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                  <text>Tho s.-,y Times - Soltiuel, ~. t'ebru&amp;r) 18, l!le9

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Campus Tensions Are Relaxed at Duke and Wisco

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By tlnited Preaa Jnte~

Long-troubled San Frane1KO
Slate College r - s loda.Y, Ito
registration down but .. higher

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~ P"'T GLA:

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l!:xt. GoiUa
Atflll. Cowl

09'PS!
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GALUPOLIS odverliolng II one &lt;
•for wise b&lt;Jying.
the cultomer to 18tl
at eertain times
Items. But remembel
11 not aiR.fS an 1D

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qualll;y.

than we hoped for." accorcUng
to acting President S.L Hayaka-

wa.

The second bombtllg In lour
da,n occurred early SUnday at
the school, shattering 18 wlnOowa of the Admlnlatratlon
Building
and
cauling ear
damage to a camJKJs aecurtty
o!ficer driving past,

Food stores use net
•• window displays. )

OU to
ATHENS -

Gov. Warren P. Knowleo
vilited National Guardsmen
eaued .., to
vlo"""' oo
tho Unh'eralt;y of Wlo«1111bt and

..,.u

otudonta. Duke YOIIed It would

bd~J,

H. Edwin \'011111 _.....s CMI
.._ . tolovltlon and oald he
"eadoned" the demond tor

S4rt u_p the rtrlt blaek Rudie•

pr-am Ia the - ·

The 33,000-otudent Untferolt;y
told them the¥ mllbt .. home
loda.Y. At Duke Unlveralt;y, • o! WlsQOnsln had moat of Its
negotiation
eeulon between recent trouble lut week wbell
admlnlstration dficlala
and I!Oitle o! Its 585 blaek ~
blaek student• lessened tension. and many white ..._.-tera
O«icials Agree
called for a boycott for black
At ·both Wlsemsln and Duke, atudle1 and other demands.
oitlcials agreed to some of the Vlolenee
grew
unW Gov.
mllltant' s demands, most of Knowles called out the guard
which centered around black last Wednesday.

""'"

A bra

eept in programrnin

to apeclttc listener
taki!W shlpe at WO
FM. Ohio Universit,y'
al radio stations.
Programming phu
separate services t1
lies: the university
community, rural S

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~EL

.
HELP!

O~JT, WILL YA

uwe are moving •

WJ.acon-

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POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

N. Duke, Durham, N.C., more
thaD 1,1500 -~~ plhered In
Pogo Audltor1wn to heor an
................ . that the oc:hool
had agreed to meet moat blaek
ltudent demandl, lneludiq a
-1Jiack dorm" giving Negro
a UY!ng~eamlng ollua-

Olllc:IAis til the lhllverolt;J ol
Cbl- oold It MRIId lake
another day or two to aaaen
damage to the Admlaiatra.
lion BuUdlnjJ mrfnl the 111&lt;!o.Y olt-ln whleh ended FrkliJ.
They oaid the aerawled
obscenities aud slocua on
walla, burned earpeta and
slalbed wtre&amp;- though theY clld
not etrter adminlatratlon tllea.

en tin

112%

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The lilaCourJt, School buB driver'•
atrlke ended Sunday afternom
around 1:20 p.m., when Jamea
Abbott, olficial organizer ~the
Amalgamated Tranalt Union, aunouneed that members of Division 1539 ATU had just voted
by secret ballot to return to

Pr. PLEASAJ!IT -

work today.
The members accepted t h e
Mason CouniY Sc:hool Board's
proposal wbleh WSI nogoUaled
in a session startlnl Saturday
at 9:30 a.m. and lasting until 4
a.m. &amp;lnday,
The settlement was brOUiht
aboot through the etrorts of Judge
James Lee Thompson, 29th judicial circuit judge.

tram lett. received Sales Representative Awards

outstanding performance.

CHI~COTHE-Twency-aeven award~

tor ootstan:U~ performance tn 1968 were P!e58Jlled Ja~ . 3~
llrot·Southern ·DMiiOlr o~.~es A:ward Ba•QJiefneid by 'c:orum\iUi!lnifi!Oilituirn ·oi.'li)'tlii.c trlc ·ca.;.·
puy ~re. lrw:livldull awards were made to 16 Sales Representatiws. Eleven District Manager PlaQ.ues
were preaented.
Howard E. Stevens, Jackson District sales Representative, received the' Distinguished SalesmanshiP
Award, presented by J. L. MeNealey, Columbus and Southern President. The winner of this award is
jqed on sales acca~~W~lllhment, attitude, initiative, abUity to work with customers, ability to work with
other &lt;OIIIplll,y departments, loyalty and IIIIPOirlnce.

Two Charged

only

After Auto
South plagued by 3leet and snow
SNOW AND FREEZING RAIN PLAGUED THE SOUTH today, as
up to 17 inches or snow fell in the mountains of North Carolina. The
storm that dU111Jed heavy snow through much of the SOuthern Appalachians was located about 150 mUes east of the carolinas early ~
day, as Die warnings were displayed along the Atlantic Coast from
Myrtle Beach, S. C., to the Virginia c.pes.
Much of the Cl.rollnas, Southern Virginia and Eastern Tennessee were paralyzed by the violent stonn.

Violation. of cea.e fire mounting
SAIGON - THE CO)I)IUNISTS ARE DESTROYING their own
Tet ceas&amp;-Ore with scores of violations lncltdiJW a 4SO..man attack
this morning against U. S. Marines 380 miles north of Saigon. The
Cooununists haw broken their weeklorw truce 170 time• since it
began 7 a. m. Saturdly, 128 of the v:lolaUons coming after the scart
of the Allied 24-hour truee 6 p. m. Sunday.
Spokesmen said 96 guerrillas have been killed in the attacks
slnee Sunday nif!ht, 30 of the Communists dying on the Marine barbed
wire In t.oday's pre-dawn battle. The 400 CCIIllllunlsts charged the 9th
Marine Regiment post after first lobbing in mortars. The Leather·
neckllowered their artillery barrell to nearly pointblank range and
blew _.-t the Red ehorge.

Gina won't be hobbled lang
ROME - ACTRESS GINA LOLLOBRIGli.l,., WHO su!!ered a
fractured left kneectP when she smashed It' her Rolls--Royce Sunday,
will undergo sur'gery Wednesday but her film career won't be hobbled lor long, her doctor oald loda.Y.
Prof. Gabriele Crespi, her physician, said: uShe wUI be walkIng again after a month. The injury wlll have absolutely no permanent
after effects. She can return to nrk lairb soon."

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Goes in Creek
Charges were filed against two
persons following a one-car accident on Route 143, five-tenths
of a mile oorth of the junction
of Rolltes 7 and 33, at 4:20 p.
m. Swlday.
The Mei.gs County Sheriffs
Dept. said a car driven by Harold E. Darst, 28, Rt. 11 Rutland,
apparently failed to roun:l a curve
because or speed, went off the
highway into a field, and Into a
creek.
Deputy Robert Beegle cited
Darst on charges or reckless 09'"
eratlon and leaving the scene ot
an accident and also arrested a
passenger, Bill LaD:Iers, 31,
Pomeroy, on an Intoxication
charge. Lan:lers sustained a head
lacerations and bloody nose,
but no medical attention was given, it was reported.
There was damage to thewinclshield, front end, and chrome
o( the car operated by Darst.

Pomeroy Firemen

Garrilon to clme hia trial thj, week

•

NEW ORLEANS - THE STATE INDICATED loda.Y it wW close
out its trial • within .. a - trial of the Warren Commiuton ancl ita

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uaassinaUon eonsptracy ca&amp;e against Clay L. Shaw this week with
the cllmaede tesfJinDIIY ol former Gov. and Mra. jotm B. Comally O(
Texas.
.
Tho CoDnallY• were riding In !root ofPresldentJolm F. Kenaec11
ond his wUe In thO )IIIIU&gt;-SOIIIe ol the presidential limousine Nov. 22,
19631 &amp;IKI Connal11 was seriously wounded In the brief burst ot 1hot1

A80VE: Phil MaL
01

that klllod Kennet!Y.

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RECORD E~GS NOTED.
COLUMBUS (UPI) - No! locome ol $77.0f million In 1968
was reported . bY the Col~bl.a
Gas Sy1tem, ~c., setting a new
hll!ll and representing the. 1511'
cmaeeud ve annual increase.

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ATJUGHT:
Petli·~
. ,,
len'itf!s. Sizes s!IIIJ
ltlrse ~ Choose il in
S2.98.
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CLUB / T o Tile Twin Clt;J Sllrillil1le elu\i
11111 ·meet at. 7:30 p.m. Thllj-1-

dOO' Ill the c;Olumbua

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MARRIAGE APPLICATIONS .
Frederick J. Smith, Sr., 38 1
Pomeroy, river boat workel,", l.lld
Oorll V. Crqcratt. 35, Pome.roy, bouiewuei William Landers,
Jr., 31, Pom·eroy, welder, and
Carol !Ue Mulford, 29, elerk ·typltt, Pomeroy •.

Have

Busy Sunday

The Pomeroy Fixe Deportment
answering a call to New Haven
!imday DH&gt;mlng to asslat the
Mason elcy departmeilt In a fin,
came out again at 12:05 p.m.
!imday to extinguish • bruoh
iire near 128 State St. bt Pomeroy.
At 12:50 a.m. loda.Y, tho E-R
S&lt;Jiad wao eaUed to bomeolMra.
Will Carman, Laurel CIUI: Road.

She was taken to Veteran• Memorial Hoopltel, when she cUad.
,.

MEIGI! GENERAL HOBPITAL
Ad!lillted,
...,.....,,. .:.. E. R.
'' ' . r rr"""-:"V
HoUOll, RD, .\(inlrovUla.

LOCAL TEMPS
.
Thetemperaturo In PomOI'Ol''l · · Diseharlllll ~rdsy - Mae
!lowntown . bualneso dlalrlc:t at llewk; Ve!'ll Slftlth, 15om Yolol.
11:20 a.m. wa~ II$ detlriiiS, un- .Admitted lb!daJ - Noqe. ,
der portly overe•ll akleo.
Dbeharpcl &amp;ul!ll1 - ·• ·

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official silence from the

:a;

JoaniWd •
lll!!t

21

I1:!WWt..w~, i(JIIa,..,.
l(

IIUllled letter• to the aebool'1

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6,000 - - advlabtc -

thne wn •19Jtl5td for . . ..

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Interference with the rl&amp;ht to elqalllla! lime. . ., •
teaeh.,. 'lbe Wartlin.l!: eame after
acbool"l l,toO ~-· " ' ·
black studenta took ewer eome Necroea.
•
cla81ea tour days Ia" week.
The
The board d. trustee• at Chapter ol. the ~· tor ·a ·
Cheyney SLate CoUege In Weot Domoeralle SOdoiJ wu J!l'•g !I
Chester, Pa,, made permanent OIJ prabatlaa tlld two ttlli lr
the e...,Jolm o! six o1 nlNt ,...,red tor ~ Ia •
IIWtmbera of the Black .!ludent UDIWI11orlzed - I I raiJI.

UulVer": ., -

Weather

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Variable cl...U..•• with US.

tle change In . . .rature •
day, U&gt;ni&amp;l&gt;t and 't.elllll.r lD . .
30o. Lows toolahl bt lllo 2Do.

MONDAY. FEBRUARY 17, 1969

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'"The general terms of the asreement, a&amp; annwnced by Abbott were:
- The Board recognizes Division 1539 ATU specifically as
bargaining representative for ita
members.
- The Board will reemploy
all Uloae on strike.
The Board will not discriminate or retaliate against
lilY 5trlldng employee.
The Board will estsb!lsh a
working grievance procedure

whereby ruture problema between the board and employes
can be re110lved.
- Seniority rights of the employees wUI be recognized.
- Limited furloughs will be
granted.
- The matter o( wages is deferred, but the Board agree• to
meet with the union no later
than March 1 to discuss wages,
hours and working condl.tlona.
- The Board will dlatrlbote
all work which Involves extra

Family

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PT. PLEASANT - A 'I&gt;Okesman lor the Stsul!er Chemical Co., Gallipolis Ferry, said today Local 859, United Rubber
Workers, went on strike Sunday at 11 p. m.
Accordi• to the apokesman, a final offer was made by
the COIJ19any to the union Friday on a new contract. The union
in a meetirw S.turday failed to ratl!y tile after.
The union notified the company it would strike at 11 p. m.
Sunda.y. Fifty-two employes are affected. Negotiati0111 have

Mrs. Carman

Dies Monday

William Spires
Dies Sunday

In Fire Trap

Letart..........,._

de!-•

0

pay O&lt;JI8lly among employes.

-

The Board will utilize pres-

ent employes for summer em·
ployment.
Masoo County Sc:hool &amp;.pt. L
Brooks Smith said late &amp;.ndsy
afternoon that he had signed the
agreement and busses were alresdy being pleked up by drivers.
Smith turther atsted !hot he
had met with the Masoo Cwnt;y
SChool Service Peraomel Assoeiatloo 111d informed this group

that be would re~,·~:lf.
t.snee of Its polley, with ..,. .
apoelfle ebanpa, Jncludl!ll opltlm o! Ito 125 ...
II
tbe next recular board m1 " •

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Smith said he would •••••
any lndlvlclual or .,._ dl4
not want to heioog to 11fT oflllo
groupo a..t they
iiiiYo
same pririlepa to he MoN.
The ATU, to dale, bu N

I OI ld U.

member., 31 buldr!Yero llld Jl
...-

... and -

mploj&amp;

7 Homeless

Chinese Communists on the fate
of the 15.
The yachts fell victim to the
gunboats Sunday during a weekcea&amp;ed, according to the company spokesman.
end crWse from this British
Crown
Colony to Portuguese
Macao, 45 miles down the Chin-ese coast.
PROGRAMONFffiST AID
"It's almost a foregone con-Bob Fisher, a fir1t aid in~
clusion that they are in Red
structor, will give a demonstraChina. But we just cannot say
tion on everyday emergency first
definitely until we hear from
old at a meeting of the Middlethe other side," a Hong Kong
port Pr A to he held at 7:30 toofficial said, In Macao, boatmen
Cora Ma,y Carman, 78, of Pom- night at the Middleport elemensaid they saw two of the yachts
tary school auditorium. Dad's
at a tiny Chinese communist eroy, operator of the Carman
Nlgflt and FOW'Ider's Day will be
fishtre village six miles north or Rest Home 25 years. died this
observed.
Refreshments will be
rnomlng in Veterans Memorial
there.
served.
British, French and Swedish Hospital. ate waa a member of
diplomats, whose goverrunents the Laurel Cltfl Methodist
have diplomatic relations with Church.
&amp;arvlvors include her h u sPeking, pustled Pekl.~ for in-band,
WOllam A., Pomeroyi a
rormatiorL Besides the Amerioon,
WUI!am
T. Soulllby, Pomecans - a man, two women and a
roy;
two
grandehUdren,
Karolyn
lO.year-old girl, ,the other lost
yachtsmen
Included
three and Tommy Soullli&gt;.Y. i'Ornen&gt;y;
Swedes, two Britons, four Hong three sisters, Mary Garrett,
WUUam E. ~res, 67, a reKong Cbinese. a Frenchman and ·Montgomery, w. va.; Kate Scar- tired employe of the Slate lfil!hbro, Beckley, W. Va., and Thel- way Dept., died &amp;mday evening
an Australian.
ma Atkins, Austin, Texas. and
one brother, ~erm~ Hanaah, at the Holzer Medical Center Hospital arter an illness of about a
Coal River, W. Va.
Flmeral services will be held year.
Mr. ~ires, a reside• ofWUkWecmesdey at 1 p.m. at the EwesvUle, was born July 20, 1901,
Ing Chapel with burial beside
her late llrll husband, WUI!am the son or the late Homer F.
and Minnie Reed ~res. He wa1
Soulaby. Tho Rev. EUgene GIU
also preceded in death by two
will olfleiate. h was also preeoded bt death by lour sisters and sisters.
FOSTORIA, Ohio (UPI) - Two
&amp;lrviving are llis wlfe, !laira brother.
young brothers. u-.pped on the
ley
Wiseman Spires; two chilFrlendo may eaU at thelwlorsecond floor of their hune, died al holne anytime. llurlal Is to be dren, Don Alan !Pires, POmeSunday when lire dealrQ)'ed the bt
roy, and Mrs. Jacob ()larprstructure.
el Ellen) Sc:h!Uing, Rutland; a
The victims were Bryan Wetlabrother, Robert Earl, Wllkeserlll, 10, and Eric, 5. Their
THREE FINID
vUle, and three grandehUdren.
father, Jan, their motherandsi ...
Three
I1Ded SoturSorvlees wiU be held Wedter, Suz.ie. 2, manqed toeaeape. dey nl8ht In the Coul1 ol neaclq at 2 p.m. at the Strong
Another sister~ Janet. 9, was not 1'01 11fa1or Cbarles Logar were and Son Funeral Home with Rev.
Everett Junior Mldlael, Middle- Cheater Lemley oil! elating. Burhome at the time.
port,
ljiOOI!Inc, '15 and ousts, Ial will he In the VInton Memor·
Wetherill
said ~
a"oke,
and
Kelth
lUdeDJur, Chester, and 1a1 eemetery. Friends may eaU
smelled amoke and herded hlo
wife and dsuf!hter wt ol the )louae. Jame• Pooler, Sr., Middleport, at the IUDeral home anytime.
·He attempted to enter the oecood ~ and COlla aaeh em ehargea ol
story on a ledder leaned qatnat assured clear dlltance.
PART\' PLANNID
tho ....... but lntenH heat lnd
A Mardi Gru potluek parcy
smoke drow him boek.
wiU be hold by past prellldents
COUNcn. TO MEET
Firemen found ooe of the vteof the Ladle a Auxiliary, D Bnswrlb CouoeU 46, Royal Weboter Poll 38, Amerlean Lettma eurltd "" on a couch in a
bedroom ond the other l&amp;ee down and Select lllaotero, wiU meet gion, beginning at 6 p.m. n..r..
In the bathroom with the water at 7 :SO p.m. W-ac~q at the dey al the home 0( Mr~~o Be A
PomOJ'Ol' Ma-'e Temple.
I'JIIIIil...
Neutzllntl.

Brothers Die

TEN CENTS

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Rolli~~g

LETART, W. VL- Fire earCecil Duncan, New Haven fire
ly S.nclay destroyed the 10-room chie[, reported that the family
home of Robert McNamara locat- had no insurance on the contents
ed beside Rt. 33. The family ol ot the hoose. The house was owntwo adults and five children was ed by Edwin Brinker, Florlds.
asleep when Damy, age 6, awak- Duncan said firemen were ham·
ened, choking from smoke, to get pered because there was oo waa drlnk o1 water. He and h i s ter supply. Fire departments
brother, Robbie, awoke the rest from Mason and Pomeroy aJao
o! the lamlly who escaped with answered the caD.
.)!It the clothes they managed to
The firemen and others man'
aged
teo-save a· ti:Vtn2'1'001111 1\die-,: ·
..l!ONC KONC1IJ!Ii) -' Westt!tll ·iju~ ""' .A-..eey&lt;hbls· el10
walher, dryer and refrigerator.
diplomats today asked Peking was lost.
tor rour Americans apd 11 other
The fire apparently started Most or the eight rooms ol. furnipersons aboard three yachts from the coal rumace located in ture were lost in addition to the
harassed and then apparently the basement.
family's elothing.
seized by Chinese Communist ~~"""'*=""""-"'-'"@W.:;;;;~;(•·······
gunboats.
.;~.::~:*1N8?3:::;:;~:::~::~;::;w.;:;:::::=:,"§::~:::::~ .:x.~::-.~-:'!f.f{:;:

More than 24 hours after one
of the yachts radioed ''They are
boarding us!" there still was

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d!!O!·t~n

the sehoul would not "permit

Silence
ror
Hides Fate
Awards Made for Performance Of Fifteen
J. L. McNEALEY, RIGHT, Colwnbus arw:l Southern Ohio Electric Company President, pre1el'lts
the District Mana,ger Plaque to Jol:m M. Welsh, Middleport District Manager, (seeond from left) Cor
aalea accomplishments In this area. Ronald G. McDade, left, and Wendell W. Hoover, Jr., third

ol

Of The Melga·MIUOII Area

School Buses
1m

l..a.WieftCI SIIVfii'D'IaD

nootevelt Univeratty in Clde&amp;BD

Aaaeu Duna•

KtJ()fffllll

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COLUMBUS (UPI) ·
ium best suited to PI
analysis and leadet:sl
ing with the world's 1
'"a superb editorial 1
Hills, president anci
editor of Knight MWSJ
last week.
..Words over the ai:
It," HUh said in a sp
Ohio Newspaper A
"Only the prlrted new
meot with Its original
permanence and its r•
can pl,'ovlde a comlli
editorial Uluml,.tioo
ership."
He said the editor!
"the newspaper's 112
excellence."
"There for all to
newspaper's
charat
ereed, Ita personality

f

-tied

oald 500 more blaek - ·
would be
to tho oehml
by I!IUIIllller.

sln:' Young Bald, HJDd thole
who really eare about black
America wtll give us a ebmCe

Analysis
Aided b-

Sizes 30 1o 36.

blaek

Devoted To The lnteiW,.

VOL. XXI NO. 208

.J. PAUL GHETTO!
BoV• AM I ?~ .1'0
::,eft 'bJ ! .
M6

r\E.LP~ pi

Ohio, students and b
puses.
,.We wnt attempt
needs or these dlstfr,
~~· rather than tr
a little bit or everyttU
body as we have bt

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II II that the - · ol the
Unlveroity ol Wlsoanaln nmoln

at

The Smithsonian Institution
was founded by an English scientist, James Smithson, who never
visited the United States but
whose remains were brought to
this country and Interred ln the
original Smithsonian Building.

J

Pink, Blue, Mini

blaek

- · and blaek - · He

Now You Know

keep IIIC&gt;Vlng. •• Oiul) me lion and a bladt - e s
c»mand tranacends all others. !&gt;I'O@rom-lbe lint bt the Sou1b.

WIIOIIIIBID Cboneellor to

The McNamaras are residing
with her mother, Mrs. Frances
Gibbs, bt Hartford.
Penons wanting to blate
clothing or household articles are
aaked to contact Mrs. Earl
Ftelds, Hartford, W. Va., 8822380,
Clothing for three boyl and
two girls are needed. Danny
wean size 6-7 in cl~Xbine and
Ooea·· 11\'ze · 11.; · ~. elothlng size 10, shoes &amp;ize 2; Mark,
size 1':1 and shoes size 5; Debbie
aize 5 and shoes size 8; Sherry

size 12 and shoes aize 6.
Mrs. McNamara
a alA
18 dre&amp;s, olze 20 olodll IIIII
shoes 7'h and 8; Mr. )I~

wear•

36 walot trauaers, .,.. 15 llld
IS\&gt; oh1rt.
Furniture and clothi!II!IIIT be
broul!ht to the llarUcml Communlt;y Center behind the :Alit
O!!loe bt HarUord or • Moo. · -1·•· Flolda,&gt; llfillb:-1
phone 882.:380. Help at t h I
time will he greatly ~etu.
ed. friends ol the famll,y aald.

Parents Hold
Children off
From Classes
COLUMBUS (t)f'O - Tet.chers at Fraoldi.D Jr. lfi8ll
School, scene of a student demonstration which caused an
early school-closing last week, met today and decided a re..
aewal of police patrols within and outside tbe school were DOt
needed.
Many parents of children enrolled at theghetto-vea scOOol,
meamrhile, kept a promise made SwxlayandlqJttlteir childreD
home from school. Ot 870 stOOents enrolled. only 597 ~
for classes today, otllcials said.

COLUMBUS (UPil - A gr&lt;q&gt;
of parents said Surday they
would keep their chD.clren home
from Franklin Junior High
School unt1l It was .. safe" to attoni
"We feel our children are not
sare in that school and we are
goi~ to keep them hc:me until
the situation ls corrected," Rev.
Maurice Brooks said at a meeting or a gr~ called Concerned
Parents of Franklin Junior High
School Students.
The parents discussed a distwbaDCe at the school last
Wednesday, triggered by the removal of a cwnselor from the
Cohunbll8 MetrqiO!Itan Arel
Community Action Orpniution.
The sehool was closed lor that
day.
Tfle parents obJected to the
presenee ol ll&lt;lilcemen at the
school last week.
"We don't want our children
ln a
sltuadon whore the
thQUihtless act of one child ml)'
involve all OW' ehlldrea In a
holoeauat
,paliee tan
take
out where
their the
bitteme1s
Oil

Sensenbremer said the d!lturbances had ''seriously aftected. the social climate ot c.ct:mmunity.
"Difterences can be ....,...
ed if there is evidenc:e ol 1011111
faith on both sides," t. aald.
Sensenbrenner asked clmnwn.
icy Relatloos Dlreetor atlfGrt
Tyree to assist ln any talkt.

Sue Lehew of

Mason is Dead
MA.~N -

Miss 9:1e lAbMr.

