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                  <text>. ·II- 'Dill DUb St Uall~ P.... W. . . . IWit 0.. Frklt;r, ~ 21, lHI

Isaac Barnhart
Dies Thursday

Cost-of
.. Livinll..... Escalator
For Teachers iS Proposed
COLIJIOIUS (UPO Sen. AlaociiUOD whteh np't!ICIDb
KleMa~ J. Malone,-, R-Ct~ more than 88,000 teachera ln the
notl, lnlrodllcod a bW In t11o slate.
General Aaacmhl,y T!!ur~ to
A total oC 10 billa Wl"e iiJtro..
provllte a COIHI·llvi!W escala- duced In tho legiolotun T!!urotor in teacher retirement bene- da,y before the IINJDbb' ....
Ria.
jourDid for the weekead.
Yalone;y'a bill would provide
S..L HOWOI'd- C. Cook, it-Te&gt;automatic increases tn retire- ledo, IJUL&lt;Iuced lour of the
ment, 'isabillty and survivors' five Senate b1lls.
benetits granted under the state
Cook's bills would:
Teachers' Retirement System
- Sot a $1 fee for ftnanclal
reports on fixtw-e s uo:lel' the
oroorun.
1lle escalator would attempt unifonn cunmercia.l code.
to ~ retired teachoers Crom
- Provide for an increase ln
losing benefits to inflation.
fees charged by county recordAn increase would go into ef· ers.
feet when the federal cost-of-Make a filing omcer ot a
liviq: index went ~ by 3 per firancial statement liable for
cent or more and remained at errors by himself or his deputhe level for three months.
ties.
Maloney's biU has gained the
-Perm it boards ot education
li UIII)Ort of the Ohio Education to contract for cafeteria ser-

CORRECTION
OF OUR THURS. WASHINGTON BIRTHDAY
SALE AD:

ALL-WEATHER COATS
THE CORRECT PRICE IS1

Values to

22.50 ....................... 15.00

DOWNIE -GROSS
MAIII ST.

POMEROY

Our Wothlngton•s Birthday Sale Ad,
This Item Should Have Read:

I

II

REGULAR 14.98 to 16.98 ................. 6.00

New York Oothl111 House

'

!

MAIH ST.

POMEROY

HOW LIKE
THE MAN!
Both the Washington
Monument' and the man
it honors have long
been admirable
examples of strength,
simplicity, dignity and
lasting greatness! To
once again pay special
homage to our great
general and first
President, this bank
will conduct no
business on

WASHINGTON'S
BIRTHDAY
saturday, February 22

EROY
NATIONAL BANK

RUTLANI

~POMEROY
Servin1 Mei1s County for

over 96 years

13ANI&lt;

.Member Federal Reserve System
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

All Accounts Insured Up To $15,000.00

I

In the House. nve bills were
introduced.
Rep. Alan E. Norrlo, R.-Weot-ervWe. 1,ponaored a bill to lOW'•
er the requirements tor policemen and flremen to retire.

Ulder Norris' measure.

po..

Uce and Oremen could retire at
the erll ot ~ yean ot aervtce,
with no minimum age requirement. The bill also would reduce trun tive years to three
the base amourt on which retirrme!K benefits were based.
Rep.. Olester T. Cruze, It.
Cincinoati, also Introduced a
policeman's bilJ tn the House.
Cruze's bill would permit pollee
"'to enter a hQutse wi1hout knocki~ U the omcers had a warrant to search it and permission from tfle judge who is-sued the warrant.
Other House bills introduced
ThtU"sday would:
- Establish rules for the retirement or Judges.
-Increase from f,100 to $200
a year the m.u:imum compensation of union cemetery trustees.
- Permit increases ill pa,y lor
township trustees.

For Southern
RACINE -

Af.Ol'OI)rlatioos to-

taling $519,.374.41 were approv.
ed for operation or Southern Local School District In 1969 by
the board of education ln a reg-

ular session Thursday nf.ght.
The breakdown of the a_wropriations include administration, $23,223; instruction, $312, 750; auxiliary agencies, $32,728; operatioo of schools, $21, 963; special services, $100; auppliefi, $37,120; contract a.nd open
order service, $18,188.40; equipment replacement, $7,146; fixed expenses, $58,506; capital outlay, $17,250, and materials for

maintenance, $6,400.
Also appropriated was $39,.
467 for operation ot the schOol
lunch programs and $38,188 in
bond retirement fUnds.

The board also approved a
prq&gt;Osal to increase the wage&amp;
of cooks and janitors to comply with the $1.30 per hour minlroom wage and voted to raise
bus driver's salaries $25 per
month.

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS 5 TO 7 PM

I

cepted and Theodore Hilldore was
awointed assistant .ianitor at the
Syracuse elementary school to
work four hours per day.
Attending were a.pt. WUIIam
Hughes, Clerk Joan Wolfe, Board
Members Howard Ervin. preiJident; Robert Harden. viee-presldenl; Harey Hill, Oils McCilnlock and Dorotlly Benu, and a
mmber of interested citizens
of the district.

VETERANS IIIEMORIAL
HOSPITAL
Admissions- Timothy Fields,
dleport; Niles Christopbersoa,
Racine; Donna Jean Roolh, Mason; Paul Forbes, MlnersvUle;
WUllam Swain, Long Bottom;
Charles Soott, Mlddleporl.
Discharges - Everett Bates
•
James &amp;tlder, Joan Wolfe. Harold Norlon, Clara Garland, Cor.
win Custer.
MEIGS GENERAL HOSPrr AL
Adminlons - None.
Discharges - None.

Pro-

..-.u,.

charged with dt.ordorly OODIIuct, roiii.U,. arrest and 111Molt and
blttery on a pollee olllcer.
~
...
uiiiP demand11 a•nn SenaeabreliWr lDcluded auspeulon of the
polleemoo IIIWIIved, c.-tim of a ci.UIOD review bnonl to Invest!pte pollee brutoi!Q&lt; chorgoo and relllOYal !'ran olllce of Safe~ Dlrector Fred SlmODr.
~
•
•
0 rornpaawn, no potU!twe with youth
COLUMBUS - GOV. JAKES A. RHODES SAID 'lllur~ all
membero of tho state Boord of Ed-tlon are college oducllod with
oo coorc&gt;aosloa or potl-e for worklne With YOUIIII people. Rhodea
spoke lo 800 delegates of tht Ohio AF!AlO Logiolatlve conlerooce

tero, lolrL Moclto Umton, PerryovUio, ond Mro. Nollie KaJ..
lles, Brl~;. tour brother.. Lod,
Ft. '4ero, Flo. I Clorenee or J.o.
gon; Ben, Stewart; and Elzo.

Brice.
Funeral aervtcea will be Sundo,y at 2 p. m. at the White~
aeral H&lt;llle at Coolville with t11o
Rev. ft"l' l!ooe olllclaU"'- Burial
wW be In tho Staooart Cemetery.
Friends mo,y call at the funeral

quate

trainiae

are needed for continued lndu1trial progress in Ohio.

RECEIPTS UP
Retail sales tax receipU In
~iga Councy for t~ two week
period ending Feb. 17, this year,
were I.Ul over 60 per cent .over
the corresponding two week per..
iod t.st year, John D. Herbert,
state treasurer, reports. Receipts for the two week period
thio year lolaled $16,921.28 compared to $10,555.94 m 1968.

DRIVER KILLED
VAN WERT, Ohio (U PI) John E. Bates, 43, Payne, Ohio,
was killed Friday when his automobUe colltded with a truck on
U. S. 224 near here.

Early Roush Named

lllcldl_.t

_....,.

or

tons

""'"" -Cllorleo
- a ca11
.. t b e
Scott Ia tba
B-..,
- 'l'llur-..,
-A nol-'.._,._._
......
- - · - - I f f.

LGrando (Baa) llllgilt, 711, 11t.
I, Nlddl_.t. cllocl,
tba ""'"" UriYed IDOl ell- ........... In lololp Geaenl ·~pltol fQIIooit,. a 1G111J m .....
Mr. MJDt wao ...,..., at lilt

'l'llur.

-

34 Pt,G~S

H - Rallrood Yonla Car 1$
Tho f'l&gt;merv7 Fire ~ ..,_ 1Nl"l, and and _ . . .
_.., 1 ..U lo DOOrtba- on OIIPie Ol'ebard fc111ow11w rflll
FIIIEMEII CALUD

u._._

He no a member &lt;1

Jlullldl·

487,

Dr. Ray R. Pickens Appointed Acting ~

d

In by bit
wife, !b'lvlo, In l&amp;a, and &amp;
.dauahter and a 1I1ter:
"'
ALTERNATE SERVICES
;
Tho United Methodist Church . Ho Ia aurvl...,.. by a 111p~
and tllo Trlnlcy United Church lluryl White, Cho-k, W. V&amp;;l
of Chrlot "W coaductSoonda)" Ll1&gt;- throe dotera, lolro. IIQincDl
ten service• ~ ttd.a &amp;. Bloaaer, Mlddltport.; MrL noyc~
da.Y 111 7 P. "'· and alternau,. Rumllold, lit. 1, lolldclltport. and
from tho United Metbodlot to Mro. Cborleo Buek, Rt. 4, PomTrlnlcy United each "ook. The
•1'01i two brother&amp;, a&amp;nDce,Rt.
0
rot oeo·vice ..w be held at the 1, Middleport, and Jolon, FairTrlnll;J United. The public lsi.,. boo-o, Ohio; 1 grllldom, Gar y
vited.
White, ar.d tk oecreat-cranddllldred.
Fllieral aervlceo WID b e BOOSTERS TO MEET
da.Y It 2 p. m. li'CIIII t11o Mlriln
Tho Mete• Band lloootero Will Funeral Home. TIW' I!n, Cboelel;
meet 11 8 P. m. !f&lt;nla.y at tho Lomloy will d!lclate. Burial will
of Melgo lfl&amp;lo &amp;hool be In lollleo Cemetery. FrieDl(

wu preceded

•
J

I

·- _L_.

last year.
Mr. Roush, who was employ.
eel by the U. S. C&lt;&gt;rpo al Engineers on locks and dams for
many years, was named to the
post at the regular monthly meetIng of the bnonllhls wook.

Middleport· Physician Chosen
Unanimously by Commission

/

/

~- -

Dr. RIJ Ralokln Pick-,
dolef &lt;1 -ctV..,.ant tlumrlallloliottal

POMI!ROY -

pootld~
.... oamocl
Ill
- ...,.......
- aaol pracUclnr
- ·acttnr
" " ',_",.,
-

-

!l&amp;lun:W ..........

~

tho -

"'

lololp
· -..
1be commloodooo
In oopoclal Mllkln -~~~
throe member• ani Clerk lllartboo ~·
prooent, voted ...tOIOiuoly 1o ~ Dr.
Plekooa lo llle poaltkoo pono1low .........
al tho lololp ~ R~leon ~•e

lafeterla

Comml-.

It's Sale Time
All Over The Store!
.t, '

~

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Fo!neral oorvlcoo I or

J:oholn

ME,GS fltEATRE
TONIGHT &amp; SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 21 - 22
"WILL PENNY••
(Technicolor)
Charlton Heston-JoanHaekett
'ARIZON A BUSHW ACKERS''
(Technicolor)
Howard Keel- Yvonne DeCarlo
SHOW STARTS 7 P, M,

Reading Program in
Pomeroy Reviewed
POMEROY - Barbool'l 11o1orboU81&gt;. ecmoultaFt for ~· reodlnr -am,
Wll at tho l'oiDenl1 El-..r Sdoool
n..r"""' for tn-aentce old lo gradoo ono
tloraU&amp;b throe.
The Pome.,. EleoroontorJ School lou a
jlllot -am In reodlnr being Ia t1oe Orlt three gradeo. ldaaa for ~oqorov.,_
111t111 oi lnootructloa IIIII btdlvldual neoclo
............and.
Poniots aaaloting In the .....una nn
lolro. Jolon Sobo, Mrs. Leo Crew, lolra. C.
J. 1'oar1011, Mrl. Soouoel Mo:KimO)', lolro.
1'1111 El~. ond Mr. and Mro. Goorp

SUN. - MON. - TUES.
FEB. 23 • 24 - 25

See
''BARBARELLA''
(do her thing)
Jane Fonda -John Phillip La
OLORCARTOONS:
Dellant Giani
See You Liter, Gladlalor
3 Ring Wing Ding
Home Sick Nudnic
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

WriJiot. ;

· Toocbarl are Ju4Y Codner. DorotloJ Wood-

CROW'S

.. Jlioloort Monts. .

,J

, -1

lniAornod It · ~ Ho,.
In lloirlao dirlnB ltll3.$4 and _,od loll JII'I&lt;IICO It tba Jmes MemorIal Cllnle l!odlcllnr In Middleport.
The acttnr ....,q. ..,_,. -.oocl tllreo
Yeu'l ltlld niDe IDII1ths ill WW D a1 a Navy
flllltor ,not Ill tile Atlaotlc ani Allaflc Po.
OF. -

command•.

Dr. Pldmna hal one lOB, RQ, Jr., age
23, a senior at KentstateUatverah;y. Hl•parad.s. Mr. aad Mrs. Ray Plekena, Qo ., ~lldl

In Cllfliin.

•
'

publl"""porey uacontralcomml_,..anl
tor the JUt' BeVJD year a as a meatter ol
t11o Galllo CcounliY Boord &lt;I Blectlono.
FOI' :U yeors ba woo comoetod with the
lollrleUii -cturlng Co. ~ acrooa

.

'

SAMPLE PANEL- Joe Sisson, Pomeroy bricklayer, above,
Frktay bulk a UQie block and brick panel to be approved by
arehiteeta of the new cunprehensive Meigs High School buildlog. The parael, constnlcted near the actual building work. is a
guide for all future brick and block laying and must stand at

'''""oBmiN,

.

the site unttllfle schoal•s canpletion. Architects are expected
to consider IPJlrom of the panel this 1Wsdly. Brick and block
ll)'iOV should get wderwo,y In aboot 10 do,ys If wcalbor coadltiona permit, aecordi.D&amp; to Kenneth Thei•s. jab a~
fOJ" Karr Constructl.on CO., general eootractor.

,

'

·· '

Carr add he bad no doubt the demonltration was 14 coerclve." Some 50 stu~

'

denio faced poslllble dloclpllnaey action

loofore tllo Interim Joint Faculey..sludent
Dlacljllne I!Gord.
SWdilla from Oberlin and a lew other campaNs sat In front (1 the ltudeat
plaeement oMce at Peters Hall. allowtor the three Marines lo get only ao

far as Dean George Langeler's otnce.
Three students walked over dte bodles
the protesters to talk with the recruiters, but Langeler eventually decided to
ask Ute Marines to leave.

c.t

Computer's Dance
PT. PLEASANT - Pnlnt Ploaaont lfl&amp;lo
- · ore curreutly enpged In
CGupleo will be matched by a compltor
aceording to their llkoa ond dlallkoo. 'I'IWo
project lo being _.ODrocl by the Cltlzont
National ani Ill oompoter oorvlce center, Tho Ohio VallO)' Date Cooitrol, looc.
Tho porpooea altho program are:
- Tn allow all .-nto · d tile oeboal
an ~ lo how coonprtors are
-.tor • 111111'0 lmportont part al dally
life.

rio-

"' the -

the .... frtondl llu·

rekindled.
Eleven men and two trucks respoaded
to the llrot call at 2:36p.m. Frlda,y. Tba lire
otorted '"' prq&gt;erty of Marvin Baird. Wind
carried sparks and started 1 blaze OD Butl
E\'1111' Jam. Firemen returned to the stl--

Tour 'Down Under'

tlonot 51\m.
_.SClP of the Ore was about 1.5 miles
s~- of Rt. 7. Two and one--flllf acrea
were iitolved tn the tlre, lnclw:Ungtwolcrea
on Baird's prqM!rQ' 1111 a r.H-acre on Evana.
Grua, bruah ADd lap rekirdled 1t 12:30 a.m. Slturday aM six men and one truck
were dispatched to the area. Firemen returneel to t11o otetlon at 2:30 Lm. SOIUrday.
Tho ftre runo were the 16th and 17th
of tllo JOif for Gallipolis volunteer fire.
men. There were 10 nmr~ in Jamary.

Procram.
lolr. Miller

•18

SPBCIAL
WIRING ALLOWANCB

Ott A"--n1 lloc-k Range
:==~~=.U==Y=NO~W~~--~JfFU
fUl fiKKJI'OWt:.U 11H.Wfl!&gt;iUNlt

I• I

Ill'-"'

1857
Ga1lla
School. Roo ncolvocllolo B. s..
~ from Ohio Stole Unl•oraiQ&lt; Ia 196:1.
Ho roaldlo In Col.....,o, ond II morrlad

AcaoliniJ Hillh

to
111e 110r1n1r Bulb Fulka, ~=~"' Mr.
IIIII lolro. Jolul Bronunor, I
TloO)' 'bave -

....., FN&lt;I IIIII

- w i l l - tlooollo .. the
TloO)'

""'!'V"III!Io

,,

Aa-

Loa~..

.

lolrL WUIIIm ~ lolro •
~t and Mill ·(lrltlllh at.

PO_!IEI!OY -

.)'.-!

~

lolotlod ~~ """"""' "' • ..Ill Nol~\"""'odaJ'.
Dr: Cloil'h~ flaUGoo. bOI'IO oopodallat, Olilo
S:ate/ Unlvertlb'. IPikt an. ..Brood Man

PRICE$ START AS LOW AS 199.95 AND ·
EASY TERMS CAN BE ARRANGED
Ao&gt;
C 0 Ill-

...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;;99.;;;2;,.;·2635:;:;:;__ _. _ _ _.;M::.;:iD::;:DLE:::,:PO::R.:,.T_ __,.
..
•'

'·

~

•
••
&gt;

'1;~~

:00

cr

GriM

·Ql-llilo, OloiO.

'

roat-.

two,_.-·

tloo - · wu lllr'll!
tim..,
·
• . "+···
VItally looterested In ollalrl 411 ll!i ~ ;:;

lllllll 1957 -

Mr. Co* f t l a tnlllta ttl u. ~ : .. ;.
111e loto Senator Tom .lnnes' lld• ·~ ;· ;

Oclal lot tllo ollob- til..,.,... ,';:
Memorial Clinic ond In ........ ·11r; -.: .&gt;~
R. Plckeioa lo Middleport. lolr.

Cocol a1J1i : &lt;0

waa act!•• In tllo .-m.- &lt;I t b a - · · · ·. ·
(caotlnood ... Po.-

IIOMI!R 11llWIN COOK

Zl

'

.:~

Students Tour Program ;&gt;
MDlDLEPORT - Ten MeJco Hlgb &amp;hool
student• joined Upward Bound yoothtrcrna
21koway area In a vlolllo Ohio Unlwrslcy
thio weekend. They reviewed collop plans
and fortheGIIIIng UpwoniBwed suorunor pro.
grams.

varlecy ollearnl... cultunl aal ro.....U- . .
activities. Year-rouadcounaeW18l•~ · '
bJ tbroo 11111dlll® ....,.elora
dlotrlctl within file 28 comt,y roalon. ·
:·
The \.liWUd
far&amp;•IM•·.
ern Ohio l1
f'..lllltJ : ·

wloo_._,: ·

On t11o agenda wos a meetlov with nloe · - ~ &lt;I
former Upward llaond sbodenta ,_ attondlow loCe of -lcloo. The ~
Ohio UnlvorsiQ&lt;. The..-.... attended tlloOhlo boo boon folded
tba Ollke
t'ni-..ralcy • hlaroball UnlveroiQ&lt; lotokellall nollllc OppGhonlty and Ia
pme.
Sooldoeaotvoo Ohio. All~~.- llor

ilor...,.

Adkolo.

Junlors heard plana for next 1ummer'a
The ......
l)pwonlllound currtcolum ond oonloro io tho
· Aoll.
eltoo,
Dr, A. P. smttb, •atorlnarloa d A-., ......, received help 011 collcae edml11i&lt;111 will the Fob. l'/ ... . alii! ·llnaoclal aid q~~&lt;Jatlons. Tllo tVwonl
IDI ''!IoriO Health . lollnllemont" u hla Bouod lll'Q&amp;i'IDl Ia olmt.! at motiVOIIiiW hlall
Iaiiie. IIIII Dr. wW tatl!oia to &lt;IPOIIIi, ,li!hGoll otutonta ~w alolll~. lout nn Marth 6 uolai "Foodlng "' Prototil,.
not planned 1o eulltlu thoilr IIIIUcallill,
~ and Vltomlna 1o Your Horae" u
lo aUOill a colleae or 1111\-..rll~. A ol,.....eok
blo klplc.
-ram • - • llle ollodonta loa
~"

els
Fur.
n
lture
OPEN FRI. &amp;SAT. NIGHTS

,

•~ Stiho(.I a~

lot loavln&amp; for

1$....

. Ftll *Ill

'Ihree Auea4 First

M!Mieport

qo...,

tied

Six Month Study

mas seaac:n Following durcb serric.sthl•
Oowera, pnwldocl by Mr. Cook. _ . ella- •
1rlbutod 1o slout4o. ~ re~t, portleularly clorlng the 1oollday - - 1lorGol(lo
the y-.a. received nmombroncos by
Bono Ia Middleport 111 Oct. 5, 1887. bawu.
the .... "' tho late lolr. and lolro. l!oiWIII.
Cook. He morrloclllle fomoer Vb-alld&amp; 11UII,
pneeded 1o1m In deatll
!toe wao tho dluShter d tho late a.. IIIII
lolrs. R. F. Blohop. The Rev. lolr. 81....
............ "' Hoatb United aour.a .
at t11o time al the marrtaae d bla ........
ter lo Mr. Cook.
·
Mr. Cook wu uoooclatod Willi bla - .
Edwin Cook. 1n a o....,r, aoeo1 •
,_.
--.on-.a.SecorodA..,,Iot~ ·
port, for a number nl yeoro. II 1117, llit
ond hlo father purcbllocl tho ~ WlloQaale Grocery. II became 1bo IWp GNooey Co., and wu - - b y ...... Cede

GALLIPOLIS - Vol...-r firomeo bot.
1 stubborn brush fire Friday aftemooo
on ShoestriqJ Ridge and then returned to the
area shortly alter mldnlglot when tho lolaze

Fred Milkr W"ms

In 11.1 -amt. H e - ly to noomer&lt;llll clurch pro,le&lt;U. lolr. Ccooll
held orod ollleo at tllo clur&lt;ti llorau8lo tile
years, and for over eo years wu a ......_
ber ot the church chOir. Ho 10rnd nn llle
atnclal bnonl d tile clloJ-dl for IIIIIQll ,.ro.
Hio lalt maJor project for tile ehordo 11'11
In 19115- he bad ..... shrubbery - planted about tho exterior d tho ~
Anauall,y ba ceuM the clurcb 10 lot dee·
orated Willi poloooettlas clorlng 11oe Chrla-

the~

FRI1ll B. )(ILLER

tba -11)''1 1968 lntornoUcwoal .,...,_

Automatic Electric Range

IUs dacllcadm lo lleatlo United Cl&gt;orch b.-1 -ltrllod loll llrOII8 laltll

To Put Out Friday

foUr
- 1,200
-In·
lonatoly
thooeloctod
UM to from
1o11o part..

Slide-out oven wall panels that sponge clean right at
the range • Two High-speed 2700 Watt surface units •
Oven Timing Clock•Stay-up surface units with removable trim rings and drip pans • Infinite-Heat surface
unit controls • Famous Calrod 8 Recipe-Heat units •
Timed appliance outlet•Tilt-away bake and broil units.

CouJob'.

Fire Proves Hard

tba

lntormallon for llle
d what llle oom-

BY BOB HOEFLICH
MIDDLEPORT Homer Edwin Cook,
81, prominent Middleport real- ond a
buslooesomon more than 40 yoara, cllocl early Saturdo,y at V._an1 Memorial Hooop!tol,
tndlng a llnprlllll Wne11.
Mr. Cook, who rolldocl at 390 North
Third Ave., waa kdown for hla deep Inter~
ellt In comnonley alfalro and for loll phD·
anthroplc actlvltleo In Middleport and Meta•

Shoestring Ridge

for a compoter daoco lo be

hold on March 7.

Pormlto _......" lo wmk, wlih tho

(UPl)- Oberlin;:

from sdoool.

·

Collect Data for

getl061ing -

01o1o

0,.

lllthll'll B. IMIIiro CJLoel &lt;I
·. (~ iool Poco 2)

lara,

w-.. • eo.,

Model RC646-H

And Toko Em Homo
992-5432

:f;

J)lial

GALLIPOLIS - Fred B. lo!Wor, am d
lolr. and lolro. Lowla Claude loiWor, 532
!lo&lt;m&lt;l Ave., baa - . oeloctod by hil om.
piQJor, Price
1o mil
Aollralla for alx montloa. Ho Ia ~

Removable oven wall panels, coated ·with DuPont Teflon•

. . . first with the features women want most

Order By Phon•

;.:I .

.... tf'Oao,..ti\Y 1n 1953. He a1., ...,.
Ill - - - Hillh clorlng tile 1946-49 -

Horn

llfOIII"•·
• ~. "-"" Vtnl!oJa Reibel, Noap JOU!ar
Aoo4 lhlnk "'
lllfolria alid Moe Y&lt;lolic, IIIII llle prlndpal -wuimakel
~

SANDWICH

c:
.,-•

!rGm the KlrkeiVI.IIe, Mo. COl-

It'. ._

bi4.""""

al Cholblro. Ho Wlil educated In the pololie aehoolo . ql AdciiiiOII Townlhlp, Gallla
A~ J1111o Sdoool and Billa &amp;ollnou
Ccollfl'l. lie lroarrieo! Gladys ~rlock al
11unt1ng1on, w. va., m Juo. 31, 1917.
He ,.., o rnemloer &lt;I the Me-• Lodae
at Cbelblro, havlnr received hio 50:~ear
pin elcht yaaro ago. Ho 10118 was Interest.
od In politico, falth6oll,y serving the Re·

Population or the New
York metropolitan area is
more than 11,350,000.

~­

=~ c~

..

Homer Cook, Churchman,
_, . --.. . ' .
~~~~~licifti&gt;.Jtiee. 2t. t.-.;'r ~~~ . ~..~ - . · {aii~·~~=~=;
..., Jr
IOIId ~
Rotlweb . ~m!lni
~ ~e, Gl~fi)oio&gt;,' cJaioato~ah:. ·~"::-:.!:':"':~.;::; Businessman, Dies Satm•da'V
Mr.;
'J

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in Pomeroy• a
downtown business district at
11:30 a.m. today was 38 degrees
under sunny skies.

.....1......
_._, ..., ......
..................

oner

PlckoaJ, ..., 44, gra.-ollod !rGm Wlllainl

Jlllle!d.

10m-.

'he Fabulous

t

•

·

&lt;"•llljiolloo) will lot ·belli at lo!Wer'a ~
Homo at 2 p.m., lolooclll'·
lolr. Jlolb&amp;&lt;lb died alooul 3 .p.m., Friday II
tba
lolodlcol C - «&lt; Flroot A.... , tho Ohio River from his holoie, oopd later
wbora ba bold ~ a
~ Folo. ~~. .Will "!!'DDWod ~ t1oo JIYaer c,.... RJwor
a.J, c. J. ~. ~iir~ - · eoqu,y· loeot.ed porttally on hla clo1141oood
cllot Clul'eb at JIU!Iand, wlll,)oo ~~ill &lt;I llf!II!OIIId _,. Cbelblre. In aarllor yean
tho
8olrlal ll'lll bf\11&gt; -~ IIIli . Ill
~eel In the United Stotoo

Hoi••

• •j '~·

-4-J ()

H1a1o So:llool In 1942, roceiYed loll BS !rGm
t1oo unJ..roiQ&lt; ot !llmeOGto In 1946 and

clfle

ctaaunc:e7 E. Ruth&amp;tJII, 71, Addleon, CRt. 1,

area.

of

~uactlnc_...,.·

permaiM!IIt IUCCIIIOl'.

GALLIPOLIS -

+'
~1 ' )

r·

"'
tloo ·vloo
-·
and Ollllcutnd
Robert
Clark,
pnalani BaiJ&gt;hwith
W.
ouro, momloor, Ia tho ~ d Dr.

"--n•"
Theiss Heads Chauncey Rothgeb, Ch.eshire,
NFO Chapter Gallia (;OP Leader, is Dead
DR. R. R. PICKENS

· -I

for tho o111&lt;1e at ,....,.. bo the 1914
primarY.
Korr pnoddocl over tba oopodol ooeulaa

,_,

pUCID- tor the peraw nt qpolatnumt, aecordlns lo
Boord Pntldaot
Charleo R. Korr, lfr«.,'O\ llepjoiiCIII, Pl&lt;keno

,,

ron

The poat d &lt;CIIIIIIJ - r woo left ...
eaoot upon the doollo of Honey Eorlnl Ioiii
Moado,y. 'l1lo late Mr. Ewli!r. d tile
Iaiii three-' ....................... Ia OWo,
hao oorvel In tho pool for almost 3.1 y-1.
Loollo Fultz, 'cbalrman &lt;I t11o GOP aoc.Uvo ....-_ aald Tlouraclay tho tomember ciooounbl... d tllo Rep.,llcan per.
Q&lt; will meet FrldoJ, Feb. Z8, ID ~ a
Dr. Plekoaa II •_.:1-0!l!loiiOII
. oliO lo be 111 ap-

Be Thrifty-Save All of Your S.lesllps

PRICE TEN CENtS

~V~O~L~-~IV~N~0~- ~4~-----------------~~~··~~~·~~·~~~~~~rl~-- --------------~SU~N~D~A~Y~.~F~EBR~U~A~R~Y~2~3~.~1969~~-----------------~~~·~·~~~~~

·'l!

AntoriCIIii Lqloa Poat

FIVE SECTIONS

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

FRIDAY and SATURDAY NIGHTS
UNTIL 9

Early Roush, semi - retired
Letart township farmer, has been
appointed lo the board ot trustees filling the vacancy eroated by the death &lt;I Harey ADen

•tmts

•"!'j..

llemlnj!woy llid:
worl4 Ia a Ono place ond""""
f1&amp;hUnc for. 11
-

Scott w, bold ..Ueo! t11o 1101111L
llowo••, Scott wu MUac !mJo:h

...,. Natloaal -'111urld01n1Jht
Wbore. a porkocl car OWIIell by DoYld Goodiiln bad CIIQ!Iotftn.lollaor daonagooa were ll!eurrocl.

-·-···- -"'-- ... --·

...

Thoughts

._ d

Shop At EIMrfelds In Pomeroy

Township Trustee

..

---------~- -·--~ -----·- -~· ··~---------

wnndoMight

llan pep pills Thursday after
rwnerous raids In the Tijuana

veuatile
anywhere" TV. Solid blaiP.
just on.r: rectir1er tube. 9• picture.
n~eae.ured diaji:onally; 40 eq . in .
Workl with hou5e current ur battery
... e\·en plu~e into rar riAartolle
li~hr.r:r . • Try one out
for ai~ today.

. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

-~ ~---··

marUJ_ana and ntne mU-

EKort - Mot(lrole'~

WIRII.IIADIO &amp; TV.

....

MARLJUANA BURNED
Mexico (UPI)
Muiean authorities burned 11

" 111h

111 SIUI STill "TilE AIIIIQlll" TV

-·

TIJUANA

Home

MOIOAOLA•
/ESCORT

--

;;home~iiatiiteriiinooniiiiiilisaii.~iiiiii'iiiiiilll••n•Middl••opor••~------•...,.iiiiiliicaiiilliili1Ytlmiiiiiiiiie.iir.illlilll- :

here."Tbe 1tate Board ol Education ia the one which determines the 1
school CtwJI'se a youth Ia going totake." ROOde&amp; said. ·-They have determioed he will take a general eourae. A general course leads to
ootldov except IIIIOlq)lo.vmeot." Rhodeo opoke later In 1romoo and
told an industrial -.wredatioo baiQiet tlat both research ard ad&amp;o

•

Take along an Escort.

-•t

POUCE GUAIIDEI&gt; MAYOR M. E. SolliOPbre,_.
talay •• tba niUit &lt;ltllreata ba rocel...,.. r.IIOirior a mardi em CJQ&lt;
Roll ..-.u.r by 150 demoaotratora
allqocl p&lt;ilco
bruta!IQ&lt;. The domonotratora wallled 1D moue fran N~-QU111er1 to Senaenf» eaner'• oftlce to proteat police treatment of Dr.
William Allealllll Dr. WUIIam
both NOJII'OOO.
- - r 1!181 wltll o cleloptlm of the morchera, but reJectocl all ft-.. demudo lnuod by u-, Ho IDatoed agreocllo e_.
dlte ao l....,odplloo Into tho chorpa Allen had le¥illocl at three
pollee otftcers who arneted him at a dc:Mut&amp;Mn reataurut. He wu land; a grea~ two alaCOLIJYBUS -

STEAl
HOUSE

The

In Melli COUilf¥. lolr, lied OIIIIOd a n i . . - afllrmln
TCJiniObliiiD Atbanl Countt
60 ,.ro. He iiiiUD!ombordtho
Botllony
Churcll.
Ho wu alooprec-ln d•th
by tooo oono, a dalllhtor, tbrao
brotbon, IIIII a diller.
SuniVOl'l lael!.de his wife,
Zora Ludwick lllmhart; I 100.
Carlloa, Rt. %, GOQ'o.Ulo; agrondson, Robert Barmort, Columbuo;
one ~uabter, Dnrlo, Rut.-

DECLINf.S Am

-

wnuam

The resignatioo of
Long as a bus driver was ac-

Going to bed?

d tllo late lAY-

II ani Jomle Cramlotani wu bol1! ID Ollw Tulmllllp

A.-s.

New Haven; James WUson, Mid-

A FULL
SERVICE

w.....

1.. a br!Of
He 11'11 tba -

vi...
Otbor Soaate l&lt;tiCOI 'lllurodQ
lncl- c:oollrmalloa al live
QPOinlmento ~ GoY. Jomoo

Is Approved

MDI'S

,I

..- - . . •••-.
......,...
H..... tal In Porlla"olluq -

Appropriation

CORRECTION!

.

U.C :Darm...i. N, M. _;,~ ...
~"
.....,•• I -~~
~ ,.,.._, died
__ .....,_
-·-at st. J - -

Tho

.....

·

oJt•• ""

how

•-r

_...c*"i..llr::.i

�..
J _ 'I'M ~

!ftet sentinel. ~lid~.)' • 1-'ebn•t) 23. 1&amp;69

~:WASHINGTON

Steepedfn Arrog~,. ·

~WHITE PAPER
I

.

~

.

BY WULL\M S. \\11ITt.:

C* WASHINGTON - BecamR some o( the
:~t tax-exem£1f; bmdatiool!l ·havo been too
~!W, twoo biased and too political for

)Joo long, 8 prO(ound movemen1 to wt them
:Jiown to alae poUUcally and
them mo:e

mak~

::-eeount.~t~le (or the use ~ then multi-bll::Uons ts now under way in l~gress .
:: This is the central meanmg of a cur.rent
: tnvestigation by the mostpowerlul commttlN
:On Capitol BiB, the Uousc Ways and Means
·:Committee, into what has itself beco';: :c
·:~st powerful, the least regul-::
.e
:teast challengeable non - elec
orce m
:c\ll&gt;&lt;lliCilft lire.
No one denies that ttle f~tions gener accomplish much that ts m tile public
;lnlorest - in nonpolitical ~treas - and no
seek&amp; their extinction. The root oC the
::Uoub•le here is that the~ _have demanded
acquired a kind of PTI~lleged san~ry
all etteetlve criticism or (Jiestion,
::;.hile themselves dishing i~ out •.s they see
The trwble, in' short, IS that u; the pro-of
or do1 .....
some undeniable good, some
u 16
•
bad in
tlave done much that ts very
• .tl
f r
and two-sided
to the tradi on o ree
.
·s
::~~ and ideological contention In thi
:;
For It has long been a plain fact oC Lite
once any proposal or any critique of
::.,~,lng has issued from "a foundation"-

t.

HITS POLE, DIES
RICHMOND HEIGHTS, 0 h i o
Michael Kessler, 23, Eastlake,
::f)lnto, was killed SaturdiJ' when

I

At Gallia Acatlemy

;x-

!c

or:

Six Defendants Fined in Court

66 PONTIAC CAT ALINA
4 Door Sedan, Radio and Healer, .Auto.m~lic t~ans.,
power steerins. power brak.es, beige f~n1sh w1th
matching interior. W/S/W l11es, low miles. Excel·
lent condition.

51795
WOOD MOTOR SALES
. Oh'
I

10

POMEROY - Six deCendants
were fined and four forfeited
bonds in the court of Meigs
County Court Judge Frank W.
Porter Friday.
Fined on three charges was
Harold Edmlllld Darst, Rutland.
Route 1. His fines included $25
and costs on charges of reckless
operation and driving on a susperded license; $50 and costs,
leaving the scene of an accident
and $35 and cos\.s, speeding.
Fined on two charges was Harvey Little, Rutland, $15and costs,
disturbing the peace and $15 and
costs, trespassing and injuring
prqterty.
Also fined on two charges was
Freda Hammond, She was fined

;:E:a:s:l:em:A:v:e:·::;;:;;:;;::::G:a:ll:ipo::'s:':::;:.~S~ts and co''' on di"urbing the
r

tubi..,Pte:d to oriam.l Gwner fo '" he from d...
tecta for 3 ~ears . Admiral 's obligation limltechb ~upplyin~ a
replacemant in e11change for defective tubE!. Serv1ce and 1n·
stallation coats paid by owner. Warranty not effective unless
registration card mailed to Admiral after deliver~ .

at

underPJ'Ivl.lepd.
GALLIPOUS - J\n in-servtcl oourae for
teachers, ..Economic Ealeation: Economics
ln the Curriculum 5t6, 5t7, or M8,'' 'frill
be&amp;ID at Galila Acadolll)' llllb School. Room
101, a&amp; 7 p.m., Wednesday, "'""'b I.
Thlo. tnlnlnR lo lumlllhed bf the ObiD
Coundl on Ec:UIOIDle E'.illcatlmt. Ohlo Unl·
versl~. Athens. Dr. G. S. Ra.jan, Ph.D.,
Prafessor of Economies, Rio Grande Col·
logo, wW teacb nine at tile eleven 2\&gt; hour
elasses from 7 to 9:30 p.m. each Wed.nesda,y, with the last class belng held May
14.

The OCEE a aon-~trotlt edUcational or-

...in

ganlzatlon •
retund up 'to $20 per quar·
ter hour upon conwletion ol the eourse.
Textbook..Qipe matmials and curriculum resouree materials are furnished.
Ohio University will gl:ve three quarter
hours (( gra&amp;Jatecredit,undergra41atecredit or special credit for thi1 course. The

~rrent enrollment Ia 31.

wai

He
a member ol the Middleport
Board o1 F.duc.UOil and Wll an actin Rotary Club membef tor yeare.
1n tribute to hll wile ""d a llloter, Mrs.
Artlllr (COrol SteWart, Cllarlooton, W.Va.,
11 among tile IUrvtvoro, Mr. Cook
ttnaneed the egJatruetion fA a c~dren's
room onto the Middleport Public Ubrary,
dedleated in their memory, in 1966.
Slrvlvlllg In addition tA&gt; Mrs. stewart
are a daughter, Mrl • .kim (Betty) .!klvers
f1 Pomei'OJ';. a grii'Kklaughter, Mrs. l..awrenee (GaiO. Coble at Dayton, and several
nieces and nephews. Besides hl·a parents
and hie wife, - a brother, George, and a
sister, Mrs. Carl (Alma) Hollman, preceded him In ~th.
Funeral services w111 be held at 2 p.m.
Monday st the Rawllnga-Co&amp;.ts Funeral Home
with at.e Rev. Max Donahue ollielating. Bur.
ia1 will be in Rlvel"Yiew Cemetery. Friends

Mrs. Glem Trout, Fnnk Porter, WWiam ;j;
Bahr, Mrs. Deanni COok, Mr. and ,Mra. ~
,,
Clarence 1bomp100:, Mrs. Beulah Johnson, t.:
Mro. Irma B. Canterl&gt;ury. and lira. Est!· r~
~~
vaWI Matthews.
Clarence

.•..

Thompson.

l\!

.i
I

ii.

t.

COLOR PICTURE TUBES

NO EXTRA COST

An example or Ada's resourcefulness Is demonstrated in the
ahetr type arrangement she has used to hold the marcy Rowers tn the
modified green house. The baaic pi.ece uaed for the ahelvi~ arrangement 11 a very old discarded nickelodeon.
Her attachment and love for
9le"a also an active member
the past 11 reflected In her an- cl. the Trinity United Church d.
Uques.
Christ, Cheater CruncH DaughOne bedroom, done excluaive- ters ot America, and the Rock
ly in anU""ea, holds a 200 - Springs Grange.
year .old bed, lpinnlngwheel, butLooking forward to a lively tuter churn. several old - time ture, Mra. Holter plans a trip
pltc:hen and basins, and a era- to either Soutll Amertr.a or Jadle used [or generations by her pan thi1 110mmer.
husband's fa.mi.Jy.
Three yean ago It was Ber.
In contra.-_, another bedroom
muda; the next year it was Hacloseby c:ontalna gowns ,purchas- wail, and laet year she visited
ed oo her trips to Parta and several countries in D.II'(IRe. the
Hawaii, A l'lllfled bedspread arod Hol,y Land, and Eo&gt;Pt.
oovered piliows used in the room
At the drap of a projector
were created by Mn. Holter She"U ahcnr you slides of her
from a Parachute, again demon- camel ride in Egypt,
stratlng her wide range ol talThe busy Chester Road woment.
an, with an eye to the future, Is
In this same room alao are al10 lookfng forward to addboxes containing dancing c:oslng larp white pillars to the
tumea. Both •he and her late husband were en.tJNelasdc about
aquare and round dancing and hid
several matching coiJtUmes for
that hobby. Among the costumes
also Is an authentic hula ouUtt
which Mrs. Holter ~rchaaed ia

Mrs. Vel-

Streel died SeOlrday 8:30 a.m.
at her home.
Sbe ""' bom In Belmont. Ohio,
a daughter bl the lalo Adam F.
and Ama Baker Klsar. She was
a grawato• ol the Saini Aloys·luo Academy In New Lexington,
Ohio, and was
mplic: teacher.
Her husband wa 5 tile late Edward

the Arrow Dancers will perform.
MARRIAGE LICENSES
POMEROY - Jerry Nelson Arnold, 21,.
and Linda Lelgll Moore, 21, both or Pome- .
royi Franklin Bentley WUson, Jr., 23, Middleport, and E)mlce Diane Rowe, 21, Racine

a

~
;.:

F. Heiner.

:?,
ff,
~-:

Route 2.

f~.

*

cHECKING ACCmENT
POMEROY - Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's department reported Saturday it is

Ste wa. a · member or the Sacred Heart Catholic Church, Sa.
ered Heart Qltld and the Four

. O'Clock Club.

·m

:e:=.an.;c:: t':'t~s

~:

~ ~~~O:p =~~ lJI).sts were
~~~
l::::.:;;:::;}::;:::;:::::::::;;~::::::::=:;::x::::::::::.::=-.:::::::::::::::::~::::::::.:;:::::=:::::=:.::~~=:::~::::l:

&amp;lrviving are one sister-inlaw, Mra. A. F. Klsar of Pt.

Pleasant; a niece, Mrs. Violet
Machir, Pt. Pleaaant, and a neph-

ew, Vernon Adair, Barnesville,
Ohio.
Requelm Mass will be Monda,y
11 a.m. in Ute Sacred Heart
Catholic Church with tile Rev.
Fatller H. A. Ryan oft'icl.atlng.
Burial will be in Lone Oak cemetery. Rosary wlll be recited
limday 7:30 p.m. In the CrowHusseU Funeral Home. Friends
may call at the funeral home on
!lmday lrom 2 WlW 4 and 7 tA&gt; 9
p.m.

Banking Group is

Hawaii,
Alid not content just to own
the costume, Mrs. Holter took
hula leaaons when in Hawaii two

Turley V. George
;, ,

6~~.l ~.,i.ll._.:liis ~..t ~~ · ~ · I~

GALL~.

