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I

8- The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pooii!IVy, 0., March ll, 1972

Snyder"
Bobcats
Ready

·

· ··

ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio University basketball
coach Jim Snyder said his
players "are real anxious and
would like to play" in the
NCAA
tournament
if
Marquette is suspended
because of having an ineligible
player.
The NCAA said one of its
staff members would .meet at
II a. m. today with Marquette
officials in Milwaukee and that
the player in question, senior
forward Bob Lackey, would
have an opportunity to clear
himself by signing an affi~avit
that he had not contracted with
an agent.
Marquette coach AI McGuire
said he did not believe Lackey
had signed with an agent to
negotiate a professional
contract.
''Ohio won't be invited to
replace Marquette until after
that meeting, " an NCAA
spokesman said.
Meanwhile here, the Ohio U.
Bobcats were waiting for of·
ficial word on whether they will
be playing Kentucky in the
tournament at Dayton on
Thursday .

Mrs. Caverlee
lnteiTed Today
Mrs . Loren
(Louise )
Caverlee, Huntington, w: Va.,
former Pomeroy resident, died
Friday evening at the St.
Mary's Hospital in Huntington
following a lingering tllness.
Mrs. Caverlee was the
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. John Miller of Pomeroy.
Reared in Pom~roy, she went
to Huntington in 1912.
She is survived by her
husband; a son, Franklin, of
Huntington; two grand·
children;
one
greatgrandchild; two sisters, Mrs.
S. E. Kaetzel of Sebring, Ohio,
and Mrs. Alonzo Custer,
Pomeroy, and several nieces
and nephews. Preceding her in
death besides her parents were
seven brothers, two sisters and
a granddaughter.
Funeral services were held
at 2 p. m. today at the Beard
Mortuary and interment was in
Hidgelawn Abbey of Devotion .

Market Report
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
Saturday, March 11, 1972
SALES REPORT of
Ohio Valley Livestock Co.
HOGS - 175 to 220 lbs. 23 to
23.20; 220 to 250 lbs. 23 to 23.50;
Light 22to 22.85; Fat Sows 20 to
21.65; Stags 16 to 19.25; Bosrs
18 to 20.75; Pigs 8 to 15; Shosts
15 to 21.
CATTLE - Steers 2ll to
36.50; Heifers 24.50 to 32.75;
Baby Beef 35.75 to 46.50; Fat
Cows 18 to 24; Canners 18.50 to
26.20; Bulls 27 to 31.50; Milk
Cows 195 to 340.
VEAL CALVES - Tops 53;
Seconds 48.50 to SO; Medium
42.75to46.75; Com . &amp;Hvs. 40 to
48.50; Culls 40 Down.
BABY CALVES - 15 to 79.
LAMBS - Tops 28.50;
Seconds 26 to 26.25.

m• Irish
or•
tops, Thel r humor II con to•
11lou1, And 'rlsh .,ngs at•
el the best; They'll last thru
•ndleu ogn.
a mlihty
1rand St. Patrie~ 1 day To ,
ltln'• fotlc. ...all •• vrocloul • .

s.,

.

And " THE FRIENDLY
ONES " at THE POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK CO .
have a special gift for the
first 12 lrishm~,. {or Ger .
mans or ??) who visit our

store and place an order for

$100.00 - 'a copy of the
HOME
FIX -IT
EN CYCLOPEDIA - a 580 page

book which regularly sells
tor S9.95. FREE . Just bring
along this ad and place your
order for at least $100.00 with
any of "THE FRIENDLY

ONES ."

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Dept. Store of Building

Since 1915.

Berrur·Edwards

Verbal·l Dies Monday
Charges
·Traded

i MIAMI (UPI ) - With both of.
them campaigning to come out
of Tuesday's Florida primary
as the dominant candidate of
tile Democratic left, New York
Mayor John V. Lindsay and
Sen. George S. McGovern
&amp;lnday accused each other of
"cheap shots" in the closing
hours of their bruising battle
for liberal voles.
McGovern sharply accused
Lindsay of trying to woo his
black campaign workers with
promises of greater gold.
Lindsay, in radio spots,
newspaper ads, and talks to
reporters, charged the South
Dakota senator with caving in
to Alabama Gov. George C.
Wallace on the school busing

issue.
Generally acknowledged as
the two candidates for the
Democratic Presidential
nomination most attractive to
liberal voters, McGovern and
Lindsay gently went at each
other on an bour-long television
program SWKiay and as soon
as it was over unfurled sertous
accusations out of each other's
earshot.
As Lindsay and McGovern
battled, major candidates in
the lO-man, one-woman race
for ltrsl place in Florida's
primary and a share of the 81
delegates at the Democratic
National Convention in July
scoured the stste with lastminu!f appeals_for votes.
Wallace Favored to Win
Wallace still was considered
the favorite to win the primary
with Sens. Hubert H. Humphrey and Edmund S. Muskie
locked in a near dead-heat for
second, and Sen. Henry M.
Jackson trailing.
McGovern and Lindsay were
in a race by themselves, not for
first place but for the biggest
share of the liberal bloc in a
basically conservative state.
Among the latest developments in the F1orida primary:
- Finally yielding to immense pressure, Muskie said
he would make public the
contributors to his presidential
campaign within 10 days.
Wallace said he, too, would
make a public disclosure but
Jackson refiiSild, calling it an
election eve gimmick. Lindsay
and McGovern already have
disclosed their contributors
and Humphrey has promised
be would.
- Appearing on issues and
answers (ABC-TV ), Wallace
said he would enter the
California primary in June and
added he has "no !bought of
dropping out at this time under
any circumstances." Wallace
said he has an "excellent
chance" to win a majority ol
the 81 delegate votes.
Shortly before going on
television at Miami station
WCKT, McGovern was handed
a full page advertisement in
which Lindsay accused him of
compromising the Hth Amendment by voting for compromise
legislation on the school busing
issue.
Busing is Hottest Issue
The first question of the
hour-long program dealt with
the busing issue.
In response, Lindsay said the
recently-enacted compromise
- which permits federal funds
for busing only if a local
district asks or if a court orders
it - was '~a cave-in to the
pressures from Wallace. If you
cave in to Wallace here, there
will be additional compromises
straight across the country."
McGovern, calling Lindsay's
assertion an "outright lie,"
said that if the compromise
had been defeated, the senate
would have adopted another
amendment outlawing busing
to desegregate schools.
Once outside the studio and
in response to a question, McGovern said Lindsay's attacks
were "regrettable and really a
cheap shot."
Cornered by reporters, Lindsay replied, "I'd call that a
cheap shot. It also shows an
insensitivity and it happens to
be untrue, aJso."

MEIGS THEATRE
..
Tonight, &amp; Tues.
March ll-14
VALLEY OF THE
DOLLS
Barbara Perkins

Patty Duke
ALSO
BEYOND THE VALLEY
OF THE DOLLS

Dolly Read
Cynthia Myers

" R"

SHOW STARTS I P.M.

Bernie Lee Edwards, 74,
Reedsville, died Monday
morning at Veterans Memorial
Hospital following an extended
illness . .
He was the son of the late
Richard and Melinda Shaffer
Edwards and besides his
parents was preceded in death
by live brothers and two
sisters .
Born at Hurricane, W. Va.,
Mr. Edwards had been a
resident of the Reedsville area
lor the past 32 years. He had
been a farmer and an employe
of the Ohio Division of
Forestry. He was a member of
the
Reedsville
United
Methodist Church .
Surviving are his wife,
Alberta Mae,two sons, Clark of
Maringo, Ohio, and Robert Lee
of Troy, Ohio; two daughters,
Mrs. Dorothy Cashdollar,
Reedsville, and Mrs. Lorraine
Haberbush, Lynwood, Callf.;
three brothers, Raymond, Roy
and Noah, all of Hurricane;
eight grandchildren, five
great-grandchildren and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will he held·
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Reedsville United Methodist
Church with the Rev. Jacob
Lehman officiating. Burial will
be in Reedsville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville
after noon on Tuesday.

·.·.··.·•·.·.·.·.·•·.·.·.·.·.·. ·•· ·.·. ·.··.··.·.·.·.·.·..··

•

.

Post Peldng· Contact Friendly·

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended oullook Wednesday through Friday:
Partly cloudy and mild
PARIS (UPI)- U.S. AmWednesday. Chance of · bassador Arthur K. Watson
showers Thursday and , held what he termed a "warm
Friday. High Wednesday and friendly" first meeting
and Thursday In the 50s with Chinese Ambassador
nol1b to around 141 south, Huang Chen today to maintain
dropping Friday to the COs the Sino -American contacls
and lower 50s. Lows at night opened by President Nixon's
In the 3Gs and lower 40s.
visit to Peking .

Otoices
(Continued from Page 11
in by 10:38 p.m., but could he
later in the Democratic
Presidential primary if the
vote proves to be closely
divided among the II candidates.
There will be frequent
tabulations on the delegate
strength being · won by the
Democratic Presidential
candidates. The Democratic
delegates will be split with 20
going to the plurality winner
statewide and 61 apportioned to
the plurality winners in each
congressional district.
The GOP will award 10
delegates to the candidate
winning the statewide vote and
will decide later on the apportionment of 30 delegates in
the 15 new congressional
districts to be established by
the legislature after the election.
At about I p.m. EST
Tuesday, UPI will transmit an
early night lead Florida election which will give the
background of the campaign
and the progress of the voting.
This will be re-led as
warranted during the afternoon. This lead will be
prepared by Mike Feinsilher,
UPI Washington political
writer, who has been following
the campaign in Florida.

IN CAPITAL
Theodore T. Reed, Jr.,
president of The Farmers
Bank and Savings Co., left
today to a I tend the Ohio
Bankers Assn. congressional
visitation in Washington, D. C.,
as a member of the official
delegation to visit various
Federal Reserve and Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp.
agencies. Wednesday, Mr .
Reed will visit with Donald I.
Baker, director of Policy
Planning, Antitrust Division,
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Undersecretary of Treasury
David
Sammons
Charles Walker, and Comp- Rev .
delivered
a
sermon
Sunday at
troller of Currency William B.
St. John Unitarian Church on
Camp.
marijuana which he said he
smokes and enjoys.
BONDS FORFEITED
"] occasionally smoke mari·
Two defendants forfeiting
bond in the court of Pomeroy juana because I enjoy it,"
told
his
Mayor William Baronick Sammons
Saturday night were Dottie congregation. "[ am willing to
Landers, Pomeroy, $25, for be open about this because I
disturbing the peace, and am not ashamed of it
anymore than I am of havihg
Leona Ross, no address, $50,
a drink of alcohol."
petty larceny.
Sammons said he also is willing to ·"flaunt the law publicly
as a way of telling those in auAlbert Paynter
thority that they have no right
to tell me what l can or cannot
Died March 5th
put into my body. "
Funeral services for Albert
"Deciding to do this was not
Paynter, 58, Delaware, Ohio, an act of impulse/' he exwho died unexpectedly on plained. "Seven years passed
March 5, were held Thursday between the first offer of a joint
at Delaware. Mr. Paynter was and the first time I smoked
born in Portland, the son of the one."
late GeorgeS. Paynter.
Even tea, coffee and tobacco
He is survived by his wife, were at first feared, he rea·
Louise; one son, William, a soned! Although marijuana is
teacher at Marshall Univer- illegal, a numhe'r ol moodsity; his mother, Ada Smith changing pills are legal causPaynter, Delaware; three ing contempt for the law by
uncles, Okey Paynter of Port- those who see the contradicland; John Paynter, Newark, tion, he said.
and Roy Paynter of Stow,
Ohio ; two aunts, Mrs. Oscar
KILLED SUNDAY
Barnett, Weirton, W. Va., and
AUBURN, Ind. (UPIJ
Miss
Grace
Paynter, Wayne Mooney, 31, Hicksville,
Steubenville.
Ohio, was killed Sunday when
Attending the funeral were his car went out of control on a
Okey Paynter, Portland; Paul country road four miles west of
Paynter, Carpenter, and Mrs. here and crashed into an
Albert Paynter, Racine.
embankment.
MEETING POSTPONED
BOOSTERS TO MEET
A meeting of the past
All members of the Eastern presidents of Drew Websjer
High School Athletic Boosters Post 39, American Legion,
are asked to meet at 7:30p.m. Ladies Auxiliary set for
Thursday at the high school to Wednesday at the home of Mrs.
make plans for the basketball J. M. Thornton, has been
banquet.
postponed.

Sennon Given
On Marijuana

Watson and his Chinese friendly," Watson said. ''I hope
counterpart met for 50 minutes that this will be the beglnnin&amp;
at the Chinese Embassy In of a series of conversations ancl
what the American am- that It will be a continuing
bassador said he hoped would dialogue. As lor the date of our
be the first of a series of Sino- . next meeting, I leave that to
American talks.
the choice of his excellency
"The meeting was warm and (Huang)".

Beverly KnappCrowned
Miss Mason County
Lovely blonde, blue-eyed
Beverly Marie Knapp was
crowned Miss Mason County
lor 1972 at the Fifth Annual
Miss Mason County Scholarship Pageant Saturday evening
in the PPHS gymnasium,
The new 1972 Miss Mason
County was presented her
crown, roses, a trophy and $250
scholarship by Kttti Thomas,
1971 Miss Mason County.
First runner-up was Miss
Rhonda Lou Bailey who was
presented a trophy and $100
scholarship award by Jim
Stewart, pageant director.
Second runner-up Chetti Lou
Hayes was presented her
trophy by Paul Watkins, past
president of the Jaycees and
head of production.
The honor of being chosen
"Miss Congeniality" was given
to Karen Froendt who was

Miners
(Continued from Page I)
It was Moore's refusal to
permit coal miners on the
official hoard of inquiry that
inspired a citizens investigation.
All but three of the 115 victims have been identified, and
the missing persons list
dwindled down to 3G by SWKiay.
Heavy applause echoed at
the citizens rally when the
leader, Donald Bryant, who
heads up the Logan County
Black Lung Association, called
for an end to the coal industry's
"domination" of coal mine
families.
"This not the ftrsl tragedy,"
Bryant said, recalling mining
accidents of recent years and
the prevalent threat of "black
lung" disease.
"Even today , there are
people on Buffalo Creek who
are afraid to say what they
know," Bryant charged. "They
refuse to testify because they
fear the loss of their jobs, or
live~."

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Visiting Hours, 2to 4 and 7 to
8:30p. m.
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
-Lowell Collins, Shade; Dana
Howell, Shade; Evelyn McCaskey, Rutland; Mabel Swan,
Langsvllle; Howard Largent,
Syracuse.
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Raymond Hartley, Lena
Pullins, Roy Kesterson,
Martha Magnotta, Debora
Pickens, Karen Marcinko.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Evelyn Landers, Pomeroy;
Bessie Napper, Pomeroy;
Salem Yates, Racine; Dorothy
Wells, Long Bottom; Ruth
Lewis, Letart, W. Va.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Winnie McKenzie, John
Jenkins, Donald Eblin, Mabel
Roush.

awarded a trophy by Jaycee
president, Donald E. Noll.
The o'ther contestants,
Sandra Fay Brown, Camille E.
Lowe, Jacqueline Arlene
Gabritsch, Linda Lou Lievlng
and Joyce Pumphrey received
individual trophies.
The new Miss MasQn County,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Knapp of New Haven,
is head majorette in the
Wahama White Falcon Band,
and is active in many other
school activities. She plans to
continue her education at
Century Career College in
Huntington.
Beverly presented an out.
standing creative dance for her
talent act of the evening.
Virginia Shaw, local dance
instructor, was presented a
trophy by Jim Stewart for her

Capt. Lieving

'l1le srnau intestines of l!OIIle
domestic cows are·almost 100

Flash flood watches IOI'
portions of southeast and extreme eastern Ohio are cancelled. Cooler today, chance of
rain. Cloudy and colder
tonight. Low in. mid 30s south.
Cloudy, warmer Wednesday.

Devoted To The

Cycle on Drugs
NEW HAVEN, W. Va. Chaplain (Captain) Bernard H.
Lieving Jr., whose parents live
here, has a leading role in the
army's current campaign
against drug abuse, recenliy
completing Cycle Ill of the U.
S. Army Alcohol and Drug
Education Course (USAADEC)
at Chiemsee Lake, Germany.
Chaplain Lieving is regularly
assigned with Headquarters,
2nd Squadron, 6th Cavaley, lsi
Armored Division in Germany.
He entered military service in
1967 and holds the Army
Commendation Medal, the Air
Medal, and two awarda of the
Bronze Star Medal, one for
valor.
The chaplain, whose wife,
Dorothy, is with him in
Germany, received his B.A.
Degree in 1959 from Otterbein
College, Westerville, Ohio, and
his B. D. Degree in 1963 from
the United Theological
Seminary, Dayton, Ohio.

Marines Keep Fit

Anderson Condemned
WASHING TON (UPI)
House GOP leader Gerald R.
Ford tnday accused columnist
Jack Anderson of employing
hearsay and gimmickry in his
allegations that the administration made anlitrost
concessions to International
Telephone &amp;Telegraph (ITT).
Ford made the attack as the
Senate Judiciary Commlltee
prepared to continue its investigation of the case Tuesday
by questioning John N. Mit·
chell, who was attorney
general at the time the ITT
matter was settled.
" .. . Anderson is to be condemned for dragging the name
of the President of the United
States before the Senate
Judiciary Committee on the
basis of evidence which is so
unreliable that it would be
barred from every court of law
in the nation," Ford said .
"Mr. Anderson has used the
universally discredited technique of multiple hearsuy to
substantiate his charges, a
~in • mil-k which involves a

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Names of patients admitted
have been temporarily
discontinued for publication.
Discharges: AHred Slover,
Pliny; Lydia Long, Mrs .
Robert Darst, Michael Long,
Troy Pickens, Darrell Jetferies, Raymond Workman,
Mrs. Julia Roseberry, Mrs.
Clarea Meadows, all Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Luther MeCarty, Ashton ; Sheila Perry,
Leon; Mrs. Douglas Whilt and
daughter, New Haver.; Lisa
Graham, Leon; MrJ. Homer
Painter, Bidwell, 0.; Thomas
Kaylor, Leon; Lewis Hayes,
Arbuckle; Mrs. Charles Jones,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Roger Hall,
New Haven; Mrs. Paul Glover,
Milton; Mrs. Daisy Hursey,
Columbus.
Births : March 12, a sori to
Mr. and Mrs. Charte, Uoyd,
Apple Grove; a son to Mr. and
Mrs. Stanley Chapman, Point
Pleasant, and a daughter to
Mr. an d Mr.s . ••oey Ha11 , sr.,
Leon .

I

fContinued from Page I)
50,000-man South Vietnamese drive Into CambOdia, the U. S.
Command said today. The action is aimed at breaking up a
reported Communist plan to hit Saigon. U.S. 8!)2 bombers and
smaller jet fighter-bombers struck suspected Communist
positions in the same area where the allies uprooted guerrilla
sanctuaries in Cambodia two years ago, the Command said. In
addition, U. S. helicopters flew air support lor the South Vietnamese on both sides of the frontier.
Fresh South Vietnamese troops moved into Cambodia today
to hack up the attack that started Thursday when rangers and
other troops crossed the border in three areas. Military sources
said the operation is aimed at stopping three North Vietnamese
divisions of about 3G,IHMl men from moving on Saigon, which is ·
only 35 miles from the Parrot's Beak area of Cambodia, which ·
juts well into South Vietnam.

Elberfelds _In Pomeroy

Fuzzy Bottoms. Making
action of 100 per cent
cotton brushed twill.
With exposed snap
front. With flare. With
patch pockets. Sizes 28
to 38 waist. Excellent
selection of colors.

• Be sure to see all the other mens and young
mens flare leg and regular style slacks Including plenty of the popular double knitsl;,cks.
· Mens and Boys Department-1st floor.

Elberfelds ·1n Pomeroy

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, MARCH 14,1972

TEN CENTS

Mud-Clay Ball Blasted
From Rt. 33 Interchange
Into Salisbury School

)
I

Twelve second graders at Salisbury Elementary School were
treated Monday afternoon for cuts and bruises, most of them
minor, after a huge "clod" of mud-clay crashed through one of
their classroom windows.
Propelled through the window by a high explosive charge set
off in the area of the Rock Springs Interchange highway construction approximately 150 yards northwest of the school across US Route 33 - the clod exploded pieces of shattered,
jagged glass through the room.
:
Narrowly escaping possible sometime what had happened
serious injury was Brent because, as Mrs. Oats satd,
Sisson, son of Mr. and Mrs. blasting has been occuring
George Sisson Pomeroy Route frequently, and other classes
3 who was ~ated beside the did not realize that the
~indow hit by the clod.
Salisbury building had been
The ball of mud landed struck.
squarely on his desk. Glass was
At the scene early were Supt.
heavy tn the area where Brent of Schools George Hargraves
was seated. He and the 11 other and Lt. Ernest W. Wtggles·
pupils, most of wholl) suffered worth and Patrolman Frank
only small cuts and bruises, Casto of the OhiO State P~trol.
were treated by Dr. J. J. Davis Board of Educalton Prestdent
at the scene.
Frank W. Porter also inspected
DESCRffiES INCIDENT -Mrs. Helen Dais tells John UBie, Sallsbury School Principal,
Other children examined by the building.
Dr. Davis were Cassie Sheets
General contractor on the
and Lt . Ernest W. Wigglesworth, State Highway Patrol, about injuries received when a clod of
Kimberly Basham, Lis~ road construction is the Shelly
earth was hurled through a classroom window of her seeond grade room at the Salisbury
Robson, Vicki Sauters, Trecia and Sands Constructton Co.
School Monday afternoon.
Dorst, Ed Blevins, Kathryn
Chaney, Pal Capehart, Allen
Partlow, Renee Kaldor and
Mark Burson.
Brent Sisson had a cut lip and
an injury to one arm. Dr. Davis
advised Brent to undergo a
complete examination, it was · - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - reported.
Mrs. Helen Dais, teacher of
the Class, said the incident
occurred about 1:20 p.m. Other
classes were unaware. for

'

NARROW MISS - Brent Sisson, a second grader at the Salisbury Elementary School,
narrowly escaped possible serious injury when a ball of earth, pictured on Brent's desk where·
it landed, crashed through a window where the second grader was seated. Glass scattered
about the classroom. The incident was caused by blasting taking place in a road construction
project near the school.

Marauder.· and to Have
New Director in Fall
The Meigs Local Board of
Education Monday night voted
not to offer a contract to David
Bowen as band director.
Bowen, who has a continuing
contract, will remain as a
teacher at Meigs High School.
Meeting with the board was a
delegation of parents and
teachers, several of whom
spoke in Mr. Bowen's behalf.
The Band Boosters and
Teachers association, who
supported Bowen, met earlier
with the board on the matter.
Frank W. Porter, board

president, said Monday night
that the board has been
dissatisfied with the band. The
board "has a vital interest" in
the band, Porter said.
Porter also pointed out that
the situation was discussed
with Bowen on two occasions
when Bowen was asked if
additional practice time was
needed. Bowen felt the band
could be improved with the
time allotted, Porter said.
Porter observed that the
band director is a "perfect
gentleman" and that there is
•••

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ews .• in Briefs

::::

By United Press Iitternatlonal

COLUMBUS -OHIO'S 54,309 STATE employes will not feel
the impact of recently approved pay increases in this week's
checks as previously believed, state Personnel Director Paul A.
Corey said late Monday.
The 10 per cent increase, or 38 cents an hour, whichever is
higher, will first be reflected in March 31 paychecks for the
second two weeks of March:' "Pay Board Chairman George H.
Boldt said the increases cannot be placed in effect earlier than
March 17," Corey said.
ATHENS, OHIO - THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES at Ohio
University has authorized a $10 per quarter tuition hike effective
with the summer quarter starting in June.
The trustees' action, taken at a board meeting Monday·, will
increase quarterly instructional fees for Ohio undergraduates to
$210. Graduate student tuition will be $260. A $45 million
operating budgetfor 1972-73 was also approved by the board.

. .~'&amp;'~

Of The Meigs-ltl010n Area

.

Watson said the meetlno .
were a direct result o1 tlie :
weleonie that Ni:lon received :
in Peking. Referring again to .
Huang he said, "when I need to
see him, or when he needs to
see me, we wl'll meet"
.
A Chtnese spokesman said .
one of the members of the
Chinese Delegation in Paris
served as interpreter between .
Watson and Huang in their ;
meeting at the Embassy on :
Paris' fashionable Avenue :
George V.
.
Today's ·meeting was the :
first
between
normal :
diplomatic representatives of :
both countries since 1970.
U.S. and Chinese represents- :
lives met periodically In
Warsaw from 1957 untO 1970,
when the talks were abruptly
cut off because of the U.S. and
South Vietnamese invasion of
Cambodia.
,
White House Press Secretary
Ronald Ziegler announced Frl·
day that Paris had been
selected as the new "contact
point" . between U.S. and
Chinese diplomats. He said,
however, "This does not close
off other channels"-leaving
open the posslbillty that SinoAmerican- relation~ might also
continue in Warsaw.

. COLUMBUS-GOV. JOHN J. GIWGAN today announced
the creation of the Ohio Conunission on Local Government,
designed to study the structure of local government for possible
upgrading of services.
Gilligan appointed Robert H. Rawson, · president of the
Empire Plow Co., Cleveland, as chairman of the commission.
Dennis V. Durden, vice president for w:ban affairs of the
Federated Department Store chain, was named vice cbairman.
"It is my hope - and my belief - that this conunisslon will
succeed In pointing the way to improving the level of government
service in every area of this state," said Gilligan. "&amp;lch a success would be a major victory lor every man, woman and child in
Ohio."

lntere~u

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIV NO. 235

Completes Anny

RACINE - In the pre-dawn
darkness of a Mediterranean
morning late last month, men
of the 34th Marine Amphlbtoua
Unit were making a final check
of their combat and survival
gear before hitting lhe
beaches. Marine Sgt. James E.
Spaun, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Junior Spaun of Route 2,
Racine, was among those men
who stormed ashore before
first light with more than 500
other marines in a mock
assault on the "enemy" at
Carboneras, Spain.
With helicopters and
powerful amphibian tractors
they secured the beachhead,
and after three days of
operations ashore concluded
"Phiblex 8-72," a highly
realistic exercise designed to
keep Marines in combat-ready
condition.

presentation of evidence three recovering in a Denver
or four times removed from the hospital where she may be able
source," said Ford, of Michl- to meet with members of the
gan. " Were Mr . Anderson Judiciary panel by about
required to produce sub- midweek, according to her
stantive evidence of probative doctors. She has been confined ·
value in the ITT case, he would since March 3, suffering from a
surely be unable to do so . With heart ailment.
but multiple hearsay evidence,
Jack Anderson is a man
Sen. Marlow W. Cook, R-Ky.,
williout a case."
a member of the Judiciary
The confirmation of Mitch- Committee, meanwhile acell's successor, acting Attorney cused Sen. Edward M. Ken·
General Richard G. Klein· nedy, DMass., itlso on the
dienst, has been sidetracked by panel, of engaging in "a ,
the ·_'Ontroversy surrounding political conspiracy ... to
the ITT case . Kleindienst discredit government ofheaded the Justice Depart- ficiais."
ment's Antitrust Division at
Cook asked for an executive
the time it made an out-of- session of the committee "to
court settlement with ITT-a examine the nature and extent
conglomerate which Anderson · of the improprieties." ·
alleges had agreed to conCook said Kennedy received
tribute $400,000 to the GOP a copy of a reporter's interview
National Convention this sum- with Mrs. Beard. The notes
mer in San Diego.
belonged to Britt Hume, an
In another development, ITT Anderson Associate, who relobbyist Dita D. Beard. whose fu sed lo give them to the
memo on the a:J tttru ~ . '""tier committee on the grounds they
in Anderson's lmnd, wn•·hed wrrc pr·ivileged J'ournalist 's
off ' 1w fl:tp, was reporl ed information .

cooperation with the pageant.
Danny King served as
Master of Ceremonies with
Janet Korri of Pomeroy the
fashion commentator. Debbie
Cottrill was pianist and en·
tertainrnent was provided by
the Point Pleasant High School
stage band under direction of
Gary Stewart. Rainbow Girls
served as ushers.
Miss Knapp, as the 1971 Miss
Mason County, will compete in
the West Virginia State
Pageant in Parkersburg which
is a ·preliminary to the Miss
America Pageant.
The annual Miss Mason
County Scholarship Pageant is
sponsored each year by the
area Jaycees. The Jaycee-ettes
held a reception In the school
cafeteria following
the
pageant, lor those who participated and those making the
pageant successful.

Weather

feet long.

Hung told newsmen that,
"conforming, to the joint SinOAmerican conimuntque, the
Chinese and Ameriean parties
have agreed on • Parla as a
channel to maintain contacts .
between the two parties. Today
1met Ambasudor Watson '8lld
in this wa'/1 am beginning the

contacts."

Now You know

NEW YORK- ADMITTING PUBLICLY FOR the first time
that the "autobiography" of billionaire Howard Hughes was a
ruse, author Clifford Irving and his wife Edith pleaded guilty
Monday to charges of conspiracy and grand larceny in the
complex, $765,000 bilking of the McGraw-Hill Book Co.
Researcher Richard Suskind, 46, also pleaded guilty to the same
charges filed by the New York County Grand Jury. He was a coconspirator, but not a defendant.
In return for the guilty pleas, the federal government
dropped a mail-fraud indictment against the Irving~, citing their ·
·cooperation in the investigation. The federal consptracy charge.
carrtes a maximum sentence of nve years in !an and a $10,1HMl
fine. The county grand larceny charge carrtes a maxtmum
sentence of seven years in jail and the conspiracy charge one
year and $1,000 fine. Court sources, however, said they thought it
unlikely that maximum penalties would be imposed and held out
the possibility that Mrs. Irving may escape imprisonment
altogether.

no question as to his integrity
and devotion to his students.
The question at hand is, bas
the band produced according to
its capabilities? Porter concluded.
Bowen defended himself by
pointing out to the board that
the reason he did not request
after school practice was due
to the cost and inconvenience
to the students and parents.
Bowen also declared that he
had been asked to resign.
Also meeting with the board
was a delegation of parents in
regard to the board 's
disbanding the high school VoAg program. Harold Maue,
speaking in favor of the Vo-Ag
proeram, pointed out that he
had 32 signatures of parents
and students wanting the board
to keep the program.
Maue felt that the Vo-Ag
program should not be
abandoned in favor of the
proposed mine training
program.
Porter said he is trying to
determine if what the school is
offering in the Vo-Ag program
fits the needs of the students.
The matter will be reviewed
and a change, if any, will not be
taken lightly, Porter noted.
"We must try to meet the needs
of the students to develop the
most
comprehensive
program," he said.
The board also discussed the
incident Monday at Salisbury
Elementary school in which
several children received
minor injuries. Blasting at the
new highway site caused a clod
of dirt to. go through ·a school
window.
Porter sug~ested that a
(Continued on Page 8) -

Dinner Planned
For Jack Crisp

.
Jack w. Crisp, Democratic
candidate for congress from
the lOth Ohio District said
today a campaign knick-off
dinner will be held in his behalf
at the Masonic Temple in
MOUNTAIN VIEW, CALIF. -PIONEER X, the spacecraft · Middleport at 7 p.m. Saturday,
headed toward Jupiter, developed its first malfunction Monday March 25.
The main speaker will be the
$.5 million miles from earch.
Honorable
Wayne L. Hays,
Scientists said the problem involved the craft's stellar
reference assembly, but it was not serious enough to jeopardize democrat congressman from
the mission. The instrument's reading being sent back to earth the 18th district of Ohio. Master
were "confusing" the Ames Research Laboratory of the National of ceremonies will be John
Burnworth, fqrmer Mayor of
Aeronautics and Space Administration announced.
Marietta.
Crisp further reported that
WASHINGTON- AGRICULTURE SECRETARY EarlL.
ticket sales have already
Butz said today there will be meat rationing and empty meat
reached approximately 200.
counters tf consumers force the government to clamp price
Rep. Hayes is one of the most
controls on beef.
knowledgeable congressmen
Cattle and retail beef pfices were reported •t record levels concerning the problems of
recently. Butz today predicted further zig-zag increases and southeastern Ohio and is an
(Continued on page 8)
exrcllent speaker, Crisp said .

.'

I

New Regulation Planned
Anti-Fire Underpinning

Meigs in

Wanted onMohileHomes

-

Dally blasting in the interchange area llat eraeked
plaster, windows and
foundatlou of homes In the
area, II bas been reported.
Residents, wbo preferred to
remain anonymous are
making complaints as the
project develops. Others
Indicated they are walling
unlfl the blasting Is com•
pleted when the total
damage to their property
can be assessed.

Wide Swath
Cut by Auto

For Fund
Gov. John J. Gilligan announced today that Meigs
County's Planning Commission
is one of 21 municipal, county,
or regional commissions
winning tentative approval
from the Ohio Department of
Development lor federal
matching funds.
The amount of Meigs
County's
grant,
made
available from Department of
Housing
and
Urban
Development funds which are
administered by the state, is
currently under negotiation between the Development and the
grant application, according to
Dr. David C. Sweet,
Development Department
director. The grant will supply
matching funds on a 50 pet.
Federal-Local basis for
comprehensive development
planning. Projects designated
to be funded by the grant will
begin approximately July I,
1972, he said.
Final approval of the grant
will be authorized by the
Development Department
upon action taken by Meigs
County to comply with further
state
and
federal
requirements.
"The federal grants," Sweet
stated, "Will enable the
recipients to carry out comprehensive planning programs
to make more efficient use of
each area's resources in order
to properly prepare adequate
development planning and

RACINE - Deputy Sheriff
David Sheets of the Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. investigated a single car accident in Racine today at 8:22
a.m. that eventually involved
two other cars and two utility
poles.
In front of the Roy Riffle
residence, Vine St., W. B.
Cross, 94, Racine, was
traveling west when his auto
struck a power pole. Cross
backed into the Riffle yard,
proceeded 115 paces on Vine
St., only to hit another power
pole. Again he backed, drove
onto Broadway St., turned west
off Broadway onto Main St.,
went 131 paces to the front of
the Ira Beegle residence where
he ran into a parked car
belonging to Don R. Hill, Rt. 2,
Racine. The impact .sent Hill's
economic growth."
(Continued on page 8)

DR. GRAHAM
TO SPEAK - Dr. Joseph ·
Graham, superintendent of
the Athens District of the
West Ohio Conference, wilt
be guest speaker at the
Pomeroy community Lenten
service to be held at 8 p.m.
Wednesday at the Pomeroy
UnJ~d Methodist Church.
This Is the fourth in a series
of Wednesday night union
Lenten services to be held In
the town. The host church
junJor choir wtll provide
music. The public is invited.

Coaches Tangle
Coaches of the S.V.A.C. will
play coaches of the SEOAL
tonight at Southern High
School in Racine at 8 p.m. The
event is sponsored by the
Southern Athletic Boosters.
Proceeds will be used to
purchase new bleachers for the
football field .
Al6 :30 the sixth grade teams
of Racine and Syracuse will
play.

Democrats to Meet. Thursday
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Joan
Spratley, Columbus, women's
director
of the Ohio
Democratic Party, will be
speaker at a Meigs County
Democratic meeting to be held
at 7:30p.m. Thursday in the
Syracuse Elementary School
Audi&lt;orium.
Although the session is called
for the Democratic Committee,
attendance of Democratic
women is especially being
stressed with local officials
· hoping to organize a local
women's organization. Also,
members of the local election
boards are being · asked to
attend the meeting.
A printer's copy of the new
ballot will be shown at the
meeting and explained .
Sample balt -.ts may be
distri~ut~.

