo

aubject :

n. Prefix

rrucramblt thHe rour Jumbles.
one letter to each square, to
form four . ordinary words.

Foxy
of It ~
knives
16. Commert.hll 28. Decorateg
36. Frylnrnotice
a Chrillfm~V&lt;
pan Item
19. College
tru
37. Godofwn r
lf.

abbr.

29. Oiua
l'oln•

for "two"

t

iiOIU\01
b-;.;v::.:..:..;,:.:.=--/-....,,...,.....,

I
D
I
the
~.A
~::.':=:::::·:;"'~;:;~· ••ueated

AUCTIONI

"l

Satlr4Q, lfrll19-10 ....

, ....

Wola\'Ooold our 1-. and IIlli 11111 tht fl1114Mli1JIIl'._
at~ '-lied lhontilosiOIIIIIWutof ......W.. Loaw
SCale !1-. 124, llh mnes nat oiiAJ8stllle GD!IIaa Rt.
325 to tho vlllqo of DonYIIIa. Watch for u.,.,

--~ 1

Now arranp tho cit&lt;led lotion
to form
su,rpriae 11\swer, u
bribe""''" cartoon.
fA••••n tonwrro""-

Jun1hh.,.1 CLOAK
'{ .-l'lffil1)" 0 ~

,,,.,.,.....n

DAISY 8UOYID NATURI

n,. ""''·rilflr •• aW&gt;'!'r rlliltf i11

o•

other claln, 4' wool rup, _ . . , tlllllo couch, 1M111J
bed. "'-'"• two pa b•tua, llll'lll: ·walller, &amp;Ius 011111,
aaiiiMI,. marlllo lOp drulll' bur•u, plcwna, .llllll' ltand,
rGUIIII tablo, HI of elalro, two bod1, &amp;lea• _. ~
~ &gt;tallnl, banJo, lluldlller,.roeozd .calllllll, "''IIIIL Allll1
rille Willi IIIIIIIUIIItloa, ..,..1111111 lll'llelllllll...ar,taaco
~' .-.tea' Iadllara, klti ellllllll ~L Girdea
Wier, tiO bolos d.laJ, 60 bolos ol aJnw, hind tools ··
old! 1111111 artieloo liCit Hlled.
· '

_.HHI a• .trwtW- toDAY

'
&amp;Cllj,...._
. ._

.

1'artu 01111. Not re-Jblo for aceldelllls ,..lolL Lunch
sonod.
~

.

Aucllatl Co., . . . . Q•t.

..... .
'

-

'N ~!~:'l\1,;
'

. ..

.. "

.

.

J XC T. H Y Q. -F M' X a·y •p

~ox

u;, VANCE, OWNER

Salt OOI1IIucted ..,

ALIKE TO ME!

rn ~'"•• arrxxJ

·ClGatllela - - ·slilllt, IIW. ..-n tulllt,.roclltruii

~H94821.

ALL BEA6LE!i LOOK

- --

.

�I '

:o -

ur

ri I an tu ay e
Iberfe s In P,ft.leroy
Shop urs·day ·9. :30 to ,s:·QO
Frida and Saturd 9:30 to·9:0·0

were DOled that a gift had been sent to
elected and the Women's Confer- Miss Slleryl Ferry, tha ~list
once oo be hold at Granrille In sc:holarshlp girl and that the ProJWJe was announced when the grom Reoource Guide lor 1969Pomeroy Society ofd:le American 70 hao been received.
Several new offlcers

Baptist Women met Thursday

l

I
'

f

The love glft dddication )Y a

1

nigllt at the Pomeroy First Bap- conducted by Mrs. Wickham.
tist Church.
Mrs. Foster OJ)Oood tha moetiDg
Mrs. Edward Foster presided with """' sln&amp;!Dg ol"~en Mr
in the absence of Mrs. Oliver Mi- Eyes That I Ma,y See." Devotlono
chael who is in Tennessee. Mrs. with scripture from Psalms 121,
Elmer Wickham gave the nomin. 1-8 al'll a poem, 11Heavenly
cm~mittee

report which was

~ires,"

''

'•

tion, vice presldentandchalrman

Listened"

was

m:l

the program

of prosram; Mrs. WU!Iam Sheri- theme used by Mrs. T. T. Slleldan, Jr., division of missions, ton. She OJ)Ooed with tho •0116.
"Jesus Arose," a poem,

~·over­

heard in an Orchard," alii prayer.