~!;.l.i.U

.;-:;~ ·.4Mr .r l .. ~

Center on First Ave. He was
bom Dec. 21, 1918, at Rt. 1,
VintOn, son or the late Mr. and
Mrs. Elmer George.
ELECTRICAL DISPLAY - llemiiOl' Bailey, Southern Hl&amp;hSchool V~Ac lllviiiOr, left,
Mr. George was twice married, first to the former Dor~
explains wiril"e conneetJoas on an electrtcaldlBj)]a'ytoFFA Chapter ofticers,left to right.
Olh,y WUt, who preceded llim In
Larry Hollon, president; Kenny Nelgler, sentinel; Tom Hunm, treasW"eri Chuck Mu&amp;- ~
rage reporter· Marion Parsons, student advisor; Eddie Htl)p, v1ee president, and Art
death. Twin llallgltters, Betly llll&lt;l
Hut; secretary: "nJe 56 memben or the Southern FFA ~ter, like ~rs thr~
Beverly, were born to this unIon. They now reside in Colum~
the country, haVe been celebrating National FFA Week, Feb. 15--22.
llus,
Hls seCOIId marriage waa to
Lyvonia Mitchell, who lllrYives.
alOill witb t h 8 I e cblldfen,
Dwa.Yno, Turley EWing, Uoyd
Enters
Geue, l;)obby K.. and vei11(I1. Lee.
an11 two ll'andchUdren. One 11011
Day in Dayton Area
and
the
power.plays
go
m
•..•
preceded him Ia death.
one Slaked out •••• On the Dean
BY JACK O'BRIAN
DAYTON (UPI) - A strike
Brothers and sisters survivWhispers
from
the
underworld
NEW YORK - Ingrid llerg. Martin TV sprawl, Gina danced
against two bus lines which serve
sa,y
the
late
Jersey
...
Greenwich
Ing
are Mrs. Glema Cochran.
precisely like an averaged CoPe6,000 school children and 4,000 man's lovely sprig Pla LindVUI- mobster booa'I'DIIY Jleo, Rt. 1, Vinton; Mra. Lauri.Yn Rua·
cabana chorus kid.
commuters £rom surrounding strom called off the engagement
der
met his fate in a cax .crush- Bell, Columbus; Clinton George,
No N. Y. restaurant often sees
communities entered its lOth day to Bob Kinsman .... Marla Cole
ed
tA&gt;
snlngot In a mob - owned Ew!ngtoo; Wendell George, RL
(Nat's whlo1w) flew back tA&gt; H'1100d Garbo Inside but the Toledo did
Saturday.
)Joky
ani
•. •• The tlpol! came 1,. Vinton; Don George, Water ..
da,y willl blrthda&gt;lng ""' but c:oWortably after the chic when one of the lesser bosses, loo; Ewlnl George, Columbua;
Affected were the St. John for noon-rush (3 p.m.) .... Geepe
Transportation Co., which pro- Kstly, to.,.Bitactresolntilelmordered something special In asked what reaii.Y happened tA&gt; Roy George, Manolleld, arod Wy,·ides transportation to school ml.nenl Bdwy. cometb' "But Ser~
text cab lie George, Rt. 1, Vinton. Two
Spmlsh that Olrned oot tA&gt; be Bender, pointed at a youngsters ard Megacity Coach lousl1" was dropped and .rePlacand
said,
"He
might
be
that sisters and one brother prec:edntel of sole sauteed willl ba·
Lines. The strike, which began ed by its author Julius F.4tat.ein's
ed him In death.
nanas •••• The Palace Theatre rlRht-rear fender .••
Feb. 13, followed drivers efforts niece •. .. Oldtirne French star
Services will be held Monday,
Michel Simon, 73, Ia down tA&gt; m Times Square isnJt merely ato gain union representation.
NO
ACCIDENTS
2 p.m., at tile Morgan Center
the Paris garret he started In bandoning legit mustc:als for the
GALLIPOLIS
1be
State
Church. Burial will be In Pine
•••• East side .. sinlfes" saloons one-ebol "Ben Hur" revival Cab Firm Founder
Patrol
reported
no
trafHJahway
Grove
Cemeler)'.
catering to uninhabited mate • it's aleo contracted for MG'M'&amp;
fic
accidents
Frid&amp;3
1n
t
h
e
Frtenda
ma,y call at tbe MelbotJpera now IUffer a 18fere llUI,jor musical u(ioocl)ye, Mr.
Gallia-Melgs
area.
b.
was
the C.,. Funeral Home In VInton
sltOr'tqe fA girls, their univer- Chip•" for next Nov. Sth.
With Costa Nostra 81ft1 bosa third consecuUve accident -free limday a1tern0011 llll&lt;l evening.
sal attraction. 10 some pass out
COLUMBUS (UP0 - Cy IIIIIs,
VIta Genovese dead, the Jer~)' day lor the Gollipollo Patrol
cbeap.metal coins 01 any 74 founder and owner of HUls &amp;lrl In olglrt, each I!I&gt;Dd lor one Cooa Nostra already Is movlng PolL
•
Cab eo. here, died Friday night drink,
tn on N. Y. Cltv rackets, ClOI'roboat ML carmel Hospital. He had · At the 37th St. Hideaway ven- rated by front page headllnei
been HI for some time "with em- erable actor Romney Brent re''··
phasema.
called the 1925 Garrick Galollea
Sole survivor wu his wife. in which he performed: it had a
Betty Hills. Services will be memorable Rodgers &amp; Hart
Tuesday with interment at Glen score, an 11..piece band and orTONIGHT, MOIIIDAY,TI~Esl~~
Rest Memorial Cemetery.
chestra seats peddled for $2.20
FEBRUARY 23-114-25
..•. Even oft~Bdwy . showslikethe
See
STRIKES TREE, DIES
amutty .. Geese" and the charm''"""'
''
-'BARBARELLA"'
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - Mary- ing "Dunes at Sea.. get $ 10 per
(do her llli,.J
lin Krupa, 19, Lakewood, Ohio, pew,
.
.
Jane
Fondal.;.
JOb• Pllllllp
' .
was killed Saturday wllen the car
Wood&gt; Allen's "Play It Apln,
in which she was rlding struck a Sam., ts a huge c:omed.v hlt and
'
tr~e near here.
as tunbor and star, Woody will
.. ' .
See
Y
w
Later,
GIIIIIOtor
haul home upwards at $12,000
.i';
,,;; .
" ; . · .~'
'·
,
I
.'
. ·.
,
3 Rllli wlog Dllll
a week .• .. Gina l.ollo is 10 ln-;t:'OUW
Home Slcli Nudlilc
sl stent she's not on the marital
Tl \lli.o;.~t:'liTI'O El.
prowl, pals think she has some7 P.M.
l'obl iol:e&lt;i ~•el') . _) II) ~he llhlo \' Ill ~

Strike

lOth

Of Columbw lJie.

MEIGS

21" l£t:TAKUIM _ ...111111 toLOI PtCTUili22J •I· lt.l IIITH IIISTAIIT PLAY
llo- ~icm't-11-t Tho Bonnlngtott-Modol 2Ctn
High-gain 3-stage IF amplifier gives studio sharp picture. Automatic Deoausser frees you of stray interference. High gain video circuitry increases
signal intensity. Comes in contemporary styled cabinetry, with Walnut
gf8ined finish on hardboard .

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--·

$399·

,

""" ace preci11on copper
~ llld eldMd cirwit1used
nch!siwly, ~leiUIIIII 111in1t
pollibletlioftl fi'DIIIkMfWII!I

95

,,;:,

-·

SATURDAY
.

:SUNDlY
..

,h-,•.,:a..;: 1·

rwbliohm~~o,
(. ~l.UI••rl." ll~ll. l

nUDI \ t:

AIMIIIM. "..0 stll'l~
Ill CIIUIIB W/UII
1111111 miEM
Pr~i$1011

ptffl1its

lli&amp;h 11in VHf ,..,...,
ultrt-~ensi1iVII re ~e p.

tion ;~ .u11 illllli 11111 tr•rce
areas. Hi1f1 SfledMty re)ects
iftlerfetenct.

1..-

~· r.l L

1111

~~7~~.

M..·l .. •k "'''"' '· l'om&lt;r{l) , ' "'""
1"•••11- ~"' r) ,.,......,, ~&gt;lftl~ eon.111

""'"''*"'·
t .n,.n.•d a. ,..,.ona duo IMIII~ .....
ltr J1.
l"ool llfll&lt;&gt;•.
I'IIIII~NIJ , &lt;~•io,

1t:11N'o

'&gt;I IN. i!li'UO!\
R) t· a r rilr dill) ond ,..,..,..), u. "'" •oek.
N"'ll '&gt;l iN.11U'TI"' ll~ 'I E~
roo l.alllpolio T&lt;l....,. In 111111 .,... w.,,o.
I lr~inio • .,. )Oir ~I I ; sL• ...,llh, t8; thr""
monoh• ~l ehe,.hcr~ . ooc )&lt;&amp;I' ~ll: oh - h •
,1, lhrw mlllllh&gt;l!-+.~11
&lt;II

1'-' LIIIIJ &gt;;eiOIIII&lt;'I, 1&gt;11t )~r $12; •b
moooh SII.U; lhret• m&lt;nl11IU..
The ln~&lt;11 l'rfl• lnll.•rnMi-1 lo llt'ltoo"•b erMiol.-.1 '" the ""'' lor pj&gt;llnul.., rl all
"'"'" d i&gt;~&gt;&amp;ld"'' ,.,·..dil&lt;.'lllu thl o , . , . _ , . , . . .
ol•o II.,.,,...,""'" ' p..,li,llo.o(l ht•rdll.

SERVING QUALITY FOOt
WITH COURTEOUS SERVICE IS' ..
O.UR GREATEST ASSiT
'

,'"

~ '.

•,

Years''
'

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s 6~

l

2·DOOR ROlE

2-DOOR UTILITY

FuU width h.t thelf,
erlra stora9• below.
Sprin9 door c.•khe1.

MltS. HOLTER HOLDS the skirt of her hula costume
which she JUrchased "'ring a trip to Hawaii. The active
Mrs. Holter took several hula les801'1a to learn to execute
the dance proper l.y.

front al her wen - malntalned
home.
And, when she"a too old to
travel, Mr11. Holter plans to remove all of the antiques and
earpetlng [rom Ute downstairs
Dl · her home. !ile will replace
all ~ tbeae with bright carpet-

ing and modernistic furniture.
"Even it I only live l on g
enough 00 enjoy it two or three
days, I want to clo It,"' Mrs.

USE OUR CONVENIENT

LAY-A-WA¥PLAN

HoJter quips.
And friends ot Mrs. Holter
know that determination le ooe
of her qualities. Sle'll do it!

••••• , 5"•66"

outlet, open work
area. Utility drawar,
'extra •+or•9• below.

I

Kitchen

.

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_-··

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Cabinets

hove white exterior, aqua interior.

PLASTIC TOP BASE

Wardrobes fin-

JO"•JO"a:J'"

ished in Sandal-

2 Utility draw•" piUl brMd bo• drawer,
doubie door storage b-low.

wood

POLEANDSHELF
CABINET

horse.
A member at

botll tile Cheater lUI&lt;I WU- Gorden Clubs,
Mrs. Holter enjoya not o n 1 y
II'Owln11oherown llowerobutgalns

WALL TANK
CABINET

•

Two 1" Chroma Polet; Two
White Hl·lmpac Polystyrene
Shalns; Delue Two • Com•
pol'flllont Metal (Wiillo) Cobine1 with Chrome Trim and
Plastic Hobnail Doors, Low•r
Compartmant D•sign•cl for
Facial Tiuu• Dispensing oncl
Hair Roll en; Twa White Plastic Towel Rings.

~

pieallllre from preparing
unique arrangement. ror c 1 u b
lhows and her home.
AIWS¥1 anxious to explore her

hobbles "' the ruuoot, Mrs. Holter completed a eourae of studJ'
with a professional Instructor OD
preparation of arrangement&amp; and

cleeorationa.
llle collocto lll&amp;lll' Q&gt;pes o1

a

'3

SGdin9 glatss doon,

r1CUn,. She haa ridden for years,
and piUs aoontoJUrchaae a show

matertala to proride Interesting
baekgrwnda for her artbUe arrancementa. Here she reaorta to
the novel.
For example, Once she p.ar~
chases
block ol salt which
lhe permitted cows on the t'arm
tA&gt; llck. dall,y. When the block aoqulred the arU.Uc design 1 h e
HOled was rl!lhl Mrs. Holter
retrieved the salt block which
has since served as a b a c: ks;round [Or nunteJ'OUI blue ribbon arrangements.
Certainly &amp;rl)11llng but a lady ol
lelllll'e, Mrs. Holter rises ear~
b every morning. She d a I I y
'"!Ips with the mUklq chorel
round tile rarm operated by her
.... Roy.

Choice

30" DELUXE CHI.l

t:k,.uta. Here llhe 11 pictured with a spinning wtleel, a cradle and a butter cturn which are lUilOnB
the h18hll.ehta at. an exclul!lively
bedroom.

'

'

17" WIDE
26" HIGH

'

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'

CAN BE HUNG
OR PLACED ON
TOP OF TANK

$

MRS. HOMER HOLTER, Che- Road nllldent, cllnp to tile IIOltimental- wllll her an-

77

Apartment FU'fJ is
Fatal in Bellaire
BELLAIRE, Ohio (UPO - Forest Polen.

to. Bellaire~ died sat-

W"dar in a tlre at hia IPIJ1ment
house.
F1re Department ofllcials said
the mattress caught fire in hh
bedromn. The body was fomd in
• doorway between the bedroom
and kltche.a.

FREE PADDING
AND

INSTALLATION
With ,.... Pure..... Of .•..

CARPET
Atl..ulu Price·

Ad,..,AII

Avoid Backyard Clutter!

6e 95 "''·rd·

Storage Shed

e NYLON
e WOOL
e ACRILAN e HERCULON

Ower 500 Co.... IIIII Pollemo To Seloct&lt;l'-.
eo-ln.feolay...,. Mollo Yeur Solldlon

e FREE ESTIMATES e EASY TERMS

• SLIDING DOOR
ENAMEL RNISH

SAVE 5.00
INDOOR/OUTDOOR ROOM-SIZE

RUG

s·19.94

2 DAYS ONLY .

" ' · ~VlN$ , StEAK . HOU$E .
"A Comlllllllily LiUicl'malil Fo~ 22

Choice

MiNIMUM ~0;I~Q. YDS.
INQOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET NOT
INCLUDED IN THIS SPECIAL!
OPEN FRIDAY

n;nJ ,\ •".,{,ollipol io,OIIIo, UUI. r ...
un•l · - - ~·•~il'l! nt·opl ._.u,...., .
'&lt;&gt;•·ond n u o l 'o•~ l'oOd 11 C.alllptlllo, !alo,
~?5

AKER ·FURNITURE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

... . •.

Quantities
Last

ITORIOIILY

years ago.
Included In the range ol hobbies followed by tile native or
Chester Township 1.1 horsebaCk

~ri•· . sO, l!l'!d, '~¢ 5 a.m,,
SatUrdii.Y at the 11o!zer Mecilcal

ter, Maxine · Griffith, and Rl\11ard POulin of the Pomeroy Na tional Bank attended a dinner
meeting of the Bank Administration Instiwte, Mid-Ohio Riv .
er Valley Chapter at the iloltday 1m in Parkersburg, W. Va,
Thursda,y evening.
John Nosker, senior v 1 c e
president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, spOke
on the revision or bank condition
reports and annual reports of
income.

111111

around.

ma Klsar HoiJW at 1006 lllaln

GALUI'OLIS - Cub Scoot Pack 203 will
_...-..... its amual Blue and Gold Banr:p.let
~·
Monday, beglming at 6 p.m., at the Grace
United MethOdist Church. The Order of

superint.endentof.pub'"
lic school&amp; in ~lla CountY, said 19 of his
teachers plan to attend.
:!$.
Albert R. Durose, superintendent of Gal- ~
ljpolis City SchOOls, has authorized the use
~ the GAHS classroom since this tr.aining
will partly meet the state's minimum re- . .
::;:
quirements for continual in-service trainIng by teachers in all Obip school districts.

RACINE FIREMEN CALLED
RACINE - The Raci.M Fire ~tment
answered a call to extinguish a brush fire
near the Leo Taylor resldenee, Racine Route
2, Thursday night. Twenty-two member&amp;
answered the call.

PT. PLEASANT -

ALL IIIIL

Uvtrw with the pleasant comblnatiCI'l of a hand 01'1 the sentimental Pl•t and an e.)'e to a 11 vely future Is active Mrs. Ada Holte!', Porn..
eroy Route 3.
The large rum home In which MrL Holter residea- on Route
7 between Pomeroy and Ctleater - is 1 pot pourri of articles representative of her busy lite and varied interests.
Attractive antiques - man,y of them hallied dawn through her
Cami]Jo as well ae the family of her late husband, Homer, are used
[requentl,y throughout the rarm home.
Here and there in the rooms are unique Oonl arrangements
which Mr1. Holter haa created in her work with two Neils Couri:y
garden cluba. Souvenirs from tra¥ell abroad also are on dhplay.
Obviously enjoying lite to its fullest, Mrs. Holter loves d.ow·
ers. So thlt she could more thorougbly follow her lntereat in flowen, Ada, as she is known to legions or friends, added &amp;"dower
room,. to her home laat fall. 'Ib1a attracthre, paneled room - green
and colorful with plants, IODle 300 in all - ia roofed with a transPirent material which ,Pennlts sunlight to reach the dowers year

Mrs. Velina Heiner

PACK BANQUET MONDAY

Storage

PICTURES AND REPORT
By BOB HOEFLICH

He wa.s preceded In death by one sister.
Mrs. Edna H. Gu,yn.
Also surviving are a niece and two nephews, one of whom Is Fred R. Carman, formerly of Addii!KJII..
Masonic services will be held at Miller's
Funeral Home at 7:30 p.m., ::btday by the
Siloam Masorrlc Lodge of Cheshire.
Friends may call at the funeral home alter 2 p.m., Sunday,
.
In lieu or flower~. the family requests
donatlollo to the Gallla Ccunb' lletll't .fund.

·:;:::::::::::::::~::...::::::::::~::::r.:."::::::*::::::::=:::.:::::::::;:~:::~;:;:t,::=:;;;::::l(~
~i

1)

men.

may call at the fUneral home anytime.

Known teacher enrolleesare George Grace,
Jamea N. M. Dav:l_s, Mrs. Emily Kemp,
Charies Eeker, Mrs. Jean Cooper, Mr. and

P•

Middletown; arod Mr&amp;. G. 11~ G~u, , (Jia;y.
mall) at Oilford, Oldo;&lt; IOitr 11'~).\hn.
Rlcky and Am LeiiUI'II, bOtb ln ac:hool;
Edwin Grover ot Seattle, Walllt., and Jom
Grover o1. ~rd; three great..grandcbildren,
thOse of John Glvver; two aJ.s.s, Mrs.
Geor&amp;la Bell at Yakima, Wallh., Inc! Mfs.
'Certrudt Carman ol Addlaon.
.1
Mr. Rothgeb was widely recognized for
being interested in the welfare al working

0

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P-~

peace chaeges and $15 and costs
on trespassing charges.
Harland C. Little. Cheshire,
was fined $150 and costs, given
a three day jail sentence and a
30.-day suspension or his driver's
license on charges or driving
while intoxicated. He was also
fined $5 and costs on unsafe vehicle charges.
ForCeiting bonds were William
C. Stout, Guysville. $27.SO, stop
sign violation; Charles Friley,
Pomeroy, $32.50, speeding; Richard E. Searles. Fostoria, $22.50,
speeding, and BasicJ. Chidester,
Alliance, $33.35, speeding.
Dismissed w e r e
forgery
charges against Judy Willet She
was ordered to pay court costs
and make good checks.

tConiiiiiiOd lr&lt;m Paee 1l

llum Trust Fta~d 101 lip lor lho benollt

~t,,Di?n~~-~eeti~
; ·, !,'OMEl\0'( :'&lt; 1'.41son Hob~I·

3-YWIIDIR TUB£ WM11AN11!...11U12MIS!...
..-.

arod

&lt;eont•nuecl rr....

•

Mrs. Ada Holter is Making
Delightful Refuge of Home

.,

Chounce;r llotlr{feb

Uomer Edwin Coole

an organlzatlon bearing no political ~espon- both Preaklents Kennedy and Johnaon.,
·
tabUlt.v whatever and op- a rnan. o1. the hit.flelt periMJQal ehllrader.
sib~
ac~e heads ol the mere peaJ. -But lt 11 allo true that 1t II the Ellt=~s in ~:::;;ss or White House - it ~- em Estebllsh.ment ouUJ.ts that really nan
b
·ust short of the voice the •~acce~ Y .m&amp;I\Y as J
To paraphrase an old sa,y1ng. the rich
oC ~ :;~ls~mi~ofthis sya;tem,thevery and the even rleher have ~ ~ ri~t
vastness
its riches, the very reiteration to sleep In tbe p.tblle parlCij bUt nearly
of its uniqueJ.y pure motJves, the ven· cir - all the park benches an ln raat resence that those ramilies and corpora- ed here ror the even richer.
~m:':, create foondations have only nom- Here, actually, iJ a force that breaks
.
ontrol ol what they may later do under no law whatever and yet ln a dHper sense
~~ edc management - all Ulese things have really operates outside the ln aa it JPc:eatcd this extraordinary climate.
plies to other immense aakJmeratlons of
At best it can be a climate of genuinely wealtb and power and wholly Cllltside the ln.
'ted
i
But at worst it can built limitations which competition. ll nolh~s~~~~~!ate =r~i~Brothers, if this time ing elSe, Imposes upa1 all o~a who aeek
ol Bi Brothers in Brooks Brothers suits to tnnuence Ute pJblic mind.
g
,
es e~triting - perWhel1 INJK\Y'S Ford Foundatlon gives
and aJwearin~t"- .ar;!~ ~ni~peachable recti- grants totalling $131,111 to DOt ooe but
:
sor~:: asl:t:ntions go.
rather eight of the displaeed \\.listantl ol
For the bottom reality here is that this the late Sen. Robert F. Keaoe&amp;\v, it Ia dllis the biggest of big money, and when the ficult 1n the extreme not to 1M tbl.a, bowbigge t of big moo.e\· is tied to the most pa:s- ever decent In ordinary charll;,y, aa a P!{ti. ~ of reformi~t motives there can be &amp;lUI political act - and an tdeologic:al Pii'tSJona
'
a1
t th L
the biggest of big trouble ror the proper po- 1e ooe, a
a
. .
th '
u·on
The incident, of course, it peud:1 as
htical processes o1 1s na
•
ord Founda
That reformist motives come trom both measured against wMt the F
consenatives and liberals is true - from t1on has to give, it it choose.s.
the so-called Texas millionaires as well as
nut in another sense it tB not peanuts at
from the Eastern Establishment liberal out- all ; 1t maJo· even 01rn --+
vu• to. have .been the8
tits like the Ford Foundatim, as directed cumulative Cac.tor ~t "!-ll Impel Coogres
bv McGeorge Bundy, 8 White House aide to to act at least rn thts busmess.

SPECIALS

- ""

)

Foundations Ride High

~;_----,

.. ·Area Deaths

Teacher Course...

•

3 - Tile &amp;mdoy Tlmoa ~ Sun~~Q&lt;, Fobniar1 23, 19611

• GABLE ROOF
120" WIDE

84"DEEP
71" HIGH

COMPilE AT $175.00

00

�•

Dollars for

~

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Garden Clul.l

Scholars Plan

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Is&amp;:p~
MVDLEI'OOT -

,I

ouldoneo counoolor atMelosllloh
S&lt;hool, oold tho llollus f 0 r
Sc:holarl drive now Ia progress
11 a move to help eracllates who
find It d!l!lclllt to compete f o r
scholarlblps.
KeJley, a graWate of Middlepurl High School and Rio Gronde
College, who took his master's
work at Qdo Univerllty, has been
a leader 1n the Citizens Scholar8ldp F-tlon since its founding
two years ago.
His remarks were made to
members ol the Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary club at the neath
United Methodist Qlurcll h o r e

I

OFF AGAIN, ON AGAIN CONSTRUCTION IS ON AGAIN - Three work s~
pages In labor uni(JII dispute over prelim-i ..ry chores Cor pile drivi~, high water

and collapse oC a cotter-dam, have slowed
progress on the rour.lane replacement for

Ohio ..
Politics
COLUMBUS (UPO -

the Silver Bridge. In catctt-qJ ef'fort, two
!(}..hour shifts seven days a week are ·DOW
operated b)· AI Johnson Construction Co.
Photo from Henderson. W. Va.., approach
shows petroleum tow am bllrgele&amp;S tow..
txat pushing through the pier sites.

Kelly used the Rotary

Up to Electorate to Decide

•

the Qut!$tion of Voting Age
While

Collins, however, disputes the the reason for his optimism.
assumption young peq:tle would
Non-Voters campaigned
flock to the poll s.
He al so points out the last
lie says no matter how maey presidential caiJlllaign saw one
people have the right to vote, of the largest turnouts of young
a great nwnber of them will pe~le, who did not have the
That's why most sa.y now
not exercise the right.
right to vote, working for cllnthe,Y will be able to pass a
Additionall~', Collins feels the didates.
resolution in the General As- vocal students at colleges and
"The campaign proved that
sembly this year to ga=t the
uni'l-·e rsities are not representa- young people were interested in
quesdon before the public.
tive or the majoril.y of 19 and working within the system,"
The joint resolution, which
2~year-olds.
Collins say s.
seems now to have the blessing
"Ninety-eight per cent of our
ot the Rhodes' administration, you~ pec:p)e act like matur e
Whether 19-year-old s get the
moves Crom the committee adults," he said recently. "And right to vote wlll be decided by
hearing f()(lll to the Senate that grOlC) is more concerned those 21 and over, providing the
Ooor for a vote Tuesday.
than the ones who dis rupt cam- question gets to the voters.
Sen. O.kley C. Collins, R- puses. ''
lroltton. th~ resolution sponsor,
Moves to put a question on
Recently, LPI asked state
believes the measure will be the ballot to lower the vot ing legislators if they felt 19-yearadopced by the Sefllte Tuesday age have not been successful olds should have the right to
arvJ by the House later.
in the past.
vote.
COllins also reels 19~year-old s
Several bill s were killed in
A substantial majority reshould have the voting privi- the 107th General Assembly,
plied "Yes,"
lege.
and one passed the Senate 25-6
The question now is wh.ether
people have shown only to die in the House.
a majority o( the state's voters
they are interested in their govCollins c~tes recent demon- think young people should have
ernment," he say s.
strations by young people a s that pri vilcge.

most 0 h i o lawmaker s hold
some reservations about lower..
ing the votlng age, nearly all
qree the state's electorate
should decld&lt;a.

"Y.

motto,

Service above Selr, to illustrate
his own approach to his work.
He suggested, too, that service
above sell, as an attitude, underlies ttle Dollars for Scholars program .
He invited Rotarians to help
the program whatever way they
could. He said over $7,000 has
been awarded to 3:i local youth
to pursue training beyond high
school. They are selected by a
committee. Awards are based
on need and CJJaliOeations.
Kelly stressed that youth need
not "just have graduated" to
qualify.
"Th~y can be out of h i g h
school for several years, •• he
said.

Dollars for Scholars is intend·
ed to inspire more young people
to sta.v In their ''old hometown, n
after reaching manhoodandwom.
an hood,
1'wo guests introduced were
Charles Gaskill, Wellston, and
Duke Burson, Galli])OHs. President Wilbur Theobald presided.
Ladies serving dinner were
Mrs. Earl Knight, Mrs. Beulah
Hayes, Mrs. Herman Haddox,
Mrs. Jane Gilkey, Mrs, Garnet
Entsminger, Mrs. Francis WiJ .
son and Miss Bess Sanborn .

College Basketball Results
By United Press International
Maritattan 78 Hofstra 63
Ohio State 88 lowa 81
Marylarw;l 84 Clemson 83
Illinois 100 Michigan 92
Ohio Unlversity 86 Marshall 80
Toledo 88 Bowling Green 77
Long Island U. 86 Connecticut 46
St. Boraventure 98 Niagara 9U
Rice 74 Arkansas 67
Loyola, nt., 7:i Colorado St. U, 64
Texas 64 Texas Christian 54
St. Peter's 82 Fairfield 80 {ot)
Potsdam St. 79 Utica 73
Pueblo
St. 96 carey St. 54
policyholders against collapse of
Davidson
79 Virginia Tech 71
an insurance firm. He also ha s
proposed a federal backup fund Alfred 83 Clarkson 69.
to guarantee insurance claims
in the same way the federal
SETS POOL RECORD
deposit Insurance corp. guaGRANVILLE, Ohio (UP0
rantees bank accounts.
Bob Garrison of Denison set a
View Tax-Exempt Groups
pool record in the 1,000-yard
The House Ways aOO Means CreesC;yle Saturday as the Deni ·
Committee resumes its hearings son swim team dominatod aclion
Morxtay into the activities of in a three · school meet.
t.ax-frtle foundations..
Garrison swam the distance in
Scheduled witnesses include 10:52.3 as Denison downed Hiram
representatiVes of lhe Girl 77-27 8lld defeated Kenyon S:;.tl!,
Scouts and the National News- Denison remained undefeated in
paper Association which will Ohio Catference acUon, while
discuss advertising Income ot Kenyon suffered its first loss.
tax~xempt organizations.
The House Judiciary Comml~
FffiST SlWTOUT
tee
resumes its
hearings
GRANVILLE, Ohio (UPI)
Wednesday on pr(lpOSed reform
of the presidentill election Denisoo Universit.Y scored five
system. It will be the com- pins Saturda.Y as Its wrestling
mittee's first session since team notched its first shutout of
tlle season 45.(1 over Kenyon as
Nlxoo called for revision ol the
p&amp;.rt or a three..school meet. DenElectoral College to tie the
electoral vote more closely to ison alBO downed Hiram 27-10
the ,popular rote in ee.ch state. whlle !llram defeated Kenyon 33The White House is expected 6,
to ask Congress to raise the
BRIDLEY ROl\IPS
natioral debt limit trom its
PEORIA, Dl. (UPI) - L. C.
present ceiling of $365 billion,
maybe by as much as $12 Bowen piled '4) 40 points Saturda, to lead Bradle~· to a %-77
billion.
Missouri Valley ConCerence basketball victorr over North Texas
State.

0R1r Krtt1r

•.phanages.
Vi vtd du ~riptions or the hungry and uo:lerclothed children ln
the Vietnam orphanage located outside Saigon by S...sgt. Thorne Cot.
trUl, just back from there, so inliiPired the glrls that they're "ready
to do Just about an,ythlng." Sgt. Cottrill has been there and knows the
need •• It "as he- who distributed boxe1 ol dolls made by a Pomeroy
troop last summer, and Christmas gifts sent by the same trc:q).
"
Cbildren in the Ava Marie Orphanage in Thailand, accordllw
Gerald Rougltt, are also humgry and need clolltlng. Distribution of
IW items sent will be handled by American service penomel.
··
The objective or the 22 troops and their leaders is to have many
' lloxea ' reody for maUU. on Girl Scout International Friendship Doy
- ~eh 13, They need Y'IIU' help - oot only with gilts of clothlqj,
food, and toys, but money. SeMi~ packages cost money.
.,
As to the items needed, this is what has been listed: bar SOlD,
karo syrup, powdered milk, plastic baby boUles, nipples, jars or
Jl8b,Y food, boxed cereal, serviceable, either new or used, clothing,
;.,~nd amall or soft toys wtlich can be packed around the food items.
:;.. It should be emphasized that things for infants are desperately
"lleeded. At the Thailand orphanage there are 60 babies, and at the
Thong Thien Hoc Orphanage in Vietnam there are even more.
So ir your door bell rings, and a Girl Scout is there askitW for
sCJnethirw to send to Ulese unfortu01tes, be generous.
The blessing will be yours.

Hat T., Vllul ~tamps, ....IN-Frnh ...... ~

U.LD.A. Clloloo T-or ...... - · "'-"" -

.... looutr AWol

Jetrery Cohelan, D-catlf.; Sidney It Yates, ~ru.; Robert N.
Giaimo, 0-Conn. i Henry &amp;
Reuss,
0-Wis., and Brock
Adams, 0-Wash.- have challenged backers of the system to
a debate on the Ooor Wednesday.
Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird said this week that
although the Nixon administration was still reviewing ABM
plans, 'I personally lean toward
going forward wlth such a
system."
Opponents of the project
claim it is untested and
eJCPensi ve. They contend the
nation would be better served
by an agreement with the
Soviet Union to prohibit deployment. of costly ABMs by both
nations.
There are no major bills up
for action by either chamber of
Congress during the week.
The Senate Antitrust Subcommittee begins a new rOUJ'MI of
hearings MOI'llay in its . invesU..
gatlon of tlle auto Insurance
iOOustry.
Chairman Philip A. Hart, DMich., has said federal regulatioo may be needed to protect

Passes Offered West Berliners
H Elections Switched Elsewhere
BERl.IN (UP1)- F.ast Germa.
ny Saturday offered to give
·We-t Berliners passes through
the Berlin Wall at Easter tor
tbe first time in three years if
West German.v would switch
Jll"ftlldential elections to another
dt,y.
• not,. tile Communists said
West Germii\V will bear the
relij)OflslbUi1iY tor the "conse~
qpence1" It tbt election Is held
as plamed on March 5 In West

u1 am convinced the result
would be positive," he told the
Berlin Commwrlst pa.JV newspaper, Warheit.
Party spokesman Bruno Kus.
ter said Danelius offered the
deal on the authority ol East
Germany and that it ·~ts based
on a reaUstle foundation.'•
· West Coerman officlala would

Berlin.

not. coqtment on the otrer.

.

Gorliai't'·~·· ColnlnuQIIt
polf;r •
" In•West Berlin, llald

CoJiege meets in West Germai'\Y
to elect a successor to Heinrich
Lubke.

Bul the Communist• ·"""pled
their «&lt;ICOUion with further
thl'jllll of aetloo a,galnat the

In jon I~ that tho Willi
'b. ·jjjiW at ·If WJOII Gorman preolciontw e..e.
llif· · l,eot
E'Jodiitlll u.n.
•.•

;·,!iii'-

Vlnollfadov,
soviet military attache in East
Berlln, said West Germany will
bear responsibility for the
"consequences" ol the election.
"'Since the West German
al.lthorltles are demoostrating
that they are not willing to take
into consideratlon tbe realities
in Europe they must get read,}·
to be~r the full responsibility
Cor the resulUng consequences,"
Vinogradov said in a speectl
published Salurd'\1''
Lt.

Gen.

There

are

D,ya

860,000

W••t

Berliners with close relati'tieSOh
the Eaot Berlin aide 0( the wall,
The laat tlme tlley were

permlt1ed lhroul!b waa In 19611.

West Berlin police reported
that a West German govem.
ment civil senant was turned
back by East German frontier
guards when he tried to leave
Weat Berlin by road to West
Germany,
East
Germany has been
disrupting highway traffic betweeD West Berlin and West
Germany to demonstrate ibl
grip over the isolated city's
vital Ute lines.
It Js expecWd that harass.
rnent of trafJi c will lncNlase
when the Russians and East
Germans begin their muttary
maneuvers early next month.
There were also rears tllat air
traltle could be llarasscd along
wftb the overland traffic to
Berlin ~eh runs through East
Germany.

Uents.

,!t'.

Quartered

Gallipolis &amp; Pomeroy

Kroger Stores

"Sliced into ChoP8"

OPEN SUNDAY

P9rk Loins

lOAM·
Prices in this ad are
effective Sun., Mon.,
Tues., Wed. ONLY in
ALL KROGER STORES!

whO was killed recently la Vietnam . His runeral was Thursday.
Danny lived in Middleport and atterxled the Middleport schools
througll his freshman year.

Pork Sausage

Cube Steaks
lb.

It% Luo - · Jl% Luo ,._. Fnltlly

slo9

I

G.-

Loaf

SEElNG A GRANDSON ON F1LM Is perh.aps the next best thing

to seeing him in person, and Mr. and Mrs. D&amp;.llas Lightfood were delighted to get a look at dteir grandson, Harold Cremeans, stationed
Cor sometime now in Germany.
1be Marvin Millirons had received the film and their son J 1m
.
' '
showed it for the
Lightfoot&amp;. Harold, a truck and boat operator, is
the son of Mra. Walter Lee, Jr., of Middleport. His address is Pvt.
E-2 Harold Cremeans, RA U710569; 814TII Engr., F. B. Co.; APO
N!" York, New York. 09165.
THERE MUST BE SOME SPECIAL tie betweeri 1i mother and her
daughter born a:n the same day.
March 1 is such a day tor Mrs. Laura Bradbury and her daughter, Ruth Bradbury Ar.oold. Mrs. Bradbury will observe her 92nd
hl.rthdly anniversary. Congratulations, you two!
'And our belated best wishes to Miss Ama Durst of Pomeroy.
She Joined the ranks of the nonegenarians last Monday.

Ice ilk

SOME CHAN:GES have taken place at Dudley F1orlsts in Middleport. Sarah Fowler, who's managed the shc:p since it opened, has
charlged jobs, She's now with. Dr, T, J. Bradshaw, Beulah White, who
has w*"• with Sarah Cor the past year or 10, is llandllng the shop. .
alone ~t will be J.~lned. in ...the operation next week by Looise ·
Thomp..,. of Pomeroy.
. .,
, ·_

-

........

$1.09

Orange Juice ------------All V......_ Ct'Hnt
51 IXTRA TOP VALUE lrAMPI
with .............. purehue ..

, ...... ....

Banquet Pies

--··--·----------~

,..... $1
4 okiL

FRISH GROUND MIIATS
Exp, 311/60

___ Teddy Morarity, son or Mr. and Mrs. Pete Morarit.v, a s tudent
-«! Miami University, wh.o is home on semester break, went shopping
purchase a birthda.y gift tor his mother. After purchasil'lg it he
-=alscovered that it was his Cather's birthday. Could happen to anyone
,~ I guess. Pete was 29, believe it or not!

'?Or

•
•

DICK NEUTZUNG, POMEROY, received a phone
recently from an old army buddy that he hadn't
from for many years. Dick was more than
pl~•sed. It was interesting to hear from each other
liCe had brought to each, and to lt)date events
general.

$1

Cooking Bags ---------------K,...,

AnwrkliR &amp; Plmtnt.

1141.
$1
Sliced Cheese ......... . ............. 2 okiL
51 EXTRA TOP VALUI ITAMPI
with this _,... ..,.. purc.h... ef

, ......

SXINLHS WEIIIIIRS
Elrj&gt;, 311/111

Rye Bread ......... . ·-·-----

88c

K,..., t •· I &amp; S R_,h ., kt. Wtintr .,

Sandwich Buns --------·-----

88c

All Grlnch K,...., Y.c: Pac

5I EXTRA TOP VALU. ITAMPI
with thi• - . - MMI ,.,.chaM II

,...............
APPUII

Elop, 3/1119

Coffee ----·--------·--------

~

$1.29

K,_,lr_,Pwo

Orange Ju.iOe
'

........

79c

Yollow

Onion Sets _____ 2 "·35't
l!.S. No.1
All Purpose White

Potatoes

During the meeting conducted
by Mrs. Robert Lewis, president, it was reported that valentlne favors were made 'lor
residents of tbe Meigs County
Infirmary by junior club members. A report was also given
on the Januao birlhda¥ party
for the )mlor members.
A thank you note !rom t h e
Pomeroy PTA was read thanking

MR. AND MHS. PAUL BAKER, Syracuse, have on
premises a Pileated wood;pecker. A Plleated
woqoeelker is a very large black-bodied bird with a
red crest. and white on the sides of the neck. The
Baken sa,y the bird h 20 inches long. They have holes ln all their
trees to prove thlt he Is a constant visitor. This type woodpecker is
!'!ry rare for this area.
VERNON NEASE, CHAIRMAN of the Bloodmobile, armounced
tbat the Bloodmobile will be at the Pomeroy nementary School tolfibrrow Crom 1 to 6 p.m. To say units ot blood are "DESPERATELY
~DED" ts an understatement.
Mr, Nease stated that 83 units should be r eceived during each
bloodmobile visit. In the past this goal has never been reaclled,
Jllerefore, there is a deficit. Support the blood program if humanly
possible.
.. , ~ Wouldn't It be wOIXIertul it 100 units_ were received?

$155.54.

Driftwood, Ill 11011rc:ea Ill IUPply and how to prepare It for
dloploy, .... Ill&lt; theme 0( the
program. Mrs. 'lbolrqJ1011 revlet~:ed •PJ'he DrUtwood Book"
by Mary Thompaoo, 111111 ~

ed a workshop onpreparine'drlft..
wood tor display. Uwaual piece a
0( drlllll'ood were dlspla,yod by
the members and readied for
nower show use.

In response to roll call, mem~
bers told where they had (JOt.. ''
ten their favorite piece or drift.
wood. Commwdcations w e r e
read by Mrs. Robert Lewis lllr·
POMEROY - Aivlual inspec. ing the meeting.
Arrangements which had beat
tlon of Pomeroy Chapter Sf\,
Royal Arch Masons, will be held brought by the members were
at 7:30pm . Thesday at the Pom- judged by Mrs. Jotm Terrell and
blue ribbons awarded in tJu-ee
eroy Masonic Temple.
categories.
A 6:30 p.m. dinner for t h e
Mrs. Dora Heaton C'ClOil!cted
companions and their ladies will
the recreation with a contest bebe held preceding the work. The
Ing won by Mrs. Fa,ye Pratt.
mark master degree will be conferred. Edward T. Evans Cif. Gal- Refreshments were HrVed by
the hostess. The next meettna
lipolis, district depuiy, grand
will be at the home of Mrs. lloyd
high priest, twelfth capitular district, will be the Inspecting offi- Moore with a program on land.!lcaping by Mrs. Heaton.
cer.

Inspection Set

Mr. ond Mrs. Albert Wukelich

Judith Lynn Brewer to Wed

Wedding Mass ts Read
In Belle Valley, Ohio
MIDDLEPORT -

In a 4 p. m.

mass at the Corpus Christi Catholi c Church, Belle Valley , Ohio,
Miss Roberta Darlene B i n g,
daughter of Mr . and Mrs. Guy
Bing, Middleport, Route 1, be·
came the bride or Mr . Albert
Lee · Wukelich, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Allxjrt Wukeli ch, Belle Val ·
ley,
1
Vows of, the double ring cere·
mony were read by the Rev.
Fr. George J. Voytko following
a half-hour of nuptial music by
Mrs. Wukelich. ner selections
included the "Wedding Prayer,"
and ".Mother at Your Feet rm
Kneeling." The Wiadtng mass
was SWlg by the cfKifCh chorus.
The bride was escorted to the
altar by ller father. It was dec·
orated with yellow mums and
white gladioli with yellow vel vet ribbon accents.
For her wedding the bride wore
a white satin A.line gown rash .
ioned with a lace bodice decorat ed with sequins and pearl s and a
detachable chapel train. Her veU
of si.lk illusion was attached to
a queen's crown and her cym.
bidium orchids were on a muff.
Miss Donna Schoeppner of
Caldwell, 1n a floor length yel low satin A-line gown wilh a lace
D'Yerskirt and sleeves, served as
maid of honor for the bride. She
carried yellow tinted carnations
on a yellow satin muff, and wore
a satin OOw headpiece.
Miss Joyce Bing or Middleport, sister of the bride, was
the junior bridesmaid, 91e was
in a gown fashioned identically
ro that of the maid or honor but
with a train or yellow lace. 9te
had a yellow tinted carnation on

her muff.
Bes t man for the bridegroom
wa s Mr. Jack Ar ~her of CaJd.
well , Route 6. The ushers were
Mr. Joe Archer of Caldwell and
Mr . Darrel Younker, Belle Val .
ley. Master Michael Wukelich
was r ing bearer.
For her daughter' s wedding,
Mrs. Bing wore a floral A-line
of oii"·e green with a white car.
nation corsage . Mr s. Wukell ch
wa s in apricot coat-&lt;ires s en·
semble and also had white carnation corsage.
t\ r eception honori ng the cou.
pie wa s h.eld in the church SO·
cia! rOOm. A .)'ellow and .white
color 'schem'e .was carried .Obt in
the decorations and O"Yer the bri dal table one large white bell
and three smaller ones were suspended, Assisting with the serv.
ing were Marie Reedy, Bomle
Bailey, 9lerrte Halley, Monica
Manzyay, Marge DuffaloandBarbara Dufialo, all of Belle Valley.
For a brief wedding trip, the
bride changed into a black a n d
white checked dress with white
collar aild cuffs and wore the or.
chids from her bridal bouquet.
The new Mr s. Wukeli ch is a
:Middleport High School graduate

a

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs. James L. Brewer, 1275
Vine St., Middleport, announce the engagement of their daugtt..
ter, Judith Lynn, to SP4 Ronald Keitll Cowan, son of Mrs. Betty Cowan, Colwnbus, and Mr, Guy Cowan, Middleport. Sv. Cowan is stationed with the U. S, Anny at Homestead Air Force
Base, Florida. He is a graduate of Pomeroy High School, class
oC 1967. Mis s Brewer is a senior at Meigs High Sctlool. A JlUle
wedding is being planned.

CLUB TO MEET
REEDSVILLE - The Rive-rview Garden Club will meet
Thursday evening, Feb. 27, at
7 :30 at the home o( Mrs. Ronald Osborne with Mr s. llarliss
Frank as co-hoste ss.
and attended the Southeastern
Ohio Technical Training Center
at Jackson. Mr. Wukelich graduated from the ~enandoah Iligll
School and also attended t h e
Training Center at Jackson. The
couple r esides at Helle Valley,

William Jacobs is

Honored or Party

Q- What are the "seven
deadly sins" as l is t e d by
Pope Gregory the Great?
A- Pride, covetousness,

POMEROY - Mrs. William
Jacobs was hostess at a surprise birthday party Wednes.
day evening honoring William
Jacobs on his 62nd birthday.
He received many nice gifts,
including a decorated cake in·
scribed, ''Happy Birt:llday Blll."
Ice cream, coffee and

'""'"" ,

lust, envy, gluttony, anger
and sloth.

Flowers
Say The
Sweetest

were also served.

Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Blake, Clifton, W, Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rwsh, Middleport; Bill, the hmored guest,
and the hostess, Mrs. Jacobs.

MIDDLEPORT &amp;
GALLIPOLIS, 0.

