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n's Tax Reform Would -Cost tlie Weal
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, WASHINj;TON (tJPI) -Pre,_ "liM' income allowa~e," a1o1W
._ l&lt;!ent Ni~ today aaked eon- with a riltnimum Income tax for
.,. t·•r~ss to reduce die income tax tho&amp;e In \~)per income brackets.
.. ,· 'i- ·lutcharge trOD) 10 to S per cent
Nb:on made repeal Gf the 7
midway tn the neXt nacal year per cent lnveatment tax credit
:'''&amp;nd to repeal the 7 .per cent his price Cor conrineilt£ eon..
'rfvestment tu: credit lmmedi.. gresa · to extend the pretent 10
· iteJy to help curb lnllaUon.
per cent Income tax surcharge
":, At the 'same time, ln a BPecial beyond tts scheduled expiration
." tax reform me11age to ~ June ao.
gresa. Ntx,n taiJed for removal
"Repeal or the tnve&amp;tment tlx
ot the poor trom the federal tax credit will permit relief to
Aroll1 by the emctment ot a every taJ~Payer through rela:rca-

Uon of the surctarge earlier
than I had contemplated,''
Nixon aaid.
· .. The revenue effect ot the
repeal ol the . investment tax
crodtt will boeln to ba
af&amp;niOeant durl~ caleldar year
1970. Therefore,, I recommml
that investment tax credit
repeal ba ae&lt;onwanlod by
extension ol the lull surcharge
only to Jan 1, 1970, with a
re~ctJon to 5 per cent on Jan.

• Nl""" &amp;aid he then wuUJ.1 ba
wUii!W to elimiJBto lhe .........
entire~ as or the end ol ftacal
1970 "i! ecom•nlc aod ftscal
ccnlltlona permit.''
In calling lor elimlraUoo of.
the lax !or the (1001' . and
cres.tloo of a minimum tax for
the rich Nixon said: "There Ia
no reason why we cannot
lllhton the ~n or !hi&gt;... who
pay too much alii increase the

Now You Know

New

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Dinette

Sets

VOL. XXII NO 1

'Ille Board

Judge Robert M. Betz, 57, of 435 First Ave,, Gallipolis, died
'frmt an apj)G.rent seU-intlicted bullet wound to the head arOtmd 12:Ui
i). m., Sunr:lay.
.
JOOge Betz Jtad been in failing health since 1955 when h0 autJered. a heart lmack. He had been seriously ill since FebriJIJ'y, 1966.

SOMEOIJb

MIGHT&amp;
INJUR£D!

luy
NowI
NowII

Get

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United Press lrternatlonal

.IJ Lealhe,rrwcks killed at outpolt

• SAIGON - NORTH VIETNAMESE TROOPS firltV maclllneguno .
untltanl&lt; r'ccketa stormed aU, S. Marioo ootpost OV81'1&lt;10idtVthe

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HlglWat,tre81 of century expected

OLD~f.IAN RIVER KEPT ROLLING ALONG TODAY to one of the
hiJhest ~rests of the century In Wisconsin, Iowa and Dlinola. The
Mpuae River will be a bit .tamer at Minot, N, D., orticlals said.
The mighty Ml.sstsa)J:1pl, its floodwaters rollirc southward,
elosed "bridges and roads today. North of La Cross, Wts., high winds
Whipped ltJ waves whicll eroded banksSIJI'Iday. At Minot, where 12,000
of the 19Wn'1 35~000 retldentJ had left, their homes, clvil-deCense of..
fiCials aid Sunday the Mouse River would not crest as higll. as had
bjlan !oared.
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HERE'
WHA

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~mbly' prepares for Jloo
. 'r action&amp;

COLUMBUS - FLOOR ACTION WAS SCHEDULED on a hoi!~on billa tonight as the 16th wook o1 tho 108th Gonerel Aoaomhl,y
C!Pened. Bills"' !or fiiBI readltVInthetwo clwnbars woold lncreuo
~anpenaatlon lor jurors who live on islands, includl~ sheriifa' dePrtments in &amp;tate aide programs tor juvenile bureaus, and clarity
die veto required to pass zoning ordinances in non.charter cltiea.
....., H~vteat work ot Ule week was eJII)ected to come in the Study
eommltteea where two of Gov. James A. Rhodea' "key educatioo bills
w~ to be heard..
.

R BEDI
I - BOOt
N -- 64 DR.
DR.
G

DRESI
-!NNE
- BOX .
-9 X 12

t:lenna!lmits interest in 3enalorship ,
" . CINC!IfflATI- FORMER ASTRONAUT JO)JN GLENN Ia "doftn.
iilbr interested" in ruMIJW for . the· v. s. Sel8~ seat in Obio nett

- 2 PII
NYLO
- 2WA
- I WA
- 2 NIC
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Killed by Car

Sherif! R~Jbert

691 , ttne tolltho
o1 l&gt;qetoWn.
aro.W!Ia'•l956modolcat

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KITCI
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Jdmson administration . by for-

ENNER

WASHINGTON (tlpl) - A
little-noticed policy change by
the Nixon administration could
lead to lower electric rates for
some rural consumers.
David A. Hamll, head of ~e
Rural Electrification Aclminia-tratlon (REA) said in a ueech
at Atlantic City, N.J., recently
that from now on REA's poliCy
wiD bo:
"TO help borrower• obtain an
adequate and Allable SOW"ce
of Power at rates tbat wUI permit consumers to make intenalve aOO pro:Juctive use of it."
This policy statement, REA
cmciala e:~~Pialned, elimJ.mted
what hac:l come to be called the
"pariey" stallion! !or , retaU
electric rates in area• served
by rural coq&gt;eratlves nranced
by the REA.
The parley atandanl waa writton into REA policy d""ng the

Ben ..d GivBs
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crom

Bl
ast

hllllaaV~~todblolace

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MARRIAGE APPLICA1,0NS
llamuel Amnliler Gibbs Jl!, 21,

deoa~~": ~ :";'.:~ta::h:~~

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By

XMr.
PT. PLEASANT _ JohD F,
,:,' 1' GI~M ' told a weekelll flOW&amp; conference here that howooldrlot CleiMienen. 23,' or -201'1 Madlooo
·make, a dedalon 011 "hether to run "for some time yet" and that 1a Ave., lab tee~~niclan at the Good•
Oov. James. A. .Rhodet: entered the race it "certainly would be a lac- )'tar _plant at Apple Grewe, suftOr:u
ferecl tbiN dqr.ee burna when

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Field on Dec. 1, 1937, at Wiochester, 100. She survives, alorc
with one son, Robert M. Bet:z,
Jr., am a graOOson, ftobelit M.
_Betz, m
t
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.New .a'\
D.E·A.CDo·Iicy may
Be
. n efit
I Rura} F0'Jks

d'emUI1arized oone today ao:l COjlturod part oil~ kUIIIW eight Loath.ern&amp;cks a~ ~OUndl.ng 25.
·
~.-· · Muttary Qokesmen aMOWlC:ing the battle said the embattled unit
&lt;d: the 9th ~rines called ib ••sP~" gunjlttps and a~ry bt.rz:tges that ,dl'&lt;lve the North Vietnamese from the .battlefield lit by
·.nares. ~lrU"-iive communist bodies were found.lttookthe Leathernecks two ~s to break the North Vietnamese attack oo the camp
~Y had setf:Up for the nl$ht 200yards below sb-mUe-wide DMZ that
'aetvea as a~rder between North and South VIetnam.

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Ave.
He married the former Sarah

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Funeral services will be held
2 p, m. Tuesday at the St. Peter's ~iscq,al Church with ·Rev.
A. H. MacKenzie officiating. Bur~
ial will be In Pine Street Ceme-tery.
In lieu of flowers, the Camll.y
requests funds for the Gallia
County District Library.
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Fr~ends may call at the WaughHalley-Wood funeral Home bet"Weeri 7 and 9 this evening.

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Judge Betz wasbornonMa.y22,
1911, in Gallipolis, son of Clar·
ence 0. and. Mabel Otick Betz.
His father preceded him in death.
His mother resides at 431 First

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a11or a' ilw dell'tl F, po!IJI!l1 .,..thetlc pla.Uo .- bacldlred

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tile new plan.

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derahowerl eodina: earb ,.....
day, Low toniabt !rom the too
to &gt;Os. Partly clou&lt;IY and cool·

TEN CENTS

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service.
The commiasloners, in other
adivity, actepted the bidoCKeith

•

Damla Marks, president ol Looai 85$, United Rubber, COrk,
Linoleum and Plastics Workers
ol America, said he asked t h e
workers to report for their regular shifts at stauf!er's today.
Assisting in the -lations
t1 1
was a field. representa ve rom
Newark, Ohio, Newton Vormli-

Two Acc.idellls
d

Goble Ford a! Middleport !or 9 a.m.
Charles R, Karr, Sr., prelid&amp;rrt,
reported on tile Melp Cclmed at a cost or $1,900.
I was olao de&lt;llled that e!- cy Civil Defense m:ecuUve comrecUve Ma,y 6, regular meetings mittee moe1lrl£ held laot -"Mombara or the conuntlloe,
or tile board will ba held weekly
named
with tho IIJllll'GVai 0( Civoo Tueldsya inatead ol Mmday.
The meetlna: time will remain at il Defense director Paul Patter·
son, are Mr. Karr, Ml&amp;Ueport:
Mayor c. o, Fisher,- ~
Mayor Charles Logar, To,.ui•IIJ
TrUstees President David JIO.
blentz, and Theroo Johnaon, Rt.
2, Racine.
Karr was elected c:hairman ~
the executive committee and Koblent:z was named vlee preai-.
dent.
Commissioners at the meetIng todq were Karr, Rober:t
·:•
Clark, and Ralph W, OUrs; Clod&lt;
Martha
~... and lllillnY
WASIDNGTON, D. C. -(SpecDepartment
!llperintendart RollaD - Ohio lOth Dlatrict Cooland
Crabtree.
gressman Clarence[: Miller announced that $491,4(:.: in Federal
grants - locludlng$88,241 toRJo
Grande College - hav&amp; baen approved [or three Souttleastern
Ohio colleges under provisions
·,
·
~"~urt
o!Title IV, Part A, or tho Higher
a new pickup truck to be provid-

Rio Gr~nt

Is Over

them smoking."
TwO physicians speaking on

mer REA Adrnlniatntor Nor11
man A. Clapp. BastcaUy,
0::orkers at Slauffer's had votClapp's ru1e said REA opera· ed to organize a union. in June,
tiona should be almed at getting l968 and received their union
electricity to rural consumers charteJ: last October.
''under rates and con:litlops
COIIWirable to tllose available
in urban areas.''
Under the new _policy, how- r.
•
ever, namil said today rural ~nVestigale
coq&gt;eratives coold go beyond
parity with urban rates in some
The 51ate Highway Patrol incases "it they are good, em- vestigated two one - car a«ident q,erators." Aides said the dents over the weekend in Meigs
new policy could mean retail County, No one was lrUured and
rates below urban levels il ttet no charges were Ued.
proved necessary to get "lntenAn accident occurred at 3 a.
sive arll producti...e" power use m. Saturday on Rt. 684, one and
in rural areas.
rour--tentlls miles north of Rt.
Actual~. lew of the near~ 143. Ol!lcors said Karl K. Welsa,
1000 electrledistrlbutloncooper- · 29, Chauncey,headedtJOUth, came
aUves in rural a...aa currenUy around ·a &amp;harp right curve and
are able lo o!!er "parlru" rates his car went orr tile lett -'de oC
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to their members.
the .., .... Wlilv, The v~'clo ;.._,ck
A 1968 REA report said pr~ an .~::;:::._..
~· - •
-~·ress was being made toward
Harry c. Carpenter, S5, Rt. 1
rate parity, with rural .rate cuts Middleport, wa•iuvojved lnaooe
amounU~ to $2.5 million in ear accident at 4 p.m~ Saturday
the year endlrc last June 30. On Rt. 12of. one and two • tenths
But only 14 JHir cent of the mllea west ol Rutland.
rUI'Il cooperatives last" year
'lhe patrol said Carpenter's
were able to cllarge rates •• ear went oa the right side of
low aa their urban neighbors, the hl&amp;!twa.r and struck a !enco,
with another 12 par cent rated Thoro was mioor dam..., to tho
a• close to nlt peril¥.
car and no damage to the fence.
Un:ler the now~iscarded par-..
ley policy, however, in!onned MEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
sources saki the JoMson adml~t- Admissions Saturday - Willie
lstnitlon ltad diaCouraged at Myers, Minersville.
le11t one rural eQOJJerative
Discharges Saturday - None,
lrom cutting retaU ratea boiOIJ
Adrn!aslooa S\mday- None.
the equal-t(Hil'ban level. Top Diocharg" Sulllay - None.
REA olllcials lei~ It was 88icl,

~ ~::.;~. ~h~ ~"..~~:

new industry to the locality anll
hinder local bushleues using the

a dangeroUs habit and keep

Workers
at &amp;auffer's Clllmical p)ant at
Gallipolls Fercyreturnedtowork
tocSay following ratification of
their first contract &amp;.mday at
Carpenters' Union Hall in a 11h
hour meeting.
The contract calls ror a "modtned· shop" - meanlngtbat BOrne
workers need not be uDioll -

&lt;Q~~;!:eliowa";i"

Ohio. The,y will alate their opinion that closing Ute depot would
limit opportunltlea or attracting

behaiC of the society said clgarette ads should be banned
from radio and television,
where tbey have been '"ex-

tremel.y effective.'' They endorsed proposals for tough new
health warnlngs 1n commeretals and on cigarette pack-

aps.
~~

$88,000

~Ill&gt;~ Ac). P-ll!!l!lo.I M

,Burglar's
Get$450
To $500

Six Fined
·In Yl . .

is to aid atude~~ of ex.cept;i.Oijll ,
heed ID begin or oonl!nue colletre

·· ··· ·-· •· .. '

stud~

Middleoort police said today
they are investigating the burg·
lary or a safe that occurred
sometime early Saturday mor~
ing at Young's Supermarket oa
Locust st.
Middleport Police Chief Paul
Parsons reported approximately
$450 to $500 was taken from tile
safe. Parsons said the burglary
occurred sometime botweenmidnight at 5 a. m,
Entry to the store was gained
by breaking glass in a front door.
Bureau oe Criminallnvestigation
U=.cfmlcians are assistil"@: in the
investigation.

IOOividual grant&amp; rangirw from
$200 to $1000 per participating
student are awarded for each
academic year of study up to a
maximum duration or four years.
Each gt'knt requires provision of
an equal amount or fliBneial assJatance to a student from one or
mon of the following 'sources:
Institutional, state, or privateiy.Cinanced grant aid.
Compensation lrom employ-

ment provided by the Institution.
including employment under the
Federal College Work-StudyPro-

granc
lnstib.ltionally-provided lOillls,
includl~ the Nattoml Defense
Studert Loan Program.
The two other colleges receiv·
ing the grants were Marietta COllege, $131,511, and. Ohio University, $271,720.

E-ft Unit Delivers
BabY GirI Sa lu rd ay

coed !rom Ohio Unlverslt,y, was
r•M-rup 1'n tho "N1 t'onal
Col
1
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Middleport emergency squad- ege Queen" finals here Sulllay
d 11 ed bab girl about nigh~
:;~;t ";turd~ ~t enroute
Alice Garrard or the Univerto Pleuant Valley HospitaL
sity of Georgia was awarded
The new arrival was born to the crown.
Mrs. Sidney LiWe, who was at ~i88Jll8Rii:Cih '~
the Speed Queen LauOOry at the
BOOSI'ERS TO MEET
time the SQUad was summoned.
Southern Local Athletic BoostAssisti~ in the dolivery were ers will meet at 8 tonight at the
Kometh imboden, Charles Way- hllh school.
Iaili alll Carl Platter.
DRIVER CITED
Pomeroy police cited Richard
WANT WORKEHS
Hayes, 2!, Pomeroy, to court
Applications are being ~keli for leaving the 1ceoe ct an aeciat Pomeroy town hall for two dent after his vehicle apparentmen to work parttime at Beach ly struck a parked car owned by
Grove Cometary.
Joam Ruaaeii, Pomeroy, early
!lmday on Wetzpli ll.

1

Of Mayor
~

persons were filled Uld

two oth.r. !or!eltod - · In
tile court or Pomeror Ma.Yor
Charles Legar 8atunla¥ nlghL
Bond&amp; were !or!elted by Rob-

ert Syre, Athena, speeding, tza, ·
and Larry Powell,
tires, $25.
Fined were Mike Youna, Mason. d-uctloo oC p...,.,..., $25
and coata; Looter llam!ng, Plmleroy, $25 and costs, aiiiUlt aDd
battery and $25 !or doatrudion
of property; JBDlee Meece, Mfd..
dleport, $15 and costs, ~
Lawrence L i &amp; I e, SrracuM,
aiJIOallng Ures, $5, and nck!oss
operation, $10 and costa, andArvll Brooks, Jr., Pomerqy, t5
and ooats, failing to regl.ster.

••P••IID&amp;

::=::::--..::::~~~m..~

NAMED RUNNERUP
WEST PALM BEACtl. l'la(UPD _ Margaret .Bastiani, a

Court Strikes
Welfare Laws
RPnU :remenls
-., •
WASHINGTON CUPI)- The
:q,reme Court today struck down
state one-yearre•idencyr8CIJlrementa Cor welfare redP.ents.
The court•s 6..3 1'UlbJa: dealt
. wUh three cases from comecttcut, ~.,.lvllllia and the Dl,_
trict oC Colombia.
Special three • )~die federal
cwrts ln all three inltances had
ruled the laws unconllltlltlonll.
These decisions were upheld today by a majiorit;y Qpinlort by
Justice William J. Brenaan Jr.
Many similar case&amp; art pond1ng in courlsai'Ollnd the coutllr1.
They roeuo molllb' oolld 1o fiiD-

Plan Weekend Numismatic Show :;c.wl:u::m
...
"!:":::
toto111

Clenciiaen wae rushed by )li1- were ual!W HEA !lnen&lt;ing at
Mcll&lt;illald, 24, Rt. t, Plllltrri)&lt;, vale coOvoYRII&lt;O to '~llnt \'sl- the agency's nxod 2 .,Or cent
POINT PLEASANT- so you
iabotor,alldJudith ,CaroiYnCre- ley lll!Ji»taa whm ht wu ad- intareatrate_
,
hav• an old &lt;O!n !hot mightb\elila, ~. Rt. l,
mltted.
'
.
' An REA s~ol)10n asld to- m"""" )lit mll!ht -.' be valuacldno CIPOrat"•·
.,.
SocOl!&lt;l deiJ'tl
won.IUI!- day retail "loa lor lilrll c..., blo?· Yw're not a collector, and
..~ to IMi1ll ba!t\1• ""' "'!,... 1umer1 dope"' heoYjl.y Oil the you'd like to learn how rare !he
arm to,llla
coat or wholesale poivor l'ront &lt;O!n Ia.
IDa
Prl~l!l ujlliUeo or ~ntlve
'l'llal 'lllatldn, 01\&lt;1 all aorta o1
a...ntl,. planto., ·
liq,lboul colno, will be anowerWo Week ' herO wh• the OH
COin Clllb ·oC Pl. Ploaaant

liu!JOid, ..,;.

!oderu -

er Tueldsy.

WASHINGTON (tJPl) - The
American Cancer soctet;y said
today the nation's robacco industry now spends $300 rni1lion a year on cigarette advertising ''to llll'(! ~Je into

PI'. PLEASANT -

""'"i

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,diOJ&gt;OI'~ student; Daniel W01le,y

Meigs County

Stauffer
Workers
On Jobs

Judge Robert M. IIetz

....

at

commissioners toda3 went on
reco"rd opposing an application
to close the Pomeroy Freight
Depot.
The commissioners wlllreglster objection in a letter to the
Pllblic Utilities Conunlsston ol

.

8£ fflGD.V6S Aill SHeW
'EM 11-\AT 1 BEAR.IJO
Gf?I.JDGES I

He sald that
also "ould benefit
otl1or YOOilll
ellllllPie, he. Hkl'
student who ear.nt
ta&gt;lble ineome dlll'hW
]fM
oow paya $117 In
taxes, he would PI¥ nana q:adlr

Commissioners ·Will Oppose
Closure of Freight Station

Judge Betz of

W6U., !'U. CEr 5'r'GOIJE5

tuea.