The program teatured scenes
with emphasis on being agree-

lations; Mrs~ L. P. Sterrett, di- able In church meetiJWS. WUhthe
vision ofleadershipdeW"lopmert, Introduction by Mrs. Wickham the
vice president am chairman of first scene depicted a church
spiritual growth.
crmmittee mee~ The readers
Mrs. Cook read a ccmmunica- were Mrs. Ellen Couch, M r s.

tion from Mrs. Gerald Brown re- Walker, Mrs. WUes, aJXI Mrs.
William Barnhart. The second
scene was a group or church peo-ple. Tald11g part In It were Mrs.
tloo leo Is $22.50. Alsoanooonced Sheridan, Mrs. Olso Gemolmer,
at the meetirt:; was the installa- Mrs. Harry BaUey, Mrs. stertion of RloGrande Association of- rett, and Mrs. George Skinner.
ficers on April 22 at the Racine
Mrs. Cook conclllied the pro- .
Church.
gram with scripture frcm Acts
Mrs. Onal Wiles, white cross 15 and prayer. Refreshments
chairman, r~orted on the over- were served by Mrs. Sklaner and
seas white cross quota, It waa Mrs. W!los oo 14 members and a
guoot, Mrs. Gemelmer,
garding the Women's Conterence
at Granville, June 19-21, at Dennison University, The registra-

Mrs.Moore Re-Elected
President of WSCS
Mrs. Nan Moore was re-elected president lor the 1969-70 year

when the Women's Society of
Christlen Service met Mondey
night at Heath Methodist Cburch,
Middleport.

Miss NeUie Zerkle

amounc~

ed that the guo st sJIO&amp;)&lt;er at IIJ •
nigllt's Cla01 l2 meeting will be
a docoor !rom the Laldn llate
Hospital. Ma,y Fellowship DO¥ to
be observed oo May 2 at I h e

POmeroy U D I t o d M-Il
Church was amounced, as was
dent; Mrs. James Criswell, sec- the Diotrict WSCS mooting oo
retary; Mrs. Fred lllbb•, treas- be held at Portsmouth m AprU
urer; Mrs. Max Donahue, secre- 24 and tho Ohio Conference to
tary of missJonary education; be hold at St. Maryo on Ma,y
Mrs. C. E. Young, secretary or 21.
A reoume o1 the !Jnanetal obcampus miniatry; Miss Bess Sinborn, secretary ol spiritual l!gatlono of the association waa
grow11!; Mrs. Glom Lambert, lo- given by Mrs. Moore. ~o~-..
cal church responslbillt;y: Mrs. signed a roond-robln eard !nr
James Brewington, Christian Mrs. James Weber who Ia hoe-.
pltalhod In Florida.
membership.
A plano prelude by Mrs. C.
Named oo the nomlnstlng comM.
HOM-.y opened the meeimittee which will serve next year
(Dg
and
Mro. Moore welcomed
were Mrs. Walter Hayes, chairman, Mrs. John Kincaid, and Mrs. the guellll and read a "~lendorous ~lng!' Devotlona
M. L. French.
The purchase of fiveehalrstor by Miss Zerkle were taken from
the primary department was 111&gt;- a sermon by Dr, Nnrman Vlocent
proved, as was a hymnal in mem- Peale. !lie spoke on commllment.
ory o1 lite first wscs presi- courage and calmno88 and oald
dent, wile o1 a former minis- the~ "II we want peace ol mind.
then we nwst accept God'• JW'ter.
pose, pardoo and presence."
Sllbstlluttng lor Mrs. Donahue,
LHOSPITAL NEWS] the Rev. Max Donahue prol811ed ao Eallllr progrom, He spoke ·
Holzer Medical Center, Flrot on the reaurnctton ol Clu1lt
Ave. V!oltlng hours 2.4 and 7~ and showed a rum entitled, "On
p.m. Parents only oo Pedlalr1cs the Road to Damaacua!' Tbe
group 1111g "Chrlot llle Lord Has
Ward.
Risen." ••Jesus Clrist II Rl.,.
Admissions
Publlcstloo o1 admissions Is en Today," and ''I Know That My
prohlblted mW !urther ootlce. Redeemer Uves."
Refreahments were served by

Mrs. Robert L. Fisher, Ha- Mrs. Earl Knlgllt, Mro. WUson
cine, 11011, 12:26 p.m. 'l'Uesda.Y: and Mrs. Young. The table was
Mrs. Rupert L, Howard, Hart.- covered In green and centered
lord, datl8bter, 5:13 p.m. TUes- with r-llow dalfodUs and taper a.
da,y; Mrs. Thomao Keaoon, Jack- Assorted cake and punch "ere
SOD, daughter, 6:42 a.m. Wed- served.
nesda,y,
Discharge•
Mrs. Gladys F. Evans, Stea
plleo 0. Harrio, The Rev. Jolm
A. !vii)', Melvin R. JO¥,iolut, !lief.
Ia A, Lanham, Mrs. James L.
Long, Marvin D. Miller, Mrs.

IMIGS fiiEAIIE

,.
''

$65.00
$49.50
$35,00
$29,50
$25,00

COATS •...•••••. , ••• , .SALE $38,00
COATS . , , .•••••• , •••. ,SALE $28.00
COATS ...••.••••.•••. ,SALE $22.00
COATS • , .............. SALE $1&amp;00
COATS ... , . , ... , ••... SALE $18.00
SUITS
SUITS
SUITS
SUITS
SUITS

A
l.

Young Mens ·
Super Slim Blue Denim Jeans
4.98

............... SALE $46.00
, • , , , •• , , • , , .•• SALE $38.00
••.••..• , . , ..• . SALE $28.00
. • . . . . ••. , , .....SALE $22.00
• • • . • , ••• , , •• , • SALE $1&amp;00

Slzoo 28 oo 38 waist. Seloet

:r- correct lo&lt;wlh.

