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16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport..Pcxneroy, 0., March 16, 1972

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

! Washington

I
I

F

•

! Report

IJy ciarcnct'
• MiJicr

1

l
l!
I
I

LEGAL NOTICE

9 :30 a . m . for the purpose of
re ceiv in g
tes timony
and
e'lidence from wh ic h the Board
will adop t an amended im pl ementation schedule for th e
mun icipalities and ind ustries in
th e Upper Ohio River (upstrea m of Portsmouth to the
Ohio -Pennsy lva nia stat e line)".
In ter ested persons are en cou r aged to otter pert inent
tes timony before the Board .
Based on th e re cord of in f or mation pr es ented at the
hearing the Board wi ll es tablish
new Impl ementation schedules
tor appropriate municipalities
and in dustries.
Pers on s
i nterested
In
receiving a copy of the proposed
a m en ded i mpl emen tation
sc hedul e should wr i te to Mr .
John E . Ri chards, Acting Chief,
Di'l lsion of Engineering , Ohio
Department of Heal th , P. 0 .
Box. 118, Columbus, Ohio 432 16.
T. A. Gardner, M.D.
Chairman , Water Pollution
Cont ro l Board
(Jl 16, 23, 30, J t c

.

STORE OPEN 9:30 UlVfiL 9 AT NlGiff'FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ·

Just received in time for the Friday-Saturday
Sale - A big shipment of

Mens 5.95

Women's "Smart Set" Frocks
Short sleeve a nd s leeveless sty les. Dan River
Fabrics . Regular and half sizes.

8.98

Large Size Card.igan Sweaters
.

100 per cent acrylic - cable stitch patte rn . raglan
s lt;eves · long sleeves. Colors include navv blue .
bnght pink and white. Sizes 40 to 46 .

SLIPOVER SWEATERS
SPECIAL 2.98
Fashioned of 100 per cent acrylic - short raglan
sleeves · solid and stripes. Sizes small, medium
and large in orchid, black , navy blue, bright pink
and white.

Women's New Spring Dresses
Sale! Women's Uniforms

NOT OPEN

C. 0 . NeWla nd,
Cler k

(2 ) 24 (l) l. 9, 16, 41

THE
ANDROME DA ST RAIN
(Tec hnicolor)
Arthur Hill
Davi d Wayne

--------------1
: • ayo ur phone wiJl j l n1hl
I "c"h ntultt", too, trhtnl
y ou place an action lant I

"G"

I Ad. You can sell furn i ture,

l•pplhncu, cloth•••••do • l
1uns of othtr unu .. d .but
1uu ru1 lt••• l
I

Ca rtoon :
Search for

Misery
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

L..-------------1

Good si ze - all white handkerchiefs. Spec ia l

price.

hf,
PO"'."''
pomeror
rullond'natl!;»na
bank
t he bank ol

I he century
eslubtished 1872

Member Federal

Deposit

Insuran ce Corporation

Sale s.oo
Sale 5.00
Sale 4.00
Sale 3.65
Sale 3.25

Mug Trees

Jacquards· Brocades · Tapestry . Crepes.' For Pants . Skirts .
Suils - Dresses etc . 58"-60" wide. Machine washable. All
selective fancy paHerns - 2 and 3 color weaves . A very· good
assortmenf .

3.99 . 5.49 • 5.99 yd.
Group

QJRTAINS and
SHORTY DRAPERIES

SERENE
BED PIUOWS

Discontinued styles - In-

Fortrel7 Filling
With new durable press
cover !standard size) .
Special Friday
and Saturday

Drapes in 36", 45" and 63"

lenglhs.

·your choice 2.00

2.00

sale 3.00
4.95 BOYS SLACKS
SALE 4.00

5.49 BOYS SLACKS
SALE 4.50
· 5.95 BOYS SlACKS
SALE 5.00
6.95 BOYS SLACKS
. SALE 6.00
8.95 BOYS SLACKS
SALE 7.00

;

1\
I

~- .

colored design . "Treasure'' · white design .

New Shipment!

Softly, Spring arrives, heralded by the singing
of the birds, the blooming of the flowers

Sole! Friday ond Saturday

QUADRIGA CLOTH
100 per cent
Guaranteed fast
Solid colors and
(Ideal fabric for
qullts).

Cotton.
colors.
print.
piecing

"Red Heart"

and aH the lavtly looks of 1 new

1.39 Wintuck and'
· Knitting Waisted

~n.

oz .. 4 ply skein&gt;. All
colors. Two day sale.

99~

skein

Spring In fashion ••. feminine

Mens 4.95 Slacks-Jeans

SALE 4.00
Mens 5.95 Slacks-Jeans

SALE 5.00

1.69 TWIN CANDLE HOLDERS

Mens 7.95 Slacks-Jeans

SALE 6.50
SALE 7.00

1.00
$1.29

See the New Norelco Triple Header Ill

POLYFIL
-- '

100% PURE
POLYESTER FIBER
99~

Supe; M ic r ogroove flo at ing heads for fa ster. closer contour
shavmg .

bag

On Sale in First Floor Cosmetics Department
Also see the newest model in Sunbeam Electric
Shavers.

'MAGIC CHEF.

2.95

3 PIECE CHILD'S
FEEDING SETS
Circus designs. Set i n -

cludes all purpose plale,
soup-cerea l bowl, tu mbler ,

1.00

2.00 a set

handsome and colorful for

While They Last

New washable - hundreds
of uses. Ideal for filling .
Special

Men! For more comfortable, easier shaving

and ftonering for you,

Black enameled. Complete with candl(!s.
Friday and Saturday

Mens 6.95 Slacks-Jeans

SALE 6.00

It's Spring, beautiful

,4

69$ yard

•

·~

Colored background with

9.95

Saturday . A fine selection.

Em bossed des ign . Tree
and well plaller.
Friday and Saturday

'II ~1\J'I

Full or Twin Size

Coltons - Brushed denims
Regular denims. All on
le lhls Friday and

CHROME TRAYS

.\ 1/1

i

Easy care - preshrunk - machine washable, rounded corners

All sizes 28 to 42 waist.

1.59

'*

.

1~1(

with bullion fringe. " Parfaet" - while background with

Mens 8.95 Slacks-Jeans

3;95 boys slacks

; \,

4.99

100% COTTON

Corduroys - Dacron and

Mens Blue Denim

right for school and dress
wear .

D

COLOR PLUSH BEDSPREADS

day sale of mens slacks.

Ready for your selection . Ideal for warm
weather wear. Work caps and sport caps in all
sizes. Stop in . See this fine selection and buy
yours.

polyester-cottons. An excellent selection of styles jus!

-a~

"No lron 11

-

Men's Lighter Weight Caps and Hats

Regular sizes 8 to 18. Slim
sizes 8 to 18. F Iare leg ~t y les in
brushed denim s - knits .

D

S6.9S

cluded In lhls group are
some Cope Cods, Cottage
sets, Teer Curtains, Shorty

4 Colorful pottery mug s on
a black ena mel ed tree.
Friday and Saturday

5 for 1.00

Boys' Slacks
and Jeans

with minimum interest and wi thout ~elay .
let's talk it over soon .

SOLID POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS
YARN DYED POlYESTER DOUBLE .KNITS

•

On !he 1st lloor a big two-

Sale!

We can put our money to work on your home

New Spring Colors and .Patterns

Sale! Men's
and
Young·Men's
SLACKS
and Jeans

Friday and Saturday

---~---r-B:.o~ys Department- 1st Floor

Just ask lor them by name ... George, Abe. Alex.

w,

10 for 1.00

Good heavy weight - solid colors a nd patterns
wash cloths in this group. Some are irreg ulars.
Some are discontinued patterns.

2 pair 6.75

up youR ltoME?

.

.CANNON WASH CLOTHS

Sanforized shrunk. zipper fly. Tough 10
ounce blue denim. Sizes 29 to 44 waist.
All lengths.
Save Friday and Saturday

TO

ACRILAN FABRIC
'

.•

For You to Sew and Wear

2.95

SHEETS AND
PIU.OWCASES

WORK DUNGAREES

SOME MEN

3.59

Mens 5.98 Wrangler Super Lean Jeans
Mens 5.98 Wrangler Fuller Cut Jeans
Boys 4.95 Wrangler Jeans Huskies · •
Boys 4.50 Wrangler Flare Jeans · - ,
Boys 3.98 Wrangler Super ·Lean Jeans
(Regulars or Slims)

Presiden t

Friday thru Tuesday
March 11·21

SPECIAL 1.88 yard

Complete selection of sizes for men and for boys. Me.nS sizes
28 to 44 w a ist . Boys sizes 8 to 18 in Slims, Regulars a nd
Huskies.
·

Cannon R,.,al Familv Bath Ensembles

T onight, M arc h 16

2 pair 1.00
-

SALE lh PRICE

pa ssen ger schoo l bus bodies .
2 66 passenger schoo l bus
bodies .
Specificatio n s
for
this
equipment is on fil e at the offi ce
o f the clerk ol th e board .
. The board will reserve the
r~ghl to accept or reject an\" or
a ll bids.
I . 0 . M cCoy,

Friday and Saturday Sale

WRANGLER BLUE .DENIM
JEANS FOR MEN AND BOYS

MEN'S WHITE
HANDKERCHIEFS

TEN CEN~

SPRING FASHION EDITION

.•

Machine Washabl~. Solids .
plaids : fancies In light and
dark shades.

Save This Week-End On

Friday. Saturday Sale!

POMEROY-MIDD _EP.ORT. OfUO

MARCH 16, 1972

.

Lid &lt;;over and 21x3f frlnged
mat. Machine washable machine dryable. Gotd;
Blue, AVocado, Tan.gerlne,
Gold.
TWo Day Sale

navy blue - hunter green.

3.99

Devoled To 'Be lnleroem Of 'Be Meiga-Mcuoia Area

. BAlHMAT SETS

100% CRESLAN

Fits sizes 10 tO1i White black . brown . charcoal .

Mens 4.. 95 Long Sleeve
Work Shirts to Match
This Sale

Pc ~

$4 .99 2

"Montage" 54"

BAN LON·
DRESS SOCKS

. navy blue - charcoaigrey.

FOR FAMILY
AND HOM1E

SALE PRICE 1.49

Mens 69c

Si zes 29 to 44 waist .
Famous make. Dark green

'

SOper cent Dacron Polyester . 50 per cent Cotton.
Permanent press. Good patterns . Floral - Early
American . Green · ~pphlre . -, Gold .: Red.

.2 pair.1.00

so per cent Forlrel
Polyester - 50 per cent
Cotlon. Scotchgard finish .

Womens Short Sleeve

Katz Sleepwear

size I its all stzes 10 to
13. Excellent selection, of
solid colors and white.
Friday and Soturdoy

DRAPERY
FABRIC
48" Width

One

4.99

A Special Purchase of Womens

SPECIAL 4.98

Orion Sport Socks

Friday-Saturday

A PREVIEW
OF . FASHION

Specia I Purchase! .

Mens 69c

·WORK
TROUSERS

.

•

at

RIDAYand SATURDAY SAL~ELBERFELDS INPOMERO

like a floating lid which has
risen over the dct·ades as the
federal debt lws swelled. If the
past record is any forecast ul
Sale!
the future, I tend to believe that
the so-called temporary $20bi lll on debt limit increase
approved by U1C House will, in
A special group of womens new spring dresses.
reality, be temporary only to
Select
from our regular stock - latest styles.
the extent that CQngress is
fabrics and sizes. Take advantage of this great
putting ofl the inevitable unless
savings.
Misses · Juniors . Half sizes.
over-spending is checked.
According to economists, the
l'eiling's original purpose was
to hn pose a measure of
Many styles to choose from including pa nts
discipline un the federal
uniforms. Not all sizes in all styles . Wh ite and
budget. TI1e debt limit was
colors .
designed to control GovernJunirs - Misses and Half sizes.
ment spending by balancing its
ability lo borrow against its
inclination to tax.
Reg . 7.95 to 13.95 Uniforms · Sale 3.00
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Unfortun ately, the taxReg . 14.00 to 32.50 Uniforms - .
Sale 5.00
Case No . 20,636
payer's dollars ha ve been Estat e of Olaf
Peterson
spent without due regard lor Deceased .
Just Arrived!
While they lasl ...
Notice is hereby gi ven that
the ceiling as a permanent Al ma G . Peterson of Route 1,
Pequot No-Iron Fancy
fixture. In short, many have Rutland , Oh io. ha s been duly
appointed Ad m inis tratr-i x of the
l 'UITIC to accept the ceiling's
Esta t e of Olaf Peterson ,
upward spiral ns a simple lact deceased . ra t e of Route 1,
Buy the new spring styles
, Meigs County , Ohio ,
of budgetary life. As one who is Rutland
now in our First Floor
Credit or s are reoui r ed to file
Lingerie Department.
dec1&gt;ly disturbed by the lact thei r cla ims with s~id fiduciary
Reg. 3.99 Full Size
with four months,
tl1at the American taxpayer is
Dat ed this 28th day at
Reg. 2.99 Twin Size
Waits Gowns - Pa iamas .
paying $43,000 a minute just to Februa ry 1972.
Reg. 2.49 pr. Pillowcases
Long Gowns - Ensembles John c. Bacon
pay the interest on the present
Robes - Mini Gowns . Baby
·
Jud9e
natio nal debt, r don't subscribe
Court of Co mmon Pleas
Dolls.
to the reckless "spend · and · 131 2, 9, 16, Jt Probate Olv rsr on
we'll · worry · about · the •
Special Purchase!
L·onscquences
later"
philosophy .
ADVERTISEMENT
In the lace or approving a $20
FOR BIOS
"I'
IJ
Sealed
proposals
Will
be
Ch
fl
I
·
t
billioi1 request lor added debt receive d by lhe Boor d . 01
OOSe Ora pnn Or SO l"d
I
CO IOr Ve Iura .
capacity, this country has the Ed ucation, of the Eas ter n Local
Sc~ool District, Reedsvi lle ,
REG 2 SO BATH TOWE
·
largest federal deficit since Ohoo,
45772 a1 the oftice of lhe
· ·
·
LS · · · · · · SALE 1.59
World War II . It is estimated clerk , ~eeo sv111e , Ohio, until
REG. 1.59 HAND TOWELS . . . . . . SALE 99c
12 : 00 o cloc k noon eastern
RE
W
that the FY 72 budget deficit slandard
lime, Morch 17. 197l, 1-~~G~
. _s9_c__A_s_H_c_L~O_T_H_s_-~--·_·_.__
. ~s,_A_.,L~E=--4-9;.c.,_/
will run about $40 billion . As I and at that ttme opened by the
cl erk ot said boa rd. as provided
have stated in the past; I Ieel by
49c &amp; S9c Values
law, for
that we're at a liscal
2 trucks chassis suitable 66

MEIGS lHEATRE

•

.

'

Like clockwork each year the crossroads. We either exercise
fiscal wizards ol the Exec'lltive some consistent , orderly
Branch ask the CQngress to restraint on federal spending •
raise th e authorized national or lace again a dangerous
debt ceiling in order to berrow resurgence ol rampant inadditional monies to .pay lor nation .
With this country deep in
oullays which exceed tax
receipts. From 1967 through debt it should be obvious by
last year the debt limit was now that the solutions to this
jacked up three times, by a pressing problem demand
lola! of $65 billion. The present more than just wishful
natio nal debt ceiling is a thinking.
staggering $130 billion, and
only rc"Cently the House passed
legislation authori zing om
increase in the debt limit by yet
A NNOUNCEMENT OF
PUBLIC HEARING
another $20 billion to an allPurs u an l to Chapter 6111 ,
time record $450 hilliuu .
Ohio Revised Code, th e Ohio
I strongly opposed this Water Poll ut ion Con tro l Bo8rd
ll meet and hold a publi c
lcgisl;ltion. Since 1917, wi
hea rm g In Hearing Room NO 2
Congress has actctl 54 limes lo Ohio Depa rtments Build ing, · 65
Sou th Front Str ee t, Columbus,
ad just this limit upwards . 'lllC Ohio,
on th e 6.fh of April , 1972, at

debt ceiling hasn 't bt-en a very
sturdy rool. It has been more

'

lhisone
continuously
cleans
Itself

HALF PRICE SALE

TABLE COVERS

him, grown-up and great for

Round · oval · oblong. MOst
all sizes 3.99 to 10.89 Table
Covers - while they last.
Half price.

the children, gracious In your

2.00 to 5.45
home~
• Speciollllleoted oven liners
and oven door liner dluipalo
normal oven soil
•Lilt-up, ramovobto coaktop

Discover Spring now,

in the pages of this newspaper.

• Removable oven door
• Removabta rack runnera

• Fluornconl cooktop light
• Removobte cooklop hrHII
• Dvon window ond light
• Clock with 1-hour timer

sALE! MAGIC CHEF

Teflon Coated

G~

ALUMINUM COOKWARE
Fired on , no stick interior, for metal
2.89 1 quart Saucepans . • . • .
3.39 2 quart Saucepans • . • • .
3.29 8 inch Skillets . - .
3.95 10
Skillets . . •

RANGES ·

AND MAGIC CHEF

1oob.
Sale 2.00
Sale 2.50
Sale 2.50
Sale 3.00

ELECTRIC RANGES

All Weather

OUTDOOR FURNITURE COVERS
~tormpruof · ~alnproof - Sunproof - Protection to
fit standard size glider. Green vinyl with elastic
bottom.

On Sale
Elberfelds Annex ·
Middle Block

2.99

I;

A line new selection In
while - awcado . Harvest
gotd: Many of these Magic
Chef ranges have selfcleaning· ovens. You'll like
the looks of these Magic
Chef Ranges - Their
performance and you' ll
like the way you can save
dur1ng this sale.

'

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Be thrifty! Save all,of your saleslips from

ELBERFELD$

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IN POMEROY .

·-~

Wearing Apparel For Your Family and Furnishings For Your Home.
••

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. .·..