A graduate of Ohto SLate
University with a bachelor of
science in education in 1958,
Mrs.,Spratley is a member of
the Consumer Protection
Commission of Columbus, the
Citizens Committee for
Progress, speakers' bureau;
the Kinder Key of Children's
Hospital ol which she is a past
president.
She also is a past president of
the Winterset Elementary
School PTA and a member of
the Maple Grove Methodist
C11urcb. She has been active
with the operation of the
Riverview Junior High School
Teen Canteen and has served
as a water safety instructor at
the Columbus Swim Center.
In addition, Mrs. Spratley
has been a teacher of science in
several schools. She is the

'

MRS. SPRATI.EY
mother of four children .

Owners of mobile homes in
Middleport will be required to
underpin· them -with fireproof
material if present plans of
Middleport Vtllage Council are
approved as an ordinance.
Meeting in regular session
Monday night, councilmen
agreed the underpinning
should be required in an ordinance. It is expected that
new mobile homes being
placed will be required to have
the underpinning within 30
days white mobile homes that
are being lived in will have six .
months alter the legislation
becomes effective. Solicitor
Rernard Fultz was authorized ·
to prepare the legislation.
Council heard a relatively
new resident, Tony May,
outline plans for forming a
mini-bike club in the community. May asked only that
council advise him of where
land for such a club •might be
obtained.
He said all members of the
club he is planning will be
required to know Ohio laws
pertaining to highway safety,
even though members will not
be operating on the highways.
Maintenance Supervisor
Harold Chase suggested that a
11)-acre site owned ·by the
village might be used near the
sewage lagoon. May will investigate the possibilities of
that site as well as several
others suggested by council

members.
The February report of
Mayor John Zerkle· was approved showing receipts of
$1,516.80 in fines and lees and
$143 in merchant police
collections lor a total ol
$1,659 .80. The fire department
report tnd~cated only one fire
call, in town, was answered but
20 emergency calls, II out of
town and nine in town, were
answered.
The council agreed to give up
plans for selling a small lot
owned by the village on Fourth
Ave., after procedures outlined
by Clerk-Treasurer Gene
Grate indicated that a considerable amount of money
would be involved in the legal
processes as well as advertising. The tot may be
rented, but this wut be left up to
the Board of Public Affairs.
The lot was once the property
of the water company which
was purchased, in part, by the
village.
Councilman David Oblinger
reported that a committee
which has studied updating of
village ordinances has
recommended that a Cleveland
firm which has submitted the
low price on the job be asked to
send a representative to
Middleport to outline the
services of his company.
Council accepted the com(Continued on page 8)

Southern Local's
Budget ·Approved
The Southern Local School
Board approved its annual
budget of $628,966.50 in a
regular session Monday night.
Supt. Ralph Sayre reported the
budget as follows: total administration $25 ,216.50, instruction $361,000, auxiliary
agencies $45,000, janitors
$25,000, special services $100,
supplies $38,650, material
maintenance $6,100, equipment
replacement $11,000, open
order $24,900, fixed charges
$86,100, cap'i'tal outlay $5,800,
school lunch $7l,IHMl and bond
retirement, $30,200.
Sayre has expanded the
budget to meet many of the
needs in Southern Local for the
next school year, it was pointed
out.
In other business, the board
accepted the school lunch
report from the state department 'of education on the five
schools In the district that were

audited last fall. The report
was very favorable, the board
found. The audit is done every
four years ..
The board also accepted the
monthly report of the activity
fund submitted by Mrs.
Marilyn Powell .
Sayre reported that two
home bound cases have been
approved by the Ohio
Department on Education. He
also reported that the program
has been adopted for seniors of
the BOE .class lor the next
school year.
The board agreed to pay for
the upcoming Ohio Test of
scholastic achievement for 20
students.
The board recognized three
teachers as representatives of
the Southern Local Education
Assn., Mrs . Robert Ord, Mr~.
Larry Wolfe and Mrs. Ruth
Stearns.
(Cmtinued on page 8)

·~

�2- The DllllySrnlinei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March If, 1972

,_....,.......,.-.,.._,.•. -.:·..

For lOth District Post

By MIKE USCHAN

c

Sen. McGovern has served in
the U S House of Representatives and ts now a U. S.
Senator After Robert Kennedy
was assassinated, Senator
McGovern
became
the
presidential chOice of the
Kennedy factiOn In 1968.
Senator McGovern has expressed a stand agamst the
VIetnam War ever smce 1963,
e1ght years ago.
Mrs. Rouse IS the daughter of
a former Mason County
Democratic chairman, J.
Wallace Burdett, and IS a
cousm of the late Joe F. Burdett, of Pomt Pleasant, a
former
West
Vorgm1a
Secretary of State and candidate for Governor of West
V1rg1ma She has restded m

•
MRS. DOUGLAS ROUSE

•

Galha County for 17 years and
IS a htgh school teacher She IS
a church offtcer and a Sunday
School teacher Mrs. Rouse's
husband, now deceased, for
many
years
was
a
mathemaltcs teacher at Kyger
Creek High School, Cheshire

Marquette .University fans,
bfficlala and players Monday
night heaved a collective sigh
of relief efter the National
Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA) reversed its ruling of a
day earlier and said the
Warriors could continue in the
NCAA tournament.
' For 24 hours the NCAA had
been saying Marquette was out
he~use Bob Lackey, captain
and senior forward for the 7thranked Warriors had not
signed an affidavit disclalnung
reporla he had retained an

James Smtih, Mike Bissell,
Donald Matheny, Greg Cole,
Charles Massar, Jean Jones,
Brian Connolly , Scottie
Sprague, Tommy Scyoc, and
Jimmte Banks, Brenda
Frecker, Beth Headley, Angela
Hensley and Arlene Connolly
as the ladtes-m-wmttng: Tim
Kuhn, Joe Buchanan, Gary
Longenette, and JIJD Landon,
guards; Jeff Fultz, Demus
Rucker, Donald Longenette,
Charles Spurlock, Howie Dorst
and Mike Hayman as heralds
Directton IS by Mrs. Maxme
Whitehead, vocal mustc
teacher who IS betng assisted
by classroom teachers. Jenny
Dean ts servmg as accompamst. The pubhc IS mVIted and a small admissiOn
will he charged at the door.
MICE - Lena Sampson, K1la
Young , Penny Sams, Margery

Myers,

Brenda

Ca laway ,

Vtrgmta Causey , Diana Durst,

Shern Myers,

Palncta

Ed

wards, Sarah Goebel , Bnan

Well , John DaviS , Gerald
Watson , Glen Putman, Jimmte
Bauman , Davrd Durst , Wtllte ...

Putman,

Jackte

Gnffm, Kelll Headley. Erma
Connolly. LISa Collms, Sherrl

Putman, l:.aurte Lan ce, Mrk~

Connolly ano Elwood Myers
GUESTS AT THE BALL -

Jamte
Banks,
Teresa
Benedum, Susan Sh1elds, Janet
Karen

Strausbaugh ,

.'!&amp;W:J:!:\.,
Generation Rap
~
·::m:.:m::::.,..»w#..::;&amp;o &amp;

By Helen and Sue Bottel

~

SCHOOL GIRLS RATED 'X'
Dear Helen and Sue:
I noticed an ad m the amusement section of the paper about
one of those raunchy blue movies (sex, sex, SEX 1) rated "X." It
satd, "An intimate study of the hidden hves of our teenage girls
- shocking, revealmg, true 1""
My fnends and I (and I'll bet a lot of other teenagers) fmd
this ad -and the moVIe no doubt - a personal msult to us We
are the girls they're talking about - 11Dpiymg that school girls
are rotten, d1rty, sex-crazy dogs
Another thmg that gets us upset is that we aren't even old
enough to see the mov1e, yet we're supposedly the ones perlormmg thts filth . And a lot of adults judge us because of such
films, books, etc
I'm a ]Untor m high school, very active in sports, clubs and
school government. I don't do X-rated thmgs, and netther do my
frtends; in fact, most of the girls I know are about bke me, and
1001 interested m changmg
We thmk "exposes" of high school vice are degradmg to us
What do you thmk? - MARGARET
Do·ar Margaret
From what I've read about those qu1ckte, X-rated, blue
movtes, they're a bunch of dull, tasteless rubbiSh with a lot of sex
scenes and no plot, and I wouldn'tgo to one, even If! could.
They're degradmg to EVERYBODY, not JUSt teenagers, but
I don't thmk the kind of aduils-who-count )Udge us by these films
- because that kind of adult stays away from them, too - SUE
Dear M ·
Score One for a straight-thinkmg school gtrl' Your pomt IS
well taken - If teenagers are banned from a moVIe whtrh sup.
posedly tells the truth about them, then there's etther somethmg
wrong with the ratings or else tremendously false about the him
I doubt that hard core (or should I say rotten core ) blue
movies wdl be around much longer The plotless cheap1es don 't
attract the young crowd who prefers more for 1ts money than
exaggerated sex, and most older people only attend once out of
cunos1ty (Wlless they're repressed voyeurs) - HELEN

+++

Dear Rap
My girl friend doesn 't hke the way I dress, eat, talk, wear my
clothes, have my hair cut ; you name 11 and she wants to change
II.
At ftrst, I went along wtth her because her famdy IS better off
than mme, and I figured she could teach me how to act But she
thinks I should be a carbon copy of the guys that s1t around Iter
pool. I don 't have anything to say to them and probably never
will She hounds Me about this and also about not bemg able to
carry on a conversation With her parents. She's always
critiCIZing.
I love th1s girl, but I'm begonnmg to realize I hke the way I
am, and my own folks are more real than hers, and my own
frtends also How do I tell her I'm not JUSt a hunk of - MOLDING

CLAY
Dear M C
You may not know it yet, but I'll bet you're close to telhng
this girl "Good-bye' " Firm up that "common clay," and get on
wlih it ' - HELEN

+++

Bailey. Ronald Malheny ,
Clifford Longenelle. Steve

Barber, Danny Spencer, Joe

Boyles , Sharon Henderson,

Jeff Goebel. Debbie Shields,
Tammy Fortney, Calhy
Collms, Cmdy Scyoc, Sherrl
Hackney. Pally Pullms, Janel
Benedum, Dorolhf' Runyon,
Charles Lanlz, Brenda Boyles.
Cheryl Gnffm, Charlene Coe,
Nancy Chaffee, Charles
Calaway, Randy Boslon, Ke1lh
Brooks, Edd1e Russell. Joey

Dear M. :
Yeah! Why stay Wtth a girl who only hkes you when you're
trying to he somebody el.e? Tell her you've got to be YOU - jus I
before you say, "See you then" (meamng not often) - SUE

Mar1e

Mar c 1nko,

Brenda

COLUMBUS (UP!) -A "declaration of inten.t" to consider
charter revocation of four Ohio
school dtstricts was passed
Monday by the state Board of
EducatiOn.
The districts - Gettysburg
Local and Liberty Local m
Darke County and Laurelville
Local and Starr-Washmgton
Local m Hockmg County have30 days to request a pubhc
hearing on the proposed
revocations
The board can take actiOn
followmg the hearmgs
The tioard sa1d all four distrocts offer less than the 45
units required to proVIde m1m-

CHORUS AND NEIGHBORS
- Jul1e Schullz, Edna Boggs,
N1esel Duvall, Con n1e Putman,
Teresa Carr, Suzy Goebel,
Nancy Bailey, Melante En
voldson , D1ana Benedum,
Conme Mays, Cmdy Mays,
Deanna Baker, Susan Hen

Sonra Carr , Paula Lrfe Ka lee n

and Debra Connolly

Teresa

Edwards,

Kalhy Foll rod, Jenny Sprague

Legislature At a G!JJnce
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
glance at acr!VIly Monday m
the Ohto General Assembly:
House
Bills bttroduced
HB 1125 Hale, Authorizes
school districts to employ
school soctal workers to perform nonteaching functions

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, Ftrst
Ave and Cedar St General
vos1tmg hours 2-4 and HI p.m
Matermty Vlsilmg hours 2 30 to
4 30 p m Parents only on
Pediatrtcs Ward
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Philip F.
Burgess, III, Syracuse, a son,
Mr and Mrs Bob J Stanley,
Galhpoiis, a daughter; Mr and
Mrs Roger K Waller, Ironton,
a daughter; Mr and Mrs
Hughte Scurlock, Wellston, a
daughter , Mr and Mrs
Fredenck McNeal, Patriot, a
son; Mr and Mrs Dale Zmn,

McArthur, a son and Mr and
Mrs Dame! W Gilliland ,
Wellston, a daughter
Discharges
William
C
Gilmour,
Raymond H Gibson, Damel H
Var1an, Chnstma Lee Shelton,
Scott Elhott, Mary Leedy,
Bertha W1ihams, Mehssa R.
Stevenson, Clayton Lambert,
Ruby S Hall, James A Dtehl,
Jr , Kmzy D Durst, Randa Lee
Damels, Mrs Betty Evelyn
Gill, Mrs Eva V Gragg, Dons
Ellen Halfhill , Charles D
Creel, Jill A Jeffers, Bermce
Justoce, Timothy A Smith,
Mrs Anna Lee Steele, Mary B
Snyder, Lenera A. Warner,
Wilham D Whittmgton ,
Dorolhy E French, Rush F
James
Fred Spencer, Pa lrtcia L.
Soladean, Janet S Edwards,
Mrs Curl!s Miller and
daughter, Kathryn Sprouse,
Michelle L Carrico, Bonme A
Reed, Mrs Holhs E Ohver and
daughter, Robm E Brewer,
Arnold R. Reffitt, Andrea D
Caudill, Mrs Beatrice Sltnker,
Ear l G Barney, Kenneth
Black, James Hartley, Mrs.
Everett Lee Hutton and son,
Charles E Jeffers, Jr., Harley
E Taylor, Henry Varney,
Debra S Young, Mmme
Perkms, Dona Evans, Mrs
Betty Mtller, Rocky J Swick,
Cora M Marr, Lawrence V.
Unroe, Lenna B. Hubbard ,
Kimberly C Vmson, Kenneth
L Valiance
Patnc1a L Gray, Mrs J ohn
R By us and daughter,
Michelle R Young, Dana Jean
Hall , Byrd1e R Barnett,
Wendy Burch, Ney Carpenter,
Gaylord Coffee , Mrs Wtlham
c Dartney and daughter,
Geneva F Day, Lillie M
Fields, Blanche M. Has)uns,
Charles H. Mcinturf!, Helen
Pemberton, Tern L. Queen,
Douglas E Tawney, Gloria J
Clonch, Audrey B Haley , Mrs.
Opal Carol Taylor

Raymond Andrews, Alan Seth, Dwayne Qualls, Chuck
Follrod, Doug Browning, Tim Rawlings, Jeff ~gUsh; back
row Frank Seth, Coach. The dinner was sponsored by
Po~eroy-Middleport merchants. Absent were Steve Little
and David Dillard. Boys of the fifth and sixth grade B squads ·
also attended the dinner.

..

negotiate

HB 1127, Netzley, No-fault auto
msurance
HB 1128, John Sweeney, Provides for annual hearmgs on
release of persons conurutted
to mental hospitals.
HB 1129, Kerns, Clartf1es power of Controllmg Board to expend money appropriated to
the emergency purpose fund m
appropriatiOns act
Senate
Bill Introduced
SB 501, Secrest, Grants free
tmtion to children of prisoners
of war and soldters mtssmg m
action m VIetnam

mum educational opportumties
for students. The board also
satd each of the four districts
falls to meet at least 2:i minimum
state
standards
establtshed for operation of a
high school.
The board, at Monday's
monthly meeting, approved
five requests for federal and
state funds for constructton of
vocational educatton facililtes.
Requests approved were :
- Washington Local Schools,
Lucas CoWlty, $1.9 millton in
state issue funds for an addilion
- Sandusky City Schools,
$854,474 from state funds for
additiOnal facihlies.

Sport Parade

(Seneca County) was elected
board president, succeeding
Mrs Jeannette Wagner of
Chagrm Falls, who has been
I president the past two years.
The board also announced a
plan to get ideas from Ute pub- Pickaway-Ross Jomt he on upgrading education.
Vocational School, $1.2 million
Citizens' seminars" are to
from Vocational Education Act be held in the state's 624 local
and $1.1 milbon from Ap- school districts to get the pubpalachian fund for new he's proposals for the
faetlities
"redestgn and improvement of
- Ashland County Jomt Vo- state education.''
caltonal school, $1 2 millton m
Edward C. Ames of Toledo,
federal fWtds and $754,271 m chBirffian of the committee orstate Issue funds for construc- gamzmg the seminars, said
tion of Its new conplex.
"every Ohio Citizen" should
New President
take part in the local sessions.
Bryce L. Wetker of Republic
"Vtewpoints of all our
ettizenry are much needed if
we are to chart education on
the best posstble course,"
Ames said. Recommendations
ultiiDately are to he considered
at a two-day meetmg here.
Prestdent Nixon was expected
In other actton Monday the
to crush Rep. John M. board:
Ashebrook of Ohto, the stan- Chartered the newly condard-bearer for the con- structed Willtam V. Fisher Caservative party, and Rep Paul tholic High School in LancasN. McCloskey of California, a ter.
Vietnam War cnttc who has
Approved allocation of
wtthdrawn as an acltve can- federal work studv funds of
didate
$51,363 to Dayton City Schoola
Also on the ballot was the and $6,144 to Mtddletown City
first statewtde "straw vote" on Schools
a constitultonal amendment to
- Established an "awards of
outlaw school busmg, and dishnctwn" program to honor
another "straw vote" on a outstanding career education
constitutional amendment students, SIJDilar to awards
permittmg prayer m publtc currently made to " basic
schools.
studies" students.
-Belmont County Jomt
Vocational School, $303,035 in
funds from the federal
Vocational Educalton Act and
$333,000 in Appalachian funds
for constructing a new facility.

11

Standi"~~~ Clark Named

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I Voice along Br'Way I
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baseball's disappointment of the year m 1971. From a .293 battmg
average the year before, he dipped to 238; from 148 RBI's he fell
to 61, and from 45 homers he dropped to 27.
Some players could manage to feel pretty good about a season
Uke that, but not Bench because after the year he had m 1970
most people had him halfway to the Hall of Fame. He couldn't
miss, they said. He was the best there was.
Sparky Anderson says he was as guilty as all the rest, maybe
more so.
"Put youself in John's shoes," says the Reds' manager. "How
would you like to he on a team where everytime you picked up the
paper you read how great the manager said John Bench was• I
think it hurt John in this respe\!t-he knows ail the players read
things like that. What are they to think• I'm the same way, even
as a manager. I don't want to pick up the paper every day and
read how great the other managers are."
Bench-teriS you right off Anderson has been a great help to him,
during working hours and after them.
"He's the smartest manager in baseball," says Cincy's gifted
kid catcher. "I admire the man and respe\!t him. Unfortunately
things didn't go well last year for me and everybody wants to
know why He's certainly not to blame for what happened with
me. I was the one who got up there and made the outs, not him.''
Golf Toarney Held
Shortly after the Reds began their workouta this sprmg, a golf
tournament was held not too far from here and a number of
ballplayers took part m the pro-am. Bench played a lot of golf
thla wmter. He loves the gsme and Anderson knows it.
"I told him I'd like to send him over there to play, all the clubs
were sending their big guys, but if he went tl would mean he'd
miss ftve days work here," Anderson says "I told John that
would put added pressure on him. All the players would say
'There It goes agsin.'"
Johnny Bench understood ~eclly.
Hedidn'tgotoplay golf He stayed here and worked.
Sparky Anderson is the type manager who will grant any
reasonable request. That goes for all his playrs, not only Johnny
Bench. Sometimes he feels he must turn down Bench even if he
has a reasonable request.
"lt's ahard thiitg to do," Anderson says. "He does everythmg I
ask him and then some. To me, at his position, he's sttll the best I

PLAYER OF YEAR
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Toledo
center Tom Kozelko, who set
two scoring records for the
Rockets, was named Monday
as the Mld-Amerl.can Conference Player of the Year.
KozeJko received 221&gt; points
to Ill&gt; for Ohio Universtly's
Tom Corde, ' the only two
players voted upon by members of the MAC news media.

MICHAEL RESIGNS
ADA, Ohw (UPI) - Ohio
Northern Unlverstty baskethall coach Larry Mtchael has
announced his resignation,
effective at the end of the
academic year in May.
Michael compiled a 99-103
record durmg hiS etght years
as head coach.
He did not dtsclose hts future .

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New York
Monlreal
Toronlo

~· 1~ it~

Most Valuable Player

OJO 27 12 72
By DALE ROTHGEB
comptled an overall 18-3
29 32 9 67
North Gallia 's Arthur Clark, record.
Buffalo
13 41 1S 41
17 44 6 40 6-5 senior center, one of the
Vancouver
Etchinger, 6-3 semor center,
•
West
main cogs in the hlgh-ecoring was naffi!!d
to the all league
W. L. T. Pis
Chicago
41 17 11 93 Pirate offense, was named the team for the fourth straight
M1nnesola
33 24 10 76 Most Valuable Player of the year. He was the area's leading
51 LOUIS
25 36 9 59 Southern Valley Athleltc scorer With a 22 point per game
Philadelphia
23 35 11 57
average He also was named to
Callforn1a
20 33 16 56 Conference Monday mght.
Plllsburgh
22 37 10 SA
Clark, a recent honoree on the All DistriCt Class A team
Los Angeles
18 45 7 43 the Class A AU-District team, and helped lead the Eagles to
Monday's Results
edged Eastern 's Dennis an outstanding, 19-3 season.
Monfr.. l 2 Philadelphia 1
(Only game scheduled)
Eichinger by one vote, 58-57
Votmg was conducted on a
Tuesday's Games
Clark will he presented the 111-~ etc. basiS by the league's
Buffalo at M1nnesota
MVP
Trophy at North Gallia's seven coaches
Coaches
Plltsburgh at Vancouver
basketball banquet Friday, elected SIX men to the ftrst
(Only games scheduled)
April 7, by Bill Gray, Sports team and seven to the second
Director of Radto Station team. The additional players
College Basketball Results
WJEH and Dale Rothgeb, Jr., were named due to he votes
By Unoted Press lnlemational Assistant City Editor With the
Coach JIJD Foster's Pirates
NAtA Championship
Ohio Valley Publishtng had three players on the first
At Kansas Coty, Mo.
Company, sponsors of the MVP team. Symmes Valley, the
tF1rsl Round)
Wslmnl, Cal 91 Ednboro, Pa award.
league's newest member,
72
Clark,
a
three-time
ali
SV
AC
placed
two men on the ftrsl
51 Thos , Mmn 78 Tr1 51 , lnd
honoree, comptied a 21.9 pomt squad and Eastern·~ Etchinger
61
Ouachlla Bapflsl, Ark. 90 game average. He also completed the team
Elizabeth C1ty 51 89, at
In all, 18 players received
Xav1er, La 102 /1/vJ E Shore 50 averaged over 20 rebounds per
Scott left the ABA
Grdnr Wbb, N C 109 E Mont game. North Gallia, m winmng considerallon m the balloting.
"If he signs wtth an NBA 94
the SVAC champtonshlp, Both teams were dominated by
club, we will proceed umnedisemors. Coaches also selected
ateiy With all dispatch and ~:..~·:»&gt;S:W.&amp;S!.?.·».:·:·:.-!!::x:::::w::::.-::::::w:::::::::;:::;o;:;:;::ro:::;:;:::;:;:o:-~·:;:;::s::::::::::::::~-::::::~. ft ve Jwuors and on Iy one
dihgence to institute a suit o
@ sophomore, Clay Hudson of the
aga1nst the club and the NBA,"
Kyger Creek Bobcats.
Foreman said Sunday. "If he
Casting votes were Jtm
does sign, we will he convmced
:;i
Foster,
North Gallui; Bill
,..
there ts a conspiracy in the
Ph1ll1ps, Eastern;
Asa
NBA to induce ABA players to
llr~
~ ~
&gt;:· Bradbury, Southern, Wayne
breach their contracts."
~First Team)
Whtte, Symmes Valley ; Paul
Scott, who had a run-lllS with
PLAYER
SCHOOL
HT. YR. ~~ Dillon, Hannan Trace; Jim
Vtrginia Coach AI Btanchi
11 ·
4 ~ Arledge, Kyger Creek and
6· 5
earber tn the season, S3ld he ~·· Arthur Clark, North Ga Ia
~ Richard Hamilton, Southconsidered hts contract wtlh : : ~·~ Dennis Eichinger, Eastern
6-3
4 ~~ western
the Squires votd because the ·; Danny Wilson, Symmes Valley
5·11
4 i.~ In other busmess, Symmes
team had failed to hve up to tis ..; Ph1l Robinson, Symmes Valley
5·11
3 ~ Valley was officially voted into
promtse to pay off a $26,000 ::~ Pat Stout, North Gallia
5-10
4 f~ the league. The Vikings had
loan.
~ Gary Crosswhite, North Gallia
6-4
3 ~ been granted membership on a
~
·.~ probattonary basis. All league
Phoemx obtained NBA rtghls ~
( Secood Team)
~l teams approved the mollon. A
to Scott m a deal with the ~
Boston Celttcs that included ~ PLAYER
SCHOOL
HT. YR.
,slmii: ~ole was ta~n
~·
cash and "future considera- ~ Keith Swain, Hannan Trace
5-10
4 ~ ~:~. eague mee g as
tions," based on the Suns'
5·10
4 ~ The league adopted the
success of legal action filed by ~ Jerry Hubbard, Southern
6-4
4 ~ spring baseball and track.
the Squires. Colangelo did not i:j Larry Justus, North Gallia
6·2
4 ::$ schedules. The basehall season
reveal details of the contract. ~ Roy Thompson, Kyger Creek
5·11
4 ~ will open Tuesday, Aprtl4 with
Scott was expected to su1t up 1!! Bob Caldwell Eastern
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6
5
3 ~ Hannan Trace hostmg
for the Suns' final stx games, ~ M1~e Caldwell, Hannan race
·
~ Eastern; Kyger Creek vlsitmg
the first Wednesday night in ~ Ke1th Roach, Symmes Valley
6-Q
4 :::: North Gallia and Southwestern
Phoemx aganlSI Milwaukee
~
HONORABLE MENTION - Clay Hudson
traveling to Southern. A double
~ and George Curry, Kyger Creek; Jene Myers, ~~- round robin schedule features
~ Symmes Valley, Jim Hubbard and Bruce Hart,
12
league
encounters .
~ Southern and Mark Smith, Southwestern.
Dtscussion was held on
~
meeting the Ohio High School
::::::::::~~·&gt;:::·t&lt;m.w.i:!88 QW!3? 8 8 e'8'3!1'~~~~ AI hI e t t c Ass o c I a t 1on
reqwrements of having two
Dave Lopes doubled in Willie
Crawford in the ftfth for the of the Mets has been scratched ced to skip a turn on the licensed umpires at each
game.
Dodgers' f1rst run. Darrell as starting pttcher for loday's mound
League secretary Mel Carter
Seaver, a 20-game wmner
Chaney's throwmg error allow- game with the Reds because of
was
inslructed to contact .the
ed an unearned run in the siXth persistent stiffness in his right and former Cy Young Award
rectpient, last worked on Distrtct AthleUc Board to se'e if
after Tony Clomnger had filled shoulder
the bases on walks.
It was the second time in March 8 when he pitched four the rule could he waived slnee
Ace righthander Tom Sever three days that Seaver was for- strong innings agamst Detroit. thiS area does not have enough
regiStered umpues. Games
Will he played on Tuesday and
De troll

I Ex·ABA Player

TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)--Sparky Anderson couldn't he if 11 killed
him.
You ask him whether maybe he was too over protective, too
solicitous, of Johnny Bench last year and he g1ves 11 to you
straight.
"I think so. I think I hurt him," says Cmcinnati's bonehonest,
straightforward manager.
The day Sparky Anderson would ever mtenhonally hurt
Jolmny Bench bas not dawned yet and it's mce to be a~le to
report the same thing goes the other way around. Bench f~ls a
warmth toward Anderson he never dtd toward the Reds' previous
manager, Dave Bristol.
Age woulm't have anything to do wtth tl either because there's
only eight months difference between Anderson and Brtslol, but
there Is an apprectable difference in the way the two men treated
Bench. Bristol handled him the same way he did any other 22year-old player on the club. Basically, the 38-year-old Anderson
does the same thing, with the Red superstar who ts now 24, but he
throws In one extra little dimension-the IDlik of human kmdness. Boiled down, you'd call II paternalism. •

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ever saw."

Way to W , Way to L

.,

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Writer

University, '13-49, in flrskound
NCAA play. After the game Lhe
NCAA filed its complamt and
on Sunday afternoon satd
Marquette was out ot the
tournament unless It appealed
the ruling and could prove
Lackey didn't hire an agent.
The issue was quickly resolved Monday when Warren
Brown, assistant NCAA executive director, came to town to
confer with Marquette offtctals. La~key signed the
affidavtt m , the presence of
Brown, .Coach McGuire and
others and that was that.

asked Lackey to sign the 15question affidavit. Coach McGuire cautiooed llim about
signing it would legal advice
and Lackey refused, though
other players in the same
situation signed the paper.
Assistant Coach Hank Raymoods said Lackey didn'rsign
because the situation was Uke
someone "awakening you at 2
a.m. in the morning and saying
'Hey, you come down to
headquarters with us and sign
this.' He naturally wanted
legal advice ."
Lackey and the Warriors

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SJ'A C's

1Phoenix Signs

Baseball'• Disappointment
Johnny Bench, the National League's MVP m 1!170, was

Wallace Sure Shoo-in

MIAMI ( UPI ) - Wtth Humphrey of Mmnesota,
Jackson of
Alabama's Gov George C Henry M
Wallace conceded vtctory, f1ve Washmgton and George S.
maJor . candtdates for the McGovern of South Dakota and
Democratic prestdenttal Mayor John V Lindsay of New
nomination today aiJDed at a York
hon's share of the leavings as
Marked by a crowded field of
Florida voted In the second 11 candtdates
on the
primary of the 1972 electiOn Democratic ballot and the
year
emotiOnally explostve ISSue of
PT. PLEASANT
school
busmg, the primary was
The
outcome
was
constdered
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
Important - and m some cases expected to draw about 70 pet.
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
cruc18l
- to the White House of the 2 1 millwn regiStered
Saturday, Mar. II, 1972
HOGS - 175 to 220 23 75 to ambitiOns of Sens. Edmund S. Democrats Perfect weather
24 25, Heavies 23 to 23 85, Musk1e of Mame, Hubert H. was forecast around the state.
Totally overshowed was the
Lights 19 to 22, Fat Sows 19 to
Republican
primary where
22 so, Boars 14 to 20 SO, Pigs 8
lo 14, Stock Shoats 12 to 21
CATTLE - Steers 26 50 to
~;.;z;:·~s~;;:-;:~::::::::~::x~::;~~=~m.:::x-x:w-;'!$f&amp;· :Q: • • •• •*-' ··· ··v w·r te otc::e.: us: :
31 75, Heifers 24 to 29 so, Fat 21st VICTORY
Cows 19 SO to 23 85, Canners 17
MANCHESTER, England
to 21 50, Bulls 24.50 to 30, Milk (UPI) - Larry Mtddleton of
Cows 185 to 275, Stock Cows and Baltimore, Md., 203%, stopped
Calves 175 to 350, Stock Steers Danny McAhnden, 192, Great
31 to 38 so, Stock Heifers 24 to Bntam- the No. I challenger
BY JACK O'BRIAN
national co-ordinator.
32 50, Stock Steer Calves 34.50 for the Brttish title- m the
WHEN LBJ RELAXES,
Sad news from Paris famed Maxim's gets
to 47, Stock Heifer Calves 31.50 eig hth round Monday night
HE'S 'BUSCHED'
pushed
a swallow down in the prestigtous Guide
lo39
For Middleton, 11 was his 21st
NEW YORK (KFS) - LBJ weekended on
Kleber gastronomtc ratings; mayhem could
VEAL CALVES - Tops 55, VIctory m 2.'1 fights. He had
St Louis brewer Gussie Busch's yacht in the
result in tastebud-griiD Pans ... Next week on
Seconds 50.50, Medium 43 to defeated former BntiSh ChamBahamas
..
Rep.
Shtrley
Chtsholm's
NBC-TV, Xerox, that old copycat, wtll sponsor
49.85, Common &amp; Heavtes 41 to pwn Joe Bugner on a preVIOUS
moonlighting marvelously: got $1,500 for an
50 50
the "Peking Ballet," which the Nixons
VISit here
anh-establ1Shment harangue at Marymount
pretended they admired so much .. Robert
College here ... We forecast months ago Bella 'Goulet jetted all the way to Morocco to play gof.
WIN AT BRIDGE
Abzug's redistricting squeeze-out (Abzug make
Status stuff : with the King
the heart grow etc) .
Oscar-producer Sam Spiegel (Dr. Zhlvago,
/n I
0Se Lord Snowdon has the Palm Springs title- Lawrence
of Arabia, River Kwai etc.) doesn't
fawners a]tlter: arnves there momentanly for
hide the fact he l)as a young son in England. He
lhe queen In the East hand a Vogue celebrtty-photo JOb, mcluding Cary
NOKTII (0)
14
just hasn't advertised 11
Gaudy socialite
and Sout h Will make twelve
Grant
...
The
Beatie
John
Lenn~ bought a
!rocks He will make eleven
author trted suicide m Greece ... Our liberals
¥ 81) ·,
1f Ea st holds four trumps to South Greenwtch Village house . Stripper
tAK Q.J4
want us to turn over utilities to the gov't, but in
... Q lOR I
the queen or West three to Penny Powers dreaming of Bdwy. as she
socialist
Israel there's strong talk of turning
WES'f
lhc queen
EAST
wriggles up close ( "Folltes Burlesque" m
over tis gov't-run phone system to private en• Q 10h 2
• 43
He will make just mne the exurban Port Washington, L.I.) says she's a
terpnse.
¥ AK Q J'1 7
¥10 5.11 way the caras he because
tidy
type:
a
former
farm
girl,
4-H
Club
leader;
• 10 fi
t 98 'I
West has four humps to the
The tiny "m" Chmese restaurant, Joe
... 741 2 queen , will wm the first and a direct descendant of Sir FranciS Drake, a
Mah's Confucius (patrons included Lucille Ball,
sou l'Jl
loump and shorten South cousin of Corneha OtiS Skinner, Academy of
Liz Taylor, Bette Davis, Streisand, Henry
4 A K f'JH 7
down to the same numbe1 Dramatic Arts grad, and a candidate for the
• v()lrl
Fonda, Poitier, Belefonte etc.), just moved
he holds Laleo on he wtll be Daughters of the Amencan Revolulton. Sure
• 7&gt; 2
able to keep South from eve1
from 1ts hole~n-the-wall on far-West ~2nd st. to
... K J 9 h
The New Jersey Playboy Resort at Great
collectmg a club !rock
larger digs m the Victoria Hall ... "Jesus Christ
No1th-South vu l11'" 1ahle
All lhos woll be bad luck Gorge announces 11 wtll offer summer guests
Superstar" IS so sens!Uve about the thwacks II
We ~ I
N111 lh
Eos l Suuth
but South should avOid 11 sky-diYIOg, whtch sounds dangerously s1ily;
has rec'd from Jews and Catholics that Its
I t
Pass I •
He should see that he can except at Las Brtsas m Acapulco, where we
4¥
P us~
Pa ~s
4•
management divulges tis superslanted title role
afford to lose two trump
P.ts s
Pass
I' 1c k s After that he will watched kids and grownupa take off behind
IS played by Jeff Fenholt, who, despite hla youth
OpL·mng: lcdd- ¥ K
cash the ace and kmg of speedboats - hanging from giant kites that
and hippie appearance, is a practicmg Catholic
' - - - - - - - - - - 11umps and play nothong but flung them hundreds of feet above the water.
who loves going to Mass. Couldn't they also
-Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacob) clubs and diamonds from
Brando says "The Godfather" isn't about
sneak
hiiD into synagogue some Fri. night? As
then on
the
Mafia
·
"I
think
It's
about
the
corporate
AHCH st"nds foo Anal yze He w•ll lose two trump
Shabhes Goy?
lhe lead Rev1ew the b1d 111cks but he woll have on- mind," he pontificated to Newsweek ,. But
Famed baseball hero Waite Hoyt retired
d111 g (ount wmn et s and los SUI ed Ju s contrac t
what btg corporation removes Its executives as
from
his seven-yea~ microphone retirement to
e1s an d hn nll y How can I
the Mafia has Albert Anastasta, Wtlhe Moretti,
(NEWSPAPE R Et.ITERPRISE ASSN I
become a Cincy ballcaster agsm. He's 72 .. . Bema ke Ill ) conitact 1
Little AU~Je Pisano; or retired a president as tl
there the Ides of March : at the St. Regis
Ev pct ts use 11 more 01 less
did Frank Costello wtlh one mis-aimed bullet
automat ically 01dona ry play
Maisonette to see Gordon MacRae pelform ...
And then removed the dullshooter the same
ers should lea rn lo follow It
No on~thought Jean Arthur ever would emerge
way
Brando
can
act,
if
not
lately,
but
he's
with all hands
\Vosl
Nm lh
F.ast
from ner cave again - she's ou~ermited
It 1511 I ha1 d f01 South to
hardly a soctal or corporate cnt1c. More a social
Garbo- but she'Ubring her lovely husky voice
\n alvzo th e kmg of hea1ts Pn ss
1A
Poss
malcontent
to the Frank Capra Restrospective in Dallas
lc•,Hl 01 to flevoew lhe bid P.1ss
~ +
Pnss
Wilt the Silt Chamber lam planned to spend
d111 g \Vesl clc"Iil' has a long You Sot•1h hold
late this month. Now if she sees her shadow,
$1mti1Ion on his flashy Santa Momca Mts. pad ,
stl ung llt'd tl ;.; ull a nd l1as led
spring'll really be here .. John Bruno's trying
•'1Hh51 ¥A 2 +J ... AKQ76 the cost st;\ted half a million over that already
I(
desperately to buy the E. 4~th St. building his
Wh &lt;t 1 cl u \ r1t1 d o now 1
Soul h ~.: a n &lt;.:ount wmne1"
. Kun Novak's m the saddle buSiness; has a
Pen &amp; Pencil steakene occupies; he owns the
" "d losc•ts 1at he1 eaSi ly He A- ll•tl (1\c hcu.tls Your 11.11rl · bustlmg Texas ftrm called "Kim Novak Sadone next door as a saver.
rn ust !osl' ~~ d ub and has ne t "aub \ uu tu slww th1 s
dles" Father Roland Melody, who wrote the
"orn e p o s !-: t b l e loseJ S 1n Otl d tf \011 h iiH' II
Xerox also ts footing the ecuaUonal-TV bill
1mpo•tant 'oNarco Pnest" book last year, this
I I LHllp s
TOO,\ Y S I!Ut' S'flON
to telecast Eisenstein's famed Russian film
In ( l l oJ•Ia Sou th ' an l ead Y v t 1r p 1 1 t ll'-" r IIJil !llltiC!! t o year has another dandy, "Wntten lD Every
"Potemkln"; this plus the Red China ballet
d cll •.t~l lo n d lo dtmlm \ pia\ l l\ 1 ,.,pMt l'" W h&lt;~ t r1 11 \ &lt;ur rlo Key" (Camark Pubhshers, Providence, N.J.);
triangulates to the logical third clue: China and
,l sp.:'dl• ~m d f•nt•s sr ht s jack
'"'" '
all of the proceeils wtll go to the Cathohc Office
Russta are untapped as Xerox customers.
Sp,ulc &lt; '' oil Ill &lt;·ak J.:J wolil
of Drug Edu~ahon of which Father M. IS

a ed Friday when the NCAA went on Saturday to heat Oluo Boslon

But Lackey diapelled the bad
dream the Wamors and their
fans Uved through by relenting
Monday and signing the affidaVIt. The NCAA inunediately
reinstated Marquette and the
whole thing was over.
"I'm very happy for the
pl~yers, the student body and
the fans," said Head Coach AI
McGuire. Lackey himself admitted he was "glad it's over"
but smd "! felt like I was going
to play ... I hadn't done
anything "
The short-lived InCident staft·