MONDAY, APRIL 21, 1969

Gallipolis Dies

B
R
I
D
E

entitt.,

POMEI.lOY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

He was l'roDOIInced dead on arrhal at the Holzer Medical Center on Firat "Ave., between 1:45and 2p. m.. Sunday, The Gallla Coun.f.Y Sheriffs Department, City Police and Gallia County Corooer were
called to the Ben hO!Jle to Investigate.
Dr. Donald Warehime, Gallia County coroner, could not be
reached to:1a.v for an official ruling in the cause of death.
·
Judge Betz · graduatedfromGal~
In 1948, Judge Bett was elect.lia Academy High School inl9l0. od Jtdge or the GoUla Counjy
·Alter COD1Jletl~ pre-law studies Common Pleas Court. He held
·at Ohio "University, he _attended that position untU his retirement
Ohio state University. He re- last OcWber,
eeh'ed hla. law degree fl'(IJ1 Ohio.
Judge Betz was a member of
Noi'thern ~niversit,y.
the st. Peter'sEpiscap&amp;.l Church,
' At a.ge2 JudgeBetzwaselect- Gallia Count.v Bar Assoeiatlon,
eel to the ouse of Represent&amp;- Ohio State Common Pleas Judge
thea. He served two terms, !rom Association, .a~ recently had re1937 through 1941. He "Was the celved a lifetime membership in
state's youngest representative the GaJUa COWlty bun Club.
l.t tile dme.
The judge was a member Of
. He, waa admitted to the Ohio thO Ohio Historical Society,
State Bar Association tn 1940 and
Dawn lAxlge of 'Maaons,
ns ·.Gallia County Prosecutor
and Scottlsh Rites,
&amp;&lt;lm 194J to 1948.
. '

rolr•
periOD&amp; with
P""'rjy would

Mostj,y cioody and cool faolllll
with scattered sbowers IDd t.lllll.-

Devoted To The lntere.IJ Of The Meiga·MtUOR Area ·

Just
Arrlvttl

s

unount

Weather

at y

"Chadoul," ~ melody tbanted
, by !'Qptlan Irrigation workers
, ~. on the man.pnvered treadwheels
o1. the Nile, ls the oldest known
song in the world.

law,

we must not .,mbtt our
50 pw. cem ot their lncmneA the ·by
wealtltlest
citizens to be 100 per
ti.:wpayefs can write oil
tor tax .P\II'POHI. This is a .Plan cent auccesstul at tax avoldadm~stration ' omcials have IDI!"e. Nor shook! the governbeea discussing in recent days. mart llmit its tax rerorm only
"Muell concern hal been to fi!IIIY lo these relatively low
eJII)reflled beeauae aomecltlzena extreme cases."
To remove the poor from the
· with inc.t"'" or more than
federal
tax rolls, the Pretkterrt
$:WO,OOO pay no !ederel income
requeated
a "low inc«ne
taxes," Nixon said. Hfheae
the wealthy.
people are neither tax dodgers allowance" which he said would
remove more than 2·mWioolow
The president called for oor tax cheats.
•·
1e families from the tax
leglalation whlcb would llmit to
"But where We can prevent it

taxe' 'of those who .PlY too
tittle. u
He said that both tlle1e goala
cwld be accom~llahed with no
lnwact on mainterance o1.
(edetal revenues. This would
1lmply mean tNt the admlnis·
tratlon planned to trade o!! the·
coot o1 ollminatlng the JIOOI' by
bringing in extra reverue1 froiTi

I"

Poople aimply interaated in' ~American -.!ractlona!, and
coin• will Join OH KAN mom· larp-alze paper lurrtncy. The
bort who come hera !rom the -ddon wUI ba non-&lt;OD\PitlTrl-Coonjy A"" and dealers tlve,
!rom oevoral ltaloolor the twoFood ca..,.ina Ia being 111m.
day ovont.
Jill«! by the ladlea auxiliary ol
Clu~ membora and deaiert WID the lod&amp;O. Hourb' i!DOr prizes,
be l!llrina, selling, \rldlna. ahd IOliVOillr idtkoio, coin
o!lerina lraa .coin -•Jill&amp; ·to poblioatlona, .til a •:arand pri10
!llellObllc.
~ 10ld coin, and !tee ~..
The dub lilVItao a11 """'co1- llon 'bolh day0 1o o!leni!.
·icoli.~r.Mj;"'ddtor- lectoro lo dlopl.,. tllolr illml)..
Clalt ChOltvr;rrt, &lt;lob ·pt'ell·
m•!l• inaterlal, with aacu\ijy , doni, ·~ that thla w!Q be

llxth•amuaia&gt;rln8eorn.

ance, aid 10 lhe
dlllbled
and to the blind oliO art airoetad.
f

DAMAGE ESTIMATED

CIN~ATI

ap no ,
$10,000
tllat .11Pf~.
lteaith
tilwn

f'lre

, •¥!

...
.
:
CiU..'lne.kowp!di~Mr; ili' lltOYIII~''

~~c:.· ~· ~ · ~ ' :~~lad ~~ ~
'
"j

.lt
•" •

•

'

, ,.; ~'~\~~

. ,,
j

"•

I

-;!,&gt; ·. :· ·'
·~

' .,

.i ,

' . ft!l

w

'

�.

'

... \·•.
.,

My
'

.. '

.

. '

Footsteps!" ~
•"
.-

.

.:00.

'

mg rae1lities were to he rrozen right where
they are now, and if the motOr Vehicle
population continued to expand • It is conc~i.vable that in a few years most large
Cities would be confronted ·with the neeessity of rationing road space.
Buses, of course, would be given priority
over the commuter in flis private car. Tbe
casual shopper would certaillly have to be
banned rrom the city during rush bours.
The salesman who depends upon his car
and the trucker making deliveries would
find their freedom of movement-and their
livelihoods-seriously aft'ected .
Such a situation, with its consequent
economic penalties, will not come to pass
on the ground because we will not permit
~o!J~ted~affic will somehow be accom·
In the air, _h~wever, we have already
reached that pomt- at least at five of the
nation'~ .busiest airports and at least in
the optruon of the Federal Aviation Ad·
ministration.
Beginning June I, the FAA plans to
Institute new scheduling rules at John F
Kennedy, La Guardia, Newark, Washing~
ton National and Chicago's O'Hare.
A "reservation" system will allocate
take-off and. landing operations under instrument flight rules at these airports
During the thr~ peak hours o( 5 to 8 p.m~
a.t Ke~edy, for mstance, 240 airline opera·
tio~s w1U be permitted but only 15 by air
tax.1 an~ 15 by oth~rs in general aviation,
which mcludes pnvate and business air·
craft.
The prospect does not please those in
the categ~ry of "others," obviously, but no
O!le else m the aviation industry likes it,
e1ther.
If the restrictions are in effect in 1970,

. ,, ly .NOEL Gl~YE ; ~ :
NEA StaH' COrroipondon

'

~

"The executives and technicians who

rely upon. ~is mode of transportation are
thos~ mdlVlduals who are responsible for

keepmg the economy at its present level.

'I_'he ~igh priority Put on these peoples'

time 1s through a flexible means of transdeprive them of this flex·

~r~ation ..To

opinion, adversely affect the econolny."
Opponents ~r the FAA plan eharge It Is
a pamc reaction to the congestion crisis in
New York last summer when air traffic
control personnel decided to "go by the
book.''

That w~s a labor problem, they say, that

ha~

no!hmg to do with the real problem,
wluch IS the ,dual one of increasing the

tton while he Is out driDidns.
.!J,e lan't at a bsr with h I 1

«

number of a1r~rts and their akcrafth~ndling capacities and modernizing the
amvays system.

buddies, he brlnp them here
and they auzrle beer while 1
pump gaa. He even brq:a about

WORLD ALMANAC

ment of Mel Brooks' wirming the
dooratop for script writing ....
But Mel's putdown may even
haVe reminded Rickles that he
Wll the evening's vulgar intruder .... More even than Sinatra,
whole UUberal Hadassah-is.plu-

raJ.for-yenta stripe has many
Jnalrkecl.
Truman Capote on the J. carIIOI'Icalt maintaining there Is a
••Jewish Mafia" among the curreM literaryestabUshrnent Milch
eonspi.res to promote each other
(tile other lide of the ethnic coin
must mean to the exclusion 'of
Truman Capote and such no doubt
1dea1 Wup t;ypes) also baa come
fD for official study by anti •
dlacrlminaUon folk.
'Ibe Duke of Windsor takes a
dim global view of young peo..
pie - DOt jJst in America; the
Duke reiP'etted 'em all .... At
Palm Beach dlrmer parties or
CGUrae .. .. Who'd ever have thunk
eatlervaUve Bill 9JckJey•s Park
Avenue door troUld be painted a

H~tlo's

·'-

and the horror scqpe remabl!l' Un..

delivered .•. The actor TheoOOre
Bikels expect a liitle proteSter
in Oct.
His political pals won't like it
if a top singer's pot - smoking
hit&amp; his fans via headline&amp; ....
Glerm Ford returns to H'wood
May 1 for his (and Eleanor Pow..
ell's) son Petet'a wedding to
Lynda Gunderson and then wUl
fa,;:e a settlementconlerencewith
his estranged wire Kathy Hayes.
CerrtraJ casting bad to supply
a discotek ruu or gals with. up..
~z:.• : mea~
inc,beiJ

..,P

Oat"·'better · '- for' • Jack · ·~

"The April' FOOIB'' fUm -

for contrast, one gal stacked like
Twiggy .... Awwwwl .... Sepa.
rate tables, never mind checks,
at Inn of the Clock: J. carson
and J. Paar •. .. Jack Lemmon
thinks he can coax Jim Cagney
out of retl.rement for one .more
movie .... Not even the ''Falstafl" role at StraUord shook
Jim from the slow completion of
his senior raunds.

MONDAY
Multitudes, multitudes, in
the valley of decision! For
~he day of the Lord ts near
m the vaUe:y oj decision.-

Joel 3:14.

Appreciative of Sir John
Churchill's victory at Blenheim, Queen Anne ordered
in his honor the building of
Blenheim Palace in 1705
The World Almanac says:
The 187-room palace with
seven-foDt·thick walls was
the birthplace of Winston
ChurchiU, who wrote of his
ancestor's desires for Blen·
heim : "As the Pharaohs
buiJt their Pyramids, so he
sought a physical monument ~hich would certainly
stand. 1f only as a ruin, for
thousands of ,vears."

aild

..'

.

Compromise, except in
the two fields, only, of mar·
als and of exact science, is
necessary in every human
action, even in the individ·
~al. Life is constantly mak·
mg a compromise-there
has to be compromise in
order to get progress.Dwight D. Eisenhower.

• • •
Clean-Finger Artists
. When children are using
fJnger or poster paints it is
help£ui to set a bowl of old
washcloths wrung from thick
suds on the table. This way
they can wipe their hands
and so spare your walls and
bathroom fixtures from fingerprints.

They'll Do It Every Time

SLAVE TO A •
MARRIED BACHELOR
Dear Helen:
You're right aboot .. married
bachelors, •• but my .situation is
worse because my husband not

only runs with every skirt In
!light, but he treats me as a

a

slave.

Even when rm pregnant (we've
had four babie&amp; in four years), he
makes me nm our service sta~

their baby shots. We don't even
get enough mooer rrom him to
eat what we shwld, Yel W
•JJODd• all the ll!allon 9l'&lt;flto ..,

BRUCE BIDSSAT

Poverty Grinds in Alaska--Appalachia of the North
· , ., By

B~jj~,.IQS$AT1 .: ,. :•.

NEA 'Washingtbn Corrospandenl

" ..

TULUKSAK, Alaska (NEAl
This tiny Eskimo hamlet or 170 people is 4.2110 miles rrom
Washmgton. Yet its poverty problems bring it at least as
close to the capital as rabied Appalachia.
Remote this village may be, but.it is in the United States
which may come as a surprise to GOP Sen. George Alke~
of Vermont.
Ia a rather pathetie comment, the eeutor as.ailtd lhe
KeDDedy llldlan Educalloa oub&lt;ommlttee'a lour of aadve
Alalkau vWageo u U II were a veulure II forelgo old.
Altea waota Waahlngton to devote Uoellto "lmprevlnJIIte
lire or the country," whloh would aeem to ltave Alaoka otm
In Russian halld1.
Tuluksak, of course, has the special marks of the frozen
sub-Arctic upon it. Where it. resembles the crwnbling
towns. of Afpalachia and the Mississippi delta is in the clestru:ction o human motivation which is as sure an accom~an1ment of poverty as is ignorance, disease and malnutrition.
Set amid spindly spruee trees and tall bushes, this vil·
lage lies on the banks or a Kuskokwim river tributary
almost within sight of the snowy desert of southwestern
Alaska's tundra land. It is a jumbled collection of priinitive
huts sided with logs or rough limbers adorned here and
there with patches of tar paper.
'
In a typical hut's crude alngle room may live an Eoldmo
famlly Of aloe or II. Juot outalde lo a ml:dure of mud alld
wood cblpa, marldag the !pol where logo are cut for the
stove wbleb rurloualy overheall the bot wilb 111 plywood
or cardboard waDs and ceDing. There 11 no aallltaftOa and
ao nanlog water.
The town is badly plaeed- too rar up river for good £ish·
tog, too rar rrom !fie easterly mountains ror good hunting.
Many Eskimo children bear facial sores which tell of
co.ntaminated drinking watt! drawn from the river two
miles up. In summer when flies are rampant, the arrucuon
Js general. Diarrhea and pneumonia also are Mmmon vll·
!age ailments.
T
. Nevertheless, while the portrait or poverty In Tuluksak
Js etched deep, cur1ous contrasts appear.
Two or three outboard motors to a family are' the rule
They power lbe Eskimos' long boats Itt! mlles up river anci
70 down to Bethel, a "center" or 2,000, after the ice breaka
up.
In a village with ~~y~e 35 houses, there are 2D snowmobiles, most eosting ~ eaeh ~ut a rew Sl,400. Air&gt;easy·
credit merehant at Bethel lets an Eskimo buy one ror f175
down, with three years to pay.
·
Only four dog teams are left here as the snowmobile ex·
tending the Eskimos' range considerably, takes over.'
The relatively new, weil·equlpped Bureau or lndt8n Af.
fairs school provideS' another "modern•• touch.
What with B.f.A. fu1d1, wellare money, Publk! Realtll
S.rvloe and other aida, VIola volunteer Fred Rolhlelder of
Mllwautee saya
Ia lederahtote belp "paoled
throu1h" Tulukaat Ia IIIII.
Yet these signs of change do not mean these Eskimos
are really, on an upgrade.
They eut just enough wood to house themselves and no
more. They let their.one traetor rail into disuse lbr laet or
a ran belt, and now another village has it. They allow their
boat motors and snowmobiles to suffer rusty disrepair
They have failed to build Blmple earthen dikes whlth·cOJJtd
guard the vlliage again!! DOO&lt;js.
,
., •
The Senate sub&lt;oninilttee go\ the notion here ~~ otub· ,.
born Iti.A. was wltlihlllding ·pure seh'ljll water and com.
pelllng the villagers to drink contamm-ted river' watar
The faet·is the Public Jlealth ·Service built the ~n. a good
well, llanded It ,over, and urgect Its use, 1)1,1s not uired !Je.
cause lhe·Esklmos r;efuse to pay ror pump rue! or purifying
agents.
•,
liji·
.c . .
AD lheoe 1Jtln11•repreoeot lac• of mollvoil(lll, a •aiHIIcap
dee,Piy ••~twined Ia IU !l•orute and· IIIIer .. ............,
woyo whfc• 1• wit" ;poverty. TWoballlo lullldteap II· lor
from Waohlngton. But tile oapHal'o ~ hearo llie fltne
blrdea. II elty elamiilor Aloollln llllllMii, Jioveri)'llyo ap
•• lily........
. i'
&lt;

"¥·1111

.

yeara, and 1 IJII( them all at
thrill stores, secood halld. 1 c10
never ao dowll ton becauae
aomebody baa to rm the Illation,
and, besides, l dm't have a
car. Our children haven't h d

booze, clothes tor hlmaell, and
"bacllelor tun."
B' · I ·complatn, he allps me
around. I n.s golna: to leave,
but rm prt!811111t ap!n. 1 think
he plans it thla WI¥ 10 he'll

keep hla stave, SOya hie rollr·
ion won't allow COIItraceptl.vea,
but he nerer J9eS ~ church,

-~·~

'

.,

• • •

•· The connection would ap- ' ' So m·e aewamea accbm·
pear about as rem9te as sun ~
panylng the.Kennedy entour·
~ .~hQOI and ~ Genghis
age
on the Alaskan Indian
80
tour were uneasy &amp;bout ~av­
~ot at all, says Dr. Jacob
lng tha security of tile big
J\ntelyes, who delivered the jets for the Utile seven,]&gt;Ji·
speech to aboUt 1,000 AAHA senger b u s h pl8nes wlllch
members at the Washington would take them to remote
Hilton Hotel.
·
Indian villages. With· na n111r
ways on tfie snow-cove~
.. The pet is a sexual sym·
terrain,'
the plal;les were .to ' N
bol and the relationship beland
on
rr.,.en 1a k e s . and
tween the owner and the pet
rivers.
is basically a sexual one,"
he says.
As one of them ·preJ&gt;i,~ ,
ror
tal&lt;e-orr a newsman
"Sexuality, as we a II
turned
to his fellows alld
know, is expressed. in many
quipPed:
"Good aftenlootl;
nonsexual ways. The a!Ut~e
ladles and gentlemen: Your
a person has toward his or
tier , pet oan he redirected ln·lllght movie today wiD•btl
expre88ions or sexuality that I Am Terrified (Yellow)'."
•
are perfeeUy normal, provld·
II could he tb~
· mosi revolng they don't get In the way
of the person'r relationship lutionary baske all llji:Uc
since the inven on of the
with his own lamlly."
Antelyes or Middle Vll· jump shot.
Well in advance of a recent
!age, N.Y., cited ezamples
game
between two Washing.
sucb as owners who feel
great empathy over having ton industrial teams, one or
their pet de-sexed. Even them contacted Supergtrla1
mare expUcit In lbe tran.. Ine., and asked lbe firm to
ferral or oexual feelings, he sand a girl In a bikini to lite
said, are owners who refuse gym lbe night or the ~onwat.
to let their pets mate or who Supergir!J 1s the lady~.
punish them ror an expre•· . ated rraneblse th't provides
slon or aexuallty. On the a wide variety of (ethlc&lt;ll)
services for a fee.
ollter hand are the mea who
insist on mating llteir dogs.
The idea was' 'to have the
shapely
miss simply walk
What does au this have to
around
the
basketball floor
do wlth veterinary medl·
at
a
erltical
moment In the
cine? "It leads to a greater
understanding of the owoer's game, to dlstraci the oppan·
reallngs about the animal, ents so the teani thar hired
and therefore may alleet the her would win.
doctor's decision about med·
She walked. They ...wked.
teal procedures."
It worked.
'1 •

•

1bility by atrport restrictions would in my

.,. ·•]''

Though bia ;•menage ......
c~pletely aorlou,sJAnte1.Y•i",
, awnits the Iitie of ',hla' taik"
was partly Intended to ~!"":
voke Interest. in the suh)~l .
matter;
c~·~ ·
1
1
'· What next,' ' Se~Jalllf. ,ina •
the Rutabaga Grower' ? .

'•

his other women.
rn hid four drelltl in tour

'

'

Head in the Pet World

and if a.irpori c8pacity ··has not. been .in.creased by then, the airlines stand •to. lose
a ~tal. of 16,400 filgb~ and 980,~ pas·
sen a
t N y k c · e1
d
eoers of
a ew or Ity one w:Ing the
course
that year, claims Stuart G.
· TiptOn. president of the Air Tr8nspor( Assoclation of America .
. . At least 80 per cent of the llorn'l"al buSI·
ness aircraft operations at any of the ftve
airports could be eliminated on an average
day, predicts John Tucker, president of
Butler Aviation Company, which prOvides
a varJety of on-ramp, maintenance and
other services to the airlineS" as well ·as
general aviation.
The fear Is that once begun at New York,
Washington and Chicago, the restrictions
will be extended to other cities.
"I feel that the use of the business~ airplane as an industrial tool is very much
a part of the transportation and communications network that our economy is
so dependent upon," says Tucker.

BY JACK O'BRIAN
bright red? .... GeneCavallaro
NEW YORK - Penn,y saved, Jr. ot the Coloii.Y Restaurant plans
The Burtons peddled their pri- on getting high - taking pilot
vate jet. even too expensive lesson!!.
()200,000) a year for Uz &amp;
Erotic play rehearsing off Dic~e to maintain .... You'd be B&lt;bry. was jolted by an unsosurprised how marzy show biz licited review .... cops who'd
jets aren't really owned by secretl.Y watched a run-through
hams, just leased when need. in an E. Village loft and collared •••. Like the late Mike Todd ed three flower children in the
who told everyone he owned his cast: two underage runaways and
private plane but when he was a bushy - tressed male escapee
.ldJied in it, lt turned out to be from an upstate reformatory,
an old one rented when needed
MUUonalre spokesman Jim
.... In Louise' a E. 58th st. spot, Kimberly offered Veep ~ro Ag~· PMer ol Yusoslavta ltkect neW··a·pappy•!roni Jim's 114to&lt;&gt;of
rtrnNng 80 much he retUrn-· Cheiape&amp;ke !J:etrteven but-_,Spito
ld with a parff of six .... In the regretfully said sol-ry,: ·not
Sardl'a dlmer jam:Bea LWiede. enough room in his Washington
tying the yearl, blithe as alwa.ys pad .... Nothing in the papers
.... Dr. Ben Gilbert, uor. Broad- about the $4,000 6 p.m. stickup at
way," house ph,y.sician for almost Leblang'.s ducat agency .... TV
all the theatre&amp;, The Met Opera, star hipped an astrology asked
most re&amp;taw-ants and hotels in one or the better star..guessers
the entertainment zone .... With to lay out his horoscope but it
his pretty Ame.
turned out gloomy for this year
At the 01car Awards, Don
Rickles really deserved an Oscar for Chutzpah for attempting to
invade the very iii1IJO!rtant mo.
~"ACTS

"

·~

•

THE WELL CHILl:. ,1D

New Drugs Prolongi~g
Lives of Cancer Victims·
'

i·. .

ly WAYNE G. UAND$TADT, M.D. ,

~1:(~·~·" ~~r~~.

