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30 - 1hc

Su~

Tlmeo - SenUnel, NuNtay, Ncnember 2, ltl6t

Now You Know
.~•.~

e

A CUI]¥ IUuotratedprogramon
tho Lewis and Clark E&gt;Pedltloo
Is rOilllar)¥ conducled by tile
Notloosl Park Strvlce at Fort
Clatq Notional Memorial, ,
Astoria, Ore., where Lewis and
Clark built a winter onc~~~q&gt;o

~.

•

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enttn~

at y·

~

L·

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..
-;:;.:.-.

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ment.

VOL XXII NO. 139

MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1969

POMEROY-MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

0)

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....

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( ,., tJ}

,.,

•

TEN CENTS
•

Meigs Voters Exercise Home Rule lf~ tiesday
Nixon Policies Up
For National Test

By IJIIIIed Preso lnternatloosl

Lebanon ftghling quieted
A cEASE-nRE TODAVB ROUGHT AN END tD the lishtlng
In Lebonoo between army unlto and Arab 1!110rr1Uao, and peace
110t10Ualors In Cairo oald they were conlldelt of reaching 1 JlOI'manent oettlement. lorael bombed lbreel!llerriUa basealn Jordan In an U...lled wornll\l to the Arab worltl
Only one lnel4ent marred the cease-fire. An explostm at
12:30 L m., one haU hour after the cease-fire went into effect,
blow "' the pipeline of the American - owned Trano-Arablan
Pipeline Co. In Lebanon. a-Ir• were already underwiQ'.

I«JJ,OIJO church gitlell away
CLEVELAND - THE 300.MEMBER predomlnanli¥ white
e...,.egatlm of the Unitarian Soclet;y of Cleveland hosdeelded to
live Its $400,000 church building In the heart of tile clt;y'o Negro
&amp;hetto to 311 black membera.
Tho congregation Is erpected to move to aoolber location.
Tba bullllt;}.wtll be devol~ by tile black grcql, which calls
C)
Itself tile
ck United Unitarian Caucus (BUU as a separate
ch¢ch and ' community center.

COP Leader wllllb Ha:YlUworda oul

"'OUR DINNER WILL BE LATE, DEAR I'M DOING A CWI REPORT ON HOW TO
HANDLE THE HUNGER SITUATION IN THIS COUNTRYr

WASIUNGTON - ASSISTANT SENATE Republlean Leader
Robert P. Grltfln warned today a showdoWn vote on the oominatlon of J..tge Clemelt F. ilaynJworth, Jr. would not serve tile
belllntereots of lbo Supremo Court.
But Grlt!ln cooeeded President Nlxoo In "no uncertain
terms" has tndicated he will not withdraw the nomination or accede to such a req110st from ilaynJworth. The Mlchlpn oenalor
aid in a radio interview - UPI'IJ "Washlrwton Window" - that
"I've said In tile past that I tllought It would be beat II Judge
Haypaworth himself were tD ask to have the nomination withdrawn.

Hit Fethion
Mt.'s dUns ... ecny to""' whethet

it'• tht t;pOft}' or 4ms strJrt!
No. Mill wi1to PHOTO-GUIDE ;,
i• SMOII (14-"'4),11Willlll (IS-15!-l)
GIINil.arQe (16-16!-1). Medillftl,...,.
........ 1% ,.m of 6-;odo,

Totoll.ook

DEAl POUY-Sooob riot- •rt
COt Oft 1M bias

Na. IICM with PHOTO.
GUID£ is ifl sim l to S yean.
!5iu 2,
of ~ ...,

,....

and ......... poa••;;a.

watllint -r wif
olontaach""P.P . . . .tlittllialii
aaam ill JM Miol4lo llli'!l liM l11 . . .
eno-lo!orill WI ltilt· Tllilt'..!i ' ' ..-! ·
hall tho .i(M _ .. ftrl .......
.......... ,....:n ,,4 ,. ,
ca•..-~ -

preu.....

'* ,....

..... Y.l Ylrd; cape, I !I•

DEAR P6LlY-If lac,.curtains hang •IR'
.,..., oiler laund_ering point a hoe.y
itoolarlteel'~r thtr,color of the qor•
laill
iller! in,tftt ....... thot loil!i
up

tlld

~!i-G.

.

'

,OU V'.$ HOTE:.o$/at ""'"" tltrfil;~
wtiglm ..... bought,""" ....red ..itll

fabtiC aMI eiJsily sewn in corners ofOny
curtoi•s thot hong

vn••••lr.

been marked by personal Conservative John J. Marchi, •
President Nixon was elected attacks and vituperation.
state legislator.
one year ago. Off.year elections
Democrat William C. BaHie
Cleveland Democrat Carl I.
Tuesday may give a small Is ra1ed a slight favorite In the Stokes, the flnt Negro eledld
lndlceflon how well his pollcl.. VIrginia governor's race, which mayor of a malor U.S. city,
have been accepted In the has live cendldafes. Thlo locH while Republican Rolph
Northeast end the Soufh.
election should show lithe GOP J. Perk In his bid lor ,...
Attention wilt be focused on is continuing to make Inroads In election. Both Insist race Is nat
gubernatorial eleclloo&amp; In New an aree long dominated by an Issue, but 90 per cent of the
Jersey and VIrginia for Indica · Democrats. Holton Is rl1ed a city's electorate was expecftd
to vo1e on racial linn.
lions ollhe Presldenf's success. dose second by observers.
Of
the
mayoral
elections
to
Detroit's mayoral eledbl
Nixon personelly campaigned
be
held
Tuesday.
the
key
ones
plfs
Wayne County Audlfar
In New Jersey lor Rep. William
are
In
New
York.
Cleveland
and
Richard
Austin, a Negro,
T. Cohill and In VIrginia lor A.
Detroit.
agalnat
Sheriff
Roman Grlbbs,
Linwood Hollon, rated as
Mayor John V. Lindsay, a white. For many of the 1
having the best chance of any
· Republican In fho posf century repudiated by the GOP In New voters, the election lsaues are
of winning the governorship of Vork City, Is -king re-election simply black and white In fhe
lhe Old Dominion. He was a on the Llbenl and Independent nonpartisan confHt.
key Nixon campaign aide las1 ticket. Usually.accurate polls
Austin has picked up support
year.
Indicate he has recovered from of some liberal Republicans and
Former !tate Representative
Former Democratic Gov. an unpopular beginning and the giant United Auto Workers
WIU!am
M. Felgtum announcR~ B. Meyner Is Cohill's now holds a comfortable lead Unlon, while Grlbbl has gar.
eel Monda,y he will seek t h e
opponent In whaf should be a over Democrat Mario A. ne-red Republican end business
Democratic Primary nominaclaee ,.... Tho - l g n hal Pr«acclna MCI ~I&lt;M· supporf.
tlon for the United !tales Senate seat being vacated by Senator Stephen M. Young.
Felghan has served s i x
years In the Ohio House of

//·2
C

ltM ~ HU., t.:.

To
Or d Eer

to H_aH•r! To be "'om with a ltr scarf,
thct scorf for a changt of PK•
. look!

DEAR POLLY-5M tfltHig oW ,.,.

No. 1214 ll'ith PHOTO·GUIOE ts i•
New S•:res to II, blnt 31 ~ to 411. Si1e
10, ll!-1 bull', 2l!o~ yar~s of 4S-irlclt.

1toll4 tloe
and
snow.
Thor
ore
waodtrhol,
-cLARA
.. ._
.., it.

Dr w•thout

8· 18

with • braun ziptJOr or ...... oll4l .... it

lor a clothespin llog tllot -

a

n~in

---------------------------------------Dras potttrns ll'nd 6Sc each tor first.cluu Moiling with JIOIM,
addrn.s, .z•pcode, pattem 1111mber and sru te Potttrtls (cart of
ttlis !ttwapaper), lox 4318, Midto•n Stot1on, New York, N.Y. 11011.

Pollr ,.,, •
1----..

-------ill!ll
;t"w.l.

df/l~t ,., .....,.

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·I S•INII,,.,.. ,. ··.'·c.,,~- tiN• ""'.

rfiM·I

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.ANDY CAPP

. ·· ~.

·' r

.,

Ohio lOth District COOgreso- t...l111e dally fears that BUrman Clarence E. Miller Frl- round their lives.''
dQ' aald the Fedenl Coal Mine
The comprehensive measure
llealth and satet;y Bill recent. covers aurfaeeaawellasUDder1¥ pesaed by the u. S. Hause ground mines. II eatoblllhea m:of Representatives is "land- tenslvo Interim mandatory
tnark lestolatloo tD protect tile healtll and safet;y standards
well-being of those who work wblle r~ admlnlotratlve
lmprovemeots In the standards
Ia a ctanaerous lnillstry."
MUler cast a uyea vote as and pro\'ldes civil and criminal
tho llauae · - 389.-4 tD re- penalties for vlolatlono. Umltflllre ll&amp;hl mining heallb and ed POl' Is IIIW'&amp;n- tor minllfet;J atandarda as well as tD ers idled by mine closures &lt;lie
Ill up a ll)'otem of Federal to health or safelY condltlnn•
_ . . t l o n tor miners tDtal- The lllreau of Mines aafet;y and
IJ disabled by PIOWilOcooloals health research programo are
alao otren&amp;thened. Mexlmlm
• ·•~ck lq."
"Thla bill 'will Insure that mot coo&lt;entratlm standards
the Federal aovernment gives and the dlaablllt;y componsatloo
tlrot prlorlt;y to the healtll and ll)'otem are opecU!cally deiii!JIllfet)r of the miner," MWer de- ed t o - wllbthe"blackl11118''
elared. -·For the flrst Ume the problem.
ltlolth of miners II COYered.
Tbe maximum mot con-atim should lnaure VETERANS MEMORIAL
that the now -ration of coal
HOSPITAL
adnera Ia not ravopd 1&gt;1 black
Stturda.Y Admlasloas
luna. 'I'IIIa bill contalno t h e Clara Jotrers, Albany; Emeot
Jl'Q1111ae of a llletlmo of JII'O- Sellards, Rutland; William Wy.,etlve work free from I h e att, Mlddlaport; T h o m a a
lrlnsotandlng hazards ofmlnlDa. c.,..,..s, Mlddleporl; Merle
1 orrera the famlllea of our ~-· Cedarhurot, N. Y.;
oool miners tile hoPI of relief Doroth,y callhclollar, RoedsvUle.
So11lrd&amp;7 Dlacbargea - CorR~ived ol Tate, Dlmy Kuhn, E I s I e
Phllllpo, llrvUle Arms.
!b!daY Admlalicma - K enIIOih - . . Mlddleporl; Fllnloo Yeodcnra, Now Haven.
~ Dlacbargea - Merle

1800
In Fund Drive

Mlrtllotta, Montie Setit+ra,
Pilar! Cole.
'

,. '

'

SQUAD CALLm

Tho Middleport E.a ..,.S
""" called at 7:38 Lm. &amp;m-

. ·'

'

..

dQ' to the 'l'ha111a• Jllatl..
home em Pieri St. from wliere

Mr. Julll.., onlndlld, waatlloen to Holzer Medical

c....r. '

El&amp;ht;y-two abBODieo ballots have been caot at tile Meigs
County &amp;ani of Electloos otnce In Tuesda)''s election, alight
reaponse, according to board members.
Meigs c.untlaas wW wte tomorrow oo lolrnablp trustoea
with a number o! races ln store. Town oftlclals also wW be
aelectod and tile lbree ochool dlotrlcto hove ~levy r&amp;-~~ prq&gt;osltloos. School boon! members wW be ele&lt;:ted.
The only eOUJQ-wlde tu: me&amp;aiD'e Is a oew three-quarters
at ooo mill le"'' for the meiUJI¥ retarded.
Polio wW be open trom 6:311 s. m. to 6:30 p. m.

Meartlme. poll workers for increase over 1ut year. Phflthe county's 40th precinct were
omounced today. Theseporaoos
ware not IIIIIIOd wllb tile workera of the oilier 39 precincts
announced earlier.
The 40111 precinct Is Mldcll&amp;port Precinct, lila workers b&amp;lng Mrs. Kathryn Evaas, pr&amp;oldlng jlllge; Mrs. Merlbe A.
Searls, Mrs. Nora Cambron and
Mru.. Norman Russell, judges,
and Mra. Mary M. Buck and
Mrs.
Bernice R. Jet!ers,
clerks.
Groups eontlmled Monday to
add their Bl.Vport of the school
operating le"'' renewal queo-

___

,_

FinN

fol~

pollee he was ab-

ducted by thrH men. forced fo
drive from Columbus to lanes·

ville, and beaten.
His nomination was not recoa·
nlzed because he was not pres.
ent at the meeting to accept, as
required by union laws.
Fink told pollee that he was
enroute to pick up Thomas E.
West, a union member seeking
the Local "'13 prtsldency, when
his car was bumped by anoth·
CONGRESSIONAL SECRETARY Belle ~ holds
er auto. He and Wes1 were to
the bronzed -•Democrat CoJWressional Footdragger" trogo to the union hall together.
PiiY which tile Republican Congressional Committee plano
Fink said when he got out of
to present tD leaclers of tile Democratle-&lt;ontrolled 91at
his
car to Investigate the dam·
Co'*re ss "who shaw unusual talents in dragging their teet
age,
one of the three men
on badly-needed legislation."
punched him In the eye end or·
dered him back In his car.
~··
Fink was then ordered at
The Music Educators Natlcnal Conference-, in a bold gunpoint to drive toward lanes·
proposal to its members, ville.
About six miles east of ZanesFriday called on the nation's
ville,
the men forced him to
music
educators to help
crawl
under the car, he told po.
bridge tile generatloo gap by
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Preslice.
maldng rock and oilier 1out11
He said they kicked him sevIdent Nlxm eoes before the namusic part of the sehool mueral times because he did not
tion tonlgbt In a major et!ort
sic program.
move fast enough.
to unite the vast middle ground
The MENC, which npreColumbu~ _d_!tectl~sJI_Id
of American public opinion be- sents 58,000 music teachers
Fink
"looked like he had been
hind bls el!orts to end the VIet- In elementary and •ocunclary
worked
over. His glasses were
nam war.
public schools, colleges aOO
broken. He had a bruise and
The plea tor dme and tDierunlverstues. declared that it
ance, coming two weeks after .. DOt only accepts rock alkl cut under his right eye. His
were
torn
and
m.e antiwar demonstratlm and other present-day music u clothes
smeared."
10 da,ys before a aecood ooe, legitimate, but aanctlooa Its
Wesf said he and Fink had
wss expoc:led to be an attempt
use in educaUon."
requested protection from the
to face the fears and frustraFBI Frldey "because ol lncl·
tions of those Americans Who
denfs which hove happened
want an hcnorable end to a
DEFENDANT FINEll
prior fo pas! elections,"
war llh.leh bas killed 39,000 One defendant was fined and Loc;al All ropresenfs about a•.
American soldiers In slxyears. a aecood forfeited bond Solur- 000 Teamsters In Columbus,

President in

Major Effort

There were no lndl.cattons the
9:311 p.m. EST adclreso, to be
carried nationwide oo radio and
televloloo, wooid Include a clramatlcally accelerated troop
plliout or oilier surprllllns new
de"relopmente.

da,y nlgbl In Pomeroy Mayor
Charles Legar's court. Robert
Ward, Middleport; was fined
~0 and costa altar a pott;y larceu;y conviction. Forfeiting a
$18.70 pooted 00 a speed.
lnc charge was Oiarles Stewart, of Cheshire.

Portsmovlh. lroolon. Oelowore
and other south central Ohio
clfl...

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature 1n dowutowu
Pomero:r at 11 a.m. Monday under cloudY aides was 49 de-

grees.

Dec. 3-l:.

Members of the Meigs Local
School District Teachers Assn.
announced endorsement of the
three mill levy, The actloo was
taken In a reeen1 mooting.
Martha Husted, prealdem,
oald John Mora, Pllyllia Hoekett ancl she will attend 1 ~
terence lor lnstnlction ln Ctnclmati on Nov. 20.22.
Mora reported lbetaasoclatlon membership Is now 129, an

Refreshments were .served
by the social committee com- ·
posed of Margaret Ella Lewia,
Theodosia Frecker,
Helen
Smith and Mildred Batley.
Also, winners of a poster cootest in tile Letart Foils El&amp;meJtary School to promote the
four mill sehool operatlrw r.
nswol leVj' there ho"' been announced.
(Continued m PagelO)

Representatives, on the lndlstry and Lebor Committee, tile

Committee rl Finance, the·
Committee on !Ughwa,ys and
the Committee m Conserva-

Preview to Spotlight
Pageant Contestants

Fue Damage

Estimated 1150
Damages were estimated at
$150 In a nre at tile one-story
Robert Seal'lo home In Happy
Hollow abeut 12:30 a. m. today.
'!Wenty Rutland ftremen and
two trucks answered the alarm.
The family was reported In bed
when a youngster smelled
smoke. The family fought the
[ire with water until the arrl val of the fire departmert.
Sheriff Robert Hartenbach is
lnvestigatl~ the blaze •

TIME TO STUFF
The aMuel stuftlng bee oftile
Meigs CourtyTuberculosisand
Health Assn. will begin at 9 a.
m. Thursda)' atHealb Melbodlot
Church in Middleport. Christ-

mas Seals oftheassoelationare
prepared tor mailing atthe bee.
Volunteers are welcome to help.

The Melgo County Junior
Miss Pagealt will otter a upreview '70" ODI!!I week before the
tun event attheMicldleportElomentary School at 7 p. m.
The 22 contestants entered in
the severth annual pageart will
be presented at the Preview
Nov, 8 tD spolllght each contestant before tile finals of the
pageaot which will be held Nov.
15th at lila Meigs Junior High
School AudltoriwntnPomeroy.
The Eastern High School ensemble cQJ11)0sed of Jean Whi~
head, Jane Ann Karr, JO)'
Kautz, Karen Humphrey,JoAnn
Brooks, Mary Jo Wolf, Robin
HUIIIJ)hrey, Ruth Ann BarnhW,
Melanie Dean, Rhea Pooler,
Rhea Mora. Kathy ow and Kathy
Tuttle wW present several selections. The ensemble is di-·
rected by Mrs. Earl Ingels, Jr.
Following the preview, a ~
cial hour wlll be held where

friends, relati"Ves, schooJ ottlclals alii the news media will

meet each COfi:estant.
The JJrogram will be open to
the public lree of charge. The
Meigs County JIQ'cees are the
sponsors of the Meigs County
Junior Miss Pageant held each
year to select the outstanding,
10
ldeal" high school senior glrl
and award her a scholarship to
help further her OOucation.
Tickets foe the full pageant
are being sold by tile .:2 cootestants. Adwnce tickets are
$1 and tlcketo at tile door wlU
be $1.50.
Pageant Day will begin with
a parade at 10 a.m. in Pomeroy
with loeal barkls, homecoming
queens.
cheerleaders, fire
equi,pmert, and the cortestants.
Organizations wishlngtopartle·
lpale should contact Ralph Worry by Nov. 13111.

Silver Bridge Scraps for .Sale
PT. PLEASANT - The stata
at Weal Virginia is offering for
laie
left of the old Sliver Bridge.
The Slate Department of Flnuce and Administration's division of purchases says it w1ll
_,bids Nov, 26 on 1,500 tons
cl heavy..miUlng scrap steel,
oil that Is left of tile bridge
between Mesoo County, W. VL,
and Gallla Count;y, Ohio, which
coilapsed Dee. 15, 1967, killing
46 persons.
Some at tile bridge atiU remains at the bottom of the Ohio
River but most of tile twioted
&amp;taelwork was hauled out of the
water alter the collapse and

-1'•

taken to a farm near Point
Pleasant where exports pieced
It back ix&gt;golber In an attempt
to determine the cause at. tbe
disaBter.

Meanwhile, dedication of tile
..,. span going up at Henderaon, W. Va., to replace tile fallen bridge Is tentative~¥ set
for Dec. 15, the second anniversary of tile collapse.
Roger Wood, public relatloos
ol!l clal for the !tate Road Commission. said, "We tentatl.ve1¥ are plamlng tD have it open
on tile 15th. depending on tile
weather, eQ.dpment, and otber
factors.••
Mr. Wood IBid Ohio G o v.

James A. Rhodes and West
VIrginia Gov. Arch A. Moore
Jr. bave lndleated they
plan to attend the cel"t:tl101'17.
Speclllatloo as to tile naming
at tile now bridge lncreaaes as
the structure nears completion.
FOUJ1h District Coogreoaman
Ken Hechler aaggested a drawIns of one name from the 46
who loot their Uves In tile collapse of the old bridge and the
su"-enl llllllllng of t h e
bridge In memory of tile one

whose name waa dran.
others bave auneotecl •Memorial Silver Brtc:lp•• s:loee the
new one ls painted sllver as W&amp;s
tile ooe llh.l ell collapsed.

$10 Million Hospital Bonds Underwritten
too grant of $2,200,000, an ~
polachla grant of$4,500,000IDII
olber aoarees Including doctaro' eontrlbullon• and a..Uoble hoopltal fundL
A .$2,486,000 medial erto
bulldbw Ia to be eoootructed
cont~cuoua tO tho hoapllal
!aclllt;y.

Located In ~ .....,_
eaalartl Ohio em the Cillo

m..

er, Golllpollolalholarpatctt;y
on the
of tho rt..r
for sane 60 mUealn- on
eaoterl,y.and weoterly direction.
Holzer Medical Center was
60 1•ro qo 11 1 aeve..W hocollal bir br. a.rleo

norih ·-

.......

lis Hackett and Helen Dal8 reported on 1 oalary school wblch
they attended In Columbus. Da..
ld Bowen and John Redovlanreported mtileproteoolonaltlatloas conference conducted
by tile Ohio Educetlcm Aoon. In
Columbea.
JeaiVIO Bowen wao In charge
of the wtll\l oo a eonoUIIK!ODal amendment which was .,..
proved by tile membership and
Helen Smllb pw the 1'l!IJOl'l at
the nomlnatlrw oommlttee.
Mrs. Hualed IDII Mon were
elected representath'81 to the
general assembl,y In Oolumbel

lions.

tl.on. He represented Ohio on
tile Natlooal Library Week Commlttee.
Feigban, ago 35, is admlnCOlUMBUS (UPI)- H. Don·
old Fink of Columbus, cendl· istrative assistant to U, s.
dete for nomination to the post Cong. Michael A. Felgban, wilo
of secretary.treasurer of Team. Ia his Iaiiier.
aters Union Local •13, has reported he was abducted at gun·
is
point while his name was
placed In nomination and HC·

ROME - ROME'S ASSISTANT PROSECUTOR said today ho
baa llled live charges against Lance CpL Rat!aele Minichiello In
1~1 llilol tug • of • wor witil tile IJIIItod state&amp; ...r who will
trJ lho ,_hllacloar. ~·
Jlaulno Carll's lepl .........,. Iller a two-llaar ~
witil iba 2~eaM!d Naplea • born 111111 Sanda¥ otl!fenecl lla1y•,

Hailed by Mr. Miller

Flowine Linea
(;£NTLE curves ettate a fluid-liM drt11

8214

Teamster
Candidate
Beaten Up

holy stifff!IU in Mi~lo COM!

New Mine Safety Law

,..
8104

Feighan in
Senate Ram

PHOENIX, ARIZ, - JIMMY DURANTE WAS described as
In excellent eondltloo todiQ' at Sl, Jos&lt;Ph'• Hospllal, where he Is
being trealed tor heacllacerallqns ouft'ered in a tall.
Durante, 76, fell backstage Sulliay while ' 1countlngthe house"
at the ArlZOM. State Fair, where he was perloi'IIlll&amp; He was
standll\l peeking through the curteln at tile crowd of 11,000 at
Memorial Coliseum when hei&lt;!ot his balance and feU aboot , _
feet to tile ote&amp;eo
!

(ContlnU!Id on Page 10)

CROCHET

With 82 Says Board

By United Press lnternetlonel

The St:lano:l11 down for •lwrl coulll

WHAT COULD be nicer for a
little girl than a cute drest
t~HM lit' • s-Higy copr ..tffl
• n~atchint t.o.Mt~ You'll
W tlilis OM simple tt sew.

Absentee Vote Light

E. Holzar.
The Holerlloopltal FOUIIIIatloo was orpnl20d In 1929 tor
the purpose ofcatlmlngtho"'"
eretlon of the
wllichal
that time hod......., to I n.bed
faclllt;y.
In 1956 a llll'aea' r o - .
and lnltrucii4Dl laollll;r wao
bllllt noar tho '-ltal tor iJio&gt;.
danto .,. tho ......q . which hod -port altlio '. _
pllal IInce 111211.
Tbe ....--• aciMial, which of·
!ers a fully aecreclltell rogistered nuraes'tninL'111ll'OII'UD·
con occOIIUIIOdate 100 atudtnll.
The HoiHr -cal COtter

'-'Ia!,

eiiiTOIIII¥ ""'roles 1 195-bed
taeillt;y under lbo !OIIIIdatlm'1
DOJli)I'Olllchartlr.
For _.. than 15 7ear1 tho
holpilal ......... dllltat.clwllh
Cine- Generel Rt41tal
wlutrob]l Claclr tj rtllln••ta
• ......., ... ralatod I ........ tho
HoiMr Nodi...

c-.

810-- ..,. .

Tho IIOIW
IDII

era

West Vlrslnla
medical-

lY 39 Pbiroldtl ,... ....Ucal atilt

c

�,. '

'

"Moderation. in the Pursuit
of International Retations Is d Vice!"

.

.\

!IN AT aAiboJ '\.--.:-.-·-·_ __;,_____;_______.... '"

3 - '11lolllllly Sentinel, Pomorw·Mlddleport, Oldo, Mondl,y, Novt~~~ber 3, 11Hl9

Assure .cont~ct: · ·BERRY'S
Duck F1rst Tr1ck

Browns Jolt Cowboys With 42-10 Pounding
ay VITO STELLINO
the Century Division with 1 .5-1UPI $t1or11 writer
1 record and Dallas still has a
Tht Dallas Cowboya. a loam l'h-gamo lead over Washingrtll•lng a nlghlmar..,, wol&lt;e up ton In tho Capitol Dl•lslon. Tht

ly Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

New Appraisals of Marl#uana

.785
"KQJ
tQI08
.QJI08

.