Today's

•'

Two Hoc g Districts
May Lose Ohio Charters;

Rucker and lana Johnson

derson,

NEIGHBORS IN ACT I -

agent , to

}

Mlllhone , ltta Young, Debbte
Eynon ,
Lor•
Barrmger ,
Alberta
Schul t z,
Tressa
Causey, Carla Chichester, Beth
R1tch1e, Helen Myers, Lon
Longenette, Conn1e Kay Slout,

Kuhn and Rrck Lehman

Brannon,

Kerth Harrts, Pamela Murphy,
Sharo n
Gnfftn,
Tammy
Cremeans. Patty Jones, Susan

Brooks,

Tammy Russell , Brenda
Sampson, Debbte Durst, Robm
Rtlchre , Vtda Weber , Roger

-

•••

POMEROY'S FIF'l1f1 ~P SIXTH "A" PEE WEE
BASKETBALL CHAMPS - were presented trophies at a
banquet held Monday mght at the Meigs Inn. The team ended
tis season wtth a perfect 9-0 record. Team members, front
row, 1-r, are Troy Griffith, Wesley Smith, Jeff Couch, Jmt·
mer Soulsby, Homer Smith, and Mark Casto; second row,

101 Pupils in School Operetta
Students of the Tuppers
Plams Elementary School wtll
present a three act operetta,
"Cinderella's Sltpper" at 8
p m. Fnday in the school
audttonum
The operetta is based on the
fa try tale, "Cmderella."
Mothers have been In charge of
creating elaborate and colorful
costummg for the producllon
over the past several weeks.
Playing the role of Cinderella
will he Diana Massar and Paul
Dean Brannon will play the
prmce. Playing the role of ihe
step-mother Will he Penny
Peterson wtth Lon Young and
Teresa Buckley as the step.
sisters Other prmc1pals m the
operetta are the fatry godmother played by Debbie
Sanders, Steve Griffm as the
peddler and James Davis as
Lord High Chamherlam
Playmg other parts are
Larry Hams as "Thimble
Bonnet," with his little green
tailors , mcluding Gregory
Hayman, Jerry DaVIs, Bnan
Btssell, Donald Eynon, Dale
Welsh, Edward Scyoc, Gary
Putnam, James Osborne,
David
Putnam,
Dame!
Brawley, Rtcky Bonng, Gene
Cole, Dennis Durst, }Irian
Peterson, Mike Baker, Kenneth Chapman, Gregory
Scarbrough, Robert Lee
Henderson, Kevm Brooks,

'

MILWAUKEE, Wla. (UPI)- orofessional contract

•
are pledged to his chotce for
prestdent Mrs Rouse states,
"The voter, therefore, has a
vmce m selectmg hts party's
presidential nommee In the
past, the Oh10 voter had little
chotce - only an opportunity to
place an X alongSide one
delegale slate pledged to the
state party's favorite son, With
no md1ca lion as to whom the
normnees
slate of delegates or the
"Dedicated to the use of favonte son supported for the
political methods to achieve prestdential nomtnalton. The
change," is the way Mrs ' new method will mean that the
Rouse describes herself She voter will need to work a httle
says she favGrs the new harder for he w11l need to make
method of selecting delegates a chotce, but this IS the way
to the national convention ThiS democracy works Only 1n a
method, being used for the ftrst dtctatorshtp can dectsiOns he
lime 1n 1972, will perrmt each avmded," Mrs Rouse convoter to elect delegates that cludes

Pro

MU Rema1ns In Totnney .,..:~r:~....

Mrs. Rouse Candidate
Mrs . Douglas (Elaine )
Rouse, Addlaon, IS a candidate
for Delegate to the National
Democratic Convention from
the loth Ohio Congressional
Dislrlct Mrs. Rouse is i)!edged
to support Senator George
McG.overn for prestdent
McGovern, of South Dakota, ts
one of the authors of the reform
plan for selecting presidential

•

PHOENIX, Am. (UPI)Charbe Scott has bolted from
the American Basketball AssoCiation's Virginia Squires and
was expected to suit up
Wednesday for the PhoeniX
Suns of the rival Nattonal
Basketball Associatton.
,
The Suns announced Monday
they had stgned the ABA'S top
scorer following a weekend of
marathon negotialtons mvolvmg Phoemx General
Manager Jerry Colangelo and
Suns' Prestdent Rtchard Bloch.
Scott became the fourth star
player to jump the younger
ABA lor the more established
NBA Among his new teammates will be Connie Hawkins,
the fust ABA player to swttch
to the NBA. Spencer Haywood
and Jim McDamel, both with
Seattle, earlier followed Hawkins' example
The Squires were not expected to SIIDpiy allow Scott to
leave the team and the league.
Even before the Phoemx
contract was announced,
Squtres owner Earl Foreman
said a lawsuit would be filed if

1972 ALL •SVAC
Tl-nDm 'l"eam

t

'*
.:;:

One Ham

J

To Another

*

t

a:

*;

Reds Lose First Contest
VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI)
-The Cincmnalt Reds suffered
thetr first defeat of the young
Grapefruit League season
Monday, falhng to Los Angeles
2-1.
The Reds play at Tampa agsmst the New York Mets
Pete Rose's triple and Cesar
Gerommo's stngle were the
only htts Monday off Dodger
pitchers AI Downmg, Mike
strahler and Jim Brewere
Rose scored on a wild pttch m
the sixth The run ended an 18mning scoreless streak by
Dodgers pttchers.

NEW YORK (UPii- The
Umled Press International fmol
lop 20 major college basketball
teams w1th flrsl place votes
Team
Po1nts
I UCLA (34) (26 0)
340
2 North Carolina (23·41 279
3 Penn (23·21
247
4 LOUISVIlle (24 3)
197
s Soulh Carolina (22 41 193
6. Long Beach St. (23·3)
187
7 Marque lie (24·2)
127
8 5 W LouiSiana (23 3)
67
9. Brigham Young (21 4) SO
10. Flor~da 51 (24·5)
35
11 Maryland (22·5)
25
12 M1nnesola ( 17-61
23
13 MemphiS St (21 6)
17
14 Ken lucky (21 5)
13
15 Villanova (19·7)
12
16 Kansas 51 (18.81
11
17 Texas EI · Paso (20 6)
9
18 Marshall (23 3)
8
19 !Tiel MiSSOUri (21 5)
7
(Tie) Weber 51 (17·9)
7
ASTROS FAVOR STRIKE
COCOA, Fla . (UP!)Houston became the ninth
major league club to vote in
favor of a strike Monday if
pension plan negoltations with
maJor league club owners are
not settled by the March 31
expiration dale of the current
agreement.
The Astros voted 31.() m favor
of a strtke

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTER EST OF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
tHESTER L TANNEHILL,

HAM FOR EASTER?
NEED TIRES? BUY
TIRES FROM RIZER'S RECEIVE FREE HAM TRY BOTH - YOU ' LL
LIKE IT

Jen k zns
•
Yields 2 Hits

Final UPI
College Poll
and regular season won -lost
records In parentheses

Thursdays
Baseball coaches are Larry
Hetnes, Eastern; Larry Shong,
North Gailla; Dick Adams,
Kyger Creek; Ken Justice,
Symmes Valley; Hilton Wolfe,
Jr , Southern; Danny Cornell,
Hannan Trace and Richard
Hamilton, Southwestern.
The league also decided to
hold a track meet for all
schools on Fnday, May 12 at
Kyger Creek High School. The
event wtil begin at 4:30 p.m.
Trophies wtil he presented to
the first teams . Ribbons
wtil be given to the f1rst five
places
Track coaches are John
Blake, North Galha; J1m
Arledge, Kyger Creek; Roger
Kirkhart, Eastern, Bruce
Wallace, Southern and John
Patton, Symmes Valley
Offtcials tabled a malton to
increase the price for admtssion. It was felt that each
board of educatton should
discuss the matter before any
change ts made.

OUr

~rv

. ..

...

In Five Inning Stint
By United Press btternalional
Ferguson Jenkms, the
Nattonal League's Cy Young
Award wmner tn 1971, IS just
about ready to lead the Chicago
Cubs' staff this year-and if
you don't believe it, ask him.
"I'm about three turns away
from openmg the season," satd
Jenkins Monday after yielding
only two singles in five innmgs
m a 12-2 triumph over the
Milwaukee Brewers.
Jenkms, whose 24-13 record
m 3i innings earned hiiD the
NL s pttcher of the year award,
is shooting for his sixth stratght
20-VIctory season Although a
veteran, he is one of the hardest-working pttchers in the
game.
The New York Mets, meanwhile, are c~ncerned about
Tom Seaver, thetr ~me
wtnner of last season and a Cy
Young Award winner in 1969
when he had a 25-7 record.
Seaver missed hts se~ond
scheduled assignment today
because of a stiffness in his
nght shoulder.
In other camps: Pete Rose's
triple and Cesar Geronimo's
stngle were the only hits off AI
Downing, Mike Strahler and
Jtm Brewer as the Los Angeles
Dodgers beat the Cincmnati
Reds, 2-1 . . Steve Barber and
rooktes Adrian Devine and
Dick Towers combmed in a
hvehitter as the Atlanta
Braves heat the New York

Yankees, 1-0
Richte Zisk hit a two-run
homer in the e1ghth inning to
gtve the Pittsburgh Pirates a 65 vtctory over the Chicago
White Sox. Rich Reichardt and
Carlos May eac!\ homered for
the White Sox ... The Kansas
City Royals scored four runs in
the late innmgs to beat the
Montreal Expos, 4-2 ... Veteran
outfielder Tommy Harper hit
two doubles and rookie outfielder Ben Ogllvie had two singles
m the Boston Red Sox' 3-2
victory over the Phtladelphia
Phtiiies.
John Milner's three hits,
mcludmg a homer and an
SERVICES TODAY
VERSAILLES, Mo. (UPI)Funeral
servJces were
scheduled for today for
baseball Hall of Farner Zack
Wheat,
who
succumed
Saturday mght, apparently of a
heart attack.
Wheat, 83, spent 14 of h1s 18
years m the maJor leagues wtth
the Brooklyn Dodgers. He was
the National League batting
champiOn m 1918 with a .335
average.
Inducted into the hall in 1959,
Wheat had 2,884 hits in the
maJors and a lifetime batting
average of .317.
Wheat retired from active
play in 1928 whtle a member of
the Mmneapolis club of the
American Assoctalton.

mght-mnmg smgle that drove
m the wmning run enabled the
Mets to down the Detrotl
Tigers, ~ ... Eddie Leon's
bases-loaded double in the fifth
tnnmg produced what proved
to he the wmnmg run for the
Cleveland Indians in their 7-6
vtctory over the Oakland
Athletics.

High payments a problem ?

i$ the all$wer
992-2171
125

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Pomeroy, 0.

00o)OOOOO.Ot600 D06 DOG GG0 0 000: 0'0 0'000 0 0 tOO ~·tOOtC&lt;tO-

At 11 p.m.
on April 17th
you're going ,t o
wish you had
gone .to
H&amp;R Block.
There's still time.

Extc. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City &amp;clltor

Pubt•shtd dellv ucep t
Saturday by The OhtO Vallev
~ubltshtng

Court St ,
A5769

Company ,

111

Pomeroy , Oh•o ,

8US!I'IfSS OfiiCt" Phone

992 21S6. Ed1l0nat Phone 992

2151

Second class postaoe patd at
Pomeroy , Ohto
National

aaverttS•no

representettve
Bottmetft
Gtllagher , Inc , 12 East 42nd
St, NIW York City , New York
Subscrtphon rates
De
livered by earner where

available so cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carr .er
serv•ce not avallablt One
month $175 Bv. ma 1t tn Oh•o
and w Va One year $1,. 00

HELP

us

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S•x

monthS

S7 2S

months s.c so Subscr•pt ton
Ttmes
Sent .ne t

Pt iCt li'IC IUdf$ Sunday

National Canoonlsu Society

0'

I

Thru

'•

I

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PHONE 992-2342

MIDDLEPORT, O.

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

It's not too late to save yourself income Aggravation isn't tax deductible.
tax aggravation that comes with prepar- And we are.
ing your own return. And for a low one
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service which includes help with audita, DON'T LET AN AMATEUR DO
HaR BtOCK'S JOB.
estimates, or tax questions.
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the average cost was under $12.50 for
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year.

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Block.
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pettle.
lu

9 A M To S PM MON THRU SAT.
PHONE 992·3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
OPEN TODAY

304 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY. 0.

'

�2- The DllllySrnlinei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March If, 1972

,_....,.......,.-.,.._,.•. -.:·..

For lOth District Post

By MIKE USCHAN

c

Sen. McGovern has served in
the U S House of Representatives and ts now a U. S.
Senator After Robert Kennedy
was assassinated, Senator
McGovern
became
the
presidential chOice of the
Kennedy factiOn In 1968.
Senator McGovern has expressed a stand agamst the
VIetnam War ever smce 1963,
e1ght years ago.
Mrs. Rouse IS the daughter of
a former Mason County
Democratic chairman, J.
Wallace Burdett, and IS a
cousm of the late Joe F. Burdett, of Pomt Pleasant, a
former
West
Vorgm1a
Secretary of State and candidate for Governor of West
V1rg1ma She has restded m

•
MRS. DOUGLAS ROUSE

•

Galha County for 17 years and
IS a htgh school teacher She IS
a church offtcer and a Sunday
School teacher Mrs. Rouse's
husband, now deceased, for
many
years
was
a
mathemaltcs teacher at Kyger
Creek High School, Cheshire

Marquette .University fans,
bfficlala and players Monday
night heaved a collective sigh
of relief efter the National
Collegiate Athletic Association
(NCAA) reversed its ruling of a
day earlier and said the
Warriors could continue in the
NCAA tournament.
' For 24 hours the NCAA had
been saying Marquette was out
he~use Bob Lackey, captain
and senior forward for the 7thranked Warriors had not
signed an affidavit disclalnung
reporla he had retained an

James Smtih, Mike Bissell,
Donald Matheny, Greg Cole,
Charles Massar, Jean Jones,
Brian Connolly , Scottie
Sprague, Tommy Scyoc, and
Jimmte Banks, Brenda
Frecker, Beth Headley, Angela
Hensley and Arlene Connolly
as the ladtes-m-wmttng: Tim
Kuhn, Joe Buchanan, Gary
Longenette, and JIJD Landon,
guards; Jeff Fultz, Demus
Rucker, Donald Longenette,
Charles Spurlock, Howie Dorst
and Mike Hayman as heralds
Directton IS by Mrs. Maxme
Whitehead, vocal mustc
teacher who IS betng assisted
by classroom teachers. Jenny
Dean ts servmg as accompamst. The pubhc IS mVIted and a small admissiOn
will he charged at the door.
MICE - Lena Sampson, K1la
Young , Penny Sams, Margery

Myers,

Brenda

Ca laway ,

Vtrgmta Causey , Diana Durst,

Shern Myers,

Palncta

Ed

wards, Sarah Goebel , Bnan

Well , John DaviS , Gerald
Watson , Glen Putman, Jimmte
Bauman , Davrd Durst , Wtllte ...

Putman,

Jackte

Gnffm, Kelll Headley. Erma
Connolly. LISa Collms, Sherrl

Putman, l:.aurte Lan ce, Mrk~

Connolly ano Elwood Myers
GUESTS AT THE BALL -

Jamte
Banks,
Teresa
Benedum, Susan Sh1elds, Janet
Karen

Strausbaugh ,

.'!&amp;W:J:!:\.,
Generation Rap
~
·::m:.:m::::.,..»w#..::;&amp;o &amp;

By Helen and Sue Bottel

~

SCHOOL GIRLS RATED 'X'
Dear Helen and Sue:
I noticed an ad m the amusement section of the paper about
one of those raunchy blue movies (sex, sex, SEX 1) rated "X." It
satd, "An intimate study of the hidden hves of our teenage girls
- shocking, revealmg, true 1""
My fnends and I (and I'll bet a lot of other teenagers) fmd
this ad -and the moVIe no doubt - a personal msult to us We
are the girls they're talking about - 11Dpiymg that school girls
are rotten, d1rty, sex-crazy dogs
Another thmg that gets us upset is that we aren't even old
enough to see the mov1e, yet we're supposedly the ones perlormmg thts filth . And a lot of adults judge us because of such
films, books, etc
I'm a ]Untor m high school, very active in sports, clubs and
school government. I don't do X-rated thmgs, and netther do my
frtends; in fact, most of the girls I know are about bke me, and
1001 interested m changmg
We thmk "exposes" of high school vice are degradmg to us
What do you thmk? - MARGARET
Do·ar Margaret
From what I've read about those qu1ckte, X-rated, blue
movtes, they're a bunch of dull, tasteless rubbiSh with a lot of sex
scenes and no plot, and I wouldn'tgo to one, even If! could.
They're degradmg to EVERYBODY, not JUSt teenagers, but
I don't thmk the kind of aduils-who-count )Udge us by these films
- because that kind of adult stays away from them, too - SUE
Dear M ·
Score One for a straight-thinkmg school gtrl' Your pomt IS
well taken - If teenagers are banned from a moVIe whtrh sup.
posedly tells the truth about them, then there's etther somethmg
wrong with the ratings or else tremendously false about the him
I doubt that hard core (or should I say rotten core ) blue
movies wdl be around much longer The plotless cheap1es don 't
attract the young crowd who prefers more for 1ts money than
exaggerated sex, and most older people only attend once out of
cunos1ty (Wlless they're repressed voyeurs) - HELEN

+++

Dear Rap
My girl friend doesn 't hke the way I dress, eat, talk, wear my
clothes, have my hair cut ; you name 11 and she wants to change
II.
At ftrst, I went along wtth her because her famdy IS better off
than mme, and I figured she could teach me how to act But she
thinks I should be a carbon copy of the guys that s1t around Iter
pool. I don 't have anything to say to them and probably never
will She hounds Me about this and also about not bemg able to
carry on a conversation With her parents. She's always
critiCIZing.
I love th1s girl, but I'm begonnmg to realize I hke the way I
am, and my own folks are more real than hers, and my own
frtends also How do I tell her I'm not JUSt a hunk of - MOLDING

CLAY
Dear M C
You may not know it yet, but I'll bet you're close to telhng
this girl "Good-bye' " Firm up that "common clay," and get on
wlih it ' - HELEN

+++

Bailey. Ronald Malheny ,
Clifford Longenelle. Steve

Barber, Danny Spencer, Joe

Boyles , Sharon Henderson,

Jeff Goebel. Debbie Shields,
Tammy Fortney, Calhy
Collms, Cmdy Scyoc, Sherrl
Hackney. Pally Pullms, Janel
Benedum, Dorolhf' Runyon,
Charles Lanlz, Brenda Boyles.
Cheryl Gnffm, Charlene Coe,
Nancy Chaffee, Charles
Calaway, Randy Boslon, Ke1lh
Brooks, Edd1e Russell. Joey

Dear M. :
Yeah! Why stay Wtth a girl who only hkes you when you're
trying to he somebody el.e? Tell her you've got to be YOU - jus I
before you say, "See you then" (meamng not often) - SUE

Mar1e

Mar c 1nko,

Brenda

COLUMBUS (UP!) -A "declaration of inten.t" to consider
charter revocation of four Ohio
school dtstricts was passed
Monday by the state Board of
EducatiOn.
The districts - Gettysburg
Local and Liberty Local m
Darke County and Laurelville
Local and Starr-Washmgton
Local m Hockmg County have30 days to request a pubhc
hearing on the proposed
revocations
The board can take actiOn
followmg the hearmgs
The tioard sa1d all four distrocts offer less than the 45
units required to proVIde m1m-

CHORUS AND NEIGHBORS
- Jul1e Schullz, Edna Boggs,
N1esel Duvall, Con n1e Putman,
Teresa Carr, Suzy Goebel,
Nancy Bailey, Melante En
voldson , D1ana Benedum,
Conme Mays, Cmdy Mays,
Deanna Baker, Susan Hen

Sonra Carr , Paula Lrfe Ka lee n

and Debra Connolly

Teresa

Edwards,

Kalhy Foll rod, Jenny Sprague

Legislature At a G!JJnce
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - A
glance at acr!VIly Monday m
the Ohto General Assembly:
House
Bills bttroduced
HB 1125 Hale, Authorizes
school districts to employ
school soctal workers to perform nonteaching functions

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, Ftrst
Ave and Cedar St General
vos1tmg hours 2-4 and HI p.m
Matermty Vlsilmg hours 2 30 to
4 30 p m Parents only on
Pediatrtcs Ward
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Philip F.
Burgess, III, Syracuse, a son,
Mr and Mrs Bob J Stanley,
Galhpoiis, a daughter; Mr and
Mrs Roger K Waller, Ironton,
a daughter; Mr and Mrs
Hughte Scurlock, Wellston, a
daughter , Mr and Mrs
Fredenck McNeal, Patriot, a
son; Mr and Mrs Dale Zmn,

McArthur, a son and Mr and
Mrs Dame! W Gilliland ,
Wellston, a daughter
Discharges
William
C
Gilmour,
Raymond H Gibson, Damel H
Var1an, Chnstma Lee Shelton,
Scott Elhott, Mary Leedy,
Bertha W1ihams, Mehssa R.
Stevenson, Clayton Lambert,
Ruby S Hall, James A Dtehl,
Jr , Kmzy D Durst, Randa Lee
Damels, Mrs Betty Evelyn
Gill, Mrs Eva V Gragg, Dons
Ellen Halfhill , Charles D
Creel, Jill A Jeffers, Bermce
Justoce, Timothy A Smith,
Mrs Anna Lee Steele, Mary B
Snyder, Lenera A. Warner,
Wilham D Whittmgton ,
Dorolhy E French, Rush F
James
Fred Spencer, Pa lrtcia L.
Soladean, Janet S Edwards,
Mrs Curl!s Miller and
daughter, Kathryn Sprouse,
Michelle L Carrico, Bonme A
Reed, Mrs Holhs E Ohver and
daughter, Robm E Brewer,
Arnold R. Reffitt, Andrea D
Caudill, Mrs Beatrice Sltnker,
Ear l G Barney, Kenneth
Black, James Hartley, Mrs.
Everett Lee Hutton and son,
Charles E Jeffers, Jr., Harley
E Taylor, Henry Varney,
Debra S Young, Mmme
Perkms, Dona Evans, Mrs
Betty Mtller, Rocky J Swick,
Cora M Marr, Lawrence V.
Unroe, Lenna B. Hubbard ,
Kimberly C Vmson, Kenneth
L Valiance
Patnc1a L Gray, Mrs J ohn
R By us and daughter,
Michelle R Young, Dana Jean
Hall , Byrd1e R Barnett,
Wendy Burch, Ney Carpenter,
Gaylord Coffee , Mrs Wtlham
c Dartney and daughter,
Geneva F Day, Lillie M
Fields, Blanche M. Has)uns,
Charles H. Mcinturf!, Helen
Pemberton, Tern L. Queen,
Douglas E Tawney, Gloria J
Clonch, Audrey B Haley , Mrs.
Opal Carol Taylor

Raymond Andrews, Alan Seth, Dwayne Qualls, Chuck
Follrod, Doug Browning, Tim Rawlings, Jeff ~gUsh; back
row Frank Seth, Coach. The dinner was sponsored by
Po~eroy-Middleport merchants. Absent were Steve Little
and David Dillard. Boys of the fifth and sixth grade B squads ·
also attended the dinner.

..

negotiate

HB 1127, Netzley, No-fault auto
msurance
HB 1128, John Sweeney, Provides for annual hearmgs on
release of persons conurutted
to mental hospitals.
HB 1129, Kerns, Clartf1es power of Controllmg Board to expend money appropriated to
the emergency purpose fund m
appropriatiOns act
Senate
Bill Introduced
SB 501, Secrest, Grants free
tmtion to children of prisoners
of war and soldters mtssmg m
action m VIetnam

mum educational opportumties
for students. The board also
satd each of the four districts
falls to meet at least 2:i minimum
state
standards
establtshed for operation of a
high school.
The board, at Monday's
monthly meeting, approved
five requests for federal and
state funds for constructton of
vocational educatton facililtes.
Requests approved were :
- Washington Local Schools,
Lucas CoWlty, $1.9 millton in
state issue funds for an addilion
- Sandusky City Schools,
$854,474 from state funds for
additiOnal facihlies.

Sport Parade

(Seneca County) was elected
board president, succeeding
Mrs Jeannette Wagner of
Chagrm Falls, who has been
I president the past two years.
The board also announced a
plan to get ideas from Ute pub- Pickaway-Ross Jomt he on upgrading education.
Vocational School, $1.2 million
Citizens' seminars" are to
from Vocational Education Act be held in the state's 624 local
and $1.1 milbon from Ap- school districts to get the pubpalachian fund for new he's proposals for the
faetlities
"redestgn and improvement of
- Ashland County Jomt Vo- state education.''
caltonal school, $1 2 millton m
Edward C. Ames of Toledo,
federal fWtds and $754,271 m chBirffian of the committee orstate Issue funds for construc- gamzmg the seminars, said
tion of Its new conplex.
"every Ohio Citizen" should
New President
take part in the local sessions.
Bryce L. Wetker of Republic
"Vtewpoints of all our
ettizenry are much needed if
we are to chart education on
the best posstble course,"
Ames said. Recommendations
ultiiDately are to he considered
at a two-day meetmg here.
Prestdent Nixon was expected
In other actton Monday the
to crush Rep. John M. board:
Ashebrook of Ohto, the stan- Chartered the newly condard-bearer for the con- structed Willtam V. Fisher Caservative party, and Rep Paul tholic High School in LancasN. McCloskey of California, a ter.
Vietnam War cnttc who has
Approved allocation of
wtthdrawn as an acltve can- federal work studv funds of
didate
$51,363 to Dayton City Schoola
Also on the ballot was the and $6,144 to Mtddletown City
first statewtde "straw vote" on Schools
a constitultonal amendment to
- Established an "awards of
outlaw school busmg, and dishnctwn" program to honor
another "straw vote" on a outstanding career education
constitutional amendment students, SIJDilar to awards
permittmg prayer m publtc currently made to " basic
schools.
studies" students.
-Belmont County Jomt
Vocational School, $303,035 in
funds from the federal
Vocational Educalton Act and
$333,000 in Appalachian funds
for constructing a new facility.

11

Standi"~~~ Clark Named

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I Voice along Br'Way I
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baseball's disappointment of the year m 1971. From a .293 battmg
average the year before, he dipped to 238; from 148 RBI's he fell
to 61, and from 45 homers he dropped to 27.
Some players could manage to feel pretty good about a season
Uke that, but not Bench because after the year he had m 1970
most people had him halfway to the Hall of Fame. He couldn't
miss, they said. He was the best there was.
Sparky Anderson says he was as guilty as all the rest, maybe
more so.
"Put youself in John's shoes," says the Reds' manager. "How
would you like to he on a team where everytime you picked up the
paper you read how great the manager said John Bench was• I
think it hurt John in this respe\!t-he knows ail the players read
things like that. What are they to think• I'm the same way, even
as a manager. I don't want to pick up the paper every day and
read how great the other managers are."
Bench-teriS you right off Anderson has been a great help to him,
during working hours and after them.
"He's the smartest manager in baseball," says Cincy's gifted
kid catcher. "I admire the man and respe\!t him. Unfortunately
things didn't go well last year for me and everybody wants to
know why He's certainly not to blame for what happened with
me. I was the one who got up there and made the outs, not him.''
Golf Toarney Held
Shortly after the Reds began their workouta this sprmg, a golf
tournament was held not too far from here and a number of
ballplayers took part m the pro-am. Bench played a lot of golf
thla wmter. He loves the gsme and Anderson knows it.
"I told him I'd like to send him over there to play, all the clubs
were sending their big guys, but if he went tl would mean he'd
miss ftve days work here," Anderson says "I told John that
would put added pressure on him. All the players would say
'There It goes agsin.'"
Johnny Bench understood ~eclly.
Hedidn'tgotoplay golf He stayed here and worked.
Sparky Anderson is the type manager who will grant any
reasonable request. That goes for all his playrs, not only Johnny
Bench. Sometimes he feels he must turn down Bench even if he
has a reasonable request.
"lt's ahard thiitg to do," Anderson says. "He does everythmg I
ask him and then some. To me, at his position, he's sttll the best I

PLAYER OF YEAR
COLUMBUS (UPI)- Toledo
center Tom Kozelko, who set
two scoring records for the
Rockets, was named Monday
as the Mld-Amerl.can Conference Player of the Year.
KozeJko received 221&gt; points
to Ill&gt; for Ohio Universtly's
Tom Corde, ' the only two
players voted upon by members of the MAC news media.

MICHAEL RESIGNS
ADA, Ohw (UPI) - Ohio
Northern Unlverstty baskethall coach Larry Mtchael has
announced his resignation,
effective at the end of the
academic year in May.
Michael compiled a 99-103
record durmg hiS etght years
as head coach.
He did not dtsclose hts future .