Cancer was ..anee rare ,)JI
:.[&gt;ii.W.IIIQ'·di;U-,l b\lt l:p~t
' ""-"r·l\t.:
·~c•II::... ~~~
think .1. tan live throuflll...U.. ~!'
.,.,.,..g 'i!!"!
.... aces
a;;;r;tc
or IJII!'l\c~rti
er preanancy, haviDs to work aa l.i a cloie ·~ortd to aceldenla
tims of this dlseiot.by' u '''
much ·••· 15 yellri In ·.Ome· ·
as a ~au.se of dea\1&gt;. 'Iiila Ia
hardul•.
cue.s.
The mesas of treat:.·
due
IIi
part
to
the
matly
In·
Ia there IIIII' ""1 out?- FIN·

ment are Improving all the
creased number ol Children
Ume.
who would have died of In·
1 ~·
fanl diarrhea and other In·
your. ohlld baa ~·· tumOJ'•,
Yea, there's a ' way outl A feetloUI diseases ·who are
of . aa)' )lud, It , sbould be&lt;
iaW)Ior " will hei)l you lind 1~ oow reacblpg adolesceace.
I I U d Je d to dolertDJiie; ill"
call the Lqal Ald Soclet¥ toeucl nature. If It ts mallg·
The cancera molt often
.._,, and tben pt In touch wiih seen In chljdren are leukenant, prompt and vigorous
your doctor. - H.
treatment
may protong your
mia and caneer of the br8in
Dear Hel .. ,
and l)llnal card. Although ·no
chlld'o life unw,rli!OIIt
cure Ia dlscove .
• .-· ~
we o1 the Nallooal tea coun.
"The
Tea
Counell Of t h~e
ell want to pPOit an enormoua
Qo-Wb at wouloJ' caaoe· a
U.S.A., IDe., ~ lor tllo .
hoax. 'the rumor that tea bar
~11 10, to get· one aeve:e ..
..
11!1• ean be aaved and excbq. U, S. Tea 111&amp;11111')', cstatiOrl· coftl after '88otherf •
cali,Y lllateo that thoro II oot
ed lor wheeJ chalra, or other
A" lllti IDIJ be oiiiOIH'to
aida lor the handiCIIIIIOd 11 to- and never haa been Ill)' truth
different
llrains· af'ihe ·cold·
tally £aloe, aa YOU ID1j&gt;lled In to the rwnor that tea bar tap
vir1la
or lhe may have aiJer.
can be excbsnpd ror ANY aida
jlo rhinitis. In same cues,
:rour colwnn aeveral mmths ago,
to the handicapped. - John M. ovortreatmeot with 11 a e a 1
Later, however, you included
Anderooo. ExecudY8 Director,
apraya aad o!he~.~d ~... ~
two letten trom wonlen w h o
d.l.. l,rrltalel ~ .... . rduc9!ii
Too
Councll
of the U.S.A.,
assured a rumber of oraamza..
membiaaes of ilifl iiu.se 1M
IDe.
tiona eolloctocl tea bar tap lor
llouses ind keeps li oold,
eharii.J, and you uked roadera
Joinl.
• .
for more Information on tbe au)).. Dear Mr. AnderiOD:
Thank you ror aettrng the recJeet.
If you bilve a water sbcirl·
anllllraicht.
lhanreeelvedovtt
We checked with one Of those
age
lo your area pracdoally
"collector&amp;" menUoned, a radio a clolon lettero deocrlbiDII 11t1 every summer; c..,ilder the
Jtad.., In l'ennl7lvoD1a, a n d eollt&lt;tlon JroJeeta In ao D1BIII' polllbility or having 8 ......
learned that It bad Indeed alk. different orpnJ.iaUona. 'lbese plemeatal watar ·antem ·lo..
ed lor tea bll( Ill( donltloni, wrltero wen reapancllna In good atalled. Thla Is buleaily a
but did oot !mow exa&lt;lly Where r.al!h to a ~ hoax. I . _ It well, eleclric pump aild con·
will be 10011 '"llid to rut t o' r trois for J the · pump ·IUld a ·
they were destined.
IODCil - H. '
'
tank to stqre water, ·
!SHED AT 30
Dear 30:

u

Hen Ia iome backlround rna..
terta1 you 01\11 userut In OX·
po.tll1!1the hoax.
S,Veral years qo a rumor

bet!on In the COmdeo-l'lllladtl,llhla area that lea bop oould be

'

BERRf'S WORl~

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exchan&amp;ed lor oeoinl ile dotJa,

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Wheel cbeJ.ro. 11 - - lljJ' and
down the e&amp;at cdaat IIIII we bequite alarmed. rio more
we denied ltl vaUdliy. ttie·more

came

-1•
oeomecl to }lllaread and
mliWldtrll!ancl whot wu beinl

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laid.

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oavod literally hundrtdoolthouaanda « .... before a~thiMa
to ask ''wheredowllendthtm?"
ll'o olilall eomlort tMi lbe'
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T~ · · ·esapea {e Cops ·Gallipolis Rotary ·Relit
. •.,,. The Dally Sontiael, Pomel'Ol'·MidiiiOIJOfto 0., Molda)-, Aprll 21, 11169

oii Debbil Sex iRian'~.

.Rationing Curbs Airwrt Traffic

If the nation's ~ban •free'ways

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~treets~ .t~afflc control systems and park·

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INGLEWOOIJ, Callt {UPI)The real Elgin l!oyl,.. Is back
and the La&amp; ru.elea Loken are
In the NaUooal ll.,ketball
Association .P I a y o f I final.s
against the Boston Celtics for
the 1econd straight year.
'1 fe\1 I ,lull bad to tokllw 1111 sh.., and evenl1tall1
they would start clrqipU..'' the
veteran slt)erstar aa1d SWllll,y
after sc:orlng 29 paints to lead
the Lakers to a 10~ victory
over the Atlanta Hawks.
The win p. ve Los Angeles the
Western Divlaion tlnlls lour
game&amp; to one against the

:' Cold Damp Weather;~
Spencer Top Scorer
Chelllj&gt;ellke trailed hoot Ga!UJIO]l; 12

paints

midway through

S&amp;turdly's second aDIIlll GalllpoJia Rotary Relays, but the Pazrtbera
Rnlshed str&lt;mg, scoring 26 poirts in the last dve e~enti and the result Wll another team victory for the powerful Lawrence CounUIDJ.

The Panther&amp; linlshed with
52\l points. De£endlng champiCMI
OalJipolls finiahed 1econd with
44 matkers.
Others In the order they fin.
islled were: Jack1100., 32; Melt:•,
28; Ironton, 25; Logan, 25; Nel·
IODYWe-York, 16; SOOthealtem,
It; aDd Vlntoa Coont;v, 3,
Despite the c•&gt;id'anddamJWOI·
tiler condition•, new recordl
were establilhed in all 10 run-

RUNNING EVENTS
1.20-YARD HIGH HUIU&gt;L~Spencer; G; Moubarger, J, and
Wllka, c, Ue; De9.eJjlen, J; Fergu110111 G. -

:15.4

(New

The 1968 hiSI1 jUmp, shot put
lDd discus records survived Saturday' I onslaught by area thinclads.
GllllpOUI' Tbmmy Spencer,
with 18 paints, coppecllndlvldlal
scoring honor• for the second
lltraf&amp;tlt year. Spencer took part
in three events, and won tllem
all. He did not run the 220 be·

RtK!-

Weekend
Sports
Record.)
ONE MILE RUN - !loll..
way,
Prater: J; Qmnlngham, Summary
IOO·YARD DASH -

Coorad,
L; Da-y. C; Black, G; Prole,
G: fi1&gt;a!!er, J. - '10.6, (New

G. -

4:-

880-YARD RELAY - Woo by
GAHS. Jack..., Cl); Cbeaapeake
(3); Meigs (4}, lrontnn (5). - .
!,38.6. (New Record.) -GAllS
runners- Black, Raines, Prose
and Neal.
440-YARD DASH - COnrad,
L; Ritchart, M; WUson, C; Weaver, NY; Martin, C. - :54.4:
(New Record.)
180-Y ARD LOW HURDLES -

Polley, NY; Huttoo, SE; Whttly,
e11111: of a aore back.
C;
Mos.sbarpr, J, FerguBOD, G,
togan•a Chuck Cc:llrad Oniah. eel with 13\!! points, and Neloon- and Rice, M (Ue). - 121.8. (New
ville-York~• Jerry Polley was Reeord.)
880-YARD RUN - Smith, C;
_third With 13. Day or Chesa.

antley, I; C\lnili11gham, M; Prapelke had 10 points.
Gallipolis and LOgan cap111red ter, J; Huebolt, G. - 2:07. (New
iour Drill place lr&lt;lphles. Ches- Record.)
220·YARD IJASH - lla.Y, C;
apeake three. Mel&amp;&amp;, !rem·
9laffer,
J; Huft, C; Black, G;
ton, Southeaotam and Nel1011·
ville-York each won one blue Payne, L - ,22.6. (New Re&lt;·
ord.)
rlbbGl.
TWO MILE RUN - Warner,
'lbt champion Panthers were
M;
Finch, C; Oe9:ephen, J; Tay ~
stroni In seconds, tldrds a n d
lourlho whereas GAHS £ailed to lor, J; Kelley, NY, - 9:59,5.
(New Record.)
1 capture a ~- place and the
ONE MILE RELAY - Won by
mue Devil• won oni.Y two third Logan.
Chesapeake Cl); Meigs
place rli)bons Glrinl the all.dey
(3); Gallipolis (4); (5).
ol!alr.
3:44.
(New
Record.)
Lonte evening's aetivtdea began
wUh the 21st an~~~al 00 Do0:11 gan rumors - McFadden, Hoi·
lillie Run. Steve Spaulding, Ky. lowQ, Adair and Conrad.
F l n a I resultll Chesapeake
pr c......;· """ .!hi• event ror
52'1l;
Gllllpolla44; Jackson32'1l&lt;
thO ucqb;J' IIrUi Y'liat. !\)lui:
MOlgt'
28( Iroaton 25; UJgan 25;
ding's WimlnB dtile wao 5:04,
allaJrtly orr hialll68 winninl mark NeliOl'lVllle-Yofk 16; SouUieastern U:; Vinton Cooney 3.
« 5:02.4.

WINS GODIVA
BOSTON (U!'D- Pemy Ann
Early Saturday rode favored
Royal Fillet to victory In the
$10,000 all.£emale Lady Godlw
Stakes at SUffolk !)owns.
HARRE11IDN TO RETIRE
BOSTON (UPI)- Ken Harrel·
son, traded by the Boston Red
Sox to the Cleveland lndlans In
a six-man deal. said be would
retlre nther than leave extensive business interests in tte
Bolton area.
DIKE. WINS
NEW YORK (UP!)- Clal·
boriVI Stable"s Dike cut loose
with a senaa.ticnw.l stretch run to
win tbe 45th running of the
$110,900 Wood Memorial at
Aqueduct Saturdey.
PLAYER TRIUIID'HS
CAR!.511Ail, call£ (UPI)Gary Pial'er shot a final-round
par 72 SW'&lt;ia.v lor a loornament
tDtal or rour-underi&gt;Br 281 and
the $30,000 first prize in the
Tournament or Champions, two
strokes ahead ot Lee Trevino.

STONEMAN GETS CAR
MONTREAL (UP!)- To mark
the wtstandlng no-hit perforniaJii:el bji'IMoJtio&lt;ll•pitcher ·BUI
stenei'hifiju a ear Was preSented ·
to 1\im SUnl!i.Y between games
or the Chicago doubleheader.

1l!JD1)s In ._1eba.ll history.
Their lnahillll to win at htlllle
a1nat1y ha• cost them the 1968
World series and the same
aMict!on Ia bamperinl their
chances at this year's National

leading Chicago Cub1, who split
a doublheader at Montreal
Sunlay, winning the first pmo
6-3 but dr01&gt;11il1!1 the nJa!ttcap 12. st. Louis Is a pme behind
the &amp;J;PADiion E)IN)s alii only a
hall"lltrle . ahead ot last-place
Philadelphia, which beat PI"
tsburgh 7-1.
•
urm 1'Mt worried yet,"
SChe»ndlenat said after SW...
day's loas. "We've been in
every ballgame except three.
We can't pt started. Tho boys
aren't down, they Just can't get
going."
Asked 11 be was ready to read
the riot ad, the ·(lrdlnal
marqer said, uNo, 1 try to tell
them I to do tile best they can.
1111 a• lone as they 10 out and
lr!'o rm 1101 worried. It's too
early In die seascn."
,
-.ver, ,lull 1 rew
Sc:hoel1dlenat told hia players:
"You can looe on1,y 10 Dlltll'
s8me• a oeuon H y&lt;iu're ~
to win the pe11111nt, 1nc1 ·we•re.
losirw mote tl•nour ~.,

Leai'l8

peniant.

, The Cardinal• !ell before the
New Ym"k loleta 11-3 Sunday,
marking their lOth ~aecuts:ve
loss in St. Louis. They I01t their
'llat three ttome II!PIII'Inces to
Detroit In the World Sarloa,
lncludlq the pivotal olitb and
ll'lftttl pmu, 1 m are winless
lo all omn st. Loul11tarts tid a

,

BLISOER RESISTANT

...,,ago,

.(I',J. •

Pvt ~.UI

BOSTON (UP!)- Colorful Ken
ott Harrelson, the crown prince of
quicker ln this game," BaYlor baselllll's mod set, is threatendoclarecl.
ing to retire at the age of 27.
The 34-year-old forward, who• His threat could wipe out a sixaveragecl only 12. 2 paints a player trade between the Boston
game in the Lakers' first 10 Red Sox and Cleveland Indians.
playoff contests, hit 14 or 18
The deal, announced by the
shots from the floor including a two American League clubs
6 of 7 in the final period.
saturday, touched orr an instant
The Lakers, who were beaten controversy in Boston and even
in six games by Boston in last diverted some demonstrators to
year's best-of-seven series but Fenway Park from their normal
who have Wilt Chamberlain on collegiate haunts.
their aide this season. face the
It also caused a tangle which
Celtics at the Forum here may have to be unsnarled by
Wednesday arxl Friday nights.
basebalJ'a t® brass unless the
"It's a pleasure to see Elgin beatle-haired Harrelson eventually agrees to join the In:liaD!I
and continue his playing career.
Stephens
Harrelson, better known as
"the · Hawk'' atter leading the
A.merican League in rwta batted
FSE Winner
in last season, amounced
CHESAPEAKE - Finishing Sunday he is retlrlng from
street FJlmtnalOr was Willard baseball. lie said he love&lt;!
&amp;epllens, the famed driver of Boston so much he refuses to
Peanuts I from Greeoo_p, Ky. leave it and can make as much
Peanuts turned through t h e or more money oft the playing
quarter mile at 10.96 seconds. · field than on it.
Harrelson's lawyer, his conRwmer-up ror Street wu Jim
stant
companion in a series of
Roberts in his D-MP '55 Ford.
talks
with
officials of both the
P, J, Heck and Dick Smith,
Red
Sox
and
IOO.ians arxl a
both rwming out or the s &amp; n
Pm:formance Slop in Gallipo. hastily-arranged Sunday news
lis, took TO!! Stock and Mid· conference, said an investment
dle ~k Elimlnator respettive- firm has offered to match
Harrelson's basebe.U earnings
iy,
Next &amp;lnday at Riverside it over the nert three years.
The investment role would be
is the big &amp;!_per I:IOck Specthe
12th business activity for
tacular with over $1,500 In prize
Harrelson, lawyer BOO Woolf
mo.1ey to be given away.
said.
Fridey nigh~ Riverside will
In the meaWme, the Indians
host a whole rte1a on::an·ror
left
·town taking Re4 · Sox
the ~ring Championship. T h e'
drivers wUl be going rora$2,000 pitchers Dick Ellsworth alii:
Juan Pizarro with them. Alii:
pune.

Is

trimmed the Houston Astros 2-1
ai'MI the san Francisco Giants

American League standings
By United Prlin hterratlonal

National League Stondi"Bs
By United Press International

EAST

EAST

W L Pet. GB
Baltimore • • • 9 5 ,643
Boston · • · • · 7 4 ,636 1h
Detroit • • • • • 6 4 .tlOO 1
New York • • • 6 5 .545 Llh
Washl11!1on • • .6 S ,429 3
Cleveland. • • • I 9 ,100 6
WEST
W L PeL GB
Mlmesoto ••• 6 4 .600
Chicago • • · • • 6 4 •600
Kansas Clty ••• 6 5 .545 lk
Oaklllll. • ••• • 6 5 .5-45 lh
Seattle ••••. • 4 6 .400 2 •
california .... • 3 7 ,300 3
Suilday'B Results
Baltimore 2 Washington I (Is~
Waahil1!ion 5 Baltimore 2 (2111)
Detroit 5 New York 2 (lot)
New York 2 Detrott 0 (lnd)
Boston 9 Cleveland 4
Chleqo 3 Seattle 2 (lit, 10 inn.)
Chicago II Sao!tio1 (lnd)
Oakloltd 5 Kanoas Clll I (btl
MinnellOio 12 Cllitor¢. I
Mordi,y•s Gamel
(Ail Times ~T)
· Saottle Jt'KaniOI Cl(l&lt;, 8:30 p,DI.
Oaittand at Mlrmeioto, 2130 P· m.
Clevelalli at ·Baltimoft, I -p.m.
Detroit at Waahlnt!ton. 8 p, 111.
tNft York at Boatoo, 11 a. m.
Onl.)' pmea. scheduled.
,
Monday'•
Pitcher•

W L Pel GB
Chicago •.•. 11 · 2 .816
Pittsburch • · · 8 4 .667 2\'2
Montreal • • · 5 7 •417 5'h
New York •.•• 5 7 .417 Slh
SL Louis •..• 4 S .333 G'h
Philadelphia .•. 3 8 ,273 7
WEST
W L Pet. GB
Atlanta ••.. 9 3 •m
Los Arweles • • 8 3 •727 112
San Fran. •••• 6 5 .545 2lh
Cincimati • •.• 4 5 .444 31h
San Diego. • •• • 4 8 .333 5
Houston ....... 3 10 .231 6%
Sunday's Reault1
Chicago 6 Montn!al 2 (lsi)
Montreal! Chicago 2 (2nd)
~hlladelphla 7 Pltteburlh I
New York u st. Lools 3
ClnchlDiti 7 Atlanta 1
Loa A*les 2 Houtson 1
Son F'ranciseo 3 San Diego 2
Monday's Games
'·
(All Tlmea ES1?
Phllad!!lphla at New YOI'k, 8p,m.
M.......U at St. Loulo, g P.DI.
Clncitmtl at Houston, 81SO p.DI.
Atlanta at San DJeao, It p, m.
Sin Frln.atLoaAngeleB,llp.m.
Only pmea acbedulecl
Mondly'sProbablePitchel;'l
WOilool.Gst records infareDthesls
Philodet;hia (Fryman l•llltNpw
York (Genii')'~), night
Montreal (Jaator o-n at St. I.Ojda
(Wad!bum l·ll, nigh~
•·
3oOl at Cl!tt:lntl (Nolan l·ll at HoustOn
(Bijoi~tP~ne 0-2) nilhL • ''
Au.itto
J.i\&amp;t San 'll&lt;iC'''·
O'&lt;&gt;dr" I-ll,
San

&lt;PIPPa•

•

....,.

movemeo4'" hle,.J1IF ~
Guerin !hen t:OmPIIDIODIII\I

-1 . . .

Ba)tlor.
lbe

••nere~•no

way to~
lor vert IOn(t He

could give the Laker&amp; the k8)' to
go o11 the way. - · r like
their clances.
"1 feel we beat ourselve1 in
the series. We didn't do the
thinp we are C~Plble ot. ,;

the Red sax lellbltively scheduled former ClevelaJJ:I hurler
5onn1' Siebert as their starting
moundsman lor a game wtth
· the New York Yankees today.
Cleveland reliever Vincente
Romo and cateher Joe AJ:cue,
the other players involved in the
three-for-three swap, also were
slated to be in uniform for the

today.

There wall speculation. however, ttat American Iague
Presided: Joe Crorrln or Baseball CGmmlssioner Bowie Kuhn
would irtervene am .Pfevent the
use of traded players by either
team until it is determined
whether Harrelson will go
thrwgb with his retirement
threat.

The eoouniB&amp;loner earlier this
1elJ011 ·lllscrambled a similar
retirement threat in the NationII League lnvol vlng Moltreal
first baseman Dom Clendenon.
In that . instanc~ two other

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
WOMAN'S THURSDAY
AFTERNOON LEAGUE
AprlllO, 1969
Won Lost

Simon's Market •• • 59ih
Tiny's Foodland .•• • 51
Land011rk .. .. .. 18
Buckeye Chips • • • 17
N.Y. Clothinl .•• 10

Red Sox

30'h
39
12
13
50

Coca-COla • • • • • 2~h 65'/:
High Team 3 games - Buck~

eye Chips, 2335: High Team game
- Simon's Market, 810.
High Jnd. 3 games - P. Col·
tins, 502; High Ind. game - P.
Collins, 188.

MONDAY MIXED LEAGUE
April 14, 1969

Points
Team No. 4 , . , • , , , • , , 78
Team No. 6 • • • • • • •••• 69

Team No. 1 ••• , , •.••• 66
Team No. 2. , , , • . , •• • 56
Team No. 5 • . • • • • ••• 48

TeaJR No. 3 • • • • • • • • • • • t3

Team High Series - Team No.
6, :ron. Team High Game Team No. 6, 705.
High Ind. a pmes - a.atlea

Boyles, 613, P. Collins, 50&amp;. Hlah
sirW}e pme - Charles Boyles,
227; P, Collins and E. Syl-vester,
178.

r iddlecl Red Sox skidded to
· fourth place,
Harrelson had been used ftrst
as an outfielder by Boston aocl
insisted on making all his
catches one-handed. He wat
shifted to first base during the
1968 season and qK!ned the
current campaign oo tlrst.
He hlt two home nma and
drove in three runs against the
Indian I last Friday and lad a
total of three home runs alll
eight runs batted in when he
waa traded.
Harrelson also helped introduce Oowtn.g hair styles, Nehru

==-~.e~~r:::. :t! ~;ket:;.~~:~~=:: ,

to join the expansimist E~s.
'lbe retirement threat is the
latest ln a fairly l q serle1 of
1 n c i d e n t 1 surrOlllding the
beotl.....,lred Harrelson.
Re was a relatively obscure
player with Charlie Finley's
Athletics less than two years
ago when he made some
ancamplimentan' r e m a r k s
about ~ chlh owner and was
ha..sed his outright release.
Harrelson then signed with
the Red Sox under a long-term
contract that made him the
ftrst twcHime "bonus l:aby" in
baseball history.
"The Hawk" helped Boston
win the 1967 American League
penrant and tad his best seasoo
a year ago with 35 hc:me runs
and 109 rl&gt;h though the 11\iurY·
~c;~

The Rio Grande College
Remaen are at Bere1 COlle~
Berea', Ky•• toda,ytoiadoubleoheader In the Kentucky Inter-collegiate Athledc Conference. The teams were rained

cl&lt;thlng to major league players
over the past year. He even
took 1.11 ownership and q»eraUon
or a JDOd..type "beach bi.IIIIY"
durq spring training.

OOWNING TO Y ANKEFS
NEW YORK (Upl)- Left..
harller pitcher AI Downing
rejoined the New York Y1nkees
Sunday from their ~eu,.
farm clltt in the International
League.
,- --

111E DAILY SENTINEL
tEVOTED TO INTE&amp;EBf Of
~lll/lllii)NAIIEA

1

ldCHARD S. Olt'EN , PUliUSHEI

Clot••• TIIIJIIIdll. ,.......
PLJtlllhrll dll!l' u oepl Stl~bJTI•CNct

Valle¥

Pllbl ! t hii~Q: ~.lUI YM~ !It. ,

P&lt;mtf"Ol', Ottk&gt;,

t5 71 ~

Buolnuo om .. P -

tn-ZUI , F.dl tor ..l P' - 91 Z-.21! 7.
Second dooo IIOIIII•paidltl''-rQJ, OII Io,
Nalloral III....U1&gt;18 l'ei)Ni oeallltl. . Bon~
elJJ.Gilllljlltr , Inc., IZ E'.ul 4l ot Sl. , New Yad

Ch.r, N,,. Yorio,
Slbt&lt;r!pllon ..... .,

n.n

o.~

..... b!'

c&amp;rrliiT

...u.bl• t5 ,. ,.. per 1Nik; mo uar ln
IOIWICI It tM OI.Ur Serflltll otn.. , *=.4D. SIJ&lt;

....u.... ~ ........._ ..... .,,,~·

l!qlllf.~"' terrill: Nn1 tll IIIII &amp;.~ 1
rnciNlo tl.~ BY mall: OM ,..,. .• t(l(l
.....,.16.)l. Ttlno _..., M.IIO..~
-1'~"~ •• lndudH

Sundl¥ Tlnloo-'lnll.t..

out Saturday In Berea.