GEniNG
UP
MAKES MANY
NIGHTS
FEU OLD

Co .m n1f!n K111ne\' ur Blu&lt;l&lt;h· r J r r lllt ·
t in ns ltlakco main rrlt' n ami wo nwn
fl•f&gt;l t e ns(' an •l n ei• llu ~ from rr,.quf&gt;nl.
burnl n~
~nd

d ay

o r lt c·h lnjo:" u rlna t oun nt~:tl t
S('('onr:l nr lly, y ou mlt y lnH£&gt;

slt' r p 11 nd han• Ht'ad ..ctu.&gt;. n,.,.k,.c·hto
ami ft·t'l nl dl'r . !I r ed . de.prf's!&gt;f' !l

~ u &lt;' h ~a sn, C YST~; x

u Nua l h

In

b rln1.1 ~

Tl'la :&gt;.i n ~ o·nmfu rt h .v &lt;"t~rbing l rr l tnl ·
I n ~:

l{t'rm s In arid unnP an &lt;! 'IU;&lt; ·kl y

e " s' n,. l'" ;n ( :o•L·_·v s Tt .X :o l d n •!&lt;l.tl5ts

Pll Bet George Would
Have Liked----------

Phi leo Color TV
Fine tunes

DID YOU KNow - About 10 per cent or the world's people are
lett-handed. The ftrst voting machine was used in the nation in 1892.
Herbert Hoover's father was a village blacksm.Jth in~West Branch,
JowL Grover Cleveland was the only president to marry in the White
l-Ibuse.
'11lere are 34,426 persons named Rich inSocial Security records .
'nd only 2,589 l'lll'ned Poor. The file s show 7,886 Angels with 9,181
H•rpa, but only 83 Halos. For every mooth of the year someone has
p · name, May belng the most eomiDOil, and October and February the
'east. And, of eourse, there are 1,678,000 smiths and abwt 50,000
lohnson'IL

the color picture

automatically, and
locks it in I

-..

PRICE
STARTS

·:Supplies Bought for Firemen

At$249·95

Eae-saetl)' the
riaht Easter Shoe!
A flutter of sprin1 styles to delight any
fashion-conscious youngster. They'll delight you,
too, with their world-famous Poll-Parrot fit,

so neceuary to 1rowing feet. PoH-ParrotJI .
will glide comfortably into Easter, and well
beYond, tor any special Ooealsion that follows.

raa

Poll · P.rrol

*"

Wtlirlybird,
aMn
on TV , tiWII'l •ith
ear.h pair of POLL·
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4.99 to 10.99

In Color

25
"""
lb.

,.,

,
.,

'11.-•. ,n·;~·~

.C/ ;~:,~.

M'ery Bentz. reported a blltnce

0(

Mason Chapter

LEST WE FORGET Flags at Middleport Village Hall ard the Meigs High School are
Q.ytng at half mast as a memorial tribute to Danny Dodd of Mason

lb.

U.S. Choice Tender Beef

Antiballistic Missile
Battle Sharpens
WASHINGTON (lJPO - The
battle over ~lballlstic missiles
wid lntensif) in both houses ol
Corwress in &amp;he coming week,
all but overshadowing progress
toward ratification of the treaty
to ban tile spread of nuclear
weapons. .
The Sel'llllte Foreigsa Relations
Cmunittee is e~ected to vote
Tuesday to send the no[Jlroliferation treaty to the Senate dOOl"
for a ratification vote earl)' next
month.
There has been only limited
)ppositioo to the treaty since
3 resident
Nixon urged its
l&amp;lProval.
But when the Foreign Rela:ions Committee held two days
&gt;f hearings on the treaty this
week. most of the discussion
~::entered on the proposed ABM
system.
ABM 'Thin' Defense
The Senate Armed Services
Committee is expected to spend
most of its time Th.ursday
talking about the ABM, current1y proposed aa a "Lhin.. defense
against a pouible Red Chinese
rocket attack in the 1970s.
In the House, five opponents
of the ABM proposal- Reps.

.POMEROY - Several vaaea the club lot' ari'OI!jiiii!MIIM ~
tor long-stemmed flowert _&amp;l'ld ilororatlou for thO , . _ ..•
~ets will be provided to Vet- Doy _ . . . . Noteo _ , 1110
erans Memorial IJospi.tal by the l1lld from thoGmleo!CiuboiHaven thanldng lllro. Qlar~o
Winding TraD Gard.., Club.
Meeting Wedneodoy at I be ~s and Mrs. Robert LoWIJ
home of Mrs. G. R. Thompson, fbr a program on prdell tt.r~
the club heard Mrs. Ch&amp;:rlea apy 8lld from tho Ternll f.,.
Lewis tell or the needa of the il,y Cor nowera.
Members reported on t h t
hospltaJ for vases. AJ.l clubs of
meeting
or the Wildwood Club Ill
the cwnt;y will be asked to parWhich
they
were pltl. M r 1.
tlelpate In the project or soeln!&lt;
Thompson
read
the ..........,.,
that the hospital has vases for
flowers being brought to the pa- J;tpOrt and the treaourer, "'"'

Concern for hu•y cbildren iD orphanage• in Vietnam and Thai·
land baa stimulated a "project or love" to involve over 200 Meiga
Couni;Y girl ooouto,
Already underw.ay is a canvass of the eounb' by tlae Big Benll
· Neighborhood of &amp;Couts am leaders tor food, clothing, and toys for
the several hundred orphaned inCants and YOUIII chtlclren in the or-

Friday night followtn8f11Mer served by ladles of tlle chureh.
Kelly was Introduced by tho

program chairman, Dr. Jerry
MalhOOY.

Plans Gifts

I

Tom Kollor.

'

-

.
J

-.-'.'

~

�••

•

P4tLI.'"'S P4tiNTEHS
\\ 1'11-Pianm'tl Sc•ht-.lultl

•

Just 66-Calories In Tasty

IJcmsehnld Task"'

lr GAYNOR MADDOX
NEA Food Editor

Br POLLY CIAMEl
SUNDAY
NA11VIT\" DEANERY, C.thoUt Wunen's Club, quarterly
meeting at SL Andrew• Parish
In Nel1011vllle, 2 p.m. Sundly.
MONDAY
TENT 95, 1lughters of Union
Vetenns, 7:30 p. m.. Morxlay at
D. A. V. Hall.

Low calorie rrulta and

DEAR POLLY- J!'rances wanlt'd lo know how to be an
erricicnt homemal«&gt;r and keep things pleasant for her
family. I havE&gt; a simplt&gt; answer but it requires wlll power.
Will pow~r to J!t&gt;l up a couplt&gt; of hours before the family
does . Imagine your delight in having the floors mopped,
washing finisht&gt;d and ironing done and put away before
breakfast. How about a batch of cookies to smell up the
house before breakfast ? These two hours with no mterruptions are worth four or five after breakfast. It works,
I know . and I am the mother of 11 .-MRS. L. J . C.

BETHEL 62, lntert1alional Order ot Jobs DaUJhters, 1:30 Mon.
dl,y night at the Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.

MEIGS BAND Boosters, 8 p.m.
at Meigs High Sehool
Cafeteria In Middleport.
TUESJAY
LADIES AUXn.IARY, D r e w
Webster Post 39, American Legloo, 7:30 Thesds,y night at the
hall; Joe Struble to speak on
Americanism.
A silent auction will be helcl
and each one Ia asked to bring
an item for it,
MEIGS COUNTY Riding Club,

at home of Mt. and Mrs. Robert PldlJp Meier , Middleport,
Thesds,y, 8 p.m.
SOUTHERN ATHLETIC Boost-

en special meeting, Tuesca.y,
7:30 p.m. at Southern L o c a I
High.

WEDNESDAY
WllJlWOOD GARDEN C I u b,
Wednesdi.Y •. 7:30 p.m. atthehome
~Mrs. Homer Holter. Mrs. Day tlln Ashworth will be the aaaiatlng holtell.

POMEROY - MIDDLEPORT UOill

Club, regular meeting. Pom-

eroy United Methodist Church,

Wednesday at noon.

Mrs. George Host

Of Women's Group
POMEROY

-

Mrs. I n e z
George was hostess for the February meedrw of the HyaeU Run
Free Methodist Wcmen's Mi&amp;-ait:dl"y Society, ~ened with the
s~~rw of "Oh To BeLike Thee"
and "More About Jesus" led by
Mrs. June Dewhurst.
Mrs. Joyce Vance sang "Don't
Take My Burdens Away." Mrs.
' George led the ,~ in prayer
il alii Mn. Audrey Patterson read
! the !36th P•llliil. Per...-.1 le&amp;tiJnonles and readings concluded
the progfam.
Mra. Bea May corxlucted the
bu&amp;ineu meeting and refreshments were served to 17 members and two euests.

City Prepares
Welcome For
Pueblo Hero
COLUMBUS CUPO - Lee Roy
Hayes, a radioman aJx.rd the
&lt;IIJIUred intelllpnce ship, Pueblo. will recelve a hero's welcome when he returns to h.is
home here.
Although it was not known exactly when he would return_ llr·
r-.ements are already belng
made ror 1 gala receptloo.
The Linden-McKinley H i g h
Sehool band. will meet him at
the airport. Gov. Jamea A.
Rhodes will present him with a
stele lias and Columbus Mayor
M. E. Sensenbrenner will Dreaent him with a statuette.
He will then be escorted to h.is
home in a motorcade m:l a block

part,.
Mrs. Warren Hayes said her
son haa become somewhat homesick.
"When he calls home three
times in tJV'o days, I know Lee is
homesick/' she said. "I wiah
I could say when he'll be home,
but he doesn't know yet."
She said h.is jaw, broken in a
North Korean prison, was stW
wired, but that he hid gained
20 pounds since returning to the
United States.

Fourth Gradel'!! Get

Africa Information
POMEROY claisSea t:A the

Fourth IUado

Elementory School ...,re presented Information oo Africa, currently
bolng -ed. b)' Thome CotPomei'O)'

trlll.
CoUrlll, who

~pent

a great
,_. of lime In Africa al011t1 will!
bll r.mll7, .._.., ollde• ....
. . . - .., tile lond, poGDie,

ore.

...., )lome• and wa:~ o1
.dlqhter, JW, is a

coarlll'•

_ _ . ........ t h e -

...... ...._ ot till ........

DEAR GIRLS-II one hao lhe will power lo gel up oo
early this plan mlghi noi be 10 hard if motber maaaged
to caleh a rew winks while the children were taking their
aapo.-POLLY

with my first baby. Then the second one arrived in 16
months so 1 had to develop some system for survival.
Just resign yourself to never having as spotless a house
as " before baby.· · The following schedule should keep
you with a reasonably neat house, a happy baby. a pleased
husband and a satisfied dispos ition .
First, the daily s~ hed­
ule : After breakfast wash
. ·.\
dishes , dress, make bed
and put clothes in the
washer. Toddler can
watch children's program
on television as you do
this . Dress child and take
for a walk on nice days .
In bad weather he can
scribble on paper while in
high chair, you can sing
songs with him , etc., and
then lunch and naptime (see weekly schedule). After nap
Let him play with toys as you fold diapers while singing or
talking to him . Read a story and it is time to start supper . While baby eats, straighten up the house before your
husband gets home. He will not notice dust but will see
clutter. After supper, bathe and change baby and let
daddy amuse him while you do the dishes . Put him to bed
and enjoy the evening with your husband .
The weekly schedule would be that during baby's nap
one or two of the following tasks would be done each day .
Vacuum and dust (preferably before a weekendl, clean
bathroom , bake, wash and set your hair, iron or mend,
take a nap or make phone calls . After baby 's nap take
him grocery shopping once a week .
Bi-weekly or monthly (during naptime) wash the floor ,
clean stove and refrigerator, clean one cupboard. closet
or bureau.
In another year the toddler will require less of Frances'
time and she can do some of the above chores during his
waking hours . Do not neglect baby to have a clean house.
When
grows into an intelligent. alert youngster you
Will not feel your time has been was ted-G LORIA

ne

'"""'

•Polly's Problem"-~

DEAR POLLY-My problem is that we have
moved to a new house and I have so many things to
hang on the walls and simply cannot hang them as
I do not want to use nails . I have tried paste-on
hooks. After a couple of weeks they came loose and
then I tried suctlon book.B wh~h l. was told were best ,,.,
and they would not even sticle tcr'the walls. If I knew ''"'"
of some nails that hold ' on a'--l'all when one cannot
find any beama, I ·would try '·t hat. A nail just goes
~ ~ straight through the waiL I do hope someone can tell
@ me how to hold my heavy ornaments on the wall .

I
~

every dieter today . Often
desS&lt;:rts that look so high in
calories actually belong in
low-calorie brackets.
Here•s one that looks rich,
yet Ws a blend of ingredients
lhal produce only about 66
Calories per serving. This

Chocolate

Apple

Mousse re·

lies on low-calorie canned
applesauce combined with
another low--calorie special·

ly,

chocolate lopping.

LOW-CALORIE

DEAR POLLY- I understand Frances' problem. I have
three children (ages 2, 5 and 7) and was so frustrated

,.,..

syrupo h a v e helped bring
dessert withJn the reach of

- WALL WORRIER

-&gt;~--------------;:~;:,'-;:;: •'.,~

•C.O· ~"'"

'"'"'·'&lt;&gt;"

Past Presidents of
PTA are Recognized

CHOCOLATE APPLE
MOUSSE
I ••• (I poubCI) low·

talorle appleu1ee

'~•

3

fCI' children of the Ccln..... t.Y

BrCJMI reviewed.
TroUbll
With Bei111 A Mama," b)' Eva
Rutlond lor the P ....... ulva
loiGtbon Loi&amp;ue Febt'UU7
1111 hold ot the hclneoiMrL Freel

POMEROY -

gambling

A

olmu-

mMure. Chill until ollgbUy

untll finn. Dust with nut·

meg. Garnish each. serving
with a halved rnarshmaUow,
if desired. Makes six servings.

was the

setting
for the annual husbands' night
d the Middleport unit &lt;i I h e
casino

Ohio Child Conservation League.
The American Legion hall in
Pomeroy was turned into uHaroJ.d•s Club" of Reno for the

Members and "their hulbands
used lmltatlon mone,y ID pls,v
at the game tables whleb were
constructed from special kits
secured !rom Harold's Club.
Matches and napldns carrying
out the casino theme were giv-

Pastor's Study
Will be Covered
RACINE - The Racine PTA
met last Monday with Mrs. John
Fisher, president, presiding. The
boy scoots led in the Pledge to
the Flag and the buy scout troop
wa s honored, as was ita leader,
Charles Mclain, this being Scout
Week.
Mirnltes of last meeting were
read by Mrs. Grace Huffman,
and apDroved. A committee was
appointed ta rewrite the PTA bylaws, and another to investigate
the cost and purchase oC new ta-

Autos Collide in
Point Pleasant
PT. PLEASANT - The sher.
trf department investigated a minor two vehicle mishap Friday 5
p.m. oo Rt. 35..2nearthecitypond
resulting in approximately $100
property damage, but no personal injury .
Cars Involved were both traveling west when they collided
as one of them started to pass
and the other pulled oot, Drlvers were Kemeth Wray, 27, pt,
Pleasant, and Charles E. Hall,
56, Ravenswood.

bles for the lunchroom. They are
to be ready ror fall use.
A Founders Day program as

follows was Df8&amp;ented:
''Begiming of Founders Day,"
by Mrs. Carl Morris; '"Found·
ers of FOUilders Da,y, •• by Mrs.

Frank Hudson; ''The Objects of
PTA," Mrs. William Downie, and
''Gifts of Founders Day," by Mrs.
Carl Morris.
Past Presidents honored were
Mrs. Rutb ~. Mrs. Rachael
Downie, Mrs. Dorothy S m I t h,
Mrs. Joyce Hoback and Mrs. Helen Pickens. Each was presemed
a corsage by Mrs. Fisher.
Mrs~ Carl Morrla gave f. review of the meeting or Count;y
COWidJ In February at Riverview.
The ~ring Conrerence was announced for April 26 at Meigs
High School from 9 a.m. t.o 3
p.m. This meeting is ror Southeastern Ohio, and dbmer reservations are to be made to Mrs.
Joe Bolin of Rutland.
Plans were made to hold the
March meeting at the Racine
Junior High when a play will be
given by students from 0 h i o

University.

Mrs,

Mary Hill, flrot IUade
teacher, and Mrs, Florence Cir-

cle, second grade teacher, tied
for room count. Both rooms were
awarded prizes.
Refreshments oC cake, cof!ee
and Koo1-Ald were served.

•

Mr. and Mr•. Doo n-&amp;s, Mr.
and Mr•. Doo Becker, Mr. and
Mrs. Ra,vmond llewart, and Mr.
and Mrs. Don lollllen.
Held In c:onjmctlon with I h e
par1;y was a brief business sesMrs. Don Mullen, Mrs. A 1 an olon. Mrs. llewart, presldon~
King, and Mrs. Lowell Beaver. appointed Mrs. Harris, Mrs. BeaA buffet mack ot sandwicbes, ver, Mrs. Thomas aDd Mrs. Morpotato ctdpa, and relilhes were ris to the nomlnallng committee.
P1111a were made !or a tdppie
served by Mrs. Kemeth Scltea,
party
and gueato n1t11rt at the
Mro. Doo Thomas. Mrs. Kenneth Harrla and Mrs. R0)'111011d March 20 llleO!ing 1o be held
stewart. Mrs. Frank S:l.s11011 ns ot the ColumlJul and Southern
a contributing hostess for the Clt1o Electric Co. socl.al room.
At that time narnoa wW be !Ubbulret.
At tbe tusbanda' night obsen- mllled for membershli&gt; and do·
ance were Mr. and Mrs. Scltes, votlooo wiU be given b¥ Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Don White, Mr, 1\lorrla.
and Mn. Kemeth Harris, Mr.
and Mrs. Lowell BeaYer, Mr.
and Mrs. James Wisec:up, Mr.
and Mrs. Eugeoe Hoodashelt,
Mrs. Walter Morris, Mrs. Kin&amp;
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Osbome,

en a1 !avors ta husbands.
Eu...,. lloodashelt, Doo llecl&lt;er, Louia Olborne, Dan White
and Kenneth Scitea were prize
willner s at tile games. Handling
decorations for the party were

.

From Scioto
COLUMBUS (UPO - The o! OeflD1 R. Charles, 38, Col.u~
bus, has been recovered from the
Scloto River after beU. spotted
about 100 teet rrom shore by the
slater of • rriend.
A search of the river continued for Charles' companion, Fred
A. GramboJr.,alsoofColumbus.
Both men were last seen 011 Feb.
16.
.Grambo's sieter, Mary Grambo Gallagher, found her brother's
jacket on a boat dock at the river
bank ancl then MW a body in the
water. CharleJ' body was stuck
in tile mud in the river. An autopsy waa to be performed to determlrw the cauoe d deoth.
Both have intenalve police recOrdl, including: burglary arreats.
Grambo was to have appeared 1n
lolualciloal Court Fri411 oo ouopieiou person ancl trllflc ctarps.

•

held at the Masonie Temple.
Whlle here they visited with his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence
Massar, Mulberry Avt;~,

SPRING~
ANGEL TREADS
ARE HEREI
THE SHOE lOX
WHERE SHOES ARE
SENSIBLE PRICED
Mlddlepon, 0.

A dliCUialon na held 011 the
purct.se and sentrw
chic:
dlncllory Cor the GalllpolloiiJ'eL
Co-lloltesaes for the evening.
MrL Junea GWlam and Mra.
Hobart WDaon, Jr., Nned refreshments to elgbt members and
one guest, Mri. Bruce Mitchell •
The next meetil1f wiD be on
March 11 at the home of Mrs. R
W. Jenkins with Toddlers to Tal"
aeb Mother's Leque 18 gue1t1
and Ken Morgan, City Manager,
11 guest speaker.

or •

1

HERE FOR BA!o!QUET ;
POMEROY - ~ lllo~sar
and oon, Stephen. of CCiumbuo
were here Thursday nigb: ror the
annual tither ~ son banquet or
PomerO&gt; Lodge F. and A. Ill.

1AN KAREN TOPE

·~·

••..

...... MARCH ll'EDDJNG PlANNED - Mr. and M1s. Earl

,., E. Tope art announcing the engagement and approaching marriage of l~tir daughltr, 1on Karen, to
I
Mr. J. Michael McConnick, son of Mr. and Mrs . Re.•
McCormick, Gallipolis. Miss TOpe is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School ond Gallipolis Business
I
•
College ; She is employed as • secretory with Tope
' I'
Furniture Co., Inc ., in GaiUpolis . Mr. McCormick is
•
a gradualt ofll'oshington Irving High School, Clarks·
I !
~
burg, 11'. Vo., and of Gallipolis Business College . He
(, is employed wilh Pennyfore Supet1114rket in Gallipolis. The wedding will be an event of Sunday, March
,.I
9 al the First Baplisl Church in Gallipolis. The
~acious custom of open church will be observed.

I,

Miss French

:tf

Receives 4.0

.
'

RIO GRANDE - LIDia Lou
French, a 1967 graduate of Kyger Creek High School, was Usted on the Dean's Honor RoU with
1 4.0 average this past semester
at Rio Grande College. M I s s
French, a sophomore, ls a member oC the College Christian A&amp;aociaUon, Kayette Club, and the
Student Education AssociaUon.
She attends the Bulaville Christian Oturch.
Mill French, daugflter oC Mr.
and Mrs. George B. French of
Route 1, Gallipolis, is majoring
ln mathematlcs and English,

i\

As City Patrolman
l'T, PLEASANT - John W.
Pelfrey, 22, Pt. Pleaoant, has
been blred aa a clQI patrolman
and Ia curmdly oerv1o1f 'Mt j,ro..
bationary period. Pel!reylomar.
ried and has one 5011 and just re~
cently completed hi• military
servil!8.
Other cUr patrolmen are weaIey Spence, George Plants, Earl
MeCart;y and Rance! Jividen.
Chier of Pollee i1 Jack Pyles.

OUR POTTED
PLANTS
Are Especially
Beautiful

This Time Of

l

itl'nplifi CitiiU" fro m 2 Mo cro ·llt ho{tli corcuits. Wt• oKh~ o nly 1/6 ounce o~ncf
j,loud lor mtl\1 mold lo~'&gt;CS . Coml.! in for J rlt•mun~lrJIItln ol Zcnoth"s
new Zl·n,·tW II m .. ~. ho: ru ~t r11-eht for ~ · ou'

I doo't blame Galllpolltana Cor toklrw olf Cor the !Will)' clime.
or our tolka are In floridl ncM'. others Ire in JID'I&amp;iea and
Puerto Rico. (Muat'nt mention names, until they return.) Holrever,
the last two dlys in Galtipoll1 must match the weather anywhere.
This gal reporter is Nrnina: areen now with the thoueht of Ill
those gorgeous ·suntans getting deeper by the minute. Oh weD, 10111111
of ua have to slave away Cor a lhing. AM stay pale a1 ehosta.

Many

SMITH AUDID-VI$UA
U11lon St. Atlw111, Ohio
Call Collect 593·7708
William$. Dilet, Mgr .
Heorlng Aid Dept .
I em tflftttSttd Hlllttrni"' eiKIYiltllilh Httrlnt Aid$.

MIDDLEPORT &amp;
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

: J PltaM mail IIIII dlttil1 \rlcllrn liltrlture

ENGAGED - Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Eaton, Corbin,
Ky. wish to announce the engagement of her sister,
Miss Peggy Gibbs, to Mr. Thomas Darnell, son of
Mr. and Mrs . Marion Darnell, Cheshire. Miss Gibbs is
the daughter of !he lale Mr . and Mrs . Mallhew Gibbs
of Corbin. She graduated from Corbin High School
and is a gradiUIIe of Eosttrn Kentucky Universily .
She received a Master's degree from the University
of Kentucky , and has taughl school in Kentucky ond
Indiana. Miss Gibbs is currenlly a freshman adviser
at Miami Universily, Oxford, Ohio. Mr. Darnell grad·
lUI ltd from Kyger Creek High School in Cheshire,
Ohio, allended Rio Grande College and graduated
from Copitol University , Columbus. He is an assist·
ant freshman adviser al Miami University where he
is working on a MasUr's degree in geography . A lore
August wedding is planned .

stars

are

Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Venus

and Saturn.
On this d!l¥ in history :
In 1S47 Gen. Z•chary Taylor
and his American soidiera
defeated Gen. Santa Ana in the
battle of Buena Vista, Mexico.

. ~file..

~-

AlEXA

In 196S movie comedian Stan
Laurel died at the age of 74.
A thought for the day:
Playwrigh~
Irwin hw ta.ld,
'"There are too many books I
haven't read, too lOW places I
haven't seen. too fDIUU' memo.
rles I haven•t kept long

. '3ls Socon.f Avo.

enough.'"

I realized htM bad this was last week when I trled to chetk the
speUirw: of some .-mes of women who atterlled a sht:Mer. I couldn't
locate a SINGLE one of them becauae the phone book gives their
husband's name all:! the report 11111Ued here ga.ve only the wive's
surnames. So, all you Rae publicity chairmen can kftP me out of
hot qter U you give me a woman•s husbarll'a tame (unless she is
a widow or divorcee).
1 know 1ome elubs prefer to list wcnen'a Orst rame1 and I will .
abide by 'that if they wlall. But it really isn't correct.

Oftltlltlort.

•

•
-------SlAH - - -

"OrrO 1/APPY" hq KEITII COBLE

morning

auditions

Joe~kes.

~ PleiM tetepllont flit II llontt let lfflrttelor t fem.

------ .... -------------

The

in one of the many shimmering pastel shades.

Here is a pet _peeve a relder has: married women beilll" listed
in the paper by first names. rlther than - ror inatanee - as Mrs.

Year ....

hdley's Florist

By United Preas International
Todl:/ Ia IUida)-, Feb. 23, the
$fill /Ia¥ ol 19a9 ' will! 311 "'
fol).oW. •
~• I '
•
The mom Ia. In lte first

"'-·

your feet. Choose a pair soon

'

Th:e Almanac

New z~nilh ··z~•lC tte " ("JO mJke lilt' fun oll~&lt;un . Pr~c ision

.like moonlight dancing on a
pl.1cid l.iike-lhat's the way
our "lustre look'' shoes by
Auditions glisten and glow at

MISS PEGGY GIBBS

At Rio College

Pelfrey Employed

~

IF YOU SEE BRIGHT new lights hlgll in the meodow above tile
,..._ orchard Hill uea it wW be because the Harry Wheelers law moved
~ • hao their pluah ,..-. home. It has as IP8fO' pi~ lll'indowa 11 .most
~ house I have plain windclwL Last summer I cllinbed to ttra \IJIMl' paa"'ture, as the ldda call that .rea. 1be view trom there Ia breathtaldrw.

•

~

IOILE FlU

THE M.'\NY PEOPLE who xrewtoknowandcare for Dr. LeoMrd
H1rrts 1re saddened that he Ia leaving. MarQr mothers were dewted
to hlm,. and the community wW miss his competent senteea.
1 den~ kllow him peroonolly, but through r~s ol our club
meeUns I know he was pneroua of hll time, givlJw miiiY prog:rmas
for our women's gl'(q)S.
Too .bod he'&amp; loa.tng. He io the ldnd of apoJHIIInded lnlivldull
we need more ot

FLEXIBILITY FABRIC CARE

Body Removed

urer'a report.

.f'(. ~

WHAT IS EASY

LOOK AT ALL THE
YOU GET FOR SO

Henderson.
MrL R~nd'l tail1 ~
· the tr1ala and trlbtllatltlnl &lt;ibeliW
the mother of Nlll[l'O chlldreo.
The bual•u meet1Jw was eooduct.ed by MrL Rlctllrd Brown
and openedwltlldowd..,. b¥ MrL
Fred HenderiGlo Roll n1 called
ond nporta were g l - loin.
Charles Gatewood. p:wthetrea...

Uno of P&lt;merO&gt; wUJ bo le4&lt;1&gt;trw the class. At least 81gh4:JM
not over 12 retarded children
make a Community Cia~&amp;. . ;

Big Night at Harold's

night.

m-

ard WhUe, Sandra White, ).n,t
John Pro&lt;lltt. l1le children Plo.Yed the cotton bill rae. and 11111er
the broom, and hid a &lt;and!' 1\lml.
Relreahments of lc:e crtfm,
heart shlped celOkies, ~
Kool-Aid were aened. Mothers
there to assist were Mra. .'fiarry Lodrick and Mrs. Non Rice.
Mro. Julia Webl&gt;, teachell of
the class, bqtna a leave of',Q.
sence thi1 week. Mrs. lWda ~­

thickened. Fold In egg
whites and vanilla. Spoon
into sberbel glasses. Chill

In

-·Ttte

•re

tin in water for five minutes.
Place gelatin miXture over
low heat and stir until -dissolved. Stir into apPlesauce

GALLIPOL.IS - Mro.
Paod
O.vlea reMwtd''OnReGectiaa"
an •.-.....,.., b¥ Helen 1111e•
wilh Sanforcl Dod;y, !c.-the Febn&gt;ary 20 meetl,. of tho Pbll....
lheaD Club. Hoeteu was MrL
Harrl1 Daoppinc at wbooe the .. wu held.
"00: Reflection" wu written
as a lelacy to lOss~-· J;l'lldochUdren. It is 1 marwlou1 and
w1rm atcwy t:A her l.lte beekalap;
her DIOITiqe to Cllarleo MacAr·

GALLIPOL.IS - MrL Rldlard

Taklr-.: roles tn tbe 1klt
Blll Rice, Gre1 Lodrli:k, Ricl&gt;-

chocolate oyrup. Saak gela·

'

Mothers Meet

low-calorie apple mousse .

Husbands

•.itve

Claaa at the llu&amp;ll:hd ,e--.· ~

hllve1
Combine applesauce and

•

Is Hostess for

NlDDLEPOJIT "' Aald!,
LJUle
m.,.. , • .ll FB•nt..
... at • va1etotiJiO Jlltbo ......,.

v.-...

teo-• •••IDa
3
1

Mrs. Paul Davies Reviews Hayes
'
Autobiography for ·Philomatl;t~~~:

Mrs. Henderson

SoCial\Event

1 eup Iow-ealorle

out in the refreshment table decorations which feawred a red
centerpiece flanked by red taCLUB TO MEET
Ders in candelabra and red_plac&amp;PT.
PLEASANT
- lllddenVaJ.
mats. Mrs. Pullen gave grace
berore the dessert course was Ie,y Country Club will hold a gen.
served by Mrs. Jordan, Mrs. eral membenhip meeting WedFrances Bearhs, Mrs. Isabelle nesday, Feb. 26, at the AppaWinebrermer, and Mrs. Danl lachiari Power Company auditorium beglnnlng: at 7:30 p.m. All
Hamm.
Attending besides those named members are urged to attend.
hactive members. The March were Mrs. Lettie Roush, Mrs.
meeting will be held at the home James Sooders, Mrs. Nora HamUNDERGOES SURGERY
or Mrs. Co~ Pullen, it was an- ilton, Mrs. Iva Turner, Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT - Hrmer Rice
Charles Edwards, Mrs. Pearl of Rut.land St., Middleport. unnounced.
Hoffman,
Mrs. Charles Bennett, derwent surgery Tuesday at Hoi·
Mrs. Elizabeth Slavin, president. opened the meeting with and Mrs. Ruth Johnson.
zer Hospital.
prayer. "People Who Live in
Glass Houses" was the meclitaUon given by Mrs. Nora Joro-n.
Members responded to roll call
by DIJning a Bible cha~cter. A
EASY IS THE "WOW"
quiz was conducted by Mrs. Beulah White.
A patriotic theme was carried
MIDDLEPORT - New coverh~ Cor the Ooor or the pastor's
study •t the Middleport First
Baptist Oturch wiU be provided
by the Busy Bee Class of the
church.
Meeting Thursds,y · night the
class voted to purchase suitable
Ooor covering. Year books were
distributed •nd it decided to send
copies oC the books to all of the

Appl~ .Mousse

d-late teppiiJ
lab!~ anD•••red
felaUn
eup w1aer
ep w•llet, IIIIOy beatea
extroet
manllmallow1, rut l•t.

J

at~

Skit Given

N8a FOB AMB. .UNS

.....
·-......

USED CARS

67 FAIRLAME ~T 2 Dr. HT, 390 4 opood trooo. P.
hra~et, radio &amp; hNter, w/s tlre1. Shorp........._. __ $1995

63 OLDS F-15 4 Dr. 8 crl. Auto. trano., p. otHrlng
radio &amp; heater, w/1 tires, Shorp..... _··-·--············---1195

U CHEVROLET !11p. 4 Dr. H. T. 8 crl. Auto. trano.
P. steorlnt &amp; brakes. Sharp. Air condition, w/a
I! roo .........- ................................................................ $1 295

67 CHEVROLET Bl•carn• 2 o•. 8. crl. Auto. trona.
oodlo &amp; hHtor, w/a tlroo. Sha•p............................ $1695

U FORD Gal. 500 XL 2 Dr. H.T. 390 ong., auto.
trona., p. ••~ ... lng &amp; brake1, rodlo &amp; heoter, w/s
tireo. Sho., .............................................................. $1395

65 COMET Crcto.. 2 Dr. H. T. 8 cyl. 4 opood t .. no.
Radio &amp; heater, w/o tlrao. Sharp.......................... $i:l95

65 FORD LTO 4 Dr. H. T. 390 .. ,., auto. t•ana., p.

59 CHEVROLET !j Ton l'lc~up, 6 crl. with cottle
rach. A oleo - .........,.........................:.................. $495

steerlnt, rocllo &amp; heo..r, w/s tires. Shcwp...-...... $1495

35 MORE SHARP ONIS TO

SALESMEN - EDDIE FIFE - CEWARD

~

na out, out, wL
NOO' II !eeMSllUOIIIa ol y - IJO.yo lnl dlotrellnd lJ¥ tho _..
ber ot cilia gtrll make lib them. WCII,:fer,cculd Your, or my, daUIIlter
be callilll a buy """" we aren't ~
Along that Une, haw you ever uen the wdrd1 - ~"'t ts 11 p, DL
'Do ;you know where your chUdren ~· - dalh •eroaa thl TV
screen? 1 l:hbw that'• a fine service pertiJnned by the teleYillon.
WHEN I WAS A GIRL, CALLING a

1
StltiCIRI.
One week they cl\uw:ed IL The words tlaahed were,
p, m. Do you kOOR' where your parent• are?"

0

lt i1 11

How doea that ITib you, parents?
BOOKS, BOOKS, BOOKS. HOW I LOVE them. Greator wrllero
thn 1 have deac:ribed what a book 1hea them. The same 11 true or a
1111nry. 1 plciUre the library as a blrl-•ure cheot holdlrw ·oll tile
world'l wealth In a never-exhM!tted ...,a,y.
'I aueoo it'a crldcet to share ...... tldngo r .. dls........r ond

...'

read in recflllt booll;s,

This nrit bit .....,. rtcm a tll'dl dletl0Nr7 o£ CU)Inory 1'fllli

ond Torma bf Frlndl Arkin (a,.llable at GCDL). It comes llllllor
B - ·to .ave lacondrl»pina Cor cooldrwaail.llavorlng (whodooon•l'l).
I)(IUI' hito small troaen. oraJW8 jlliee CIRI IIKI •.t ore in the retrlpr~ alol'. Storqe' ln larp Jor• ruoio tile riakbl the butlom part be..,.ol,.
r ...l4 boa!&lt;• II plo ulnd.
. .
.
, Tho bltlaanother pro,.rll.lt 111110 .do-will) recocni•Ins your ·

,..,-111111: ,

.· •.'Tfte .oi~ IIJ'I to the

(PIId...,O

.
.
IIOedlo: Y&lt;&gt;a ho.. ' a toole inyour.tail.Q
.

1

!:odes. emergenc:y n.unlbers, COIIlll'ljlnity f - . .nd.local 9

,,1ong
dlstlnce dil~ng infonnltion. And your complete llhopp'ino oulde .

. .•

•,

~

'

the Yello\'9 Pages.

;

l',t:

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·:'": "":\)i'~"'4':(.,.~,

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So, If ~ 'tau'ie up in the ali ebOYt ptiOne nurnbn lillt .
~In the~·
,
·... .
Ohia M,'

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�__
Dr. and Mrs. Burner
Observe Anniversary
GAWPOLL~

-

A aurprbe

party was giyen lor Dr. an:l Mra.
RaljJI1 Bur110r at 90 Court street
oo Fob. Slh ln honor ol their oliver weddi.D£ unlveraary b)' their
ehUdren, Mt. aN Mra. RIJ»h

Burner, Jr .• ot Fluahlrw. Mich.,
aoo Misses Jarice and Jc:o-ce
Burner.
AtterwJlng the part;y were Mr.
and Mrs. James Partee n, Mr.
and Mra. Stanley Slunder's, Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Curl, Dr. aDJMra.
Oscar Clarke, Me. aid MrL Cl,yton Mtller, Miss Edith HutslJ1)lllar, Dr. and Mrl. LewiaSchmidt,
Dr. 'Ibornas Prtce, Mrs. May Ellictt, Mr. and Mrs. tlavlea

Grent, Dr. and Mrs. Gonkm Gtbo
ert. Mr. alii Mrl. Glem Burner
of Huntington, W. VL
LL Col. and Mrs. Geol"p
Grace, Mrs. Varney Faye Clio-

Mrs. Reese Announces Pions For
OAGC District 11 Spring Meet
GALUPOLIS - "A Fling With and a member of two garden
Spriftg Flowers" is the tqJi c for clubs, one which she organb.ed.
the aower arranging demonstra- She is currently Cirst vice presitio'll planned by Mrs. Paul W, dent ofOAGC.
Reed, for the Ohio Assocladonof
The sprtng regional meeti~
Garden Clubs Region 11 Spri~ will be held Thursday, Aprll 10,
meedJw, APril 10, it was an- at Richland Methodist Church, Rt.
IIOUil&lt;ed IDdoy by Mrs. Joho H. 33 between Athen5 a~ Ptmeroy.
Reese of Galltpo. Hostess clubs are Richlarll, New
Us, regional dt.. Marshfteld and The Plaina Gar~
rector.
den eluh.
Mrs. Reed is a
Mrs. Dorsey Bumgarner, state
Oower
show ehainnan ror stateaoo councy ratr
judge, a member flower shows will give a talkdurol the judges ing the morning session.
council, Regions
Chairman for the day Ia Mrs.
8, 9, and 11, in- Edward Mizicko. Coft'ee hour will
MRS. REED structor lnOAGC be 9 L m. to 10 a. m. Luncheon
clinics, former "tn be served at ooon at $1.50
s1ate chairman of Oawer show per plat~;~. Registration fee is 50
awards, former regional director cents.

Playlet Presented for
Baptist Ladies Group
GALLIPOLIS - A oneactpZ.,.let, ~'The Hidden Motto," was
presemed by Associate Pastor,
Harry Cole, Mrs. Coleanr:ldaughter, Jud)t, for the Ladies Fellowahip, Missionary and Senice, of
the First Baptist Church Thursda,y evening. The playlet emphasized the ffOrds, "The L o r d
Wants You."'
Assisdrw: the Coles in the pres..
entation were Mn, Dean Davis
and Mrs. Pat McBride. Mrs.
Roger Hood was pianist.
Mrs. Jos~ Chapman, prest...
dent. welcomed 1 group or over
sixty women and young ladies to
a patriotically trimmed room.
in honor ol George Washington's
Lincoln's
birthday. Abraham
lamous Gettysburg Address WI&amp;
read via tape recorder. After the
pledges to the American nag a.nr;l
tbe Christian nag, Mrs. D e a n
Davlo 11ng "The Star Spangled
Buner" and Mrs. Chapman led
In prayer,
Missionary letten were read
from the Donald Moffats, editor or
the "Ohio Independent Baptist"
magazine; Shepherds H001e and
School (for the mentally retarded), ·Cedarville College, Arlene
Spurlock, the Daniel Zlmmermaru;, and the woodens.
The business at hand included
the follOJJing: (l) A petition Willi
1iped to urge President Nixon
to include ''in the beginning, God"
on the .new commemorative stamp
honoriag the astro•uts who circled the mooa on Christmas Eve.
(2) Mlaolonu)o books ha•e been
ordered for the church library,
(I) Tho women voted to "'""Dotty Croc:ker
coupons, tradin,

and used U. S. Commemorath'l and foreign stamps tor
~· Home ani School (4)
A miscellaneous mhsion~ry
shnwer wlU be held at the March
JOUIIlP. "tlng forthi"Donlldllares
lbmtpl

who wiJI be leaving in June for
san Paulo, Brazil.
A time of fellowship was had. in
the church Cellowship romt where

refreshments

were served by

Mrs. P!tyllls Taylor, Mro. DUly
Shaffer and Mrs. Ann Waugh at
a gailY decorated table of red,
white and blue.

MONDAY
PACK 203 Cub Scouts •Ill
hold their annual Blue and
Gold Banquet, 6 p. m. at
Methodist Church.
BETTY ST AM class meetirwln fellowship rom~ of First

Baptist Church at 7:30 p.m.
CATHOLIC WOMAN'S Club,
8 p. m. in church basement.
The Rosary will be !lid at
7:45 p. m.

Luncheon chajrmen are Mrs.
Lawrence Shield and Mn. !Iollis
Stalder.
Reservations must be made by
.Atlril 7 with Mrtl, Edward Mi~
zicko. Livingstm SL, Athens,
Ohio, 45701.
Region 11 of the Ohio Association of Garden Clubs JnclOOes
Vinton C'.ounty, Athens County,

Ill"'

a.-,

nae nlndMr, movtne ...... '
ward aerou the border 1n
March ot better lichen areaa,

Fluahlnl. Mleh.
SOndlJW ••-l.....,.eato bul
unUJ.e to attencl were Mr. and
Mrs. Burhl Hood, Mr. ml Mrs.
Roger Hood, Mr. and Mra. Wor11\1' EWIA, Kr. lnl MrL - r t

have

MacKenzie, Mr. udMr&amp;. Morris

BY HOBART WII.SON, JR.

••
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bonle&lt;YhUdon,
Soviet olllelalohawllriiOdy

THEY still remember hlml Oaear Odd Mcln1Jre, flmou1 New
'II' ork columnist who spent hit boyhood )'Mrl ln GalJipollJ, it atlli
remember~ by tbole who read hla artlclel owr three~~ qo.

10111 nvonl hordoolrol.....
baek to lhe Flnnloh lido. ·

loop! Flnnloh bonier

++++++
Edaa Twltt)' Smith, Scottsboro, Alabama, request..
.lrw the date or OOM'a death. Too. she warUd to
, know tr he reall¥ buUt a ·reurement hOme In Gallipolis, ani If Mro. Melnt,yre ,.., IIIII livlrw.
' Mra. sm.tih ldd.ed, ~'I read 0. 0. Mcintyre's column daily'· and still miu it."

SILVER REPLATING
REDUCED20%

M.......

++++++

OSCAR Odd Mclri:)'re died 31 years ago, on
Feb. 14, 1938. He built a "dream house11 on state
' Slreet ID Galllpollo, but dl«&lt; •lthout ..or seeing
IL His wiCe, Maybelle, Ia adllllviag. She vlaita "Gatewood" eveTJ

.: j

LAST 5 DAYS

memtable.

Morgan County, Meigs Coo~.
Waohlngton Cooney, Gallla Coon~
and Hocking County,

luneh, I got a sandwich ani fruit
Aa you ean guess, my supper
waa different alrio.
But at least I wasn't alone
ln 1111 oulforlngs. My slotor ani
two brothen had the BBme mean
mother as I did.
t.(y mother in~isted upon lmowing where we were at all times.
You'd think we were at work on
a chaJD gang. Sbe had to know who
our friends were and what we
were doing. She lnsl&amp;U!d If we
said we•d be home ill a hour,
that we be gone one hour or less,
not more.
When we were ywnger, and
we disobeyed, she actually struck
us. Imagine! Now you begin to
see how mean she really was.
The worst is yet to come. We
had to be In bed early at nl.gh.t
so we could get up early next
day. We could not sleep tlll noon
like our friends. So whUe they

rny mother actually had
the nerve to break the child Ia~
bor law. Sle made us work!
We washed dishes, made beds,
learned 1X&gt; cook, and sll oorto ol
cruel ttdnga. I belleve she la.y
awake at nllbl
•lll!nklnr otpan
. • •
• j
thlngo to do 18 ... ·
• .
Sbe always Insisted up)n our
telilng the whole truth even If

Vinton WSCS Hostess
Mrs. Mildred Baker
VINTON - Mrs. Hazel Harmon
was in charge of the program for viaitor &amp;nliwered the roll
the VInton United Methodist Wmn- a 11crlpture verse. 1bl.rty - three
en's Society or Christian Service sick calla were reported uxl six
meeting held at the tone ofMra. cheer cards were signed. Meeting
closed with prayer.
Mildred Baker 1 ThW"sdly,
The next meeting will be held
Mrs. Harmon's study arxJ program was based on reltgioua at the home of Mrs. CollleyWhite"'nta am observances of speci&amp;.l ley on March 2L
An auction sale was held of
day&amp; and weeks pertaining to lhe
articles
donlted by members.
birth, death and resurrection oC
The
hostess
served retreshoour Lord. Mrs, Dan Enans read
menta.
quotations. "Just Suwose."

can "'th

summer,

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++++++

' "

REV. Theodore M. Heaburgh, pre&amp;ldent of the University o.r
Notre Dame, haa come "' with a new utnstara action" policy which
we believe ahould be adopted by all institutions of hlgller learntrw: in
this ~ in order 1o preserve our treedom and queU riots led
b)' stlilent mUitants or mlnorll;y lll'OICJIB who tppBrendy need to be

it killed us, and It nearly did.
By the time we were teenager, ahe waa much wiser and
our lives became even more
unbearable. Nme oC this tootIng the hom of a car for us to
eome running! ~e embarrassed
us no end by making our dates
and rrlends come to the door
to get us. I forgot to mention
Utat while my friends were dating at the· mature age of 12 and
13, my old..fashloned mother reCused me that privilege until I
was 15, and than only to a school
fun&lt;lion.
My mother was a complete
failure as a mother. None 0( us
bas ever been arrested or beat~
en his mate. Each of my brothera served his time ln the ServIce of this country. And whom
do we have to blame for Ute terrible way Wl -tumed out1 You're
right. Olir mean mother. Look at
the things we mlsaed. We never
got to march In a protest parade,
or take part in a riot, burn draft
cards, and a thousand other things
that our friends did. 9-ae forced
us to grow up into God-tearing,
e&amp;cated, honest adults.
To tell the truth, l thank God
He gave me the 41 me&amp;nest mother
in the world." - READER
Dear Helen:
When I was 13, J started becoming attra ct.ed to boys. I am
now a male ~ 17, and think I am
hom01exual. I don't want to be,
Helen. I want a normal life and
love- morethananythlng,lwant
people to love me - but I am
repulled by IJie tlloughl of go..
lng 'lrilh a girl,
I had one experience with a
boy and I enled up frightened and
ani WIJllng to ldll

++++++

IN case yoo talled to notice the

+++++

AFTER

rnlkl wond•rful 11th. All Work

MAN

QUAORUPU 61LVERPLATIO by our SUIW llowl.. 15.15

lUI

skilled sllftiSIIllthl and Sl.. llflca lriJI (Jw
-~ to ALL plocoo.
14- loJ ....