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New York
Monlreal
Toronlo

~· 1~ it~

Most Valuable Player

OJO 27 12 72
By DALE ROTHGEB
comptled an overall 18-3
29 32 9 67
North Gallia 's Arthur Clark, record.
Buffalo
13 41 1S 41
17 44 6 40 6-5 senior center, one of the
Vancouver
Etchinger, 6-3 semor center,
•
West
main cogs in the hlgh-ecoring was naffi!!d
to the all league
W. L. T. Pis
Chicago
41 17 11 93 Pirate offense, was named the team for the fourth straight
M1nnesola
33 24 10 76 Most Valuable Player of the year. He was the area's leading
51 LOUIS
25 36 9 59 Southern Valley Athleltc scorer With a 22 point per game
Philadelphia
23 35 11 57
average He also was named to
Callforn1a
20 33 16 56 Conference Monday mght.
Plllsburgh
22 37 10 SA
Clark, a recent honoree on the All DistriCt Class A team
Los Angeles
18 45 7 43 the Class A AU-District team, and helped lead the Eagles to
Monday's Results
edged Eastern 's Dennis an outstanding, 19-3 season.
Monfr.. l 2 Philadelphia 1
(Only game scheduled)
Eichinger by one vote, 58-57
Votmg was conducted on a
Tuesday's Games
Clark will he presented the 111-~ etc. basiS by the league's
Buffalo at M1nnesota
MVP
Trophy at North Gallia's seven coaches
Coaches
Plltsburgh at Vancouver
basketball banquet Friday, elected SIX men to the ftrst
(Only games scheduled)
April 7, by Bill Gray, Sports team and seven to the second
Director of Radto Station team. The additional players
College Basketball Results
WJEH and Dale Rothgeb, Jr., were named due to he votes
By Unoted Press lnlemational Assistant City Editor With the
Coach JIJD Foster's Pirates
NAtA Championship
Ohio Valley Publishtng had three players on the first
At Kansas Coty, Mo.
Company, sponsors of the MVP team. Symmes Valley, the
tF1rsl Round)
Wslmnl, Cal 91 Ednboro, Pa award.
league's newest member,
72
Clark,
a
three-time
ali
SV
AC
placed
two men on the ftrsl
51 Thos , Mmn 78 Tr1 51 , lnd
honoree, comptied a 21.9 pomt squad and Eastern·~ Etchinger
61
Ouachlla Bapflsl, Ark. 90 game average. He also completed the team
Elizabeth C1ty 51 89, at
In all, 18 players received
Xav1er, La 102 /1/vJ E Shore 50 averaged over 20 rebounds per
Scott left the ABA
Grdnr Wbb, N C 109 E Mont game. North Gallia, m winmng considerallon m the balloting.
"If he signs wtth an NBA 94
the SVAC champtonshlp, Both teams were dominated by
club, we will proceed umnedisemors. Coaches also selected
ateiy With all dispatch and ~:..~·:»&gt;S:W.&amp;S!.?.·».:·:·:.-!!::x:::::w::::.-::::::w:::::::::;:::;o;:;:;::ro:::;:;:::;:;:o:-~·:;:;::s::::::::::::::~-::::::~. ft ve Jwuors and on Iy one
dihgence to institute a suit o
@ sophomore, Clay Hudson of the
aga1nst the club and the NBA,"
Kyger Creek Bobcats.
Foreman said Sunday. "If he
Casting votes were Jtm
does sign, we will he convmced
:;i
Foster,
North Gallui; Bill
,..
there ts a conspiracy in the
Ph1ll1ps, Eastern;
Asa
NBA to induce ABA players to
llr~
~ ~
&gt;:· Bradbury, Southern, Wayne
breach their contracts."
~First Team)
Whtte, Symmes Valley ; Paul
Scott, who had a run-lllS with
PLAYER
SCHOOL
HT. YR. ~~ Dillon, Hannan Trace; Jim
Vtrginia Coach AI Btanchi
11 ·
4 ~ Arledge, Kyger Creek and
6· 5
earber tn the season, S3ld he ~·· Arthur Clark, North Ga Ia
~ Richard Hamilton, Southconsidered hts contract wtlh : : ~·~ Dennis Eichinger, Eastern
6-3
4 ~~ western
the Squires votd because the ·; Danny Wilson, Symmes Valley
5·11
4 i.~ In other busmess, Symmes
team had failed to hve up to tis ..; Ph1l Robinson, Symmes Valley
5·11
3 ~ Valley was officially voted into
promtse to pay off a $26,000 ::~ Pat Stout, North Gallia
5-10
4 f~ the league. The Vikings had
loan.
~ Gary Crosswhite, North Gallia
6-4
3 ~ been granted membership on a
~
·.~ probattonary basis. All league
Phoemx obtained NBA rtghls ~
( Secood Team)
~l teams approved the mollon. A
to Scott m a deal with the ~
Boston Celttcs that included ~ PLAYER
SCHOOL
HT. YR.
,slmii: ~ole was ta~n
~·
cash and "future considera- ~ Keith Swain, Hannan Trace
5-10
4 ~ ~:~. eague mee g as
tions," based on the Suns'
5·10
4 ~ The league adopted the
success of legal action filed by ~ Jerry Hubbard, Southern
6-4
4 ~ spring baseball and track.
the Squires. Colangelo did not i:j Larry Justus, North Gallia
6·2
4 ::$ schedules. The basehall season
reveal details of the contract. ~ Roy Thompson, Kyger Creek
5·11
4 ~ will open Tuesday, Aprtl4 with
Scott was expected to su1t up 1!! Bob Caldwell Eastern
~~
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6
5
3 ~ Hannan Trace hostmg
for the Suns' final stx games, ~ M1~e Caldwell, Hannan race
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~ Eastern; Kyger Creek vlsitmg
the first Wednesday night in ~ Ke1th Roach, Symmes Valley
6-Q
4 :::: North Gallia and Southwestern
Phoemx aganlSI Milwaukee
~
HONORABLE MENTION - Clay Hudson
traveling to Southern. A double
~ and George Curry, Kyger Creek; Jene Myers, ~~- round robin schedule features
~ Symmes Valley, Jim Hubbard and Bruce Hart,
12
league
encounters .
~ Southern and Mark Smith, Southwestern.
Dtscussion was held on
~
meeting the Ohio High School
::::::::::~~·&gt;:::·t&lt;m.w.i:!88 QW!3? 8 8 e'8'3!1'~~~~ AI hI e t t c Ass o c I a t 1on
reqwrements of having two
Dave Lopes doubled in Willie
Crawford in the ftfth for the of the Mets has been scratched ced to skip a turn on the licensed umpires at each
game.
Dodgers' f1rst run. Darrell as starting pttcher for loday's mound
League secretary Mel Carter
Seaver, a 20-game wmner
Chaney's throwmg error allow- game with the Reds because of
was
inslructed to contact .the
ed an unearned run in the siXth persistent stiffness in his right and former Cy Young Award
rectpient, last worked on Distrtct AthleUc Board to se'e if
after Tony Clomnger had filled shoulder
the bases on walks.
It was the second time in March 8 when he pitched four the rule could he waived slnee
Ace righthander Tom Sever three days that Seaver was for- strong innings agamst Detroit. thiS area does not have enough
regiStered umpues. Games
Will he played on Tuesday and
De troll

I Ex·ABA Player

TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)--Sparky Anderson couldn't he if 11 killed
him.
You ask him whether maybe he was too over protective, too
solicitous, of Johnny Bench last year and he g1ves 11 to you
straight.
"I think so. I think I hurt him," says Cmcinnati's bonehonest,
straightforward manager.
The day Sparky Anderson would ever mtenhonally hurt
Jolmny Bench bas not dawned yet and it's mce to be a~le to
report the same thing goes the other way around. Bench f~ls a
warmth toward Anderson he never dtd toward the Reds' previous
manager, Dave Bristol.
Age woulm't have anything to do wtth tl either because there's
only eight months difference between Anderson and Brtslol, but
there Is an apprectable difference in the way the two men treated
Bench. Bristol handled him the same way he did any other 22year-old player on the club. Basically, the 38-year-old Anderson
does the same thing, with the Red superstar who ts now 24, but he
throws In one extra little dimension-the IDlik of human kmdness. Boiled down, you'd call II paternalism. •

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ever saw."

Way to W , Way to L

.,

By MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sports Writer

University, '13-49, in flrskound
NCAA play. After the game Lhe
NCAA filed its complamt and
on Sunday afternoon satd
Marquette was out ot the
tournament unless It appealed
the ruling and could prove
Lackey didn't hire an agent.
The issue was quickly resolved Monday when Warren
Brown, assistant NCAA executive director, came to town to
confer with Marquette offtctals. La~key signed the
affidavtt m , the presence of
Brown, .Coach McGuire and
others and that was that.

asked Lackey to sign the 15question affidavit. Coach McGuire cautiooed llim about
signing it would legal advice
and Lackey refused, though
other players in the same
situation signed the paper.
Assistant Coach Hank Raymoods said Lackey didn'rsign
because the situation was Uke
someone "awakening you at 2
a.m. in the morning and saying
'Hey, you come down to
headquarters with us and sign
this.' He naturally wanted
legal advice ."
Lackey and the Warriors

·

SJ'A C's

1Phoenix Signs

Baseball'• Disappointment
Johnny Bench, the National League's MVP m 1!170, was

Wallace Sure Shoo-in

MIAMI ( UPI ) - Wtth Humphrey of Mmnesota,
Jackson of
Alabama's Gov George C Henry M
Wallace conceded vtctory, f1ve Washmgton and George S.
maJor . candtdates for the McGovern of South Dakota and
Democratic prestdenttal Mayor John V Lindsay of New
nomination today aiJDed at a York
hon's share of the leavings as
Marked by a crowded field of
Florida voted In the second 11 candtdates
on the
primary of the 1972 electiOn Democratic ballot and the
year
emotiOnally explostve ISSue of
PT. PLEASANT
school
busmg, the primary was
The
outcome
was
constdered
LIVESTOCK SALES CO.
Important - and m some cases expected to draw about 70 pet.
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
cruc18l
- to the White House of the 2 1 millwn regiStered
Saturday, Mar. II, 1972
HOGS - 175 to 220 23 75 to ambitiOns of Sens. Edmund S. Democrats Perfect weather
24 25, Heavies 23 to 23 85, Musk1e of Mame, Hubert H. was forecast around the state.
Totally overshowed was the
Lights 19 to 22, Fat Sows 19 to
Republican
primary where
22 so, Boars 14 to 20 SO, Pigs 8
lo 14, Stock Shoats 12 to 21
CATTLE - Steers 26 50 to
~;.;z;:·~s~;;:-;:~::::::::~::x~::;~~=~m.:::x-x:w-;'!$f&amp;· :Q: • • •• •*-' ··· ··v w·r te otc::e.: us: :
31 75, Heifers 24 to 29 so, Fat 21st VICTORY
Cows 19 SO to 23 85, Canners 17
MANCHESTER, England
to 21 50, Bulls 24.50 to 30, Milk (UPI) - Larry Mtddleton of
Cows 185 to 275, Stock Cows and Baltimore, Md., 203%, stopped
Calves 175 to 350, Stock Steers Danny McAhnden, 192, Great
31 to 38 so, Stock Heifers 24 to Bntam- the No. I challenger
BY JACK O'BRIAN
national co-ordinator.
32 50, Stock Steer Calves 34.50 for the Brttish title- m the
WHEN LBJ RELAXES,
Sad news from Paris famed Maxim's gets
to 47, Stock Heifer Calves 31.50 eig hth round Monday night
HE'S 'BUSCHED'
pushed
a swallow down in the prestigtous Guide
lo39
For Middleton, 11 was his 21st
NEW YORK (KFS) - LBJ weekended on
Kleber gastronomtc ratings; mayhem could
VEAL CALVES - Tops 55, VIctory m 2.'1 fights. He had
St Louis brewer Gussie Busch's yacht in the
result in tastebud-griiD Pans ... Next week on
Seconds 50.50, Medium 43 to defeated former BntiSh ChamBahamas
..
Rep.
Shtrley
Chtsholm's
NBC-TV, Xerox, that old copycat, wtll sponsor
49.85, Common &amp; Heavtes 41 to pwn Joe Bugner on a preVIOUS
moonlighting marvelously: got $1,500 for an
50 50
the "Peking Ballet," which the Nixons
VISit here
anh-establ1Shment harangue at Marymount
pretended they admired so much .. Robert
College here ... We forecast months ago Bella 'Goulet jetted all the way to Morocco to play gof.
WIN AT BRIDGE
Abzug's redistricting squeeze-out (Abzug make
Status stuff : with the King
the heart grow etc) .
Oscar-producer Sam Spiegel (Dr. Zhlvago,
/n I
0Se Lord Snowdon has the Palm Springs title- Lawrence
of Arabia, River Kwai etc.) doesn't
fawners a]tlter: arnves there momentanly for
hide the fact he l)as a young son in England. He
lhe queen In the East hand a Vogue celebrtty-photo JOb, mcluding Cary
NOKTII (0)
14
just hasn't advertised 11
Gaudy socialite
and Sout h Will make twelve
Grant
...
The
Beatie
John
Lenn~ bought a
!rocks He will make eleven
author trted suicide m Greece ... Our liberals
¥ 81) ·,
1f Ea st holds four trumps to South Greenwtch Village house . Stripper
tAK Q.J4
want us to turn over utilities to the gov't, but in
... Q lOR I
the queen or West three to Penny Powers dreaming of Bdwy. as she
socialist
Israel there's strong talk of turning
WES'f
lhc queen
EAST
wriggles up close ( "Folltes Burlesque" m
over tis gov't-run phone system to private en• Q 10h 2
• 43
He will make just mne the exurban Port Washington, L.I.) says she's a
terpnse.
¥ AK Q J'1 7
¥10 5.11 way the caras he because
tidy
type:
a
former
farm
girl,
4-H
Club
leader;
• 10 fi
t 98 'I
West has four humps to the
The tiny "m" Chmese restaurant, Joe
... 741 2 queen , will wm the first and a direct descendant of Sir FranciS Drake, a
Mah's Confucius (patrons included Lucille Ball,
sou l'Jl
loump and shorten South cousin of Corneha OtiS Skinner, Academy of
Liz Taylor, Bette Davis, Streisand, Henry
4 A K f'JH 7
down to the same numbe1 Dramatic Arts grad, and a candidate for the
• v()lrl
Fonda, Poitier, Belefonte etc.), just moved
he holds Laleo on he wtll be Daughters of the Amencan Revolulton. Sure
• 7&gt; 2
able to keep South from eve1
from 1ts hole~n-the-wall on far-West ~2nd st. to
... K J 9 h
The New Jersey Playboy Resort at Great
collectmg a club !rock
larger digs m the Victoria Hall ... "Jesus Christ
No1th-South vu l11'" 1ahle
All lhos woll be bad luck Gorge announces 11 wtll offer summer guests
Superstar" IS so sens!Uve about the thwacks II
We ~ I
N111 lh
Eos l Suuth
but South should avOid 11 sky-diYIOg, whtch sounds dangerously s1ily;
has rec'd from Jews and Catholics that Its
I t
Pass I •
He should see that he can except at Las Brtsas m Acapulco, where we
4¥
P us~
Pa ~s
4•
management divulges tis superslanted title role
afford to lose two trump
P.ts s
Pass
I' 1c k s After that he will watched kids and grownupa take off behind
IS played by Jeff Fenholt, who, despite hla youth
OpL·mng: lcdd- ¥ K
cash the ace and kmg of speedboats - hanging from giant kites that
and hippie appearance, is a practicmg Catholic
' - - - - - - - - - - 11umps and play nothong but flung them hundreds of feet above the water.
who loves going to Mass. Couldn't they also
-Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacob) clubs and diamonds from
Brando says "The Godfather" isn't about
sneak
hiiD into synagogue some Fri. night? As
then on
the
Mafia
·
"I
think
It's
about
the
corporate
AHCH st"nds foo Anal yze He w•ll lose two trump
Shabhes Goy?
lhe lead Rev1ew the b1d 111cks but he woll have on- mind," he pontificated to Newsweek ,. But
Famed baseball hero Waite Hoyt retired
d111 g (ount wmn et s and los SUI ed Ju s contrac t
what btg corporation removes Its executives as
from
his seven-yea~ microphone retirement to
e1s an d hn nll y How can I
the Mafia has Albert Anastasta, Wtlhe Moretti,
(NEWSPAPE R Et.ITERPRISE ASSN I
become a Cincy ballcaster agsm. He's 72 .. . Bema ke Ill ) conitact 1
Little AU~Je Pisano; or retired a president as tl
there the Ides of March : at the St. Regis
Ev pct ts use 11 more 01 less
did Frank Costello wtlh one mis-aimed bullet
automat ically 01dona ry play
Maisonette to see Gordon MacRae pelform ...
And then removed the dullshooter the same
ers should lea rn lo follow It
No on~thought Jean Arthur ever would emerge
way
Brando
can
act,
if
not
lately,
but
he's
with all hands
\Vosl
Nm lh
F.ast
from ner cave again - she's ou~ermited
It 1511 I ha1 d f01 South to
hardly a soctal or corporate cnt1c. More a social
Garbo- but she'Ubring her lovely husky voice
\n alvzo th e kmg of hea1ts Pn ss
1A
Poss
malcontent
to the Frank Capra Restrospective in Dallas
lc•,Hl 01 to flevoew lhe bid P.1ss
~ +
Pnss
Wilt the Silt Chamber lam planned to spend
d111 g \Vesl clc"Iil' has a long You Sot•1h hold
late this month. Now if she sees her shadow,
$1mti1Ion on his flashy Santa Momca Mts. pad ,
stl ung llt'd tl ;.; ull a nd l1as led
spring'll really be here .. John Bruno's trying
•'1Hh51 ¥A 2 +J ... AKQ76 the cost st;\ted half a million over that already
I(
desperately to buy the E. 4~th St. building his
Wh &lt;t 1 cl u \ r1t1 d o now 1
Soul h ~.: a n &lt;.:ount wmne1"
. Kun Novak's m the saddle buSiness; has a
Pen &amp; Pencil steakene occupies; he owns the
" "d losc•ts 1at he1 eaSi ly He A- ll•tl (1\c hcu.tls Your 11.11rl · bustlmg Texas ftrm called "Kim Novak Sadone next door as a saver.
rn ust !osl' ~~ d ub and has ne t "aub \ uu tu slww th1 s
dles" Father Roland Melody, who wrote the
"orn e p o s !-: t b l e loseJ S 1n Otl d tf \011 h iiH' II
Xerox also ts footing the ecuaUonal-TV bill
1mpo•tant 'oNarco Pnest" book last year, this
I I LHllp s
TOO,\ Y S I!Ut' S'flON
to telecast Eisenstein's famed Russian film
In ( l l oJ•Ia Sou th ' an l ead Y v t 1r p 1 1 t ll'-" r IIJil !llltiC!! t o year has another dandy, "Wntten lD Every
"Potemkln"; this plus the Red China ballet
d cll •.t~l lo n d lo dtmlm \ pia\ l l\ 1 ,.,pMt l'" W h&lt;~ t r1 11 \ &lt;ur rlo Key" (Camark Pubhshers, Providence, N.J.);
triangulates to the logical third clue: China and
,l sp.:'dl• ~m d f•nt•s sr ht s jack
'"'" '
all of the proceeils wtll go to the Cathohc Office
Russta are untapped as Xerox customers.
Sp,ulc &lt; '' oil Ill &lt;·ak J.:J wolil
of Drug Edu~ahon of which Father M. IS

a ed Friday when the NCAA went on Saturday to heat Oluo Boslon

But Lackey diapelled the bad
dream the Wamors and their
fans Uved through by relenting
Monday and signing the affidaVIt. The NCAA inunediately
reinstated Marquette and the
whole thing was over.
"I'm very happy for the
pl~yers, the student body and
the fans," said Head Coach AI
McGuire. Lackey himself admitted he was "glad it's over"
but smd "! felt like I was going
to play ... I hadn't done
anything "
The short-lived InCident staft·

Today's

•'

Two Hoc g Districts
May Lose Ohio Charters;

Rucker and lana Johnson

derson,

NEIGHBORS IN ACT I -

agent , to

}

Mlllhone , ltta Young, Debbte
Eynon ,
Lor•
Barrmger ,
Alberta
Schul t z,
Tressa
Causey, Carla Chichester, Beth
R1tch1e, Helen Myers, Lon
Longenette, Conn1e Kay Slout,

Kuhn and Rrck Lehman

Brannon,

Kerth Harrts, Pamela Murphy,
Sharo n
Gnfftn,
Tammy
Cremeans. Patty Jones, Susan

Brooks,

Tammy Russell , Brenda
Sampson, Debbte Durst, Robm
Rtlchre , Vtda Weber , Roger

-

•••

POMEROY'S FIF'l1f1 ~P SIXTH "A" PEE WEE
BASKETBALL CHAMPS - were presented trophies at a
banquet held Monday mght at the Meigs Inn. The team ended
tis season wtth a perfect 9-0 record. Team members, front
row, 1-r, are Troy Griffith, Wesley Smith, Jeff Couch, Jmt·
mer Soulsby, Homer Smith, and Mark Casto; second row,

101 Pupils in School Operetta
Students of the Tuppers
Plams Elementary School wtll
present a three act operetta,
"Cinderella's Sltpper" at 8
p m. Fnday in the school
audttonum
The operetta is based on the
fa try tale, "Cmderella."
Mothers have been In charge of
creating elaborate and colorful
costummg for the producllon
over the past several weeks.
Playing the role of Cinderella
will he Diana Massar and Paul
Dean Brannon will play the
prmce. Playing the role of ihe
step-mother Will he Penny
Peterson wtth Lon Young and
Teresa Buckley as the step.
sisters Other prmc1pals m the
operetta are the fatry godmother played by Debbie
Sanders, Steve Griffm as the
peddler and James Davis as
Lord High Chamherlam
Playmg other parts are
Larry Hams as "Thimble
Bonnet," with his little green
tailors , mcluding Gregory
Hayman, Jerry DaVIs, Bnan
Btssell, Donald Eynon, Dale
Welsh, Edward Scyoc, Gary
Putnam, James Osborne,
David
Putnam,
Dame!
Brawley, Rtcky Bonng, Gene
Cole, Dennis Durst, }Irian
Peterson, Mike Baker, Kenneth Chapman, Gregory
Scarbrough, Robert Lee
Henderson, Kevm Brooks,

'

MILWAUKEE, Wla. (UPI)- orofessional contract

•
are pledged to his chotce for
prestdent Mrs Rouse states,
"The voter, therefore, has a
vmce m selectmg hts party's
presidential nommee In the
past, the Oh10 voter had little
chotce - only an opportunity to
place an X alongSide one
delegale slate pledged to the
state party's favorite son, With
no md1ca lion as to whom the
normnees
slate of delegates or the
"Dedicated to the use of favonte son supported for the
political methods to achieve prestdential nomtnalton. The
change," is the way Mrs ' new method will mean that the
Rouse describes herself She voter will need to work a httle
says she favGrs the new harder for he w11l need to make
method of selecting delegates a chotce, but this IS the way
to the national convention ThiS democracy works Only 1n a
method, being used for the ftrst dtctatorshtp can dectsiOns he
lime 1n 1972, will perrmt each avmded," Mrs Rouse convoter to elect delegates that cludes

Pro

MU Rema1ns In Totnney .,..:~r:~....

Mrs. Rouse Candidate
Mrs . Douglas (Elaine )
Rouse, Addlaon, IS a candidate
for Delegate to the National
Democratic Convention from
the loth Ohio Congressional
Dislrlct Mrs. Rouse is i)!edged
to support Senator George
McG.overn for prestdent
McGovern, of South Dakota, ts
one of the authors of the reform
plan for selecting presidential

•

PHOENIX, Am. (UPI)Charbe Scott has bolted from
the American Basketball AssoCiation's Virginia Squires and
was expected to suit up
Wednesday for the PhoeniX
Suns of the rival Nattonal
Basketball Associatton.
,
The Suns announced Monday
they had stgned the ABA'S top
scorer following a weekend of
marathon negotialtons mvolvmg Phoemx General
Manager Jerry Colangelo and
Suns' Prestdent Rtchard Bloch.
Scott became the fourth star
player to jump the younger
ABA lor the more established
NBA Among his new teammates will be Connie Hawkins,
the fust ABA player to swttch
to the NBA. Spencer Haywood
and Jim McDamel, both with
Seattle, earlier followed Hawkins' example
The Squires were not expected to SIIDpiy allow Scott to
leave the team and the league.
Even before the Phoemx
contract was announced,
Squtres owner Earl Foreman
said a lawsuit would be filed if

1972 ALL •SVAC
Tl-nDm 'l"eam

t

'*
.:;:

One Ham

J

To Another

*

t

a:

*;

Reds Lose First Contest
VERO BEACH, Fla. (UPI)
-The Cincmnalt Reds suffered
thetr first defeat of the young
Grapefruit League season
Monday, falhng to Los Angeles
2-1.
The Reds play at Tampa agsmst the New York Mets
Pete Rose's triple and Cesar
Gerommo's stngle were the
only htts Monday off Dodger
pitchers AI Downmg, Mike
strahler and Jim Brewere
Rose scored on a wild pttch m
the sixth The run ended an 18mning scoreless streak by
Dodgers pttchers.

NEW YORK (UPii- The
Umled Press International fmol
lop 20 major college basketball
teams w1th flrsl place votes
Team
Po1nts
I UCLA (34) (26 0)
340
2 North Carolina (23·41 279
3 Penn (23·21
247
4 LOUISVIlle (24 3)
197
s Soulh Carolina (22 41 193
6. Long Beach St. (23·3)
187
7 Marque lie (24·2)
127
8 5 W LouiSiana (23 3)
67
9. Brigham Young (21 4) SO
10. Flor~da 51 (24·5)
35
11 Maryland (22·5)
25
12 M1nnesola ( 17-61
23
13 MemphiS St (21 6)
17
14 Ken lucky (21 5)
13
15 Villanova (19·7)
12
16 Kansas 51 (18.81
11
17 Texas EI · Paso (20 6)
9
18 Marshall (23 3)
8
19 !Tiel MiSSOUri (21 5)
7
(Tie) Weber 51 (17·9)
7
ASTROS FAVOR STRIKE
COCOA, Fla . (UP!)Houston became the ninth
major league club to vote in
favor of a strike Monday if
pension plan negoltations with
maJor league club owners are
not settled by the March 31
expiration dale of the current
agreement.
The Astros voted 31.() m favor
of a strtke

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTER EST OF
MEIGS·MASON AREA
tHESTER L TANNEHILL,

HAM FOR EASTER?
NEED TIRES? BUY
TIRES FROM RIZER'S RECEIVE FREE HAM TRY BOTH - YOU ' LL
LIKE IT

Jen k zns
•
Yields 2 Hits

Final UPI
College Poll
and regular season won -lost
records In parentheses

Thursdays
Baseball coaches are Larry
Hetnes, Eastern; Larry Shong,
North Gailla; Dick Adams,
Kyger Creek; Ken Justice,
Symmes Valley; Hilton Wolfe,
Jr , Southern; Danny Cornell,
Hannan Trace and Richard
Hamilton, Southwestern.
The league also decided to
hold a track meet for all
schools on Fnday, May 12 at
Kyger Creek High School. The
event wtil begin at 4:30 p.m.
Trophies wtil he presented to
the first teams . Ribbons
wtil be given to the f1rst five
places
Track coaches are John
Blake, North Galha; J1m
Arledge, Kyger Creek; Roger
Kirkhart, Eastern, Bruce
Wallace, Southern and John
Patton, Symmes Valley
Offtcials tabled a malton to
increase the price for admtssion. It was felt that each
board of educatton should
discuss the matter before any
change ts made.

OUr

~rv

. ..

...

In Five Inning Stint
By United Press btternalional
Ferguson Jenkms, the
Nattonal League's Cy Young
Award wmner tn 1971, IS just
about ready to lead the Chicago
Cubs' staff this year-and if
you don't believe it, ask him.
"I'm about three turns away
from openmg the season," satd
Jenkins Monday after yielding
only two singles in five innmgs
m a 12-2 triumph over the
Milwaukee Brewers.
Jenkms, whose 24-13 record
m 3i innings earned hiiD the
NL s pttcher of the year award,
is shooting for his sixth stratght
20-VIctory season Although a
veteran, he is one of the hardest-working pttchers in the
game.
The New York Mets, meanwhile, are c~ncerned about
Tom Seaver, thetr ~me
wtnner of last season and a Cy
Young Award winner in 1969
when he had a 25-7 record.
Seaver missed hts se~ond
scheduled assignment today
because of a stiffness in his
nght shoulder.
In other camps: Pete Rose's
triple and Cesar Geronimo's
stngle were the only hits off AI
Downing, Mike Strahler and
Jtm Brewer as the Los Angeles
Dodgers beat the Cincmnati
Reds, 2-1 . . Steve Barber and
rooktes Adrian Devine and
Dick Towers combmed in a
hvehitter as the Atlanta
Braves heat the New York

Yankees, 1-0
Richte Zisk hit a two-run
homer in the e1ghth inning to
gtve the Pittsburgh Pirates a 65 vtctory over the Chicago
White Sox. Rich Reichardt and
Carlos May eac!\ homered for
the White Sox ... The Kansas
City Royals scored four runs in
the late innmgs to beat the
Montreal Expos, 4-2 ... Veteran
outfielder Tommy Harper hit
two doubles and rookie outfielder Ben Ogllvie had two singles
m the Boston Red Sox' 3-2
victory over the Phtladelphia
Phtiiies.
John Milner's three hits,
mcludmg a homer and an
SERVICES TODAY
VERSAILLES, Mo. (UPI)Funeral
servJces were
scheduled for today for
baseball Hall of Farner Zack
Wheat,
who
succumed
Saturday mght, apparently of a
heart attack.
Wheat, 83, spent 14 of h1s 18
years m the maJor leagues wtth
the Brooklyn Dodgers. He was
the National League batting
champiOn m 1918 with a .335
average.
Inducted into the hall in 1959,
Wheat had 2,884 hits in the
maJors and a lifetime batting
average of .317.
Wheat retired from active
play in 1928 whtle a member of
the Mmneapolis club of the
American Assoctalton.

mght-mnmg smgle that drove
m the wmning run enabled the
Mets to down the Detrotl
Tigers, ~ ... Eddie Leon's
bases-loaded double in the fifth
tnnmg produced what proved
to he the wmnmg run for the
Cleveland Indians in their 7-6
vtctory over the Oakland
Athletics.

High payments a problem ?

i$ the all$wer
992-2171
125

E. Main

Pomeroy, 0.

00o)OOOOO.Ot600 D06 DOG GG0 0 000: 0'0 0'000 0 0 tOO ~·tOOtC&lt;tO-

At 11 p.m.
on April 17th
you're going ,t o
wish you had
gone .to
H&amp;R Block.
There's still time.

Extc. Ed.

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
City &amp;clltor

Pubt•shtd dellv ucep t
Saturday by The OhtO Vallev
~ubltshtng

Court St ,
A5769

Company ,

111

Pomeroy , Oh•o ,

8US!I'IfSS OfiiCt" Phone

992 21S6. Ed1l0nat Phone 992

2151

Second class postaoe patd at
Pomeroy , Ohto
National

aaverttS•no

representettve
Bottmetft
Gtllagher , Inc , 12 East 42nd
St, NIW York City , New York
Subscrtphon rates
De
livered by earner where

available so cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carr .er
serv•ce not avallablt One
month $175 Bv. ma 1t tn Oh•o
and w Va One year $1,. 00

HELP

us

HELP

S•x

monthS

S7 2S

months s.c so Subscr•pt ton
Ttmes
Sent .ne t

Pt iCt li'IC IUdf$ Sunday

National Canoonlsu Society

0'

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Thru

'•

I

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992-2342

MIDDLEPORT, O.

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
Insurance Agency

It's not too late to save yourself income Aggravation isn't tax deductible.
tax aggravation that comes with prepar- And we are.
ing your own return. And for a low one
time fee you can recetve our year 'round
service which includes help with audita, DON'T LET AN AMATEUR DO
HaR BtOCK'S JOB.
estimates, or tax questions.
H &amp; R Block's charges start at $5 and
the average cost was under $12.50 for
over 7 million returns we prepared last
year.

II&amp;R.
Block.
1\e'iw
pettle.
lu

9 A M To S PM MON THRU SAT.
PHONE 992·3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
OPEN TODAY

304 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY. 0.

'

�. "

.'

..

'

I

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, 1972

PTA Supporting
Salary Increase
A letter directed to
Congressman Clarence Miller
asking that the Federal Pay
Board authorize school employe sala'ry increases approved several months ago by
the Ohio Legislature was
circulated for signatures at the
Monday night meeting of the
Pomeroy PTA.
Signature for a second letter
to go to President Richard
Nixon were also solicited. It
was noted during the meeting
by Mrs. Gene Mitch, president,
that a letter will be sent from
the PTA.
The possibility of using cable .
television lor classroom instruction was discussed and
Mrs. Mitch reported that there
is a need lor 16 repairable sets
fo r classroom use at the
Pomeroy School. She said that
the sets will be repaired in the
Meigs High School television
class. Residents with sets to
give are asked to contact either
Mrs. Mitch or Mrs. Robert
Lewis.

Mrs. Franklin Casto, Mrs.
Ja mes Soulsby, and Mrs. Bill
McDaniel were appointed to
the nominating committee.
. They are to present a slate of
officers at the April meeting. It
was noted that Meigs Local
School District Superintendent
had requested time to speak on
the five mill school levy whlch
will come before voted at the

Robert Morris, principal,
reported on the reading
program progress noting that
47 children have now exceeded
teaching materials which are
available in the school. This
figure, he said, was arrived at
through standardized testing.
A request was made for three
additional mothers to help out
in the program on Tuesdays
and Thursdays, 9 to 10 a.m.
Mrs. Mitch announced the
April 6 meeting of the Meigs
County Council of Parents and
Teachers at Riverview, and the
Easter vacation whlch extends
from March 30 wApril 4.
The attendance banner was
won by the third grade.
Refreshments were served .
Pomeroy cub scouts led in the
pledge to the flag, and the Rev.
Robert Card, Methodist
minister, gave devotions.

PORTER REASSIGNED
Army Specialist Five
William L. Porter, 24, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Dear! Porter,
Route 4, Pomeroy, has been
assigned to the 1st Armored
Division near Nurnberg,
G~ rm a ny. Spec. Porter is
servin g with Headquarters
Bottery, 2d Battalion of the
division's 14th Artillery. He is a
1965 graduate of Rutland High
School. His wife, Sharon, lives
on Route 3, Athens.
TRAINING ENDED
Army Private John L.
Warner, 18, son of Mrs. Marion
J. Warner, 102 Legion Terrace ,
Pomeroy, recently completed
eight weeks of basic training at
the U. S. Arm y Training
Center, Armor, Ft. Knox, Ky.
He is a 1971 graduate of Meigs
High School.
VISIT .GRUESERS
Mr. and Mrs. Howard I.
Snyder, Parkersburg, W. Va .
were weekend guests of Mr.
an d Mr s. Paul Grueser ,
Middleport.

described it as a "truly great
enemy, the chief of all the isms
which we have to combat and
conquer ." She said that the
change must begin in our own
house in order to persuade
others to change. Miss Karr
noted that many of our country's forebearers knew what it
meant to listen to God 's
guidance and obey His command.
Concluding with a reading,
"Where is Easter?" Miss Karr
pointed out that Easter is
whenever men know and
believe in the risen Lord,
whenever they turn from
paganism, whether it be
worship of a carved tree in
Africa or material possessions
in America, being risen with
Christ means seeing things
from above.
A silent prayer for the sick
and prayer by Mrs. Virgil
Teaford concluded
the
meeting. Mrs. Herbert Parker
was the assisting hostess.
Others attending were Mrs.
William Houdashelt, Mrs .
Damon Ferrell, Mrs. John
Sauvage, Mrs . T. A. Hilldore,
and Mrs. Donald Lisle.

&amp;rrisonville
Honor Pupils
Are Annormced
HARRISONVILLE - The
honor roll for the Harrisonville
Elementary School for the past
six weeks was announced
today. Listed on the honor roll
were the following students:
First grade : Mary Lee and
Darlene Nelson .
Second grade: Sheila Young,
Danny Riggs, Annette Might,
Willie Donahue, Mark Cline,
Sheila Bing, with Aogela
Harmon and Patricia Brown,
all A's.
Third grade : Regan Arnold,
Jerry Burchett, Robert Harman , Anita Lee, Frank King,
Anita
Lewis,
Dreama
Richards, and Nancy Welsh .
Fourth :· Linda Donahue,
Richard K. Hill, Randy Mitchell , Mik e Vance , Randy
Oliver, Mark Riggs, Belinda
Whittington .
Fifth : Sherrie Burchett,
Julia Vance.
Sixth : Jeff Arnold, Rod Hill,
with Sue Kennedy and Brent
Stanley, all A's.