Z-Tbe Dall)' . .lnel,lolilldleport-Pomeroy,O.,March 16,1972

~

Voice along Br'Way

Generation Rap

.Laurel Oiff
l'lews Notes

By Helen and Sue Bottel
BY JACK O'BRIAN

IS LITTlE FAKE!\ A PHONY?
Dear Rap:
· My girl friend is a phony. Sle make.s herself up to be
aomethinc she. isn~. I mean if I wanted Raquel Welch, I'd go out
h\mtlng.
She wears a wig that isn't the same color asher hair. Sle
cakes on makeup wben she's good.Jooking without it, and last
night I folDicj out she was wearing falsies!
She Is also klnd and lDiderstanding and has a great personality. How do I tell her that I like her better as herself - no
offense intended? - MR. QRPIRB
Dear Mr. Q.:
(I'm curious to know how you found out about the falsies,
huh?)
If she's so ''fake" and repulsive, how come you started liking
her? Guys usually go by looks first- then discover personality.
But now that you know she's also klnd and understanding,
tell her a girl this good.Jooking shouldn't hide it with a mask. (It
might turnout she Isn't, and you'll want her to put it back on .) SUE
Dear QRPmB:
(I'm curious to know what those initials stand ior, huh?)
Your letter reminds us of something we read in ~ local
weekly fun sheet:
Dear Miss l.ovelomer: When my wife gets ready for bed she
takes off her falsies, eyelashes, make-up, wig, 1\'aisl cincher and
something she calls a "fanny.fattener." This is getting to me;
what should I do? - FAKED OUT.
Dear F.O.: Sleep in the drawer, seeing as how that's where
the best parts of her go ! -MISS L.
·
Dear You Two :
A last word on the flag patch business which really amused
me. All that hubbub over "defacing" the flag - and you two
overlooked an obvious rebuttal. The Govemment has a United
States Flag eight~nt stamp! It gets licked, franked, stamped,
cancelled, tom and defaced. I've seen no complaints from
patriots that it should be taken out of circulation.
So-o-o-o, here's a vote for your side, from - A GREAT
GRANDMOTHER
.
Dear Great :
Thanks, greatilrand, we needed that! -HELEN AND SUE
Dear Helen and Sue:
Last year when I was a freshman it was Dullsville. i mean I
waa really out of it: no friends, especially girls, with whom I
scored Zero.
Now this year, as a ao~t~omore, I've changed and become
more outgoing. Which is fine except now there are five very fine
and nice girls I Iilii!, and they seem to like me.
I don't want to hurt anybody's feelings and I'd hate to be
·called a five-timer. If you like them all equally, bow do you
choose?
P. S. l'm not girl crazy. -IN TOO DEEPTOGETOUT
Dear ITDTGO:
If there are five girls you UKE, you have no problem. lf
there are five girls you LOVE- THEN you have a problem!
Keep ltfriendly,get to know them better, and pretty soon the
field will narrow down - either through personality clashes or
because some will go on to different guys. Whatever, don~ start
weeding them out loo soon, or you might be back playing
memories of your freshman year. -SUE
Dear In:
·
Maybe you aren't ready lor real dates yet - which is why
you consider girls good I:Jud(les rather than girl friends. Enjoy
your new popularity, let the girls compete for a wblle, play a
little hard to get (~UIIvely)3 and.save your money. (Dates are
expensive,y'know.)P'lvegirli on a loose string are cheaper than
one tied up as a steady . ..:. HELEN

dering antiques as Je,:•;• ', Arthur (Street
HE'S ON TV:
Singer) 1'-acey etc.... Nlce.scene in this •switSHE'S OFF BDWY
chblade era: the black blind pencil peddler on
NEW YOR!t (KFS) ..:. Pick Cavell's wife, ~th Ave. gently placing a blanketed cushion to
Carrie Nye (some people think he hides her), protect his guide dog from the freezing
comes out of the celebrity~loset Aprll2f for an pavement.
off-Bdwy. role in "The Real Inspector Hand" ...
"Stardust" lyricist Mitchell Parish left P. J.
Father Tom Carey, founder of the very first off. Clarke's at the 4 a.m. closing and reported later
Bdwy. theater, "The Blackfriars," is to friends he got to his only yards-away home an
desperately ill ... Jack Cassidy (whose wife hour later. How come? "I was mugged," he
Shirley Jones checked out of their marriage) shrugged ... Clint Eastwood's share of . "Dirty
checks Into the Sherry-Netherland for Harry" is nearing a tidy $2 million ... Lady
rehearsals of "Tough to Get Help," opening Nancy Keith and her lovely daughter signed the
April 25. Carl Reiner directs.
guest book at Quo Vadls, the former in her
Veep Spiro Agnew years ago wrote a song, proper noble title, daughter in plane style, Kitty
and Frank Sinatra's pal Jinuny Van Heusen Hawks. Her rear name.
(multi.()scar composer) has reworked the tune.
We wince a bit at the TV~ommerclal voice
Ned stop - lyrics and a publisher ... Uzzie imiwtions of Pete Smith of MGM short-subjects
Arden hairdresser RIU. DeSantis, who made the ·· fame (Pete's still around and should do them
China trip with Pat Nixon, is being bombarded himself); meanwhile Len Maxwell coiiects on
by magazines and book publishers to tell all. Pete's tones via Mars Bars and Cool Whip.
("How black are the roots?") ... Tracy Swope, F;Pete's sake! ... TV invades the voices of
20; grandkld of Herbert Bayard Swope and sprig Shirley Booth, W. C. Fields etc ... Publishing
of actress Maggie Hayes, will lecture in Row hears Rod McKuen's reason for abancolleges. On denim, f'gosh sakes!
doning Random House for Simon &amp; Schuster
Seafood dinery in Sea Bright, N. J., waa simply was $500,000 ... No room at the soignee
named the 1\um 1\unner. Found a hidden boat- saloon casino Russe and Jose Ferrer and seven
slip in the 56-year-old building which had once . friends had to occupy a nook wherefrom they
been a refuge for booUeggers · l'1Jillling the couldn't see the Russo-rockin'' floor show. So
Prohibition blockade ... No jokes by comic host Dimitri Poll sent two singers and a
Larry Storch about his manager: she's Norma, balalaika plunker into Jose's jideaway.
Mrs. Storch.
The number Of l!lOVie mosques in the 57thTV's Archie Bwtker couldn't resist all that 3rd Ave. new-showbiz area increased again:
Las Vegas loot: opens June 2lat the 1\iviera as, "The Screening Room," opening in Sept., will
get this folks, "an accomplished singer, dancer bring the Eastside theater total to almost 30.
and story teller" ... The Temptations at the And more to open ... Zsa Zsa 's off to Paris soon
Copa have more valets than the group itself for a Bardo! flick. And hoping BB can't read
numbers ... Toronto shop owner peddled Disney- English: Zsa told interviewers Brigitte had face
characters T-shirts -with that innocent gang &amp; gams repaving ... Dana Andrews' film
· performing sex acts. He was busted of course. ·comeback (after a successfully gallant hattie)
Fined $150. Not enough.
Is complete: he stars with Donald Pleasence
TV reprise of the stylish "The Band Wagon" and Stanley Baker in Para's "Innocent
flick chopped entirely the marvelous opening Byswnders."
"By Myself" sequence of Fred Astaire arriving
Be be Daniels died last year and Ben Lyon's
in N. Y., whicll set the season and flavor of the re-marrying Marion Seiter. After 40 years with
movie. Disgusting clumsiness ... Fred Astaire Bebe, "I just couldn't live alone" ... There are
never really had a peer, but closest was the late bucks in brutality it seems: "Clockwork
Jack Buchanan, a polished 'musical comedy Orange" has Warners projecting a $40 million
giant ... Radio-TV's Joe Franklin hosts a world gross ... Gross Indeed .. . Pretty Pair:
Caribbean cruise dedicated to his "Memory tennlst Pancho Gonzalez with Yvette :Mimieux
Lane" fixation. Joe really wandered far back to. ... Count Basie's Long Island manse has a
piece together Its entertainment: such dod- $125,000 tag on't.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Hamlet in Luck,·Finally

Poor Yorick , sitting West.
thought of trying a five·club
call but decided against it.
Luck had never run well lor
• K 72
him.
• AIIIBH
The lair Ophelia studied
WES'I'
EAST
he r cards for awhile. "To
• Void
• 2
•10 5
• KQ!JB H:12 ~ lam or .not to slam" was her
problem . She bid six.
.JB4
.Q1095
The six·spade ca ll shut off
•KQJ97 •vo;d
Horatio and poor. Yorick
53 2
••rened the king of clubs.
SOUTJI ( llJ
Ophelia put down the
• KQJ 107114:1
dummy and Hamlet. gallant
lor once. said. ·'Thank you.
+A 1; :1
Mrs, Judy Spencer was comy darling."
hostess. Eleven members were
He started to reach fo r
Both v ~dm:rtthlc
present. One guest, Louisa
ll
umn\y's
ace and then
West Nurth F.asl Suuth
Johnson, attended. Games
paused for a mute soliloquy.
Pas.-. Pas!'
Pa!iis
fi •
were won by Georgia Diehl and
Was there any hurry about
Pass
taking
that ace of clubs? Was
Ruby Frick. The April meeting
Openin~
lead-4K
there any harm in taking it ?
will be at the gas company
The
answer to the first ques·
office in Middleport.
lion
was only i! Yorick could
Ry Oswald &amp; .James Jacoby
Hamlet's opening bid of Stnd 51 lo• JACOBY MODERN book
four
spades will be found in
The ant lion, often called
any
bridge
book even though to : ''Win of Brirlg•," (c/o this new5 the doodle·bug, can o n I y
pa,.t), P.O. Bo• 419, tadio City
walk backwards.
not in Shakespeare.
l'iOIITII
•A9 s:.
• A6

IIi

.J

Laurel Cliff

•
Mark

Mr. and Mrs.
Stahl,
Stockdale, and Mr. and Mrs.
WillUim Perry, Athens, visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
Anumber of people called al
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Schaefer to see the sacred Illy.
Mrs. Frances Hewiston was
hostess Thursday evening to
the Laurel Cliff Health Club.

.4

4.

StDfion, New Yor•, N.Y. 10019.

shift to a suit his partner

FRI. &amp;SAT.
Mar.

17
18
VANYL-ITE LATEX INTERIOR
PAINT
NEW

IMPROVED

VANYL - ITE - an
out standin9 late)C paint made with a new Acrylic Vinyl Latex Polymer .

ADAPTABLE -

Save s1.oo·

second was only if ¥orick
could
ruff. clubs.
The answer . to the
held eight
Hamlet decided there was
something rotten about the
club suil and he let Yorick
· hold the !irst trick. It was
just as well. East could have·
ruffed the ace and left Ham.
let one trick short of his
slam .
(NfW SPA PU: ENTUPRISE ASSN.I

•+CRRDJenJe~+

Pas5
Pass
Pass

I•
5

RAPIDLY

-

In

th irty

minutes teavin9 no un pteesenl odor - CLEAN
EASILY WISh equip ment in werm , soapy waltr

:DANCE
. . . TO UVE ENTERTAINMENT
I

SATURDAY NIGHT, MMal 18
10 PM 'TIL 2 AM

•,

Martin Resta
· In, The

Heart of

.John.... •Kalleel Combo
R~lo Clendennen,
John Kallel, on sax

t,

vocalist .

John· lynch, drums
Skip Stewart,

aa·t:te:n:d~e~d~m:o:r:n~in~g~~:r:v:ic~e:s~~'~:::::::::::::::::;::::::::~~::::::::: b

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, March 16,
the 76th day of 1972.
The moon is between its new
ph3se and first quarter.
The morning star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign o! Pisces.
President James Madison
was born on March 16, 1751.
·on tliis day in history :
In 1802 Congress authorized
the establishment of the U.S.
Military Academy at West
Point.
In 1830 only 31 shares were
traded on the New York
Exchange. A record 31,730,000
changed hands on August 16,
1911.
ln 1966 American astronauts
Neil Armstrong and David
Scott docked their Gemini-8
space vehicle with an Agena
craft, the !irst in orbital
history.
In 1971 Tom Dewey, twice
unsuccessful Republican presidential nominee, died at the
age of G8.

TIME
TO PLAN
'
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('

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certain swges, said Snyder.
"But, instead, our coaches,
Capt. Tom Corde and several
of our senior. players did
tremendous jobs 'in clutch
.!i_ituations."

College
Basketball
Results

I

I

25 UnitJ In Stoek. .• l11.eck ~Prices I I

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DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS·MASON AREA

CHESTER L, TANNEHILL .

Euc. Ed.

'

ROBERT HOEFLICH,

The setting for all the action
is round two of the NCAA
basketball ch~mpionship, with
four doubleheaders on tap at as
many sites tonight. The two
winners in each section will
meet Saturday for the right to
advance to the semifinals in
Los Angeles lhe following
weekend.
Only UCLA, carrying a
pe,rfect 26.0 record and the
unanimous choice as the
country's No. I team in the
final UPI ratings, figures as a
runaway fa•orite tonight
against 18-9 Weber State. ln the
second game of the doublehead·

City Editor.
Published daily ucept
Safr,rdey by The Ohio v~uev
Publishing Company , 111
Court St .. Pomeroy , Ohio ,
oiS16t. Business Off ice Phone
H2-2150, Editor ial Phone 992 -

7157.

Second ctns postage- pa id at
Pomeroy , Oh io.

Ebersbach
Hardware
"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
. POMEROY

National ~dverHs i no
repruentative
Bottinelli ·
Gallagher , tn c., 12 Eut 42nd
St .. New York City , New York .
Subscription rates : Oe lh!ltrtd by carrier where
l'¥'1111ble 50 cenfs per week ;
By Motor Route where ·ca rr ie r
servkr not availablr : One
month S1.7S. By ma il in Ohio
and W va ., One year \14 .00 .
Si11 months S7 .25. Three
months S4 .SO . Subs cr iption
price includes Sunday Times .
Sentinel .

PRICES START AT
See one of these
salesmen for an Olds
Slep Ahead Spring
Deal:
Pete Burris,
Marvin Keebaugh or
Irving Karr ..

The fun mower to own. Rear 13.5
cu . in . 4·CYC ie engine. 3 forw.1 rd
speeds, neutral and 1 reverse ...
so easy to operate it feels almost

STORE HOURS:

like driving a ca r. 71evel cu!!lng
heights . Easy.actlon recoil

hi9h . Many sa fety featur e ~
Bright red color .

EasternConference
Atlantic Division
W. L. Pet.

BoSI.
n
New York
Philadelphia
Buffalo
B~l

starter. 1-plec;e steel grass cutting blade. EM c;ep1ional traction
fr om 12 .SO)j4. 10-in . pneumatic
rear tires ; 10.50M3.SO-in. semi.
pneuma1ic front tires . S-in. guide
wheels . Overal~ : 52)(31x37 in

NBA Standings
ByUnltedPresslnlernalional

Lou &amp;The!iiila

Catalog Merthant

OSBORNE
220 E.

~in

'

THURSDAY
FRIDAY

.

PH. 992-5342

J

Catcher carlton Fisk hit a
two-run homer in the eighth
inning to give the Boson Red
Sox a 2.0 triumph over the St.
Louis cardinals. Rick Wise,
obtained by the Cardinals for
Steve Carlton, allowed
one hit and one walk in
five innings . . . The Phi·
ladeiphia Phillies scored five
runs off Joel Horlen in the fifth
and sixth innings to whip the

Chicago White Sox , 8-6 .. .
Consecutive hits by Tim Foli,
Jerry Koosman, Ken Singleton,
Ken Boswell and Mike Jor.
gensen paced a five-run sev·
enth·inning which enabled the
New York Mets to beat the
Pittsburgh Pirates, 9-4.
Jim Perry allowed four hits
in five innings and rookies
Greg Jaycox and Tom Norton
completed the shutout as the

25
30
47 .
54

30 45 .400 4li2
26 45 .400 41 ,

W. L. Pet. GB
•·Mil waukee 59 18 .766 .. .
Chicago
52 24 .684 6'.,
Phoenix
46 31 .597 13
De 'roi '
23 51 .311 34' 2
Pacific Divisic.n
W. L. Pel . GB

.!. . .L.dt:

.- Los~nqeles 6.• 12 .842 ...
Gold"'' q
t7 1 ~ 1.?7 16' ,

Milwaukee Brewers 1 9-4 win

over the Giants ... Bobby
Brooks' two homers and a
single led the Oakl and
Athletics lo a 12.1 romp over
the california Angels.

Bench Is l1npressive, Reds Lose
MIAMI (UP!) - Johnny
Bench impressed a crowd of 1,·
957 Wednesday with his display
of power, but the Cincinnati
Reds still fell victim to the
Baltimore Orioles 4.J in Grape·
fruit League competition.
The Reds play the New York
Yankees today at Fort Lauder·
dale .
The Reds were ahead 3 • 2

when Paul Blair slugged a
ninth inning single with two out
to give the Orioles the victory.
Bench hit a homer in the
fourth to put Cincinnati on lop
1.0 and then slammed a second
one in the eighth with a run·
ner aboard.
The Orioles countered with a
run in the fourth on a walk and
an error, a run in the sixth on

back-lo.IJack hits by Don Bu·
ford , Mark Belanger and Chico
Salmon , another in the eighth
and then Blairs heroics in the
ninth.
Gary Nolan started for Cin·
cinnatl and worked five innings.
He gave way to Jim McGloUl·
lin , Ed Sprague and Joe Gib·
bon . Gibbon got lhe loss.

Ph. 992·5515
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.'

Springtime

SALE

DON &amp;EDNA WILSON

er, it will be sixth-ranked Long
Beach State against the Univer.
sity of San Francisco.
Most of the evening 's fireworks are expected at Morgan·
town, with second·rankedNorth
Carolina meeting No. 5 South
Carolinaandthird-rankedPennsylvania going against cross.
town Philadelphia rival Villanova, which is rated 15th.
Marq"ette, the No. 7 team in
the country and lucky just to be
in the NCAA after noarly being
expelled earlier this week,
takes on 14th-ranked Kentucky
in the first half of a
doubleheader at Dayton, Ohio,
with the nightcap pairing Big 10
champion Minnesota, the No. l2
ranking team, and lOth-ranked
Florida State.
In the final doubleheader at
Ames, Iowa, it will be fourth·
ranked Louisville against
eighth·ranked Southwestern
Louisiana and 16th-ran ked
Kansas State against Texas.
Two of the nation's finest
guards will be matched at
Ames, with first-team All·
America Dwight Lamar . of
Southwestern Louisiana going
against Louisville's Jim Price,
a second-team selection. Lamar
averaged 36.6 points ~er game
in leading the Cajuns to a 24·3
record.

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Springtime Is
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2 Piece
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_ ·•
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Seallle

47 31 .603 18

\

31 44 .413 32 11~
16 61 .208 481!~
x-Ciincheddivisiontitle

Hou ston
P')rlta nd

.~%c-1 ~,

GB
Wednesday's Results
675
·.600
l
os
Angeles
121 Cincinnati 116
6
.382 22,12 Allanla 134 Seaflle 96
.270 30,12 Bos lon 120 Philadelphia 115
Phoen ix 110 Milwaukee 106

W. L. Pet. GB
34 40 .459 ..

Minnesota Twins downed the
· New York Yankees, 3&lt;1. It was
the Yankees' ninth loss and
fifth shutout in 13 exhibition
games ... Rick Auerbach ha d
four hils in four trips in the

49 N. Secood

- (Onl games sc heduled)

fh~rsday'sGames

Bal 1jmore at Cleveland
New Y'"lrk at Houston

Midwest Div ision

POMEROY, 0.
•®., 'Jo'lCNiHO

•,

In other camps: Don Sutton,
who went live innings, and
Claude Osteen combined on a
five-hitter as the Los Angeles
Dodgers heat the Montreal
Expos, :&gt;-0. Dodger pitching
has allowed one run in the last
three games ... Gay lord Perry,
acquired during the winter in
the trade that sent Sam Me·
Dowell to San Francisco,
pitched six shutout innings in
the Cleveland Indians' 8-2 win
over the San Diego Padres.
Paul Blair singled in the
decisive run in the ninth inning
as the Baltimore Orioles
defeated the Cincinnati Reds,
4-3, despite two homers and
three runs ba !ted in by Johnny
Bench ... The Chicago Cubs
routed the Tokyo Orions, 11·2,
after being held hitless for 51.:J
innings
by
38-year·old
Masaaka Koyama ... Homers
by Aurelio Rodriguez and
Norm Cash led the Detroit
Trigers to a 6-2 victory over the
Kansas City Royals.

landa f Golden Stale
Cleveland
22 53 .293 12'1&gt; · Poro
I
Only
games schedul ed)
western Conference

Oldsmobile·Cad iliac

Pomeroy

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Ananta
Cincinnf!fi

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

9:00TO NOON
9:00 To 9:00

992·2178

52
45
29
20

Ceutrat Division

MON., TUES.
WED.&amp;SAT.
9:00toS:OO

decla red

'

Pro Standings

.

'

"Sporty-look" CRAASMAN
6-HP Rotary Riding Mower.

were

H.an k
Aaron Makes 1972 Debut

By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Conservative basketball fans
who like their endings straight
and proper can turn toward
Provo, Utah, tonight, where
that old reliable machine from
UCLA figures to continue its
smooth passage to an unprecedented sixth consecuiive NCAA
championship.
But for those who prefer
sorpe suspense with the possibility of raucous, last-minute
doings both on and off the
court, the place to be is
Morgantown, W.Va ., where a
pair of bitter rivals meet in
both ends of a doubleheader.

.•

'

Warriors

ineligible the following day
because of the questionable
status of star forward Bob
Lackey.
Lackey,
the
leading
Marquette scorer with a 15.1
mark , refused to sign a a[.
fidavit verifying he had not
negotiated to turn pro. On
Monday however, Lackey
signed the affidavit and the

NCAA reinstated the Warriors "They are quicker than we are
after threatening to replace and they jump better than we
them with Ohio U.
do. They're a lot like Tennes·
see. They don't throw the ball
Earlier after. Marquette had away very often ."
rolled up a 21.0 record, star
Kentucky lied for the South6-11 center Jim Chones signed eastern Conference champion.
a pro contract with the ABA ship with Tennessee, ·but got
New York Nets, making him in· the NCAA nod by virtue of its
eligible.
two victories over the Vols.
The Warriors lost two of thier
Leading the Kentucky
last five games o! theregular sco;·ings is 6·11 junior Jim
season, finishing 24-2 and rank· Andrews with a 21.9 mark and
ed seventh in the UPI ratings. followed by 6-6 senior Tom
Parker at 18.6. The othe•· three
Need Luck on luck
Rupp, who may he coaching Wildcat starters also are in
the last games of his fabled double figures .
career at Kentucky, said he
The winners tonight meet Sat.
•vas' 'optimistic'' about the Wild·
cats'
chances
against urday afternoon forth~ Mideast
Marquette but said his team Regional championship and a
would have to have "luc~ on ticket tonational semi.finals the
following Thurstay in Los Angetop of luck" for a win .
"Marquette is a very line les . Tonight's losers play a conball team,'' the perky Ruppsaid . solation game Saturday.

NCAA Crown

·.