Anti-Fatigue Mats

Made exira

''·

'

1------------------oof
MENS WALK SHORTS
See tho exeeUoDI selection of mou "alk ahorta In aile&amp; 28 to
44 "ols~ Solid coloro, plalda, cbeekl. Every pair lo - -·
oellt presa.

Mens Broadcloth Palamas
~~. 2 -~ 5•00

and
IHFAIITS AND TODDLERS 2 PIECE PLAY SETS
SEERSUCKER OR KNIT .............................. SPECIAL 2.88

Sizes A, B, C and D. Cool oQ'lo tq1 with IIDicbed collar. Very
well made. save duriDg this ule ... these $2.95pajam...

$L98
$8.00
$2.00
$LOO

'
'•

back.

--------------------------

54" wido.

tu.....e

1.00 yd.

4.98 WOMENS UIIBRELLAS.............................. SALE 3.88

TOll CUIHIONI
Our entire stock of Tou Pi llowo. Regular $2. 95, $3.19

and $3.99. While they loll.

Sale price 200

---------------------------

FULL SIZE.- AN EXCELLENT BUY

6.19 Sale price

---------------------------

Sale Price

2

palfl

27 x48-Nrlon and Raron Acetate
Sldd proalr.ek - wuhlbla- p....,llnll* owalllll ntuplar,
Frqocl IIIII - Dac:arallll' ColGI'I -

5. 00

Sale of Hand Tooled and Natural Leather Handbqs

See The New

•"··••1

$34.00 HANDBAGS .......... , .... , , .... SALE
t2'9.00 HANDBA43S •.. , •••.••••••• , , , • , •• SALE $14.88
$24.00 HANDBAGS •• , ... , ............. SALE $12.88
$23.00 HANDBAGS ... , , ................ SALU11.88
Triple Head
$20.00 HANDBAGS •.. , .. , , ..... ,... , ,SALE $10 88
$17.00 HANDBAGS . , . . • . . , ....... , ... SALE $8.88
$15.00 HANDBAGS •..•.•.•........ , •. ,SALE $7,88
$1LOO HANDBAGS, •• , , • , , .. , .•..• , •••SALE $6.88
.7.00 HANDBA~ , ......... , ••• , , ••• , ••SALE $3.88 On aolo on tho Main Floor.
~--- --~~~--~~----1 Thla now Ro1or hoo tho
n•• , •• h.bu- drop head.

NOIELCO

Speed Razors

---.MENS
. . .SHIRT
. SALE
2 for 5.00

For This
3.19
Linoleum on Sale In Our
Warehwse
on Mechanic Street

·Select Your

Porch &amp; Lawn
Furniture
~lo prlcoo on oil Porch
and Lawn Fumlturo thla
week end 011 tho 2nd floor.
Well known makoo.

pe.,._

Fama"a Garton quality Croquet Sets. Known for their

Sleeve
preu Sport Sldrta. Woll kDolnl - ·
- Bli aoloctloo of the most P&lt;Jilular JNittern&amp; and aolld colora.
All alaes &lt;small 14-14\;.), medium (15-lSih ),larse (16-181h ),
exira larie (17-17'h ).

fine quality.
4 Pltll'or Sot. In unblo Cardboard Holder. C...ploto
with R•l• Book ...... -~......·--·-..-·-............ ------4.68

1-------------------·
Toro L11r1 ~trs
ON SALE
Warth•st
On Mech1nlc Strett
~

6 Ployor Sot. Comploto with llotal Storage Stood.
Ruloa ...................................---··.....................- ............8.48

BOYS SHIRT SALE
2 for 3.00

l:C~:: ~".I~~b::i.'i!: .~.~:'.'.:.~~~~:. ~~~. ~~~

Sllel s oo 18 • Pormonont pren abort aloe,. JPQrt ahlriiiD
u OKeUeat aoloctloo rl. solltl colora 1111 patteru.

Sale Prices This Week End
KIMBALL PIANOS

Salel lens Big Yank
Regular 10.90 p.,..nont Prell Work Unllonoo
Thlo ~lo .._...... -.......- .......................-.. - .....-9.00 a ault
Rotular 8.90 100" Cotton Twill Wort Unll...o
Thla Solo -----·--............. ___.. ________7,00 • ault

B1a aeleetlaa of ..... 1n PIDII attd lildrtl. Elallltlt tell

GI'J.

19 inch and 21 Inch width cvt Tore Mowwa. Many modolo.
S.ll propelled. All complete with gra•• catcher. Roody
to pUt to u••·

Ylalt tho mualc -doparilllont on tho oocond floor. Soo tho
boootlfvl Kl•HII PI-a. Soloct tho ono you lor
J"'raollor your fo•lly ood .... now.

/

y,....,.,

Sale

79~

ClnSIIII Colli' Television
lajers lllat.;OMrari on ballwin
'

on RCA iUS 'IIIki.:Taile Sets.

P'l·
".