~ flf
Anehor and !QIJor
stores, died ~ In lllo
eranolllamorlolllolpi!U.
!lie was born bt u • ...., lla •
dsui!IMr o! the late P • .\, W
Sarah E. Heslop, Lihlit/...
waa • member~
eapal Clllreh ot -...-.
!lie &amp;110 was a ~ _, ......
Ealllenl 9lar

Maoon, a retired

the

Red

v•

ttiean.*"-

=~=~=GC~U.~~~

Gl
them," Brooks sold.
eharlnr
.
C. L. ~. aoal- •..,_ - - Cblbo .
erlntendent of Columbul • . - ,
Sold elUHI would be eondu&lt;:tecl
as usual lods,y de1111lte 111\V

nl-1 ..... IIOIID

-·

walkCiut.

11!11 II l

FUneral

Mayor M. E. Senaenbr- ~
sent teleanms to the..- &amp;!Ill tot T to tho clt.Y Boord of Edu&lt;adoa, wiU 1111 In
llki!W 1'- to neautlate the F~ eail
diSj)Uie.
II l'llmo aartitJ1o.

�1-

n.

February 17, 1969

"Let's Ftnd More Comfortable Seats
and Talk This Over!"

3 -

" ohould be a place of light, of liberty and
of learning."
Today's students are definitely enjoying
an abundance of the second of these three
La, but there is cause to wonder how the

other two are faring. Consider the light
shed and the learning displayed recently
oo one university campus.
It began when about 35 members of
Students for a Democratic Society (SDS)
hoisted. a. Viet COng flag at the Post Office

at Stanford University . Young Republi~
cans attempted to remove the flag, but it
had been skilHu11y knotted to frustrate

just such a reactionary reaction .

Tbe SDS group next marched to the

office of President Kenneth S. Pitzer, demanding that he answer their questions
"concerning the university's participation
in the violence perpetrated against the
people of the world."
UnfortunatelY, the president was not
there, so the students had to go away un·
entightened.
Next day, in " the most dramatic show
of conservative student strength yet seen
on campus," about 50 Young Repubtic•ns
and Young Americans for Freedom
chanted "pigs off campus, pigs off cam·
puo" at members of the SDS during a
noon rally imd waved brightly colored
plac:ardl bearing such devastating slogans
u 1 ::uYou Liked Hitler, You'IILove SDS."
l\llOr enduring an hour's hecldlng, the
SDS led a march on the Applied Elec·
t:ronits Laboratory, but was prevented
from capturing the building by the COD·
sorvallves, with minor scuffling. About
.100 SDSers then invaded the research
h\&lt;UIIies In the Stanford Industrial Park.

where they raised the red flal ol. revolution and the black flag of anarchy.
Thus ended another day in youth's Wl·
ceasing quest for light, liberty and learn·
jng"'in one grove of higher educaUoo.

FEAIIF'UL a mother poriOI\aliJ Involved
YEARS: A PLEA FOR HELP I will be moll l!l'ateiVI If 10IJl'
JneiiiPI
IN Hill.tt
FOR PRISONERS OF WAR
MOTHEII OF A PRISONER OF
Dear Helea:
Four year a ago lite w a 1 a WAR

'Monument' to War

band ~e aa he lett for Vlel.
M01101Jl' f&lt;luchinllletler bring
nam. She baJ DOt nen h I to oupport !rom all America! And
amee. Sle doesn't even k n b w may the prl1008rl ~ war - and
whether he ll tortured or eaft, all our Servicemen - be home
aick or well - altve or dead. 100111
!lie only that bla plano NOTE TO READERS:
Sead your letters and tel ...
went dcnm in North Vlolnam,
and otberl of bis crew were cap. grams to
tured a a prt10ner1 or war. 9\e
The Hon. Henry Cobot Lod&amp;o,
c&lt;J The stateD-~
hopei and Jftfl - but lhe MV·
er bean. ID f&lt;lur years lllle haa
Waahlngton, D. C.

FOUR

The nations of the world will spend

other mltilary needs in 1969.

They have already spent more tban ft
trilUon on wars and preparation for wars
so far in this century.
If the present rate of increased spendlnJ; continoos, that figure will be doubled
wtthin 10 years . Even if the present rate
remains steady, more than ••o trillion will
have been spent in homage to Mars by the
end of the century.
The figures are from the third annual
survey of world military expenditures by
the U .S. Arms Control and Disarmament
Agency. A few others :
• Since 1964, the world's Gross National
Product has risen 9 per Cent per capita ;
the world's military budget, 16 per cent.
• More than 20 million men and women
are in active duty forces ; another 30 million are directly or indirectly engaged in
productive activities resulting from mill·
tary expenditures.
• The average annual expenditure per
soldier, worldwide , is $7 ,800 ; for the estimated one billion school-age children in
the world , the expenditure averages $100
a year. Half the governments of the world,
including the United States, spend more
on defense than on education.
This is only a sampling from the report.
The statistics go on. And on. And on.

THE WELL CMIL~ e

Tuppers Plains
Soeiety News
the Bogart role well, Anthony
BY JACK O'BRIAN
NEW YORK - Woody Allen's Roberti pla,ys hill best friend and
dearelll cuckold with llluorply witup~ :rt Again, SaJnU at t h e
Broadlurat Theatre Ia ten times ty scyle, Diane KNton did hand·
flmier than Woody's '1lon't ily as the wife Woody seduces
Drink the Water," which ran a and nobly gives up right after she
year 011 Bdwy .... ll's Jammed swears off him ...• It's a show
with jokes, big vlllld gul!a"• CUll of laughter in a show-world
based on the very real truth 0( mostly ugly solernnit;y.
ot W~'• own retroa'-1fvefears
d marrlaP, .sex, movle..ftm..fanOldtime hoofer John W. Bubtallel, loti of lovely minl-lki.rt- bles could use a lot of help from
ed girls and a aurpriaingl.y coo- the stars who uaed his oonaida!ltent performance by the ugly- erable talents along the TV gab-dr.kenng who fashioned this she: show clrcuit . He's alooe wltll
naialPD •••• 1be jokes are there clockround nunes in a amall
~are~- ·~· L, A. Oat. Ansi• Dlckell$0ll'•
1,0. ~ marriage to Burt Bacharach apintludlng 'F'l'loloull\r
u.in or having HUm!lhN1 Bogart parently tnmed her muolcal:
return as Woody's amoral devil- lhe"ll sing for the first time
father urging him on to racier Feb. 27 with Dean Martin.
l!lexual !XJAQUestl, all of which
"Man in a Glass Booth" star
..rnunlt&amp; .;•• Jerry Lacy carbona Donald Pleasence · dug his car
oot or an E, 62nd St. tix • foot
100wbank after the blizzard and toond a parking Ucket attached .... Peter Lawford algned with Bravo Records - to
sing, u you can stand it ....
One of tbe great prot of showbiz, Sol A. Sebwartz, formnr IJtu ..
d1o boas of Colurrtlia Pictures
and president of RKO Theatrel!l
took one year off from the ratrace and DOW retnrn11 a• veep
in charge of 20th-Fox' oversea.
theatre operations, a big job
TilE DAILY SENTINEL
tor a gent to match it.
D£~01$ D TO ltiTE~ OF
Buaie1t man on Bdwy,? We'd
~ltlA!iON IIIU':A
IICHAAD S. OWEN, PUBLISIIf.R
guess Konrad Mattbael, co..proa - TMIHIIW. Editor
ducer ot "George M."' owner and
Pllbl!ot..a dlllly uc.pt S.IUrdiJ~ TII!IOhiu
van.) P...Wiolliftlll r~. 111 MK'-oiit 51...
operator ot the Alvin Theatre
, _, Ohia, ' $1611. lll~&gt;i ,. u Olli e. P't1«10
tt2-t l " · Elllilorlll p - 1192..2 1 ~? .
(where "-The Great White Hope..
S.evad dau pn~ap.,. idotP......o)',Otllo.
slule"s along), president
the
Nail-a lclv.·ll''lll rtPnNnlltl.,. Botlir&gt;elti4tl.oj!llor, l11e., 11 f:aot 4lot St., '""' Yon
APA -Phoenix Repertory 'l'heatre
Cit), N• ~· ..t.,
- and one of the major actora
s.A&gt;o&lt;'rljltlon ....,., Ddi "" nld b)l &lt;'rrle r
-~ -.liable 4~ rento t)'llr • ..._\ one ~r in
'"'oanct "' it. Dall ~ s.m_;,.,.l om.,., t=.to. s ix 1 In uBoya in tile Bandl"
,......,ll L111. TllrW I!IOII!ho, N,§, BJo N""'r
••Hello, Dolly" is a standby's
llo'U -re ,.....,..,. .. m e. - awUCw. 0..
dream
come true for Thelma
Nlllll tl.to. dJ JIIUI, 011t ,_, tU. ~ Sb
....... l 2$. Thr ......... "'IO.Soat rtltlcm
Carpenter: oil tile Bdwy, bosrda
i1''" iftohdu .'Ud~J' Tione....-1 ..._
14 years, she now playa every

...

.

.DIY

or

BERRY'S WORLD

BY MRS. EVE LYN BRICKLES
Mrs. Lea Jean Hawkins of~
lumbus
spent a weekend here with
Wed. maUnee (Pearl BaUey'a
been alllng) with star billing her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
.... Edie Adams was forced to Arbaugh, and son, Wesley.
Mrs. Marvin Walker returned
omit several overly specUic
home
from St. Joseph Hospital
shafts in her imitation of Jackie
where
she underwent surgery.
Onassis on the Jackie Glea10n
Slow; we've read them and the She is recovering nicely.
MT. and Mrs. C. C. Carter,
network was right •••• Ed BegMr.
and Mrs. Thurman Babcock,
ley jetted In to star in Bdwy.' l!l
Tressle
Stethem. Rutfl Stethem,
• • Zeld~' ~- and the trip made hla
Deloria
Frank,
all of Long Botfive,year-old daughter a memtom,
were
recent
guests or Mr.
ber of the .. 100, 000 Mile" flyand Mrs. Oscar Babcock.
ing club.
Mr. and Mr s. JOOn Hayes or
"Promises, Promises" had a
Chester
were recent Swday eve$105,000 week, biggest gross in
ning
guests
of Mr. and Mrs. EvBdwy. theatre history .... Woody
.
Allen's .. Blay n ~' .Sam" ere.tt .Watson al'¥1 (amll,y.
_Mrs.· Den Headley hu ret~~
already Ill a huge succeu: lt was
peddled to 20th-Fox for a ceilina home from a Parkersburg hosof $900,000 and 11 it never got pital where she underwent eye
past the ftrat night the PaYo« surgery. She Is recovering sat1slactorily.
is $350,000.
Mr. and Mrs. Wilford Tipple
Bdwy , newastanda have been
visited
a day here with her par..
pressured to peddle (and ellsplay) the moll explicitly porno- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
graphic publications we've ever Nichols.
Tommy Watson spent a recent
encountered .... As we prophe·
Surdi.Y
at Delaware wlth his parsied, Britiab auth_oriUes jumped
hard on U. S.-run London gam- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Fon Halsey.
Mrs. Eulah SWan ancldaughter,
bling joints .... The Colon.Y Club
Mrs.
Elizabeth Lyons, Mrs. Os(where George Raft officially was
car
Babcock
an:l Mrs. Leota
run out of England though he was
Massar
spent
Sunday with Mr.
merely a name tor tile marquee
and Mrs. Marion Riggs and famr
and a famous hand for tans to
shake) has been shuttered .... ily of Logan.
It had a British board of directors but the u . S. boys ran the
wbeels.

Allergy May Be Cause
Of Child's Bedwetting
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
within two weeks the older
child's -otting stopped
completely. Sbe was so
happy about this she refused
to
drink milk to confirm the
' children who are .over 3. The
doctor's belief that an al·
fact that the problem is not
lergy was the true cause of
that simple has been demonher trouble. When, some·
strated by Dr. J. W. Gertime later, she ate some ice
rard at the University of
cream, she wet the bed
Saskatchewan. He had been
again and this left no doubt
using all the known treat·
as to the correctness of the
ments on a 12-year-old girl
w l tho u t any appreciable tliacaosls.
success when he learned
Since then, Dr. Gerrard
that her baby brother was
has cured bedwetting in 25
allergic to mllk. . . . . children whole ellergles InHe removl!thllilk fromllllk cluded eggs, citrus fruits,
diets of both children and
tomatoes and the artificial
coloring In soft drinks. AI·
lergy Is not the cause of all
bedwetting but it Is arpar·

A small bladder or emotional upsets are usually as·
sumed to be the cause of
persistent bed wetting in

Kingsbury

News, Notes
s..&gt;t

Ralph Carl ol tile earleton Church presented plns for
perrect attendance to Jodi Harrtaon tor ooe year aOO Harold White
for one year.

The Kingsbury Missionary
Club ot the Carleton Cllurch met
for its regular meeti!W recently
at the church. Present were Mrs.
sadie Carl, Mrs. Judy carl, Mrs.
Jay Stiles, Mrs. Delores Klfw:,
Mrs. Virginia Dean and Mrs.
Neva King.
Mr. and Mrs, NevWhitehadas
Melga
recent visitors, Mrs. Charles
HoOey, Ashton. W. VL, aRt Mrs.
Bernard White or Masoo.
Mr. and Mrs. sam Damron had
By United Press International
as recent visitors. Mrs. Jdnuur
Todly is Monday, Feb. 17, the Morris. local, and Mr. K~Jmeth
.. - ---·--·48th dly of 1969 with 317 to Holbrook, New Haven, W. VL
Charles E. Burdette to Beulah lollow.
VIsiting recently with Mr. and
Jones, Emerson Jones, lot, Mid1be moon is between its new Mrs. Charles Ktaw were Mr. 1M
dleoort
phaae and first quarter.
r• Mrs. Nathan Arnold, Mr. and
Beulah Jones, Emerson Jones
The
morning stars are Mrs. Patrick WWllma and ttm.
to Charles E. Burdette, % acre, Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
DIVId. all of Chester, and Mr.
MiddleporL
The evening stars are Venus Mrs. Edward Kirw of HuriiiODBlaine carter, Sr., Ruby ear.. and saturn.
vUle.
ter to Archie McKinney. Eva McOn this day in history:
. -, Mr. and Mrs. Lonnie Hudaoo
Kinney, parcel, Rutland.
1r. 1817 Baltimore became the and Mrs. Edward Kltw. Harr!IIOIILyle W. Hysell, Leona Hysell
first American city to have a haa as recent vtsltora, Mr. and
to C. C. Howard, Leaa M. Howstreet illwnirated with gas Mr&amp;. Frank Hudson and Ten! ol
ard, parcels, Scipio.
Syracuse.
Marjorie Loulse Ward to Hol- llghta.
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean and
In 1906 Allee Roo,.velt, oldest
land Henry Ward, 4 acres, Rutsons
had as recert 'lisiton, Mr.
dltughter of President Theodore
ian:!.
and
Mrs.
Paul l'l)'nler ol Car·
Roosevelt, was married. in the
Raymond L, Ru~&amp;ell, Adm.,
Wbite House to COrwressman penter and Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Moses Cleveland Russell, dec.,
Waggoner and Joy or Harrt...,.
Nicholas L&lt;qworth ol Ohio.
tll Betty Rusiell, ,P~trcet. Salis.
In 1966 a Soviet T-114 cnshed, vU!e.
bury.
~
Mrs. Foye Pntt of Middleport
Clarence Beaumont Jackaon, kWing 48 persons.
visited
with Mr. aDd Mra. Olen.
A thooght for the dly:
dec., W Helen M. Harper , Atfld.
HarriiOD
the past week.
William James said, "Man lives
tor Trans., Middleport.
Mr.
and
Mro. Nn White 11111
Ruth A. Mllrr Lewis, Leonard by hoblts Indeed, but what he sons visited with Mr. White••
Lewis to Unloo carbide COrp., lives tor is thrills aJd excite-- mother, Mrs. M1J11e White of
meM."
parcels, Sutton.
Madison1 W.VL
lla)' E. Myers, Grace E. MyMr. and Mrs. Gary Gibson and
ers to Earl Clicldnger, .U aere,
son vlolted willl Mr. and Mrl.

This Day•••

Property
Transfers
"

LONEJ,.Y,

bride, learfUil1 ldollng her hull- Qear Mtither:

more than $200 billion on armaments and

In History

~

enUy a more tmpor ant

cause than has been gener·
erally realized.

Q-11 II hea1111y to let a
child sleep In a room with·
out a little circulating freoh
air?
A-AifllouJh the circula·
lion of fresh a1r Is necessary
for comfort In the summer,
in winter there Is enough
air movement through porous walls and celtlngs and
around windows and dooro
to supply the body'o needs.
The wr doesn't have to be
cold to be fresh. Cold drafts
should be avoided.

reeel•ed no word.
9te Ia 011e ot over 800 wives
... motberl ... tamtu.u. w h o
live in a nllb-re olloar. North
Vietnam hal DIVIf releued the
number nor a ~ete llat ol
the Amerlcons It Is holding prlaoner. No1111 Vlolllam hal roflloed to obldo by the Genova coo.
v-on• willch It oi8JIId, eoncernlns the r!ghta ol prllonoro
o1 war, Very fOif llmWeo lul"'
hoori !rom their hulbaotts or
10111. It Ia I I il theM ,ycmng
men have bMD nallowed up.
Tho IOif who pi l - 1 out Clll
1a,y notbini exeept u l am
alive." ADd theM lettera are
pltii\JIIy • .,.,..., porhapo .... in
two year•, IOIMU.mea written
oix DIOIItho before delivery, &lt;An .
you imqlne the -ered
by thOse who wilt at heme?
l Can, u our 1011 II a prlaoner of 'tlilr In North Vlall1am.
Wo, at leaot, kmw that be Ia
alive; h11 wUe baa a treaiUTed
It keepo our bopea
hllb, and It makes us doubly
Nil tor - Ill thOse who don't

1-.

know.....
For thlt reaJOR rm aaldng
your help, Helen. WCII't. 1 o u
plean print tile tollowln8 me•·

ly PHIL PASTORET

If the groundhog sees his
shadow Feb. 2 we are to
Minersville.
have six w e e k s more of
Charlea Wayne Swisher. MiDI. winter. If he doesn't,. we
Mae Swisher to Kelth!Ugga,Bar· · have only 42 days more of
bara S. Riggs, Iota, PomerO)'.
the miserables to endure.
Dwight E.
Coond, Tbo1Jna
•
•
Borrowing trouble U
Grace c:oor.d, Clark M. Nictt..
about aU JIOU- can tn4taage
oll, Betty K. Nichols, J, A. Nlch-·
around htrl! the daJI beola, Bernice V, Nichola, Mary
tort
poydoy.
E. Nichols to Leo..rd L Lentz,
•
•
Alice Lentz, 87 acres, Salem.
We have about the same
admiration for Its variety of
Hint to our beanery
flu
as we h a v e for some
waitre.ss: how we like our
other
imports from a urtain
morning coDet il immediBritlsh
erown colony.
attly.

•

•

"'I !N ....UJ ""llf to pt tire ,._ Tolb ,_;ng, we
..,;nt h,.;.., 'Hirlth n tire Rouncl r aWe'r'

.,u

••'H-r••. ov

.

Q-At pu•ent are tMrt
any active U.S. llattleahjpB1
A-The newly recommissioned USS New Jersey Is

that a deficiency of the
gamma globulin might be
the cause. If so, what Is the
recommended treatment?

A-A(ammolfoballaemla
Is a disease that, like color
blindness, can be Inherited
by a boy from bls mother.
Girts may carry the gone
but do not have the disease.
The vlcllm has difficulty
fighting any ldn4 of lnfec·
lion. An injection of gamma
globulin helps the victim to
gat over an Infection for
wbleh there Is no effective
antlblotie, but the effect Is
not lastln&amp;. There Is st present no laotlng cure.

tanner resident olthtsarea,died
rece"t~y. !:~ has two brot..,.,L·.
Ralph and Donald Brewer I

umu

Ia this area.
Mr. and Mrs. James P.,e of
Middleport apent a SUiday with
her mother. Mrs. Eha Dailey.
Mr. and Mrs. carl Author"'"'
and Eha Dalley were recent din-ner guests of Mr. and MrL Ivan
Roush, GaDtpolta.

James Ray Lawrence. a student
It Ohio State Ontwralty. ape~nt
the weekend with hla parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lawrence.

ota.

March 16, alao marks the
beginning of National Sal...
men's Week.

Herman topped the wtnn.er1 wttll
18 and Mleke.v Cbildl' 16 waa
free throw•.
h!gb for Melp, Pt. Ploal8llt"a
Ed McDermitt t_.t the Big '"""'"" piled up Its load in tho
Blacka with 21 points. Aho bit- third qiJarter by hillinl! 22 points
ting in double
for the to Melp' six.
Meigs will- close Its reaular
- . - · Pete McDermllt and
Rick llandlO;)', each with 13, and aea~an sc:IMKille thi• Tueadly at
Dua1ne Greer with lL
home aplnat Gallipolis. T h e
The Big Blacka hit on 31 of preliminary matA:h II " hedul·
64 llteDtpto !rom the ncior for ed to begin at 5:30 p.m.
a 48 per eeat average. Pt. Pleasant al10 lOt 27 nboundo.
BY QUARTERS

Tbe Pt. Plea Am reservu WUJ

the pre11mloary oonlest 59-49.

MEIGS

PT. PLEASANT
'iAME
P , McDerniitt

FGA-M FTM·A fF PTS
13
· · • • · •..• . • 11.$
I~
0
Handley • • . . . • • • .•. • • . .• . ••• 11-6
13
1-1
1
Miller
0
. . • • • • . . • • • •. •• •.•.. • • 0-0
0-0
3
6
Park . . • . ••••..•.. . .• • ....• , • 7-2
:1-3
1
Greer . . . . , • • ••.. •.. •• • •• • •. 13-5
11
~~
2
1
Neville . . • , • . . . . • • •. .••• , , • ,
5
3
Smith • • • • • • • • • ••• •. • • ~ •••••• • 5-0
3-4
5
21
E. McDermitt . , • • , .• •.. • , , •• •• • 14-9
2
3-4
Wilson • • . ..• ••.. . . . • .•• • • , •• • 2-2
1).1
4
2
2
Joins • •• • • ... • • •• • • . . , ••• .• ••• 1·1
0-0
0
Newberry • • • . • • ••.•• • • • . • •. •••• 0-0
0
0-0
1
IHJ
.
Casto • • • • • . .••• ••.• • • .••.• • • •. 0..0
0
1
74
TOTALS .•• , , •• . • .. .••• , •• , •••• 64~1 12-23
23

Weekend Sports Summary
By United Press International
Sarurday

DENVER (UP!) Penny
Northrup or Elll cottville, N, Y
won the dmmhlll event to clinch
the women's Roch Cup akl title.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPQDon Glover of Bakersfield,
Calif., took the $8,000 Orstprlze
In the $60,000 Ebonlte Bowling
Open with a 245..212 victory over
Don Johnaoo ol Kokomo, Ind.

lrot'ld two-man bobsled cham-

plooahlp.
DEVENTER,
Netherlands
(UPQ-Norweglan otudont, Dag
Fornaesa won the 1969 men's
speed akatlng world champloollhip att.r - l n g the EJt.
ropean erown a rew weeks
earlier.