Harsh 'Pot' Laws

'/

s

NOBDI

....
.. ·d
i '

1_. again Sunday.

we"'-

•n

WIIIIT

BAST

•QJl098
"953
"108U
tA72
t988
• 52
.ATU
801JTB (D)
.AKZ
"A76
tKJ54

Under Fire

It was lhe same old story tor
the Cowboys as the Browns
converted two fumbles and a
peas lntorcoptlon Into a quick
2HI lead and waltzed to tho
.....lclory behind fl•e touchdown
~ by Bill Nalsan.
The clubs oro likely to meet
again In the title game, since
C..veland has I wide lead In

•xu

Could this be a vignette of American domestic Ufe ln the
future?:
In tbe evening after a hard day at the office, dad tlll'IIS
on the wall-mounted television set to watch his favorite
program, " The Unreacbables." As a latter-day Elliot Ness
leads his narcotics agents ln a raid against a warehouse
storing illicit marijuana, dad lights up a joint of Acapulco
Gold (Trademark Registered) , sits back m his easy chair
and enjoys , enjoys.
A fantastic and incongruous scene---but no more so than
it might have seemed to Americans in the 1920s bad they
been told that someday people would sit around flickering
boxes watching the exploits of alcobol-law enforcement
agents while they sipped potations of once-forbidden liquor.
There are those who say that the &amp;ltuntion in America
today with regard to marijuana is the same as lt was
during Prohibition with regard to akohol, except tho.t the
former ls far less harmful than the latter. Foolish laws that
should never hove been put on the books are ruining the
lives of many young people, making criminals by definition out of mUIIons of others and fostering general disrespect for the law.
Anthropologist Margaret Mead is the latest, but not the
only, respected ~ubllc figure to advocate repeal of the
laws against marijuana.
"We are damaging our country, our laws and relations
between young and old by Its prohibition," she told a
Senate subcommittee. "This ls far more dangerous than

Bolh vulnerable
Wool Nortla S..lh
IN.T.
3N.T. ~ ~

-.
"7:{~~,~-f-;.

Oswald: "Today Is the age
of specialization. If you want
to be the best at anything,
you have to specialize and
learn all you can about the

•

subject."

·.
/ ...

\

/

Jun: " This means that If
you want to be a top bridge
expert you have to put as
many lazy bids to work as
you can and must use some
bids that are completely

G1,...,H14"'-

'

~

"Alfl you hopi"f lor a lull in Spiro's statements, tool'"

artificial."
\

said, "but anything used to excess ls harmful."
Dr. Joel Fort, a noted psychopharmacologist and, like
Dr. Mead, a nonuser, is another who calla for lifting the
ban on marijuana. Writing in a recent issue of Playboy
magazine, he advocates Its manufacture and sale under
federal licensing and inspection in the Interests of public
health and safety, in the same way that the production of
alcohol is regulated .

Oswald : "At the same
time, you must start by
learning your basic bidding.
Withouf a sound, slm~le,
basic structure to work w1th,
you will get nowbere. Take
today's hand as an example.
The bidding by expert or beginner will be exactly the
same. The expert will make
the hand. The beginner may
not."
Jim: "The beginner will HE'S A GAMBOLING MAN
remalnlngplatonlciY&lt;KI've~
win the first trick and attack Dear Helen:
Invited to see lor your sell. Why
either diamonds or clubs. If
we exchanged dime store ask ME?- H.
he goes after the diamond riDD In the park, but we nev- Dear Helen:
suit, he will knock out the
0u da
...
diamond ace and, while West or really got married because
r
Uflhter recen..., &amp;tartwill be able to get his spade Nick oald he wanted to be sure. ed writing to a Nlprlan pon
suit set up, he won't have an He moved Into Ill)' apartment, pal . Now be says he hal _ ,
entry for it. If he leads a and for five 7eara Pve been accepted b7 several univoral.
club, East will win the trick IKlpl.lli he'd make up his mind, ties In the United Slate1, but
and play a second spade . . but lnotead he concentrated on needs money for the !are orer
West will have his spades
he
set up and will get in with gambling, drlnldlli and occare.
the ace of dtamoiuls to run alonal flings - aa he said, for
Soodra wants to start a lllCIIIthree spade tri&lt;'.ks."
••comparison purposes.'•
e~ raising campaign, but- am
Oswald: "The expert will
When he started dating a 19- I overly suspicious, or ml811tho
let West hold that first trick. year-old girl, ~ being 28, got tske themoneyandrun?- MRS.
Tben It won't matter which upset. one nlibt 1 waited by 0. E.
minor suit be starts with. If the door with a heavy stick Dear Mrs. E:
East gets In, he won't hav.e
a spade to lead. 11 West gets of Drewood, and It's a good
&amp;.oplclon Ia the better part
in, his tooth will have been thin&amp; he didn't show, or he of charley when II comealothls
pulled."
might have landed in the ho&amp;· kind of Hforelgn aidl,.
Jim: "It really doesn't pltall This brougllt things tD a
Have 70Ul" daughter Ilk hor
take much expertise to duck head, and the next day 1 threw pen pal which unheraltieo actbot f~rst spade. We would him out
cepted him, and the name or
He keepa aa,ytng he doesn't his Nigerian sponsor; thai If
expect any real bridge flaYer would do ao. Peculiarly
eno)l•h,. th~ , duck player lovo,Jhla . Jli~l,. ancl Pleallfl,~ , ,sh,., P,4ds, _.::'\')&gt;llre~U. .. !¥1 ,~
0
wliidr'up ·m m&amp;flO "tttl:b. he come back, but I suspect it's lay while all Investigations are
Tlfe'lll.., whll •gnl!s the first more to aave on rent th8n be- · made," Pll bet aho never~&amp;arl'·
spade and happens to play cause he loves me. He prom- from him apinl
~=~~l.~st will wind up laos he'll stop all his bad habP.S. NOTE TO ALL PENIto but Insists marriage still PAUl: II your correspondent
!No_. f-ptill AsmJ
lan't for him, as It would ••kill requests ~-v or -naive

BY JACK O'BRIAN
see anything you like, t e I I in&amp; It like It Is In jails- but
Most older Americans, however, whose contemporaries
NEW YORK - The Shubert&amp; l!l"&amp;ndma" .••• N. Y. lndle gar- not the way the play was writsit in the halls of Congress, the state legislatures and quieti,)' peddled the George Ab- bage collecUon workers plan a len .. .. Varlecy, an alwaya obcounty courthouses and who have been reared to believe bott Theatre •.. . The!Um-mak- strike but they don't realize jectlve play anslyst, calla the
that marijuana is a ·'Jdller drug,"-are not about to press lng Andrew &amp; Vlrglnla Stones there'&amp; a big probe on or rack- scene ua colossal piece of fakfor its legalization In the near future. The nation has
ery."
enough of a social problem with alcohol and tobacco with- apllt after 20 years ..•. Made- et-ron boss swUlmen.
leine Carroll*s wanted for two
Groucho was a sure UghtThirteen of TV'I top 15 day ..
out embracing another vice whose effects on human beBdwy.
plays
..
..
Bardot's
new
hearted
comedy
Marxman
on
time
shows are soap operas
havior are as yet imperfectly known.
.
beau - Paris p.~bliaber Mi. the Merv Grlfftncast. ... Men's ... . Ava · Gardner who vowed
There is also serious question whether the use of mari- chael Engel .... If Men Grlf- enlarging his reaction-sounds she'd never return to Spain
juana is as universal among youth as Is claimed or whether
it has merely been seized upon as a symbol of revolt. Ill- fln'a only 44 , he was an un- to jokes: smutl,y japes got an - will ...• Anc!Y GrUflth Who
considered legalization of marijuana could create a prob- deraged 17 when he sang at the ••Aht'' and an oceallonal uAh- vowed he'd never return to
Waldorf with Freddie Martin's bah!" but anti-Veep A g n e w regular 1V - will ..•. Tallem where one really does not e:i.ist as of now.
But Americans of all ages seem to be reaching a con- bunch of coconuts .... JUs wife swipes elicit from Merv ••Ho- ented little Julie Budd at 15
sensus on one point, and that is that the laws against Luise King won..over AlvinoRey ho-bo!'' . .. . sal Mineo's self- can't sing In N. Y. nlflhtcluba
marjjuana are i n c on s i s t e n t and es.cessively tiarsh, to the Mormon faith after 59 defense for his nakedly oxpllc- so she spends her weekendsespecially when they fall to cllfferentiate between profes- years as a Christian Scienti&amp;t It male-homo-rape scene in the babysitting .... Girls satisfied
sional dope traffickers and those wbo may merely hove ()'ou can't negate a wife) .. .. ugly little warmed-over uFor .. with one mink coat please cooexperimented with tbe stuff by themselves or with friends. Meyer-Davis toy-ahoppin.g tor a tune and Men•s Eyes" on the aider producer ROll Hunter
In South Dakota, for example, until 1968, first-time
grandchild saw a sign, "If you Carson cast was that he was tell. - who )1st bouprt,.M_s -~~-cv"'c!IAP w •jmple pn•eaaion of raariiuana could get
""'' ,,,. •· _,_,,...
W
t-L... w .. L-- , ..
..• . .... . , ..... .. .•.. ,
•• •• ,~ prOI\l.l!lq ..,.,c,,...._,,.,
you 90 days. (This has s!Dce been raised to two to five
- ,
Sanuu,y ,Pavia Jr.-t.lllehlaed .
yean., llut dcross the "state linellrNorth Dakota-, tho very ··
frted chicken reataurants w~u
sliine offense carries a penalty of 99 years at hard labor.
be kosher.
Dr. James L. Goddard, former director of the U.S. Food
The new sensaUon _ book
and D~ Administration, Is confident that on the basis
(meanlng dlrly) '"Miami Goldof scientific Investigations that are now being conducted
en Boy" baa a ch~;Hcter who
--,
··--.,
-"we will know in a very few years bow harmful lt
is a fat clown,llkea booZe and
I
sometlrlngbeautltul."
glfte (even on an "aehan....
(marijuana) is or is not."
girls and naturall111lQ" rei&amp;DIHe's so smooth be coulci balls) drop himl Tbero are •
In the meantime, It would seem that the nation mlRbt
blance to lllQ"one no doubt llvprobably have charmed Carrie low who figure the rich Amer.
safely support the Nixon administration's recommendation
lng or away-we-so doli&gt;tleasla
Nation out of her axe, but In lean Is a oet-up for a llllakethat marijuana be reclassified from a hard narcotic, which
it Is not, to a bollucogen, which it is, and reduce personal
sheer coincidence without a
Q-The bldcllng hu been:
Ill)' aane momenta I knoW he down.- H.
.
By ItAY CROMLEY
possession or use from a felony to a misdemeanor-while
doubt --·- While the Mets man- Weol
Nortla
Eat ~ Ilea, cheats (even at cardl),
Thla column 11 -••ted to
continuing to crack down on the pushers and wholesalerS.
NEA Washington Correspondent
Pass
agement Ia jlllm"ing about hcJ1f ~
and has stolen ll1tllley from family Uvlng, soU you're hev1
1•
As Vermont Royster, editor of the Wall Street Journal,
You, South, hold:
me 1111en he couldn't sweet Wk In&amp; kid trouble or )1st plain
WASHINGTON INEA) rnuch It'll have to pay all Its
has observed, stesling a loaf of bread used to be punished
genius
bollplayers
next
year,
•AK
7S.AZ
ti•AK
U
meoutorlt.
tr&lt;Kible, let Helen llolp YOUI
7
8
The beadlines go to student moratoriums, demonstrations
by boaging in England. It Is still against the law to steal
its
front
office
gang
was
given
What
do
you
do
now?
So
ll'by
do
[
atlll
care
for
She will also welcome )'0111'
bread In England, but today the punishment is more nearly and marches and to judge-halting in Chicago.
a
healthy
booua.
A-Chock
to
...
that
yoa
luove
this
cad?WEAKENING
own amusing experiences. Adcommensurate with the crlme.
But some quiet new shifts in tactics now being instituted
~
S.
J.
Perelman
1n
New
Yorkboon!
correetly.
Tlloa
bid
!oar
Dear
Weakenln&amp;:
dress Helen - . 1 In care ot
Tbe same, he thinks, ought to be true of smoking by student groups across the United States promise to be
er
mae
says
the
modern
"orld
no-tnamp.
•
•.
For
the
nme
reaaon
10
thUI
news_paper.
considerably more significant In cbangiag the nation's unimarijuana.
versities, and, if successful there, in bringing student influ- la telescoping Its cultures so
~ susceptible women fall
ence to bear on national and international problems.
that ••Girls in Bangkok a r e
tor ..gamboling"' men: Their
e Stadenll are lvDIDI IG the law to get college rules, sucking Eskimo Plea between
8 A R 8 S
free and esey charm cons the
regulations and ad min is tr a t i v e procedures changed. temple dances and Watuli war.
pia Into thinking everything
They're employing highly paid attorneys from some of the rlor dances heve to be ltagBy PHIL PASTORET
will be better - tomorrow.
nation's largest and most prestigious firms .
ed because the warriors really
Of course, fish Ia brain
II you take Nick back, 7ou"ll
Much of what passes for bargaining In labor-management
e b a number of test cases, students are taking college
go
around
In
khald
fati81es.
~
food.
Consider
wbot
it
does
be
stuck with a cad In a house
relations resembles the process of buying a rug in an Ara- authorities to court on student ri~ts. Attorneys say the
..•.
Tne:
and
bell7
dancers
for
the
Imagination
of
the
or
cards.
Don•t weaken! - H.
bian bazaar.
young people are winning a major1ty of these cases.
now
are
being
exported
to
the
angler.
Dear
Helen:
A union may know pretty well what a company can alThe college administrators, these students and their
• • •
M1 husband reeently joined
ford in the way of wage raises and improved fringe bene- attorneys assert, over the years hove grown so used to Middle East, hula dancers are
exported
to
Howat!
a
n
d
For
the
offil:e
wolf,
it's
a
nudist club that ps doWn
fits. The company in turn may have a good idea of what exereislng power they have grown slack in their methods
borscht
to
the
Cataldlla.
always
open
season
for
to
Its
private beach every mornits employes are willmg to accept. But as With the rug and make their decisions without due regard to common
dear hunting.
seller and rug buyer, it would be unseemly for either side legal P.ractices. Attorneys claim college officials are thus
11The
Happy Ending" 11 a
• • •
ing for a aunrlH dip, no mat..
to come right out and say what it is willing to settle for .
like s1ttlng ducks when brought to court.
new film and uSad Fndl.ng" a
ter how cold. He says there••
Of c o u r s e, they have
h••"'· --•Each , therefore, approaches the other with totally unrealLegal procedures these students are foUowing now must new rock l!l"OOP .... Fredorlck fewer wrecks on the rail- no -uv-.-ov, and If I doubt
istic demands, knowing that sooner or later, after a good not be confused with the clrcuslike stage show now 1:.!\'g Loewe who wrote the original road than on the highway. It, join them. But he l&lt;nows I
show of negotiating toughness and savvy, the issuance of on In Chicago in which Black Panther chief Bobby
e, ataae melodies for 11 Palnt Your
won't because 1 can't ltand
ula matums and deadlines and maybe even the calling of a David Dellinger and six others are on trial for their activiWagon~
(oot
to
mention
"My
cold water and early riling.
strike, they will reach essentially the same agreement they ties In Chicago during the Democratic national convention
Fair
Lady,"
''Brlpdoon,"
etc.)
Toll
me, Helen, can nudists had
coul1 have reached in the beginning.
last year . The student cases this column refers to are but reUred loWly from mualc
romnln
platonic? - DOUBT. to
Company negotiators are thereby enabled to go hack to stralgbt legal cases fought according to es"bllshed proceafter
"Lady''
will
make
another
FUL
It
the bo~d of directors to tell how they stood up to the dures.
fortune
from
the
uw&amp;ga~"
tllm:
Dear
Doubtful:
cities.
union ; union leaders can go back to their membership and
e S&amp;udenta are uainl medlator,._usually skilled attor111 cold Nov be
ing from
tell how they made the c ompany knuckle under. Every- neys-to negotiate with college olflclals In long selllions five albums and 26 stngte rec- How often do you see the
em r water' at soning to
body is happy .
reminiscent of labor union-management bargaining. These ords have been waxed alread7 engineer with his arm sunrise: Yea - I rather lmag- the birds seem to
Since the 1940s. one major firm in the United States bas meetings are aimed at securing concessions on student ..•. Thesmut..ftlm .. Baby.Do11," around the fireman?
1M nudists have no trouble oing the street war.
refused to be a pa rty to this process.
rigbts.
Alle r care ful study not only of its own present and proStudents on a growing number of university campuses loerlcs as "A FUm Y&lt;KI WUI
~
jected fin a ncial position but of wage trends in other industoonthestrea
with waa
thus are using the most effective
of the more peddled
Never
See
Television,"
tries, the general economic situatlon in the nation as a suc:eeasful labor unions-bargaining, g
experts ta do
whole and estimates of changes in the economy during the research and to teD them what their rights are, using the object of a $675,000 bid by
CBS. Varlet¥ reports •.•• So the
MRS. CHIL.BI.AIN CALI.IP, Tloll
LOOK WI40 TMl'f SINTou fiND
life of the pending contract, General Electric puts forward courts.
drive Is on to flltlu"""'P the nsBURNER SER.VICE ~MiNT
OH, VI6"•TMI 011. BURNER IS IM
what it consi ders to be a fair offer. It is presented on a
The next step may well be that student associations or
ta ko-it-or-leave-it basis, with no holding back for later contlon's1V~bes.
~AJ:I
PL.IiNTV
OF
lo'.EH
~VAII.A~I···
A ISXIS UTIUTV ROOII.•• •
cession s. a lthough the company has always stated its will· otber student groups, like labor unions, may well ask for
Huae
ada
otrer
franchises
....,_.
__
mgness to modify its offer in the light of additional infor- eertlflcatlon as bargaining agents lor the undergraduate for "Allee' s Rartaurantl"
and graduate men and women on campus.
mation supplied by the unions .
Lobbying groups composed of paid professlonal&amp;--legal causa of the hit 10111 and film
The method is called " Boulwarism." after the former
GE vice president , Lemuel R. Boulware, who ori~ inated it. or publicity ezperts-may be sent to state Jeglslatum aDd of the same tiUe - lilt there
And " Bo ulwarism ," not money. is the real issue m the cur- to Congress to quietly work on the lawmakers In the tradi- hallft been a real Alice's Rea ..
taurant in several year• .••.
~"'"'·
rent nationwide strike against GE by a coalition of 13 tional manner.
These steps could be highly effective. The students and The GOP will steal a notion
union s.
The company' s approach makes good sense from a student groups Involved fn this new trend seem to hove from lndoatry: companies seod
strictly lo~ical standpoint. but H is poor psychology . Union ample funds . They have a large constituency that ban out amh!Uoos orliilnal must cal ~'-'- ,_
offic ial s. like anybody else, like to feel they are performing shown an ability to get involved emotionally.
shows to dramaUze their In maneuvering thus far, students have been fighting
a useful function and are ea rning their pay.
docta
to cuatomora - and the
The compa ny .has also been guilty of going over the heads principaDy for a loosening of college regulations on how Repubs wiD do the aame topedor behind the backs of union officials by taking its case di- and where they shall live, on how they may be expelled, dle their political wares -· -rectly to its employes. This , too, has been honest, straight- who shall deal with them and under what rules when acforward and log1cal- and paternalistic. It is also, it now cused of campus violations and for a larger student voice The backlot acuttle Ia that
In college policy.
Mike Fr.ankovld1's •'Doc:tora'
seems, ittegal.
In
the
background
there
is
a
strong
movement
against
Wlvoa"
movie wilt make The
The U.S. Court of Appeals in New York , upholding a 1ll64
grades,
against
required
class
attendance,
against
the
conKlnoey
Report
look like Bobbdecision by the National Labor Relations Board, has r:ded
that " Boulwarism" violates the mandate of the National siderable number of r e q u I red courses for graduation, sey Twins research.
Labor Re lations Act that parties to a labor dispute must against the way courses are taught and lor the addition of
some new courses.
bargain " in good fa ith ."
But with the growing student discussion of the Vietnam
Thu s, unless the deci sion is reappealed and overturned,
war,
defense expenditures, race, the slums and state and
A gem Is not polished
GE mu st get in line w1th all the other companies in Amernational
politics there Is nothing to atop the students from without rubbing, nor a man
ica and start enga ging in blustering, posturing and phony
following the lead of the nation's labor unions In using their made perfecl without trials.
figuring .
lnOuence on these major problems.
-Chinese proverb.
Rug dealers , rejoice .

n,·,.

RAY CROMLEY

Students Are Going Legal
To Bring Colleges to Heel

WORLD

Well, Back to the Old
Bargaining Table . . .

..'

becks, Bill Kilmer and Chorley
Johnson, threw six touchdown
palMI.
Hal P.rfJict lit-.!
lri . thl- Western c00ieret1ce,

L&lt;1s Angeloa-tho Cosslol Division leader-became the only

tum In pro football with o
perfect record, 01 II boosted Its
mark to 7-0 with a 38-' romp

' · '~'i':l . ·

any overuse." ·
Marijuana is safe unless taken in excessive amounts, she

'

Rodlklna lost to Baltimore, 41 -

ll1eu wore auppoaed to be 17. Cio.. l - • two IHdlnll.
thl "new" CowboY$, but they challengers
boolon as
looked llko tho old """ who New York Iosito Phllodoiphlo,
could never win the "big" 23-20, and St. Loula was upset
oeme when they were blasted by Now Orlean&amp;, 51-G, In a wild
by ll1e Cleveland Browns, G-10. 11""'" In which both quarter ·

tee=••

Hado's They'll Do It
ad-~======~~~~:!~~~~~~!:~~·
=~=~
=:::J
So

ISiwmCH -..

..

ov•r

to stop five Miami drives In·

slda the 20-yard line In the second hall was due largely to

Davis and Tyler who "shut ott
Miami's option ploy&amp; by pinch·
lng In and forcing the play Inside."

w .,._

....0

o
o

Reterves

Carroll, 31 - 13.
In addition. Ashland and Cop·
ltal played 1 7 · 7 standoff
while Heidelberg end Otterbein
tied, 14 - 14.

which decided the championship
"It was a broken pass play,''
Fair said.
"The satetyman was rolling
up and left ma alone. I'd like
to hava that happen everytlme.
"When I got rlghl up to the
guy, I knew It was six points
on the board. He just sat there.
We might have been able to get
more deep patterns later, but

we didn't hove any kind of field
position."
Bill Mallory , Mloml's hood
moment In football," Lauterbur
coach, was gracious In defeat.
said.
"We lust couldn't get lhe ball
The win was Toledo's seventh
In there. It was as simple as
that. It was a great defensive

loolbell game. " he said.
"Toledo played

a fine game

Toledo started football In 1917. and I hope they win the Tong.
All the scoring In Saturday's .,.Ina Bowl. We lust couldn't
clash at OKtord

Coach Bill Adams' Hannan
High WDdcats came out on tq&gt;
14-12 In a wild mud-soaked bettie Saturday night at North Galtla Hljjlt School. Awroxlmately 50 spectators braved the ol·
ements to watch the contest.
It waa the !IIIII pme of tbe
season for theWDdcatswhofinlshed with a 6-3 record. Randy
ThOODP8011, senior !lanker, who
had srored a total of 120 points
in the first eight games, was
helci scoroleS&amp;
The loss for Coach Mel Carter' s North Gallia Pirates loll
them with a ~ record, wtth
one pme left on the slate. North
Gallll travels to Glouster noxt
Friday nlghL
It was no night for pai81Jw:
but the WDdcats took to the airlanes a lew times and almost
had three or four Intercepted.

ll1e first hall.
to."
and gained only SO yards rushOhio Stele rolled to lh 20th
Miami grabbed a 1 - o load
on Cleve Dlcerson~s two - yard straight win, 35 - 6 ovt1r North-

1~annan took a6-il"tesd ~the

western.
Oollonce

By United Preas International
Ohio Slate 35 Northwestern 8
Dayton 32 Xavier 14
Kent Slate 35 LoulevUie 6
Ohio U. 22 Western Mlchlpn
17
North Texas Slate 31 Clnclnnatf.

so

first period
blanked

leJan

14

K011l011 24 Oberlin 0
Ohio Northern 17 B l - D
Marietta 20 MI. Union 12
HUisdale (Mich.) 49 Findlay 2
Centre (Ky.) 21 WUmlngton 7
Defiance 21 Central Slate 0
Wittenberg 4S Bucknell&amp;
Akron 9 Central lollchlpn 6
Jotm Carroll 31 llethoa.Y (W.
va. 16
Alloght!llf 28 Case Tecl17
Olterbeln 14Heldelber&amp; 14(tie)

Thomp-

son scored from 20 yards out

State, 21 . 0, for Its eighth

with 1:5S left lntheperlod.11lat
was good enoush for a six point
lead, 6-0 at halftime.
The Pirates tied It 6-6 with
1:41 left In the third period as
Alna Hall scooted seven yards
lor the touchdown. The try for
the extra points faDed.
North Gallla went ahead 12-6

straight of lhe season.
In olher games: Kent Stole
ripped Louisville, 35 · 6, os Phil
Wllhenpoon rushed lor 242 yard
end three TDa; l&lt;anyon whipped
"Oberlin, 24 - 14; Ohio Northern
shut out winless Btulllon, 17 -

Toledo 14 Miami 10
lor two touchdowns.
Marahell 21 Bowling Gr- 18
Baldwin · Wolloce ripped Ohio
'l1tlol (PL) 43 Weoternlleserve Wesleyan, 36- 14, as Mike Balke
22

w'-J.~rry

Central

O, as Damon lnfalvl plunged

Aabland 7 CopiW 7 (tie)
Mllklngum 20 DenliOO 7
Yotlll&amp;stown State 20 Southeastem La. 7
Wooater 28 lllram 8
Baldwin-Wallace 36 Oldo Wes-

passed for two touchdowns ;
Gary Koslns scored four touch ·

downs In Dayton's 32 _ ,. win
over Xevler; Akron edged ten.
tral Michigan 9-6, ·qn Chuck
Shuman's 4t1 • yard pass to
Jock Beldelmon.
Olher wins went to Marlette
over Mt. Union, 20 - 12; Youngs.
town stole over Soulhaoslern
Louisiana, 20 - 1; North Texas
Slate over Cincinnati, 31 · 30;
Wooster ...,. Hiram. 28 - 6;
Musklngum over Denison, 20- 7
Marshall over Bowling Green,
21 - 16; Ohio U. over Western
Michigan, 22 - 11; unbeaten
Wittenberg over Bucknell, &lt;IS •
6; Hillsdale !Micll.) over FindJay, 49 . 2; Centre (Ky.) over
Wilmington, 21- 7; Thiel (Pa.J
over Western Roserve, o13 - 22.
1

Wisconsin at Ohio Slate (BT) Cleveland 42 Dallas 10
advantage of Daklond's loss to
New Orleana 51 st. Louis 42 move Into first place by
ClnctnnaU at LouleviUe
Dayton at VUlanova
PhD 23 N01f York 20
whipping Buffalo, 29-7. In other
Middleport. The lofelgs re- Bowling Green atOhloU.(MAC) BalUmore 41 Waah 17
games, New York edged
served were defeated 22-0 Miami at Maryland
Minnesota 31 Chicago 14
Miami, 34-31; Boston blanked
by the Belpre reserves ear- Toledo at Northern Dllnols
Detroit 26 San Fran 14
Housfon, 24-0, and Denver shut
ller.
Sunday's
Games
out
San Diego, 13-0.
~;;~::·!!:·"'·"'
. o::r.&lt;o~mx.:·~.,~ZW Marshall at Kent State
•
lllram at Otterbein (OC) (N) New Orleans at Dallas
Jan Stenerud'sllvelleld goals
Muaklngum at Heidelberg (OC) Plllla at Waahlngtoo
and two pass Interceptions by
Johnny Robinson sparked the
Baldwin-Wallace at CapiW(OC) Atlanta at Detroit
Chleh to their aeventh victory
San Fran at Loa Angeles
Wooster at Wlttenberg(Oq
against one loss. Stenerud's
Ohio Wesleyan at Oberlin (OC) Cleveland at Minnesota
kicks ranged from 18 to 47
Kenyon at llamllton (N.Y.)
New York at St. Louis
as the lourtb period got under- Denison at Wabash (Ind.)
yards, with a 37-yarder In the
Pittsburgh at Chicago
first minute of the final period
way, Bobby Ratliff went one Marietta at West Virginia Woo- Green Bay at BalUmore
yard to score with 10:46 left tn
leyan
putting the Chiefs ahead for the
field Ia In satisfactory condiUon. II not, It will be at

Grid Scores
By United Press International
Dennison st. Mary 0
Indian Valley North D(tie)
Newark Catholic 14 Denville 12
McDonald 57 sp'&amp;flelci Local14
Milan Edison 28 Black River 0
Huron 13 Fostoria

Wilmington at Mt. Union
The tying touchdown was Central State at B l made with 4:50 left In the tourtb
period when Uirl")' Thompson Wl,s;:nBln at &amp;lperior at Ashraced 36 yards to score, That Youngstown State at Akron
made It 12.-12. The extremely I Ohio Northern at Grove Clt;y
Important pme wtnnlng extra
(Pa.)
points were ocored by Tom Dal- C
g1a M 11 8 t w te R
68 rn e.
ton on a run as the WUdcats arne
e on
serve
upset the Pirates 14-12,
Findlay at Jolm Carroll
Hannan • • • • • - 0 6 0 8- 14 Case Tech at Rochester InatlNorth Gallla , , , 0 0 6 6-12
tute
,=AA.:....:m.T!!
Defiance at Anclerson(lnd.)
JACKSON - Members of
BT - Big Ten Conference
the Southeastern OhloSportsMAC - Mld-Amerlcon Conwriters am Broadcasters As- ference
soclation wiU meet Sunday,
OC - Ohio Conference
November 9, to select the
N - Nlght Game
1969 Ali-SEOAL
footbetl
team.
The meeting wiU be held at

Jolly Lanes Bowtlng Center in
Jackson starting at 1 p.m.
An of · the league's eight
head football C&lt;Bches are lovlted to attend the .e'sslon to
aid the scribes and casters in
selecting the 22 best tootball
players In the 1...,, the 16
honorable mention players,
the most valuableplayer,and
the coach of the year.