••
'

,..., :r' ,

~· '

..

i,

•

----- ------

- 'lllera were North Karaali
aircraft knoWn to be "atrbomeu
at tha limo, but nt1 eVidence
that ground forces In the
Communiot •lion w t r e on
extra alert.
-There wu no lndlcaUon the
Norlll Koreans tried to force the
plane oo land, In an attempt at
piracy slmUar oo the capture ot
the U$ Pueblo.
· -The plane was under
command of tha U.S. Navy and
had oo mlsolon lor lite Central
Intelligence Agency, nr the
Natiorw.l Security Agency, the
Pentagon said.

l

RAVEN~OOD - The C1Di11 Kay lalaot apec:tacular !han the alAI "Ravelllllllod," bot._,..
one Is hapJil' tl1e ferry Is runn!Dg again. Heeded by Wally Shaver of the Ravenawond Jaycees, a
cmnmittee of city fathers was successful in obtaining a new franchise operator. Earl Naylor, who
obtained l;he CJOOy Kay at Sissonville. She opera~s seven days, 7 a.m. to 7 p.m. BalJD)', IUIIIJY
weather SUnday brDtVhl oot !revelers eoough oo keep t11e CIIK!y Kay scurryiDg !rom West V!Pglnla
to Ohio and back again. And there was plenty or yoong foot passenger&amp;, too, shown above. Toll
collector is Roy Swain, the pilot Is Wolter Swain, both of Bollerille. The first franchise oo - ·

ate a ferry at Ravenswood Is believed to have been granted in 1841 when Martin Van Buren waa
In the White Hoose.
·

Railway Hearing Set
'