.111

end still rlslna ... thltltan IIXUUenl
tim1 ta like ldv.lnllp of theM low,

Man:

Yes, there• .s hope. Call the
Mental Health Aasodation In your
dcy and ask for a referral. A
few talks wiUt a ps,ychlatrlst
at a Mental Health Clinic (here,
you pay what )'C)U ean aftord)
might show you that one nperlence does mt turn a boy homosexual, but guilt feelings over lt
mJght make him TifiNK he Ia.
- H.

(

8AUI :mmll

GIRLS NEW

'3·29 to '5.95

~QT 88

J

Paul Davies Jewelers

404 Second Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio

++++++

1

\
1

C.Dter;
with mucb better ll~il~:;!but It
C~umbua

season pmea at the. Coliseum.

.teams play

aeeretary - treasurer ... B. W. Clark assumes Gallia Court)' Deputy
Registrar duUea ... Paul JaQuay selected for naval reserve otncers
tralnlog ... GABS yearbook dedlceted to Celch Jameo F. (Jim) Hald-erman ... Glouster elimlllltes Bidwell-Porter 49..:J2 in Class B Dis..
trict Tournament.

INTER THIS CON'IIIT
AND WINI

1ST PRIZE
A Brand Now $209.95
DRESSMAKER ZIG·V.G

Graham Movie To be Shown

Sowing Mochlne

PI'. PLEASANT- "Souls In
Cooflict" a full-length film ln
eolor 'lrill be shown StndO.)' 7:30
p.m. at the Main Slreel Bapllol
Cbttreb.
The rum waa made during Bil-

2ND PRIZES
Discount

Certifl-

These .,. good lo·
word the purchase of the
$209.95 DRESSMAKER Sow-

ealeL

ly Graham's world Ptbllelzed
London Crus:ade and etlcompaasel the Uvea of tllree cyplcal
lnllvl&amp;tals, trwbled 'lrilh I h e
t present and completely cantuaed about lhe fulttre. A jet pilot
~ baa hll doobt about Uds new
•'rel.lglous res:urpnoe" all hla
maleo are talhlng about. A prom-

'

CONTEST

Simply Unscramble The Words
And Mail Today! .
I. Any rtlldi!nt of the tlnlttd SUtd1
may tflter ucept emplaJett &amp;110
SUPPlitn of CITY SEWI-NG MACH·
IN£ CO., Mlt)'wlrlr, IC!., and their
ImmediAte fAmilies. Tile opPtatlon of
this coote5t shall be subject to and
In conformltJ with all fedtral, stltt
.ntl local laws, llllliftanc:ts, dttiJIOM

lftd I'IIUiitkiM.

.u.

That's the ona that comes from paying excessive
rates when it comes to financing an automobile.

- - - - - ..... - - -lntry hrm-----,...-----

But there's one sure remedy. See us about your
next auto loan and we'll show you a cura
without pills. Talk to us.

ENTRY FORM •

Ohio

Enter ' ' "SMART MONEY"

In London.
The Rev. Earl Ted Wall, pastor ol the Main Stroot Boptlst
ebur&lt;h, oxteotls an lnvllatlm to
the I)Ublle to sao tltls stlrrittg
film.

tOBACCO

J. All tntrits bttome the property corttcl entJt.s. OtiMr lntriH wlf
of CITY SfWING MACHINE C&amp;., melw a $140.00 Dlsc:ou!\11: CrrUfk:~
Molf)'~villt, ICanW.
ate. An prla wiMin will N nollfltd
'
J. Entries must k postmared na .. moll.
later than B daws fr11m the receipt •· Only a~tt entq Ptrlftlt&amp;ll , _
of this entry. So hurry, mall tod.ay! tach contrstut.
Wlnn~rs of tht Sewing Macbint , S. Decblon fif tilt Judgn 11 fllll.
Adjusu.bte Dress F.mm, Transistor
Radios .and Pinking Stltars will be 6. No r.!pn!lfnt.atltt wlll all ,.,
hltcttd ~ drawlag from amtnt~ all COIIIt to JOUr haml. WH!nm d M

notlrllll .,

1nent aetress woo.ders about thla
strange new ..personal contact.''
A pemyan!O gambling factory
worker tries to figure out what
the odds are for him. Their need
for a s:oul..saUstylngrellgiousexperience ls realized when eaeh attends one of Graham'&amp; meetings

l'IIISYOUI

II'1 Easy ... It'1 Funl

·---

NEW KENDALL

'TOBACCO CANY

.

OHIO VALLEY BANK

and ooo dlmor last Wodneeday,
second time he was preaen&amp;ed
the Dairy Farming award by

Woodrow Brown. He Ia the soa
ot Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush,

Letart.
Dlck.le Carson, a IICiphomore,
received another top award, the
Star Groonhand, from Mr. MJ.
chael Whalen. He is the son ot
Mr. and Mrs. George Carson,

Mason.
Sammy ScarbeiT)', a senior,
received the Chapter Leadership

award rrom c. P. wuuama.Sam.-

my Is Ute son oC Mr. and Mra.
Johnaon Scarberry, New Haven.
David Smith, a freshman,
received the scholarship award
from Prlnelpal Clyde Folo,y. David ls the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Cecll Smith, Ma11011. Foundation
awards were presented by Hmorary Chapter Farmers as follows:
Farm Forestry award to Terry Bumgarner, aon ~ Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Bumgarner, by Gerald Rood; Agrleulturo.Bttalneoa
award to SomJny ~ry. Ill'
Joh.n1011 Scarberry; Uveatoc:k aWird, "to lleWWral, ....
d Mr• .altd lolra. David Dewlatrot, Ill' Noloon Jomlnp,
Farm and Home

others, Robert Dewhurst, National ani County 4-11 LeadershljJ
award, which is sponsored by
Soars and Roebuek with Mrs.
Ray111011d Uevlng, president . ol
Mason County 4:-H Leaders Assocl.at:icll, making the .Pf'esentatlon.
Oflicers of FF A are Robert
Roush, president; Terry Bumgarner, vice president; Sammy
Bearberry, oeeretary; Robert
Dewlm'st. ·treasurer; WWiam
HuaseU, reporter; John Bumgarner, sentinel, and George Smalley, advisor.
John Bumgarner oiTeredtheln·
vocatloa and Freddl.e Weaver le(f
the creed.

Clreult Judge James L e o
Thompson and Mr. James Lewis
"""" honored by reeelvlng the
Honorary Chapter Farmer Awarda presented by the omc:ers
o1 lho cqatt~sat~oo 1n ;. opee~a~

lhe dlffleull task ol Improving
lhe dlotrlbulion system .. rood
can be moved from producing

rI

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I

rely on imports for• muchoftheir

Gallipolis

.•

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For

Farm

&amp;

Wney Supply C..
8 Mil•• Weat Gallipolis
Rout• 35, Rodney, 0.
61A. 245-5509

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TUESDAY,
FEBRUARY 25I
7: 30 p M

'~:,W~~:.;,.slder that nearly I

:~;;r;.~.o~:v:~c:.ln~: 11

for export we realize the lmpor!ance of world food trade to our

eoonom,y. Each year we eJqKJrl:

nearly $7 bllllm worth ol food
and fiber products. In &amp;plte of
many producers' obiecttons, we
Import abwl $4 billion worth ol
food pro&amp;lcts. However, 01"11.1 about one-ball of IIllo eompet.es
with food products produced in
lhe United &amp;ales. The 1181 I•
made up of coffee, tea, sugar,
and other products which are
ma~~~Ub!:.rct~ aver

1

~"'~t;;~.~":.~.:S:.:C::~
. . ..
Clinic On W

~~~~~! ~~~~,a~r~
l.Ainch Served

Pleasant Point
Resort
~onsored

by

Keefer Service

Center, Allis Chalmer Dealer
an::l Agricultural Extension
Service

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WHERE - Episcopal Parish House (beside
Pomeroy Hieh School) Pomeroy. Ohio
WHO - Chemical Specialist - Landmark,
C I b Oh'
0 um us,
10
w. or• invitinv all of the farm•n in th• M•iv•, Ma·

•on, and Gollio County area, all Vo-ag students, and
anyon• •h• thot is int•r••t•d ln attending.

w.

~• •u•• that oil of us l"ilolia• thol ch-emical• ploy a major
roll in forming the•• day •. w. hor· to give you the lote•t Info,..
mation cot thi, meeting which wll illnoble you to do o bett.r tob
with your crop th11 yeor. Brir~g all of your e~ue•tion• with yo, a•
thi• will be o good opportunity to 1et 10111e of them a"'w-d.
llrir~g r•ur wUe, your hlr.d hond, or any- yeu wl•h. lwryo,..

1 '• •• c:•m•.

. '•

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PC!.!!!!!! 1
Ph.

Mos.on Countin
992-2181, Joek
c••••y.

w.

M!t•- Op•• Doily Til 6

®

SPECIAL NOTE:
Th&amp;r&amp; ore many new chemicals this year - it is very
important that you are aware of their good features

1
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·----------------·
as well as any restrictiCilS the FDA moy have on them

Co.

Ylslt Us
All Week long
FEB. 24-28
DAILY
...lster free When You
VIsit This Weeki
110 f.URCHASE NECESSARY!

.M,Jgs . Eq~ipment Co.

'

',.

I

I

THIS
FREE

• International Hydrostatic 544 Tractor
given to some lucky farmer free of charge.
Come in and se" it-and register for the
drawing.
• See the greatest advance ever in farm
tr~ctor speed selection-Hydrostatic All·
Speed Drive-from "9 below to '20 above
and everything btlvfeen."

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DOOR PRIZES,
L
·11 REFRESHMENT$
INFORMATION
. ,.....,. ~

F,..e Customer Parking

• Driv... in Window Service
• Complote Ba•king S.rvice

••
Pim!PS

:5£~;::~~~":' :..~c;m.;, I1 Malor Chemical Meeting•I

rated)' . .,, . ·'"' .
....RII.,~

BAINES

8 A.M. TO
5 P.M.

• Simplex ADPIIcators
• Plasllc co,•s

Plant
W
'
(
.V.ers,
. ;. '
. p' .....

WE HAVE Itt
STOCK

.ol
n mar n.nnounces

Ohio Vallo,y Eloetrle Corp., wao
the guest opooker, ltlld olher
guoota were -&lt;eel by Som1111 Bearberry. Tlto Jau.r alao
ltlltUttarlzed Chapter aetlvltloo
and -laltted the moattlng ol the
emblem.

·With·. ·~t•rln

--- -----,- -·

-------------.
La d
k
I

eeromony.
I. R. Ford, Asst. manager,

• ·-··· -··_,.....'!"'i"l..·'!"'-.---· •

Gallipolis

the most ret;ent ,year from whlell

To.acco
Plant Bed ·Supplies

,.

UTCIC ••• •••·• ••• •• ,, TAliS .•••• ·••••• ••• NllnAP .•••• •••••••• ••••••••
AMsl ••••••••••••••• cnsTH .......... , •••• OBTUH'fltLO ••• , •• I I • • • • • • • • • •
MHI •••••••••••••••• UOffiN •••,. ••••••••• I,MA~ •••••••••• I • •• • • • • • • •
LINIDI •••••••••• ~ . . . . . . . I • • • • • • • • • • • IIOISICI ••••••••••••••••• ~ I • •

the oroblom, becauseltlmpoaos

the excess 0( exports over imports the total balance ot trade

TOMMY ROUSH

MR. F

r1 about one~rd o( one per tisurea are avai.Jable.
cent, whereat food oonjump.
'lbese are Juat some ol the
·Jon per t:aplta has been lncreas- fii'(Jltlema ~1\1 everyone
Ina at almoat one-11111 d &lt;110 living In the Umted States, and
per cent. The dift'ereoce be- particularly the farm people. To
tween production and c on- stave otr disaster In the world
sum.Ption has been made up by in- the birth rate must be brought
ereaaed food importa from the under ew~trol and we must indeveloped countries. Food lm- creue our food proWctlvit,y.
porta by the less developed counAnother WI,)' of Ulustrating the
tries have been moatly KTain to sltuatloo Ia when we consider
increase the calorie Intake.
any baby born in the world to~
More than 50 per cent Of the da,y. This child haa one chance
world population has an annual In 16 of being born in the UnitIncome of less than $100 a _per- ed Sates. He has two out of
aon. At low Income levels, a high three chances of being blaek.
percentage of total expenditures brown, or yellow. He has on e
is for food, and a largepartoCin- chance In five or being born Ch1creases In irlcome wUl eo ror nese. He has two out of three
food. As lncornes rise, II In- chances of. being chronically ill
creased supplies. are not avau: or amicted with malnutrition
able, food prices go up, and the e\len to the point of death. He
poorer people whose ablllty to has only one chance in lour of
buy haa not impTOYed can ob- auft'tclent education whi ch wlll
lain even leiS food.
permit him to learn to reacl.
The impact of population on
Next week we hope to ~
food suppliea 1n the developing line some of the wa,ys In which
countries Is accentuated by the the world food problem aa weU
concentration oC people in eft- as our problem at home affects
ies. The extremely rapid growth farmers or the United htes.
of. urban popul&amp;tl.on compounds
-

garner.

at the high school. For t h e

;; ,. "us
'· Pf1nt led 'Fertilizer

WISNOI , •• , , ••• , •• , .IMDN ••••••••••• , , ••OGMIMH'OA. , ••••• ., , •••••••••

AUTO LOANS

Wahama's Vo-Ag instructor, at the annual parent

eel oountrte• at an .......al rate

Imports ln the food area greatiy helps the United &amp;ales in its
total trade program because of

and Mrs. Lee Httosell, IIY .
Lowell . Cook; Farm Mecltonl~., .
to Terry Bumgarner, by Harry
Mlller. Terry also received tile
SoU and Water Consenatkm Award pre&amp;ented by Edward Bum-

"·

Unscr.amltlt TiltH Woret-Hirll:
Thly All Ptrt.alft t4 StWiftl

the Ohio Hereford Association is
c~sponsori~ a grading cllnic
with the Ohio State University an:l
The American Hereford Association. This will be held the afternoon o.r Frida.Y, Feb. 28th, starting at 1 p. m. in the Junior Fair
Beef Arena on the State Fairgrounds. A workshop senion on
the keeping of Performance records for beef cattle will follow.
The Association's anra&amp;al ba~
quet and meeting will be held on
Friday e'fening, Feb. 28,atStouffers University 1M on Olenta~
gy River Road. A socialhourwiU
be held at 7 p. m., roliowed by
the ba~uet at 7:30 p. m. Featured speaker for the evening is
Mr. Gene Wiese, Marm.ing, Iowa,
currently vice president of the
American Hereford Association,
and also a promlnem breeder of
Hereford cattle.

~"'"''' '' "' Mr.

• Mrl BromiQ ··
•·Ylfll!!l (Liquid)

PUZZLE AND WIN PRIZES!

The diet deOc:lt areu include
all ol Aala exeepl J..,... and
Israel, all but tile JOUthem Up
ot Africa, and most ot South
and Central America.
Durin( lhe put ........ food
production Increased at a slightly faster rate in the less developed countriel than in the
developed eountrleo, buiiJie per
capita trend In the less deYeloped eGlllltriea has been damp..
ened by a hieh rate of population growth. Amual &amp;q;Jtllation
growth haB reaebed 2.$ to 3 per
cent 1n manY deYeloplng countries, as wides.Pf'ead applieatlon
ol medical leclwlolot!Y altd Improved food aupplles have reduced death rates.
Aa bnportant aspect of t h e
-lei food problem lo tile need
to bring birth rates Into balance with food supply, and some
pfOil'eea Is being made in this
dtreetloo.
Over the past two decades,
food production per eaptta has
increased in the less develop..

merrt. to William Mussell, 1100

"'-e-

FOR ALL
TOBACCO SUPPLIES

-.

sale wlll start at 1 p. m., with
the auctl.oneer, Mr. Emeraon
Marting o.r Washirwton Court
House presiding.
As a new innovation this year,

Farm Award by

++++++

$140.00

GAlLIPOLIS - The Ohio Hereford Association wtll hold its 20th
Anniversary Show and sale on
March 1st, in the Junior Fair
Beef Arena at the Ohio EJII)oaltiona Center, Columbus.
The largest conslgmtent in
year&amp; marking the 2oth anniversary includes 50 anim8Is,approximately 25 bulls, most ready for
serviee into any purebred or commercial herd, and 25 heifers or
for excellent FFAor.f..Hprojects
Cor thla year.
Judge for the morning :show,
starting at 9:30 L m., is Dr.
Randall Redd, Ohio state Universtly, Dr. Reed has judged several Ohio Hereford Shollfs. The

a" aeutral areal,· W'hereas many &amp;nalle,y,

TWENTY YEARS AGO, from the ftloo ol Tlte Dally Tribune ani
weeki)' Gallia Timet ... Gallia Times . Editor J. Sherman Porter to
oboerve 4lot blrthdly on Feb. 28 .... Glenn P, Clmpboll nomed Ulh
GallJpo.U.a Chamber of commerce presktent. Other 1949 chamber
otfteera blelude Harland Martin, 'liee Pl'elldeM., lnd Earl Boyer,

No Obligation - Nothing Ta Buy!

Darnbrough's

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

Tom Roush Wins A

(MI. . . . .

Con~~on

•

I

· THE OU shOW'case is not only larger ttan Ohio State's St. John
Arena, it"s more comfortable. The convocation Center has theat&amp;rb'Jte (cushi~ seats.. Sportswriters and fans lnthl&amp; ~ are making
efforts to have the Ohio High School AUdetic As1oclation switch the
Clao t:f~ ;tlegl...l

from'" '

wOaD~

ln Tho Now Jr. High LHkl

J.... ~'~... -

Anniversary Sale Planned

a

_ BIUNG IN IDLVEk TODAY! _

DON'T WAm INTEl TODAYI

c;,.ot

1.24

.14

Ext. A...,., AtlrleuUure
Mel(l Coonly
POMEROY - Ptoblle polley II
a 9r&lt;JPOaed or adopted «Nrle
d aetlon by aoeloty obtolnod ln
group dedtlona.
'lbl• was the keynote ol a program ln agrleultural polley ••
studied in a recent three-Week
winter aehool at the Udveraity
ol Arizona. During the laet 40
,yean, qrlcultural, publle, and
foreign poUey have been 10 intertwined lhal I felt oome ol lido
m11er1a1 wwtd bo of aenoral
interest to all.
It ian't often one takes t h e
tlme to sit down and outline uaetly major p.1blle objectives.
We might ooy lhe objective of
the United States is the survival of its citizens and eulture.
During the last several yean
we have attempted to achieve
this d:tjective_with our goals beIng oewrl~ lhrouglt otreoglh,
world wide procreu through
partnership, and encwraglns aU
countries to have a revolutionary meaning of freedom.
We have alao enoouraged
throuehaut the world a commwtib" of C&lt;lUntries, operating under law, striving for peace
through perseverance,
Our torolon polley lo
mutual Mt"Url\)' for all. And as
our new President said "We

'

Shean.

SPRING DRESSES
Choos• Whll• Selections Are

er- •••• J4JO

4TII PRIZES 5·Tranohtor
Radloo.
ITII PIIIZES 5· Pair Plnklnt

lrith picturea. Refreshments.
ANN JUDSON Blble Oa11 at
7:30 p. m. FellowohljJ Room.

l.P- m.

'

=
...

$21.11

forma.

meeting 1t lhe hllllt7:30

fHVEH.SIDE STUDY CLUB, 1p.
m, with Mra. Albert Durose.

&gt;"P . . . . . . .

1970, we Rnd &lt;-'hlna wlUt onefourth of it, or abollt 700 mil lion. Two-Udrd• ol the - l e
ot the world live in Indll and
China. Two.thlrdt of the world' a
Income is tn Europe and North
America.
The land area of the world Is
made Ul&gt; of approxlmalely 40 per
cent deaert and tee and IDOW;
30 per eerX foruts; 20 per cent
puture land, and 10 per eent
crqtland. This 10 per cent crop.
land. representing about 3 per
cent of the world's aurface, 0lllttO• out to 5\; mllll001 111111are
miles.
When you figure this out, it
amount:J to about one acr• per
perecm now lb1ng In the world.
Tlto Food and Agrleultural Orpolzetlon ol the United Natlono
estimates that 2,650 ealorlesper
dl,y II the minimum needed for
a aaUit'aet:ory dl.et.
There 11 1WI much hunger in
the world. Probably two - lhlrdo
of the world's people live In
countries witll nutritionally InadeQuate naUonal anrage diets.

the

PltlZES 2·Adjuotoblo

m. Child Welfare program

THURSDAY

....

1111111

low prlca lo have ,..,r worn altvtf· Tllfllt ••••• f;27.50

ware, 1ntlqun lnd flmlly htb1DCIITII
.-.plated IIQ ntW, ThtH pieces IN

+ + + + +

Machine.

AMEmCAN LEGION Auxiii-

CHESHIRE WSCS will meet at
the home ofMra. J. H. Burger,

~,.. .,..., ...__~,. ..

Public, Foreign Policie8
Intertwined in Moder~ Complicated World

"TI:IEY will be told that they are, by their aed.ons, going counter to the overwhelm log convletions of this communi!)' a.t to what is
pr~r here, •• Father Hesburgh continued. "U they do not ~l"thin M -. . are attempting to end
war
time period cease l.rd desist, they will be asked for their identity in Vietnam and bring peace In
cards.
the Pacif.lc." In a world setting
+ ++ + + +
our 111mber one prc;lblem fa Rus"THOSE who produce these will be susperded from this com- ala. Its version of the history
mwlity as not und.erstandi-. what this commwalt;y is. Those who do of mankind hat been primitive
) not have or ~Ul be assumed not to be members of the c:ommuni.V" and IOeletiila followed by atavery,
J will be eharged with trespassirw and dlsturbirw abe peace on private feudalism, where one man conI
prq&gt;erQr and treated according to the law.''
trolled many others, followed by
+++++ +
capJ.tallam, aoclallam and c:omA i11r cry frr6. the outmoded (2,800 seatirw capacity) Men's muntsm. We belleve In the UnitGym! That was our first thought as we entered Ohio Universlt;y'B ed states that capitalllnt, whieh
new 13,600..seat Convocation Center ror the first time lut saturda,y. sivea every man an equal op+++++ +
portunlt;y to strive tor better
DATELINE, along with three other Galllpollllno - llo(er Biro thlnga 'lrilh hlo lndlviAial elrort,
roo, Hugh Graham and Wayne Rir88r - watchecl C.ch Jim SnYder' a Ia the most rewardfnl form o1.
Bobcat&amp; bump off Mlan1i 60-59ina thrilling ~AmerieaD. Conference tocfeQ'.
cooteat. Over 10,100 persons - a naw MAC attendanee recordJn tbe world setting ·of a papviewed the contest despite the tact the game "as on regional tel&amp;- ulation of 3,6 billion people by
vi slob.

FOR llfBTANCI

self. I can't attord psychiatry,
and besides I couldn't bear to
tot 1111 porents know. Wily do people make jokes about a subject
that is the most terribly, crushIngly painful mloory In I h o
world? And is there any ~
for me? - I WANT 1'0 BE A

j

"an,yone or any group" substitutes force, ..be it

violent or no~vtolent," they wHl be ~iven "15 minutes of medlta..
Uon to cease and desist,•• he said ln sletter to faculty and stuclelts.

Every Item Replated at Sale Prien

CONTEST RULES
IU')'

IN the event

,.,.. '"'"' .,.,., "''"" , .. •• 50"'

Dear

••get tough'' policy which ap-

peared in last Wednelday's paper, Father Hesburgh said the univer ..
1 alty ''recognized the wlldltyofprotest ... reprdingthe curreut burn-lag issues of our society." But, he IBid. "rational persuasion" Is
the acceptable method.

Devotions were led by Mrs.

TU~&gt;\'1

Department store

i sent oome to lean better llliDDers.

ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED- Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
BroWIIJr. of Route 2, G•llipolis, are announcing lhe
engagement of their daughttr, Peggy Lou, to Staff
Sgt. Charles E. Huber II, son of Mr. Charles E. Hu·
ber of Silver Springs, Md. and Mrs. Betty Jo Huber
of Denver, Colo. Miss Brown is presently teaching
at Henderson, 11'. Va. S/Sgt. Huber is stationed a!
Ft. Campbell, Ky. as an instructor with the Air Force
82nd. Combt. Sec. Pol. ll'g. ll'edding plans are i•·
complete.

Jessie Houchins. Scripture from
SL lAlke and prayer was by Mrs.
Verla KnlghL Mro. Willard Woodrull' read "'Li vtng Our Hymns.''
Mrs. Daniel Ewans presided
am welcomedanewmem.ber.1be
secretary's report was given by
Mr&amp;. Mlldred Baker and t h e
treasurer's report was given by
Mrs. Conlry WMUey.
Arrangements were ~leted
tor the potluck dinner to be held
in the fellowship room in honor
ol dte youUt group from Aabury
College, Wilmore, Ky., who wUl
have charge of speclaJ servlcea
at tbe church.
Seventeen members 1111 one

p.

-·

Agricultu~

BY C. E. BLAKESLEE

WE recelwed a letter last week trom Mrs.

Webaer, Dr. and Mra. limier
Thomas, Dr. and Mra. Ttanls
Dr. Quntln Korlllqe,
Mr. ud Mrs. Earl Burner, Mr.
lnl lolro. T. 0, lnl Mr.
and lolro. Gro.w lllrrla.
llrL Max Elliott lid lfrL Arvel Vnoel prealdedatlherefnol&gt;-

slept -

-~ ..,. . . . . . .

New in
Farming

pards b&amp;iay In an 1~t fD·
. SIJO~ALMI, · f1~
&lt;VPil- t"lnnllll olllellli!o 111-f -.u..~rr.onaollW
'
•
mlti!JW htlhe(l'llllll- lpiO lluoola. .,
. 'l1io (O&gt;OrnmOnto olFIDIInd
... .., lhe - r
ol the
tence, tfiPtealtd eoneern sat.- lnl lhe SOvlot lillian ha.. an
un!Q ...,. the h•:reulrw d... .....,;,.. whleb 11)'1 1 rol,..
_ . lo 1 domeode anlmal ani
IICII001 ol Ral-r lD lheSO.
Ill &lt;N&gt;HI!W tho l!ord.. lo I
v1e1umon.
·

d..., lolr. and lolra. Goo r re
chrtot ot
Kr. L. E.
Grubt, lolr, anllln. Clrl Borner ol AohlaDd, KJ,, lllao Nancy
Groco ani Kr. and Kra. Ar..t
UnMl and c:llu&amp;hter, CIDdy, of

CHERYL ANN THOMAS

MEANEST MOTHER
IN THE WORLD
Dear Helen:
The Tomah, Wts. Rotary Club
newsletter recently printed an
article that I hope you'll reprint. Here it is :
l had the meanest mother In
the world. WhUe other kids ate
carutv for breutast, I had to
have cereal, eggs, toast. When
others had pep and candy ror

.... " ............... .

Showing.Appetiu For Soviet GrOll

PEGGY LOU BROII'N

TO BE II'ED - Mr. and Mrs. john R. Thomas, 507
Fourth Aut., announce the engagement of their dau·
ghter, Cheryl Ann, to james I. Enyart, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert R. Brown, Rl. J Celina . An August
16 wedding is planned at Grace llltited Methodist
Church. Miss Thomas is a graduate of Gallia Acade·
my High School and is a senior at Rio Grande College , where she is majoring in Elementary Education. Her fiance is a graduate of Celina High School
and Minmi University, Oxford, Ohio, with a Bachelor
Degree. Employed by the Gallipolis City School Sys·
tem, he teacktS Driver Education and coaches freshman football at Gallia Academy High School.

.,...,

"·

.

'.~.&lt;-'.

�...

23, 1969

Backstairs at
The White House
(UPOWASHINGTON
Backstairs at the White Howle:
The • logistics ot Presklent.

Nlxon'o _ . . , trip . n - vl.tdl)' the pnooldeDcy M• IJ'Oifn aa eoutamb

World of
Religion

Four Metga, Comty organizations will work together to stage
the f1fth aMual Min Southern Ohio Pageant in early ~ .
The pogeant eo-oponsors are the I'Umeroy Chamber of Commerce.wtdch hold&amp; the franchise to stage the event, a part of the
Mias Ohio and Miss America pageants, and Xl Gamma Mu Chapter af Beta Slgma Phi SororU;y.
Co-general ctWrman ol the pageant will be Mrs. Richard RawBy LOUIS CASSEI.S
lings, representing the chamber, and Mrs. Halpll Welker, who will
UPI Hellglon Writer
be the sororlty chapter'a repreaentatlve.
A recession ~ pabllc lnterest
Mrs. Charles Lewis has a«epted chairmanship c:A. stage decor ations tor the pageant. .\ new stage setting will be worked out by In rellgkln Is reflected In lhe
Mrs. Lewis, who i• talented in this neld. lile will be aided by latest statistical reports from
U.S. churches.
members of. the Winding Trail Garden Club.
The 1969 Yearbook OC AmeriThe rourth organizatloo liking part In the pageant wUI bo tho
can
Churches, juot publlahed,
Big Bend Minstrel Assn. ltJ members wtU be joined by other
reporl&amp;
that
total
church
talent of the county to present song and dance numbers between
JJKllllbershlp
roae
during
lhn
segments ol the pageant competition. Mrs. Coleen Ohlinger and
paat year by 666,545 to an aU
Miss Becky Nease will train the pony chorus lines.
Even though the declskln to pruceed with the ~this year Ume high ofl26,445,110.
But the alpdflcant thing about
was reached ooly Friday night, remarkable progress already has
these figures 18 that they
been made .
Mrs. A. R. Knight, certainly one of the county's most genial host- represent a growth rate otlesa
esses, will be in charge ol housing contestants who wiU arrive rrom than one-ball of me per cenl A
Gallia, Washingtoo and Athens to take part with local cootestants in growd• rate at least twice tbat
large would be necessary for
the al!alr.
cJ•~rches to keep pace with tho
Mrs. Charles Griffith of the Pomeroy Nattooal Bank wlll again
amrual increase in the U.S.
be chairman of the audl.ting that ia recp.aired m pageant night to
compile points given contestants by each judge during the com- flOIIUlatloo.
Losing Ground
plicated system of selecting the new Miss Southern Ohio.
Thul churches are relaUvely
Heading again thla year the coUectim ol glfta and awards em belosing IIJ'OUnd. In 1967, 64.4 per
ha1C or the chamber or commerce will be Mrs. MoUy HilL A program book will be compiled in the near future and this will be cent of the population were
church members. In 1968, the
handled by the sorority members.
So all in all, great strides have been made alreacb' for the 1969 -rUon declined to 63.2 per
cent.
event.
Churth attendance figures are
Present holder oC the title is Miss Laurie Schaefer, Columb.ls, a
even more indicative tban
student at Ohio University In Athens.
membership JtatlsUcs, since
The pageant ls open to glrls in Meigs, Athens, Ga.Jlia and Washmany people who lose interest
ington Counties or girls whO Uve elsewhere but who are attending
eoUeges in any ol the foor counties. Mrs. Welker and Mrs. Raw- In religion simply otop coming
to church without bothering to
lings will be handling registration
contestants this year.
remove their names from tbe
rolls.
~ 1958, which In retroapecl
THE REV. T. A. ' CLELAND OF RACINE will be undergoing
another operation in the near future at Pleasant Valley Hospital. appears to have been tho peak
Several pints of blood will be needed for the surgery a. n d year of the postwar religious
revival, the Gallup l'llll found
residents may give on his behalf ~ when the bloodmothat
49 per cent of America'&amp;
bile visits the Pomeroy Elementary School from 1 to 6 p.m.
am.tlt p o p u I a t I o n attended
Those giving on his behalf are to indicate that to the clerical
church on a \Yplcal !imday.
help at the untt. Incidentally, lhn Rev. and Mrs. Cleland wUl obThe proportion of c:hurchgoer•
serve their 57th wedding am.lversary On March 17.
declined to 47 per cent In 1959
and remained at that level for
RITA HOLMM, DAUGHTER OF Mr. and Mrs. Earl Hollll8ll, three years. It slid to 46 per
Racine Route 1, has been returned to her home from Children's
cent In 1962 aud 1963, to 45 per
HOspital in Columbus where she was confined for three weeks
cent In 1964, sed to 44 per cent
loll owing lllrpry.
In 1965 and 1966. There was a
lt'U be severa1 weeks - at least - before Rita can return to
brief lncreoae to ~5 per cent In
classes in the seventh grade at Racine Junior High School. Mean1967, but In 1968 lhn decline
time, her classmates took up a collection and ~rchased a gift
for Hila to remind hnr she Is 1101 loriiiJIIen.
Request&amp; coma nccasl...atly ~· ,l nformatloa about peq&gt;le and ob""!"· jectl ot.loqr ago In the 'Bead area. It Isn't often we can giw satisfaco.
In 1945 &amp;Jx members or "dle
lion. The" only known i'&lt;lllleroy hack - - flloa - thlt of The Fifth Dlvloloo of the U.S.
Democrat _ went 'I&gt; In smoke In 1927 when fire dest:rqyed every· Marine&amp; planted an American
thirw on West Second I.Dd Mechanic stL In the area of Kroger's alit FlaB atop Mowrt !llrlbeclli oo
the present Dail,y ~1 otftces.
Iowa Jlms.
Files of the defunct Tribune Telegroph, a stroogdaUy ollho 20s
and into the years ol'l'be Great Depression either have becane lost,
never were. or have been tragically destroyed. Thoaewere the years
thlt the llsrlleys, 011 ver and son, Melcolm, malnlllaed tho Talegraph to severe Israeli reprisals.
These fearS Were sbarpened b)'
at a high degree of excellence.
'The above Introduces Robert E. COleberd, Jr., of 3055 16th St., Israeli Trsnsporlltloo ldlnlster
N.W. ApL 102, Washington, D. C. 20009, who desires certotn ln!or- Moshe Carmel who said Friday
night the Arab nations "should
rnaUOn of the Pomeroy area. He writes:
''I am writing to IDQ.uire whether ywr newspaper tiles c:ontain not complain or be surprised .. 1f
lUll' Items on the carl Barckhoff Church Organ Company which oper- Israel retaliates.
ated in Pomeroy ln the yearal903to1913. My avocation is researchA
Jerusalem communlcJ&amp;e
~ and wrlti~ about midwesteru organ bui.lders and I'd like to do a Saturday said an Israeli patrol
killed three Arab guerrillas
story on this firm.
"rd also Hke to ask about .. oldtlmers" In the tommunity who Friday night In a clash ooutlt of
might rej:all the firm and whom I could lriervtew.
tho
llraell - occupied Golan
"I would like to have such names prior to 1 trip to Pomeroy hol&amp;ilts. Tbo report said two
other DJerrlllal Ded the scene,
scheduled in June.
and left behind a Russian-made
"Your assistance is greatly ~.DPreclated."
Sincerely,
Klachnikov rifle. a bazooka, a
Bob Colebenl
mortar, some hand grenades
Mr. Coleberd would appreciate a card from you - if you can and a mmber ol mines.
help him - mailed to the lddresJ above invltlJW him to call In June.

Presidential LogistiCs Show

Gl

..,...,.n,

term eowrlnc:
maIUineo, radio 0111 teleYiakiD,
~Dade the •riel snwller.
The preas partJ, a pneral teeYirw Woaii!Jiton lllrl1 Sundo.Y with tile Chief Em:ullve

bnprovlrw

~...

hlw

lhlt 110 1ear to yeer ~­
MDI an be u:ade. lka•P•, au
uallai&gt;Je . . - lndlcallla

Perhaps tile moot -Uve that caD1bUtlona hlrro "-&gt;
nr)' Utile cllriae lhe put lhreo
- · of public lnlerolt In _ . . . . period In wlllch 1llo
re11i1on II &amp;uldoy School
ll!ldlment. Many porenls keep periiODII IDeome of Amerlealll
l8lldlng their children to lllnday climbed by 25 per coni.
Willi
coats
aleadll7
rltiD&amp;
Sdw:Jol out of ....... oonvlctloll
durehotl ore leelbltr a
that It's the ltdDI to do, IODB after lhoJ have peroanally loot ...... financial pinch.
Altboulb dllrch ~ nolntoreol In the cburch.
Sunday school enroll- lo IIZnllJ are ccmeernod . - lbo
not aab falllne to ~ poco .......... lhe7 aru't In •
wltll populatlclD growth: It has J,11111c. ThoJ .,.,. that tbe
relllolarod ae absolute clecllne dllrch hU - - f a r
.,...., yeor for lhn paat five more ' - 111r1 fat :r-•
~
Ita
101111
htllory.
ADd In
year a.
The atewardshli&gt; sact1on oidia Ierma OC oplrllual heehh, the
National Council of Cburcheo durch IMIDI to IIIII olong
ou_.odly keeps track OC better II to lllllfer!D&amp;
contrlbutlons to clurches, tut lllverldt;r II does It's
its stoU.Uca are so lnodOQllle rldlni • blal1 tldo oc )lbllUiarlt;y.

wmberod o-.er 150. Sowrol
tbneo IIIII Jlllllber will be
picking up the Pre•!&lt;lont at eoch
of Ilia Ylolla to !he - l e o .
·When Iormor Preoldont llotry s
1'..- wenl to BrozU In the
tate Iortie• lor a llll)or InterAmerican con~enmc:e, tho White
H&lt;0110 preao poriJ Included
. - :15 perooaa. Ani In Ita
day. tbiJ waa a tar more
.......nil.. trip lm&lt;oiYIJW lormal di&amp;&gt;IOIDIUC JIIIIIQIIatiOIII and
of ..,...,..... lhln
Nboo'a Jarply ...-~­

=

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J-.a, l....udllW Papo Paul VI, bac:clo to ..1,
mudl ol lhe dlocuaalon ~ bo to brllv ' - "
de.- to p\UJW to .._ In tile form Gl

-r. u.s.
Some
remolnod

o;aroar

•tandllv· .
dlplomata

In

11111hllleD

....

!lloUid lhn pr..l - ...

lllelr retelwd In EIUWOo hi .•

lradltl~lollc belief tllel NJaen IGIIIO trouble ~ ......
~ ~..........
In
woa plurwiJW In ~ _ _ . .
~~ II
t.llka too 10011 o!lor ouumlrw
-·
tho prealdeney. Ill foci, -·
uul ol
-_._.• ol

r........ ...
*::t"

Jobs In lbiness

joUrney.

Tele'tillon Awn-Ne
"Live" televialGD of Nixon In
Eurq10 wW bo oYlilal&gt;le by
11teUite tram Tokyo to Tq&gt;ekl.
Wrltlen account&amp; lhol aab I
low years ago woold have taken
hours to tranamll to thll
country tram Europe wW zip
acroas the Atlantic in a matter
ol miDuteo.
Aa far as tho publle Is
c.....,mod- II IIIII, the Ameri..., publlc-lhla ftrot Nixon
..,...,.e Into per~ diplomacy
wUI be a IIJOCIIcle essantially.

. _POMEROY
Tho death of a lhr"'feer-old tllrl
Sl yearo ago from diphtheria Inspired her lather to hope
!orAmproyed sewage facnttJea,
· Laot week thai hope helped bring a . dream
nearer reality . The memory of little L l a a
; Sauvage, daughter of John Sauvage, Butternut Ave.,
Wll strong when a valuable plot of ground owned by
him was blrned over to Pomeroy for its new sewer,.. "JIOII mly a token poymenl.
When the sewerage system ia begun · In Pomeroy
Iller this 'year. · It will be a dream of Iormor Mayor
John Sauvage come true.
STAKES LOT - POmeroy Mayor Char. " &amp;uvoae, who Ia 88 years old, has been a prcmoler los Legar stakes oil a 40 x 40 lot that has
d improved sewage facillUes in Pomeroy for more been oold to the vUiage by John Sauvage
than half a century.
Oeft) for constructloo of tile Fourth st.
Ilia most recent action In support ot the system oc- lttt atatlon when the town's sewerage s.yscurred when he agreed to accept tho token payment from tem Is built thla year . Souvage, hbnaell
the vlijap for a 10 X 40 fi. lot on whleh tho Foorlh st. a onetime Pomeroy mayor. haJ worked
Cor improved. sewerage in the town for
IIIWtatkln wW be built.
:·.u'J: really didn't want to lose
almost 51 years.
tbe land," said Mr. Sauvqe,
"bul alter thinking over how long coold be made to get drainage mont Ux&gt;w u. S. Corps of f)!gl1 had lou&amp;llt for this t;vpeolthlng, moving apln, but there were neero) In 1937, awarding of U3,and lf4mlng other pr&lt;&gt;perly own- seemingly always small JlOQis 000 lor tho Butleroot Ave. - en ~idn't want to give up the f1 stagna1ed water In the area erage project was approved. WPA
needed footage, I decided to let for many years," Sauvage re- workers, a short time later, did
lht " town have my land for the caUed.
lho lnotallatlon.
lake of principle."
Mr. Slluvage, concerned that no
Mr. Sauvage, during meetings
''I began persuading otl!era!or noteworthY progress was being with War Department otrlclals
better sewerage dispoulln Porn- made to Improve the 11ewage con- in Huntington, convinced them
8t'oy beek In 1918 Immediately
clltloo, went to &lt;;:olumbus In 1919 the ~gar Run basin handled
following the death of my 3-year. - nn 2obour drlvelhen-- and coo- drainage lor 1.100 acres 0{ land,
olddeughler, El!lo Mae,~hecon- !erred wllh !late Department of Instead of365 as their reonrds
tlllled.
Healtll otnclalo OYer the sltua- said. He aloo pointed out thai
UF.lfie Mae, God rest her soul, tion. ;:
the raising of the · water level
died ol dl»htherla caused by stag..
••By .t his Ume otJter children upon completion ol the locks benoted water that stood behind our In lhe neliH&gt;orhood had died of low GaiUpoUs woold shut otr
housa ,..r the mouth of lhe &amp;II- diphtheria," sold Mr. Sauvage. drainage !rom the stone culver!.
ar Run~aln,'' recalled Mr. Sauv- Health depa.rtmem otl'iclals, how"Now, with the sewerage s,ysaae.
ever, told Sauvage the problem tem proposed ror building this
Sauvap,.shc!I'IIY after the bo,tr- bolonaed to the town and they year, I have the satla!aetlon or
lal of his ilauchter, tookDr. Law- coold lend no noteworthy assist- knowing I wiU have again done
reace, health~isslonerthen, ance.
my part," chuckled Mr. Sauvto a meelln&amp; of village eouncll
Sauvage, wllh lila sewage prcb- age alter he and Mayor Charles
- e lhe peyalclan told mem- lem ollll In the baek of Ilia Legar marked orr the area or
bort that the death of the 3-yoar- mind, ran for and was elected .,.._r~y he has al!l'eed to aetl
old lass coold be linked to the mayor ol POmeroy In 1921. He to the village.
i
stapted water conditions In the llerved one tull term, from 1922Mr. Sauvage, in addition to
!Upr Run basin.
24, bul did nol seek re-election. serving as Mayor of FUmeroy,
1bo · I'Omeroy octogenarian
"I did everylhlng I cwld to In the 1910&amp; and early 1920s
_.,~_
said a ftve.!oot high otone cui- try to all ••~te tho dra!Mge sit- was a special clepJt;y sheriff,
vert fadli\Y whlclt stretches uation whlle I waa mayor," re· served as deputy marshal of
from tbe rar aide ot Fourth St. mar ked Mr. Sauvage. 4•At one Pomeroy and was Meigs County
to the wamr's edge of thn Ohio time In that period ltooktwomen Re)lUbUcan Executive Committee
River, had collapsed In thevlcln- and we cleaned the bllt culvert Chairman.
lt.v of where Meigs General line- out from beslmlng to end. Ill
He alao operated pool halls In
-.a.u....
.... ...~. 1 .. _
pllal otondsclurlngthe spring ~on to ove,.w...., else, we downtown ~ IJIOit of lhe
. a,i"'Sh 1 time .rrom ' 1..''1iatl!·kl•'retlre·llf 1918; '" elllattrg ·a· 'm.ljliii'ait .. found two ·te. lo_~.and
~
lake at. stagnated water to ex- tub in the debril."
ment in 1951. Mr. Sauvage"nrtre,
I"'
In tile area behind Ills ButSauvaao'• elforto continued Alborla, passed away In 1963.
,.~
1am1t Ave. home.
long alter hia term of mayor He has one son, Joho of &amp;~orauThe lake of water lasted mly ended and cluing a meeting he cuse, and a daughter, Mrs. Ger- ...... woth
~
••
a eouple of weeks, before repair a or,_,._
uoe wor Deparl- land Weaver of Dayton.

.·-...

evlclent In tho Slate lloparlmonl portlo;ullrl)' In Alta
when ton.r Preolclolll llwillhl AllleriCL

PREPARE YOURSELF FOR A II!TTI!R FUTURE
MEW QUARTER IEGIMS
MARCH 11

DIPLOMA COURSES
SECRETARIAL
IUS. ADMIMISTRATIOH &amp;
GENERAL OFFICE
·
ACCOUMTIMG
Wrlto, Viall, or C.ll 446·4367
For Co,.lol oad lolo-'1""

Galll,.lls ••111111 Col.
36 Locust Street

Galllpello

."

• !

•

••

-•
•
•

•
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Lebonese Leader
Condemns Raids
By United Press lnternatlonai
A leading leltwlng politician
In Lebanon Saturday condemned
Arab commando attacks against
tsraeU civilian targets and saiAI
the omphasl3 must be placed on
economle and mllllary objectives.
The statement In Beirut by
Kamal Jumblat,
leader of
Lebanon's Progressive Socialist
Par1y (PSP), reflected growing
concern over such incidents as
tbe attack on an llraell El Al
Airliner in Zurich, Switzerland,
last Tuesday and the bombing
~ a Jerusalem supermarket on
FrJda1.
The Lebanese poHUelan has
_ , an outapoken champion of
the commandol, and his comments were coosidered slgnif1-

rant.

;i

I
I

feysterlooa ~bmarlne
Ill · Cairo, EQ-ptlan newspapers carried mysterious reports
about an un1denti!led submarine
and hinted It unloodod Arab
COIIIIJlBDIIDa IIOIIIOWhere on lhe
00111 of occuplool Sinal. Thnre
was nn olllclal confirmotlcm.
'" Jn Jerusalem, pollee still held
10 llllii)Ocll rounded up In llle
aftermath of tile supermarket
IItut which killed two llraeUs.
But there were no new lnddents
SalurdaJo and the clt.v returned

to near normal condltloos.
UPI correspondent Ellav SImon, in a Jerusalem report,
said police removed roacl&gt;locho
which, had been set up to
prevent ciashea between Arabs
and Jews. He said the ani)'
outward sign of tension was the
pooling of a lew extra pollee
guarding streets linking lbe
Arab and loneU sectors of tho
clt;y.
Kamal Jumbla~ In • algood
editorial appearing In hia
weekly Beinlt newspaper, said
Arab conunando groups "must
end the killing or civilians and
direct their efforts at economic
and miUiary targets." He opoke
out against tile Zurich raid oo.
tho El AI jetliner.
Called Raid 'Mistake'
"The choice ol neutral Switzerland, whose sympathies are
with lhe Palestlnlln and Arab
cauoe and which hla supported
liberation movements In Moroc..
co, Algeria and Tunisia, was a
mistake
that harmed oor
relatloos wltll the people or that
country," Jumblat wrote.
He said world reactim wa1
unot in ravor 0( the Araba."
Feara have been expressed In
many
Arab
Q.~arters
that
commando raids on l1raell
clvlllons laid Arab states open

?•
•

&lt;•

1 The term ··payola" wu flrat mentioned In 1·859. It wee:
0 a. The name ghien t~ the flrat Italian drlve•lnl)ilnkil ,. ' 0 lf~" 'A tllllifi'i~' ·· ..... ,...... ·
game craze that awept the country
0 c. Money paid to disc jockaya for
'

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0

plugging recorda

(oJ' Oo.

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~

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d. A suburb outside of Philadelphia

2 Who won the 1959 World Series, the Cardinals or the White Sod
0 a. Cards 0 b. Sox 0 c. Neither, the Dodgers

3

.....
~

•' '

Countdown is Begun
CAPE

A favorite berry received soma unfortunate publicity In 1959. It was:
Strawberriea

0

b. Raspberrlea

0

- " " beJlllll SolurdQ lor
the launch of three astronauts
011 America's most ambitious
JIPIOO mlaaloD- a 10 day earth
orbital voyage In wlllch they
will teat the nation' 1 machinery
lor reaching lho moon.
llhwlnll on the outcome will
bo Amerlea'o plans to land two
men on the lwar surface this

c. Cranberries

Blueberrlea

4

The most popular dance of 1959 was:

0 •. Jitterbug
0 •. Didn't dance in '69

•'

5

Merengue

0

c. Twist

0

IWIIDIOr.

d. ChaCha

llurlng the vllal ftlghl Apollo
9 astronauts James A. McDivitt,
39, David R. Scott, 36, and
Russall L. Schwelckort, 33, wiD
lb' two spacecrofl lhey caU
,.Gumdrop, and u~der."
Object of the mluton lo to

Hawaii and Alaaka both became atates in 1959.

0

a. True

0

b. False

0

c. Maybe

A medal waa awarded In 19&amp;9 to • small animal for a pioneer apace flight.
6 Which
animal r8celved the award7
Qa.AmouH 0 b. A monkey 0 c. A gerbil 0 d. A amall .elephant

.

,.

.

"We have a very complex

set

ol hardware and a very
complex set of maneuver&amp; to go
tttrouah," McDivitt said in an

Interview. ''I think everything is
going to work."
To aid radio communications
when the two ships are apart,
the astronauts nicknamed the
lWlar module ••Spider" beeause
It looks like a bug, They roll lhe
command ship '"Gwndropn be~
eause It was cloaked In blue
wrappings when It was shipped
to the rnoonport.
The three spacemen are
scheduled to begin their adventure When the five engines on
the ftrlt stage of lhelr Solum 5
rocket road into life at 11 a.m.
EST Friday. An Atlantic Ocean
splallhdown Is IICherulod lor 9:47
a.m. March 10.
The launch will cHmu one of
lho busloot and moatollnlflcant
weeks In apace the United
Sato.. ~ llilS

.. ·.\

.
'

lelltoi:o

500
_......,.nell

_,.
_
....1110_

If you did well on this little "remember 19_
59" quiz, chances are, you

A - - IDIIIIJ unlq..

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

t.ndllftl-

might even remember that since 1959local telephone rates haven't gone
up one cent. And long distance rates have gone down several times.
If you didn't know that, you might want to )ot it down. Just in case
we have another quiz.
Ohio Bell

--..............
..--..., __ _
--ln
--todotlwor

..,. ... D..U without

".....

._cy

raa,

"•

&lt;Oir.._ ·
,dam••

. . . .,tftlt .....

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&amp;illlrd, . . . . . . . . . . .

ONLY 3 L!Ffl

REG. $129.95

:,}

sgg.so

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leJ.,.,
J:na

-ll\.

\1\flr. "mtill!on

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"""·'1!1!11 il!e

•'Preliminary reports show
mmerous shnUings throushoul
the country," tho U.S. Mlllllry
Command reported tn a terse
communlcpe.
u All ol the four Corps areas

'

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"'

NEW

ORLEANS

.

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and mixed with the blaot of the
Rockela and DIDi IOU II•
Communist rockets and mor- were fired at the bla IJ.S. llr
tars.
at Cam Jlo.J, II$
Machlnegun and rifle fire miles norlhnaot ol Solp, IIIII
crackled In the darkened lllreels at Blen !loa, the b u - air
~ SeJgon, but most ol the fire beae In Vlelnam J..- If
wa• believed to come from tt.e miles oortheut ol lila ....IlL
ranks or jltlery SOuth VIetnaThere were no earb' reporta
mese police •
of attacks em Till Sua Nhut
Some ol the rockets aimed at Airport, the bell .. 1llo
Saigon
exloded near South nnrlhwesl outsldrla OC SoQioil
Vietnamese Navy headq.larters which was a prime torpt In lho
VIet Coni ol!enlln a Jeer ..,.
along the waterfront.

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1969

PAGE II

I
•
•

•

~~ •..,, 'i
~ i"'.~--·'.

.

f

r

(UPO-

President John F. Kermedy was
killed by riO.e shots fired rrorn a
slxth-ftoor w l - be him him,
and anyone who heai-d more
than three shots was the victim
of ''sonic: booms" caused by the
whiz of bullets, an FBI firearms
elqlert told the Clay L. Shaw
trial saturday.
The Warren Commission said
Lee H a r v e y Oswald was

, percb¢ \1\ .~1.\, ,J!\!'!IP!l ,~ I'J~ •
Texas SchOOl AOOk · ~osltor.Y,
and Sllid he was the urasaisted
assassin.
The testimon.Y by Robert A.
Frazier contradicted Dlst. Atty.
Jtm Garrison's claim that
Kennedy was killed by a
"tri.angulatlon of fire•• - indudlng b.dlets fired frDill the front
Charged with Conspiracy
Garrison charged Shaw, 55, a
reUred businessman with plot·
ti~ with Oswald and ex~llot
David W. Ferrie to murder
Kennedy. The 6-loot-4 Shaw,
who wears his silver hair in a
crew cut, is charged with
conspiracy, oot with the actual
murder.
Defense Attorney F. lrvln
Dymon:l asked Frazier the key
question Saturday:
"From all the evidenc:e you
have examined did you fin:l any
evidence that the shots came
from any place other than the
sbrth-fioor
window of the
depository?"
"No, &amp;ir," Frazier replied.
Frazler, chief of tile Firearms
ldentiOcatloo Unit or the FBI
laboratory In Wash~Jvton. said
it was ..a relatlwly easy shot"
with lhe 6. 5 mm llallan military
rlOe thai was found IQ the
depoeltory to tile point 265 feet
away
to lhe al.., moY!JW
prealdenUII lbnoualne Nov. 2.2,

1963.
Breaka Sound Barrier
Fnzler said small "sonic
booma" caused IGI!e wllneasoa
of tho IIBISsiMtlon In - ...
town Dollas to hoar more or
fewer thaD lhe throe shola the
Warreo CGinmlaston oalcl wore
Orod by O.Wild. He said tho
munle velocit.v ola bullet Orod
tram tile lllanllcher-carcano
rifle wu 1,So0 foot per secood
and lhol the speed of 11011nd Ia
1,100 loot per sacond.
Earlier testiiJIOIII' In the Shaw
!rial by per0001 al lho ocene In
Dtaley Plaza, hal varied In tho
nlllllber of IIOIIIIds hnard. Moot
wllltnooa sold lhey heard three
. ohola. 'tWo said lhoy hllrd lour
and me doacrlbocl ani)' two
shola.