Globe

~

'f1
~

-

rotters our

John ntmehlll, 't7, the ,..
tlon'a No. 2 nlnked table tennis
player, began a four-do¥ tour
today with the Harlem Gllmters with Clnelnnatlaathelr

l!l.ae.

He Ia s~ for onetime "orlci ~loll, Frank
Beraman or Erwlaad,. called
&amp;"IIV 117 an Ul-1 In hla l'llm111,-haatouredwiththel'llmous beokotball team the pool
the y.,a as • halftime Plll·
blUon ~r teaming with
oiMr w o r - pla,yerL
Tolllllhl1l wlll be pl.o,)'bwwlth

anGiber Iormor WOI'Id~lon
Fualtl. of j..,. Beflllllll'l
· - pu1Der on the tour.
. FrfoiiJr tho Middleport yoolh

111¥

to Dllrolt fr&lt;lm Clncinnati wharo he wlll beiiln throe
dill of .,.,..,....lon leldllltl tho

olio tabht - · ' - In tJe.

Include Tannahill and llll1 Jooo
Lee, Cleveland, U. S. SlJw:leo
champion.
'11la 1969 national tesm chsmplonahlpo have drawn a record
80 men's, 17 women's lnd 10
Junior teams, each cOIIlj)Ooedot
at leaot three players. Ohio
alone h sending eight men's
tll0lll8. Tonnohlll, having defeated Lee In theOldotesmtrlala
a lllOltb oao, 11001 to Coho aa
No. 1 on Ohio' a No. I team. Lee
Is No. 2, Don Lyons, 33, 111yton,
Ia No. 3 and Ed - , . . 38, Dayton. Is No. 4 and tha alternate.

when Gustave Ring's .t-year-old
colt was nominated by John D.
Shapiro, president of Laurel
Race Course.
Czar Alexander, who rar\ the
fastest 1112 miles on greu In
American Thoroughbred history
In winning the $100,000 Qak

-lllllahlia.-

T-a ~(po It Coho ond In each P'&lt;lOP llltllt.. ""'-

Thua; no IAIIIIl. even ~
;flaf ~ Frkltt1 eveq llllde ~ 111 tha leaat aklll6d
"Ill! raullil-robln matcl,1oa b.-. pla,yera, lo allmlnated fr&lt;lm. a:::::;.""'
ot tho U, S. ' coljlO!illCI!.
'
}!;~~:£~~~=
'' :;"'
· 111!·lliloabart
~ 19*1 Whicb wul
-

lltiQ.

.

W. L.
New York
6 2
H&lt;Kiston
4 4
Buffalo
2 6
Miami
I 6
Boston
1 7
West
W. L.
Kansas Clcy
7 I
Oakland
6 I
San Diego
4 4
Clnclmati
4 4
Denver
4 4

MeKinley

marked ll1e first limo tho
Broncos ever shut out thllr
opponent during a regular
season game.

Pet.
.750
.500
.250
.143
.125

D
1
0
0
0

.875 Ellloll blocked a Mloml punt
.857 and Randy Beverly recovered
on the Dolphins' 31.
.500
.500
.500
&amp;mday' s Results
Kentucky 104 Carolina 102

The Jm rallied from an 11polnt halftime deficit to defeat
the Dolphins on a 36-yord lleld

goal by Jim Turner with only
2:41 remaining . Turner's tleld
goal was made possible when
T. Pet. Jets' defensive tackle John

&amp;m.:la3' s Results

ClncinnaU 31 Oakland 17
Kan City 29 B'lffalo 7
New York 34 Miami 31
Denver 13 San Diego 0

Ml~o;.!":!':~~
Monday's Games

New York

Milwaukee
PhUadelphla
Baltimore
Detroit
Booton
ClndMaU

East
W.
10
6

e
•e
L. Pd. GB e
I .909
e
4 .800 3
•

....-

ONLY .

·

'299

lASON

!:.~M~illl

co.

. MASCIM, ••.YA.

LAVER VOTED AWARD
NEW YORK (UPI)-Rod
Laver has been voted the
Martini and Rossi Tennis
Player of the Year Award lor
the second consecutive year.
Laver, the only player ever to
score two grand slams, wlhnlng ~

FREE

:

ZlnithOullityflltUIII

•

• Handmlted Chilli$

•

• Custam '"Ptrriii·SII'" VHF filii
Tunin1

•

• 3-Siage If Amtllilier
.. front Mountld Spelkar

e

i

e
e

Gl!

'II e
'h
'h e )

2\-1 e
4\-1 e
4'h :
e
e
116 e
e
:

gg.9s

e

The MOBILON • At333

Of&lt;.•

•

•e
e
e

L. Pet GB e
•
6 I .875

w.

'h e
e
1\-1 e

Pittsburgh

8 2 .750
4 2 .667

Carolina

4 4 .SOD 2\-1

Kentucky

S1()95 v.We'

•••
••e
•••
••
••
••
••
••
••
••

~ ~ :~~ t'h :

B7 United Preasllltemational
Eut
Indiana

e,
e

4 3 .5~4 \ :
4 5 .4 5 -.:
3 4 .42 5 e
\

•

includes

Exc itin g com pact Super
Scre en TV features a
handso m e sc u l ptured
multi- c ol ored cab in et
fashioned in cll:loil. modern rectengular lines. In
Grained Amer1can Walnut
color and Gold color. or
Grained Pecan color and
Silver color.

•

TVSTAno·i

•

I

Ie

•
3 5 .375 3\-1 •
'Mig . SUQ9fl led 111111 prtt;l
•
3 6 .833 4 •
West
W. L. Pet. GB
? 4 .636
Dallas
Loa Angeles 5 5 .5110 1\-1
Waahlngton
4 5 .444 2
:
MIDDLEPORT
:
New Orleans 3 8 .333 3
e Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Hlghto
Phono 992·2635
e
2
7
.222
4
Denver
eeeeeeeee•••e••••e•••••••••e••

New York
Miami

•

•

: Ingels Furniture

the U.S., British, Frencll and
Australian titles, was chosen
unanimously In balloting of an
International panel of tennis
writers from five countries.

HEYI. ..
that's bad fot the blood prNturel

~

-_..

When trouble comes in bunches, it strains
both the family budget and the nervous
system. Before you hit the ceiling, give us a
call. Chances are we can salve your problem
and soothe your nerves. When money's the
question, the ana-r is City loan.

AND SAVINCI COMP.ItiiY

LOANS W TO $SODII
Avellalsle Through Our

C-M Con1p11ny

..

rv""'

125 E. MAIH

992-2171

'

POMEIIOY, 0 •.

•

-"7,-·----.
·~-- ·--'
.,

.

••
•••

By United Press InternaUonal

ABA Standings

•

!:1~14~Co:·:rt:~~-:;==~~~
e~

•.:e

NBA Standings

Fight

rorm rev

Pho,. 992·2.966

eei~e.~•e•••eee•••••
~
e

West
W. L. Pet.
6 3 .667
Atlanta
San Francisco 4 2 .667
Los Angolea
5 3 .625
Results
Chicago
5 3 .625
Phoenix
3 5 .375
By United Press lllternatlonal
Seattle
1 7 .125
NEW ORLEANS(UPI) - Bob
San
Diego
I 7 .126
Foster, 180, Washington, slop&amp;mday's Results
ped Chuck uslie, 180, New
AUanta
125 Seattle 113
Orleans (5).
ClnclnnsU 124 Los Ang

STOF A TO LIONS
CINCINNATI (UPll - Jolm
Stoia third string quarterback
for ,j,. ClnclnnaU Benpla, has
_ , &amp;lsned by the Detroit Uons Bengal&amp; head coach Poul
B '
ealed &amp;mday

Dnls-W•r••l•s.

New Orleans at Wash
(Oal7 game scheduled)

ClnctnnaU Blll.ouston
Denver at Qakland
COLUMHUS (UPI) - Niles
San Dleao at Kana Clcy
McKinley blanked SteubenvUie
Miami at Boston
16.0 In the battle ot Class AA
Buffalo at New York
glanta. II was the only game
in which a member of United
Press lnternational•s Top Ten
suffered defeat over the week-

Dale Warner

lhe final perlocl.

T.
o
0
0
I
0

SUnday's Games

Blanks Big Red

ble as the American entrants In
next week'' race.

3 ROOMS
'l1le
~~-:r;;~~Ci~·11 U - F-urniture
becln 117 seeding
tesma

,.... of Ill title In tho NllloMI . '"""'-,

East

Monday's Games
TOKYO (UPI) - Ruben NaNew
York
at Milwaukee
Tree Stakes at Santa Anita, varro, l29o/4 , Los Angeles,
(Only pme acheduled)
joins Cragwood Stable's Hawaii stopped Ken.ii Iwata, 131'4' Jaand Verna Lea Farm's Nodou- pan(3) .

ON USS ENTERPRISE
East Calton 6 Dover 6 (tie)
CLIFTON - Machinist Male
Now ulllqiton 7 New concord 0 Second Class Charles R.
Malvem 18 Garaway 6
Fugate, USN, son of Mr. end
Ballaira 16 Martins Ferry 6 N'n. Hershel Fugate, Is serolng
aboard the nuclear . powered
BrUllant 20 Duton&gt;a1e 0
aircraft
carrier USS Enterprise
NOes McKinley 16
at
Newport
News, Va.
Steubenville 0
Steubenville Celtral 21
Weirton. W. VL 0
CAPTAINS INTREPID
Canton Lobman 29
NEW YORK (UPIJ-Wllllam
canton Gl-ood 6
Ficker.
a 41-yoar-old orchlloct
Canton C. 211 Conton Aqulras 0
from
Newport
Beoch, Calif.,
Cleve. Glenville 20
Sunday
woa
chosen
captain of
Cleve. John Hay 12
lhe
Intrepid,
the
successfUl
Cleve. St. (flllotius 28
Amerla'a Cup deiJildor In 1967,
Cleve. Wast Tech 12
tor the 1970 cup races oft
Parma 8 Garllold Hellhts 6
Newport. R.I.
Ashtabula Edpwood 32
Ficker succoods Eol.ll "Bus"
Alhlllbula St. Johol2
Mosbacher
Avon 6 Brookside 6 (tlo)
Warren Harding 46
aror..-., W. VL D

naUon'o...,.
ohlpa
peri!lpa
lh1l year 10
111111 placllltl
tho nonalnlng 50 llto10P'&lt;IOP&amp;
by draw wltb-le!IIDLSoturday the ...,.s In •eh P'&lt;lOP
m.eot each other. Sin~ lhe
teaiDI flnlahl'* llrot 'In eaeh

Nilet~

first time, 9-7.
Robinson's two Interceptions
set up scoring runs of 34 and
five yards by Mike GarreH In

By United PresolllternsUonal

end.
Players named to the allNDes McKinley had been
league .. dream team" will be ranked fltth and SteubenviUe's
honored guests at the All- Big Red just a notch below in
SEOAL Football Banquet to sixth place.
be hold ln Jackson on '11lursUpper Arlington, within a
clay, Dec. 4.
step of Its third stral!!bt 'AA'
1ill!l!l!'l':'Jt'l':'Jtllm-llllilllllll811l11811R title, blanked Marietta, 28-ll,
"
for Its 29th straight win. The
Golden Bears can closeout their
COLT NOMINATED
third
straight unbealen season
LAUREL, Md. IUPIJ ~ Re­
cord-smashlng Czar Alexander with a win over visiting Lanbecame the third U.S. horse caster Friday.
Invited to the SISO.OOO Washing·

st. Welll'n 0 ton. D.C., International Sunday

Marion Cath. 14 No. Union 12
Sandusky st. Mary 37 Clyde 6
Carrollton 24 West Branch 8
Crestwood 34 Southeast D
Ctn. Moeller 19
Cln. st. Xavier 19
Dolts 18 Tol Norlhwoodl8(tie)
Shaker Hgts 14 Cleve. llgts. 12
Pittsburgh (PL) Shadyside o
H..UOn West. Rea. Acad o
Cleveland C. C, 12
Rlchll1011d Heights 8
Lutheran West 34 Beachwood 12

AFL Standinga

the contest.

Middlenart
Youth -on Man·=.n~~~!..~2(tio)
T 'I'!

This Week's

u
ITJ:"ld t w;:•
nannan
"' l ca s"' lR

toOk place In generate the push when we had The Pirates ne-ver threw a pass

College Seores

Play

Grid Games

Bethany (W. Va.) over John

"This Is my most sallstylng

overall, Including five In MAC
warfare, and moved the Rockets
within three victories of an unbeaten season - the first since

NFL Sttuulinga

Mlnnuata games but the six TO peuet by TD po- 11 ll1e Rams
whipped Chlcal[1&gt;. 31-14, lo Kilmer and Ernie Wheel- remained unbeaten with the By United Prell fnternatlclnal
East
retain a one.geme lead over wright's run for a seventh victory over Atlanta while Joe
Cent1lr)o
DIYIIIon
. , Fit ED McMANE
on
two
acorlng
TDa
aa
l&lt;app
hit
Green Bay, which edgod csrrlod the Saints past St.
AFL llt1 I_'
W.
L.
T.
Pd.
PlttsiMJrgh, 38-:U, In 1M Central Loula lhlo time. Four of lho VIking&amp; toppod Chlc-vc&gt;.
Uf'ISporloJoe Namalh .,..
5 1 1 .833
Bart Starr came off 111e Cleveland
One c:eok can spoil ll1e broth. · - , . . . , Including •
Division.
John-'&amp; olx TD P I - - •
3 4 0 ,429
Tht Ookland Raldon Clll1 pair to Don Mlt)'MI'd wllldl
Oe'trolt beat Sen Francisco, to Dave Williams. New Orleans bench In tho fourth period and N01f York
st.
Louis
2
4 I .333 beer wll_. to thai alotemont . ..,.bled ll1e -"'Y I I - ID
26-14ln lhe other game.
buill up a 51 -21 lnd end lhrow a &lt;43-yord TD peas to
1 &amp; 0 .143 Tbe Raiders aullorod lllelr first &amp;at ., AFL .--d lor moe!
Carroll Dale wllh 4: &lt;IS left , as Pltlabur811
aa·lllmore Coach Don Sllula cooslod lo the win.
lhe Packers edged Plltlborgh.
Cllpltol DIYUIAJa
shook up hla lineup and two
Th-. Two TO Poloa&amp; of ""' - - SUnday .. CAil"ftr loucl1downl (13). MeyW. L. T. Pd. rookie quarterback Grog Cook Mrd, who caught
now starters, linebacker Bob
Norm SnHd lhrow two Terry Hanratty throw lwo TD
6 I 0 .857 ralurned to action lor 1M llraf tor 121 ~·ds· tiiO boc:8me tho
Grant and cornerb«k Tom touchdown passes to Ben paues lor Plltaburgh bul was Dallas
4 2 I .887 time In tour weeks and sparked first pro r«alvor 1o
tho
Maxwell. Intercepted paa101 as Hawkins--tho second with 1:06 stunned when hit by Ray Washington
3 4 0 .429 1M Clncl..,..i Bangols to 1 31- 10,000y- .......
lhe Colts blaafod Washington. lelt-to gl .. Phllodolphla 1M Nllachl&lt;eln the third perlocl and Philadelphia
Rookie linebacker Ted Hen- victory over New York. Safety lett the game In favor of Dick N010 Orlean&amp;
Mlko Ttllllerro- o pair
I 8 0 .143 17 upset by Iossing lor lwo
touchdown I.
drlcks also started 11 veterans Bruce Maher tell down on the Shiner.
West,
of louc:l1-. io raokle
Bobby Williams ron 1M
Coot&lt;, who milled four gamu Ron Seller&amp;, " 1M l'lllrklll
Dennis Gaubatz, Lenny Lyles winning touchdoWn ptay end
Central Dlvlalon
and Don Shinnick were ,left Hawkins uncovered. The MCOIId-hall kickoff. back 71
W. L. T. Pet because of an arm Injury, broke a .--d niM_.
benched. Tom Matte scored Giants Intercepted tour of yards end Lem Barney followed Minnesota
6 1
.857 Qlnnecled on 11 of 19 PIIMI tor Joalng slrHk by -lng tho
with e 50-yard punt return to Green Bay
lhroo touchdowns lor tho Colts. Snead's pasaos bul still lost.
Oilers. Tht shutout tho
5 2
.714 119 yards, Including ld New Orleans lost Its first six
Roman Gabriel tossed three set up scores that carried Datrolt
4 3 0 .S71 of 35 and eight yards to llral ever acored by tho
Detroit past Sen Francisco.
Patriots on IMir home lltltl In
Chicago
0 7 0 .0011 substitute end Chip Myers.
their
10-yeor history, and tho
The 1011 was . eapeclally
CooaW Division
1o
W. L. T. Pet, harmful to the Raiders as It 1011 dr~ ""' Ollorl """
games belllnd 1M Jets In tho
Los Angeles
7 D 0 1.000 dO"Of'llod them out of first place
The Melp Marauder reIn tho American Foolbell Eastern Division .
BalUmore
4 3 0 .571
League's Western Dlvlalon. Th•
serves (3-2) will host t h e
Steve Tensl threw a two-y•d
AUanta
2 5 0 .286 Bengels, on the other hand,
llelpre Golden Eagles rescoring Pill to AI ""'-&gt; and
San Franclaco 1 5 1 .167 snapped a four-game losing
&amp;at up a '-Yord TD riMl by
serves this evening starUng
SUnday'&amp; Results
streak.
In
Floyd L!ltle wllh hi&amp; about 6 o'clock.
The game will be played
By United Presslnternatlooal Loa Angelea 38 Atlanta 6
Movoo Info Fin! Ploce
lhe third period ID -'&lt;
Green Bay 38 Plttabur!!b 34
The l&lt;ansos City Chiefs took Denver's •lctory. Tht triumph
Ill Maraudor Stadium U the
Saturday

COLUMBUS (UPI)-Ed Da•ls plunge and Archie Strlmel's
and Jim Tyler, Toledo's delon- placement.
Toledo lied. it 7 . 7 In the secll•e ends, pu1 on quite a performance against Miami.
ond period on Jerry Cole's fiveThey ware two of fha big rea- yard run end Ken Crots' kick,
sons for the Rockets' hard- but Miami forged oheod 10 . 7
lought14-10 win over Miami at on Strimel's 28 . yeard field
Oxford SatUrday whlth clinched goal .
With o third and eight sitthe Mid-American ConferenCe
tltta end a. trip to the Tangarlne uation, Taledo sophomore quarterbeck Chuck Ealey tound Don
Bowl In December.
Davis and Tyler combined for Fair alone at the Miami 20 end
43 tackles. forced three Inter- the Roc;ketl' wide receiver ramceptions and caused two Miami bled the reat of the way to
tumbles. Toledo head coach complete the 52 · yard play

Lauterbur lei! Toledo's ability

Bengals Topple
Raiders 31 To 17

Atlanta .

Toledo's Defensive Ends
Turned Tide to Victory

Frank Lauterbur termed It "the
greatest effort l'~w·e ever seen
by two college ends In 20 years
of coaching."

Pro Sttuadiragl

\

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···········---.-------""":~-T ~~~--~ r-~1'1"...,.. • ~

•_'4 ~ Tilt~ -

',.!1)''

..I, P_,..Mlddloport, Olllo. ...,_, No~omlloor

Cincinnati Defeats

Los
Angeles, 124-116
.

··--1

tance from rookie Butch Burd,
ol o10 for who came oil the bench to
Tam Von Andllo and lho score 15 polnlo, and Well
¢1nc)nnolt Royola.
Hazzard, who netted 13 of his
Cilnclnnotl wullng ewoy with game hlg_h 23 pqlnts ofter
"" ""' wtna In nino ate"' this lntermlssfon. Bob R.ult'a 22
......,, . - 1 y porkod up points topped the Sullie
Sunday night aa Von Andale scoring,
In hla grMtoal night as
1 IUiional Basketball Auociollon player.
Van Andlle, whose previous
In the Irish Mood
pro car•r high was 32 polnb,
. PoUsh up your brogues,
•tto holp doiHI lho Loa gn-ls. This year. Irish pipedAngoin L.okors, 12.. 116, Tho up stripes, print-played
former Indiana ster'1 total was tweeds and heathery band·
noodod by the Royals for made knits are making the
lhoy frllftrod away a 16-point fashion scene. Irish-made acflrst hoi! leod boforo rallying In cessories are "in" 88 well
lho fourth quorter tor lho Skirts, pants, sweaters'
victory.
~.hlrts and coats all atgnai
Allonto routed Sootfle, 120- Erm Go Bragh" Jn the
111tn tho only olher scheduled world of fashion.
NBA f1mo.
Onclnnotl trolled IIH3 going
Into the final quarter when Van
Andlle poraonolly look the Prepare for Bug Battle
Before llllel!to beclll lllelr
Ukers to task with an 18-potnt
annual
IDv•slon, prepare
fourth.perlod
burst
that
your
apray
progr-a, ready
iMpped Loa Angeles' five-game
Y
o
u
r
spraying
eqalpment
Winning string. Jerry West
and cheek llle Jist of cbompaced tho loaers with 27 points. leala avaOable and what Ia
Atlanta won Its third straight reeommeaded Ill your Joealwtth some IICOnd half IIIII· lty.

111
l!nu
LileUilllld
could
bogln

NOTICE SYRACUSE
VILLAGE
•

..

CURRENTEXPENSE LEVY THAT APPEARS
ON THE BALLOT, TUESDAY, NOV. 4, IS
A RENEWAL FOR TH': STREET LIGHT OF
THE VILLAGE.

•

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'&gt;

HERMAN LONDON. MAYOR
Pd. Pol. A.J ••

,· ,

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TO TH£ VOTERS OF
SOU!HfRN lOCAl SCHOOl DISTRICT

·.
•,

•,

.'

There 11 o ru~or spreading throughout the Oi strict
that I ~m not 1nterasted in serving on the Boord of
Educatton for another tsrm if 1 am elected. This is
not true. If I om elected I will serve the District
as honestly and as fairly as 1 hove in the past.

&gt;,

'

Defeat lo hord to take. But lllora•a 1 wv to tah&gt; 1 ~
too. Tbore'a 11110 thllwo lhot are better •ld Pr1VIIel1
thin JKJi&gt;llcly, Tho QUOtotloo 1&gt;¥ Ironton Hlib Coach Bob
BrWity In Suadaf'• Ironton Trlbulle lbout thoaftalur Frl·
di.Y nlcht whon tho Monudora trounced tho Tlpra np1o
1111 t~em In place, Ia of -rallntereot: •
""
cooeh Bob llruno7 ccilwliillld on - · ·
two quorterllacko, Grea Sterruan and llol ~.. 'I
lllouBh II Wll 1 ............ tlfart oolitel'lllllllln'l put to
110 out there. O!ternomo~
· tho llr
with 1 bruJMd hln )lth
I ·•-·,.
at half of the pme
•..,..
.. ....... .... went with !\lt!Uo
earlier b.- I didn't. He hllli oudoii...U and his perform.
ance waa terrlllc. I om real Proud of him and Greg.'
"The Ironton COICb ~ 'We weren't in a1 good ot ·
•"-Po as It looked. Gregg had a bruised hiP, Bob Beltley
had • badl¥ opnlned ankle, l:loQr Heney ard Daria Malone
wore CIITyllW ~ratures and !Iandy Edwordo was sun
1101 at 11111-er, Credit shouldbeclvento the Meigs toom
they wanted to win a little more than we did,' Coach Bnm-

Ironton

ey concluded."

....

STATUE DAMAGED
VATICAN CITY (UPI)Vatlcan officials draped 1 cloth
today over the hands of 19th
century statue of Pope Plus VI,
badly domoged Seturdoy by a
hammer-wielding West German .

Standings
By United Press International
Big Ten Conference

ORIS l. SMIIJI

....

.. , '-""· OvoraO
• W h .,.... W "T

.........

' ·~· ..
Ohio State ..• 4 o o
Purdue . . . . 310
Irdlana . . .. a 1 o
Mlchlpn · · . 310
Wisconsin ••• 2 2 o
Northwestern . • 2 2
Iowa • • • · • • • 1 3 o
Mlchlpn St. • • 1 3 0

Candidate For

Member Of
Ellferl loc1l ..r. of E•ucatlon
El

~

t1

o

....

oc on, ... YOmbor 4, 1969.

~:::::::::::::P:d·:P:o:l:.A:d:•:·~ illinois
Minnesota
. . . 10 34 o0
. . .....
HIIIIHIUI.IMIIIHUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII

Your Support Will Be Appreciated

Clarence Lawrence
••'

C~DIJ)ATE FOR MEMBER OF

,•

'"'

SOUTHERN LOCAL
BOARD OF EDUCATION
If ol~tod I will work h&gt;r tho bonolit of our
childrfl'a ec:lucatlen.
Pd
I
IIUII=t$ DMIIIIIIHMIIINIIIIIIII

Ann

'~

·'

~
~
..,.~

Boso

...·'..
,,..
'

,·
~~

~

[·

...
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-:

Candidate for Member of

!