A pUblic hearing wtU be held would be lost If the requested
at 10 a.m. '1\teaday, Ma,y 6, ill change were made.
the Public UWittes Commission
Tbe statloo it Pomeroy serves
of Ohio OO!ces In Columbus on the Chesapeake and Ohln RaUtho awUcatloo to change t h e way Co. and the POnn Central
lrel!lht ot!lce ID POmeroy from Co., as a ~~~Werning lllltloo. for
an
agency to a non-ageney sta- the non-agency station at MJ.d.
~~~~~~
lion."
dlepart. The o1xtloo Is0 open from
FD!ng
tha
application
with
lite
7
a.m. to 4:30 p.m., MondaY
LAUREN .ILSLEY
commlsoloo was the Chesapeake through saturday inclusive !or
and Ohio RaU110Y Co. and 1 h e carload freight ooboth raUroads.
Pem Central Co. The companII tho appllcatlan Is granted,
leo llilted they have maintained Gallipolis wtll become the 81111·
the agoncy !re!ghi statloo ID Pom- ernlng lllltion for POmeroy oo
Three ntOro contos~nll - twl:' C!il' ~ ·~ternltY •-.loW I "~'!'•.' ~~bus;
. ..' .
A inan trailted In Metis Goon- ""'s recently denied rolesso on 'lr"Y more than !jve years and both Uooa.
. ~~ , lrolil Ohio Unl~altr and . ~ ;P~eQo~•. £9nle~!l!'!'! .•. Tlio iloilll~te'f'ti!.Mr, ~lid ~i. · r;, ~·lllifJRiioooel dt.ilie ill;;.· apjllcaUoo lor.' j!iii'Oie 1n .1!1.11- lh&amp;t the r~~. J~ilvt\1 Jr11i11 _ 'llle Gallipolis alation 11 ~
th~ l!atlo!! laln§U!fi~lent to Ju,ot- from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mooda,y
lli Its Oltpenso.
·
lhniUgli saturdtt.Ji lor carload
~· ,5oqtltll'n Qhlo In Porno~ p~, )41~·~ wUlp,..oent. tra~ In danc!Dg, ,three years loll~ e~mmutat!On ·of h 1! jumped bolld In Meigs Cotmcy.
There are three OJitPioyes ....0 lretg!tt. II the application Is
.Oo!·AIIrU 26.
•
I 4•ttc
IW{&gt; .,. . . .
ol ~~c trainlri( and,_ lour - • I nlbat state; ·
"
!llerlll Hartsnbach said GibA memblf,,of PI Bola Phi So- yesrs tra!nllli In Instrumental
MOiko Coull,y litorl.lf Robert son ,was In cuBIDdy In Meigs CounThey are Cheryl AM PasiQ&lt;, a rorlcy, Mlsa Connor lao had ,.._ music,
c. Hartetlbacb oa1c1 he has been 1;y .., tha forgery charges In JuJ.y
!rf!olunan at. Marietta College; la1 tralntng·IJ! danclngandartand
She was a hiQil school cheer- IIDII!led.by MlsSCIIrloltlclals·that of 1967 and wasrole81edoobond
1\ICY. &lt;;onner, ~IMto, a lor 11er talent act In tha ctllljletl· leader and a member of the Na- . Charlei Lee GibOon, whose last Hartenbach said he Is chargecj
l)'eolunan aiJ&gt;h!o ,Unl~liy, and tioo wiU preaent a mndern Jazz Ilona! HIBIDr Society. She W"'\the area ~oa · was given 11 Oak with at least 10 counts o1 for~uryn llf;Bro Dolf(, . ,also .a donee.
,.
Lincoln Center lncenU\&gt;e ~ward ruu, wt!f be available to cttl- gery locally and more slmUar
trealunan ij/O, u.
.
lor cootrlbuti~V to per!orm(Dg clals bore after completing hlo charges In llocklng and Plcka-.
_ Tho 1969 Mlu SOUthei-n Ohio
On tho ttOan'allat at Ohio Unl· arts whUe in higll sebool. Site - . . ID that otate. Glbq ..., Cooondea.
'
'
.'!Jill'
be crowned
on sattll'tlay, ~ versil;v, M108 Connor at Granville playod the leadsinjiOveralochool
WASHINGTON . (UP0 - 'llle the money they receive1n 26, at !he Melia Junior Hfsh Higll School .,.. a member ot produclions and took pu:t In
Nlmn administration Is maldDg uCongreas wants to koow it it
School in Pomeroy.
the Natlqnel Hm Soclel;v, the gymna&lt;itlc competition. Her hobo
plano oo experiment with wUl be for bread or booze," he
· 'noe dauaflter of Mr. and Mrs. Spanls~ ,National Honor Soctot.v bleo ·are oow!Dg and water and
811&amp;ranteed atUllal Income. 'llle said- and how new lnoome will
lllchard Paslcy of Parkersburs, and tvaJ·a cheerleader, Silo no """' .aiding. Miss !Isley Is a
plans mark a big departure affect tbolr work patterns and
.,Miss . Pas19' was a higll se~ool a Y""'"'n taiendat Girl cantil· clanee instructor and a Sunda)'
from President Nixon's cam- work motlvat:loos.
'\:heerloader and was editor other cla1e at Ohio Ulliversl~. Her Sc- teaehor.
So cIa 11 y, the department
paign oppooltton oo the conA mamber otAiphaXIJ&gt;oltaSo:achool y....-, Sbo "'"' lbo hobbles are palnli06, horseback
wants
to know what impact
troversial proposal,
"&amp;Ond cjtlzon of the year" award rltlh1r.&gt;ind tennis.
rnrl~, M111 Ooley Wjll p"oenl
'llle Department o1 Health, guaranteed income will have on
at her ••hOot.
Mlli Collier lotho dauihtcr ol a dance rculino In lite lalontc001o
Education and Welfare (HEW) marriage and birth rates,
. Miaa Pasky Is a·member ot Mr. ~Pi