~~~
WASIIINGTON (Upl)- Pres1dont M...n has clloovowed an
-or1 memborahlp In tho

CONSTRUCTiON UNUM!TED - Er&gt;gineerirw know~ow. plus American workmen and modern equipment change the pic. ~ ttre ·daily at the $40 billion Racine Dam
(above). Cement !rom the towering hate'"

tor a moon shot) mnass five giant plers
where construction records are being set,
both for lock and dam construCtion.

K y to Meet Nixon zn Paris
PARIS (UPO- South VIetnam
announced Saturday that Vice
President Nguyen cao Ky would
return to Paris £rom Saigon
Tuesday in a move strengthen-Ing the possiblltty he would
meet with tow"ing President
Nixon at the eOO of the week.
The annooncement In saigon
where K)' has been consulting
with South Vietnamese leaders
and celebrating the Tet lunar
new year holiday, said he would

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (IJPQ
Coal miners in West Vir~
glnla and Eastern Kentucky will
meet March I In Pikeville,
K.Y., to discuss the dangers of
black lung disease. The meet~
ing was announced Saturday by
Dr. L E. Buft, a Cllarleston
physician, whoactedasspokes~
man for striking West VirginIa coal minora In their fight
to obtahl legisladon to a I d
those al!llcted with black l q
dl-11.
The strike, labeled • wildcat walkout by company and
unloo otrlclala, haa crippled
productloo In southern West
VIrginia. About 10,000 miners
are partlclpatlna In tile strike.

leave Saigon Monday Cor Paris.
has
been acting as
coordlrator
of the saigon
delegation at the Vietnam peace
cooference.

Cong negotiators.
Saturday Meeting
Nixon is scheduled to arrive
in Paris Friday on his fivenation tour of Europe, It was
ellpected that a meeting with

Diplomatic observers said a
Ky-Nlxon meeting in Paris
would greatly strengthen the
hard
of South Vietnamese
negodators In their tl¥~f-war
at the conference table with
North Vietnamese and Viet

Ky would take place saturday.
Ac:cording to diplomatic observers, a meeting between Ky

Ky

arwJ Nixon wou1d amount to a

new public: demonstratioo of the
rejection of Communist
demarlls (or the replacement of
U.S,

Paris, London Trade
Words of Diplomacy
LONDON

(IJP0- Britain Sa-

lunlay pledged anew Its lrlend-

lihlp for lho United states and

loyallf to NATO amid a blazing
dJ»lomatic row with French
Prealdent Charles de Gaulle
wer his reported proposal to
scnp NATO and the Comi11Ql
Market"" and ease America out ot
liBrope.

The dispute, exploding almost
on the eve of President Nixon's
&amp;iropean tour, was expected to
make more difficult his attempla to lighten Weatern unl!l'
before he meets the Soviets.
In a direct public rebuff to De
f'.aulle, British Foreign Secretary Michael &amp;ewart said "'we
cannot accept what appears to
be his thesis thai friendship and
alliance with America are
necessarily the same as depen-

GOES BERSERK
AMSTERDAM CIJPD - A 24year-old Iranian went berserk on
a crowded Dutch airliner fl.ying
high over tho AU111tic saturday,
dema- tho plane return to CoD- dence on America."
ada and slashed al4-year-old girl
S:ewart addressed a Fabian
with • knife before being nn.uy
Soc:lety · · - In Londcln """'
subdued by tho plane erew.
after French Foreign Minister

Michel Debre in Paris accused
Britain of. what amounted to
diplomatic sharp practice in
making public: De Gaulle's
reported offer of secret talks
with Prime Minister Harold
Wilson,
Raps Disclosure
In a radio broadcast interview. Debre rapped what he
termed the usensational character,. of the Loadm disclosures,.
denied De Gaulle hod ol!ered a
secret deal Including a Big Four
Ellropean "'political directorate"
and angrily blamed the British
for leaking detal.ls.
NeUied British otnclalB OJJickly retorted that the aecount of a
lunch t.llk Feb. 4 between De
Gaulle and Britain's ambassa' lOr
to Paris, Chrlotopher
SDames, was accurate and

baRd on a BUmmary agreed
anerworos by De GauUe'a
Elyaeo Pala.., and the British
embassy.
-,_

Parked Station Wagon Struek'~

· . .

*""..

•

plant (ri.ght, resembling a launching tower

•

,

0

o,·,·;.' .

u.s.o. building In tho downtown
oroa. It was the first shelling of
the South Vietnamese capital
since the U.S. bombing halt of
Norlh Vlelnam on Nov. I, 19611.
u.s. Dumps Bombs
U.S. Air Force B-&gt;2 jets
droDed over the jungles arwnd
Salgm within two hours of the
first
rocket explosion and
dumped toos of bombs Into Volt
Cong strongholds. 'The coocusslons rumbled throogh Salgm

3 Shots,
No Less
Or More

l!l"'-,

'!•'

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Bin h.

GAI.LIPOLIS- Clt;y pollee In·
velltlpted a two cor colUolon
lnvolvlnll a parked car a1 2:03
. ~.~~. ~~.l~. Ill
i.m.
Sllurclay; Michael E. Cor-Ho dOetn't rememberhavlna . bin, 18, of 1105 Ohio Av~ ••..-a a
, Otlh "'!'!. •lxlh
' '
. ·
11eo11 ~led In the orJlllllha- oiled to GalltpoUs M!mlcl[ial
110"' ·~ !liitll,f"'r ,- • Dti$ OF INJIJRIES ·'
Uoo ailil for lhll matter doetFeb. 2f on a charRe ol
. ~ ,. ·' . . . ciJiVELAND .CUj&gt;lj :;_, Vlclor n't even own a (lUll, Whlllllouao COUrt
reckleu operatlm.
·.
.Colllllll!b• ,
t;· dll!l!l4turcltJ In Mt, a111- Blyco llerloll advlaPolice said Corbin, headed
~
.
. ,1111! , Sl~ l!c\opl~ t~OJ1!. llliurilla•o- oil Rep. Richard D, lolecarti\Y,
~~ed ""' · ~ , a_uoot lllit~to ,, ~ ·-~'!,I*' lw*"-li ~,Y, : ,·.' . .
. • . noo:thW9.11 ..
li., mada
a
'tl&amp;ht
turn
oolo
Fourth
Ave,,
,- ' ct"l
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TAWNEY STUDIO
422 S..o~ Avo.
Gallipella, Olole

ever plumed.

It wUI begin at 8:14p.m. EST
-.clay wllh lho launc:h of a
lwln-eyed leleYiolon probe desllllled to scout the planet Mara
July 31. Tho Mariner e
spacecraft will radio beck up to
COLUioiBUS (IJPO - About to lhe llllh ~. except lor 124 closeup plclureallhoWIDs lhe
3110 guelll, many 111 ni&amp;llt flam01 that JOllied !rom Rtu. morllan surface 111 10 Umea
cJOU.o, had to be ovaellated floor windows to lf1foral ...,mo IIJ'Oiter detaU dian over bllfore
!roln lhe NeU Housa motor ho- em 1110 alxlli floor ollhe 11-otney
eerl)' SoturdaJ a blal1 otruclure.
see;;· 2:35
Wedne ...•• ~
fir. l'illii'Od ,,_
__
all!lllolloor
One llremail said It woo "ml•
a.m.
.._, w~
•w....,,
BPI""
plans to orbll a
DOrlh .....
raculout" 110 Wll , _ Tirol - - llleiWa to
l'lllloe and ftremen !QII8bl ldDed.
reiDCorco tho giQbal 111roua11 fiUed eorrldou 1o
F i r - said lf!fonl real- watch operated ~ lhe !!mirmaid lhe..iuollo.
denla won em their window mental Science Sionlceo Adml•'I .,.. tDUIII! onou&amp;h m our sWa reldY to Jump and had to ni~Uoo (~:!&amp;\),
men, bul poUca did 11 without " be "periUided pot to do !0·
The prollmlnary P!'rllon oflha
benellt o1
mat!&lt;~/', oald AaW.erner said ~ .newt)' lnotolled '1"111 ApoUo 9 &amp;«
alllant Fire Ch~ .• ~ , 111.~ coUina iiODB the 11!111 Wlderw"• on schldde at 5 a.m.
Fed~.
,
,:
.
, Roqr ·
-rellt!Y a!' ~
-~ Cbarlet . ~, 5P, I~
Ill, (f~Yel ' 4)11J:ilb'· , 1 ,Tho O~at Item of bualneat 00
Wallbilllton court ~~" .wa• , tW~, l!uoftl;' .ill&amp;!!~ ~r •. . . ,, rocket launch pad No. 39 A
am0111W and cher&amp;od With sat- , llf ,,_lhi, ,'-1~ said , wheft. ho , tlls to Ill•• a pnliml""ll' check
llnl • -'~" ftrt and1lnloxl- l~ _ olll\e·,:ftro, ~ , had .;lhn ~ , Jl!e two, ~pocec,..n, OIOd to
~ ~
operator begin wok- Jood ·lhnhlp•!
of.wer.
Flftlnen
••M
.
McDlyitt_ SCOU arid Schwelek~
.~ 11!111 .!loor north corridor art; m1U11ihlle, - s e d 1111
·CQiilllno 2f I'll!!!"" IDII all ware ctulcal , renilozvOIIo PDI1Ion ol
b,O!d!l., ll'!llllil b.ir namer. ~~
1q IWO ~rl
~,;;~· '!l!o;¥' · ~ ~ ·~ w~ , :ir~r'l• I:henftdi1..Vouo..,m..
't~~!fd'.it
t1oo to ' lila · ·key to 'IM enllre
~·
) ' - - ·, William ..

.'

(Answers printed upside down at bottom)

cheek oul the !oor~eqed l11111r
module landing croft to be lesl
Down in apace by man for the
Orot time In the relative safecy
ol an orbit no more than 310
mUea aboVe llrlh.
The jam-packed filghl plan
calla for crew transfera between
the c...,..nd ship and the lunar
lander, an Intricate rendezvous
and docking operoUon. and a
two-hour spacewalk by
Schwelckarl to tell the breathing apparatu1 moon explorers
w!U uae.

500 Evacuated
From Neil House

,,
f

(UP!)- A

KENNEDY

SAIGON .(lJ PO - Communlot have received some indirect f1re
ftred rockets and up and ~wn the countr). A
mortaro lnlo Solgun, Da Nlllll, IWIIber ol places have been
Tay Nlnh and other cltlea and hlt."
Allied balea throughout 8wUt
An official spokesman for
Vlelnam early Sunday, bul u.s. u.s. heacQ.Iarters said most fA
CoiiUl\UIIer s said there was no the incidents were considered
ovldonce that VIet Coni lroopa "lnsJ.gnUlcant."
had IIIIIDched a long predicted
Twenty or more rockets or
- a l ol!enllve.
mortar•
landed In Salgm,
Qmflre rattled in the streets including one that started a
ol Saigon, and there were huge ftre In the central morhet
re-'s of fi&amp;htlna In tho ,Place. Another crashed near the
capital's southeastern section
where AlJied spokesmen said
Commmlat forces attacked a
pollee atatloo wltll 840 rockela
and small arms.
Small Ground Probe
Groond fighting aloo was
reported 18 miles northeast of
Saigon near the perimeter of
the U.S. Army headquarters In VOL. IV NO.4
Vietnam. Spokesmen said Communist units launched ... small
I!I'OWld probe" outside the
defenses of the base at Long

~era

)!Y BOB WINGETT

some 10rl ot lhlnldrw waa lklaa . tram - r

•linl•

'

Ho Chi's Rockets, 1\'lortar~,
Fall in Saigon and Da Nang

Dream of·
51 Years
:N ow True

WhO. ho wa 1 expodod ID....,. olnce hla•INion hrliiJ!IIl
011118 so hour• ..- mote In ,..., •• ...U u ID·blcG~wraotiG~• wllll
1 - ..... 'lll- lhon lo

Eur-

,.,

wllll

Not Too

.

. . ...

.............

lhe . . , . _

Behuul Popu/.tition Growth
llllntl 43Sanaltlve
per - ·. _

kl'*

f

Interest in Churches lAJgs
re•med, wllll attendance aver-

ru....

t:l..........,

.

-.

--

..
--·
ut••
Comnumicatiom Improvements' ......
.....-········
.....
D.

- ..

whl~h 11 a -

way street from

:Vruce to Pine.
Cori&gt;Ji\'• cor llnlek a parked
......, ownl!d by Malooim
Jaek""'' ·llf 709t'ourthAve. There
wao ~rate damqe to bothvohiolea. fi'o cine waalnlured.
Nice elM&lt;~ Charles w. Me-

the Saigon regime by a c.-lition
"peace cabinet.''
However, some oba~a,
remarked
that the French
authorities might be displeaaed
by such a meeting. Ky. who
broke off relations with f'ranct:
four years ago, has always
o p e n I y critidzed President
Charles de Gaulle's guvernmenL
Ky, who acts as the chief ~
ordh•tor or the South Viea.
mese delegation to the pace
talks, declared in saigon Feb. 9
upon his return hc:me for the
Tet holidays he considered:·
France a hostile courtry.
But the observers said it would
be difficult for Nixon not to aak
the Sooth Vietnamese VIce Pre atdent to meet him. notwithstanding the possible eonO.icttJw:lnter- ·
pretation or such a meeting.
If the two Allied Ieeder&amp; did
meet, lt would be tho hi8hestlevel attempt at coonlhatlrw
their countries' pollclea llace
Nixon's inauguratim Jan. 12.
Vietnam and de Gaulle
Vietnam will be one ol Nixon's main preoecap:Uona when
he ls de Gaulle's (IUOSt Feb. 28March 2. He is due to a»eDI 10
hours in lorelgn policy Iaika with
the French leader and 1110 be
brlel8d 011 lhe Par Ia talks iQ1 :
c hie( American negodatur Henry cabot Lodge.
The next negotiatiac
or the slow-movirc calkl wW be
helcl apin Thursday, 24 -.,., "
before Nlllllll'a arrival In the
French c~q:~ltaL

•••ion

Lance Hart is
On Committee

POMEROY Malp. c:a...;y •
llelnocnt EacuUve c-ml- · •
ChalnDIII Jack Ctlop, challeJw. '
lrw other 1 - r • to !ollCM Ill•

&lt;OUIIIJ-.. .

·~··

oppal- • -~ .-nemo.rot hla
to tho
~
12:tS p.m. Friday In !nJnl o1 comml- with lloll 'IIIIIJW prt-.Jo "
1102 Adrian Ave.
lops.
O!rlcen reported .!bel MoC..Crlap, atmlek backed ou1 o1 a dr1vew~~~ two oppa~~ o1 ~D••
ani hll car atruck a parked ear crllo 'mli;IJ o'
1itii .·
0111111!11 by R-r llotroa of 122 meeU.
lhe ..,..,laM ·
Basdanl Pr. Tbor&lt;! wao miiiOr week. -- ~ • ·II
claJnalle to cora. No...,. .,.. Pomeroy; ' ·: ' · ·,

-!liD-

ot

._.nt!llll

...

Cormick,Rt.,20.to ol
142'h "-.!'
" - "to
Jnlurod.
-ml~lm!oll!hl
cr1,.to~~r:~s~;;~)
mouth
lllllll1clpal
S3 thoTbo
11111111&gt;er
o1 aecldanll In- ecrata
Fib. 2t em a •l!ar!lo OC ' -· vellllll!led 1&gt;¥ ell¥ p&gt;U.. In lhe ocaml~
er haoldna after aa ace- al

ftrllli2 ~· ollhe yeer.

.
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role In lhe p· m:r-

,

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13 -

GOP ()ptimistic
.

'

COLUMBUS

(U PO

-

Ao

-lnlatratlon - ._ned iOint
· resolution to lower Ohio'• vat. tng age to 19 wtn be voted on
· in tbe state Senate Tuesdal.
The resolution has the support
rA. Go\'. James A. RhOdes' and
.observers feel it will get l he
. nec:euary two-third a vote to be

sent to the Hoose for consideration.

A similar resolution was
adopted by the Seriate 25~ in
last year's sessi011 of the General Assembly, but died in the
House three months after Senate adoption.
A total ol six voting age res-

olution• have been introduced
in this session, four of them In
the House.
It wlU take at least 22 votes
in the Senate Tuesday to get
the joint resolution introduced
by Sen. Oakley c. Collins, R-

Jronton. Temyaon Qayer, RFindlay. and Robin T. Turner,

R-Narloo, ,.q,ted.
A110 m

Tuesday's calendar
for a Qoor vote ls a bill to provide for uniform annual observances of four legal holidlys on

tee

-··

The House bill would conform
with Jodoral hollda,yo.
According to the bill, Washlqtoo's Birthday would be
c:1w1pc1 from Feb. 22 to the
tllird Ma!day in February;
M.morw Day ,..Jd switch
bam May 30 to the last Mmda,y In May; Columoos D sy
.JitiOUld move from Oct. 12 to the
.-

In October and

-

veterans' Day would be ob..,...ed on the fourth lJ1

Oe-.
1be bill

PROCTOR STEAM

IRON
.al.

Bacb Players
CLEVELAND (UPO - United
iJteelworkers District Director
Paul Schremp said Saturday hlo
fi,OOO....,....r oroupmllllltplck-

,t Clevelsod stadium April II
t- opeo1ng day 7 If the Base~~

Pla,yer Assoclatloo calls a

over the penaton plar. dls~
major leQJ.e owners.
: "We feel very stronlb f o r
Ole players In this issue,"
Schremp said. ••u a strike shoUld
Corne to pass, rm sure all our un~
1m men would stand behind them.
: --~ oo1y for ourselves,
We could throw up a picket ltne,
jnaybe baycott games In which
p:N~-unioo pi!Q'ers performed."

ftrike
~~Ute

.

•

with

ASSIGNED TO COMBAT

88

ANI'IQUE
KIT
New lortll}'Iog lotos !ell
you &amp;ntlque in two t&amp;IJ' ltepJ,
n.me day . Included are bUe
l'lue. tandpaper aDd
cheellflek.th.

eoat,

~~-~~
I

99

~0~- · --.0-

FOR
! • '.

.,. . ,

!•

at a low price. SIJIIl• traJ
1

comportm.,. lbat

or tackle. Secure

$ 33

.tronc baadle. IIH

U"XI'"

... LIMITED QUANTITIES ON MANY SALE' ITEMS .'

22

FUlL
GaL

SUNDAY ONLY

s

7" PAN &amp; ROLLER
SET

7" TWIN PACK

ROLLER REFILL

33

•

l!

CH

TUBES

I

r

Ohio Valley Memory Garde111

s

JUICER

Cemetery. A Choice Selection

Of Lots l1 Now Available.
For lnfornuuion Phone

AUTOMATIC

PHONOGRAPH

s

88

446-3615 Or Wrire

Ohio Valley
••ory Gardens
l1l BASTIANA DRIVE

SUNOAY ONLY

.. . -

.

.

. .

.

...

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s.lktrk by new owner Robert E.
. Short. Frank Howard was the
club's bi&amp; xun with 44 homers
and althoueh the Senator's td.t a
aubstandal total of 144, WUliams
reels thlt ou1put can be even

da S.turdi.Y for a qllick •leVover at his l1lamorlda hOme be-fore go!~ 00 10 p..,.... Beach.
1 *lt w11 tbe ftnt .time rve
ever seen the man but J was lmprels," said Wuhlllgton,pitcfMir
caaey Cox. ,.1 liked the wu he
an.wered queation.a anrJ handled

hlmoeiL

Infielder Tim Cullen anrJpitdler Jim HaRr-.rl &amp;1.10 were tn the
audience 11 weU as mu Jurges,
one ot WUJiams' tonner mansl·eater,
agen with the Red Sox. WWiama
As one of his first ordert of made it 1 point to shake hand•
business, he said he is glvi11g and chat with All four after field"some thought" to moving the IIW nearly 75 assorted questlons
fences in at Robert F. Kennedy batted at him by the
medlL
Stadium where the Senators will
The quesdona came at him
open the season April 7 agalusto from all fields anti rarwed trom
the New York Yankees and play• the length of his cOntract - nve
all their home games.
years as combination vice preWilliams' returned to F1ort- sident and ma.-.ger - to how

,_s

()hio State Slips
By Iowa, 88-81

mu&lt;h did he krlow - ·

•rs.

rlJ

p!Q-

•• (·"'rlr*b, not too much, .. he
replied. "I've seen Jo'ra."lk lloward sod Mike Epstein aoo I played against camno Pa&amp;CU&amp;I, of
course, but other ihan U.l, the
only place I've seen the .Plt.Yers
ha11 been 011 television."
Williams neglected to add that
Joe Coleman. Jr., one of tbe

Serw.tors• pitchers, also is known
to him becauJe the 22-year-old
right-hinder Uled to attend a
New England summer camp at
whicll the new Senator Jlllllller
served as instructor.
Eaet terms ~Williams' new
contract with the club were not
spelled out by either him or
Short. It is known, however, WUIiams autcm.at.lc:alb will become

the hlghe•tpoldbe--r
ln tu atory with a .75, 000 salary
plus u Q!Jtion to buy 10 per cent

ol the Senators' stock.
Short purchl.aed the Se.._tc.-s
two moodls ago for altchtb"more
than $9 million, so wlillamft •
stock wiU ecJII'I.e to at

leallt.-oo,-

000 alii provide tdm with a more
lucrative paekap tMn Vinet
I ~rdi was given when he
••• recently Mmed coach - se~
eral manager and part Olt'ner of
the Washlqrton Redskins in the
Nallmal Foolbell Leque_
Short, the artable 51-ye&amp;r-441
SeMton boss who wouldn't take
an orlglnal no lor an answer
and ft.-.Jly IUCCeedeci in larding
Wlllimns •• hla manqer all.f
••partaer," said no new general
manager would be .-.med to take
Selkirk's place. He indicated both

he am wWiam• would map u
arw:l eucute all player tndea.
Short hl.a been aientnc the
playen and undoubtedb" will eontinue to do so.
... have a world ot eonftdence
In Ted 11 the nwager ot our
boll club," dsclared tho Waoh,._ owner. "I knolr It'• tndl·
Uonol In b e - lllot .,...!playera never made p-eat Jl\aftiiCIH'I,
but if anyc:JDe can, I believe he
hat the lbllity to become the exception."
Short, a ..tt-ve of Minneapo.
Ua, first IIW WWlams play for
Minneapolis la the American AaaocladOD. ill 1938. He 1tiU remembers the game.
.,Ted hit tbe ball out ot Nicollet Park, .. aaya the Washi~
owner. ..He hit it ao hard the
boll would have traveled out of

two parka,,,

Williams retired as an aetlwe
player wllll the Bootoo Red S..
after the 1960 aeason. On hl•
fino! trip to the plate he M I
home run off Baltimore ptt.eher
Jac:k Fisher, now with CtncimatJ. FtDr recalls that blow, too.
•• A Iotta people seem to be
urde:r the ~Jrw:resaion I~
l,y let him hlt me," he ..,1•
"n.t's 1 mistaken t.rnPresalon.
1 waa trying to set him ou.L"
As Car as the man in the street
here 1n Washingtoa is Ct:llleerrM!Id,
WUllams' arrival ccnes as a
tremeJdoua IIKH'Ile booster lor
a bell elub that lonr hoo beeo the
butt ol auch jokes as uw..hlrlgtm, ftrat in war, tint In peace
aoo laot In the AmerlCIII Lea-

gue."
Said one

~GWrnment

- dol&lt;ribed -~~ . . . ._.
tlmo
fan, lcilowl.. Wli-

So_,

I..Lam.J' . . . . .
•'If be -

l&gt;rlllll • willilliW

bell clltl lo lhll llo ....... . •
make a b l - dlfle.-. lllonoll
the polltlclaas put lepthor,

oot only llllldor boll ,.., but -

r ..

us -

ol die
element ben too. 1be

)'(U1I

ldda here attll lodl\f' to IPQI'tl
ftliW'eO Uke WWiomL It doo111't
matter that the)"w De~ Men

'

!

him piQ'. They never 5IW Joe
Loulo figh~ but he talk1
they llateo to him. 1bey know
he's clone s&lt;B~ething."

All Williama has to do _ .
with the Se.-.tors is boOit them
out of the AL boaemenl.
He" s bralll aew at the job but
worker, believes he can do it.

Trevino, Douglass Share Tucson Open Lead

two more on the fourth aD:I sixth R«&lt; Funseth two strokes behi!¥1 hole, but bogeyed nine and teR.
Pete Brown moved 1CI to seven
to
overtake
Pott..
Trevino
aank.
a
15--foot
.PUtt
on
unlier
J:al' with a 34 on the front
TUO&gt;ON, Ariz. (UPO - Lee
the leaders at eight under par.
Douglass, who was one shot
Trevino an.:l Dale Dougl.as11 moved
Barber, playing in the same the ninth hole for his par and nlne. Phil Rodgers. Bob Wright
into the lead ot the Tucson ~en behlnll the leader after Friday's threescrne wltb Pott, also tired that was the stroke that moved alkl Jerry McGee were tied at ab
Golf Tournament at 10 URder par roum, hit two birdies in his flnt an eaglll:! on the par five No. 2 him Into the lead with Dougla1s. urder.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPO Dave Sorenson scored 32 points
after
the first nine holes of sat- nine holes to move irio a tie with
and Jim Cleamons added 21, including 17 In the secorkl half, to
Trevino.
urday's
third round.
lead Ohio state to a hard-fought 88-81 Big Ten win Saturday over
Pott shot an eagle on the Nl\ 2
Second round leader JOOnny
I'"'L
The victory, Ohio ~te·s sev- State 38.
Pott fell one stroke off the pace hole, but then hit two bogeys to
MASON - A pair of free
drop hlm to nine ulller par.
at nine-under par.
enth · in ten cooference starts.,
Fouls: Iowa 21, Ohio aate 15.
1'on,y FleSds. 6-3 Waliama sen- department and vards ~
First rowxl leader Miller Bar- throws by Senior Gary Fields ior center, was high scorer for Spencer with 17. Ton,y Fields a'.
Trevino Clred birdi~;~s the first
kept its slim title hopes alive.
Fouled out: Jotwlsoo.
two holes or the (ront nine and hit ber was hm.,ed with Don Bies and with 28 seconds remaining gave the game with 15 points on five so got 17 for the hosts.
Jim Johnsm's 25 points paced
A- 11,276.
Wahama's White Falcons a 56- field goals and tbe same num~
Iowa which fell to 4-6 tn the Big
Spencer scored a 49..29 win ov54 victory over Spencer here ber ot free throws. Rb.er and er the Wahama Reserves in the
Ten.
'"Wb:r •ot daoo. your tq
Friday lllglrt.
The 15th ranked Buckeyes, now
Gary Clark also hit in double preliminary contest.
all lteiOfthand?"
Fields, a 5-7 guard, Kart hls figures ror the hosts with 13
15~ overall, led from start to
OU QUOIN, lli. (UPO - A quartet of ~yesr-001 ,._.,
BY QUARTERS:
two free thnnrs thi'OUitl the hoo.P points apiece.
flnish. lowa came within two
who earned almost $300,000 last year held a list of 81 hones
SPENCER . • ••• 18 33 42 54
&lt;&amp;lmly lor hla lhlrd and !oorth
points at 74-72 but Obio State
kept eligible by their owners foe the 44th edition of the HambleVarda was top scorer for the WAHAMA • • • • • 13 30 42 56
points of the conteat.
poured ln 10 fool shots In the fitonia:n harness race this year.
Spencer crew with 13 points on
Spencer, after Fields .sank his five buckets and three eharlty
nal four mlnutes to puU away
SPENCER (54)
The $125,000 stake, moat r:amous ofharnessradrwevents,
fouJ
shots,
got
a
chance
to
de
the
for good
will be staged Wednesday, Aug. 27 at theDu Quoin State Fair.
Stewart 1&lt;1~. Stalnaker 5-6tosses .
soore when Wahama committed
Rox:
10,
Dye 2-1-.1, VardaS-3-13, Buah
Nevele
Major,
Liady's
Pride,
Dayan
.and
Gun
Runner
ate
The
Falc:cms,
now
10-8
for
the
CHAMPAIGN, lli. (UP1)- llila personal with two secoods left seasoo, hit only 20 ol 77 shots 4--1-9, Garrett 1.0-2, ChamberS
rated as the probabl,y horses to beat baeed on their 1968 perOhio State (88)
nols' steady markmanlhlp over011 the clock.
formances.
!rom the field for a oold 26 per 3-6~, Anderson ~1-7. Totals 24'
Howell, 5, 2-3, 12; Cleamons, came a record basket ahootlng
Bush,
shooting
for
the
visitcent average. Spencer comected 6-54.
6, 9..9, 21; Sorenson 13, 6~, 32; performance by Michigan's Ru4.v
or's,
missed
the
first
try
or
his
on 24 of 62 fleld goal tries for
Meadors, 1, 2-3, 4; Finney, 4, Tom.ianovich Saturday and car~w=~w.~~~mw.~~-~~:f.~l~~~~=~=~;:~~=i~~r:=?:~~=;r:~~~~;j:
Ohe-on-&lt;~~~.e and ~cer got the
WAHAMA (56)
39 per cenl
5-6, 13; Andreas, 2, 0.0, 4; Smith, rled the Dllni to a 100..92 Big
rebound. A frantic attempt by
Herndon 1-4~. Gillispie 2-l1, 0&lt;1, 2. Totals, 32, 24~9. 88, Teo basketball victory.
The losers also Iedin rebound~cer to score in the final
Iowa (81)
Iog with 61 compared to tbe Fol- 5, T. Fields 5-.1-15, Rizer 11McGUmer, 5, 1-1, 11; JohnTomjanovlch, whon.ntshedwith
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (UPD
secoo:l was also unsuccessCul coos 59. Herndoll grabbed 21 1-13, Clark 5-3-13, G. Fields ~n.
40 points, bagged 19 tteld goals, _Racing driver Don MacTavish,
as Damy Rizer blocked the try. rebounds to lesd Wallama In lhat 2-4. Totals 20-16-56.
son,. 10• 5-7, 25; Jen1en, 2, o-, a new high 00 the llllni.Asaembly
4; Calabria, 6, 2-4, 14; Vidno- Hall home court. His teammate, 26, was killed Saturdl¥ when his
flanker, signed contracts Sab.irCLEARWATER, Fla. (UPO vic:h, 5, 2-3, 12; PhUIIps, 6, 1-1. Dermis Stewart accounted Cor 29 car s~ed into &amp; wall at 150
day with the Pittsburgh Steelers
13; Schulze, 1, o..o, 2. Tw.J.s,
nwh and spun 400 teet down the Eighteen players. including vet- of the National Football League.
points, but the Wolverines' were front stretch before a horrified erans Bobby Wine and John~
35, 11-l&amp;, 81 .
Kolb, who played at Oklahoma
Hai!Ume score· rowa 35 Ohio unable to keep pace with the D- crowd at Daytona lntenw.Uonal zer, r'poned Saturday as the
State,
was the steelers' third
·
•
lini'B hot seem.d half ahootlng, Speedway.
PhlladeliJhia Phffiies opened
Ashland. tallied 25 rebounds to
STEUBENVILLE, Ohio(UPD- before Steubenville could g e t
round
choice
in the league's re¥111 Adamo Saepo ---- . - ').'be PJne .was .close all the . -- A 1981 F&lt;ll'lf''drhJ!l\ by sam IIPrlor tnlrung.
Ashland College effectively con- going, registering IU.firstbucket 15 for the bast lelm, 11!'1 '1111&lt;11&gt;
The Phils also said they had cent draft. LJberto, taken in the trolled the bollrds Slrurday to de- at 9:42. By halftime, Ashland had 21 of 42 !teld goo! att"""" to.
way. Tbe Dllnl moved lJ1 front SUnmero of sawllMh, Ga., piled
JUst before ~ftlme when a 10- into the wreckage ofMacTavlsh's been lnlonned by lett - hander 15th round, played for Louisiana feat steubenville 49-20 to rack up a 23-7 m1rgin and rolled Oil to lts 8 of 35 by the Barons.
foot fielder by Jodie Harrt1011 1966 Mercury comet and the two Chris Short, - 15 game wi lP Tech.
At Ztmesville
its 22nd will againstjust one loss. lRlh straight win, a school recbroke a 4a.Il tle and p.ve the torn ~icles spun wU.dly off the ner last season, that he would
Ashland, headed by John Sav· ord.
'Z ANESWoLE - Mel Adams,
WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
not observe the players boymfnl
a 50-48 edge.
track onto the grass.
Steubenville, now 3-18, was
age
with 14 points, racked !.C) the
one or Logan High School•s all·
(UPO - Jack Billingham, exThe lead changed hands sevThe accident, witnessed by 40,- cott past March 1.
headed
by Dan Leake with 7
rtrst
fteld
goal&amp;t
12:08
otthe
first
time great cc.ches, has resip
peeled to be marager Gene
eral times after the lntermis- 000 peq&gt;le, occurred on the ninth
half
&amp;nd
increased
the
lead
to
S."
points.
ed as head grid mentor at ZanesORLANDO, Fla. (UPO - Most Mauch's No. 3 starter this seasion. but the Dllnl took command lap of a 300..mile _prep race lead~
vllle High School.
lor good with 13:09 left wben ill8 '4&gt; to Sunday', $208,000 Day- of the big name players were son. was among tour players who
Tbe Qak HID llltlve &lt;ompiled
Dennis Pate's lay-up made it t.ona 500, richest stock car race missing Saturday when 16 pitch- came to terms with the Montreal
a ~7-.3 record in three seasons
ers and catchers reported to Expos sarurc.tay.
67-66.
in history.
at ZAnesville. He plans to re- .
The signing or Billingham, re-The Wolverines came within Sommers climbed through a win- new manager Billy Martin for
main at the school ln a teaching
liever
Don Shaw and infielders
one point afterward but with aev- dow of hls wrecked car, appar- the start of the Mirmesota Twins'
capacity.
Joe
Moock
and Carry Jestadt
en minutes ten, Mike Price and ently unhurt, but MacTavish was spring training camp.
His resipatton entts a 21-year Harrlaon sank seven points to rushed to the track Infirmary
briqrs
to
16
the number or play~
or the 16, only five have had
coaching career, dLII'LfW" which he
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UP0 to be chosen within a few da,ys.
keep tbe Wini safe. Greg Jac:k- where Dr. Carroll Herron pro- major league experience and none ers in the Expo camp.
eompUed an overall record of son led the mini scoring with 33 nounced him dead on arrival. is classified in the star category.
Roiiand Todd, coach at the Unt. Possible participants were re~
446-4~0
117 wins, 65 losses and 1even polnts, and Price bad 23.
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. versi1;y of Nevada at Las Vegas ported to be San Francisco &amp;ate
TOO five include pitchers DanExact cause of death was not
ties. He also coached at McKell,
367-7598
"'
disclosed, but there were reports ny Morris and Jim OUom, catch- (UPO - Mike Burke, president ba&amp;kelboll team, Saturday coo- and U.C. Davis, from the Far
Ky.; Paris. Ky., alii Coal Grove.
of the New York Yankees, said firmed that the Revels' star West Cmference; Westminster
ers
George
MIU.erwald
and
John
that MacTavish lost both reel in
Ron Apperson, an assistant
Sevcik and outfllder Jim llolt, Satu:rda,y owners may have to guard, Tonuny Watkins, is ineli- College, Salt Lake Ci1iY, Seattle
the accident.
football c~ch at Zanesville since
MacTavish was trying to pass who reported ahead or the sched- meet next week to discuss the gible for the NCAA Pacitlc Coast Pacific, Plaget Sound and u.c.
19$9 aod .track c•clt from 1960
1 car driven by defending champ- uled date for the rest of the boycott problem if the sib.ation Small College tournament ln Las Inine.
to 1967, baa been named to suc-"isn't settled by mid-week.,.
Vegas on March 7-8,
Watkins has been a standout
ion Bunkie, Blackburn of Daytona squad.
ceed Adams.
Bw"ke,
with
only
half
ol
the
2!;
Defending
&lt;hamploo
UNL
V
was
all
season Cor the Rebels, curBeach when he lost control, hit the
PITISBURGH
(UPO
Jolm
players
e:xpected
having
report..
aelected
to
host
the
regional
reolly
ranked third 113tionally In
wall and started to spin.
ed.
said,
uthere
are
a
lot
ol
deKolb,
center,
and
Ken
Liberto,
last
Thursday.
Theother
plaJofl's
the
UPI
small college ratings,
He came toahaltfaci~traffic,
cisions
that
must
be
made
and
three
tourney
teams
are
expected
The 6-loot-2 junior has compi.led
GUEST SPEAKER
arxl Sommers, who had pulled to
next week is the logical time.
a 19,7 scoring average in 21
the
inside
or
the
track
to
avoid
RACINE - Bill Bohr, AthleU&lt;
FORT
MYERS,
Fla.
(UP1)
games for UNLV. With three
Director at Ohio Unlversib", wW
debrto, slammed besd-oo ioto
SARASOTA,
F1L
(UP1)
Bill
I'll
Kolly,
s
2t-year-&lt;&gt;ld
rookie
re8Ular season games left Ole
be guest opeoker II the All~
him.
Meltoo,
eJ~Pected to be Chicago's
01Uleldor,
reported
to
&lt;Smp
SatschooJ boasts an 18-3 record.
Barlquot at Southern Hllh School
Blackburn and another driver,
regular third baseman this seaTodd sa..ld Watkins doe11 not
here March 4.. Dilmer wtU be urday, pvlng the Kon111 City Hank Thomas of Wins"torD-Salem,
OWNERS:
son. reported to the White Sox
have enough credits from his
·served at 6:30 p. m. Tickets 0"1&amp;1 RQyalt 47 players, lhe lar&amp;est N. c., were forced to leave the
Henry, Don,
camp Saturday, giving Mlr.ger
two ·previous years at Riverside
be purehase4 from the c~ches lllllllber ol players to llhow up for race after hitting debris.
NEW
YORK
(UPI)
Two
reAI lAipez 30 players in camp.
Poui Baird
(Calif.) College to ~ali!Y for
member olthe football and training.
MacTavish, a bac:helor, was
strictions which prevented Seton the NCAA amall collegeplayolls.
Melton,
23,
was
with
the
White
born Aog. 22, 1942 In Natick,
Sox briefly last sprin&amp; before Hall Ulllverslty fro1p laklng part
Mass. For rac:lng purposes, he
being farmed out to HowIll of in any intersectioMI t.sketball
Usted his hometown as StillwaATHENS, Ohio (UP"O - Grq
pmes or pt.ylfW in IUU' outside
ter, N.Y., but recently moved to McDivitt scored 35 polnts Sltur. the Pacific Coast IAague. He reare.-.s
such as Madison Square
turned to the White Sox In SepCharlotte, N. C
dQ' to lead Ohio University to an
we:re Uflecl Saturday by
Garden
A Cmst Guard veteran, Mac- 86-80 ~American Conference tember and batted over •300 for the school•s athletic ccuncll
Tavlah had stwlledauU.aotlv• en- basketball win over Marshall (W. the month, compiling an overall
1be restrietlona I* been in
mark of • 266.
gineering for two yean at Frank- VL) University.
eHect since February 1962 as an
lin lnadtute tn Boston.
The win kept the llob&lt;ats In
S~ PETERSBURG, FIL(UP0 aftenntth lo the college btsketOPEN
second place. one game behind
- Jolully Murplcy, generalma~ blll seudl.l of 1961 in which
TOOAY
10111"0 - leodl~ Mlaml Ea&lt;h agar of the New York Meta, Seton Hall was involved. Since
Lei'O)' Kell.Y, the running star tor team ftnishes the season next IBid saturday he has signed 13 thlt time the school had restrict..
tho Clovel&amp;lld Browns olthe Na- saturday. ·
non-bltterymen Inti el!pec:tt them ed. games to college eampuses
t1aoa1 Footholl Leque, 11 a
The 'llnmd~rl"' Hen! held a
to report whea Ml SQuad work- only.
llrGIIIl CGllendor for the atort1n1 311-37 lead at ball!lme, but the out&amp; besln Thursday.
The (le:cisions WiU nothaveany
. c:eufer Deld job with the new BcJbcata came back ln the seeom
Murphy Indicated lhll he would immediate impact on the uniAmerican t etl'., expansion hall tor the wirL
DOt sipt a p!Q"er who tad doubts verstty•s blsketball teUn aa Se'team.
Hlah-s&lt;orl~~g Gerald McKee
about reporting and therefore, too Htll 11 only i-12 lor the
Kelly comet ott. a tr~ waa held to onJ.y nine points,
elllllcted all .J3 tO show up Thura- seiaon w1tb four pm.es remainAYoid your Woterloo by
.-... In Veuezuela, - .. ba which put him ... pollll sby of clay.
ina and not in Une ror any tourbtlr19ing your tell problems
led the leaaue In battlna with a Qllw tho Ohio University allto H &amp; It ltOCK. You'll tet FIDEIAL
nementlllal'.
•~Y to1 break thot'1 comint
mark sod llnllhed oeeond o&lt;OI'i~ record. McKee dlsloAIID
to you, plu1 our 9UOfonfr*e of
ln ""'' bstled In.
. . .. . Cited a n~er towarcllho eod of
IICCUUKy.
Lou Gormari, .... · I~o¥ola' dl- the .,ina, ..
. .
P.S.1 A lrlp to ILOCit is
re&lt;tor of 1Dlnor • • CllieraDan D' Antooi .PAced the Herd
• lot , ....., · - "
tiona, ...-ced tho ol&amp;ni~ ol with 20 poiola, followed by Jim
,.,... hdrist, a tree Qlftt and a draft cholee. Davldaon with 18.
Gorman lold Kan ..s City bad
Tho Bobcall are 1~ overall
sianed ·Mod&lt; ~ a .for• aod .114 lo the MAC while ~­
!Ni' •100,~ ,,.,...,., 11a1&gt;1• f..- ' llhaii Ia 11-15 overall aDd 2-9 In
' tho Cidooeo Cilba: and UllaDod tile, . _
'
By WILUAM P, OILEMAN