TUESDAY ·
AMEIU .CAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
263, 7p.m. Tuesday night at the
home of Mrs. ADen Hampton.
RUTLAND Firemen's
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at the fire hall. Plans to be
completed for the jitney
supper. Traveling prize to be
brought by Mrs. LouJse Eada;
hostesses, Mrs. Virginia
Michael and Mrs. Judy Miller.
HARRISONVILLE Chapter
255, OES 1 regular session
Tuesday ni~ht, 8 p.m. Members asked to lake food for the
Charles Sheets family . Of.
ficers' practice at 2 p.m.
Sunday.
WEDNESDAY
PAST Presidents, Ladies
Auxiliary Drew Webster Post
39, meeting scheduled for
Wednesday at home of Mrs. J .
M. Thornton,_postponed.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
home of Mrs. Cora Beegle,
Racine.
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters, 7:30
Wednesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
home of Mrs. Bernard Fultz.
Mrs. Carl Horkey will review
Clare Booth Luce by Stephen
Shodegg and Mrs . Harold
Sauer will review Curious Life
for a Lady by Pat Barr . .

Response will be a famous
Meigs
American Cancer'S!lciety, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at Columbu5
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
All board members and
crusade workers , asked to
attend.
'
SOUP SUPPER, Wednesday, at Racine Wesleyan
United Methodist Church
beginning at 4:30p.m. ·
Add Tuesday
SYRACUSE PTA regular
meeting, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
school. A drug film, "Trip
Back" to be shown by Carl
Hysell and speakers will be
present.
.. _
YOUTH MEETING, Sacred
Heart Catholic Church, 7 p.m.
Wednesday for seventh, eighth
and high school students.
Speaker will be the Rev. Fr.
Donald Horak, teacher at the
seminary high school in
Vienna .

la~~EC!ALMEETING,

Bald Knob

Notes
Sunday School attendance at
the Freedom Gospel Mission on
March 4 was 33. Offering was
$9.07.
Several from here attended
the funeral of Mrs. May
Johnston ,
a
former
correspondent for this community. Mrs. Johnston had
been ill for a long time.
Mr. and Mrs . Donald
Cremeans of Tuppers Plains,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnston
and daughter of Hemlock
Grove visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Johnston and family
recently.

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, March 14,
lhe 74th day of 1972.
The moon Is belween Its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning star Is Jupiter.

The evening st~rs are Mereu.
ry, Venus, Mars and Saturn.

Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
German -American sc ientist

Albert Einstein was born
March 14, 1879
On this day in history:
·
In 1143 the first town meeting
in America was held at Boston .
In 1812 lhe U.S. government
authorized the issue of the first
war bonds, floated to buy

Taylor, Mich.; · Ernest, .River
Rouge, Mich.; Anna Mae
Conlile, East Bank, W. Va.~ and
Myrtle ·Baumla, Trenton, .
Mich, : 22 granddilldren and
several great-grindcl!lldren.
Funeral services were held
today at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Marshall
Larimore officiating. Burial
was in Minersville Hill
Cemeter)'.

j

"The Restless Ones," con·

Shelley Ann Winters
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. W. V.
Winters, Route 3, Bellefontaine, announce the engagement
and·approaching marriage of their eldest daughter, Shelley
Ann, to Mr. Richard Wtlliam Nease, son of Mr, and Mrs. G.
William Nease, Route 3, Bellefontaine. Both Miss Winters
and Mr. Nease were graduated from the Logan Hills High
School in the class of 1970. The bride~lect is a student at Ohio
State University, Columbus, and her fiance is a student at
Urbana College, Urbana. The wedding will be an event of
Aug. 26. Mr. Nease is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
PhtllipsandMr. and Mrs. U.S. Nease of Minersville.

.

HARRISONVILLE - A fifth
and sixth grade basketball
. game at 6 p.m. followed by a
party and later a dance from 8
to 11:30 p.m. will be staged at
Harrisonville School Friday.
Plan! for the full evening of
entertainment were made at a
recent meeting of the
Harrisonville PTO . The
Hilltoppers will play for the

sidered the most successful
motion picture yet produced by
Evangelist Btlly Graham, will
be shown on March 19 in the
New Haven Theatre. ·
With the accent on youth, this
lea lure-length film deals
imaginatively and
dramatically with the teenage
crisis. With a background
setting provided by the 1963
Billy Graham Los Angeles
Crusade, and artfully woven

into the story pattern. "The
Restless Ones" Is a hard- .
hitting, bold approach to ~ial ·,
problems.
·l
0 j

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tall cans

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Pome oy
~ perS(&gt;na I Notes .

Robinson's Cleaners

ALL MEAT
WIENERS

CHOPPED
SIRLOIN

lb

lb

Fresh, Extra lean From

square dance and there will be and sixth grades, and a report
a charge of 50 cents for adulls on this will be given at the
and 25.cents for children under special meeting .
FOR
12. Pre-school children will be
Attending were Leo Morris,
admitted free.
Linda
Morris,
Helen
Cementing the outdoor Overholzer, Doris Fox, Mary
basketball court was discussed Hanning, Betty Bishop,
but no action was taken pen- Kenneth Payne, Sue Payne,
ding the cost estimate. It was Judy Stimetz, Donna Eblin,
also decided that the Tractor Kenneth Eblin, Nancy White,
Pulling Association will be Sally Welsh, Ann Barrett,
asked to donate money in Charles Barrett, Jr., Mary
Ring Styl,
exchange for the right to have Ash, Bo Whittington , and
No. 61
~"&gt;'J::UU...
W' #WP.I"!m tractor pulls there. Sammy
Barbara Whittington .
::::
~
Lewis, a member of the
Assisting with the babysit~:
~ • • •·
association, wlli meet with the ting were Brenda Bishop ,
Set with radiant birthPTO in special session Thurs- Beverly Bishop, Sharon
~
day night at 7:30p.m.
stones- one done for
Hanning, Cathy Morris, Vicky
····
' : A discussion was held on Nutter, and Marlene Barrett.
each member of the
Mr. and Mrs. Benny Buck field trips for the fourth , fifth
family.
and children, New Lexington,
spent the weekend here visiting
Ring can be made to
hls mother, Mrs. Ben Buck.
hold from two to five
BASIC COMPLETED
Guests of Mrs . Ralph
birthstones.
Private James S. Eakins, son
Spencer over tbe weekend
were Mr. and Mrs. Edward of Mr. and Mrs. James E.
In precious IOkt. yellow
Eakins, Route 2, Racine,
Mcintosh.
or white gold.
SAME DAY
Mrs. John Weeks, Mary Beth recently completed eight
SERVItE
and Tom, Gallipolis, and Mrs. weeks of basic training at the
In At 9-0ut At 5
Eldon Wee~ were viaitors In U. S. Army Training Center,
3.00 Additional for Each Birthstone
Armor, Ft. Kriox, Ky. The 1971
Reynoldsburg, Saturday.
Use Our Free Parking Lot
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer, graduate of Southern High
Lou Ann and Kimberly, spent School received his training in
Saturday here visiting Mr. and Company D, 12th Battalion, 5th
Court St.
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy · ·
Mrs. BQb Hoeflich and Jayne Brigade.
Pomeroy
Lee.
... --·Miss Helen Lochary left
Saturday from the Columbus
Airport for Chicago where she
will visit Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Lochary, Meg and Robert,
until Easter when they wtll
come to Pomeroy for a viait.
Accompanying Miss Lochary
to Columbus were Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
Mr. and Mrs . Bill King,
Newark, were recent visitors
of Mrs. Welby Whaley and
other relatives here.
Mr. apd Mrs. Bob Grueser,
Crooksville , were weekend
The farther you call the more you save. Here are some examples. •
visitors of hia parents, Mr. and
Dialing 200 miles costs 80¢ instead of $1.45 person to person. You save 44%.
Mrs. Karl Grueser. On Sunday
they went to Williamstown, W.
Dialing 500 miles is $1.00 versus $2.15 person to person. You save 54%.
Va . to visit relatives.
Dialing 3000 miles costs $1.35 as against $3 .55 person to person. You save 61%.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Gaul
and children,' Garden City,
Saving is simple, isn't it?Just use your dial instead of ours.
Mich . spent the weekend here
visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs . J. M. Gaul, Route 3,
&amp;EIIEA.N. 1BU'RIIIl0.111""1EIE
Pomeroy. A family dinner was
held at the Gaul home honoring
Mrs. D. J. Morgan, Route 3,
*WeekdayS a.m. to 5 p. m. interstate 3-minute call s, pl us tax.
After 5 p.m. you save even more.
Pomeroy, on her 82nd birthday
anniversary.

use

-

79~

SAVE 20' LB
SUPERIORS ·

lb

·

Adv. ·

lb

STEAK

0

lb

'.

BALLARD'S
• FARM
·sAUSAGE

CUBED-

••••••••••
.

j

Lowest Price!

USDA Oloice Beet.

Dutdll.oaf, Pickle Loaf; S~iced Loaf, Head Cheese, Souse, Minced.Loa.f, Pickle-Pimento·

Restless Ones Film Coming ·
NEW HAVEN, W. Va . -

FREE ON-STREET PARKING AFTER 5:00 P.M. ·

•

•

Eventng
• 0if Fiun P/wnne
~
d Firtuay
~J

NEXT TUESDAY
A meeUng c' the Women's
aga inst the British .
of
Veterans
tn 1941 military and naval Auxiliary
bases In 'the Philippines were Memorial Hospital will be held
leased to the Uniled States for next TUesday not tonight as
99 years .
earlier announced.
military equipment for

SYRACUSE - Ethel L.
Bef2ing, 82, died Sunday night
at the SyraC11se Nursing HOJile.
Mrs. Betzing was the daughter
Of the llite Ajellne and Eldeth
Brown. She' was also preceded
in death by her husband, Peter
Be !zing.
Survivors include five sons
and two daughters, George and
John , of Akron ; Chesler,
·Chesapeake, W.Va.; Peter, of

THURSDAY
FEENEY-BENNETT f'oat
128, American Legion birthday
observance, dinner 6:30 p.m.
JITJ:!EY Supper, Rutland
Grade School, by the Rutland
Fireme.n's Auxiliary. Serving
to begin at 4 p.m. Menu to
include ham, creamed baked
chicken, noodles, salads, green
and baked beans, desserts,
rolls, and beverages.
EASTERN AthleUc Boosters
meeting, 7:30 Thursday at hl8h
school to plan for basketball
banquet.
ST. PATRICK'S DAY card
psrty, Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
Table and door prizes.
Donation $1.25.
·
WILLING Workers Class,
7:30 Thursday, at the parsonage of Enterprise United
Methodist Church with Mrs.
Stanton Smith as hostess.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, Thursday, 1:15
p.m. home of Mrs. William
Witte. Program by Mrs. Welby
Whaley; contest by Mrs .
George Skinner.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30Thursday night at the hall.
FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE 5th and
6th basketball game at 6
followed by a party for the
team. Square dance from 8 to
ll :JOp.m. with the Hilltoppers.

'

Ethel ,Betzing Died Sunday

Social Calendar

May primary. At that meeting
also a science fair will be held.
Tbe May meeting will feature a
program by the fifth and sixth
grade band.
'
Mrs. James Soulsby, ways
and means chairman, announced a rummage sale to be
beld at the Pomeroy Junior
High School auditorium,
March 31-April I. By-law
changes were noted by Mrs.
Mitch, who read thank you
notes from Mrs. Ben Neutzling
and Mrs. Lelia Curtis.

Easter Breakfast in
Syracuse is Planned
SYRACUSE - An Easter
breakfast for the Syracuse
Cluster churches at the Asbury
United Methodist Church in
Syracuse was planned when
the Women 's Society of
Christian Service met recently
at the home of Mrs. Karl Kloes.
Members of the Society will
serve as hostesses for the
breakfast. Also noted was the
Billy Graham film to be shown
soon at the New Haven theatre.
A report' was given on the
World Day of Prayer service
held last week at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church.
It was noted that the 16 shutin vtsits had been made during
the past month. Officers
reports were given and free
will and Lenten offerings were
taken.
Mrs.
Virgil
Teaford,
pres iding at the meeting,
opened with a reading on ~~~"
new version of the 23rd Psalm.
Mrs. William Eichinger used
Luke 9, a meditation from the
"Upper Room" for devotions,
and a poem " A Lenten Guide"
from Guideposts, with prayer.
A program on "materialism " was presented
by Miss Marcia Karr who

•

.,

.'

'

SCOT

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Whole Kernel Com

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r-

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Shellie Beans - Spinach

5

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MACARONI
j
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and CHEDDAR CHEESE

FIRM GOLDEN RIPE

.j

l

BANANAS

''

1

lb

QUALITY • • •

10~

on~

FACIAL TISSUES SALE
Camellia
Thrifty Brand

IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!

for

200

ct.$

boxes

CtiPA ~ DRIDII M

With This Coupon ONLY

BREAD
~~

cans for

CliPA~OkiDEft-1

FABRIC
SOFTENER

FAVORITE

3 lb basket
I

C!IPANOR I ['I(!M

59~

$1

.. _

MARK VSTORE

Limit: 1 coupon " ' V.. aaiiDn sin bDttl• purch..ed

l

STALEY'S SYRUP

24
39~
bot~z.
Reg. sg•

1
1

II

With
Coupon

1
1

Good Only at Mark V
Expires 3-4-72

·1

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BUT •••
Regular

YOU'LL: NEVER BUY QUALITY

THllilSDAY ONLf SALE! .

FOR ·LESS

.8. . 694

BAKER'S
Fine Furniturt
MIDDLEPORT

SPECIAL

'16&amp;

OHIO

Pkg.

JELLY BEANS

RC COLA·

THAN YOU DO AT

39~

pkg

SUPER MARKET • Open Datly 9 to 10 • Sun.
·

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We Accept Federnl Food St£lmp.~

.

Corner Mill and Seco~ct'Sts.
I I

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PHONE: 992·3480

" We

~e serve The

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CliP AND Rl Oil M CLIP AND Rl OHM CLIP AND Rl Of I M .J

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Without Coupon If, sallon size Sta-Puf I
I
Fabric SohPnPr 7'1 This Offer Good
I
thru 3-18-72 . Good Only at

~---------------,

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Right To Lim it Ouanti ties:·

lMQDLEPORT, 0.

�. "

.'

..

'

I

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14, 1972

PTA Supporting
Salary Increase
A letter directed to
Congressman Clarence Miller
asking that the Federal Pay
Board authorize school employe sala'ry increases approved several months ago by
the Ohio Legislature was
circulated for signatures at the
Monday night meeting of the
Pomeroy PTA.
Signature for a second letter
to go to President Richard
Nixon were also solicited. It
was noted during the meeting
by Mrs. Gene Mitch, president,
that a letter will be sent from
the PTA.
The possibility of using cable .
television lor classroom instruction was discussed and
Mrs. Mitch reported that there
is a need lor 16 repairable sets
fo r classroom use at the
Pomeroy School. She said that
the sets will be repaired in the
Meigs High School television
class. Residents with sets to
give are asked to contact either
Mrs. Mitch or Mrs. Robert
Lewis.

Mrs. Franklin Casto, Mrs.
Ja mes Soulsby, and Mrs. Bill
McDaniel were appointed to
the nominating committee.
. They are to present a slate of
officers at the April meeting. It
was noted that Meigs Local
School District Superintendent
had requested time to speak on
the five mill school levy whlch
will come before voted at the

Robert Morris, principal,
reported on the reading
program progress noting that
47 children have now exceeded
teaching materials which are
available in the school. This
figure, he said, was arrived at
through standardized testing.
A request was made for three
additional mothers to help out
in the program on Tuesdays
and Thursdays, 9 to 10 a.m.
Mrs. Mitch announced the
April 6 meeting of the Meigs
County Council of Parents and
Teachers at Riverview, and the
Easter vacation whlch extends
from March 30 wApril 4.
The attendance banner was
won by the third grade.
Refreshments were served .
Pomeroy cub scouts led in the
pledge to the flag, and the Rev.
Robert Card, Methodist
minister, gave devotions.

PORTER REASSIGNED
Army Specialist Five
William L. Porter, 24, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Dear! Porter,
Route 4, Pomeroy, has been
assigned to the 1st Armored
Division near Nurnberg,
G~ rm a ny. Spec. Porter is
servin g with Headquarters
Bottery, 2d Battalion of the
division's 14th Artillery. He is a
1965 graduate of Rutland High
School. His wife, Sharon, lives
on Route 3, Athens.
TRAINING ENDED
Army Private John L.
Warner, 18, son of Mrs. Marion
J. Warner, 102 Legion Terrace ,
Pomeroy, recently completed
eight weeks of basic training at
the U. S. Arm y Training
Center, Armor, Ft. Knox, Ky.
He is a 1971 graduate of Meigs
High School.
VISIT .GRUESERS
Mr. and Mrs. Howard I.
Snyder, Parkersburg, W. Va .
were weekend guests of Mr.
an d Mr s. Paul Grueser ,
Middleport.

described it as a "truly great
enemy, the chief of all the isms
which we have to combat and
conquer ." She said that the
change must begin in our own
house in order to persuade
others to change. Miss Karr
noted that many of our country's forebearers knew what it
meant to listen to God 's
guidance and obey His command.
Concluding with a reading,
"Where is Easter?" Miss Karr
pointed out that Easter is
whenever men know and
believe in the risen Lord,
whenever they turn from
paganism, whether it be
worship of a carved tree in
Africa or material possessions
in America, being risen with
Christ means seeing things
from above.
A silent prayer for the sick
and prayer by Mrs. Virgil
Teaford concluded
the
meeting. Mrs. Herbert Parker
was the assisting hostess.
Others attending were Mrs.
William Houdashelt, Mrs .
Damon Ferrell, Mrs. John
Sauvage, Mrs . T. A. Hilldore,
and Mrs. Donald Lisle.

&amp;rrisonville
Honor Pupils
Are Annormced
HARRISONVILLE - The
honor roll for the Harrisonville
Elementary School for the past
six weeks was announced
today. Listed on the honor roll
were the following students:
First grade : Mary Lee and
Darlene Nelson .
Second grade: Sheila Young,
Danny Riggs, Annette Might,
Willie Donahue, Mark Cline,
Sheila Bing, with Aogela
Harmon and Patricia Brown,
all A's.
Third grade : Regan Arnold,
Jerry Burchett, Robert Harman , Anita Lee, Frank King,
Anita
Lewis,
Dreama
Richards, and Nancy Welsh .
Fourth :· Linda Donahue,
Richard K. Hill, Randy Mitchell , Mik e Vance , Randy
Oliver, Mark Riggs, Belinda
Whittington .
Fifth : Sherrie Burchett,
Julia Vance.
Sixth : Jeff Arnold, Rod Hill,
with Sue Kennedy and Brent
Stanley, all A's.

TUESDAY ·
AMEIU .CAN
Legion
Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
263, 7p.m. Tuesday night at the
home of Mrs. ADen Hampton.
RUTLAND Firemen's
Auxiliary, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday
at the fire hall. Plans to be
completed for the jitney
supper. Traveling prize to be
brought by Mrs. LouJse Eada;
hostesses, Mrs. Virginia
Michael and Mrs. Judy Miller.
HARRISONVILLE Chapter
255, OES 1 regular session
Tuesday ni~ht, 8 p.m. Members asked to lake food for the
Charles Sheets family . Of.
ficers' practice at 2 p.m.
Sunday.
WEDNESDAY
PAST Presidents, Ladies
Auxiliary Drew Webster Post
39, meeting scheduled for
Wednesday at home of Mrs. J .
M. Thornton,_postponed.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at
home of Mrs. Cora Beegle,
Racine.
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Royal and Select Masters, 7:30
Wednesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Temple.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club Wednesday 7:30 p.m.
home of Mrs. Bernard Fultz.
Mrs. Carl Horkey will review
Clare Booth Luce by Stephen
Shodegg and Mrs . Harold
Sauer will review Curious Life
for a Lady by Pat Barr . .

Response will be a famous
Meigs
American Cancer'S!lciety, 7:30
p.m. Wednesday at Columbu5
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
All board members and
crusade workers , asked to
attend.
'
SOUP SUPPER, Wednesday, at Racine Wesleyan
United Methodist Church
beginning at 4:30p.m. ·
Add Tuesday
SYRACUSE PTA regular
meeting, Tuesday, 7:30p.m. at
school. A drug film, "Trip
Back" to be shown by Carl
Hysell and speakers will be
present.
.. _
YOUTH MEETING, Sacred
Heart Catholic Church, 7 p.m.
Wednesday for seventh, eighth
and high school students.
Speaker will be the Rev. Fr.
Donald Horak, teacher at the
seminary high school in
Vienna .

la~~EC!ALMEETING,

Bald Knob

Notes
Sunday School attendance at
the Freedom Gospel Mission on
March 4 was 33. Offering was
$9.07.
Several from here attended
the funeral of Mrs. May
Johnston ,
a
former
correspondent for this community. Mrs. Johnston had
been ill for a long time.
Mr. and Mrs . Donald
Cremeans of Tuppers Plains,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnston
and daughter of Hemlock
Grove visited Mr. and Mrs.
Lawrence Johnston and family
recently.

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today Is Tuesday, March 14,
lhe 74th day of 1972.
The moon Is belween Its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning star Is Jupiter.

The evening st~rs are Mereu.
ry, Venus, Mars and Saturn.

Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
German -American sc ientist

Albert Einstein was born
March 14, 1879
On this day in history:
·
In 1143 the first town meeting
in America was held at Boston .
In 1812 lhe U.S. government
authorized the issue of the first
war bonds, floated to buy

Taylor, Mich.; · Ernest, .River
Rouge, Mich.; Anna Mae
Conlile, East Bank, W. Va.~ and
Myrtle ·Baumla, Trenton, .
Mich, : 22 granddilldren and
several great-grindcl!lldren.
Funeral services were held
today at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Marshall
Larimore officiating. Burial
was in Minersville Hill
Cemeter)'.

j

"The Restless Ones," con·

Shelley Ann Winters
ENGAGEMENT ANNOUNCED - Mr. and Mrs. W. V.
Winters, Route 3, Bellefontaine, announce the engagement
and·approaching marriage of their eldest daughter, Shelley
Ann, to Mr. Richard Wtlliam Nease, son of Mr, and Mrs. G.
William Nease, Route 3, Bellefontaine. Both Miss Winters
and Mr. Nease were graduated from the Logan Hills High
School in the class of 1970. The bride~lect is a student at Ohio
State University, Columbus, and her fiance is a student at
Urbana College, Urbana. The wedding will be an event of
Aug. 26. Mr. Nease is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
PhtllipsandMr. and Mrs. U.S. Nease of Minersville.

.

HARRISONVILLE - A fifth
and sixth grade basketball
. game at 6 p.m. followed by a
party and later a dance from 8
to 11:30 p.m. will be staged at
Harrisonville School Friday.
Plan! for the full evening of
entertainment were made at a
recent meeting of the
Harrisonville PTO . The
Hilltoppers will play for the

sidered the most successful
motion picture yet produced by
Evangelist Btlly Graham, will
be shown on March 19 in the
New Haven Theatre. ·
With the accent on youth, this
lea lure-length film deals
imaginatively and
dramatically with the teenage
crisis. With a background
setting provided by the 1963
Billy Graham Los Angeles
Crusade, and artfully woven

into the story pattern. "The
Restless Ones" Is a hard- .
hitting, bold approach to ~ial ·,
problems.
·l
0 j

Luncheon
.Meats
....
~.~.~~~~~~~..
~~
.
.
79e
SUPERIORS TASTY ·
.. . ·
-- ~~ h··
s
69e
Po
IS . ausage................................ . . ·
SU!ERIORS U~
e
t1nk
.sausage
.....................................
99
ANEW SUPPLY-ENJOY SOME NOW!
.· ·. ·
69e
Salt F1sh........;........ H.............................. · ·
9e
USDA Choice
·Ground Chuck.................................8 ·
•

·

SAVE
30' LB.

Beef .

·

BUDGET BACON

SUPERIORS

Happy

SLAB BACON

Easter
Gift ...

ANY SIZE

59~

lb

lb

lb

3

By Superk11s

1·•00
~

lb

59~

PIECE

~~cu-IH4/U

1bKEEP.

WILSON'S

~-

MOTHER

EASY MONDAY
SPRAY STARCH

SPECIAL

BY DEBBIE

FROZEN FOODS

FRESH CRACKERS

SHIR
fiNISHING

OUR GOOD

SOOT lAD .

3· $1
I~b b~

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Real Good
Buy Now! ·

Fairmont or Sealtest

GRAPE
JUICE

I'CE ·CREAM
1~b

pkg

. DINNERS

ROYAL

for

OL

79~

29 e

carton

22 oz
can

3

6

FAIRMONT

16

on~

$

Kleerview
gat· 9~
Windshield Washer
·DURKEE··:FRESH . 3~~~ 9~
CUCUMBER SLICES
SUGAR FREE 7 ftaVOIS
FAYGO POP 12 oz can 13~
LARGE SIZE
doz
39~
EGGS (Unclassified)
COAL RIVER 51b bag ' 49~
CORN MEAL

COITAGE CHEESE

$

TV

gal.

carton

49~

BANQUET

MARGARINE

If you dial long distances yourself, ,
you pay less.
··:·' '"·
It's that simple.

1f2

OCEAN
PERCH

10~ .. $1

DAIRY FOODS

WELCH'S

CAPE ANN

SCOT LAD BISCUITS

GOESS"-ER JEWELRY STORE

tall cans

EVAP. MILK

LEMON DnERGENT

Pome oy
~ perS(&gt;na I Notes .

Robinson's Cleaners

ALL MEAT
WIENERS

CHOPPED
SIRLOIN

lb

lb

Fresh, Extra lean From

square dance and there will be and sixth grades, and a report
a charge of 50 cents for adulls on this will be given at the
and 25.cents for children under special meeting .
FOR
12. Pre-school children will be
Attending were Leo Morris,
admitted free.
Linda
Morris,
Helen
Cementing the outdoor Overholzer, Doris Fox, Mary
basketball court was discussed Hanning, Betty Bishop,
but no action was taken pen- Kenneth Payne, Sue Payne,
ding the cost estimate. It was Judy Stimetz, Donna Eblin,
also decided that the Tractor Kenneth Eblin, Nancy White,
Pulling Association will be Sally Welsh, Ann Barrett,
asked to donate money in Charles Barrett, Jr., Mary
Ring Styl,
exchange for the right to have Ash, Bo Whittington , and
No. 61
~"&gt;'J::UU...
W' #WP.I"!m tractor pulls there. Sammy
Barbara Whittington .
::::
~
Lewis, a member of the
Assisting with the babysit~:
~ • • •·
association, wlli meet with the ting were Brenda Bishop ,
Set with radiant birthPTO in special session Thurs- Beverly Bishop, Sharon
~
day night at 7:30p.m.
stones- one done for
Hanning, Cathy Morris, Vicky
····
' : A discussion was held on Nutter, and Marlene Barrett.
each member of the
Mr. and Mrs. Benny Buck field trips for the fourth , fifth
family.
and children, New Lexington,
spent the weekend here visiting
Ring can be made to
hls mother, Mrs. Ben Buck.
hold from two to five
BASIC COMPLETED
Guests of Mrs . Ralph
birthstones.
Private James S. Eakins, son
Spencer over tbe weekend
were Mr. and Mrs. Edward of Mr. and Mrs. James E.
In precious IOkt. yellow
Eakins, Route 2, Racine,
Mcintosh.
or white gold.
SAME DAY
Mrs. John Weeks, Mary Beth recently completed eight
SERVItE
and Tom, Gallipolis, and Mrs. weeks of basic training at the
In At 9-0ut At 5
Eldon Wee~ were viaitors In U. S. Army Training Center,
3.00 Additional for Each Birthstone
Armor, Ft. Kriox, Ky. The 1971
Reynoldsburg, Saturday.
Use Our Free Parking Lot
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Hammer, graduate of Southern High
Lou Ann and Kimberly, spent School received his training in
Saturday here visiting Mr. and Company D, 12th Battalion, 5th
Court St.
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy · ·
Mrs. BQb Hoeflich and Jayne Brigade.
Pomeroy
Lee.
... --·Miss Helen Lochary left
Saturday from the Columbus
Airport for Chicago where she
will visit Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Lochary, Meg and Robert,
until Easter when they wtll
come to Pomeroy for a viait.
Accompanying Miss Lochary
to Columbus were Mr. and
Mrs. Patrick Lochary.
Mr. and Mrs . Bill King,
Newark, were recent visitors
of Mrs. Welby Whaley and
other relatives here.
Mr. apd Mrs. Bob Grueser,
Crooksville , were weekend
The farther you call the more you save. Here are some examples. •
visitors of hia parents, Mr. and
Dialing 200 miles costs 80¢ instead of $1.45 person to person. You save 44%.
Mrs. Karl Grueser. On Sunday
they went to Williamstown, W.
Dialing 500 miles is $1.00 versus $2.15 person to person. You save 54%.
Va . to visit relatives.
Dialing 3000 miles costs $1.35 as against $3 .55 person to person. You save 61%.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Gaul
and children,' Garden City,
Saving is simple, isn't it?Just use your dial instead of ours.
Mich . spent the weekend here
visiting his parents, Mr. and
Mrs . J. M. Gaul, Route 3,
&amp;EIIEA.N. 1BU'RIIIl0.111""1EIE
Pomeroy. A family dinner was
held at the Gaul home honoring
Mrs. D. J. Morgan, Route 3,
*WeekdayS a.m. to 5 p. m. interstate 3-minute call s, pl us tax.
After 5 p.m. you save even more.
Pomeroy, on her 82nd birthday
anniversary.

use

-

79~

SAVE 20' LB
SUPERIORS ·

lb

·

Adv. ·

lb

STEAK

0

lb

'.

BALLARD'S
• FARM
·sAUSAGE

CUBED-

••••••••••
.

j

Lowest Price!

USDA Oloice Beet.

Dutdll.oaf, Pickle Loaf; S~iced Loaf, Head Cheese, Souse, Minced.Loa.f, Pickle-Pimento·

Restless Ones Film Coming ·
NEW HAVEN, W. Va . -

FREE ON-STREET PARKING AFTER 5:00 P.M. ·

•

•

Eventng
• 0if Fiun P/wnne
~
d Firtuay
~J

NEXT TUESDAY
A meeUng c' the Women's
aga inst the British .
of
Veterans
tn 1941 military and naval Auxiliary
bases In 'the Philippines were Memorial Hospital will be held
leased to the Uniled States for next TUesday not tonight as
99 years .
earlier announced.
military equipment for

SYRACUSE - Ethel L.
Bef2ing, 82, died Sunday night
at the SyraC11se Nursing HOJile.
Mrs. Betzing was the daughter
Of the llite Ajellne and Eldeth
Brown. She' was also preceded
in death by her husband, Peter
Be !zing.
Survivors include five sons
and two daughters, George and
John , of Akron ; Chesler,
·Chesapeake, W.Va.; Peter, of

THURSDAY
FEENEY-BENNETT f'oat
128, American Legion birthday
observance, dinner 6:30 p.m.
JITJ:!EY Supper, Rutland
Grade School, by the Rutland
Fireme.n's Auxiliary. Serving
to begin at 4 p.m. Menu to
include ham, creamed baked
chicken, noodles, salads, green
and baked beans, desserts,
rolls, and beverages.
EASTERN AthleUc Boosters
meeting, 7:30 Thursday at hl8h
school to plan for basketball
banquet.
ST. PATRICK'S DAY card
psrty, Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
Table and door prizes.
Donation $1.25.
·
WILLING Workers Class,
7:30 Thursday, at the parsonage of Enterprise United
Methodist Church with Mrs.
Stanton Smith as hostess.
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Health Club, Thursday, 1:15
p.m. home of Mrs. William
Witte. Program by Mrs. Welby
Whaley; contest by Mrs .
George Skinner.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange,
7:30Thursday night at the hall.
FRIDAY
HARRISONVILLE 5th and
6th basketball game at 6
followed by a party for the
team. Square dance from 8 to
ll :JOp.m. with the Hilltoppers.

'

Ethel ,Betzing Died Sunday

Social Calendar

May primary. At that meeting
also a science fair will be held.
Tbe May meeting will feature a
program by the fifth and sixth
grade band.
'
Mrs. James Soulsby, ways
and means chairman, announced a rummage sale to be
beld at the Pomeroy Junior
High School auditorium,
March 31-April I. By-law
changes were noted by Mrs.
Mitch, who read thank you
notes from Mrs. Ben Neutzling
and Mrs. Lelia Curtis.

Easter Breakfast in
Syracuse is Planned
SYRACUSE - An Easter
breakfast for the Syracuse
Cluster churches at the Asbury
United Methodist Church in
Syracuse was planned when
the Women 's Society of
Christian Service met recently
at the home of Mrs. Karl Kloes.
Members of the Society will
serve as hostesses for the
breakfast. Also noted was the
Billy Graham film to be shown
soon at the New Haven theatre.
A report' was given on the
World Day of Prayer service
held last week at the Sacred
Heart Catholic Church.
It was noted that the 16 shutin vtsits had been made during
the past month. Officers
reports were given and free
will and Lenten offerings were
taken.
Mrs.
Virgil
Teaford,
pres iding at the meeting,
opened with a reading on ~~~"
new version of the 23rd Psalm.
Mrs. William Eichinger used
Luke 9, a meditation from the
"Upper Room" for devotions,
and a poem " A Lenten Guide"
from Guideposts, with prayer.
A program on "materialism " was presented
by Miss Marcia Karr who

•

.,

.'

'

SCOT

Plain or Self-Rising

SCOT LAD CANNED GOODS
Whole Kernel Com

TOMATOES

r-

Every Day Low Price!

$

Peas -Green Beans
Shellie Beans - Spinach

5

GOLDEN GRAIN DINNERS

$

MACARONI
j
'

and CHEDDAR CHEESE

FIRM GOLDEN RIPE

.j

l

BANANAS

''

1

lb

QUALITY • • •

10~

on~

FACIAL TISSUES SALE
Camellia
Thrifty Brand

IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!

for

200

ct.$

boxes

CtiPA ~ DRIDII M

With This Coupon ONLY

BREAD
~~

cans for

CliPA~OkiDEft-1

FABRIC
SOFTENER

FAVORITE

3 lb basket
I

C!IPANOR I ['I(!M

59~

$1

.. _

MARK VSTORE

Limit: 1 coupon " ' V.. aaiiDn sin bDttl• purch..ed

l

STALEY'S SYRUP

24
39~
bot~z.
Reg. sg•

1
1

II

With
Coupon

1
1

Good Only at Mark V
Expires 3-4-72

·1

.

I

1

L--------------1

BUT •••
Regular

YOU'LL: NEVER BUY QUALITY

THllilSDAY ONLf SALE! .

FOR ·LESS

.8. . 694

BAKER'S
Fine Furniturt
MIDDLEPORT

SPECIAL

'16&amp;

OHIO

Pkg.

JELLY BEANS

RC COLA·

THAN YOU DO AT

39~

pkg

SUPER MARKET • Open Datly 9 to 10 • Sun.
·

·

We Accept Federnl Food St£lmp.~

.

Corner Mill and Seco~ct'Sts.
I I

I'

'
I.

'r

•. , I

'

PHONE: 992·3480

" We

~e serve The

I

1
I

CliP AND Rl Oil M CLIP AND Rl OHM CLIP AND Rl Of I M .J

I

1

II

I

Without Coupon If, sallon size Sta-Puf I
I
Fabric SohPnPr 7'1 This Offer Good
I
thru 3-18-72 . Good Only at

~---------------,

I

,

Right To Lim it Ouanti ties:·

lMQDLEPORT, 0.