' ·Mra. George E. Con- pat!Uoo rl. the local [IOi8ltll.
has asked lnr $9.7 miUion In children's perlormances i n
nscol 1970 to experiment with ochools and familY relatlon';
':
auaranteod amua1 Income and shlps.
"
Cities be(Dg considered lor the
chUdren's allowance In several
test
Include Charlotte, N.C.;
model cities neighborhoods.
Gary,
Ind.; Philadolpltia, Pa.,
About 800 families would be
and Seattle, WaSh., UPI has
Involved.
"I want ,to 811 ahead, as learned. It Is expected two
opcldy as pooolble, with a cities will be chosen within a
aerloo ~ well-des!IIJIOII lnoome

OU, .}[Qrietta; .di!e~ Canflidates F(lce Meigs Cftarges

"

. "'::r ;::::r::;~~:;;

s:;,~dl~t.'!P:~: . :tr:t :.:~ :.m:n~

~\o~t!\;·r;~;;:•~~,.,, ~~:.~~~-r·~ c:!~~,. :!

'

'

granted, It woold be -

lite

same hours lor the same !rtl&amp;lll

service lor I'Umoro,y.
Tho principal raU patnm wilD
are presently transacting ball-

. neos with the POmei'O)' are Me1ga Counb" Farm 11uraau,
Robert E. Lee, Ml- lileo1
Corp., Ohio VaUII)' bllltrleo,
POmeroy Food Co., Pomeroy Cement Block Co., and the &amp;opr
Run Flour Mills.
I Is pointed out t1oa1 I a 01
distance telepbooUnj:' ......,. be
Involved ID patrono CCIIUcllbl
,
the Oalllpolla ~· lrif""ji. \ .. '1.
Ialli of aht(llrienti and 'M'IIi- ' . "' ~
!orlll$Uoo u 111e DnCa\kltlli~
·
proved.

,,~~N=~-F~ch to Try

1

week tor the ._unont.
Seattle Ia believed oo be - rl.
the two.
HEW r~o- the tt.7
million for UJnnovative demonstration of now approaches to
Income maintenance IIIII IOC1II
services."
'lllo administration hopes ID
!Inti a system o1 guaranteed
support lor low-income !amillb
that would reollee welfare ralla.
Reoults ol the testing will be
reported oo Coogreos.
HEW gutdolloes sc:.....Ued
po.ymcnts to !amllleo to beglo In
December and evaluation to
begin In January 1970.

:~:.
.....y ~=:~nts~ President
said ID a recenl

O'Ptimistic
=~~:~~-=About Maior
Problelm
·
01

Finch

Clarlw Retires; Yeager is
Promoted to Foreman Job ~-:-· r.::U.::""'..,.,::
·'

eoonomlc and ooc:lal quostlms.

,
'

WASHINGTON (UPO -Pros- program and the men who""" ..
Edwin H. Clarka, mabz!eunce
ldent Nixon believes he can. bring su«eas."
_.
make "real ' prosress" duriDg
Nixon t11en said 11e bod 1'0111
~re=
at ~~ !J\IOrll Plant,
BURIAL SERVICE HF.RE
t11e next 12 months on tl1e "a very dlsturi&gt;IDg .._-t" '· .
0
on
....
rement
rram
Tbo
.......
ol
Bertha
"-'-'-s
--"'- problemo he races, whi ch predicted
.
.
' ·.
his position 11111t the Central
.....,
,,........ • .....,...
tha SoY1et
. Colnpallf after com J former
Racine irea
the trar In Vt'e--.
()peraiiDe
·
· resident who 1~1udl..,
·~
w-• Unioo would surpoos the ·'Uni!M
• died this ,...k. 'IIIII arrive from
But In rewa!IJV his e&gt;peda- Slates In ,...Jl01117 beta- the
piiii(Dg -.ly 20 years ol Com- l'bUtUiol(lhla for fUneraherYI.eea tiona Wednesday • 1""1, Nbron American p-•e .., •-'service.
•• 2 · ...ft_._, · th ........
'"""
....,.
-•·.....- CIMiie
,.,._ 1 Gr
•
JI-m. _ ~- ill • ~··• also made a now plea lor the wlll to be ~n::r::·~~=~~
..,. ·, · · wao _,,.a · a.
~- ·'1'\1• R..-• G·le n con!inued mllltoey stretWth, agalnot ·the
9tolloo, W, Va., ......._ Hiles will GII!Ciale. aartal will promlai~V "thlo •tim Is currant O(ipolltiCOl
anT~ o:;:ohlltll•
' !leiD~· ~ 'Fallo COJllelerY. mUitarii.Y sll'ODg and wtU posed antlboil1•tic
· 1 '!Ill' ~" .ar. \wO 'tllecea •'told, tenlain oo."
tern, even hiD ' .'W~!,:.ij;;
~'
,
!
liO
...._
,
·
~
Frlendl
lna,y
call
{.
•
''1'\le
Preoldent
made
the
W&amp;l
, ....,....,
·'
parey, Nixon Aid:
. at I1Mi ·~al liolhe !rom hi' ,coDunonts duri~W llqii'OII!Piu
"I am nnt
ID~'. 1~~·~
t ~-~ . r~.·:•:
re~ko to 5,000-· Rtltubllcan · aOQ&lt;- But 1n 1110 :,1
" ' ·at the 1hnual R411ul&gt;ll· mUitary · ~.
"" '

:Funei''

tr)ol"

,,

w

'
·.cq.lerenee.
~
ladies' lbo "hlglioot

.. CIIIO,IIl

lbo

Tlro•Awar Ba1~ faf.all
YICIRIM Clanen.

Loot 3 dtll'• of our Hlo of' ~Mt~• Slech •""
Buy yoor lo-lto· Mko ao~ style NOW .... lAVI. ·

end.

CO::··

1------------------1
lsposal Yacuun1 aeaw lags

THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATIJRDAY

laot report was aired Via radio
telecype 50 miootes before the

OCSE GaifiS

6, 9 and 12 IHt width llnolouiulo oMit, now pattoraa
and coloro. Yloyl wall co-hog 54 lnchoa wide llnol..,m paoto - chro110 edJing and a big aoloctloo of
,.. . oliO llnalou• Nfl - Tloo now $print and S.••or
pottoma.

SALEI CROQUET SETS

malnlalned since . the Incident ,
still hail ' 1101 anQo!m&lt;.,t wrw.t