Melp ' . ' ' • . ' .15214163
Pt. Pleaoant • . . , 21 36 51 74

By United Preso International
Ealll
W, L, PeL GB
BaltimOre • • 45 16 , 738
N01r York . . 44 21 ,f/7 3
Phlladoljlbla ' . 40 20 .661 4'h
Bolton . . " 36 25 .590 9
Cincirlnatl . . 32 30 .516 13\7
Detroit , • . • 25 38 .397 21
Milwaukee . , 18 45 .286 28
Weot
W, L. Pet. GB
Loa Angeles . . 42 21 .6f1
Atlanta . . . • • 39 26 .601 4
San Fran. , . . 29 34 .461 13
San Diego , . • 27 35 .435 14',\
Chicqo . . ... 25 39 .391 17'h
Seattle •. •• , . 23 41 .359 19'h
Phoenix .. ' • . If 48 .226 27'h
fimday' 11 Results
Phlla 127. Bolton 102
Milwaukee 106 Los Ang 97
Seatlle 127 Detrnlt 119
Phoenix 125 Cincirlnatt US
San Fran 113 Atlanta 106
(Only samoa scheduled)
Monday's Gamel
Clncimatf at Baltimore
Atlanta vs. Milwaukee
At Baltimore
(Only pmes schOiltled)

-~-~-:,

This Week's
Games
OHIO COLLEGE
BASKETBALL SCHEilULE
By United Press International
Monday

Kent State at St. Bonaventure

Loyola (Chicago) at Ohio u.
FindlaY at Blu!Iton (MO)
Cleveland state at Wa,yne state
(lnd,)

Nortbw- Institute (Ind.) at

wu.

bertorce
TUesday

&amp;rn&amp;

Ohio State at illinois (BT)
Marquette at Xavier
PROENJX, Ariz. (UPI)....Gene
Baldwin-Wallace at Detroit
Littler held oiJ a late surge by
Caae at fllram
Miller Barber, DUly Maxwell
Marietta at California (Pa.)
HIALEAH, Fla. (UP!)... Fort and Don Jamary to win the
MI. Union at Ohio Northern
Marcy, with Manuel Ycaza $100,000 Phoenix Open by two
Ohio Wesltyan at Aahland
abosrd, raced to victory in the strokea with a lour..J'Oitlld total
Musklngum Ill Capllal (0)
lly United Press lllternatlonal
$6ll,qoo Bouplnvlllea tuJ'l handi- ., 263.
E.alt ).. I .. ·..... :;. Kenyoo at Oberlin (0)
cap. 111 Hialeah. " . . .
' . -·
'W, L
GB Wittenberg at ~ (0)
Wooster Ill Denlsoo (0)
Miami ..• , , , 29 25 .537
DETROIT (UP!) . Wll'l!e
Malooe
at CedarvUie (MO)
Mlmeaota , , • , 29 26 .527 'h
Coanelly, a r!ght.wlnpr for the
Wilmington
Ill Aniter11011 (Ind.)
Kentucky . , , .. 27 26 .509 l'h
lnmeaota NortJa Stars, wa1
Akron at Gannon (Pa.)
BIG TEN CONFERENCE
Indiana , •. , , . 30 30 .500 2
l&gt;'aded to the Detroit Red Wbtls
Leauge OVerall New York • . • , 16 37 .302 12'h Thiel at John Carroll
In exchange for llrst,year pro
Rio Grande in Kentucl&lt;y lAC
W L W L
Woat
Dam,y La"son and a pla,yer to
Tourney
Purdue ...... 7 I
H
4
W, L, Pet. GB
be named later,
Urbana
at Michigan Christian
Ohio state .... 6 2
14
4 Oaklond ' • ' ... 41 10 .804
Wecmesday
Michigan , , • . 5 4
11
8 Denver . ...... 34 22 .607 D'h
ARCADIA,
Calif.
(UP!)...
lllinDio • , •. , 4 4
14 4 New Orleooo . . 28 28 .500 15\0 D.,.roo at Clnclmatl
~lcken Tree """ the $59,300
11 7 Dallao , .. •• . 25 27 .481 16\1 Toledo at MarshaU (MAC)
San Luis Obispo Handicap over lowa ........ 4 4
Mich. state .. 4 4
9 8 Loa Angeles , , 22 32 .407 20'h Western Mlchlgan at Mlatnl
the rain-lOOked Saitta Anita
(MAC)
Indiana ' ' • • 3 5
8 10 - - .. ' . • 17 35 ,327 24',\
hUllide and Infield tuJ'l cwrae,
Bluii!Dn at Defiance (MO)
Northweatern •• 3 6
11
8
~'1 Results
&amp;mdly
Findlay at Central state
Mlmei0Ul . . . 3
6
9 10 Mlaml 113 llouston 108
SALISBURY,
Mel. (UPQUrbana
at Walsh
9 10 N"" York 112 Indiana 96
stan Smith, the thlrd-nnldng Wisconsin • .. 3 8
YOltlll8lt&gt;Wh Slate at Alliance
Dallas 119 Oakland 116
plaYer In tile United states
(Po.)
MID-AMERICAN CONFERENCE Denver lot New Orleana 95
doreated Egypt's llmae1 El
Thursday
1ague Overall Kentucky 123 Los Angeles 99
- · · · 6-3, 6-8, 6-4, 6-4 to win
Central
Michigan
at Ohio NorthW L
W L
lllondly' 1 Gomes
the 66th U.S. Men's Indoor
oro
Miami " " " 8 2
12 9 Oakland at Honoton
olngles champloollhip.
Ohio u.. .. .. 7 3
12 8 New Orleans at Loa Anlele• Rio Grande In KIAC Tourney
Samrord. at Xavier
WesL Mich. , 5 4
10 11
(Only pmeo scheduled)
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.
Friday
Kent state .. , 5 5
12 8
(UPQ- Bemy Par110111 ol DeAdelbert at John Carroll
11 9
Toledo , .. . 4 5
troit won tile Automobile
Cleveland state at Eaatarn MichBowllog Gr'n , , 3 6
8 12
Racing Club Of Amerl ca
Igan
7 14
(ARC A) 300 stock car race 1\farllhall " . " 1 8
WOMEN'S THURSDAY P, M.
Sllturdly
leading trtND slarl to finish in
Pomeroy Lanes, Feb. 6
Iowa at Ohio bte (BT)
MJD.OIDO CONFERENCE
bls 1969 Ford.
WDR Lost Clnclnnaa at Louisville (MV)
Loquo
Overall
Simon'
a
Market
,
,
•
41'h
IB'h Chatlanoop Ill D.,.roo
W L
W L
LAKE PLACID, N.Y. (UP!)...
28
Xavier v1. Canlolus Ill Ball'olo,
Defiance .... 7 2
18 9 Landmark , , , . , , 35
llal,y'o No. 2 slod, driven by
N, Y,
&lt;:arvme ... 5 S
13 9 Tiny'1 FoodlaDd, , , 34',1 28\\
Novlo de 2ordo with Adriano
Buckeye
PotatoChlpo30
33
Bowling
Green at Toledo (MAC)
6 11
Fraalnall1 as brskoman, turned Blulllon • " . ' 4 3
35
Kml Stale at Weatern Mld!lpn
Wllmlogtoa , , , 4 5
7 11 New York Oothlqr., 28
In two lut runo to win the
46
(MAC)
FindlaY , , , 2 5
8 13 Coca Cola ........ 17
lUgh Team 3 Garnes - Tiny's Martha!! at Ohio (MAC)
Malone • • • •••• 2 6
~ 12
Foodland, 2290.
Miami at Miami (Fla.)
0100 CONFERENCE
lUgh Ind. 3 G-1 - P, Col- Beldwln-Wallace at Musklngum
SIGNS KEY
Overall Una, 490. ·
(O)
PIIILADELPIUA (l,JPI)_- The
W
L
High
Team
Game,
Buckeye
PC&gt;o
Capllal
at Wooster (0)
W L
.Phlladeljlllla Eailes Stt!IDUtlced WI!IA!tilera .,.10 I
15 3 tato Ollpo, 817,
Heldolberl at Mt. Uoloo (O)
belly the t!gnlng ., lhelr 13th
14 8
High Ind. Game, llntna Smllll, Ketvon at Hiram (0)
Bold.-Wal. •• 10 2
drall choice, tight end Wade
11 7 184.
Marl- at WlltedJerr (0)
c..&gt;llal ' "
8 s
Key of Soolhwest T-• state. Muald,....,,6 3
13 4
&lt;l&gt;erlln at Ohio Wealeyan (O)
Ken;von ••••• 6 t
11 12
Adelbert at DCXII80D
O!IA!rbaln , ., , 8 S
9 9
OIUO IIIGH SCHOOL
Blulr!OD at Malooe (lro)
12· 7
BAliK!;'l'BALL SCORES
FlndlQIII CedarYllle (lro)
MarltUo " • " 5 5
Wooater ••••• 4
4
8 11
C-.1 Comoetiout at Akron
s 11 Miami Traee 11Frattldln He1ghta Allhiand at S!Oubenvlllo
Rlrlm ••••••. 4 8
;It
Cenlrll Slate at Ktlllucky state
7 I
Obarllo .. .. .. 3 7
5 14 ·Fraoldln 80 Coloma• Indiana (Pa.) at Cleveland state
OhloWea. •••• 3, 7
DtiiiiOil • • • • • 3
8
4 12 u._
R-.t
·'
.._ 64.......
.44 Coloma• . lllntwor Collep at' Olllo 12
,.,......
•""'
em
4
Heldalbera • , , 3 1
Mt.Uoloo,,.,S I
8 11
--43
Rio ~- In KJAC
. LanealtH 5 _ 1 - - 52
W11110sburll (Pa.) at Walsh
Z1111..WO Ro.......,s 81 Calli- • y - - - state Ill St. Fraocla
OTIIEIIS
weU75
--""
Won Loa1t BuCkoye Valloir tpDelawlrei~q.
(PaBT.)Ashland ........ . . 20
Btg Ten Conlenaco.
I . ••Ill
Dlyf!ln
17
MV- Mla...riVaii-Con!er. " " " " " '
6 Launlvllle 11 .QmdDaloa (Roll) once,
Y.......,..nstate,,., 16
Colllnl state • , •••.• lJ
5
13 ·
MAC - llld-Amerlean ConlerUriUl . . . . . . . . .... 1J
5 lilntlullo' 78 Toledo W.......... enca.
.CiticlnJllll . ......... ,11
8
42
·~ ' . T
o- Ohlo~C..
Ohio~, ,..,.,IJ
8 Fottorla1SBII"lldill
YO - llld-Oblo c.tnftnaco.
. .··
CUe'h$ ...••.•••• 8
~! ',
~~;~: ~, ~·

SCORES
l&gt;ct:

Standings

.......

11
.

!«"...

""'" ·.. e

\. ~ ' " ·; .. 1

••• :.t:- •••,•.,. ~ . •

Getting a freoh ll4rt
in life il wh4t too IIIGtlll

~ , , ...... 1

l ••. ;.; ... 8

kid&amp; gtt tMte doUI •

'

.. New all M __. II•....,.
pa..l •ad we9re ia . . .1••• !.,..

Tourney

Pairings

..

" .. ;,"' 4
s:=~·'·
""'" 3
A
······· ~. ~ •• 1

• . RoloCo••I10".l m:rlllw1i51
..,.
,·, .... ...,~ · u Toledo. CanH~_,.,..... -.&gt;J' ,... .

.~~

&amp;8

..

11

CARLSON liESIGMS
STOOIIS, Com. (\11'1)-Burr
held e:.ch ld 1he

cut-.
U111Yeraht ci Coonactleut, an.

1111 llrlldl •
,::;;_ · · ' ,
!'1m CllntOo 59·Tolow WMlmer ""'1"~ ~ ht wao rol!lln1i ' Is
:··'
.... Ilia 'poat at the end of lha
12
11 . fi11'milla
-'IDI. c;r.. ts ll•iaa. 1o p1•ate IIIII~ ts ~ ~fG.a1.78
·
nell ~.
·
,.
•
. . ,. I

1ll.t

.1!.1

'·

.~

-.

,.

'

state (4-4) - · Iowa (1-4).
Wlnoll elljlpod to 4-4 in the
Big Teo with a 75-70 upoet loiB
to Mld!lpn state Solllrdly.
Purdie, behind Rick Mount's
35 • point oulburlt, breezed by
Wi1con.aln 87-69 ror Ita seventll
ll!g Ten win In ellhl outing&amp;,
Ohio state spotted Mlnneaota
a 2~16 halftime load her&lt;&gt; Saturday night then roared bsck lor
a 58-41 victory. The Buckeyes,
111 6..2, tran PurGie by ooe g11D10,

Announced SEO NeWSffien
palrl~s

for 29 area
Iiiah school basketball teams
(Class AA and Clan liJ ..ere .,.
nounced today foUowlrw various
seetional drawings ~ alterTourney

nooo.

,..., They are:
CLASS AIAt Ol.k Hut

. FEB. 22 - Gallipolts (9-8) vs.
Rock Hill (l.J7), 7 p. m.; Vinton
Coonly (6-12) VB, Sootil Point (!~
4), 8:30 p. m.; FEB. 28- No. I
seeded Jackson (10-6) vs. Rock
Htll OT Gallipolis, 7 p. m.j No.2
seeded Wellston (9-8) vs. Sootil
Point or Vinton County, 8:30 p.
m.. MAR. 1 - Fh.ts, 7:30p. m.,
winner to Athens District.
At Albany
FEB. 21 -· No. 1 seeded Athens (15-2) vs. New Lex:lngton {711), 7 p. m,; Meigs (~H) vs.
Nelsmville-York (6-11), 8:30 p.
m.j FEB. 22 - Warre:n Local
(li-10) vs. Logan (7-10), 7 p, m. ;
No. 2 seeded Maretta (1U) vs.
Belpre (6-12), 8:30 p. m.; FEB.
28 - Athens or New Lexington
vs. Warren or Logan, 7 p. m.;
Meigs or Nelsonville-York vs.
Belpre or Marietta, 8:30 p. IlL;
MAR 1 - Finals, 7:30 p. IlL ,
wlnner to Athens District.
At Gallipolis
FEB. 21 - GalliaSoutiMe stern
(9-8) vs, Kyger Creek(10.S), 7:30
p. m.; FEB. 22 - Oak HU1(6-12)
vs. MelgsSouthern(l-11), 7p. m.;,
N'orth 'Gallill (7-10 vs. No.2 ueded Meigs Easte•n (11. 7), 8:30 p.

To Meet On.
February 23
Members

ot

the Southeastern

Ohio Sportswriters and Broadcasters Association will meet
Sunday, Feb. 23, inJacksontoselect the 1969 AII-SEOAL bosketball team.
President Jim Sollars or the
Jackson Publishing Co. announced that all of the league's
eight head basketball coaches are
invited to attend and assist the
oportswriters and Pla.Y~-i&gt;laY
men tn picking the 1969 allleague team.
The me eting will start at 12 :30
p. m. with a dinner at the Jolll'

Lanes Bowling Center for t h e
coaches and member s of the association.
A first, second, and thlrdteam
will be selected along with honon.ble mentions, the league' s
most valuable player, and coach
of the year.
Members named to the team
wiU be hmored at the All-SEOAL
barquet to be held in the Athens
high school cafeteria on Ttrursday, Marcil 20.

College Scores

winner to Otlllicothe District.
At Ironton
FEB, 21 - No. 1 seeded Chesapeake va. Hannan Trace, 7p. m.;
Green Twp. va. Symmes Valley.
8:30 p, m.; FEB. 22 - Wheelersburg vs. lrorUn St. Joseph, 7
p. m.; Coal Grove vs. No. 2
seeded Fairland, 8:30p.m.; FEB.
26 - Che81lpeake or Hannan
Trace vs. Wheelersburg or st.
Joseph, 7:30 p, m.; FEB. 27 Green Twp. or Symmes Valley vs.
Coal Grove or Fairlard, 7:30 p.
- m.: MAR. 1 - Finals, 7:30 p.
m., winner to Chllltcothe District.

Cage Scores
lly United Press lnlematlonal
starr-Wuhlnil!On 70 Waterrord

54
floyvue 58 Gueroaey Catholic 56
Fort Frye 77 Willlamlitnm (W,
Va.)66
Eaat UvotpODI 101 Martins Ferry 59
Bellaire St. John'a 69 Shaeylltde
48
Lima 77 Columbuo Well 70
Cl.... Unlv, School 51 Buffalo
Nichols 49
Kenlfal 55 Aurora 39
Solon ~ Twlnlburg 62
Aahtabula 57 Comeau! 50
Cleve, Gilmour 69 Beachwood
f1
Marl- 85 Parkersburii(W. Va.)
64
Warren Local 72 11e1pre 64

., their Rrlll ,_~~ng 1n eo.
lumbus, Ohio State boot Dllnolo
75-87 • • Dave Soren1011 led tbe
with 30 polnta.
Sorenson. the BJst Tea'• tllircl
leading scorer 03. 9) and No. 2
reldmder (12. 1) . , . . _ 12
. .
points and five rebo&lt;Ulds opiollt
the alowdowJwninded Gophera.
'

-

--

~ Bill .....

uplalned hU pmo ptso,
" Ohio .... Ia a ODJtl .IS
and we ...,.. l&lt;1fal 1o b a o:l
them. • It for - llall,
I tlloul!bl It - d llr aother. rd do the samo 1111111
.... l£llln, only •
.. . . .
better Job ol It, • Fltdl MM.

Jackets Top
Rio, 107-95
It was big Bob Mabry's night
at Cedarville Saturday night as
the 6-Sih junior center of the
Rio Grande College Redmengra~
bed 40 rebounds arxl scored 31
points but the Yellow Jackets
downed the Redmen 107-95.
Unofficially, pending tt-e weekly release from the Nabonal ABsociation of IntercoUegiate AttP
letics (NAIA), Mabry has 453 rebounds in 19 games, an average
of 23.8 per game. The last NAJA
report pve Mabry 386 rebounds
in 17 games, an average of 22.7
per game.
Uootrlcially, too, Mabry' s 31
points brought his total to 500 in
19 games, an average of 26.3per
game. Thft last NAIA report listed him w1Ul. 436 in 17 games. an
a~erage of 25.6 per game.
Mabry's 67 rebounds and 64
polrts in the last two games
should help hi1 NAIA stan:ling,
which, atter 17 games, gave him
seconi in rebound!~ ard 28th
in scoring.
Jim Marshall, ~2 sophomore,
was theotherpartotRioGrande's
'"on~Mwo" punch with 'n points..
Mabry had 40 of Rio Grande's

62 rebounds.

"'n

The
lelt Rio Gnnde wilh
a 9-10 record for the • •- .
After the Kentucky lnieroollllllate Athletic CGnfel"UCe ~·
ment CKIAC), which 1tart1 hire
Tuesday, the Redmen how ....,
Ohio
Northern left • the
schedule, here on 'lhu'lda7, Fib.
27th.
Rio Grande ..W ~
bellovUle, Ky., Collep Tueedl,y
in theGallla AcadomyHtai!SOhool
gym In the KIAC tournoy, If tho7
win. the Redmen will face Camberland, Ky. , Coi1ogo Thuredl,y
night at WUllemoburc, Ky,
Redmon finished In a third plaeo
tie in the KIAC witt. a 6-6 record.
Cedarville hit 46.2 per- o1
their shots, maklag 37 ol 80. At
the tine the Yell"" Jockots - •
33 of 40 lor 82.5 per cent. Ceduvtlle had 58 ratv-""'a, Atberton
ha4 15 ond Warren 12.
Rio Grande - o n 341 ol
76 from the lleld tor f7.4 ...
cent and shot 53,1 II the U...
rnaidog 23 ol 36.
mo GRANDE (95) - lfarohall
12-3-27; Jordan 441; MabrJ· 117-31; Bentley ~1-7; Baker 2-15; Jacobs 1~; Hairstoo 4-l-4;
Bell 3-U-6. Tolals 36-76, 23-38,
95.
CEDARVILLE (107) - Atherton 8-1-l7j Warren 7-3-l?i G.
McDonald 3-4-10; B. lllcllonold
9-17-35; Boertp 7-$...20; S-

n.

Bruce McDonald, 5-10 senior,
paced Cedarville with 35 points.
Don Atherton, 6-9 plvotman, and
John Warren. 6-2 rreshman,each
had 17, and 6-4 Gary McDonald
had 10.
()..4; Hunter 1~2; Treazaer 0-1-1;
Cedarville led all the wa,y, com- Zazverski 0-1-1. Totals 31-10,
Ing out on top 49-41 Ill the halt 33-40, lU7.
The Redmen closed the gap to
three points, 70-67, with 10 minYOUI lilT AaauaMOI II
utes left in the contest but tailed
to ke"' the n!ly going.

~i%~

by United Press 1ntern1tional
m.; FEB. 28 - No. 1 set.'ded Ohio State 58 Minnesota 41
Alexamler (11-6) vs. Southwest- Ohio U. 60 Miami 59
ern or Kyger Creek, 7 p. m.; Xavier 104 Detroit 67
Oak Hill or Southern vs.. North Cincinnati 76 Tulaa 63
Gall Ia or Eastern, 8:30 p. m.; Toledo 66 Kent state 58
MAR. 1 - Finals, 7:30 p. m., Bowling Green 101

Local. Bowling

II In
tile

lamlly,

three Big Ton cluboa Tuesday
n!gbt.
FronWutmlng l'lmllo (7 -1) II
at Indiana (3-5) wbllo Mlchlpn

«~
$~

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Fifth.
ranked ClaBB A power Brldpo
port High School OliPioded lor
234 points over the weekend
to lnish its record season at
16-1.
Bridgeport ripped Warwood, W, VL, 111-77 Friday
night, tilen humbled Poorhatan
123-.'36.
In Clasa AAt Columbus East
boot Columbus Northland 10660, and canton McKinley beat
canton Lehman 511-51 lor the
cily title. •
Class A leader Strasburg
beat Tuslaw 59-50, and runnel"lt) Zane Trace Ross beat
Unloto 57-52 and VInton County 85-68.

Rlini Hold Spoiler Role
COWMBUS (1!1'1) - APSIU·
eotly eliminated l'rom tho lila
Ten title chale, Dllml1 11 ....,
calli In t110 role ol apoller.
Tho alddtlln&amp; llllai wwld !Ike
llOChlna better than to knock oiJ
visiting Olllo state In ono ol

118ur••

'

NAME
FGA-A FTM-A RB PF PTS
Walters . • . . . • • • • . . . . .• IG-4
0-4
8
3
8
Tyo . • • • • . . • •• ••• •• • .•. •• ~2
1-1
5
4
5
Myers • . , , , , , • ...• , , , , , , , 17-11
8-10
13
1 30
B. Werry • . •. , • , •••.• , , •.•. S..O
0-1
3
3
0
R.llaaerty .. . . ••. •• ••. . , ,l(l.l 9-11
2
3 11
Ault • . • • • . . . •. , , , • . , , , , •• , 2-1
1}.(1
4
2
2
Roblnson • • • . . . • • • . .. . •• • • • , 4-2
2-2
4
1
6
Hensler • . . . .•• . .• .•• •• , .• •1-0
0..0
2
2
0
Smith . • • • . . • • . • •.. . , • , • • • • 0-0
1-2
4
3
1
TOTALS . . . . . . . . . . . . .... .. 5~21 21~1 45 22
63

AII..Stan@

Rich llatalortl, onotber oenlor,
who lOt .... flald !IOii IDd nine

T-

Don Glboon In Marylind recently.
While lhere they vltlted ,.verll
places. of interest 1n WuhllwtoD.
Mr. and Mrs. Woyne Bell and
Clmll,y had as recent vlllton.
Mill Slndrl Bell and Milll£url
Hamilton or Atheno, John llid
Henry Peclraa of Cleveland, Mr.
and Mro, Paul Hlcka and Mro.
Romll Deal ol B!'llllol, Teftn,
Mrs. noma Bell remained for
• loopr Ylalt with her aaa lilt

' ... ,l~.: ...

"

Dardel Brewer of Hamilton, a

Q-Wh4t mo1quito carries
malarl41
A-The female Anopheles
mosquito has a lone proboscis with which It pterees
the skin, spreading malaria.

PT. PLEASANr _ The Point and 61-41 an.r 111ne por!Gds. At
Pleasant Bla Blacks &amp;nl&amp;lPid a
point In the final period,
13 -Pme lollng atreak here Fri. Me1p beltlnd by 22.
diJo night with a 74.$3 ...,~ 018110
Malp' only -performvictor)' over Meiga' Marauder•. er n1 Ienior Joe MJera wbo
The setback ended the Marau.. alnpd the Big Blacks' DOts 11
ders' victory string at two, and lime• In 17 lleld p i attempts,
put them at 3· l4 on the aea.an. He aloo WObl 8 for 10 at the
Pt. Pleasant's overall alate t 1 free throw line lor a career
3-15.
hjgl1 of 30 polnta, M)'era also
Mel~o, able to hit only 39 per led Mar.,...r reboundinl with
cent or its Shots, fell behind 13 ol the team's 4-5.
21~ 1 5 by the close ~ the first
The only ather Melgt pl11er
period, trailed 36-.21 at halftime to bit in double tlgures wa1

,...

Stiversville

Recent visitors ol E.ll Carpenter and family were Mr. and
Mrs, Dell Talbott, llutlyllurlt,S.
tho only active U.S. battleship today.
W. Durst, Elva Drally, Tom
' Durst, Glenn Abela and Doug Clr·
Q-How is a plono tuned
clo and Mro. Roy Donlhua.
to A-4401
A-The plano tuner be• • •
Jiins by stretehlng the string
There Is absolutely no
A above middle C unW it
sl.gnitlcance to the coincivibrates 440 tlmeo a second.
dence t h a t Buzzard Day,
Then he tunes all of the remaining strings on the plano
to proper relationship with
this A.

Q-My HD, 7, has had re·
pealed colds. I have heard

..

'

u weU as to Pre1ldent Jttchard M. Nlxoo, the White Houoe,
Washlnaton, D, C. and to yaur
Congressmen. - H.
This &lt;Olumn Ia -cated to
family llv!Dg, so It Y&lt;JU're having ldd trouble or just plain
trouble, lot llelen help YOU,
91e win also ,..loome your cnm
anmaing experience•. ~IS
Helen Hottel ln care of t h I 1
newspaper.