UPl-orts Writer
Only a better than average 4-1 League Surday, the Cincinnati
Reel Schoendienst lll'l he road record is keel)l.ng the Reds beat the Atlanta Braves 7lsn't worried, but his St. Louts C&amp;rdllllls out or the Eastern
Cardbala are 6 t r u 11 g 11 n g Dh1sion cellar, but they're stUl

ll'h pmes behind the league.

wanted to

Harrelson Talks Retirement At Age 27

C?.r.l}!n?_ls Los~_.! f!!'!._ .~'!!is.":!~ ~!l!~'!!~-- . .
thrauglt .,. ol tho costliest

II

ur

back dotrw hil tblng," Chamber- matcbe• Cblmberlaln, w11o bu oft 10 o!rl,lglttpolnto.
Jerry Well and Johlllll' Epn
269 . r-nds In II playo!!
lain cOmmented.
added
21 and 16, reapectivel,y,
pme1, ap.inlt bis old namisia,
Chamberlain, the for the I.Akera whUe Zelmo
giant who was acquired in an 3JI.yearodd BW Ru18eiL
111t
Beab'
scored 30, B1ll Bridps hit
wouldn't
feel
like
a
otlseasoo trade from the
24
ond
Lou Hudson ado 23 lor
chaJnpl.onahlp
if
Bolton
wasn't
Philadelphia 76era, picked oil 29
the ilawi&lt;L
rebounds and scored 16 point&amp;. Involved," Baylor llid.
The !.akers led by 17 polnto In
"All we have to do to beat
~ is keep playjtW like we the third quarter but the Hawks
Richie Guerin, Atlanta's play·
have been,'' the big center came back and went abeld 87· er-eoach, iDHrted MmseU in the
86 with 7:30 to go. llut with the starting lineup in the seeotKI
orterecl.
The Botton-los ~ell aerie• score Ued 8B-88, the IAlkers ran haiL

Hawks,
'"I tried to get D1J1 stds

ord:)

L;
ninl avento Sllurdey nit!llt.
M;
Rose,
J; Hueholt,
saturda.r afternoon, two n e "
36.9.
(New
Record.)
field mark.1 were let, for a to-

tal ~ 12 for the 15-event meet.

Finals ~

Lakers Win, To Meet Celtics In NBA

.12 Records Set In

In the American League, the
Chicago White Sox swept a
doubleheader from Seattle, S..2
in 10 innirw:s am 13-3;
Baltimore beat Washin8ton 2-1
but lost the nightcap 5-2;
Detroit and the Yankees Sllllt,
the Tigers toldng the first pme
5-2 and New York the second 2·o; Kansas City knocked orr
OaldaM ?..S alter the A's had
taken the q&gt;ener 5-1i alll in
single pmes Mlnne- routed
Cllllornia 12-1 and Booton
ripped Cleve}f.OO 9-4.
Kevin Collins 6mashed a tw()o
run homer and Ron SWoboda
doubled In another pelr to
highlight a fiv~run fiftll inning
outburst for the Mets after St.
Louis bad token a 3-0 lead In
the Rrsl Now York wrapped it
up with three more I"\11\S in the
ninth on a bases-loaded double
by Jerry Grote. Reliever Nolan
Ryan gained credit fop his ttrat
victory.
The Cardinals have 1 team
bellitW average or ,217, 32
I)Oints less than their Ogure or
lui year.
Donn Clendenon, appearing In
his third game for Montreal, hit
a three-nn homer in the first
Inning to give the ElqlOS tllelr
aeeond;;ame victory and SIIIP
Chicago's winnill« akeln at
sewn. The .CubS, who ha\'e an
11-2 record and a 2lh pme lead
o.,.r runnenc&gt; Pittsburgh In the
~ot, won the opener behled the
pltchlNI ot Fequaon
Jenidlll and three runs-batted-In
by AI Spangler.
ReserVe third baseman Rick

.ti'q.

a bases-loaded grou.JVJout and a
paJr of singles to he)&amp;l Philadelphia overcome the Pirates. Rick

Wise ewned hts record at 1~1
with eit!llth-lnnlng relief help
from Barry Lerch.

The Redmen are rmJ 6-4 for
the uason aM have a 1-1 mark
in the KIAC. Rio Grande is at
Wllmington Tuesday and at
Malone College at Canton on
Thursday. Both are sing)e
games. The Marietta Pioneers
are at RioGrallleS.turday for
a doubleheader.
BW
Mto · .. 1 mum

R ecJs At nouston
U
V
Series
.-or
Pete Rose si!Wed home rook·

- HOUSTON (UP!)- The strug·
gllng ClnclllliiU Reds have the
chance to improve their reearcl
toolght when they race the
Houston Astroo In the rtrst ol
a two-pme serie!l,
Gary Nolan will be on the

mowll to battle Wade Blasi•
game of Houston, curreDtly In
the
cellar or the Natimal League's Western Divilion.
AI!Aor" losing to Altatlto ~ Sa"
urday and then defeating the
Bnves 7-1 Smda,y, the fte!:ls
stand in fourth place.
Lee May and Johnny Bench
were ClnctMad's stars Sunday
as each hit homers to lead the
Reds to rlctory over Atlanta.
Tony Perez helped out with
three singles and Jim Maloney
limited the Braves to only six
hilL
It was Maloney'&amp; first win of
the sea1011 as he ali&lt;Med only
one run, Felipe Aloo, Harlk
Aaron and Orlanda Cepeda •!ogled In the •lsl&gt;th inning lor
Atlanta's sirwle ·score.
The flra&amp; imtag was the Reels'

nnest, when

May Qhnaxect

ie Dar..! Chaney In the eighth
lmlng with the Reds' seventh
alll last run.
Maloney struck out six and
walked two in his tlrst complete game this season. He had
two previous 1tsrts but was not
involved in a decision.
Ken JOOn801l ted: the loss for
Atlanta.

HAITI BEATS U.S.
PORT AU PRINCE, Haiti
(UPO-Hattl deleated the Unit·
ed states 2-0 SUnday in a world
soccer cup match. Haiti scored
a goal In each halL

Dale Wamer

AM I LIABLE FOR
SOMEONE STUMBLING
IN MY HOME?
Our

Home

Prot.ctlon

Poll ~y

protect1 you &lt;&gt;!IG!not lou wh•n
10meone !o occldental ll lnjutecl
on yaur prop«ty . Don t ritk a
IGWIIJit for on gcc i d•nt 0&lt;1 )OUt

property, Consult "' ' todoy obout
fh i l or any other qu••tion deal•
ing with inlut"OnC:I , We're h.,l
to help.

Davls-W1rner Ins.
Phone 992-2966
114 Court $1.

City Loan
of course ...

a

IOI.lf'oonlll barrage with hia round
trlp_per
with two abMrd.
Bench'a aolo homer came In the
sixth to make It G-0 after Peres
t.d singled home the Bed•'

R!th run In the

fllllllml~~&amp;

CONES
BANANA SPLITS
SUNDAES
MILKSHAKES
MALTS • FLOATS

For yea" we 'vo encouraged pooplo to pick up the
phone and coil City loon. Whether it's an unox·
pectod emervency, o suddenly available bargain
or a family decision to pay off some pesky biNs to
rtdi.ICI monthly payments . ·.• it can be Gl&gt;. ,!ICilY.
a• dialing your .
,~

••

'

�'
,- 11W DaliJ SooH.I, p~
0.,-,..,.,,
,

,.rll
,

',

ATHENS, Oldo (UPO - 'l1lo
0b1o Umonkf 1'081 IIIII I He
Oblo aa:e •Jnlverii!J Lontern,
11o1b cano,lllll - r o , dOftt.
leatecl award
here

pre-•
llltllrdoi' n1a1rt 111 iha ....... ban-

quet Gl 1118 Oblo Ccillep NeWI· _.- Aaooclalloa.
1be Rio Grande Sl&amp;ntl• top.
pod tto divlllon In a amall eoJ,
·
·

Tuppers Plains
Society News
BY MRS. EVELYN BRICKLES
The Ruth Cir&lt;:leottheWcmen•s
Sotiet,y of Christian Service or
St. Paul's United Methodist
Church met recently at the home
of Neisel Weatherman. and Ger·

trude Ho1fmanpreseri.ed theproeram topic, 01 The lorc:lill Risen,"
Crom the Response ·m.g.z1rle.
Discussion was held concerning
the pledges for June to Deceflloo
ber 1969, It was dedcled to con-!lult wlth the Naomi Circle belore
making the pledges. A district

meeting was announced for A»rU 23 and 24 In ColumbuB.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dorst
and her slater, Juanita Grueser
made a trip to COlumbus where
Mrs. Dorst and

Mrs. Grueser

attended a hair beauty meeting.
Mr. Dorst visited biB brother
and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
ToiM'IY Dorst am ctillclren while

there.
Mrs. Eulah Swan spent several

days with her granddaughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Lawrence Hasbargen
aiXI belped them move trom Belpre to Parkersburg to the prep.
erty they bougtlt there.
Those calling on Mr. and Mrs.
Oscar Babcock over a recent
weekend were Mrs. Dinsmore
Boyles of Allred and dauglrter,
Mrs. StarUng Massar ot Eastern, Mrs. RaymoOO Frecker,
Mrs. Florence spencer, 1\ppers

Plains, and M'r. and Mr!. Dale
Welsh of SUcceRR.

Nallhi McDonald ot Columbus
visited Mrs. NeJsel Weatherman
over the weekerd.
Rdlert Marcinko Jr. of Canton
spent the weekend with his par.
eJts, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Marcinko and l'amUy.
Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Lyons and
100, Lamar, and Mr. and Mrs. 0 scar Babcock aOOEulahSWanwere
Sllday dinner guests of Mr. anct
Mrs. t.wrence Hasbargen of
Parkersburg.
lllr. ud Mra, Marvin Wolker ol
Ealt Slade ealled on Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Brlckles on Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Brlckles has been Ill
with viiv.
Mr. and Mn. Clarence Nlch-

oh spent several daya with their
son, Rev, and Mrs. Cecil Nlcholl!l, Toledo.
Jolu&gt; Tall of Burr Oak and Mi88

Marb'll Berrard of Guyavtlle ard
Mr. all1 Mrs. John Hayes of Chester were weekend guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Fon Halsey.
Mr. m:l MrL Virgil RooahaiXI
pudaoo ofWestShadewerecalltrw on his siater, Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald VIolet Sunday afternoon.

lAurel Cliff
News Notes
Sabbath School atterliance at
the Free Methocllat (burch on
Aprll 13 WU 119, Oftering Wl.l
t2S.M.
Mr. alii Mrs. Paul Jacobs aDd
ehlldren of South Shore, Ky••
IJ)Int a week with Mr. Jacoba"
parent&amp;, Mr. an:l Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs.
Mr. ami Mrs. Edward Bauer of
M'arion and. Mia a Polly Karr spent
a woekond with Mr. and Mra.
Charle1 Karr.
Mr. and Mn. Lewia Peters
and cblldron of West Virginia
.,.rn an event~ with Mr. an:l
lira. Norman Schaefer.
Mn. Cltrford Icenhower u~
derwent 1urgery last week at
Veterane Memorial Hospital.
Mra. O.rle1 Diehl was a mecJ..
leal patient at Holzer Medical
CeJttor.
Mrl. Georgia Diehl io visiting
relative• at MWenburg.
Mr. and Mra. Herman Kasper
alii Bamla of Daytonviaiteclrela·
tlvea over the weeketd.
Mr. and Mrs. Clitford Jacobs
called oo hh parenta, Mr. and
Krl. PRrl Jacoba. Mr. Jacobs
11-loyod In Springfield.
Mr. aod Mro. Calvin Lane of
lllddleport cilled on the Cllrtord
Jaola l'amUy Sullda1 afternoon.
1107 Howill, who Ia 01111liO)'ed
ID Cldcago, ..,... the woel!end at
blaiDnehan.
'
lfr. Udl Ura. Vera Story ot
Col-. opent a weekend with
..... pannll, Mr. ·and Mro. N.,...
11t111 SehU!or. TMir 1011, Jolin,
r - heme wltll hlo porotltl
a1ier'" 'week wtth hlo gro"""r·

'"

, Mr. ·and Mn. Ernaat PowoU
~ild IIOD, han, have moved to
11to1r ll'aller home oo the Har·

........ -.

.

,,

''

..
~

·'£.

lep dlvllloa.
•
1be 1'011 '""' fllllr Gl 1M IS
llralillaco awaro lD tho 196869 OCNA com,pell~ wbUe ,lllo
Llntml took lllroo. A tolol Gl
78 awards W11'0 prooantecl by
Tracy H. Norrla G1 W - g
Unlveroi~J, tho .......... OXOCII•
tlve aecrelaJ'Y.
1be 1'011 won top ewarda for
the best pJbllc aervlce CIDI·
patgn and the boll adYorUoement whUe ita Mark Roth was
first in the newa IIDrY compe.
dtioo and Pete Boa! In tho belli

• r

!'0

\

· rf . .
on. lllldilla,Will- Ccilleao

-ol

GAUGES- Gollipolls, 12.2and
25,2 running 52 teet of rollers;
Pt. Pleasant. 26.17; PomeroyMason, 24.64; Hinton, 2.93 Blat;
Kanawha Falls, 7.25 stat.; Charlestm, 19.29; London. running
2,25 feet of rollers; Wintleld, ~
nJng 4 teet or rollers.
BOAT MOVEMENTS:
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS - Semet
down 5 p. m.; lloyou LaRelne
down 10:15 p. m.; Walter Cl.lrly
up 11 p. m.; Esso Pennsylvania
up 12:35 a.m.; JaneT, aooEtna..
Louisville up 2 a. m.;S. M.Jenks
up 3:50 a. m.; Jeflboa.t up 7:40
a.m.
KANAWHA RIVER- Marme~
Jdm Fox down 5:30p.m.; Alan
R. Merrill up 7:30 p. m.; 0. F.
Shearer down 1:40 a. m.; Ouachita down 1:45 a. m.; Winfield,
George T. Price down 8:25p.m.;
A. V. Criss up 1:10 a. m.;Elger~
clll! up 2:25 a. ffi.; Mt. Slate up
4:50 a. m.; Fort Dearborn down
7:25 a. m.
OIUO RIVER - Lock 14, OVEC
up 2:10 p. m.; Philip Sporn up 4
p, m.; Steel Clipper 1.11 3:30 a.
m.; Mark Eastin L1J 3:30a.m.;
Lock 16, John l'llshak up 2:50 a.
m.; st. Marys down 3:20 a.m.;
ORCO lf 4:45 a. m.; Lock 17,
Polly R. lf 9:55 p, m.; AOOrew
P, Calhoun down 5:20a.m.; Bellville Locks, Elisha Woods tC&gt;
10:40 p, m.; Dtmcan Bruce up
12:15 a. m.; Alton zephyr 111 5
a.m.; Southern down 11:30p, m.;
Lock 21, WUIIam H. Zimmer up
6:10 a. m.1 Lock 23, JefferiKin~
5:25 a. m.; Racine Locks, Natiora.l down 7:20p.m.; EdwardS.
Bosworth down 10:30 p.m.; Peg~
gy Downey down 6 a.m.; Greenup
Loeka. cottonQueenl.ll3:35p.m.;
Fnncea HouglaOO "' 4:40 p. m.;
Ravenswood tV 10:20 p. m.;SteveMOO ~ 2 a. m.; Valvoline down
4::50 L m.;Scott ChotiDtCJ7a. m..;
Robert P. Tlbolt down 7.:35a. m.;
Kathleen K. down 4:55p.m.; Meldahl Locks, Dell '&amp;tcher down
9:50p.m.; BuckFreeman~3:30

, iiY MRS. RQBERT WOOD
atelier Gard011 Club
actltally or Olllotllw. a I t a - Gla&lt;1&gt;1or laalalllc meJttolbnqe.
,
'
.nw I• Ia a IDJ.•&amp;erlou• J}laee, ani we ~ a
lhe Wlitmwn and oYOD fantastic
r.;..;r.; .~l ailact• Ullt1lf the PJonta and aaltttalt lll'OUIId UL
IDCOIIorl IPI"'!clatod theoe .a-n Ioree! better tllan we
, wudcl,plaet their..,- ,acoonllni to 1M...., IIIII
or drup wla....t "'-1111 wiQithey were el!acdYL
put lllolr lallh ID !ertllllor relher t11an tile
10 to tha \frUIIItore or to lhe doctor. No octdlogroVed 1M !act that....., thrive beatlhe filii IIIIIOit, and drutr
atlll
':~.t~·
wbooO loll It l i t o - · wllch cloctora
i'!
they uoe JDight be made up aallttle wblte tall-

teclildlllieal ad.w.ncea law made ua aware of eva

·-··----··--~--··-··• SECOND FLOOR •

• ANNEX

-

SPRING COATS

.,

\

n~ 1,~/f.::; t.,~M:1~·

to

_·c ·.

• Stuody 5/8" boon lvldln9 loto

,,

LADIES

,,

SWI SUITS

'

ASPECIAl GROUP·

'2-'3-'4
97~

Ml441ofiOI'I, 0.

· •

'

· wNStAIIS. ....

·o
·
o

.

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...

"' ~

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••

,,
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r

EA.

FOL
A silver-topped table thlll serves a IIINllihld~ of
flllrpl1ses. Non-silll! U•legs. Table folds easHy
lllld 'OIIIfJIICIIy.
'

·~·

• '1:

'

for a potluck dinner.
' ..... memo n,pld p~ growth, greater unltannllf Gl plaala, earlier Mra. Elizabeth Slavin gave tile
'! illklor. much bolter •111111 ~com at harwll.
lll'lll'or and Mra. Beulah White
The stet! of teclmlelanl cotllluciiJw lhe tJI)Orlmellll c1o not lr)&gt; lll'OJOntod devotions u s I n 1o
' to ~laiD tha dll!arooce, but thq wW -lthallt Is great. The one "God's Plan for Man,"lrom the
poullolllty mfntlODOd lalhlll ....,... IIIII' lie abiOI'bed by lhe plant and mapzlne ''Dec laton." Membero
Into hea4 but technlclano ore quick to point out thetlhla Ia responded to roll coil by IIJ'·
only a aueal.
,
log aomethiDg nice about the
., ,AI tha ~c Gardeolar Ellperlmtolal Farm, It wu !oundthat ooe seated next. The blrthdl¥
tiJitPII tin p placed 111edilnga made them ....,. blgor l!ld of Mrs. Franeeo Bearho w.,
~· 'ftolo aome el!ecl Ia achle~ with wirea lll'1llll: alme the noted.
Platq. While ouch lhlnP as !"''ll' Uo cana and wtrea tltll' make RoUnd-robin carda were sign.
r.aar
- l a t like a Junk yard, a Uttlo lllllhbnooo con ed for Mrs. Grate IIYaell l!ld
bl o.erl
II It 11-hl lhe 1t1D11 oHtlellco.
Mra. DaiOY 111111. Mra. C. P,
·~A!! e..llollallooH&gt;Uiecl:rji.Culture, or oolllg elll!'lrlclt;v to make Brlllluey thanked ~ class for
'·
.,.O.. 'i.otier,ll"lhlll"llallha8' ~WWtlhloi!aed" alr,JoNEa- floWer • · tli'iltor and
: , ~· of ....,tanceo that make "' lhe atlltolpbere which her mother, Mra: Cbarles Mclolve becotlie elec:trlfled by loolllr w Plnltlc ati electron. Theae Namee, 95,
ll!alaed air Plftlclea ore formed by ndlaU.., Oloctncal dlochorpo It woa decided to have a home·
il1il lrl~onel.._lciiJ. Only 0111 oltha kldzed ID&lt;lleculaa In 'II mado hal llhow at the 111.1' moetttilllon 01 re,ntar molecule a Is etllllqjjt to make alpa gr&lt;ill-r. lug, Othera attendiDg were Mrs.
'Here areij'lacll allons oa people - 1M depressed foeiiJw Ruth JoiltiiOD, Mra. John ..,...s,
· ~ou ~ 'pr · lllr .to1eta when atmoi!Piierlc PftJBUl'O Ia low II re- Mrs. MoiDe McGhee, Mra. In
of...,.lnlhealr,andlhlrelle!P80111owhohave Turner, Mro. Pearl Hofflnan,
...._IOYOroli,
1oe1 wlttn they areplacedbo a roc1m with a...,. Mro. Dllll llamm, Mro. lsabeUo
l!olfbw ..,.~ &amp;or ,the lOIII In the air.
WlntbrtolnOr, Mra. AA Jordan,
,,. SctenCe " alea failed to o&gt;;olaiD lha power of a m.,. who haa Mra. Charl01 Bennett, Mrl. Nora
fout!d thai he· a .lf&gt;e peraooal qualib' to loca,te water lllllerground Hamilton, Mro. James S:ouclero,
)lltlt 1 lorliod ·flck. Soomda -Ide, but who eaa dell)' thalli actual- l!ld Mro. Char leo Edwards.
· jl Ia ,l!ld tbaf 1118 aUck wW twlot lD his hando so violently as to
,
•
,.._llllltera.
'
'
':'. ·F!Un all llda we c:aJi only assume that our world Ia Alii Glllll't~ and that ,lhl harder we ·try to oolve Ulele lew puallea, the
. . tpJitdl,we llld. ,
'
,, Porhape thera Ia a Uttlelantaay lD every !act, tiiiii!IDOia&lt;l In

-::.tJook

"
POJ,.I.\"8
POINTERS

~ebool,

baa railed

~

'I

or faculty of the oo;bool lltCI
made over tt.ooo b)' ae1Jlng
CoDtacl a radlo station lltCI mate
them. Stte1t a aame ·iJ IOiJ ollun

'

.··.-..•a.9f.
. I
'

COlwnhU.t,

••

contriiMion wao made to aent to the
CGola!l
were weekend lhoACeneer
SOeloiY and It wure- aryteoldentj. TWeldiMoa.....

viollorl at tho Arnold Rlchardo' ported tllat cancer pads for tbe
' , .
hOme. Other recent guests were IOCI!I unit have beeo completed
!If· and Mra. Paul Gomer ol wllen the Rock Springs _ , .
Dayton, Mra. Jameo Phllllpo Gl Health Club met 1burlday at
Columbul IIIII SacOY 8mton ~ lho home Gl Mro. Homer Bad.
Denver, Colo. Mrs. bmton and ford.
JOlt came Friday from Deliver
Mrs. w. A, Morgan, M r a.
and Will remain for an llldefl. ·
Ceorge Skloner, · Mro. Mark
nile vlalt. Arnold Jllcharda re- Graeser and Mra. John Goell
maint a patient at ~lzer uo...
- • aJIPOintecl to the 111.1' comIIIW.
mlttee tor blrtllday lrea!a to be
Mra. Forreat Baclrte1 retum·
ed home llmda,y after llpelllllq
two Weeki in San Alltmio, Texas with her BOa, Buteh, atatkced at Lackland Ail Force Base,
l!ld daughter.U.~aw, carOl. During hM- time Utere, the three
visited MaJor Jamea Roller and
famUy at Randolph Air F o r c e
- · Mra. Bachtel now Into CO.
Iunibus SJnday and was met there
A plad.e was plarmed for &amp;ln.by her daui!llter, Carol.
dOll at the llaae Wolton LeaiUe
Recent IU8&amp;ts of Mr. and Mrs. Farm following church services
L. w. McComas "ere Mr. and
when the Metbodist Youth Fel·
Mrs. carl Vanderhool and chll- lowshlp met last nt.gtrt at the
drell. Margaret, Flqyd and Mark, Heath United Methodist Chl1rcll,
Waldo.
MiddiOIIOl'l.
Mr. and Mr .. Herman George
Teens ~ the eturch from tile
Blld children of Morgantown, W,
JOYenlh grade up wiU be Invited
Va. were Thuraday guests ot
Mr. and Mra. Harold George to alleDd the plcale even tbQY are not aetlve in the youth
and family. Alao vistthlg with
group.
_ Mary Bl'll&lt;llury led In
the llarold George family was
devotlona and Glenna ~rap
Alt&gt;l&gt;a Holt of Mlnerav!Ue.
¢117011 lhl plano for fii'OUII olng. ,
Mrs. Charles Searles spent
lng.
,
the past week in Bellefontaine
Attending beoldeo those namWith her husband who Ia '""'-lot' ed were slndy Johnson, Jennied there. They returned home
fer tod Bridgett Goble, Brenda
llmda,y, Greg and Lisa Becker
Edwards, Twlla Clatworlhy, Ed·
JIIOII(IIng aevoral days with
die Brcnrn, Cyntllla Mills, George
their grandparents.