Answer Tmnurru\\'

styles.
· Musselman, a strict disciple
of a tight defense, is in his first
year at Minnesota and led the
Gophers into their first NCAA
tournament ever. lt was only
the third time they had won the
Big Ten title - the first was an
outright championship in 1919
and the second a tie with
Diinois in 1937, two years
before the NCAA tournament
began .
"Florida State has a tot of
talent," Musselman said of the
· Seminoles, who bring a 2li-4
recordintothegame. "They've
got a Jot of bench strength and
that worries us ."
While Florida State is deep,
Musselman was forced to go
with an "iron five"lineup after
the suspensions of Corky
Taylor and Ron Be hagen .

afternoon, .but got fog-bound at
home and didn't arrive until
late.
Tonight's first game pits
coach Adolph Rupp's Kentucky
Wildcats, marking their 20th
trip to the NCAA tourney,
against Marquette , which still
wasn't sure un til late Monday
it was going to be allowed to
compete.
Despite a convincing 73-49
win over Ohio University
Saturday at Knoxville, the

Defense Of

I'OiiEIOY, 0.

·----------!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

25''
CUT

see a rontras.t in coaching

'n1e Minnesota defense emphasis is borne out in the teams
scoring averages, which show
IHl Clyde Turner lo be the only
Gopher in double ligures with
an 18.4. scoring average.
Florida State, meanwhile, has
an 88.7 per game scoring
average to throw against
Minnesota's 56 .9 defensive
mark, ·· and four players
averaging in (\ouble ligures.
Seminoles Fog Bound
Ron King leads the
Seminoles at 17.5, with 6-10
Reggie Royals next at 15.9,
followed by IHl Roland Garrett
at 13.4 and 6-11 Lawrence
McCray al 12.6.
· The Seminoles, who earned
their regional berth with a
tougher than eXJ!OCted 83-81
win over Eastern Kentucky
Saturday at Knoxville, Tenn.,
were to be the first team to
practice here Wednesday

UCLA Opens

.·

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
PH. 992·2126

Marquette and . Kentucky, will

execution," said Musselman,
whose Gophers captured the
Big Ten title and posted a 17-6
overall mark. "We took three
of four days off after our final
By United Press International
game and we don 'I usually do
NAIA Championship
anything like that."
At Kansas City, Mo.
(Second Round)
Contrast in Styles
Hank Aaron made his spring
Weslmonf (Calif.l71
ABA Results
The Minnesota - Florida debut for the Atlanta Braves
Xavier (La.l 59 State game, which follows to- Wednesday and let it be known
By United Press International
Sf. Thomas (Minn .) 93
East
Ouachifa Bapfisf (Ark .) 87 night's ·first contest between in his quiet way that he is
W. l. Pet. GB
•· Ken tucky 60 14 .811 ... Auguslana (Ill. I 76
physically and mentally ready
Glenville St. (W.Va .) 75 of
Virginia
43 33 .566 18
for
the ordeal that is ahead as
NG Cage Tourney
Western Washington St. 7.4
New York
39 37 .513 22
he closes in on Babe Ruth's ailNortheastern Oklahoma Sf. 68
Floridians
31 44 .413 29lf&gt;
Sfephen
F.
Ausfin
&lt;Tex.)
87
Carolina
Dates
Announced
30 46 .395 31
time career mark of 714 home
Adams Sl. 1Colo.l77
Pitfsburgh 24 52 .316 37
rW'ls.
Eau Cia ;re (Wis. ) 59
West
The third annual North
Aaron, who will start the 1972
Belhaven (Miss.) 53
W. L. Pet. GB
Band
Boosters'
InGallia
Gardner-Webb I N.C.) 91
season needing 75 homers to
•·Utah ,
55 21 .724 ...
Pittsburgh Sf. IKan.) 87 dependent Basketball Tour. surpass Ruth's career total,
Indiana
41 33 .554 13
Kentucky Sf. 112
Dallas
36 40 .474 19
namenl will be held April 12,
West Georgia SJ 14, 15, 19, 21 and 22, according singled, grounded out and was
Denver
30 45 .400 2~•;,
NCAA Colt Div Championship
called out on strikes in the
Memphis
26 · SO .342 29
to Phil Skidmore, tournament Braves' 4.() loss to the Houston
Af Evansville, Ind.
X·Ciincheddivlsionlitle
(Qu~rlerflnal Round)
manager.
Wednesday's Results
Astros. Aaron, 38, looked as
TennesSJ!e Sl. 95
New York 119 Memphis 112
A
$25
entry
fee
will
be
sharp
as he did last season
;Soulhampfon
I
N.Y.)
55
Utah 109 Indiana 108
charged.
Trophies
will
be
Roanoke
(Va.)
94
(Onlygamesscheduledl
when he batted .327 with 47
Missouri (51. Louis) 69
presented lo the first two homers.and 118 runs batted in.
Thursday's Games
Eastern Michigan 93
Utah vs. Floridians
teams. Any team interested is
"No doubt I'll start feeling
Assumption 88
Af Tampa
asked
to
contact
Skidmore
or
Akron
(Ohio)
92
the
pressure as I get closer and
Carolina at Denver
Southern Colorado Sf. 11 call 446·3993.
IOnlygamesscheduled)
closer to Ruth's record," said
Aaron after the game. "But I
like pressure. I seem to play
better wher there's something
at stake. It's times like when
we are out of the race and l
If your front wheels are out of alignment,
have nothing in particular to
shoot for that I find myself
your car won't ride and handle properly,
letting down."
and your tires will wear
,. out rapidly. Our
• •expert mechan (~~ .~'!1 align your wheels
~ properly on our ~recision equipment at
•. this low price.
'·
·

.·
.·

What do you do now ?
A-PIL"ls. PBI'tner pla('t.od the
conll·act.

.J

'

JIM SNYDER

DAYTON .(UPif - Minnesota coach Bill Musselman is
more worried about his team 's
"execution" and Florida
,State's "depth" than he is
about what kind of reception
the Gophers are going to get
here tonight in the first round
of the NCAA Mideast Regional
basketball tournament.
. "I really don •t have any
idea;" Musselman said when
asked what he expected from
the predominatly Ohio fans in
the 13,458-seat University of
Dayton Arena.
The Gophers were involved
in the most widely publicized
and controversiOJ melee of the
year at U1e end of their game
with Ohio State Jan. 25,
resulting in the suspension for
the rest of the season of two
Minnesota players.
And as one observor put it,
"This is Buckeye Country."
" I'm worried about our

Most
American cars
Parts extra, if needed

+J .AKQ76

.AK6 51 .A 2
Whal do yo u bid'.'

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Ohio
University Coach Jim Snyder
has been named Mid American
Confer~nce Coach of the Year
his second such title in three
years, it was announced today.
Ohio University was co-winner of the MAC with Toledo and
defeated the Rockets in a playoff. Snyder also won the same
honors in 1970. ·
Snyder beat out Bobby Nic·
hols of Toledo and Frank Triutt
of Kent SUI~ finished third.
"I'm flabergasted," said Sny·
der. "This is quite a surprise
and honor I never dreamed of
getting.
"But it's been a most unusual
ye~r and this aort of follows our
·patternofbeinghigherthanhlgh
one day and lower than low the
next," said Snyder.
"Acutally .this is a tribute to
our players and my assiswnt
coaches - Dale Bandy and
George Klein," said Snyder.
"This was a year when it would
· have been easy for our coaches
and players to collapse at

$

You, South. hold :
.9R6$4 .A2

Of.The Year

·Front End·Alig~ment

11nltd g!.11, t»ttttr &amp; R.
Htt. tttlnltll c:.mper
mlrrort. frt. tltblllztr,
e&amp;IL A. 'Prll'lflo S.,.IIH
R. lhocltt, a V-t to~IM,
Turio

.

The Daily Sentinel

WASHABILITY - dirl and

110 W. MAIN

t

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Pas."i
Pass
Pas."i

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West
North
East

types of Interior walls and
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surflcts, use tap -water tor
th inning EASY TO
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Sabbath School attendance
March 12 at the Free Melllodist
Church waa 129. Offering for
.the day was $205.
Mr. and Mrs. 1\aymond Gill,
Cambridge, spent the weekend
with his son, Rev. Eugene.Gill
and family, an.d attended
church services Sunday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs, Pbll Wise,
Beverly, attended church
services here Swtday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bauer,
Marion, spent the weekend
wi th Mrs. Bauer's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Karr and

Snyder Is .
MAC Coach

REGULAR 5.85 GAL

lor all

Cltllln!jls- ECONOM I CAL

BY BERTHA PARKER

3- The DIUy Senilnol,Middlepo,rt-PCJIIlei'Oy,O., March 16,1972

lblday at the toCa1 claarch.
patient at Unlvenlty Jbpltal,
Mr. Chlrlel Diehl remalna 1 COiwnbua.

~

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CHAISE LOUNGE
~nd

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A Coondog field trial will
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Z-Tbe Dall)' . .lnel,lolilldleport-Pomeroy,O.,March 16,1972

~

Voice along Br'Way

Generation Rap

.Laurel Oiff
l'lews Notes

By Helen and Sue Bottel
BY JACK O'BRIAN

IS LITTlE FAKE!\ A PHONY?
Dear Rap:
· My girl friend is a phony. Sle make.s herself up to be
aomethinc she. isn~. I mean if I wanted Raquel Welch, I'd go out
h\mtlng.
She wears a wig that isn't the same color asher hair. Sle
cakes on makeup wben she's good.Jooking without it, and last
night I folDicj out she was wearing falsies!
She Is also klnd and lDiderstanding and has a great personality. How do I tell her that I like her better as herself - no
offense intended? - MR. QRPIRB
Dear Mr. Q.:
(I'm curious to know how you found out about the falsies,
huh?)
If she's so ''fake" and repulsive, how come you started liking
her? Guys usually go by looks first- then discover personality.
But now that you know she's also klnd and understanding,
tell her a girl this good.Jooking shouldn't hide it with a mask. (It
might turnout she Isn't, and you'll want her to put it back on .) SUE
Dear QRPmB:
(I'm curious to know what those initials stand ior, huh?)
Your letter reminds us of something we read in ~ local
weekly fun sheet:
Dear Miss l.ovelomer: When my wife gets ready for bed she
takes off her falsies, eyelashes, make-up, wig, 1\'aisl cincher and
something she calls a "fanny.fattener." This is getting to me;
what should I do? - FAKED OUT.
Dear F.O.: Sleep in the drawer, seeing as how that's where
the best parts of her go ! -MISS L.
·
Dear You Two :
A last word on the flag patch business which really amused
me. All that hubbub over "defacing" the flag - and you two
overlooked an obvious rebuttal. The Govemment has a United
States Flag eight~nt stamp! It gets licked, franked, stamped,
cancelled, tom and defaced. I've seen no complaints from
patriots that it should be taken out of circulation.
So-o-o-o, here's a vote for your side, from - A GREAT
GRANDMOTHER
.
Dear Great :
Thanks, greatilrand, we needed that! -HELEN AND SUE
Dear Helen and Sue:
Last year when I was a freshman it was Dullsville. i mean I
waa really out of it: no friends, especially girls, with whom I
scored Zero.
Now this year, as a ao~t~omore, I've changed and become
more outgoing. Which is fine except now there are five very fine
and nice girls I Iilii!, and they seem to like me.
I don't want to hurt anybody's feelings and I'd hate to be
·called a five-timer. If you like them all equally, bow do you
choose?
P. S. l'm not girl crazy. -IN TOO DEEPTOGETOUT
Dear ITDTGO:
If there are five girls you UKE, you have no problem. lf
there are five girls you LOVE- THEN you have a problem!
Keep ltfriendly,get to know them better, and pretty soon the
field will narrow down - either through personality clashes or
because some will go on to different guys. Whatever, don~ start
weeding them out loo soon, or you might be back playing
memories of your freshman year. -SUE
Dear In:
·
Maybe you aren't ready lor real dates yet - which is why
you consider girls good I:Jud(les rather than girl friends. Enjoy
your new popularity, let the girls compete for a wblle, play a
little hard to get (~UIIvely)3 and.save your money. (Dates are
expensive,y'know.)P'lvegirli on a loose string are cheaper than
one tied up as a steady . ..:. HELEN

dering antiques as Je,:•;• ', Arthur (Street
HE'S ON TV:
Singer) 1'-acey etc.... Nlce.scene in this •switSHE'S OFF BDWY
chblade era: the black blind pencil peddler on
NEW YOR!t (KFS) ..:. Pick Cavell's wife, ~th Ave. gently placing a blanketed cushion to
Carrie Nye (some people think he hides her), protect his guide dog from the freezing
comes out of the celebrity~loset Aprll2f for an pavement.
off-Bdwy. role in "The Real Inspector Hand" ...
"Stardust" lyricist Mitchell Parish left P. J.
Father Tom Carey, founder of the very first off. Clarke's at the 4 a.m. closing and reported later
Bdwy. theater, "The Blackfriars," is to friends he got to his only yards-away home an
desperately ill ... Jack Cassidy (whose wife hour later. How come? "I was mugged," he
Shirley Jones checked out of their marriage) shrugged ... Clint Eastwood's share of . "Dirty
checks Into the Sherry-Netherland for Harry" is nearing a tidy $2 million ... Lady
rehearsals of "Tough to Get Help," opening Nancy Keith and her lovely daughter signed the
April 25. Carl Reiner directs.
guest book at Quo Vadls, the former in her
Veep Spiro Agnew years ago wrote a song, proper noble title, daughter in plane style, Kitty
and Frank Sinatra's pal Jinuny Van Heusen Hawks. Her rear name.
(multi.()scar composer) has reworked the tune.
We wince a bit at the TV~ommerclal voice
Ned stop - lyrics and a publisher ... Uzzie imiwtions of Pete Smith of MGM short-subjects
Arden hairdresser RIU. DeSantis, who made the ·· fame (Pete's still around and should do them
China trip with Pat Nixon, is being bombarded himself); meanwhile Len Maxwell coiiects on
by magazines and book publishers to tell all. Pete's tones via Mars Bars and Cool Whip.
("How black are the roots?") ... Tracy Swope, F;Pete's sake! ... TV invades the voices of
20; grandkld of Herbert Bayard Swope and sprig Shirley Booth, W. C. Fields etc ... Publishing
of actress Maggie Hayes, will lecture in Row hears Rod McKuen's reason for abancolleges. On denim, f'gosh sakes!
doning Random House for Simon &amp; Schuster
Seafood dinery in Sea Bright, N. J., waa simply was $500,000 ... No room at the soignee
named the 1\um 1\unner. Found a hidden boat- saloon casino Russe and Jose Ferrer and seven
slip in the 56-year-old building which had once . friends had to occupy a nook wherefrom they
been a refuge for booUeggers · l'1Jillling the couldn't see the Russo-rockin'' floor show. So
Prohibition blockade ... No jokes by comic host Dimitri Poll sent two singers and a
Larry Storch about his manager: she's Norma, balalaika plunker into Jose's jideaway.
Mrs. Storch.
The number Of l!lOVie mosques in the 57thTV's Archie Bwtker couldn't resist all that 3rd Ave. new-showbiz area increased again:
Las Vegas loot: opens June 2lat the 1\iviera as, "The Screening Room," opening in Sept., will
get this folks, "an accomplished singer, dancer bring the Eastside theater total to almost 30.
and story teller" ... The Temptations at the And more to open ... Zsa Zsa 's off to Paris soon
Copa have more valets than the group itself for a Bardo! flick. And hoping BB can't read
numbers ... Toronto shop owner peddled Disney- English: Zsa told interviewers Brigitte had face
characters T-shirts -with that innocent gang &amp; gams repaving ... Dana Andrews' film
· performing sex acts. He was busted of course. ·comeback (after a successfully gallant hattie)
Fined $150. Not enough.
Is complete: he stars with Donald Pleasence
TV reprise of the stylish "The Band Wagon" and Stanley Baker in Para's "Innocent
flick chopped entirely the marvelous opening Byswnders."
"By Myself" sequence of Fred Astaire arriving
Be be Daniels died last year and Ben Lyon's
in N. Y., whicll set the season and flavor of the re-marrying Marion Seiter. After 40 years with
movie. Disgusting clumsiness ... Fred Astaire Bebe, "I just couldn't live alone" ... There are
never really had a peer, but closest was the late bucks in brutality it seems: "Clockwork
Jack Buchanan, a polished 'musical comedy Orange" has Warners projecting a $40 million
giant ... Radio-TV's Joe Franklin hosts a world gross ... Gross Indeed .. . Pretty Pair:
Caribbean cruise dedicated to his "Memory tennlst Pancho Gonzalez with Yvette :Mimieux
Lane" fixation. Joe really wandered far back to. ... Count Basie's Long Island manse has a
piece together Its entertainment: such dod- $125,000 tag on't.

WIN AT BRIDGE

Hamlet in Luck,·Finally

Poor Yorick , sitting West.
thought of trying a five·club
call but decided against it.
Luck had never run well lor
• K 72
him.
• AIIIBH
The lair Ophelia studied
WES'I'
EAST
he r cards for awhile. "To
• Void
• 2
•10 5
• KQ!JB H:12 ~ lam or .not to slam" was her
problem . She bid six.
.JB4
.Q1095
The six·spade ca ll shut off
•KQJ97 •vo;d
Horatio and poor. Yorick
53 2
••rened the king of clubs.
SOUTJI ( llJ
Ophelia put down the
• KQJ 107114:1
dummy and Hamlet. gallant
lor once. said. ·'Thank you.
+A 1; :1
Mrs, Judy Spencer was comy darling."
hostess. Eleven members were
He started to reach fo r
Both v ~dm:rtthlc
present. One guest, Louisa
ll
umn\y's
ace and then
West Nurth F.asl Suuth
Johnson, attended. Games
paused for a mute soliloquy.
Pas.-. Pas!'
Pa!iis
fi •
were won by Georgia Diehl and
Was there any hurry about
Pass
taking
that ace of clubs? Was
Ruby Frick. The April meeting
Openin~
lead-4K
there any harm in taking it ?
will be at the gas company
The
answer to the first ques·
office in Middleport.
lion
was only i! Yorick could
Ry Oswald &amp; .James Jacoby
Hamlet's opening bid of Stnd 51 lo• JACOBY MODERN book
four
spades will be found in
The ant lion, often called
any
bridge
book even though to : ''Win of Brirlg•," (c/o this new5 the doodle·bug, can o n I y
pa,.t), P.O. Bo• 419, tadio City
walk backwards.
not in Shakespeare.
l'iOIITII
•A9 s:.
• A6

IIi

.J

Laurel Cliff

•
Mark

Mr. and Mrs.
Stahl,
Stockdale, and Mr. and Mrs.
WillUim Perry, Athens, visited
recently with Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
Anumber of people called al
the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Schaefer to see the sacred Illy.
Mrs. Frances Hewiston was
hostess Thursday evening to
the Laurel Cliff Health Club.

.4

4.

StDfion, New Yor•, N.Y. 10019.

shift to a suit his partner

FRI. &amp;SAT.
Mar.

17
18
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PAINT
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ADAPTABLE -

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second was only if ¥orick
could
ruff. clubs.
The answer . to the
held eight
Hamlet decided there was
something rotten about the
club suil and he let Yorick
· hold the !irst trick. It was
just as well. East could have·
ruffed the ace and left Ham.
let one trick short of his
slam .
(NfW SPA PU: ENTUPRISE ASSN.I

•+CRRDJenJe~+

Pas5
Pass
Pass

I•
5

RAPIDLY

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In

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minutes teavin9 no un pteesenl odor - CLEAN
EASILY WISh equip ment in werm , soapy waltr

:DANCE
. . . TO UVE ENTERTAINMENT
I

SATURDAY NIGHT, MMal 18
10 PM 'TIL 2 AM

•,

Martin Resta
· In, The

Heart of

.John.... •Kalleel Combo
R~lo Clendennen,
John Kallel, on sax

t,

vocalist .

John· lynch, drums
Skip Stewart,

aa·t:te:n:d~e~d~m:o:r:n~in~g~~:r:v:ic~e:s~~'~:::::::::::::::::;::::::::~~::::::::: b

The Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, March 16,
the 76th day of 1972.
The moon is between its new
ph3se and first quarter.
The morning star is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign o! Pisces.
President James Madison
was born on March 16, 1751.
·on tliis day in history :
In 1802 Congress authorized
the establishment of the U.S.
Military Academy at West
Point.
In 1830 only 31 shares were
traded on the New York
Exchange. A record 31,730,000
changed hands on August 16,
1911.
ln 1966 American astronauts
Neil Armstrong and David
Scott docked their Gemini-8
space vehicle with an Agena
craft, the !irst in orbital
history.
In 1971 Tom Dewey, twice
unsuccessful Republican presidential nominee, died at the
age of G8.

