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'\1

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.e·n tin

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8-~ sentinel, Pom~Middleport, 0., Mar. lS, 1963

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NOW YOU DOW:

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. A~ ·· ·

. . Palrlol,a ........ . .
M tf a Be• .... AIIIIC If·

Midilie,;orl'

...... -Mei ..........

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o frelallll!-.

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. VOL XIV

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YEA'JRtll

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NO. 281

-At A Ghuaee-o

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BRIEF

WIRE
'rom

PALM BEACH, ;Fia. 1~1)- fatvoiUinll ol. ~
seeurltj nperto w~ terllll dtallnC .wtlb hll

today to . ....,_, re-

~

MolldAy .Iii

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,.,..,... from Central wilb .the thief ~

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lhat Conlliumlst ele- e.mraJ Amerlean 11J1Ubilta
wem~-P~.
:
.
Killlwdy wjlh Seclli'jl)' Jlff!JNII'alfabt ft»
de!JlOIIIIratlons lll C.. Kellllt!dy trip han .....,
Ia Rita ..U .......
l!lve. Par I ol. the •
'l1le Pruldent waa relalli18 oltpl would be
bert today and lludyinl two mal for IllY

'outsldt lilt 'Unitod Slot..: relatively ·talni and nothin&amp; ol.
· ~~~e pre&lt;au~~opo·. Qlo &lt;.'OUid a thn!iit· 1o the Chief EXeculttrilxiUiclln pai-t :w&gt;~~~e ~- llve'i llfety or diCnlty il· anCUMII •a1tll ~ atliV· lk!lpltod.
: ol communet ·.agenll in · The Ptealdenl and lils .
WeStera lfemlphei'e,
er, Atty,l{len, RObert F..
.
·putt.. Gt American oedy, 'flew w Palm
bave befD li&gt; litd oiut W,slllnlion Friday
·.
Rica Ill' 1ft111Co. Re- 'lbO l~y· general will· .
bade to the Wlilte llouae turn to W..,lngtM liter the
·
the allllatloa is weeKend and tlie Pre~~ldent .

!,ave f.;. Colla Rita· early Mon- day .nerr-.s aboard the WhU.
· 111Gl'Dinc.
·
llollot' ~t. the Holle1
his arrival Friday In Fib:. 'LIIte Sunday· he ·wmt 141U
ol more thea .. de- joined here by ·~ ~
and a bright sun:• tb e
. spent much of the
afternoon IDilllgiOC by lhe. pool
at the oeaaide villa of C. MitR-

Stale Dean
of ' ranking

Rusll and

a SJ'OIIP

Bepu~.IICano · d

oOmocrats frO... the H ou if
and Senate Farel;o Allain f$ill
Paul
'
. rbitt&lt;loi* ·'lrhn ~· ~ .
The President probably wiD tbt frelli!Ool IN ~ "lliiii
10 erutotnc Slturday and Sun- leavJni bfte•
loloocloy. ' ·•

Southern Hi~ ~mftf ~
Winner Of ~g~ ffli\ ft~tw

March Meeting
Of Council
Held Wednesday

Peggy Glenn, aenlor at Southern Hil!h Sj:!lool, ·w ll
awarded the top FHA degr.ee at Ohio sfate Uhiversit}';
Friday evening, March 15. She received her State Homemaker's Degree at the Future Homemakers, of' America
state convention. She is the d,aughter of Mrs. Dorotby·

MISS LOIS CHRISTINE RIFE

Glenn.

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Tliere were between 1,000 and fleer ol. the oenlor dau, bual•
. 3,000 delegates from FHA chap- neo• manager of the Ann m••
· ters 'all over Ohio attending the staff, and librarian. She is aiiG
meeting and approxlinately ZOO active IMinber of her cbureli.;
girls received Stole HO!hemak· Other memliors from Suuthlril
er Degree•. ~,. Glenn i8 the Higfi "School attending the atila'

only girl from · Meigs County
who won the delfee.
Miss Glenn Is active In cbapter and school work. She is edl·
tor ot the school newapaper, of·

'

Shop Tomorrow, Saturday·9arfi to;9pm'""

cdavention were: ' Jeanie · uel, Linda S!Dwe, Kinda HlU,
Linda Eichinler, Jean Miller;
Dottle MDII'e, .Judy Sayre, and;
Jean Hamm, chapter· advisor,"'

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Elbetfelds In Pomeroy
STORE,.W.IO..E.
BAR·GAIN DAYS
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Capable, Courteous Sc:de•p•ople ·to help you with
all your purchases in Furniture and Ftirnishings .for
your ho1J1e and wearing apparel for your family. .. ·--·

MEIGS THEATRE

.

FIIIDAY thr.uth WID.

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Morch 15-20

~ervi~~ ~Atr,

Mr.· 'w~ll.

Are Annqmt~li4.

·lends the MOST

SUI'TS

fo FARMIRS?
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BCillkr are the leading institutional lenders
to agriculture • • • with some $7 billion in

W•rren Sewell

.lo!IDDLEPORT, OHIO

NOW SHOWING
Repeat Engagement Due
To The Hl&amp;h Water -

Flnt U. S. Coaveut

''THE PRIMATUI.I
IURIAL''

11".totes was eoltbllahed at Port
Tobacco, Charles County, Md.
nuns established this first
American headquarter• of the

(Color)

Wltb Ray Mlllaud and ·
Hazel Court.
Alto CAitTI)ON &amp; COMIDY

In 17110.

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
'299
ONLY

~omeroy

•

National Bank

Serving Melga County for ever 90 years

POMEROY- RUTLAND

up
'A rrow
By
and
Shapely

Firat convent in the

We Pay 3% lntel'eii&gt;On Stlflinp

.

SHIRJ;S.

MENS $16.95
•ovs.....95

l0811S outstanding to farmers , • , of which
about 75% is non-real-estate credit-&lt;lollars
aidib{ the rurrent operation of fanns.

1t1,_ Ill illlllt aln·lllt INI far ., 111M t•a 111,...1

Latest Stylealn ·

Sport·Coats ~a=:.~w
s1.9·ts
e
· Is _.
.Sport ·coa

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CREDIT-WISETHE lANK
II THI FAIM.l'S
liST FIIINDI

By •CURLEI!!
eBROOKFIELD
eWARRI!!N.SEWI!!J,.L

NO.ot-- a.t•nco..,
eo....nllllf y...,..

MASON
FURNITURE CO,
MASON, W. Y~

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HATS
BrSMSON
and

TROUSERS

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HUlBARD ,
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Complete ..._.!On · ·

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,.... Jt~;hy

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New In Formi?i

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Pomeroy:Mifitia Checl,e4
Invader
Morga,n
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roalnlng brigodes and 1000 be life ln!G :Keo.- 1· hne been mosl: welc01ne: They · ll!nned tiie
river but could see no tln.clad. Tht!sa men llad
tucky.
•
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pioneer .blOOd in their !Veins - !bey d"'ltl~
The only force In front nf hll veterana waa
to make their own gunboat.
·
the Pomeroy Militlo . under Coptlln cyrua
At the Pomeroy wblllf was •Valentine B. ·- Grant. The Pomeroy Company hail· done well
Horton's side wheel towboat, the Condqr ~ a
that day. From before dawn they had been
low
fierce lookill,i!. lang iosed crafl, whicb bad ""
busy collecting Rebel stragglers trying IG 1!111\lggeatlye
·holes in her wheelhouse. Actullly, •.
cape by crossing the river at Racine and Syn·
bowever, she was v~ry inoff,nslve. Horton,
cuse. But as a barrier to lila own eiCaJI!! ICfOII
one nf the founders of Pomeroy, ~ the boat
the river Mor¥an gave them Uttle heed. In the·
to tow ltarges of coaHmd salt from the local
past · weeks h1s experience wltb home guard.
mines
to Pittsburg, Wheeling, and ,Cincinnati.
units had been a farce .
Groot· ond Schreiner directed their men to
He was fond to observe, '.'When one of my
tate tile· lmeient cannon on bnllrd the Condor.
squads rides up to a company of tbese farmera
Without proper tackle, but with plenty of
you can't see the road for them hiptaillnJ." •
brute
strengtll, the militia manhandled the
At Aurora, Wellston, and mony other towna
heavy
fieldpiece
across "tbe wbarfbnat, up the
along his line of march whole compaaies sur•
CllliPI•nk of the towboat, ond mounted It in
rendered to mere squads of Coofederatea. At
the bow. Schreiner loaded Ill&amp; piece with bita .. ,.
Batavia the home guard CPt down treet lleldlld•·
of. scrap metal and chain Unll.a as the Condor
the galloping Rebels to keep them from com·
got up a head of stelm ond started down·
lng bKII. through the town. Not one of the
~am. Aa she reached the ue11er end of Eight
brave lads offered to fell a tree ahead of Mor·
Mile
Island, the pilot anct militia officers could
gan. In Clermont County Captain Burick
see a groy.clad scout i.n midstream, "testing the
granted Morgan safe conduct and helped to
ford on horseback.
guide him to Smith's Ford. These units were
Morg~ and his troopers saw the Condor,
all valueless to the bard riding Reculars on
and assuming abe wa1 another Union 11\illboat,
Morgan's tail save one -The Pomeroy Mllltla.
fled into the hills, wishing no more brushes
Captain Grant of the Militia and Coptaln
with the doughty tin·dads; .The Condor saved
Schreiner of the Middleport Light Artillery
·
the day for the North." , ·
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knew their duty of rounding up stragglers waa.
With
brams
and
nel"e
in
!be
finest'
military
·
one thing and to stop Morgan's advance wa1
tradition Captains Groilt and Schreiner turned
another. They had but one old gun, used to ·
Morgon'a exhausted men baeJ~ .to the north and
fire salutes on Fourth of July, and about two
to their inevitable capture. The list of homehundred .old' men and boys. With tbls •army'
guards
worthy of the name; nortb of the Ohio
they were to head off one of the best cavalry
River,
Is
a short one :... Tbe ~meroy Militia.
units ever to ride into history.
·
Pomeroy's
·contribution to !be capture of
The following quotation is from Allan KeU.
General Morgan was priceless and it .will be a
er's"~book 'Morgans Raid':
_
ahame If BO.meone down there doean't mount
"The scouts brought word that Morgan's
an old muzzle-loader oboard . ariver boat, run
main party was now headed for the sballol#a
up tile flag, and fire 1 few salvos In hOnor of
at Eight Mile Island. Grant and Schreiner
tbe Captains and of the brave men who held
knew they could not face hundreds of veter~n
tlie
ford. July 19, 1963, will mark the lOOth
cavalrymen, even If tiJey could beat Morgan
anniversary
of the •stand at Eight Mile Island',
to Cheshire. Fltcb aild hill gunboata would
'

MAJ. BYRON STINSONI M.D.
: ·· School of Aerospoce Medl• ne
Brooks AFB, Son Antonio, Tex.
'fhe sun was sca~cely six hours old that morning of July 19, 1863. when General John
Hunt Morgan spurred his lathered horse to
tile crest of the· ridge. He hurled the big bay
~ .athwart the dusty road and fiercely dared the
i;; retreating Confederates to pass him. In the
. nlley the fleeing Rebels co~d hear the rifles
ill the 2nd Kentucky popping away at the pur·
sumg Michigan Cavalry. Occasionally a distant
boom, followed by the hiss of chain s h o I
through the trees, warned them they were still
in range of the tin·clads on the river. Horsemen. wagons, ambulances, and artillery strut
gled for the rigllt·of.way along the narrow trail
Jhot lea up the hollow. If the thin lines of the
2nd Kentucky gave wav under the swirlin~ assault of the victorious Yankees the last trail to
safety would be sealed off.
Not a man of the mob dared to ride past the
big horseman at the top of the hill . "Get into
ranks you men!" he ordered. "No handful of
Yankees is going to turn us from the river."
Squads and platoons began to form up.
Sheepish teamsters settled their fnghtened
horses and pulied off the road into the trees.
Out of ammunition anrl useless, the how1tsers
were unhitched and rolled into the ravine.
.'~Form up there! Form up there! Let's show
an army to those blue-bellies!" the General
caUed to his exhausted men. "Cluke, you nde
back and tell the rear guard to come in. We're
Ill going to ride out of here together."
• One thousand brave men did ride away from
~ the trap at Buffington Isla~d. With the rear·
guard holding Shackleford s M1ch1ganers at
everv ridge, Morgan turned back toward Porn·
eroy· and the ford at Eight Mile Island. For a
few hours he had the inside of the arc. If he
could cut across tu Cheshire while the Union
gunboats were chugging around the Great
Bend.&lt;~! the Ohio he could cross with his re-

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BILUE
.'I SOL VICTIM
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The story of Billie Sol Estes and his Texas
ammonia tanks that exlllted mainly on paper
bas roeked the Department of Agrleullure and
the rest of the nail•• as well.
'

Behind the headlines, however, are many

lnnoeent ,persons who lost their jobs when
BUlle Sol's glgantie busln ..s empire started
to erunible.
Joseph French, a newopaperman and a for·
mli•' Middleport resident. was one of these.
The ~llddleport high sebool grad had his lint
/ lleYispaper job working for Harry Houdasbelt
· Go the old Middleport Review.
" ,Joseph Clark Freneh Is the son of Jennie
french of 1238 We1twood-av, Columbus. and
the late., Earl Freneh, former New York Cen·
'"I Olspatrher at _Charleston, W. Va. a n d
IJ/ibson. Among lift. FTeneh's relatives In
Meigs eounty ore two lint eouslns Robert
Dolley 11f ~liddleport R. D., ond Mr;. Bethel
Colemon. Middleport. His grandparents, Clark
and .4Uee Freneh. now deteased, were of Mid·
dlepfltl.and the late Mr. and Mrs. Joe Shawver
lived In Pomeroy before their death.
. ·, The former Middleport resident who Is now
Vbill~~&amp; his mother in Columbus', ha• given
Tbe Sentinel permission to re-print an artlele
: published 01rlier In the Hartley newspapers.
'··
BY JOE FRENCH
'l'houoands of words have been written about
th sledgehammer effect of the fall of Billie
Sat Estes had on the eeonomy of West Texas
and the prestige of the Department of Agri·
culture - plus hundreds of. other restilts but few .if anv mentioned the effect on Billie
Sol's employes.
I .was working as a reporter and photograph·
ef on Estes' paper. Tbe Pecos Daily News. that
evening on March 29. The News Wal a morn·
i8g paper, so all the editorial staff was on duty
, when the news broke.
' I wns looking for an early sports feature
..and was reading copy as it came over the teletype. The bell rang, and as I watched. the first
few sbQrt paragrapb.s announcin&amp; Estes' ar·

•

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.=::U.:Ierprlle

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ol the Soutlt...ien;'ratleo out at

lilht.r. welcJlll oraUono

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:meo~lell

P,.,...... •

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SENTINEL .
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~age

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lOd Mu. :c
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'= ~~ !:.,~ ; '} £

pl~!y

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Syncuse
.
News Items

or

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On fJ.e
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Average
. Farm· J0COme FOr
}962 JS,up Four per cenl

Ohi0 Stnp
• Mine spol"lbankS
To Be Plan·ted Wfl•lh Trees

G~IU-

/

Mr.

ol 131

.:'~. =".:"~::':.,~ .,::'"...,."'"th; ~

per

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t::'llnl ~with lboll~

l~surlllio~y~~~~~$
I~ *"· liar\IV

!.:= =

In lhe beef cattle llutJ.