MOND~Y

TIIEODORUS COUNCIL 17,
Daughters of America, IOOF hall;
lnelllbers to take llandwlclles; to
practice with Qlldlng Star Coonell to receive state and national
.affieers at May rally.
JOF CLASS, Monda¥, 7:30p.m.
at United Methodist Church, 1'0111.
eroy.
CHESTER PI'A, 8 p.m. Monday at the school;
night
will be observed with Mro. lloy.
ward Bis&amp;ell, chairman; gueat
Bpeaker a representative from
th~ Slell Plant; new offieera to
be elected; refreshment&amp;.
MIDDLEPORT PI'A, 7:30MondOY night at lhe Mlddlot&gt;Ort El&amp;menllry School. lnslallatloo of
new omcers; program by the
Rio Grande D&gt;semble directecl
by Merlln Ross. Fifth grade
mothers will serve.
TUESDAY
CHESTER GRANGE 2609, reg.
ular meetil)g, Toesd117 evening.
.A ll members asked to attend by
Harry D. Holter, master, who
reports Ulat an important business session will be held,
HOMEBUILDER'S
CLAS'i,
Middleport Church al Christ, pro~
gresalve dinner, beginning at the
church, 6:30 p.m. Appetl.zer witli
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Pickens;
salad with the William T. Grueaers; the main course with Mr.
and Mrs. Cash Bahr, and deB·
sert at the Denver Rice home.

The sophisticated doll
Mre wears a mini sleepdress from Vanity Fair in

the newest shade of down
pink. It combines fashion's new see-through
look.with baby lace at the
neckline and ruffled hem,
It achieves its blush of
color from its nylon tricot
lining.

•

TUrner, Mrs. Harvey McKinnis,
John Bateman, Mrs. Edmond W,
Henry, Mrs. Harvey L. Maynard,
James M. Hall, Beverly J, Mabie,
Tamara L. Drummond, E I .m e r
Belue, LOri Clark, Kllvln Dack.
VIckie Goul, Mrs. Gl011 L. Gooldin, Mrs. Bumlce III)'Wood, Paul
A. Maloney, Raj'IIIOIId Spires,
Mra. Gordon Young.

Hawley, DaYid KraWBCQn, Mary
Ann BechUe, Jom Sebo, li&gt;aan

Friday Club is
Entertained
Mrs. Ben Neutzllnl

e--

Power•, and Mrs. Jack !Iavin,
counselor.

Black-

IH

FINISHING
SAME 'DAY
SERVICE
ln At 9- Out A~ 5'

..,.....,. a....,.
· '216 E. 2ncl, p......,
'!'0 Mlli t. MIIWI•

tl

day Club at her Pomeroy home
1bllrllda&gt; night ,
Mrs. Henry Reibel presided
at the meedng which 0110ned With
the Lord's prayer in unieon. Of.
ficera' reports were heard. It
was reported tbat Mra. R u b 1
Erb's husband is Improving, but
that her daughter is a surgleol patleort In a Columbus hoa·
pttal, Members olgned a I'OIII1If.
robin cardforMissThelmaGrue-

,,$
;· '

''•

ser.
.. . .)VEDNESDAY
.
Mrs. CarrieMelnhartandMrs.
POMEROY WCW, 2p.m. Wed- "' Merle DaUOY thanked their Sf'"
nesday, ~meroy United .Metbo- cret pals for gifts. Games were
dlot Church .
plll,)'ed, with prizes being won
PASr PRESIDENTS, Ledies by Mrs. Meinhart, Mrs. Reibel,
Aux:l.ltary, Drew Webster Post Mrs. Ella Smith, Mrs, Eva Des39, American Legloo, 7:30 Wed· aauer and Mrs. Mabel Wolfe.
nollda&gt; night at the home of Mrs. Mra. Noutzllug served refresh·
J. M. Thornton.
ments to those named and Mrs.
Nettle Hayes, Mra. Margoret Set·
THURSDAY
denabel and SUss ~ll Diers·
SYRACUSE THIRD WDlNES- bach •
DAY Homemakers Club, postpon~
Use Old Bath Mat
ed last week, will be held ThursYour old balbroom mal
day' at 10 a.m. at their regular
be eat to Ill an eleelrlc
can
meedng place. Sal"" will be the
Door or oboe poUoher. Juat
aubject and Mrs. Howard Nolan
atllcb a cbanael to run elaawill be the leader. There wlll be
lle lhroagh and .Up lhe new
a potluck lunch at noon.
cover over the old felt or
WOMEN'S ASSOCIATION, 7:· bristle pads. These coven
30 p.m. nwrsda.v night at me are easy to remove after
SUddleport First United Pres- each use to machine launder
byterian Church. Mrs. WIUiam ID bot sudo.
Morris, 1)1'0£I'apli Mrs. Tom
KeUy, d..ottons. Mrs. E. O.
~Y. Mrs. Helen Lewis,
Mrt. Edna Anders· on, Mrs. James
Buebanan, Mrs. Carl Gllrnore,
hostesses.

~rt-. · ' t.Zl'ne.rr~--. l i ft('fti'i'O ll~lri: '~U'crsi tfri' 'Jm~.f.~
c~loon frnm 2 Mot , ,.1 olh•c"' r •rrvi t~. ·wc,Rtl~ o n tv 1ff. ounce·1atfrf
wuod lo r mr1-t mild l m~t·\ C11 mc '" fur ,1 1ft•mum1 ra tim1 o f Zen ith 's
nl"w Zt••wll c . It m~y ht tu\ t r11.:ht lor \'u u '

.7'"~!1'

r~.. 'l" "llty 'II"' ''

in /Jd o re

t~H• n~me 8~1 on•

-~l! T'"I O II:I7 FfJ

Zf NI TH D£ALE R

i Hllri" Aids.

t 1m

:=:J Pltna flllillulllttti111111tllrn titeuturt
~ Plme lt..,hont lrltll holnt to "'"'~' 1111 • dim·
onstrlt!Ofl.

------SlAT[ - -

-----· . . ... __________

silent phone?
NEWSPAPER ADVERTISING

HLLS PEOPLE WHERE ••• AS
WELL AS WHAT ... mBUY
If the phone doesn't ring, could
be that not enough people know
you're there. When you've got a
lll¥ice to seN, you tan to11111 on

n.....- adnrtisitg to make

I hOaolltoiortera'cliY, ·

, llrL i.ouluo ·1111'1'011 .a de Isert

that phone ring , .. Gild ring , ..

m~era l!ldlioillla. !=~~=~~~

ad ring , . . bHIIust newSpaper
adnrtlslnt really geis tile ~~

")

'

.

~

saga "~ss. CINck db ttl! Dis·

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'

'.\,

•,

i

I

L k H t

course to

:or

ed members of ~ Third Fri-

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT WCTU, 7:30
Frldll,)' nigh~ Middleport First
Baptist Clnlrch.
SATURDAY
rs. ou s os ess
BAKE SALE, Raeine Chapter
134, O.E.S., S&amp;tu.-., 10 a.m.,
Racine Food Market. Each memOf Alpha Epsilon
ber to oontrlbute, For pickup Gl
Item&amp; ciU Opal Diddle, Barbara
IJo!gan,
Kate McNickle, or Cora
Ohlo-AIIIi&gt;8 ~!fallon Chapter of
Alpha Delta Kawa mot ,Toes- Wfbh.
do¥ night Ill the home ol Elma
Looks In !b'nCIIIO wftll Helon
Smtit., clulplajn, !11'8aontlng a
abort program.
11W •avealng'o WOI'II "'" deYOiod to plamlntlho chapter's
for .!Kt-70. ilaxlne
w1nao14 prealdeet, wiu •..,....
tho ~! al u.e Nllloaal
Convdloo to be helcl lhl• lltm•
mer lD Kanaaa •CIIJ, 110., the

M

ject fl. mmtltly ~ r.,....• El U
for lhl real..:.n!l, , ': "
''Teaeb ua toPr~!!U~.f"votl~ lheino · uiooot 1&gt;f .... ,;.
Amoa Leonard. IIIlO ,.... """"\ ..
lure from Sto!coad Ntl' fol!lio!·
1n1 the I,Drd'a 'Pro,jer _. tloo ·•
pledge ot aUeglanee 1D ""'""'
Mro. Sco11 Foliner wil l!fam 1-r for lhe . , . _
Red Skelton'o ..............,
the pledge Gl illestance wuiiV,
en by Mra. Jamoa Conkle• .All
article oo open bear! uprj
firlttoo by Dr. Chai'lea ·KIIIIo,
a ...native of Atbeaa, wu r~
by Mrs. llarold
and
Mra. WUIIub Grueaor pve a
- - antltled "lltreyD111&gt;1b
Meetl a Vitamin."
The contest was woo b)' Mn.
WIWam Gruoaer l!ldMra,Jamoo
Cc:xlkle. Refrelbmentl were sen.
ed by the bostess. AIIA!ndlng .besides those umed wen Mrt.
Arise Abbott, Mrt. Ollie Ciarlo,
Mra. Clara Eichinger, Mro. Fred
Goegloln, Mrl. WOllam Folmer,
Mra. Ethel Gruoaer, Mra. Cllf•
ford Leifheit, and Mri. Wilby
Who!OY.

are .

','&lt;

. ,&lt;

Club Contributes
To Cancer GJo
..
ro ·.
J!OIP
~

..

Ave. Vlaldng hours 2-4 IIIII 7-8
p.m. Parenti oal.l' oo Pedlatrlca
Ward.
Admllolons
PU.bllcaticll: of admlaaloas la
problhltecl until llortber notice.
Blrtho
lltl. Thomal stanley, BL I
'Patriot, IIOD, 9,.0 o.m. lllfllr.
dO)'; llro. Mlchall E. Nelaon,
Wallsten, IIIII, 1:50 Lm. day; MrL Doll c. ilecker, SUd' dloport, 1011, 1 a.m. ,...,.....,.,
ifra. Jlmol E. K1or. Welioton,
IIOD, 3:ll! Lm. ~.
'
Dlamlaaed
,
Mro. Rohort L, Allen; Mra..
lloberl L. Flll&gt;or and lltant aon,
. Mro. MarT E. Flanqan,' Mra.
Doll C. Fowlot,' Jack L. Frlllk·
. .......,., Mro. 110.1' L. Glltm, MrL
Olatl E. ~. llr'a. llertha
II. ~• .llii• •
.... lira: Nulllr\VUillml, lira.
Gl,eolo , w,.,, ~ ~:: Eatller
J, N!but, , Jamoa R. 'Nichola,
lira. . ~ f, ~.· !'"- L.
IIIPP, .lllllJ J • •~ , ~~~~~

c. ......

Mra, Jaal•ce

dren,

. BATH··

'OR UN,LEACHED

.~ l ·1l,:qo:.

pre"""""

,

~~ bukelball pJI)el

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Plan Picnic
Next Sunday

sal""

' In tha e&gt;perimaot wan laster soedUng lltROI'1IFtt-• ll!itod
,

en;...,

BID'•
Eetller Dull to the .
Cleveland ·Clinic for Cyatlc FIbrosis, and Mrs. Fellowt to the
Richland Coun1;y Toberculoals
HoaPlW at Mansllelcl.
A eocktall hour preceded the
dlmer meedng. Mrs. Terrr
Beecheler, the ealon chapeau,
welcomed the member• a n d
guests attending, and Florence
Slerman, petit L' Aumonler gave
the hlvoeatloo.

.

exC&lt;l)l &amp;or
bushel~

OUr

~

.... 69e. s·. ' '·7, · ~. AYAI'
. .

SENSIBLE PRICED

a~e,

lr PO~LY Ci!AMER
to lmow bow to raise

CANNON
BATH TOWELS

meatlllg

t1an

Raising Plans
School Groups

• FIRST FLOOR •

Other dia!IDPIIIhed auesto at
lhe dlunor
In addition to
Mra. lllartiO who brOIIIbt greethlp wore Evillne BerklOY,
L' Arclilvlste, Nevada; lielen Beo1 child ·cbalrman,
£4.,-11; - · FellOws, lhlrd
lllltllbor of tho commlltoe, ll!elby; !leva · Clhla, Silloh, paroc1y
chllrmu; Dorotl!1 VltaZ, conaUtulloo and by~awa chairman;
Helen Loret, lllrltB scholarship
cblirm.an; Louise Veshosky,
marclte · cbalrman, and Bett,y
KorteVele, all o1 Cleveland; Dar~
lone OUnmlna, audltlnl commit·
lee cholrman, of New Wallhlna·
ton; 8nl3 Donna Paul, color bearer, GIGibaonhol'f.
Aloe
was VIrginia
Rahe, Gibsonburg. ·the national
pciuYior member. 111tlttloo was

per

...1(~111'·

Single le.a, balled
hlbing, I" thi'k
virqin polyfoam
mattress with striped 'ouon tic king one
side; vinyl the reverse side.

·

ktad."IM ,

hold o lvll

* 19" rauncl ancf 19" high
* D••Ien, atGI~n &amp; Nr r..latant

,

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• Lor9o onou9h

sttetel, carrton.

)'leld of

19" Patio Tab

1/3 OFF

WH~RE SHOES ARE

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.t

Br0addoth Prints
.

I!IDDUPORT

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THE SHOE BOX

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Piece Goods

BAK8f.UINI1Ua
,

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: :::%i~ll!;~...., ,~,~. ~. i.: ~ .

1/2 . PRICE::·;~: :'"!"'

gr-

day

the

TV TRAY TABLE
!1

her ·Lt~aolereEclna
Bmeltz of Alllca-· and tho Le
Demt..ChQeatt ~Ddere Hazel

Church Class
mullc wetahad 44 per ceat more
dlld ~:,;~~;::with
nomuolc.
wu clur,., 20 perlllll IIIII lha moat ,... Holds Potluck
lar more abunclaslt rmt
dlocoverod
_
~ . t9&amp;ttho-=wa•m010Citothelleld. Muolcwesp~ Dinner Event
'. '
to ooa IIOCIIon o1 the field. 11W hll'ioatecl
corn
I !fGtti the muJ!.c 'JOCdon wao 137.5 buohela acre. Tha -plot, Members · Gl lhe 8JOY B • e
; wbldt ncoiYed ldolltlcal treatment
tho muolc wu 118.7 Clasa met Thur""" nli!llt at tho
· lnlahela per
a cW!erence of 20
SUddleport Firat Bapllet Clnlrch
a

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moeiiDg hCM!Ored
lho Dtpartem~ Cblpeau Vk&gt;let Aklilob , New w-·"---·

Tbe1~cropwaalncreaaed

KING SIZE

ASelected Group

,,

$1.72 Per Lineal Ft.

held for 10 """
wiU•'
dapeau Alchholz having .........
II W&amp;l IDIOUIIced by Mro. Alchholz lhlll the Denver bed proJOet
hal &amp;One over tho $1,000 sol
and that · new laloa has bemor'
.
Banlzed In Darke Coun1;y, 1be
June pouvlor to be held In co.
lumbus at the Fort Hqea Hotel
on June 8 wao DOted and 1Joro..
thy Vltaz amounced a bWIIr
COII!est to be held at q,e atafO
convention in Clevelaad 'in July.
Plans were made~ toramemorW eervtco to be held by. Flor·
ence Slerman, L•Aumonter ti
the LOroiD Counq Salon, for decealed members.
II was reported tho! the chapeau Is allowed $100 to be do.
natod lD Ohio to the hospital
of her choice tor cystic ftbrosts
work. Mra. AlchhoJz selected the
Cyatlc Fibrosis Clinic In Cloveland and the Columbus Cyatlc
Fibrosis Center. Each member
of the child weltare committee
Ia allowed to designate $50 each.
Mra. Bean gave hers to Lor-

...~.;

······----··-·
·
Find these
Items In the~~,

LADIES SPRING
DRESSES
. ·.-

abl8 to

and IO)'I&gt;oattl were p - In greenhouse !lata. ODe
placed 9011 to a ph_..,h lhet plaled "RhiPiodl' In Blua"
The flat waa placed lD a illent green houao.
waa a bil dll!ereoceiD the ..,.... Glgrowlll, all ID lavor Gl tho

'

three floors indicating the .MOONLIGIIT SALE Specials •
Here are
them listed below: ' .

'

lad that p - reiii)CIIId to muolc'l

"!~.~~~~=~~.
_.,._tloo
stet! of lhl Jo!aoweledor! Seed
p
... confirmed lheJtl't!IOriL

DON'T MISS miS SALE AS WE JOIN GALLIPOLIS MERCIIANTS, IN
,•
orange price cards OIJ
Look

... ,

-ot or

,..., frmiiDtla. Noone yet l!ao -

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

NAME
BRAND
SHOES FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY

L•oo llot - Handl01 easily in 12', Width

It

. pluU irOIIIDibetter whan music was played to

TONIGHT 7 to _lOp.m.'

Wheeler.

Patterns are Rotogravure Printed - The sealed · In
clear vi~yl for easy care and heavy wear.

jjt.Yt~~ - and tho JIOOlite wbo dllcover them areo'tablo to

••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

,. . ,

"DURAVINYL" SEAMLESS FLOORS

•otiiiNU!Ie•

:

Hazel Carnahan, who is m.
Miss Vera Beegle accompa~
led Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beegle,
takill8 their son, Bruce, to Cohunbus air port. Bruce spent
three weeks at ilome a~ is returnirc to the Marine Corpa at
29 Palms, C&amp;lil. He is in data
processing.
Mr. and Mrs. William Bentz
of Coshocton spent Sullda1 with
his lather,,Mr. Jolu&gt; Bentz.
Mr. 1111 Mn. C. A. Covey an:l
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Covey of Belpre were sw.lay atternoonguests
ot Mr~. Ada Beys and Mrs. Ethel

LID.

.-.mer•

I'Omonrt• llar7
DepirleiDIII\al L'AuntGbler of tile
Elaht alid FoJV, was one of
. "'""' dllliDgulllhed aue•t• at
lhe ~MolD ~ a34 ....
mw c!lmorand..reckheld'llllro~ nll!hl •at the Amorlean LtJion

111, .-

.. :... · ~w::..
Mrs. Ralph Gilmore ot Colum·
bus 1.&amp; a guest ot her sister, Mrs.

Mr. Crill Bradford of Wortllington Spent the weekeiXI with
Mr. and Mra. A. C. Bradford.
Crltt and his lather spent Sullda1
at Charleston, W, Va.
Mr. and Mra, Edward Howell of
Pomeroy visited an evening with
Mrs. Gretta Simpson.
Mr, and Mr!. Olden Thaxton
o1 Arizona were weekend gueats
or his brother-ln..aaw a.-1 si1ter,
Mr, and Mrs. Charles Wagt)er.
Mrs, Am coe li visiting reJa..
tlves in Columbus and Mr. and
Mrs. Dave Thoma• at Gahanna.
Miss J11n1 Neider of Columbus spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. George
Nelgler.
Mr. and Mrs, David Nease of ·
Columbua were weekeOO ~sts
ot his mother, Mn. Don Nease.
Mr. Roger Blr&lt;h of Belle,..
visited his parents, Mr,and Mrs.
Elza Birch.

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Homo. I:oraln.

ftaeine
c __ .al Events

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iw1in.

Ualverollf Sludeol waa IIIIIIOd
Qie belli
columnist l!ld
Tom lllDe wa• aeleeted as t h e
beat aPoria .eolumniJt. Tbe award
for lhl best ....- wenlto G1r7
Damm of the Qoyahop coueao

P~,:·

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lilllin Flonllng of lhe Mlaml

Alfred
Spcial Notes

.~~·i..