TIME
TO PLAN
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certain swges, said Snyder.
"But, instead, our coaches,
Capt. Tom Corde and several
of our senior. players did
tremendous jobs 'in clutch
.!i_ituations."

College
Basketball
Results

I

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DEVOTED TO THE
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MEIGS·MASON AREA

CHESTER L, TANNEHILL .

Euc. Ed.

'

ROBERT HOEFLICH,

The setting for all the action
is round two of the NCAA
basketball ch~mpionship, with
four doubleheaders on tap at as
many sites tonight. The two
winners in each section will
meet Saturday for the right to
advance to the semifinals in
Los Angeles lhe following
weekend.
Only UCLA, carrying a
pe,rfect 26.0 record and the
unanimous choice as the
country's No. I team in the
final UPI ratings, figures as a
runaway fa•orite tonight
against 18-9 Weber State. ln the
second game of the doublehead·

City Editor.
Published daily ucept
Safr,rdey by The Ohio v~uev
Publishing Company , 111
Court St .. Pomeroy , Ohio ,
oiS16t. Business Off ice Phone
H2-2150, Editor ial Phone 992 -

7157.

Second ctns postage- pa id at
Pomeroy , Oh io.

Ebersbach
Hardware
"EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE"
. POMEROY

National ~dverHs i no
repruentative
Bottinelli ·
Gallagher , tn c., 12 Eut 42nd
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Subscription rates : Oe lh!ltrtd by carrier where
l'¥'1111ble 50 cenfs per week ;
By Motor Route where ·ca rr ie r
servkr not availablr : One
month S1.7S. By ma il in Ohio
and W va ., One year \14 .00 .
Si11 months S7 .25. Three
months S4 .SO . Subs cr iption
price includes Sunday Times .
Sentinel .

PRICES START AT
See one of these
salesmen for an Olds
Slep Ahead Spring
Deal:
Pete Burris,
Marvin Keebaugh or
Irving Karr ..

The fun mower to own. Rear 13.5
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speeds, neutral and 1 reverse ...
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EasternConference
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Philadelphia
Buffalo
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starter. 1-plec;e steel grass cutting blade. EM c;ep1ional traction
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NBA Standings
ByUnltedPresslnlernalional

Lou &amp;The!iiila

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OSBORNE
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THURSDAY
FRIDAY

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PH. 992-5342

J

Catcher carlton Fisk hit a
two-run homer in the eighth
inning to give the Boson Red
Sox a 2.0 triumph over the St.
Louis cardinals. Rick Wise,
obtained by the Cardinals for
Steve Carlton, allowed
one hit and one walk in
five innings . . . The Phi·
ladeiphia Phillies scored five
runs off Joel Horlen in the fifth
and sixth innings to whip the

Chicago White Sox , 8-6 .. .
Consecutive hits by Tim Foli,
Jerry Koosman, Ken Singleton,
Ken Boswell and Mike Jor.
gensen paced a five-run sev·
enth·inning which enabled the
New York Mets to beat the
Pittsburgh Pirates, 9-4.
Jim Perry allowed four hits
in five innings and rookies
Greg Jaycox and Tom Norton
completed the shutout as the

25
30
47 .
54

30 45 .400 4li2
26 45 .400 41 ,

W. L. Pet. GB
•·Mil waukee 59 18 .766 .. .
Chicago
52 24 .684 6'.,
Phoenix
46 31 .597 13
De 'roi '
23 51 .311 34' 2
Pacific Divisic.n
W. L. Pel . GB

.!. . .L.dt:

.- Los~nqeles 6.• 12 .842 ...
Gold"'' q
t7 1 ~ 1.?7 16' ,

Milwaukee Brewers 1 9-4 win

over the Giants ... Bobby
Brooks' two homers and a
single led the Oakl and
Athletics lo a 12.1 romp over
the california Angels.

Bench Is l1npressive, Reds Lose
MIAMI (UP!) - Johnny
Bench impressed a crowd of 1,·
957 Wednesday with his display
of power, but the Cincinnati
Reds still fell victim to the
Baltimore Orioles 4.J in Grape·
fruit League competition.
The Reds play the New York
Yankees today at Fort Lauder·
dale .
The Reds were ahead 3 • 2

when Paul Blair slugged a
ninth inning single with two out
to give the Orioles the victory.
Bench hit a homer in the
fourth to put Cincinnati on lop
1.0 and then slammed a second
one in the eighth with a run·
ner aboard.
The Orioles countered with a
run in the fourth on a walk and
an error, a run in the sixth on

back-lo.IJack hits by Don Bu·
ford , Mark Belanger and Chico
Salmon , another in the eighth
and then Blairs heroics in the
ninth.
Gary Nolan started for Cin·
cinnatl and worked five innings.
He gave way to Jim McGloUl·
lin , Ed Sprague and Joe Gib·
bon . Gibbon got lhe loss.

Ph. 992·5515
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.'

Springtime

SALE

DON &amp;EDNA WILSON

er, it will be sixth-ranked Long
Beach State against the Univer.
sity of San Francisco.
Most of the evening 's fireworks are expected at Morgan·
town, with second·rankedNorth
Carolina meeting No. 5 South
Carolinaandthird-rankedPennsylvania going against cross.
town Philadelphia rival Villanova, which is rated 15th.
Marq"ette, the No. 7 team in
the country and lucky just to be
in the NCAA after noarly being
expelled earlier this week,
takes on 14th-ranked Kentucky
in the first half of a
doubleheader at Dayton, Ohio,
with the nightcap pairing Big 10
champion Minnesota, the No. l2
ranking team, and lOth-ranked
Florida State.
In the final doubleheader at
Ames, Iowa, it will be fourth·
ranked Louisville against
eighth·ranked Southwestern
Louisiana and 16th-ran ked
Kansas State against Texas.
Two of the nation's finest
guards will be matched at
Ames, with first-team All·
America Dwight Lamar . of
Southwestern Louisiana going
against Louisville's Jim Price,
a second-team selection. Lamar
averaged 36.6 points ~er game
in leading the Cajuns to a 24·3
record.

cJ9c VALUES!.·

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SEE OUR COMPLETE LINE Of MOWERS

Springtime Is
Gym Set Time

2 Piece
Web and
Unholstered
_ ·•
....

Seallle

47 31 .603 18

\

31 44 .413 32 11~
16 61 .208 481!~
x-Ciincheddivisiontitle

Hou ston
P')rlta nd

.~%c-1 ~,

GB
Wednesday's Results
675
·.600
l
os
Angeles
121 Cincinnati 116
6
.382 22,12 Allanla 134 Seaflle 96
.270 30,12 Bos lon 120 Philadelphia 115
Phoen ix 110 Milwaukee 106

W. L. Pet. GB
34 40 .459 ..

Minnesota Twins downed the
· New York Yankees, 3&lt;1. It was
the Yankees' ninth loss and
fifth shutout in 13 exhibition
games ... Rick Auerbach ha d
four hils in four trips in the

49 N. Secood

- (Onl games sc heduled)

fh~rsday'sGames

Bal 1jmore at Cleveland
New Y'"lrk at Houston

Midwest Div ision

POMEROY, 0.
•®., 'Jo'lCNiHO

•,

In other camps: Don Sutton,
who went live innings, and
Claude Osteen combined on a
five-hitter as the Los Angeles
Dodgers heat the Montreal
Expos, :&gt;-0. Dodger pitching
has allowed one run in the last
three games ... Gay lord Perry,
acquired during the winter in
the trade that sent Sam Me·
Dowell to San Francisco,
pitched six shutout innings in
the Cleveland Indians' 8-2 win
over the San Diego Padres.
Paul Blair singled in the
decisive run in the ninth inning
as the Baltimore Orioles
defeated the Cincinnati Reds,
4-3, despite two homers and
three runs ba !ted in by Johnny
Bench ... The Chicago Cubs
routed the Tokyo Orions, 11·2,
after being held hitless for 51.:J
innings
by
38-year·old
Masaaka Koyama ... Homers
by Aurelio Rodriguez and
Norm Cash led the Detroit
Trigers to a 6-2 victory over the
Kansas City Royals.

landa f Golden Stale
Cleveland
22 53 .293 12'1&gt; · Poro
I
Only
games schedul ed)
western Conference

Oldsmobile·Cad iliac

Pomeroy

•imore

Ananta
Cincinnf!fi

KARR &amp; VAN ZANDT

9:00TO NOON
9:00 To 9:00

992·2178

52
45
29
20

Ceutrat Division

MON., TUES.
WED.&amp;SAT.
9:00toS:OO

decla red

'

Pro Standings

.

'

"Sporty-look" CRAASMAN
6-HP Rotary Riding Mower.

were

H.an k
Aaron Makes 1972 Debut

By MARTIN LADER
UPI Sports Writer
Conservative basketball fans
who like their endings straight
and proper can turn toward
Provo, Utah, tonight, where
that old reliable machine from
UCLA figures to continue its
smooth passage to an unprecedented sixth consecuiive NCAA
championship.
But for those who prefer
sorpe suspense with the possibility of raucous, last-minute
doings both on and off the
court, the place to be is
Morgantown, W.Va ., where a
pair of bitter rivals meet in
both ends of a doubleheader.

.•

'

Warriors

ineligible the following day
because of the questionable
status of star forward Bob
Lackey.
Lackey,
the
leading
Marquette scorer with a 15.1
mark , refused to sign a a[.
fidavit verifying he had not
negotiated to turn pro. On
Monday however, Lackey
signed the affidavit and the

NCAA reinstated the Warriors "They are quicker than we are
after threatening to replace and they jump better than we
them with Ohio U.
do. They're a lot like Tennes·
see. They don't throw the ball
Earlier after. Marquette had away very often ."
rolled up a 21.0 record, star
Kentucky lied for the South6-11 center Jim Chones signed eastern Conference champion.
a pro contract with the ABA ship with Tennessee, ·but got
New York Nets, making him in· the NCAA nod by virtue of its
eligible.
two victories over the Vols.
The Warriors lost two of thier
Leading the Kentucky
last five games o! theregular sco;·ings is 6·11 junior Jim
season, finishing 24-2 and rank· Andrews with a 21.9 mark and
ed seventh in the UPI ratings. followed by 6-6 senior Tom
Parker at 18.6. The othe•· three
Need Luck on luck
Rupp, who may he coaching Wildcat starters also are in
the last games of his fabled double figures .
career at Kentucky, said he
The winners tonight meet Sat.
•vas' 'optimistic'' about the Wild·
cats'
chances
against urday afternoon forth~ Mideast
Marquette but said his team Regional championship and a
would have to have "luc~ on ticket tonational semi.finals the
following Thurstay in Los Angetop of luck" for a win .
"Marquette is a very line les . Tonight's losers play a conball team,'' the perky Ruppsaid . solation game Saturday.

NCAA Crown

·.

Answer Tmnurru\\'

styles.
· Musselman, a strict disciple
of a tight defense, is in his first
year at Minnesota and led the
Gophers into their first NCAA
tournament ever. lt was only
the third time they had won the
Big Ten title - the first was an
outright championship in 1919
and the second a tie with
Diinois in 1937, two years
before the NCAA tournament
began .
"Florida State has a tot of
talent," Musselman said of the
· Seminoles, who bring a 2li-4
recordintothegame. "They've
got a Jot of bench strength and
that worries us ."
While Florida State is deep,
Musselman was forced to go
with an "iron five"lineup after
the suspensions of Corky
Taylor and Ron Be hagen .

afternoon, .but got fog-bound at
home and didn't arrive until
late.
Tonight's first game pits
coach Adolph Rupp's Kentucky
Wildcats, marking their 20th
trip to the NCAA tourney,
against Marquette , which still
wasn't sure un til late Monday
it was going to be allowed to
compete.
Despite a convincing 73-49
win over Ohio University
Saturday at Knoxville, the

Defense Of

I'OiiEIOY, 0.

·----------!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

25''
CUT

see a rontras.t in coaching

'n1e Minnesota defense emphasis is borne out in the teams
scoring averages, which show
IHl Clyde Turner lo be the only
Gopher in double ligures with
an 18.4. scoring average.
Florida State, meanwhile, has
an 88.7 per game scoring
average to throw against
Minnesota's 56 .9 defensive
mark, ·· and four players
averaging in (\ouble ligures.
Seminoles Fog Bound
Ron King leads the
Seminoles at 17.5, with 6-10
Reggie Royals next at 15.9,
followed by IHl Roland Garrett
at 13.4 and 6-11 Lawrence
McCray al 12.6.
· The Seminoles, who earned
their regional berth with a
tougher than eXJ!OCted 83-81
win over Eastern Kentucky
Saturday at Knoxville, Tenn.,
were to be the first team to
practice here Wednesday

UCLA Opens

.·

POMEROY MOTOR CO.
PH. 992·2126

Marquette and . Kentucky, will

execution," said Musselman,
whose Gophers captured the
Big Ten title and posted a 17-6
overall mark. "We took three
of four days off after our final
By United Press International
game and we don 'I usually do
NAIA Championship
anything like that."
At Kansas City, Mo.
(Second Round)
Contrast in Styles
Hank Aaron made his spring
Weslmonf (Calif.l71
ABA Results
The Minnesota - Florida debut for the Atlanta Braves
Xavier (La.l 59 State game, which follows to- Wednesday and let it be known
By United Press International
Sf. Thomas (Minn .) 93
East
Ouachifa Bapfisf (Ark .) 87 night's ·first contest between in his quiet way that he is
W. l. Pet. GB
•· Ken tucky 60 14 .811 ... Auguslana (Ill. I 76
physically and mentally ready
Glenville St. (W.Va .) 75 of
Virginia
43 33 .566 18
for
the ordeal that is ahead as
NG Cage Tourney
Western Washington St. 7.4
New York
39 37 .513 22
he closes in on Babe Ruth's ailNortheastern Oklahoma Sf. 68
Floridians
31 44 .413 29lf&gt;
Sfephen
F.
Ausfin
&lt;Tex.)
87
Carolina
Dates
Announced
30 46 .395 31
time career mark of 714 home
Adams Sl. 1Colo.l77
Pitfsburgh 24 52 .316 37
rW'ls.
Eau Cia ;re (Wis. ) 59
West
The third annual North
Aaron, who will start the 1972
Belhaven (Miss.) 53
W. L. Pet. GB
Band
Boosters'
InGallia
Gardner-Webb I N.C.) 91
season needing 75 homers to
•·Utah ,
55 21 .724 ...
Pittsburgh Sf. IKan.) 87 dependent Basketball Tour. surpass Ruth's career total,
Indiana
41 33 .554 13
Kentucky Sf. 112
Dallas
36 40 .474 19
namenl will be held April 12,
West Georgia SJ 14, 15, 19, 21 and 22, according singled, grounded out and was
Denver
30 45 .400 2~•;,
NCAA Colt Div Championship
called out on strikes in the
Memphis
26 · SO .342 29
to Phil Skidmore, tournament Braves' 4.() loss to the Houston
Af Evansville, Ind.
X·Ciincheddivlsionlitle
(Qu~rlerflnal Round)
manager.
Wednesday's Results
Astros. Aaron, 38, looked as
TennesSJ!e Sl. 95
New York 119 Memphis 112
A
$25
entry
fee
will
be
sharp
as he did last season
;Soulhampfon
I
N.Y.)
55
Utah 109 Indiana 108
charged.
Trophies
will
be
Roanoke
(Va.)
94
(Onlygamesscheduledl
when he batted .327 with 47
Missouri (51. Louis) 69
presented lo the first two homers.and 118 runs batted in.
Thursday's Games
Eastern Michigan 93
Utah vs. Floridians
teams. Any team interested is
"No doubt I'll start feeling
Assumption 88
Af Tampa
asked
to
contact
Skidmore
or
Akron
(Ohio)
92
the
pressure as I get closer and
Carolina at Denver
Southern Colorado Sf. 11 call 446·3993.
IOnlygamesscheduled)
closer to Ruth's record," said
Aaron after the game. "But I
like pressure. I seem to play
better wher there's something
at stake. It's times like when
we are out of the race and l
If your front wheels are out of alignment,
have nothing in particular to
shoot for that I find myself
your car won't ride and handle properly,
letting down."
and your tires will wear
,. out rapidly. Our
• •expert mechan (~~ .~'!1 align your wheels
~ properly on our ~recision equipment at
•. this low price.
'·
·

.·
.·

What do you do now ?
A-PIL"ls. PBI'tner pla('t.od the
conll·act.

.J

'

JIM SNYDER

DAYTON .(UPif - Minnesota coach Bill Musselman is
more worried about his team 's
"execution" and Florida
,State's "depth" than he is
about what kind of reception
the Gophers are going to get
here tonight in the first round
of the NCAA Mideast Regional
basketball tournament.
. "I really don •t have any
idea;" Musselman said when
asked what he expected from
the predominatly Ohio fans in
the 13,458-seat University of
Dayton Arena.
The Gophers were involved
in the most widely publicized
and controversiOJ melee of the
year at U1e end of their game
with Ohio State Jan. 25,
resulting in the suspension for
the rest of the season of two
Minnesota players.
And as one observor put it,
"This is Buckeye Country."
" I'm worried about our

Most
American cars
Parts extra, if needed

+J .AKQ76

.AK6 51 .A 2
Whal do yo u bid'.'

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Ohio
University Coach Jim Snyder
has been named Mid American
Confer~nce Coach of the Year
his second such title in three
years, it was announced today.
Ohio University was co-winner of the MAC with Toledo and
defeated the Rockets in a playoff. Snyder also won the same
honors in 1970. ·
Snyder beat out Bobby Nic·
hols of Toledo and Frank Triutt
of Kent SUI~ finished third.
"I'm flabergasted," said Sny·
der. "This is quite a surprise
and honor I never dreamed of
getting.
"But it's been a most unusual
ye~r and this aort of follows our
·patternofbeinghigherthanhlgh
one day and lower than low the
next," said Snyder.
"Acutally .this is a tribute to
our players and my assiswnt
coaches - Dale Bandy and
George Klein," said Snyder.
"This was a year when it would
· have been easy for our coaches
and players to collapse at

$

You, South. hold :
.9R6$4 .A2

Of.The Year

·Front End·Alig~ment

11nltd g!.11, t»ttttr &amp; R.
Htt. tttlnltll c:.mper
mlrrort. frt. tltblllztr,
e&amp;IL A. 'Prll'lflo S.,.IIH
R. lhocltt, a V-t to~IM,
Turio

.

The Daily Sentinel

WASHABILITY - dirl and

110 W. MAIN

t

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Pas."i
Pass
Pas."i

\

•

The bidding ha:; been:
West
North
East

types of Interior walls and
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surflcts, use tap -water tor
th inning EASY TO
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DR·IES

Sabbath School attendance
March 12 at the Free Melllodist
Church waa 129. Offering for
.the day was $205.
Mr. and Mrs. 1\aymond Gill,
Cambridge, spent the weekend
with his son, Rev. Eugene.Gill
and family, an.d attended
church services Sunday
evening.
Mr. and Mrs, Pbll Wise,
Beverly, attended church
services here Swtday.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bauer,
Marion, spent the weekend
wi th Mrs. Bauer's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Karr and

Snyder Is .
MAC Coach

REGULAR 5.85 GAL

lor all

Cltllln!jls- ECONOM I CAL

BY BERTHA PARKER

3- The DIUy Senilnol,Middlepo,rt-PCJIIlei'Oy,O., March 16,1972

lblday at the toCa1 claarch.
patient at Unlvenlty Jbpltal,
Mr. Chlrlel Diehl remalna 1 COiwnbua.

~

public is ir.v itrd .

CHAISE LOUNGE
~nd

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Y~r '.~~~Jayground-an Exceptional Value!
~· I olalnbow
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TERM.STotlay
at W.A..I .

CHAIR

.,

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Gyt1 Set ,.
on CREDIT
FlEW TRIAL SUNDAY
A Coondog field trial will
begin 10 a.m. Sunday northeast
of. Racine, off Rt. 124. The

'

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of Colorll

3999
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2U2•6

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2 regukia r,'wing' &amp; circu!l~dder twint~t
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2 WAY COMFORTT!
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polypropylene webs
or si nk down in viriyJcovered
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foa m
"cus hl"ons . 1 Stur dy
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fold easily .

�.I

I

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 16,1972

5- 'l'lli Dlil7llinllnel, ~Pomer~y, 0., March 16, I!IT.!