reaction, U anyo1 lbo Unltoicl
Slate• lfould malio. ·He pia~
to repprt to the N.tlon on the
sltuatloit Frldey a~ ·• prevtw~
scheduled televls"'l 1news confere..,e, three days tind II houto
after !he plane dillll'l"'i"ed.
ID his reotralnt, ~lxonlet th~
Ponlaaon carry 11ft •bilrden 'l'or
dlopenolntl lntornl.tioo about
the lnc1clent. ·
•
Thase reports emerged train
frasmentary Pontaaon brlefi~V!
durl11g tho dey:
·'
·.
- Tbo plano waa _.-endy
lakon by surprise.' There was
"no record'' of any transmission
"hen It dlsap~, and ita

Guaranteed Income Plan

AREA

Very nice patterns. Coat style top 4 long leg bottoms with
adjustable gripper. Boxer waist.

l

loll••

$4.49

Per11anent Press Pata11as

KAYSER HOSIERY SPRING SALE
1.35 Wondorloc Agilon Strotch.................... - .... ~1• 99c pr.
l pal~ lor 2.90
2.50 Agllon Panty Hou................................._.~lo 1.99 pr.
3 pal~ lor 5.90

-

Big group of sproodo. 100% cotton. Chenille and woven
patterns. All colon. Fringed.

BOYS SIZES 6 to 18

0

0

Forge~~!: Suspect Will

1-------------------o

2.79

,-1

•
,__.

'

TOKYO (UP!) - North Korea said todoy tho U.S. Navy
reconnaissance plane it shot down was part of an Ameri~n
plan to trigger Wtlf 'In KorOa. The Communlsla 881d tenolon
over the incident Indicates fighting could break out again nat
&amp;1\Y moment."
'llle brlgandlsb Prnvocative act committed by the U.S.
imperialist aggre.sors this time was part of their planned war
prepantions Cor ignHing a new war in Korea,'" North Korea's
'defense minister, Gen. Choi Hyun, said,
Ed. Note: ,
Far East expe~, meanwhile, have recalled frequently
that North Korean ctCrectors to South Korea repeatedly have
reported North Kofea 1ought to provoke war by the seizure d
the Pueblo, ard was eJpeCted to create aootber Incident designed to embroU ~e U.S. and discredit the judgment or the
u.s. military commar4.

Nylons, Hwculon•, Tulttd Yarns and Cut Pile In good
colon. About 100 to aoll.

extra large.

-~)

•

•
rurxr.wt:··e_. :qn~m~~:e:::~

27154

..........

....

'

'·down

For This Sale .••

.

·..:l
, f)

,- . •'. ['

•

, WASHINGTON (UPO- AU, S. Ill tho ebllJ,y waters.
plano ao the ''896th unit ot the
' .deotroyer ID the Sea ol Japan
·'l'bedlodiee were diiCOYerecl.ln Korun people'a arlny" which,
' has recovered tha bodies rl. !ide In aUI· aboot 17 ,miles norlll' ol it Ald, was cited far ''deliver•
:,eftteer and 11180Dllatedman!roin the aile where debris waa 111-ot i!V a serious · bloii to tho U.S.
·,the Na'l)' Intelligence plane shot ol&amp;hted TUesda,y, The plano car- air plrat.&gt;a who ftew into the
by North KAn'el, the De. ried 31 men.
tnvlolble territorlal olr of our
·.:tanoe DoJlirtinant said ~. II
''We are,_ gravely Ctlll&lt;ern- iathorland ••• " It added lbot
..added it was now .,aravGly em- ed abool the cluti!ees o1 llnd(Dg the plane was part :of a U.S.
~ cilrl!ed" about the chances rl. 1111' """"loora." the opoke,man · oclleme lor "lgniUow a new war
ulcJ. "Tho search Is being con- tn Korea."
IIDtl(Dg lillY survlvoro.
· A Penlai&lt;lll spok- Aid Unued." ·
The Pomqoo has mainlained
'the U$ TUcker oloo '....,.;vor.
Nit ldontitteo wete rolaaoad the plane was "far outside" 1111'
ed lite jacket&amp;, "numtJ'O!ll piec:- lor 1bo two bodies pending IIDII- terrltnrlal botnlanes claimed
,es ol aircraft wreckage" and ncattoo r1. next olk!n.
b~ 'North Korea.
;p~eees of shr~l - torn a I rNorth KorOti ~ ldentlfted
Presldont Nixon, ID the
cratt
"hlle. patroiiiDg the unit which shot ®ion tha deliberate silence he .has

CLEANUP SALE

Solid colors. Kodel and cotton aweat shirts wash 10 well
and hold their shape. Solid colors. Small, medium, large4

3.98 WOIIENS UIIBRELLAS.............................. SALE 2.88
2.98 WOIIENS UIIBRELLAS.............................. SALE 1.88
5.98 liENS UIIBR ELLAS. ...................................SAL E 4.88
••98 MENS UIIBRELLAs. .............................. _...SALE 3.88
3.98 MENS UIIBRELLAS.........- .........................SALE 2.88

•
I

IAMPLERUGI

'

.Z

.

1--------------------

SWEAT SHilTS

enttn,

:;.Officer ·RecOv.ered ~ &amp;. om · Sea

$7.95

SWINGER CWfCJI PURSES. , . , , ...• ,SA!Jl: $L39
SPRING JEWELRY ...... , ... , .•... SALE $2.it
SPRING JEWELRY . . .............. SALE $1.39
SPRING JEWELRY ... , •... , . , •••. ,SALE 69c

•

·~'

Sale 3.00

BARGAINS IN ACCESSORIES DEPT.

'

,•r

V ,r

$5.95to $7.95

SHOP CAP STYLE ..................- ............- .....- ... - ...-98c