H6nored SJt Dinner,· Wreck
\l

beot dally ,llllbllllhed &lt;llr1ng the current school year and
towed the editorial wrldng, wblle
stuart Meek received the belt
feature article award.
;:,uc)
The Marietta COllege MareoBY MRS. FRANCIS MORRIS
Uan wu 11eleeted a.s the best
The Women's Society or0u1...
weeklY by a college with an en~ uan service oftheWesleyanUnltorollment d more than 1,500, ed Methodlat tburcli was grac(..
while the Rio Grande Slpals oosly e-oalned In the borne of
was sele&lt;:ted in the under 1,500 Mrs. Albert Hut Friday evening.
class. The John Carroll Uotver. Ai&gt;rllll. Mrs. 1&gt;J. 0. Dumas wao
alty News was named tile beat program chairman, using as her
bl-weekll'.
t&lt;plc "The Universal God." Several members took parl It waa
reported the entire pledp tor the
year has been met and al10 a do._tion of money has been sent ~
the Southside Settlement in CoIWDhuB. DuriJ1! the social hour
Sunday School atteo:lance on the hostess served a delicioua
April 13 was 61. The otrering deuert cour1e.
Mrs. GreUa Simpson was hostwas $20.30. Worship services
were held at 10:45 with DJns- ess at her home MoiKiay, April
more Boyles, leader. Worship 14, tor the Esther Circle of tlte
services were held Sunday eve-- Baptist Missionary Society. The
ning at 7:45 with the Rev. casto. meeting opened with devotions
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Noel followed by the bustnesl!l session
an:l family of Louisville, Ky,, when the nominating report was
visited her parents, Mr. and given am officers elected were:
Mrs. McKinney, and her broth- chairman. Mn. Helen SimPson;
er-in-law and sister, Mr. and vice chairman, Mrs. Dorothy
Mrs. Bob Bernard. on Dutch BadsJ.ey; secretary .. treasurer,
Rldge over the weekend and at- Mrs, Frances WUcoxen; White
tend~ church here on Sunday, Cross, Mrs. Ethel Smith; L o v e
Mr. an:tMrs. Charles D. Woode Gift, Mrs. Marie Roullh; flower
recen!Q' visited Mr. am Mrs. Fund, Mrs. Gretta Slm,pson. A
Clifford Hayes and Gregory at program prepared am presented
by Mrs, Ura Morris preceded a
Middleport.
Mra. Iris Carr and daughters Love Gift. program and offering
recentl,y called on Mr. aD:! Mrs. in charge of Mrs. Marie Roush.
The meeting closed by repeating
Arthur Atherton.
Gainer Griffin has returned to the 23rd Psalm in unison. During
his home hereafter spendi~sev­ the social hour the hostess served
eral weeks with hls SCil-in-law lovely refreshments.
Dudley Wolf has returnedhome
ani daughter, Mr. ard Mrs. Otar~
les O'Brien alii Kevin, In Colum· from Holzer HospitaL
Mrs. Albert Paynter, Mr. DaY·
bus.
ld
Yost aOO Blythe TheissattendEmma Findling spent several
ed
the funeral of Mrs. Russell
day a with her brother, Louis Per(Mabel) Radclll! at Boawr FaDs,
aon, at Torch,

•
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,

~ Wll 101- oa I h o
OCNA '·l&gt;olltr' witi. lila moat 111- '
lraet!VJ!rooi-U..Keni!lllllor .GI Ktid 111to lllliverlltr 1100
the award fqr .CAr11lDI out 1M
batt' .Wcllloaal aenlce cam.

Jlll&amp;D,

•

,

sports story division.
Commuter.
The Lantern wa1 named the

[RIVER NEWS

•, I / '

=~=~·::~·N!!!Ui.i"~Depqrtmento/ Officers .are

21, it!lll

Post,~ 4J,ntern, Signals Awarded
·
!i;;J.
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6- 'I1Io l/llb Seatlnel, PINIIOI'Ol'&lt;-""'"' O.,IIMlay,AprU 21 0 1969

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Fincl Everything Fr()tn Auto's To Yo~ Yo's ln Tb~· Sentinel, WantA~ ·WANT AD
INFORMATION

DEADLINES
!i p.m. Doy B•f•• Puliolicoliofl
Monday Dtodline 9 a . m.
C,u.collottont &amp; c.,.,,c:tlo"'
Wi tl be oc:uprtd until 9 a .m. fDf
Day of Publiutian

REGULATIONS
l'- P""'lither rourvu tho right
to edit or rojoct on)l odt .teemed ob·
jloctionoL lh. piAolitk.• will not

b.. ruponti b lo IO&lt; 11'1010 than OIN

.\

iiiCIII'fKI ;,.,t.,lio n .

RATES
For Wanl Ad Sorvic;o
5 c:onU ~· Wgrd o,. inuo t ion
hl i"i"'U'fll Chorgo 75c
12 conU per wo rd thru contoCu•

'
ForS1fe

Pomeroy
OF
lo
_ auAun
. tor Co.

@)
-

2 SIGNS

SE~DA~N~-----·

1968 CAPRICE 4 DOOR
327 Va ~ngine, power steering and brakes, Turbo
Hydramatlc trans. Blk. vinyl roof over sireen fi · H

headlight covers. Positraetlon rear :~i.:
T1nted gloss. ~omfortron air conditioning. A beauti•
f~l kept cor w•th only 6300 miles. Oh yes new car
t1tle and warranty.

1li6!Jand lleoldr.
.. he . , . the
rues wllb Blue Lomtre. Rent ,
electric • - · fl. Tiny'•

R~tro~toble

18 conll por Wl)l"d sill consocuti•o
25 por c;onl D; ttour~l Qn poid od1
and o~l poid within \0 doyl .
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 fot 50 word n,; nimum . Eo
addilionul word :l't.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25e Chorgo por Adver·
tl . . lllenl .

OFFICE HOURS
1:30 0. 111. to 5:00 P·"' - Doily
_J.I3J: o .m. to 11:00 Noon Saturday•

Notte.

.

I!Gy

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HOWI)l{,

MlZ: TUfTLE ••
COME ON IN

.

~

Says:

CLIP
THIS
COUPON

.... s.mc.
'

.I

wllb Pkddel Tlllllll. fl.•
at Nelloa IJral, 1-14-lllp

1966 PLYMOUTH VALIANT ..................................$1095

'I'OUR

TOMATO STAmil, llllrlell 0.
CUnnlnglmm, Rl. s. I'OmeiiVJ.
on other llde of lolqpwndJ
on olcl Rt. r.l near Flineeoo

Two ~or, 6 cyl. eng., std. trans., radio heater like
new t1res, dean vinyl interior.
'
'

Po~,~~!!s.~!!~~ Co. I(J..\
~

Pat Coal Mine.

-

obampaoer •. ._.,.

I'Wnlture.

ForSIIe

VACANCY lor two elderly peo- '''59 FORD V-6, tt!5. l'llone SIX-ROOM muse, wall to wal
ple, Prefer private paid pa919-2914.
4-111-i!tp
carpet lD living !&lt;10!11, level
llobtl. Phone Mason, TIUIII.
---lot; ntcoot home Ill MiddleIN-tic H•Sl MG, 8a!em St., Rullaod.
port, 144 Nortlt Fourtb St.,
4-20-31&lt;
'Middleport, !'bone - ·
WILL DO baby sitting in my
4-17-«p
home. $15 a week. Phone 992- ~96~ F0RD Galaxie 500. ant~
1311i,
4-21).31&lt;
matic transmission, 390 en· IF CAII!PI!!TS look dull llld
Rine. Phone ~ . 4-20 3tp
drear, ....... tile ..
they appear wllb Blue I.IIIIN.
Employment Wanted
Rent eleelrl&lt; lbampooer fl,
INTERIOR and exterior paint- 1963 VOLKSWAGEN, 1650. Ph.
!192-677:1.
4-20-3tc
Baker Fumlture.
4-1~
ing and roof W&lt;&gt;l'i&lt;. Call Gene
Congo, Long llolt0111, BU-:IIrol.
'-16-l!tp 1968 CHEVY "!lwo, two-door se. I!!XCEl!LENT eondltlon, used,
dan, V-8 automatic, Phone 992one Kelvlnator 13.8 automatic
1'547.
440 lfe
del\'osl
double door refrigerHelp Wanted
ator. f!50, One 311 lneh elecMEN FOR production ....t In 1%9 FALCON, air conditioned,
tric
range witb l!ridle, 110,
modern brick plant. steady
V-8 atourrratic, power steer·
wort. day sbllt, good hourly ing, two door !M!dan, um one 7 plet'O ~~~~ eet,
like ....... Phone IIIII piece work rates. paid
Chrysler New Yorker. Pbone
Iller
S p.m., 1111mt from
\'llcatlons and holidllj'll. lnsur!192-6547.
4-20-3tc
t a.m. to 4 1r.an.
f-lUte
auce benefits, free bunk
llouse, bring your own bed 1965 FORD GALAXIE 500, powROOSE lD Racine, 3 bedrooms,
clo!bes or move to thlJI nice
er brakes am steering, tinted
baf!l, owner tromfemd. For
rural area norlll of C.llll!lbus,
glass, white wall tirf;!s, A-1
appolnlment eall 919-2811.
Ohio. No age limit. Apply In
condition, one owner car. Low
4-U.!Ic
person only. The Galena
mileage. ean daytime 992!'llale Tile and IBrtdt 0&gt; .• Ga250lj evenings am weekerxls
SINGER Sewing Macl!IDe 1D
lena, Ohlo.
4-!Uie
661.J063 Coolville.
beauUful light flnlslled cabi4 21 3tc

---

4.11.-tle

..., Ettlle . . s.t.

......... .

80DNIII' DOWIIIMI
IIIII 111111 .......
INI••IIf. OMo

----

NEims

CCllllfllele Frilnf·E'Iid
and Brake s.,lce .

.__

"NEVER VlliCD 6DYI1q like
ft," l8y ...... ol BlUe IAIIIre
· for deantng earpet. Rlnl

POMEROY, OHIO

Auto S.ln

llald

IIIJIIII)VE ICXtJI8j .....

Save over $1000

---

UJ.-a.

Ban!alDiand.

tivo intorliOIIt.

lnurtionl.

...

HANNAR'S
lm!M -

'

Busine·s.s Servi

UPIIIGIIT RAHOS, .......U.
tioaed, eoll 'lfi.Ciil Rutland

l"'lrrlllun Co.

'

'

~

BLIETTNAR'S ·
PH. 99:1.2143
LleAL IIO'I'ICI
IN TNI OOUlf W ~OMIIDII
Mllet (»UUIn'Y,

.........
I'LIAit

OHIO

MASON CAR WASH
Car Completely Hand
Rubbed and
Rinsed
$1.25
Opon: Mon. lhru Frt. 1

Saturolor- 9·6
Sundar - 11-6

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

Wlltel All111111t

ss.ss.
..... ..... ,.
-GUAJIANTEEDPHONE 99Z·2094

Quick -Dependable
T.v. Service ,

5 11101111,

bath, funulce, pordlel, II·
rage, lo!I'P lot. fi.OIJO.OII
ANI1QVtl'Y - I 1'00111!, bath,
furnace, basement, I car Cll'·
port. large lot. ti1IJO,OII
RI!XlREATION - 2 ltlbl,
swings, slides, ~.
danclll!l, rests..-ant, I bouooo
aDd cottage, Plenty pm!ng
liJIICC

SERVICE MANAGERHAROLD WALKER

HUMPHREYS
Phono 992·7242

132,5011.110

ABIJOCL\TEI

- WMPO'
'

'

'

l IJEMAND 'rOIJ STOP
'THIS VIOLENCE I

A-~~~
.

.INF91tMAHON .
MEWS

pres~1ts

D~ILY

if
t:SO~ A.M.
'
12 NOON
3 P,;M.

~ITt

A:3J) 'P.M.
l&lt;eebil)g. Meigs
Gol~jo '~nd

1'EU'OI1D

HELEN or VII\G1L

FAt.WJ(o.OFf'-

AliD

tablel, Only

and picnic

AND ll.IST WAAT'S
t;D E/o5V A60VI"

LOCAL ~REPORtS

GEO. ROBSJ&amp;TJM, BnW
MIDDLI!PORT -

IN

...
4-1~

Mason

net, like new. Fully equip'IIALE AND FEMALE : Is $%.50
ped to do all fancy sewing as
hourly worth a 5 cent JlO'~
For Rent
well
as beautiful IJiralgbl
card to yoo? Easy to earn APAII'l'MENT, !irs! floor, lour
ttltcliiJI8 and rig zag design$10 to $15 daily dislributing
BusiMII S.Mcilt
room and bath, also second
Ing. Pay off balBIICe olll payfamous Watkins products to
TBRM1Tl!l'l
SWABMJNGT 'ftlay
fioor apartmelt. four rooms menlO at $6 montbly or lSO
~llslled customers in city
ore
reproduetlves
·tl&lt;ked out
ll!ld bath , both ciooe in. Phone
cash. Guaranteed. Phone 11ft.
cf Pomeroy, F\rll or parttime.
of the active le'm!le colony
99'Ui233.
4-111-lilc
211115,
4-lll-llle
We help yoo get started. FURNTSHE!l ond unfurnished
tnleallll!l ~ , _ !Q Mit
'
- ....
_., .... !,. .... ~ . .:..o. .... ebloltloi: Lrnf: ~
I Write 0.96,. Watkins Products. •:.-•·apartments. Clase to IC!hooJ.
llEPO!ISEIImD I!JoetroiUI'·'Va.'' ..
.M~tm. 55987.
- reasonable, Melgl 'eom.
" nc., Wi oona,
. ··~Phone !192-5434,
10.16-tle
cuum Cleaner complete with
4-21-ltc
JNIIIY, Allied Pest Coalr&amp;l, 7
attachments. paint sprey aDd
Liberty. Pomeroy. 0. AfiAir
'l'IWLER LOTS, Bob'a Mobile
cm'dwind&lt;r. LookJI and eleana
FUll. OR PART time. earn
! p.m. lft4lliJIJ.
f.17.etp
Court, Syracuse, Ohio 011 stall
Uke new. Pay oil belance o1
lSO to $1110. write 11oi 1168-L.
Rt. 124, Phone m41111.
6 payments at $6.50 monthly
lD can! ol Dally Sentinel, Po1-11-tle or $50 cash. Guaranteed.
moroy.
4-l&amp;«e
Phone !192-26115.
FURNISHED boule 1u PomeBu•ln.U.Opportunlty
roy, ftv• rooms aDd bath. WESTINGHOUSE waaher and
OWN YOIJil own dry cl~
CaD evenb!gl. 99U2IIl
dryer, good condition, Phone
CJIUCK'S Call IIIII Clrrr 'I\'
bullness. Ambitious lll8ll or
u.tle
74M2~!~ after 5 p.m. 4-16-3tp
Serolte, ap 111 GDI'IIIII
"WOIIIID to take ..... and ....
011
.......
BrlDilllim
In ...
lruct aDd lllllfe. We wDl do FURNlSIIED TWO IIEDROOM GkRDEN TIIACI'OR. Slmpllc~
deMing wbol,.ale. Apply In
aparlmebt. Ml!ldlepott, l'llone
- · Cback'o 'IV, UIIJaltlr.
ty, plow and cultlvatonJ. AI·
IIIII A.._, " - " ' · 186
ponoo. A.B.C. Cleanel'll, M.
!192-3874.
U&amp;
len SaJI'O, Racine. Pbone ,._

~reo

lnforJVe~ ·:As
We.11 ~s

trn:LE ORPHAN ANNlE

Entettoimed

----

1111,

w. v..

4-1~

2912.
8BPI1C taob ......... llllllr
Bnllm'l 'Inlier
llallllllloa, lllewort, Cldt,.
Park, l.llnemllle, l'llome IJS. SINGER ZIG ZAG oeow1n!! ma33'14,
...... chine, Thlo machine jlllt lllre

.....

'I'RA!t.ER,

triLL SEIJL ooe or both ol my
r!eanlng plalltl. A. B. C.
Cleaner~,

llason. W. Va.
4-IJ.IIo

Wentecl To Buy
VACANT LAND In• or near•
~ Plains. State prire,
slzo, locatloo. Write Box

1168 W, care of The DaUy Sentinel. Pomeroy, Obio, 45'1811.
4-1J,1!c

Lost
SMALL BEAGLE dog, blue
boo, black body, large ean,
two indies white on tail and
feel, about 10 lncheo hlgh.
II has been ,... lD Rutland
\'ielnity. l5 reward to anyone
lor bJs return. Contact or
send card to stanley Aleshire,
New Lima Road, RD, Ratlaod,
4-1~

For Sale or Trlde
1M CAMERO VI, 4 lpiOII;
1lr1 l"'reblrd VI, 4 1p1011.
Cll1 - - .......

_ _ _ sa.u.
Auto Sale•

"---·
c.

c. IIIWII'OIID
- · 'Ibis madllne ma1res
Apartment,
faDCY deslgns. buttooholeo.
AucnoNIIB
rompletely modern with buf1t. rnrmograms, ..,. on buttons.
C.:thtr ......
In kitchen, wall oven and
'Ibis sold new l&lt;lr • .115. Will
.......
I
table too unit, stalnt..s steel sell l&lt;lr .1!8.50 or $6.50 per
....... OMo
slri&lt; with disposal unit, bath,
month, call !192-2836. 4-!Mic
Clllt Br Mnt
romplete with ohower and
IIIII
large closet. nicely deoorat· tmOLAIMEtl !JAYAWAQ, 1911!1
ed. Call !192·S111 for appointAM-I'M lllereo eonaole, lD
&lt;X111Dm0N1N0 1W11811&gt;
ment.
4-l~tle
lovely walmrt finish. Juat lUre AIR
oUon .......,, J..... Refrte.
,_, Ibis set has factory warmlloa, New Irma. ' APAR'l'MI!!NT, 1oor "101111,
ronty, Wpeecl automatic
IIWII!t.
,,.
bath, dean: front and baek
chlll(er. Till~ ee~ sold much
Pntrance; 8!8 South Second,
hlgber. Anume balaneo ol
READY • Mil -ell .....
Middleport_
4·20-3tc
$101:26 or pay $$.50 per month.
ond lfcbt ID 'lfllllt PIOjlet.
Caiiii9MW.
4-20.6te
11'111 and ..,, ,.,. ...

1 THREE

room

HOUSE in Pomeroy. call 992-

3223,

4 21 3tc

For Sale
POODLE PUPPIES. AKC Toy
miniature, $75 and up. Slad
service and grooming. Ph4llt
89U4U.
II J tic

mare, 10-lnebeo, dua to foal
In fall; solid bla&lt;t gelding,
48 lncheseri : botll gentle, broke,
band!
by chlldren, Also lltlllGICT PIUCI lutdlll&amp;t •

oar tldld Door 11at11e1 11tap.
llabr 11'1ullltaN. .......,...

horse
dr....Evenlnp
· - · e&gt;reeUent
eondltlon.
after 5

Oldo.

p.m. llld weekendo, Walt IC.
Balrer, Tuppers Plolnl, Ohlo,

..

4-NJ&gt;

- - -rletleo

LOT ON MID Sl., 1D Mlddl$lrl WIU. HAVE all ..
o1
dooe to poolol!lce, ~oat
southern plants alter April ;s.
wide, 125 foot deep, beolPhone Cborlea R. HaiTls IIUlent lot, 20 foot all&lt;!y In INd.
7AI93.
4-20-tlc
Phone IIIIJ.5151,
ONE NORGE wringer type CliOAIIIml: ....... ..
lind N • • ABC ..........
GERT'S a gay girl, ready for
waslllug machine, cne Singer
11-.
W, Va. ,.._ 'fiNIIL
a whirl after cleaning C!ll'·
•ewintl macl1ine. bolh r..- m.
pets wltll Blue · Lu!lre. Rent
Phone 119M261!.
eleetrle ..,ampooer, fl. 8aJI'O
.....
Hardware, New Havea, W. ~E LIVING _ , suite, one RAMIID'i 'I\'
Va.
t-11-a.
dlnlng room IIUite lnehlllnl
,....tilralol;
Clllb ...
··-· ...
....,.
.
~ rt I
china elooet. three p!oce CIA·
1111111111 ht wllll pa "iia.
SEVEN ROOM house aDd ontfee and aDd tables. Pbone
buildlngo; 2 aereo; phone
9115-3862, Clarl111 Chal!ee, IJIJ.
Portland 8Wl7!6,
4-17-tle
ver Ridge Rood.
t-• Jlp

"'*

...
..... ...
..a

"'

. 'li&gt;" .

~•--u
~INII.'\
ftUNN

SMITH AUTO SALES
IANAUGA, OtilO

land

Fltmll1tfe.

~~\II".W:,

4

',

RQ:t-,

c.a.«£
\

i·,

"
..
A~~ .
,

......., ,

. '• •

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./
I
.
.

GJmm.E rkllll!l bone P11an1 ,
74'UOU
' .....c~.... ' eti
'

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.....

'

~

tROSSWORD

-·-·

lt.Bt:x

rDlOWJ1111Jlet::.=:::t.c

2LPrtface

- - · t o - b ..uan,lo

17. J'tma].e

22. Lillo

v-ombtethnti'Dllrlumbln.

f•!• le-ur ordiiW'J worcl1.

TUC£4

....... 1'1-. . . . . Clolf.... l1eadJ • Yll Co., IIJdtlle.
,.., Oldo,
....

TWO PONIES, brown and wbite

HORSE TIIAlLER, 2 bone ....

LleAL lllmCI
IN 'NI COUIT Oil CatWIMI PLIM,
MIIH COUirt'r, 01110

..
1

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Clft tl liN 1Mt
IJ.IIMIL ......

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11'i'b
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rt~tt ,,.~ 111111 'In

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Cornell Administrators
Give-in to Blacks' Guns
Press International
The black students promised
Cornell University administra- ••rurther confrontation., if the
tors who signed an amnesty administration did not hooor the
agreement while black students agreement.· ·
stood over them with guns have
The blacks refUsed to discuss
asked a faculty committee to the sit-in or the reason tlley
drop proceedings against rive armed. "Back away from me,
blacks arrested in an earlier lmy," one told a reporter.
demQnstration.
An administration spokesman
Blacks at the Ithaca, N.Y., quoted one of the black leaders
school seited the ~dent Union as saying the guns were
early Saturday and evicted obtained for '•self defense."
parents visiting for the week- Muller said they were allowed
end. Apparently some of the 80 to keep the weapons because of
demonstrators had guns then . "a very real fear that they
SUnday, a yellow car drove up were subject to reprisal.''
and two black students unloaded
A faculcy meoting today was
two packages of guns.
scheduled to hear Dean Robert
"The revolution has come. D. Miller recommend disciplinaTime to pick up the guns," ry measures against the five be
By United

white students chanted.
The black students then
emerged from the building,
armed with 16 rifles, three
shotguns, broken billiard cues

and clubs and marched to the
Afro-AmericaJl Center. They
posted 12 armed guards around
the center while universizy
officials signed an amnesty
agreement on the steps.