.;

Souther• local IHr• of
E•ucatlon

.'
,'

'

Pd. Pol. Adv.

Your Vole and fnRt~u.c. Appreciated

VOTE FOR
•
•'
••

Lawrence (larry} Wolfe

•••~

CANDIDATE FOR MEMBER OF

'

.ltdne Village Council

•·••'

i~

&amp;

oo

610
5 2 o
520
2 5o
2 5 0
3 4 o
3 40

1o 570
1
Mid-American Conference

to y o u r deniW for a
ebeet-up, a eleaalag ud
wllalever repelr wort moy
be -eail81')'. Thea mala·
Wa beadalan oa beauty
by . brulblac a I I e r every
meal.

Packard
Strategy
Ondined

sections.
senslon between city hall and•
Tin With Europeans
the pot lee force . He seys Stokes
Perk, 55, a strong vote-getter created lll ·wlll among the po..
In Republican dlofrlcta In 20 lice by wllhdrewlng while po.
years of politics, streues high !Icemen from the Glenville aru
taxes and law and order. His during the civil disturbance
NEW YORK (liPI) - ~e
Czech desctnl gl..,. him an there teat year .
Masa21ne 1111c1 SUnday tile Nix.
emotional kinship with the ~
Polic. Hoattlt
on administration has under
per cent of Cleveland's popula.
Hostility to the mayor among consideration a "Jtratetlon with eastern Euro---n
~
...- the poll ce torce rema 1ns strong. memorandum" wrlUen bv De•
background.
The c hi •.
r appointed by $tokes, at&gt; Defense Secre'"-· 0 'a v 1~
d
Negroes comprise about 35 a nd th e F ra1ernal Drder of Po- Paekard wbich 11711
_,
per cent of the 315,286 rogls- lice. beth oblected to 60 of hlo forces of tile future need not be
tered voters, 10 Stokes must recent new pollee appointees, prepared towa-amasalveland
Iake between 15 and 20 per clal I
m ng po11ce teato he d found war In Asia." cent of the white vote to 'tt'ln, lhom til Th
Time said the •"""',
as he did In his primary vic· ru~nedunb . _._e men
1 1 1had bttn
-.... In tho
Y
PlY~••
00
•
•·
llefenae
De··•-ent
to ry over a weak white candl· ~La
nd dor
,...w, as ' 'Stra•~
WI
or
anclhigh!OX· -""6ol' ~··
u--o--~-Number
' year and In his
daIe ear Iler th•s
es, according to most surveya, 1br , ulftNIII
primary and general election are the biggest Issues with
ee, recommends that the
wh
Unf.ted States ,.remain a Paelf~
vldorles In 1967.
A lhl d
Ito Cleveland votera. Many lc r -•· "-·~ air and
r
candidate, Sydney of those still In the city hove
~-· wu......,
Stapleton, 22. of the Socialist sunk their life savings Into nava1 strength,"'
Workers Party. was expected hcusas In nelghborhooda now
The I!UI88Zine llld, ~The Wily
to rU"' a wuk third.
changing and riddled with extensive foreign ,preaence at
Stokes has campaigned on crime.
U. S. lll'OWid troops would be
claims of gelling the city's
Though tho Glenville disturb- In Europe, to meet NATO com.
economy moving, building low ances waa a bad mark on mitmenta. The Joint Chiefs of
Income housing, fighting air Stokes' record, many white res. StJdt would be rer,dred to plan
and wale&lt; pollution and mod- ldonls tell Inquiring reporters for a maJor war tllere and a
ernlzlng the pm1ce depertment. they believe the Negro mayor brushllre engagement else.
Between the primary and the Is better equipped to handle ra. where, the 10 called 'CIIe-balf
war• strategy , ra1her than tor
general elections, Stokes an. clal disturbances than Perk.
nouncod a $9 million proloct to
Othora fMr.,. Jiertt•a · olocllol] maJor actlona 1n both Europe
·rwltallzethe laktrfront, end apj would · trloO*" dl"utbt'ncil, :andJAala• ..rn .q . .
,. .
pointed 200 new policemen.
whlct)ttwl been
He shrugs oil a civil service
s
hinted br black
"No P~ tor full • scale
themselves.
mllltoey IIIIOI'IIUona In •~1 ••
• cend.l th aI del ayed eJCpanslon militants
And the
......,. .....
of the pollee force until last
re are some signs or Latin America wouJd be~
thet Perk has not rTtade a lfdered."
month, calling It the price of t
progress.
• rang 1mpresalon on the unde.
On Friday, flaring a S,Peeeh
EIICioi'Hd by Popon
cldod while voters, lnd lhot at Loa Ansalee Detenae Sec
Tho mayor hao the endorse- Sfokea, olfocks on his record aa retaey .Melvin
Laird
mont of both motor Cleveland county auditor have hid some U. S. forces ~ld ....:..
dell
effect.
uamaller, leaner
Y newspapers, much of the
In a series of "Dear Ralph" btl
...... 4.,.. ' more a:aomajor buslneu leadership and 1 "-e, ce.--., more \'Olun..
5
t 11
enllll'J 1, tokes has acculed teer , Laird ha
moo co oge youth.
Pork of lncreoalng tho budget Unl~ ~te ,• alao Mid tho
• • llhoollnr for
Odd!f for a challenger. Pork of lho office by nearly 50 per
has reluaect to debate lho In- cent and reneging on promlaoa a capobiiU;y ol fll!htlng- bla
cumbent..
to give emptoyes civil service ~~~.. one am.aU one Instead
" Carl Stokn con out-folk me protection.
~ -•"'" to cope with two bla
any day of the week, but I'll
ones and a IIJJlaU me.
outperform Carl Stokes as mayor seven days a week and 365
c:lay1a year," he says.
Yo11 Vote and !Influence Appreciated
His major campaign gimmick
Is a serlea of 98 per cent din·
nera, given at the Bohemian
Notional Hall, the Polish Wom en's Union. and similar nation.
ollty meeting placoa.
There Perk tells overflow,
CANDIDATE FOR
cheering crowds that Stokes Is
resi)Onlible for Cleveland's
nearly 250 homlcldu thla year.
He claims Stokes has padded
the city hall payroll and raised
A School Buo Operator In Saliobvry For '/]' Yoaro
taJCes unnecessarily .
. 5o I am ""'Y fllllllior with all our Towns hlp Roodo
Perk claims he cen end dis·

E

llarold Jorden, lfrl. Ronald
E. WUooo end Infant 1011,

llri&gt;

orJ.r.

lltfUI

Bllley E. . W.tlon and
100, Mra. llold L, 11u1er 1111
m. Wily. Pareata only on ~­ lniMt 1011, Mra. llquilaa a;
dlatrlca Word,
Mama, James H. Chottln, lira;
Admlallma
C. Daniel Crlallp, Charlot E.
Publication o1 admlulona Ia Galea, Mn. Hallie R. Miller,
Pl'Ohlbltecl untn turthor - ... Mro. Fot"roll G, Sork, lira.
Birth a
Ervin L. starr, and Mro. Ralrl6
Mra. Robert R, Taylor, Rt. B. WeUa.
1 Chelhln, dolqhier, 1:35p.m.
Soturdal'; Mrs. Charles E. King, \iiSPENDS RULE
•i

3:58 a.m. am..
dof; Mra. R-. G. Klrkenclall, Rt. f Dok IIIli, dauilhter,
6:28 a.m. &amp;mdo.r; Mrs. flar.
old E. Lawaoa, Rt. 1 lAiert
W. Va., aon, 3:14 p.m.
Weuaton,

IIDil,

&amp;m:

do¥.

lllocharaes
Mrs. litella J. Bolli~J, lira.
George W, Brown, w. G. Caa.
to, Gor7 A. Chapman, Jr.,lilerrl L. Coleman, Mrs. Wendell
L. Crootor, George L, Filiior, Clarence E. Grover, Chor.
lea Martin, Henry D. Rouab,
A. Sims, Mn. Everitt
N, Thacker, Mrs, liarYIQ' V10· Vrllllken, Mra. Emma 11. Wrlibt
-

WASHtNATON CUPII _.,. ·. '
··
U.S. Judicial Conieronce
111iklng body ot lho
Judlctery, hlsauapeatdad a flv. i
month-old rulo which lllcl
federal llldgu hod to got
pormlaalan lrom lho cantor~
btfore acCI¢1ng INa lor off.
bonchactivlfln. Theconf.....a
put forth tnafMd a tomporory
replacement rult which oiiml·
nafn lho
lor ·prlilr
permission; but 11 aeya fhef
lurlsts who ocCI¢ PlY for
lectures or other apPHranc:ei
must tater ·~ their acflvl•
lies to a thr.,.ludge panel
doalgnated by lho chief luatlce
of the United States.

neea

VOTE
NATHAN E. (NATE) YANAIAN .
FOR
Tow1slll' Tr.sttt

lutl•••

Al.

•••de•

Your Support will be Appreciated

'
•

YOUR VOTE WILL BE APPRECIATED
Pd.
Ab.
. .Pol.
. ---.·-·
·

0

Frank Cornell
Ploce X Before Nome Whon Wrillen In
FOR
LEBANON TOWNSHIP

1'1iUil'EI
S.rvod As Truatoo B Yn. Ago

~.:'!elf•~~·

the c:honc:.. to put L•b•non

Town•h~

.. ad on

P . Pol , A4w.

DEAR POLLY-1 am a surgical nurse who was pleased
to learn through Mrs. D. G. P.'s letter that she Is concerned over our elderly citizens In nursing homes . I believe
one of the biggest problems facing older people is the
feeling of not being useful or needed any more. My grand·
mother Is In such a home and complains of that and of
not having anytbin« to Clll!
Her eyes are bad. Site Is in
generally bad health and
there are many tblngs she
cannot do. For several
yean she has received
great joy from working
with liquid embroidery. It
Is easy to do, the Unes to
be followed are very clear
and the articles to be made
) ,,. '!'

I WOULD APPRECIATE YCIII

VOlE.
...

·~ ·

.,,

!

,,

WILLIAI

FOR
IBIS
IOAB OF E"CAIIOI

are simple. The tubes of
paint are color-coded and

I
I

.~ 'I

THIS IEPialiCAN CAND.ATE

to UOU 6DOUUh Urn~.

SAliSBURY TOWNSHIP TRUST££
· Your Vote and Influence Appreciated
Two To Bo Eloctod, Tuesday, Nov. 4
Pd, Pol.

NEED A RIDE TO THE PQLLS? NOV.• 4
PHONE 992-7149

ROBERT .(BOB) . .LOUIS

Southern local School Board

Tr11tte Of Sutton ToWnship

"Nu.

easy to handle. Since she can no longer see well enough to
do real embroidery she enjoys this and has been able to
make some very pretty things which she uses for gifts to
the family and for her friends in the home.....JANICE

.-----Polly's Problem
DEAR POU.Y- Does anyone know how to make
children's ties out of men's. ties? My son has to wear
a necktie In first grade . I would like to make him
some out of a lot of beautlful ones my husband
never wears.- MRS. C. B.

God nas I~Wnod

FOR:

POLLY CRAMER

DEAR POLLY- Mrs. D. G. P. wanted some ideas about
things voiUDieers working ln nursing homes could do for
the patients. For four years, a friend and I went to/ local
nursing home one mornln~ a week and played BID5o with
the old folks. They loved tt but, of course, it is no fUD to
play without prizes. We asked our friends to go through
their drawers aDd donate small things like hankies, cos·
tume jewelry, cuH lints, etc., tltat they did not use. Now a
church group has taken over thls project. The only dlffi.
cuity was collecting the prizes but it was worth the trouble
as each "Bingo Day" found our friends seated at their
favorite tables waiting for us. We were faithful about going
each week. We could not disappoint them for they looked
forward to It so much.-MRS W. C.

WRITE IN CANDIDATE

VOTE FOR

CANDIDATE FOR .

Pd. Pol. A4Y, ~.

By

Pd. Pol. Adv •

Candl4ate For Mfm ..r Of
Election - November 4, 1969

To Nursing Home Patients

1

TRUSTEE OF SAliSBURY TOWNSHIP

IXI CHESTER w. ZIRKLE I

JUNIOR TROOP 61
A SPOOK HOUSE WAS FEATURED IN decoraUona for
1 Halloween perl;y Frldo.v nll!ht Cor members of l'oliteroy
Junlot" Troop 61 at tile Sacred Heart Church auditorium.
Coatume prizes were won by Debbie Ba.Uey, the prettiest; Jackie Carsey, the ugllelti Kelly Clelaod, the most
original, and Tina Duff7, the furmleat. Judgea were Paul
DomeD, Arehle Swartz, and- Darnell, Jr.
Gemea were - - with Debbie Belley, Jackie CarlOY, Tina Dut(y, Bremeoaa Hood, and Terri Ruaaell wlnnlnr prizes. Brian Soott McKbm07 was a guest at tile par11 and Mrs. Pat Duff7 and Mre. Eusane McKinney asllated.
Other memben fl. the troop attending were Catby
Blaetiner, Janlne Drenner, Julie Gheen, Ccyatal G Ia z e,
Rhonda Hud1011, Kim Jone1, Cindy MeKlmey, Angie Sisson,
Jane Sleoon, Paisa Smith, Kim Taylor, Tere11 TIQ'Ior, and
U•Tbomaa.

Volunteers Bring Cheer

TUES., NOV.• 4th,l969

OREN C. WEARS

COMPLIMEN'JS.

CHARLES PYLES

Id

NDDDLEPORT TROOP 5
COstume prizes were awarded cllrlng tile Halloween party
at Middleport Junior Troop 5 hold at the B&lt;OUt houae.
Mra. Rooooe Wloe Judged the coeturnee for prizes pur.
......., by Tam! Holfman. Wlmlng the prizes were Clnd,y
Glaze, the pretUeat; Chuck Adams, a guest. the uattest;
Megan Miller, the molt original; and Beth Vaupan. the fUn..
nleat.
Winners of pmes planned by Vicki Slack and TamJIIol!.
men were won 1&gt;¥ Marilee Cosseli, Beth Vau!ihan, Clnd,y Glaze,
Cheryl Wooda, Patly Boyles, Becl&lt;y Coleman, and Mogan
Miller. Don and Zandra Vaughan were cuesta.
Sandwldlea, potato chips, and soft drinks were served. A
court ol awards was planned for Nov. 12.

NLLY'S NINTEIIS

r---------.;;.;:.:.;::.:.::::.::.__..

Now
now about uswnJno to Him?

Adv.

More than a few things are troubling our cities,
our world, our souls.
•
.
..sometimes, we raise our hands heavenward and say, ;
When oh when are you going to change it all, Lord?':
And "changing il all" is just what He expects us to dol
Ltsten: "Love your neighbor as yourseif."
.
If that were put to practice-really to practice-ghettos
would not~xist, wars would cease, hunger would end,
. mhumantty would be. stricken from th!l dictionary.
' A perfect world.
Will we ever'see it?
One thing certain, we woh't even begin tO see 11
If we don't start doing w~at God has asked of u~·
for heaven only knows how long.

"d
Name New Pres' ent

Presentation of rertonol and atate a... rds, lnatollatl&lt;lll
of r.,tonal olllcera and a talk and damonatrallool on Japaneoe Dower art hlibllibied lho Ohio Aaaocladon or Ganlen
Clubs' taU meeti!W Saturdo;y at the Lake Hq,e !.odie.
Featured In the aworda pre~on wae the VIctor Rlea ·
OutatordllW Gorden Club Aword pYOII to the Wilding Trail '
Garden Club ot Pomeroy. Tho noxl hlibeat award, rerlonol
outlllrdilW prdener, went to Mra. Earl Brown of Galllpolla.
Mrs. Paul Wendoll Reed, llrat rice president of the OAGC,
made tho cerllllcate presentation to Mra. Brow!L
The R..w.t Friendly Gantonero received llrat place bt
Class B Corthetrtherapyworkwlthtlleopeclal education clua
at tho Rl.tland School. Mre. HOIIUd Birchfield waa chairman
oC the therapy Procnm.
A third place aiete level aword wee prose- fDr tho
Meigs Counly Christmas Show staged last year. R.,tonal
awarda went to the French City Garden Club, llrat, Clo11 A,
si~Wie show; Rutland Friendly Gardeners, secord, Clo11 A,
single show; Mota• COUnly Dower show, third, Cloea D,
gr..., show; and French Clcy Garden Club, third,,....,"'-·
Mra. Earl Bender, Ule Oower show award a chairman,
urged clubs to enter In state C&lt;llll!OIItlon.
44
Shows,'' abe said, ' 4 should be registered 1 moNh ln advance with the state chairman. The score sheet In the judaea
and exhlbltore' hlrdbook should ba Collowed. A period or 2()
da,l's Ia all&lt;Med alter the ohow to complete the publlclcy report boo!&lt;- Adequate pictures and publicity are necesii&amp;J')'."
ToldlW llrat In the region and secold in the state In year·
book competition was the Wilding TraU Garden Club of PomerO)'. other reglcnlaworde went to HW ard Dale of Marietta and tho Marietta Garden Club, tie lor secord place; Galli·
polls Garden Club, third, and n" honorable mention to the Rutlard Friendly Gardeners.
Mrs. George Coones, Jr., regional yearbook chairman,
made the presentations. She reminded the clubs to submit CCII'·
leo or their new yeo-· to the reglonel director.
The Ohio Aasoclation of Garden Clubs' civic booltltlcadon
award was preBOnted to the Gallipolis Garden Club. h wae
noted thet the oow clric beautlll..;tlon chairman le Mrs. Kenneth Remlta or GIIIIPolio.
Mrs. Kermeth E. Thmnas of Nova, OAGC stsie president,
presented radio program awards to Gallia ard Wash!Jwton
Counties. In apeaklng to the 164 l!llrden club members preoent, Mra. Thomas announced a mture study eanw next June
&amp;..11, the uGardeners• day out" next September, and the state
convention at Ashland College, All8- 1-13,
REGIONAL OFfiCERS INSTALLED
NEW REGIONAL OFFICERS Installed 1&gt;¥ Mra. .Albert
Pool of Marietta, past OAGC president, were Mrs. Jolin H.
Reese of Gallipolis, Bellon 11 director; Mrs. Paul Shoemaker, Cheshire, secretary, and Mrs. Karl Grueser, Minersville,

..... Reese - e d the appolntmenl or Mra. Robert
Lewla, 306 Sl&gt;rllw Ave., PomerO)', u news releoae ehltrman

old uraed cl..., to aerd ltema of regional IDtereat to her,
Also &amp;!IIIOUDCed woa tho C)polntmenl of Mro. Clerles Lawls,
Middleport, ao ptilllcltlo book chalrma!L It will ba her r&amp;o
8ponaiblllll to pr~~~&amp;re a book In which all new~eo
In the recton wiD be recorded. Publicity booksz;~to be 10nt
to Mra, Earl Nett of Galllpoli&amp; by Dec. I
·
Mrs. Edward Mlslcko or the Rlchlard G en Club of
Athons, allde chlll'lllln, reported four awards !Dr slides tered In the state allele competition.
GUEST SPEAKER
MRS. ROBERT. DURANT OF LANCASTER, lnlornodOI&gt;Illy known teacher. lecturer, and demonstrator of Japanese
flower arrarwementa, wa• guest speaker.
Uslrw ,.lkebaM Jepaneae Flower Art., aa hertc:vle, Mrs.
Dunn! reviewed the history or Japanese arrqi!W, porllc,..
larly the Rlkl&lt;a style of 700 years ogo which she described
11 uveJ"f tall, 110111etlmea requlrlrw a ladder to construct!'
Sbe 'described the miniature Rtkka as a comparison to a
scene with dltrerent plant materlale representllW ports ofthe
scone relatbw to hea...., man and eerth. She •ld tho Moriban scyle uaes a needle holder ard lllot the Nlagerla Is a
''thrown in" atyle.
Several or each of the szyles diocussed by Mra. Durant
were demooatrated. She suggeated putii!W throeoffourplece o
of drlllwood together for an uoosual ef!ect, acrubbi!W the
wood with a wire brush to_get the same color effect on the
wood.
Several wa.y11 to condttlon hard stern plant material were
dlscusaed 1&gt;¥ the apeeker. She siJIIIIeated dlppiJV In alcohol,
rubbi!W with Bait, bernllW with a cardle, or dtpplng IIIIo bolllng water then cold water. Soft sterns, she said, can be dipped
tn vinegar then cold water tor 10 minutes,
Another tip ln arrangirw was to add aspirin or some cutup hot to keep the water fresh smelling.
In the U arrangements made by Mrs. Durant, &amp;he used
unusual materials lncludlllf blrch logs, sego palm, weeping
mulberry, WU'iegated kale, pampas grass, bleachedandpainted scotch broom.
The Q11teriala uaed in the arra~ents wp_re given as
prizes to Mrs. Golda Story, Mrs. Belva Wtlla9.f, Mrs. Buel
Ridenour, Mrs. Jack Hart, Mrs. Hannah Wardet, Mrs. Allee
MWer and Mrs. Robert U.wls,
The demonstrator became a professor in the First D&amp;gree Muter Grade in Tokyo, Japan tn 1968.
Mrs. George Leitch, chairman of the day, welcomed the
sardeners. Mrs. Reese presided and Introduced Mrs. Thomas, the state presldenti Mrs. Paul W. Reed, ftrst vlce preaf..
dent and state adviser, and Mrs. Pool, past OACG president.

lets"

Holiday bazaar plans were
completed when the Women's
- -·MoNii,(y
As&amp;oclatlon met Tlrurada,y
TIIEODDRUS COUNCIL 17 , nlllht at the Middleport Firat
Doul!hters or America, 7:30 p. Unltod Presbyterlnn Church.
m. Monda¥ at the IOOF hall.
The bazaar wiD ba held on
Charter to be draped In mem. Nov. 18 and 19 wltll a lundl.
OQ' of Elsie Hart; members to 000 to be aerved '"' both Ill¥•·
Numerous homemade articles.
wear white.
...
POMEROY Gorden Club, Imported jeweley and novel.
ties, Chrlatmasdecorationsand
~.PK,.';;; ~~:. houBOhold Items will be for Bile
ard Nolan asststlrw: hoateaa. by the women of the church.
·
Arrangements were a l s o
SALEM CENTER PTA, Mon.· made durlng ..tlle meeting cooday, 7:30 p.m., Thanl1Uivf9s - 'llueted1;) · Karl OWen Cot'
skit by slx111pade; Ptl. James the Aaaocletlon tv •holt World
Sheets to speak on, The lllllh· communlcy DIQ' on Friday. Pie
way PatrolmenL_Our Frlepd•. and cotree will be served fol.
MIDDLEPORT Garden Club. Jawing the 1111ck hmcheon at
7:30 Monda.v night, Columbus 12:30 p.m. Tho observaneo Is
a n d Southern Ohio Electric. sponsored by Church Women
Hostesses: Mra. WU!iam Mor· United of Meigs County.
ria, Mrs. A. R. Hecox, ard Miss
A report on the fall Presby.
Lucille Smith.
terlal held on Oct. 16 at Me.
YOUNG ADULT Clasa, Bred- Arthur was given by M r e.
ford Church of Christ, 7:30
Monday night at the church.

Thomas Kelly. Five attended
from the Middleport Church.
The Lord'·s Prayer in unison
opened the meeting wltll Mrs.
Rodney Downing giving dev&lt;&gt;tlons. 9le used articles writ-.
ten by Norman Vincent Peale
perlalnlng to the art of living
with minimum upsets. S:te read
several verses of scripture.

::'"t

c:=~.LA:;.:TI~:,~B,; Dinner

CouncU, Middleport Lodge, 7:30
P m. Monday All Master Me·
s~ns wel~e. Petitions r .
quested to be In by Monday.
RIVERVIEW PTA
t th
chool
' 8 · e

~n at~· N~~
g

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:;:m-

the Athens Moria! Health Center """ given b)' MrL Harry
CokOIIOUIIher, genion therapy chairman !rom Athens Court,y,
She 11id that clubs Dill)' aet credit Cor eunahlne work by aendc
lng ....U Chrlatmao gilts to her by Dec. 1. She opoke of the
two large i!llrdon plots moiriained by the Good Luck Club ard
presented therapy awards to clubs for their work at the Gal..
llpolis State Hospital and the Athone 1\lental Healtll Cenler.
A worksh~ for regional chairmen, directors and prden
club members at the Worthirwton United Mothodlat Olurch
on Monday, Nov. 10. from 10 L m. to 2 p. m. was armounced.
County contact chairmen givl~ reports were Mrs. Mizlckoo!
Athens and Mrs. Leitch of VInton. Introduced were new chairmen, Mrs. Macy Stump of Hocklrw. Mrs. Fred Blaettrar or
Meigs, ard Mrs. John Broughtoo, Washington.
A prize was awarded to the French City Garden Club tor
havi11r the largest attendance at the regioral meetl~ Guests
were r eglatored by Mrs. 1\lacy 1\larrow, Mary Hayhurst and
Grace Nunemai«&lt;r of the Vinton Coun1;y host clubs. A lunch-

eon was held at noon.

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P4, Pol. A4w,

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• • •
Here to Stay

...

Pearls are here to stay.
They first made their comeback last year as long,
swingy ropes. This season,
the ropes are back, joined by
e I egan t , double-stranded,
jewe1-dasped pearls, c h o k·
ers and fine strands of seed
pearls.

••

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·,•\o

o,.n Meft, Thru S.t.
Too., , E"•· By lt.p,olntment

Liner Is Best
To keep the line you draw
in the crease of your eyelid
from running, use a cake
liner instead of a liquid.

MARY JUNE'S
BEAUTY SHOP

Cake

992·3667

Middleport

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.

sened. Hostesses were Mrs.
Joe Bailey, Mrs. WOllam Qh.
linger, Mrs. Leo Kennedy, Mrs.
Plummer Beason, and Mrs . J.

'!

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OPTOMETRIST
OFFICE HOURS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE AT
NOON ON THURS.)- EAST COURT ST., POMEROY

K.

WEATHER BULL

N!