Cbarlee Evans and daughters
'
sage;
were recent guests or Mrs. Bet"TO ALL AMERICANS:
ty Ward and family ,
..Our daughter-tn.Jaw. as a
Kathleen Ward end ElvaO.Uo11
attended a meeUrw ai the County
member of "The League of
Wives at American ~letDam
Extension offlce in Pomeroy re-Pri1011er1 of War, •• is ..,Ife-, cently.
ly requeatlng thai OUr ·GOv·
Mrs. Elva Dalleyanddaughter,
Judy,
called on MrL Daisy Paternment work hardar In aeterson. Syracuse.
curing the rl&amp;bts and releue
Dale and Chuck Lawson were
ot then Amerteans. TheBe derecent pests of Mr. IIJi :Mrf!! ·~­
voted wlvea are atJdnl that
Doug Circle, Bald 'KnobS. ' '~":~
all interested Americana help
Mr. and Mrs, VlctorDurllland
by sentllnx telosramo or let.
SCotty
called on hl1 parents, Mr.
ten to Walhtngton. The Geneva Cooventltmo should be hon- ard Mrs. R. R. Durst and Tom.
Mrs. Margoret Webster ol Coored. Our Government thould
lumbus 1pent a recent weeiCend
demand thlo of Nortb Vlelnam.
HPlease uk your trlenda to with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Rudy DuroL
help by sendiDI their own per·
Mrs. Mike Eva1111 and chUdren
sonal menage. Write y o u r
Prealclent, yaur Congresoman, . called on Mrs, Ada Van Meter,
Mr. and Mrs. S. W. Durst and
your Senatort, your Governor~
Mr,
and Mrs. Dell 'l'llbottattendThe prlaoner of war lilllalkln
ed
the
llmenl of their aunt, Mrs.
mull ba kept uppormost In the
Iv• Durst, at Evans, W. Va. The
minds or our leadorol
funeral was held at the catto
"Thil 11 the tint Ume these
Funeral Home.
courageous JUWl8 women have
Mr. and Mro. Tom Birch and
uked us to support them. At
chidren of Waterford, Mr. and
Mrs. Joe Lipps and Mrs. Law·
QUICK QUIZ renee Lipps ofVlncentwereweek
end guests of Clint Blrcll and Leo

IIAFIIIS

Bedford.
Frank w. Porter, Gdn., Floytl
Hendrickll to Audrill Jeffers, lot,

Pomei'Q¥-111~. 0., "'"""""· Ftlbruon 17, 1919

Blacks over Meigs 74 to 63

Lots of Liberty, Little Learning
•• A universlty,' ' said Benjamin Disraeli.

The Dally -.eJ,

Marshall (W. VL) 80
Wittenberg 82 DenJBOil 67
Baldw!J&gt;.Wallace 96 c.&amp;&gt;ilal 81
Ashland 28 Woynesbure (Pa.) 14
YD&lt;BI8s, state 79 Wayne state 62
Earl ham (Ind.) 88 Bluf11oo 76
Musld~89

Slippery Rock (PL) 67
Woooter 93 Point Park (PL) 79
Defiance 92 WUmington 75
Hiram 84 Oberlin 59
Ohio Northern 98 Hillsdale 74
Ohio We1leyan 82 otterbein 72
Cedarville 107 Rio Grande 95
Findlay 111 Malone 78
Kenyoo 82 Mt. Union 78 (2 ol)
Marietta 86 Heidelberg 8S
Florida state 79 Daytoo 71
Cleveland State 41
Centnl state 40
Case Tech 59 Ttu.el 53
Wash. &amp; Jett at John Carroll,ppd

FIVE-l&gt;A Y FORECAST
By United PreBB International
Temperatures in Ohio Tuesdly tllr&lt;&gt;Jgh Saturdly will average below normal.
There will be continued &lt;Old
througilout the period, with Ut.
tlo dly -to.do,y change In temperatures. Doy-time hllb• will
average near 30 in the north
to the lower 4(1s in the BOUth.
Night-dme lows will average in
the mld-teeno In the north to
the lower 20s In the SOUth.
Precipitation will ~about
one-tenth of an ineb melted,
occurring mainly as occasional 1iKirt snow near tile end of
tile week.

What Would HaDPen
If A Fire Destrored
Yo11 Home?
Could you afford to buy a
new home or rebuild yowhome? You probably have

"fire and extended cover•
age" insurance with your
mortgage, but is this en·

ough?

This
only

VICe.

It is not what he has, nor
even what he does, which
directly expresses the worth
of a man, but wbat he is.Henri·Frederlc Amiel, Swiss
philosopher.

REMODELING PLANNm
Sf ANTON, Del. (UP!).. A $4
mlll1oo face lltllng of the
clubhouse ud other facllitles at
Delaware Park Raee Track will
begin Aug. II It "as IIIDOUtiCOd
&amp;mdly by Belrd C, Brittingham, l&gt;'ack proeldent.

Phone 992·2966
114 Court St.

TAKE IT FROM MEl
THE DAIRY ISLE HAS
ATASTEY FOOD TREAT
FOR EVERYONE!
•ICE CREAM • SANDWICHES
BASKET DINNERS •SNACKS
• SOFT DRINKS

TWO F AVORfl'ES
NEW
YORK
(UP!)... Milo
Prim Trim, wimer d. four ol
five ltarta thl.a seasan, IDd
lltablemale
Yankee
llladow
were ear1y favorites to win
Monday's featured $7,500 N""
York Breda Pace at Yonker•
Raceway·.

"EVERYTHING THAT$ COOD TO EAT''

McCLU'RES

DAIRY ISLE

Fourth I. Locoat
MIDDLEPORT

Miller 52 Glouster 48
Well- 61 Alottander 63
1'1&gt;1t1t Pleua! (W, Va.) 71Melp
f1
Zano Trace Olo. .) 85 VloIDII Cattol;)' 88
F-al HoddntJ f1 NeiUIYille-

Yorlt

SOMETIMES IT JUST tiAPPENS I
Just about averyane has the exper'-nce

a

oometime ... a sudden case of
financial embarrassment, You can IOive
most any financial crisis by remem&amp;erino
these few words , , , "When money'•
the question, the answer ia City Loan."

Claoo A Ill Llaeuter
Mllieroport 70 Uborl;y 11n1oo1 58

llea1h Sl Lanl:oatoo' F-elt 28
Uoltlna v~ 19 NIWirk Cltholle ts
Claal A a t CudiDtltoD 61 IDI!hlllll C9porto)

a

Cluo A at Wellllnllla
GI'III1VIllo 57 New Alba117 S1
Otherl
Lima Senior 77 ~~ Woat
70
DQton Alttr 75 Collllllbuo lllrt-

10;1' il2

lOANS UP TO

s-

Avolloble Throvgh Ov•

CoM Company

inl ..ance

pay off the
m~rtgage . See us for ado-

m;ght

125 E. IIAIN

.,
~i

�'·

Great.

years lf."' arc DOlt' harvcliling
4,000 pounds wlth J.Qroved
mt.othods ol cultiva~ '
In Jldonesla e~rta arc
hopi!¥1: that introduction or rJe\111
straJns oi "Miracle rice"
developed In the Philippines wW
I
provide the
key to self·
sumctency in rice by 19'13.
E:cpert1 Agree
In the PhUlppine11 Itself this
N a t I o n s Secretary General
However, mOlt ec0MIIll1ta Thant somberlY swnmed ~ In rice, developed at the Internaand development. experts qree these words:
tional Rice Research Institute
that free handouta alone are
·~e are not winnlrw the wlr near Manila, made the country
ne¥er goh~g to · solve the on
wart. The opportunity a rice e)IIH)I'tlrw ratioo tor the
problems or the poorer n1tlona.. gap.,.is growing wider and first time in 1968.
The root cause• of their Inequality Ja Increasing."'
Gap Narrowtrw
problems can be sol¥ed onl)' b)'
The povert)' gap is narrowing
UnempiO)'II'IerC Rises
themselves.
lrklia ha&amp; one-sevemtl ot the in both SlrJIIIPQre an:! Malaya
The premier of Stnppore, world's ~tion. Ten million am in both places -~ at
Lee Kuan Yew, one of the moat of Its 520 mUJion peqJie are least sees to It that the poor can
realistic leaders ol the underde- unemployed all1 the figure rlaes .eat. One section of stalk trom a
veloped world, ls one W'ho ateadily as the J)qMilation soars tapioca plant when replaPted.
acknowledges that the war at the rate of 1,000,000 a month. yields another stalk. Beneath
aplnst poverty must besfn at Tens of thousands ot Indians
each stalk is 1 large edible root,
home.
tho
iradiU_. rood or the poor
aleep and die in the streets aoo
"The world doeA not owe ~i&amp; a miUI:ons sutter from malnutrl:.. when nothing else Is available.
living,'' he concedes. Nor don tion.
In Pakistan as in every other
he believe that the world owes
The first eight years of the nation in the region the birth
the poorer nationl protection, devel~ment decade saw India's rate is the most devastating
sometimes from themselves.
per capit• income rise by 1 drawback to progress. President
Commenting on Britain's 1968 pltlable $2-lrom $41 In 1960 to Ayub Khan aald recently that
decision to withdraw its mtllta- $43 in 1968.
unless it Ia drastically reduced
ry presence · from east of Suez
all
Pakistan has achieved and
In the colonial era India was
hy 1971, Lee said "So the time rererred to as ''the brightest may achieve eeonomlca.lly will
has come for us to do some o! jewel In the British crown." BUt be absorbed.
the dying. ..
11'8 development picture is no
on indeperdence in 1947 the
The trouble is, in the opinion Indians reinherited their coun- brighter in Africa, where more
of experts, there are not. enough try !rom tho British with a than 180,000,000 persons. f!Pread
Lees around in the poprer two- practically nonexistent inclua-- over an area or the continent
thirds or the world.
trlll base, a creaking, Victorln more than twice the size or tile
Retain Structures
civil administration burled .,... United states, gained their
Many of its le.d.ers ~~;eem neath mountains of paper and independence from colonial rule
detennined to retain tradltlollll red tape, and a 70 per cent in the decade between 1957 and
tribal structures and customs illiteracy rate.
1967.
merely to keep themselves in
40 Countries
Administrative inefftciency,
power. They have adopted the cor~tlon, Industrial ml &amp;manThere are now more tllan 40
old colonialist doctrine o! divide agement and internecine poltti· in:lependent countries on the
am rule and berK It to fit the cal Instability have combined to continent, many of them trying
new conditions or irdependence. make parts of lr.:lia, 20 Y&amp;ICS to exist on one--cr(J) econc:mies,
Swedish economist Gunnar later, an international slum.
with
their tribally divided
Myrdai, in his massive workpODUlations subsisting on primi~
Problems Remaill
three volumes spread over
By investing beavib in public tive agriculture that was oldmore than 2,000 pages-on the housil'€' Sinppore has cut fashioned in the &amp;team age.
unden:le\'eloped wodd, "Asian deeply into Its slums. Half of
In many cases efforts to
Drama: An Inquiry Into the the 30,000 families on the r-elief break down these tribal diviPoverty of Nations," was rolls 10 years ago are nqw siontt have led to disaster. The
scathing in his denunclatlon of breadwinners- but vast prob- Nigerian civil war has ita root
the political leadership or the lems remain. Malaysia claims causes in tribalism. Tribalism
poorer nations.
the second highest per capita and corrte)tion -are the twin
India ls a classic eU:mple o! income (to Japan) in Asia, $326 scourges or AfricL
the situation which United a year in 1968 but it is prey to
African nationalism never
prepared
the masses for the
nuctuations in rubber which are
decades
of
hard toll and
disastrous.
Deputy Prime Minister Tun revolutionary social (hanges
Abdul Razak believes if Malay- that will have to be made if the
ans would realst the lure of continent is ever to catch '-"
Kuala Lumpur and other cities with the developed world.
am take part in the otrtclal
Instead they were told that
larll schemes unemployment independence meant Nirvana, a
could be solved ancl a higher toilless world where- everyone
of living become could sU under the shade of his
ian Straw Hat" will be played standA.rd
possible.
money ,;_ jl'e(t 11i -'~ I WJtch._. the
by 1-~ry Landaker, a Cres\'1'!"

• •

Some Retu-hing for the Moon, but Billiom

Decisions

OJ World's Peoples Umure of Next Meal

.-Urll'l, Asia arw:t the
De\"elopment DecMte:
Must the Po,·erll' Gap Widen'~
II)' PETE II L\'NCII
tllilied Preu InterMttonal
Min tOdll)' is on tile threshold
of lanllrw on the moon but on
earth two-third&amp; of the world's
~ulation cannot be assured of
pttina a ~quare meal tomor-

production, and one-tenth of its
industrial oulput.
PQ9U}atlon E)lplosion
At the same time U is faced

massi"e population
explosion
that
eats
away
progress before it can grow and
take hold
The population of tile povertystricken two-thirds ot the earth
is increasirw: at more than
row.
Whlle the developed world double the rate of the advanced
reache• for the moon the two countries. ln India a million
billlon peq,le of the underdev~ people are born every month.
In the past 20 years the
loped world in ACrlca and Asia
United
States and Britain alone
MU"Ch, ~o fllr vainly, tor a way
have
poured
some $85 billion
out of wretchedness and poverInto Africa arYl Asia in aid aOO
IJI.
A1 the United Nations plarr loans In .. bid to bridge the
Den are alreldy at work laying poverty gap.
Last year the U.S. Congresa
IP"QUixl rules Cor the second
''oted
the lowest sum in t.he
development decade or the
history
of the foreign aid
1970is, while the develqJment
decade of the 1960's nzzles program, $1.75 billion.
Britain, beset by massive and
tcMardl dlstnuslonm.enL
Despite massive assistance stubborn fiscal problems that
!ram the industrially advanced ha'Ve the rest of the Western
countries, the underdeveloped world jitten, has been forced
llt'orld still struggles along on drastically to trim lts foreign
only one-slrth of its total aid program to less than . 5 per
incMI.e, one-third of its food cent of its public expenditure,
with

a

Style Show Planned by
Rio Faculty Women
uthe New Fashion Pitch with students will be modeling .. They
the Now Soupds," Is the theme are Miss Judy Wright, a junior
tor the Rlo Grande College Fac- from Moulton Hall; Antonette Colllll;y Women•a sl;)'le ahOW plan- ura, sophomore from Davis Hall;
ned Feb. 26 at 8 p.m. at t h e rile Stegmiller, freshman (rom
Davil!l Hall, and Paula ~tiling,
Rio Grande Dining llall.
Modem mUsic will accompany a sophomore from Davis Hall.
Faculty women modeling new
the presentation ct styles from
Bernadine's. Mrs. Bruce Curti a styles will be Mrs. Sam Gross.
11 in charge of tile program. man, Mrs. Alphus Christensen,
For the rtrst time, women Mrs. John Albertt, Mrs. Charstudents aa well as racult;,\r wom- les Withee and Mrs. Robert
en wlll attend the show. Four Leith.

5 -

iuD Graade College Thea-

Grande College, has ~leeted 26
tre, wlll preoent Ita tldnl,pw.jor aDidento; to,IIQrirl\l' the,v...,._
pUC&lt; or the ......., '"An Italian chlracter8 in the play. Roe Rie!
straw Hat,,. on March 6, 7, and gel, a senior from Circlevtlle,
&amp;. In Community Hall. .
is the assistant director.
HAft Jtallan Straw Hs.t,"' a fiveThe major parts in •• An ltalact plQ' 1Q' n~geno Labiche and

Marc....Yldlel, is a French com~
ecb' wrlllaa In tho 19th century
v.-no tradition. In tho pll\)'.
the wrltera allow you to view
the countless rarclal events that
pre&lt;Ode tho marriage or t h e
hero, F adiDard.
Samuel Grossman, director o!
•• Arl Italian Straw Hat" and head
fl the drama department at Rio

Home, Contents
Taken by Fire
PT. PLEASANT -

A !I r e

Soturdl.r around 6:30 p.m., de·
nroyed the home and contents
or WIUiam H. McConlhay, Sand
HOI Rd.
The two IIDry frame building
and it1 eootents were valued at
$14.500. Sixteen men andapump.
er truck anawered the alarm.
At the peak ot the blaze, ftre~
men ran wt ot. water. B)' time
the tnlck was refilled at a nearIQ' pond. the Oro
oot or COO·
11"01, lltemen said. Origin or the
lite wu undelermlned.

""s

Rose Modnla
· Dies Saturday
PT. PLEASANT - Mrs. Rose
P,

~Ia,

1509 KanaWha St.,
cllocl Soturda.Y evening In a Charl o - bolljlital. !lie was born In
Nrplu.ltal1.
&amp;lrvlvtna .... her hu!lband.
.t.'homil, one 100, AttUio, 9.ln
Vall.,, CaW:.; two daughters,
Mr1. Fedor• Berry, and M r s.
Heluman, both orCIJar.

E-

lelli!O;a llater, Mrs. Mary Mar·
c1n11, Aurora. Otdo. and two
..lllllchllilron.
Fliloral Mrvlceo will be held
ti Lnl., Tvelda.Y In the Mohr·
~·· FWIIral Home, witt! Rev.
-F-r A. H. Ryan ollldatlng.
Burlil Will be In Kirkland Me·

lliGrlai .Gordeno.
i'J;ilada ,may call at the tuner·
a1 liolbe -oen 7 and 9 this

~

rroln Xenia, t!lhfu; Vrlllll&lt; Pilxie.
a )lnl.or from Rio Grande; Gtni
G1,1stafson, junior from Falls

Church, Va.; Kim George, a j.mior from Ravema; Donna High,.
freshman from Kent; Ealnor
Reid, freshman from Columbus;
(
RIVF.R :'&lt;1 EWS _
Jonathan Ogle, BOPhomore from
Philadelphia,
Pa.; Pamela HumGAUGES - Galllpolla, 11.8
pleby,
fresl1man
from Worthingand 16.1 running 13 feet or rollton,
Ohio;
BUI
Hope. a IIOI&gt;hO·
ers; Pl Pleasant, 24.10; Pomeroy - Mason, out; Hinton, 1.64 more rrom Tappan, N. Y.; Barb
stat.; Kanawha Falls. 4.75 ris- Smltll, sophomore from W est
ing; Charleston, 18.17 falling. Richfield, Ohio; Dean SteWart,
London, Marmet and Wlnrield, a sophOmore frOm Ambridge,
Pa.; Gary Rockly, treshman from
are on the slll.
Warren,
Ohio; CherYl l.ewil, a
BOAT MOVEMENTS:
freshman
trom Columbus; John
GALLIPOLIS LOCKS - S. M.
Smith,
a
freshman
from Urbana,
Jenks down 1:SO a.m.; Jesse
Ohio;
and
Joe
Coli,
aaeniorfrom
Brent up 3:20 a.m.; Steel RanNew Jersey.
ger down 5:05 a.m.
others In the cast include TerKANAWHA RIVER- Marmet,
ry
~Ires, Brian Smith, MIke
Ouachita down 2:30 a.m.; Fort
Bradley.
Sandy Caplzz~ Vlkld
Dearborn up 5:45 a.m.; WinSeebach,
Louis
Gerstein, Brenfield, W. fl 9:1aver, Jr. up 7
p.m.; Elgercliff up 8:10 p.m.; da McLain, Howle Sheetz and
Marlon Hogehead up 1 a.m.; Sol- Kathy VaaU.
vay up 1:20 a.m.; H. E. Bowles
down 3:30 a.m.; Morrta Harvey up 3:15 a.m.; Beaver up
5:05 a.m.
OIUO RIVER- Lock 13. PhilIp Sp:.rn down 6:411 a.m.; Lock
14, Jolm l'llshak up 3:15 p.m.;
OVEC up 1:25 a.m.; White Gold
up 3 a.m.; Lock 16, William Pitt
Sculpture - the ar.t ot creating
up 3:55 a.m.; Lock 17, Natlmfigures
and desip In wood,
al up 3:20p.m.; Diane Boswurtb
- . , 2:35 a.m.; ORCO up 5:25 ceramic, and metal - was 'dlsa.m.; Rick Freeman down 5:45 cuued. by Mr. Jack Slavin at
a.m.; BellovUle locka. Aliquip- Thursday night's meetl111 of the
pa up I a.m.; Robert E. up 2:10 Eleanor Circle at Heath Methoa.m.; Jeflboat down 5:35 a.m.; odlst Church.
Mr. Slavin displayed several
Mark Eutin down 6 a.m.; Lock
pieces
or his work. eiplainlng tbe
21, JaneT. down 5:40a.m.; Lock
conception
and exeCI.itlon ot each,
22, Beckjord up 2:40 a.m.; Jetaoo
also
touching
on brooze eaatferaon up 4:30 a.m.; Albert F.

•---------J..
ieu______!Wil

Sculpture is
Explained by
Jack Slavin

Holden up 5:15 a.m.; Lo&lt;k 23,
Peace up 4:30 a.m.; R a c 1 n e
Lo&lt;ka. ~een CI1J down 6:20
a.m.; WUllam H. Zimmer down

5:55 a.m.; Foremost up 6:30 a.
m.; Peggy Downey up 6:45 a.m.;
Greei'IIP Locks, James L. Ham-

Uton

8 p.m.; Allied-Ashland
down 12:30 a.m.; Etna~LouiSYUle
up 1:30 a.m.; Andrew P. Calhoun
up 2:15 a.m.; Valvoline down
6:10 a.m.; Steel Clipper down
7:20 a.m.; Meldahl Loeks, Miss
up

Luck¥ up 2:50 p.m.; Irene Cho..
tin down 3:40p.m.; Robert P, Tlbolt down 2:30 a.m.; Elaine C.
up 4:20 a.m.; J. S. Lewis down
5:15 a.m.

N. W. COMPTON, 0. D.
OPTOMETIIST
!KJIJRS 9:30 TO 12, 2 TO 5 (CLOSE ~T NOON ON
- EAST COURT ST., POMEROY

lng.

The meetlJW ~~ ~· ~~·~~nil

'I'tlallin! has' aooullthlng'br uw

same problem the capital
Bangkok Is wealth,y but the

countrysJde mJght as well be
back in the 16th century. But
American aid and American
urging that this situation breeds
cmununism is producing pro-grams designed to Improve
rural Ute.
GNP Jumps
Pald.stan's gross 01tloml product jumped 63 per cent but the
country's per culta income is
still among the lowest in the
world and there are startling
contrasts between wealth ard
abysmal poverty with Uliteracy
ancl disease still nmpant.
But there are some hopeful
signs. Four years ago ln the
Punjab, the northern '"granary
or India," Rani It Singh was

growing only enough wheat on
his ten acre rarm to earn the
equivalent of$466ayear. Today
by

uolng high yielding seed,

fertilizer and pesticides, he is
earning $1,733 on the singlecrop. In Mlharashtra State,
not rar from Bombay. farmers
who were proclucing only l,OQP
pourds of rice per acre llJ'.9

wealth

grow.
Fa.U.

. E
Hos ts Dts. t net
vent

llober Medical Center, }'lrllt Mornn. Donald E. Nott. Mrs.
Ave. Vlattlng houri 2-4 and 7.8 Walter J. Paulina, Jr., J. Mix
p.m. Parenti; onJ,J em Pedlatrtca, Poor, Mn. Gen• PUckett, Mra.
waro.
Evei.Yn Wall. PaiQI William...,
Thomas E. Wilson, Gregory L.
Admi11lon1
Publication or admlsolono It V.n Meter, ~rnond Lane, Mrl.
1111pended unUI further notlce. Charles F. Powell and inrant
Births
1011. Mrs. Soon,y Weaver and inMro. Gerald VI. !lmi&gt;SCMI, !Ia· rant daughter, Thomas J. Banks,
cine, daughter, 1:f2 a.m. Satur- Mra. Wald L. Diddle. Edward
da.y; Mrs. Roy K. Keefer, . Pt. M. Ferguson, Mrs. NonaJ.Feye,
Pleasant, aon, 11:41 Lm. Satur· Brian R. Grlndstaft, Mrs. Glenn
dayj Mrs. James McKnight, New A. Icenhower and infant 1011, Mra.
Haven, daughter, 12:21 p.m. Sat. K..,..th R. King. Fred D. Kirby.
urd.ay; Mrs. Dl\'ld Hively, Sflh Mra. Joe E. Melvin, Mrs. Floyd
VIne st.. aon, 3:11 a.m. &amp;ul· c. Muncy and infant son, Mrs.
day.
Carl H. Murl'Q', Jr •• Mrs. CecU
P,
Oliver, Mrs. Evelyn P. Oli ..
Discharges
Mrs. VIrgil F. Adkins, Mro. ver, Mrs. Jamea G. Slaver and
Carlos J. Baldwin, stanley R. intant son, Mrs. Mary 9drley,
Evans. Tlrnotby E. File, s.m. ·M r•. Kenneth L. Stanley, Charuel Gibson, Michael S. Jackson, lea E. S!Dkea. Roy L. 8tuni&gt;o,
Samuel J. J\Dllper. Mrl. Milbel Mra. Denver S.. Tucker, Mrs.
E. Jarrell, Earl W. Knick, Char- Cena Par11011s.
les R. McNickle, Mrs. Rebecca

Representative• r r o m six
churches attended the~ aesalon ot the flocking 9J.b - diatrtet
Missionary Convention or the
Providence District at the Naomi Baptist Church, Pomeroy.

I

I
!

Glory Road" was the theme ot
11:30 a.m. devotions by Mr.
()ualle. He gave scripture from
Matthew 7, 13-14, and there wa•
music tor the Mrvlce with Mrs.
Campl)ell Harper at the plano.
Mrs. ADen Hampton. Mrs. Bobby Payne, Mra. Charles Soott,
and Mrs. Famle West were ln
charge of a dlmer served at
noon in the church dining room.
The afternoon session waa conducted by Mrs. Harper, conven.-

\

I

I

muot get throogh the Benata,
was expected to get a favorable

vote in the House. However,
Democrats were expec!ted . to
oppose the resolution because It
called for long - range reporta
and not lnnnedlate aolutlono.
The resolution was one of two
items up tor third rea.cHng 1D
the HDuN toda,y. 1be second
item was a bill covering dlapo..
altlon or abandoned and unclaimed motor vehicles.
Both houses or the leglolature
were to reconvene at 8 p.m. ·'to
open

the oeventh -

or the

108th.