1111 Inti · E • .R. Wagoner lOd SUo, AU..
P. J Ryao :"'
is
tion and produce feeder
111 tbe
Two IN ~ of. ....__'_.
~J:..... . - ., • .
. •·f iU !"! . lhe; ttle ,
ond a more manual Others put on a cen.ln ll1lOWll IIDlloo to , the , _ of businefo. rioul "JIOinla'' ,._,_ thll
on buo~Deu.
' ~~
en.. .,,_,
"'~""'" . o{ the ....,.latlon n . .~s, ca ·' f'N ·~ratlon,wllb 1110tlior 201 IIPd. ol gail on tbe 011Ivel lOd Jet 1!11'1 and .._.., ,Ukt.
.
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Mr. lOd Mro, i~ ~ f!i- ] ~ l!!
ellttie ~ ore the
have ~ plano !&lt;rr.. the leedlnl out' weD. :Tbo I~ SUo 1111~• dl'I'P tbe sljap farmers In lhe oorn belt finish Filura rdsmd l&gt;1 tbe Jle. oomlc (&gt;rOIDOIIiqllors ••
Bl!1mlly evi!hlnc•.,.lih ~ ~ J i
....,... 80oi'tbeutern Ohio
Carl ,Close, .Pruldent, ability . of the la~s ~ m il!&gt;wn the chut. wl)ore ougers lhe operallon. Othera prefer to ~men! on-,. oald that IllS It ... of the better ~
Mr ..,. Mn ~
Marietta; Ruth Butler, Vice ""f
·
II the Glen x.Jley pldo: It· up ancl run It 1110 120 buy calves or beavler cattle, upelldltUrel ID· this field should
Clwlletl JJIIIo '
. ; " .• "' " .
to ·
at the
President, J;!!lnUnglo~; HI Pill arm with a IJl'OIIP J&gt;l ~~~"""·!It feet Ia ,the feed bunk. Corn lOd leal lhem large quaotltlel of reach m .l billion, up live per PrenUce.Hall. IDe., lit lhe
Mq .,.,.1. . If
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Sej;Ntary • Tbrea~ really •had the!IO, aotu,mJs !""•· ~ 111¥1 and protein ouppie. oorn, anc1 ~II to the picker.
cent from la8t year. It will not of last year ~" ;• .boost
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--.-Y:
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8
lt•. and ~ tour .
,..... er, MlddleJI!ll'l..
·
lnl along, proYidlnc a'bulldant )IIOnt ore pta~ on top of the The ulibi)ale ro•IUI!a 1n lhJ b distributed evenl)'; lor lhe J to I per ceot in speridlng In ihli
~J'f· .4nt llh: e
te loriS.,
Rlbbona ,for the show have feed.
. , .
.; Ill•«• -by an auloma.tic propor· case is
of good beef on ffrot three months, sald the Jle. eategory, but others """" DO!
..
elle ·Coullty.
,
been fllrnWm by the Pomeroy At lhe CoUiver (arm the Jli'01 !loner·
.
. . the table of Mr. llld Mrs, Con- , - , ;r ahould be 11 1 ae• IIW'e aod /Dr the put Ills 111011tha In Hotze 9os ·\:.1
~
Tbo ule eom1ft1 up
Bank. Mem~ of the (ll'am Willi ha~ pl118 two and.tiS , lt ~ posSible to adjust the sumer throughout the Unll«&lt; .
~ hu been litlle
·
r
pi ·
1e preceded by I!Je ...,,.
Springs Grang• will again tenths pound~' of .....,
day in!OUilt of llilqe, the alllOUIII Stalel. ~ penon IIIWII dOlor·
!her way in the actlvllr
. Mrs. Fred Tuckerman and
way at t 1 . m.
lUnch at noon. Botlt the durln8 the winter. These will of oorn and eot meal and the mtne where he fila lnlo the piebutiDg to the new111an1
Mrs. J~ Reeves VISited Sat.
•
. of Wllhb!gtoo c. H.
and sale are held In the be carried· on luU feed of"oom 10100nt of prolelii supplement lUre.
figure.
With Mr~, Tuck&gt;rman'a
... will llalll judga tbe tve\11. 'l1le
Coul&gt;ty Hlgbway pl118 summer pasture •nd will Ia. aoy level desired. ·
·J Fill' me, 1 Uke being 1 ...,.
Slglis of hope for an
M~s.. Els10 Perry, RJid.
u1e, 11att1 promptly ·an p. m.
Garage. .
·
· be ready to sell In Sep!embef. Tbere an man, types ., op. aumeo ol i!ood bee!! .
moved • government
.~."" ; ·"- /
~
111\1 ,.ut:'lll 111c:Uoneerl Emer·
are available from He bad bousftt th~se ~lves at .
to IBY that bueiDeu -er
ft«ent • .....,.., of ""· ·•n4 •· ~ ·
~~., WashiniiOII IdlY of nle Cl01!9lsnora ""average weight oU'I$ poulid.
Farm Front
turned c1owu whlle this ...u..
Lfucoin Bussell were~. .., t
.
and B. W.
of Creola
·, ·
.
'At •the Glen KeUey F'arm, 44
·
the economy was having 1
Frankllal · Rullle(l co(j )Jlilr,. &lt;: II
' readiJ:Ic'!l&gt;e ~ lOd ery· The ~ ev~ megUooed bead had beeo parchased at an
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Cb.apmao year.
, Mr._apd Mra, GuJ' ~ ·· ~·~
. Jng lbe ""'· ,!~
'
a visit last week to JIOII:: aver~ge weight of 315 pounds
of c.Iumb.as visited his grand· FlguretJ avallable In
POmeroy. · ·
; ' • ~
FttthJ:,jhree bulls and fe- clwen. of' feeder calves from for belweeh 2Z and 23ren!a.
parenta, Mr. and Mrs. James month or the year
. · I!Uesls of ~.:
, lllllel · ~ CGIIIIgJiOd to q,. allei the Galllpolls Feeder Calf Sale~ The grain . ratloll oonalllted of
.
,
'.
S. Qmck .
tiM! investment in new
and famlb)' IS .ciJilslgnorl o1. ~ ooun- FIVe carloads of caWemen frol!l &lt;rUahed corn and a cqmmerMr. and Mrs. Robert Harden equipment would be
.
sister, Mr. ond ;
!lei..ID 0111(1 and West VIrginia.
Gallla and Meigs Cial supplement at a :~llo of I
H of Mar~on spent the week end $311.15 billion. This was up by Mrs. Eugene Haning.
Tliey are:
Counties attended. From Meigs ta. 10. These will be oold early - B G n.o
WIIh his parents, Mr. and Mrs. only about II billion from the 1962 __....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;._ _
Walter Bentz: Pomeroy
county were W. S. Michae1, thi! spring, as heifers usually
~ RD P. GODWIN Income per farm was up about i·Robert Harden and Mr. and projected total of $3716 alth 1uo-h
·
l,lo)'d ~~~ ~ .
I'NII Ia-toloot
ta per cent
Mrs. Vernon Donahue of East the latest figure " w~llu fro;,
' Butlerjjleteford Farm,
t:I-The Ag- The Deparlment said farm !.&lt;tart
11961' l14.4 billion.
P
I·
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' polis.
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average f~oome : s fa~~ ~:=I drop'"':! from S,!Mil,OOO Mr. and Mrs. Okey Wood Should the projection ha ve ·
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c. A.
In llltll .... 13 4llll aboul 4
In 111112 ;. a~ mated 3,1188,000 have returned lo their home shown a continuing levehng . ofl.'
~
Frost;
ceol higher lha~ the l3,3tl0 r!: lalized ~ ;arm same peru&gt;d. re- here aller spending several or a decline. 1here would be real .,
_.
. ?, ;
~arm, Ona, W. Va.
.
_
W
izr : In 1981
$I 69 b U
mcome rose fro!" weeks w1th the1r son and daugh- worries amoog some forward_
- 1
Poniero)
·
· . l. . 1 lon in 1
to $12.9 bil- ter and families in Columbus looking businessmen.
'
·
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,-_-·:::;•, N. Gebhardt, COLUMBUS -.Ten th01188ndafter the site has been disked.'•
In ~ review of the. farm Income bon ID 1962. Net . f~rm income in and Grove City.
Must Moieratzt.
I'
Florence ~ircle ~pent ~ l!!f ~ _
.
.
. of strip mme opollb.anks Dickman emphasized 1b a 1 oltuat~. the Department aatd 196l, was '12.1 billion.
Mr. and Mrs. Oris Hubbard They regard Ibis sort ol spend. days lasl . week With M!'· "'nd _ c .~
In OhiO are expected tl&gt; be
planting and seeding ore part the gam ID net IArm mcome per
Por ClpJia Rio..
and Peggy spent tile week end· in• as an indicatloo ol how Ameri.' Mrs. James Patterson tielpll1C . ·.· '
r~~~~=i·Ofl
to ~· gras~ and Je.. OL the ~lamatlon required by farm reflected .• aUght gain in to- 11le personal income. per c~pi- with their daughter and son-in- Call business and industry are care /Or their son, Brent. Who - ~
:1~
tn the next ltx weeks or law of tHe stripmlne operators. tal . net farm mcome and a flU'- ta of tHe far~ population dunog law. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Van· geared to face the world . Wide was ~ll.
~.
- j
·
of the tree seedlings are thei' drop in the. number of 1982 was ~~mated at $1,430, Iangen and children of Colum- struggle for economical produc- Ml'; and Mrs. Paul Sr!! 1 t~· ~ 5
Is
-~ the Ohio D.ivi- farms. Compared WJth two years compared with $1,373 In 1961.
bus.
Uon and for new markets
Portland called on Mr. arid Mri. ~ ~ 1
111n"le planting , season
'
~!~ p;,;;;.:; lheire." said I. I. Dickman, chief lion of ForeStry, although so~e earner. the average realized net The personal income per capita Mrs. Harry .Clark visited sev· Charles S.- Jensen. president of Da~ . ~~i~ and _famii_Y ~ntly.
~;~~~
~ Division of Recla· oome from other sorces. So.me
•
.ot tile f&gt;rm. population !rom era! days with her children, CJ.T. Corporalion, a subsidiary · J1qt Smith •P"!lt the weekeiiil ··-· · '
c·
lmatlo·n, 'and trees will be go- operators a~· plant tbelr"Unafo
!arm sourcos m 111t12 was 19l16. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Simms of 'cJ.T. Financial Ccirporation.l•t Lau•~l Cliff. ~ .
In the ground as weather fected (unnuned) land to trees
compared With 1899 m. 1961. Tile and children and Mr. and Mrs. comment~. earlier In t~e yearl Melvm . CU'cle. of CalumbUll
-·~·lpeil'lllil~ .•\pproxlmatety 7,000 although It is .not required .by
· •
peTSOJial per capita mcome of Jimmy Joe Hemsley and other lhat U. S. industry needed:_..~uge ' and J~mes . CiTele ancr:'""'n'
wUl be planted to trees, Jaw. On ~~ Unaffected .. sites~he farm population from non- relatives in Columbus. ·
modernization program if it were 1RJcky of New Haven: spent I
hardwoods rather than planting machines can be used,
_
=~sources wal!l $504, _compar- Mrs. M~yme Holmes is now . to "effectively compete with for· ' Sunday. aftern?Op fri~ Mrs. ·
We have fow.d that and they are useful on aome
.
th $47~ 8 year earlier. .
recuperaUng from a fractured eign manufacturers, keep pace !Mary Circle.' ' :
·
the black locust, blaek spollbank lociitlons. ·But most
. Cash receipts from markebngs hip at the home of her daughter with an expanding market and I ~. ·•
. + •.
ash, red oak, cottonwood, of the -tree planting is stiJJ done Sunday School attend~nce on ~ ..1982 Jncreased a~ut $500 mil~ arid son~in-law. Mr. and Mrs. realize our potential for eronomic ,th&lt; survey dul Dot show . wb~
silver maple and tu- by hand.
March· 10 was 8&amp;, offermg was lio due mostly to higher average Robert Crow after a three week expansion.
._the _step-up in the farecast .•tem1
·~~~~~----"""'""'""ilb:nl~
do better on spoil.f25.80.'
· _ .
:rlces received for farm pro- stay ln Holzer hospital.
He said that about 60 per cent ,me&lt;. from the revise' t.u s:C!IIM·
,.,..,
. . eonlfers. Locust is
Vistttns Mr. and MrS. William ucts. G?vernment paymen~ . to Mr. Claud Quillen has re- of the nation's machine ";::il·~:;...
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YOU TROUT
~il-b~Ildlng tree and is mix·
Folmer over the weekend were farmers m 1962 were '1.74 bdl~n hlrned to his home from Hot. 1were at least 10 years old, many·
FISHERMAN
ed m with the other seedlings.
Mr. 100 ~· llot_lert Job.ason compared. With 11.48 blthon m zer hospital.
Iobsolete by loday's high speed
Milo!'" klnl ,_ •lu.u t1J. 'ftlese trees will yleld pWpwood,
and dnldren, Dougte and Cindy l9Gl.The Jncrease m government Mr. Carl Hubbard Is employ- standards. If projected needs
• • •
•
1
ii~!k;:'" bock In - · •••In aod some of the species will
of Columbus.
. pa~ments stemmed from the ed at Owensboro Ky
new productive capacity were
GARDEN SEE
INck In eventuaJly grow into aaw timMr.' and Mrs. Rober1 Grues- w at and feed grain programs.
Mr. and Mrs. Cha;les Theiss be met. he said. plant and
•
D
. -In
ber.
•
er and family of Springfield G lle&lt;onl c,... Set
and daughter of Columbus were ment expend;tures should
eFIELD SEED
y,ar ~ store ran
"Stripmine operators may al. fOJec!
spent Sunday afternoon with f ~s mcome reahzed from weekend guests of his mother a $48 billion level by 1965.
e FERTILIZER
You eoUldn't bUy thill so recta~ their graded spollhls parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lew- i:r~ 10g rose almost $750 ~il~ion Mrs. Carrie Sindair and sister: Some business sources
8
blit fdr love or money. We banks With grasses and 1e- CHILLICOTHE- As a result is Grueser.
to
r~d $40.6 biUmn. Rose Ann Theiss.
hailed the revised deprecliati•&gt;n !l
h,,~ 1ar1e otoot IJOW.
gumes where It Is feasible. Seed- of restoration of ~trip mined Mr. lOd Mrs. Danny West But • l::'~er me of about f650 Mr. and Mrs. John Southern allowance schedules ;n the
Middleport feed Mill
Pllckena H1rdwere logs are made m early spring lands In Wayne National Forest and sons of Falls Creek, Pa., offse arm prod~tion expens- and Martha of Rutland and held as a spur to ;ncreased ;n. Tony ~owl••· OwM• &amp; Opp.
u••- w• ·ua
whenbed
lh,e f..
-·nd
In
. County, a-•ers
visited with her ~~nts,
Mr
t mostsa1d
of' th!l
gam. The
• ~,
":r"
-- Is still
hav Lawrence
"&amp;r-...
expenses
In and Mrs. Ruth Thomas and vest.ments ln equipment and rna·
"We Do Custom Grinding''
~~:;;!
com
rom fa.ost, or in
e access now to to. ol 21 and Mrs. Arnold Snowden
d
th
.
. ·Sandra of Pomeroy visited Sun- ,chmery. A Commerce Depart- N. .2nd,..,., - -_ MJCidlepert
ponds -which b•~~Jlften stDCked week. They came to attend
. ue ~d : ~rststent riSe day with Mr. ~nd Mrs. Claud ment spokesman, however, said

lrrdbe~lll&gt;D

i

" '""' -FRENCH:
· JI!C!
.

prosld.,it

liant11J81on.

Tbo belt • &lt;IItie

Middlepori News Man Victim Of
•
~itlie Sol's Wayward Gas .· Tanks

'

fitJ9~i4/ G~p

-~ 1!1 «&lt;::IJJ)) ao - . . JIIl8ll Loltbelt; ~- OIJ!o•Boo! ,Cattle Jmpro\'emtnt lbiJI .teon.
I"""· SoiJ)O JIOOPie. fer to ~
.au,; ::"11
:C::FC:.:
~_,, Dr. W. F. McCoy, llwlllnf· Asaoellllon; Andrew Cross, Rio · The IN! ,.q, of tJjj dlr was ill the pure ot"ed ~ llld .V:: ,::-,...-:!
PIJl1 tbne flrmon.;.... tun 111111" ~ertul Jtl~
~ ,
llart1 Gulhrjij, Coolville, inldo at ' the .,_m of Roy, furnish foundation a~ for oU.. ~ YOlUc'(VPn _ Tl,. of ;.., U..,.ld rile
flmitn oecuring mOr. .llld, tl)e mr~ ~::teporl. F=~islted Included JOhn Z'~
.!~:!:!t; =~· .s.::,:.o;:,~ n~ •per: latat ,.....,.. by tbo eom...... billion.

~

rest came over the wire.
As we found out later, the same bulletin wu
being read over a nearby television station and
almost before the teletype stoppd clattering,
phones began to ring,
QUIT ANSWERING PHONES
The people of Pecos wanted to know If the
announcements were true, if so, the real facts,
the whole story. After the first few calls, we
stopped answering the phones - beeause as
much as we hated to admit it, the only infor·
mation we had on the owner of our paper was
coming to us over the wire.
After the in'tlal shock arid resulting confu·
sion, we went about our job of getting out the
paper.
It was only after the press started rolling
that we relaxed enough, and had time to start
wondering about the people's reaction, and,
of course, our own position.
As for the people of Pecos, they had long
been divided into two camps, either for, or
against Estes. There was no middle ground.
For example, the day after the arrest I was
assigned to take pictures at a ladies club meet·
ing, and every one of the 30 or more there ex·
pressed their sympathy, as though a relative
had died. Business men worried about the ef.
feet on the economy of the town. Estes enter·
prises had a large payroll, and the loss of !bat
would hurt every merchant in town.
CONFIDENCE DIED HARD
For the first few days Estes supporters
firmly believed that their Billie Sol would
eome out on top. They just couldn't believe
that a»y one shrewd enough to build such an
enterprise, could be careless enough to leave
himself wide open to persecution. Then, too,
there was Billie Sol's reputation for being a
religious, wholesome family man, who enjoyed
doing good for others.
On the other hand, there was criticism of
his business methods which, according to non·
admirers consisted of either sell out or be
forced o~t. It was that policy that caused his
downfall when' he tried it on thie Pecos Independent weekly ,pewspaper.
Even a few hours after the arrest, It was
evident to every person in West Texas that no
matter what the outcome to Estes personally,
the ones that would be hurl most would be
themselves - the farmer, worker and small
businessman. I suppose the Estes case will he
orgued for years to come in West Texas. but
you'll never convince his friends that he in·
tended to defraud anyone, just as you'll never
convince others that he ever thought of any·
one but himself.
As more and more facts came out, the staff
of the Daily News ceased to wonder about the
future. We knew what was going to happen,
it was just a question of when.
STAFF TURNS ELSEWHERE
None of the editorial staff was a native of
Peens. but most of us bad either bought or
rented home, moved families, and prepared to
make Pecos our home. Now a town of around
12,000 population could absorb some clerks,
typists and bookkeepers from other Estes en·
terprises, but there was certainly no future
for almost a dozen newspaper people, So we
started lookinc.
·
A few of the staff left Immediately, but most ·
stayed until a few days later, when tile force
was cut to a bare minimum. We went our var·
ious ways, stillaomewhat dazed.
Time, and more timely eventa, will dim the
Estes case, and television eomlcs Will fllld an·
other subject for their jokes, but ·the people
of West Texas and those who were on the
staff of the Pecos Dally News that March 21
wiU never fQrJet the date, or Billie ~1 f;ate~.

_DIJIJ: ~~!· ~~~~ e·l!~'!f !•· 1983··

0' ' '; •

Be.ef EnterpriSeS Co.pmaOd Mofe'liof)Oriance Are
Rosin~~~
Smil;n,; These Days

.

[

• .. ..

LarmeJ

~-:!INGTON

Social News

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*

.f

ftock Spnngs
Soe1aJ NoteS

l

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Lawrence Co.
Has New ponds

Ch•~oBalt

............................,.·

SEE U$ FOR.

From p • l

962

i

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'.· ..J
.· \
UleQ

,Fa
. .

rm Equ•·p·m
. ent

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.: :.1J{I$ED
J; D. MANURE
SPREADER.
. ·;
.
.
, · 1'~1--.J N
. I" ·MANURE SPREADER
• :'UIIIU1 aw· aea
.· SED DISC HADROWS
f\1\
• 2

'

HELLO WALL ..,. That probably wasn't the greeting offered by Lucille Garten, North Flrst·st, Mid- · •
dleport, )Vhe nshe went to her car Wednesday afternoon and foun~ it partially' buried by crumbled . ce• ··
meot from a fallen wall. The right side of the auto was practically , 'molished. Mrs. Garten was In· the
process nf shoving a large chunk of concrete off tjle right fender waen the roving.Sentinel featute pa&amp;t · !
camera snapped·her.
·
.
I

u
"

MORRIS
&amp; SUPPLY
. IMPlEMENT
'
.
.CO.

;.

· PHONE WI 9-3202
PEARL STREET
' '

RACINE, 0.

FREE GIFT

~th

'!"h·

~~u~

l!lonThere
and ore fui)Oral,
of Charles
Smith.
gills mixed
predommating.
Mrs, Norman
'Wyersmlller
seven addlllonal ponds wblch lied Friday at tbe home of
be sloelted al the·. proper parenll, Mr. and Mrs.
Ume IUld these :35· J!Ondscaver- ~purrier.
age a~t three acres: -in size'. Gary ·Merritt baa been·

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Len1 large~te""'chases ol oome
. don and Patricia spent a few

tl npul ms.
Es.:;::tes by states

~f reahzed days

1962·me per farm m doUars

with their daughter and

!1~-m-law, Mr. and Mrs. James

'5.4

SIMPLICITY TILLERS

•

.

Now Is The Time To Get Ready to
Make Garden. We Have 4 H.P. Tillers · ·
'
In Stock Ready To Go.

MEIGS EOUIPMEMt tO.

•

Ponieoy, Ohio

mation recently issued, the gov- ness.