�, ------·
•
~·

.

.

.

.I

•-'nil Dally 9111tinel, MlclcllepotW'orueroy, o., Ma'clll4, tm

·

'

•

Sentinel Classifieds GetAction!"·Sentinel Classifieds _Get Results!
.

.

@)

WANt ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P. M.
Day
Before~
Publication
.
Monday O...dltn, 9 a.m .
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
[
·
W!llbeaccepte&lt;luntll9a .m. for ·
Day. ol Publication
REGitLATIONS
lt71 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN
$24JS
T1lo! Publisher .reserves the
local I owner. new ~r trade In, 13,000 miles, automatic
right to odll or re/ect any ads
trans. , luggage ra ck; rad io, chrome wheel covers, blue
deemed objfct onal. The
color,' blk . vinyl Interior.
publisher will not be
responsible for more than o~
1970 CHEVELLE SS396 CPE.
$2295
itlcorrect ltlsertlon.
Green finish, blk . vinyl roof . green vinyl interior, new
RATES
wide oval tires, 4 speed trans., power steering, radio . A
For Want Ad Service
sweetheart
of a buy .
I" .
S cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 7Sc
1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.
$2095
12 cents per word thr..

Pomeroy
Motor Co. ·

2

OF

IUALITY
'

consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six c® ·
\ecutive Insertions.

V-8 ~ngine, automatic trans .. p. steering, factory air
conditioned, good w-w tires, radio, dark green finish with
spotless Interior.

25 Per Cent Discount on pal&lt;
ads and ads paid wltl)in 1r

daytA~Do~rTJ~:~Ks
suo

for SO word minimum
Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.

~

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Ridgeway, the nurses and
a ides for thel r k l ndness and
wonderful care given me at

Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sincere thanks to the many

POMEROY LANES
Early Wednesday Mixed
March 1,1972
Pis
Zlde's Sport Shop
48
Smith-Nelson Motors
48
Oiler's Sohlo
47
Young 's Market
42
Nelson's Drug
28
Tenth Framers
27
High Ind. Game - Charles
Smith 235 and Betty Smith 198.
High Series - Charles Smith
595 an.d Betty Smith 500.
Team High Game - Tenth
Framers 702 . Team High
Series - Zlde's Sport Shop
2022. .
Bantam League
March 4, 1972
Pis
14

Re&lt;t Barons

Pin Busters

be forgotten .
Mrs. Paul (Margaret)
McDaniel, Sr .. 488 S. 4th Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio.
3-14-ltc
WE WISH to thank everyone
who was so kind and
thoughlful after the death of
our son and gran9son, Jerry

Cleland. We especially wish to
thank Rev. Lloyd Grimm for
his consoling words, Martin
Funer~l Home, all of our
friends and neighbors who

helped In anyway and those

sending flowers .

Jerry

Cleland

tamily
3-14-ltp

Meigs

11

Mustangs
8
Ball Breakers
8
Zodiacs
7
Sneaky Snakes
6
High Ind. Game
Mike Hindy 147 and Kellh Lynch 146.
High Series- Mike Hlndy 248
and Rena Lefebre 228 .
Team High Game and Series
Earl S. Shaffer •. Gathel L.
- Red Barons 788 and 1518.
Shaffer to Elma E. Imboden,
m acres, Sutton.
Senior league
Olis C. Buchanan to Helen C.
March 4, 1972
Pis Buchanan, Cert. for trans.,
Pin Busters
16
Olive.
The Pros
16
Gutter Dusters
14'12
Ava Gilkey to Doyle T.
Roylil Crowns
13 1/ 2 Hudson, Nellie Nadine Hudson,
BorrJ Losers
12
Lot 16, Part Lot 15,
Strikers
9
High Game -Gene Davis Harrisonville - Scipio.
170 and Rich Bailey and Russ
Corbett L. Patterson, Daisy
Davis 167.
M.
Patterson to Hallie Cross,
High Series - Dave Swisher
457 and Rick Stobart 448.
Lots 43, 44, Carleton's Add.,
Team High Game and Series
Sutton - Syracuse.
- Pin Busters 796 and 2319.
Roy Gladman to Clifford
Longenette, Parcel, Olive.
Pomeroy Nat' I Bank Junior
Eugene T. German to
March 4,1972
Howard
Young, Inez E. Young,
Pis
Chiefs
17 1 Acre, Olive.
Rams
16
Allen E. Ball, Freda Ball to
Thundering Herd
15 John C. Beaver, Carolyn J.
Zodiacs
13
Beaver, 2.02 Acres, Chester.
Bengals
11
Strike Outs
9
Wendell H. Hooper, Lena M.
High Ind. Game - Cathy
Meadows 179 and Steve Hooper to Grady Arnold,
Patricia Arnold, 45.53 Acres,
Bachner 162.
High Series Mitch Scipio.
Meadows 411 and Steve
Alfred Birchfield to Gilbert
Bachner 402.
Team High Game and Series M. Zwilling, Pt of '}J)7 and 208,
- Chiefs 929 and 2599.
Pomeroy.
W. S. Snodgrass aka dec'd,
W. Scott Snodgrass aka dec'd,
Early Sunday Mixed
March 5, t972
to Charmion P. Snodgrass,
Pfs Cert. of Trans., Orange.
Racine Food Market
57
Jolm A. Curry, Harriet J.
Eagles Club
49
Tom's Carry Out
46 Curry to Donald Yoho, Enna
Farmer's Bank
34 Yoho, .SO Acre, .9 Acre,
Forest Run Block
32
Rcseberry 's Pennzoit
22 Salisbury.
High Ind. Game
Dick
Paul G. Smitb, Mary H.
Dugan 219 and
Linda Smith to May Watson,
Winebrenner 212.
Ifigh Series - Larry Dugan Minerals 63 Acres, Scipio.
57E and Linda Winebrenner 532.
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
Team High Game and Series Hysell to Virginia Wyatt, 74.64
- Tom's Carry Out 730 and
sq. rd., RuUaoJd.
2081 .
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
Wednesday Late Mlxe&lt;t League Hysell, to Vernon H. Alvis, 54
March I, 1972
P1s sq. rd., RuUand.
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
Morrow-Moore
54
Owen-Holler
48
Hysell to Kenneth E. Hysell,
Cassell-Carsey
42 Parcels, Rutland.
Fultz-Bentley
42
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
40
Rosenbaum· Meadows
Blakeslee-Hoyt
14 Hysell to Carl Junior Hysell,
High Serie s Team
Morrow-Moore 1901 ; Owen - Parcel, RuUand.
E. Joanne Russell to Guy 0 .
Holler 1895 ; Fultz-Bentley
1856.
Russell, Lot, Pomeroy.
High Game Team
Guy 0. RWISell to E. Joanne
Morrow -Moore 686 ; Fultz RWISell,
Lot, Pomeroy.
Benlley 653 : L. Dugan 516.
High Series - Men : W.
Otto C. Lohn, Mrs. Amber
Boyer 5jl; F. Morrow 534 : L. Lohn to Columbus &amp; Soutbern
Dugan 516.
High Series - Women : M. Ohio Elec . Co. , Ease .,
Dugan 478 ; N. Carsey 467 ; V. Pomeroy.
Hoyt 462 .
Paul P. Fisher, Theresa
High Game - Men: F. ·
Morrow 212 ; J . Carsey 200 ; W. Fisher to Louise R. Johnson ,
Boyer 193.
Lots, Middleport.

Property

Transfers

High Game -

a.m. in front of liquor Store.
tRmer may have by iden tifying amount and paying for

ad.

3-14-141c

Lost

friends,
neighbors
and
reiat lves for their cards, SHAFT and universal joint
flowers and prayers. Your
from Power Take-Off on 1961
kindness shown me will never
Ford Dump Truck . If found

Local Bowling

Women: N.

Carsey 175: V. Hovl 168; M.
Dugan 167.
Early Bird League
March 8, 1972
Pts
74

D. G. Pinnettes
Evelyn's Grocery
SO
King Builders
46
Larry's Ashland
42
Rawlings Dodge
30
Meigs Mobile Homes
22
Team High Game - D. G.
Plnnettes 785 and 761 : Larry's
Ashland 760.
Team High Series - D. G.
Pinnettes 2283.
Larry's
Ashland 2182 :
Evelyn ' s
Grocery 2129.
Ind. High Game - Mary_
Voss 211 and 200, Flossie
Maxson, 178.
Ind. High Series - Mary
Voss .584 r Flossie Maxson 484 :
Maxine Dugan 464.

The m o n l h of July is
named for Julius Cae sar:
August is named for Augustus Caesar .

We talk to-JOU
-like a. petSOfi..

ON YOUR DIAL

Wanted To Rent
MODERN 3 or 4 be&lt;! room home.
Phone 992-3062.

For Rent

loaves Sl with S10 additional

beans 2 cans S9c, Hart's whole
kernel corn 5 cans $1,

Broughton ' s Ice Milk Ice
Cream, Gal. $1.19, white
polatoes 50 lb. bag $1.59,

MEIGS INN
ROOMS
by
Oily, Week, Month
Liberal Rates

PH. 992-3629

Complete assortment of fancy

Easter goodies including
Easter Baskets from $1.49 to
$20. We accept Fe&lt;leral Food
Coupon. Streich your money,
foo(tcoupons and lime, see us
for seed potatoes, onion sets

and garden plants as needed.
Save In many ways at Bright
Star Markel, next to Drive-In

Theatre, Mason, W. Va.

new I y

decorated,

·Nathan Bins
Radiator Speciollsl

MARimA
TYPEWRITER

SMITH NElSON
MOTORS.· INC.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy

616 Main St.
Belpre, 0.
423-6551

EXPERT
·Whpel JUiJnment
$5.55
I

TERMITES. . TERMITESL

.

Gal Rid oiThem
We will protect any single
dwelling residence lor

'149.50

On Mas_! American Can.

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-7n94

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect 614·452-3158

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Y..CITY

0pen1Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

EXTERMINATION
633 Main St.

Auto Sales
tires. Good work car, $150.

OFFICE
MACHINE
REPAIR

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

J-7-lf

FURNISHED, 5 room apart· '63 CHEVY 283, standard, good
ment ,

Business Service.s

purchase. Broughton's 2 pet.

sweet milk gal. 99c, Bologna
In piece lb. 59c, grade A small
eggs 3 doz . $1, smoke&lt;! slab
bacon whole or half lb. 49c,
Van Camp 29 oz. can pQrk and

·- ~

Z.nesville, Ohio

Real Estate For Sale

OOlDNIAL
.AUTO BODY

- -]
·~· ltn" ~ "" · l.tll

537 High St.
Middleport, Ohio

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITION lNG

B&amp;W HEATING 00.

a.,.

1,1.1.1'11. 0111.

11£ QIIEF APPRECtAT£6

'lOUR DEDICATION, CROMLEY.

Complete body repairs
and paintings, glass
installation,
free
loaner
cars
and
estimates, also
mechanical
repairs.

ARE
SUDDENLV

SO

WE SAT UP;

3 · 14

UPTIG~Tl

WE'S SLEPT

BEFORE.

Phone 992-3793

All WEAtHER ROOFING
&amp; IXINSTRUCTION

9UT, AT 'EAST,

W~V

'

. I'

3 -14

&amp;· PWMBING CO.
240 Lincoln St.
Middtoport, Ohio
Dbll AnthonY Plumbing
We have a complete Home

1

Mainten1nce Service the

yeor around. No matter wl)ll
your need. Complete' roo! or
spouting repair. Interior or
exte•ior carpentry. Ceiling
tile and'Paneting and Siding.
Complete Plumbing J
Heating.
Oily Number 992-2550

Phone after 5 p.m. 742-563.5 . .HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
ground floor, Albert Hill.
3·14-3tc 98.!_3529_ .
Phone 949-2261.
Free Estimate
· call 985-3582 or see Charles
1-28-tfc
3-10-6tc
BisselL Chester. Ohio.
'66 THUNDERBIRD, V-8,
We have 24 hr'. emergency
3-14-3tc
FURNISHED apartmenl, 4 automatic, power steering, FOR THE BEST deal lil a new
service.
power
win
'
power
brakes,
or use&lt;! mobile home, try
rooms, Mason, W. Va. on
742·3947
m-SIDl
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Highway , Phone 773-5147 . dows, phone 992-5637. 3-12-6tp
Notice
992-3891
742-4761
Kanauga,
Ohio.
Reynolds Flower Shop.
Weare fully insured
_1_2-lMotc;
3-9-6tp
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT
overweight ladles, teens and
This Weak's Special ·
"jo ACRES, · ~ bedroom- home,
men Interested In a Weight ONE LARGE trailer space,
electric heat, vinyl siding,
Velma G. Zuspan, 773-5750,
Watchers I R) Class In
TP&amp;C water district ; J miles
Mason,
W.
Va
.
Pomeroy write: Weight
south of Tuppers Plains just
3-7-18tp
Watchers !RL 1863 Section
off Rt. 7 on County Road 28,
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
For Appointment
518,000
; phone 667-3336.
10-3-tfc APARTMENT. 3 rooms and
3-12-7tp
Phone 949-2803
- - - - - -- - ' balh, furnished, North 2nd
Make reservations for your
"RUMMAGE Sale, Saturday,
Ave., Middleporl, Phone 995USED
CARS
60X12, 2-bedroolil, all-electric, INTERIOR &amp; exterior pa•n•private parties, banquets,
5293.
March 18, 10 a.m., 620 Locust
3-7-lfc
a1r condltooned, Bx20 ft. P~rch lng. R. I. Dubbeld, phone
special occasions.
Streel, Middleport.
and alumln~m awn1ng, 742 _5825
, Ideal for meeting place 3-14-6tc - - --,---NICE 2 bedroom house with
aluminum skirting, com'
3·13-5tc
with or w~lhout kltcher '
pletely setup. Beautiful, _ __ .,....:_ _ __ _
lvlleges
1
bath, nice yard and lot of
PIANO and Organ lessons,
privacy . Phone 992-2S02.
location. OWner leaving state.
- •
· - · pr · Individual Catering
Gerald Hoffner. Phone 9923-14-6tc Beige with vinyl top and
_Will seat up to 150 people.
. Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272. ' SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
3825.
,,
1-10-tfc REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446:..
interior. full power equip- ....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. 4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
Phone
3-9-12tc . NICE 3 bedroom house in ment. factory air . Only
r - - - - - - -- ---1 Pomeroy, good neighborhood, 10.000 miles.
3 BEDROOM house . wall to wall
Owner &amp; Operator.
· 992-3975
992-57&amp;
carpeting downstairs, double
' 5-12-tfc ,
Now's Time To
cl ose to schools and stores,
phone 614-423-7772, Belpre.
lot - $7,500; phone 742-3462 or - - -- '
l.:..---------~
3·14-2tp
ORDER
inquire at Brick St., Rutland. Mob~e
HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
3·13-3tc
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
TRAILER , Brown's Trailer·
'FIELD SEEDS
'
OHIO.
Court, Minersville, Ohio,
3·5-30tc
" You' ll Like Our Quality
3 BEDROOM rancn type hom•,
phone 992-3324.
Way of Doing Business."
FERTILIZER
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
3-J-tfc
O' OE LL WHtt:L allghmenl
GMAC FINANCING
Plains. All . new with total
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. '
electric
and
centra~
air
992-5342
Pomeroy
SEED CORN
Complete
Irani end service, '
FURNISHED and unfurnishe&lt;t
conditioning, bath and 'I• fully
Open Evenings 'Til8:00
apartments.
Close
to
schoo~'.
tune
up
and
brake service ..
order t~ow &amp; Savel .
carpeted, full basement;'
Till P.M. Sal.
Wheels balanced elec-.
Phone 992-5434.
garage In basement. See by ,
troolcally.
10-18-tfc
All
,work
appointment, phone 992-2196
Reasona~le
.
guaranteed.
_
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson. •
Real Estate For Sale
rales. Phone 992-3213.
··
- ~~Financing available.
·'
For Sale
7-27-tfc
12-30-tfc'.
KOSCOT
Oil of
Mink , HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights ."
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
--C-.-B~R-A-D~FO~R~~O,--Au_c_11-on-eer
Kosmetics, Wigs. For free
LOSE weigh! with New Shape
2196.
demonslralion, call for apComplete Service
'
Tablets, 10 day supply only
7-18-tfc
pointment,
Mrs.
John
(Ann)
Phone 949-3821
1220
Washington
Blvd.
S1.49 at Dullon Drug Co.,
Racine, Ohio
Belpre, Ohio
Middleport and Nelson Drug
Sauvage,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
992-==========~
3272 .
1Critt Bradford
Sfore, Pomeroy.
3-9-121p
5·1-tfc
J-13-3tp
WOULD YOU like to order your
mobile home to suit your taste
and
needs? If so, let Robert HARRISON'S TV and Allton~·
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; Flame REGISTERED male boxer, 3
608 East Main Street
Service. Phone 992-2522.
Dixon
show you the easy way
of Hope Perfumes. Human &amp;
years old, phone 992-7791 .
POMEROY, OHIO
6-la&lt;tlc
to
custom
build
your
home
synthetic wigs. No need lo
3-12-3tp
992-22591i 114 :00
and have delivery within 3
leave Meigs or Mason County
Sunday &amp; Evenings
weeks. Come and see the new SEPTIC tanks cleanea. Miller
for lack of money. If ln - 12 FT. WIDE trailer, air conSanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
992-2568
Greenbriar. It Is the home for
tereste&lt;t call 992-5113.
ditioned, washer and dryer 662-3035.
.
those who appreciate lhe
3-7-lfc
$3,800; See Howard Johnson ,
Asstl.c:iate
2-12-tlc
BEAUTY AND CHARM
belter things of life.
-- Chesler .
Almost new BRICK- J large
Manufaclured by lhe largest
3-14-6tp
SAVE up to one half . Bring your
builders
of mobile homes. Our SEE ITS FOR':' Awnmgs, &gt;~or,:
bedrooms
with
double
992-3020
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
doors and windows, carports,
12 ft . wide Arlington Homes
closets. The kitchen is a
151 Butternut Ave., Poo:n~.rov .• 80 H.P. MERCURY outbcard 192 N. 2nd
Middleport
marquees, aluminum siding
start
at
$3,695,
delivered
and
housewife's dream , Jlh
motor, phone 985-4225.
railing. A. Jacob, sales
and
set-up. We service what we
3-14-51p PERFECTION PLUS is our
11 -21 -tfc
baths, carpeted, recreation
representative
. For free
sell. Meigs Mobile Homes,
room has everything, utility
estimates,
phone
Charles
rating for thi s beautiful
Tuppers Plains, Ohio, 667·
3
F20
FARMALL
Tractors,
Lisle,
Syracuse,
V. V.
room
,
carport.
About
1
acre
Instruction ·
decorated 3 bedroom, 11!2
3891 . Call collect for apwith some farm . equipment,
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
of
ground.
$28,500.00.
pointment.
bath home . Completely
TRACTOR
TRAILER
3-2-tfc- - - -- - no reasonable offer refused.
carpeted,
includes
all
3-8-6tc
TRAINEES NEEDED. You
Phone 614-423-7772. Belpre.
WANTED
can now train to become an
3-14-2tp drapes. venetian blinds, air
ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con·
l BEDROOM HOMES
SAVE nunareds of dollars on
condition . Kitchen, with
over the road driver or city
structlon Co. We specialize In
ALL PRICES,
used and repossesse&lt;t Mobile
driver . Excellent earnings 1 GOOD Stoke-a-malic healer; built-in features . located in
aluminum, vinyl and steel
Homes. Also franchise
CALL CLELAND'S
aller short training on our
Pomeroy on large tot with
siding ; llberglas, brick and
phone
742-4211
days,
742-5501
dealer's for new De,trolter's.
trucks with our driver Instone : complete line of
garden and attached garage.
evenings.
We have a variety of 8, 10 and
structors to help you. For
WHY PAY RENT? S5,900 .00
. res idential and commercial
J-10-6tc
Must be seen to be . ap12 wldes - one justfor you. R.
application and inter\lieW,
roofing ;
remode-l-ing .,• .:.
buys 2 bedroom home In
preciated, $18,000.
A. Miller Enterprises, Inc.,
call 304-344-8843, or write
building,
suspended
ceilings, .
good condition. in excellent
705 Farson Street, Balpre,
School Safely Division, ~HOWAL TER' S Wet Pet Shop, Spacious 5 be&lt;troom, 2 bath,
inierior
and
exterior
painneighborhood, nice yard or
Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
phone 423-9531.
Uni ted Systems, Inc., c-o
ting
;
complete
line
or: ,
brick
home,
beautiful
built-in
garden, can· now.
Tropical fish and supplies.
3-I0-6tc
Terminal Bldg .. 5517 Midland
Masonry
work
.
All
work~ .,
kitchen
.
Located
within
Stop in and compare ..
Drive, Charleston, West
guaranlfeed to customer' j'
J-1-27tp walking distance lo shopping.
Virginia , 25306. Approve&lt;! for
SELL TODAY,
sallsfadlon. We are fully
Real
Estate
For
Sale
6 Room-2 bath hom·e,
V.A. Benefits. Placement
CALL CLELAND'S
msured for your protec11on. 32 l
assistance available. Over 700 TOMATO seed: Organicall y (shingle). cellar house,
5 ROOM apartment, grocery
N. Second, ph. 992-3918.
'
grown. God's miracle mixed ; garage, plus exira lots. One lot
transportation companies
store combined; very good
CASH TALKS - $12.900 full
2-15-301c
packet of 7 different varieties has walkways, set up for
stock of merchandise; plenty
have hired our graduates.
price. 2 story frame , 3
SOc. 3 packets for $1. Post- !railer. Located in business
3-13-2tc
of equipment also Include&lt;! ; . BACKHOE AND DOlER work
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, lots of
paid. Don't mi ss this big dislrict, across from the A~P
doi11&lt;1 a verv Qood business In
Septic tanks Installed. Georae_'l
NEWS, like garage, storm
surprise! Big Tomato Gar. Store in Middleport. Floor
a growing areo: Price $18,000.
.1
Bill! Pullins. Phone irn.,n1tj j
dOors. windows, etc. Close to
Wanted To Do
dens. Syracuse, Ohio 45779. furn .
George Hobsletter, Jr., Real
. . -.WS-111: j
3-12-7tp Letart Falls - 10 room house
shopping, excellent location.
Estate Broker, Hilton Woffe
EXPERIENCED seamstress Salesman. Phone 949-3211 , '
dres smaking and alterations.
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
wi th bath, basement, fenced·
NEEDLE
Sewing in lawn, two buildings, fuel oil
___ __
"7""_
_
3·12-6fp
FARMS WANTED
service, all makes. 992_2284
Will come to your home. Call TWIN
Machine 1971 Model in walnul · heat. 5 loto, three of them
992-6564 .
'lll;le Fabric Shop, Pomeroy· .
stand. All features buill-In to located on the river front, "NO PARKING AREA - 1 ~NICE 2-slury nome wnn tufl '
3-12-3tp
Authorized Singer Sales and
make fancy designs and do selling due to ;JI health,
basement, 2 lots, new fore~
,iervlce. We Sharpen Scissors.
story frame,
bath , 2
slretch sewing. Also butair
furn~ce . Near Pomeroy.
Home has two porches
3·29-tfc
bedrooms,
basement,
forced
Employment Wanted
tonholes, blind hems, elc. one enclosed, within walkinr
Elementary School. Phone
air
heat,
porches,
IN
GOOC
$43.35 cash price or terms di stance of school.
W.:-7384 to SJ"!.
·
DRY "WALL Finisher con CONDITION. $5,900.00.
AUTOMOBILE Insurance bean
available.
Phone 992-5641.
lractor. R. I. Oubbeld, phone
Several Lots lor Sale.
cancelled?
Lost
your
J-8-61c
742-5825.
~f:Iator's license? cit11 M:~. , •
I Nee&lt;! LiStings lor Farms and
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
3-13-51c =~:-:-=-:--­
VACUUM CLEANERS. Electro Homes. Also Handle Rentals.
SIX
ROOM
house,
133
Bullernut
REALTOR
Hygiene New Demonstrator
Ave. Contact Ed He&lt;trlck, 21J7 i
has
all
cleaning
aHachments
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus, · - -- - ----.:.6·:.::15-tlc ' {
Wanted
•
plus the new Electro Suds for
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
CONCRETE de· .l
shampooing carpet. Only
1_1-21 -tfc READY-MIX
llvere&lt;t right to your prolect.
S27.SO cash price or terms
Fast and easy .
Free ••
BUILDING
lots
in
iiranchwood
available.
Phone
992-5641.
0
estimates.
Phone
992-328j,
Subdivision at Rock Springs, ,
'
386
Goegleln Rea•Y· Mix Co.,
110 Mechanic Street
T. P. waler, phone 992-2789.
~.,------· · tc
Middleport, Ohio.
·
3-l -121c
MODERN Walnut Stereo-radio
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
6-JO.tfc
combinat ion, four speed Intermixed changer. four
EXCELLENT INVESTMENT
speaker
sound system ,
OPPORTUNITY is knocking. We have a business which
separate controls. Balance
has
returned the investment in one year . Asking only
$69.40. Use our budget terms.
520,000.00.
Ill ~~~P,'-IIJ
Call 992-7085.
Moyt 1
· BABY FARM
L AUIOIIIIIICI
Not A Motor Route:
3-8-6tc
29 ACRES - with free gas, oil and gas income. 6 room
~ IJIM41 optrtllon, ·
-::--:-:----:Cholet of wotor
home, bath, cellar. barn, and fruit. Only 513,500.00.
Dajlu
COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio,
tempo.
Auto
'1
benutlfut Early American
3 BEDROOMS
styte, with AM-FM radio, four
1.·,~~~
RENOVATED - Neat older home. Gas turnace. bath,
..
s~kers, 4 spee&lt;t automaticF
lt!tr
ofl
Pow or '
paneling. Garage, '-" acre of land. City water and gas.
and
c anger . Balance S79.34. Use
FEMALE
cook
FIn
Aglta
l!l',
.
Ohio Power . Only S11 ,000.00.
our budget terms . Call 992·
,_,,..•• ,rttlhouseparent, oveSrl 40, f or
7085.
. OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE
ltll~ltt
1
Children's Home. a ary pus
3-8-6tc
HtltofHtll
High land abcve flood for building. Low land for laun·
room and beard . Phone JOj. ,-- - - - - - - _ _ :
llryoro
chlng, fishing , and sw imming. Asking S16,SOO.OO.
lurr111n- ·llot11~
428-3721 before 5 p.m. , ask for POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
2 B.USINESS BUILDINGS
~1111 lllllft, ilt!lftl
Mrs. Doby.
Park view Kennels, Phone 992.:
:flltl.
NO!Ioltpof!~
3-7-lltc
.
.
POMEROY
Buy
now
belore
they
get
hl1her
and
scarce.
5443
Both on East Main.
~•rGrylnl.
8-15:tfr.
,,.,,
·• h Ll,~l
WHAT WE NEED IS ·Mo R·E-·LAND, MORE FARMS,
Wanted To
TROPICAL
FIS·H,
fancy
HOMES IN MIDDLEPORT, RIVER FRONTAGE, AND
t A
.,~~~
) LD FURNfTURE, Round oak
guppies, angels and breeders,
HIGHWAY
PROPERTIES.
WE
HAVE
SEVERAL
rto•Cirlltf
tables, Brass be&lt;ls, dishes, ' : Bellas and supplies. Phone
THINGS COOKING . WANT TO SHARE -IN MONEY TO
ltrvlce
clocks, and -or complete . 992·5443.
BE
MADE
IN
MEIGS
COUNTY.
THEN
LIST
WITH
US
12-30-tfc
'
households . Write M. D.
IF NO SALE, YOU PAY NOTHING. '
'
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio..
~
.
Call 992-6271.
CORN. Phone 167-61 64.
'&gt; ~·11-tf,
3-12-3tp
992-3325 HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE 992-2378
Ar~!ld Orate

AH BIN OOOBLE-CROS5ED
. INTO NOTONL'/ GNIN' ·
UP MAH FAVORITE
SPORT-·

A'-N MEMBER GITTIN'
BEAT UP 'IEU.S THE
PASSWORD "IIIO&amp;IRT
MITCHUM•-AN' WE
ALL GOTTA· RUsH ro
HIS RESCUE.&lt;:'

-WT tNro PROT&amp;CTIN'
YO' DOUe&amp;.E·Cf'(l!SEP5!!

ll

fl

!l

\

I

SYLVESTER,.YA OU&amp;IlTA
Bi ASHAMEP O' YER·
SELF!~~ NOTHIN'
BUT A CHISE"N' BUM!

ON&amp; MOMENT,
511N, IF YOU

PLEASE!

The
OrChid Room,

WELL $HE
CAN
HER
8REA1111

eAVE

t.VINI£ ARE YClU

8U~EOFWHAT

YClU'RE &amp;AYING r

ANY lflhlt7NIIIIt ATTACKS
0"1 MY"CHA!lACTEA: At.IP
ECONOMIC STATUS WILL
COST YOU ANOTN61f
C'IME!

JANIE LEFT IN A HUFF...
tMMEDtATfLY AFTER
&amp;HE &amp;AW 1H05E:
LOIELY R05E5

\OJ RECEIVED/

'11 BUICK ELECTR
2 DOOR H.T.
$4495

Homes for Sale

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

.... .

.........

GASOLINE ALLEY

·12' - 14' - 24' - WiDE

CLELAND
REALTY

.

3 - 1..

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

, I

Teafo~d,

.1
•'

Ll'I'IU: ORPHAN ANNIE

Sr.· Broker

·U.Mk

i"

..

ltllllf.\.fl IDlt 1'i' -""",::2
~ ...J C
II--

QJJ~~~·

AcaosS ·aa. ReverlnJ

1.-nllef
f. Dublin
doll
lLkhl

U.Item

NARVOUS?

GULP!

Y•tarUY'•.A.i••
Katmmduil N. Jlionilnr

tenor

I. Allan

17. IIWIIOll·

I. Hone
opera
lwltdnl
5. "SoBI&amp;''
heroine
I. Kill, old

11. Item in
a box

tu

river

natlona

U. Youn&amp;

anlmtl

hide
ll.lmPIIIIve

li.Sicllla
hotlpot

11. Venenble

score

lObi

Zl. Habituate
Zl. Gliltened

!t.Cunesr
IL Induc-

tionU.ThesII. Three
plan'a
(comb.
forte
form)
11. Broublha

ltJie

tJ
II

NUDET

tTEANIN

0

~

~1

lt.lOOdlnant
II. "-Got

I

Now ........, the clrcltd 1tU-.

) I

Sixpence"
U.Land

to,_ the_, ... _ , .
IIIIi nttd bJ the IIIMm canoon.

meuure
II. Temple

11&amp;.-a.- 1SHE ( I I I I r I I r J rn

1'1.=

Ynterd•y'•

(poet,)

!5. Bllbop'•
montle

Jumble" EMIItY BULGY ltNSOlD VtlttLI
An•"'erz A• a judge- O&amp;.tt ofrobet- SOli I

Zl.~e-,
London

otreet

WHAT'!&gt; THr5

lt. Mother of
Hezeklob

ABoUT OUR

FAVORITE
SRJRT?

Sl.Greek
letter
U.Capek
. pbty

U.S.tlrleal
dnwlnr
SI.Rofnln
syllable

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

CAP!' AIN EASY

One letter simply 1tandl lor another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. 'Single letters,
apootropbes, the length and formation of the words ore all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilrerent.
CJIYPTOQUOTES
NA

;t.

ENVE

GKA

WR

UGKE
HE

FU~NITURE .

- - -- - --"---

Intently
I. Counter-

lneombl-

I ERECK

weapon
t.Tooth
lt. Where

LGued

,

'"'e letter to eaeh oqllan!, to
form _four ordinary worda.

opera

DOWN

U.-Paulo
U.Recent,

WHO'S

.. ;:-_

at. Quite old

lfUI-

I

U~~~trambletheMiaurJumbler,

Uljj point

·S'I. SUll

LTolte

Senti'Rel"

Ph. 61•'992.2156

i

I'OIIl:FROilT OF WKER&amp;
l6 -lUUUE!!

.•
•

Carriers For ·
MASON
and
HARTFORD

The

'2'

I

Help

Virgil B.

•o

l

'

WANTED I

I I

- - -- - - -

Conl!ct
VERA EBLEN

Buy

WMP0/1390

your larder . Favorite or
Bonus brand while bread 7

,, •.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 I'.M.
~I!RO'I', OHIO

WISH lo express my ap·
~reciatlon to Dr . Telle and Dr.

IN LOVING memory of our FREE tickets are now available
on a 'free giant $20 Easter
father, Clair Gites, who
Basket large chocolate
passed aW~y five years ago
Easter bunny and. large fruit.
loday, March 14, 1967.
and nut Easter egg. See them
· Days of sadness, still come to
loday and. get your free
us, Secret tears do often flow ;
lickels, no pur'chase required,
N\emorles hold you ever near,
at the Bright Star Market
Though you left five years ago
next.
to the Drive-In Theatre,
today .
Mason, W. Va .. where low
Sadly missed by children:
prices and convenient serviceMella and family ; Clair and
are featured every day, check
tamily.
the following prices and stock
3-14-ltp

THE

'-- --------:-----------___.!
Found
Dally, Card ol Thanks
MONEY, Mondil.)!, March 13, 10

OFFICE HOitRS
8: JO a.m . to 5:00 p.m.
8:30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
Saturday.

For Sale

In Memory

EW

FHDD

VJO

VDDWF

UVBA

MVTE
V

WR

DVTCA

V
NHK

CWWL
DHRA

MVTE

TASTAVEHWJ. - QWNJ

WR

DWSBA

Yetllerdl7't CryploiJ.note: IN NOTHING 00 MEN MORE
NEARLY APPROACH THE GODS THA!'f IN GIVING
HEALTH TO MEN •..ClCERO

Rut lind, o.

tC 19'12

"

lin,. Ft"aturea Syndicate, Inc.)
I

1_,

I'

I

t

r

'·

~ELL,

W~AT?

WELL, WHAT ABOUT
KISSING ANI&gt; HU661N6?!
•

�, ------·
•
~·

.

.

.

.I

•-'nil Dally 9111tinel, MlclcllepotW'orueroy, o., Ma'clll4, tm

·

'

•

Sentinel Classifieds GetAction!"·Sentinel Classifieds _Get Results!
.

.

@)

WANt ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P. M.
Day
Before~
Publication
.
Monday O...dltn, 9 a.m .
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
[
·
W!llbeaccepte&lt;luntll9a .m. for ·
Day. ol Publication
REGitLATIONS
lt71 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN
$24JS
T1lo! Publisher .reserves the
local I owner. new ~r trade In, 13,000 miles, automatic
right to odll or re/ect any ads
trans. , luggage ra ck; rad io, chrome wheel covers, blue
deemed objfct onal. The
color,' blk . vinyl Interior.
publisher will not be
responsible for more than o~
1970 CHEVELLE SS396 CPE.
$2295
itlcorrect ltlsertlon.
Green finish, blk . vinyl roof . green vinyl interior, new
RATES
wide oval tires, 4 speed trans., power steering, radio . A
For Want Ad Service
sweetheart
of a buy .
I" .
S cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 7Sc
1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.
$2095
12 cents per word thr..