KEY LEADERS 1D addition
· to P n ahtO'n-t De 6auDe ·
1ebeduled. for calli ,-from

Prealdent Nixon are, lop to
bottom, Brltlsb Prime Minister Harold WUsoD, West
G e r m a n Chancellor Kart
Kfesinger aDd Pope Paul

VI. Tbe Preoldent wUI re·
tun to Rome from Paris
lor tbe meeting wllh lbe
Pope, bla IIDal olop before
ftytnJ baek to WaabiDJion.

out.

traditionalism.
also is desperately
needed is a curb on the
eJq»loding birthrate.
India has already begun a
birth cootrol program but is not
yet moving nearly Cast ei'IOUgh.
What

way: "The pol.ltlcliDS had sb:
lucrative years of it. Now it's
our turn and we don"t really
mi..S this war going on. It's
good for business."'
What Is Needed
The consensus among the
experts i&amp; that what is needed
in the underdeveloped world

Following tho oesllon. lbe
Senate Judiciary Conunlttae
plamed hearlnp on bUll per.
mlttlng wlrela[lplnll and abol·
lahment or tho death penal~.
Latar In the week, hearlnp

bill&amp;, resolutions and j 'nt

LeJlslators ltill awaited Go¥.
James A. Rhodes' legislative
proposals, including tdaher education and cabinet reorpniu.
tlon.
11n~ propou.la were sU.Il be~
tng clralted Into bUis.

'\

SERVICE PLANNED

I
I:
!

.

'

'i

I

I

SPRING
STYLES
AND COLORs
ARRIVING DAILY.
THE

~~~.W'~e,=

lr--JIOIRIGIEie
Permanent Press Heavy Duty

Brinker.

''Even the young are beJ!)nnlng to patronize seafood

liouse1. A young fellow brings

bls girl and usually orders
an expensive lobster for her.
Why? Well. I lhlnk it Ia because lobater still carries
the

connotation of 'sinful,' "

AUTOMATIC DRYER

Spring Activities Planned
By Sew-Rite Sewing Club

The dryer designed
for PERMANENT
PRES$
... and all other
fabrics .tool

A couple'1 party and a rum- sale was announced tor May 2
map Ale were among the s.Prlnl and 3, and members were askactlvltlea plamed wllon the Sew· ad to start plherlng up sale

Uon.
Persons with rummage to contribue are asked to notify one of
the members o! the auxiliary.

Take a

LOOK
at

M•tchlng INIOIRGIEI

yovr

VH·.......,.

'-~-~ ·

~

AUTOMAtiC WASHER

March or Dimeo a- 111 e II"OOC&gt;
"IOted to urve the Southeastern
latl
·-•lord ••
011 Ohio
Here
~on March 16.
In Fob
Famoo• - • • born
r..
111' Was the p~ theme uaed
b)', Mra. Gaklya Morpn, loctur-

Tho VHQ Symbol on each
Norp Aulomalic· Washer Ia
If tG•es are o ~" in the·

.

your usurancll ot 'utmaat . ~ .

IOJII

FIDIIAL
AIID
retutn iS prepgrtd, dout:tt•
STATI

)

'

"

neck to you. !.1 llOCK do
the job. In no titr.• · yout

QUALITY, DI,IRABILITY ·

checlc•li ond guaron•••cl
for ctecurocy. Try enjoylnt

,.
Waahor ·ancl D~r ·
ava\lobl.o iri Avoc8do.
C0pp.rtone, Whllt

PERFOii.ANCE

to... •• for o ehongt.

Well, Mr1. Wwant Boyer, Mrl.
~d

11111¥, Mra. t.arey Web-

J'UIII, Mra. Elza ®more. Jr.,
Mro. Chlrlea Jlolfman;
__ , lilrrf. Flo
Strlddand, lilra. --d Browntna, and Mro. Geo...- IIGftman.

Heath Youth at
~ :""W:~~~;~:;~ lns.titute Event

·. ·

304. POMEROY,
EAST OtljO'
MAIN ,
,

14ootlay lltru ·Soi ·~

-

--NciA.l;tnt

9'

~

..

Following the saturo.y afternoon rehearsal, Mrs. Burt had a
valentine party ror members o1
the choir. Cookies, cLPcakes,

Kool·Aid and valentine candy
were nr\'ed. There was an ex..
charwe of valentines from a decorated box.

Edmund Lillys •
clUes as Boston, New York,
New Orleans and San Fran·
~~o. fresh rish was rare in
thOse days. Now, however,
things are different. Express freight and air trans.
port make it possible to
transport fragile fish and
seafood satisfactory. Even
the luxury items such as lobsters, crab, oyster, shrimp
and bay scallops appear in

l'L........
. ~-,..,....,·~~

~'

1,

'·

.,

K.

~ ~ 4)'; ' ' tera.

'

' .

out AIS

In AU -

" Then there are the connoisseurs. men and women
familiar with the good things
in lire who regard fresh rish
and seafood as part of that

...11111'1 0..11n
2l6 I. 2nJ. ,....,.,
IIWI

tO Mill t.

picture," Lillys concludes.

3 ROOMS

New Furniture
ONlY $'299

ct.

$30.00 ..........

MASON

FUINITUIE CO•.
MASOII. W. VA.

better seafood restaurants in
inland cities _
"Tojay's patrons of the
better seafood restaurants
differ from those of 35

MONDAY

Discussed

• FRIENDLY CmCLE, Trinity
United Church of Christ, MonA special oftering for t h e day, 8p.m.; Mra. Phil Globokar,
Southside Settlement House In program leader.
CoJwnbu1 was taken during a
mieUng ot the Women's Society of Chrlstlan Service 'nllrs..
day night at the Pomeroy Unit.
ed Methodist Clmrch.
Mrs. Robert Warner presid·
ed. at the meeting wbich featured a program by Mrs. Clara
1bomas on the tcplc "Herita~
and lnnc:wation tn. Warahtp.·~ New
ways or worship ln modem
churches were discussed by the
program leader.
Plan• were made for a silent
auction to be held at the March
meeting. It was reported that Wrlnll tile paot month 30 otck calla
have been made by members.
An bwitatt.on trom the Trln-

IQI United Church or Chrlat wao
read Inviting members to attend
the Lenten breakfast on Alb Wednesday.
A romd-I'Obin card was sign-

MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710.

Eight and Forty. 7:30 Monday
night, home of Mrs. Eileen
Searls, Middleport; members to
bring newspaper clippings.

JOF CLASS. Pumeroy United Methodist Church, 7:30 p.m.

o ... ~ tQ t ho
!Q "'h '" 5 min
ul•t ' Un d oom
$1Q•n•ng, no
•o&amp;&lt;lil"'iJ . Auo•l

Monday ~ at the church.

otd coloa

p••-

6 FOOT WOODEN
STEPLADDER

CHESI'ER P. T.A•• 8 p.m. Monat the school; Founders
Bay program led by MFs. itobtrt Woods; Avan Romine, P.T.A,
district otriclal at Athens, the
guest speaker. Child care servday,

Soft. tlurdy. KOnomlcal . Allolumlnuot~
(:Otlltruc:IIQn ... lth winy I tol .. trlld lho..
riwll..:j to I••'· Onot-poKe ••ltuded
olo.o min"m pa il hold••
wpporll up to 50 lb1
hrl..:t lor houtlthold
•

1.77

6 33

ice prOYided; refreshments.
TIIEODORUS Councll 17, 7 :·

6 FOOT ALUMINUM
STEPLADDER

SALE
PRICE

lt.re' • a llgt.tw•lifhl, ~turdy lodde•
euellent lor houtehold use. Fullr rod ·
ded . Stejll ore morlited inl&lt;) side roil
Equippe-d with o sturdy
thelf lod. Good quoliry
lor ill p•i&lt;:•!
•

1149

u~e -

30 Monday. IOOF hall; Mem&gt;ers
to brl.ng a valentine, eooldea or

..-Idles.
TUE!ilAY

-. -----

Auxiliary, Veterans Memorial Hospital, 7:30 p.
m. Tuesday, hospital cafeteria;
tUm on the heart to be shown;
refreshments served.
WOMEN'S

.

: .-.: --c:.~.__
~

ed ·for Mrs. Marie Custer, a p&amp;"SALISBURY P.T.A,,7:30Tuestient at the Veterans Memorial
do&gt;'
nil!ht. program IQ' Mr a. HoHospital. There was a moment
mer
Hclter; Girl Scout Troop
ol silent prayer tn tribute to Mrs.
Verlle Gordon. The 23rd Psalm 100. opening eeremOll)', fourth
was repeated in unl111011 and the grade parents to serve refreshmeeting closed with prayer b)' menta.
BIG
BEND
Neighborhood
Mis1 LAicretia Genhelmer.
Meeting,
Girl
Soout
CouncU. 9:·
Refresbments were served by
Mrs. Norma Parker and Mrs. 30 a.m. Columbus and Southern
&lt;lido Eloc:trlc Co.
Jed Webatar. Sr.
GROUP II, WOMEN'S All().
cl.atl.on, 7:30 p.m., home of Mrs.

--

--

aEAOV . TO - FINISH

READY -TO - FINISH

BOSTON ROCKER
Mode ol hordwood ...tth an Eorly
American OC(•nl lot r+.or llnlthlng
louch ro any room in ~our horne. 391/2" high 21" de•p - 11" '"'ld• - Seal
lilt 21:. 18"

22.99

10 DRAWER
DRESSER

5 DRAWER
DRESSER

Mod• of I( nottv Pine In Earl, American
O«.ent. Solid lop ond tldea . D•ep tid•·
gu ided dtowero with metal knobt. 4 :1"

Mode oll(notty Pon• il'l E11rly Ameriean
d"l•gn _Ouolily contlructed. Fin• deiCIII
Wood knobt . 28" • 15"
• 40"

• 15"•3""

33.50

REG
42 .'&gt;0

26.98

Betsy Horky; devotions, M r a.
Dwight Wallace; book study, Mrs.
-LOWery.
9JUTHERN ATHLETIC Booltlri, Tveads.Y, 7:30. high school
111. Raclnei f1nal plana for aporll
ulnquet to be made.

WEDNEIDAY

- - - - •Polly's Problem, _ _ _ __

WEEKEND REVlV AL, Lang..
'rille Church beglmlng Wednea_., Feb. 19, contlmlng thrauah
Feb. 28; service• nightly at 7:ao, with Ev&amp;nllOllst Lawrence

DEAR POLLY-1 would like llJ hoar about some of
lhe readers' arm-saving Irick~ as I have llmilecl use
of my arms due to a whiplash Injury. I am unable to
reach over my head. All work must be done at eye
level. Does anrone have sugDstlons for a table lhat
can be used a eye level? Tho weight of my armJ Is
too much for my neck. I do typing as therapy, silting
in a chair wilh arms high enough to support my arms
and it works fine. I am unable to look ac.wn so I have
trouble keeping the typing hll!h enough to~ . I would
I1ki! lo hear from other whiplash viclims.-MRS.
c. R. v.
ii........................"'&amp;illW~lAf if I S ll~li
'h
DEAR POLLY-To keep sultc;aseo clean, and !rom col·
lectln'g nicks and du•l while stored. I pul them in 32-gallon
plasl\C. garbage can Uner
bags. They are I a r g e
enough to hold the biggest

DESK CHAIR
BOOKCASE

Cooler, Jr. the speaker; speelal
..nafnl. Everyone welcome.
MIDDLEPORT Literary Club,
tfbme ~ Mrs. JIDlel E u I e r.
W-lda.Y. Feb. 19, at 2 p.m.;

Mode ol Knotty Pine . Colonial. Quality
t.Onllrudtd. Fh• detotl. A handsome
boc:tlicase lo ~ great in den, livi"'iJ

·-., ...,_ ,. . 18 88
• 10-1/2" .36".

lilra. Golen Brown to ...,.,.,.
-rile Seareb for 1 UJabl.e Past.'"

REG
2150

•

Mode ol Cleo• Pine Ou11!it, buill wi~
&amp;tralghl, tmoolt\ deaign . Stood&amp; e~ enly ,
R•ady to &amp;lOin, on liqu• oo p11int IS" •
14"" 28·1(2" .

6.66

REG
79S

ol !(noll~ Ptne.
I tap oi'ICII
1id... Deep liide-guidecl draWMS wllh
wood k;oobli. Early ""'•rlc.on ._lgn.
34" , I 7" • 29-1 /2" .

REG
24.9j

20.88·

tLAS!I 12, Heath Uolled odllt Clur&lt;h, 8 p.m. Wednelda.Y;
..... C. F. Hlbbo,clovollonalload·

11\1 . Mra.

Earl l!nlalt. pr&lt;181"1Dl
thalrman; Mr~ ~· Criswell,

Mi-IJ' Job~! !lolchlca. Mrs. c. o.
Fllhet, and Mro. C. M. HoD-

one will - liold

two smal1er cases. Saves
having to clean luggage
every time you use it.DEIEDRE

llliU• tiOiieiR&amp;.

t . '·
f.

St\Cl!Eb IIEAitT Parlll\, l'om·
- Ro . ' IIIII Slatlono or the
ci:~
'I p.m. At11 WM-

..::..

""I!IN-·

.

-

SAlMONS

..

ANTIQUE .

.sYRACUSE 1111RD W. . .
Club, 10
wid.
~ at U!o bomo or lilra. Jrtrle

fJOmomaker•

._m.

Mode ol

lnoH~ Pine In Colontol d ..
1ign. Ouahty t.ontlrvcted . Will gl~•
~ nrwke ol hurd ob11s• .lrom chU·
drion. loh or room to lfare toysl •2

Parktai .aullleet. ''KIIirir Yo Ia r
CCIIiJQi G!wornn.K;'' there 'IIIII

.

· 1(2"~

bt a lpelker. l'&gt;lluck dln!lot at
liGon; · moffibera to lll'lnl taliio
~~~;-roll eall ~ Uheait., H

18 . 9~

:I
I

'

'

25J8

Contain• I pint of bo•• (oat lolat, •
('IOJtiUI ol llnllh cool ontl'iuing gklre,
~ndi)OI)er, d.,.••e&lt;.latt! ond 11 detol'-d
l.,.lrudlon 1heet . Alnlll:lu• right O¥er
old or ne"' liurhxel . Ch_. frQII'I o
... Ide Mlot&lt;:tlol'l f! dikoroto. 'oliwa. ·

REG.

c:.

•" . . .

3.9!1

rht Depdn.tJI Score of Bvildial siilcJ'bls

.

..... , ' .
''

't..

POMEROY CEMENT:.Oca (02.

. '." !;hildten ma':r be .a calli•
tort in ~ne:1 ol &amp;&amp;e•.but !~!At
· ,...,ii't Dec:essarify apply 'to
lhe yoult1'uno next door.

.

19"ot 16'' ,
REG.

•¥.-..,!'.

.,

plains .

C.W..IIIt ,.,••

"Their I o v e of fish has
cultural backgrounds and
they form a large sector of
our patrons. Many of them
order fresh·water fish . In
fact, at our wholesale markets in New York, fresh· or

SAME DAY
SERVICE

In Worship

Waahtnaton. Mra: FreRcea GoerS..en 7!&gt;Ulh or U!o Hath Unitlain, lhe life ol WD1lam Honrr ad · llethodiot Cbir&lt;h w 0 r 0 1n
DEAR POLLY-I am an·
Harrlaoo; lilr,l. ·- t d , the liCe 1 l"oi1iinoull! ~ Ill the TrlnRrlng Mro' K. E . S. wllo
has a card table with a
of Henry W'\4•-th Loowfallow; . IV, Vnllad Mefl!!ldla\ Clolrcll
warped lop . .
·removed
Wlllllm Gr.. oer • \he U!'e Qf .. ~ a inld...wj,r lni!l,ltute.
our
olcl
lop, ~!itt on
new on made or y, ·lneh plywood
J..,.l Ruo.-u IAMoU;IJIIIIilrt. , · ~ .ofU!o i.e.:Yieowai 1'ctllhat can. Jle 'Ill IDY finish. We 1p&amp;lnled a. checkerboaid In
Ro(lert RcMiah. IDII . ~·· Helen obriljon,'t, II •feabored If a1iH1r
red A!ld ~k. b~ks Jn \he cen'"~·Gut a biJICk slrlp around
edge~ or tile ·table and ·at ye lpw band between lhe
fhe
, """""'' lhl ·llle Of Ab~.f ...... ;"'Gl9lill·"IUI'I
.. cheekerbliird ,aud the black'ol\j'lp. AJ!\'r thio was dry, we
IJptaln. ~
· ; -~~·
··· Tbl vu ~~ ~···In
i.rl and 'ted!MI1
applled i~i) coa~~of'vamlsH N'4 have a very useful and
. Amos
.f'MU· '
"!.., oiY.. 1'bt ·IOtAII :nN at ' ·'
altr~liyo ,c,aNI laule.-MRS. '{
)qe .Iliac
ld!'~. ~ Goqjtl~ 1 11i1 l!f' Mr. 'aDd Ma
»relinted. "¥Y11W Wfd,s qr Ab;', YtJ., ·'i 1
_)
DEAR PQLLY-We had the '&lt;oame situalloo as Mra.
·' rahllll Llnc:OJL!' ' Mr.~
A........ ~~·~t..t:,.,. UloldlL .. l'· E. s . wllh an old c:,atd tabl• !In fact we had two). We
·~!il"'l-1)11!- lilm...,.. ' "-~.'!"" .,..~"'11'"-".,.... • .were havh.l&amp; a j&gt;)g 'falf\!IY ~1!'11"1: and ,needed more !able
} jiJriil
on aw.i•te or T11a1111
· ~. ~.~·~~ ........ ·~.,space ao hid two'$-~!!&lt;~ 11111119 pieces of v, -Inch plyw'""'
,- ~
ljli1oi!tii~:
tho ' ........~, -: """ _.., ..., ~
cut frOm a good gr~: •My II ' bUd 'tilled wood screwa Ill
~.iltil ~ b)'!Mhllrne ·, lflr1 ~.,.. Ill. . ~
altach one of lhele to each tab and we bad two nk:e lablea
~r&amp;;,_,;~. ,;· ·· . "!·Karorl · ~ 1D11 ~; w.._
·ollh larger tops lhu .reJular cjll"ll tableo.-.MRS. H. K. T .

J::;:1::

another increase factor.

FINISHING

sweet-water fish from lakes
and rivers constitutes about
half or the sales," he ex-

Innovations

ly POLLY CRAMER

we a

America'• Largell T-.x; Service with Over' 3000 . OHi_~l :

"Except for such coastal

Needs Eye.Level Table

1uitcase, or

The Jewish population is

ate f1sh be c a u s e It was
cheap. In general, fish was

POLL'rS POINTERS
Whiplash Victim

pared by Mrs. Don Mullen.

in our affluent society, the
price of fish does not seem
to trouble them too much,''
he observes.

Catltolics who came on Fr ·
days and days of abstinence,
and men who went fisbing
regularly and enjoyed eatlng
fish, ,Piua a few others who

Junior Choir Serves
At Morning Worship

Mrs. Mae Cleland, president,
introduced Mrs. Ethel Benz or
Beeline Fashions, a guest. AtRlte.sowlng Club met recent!Jo ltaml.
It
waa
amounced
during
the
tending the meetins were Mrs.
at tbe club hOuse with Mra. Dm
meeting c:onducted by Mrs. Bill Mae Cleland, Mn. Jean CleMeKnlght ao the bo-•·
Tbe couple'l party waa teo· MdlUilel. preatdont, that the land, Mrs. Virginia Nease. Mrs.
tatlvely oehemled ror April 20 IIIORO)'.maklng pro.loct ror March Gene Lyons, Mrs. Mildred Roush,
at ttle Amorlean Lellion hell. II will be a mother'• calendar which Mrs. Mary Slouter and Mrs. Anwill he a potluck event with 1111· the members make 1mall contrl- nie Nease.
~s as ,cuest1. Tile rummaee butlma for uncompleted dally
Iaska. The calandara will be pra-

A valentine box was sent to a
aervtceman In Vlelbam, It wao
notad, 111111 a white el..._ sale
""' hold during the meeting. Tho
blrfllcla,y unlverlllll"1 or M r •·
MUIIOI! wu oboerved with a gift
from her oec:ret pal.
Tba proJect or re1118111hering
The )!oc:k ~rlnga Grange will children at the Melli• COunty
aene tbe canteen at the R e d
Croaa Bloodmobile vlolt on Feb. home '"' their blrtbclayo ""' dlt·
24. at the POIIlel'OIY Elemenlar)' cuated and It wa.t to land
aglftto..,.oCihoc:hllclren
!!&lt;~.;. ror oorvlqr tho centeen whole blrthda,y baa a1read)' pas..
ad.
were made durioc Tlurlda.Y
Mrt. Edward Well will be holtftl&amp;ht'• meedrw otthesruae,pre.. eaalor the March meetllla.
• - over Ill' fred Goi8)Afln,
Retreahmenta were IIOI'Vad IQ'
master, and htld at tbe heme of llrL McKnl&amp;bt to Mrl. Mullhall
Mr. ·a!lll Mrs. Amos '-rd.
A contrlblrtion was JMde to the K.... Mra. DID COlUna, M r •·

Lillys, born in Constanti·
nople of G r e e k parents,
opened his first restaurant
in New York 35 years ago.

unpopular. a "duly' to Calh·
olics and generally avoided.''

A rlllllmage sale was planned
In March when the Ladies AUJ,Iliary or the Racine Fire Department met recently at the fire sta-

one of the less crowded.
Al1o , more and more people
are listening to heart
specialists who advise more
fish and less meat in Ule
diet. Fish is relatively low
in saturated fats, said to be
a cause of high cholesterol
in the b I o o d, and high in
polyunsaturated fats .
"Most fish are low in cal·
ories, too. That brings in
many weight watchers. And

sters. Most epicures agree
with him.

"Other young people come
because tbey have traveled
ln Eurot&gt;t where fresh fish
is part of the culture and is

Is Announced

"Friday is no ionger the
biggest day. In fact, it is

none equals our Matne lob-

"In those days, patrons of
seafood houses were malnlr.

.....

years ago.

beautifully treated. There
they first learned how de·
licious It can be."
A recognized expert on h.iJ
subject, be believes Chesa·
peake crab is the sweetest
and most flavorful. Familiar
with lobsters from all parts
of the world, he ia positive

ellplainl Edmund Llllys,
aulhority on I o o d s of the
oceaus and rivers, and owner
of New York's Gloucester
House on E. 50th St. The
most elegant aud highest
priced seafood restaurant In
lbe Unllecl States.

Plans to Serve

New automatic

oe,..

Jlooi•.

Knighting.

Grange Makes

Mrs. (;assaiL

A•hlnt, Ollie ..1701

benecllc:tlon.

F'reoh fish and oeafood are
acquiring a new personality.
To many they now have snob
ar.peal, 'In part because of
h gher prices per llem .

Bloodmobile

ban:t.s joining their wives tor the
prty were Don StJvers, Bernard
Fultz. Steve Houchins, the Rev.
Max Donahue, Galen Brown, Bob
Dyer and TOm CisselL
'
Mr·s. DoMld Stivers pve the
devotions and refieshm.erlts carrying out the valentine theme
were served by :Mra. Ollrles
Byer, Yre. Brown. Mrs. Dona-

VERI sMITH A~DIQ.VISUALS, INC.

oeaolon wiU be held on May 25
at the ForestRunBaptlet:Cbureh,
Pomeroy, Mr, Qualla pve t h e

ly GAYNOR MADDOX
N - r Eo~rprite Asso.

Rummage Sale

IARY JUNE'S
.AUTY SHOP

and Mrs. Robert Hamm. 11-.

The orno:ring hearirig aid that filters out loud,
painful, sudderi noise ...
Sudden blasts Of noise can be uncomfortable. Especially if 1our heati"Q aid doesn 't
shut them out quii~kl~ .
The new Zenith ModerotOf' eliminate$ thi 1
P,Oinful diKomfort. And it give$ you thi1 prot.,ction oufomdlitolly.
.
As~ us for o frM ~emon1tration . We thin .. ~
we c:on ta¥e· you di~omfo,rt .