Jlernor listed the following spec-Ada Slaek
clfic observances:
1------~=:..:=:::
Ohio Wildlife Week, March tlon and wise use of our bask&gt;ll
17·23, Conmvati.on Month, Ap. •. ahlral resources." He also de1-30, Arbor Day, April 26 dared "there ts a cootinulng
SoU Stewardship Week. need for Increased emphasis by

A Remington .
. Adding Mechine or
'

Typewriter , , •
,I

uimo ar~erl
~or Quillen
ani! and
Mr. sons.
and Mts. Doug·
an aerVJolas Knapp

Many of these water areas are fined to his home with
Del ·
GOmther of Pomeroy.
remote and provide tops· In ... Mrs. Dons Arnold and
a;:r·· ~· 158 · down 11 per Mrs. Laura Loifheit received
cape recreation.
visited Mrs. Iva Singer of
oentnt; y,la~200 · down 32 a letter !rom her daughter, Mrs.
The ponds are being number· ter Thursday afternoon.
cent: ary n · $2,!165, up Kathryn Peters, stating that
ed aoo will be mapped to guide Mrs. Wilbur Bailey and
' ~ew Jersey • 85• up she received the appointment
anglers and hunters to t h el r ter Ruth Ann spent Friday
perl cen ' New hYork, 13. 162· of postmaster of the Arcadia
•
•
per cent · 0 10 $ 163 up Ohi
off
. '
sport, aecordlng to Ray Bielh· ternoon wHh Mr. aoo Mrs. J.
• .' ' ·515 o post Ice.
1
mill dllltr'ct fish
·
t E• T.L.C-Yacy
· '
t The Pia.ms.
per &lt;en ' Pennsylvama. $2,
Mr · and Mrs· Ezra Phillips
er,
1
managemen
a
2 Per cent· Ohio $2 763
supervisor, Ohio Division of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
lioW. 1 P.,r ce~t ' • · up and Nola Phillips visited rela·
Wildlife. Signs alopg the high- lOd son sjlent Friday
·
·
lives In Logan, W. Va.
ways Indicate tbe Jocatloo of the with Mr. and Mrs.
•
,
Mrs. Gordon West and child·
ponds. Tbls fishing opportunity Frlnce at Mason, w. va.
Proelwmed ln.Ohio ren and Connie Kay Chapman ~~~
is the result of cooperation ,of Mr. llld Mrs. Joe
f.onservatio"fays
of Rac1oe, were V!Sil!ng With
Oakley C Collins lronton strlp and family visited with her
COLUMBUS
tile former s grandparents. Mr.
muier a.r:ct state' senAtor - t h , -. ents Mr. an Mrs
:
- . servatlon land Mrs. James S. Quick, Sunf
.
'
'
·
days m Ohio have day.
Ish superv150r slated. .
Friday and Saturday
proclaimed by uu
~•vernor Mrs. Mary Hubb.ar d ·m con·
A. Rhodes. In a procla· fined to Holzer hospital by Ill·

Your Choice of
BELIEVE IT OR NOT - These ·five Little Leaguers were the hard core of a
on
oles baseball team in Racine five years ago. Today they are the five
High school's ~ectlonal basketball champions taking • shot at the district
this (4 p.m., Saturday): Left to right, high school senior Larry Salser, junior
Larry Price, juniors Peanuli Wi~kllne
and Bruce Beegle. ·
·
.
. •

andprod ucp:'1011

19-25.

:! ,.

In the proclamation, · GOver·
.... RhodeJ slated that "It is
duty of every citizen ol
to sharet be responsibility
the conservation, restora-

, ..WM11' You Purchase A

.,I
'

school authorities to promote

programs wilich will enllghtoln
our children that they may have
a better understanding of the
problems attendant to the wise
use of our resources.''

.

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BULK GARDfttSIEDS:
..

COMPLETE
{

·of Qualitv''
.
..
STARTING AND

G,R.OWING
·•PROGRAMS

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,Smfla

STOCK OF

'

• Garden F~rtilizer · ~ .
• Lawn · Fertilize~,:
·..;: "'.
,,

. 1.

IMOP MOW
~

lor

1

!.tm!~~

..$UPPLIES
..-

~JEW

Just .t.rt"ltled!

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-

,..

.,

GARHN

'

. MIXING
.. .

'"

22" Lawn

I'

Mowers

--

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~ack W,

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l

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illY .•&amp;.~i1e1

:,
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ClliWy, Mjr,

E. Matln

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Rotory

9
SUPPlHS
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Tillers,-'••
,,
89·
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New In Formi?i

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Pomeroy:Mifitia Checl,e4
Invader
Morga,n
·
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o liY

roalnlng brigodes and 1000 be life ln!G :Keo.- 1· hne been mosl: welc01ne: They · ll!nned tiie
river but could see no tln.clad. Tht!sa men llad
tucky.
•
·
pioneer .blOOd in their !Veins - !bey d"'ltl~
The only force In front nf hll veterana waa
to make their own gunboat.
·
the Pomeroy Militlo . under Coptlln cyrua
At the Pomeroy wblllf was •Valentine B. ·- Grant. The Pomeroy Company hail· done well
Horton's side wheel towboat, the Condqr ~ a
that day. From before dawn they had been
low
fierce lookill,i!. lang iosed crafl, whicb bad ""
busy collecting Rebel stragglers trying IG 1!111\lggeatlye
·holes in her wheelhouse. Actullly, •.
cape by crossing the river at Racine and Syn·
bowever, she was v~ry inoff,nslve. Horton,
cuse. But as a barrier to lila own eiCaJI!! ICfOII
one nf the founders of Pomeroy, ~ the boat
the river Mor¥an gave them Uttle heed. In the·
to tow ltarges of coaHmd salt from the local
past · weeks h1s experience wltb home guard.
mines
to Pittsburg, Wheeling, and ,Cincinnati.
units had been a farce .
Groot· ond Schreiner directed their men to
He was fond to observe, '.'When one of my
tate tile· lmeient cannon on bnllrd the Condor.
squads rides up to a company of tbese farmera
Without proper tackle, but with plenty of
you can't see the road for them hiptaillnJ." •
brute
strengtll, the militia manhandled the
At Aurora, Wellston, and mony other towna
heavy
fieldpiece
across "tbe wbarfbnat, up the
along his line of march whole compaaies sur•
CllliPI•nk of the towboat, ond mounted It in
rendered to mere squads of Coofederatea. At
the bow. Schreiner loaded Ill&amp; piece with bita .. ,.
Batavia the home guard CPt down treet lleldlld•·
of. scrap metal and chain Unll.a as the Condor
the galloping Rebels to keep them from com·
got up a head of stelm ond started down·
lng bKII. through the town. Not one of the
~am. Aa she reached the ue11er end of Eight
brave lads offered to fell a tree ahead of Mor·
Mile
Island, the pilot anct militia officers could
gan. In Clermont County Captain Burick
see a groy.clad scout i.n midstream, "testing the
granted Morgan safe conduct and helped to
ford on horseback.
guide him to Smith's Ford. These units were
Morg~ and his troopers saw the Condor,
all valueless to the bard riding Reculars on
and assuming abe wa1 another Union 11\illboat,
Morgan's tail save one -The Pomeroy Mllltla.
fled into the hills, wishing no more brushes
Captain Grant of the Militia and Coptaln
with the doughty tin·dads; .The Condor saved
Schreiner of the Middleport Light Artillery
·
the day for the North." , ·
•
·'
knew their duty of rounding up stragglers waa.
With
brams
and
nel"e
in
!be
finest'
military
·
one thing and to stop Morgan's advance wa1
tradition Captains Groilt and Schreiner turned
another. They had but one old gun, used to ·
Morgon'a exhausted men baeJ~ .to the north and
fire salutes on Fourth of July, and about two
to their inevitable capture. The list of homehundred .old' men and boys. With tbls •army'
guards
worthy of the name; nortb of the Ohio
they were to head off one of the best cavalry
River,
Is
a short one :... Tbe ~meroy Militia.
units ever to ride into history.
·
Pomeroy's
·contribution to !be capture of
The following quotation is from Allan KeU.
General Morgan was priceless and it .will be a
er's"~book 'Morgans Raid':
_
ahame If BO.meone down there doean't mount
"The scouts brought word that Morgan's
an old muzzle-loader oboard . ariver boat, run
main party was now headed for the sballol#a
up tile flag, and fire 1 few salvos In hOnor of
at Eight Mile Island. Grant and Schreiner
tbe Captains and of the brave men who held
knew they could not face hundreds of veter~n
tlie
ford. July 19, 1963, will mark the lOOth
cavalrymen, even If tiJey could beat Morgan
anniversary
of the •stand at Eight Mile Island',
to Cheshire. Fltcb aild hill gunboata would
'

MAJ. BYRON STINSONI M.D.
: ·· School of Aerospoce Medl• ne
Brooks AFB, Son Antonio, Tex.
'fhe sun was sca~cely six hours old that morning of July 19, 1863. when General John
Hunt Morgan spurred his lathered horse to
tile crest of the· ridge. He hurled the big bay
~ .athwart the dusty road and fiercely dared the
i;; retreating Confederates to pass him. In the
. nlley the fleeing Rebels co~d hear the rifles
ill the 2nd Kentucky popping away at the pur·
sumg Michigan Cavalry. Occasionally a distant
boom, followed by the hiss of chain s h o I
through the trees, warned them they were still
in range of the tin·clads on the river. Horsemen. wagons, ambulances, and artillery strut
gled for the rigllt·of.way along the narrow trail
Jhot lea up the hollow. If the thin lines of the
2nd Kentucky gave wav under the swirlin~ assault of the victorious Yankees the last trail to
safety would be sealed off.
Not a man of the mob dared to ride past the
big horseman at the top of the hill . "Get into
ranks you men!" he ordered. "No handful of
Yankees is going to turn us from the river."
Squads and platoons began to form up.
Sheepish teamsters settled their fnghtened
horses and pulied off the road into the trees.
Out of ammunition anrl useless, the how1tsers
were unhitched and rolled into the ravine.
.'~Form up there! Form up there! Let's show
an army to those blue-bellies!" the General
caUed to his exhausted men. "Cluke, you nde
back and tell the rear guard to come in. We're
Ill going to ride out of here together."
• One thousand brave men did ride away from
~ the trap at Buffington Isla~d. With the rear·
guard holding Shackleford s M1ch1ganers at
everv ridge, Morgan turned back toward Porn·
eroy· and the ford at Eight Mile Island. For a
few hours he had the inside of the arc. If he
could cut across tu Cheshire while the Union
gunboats were chugging around the Great
Bend.&lt;~! the Ohio he could cross with his re-

.

..

BILUE
.'I SOL VICTIM
,
.
'
The story of Billie Sol Estes and his Texas
ammonia tanks that exlllted mainly on paper
bas roeked the Department of Agrleullure and
the rest of the nail•• as well.
'

Behind the headlines, however, are many

lnnoeent ,persons who lost their jobs when
BUlle Sol's glgantie busln ..s empire started
to erunible.
Joseph French, a newopaperman and a for·
mli•' Middleport resident. was one of these.
The ~llddleport high sebool grad had his lint
/ lleYispaper job working for Harry Houdasbelt
· Go the old Middleport Review.
" ,Joseph Clark Freneh Is the son of Jennie
french of 1238 We1twood-av, Columbus. and
the late., Earl Freneh, former New York Cen·
'"I Olspatrher at _Charleston, W. Va. a n d
IJ/ibson. Among lift. FTeneh's relatives In
Meigs eounty ore two lint eouslns Robert
Dolley 11f ~liddleport R. D., ond Mr;. Bethel
Colemon. Middleport. His grandparents, Clark
and .4Uee Freneh. now deteased, were of Mid·
dlepfltl.and the late Mr. and Mrs. Joe Shawver
lived In Pomeroy before their death.
. ·, The former Middleport resident who Is now
Vbill~~&amp; his mother in Columbus', ha• given
Tbe Sentinel permission to re-print an artlele
: published 01rlier In the Hartley newspapers.
'··
BY JOE FRENCH
'l'houoands of words have been written about
th sledgehammer effect of the fall of Billie
Sat Estes had on the eeonomy of West Texas
and the prestige of the Department of Agri·
culture - plus hundreds of. other restilts but few .if anv mentioned the effect on Billie
Sol's employes.
I .was working as a reporter and photograph·
ef on Estes' paper. Tbe Pecos Daily News. that
evening on March 29. The News Wal a morn·
i8g paper, so all the editorial staff was on duty
, when the news broke.
' I wns looking for an early sports feature
..and was reading copy as it came over the teletype. The bell rang, and as I watched. the first
few sbQrt paragrapb.s announcin&amp; Estes' ar·

•

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:

ol the Soutlt...ien;'ratleo out at

lilht.r. welcJlll oraUono

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.

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Syncuse
.
News Items

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On fJ.e
~

~

Average
. Farm· J0COme FOr
}962 JS,up Four per cenl

Ohi0 Stnp
• Mine spol"lbankS
To Be Plan·ted Wfl•lh Trees

G~IU-

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Mr.

ol 131

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t::'llnl ~with lboll~

l~surlllio~y~~~~~$
I~ *"· liar\IV

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In lhe beef cattle llutJ.