Mrs. J. E. Harley gave the
prayer tor missionaries of the
da,y and Mrs. R. M. Slerman,
im&gt;IP'aJil leader, read materc
1ol by ·Dr, Pnle on paoee ·of•
mind.
Mro. Kelly, Mrs. MJron llfll •
ler and Mrs. Lewla Sauer, Jr.
the nominatf.ngeommlttee, were
osked to preaent a slate or or.
ficers at the next meeting. Mrs.
owen closed the meeting wltlla
JI08IIl "The Weaver s'' and prayer.
Pumpkin pie and correo were

·I
, nl

'"- •w
)

Party Planned

A hollcla,y cllmer party wae
Planned Dec. 2 at Friday night's
meeting of the Loyal Bereons
Class of tho Middleport Church
of Christ.
A turkeydlmerwillbeserved
and a Christmas gUt exchange
wiU ba held. There wW be no
meeti!WlnNowmbor, ltwasr&amp;ported thot MrL Bessie Ashley
lelq~romw and that Mrs. Norma BIJWham ts at the borne ot
relatives ln Reynoldsburg. Also
noted were the deaths of Della
Greenlee and Mrs. Helen Belay,
L, R. WUoy ard the Rev. llaullln Moyer were both reported
out and about after finesses.
Mrs. BetQ Cline had charge

w-

usl~

step4)y-step lnstructlonll CM1 start.ID&amp; vloletL
A report on actlritles with the Good Luck Garden Club at

Holiday Bazaar Planned

p.m., ~·
se
foil~ tile buslneaa meet.
lng.
reBhmente .
.
TUESDAY
1\!rs, 0. E. McKinley WIS the hospitalized and bereeved.
ELECTION DAYDirmer, For·
est Run Methodist Church, SOli),
elected presldert of the Mid- Duea were increased to $1. 99.
d.leport Women' a Christian Servtrw: on the nominating com- sandwiches, pie, and homemade
Temerance Union at a meeting: mtttee for the new otncers were lee cream. Servi~ to begin at
Thuraday night at the MlddJ&amp;- Mrs. Paul Haptonslall, Mrs. 11 a.m.
-·
port Firat Baptist Church.
Jacob Turner and Mrs. White.
ANNUAL ELECTION diQodln.
other oftlcera named were
Scr)IJture trom Matthew by ner and llllpper ' llllex of~~Mrs. Audrey Mlller, 'f'lee Mrs. Tvner evened the meet- cuse Presbyterian OJureh;serprealdent; Mrs. Betty Cline, ing. Mr&amp; McKinley and Mrs. Ylng begins at ll:30 and 4=30
treasurer; Mra. laabeUe WI-. White 8aiW ''Near the Cross." p.m.; price ' 1 per plate. Pie
15 cents extra. Sponeored ey
brenner, aealstali. secretacy; ard Mrs. Whtte pve devotions. Volunteer Firemen Ladles AID:Mrs. Beulah White. aecretary, ust.rw the hymn 14 Lord, I Have
and Mrs. Elizabeth Slarin, ••· Sh.- the Door" ard a medlta· Ulaey.
WEDNESDAY
aiatont aecrata1')'. Mrs. Jacob tlon on It b)' Billy Graham.
LADIES
AUXILIAIIY ol the
Turner was ramed. card ebalr- Mrs.. Jacob Turner read uAre
Mloklleport
Fire Dept., ..7:30 p.
man, with Mrs. Joe Turner as You Worried."
m.
Wldneada,y
at home DIMro.
her aaslatant.
Plana were made tor the NoEverett
Bochner;
Mro. Jolin
It woa voted during tile m""'- vember meeti!W to be It tile
Vroman,
co.boate11.
IIW to discontinue sending Oow· Nazarene Olurch. , Cookies and
WORSHIPFUL Master 11art- Ml11 Coria Morris, lbldenl
era ard to sold Wily cords to cotroe were aerved 1&gt;¥ Ute Baptist women oltlleWC11Jtothooo well CUrd ..-.nces rerular .at Ohio State Unlvorolcy, waa
named and Mra. Rozel Board, meetiD&amp; PomeroY Lodge 164, here fot" a weei«&lt;rd visit with
Mrs. Genevieve saxton and Mrs. F 1&lt; AM, Wldneada1, 7:30p.m. hor parento, Mr. and Mra. Carl
at teuwle. Electloo orotncera, ~Ol'rls.
Poori'Hotrmo!L
re!reabmonto Collowi!W meetBrinker and oon,
iJV. Mooter Muons lnvlied. Clllck, of Flndlor _ . . . . ~AY
1pataoi-Cornallandllarr
WORLD COMMUNITY D1J 'BIIIIIk, . Moc:helllc St., Jiantr01,
PI'OIP'IIII practice eeaslon, 1130 Mi. llltl Mra. Bv Rial IIIII
1burada1 a1toriiiXIII, Mlddl• Morlli1an and Carobm Troq
pOrt Firat Unllld Presbyl8i(an havt DltiVed Into their n 1 w
Chureh.
homo on stele 7 ooar
tho _... Adilltloa. Their
Wetapll Slrtoi homo hal b.a
.IIIII'Ch4led bJ lira. F~eea
~ who wiD '""'elhore
from tho
home '"'

Funeral Services
Held Thursday

Gorden Clubs of VInton Court,y were hoatetaea fDr the loll
meetl~~t~- Mrs. Grueaer reminded clubs thot r etJonlld!lll• of
25 cents o club member are due and that In submlttl,. the .
amount :he number of DIOII!ben In the club llhould be noted.
Mre. GUbert Cullen, Marl-, ehllnnonaf...,toaalllower ehow schoola ard Judges, a_,.,ed a school to ba held
May 20-22. Reaer Y&amp;tlono •liP I and details of the event ere to
ba published In the Garden Path, ahe Aid.
•
Mrs. Allan W. Boach, chairman of Junlo.r club octl¥1~'
ttes, r""'ested thot aU Junior club news ba sent to her. llortl:;
culture chllrman. Mra. James Clark, annoimced thet se....r
4 'Tcp F11.ght Gar&lt;lenen 11 were presert. Ste urged aD counties":
and clubs to appoint horticulture chalrme!L For her display·
at the meetllW Mro. Clark uald "P.--tlon at African Vio-

trasurer.

_, th
of themeetlngwhichq&gt;enwwl
a song and prayer by Homer
Rice. In tribute to the late
George Mowrey, Marvin Kelly
read a poem, "There Ia No
Death.'' There were two &amp;eleetiona HMy Desire 11 and 14 Each
SteP 1 Take" by Rice and Wiley.
WUeyalooreodecrlptureard
a Bible stocy entitled "One
Good KIQ!." George Meinhart
presented an article written by
Ronald Reagan comparll\; the
third cettury of Rome to the
pr esent time.
Rutreahments wore aer vedby
Kelly, Meinhart, Lewis ~
lett, Wiley, and Robert McEl·
hlllfiY•

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the uclfln. new

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l3i

OIL HOME HEATER

AUTOMATIC
CONTROLS!
Just DIAL your comfort!
Push 1 button to start ar
stop the FLOORSWEEP I

now ''"• you .,..zln•

SUPERHI!A9
FLOOR all

(2nd Twm)
Your Yoto and Aid Will Bo Approclatod

"

llol- ~col Center, Firat
Ave. General rial!lni hours 2-4
and 7-8 p.m.
llatornlt;y
vtaltlnr hoilra 2:30 to t:ao p,

-·v. s.

League Owrall
WLTWLT
x- Toleclo .••• 5 o 0 7 il o
B&lt;Ml. Green .. 310 430
Mloml ... .. .. . 220 520
Ohtou.. . . . . 22o 331
KentState .... 140 440
Wes~ Mich. •• . 1 4 0 3 5 0
Mid • Ohio Conference
WLT WLT
y-Dotlance ... 300 800
Flndlay . . . . . . 110 340
WUmlngton , • • • I I 0 2 5 0
Blufllon ...... 0 3 0 0 8 0
Ohio Conference
league OvoraO
WLT WLT
Wittenberg .. , • 3 0 0 6 0 0
Marl- . .. ... 5 I 0 6 I 0
o es ann · • 3 I 0 4 2 0
W 1. . .. .. 3 I I 5 I I
Bold.-Wal
Muoldngum .. .. 3 I 1 4 2 1
Kenyon .... ... 3 2 0 52 0
Denlaon .. .. ... 320 520
DiYided Look
Wooetor. ,, .. .. 230 240
Capital. · ..... 2 3 0 2 3 I
Wllai'o the loet lhlo oeaMt. Union . . .... 2 3 0 3 f ·~ aoa? lt'o divided, one b
Hlram . ...... 240 240 day, aoolber by alpt.
Otterbein .. ... 0 3 1 2 f 1 lOra dre1101 and aUm jeroey
Oberlln . . . . . 040 240 IIIOI'ilwear are gOOd day.
lfme oaUito. Try them 111 10ft
Others
of pld; or blae. For
W L T eveUg "d"ate" dre11e1, meAkron • •• •.••• • • • 7 1 0 iallle lmlt aDd velveteen w1JJ
John Carroll .•• • , . f 2 o make )'OU 8 lblllbtf IUCCela
Ohio Northern • .. .. 4 3 0 at any Cala.
Central State .. • .. f 3 0
Ashlard • , • ••. • •• 3 2 1 FIRE ON MOBS
Cincinnati • • • .. .. • 3 4 0
KARACHI CUPU- Paklstanl
Youngstown State ... .. 2 4 o troops opened lire Sundoy on
Dayton • , • , • , .••• • 2 6 0 mobs of Bengalis who rioted In
Case Tech .. . ..... . l 50 Dacca. Official reports from
Westem Reserve • • • • 0 6 o the scene said one person was
Xa"""'
killed and 19 were wounded.
·~r .•.. . .••.. 070Th
t
x-Cllnched MAC tide
e argot of the Bengali
Y - Clinched ur... --·o title . vJolance was refugees from
JnU-V~U
India.

:;:::::::::::::::~;;::::::·:P:•:·=A:d•:·::::~Ohl
.••••

a.

football player to rM&lt;h tho
NEW YORK (UPil- Ta Woo 10,000-yard mark In . pass
won tho 151,11l0 Vosburph receptions when he gained 121
Hancllcep at Aquoduct by a yarda against the Miami
hMd. Plucky Lucky and Rlolng Dolph ina.
Market llnllhod In a hMI
loriOCOfldptoco.
NAPA, Calif. (UPIJ-BIIIy
Sunday
Casper, Jack Nicklaus and
TOKYO (UPII-Ruben NaGeorge Archer ore tied for the
ve; ro, 1~, of Loa ~gelu,
load In the suo.ooo l&lt;alaor
International Open golf tour.
nament. Thoy moot Mondoy In
suddon-dooth play.

CLEVELAND CUPit - &lt;loth
Carl 8. Sfokts, first Negro to
be elected mayor of a major
American City, and hit white
Rtipubllcan opponent, Ralph J .
Perk, solemnly assert race Is
not an Issue In the campaign.
But 90 per cent of the elec·
torate Is expected to vote on
racial lines on Tuesday.
Polls and surveys Indicate
Ihat Negro voters, proud of the
dapper ~-year -old mayor as a
symbot of black achievement
and pleased with Improvements
In services In their areas, will
0 lve Stokes up to 99 per cent
In an expected heavy turnout.
Perk, the Cuyahoga County
a udltor, has focused his campaign on achieving as strong
s Upport from White II"HI IS
tokes will receive from black

For Southern Local Board of Education

·:.,

Some ndea for ieelll eare:

'
S.lvi'Uy
stopped ken)l lwat1, 131~,
LAUREL, Md. (UPI)-High Jopan. after tho third round of
Echelon _ , tho 1183,120
•lunlor llghlwalght bout.
Plmllc:o.L.ourer Futurity lor 2·
YMr-olda.
LAUREL, Md. IUPtl-czar
Aloxendor, owned by Guatove
HUNTINGTON, W. Yo. CUPI)• Ring, was Invited to reprttent
-Niorahell Unlvorolty brokt a tho United Stain In lho 11.10,000
27-gome loolng atrNk by
Washington, D.c .. lntornationol
booting Bowling G.--, 21-16. at Laurel ne»et week.
Tho Collogllfa record lor
consecutive doiHta In toolball
MELBOURNE,
Auatralla
Is 211-shered by Virginia end (UPIJ-Bruc. Davlin boat L.oo
Kansas State.
Trevino In a sudden-dtath
playoll to win the Dunlop
OXFORD, Mlaa. CUPI-Tol• lntern1tional golf tournament.
do University earntd a bld to
the Tangerine Bowl by booting
NEW YORK CUPI)- Don
Miami of a.1o 1._10 for tht
Maynord, a New York Jell
Mid-American Conforenco title. flanker, boceme the llrol pro

In Sto~es-Perk Contest

Ohio Grid

Pd. Pol, Adv .

Rules for Teeth Care

Numerous Awards'

Weekend Sp()rts Summary

Racial Undertones Found

s

Re-Elect
HOWARD R. ERVIN

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ARNQl;D
GltATE
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�e _ Tile Dally -nel, Pamo.,..Middl-'o Olllo, ,.

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y, Ncmmber 3,

1969

JJA~ ' ,,. ,, ·,,:. " ""'...,.~~9!~....--'1'1*
·
·
.,.rcy wa1 ~··. her clallllh!A!r,
se..nJ local people, lnclud: Sheila Cer•"Y•

Speculators Getting into
Futures of Pork Bellies

11111 llorcJihy Andenoo, Mr. 1111
Mr 1IDborl Clark atllllled a
Mra. HAlbert Clark ani Mr. 1111 r~ pme 1n Colu'inbuo ca

sharply. By the fiscal year end- pointing to another new record.
By IERNARD BRENNER
llmtt to ClioIng last June 30, frozen prok
WASHINGTON (UPII- Some
Under Mercantile Exchange
bellies had become the nation's
of the doctors. housewives, lasecond largest futures marke1 trading rules, experts here uld,
borers, airline pilots and furniIn terms of number of contracts speculators can buy a 30,000
ture sal11men who speculate
traded and the bi-t - 117.2 pound futures contract - with
billion - In dollar value of a value at recent prices of
about $12,750 - by potting up
trading.
avidly these days In the fro1en
"margin'' of lust $700.
Mldt Into S.con
pork bellY market don't know
EKchange rules limit price
Pork bellies, the CEA report
eKactly what pork bellies are,
explained, are cut from the changes to a maximum of 1.5
government experts say.
lower portion of hog cercaues cents per day. But this amounts
But the explosive nature of
between the hams and shoul · to a possible net gain or loss
the futures market tor belliesders. Most pork bellies are of $450 per contract each dey.
the fact that large sums can be
eventually sliced Into bacon, Thus, a speculator's $700 marmade or lost quickly - has
though some are marketed as gin Investment could theoreticdrawn many small speculators
ally be more than doubled or
Into this comparatively new but fat por.k.
At some times of the year, wiped out In less than two
tastilrowlng futures venture.
production of pork bellies runs trading days.
A profile of the mushrooming
The CEA report explained
ahead of current needs and the
market was presen-ted here In
the
seasonal pattern In which
eKcess stocks ere frozen for
a reporl on frozen pork belly
storage. Trading In park belly surplus pork bellies are frozen
trading compiled by the Agrl ·
futures contracts involves buy- and stored during winter
culture Oepertment's Commodimonths, then moved Into use
ty E)tchange Authority, which Ing and selling contracts to deliver 30,000 pound· lots during during the summer. It also debegan regulating trading In the
specified months In the future. tailed the operations of various
commodity last year. The reSome trades In pork bellies types of traders Including lar98port was based on the CEA's
are
made by meat Industry scale hedgers, who normally
· first survey, conducted In Janfirms and individuals who own follow the seasonal produdlon
uary of this year, of positions
actual stocks and wish to trends In their operations. One
held by all traders.
"hedge" against possible price eKpert Indicated the CEA was
Trading In frozen pork bellies
changes which might cut the anKious to see a greater underbegan on the Chicago Mercanstanding of the workings of the
value of their holdings.
tile Exchange In tate 1961, but
market
among small traders .
But, the CEA report said:
there was comparatively little
The
survey
showed that of
"AA unusually high percentage
adlvlt 1 IXItll 1964. Since then,
5.722
traders
uncovered
in last
of speculative positions sets off
trading volume has Increased
survey,
only
357
were
January's
pork bellies from the typical fu·
members
of
the
meaf
Industry.
tures market. Speculators are
apparently attracted by the The rest represented a crosswide and frequent price move- section of the public including:
STATE STORES TO CLOSE
ments of this commodity."
S94 farmers ; 39 professional
COLUMBUS All state
The report noted that trading speculators; 306 doctors, denliquor stores and agencies will in pork bellies started with m tists, nurses and pharmacists;
be closed on Election Day, contracts in 1961 and moved to 12S lawyers; 120 teachers; 221
Tuesday,
November
-4. 154,679 contracts in 1964. In Insurance and real estate salesDepartmental offices will 1965 , the take-off came with men; 164 craftsmen and skilled
remain open, although em- trading lumping to 715,234 con- workers; 57 unskilled workers
ployees will be allowed suf- tracts and by 1968 It was a rec- and laborers; 210 housewives;
flclent time off to vote, he said. ~ ord 1.4 million. From January and 150 "semiprofessionals"
through #My this year, some such as fliers, draftsmen and
~=~~~;;;::::·=·~.;:::-·M·:o;·;o;-.:&amp;~:
787,000 contracts were traded, radio operators.

Mra. Mike ~.. hove been Satlll'dQ".
.
Ill wttb llu.
Mro. E1cla Cone)' Ia qaln
Mro. Alloa Wlalo,y of Colum- able to w&lt;a'k alter ._YIIv boeD
bua lll)etll FrldoJ 11181rtwlth A• IU lor a e&lt;q&gt;lo of weeko.
GUke1.
SUniiQ
oaUoraafA•
Mra. s..• lleltger vlolted Gllker were Mr. and III'L Q!Do
her ola!A!r ot Weotenllle over leD GUkey of Allan~' 1111 Tid
the weekend.
ani Kathy 1111 Walter J-...
Jlloa Clarice w._,.r of
Bcll&gt;b)' Glbom IPOIII a Df8bt
California Ia ~~ wook at ' - • recently 1111 reporto
wUh her porenla, Mr. ani Mra. 10 lnohea or 1,_tn New York.
II. G. w._r.
Mro. S1a1Ja AtldDt !1 iq)I'O¥Mr, ond Mra. Clair
lrv her .._with 0 new porch
er hove returned obr OJ)IIIII: r&lt;KJl 1111 ....s Jllnelilllo
lng a week in Florida- Joy no
Recent caUero of A.. GOkey
a auest or Sherrie Turner In were Mr. 1111 Mro. M. A. Q&gt;o
their ab10nce.
pte, Marpret lloullaa, Looh
Mra. Grace Clark IIPOIIIOI'ed WllllaOII, Minm., .McGrath,
• Stanley ~ la11 week. Cook- Cllntm 1111 Tid
.

.....uv

on lhe Farm .&amp;oot

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

Numerous programs of special
note are on tap tor television

TV... in Review
watchers In the next few weeks.
Wednesday, for Instance,

ABC· TV will offer the memora·
ble movie, "A Man and A
Woman," starring Anouk Aimee
In 'the tale of • widow ~Jnd e
widower who meet af &gt;their
children's boarding school.
The same night, Frank
Sinatra hes another of his
musical hours on CBS-TV.
Thursday, Bob Hope will
appear In a 90-minute NBC-TV
remake of the Jerome KernOtto Harbach musical, "Rober-

·:

ta," which helped launch the

I .RIVER NEWS J
I GAUGES

-

Gallipolis, 12.0
12.0 running 3 reet or ro1],
a; Pt. Plea~ant, 23.98; Pomoy~Mason, 20.43; Hinton, 2,15
; Kanawha Falla, 4•80 rts; Charleston, 18.26 rising.
on. on the sW; Marmet,
~mlrV one !oat of rollers; Will:
on the sill.
'

comedian's career In the 1930s
In New York.
On Saturday, NBC-TV's movie slot offers an lntrulglng
two-hour original work by Rod
Serling, "Night Gallery," a
dramaflc trilogy In which each
story concerns a painting "and
persons driven to tragedy by
greed and guilt." The cast
Includes Joan Crawford, Roddy
McDowall, Ossie Davis, Sam
Jaffeet.,!;T"q~T~

Bosley.

Prlseiits Another Movie
Sunday, meanwhile, ABC-TV
presents another worthy movie,
"The Spy Who came In From
the Cotd," starring Richard
Burton.
The same night, NBC-TV has
a rTHISical hour entitled "An
Evt:nlng Wltfl Julie AAdrews
and Harry Belatonte," produced by Gower Champion .

Harrh•:.nville

Society News

By AVA GILKEY
Mrs. Mary Dlehl and Miss
Ruby Diehl are spending a
cot.ttle of weeks in Rockvll1e,
Md,, the guests of Mrs. Clara
Carl and Mr. and Mrs. Ray•
TS
mond Chapman.
•,BOAT MOVEMEN :
Mr. arxi Mrs. Murl Douglas
·. GALLIPOUS LOCKS- mue roturne&lt;f home Friday evening
Bird doom 4:30 p, m.; Peggy
after a two weeks visit with
Downey doom 5' 20 p, m.; John CoL and Mrs. Don Gibson at
Ladd Dean.., 8:35p.m.; AllieciAahW¥1 down 8:40p.m.iElger... Rockville~ Md. Peg and Mrs .
cUll down 10:50 p. m.; PhUip Diehl ei\IOYed their telephone
Sporn dawn 11:50 P. m.; Queen conversations. Mrs. DiehJ and
Clt;y ._., 12~0 a. rn.; Esso West Mrs. C&amp;rl are sisters, Mrs.
VIrginia doom 3 ._ m.; Franklin Diehl Is assisting Mrs. Carlin

'

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.,

Pierce dOim 4:45 L m..

the care of her new great-

KANAWHA RIVER- London,
Solvay 111 l:SO a. rn.; Marmet,
OUichlta IV 8:45 p. m.; JuaDlta
White lCJ 9;05 p. m.; Winfield,
H, E. Bowles clown 5 p. m.; MI.
Slab! clown 6:25 p, m.; Alan R
Merrill down 10:55 p. m.; Fort
Deorbora d own 11 :25 p.m.; W.
~H. ~
..ver, J r. down 12:20 a. DLi
Jefferson down 2:05 a. m.;

granddaughter.
The Russel Haning and Johnson reunion was held Oct. 26
in the new park between HarrloonvDie and Rutland.
Tho Lend:A..fland soclecy met
last week with Frances Alkire.

George T, Price l4l 3:15 a.

omo RIVER -

Ten members were present.
Refreshments in observance ot
Halloween were served. The

m. meeting was in charge ot Paul-

Lock 14, Dun- ine Atkins. The third Wednes-

can Bruce up 4:05 p, m.; East- day In November the meeting
ern down 3 a. m.; John Pushak will be held at the llalllday,
.., 3:50 a. m.; A. v. Criss 111 Atkins home.
Mrs. VInas Lee of Racine
5:40 "- m.; Lock 15, st. Maryo
called
on her mother, Mrs.
down 5:35 a. m.; Lock 16, ExKatie
Wilson,
Saturday,
plorer ~ 3:40 a. m.; Lock 17,
JaneT. clown 11:50 p, m.;Beck~

lord up 1:45 a. m.; Steel Ex,
press down 3:40 a. m.; Polly R.
up 5:30 a. m.; BelvUle Locka,
National Star t~~ll:35p. m.; Na:
tlonal clown 1:25 a. m.; Raclno
Locks, Toby C,dow'n8:10p. m.;
Charles K. down 12:45 a. m.;
s. M. Janko IC&gt; 4:50 a. m.;
GreeniC) Locks, Alton Zephyr
1C&gt; 5:05 p. m.; Red Bird down
1:20 a. m.; George &amp;evens qp
4 a. m.; Ned Merrick lC) 7 a. m.;
Moldahl Locks, Jim Martin
doom 4:45 p, m.; J.
'-Is IC&gt;
5:55 p. m.; Franklin B. down
6:30 p. m.; Ravenswood ~ 8 p.
m,; Steel Clipper - n 10:30 p,
m.; C. R. Clemen• clown 11:10
p, m.; ORCO 1C&gt; 12:30 a. m.;
Mill Lucio&lt; doom 12:55 L m.;
0. r. Shearer ~ 2:20 L m.;
Peace IC&gt; 6:40 a. m.

s.

'"

.t

••

·•
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••
·~

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••
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LOOK~AUKES?

ll's oalural; they're In lbe same ramUy. 'l1la Farrow, 17, leH, bas
goue from modeiiDg 1o acling and wlll make ber IBm debal In 8D upeom1B1 plclure
being shot in Canada. lfer sister Mia, rlgbl, Ia a morelamUiar lace lo movie aDd lele·
vloloo vlewera.

..,

TERLINGUA, Tex . tuPil-A
funny thing happened on the
way to the third annual world's
championship chili cookoff. One
contestant, a few supporters
and one of the ludges couldn't
find it.
Take Woodrow ')Wino Woody" De Silva, for Instance. He
is the man who not only
deslgned the Los Angeles
International Airport, but who
also wes the cochampion of the
1968 cookoff. He got lost in El
Paso; Juarez, MeKico; Alpine,
TeK .; and Study Butte, Tex .• on
the way to this former mining
town.
And when he did arrive, he
mal'inated his meat in so much
champagne It turned out 5 per
cent alcohol .
Suppol'ters of Joe D. De

meat. carved into the thumbsize chunks demanded by the
Chill Appreciation Society International and won the third
annual kickoff.
In so doing, the man who
brought the London Bridgestone by stone-from the
Thames River to the Arizona
desert became the flrsf undlsputed champion of the cookoff.
The first championship end~
in a tie when the third and
deciding judge claimed he
couldn't decide because his
taste buds were burned out.
Last year's event was stalemated when "bandits from South of
the Border" stole the ballot
box.
Nothing much could be done
about those supposed to be at
the event who went astray.

Before next year's cookoff they

.,

..1

will accommodate iet aircraft,
but that would mean extending

.,
1

the runways over Dirty Women
Creek.

••

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••

IN SERIOUS CONDITION
COLUMBUS, Ga. IUPIISplit end Paul Maliski of the
University of Florida Is In
serious condition today after
suffering a head Injury In the
'Gators' 38-12 loss to Auburn

Saturday.
Mallska, a senior from
Winter P•rk, Fie., collapsed on
the sidelines after being In·
lured. Doctors are considering
surgery.

·JUST30 MINUTES'
TO DO IT ALL IN
TH£ M£W HOO.V·ER .

•'i

':'1'

at a price you can afford t ~

SPIN-DRYING WASHER

..,

'' .

Sweeping Triple Dresser
Groupings ...
Remarkably Low Priced!

•
BAKER.FURNITURE
IIDDLIPOitT, D.

MIDDLEPORT

INT. ~~EZZP.,~ the ~mance of the.
Mec!Jteftll•tl Hili Ua.tn..feisl"~elidor to
your home. . . ..
, , ,v

NBC-TV Animated Speclol
On Nov. 12, NBC· TV presents
a half-hour anlmafed ·tpeclal
based on charaders friltn Bill
Cosby's monologues. . Title:

••

•

- BaiJaln - aa;plif:... .
~!~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i~~~~~~5§~~~~~~~~~~:

Martin.

•I

"

Bargain - Bargain -

loam
of O.n
Rowan and
Dick
CBS-TV
series-Bing
Crosby,

..,

can enlarge the airport so It

DAIRY ISLE

Ella Fitzgerald and the comedy

•
.,·'

CALIENTE , Capture~ the look of ancient
·Moorleh lll'CblteetUre •nd translates It Into
mollem Amerla'e way of life.

Chili Cookoff Had the Funnies

REG. HOT DOG
15e DRINK
10e CHIPS
" • ,... f•

Hey- lt'r

••

.j

..,

Frates, traveling all the way~~~~~~~~~~:':"---------...
from Springfield, Ill., couldn't
find the Terlingua Airport and
Also Sunday, Prince Philip, stopped in Mexico to ask
Queen Elizabeth's husband, Is directions.
the guest for
the
22nd
Actor Cameron Mitchell, one
anniversary program of NBC- of the judges, got as far as El
TV's "Meet the Press."
Paso and discovered there were
Next Monday morning, the no commercial
flights to
National Educational Television Terlingua.
network offers the debut of
Buf C. V. (for Chill Vlctor"Sesame Street," a dally one- iousl Wood Jr. found the place
hour color series for preschool all right and In time for
children from three to five Saturday's cookoff . Replete
years old.
·
With an . "electronic chill
And ~.,day night, Carol ' ga\uge." w~ ·slmmered ~ rifne
Burnett hal a rather high- different kinds of green chili
4th &amp; LOCUST
powered guest lineup for her peppers with seasoned bull

"Hey, Hey,
Albert."