Porn.....,,...,,,=

i

parcy with huabands of member•
a1 guests. Other pests were Mr.
and Mrs. James Pape and. Mr.

hearing aid
Zenith Moderator

charge ot the music ror the aftentom progr.un. It Included
"Yield Not to Temptation'" by
the JWilor choir or the Firat
Baptlot Church. ReodvUle. and
a piano aolo, uereat Is T h y
Faitbtulneaa"' by Kenny Roberti
~ the RendvJlle Church.
It was arn::uu:ed that the next

•

Frsh. and Seafood Gain tn Snob Appeal

Shrine Club Planning Dance

down trlbaliam, corr\4)tion and

and

Prov-

~· n• AMEatCANs

Special musk for the Pomeroy Trinity United Church of
Christ SwKfay morning worship
service was presented by the
junior choir under the direction
of Mrs. Marvin Burt.
Attired in white robes w 1 t h
green satin ties, the youths sang
the anthem, the introit, a..S the
being woo by Mrs. George Mow- son, Mrs. Marvin Burt, M r 11. "Amen" following the morning
rey, Mra. Denver "-Jple, Mn. Pauline Hart. Mrs. Julia Boyles prayer. Mrs. Ben NeutzUqg accompanied at the organ. The
EURene Murray, Mrs. Roy Reu- and Mrs. CllUord Jacobs.
youngsters
during the past year
ter and Mrs. Richard Russell
in regular weekly rehearsals
have been trained by Mrs. Burt
to sing 1D parts.
Singing at the service were
Plans for the annual dance were
A St. Patrick"• Day dance has
Betty Lou Roseberry, Faith Ann
been planned torSaturd~.March made during a meetlrw Thursday Perrin, Maralynn Tracy, C&amp;ra15, at tho Melp JWilor High night which was preceded by a
lynn Tracy, Melanie Burt. Mary
Sehool auditorium by the '!Win potluck dinner for the NCibles
Heleb Blaettnar, Jim and Doug
and their wives. Thegrol.(ldanced
City Sllrlne Club.
Rosenbaum, David Harris, Mike
and played games following the
Oiler, Mickey Oiler, Kenny
The dance wtll be held from meeting.
Harris, Gary Boggess, M a r k
9 p. m. to 1 a. m. ard music will
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Mitch, C a .i- o I Barnltz, Shari
be provided by the Five Sl.lnta Harry S. Moore, Mr. and Mrs.
Mitch, Becky Thoma&amp;, L t a a
Orchestra. Tickets are avatlable Charlea Wagner, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas and Cathy Blaettnar.
at the Farmers Bank and 8avlnga Gil)' Guinther. Mr. and M r s. DaDQ)' Will, also a member or
o. 0 ' ~M
uew, J'(ff&lt;'"
v.-~r
Walter Grueser, Mr. am Mrs.
"~
••
...
the 1 J~lpir,, WBS_ ~~~ ~ S,lr~. at
, oose,
urtnl&lt; ·
~
p••. .,.:14s. I;l&amp;y, the
service.
er'a Jewelry and Watch Repair Heacon, Mr. and Mrs. Kermit
ltll1 Wli!ier Hardware In Raelne. Waltono Mr. IIIII Mrs. Don Miller,
The)' can also be secured from~. and Mrs. Don Jolmson, Mr.
Walter Grue•r, Guy Guinther, and Mrs. Thereoo Jctlnson, Mr.
Dcm Spires, Kermit Walton. Don aM Mr1. Gerald PoweU, Mrs.
Jolmaon, Don MUter and Jesse Phil Baldwtn and Mrs. Charles

Model DEJ.I525
(Eioctrlc)

toda,y is revolution. not military
revolution but a geruine social~
glcal revolution !hot will break

~the

Idence Diatrlct, Mra. Bernice

Others attending were Mrs.
Mrs. Robert Couch wa1 honored
with a liJ'ette show- carl Blllkam, Mrs. Norbert
er at the home or Mrs. B e n Neutzllng, Mrs. Terr1 Pballn,
Mrs. David Cummings, Mrs. LesNeutzllng.
Co-hostesses tor the shower lie Price. Mrs. Kenneth Braun,
were Mn. J, M. Thornton, Mrs. Mrs. Allen Eichinger. Mrs. Ray
Kenneth Harris, Mrs. Jack · Glaze, Mrs. John Ketchka, Mra.
Carsey, Mrs. Harry Davis, Mrs. Danny Zirkle, Mrs. Harold El&gt;Doo HunneU and Mrs. Ellen eubech, Mrs. Roger Cullums,
Mrs. Sharon Manley, Mrs. Al~ouch.
The wlentlne theme was car- bert Smith, Mlsa Sybil Ebersried out in the table decorattone bcah and Miss Jaldce Couch.
Also presenting S,lfts to M r s.
which featured red roses Banked
by red tapers. Ribbon sam.. Couch were Mrs. James Hawley,
Wiches, punch and red rosebud Mrs. Ann Roush, Mrs. Harold
Triplett, Mrs. James Diehl, Mrs.
mints were served.
Games were played llrithprlzes Joe Gloeckner, Mrs. Harry Watr-

reso-

eroy, Lenten aervic:es have been
scheduled for 7 p. m. S.turday
evenlrw at the church.

Women's Auxillaey

Fr~ a1ght

lutions.

A service of Rosery and staUona of the Cross will be held
at 7 p, m. Ash Wednelday ror
the sacred Heart Parish, Pom-

Lnta, president or the

Doro~~&lt;y

Shower Given Mrs. Couch

On Review of Welfare
COWMBUS (UP0 One
week after 500 per~C~ts sought
immediate welfare relief rrom
the &amp;tate, the Ohio House was
to vote on a measure ordering
a review ot welfare needs and
pol Ides In the alate.
The joint resolution. which

tlon preaident, aullt.ed b.Y Mra.
Jesse Roberti, vice prellident.
There were remarks by M r s.

The ali-&lt;IQ' meeUng _,..t
Boo'deo,
atate ·
·and
"'
with Sunday school at 9:30 a. the
chUdren'a
band,
Mra.
m. under the direction ot Oscar MarJorie Payne. all or BI-ll.
Qualls. auperlntendeut. ' 'T h e
Mrs. Ervin IOJmgardner had

House Moves to Vote

Victim
Outraged at the corruption of
the politicians y~ army
officers
in ITWIS African
countries have risen ~ to
overthrow them ir. bloocly
military c(M(ts. But they in turn
lla.ve ranen vlctlm to the ver)'
corr~tlon they sought to stamp
United Press International
correspol¥1ent John Platter, on
a Yi.ait to the Nigerian war front
last year, watched a senior
army officer nonchalantly pull a
thick wad or banknotes l'rom his
pocket and . then ask "Now
where did these cmte fr&lt;J111?"
Noting Platter's incredulous
stare the officer justified it this

Mondo&gt;, February 11, 1969

Naomi Baptist Church

College Theatre Will Present
Third Major Play of Season
The

The Dolly Seotlnol, Porneroy-Mldcll_.t. 0.,

'

'.

1

�I -

Till Dally Seadnol, Pcmeroy-Mlddl_.t. 0., Mondlo)o, f'ebrulry 17, 190

liME's

A-WASTIN~!

A LITILE 'HOMEWORK' Watching Want Ads Brings Top Grade Results
WANT AO
DEADLINE~
~ p , ltl . O.y lof•• PutiU~otion

Mo...._., D.oclt;,.. 9 0 . 111.

Co-oiiGl ionl

Will

t.o

OF
QUALITY

&amp; C111roctio"1

occoptGd ,."'11 9 • ·"' · foo

Day of

P~o~blicotion

REGULATIONS
Tt.. P_.llth.r ••••"'" th. ri8hl
to edit or rot.C' any ach d••-d objMIIo,...l. The pul:dithilr will not
1111 ratpom~U,Io 100' _.. than ona
IMorroct inaortion .

RATES
For Wal'll ..II S.rviu
5 earott pel' W.,d .,.. ln.. rtion
..lftiMUIII Cloer•• 7Sc

12 contl IIHI' word throe conaocu tlvo ln••tlont .
II
per Word ,;, contocw1•v•

c•"''
.............

25 ,_, unt Oitcount on p01d odt
oM oclt pold within 10 do)'t CARD OF THA"KS &amp; OBITUARY
11 .50 fOI' 50 wor,j .,.;nimum. Eo .
.. clltlonal wOI'd 2c .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS

INFORMATION

1962 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE ......................... $599

Yes, We Hove Thetn

HOME LITE

DIRECT DRIV.E
CHAIN SAWS
Monr Modoh
At low u • •

POMEROY

3 Seat Wagon, VB engine, automatic trans. Power
steering and brakes, good tires, radio and heater.
~··

Mfr.
992-2181

BLIND ADS

--·.....

For Rent

For Sale

FOUR ROOl\1 furnished apart· FOR A JOB well done feeling,
Notice
ment. Phone 992-3658. 2-11-tfc
clean carpets with Blue Lus ·
SEE NEIGLER Bullding SUptre. Rent electric sham!X)Oer
ply lor bullding your horne,
FIVE
room
house,
bath,
gas
$1.
Tiny's Bargainland.
Long time loan available.
fumaC&lt;,
632
South
second
St..
2-17-31c
2-13-trc
Middk!port, Phone 992-3990.
2-lfl.flle SIX ROOM house. bath. form.
INCOME TAX Service daily exer Leonard Hess, sr .. propercept SUnday 9 to 5. Evenings
by appointment. Mrs. Steven LOT TN Middleport, !deal for
ty. II Oak St., P&lt;Kneroy.
'Warxla' Eblin, Rt. 2, Pome-· partlnrl trailer. Phone 9112Pllone 992-3394.
f.1fl.fltc
39911.
2-1&amp;«&lt;
roy. Laurel Cit!! Road.
GOOD HAY AND STRAW. SOc
1-~·
bale, Paul Karr, Chesler,
WILL DO S&lt;wtng at horne Ohlo.
2-13-61c
For Sale
rippers.
pockets, pegging.
POODLE PUPPIES, AKC Toy
hemmJng. alterations, ete.
MAPLE STEREO. radio conminiature. $75 and up. Stud
Mrs. Freddie Thabet, Mason,
sole combination, 1968 model
servlee
and
gro1lmlng.
Phooe
Phone 773 -!1~1.
4-"'-tfr
stereo AM &amp; FM radio com992·5443.
II 3 tic
bination, 4 speed automatic
VACANCY lor two elderly peo.
changer. Balance due t92.60
pte. Prefer private paid pa- NEED LIMESTONE for your
or payments of $6.25 per
driveway? We furnish and
liea!JI. Phone Mason, '1'13-518$.
month. Call 992-3218. 2-14-:Itc
deliver. Emmett W. Shuler.
IIJ.8-t!c
Contracllng, Pboue ilQMW.
STEREO. walnut console with
12-22-tfe
TV SERVICE. Service manager.
4 speed changer. 4 speaker
HaroM Wolker. You buy from
system. Balance due $73.~ or
us we will lake ca&lt;e of II. MTATOES, Phone 843-2254
$&gt;.75 per month. Phone 1ft.
Clarence Proffitt, Portland.
Humpilrey's TV. Phone 1ft.
3218.
2-1-wte
10.111-tfc
'I'H2.
2-12-etc
MIXED hay and timothy. Ph.
LAST CHANCE
1192-6410.
2·14-elp
Help Wanted
CLOSE-OUT
PRICES
WAITRESS wanted. No ezperl1967 BARON 12 x 60 foot mo"""' ni!CeiiSllry. Nights, 3:311
bile home wttll 8 • 20 awning.
WoMen•
to IZ. Ai'PIY at Blue Tartan.
NYLON HOSI!. , . . .• a prt. 1.00
Three
bedrooms, like new,
2-ll-7tc
R•t- lk •aGLOVES •... • •...• 3 pr•- 1.00
$5.000, 810 Soutl! Fourth St,
WINTER CAPS • • ...• 4 .., 1.00
Middleport. Phone 992-2012.
MANAGER for Sarah Covet~lry
R•t· 2.99 - · HooMcl
SWEAT SHIRTS ...... 3 for 5.00
2-14-61C
Corp., would like lour ladies
lor. J*lllme W&lt;&gt;rl&lt;. Excellent

pay. and career advancement.
Phone !lft-2717.
2-111-ltc

Brrants Bud1et Shop

THREE female Cbihuahuas, 6
weeks old. Phone 742-4294 eveilings and Saturday afternoon.
Mrs. 0. F. Lyons, Rutland.

MAN to IVOii: on dairy !ann.
house Included. OrvHie Hoi·
tor. Long Bottom. Phone 9493833.
2-14-31c

Ohio.
2-1~c
SOUP'S ON the rug thai Is. so
clean the spot with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer
Auto Sales
$1. Baker Furniture Company. 1962 CIIE'VROLET Impala V-3,
2·17-lltc
LADY lor houBewurl&lt;. Cook,
•landard. white, 4 door. Good
live ln or out. Phone 991-5251.
tires, radio. Best offer over
2-14-1fc SINGER aewtng machine. in
$1100. Call Middleport 992-M23
lovely lig!It ftnlobed console.
or Athens W3-12f&gt;4. 2-13-41e
like new. Equlp)&gt;ed to zig zag
~to wort
ln motel.
2-1:1-Gic
buttonbole. darn. monogram.
f'lloDe IIIUIIII.
tic. Pay last 8 payments of
$5.11! monthly. Guaranteed. 68 LeSabre •..•.. Save
Cu•tom 4 dr. S.don. Demons fro.
Wanted To Bur
Phone 11112-2685.
2-11-Gic tlon,
Fo;u:tory Air Conditioned.

ANTIQUES, cllsbeo. fumlture,
chllla cabinets, old phonographs, clocks. misc. Lee
RucllsUI, 108 Legion Terrace.
2-11-12tp

---

A WORK HORSE or team.
Hqh Laifbeil. Pomeroy. Ph.

-·

2-1-wte

Wentecl
ANTIQUES, furniture, d - .
milcellanL"lUS. Mrs. Howard
Cedi, !011 W. Maln St., Pome...,.
I...Uc

For Sale or Trade
111115 CHEVROLET Impala twodoor hard top, m automatic,
power steering and bl'akea.
Call - 7 .
1-21-tfc

For lent
'OUR ROOM bouse with bath,
In Hartford. Cali 182-Z37G af.
tor s p.m.
2-ll-31e

UNJI'IJRNISHED lart!e five
room anartment. Arnold Br'&gt;lllen. 811 E. Maln st., Pomeroy. Phone !lft-2448.

2-7·1fc ·

FIVE ROOM apartment, close
to Pomeroy - - dlllrlct.
Pllooe 192-51110.
2-7-lfc

1964 roRD, 4 '1"""1 ftoor shHI.
newly overhauled engine,
owner In armed service.
Pllone 9112-2389.
2·11-6tp
SAVE SAVE SAVE! Save your
lawn, your time and your
back. We have a new trencher to dig your water line
ditch. Henry Bahr 9115-311811 or
ll&lt;&gt;ger Bahr 11115-39511. 2·7·30tp

'TWO FAMILY BRICK bouse,
5 rooms and bath upstairs. 5
1'001111 and bath downstaln.
HBS fUrnace. In Davis Produce
bloct. 4* Cole St., Pomeroy,
Phone !lft-2585.
2-9-121p
ONE YEAR old Collie dog, also
one English Shepilerd puppy.
N. G. Rosi, Minersville.
Phone flfU'/10.
l-11-31c
IIIII SCHULT boule trailer set
on
acre Jot bact of Hartlord. Like new. Lived In very
little. For information, write
George Fields. 1308 E. 93rd
st., Chicago m. !IOSit.
2-18-121&lt;

*

MIXED HAY, lO cents a bale .
Phone !lft-3331.
HIJ.71c

FURNISHED and unfurnished
oporlmeDII. Close to ocbool.
Pbone IIIUISI.
10.11-tfc

HABIIONY ~~~ - 3
IIIII t - · lumlobed, new
'Willi,
fUmllure, pri• • pdllil. Out of llllloodl,
J blocb ~ Pomeroy pool
alllce, • 1M from 10 o.m.
to • p.m. .:: '
2-t-llc

a....
,.,

t .............. .

124 •· MAIIII

Pt•eny He•• I Am

---·-·

SMITH 4UTO SAL!S
IC;A114UGA, OHIO

Car

·Needs-··

606 I. Mil• Po..roy, 0.

NUIIOY

Smorl bron1e finish with mok:hing lnt.rlor.

fil Pontiac ...... t2295

Cotollna Conv. Coupe. This is o
1uperb one owner new Pontiac
trod.. ln. Fully equipped .

66 Ford ......... $1195
Btonco Sta. Wotan, Popular 4
wheel drlv•. Show• good cor•·

I t trc

ATR CONDmONING Refrlger-

allon service. Jack's Refrigeration, New Haven. hone
882-2079.
• 8

*·

READY - MIX conerole delivered right to your project.
Fast and easy. Free eltlmates. Phone 992-3284, Goeg-

leln Ready - Mix Co .. Middleport, Ohio.
6 311 lie
BUDGET PRICE !urnlturo on
our third Door budget ohop.
Baker Furniture, Middleport.
Ohio.
22-ffc
SEWING MACHINES, re~
service, all makes. WY 22284. The Fabric Shop, Pon&gt;
eroy. Aulhorlzed Singer Sales
and Service. We Sbarpen
Scl1110rs.
2-29-llc

Complete Front-End
and Brake S.-vlce

BUICK
PONTIAC
GMC TRUCKS
POMEROY

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
UEO. HORST~ ~
SYRACUSE - Ooz7 6 lOODIII,
bath, furnace, 3 bedrooms.
One Door plan. Llrle lot.
Good garden. $6500.00.
MIDDLEPORT RIJIIAL - i
rooms. bath, large living
room fireplace, enclosed porch
outbuildingB. $6,000.00.
ROUTE 1!4 - 7 1'001118. bath,
basement, pol1."bes, garage.
Aoking $3,1100.00.
NEI.EN or VIRGH. TEAFORD
SYRACUSE
-1
2-14-Sic

Dick Turner

BLAETTNAR'S

*

No. IDOtl
h late ctf Lana L. en..,, D_...,.
Notice It llerab1 llYCn U..' Loa

IN POMEROY

L. t;UlOf • h - Pa&amp;t Ofnoi!CI Ad.ciHJI

.. 803 S. Tb.1l"d IUMI, MiddlllfUl,

Ul•lo b11 been duly Jppo.lDted U Ad·
u• ;ruatntrilr. wllh U.. WW M"Me!l

Eli'EIIENCED
Wlmr Stmct

uf tbe i!:;st•U of 1An1 L. Cutor, late

ol 11•1•• Coun17, Obio, deceaMCI.

Daled Ill~ :111.11 dll' of .11a. 11180.
JOMN C. lACON
An,nt

.Jud" of

Maigt

COUnt't.

ttle

:.-a.

........_

CINrt
01110

2-10; .. ., JCCI

After all,
it's the only
country
you've got.

I

CURTISS CATI'LE Breeding
Service. Pllone Parker liZ22M Pomeroy or 687-3251 Cool·
viDe call llaUon.
1-14-IO!c

SEPI'IC lanka cleaned. MUier .
Sanilalion, Stewart. Ohio,
Phone 682-U31.
1-12-tfc

Frr:l ~· ........ TruCk or
Bullcl&gt;- -....r To Tho

f

Sm&amp;lleat 1'-oter

BLAEnNARS

RADIO and TV repair, h01110
calla, and antennaJ Installed.
Jobn Harrison, Phone 992-

"The bou' cold is better today ••• he"• makina: a list
of suspects as to who micht have riven It to him!"'

Harrisonville

Insurance

LIOA.L NOTICI

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS

Colu!'llbu•, Ohio January 31, 1969
CCHitract Sol .. Leva I Cop.r Ho. 69"'5
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
s.aled propo•al• will be received
at the office of lhe State Highway
Director of Ohio, Columbu~ Ohio!
until 10:00 A.M., Ohio ll:oii,W.
Standard TIme.
Tuudoy, February 25, 1969. for
lmprovementa in;
Athen•, Gallla, Hoclt.ln~, Melt••
Monroe, Morv_an, Noble, VInton ond
Washintlon Counties, Ohio, on vor.
lou• 1Ktion1 of U. S. Routes No11.
33, 50, SD·A, State Route• No1. 1,
13, 56, 18, 12.4, 143, U41 278, 329,
356, 317, 681, 685,~ 690, o91 In Ath·
'"' County; U. :o. Route No. 35,
State Rout. . No1. 7,)41.c, 160 218,
233l 325, 553, 551', 308, t7S, 190 In
G111l Ia C111unty; U. S. Aout• No. 33,
State Routn No1. 56, 93, 180, 278,
312, 327, 328, 374, 401, .595, 66.4,
678 In Hoelt.inv County; U. S. Rollfe
No. 33, Stcrte Route• No1. 7 124·W,

124•E, 143, 248, 325, 346, 681,684,
689, 692 In Melt• County; State
Routes Nos. 7, 8 26 78 145 255,
260, 379t536, 53&gt;, 556'-!65, h4 In
Monroe ounty; State Koute• No11.
'11, 60, 76, 78, 266, 284, 329, 339,
376, 377 555, 669, 792 In ~gon
County; l.J. S. Route No. 21, State
Ro"''' Noa. 76, 71, 145, 146, 147,
215, 260, 285, 339, 340, :5131 564,
565, 566, 574, 670, 6n, and 24 In
Noble Co~o~nty; U. S. Ror.rte No. 50,
State Rout. . No•. 56, 93, 124, 160,
671 617, 683, 6891n Vinton Co..,ntyL
U. ~.Routes Nos.21, 50, 50-A., Stot
Rout•• Ho•. 7, 26 60 76, 12.4 145
260,
"'·
.~
Woshlntton
l.o1,1nty, by 618,
hed.h:ldol
~proylnt for weed and brv11h control.
1101'11 Length; 1,510.39 mil••·
"The dlllfe lei f"' ~;:ompletlon ol thla
work 1holl be 01 aet fOI'th In the
blddlnt pt'Opo11al."'
Eoch bidder 1holl be req~o~lred Hi
Ill• wllft hla bid o certified c:k.ck
for on amount eqvol to fiYe per ce~~l
of hla hid, hut In no event niOf'e
thctn , ... thouund dellor• « o bo...,
F... ,.,. per cent of hla aiel, poyab'te the DlreciOf.
Bidd•• muat apply, on the proper
forms, for quollflcatlon at l•o•l ten
dayl prior to the dote 11et fOf Ofl'n•
lng bids In oec:ordor~Ce with Chopt"
5525 Ohio ReviJ.d Code.
PlctnJ cmd JjHICiflcation• ore on
Ale In the Oopottment of Hi1lwroy1
and the Offln of th• Dlvhlon D•pu•
ty Director.
Th• Dl,.ctor r•JerY" the right to
rejec:t ony oM oil bids.

676

m, s'iO. '''·

'o\JIJ'RE " V~
ClOBBe.RER.!

STU~D

,.. SMYM!All!

INFORMATION
NEWS
presents
LOCAL REPORlS
DAILY
AT
7:50 A.M.

JU.Ifc

AUTOMOBILE insuranre bee•
eancefled? Lost your operatcr's llcen~e'!' can 992-2968.
f II tfc

"THATS WHAT
'I'OU "THINK!

WMPO

11-f.lfc

••

IJCWJ'S MY CHNJCE"! I\.L
"-IVEN&lt; UP BEHIIJD f\ER.
fWD CLOBBER H£R llllnl

Con.

PH. 992-2143

CJGARETI'E vending machlneo
and service. ABC Enterprises,
Mason. W. Va. Phone 7'13-5$43.

278, 324, 327, 328, 346, 3.. 9, 356,

BLAETTNARS

CARNIVAL

LI • .&amp;L NOTtea
OF AHOINTM.MT
Atl•lnlltretfH' W'"Will
AnMntl

leone•

Society News
Buy U.S. Savin1• Bondo
ol Freedom Sharea

Mr. ark! Mrs. Jake Lee of Ra·
cine were dinnar 'guest&amp; of her

mother, Mrs. Katie Wilson. a r&amp;cent Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Jackson
am grarklaon and Mr. and Mrs.
E. R. carr have returned from
a three weeks visit in CaHrornta.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Alkire
visited the F. 0. Whaleys in eo.
lwnbua a recent Sunday. Mr. Wha·

Otestnut Ridge
Social Events

er, Ella Douglas.

at

Veterans

Memorial Hospital recently.

Mrs. Sharon Jewell and Mrs.
tather
VirKU Atkins, at Unlvwalt.Y Hospital In Columbus. He la recoY..
Doroth)' Smith visited her

sen-,

erlq] ..pty frmn!M)or our
Mh.
Welsh took Mrt.
M1nnle Folt to Lancaster to con--

ne..

sult an eye apectallst.
Mr. and Mro. Frank

~pie

o1

'

'

\2 ttOOM

THE. ENE.MY MGtfT NOT
RECOGarifZC }v'f: J1 THIS
RIG, BUT 'nfi'E'S 110

I&lt;LID"f. lliE

a

rec~u•

SKILL

MILKMAN,

•

3 P.M.
AND
4:30 P.M.

Ori f!ARTH THAT
Oltcau!SE. '(QY I

'-MU. APPEAR \IJITHifi
llE HCUR SAHIB ...
'100 MU&lt;;il!l' -

FLEE 9-iOQTL'f
AF'TER HE
Et1~1HE

H06Pmu.!

rew

Alfred
$Jcial Notes

A-

rH1llf~~!!..:2:!:::1: '

DAILY CROSSWORD
&amp;.Crawl

-

... lOu :l'ltapnldud

river: pau.
CJoae.ua
DOWN

._..,

20.Remain•

lnl'

Bns11

s.TV

22. RomUIUI
to a.mUI

.....,..r

25. ConUD~

f. Farm
nhiele

•. Dia,........
ll. Military
oebool

1tUdent
T. Fatima'•

........

clnunl
28. J'earleu

nyer
buftl..

27. Nanni••

... C.pltol Ill
Jofofttana

8.BpooeAp
projecUit1

29.CartJnc
vehicle

..,....

(J

1I

lt.Tibetan

~W-bo

PACTS

18.-t

.,...

1. ChleOy

WORLD ALMANAC

letter to ...b oquare, to
form four ord.lnarr words.

place: 11.

bawk'l tlytll

Alldre !arml.