•

NIT Has Four Top-Rank~d Cage Teams
NI':W YORK IUP I) - Say
what you will about the
National Invitation Tournament, th\s year's field is the
most attractive in many years.
The NIT committee came
under heavy fire the last couple .
of weeks hecapse of ita failure
to invite small college power
Kentucky State and major
independents Duquesne and
Detroit to play in the postseason classic .

ranked l&lt;!ams and eight team's Staie (No. !3), the University
which ha ' • ·Won 20 or more of Texas at El, Paso (No. 17)
games this season. That's not a11d Missouri (No. 19). AU four
bad considering the NIT only teams have' won 20 or more
gets the leftovers among the games this season as have
nationally
r~nked
in- tourney representatives
dependents and must resign Lafayette, Syracuse, Oral
itself to taking conference Roberts and Virginia.
runners-up.
The nationally ranked teams
The tournament begins Friin this year's NIT are day night with Virginia (21-8)
Maryland (No. 11\. Memphis meeting Lafayette I~) and

Fordham (18-8) .· facing the first round concludes
Jacksonville (17-7) . First- Sunday afternoon with PriDceround . action continues ton (111-6) meeting Indiana (17Saturday afternoon with . 7) and Texas El Paso (~)
Syracuse 120-6) taking on playing Niagara (18-8).
Davidson '(1!1-11) and Maryland
123-5) meeting St. Joseph's
Most of the coaches polled
(Pa .) (19--11),
favored Marylam to take the ·
On Saturdsy night St. John's tournament, but Memphis
(N.Y.) (17:9) faces Missouri State and Texas El Paso loom
(21-S) and Orai 'Roberts (~I) as strong rivals for the.
plays Memphis State .121-6) and Terrapins.

Astros Eye First NL Flag With May,
Roberts, Tom Helms And Jim Stewart
COCOA, Fla . (UP[)- The
Houston Astros, who have been
" lmrrel of surprises an winter.
think lhey may have one more
trick to spring on the world of
baseban, the bi~gest one of
them an.
The fi rst indoor World
Series.
The very first surprise from
the residents of the Astrodome
was the rehiring of Manager
Harry Walker, just when mosl
people were fm·ecasting that
"The Hat'' was going to be
handed his hal. Then General
Ma nager Spec Ri chardson
('~I me up with lwo astounding

player deals at the winter
meetings.
The first obtained slugger
Lee May, second baseman
Tommy Helms, and reserve

outfielder Jinmty Stewart from
Cincinnati for five players. The
second brought pitcher Dave
Roberts from San Diego in
exc hange for thre e minor
league players .
Walker Talks Hoperuny
It's because of those deals
that the beneficiary of the first
surprise, Walker, now talks
hopefuny or "going an the
way," by which he means into
U1e World Series.

Play Resumes
BY United Press International

land East Tech beat Lorain Ad!Undefeated Hardin Northern miral King 81-54 in Class AAA ;
takes on Ayresville in one of Poland Whipped Chagrin Falls
fi ve Ohio high school basketball Kenston 82-54 and Big Walnut
regional tournaments tonight defeatedWellsville 64-50 in Cia ss
around the sta te.
AA; and Contential edged
Hardin has a 22 - 0 record Mansfield St. Peter 70-136 in
against Ayresvilie's 18-!i.
Class A.
In the other games: Cleveland
Heights 121·1 1 contests Geneva
119-3)and Akron Centrai-Hower
121-2) goes against Massillon
Ohio HighSchool Regiona I
113-91 in Class AAA games at
BasketbaiiTournamentScores
C•nlon . Columbus Ready (21-1 ) ByUnited Press lnternationa I
plays Steubenville Catholic ( 17ClassA
Con
tin
en
tal
70
4) at Colwnbus and Warren LaMansfi el d$! .Peler 66
Brae (17-S) plays Independence
ClassAA
115-8) .HI Copley in Class AA Poland 82
Chagrin Fa tls Ken ston54
games . The Class A HardinB
ig
W
alnul
64 Wellsv ill e 50
Ay resviile game will be played
ClassAAA
at Bowling Green.
Young stow n Boardman 82
Totedolibbey59
In games Wednesday night,
Youn gstown Boardman downed Cleveland Easl Tech 81
Lorain Admiral Ki ng 54
Toledo Libby 82-59 and Clevel"''""'~-""'""'""'"""'"""'"""'»«:'"&lt;~""d""l....,....,~-&lt;:&gt;'MQ.q&gt;

And it's because of those
deals that Richardson says,
"We now have a set lineup for
the first time in history and the
manager has very few personnel decisions to make"- a
statement that hints Walker
still may be on a very large
spot.
The
28-year-old
May
probably is the single most
important man. The big first
baseman slanuned 39 home
runs and drove in 98 runs last
year while batting .278.
Helms, a .258 hitter and a
sparkplug, is a slick second
baseman who led the league in
fielding that position two of the
last three years. He seems an
almost perfect keystone mate
for the 24-year-old Roger
Metzger, who Richardson says
"is going to be the best shortslop in the National League
some year, maybe this year."
Doug Rader hit 12 homers and
drove in 56 runs with a .242
average last year despite a
shoulder separation and the
word is that an operation to fix
that condition last October was
completely successful.
Outfield is Set
The Astros' outfield is. set
with Jimmy Wynn, Bob "Bull"
Watson, and Cesar Cedeno.
Wynn dropped from 27 homers
to seven in 1971 as he feuded
with Walker, a situation which
he thinks is improved because
"Walker has changed - he
treats us more like men now."
One problem Walker must
solve is catching. Johnny
Edwards (.233) has the inside
track but Bob Stinson, who has

______.,...l&gt;\cii»«:&gt;M&lt;l'l

,-r,'nff

~.·n"''..•. :..,''b·...
ar·

· '"·;"/
'-J
'•p

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

"i\&gt;•····i··;&lt;"''

,

~
~

Miss

America .

~
~

: Shoes ·

I

Pahner hail a chance to
regain the lead among the aUtime money winners this week
with Jack Nicklaus skipping

your we ll-schooled

looks. Cui nut in th e

Haywood, Don Smith and Dick
Snyder are aU through for the
season for 1the Sonics, who had
the NBA minimum number of
players in uniform for the
game.
Jerry West scored 3~ points
and recorded 16 assists as the
Lakers beat Cincinnati for their
30th road victory, an NBA
record. Los Angeles trailed, 8984, entering the final period but
blitzed the Royals, 16-4, in the
first four minutes. Gail Goodrich scored 24 for the Lakers
while Nate Archibald led
Cincinnati with 33.

'

this tournament. Nic~laus
overtook Palmer two weeks
ago at the Doral-Eastern Open
but a w.in or second-place finish
here would put Palmer back on
top.
While Palmer was having his
troubles Wednesday, two of the
game's other superstarsGary Player and Lee Trevinowere pleased with their rounds.
Trevino shot a 3-under-par 89
to share low pro honors with
Gibby Gilbert and AI
Gieberger ovr .the 6,943-yard
Hidden Hills course. Player,
the defending champion, fired
a 71.
In addition to Nicklaus,
several other toui winners this
year are bypassing this tournament including George Archer, Miller Barber, Paul
Harney, Bob Roseburg,
Homero Blancas and Tom
Weiskopf. Billy Casper, rookie
sensation Lanny Wadkins and
defending Masters champion
Charles Coody are al$o absent.

JUDITH MAXSON

Judith·Maxson
May 19th

REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond E. Maxson of
Route I, Reedsville, formerly
of Parkersburg, announce the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their youngest
daughter, Judith Arlene, to
James Austin (Jay) Limbach,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Austin B.
Limbach of SOU 3rd Ave.,
Parkersburg.
Miss Maxson is a 1970
graduate of Parkersburg High
School and is employed at
Cather, Renner and Cunningham, Parkersburg.
Mr. Limbach is a 1971
graduate of Parkersburg South
High School and is employed at
Ralph's Super Market. The
wedding will take place in the
Gospel Chapel at an open
church ceremony May 19, at 7
p.m.

SPRING
FLOWERING BULBS

JUST ARRIVED

Svort na ...'ll J

Crocus, Gladioli, Cannas.and Amaryllus.
Guaranteed to grow and bloom.

, , .•~hOP. P~meroy B~f!. franklin Store early for all
.,
··•your' East~r needs r · h'l
1
__ ,_ ..
, .. ' R"-~ I' t . ' .. . • • w t e se ections are ' ' \ l:l
c.u•nP e e. Cards, party items, empty and·
' .,
ftlled _baskets, toys, flowers, gifts and large I'
selectton of candy and candy novelties.

.

· CE
- NTER

ninth day.
Negotiations were not held
Wednesday and there was no
immediate word on when talks
would resume.

.:~NJitF~0~~~~~·
l POMEROY, OHIO .

lwst pla ces wi th a

LETART FALLS - Mrs.
Drew Fisher of East Letart
held a products party at her
home Monday evening .
Hostess was Mrs. Phyllis Cline
of Harrisonville. ·
Games were played and
prizes given. Attending were
Mrs. Lillie Hart of Racine,
Mrs. Focie Hayman, Mrs . ·
Margaret Gloeckner, Mrs.
Eula Wolfe, Mrs. Hazel Fox,
Mrs. Ferne Hayma?, Mrs.
June Wickersham, Mrs.
Donohue, Mrs.
Bertha
Robinson, Mrs. Mabel Shields,
Mrs. Doris Sayre, Mrs. Jessie
Jarrell, Susie Jarrell, Mrs.
Phyllis O'Brien, and children,
Linda and Carol and Mrs.
Florence Adams.

¥-

•

.&lt;

•

CHECKS PRESENTED- Don VanMeter, Wahama HighSchool Athletic Director, Sl'l'Otod
from left, presents check donations to the )lfason Volunteer Fire Department and Mason Pollet·
Departmen't in recognition of their assistance in parking autos and handling traffie durit1g 1!17172 school year athletic events. The donations, made by the· WHS athletic deparln•e11t , ;on·
received by George Carson, Mason fire chief, far left and Ross Roush and L1tief John Harr;oh,
Mason P~lire Department.

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SURGERY TAKEN
Patricia Glaze, 17 year old .
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Glaze of Columbus and
granddaughter of Mrs. Grace
Glaze, Middleport, underwent
surgery Wednesday morning .
for removal of a brain tumor.
Relatives here report that she
is In satisfactory condition.
Mrs. Grace Glaze has been in
ColUmbus with the family.
Patricia is a patient at
Children's Hospital.

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Also western style

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DRESS SALE!
ALL NEW SPRING STYLES

1 SALE GROUP DRESSES
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992-3498
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

The Chateau

Center by Ethan Allen.

the righ;;a; c) -, ' ::
to look this spring

rna ies It

Clemente, with whom they have always been a sore subject.
"I've got enough money. I never had any endorsements in my
life, why should-I start now? "
Other PitU&lt;burgh players such as Blass, Dave Cash, Dock Ellis
and Dave Giusti were asked to do one TV commercial together
for a deodorant They did it, and that was it. The majority of the
Pirates, however, received the same amount of endorsement
offers as Robertson . None .
"It wasn't a matter of commercials and endorsements so much
as it was a general indifference to what we accomplished," says
Robertson. "I was surprised. Disappointed, too. Baltimore got
more recognition than we did. We won it. Baltimore didn't win it
We went into the clubhouse as world champions after that final
out, not them. ! don't know why we were sloughed off the way we
were. It's hard to figure. I think the press could've built us up
mnr"' ''

..

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Raymond Lane, Texail Rd., Spruce St., Gallipolis ; Nanette
Gallipolis; R41bert C. Lane, Jr., McKenzie Moody, Chillicothe
Kanauga; Brenda S. Lee, 741 Rd ., Gallipolis ; Lena Mae
Fourth Ave., Gallipo;is ; Pope, Rt.l, Patriot; Audette L.
Howard Morgan Long, Pt. Rossiter, Crown City; Paula J.
Pleasant; Candy L. Merritt, Sallllders, Bidwell, and Carol
Spruce Street Extension, Shoc~ley Swindler, Rt. I,
GallipoUs; Connie Mitchell, 81 Crown aty.

See Us Soon
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Any Shade You Like
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on'~Ie~~~~t:~:;!~~:n:d~~~::~:~~~~~~;t ~::~"!:~.?:;~

Anderson Street, Mason, W.. ·
Va. ; Deborah Ann HaJTism'l,
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis ;
ROberta Heib Cox,. Uncoln.
Ave., Pt. Pleasant, George A.
Hoffman, Riverview Place,
Middleport ; Karl A. Kebler,
Jr., Mason, W. Va.; Phillip

TO WED SATURDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing of
the Harrisonville Road are
announcing the approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Sandra Kay, to Mr. Paul
McElroy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul McElroy. The wedding
wiii be an open church event at
Denzle C. Stanley, .Vivian
the Zion Church of Christ at Stanley to Warren D. Clay,
6:30p.m. Saturday, Mar~h ta: Phyllis J . Clay, Parcels,
A reception will foiiow at the Scipio-Pageville.
church on Hat-risonville Road.
Robert S. Blackwood, dec'd.
to Gladys E. Blackwood, Cecil
Leroy . Blackwood, Esta Mae
Wein, Cert. of Trans., Scipio.
Hal Lyman, Doris M. Lyman
to George H. Warner, Grace M.
Warner, 35 Acres, Salisbury .
Fred B. Smith, Bertha F.
Smith to David S. Heaton,
Janet Heaton, .25 Acre,
Chester.
' Leland E. Clonch, Reatha V.
Clonch to Clifford E. Manley,
Emily F. Manley, Parcel,
Rutland.
James W. Suttle, Gretta M.
You'll want to be in harmony
Suttie · to Clintoq Holsinger,
With the, season, as sunny skies
Parcel, Olive.
·
arid fragrant flowers fajrly sing
LukeS. McDaniel, Kathy S.
McDaniel to Columbus &amp;
out the wonderful news: spring
Southern
Ohio Elec. Co., Ease .,
has finally arrived!
Lebanon.
Eleanor R. Smith to
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Elec. Co., Ease., Chester .
Edward L. Baer, Ruby Baer
to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Elec . Co., Ease., Salisbury.
Martin Wilcoxen, Frances S.
SEE OUR ASSORTM.NT OF NEW
Wilcoxen to Columbus &amp;
SPRING PURSES
Southern Ohio Elec . Co., Ease,,
Lebanon.
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
NEW SHIPMENT LADIES' SHORT
Ohio Power Co., Ease., Salem.
SLEEVELESS - FLAME STITCH
Earl Morris, Opal V. Morris
to Earl Morris, Opal V. Morris,
Parcels, Sutton.
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
Hysell toMahel Oliver, Lots JIJ.
II, Falloon's Add., Rutland.

BLOOMING

~

t.

The Gallipolis Business
College will hold ita · arulusl
graduation exercises at 7:30
p.m., Saturdsy, March 25, at
the Grace United Methodist
Church. The public is invited.
Speaker for lhe graduation
will be ann!lllnced later.
DiPlomas are to be awarded
to Donna Jane Altizer, :11
. Viotoh Ave., Gallipolis;
Karolyn Soulsby Black, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy; Jacqueline
Reynolds Blankenship, ·184
Park Drive, Pt. Pleasant;
Redi~ Gail Boster, Thurman;
Conme Sue Carhart
.
' 1101
: Sunset Drive, Gallipolis;
Gracella Jo Endicott, Pt.
Pleasant; Patty Ann. Goeglein,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Nancy Grace
· Third Ave., GaiUpolis; Mar;
Sue Grim, Rt. I, Gallipolis;
Denise Elaine Grinstead;

GLAMOUR

to Be Wed

•Today's

BIG A STILL CLOSED
NEW YORK (UPJ )-Aqueduct Rare Track remained
shut Wednesd•y as the strike of
pari-mutuel clerks entered its

A pe rky shoe

.

.

Scott Makes NBA
Debut.. Suns Happy

MASON KNICKS - The Mason Knicks, :Hlth Grade basketball team in the Bend I.eagut·
this season. was coached by Charles Kitchen. Team members are front row, from ldt, s.. utt
Chapman, Bob Van Meter, Tim Young, Billy Gibbs, Tommy Roush. Second row, JultuuJ
Barto n, John Van Meter, Kenny Young, Harry Gibbs. Third row , Butch Stewart, Eddie Hull nion,t;tenn Werry and Jimmy Bable. Coach Kitchen is in the background.

GBc·Graduation Set March 25

. ..Wi•tt
al mer
l
Try Contact .Lenses

On top of that, many writers~
and . fans thought . the invttallons extended to local
schools Fordham and St.
John's were undeserving and
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. may try them (in the Mast.
that neither Lafayette nor (UP!) - Arnold Palmer, who ers)," Pahner said. "If they do
Davidson · should have been at 42 will give contact lenses a bothet me, I will just wait until
invited since neither team try next week, is trying to fight after the Masters ."
plays the kind of competition his way out of a terrible slump
associated with post-season with his beloved Masters
tournament only three weeks
tournament teams.
away.
The fact thBt Ohio Stale and
Palmer, who missed the cut
Tennessee each turned down a
bid to play in the tournament at the Citrus Open last week for .
further embarrassed the selec- the first lime in 86 tourtion committee, but amid the ·naments, shot a struggling 75
'
furor and fuss the NIT has Wednesday in the pro-am
managed to come out smelling preceding the $125,000 Greater By United Press International
Charlie Scott made h.is
Jacksonville Open, and impretty good.
NationaiBasketbaUAssociation
What they have assembled mediately headed for the
debut Wednesday night and
for the 35th aiUluai tournament practice area.
"! played awful,'' moaned Phoenix fans came away
are four of the lop 20 nationally
the
four-time
Masters pleased.
Scott, who was leading the
champion. He said it wasn't
American
Basketball Associaone particular phase of his
game which was bad, "it was tion in scoring before he
jumped to the NBA Suns last
everything."
Asked if he had hopes of week, stored ll points in 22
getting his game together here, minutes to help Phoenix to a
Palmer replied, "! have hopes lliJ.J06 victory over the Milof getting it together before the waukee Bucks.
Connie Hawkins, another for·
!)lasters. That's why I've been
mer ABA star who defected to
hit wen in minor ( .324 at Tulsa working so hard."
last year) but hasn't clicked in
Palmer, whose string of poor the NBA, played the major role
previous major league trials play started with closing in the upset, however, hitting 13
with the Dodgers and Cardin- rounds of 8M9 at the Jackie of his 27 points in the last IO'k
als, might move ahead.
Gleason Inverrary Classic, has minutes to rally the Suns from
The first four starting pitch- been using glasses in practice a four-point deficit.
Neal Walk added 17 points for
ers are righthanders Larry because of a nearsighted
Dierker (I~ with a 2.71 ERA), condition but he hasn 't felt Phoenix while Kareem AbduiDon Wilson (16-10 and 2.45), comfortable with them . His Jabbar led the Bucks with 36
and Ken Forsch (8-8) and 2.54, contact lenses are scheduled to points.
and southpaw Roberts ( 14-17 arrive next Tuesday or Wed- · Elsewhere, the Boston Celtics
defeated the Philadelphia 76ers,
and a fantastic 2.10 at San nesday.
"If they don't bother me, I 120-115, the Atlanta Hawks
Diego) .
crushed the Seattle SuperSo'
;:;:::=::::::::~:::!::::::~::8:~::~::::~::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::?.!::!!!::~:::::::::::::~~3::~~~=*"3!:~:*s:::::::&amp;::::::::::::s: nics, 134-96, and the Los
~
~
Angeles Lakers beat the
~aM
i::~ Cincinnati
Royals, 12l·ll6.
Dave
Cowens
17 of his
~ 24 points in the scored
period as
i!tw
!!i« Boston downed final
~~ • j ~
the
76ers to
I
~
~
~ clinch at least a tie for the
BRADENTON, Fla. (UPI)- "Every time I look at that pic- Atlantic Division title. Cowens
broke a 104-104 tie with little
ture, I gel cold chills. "
Bob Robertson, Pittsburgh's red-haired, big muscled first mor~ than fiveminutes.l~lt ~~pd
•
the next six Boston
baseman, sat on a chair ouiside the clubhouse waiting for the ball thenhit
.nls
to
push the eelu-·cs
" o" ~
Pol
•
game to begin when someone showed him the picture again . .
112-1061ead.
John
Havlicek
led
It was taken an instant after the last out in the final World
Series game with Baltimore last Oct. 17 and you can see Ump Ed Boston with 36 points while
Sudol signaling Merv Rettenmund out, Steve Blass jumping high Billy Cunningham had 32 and
Fred Carter 30 for the 76ers.
into the air and Robertson, with his mouth wide open, raising 30 points, crushed ' injuryboth hands aloft
riddled Seattle, which entered
The Pirates are very proud or the picture. They have the the game with only eight
original back home in Three Rivers Stadium and they have put a players in uniform and then
duplicate on the frorit cover of their 1972 press, TV and radio lost center Pete Cross with a
guide. That was the one Robertson was looking at now.
broken nose and three stitches
"You k·now why my mouth is open like that?" he said, pointin~ over his eye. Spencer
to his face in the photo, "1 was saying 'World's champions.' I
must have stood there saying that for five minutes . But you know
something? 1 didn't really feel like a world champion all winter.
Financially , 1 did. Otherwise, no.''
Robertson not Alone
Bob Robertson isn't the only member of the Pirates who says
that . Many others do. They say the Orioles received more
recognition losing than they did winning and for the most part
they are right. This puzzles the Pirates: They can't understand
why they were ignored, why they were put off in a corner
someplace as baseball's faceless wiiUlers.
Roberto Clemente is a prime example . Clemente dominated
the World Series as few others ever have, yet was offered only

.