Stephen Muller, vice president
the
school, said the
administration wanted to avoid
summoning civil authorities to
oust the demonstrators. "The
university knew what the
consequences of such an action
would be and the trouble that
woold arise," Muller said.
Muller and Vice Provost W.
Keitb Kenned.Y also agreed to
obtain legal aid for the black
students if clvU actions are
brought aguinst them; to make
the school responsible for
damage done during the sit-in;
to station a guard around the
aehool's Afro-American Center;
and to grant amnesty to all
demonstrators.
of

dropped.
On other

campuses:
Georgia- Tension appeared to
have ended today at Atlanta
llniversity, Saturday 60 militant
blacks released J8 trustees who
had been chained inside a
meeting room for more than 24
hours, saying they had won
concessions. Out much of the
student bod,y rebutted the
militants and voted not to
accept the concessions. Dr.
Bugh Closter, president of
Morehouse College, a part ol
the university, said he had
reversed his decision to resl.gn
as a result ·of the vote.
Massachusetts - A six4a.v
student strike at Harvard
University officially ended Sa~
turday as students voted to
suspend further action for a
week . But militants, including .
Students for a Democratic
Society, said they would boycott
today despite the vote.
Dlinois- Three Northwestern
University students collapsed
Sur!dey as a hunger strike tn
opposition to disciplinary mea-

· ·· Five fJay fol'fl(:(lll
By United Pro11 lillemal!ilnal

aures pas.sed its 100th hOUr. one
was admitted to a hospltal
suffering chUla, rever and a
headache.
Another htmger strike, also
protesting disel•lllle, c:ontiJued
at the Unive.rsity of Cblcago
tode.y. About 20 students were
sleeping in tents as they fasted,
seeking new hearings lor 42
expelled students.
Black students at Lake Forest
College &amp;lnda,y were granted
veto power over black faculty
BIIPOintments. An administration official admitted there were
risks in the decision, but said,
"blacks deserve that such a risk
be taken simply because of
their history."
CaLHornia- Sen. Joseph Tyd~
ings said Smday student
rebellion is an indication or the
feelings of society at large. l-Ie
said it is time to dispel "the
myth that campus disruptions
are the result of a handtul of
mlUtant students...

White

Hope,"

based on

the

controversial career of heavyweight boxlng champion Jack
jollnoOil.
The best musical was judged
to be "1776," dealing with the
struggle to create the Declaration of lniependence. Peter
Stone wrote the libretto, and
Sherman Edwards created the
ldea and supplied the lyrics aOO

music.
The major acti~ awards
went to stars James Earl Jones
of "The Great White Hope" arxi
to Julie Harris of "Forty
Carats" in the dramatic categ~
ry, and to Angela Ltnsbury of
"Dear World" and Jerry
Orbach of "Promises, Promises" In the musical field.
· "The Great White Hope" and
"J176" tied in the number ot
81\uds, each getti!li threti,
"Promises, Promises" was the
only other to get more than one
award. Seven of the 15 awards
were scattered among as many

readings will range from the

lower 30s In · the north to the
upper 30s in the 1100th.
Tumlng c:older at the start
of the period, then eontinued
cold tile rest of the week. Ralnlall will average about one hall inch ln the northeast to
about ono-lourlh lllch ln t h o
southwest, occurring as showers early In the period and
again at the end of the week.
~~fQO~II~

VETERANS MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admissions Saturday - Goldie
Jones, Pomeroy.
Discharges Saturday -

Jane

Brown, David Ross, Walter Har·
ris, Helen Icenhower, Uoyd Nelson, Aaron Yost, Paul Ours. Kevin Griggs, James Stewart, Myrtle
Mollohan.
Admissions Sunday - Jdln
Ho!fman, Chester, Hattie Powell, Racine; Coy Starcher, Pomeroy; Dorald Eynon, Reedsville;
Charles Wilson. Reedsville; Lucille Lambert, Rutland,
Discharges Su~ - Dortha
Salser, Rita Salser, George Nesselroad, Charles Scott,

attractions.
The results were revealed in
an NBC-TV color special hosted
by Alan Killt aM Diahann
Carroll beCore a celebritystudded audience at the Mark
Hellinger Theater.
Productions between March
20, 1968 afld fWtrch 16, 19$9
were eligible in the competition.
Alter a committee or experts
picked nominees in the 15
categories, 434 person!! various1)· connected with the stage
voted und.er auspices or the
League ot New York Theaters.

TONIGHT AND TUESDAY
APRIL 21 • 22
(Technicolor)
Joseph Losey's
"SECRET CEREMO~"
Elizabeth Taylor-Mia Farrow
COLQRCARTOONS:
33 Fathoms Plus
Hareway to the Stars
SHOW STARTS 7 P. M.

BALTIMORE (UPJ) A
"Teen-Agers Rally for Decency" whiCh drew 45,000 persons
degenerated &amp;lnday into a battie of fists and rocks between
white and black youths. At Jc:ast
200 persons were injured and 133
arrested.
Some 650 police, includingriot
units and mmmted patrols, swept
Memorial Stadium parking lots

and nearby streets to rout t h e
youths.
AuthoriUe!l said at least 200
were stabbed, beaten or pelted
with rock's in the fighting which
spread to the nearby Greenmount
Avenue area, scene of last year's
most severe rioting.
Pollee saki they arrested 133
persons at the stadium area and
in parks of the downtown seclion.
D01)Uty Police Commissioner
Wade H. Poole said there was no
organized outbreak, ")1st rotten kids."
"It's the same all over the
country, lO per een1 of the kids

Rf!se B"(tcher Charges'LBJ RemiS$
In Failing 'to. Rescue Pueblo

.....
,
.....

•2·49
..,•..•....,._

• S,rlo&amp;ltr!

•llllttwl

~.

lllpl

NEW YORK CUPO - M r s.
Rose Bucher, wllo of llie ~taln of floe Plleblo, aecused for.
mer· President l,yndOn B. Johnsoo !ilDda.f of being "remlu in
his dub" to rescue the captur.
ed Plloblo crew and sald Amertcaa servicemen "now have good
reason to question whether they
will be supported'' tn misfortune,
ID a COJYrighted article in Ute
wrrent issue of McCall's Maguine, Mrs, Bueher eomplalned
that she got tbe brushoff rrom
civilian and Navy otnclala from
John..., 00 down. !lie oatd Capt.
James Otis Mayo, politf.eal and
mllttary adv:iaer to. the state Department•a BUreau ot East Afdan
and Pacific Affairs, accused her
of ufiarasslng" him when she
called him ror news of her husband, Cmdr. Uoyd M, (Pet e)
Bucher.
"Get a Rocking Chair"
''When I askedhim'Whatwould
JOUr wire do tt she was in my
position?' he told me, •If you

SUNGLASSES add a modern touch lo the raee of a
reindeer herdsman In tbe
.. wild east" of R u 1 ala's
Kamchatka Peninsula.

Washable Paper Fabric
Now , a new "paper'' fabrk I hat can be washed! Predicted for production In a
few months are "paper"
fabrics wh lc b are Ughl·
weight wlth affinity for color and paUern and at low
cost. This product has been

use-tested lor five yeara in
curtaln8 which have ben
successlully laundered two
to four tim~ a a year.

Broom lor Patio
When it is time to scrub
the patio or garage, it is a
good investment to get a
supersized , commercial-type
broom . It is necessary to
buy this from a janrtori81
supply house but it is worth
the trouble because it is wide
enough to cover a considerable surface with each
stroke . Like all brushes .it
should be swished through
hot soap suds to keep the
bristles clean.

start the trouble and the other
90 per cent get blamed for 1t."
Poole said.
Organizers of the rally, a
group of t.enagoro backed by
city comptroller Hyman Pressman, wanted to outdo a similar
rally helq In Miami which at.tracted 30,000 teenagers to the
Orange Bowl.
State'• Atty. Charles Moylaa
said the orpnizers "were ex~
tremely ill-advised, to say the
leas~ to bring 45,000 teenager!! to the OrarJ.ile Bowl.

T,

~n

•

til••

Cora Ho·

Dies Saturday

Inlepenf.

wa.

!he

Mens,Sp~rt· Jackets
By

Meat, Poultry Inspection
Acts Eased in Miller Bill

AUCTION

SAT.

7 STEERS - 7 HEIF'ERS

H•olth pop.ro - ln•P•ctian wftCo1110
HORSES: 7 yr. old tPot,.4 riding 111111ro (Ful Moy)

,

MACHINERY

1 t9561ror4 Ttuck :iT-Two S,Mcl
.
, :.
.1
'
M, ,fi. -JI:alc• ,.
'
Two c;:h"ht

"1963 MnM)' FerguiCNI 01•••1 Mo4•1. SQ TractOJ

,Furniture
Ml~dl

ort

M. F. No.3 Bolet&gt;
Cut Off Sow
1958 I. H. Troctor
1947
S.Oddlo ond &amp;ridl•

I'!P.Wt, Dlac ·
~

s-····".
M(

·'.f•~!~"'~".' ~'~'JI.

I~ 196$ lho Untied Nollpna
disarmament CCIII\m1salon fee.« tvenill •' lor the Drot ttmo ~lnee
1seo.' I· wtien thefe I, in•, i

.tatem.r..

~ lho
warner,

todo¥

aL Dlenbiel1)hu.

14 Calv,., (9 Ma. to-1 Yr.)

.E. '

wal )!llled

,.

lh' 1967 the Greek armi'-, ioOk

ovor &lt;IXItrol al thl! -riliio!L ·
A thouCht •tor tJt8 IIU::. 'YOIUTH

Ric~.,! Jlrlnot~)' ~
than

·i·~~:~~;~~:~~~~1~;~

said:- "Conaeitftcf1hal no,JnQte ''d•
P!"i"
to t10 w)lh 'ptlantrr
H'dtoo•
wUh ·p~lillct." '~ ".
. ,, · '

"

'

Mr. Wrangler
OUR MOST
POPULAR STYLE
IN QUALITY
TAILORED

..••.

_ _ _ _:....=,:._.;_

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TEN Ci'Nr&amp;·

TUESDAY, APRIL 22. 1969

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

· .VOL. XXII NO. 2

•

Lows tonight in. the ~ ,1',Jr1io
ly doody w-~ wtlt
chance or a rew shoW..._ ln •
north~ st. Mostly .·~ ~ 1':'1 'where and coollnuotl cool, IIIIJ!' .··
mostly in ttJe 50s.
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·1

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,,

:}Award Sewerage Contracts
•
',~

a.nd II. L Miller &amp; COmpany was
awarded the sanJtary aewers COJ1o.
structloD cootracL
The Miller nrm had btd $843,·
079.80 to bullcl the sanltar)' oew·
er11.. K~ Construction bld$209,~
342.SO on tbe treatment plant.
COtmcUman Fra.nklln Rizer
)'Oted against the ordimnce authorizing the 1sauance of $135,..
000 in notes to obtain lnterium
financing prior to the issuance
or the sewer revenue bonds •
Rizer said his opposition Is
based on a section or law that
permits a tax to be levied.agalnat
the property owners to pay the
amount.

Pomeroy c0111cll approved
:::;three ordh•nce&amp; under emer·
·: &gt;jency rules Monday night to be,&gt;iln conOtructlon of Us loog 11&amp;:,:ia.ved sewage disposal system.
•'~- By • 5-1 vote, council moved
'to Issue notes valued at $135,000
ln anticipation of Issuance of
·,bonds and umnimouoly ap•roved
ordinances estabUsfling sewage
\~ystem ·rates. and awarded oonstructlon contracts.
.:· Followl~ reeonunendatlon of
' the eng[neorbw firm of Burp"
·and Nlple, the cc;mtract to build
·the sewage treatment plant was
'awarded to the Don K!Jw Con. 'atructloo company of Jackson

Bolh Mayor Ct.rles ~rand
Council Ptesldent Leslie Fultz,

who t.ve headed the villages
sewerage system project, said
in their opinion adequate rums
wlll be obtained tram other revenue 10 U.t no tax Of this r&amp;;
ture shoold be lr~ vied.
The $13~,uoo In Interim lund
notes, lt was pointed ou~ will
be used to ,.,. port!oos af llnan&lt;llw cools or the $1,236,800
proJect dlrbw the period Ill ad·
vance or allocatlon (( other tunds
8Uch as floe f562,800 Economic
llevol-ent AdntlnlstraUon disbursonteniS which are perlodl·
cal as conatructioo )JI'Ogl'esses.

Comcll,

though

expniBIIinl

grave concern over whattheyfelt
were hiJi(l coata, unanlmouoly ap.
proved tile ordlnanceestabliohlng
rates ror Ute sewage eervteea.
"We ha.ve no alternative but
to aJIP!'(We the rates, or forget
about thewholethlng," saidCouncUman Don ColUno Ill sununlng
up the general attitude. Tho state
require• floe sewerage be buill
COtutclt President F u I t z, ct.
- Next 10,000 gallons c( wathough lndlcatlng he would like to
ter
consumptlon per month see a. lower rate, said It is not
$1.70
per 1,000 £U(Ioos or part
nearly as high as some areas
are haviq to PI¥ for sewer~ lhereol.
Next 15,000 gallons of waage facUlties.
( Conti111ed on page 8)
After considerable discussion

·r;andystriper Service Recognized
,....-· \: Nlimeroua awards were .PTI-tented ~ring lLil Impressive can·dtollght service Monday nlaht
~ When tht annual presentation tea
of the Veterans Memorial Hoi- .
·PJ,tal candystrlpera was held at
_ '.tbe Pomeroy Elementary School.
·' ' "' Glrll !illb 10 hourS of service
· ' Were presented caps; plns were
stven for 100 111C1200 bouro serrue; certlllcates to Utoae wllh
' 50 hour .....tee, and bars r.,.

and fri(Jlelrt. expressions or dls(&gt;leaBUre, the following rates
were set:
PREMISES IN SUGAR RUN
NAYLOR'S RUN WATERSHEDS
First 2,000 gallon• c( water
C011811DI(lllon per month - $5 per
mmth sewerage utlllt;y fee.
- Next 3,ooo gallons of water con.IUmpUon per month - $2
per 1,000 gallons or ,Pilrt there-

Students
To Usher
Pageant

certificate: Sandra Newlun, cer..
tlficate and 100 hour pin; Dotty
Oblinger, Patlllf !'lckeno, bo1b
caps; Lucille Priddy, 300 hour
pin; 9\aron P)'les, tap.
Laura Harris, cap: Candace
Hawk, eertifica.te, 100 and 200
hour plna; Mary Sle llayOO, cll!i;
Pam Henderson, eertlftcate and.
IOQ and 300 hour Jlln and bar;
Kathy JWl, &lt;erllllcate, 100 and
200 hour plna; Bette Jean Jlol&gt;.
atetter, certiflate; Brenda Hoiman, Jeani aJgbes, Jf11 Kautz,
Dione Knorr, Joyce Lwtsford,all
capa; carOlyn MIJlles, certlficate; Dlane Ma,yle, Cellae McGowan, Debbie McMillan, all
eapa; Lenora Mlehael, 300 hour
pin; BetiQ' Miller, cap, cerllll·
cate; Jaclde Mora,. certificate;
Roblll MOrrow, 200 hour (lln;
Brl&amp;ette Naue, 100 hour pln.

PICTURES DEDICATEIJ - Don Hunnel,
right. commarder or Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, a.nd Post Adj. Kenneth

Harris led dedicatory services ot the portraits of 'Ilu:mas R Lind, WUiiam Neutzling
and Richard A. Genhelmer. all Vietnam war
victims, Monday night. The portraits are
a memorial to veterans now serving, those
who have sen«!, and to all who have madt
the supreme sacrifice durirw the Vietram
cooflict. Thomas R. Lind represents the Ma·
rines, Wllllam Neutzling, the Army and
Richard A. Genlleimer, the Navy.