1111 Inti · E • .R. Wagoner lOd SUo, AU..
P. J Ryao :"'
is
tion and produce feeder
111 tbe
Two IN ~ of. ....__'_.
~J:..... . - ., • .
. •·f iU !"! . lhe; ttle ,
ond a more manual Others put on a cen.ln ll1lOWll IIDlloo to , the , _ of businefo. rioul "JIOinla'' ,._,_ thll
on buo~Deu.
' ~~
en.. .,,_,
"'~""'" . o{ the ....,.latlon n . .~s, ca ·' f'N ·~ratlon,wllb 1110tlior 201 IIPd. ol gail on tbe 011Ivel lOd Jet 1!11'1 and .._.., ,Ukt.
.
· --~
Mr. lOd Mro, i~ ~ f!i- ] ~ l!!
ellttie ~ ore the
have ~ plano !&lt;rr.. the leedlnl out' weD. :Tbo I~ SUo 1111~• dl'I'P tbe sljap farmers In lhe oorn belt finish Filura rdsmd l&gt;1 tbe Jle. oomlc (&gt;rOIDOIIiqllors ••
Bl!1mlly evi!hlnc•.,.lih ~ ~ J i
....,... 80oi'tbeutern Ohio
Carl ,Close, .Pruldent, ability . of the la~s ~ m il!&gt;wn the chut. wl)ore ougers lhe operallon. Othera prefer to ~men! on-,. oald that IllS It ... of the better ~
Mr ..,. Mn ~
Marietta; Ruth Butler, Vice ""f
·
II the Glen x.Jley pldo: It· up ancl run It 1110 120 buy calves or beavler cattle, upelldltUrel ID· this field should
Clwlletl JJIIIo '
. ; " .• "' " .
to ·
at the
President, J;!!lnUnglo~; HI Pill arm with a IJl'OIIP J&gt;l ~~~"""·!It feet Ia ,the feed bunk. Corn lOd leal lhem large quaotltlel of reach m .l billion, up live per PrenUce.Hall. IDe., lit lhe
Mq .,.,.1. . If
.. ·
Sej;Ntary • Tbrea~ really •had the!IO, aotu,mJs !""•· ~ 111¥1 and protein ouppie. oorn, anc1 ~II to the picker.
cent from la8t year. It will not of last year ~" ;• .boost
·
--.-Y:
·
J;
~ "'
8
lt•. and ~ tour .
,..... er, MlddleJI!ll'l..
·
lnl along, proYidlnc a'bulldant )IIOnt ore pta~ on top of the The ulibi)ale ro•IUI!a 1n lhJ b distributed evenl)'; lor lhe J to I per ceot in speridlng In ihli
~J'f· .4nt llh: e
te loriS.,
Rlbbona ,for the show have feed.
. , .
.; Ill•«• -by an auloma.tic propor· case is
of good beef on ffrot three months, sald the Jle. eategory, but others """" DO!
..
elle ·Coullty.
,
been fllrnWm by the Pomeroy At lhe CoUiver (arm the Jli'01 !loner·
.
. . the table of Mr. llld Mrs, Con- , - , ;r ahould be 11 1 ae• IIW'e aod /Dr the put Ills 111011tha In Hotze 9os ·\:.1
~
Tbo ule eom1ft1 up
Bank. Mem~ of the (ll'am Willi ha~ pl118 two and.tiS , lt ~ posSible to adjust the sumer throughout the Unll«&lt; .
~ hu been litlle
·
r
pi ·
1e preceded by I!Je ...,,.
Springs Grang• will again tenths pound~' of .....,
day in!OUilt of llilqe, the alllOUIII Stalel. ~ penon IIIWII dOlor·
!her way in the actlvllr
. Mrs. Fred Tuckerman and
way at t 1 . m.
lUnch at noon. Botlt the durln8 the winter. These will of oorn and eot meal and the mtne where he fila lnlo the piebutiDg to the new111an1
Mrs. J~ Reeves VISited Sat.
•
. of Wllhb!gtoo c. H.
and sale are held In the be carried· on luU feed of"oom 10100nt of prolelii supplement lUre.
figure.
With Mr~, Tuck&gt;rman'a
... will llalll judga tbe tve\11. 'l1le
Coul&gt;ty Hlgbway pl118 summer pasture •nd will Ia. aoy level desired. ·
·J Fill' me, 1 Uke being 1 ...,.
Slglis of hope for an
M~s.. Els10 Perry, RJid.
u1e, 11att1 promptly ·an p. m.
Garage. .
·
· be ready to sell In Sep!embef. Tbere an man, types ., op. aumeo ol i!ood bee!! .
moved • government
.~."" ; ·"- /
~
111\1 ,.ut:'lll 111c:Uoneerl Emer·
are available from He bad bousftt th~se ~lves at .
to IBY that bueiDeu -er
ft«ent • .....,.., of ""· ·•n4 •· ~ ·
~~., WashiniiOII IdlY of nle Cl01!9lsnora ""average weight oU'I$ poulid.
Farm Front
turned c1owu whlle this ...u..
Lfucoin Bussell were~. .., t
.
and B. W.
of Creola
·, ·
.
'At •the Glen KeUey F'arm, 44
·
the economy was having 1
Frankllal · Rullle(l co(j )Jlilr,. &lt;: II
' readiJ:Ic'!l&gt;e ~ lOd ery· The ~ ev~ megUooed bead had beeo parchased at an
Mr. and Mra. Floyd Cb.apmao year.
, Mr._apd Mra, GuJ' ~ ·· ~·~
. Jng lbe ""'· ,!~
'
a visit last week to JIOII:: aver~ge weight of 315 pounds
of c.Iumb.as visited his grand· FlguretJ avallable In
POmeroy. · ·
; ' • ~
FttthJ:,jhree bulls and fe- clwen. of' feeder calves from for belweeh 2Z and 23ren!a.
parenta, Mr. and Mrs. James month or the year
. · I!Uesls of ~.:
, lllllel · ~ CGIIIIgJiOd to q,. allei the Galllpolls Feeder Calf Sale~ The grain . ratloll oonalllted of
.
,
'.
S. Qmck .
tiM! investment in new
and famlb)' IS .ciJilslgnorl o1. ~ ooun- FIVe carloads of caWemen frol!l &lt;rUahed corn and a cqmmerMr. and Mrs. Robert Harden equipment would be
.
sister, Mr. ond ;
!lei..ID 0111(1 and West VIrginia.
Gallla and Meigs Cial supplement at a :~llo of I
H of Mar~on spent the week end $311.15 billion. This was up by Mrs. Eugene Haning.
Tliey are:
Counties attended. From Meigs ta. 10. These will be oold early - B G n.o
WIIh his parents, Mr. and Mrs. only about II billion from the 1962 __....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;._ _
Walter Bentz: Pomeroy
county were W. S. Michae1, thi! spring, as heifers usually
~ RD P. GODWIN Income per farm was up about i·Robert Harden and Mr. and projected total of $3716 alth 1uo-h
·
l,lo)'d ~~~ ~ .
I'NII Ia-toloot
ta per cent
Mrs. Vernon Donahue of East the latest figure " w~llu fro;,
' Butlerjjleteford Farm,
t:I-The Ag- The Deparlment said farm !.&lt;tart
11961' l14.4 billion.
P
I·
. '
. ;
' polis.
. ..
.
average f~oome : s fa~~ ~:=I drop'"':! from S,!Mil,OOO Mr. and Mrs. Okey Wood Should the projection ha ve ·
· • . ·: : .o .
'
•
c. A.
In llltll .... 13 4llll aboul 4
In 111112 ;. a~ mated 3,1188,000 have returned lo their home shown a continuing levehng . ofl.'
~
Frost;
ceol higher lha~ the l3,3tl0 r!: lalized ~ ;arm same peru&gt;d. re- here aller spending several or a decline. 1here would be real .,
_.
. ?, ;
~arm, Ona, W. Va.
.
_
W
izr : In 1981
$I 69 b U
mcome rose fro!" weeks w1th the1r son and daugh- worries amoog some forward_
- 1
Poniero)
·
· . l. . 1 lon in 1
to $12.9 bil- ter and families in Columbus looking businessmen.
'
·
.: '
,-_-·:::;•, N. Gebhardt, COLUMBUS -.Ten th01188ndafter the site has been disked.'•
In ~ review of the. farm Income bon ID 1962. Net . f~rm income in and Grove City.
Must Moieratzt.
I'
Florence ~ircle ~pent ~ l!!f ~ _
.
.
. of strip mme opollb.anks Dickman emphasized 1b a 1 oltuat~. the Department aatd 196l, was '12.1 billion.
Mr. and Mrs. Oris Hubbard They regard Ibis sort ol spend. days lasl . week With M!'· "'nd _ c .~
In OhiO are expected tl&gt; be
planting and seeding ore part the gam ID net IArm mcome per
Por ClpJia Rio..
and Peggy spent tile week end· in• as an indicatloo ol how Ameri.' Mrs. James Patterson tielpll1C . ·.· '
r~~~~=i·Ofl
to ~· gras~ and Je.. OL the ~lamatlon required by farm reflected .• aUght gain in to- 11le personal income. per c~pi- with their daughter and son-in- Call business and industry are care /Or their son, Brent. Who - ~
:1~
tn the next ltx weeks or law of tHe stripmlne operators. tal . net farm mcome and a flU'- ta of tHe far~ population dunog law. Mr. and Mrs. Donald Van· geared to face the world . Wide was ~ll.
~.
- j
·
of the tree seedlings are thei' drop in the. number of 1982 was ~~mated at $1,430, Iangen and children of Colum- struggle for economical produc- Ml'; and Mrs. Paul Sr!! 1 t~· ~ 5
Is
-~ the Ohio D.ivi- farms. Compared WJth two years compared with $1,373 In 1961.
bus.
Uon and for new markets
Portland called on Mr. arid Mri. ~ ~ 1
111n"le planting , season
'
~!~ p;,;;;.:; lheire." said I. I. Dickman, chief lion of ForeStry, although so~e earner. the average realized net The personal income per capita Mrs. Harry .Clark visited sev· Charles S.- Jensen. president of Da~ . ~~i~ and _famii_Y ~ntly.
~;~~~
~ Division of Recla· oome from other sorces. So.me
•
.ot tile f&gt;rm. population !rom era! days with her children, CJ.T. Corporalion, a subsidiary · J1qt Smith •P"!lt the weekeiiil ··-· · '
c·
lmatlo·n, 'and trees will be go- operators a~· plant tbelr"Unafo
!arm sourcos m 111t12 was 19l16. Mr. and Mrs. Gene Simms of 'cJ.T. Financial Ccirporation.l•t Lau•~l Cliff. ~ .
In the ground as weather fected (unnuned) land to trees
compared With 1899 m. 1961. Tile and children and Mr. and Mrs. comment~. earlier In t~e yearl Melvm . CU'cle. of CalumbUll
-·~·lpeil'lllil~ .•\pproxlmatety 7,000 although It is .not required .by
· •
peTSOJial per capita mcome of Jimmy Joe Hemsley and other lhat U. S. industry needed:_..~uge ' and J~mes . CiTele ancr:'""'n'
wUl be planted to trees, Jaw. On ~~ Unaffected .. sites~he farm population from non- relatives in Columbus. ·
modernization program if it were 1RJcky of New Haven: spent I
hardwoods rather than planting machines can be used,
_
=~sources wal!l $504, _compar- Mrs. M~yme Holmes is now . to "effectively compete with for· ' Sunday. aftern?Op fri~ Mrs. ·
We have fow.d that and they are useful on aome
.
th $47~ 8 year earlier. .
recuperaUng from a fractured eign manufacturers, keep pace !Mary Circle.' ' :
·
the black locust, blaek spollbank lociitlons. ·But most
. Cash receipts from markebngs hip at the home of her daughter with an expanding market and I ~. ·•
. + •.
ash, red oak, cottonwood, of the -tree planting is stiJJ done Sunday School attend~nce on ~ ..1982 Jncreased a~ut $500 mil~ arid son~in-law. Mr. and Mrs. realize our potential for eronomic ,th&lt; survey dul Dot show . wb~
silver maple and tu- by hand.
March· 10 was 8&amp;, offermg was lio due mostly to higher average Robert Crow after a three week expansion.
._the _step-up in the farecast .•tem1
·~~~~~----"""'""'""ilb:nl~
do better on spoil.f25.80.'
· _ .
:rlces received for farm pro- stay ln Holzer hospital.
He said that about 60 per cent ,me&lt;. from the revise' t.u s:C!IIM·
,.,..,
. . eonlfers. Locust is
Vistttns Mr. and MrS. William ucts. G?vernment paymen~ . to Mr. Claud Quillen has re- of the nation's machine ";::il·~:;...
- -J
YOU TROUT
~il-b~Ildlng tree and is mix·
Folmer over the weekend were farmers m 1962 were '1.74 bdl~n hlrned to his home from Hot. 1were at least 10 years old, many·
FISHERMAN
ed m with the other seedlings.
Mr. 100 ~· llot_lert Job.ason compared. With 11.48 blthon m zer hospital.
Iobsolete by loday's high speed
Milo!'" klnl ,_ •lu.u t1J. 'ftlese trees will yleld pWpwood,
and dnldren, Dougte and Cindy l9Gl.The Jncrease m government Mr. Carl Hubbard Is employ- standards. If projected needs
• • •
•
1
ii~!k;:'" bock In - · •••In aod some of the species will
of Columbus.
. pa~ments stemmed from the ed at Owensboro Ky
new productive capacity were
GARDEN SEE
INck In eventuaJly grow into aaw timMr.' and Mrs. Rober1 Grues- w at and feed grain programs.
Mr. and Mrs. Cha;les Theiss be met. he said. plant and
•
D
. -In
ber.
•
er and family of Springfield G lle&lt;onl c,... Set
and daughter of Columbus were ment expend;tures should
eFIELD SEED
y,ar ~ store ran
"Stripmine operators may al. fOJec!
spent Sunday afternoon with f ~s mcome reahzed from weekend guests of his mother a $48 billion level by 1965.
e FERTILIZER
You eoUldn't bUy thill so recta~ their graded spollhls parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lew- i:r~ 10g rose almost $750 ~il~ion Mrs. Carrie Sindair and sister: Some business sources
8
blit fdr love or money. We banks With grasses and 1e- CHILLICOTHE- As a result is Grueser.
to
r~d $40.6 biUmn. Rose Ann Theiss.
hailed the revised deprecliati•&gt;n !l
h,,~ 1ar1e otoot IJOW.
gumes where It Is feasible. Seed- of restoration of ~trip mined Mr. lOd Mrs. Danny West But • l::'~er me of about f650 Mr. and Mrs. John Southern allowance schedules ;n the
Middleport feed Mill
Pllckena H1rdwere logs are made m early spring lands In Wayne National Forest and sons of Falls Creek, Pa., offse arm prod~tion expens- and Martha of Rutland and held as a spur to ;ncreased ;n. Tony ~owl••· OwM• &amp; Opp.
u••- w• ·ua
whenbed
lh,e f..
-·nd
In
. County, a-•ers
visited with her ~~nts,
Mr
t mostsa1d
of' th!l
gam. The
• ~,
":r"
-- Is still
hav Lawrence
"&amp;r-...
expenses
In and Mrs. Ruth Thomas and vest.ments ln equipment and rna·
"We Do Custom Grinding''
~~:;;!
com
rom fa.ost, or in
e access now to to. ol 21 and Mrs. Arnold Snowden
d
th
.
. ·Sandra of Pomeroy visited Sun- ,chmery. A Commerce Depart- N. .2nd,..,., - -_ MJCidlepert
ponds -which b•~~Jlften stDCked week. They came to attend
. ue ~d : ~rststent riSe day with Mr. ~nd Mrs. Claud ment spokesman, however, said

lrrdbe~lll&gt;D

i

" '""' -FRENCH:
· JI!C!
.

prosld.,it

liant11J81on.

Tbo belt • &lt;IItie

Middlepori News Man Victim Of
•
~itlie Sol's Wayward Gas .· Tanks

'

fitJ9~i4/ G~p

-~ 1!1 «&lt;::IJJ)) ao - . . JIIl8ll Loltbelt; ~- OIJ!o•Boo! ,Cattle Jmpro\'emtnt lbiJI .teon.
I"""· SoiJ)O JIOOPie. fer to ~
.au,; ::"11
:C::FC:.:
~_,, Dr. W. F. McCoy, llwlllnf· Asaoellllon; Andrew Cross, Rio · The IN! ,.q, of tJjj dlr was ill the pure ot"ed ~ llld .V:: ,::-,...-:!
PIJl1 tbne flrmon.;.... tun 111111" ~ertul Jtl~
~ ,
llart1 Gulhrjij, Coolville, inldo at ' the .,_m of Roy, furnish foundation a~ for oU.. ~ YOlUc'(VPn _ Tl,. of ;.., U..,.ld rile
flmitn oecuring mOr. .llld, tl)e mr~ ~::teporl. F=~islted Included JOhn Z'~
.!~:!:!t; =~· .s.::,:.o;:,~ n~ •per: latat ,.....,.. by tbo eom...... billion.

~

rest came over the wire.
As we found out later, the same bulletin wu
being read over a nearby television station and
almost before the teletype stoppd clattering,
phones began to ring,
QUIT ANSWERING PHONES
The people of Pecos wanted to know If the
announcements were true, if so, the real facts,
the whole story. After the first few calls, we
stopped answering the phones - beeause as
much as we hated to admit it, the only infor·
mation we had on the owner of our paper was
coming to us over the wire.
After the in'tlal shock arid resulting confu·
sion, we went about our job of getting out the
paper.
It was only after the press started rolling
that we relaxed enough, and had time to start
wondering about the people's reaction, and,
of course, our own position.
As for the people of Pecos, they had long
been divided into two camps, either for, or
against Estes. There was no middle ground.
For example, the day after the arrest I was
assigned to take pictures at a ladies club meet·
ing, and every one of the 30 or more there ex·
pressed their sympathy, as though a relative
had died. Business men worried about the ef.
feet on the economy of the town. Estes enter·
prises had a large payroll, and the loss of !bat
would hurt every merchant in town.
CONFIDENCE DIED HARD
For the first few days Estes supporters
firmly believed that their Billie Sol would
eome out on top. They just couldn't believe
that a»y one shrewd enough to build such an
enterprise, could be careless enough to leave
himself wide open to persecution. Then, too,
there was Billie Sol's reputation for being a
religious, wholesome family man, who enjoyed
doing good for others.
On the other hand, there was criticism of
his business methods which, according to non·
admirers consisted of either sell out or be
forced o~t. It was that policy that caused his
downfall when' he tried it on thie Pecos Independent weekly ,pewspaper.
Even a few hours after the arrest, It was
evident to every person in West Texas that no
matter what the outcome to Estes personally,
the ones that would be hurl most would be
themselves - the farmer, worker and small
businessman. I suppose the Estes case will he
orgued for years to come in West Texas. but
you'll never convince his friends that he in·
tended to defraud anyone, just as you'll never
convince others that he ever thought of any·
one but himself.
As more and more facts came out, the staff
of the Daily News ceased to wonder about the
future. We knew what was going to happen,
it was just a question of when.
STAFF TURNS ELSEWHERE
None of the editorial staff was a native of
Peens. but most of us bad either bought or
rented home, moved families, and prepared to
make Pecos our home. Now a town of around
12,000 population could absorb some clerks,
typists and bookkeepers from other Estes en·
terprises, but there was certainly no future
for almost a dozen newspaper people, So we
started lookinc.
·
A few of the staff left Immediately, but most ·
stayed until a few days later, when tile force
was cut to a bare minimum. We went our var·
ious ways, stillaomewhat dazed.
Time, and more timely eventa, will dim the
Estes case, and television eomlcs Will fllld an·
other subject for their jokes, but ·the people
of West Texas and those who were on the
staff of the Pecos Dally News that March 21
wiU never fQrJet the date, or Billie ~1 f;ate~.

_DIJIJ: ~~!· ~~~~ e·l!~'!f !•· 1983··

0' ' '; •

Be.ef EnterpriSeS Co.pmaOd Mofe'liof)Oriance Are
Rosin~~~
Smil;n,; These Days

.

[

• .. ..

LarmeJ

~-:!INGTON

Social News

~

"

*

.f

ftock Spnngs
Soe1aJ NoteS

l

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'I

'

Lawrence Co.
Has New ponds

Ch•~oBalt

............................,.·

SEE U$ FOR.

From p • l

962

i

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UleQ

,Fa
. .

rm Equ•·p·m
. ent

.. · ·

;'

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· ·

.: :.1J{I$ED
J; D. MANURE
SPREADER.
. ·;
.
.
, · 1'~1--.J N
. I" ·MANURE SPREADER
• :'UIIIU1 aw· aea
.· SED DISC HADROWS
f\1\
• 2

'

HELLO WALL ..,. That probably wasn't the greeting offered by Lucille Garten, North Flrst·st, Mid- · •
dleport, )Vhe nshe went to her car Wednesday afternoon and foun~ it partially' buried by crumbled . ce• ··
meot from a fallen wall. The right side of the auto was practically , 'molished. Mrs. Garten was In· the
process nf shoving a large chunk of concrete off tjle right fender waen the roving.Sentinel featute pa&amp;t · !
camera snapped·her.
·
.
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"

MORRIS
&amp; SUPPLY
. IMPlEMENT
'
.
.CO.

;.

· PHONE WI 9-3202
PEARL STREET
' '

RACINE, 0.

FREE GIFT

~th

'!"h·

~~u~

l!lonThere
and ore fui)Oral,
of Charles
Smith.
gills mixed
predommating.
Mrs, Norman
'Wyersmlller
seven addlllonal ponds wblch lied Friday at tbe home of
be sloelted al the·. proper parenll, Mr. and Mrs.
Ume IUld these :35· J!Ondscaver- ~purrier.
age a~t three acres: -in size'. Gary ·Merritt baa been·

Mr. and Mrs. Herman Len1 large~te""'chases ol oome
. don and Patricia spent a few

tl npul ms.
Es.:;::tes by states

~f reahzed days

1962·me per farm m doUars

with their daughter and

!1~-m-law, Mr. and Mrs. James

'5.4

SIMPLICITY TILLERS

•

.

Now Is The Time To Get Ready to
Make Garden. We Have 4 H.P. Tillers · ·
'
In Stock Ready To Go.

MEIGS EOUIPMEMt tO.

•

Ponieoy, Ohio

mation recently issued, the gov- ness.

Jlernor listed the following spec-Ada Slaek
clfic observances:
1------~=:..:=:::
Ohio Wildlife Week, March tlon and wise use of our bask&gt;ll
17·23, Conmvati.on Month, Ap. •. ahlral resources." He also de1-30, Arbor Day, April 26 dared "there ts a cootinulng
SoU Stewardship Week. need for Increased emphasis by

A Remington .
. Adding Mechine or
'

Typewriter , , •
,I

uimo ar~erl
~or Quillen
ani! and
Mr. sons.
and Mts. Doug·
an aerVJolas Knapp

Many of these water areas are fined to his home with
Del ·
GOmther of Pomeroy.
remote and provide tops· In ... Mrs. Dons Arnold and
a;:r·· ~· 158 · down 11 per Mrs. Laura Loifheit received
cape recreation.
visited Mrs. Iva Singer of
oentnt; y,la~200 · down 32 a letter !rom her daughter, Mrs.
The ponds are being number· ter Thursday afternoon.
cent: ary n · $2,!165, up Kathryn Peters, stating that
ed aoo will be mapped to guide Mrs. Wilbur Bailey and
' ~ew Jersey • 85• up she received the appointment
anglers and hunters to t h el r ter Ruth Ann spent Friday
perl cen ' New hYork, 13. 162· of postmaster of the Arcadia
•
•
per cent · 0 10 $ 163 up Ohi
off
. '
sport, aecordlng to Ray Bielh· ternoon wHh Mr. aoo Mrs. J.
• .' ' ·515 o post Ice.
1
mill dllltr'ct fish
·
t E• T.L.C-Yacy
· '
t The Pia.ms.
per &lt;en ' Pennsylvama. $2,
Mr · and Mrs· Ezra Phillips
er,
1
managemen
a
2 Per cent· Ohio $2 763
supervisor, Ohio Division of Mr. and Mrs. Henry
lioW. 1 P.,r ce~t ' • · up and Nola Phillips visited rela·
Wildlife. Signs alopg the high- lOd son sjlent Friday
·
·
lives In Logan, W. Va.
ways Indicate tbe Jocatloo of the with Mr. and Mrs.
•
,
Mrs. Gordon West and child·
ponds. Tbls fishing opportunity Frlnce at Mason, w. va.
Proelwmed ln.Ohio ren and Connie Kay Chapman ~~~
is the result of cooperation ,of Mr. llld Mrs. Joe
f.onservatio"fays
of Rac1oe, were V!Sil!ng With
Oakley C Collins lronton strlp and family visited with her
COLUMBUS
tile former s grandparents. Mr.
muier a.r:ct state' senAtor - t h , -. ents Mr. an Mrs
:
- . servatlon land Mrs. James S. Quick, Sunf
.
'
'
·
days m Ohio have day.
Ish superv150r slated. .
Friday and Saturday
proclaimed by uu
~•vernor Mrs. Mary Hubb.ar d ·m con·
A. Rhodes. In a procla· fined to Holzer hospital by Ill·

Your Choice of
BELIEVE IT OR NOT - These ·five Little Leaguers were the hard core of a
on
oles baseball team in Racine five years ago. Today they are the five
High school's ~ectlonal basketball champions taking • shot at the district
this (4 p.m., Saturday): Left to right, high school senior Larry Salser, junior
Larry Price, juniors Peanuli Wi~kllne
and Bruce Beegle. ·
·
.
. •

andprod ucp:'1011

19-25.