-

I ARBOX,.lllllll):.'l!:-.-

.........

U.lwUI
fl.

......

u.........blet'-fwrJumblet,

11. Put

......... .a... .
80. BeveN MIL
31. PtruMI
II. Uw coal
14. Part o6 •

KNOW YOU

WE~E ~E~E

FIR51;

BUT CAN BLIGS WAIT ON ME?

I'M IN A. TEI'i!lil19'LE

HURRY!

I I I

WMPE

I (J

(J

lrU.mll-

-

SS. Wltb
noUUq

THIS MleHT

to""

Be ONe

eND OF A SHIP.

..........

•t. Btroq
beer

....

.-..-

II. 1. MASHI!TI!R
DIREC::TOR
Feb. 10..17

•

.

·•

C"--n .. _u_)

, ......., auAY CUBY CHnY INIAIII
\·~...........
· 1"--"" ftr•..,. -·•.,.,t.Jfor WIUw

~--

--niiUOCK OllUCII fiUT

Resul~s

Like Magic
Some men are remem·
bered for their careera,
others merely for oome Incidental or olf·band oct.
Jobn Mantaau. .tile 4th
Earl of Sandwich, openl-40
lofam0111 .run In lliiUsh

The o n I y tlmt 101M

boues hove betn """""'

to 1"aise an,Otl8 is during
opokergomt.

• • •

01'1" leCTetaru''• motto:
11'1 ewl'f! 111&lt;1n for herself.

'Conway promlnd Jane El..n the oun, tho moon and
the otan, but he otUI ow.. her 45 oanta
from threo_ weeko qol"

poi!Uco, Tile 'World Almanac llolel, but hll name beC81111 a ho111el1old word
att.r i'IU wheil he· IIIPPGiedly pmblecl for 2t conllnuouo houro without eatIng
fOr aliael of cold
......, biltwilolt .·plket of'·
bread.
.

.,...pt

oM le.Uer limply ltant!a lor anot:Jier.

lll fllla u.mpJe A 11 llHd

ror the two o+e, ete. S~ letters, apoa..
.t ropblei. tile l.a,th and tarmaUon ot tile worU are all hlnta.
for the .thre

when you
BUY or SELL

~·.. X

Each day the code lettlrt IIU'I dlttmdd.

with a

...

I

CLASSIFIED AD

JQDT.Iji~~

~

VJi'lUlbB '

...........
~~

ACZHI OPXM

BClU!epNO, WKJ&gt;DPJW Zl(ICJ:PKN BTM .

...,.....,
Wut Ad•

NPNJ"J&gt;'- ~)&gt;U

work '

-X P

r
A

(

i'
"' '
1

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

,,• "• .

~·

..,,.,

...

...

XJCA.

THN

H

SMHV.

- ............. C17Ptoqaote: .MAN Js ~ ONLY ANIMAl,
THAT KNOWS THAT ANlMALS GROW OLD.- LICHTEN-

Phone ~2·2156
:

~

1 .
. :t' V I ·B ..H Ill N

BI'ptG

',-

.

~·

' ,, tl

11

,

••
_...L.-.

·-

'

I'IILL
NOl 1!1'
NECESSARY,
T~l

TIEl' WOULD Kti(NJ IHSiANT\.V THAT
Ar1 OLIVER \I,WlBUCKS WITHOOT A

'QAHIB~

'S.T~Y

PIJI1JAB I~ A
HERe

I

!

MY 'Mt:~Sl"fR" TO ALlAY

lHEIR. SUePIOONS!

-l't&gt;10 '

Middleport spent AD evening with
weekend with
tho !d. A. E;w&gt;les and helped Mr,
Mr. and Mrs. Millard Otriatlan
Epple celebrate hlo blrihday.
were their daughters, Millie and
Mrs. Oma Arlx villlted hor
e&lt;eeping Meigs
Rosalie, Columbus. Millie has
dallj]hter in Weot VIrginia.
el!'()loyment at NatiOIMkle lrlsur- ley (Babe) e}lpects to urderso
Mrs. Mae Plr.:kett 11 reported
Gallic and
ance Co. and Rosalie isattending heart surgery at a Clevelaad to be much better. 9\e is wtth
Mason Area
school. Another sister, Ltncla, is Clinic in tile near future, He her daUBhter tn Florida.
also employed at Nationwide.
Robert BUzzard. a former lo-has been a patient at Riverside
Informed As
Mrs. Audrey Quickie IIJ)8nt a Jloapitalln Columbus tor32days. cal resident now llvtzw tn COloweekend at her home near .BidChaa. Jones, whole Ulness has rado ~rlnp., Colo., baa returned
Well As
well
been mentioned berore, ia not 10 home after a montb in thehosplt·
Mrs. Laurence Morton was a weU and hil slater, oaa. 83 al where he urw:lerwent baek sur- '
Enterlained
Columbus vlaitar last week..
years old, has spent two weeki gery.
Mrs. Allee Thomas spent: I
Mr. and Mro. Roy WtiiOIIWI
with the Jones;.
.
days in Columbus consultiJII her
Mrs. Raymondllomhue hoa...,. IP8nt a weekend at their home
doctor.
turned home from Holzer Medical here.
John White, who recentlY UP.. Center after surgery. Mrs. GAte
Mra. Ava GOkey had 11 recert
derwent surgery at Vetqrans Clark cared ror the chlldren Sundl¥ callers Mro. 01- GOMemorial Hospital, Pmteroy, ts while she was n~.
key, Karen. Tad and Kathy of AlThe WSCS wUl meet on Tuesbany.
Karen has a new Muatarc.
I"" roving.
Bud Douglas violted his mCJII&gt;.
da¥,
Feb. 18, at 8 p. m. at lhe
Jolin Goodwin, a oophomore at
Ray Alkire and M111!1 Penny Wilhome
ot Oaie Mae Follrod with
OU, spent a weekerd at home.
liams of Rudand enjoyed ice skatGenevie\'8
Guthrie leadirw the
Miss Mlllle Christian aDd a ler, and tamlly near Marietta. ire in Athena Thurldl)'.
prqp-am.
friend of Columbus called on Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. Dcald Cone ai'Kl
Mro. SteUa Alld1111 to ~~~~~
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald SWortz
and Mrs. Albert Cooe.
Kevin ol Athens a SUnday night• with Mrs. llubf Hallldl;f
lAtest report is that Mrs. Rob- with his parents. Mr. and Mro. while hor dauahiBr, Paulino At.- and fllmll.Y of Marlella and Stevie
ert TUrner is restiJV comfort.. Albert Cone.
ktna, lalnColumbuawithherhu... and Kathy Follrod, local, spent a
•bl¥ at the home of her aon. .Mr.
Mrs. Ginevra Foster Yiaited band who Ia eoaflned to UDlveralQ- recent Sundl¥ at the Fol1rodRob11'11011 hmne.
and Mrs. Le1aM Turner, near her brother, Harve1 Bratton. in Hoopilal.
Mr. lllld Mra. Ernoot VIneyard
Alboey. She was hoopitalizedWltl! Lopn.
Waldo Neal baa returned from
recently
vioited her parent&amp;, Mr.
a heart attack.
Mre. Jolin Whlta vloited her Sheltering Armo lloap!tal where
and
Mrs.
Arthur Atherton.
Mrs. GnceHeulerspentafew huabuld at Veterans Memorial he underwent hernia surgery.
Mrs.
sarah
Woode of ~pen
da¥• with hor 11011, Clayton H - Hoepltal in Pomeroy recently.
Mr. and Mro. Blohop of 1.aJ&gt;.
caster reeently moved into the Pla!no spent a da.Y with Mr. and
farm home whleh they purehiHd Mrs. Vere S.artz.
Mrs. Graca SWart&gt; spent ada¥
from 1ho HAlbert Clarka.
at
the Vernon Swartz home at
C. C. Howard hu purchooed a
Hocki"@@Irt.
tract of land from Llole tly..n
(better known 11 part ol tbe Kern
Spendi~

LAMPS electrified, convenionll,
lamp parta, chimneY!. shades,
wiring, Lee Rudisill, 108 La·
gion · Terrace.
2-ll-12tp

IAliUI/2

-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992·2094
'

Molt ,.,.,... ,,... ...........
Llwd~ '""""' .. ••• ... - .
P:wlly ~Mot~. l11lh llr • r.11

Business Servlcet

'l'RAILEI\ LOT8. Bob'l Mobile
Court, 8)T..,_, Ohio on Slate
Rl. IJI, , _ !lft.21lil.
1-11-Uc

SSe

ONLY Sll.95

Plus 2.1t ,,.... Tea

MCOIE'S

Ott ..

Crllt Braaord

OFF ICE HOURS
I:JO .... . to 5:00 p.m. D•ilv
lt30 • ·"" · to 12:00 Noon Saturday

7Jb 4 Whit• ,, .... u.

C. C. BRADFORD
AUCI'IONI!ER
Complete Senlc!e

OPEII EVES. 8,00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

r'' ..,.....

clutr, eatte -.,. IMeft,
...... ull

Business Services

Pomeroy Mator Co.

IUI11IItlo,..l :ZSc Choroo IIHI• Ad ... r-

He'"'l

Open Til 6 Doilr

Impala 4 dr. Local 1 owner cor , V8 en~ine, power·
glide , radio and heater, good tires, blu~ finish .

UPERT

SPECIAL
SHOW TIRE SALE

Jack W. Carsey,

........... ~............. $695
Convertible, local 1 owner cor. Super Sport model,
bucket seats, good tires, 6 cyl., 3 speed, floor shift,
radio. Popular Model, special price.
1963 CHEVROLET .................................................. $695
1963 CHEVY IL .............

Sl 40• SO

Business Services
......
..... .......
..
55

SO I ""L'ST

�1 _

RACING FOR REHAB/LIT AT/ON

WASJIINGTON
(UP0Three of President Nixon's tap
eccamlc advisers were called
befOI'e a eongreuinnal oommit..
tee to:ll.f to explain how the
admlni1tration plans to deal

Looera have a chanee to

beeome winners in a

unique program at
Ohlo'o Manollekl Refor-

matory comblnlnl' race
can and rehabilitation.

wtth

Inmates ln an automo-

rebuilt racer whieh every
weekend in seuon heads
through the galeo for a
nearby dirt track to com•
pole against the beat

wheelmen the area can
put up. Throe go along
as the pit crew-ad always return. Some 100
men have gone through

the course, most going
on to oul8ide jobs as
mechanics. None have
had to return for a re-

BEHIND THE WHEEL lor a race, the mao beblad the
Mansfield, Ohio, Reformatory's combloatlon of raeiDg-~
and rehabilitation 11 Sgt. Jerry Campbell, instrueter of
the automotive class.

azines'' are dying off in epidemic proportions. Teens un aware of once Important "College Humor" as a national
yetdh publication. Many universities, colleges and high
. schools have published their own ''In" humor magazines
and newspapers with heady emphasis on local people and
subject matter. These, too , are drying up. Some blame
lack of advertiser interest and riBing costs as principal
reason for the general demise. Closer to the truttl
Is the basic problem of editorial appeal. Tun- and college -age humor Is tough to
pull off In print. Much of
It hJ automatically off-

i '

ed 1 dlvOI'ee trom Marcia Hf.wk.
1be delendaal w.. reotonld lto
her malden name or Moreilj P.•tor. A ault for divorce llled by

One divorce has been ll!'UIIad,
dlamlaaod, and 811
• . . - on 1 cognovit note lllod
In Meigs County common plea&amp;

.-..r

court.
'The aetlon on the note was
ror $2,982.32 ftlod by Brookline Sovlnga &amp; Trulll Compony,

Pltlsbur~

against Alma - ·
RD 1, Portlaud, Dogelle Carpon.

ter and Elizabeth Carpenter, also
RD I, Portland.
Larry M. Hawk, charglnglfOSI
neglect of &lt;llty, has been award-

• '

tournament team.
Reeelving a trophy ror the

the Kyger Creek cheerleaders:

Grimm, Mary Kall, P a m
Moore, Billy Jo Clark, Coonlo
stl!llam, and Dream• Henson.
Here are the top five aeorers of the toornament:
Player
FG ST TP AVG.
Carter, SW.
18 12 48 24.0
&amp;I.e

Greenlee, NG

13 9 35 17.1

DfS Board

wm

at

Mozart composed his ftrst
soratas during an European concert tour at the age of six.

at it.

VOL. XXI . NO. 209

The boord of dlre&lt;tors of the
Meigs County -f()ollars for

Walker
Stout

Scholars" Foundation wlll meet

Beman
Morpn

18

12 48
12 8 32
10 6 26
5 10 20
6
0 12
51 36 138

Meigs High School building Ia Totals
HANNAN TRACE
Middleport to begin Ill program
D. Daniels
13 7 33
lor 1969.
8 28
10
Members of the board are June Jeffers
8 0 16
Lee, Gary Parsons, KaUe Crow, Chapman
4 0 8
Fred Morrow, Ted Reed, George Wells
4 0 8
Hargraves, Harold Sauer, Hor- -mery
1 7
3
ace Karr, Vernon Weber, WU- Slason
2 0 4
Uam Perrin, Jack Welsh, Mrs. Barry
S.
Daniels
1 0 2
0. B. Stou~ Robert Wingett and
Totals
46 17 1011
Tom Kelly, cbalrman.

HOSPITAL
Admissions Saturday - Addie
Bartoo, !Utcine; Holly Friend, Sy.
racuse; Lowell Cremeans, Coolvtue; Albert Guinther. Middleport.
Discharges Satur~ - David
Icenhower, Edith Klein, Ada John~
8011 1 Clara Bull, William Searles, Jerry Alexander, Raymond
Jewell.
Admtsslms &amp;lnda,y - Eric
Boegli, Mason; Thurman MartiD, ~racuse.
Billy
Discharges &amp;mda)'

.........

FAST·IlASY

-

No riMlnl • No tltdrk:ill'
No ......, ..... liO lift
tNDOORS - OUTDOORS

BAKER

Long-Service Masons
HIGH RISE for tbe birdspurple martlao, Ia lhts eue
-II a dllilaltdsltbtll festVe
ol Grl(tovUio, 10. Tloe eommaalty baa bec!ome a cea~
ter ol lalereat Ia lbe laoed·
eattnc msrtla 11d publlobeo
a anlqae aew.,aper, ,.Tbe
Purple Marl Ia Capital
New1," read by bird. watch~
era across tbe IIDd..
Some people I a u g h at

ghost stories, but they also
do most of their ;-eading in
the daytime.
.,

• • •

The first thing to
with e r in this year's
garden wiU be ambition.

Will Be Honored Here
Ben R. Evans, past grand mas-

ter ot Free and Accepted Masons of Ohio. will join members
and guests of Pomeroy Lodge
No. 164, F&amp;AM, In hooorlng a
number or veteran brethren at
the annual father and son ban&lt;JlOt

this Thuroday at 6:30 p.m.
Mr. Evans, a ~11-known Jackson countian, wDI present 50 yoar lapel pino to Frank H. Johll·
ston, Clarence A. Massar a n d
Charles Theron Russell. Evans
will be lntro&lt;llcod by RIFt Wor shipful Brother Theodore T.
Reed, Jr., 33rd degree Mason,
and p&amp;.st district deputy grand
master or the 12th Masonic Dis~
trlct.
Evans also wUl award 25-:rear

Death ot Mr, Ewing, who had
been admitted to the hospital lao!
Wedne sda.y, was attributed to con~
gestive heart tallure.
Born MaY 16, 1904, he wao the

lapel pins to Sidney L. Grueser, George D. Massar, George
A. Meinhart, William G. Sol!'·
fried, Everett A. Tracy a n d

1011

Benjamin F. Turner.
The dinner, to be served In
the Pomeroy Masonic temple,
will be prepared and served by
the ladies of Pomeroy Chapter
No. 186. Order of Eastern Star.
EntertaJnment will be provid~
ed by Brother Cecil E. Barnes,
Joppa Lodge No. 66, F &amp;AM or
Akron, who will show siides taken by him in Japan.

BEN R. EVANS

The entertainment will close Curd Invites all master Masons
with a "circle of friendship"' and their sons or ~ted 10111
led by Brother Theo L. Smtth, ID attend. Tickets may be pur.
past master.
chased from officers ol PomeWorstdplul Marter Hartwell roy Lodge or at the door.

k
Qulc en

Furniture
Middleport

of the late Benjamin H. and

Allee Downie Ewing. The deceased became Meigs County coroner In 1934 following the July
20th death ol his lather, and had
served in that capacity ever
alnce.
Mr. Ewing, believed ID be one
of the last three non.physiclan
coroners in Ohio, was elected
ln November ot 1968 to a new
rour..year term of otnce and be1!311 serving It In Jamary of this
year. He was Deputy Coroner wtder his lather several years.
Mr' Ewing had become one or
Meigs County's largest property
owners, speclall'llng in commercial real estate.
He built and owned several
Pomeroy buainess locations Including the Ewing Funeral Chap-

each locaL

'

Just try shielding your
far.!e with the telly when

taking a Sunday afternoon
nap, and you'll go right baek
to this paper.

Guerrilltu alrilte al delta lxue

Bridge

Themselves in

Work re!IUmed t.oda)' - at a
speeded up pace - on tho $12
million Ohio River bridge be~
tween Kanauga and HonderiOO,
w. Va., following a 12-day dela,y
as a reouit or a Jurisdictional
labor diopute.
Ed Goza, project I1UUlllger ror
the A1 Johnson Construction Co.,
Minneapolls, Minn., told t h e
Tribune and SentineJ thh morning that construction work Ia
'DOW 1n
go ahead."
Goza said, "In order to make
up lor lost ttrne. we will work
20 hours a daY. two 10-bour
shiftl daily, seven daya a week."
At that, Goza oald It will oWl

ruu

I

SAIGON - FlRING MACIUNE GUNS AND ROCKET grenade&amp;,
communist guerrillas smashed over barbed wire and into a South
Vietnamese ouq,ost .in the Mekong Delta and mauled Its 10 ~man gar~ be hard to make up approximateri.oan, military spokesmen oald tor:ioy. U.S. hellcopt.,r gunshiJ&gt;o ly two mondls of loa! limo dUe
whirled to the rescue, killing 12 of the hundreds ol att.acken. The to three atrllro5 and collapae of
a coffer dam.
rest of the guerrillas fled.
The Jurisdictional dlopute came
The defenders suffered six men killed, seven men wounded and
about
when Local 543 of Con28 missing. The batUe erupted Monday night 50 miles southwest of
struction
and General Labor Un~
S&amp;1gon at a base set \II the days ago to convince delta residents to
too,
}!lrnn·
too, objected to work
1wing away from the Communists.
ualgned to pOe-drivers. T h e
strike bel!311 Thuroday, Feb. 13.
Pletuure yru:/111 10011 in Red pori
HONG KONG - THREE PLEASURE YACHTS opparentiy seized by Cmununilt OliM bobbed at anchor today in 1 mainland 0\i..
neat harbor near Macao, spotted by ce»;stal sailors. Peking maintained alficl&amp;l sUence on the fate of the 15 persons aboard, including four Americans.
Authorities in Hong Kong have slid they were convinced the
yachts had been IDtercepted by Red Chinese ~s while eruiairw
tr-om Hong Kong to Macao. Diplomats from several countries said
atteJI't)ts were betrw made to persuade Petdng to admit capturing
the yachts and agree to return them, with their paaaengers. to Hong
Kong. They reported uno posidve response" to their queries.

Soviellapreod injl.uruJe into Peru

• llpeclal cool-down c.,. for
l'ennanent Preas fabrlca
• 4 C)'l)les, 2 speea
• New Super SURGILATOR"
agitator
• 5 waler lamp, 2 water IM
telectiOM

,.... dryer

• No-Iron care for Permanent
Press labrlcs
• 5 cycles. 3 settings lor heat
selecllon
o TUMBLE PRESS• control
• Super-fast drying system
• Eaay-to-clean lint screen

U~. PERU ~ THE SOVIET UNiON eJIIIanded lulnlluonceln
SOUth America today through a tnde agreement with Peru•a new
mWtary regime. Peruvilm Foreign Minister Edgardo Mercado Jaraaln said the accord, signed Monday. ended his country"slq econ-om~c reliance on the United States. until now Pen's blgest t;r..s..

ing partner.
The pact slgl'lll.s 11the openirc or. new commercial (rort" and
u&amp;he end ot an era in which our trade was chameled in only one dl•
rection.:' Mercado said.

Franldin IChooi bad to IIOI'IIIal
CQLIJliBUS -

ATTENDANCE AT TROUBLED Frlllklln JW~Ior

e~ to rotum to 11101' IIOrfnalloda.Y lolloW·
~ . 'pi,lhl betwe.. ~ ol oduealltllt rt!J)reaen-

HIP Seheol was
'

Dependable Quality-Continuous Servlc..Senslble Credit
Shop Monday thru Thursday, t:30 to 5:00, Friday •ild
Saturday 9:30 to 9:00.

ELBERFELDS IN POMERO,Y
\

lnll 1 moeiJrw
tatl VOl and t lfooP df j~~$1~1.

Cllfl&gt;nl 'I),..., eommuniiJ relation illroctor here, -

18 ~

or Mlyor Ill. E. SOIIIeabreMOr With the - · and oald he lhougllt
uiCIIle ..... ,~·~' t.d bella IN!da.
' .

· 11Mo.meedrw·• • ·held aftsr · - 2'T.I. of Fnnldla'a · ~
w~re oblol!l- ~Gm· !ICi!oo/ ·Mpn~~ay. P&amp;rew or the oludentl...iomftd
IG kelp iholr) llll4tep homo Ulltll "oalo condiUono" retumed.IO the
ocllool. Loot W~ !lfitllfbeDcel bro1!e wt when school ofll.
clalo removed a camoeiOr Pf(lt!ltll' wllh sllltlont.t.
.(Cmt- 1111 Pogo 8)

..

•

AWOLs Tum

looplwl~

WAS~GTON - CONGRESS TOOK ITS F1RST mG step In 15
years todly. toward overhauling the federal tax system by tocusing
on tax..exeowt m·ganizations, The House Ways alll Means Committee
opened the O.rst phase of hs tax~reform hearing~slnto alleged loopholes and lbuses that give preferential tax treatment to many Amerlcalll, mostly in high income brackets.
Nearly 50 witnesses signed \It to testify on tax...exempt foundations. This wtll take at least two weeks. Witnesses Include Ford
Foundation President McGeorge Bundy- a former top White House
aide under Presidents Kemedy and Johnson - and officials of other
large foundations such 11 the Carnegie and Rockefeller Foundations.
The leacl-otr witness was to be Rep. Wright Patman. I)..TeL,
who has been investigating the 32,000 foundations which PA¥ no tax~
es for more than a dozen years as chairman of another special subcommittee. .. I'd like to see all these loc:vholes plugged \It,'' Patman said before the hearings got underwsy. He was readJ' to testify a .. btU a day" could be passed by Cqress to close loopholes
and insure everyone pays his tax uwr share."

•
I

William Henry Ewing, promi.
nent Pomeroy businessman a n d
Meigs Count;y cormer for nearly
35 yaars, died Munday at 3:15
p.m. at the Holzer Medical Center Hoopllal In GaDipolls. He
was 64 years ot age.

e

'liM ......

and uaed for ...,.180 of

,".d::Utian;! m.atteJ'; lnclcdcd:

- The

viU-- - ··

ed to share die ~

- - the

loote!

ed and the Mei.IUI'e1

. , . . . • ._

~ !!II!! !'e!!'-"! ted ttwa ~
Conllrlletlon
Comj&gt;enJ of llkAr·
- The Parking committeewaa
........
1ked to lfudy whether Olllome tlllr II wllllal to should be made a ooe - .....,.. 1110111 to drive JIIIIDI at 1llo tom of U.c:oin HID, 1111 Ia ~
'he third reading ol Ordl- lble to tbo ...........

uent.

...

.

- . , "' llu&lt;lfthe iandllll&lt;llmp x 20 11. molal buu;H\ .:0
·
problem Ia plamod by the health board ol public offalr~
log,
donated
to
the
vU
,.:;.C·
department m Feb. 26. He aoked membera ol ot~UDCU for 101~ eonatruetloa llrm, will &gt;.
goot.lono on ways &lt;t ooivlng the ad CHI the lot adiacel . :·
dump tnue now conti'Oirt1ng the water plant on East k •:'
\

~

~ No. S88

reaardlna

Attending

t he

wer&lt;'

~ ~,pr.

c.-a.

tng of dlaabled motor ve. Clerk J1110 Wal""' oed
a on stree&amp;a or private prop- men FWtz., Franklin Rizer. 1lriMI:

in the village HI IIJPI'OV·

~.,

.
enttri
,.t

, ,.

; :

r

Collin• and RQr - ·

Weather

-

Variable cl~sa and Utde~
c~

In temperatllre todi.J. t&amp;nlght and WodnoldaJ&lt;. HIP _ ,
from the lower 30s to ihllower
40s a!XI lows tonieht in the ZO..