,_

-- - - · :,___

w._,.

•
Memorable Movie COm,ng
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD I UP I)

i-.

,.

Your Choice

J . ,t

ni

::0\VJ DIW

.'

Available For Our Custorrwrs and Friends

Fat

The same evening. on the
same network, Johnny carson
has a comedy hour that
Includes George C. Scott end
Maureen Stapleton.
On Nov. 1S, there's a Billy
Wilder movie on NBC-TV: "The
Fortune Cookie,'' starring Wel ter Matthau and Jack Lemmon
in a serio-comic story that won
four Oscar nominations .
And Nov . 17 NBC -TV has
another fine movie, "Madigan."
a cops·and-robbers tale with
RIchard Wl~mark, Henry Fonda and Inger Stevens.
On Nov. 14, of course, the
commercial networks will present the greatest show of them
all-the scheduled launching of
the second manned flight to the
moon, the 1ourney of Apollo 12.
Ll ve coverage of two moon
walks Is currently set for Nov.
19 and 20.

.
..
CD

;:

BANKAMERICARD

SOMETHING SPECIAL FROM

:::1

I

.-{

CD

!!.

"I

Herb Alpert and The Tlluan-. Brass-Stereo Record Album

.'Ill

CD

NOW ON SALE-1.00

~

:::1

.
.;,
..
I

CD

:::1

BonkAmericord/Muslc Box/A &amp; M Records SP 19006 (331
Side One,
Side Two:
1. My Heart Belongs To Ooddy
1. Brasilia
2. Look Around
2. Thi Lovers
3. Wind Song
3. fowl Play
4. Cone! on D• Amor (Wand•rlove)
4. 11'1 Hard to say Goodby ..
5. Green Peppers
5. 80,80

I

This recording may be played eith" mona•raflr or stereophonically.

;;

!!.
:::1

I

CD

..

by JiJmous ~oirCJiouse

CD

SHIRT
fiNISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9 - Out At 5
U•• Our fi'H Pa"'l"g L•t

IIW••'s Cltl1en
'216 E. 2nd, , ......,.,

;;
:::1

OON'l'BMPORA'
Classical · contemporary
de~~lgn tluit, will add a look of eophlatlcation

OFFER
EFFEC/1VE

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to any bedroom.

NOV. 3 T015

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~~

D&amp;D MEAT DISTRIBUTOR

COME IN THIS WEEK AND
,,,c,; POSE FOR YOUR PICTURE BANKAMERICARO(r)

~

(r) '$.rt&gt;lc...,_, owned .,4 llc.nMd by 8ANKAMERI(A.RD S.,.lc.

.~,

~&lt;, :

.,'(.

C..--~;;.~ :

.IS CHEESE
.....

PELOSI'S
TAKE'N BAKE PIZZA

.).!11••• at Grape
·G.. ll,..la, ()lola

,-...... 44H332

13111. MAIN ST.

992-3502

-

I

!
•

"-' H

.,. • •

• ~., " · •

-

-

...
''

•
URE
•CARPET

.

The Citizens National Bank, Middlepwt
The Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co., P•eroy
The Pomeroy National Bank, Pomeroy

PIAIL VAlLEY

Look at the styling! It's rich in the details that make Continental elegance like this so popular. Check all the quality
features. Like the rich, warm color achieved through an exelusive machine graining process on tupelo veneers and select
hardwoods. Then look at the price! Each grouping includes.
a triple dr er, mirror, chest and headboard! Whichever you
choose- you'll be getting the buy of a lifetime- and you'll
dream happily ever after!

-

•

;:

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··
·;
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'
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�• - '1111DIIIJ Sootlnol, Poma~-Mlddl_.t, Ohio, ~. Nomnbel' 3, 1989

,..

The bride woce a ltreel
lorwtb white chantilly lace
dron with an alhow lelllllb voU
centered wtth a .,.p otwhttelace
and pearls. Her jewalry was •
gold cross a gift of the groom.
She carried a cascade of white

mint green. The bride's
ilft: table waa ce.Ured with a
mlnlatW"e bride alii groom.
Bride bingo was played.
Prizes were kitchen gadgets
and were presented to the bride.
Refreshments of white cake
deconted with blue roses,
punch ard coffee were served.
The guest Ust Included Mrs.

Of

.

LANDMARK
tiO. I
NO.
• T•atM 011

.:....$3695

Power steering, radio.

son.

Po~neroy

beige sheath dress and blackaccessortes ai'KI her flowers were
white mums.
A reception followed In tho social room of the church. Thetable was covered with a white

2

· ·· ·

$5.55

PH~EIIHIII4

-r

0880._

YOUTII GROUP VISJTS
The Y&lt;Uh G""''&gt; or St. Paul
Lutheran Cburch atlerxled a
Folk Mass at Christ the King
catholic ChurchC&amp;mpusCenter
at Athens, on Sunday afternoon.
Following the service, the Rev.
"-•-~lila rr spo kelo th e
Father lWD8I"l
gl'Cq) all:l e"')lained their servtee.
~•
l ld B
. Atteo~ng were V c
urngardner,
Marsha Sprouse,
Bruce Adams, Brian Russell,
Davy Roush, David Russell,
Dwaln Russell, Harriett Layne,
Holly Layne, Becky Paugh, Lou
Ellen Rouah, Kay Roush, Deb:ble Paugh, Joe Michael Tbomp:son, Mr. and Mrs. David Roush,
:Dale Roush, Mr. arrJ Mrs. wu.
Jlam Ruoaoll, Mrs. Donald Bum-

fi!IIIT . . . CALL •
RAILINBJ' SERVICE

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

DAY112•Zl51 '
NIGHTIIZ-7324

!lt. H.-RnlltltS. .

For Sale

\MIDDLIPOIT, 01110

·- -·

____________ _

NEWS
.!'1111111

· ~OCAL ~tJ$

Frat ootlmate. Phone 992- 992-3874.
10..22-tfc
2806. Wegollli1Where.
-------------~

10-1-tlc
-- - - --- -- --VACANCY for tiro elderly peo..
pie, PnforprlvatepaldpaUents. Phone Mason, 1735185.
l~c

--- -- --- -----LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS COUNTY,

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

RUMMAGE SALE, CathollcWo.
men's Club, Sacred Heart
Pariah, Nov. 3, 4 and 5 ln
cltlrch auditorium, 9, a.m. to
3:30p.m. Plenty ot.treeparking, For rummage P,ck-u.p,
call 992 • 2825, chureh re&lt;tory ·
10-30-Stc
------ -------CHUCK'S con saveyw"'tohalf
on TV repairs II you br!rw
them ln. 01Uck'sTV,152But.,
ternut, Pom•roy. Phono 992S080.
10-18-tfc

OIUO

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

CECIL D. MEHL, JR

BOB'S REDUCING Salon and

·----..-

lftFORIIATIOM .

- ~·

.

'

' WMPO

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NewmembersorS~PauiLu-

theran Church In New Haven
were honored at a reception held
Immediately following the reg~&gt;lar morning worhslp service on
Sundsy. They were accepted 1~&gt;to the membershlpofthechurch
at the service.

F•Tiil Fastest ··.

1. ..., . . . ""'"

FURNJSIIED dina tooin opart. .COAL, UJXP, aa. .......,.,
ROOM FOR 2 "female patielto,
meat, litowar, newbdla~nt­
mlna nm. Excelalor Silt
bedlaot or ambulatory. S.Yn•
ld, 507 Mill St., Wdlllaport.
Worka, Eaot MilD SL, P..._
cuse Nurslr~ Home. Phone
PhCile 111-Z/12. · WS.Uc
oroy, l'hollo 992-1881.
992-3707.
11-2-atc
8-13-cte
Doy of Pul,licotl..,
REGULA liONS
I'WO BmROOII homa," UYIJW
Tt.. Publi•"-• ,.,.,.,,, th.t rifht I WILL plck..,merchandloelllld
taka to auction on a pareoJt,. · . - , dlnlrw . - , baU and JORDAN'S USED cloth! ... ~­
•• Hit ., ••i•ct onp od• i••-4 ..,_
... bula. Call Jim Adamo, . . ' Ill OWL c:arpattJII. 'Itt
.,ectloltOI . The p...bli1h.tr will net
s~Keno Rood. N.,.. shipk ro•pon•ll,lo for - • tl.aon • •
aucdoneer, l'"tl,.. ~ lbOiinoll A.._, Woldl.,.-1.
molt of men's and children's
· !nco"~' inurtietn_.
_, 742-441111
Pb. 1124111 or 112 1035.
Ill Uo
clothi&amp;W. Open Friday' satRAtEs
.
urday and Sundlty otto..,_,._
F., w,,. Ad S.rvlce
ROOF REPAIR ..... 111 oW. --=- -- ~ -----~.~-~--=-~-­
5 unb per Worllf 0 "' ln•ortlon
111-31-4tc
llli~l..;u.,. Cher,. 75c
lnll a1ao lnlllrlorJialntlrwllllll 4 ROOM Unturnlohld .......
12 un11 , , , • .,._. thrM con.. cureiDOdiiiJW, by contra~
1650 Lincoln Helat&gt;ta. l'hollo RECEIVED new o~mentot!all
tlwo '"'"''•- ·

,.,ell

,.

S.lceDAY• .

6 ROOMS, bath. Clooe to 1o1m. .
Ph. 992-2048, 992-2431 a115r
5.
10-2t-ttc 1

e... .

'

WIKUI SRYICI: •

-8UARArrEED-

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

Notice

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11-2-llte

Motor Co.

bet, Mrs. E. L. Stein, M r s.
Charles Smith, all ol New Haven, and Mrs. D. A Smith, Hartford.
For a weddlll:: trip to Pleasant Point Resort the new Mrs.
Powell wore a brown dress with
brown accesorles and a corc."oe
.._,
of white mwns.
Mrs. Powell attended Waharna High School atkl is employed
' 1 corih por Woul • 1• co~t~ocutlwo
ji'IIOtfionl .
at the Sunset Laundry Mat in 25 ,.., cont Di•count ..,.
1; 1
Pomeroy, Ohio. Mr. Powell is oni ollf• paid within 10 ;.,, .
a graduate or Wahama High
CARD DF THANKS &amp; OBITUAAY
$1 .50 for 50 •orcl 111inl...,.. Eo
School aOO is a member ol the Ollllfitlonel wotd lc.
Hartford BaptlstChurch,Hets
BLINOAOS
employed by Foreman and Abo- l · tl~::·~~~ l5c Chor,. ,., Alllwor.
bott In Middleport, Ohio. The
OFFICE HOURS
couple are resi.dinginNewHavl :30 , .... •• 5:00 P·• · D•llr
en.
,IJJOo . ~n.tolUJON~WN~~IIIMr
Out-or-townguesto atthewed- Notice
ding were Mr. arxl Mrs. Harry
Haymaker or Pineville, W, Va., HOME REPAIRS, palnttna, carMr . a nd Mr s. J ames Tre nt a nd
pentry,
shl~ll~. ·gutter
!!IOns, Brian and Allen, George
cleanif@:, repairardin.stalla·
lion. Free estimates. AU
Pickens of Oa k !Ia r bor, Was hi""'"
nd Mr WUIIa PI k
work guanmteod by elqlerl·
.,.-n, a
,
m c enced men. CallChester9SS..
. v a.
ens o rQ uanbco,
4147 coli~
NEW MEMBERS HONORED
10-22-18tp

Ices

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

'.

FURNISHED
Oat. Qllld
walcome. PlxN&gt;e 992-707S:

irish linen cloth and centered
WANT AD
INFOAIItATION
with an arra~Wement or white
OEAOLIN&lt;S
nowers aOO silver cand1elabras
5 ' ·"' Doy B•f•• P~llcetl•n
Morwlor O.odiiM 9 ....
holdi~ white tapers. Those asCo••"•''-• a c.,rectiOfl•
ststtng were Mrs. Arthur Till- ·Will II'• oo:npt•d '"II t
for

••• •

EIPIII

POIEROY .

Fer Rent

~:

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Business ·~

.'

PI J II (114) IR-S

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Factory oir, power steering, disc brakes, Turbo
Hydramotic, radio and R.S. "•peaker, bucket stat
console, blue with blue vinyl roof, fully equipped,

Tmn Hofrman, Mrs. John Fergu.- day dress with black acceasor.Tereu Ferguso~tt Mrs. lea arxl her ftowera were white
Phll Batey, Mrs. Jess Abel, mums. Mrs. PoweU wore a

-

'

. SiiYiNO MitG~ "GALLIA
- _ AND !'AION C UNTIU

S.S. 396 H.T. Cpe. Official car. New cor title.

a real beauty, reduced to $3695.
1968 CHEVROLET •
----$2695·
Impala 4 Door. 1 own• and only 12,000 miloa.
Spotless clean interior, gold finish, good W.W.
tires, factory air condition~. Automatic trans.

.

• Eon' h'l Pl-.
• Del,.. Dt't Dtll•et,

.!

1969 CHEVELLE - - - - -

.

'

HEATIN'G

Motor Co.

MALIIY

Miss Jane Powell of Glenville,
W. VL, sister ofthegroom. She
wore a blue Mine dress and
carried a cascade or blue and
white mwns.
Mr. John Ridgway served as
best man for the gromn ai'KI usher was Mr. RonaldSteinotHunt..
lngton.
Mrs. Pickens wore a burgu~

Xlaa &amp;!san Wald, Mrs. Donald
F. Roush, Mrs. Datid Fields,
Jr., Mrs. Marcellus Wald, Mrs.
Jack Frey, Mrs. John Morgsn,
Mrs. David Dewhurst, Mrs.
~~ Ward and Mist;)', Mrs.
- · - • , Jackie DM.--",
JIDI8. 0llUUlUI
~uuan_,
Mrs. Paul Rickard, Mrs. Pbyltia Scott, Matthew Scott, Kevin
Scott, Ltaa Scott, Mrs. George
Ralllolph, Mrs. Kermit Ford,
Mrs. 0. J. Howard, Mrs. Cecil
Pickens, Mn. Ronald Stein,
Mrs. Arthur Thabet, Mrs. Herfnan I .,,,_, 0 Mrs. Carroll Ad.....,.,lll;l
ams, Jr., Mrs. Jack Flesher,
)Ira. Eugene Weaver, Mrs. Ad:rlan Lathey, Mrs. William Chis:._
Mr li. ~--Co
hart Mr
;n,r,
\.4&amp;1."
pe
•
S.
Clayton Athey, Mrs.. Paul Powell, Mrs. Samuel Halstead, Mrs,
u--•
' - Mr Jolt Smith
fU&lt;ax.&amp;D8 ....,No
8.
0
I
)irs. Diarm. Jeffers, Mrs. Juhn
~rawsczyn. Mrs..
Greg Hotr·
o
• .,
Mr
man, Mr 8. Delton ......,re,
&amp;.
Vernon Harrah arw:l the hos~

,....,.,

2

The color scheme waa yellow mums. The maid of honor was

aftd

II FLOCK

Bargains And MoreBar~ai~~-:J~, -~enti~~l .£;lassified8

New Haven Social Events
· BRIDAL SHOWER HELD
Mre. Rick P, Powell was bononc1 with a bridal sh""or at
!h. hcmlo o/. Mro. Edwin L. Stein
with Mro. WWiam Rus..U,
Mrs. Chlrleo Smith and Mro.
Pnaley Roush as co-hostesses.

I'M
HOlDIN'

'llllY,

and Chrlscmae n....... and
wreaths, noveltiea .and glftL
FURNISIIED 1111rage..,&amp;rime~
Ellen' a Gilt Shcip, ReedoviUe, SOLD! !IrATE wabllt Starao
Phme 99!h'5435.
Ohio.
111-31-3tc
· · ~•ahalumeeontral,
4......... lntarmlled
ebanpr,
4-lpoaller IIIUIId 81llam- Bal- - - - - - - -- - - - WE'VE MOVED, Barkaroo 1&lt;8!&gt;....
..,. $89.30, UaaCMJrtimo
FURNISHED
Apartme-, t ·
nela.
Scottfes. We&amp;U.ea,
Pfi1JIIent
pion.
99:1-3152.
rouns, both, full size beSchnauzers, Poodles, Dach..
I0-30-8tc
ment, nice yard.. Muon, W.
bunds, Bassota ond Baqleo.
Va. Robert J. Roush. l'hone
1'llrll rilbt at Torch, OhiC~J
MAPLE SI'EREO.aAJliO, 1988
Mason, 773-5639.
Fourth house on right.
lovely maple llnlah, with AM
10-2s..etp
111-31-7tc
and FM radio, 4 IJIIIUrl,
-----------dual volume control. BaiNWI
TRAILER LOTS, """"
u~· 1· Mob"-e
u1
AWNINGS, . atorm dOon lllll
clle tal.30. Uaa aurtlmi!IQ'Court, Syracuse, Ohio, on
ment plan. Call 992-3352.
-·te R' 12•, Phone 99 2" 1rdowa, carporta,
mar•
•
qu-•,
"-n -~ bitt •-··•·
10-liCI.atc
296L ·
g.11 uc
·~ """" - u
••tto,n. Elmer-"-, IIIII ~.
nua.w
._.....
---ntati
F
fret lti ·
1
--- - -------raae
.._ or
•
maw,
Charla• Uale,
1640 LINCOLN lila., 4 rooms
Syracuoe. V, V,JGh.,_ml , EXCELLENT LOT, t8'lll211'.
and bath, 'h basement.~ S!la. IDe.
So1-cte . MW street, Mk'd'tport. AJ.
992..2293.
t0-30-Itc
•
so 2 story brick buiJdhW..,
- - - - ---------- ----- ------- - N, 2nd St., Mldd10110J1, I'll.
ELECTROLUX aweoper, cam992-5251:
""'"'
SLEEPING room with tur,.co
plete
with
attachments,
_...
11-2-cfe
~
99 ...... 40.
___,..__
spray, cordwtnder, ..
IM .. ~¥1"
ll-2-7tc
away bags. FUll cosh price

t:'or Sale

- - -~· - · ··

Al

IHOOCINS 91tiRI'l

7i$ll&amp;

lirt.OIIt

can

'3:_P~~­

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

A•.
.

--

4:30
· --·- •••
-·
-

Ketcfm~ ~n?~

..

Mason ·Are(r ·

Real Estate Fer Sale

P._

~~~ 1 0\II!R•
HCAI&lt;l&gt; 1HE INJf5r

As

· Informed
weY.A~
. Entertained'
- . -. ... -·- .

can • ••

-

~rand Undo, Mrs. A. L. Tho reception lor Mr. and 1649 Lincoln Heights,
Hea
. lth Center Is '""'
. open, Flj'D~i~~. .
~ ~1. Te~s a-.Uable.
~, , \Ira. Corroll Adamo, Mra. Douclas Singer and l'oll!l• Pomerqy, Ohll&gt;
. Pla)ntl!! : . , 9 !I'D&gt;. to.t5 pl,lll.l '' ?l''"'lnt-.
~2 ~ -; , ..
pn,. lolt'o. Kermeth Thompson, ly and Mrs. Frank Young, Jr,
vs.
meat, 5 p.m. •oo10jf.IIL no~
rerr
· ·
:•
r
·
.
)a
m·.a~ lite
592

·a · ·

·Rev, and Mrs. James Moy. Rick and JLO!y, washeldlnthe JANISM. MEHL,
• MARRIAGE ANNOUNCED
multi • purpose room ot the Address Unknown, Defendant
The marriage Is bei!W an- church. The Rev, James Moy, NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
nounced of Miss Patty Smith of
New Haven to Mr. Rick P. Powen of New Haven, hold Sop~ 20,
at 1:30 p.m; at the Rertlord
Boptiat Church. Miss Smith Is
the foster da~ter or Mr. and
Mro. Cecil Pickens otNewllaven and the groom Is the son ot
Mr. and Mrs. Paul 11. Powell
also of New Haven. Tho Rev.
llarold Blll..,s of Point Pleas'lnt oMclated at the double rt~
cereiiUXIJI.

pointment necessary. Locat-

Auto Sales

No. 14,5SO
Phone 67S-2454 or 675-4020.,
Janis M. Mehl, whoseplaceol
10-3-ttc
residence Is unknown, wUI take - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 1966 COUGAR, 302 erwtno, 3on
notice that on the 11th day otMEIGS LOCAL Parents, vo~
Door,wldeovals,$1900• 1931
••
Ford Chevy powered, 90 per
October, 1969, theundenlguod
for the school tax renewal,
cent 'dOIIO, $1000• Call 94 ~
filed his petition against her In
keep schools open. Don't vote
2101 after s p. m.
the Court of Common Pleas or
against your kids by not
Metes CounQ&gt;, Ohlo,pnytngtor
voting or to economize ot
I0-2 6•12tp
a divorce !rcmJanla M. Y.ehl,
lllelr expense. It Is no fax
-----------1
H ld ...__
Rt 2
and tor such other relief to
ncrease. oro ~ue, · •
which he may be onUtled;onthe
Albany. Harrisonville PTA
69 Pontiac Savo $1101.73
member
&amp;..,nulllo I dr. Hard Top.
t
grounds ol grossneglecto duty
.
Demo. Foctory olr conclltl•n"My .transgresskwnsb We1'he and extreme eruelty. Sold cause
IO.l,-l4tp
'"'' p,• ., ,.,,..,, Pow.,
bound mto a 1/0 e; Y lS
braku. Auto. tron•· lh •'••
hond they were /liStened to· wUI be [or heorl~ on and after Help Wanted
'"' •""•'· """'•• ,..,100 ,
tther,· the~ were set upon the 25th dayofNovember,l969.
L•w, low n~lleata, vinyl tap.
WSW flbti glon tiro•. EZI
y neck; e caused my
CECIL D. MEHL, JR BIGHOLIDAYBUSINESS!Sorvolno.A,..FM.,dlo.
strength to fa iht; thohe dsLorod/
BY: Crow, CROW, &amp;
Ice cusa-rsln cltyofPom69 Pontiac Sa.. $949t97
1 1
gave memo
e n .
PORTER, hisAttorneys.
eroy wUil quallty Watkins
Ctrtallna 2 ..-. Hord
op.
th.ose whom 1 can_not W1th· (10) 13 20 rr (11) 3 10 17
Execwtlve c.. FGCtory air
stand."- Lamentatwns 1:14.
' ' '
:Uoduorctepa&amp;~~~~..s~~glnl~s'
~''A:' :":!~::
24,' 71;
-- - --------1.:.41
.,..
Vl"yl top, EZI glou. Radio.
IN THE MATTER
$95.00 weekly and \.IJ posLow, lo• ~r~IIHt••
.

f.':':;'"'l!.'l'..

swt:u'"t.~~T

oF
OF
PROaATE COUAT,

THE WELL CHILD®

~~~.:;.::.:~~::. ~~

~

Wloona Ml

whlto

MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Recovery Is Complete
If Limb Is Braced
Br WAYNE
~My

&amp;randoon has osteo·
clmlnditis. What causes it?
Is surgery the only cure?
: A-ID WI dllease there is
bof]ammaUon of the cartilagluous growth centers of some
Of the long bones. The cause
is Ulllmown but heredity may
be a factor. It occurs between the ages of 4 and 16
and perslats until the growth
period is over. When It Involves the knees it is called
~ooci-Schlatter' s
disease

'•

G.

.,blpe it is called Legg, Calve
:or Perthes disease. When the
•lnvolved limb Is protected
: against weight-bearing by a
:'brace or cast until the dis·:ease has subSided, recovery
:.is complete. No operation is
1

::required.

: Q-My son, now 18 months
: old, still has a soft spot on
• hls head. What causes this?
: A-Some foatanela close at
.,.Jilne months and others not

BRANDSTADT, M.D.

variety of diseases, It may
be necessary to test Its blood

for a n e m 1 a or abnormal
chemical composition.
Q-ls It serloua when a
boy, 4, has a hemoglobin
8 per cent below normal?
A-No, but if on a recheck
the concentration Is still low
an effort should be made to
determine the cause.
~WW

blood transfusions

sonality to be more like that
of the donor than of his

parents?

~At

lbe boopltal, they
'I took blood from the heel of
;,, m7 friend's baby before he
;~.t;ame home. Why was this

· ~e?

;~ A-It wao takea from the
l r.etl because in an infant this

flied

In 1he Probate

~!~:, !:J~!:.ite~e~t: tor
CASE NO

IP·

16510 Flrot and

FlnaiAccou~lof Lelah Forrest.

Adam Forreso, Deceased .
CASE NO . 18127 First and
Final Accounl o~ Elizabeth
Moodlspauoh. Admlnlstralrlx
of lhe Estala of Dernl

Mfti~~"c\'."ie~~n~~~F inll &amp;
OISirlbullve Accounlof Moud C.
Holcomb, Executrht of the
~~t~~':nb~'o:~~::. Raymond

CASE NO . 19851 Flrl1 and

Final Account of Earlene
Norris, Administratrix of the
~:~·::,:~.Freeland E. Norris,
CASE NO. 19000 Final Ac ·

count ot Pandora Collin•. Ad ·
m inlatralrlx De Bonis Non, of
the Estat•of Roy E. Strlckla'n d,

o~:;~edNo .

19S2-4 First end
Account of Anna M.
Wilson. EJCtKutrlx Of tht Estate
of c~"~~e :b~h~~ 9 ~e~1::t•dand
Finlll

It and what Is the best treat-

and Arthur L. Rowo , CO·

~What

Ia meant by hy-

ment?
A-This Is not a standard
term but I would assume
that It refers to colic associated with nervous tension.

which is much less with her
subsequent children. In some
babies, allergy or a deficiency of progesterone may
be a factor. The treatment
is loving care administered
in a relaxed manner and

elimination of any causative

nneaota 55987.

Final Account of Elsie Smith

Executors ol l"e Estate of Ida
K. Rowe. Dt&lt;:elled.

CASE NO . 20110 Flrol and

Flnel Account of Opal R .
Hollon, Execulrlx, of t"• Estate
of Jemu W. Hollon. DeceaHd.

Unltu exceptions are flied

thereto, llld accounts will be
for h~terlng before tald Court on
the 3rd day of Dec:•mbtr, 1"9,

~ROIATI JU.D OI

f . H.O'BRIIN

Which to get a s ample . Sin&lt;·e order by the 12th week of
a newborn may havf' a wide life.

MEIOSCOUNTY,OHtO
11 -3-lfc

TUPPERS PLAlNs _;,· 3 -

n

l'OOIDI

· _ -------------

1aa. batla

'*

'=

·-'*

•15.