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 16,1972

5- 'l'lli Dlil7llinllnel, ~Pomer~y, 0., March 16, I!IT.!

•

NIT Has Four Top-Rank~d Cage Teams
NI':W YORK IUP I) - Say
what you will about the
National Invitation Tournament, th\s year's field is the
most attractive in many years.
The NIT committee came
under heavy fire the last couple .
of weeks hecapse of ita failure
to invite small college power
Kentucky State and major
independents Duquesne and
Detroit to play in the postseason classic .

ranked l&lt;!ams and eight team's Staie (No. !3), the University
which ha ' • ·Won 20 or more of Texas at El, Paso (No. 17)
games this season. That's not a11d Missouri (No. 19). AU four
bad considering the NIT only teams have' won 20 or more
gets the leftovers among the games this season as have
nationally
r~nked
in- tourney representatives
dependents and must resign Lafayette, Syracuse, Oral
itself to taking conference Roberts and Virginia.
runners-up.
The nationally ranked teams
The tournament begins Friin this year's NIT are day night with Virginia (21-8)
Maryland (No. 11\. Memphis meeting Lafayette I~) and

Fordham (18-8) .· facing the first round concludes
Jacksonville (17-7) . First- Sunday afternoon with PriDceround . action continues ton (111-6) meeting Indiana (17Saturday afternoon with . 7) and Texas El Paso (~)
Syracuse 120-6) taking on playing Niagara (18-8).
Davidson '(1!1-11) and Maryland
123-5) meeting St. Joseph's
Most of the coaches polled
(Pa .) (19--11),
favored Marylam to take the ·
On Saturdsy night St. John's tournament, but Memphis
(N.Y.) (17:9) faces Missouri State and Texas El Paso loom
(21-S) and Orai 'Roberts (~I) as strong rivals for the.
plays Memphis State .121-6) and Terrapins.

Astros Eye First NL Flag With May,
Roberts, Tom Helms And Jim Stewart
COCOA, Fla . (UP[)- The
Houston Astros, who have been
" lmrrel of surprises an winter.
think lhey may have one more
trick to spring on the world of
baseban, the bi~gest one of
them an.
The fi rst indoor World
Series.
The very first surprise from
the residents of the Astrodome
was the rehiring of Manager
Harry Walker, just when mosl
people were fm·ecasting that
"The Hat'' was going to be
handed his hal. Then General
Ma nager Spec Ri chardson
('~I me up with lwo astounding

player deals at the winter
meetings.
The first obtained slugger
Lee May, second baseman
Tommy Helms, and reserve

outfielder Jinmty Stewart from
Cincinnati for five players. The
second brought pitcher Dave
Roberts from San Diego in
exc hange for thre e minor
league players .
Walker Talks Hoperuny
It's because of those deals
that the beneficiary of the first
surprise, Walker, now talks
hopefuny or "going an the
way," by which he means into
U1e World Series.

Play Resumes
BY United Press International

land East Tech beat Lorain Ad!Undefeated Hardin Northern miral King 81-54 in Class AAA ;
takes on Ayresville in one of Poland Whipped Chagrin Falls
fi ve Ohio high school basketball Kenston 82-54 and Big Walnut
regional tournaments tonight defeatedWellsville 64-50 in Cia ss
around the sta te.
AA; and Contential edged
Hardin has a 22 - 0 record Mansfield St. Peter 70-136 in
against Ayresvilie's 18-!i.
Class A.
In the other games: Cleveland
Heights 121·1 1 contests Geneva
119-3)and Akron Centrai-Hower
121-2) goes against Massillon
Ohio HighSchool Regiona I
113-91 in Class AAA games at
BasketbaiiTournamentScores
C•nlon . Columbus Ready (21-1 ) ByUnited Press lnternationa I
plays Steubenville Catholic ( 17ClassA
Con
tin
en
tal
70
4) at Colwnbus and Warren LaMansfi el d$! .Peler 66
Brae (17-S) plays Independence
ClassAA
115-8) .HI Copley in Class AA Poland 82
Chagrin Fa tls Ken ston54
games . The Class A HardinB
ig
W
alnul
64 Wellsv ill e 50
Ay resviile game will be played
ClassAAA
at Bowling Green.
Young stow n Boardman 82
Totedolibbey59
In games Wednesday night,
Youn gstown Boardman downed Cleveland Easl Tech 81
Lorain Admiral Ki ng 54
Toledo Libby 82-59 and Clevel"''""'~-""'""'""'"""'"""'"""'»«:'"&lt;~""d""l....,....,~-&lt;:&gt;'MQ.q&gt;

And it's because of those
deals that Richardson says,
"We now have a set lineup for
the first time in history and the
manager has very few personnel decisions to make"- a
statement that hints Walker
still may be on a very large
spot.
The
28-year-old
May
probably is the single most
important man. The big first
baseman slanuned 39 home
runs and drove in 98 runs last
year while batting .278.
Helms, a .258 hitter and a
sparkplug, is a slick second
baseman who led the league in
fielding that position two of the
last three years. He seems an
almost perfect keystone mate
for the 24-year-old Roger
Metzger, who Richardson says
"is going to be the best shortslop in the National League
some year, maybe this year."
Doug Rader hit 12 homers and
drove in 56 runs with a .242
average last year despite a
shoulder separation and the
word is that an operation to fix
that condition last October was
completely successful.
Outfield is Set
The Astros' outfield is. set
with Jimmy Wynn, Bob "Bull"
Watson, and Cesar Cedeno.
Wynn dropped from 27 homers
to seven in 1971 as he feuded
with Walker, a situation which
he thinks is improved because
"Walker has changed - he
treats us more like men now."
One problem Walker must
solve is catching. Johnny
Edwards (.233) has the inside
track but Bob Stinson, who has

______.,...l&gt;\cii»«:&gt;M&lt;l'l

,-r,'nff

~.·n"''..•. :..,''b·...
ar·

· '"·;"/
'-J
'•p

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"i\&gt;•····i··;&lt;"''

,

~
~

Miss

America .

~
~

: Shoes ·

I

Pahner hail a chance to
regain the lead among the aUtime money winners this week
with Jack Nicklaus skipping

your we ll-schooled

looks. Cui nut in th e

Haywood, Don Smith and Dick
Snyder are aU through for the
season for 1the Sonics, who had
the NBA minimum number of
players in uniform for the
game.
Jerry West scored 3~ points
and recorded 16 assists as the
Lakers beat Cincinnati for their
30th road victory, an NBA
record. Los Angeles trailed, 8984, entering the final period but
blitzed the Royals, 16-4, in the
first four minutes. Gail Goodrich scored 24 for the Lakers
while Nate Archibald led
Cincinnati with 33.

'

this tournament. Nic~laus
overtook Palmer two weeks
ago at the Doral-Eastern Open
but a w.in or second-place finish
here would put Palmer back on
top.
While Palmer was having his
troubles Wednesday, two of the
game's other superstarsGary Player and Lee Trevinowere pleased with their rounds.
Trevino shot a 3-under-par 89
to share low pro honors with
Gibby Gilbert and AI
Gieberger ovr .the 6,943-yard
Hidden Hills course. Player,
the defending champion, fired
a 71.
In addition to Nicklaus,
several other toui winners this
year are bypassing this tournament including George Archer, Miller Barber, Paul
Harney, Bob Roseburg,
Homero Blancas and Tom
Weiskopf. Billy Casper, rookie
sensation Lanny Wadkins and
defending Masters champion
Charles Coody are al$o absent.

JUDITH MAXSON

Judith·Maxson
May 19th

REEDSVILLE - Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond E. Maxson of
Route I, Reedsville, formerly
of Parkersburg, announce the
engagement and approaching
marriage of their youngest
daughter, Judith Arlene, to
James Austin (Jay) Limbach,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Austin B.
Limbach of SOU 3rd Ave.,
Parkersburg.
Miss Maxson is a 1970
graduate of Parkersburg High
School and is employed at
Cather, Renner and Cunningham, Parkersburg.
Mr. Limbach is a 1971
graduate of Parkersburg South
High School and is employed at
Ralph's Super Market. The
wedding will take place in the
Gospel Chapel at an open
church ceremony May 19, at 7
p.m.

SPRING
FLOWERING BULBS

JUST ARRIVED

Svort na ...'ll J

Crocus, Gladioli, Cannas.and Amaryllus.
Guaranteed to grow and bloom.

, , .•~hOP. P~meroy B~f!. franklin Store early for all
.,
··•your' East~r needs r · h'l
1
__ ,_ ..
, .. ' R"-~ I' t . ' .. . • • w t e se ections are ' ' \ l:l
c.u•nP e e. Cards, party items, empty and·
' .,
ftlled _baskets, toys, flowers, gifts and large I'
selectton of candy and candy novelties.

.

· CE
- NTER

ninth day.
Negotiations were not held
Wednesday and there was no
immediate word on when talks
would resume.

.:~NJitF~0~~~~~·
l POMEROY, OHIO .

lwst pla ces wi th a

LETART FALLS - Mrs.
Drew Fisher of East Letart
held a products party at her
home Monday evening .
Hostess was Mrs. Phyllis Cline
of Harrisonville. ·
Games were played and
prizes given. Attending were
Mrs. Lillie Hart of Racine,
Mrs. Focie Hayman, Mrs . ·
Margaret Gloeckner, Mrs.
Eula Wolfe, Mrs. Hazel Fox,
Mrs. Ferne Hayma?, Mrs.
June Wickersham, Mrs.
Donohue, Mrs.
Bertha
Robinson, Mrs. Mabel Shields,
Mrs. Doris Sayre, Mrs. Jessie
Jarrell, Susie Jarrell, Mrs.
Phyllis O'Brien, and children,
Linda and Carol and Mrs.
Florence Adams.

¥-

•

.&lt;

•

CHECKS PRESENTED- Don VanMeter, Wahama HighSchool Athletic Director, Sl'l'Otod
from left, presents check donations to the )lfason Volunteer Fire Department and Mason Pollet·
Departmen't in recognition of their assistance in parking autos and handling traffie durit1g 1!17172 school year athletic events. The donations, made by the· WHS athletic deparln•e11t , ;on·
received by George Carson, Mason fire chief, far left and Ross Roush and L1tief John Harr;oh,
Mason P~lire Department.

'
•
j

•'

l
•

l'•
'-J

LADIES SPRING

'
I

'

BOYS'
. KNIT

SHIRTS AND TIES

SHIRTS

Men's Knit
Solid &amp;· Stripes

Men &amp; Boys light
weight jackets in

SIZE 4 to 16

~TANK

jackets.

TOPS

SURGERY TAKEN
Patricia Glaze, 17 year old .
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Glaze of Columbus and
granddaughter of Mrs. Grace
Glaze, Middleport, underwent
surgery Wednesday morning .
for removal of a brain tumor.
Relatives here report that she
is In satisfactory condition.
Mrs. Grace Glaze has been in
ColUmbus with the family.
Patricia is a patient at
Children's Hospital.

Polyester cotton.
Also western style

.

-

~
'

·~---

-

••• be light on your. f'eet

Everything Fine At Eastertime .. .

Na vy and Red
Bone and Brown
Whi te

Chapman's Shoes
MAIN ST.

POMEROY

\

Add.an Arab hose-end spray Applicator and you're ready
to completely termlte-prool the average 3-bedraom home!
Saves you over SlOO compared to the cost of calling In a

professional exterminator. Buy Arab and do both you and
your home a favor ."Price may vary slightly .

''tiEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00.
992-2709

MIDDLEPORT

POMEROY, OHIO'
Member Federal Reserve System
·
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9 a.m.
to 7 p.m., (Continuously) . .
$20,000 Maximum Insurance
For Each Depositor

~) )(«:~

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE

Shops the

'

WANT AD WAY

ON THE T IN MIDDLEPORT

lOLA :S 5TI-f

WILL END SATURDAY, MARCH 18

Storewide Reductions! Register for Free Prizes!
DRESS SALE!
ALL NEW SPRING STYLES

1 SALE GROUP DRESSES
Values To 28.00
Jr. &amp; Misses Sizes

1 SAL£ GROUP DRESSES
KNIT
COVER
STORY
It's the new• of
the hour,
translaled by
E 'n C jr. in

Values to 12.00
Misses &amp; Ha If Sizes
iota Has the

DRESSES
.~ ·

in Mi sses Sizes, 8 to 20 .

LADIES
CLASSIC PUMP
.

ALSO:

. E 'n CJuniors, Sizes 3' to 15
Culotte Type Dresses, En sembl es
and Pant Suits .

washable
polyester
·doubleknit.
Slit-front dross,
highlighted with
braid and
hotpant-pow.
Red wilh navy
braid, eggshell /
brown braid,
navy/ red
braid. 5-13.

28.00

DRESS SHOP

.'

The Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.

$19.95 buy. I gallon of Arab Termite Control Concentrate.

EVERYBODY

Famous .. .

.

.ANO SAVE '100 OR MORE

Personal touchea: • pastel
nylon negligee, bordered in
ecru lace, worn with newly·
deBigned panty· hose,
ohaped to fit all figures.
Negligee by Formfit Rog·
ers. Gaymode Panti-hose
by J. C. Penney.

PER.M. PRESS POLYESTERS

Heel, toe, away you 'II go in the
prettiest foot-finds by far.

stom pon' heel. The las t

wo rd in ias hi on ior d ass and ailer.

*

Values to 16.00
Ju11ior Sizes

"The Bank That Flies
The Flag Every Day"

round , bum p toe and

*Shirts by Rob Roy
Carter's Underwear
Sleepwear

Our Greatest

'

j

*Boys ' Suits 2 &amp; 4 pc.

COATS

!
J

1

*Coats, Bows, Purses, Gloves

MEN AND BOYS
MIX'n' MATCH

I

l

*Cinderella Dresses, jackets &amp; Dress Ensembles
*Blue Bird Capes * Trimfit Hosiery

Transfers

c·:_::_;·-~

Look what's coming up
for spring. . . happy
fashions tor little guys
and gals. Dressy things?
Sporty togs 7
Oh, we 've got 'em all.

INFANTSthru SIZE 12

Property

J

own a
car

Beauty Salon

ringtime

Meigs

TANK TOPS

jt.

eas

.•

CIRE COATS

TJ'L 9

Don't let money hold you back. Want that
bright new '72? Shop around and choose
the model you want . . . then come in and
see us about a low bank rate auto loan ...
it gets you the cash you need . Talk tq one
of our car loan experts about the details
' ... he's got all the answer.s for you.

TERmiTE
YOUR

Products Party
Given in Home

JR. GIRlS

992-3498
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS

The Chateau

Center by Ethan Allen.

the righ;;a; c) -, ' ::
to look this spring

rna ies It

Clemente, with whom they have always been a sore subject.
"I've got enough money. I never had any endorsements in my
life, why should-I start now? "
Other PitU&lt;burgh players such as Blass, Dave Cash, Dock Ellis
and Dave Giusti were asked to do one TV commercial together
for a deodorant They did it, and that was it. The majority of the
Pirates, however, received the same amount of endorsement
offers as Robertson . None .
"It wasn't a matter of commercials and endorsements so much
as it was a general indifference to what we accomplished," says
Robertson. "I was surprised. Disappointed, too. Baltimore got
more recognition than we did. We won it. Baltimore didn't win it
We went into the clubhouse as world champions after that final
out, not them. ! don't know why we were sloughed off the way we
were. It's hard to figure. I think the press could've built us up
mnr"' ''

..

.... 1199?-7606

New a,!l the se wing hoorn self-containe(l sewing ceuter. It offers space for ma·
chine and storuge. Sc win ~

.
,
.
' ----- "H£_ _ _____.. .

Romantic . appealing " Dewkist " gardenias.
Loaded with
buds'

"

Short, swing styles or
lovely long hairdos,
will cut, set, any
"do" you des"ire. At a
price you can well

·

..........~::::·_--·- ...4/., .-

M•KE POM

Hairdo
just Right For You. ·

Raymond Lane, Texail Rd., Spruce St., Gallipolis ; Nanette
Gallipolis; R41bert C. Lane, Jr., McKenzie Moody, Chillicothe
Kanauga; Brenda S. Lee, 741 Rd ., Gallipolis ; Lena Mae
Fourth Ave., Gallipo;is ; Pope, Rt.l, Patriot; Audette L.
Howard Morgan Long, Pt. Rossiter, Crown City; Paula J.
Pleasant; Candy L. Merritt, Sallllders, Bidwell, and Carol
Spruce Street Extension, Shoc~ley Swindler, Rt. I,
GallipoUs; Connie Mitchell, 81 Crown aty.

See Us Soon
Expert Hair Coloring
Any Shade You Like
Make Your Appointment Now

s ,N

The Farmers Bank

on'~Ie~~~~t:~:;!~~:n:d~~~::~:~~~~~~;t ~::~"!:~.?:;~

Anderson Street, Mason, W.. ·
Va. ; Deborah Ann HaJTism'l,
Fourth Ave., Gallipolis ;
ROberta Heib Cox,. Uncoln.
Ave., Pt. Pleasant, George A.
Hoffman, Riverview Place,
Middleport ; Karl A. Kebler,
Jr., Mason, W. Va.; Phillip

TO WED SATURDAY
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Bing of
the Harrisonville Road are
announcing the approaching
marriage of their daughter,
Sandra Kay, to Mr. Paul
McElroy, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul McElroy. The wedding
wiii be an open church event at
Denzle C. Stanley, .Vivian
the Zion Church of Christ at Stanley to Warren D. Clay,
6:30p.m. Saturday, Mar~h ta: Phyllis J . Clay, Parcels,
A reception will foiiow at the Scipio-Pageville.
church on Hat-risonville Road.
Robert S. Blackwood, dec'd.
to Gladys E. Blackwood, Cecil
Leroy . Blackwood, Esta Mae
Wein, Cert. of Trans., Scipio.
Hal Lyman, Doris M. Lyman
to George H. Warner, Grace M.
Warner, 35 Acres, Salisbury .
Fred B. Smith, Bertha F.
Smith to David S. Heaton,
Janet Heaton, .25 Acre,
Chester.
' Leland E. Clonch, Reatha V.
Clonch to Clifford E. Manley,
Emily F. Manley, Parcel,
Rutland.
James W. Suttle, Gretta M.
You'll want to be in harmony
Suttie · to Clintoq Holsinger,
With the, season, as sunny skies
Parcel, Olive.
·
arid fragrant flowers fajrly sing
LukeS. McDaniel, Kathy S.
McDaniel to Columbus &amp;
out the wonderful news: spring
Southern
Ohio Elec. Co., Ease .,
has finally arrived!
Lebanon.
Eleanor R. Smith to
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Elec. Co., Ease., Chester .
Edward L. Baer, Ruby Baer
to Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Elec . Co., Ease., Salisbury.
Martin Wilcoxen, Frances S.
SEE OUR ASSORTM.NT OF NEW
Wilcoxen to Columbus &amp;
SPRING PURSES
Southern Ohio Elec . Co., Ease,,
Lebanon.
Franklin Real Estate Co. to
NEW SHIPMENT LADIES' SHORT
Ohio Power Co., Ease., Salem.
SLEEVELESS - FLAME STITCH
Earl Morris, Opal V. Morris
to Earl Morris, Opal V. Morris,
Parcels, Sutton.
CarlS. Hysell, Thelma Agnes
Hysell toMahel Oliver, Lots JIJ.
II, Falloon's Add., Rutland.

BLOOMING

~

t.