:! ,.

In the proclamation, · GOver·
.... RhodeJ slated that "It is
duty of every citizen ol
to sharet be responsibility
the conservation, restora-

, ..WM11' You Purchase A

.,I
'

school authorities to promote

programs wilich will enllghtoln
our children that they may have
a better understanding of the
problems attendant to the wise
use of our resources.''

.

'

.
BULK GARDfttSIEDS:
..

COMPLETE
{

·of Qualitv''
.
..
STARTING AND

G,R.OWING
·•PROGRAMS

~.

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STOCK OF

'

• Garden F~rtilizer · ~ .
• Lawn · Fertilize~,:
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IMOP MOW
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..$UPPLIES
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Just .t.rt"ltled!

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SUPPlHS
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Joi~~,:in · c~arrying iill•o..lt;,c:ommunlty's traditional spirit-Of bospitality. Tell tbeDalljr'llentlnel the
name .Hi~ addre~ Di'tlluilftes you
knGw wbo are povip&amp; . to our

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Phone\f¥2-!11~

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Flood Waters SloweJ Us Up ••
WE

WANT

10% OFF On

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TV In Store -

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CHASSIS

vlmTieAL

JACISON (llil
B. Tbomu 1·2-4; Walburn 1Sprtap lN-27; Sobataka
M1111t 1-0-2. Tal'ALS 1..

CONSO~ ' T'V

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FINISHING

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On llequoot

ROBINSON'S
'

A\UVIAID
'liY ' Ill~ .IIIII
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Sale'

We handJa an aizu ot tub
for 110tt1e pa. We aervtca

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Rutland Furnitu,. .
RUTLAND, OHIO .

Phone SH. 2-4811.
.

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Bas Blmiou.s,

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Joi~~,:in · c~arrying iill•o..lt;,c:ommunlty's traditional spirit-Of bospitality. Tell tbeDalljr'llentlnel the
name .Hi~ addre~ Di'tlluilftes you
knGw wbo are povip&amp; . to our

., '

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·' · '•

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Phone\f¥2-!11~

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Flood Waters SloweJ Us Up ••
WE

WANT

10% OFF On

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•

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·ACTION Slt·LE
.

A~y

.

~

•,

TV In Store -

..

CHASSIS

vlmTieAL

JACISON (llil
B. Tbomu 1·2-4; Walburn 1Sprtap lN-27; Sobataka
M1111t 1-0-2. Tal'ALS 1..

CONSO~ ' T'V

~=;;;..-=:::: -= =--

•

•WviLmll
·eU..iiWIII
oilll

WEEK. COO~i

· MIDDI.IIIOIJT

'

.tMAit ~Ill
HMDI

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-~

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,

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Does it have a liVely 4! ~ ':' ;~:;.;,;
noes it ofei a p)l~. v;~r.
.
. ~
...
Does it look 6ke tlaDZ

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SHIRT

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3 ~ENITH
HEARING
AlOS
..,
.
--

.

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..._., - ....
FINISHING

flnloi!M ·-- -~ -- - 2S. ..,.
eSomolloJ Sontco
On llequoot

ROBINSON'S
'

A\UVIAID
'liY ' Ill~ .IIIII
. ,,,

Sale'

We handJa an aizu ot tub
for 110tt1e pa. We aervtca

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..

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Rutland Furnitu,. .
RUTLAND, OHIO .

Phone SH. 2-4811.
.

\

,'
I, Ml)n St: ·-

'
"

.

'

�"•

'

Ill NOTICES

•

WMPO Radio
a.oNJIAY TBitlJ FIIIDAY
I :CJO Newt
1:1&amp; Coul!lrf ~ Time
uo Country Jainlloree
1::111 N..,.
1:36. ....._
.... w World N....
1\FD
l :4i Melp County
7:00 New•
'I,:Oii R,...eklaot Pllfll'
7:30 News
7:35 'Pick.,. l!anlware Show
7:50 1:50 News Report

7:111 l!reatfast Pari)
7:SO News
7:35 Breakfast Party
8:00 Nem
1:05 Breakfast Party
8:30
News ·
' "--~8:31. Dn:&lt;IIWOH Party

t :OO tl..,.
.,;.O.
9,05 llialdiilt ....
.,
~: 15 Jones Buick Show

t :30
9:35
!~ 00
IO:Oii
10·35

New~

Breakfaat Pany

Newro
8:00 .Radio Hymnal
Polka ·Party
8' 15 Breakfast Party
MUsle In the AU
8·30 Van Parllck Sporl Show 10 · .,~ The Good Life
8·3$ Brealtfall Party
, 0
8 45 •Iaker Fum. ShuW-Frl. !0:5! nder Ohio Sklea
9·111' folews
11:01' New•
UO I)Oftee Wllh Jani!l
·11:05 rop Ten Show
11 ' 30 N•""
1:11 NeWs
9·35 Coffee Wllh Janet
11:35 llutti&gt;•'s Top Ten Show
9-41'1 Belly. Newton Sliow
IZ:OO News- N0011 . Report
. 10·00 Nm ,
12:15 Mosie lnter•ude
tO DO Ministerial Association
IZ:30 Be9 · MerliD Teell
10·:!11 MnmiDJ Interlude ·
I:OO ~·ews
10 30 News
I:05 Platter Par!J
3
lB 35 Momln&amp; Interlude
' 30 News
.
11 oo News
3:35 Platter Party
11 01 Swap Shcp
4:00 New•
n ·oo Newo
1:05 Platter Party
u-~
4:30 New.
11 .40 Coonll')l· .......
own
· . · .., .. __ _
IFamJJy WQI'Bhip Thun.l 4:35 f"Jalter •81'11
tr· !ill Up1oor Rnnm Meditations S:OO Nf!,,~ .
. 11 ·58 l&lt;ni Jones Slocll AYe.
5·11&gt; !'Jolter Party
t• Ill: Nooli News
5:30 Sign Off
1~ : 1$ Music Just ·•'or You
6.00 Februa~ Sign Off
12 I ~ Goeslilers Goleso Star ~'rl.
· 1 lul"l'
12 30 Mu•tc Just ?or ~ou
7:30 Newo .
1·00 Newe
7:35 Arrliy Hoou
1.11&gt; Pi.ll81c Just For You
1:00 Bev. Ira Tlbbl
l ·.f , ~ews
·
8:15 Ch~rcb at Work
I ·1\ \lusi&lt; Jual f'or You
1:30 Newa
.
2 00 Newa
1:35 · ~·"""'"~ . -mbl1
1·05 Mu••r ·Jull For You
9·00 Wlap 01 HeaiiJ18
I ·311 News
9:30 Cburdl Wcrlll Nowo
9 ' 46 Sunday Olapel .
I 35 Musoc Just For You
lt:OO Vol"" of Propbecy
S uoo ~'" .
3-'05 Plaller Party
IIi :311 New•
S :10 Newo
10 35 Penpectivn ·
S 35 Plaller PariJ
10 50 Social Securl~ .
1110 Nelli•
IUD Countr) HYJIIID 'l'llle
4 U5 Platter. l'arty
II '30 Newo
P~ Blaettnttr Auto bow - 11 ' 30 Count!']' Hymn 'nine
Tun. &amp;Tbun
12·00 Nooa Report
4· 10 Local Niws
IZ,I5 r... 4 10 Musical Myoterlee
12:30 Ire• Merlin Teell
a:oo 11oo1r m lledatoo
5·00 New•
I. 311 Lulherar Hour
J or. Platter Party
2:110, ~ 30 Sigo Off
2:011 Baptist Layman's Hour
8 00 Febru•r, Sign Off
2' 35 Baclc to lbe Clllll
8ATVRDII f liCHEDULI!
3.00 ~ Roscoe noome
, oo ;~ews
3:11 The Quiet Hour ·
8 05 Countcy Music Tlmf
4:00 New•

11M
4 door.

machine A-1 condition.
fGnrard and backward. uar111, 1
patch••. monosrams, etc.
allaclunents needed,
cash or 7 paymenll fl 1110111111-1
IJ. WY :I-221M.

8·30 .......

4 : ~~ySbo~

8 35 Farm World Newt
8 40 RFD
7.80 News

4:30 Ne,W9
4:35 Sign Off
f: 00 Febf'UIII1 Sign

DOWX
eoiJooi. .

1. l'ellow:
2. Staple
fooolot
CIIIDa

......._
· DAILY CRYP!l'OQUOTE- Here'a bow to work ltl
A~YDLBAAZB

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One letter limply otanda for onolbor. JD lbla 110111plo A 1111014
tor "'e tbree I.t1, X for Ute two o·.. etc. Slnel• letter., apoe.
tropbte-. tbe lenath ab4 torm&amp;Uon of the wordl ll'e all blat&amp; · L
lliach clay t110 code ~ettmo .... dltfere~~t.
NANCY
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A CllliUTl.Uf..,.;'!ViLLIAK P111NN
0 liD, ..... I'.WZ.

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----~~~·~·~~·-~----- ------

'":'".WJ'EH . RADIO

111....; 'l'llromp Frld.y
\i':~ ~1. News
7:15 Sign On, Muslctll Clock 12:10 Ohio News
4 :45 Tbe I.Jieltne .., 12:15 Mane..
.
t ·OO Oltlo Valley New1
'2:20 Lifeguard BuUetln Boord
&amp;:OS Sporl8 Tuday
12:25 Newt 0 Grait1o
1.10 World News
8:15 ·Musical Clock
I~ : II Agriculture Alent
8:ii5 Community New.
U .45 Countcy Go liDwl&lt;.
9.00 LaiCitllline
.
1:55 Newr ilel!l
3:00 CounlrJI Go llounr
9:30 . Public! Servl&lt;e ' '
9:45"ShoweH of Ble.slnr
2:55 News Beat
10 .011 Mason:Cotmty l'oowt.
S: DO Midway Matiner
1~: 05 1'11111 ol the Town
S:55 Ne.. Ileal
1£:55 World NeW.
' '1.10 Dlsclaa wllh Dou
U:ll 1'11111 of lhe Towu
4:30 Interclynge
IOlcept Fri. Clturdl BeDs RJne 11:00 Community NeWII
11:45 World 1\J...,
5:05 World " Nalk4lal Nelli
II ·55 Maaon County NeWII
5:1$ ~· on Sporto
12'00 Con!J!Iimlty News
a:311, Sign Off

I loWIE oea&amp;I1VED
'I'll! tl HIS .,

~OI'SHocl&lt;

I FEAR Hill

VILlAINOUS N~
I8111MUHE'IO I

OIJRM!AQRI;B

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AH, '&lt;'Et:ar.
; .

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•

90 HQI/ 'fl&amp;

e&amp;e:Q.1E8

Ol!jROEt!Tf

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By LIFI' •IIII' McWILLIAMS

'"'·'"I

1WICE llEFWE
'fOU 'TURNED ME
t9NN ... t'OR ONE
REASON OR
ANOl):IER!

-

ALL RIOHT,

DICK !.}. ~

ACCEPT
"rOUP..
p~~ ··l~ !

....

.. (. '.. ..
)~

'

..

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.

'

�"•

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Ill NOTICES

•

WMPO Radio
a.oNJIAY TBitlJ FIIIDAY
I :CJO Newt
1:1&amp; Coul!lrf ~ Time
uo Country Jainlloree
1::111 N..,.
1:36. ....._
.... w World N....
1\FD
l :4i Melp County
7:00 New•
'I,:Oii R,...eklaot Pllfll'
7:30 News
7:35 'Pick.,. l!anlware Show
7:50 1:50 News Report

7:111 l!reatfast Pari)
7:SO News
7:35 Breakfast Party
8:00 Nem
1:05 Breakfast Party
8:30
News ·
' "--~8:31. Dn:&lt;IIWOH Party

t :OO tl..,.
.,;.O.
9,05 llialdiilt ....
.,
~: 15 Jones Buick Show

t :30
9:35
!~ 00
IO:Oii
10·35

New~

Breakfaat Pany

Newro
8:00 .Radio Hymnal
Polka ·Party
8' 15 Breakfast Party
MUsle In the AU
8·30 Van Parllck Sporl Show 10 · .,~ The Good Life
8·3$ Brealtfall Party
, 0
8 45 •Iaker Fum. ShuW-Frl. !0:5! nder Ohio Sklea
9·111' folews
11:01' New•
UO I)Oftee Wllh Jani!l
·11:05 rop Ten Show
11 ' 30 N•""
1:11 NeWs
9·35 Coffee Wllh Janet
11:35 llutti&gt;•'s Top Ten Show
9-41'1 Belly. Newton Sliow
IZ:OO News- N0011 . Report
. 10·00 Nm ,
12:15 Mosie lnter•ude
tO DO Ministerial Association
IZ:30 Be9 · MerliD Teell
10·:!11 MnmiDJ Interlude ·
I:OO ~·ews
10 30 News
I:05 Platter Par!J
3
lB 35 Momln&amp; Interlude
' 30 News
.
11 oo News
3:35 Platter Party
11 01 Swap Shcp
4:00 New•
n ·oo Newo
1:05 Platter Party
u-~
4:30 New.
11 .40 Coonll')l· .......
own
· . · .., .. __ _
IFamJJy WQI'Bhip Thun.l 4:35 f"Jalter •81'11
tr· !ill Up1oor Rnnm Meditations S:OO Nf!,,~ .
. 11 ·58 l&lt;ni Jones Slocll AYe.
5·11&gt; !'Jolter Party
t• Ill: Nooli News
5:30 Sign Off
1~ : 1$ Music Just ·•'or You
6.00 Februa~ Sign Off
12 I ~ Goeslilers Goleso Star ~'rl.
· 1 lul"l'
12 30 Mu•tc Just ?or ~ou
7:30 Newo .
1·00 Newe
7:35 Arrliy Hoou
1.11&gt; Pi.ll81c Just For You
1:00 Bev. Ira Tlbbl
l ·.f , ~ews
·
8:15 Ch~rcb at Work
I ·1\ \lusi&lt; Jual f'or You
1:30 Newa
.
2 00 Newa
1:35 · ~·"""'"~ . -mbl1
1·05 Mu••r ·Jull For You
9·00 Wlap 01 HeaiiJ18
I ·311 News
9:30 Cburdl Wcrlll Nowo
9 ' 46 Sunday Olapel .
I 35 Musoc Just For You
lt:OO Vol"" of Propbecy
S uoo ~'" .
3-'05 Plaller Party
IIi :311 New•
S :10 Newo
10 35 Penpectivn ·
S 35 Plaller PariJ
10 50 Social Securl~ .
1110 Nelli•
IUD Countr) HYJIIID 'l'llle
4 U5 Platter. l'arty
II '30 Newo
P~ Blaettnttr Auto bow - 11 ' 30 Count!']' Hymn 'nine
Tun. &amp;Tbun
12·00 Nooa Report
4· 10 Local Niws
IZ,I5 r... 4 10 Musical Myoterlee
12:30 Ire• Merlin Teell
a:oo 11oo1r m lledatoo
5·00 New•
I. 311 Lulherar Hour
J or. Platter Party
2:110, ~ 30 Sigo Off
2:011 Baptist Layman's Hour
8 00 Febru•r, Sign Off
2' 35 Baclc to lbe Clllll
8ATVRDII f liCHEDULI!
3.00 ~ Roscoe noome
, oo ;~ews
3:11 The Quiet Hour ·
8 05 Countcy Music Tlmf
4:00 New•

11M
4 door.

machine A-1 condition.
fGnrard and backward. uar111, 1
patch••. monosrams, etc.
allaclunents needed,
cash or 7 paymenll fl 1110111111-1
IJ. WY :I-221M.

8·30 .......

4 : ~~ySbo~

8 35 Farm World Newt
8 40 RFD
7.80 News

4:30 Ne,W9
4:35 Sign Off
f: 00 Febf'UIII1 Sign

DOWX
eoiJooi. .

1. l'ellow:
2. Staple
fooolot
CIIIDa

......._
· DAILY CRYP!l'OQUOTE- Here'a bow to work ltl
A~YDLBAAZB

.

lo. LOlfGI'lllLLOW
One letter limply otanda for onolbor. JD lbla 110111plo A 1111014
tor "'e tbree I.t1, X for Ute two o·.. etc. Slnel• letter., apoe.
tropbte-. tbe lenath ab4 torm&amp;Uon of the wordl ll'e all blat&amp; · L
lliach clay t110 code ~ettmo .... dltfere~~t.
NANCY
.t.oa;ptdpemQuo~

lwa:J1CIIJQ[:r

ZCQSMCBBM

Qm

J'CP

E SPPU

! r J, II B W. ~ ~-~ ~ ! ~ PlB

11 X . •

· . Y..t.rolo.Ta c.,.,loqaotot '1'0 Bll LIK11 CIUIUT l l TO ill:
A CllliUTl.Uf..,.;'!ViLLIAK P111NN
0 liD, ..... I'.WZ.

.,...Ui, 1M.

----~~~·~·~~·-~----- ------

'":'".WJ'EH . RADIO

111....; 'l'llromp Frld.y
\i':~ ~1. News
7:15 Sign On, Muslctll Clock 12:10 Ohio News
4 :45 Tbe I.Jieltne .., 12:15 Mane..
.
t ·OO Oltlo Valley New1
'2:20 Lifeguard BuUetln Boord
&amp;:OS Sporl8 Tuday
12:25 Newt 0 Grait1o
1.10 World News
8:15 ·Musical Clock
I~ : II Agriculture Alent
8:ii5 Community New.
U .45 Countcy Go liDwl&lt;.
9.00 LaiCitllline
.
1:55 Newr ilel!l
3:00 CounlrJI Go llounr
9:30 . Public! Servl&lt;e ' '
9:45"ShoweH of Ble.slnr
2:55 News Beat
10 .011 Mason:Cotmty l'oowt.
S: DO Midway Matiner
1~: 05 1'11111 ol the Town
S:55 Ne.. Ileal
1£:55 World NeW.
' '1.10 Dlsclaa wllh Dou
U:ll 1'11111 of lhe Towu
4:30 Interclynge
IOlcept Fri. Clturdl BeDs RJne 11:00 Community NeWII
11:45 World 1\J...,
5:05 World " Nalk4lal Nelli
II ·55 Maaon County NeWII
5:1$ ~· on Sporto
12'00 Con!J!Iimlty News
a:311, Sign Off

I loWIE oea&amp;I1VED
'I'll! tl HIS .,

~OI'SHocl&lt;

I FEAR Hill

VILlAINOUS N~
I8111MUHE'IO I

OIJRM!AQRI;B

~- "

AH, '&lt;'Et:ar.
; .