TEN CENTS

TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1969

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

W"'f'W' facing up to las

Coach Rudy Shively's North with 11. John Garnes, 6-lsenior,
Gallia Pir-ates downed the Kyger hod 10.
Reese paced Kyger Creek with
Creek Bobcats 57-43 saturday
night at Mercerville tor conso- 16 points and Chuck Bradbury,
lation honors in the 46th annual 6-3 senior scoring ace of the
Gallia County Basketball Tourna- Bobcats, had nine. Eail 'I'hoolment at Hannan Trace H i g h as, 6-1 senior, had 10.
The Pirates had 63 rebourds
School.
with
Greenlee getting 23, Garne1
The win lert the Pirates with
16,
and
Morris and Dave Clark,
a 7-11 season's record including
6..0
senior,
each had eight.
the tournament. It was the fourth
Kyger
Creek
had 38 rebounds.
consecutive loss for Coa.ch John
Reese
had
12
and
Bradbury had
Sang's Bobcats who Onlshed with
a 10-3 reconi Including the tour~ nine. , The Bobcats had 12 turnovers and 13 personal fouls and
oament.
The Bobcats led briefly in the the Pirates had 22 turnovers aid
first period which ended 16-14 13 personals.
The Pirates hit 21 of 58 trun
with the Pirates ahead. Kyger
Creek also led on three occas-- the field for 38.3 per cent and
ions late in the first half which made 15 or 27 at the Um for55.5
•
f&lt;&gt;UIII North Gallla lead!"" 26-25. per cent.
Kyger Creek cormected on 16
Kyger Creek'slastleadwas27~
or
67 (rom the field ror 23.8 per
26 when Tom Reese, 6-1 senior,
hit a jumper with 7:34 lett 1n the cent and had 11 of.18 at the line
ltlird period. Bob Smith, 5-9 for 61.1 per cent.
NORTH GALLIA (57&gt;- Gree"'
junior, tied it 27-27 with a free
lee
&amp;-2-14; Smith J-.5..11; Garnes
throw and then Ron Greenlee,
4-2..10;
Clark 1-0-2; Morrill 76-2 senior, made it 29-27. The
Pirates piled ""a l().point lead, 6--20. Totals, 21-58, 15-27, 57.
K~GER CREEK (43)- Reese
41-31, with 1:10 to go and led
S..-t-16;
Thmnas 5-0-10; Bradbury
41--35 at the end ot the third
3-.1-9;
Spaulding
2-2-6; Rothgeb
period.
0-1-1;
Buckley
0-1-1.
Totals 16The Pirates raced to a 12polnt lead, 47-35 with 6:36 left. 67, 11-18, 43.
The Bobcats cut it to six points, North Gallla . . • 16 26 41 57
49-43, with 2:30 to go. North Gal~ Kyger Creek • , . 14 25 35 43
lla scored eight points in the last
2:23 for the victory.
Ron Morris, 5-U senior, led
DEMANDS BALLOTS
North Gallia with 20 points.
PIITSBURGH (UPO - EmU
Greenlee had 14. Smith finished
Narick, candidate for president
o( the United Steelworkers ol
America OSW), demanded ~
day that each union district send
htm a cowtt or the ballots la

-r

communlt¥.

Henry Ewing, Undertaker, Dies Monday···,

Daniels. tiT
Walker, SW
Reeae, KC
Here are the

13 7 33 16.1
12 8 32 16.0
11 9 31 15.1
team records:
W L TP OP
Southwestern
2 0 138 113
Hannan Trace
1 1 1011 115
Nortll Gallla
1 I 110 lOt
Kyger Creek
0 2 108 133
Totals
4 4 465 465
Here are the teams' scoring:
SOUTHWESTERN

prove law ertoreement. Chief ~
PuU.::e JW W~r r"'Nl·iW •.::tfvlty at the flrlll ........ 0( the
group In Marl- lui - k.
Mayor . _ oald

Devoted To 11ae lntereda Of11ae Meigi·MOMm Area

.spring coat had better
not let his wife catch him

Pirates Take Third

VE'l'ERANS MEMORIAL

plot

The fellow who admires

.

TEEN TRAVEL BAN: Pressure being applied to state
and federal ontclals to close Mexican border to travel bv
minors. Proposals aimed at slowing d4Jwn nareotlrs trailrit; ask that teens be prevented from entering Mexico
unlr:ss accBmpanled by parents "or other responsible
adults."

n.

•

Now You Know

.something nice in a

Carter

Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the

r.w-cha.M ut • -40 x 40

!rom Jobn Sau\lliJIO, along Butterrut Ave., to be uaed as a
sewerage system lift lltatfao:.
Council, In oU1or &amp;ctiYIIY, ap.
- e d portlclpotlon 0( the village in the Southeastern 0 h I o
Co\llcU or Govemmenta whid'l
II being eotablllllecl by 12 ooun.
tiea to leek federal fUnds to 1m-

'

FG FT TP

Meet on Tuesday

lollowed b,y action 1-.,g ID the

\

Gla&lt;lys McHaflle aplnot •Jomeo
L Mcllaflie hal been dlsmlll.,.j, with pre)ldloo, on 8PPJic:a'
Uoo of the pialntill.

Editor, rreen Magazine

GONORRHEA NOW EPIDEMIC : 1.4 million cases last
year: 378.500 OVI!T number notf!d in 1962. The figures are
based on a 7Uitionwide survey of more than 1.30,000 phusi·
dans. The actual incidence is much higher.

Joe McDaniel.

Court Grants One Divorce

-By Robert Macleod

one "(armer's daughter'' era Is really gaposJs of the highest magnitude. MeanwhUe, ethnic and racial pre11are
~roup&amp; kePp trying to hush the rree whlsperln~~:, wheeling
.. u11dergrouod ... Here Is a large part or the answer to humor
In p""h1:. Free speech shouldn't be "Intimidated" In the
humor department any more than in/on political matters.
Small wonder humor magazines rold . They don't print If
"like It Is ... Teens or all race and color carry on their own
whisperings and laugh as raueously and cruelly as tbetr
parents and grandparents before them. Repression anyone?

FEB. 19 • 20
NOT OPEN

Patman' • bll!, tt eweared.
would be rar stricter than OIWI/
the admlalstraUon pi&amp;os ID sellli
to ~11 later thla week. l

tell whelher or not the tbe·
ory Involved bas proved to
be a pled piper efrort
measured on the scale of
"like It really Is, man."

•r.Ued

WEDNESDA~ &amp; THURSDA~

Wrlllltt Patmln, chairman of
the House BlnkitW and &lt;..."\\I'Tency Commltlee llid he ww,ld
Introduce &amp; bUI to nmlt tho
UbiJik boldlftl C(IIIJUO"' idea-

America. Trial by time will

preu. Some psychologists claim that sex and aggression
are both exprened more directly than ever before on a
••tfR it It right here" basis. No need, they say, to have U
out In joke·eartoon form. Hurry, though, to add
t at yo•ng people today do have a senae or humor about
their world generally etneludlng polities), but the one-to-

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

tc be ot.Lr.i.nud Uriore biOs oo
build Pomeroy'a sewerage system and treatment plant can be
invited, Ma,yor Charles Legar
told town councU Monday nigllt.
Two routine ordinances per~
taining to the sewage system were
oftered by Council Presldent Les1ie Fultz, The mayor said adver~
Uaements for bids to buUd the

O(iir&amp;te

ay item will be publlahed ltrlrt er s and dr aln• in tbe uwerage
on March 3.
system area. Bodl wer• ii&amp;JPl'O¥·
It wu pointed cut that a rate ed In rtrlt reactlne•.
ordinance wlll have to be ap..
FUltz oed Mayor Lepr pointproved before contracts ou the ed out that approval ol -the
system can be awarded.
ordinances 11 necesaary to satOne or the ordinallces pre-- iety requlnm..ts of the Ecob·
ed by Fultz related to eJnl).oy.. omlc Development Admlnlolra·
ment o! a superintendent or sew- tlon which hao granted ~.erage, and the other to reeula- 800 to the project.
tion or the uae ol p.~blte sewReading ot tile ordinances was

Wotk··oll ·· · , ,,. __

limits In a school endorsed
publication. Sex Is much
more of an open maUer
against the pornography
and near pornography In
many national publications
a n d l h e "underground"

oi rruDI tv

Onl.y a few easements remain

both bank and buliMII CCIIl..
pltxet.

teachers are the students
and the students are the
~eachers. P a r e a t s arc
lumped with tllose belnJ' In·
doetrlnated with "social
reality" by the young pro·
test people. This Is the
party Jlne of the student·
activist segment of youn~

LAST LAUGH THAT Hl1RTS: So called " humor mag-

and any "restricted" expression pales In Its Impact

IIDll ~

that allowa U.

Bidding on Pomeroy Sewerage Will Begin on March 3

REVERSAL OF TEACHER ROLE : "Social studealo"
pilchlng the premloe tbat
in matters of protest, the

THI NATIONAl RIPOIIT ON WHAJ'S HAI'fJININO

Frank Stmtn, .Raquel Welch
CQWRCARTOONS:
I Want My MUIIU!I&gt;
Talk,y hocum
Felli With Dudes
Bi&amp; Game Haunt

Keith Carter, 6-0 senior, and
Jimmie Dale Walker. 5-10 sen~
lor, or the champion Southwest¥
ern Highlanders were named to
the Ove - man All - Tournament
Team Saturday night at the 46th
amual Gallla County Basketball
Tournament at Hannan Trace
High School.
The other three members of
the All-Tournament Team were:
Dave Daniels, 6-~ senior of the
runnerup Haruwl 'har.e Wildcats;
Ron Greenlee, 6-2 senior, third
piaw North Gallia Pirates; and
Tom Reese, 6.1 senior c1 the
last place K,yger Creek Bobcats.
Tournament managers, Deamll
M. Murdock, Local &amp;Jporlntendent and Wllfrod L. Dingess,
~ Trace High Principal,
presented the trophies to the
first and second place winners,
the game ball to the third place
team and to members of the all-

CHRYSLEit MINI t.Vl1'H MAXI MILL? Chrysler is mir·
mg mini size with maxi power. Success with tiLe ''Swinger"
r a Dart witll 340-cubic-inch. four·barrel carburetor engme J
helped corporate officials make the decision to go full
speed ahead 011 a "smaller car ." Next year's Dodge and
Plymouth sports cars will be designed to take a 400-cubici nch engine. tops in the field.

Youth Beat

"LADY IN CEMENT"

related

Best Cheerleading Grwp were

NEA's

TONIGHT &amp;. TUESDAY
FEB. 17- 18

and

1n app~h

for ID II'&gt; In lorblddin&amp; blnki
ani buatne11 to merp.

All• Tournament Team Named

fresher course.

MEIGS THEATIE

inftatioo

problems.
Paul W. McCracken, chal.rman of Nixon's Council ol
Ecooomic Advtaera, aM two of
his colleagues were to be the
nr.st witnesses in •even daya of
hearings by the Searte-House
Economic Committee.
The investigation or the •tate
of the economy was one ol
sever1l major matters facirw
conuess as it came blck to
work today from an extelded
Llncdn's Birthday recess. In
another corner of the business
realm, it appeared Congreu
and the administration might
run headon in conflict over how

tive me-chanica ~~:lass Instructed by Sgt. Jerry
Campbell are partnera In
the operation of the
"High Wallo Special," a

; - ~~
ON TilE OUTSIDE for a race, Mansfield Inmates servIce lhe ••High Wall Special." The car lo powered by a
4%'7-eubh~ ..DCh eoglne donated by Ford.

.

"'&gt; .., •.,!"

Congress Wan~ Answers

111o Doll)' Som~Del, p...,_,-M,.U..,.,.-1, 0 ., ~. Fo1&gt;nJ0rY 17, IIHI9

'

.

'

··. ,. . .•A

~

CAR BURNS UP
A car owned by Ronald Spirea
was deotroyod by lire afternoon on old Route 33 aear
the Clark . rarm. Pomeroy fire-men answered the alarm. Later
Monlay, the department was call~
ed to the area near the Perry
Riggs home, FlMwoods, to asslat the Chester Fire Department to fight a brush nre.

Lt's a

J'\.T
1 ~ew

CORONADO, Call~ (UPOWhen Lt. Edward R. Murpby
Jr. went to Ollleer Clllllkl•ll
S.-, tho Navy llid an
Amorlean priiOIIIII' or war niuot
teD tho ~ only hla .....,,
ranh .... Hrill nl.ll'lbllr.
Whon llurpby llrOH lor the
nlth limo !rom 1 Korua Jail
ftilor olkk with hlo own blood,
he had lolmed IIOIIWihllttil olae;
when people hurt you badly
eiiOU[Jh they eon t111ko 1011 talk.
Murpby, 31, Monday told .a
Na&gt;Y court .ot lnqull')' lmo lha
c..,UUOo or the US$ PIIOiblo
aftsr two vlciGOI belli!WI by
Nortll Korean soldloro· he &amp;an a
l'al11 coo!esoloo lha 1117 ohlp
had baru4od 111to Norlll -Koreolt
wltefL
llurpby, tbe .P_.i execo-

IIIIi

,,

.•.'

'

Two persons were bel~ h.eld
in Meigs Count,y Jail toda,y on
charges of being AWOL from the
armed rorces. Both men wtllrully surrendered themselves
here.
Marvin Allen OUer, 164 Pearl
St. , Middleport, reported to the
Middleport policedepartmentald
Floyd A. Reynolds, 22, ol 238
Second SL, Pomeroy, surrendered to Sherilr Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept.
The sherut said an afftdavit
chl.rgi.. brealdJW am entering
has been fUed agains~ James
Games, Pomeroy, in the b.trg.
lory or the Ada HIU'j10r home.
Garnes was arrested alii posted

-

pie by their ftrst names, and was
.. called by them.
Wlliiam Henry Ewing was a
member of Pomeroy Masonic
Store bulldlnga In Pomeroy, Gat· Lodge No. 164, F &amp;AM, Chaptor
No, 80, Royal Arch Maaons; Bosllpolll and Pl. Pleasant_
worth
Council No. 46, Royal and
Mr. Ewing also was chairman
Select
MaSOJis; ado Valley COmof the conatructlon comml- of
mandery
No. 24, Aladdin Temple
Veterana Memorial Hospital
whUe a member of the hospit. 9lr1ne Club of Columbus, the Ancient Accepted Seottl.sh R 1 t e
al's board of trustees.
The hospital project was, in Valley ol Columbus, and of the
Mr. EwinJfs own words, uthe Pllmeroy Eastorn Star chapter.
MaiJOilic services will be held
building project or which I'm
Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. at the
most proud •.,
Effin&amp; as a young man, worked as a shoe shine boy In downtown Pomeroy and later was
employod at the freight depot
express office on West Main St.
Later, he attended the Cincinnati College of Embalming (in
1924 and 1925) following whkh
he started In the undertaking
buslne•s with his father .
COLUMBUS (UP0- A week
In his later years, as h i •
alter 500 welfare marchers
·terms as corooer mounted, he spent a day in the statehouse
came to love Ute "game of pol- rotunda, the House of Repreitics" as it related to his Plb~ sentad ves took initial action to
lie office. Home1pun, plain, of- review all aspects ol welfare In
ten seen riding a modest motor - Ohio.
bike on lnspectlon tours of whatThe House adopted by an 88-0
ever butldi.n,g project he had go- vote and sent to the Senate a
Ing, he callod thousands or peo- joint resolution to create a leg.

Ewing Funeral Home.
&amp;trv:lving are his wUe, Beulah; one son, Ben H., Pomeroy;
three sisters, Janet Gatkte, Pontiac, Mich., and Mrs. Mary Buck
and Mrs. Helen Norris, both of
Pomeroy, and a raunberofnlecea
and nephews.
Funersl services w I l I be
Thursday at 2 p.m. at the EwIng Chapel with Rov. WUbur Perrin omciating. Burial will be Ia
the Beech Grove Cemetery.

resolution, we will show our
commitment and concern to
dealing with the very basic
problems."
But, Democnts were not sileli: on the move Monday night
Rep. Phale D. Hale, D-Columbus, was successful in get.
ling an amendmer.t tacked onto
the resolution. Hale ealled for

The resolution., which would
create a 12--man House~ Semte
stllly committee, woukl requ1n
tho gr..., ID report ID the lOath
General Assembly, not neceas.arUy during this session.
Representatives also palled
their second but of the session

the resolution grew
''out ol a deep sense of frustra.
tion., on Ule part or welfare re-

to get the amen:lment lnchlled.
Rep. Anthoey J. Russo, D-

before

el which he and his rather coo.structed between Mulberry Ave.
and Mechanic Sl. In 1927. Ewing
aloo built and owned the Kroger

Friends mQ" eall at the funeral
bome anytlme.

GOP Leadership Backing
Action in Welfare Field

1....--..-..llq .......

Monday nigh~

By a vote of 83--2, the HouM
ll- PBIBad and to the ~~~
!li- "" temadw approaches and solu- a bUI providing Ia&lt;
dl-ltlm
House Speaker Charles F, tions to Ute problems.
of ab&amp;moned and junked ,..
Kurfess, R-Bowling Green, left
Last Tuesday, Hale was de-- hides.
the chair to speak in support of feated in the House Welfare
The bill was debated on tbe
Committee when he attempted aoor ror nearly hall an hour,

· ·'b"e.-r. ·· -~ · P!l:"'.."...
.Ch·_,a. ··m
•
Op posing
t~~~~d
Retail T.ax
cipiente,

The Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce voted Monday to oppose
the proposed gross retail tax
propollod by Gov. Rhodes "hlch
will be considered by this ses~
sion of the state legislature.
A re!Olutlon wtll be prepared to that ecrect and forwarded
ID appropriate stale o!llclals,
lneluding Rep. Ralph Welker.
The tax in questlm, which rematna ID be apellod out In detall by the governor, or his legIslative leaders, would expand
vocatkoal etlleaUon in Ohio.
Fred Morrow, who preatded in
the abaence of President W 11liam Grueaer, reported on a.n

administrators, tax-

payers and legislators.
"Growing To Disgust"
"This frustration in some
areas Is growing to disgust,"
he said.. "By adoption of this

several

ameDdmenta

were decided and the vote on
Cievelarxl, House assistant mi~ the bill was takerL
oorit:y leader, supported the
The House adopted two other
resolution, but urged immediate resolutions Monday and t.d 10
reports.
bills introduced.
"Let's do the job now. in -Jrls
Three of the bW&amp; covered
session of the legisllture," Rus- election law changes, two with
so said.
health departments, and ODe
urged adopdoo ol .. My Ohio'•
as the offlcial state 8QII&amp;.
In the Senate, two reBGiutlona
were adopted, five gubenatorial appointments confirmed, and
six bills introduced.

New Post

Colors
Ordered

Spring must truly be just around the corner - Ole Dairy Queen
at
Ule
root of the Pomeroy- Mason bridge has reoperM.!d after being
IndUstrial comml- meeting of
the Soulheastom Ohio Reslonal closed for the winter.
New post colors have been orCouneU he attended recently.
MRS. DOROTHY JOHNSTON, ELECTION bo6rd clerk, reports dered and may arri Ye in tl.llle
Posalble
purchase
of
n
e
w
Heart Fund
Christmas decorations in 1969 no wiltl:lrawals by Pcmeroy candidates for nomh•tion in the May for the annual birthday obser"foprimaries.
ance of Drew Webster Post 31,
al10 was disaassed.
Since
no
one
withdrew
there
will
be
seven
Republicans
seeking
American Legim, on Mareh 18
Attending were Robert Jacobs,
Haort Fund Radio Day from
oomination
ror
four
councU
seats
aoo
two
Democrats
seek
the
nomat t h e PomeroY Elemntary
WMPO has been amounced for Tom Cassell, Richard Chambers,
School
Jaek Caney, Beulah Jooes, Rob- inaUon of treasurer.
Tuesday, Feb. 25.
Since there are no Republican of the Mei.gs Count;y Heart Asert Wtngett. and Morrow.
This was announced MoadiJ
Jim Mees am Michael Kay'
candidates
for
treasurer,
either
sociation
ia
Dr.
Harold
Brown.
night
when the post met wl1b
announcers, wlll head the proMrs. Pb.YWs Hennessy or Mrs.
Conunalller D o n Hurmel in
Ject ill cooperotloo with the 1&lt;&gt;E-ll SQUAD CALLED
!lillie Sooll!by, Domocrots,
ALTHOUGH
HENRY EWING charge.
eal Heart Fand Drive headod by
T h e Middleport E-R squad
Paul Caaci, first vlt:e eom-Dr. Horold Brown. Maeo and went to the Ruasell Eblin h&lt;me -ronlly will be oervlng In lhtr had been in falling health f o r
treasurer's post apparently,
several
months,
his
death
came
maider,
reporttd oo plans lor
Kay wUi be anlslad ill' Mro. in the Cheshire area at 7:38 p.
u
a
shock
to
many
Monday.
the
observance.
Acctptad •• a
Marpret NOUIIIIIl and llrOO tal- m. Monday from where Mn.
FROM 6 TO 8 THIS evening,
Undoobtedly, Henry was bien- new member waa Frank ft)rtber.
ent will be presented througbout Thelma Eblin was rento¥ed to
or from 1 to 3 and 6 to 8 p.m. od wllh a homespun type ol hu- George Kaufl was accepted b,y
the day as doMtion pledps are Holzer Medical Center as a~
tomorrow, you can have a tree mor which long will be remem- transfer.
made at the station by phone. leal patlon~
tuberculosis skin test at t b e berod. He """ Melp County CorReported hespllalizod ...,..
oner.
and
enjoyed
a
popularity
Lincoln
RusSell at Veteran~
"II.
Meigs Junior HlgbSchoollnPom.
with voters which encllred over Memorial and Grover Erb at
eri;..e
health cards
a apan of more than 30 years. Meigs General. Elu G~
Uw o!!lcer, . also · told the cau.ct lor American mllltary an.vtlme thlo year are being ur- Certafnb" his was one ol the was named cllrectorofreeN&amp;UCII
Korellll what
they
know men, laid down In the t9SOa lied to tal&lt;e advanla&amp;v or the top records in lenath ol 111rv- for the PQit and wW 1m1111 W.a .
alreadjl- that the 1'1!oblo had 4urlnll the oootrOYOroy over 1ree service. ' " - plomlas to lee.
own cunmittee.
beeo s._.. Ia eap..,_
"bralnwaahlnc'' or U.S. prlao- work Ia lood bootl)~ at the Meqa
Brancldng out from his tu~
A report ·waa. etven oa a n.
. The 1orma1 court or 1i1qu1ry - • In the War.
Cotlnq Fair ID . a t ....., tal&lt;e neral home buoineu lniD com- cent record hop _ , _
by 1 board of ftw odmlralo lDto
that 1001 llop - · [Iaiii . . merelal real estate 10111e years post a n d C&lt;:INMader
the Pueblo's e~~ture Jlft. 23,
u1 think the Ulllerbrlnl the ne01afiU'7 health carda at bedt, tho ellcked
•
1968, cmttouad todlJ with principal mutt be maiiUined- thlo time.
lor Mr. Ewllll!, holdlap maklrw proJect&amp; - .
teatlmOI\Y by two mon Pueblo lOYall¥ . to ono'o COUIIIey,"
have P&lt;JWIL
llefreahmellta '"'" ...,.;i
olllcoro.
11111'111&gt;1' l&amp;icl. "Howevar, lhe
AND MEIGS COUNTY will obAs blo ..-ro will
:rou, Elu Gi1mGro
Bob V~·-~
otate ol the art hu ciwtpd 11411\'e Heart Sunda)' thlo com- Honry llkad 10 keep up with .
Murphy wao tho 1-.r Iince the &lt;edt wu wrtu.n. lq Sluldl1 from 2 to 4 p.m. tho llmol and llhed tbiDII ..,.,
willie" .lor the third phase or What we haYe lo • Vciun!Aiero will be mavtng !rom
-·"
.,... - to
- .._.....
q IDtho Puolllo laqull')', dMil.. with P.IYcholoslcal warllore enviJ'OI&gt;o door-to11oor tllrw(l&gt;ont tho ooun- to
volved
In HI
lll'O.ltell
tho conduct ot tho 82 ofll..ro menl. I lhll* the Coda ot " to «iila&lt;t llmd&amp; On '111elda1 · oed -~~ lila pr_.u.a
and mon durlnc their ulll&lt;inlha Conduct ~·· noiiPJII¥ woll In · a do~- radio IJl'VIl'IDI alao
oil CI!PIIvi!J In Norlh g...., ouch . aa tnviranmelll. ''
will be held OYtr WMllO ., ral• ad . . . . . . botil tbo• proJocto.
Other phano hevo t1ea11 wllh
01 Bucher'• ourrendet of tbo - · · Pll'ltlll and lbelr He tile ~ tho detlilo ahlp'i lhloa~ and .a,~un. Pueblo, Murphy said II ho had children whe have under- tall, tho I n - ollm·
.• Noar lhe \!&lt;incluoion ol hlo been --mine the veoMI ido helrl -illfY are _.lad to
teolilnoov, llurphJ Wll ukacl ieclaiOII Woold Mft baeD be pre!19!1fid on the air. lleadYe1, Melcl·
will Dlln
blo .,Pinion of tbo ~ ot "eaHiaiaUJ the oama."
lng tldo ·
Wive on bdlal! llenryEwilla.
,

Mees, Kay Heading

Day

Game says L L lUUrph'Y

nOecnns

t.._ -

IOU

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

........ ..._...

1-•

Cao.aiJ

IIIII

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