SPORTSTER BASEBALL STYLE ............ ______ ..._1.59

.'

·.:.:. 'I:

Good colora . .

1.39

A !lao cop lor oummor "ear • washabla - very well made • B1a
selection of colora.

·------------------------5.50
5.00

1

VINYL
UPHOLSTERY
Cloth

Si zo 18 x 30. Morbeliztd
pattern in · big selection
colora.

LEE WORK CAPS

SPECIAL! SMALL GROUP
FAIIOUS IIAKE BRAS AND GIRDLES
THIS SALE ONLY ................................ . .. ........ J\ PRICE

'

Bunk, Twin and Full bod oiao. Big aoloctlon of colora.

Puro Foam R•bber

ANOTHER SHIPMENT

59c PHIL MAID PANTIES , , , . , .. . .. SALE 2 lor $1.00
$5.98 DUSTERS ................... , , SALE
14.88
$4.98 DuSTERS .............. , .........SALE $4.08
$8.98 DUSTERS ..................... SALE $3.28

''

6.95 to 7.95 BLANKETS
$1.&amp;9 D•d•Tred

slim- tl!lhtiiUIDi- made by Wrallg(er.

$8.95 SUITS , . . . . . , ........ , , , , SALE $8.00
$3.95 JUMPERS .......•••. , , •• , .• SALE $2.00

G~ $3.95 BONDED SKIRTS ... . . , . . .. ,SALE $2.00
GffiUi $2.95 BONDED SKIRTS ••.. , , •. , • ,SALE fL50
G11Wi $10.9.1 DRE3iES . , , , .. , , . , , , . , ,SALE $8.00
GI!Wi $11.95 DRESSEl; . . . , ...........•SALE $7.00
G~ $7.95 DRESSES ....• , ........... SALE $8.00
GffiUi $8.9.1 DRFSSES ......... , ...... , .SALE $4.50
GffiUi $4.95 DRESSES • , , , , , , , , , , , , • • , ,SALE $3.50
G~ $3.95 DREms ................. SALE $8.00

:-...."""::----1

1--~~--~~.;,·-~,

G~ $13.95 COATS .•.•...•.. , ....••SALE $10.00
G~ $10.95 SUITS . . . • . , , • , ......... SALE $8.00
G~
G~

68..

'

lrreplars of a well known make of Thermal and
Solid leave

Sizes 29 oo U waist - triple stitched- boa'l)' duQo oervl""'
a1&gt;1o blue dolllm. ~ shruak.

GmUi $29.50 COATS . , , , • , , , , • , , .•. , , .SALE $22.00
G~ $25.00 COATS ... , , , .. , , ..... : ,SALE $1&amp;00
GffiUi $19.50 COATS • , , . , ............ SALE $16.00
G~ ~6.50 COATS • . .............. SALE $12.00

Sborl

Gordon E. Reynold&amp;, Kenda SUe
Mr. and Mro. Jack Bowman
Ritenour, Carter SandlJn, Mrs.
Ruby F, Sounders, Mr1. Darrell and daughter, SJsan, Columbus,
M. Shaffer, Mrs. WUl E. Shoe- were weekend guests of Mr. and
maker, Paul E. Vltlroe, Mrs. Da- Mrs, Karl OWen. Other reeent
vid 1L William, Donald E. Wll- vtsloors of Mr. and Mra. O..on
liamiOI'I, Larence G. Clark, Ter- were Mr. and Mro, John Goodry Do1inoy, Jelfl'll)' Cutlip, Mro. rich ol Dl1!on.
Barry TUllo ol Akroo and hla
Gerald ~Ires, Mro. Rlcbar&lt;l JL,
Mees and infant soo. Mrs. How- fiancee, Miss Am Ambrooie rl.
ard J. Boggs and infant ...,_ Barberton, and Ml08 Jeoole lfo.yt
ol Columbus wore "eekend YlllWar's Casualties
ooro of Min Boss Stulbom and
World War II cost the
Mrs, Mabel Sonbom.
United State s more than
and Mrs. Edward Crook&amp;
m ,ooo lives in battle dead , andMr.daugllt&amp;'o,
Pam and Clatb-,
or about one in every 450 of and Mrs. Walt&amp;' Crooko, have
the 1940 population.
returnad !rom a trip to Norfolk, va. where they "ore 1110111
of U. and Mra. Gene Crook&amp;.
Mrs. Paul Gruoser · Tuesday from a vlolt 1n Whoel.
TONIGHT &amp; THURSOAY
(Dg with her 11011 IIIII tlaulhler-lnAprll16- 17
la", Mr. and Mra, Elmer .romCANDY
11011,
Jr. Their 34ih woddlac(Technlcolor)
niversary
and Mra. G,.._.,
Clarlea Az,.vour
blrthdl¥ amlversary.rereobnrMadan BraOOo
ved &lt;ming the villi. Mra. MaCOLORCARTOONS:
bel Wolle accomJIIII(ed her oliOThink or Sink
tor to Bridgeport llherelbella1·
Nudnik on tho Belch
...
wilh Mr. llld Mra. llarr7
(Th!a lo an Adult picture,..)
Sidler.
lWouto U.., vtailad !n
(One admission only: $LOOl
Parkorlbur11o
W, Va. with Mra.
SIIOW STAR'l'S 1 P.M. .
Gruuer'a daulhler. Mn. HOw·
.art! ~. and her lolollobd.

•'

WOMENS
WOMENS
WONENS
WONENS
WOMENS

WORK DUNGAREES

Bareiins In The Uneerle Dep.tment

Other ofrtcera named were
Mrs. Jack Bechtle, vice presi-

Births

WOMENS' $49.50
WOMENS $39.50
WOMENS $29.50
WOMENS $25.00
WOMENS $19.50

I •.' '

Another Sale of

liENS BLUE DENIII

'

:·•

1

Bareains in lh_e Readr To We~r
Department on the 2nd Floor

from the Ideals were

accepted. The offtcers are Mrs. given by Mrs. Fosw.
"They F e 11 SUent
Joe COOk, division ot lnterpreta·

vice president and chairman ot
SPecial interest misaiooarlesi
Mrs. Foater, diviaiooofChristian service, vice president and
chairman or Christian social re-

l

-

·,

Elect Officers

atlng

I

Tl1e Dally Sentinel, Mlddlopor&gt;-Pcmei'O)', o., April 16, 1969

Baptist Women

r·l

'

AI

' ,.;o

we

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