I EX
Yl WHEE

•

90 HQI/ 'fl&amp;

e&amp;e:Q.1E8

Ol!jROEt!Tf

·~.

'~.I

Oil
By LIFI' •IIII' McWILLIAMS

'"'·'"I

1WICE llEFWE
'fOU 'TURNED ME
t9NN ... t'OR ONE
REASON OR
ANOl):IER!

-

ALL RIOHT,

DICK !.}. ~

ACCEPT
"rOUP..
p~~ ··l~ !

....

.. (. '.. ..
)~

'

..

)

.

'

�•

. '

Ca,DC:;tyCrowd
"ores Varieties

,. ·!!'',.,....
4 .

.

ter members were

made

_

•

.... ... ....... .._.,
.....................
......................... _... '
NOW YOU KNOW

. . IN«SER'J ..

at

regular meeting of the
thea Women of the
I Chiiii'Ch of Christ

.W lie ....

(

I

•

•

I

•

ftd

enttne

.

Plans for a tea llonorilll

Pq-t CIH)

..,

•

Tea Honoring
First Members
Being'flanned

.itMfJtlfe~t'·
...
. .

ct';

-

'

.

,..,_, To T.. ,,.,.,..,. 01 TM llefp.M_,. .4,...

at the churcll. Mn.

\ O.trst was in charge of the
volional period using
meditation. "Moment
Moming,n and cloting

VOL XIV NO.

2~2

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

MONDAY, MARCH 18, 1963 .

0

Ice Jams, Rains
Bringing Floods ......

VA11CAN CITY (UPI) -

Pepo Job xxm -ylllm·
bled IIIII feQ oa doe Iloilo o1

1111 1llroDe lhlrlal

Tlte
1101

1

maa aado

Sunny Skies
Aid Hope
OfNoFlood
..... llll&lt;nalollll

M08n.l!, All. (UPI) - Jte•
taeky'1 Dlame Sall}'tf Illes
tit New York - y - •

of Amerlco'o Ita

llle -

Jllllfor ""'· lymbolle ol . .
eoaolry'1 "ldeol MJb - 1
ltBler

MJu

•

-

.

,. '·~:

wan

• Tho 01~011
IJ!'lniiQ ~ . ,
• No ..lilousltlnlnc

~en

Racine for the first time \()()k a com·
Racine ·Fans happy '! Deliriously so!
that followed , and a complete account
Township in the last split (?) second,

• CIIOS1 to brulh or rdler

• D~es In zq, mtftlrtos . . .

• Folany room, woodWOik too
• Stays ct•ntr, eftlnt tMitf~

-

Tonleht Thru WtdntiCIIY
More~ 15-20
'

Wtll Dlsnrt"o
"IN 1DRCH OF

mil !Jon for
-~ase for schools ment and
meeting an in- Highway
'aused by Lhe ex- Those b1lls

!

THfl! CASTAWAYS"

1

See The Compl~
'.
line Of

(Teehnleolo~)

Hayley Mills lolaW'lce Chevo·
t~r. Geo . .Sanders, Wilfrid
Hyde Wblte, Jules Verne's
Avalanche o! Adventure!
Dis• Carteen1
·
•

. Budget Asks
$50 Million

I

'

'

.n.

lncl~d!Dg ,Spr~

LusiN

'lhi

semt•r:los.t alkyd enamel ~

•udgets of $nu. 4 dLScUss the budgeL At that time.
~~- -- -- - - - Finance Direcor .ijichard. Krao

Spred Satln. ' Ulill .
· yellowlOI GJost White t.~
malchet

bacjl will gi~e nls ~lte ol

ole
i:ar
/reck

Hour Enamel. Flonnamel
for wood or eemeDI ~
Craftsman OUtside Wlllii
HoUle Palnt.

!Finance Committee.

1n bill will he in-' Rep. 'Ralph Fisher, R-Wooster,
'! House after House l&lt;~inance Commillee chai....
man, said Lhe cummittee will hoi•
1
dl already has it~ fiJ·st meet ing Tuesday nig~t t1

GLIDDEN PAIN1S

Adm!Qion 7k &amp; (Go

!he Highway Depart..
$27 mJlhon l'or tilt
Safely Department.
are now Ill the Senat•

1 1· ev~:mues in the next two years.
Committee work on the budget
'was expected to take about .1
month.
i Otherwise,
legislative actioa
this week was expected to bt
'
sparse. The House was scheduled
lo vote on three measures. the
age was caused majOI' one of which would allow a
:45 p. m. Satur- referendum on extn:1 taxes for r ..
cident on West gional planning.
----neroy. Pomeroy

'· -;: .:,

Elberfelds
In

!

.

1

Confli"ct WI"th

ehicle
driven by ~
52, Pomeroy , ,

!f,

',

' '

-mtrol and hit a ,
I

Neighbor Fairs
•
thout
No
Is Eliminated
ls C.urt Saturday I
.edium damage to '

hUnger's car but

WY 2-2039

DAY or NIGHT

injury.
filed . In Mayor

Pomeroy Flower Shoo

happiest
&gt;·, ~ ifi(jflfii

..

are sp'e nt
In your
own' home

'

NEED TO
SEND MONEY
IN THE MAIL?

' And Jhe kltthon Is 0110 ottf&gt;e most
llnportanl aroas. Why not havo
a ..,..utilul kitthon liko thio ono?

IO ' MOIIY DOWI
Call

ul

nd Neggemeyer, ' PT. PLEASANT - The date•
as fined $5 and for the Mason Cou nty Fair

lor .,

I

•

-

.ation by driving
ind Shelby Pick orfeited $25 bond
operation charge.

"

. ludr ~rlai14f'• J!IYrioci fans eeaerlr awalt ,.,; ...,.
· · idltloil Of. ''na JlidiGcirlanil 5how," oii ~tour:-IO.io,
~~~~~1:-wrltty·· ~ra!" over CIS-lV. Her eue.t

I

lO[i;ll Hospital

. ln.,/hf

J

Fill ISTIMATIS
- ~~

change was made so there
would be no conflict with Gama
:county Junior F'air and
the
: Meigs County

Ft:~ir.

3 Sundav - AI- · The slte of the 1963 Mason
, • Pomeroy~ Janet' County Fair ha s not been desig- ne- Helen Brick- nated and a further discussion
'
'or location Wil l be held at tha
-&lt;.:S Saturday - genera! membership meeting on
·)e. Pomeroy : Ma - Marrh 18th.
,'
Middleport; Mar~ . Ala Board of Directors meet~
Chester ;
Irene ing March 14th the possibiUt.ieJ

.: ..ltliill .~r~(l. h RObelt ·.Goulet, who .ta....a,·In . the i
hit IIIUiieal "Ca~Ot,"'·ind:' PIJil ~Ivers; .

· . Of Sere•••t lilko and .t,op .••ll•'llq" fame.'

havE.' been changed to Augu ~t
5 through
Augus t 10.
The

O,J&gt;Iigalion

of working wit h the Area Re·

!TOy.

~s Sunday - Mrs .

l•autif'-11 cabln•to
•.. ·.•, I wfthplealyolltora..
.,._ wiN lte • CCNto
lfOht

devt! lopment Administration for
Racine ; Effie Da· assistttnce in getting a perman·
·; Bessie Hysell, ent fa1r site and buildings was
lph Davis, Middle- discussed with ARA represents·

Don't Ri1lc Mellint It,

Parsons, Anti~ui - 1 tives, _bu! due to the .fact th~t
.:obart Minersv1He. -the fair t ~ a non-prnf1t orgam·
' SUNDAY !zation the AR~ , un?er pt·e~nt
'
ES

itY•

Colorful, malntenarwe·free Formica counter tDfM wlll 1M a delifhl
to rou olwaya.
Alutlrectlva .. clly
car.t.fer floer wiM san
fa\ ...... ef wert&amp;.

A now, modorR
ceiling will e~dd jutt
thtt rltht flnilhlnt

......

There is no risk when you stop
at our bonk and get a BANK
MONEY ORDER. It protects
your money and provides you
with a receipt.

.therson, . Racine; 1taw, can not g1ve du·ect assJ.Stw
•, Minersville; Co-l ance.
ldd leport.
•

1y - Mr. an,d Mrs.j
Meigs General Hospital
Racine a daugh- ADMISSIONS SA TURDA V '
'
I Homer Jones, Middleport,
DISCHARGES SATURD,WAlbert Bengel, Pomeroy; Clar'?.P RETlJRNS

We Pay 3"1. lntereot Oh Your '"'"~~

The FARMERS BANK
and Savings

Pl l - A sheet of e nce Willi~s, Pomeroy.
· 1stamps was bought ADMISSION SATURDAY , ...st office this week Chloe ~y~ Coolvtlle;
W IIJ
1

1'

··&gt;
Yoong, ·P'onieroy.
J ~ were sold within DIS~HARGES SATURDAY.lt·.A!a:J after it was dis-- Cla!'f"nce Sputrter. Pomeroy. 1
•. ~ause of a printing ADMISSIONS SUNDAY .,. H• ·I
inw; stam~ bore the mer Jones, . MidtJJ~port.
..
·,1of the queen·s head. DlSCHARGES SUNDAY -AI- '!
· bert Bengel, l'omeror q Clli~
EFERS J.\CKIE
ence ,Willjama, PlllllOI''lt; .~ .
&gt;Ohio &lt;UPil -some- bec&lt;a Cool&lt;, PI: P~asanL ,

J-·

Mamber FadaraiR•arw Syllllftl .
Mamber ~adarol Daposlt IMur.- Corpor.tlon
.

POMIIOY, OHJO

'

,., • • ••• :·

thinks J.xque"
loolla better on $1
t incge Washington.
j,f:~Flnt Lody'o ~ic- conce,-1
1
the portrait of· ~· 'Stewar.l,
appeai-ed .....t. ..1, Mrs . .llcilj

tt.J&lt;.....
'

\'

. . Ge:m,~ i\!n.; ~illltli!5,q,li&gt;

�•

. '

Ca,DC:;tyCrowd
"ores Varieties

,. ·!!'',.,....
4 .

.

ter members were

made

_

•

.... ... ....... .._.,
.....................
......................... _... '
NOW YOU KNOW

. . IN«SER'J ..

at

regular meeting of the
thea Women of the
I Chiiii'Ch of Christ

.W lie ....

(

I

•

•

I

•

ftd

enttne

.

Plans for a tea llonorilll

Pq-t CIH)

..,

•

Tea Honoring
First Members
Being'flanned

.itMfJtlfe~t'·
...
. .

ct';

-

'

.

,..,_, To T.. ,,.,.,..,. 01 TM llefp.M_,. .4,...

at the churcll. Mn.

\ O.trst was in charge of the
volional period using
meditation. "Moment
Moming,n and cloting

VOL XIV NO.

2~2

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT; OHIO

MONDAY, MARCH 18, 1963 .

0

Ice Jams, Rains
Bringing Floods ......

VA11CAN CITY (UPI) -

Pepo Job xxm -ylllm·
bled IIIII feQ oa doe Iloilo o1

1111 1llroDe lhlrlal

Tlte
1101

1

maa aado

Sunny Skies
Aid Hope
OfNoFlood
..... llll&lt;nalollll

M08n.l!, All. (UPI) - Jte•
taeky'1 Dlame Sall}'tf Illes
tit New York - y - •

of Amerlco'o Ita

llle -

Jllllfor ""'· lymbolle ol . .
eoaolry'1 "ldeol MJb - 1
ltBler

MJu

•

-

.

,. '·~:

wan

• Tho 01~011
IJ!'lniiQ ~ . ,
• No ..lilousltlnlnc

~en

Racine for the first time \()()k a com·
Racine ·Fans happy '! Deliriously so!
that followed , and a complete account
Township in the last split (?) second,

• CIIOS1 to brulh or rdler

• D~es In zq, mtftlrtos . . .

• Folany room, woodWOik too
• Stays ct•ntr, eftlnt tMitf~

-

Tonleht Thru WtdntiCIIY
More~ 15-20
'

Wtll Dlsnrt"o
"IN 1DRCH OF

mil !Jon for
-~ase for schools ment and
meeting an in- Highway
'aused by Lhe ex- Those b1lls

!

THfl! CASTAWAYS"

1

See The Compl~
'.
line Of

(Teehnleolo~)

Hayley Mills lolaW'lce Chevo·
t~r. Geo . .Sanders, Wilfrid
Hyde Wblte, Jules Verne's
Avalanche o! Adventure!
Dis• Carteen1
·
•

. Budget Asks
$50 Million

I

'

'

.n.

lncl~d!Dg ,Spr~

LusiN

'lhi

semt•r:los.t alkyd enamel ~

•udgets of $nu. 4 dLScUss the budgeL At that time.
~~- -- -- - - - Finance Direcor .ijichard. Krao

Spred Satln. ' Ulill .
· yellowlOI GJost White t.~
malchet

bacjl will gi~e nls ~lte ol

ole
i:ar
/reck

Hour Enamel. Flonnamel
for wood or eemeDI ~
Craftsman OUtside Wlllii
HoUle Palnt.

!Finance Committee.

1n bill will he in-' Rep. 'Ralph Fisher, R-Wooster,
'! House after House l&lt;~inance Commillee chai....
man, said Lhe cummittee will hoi•
1
dl already has it~ fiJ·st meet ing Tuesday nig~t t1

GLIDDEN PAIN1S

Adm!Qion 7k &amp; (Go

!he Highway Depart..
$27 mJlhon l'or tilt
Safely Department.
are now Ill the Senat•

1 1· ev~:mues in the next two years.
Committee work on the budget
'was expected to take about .1
month.
i Otherwise,
legislative actioa
this week was expected to bt
'
sparse. The House was scheduled
lo vote on three measures. the
age was caused majOI' one of which would allow a
:45 p. m. Satur- referendum on extn:1 taxes for r ..
cident on West gional planning.
----neroy. Pomeroy

'· -;: .:,

Elberfelds
In

!

.

1

Confli"ct WI"th

ehicle
driven by ~
52, Pomeroy , ,

!f,

',

' '

-mtrol and hit a ,
I

Neighbor Fairs
•
thout
No
Is Eliminated
ls C.urt Saturday I
.edium damage to '

hUnger's car but

WY 2-2039

DAY or NIGHT

injury.
filed . In Mayor

Pomeroy Flower Shoo

happiest
&gt;·, ~ ifi(jflfii

..

are sp'e nt
In your
own' home

'

NEED TO
SEND MONEY
IN THE MAIL?

' And Jhe kltthon Is 0110 ottf&gt;e most
llnportanl aroas. Why not havo
a ..,..utilul kitthon liko thio ono?

IO ' MOIIY DOWI
Call

ul

nd Neggemeyer, ' PT. PLEASANT - The date•
as fined $5 and for the Mason Cou nty Fair

lor .,

I

•

-

.ation by driving
ind Shelby Pick orfeited $25 bond
operation charge.

"

. ludr ~rlai14f'• J!IYrioci fans eeaerlr awalt ,.,; ...,.
· · idltloil Of. ''na JlidiGcirlanil 5how," oii ~tour:-IO.io,
~~~~~1:-wrltty·· ~ra!" over CIS-lV. Her eue.t

I

lO[i;ll Hospital

. ln.,/hf

J

Fill ISTIMATIS
- ~~

change was made so there
would be no conflict with Gama
:county Junior F'air and
the
: Meigs County

Ft:~ir.

3 Sundav - AI- · The slte of the 1963 Mason
, • Pomeroy~ Janet' County Fair ha s not been desig- ne- Helen Brick- nated and a further discussion
'
'or location Wil l be held at tha
-&lt;.:S Saturday - genera! membership meeting on
·)e. Pomeroy : Ma - Marrh 18th.
,'
Middleport; Mar~ . Ala Board of Directors meet~
Chester ;
Irene ing March 14th the possibiUt.ieJ

.: ..ltliill .~r~(l. h RObelt ·.Goulet, who .ta....a,·In . the i
hit IIIUiieal "Ca~Ot,"'·ind:' PIJil ~Ivers; .

· . Of Sere•••t lilko and .t,op .••ll•'llq" fame.'

havE.' been changed to Augu ~t
5 through
Augus t 10.
The

O,J&gt;Iigalion

of working wit h the Area Re·

!TOy.

~s Sunday - Mrs .

l•autif'-11 cabln•to
•.. ·.•, I wfthplealyolltora..
.,._ wiN lte • CCNto
lfOht

devt! lopment Administration for
Racine ; Effie Da· assistttnce in getting a perman·
·; Bessie Hysell, ent fa1r site and buildings was
lph Davis, Middle- discussed with ARA represents·

Don't Ri1lc Mellint It,

Parsons, Anti~ui - 1 tives, _bu! due to the .fact th~t
.:obart Minersv1He. -the fair t ~ a non-prnf1t orgam·
' SUNDAY !zation the AR~ , un?er pt·e~nt
'
ES

itY•

Colorful, malntenarwe·free Formica counter tDfM wlll 1M a delifhl
to rou olwaya.
Alutlrectlva .. clly
car.t.fer floer wiM san
fa\ ...... ef wert&amp;.

A now, modorR
ceiling will e~dd jutt
thtt rltht flnilhlnt

......

There is no risk when you stop
at our bonk and get a BANK
MONEY ORDER. It protects
your money and provides you
with a receipt.

.therson, . Racine; 1taw, can not g1ve du·ect assJ.Stw
•, Minersville; Co-l ance.
ldd leport.
•

1y - Mr. an,d Mrs.j
Meigs General Hospital
Racine a daugh- ADMISSIONS SA TURDA V '
'
I Homer Jones, Middleport,
DISCHARGES SATURD,WAlbert Bengel, Pomeroy; Clar'?.P RETlJRNS

We Pay 3"1. lntereot Oh Your '"'"~~

The FARMERS BANK
and Savings

Pl l - A sheet of e nce Willi~s, Pomeroy.
· 1stamps was bought ADMISSION SATURDAY , ...st office this week Chloe ~y~ Coolvtlle;
W IIJ
1

1'

··&gt;
Yoong, ·P'onieroy.
J ~ were sold within DIS~HARGES SATURDAY.lt·.A!a:J after it was dis-- Cla!'f"nce Sputrter. Pomeroy. 1
•. ~ause of a printing ADMISSIONS SUNDAY .,. H• ·I
inw; stam~ bore the mer Jones, . MidtJJ~port.
..
·,1of the queen·s head. DlSCHARGES SUNDAY -AI- '!
· bert Bengel, l'omeror q Clli~
EFERS J.\CKIE
ence ,Willjama, PlllllOI''lt; .~ .
&gt;Ohio &lt;UPil -some- bec&lt;a Cool&lt;, PI: P~asanL ,

J-·

Mamber FadaraiR•arw Syllllftl .
Mamber ~adarol Daposlt IMur.- Corpor.tlon
.