.10,

-

·•·--

Softenera, tlltere,
don. ...000.
etc., money back guarantee. LETART _ .5 roam tnm1 ,
C. W, lluc:k,l!laiand, Oh(Q,
bath, door 61Nce. $7,000.
10-29-301&lt; SYRACUSE- 4 boclroomo,1'h

batha,-~-,21ata.•"~O,OOO

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

--

PAINT DAMAGE, 198hlc za1 , R~baRURAL~sewirw maehlnea, IWl In ...,,, aeme-.
ortalm1 cartons. No attach- $8,30.0.

we=•

...In Raady-Mix Clio,
port. Ohio.
IIO.Ue

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

...

---,.

:- - - - - - - - - - - : - . - - 7 , . ' ,

I+Uc•
.-~. -.:_-~:!::'""
.·-~~;.~-~-~
'
1· 1..-..u:
_ ... , · ~
-·

UUIIII

Full, cub price,

IIUMOIIo

~8.50,

or

II, . .
W: V.,· _
,
-1"'\
• ..... .-._.:

.,.,.......

- - - - -,- - - - - - -

E-.Z IIIOI1Il1IY temll, PhOIIe
992.2885.
10-211-«e

_,_,..

..:·~ro·'

IIIIUii
.......... ,;,__. Ololo.rh.;

IIEPTIC ..... .._..,.

.

Busl•ss services
------------ . FOUiliE,-11 at.rntlr

F,..Sale

Jc•,:c:;:

holeo, IOWI onbutlons, JIICIIIOo

--a, a·~L,.__,
hem_,._,
,..,.

POMEROY

mlgoDil

, . 3...
~-Hil

O
SYRACUSI

.:7-:-----------

1111011 ~.- ..

-

6.-

~• are UUUOOJII, wa w.... .o\"__,'TES
1 or 2 needles, makeabuttc&amp;
'""""'"

---

BUIC~MC TRU~~~TIAC

'--~ 1. capital
ofOngon

!.'.,....~
!'•..Uadd!U., ~7U.
t.lltfe

~:t• ~ ,••So- ~ HELEN ar VIRGIL T~P!IR~.po.:::.:

15,689

A.CBO'J&amp;

1'01:111 aa1 IM..a-r(R 11·

t00~~ 1do.
...-ca.

~WI~~;IJ.J~==~.-J

CROSSWORD

:-*liJifiS- Fi.OOB iJd..iiii; .....

$4.12 per hour, after short
tralnJna, For Interview and
"'
SIEGLER GAS , bealer, 76,000
U-. 00117• alt .._,._.Ill
••
,.._
-.
application, caD 1-313-241- COAL, egg•stokor-mlnorun, JaBTU, tbermootat, tan, uled · wtdo. Pa.. Allllar0411o • - .
SS72, ' or write Nationwide
cobsCooiCo.IIWiandTIPPie,
..,.winter, .125. Sosal228 W, VL Pllasoi.,.,...'l'llalllr
Safety Director, Room 426,
Phone 742-4952 or 992-3469.
S. Tlllnl Ave., Middleport, 1:30 or HNBU; 118elae.
307 Esst 4th street, Tnns1&amp;,3-30tc
anytime,
10-30-llp .
•
~NI Ue
portation Building Cincln- - - - - - - - - - --- - ---------naU, Ohio.
' 11--3-2te ~'w GAS turrace lnatalled; NEW OU..F1JRNAcE,lnitalled,
-------- -- -t2 95, Terms available. ...
SU5. Terms available, Ph. SIB IIEIOLEIJ'dldiOWSollllb'
ru..
ft2.3S52.
. 1:w INM'W JOUl" bama. C111

Wl-4fcl

lt,:Rnmen

branch
(abbr. I

T.llntansle·
mont
8. Secular

I.Seaeaale
lO.Tykea

a.ll'miCh

painter

18. Son of

Iu&amp;c

19. Lucky
charm8

:I&amp;Y-blrd
ofproy

110. 'l'bn&gt;ulh
21.Atall
(Scell
22.Abyu

llollem

lM.Jiea4ow

20. htber

:rr.AflllctiOnl

' ----:--:-'-~'----:----::::!
·t.OG,AN FIRE ond •
-~
-....,

6,1\l!llWy

:m. City of

Unocrsmblet_f_Jumblee.
letter to eaeh· oquare. to
form four ordinarJ word.•.

&lt;ltrDWIY
36.Jap-

-

t oodtllh

28. J)l&gt;trk:t
of
LondoD

at. SUifelt
M.KIIItery

DOBOL

capo

35.Forap
36. Split
37. S +aped

mollllnll

38. Froated

S9.So1lllde&lt;l
boll

ill. Oppoolte

ot
awet.ther
43.ADpr
45. Direction

{abbr.)

ICfNAGEj
tl

I

-!
....,.f

lllll)t 8ala1 mlllani•LIIr•,

WJIIdalln lire IIIII . . . ..

&amp;41dPDI'DI

"ldJI dl1

•

prlctl OO&lt;ill t;pN.iad
Cl( lrt estfnlll'... l •

-..1, Dwl&amp;\tlelia.

'

10-UIIta

992-3352.
--~---------- -•
(QIPUJER
t().lo.ttc
10.1Mc
Gu7 NIIIJtr, Raclnl, ~c JUiRiiilJii&amp;TV"ANDAIITiit.i
- - - - - ---..-- - ---- · ~. -~"'!!~--~-..-. lfA siavJC£.. ....... . ..
PROGRAMMING l"EMI - A~TOMATIC rille, Z2 Real Estate For Sale
'--------------- 2N_I.
t-IMD
-

LEARN ot ho~no .. In raw
11 "''· No '* 1111 •due.•par•
tl1111n neodH. It"• 1l111pl•• N•w
1

ea•~ ln•tent Learnlna Mothocl.
Write for fne brochwe.

lo• with

scope. Phone 84~

2476.

11)..2g..10tc

-g;WING ilidUNES. _....... . .+-••,...-•---------letvice, ~ inakea. 991-22,_... , ~ .
·. .
. -.J. 'lbe Fabric Sbctt, a...t-..
P . .r_cW. AVI'O..._.
.
·
.
•
'
"
.
...
.:..:....A l
.,-...-. .._......,..

Clela,nd Realfv

--- --- -----CA-ERS ~ Ira·-•
·
JIU""
a •.,
....., trall.ua, ROUTE 7 _ BEAU'I1Fi1L•¥1n
Banner and ContluentaL Low
r00111. brlck home, 4: W-

price, 10percanttol5 percent
Gaul'•
..._..NviiWo.
_r e~.o.1
D&amp;.-... ~~~oa•
"""" -ao. .,_,. ... •
3132. Tiro ml1aa o/.

COMPUTER COLLEGE
OF TECHNOLOGY
One Public Square 1104
Cleveland, Olhla "113 .

came"'

L------------'

Olelter on

Rt.

7. Watch tar

~~ ~r ~ Ulll"
Slnlct. We . . . . .Sell-

.,_p e.

l'OClllll,- cloaeta, excel·

·-......
-""~
.,... ~--.
....,., ld·-·~·
Mit~ ....
eto and dlapoaal, tun
lth __,_,_
m.....

w

'

~-Iff

HERE'S THE WORLDFA.I\CIJS HOCKE~
PI.IIIE~ Wllf6 HIS

:,.i: 'lei"'
,· Loet ,_.,......,.

511CK llEFOO:
1HE 6A/o\f .,

tair'a Q_IIUt'1 Cililfl . . .

~~

....._

,...,.,N,..,. recna-

o'- left on,.._ _ u-• If
tloa room,prapand .........
DAIRY HAND wanted. Mutt be
..,
--v
WQ', llh &amp;crei ll'Qlnd, fruit
1~""
able oo cp~nte milking ma- · - - - - - Inti, lilrullbaey, troatporeb
chltte. Houae furnished. Ar-------and .DWl)'Oiherfeaturel.
vtl Holter, p~ 9•••833 , 55-GALLON d.nlm1, p:ld for ONCE ·JN efaJ"t..i1 11'--~••
•-11111:1 ..~
h ,..,
......,....,
11-2-atc
traa • ...50 oath. l'onoero7
C\lportul1ll;f Pnoentlltaalf---- - ------JtalkCompaQ,y.
Her.i•Youra.21tor7hmlo

-::u,.,..:

t0..22-12tc

llllted To BUJ
\AUn,

-------------POODLE p•- •~c .._
v.-.-.I.Eollo nn now

'-'AUU.,..., .. ., •..,_.,. ,....
at&lt;. Wrl.. llllrdatun, $11 ..... ..,.
- I I M. D - I I
DL
..mee- rra I ~
· ........,, m. t , . . _..--

Any person Interested may
flit written uceptlons to 111d
or
accounts or to matt•n per·
PamuOJ. &amp;lhOIIIttz.t211.
talnlna to the execution of t"t
~~
trust , not ltSI than five davs
prlortothedaltSIItorhtarln9 . - - - - - - - - - - - -

factor that can be ldenUfted .

W«4

HOBSTETTER, Brolcor

ca..,.,.1,- PLarae 1oi. •t; C. BRADFORD, AurU p
RURAL
6
•--- 1
C
'•Sol iloilo ·
,._. """"'• ce •
Z
lar, _,drlllldwoll. A&lt;&gt;" - MM121'
re. $2410.
Ract•• ' CJ1d41··:
MIDDLEPORT _ srooma, both
. CriU ~:'.,_. i
11111 !Urnance, ,.,. ldtcban,
-~-, .. 2,000.
-------------~·
_._... ~
POMEROY _ 8 , . _ tnme, IIEADY-IIIX OONCJIE'[E dall.ba" do•._.• ..,000.
tN4 11!111t ta JGUl' ,..,.; .
------- ------.. .,
_..,...,.
RACINE- 3 bldrooma, lath,
flit IIIli _.,, Fnl ..U.
WATER CONDITIONERS, $8,
- 1 Door a.r.ce. La--~
lllllaa, I'll. 992-a:IM, -0.:'

blaa, old clocka,

disposed of .

, Ja the easiest p I a c e from Most babies outgrow the dis-

Onlr

flnloh.

GIO.

polloher, Runs like now, t&amp;9
cash, or tenn1 aftllable.
Phone 992-2685.
IIJ-28.6tc
------- ------THREE coooecutlve loto In
Beech Grove
Cemeteey,
Write WWiam J, Moore, 31
Rl
Ide Drl
n.~vera
"Ve, ~-· 5,
10-29-101&lt;
Ohio.

BLAETTNARS

AREA. Train ,_ to drive
1•-· c. 1 a1
aem ~-c~, oc and over

alwhlchtlmosaldocco·u ntswlll
be considered end continued ~A "'"""""" -~ ~
from dly to dey until finally

f.at~,.;:-s,.. I.~~ 7!A

11-3-ltc
- -----------

the road. You can earn O'Yer

..

Hlr mile•. Raila.

Court . DRIVERS NEEDED IN THIS

pertonic colic 1 What cau.aes

A-No.

24 mouths. The aver- This is common in a ftrst-

•l ooon.

Accounos and vouchero Of lhe
following flducleriOI havo boon

Final Account of Jomu
Nicholson.ofAdmlnlslntor
ot tho
Estate
Ray Nicholson,
Deceased.
CASE NO. 20029 Flrol and

,. ap is about 15 months. Your born because a baby can
:;..cm•s soft spot will close sense his mother's anxiety

'•
::

'

Administratrix of the Estate of

when it involves the in a baby cause his per-

;~ .~ore

Pleasan~

pasoor or the church, otllclated
at the service.
ATTENDED MEETING
TheRev.JamesMoyandWUUam RusseUattetdedameeti!W
of District 11 and 12 orthe Western Pennsylvania -West VIrginIa Synod held at Jackson's MUI,
West VIrginia.

. Tho church wao decorated
with armw:ements of white
Kladioll, ferns and catdelabra
holdlnl white tlpers. Traditionalweddllwmuslewasplayedby
the or-..tat Mrs. William Russen. ..... '

•
•
•

Point

,

S:u

," .,.. - - - - - - - - - - 5 P. m.
H-2-Uc lalmY VACUUXcleaner, com-----------pletewlth cloanlngtooloand

ad below K and K Xoblle

Homes,

,-

•·.-.-

bidromn.s,

~...

_,.

porchu,blnllle!t,lowllat. ·
$SGO.OO do!no, bllai~Ce W.
r_...

._

ll..a..fc' WE ILWE GIIEAT NEED FOR
HOMES TO SELL; CALL US
------------

"~-~ttL

"RaltiQ SAf:E

FURNJSIIED and untw:nlehld ·
~ CIONtll~ .
p._ 8111~1. .

'iO:i...,.

2

0..

......_._

&amp;Ill fU1 wttll

¥111 _
... B-Vtca ...
. . . JIIla, ....... ar,.a.· ,

e..u.-

TODAY. .

HENRt CLELAND,

__.

Gillet 992.2218 '
' 11~

•
"'· ...!

..

.

'
I ·or..;.

~.i

•

··"' :;J..

•'

...

.,

' '·'

•

--- .
•

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••
.
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�••
11-,. 111111 Sontilllll, P

or· MM!Port.llii~U

7 ,,, Non · '1• I, 1MI
~

,(

Name OVL Company'Zeri Kirkhart
,~ 0 Certtlfiled lr~ar
•.1
keI Services lleld

Fr!eadl and rellit!vea oltlle
ReedniDe - .101)110 commuoltor
have loaraod oltlledootllol ZOrl
Kirkhart at C~~Yahop Folia.
Mr. Klrldlart mcewasabuli·
neaaman who 01lft4oll and Cllllrated tile .101)110 ........ and
olao • aeneral 11ore at Lonl

News••• in Briefs
(c.ntlrllod P.qe 1)
atalll oplnat W&lt;ni!W him over to the United SlaleL Csrlleald
tile cbarpa agalnat him In 7taly are ldchlplrv, private violence,
brllwlnl w_,. or war Into Italy, poaseaal~WthomiUegally aoo
carryq them WegaUy.
.. __ _,___ _.
.. __ _,

Three Olllpo811 a.........,,..... near uutver

· ATrEND FUNEIIA.L
Mrs. Marlenollarrlaon,.Mta.
Dawe Ashley, and Mrs. Paul
Zlrkle and 8111, Reymoncl, Joined by Mr. and Mrl. Bill Horrah o1 Vandolla, 110re In Parkorlburg Saturcla.V to aUoed !Unero! aenloos ror Mrs. Yolanda L. Jones• ..,_,, Jones was a
aloler ol Mra: Paul Zirkle, and
was rormerlyo!Middieport.llle
was preceded In death b7 her
parerts, Mr. and Mrs. Al1red
Lljijn; and a· slater, Mrs. ·Ot.
t!e stboll.

SAIGON - STIFF NORTI! VIETNAMESE art!Uery barrages
have forced Allied tr-• to abo!Kioo lllroo U. S. outposts oloq
the Csmbudlan frontier, mllUoey apokesmen said todey.
7t was the ftrot reported nao or coovortlonal artWery by
Bottom several years qo.
the VIet Ceq or North Vletnuneae In tour monthL U. S. mll~He loll Melp COol1b" and Wllllt
to QQ"Ihop. Folia where he tary IIOUl'Cea aald 101110 or tho aolvoa c a m e from netlhbori!W
~ L'1JUI' u. b. ne.llCCJIItBr&amp; were snot dOWn s.Ria.Y by
enpi!Od In truck
lila
auerriUa gruwd gi0U10rs whe used the heal'Y cowr or the Jwwle
wile, Allie Bolle Klrldlart, died
to move around almost at wilL
a few yeara ago.
The woolu!nd !Igbtlrv killed 11 Amarlcans - six In the amMr Klrldlart, 84, had bush qf • truck convoy, four In a helicopter crash and one in
In falling health ror 11011111 Ume
the wllhdrawol lrom lire bose Kate.
and was cared for ln a lm'llng hoDie tile past IOYerol
mmiiiL
He Ia 1111'\'lved by three chil(Contlrwod !rom Page !)
dren, WWIU'd and Audra, both
o1 _.. C\o'ahoga Falls, and
They are Joan Asbury, first.
Arpl (Pete) ol Arlzonl; HVfirst grader; Dean Hill, second
eral grandchildren, and other
place. fourth grader; Becky
relatives. Local reladves lnSayre, third, sixth grader;~
elude a niece, Norma Rockhold.
NEW YORK - Record sales,
ny Wolfe, fourth place, fifth
Reedsville, and a ara-•l!h·
exceeding 100 mUilon dollars
grader, alii Jess Wolfe, fifth
ter, Jean Tru1ael1, ot near
for the first Ume. and lncreas~
place, a rll'st grader.
Baahan. Funeral aervtcoa and
ed Income were reported by
Hmorable mention went to
burlol were held Solurday '*"
Cbrlo-Cra!t lncllotrlea, Inc. for
carol llalley' Jane Smith, Katb,y
OJ.ro'&gt;oga Folia.
Ita flow year ended Aug. 31,
Hayman, Dianne Ward, Derutis
1969. Sales and net protlt ror
Satterfield, Joe Satterfield,
tile year were $102,324,000 and
Randy Alley and steve Boso.
$4,436,000 c:ompared to $89,The winners will be present030,000 and $3,488,000 ror the
ed prizes.
pnvlouo 12 moolhs.
Income before extraordinary
Koneelh L, Lamp, 36, Reedsol $794,000 011 aoleo
earnings
ville, died ~ at his Roule
~ marketable securities was
1, Reedsville home.
The am o1 Cutlord B. ond MEET mE PRESS secre- $8,642,000. lnclu&lt;llng extraorTONIGHT AND TUES.
NOV. J-4
Edna Asbury Lamp, Heeds- tary !or lbe F I r1 t Lady. dinary tneome of2S cents, earnville, Rootel, Mr. Lamp was Collltallee CorneD Staart, Ings were $1.06 per abare ror
.. STAR"
bom In Mammontll, W. Va. He above, bas been named by the 1969 !lacol year, comparhad been employed aa a tim- Mro. Nixon to be director ed to 93 centa ror 1968.
T echnicolor
o! ber otaft, succeeding
Average llbare 1 outstanding
ber cutter. He was a mem- Gerry Van der Heuve! wbo
Julie Andrews
for
the year were 3,168,692
ber of the Disabled Amertcan waa named apecla! asolatRichard Crenna
Veterans Chapter of Parkers- aat to lbe U.S. ambaoaador compared to 2,479,033for 1968.
Colorcartoon:
The latter Is acijuated to rel:ur&amp; and was a navy veteran to Jta!y.
Stuck-Up Wolf•
fiect
the 1969 common stock
of the Korean War.
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
dividend and the two-lor - one
Besides his parents, he Ia
common stock split.
Rlrvived by a brother, Cla,yThe Broadcasting Division
t.oo. Belpre; two Blsters, Mrs.
had an excellent year, reportFrank (Ethel) Murphy Cool- L
Ins record aalea and earnings.
viDe, and Mrs. James (CharDl
OUDC
and
The lndnslrW Dlvllioo also
lotte) Van Foaaen.. ParkersFuneral services lor Fredburg, and several nteees, neph- die E. Kiser, 61, Racine Route had hll!her aolea and earnings.
for
ews. uncles and aunts.
2, ldlled ln a truck-c:ar accident Although the Boat Division also
MARRPAGE LICD&lt;SES
Funeral services will be held on Route 7 near the Addison produced record sales, profits
JaroldotlaLambert,23,Weat at2p.m. WemoadeyattlleWblte brldp In Gallla County SaW&lt;- were lower than the prior year
Leath 87' Sh08$
Columbia, Route I, and Violet Funeral Home iD Coolville with dey, will be held at 2 p.m. because of reduced margins.
The world's larpst builder
Martoena Cremeans, 18, Cool· the Rev. Rey Deeterolftclatlng. Tueadey at the Letart Folia
ol
pleasure boats, Cbrla-Cralt
WHERE SHOES ARE
ville Route 2; Terry Lee Vol- Burial will be In the Tuppers Melhocllst Church.
lance, 20, Gallipolis, and Lou- Plains Christian Church ComeBesides 13 cbUdren and his also operates three major mar.
SENSIBLE PRICED
ket television staUona and man·
vetta
Darlene
Chafin,
19,
Pome•
Frienda
--•1
tth
•·
w11
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
_,,
may= a e...
e, named In the accaunt of
uractures lnduatrlel and agri,
the
accident,
Mr.
Klaer
Ia
anrl
vived by hla motller, Mrs. Mary cultural chemicals, plastics and
Kiser, Long Battomi a sister, fiber and roam producta . The
Rosa Miller, Crown City; 21 oompoJil' ..,.rates 19 plants In
grondchlldrell. , . ~;n d several lAin llatel, l'aQada. llal1 and
Renrve Dlatrlct No. 4
Slate No. 223-X
Tli.wan.
·
nlacea and nephews,
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF COND5'110N OF
OlllclaUng at tile aervtcea
wW be the Hew. Freeland Nor.
rls and borlal will be in the
Q-Who founded the
Letart FollsCemetery.Frlmds
OF POMEROY, OIUO
Smithsonian
Institution in
may coli at the Ewing Funeral
Washington,~. D.C.?
Home until noon Tuesday when
And Foreign alii Domestic Subsidiaries, a member oC the Federal Reserve
A-The ,;nglish scientist,
the
body will be taken to tho James Smithson, who never
System, at the close of busJneas on October 21, 1969, published in accordance
church.
visited the United States but
will! a call made by the Federal Reserve Bank o! tills district purs- to tile
whose remairul were brought
provisions of the Fedenl Resene Act.
to this country and lnteried
In lbe original Smithsonian
Building.
ASSETS
679,988.21
Cash arol due from bonks {lnclnollqj$None uq&gt;Osted debita) ••• '
U. S. Treasury securities •.• , , •••• , ••••••• , .••••••. 1,211,474.12
ObligaUona orStateaaoopo!IUcolaiDI!vialons... • • • • • • • • • •
845,435.81
Other securities (lncludq $None corporate stocks)
18,000.00
HARTFORD - Mrs. Wile
Federal 1\mda sold am aecnrlUes pnrchaaed under
D.
PbUllpa, 89, llarUord, W,
agree111.ents to resell •••• • , •••••••. , •••••• , •••• tOO,OOO.OO
va., died &amp;mda,y at VeteranJ
&lt;Jther 1oana • •••• , • • • • • • • • • • •••• • • ••• ••• •••• •• 6,999,686.45
Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy
Bank premises, furniture alii fixtures, aDd oltler
following
aeverol mont111 ol 01assets represertq bank premlaea , , , , , • , •• , , , , •• 544,191.60
ness.
Sle
was a member £4. the
Other usets • • • . • • . • • • . . • • • . • • .............. , •• 5.517.32
llarUord
Methodist
Church.
TOTAL ASSETS .. • •• , • , ••• • •••••••• • .•••••••• $10,504,293.51
Born June 5, 1880, atTrhme,
LlABIUTIES

rarm:na.

0

Voters

LODGE TO MEE'll
omcers wDI be elected by
Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM
at 7:30 p, m. Tuesday at the
temple. All Master Masons are
Invited.

AcCidents
Set New. Reco11fl
.
Aceldenta lnveatlpted Ill a
alnilo mont11 11v 1110 Golllpolla
PVst, Slate llJt!rwl,y Patrol,
reached a 11ft . Ill-Ume hll!h
Ill Oclober wheO 88 ...were lnvootlpted Ill Gollla and
Melga Counjlea.
Thlo Is an lnc-10 ol nlne
rrom the prevlooo montll ......

Last ...nth there were 21acoldenta In which 31 peraoo•
were Injured. Olllcora spent
1,0 17 hoUrs patrollln8 the hll!hwa,ya 'If Gollla and Molal CounUos, made 221 arrests, Issued
299 warnlnss, rendered aaolota
to 112 motorists and ooncllcted
soi"Ju,tor weilllle lntpectlolla.

77 aeeldents were investlpted.

lJDtll last I)IODth, September's
T1 accldenta had been tile alltime hll!h.
Gallla Caurt;y recorded three
trafllc !atallUes In less than
24 hrura 011 Oct. 31 and Nov.
I, altboul!h 0118 ol the victims
.... ln)lred 00 Oct. 25 and died
Nov. 1. Thelhreedeathabr&lt;llll!ht
tho year's !atallty total to nine.

Don'l Afteel MUk
Lightning and thunder do
not aftliCt mUk at all. It appears, rather, that hot molal
weather which produces socalle;l heat thunderatornll
also favors the growth of
bacteria and the spoiling of

food ..

VOL

ed

hero by Franklin Ginther, Up-

t"!f
_l"!!..ill~ Iliff!'"•-... Dlt c and ..,.,., director.
Glnlhe'r, a natiVe ol Middleport and gracllate "' Middleport llll!h School In tile late
toa, also waa instrumental mu ..
lie Instructor and barul dlrec-

QUICK QUIZ

Elberftlds are headquarters for
Carhartt Brown Ducks. Vi sit tht
mens and boys wear.

Equity capital, total ••••.•••••••••• , , • , , , o , , , ,
Common stock - total par Yalue • • •••••• , ••••••
(No. shares althorlzed -

$769,139.00

, , ,

o •••

300,000.00

12,000

(No. shares outstanding - 12,000

;

'
~I'

•

fj
.;'

'

Surplus •••••..•• o • , • • • • • • • • • • • , • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 3oo.ooo.oo
Undivided profits , ••..• • ••• , o • , • • , , , , , • , , , o , , , , • 169.139.00
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS , •••••.••• , •••. , ••• , •• 769,139.00
TOTAL UABIUTIDi, RESERVES, AND
.
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS • , •••.••• , ••••• , ••••• ,f10,504,Za3.51
MEMORANDA
Average of total deposits for the 15 caleDIIar
deys eiKIIIW with call dele •••• •• , , , •. , ••••••••••• 8,844,684. 88
Average of t.otal1(8118 for the 15 calendar da}s
ending with call date. , .
6,934,070.66
I

I.

,

,

,

•••

,

,

•••••••

I

•••••

I, Paul E, Kloeo, Cs1hlor or tho abovHIImed bonk do hereb)o declere
that this report of c:onlltlon is true to the beot of my -loclp aiKI be!ter.
PAUL E. KLOES, Csahlor

tho Wllerojpld director a, otteot tile eorrectneal or thla report ol
co!Kiitloo arol de~lafo lhat It has been examined b7 ua and to the beot o1 our
knowledp aoo belie! lo true arol correct.
TIIEODORE T. REED, JR.
FRED R. CARSEY, JR.
TIIEREON JOHNSON - Dlrecton

- WASPI!NGTON - OPPOSITION TO TilE NIXON doctrine lor
olld!IW tho VIetnam War ceriered today on the President's r&amp;U.ure to repudiate tho Saigon gownment or ortar a tlmetab!e lor
U.S. troop wllhdrawaL
Tho President's a~Dtlr~ero aald he had leld tile altlaU011 oot
boM.U,, mplalned his plan as much aa he dered aoolhat he
should now set tho tBtlonal altii)Ort he sought. Few those commonii!W on Nboo's llonlaf night speech suggested be had otrered 1111lhiiW oubetantlally new, But • ..,porters aald his plan lor a
_ . - wllhdrawol was the rtlht wa,y to eiKI the war.
Critics Bald Nixon .... orreri!W nothln8 that showed tile remotest chance of success. Some crlUcs compared his apprc.cb
with that or Proaldort Lyrolon B. .Johnson.

or

madea!locko!peaslmlatslook
like dumb dodos by defeating
Athena, GeUlpolla, Wellston,
Nei801111W&amp;-York and !ronton,
and t5eJn&amp; Lopn.
Bernard Fulb:, t.IMss C&lt;Jott'ty
COral Gl-Ove', won ~·sole Owner.
llhlp ol oecmd place ID tile prosecuting attorney and a ROSouflleaatern ObloFootliall Con- tarlan, will be master ol cere.
ference last week by defeat- IIIDI11es. Common Pleas Juclp
John C. Bacon Ia Rotary's pres.
Ins lronlon 28-13.
Coach Chancey•s team, tnex- ident.

week by United Press llltemaUonal.
The Marauders, with a 1100league game remaining Fridey
nlgirt aplnst Claas A - •

(Conbnued ... -

OOIIIG. VAN111:

Will Speak
Coogressman Charles A.
Yanik ol tile 22nd District will
address a loth Dlstrlct Democ:rat workshop to be held Saturdey at tile Elks Club In Nelawille.