The Gallipolis Business
College will hold ita · arulusl
graduation exercises at 7:30
p.m., Saturdsy, March 25, at
the Grace United Methodist
Church. The public is invited.
Speaker for lhe graduation
will be ann!lllnced later.
DiPlomas are to be awarded
to Donna Jane Altizer, :11
. Viotoh Ave., Gallipolis;
Karolyn Soulsby Black, Rt. 2,
Pomeroy; Jacqueline
Reynolds Blankenship, ·184
Park Drive, Pt. Pleasant;
Redi~ Gail Boster, Thurman;
Conme Sue Carhart
.
' 1101
: Sunset Drive, Gallipolis;
Gracella Jo Endicott, Pt.
Pleasant; Patty Ann. Goeglein,
Rt. 3, Pomeroy; Nancy Grace
· Third Ave., GaiUpolis; Mar;
Sue Grim, Rt. I, Gallipolis;
Denise Elaine Grinstead;

GLAMOUR

to Be Wed

•Today's

BIG A STILL CLOSED
NEW YORK (UPJ )-Aqueduct Rare Track remained
shut Wednesd•y as the strike of
pari-mutuel clerks entered its

A pe rky shoe

.

.

Scott Makes NBA
Debut.. Suns Happy

MASON KNICKS - The Mason Knicks, :Hlth Grade basketball team in the Bend I.eagut·
this season. was coached by Charles Kitchen. Team members are front row, from ldt, s.. utt
Chapman, Bob Van Meter, Tim Young, Billy Gibbs, Tommy Roush. Second row, JultuuJ
Barto n, John Van Meter, Kenny Young, Harry Gibbs. Third row , Butch Stewart, Eddie Hull nion,t;tenn Werry and Jimmy Bable. Coach Kitchen is in the background.

GBc·Graduation Set March 25

. ..Wi•tt
al mer
l
Try Contact .Lenses

On top of that, many writers~
and . fans thought . the invttallons extended to local
schools Fordham and St.
John's were undeserving and
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. may try them (in the Mast.
that neither Lafayette nor (UP!) - Arnold Palmer, who ers)," Pahner said. "If they do
Davidson · should have been at 42 will give contact lenses a bothet me, I will just wait until
invited since neither team try next week, is trying to fight after the Masters ."
plays the kind of competition his way out of a terrible slump
associated with post-season with his beloved Masters
tournament only three weeks
tournament teams.
away.
The fact thBt Ohio Stale and
Palmer, who missed the cut
Tennessee each turned down a
bid to play in the tournament at the Citrus Open last week for .
further embarrassed the selec- the first lime in 86 tourtion committee, but amid the ·naments, shot a struggling 75
'
furor and fuss the NIT has Wednesday in the pro-am
managed to come out smelling preceding the $125,000 Greater By United Press International
Charlie Scott made h.is
Jacksonville Open, and impretty good.
NationaiBasketbaUAssociation
What they have assembled mediately headed for the
debut Wednesday night and
for the 35th aiUluai tournament practice area.
"! played awful,'' moaned Phoenix fans came away
are four of the lop 20 nationally
the
four-time
Masters pleased.
Scott, who was leading the
champion. He said it wasn't
American
Basketball Associaone particular phase of his
game which was bad, "it was tion in scoring before he
jumped to the NBA Suns last
everything."
Asked if he had hopes of week, stored ll points in 22
getting his game together here, minutes to help Phoenix to a
Palmer replied, "! have hopes lliJ.J06 victory over the Milof getting it together before the waukee Bucks.
Connie Hawkins, another for·
!)lasters. That's why I've been
mer ABA star who defected to
hit wen in minor ( .324 at Tulsa working so hard."
last year) but hasn't clicked in
Palmer, whose string of poor the NBA, played the major role
previous major league trials play started with closing in the upset, however, hitting 13
with the Dodgers and Cardin- rounds of 8M9 at the Jackie of his 27 points in the last IO'k
als, might move ahead.
Gleason Inverrary Classic, has minutes to rally the Suns from
The first four starting pitch- been using glasses in practice a four-point deficit.
Neal Walk added 17 points for
ers are righthanders Larry because of a nearsighted
Dierker (I~ with a 2.71 ERA), condition but he hasn 't felt Phoenix while Kareem AbduiDon Wilson (16-10 and 2.45), comfortable with them . His Jabbar led the Bucks with 36
and Ken Forsch (8-8) and 2.54, contact lenses are scheduled to points.
and southpaw Roberts ( 14-17 arrive next Tuesday or Wed- · Elsewhere, the Boston Celtics
defeated the Philadelphia 76ers,
and a fantastic 2.10 at San nesday.
"If they don't bother me, I 120-115, the Atlanta Hawks
Diego) .
crushed the Seattle SuperSo'
;:;:::=::::::::~:::!::::::~::8:~::~::::~::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::?.!::!!!::~:::::::::::::~~3::~~~=*"3!:~:*s:::::::&amp;::::::::::::s: nics, 134-96, and the Los
~
~
Angeles Lakers beat the
~aM
i::~ Cincinnati
Royals, 12l·ll6.
Dave
Cowens
17 of his
~ 24 points in the scored
period as
i!tw
!!i« Boston downed final
~~ • j ~
the
76ers to
I
~
~
~ clinch at least a tie for the
BRADENTON, Fla. (UPI)- "Every time I look at that pic- Atlantic Division title. Cowens
broke a 104-104 tie with little
ture, I gel cold chills. "
Bob Robertson, Pittsburgh's red-haired, big muscled first mor~ than fiveminutes.l~lt ~~pd
•
the next six Boston
baseman, sat on a chair ouiside the clubhouse waiting for the ball thenhit
.nls
to
push the eelu-·cs
" o" ~
Pol
•
game to begin when someone showed him the picture again . .
112-1061ead.
John
Havlicek
led
It was taken an instant after the last out in the final World
Series game with Baltimore last Oct. 17 and you can see Ump Ed Boston with 36 points while
Sudol signaling Merv Rettenmund out, Steve Blass jumping high Billy Cunningham had 32 and
Fred Carter 30 for the 76ers.
into the air and Robertson, with his mouth wide open, raising 30 points, crushed ' injuryboth hands aloft
riddled Seattle, which entered
The Pirates are very proud or the picture. They have the the game with only eight
original back home in Three Rivers Stadium and they have put a players in uniform and then
duplicate on the frorit cover of their 1972 press, TV and radio lost center Pete Cross with a
guide. That was the one Robertson was looking at now.
broken nose and three stitches
"You k·now why my mouth is open like that?" he said, pointin~ over his eye. Spencer
to his face in the photo, "1 was saying 'World's champions.' I
must have stood there saying that for five minutes . But you know
something? 1 didn't really feel like a world champion all winter.
Financially , 1 did. Otherwise, no.''
Robertson not Alone
Bob Robertson isn't the only member of the Pirates who says
that . Many others do. They say the Orioles received more
recognition losing than they did winning and for the most part
they are right. This puzzles the Pirates: They can't understand
why they were ignored, why they were put off in a corner
someplace as baseball's faceless wiiUlers.
Roberto Clemente is a prime example . Clemente dominated
the World Series as few others ever have, yet was offered only

.

•

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TRICOT LINED
IN BlACK OR
WHITE

J

·THE SHOE BOXAA ToW
Width .

Where Shops are Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT. O.

And

BEAUTY SALON ·
Main &amp; Sycamore
POMEROY
.

Easter Slnec;o[
r
1-0

Our Reg. 517.50 Permanents. Make your
app t. now - have your permanent later!. .......... ...

.

1250.

�.•

..

6- The Daily Sentinei,Mi~port·"lliJlei'Oy,O.,March 16,1972

7- Tbe lllllf llenlblel, Mldclleport.pcmeroy, 0., March 16,1972

1"'

'

Easter Seal Report Now Public
Early ·liagnosis of a
disabllitJ oJ the traditional
medical axion for the sue·
cessful li'eatment of children
and adults with handicaps and
disabling conditions.
The annual report of the
National Easter seal Society
just received by Rev. Charles
Simons, current President of
the Meigs County Society for
Crippled Children and Adults is
available to anyone who wishes
to see it. One each will be
placed in the Middleport
Library and the Pomeroy
Library .
'
In stressing the need for
early evaluation, the report
stales, "screening programs
for school-age children identify
speech, hearing, visual and
other problems which can be
corrected early in life." The
report singles out sickle-eell
anemia for early detection,
which has a high incidence and
mortality rate among the black
New areas of loveliness open up in the bedroom with

The bay window of any living area hecomes a versatile,

the addition of an attractive study and bill-paying area.

comfortable gathering place with a built-in, cushioned
banquette. A delightful breakfast nook can easily con·

French provincial deek ami paisley covered chair, set
again.!!t th e light airinesR of matched Slt~dea and floorlength cnrlain s, ~•cc ent thi s window treatment. Tontine

window shade cloth by Stauffer Chemical Company.

Grange Opposes
Revamping of
Ag De,Partment

vert to a gaming area or a favorite conversation spot.

Fluffy ruffled curtains add to the relaxed feeling. Kodel
polyester fabric blends, and Kodel latex foam rubber.

Party Staged For Veterans ·

Focus On
Ingenuity
Is Theme
The new breed of apart·
ment dweller Is setting up
ermanent residence- usng Ingenuity to create a
focal point.
The focal point can be a
wood-burning fireplace In
an older apartment. In a
newer bulldlng a colorful,
oversized oU painting can
be an eye-catcher.
These principles can be
utUI.Zed whatever style of
furniture Is selected-be It
traditional, Mediterranean
or contemporary.
Because apartments tend
to be small, here are a few
pointers to keep In mind:
. • Keep furniture smaU In
size.
o Select lightly scaled
furniture. For example,
cushioned seat and back
wooden party chairs In
place or upholstered armchairs.
o Don't clutter. If there
Is a picture window with a
IDvely view- and privacy,
why bother with draperies?
• Pattern In fabrics

r.

DELORES GILL
Delores Gill, 9, daughter of
the Rev. and Mrs. Eugene
Gill, has been named
Christian Youth group
member of the month at the
Laurel CWf Free Methodist
Church. She was named for
honor points received by
meeting all requiremenls.
should be In relation to
ro~~~~Z:-coverlngs should
be wall-to-wall unless the
tloors are good, such as
parquet.

Serving Begins at 4 ·
RUTLAND - Serving for a
jitney supper to be held lonighl
at the Rutland Grade School
will begin at 4 p.m.
The jitney supper is being
held by the Rutland Firemen's
Auxiliary which met tuesday
nigh! at the hall to complete
plans. The public is invited to
the. supper. A varied menu is
planned .
Welcomed into membership
of the group was Mrs. Jim
Quillen, who recently moved
here from Cleveland. The
bylaws were amended. A
household products party was
tentatively set for April 16 and
members were asked to invite

a guest or two . Books are
available at the Miller Bros.
Store. All members are asked
to take a dozen cookies for
refreshments.
Mrs. Jerry Eads donated the
traveling prize won by Mrs.
Merle Davis. Refreshments
were served by Mrs . Bob
Miller and Mrs. Kenneth
Michael. Others attending
were Mrs. Bruce Davis, Mrs.
Bill Gaddis, Mrs. Bill Brown,
Mrs. Howard Birchfield, Mrs.
Bill Williamson, Mrs. Larry
Edwards, Mrs. Bob Miller,
Mrs. Bob Bishop, Mrs. Dick
Foley, and Mrs. Russell Little.

Forty-four paUents at the
Southeastern Ohlo Mental
Health Center were guests at a
St. Patrick's Day party stag~
Tuesday night by the
Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Games were played with
prizes of wash cloths, perfume, cologne, sachet, powder,
shaving supplies, stationery,
stamps, candy, jewelry, pens
and note pads being awarded.
Refreshments of candy bars,
cakes, bananas, and gum were
served. Mrs. Carl Roach was at
the piano for a hymn sing, and
Lawrence Stewart had the
proyer .
Others going over for the
party were Mr, and Mrs. Osby
Martin, Mrs. Lawrence

Rev. Lund to
Add:
p'T' A
ress 1. L1
The Rev . Arthur Lund,
pastor of St. Paul's Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy, will be
speaker when the Chester PTA
meets at 8 p.m. Monday at the
school.
The Rev . Mr. Lund, who is
active with the Meigs County
Committee on Drug and
Alcohol abuse, has had special
training In drug and alcohol
problems
at
Rutgers
University summer school.
He wiU be speaking on
"Drugs- Parents.- You Can
Do Something". He will be
using three film strips in his
presentation entitled
"Prescriptions, Not for
Kicks", "Marijuana" and
"Uppers and Downers - Who
Killed Billy Lawton". Pamphelts will be distributed on
alcohol and drug abuse. The
public is invited to attend the
meeting.

K&amp;C JEWELERS .

Slewart, Mrs. Denver Rice,
Mrs. Norman Yeauger, Mrs.
William Yeauger of the
Homebuilders Class; Mrs.
Clyda Allensworth of the Loyal
Bereans Class of the church,
and Miss Elizabeth Fick, Tri
City Sewing Club. Carl Wright,
a hospital employee, assisted
with the party.

COMMITTEE NAMED
RUTLAND - Mrs. Shirley
Bishop, Mrs. Herbert Grate
and Mrs. Donna Grate were
named to the nominating
committee when the Rutland
PTA met Monday night at the
school. Several money making
projects were discussed. A
decision on serving the Rulland
Alwnni Association banquet
was postponed. Several
amendments to the by-laws
were
presented.
Mrs.
Elizabeth Websler 's second
grade won the attendance
banner.

LETART FALLS - Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 here held
its monthly meeting at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Donohew Thursday evening
with worthy master Herbert
Shields in the chair. The
trustees of Community Hall
were authorized to get
anything needed from the
grange hall.
Grange members voted
unanimously against
reorganization of the Department of Agriculture.
The Grange will repair a
small room in the community
hall for a storage room for
Grange equipment. Mabel
Shields, lecturer, gave the
program, a readingf ~~ our
Neighbor," by Erm11 Wilson;
"My Neighbors", by Florence
Smith; '\A Bit of March," by
Doris Sayre ; "A Popular
Proverb," by Mable Shields
and "A Farmer's Joke," by
Herbert Shields.
Games were played with
prizes going to Doris Sayre and
Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Herbert Sayre. Potluck
refreshments were served. The
next meeting will be at the
Community Hall April 13.

population.
Other evaluation programs
receiving Increases attention
by the National Society, its
state and local affiliates
concerns infant development.
Beginning as early as three
months of age, children
suspected of neurological
impairments ·can he given
evaluation by medical and
paramedical specialists. As
vital as all of these programs
are - they are not possible
without adequate funding to
provide maximum service.
Revenue from public contributions and other sources,
report announces, reach a new
high - ~.5 million in 1970 as
compared with $39.4 mjlllon for
Uie preceding year, an in·
crease of 15.5 percent.
Programs supported by
these funds fall into ~0 major
categories, with restorative
services totaling 204,000 to
leading all others. Second
ranking Services numbering
more than 72,600 include those
in a basic program designed to
provide health and welfare
information, referral to
agencies best qualified to give
treatment, and a follow-up
procedure to determine
whether the client Is receiving

DR. GRAHAM

Dr. Graham Will
Speak at Rally
Dr .
Joseph
Graham,
superintendent of the Athens
District of the United
Methodist Church, will be
speaker at a rally to be held
Saturday at 6:30 p. m. at the
Wahama High School. The
rally is being held one day
before the Billy Graham
evangelistic films are shown at
the ~ew Haven Theater in New
Haven.
·
The films to be shown include
"The Restless Ones", Sunday,
2:30 and 7:30p.m.: "The Heart
Is a Rebel", 7 p.m. Monday;
"Lucia," Tuesday, 7 p. m.;
"The
Shadow
of
a
Boomerang," at 7 p. m.,
Wednesday, and "His Land,"
Thursday, 7 p.m.

the services required.
In Ohio nearly 20,000 han·
dicapped children and adults
received services through the
Easter Seal Society aHillates
providing a variety of localized
services lliroughout the-state.
These services are categorized
in five areas of disability In·
eluding Communication lm·
painnents (speech and hearing
disorders screened and
treated) ; Orthopedic;
Neuro(ogical
and
Neuromuscular: Social·
psychologic~!, educational
disorders; and a general
category which includes heart
and circulatory diseases,
respiratory.diseases, qlindness
or visual impairment and
testing and accidental injuries.
The programs in Ohio were
funded in the amount of
$1,303,386 through voluntary
contributions from the public
in 1971 Easter Seal Campaign,
speCial gifts, memberships,
bequests and memorials,
government grants and other
income . . A significant grant

W

lm

Social Calendar

THURSDAY
FEENEY ·BENNETT Post
128, American Legion birthday
observance, dinner 6:30 p.m.
JITNEY Supper, Rutland
Grade School, by the Rutland
Firemen'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. _
SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
Thursday, 7;30 p.m. at hall in
Chester, work In EA degree.
All Master Masons Invited.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
clubhouse, Racine. Refresh·
menta.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters
meeting, 7:30 Thursday at high
school to plan for basketbell
banquet.
ST. PATRICK'S DAY card
party, Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
Table and door prizes.
·Donation $1.25. .
WILLING Workers ClaBS,
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~ Williain
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 81o
11 :30 p.m. with the Hilltoppers.

DANCE PARTY, Friday,
High
School
Wahama
auditorium 8 to 11 with the Jays
emceeing, school sponsored.
SA'ruRDAY
DANCE PARTY, Saturday, 8
to 11 p. m., Wa)lama High
School, the Jays emceeing,
school sponsored.
BELLING and shower
honoring Mr, and Mrs. Donald
Randolph 7:30 p. m. Saturday
at Hemlock Grove Grange
Hall.
PUBLIC BEAN and com
bread supper, Saturday,
Tuppers
Plains
United
Methodist Church annex,
serving starting at 4:30 p. m.
AMERICAN LEGION Post
602, Racine, birthday party and
supper, Saturday, 6:30 p.m.
with speaker, for members and
families, games.
SUNDAY
DEDICATION ceremonies
Sunday at Pomeroy Lower
Llgh'l C~urch. The Rev.
Matthew Harden, Ann Arbor,
Mich., will be guest speaker.
Services for dedication of new
Sanctuary will be at 2 p.m.
REVIVAL Monday through
March 24 at Long Bottom
Christian Church, 7:30 each
evening, Lori Brafford,
evangelist. Public welcome.
MONDAY
THEODORUS Councill7, D.
of A., Monday, 7:30 p. m.IOOF
Hall. Brochures on Insurance
program available from Mrs.
Nettie Hayes or Mrs. Henry
Reibel.

New contemporary look of the olfl.fashioned rocker eel•
off area·near~the-entrance with distinction. Low coffee
table plus hrasB-and·gla" lantern complete the compati·
hility of yesterday and today. Exotic texture of screen
and vari-striped wallpaper add unusual touch. By Lon·
dan Style 2 Collection of Vymura WallcoveringB.

SPORl
COAlS:
the costume makers

Curlee
Cricketeer
Sewell .
Eldorado

Watches by Bulova, Accutron and Caravelle
New Costume Jewelry
Charm Bracelets

!dent Bracelets
Birthstone, Linde Star, · Cameo,
Eastern Star, Masonic and
Diamond Onyx.

Crisp, clean lines of sleek white plaBtic furniture mix·

Fashionable fabrics
and colors.

and-match modular and curved lines to exciting advan·
VOY AG[

$1 5 0 TO :u s
W EO "lN G liZ . 50
M AN'S"
~::..
' _ _ _ _ _,_ _ _ _

Officers Elected
Mrs. J. Edward Foster was
elected president of the
Missionary Society of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church
Thursday night .at the church.
Others elected were Mra.
Oliver Michael, secretarytreuurer; Mrs. Orval Wiles,
while crosa chairman; Mrs.
George Skinner. chairman of
Christian social relations; Mrs.
Ellen Couch, love gift chairman, and Mrs. Albert Smith,
literature.
The Rio Grande Association
spring meeting wu ann~
for March 18 at 2 p. m. at the
Calvary Baptiat Church at Rio
Grande. At that time an invitation will be extended from
the Pomeroy Church for the

I age. Vibrant, bright patterned wallcovering becomes a
calalyBt for the unusual in a small area of the room. By
Loudon Style 2 Collection of Vymura Wallcoverings.