POMIIOY, OHJO

'

,., • • ••• :·

thinks J.xque"
loolla better on $1
t incge Washington.
j,f:~Flnt Lody'o ~ic- conce,-1
1
the portrait of· ~· 'Stewar.l,
appeai-ed .....t. ..1, Mrs . .llcilj

tt.J&lt;.....
'

\'

. . Ge:m,~ i\!n.; ~illltli!5,q,li&gt;

�NOW' YOU KNOW
..... Rill , . . _ ~
..0.!114tlaWI ........ _
... _....,. .. till .. ....
........ llllbul .. Ill oearda
. . had.

-

e

·.

VOL XIV

NO.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPdRT, OHIO

2~2

CENTS

MQNDAY, MARCH 18, 1963 .

f 14Burns Ou
lee Jams, Rains
Bringing Floods
in
'

WSAZ..TV
Chennel 3

~TV
~-3
'
!

•. 'I :OD Gospel Cara..,. ,
"" lO:It Vlot&lt;eat Peale
10:30 lJYlng Word
Jt:e Olrl8topben
11:00 'Ibis .. Life
11:30 Calbollc Hour
11:00 TV atapel
12:30 GoopeJ Harmony Bo;va
11:45 qantea Club
1:011 q.amplousbip Bowlq
2:00 Bl&amp; S BowJJnc

1:• ·Leave

11:1$ IUIIdiJ'.,..,_

···--- ....

; :=~=
' l:•l'lllilwtn~

'

t

.( 7ilt 'l.ulie
~

..

_TUESDAY

Coldlill

er P le
Ca
1
'-ll
r

,,. f'ICIIiN
~· ...~ a.ptit

lfoadq .Nipa

~:• ~U;IIildoller

11:16 Woril' IMII 1llillipr;

.-

.. l"lalpl

- , . . , . '.

h ~ ~UN

'l •
j 'r

'~10:30 'Wb!il'l
D:IID 11:1111 -

are spent
In your

n:a

r-a

.., Line

.

'

101111' ···· -·· '"'
. · "lfolber · :~;..::..:.;..

. .. .

,;.!.,___ , ............

.,\

~

~

'

'

1,.,,

. Ji:lt 'Me'~

.

(

~,.,._.._

..

JI Pomeroy. Pomeroy
.ld a vehicle driven by

~

.... TGIIillllit ., '

Q;lt: . . . . . ;. . . . . . -

.'

· of Ohlinger's car but
ed without injury . No '

~

'fRIDAY·
.•.

And the kitchen 11 one otthe moot

were filed. In Mayor

.:..egar's Court Saturday I

:aymond Neggemeyer.

·'

t ,.11:15

:• :':11:30
·•••, _c;;U:OO
J; ' l:llt
r'"',

-~.;;..,

.....::: 1:011

~=-

Call v• for .,
fill ISTIMATIS
.• ~ . OJI!'.-•tlort

I,I!AIIIIoa

:SIONS

lc GoUalll
Noblemeo ~ ·
QlampiOIISbip Brldge
Cballenp .Golf
I:8Wer .....,
' , ..llliaio
llee&amp; .Jll&lt;ol enr
Qioic..... •..
Sl tet- Repor11
s 1 •awa ·

_,.............
...,...-.
.,..

......

Racine; Helen Brick- nated and a furthf'f discussion
:'of location Will be held at the
ARGES Saturday - ' general membership meeting on
1 Zirkle. Pomeroy; Ma· ~ March 18th.
,
igan, Middleport; Mar- , ALa Board of Directors meet·
ssell, Chester;
Irene ing March 14th the possibilitie!
Pomeroy.
of working with the Area Re..SIONS Sunday -Mrs. development Administration for
· ~ylor, Racine; Effie Da- assisUint·e in getting a perman·tland: Bessie Hysell, ent fair site and building'l was
•; Ralvh Davis, Middle- discussed with ARA represents·
aries Parsons, Antiqui- tives , but due to the ract that
• ]es Stobart, Minersville. the fair is a non-profit organi·

"""-~

7:111 1'be Jetsono

•:• s . ho

c.a.ful, malnt.nanc.-frH Formk• COIMtef ttpt lt,IN be o •Utht

to you lllw.,...

.,

,..-ol-

An-attrectl'te . . cily
c•...,_AMrwiiiHn

'I

A ntw, modtr• ,

..u... wlll add"'"

the ,.... flnithlnt ··

........

11ow11

. a:• Here'.- Edle

--·

IO:It V -

n :•

. .ARGF.S

"'

SUNDAY . zation the ARA, under present

Autherson, . Racine; law , can not give direct assist·
tOush, Minersville; Co- a nee.

t..

G( , . . , . _

a.... 1l!oaler

The site of the 1963 Mason

teroy.

• ·: ••• rrau-..

llelnt trf.

Sunday - AI·

.:~tzel. Pomeroy: Janet :County Fair has not been desig.

~ ~:. . . . . . . FUll .

leautlful cab lnttl

PT PLEASANT - The dafel

the Mason County Fair
a citation by dri\'ing have been changed to August
-mter and Shelby Pirk - 5 through
August 10.
The
·ine , forfeited $25 bond change was made so there
ltless operation charge. would be no conri ict with Galli&amp;
:Cou nty Junior F'air and the
Memotial Hospital
:Meigs Cou nty Fair.

t:•
a:•
' '' . (., ,,. ·llawllot . '
"~::

,

JS El"liDIDate
• d

.le, was fined $.1i and · for

~ll:Gt..cDavey

lmJIOfiOnt oreoo. Why not have
a .utlful kitchen like this o.,.?

1Confli"ct WI"th

~:~ medium damage to , Neighbor Fairs

·

'n:•ao~.~~a'
..,.
.- j&lt;
'
'

- - -- -

Jblinger. 52, Pomeroy,,
. of control and hit a- '

·'·

.WHIN-TY
CIUIIIiel' II

own home

month.

r•

lad."' He r

U:JI:...- · ~
I

..... Cl!adld

was expected to t.ake about a

etWreck

,,. Oea!UI The Metutee

' · t:DI ....... McCoJo
J
.::. 1:16 G•. t; l'but&lt;r

I

'

ll:to BriMley• JIIIIIUl

ll:llha . . _ ,.......

for tM

Ot~rwise.
legislative actioa
this week was expected to bt
sparst&gt;. The House wa..~ scheduled
to vote on three measures, the
t damage was caused major one of which would allow 1
·•o at 5:45 p. m. Satur- ' referendum on extra taxes for
·m accident on West. giona l planning.

u.m.

11:• JluDIIe.J'I ....
n,.-.
11:11 ........ .

million

1

~·.

.,,.~~

7:•

S27

lWard meeting an in- Hi ghway
Safety D~&gt;p'artment.
pupils caused by the ex- 11hose bills are now in the Senatt
.qpulation.
'Finance Committee.·
ropriation bill will be in- Rep. Ralph Fi:;her. R-Woosler,
in the House after House Finance Committee l'hair·ddress.
man, said the committee will hoi•
~pproval already has , i~ first meeting Tuesday nig~t tl
m to budgets of $73S.4 d~cuss. the _budget. ~t that timr.
.L..---- .. - . - -- -- ~-- Fmance D1recor fi.H.'hard
Kra.
bach will give bis ·;cij~jill~te ol
0
ire\'enues in the Mxt two years..
' -committee work on the budget

•
'

· .,.. IIlii 8ullivu

happiest

IO ' MOIEY DOWI

. , mill ion for thf' Highway Depart•
the in('rease for schoob ment a nd

-- _,.._
.........
s;• licx.- •

li: II W..alllo!COit

GNat Qtalleap '

'

.,..lit.~

10:01 Dinah Sllon
11:. 11m

' t:t.l

es Budget Asks
r $50 Million

''

To Girbt

t :OO Maiclf 0..
t:2i AltemooD .llepod
,,. ~ Room lot hlllr;

. . . Qr$4

1:• iSIIml · ~

it

I :QO Morv GriUm
1:55, Newa .
I:OD lMttt• YOUIIl
l:it YOIIIIC Dr• ..._

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

1:. . . . . .

',

11:25 Ntwa
10:10 Pla,J Your lluodl
11:00 Pnce li Rlgbl
II:IO ' c.....&amp;rllloQ
ll:.OD Y'*' 1'1111 imprealola
IJ:IO -tr1llll or ~
U:fi6 Newo
1:00 NIIWI!

7:110 O'Toole
1:111 W.oll Dila.,

.u:•

.,

-

1:30 Operalkla Alphabet
10:00 ~ Wbeo

1:4$ Weather
1:50 SpOrts

WCHS-W
ChenMI I
•U:It PanrJD•e......,.
ess Report
-. l:lt Oral ~~abed~
·: ,,. Be¥. 81nac
l:ti 'Dltlac s.ll

f ,!he tears that followed, and a complete account
'to Green Township in the last split (?) second,

..

1:16 lod!l1 001 , _ .• •
t:CIII ClGod 1111rD1Di

1:00 NBC NeWI
J:30 -Wild ICiniPfom
f:IIO Golf ·
• S:ot frillier On CommuaJsaa
l:ot lfeel the Prnr
l:att Nen Picture

•s! quarter
Racine for the first time took a com•
Were Racine Fans happy' Deliriously so!
)~ft.

t:IO~CW...

1:011 . fodoJ

'

,&gt;

' &gt;t, Middleport.

\Jnday - Mr. anti Mrs.
Meigs General Hospital
~lor, Racine, a daugh- ADMISSIONS SATURDAY &gt;~
~ Homer Jones , Middleport:
· i
DJSCHARG~ SATURDAY·,, IREAP RJo."''URNS
Albert Bengel, Pomero~; ,Ctar, ,
~N mPlJ - A sheet of' ence . Williams, Pomeroy.
• , · .' J'Oenny stamps was bought ADMI~ION SATURDAY • '
, :._.&lt;~Pn. post office this week Chloe SeCoy, Coolville ; W Ill
· '·-·r- ~ ·
·
Voung, · F'Omero~.
·
· ,t. ·
'-"'~
were sold within DISC:HARGES SATURDAY'""'"" aft.r it was dis- Cl81"'nce Spurrier, Pomeroy.
'P.I'l.! •• because of a prioLing ADMISSIONS SUNDAY - Hoof the·stamt¥ bore the mer Jones. Milldlep\)rt.
.
of the queen's head.
DISCHARGES SUNDAY -AI&lt;
~f;:;;;;;;;;;:;;
bert Bengel, Poll!~roy, Cl~
·j
JACI[li:
ence W,illiams, P.~roy; 'JW.
Ohio t UPII :..SOme- bect!a Cook, Pl. Pleasant.
· area thinks JacQue..
.,
~tt' ·~
lookt better on $1
lJIIIIERS AT t:oloK;EI.!i .

l

Washiugton,
Ushers ,at , \he .Mari!Ytl ~tbe First Lody's. pi~&gt;- concert &amp;mday were "J"ll'.,~~li!id
' over tho P!H'Irait of m~s ·Stewart: .
•ppeared
1ael, Mrs, Bolj Neloa~~·;~~·;~'i.
at.X.U..
G&lt;~or&amp;ll 40'l Mrs.
'
'

l'$ltDI'

.

..

�. '

tapacity Crowd
~oves Varieties
A WdcHnepdrt I

'!; •

I

•

.\

NOW YOU KNOW

.

•

leaJo IIlii poiMU dJclll, .
lallo oad elln aJ1M1Pare _..,. io IW llle . .
flllbloao lllliDal ill ... ......

;..... .... Ootl

at y

e

forleoiL

ill7£ATBER.

... -··

en tine

~art~•JMIPI

~~
\linJ.ac

-.

tiOIIIIII$,

Dftlflled To TIN ,,.,....,.
01 Tlur Mei•..M,_,. .4,..
'
VOL XIV

(

,_

'

'

,;_

l ~,

)

,.

NO.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

2~2

MONDAY, MARCH 18, ·1963

.·

-LOok wha&amp; bappensmtll

1\'.::r:~umlfr
. !~lriJ- \1\Y '

:.

lee Jams, Rains
Bringing Floods

1:00 Popeyo • Pali·:.·
t:30 Ruff &amp; Heady
10:00 Shari IA!wl( ·
10:30, Klug Leooai'do

•·

11:00 Ful')'
U:30 Make RoOm Ftll'
12:00 Mr. Wizard "

Tonllhl Thru Wedn"day
Morcli 15-20
· Wtlt Dlonoy'o

"IN JiiiRCH OF

CASTAWAYS"
(Teelinloolor)
Hayley MW., Maljrloe CJ.lev~·
lier1 Geo. San~ers, W11fr1d
ilyao White, JUieo Veme's
Avalanche m Adventure!
DliftiY Cartoons
,.
· · Ailmilslon 7Ge &amp; 40o
'
.

'

\C

.·

beams.
for east Kentucky flood refugees.
The poniUf did not ...m to
Ice gorges broke up on the AIdropped late Sunday !rom he overly dlsturbe&lt;l by I b.
legheny River in western Pennsyl- new weekend · floods at Harlan, loll.
vanlll sunday night, and flood Ky. , on the CUmberland River

•J

wa~a
i:&gt;add,;

&amp;:4o News . .
•·
7:00 Saturday Jamboree
7:30 -~· Benedict ·.
••
-1:30' Joer lllshop •: ·
t :OO Saturday NfJiht Movle
J_l:OO NeW.~
Ji:loweathor .
. '
' ' .
'
11:1.1 Spor'" . •
".
' 11:20 Movji_ . '¥

II: 00 RID Till TID
11:30 Roy Rogers Show

12:00 Sky, King

12:30 Readln&amp; Room
1:00 News ·
1:30 BiB Picture~
2:00 . C.o.Sroads
2:30 Movie
4: 10 11om
4:30 Dragnet
5:00 Doctors At Work
5:110 Early Show
7:00 PeiXltY
7.30 Jackie Gle...,.
1:30 Delendon
1:30 Have Gun WiU :i'mll
lG:OOGllllGOko
Jl:oo Newo
11:15 Late Show '

happiest
h iD ~UAi

are ap'ent
In your
own home
And the kitchen lo -

ohhe mod
Important area .. Why not hCIYe
a ~uliful kitchen like thio one? .

IO ' MOIIY DOWI

-..a~:~...-_::_,

12:00 Newt

WHTN·TV

Call u1 far 1
flll ISTIMATIS
; 1)1~ . OJt!ifqtian

Channel 13
10:00 Nel&amp;hhors .
10:11 SOcial Secutlty
10:30 Cb!u'cll of O!rllll
ll:OO Top _· c.t
,.
u ::!0 ~III,Y .. Ceoll
12:00 Buga BunllJ
li:ao Allakiizalii
1:00 FllciUI

leautlful caltin•fl
-plonlyol. . . will H• _,.

...... ltY.

Colorful, molnten.,..f,.. FormlwCGUntettepliwiUbeadelighl

tarouatwap.

_......tow
you_.,_

A.n . •ttn~ctln••lllr

will,....

A new, mad~rn 1
.Uint will add iY" ,
the rithf flnilhlne .
touch.

I

.l

~:30 Let~a ,, pance

Ut Golf

uo BowUna

$:00 ~orld of· Sporll
1:30· WresUina
7:30 Gallant Men
1:30 Mr. 9mlth
t: oo Lawrence Welk ·Show
10:00 Fight 01 . Week
·'
10:.45 Mike That Spare
ltOt Ac,demy~ Award J'beat•

Hazard, Ky., on the North
of the Kentuc:ky River.
A crest 10 feet over flood atage
was predicted at Barbourville, Ky.
todiy, and a crest of the Ohio
River at 8.8 feet above flood stage

teaior

Pl."

Mlu Sawyer, o 11-yew..ld
cbarmlnc bload from Loalovllle, Wll •elected qDHD of
lite teen oet Salltrday oJcb1 ot
lite lib aanual Julor Min pa·
ceanl. Sbe competed •1olDal
4t other glrlo, eacb repnoeDI·
lnl a otete.

Concert Choir
Will Appear
oUghtly over flood otsge from
Circleville through Chillicothe and
Piketon . . . result of heavy ralna Here Friday
Saturday.
i

DELIROUSLY HAPPY - In the last quarter Rac ine for the first time took a commantling lead of six points with 2:37 left . W e re Ra c ine Fans happy? Delirionsl y so!
But it was short-lived. For a picture of the tears that followe d , and a coml'lete account
of Racine's heartbreaki~g 52·51 loss to Green To wnsh ip m the las t sphl (?) second,
see Pages 4 and 5. -Sentinel photo.

TIg
• ht Rh0des Budge t Asks
or Anot her $50 MI•II•100

~ver was riainS at The Concert Choir of Ken· ~'1
'
With •. oreal expecled lucky Chrislia&lt; College will
more &amp;han f1ve feet above present
Scared Music

'The Ohio

Car Goes Off
Highway, 'H't
1s
Bn'dge On 33

I

Torry CUIIums, 20, Rl.

Alliance For Pr.o~ress
Hit
l:l
BYCa
. stro AS Catastrop· he

.•

'

Ann Sothern.Aim• · 'lV N~'"" · old ..': . ••
fr,;sure_ofl.mgg; _ier , ,:!,111i&lt;e· , Cl)o•v.,:·

· ceaa_._..

~m, Fnlil Parej'
•

f

•

:If. ....

•

thele

•

ran off the rlghi side

~n~~a~~ ~

°

Sunday·
•

~oy, losl rontrol of his

=="-.:::.:::~:::..::.:=:....::=:::..:=c:....------:--1 and

Chennel 8
TV Classroom
Capi8JD Kqngaroo
The ·Alvla _Show
Mighty Mouse · Pl8yhOUH

threatened several towns.

In the Meadville area, shout 300

glnia, heavy raiM sent stream Ohio Rlvtr flood near New
swirling over their banko again.
Ind.