BY BOB HOEFUCH
sets more oxciUngwllb
each passing dey, when you'N

• uta

Vanik, alawgracklateofWest-

young at heart."

em Reserve, was elected state
aena1Dr ln 1940. He served on

Aed cerlalnly young at heart
Ia Mrs. Ruth Ell• Moore observed her 90th blrtbtlal at
her 'Middleport lUll bome -

tho Cleveland Board o1 Educatlm and before being elected to
Coogresa served as j!dgeortho
'111m! olpal Court.
Cong. Yanik Ia being Cr e-

dajr.

cpently mentioned as a senatorial candidate to fill the ol Stephen Young who bas an-

programmed

nounced his retirement as U.S.
Senator from Ohio.
Saturda,y' s wori&lt;ahop Is being

aponsored by tile lOth Dlatrlct
Democrat Actloo Club wblcb Is
headed by E. A, Wingett o1
Recine. The ftrst session alarts
ot 1 p.m. and will be followed
~ a 6 p.m. &lt;lltmer.
ConclncUng the workshop aessloo wtll be Slate Cbolrman
Eugene "Pete" O'Grady a n d
state headquarters.
eeded her In death. Mr. Moore spend the nlgirt with her, bow- O'Grl&lt;b' bao
I'OCJitated all pre.
died In 1960.
ever·
clnct committeemen, respeeThelhreellvln8 cbUdr011 are
91e Ia a member o1 tile Roy. live cllldldatea and D01110&lt;rot
WU!ard, Daa o1 CoiDDIIIIa and ol Nell!hbora Lodge ol Amer(Ccntlnuecl·o . - 8)
Goorp "' Maryavllle.
lea and was formerly a mem..
Mra. Moore hea 21 grand- ber o1 tile Pytblan Slaten
ehlldren, 21 great - grandchii- Lodge, 91e belooga to tile lollddren 1ttd a1x great-great.crand- dleport Church o1 Christ.
children.
·
Mrs, Moore Ia looking forThe elderly Middleport resl- ward to her Nov, 16 rl1l!ht.
dent liVOB olone and likes II. ()( c:ourae, Oylng Ia noWng to
Plano lor holcittw abort nr-91e reada
glasaoa her - abe earlier new to Arivices
at the Meiga Courthouao
"cooks up a storm " and ..,: zona to violt her son, but thet
Jo.ya -rally
healtll. A was WhOil abe waa YOUIIIV - monument next Tuesday 1n oJ&gt;.
........,. ol Veterans Day were
ne5l!hbor uaually comes In to abe .... ClCily 85.
_ 1 _ Monclay night by
; ; l 'I!U' · g ""W ·
.,,.
Drew Post 39, American L&amp;TEAM TO MEET
sloa.
BlJFFALO, N. Y. (UP!) The Big Bond Nellthborboool
Legl-lroa able to take put
HIIU')' Pia-aid pleaded Girl Scout aenlce loam will are aolced to notl(y Commanoler
_,.._ ill a cl"' court Mnnilav
.......
"
- - moot Thuradey ot the ...... Don RunneL Realdents are also
to a charp ofpub!lclntoxlca- hoUaa 1n Middleport rrom 9:30 urpcl to diap!a,y !las• that day,
tion, but told tile judge he to ll:30 a.tn. AU oxocuUve .,_
Memberahip for thetl0l¢year
couldn't . . . . . . 15-dey jail, t!cora, troop organizer• and
t.rm
troop &lt;maultallta are urpd to waa -.cad at 258 wltll tho
· at thla time.
"lbotvoto-IAimomiW," . - _ q..,.. o1
Jfamllllra areaak·
Pltdl olk! aald.
ed to.., ,..,.. • • thl1 wool&lt;
Jllpiiii..IIM!b U D I to d U.. eillrebel• '1110 ia9 P!GmR LUtbert, llf•Jtd
. "lilp'•:I\'Ubur P, Trawmill
IO~the~i1111lle
lllill ~ F!l'lt ~
olao mode Pl'Widciila ~· :~ "~l'iea ,:_ llc!r!flls.i'!O",
ant pve PlatLOCAL TEJU-:;
tnnioc! . 0 •• r to the special
.
eacb · iilll•• tile • • • "'id·llaal 47 at!'l· . ~ Alllarapa, J!o~'l!tll'•·
~it!t·na: VtiiiUonal ..,._
I Q - - ''train" wh!ch wW be I n . ~ la-JIIW •· ~ ol
tbetlt,H-1 . Lt~~e;• tllillo. Eria · Jl¥- ·' """""" ,
. l'WIOroy ot llotn. """"""" orQY at ll4fla.ILIIUtlola)o, Dnea
m bo ""'d iJtd m o}r-• ~· boa
~ llllde, . . .~ Mo!lo Busb,
,.
·,
·
· ' ,r-,-,-.• may '" ' - , to "M"~
17 w~ Jcu 'll""
i&lt;~ llarrtI
Woilo. ,
.
, '
. '!11-IIIIIIIIPIM-IIIill!liWYilll
. ••
lil!l•a. ol' inallOd tO PO Bux 401, Potn-

-

rrom

'-Ins

IScolld Colon

SCREEN PMN1ED THEIIIAL WEAVE

4.99

l'o~alor

NEEDLEWOVEN

THERMALWEAVE

4"

4"

100% polyester tor long lutIng beauty! 8 bright solid
COIOfl, 72 XQO..Inch,

l
. l l d d l- - '

ae..

..,..u

*'

'

·~fli!dlwiUprol&gt;ablfbeiiY.,Uio ~-

aood

au.

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

Cool\'

STORE HOURS

w1ci..ut

To Churches Total $411;000

;

'lati*fi '

-..,!rom
!!OJ

or

years. The matter was refer- the new Route 7 by~ss.
red to a committee headed by
Don Collins.
Mayor Logar was given authorlty to advertlae lor bid.e [or
a new body and tank for one of

PI Ia tentatively beUeved thel
the Hiland Church Road will
be rebuilt and improved since
It Uea In s good position to

the fire trucks in order to secure an accurate estimate of
the cost involved. Mayor Legar aald the body and tank

road to the new four . lane
highway. Pomeroy wiU contlnue to have an access road via
Union Av0101e olao, tho mayor
aold.
Cooacll cmrerred wltll Tom
Caaaeu, loeol manager o1 tho
(Cortinued oo pap 8)

ml.!bt coat as much aa $6,000.
However, be pointed out that
there Is a fire department IOYl'
ol ooe mill In elfect In tile town

provide

an

excellent access

Plan Service on Nov. 11

Partial Shiflet Bequests

- . . . . .'!"' - ""u-. '"-'

Lellle F. Fultz, Pomeroy busi.Desarnan, Mot:tdQ night res:IPed as a Pomeroy Village Councilman.
Although atterolln8 a regular meetiJw
couru:U Mooda,y
Dl&amp;lrt, Fultz submitted ltls reslgnatloo In wrltiJW to Mayor Char)os Lepr.
The letter aald, in part:
11
My realgnatlan as a member of the council olthe vUlage
ol Pomeroy Ia hereby submitted, effective this dele.
"As you wiD recall, I agreed to run for my presert term~
57 after you speclllcally """"&amp;ted that 7cPo oo, and with tile atlpnlaUm that I would servo only until a suitable replacement could
be toun:L It is a matterotrecOJ"dtbat J a++em;ed to resign more
tllen 18 lllOitba ago, but agreed to Oilal oo lor a 'short oddltlonal
ported.' It is olao a matter orrecordthat last AprU,I again oubaltted my resipaUon but was once more pre"Vailed ~ to remain. Because or the maoy d.emaiKis upon my time, I Ceelthet I
can oo IOIWOr do justice to the position.
"During my tenure of olftce, lor tile next four years. It
I have attempted to porauepoll- brings In
$6,000 IDilual_clu. wllldl _ . , . to me to ·IJ. There 11 a $6,000 lwll the In the bell Interest and of edneas remaining oo a new
tile most bcmollt to tile Jlllljor- fire truck recently deUvered
IIJ ol our c!Uzena, not ClCily for to tho - ·
toda,)', but tor years to come.
Counellman Rizer read a let.
.,Yoo 111a7 be assured that it ter in reterenee to his com ..
bas been a distinct pleaanre to nwnlcatlona with Congressman
have oerved with yoo and oth- Clar011ce Miller ill regard to
er members of couneU as the the possibiUey ~ securing a
governing body ror our vu. IIIJillliemental grant to belp wltll
la&amp;e.''
the sewage dlaposalsyltemnow
A Republican, Fultz bas aer- IIIICierwliY.
ved lor approximately 11 years
Altbou&amp;h tile 1-r•s content
as a councilman.
was discouraging, Cong. :wlMayor Logar accepted the lor aald he wW cmtlnno to look
resignation with regret. No re- Into obtaining more federal ald.
placement was named last night Tbe town already has received
but a new councilman is ex- au Eoonom1c Development Ad..
peeled to be named within the minlatratlm grant ol $562,000
next 30 days, However, COIDl- on the sewage project. Thiswaa
ell did elect Franldin Rizer orislnaUY eeUmated to he about
to sene as new president ~ 60 per cent ol the total cost.
the council, the post which However, due to rising costa,
Fultz had been holding,
the grant amounted to only about
CouncU heard a letter from 47 per cent or the cost by tile
four street department employ- time the contracts were award ..
es requesting pay increases ed.
of 50 cents an hour, time and
MIQ"or Legar reported on a
one.bal! payment for overtime meeting wlllcb be attended last
and double Ume lor holidays week in reference to tho exand ~ work. The letter peedlture ol 101110 $500,000 In
alated lhat the employes bawe federol !tmds glwen to Meigs
had no P8J' increases in two County for access roads onto

....,t

New Mobe

9A.M.-5P.M.DAILY
94.M.-9
.

"'

Hope Dimmed of
More Sewer Aid

--======-

Ticket aales nuat end- next
llloodey, Nov. 10. None will be
sold at the door.
Rotary and the Middleport
Fire Dept, wiD alll&gt;ud tho ban~J~et 'fii' groups. ·Pomeroy !Iramen, Rutland ftremen, and Ule
Pomero,y Lima Club are · cleUy Invited alao to atteoola
groups. MembersoiRotaryalao
have ticketa tor sale.

-'ar

WANTED

,,

Speech Analysis

Cong. Vanik

Among tile exciting upeo1llinl
events ror Mrs. lloore - has known plenty ol bard 1iOJ1I
In her time- Is a trip toTecDpe, Ariz., 011 Nov. 16. M r a,
Hanoi
perform IU
Moore will !ly rrom Cotum..
P AlliS - NORTI! VIETNAM AND TilE V!ET CONG oMclalbus and is not concerned abaat
ly corolemeed today President NWID'a peace program aa a Dlll&gt;o
the
modo ol tran-tiMil' aUegadly designed to prolcqthe war In Scdh VIet-.
tatlon exeept, perhaps, the u.
The dolagatlona or both Hanoi and the Viet Ceq at the Parpoets ol being hijacked.
It peace talks Issued otatements denounc!Jtgthechlefexecut!ve's
In Arlzoaa, Mrs. Moore wiD
pollclea as ae1 forth in hla llonlaf night fll)eech. The VIet Ceq
Ylalt with tile YOIIIIPII ol ila'
aatd Nboo dillllla,yed In hla speech a desire "to praloq aoo lnelitbt children, WWIU'd.
toull) the American war or aggression In South VletrBm."
BonJ. It Hartford, W, VL,
Mra. Moore c:ameto Middleport
A. do tlae
folh
at tile age ol I 4 to work as a
WASPIINGTON - LEADERS OF ANTIWAR demonltraUooa
c!omeatl c. At tile age "' 10
achednled Ialor thla month rldlc:uled President Nixon' a war poiiC7 - h aa diiiiiPOinti!W arollnsn!tiJW,predlctlrwthatltls com- alto was preparing lUll meola
so It was ~ ror her to
menta wW only drive more protesters Into tho atreeiL
''I think In a aense the apeodllo a clear
to our el- step Into hoUsehold enq»oy.
mont. h was married at tile
rorto to bring large IIIDibera ol people toW uhlttston." aald Ted
age
"' 15 to tile late George
Jolmaon, a Peador oltlle NO.. MoblllaatiClll Commlttoe to End tho
Moore, about live ......, boWar In Vlotnom (New Mobe). 111tt jrGOQ&gt; Is aponaori!V a NoY,
fore her 16th blrtbcla,y.
(CoeUnued 011 pep 8)
Mr. Moore was a eool minar and tile Moores were Ia and
out ol tile Mlotiloport CCJIIIIIUUI..
olW11t retumod.
Sorrow Ia DO ltr&amp;lt&amp;l!r to the
lllddleport lUll lad¥ wbo pro.
clallno that " " - Ia t h e
root ol oil avil." Five ol her
elitl&gt;t chlldreo - Neol, Aloazo,
SPa fl((ddleport c:burchea bawe chnrchea alter that Ume. In his FrMcla, 1'1111 and Aana _ pre. .b roceiYed checkafor$8,000 will, tile late Mr. llllllet ""'
U I pertlai 47otrlbut!cm ol tile provided for tile dllrcbea 111
lilote ot tile late · Fred Shlr- IDbailmoot ol bla oalatt.
V£TERANS MEllORIAL
:.t.
.
Earlier, tile clllrchas I o t
IIOSPJTAL
;
· lltcentiJ, JII'GPOIV cnmod b7 smaller amounts ranalnl rrom
Ad110111!ma - PlllrB BocMI',
late lfr. Shlrtetwauoldand $1,000 to $3,000.
lllcld!~ MoryGUke1, PGat.. ~
~.~
-·~at Wll . !btl • - - ' •ror: ..... Rouah, Pt. P!oaa
wl
' ii=~~:w ~·--·~...,_,
~
&amp;Ill; Mlc- Dorst, "'ddleport;
• .
tl.. """""'"'~·~-.
...,.. rolldod_ in .........
,.,..~~ Ethel Johtii!GD, Vlman; PIW"
Firat. .~ t!lli-111:
moi!llll to lwl•!h lt!OCIII'•
~
P,_..,:,.....

peopl,

Mrs. Myri Purcell, Kenalng.
ton, M&lt;l.; Mrs. E&lt;llth Grar, eo.
lumbus; Mrs. MlldredS tone,
ChiWcolhe; Mrs. Rulli Grlneteod, llaritord; Mro. L e a b
Llt21ngar, Westerville, and
Mrs. Doris Krall, Jackaonville, 1:;;;.....;::
N.C.; three sons, E. Plarold
Phlllll&gt;s, Arlington, Va.; Jemes
R. Phillips, Nitro, and Wayne
R. Phillips, Belle, W, Va.; 20
grandchildren, and 18 greatgrandchildren.
FIDieral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Wemesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
tile Rev. IUllard BIDups olDelating. 1lnrlal will be In Gra..
bam Cemetery, Friends mey
coli at tllefutlarolhollleanytlme
after 3 p.m. Tueadey.

work in clrciPIItlon,
lncludillf drivllll ll&amp;ht
truck. Call The Dailr
Sentinel, 992·2i5&amp;, or
write sane, Pomeror,
Ohio.

en tine

Fears
Hijack

Critk. UJallled il tpelled oul

Adult, afternoons, to
w••

Cootbell ICJiad and Head COach
Charley Chancey and hla atal!,
and their wlvea, will be spacial
guests o1 the ~~ which Is
l)lO!I&amp;Ored by the Rotary Club.
IIOiarY,' ror·niilre tlt8ti25yoaro,
..,..,aored baJWpletl ror tile Mlddieport YeUow Jac:kets before
the acboola' conaolldaUmthree
years ago.
The Maraudar cheerleaders,

'

W. Va., she was the daughter
ol tho late Emery L and Mellsaa Jacobo Robe. Her busband, Jacm, died In 1965.
!Urvlvlng are alx danl!hters,

PLAN DINNER
An elecllon dey dinner, sponsored by the Morris CblpOI,
wW be bold at the Spiller truotoea bullclln&amp;near Racine all clair
tomorrow.

5

The pnbUc Is Invited to atvarsity and 111 resenes," also perlenced when the aoaaon
started, loaded with juniors, tend the banquet ane program
wW be l&gt;an!,let gueota.
UJIPOI' Arlington, campait!n- and with no regulars o! 1968 following lt. Dinner Ucketa, at
ln8 In tile toul!h C011trol Oh!o returning to tile otrenalve or $2.50 aacb, are on aole In
League, already bas """ Its defensive bacldiel4s, woo its ~meroy at the New Y o r k
opener against Claos A. Iron- Clothing Hoose, Slriaher 6
third straight cbamplonablp.
1m
st. Joe, dropped Ita eec- Lohse Drugs; ill ReUand at the
Cooach Moorehead's Golden
Bears have been ranked No. I eed game, nonJeague, to undo- RuUam Furniture store ancllhe
In Ohio Clau AA football all !oated Class AAA Pl. Pleas- Rutland Dept. store, and Ia
commitments.
faD by the Associated Press, ani ol Weot Vlrslnla, lost 35- Middleport at Dntton'a Drill
Members ol the Marauder and wm No. I ranking thla past 18 to champlm Jackson, then Store arol Western Auto Store.

By United Pross lnlernatlonal

••

"0!::Z$2

"1.

tor at Middleport llll!h School
CollOWUIB his gradnatlm rrom
Ohio Slate University. Ginther
wW attend tile banquet and aent COach Moorehead.
The l&gt;an!,let was moved up
from Thursday, Nov. 13, to
Wednesday, NoV. 12, to accommodate COach Moorehead'•

Ellterfelds In Pomeroy

Dies Sunday

TOTAL DEPOSPTS ••• , •••.•••• 19,393,994,10
(a) Total demarol deposits , • , • , , 3.113.895.11 .
(b) Tolal Ume. &amp; savings deposits, 6,280,098.99
other liabilities •• , , . • , , , , •••••••••• , ••• , •. , ••••
TOTAL LIABIUTIDi ... , , .. , ••••• , ........ . .... . . ~
62
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
.
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set ~ pursuart to IRS rulqs) •••••.•• , • , , •••••• , •• $34,297.89
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIFS .••••••.••$34,297,99
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS

xxn 1\Jo. 140

waa prevalled upon to come

Mrs. Phillips

Certl11ed and otncers' checks, etc. • , , ••• , , , , , , , • , , , , • , 66,735.11

Cf: -

Devoted To The ln#A11wll Of The Meiga-Ma10n
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT (')f-110
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 4,

Marvin Moorehead, atbleUc
cllroctor and head football coacb
"' Upper Arlington llll!h School,
with a st:r1n1 ol 29 atratlht
Ylctories, will be the principal
spoakor tile ev0Din8 o1 Nov. 12
sports tans honor the
Melga Marauder football loam.
Lee McComas, chairman ol
tile Mlddleport - Pomeroy Ro.
tary Clw committee arranging
tile ban~ and program, aold
llc!nda,y nlgirt COach Moorehead

L,:========:!.~ro=y~·---------ueral:::.:bo=me:..:all)'ll:::m:•~·

or

Paris Talks
All
'
But Written Off_

' "Under the new orders," swn,mer eKchange of letters
NI)(On said, "the primary bo'-&lt;1 .Nl..;, and tho tat• &lt;io
mission of our troops Is to Chi . Minh.
By STEWART HENSLEY
The other sl,4enable the South Vle1namase
WASPIINGTON (UP0 - Preatdem Nboo hal vlrlua11)' writforcn to e11ume the full not shown "ft..
ten ol1 tile Paris lalkL He , _ plna hl1 ' - • "" a gradnol U.&amp;
responsibility for the security of to join us ir.
withdrawll from VletDam UDder cmdltlma dvilw thos.i&amp;an-peace."
South Vietnam ."
rnmort a !Igbt!!W chance lor survivaL
Aldol said N
He said the South Vietnamese
The pre1ldonl'a adolreoa to tho llltimllonlaf nlaht was aimere gaining In strength even speech himself. f.:
~ .-'
at two audiences:
more rapidly than he had Informed In at ~
.,.&lt;
He _.(ed to the American pomlic lor Ume ln .wblch to
Nixon would say ., d.
anticipated.
-:(.
.fl
•vo
a carefully ataged puUout keyed to thelncreuuw abWty
The President Indicated he full agreement, U.
'
:
'
&gt;
&lt;l
&lt;t
'Ill
V - a e to deferollhomoelveL
held little hope for a neQOtlated said.
~ o ~ 0
warned Hanoi tho
~ !!·
.
le would be Interrupted on the negotleflng front."
·
~ ::.- ,.-4
United States would
In his May 14 address In
~ d'l ~
'rong and effective Vietnam, the President had
· ~ ·" .-'
-• • If tho Communis!$ omphaolzed hll pr_.ls lor a
0 '1- .-reased Infiltration or the negotiated peace, Involving
level of violence during the U.S. mutual withdrawal• by Hanoi
pullout .
and tho United Slates ond •
political settlement worked out
by tho SOigon government and
the Viet Cong.
Mondety night he put hi•
Nixon called this "a plan
Arec~
emphasis
on a pl11n for staged
which will bring the war to an
PRICE
10
CENT~
1969
end regardless of what hap~s

Upper Arlington Coach Moorehead
Will Speak at Marauder Banquet

THE SHOE BOX

Demand deposita of llldlvlduala, partnersbll&gt;s,
and corporations • • • • • • , , , , • , •••••••••• $2,464.183.86
Time am aavi~Wa deposits IIKiivlduals, partner shills,
arol oo11&gt;0raUons • • • • • • •• ••••...• ••• ..••• • • 5,908,09&amp;. 99
Deposits or United Slates Governmert , • , • , • • , , , • , , , , , 3535,109.58
Depoolts of Slates aiKI pollUcol subdivisions .••• , .•••• •••• 915,718.07
Deposits of commercial banko , , ••••• , • , ••• , ••.• , •••.• 4,087.89

South

agreement. He ukl "no pr~
new onion 1uporlodlng tho greu whatewr has bien made
previous ttrMegy or maintain· except agreem..,t on the lhape
lng maximum military pressure of tho berGOinlng table" delpllo
the Parl1 t•ttw and a serlet of
ort·1ho Commun1111.
"secret lnltletlvn," Including a
Prim1ry Mission

Gen. Creighton W. Abrams,

Pomeroy Council President Fultz Resigns

Water Proofi 111

00

In

President lo got tho n.ttonel mont.
"II I conclude th.t tncroalod
support llo sought. But crlllca
said Nixon offered IIHio now, enemy action JeopardiZH our
end l - 1 of tho Nov. 13-15 remaining forca In VIetnam, 1
antiwar demon1trallon1 celled •hall not hesitate to take stroog
ttl&amp; speech •·a clear Impetus to and effective measures to deal
our efforts to bring large wlth .tha1 situation," he uld.
Nixon's 33-mlnute addr111
numberl of - t o to Wo&amp;htng.
appeeled to "the great silent
ton."
The
Pretldent himself melorlty" of Americans for
solemnly warned Hanoi that support of hit policy of
U.S. withdrawal plans are "orderly, scheduled" wlthdrecontingent on a continuing lull wei. But It also was e clear
In military activity. He said tho notice to the Saigon governenemy "could make no greeter ment that It cannot count on
mistake" than to step up the Amerlcentroopslndeflnltely.
Nixon . revealed that during
fighting while the United Stoteo
Is carrying out the delicate his July visit to Vietnam he
maneuver of gradual disengage- gave the American commander.

at y

Kiser Service

••••

total Immediate American pull-

out as a couru that would lead

He opoclflcally mentioned Bor·
lin, the Middle Eo1t ond
"eventually oven In fho Wfttern
Homllphore."
"For tho futuro of puce,
precipitate withdrawal would be
a dl1111ter of lmmenM magnltude.'' he said In o broodca1f
from the White House. The ·
speech had around great
public expedattons because It
was announced three weeks In
advance.
Time For """-I Support
Supporter• said tho "Nixon
doctrine" set forth the VIetnam.
ollu.tlon llonmly end In ao
much detail as poulbl.......,nd
now It was time for the

•

MEIGS THEA TIE

00

t. IPildld a1 South VIetnam Is
eblt to take over more and
more of Its own defense.
H&amp; rejected demands tor a

VIetnam and lead to Commu-

Dies Sunday

The Farmers Bank and Savings Company

be • gradual process which can

nist aggression In other areas.

Kenneth Lamp

Ann

By LOUIS CASSELS
WASHINGTON CUPIJ -Pre•·
ldont Nixon lold the nation
Mondety nlghl he hal worked
out a pion with SOigon lor "the
complete withdrawal of oil U.S.
lf'OU"d forces" from Vietnam.
He gave no timetable tor
withdrawal. But lie said II will

to "massacres"

Chris-Craft
Reports New
Record Sales

SHOE GREASE
NEATSFOOT Oil

·complete Withdrawal from Vietnam Promised

c' """'

w

.
... . ,.,
!"1',:.1 .~

',

:!""48.=~ c~

'·

. '·

The-....-...

"(.'

eroy,
Commanler Hunnellt11l0UDCed a meeti!W olthe Past Commandors CIW lor 7 p.m. Wodneadey, Nov, 19. As' a dinner Is
beillll pia_., those wbo wW
be pre- are aslced to notl(y

HumoL

Commanler Hutmol Invited
members to attend a roctpdon
Sllllla.Y rr.... 2 to 4 p,... ot t11e
Pomeroy Elementary School,
houoritV MrL carrte ~~euts,o
linl, eighth cllatriet amdllar;y
prooldort. PI waa - . . ! alao that Phil Oblbtpr Ia to bead '

Olarlos Swalse1 .._red oa t11e alllllll Gill ror t11e Y.,..
a project ol JlodLH,_ steps lrom p.........,deai&amp;Dedtore•nhn

near the post h..,. on Leglm hofll)ltallud wterana4nrlnctbe t
Terrace to Weill Main Sl. The Chri . . . . bolidQ . . . .
atepo are ,_,., llnlahed.
Ll&amp;hts will be IW""'
A ,._t wu ~~- .., tile
mon111!7 party lbr IAIIcm and

Audl¥7' •I

hn 11101 tii05r

wlveo or a
. , . tiOl¢
euch party waa •••
• ad ·ra.Nov, 2hillll PliO OhllaJ r, Joe
Str.mlo ~ ..... '-111-Jitiell as
hosts.
'

. "r,

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