War Victims Memorialized

Ushers and usherettes reprePortraits or three Meigs Coun- guests. They are Randy Van Me- colors were also dedicated and
the old colors retired.
senting the three high schools ty servicemen who have lost ter and Mike Werry.
Commander Don llwlnal reand Melgo Junior High School their lives in Vietnam were prePost everlasting services in
tribute
to
post
members
who
ported
on tile eighth dllllrlct eonot Melp County have been nun~ sented to Drew Webster Post
ed for Saturday evening's Miss 39, American Legion, Monday have dled durill!~ the past year terence held &amp;uu.iay In WUkeawere also conducted by struble. vUte and attended by hlmHlf.
' pins for 300 houra service.
Southern Ohio Pageant.
night.
Mrs. George Hackett, Jr., ad·
Those
honored included Mark H. Frank Vaughan and Kautelh Jtar.
The grcq~ will report to the
The photographs. representing
Pickering,
Otto B. Krelnblhl, both ris. The summer district corder~
vlaor
lhe II"OUPo l!llr&lt;&gt;llced
Meigs Junior High S&lt;hool in the three services and aU .• er.
)frl. Harold Slyre, hospital aux~
Pomeroy at7p.m. saturday. They vicernen or the Vietnam war, World War I veterans (Mr. Krein- ence was announced for Jwte 1
,Ulaey pre41ident; Mrs. Louiae
will assist in the !!eating oC pag- were presented during memor- bihl was a past post command- at Junction Cit;y.
'Bearhl, volunteer oervlce chair·
NameB as delegates to the .JuDe
eant patrons.
ial senices conducted at t h e er)j Clyde M, Hysell, Willis Will,
mu, and Donald Diener, boa"and Thomas J. Mathews, all of I sessloo and aloo to the state
Represerting Meigs H i g h (lOBI home by Joe struble.
admlnlatrator.
School will be Kathlr Francis,
The pictures will hang ln the World War U, and 1'homas S. oonvention were Paul CUCl,
-· 1be aervlce was coocluded by
Connie Bechner, Peg O'Brien, post borne and were draped for Shasteen, of the Vietnam War. Frank Vaughan, Robert Vousban
· 'tlte approximate 80 CandyotrlpDuring the evening new post and Edgar Van Inwagea. Alter·
Susie Soulsby, Jill Harris, Den- laat night' !I ceremony. The pho· oro, allln tjldlorm, slnalnJ''Clbe
nis Gilkey, James Crow, John togra.pbs are of William Neutznates are COmmander HumeJ,
Rear- End Collision Charles SWatzel, Lawrence Sln1tb
Lohse, Mickey Childs and. Chip llnl!, Army; Thomas Lind, Ma·
Little Candle."
Haggerty. Eastern representa- rlnes, and Richard Genhelmer,
The Meigs County Slerlff's and Kemelh Rarrla.
3~~~~!1~~ award• were:
!lltriey Pyleo, lllary Radford,
Abbott, certlllcate and ead! cortlllcate lllCI 100 hour
Humel reported also on a fourtives will include Rbea Mora and Naval Air Force.
Department investigated a twoRhonda Braden, pln; Brenda SoJre, 100 lllCI 200
Allan Holter while Brenda HolRelatives attending Jut night vehicle accident at 5 p.m. Moo~ district 5oth anniversaryabllll'Y~
·aro..ta Bradford, hour plna; l'llrlcla. Roullh,, •111:
man and Keith Ashley wUl be Included Mrs. WUIIamNoutztlng, day on ROute 33, eight - tenths anoe held ill Lancaster. AttendhOUr plDa; L ln d a ~~ Shaffer ~ .Linda llbenellold,
representatives from Southern .wlfa 01 tlte late Army man,.and Q( ,a mile .south ~ the r a 1 t- Ing the . . . --..Mr.llllllln.
' HigtfS&lt;liolll
.
Don llwmel, Caici, Franl&lt;VIIIIlh•
hie parents, Mr. and Mrs. Nor- grountls.
A committee to make \CI the bert Neutzlillg; Mrs. Olan Genan
and Mro. Katherine Wel&lt;lt.
9lerifr Robert C. Hartenbach
otql~ · and lighting crew aloo heimer, mother ol Richard Gen- said a car drl ven by Julian W,
B!lv·erliC...-.0111, SOulob7, boih o1Pa1 Rloe &amp;ir·
Plana for the summer base'tloruri&lt;oat&amp; and 100 ltoilr
loco, cap and &lt;erllllcate;· IIJrl·
ball program were reported. 'Ihe
hao llllited on behalf ol the helmer; his sister and broth- Hoffman, Rt, 3, Pomeroy.
Big Bend Minstrel Assoclation. er-tit-law, Mr. and Mrs. WU- Hoffman, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, ran Pomeroy lllCI Middleport pooto
~- COI!der)o, &lt;ertllleate; Jen· "- swan.On, . certllloalt; Clnd¥
n11oJ: Davit, 200 btalr pln; Pill· Ttnnan~ cap and 100 bator Jln;
with 'over 80 member• - seated, lett to
Maldnjj "" !hat gr&lt;q&gt; wUI be llam 9lerldan, and his aunts, into the rear of a vehicle driv- will II(JOOSOr the program wlflo
Dlll, cortlll.cate; s b l r l e y Beveri.Y 'litomi&gt;son, 200 btalr;
Mrs. Kathryn Crow, Erie ChaJn.. Mrs. Jolut Scott and Mrs. Rus- en by Herbert v, Dixon, Rt. 3, home· games to be played at the
rl,sht. _.-e Lenora Michael. Minermn8, presldelti Linda
~ake, cerjlllcate IIIII 100 hour !llerrte• 'l'tlrner, Kathy Tutti,,
bers, James Andenoa, Steve sell Watson. Representing Mr. Pomeroy, when Dixon stopped to ~racuse Park.
Grind.itaft, tecretan; staldiQI, left to rf&amp;ht. Jemlter Davis,
·!lin; Sally Duckworth, cap; Re· Pim Wal&amp;irn, all capa; Dlalie .
Powell, Ben PerC)', Rft.y Alkire and Mrs. Reino Und during the make a lert turn. There was
Refreshments were served by
Ra,ciDe, vlee president, aad Diane Wellh,.Middleport, tre11ur·
11tt1111 ,_.sle, cerllllc11t; Janice Wollh, cortlllcate; Joan .1\'ltlteand. Ralph Werry.
moderate damage, with no injur~ Elza Gilmore and Roger Freck·
er~.
presentation was struble.
,E&amp;Itman, cap ~ ctrtlfiealei head, cap; Violet Wolfe, :llsan
The otago and lighting orew
ies
or arrests.
er.
Two Vietnam veterans were
,., • RhOnda Ervin, &lt;erllllcate and Woodrum, and Vlcld YotUII, aU
w(ll meet with tontestantl arll
100 bour plJi; D"'~ Fitch, oap; cap1.
entertainers ol the Big Benl
)(OIIQ: Frwlo, certllleate and
Relre-• ... re . served
Minstrel Association at 7:30 p.
.' ~, bOar pln; Slsan Gerlach, from a table carr;ylng oOt a .(link
m. Frlday in the MeigB Junior. '"''l:eriul&lt;ate; Undil Grind starr, 300 ootor ll&lt;heme to conclude the eveHigh AOOitorium in Pomeroy to
·' hour pin; Marla Grueser, c:er- nlng. A uumber ofp~rtntawere
rehearse (or the approximate
tlllcate; llblrleY Qloltla, cap lllCI on hand lor lhe al!alr.
two • hour pageant which will pt
underway at 8:10 p.m. Saturday
at tile Meiga Junior High School.
Advance tickets are beilw sold
at the New York Clothing House
and S'dsher aOO Lohse Drugs In
In other activity. the chamThe public is being urged to Bahr Clothiers and Dutton's
Pomeroyi the Fui-Valu Market
ber voted to enter into a emlD Racine and at Bahr Clothier pJrchaae advance tickets tor the Dr&lt;IJ!S ln Middleport,
tract with the , Mid-Eall: 0 u ~
The
Chamber
of
Commerce
and Dutton Druga In Middleport. annual &amp;n11hern Ohio Beauty Pag.• r
By United Preas
eant Saturday night in the Pome- is co-sponsoring the pageant with board Racine Assn. to super"'t'
-the Xi Gwnma Mu Chapter ol the vlse races at this June'a Reroy Junior lUgh Auditorium.
·-Shorllivlld retirelllflltt for the
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Kermit Walton, Fred Morrow Beta Sigma Jbl Sorority, The C gatta Weekend.
~;,; ~TON.'- THE RETIREMENT OF KEN "THE HAWK" Bar. .
HOSPITAL
A deeislon was also reached
and Jack Carsey, of the Pome.- c:t C committee reviewed final
In major leaP tw.se~ll was e;q,ecled to cmne to an end today.
ADMISSIONS - Sarah Hoi!·
to
begin commitments to IP'CJI,UIJ
rqy Chamber ~ Commerce Pag~ plans Mmday at a regular chamiJtrreloon oald Saturday he would retire from bouball rafloer tl!in
man, Letarti KeDneth Braun,
and
organizations for concession
eant Committee, said advance ber luncheon at Bailey•s
;aeoopt the "lride which - hlm and two other Bootod player• to
Pomeroy; F1orenee Quillen, Ra·
areas at the regatta.
tickets may be bought at a re- Restaurant.
lliillanl.
etne; Eleanor Gordon. PomeroYi duced price throoJI(I Friday eveRkhard Chamber&amp; will be treaThe c of c pageant commit' '·· But the 27-year-old H&amp;rrehon tad 72 bator• from !he time be
Dlattl Cundtll, Mason; EarlllU·
surer
of the Regatta and Robert
Ding from New York Clothing tee also commended the efl'orts
' io traded to actually Join !he club tindall lndlcatlono were he would
~;:her, Alban)'.
Jacobs
was appointed to work
HoUse and SWisher and Lohse ~ Dlre&lt;tor Robert Hoelll&lt;h and
.:JQln the Tribe liolore locla,•a 4 p.m. dotdllne. TelophOIIO ltOJllllallonl
Dlsebarps - Ross Morris,
Dtug Store In Pomeroy, the Fui- others who have given their time with Tommy Reuter and Tracy
:*-•en Cleveland Preoldent ""' Get&gt;erol lol'alilpr .Gabe Paul la·
Bett.Y
LUlie Smlflo,
Whaley, who will head floe Old
Valu Market Ill
lllCI at to the ~ amuaL event.
"l!tltlmore and 'HarreiBilll ln Bolton Moo:lay _.-ed to t.ve cBlanche Rasklns.
Time
Fiddler's COOteBt.
'';tlpi:ed the col9rliii ,Jtawk he ·~oold a~ndclll blo,brlalaetr-lmpoeed
The chamber approved a reiO~Ue.
'
OF Til£ FOUR G111U1 WHO REcrJVEII liARS
Iutloo opposing the removal -.
y •U'IIU in couni,Y'I hiltor;y ,' .
. be ~ to J[u 1o1: 11011, htlura ol oorvlee, In 'Linda GriDdMEIGS GENERAL HOSPITAL
the freight depot ll&amp;l!llC¥ from
Pomeroy. h waa deeide4 tut
Till!·
OF LOs ANGELEs
oPent JIJ«.. hln ltandori"" .iliA Lonora Ml&lt;~eL 11lo lourlh tdrl'to
ADIIISSIOI'IS - None.
the chamber should have a repon t1t0 trtat 01 SirJian B. SlrllaD alll olllclalo pleri!COiw.irdi NaMola..... Ia Lllt:Uie Priddy.
DISCJIARGES - None.
resentative at the PUCO bear~
[ng Ill Columbus txt May 6 and
rote !he ..
lllu&lt;lal ' Ide ' . . '' .
,,
TYJ:
named AUDrney Fred Crow to
receive letters OIII)OIIng t h e
the - t tii"oteetecl •rlooner ln floe hl.atorY ol,
· · ·
·
.
·
closure Ill behalf af the C ~ C.
...,
·~
I,
......_
which
will
take
place
n was pointed otit !hat orlii·
NEW \'ORK (IJPI) - 'l1le
nal letters 0{ oppositloo rrom
lD Wallhlntlton, D.C.
. """" .ever ·
.·..~~·ool·~llorlio'! lllCI~
both organlzatlmo lllCI buelaou.
Ml'" SlocUm; a J[l"ltlulojt ct
Jtadclllre,
'llso
111mbora·
.,....,.
es, should be mailed to tlto N&gt;~
·
.0111·~ 9tolatto..
llc Utilities eommlooloo Ia Ct&gt;her anceatilra R - WD!laml,
·· ·. · cint ~nlio .past
to Adam'
Iwnbus wllh ~
'!l'lhe
communlcatlol\
dlroctod
to
Crow.
ltll~tbe

or

Prtal

i':f•'t.'T' ·~ ·'~~~ I~

.w·

Get Your Tickets

Early, Says C of C

;m

lho

Fully waohablo Dacron

Polytotor/Cottan POP"
lin. Feot-..rea water rt•

y-,

pellent finish and fully
llntd slttv••· Silts:

small, medium, Ioree
and extra large.

1mt.tis

:;l f;,

.ttr .

Clooo•• n0vy,
l.lue, peen,

yellow, or•nge.

cOUNTY

.

\.

.~

ftrst

' 'l ·

.

.

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~~
:Ill
.:-.;;lho.:.!~;,...i~... lnjheh)~oi
tiollahn
•

I

'

I

Ra-.

to

hlo

' .,,.

'

•

Other Styl'll A~l~a~le
Fl•r Mens an4 :lfrs
l1cl••:

en tine

l)epoted To The llllemll Of The Meigs· M111011 Area

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''

Weathc;t ·

at y

The longest movie ever macle
·ot without dlalogue·tn n Is "Sleep"
...;.by An:b' Warhol consisUDK sol'"'
- ·ly of a man sleepina ror eight
~

Walter Jones

live-lenths miles weot of Rt. 7.
Officers said a car driven by
James L. Franklin, 19, Rt. 2,
Gallipolis, went c.ut or control
on a curve, went oft the highway
and hit a large tree. The .car
was demoUshect.
Admitted to Holzer Medical
Certer, First Ave., was Ancel
Lamm, 15, son or Mrs. Fay e
Lamm. 125 State St., with a trac~
tured lett wrist, Crac:tured jaw,
facial lacerations aOO head i~
jury. He was a passenger In the
Franklin car,
Franklin suffered chest injul'ies, lacerations or the nose a.nd
cuts on the legs, He was taken
to the holl[&gt;ital; treated and released.
The patrol cited F,ranklin to
Gallipolis Municipal Coort on a
charge of reckless operation.
Barbara Jo Lawhorn, 17,
da~ter ot Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Lawhorn, Bidwell, wao admitted
to floehospitalat3:50p. m. Sw&gt;day with a fractured back and
fractured shoulder after an atcl~
dent at 1:44 p. m. Sunday on Rt.
J60, one and three- tenth&amp; mUes
north or Rt. 35.
The patrol said Miss Lawhorn,
headed SOtllh, came"' behind another car, pulled wt to pass,
lost control and her car went
ott the left aide of die highway
and struck an embankment. The
vehicle. which had heavy dam-

•

You Know

. ,- .

T

Four persons were lru'ured• two
ofwhmn wereadmittedtothehospital, in seven weekelliaccidents
in&lt;esdpted by the State Highway
Patrol.
Two persons were Injured In a
one car accidentat4:30p, m. Sunday 011 Teen&amp; Run Rd., one~~

~Now

&lt;: '

~··; hours.

• were ni,y wife and 1- ·were Pete telmen evt.~here 'ftiYil• 1\vi and the compoUtlon lpr c o II!·
Bucher, Pd llko you wgetyWr. aooc~ : fOUoo' to quellllm whether mando miJi(ll worK· apmot hl1
oelf a nice rocking d!alr by a . lhel' WJU be o_...cl s!Miuld wllh a.d he m!Ji(ll ...n
up
quiet like and slop aoldng que•· ' lhel' alao iall IntO mlllort.ni," hie Naval career. ·
tiona.'"
.
- lh8 said. itJf rurther h1111ta me
" .But the diiUlUJI-entl I
''The 1\leblo Incident lhows that Ute mOrale at tile Amerltlll IIAve laced aJooo dlrl!ir tlojo
our country dld not otand be- llabtlng men ~ hel• but be dreadllol, mlulngyearha~omade
me hOJ)'! now !hat 1111' 1!oolblnd
hind ita men, 11 she wrote. uour negatively affected."
mistake is -U!at we didn't react
Mrs. Bieber aald that when does nOt 10 to sea again," abe
in the tirst 24 hours alter the her husband realized Uti! United wrote.
ship was taken. M,y husband reels States was Nit going to retal~
as 1 do: The onb acUon tor the Jate, be told the North Koreans
~tt
UnUed ~tea to take was to the,y could kUl tdm tf they aent
~~ret.aJtate · with military foree. his men and the ship back home.
This was what he and ht&amp;: crew He later tried to kill bimselt
,.
were sure would h-n ln the,. . to avoid dllhonorlng tile United
first tew days, andtbey.werepre- states by .signing IUQ' more'uc:on·
-, . ,·
pared to die for their country," feaaJons., and ''apologies." Ill
PT. PLEASANt - Cora HtlJohnsoo Remiss
ttda, she said, .., do not thlM sstt, 73, Apple Grove~ died Sa~
9te s&amp;ld the rac:ts show that my husband waa remi1s in his urday evenina: 8t home a'tier i.
Johnson was ''remiss in his Wty dutl.''
lone Ulness. She wat born0d.12i
to bring back our men and in tolMrs. Bucher said JOhnaon 1895.
,
.
crating tJJe illegal seizure of an wrote her once about a mantb
SurViving are her huabaildt
American Na.valahtp on the high after tJJe ship's seizure, sa.vfng carl H.i a fOil, e,twrles, ~
seas .... by permitting a pI p- he was grateful thi.t she waa apli1, 1111.; threedjl..ra, Mr~ .
squeak country, North Korea, to aware that ne~Gtlatora "must Elizabeth 1'1'1&lt;11\at; H~
embarrass our great nation. •• . be guided by the parBIIKllDt in- Mrs. Louise ~-~
"It appears to me that serv~
terest - release of the ~rew enee, Ky., and Mr~ Mar7 J.t?"
under honorable eonclltlona." 9!e Blainj Gallt,o11s . FetTy; t~
sald the State Department pve brothers, Harh Black, Al&gt;pl~
T,
her little lnrormatlon. c:onsola- Grovej Frank anc1 DOrsey· BlaO"~n
tlon or GUidance ... how to"'" Huntington, all!! Stanley Black,cir
~....
wllh lhe preos and her retatl0111 Lesap; two slstero, Mrs. ilii
•.....
with former Secretary of State elrKia Wallace, A&amp;Jple Gr.;we, an;d
Dean Ruok were J)llrllcularly Lt. Col. camtlte ·.a , SW!esartj
Q
rrostratlng.
Beaver, Arll.;fivep-anc!chlldteil!
1-.:7
Wao Bucher Dead?
and three great-craill!chlldre~~o
- rolled over onto its top.
!lie recounted bow 1 rumor
Funerol ,.-•ceo
wlU be h-'"
age,
nl
..,
Oarles W, Bodlmer, m. 16, · that Bucher had kiD~!! blmselt at 2 P.. JL Wldnl~attheiJ4ohi.l.
Eureka Star Rt., was treated at •"Proved the breaking-oR' po1nt stephfms F'lllierit Heine With.
the hospital lor lacerations and ~ eommunleatlon between Dean Rev. Alfred Cox.oiii~U,.. ~
released after an accident at Bulk and me, 011 the onl,y oc~ lal wW be In peale Qapel.c8~
3:50 p. m. Sunday on Rt. 1, eight- caaio.a we met .... alter which I tery. Frlellf• may call at tJit
tenth&amp; of a mil~ south ol the
rett worse and knew leu than tuoeral home •atter 7 .P.m. Tuei;.
jiBlction of RL 21 8.
before." Ste said sbeukedRulk day,
·
::
It lhe CIA bad been lnrolved
·•
The patrol sald Bodimer '"" ln floe Pll"'lo'' mloaloo otr the
headed north when a c:ar pulled Korean coast and he checked
.,
out I)Rto the highway in front ot witJJ CIA Chief Richard Helm!
him. He went off the lett aide o! b,v phone. then replied, "No,
the highway to avoid a colllslon. tbe CIA was not inVolved.,,
The car struck a guard raiL
..1 asked Mr. Rusk it my hus.There was minor damage to the band was alive," she wrote. u1
PT. PLEASANT- Walterwu.:.
guard rail. The car was demol· waa still V8J'7 worried about Ham (Polly) Jones; 68, was~
ished.
those sulc:ide rumors." 9le said on arrival 1t Pleasam VaiJey
No one was injured in a one Rusk told ht~r he '1:1tlleved" Hospfal Saturdl,)' morning of an
car ncctdent at 9:10 a. m. ~ Bucher was aliYtllftd 1
aprent heart attack.
day on Rt. 554, two and three-He was a retlrect employ of &amp;be
Bucher .was alive and when she
tenths miles west ot. Cheshire. pres sed him 1or pl'UUI
~ he
an- old pt. PleaSII~. ,Transfer Co:,
1
There was mJnor damage to the ewered: uwhlt .Proof do you have now the Pot• E"'r(las. He wa'•
car drlven by MoUie J. John- that be Isn't";-'
born here Oct. s;11900:
·· · ·
son, 62, .ol 1915 Chatham Ave.
Navy Thwarted Her
SUrvivors are hls wife;
The patrol said Miss Johnson
9le llid Navy oftldala con- Mayes Jonea; two sons, James
started to turn arourli at the Uluoully thwarted ber· ia .her Ed:ward and ~r}esWlU-JIIIt
Junctloo ol story'o Run Rd The -~- ~ ,- 1 ....~, 01 .~ a olllt&amp;r; ltiJol Elnlllillllatr; Ill
motor stalled and w!-4n she re- ;;;i:.Ji.s~;.":t,;:;";..;,..,.; local; 12 grandChlldrell,mitwO
started the car the vehicle lunged bera In the belief tbat "good ereat.trao:lc:hildrea. ~
forward and struck mall boxes mamerl reQUired me to CCJU..
ServlC:ee wlU bi cOnducted·~·'·
owned b,v Clyde F'ttch and Dennis tact thtJII'' 1o let them know p. m.· ·Tuta4a)' . frat~. the MohrOXYer, both of R~ 1 Cheshire. !hey "belong to 1 .,...U,ellc iltephono ~ llfil!lowlih
The . patrol is investlp:UJW a Comnuait;y." .
Rev. O,· H. carder and the Rev.
hlt-shlp which oceurred at5:39J.
!lie oald Bucher baa hla hean GIQ' ClendaiJ[nB In charge, Burm. SotttrdayonlbeRt.35byi)aoa, .., a IUbmarlne CIIIIID!and ror tal will be in Lena Oak C...t&gt;three-tenths or a mile eut ot which he waa orlctuuy train- · tery. f'rll.ndl
received
the juncUon of Rt. 160. No one ed. !lie oald hli
·
at
the
t\1\eral
- tl waa injured.
Officers reported that Daniel
RUI\)'on, 26, or Rlo Grande, was
headed wei!L Another car drove
onto lhe Rt 35 b)Ja1s into the
path ot the Ruhyon car. RW\Yoo'a
car went otr the right side ot the
highway and &amp;~ruck a sip post.
There was minor damage to the
car.

"As tbey stand aaw, Federal
WASHINGTON, D. C. - (!Ill.
MONOXIDE POISONING
clal) - Ohio lOtio District Con- laws lowose aa IDlwarranted adYOUNGSTOWN (UPO - 51&gt;- gressman Clarence E. Miller hu ministrative burdeo 011 small
san Frketich, 17, Lowellville, Introduced blUslhal-.tdamend meat and poultr)' J)I'OC811Drl,n
'
and Thomas Macabobby, 22, the Federal Meat Dts(IOCI!on Act Mlller stilted.
CADET KILLED
Youngstown, died of carbon and the Rltlltry l'rtldldl Dtopec"A proceiiOl' Is 111bjected to
TUXEDO, N. Y. (UPO - monoxide ..isonl~ Ill a parked
Uoo Act to permlt meat and either a Federal lnapection or
James Greenlee, 20, Rocky Rlv- car in nearby Austintown TOWJ1o.
poUttry JII"Oducta. to be distrib- a State lno.[ltlctlm !hat la at lout
er. Ohio, a senior cadet in the shlp Sunday, •ollce said.
uted Ill lnterllate commerce al- as otrlogent as the Federalllalldl.J. S. Milit.ar, Academy at West
ter having passed Federally-oj&gt;- arda. But dte present law rePoint, was kllled in a weeken:l ELECTED DIRECTOR
proved State lnspectlm requtr.: olrlcta State-ln!lpOCted products
automobile accident near here.
AKRON, Ohio (UPJ) - Rob- me11ts.
to distribution wllhlll the state.
Pollee said GreenJee and a· ert KUeen. retired police chief
ThUs proceasors must IUbmit
fellow cadet, Jack Mullen, 22, or Xenia, was elected director
to Federal lnJpeedoa Ol' else be
ot Heber Springs, Ark., were of the North-central Region of
cut afllrom out-ol4tal!! lnlrkell
killed when their car skidded Sertoma, lnternaU'"'!J, at the
for their procktctl," he aald.
off a highway into Lake Tana~ group's aMual convention here
"This. sttuatton· cre~tel a IPtBy United Pre11 lnter•tinl
waukee.
during the weekend.
clal hanllhlJ&gt; lor oman _,_
Today is Moo:tay, Aj&gt;rll 21,
the llllh day ol1969 wlflo 254 to BOra and amounb to an expreaoloo ol lack ol conlltlence lillllo
follow.
Tile mooo is J~Pro&amp;china lt11 abUlcy af State tnor,ecttoo - cleo. !lnceState btspectloo llancJ.
n-:at quarter.
SAT.
APRIL 26, 1969, 11:00 A.M.
The morning stars are· Venus, ards are at least aa ~ 11. the
Fedenl -du&lt;ll, lt II only .....
Due to the death of my husband, l will ull th' fo[.
Mars and saturn.
lowing farm chanle1 at Auction. The 1al• will be 011
The evening stars are Mercu- oooablo !hat reotrlctlo!t• 1101 be
Imposed .. State-lnapeeletl-'
farm located near Zion Church on Lodl Town1hip .Rd.
ry and J'WJiter•
producto. The,. blllo will cor•
76, 4 miles Ea,t of Shade, Ohio. (Sale Sign• ,.;II ••
On this day in history:
up f&lt;am St. Route 33.)
In 753 B. C. Rome waa .lounded reet thi• cue ot bureaucratic:
by Romulus.
near4tibtednees," he ~
48
HEAD OF Cot. TTLE
olll'
In 1954 U,S. Air Force planes
Two H•r•ford Bull,
Charoloil Bull
INVFSTJGATE DEATH
3 H•r•ford C1on H•lf•• ·fB,.d) 7 Chorolai• Crou H•if•fl (Bc.lf)
bopn lbll!i French troopo
MIDDLETOWN, Oblo
from Parts to Irw.to-Chlna to
4 H•r•ford Cowl (Brtd)
7 Brod Hollt,;n Cowl
An
investlpd.on ·
4 H..-.ford Colvos
2 Holttoln Cowl with Cofqt
reinforce the bealepd bastion
Hohtoin H•ifor with Coif
2 Hol1toln H•lfon B'r4HI

1966 Dodto Trur:k (pir:kup)

'

Men

Today's
Almanac

IT'S NEW VINYL FLOORING
THAT'S CUSHIONED!

"""'
f.

d
.L' our
lUre
'J
JY7
II• h,.., eeken d lf.J}
ar.ns

Decency Rally Turns into Battle

"MUGS THEATRE

•

V

Tonys to American Plays
NEW YORK (UPK)- Two alJ.
AmeriCan productions won 1(11
honors in Sunday night's competition for the Broadway thea~
ter's annual Tons awards.
The best drama honor went to
Howard Sadder's "The Great

~ cold period ii lndl""ted 1i.
Ohio with temperaturu averaging well bolownormallort11e
nvo-&lt;~&lt;~y period •!arllng Tuesday. Jllill tem(lOi-lturea will
average in the lower 50s in the
north lllCillllhelower 60oillthe
south, while the overnight low

.'

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'
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•

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'
I
II
l»butante to "'e rowe · · ·
d

n

,.,

e-·

,;..........

"''Il••

', CCNre•

· Marion Kestenion
'

Die8 in Florida

,.

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