Driver
Dies In
Crash

'

ISports Briefs . . .1

Ashland Notches 22nd Triump

99

SUNDAY

Star Guard Reported
Ineligible For Event

Auto
Wrecking

4 7 Royals

GUARANTEED
USED AND
REBUILT
PARTS

Report For

Training

McDivitt Gets

Council Ufts

35 Points in

Restrictions

CRAZY
on

your

SUNDAY ONLY

GENERAL ELECI'RIC

...

GOING

The Almr J, Errecred

In Ma10nie Garden,

--~

Marshall Win

PROCTOR

GOLF

·

Down

.
'•

$ 99

MINNOW
BUCKET

···

BAIRD

IRONING BOARD

Infantry Division Jan. 15 near
Lai Khe, Vietnam, as a combat engtneer.

Goyette.

boa

-------,.,.--.,.--,---,--,,.--,,..--...l.....l..-----:--:--:--:-""'l'-..,-:::-:-,...,.,.,,..,,.,.,...'""H!-..;..."""""""""""'"-'-""~"".,_....,_____..p~~ ~.mr. .. .J..

Army Private
Flrst Class John H. Whiting,
19, son of Mrs. Mary Whiting,
Route 2, was assigned to the 1st

HEXTALL CALLED UP
NEW YORK (UP0 - Tbe New
York Rangers called up center
Dermis Hextall from Buffalo of
the American Hockey Lelgue S..t-urdly to fill in for injured Phil

rt&amp; a Mt4. A quaJity box that MDI

Tbill MW

tateh,

EWINGTON -

SISTER-IN-LAW DIES
MIDDLEPORT - Mro. W. S.
Board of &amp;Ycamore st., bas received word of the death of her
slster-l!Haw, Mrs. Rush Crites
fA Weston, W. Va. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.

TACKLE BOX
handle a. lot

LIMITED QUANTITIES

)··

Never a tlme • walter as' a
pla)·er, the energetic 50..yearold former Bost.m slugar gave
eviGence he will run the Serators
the SIJiie way when he made a
reaerva.tloo lboanl aa earl.v Jet
to Florida Satun!ay o6 ba &lt;oold
be at the club's Pelq)ano Beach
tninbw site In plenty ot Ume ror
Monday' a opening session.
"1 don't know It aU the players wut be there."' ..td WUiiams,
r-t~rrl~ to their pension strike,
''bUt I'll be there. I'm DOt SlY•
_Inc we're goma win the pennant,

but I'm not ~Qlne we're gorua
loae lt either.
The Sonotoro llnlshod lOth lo
the American 1Aque- last IM100 Wider the ma..,.oroh!p ol
Jim Lellu&gt;e. recolltly fired olonr
with General MII'IIPr Georp

lllini In
100-92 Big
Ten Victory

I'LAN02000

baa

'

__ __ ___ .. _...

Wahama Edges Spencer, 56-54

REGULAR SIZE

bolldaya for JM&gt;Ilc emplayes to

ONLY

120

JERGEN'S
SOAP

bring 1l1em 1ntx&gt; ...,.ter &lt;OOsioledcy, aDd ...Wd IIJOI.y Mooday
obaervuces to all level a or gov-

Outfit

SPECIAL
SUNDAY

99

Vlololo- Jowl 1!11 CI'IOido 1jOIHng. Pleoly ofiiOam
lor -'or lrorOog. C l - - - Io.l lor lrooint In •or
cliroctlan. Eaty-- lalorlc
Leakproof. Lighl-

alao ,..Jd modlfy
the varloua sectkll.s authorizing

Union Threat

124

EVEN-FLO STEAM VENTS Sc:itnlilically &lt;.
tributtd o - the entire ooleplote provid&lt;
full, even steam covera~e.

MOSCOW (UPO - Pravda
Saturday do;,scribed American
hippies as "meager, pathetic,
pale-faced" figures whose
nai1re rebellion against capitAlism represents 1 " capitulation of conscience."
"Their poistion is a retreat
from the struggle," the Communist part;y newspaper said.
"Their rebellion is lllive; it
is the product or a contlict or
some members of the pet.t,y
bourgo!:'Oisie with · their o w n
conscience."

TWO KILLED
ST, CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio (UPO
- Gregory Slenski, 18, Lansing, Belmont County, and David
.....,.,n.
Myers, 23, of near Bridgeport,
For state employes, Columwere killed Saturday in a two-car
bus Dl,f was added as a new
coUiston near here. One other
holiday, but Lincoln's blrlhday
person was injured.
...Wd be dropped.
The bW wou.kl become eft'ec~
MINISTER KILLED
tMnlliiL 1;"1911, the oame date
W
AHREN;
Ohio (UPO - A
aa rftld6ral ledalatlon becom.ea
weU-JtncMrn
area
minister was
law.
: Committee hearings also pick killed here Saturday when struck
by a car. The victim was identiqp momentum TUesday.
: The House Finante Commit- fied as Rev. Spurgeon Dlllaney of
Warren.

Pleasant Store·

day

wolght. lllaclc hooch, 1200 .,._ N:. eNf. "'*'•rlllil I.Uoialollll, Inc.

----

The ~ Ttme..senttnel, Sunday, l"ebruary 23 0 1H9

W,\SIIINGTON (l'PO - Ted
'liWuns1 an l111tant hit •• new
mantger ol the Walhirwton S..
Mora, tacklee the tqh part of
the Job MOIIday whorl he lakeo
over a ball club alreMiy eoutaned to loot place IPI• by all the
eQerta.

will hear testimori.Y from
Ole State Department Tuesday
morninG, and the state
Natural Resources Department
Wedoesday oight,
The Ohlo Civil Rights Commission also will testi!y to its
wdget requests Wedllesday.
In the Senate stut:b' committees, . the Judiciary Committee
Monday lllght will take testimony on a joint resolution to
put a questiOil or eliminating
the death penalty on the NO\'ember ballot.
Capital pmishment can be remoYed. from Ohio's crimlnal
laws either by a em stltutl.onal
amendment or a statute passed
ooly by the General Assembly.
Up for second hearing ln the
House Judiciary
Committee
Tuesday, will be a bill permitting the state Highway Patrol
to assist county or city authorities in riot situations and another measure to make Gtio's
laws covering sale of obscene
literatures.

~

Williams .faces Difficult Task In Rebuild-ing Senators

OPEN ~ILY 10 A. M. TO 9 1'. M.
SUNDAY 1 TO 71'. M.

:About Passage of
:Voting Age Bill
\

--· --·-

45~l'(;o

GOLF CiS MELMA£"biSHES
s 97 ~ I 66·.
.

ETAX

10'"

.:!42 ·

sun

lho ~5.,_.-okl ·llrot !No"'""""
'to .liloh' .Oino!lt\ forl!l el,;,, 1be
'Rillolt
' "l"'..,.
.,._.. Pou1.•"'"'
.
. II· '"'
,.,..,....
• IJ-¥eaf,oljl ~ 'plio
RGllbiHoii...O llld

.. · · ·

,....~·,.,·. '!l'~~·it!'t!IO~·

~ 'll(,'.f "t· ~fl.
frio aiOntdr-'l; ·
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,.

~

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•

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-~· ----~-

--- ·- .. --

.

~

•

'

1M Sir~ n.o.&amp;.IMI, ~. Fobniar7 23, INll

11 -

.. ... . ---·
•

Meigs Scores Sectional Tourney Upset Win
·'·

ClA551FifD RATES
OM Oe,.-0._ tiiM •••• ~ -17c u._
Si• Ufti.Cutt..-, .,.,., ••• - ·15c u,.

..

ALBANY - The Meigi Marauden racked ~ a aurpriae rictory
the Clan AA sectiorala here Friday night b,y scoriag a 83-60 . .
set trl.Uiq)h over Nelsonvtll~York.
COOdl Carl Wolle's Marauders, &amp;Oirw !do the !OUrllO!Ilent with
a ~15 overall record, tun:8d in a balanced team eftort while .Per•
lurm!rw In the underdos• role. Nei....W...Yock told boa!en Meigs
both times the two SEOAL teams met in regular &amp;eason pmes.
Tile Buckeyes ol Athena ~ cpnod the game with a quick
Z-0 leoc! m a bucket lrml uademeath by Mark F'lck, bot then tho W..
rawlera got in front aad were lOidtr:w 13-10 by the cioN of the ftrst
period,
NebonvUle--York. in a continued effort to douse the Mllrauder markers.
upset try, battled hard throughTyo, a 6-1 forward, paced all
out the aecon;l quarter anti fi.J- scorers for lhe game with 20
ly held a 27-26 h81!11me lead.
po!n!L He hit oo e!gllt o! 18 field
SECOND HALF
goal attempts and lour oC nine at
Me!p jumped early In the tool Une.
the third stanza and grabbed aP
Joe Myers, the winners 6-3
eiahtpointedge, 39-31, by late in center, followed with 17 points

, ,,

eeL
The

eventual winners once

more moved to stack \II a good
lead in the early part of the tlal1
eigtlt miDutes am at one step
held a 54-46 edge.
Nelsonville ·York, nowdespe....
ate to overcoote tht deficit, resorted to commttttne fouls and
betore the contest ended tour
Buckeye starters exited withtlve
peroooala, Fooling out were Phil
Ermis, top scorer for the loaers,
Fick, Jerry Polley and Bob Crawford.
The foullrc tactics of the Buck·
eyea. th&lt;qrh not successful in
tba ftnal outcome, aidod the Albens CountianJ in their strong effort to overcame the point ded·
cit fact~ them. Nel1011ville.York
with obout two minrtes remaiJ&gt;.
tJw, had cut the Marauder advantap· to two points, at 58.$6, IJo.
cause Meigs was ha~ difft...
culties in tallying on their tree
tbrOIIL
- Meip, however, was able to
9'1 10 ita slim ~ ll)e real
~-Pioko&lt;hvd!e

.-

1 !yllw win, Blc ococen lor the
winners In the final quarter were.
Senior Rich Haggert,y and Sophomore Jelf Tyo, each with six