WCHS-TV 8:00
t : oo
11:00
10:30

Aid Hope
OfNoFiood

New York - 7 ........
tile """"' of Amerlea'o JJIS
Julor Mlu, oymbellc of tile
COIIllry'• "Jdeal ldP tebaol

to

0:

6:48 Weatber · ·" · ·

t'l: -' - "i

MOilLE, All. tUPit - K. .
toelly'o Dlame SaWYer fUeJ

families were alerted to be ready
1
t.fJ evacuate as civil defense work·
stage Tuesday. Last week, cert at the Middleport Church
rs kept a' watch on French Creek.
crest at the Queen City of Christ Friday March
Th.e Allegheny rose about one
from, high o( 60 to 54,3 1
'
I
• I G d
COLUMBUS (UPil - Gov. leges.
million for the Highway Depart·
7
30
foot at 011 City, Pa., when the
expected at Louisville Wedabout five fe'fl over flood at · p, m., Fred · ar ner,
A. Rhodes will present Most of the increase for schools ment and $27 million for the
ice moved through early loday,
paThstor ~allrd lodll~l ybe,
lo M 1 the legislature tonight his will go toward meeting an in- Highway
Safety DepartmenL
but . the river waa still about two At least eight families fled t heJr
e cuo "
on ur ar . I .
budget wh.Ic h WI'II ask crease .m pupils
. cau.sl'd by 1.he ex· Those b'l li s· ate
. . no\~. Ill
. lh e Se na tI
a~-• Tora·•o 'ler
•Olnel at Madison, Ind., and V&amp;·~
n
22·31 lo presenl. .roncerls each about $50 mllhon
.. ' mote. I£or s tat e pand ing populatmn.
.
F.mance
.
Comm1't lee.
I111
feel £rom flood ·. stAae there.
.
~
·
·
1h d 1
In· red In
A tornado o1ert oovermg the night at Chr1stu&gt;n Churches
.
:. '
,
..
,
Rahll Batter Vtrlhla
Ind., m the face of the nslng
. e rver was JU
an est
thirds of th tate th
h t K tucky
operatmns than in the current The appropriation bill will be in- Rep . Ralph F 1she1·. R-Wooster.
1
8
An .ice jllJ'I on Fiench Creek
,
accident that took place at
W ern two- ather ctl :, dur. O~g :: pen lv ' .
two-year period.
troduced in the House after House F'inance Committee chairat "'*~mlirtd&amp;e Sfirbip, Pa., Three persons drowned Friday ·
Saturda~ on Rt. 33
~ 8 v 1 ls 00 8di tiennsr ,;.ma.
The Republican governo~ ~as Rhodes' address .
man, said the commitlee will hoi•
bacl{«J up
. . -about
when
their
motorboat
and
a
half
m1les
north
of
w
·and·
t"
..
DO
1111Mth
Kamu
er
hre:
...
on
°th
ISS
to
seek
appropnatton
H
al
already
has
its
L
·
- • · · ,._! _ .!.'_ •
"""
wea er
1 e~n~ o1 e mus 1c
r· 1 1 ouse approv
. first meeting Tuesday night t1
In Oood·baltered
VIrin tho backwater• mnn
dolpit~ .....0:4 ~ ~t ol Kentucky
for the ISL'll pe- !been . given to budgets o! $73S.4 dts&lt;:uss the _bu• 1get. At that limt,

· ·

12:30 Exploring ." ..
~:30 Project i;ducalioa
2:00 Sgt. Prest6n
'
2:30.. Reailer's Digest
:1:00 John's Scrapbook .
3:30 •Sports International
6:00 AU-star boll ,
1:00 Porter Wagner Show
6:30. l'&gt;ews &amp; Sports . •

TH~

Tbe IJ,year..ld pootlfl · wao

Sunny Skies

aotlajared Ia lbe lall and woo
By United PrHI International
belped to blo feet by aldeo,
By Uniled l'rftl Ialmlatolul
Floods forced hundreds from their homes from WisThe IDcldeDt ••111&lt; dariDJ
Sunny skies and worm ten,...r-1
consiil to Virgirua today. Another winter storm brewed aa aadleaoe Ia tho Cltlll&lt;D-I::::gwere expected 1o
in the Rockies. Ice-melting temperatures and thunder- tine HoD 1o a pllJII'lmoge
In Soulhern Ohlo and
storms sent flood Waters rushing through the low
from the Pope'o home dloalong Lake Erie loday.
of Erie and Cattaraugus counties in western New York. • ... of Berpmo.
Filly persono Oed !heir hornell
Tbe Pope Wll moanllq the 11le weather11Uln predicted
•• .___
Jded
cool conditions today
WL.- an ice jam burst on More than !10 houses were dam· .....
141 •• - - • aaa
"""
'•how&lt;., throughout the reot or
Cattaraugus
Creek. A
aged and 100 families left
· •wPI
when 11e alllbbled
tile
....
I'
08
buckled and collapsed on the Hud homes in the Big Stone Gap, Va ., elllb and last slop aDd fell IW,!eK.
son River near Troy, N.Y., Satur· area.
heavily, An "oil" of dismay
lleoplle lack of ralofall SUnday,
da killing one and injuring three. Kentucky Gov. Bert Comb a reae from the audleace. Mde• lri•·ers below Columbus draining
the big and mnddy Ohio RivOfiicialo blamed the ron.tact of the made a televioioo appea !Sunday ruobed 1o llelp lhe Pope to bls
icy waters against the steel for oolthers, bedding and money feet.
·
00111inued to rise. The Scioto

r

..... ·,., .:
t:311 Don oo-'l.be rotm

VAnCAN CITY (UPI) Pope Jobn xxm loday llllm·
bled and loU .. lbe steP. of
blo tbrooe darla1 a man and·
leaee.

lop .

was demolished. The
driver was treated tor
Cjlf

· •

Jo~ Named

Chairman Of
Cancer Crusade

.. - . . . ~ ...... ~Fmance D&gt;ref"r f1Jchar4 . Kr.,
p
}
bach will give his riljmate of
Pow·er 0 e
'"''"u"' '" the ""' two year11,
1
r.;::r~h~r:ua." s::.~.~: .::::~~~ ;th s:~~e-~~~;;,"~
"'~0~~~~~ "~~k ~~.'h:b~~~g·~
"There Is A Balm In Gilead ,
" no new taxes ."
Hit In 1Car
nwoth.
"Steal Away," ~nd "The
The governor planned to offer .
Otherw ise. legislatil&gt;'e acHoa
lb _My Shephe~d:
.
a bUI with income estimated at .
w
k
his week was expected to bt
The host mmlster mvites
same £igure as expenses m Street
rec
sparse.
House \\'as schedulec;l

l • sO ·' f ·,._lbbJH I
.11
July I. Along w1th , ___
. an. vera en... thl• 80 WI' his
'proposal, Rhndes l
sing. Included .,th : Y• ar •
deliver 10 th• joint legis-

tions of the arm and bruises al
Holzer hospital, and released.
HAVANA CUPU-Premier
Batista, wbo was overthrown by He was cited for failure to
del Ca11tro defended cOnditions in
revloution.
drive on the right haJf of
sponsored AJllance for
He admitted Cuba is suffering road.
Richard E. Jones, vice presl·
meam "frig}Jtful misery" for
shortages but said, "We are Arrests reported by the
o( the Pomeroy Farmers
lD America.
a beginning: ... We •are trot included Horace Smith,
and Savings Company,
"lmperlsllam Is sitting on a
the futtire. Sympathy lor Reedsville, cited 1o Meigs
will lead the AmericliJI Cancer
canO'Ind the Alliance for
is lnoreaslng .
lor defecUve bral&lt;e•:
1913 Cancer Crusode
11 beD for the people."
the pepole despite
~. Middleport, cited
Meigs county.
said. "It representi Ute
heeause the truth ia
oourt Friday fflr
frightful misery. 'lllat is Ute
through and people can1 be
violation: Fred Kulm.
In annou!"'lng the
son they don't let people
easily."
2 Racine, cited to GaWpo~c Cluk, presideD
here . . . We
many
court for.., Dl1lffler and '1"
th':..!".'!'.;...eoon,
•
to show them, •• and very
llcense: Rohort IJt&gt;. "e - • ~ v_,
•
pressive ones."
28, Rt. 3
cltod. ful educational aod fund-rais·
Castro mad. ....
. court Friday. Ior '·"
lng crusade under l!is Ieider·
uw·
" The Crusade
Ill tart
to display reglslration: and
A II th Cancer w c.!lrol
rsdio-televlsloo appearanoe just
day before President ·
Midkiff, 49, Leeap,
pr ' . e
amval In San Joae, Costa
cited 1o Melp court
month, which Is designated each
for a meeting with ~al Amerl Thi'.sWee'~-end
atop sign violltion,
by lbe President of 1 he

I

the

I

Tile

pubJic to attend.

hope of giving the state a bal·
to vott&gt; on three measures, th
anced budget.
I Medium damage was ca usPd major one of which would allow 11
Health , welfare and cducatiun to an auto at 5:45 p. m . Satur- referendum on extl"a taxes for r•
i account for 90 per cent of the day in an accident on West gional planning.
funds requested . Education alone Main-st in Pomeroy. Pomeroy
- ---will account lor 55 per cent of the Police said a vehicle dnven by
total.
.
. Conrad Ohlinger, 52, Pomeroy,
IC
I
•
Rhodes proposes to pve pubhc 1went out of control and hit a :
schools ahout 146 m1ll1on more lpower pole
th,.., during the past two years , There wa~ medium damage lo
Of
state universit.i~ between $20 the front of Ohlinger_-s ca r but
,
01
handThe PomeroardyHedlgb Sse
million and $25 mllhon
An· ,he escaped without mJury. No
1
wao aw
"
.
$4 million is earmarked !or ,arrests were filed . In '1&lt;1ayor
ratlns for
performance m municipal and community col· Charles Legar 's Court Saturday
the Ohio MuSic Educators
____ .. ·- .. . ht R
·
tT b nd nd
mg ' aymo nd Neggemeyer ' PT. PLEASANT - Th e date•
trlct com'7-~ IVe t a I :,..
1\fotorcyele Victim
Nelsonville , was. fined $5 ' and for Ihe Ma son County Fair
WI compe 1 on a ro
,
H
costs on a citatiOn by dnvtng have been changed to Augu c;t
urday.
To Be Burted ere . 'eft u£ &lt;·enter and Shelby Pick - 5 throu gh August 10. Tho
Director Ronald W~ltz's PHS Funeral services for Halhe ! ~ns, Racine , forfeited $25 bond change wa. made so there
can ..-.l~ents on problema
_.
-----States.
band was rated superior for 11:8 Earl Gotschall, 33, who . was
reckless operation char ge. would be no confli ct with Ga11ia
t"1:01t&amp;U
·
Mr. Jones bu appealed for presentation of "Coat Of ArmE, kil1ed in a moturcycle
on a
_
countv Junior F'&lt;i'ir and the
tho
•
Singles ani!' dOubles
Guest&amp;(?) Pick Up
record number of volunteers "Sequoia" hy La Gassey and i.n Baltimore, Md .. Friday mght , j Meigs Memotial Hospital
County l'air.
economic development prOgram.
be run off next Friday
Tab For Dinner
, join the crusade 10 that the " Jedermann" by Whear. T will be held at the Chase Fun· ADMISSIONS Sunday - AI- The site of the 1963 Mason
He spoke In favor of i
·
In the annual
The Po,m eroy Llona Club was fl&amp;ht ~galnst cancer mwy be bnnd also recewed ~top ratmg
honw Tuesday at .2 P· m. lberl swatzel , Pomeroy; Janet County F'air has nut been desi ll011
of Communist p~u of the
AsSociatkm
o st ·to Middport ~ Porn-- stepped up.
sight reading. Director WoJ.. with burial '" the Standish c~m· Manuel, Racine ; Helen Brick· .nated and ~ rurther discusston
viet Ualon and China lo
exlends over two
Rotarian Sun4ay oveolnc "If we work l&lt;legher," he tz loday thanked the school
n.e Rev . Carl Hernng lies, Pomeroy .
of location will be held at tho
iJt., "qnlty of the
ill
oompetition ·laat
Steak House lor a said, "I am sure we ean make band boosters, band
offlcl8te.
.
DISHCARGES Salurday - general membership meeting on
against lmperiallst
and Sunday
dinner. However, the Jlo. the 11!113 Crus8de a record one and ~mbers far thea
He was the son of Vtclor and I Ravmond Zirkle. Pomeroy; Ma ~ March IHth .
,
castro atlllebd Ct!han ·
FOreman and Abbott
picked up the tab be- In lives 88Yed and In tile !undo operation In making the
Ollie Gotschall, and formerly jry ·Hannig''"• Middleport ; Mar- . At a Board of Directors meet·
who ho've gone 1 oUillted
·Pla!!e · IIIOIIey (SJtl) .o n
of lheir recent bowling the! are so urgently ne&lt;ded ftll' ment possible.
lived m Rutland, movmg
to ·-garet Bissell, Chester:
Irene i11g March 14th the possibilities
the regie ol President
. total, . followed by
at the hand&amp; of the Lions.
Baltimore 11 years ago. He was 1 Baxter, Pomeroy.
of working with the Area ReBetaneo~ of Venezilelo and
.($f2) wiQI 2947,
from 1be Lions club
CALL FOR I
a member of several motor- ADMISSIONS SUnday - Mrs. development Admini stralion for
mer CUban" Presldeat
No, 2 ($Zil) with 2M5.
BJU Porter, Dale Warner;
BOARD TO MEET
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Ohio cycle clubH and ~as employed I Larry Taylor , Racine ; ·Ellie Da- assist•nce in geltmg a perman·
Crll:kett Searles, Sporn No.
Kraeulter, Bob Jli(.'GIJa, The Meigs Cllllllly Health 8d• Selective Service
the Madera Wme. DIStillers. ,viS , Portland ; Bessie Hysell, ent fail Site and bmldings was
226
Murray, ~I
&amp;lki ·
board council Mll meet announced today an
are
h~ parents, Pomeroy , Ralph Davis, Middle· discussed w1th ARA represenla~
lis'
hod
Kirkland. From
at 7:30
II the call of liM men, 10 more than three
Jaunlla .
Charles Parsons, Anttqui- · tiVes. but due to the £art that
hl&amp;h tltree game -let,
Edison Balter,
Presidellll the March call. lnclnded were Janet Grunes, Kay Srrulh, 8 ty; Charles Stobart, Mmersvd!e. ithe fa1r is a non~proht orgamwlllle·lbe'Rolrodl h8d hiJib
Hubbard, Jack Welsh,
lrostees or their three from Meigs oounty.
of Baltimore; two me&lt;es. :"': . DISCHARGES
SUNDAY lzatioo the ARA . under present
1
ele··
game 915. · Hig Bahr, Diet OWen. Carl
.
and mayors
a nephew. Friends rna~ ca a Edward Authetson, . Racine; law , can not g1ve du'eL't assiSt•
councll .membera are lo atMAN nNED
the funeral home any time.
Frank Roush . Minersville : Co- ranee.
scral!lh total wa~ Sporn No. Z and Dick Rooeubamn.
with :aail3 ·
lend. ·
Clarence Lewla of Middleport
ra Canter , Middleport.
•
~D
was fined $25 and coats on ronCAR DAMAGED
Birth Sunday - Mr . a~ Mrs.
Meigs General Hospital
~r:~~;;l~ 76
Harold ·Eugene lfyseU,
28,
TAKEN T0 IIOSPITAL
vicUOn of overload, by
Both lell doors and the f~t Larry Taylor, Racine, a dangh· ADMISSIONS SATURDAY Rt. 3, Pomeroy, was
Cbarles PII'IJOIII, Anllqulty, polls Mlllll&lt;lpal court, Saturday. Ml fender of Charles P .
· ·ter.
Homer Jones, Mi ddleport.
at 11 p.m.,
by the
tailen 1o Melp :Memll\'lal
Una aulo, Rl. 3, Pomeroy, was 1
DISCHARGES SATURDAYcounty lhoraf'a depart·
at 7:10 p.m.
CLASS TO MEET
damaged by a hit-skip molor· STAMPS REAP RETURNS
Albert llengel, Pomero~ ; Claro
He was charled with dlso
a medica( pa· The J.O.F. Class of the
is! In Gallipolis Saturday after· LO~DON &lt;UPI• .. A sheet of ence Williams, Pomeroy.
lbe peace at th• Pilot
by lll!c!oo omeraenc1. ed . Melhodlal Chureh will
Galdpolts pollee are prob- oo th/ee.penny stamps was hooght ADMISSION SATURDAY
In Cheohln.
at 7:30 lonlCht ot lbe cburdl.
the · blCident.
at a London post office this week Chloe Secoy, Coolville; Will
•
·for $2.to. ·
Young, Pomeroy.
The stamps were sold within DISCHARGES AATURDAYhours for $14,280 after it was dis-- Clai'Pnce Sputrier, Pomeroy.
'
:,. r.
,. •
,
·
.
.
covered that because of a printing ADMISSIONS SUNDAY .,.. Hn. ~ IIJIIeo if .
two appnwed by the RDman who had cancer of the pancreas. error none ol the stamp~ hore the mer Jones , M1ddlepbrl.
, .
·
.
·' · · · ·
Cbui'clt for her beotiflca- Also p....nl In the basilica u•uai picture of the queen's he"'!. DISCHARGES SUNDAY -AI'·
.
wen 1110 Slslero of tharlcy, nwsl
· bert Bengel, Poll)troy, Cbn'&lt;
Pr.,..t 11 ....,ll111llies Sunday of tbO.p Dowa direclly from the PASTER, PREFERS JACKIE
enc&amp; .Williams, POJJ10flll'; ·a.,.

Pomeroy Rand
WinS Superior
'"lecUont Ironton Rating

~ave

BOW}ers Will
\

Pomeroy~

Contm'ue Play

t~;~~~

?.'m

~~

hpe~ior

Conf}' t W'th
Netg
• hb FairS
•
Is Elt'mt"nated

moro.

w

March

I .

acc1~ent ,

:.~aim~~~~~

President.~

Fl~lnto

.Red Cot1ntry

r:::£:~~g~~o. i

i
I

sl~ters,

Clar~j -port,

.ea..

~

~eigs

I

Eve ,

S&amp;turoly

Sut1dai
·u

. sea.·t·::.n. 's;, aln
.. th·00 d .IS

'i:14r~rJ:f~r

T

t~R·

,-e a r··

7\I

1

,AJm
IS,~
of J!IW·UDiled ·Siates f!H' the bealifi- DAYTON, Ohio &lt;UPII ...SOme- bocCI Cook~~:;·~P~t~
1rho'o'!'lelll,
11 llltld by
&lt;lltlrob eallou.
one •in . thi• area Utinks Jacquo- .·
..
. . ~P=Ieats~a:n:t~,w~.
· ~ by .llfracle ol 'M!III* 11!110• bol-a a Prot· line Kennedy looks hotter on $1
IJIREJUI
· . m··ltlll !bfoU1b the estsat In .~ Vor~ l!)d only con· bills than ~ge W8Shinglon.
Ushe•• at ~ . .
,
· Olf· Mother, Seta , vertttt ID cathollciom after the Bills with lbe First Lady's. piO&lt; 1ooncer! Simdlly wero
.
·.

oljfl)••

~ 1o deoth af l'l'f hu~. wllen 1he lure HStad over tlw porlra¥
Stewart, MrOl ~· ,
.Ill
~- Silo• ~ llyo· ehJidrea, by Wuldagtno have appeared reoellt- 111!'1, Mr1. Boli NelsOO, lirt. .

•l"i tlte ..,...

w•

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