Pomeroy
Motor Co. ·

2

OF

IUALITY
'

consecutive Insertions.
18 cents per word six c® ·
\ecutive Insertions.

V-8 ~ngine, automatic trans .. p. steering, factory air
conditioned, good w-w tires, radio, dark green finish with
spotless Interior.

25 Per Cent Discount on pal&lt;
ads and ads paid wltl)in 1r

daytA~Do~rTJ~:~Ks
suo

for SO word minimum
Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per
Advertisement.

~

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Ridgeway, the nurses and
a ides for thel r k l ndness and
wonderful care given me at

Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sincere thanks to the many

POMEROY LANES
Early Wednesday Mixed
March 1,1972
Pis
Zlde's Sport Shop
48
Smith-Nelson Motors
48
Oiler's Sohlo
47
Young 's Market
42
Nelson's Drug
28
Tenth Framers
27
High Ind. Game - Charles
Smith 235 and Betty Smith 198.
High Series - Charles Smith
595 an.d Betty Smith 500.
Team High Game - Tenth
Framers 702 . Team High
Series - Zlde's Sport Shop
2022. .
Bantam League
March 4, 1972
Pis
14

Re&lt;t Barons

Pin Busters

be forgotten .
Mrs. Paul (Margaret)
McDaniel, Sr .. 488 S. 4th Ave.,
Middleport, Ohio.
3-14-ltc
WE WISH to thank everyone
who was so kind and
thoughlful after the death of
our son and gran9son, Jerry

Cleland. We especially wish to
thank Rev. Lloyd Grimm for
his consoling words, Martin
Funer~l Home, all of our
friends and neighbors who

helped In anyway and those

sending flowers .

Jerry

Cleland

tamily
3-14-ltp

Meigs

11

Mustangs
8
Ball Breakers
8
Zodiacs
7
Sneaky Snakes
6
High Ind. Game
Mike Hindy 147 and Kellh Lynch 146.
High Series- Mike Hlndy 248
and Rena Lefebre 228 .
Team High Game and Series
Earl S. Shaffer •. Gathel L.
- Red Barons 788 and 1518.
Shaffer to Elma E. Imboden,
m acres, Sutton.
Senior league
Olis C. Buchanan to Helen C.
March 4, 1972
Pis Buchanan, Cert. for trans.,
Pin Busters
16
Olive.
The Pros
16
Gutter Dusters
14'12
Ava Gilkey to Doyle T.
Roylil Crowns
13 1/ 2 Hudson, Nellie Nadine Hudson,
BorrJ Losers
12
Lot 16, Part Lot 15,
Strikers
9
High Game -Gene Davis Harrisonville - Scipio.
170 and Rich Bailey and Russ
Corbett L. Patterson, Daisy
Davis 167.
M.
Patterson to Hallie Cross,
High Series - Dave Swisher
457 and Rick Stobart 448.
Lots 43, 44, Carleton's Add.,
Team High Game and Series
Sutton - Syracuse.
- Pin Busters 796 and 2319.
Roy Gladman to Clifford
Longenette, Parcel, Olive.
Pomeroy Nat' I Bank Junior
Eugene T. German to
March 4,1972
Howard
Young, Inez E. Young,
Pis
Chiefs
17 1 Acre, Olive.
Rams
16
Allen E. Ball, Freda Ball to
Thundering Herd
15 John C. Beaver, Carolyn J.
Zodiacs
13
Beaver, 2.02 Acres, Chester.
Bengals
11
Strike Outs
9
Wendell H. Hooper, Lena M.
High Ind. Game - Cathy
Meadows 179 and Steve Hooper to Grady Arnold,
Patricia Arnold, 45.53 Acres,
Bachner 162.
High Series Mitch Scipio.
Meadows 411 and Steve
Alfred Birchfield to Gilbert
Bachner 402.
Team High Game and Series M. Zwilling, Pt of '}J)7 and 208,
- Chiefs 929 and 2599.
Pomeroy.
W. S. Snodgrass aka dec'd,
W. Scott Snodgrass aka dec'd,
Early Sunday Mixed
March 5, t972
to Charmion P. Snodgrass,
Pfs Cert. of Trans., Orange.
Racine Food Market
57
Jolm A. Curry, Harriet J.
Eagles Club
49
Tom's Carry Out
46 Curry to Donald Yoho, Enna
Farmer's Bank
34 Yoho, .SO Acre, .9 Acre,
Forest Run Block
32
Rcseberry 's Pennzoit
22 Salisbury.
High Ind. Game
Dick
Paul G. Smitb, Mary H.
Dugan 219 and
Linda Smith to May Watson,
Winebrenner 212.
Ifigh Series - Larry Dugan Minerals 63 Acres, Scipio.
57E and Linda Winebrenner 532.
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
Team High Game and Series Hysell to Virginia Wyatt, 74.64
- Tom's Carry Out 730 and
sq. rd., RuUaoJd.
2081 .
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
Wednesday Late Mlxe&lt;t League Hysell, to Vernon H. Alvis, 54
March I, 1972
P1s sq. rd., RuUand.
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
Morrow-Moore
54
Owen-Holler
48
Hysell to Kenneth E. Hysell,
Cassell-Carsey
42 Parcels, Rutland.
Fultz-Bentley
42
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
40
Rosenbaum· Meadows
Blakeslee-Hoyt
14 Hysell to Carl Junior Hysell,
High Serie s Team
Morrow-Moore 1901 ; Owen - Parcel, RuUand.
E. Joanne Russell to Guy 0 .
Holler 1895 ; Fultz-Bentley
1856.
Russell, Lot, Pomeroy.
High Game Team
Guy 0. RWISell to E. Joanne
Morrow -Moore 686 ; Fultz RWISell,
Lot, Pomeroy.
Benlley 653 : L. Dugan 516.
High Series - Men : W.
Otto C. Lohn, Mrs. Amber
Boyer 5jl; F. Morrow 534 : L. Lohn to Columbus &amp; Soutbern
Dugan 516.
High Series - Women : M. Ohio Elec . Co. , Ease .,
Dugan 478 ; N. Carsey 467 ; V. Pomeroy.
Hoyt 462 .
Paul P. Fisher, Theresa
High Game - Men: F. ·
Morrow 212 ; J . Carsey 200 ; W. Fisher to Louise R. Johnson ,
Boyer 193.
Lots, Middleport.

Property

Transfers

High Game -

a.m. in front of liquor Store.
tRmer may have by iden tifying amount and paying for

ad.

3-14-141c

Lost

friends,
neighbors
and
reiat lves for their cards, SHAFT and universal joint
flowers and prayers. Your
from Power Take-Off on 1961
kindness shown me will never
Ford Dump Truck . If found

Local Bowling

Women: N.

Carsey 175: V. Hovl 168; M.
Dugan 167.
Early Bird League
March 8, 1972
Pts
74

D. G. Pinnettes
Evelyn's Grocery
SO
King Builders
46
Larry's Ashland
42
Rawlings Dodge
30
Meigs Mobile Homes
22
Team High Game - D. G.
Plnnettes 785 and 761 : Larry's
Ashland 760.
Team High Series - D. G.
Pinnettes 2283.
Larry's
Ashland 2182 :
Evelyn ' s
Grocery 2129.
Ind. High Game - Mary_
Voss 211 and 200, Flossie
Maxson, 178.
Ind. High Series - Mary
Voss .584 r Flossie Maxson 484 :
Maxine Dugan 464.

The m o n l h of July is
named for Julius Cae sar:
August is named for Augustus Caesar .

We talk to-JOU
-like a. petSOfi..

ON YOUR DIAL

Wanted To Rent
MODERN 3 or 4 be&lt;! room home.
Phone 992-3062.

For Rent

loaves Sl with S10 additional

beans 2 cans S9c, Hart's whole
kernel corn 5 cans $1,

Broughton ' s Ice Milk Ice
Cream, Gal. $1.19, white
polatoes 50 lb. bag $1.59,

MEIGS INN
ROOMS
by
Oily, Week, Month
Liberal Rates

PH. 992-3629

Complete assortment of fancy

Easter goodies including
Easter Baskets from $1.49 to
$20. We accept Fe&lt;leral Food
Coupon. Streich your money,
foo(tcoupons and lime, see us
for seed potatoes, onion sets

and garden plants as needed.
Save In many ways at Bright
Star Markel, next to Drive-In

Theatre, Mason, W. Va.

new I y

decorated,

·Nathan Bins
Radiator Speciollsl

MARimA
TYPEWRITER

SMITH NElSON
MOTORS.· INC.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy

616 Main St.
Belpre, 0.
423-6551

EXPERT
·Whpel JUiJnment
$5.55
I

TERMITES. . TERMITESL

.

Gal Rid oiThem
We will protect any single
dwelling residence lor

'149.50

On Mas_! American Can.

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-7n94

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect 614·452-3158

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Y..CITY

0pen1Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

EXTERMINATION
633 Main St.

Auto Sales
tires. Good work car, $150.

OFFICE
MACHINE
REPAIR

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

J-7-lf

FURNISHED, 5 room apart· '63 CHEVY 283, standard, good
ment ,

Business Service.s

purchase. Broughton's 2 pet.

sweet milk gal. 99c, Bologna
In piece lb. 59c, grade A small
eggs 3 doz . $1, smoke&lt;! slab
bacon whole or half lb. 49c,
Van Camp 29 oz. can pQrk and

·- ~

Z.nesville, Ohio

Real Estate For Sale

OOlDNIAL
.AUTO BODY

- -]
·~· ltn" ~ "" · l.tll

537 High St.
Middleport, Ohio

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITION lNG

B&amp;W HEATING 00.

a.,.

1,1.1.1'11. 0111.

11£ QIIEF APPRECtAT£6

'lOUR DEDICATION, CROMLEY.

Complete body repairs
and paintings, glass
installation,
free
loaner
cars
and
estimates, also
mechanical
repairs.

ARE
SUDDENLV

SO

WE SAT UP;

3 · 14

UPTIG~Tl

WE'S SLEPT

BEFORE.

Phone 992-3793

All WEAtHER ROOFING
&amp; IXINSTRUCTION

9UT, AT 'EAST,

W~V

'

. I'

3 -14

&amp;· PWMBING CO.
240 Lincoln St.
Middtoport, Ohio
Dbll AnthonY Plumbing
We have a complete Home

1

Mainten1nce Service the

yeor around. No matter wl)ll
your need. Complete' roo! or
spouting repair. Interior or
exte•ior carpentry. Ceiling
tile and'Paneting and Siding.
Complete Plumbing J
Heating.
Oily Number 992-2550

Phone after 5 p.m. 742-563.5 . .HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
ground floor, Albert Hill.
3·14-3tc 98.!_3529_ .
Phone 949-2261.
Free Estimate
· call 985-3582 or see Charles
1-28-tfc
3-10-6tc
BisselL Chester. Ohio.
'66 THUNDERBIRD, V-8,
We have 24 hr'. emergency
3-14-3tc
FURNISHED apartmenl, 4 automatic, power steering, FOR THE BEST deal lil a new
service.
power
win
'
power
brakes,
or use&lt;! mobile home, try
rooms, Mason, W. Va. on
742·3947
m-SIDl
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
Highway , Phone 773-5147 . dows, phone 992-5637. 3-12-6tp
Notice
992-3891
742-4761
Kanauga,
Ohio.
Reynolds Flower Shop.
Weare fully insured
_1_2-lMotc;
3-9-6tp
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT
overweight ladles, teens and
This Weak's Special ·
"jo ACRES, · ~ bedroom- home,
men Interested In a Weight ONE LARGE trailer space,
electric heat, vinyl siding,
Velma G. Zuspan, 773-5750,
Watchers I R) Class In
TP&amp;C water district ; J miles
Mason,
W.
Va
.
Pomeroy write: Weight
south of Tuppers Plains just
3-7-18tp
Watchers !RL 1863 Section
off Rt. 7 on County Road 28,
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
For Appointment
518,000
; phone 667-3336.
10-3-tfc APARTMENT. 3 rooms and
3-12-7tp
Phone 949-2803
- - - - - -- - ' balh, furnished, North 2nd
Make reservations for your
"RUMMAGE Sale, Saturday,
Ave., Middleporl, Phone 995USED
CARS
60X12, 2-bedroolil, all-electric, INTERIOR &amp; exterior pa•n•private parties, banquets,
5293.
March 18, 10 a.m., 620 Locust
3-7-lfc
a1r condltooned, Bx20 ft. P~rch lng. R. I. Dubbeld, phone
special occasions.
Streel, Middleport.
and alumln~m awn1ng, 742 _5825
, Ideal for meeting place 3-14-6tc - - --,---NICE 2 bedroom house with
aluminum skirting, com'
3·13-5tc
with or w~lhout kltcher '
pletely setup. Beautiful, _ __ .,....:_ _ __ _
lvlleges
1
bath, nice yard and lot of
PIANO and Organ lessons,
privacy . Phone 992-2S02.
location. OWner leaving state.
- •
· - · pr · Individual Catering
Gerald Hoffner. Phone 9923-14-6tc Beige with vinyl top and
_Will seat up to 150 people.
. Phone 949-4892 or 992-5272. ' SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
3825.
,,
1-10-tfc REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446:..
interior. full power equip- ....__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. 4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
Phone
3-9-12tc . NICE 3 bedroom house in ment. factory air . Only
r - - - - - - -- ---1 Pomeroy, good neighborhood, 10.000 miles.
3 BEDROOM house . wall to wall
Owner &amp; Operator.
· 992-3975
992-57&amp;
carpeting downstairs, double
' 5-12-tfc ,
Now's Time To
cl ose to schools and stores,
phone 614-423-7772, Belpre.
lot - $7,500; phone 742-3462 or - - -- '
l.:..---------~
3·14-2tp
ORDER
inquire at Brick St., Rutland. Mob~e
HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
3·13-3tc
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
TRAILER , Brown's Trailer·
'FIELD SEEDS
'
OHIO.
Court, Minersville, Ohio,
3·5-30tc
" You' ll Like Our Quality
3 BEDROOM rancn type hom•,
phone 992-3324.
Way of Doing Business."
FERTILIZER
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
3-J-tfc
O' OE LL WHtt:L allghmenl
GMAC FINANCING
Plains. All . new with total
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124. '
electric
and
centra~
air
992-5342
Pomeroy
SEED CORN
Complete
Irani end service, '
FURNISHED and unfurnishe&lt;t
conditioning, bath and 'I• fully
Open Evenings 'Til8:00
apartments.
Close
to
schoo~'.
tune
up
and
brake service ..
order t~ow &amp; Savel .
carpeted, full basement;'
Till P.M. Sal.
Wheels balanced elec-.
Phone 992-5434.
garage In basement. See by ,
troolcally.
10-18-tfc
All
,work
appointment, phone 992-2196
Reasona~le
.
guaranteed.
_
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson. •
Real Estate For Sale
rales. Phone 992-3213.
··
- ~~Financing available.
·'
For Sale
7-27-tfc
12-30-tfc'.
KOSCOT
Oil of
Mink , HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights ."
Call Danny Thompson, 992·
--C-.-B~R-A-D~FO~R~~O,--Au_c_11-on-eer
Kosmetics, Wigs. For free
LOSE weigh! with New Shape
2196.
demonslralion, call for apComplete Service
'
Tablets, 10 day supply only
7-18-tfc
pointment,
Mrs.
John
(Ann)
Phone 949-3821
1220
Washington
Blvd.
S1.49 at Dullon Drug Co.,
Racine, Ohio
Belpre, Ohio
Middleport and Nelson Drug
Sauvage,
Syracuse,
Ohio.
992-==========~
3272 .
1Critt Bradford
Sfore, Pomeroy.
3-9-121p
5·1-tfc
J-13-3tp
WOULD YOU like to order your
mobile home to suit your taste
and
needs? If so, let Robert HARRISON'S TV and Allton~·
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; Flame REGISTERED male boxer, 3
608 East Main Street
Service. Phone 992-2522.
Dixon
show you the easy way
of Hope Perfumes. Human &amp;
years old, phone 992-7791 .
POMEROY, OHIO
6-la&lt;tlc
to
custom
build
your
home
synthetic wigs. No need lo
3-12-3tp
992-22591i 114 :00
and have delivery within 3
leave Meigs or Mason County
Sunday &amp; Evenings
weeks. Come and see the new SEPTIC tanks cleanea. Miller
for lack of money. If ln - 12 FT. WIDE trailer, air conSanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
992-2568
Greenbriar. It Is the home for
tereste&lt;t call 992-5113.
ditioned, washer and dryer 662-3035.
.
those who appreciate lhe
3-7-lfc
$3,800; See Howard Johnson ,
Asstl.c:iate
2-12-tlc
BEAUTY AND CHARM
belter things of life.
-- Chesler .
Almost new BRICK- J large
Manufaclured by lhe largest
3-14-6tp
SAVE up to one half . Bring your
builders
of mobile homes. Our SEE ITS FOR':' Awnmgs, &gt;~or,:
bedrooms
with
double
992-3020
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
doors and windows, carports,
12 ft . wide Arlington Homes
closets. The kitchen is a
151 Butternut Ave., Poo:n~.rov .• 80 H.P. MERCURY outbcard 192 N. 2nd
Middleport
marquees, aluminum siding
start
at
$3,695,
delivered
and
housewife's dream , Jlh
motor, phone 985-4225.
railing. A. Jacob, sales
and
set-up. We service what we
3-14-51p PERFECTION PLUS is our
11 -21 -tfc
baths, carpeted, recreation
representative
. For free
sell. Meigs Mobile Homes,
room has everything, utility
estimates,
phone
Charles
rating for thi s beautiful
Tuppers Plains, Ohio, 667·
3
F20
FARMALL
Tractors,
Lisle,
Syracuse,
V. V.
room
,
carport.
About
1
acre
Instruction ·
decorated 3 bedroom, 11!2
3891 . Call collect for apwith some farm . equipment,
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
of
ground.
$28,500.00.
pointment.
bath home . Completely
TRACTOR
TRAILER
3-2-tfc- - - -- - no reasonable offer refused.
carpeted,
includes
all
3-8-6tc
TRAINEES NEEDED. You
Phone 614-423-7772. Belpre.
WANTED
can now train to become an
3-14-2tp drapes. venetian blinds, air
ALLSIDE Builders &amp; Con·
l BEDROOM HOMES
SAVE nunareds of dollars on
condition . Kitchen, with
over the road driver or city
structlon Co. We specialize In
ALL PRICES,
used and repossesse&lt;t Mobile
driver . Excellent earnings 1 GOOD Stoke-a-malic healer; built-in features . located in
aluminum, vinyl and steel
Homes. Also franchise
CALL CLELAND'S
aller short training on our
Pomeroy on large tot with
siding ; llberglas, brick and
phone
742-4211
days,
742-5501
dealer's for new De,trolter's.
trucks with our driver Instone : complete line of
garden and attached garage.
evenings.
We have a variety of 8, 10 and
structors to help you. For
WHY PAY RENT? S5,900 .00
. res idential and commercial
J-10-6tc
Must be seen to be . ap12 wldes - one justfor you. R.
application and inter\lieW,
roofing ;
remode-l-ing .,• .:.
buys 2 bedroom home In
preciated, $18,000.
A. Miller Enterprises, Inc.,
call 304-344-8843, or write
building,
suspended
ceilings, .
good condition. in excellent
705 Farson Street, Balpre,
School Safely Division, ~HOWAL TER' S Wet Pet Shop, Spacious 5 be&lt;troom, 2 bath,
inierior
and
exterior
painneighborhood, nice yard or
Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
phone 423-9531.
Uni ted Systems, Inc., c-o
ting
;
complete
line
or: ,
brick
home,
beautiful
built-in
garden, can· now.
Tropical fish and supplies.
3-I0-6tc
Terminal Bldg .. 5517 Midland
Masonry
work
.
All
work~ .,
kitchen
.
Located
within
Stop in and compare ..
Drive, Charleston, West
guaranlfeed to customer' j'
J-1-27tp walking distance lo shopping.
Virginia , 25306. Approve&lt;! for
SELL TODAY,
sallsfadlon. We are fully
Real
Estate
For
Sale
6 Room-2 bath hom·e,
V.A. Benefits. Placement
CALL CLELAND'S
msured for your protec11on. 32 l
assistance available. Over 700 TOMATO seed: Organicall y (shingle). cellar house,
5 ROOM apartment, grocery
N. Second, ph. 992-3918.
'
grown. God's miracle mixed ; garage, plus exira lots. One lot
transportation companies
store combined; very good
CASH TALKS - $12.900 full
2-15-301c
packet of 7 different varieties has walkways, set up for
stock of merchandise; plenty
have hired our graduates.
price. 2 story frame , 3
SOc. 3 packets for $1. Post- !railer. Located in business
3-13-2tc
of equipment also Include&lt;! ; . BACKHOE AND DOlER work
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, lots of
paid. Don't mi ss this big dislrict, across from the A~P
doi11&lt;1 a verv Qood business In
Septic tanks Installed. Georae_'l
NEWS, like garage, storm
surprise! Big Tomato Gar. Store in Middleport. Floor
a growing areo: Price $18,000.
.1
Bill! Pullins. Phone irn.,n1tj j
dOors. windows, etc. Close to
Wanted To Do
dens. Syracuse, Ohio 45779. furn .
George Hobsletter, Jr., Real
. . -.WS-111: j
3-12-7tp Letart Falls - 10 room house
shopping, excellent location.
Estate Broker, Hilton Woffe
EXPERIENCED seamstress Salesman. Phone 949-3211 , '
dres smaking and alterations.
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
wi th bath, basement, fenced·
NEEDLE
Sewing in lawn, two buildings, fuel oil
___ __
"7""_
_
3·12-6fp
FARMS WANTED
service, all makes. 992_2284
Will come to your home. Call TWIN
Machine 1971 Model in walnul · heat. 5 loto, three of them
992-6564 .
'lll;le Fabric Shop, Pomeroy· .
stand. All features buill-In to located on the river front, "NO PARKING AREA - 1 ~NICE 2-slury nome wnn tufl '
3-12-3tp
Authorized Singer Sales and
make fancy designs and do selling due to ;JI health,
basement, 2 lots, new fore~
,iervlce. We Sharpen Scissors.
story frame,
bath , 2
slretch sewing. Also butair
furn~ce . Near Pomeroy.
Home has two porches
3·29-tfc
bedrooms,
basement,
forced
Employment Wanted
tonholes, blind hems, elc. one enclosed, within walkinr
Elementary School. Phone
air
heat,
porches,
IN
GOOC
$43.35 cash price or terms di stance of school.
W.:-7384 to SJ"!.
·
DRY "WALL Finisher con CONDITION. $5,900.00.
AUTOMOBILE Insurance bean
available.
Phone 992-5641.
lractor. R. I. Oubbeld, phone
Several Lots lor Sale.
cancelled?
Lost
your
J-8-61c
742-5825.
~f:Iator's license? cit11 M:~. , •
I Nee&lt;! LiStings lor Farms and
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
3-13-51c =~:-:-=-:--­
VACUUM CLEANERS. Electro Homes. Also Handle Rentals.
SIX
ROOM
house,
133
Bullernut
REALTOR
Hygiene New Demonstrator
Ave. Contact Ed He&lt;trlck, 21J7 i
has
all
cleaning
aHachments
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus, · - -- - ----.:.6·:.::15-tlc ' {
Wanted
•
plus the new Electro Suds for
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
CONCRETE de· .l
shampooing carpet. Only
1_1-21 -tfc READY-MIX
llvere&lt;t right to your prolect.
S27.SO cash price or terms
Fast and easy .
Free ••
BUILDING
lots
in
iiranchwood
available.
Phone
992-5641.
0
estimates.
Phone
992-328j,
Subdivision at Rock Springs, ,
'
386
Goegleln Rea•Y· Mix Co.,
110 Mechanic Street
T. P. waler, phone 992-2789.
~.,------· · tc
Middleport, Ohio.
·
3-l -121c
MODERN Walnut Stereo-radio
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
6-JO.tfc
combinat ion, four speed Intermixed changer. four
EXCELLENT INVESTMENT
speaker
sound system ,
OPPORTUNITY is knocking. We have a business which
separate controls. Balance
has
returned the investment in one year . Asking only
$69.40. Use our budget terms.
520,000.00.
Ill ~~~P,'-IIJ
Call 992-7085.
Moyt 1
· BABY FARM
L AUIOIIIIIICI
Not A Motor Route:
3-8-6tc
29 ACRES - with free gas, oil and gas income. 6 room
~ IJIM41 optrtllon, ·
-::--:-:----:Cholet of wotor
home, bath, cellar. barn, and fruit. Only 513,500.00.
Dajlu
COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio,
tempo.
Auto
'1
benutlfut Early American
3 BEDROOMS
styte, with AM-FM radio, four
1.·,~~~
RENOVATED - Neat older home. Gas turnace. bath,
..
s~kers, 4 spee&lt;t automaticF
lt!tr
ofl
Pow or '
paneling. Garage, '-" acre of land. City water and gas.
and
c anger . Balance S79.34. Use
FEMALE
cook
FIn
Aglta
l!l',
.
Ohio Power . Only S11 ,000.00.
our budget terms . Call 992·
,_,,..•• ,rttlhouseparent, oveSrl 40, f or
7085.
. OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE
ltll~ltt
1
Children's Home. a ary pus
3-8-6tc
HtltofHtll
High land abcve flood for building. Low land for laun·
room and beard . Phone JOj. ,-- - - - - - - _ _ :
llryoro
chlng, fishing , and sw imming. Asking S16,SOO.OO.
lurr111n- ·llot11~
428-3721 before 5 p.m. , ask for POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
2 B.USINESS BUILDINGS
~1111 lllllft, ilt!lftl
Mrs. Doby.
Park view Kennels, Phone 992.:
:flltl.
NO!Ioltpof!~
3-7-lltc
.
.
POMEROY
Buy
now
belore
they
get
hl1her
and
scarce.
5443
Both on East Main.
~•rGrylnl.
8-15:tfr.
,,.,,
·• h Ll,~l
WHAT WE NEED IS ·Mo R·E-·LAND, MORE FARMS,
Wanted To
TROPICAL
FIS·H,
fancy
HOMES IN MIDDLEPORT, RIVER FRONTAGE, AND
t A
.,~~~
) LD FURNfTURE, Round oak
guppies, angels and breeders,
HIGHWAY
PROPERTIES.
WE
HAVE
SEVERAL
rto•Cirlltf
tables, Brass be&lt;ls, dishes, ' : Bellas and supplies. Phone
THINGS COOKING . WANT TO SHARE -IN MONEY TO
ltrvlce
clocks, and -or complete . 992·5443.
BE
MADE
IN
MEIGS
COUNTY.
THEN
LIST
WITH
US
12-30-tfc
'
households . Write M. D.
IF NO SALE, YOU PAY NOTHING. '
'
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio..
~
.
Call 992-6271.
CORN. Phone 167-61 64.
'&gt; ~·11-tf,
3-12-3tp
992-3325 HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE 992-2378
Ar~!ld Orate

AH BIN OOOBLE-CROS5ED
. INTO NOTONL'/ GNIN' ·
UP MAH FAVORITE
SPORT-·

A'-N MEMBER GITTIN'
BEAT UP 'IEU.S THE
PASSWORD "IIIO&amp;IRT
MITCHUM•-AN' WE
ALL GOTTA· RUsH ro
HIS RESCUE.&lt;:'

-WT tNro PROT&amp;CTIN'
YO' DOUe&amp;.E·Cf'(l!SEP5!!

ll

fl

!l

\

I

SYLVESTER,.YA OU&amp;IlTA
Bi ASHAMEP O' YER·
SELF!~~ NOTHIN'
BUT A CHISE"N' BUM!

ON&amp; MOMENT,
511N, IF YOU

PLEASE!

The
OrChid Room,

WELL $HE
CAN
HER
8REA1111

eAVE

t.VINI£ ARE YClU

8U~EOFWHAT

YClU'RE &amp;AYING r

ANY lflhlt7NIIIIt ATTACKS
0"1 MY"CHA!lACTEA: At.IP
ECONOMIC STATUS WILL
COST YOU ANOTN61f
C'IME!

JANIE LEFT IN A HUFF...
tMMEDtATfLY AFTER
&amp;HE &amp;AW 1H05E:
LOIELY R05E5

\OJ RECEIVED/

'11 BUICK ELECTR
2 DOOR H.T.
$4495

Homes for Sale

Karr &amp; Van Zandt

.... .

.........

GASOLINE ALLEY

·12' - 14' - 24' - WiDE

CLELAND
REALTY

.

3 - 1..

MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

, I

Teafo~d,

.1
•'

Ll'I'IU: ORPHAN ANNIE

Sr.· Broker

·U.Mk

i"

..

ltllllf.\.fl IDlt 1'i' -""",::2
~ ...J C
II--

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AcaosS ·aa. ReverlnJ

1.-nllef
f. Dublin
doll
lLkhl

U.Item

NARVOUS?

GULP!

Y•tarUY'•.A.i••
Katmmduil N. Jlionilnr

tenor

I. Allan

17. IIWIIOll·

I. Hone
opera
lwltdnl
5. "SoBI&amp;''
heroine
I. Kill, old

11. Item in
a box

tu

river

natlona

U. Youn&amp;

anlmtl

hide
ll.lmPIIIIve

li.Sicllla
hotlpot

11. Venenble

score

lObi

Zl. Habituate
Zl. Gliltened

!t.Cunesr
IL Induc-

tionU.ThesII. Three
plan'a
(comb.
forte
form)
11. Broublha

ltJie

tJ
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NUDET

tTEANIN

0

~

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lt.lOOdlnant
II. "-Got

I

Now ........, the clrcltd 1tU-.

) I

Sixpence"
U.Land

to,_ the_, ... _ , .
IIIIi nttd bJ the IIIMm canoon.

meuure
II. Temple

11&amp;.-a.- 1SHE ( I I I I r I I r J rn

1'1.=

Ynterd•y'•

(poet,)

!5. Bllbop'•
montle

Jumble" EMIItY BULGY ltNSOlD VtlttLI
An•"'erz A• a judge- O&amp;.tt ofrobet- SOli I

Zl.~e-,
London

otreet

WHAT'!&gt; THr5

lt. Mother of
Hezeklob

ABoUT OUR

FAVORITE
SRJRT?

Sl.Greek
letter
U.Capek
. pbty

U.S.tlrleal
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syllable

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

CAP!' AIN EASY

One letter simply 1tandl lor another. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, ete. 'Single letters,
apootropbes, the length and formation of the words ore all
hints. Each day the code letters are dilrerent.
CJIYPTOQUOTES
NA

;t.

ENVE

GKA

WR

UGKE
HE

FU~NITURE .

- - -- - --"---

Intently
I. Counter-

lneombl-

I ERECK

weapon
t.Tooth
lt. Where

LGued

,

'"'e letter to eaeh oqllan!, to
form _four ordinary worda.

opera

DOWN

U.-Paulo
U.Recent,

WHO'S

.. ;:-_

at. Quite old

lfUI-

I

U~~~trambletheMiaurJumbler,

Uljj point

·S'I. SUll

LTolte

Senti'Rel"

Ph. 61•'992.2156

i

I'OIIl:FROilT OF WKER&amp;
l6 -lUUUE!!

.•
•

Carriers For ·
MASON
and
HARTFORD

The

'2'

I

Help

Virgil B.

•o

l

'

WANTED I

I I

- - -- - - -

Conl!ct
VERA EBLEN

Buy

WMP0/1390

your larder . Favorite or
Bonus brand while bread 7

,, •.

OPEN EVES. 1:00 I'.M.
~I!RO'I', OHIO

WISH lo express my ap·
~reciatlon to Dr . Telle and Dr.

IN LOVING memory of our FREE tickets are now available
on a 'free giant $20 Easter
father, Clair Gites, who
Basket large chocolate
passed aW~y five years ago
Easter bunny and. large fruit.
loday, March 14, 1967.
and nut Easter egg. See them
· Days of sadness, still come to
loday and. get your free
us, Secret tears do often flow ;
lickels, no pur'chase required,
N\emorles hold you ever near,
at the Bright Star Market
Though you left five years ago
next.
to the Drive-In Theatre,
today .
Mason, W. Va .. where low
Sadly missed by children:
prices and convenient serviceMella and family ; Clair and
are featured every day, check
tamily.
the following prices and stock
3-14-ltp

THE

'-- --------:-----------___.!
Found
Dally, Card ol Thanks
MONEY, Mondil.)!, March 13, 10

OFFICE HOitRS
8: JO a.m . to 5:00 p.m.
8:30 a .m. to 12 :00 Noon
Saturday.

For Sale

In Memory

EW

FHDD

VJO

VDDWF

UVBA

MVTE
V

WR

DVTCA

V
NHK

CWWL
DHRA

MVTE

TASTAVEHWJ. - QWNJ

WR

DWSBA

Yetllerdl7't CryploiJ.note: IN NOTHING 00 MEN MORE
NEARLY APPROACH THE GODS THA!'f IN GIVING
HEALTH TO MEN •..ClCERO

Rut lind, o.

tC 19'12

"

lin,. Ft"aturea Syndicate, Inc.)
I

1_,

I'

I

t

r

'·

~ELL,

W~AT?

WELL, WHAT ABOUT
KISSING ANI&gt; HU661N6?!
•

�'
8-the DaUy Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 14,1972

................ .·.. ..·.·...··••··•·••.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.•.·.·.

:,!E::.~dedO=K- . Mitchet.~· is Ex.pected To Deny
Royals Moving ·West,
·Blame Poor Attendance ~r::t:r:::::~~ Any Knowledge Of ITT 11 er

School Arts~ Fair
"
·F un or Parents

1bunday throup S.lllrday :

Variable oloadiDHs 1111d

KANSASCITY, Mo. (UPI)- Louis It was announced here
The Cincinnati Royals will play today by Ge neral Manager Joe
next season's home games in Axelson .
Kansas City, Omaha and St.
In an airport interview with
UP!, Axelson said formal
announcement of tbe move
would be made simultaneoUB!y
in Cincinnati and Kansas City
at 12 noon EST today .
He said the Royals were
moving out of the Cincinnati
Gardens because of "bad at·
tendance over a 15-year

Treasurer's
·Balances

About Even

period ."