All N1 •• ,.,trlct•tl •• ,._,,
......,., ca.•efflcrtti.,.l •nil Ia ,._
'•t~r~lw

~~~,.

The Athens Bulldogs scored a
61-67 victory over New Lexhw·
too&gt; In the first Friday evening
g!lllle ol tho Alhony toor..,.,.nt,
Gomes played last night "ere
Warren Local (8-10) vs. Lopn
(7-lll lllld Belpre (1&gt;-U)vs, Mariella (1:&amp;.6),
Meiga will play the winner of
the Belpre va_ Marietta gomo at
8:15 p, m. this oomin&amp; Friday
ntchL
By

Q~arters:

Metp , , , ; , , , • 13 26 46 63
NelsonvUJe-York •• 10 27 45 60

BY DICK THOMAS
Including tournament play,
GALLIPOLIS The SouthCoach Uoyd Myers' lllghlandwestern Highlanders did it a- ers will now meet Alexander,
gain - they deleated K y g o r
with a record ot 11~. the top
Creek 48-42 in the opening game IOOdod team in the tournamen~
&lt;t tho Class A Sectioool Tour- at 7 p,m, Friday, Feb, 28, tn
nament Friday night at Gollia the GAHS gym, II they survive
Acadelny High School,
tho ~ catlos~ the lltghIt was a rematch of the open- landero wili ho in tba linalo
Ing game 0( tho 400. 8111111ol Gal- Saturday, March l.
Ita Councy Baaketball TournaKeith Carter, 6-0 senior.
ment a week ago when Soutb- sparked the Highlanders with 18
wootem defeated l(yger Crook points, Jimmie Dole Walker had
76...65. ltwaaSoothwestem•sthlrd 12. Dave Morgan, s ...u senior, had
conserutlve w1n in tourney play, 8'iJ(Jints, and Ricky Slout, 5-9 junKyger Creek's third toornament Ior, had 7iiOints, Char lea BeIon and the Bobcats' fifth con- man, 6 ...1 senior, had 3..points.
secutive loss, counting the last
Tom Reese, 6-1 senior, playtwo games of the league season. ed an outstanding game for Ky.
Swthwestern is now 10~ for ger Creek and finlohed with 14
the season, including tournament points. Chuck Bradbury, 6-3 &amp;en·
pla,y and Kyger Creek is 10-9, lor scoring aee oi the Bobcata,

ALIWIY -

Coaeh Chuck Mc-

ltlM/1 olll!ou BillclOp bullt up

U.S7 In a Clu1 AA Sectional
..._IIIDurnomeat pmehore
Friday ntpt,
1M win loll Athooa with a 172 . - d . Tile Bulldop,
SI!:OAL c:baln&amp;JIGna, wiU , _ lace
the wt- o1 the Warron-Localt_. m Feb. 28,
loci 21-12 in Frlda1'o
..... .... portocl, .... wu
on ..., J7 .#f at halftime, II ....
M-38 II! laYor ol tba Bulldop

pelada, Tile Panthers
CIIUeond AHS n-u tn the !lnal
- . , , bul It waaa't - ·

llm&lt;8011N:

A - , • , •••21 '¥1 441 61
lat..... ' ,12 26 38 57
ATIIDIS (ll) - Wic:llerham;
12.:41; llnrl, U-14; llanclloy,
:1-4-10; Nool, U-1; w...,.., 31-7. TCCOII - 23-IS_.l.
NEW . LEXINGTON (57) ~-15; Dld&lt;enm, 4-4-

lfa....._

12; x.e., 1·1~: Kozlowatd, IDola J ., 1•. 5..2-tz: Demay, :1.1-

t. Taloll .,

22-1U7,

I

hMdql.al1era here.
Nolan, &amp;.4 last ,....., despite
bot,. bothered liY severe ann
trcd!lao eorly Ill- tho year, aa1d
he 11M •'been ove~_at the beach
modllllliow.
•'t tltlDk all the players reel
the oomo way I do (Jbout demands to the clubs)," he said.
u'I'hey are afraid what the oth-ers ..W tht'* II they report_ I
" - I om dollw the ri~J!t thlrw
and I t.ol I am."
carroll ""' the only llldlbor
of Iaiit 8MIOI1' I l'Oiter to Jhow
,. TlloriCia.Y lor the first day o!
_ , tratntow.
At Clearwater, Fla., the Phlladolplda PhWiea· ma-ent
aald It would play tho R e d I
March 1 In the ftnt oxhtbttioo

points in the !ourtli period, Danleis btt 14 field goals and oeven free throwa for his total.
Chesapeake took a 24-10 ieoc!
at the end ol tho nrat period and
llretched it w 40./ll at halftime,
Tile Panthers led 60-32 at lhe
end 0( tbreo periods,
Harman Trace scored 36 points
In the loorth period but tho rat-

Friday's H"~gh School Soores

g;'!~ :r;:=~~al

Red Hurlers Working Out
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)- Pit&lt;:J&gt;.
era Guy Nolan ODd Clay Carroll were among 14 pitchers and
catehorl who · reported Frida1
dw-lnl the aecond day ot aprllw
tninitW Ill Cincinnati Redo'

-

was held to seven points, two in
tho first halt
It W&amp;tl d:Je last aame for these
Kyger Creek seniors: Bradbury,
Reese, Stove Spaulding, 5-10;
Evl Thomas, 6-1, Olld Komy
Buckley, ~. who didn't get in
the game.
Earning a starting berth on

the Bobcats Friday night was
Kemy Brown, 6·1 sophomore.
tallied 9i»inla,
Brown hit from the comer to
give Kyger Creed a 2..0 lead but
Carter made a jumper from the
key to tie 112~, SouHnreatmn
took a 9-4 lead but Reese scored oo a rebound play and then
added two free throws to narrow it to 9.S with 1:35 lett, Morgan, Clll'ler, lllld Walker oeored
to prt Sootbwaatmn in !root I$-9

and the lllghllllldero led 17-9 at
tho end oltlle firllt period,
Southwootem pourad It oo In
tllo second period piling up a
27-13 lead at tile 4:54 mark, The
lllghlandera led 31-17 with 2:02
to go and 31..23 at halftime.
Spaulding btl a l q shot ID
open the tbtrd period and Bemen !ollowod with a tree throw
and the lllghlanclers led 32~5,
Reese btt !rom the comer and
Brown Olld Rothgeb made tree
throws to cutSoutlrwestern'alead
to 32~9, Tile lllghlander1 led
to-35 at the end or the tbtrd
perlnd,
Walker opened tho fourth perIod with a jumper. Bradllury tippod in • rebound lllld - ·

later mado a tree IIMI
It ,... - a t o m 4248, Be-

man added a free throw f o r

with Roese puDing dolm 13,
Soutlnnoatom IIMI Broom bttfron• Southweltern had 26 ,..,.,,....
tile comer to cut Ute Hliltlllll4- and Jimmie Walker waahlllhwllll
era• lead to 43-tO, Carter btl 11,
from the aide to make It 46-tO
Tile lllgllllllldero btl 19 or 44
!rom the field lor 45.4 per with 3:33 to "''
Then the tun otarlod. Kner and mode 10 ol 15 at the tool
Creek put on a full court pre11 llne,
l(ygor Creek btl 16 or 60 Sholl
lllld tba lllal"anccer• otarlod to
ataU for ttmo,Soulliwootommaa- lor 26.6 per oont aod mode 10
aaed ID eat up oomo time brt or 16 at tba line,
KYGER CREEK (42) - Brad1oa1 the ball ...t or ....... "'
tba Bobcall, Brolm dwod In a bury, 3-1-7: Reoae, 4-8-14; Rolbrebound w ...,_ It to tbree geb, 2~~: Spaulding, 2-ll-1; Thopoints again, U-42; with 1:25 mas, ~~~; 111d Brown, t-1-8.
to go, Beman made a tree throW Totals, 1~0. t0-16, a·,
and Carter ondod the pme 1001'SOIJTIIWESTERN (48)- Walker, 6-ll-12; Carter, 7-4-18; Being two !reO - · with
seven second• 011 tbe-c:lock.
man. 0.3.3; Sklut, 2.3-7; Mor4-li.S. Totala, 19-lt, 10Tile Bobcats had tba hand In reboomdjnr. lll!lltintl 36 15, 48.

--

~~me

even if minor league play-

era have to be called in.
The Philltes were slated to
open spruw training today wtU•
pitchers and catchers alii ex·
pected at lea•t 15 players to
1how 1CJ the Orst day,
General Ma-r John QulM
said Friday t! tho strike by maJor 1eque players is still on
Monday, • IUI'Ve)' wiU be made
and some ·~ playera In the
club'• minor league .system will
be called in to make certain
the 11 beat 181m a-vailable" is on
ha!OI lor tho g!lllle with Clnc:in-

natL
BOMB EXPLODES ,
PARIS (U~ A homo Jlllde
bomb and a Molotlv cocktaU
exploded In !rant &lt;t a lett book
bookllore and the olftceo ol tho
loft wing
Adlon,
early Soturday, There were no
~leo l!ld damqo waa al!ghL

--r.

~~':r'"::a

Col......

Reynold•-

burg 46
Westerville lf1 Columbus Hartloy 56
llllllard 65 Maryavlllo 63
At Manatleld
Marton Harding 63 Creatitne 31
Gatton 61 WUlard 55
At Bainbridge
Sheridan 80 IUIIIIboro 61
At Albany
Alhens 61 N011 Lextngtm 57
Meigs 63 NeloonvUle York 60
At Springfield
Buckeye loeaJ 32 Yellow ~rtnga
30
Bethel 59 Soathealtern 54
At Mar~
Shenandoah 61 Watertocd 42
S&lt;yvue 57 Caldwell SO
At Bellefontaine
Fairlawn 51 Weal Ubort;y Solem 50
Piqua Catboltc 78 Triad 65

AI Porllmouth
Sooth Webll!or 73 Weal Ualon '¥1
Valley 65 Notre Dame 54
AtChe--'&lt;e 79 l!aDnan Traee 68
!lrmmea Valloy83 er.t'l'flp. 73
AI We.WVU!e
Northridge 87 Dublin 52
~burr 61 DanvWe 58
At Llncaater
FalrRald Union 54 Watkina Memorial 52
Plekertnaton 58 Berne Ualon 51
At N011 Concocd
Zaneaville Rosec:rans 68 Phtlo 54
Lake 67 New Atheno 31
Atl'llletoo
Pike Enatern 65 Winchester 37
Seaman (f1 .. 55
AtNellalvUie
Fedora! llocldng 63 CrookovUio
55
At Ga!Upoila
Gallia Soulhwellom 48 l(ygor
Creek 42
At Chllil cothe
ChiUicothe Flaset74 Paint Valley
38
Lynchburg CI.,. 79 UnlotD 62

LY tall short, The Wlldcata cut
Chesapeake's lead to e!ghtpotnto
late in the game but that wao
as close as they came to overtaking the Panthers,
Malcolm Adkins, 6-1 jJUdor,
top ooorer in the Obto Valley
Conference, led Che--'&lt;e with
20 points, Jell hll had 15,
Jim Folrchlld 14 and John

&amp;toll 12,
BUI Welio, 6,J junior, ,...
oocond hiib man tor llaman
Trace with 11. llaman Trac.
outreboundod Chesapeake ~2
with Dantela gett1na 14, WeUa
eight and Jim Sum HVen.
Chesapeake comected on 83 0(
64 !rom tho fteld tor 51.5 per
cent and made 13 0( 15 !rom tba

~ USED
•~t~ms.

Malooim Addnahad12o!Cheo-

CHESAPEAKE (79) - Fair.
c:hUd, 6~·14; Wilks, t..O.S; M.
Adktno, 94..20; Jolm Shell, 4-fr
12; J. hll, 6-3.15; D, Adktno;
1-ll~: Smith, 1~-1; Carrico, 20-1, Totals, 33~. 13-15, 79,

santa a ara upset; UCLA. Romps9. 1· 66·
•

•

By United Pres• International
UCLA stood alone today as
the nation's only ume&amp;ten
maJor college
t.om,
toll..,lng tho stunning upset in
overtime
Friday
night o!

••kelball

second-ranked Santo Clan.
Sin Jose State did the honors,

College Scores
By United Prell

International

East
"""" 58 llro1m 52
Brndell 79 Mddlbey 73
Prlncelon 72 Yale 53
Rutavs 88 But!alo 78
LaSalle 98 Detroit U 96
Cornell 65 Dartmoutll 62
Brdgprt 64 New Hamp, u. 58
Columbia 92 Harvard 74
lllny Brk lf1 Brklyn Foly 41
llhac:a 73 llamlllon 88
Buckeell 102 Lehigh 73
South
Frmnt 104 Aldron-Brddo 80
Waah, &amp; Leo 79 Centre 65
W, Va, St. 92 Mrrs 11rv1 89
Mldwoll
De Paul 86 St. Leo 74
Wayne St. 84 Oakland 69
S. Dakota Sl 99 N Dakota Sl 92
Carroll 94 Wheaton 78'
llipln 74 Lawrence 58
Colo, St. Coli 91 Omaha 79
AQJ!nao 98 Nortlnlood 94
Rcklrd 90 Lake Forest 70
Carleton 82 Galeaburr ••
SOU!liweal
Anselo St. 83 Tarleton 75
West
UCLA 91 Orep St. 86
Oregon 74 Slhm CaUl. 84
UC Sbla Brbra 81 SF, 75
Colorado Minoa 811 Resto 86

!iHOPKEEPERS TO STRIKE
PARIS (UPI)-Fraace'a lltopkeepera amouncad Saturday
thai tbey -.Jd ., on strike lor
ftve houri March 5 to prG!oat
llcenaea, tuaa lllld OJIIIIIoyo
hoalth lnourance which they
aatd "ero eating up )lnlllta.

oulduelirw tho BrCOtoos In
double overdme for • 73-69
victory that eRied 8aJU Clara"•
21-.e WiMifll llrelk.
Low Alclndor aet a Paclftc
Eight Conference scortrw record
by hlttirw 27 pointa Friday ntcht
and runn1,. bto career _ . to
965 points u No. 1 UCLA
drubbed Oregon state 91-66, II

only 11·10 with eeven minutes

74-84, Santo Barbara odged San

,..,., Junior guard John Vallel,y
then btt two 2o.loot janpero lllld
UCLA alreaked to a U-23

Francisco 81·75, and nn.
ranked LaSalle potted Ill 14th
victory tn a rOll wllll a 9S-98
daclstoo over Datrott, del)llto
tho 41 points and 32 rebwnda &lt;/,
relnatated Spencer llaywort!L

halttime load.
santa Clan scored a three-

point play with 53 ......ta Jell
in regulation to tie tho pme ~
52 and send ill match with Son
Joae state Jato overtime. Bernie
was the Bndu' 37Ch eonaec. v..sey put san Joae state
live victor)' lllld 84th in their ahead to atoy with 3:29 1efi In
.PBit 86 gamea.
tho oecond overtime, whoo ho
The old conference aoortow hit a Jump shot lrml the top of
mark was 958 by Door Smart ol the i.y,
WaahiJW(oo In 1957-49,
In otber major college games,
Orepn
State IUCC811lully Rulgars beat Bu1falo 8&amp;-78,
double-teamed Alcindor in the Calmnbta boated Harvard 9:&amp;.74,
Cli&gt;OniJw minutes and trailed Oregon boat Soo&amp;hem Calllorola

ABA Sl'ANDINGS
By United Prell lnternatiooai

East
~
W L Pet, GB
Miami • " ,. ,30 25 .545
Mlnneaoto , , , .:w 27 ,526 1
•• ., • ,31 31 ,500 2"11
Kentuck,v ' ' ' ' ,27 27 .soo 2~
N"' York. , , , , 16 38 ,296 13'h
West
WLPelGB
Oakland • ,. ...44 10 ,815
•
Denver , ., •• ,34 23 ,596 11'h
New Orloana , ,29 29 ,500 17
Dallaa •• , • , ,26 29 ,f73 181,2
Loa
,24 32 ,429 21
U.Uatoo •• ' • ,(7 S1 .315 27
•
OP
Friday' a Reaulll
908 Dallas 120 IDdlana 116
(Onl,y gamea achoW!od)
966
1161
1134
NBA 81' ANDINGS
1118
1220 By Unltod Preoo International·
11117
Ealll
1182
W L Pet, GB
lloJI-o, • , 47 17 ,734
Pbtlodel)lhla '' 12 21 ,867 fl.;
AVG. Now York,. ,,44 23 .6~7 4';1,
69.6 - · · . ' ..38 25 ,803 8\!a
66,0 Ctnctmatl • ., .34 31 ,523 13\'J
.BU lletrolt ' • • " ,28 to .398 22
63.4 Mll"aukoo ' • ' 18 4~ ,297 23"
62,7
Welt

Final SEO Standings
OVERALL STANDINGS
TEAM
Athena .
• • • • • ••••••.••••••••
Jeckson • • • • • . • • ••••.•••••••••
WeUston • • • • • • • • • , •••••••••• ·••
GaDipoUs • • • • • • • • . • , •••••• , , • ,

W·L

PTS
1163
7 1079
10
8 1262
10
8 1188
Ironton . • • • • • . • •••••••••••••••• 9
9
1090
Lopa o
o
o &gt;
o o o o o
o
o o o o 1
11
1127
NeliOn'rlJl6.York • • •••••••••• , • , • , , 8 12 1022
IS
Meigs • • • • • • • • • • • ••••••••••• , • • • • • ..
• •!.S
906
0

0

0

0

0

I

0

0

0

0

16
10

2

•

TOP OFFENSIVE 1EAM!i'',
TEAM

PTS

Wellll:on , •••••••••••••••••• , •. , • , •• 12S2
Galltpolia •••••••••••••••••••• , ••• ,•,; 1188
Athena •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1163
Jack1011 • • • • • • • • •••.•••••••• , •••••• 1079

G
18
18
18
17

I..ogan , •••••• , •••••••••••••••• , , •• 11%7 18

.w

TO
•- BrART A NEW J.lliB
THROW OFF tile dWu ol II
•• RIO!d IJIOOIIlO. We need a man
"" .... 4t

In GallipoliS area, caB

Limited tnvet
We lraln, Good IIWI can earn
up 1D PI.OOO pl111 ...... Air
mall H. I. DlcketiOO, Pre!!,
Soullnreatern PelrOleiDD Qlrp,
n. Worth, Teul mo1. 41-4

,, on CUIIDmerl.

Wanted To Do

CHILD an day or DltlbiiD my
blme. P1L .......
fJ.f

Lost
AoaiJem'J

Forlelll
FURNISHED ..,..-ot. "'""
l8lit llteDa Arnold, Pili: Cllt-; ..... Balel,
'1M

OPP'ICB apaee 1ot
f4I.2S4I
PJIL

tram 1

a.m.

Uh

Ansel•• •'43 23

,652
TEAM
PTS . 0 AVG. AtlaDia " • ",41 27 .601
Athent • • • • • . • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 901 18 lo.t lion Frm ,. ..32 34 ,486
Jacklon •• , •••.••• , •••••••••••••• , •
17 18.4 lion llleav • ' • !Z1 S1 .419
~ • • • • • • • • · · • •••• , • •• , ••••••• 1111 IS 82.2 ChlOifD ' ' ' ••26 to ,394

ese ·

NAME, TEAM
FGM FTM PTS G
Sldp Ilooonarcl, WeUaton ••• , , • 161
128 442 18
Dan Wlclcerhlm, Athena , , , , _ • ItO
82 342 18
Paul Green, Jackaon • , , • , _ •• , lit
45 313 17

•''·--F----------.. . . . . ._, ___

iu
18.4

r ...._

. . •.

..

We .. balldorL llllbllalw

far IIDiplllltl A~, AJI.
.,. Wt lrlo.
. . II

,.....

Golllpello

ALL lppea or· IJa!ldlnli: lalt, IIIDck. brlot. · - plpa.
W I W . - - .,.,_,
illltdowt, 11111111, e1c. aauda
tllmn•• 1'1:1, 6 Oflloo .Bopdp,
Wlalaa, Ria Onado, 0. Cll
Nllla!W f,
II II

--·

.,,.

1811 WALNIJT - · AMftl
ndlo. Four IPMd ....if.
~ PlfiiiOIIII Ill .... por
llllllllill t1t Pfl'/ bile• ol
PIUII, caB - · 41-41

IM
ZlG ZAG
.w1DC -~~~~··
A•ae
payliiOIIII al .,,11 por

•·•· can

JIIIJ be'- or
,...,, f1.4l

NEW GMC 1IUCK
HEADQUARiEIS
1111 Ill T, a.J. .....
1111 Ill T. 011: Pldalp
1M Ill T, Clln.
llf1 Ill T. 011:
1M .. T, lallrlllllaall
1111 Ill T. 1M. iti1+
liD lJi T, a.. 1M+

PURMft'IJJtlll "' .a
tMdl. We buJ !IDd oell, Rice'•
• 111111 ....... .. Ill.

wm

..,

Ill TREIIENDOUS 8AVIIIOS, P'roncll
atr Jlame Caller. PIDo 81,

~lAilY ~ ~

41-U

-

lfll,

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

4U

1111 RT 1&gt;00011: Caroael, Ph.
4fe.l40'/,

1111 Ill T, Clln......

4U

OLD BRICKS, Pit 448-1...

r.ntrilci'
llal 114 Dadlt 1llllllr
1111 lJi T, Dodlt
I. . .

4).1

BIJNOY lnnnpet far tale, I'll.
IIIIM,
G-3

IMI T- GIIC
llf1 I T_ OIIC

1111

na ololamoblh. Pb. ""

alii.

G-J

IIIIOIICMaalllo
-tTJ'armWneelftll w. lhiii'Diftl
tl. . .rusr
ol - I I ) , . _ ...... 1111 I '1'. llllllllfiiiiNI
Coantry WOIIenl, - Relllloaa,
. . Ill '1'. Dadtll 1*11•
Jaa 6 BIIM, CGurl St Jlec&gt;
- I T . tnt,~
ard llbop, 45 CGurl St

O.J

OH. 4463643 .

GOOD 3 BR home, new well,
34: hundredtha Tob. B., second growth Umber, coal seama,

OR aALI - cottap. 4 '" llli bllb, .. Teul Rd. - - 1y doemleol,

...

can ,.,...

a.tDg nam lllltl,

'r1fiWi ... ..... Oirltln

ll'1nllln, ...11'11.

" Amlbal'J' at ........ ~....
'
'

;:,

~.

IIII)IIOOIIIIIIflnllbellll{ll&amp;
,... IIIli Nfrlprllllr

~

iiij!llppld,

OlnlriiiJ laaiJieol

Pll, . . . .

..

...............

:,..BeiiiR.

I ROOMS IIICI Wb, lllfanL ...
P1L 44MIII.

M

ruRMIIIIID ...,. at,

4
' .-..; prMIIWb, .......

. . . . . . . .......SAte....
.. 2111 ... - - ..

'

'

..

CAIIII

Five miles from VInton. Only
$2,750,

17 ACRES

NICE 8 RM. frame on Jack1011
St New!)' painted, extra tot.
$4,000. Terms.

Jay Shoppard, 14U!1J
Bar! Winton, Way.. Amsbary, 44U!311

2 NEW 3 BEDilN, IIIUatS.
toke Drive. Rio Grande, 0 ,
(Call nna-), I'll,
611

Ill-·

BAIRD REALTY COOscar Baird, Realtor
SMALL CHESHIRE FARM
Located on Storys Run Road in
Cheshire Townsllip tilts !ann
!s 13 plus a&lt;res. Nice live
room, one sllory boule with
running water. Good fences,
bam, garage, and tool obed.
Let .. show you lhil one.

LOTS OF TIMBER
Forty five acrea of almoal all
Umber. Nice five room one
. &amp;lory borne with bath, Flrel
oil apace heater. All reeently
remodeled. DriHed well hu
plenty of water, Loto ol eo·
blnets. A real bargain,

4 tpeltl lllletmbl!d

llli Dolfao Plekup; 1111111 V,._
Wpoed l!aal.: cab:

1111 """'tiDGd
...,
dBtJ' .....
llaaJPII',
-..,..,
ml arfCIDal. - · ...,

......

dall YOitlme ClOIIIrvl, 4 lpelker
- - ' 1)'111m, loftiJ walnut
llniiiL Taloa ..... paymenll ol
t~.ll

lllllld, 4 -

"'.14.

Cal ...1011,

4W

~. 1'11111 tile

IIIII ........ ,,.,,;,.. , .....
• • (]ley, Impilii Como,

y,._

loab .... 1111 Fan! ,..,._ 100, I .,C.

..... 1'11111 •

Neal Realty
A. A- NIBERT, RealtGr
TIDRD AVE, 6 BrATE f/F,

FORMERLY NIBERT
AIIIIOCIATI!B

a

llfJY tblo 2 BR home on Plum
Streel lot down, t30 a
month. FuR ~ ~.000.

WOULD YOU LIKE

WIPE 00'1' CLEAJIER II a ...,
dllm!eal. n•a fat, ..., IIDII
~Rentawaldoan-

tJ,

Cealral
ClDult Ill,
et

~.

17

A ~ BR home near

3

acre&amp;

towu

wtlll

~ ground, Hal -

gas furnace, aluminum aiding
!IDd oar pori.

. alrio · 4H 15 ACRE FARM
,.,_, . . . . . .
LOOKIN'G lor a baby farm with
1100 I'I7D*IIb 8lllloll w....
good 3 BR modem home,
I !!JL all!ld. ., ., ., .. ...00 BAY. Paul Gnmtr, ...,_., 0,
bath, buement IIDII omaU
1111 Fan! Fahlon, I .,C, tlald. I'll. IINlll
6.1
....._ -

1111 atev. PlcloiP.

.....
1'11111-r.

...

liU Qtev, Pldlup, . . a..,
Wlpo. ,. QleV,, , _ . . . .

IIlLI/I
t.mOMII
-.OMa

.......

bern. Also has .25 lobacco
bose. WID sell complete furniture or will seD farm

separate.

Would consider •

mobile home In trade,

WE HAVE A NICE

2 BR hOme looaled on 5th Avenue In Kanaup on • nice lot.
II you oan qualify. will seD
for M down !IDd balm:e
ltlte rent Allo wlil · oonalder
mobile ltOmo In trade.
OFFU.'B PIIONB W.IIM

Want A Real Barpi n
WELL HERE .rr IS. A NEW 3
BBDllootl HOMll: wrrll BTOalrl
WINOOWS, D~ LOT, LARGJ:

XI tcldN AND UVJNO ROOII..
NJC&amp; BATH AND THII J'\JU.
Pitre&amp; II 11.100. YOV WILL

'REALLY UKI11US ONI. DON'T
LET 50liiEOHZ IIUIII IlEAT YOU
_TO THIS ONI.

Real Estate For Sale

GOOD
THAH

OAB.AOK

FLAT

LOT

ON A

IN

VatY

NJ:IGHIMJKHOOD.

K.-

111M~

Female Help Wanted
metics ~-llipoli
needs women
in and
Full or
around....1.
part

3larp bedrooms,

l'h bath, spacious LR with
w-W carpe~ an an J18110led
dream kitchen wlttJ oven,
range and dishwasher, inside •
outai.de carpet on porch. 2 car
garage with automaUe door
opener, workshop In garage,
located ool St. Rt. 3.&gt;, Beat
vaJue on today's market at
$21,000. Possessloo oo deliven or deed.

80 ACRES

.

••as..

Ill •

LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI OP .&amp;PIIOitnMIIIf"

.,_

AMSBARY APACHE
TRA\~~~~~hS_t~ES

ou•~ a ...lnted .-tal' of '1M ~
ul: of ,..... enwfrlrl't 1111 uc.

,.,. -.."' """""· - · - la~u!:tonU.. a~-..~

WANTED I

ServiCII

--·

LOCATED ON Lower River Rd.
- J acre tobacco base, $1,100 corn base base, large barn
and loafing shed, 50 acres

Ohio River Bottom. two story
home, 3 BR and bath, basement, deep well, oU forced air
rurnaee.

NEW LISTING
LOCATED AT NO, 21 Gallta Sl,
- Neat small 2 BR home with
three large rooms on main

0,.,...
atr,

..,,.

EARLY

••

PINKING SIIEAR8 llbalpeDed
•1.11 up, octsaon 45&lt;: up, Sbop.
pard Sewtns MadJine SalOl 6
Sorvtee, 182 Ia! Ave.
4rt4

D:NNBTII mDillll'l
WATER DELIVERY

SEIMCB

P1L 44Uiff.

117 If

SAVE
UP TO

$100

" 'Doi!VetJ
- 'IIDftlf
Water
Sonloe
Patriot star Rl, OOipolla
~ I'INUI

t F YOU BUY MOW
BEFORE MARCH I

Ooor. Walk-In basement with

Rec. room, laundry and workshop, fenced yard. Will sell or
trade for larger home. PoetleSSion March 1, 19~9.

-·

HOBART I&gt;DLON, Realtor

SlYLINE
MOillE HOMES

DEAD STOCK

~~i~GS
~ $3995
2 Bedroo• M

IAI1IIB PIBI' CONTIOL
Jl'RBII: IDtpeellon. eaD , . . .

Evealllp W.1111

lflntl1

LIST NOW
FOR
AN EARLY
SPRING SALE

TBIIIIlTB

O'Dell.

SKYLINE
MOillE HOME

O)&amp;llor '"'

lCDirmltal Twwlla Sonloe
u 8IJlmanl Dr.
117 If

PALM
SPRINGS
TIP-OUT

a PBtr CONTROL

..

FAI!f Eda miDatiOII Co, WIIHJ.
i!llbial. Oldo. I'll. riUIA

DOLL a.. lfWN) 111441*'"
tdaD MYIIIIbll rer 1 *'eltt
nlaa alto rot'~-

with tho

DILLON AGENCY
Ph, 446-2674
•• 446-1224

•

........ IIIOIIwl.

lr or w

...

lltltlrl), . .
Ill) . - . PIL •

.II

Auto. Wa•hor &amp; D.,..
STOP SUMDA Y 2-6

With

WELL-EQUIPPED to baadie any allaotloa, a&lt;trell
Diana Rl&amp;lt bean arma
allll self for ber role ID lloe
lalnl Jameo lloDd ople betor ftlmed ID E"'laod,

lllll

..

TRI-COUNTY
MOilLE HOMES

PUBLIC SALE

..... Wtllll . . . . . . -

ft.ll

$5995

3 Bodroam

'WIIIIIUI'II Clq4l • 11!lholllor7
...... • - . 1111Clm' •· IINhlllalll.l eqallp.
1m1. 7 mL out, filii, P1L W. - . Ill wwt . . . . ..
-·

IJ,,.

l~tatt., ~c........., Dtiilnl
Notice .. benbJ 11..-.D ta.li Pllr-

LOCATED ON ST, R~, good w
fair renee, large bar~ .86
tobacco base, plent;y water,
very nice farm home with
aluminum aiding, country ldtcllon with plonzy cabinets, 3
BR and bath, laundry room,
LEB'I PWIIIIlNG 6 JIBIIOD.
oil circulating heat. Price has
BUNG, ~
0, ~
been reduced from $12,500 to
$10,500.

210 ACRES

N~

_.~ .. c~~~·
,.,-~
IW. . _

......

THUISDAY, FEIIUARY 27
STAlliNG AT12:SO P.M.
LOCATIOH: From Galllpoll•, lilouto 7 to .hntctleo
211 go 4~ milo•. R"••• for solo, h . .o •ol4 '"7
Farm.

MACHINERY
with cUitlwtor•, llrq, cii•IL,
II•• ap&lt;Mdor, 2 horoo aiM, ... ,, 3 ..... _.., horaoa,

1941 Ollwer

4

~' tn~ctor

wt- 1400 l~a, ...h, 1;350 teloecco •tlcka, !oNeco

,.....

-

1957 PI, . . ..

, ,..,.·z"•'"'
~.... -...
······
eN! ~- ...!_~!!N..LTU!~.
--I'll··,_......,.,.........
!.rMideat .... rwlth '
......, ~. •nlll dr•u ... , ·i dtter ... IIIIOcd, ftltt.oke.

,

4 plec•

.,....,In

ANfiQUES
nite, china. cle.-., che•t\ hell tNre. wtth ...._
i•• 3 -~. atht 't...,

,..,. , and ,._. \raa, 15 ,.non .,.,..
, .. nutMtOu• tc. tMntiOI'.
Not Ro-oal~lo F..

~.

,-,t;'tlu:"un~

ANDIIEA'IINil
RROiliUII'Ii'l!ii 1111 II iiNif-. ft,

time. No experience required.
No terd.tOI"y restridlons. Take
Gatll,oli•, 0.
tl..tr claim• wtu. _.. 8dllelarJ" ..-.
orders anywhere. ltighest pro- •---...:'..:;•;.;·"'=-o;;';;29;...._ __ . bl roar .,.a..
flta up to 80 per cent. 300
~te4 tll1e • • 4aJ ., ,.......,
Good llouaokeoping aA&gt;fOVed
IMUfiiiCe
JOliN W, _ .. .
~.~-~
eosmetlcs. Everythlngfurnlsh- POll ALL,_. hw~~~Mt ..tl, Feb . Ill;
11;. Mar. 1
ed. Credit extended. No atoek
e11eet with , _ Grttnp II"' carey, No lranchtse !eeo.
01111111 tile Noal IDI, Aa~Dep,
No sU&gt;ck Investment For lull
11 111a111 St. .\ten~~ lot IIIIa,
Wormation by mail, plus 3
lin, llomeo1merr, bal;l.'lal
tree aamptoa, write SI'IJDIO
IIIli -11 Ua"""- H
GIRL HOLLYWOOD FORMUo=
~,,
u.,t:l 'umltw-. .....t 111f••
caUaneou• ....... &amp; •ou•..
LA, Dept, M-178, 114411 Hart
NATIONWID!l III9IJRARal:
hollll ....... •• •'•• ...,.
St,, No, llollywood, CalU,
AUTO. lin, Ufe. 41 . . . 1L
ce•plate ........
91605, Alao tnunedtatobtgpro__,..._ p ..__ W R.
fit open1np lor party plan ~
,..., ' _,.,.,
'
Iron. -.1111.
H
erators .
45-1

··~·v&amp;r.·
=--ql!=~-...
.._
WP.
•, ~·~
dl111!pl, ,.
~~t::.:.~
.tlliid'
tl ' .
'

~
.,,~~-·

DBWHI'I PJ.miMMi

-

~- "......,.

BEAUTIFUL BRICK

'J

• rw• ""

FREE. Taka delivery on a '69
Apache campinQ trailer before
MIII'Ch I and get o Sportyak II
poly·boa_t !roo, A $100 value,
complete 'Wtth oan. floats up 10
700 pounds, weighs just 38
Choose from nine new Apache
models that sleep from four to
.;~1 peopla, See them aoon.
This summer can bot area - it
you don't miss the- now.

WOMEN! BIG MONEY
STUDIO GmL Ho 11 ·.............t
.
COs-

Dillon Agency
NEAR NEW -

BOOM AND

........ ..
... ..
•&gt;r••

nP

v

WANT A
LABGK
KITCJII;N
WITH LOTS
Ot"
CABINZ'I'S.
HaS rr IS. JHa.VDU I IISDB00)18, TU.I "BATH. V'I'ILITY "
LARGE

Heetlntl

you'll ! 0.. PMtl, o.,DIIMMQ I
miss the boat III'&amp;NDAIID
IIEATIJifO, Ill 'IIIINI , _

1 Yr. Old Brick
Owner Movlna Out of State

............. jiiii .......

...- ....

4;00 lntercbarlge

•

'til March,

11210.000 INOT MANY A.T ftDI
PmCI: Df III"BBHH v .u:.aar&gt;
CAIU"ETED UVINO aOOM Wml
FUla'LAC&amp;.
LAIUJE FAIIJI.Y
BOD.Irl, .UILT JN IQTCHIN, LOTI
OV CLOSETS. I "'I BA.THI, a C411
GAKAG&amp; AND LOY&amp;Y rL\T
LANDSCAPED I.A.WN.

EYBNING
C..MauloMUlll
Cl!arllt II. Nell 1111111
A, A. NIMJ:I IIIM'II

3,,
11
15
17

12:00 News ~
12:15 Bulletin
12:30 The "In"" Sound
12:35 Teen-Time '18
5:00 fi:ews, Weather, ~
5:30 Sunset Sere.cle (Until
Sign otrJ

If you wait

~rssm .IS :rcfi.roa~

Ladllear--

per aDIIII or IUDce WHY PAY RENT

1111 Clletlolel Pldtup, 1 ~. HAY FOR 8ALJJ:, Pb. -~

OliO -

I BmROOII ROllS&amp; • 'l'eul
lid .... ,.,, Pit _.,, IU

cltaJ.-.

Rebert L. BaH, I'll, ......

SATURDAYS
11:15 Washlngtrcl _ . .

Plumbing I

Very Nice 3 Becnom
Sprln1 Valley Estates

No Money Down
6 Room Home 2 Acres

l4 ACRE

VINTON

.•

5:00 Newa, W8ather, ~

Campin1 Equipment

VACANT LAND, 15 A. pasture,
2 A. woods, pond, good renee"'
just oil Rt, 160.

GOOD 7 RM. home, bath, pr...
age, part basement, 2 porches,
shade trees, drilled well. Just
of! Rt 3.&gt;, $3,500,

'

.t:OO lnterebaNO

Farm &amp; Home (Tues.,
Wed., Thurs.)
12:45 Country Go Round

21 ACRES

I.

STIIIIIIlO - IWliO CONIKILE,

ftWQill
~

Bl1 Savl"s If You
Buy Now

5 RM. FRAME Home, Tob. B.

1•

4W

Nealy New Brick

446 4500

1960 MODEL, 10 x 43, includea
275 gal. tank, awning.

have buyers wbo want f8l"'l'll,
businesses, or houses. We can
move yours, List wtlh us and
let "" save you money_

dual volume c:om.roL Take over
pa,..... &lt;Jf t1 par 11101111! or
pa.y jull • • . Call ttf.lla

Ew. 446 37M
Vwy Good Value

I IIJnnMpOIII llob Pww
11lllt
MOBILE bOme, 1113 EICllr, 10
New ... lllllar7 01118'1 • 56, contnJ air c:ond., &lt;ar....... !few US x •· U Pl1 pelod, .....neut cond, PIL 411. NOW IS THE TIME
DJioD tlrll .... - ....... IIDifl«l,
41-11
Ia.
If yoo want to ..u your proOMa \'alllf ......... .
perty In Gallipolis or Gallla
AXC ncJoleled poodle. white
Ill Plae It- ft. Ill 'Ill
County,
see us now as we
101. faltalo fill, _
......

...

MONDAYS TIIRU FRIDAYS
7:45 E&lt;I!Ma ot Joy
8:011 Ohio Valley Newo
8:lS Talk ot the T""n
9:15 Tho MornitW Show
10:30 Chatterbox
11:011 Tile Morning so11:45 WorJd.Maaon Co. News
12:00 Com'b'·MkL News
12:15 Bulletin B&lt;anl
12:30 Prosecutor Reports (Mon.)

AGENCY

196 ACRES

m ea. •

h.p. q,,
1111:11, Gild. 0111 flfml far
tWaU.,
41-t

WJEll Radio

THE WISEMAN

_...,.It

1'111 Clll!lV, ""'""'· 'IJI. .......

AKC REO, German Swpberd
malo pap, Pit t4e-1211 or 44&amp;.

.. ............ "'·H.......
aall . - .

Chl-130 ~ 121
!24 Loa Antleleo 102
PhUadtl&amp;lltla 11J lloattie 109
(Onl,y lcheoldod)

·~·••· -··•••••"'•~····'""·~·····-···

e-

bome Ill ,........• • -

lr•••·••ta

F~a Rt!JI'lto

2U

IF YOU . . IIIMOW

t25 ThiN A.,.,

monlb •

IIBAL'I'OII
1'- Vllale, C11J PlliiMIJ
Flnl • Ollft

vw ueenent c:mdlllan, Pit
LOW, LOW, PRICIII aa lfl&amp;. Ita
• nn after 5:30 P.M. 14-S
Oirltln P\ilillllft,
I LARGB ... 111111111 .....
PIL
M MAPLE S'I'EftEO - RADIO,
Ofllee , . _ t4t4TII II Bn.
..... • • 1111PW llocw'd.
1!1
lovely maple llnllb, with
-· - · r - ...... can \IIIII) PIIRNITIIRB: pad IMIII
lloq
Wedlorltolt,
P!J. 441-1111
All • !I'M rediD, ' . . - .

63.0 Seattle , •• , ..24 t3 ,ass 191!l
"'-'lx •.. ., 14 51 .215 ~~~

AVO.

,.

Gallipols Daly
Trlllune

'1M

Ansel•• '

Loa

OVERALL scoiiiNG

1

JLUPINO I'OOIIIL n II)
· . - , Part Cenlnl BoW,

W L Pet, GB

GaD.Ipolta • • • • • • • • •••• , ••••••••••••• liSt 18

can

rent.

.,

TOP DEFENSIVE 'IEAM

Oralldl. Pboat IIW!U. 141

1111 Ill T. GIIC Plebp
llf1 lJi T. OIIC ftbp

!JIM rill·
Jnlllalo .U.S, IDIIdo ol band,
D tatmd, eal1 44f.IMI. 0.J

Welh, 4.3-11; Mmtaomeey, 22-6j Barr,-, 1..0~. Totals, %7 ...
75, 1~4. Gf,

HANNAN TRACE (68)- Danlola, 14-7-35; Jellaro, 3-1-7:
Cbapman, 0...1-1; Sisson, 3-0-6;

BABY BED, l'llone

W11111lll
OI'I'ORTVNrrr

QALLIA

foul Uno, l!aDnan Trace btl 36
par cont. making 27 ot 75 from
tba fteld and 14 ol24 at the line.

apeake'• 22 rebound•.

tile

-:; WantM To luy

--

~~.-;;

w him,

l&gt;olanto' and tho

Rev. .Elmer Getaer, Mc:Coy
Foneral Home lor their ktndneaa and eftlelent 1ervic:e.
Mrs, Bernie Smidt &amp; daughter
Miriam
45-1

... . .

~ ~

· admintatered

ROY, EYOretl

Daniels Scores 35 Points, But Wildcats Lose, 79-68

Nolan, Carroll Among 14

• - - · ballltmo lead, then
hold
on to odgo Now l.exl!IIIOn

RICH HAGGERTY

!J.. ~~ · . . tr"o:h'

per-.

By Panthers

and hoarlltlt lhankl w our
.m.an,y frtenl5s, relatives and
neighbors lor their Pra,)'ert,
noral otrertnga l!ld aell or
klttdnesa during the loss of our
belOVed hul- and lather,
liemte B- smtlh- A special
thanks to llolzer Hoapltal otal!

SW Highlanders Eliminate Bobcats, 48-42

,.._

Athens Slips

BILL HENSLER

JOE MYFRS

Meigs-Buckeyes Box

.

WE WISH to IXIend our atncere

lui Estate For Sale
0. D. PAJISONS

hard road, $8,&gt;00,
GOOD l£iWi WIIP IIIII - .
w COIL Clrl Wlllan, ... TRAILER

lfor$1.00

C.4 c' Thanks

JEFF TYO

.......... fl, Cenlnl aiPtll1
Ct.
..

20~

DHolllli•: 4:30 , .... doUr a.,. 11
•. ,._. Sah.rrdar.

DIIIVFS FOR BASKET - Aa -lied -oolllnt
Hlal"•nlar drlftt tn for a Ja.yup qatnot Kner Creek'o call Ia a Clast A Seotlmal ~. . pme at Galllpollo ·
Frldo1. Soutlnnostom """ the pme, tll-42. P1aJon la4 to
rtgllt are T..,. Reooo (41), Jimmy Walker (34), Joo llolllpb
(33) IIIII Koa Brown (35),

3.\'VB BIG! Oo JOUr """ raJ
ad tqlbt&gt;iiiii'J elolnlnl wHit
Blue Laolre. eloolrto:

HAVI
MANY USES

u-• tha M ;.ta • .,.,_tf.

40

RUG11 A aa&amp;T Oean far lool
wHit Blue Luatte, Rent olectrle ~ p , ,.,_ ..
Hanlware Oo,
oa4

Used Offset Pletes

..... ,,.,,.11 ..., ... ••fllratlen .,.111
1M eharptf for _,,. "~ ef

IRONTON Dave Daniels
olammecl in 35 po1nla but h I 1
Hannan TracoWUdcalswentdown
to a 79~8 deteat at tba honclo ot
the Chesapeake Panthers Friday
night in tho -"&gt;g rwnd ot the
MEIGS
Class A Sect1ona..l Tournament.
NAME
FGA-M FTIII-A RB PF PTS
Daniels, a 6-1 senior guard,
Tyo •.••••••••••••••••••.•• 18-8
4-9
11
1
2G
one of the area's too Class A
1),4
Hensler ••••..••.•.••••••••• 11--5
5
3
10
M,yera ••••••••••••••••.••••• 7-7
3-8
u 3 17 All - Slate candidates, had 18
1),4
B. Werry •••••••••• , •• • •••••• ~
1
0
0
Ault ••••••••••••• , •••.••••• &amp;.1
1-2
2
4
3
D-1 . 0
Robinson ••••••••••••.•••.•.•• 3-1
2
2
R. Hlaart)' • • . • • • • . . • . • • . . . . . • 3-2 7-12
1
J1
TOTALS • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 52-24 li-32
32 14
63 By
At Paint Valley
BUCKEYES
Sheridan 80 IUI!oboro 61
NAME
FGA-M FTM-A PF PTS
At Lima
E..ta ••• , •••••• , .•.•••.•••••.. 14-6 S.ll
5
19 Lima C,C, 58 Findlay 52
Ftc:k ..•• ••.•.•••••.•••••••••.•. 10--5
4-4
5
14 Delpboa SL Johns 69 St. Marya 63
1),4
Polley •••.• .•••• •.•••••••••••••• S-3
5
6 Ottawa Glandorf 78 Van Wert 67
C:rawbd •••.....••••..•••••.•••• 8-1
4-5
5
6 WBI)Okonota 68 Elida 62
1),4
.Kidld.tr • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 8-4
1
8
At Youngstown
Thcwnpecw1 • • • • • • .. • • • • • • • • • • , • • • • • W
1-2
3
7 Youngotown Hayen 71 Beaver Lo1),4
1lrol:*l • . • . • • • • • . . • • • • • . • • • • • • . • • 0..0
0
0
ea140
- . -"
1),4
Verba ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 0-0
0
0 YCJIID!IBiowll South 56 POland 46
1),4
Sulllt~~~ .••.•.•...•.••...•••••..•• 0..0
0
0 Yngatwo, Mooney 68 Yugotwn,
TOTALS . • . • • • • • . . . • . • • • • , • • . • • • ta.-.21 IS-22 24
60
North 67
At Bowling Green
KEY - FGA-11, !leld pia atteQtocllllld Jllllde; FTM-A, tree L1ma Senior 73 Lima Bath 69
tbrow1 made ut ~ RB, rebouarJs; PF, _periOIIIl fouls; PTS.
At Alhll!ld
Manalleld Senior 69 Leldngtoo66
PERCENT AGES - Flold pia: Meigs (24 ol 5%) 46 per cent; Alhlmtd 68 Clear Fork 51
Nei.....W...York (21 &lt;t t8) 43 per cent; Froe throws: Meigs (15 or
At Valley
32) 41
NeiiiOilY!Ik&gt;-York (18 ol22) 82 per ce-.
Northwest 63 Pl&gt;rtamouth Wesi 41

••

•hlr"'•
, ..

-.ci• in the •itl,..l
c.,y
IIIIUH fOf clenlfi•d •4-•*tiU-ftt will b• c:hort•tf the rot•
~ 25c fw •ach , ...... .
Alll1 ..-tf.. •tf 1..- thr.. ., ••• II-•

der the bucket, hadaperfectrdght

ures.

P•ilr T,1ft_ ••rl• ~ ,,.,.

i"'•ttlen,..

while Haggert,y and So(llumore
Bill Hensler also got in domle
figures with lland 10 ,POints, reapectively,
Myers, hitting mostly trom unfrom the field connecting on seven
of seven shots he tried. He also
put through three of eight charity
toss tries.
Haggerty, substitute guard, got
all ot his 11 points after going
into the gome in tho third quarter. Haggerty sank two or three
shots tried from the tleld and hit
seven or 12 foul shot&amp;.
Hensler, meanwhlle, p u t
through his 10 markers on tlve
ot 11 fteld goals ho attempted,
Ermis, in leadi~ the Buckeyes
with 19. scored on flve ol14lield
goal attempts and nioe of 11 !l"ee
throws~ Fick, with 14 markers,
was th.a only other Nelsonvllle-York l)]lyer to get In double fig-

For Sale
Aluminum
Sheets

···e4 ,., .,. . . . .

TN-H c.n•ecr,•li"' tf•r• •• ·lk liM
"-4......,, •• ,_
l-t•1fi•M will leh , ... .,_ t l -

ip

the quarter,
The Buckeyes of a.ch Bob
Sheskey, however, bepn a rally
o! their own durirw the doalrw
mimrtes and led twice in the quar..
ter before Meigs got a 46-45lead
just before the third period efd.

Fer Sale

SMITH AUTO So\LU

1),

"""1 Accl...

P, MAtnM, OWIIIW

ICAIIAUI.,__

,,

.

~

I.

',.

�. . .

.

.

.... ....

-~ ·----·-

·-

'

.

------- _......

-· -· ..

11olzer Medical Center. l"lrat
Ave.. Glllipo1ia. Vlaldng houri

WA~T

l..f and 7.4 p.m. Ponmto onb""
-.trtcaWmL

S P·• · O.y

MH4f., ...
o.-iflM
• •• ••·
c.-u.,l
, a CllrfeC'
tl.....

Will ~. •cc••'•ll uM II 9 ' ·"'· f.,

- . Albert R. Jewel~ RuooellM.
For w,l'lt Ad S.. ... lco
5 corwt 1 , . , Wotd ,,.. ina.,tlon
Utile, Chrllllqlher Looa. Mrs.
MlniMuno Chert• 7Sc:
RGI&gt;ert L. Masten, Mro. ~ M.
12 ur•h per word tlwoo co.,.ocuMcQrlre. Mrs. Carrte T. Mein- tl"'• ln1ertion• .
hart, Mro. Gerald PuUinl, Law11 CO ... I per Word •ill COAIICulivo

NEW TRUCK paJll' has put a

new

or

The Rizer Oil Ccm196{1 model Dodge

on C&lt;mpo.,.. whlcb -

tilt-cab truck into operation. It is the
largest tanker of its type in the county. \
with a 2,000 gallon cap&amp;clty, and dual
equipped to haul gasoline and fuel oil.
Like other trucks of the tirm, It has a
radio dispatching an:l reeeivl~ unit. Riz-

II'IIOrtionl .
25 per r;:ont Oiuount on ,.id od1
•rod o411 ,_;d within 10 doy1 .
CARD OF THANKS &amp; OBITUARY

100, Corol J. WI..-an, Charles
$1 .50 for 50 wot d "'inimuM . Eo .
Allbri&amp;ht, Mrs. Artll..lr Gelwick.
eclll itiencd word 2c.
Mro. Jamoo C. McKnlgilt and In·
8LINO ,._OS
fant daughter, Mrs. James L.
Adclitlonol 25c Chorv• per Adv••·
Steele and infant son.

l\lol doll ...

eries in 1949 with one 111tall vehicle. mw
has three trucks in q&gt;eratioa trcm its
East Maio-St. , Pomeroy, headquarters.
Driver WUmer Halfhill Is beside the new
truck. Other Rizer OU Cmlpan,y tanker
drivers are George aOO John Miller.
Se ntlnol Photo.

lt30 o .rn . to 12:00 Nool'l

VETERANS MEMQRIAL
HOSPITAL

't:Admltted
- Nellie B r o w D.,
ro,y; Allen Johnam, Mid--'·
Dlocharged

-

Paul Forbes,

Gerald Graham, Donna BUlle,
VIola Moon.

MEIGS GENERAL HOSPri"AL
Admltled - None.
Discharges -

C.l .LLIPDLIS- Two men who the General Pershing, now unare prominent In river affairs dergoing repairs at pt, Pleastoda,y were mentloned ln the Rlv~
er News of the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune just 50 years ago,
One ia J, Mack Gamble of

ant, would re8Llme trips about
March 1. The Wood wUI oper~
ate in U!e Pittsburgh • Clnclnnad.

Clarington, a river correspondent · tor Waterways Journal; the
other, Captain Frederick Way,
Jr., Sewickley, noted river autb~
ority in the Sons and Daughters
of Pioneer Rivermen.
Here's what the Tribune River News had to say about each :

ble and the Pershing In the Pftts-

trade in oommandoCCaptaln Kim~
b.lrgfl~Parkersburg

trade.

tully watched. Federal olftciala
stated that dams wou.ld be operated more to suit packet ownen
and that every endeavor would
be made to have the nine-toot
stage maintained. On this statement, Liberty Transit otnc:lals
are going ahead with their plana

tor spring. It i1 now propoaed

FEB. 19, 1919 - THE LOUJS.. to have a boat out of Pittsburgh
vOle-Evansville Packet Co., has every four or five ~~ running
too, been a victim al the car to Charleston and Cincinnati.
"shortage," so much that they
The company's bolita have alwtthdrew their steamer Speed ready been rebuilt in expectation
from the LaulBYi1J.e. Evanaville of increased business w I t h
FEB. 17, 1919 - J . MACK trade tor the lack of business spring. The three vesseJs now
Gamklle of Claringtoo, a Uve before the Armiatlce was sign~ owned by the company - Gener.
wire, is one ot the best river eel.
als Wood, Crowder and Pershing
scl,"lbes to be round along the
The &amp;:. Louis Boat and Eng!- - have been made lnta model
Ohio River. Young Gamble is a neering Co., recently orpniz~ river packets ca,pllble of handrelative of the late Captain M. ed by E. A. Faust, has been a- ling SOO tons of freight each.
Gamble, well known in the good warded a emtract by the RaU ~
Other boats will be added to
dayS of the fast aidewheel pack~ road AdministraUon lor the em~ , this 1111mber as rapidly aa the
eta Courier and Diurnal in the struetlon or four sell..propelled trade )lstlfies the p&amp;rchaaea.
Wbeellng and Parkerlburgtrade. barges costing $244:,000 each. In fact, the company Ls even
The barges' are to have a ca ~ now preparj.ng an·inenal8 bl tnt
h:B. 18, 1919 - WE have pacity of 2.200 tons each and neet. The new schedule will be
reeelved irom Captain Freder- wl.ll be operated between Btrm~ undertaken March 1. The com~
Ick Way, Jr., a fine picture of ingham and New Orleans on the pany started the General CrowCaptain Emerson's towboat Fred Black Warrior River route. Each der out Tue.sda.Y for Charleston.
Hudson when the boat was sunk barge will bo e«J~iwed with two
In the Ohio River at Coraopolis. 400 horsepower motors.
FEB. 21, 1919 - CAPTAIN
Pa. on Dec. 20, 1918. Fred Way
The American Bridge Co., In John W. Lane, tormer owner of
ls a young authority on matters June 1918, broke all reeorda: of the Helen Lane, was in town on
pertaining tD steamboats and the _ . borge building DOt oo)y business. h is reported that the
river. He has a fine collection oo Western. rivers, but on all Helen Lane broke in two with a
~ boat pictures.
rivera. On June 30 last, they big trip oo board while being
launched their 14th barge for operated between New Orleans
NOW HERE ARE OTHER bits that month. They were all 175 and Morgan City, La. We have
of. interesting River News day teet long,
heard no particulars about the
by dey from tbo Tribune,
incident, If it be true.
FEB. 20, 1919- A DISPATCH
Manager Charles Art.hnr of
FEB. 17, 1919- THE GREENE !rom Pittsburgll Wednesday says the Acme Boiler 9lop of this
Lines will now endeavor to make ofticera of tile Uberty Transit clOy, has booll aoked by Captain
• trip and a half a week between Co. state they are at just the Seibolt for a bid on a battery of
Clndmatl, Charlestat, and Pom- begimlng of their olforts to re. two new boilers for the Uberty
eroy. After deserting the Porn~ vlve river trafl'tc on the Ohio Transit packet General Per shinE.
eroy Cif;y Wharf for over t w o River. Jantel!l M. Brown. new The boilers are tD be of the
yeara, the Green Line boats are general manager of the com- same alze as those now on the
now landing there again.
pany, was in Washington, D. C., General Crowder, that were built
recently In an effort to eecure at the Acme shop for the CourFEB. 18, 1919 - CAPTAIN Cederal cooperation. He was told Ier but were placed on the brand
Selbolt, manager of tranaporta- by olficlalo o1 tbo u. S. En. new Dunbar before the packet
UOn for the LibertY Transit Line, glneers Department and Depart. was rebuUt and her name changwas here Monday M business.
ment of Inland Waterways that ef- ed over to the Crowder. They are
He Lnformed Captain Wlll Guth- forts of his ~mpany to revive allowed over 200 pounds presrle that the Ger!eral Wood and river traffic were being care- sure. The boilen on the Gener~
al Persblng are oald to bo 32
years old. Gallipolis boilers al~
Matters
wayo give the boat satlsfactlca.

'

I Mon~tary
..caos..
I -

I

FEB. 22, 1919 -

DOWN

-&lt;lo))a,r

rlverman says the fast Urania
~ the Bay Line was unable In
bor boat deys to make two trlpo
pllll' week from Cincinnati to Iron-

I t 'ormer

bill
4 Me:al:ic1n coin
I Cer\llln fruit
12 Freneh coin
13 Shakftlpellrean river
ltAuam
silkworm

Ru..,,1~u-.

ruh.•r

2Had on
3 Farlhe!lt
outward
4 Sticky
substance
5 Cry of
hlo.cchanah
6 Great Rnef

IS Cr11ft
16 Dasa-runtled

24 Pt&gt;n name C)f
Charles Lamb
:?."o Solitary
26 Poker :o;takN&gt;

apin
20 Muculin@

28 Biblical

9Al~rian
!I.e

nickn.m•
21 C1vi1r
2Z Unequ1l

conditioM

24 Boy's name
261nspi.red with
reverence
21 Oriental coin
30Unfuten
32 Hint
J4 lntroduee, u •
coin in • dot
35 Rental

........

aport

10 Southt'rn
Fran«
11 Allll.'viatc
11 Loam pert
19Hangman'5
1peelalty
23 TranBctil.lfll

b-+-+-.J

eonlt"acbl

(comb. form)
IT JnaUI'Jflltl
(ab.)

JfTerm u.ed in
-boll

..........

41 Hart (.-t.)

a: Grownup

27 Murmur
~rdcu

29 Bird's homt·
Jl Prin~in~
ml!\lakl·~

l3 Toi l

38 Ne~ t lo
oW T or..l,

siniCei''A
tq)CC:itllty
41 Walking sbck!!42 A&amp;aa&amp;tant (a b. )
43 Take evenihJ(
meal

44 Shoahonoan
lnd.ianll

46 Honrt.ck
f(ARU'

47 Smell

48 Walk in watc.-r
SO SHaml.'

Boatooa, and Tolqraph b U I 1
maldng thla tlmo, with but few
landings on a lrip.
William McAdoo ~ tllat
Uncle Sam po1d W, S. Dick.,.

ol Konooo Clt;y tbo handoomo
..,m oC $458.SOO lor the Advance
and A. M. Scott and nino - ·

lull barges which was a Chrlltmas g1tt: for Dickey ot Jult a~
bout a fl,larter ol. ·a mllltoo dollars . Who NQ'S it doesn•t pay to
be a politiclan? - WaterwQs
Journal.
Whot shout Cpataln John ._,.._
ons of Middleport, who t.I'IIOid~
eel the Winifrede and a few pop~
tar barae• on Uncle Sa.m for a
fortune said to be $15,000. Now
Lym.s wants

to

lltii'Chaae

t he

Pomeroy-Mlddl_.t otreot railway.

458ird

•en Feminine

aJ!Pellation

S2Dirk

52~

M BUihy clump
55 Hudt heroine
51 y.cu.line
Lr+++~
..... (pl.)

SHiel""

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPlf AL
ADMITTED, Mrs. Cloytoo Hoger, Albany, Ohio.
DISCHARGED, Marjorie Bowen, Pt.. Pleasanti James Rouah,
West Columbia; Randall Mayes,
Ashton; A. G. Rayburn, Pt. Pleas-

ant.

Week's
Summary
Weather
T e m p e r~
aturea, predpitatiod, and weather conditions for each 24-hour
GALLIPOLIS -

period as recorded by Pete Me~
Cormick at Fairfield Weather

station.
DIIJ'

High Low
!lmdoy .
• ..... 41 28
-dey . . . . . . . . . • 47 29
Tueodoy • • • • • • • . • •

51 30

Wednesday • . • • . . . . 49

49 30
Fr~ . . . . . ,.. ..... a3 22.
Saturcloy • . . . •.•.•• :HI 25

Thuriday • • . . • • • • •

Average high lor the week this
year - 46.4 degrees. Jast year

- 46.3 degrees.
Average low for the week this
year - 26 degrees, last year -

24.8 degrees.
Total precipitation for t h e
week this year - none, laatyear
- 0.92 inches.
Total precipitation to date this
year - 4.01 inches. last year 2.81 inches.
Amual average prectpltaUon
- 38.40 inches.

Spring Coin Show
Planning Underway
PI', PLEASANT -

The OH

KAN Coin Club will hold a rqular busineaa meeting, social
hour and trading session Moodey evening, Feb. 24, at tho TuEi&gt;dle-Wel Manor. Tho ooclal
ltour and tradbtc: aeu!on Ia plan-

ned for 6:30 p.m. 'Ibe Plbllc is
Invited.

The club aloo wW ......,..
Ito plomlna o( tbo llxtll Amllal

!t&gt;rlni

Coin 011 AprU 2627, at the Moooe Loqo. Following tile bullnelt IIIMliDe. tho

50-lot coin auctlal wiD bo conducted.

Allpro~pecdvenewmem­

bon are urliOd to attend.

In 1942 a J _ ... oubmll"lno

ftrod 25 oholll at ,. oil roflnery
near Santa Barbara, cam•• the
tint enemy attack on American
soli In World War D.

Serling Will Visit
University Campus
ATHENS -· Tolorialoo wrltOTi&gt;roW&lt;:er RodSorllngwillvillt
tbo ado Unlvoralty wnpuo Sindey and !olmdoy (Feb, 23./14)
lllldlr aulpl.cea of the studtnt

Govem..- Lacture Sorleo.
Sorllnc,

-hat&gt;·

boll known

tor hla television teriea.

•'fwl~

SHOW TIRE SALE

H••vr. 411f,, ••fN ....,
.. W uiJ r J 11rl-

Jan. 22 near Can Tho, Vlelrwn,
•s a mediante.

who passed away one year ago,

Fob. 22, 1968.
Deep in theheartllesapicture.
Of a loved one laid to rest.
ln memory's frame we shall

...,..:-'::.... .,... ..........
Ll•l
Pullr

2-2Z.ltc
IN LOVING memory of our deer
father, J arne s Thomas Edwards.

,...,., ..... , ...
-GUARANTEEDPHONE 992·211M

.......... ltrtla .......
• ~11

f."••u•. hUt "
t l , . - ........ .
MCOIE'S

-

124 • . MAIM,

of

Thanks

I WOULD like to thank everyooe
for the maD)' cards. ll.a~~rera
and calls received durina: my
hospitalizallon. Ms special
thanks to blood donors, Dr.
Davis, Or. Kemp, Dr. Lobo
and nurses of Holzer and Cabell Huntington Hospital. Your
thoughtfulness wHI always be
remembered.
Mn. Elbert "Ada" Taylor.
2-23-ltc
WE EXTEND our sincere thanks
to the re5ldents of Mei.ga, Ft.
Pleasant al'kl Mason, lor the
wonderful help we received
when we were len. homeleu
on Christmas Day when ftre
destroyed our home. The contribut.iOI\I!i received were deeply appreciated. Thanks to each
and everyone.
Jack L. King ard Family.

Z-23-ltr&gt;

TO THE MANY friends end rela,.

ForS.IeorTrldl

DIRECT DRIVE
CHAIN SAWS

1

~ack
W. Canoy,
.
Mgr.

.

H2·2181
Opon Til 6 O..ily

,_..
- - "'"' lit*&amp;
Clll...-r.
1....

..........

Card of Thanks
I WISH TO express my sincere
thanka and gratitude to my
marlY friends and neighbors

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

EAGLES ClUB
STEAK DINNER

.ft. 2~

1:00-6:00 P.M.

Melf'lb.n and Fomllin
Welcome

11*__. l l l f l t _ ........ _

H

I

poultry, box 188. Athenl, Ohio.

l
I
l

pho110 59:1-7831.

..... ,Ill.
.....
s....

=m;

Iandin&amp;.

radio,

Pontiac s~:;5

Catalina Conv. Coupe. This is a superb condition one own~
er new Pontiac Trod... in. You'll have to see it to oppre-

ciato ito condirion.

NOW

i:~ed

Bui(k

66

NOW

l

....

w

64

$1,595

~;5

Ford
Buick

Adults $1.25
Children 75c

a atBVIIOLET

~ plcmp
lnlolt; bill bed. PrkOd ID oell.
Delbort J,nlon, l'olilabrl.
Oblo.
,....,

GIDI Club Sunday
I p.m.

$1,695

64

Was
$1795 $1,695'

1911 RAMBLI!lR, I eyllnder• ..,_
SEE Nl!liOUilB llulltfloW .....
eulllnl baJ.
bmiatlc, . . . 1181 PonU.. $10 IIALE8 piJ for llalldllll yaar IIOml,
Pl1tae
.
.
HI-lle
catallno, v.a outomatlc $11111.
Lq lillie loa mllfNt
In .... condition, l-11.4fe -Bailey,
Darwin, . . . ... XING T!OtBoNE. ._.lent
coadWan. pbone 11N117.
1147.
1-ISap
WILL DO MWIDI II ' - IIppert. poo:bll, Plllhtl. lltll OLliS, tiUlll ..u. MIXI!lD-HA-Y,-JIIc-1-lille-,=
hellllllltll. lllentlooo, ole.
..,
...
to
Germany, ...
Mrt. P'rtddle 'lllabll. ..._,
.....
2-a.tte
- · Doold Balrer. .,........
Phone 7'1Ut151.
.....,
WWI&lt;:

---

VACANCY for tiN o1t1o11J .....
pie, Pnllr pdtlllo ....
llenll. l'lllao ..... _
, .... .
It&amp;&amp;

BEELINE F AIIIIION lt)olloll,

womon w11o lUre meetlnc peo.
pie, llbarlng IUD, ~ tl1e
lolat guarllllleed BeeUne fa.
........ Supplernlnl ,.,... ,.

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

1491 lllVI: 14911 .... .,_
mRy Income. EnJa1 port time . . . , _ lime ... , _
career with above averace
'lrllet. Wo ..... I - ~
ear~s. No delivery no colledlono. 1llltr II your _ . . . . . . . . , . . . Jiffar
tun1ty for oueeea II ,... ""'
lltiJir 111br • II. 2-7.aatp
•!llllnl to work "" it. Phonl!
Nl-fiOS. Jean orn-u.
r.aatp 11ft U. ZIG ZAG

-Wanted
--To Buy

ONE oR TWO bed"""" traDer.
Elmer Eckleo, Star llaute.
Cralpvllle, 'II'. Vo. Iaiii.
S.U-IIp

AlfftQUBB, ~. fll:dl ..
dibia eNWs, old .....
• • clodll, ..... lM
R
Ill 1llllo" 'lWNol.

••lllf

..

· -·a L-·

... ,. ..

................

.m.
,.,..,

GBO. ·llollll'BTI'III l r -

r.rr &amp; Vii ZUilt

·-

It!..,._,.

.

. ...
.....

~~~=1~:--·
..... .
. ..llftl
IORAUwol-foe'I!C,

,._ - - Will! Blue IAII·

...

CUBI&amp;ilbll,

u•

~=

CUimSS CATIU: llnod1nc
lonll:e. . . . 1'lrbr ...
- PolllOIVl' ... ..,..,_ CooJ.
Yllle .... llllllli.
1-1*-

ON USED CARS

]
::

·-

arne

.:·•

1967 Doda•-------~-------$2395
1967 Dodga. ______________ $2195
Polaro

:••••1

4 Dr. Sedan. Auto. frons. P.S, &amp; P,.B. Radio. Dark red finish

11a1111 ....., 11111er
a.mtatloa, Stewart, Oblo,

............

!IPOIJTING, ........ lllfl .....
petdrf, ... 1'11110¥'111. by
... llaur. alnlon
Plefte. . . . . . . . . . ..

S.IUle

-C. IIIWIP'OIID

Coronet Station Wagon. P .S. Auto. trans. Radio

I'

••

lj'

••
••
••
:~

c.

,.._

1966· Plymouth----------· $2195

Clean interior, good w. w_ tires. R&amp;H.

1965 PLYMOUTH ...................... $895

Valiant 4 Or., 6 cyl., automatic trans.,
radio ond heater, ;rey finish .

•st
·-------------------------- ·

.,

, .,

((;r/r/1(((
Hf J~

•o

0

~

J cJI

Golaxie 2

Ford Mustang. ______ $1495

2 Dr. H.T. 4 spd. V8 •"'Ii no

TRUCKS

••
••••
••

.

1'68 Chevrolet•••• ~-------S2195
1.963 ' ..
$1595

••••
:1

}) Tan PU. VB engil18. Auto. trans. Radio. Low

:i,.

••

1 Ton Stako.

..••
;:

,.

;:

mllt.agt

.Dual whoolo. Low

'' '

•I

I I lie

·

shuto

J..... llelrlt-

AIR OONDri'IONING Reflipr·
orotkio, New • - · ' -

IIHII'II.

f . lie

RBADY - liiiX cottemo dellv·
.... rllltl to ,..,. project.
JPut "'"' 1117. ..... ....

~-"*--· Oooc·
loll ..., - 1111 Co., Jllddlo.
port, Oltlo.
• • tie

..

111J11C11:'1' PIIICI llnltule •
- lblrd llotr ..... .......

fllbr P't1rtlllaN,

weight
5. Victuals :
Informal
9.

Stork's

..

--··~

IIACIIINI!S, l'fllilll'
......... , 111. lllllill. WY S.

:· :·
:~

material

MIDDLEPORT - 30 rocm brick, ·•
20 rented, BAR D-1-2-3. Hot
heat. Good lnvoolment, .;;; :
nlce return. Ideal for coq,le.
Onil' $10,000.00

3

12. Female

deer

17. Hll -

tnil

ton's

Along

hidden
para -

4. Pronoun

13. Kind of
break
H . 12 midnigh t
to 12 noon
15. Ministers
16. Soft, subdued shades

19. Acronym

for an
invasion

- over
I whitewashes 1
6. Breach
7. Opening

18. Ripped

22. Noi :;y

32.

24 . Unhappi ness

26. Father of

and spreading out

Ody s~ u!l

:H. English

8 . Lager anct
stout
9 . Scabba1·d

Intense

;w_ Hefdta·
lion

sound
36. Useleealy

county

3i. African

antelope
4.0. Append
U . Fiah

nur~

SYRACUSE

SHOWDOWN

Your New Chevrolet
At A Lower Anniversary Prlctl

-,;:-~,....,r-r;-..,;.,.~

Reverberate

VISIT YOUR FAVORITE
SALESMA.M AT

21. Pinochle

tonn

Pomeroy Motor Co.-

23. Scorches
25. Dirties
28. Tidy

Yoll" Chevrolet Dealer

ofUru.

Open Eveni111s Til 8

33. Removes
silt, mud,

992·2126

etc .
35. Seaman
37. Indian

coins : abbr .
38. Awaits
39. Word with
keeper or
craaher
41. Elevations

~lg!OOID~"-Jwowl' 1-.J,_
llnltnmbtetheee ...... Jumblet.
one letter to eaeh square, to
form four ordinary word• •

42. T&amp;bleot
contents
43. Units of
thew~k

I.«Sl

DAILY CRl'I'TOQUOTE- Ho,..•s how to work it'
AXYDLBAAXR
I•

LONGFELLOW

One letter .!limply stands for another. In lilts sample A Ia used
for the three L'.. X for the two 0'11, etc. Single letters, apo•·
trophies, the length and formaUon Of the word• are o.n hints
F.ach dey t.he code lettera are different.
·

I . J

i

A Cl")'pio&amp;"nn•

A.G

KNA

MSD

IIIII .. ,lee. Wt 01,...
.........
...lie

QD.J AN JH

FV

QNH

MJ L M S

Q.loo-n

DAGLXS

NQOLM

MG

MDBB

SFKVDBT .

II

VSNI

YHt.en~ay•• Ceyptoquottn AUTOBIOGRAPHY IS AN t."Nw
RIVALLED VEHICLE FOR TELLiito THE TRUTH ABOL"T
OTH~ P~OPUl.-GUED~

'

For Sale , '

,.. ,d~ HELEN or VIRGIL TEM"ORD ·• ..

... !IDfl ..... ,, i4Me

VAlUE

.'?

Violently

29. After do!!
31. Oriental

trimmings

barge

IT'S OUR OWN

dlse

5.

work

Many More At Baraain Prices!

brew
letter

with

... , . ftllrle ..... Ptitll'

..,, Allllwbroil Sbipr .....

••
.,

ness

15. He-

expression
2. Turned

!lUll

IIIWING

.....

bO\V,' i
I . Contorted
fncla !

relative
10. Tropical

20.

l't'!treat
Iii. Stlll-

IJIOth

Crill ......

Ilion. nrvlee.

Impala cpe., local owner car, new cor trade•in , Less
than 23,000 miles, w· w tires, like new; 396 VB engine, 3 speed man . trans. Vinyl interior, Maroon finish, radio and heater_ Deluxe equipment. One of the
cleanest 66 mcdels in Southeastern Ohio.

11. Snug

informal

"

1966 CHEVROLET ..................... $1795

31. Neighbor

Hardtop. P .S. Auto. trans. Radio

19~5

I
'
I

44. Clothing :

'

- '

Safari Station Wagon, local 1 owner car, white over
dark blue finish . Clean interior, like new w-w tires,
automatic, power steering ond brakes. Rodio.

DAILY CROSSWORD
..t.CROSS
1. Small

"

Don't • Short-Changed
Get
the...... .. ... .Deal In Area
..

1965 PONTIAC ....................... $1695

'~

WARRANTED
USED
CADILLAC

OPEN EVES. TIL 8
992·5342
POMEROY

good tires,

·--------------------------

30. Two·toed

lnii!T. 01111

'

Ii ·/1966 ford--------------- $1995
Dr.
Ii

AOOIIOND:B

c............

Fury Ill 4 Dr. Sed111. Auto. trono. P.S. &amp; P.B. Air conclirioning

1:

••

-r

s.m..

limp
partl.
·
-..
1Meliltmie1o.
Rutllllll, · -Lo11111 TmtiCe.
1-IJ.IIIp

POMEROY BUSINESS SECTION l!
- 7 room brick bulldl.,_. .s.- ;.
000 aquare teet ol Boor ap~~ce. ~:
Barpln, .... 000.00.
••

elltcll, ~ ,I ,_... Ill Ill ..
mllra Wlli.Itl•, - 1111Iu&amp;o
- · ........,_ mllra ,_,
·
· -4111.
· Jilt
• ......
IAft .. twill ., SYRAClSE - Modern3 bedromn
insulated home, one floorplaiL
lllfl ........._
Nlee lot with plnu 1 breu..
._ . , .. or el. ff
w.,, double prqe. Askhw
... 111liiiiii.......... 1••
f20,000 00.

1964 FORD GALAXIE ... ...... .......... $995

500 H.T. Cpe . V8 engine, automatic. White finish.

.

Motor Salu

::

,,

HOBSTETTER
REALtY

4 Door, Local 1 owner cor, 6 cyl. engine, powerglide
trans. Turquoise over white finish . Spotless clean interior_ R&amp;H.

1966 Cadillac: Coupe DeVille •........... $3500

Star Chief 4 dr. Sedan. Beautiful light blue original finish .

I

..
,.... ..
.

Re•l Eat8te For ~

1964 CHEVELLE MALIBU ............... $995

Whi.te ~ith beige inter ior, full power equipment,
rod1o, ftnted gloss, w/s/w tirn, Climate Control airconditioning, 26,000 miles, one o:wner, new Cadillac
trode .

Fully •quipped.

.:

,.
,. ]
••

OOilO MY, llni lllfl ......
,._~~~~-., .... per
&lt;lllllii&amp; to ~~~~t.· Rilmw
IDiilllll, or Pl1 ..... el
1lllllld, . . . . • • Ool . . . . S.IHe

Impala 4 dr. Locol 1 owner cor, VB engine, powerglide, radio and heater, good tires, blue finish.

Gold with matching interior, full power equipment,
radio, tinted gloss, tilt &amp; telescope sleering wheel,
w/ s /w tires, Climate Control air·conditioning 1 one
owner, New Cadillac trade .

Was
$1095 $995

l.AIIP8 electrlfled.

WlNil80II boule INk.
IOaiJioel; , _ . . . , . ; ; '
ror . . or tut ,..,. ••
·~

....... ..... .... •.. . -·

1963 CHEVROLET ............•........• $695

MOW

Pontiac

••

••
·•

1• WAUIU'I' lllnO, Allftl

Convertible, local 1. owner car. Super Sport model,
buc.ket seats, good trres , 6 cyl., 3 speed, floor shift,
rod1o . Popular Model, special price.

1968 Cadillac Calais H.T. Sedan ......... $5300

Grand Pric• 2 dr . Hard Top. Air Conditimed . Bucket seats
with full consul. Automatic. PS &amp; PB.

luslneu

••••

-

1963 CHEVY II ......................... $695

Full power equipment, rodio, tinted gloss, w/s/w
tires, Climate Control oir~condit i oning , white with
turquoise interior. Very low mileage .

$1,495

POMEROY, OHIO

11
IIOVliB IN 1'appMr 1'111111. I~
..... ,.....,. boule, bini ....
lilocli:
......
Ill Route '· Clll
Oioltllle
..,.,._
I-2Hip

3 Seat Wagon, VB engine, automatic trans. Power

..

!l

-

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

1967 Cadillac Coupe DeVille ............ $4500

Pontiac

'

:

1965 CHEVROLEH DOOR ............. $1295
6 ctl.., std. trans., white with blue interior, 22,000

HOW

... """ ' .- IIi
lfelp ·-::
""'"n '•
Counlf, rtUiillable
........
••
s.:aw~p

sharp!

actual milu. Good one!

HOW

-

ms.

;

Full power equipment, radio, tinted glou, whitewall
Poly ..Gios tires, tilt &amp; telescope steering wheel ,
Cruise-control, auto _ trunk relegse power door locks,
white vinyl top over green metallic fin i sh, matching
green interior . Locolly owned.

Grand Prix 2 dr. Hord Top. Another one owner new Pontiac
.trade in. Really sharp.

loot Jot. Growl IIIII, Mldoleo •
port. Pia........ 1-11... :

" TO 100 ACRE I"A1III with -

Real

1968 Cadillac Fleetwood Broqham
4 Door Sedan ..................... $6500

-•

I4Nic

Quality Selection
Right Nowl

steering and brakes, good tires, radio and heater.

S~orts Wagon 9 pass, This is the popular 9 pass . Wagon
w1th skyroof. It's a one owner new Buick trade•in . Fully
equipped.

Pontiac

1966 CHEVROLET IMPALA CON ....... ,$1795

327 engine, oulo. trans., P .S., P .B ., white with bloc~
vinyl top, 17,000 actual miles, local 1 owner car.

2 Or. Htp. , full power equipment , comfort control air•
conditioning. Radio, tinted gloss WW tires 1 0
' ll
d .
'
,
wner,
new C a d• oc; fro e~m, 9,500 octual milet. .

$895

Was
$1795

At lower- Than-Usual Prlcesl

1968 Cadillac El Dorado ................ $6500

Country Sedan Sta. Wagon . VS. Auto. trans . Power steering

$1,995 64

~i ld~at 4 dr: H~rd Top. Spotless burgondy with black vinyl
l~tertor. Th11 II a one own•r skarp trade-in that we can

h 1ghly r•commend.

i

Custom LeSabre 4 dr. Sedan. Factory Air Conditioned.
S~orlding OYiginal gold finish with matching bud:skin all
vmyl seat. Exc::eptional condition .
HOW

$2, 295 65

Full operating Consul. Shows good core.

wltlt AioDe
HI.a,

PL1rMOIJTII 44iar' II
power ~.a.-tiC

67

HOW

5
1 ~.!d 2~~.~!~.~S~J~~~O~t~f•~!.

S.U4tp

"!'!"!'

7GMI.

Dinn•r• T a Go

•m.

I

Buick

Was
$1795

IOOd &lt;OIIIIItlon, flllllil. . . . m ROOM boule, balli. 10 • 110

WOMEN. BIG 1\lonoy. studio Girl

band, lither and brother, WU111111 Henry Ewinfl. Wo ohall
alwQs remember your WCJOoo
dlrrul acts ol. kirdnesa.
Tbe Ewing Fomlly.

N DAY old or otartod leg..,
horn pulloto, both floor or cage :
,.....nawlloble. Poultry houo- ·•

65

$1,795 65

&amp;

TJIIIBE..- bliiiJied lpoil- 11A811 FIOOLE, ~ lliii"'IIIIIY liDllll, tomllll acale G. D.
- ' · 1M Ma1b1nr Aft.
A. E., .... "*- PHI 81)'1"11,
Portlml. 11111111.... Rt. 1111,
.... mile bollllr lbmllniGOd
pl&lt;kup " - ;

Pontiac

tsh wtth. matching tnterior. Power steering. Power brakes.
Automat. c trans.

For Sale

HOW

MOW

~atali.no 2 dr. _Har~ Top. Beautiful original turquoi·se fin·

Z-23-ltc
wolltr, llooll, l'tlmllln. JiflPOI'ATOEI,
"*10.1
.... paltllll. Otllel ell ......
a.- Ptdll, 111111&amp;4
I IIIoob ~ PwlWiOJ pill
lf.lltfe
Gllb,~INDitiJL
to • p.m.
......
- roaD pldoup, .... .....
POUR ROOM fllilllW liPid- lloiD, .... 0. .... .....
.IMp
- - ,._ ...... I-ll&amp; 11'1....

lranmil....,,

Help W•ntecl

.... d.,.U, o( .... beloved bull-

66

1Jw aDd automatkrl. Modem

_ _ _ _..:.Z-23-1lc

modllte big proRt openlnga for
poarQo plan operaton.

tng. Power brolces. Auto. trans. Extro sharp.

BlAETTIIAIS

NM*

HARIIONY

Buick Just Arrived $1,795

~eSobre Cuitom 4 dr. Sedon. One local owner. Power steer•

PH, 99:1-2143

MI.as Ami Durst. Pcmeroy,

Al.aotm~

Catalina 4 dr. Sedan. One local owner. Power steering .
Power brakes. Auto. trans. Shows excellent care.
NOW

From lht ........ Truca ""
B~•r Jleclator To Thl
..
hallest H....r eo....
·~

a..

to ......
... · lf.lltfe
for the:ir kindnes&amp;. syrq;aathy, 'l'IIAILER ID1'&amp; Boli'l JkHio
cards and noral offerings exClcl, . , . _ '*Ill tllllllio
terr:led to me during the death
Rt. Dl, ..........

Pontiac A~~:~$1,395

66

PUR1111111D IIIII tmfaiiiiiNd
lpoiblilll'"·

65

.,

liN
UM"URNI.II•
... lulll. Amold .,.
..... Ill B. llaiD .......
rrt1

HOW

.
•

........

door bird tap, 117 ........,

--

lywood, callt.,_91605.

Count On Karr &amp; Van landt
FOf The Finest

EIPEIIENCED

• • aiBVII(li.ET ..... -

$140 50
Aa low aa .. ..
POMEROY

Mony Modolo

OK USED CARS

BLAETTNAR'I

t1 vas who remembered me on
m,y 901b birthday wtth card.a,
llowen, clldy and cake, I

Holl)'wood Cosmetics needs
wcmen In and aroun! PfJII'leroyMlddleport. Full or part time.
No operience required. No
territory reltrictlona. Take
ordera IIQ'Where. Hl&amp;:hest pro-ftts ~ to 60 per cenL 300
Good H-keeplng IPlJrOVod
~osmetlcs. Everythingturniahod. Credit tJIIAnlded, No otoek
to carry. No franchise fees.
No stock hweatment. For tull
inlonn.atlon by mall, plus 3
Cree samplea, writeStudloGirl
Hollpood Formula, Dept M197, 11481 Hart St., No. Hol-

40'·

POMEROY

Dearest father we are r.o sed.
of Ill)' dear husbaOO, Charles
lonel&gt; and l&gt;lue
H. Jooea. I wish to eldend spe-It is your blrtb;lay, and we can..
cial thanks to Dr. Ray Pickens
not spend it with you.
am all my co-workers at VetNot a gift nor a card we can
erans Memorial Hospital. It
glve yootoshowyooourlove.
helps eo much to know that
For you are with our heavenly
friends 11hare my sorrow.
lather. up above.
Golda Jones.
When our work is done, we
--=~:--Z-23-ltr&gt;
pray God wants us, too
Notice
So we can come LCl there and
AUCTION EVERY Friday nlgbL
be with .)'OU
George's Auction House, RutAnd ask God to send an angel
land. Consignments welcome.
to whisper in your ear
Forest George, Mgr.
How much you are loved and
missed down here.
By Daughters, Gaye Livingston, am Alyce Schneider and
son, Kenneth Edwards, Sr.
2..23-ltc

Used Ctrs

Complete Front·End
and Brake S••lce

106 E. Moln Po-roy, 0.

POMIIOY

Y••· We Han The•
HOME LITE

keep it,

Because she was one or the
besL
Ralph E. Lee and Family.

Usetl Cars

POMIIOY MOTOR CO.

99~326

2-21-:Ilc

.
~

•'

'

'

' - ,.
.

w. .

~

.. ..
,

~~

-

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

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

. ..
'

Use• Cars

S5.55

OML
t.ltl' ·~!·!~ T••

Plat~

Card c' Thanks

B. Bevan, Route I, Wll 11~
to the 89th Engineer Boitalloo

Used Cars

WIMII All1n11t1t

tNM•,

J'75• • Whlta 11 ....11•

IN MEMORY of Roberta M. Lee

llaht Zone," will 1pelk at 8:15
p.m., ~ In the Baker Cenwr Ballroom. A roceptlon will
follow In Voiat llall. He will aloo
be a gueat at a coltee receptioo,
9,30 "' 11 p.m., llmdey, In the
Alumni Lounge o( Boker -Center. WO~ANNOT ad-te)y ""'"
ptesa our deep IPPTeCladon
for the many k1111!.-11e1 exten:led to us durl... ttia tUneaa

ASSIGNED AS MECHANIC
CROWN CITY - Arll\l' !t&gt;e·
clallst Five Michael D. Bevan,
21, oon ol Mr. and Mro. Dwieltt

Usecl Cars

Used Cars

UPERT

.

SPECI~L

In Memory

Card

Used Cars

.

S..tt.~tdor

18

ton and 000 "' -tlngton. ll
kept the oldowhoeloroFleetwood,

(coil. ) 7 Individual
8 Equals
18 Penetrate
~I'IIOnl

AN OLD

Cora W.iagtns.

Tho SUilllay Tlm•..-,incl, SUnday, l' ebna'"l' 23, 19611

ID -

•

OFFICE HOURS
S:30 ' ·"' · to 5:00 P·"' · Dolly

\

__.,... ·- -·

:Business Services

a.••• !l•llctti-

Dll&lt;har&amp;l&gt;l
0,,. of Pulf)kotiOI'I
Rt.:GULATI0t4!.
Mro. Keith G. Aelker, Jr •• Mro.
The P_U,Mr ,,,.,.~, the r1tht
GIIDI G. Borbr, Mro. - . . . •• oil II g,. "'ioct '"r odJ 41••-41 eb·
Beesle, lira. Jamea A. Ferrell, jectlo~~~el . Tho ~Usher will '"''
Mro. WUUam Fllhor, Deborah ~ '",.'"'~'· ... - · thel'l ....
L. ~. WOllam II, Hutcbln- IM.....,ICI il'llariiOI'I.
RATES

rence Reed, Mra. Forrest E.

.... ---

AD

INFORMATION
DI.AOLINt:S

A~o

Roach, Mro• .Jobm&gt;o E. Thomp.

-

ant Ads Bring[Top Grade Results

[HOSPITAL NEWS]

Fllbll&lt;alkln ol ............. ••
,._...... unUI further nollce.

~

·~ ' 11!1 .... . .!ri

.

,,.pqiJO
fOifO_UIIN•• . . . . . WSIJ1
•
':I;" .

~

....... .,.E""wnilaUr

1 '

~ -~

,

...
&lt;

�-·..

-··-.

·--· - ~-···-

...

----·--·-~--

In Our Town
GALLIPOLIS -

When W....... eomoo -

e111

-·-

l!llrilll be far bo-

hllld?

• 10 - far belllnd? WCll!dor bopplmod 10 a.at lOur
IDchel tA. IDDW tbat waa torecut for lut weekend far our area?
All I set are ~atiool u annrer1 u queldona. ThNe modTWELVE NEW manbers were iaitllled into the c•mpoi.IB Elks Lodge, No. 1&amp;7, in a recent
ceremDIIY at the Elkl Hall conducted b)' Past EJOllted Rulers James Robioaon. SytvanGardaD',
Irvin Folden. Bob Sheets and Judge Robert S. Betz. This Max Tawney photo &amp;holts, ftnt row,
Bemy caldwell, James DeMonic, John Tunny, John Russell, 8Ul Ruaaell and Wayne Love, new
members; rear, Junes Robinsoo and SylWJJ Gardner, past rulen; Frucis Kinsky, Jerry Nibert.
Dr. Donald Thaler, Paul Plymale, Richard Northup, Joe Barsotti, new members; and Irvin Folden, Bob Sheets aOO Robert S. Beb:, past rulers.

Heart Sunday Captains, Workers
In Gallia Rural Areas Announced
captain; Mrs. William Houdt,
clt;y chairman.
The rural eaptains and work- Mrs. Robert Hall.
Ohio - Mrs. Richard Simms.,
ers are:
captain;
Mrs. Carl stapleton,
Addison - Mrs. Earl Jones,
Mrs.
Delma
Angel, Mrs. Juanita
captain; Mrs. Janet Nibert, Mrs.
Cameron Sands, Elsie PoJysoo, Craig, Mrs. Flizabeth Butler.
.!ttring{ieid - Mrs. Lonnie
Mrs. Daisy Tabor, Mrs. Ewvand
Burger,
captain; Mrs. Kall BurSmith, Karen Jones, &amp;Isle Jones,
leson.
co-captain;
Mrs. Don DenLoralee Tucker, Janettee Smith.
ney,
Mrs.
Bill
George,
MiASBet·
Cheshire- Mrs. Gladys Rife,
captain; Doris Zerkle, J e r r y t;y ::Jddmore, The Bidwell I v y
Neal, Mildred Scott, F.arnestine Club, Mrs . Bruce Stoot, Mrs.
WUls, Lucille Mulford, He i e n loren Neal, Mrs. Puul Saunders,
Smith, Donna Misner. Katherine Mrs. Charles Burnett, Mrs. William Hall, Miss Marge Foster,
Metzger, F.arldean Sl;eggs.
Clay - Mr&amp;. James N. M. Mrs. Roy Burger, Mrs. Martin
Davis, captain; Mrs. Lester An- Hash, Mrs. Carl Hall, Mrs. Blll
gel, Mrs. Wayne Baker, Mrs. Phillips, Mrs. Judy Hamilton,
Helen Halley, Mx'B. Earnestlne Mrs. Bulah Cremeans, Mrs. Tim
Mooney, Mrs. James Sa\Uiders, McClelland.
Perry - Mrs. Amis Wood,
Mrs. William Grifflth, Mrs. Da.
vid Tawney, Mrs. Bill Unroe, captain; Mr. Dave Jones, Mra.
Alma 8auffer, Mrs. Paul BurnMrs. Hud Saunders.
ett,
Mrs. Jack Henson, Mrs.
.Green - Mr. and Mre. Glenn
Vernon
FaUon, Mrs. Carl ElPowell, captain; Mra. Hobe Foster, Mrs. Iahmael Gillespie, Mrs. lis, Mrs. David Altizer, Mrs.
Clyde Day, Mrs. Estella Layne, Lawrence Akers, Mrs. Melvin
Mrs. Roy Hemphill, Mrs. Glenn Gilbert.
Raecoon - Mrs. Edna GraGraham, Mrs. Charles Steger,
ham,
captain; Mrs. Willard Cop.
We do! State Farm pays the Mn. Harry Pitchford, Mrs. Bud
whole bill lor such things as McGhee, Mrs. John Nibert, Mrs. ley, Mrs. Frank Petry, Mrs.
gasoline delivery, on-the· Earl Smith, Mrs. Walter Allie, Wendell Evana, Miss Grace ThOspot mechanical first aid Mrs. Annabelle Ball, Mrs. Elva mas, Mrs. Ruby Hurt, Mrs. Marand towing to the nearest Holbrook. Mrs. James S1ddmore, vin Bailea, Mrs. D. K. Graham,
place where repairs can be Mrs. Earne'Bt Watts, Mrs. Tom Mrs. L M. Frost, Mrt. Glena
made . Yet th1s valuable Crossen, Mrs. Douglas Darst, Ward, Mrs. Helen Conner,
coverage may cost you less Mrs. Larry Enns, Mrs. Jay Robert Ruff.
than a penny a,---.. Sims, Mrs. Bill Joe Evans, Mrs.
Walnut - Mrs. Dan Notter,
day ... one more ...._.
captain;
Mra. Paul Stewart, coCharles Carmichael.
eaptain;
Mrs. Mlldred Wells,
11ood reason to Kananga - Mary Clendennin,
msure your car
Mrs. Woodrow Pope, Mrs. Clyde
with State Farm .••, .......c\ captain; Mrs. Daisy Adams, Elliott
Jr., Mrs. Earnest Baker,
Uada Adams, Mrs. James Dal.
Call me today!
Mayes, Miss &amp;le
Mrs.
Thurman
ton, Mrs. Otarles
Reynolds,
Luman.
Joyce Reynolds.
Greenfield - Mra. Theodore
Guyan - Mrs. Houck Beaver,
Pori! C•ntral Hot• I &amp;ldt•
Ball,
eaptain; Mrs. Neva Warncaptain;
!\Irs.
Ralph
Workman,
Sec001d A.v•nu•
Phon• .«6·.4290
Norris Carter, Mrs. Bobby Hal- eke.
Horn• .t46...t511
Morgan - Mrs. Marie Tho-ley, Mrs. Eugene Small, Virgie
Ga llipoli li p 64103 Montgomery, Mrs. Truman mas, captain; Mrs. Clara FisJt..
er, co-captain; Mrs. Kemeth
9Jeets.
Harrison, Mrs. Edith Bane, Ward, Mrs. Robert Neal Hash,

GALLIPOLIS - Mrs. Myrtle
Neal. chairman of the rural work·
ers for the 1969 Gallia County
Heart Funrl campaign, announced captains and workers ror today'S "Hearl Sunday"' campaign.
Cit;y workers were aJ'U'IOUnced
last week by Mrs . Carl Bias,

STILLED I

WHO IETI ITUCI
WITH THE IILL?

Mr•.

c.

Caroll K. Snowden

-

toreeallera pt me. 1bto" .., a 7G

om -

~
preelpltalloll lanl8ht and . . 80 Kind ~ a hlt....wnioo alboatlon, U yoa all&lt; mo.

JOI"-.......,

cbaJic:e - · - ·

I wish weather observers wwldD't pt eo excl""! -....,.
see IIJIIlethinl: oo the radar. Laat week, that snow 11111t have
been a bunch of crows on tbe scope.
NOTHING PROVOKE&lt;; ME MORE - Than to turn on tho television to watch one fA. my favorite llbow1 and have a Special ereet

me -

""""l'"ctediT· lwatd! .. row ....... -

week.

I turned the set on the other eveaing to watch The Qrtalder
and then was Perry Como emceeins some kind ot a aport&amp; awards show. I like to wateb the Avengers em MondiJ, Jt. Takes
A Thiel, on Tueada:, Name ~ the Come .., FrldaJ - - . rm
mt covering a basketball game - and Mamfx on Saturday.
I HEAR TilAT Don Maanonl, former GoiJla Academy lll8l&gt;
School and Concord College cage atar, is teachinc tcbool ewer
in Maryland. Don' a a nne fellow. l drove to Pt. Pleaunt several times a week to get a paper - before the bridle fell to keep up with West VirKfnia In order to keep up with Don and
the Concord Moontain Lima.
Happened 10 walk Into the Walhlnlfon Sdlool &amp;YJII me daJ wbllo
Dm was sWl home on the mid..year break and tbere he ns coachIng a bunch ol junior hlll&gt; boys. Not all 8IIOd baaketlwU pla.yers
become good coaches but in my opinion, Don Magrwrl will be a
ROOd coach.

TENTH DISTRICT CONGRFS'IMA!I CLARENCE E. MILLER recomb" had tho o!
tho Memben D1Di1w In the U. S. Copltal. Emoot
Petl....r has been eq&gt;loyed there more than 30 yoaro. Tile award wao a ploce oC ...... INn
Praident Ntxon•s bUgu:n1 platf«m slcMd bJ 88 members of CCqrtl.t. "Endl'1 t. atlaltblllll -:
~ a tepnt around tho &lt;:.pita!, havil8 iPWiod - o r the nation'• boot"-" llpna .b¥01' the ;

11w a preaentatloo to tho headwaiter or

years.

.

....•

REDS TO HELP SYRIA
MOSCOW (UPD- Tile SOVIil
Unloo hal offered Syria uolf!
tonee In develoP"!! Ita of
loduotry, a SOVI~ .......
munlqoe aafd toc!Q, It oaJt

polio l'l&gt;at, Slate lll8l&gt;wa.Y Patrol, and It wun't unUI jullt t h o
other dly I found out where he was.
The Wlng!oot Clan, PL Plea- odltion ~ the Goodyear Tire
and Rubber Compony paper bad a pl-o or Mr. and Mrs. - ·
McWUllams and dauabter, Kelly Jo, ap six, at tho omual Good·
year Children's Christmu PIJV, Several ottkerl baVe left the
local pollt In tbe last couple or years. They juot- away.

npruentat1Yf:l ol nama.~
aod MOaCGW bad dlaeuloed ~

rr WON'T BE looa before they'll have a now bridge acroa• "de...elq,ment of the -~ 04
-=.·
tbe river at Pt. Pleuant.HendflriOil-Kanaup. Time wiU pallt raat industry in S)Tla. ,,
.....
one. IUII1Jil8l' gets here. In the meantime, tbe terQboata wl1l
••
eonUDue to traniJ)Ort tramc aerou lbe river.
KARAVAL, the Kaiser Aluminlm oompaa,y paper for t1te em·
~I think the rer,...- operaton deoene a word olpralao !or LEGAL ABOR'I10NS
ployees of the Ravenswood Works, about a month ago carried a tho Job they're ciDID&amp;. There ,... cplte a bit~ c l o - a yur
LONDON (IJPO - Brltaln!i:
front page story about the George Gilmore famlJy of Gal11poll•. 08&gt; when they were jullt pttlng the .,..~~on llllllorway, But- National Hoalth 5ervlco pal\t
There was a good pieture of Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore with Bob tile lorryboato aro c1DlD&amp; a aood job deaplte bea"l' tnlllc, u!Yoroe formed u,sM lop! - ·
Marehl, with Mrs. GUmore holding the special engraved silver IQbllc opinion and tog and blgb water.
laat year, tho HAI!IIh 'Minllllrf,
plaque honoring them lor ""outstanding oontrlbuUons to the athroported Friday. It jla)d 41 pa(
letic program oC Gallla Academy High SebooJ.,.,
of tho .....
It couldn't have happened to a nicer couple, and their aona.
unmarried aad 19 par cent of
George, John, Andy, Dam,y, Jim, and Norman, all GAHSathletes.
Happv the people to whom the people who&lt;o God u the thoMw....,UDIIerl8.
Loni!-Poalmo 144:15.
such bleiSi!lfl• fall! HaPPtl
I MISSED MIKE MeWllllams, former member of 11le GalliMrs. Bob Queen.
Huntlnglon Mrs. Richard
Sayer, captain; 4-H club members, Mrs. Eleanor White, leacJ..
er; Edclie Sayre.
Gallipolis - Mra. John Finney. eaptaln; Mrs. Plus H y m e,
!\Irs. John Layne, Mrs. ~

~

••

•

Elberfelds Are Headquarters

.libt Tlie Famous
Kate Greenaway Dresses
For Girls ...

Pulllns, Mrs. Leo Valentine,
Mrs. Bob Clark, Miss Shercy
Finney, Mra. Bill Mitchell, Mrs.

Mahlan Redeker, Mrs. BUl MU- d , !\Ira. Jolut Markley, 1\lr o.
Ja,y Bradshaw, Mrs. J a me s
Craft, Mrs. Earl Durham.
Addit:iooal cli;.Y workers a n d
capWins were announcecl Satur.

do,v bY Mrs.

Madge Neol, 11&lt;11·
eral chairman or the drive.
They are: Mrs. Ellz~
MDI s, captain; Mrs. Kenneth
Morgan, Mrs. Norma F o o s e,
Mrs. Ronald CalhOun &amp;Dd Mrs.
Marlin Hllghes, of the Portsmouth
Rd., Evans Heigbts, Holcomb IIlli
and Edgemmt Drive area.

Ranging in SiJU frolll 9 IO 24 !ftOKihS Gnd 1 )0 14
yeGrs. You never saw a prttller group of girls
dresses, including ensembles - dresses wilh 11141•
ching 11415 - panlie dresses - dress up styles.
Come in Gnd lei liS show lhem to you. Also sn
our complete line ofsirls coats - suils - dresses
blouses - skirts .,. sportswear - jusl anylldng you
need we have including tlte "Chubbelles" for the
hard to fit girls in sizes 8ljlo 14lj.

Gallia County
Bookmobile

IS
JUST

AROUND
THE CORNER I

It's Been A Long
Hard Winter On
The "Old Jalopy"
YOUR AUTOMO.LE DEAlERS ARE READY TO
GIVE YOU A GOOD TRADE OR BUY ON A

NEW

MODEll
FINANCE YOUR NEW
CAR WITH US ..•
COMPARE THE COSTS!

Why is it so many folks take t~eir time selecting a new car, but seldom look around

for the b•st New~Car financing Plan? Why pay mor• than necessary? If you ore plan~
ning to bvy o new COf' this S.pring, come in o!'ld see us . We con save you money . Stop
.in and see us soon.
.I

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Gallipolis, Ohio
"SERVING THIS COMMUNI1 Y SINCE 1863"

The Gallla C&lt;unt&gt; Dlairlct IJ.
brary has released the following
achecllle of the bookmobile for
the next two weeks:
Mood&amp;J, Feb.2t- Rio Grande,
9-11:30 a.m.; Centervtlle, 12:30·
2:30 p.m.; CeMerpoint, 2:t5~ p.
m.; Fairvlew, 3:30-4 p.m.; Wlntero Station, 4,05-i:OO p.m.
Tlleada:, Feb. 25 - VInton
Elementary, 9-11:30 Lm.~ Ew.
lngtoo, 12:45-1 p.m.; VlntonComDRUiilJ, 1:15-1:00 p.m.; North
Gallia, 1:35~:ts p.m.: Harrisburg, 3:30-3:4.5 p.m.; Rodne:Y,
4-4:15 p.m.
.
Feb. 26 - BIAIweU-Porter FJement:ar)', 9 a.m.
to l:l5 p.m.; Cremeans. BidWell,
1:20-1:40 p.m.; Pldlllpo, -•11,
l:U.:I p.m.; POrter, 2:QS.."I:15
p.m.; F.ao. 2:00.."1:45p.m.; Kyger,
3-3:15 p.m..; Spears Stadon, 3:·
30~:45 p.m.: Kanaup, 4-i:30

w-.

Tim-.

p.m.

Feb. 27 - Acldavllle Elementary, 9-ll:IS a.m.:

Clloahln.l!yger Elementu&gt;,l2:·
4~ p.m.; Chaohlre ConununllJ,
3:05-4 p.m.j Addanlle Cammun~
10", f,1S-i:45 p.m.
Monday. March 3 - Clay EIO·

mentary, 9-11:30 a.m.; Hannan
Trace Hlgb, 12:-45~ p.m.; HamU&amp;on'a, 3:15-3:30 p.m.; Clfnler
3:3~:50 p.m.

MUla,

Tue-.

March 4 -

-

Trace ElementAry, 9 a.m. to
2:30 p.m.; Smltll'a, 2:40.."1:50 p .
m.; l.Qne't, 3-3:15 p.rn.

w--·

March 5- Gn4n
Elementorr, 9·11;00 a.m.; Sootll·
welllom Hlil&gt;, 1~,10p.m.; Norlb·
up, 3:30-i p.m.
Thurada:, March 6 - CadnNo

Be Thrifty!
Save AU of Your
Saleslips From . ..

Elementary, 1:15 a.m. to u:..
3G a.m.; Waterloo School, 12:4S.,:t5 p.m.j Waterloo
llJ, 2:50~:30 p.m.

,

7 PAGES OF FANTASTIC

--7 DAYS

SAVINGS
SALE BEGINS SUNDAy
AT 1:00 P.M.

Comnul~

'

•
',.

..

.
.:

.•'

7 DAYS

�_... "'

.

---..---

-----·

....

..__

~

------

..

On Food Buying.
• l,;t,

u A UFV '23 ·~ .·~

A.a.--··
BY PAT GLASS

Ext.

Gollla Counl;v
GALLil'OLIS - '!be aim Gt
DliiV' foocl ............. l&amp; to . .
IIDOd beyo - to jllrebuo t b e
folnUJ - IUIIPJ¥ Ia such I n.y
lblt then Ia the 111011t relllrn
for tho 11101107 opoat. And that

M.- Kdly

return Ia more than dollars aDd

cents value.

Work ..• that
Really lsn 't

a

For new-~·· tbe
taA Gt making a eeloetton Ia a
big '""· For thoae wbo have bad
_.teuce In lnqlngthofood '"'P-

It Ia a on:oblt!'m

a,yiDI ••Jet
So

welcc:me

"My work limply does DOt
like work," Kelly dBdares, Ufor it Jmrojyea helpjbg
JIOOI)Ie realize tho Joy Gt making IIIla!&lt; and pralling God with
the voice and with aU kiD&lt;U olln-

.PIY,

with • smile, IDd
.-rlbutbw more thaD
words: Ghe - 10 more

a generous
the amount you
wiD Hvel

Week in

seem

He baa a BS and MA from Columbia Uainrlitjy"Teachere' ColI - lllCl - e d at Clnclmlll
Cooaervalory Gt Mnalc, Jullllard
Sellool Gt Mualc, Union Seminary

-

lilopping Ia A Big Tuk

titer.

Orlando .I;YlllPIImloo In Florida.

~

table.

FoUOWihlp Ill 6,30 p.m.
Hla Wife will be 1 f t - aloo. He
wiD be Introomeed by Kimball

play siml&gt;le melodies oo Yfllioua
brass, woodwind. and string tnltruments. The method involves
"Imitating motorcycles, blowing
on pieces ot eardenhoseiiiHieven
a breatM nr contest.
When Kelly arrlved In Japon
Ia 1957, he had behind him a 10
year dlallaguiabed uwalcal career aa performer and mulle educator. It Included radio llld tete.
vision appearaneea,andper!ormancell with the JaekeamD.e and

many

nuglng from tho """""""' Gt
the jllr&lt;buo tG the oolllle ut.
la!..UOO that the flmll1 tho Ia aorved em the

Mal'•

ltnunentl."'
At Klnio Gakuln'a Jmlor Hllb
Sellool, Kelly bas perle"""' a
methoci Gt teacbing all-w

lacludos

there are IWI many 9188-

U.... In deterlnlnln8 If ooe Item
Ia a better choice .--.

United Press IntematlcJna.l
Allied interest focused em nuclear policy and new demoastratlona of Cemmomlat oootlllcy as
President Nixon headed I o r
Europe on his first foreign tour

traffic on the hlalnrays to Berlin
- one of the dties Cll Nbroa.'a
DJrqJOOllltinorary. Tbelnter!erenee so far had been little more
than a nuisance. but WeBtern ae-

eurlt,y omeers were

keeping

a

Iince assuming office. British Defense M1nlster De-

wary eye on the situation.
Welt Germany stoodtlrm in ita
nis Healoy urged the United States determination to assemble ttl
to reaffirm Ita commitment to eloctoral college In the bedef'end Europe with ooclear wea- leaguered capital, the aetion
pons, warning that failure to do which the Reds are proteatlng.
10 wuu.ld lead thenattonsotWestThe COmmunlata also wore acern Dlrope to press for nuclear tive In China. althoulh there waa
weapons or their own.
no iDdlcatlon thai their operatl.oPa
The East German Comnunista were c:oordinated with those ol
contfrued their haraa.uneot of the Qaropean Reds. The Otinele
Communlat seizure ~ of
Ia New York, stetaoo Unlvorslcy three yachts en route from Hmg
and Presbyterian School Gt Cbrls- King to Macao with alx Ameritlao EcUcatlm. Born In lnriu, cans and nine others on board
Pa., Kelly considers lllntlng. was followed two day11 later by
loll, W, Va. hla hometown.

.

s.

as hostages for the return

ot a

defecting Chinese diploma~ The
reaaon for calling oil' the WarAW meeting remained obscure.
Around The World:
Wallhlngton, Defense Secretary
lolelvtn Lalnl eeld the United
Slates should proceed with t h e
buUdlng of antlmissile defenses
to offset "very rapid'' Soviet
progress ln the strategic -arms

race.

..

•sdo1. Lltllf •h • . I a urea. Hip lallf 1!111 • •
1Y In tht 30a -a. 111!11 [1001.
lalllfll In ...,... 2h -loor

•

.
•'

.

. t.

TEN CENTS

air cond., P .W., P. seats, c~Jatom

2 Or. Hdtp. 4 ·sp..d. Low mileo. Nice

lition

vlnvl int. Was S3695.00

cal alora uvea 1DU1Y I atop. A
IIODd . . . . . wiD belp

ollm!nohi such problema u
brulaed fnllta and veptablea,

1967 lid. Scllt.

1967 Cllrysltr '300'

rroz., -·· c~unqec~
paotrieo, a n d - oJP.
lhlwod

Air cand. All powor. Was

4 whool drlvo. 16,000 miles.

$1995

HALEIS
1966 Cll11. C.,rlce

recem

these ltema only or limes a week. - . . , lheae dellverloo are med8 could
determine tho liiM&gt;pplna ~~q. ua-

1962

Hdtp. Buehl seats. Automatic. All
power. Sharp.

'200', jet black. Made .In

$1295

to take .......... Gt elalo, lbopplng !lbould be the latter port Gt the week. Knowing your own local altuallon will
help In decldlntlthe boat limo lD

SPRING'S JUST AROUND
THE CORNEll

l!bop,

'299-DD

Mal&lt;e A UBI
The !lrot Teflllrement Gt 1
well - planned shopping trip Ia
a i!IKJIII&gt;Iog Hot. Maey a'-t'a
neglect planning • ahaAinr llat
beeluao they feel they cbl't have
limo. Actually, advaneed planning saves both time and money. Be sure to take the list with
you. Some helpl\11 binto ...,
Plan BMmWI for tbe week. This
will help In Including the baale

'~

OPEL$. _________ $1125.,

SUZUKI MOTORCYCLES

IIDOd

G•m~;~ny.

Sharp.

11114'.

w Insure

Ll~e

new.

Wilen To IIMlp
lime and cia.Y Gt !lbq&gt;ping cau be 1m~ I b'af.
fie Jams an botheriODle. Mon-

Jeruulem: Arab terrorists exfood groups
ploded a OOmb ln a supermarket
In Jerusalem ktlllng two per!IOrtl
and wounding 33.

-~

PlamiDi the olq1plng !lot ··eordlns to the Ia.Yout "' tho Jc&gt;.

The smaller llorea may

\
the abrupt caneellallon of a acboca.Ied meeting u. and
Chinese dlplomata In Waru.w.
Eastern EBropean eourcea hinted thai the Americana aeized aboard the yachts would be bold

...

4 ·Dr. Hardtop, gold, bloc• vinyl top,

and ......&amp;!' •• well •• boiJling
them obtain mu1mum llllolaetlm from their food dollara.

lhlpmenta Gt ~· doll7.

Nuclear Polley; New Red Moves

Review

l~tter

~~ -

1967

1967 Iuick Eltctrt

- tr1pa
·lind
"""
pion their
lhcliiPinl
It aavea
lime

oludby.. 111111 -

Western World Attention Is On

rmanent

'•

Plan Food Buying

......... ..

-n .o""~.h.r,. -.. .~. Q._,cf;3_~:~:~. -. AtJ. ~-~-.·-w-·~!:b~=~==

Now You Know

NEW BUICIS·
IN STOCKI

tail-...

da,y, Tueedly, or Wodneedly an
Ukely to be llle better choice.
Yootlarpr _..,, reeolvefreall

......,..

ALL MODELS OF

In prl.... Qlllll4o and aowl1 aU
complicate tho )11'Clblem Gt making the choice . _ the
- . 111111 ve alfored In the re-

...-.ell, """-• In
pockqeo and ~ at old
Now food

~·

.

Pat Glass Newsletter.

HEART.---..)

GALLIPOLLS - "'l'ut:orinc
teenaeer• to loot inmlpela and
trombone at"
Tbat'a how Merle Irwin Kelly, scheduled tG _ . bon MandiQ'", Feb. 2t, describes his work
aa a mlaaklnary Gt the Prelllr.Y. !&amp;ion Churcb, U. S., Ia Japan at
a meeting ol the Presbyterian

-~,. ~,_ . _

ALL MODELS iN STOCK

10% DOWN

up

&gt;ower Company htwnes Nlea
a High School Future Hometnces Monday. At her left is
1t, are Charlotte Grimm an:l

"·· -

Dine

Ill·

trltion. Yet, of coorse, mems
can. and should be, tlexfble.

weariness on this secorKI s~
his fiv&amp;--ration, eigh.t-day

r. Bright and early, ConserJvc party leaders- the ~
ion- began arriving at the
el for conference!! with Nixon
or to a three-hour formal
eting with WUson and his

30r government aides at No.
Downllll! StreeL

juoen Elizabeth D lnv!,...
Due~

roa···te· l•nch :· at

·emony,

the

llyirw

.formal'
of a

eath

the

Tomb

of the

lace
FORD CUSTOM 500 4-DR SEDAN
F-100 8TYLEBIDE PICKUP

Wide

bumper.

bed,

heavy

springs,

'\'-8

engine, Crui....,O-Matlc, radio and
many other extroa.
Sticker Prlcf' .

rear

-

$3300

MARTIN FORD
PRICE

$2,099

~~~l, .~;..;::::;;::~~~~~=~~~~~~~~===~:'' ..

$2, 725

;:~T~N

..

FORI:
Plus Frooi••

69 ERCURY

apply
.ndards

FORD LTD 2-DR HARDTOP

.

FULLY EQUIPPED. FAC. AIR
Sticker Price

$4,563

I

MARTIN FORD
PRICE

sticker Price

air c:ortd. Rocfio, local·

ly awned. Cloan.

$995

$3120.50

$795

MARTIN fORD
PRICE

2

•.

66 W.•
Clrntt 500 .
Or. Honltop.l buebt ...,,,

-"'· ,,.,.,., r. ,........ P.

....~~: ••,

$2,699

, ... ,1 roof, 29,000 . . . .

~ .... D•k ''"" flnl•t. I•
thOWNOM coM.

$1695

Plus Freight

64 FOD
'Country

S.dan.

V-8,
automatic trans. Beautifu I medium green wi th
motehing interior. In
superior condition.

$995

88 4 Or.

Sodan,

p.

steering, p. bralc4ts, v~
8 automatic, 1fodio,
beautiful red &amp; white
finish,
rod i11terior.
Real fine transportation

$595

Conv. 6 cylinder engine,
1tandard shift, locally
owned in GOOd condi~
tion.

$895

Fatrle,. C.T ~· 2 ~Jr. Hani•
390 Y4 .,.,.,.., new

61 Ftr4 LTD 4 Dr. W.n

.
,_..lu• a.tue, bto~k 'lllrtyl roof, clelwce lntwler
390 2V •ntlne, P.S., P.l., redlo, w..ow tfr••· D•luq wtt..l cov!
••, c:-f.-t h-eoM .,Or!tlllltf.,., tetriiiCt-le heeclllght1. Tht1 11
ho• 11,000 actuel rwllee. Wee locelly owned. Salcl ,._
l.y M"'tln F.,. fer S.UOD.

.,ea

...-n.

$2995

I

D¥el tlru. ,..., steeP
poww brOet, radio.

••'*· 1Solei""'
l.p thle
.. 1111 .. C:on41tl0f',
•I ,...

ll:liil'

$1995

Ftr~

65

67 Ftr~

64 CHEVROLET

wM'onty.
I

..

·n.......,~
2 0.. HaN._,,
loeellr ••"'"· wtute with
ll!..,tllul oque Interior. P•

..
, -'"''"'r ,..........
'- .,,
...... !acel
tlret. 1hie
. C,tlf

eftt
up ........ ...,..

will helcl

Wi4y't, ln!l.-fiOft.

they

are

nit they may have mistakenprejudged the new adminl&amp;Ltlon. To the cootrary, the
lin \4)sh« of Nixon'&amp; early

.. .

FAIRLANE 2-DR HARDTOP

c-try S.dan 9 Pa11·
....... Stati.., w......
V-1, aut. m.is- Power
if..,i.., power -ltralr;es,

when

ring se~.:ord thoughts about
t011's capabilities.
~owever, I seldom hear them

$3,763

FULL FACTORY STANDARD EQUIP. V_. ENGINE, VINYL
ROOF, RADIO, P. STEERING, CRUISE·O-MATIC

the same extraneous

lding Democratic presidents).
l'he situation could change
·141tlY, but it is obvious that a
xlly nwnber of peo.Ple are

Plus Freigl,t

880 C:.stom4 ·Dr. S.dan.
V-II engine, P.S., P.B.,
radio, w-s·w tires. Meet.
ium blue wilh bluo interior. Nat a 1harper 64
·Model In thit area.

of

Republicans, of course, tend

Plus Freight

63 Ftr4

(Continued on page 8)

fault~finding.

$3 099

64 .....

talks asspokesmen
"free-~ wide
Jritish
stressed
cfng" and said they ceJUred

otherwise irdulge in arbitra-

CRUfSE·o-MATIC, P. STEERING, P. BRAKES
AND OTHER ACCESSORIES.
MARTIN FORD
PRICE

....

ood to count off for neatne&amp;IB

$3 199
I

We11tmil~

rrg Mr. Nixon

2 Dr. Hardtop, blk. vinyl roof,
P . steering, console, w/s/w
tires, radio.

FORD G~LAXIE 500
.&amp; - Oft HARDTOP

at

ont

known Soldier in
r Abbey.

~story

COUGAR
Stlc.er
Price
$3 717· 70
MARTIN FORO
PRICE

before

64 Yllksw1111
2 Or. Beige color, w/ slw
tl,.s. very, '"''' 1horp.

.

.. '

JWif@:
has been a rapid
-rease in ttle membersbip of
, "I told you so" society.
'I told you Nixon would make
better president than many

JPle thought he would," one
" member of the aoclet)"
narked the other day.

"That's funny," I said. u1
1't remember your teWnc me
t1hir'€ like that."

"Well. maybe I didn't say it
; loud. But I bave !olt aU
qr that he was got~ to tool
ot of people."
"Then how came you were
ring last November that you
re thinki~ about movlQI ItO
»ti co ror the neJd fCIUI'

ars?"
11
That had nothiQB to do with
IOD's election. I juat hlp._.
' to have been iiUnp')&lt; l'llr
!he good hot tamaleL"

•• A few days after die electloft
fW YOO rolling I ....
1 sidewalk with fOUl' IIOIL
70U ~IIi fill ...

bol'l"
courl8 I
that ~·"
If )101 roollr

*"'•• ...U
filL

'
'

-·"

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