He said the tri-dty ar(angeMiddleport Village received ment would be necessary next
$17,176.14 and spent $17,293.96 year partly because of a lack of
during the month of February
acco rd ing to the monthly
report of Clerk-Treasurer Gene
Grate su bmitted to Middleport
Council Monday night.
Receipl.s and dis~ursemenl.s,
respectively, for the various
funds and the clerk-treasurer's
balance as of Feb. 29 were :
General, $4,626.10, $2,763.11,
or 41 arrests by the Mid$32,068.23; cemetery, $1,676.26,
dleport
Police Dept. during the
$1,339.48, $342.85; fire equipment, $450, · $17.43, $883.40 ; month of February, almost 25
swimming pool, no receipl.s, · pet. were on the charge of
$6.50, $1 ,989 .07; planning intoxication . This was revealed
commi ss ion , no receipts , in the monthly report of Chlef
$160.77, $908.70; street main- of Police J . J. Cremeans
tena nce, $212, $2,340 .92, submitted to Middleport
$8,310. 45; sanitary sewer, Council Monday night.
The report showed 10 were
$3,757.92, $3,177.62, $20,217.48;
for
intoxi cation , six for
water , $6,290. 86 , $5 ,41 2. 07,
$21,830.22 ; water meter deposit speeding, five for driving while
trusts , $163, $50, $5,715.31; intoxicated (OWl), five for
sanitary sewer escrow, no petty larceny, three for assault
receipts, no disbursements , and battery, two each for
$57,184.1 2; ge neral bond reckless operation and im·
retirement, no receipts, no proper backing, and one each
for running red light, running
disbursements, $11,269.09
The total in a ll funds as of stop sign, failure to have
vehicle under control, failure
Feb. 29 was $160,718.92.
to yield right of way, parked on
yellow line, blocking traffic,
indecent exposure, miscon(Continued from page I )
duct, and no license tags.
car 25 feet away to hit a second
Ten accidents were in·
vestigated
by the department
parked car owned by Robert
during the month. The police
Beegle.
There was light damage to cruiser was driven 4,135 miles.
Beegle's car, and heavy to the Merchant police collections
Cross and Hill vehiCles.
totaled $148 and parking meter
Cross was taken to Pleasant collections were $841.50.
Valley Hospital in Pt.. Pleasant
by private car . No citation was Hole ~ Road Is
issued .
An accident was reported at Blamed For Wreck
8:10 p.m. Monday on SR 124,
Two persons were slightly
two and one-half miles east of injured in a single car accident
Reedsville.
at 3:45p.m. Monday on Gravel
Den cil P. Jamison, 53, Hill Rd., one tenth of a mile
Reedsville, was traveling east west of Rt. 564.
when a deer ran into the path of
According to the Galliahis car. The deer was not Meigs Post State Highway
killed . There was light damage Patrol, Herman A. Jones, 22,
to the car and no injuries or Rt. 1, Cheablre, lost control of
arrests.
his car after striking a large
hole in the road. Jones' car left
the highway and rolled over
several times.
Jones and a passenger, 16
Tonight, March 14
year-old Franklin Jay Jones,
Rt. I, Cheshire, both received
VALLE Y OF THE
minor injuries but were not
DOLLS
immediately treated. Jones
Barbar a Perkins
was cited to Municipal Court
Pa tty Duke
ALSO
for having no driver's license.

10 of 41
Arrests for
Intoxication

Wide Swath

MEIGS THEATRE

BEYOND THE VALLEY
OF THE DOLLS
Dolly Read
Cynthia Myers

LODGE TO MEET
A special meeting of Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will
be held at 7: 30p.m. Thursday
at the hall in Chester. Work will
be in the EA degree. All master
masons are invited . .

"R"

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Wedn&amp;s day &amp; Thursday
March 15-16
NOT OPEN

available dates in Kanillls
City's Municipal Auditorium
next year.
"We're gQirJg to try for 21
games in Kansas City next
year," Axelson Said, adding
the remaining 21 game home
schedule would be divided
between Omaha and St. Louis.
The Royals, who had 33-49
record last season, drew
1,999,948 fans from 1957
through last season. The team
has had only two seasons with
more than 200,000 attendance.

. Bid Awarded
Jack W. Crlap, presldeul of
the Leading Creek Conservucy District, reported
today acceptance of a bid for
the purchase ol a 1Z
passenger van. Three local
firms submitting bids were
Pomeroy Motor Co. $3,395,
R. H. Rawllugs and SoDS
$3,101.14, and Keith Goble
Ford, Inc., $3,3110.
Crisp aald slace It Is the
policy of the dll1rlct to lake
the lowest bid on comparable '
equipment the bid of the
Goble Company was ac·
cepled.
:~?.;:m::..;&amp;~t.;m..:~·~~: ~·*

Response Good
The response to the !Wid
drive being conducted by
members of the Racine Fire
Department for a new two-way
radio has been good so far Lt.
Pete Simpson said today.
The Racine unit protects
property in Letart, Lebanon
and Sutton Townships.
Members believe that if each
family they serve would
contribute $1 the goal of $1500
would be reached.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMmED - Sarah Hoff.
man, Letart, W. Va .; Ruth
Lutheran, Racine; Archie
Donohew , Racine ; Wendy
Barker, New Haven ; Leola
Keck, Pomeroy.
DISCHARGED - Scott
McComas and Dora Frost.
Visiting hours from 2 to 4and
from 7 to 8:30p.m.
JAYCEES TO MEET
The Meigs County Jaycees
will meet at 8 this evening at
the Pomeroy village hall. All
members are asked to attend.
FIREMEN CALLED
Pomeroy firemen answered
a call at 3:32p.m. Monday to
extinguish a brush fire on
Spring Ave.
FINED $5, COSTS
Evelyn C. Young, Racine,
was fined $5 and cosl.s on
conviction of speeding by
Syracuse Mayor Herman
London Monday night according to Police Chief Milton
Varian.
SERVICE HELD
Funeral services for Dale G.
Paynter, 58, Delaware, Ohio,
were held Thursday at
Delaware Instead of for Albert
Paynter as was previously
reported.
FmEMEN CALLED
The Middleport Fire Dept.
was called to Grant St. at 6:03
p.m. Monday to extinguish a
brush fire . Firemen were on
the scene.aboul It hour .

TIMES

HAVE

CLUB TO MEET
The Twin City Shrine Club
will meet at 7:30p.m. Thurs·
day at the clubhouse in Racine.
Refreshments will be served .

CHRH6ED
... IN BANKING TOO!

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Tuesday was 39 degrees.

mid 101 aDd lows from the
mid 381 to lbe mid 40s.

i'm&gt;~W'! · ;--

Council
(Continued from page I )
mittee report.
,Mayor John Zerkle reported
that Green Hill Homes, Inc ., is
interested in buying a portion
of a lot owned by the village
near the corner of Broadway
and Elm, Apart of tbe 128 by 50
feet lot is now taken up by
streel.s. It was agreed that
council members wiU inspect
the localion before any action
Is taken.
The mayor also ask that
council consider legislation
which would rid the commWii1y of junk cars. The
mayor said be had counted 55
such junkers about town. It
was agreed to turn tbe matter
over to Solicitor Fultz to come
up with adequate legislation
for consideration. Council also
discussed several houses in the
community which should be
torn down since they are safety
or fire hazards. It was agreed
to talk to Fultz also on that
matter.
Councilman Ohlinger gave a
detailed report on a tour of the
town . which he and Councilwoman Mrs. Roger Morgan
had taken. They recommended
changes in several parking
meter locations, putting a
speed limit of 25 miles an hour
on all streets except in the
school zones where 20 miles an
hour is the limit, changing the
stop signs on Fifth Ave. at
Palmer and Hooker Sl.s., so
that the stops will be required
at Hooker and Palmer Sl.s.
rather than on Fifth Avenue.
Council authorized Maintenance Supervisor Chase to
carry out the recommendations.
It was also agreed that the
Middleporllevee is unsafe and
council began formulating
plans to discourage ils use by
boaters this summer.
Chase was asked to secure
prices on enclosing a drainage
area on Brownell Ave., and
present the figures to counciL
Chase reported that all fire
hydranl.s in the town have now
been standardized as to thread
so that they can be more
readily used by firemen . The
maintenance supervisor also
reported on the need for sotne
repair to the lagoon road below
Hobson.
Herman Haddox complained
to council of the alley at the
side of his Hamilton St. home.
The alley
should
be
reestablished as it once was,
Haddox said. It was agreed
that Chase . wiU visit Raddox
and discuss the problem.
Charles Searles also appeared before Council to
review a problem near his
home on Pearl St. Drainsge
near his home is not adequate
and trash from a nearby
business establishment is not
being properly covered, he
ssid, to prevent it blowing
about the neighborhood.
Searles stressed that he
wants no difficulty w.ith
anyone, but would appreciate ·
some help. It was agreed to
look into installing a catch
basin in the problem area and
to confer with the owner of the
business on possibly providing
a fenced-in area for trash.
Oflicials said the owner has
been cooperative in tbe past.
Attending t.~e meeting were
Mayor Zerkle, Clerk-Treasurer
Grate, Chief of Police J. J.
Cremeans, Maintenance
Supervisor Chase, Council
members, Dick Vaughan, Mrs.
Morgan, Ohlinger and Fred
Hoffman, Haddox, May and
Searles.

BECAUSE OF POPULAR DEMAND

ern society. It makes her bookkeeping

THE COTTON GIN

easie r and kee ps track of tne budget. If
you don 't have your own checking account , don 't you think it's about time?

RT.

7

ADDISON, OHIO

WILL REMAIN OPEN

Come in today and ope n one.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

A New Shipment of
Spring Goods.

POLYESTER.~~~~..~~~.~- ...~~.~1.50
Velour SI.OO lb.

lililens·,atioNII

Nylon Fleece 90c lb.

· Dotted Swiss $1.09 yd .
1st Quality Bonded Acrylics.

-4ClNCINNA Tl

LIMITED SUPPLY ...................11.49 yd .
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
Member Federal

Dtp08l~lns!ll'f. nce

I

.

Ctrpcltllloa .

WASmNGTON (UPJ)-The
Senate Judiciary Committee
today called on former Allor·
ney General John N. ·Mitchell
to help explain hnw the government settled a billion dollar
antitrust suit against lnterna·
tiona! Telephone &amp; Telegraph
(liT) .

Advance word was that

Mitchell wpuld swear-as he
has said publicly- that he had
nothing whatever to do with the
settlemeut. Mitchell also was
expected to deny any knowledge of an m offer of up to
$4®,000 to help subsidize the
Republican National Convention.
At stake in the committee's
inquiry is the nomination of

1

'·

New Shipment Cotlon Knits SI.OO lb.
s 1.49 yd .
.
. Jacket &amp; Dress Zippers. All colors. a_JI
rengths. 20 for 1Oc .

~

(Continued from page 1)
letter be directed to Shelly and
Sands, contractors for the new
highway interchange, informing them that the board
wants no more blasting during
school hours. If blasting
continues during those hours,
an injunction against the,
contractors should be secured,
. Porter suggested,
Porter also suggested that a
letter of commendation be
directed to Mrs. Helen Dais,
teacher, and School Principal
John Lisle for the manner in
which they handled the
situation.
.
Porter also suggested that a
letter be directed to Dr. J. J.
Davis for treating the
youngsters at the schooL He
said Mr. Davis refused any fee
for his services.
Samples of the clods of dirt
with glass that struck the
school were presented for
showing. Some of the clods
penetrated into the groWid 2 to
5 inches, Porter said.
In other action, the board
appointed William Reed as
welding teacher for the period
of March 1 to May 28 at $666.66
per month ; appointed Annalu
Hill as Title I remedial reading
teacher at Harrisonville for the
remainder of the school year;
approved Rev. Wilbur Perrin
as a substitute teacher, and
directed a letter of intent to
hire the following teachers for
the 1972-73 school year :
Stephanie Niemiec and Denise
Wiegand, special education;
Charles Frecker , Industrial
Ar1s, and Sharon Kourim ,
elementary.
Teachers were not appointed
since salary increases have not
been approved by the Federal
Pay Board.
James Butcher was changed
from Title I to a regular
assignment and· William Reed
was appointed to teach a 31J.
hour welding course for the
Carpenters' Apprentice class
at $7 per hour. The state pays
$3.25 per hour and the union
pays $3.75.
The board, in other action
established the posilion of
assistant high school principal.
A letter of intent will be
directed to Terry Ohlinger that
the board had approved the
position on an indefinite basis,
due to. the Illnesses of Asst.
Supt. Larry Morrison and
Principal James Diehl. Buster
Barrett was hired as subatitute
bus driver.
The board approved the
closing of schools ori March 3,
due to the weather.
The board accepted the
resignation of Dr. P. E. Stanley
as a member of the board of
trustees of the Pomeroy •
Middleport Public Libraries.
Named to replace Dr. Stanley
was Mrs. Mary Lew Johnson. A
letter of thanks will be directed

to Dr. Stanley for his outstanding service.
Teacher appointments
usually recommended in
March, is being delayed until
April in the hope that the pay
board will have acted.
The school board also
recalled that it is in the process
of getting recommendations on
dress code revisions with the
help of John Thomas, president
of the student council.
Attending were Porter,
Virgil King, carroll Pierce,
Don Mullen, Joe Sayre, board
members; George Hargraves,
superintendent, and Lee W.
McComas, clerk.

Richa.rd G. Kleindienst to eallfornla said he notified
succeed Mitchell as attorney Mitchell of them convention
general.
'
·
. offer either "! May or SepKieindienst bas denied any· tember •.
substantive role in the !llllitrusl
JudiciarY Chairman James
case, but did concede he "set in 0. Eastland, D-Miu., said
motion" the chain of evenbl Harold S. Geneen, preaident of
that led to the oot-of-6lll11 rrr, will be call~_ IQ testify
settlement. Likewise, Klein· · later.
.
dienst has denied he knew
Another witness vl!lll to the
anything of the convention investigation is Ric;hard J.
subsidy offer.
Ramsden . He wrote an
Memorandum Published
analysis in two days for ~2
Columnist .lack An.derson which was a key factor in the
published a confidential government's decision to settle
memorandum from an m the case rather than to pursue
lobbyist, Dlta D. Beard, that its lawsuit . The analysis
linked the setUement to the predicte&lt;f dire consequences to
the company, the stock
oIfer.
Mrs. Beard is in a Denver · market, the economy and the
hospital under treatment for a nation's balance of payments if
heart condition. She denied laSt m was forced to get rid of
weekend she meant to imply Hartford.
Mitchell was involved in the
It subsequently was learned
settlement, her memorandwn that Ramsden was recruited to
notwithstanding.
write the analysis by White
Anderson's aide, Britt Hume, HOuse aide Peter Flanigan.
swore last week that Mrs. Tunney and Sen. Edward M.
Beard told him abe and Mit· Kennedy, D-Maas., have inslstchell struck the bargain for the ed that Flanigan also be called
out-oi-&lt;:Ourt settlement at a as a witness.
Kentucky Derby party last
With some or all of these
year.
witnesses in the offing, it' apln statements to reporters peared tbe hearings would nm
and to Sen. John V. Tunney, D- at least another week, .or
Calif., Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke of possibly two.

.

BY BOB HOEFUi::H
Although the program was fonnally entitled "cultural arts fair" at the Pomeroy Elemen1ary
~hool Monday night, it was really a time for fun and parental pride.
.
Conducted.under the sponsorship of the school's PTA, the fair was designed to display recen,
work of the children In tl)e field of cultural ·arts. The displays ranged from simple crayon work
through oil paintings, collages, mu8ical composition, poetry and essays.
Staging Uie (air, however, was no simple matter.
In the.first place, there is no specialized art instruction in the School's curriculum. Regular
Classroom teachers -: many of whom attend special art workshops on their own time to pick,up riew
tips and techniques -pitched in beautifu.lly to encourage tbelr students to "create" for the Monday
night fair .
An innovation at the school with oil but to work with judging could bf: completed by
this year, inaugurated through sketching, pastels, crayons, Monday· night. Making up the
the efforts of ·Mrs. Charlene charcoals and other artistic judging staff were Mrs. Nan
Hoeflich,
cultural arts mediums. Avariety of works of Moore, Miss Lucille Smith,
chalnnan of the PTA, has been these youngsters were Mrs. Clara Lochary, Mrs. Allee
an evening ari class conducted displayed at the fair.
- Nease, Mrs. JeMifer Sheets,
by the Meigs High School art
Monday night's informal air, and Bill Mayer.
·
MISS LUCilLE SMITH, left, and Mrs. Nan Moore, retired teachers, judged essays subinstructor, Mrs. Margaret Ella however, was no indication of
After the entries were
mitted in the competition of the Pomeroy Elementary School cultural arts fair. Mrs. Moore
Lewis. The pupils of the school the hard work which preceded judged, a committee composed
was the Middleport High School English teacher of Dave Diles, nationally known sportswriter
- giving up evening "free tbe fair earlier Monday.
of Mrs. Hoeflich, Mrs. Lila
and ABC (TV) sports commentator.
time" - have been faithful in
A.team of judges invaded tbe Mitch, PTA president, Mrs.
coming to the school school auditorium early Carol McCullough, ·Mrs. Jean
auditorium one evening each Monday afternoon to study Braun, Mrs. Sa!Jdy Kovalchik, Barbara Riggs - handicapped - set up displays of the could be seen by interested
week to get acquainted not only hundreds of entries so that all Mrs. Lois Rosenbaum and Mrs. by a abortage of display boards cultural arts work so that they
(Continued on page 8)

MRS. CLARA lOCHARY AT mE PIANO, and Mrs.
Alice Nease found judging the music entries at tbe Pomeroy
Elementary School an easy task. Submitting the only m:iginal
composition, words and music, was Jayne Lee Hoeflich, a
third grader. Mrs. Locbary and Mrs. Nease also judged
poetry entries.
J!:i!llltl~~~~@·~'-'~z:-h·x,:;:o;~:w~-.. ·~w..»~ ~

Agri•Biz Meeting .At Rio

..
•.

Devoted To The lnterea" Of The Meigs·Ma&amp;On Area

:·
An Area Lime and Fertilizer
Conference at Rio Grande
.College March 23 will highlight
ways agri-business better can
assist farmers with field and
forage crop production in )972,
1:30 to 5:1~ p.m. program in
Moulton Hall.
C. E. Blakeslee, county
agricultural agent and liming
and fertilization of forages for
high yields will be emphasized.
Industry and governmental
people
advising
crop
producers, vocational
agriculture teachers, and
interested larmers are invited.
Signs wlll point to Moulton Hall
on the campus.
"Boost Forage Yields with
Lime and Fertilizer" will be
discussed by popular OSU
Agronomist Don Myers
following opening remarks by
John Van M.e ter, Piketon,
chairman. Variety ~hanges
and certification will be given
by Walter Jones, Ohio Seed
Improvement Association .
John Trierveiler will discuss
effective use of soil and pl8nt
analyses. "The Lime and
Fertilizer Needs of Our Area,"
will be presented by Hunter
Follett.
Both are Ohio State
University agronomisl.s. The
program will conclude with
"Tips on How to Use the
Agronomy Guide and the Ag.
Chemical Handbook," by John
Underwood, Jackson Area
Agronomist.

The committee arranging
the program are Charles
Reisinger, Wayne Neal, Paul
Riegel,
and
Rodney

in Briefs
•
•
•
(Continued from page 1)

News

insisted the uptrend will help consumers by encouraging added
production. The blunlotalking Butz, in a speech prepared for
delivery to the Texas and Southwest Cattle Raisers Association
at Houston, added that the administration's decision last week to
raise allowable beef Imports by 7 per cent will not dampen
prices.
WASHINGTON- REP. CHARLES A. VANIK, D-Ohlo, is
proposing that the meat Import quota law be repealed because he
said it "has slmPJy provided protection to a few large cattle
ranches at a terrible cost to the American consumer." Yanik
introduced legislation in the House Monday to repeal the law,
which was enacted in 1964.
Vanik, the member of tbe House Ways and Means Committee, noted that tbe administration has amounced the level of
meat Imports for 1972 would be restricted to tz4·bUUon pounds,
and 3 per cent of the total amual American meat consumption.
"This quota level is totally Inadequate to meet the demands of
the American public for meat at a stable price," Vanlk said In a
House speech.
COLUMBUS -GOV. JOHN J, GILLIGAN has withdrawn his
opposition to a proposed constitutional amendment which could
pave the way for a state lottery or off-track betting in Ohio. The
proposal, already cleared by the Senate, was up for a vote in the
House today. It would repeal the constitutional prohibition on
lotteries. The voters would have to approve the question in a
statewide referendum.
"I'm perfectly willing th~L a lottery be considered," GUllgan
told a news conference Monday. "I'm opposed If its primary use
is for revenue, but If people want to gamble for fun, that's
something else again."

NEW!
PtaytaDou'le Diawadr
WAIST
I:ON.....
'I'ROLLEB
Girdle

KeeRS you under control ...
giY.es you a smoother
waistline . .. Exclusive, self·
adjusting "Comfort Baod!~
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school.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 15, 1972

·.~%.....

,

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

~.

ews•• in Briefst
By United Press International
MANAMA, BAHREIN- A DANISH CARAVEILE charter

jetliner flying holidaymakers home from Ceylon crashed
Tuesday night near Dubei in tbe Persian GuH, apparently killing
all of the 106 passengers and six crewmembers, officials said
today.
A report that one man had survived tbe crash in the mountains some 40 miles east of Dubel 'alrport was·not confirmed.
sterling Airways, the Danish charter airline which owned the
plane, and the Tajereborg Travel Agency in Copenhagen, which
had chartered it, said there appeared to be no survivors.
SAIGON - SOUTH VIETNAMESE PARATROOPERS
turned back two more attacks by members of the North Vietnamese Army's (NVA) ellte 320th Division on Rocky Hill 421
today, killlng at least 28Communists in one three-hour fight.
Field repqrts said the South Vietnamese suffered two
wounded in a dawn battle and reported only "light" casualties in
· a pre-dawn mortar and ground attack. In Saigon, the U. S.
command said it was deactivating 42 Army and Air Force units
~mprising 5,700 men. It was_the largest single "standdown"
since 42 units composed of 6,100 men were deactivated last July.
AMMAN - KING HUSSEIN OF JORDAN announced a
major reorganization of his COWitry's goverrunent today, a move
that some dipl011111ts hoped could lead to a peace settlement with
Israel. The 37-year-old monarch said he planned to reorganize
his Hashemite kmgdom into a federal;state known as the United
Arab Kingdom.
It involved both parts of Jordan - the part east of the Jordan
River and the west bank section that has been controiled by
Israel since tbe end of the 1967war. "Amman wlll be the central
capital and tbe capital of the Jordaitian region and Jerusalem
wlllbethe caPital of the west bank. The king will behead Qf state,
assisted by a central couricll of ministers," said Huss~in . The·
new state, he added, "will have a single army."
WAsHINGTON - THE PAY .BOARD called a closed
meeting today to tackle for t)Je second day in a row its toughest
problem to date ~ tbe contract settlement that ended the record
West Coast dock strike.
'
'!be board met for three hours in an unusual public session
')'uetoday !llld foUowed that by a two-hour executive meeting, but
failed to decide whether to accept the contract or soften it and
(Continued on page 14)

~..n., •~M.A.

PHONE 992-215.6

)EN CENTS.

·e's
Glamour
Dented

.

may be made for:
Es Ia blishing permanent
vegetative cover, contour strip
cropping, planting trees or
shruba, Improving permanent
vegetative cover, developing
facilities for livestock water,
water impoundment reservoirs , improving stand or
forest trees, diversions, stream
bank protection, construction
of permanent fences, wildlife
resolU'ces.
Farmers interested in cost- food plots, habitat or cover,
sharing on the following improvement of wlldlife
practices must contact the habitat, animal waste storage
Meigs CoWity ASCS office in and diversion facilities,
the Masonic temple at sediment retention and water
structures
and
Pomeroy and make application control
to
stabilize
a
source
measures
prior to starting the practice.
Applications for cost&lt;;baring of sediment.

reinforcement pine Is: Nylon Spandex. crotc:h: lOO'r. Nylon. Ela•lc: RII)'On, Cotton, RLibbtr, Nylon.
c:o~~~~I'C!MtiON

.

Meigs countlans may participate in the REAP program
which Is designed to improve
:tbe qualify of life of everyone.
· This will be accomplished by
auisUng farmers and ranchers
or
abate
to prevent
agriculturHelated pollution of
water, land and air and by
conserving agricultural soil,
water, woodland and wildlife

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
tNTDWIATIIIHAL I'Ll'rT'b

POMEROY-M.IDDlEPnRT. .OHIO

·RE*P 6fferelt

Warahouse and Annex • • •
9:30 to 5 p.m. Weekdays
Open ,riday •d Saturday
9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.

o m 1 .,.

NO. 236

Supt. Hargraves said pupils should not use the Salisbury
playground on weekends or after school is dismissed on a school
· day when there will be blasting at that time.
·

Shop Elberfelds Main Store,

Exclusfvt at Olf'ltf eJastic .

.~0. XXIV

There will be no more blasting scheduled in the road construction in the Salisbury Elementary school area during the
hours when classes are in session, Supt. of Meigs U!cal Schools
George Hargraves said today.
Hargraves' aMouncement followed a meeting Tuesday attended by representatives of the contracting firm of Shelly and
Sands, the Ohio Department of Highways, the contractor's in·
surance firm, Frank W. Porter, .president of tbe Meigs Local
' Board of Education, and Hargraves. The meeting followed
Monday's iricident at the Salisbury school when a· clod of mud
crashed through a classroom window, causing minor lnj urles to
12 second grade pupils. The mud had been hurled from a blasting
site at the highway project approximately 150 yards from the

•

Body •na

'

Iteduced

Marhoover, Jackson; Frank
Adams, Beaver; John Van:-.
Meter, Piketon, and Ken
Brown of· Oak Hill.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Southem
(Continued from page I )
Sayre reported that he had
received applications for
teaching positions from James
R. Lawrence, Barbara Crooks,
Larry Morgan and Faye
Adkins. The board also voted to
place Wilbur Perrin on the
teachers' substitute list. The
board approved the Racine
Baptist Church's use of the
football field on July 19 for a
Gospel Crusade. In event of
rain, the high school gym will
be used. The request was made
by the Rev. Charles Norris.
Sayre reported that a bus route
had been extended to pick up
Charles R. Wolfe.
He also reported that im·
provements rn the Racine and
Letart Schools, requested by
the Racine Fire Dept. have
been made. The board ap·
proved a field trip to Colwnbils
on March 22 for all Vo-Ag
students to attend the Central
Ohio Breeding Association .
Bob Spurlock is the advisor.
Attending were Clarence
Lawrence, Charles Pyles ,
Denny Hill, JWilor Salser and
David Nease, board members;
Sayre, Jim Adams, principal;
Mrs. Nancy Carnahan, clerk,
Mrs. Ord, Mrs. Wolfe and Mrs.
Stearns.
·

o~

•

Mei as Local School Board
.

More and more women are using per·
sonal checking accounts in today ' s mod-

·

t'

WINNERS IN THE Vocational Industrial Clubs of
American (VICA) Southeast Regional Contest held at the Tri
CoWity Vocational School at Nelsonville, Saturday were
seven studenls of the Meigs VICA Chapter. Winners In the
opening and closing ceremony class, in which the students
disassembled and explained each component of the VICA

emfileJII, weri,l-r, Robin Duckworth, queen, Charlie Lane,
parliamentarian, Debbie Jewett, treasurer, Kathy Matson,
reporter, Greg Hayes, vice p~sident, Christine Robinson,
president and Rick Carter, alternate. Absent was Paul
Miller. They were presented plaques and silver medals.

(More Pictures on Page 8&gt;

Development Seminar
In Pomeroy Thursday
Ohio Development ·DePartment staff members will be in
Pomeroy Thursday tq present
a selective development
program to community leaders
and interested citizens. The
seminar wlll be from 9:t5 to
11 : 4~ a.m . at the ·Trinity
Church, Second St. There will
be coffee at 9 : 1~ a.m.
The Meigs CoWity Study
Committee and the Meigs
County Regional · Planning
Commission are sponsoring the
Meigs County program.
The Development program is
funded by ali $85,000 federal
grant from the Appalachian
Regional Commission to
stimulate
Industrial
development In Ohio's 28
Appalachian counties . The
program now is in its im·plementation phase, according
to Department Director David
C. Sweet. ·
Sweet pointed out that since
the program's Inception in
November, staff members
'
.
have met with more than 450
community leaders and
private citizens in I~ com-

munities throughout the AP·
palachian region in an effort to
explain
the
selective
development approach and to
Involve each respective
community in the program.
The pilot Appalachian
program
replaces
the
" shotgun " industrial
development technique of
attempting to draw any ln·
dustry into a region . The plan
substitutes the "rifle" approach - use of selective
development techniques to
guide communities to in·
dustries best suited to their
needs, goals and resources.
The· program, which Is expected to serve as a pilot

program for other states in the
region, is Wlique in its "total
. dependence on the grass-roots
community effort, interest and
knowledge fo'r success," Sweet
said. An area development
economist will work full-time
in each local community
during the implementation
phase.
"The field economist will
first determine community
needs and goals through a
series of surveys and meetings
with community leaders and
private citizens encompassing
a broad spectrwn 9f interests,"
he explained. "Then potential
industry alternatives wiil be
presented to the community."

Architects are Retained
Eastern Local School Board
Tuesday night retained th.e
architectural firm, Eesley,
Lee and Vargo of Marietta to
study preliminary plans for a
proposed addition to the high
school.
John Riebel, superintendent,
said the board discussed the

.

building program at length.
In other business the board
Issued a three-year contract to
Reibel, and placed Alice Curtis
and Opal Hollon on the substitute cooks' list. Tuition for
students going by the state
formula was set at $125 a year.
(Continued on page 14)

Tax Explained
Meigs County Auditor
Gordon Caldwell said today
he has been furnished copies
of a 1&amp;-pige booklet explaining the state's new
personal Income tax.
Caldwell also has on hand
the quarterly estimated
lnco111e Lax forms. He said
the
booklet
contains
questions and answers about
the lax, sample tax computations and wlthholdlng
charts, aad sectloDB dealing
wllh
the
homestead
examptlons and 10 percent
real property tax reduction.
Copies of the booklet may be
obtained at Caldwell's office.
DEDICATION SET
The new sanctuary of the
Pomeroy U!wer Light Church
will be dedicated Sunday at 2
p.m. The general superintendent, the Rev. Matthew
Harden, Ann Arbor, Mich ., will
be the guest speaker.

Weather
Cloudy and warmer tonight
and Thursday, rain likely ; a
chance of thundershowers
south . Low tonight in the upper
30s to mid 40s. High Thursday
in the 50s north and in the mid
50s to the mid 60s south.

MIAMI (UP!) - Aalabama Gov. George Wallace's 81!1'·
prising steamroller victory Tuesday in the Florida pfut\aey
shattered Sen. EdmlUid Muskie's Claim as front.runne- and
threw the already muddled race for the Democratic presl!lenttal
nomination into chaos.
Coming off a disappointing showing last week in New
Hampshire, Muskie finished a badly beaten fourth. Sell. Hubert
H. Humphrey of Minnesota, who wound up far behind Wallace in
second place, intnledlately claimed he was tbe leading candidate
for the nomination. Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washtncton ran a
surprising third.
The results, closely watched by politicians over the country,
even further confused the Democratic presidenUal sweepatakes
and left the party still without a dominant candidate for the ·
·nomination.
"My situation looks hearty, our · campaign for God and
encouraging and building, " country," and said that the
said Humphrey. Wallace other Democratic candidates
pledged, "We shall continue "may want to get together with
me now. I think all of them
:~~::x:-..-::-.:::::~::::;:-;;::::::::~:::::::-;~::::::::::::8::::!:::::;: have been badly hurt."
Victory Dlllw'bl Mualtle
Only Losers in
Muskle said his own 1088 did
not disturb him as much as tile
Tuesday Voting
victory by Wallace, whom be
~ MIAMI (UPI) - In bitterly attacked as "a dema·
:~ terms of cbooslug the next . . gogue of the worst possible
kind."
: · oandldate, there were no ~
In next week's Illinois
~ winners In the Florida~ primary, only Muskie and
~ primary Tuesday - oDly § former Sen. Eugene J. Mc·
~ earthy are entered in the
8 : losers.
~ Perhaps the wilmer was~ presidential preference test
a man whose name was not
and Muskie and sen. George S.
:::; on the ballot and will be on · McGovern are the only ones
:' no primary election ballot
seeking convention delegates.
: - Sen. Edward M. Ken·
The entire field, . however, is
nedy. Alabama Gov,
entered in the April 4
George C. Wallace won
Wisconsin primary.
~ here with nearly a three-toIn addition to winning the
:S: one edge over his closest
second primary 'of the 1972
~ rival. But no one - not
election year with 42 per cent,
$: even Wallaoe - Is ready to . Wallace picked up 75 conven~ believe that Wallace wiD be , tion delegate votes, the biggest
~ the Democratic candidate : bloc nailed down by any
~ to succeed President Nixon ~ candidate so far . Humphrey .
:_, In November.
~·. took tbe other six delegates '
AU Wallace's victory did~ with 18 per cent.
~ was anure hJm of a stage ~
H the Florida primary was a
~ at the convention and ~ defeat for Muskie, it was a
~&lt; assure the nation of a ~
boost for Humphrey, at age 60
~ rouadhouse fight - what ~ seeking a remaich against
Senate Democratic Leader t President Nixon, and for
Mike Mansfield likes to call ;;\ Jackson, generally considered
:::· a "brouhaha."
:~ the most conservative candi:;§
':;:
. (Continued on page i4 )
&lt;•-"•"'·;:;:~··;:.'~'&lt;•&lt;•'•·&lt;h'•'~-~-w-~-"
-~·Y.I.I'.·~·....-.~· - .•Y.•~-·»!O!·.~·Y.&gt;~.:.v.v~.

~j

i

~
.~

i

l·
~

Hatch Has .Novel Request: Let Barnesville Be
ST. CLAIRSVILLE, Ohio she ~•id. "Hanna is about 'to definite reaction to our propo(UPI)-The female president start closing in from the north tal," Mrs. Schuster said. "I
of the Barnesville Planning and land has been acquired for don't think he had evet thought
about anything like this before.
Commission came to the mining on the south .
hometown of Hanna Coal Co.
"I'm afraid there will be no He seemed to consider it a noPresident Ralph Hatch way for Barnesvllle to grow. vel idea.
Tuesday and asked him not to The town will have no future
''This was our first meeting
mine within five miles of her for other industry," she said. with Mr. Hatch so we didn't
community .
Mrs. Schuster and Mrs. Aida pressure htm. We just gave
Mrs. Joseph Schuster said Rizzi, Presideut of the Bar· him our suggestion · to conshe was afraid strip miners nesville Chamber of Com- sider ."
were about to close in" on her merce, suggested to Hatch that
Mrs . Schuster said she
Belmont County commhnity of his £irm observe a "buffer couldn't determine how im4,300.
zone," five mlle:J wide ~I'Ound portant her meeting with
"Already there are barren B&lt;1rnesvillr.
Hatch would turn out to be.
hillsides within one mile of
"You've got to realize lhat I
" ANuvt!lldea''
Barnesville on th~ west side."
"Mr . Ha'.ch didn't have any see mining in a different light
11

than he does," abe said. "My
first impressions of strip
mining were - well, you might
call them unfortunate.
"I'm originally from Cleveland and when I came bere two
years ago I couldn't believe the
land around the town of Cadiz.
The minln~ there caused a
shocking amount of devastation.
"It seems to me there's a
real possibility of BarnesvUle
becoming like Cadiz," she said.
"I don't wani that to happen.
''Mr . Hatch doesn't even like
lo Soy his mining damages the

land. He perfers to use tenns
like 'rearrange.' Mr. Hatch
and I operate on different
premises.''

Hatch was reluctant to
evaluate the meeting.
Not Blufllng
."It was a good meeting," he
said. "We just discussed in
general terms the mining
situation . There wasn 't
anything to be resolved at the
meeting. It was just a good
discussion "
' he was not bluff.
Hatch said
ing whenhe said he would close
all operations if a House-pass-

ed strip mine reclamation bill
was passed by the Senate with·
outcliange and signed into law.

lfiS remarks drew a· stinging
reply from Gov. John J. GUll·
gall and intensified the debate
over what type of reciarll8tion
mining companies sbou\d be
reqUired to perform.
A, Senate subcommittee has
changed tbe bill in several
ways, including allowing bigb-:
walls to stand in some cases.
Hatch has not aald whether
the amended bill would force
closinf his operations.

I

I
r

.'

I

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