NEW
Just Anived

Kerm 's Komer

BULK GARDEN SEED

New .York Clothing· House
Easter Headquarters For Men '
S: JO p.m. Daily
&amp;

Mason W. Va

Saluruv

'

POMEROY, OHI()

Notes

PTA Scholarship Deadline is .April 1st

'

Mra. 'Beulah Ewing and Mrs.
Helen Norrl! visited relatives

in Kingston and Jackson
Sunday. AI KingstOn, they
were guests of Mrs. Norris'
11011, Eugene, and family, and
in Jacklon they visited Mr. and
Mrs. Lawton Templeton. Mrs.
· Templeton iS · Mrs. Ewing's
sister, Gaye.
Mrs. Charles Davis and
children, Timuni, Lisa and
Thomas, Scottsboro, Ala., were
Tuesday visitors of her fatherin-law, Mr. Richard Davis,
Union Ave.
Mr. and Mrs . William
Radfot'd and Mrs. Glen Glaze
were In Colwnbus Sunday to
visit their nieces, · Ptitricia
Glaze and Denise Byers, both
patients at Children's Hospital.
·While in Columbus they also
vl!ited with Mary Radford who
!snow employee\ In the office at
Doctors' Hospital whil~ con·.
tinulng her nurses training at
the Columbus Technical Institute. She plans to resume
full-time training In the faU.
Mrs. William Folmer was
returned home from the Holzer
Medical Center Wednesday
following surgery there last
week.

service of instaUation.
A white cross report was
given. Mrs. Robert Kuhn was
at the plano for group singing
of "They'll Know We Are
·Christians by Our LOve" and
Mrs. Joseph Cook had prayer.
Scripture in uniaon'was Psalm
24,-1 and Ephesians ·5:1~17.
"Changing Family Patterns" wu the prilgram topic
used by MJ:s. Foster. Mrs.
Skinner read "Hear. the Word
of God" and the closing prayer
was by Mrs. Kuhn. Mrs. Ellen
Couch and Mrs. Albert Smith
were hostesses. Others at the
meeting were Mrs. William
Watson, Mrs. Lester Price,
Mrs. T. T. Shelton and Mrs.
Ivan Walker.

complete schoianhlp I! 1200 a
year for a two year period or a
total of f400. One will be ''
awarded this spring to a Meigs
County senior.
The completed applications
are to be mailed to the
today.
Scholarship Committee, Ohio
Appllcations are available in Congreu of Parents and
all three Meigs County high Teachers,.Inc., 427 East Town
schools to seniors planning to St., Colwnbus, Ohio, 43215.
enter the field of education. A Selection of the recipients
are made by lhcl Ohio PTA
Scholarship Committee which
BURT GETTING BA
will meet In ,\prll. No apJeffrey L. Burt , son of Mr.. pllcations are ·acknowledged
and, Mrs. Marvin Burt, 315 and only those selected are
.
Welzgall St., Pomeroy, will ilotilled.
,
receive hls bachelor of arts · The foUowtng basis guides
degree at Bowling Green the committee In its evaluation
University Saturday when and screening of the ap- '
commencement exercises are pllcants:
· beld.
-Scholarship record as
The deadline lor making
application for a J400 PTA.
scholarahip to be awarded this
spring Is April!, Mrs. Richw-d
Vaughan, president of the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers, advised

.

presented by the tr8111Crlpt of
credits from .the high school
and attached to the ap·
plication.
·
-Recommendations.
-Statements furnished by
the student giving Information
about activities In high school,
and also reasons why he or she
w~nt$ a position In the field of
education.
Only applications completed
according to instructions are
considered.
To receive a scholarship, ills
required
that the student
be ki
h' hmust
ill
ta ng a course w 1c w
l~d
· to teachi!'g
latedor other
educationally r~
ca~eer,
such as counselor, educalional
psychologist, visiting teacher,
II bra ria n, voc a qo n a I
education, school social

Tree Sales to Begin

many

PI'A'I of ONo bGilb.
the llla\1 J'zzn-111 SO' I PI:
~ Jut ,....
An Eaalenl Bicb Bellool
graduate bas reeelncl tba
acholarship for the put two
years.
.
Further lnformaU. an the
achcjlarshlp prCJtllam may be
oblatned from Mn. Vaugbln,
Third Ave., Middleport.

take a fashion break

in~~·

by 1&amp;"~~

feet a break. They
deserve it. Dress them up
in a pair of Summer Coolers from

Thorn MeAn. In go-wlth-anythinggt'lliny
white leathers, SUmmer Coolers are deslgMd
to complement today's colorful warm--ther apparel
for men. Summer Coolers offer the latest looks In fnhion,
from dressy boot and oxford styles to ntw hi&amp;h-h"l
fashion boots. Thorn MeAn's Summer Coolers .. .
designed to make the !ivins easter. Only $14.99

heritage house
FORMERLY KIPS SHOE STORE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

''

• • • How A Good Thing Gets Around.
Come See For Yourself

BAKER
IS

READY
FOR
SPRING

.

Dautahter 's th
.o;rt
·. hdar11 Noted
D~
'-'

ufavWJilldcake;Ic:ecream,
potato chips and 10ft drinks
were served. Gifts were
Mr. and Mra. Steve Houchins
presented to .!Ar.\. Others at·
fending were Tereaa Harden, entertained Saturday af·
'!'riley Riffle, Tanya Salser, temoon with a .party honoring
Kathy Baket and Doug, Cindy ' theli- deughler. Stephanie, on
her seventh bli1hday.
and Brian Warden.
· Games were played with
prizes going to the winners.
Bubb.le pipes were given u
·
favors. Cake and Ice cream
·
·
were served by Mrs. Houchins ·
S.-sgt. and Mrs. Michael who was assisted with the
Capehart of Homestaed Air party by anothe~ daughter, '
Force Base, Florlde, are an- Angela, and her friend, Kim
nounclng the birth of their lint Glull. ·
·
ch!lci, a 110n named Benjamin
Attending the party were
Allen Ray.
Margery Miller, Tanya
The infant wu born on Stobart, Joyce Stewart, ·
March 13 at the Pleasant Susanna Wise, Kimberly
Valley Hospital and weighed Roush, Pam and Cindy Crooks.
five pounds, nine 011n~es. Paula Swisher sent a gift to
Grandparenta are Mr · and Stephanie.
Mrs. Ben Cuto, Muon, W.Va.
and Mrs. Lorraine Theobald,
Columbus. Great·
grandparents are Mn. Forrest
c.to and Jeaee Ly0111, Muon,
W.Va.

HOW

ABOUT

Son Bom Monday

YOU
·z~

PA1 CABJE

BONGFEST SUNDAY
A IOIIIfell will be held at the
'f141perl PI.IIDI Ellmlnlar)'
~at 1:311 p.m. on SUllday,
Mlfdlli, wllh tbe RevelltU0111
Qulrt.tt, the 0wen1 Family and .
the BlaeU M-cen to be

llhipl _.. awaded b)' llle

Give your

SUPPORT ASKED
The teen youth group of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ is
asked to support the new
Church of Christ in Gallipolis
by attending Sunday morning
services there.

RUTLAND - Orders for Arbor Day plantings, the
flowering crabapple trees or garden club members stress
pink and white dogwood trees the Importance of trees in
are .belilg accep!M , ,thi'ough .. estabHshing a balailcecl' ·ert· .. ' .
Marclf 'zil by ·the-'" Rullarid I vlronflleht. Tliefpdiitt out tliaf ' .. ' '
Friendly Gardeners Club.
now Arilerlcans. are burning
·
Peracina wlahlng to order ·more and more fuel and uptrees may call either Mrs. setting the healthful balance of
.Jiarold Wolfe, 742-,1191, or Mrs. oxygen and carbon dioxide in
Larry Edward&amp;, ·742-3781, the the atmosphere. Trees are
civic co.cbalrmen, or contact nature's way of converting
any member of the club.
carbon dioxide into oxygen,
"Keep it clean and green by and they point out that
planting a tree" suggests. the statistics show that one tree
garden club members who produces enough oxygen in a 24
invite residents to join in the hour period to Sl(llsln We for
celebration of Arbor Day. This the same period of time.
year marka tbe centennial of
Trees filter odors and dust
Arbor Day proposed In 1872 by particles from the air, they
J. Sterling Morton.
release moisture that cools the
In urging participation in air and washes it, they are the
beSt answer to erosion, they
help keep pollution from
washing Into streams, they
reduce silt that clogs streams,
and they help prevent flooding;
explain the club members. In
addition · they provide shelter
for birds and wildlife, they
Lori Warden · was ·honored provide shade, and they
Saturday with a party In ob- camouflag~ harsh scenery.
servance of her seventh
The tree sale is an annual
birthday at the home of her part of the Rutland Friendly
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gardeners annUal cleanup,
Warden.
paintup, and plantup campaign
Games were played with · scheduled this year for the
Michelle Johnson, Kim \ week of May 1 through May 6.
Maynard, Rebecca Lee,
Melanie Weese and Angle
·
7
Glenn winning prizes. Hats,
horns and balloona "'ere given
l&gt; •
II

worker, teacher or the deaf and
bard or hearing, orthopedically
handicapped children, 11M*
with visual handlcapa, the
edtiC8ble menially retarded,
physical, oc;cupatlonal or
speech and hearing therapilt.
All Meigs County Pl'A units
have contributed to the
scbolarship which will be
awarded to a local stucleDt this
year. A total of 233 scholar·

GUARD YOUR HEALTH

BIRTIIDAY OBSERVED
Ronald Barnhart was
honored with a family party In
observance of his birthday
anniversary Sunday at the
home of 'his parents, Mr." and
Mrs. Dale Barnhart. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Barnhart and four of their five
children, Kathy, Dale, Kenneth
and Leah Ann, and Mr~ and
Mrs. Ernest Barnhart and
daughter, Sherrie, who baked
the birthday cake for her uncle.
Greg, a son of the Ronald
Barnharts, was unable to attend due to his employment.

By Lori Warden

There's that shirt ... those
slacks ... those ties. Find the
missing link: the sport coat
that make~ them into an ensemble. Start looking in our
store. We have the best.

RINGS

"A Church for Otberl" wu methods and auisted In
theprolramloplcpreeenled!Jy solvtne their health probltllll'.
llflsi EIJJabeth O.vla, •At a
f4laa Dl!vla concluded llie
meeting of the WSCS of the worship service by comEnterprise United MelhOdlat mentlng on ~Ur praiae of God
Church at the bonie of Mrs. through Dtir iifferlngs. A penod
Frances Runnel.
of prayer followed and Mrs.
The caD to worship included Hunnel118118 another song.
scripture from Acts 2:46-47.
Mrs. Hunnel presided at the
The leader explained that we meeting with· members giving
. pr8i.tji!God In 11011g wltb''Mrl. ll(llrish ·name In response to
Hunnelllnglnc "Now Thanlt. · rollcaU.Planaweremaclefora
We All Our ~loci:" Aprlyer Bible study on St. Mat!Mw to
froni Africa by' Mia Davia wu begin sometime after Easter,
preceded wllh the comment
Members reported on shut-In
that &lt;;ocfapeaka to tis through visits dtll'ing the past month.
prayer,llld Mrs. Delores Will Mrs. Martha Husted gave a
eJ'tll'wlli"ed scrip~ u a way report on the bOQk, "Ed!ICatlon
God ..,.ks to b)a pecple. 1
of the. Wasp." Announcement
The prdcram lOok the format . wu made of. the Billy Graham
of a dlalocue between a WSCS film crusade to be held March
leader and · a missionary 19·23 at the New Haven
couple, who explained a pilot Theater. Mrs. Bernice Evans
project In Africa where the closed the meeting with
people were taught how to prayer.
improve their agricultural

PerD~al

Birthday Marked

HAS GREAT

Pendants

was awarded In teRoy Klein,
Ph.D, M.D. qf CQe Weste,rn
Reserve Unlvenlty Scllool of
Medicine, Cleveland in his
second stace of the project
initiated last year In the study
of
developmel'tal
and
metabolic boneprbblema Iii the
growing children and animals.
"We are very proud. of our. ·
Society- tiere in Meigs County
and across the nation," !'lid
Rev. Simons '1or the many .
volunteers who make thls.W«'k
possible, for the thousands of
donors who contribute rilckels,
dimes, and dollars to ~lp those
thousands who cannot help
themselves."
The National Easter ·Seal
Society, the nation's oldest and
largest voluntary · health
agency serving the ban·
dicapped, was founded in
Elyria, Ohio In 19!9 by
Rotarian Edgar F. (Daddy)
Allen. The Society now
provides services coast to
coast, in Alaska and Hawali,
and has International Affiliates
throughout the world.

Mrs. Runnel
Hosts WSCS

Pomeroy ...

. ..
',

Y'.l.' ...

1V BIUS AT
JIMMIE'S

.'

~··

FURNITURE

Paslry Shop

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

383 N. Second Ave.
Middleport
992-3555

Authorized Agent

featured.

'

I

"·' .

�.•

..

6- The Daily Sentinei,Mi~port·"lliJlei'Oy,O.,March 16,1972

7- Tbe lllllf llenlblel, Mldclleport.pcmeroy, 0., March 16,1972

1"'

'

Easter Seal Report Now Public
Early ·liagnosis of a
disabllitJ oJ the traditional
medical axion for the sue·
cessful li'eatment of children
and adults with handicaps and
disabling conditions.
The annual report of the
National Easter seal Society
just received by Rev. Charles
Simons, current President of
the Meigs County Society for
Crippled Children and Adults is
available to anyone who wishes
to see it. One each will be
placed in the Middleport
Library and the Pomeroy
Library .
'
In stressing the need for
early evaluation, the report
stales, "screening programs
for school-age children identify
speech, hearing, visual and
other problems which can be
corrected early in life." The
report singles out sickle-eell
anemia for early detection,
which has a high incidence and
mortality rate among the black
New areas of loveliness open up in the bedroom with

The bay window of any living area hecomes a versatile,

the addition of an attractive study and bill-paying area.

comfortable gathering place with a built-in, cushioned
banquette. A delightful breakfast nook can easily con·

French provincial deek ami paisley covered chair, set
again.!!t th e light airinesR of matched Slt~dea and floorlength cnrlain s, ~•cc ent thi s window treatment. Tontine

window shade cloth by Stauffer Chemical Company.

Grange Opposes
Revamping of
Ag De,Partment

vert to a gaming area or a favorite conversation spot.

Fluffy ruffled curtains add to the relaxed feeling. Kodel
polyester fabric blends, and Kodel latex foam rubber.

Party Staged For Veterans ·

Focus On
Ingenuity
Is Theme
The new breed of apart·
ment dweller Is setting up
ermanent residence- usng Ingenuity to create a
focal point.
The focal point can be a
wood-burning fireplace In
an older apartment. In a
newer bulldlng a colorful,
oversized oU painting can
be an eye-catcher.
These principles can be
utUI.Zed whatever style of
furniture Is selected-be It
traditional, Mediterranean
or contemporary.
Because apartments tend
to be small, here are a few
pointers to keep In mind:
. • Keep furniture smaU In
size.
o Select lightly scaled
furniture. For example,
cushioned seat and back
wooden party chairs In
place or upholstered armchairs.
o Don't clutter. If there
Is a picture window with a
IDvely view- and privacy,
why bother with draperies?
• Pattern In fabrics

r.

DELORES GILL
Delores Gill, 9, daughter of
the Rev. and Mrs. Eugene
Gill, has been named
Christian Youth group
member of the month at the
Laurel CWf Free Methodist
Church. She was named for
honor points received by
meeting all requiremenls.
should be In relation to
ro~~~~Z:-coverlngs should
be wall-to-wall unless the
tloors are good, such as
parquet.

Serving Begins at 4 ·
RUTLAND - Serving for a
jitney supper to be held lonighl
at the Rutland Grade School
will begin at 4 p.m.
The jitney supper is being
held by the Rutland Firemen's
Auxiliary which met tuesday
nigh! at the hall to complete
plans. The public is invited to
the. supper. A varied menu is
planned .
Welcomed into membership
of the group was Mrs. Jim
Quillen, who recently moved
here from Cleveland. The
bylaws were amended. A
household products party was
tentatively set for April 16 and
members were asked to invite

a guest or two . Books are
available at the Miller Bros.
Store. All members are asked
to take a dozen cookies for
refreshments.
Mrs. Jerry Eads donated the
traveling prize won by Mrs.
Merle Davis. Refreshments
were served by Mrs . Bob
Miller and Mrs. Kenneth
Michael. Others attending
were Mrs. Bruce Davis, Mrs.
Bill Gaddis, Mrs. Bill Brown,
Mrs. Howard Birchfield, Mrs.
Bill Williamson, Mrs. Larry
Edwards, Mrs. Bob Miller,
Mrs. Bob Bishop, Mrs. Dick
Foley, and Mrs. Russell Little.

Forty-four paUents at the
Southeastern Ohlo Mental
Health Center were guests at a
St. Patrick's Day party stag~
Tuesday night by the
Homebuilders Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ.
Games were played with
prizes of wash cloths, perfume, cologne, sachet, powder,
shaving supplies, stationery,
stamps, candy, jewelry, pens
and note pads being awarded.
Refreshments of candy bars,
cakes, bananas, and gum were
served. Mrs. Carl Roach was at
the piano for a hymn sing, and
Lawrence Stewart had the
proyer .
Others going over for the
party were Mr, and Mrs. Osby
Martin, Mrs. Lawrence

Rev. Lund to
Add:
p'T' A
ress 1. L1
The Rev . Arthur Lund,
pastor of St. Paul's Lutheran
Church in Pomeroy, will be
speaker when the Chester PTA
meets at 8 p.m. Monday at the
school.
The Rev . Mr. Lund, who is
active with the Meigs County
Committee on Drug and
Alcohol abuse, has had special
training In drug and alcohol
problems
at
Rutgers
University summer school.
He wiU be speaking on
"Drugs- Parents.- You Can
Do Something". He will be
using three film strips in his
presentation entitled
"Prescriptions, Not for
Kicks", "Marijuana" and
"Uppers and Downers - Who
Killed Billy Lawton". Pamphelts will be distributed on
alcohol and drug abuse. The
public is invited to attend the
meeting.

K&amp;C JEWELERS .

Slewart, Mrs. Denver Rice,
Mrs. Norman Yeauger, Mrs.
William Yeauger of the
Homebuilders Class; Mrs.
Clyda Allensworth of the Loyal
Bereans Class of the church,
and Miss Elizabeth Fick, Tri
City Sewing Club. Carl Wright,
a hospital employee, assisted
with the party.

COMMITTEE NAMED
RUTLAND - Mrs. Shirley
Bishop, Mrs. Herbert Grate
and Mrs. Donna Grate were
named to the nominating
committee when the Rutland
PTA met Monday night at the
school. Several money making
projects were discussed. A
decision on serving the Rulland
Alwnni Association banquet
was postponed. Several
amendments to the by-laws
were
presented.
Mrs.
Elizabeth Websler 's second
grade won the attendance
banner.

LETART FALLS - Ohio
Valley Grange 2612 here held
its monthly meeting at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Donohew Thursday evening
with worthy master Herbert
Shields in the chair. The
trustees of Community Hall
were authorized to get
anything needed from the
grange hall.
Grange members voted
unanimously against
reorganization of the Department of Agriculture.
The Grange will repair a
small room in the community
hall for a storage room for
Grange equipment. Mabel
Shields, lecturer, gave the
program, a readingf ~~ our
Neighbor," by Erm11 Wilson;
"My Neighbors", by Florence
Smith; '\A Bit of March," by
Doris Sayre ; "A Popular
Proverb," by Mable Shields
and "A Farmer's Joke," by
Herbert Shields.
Games were played with
prizes going to Doris Sayre and
Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Herbert Sayre. Potluck
refreshments were served. The
next meeting will be at the
Community Hall April 13.

population.
Other evaluation programs
receiving Increases attention
by the National Society, its
state and local affiliates
concerns infant development.
Beginning as early as three
months of age, children
suspected of neurological
impairments ·can he given
evaluation by medical and
paramedical specialists. As
vital as all of these programs
are - they are not possible
without adequate funding to
provide maximum service.
Revenue from public contributions and other sources,
report announces, reach a new
high - ~.5 million in 1970 as
compared with $39.4 mjlllon for
Uie preceding year, an in·
crease of 15.5 percent.
Programs supported by
these funds fall into ~0 major
categories, with restorative
services totaling 204,000 to
leading all others. Second
ranking Services numbering
more than 72,600 include those
in a basic program designed to
provide health and welfare
information, referral to
agencies best qualified to give
treatment, and a follow-up
procedure to determine
whether the client Is receiving

DR. GRAHAM

Dr. Graham Will
Speak at Rally
Dr .
Joseph
Graham,
superintendent of the Athens
District of the United
Methodist Church, will be
speaker at a rally to be held
Saturday at 6:30 p. m. at the
Wahama High School. The
rally is being held one day
before the Billy Graham
evangelistic films are shown at
the ~ew Haven Theater in New
Haven.
·
The films to be shown include
"The Restless Ones", Sunday,
2:30 and 7:30p.m.: "The Heart
Is a Rebel", 7 p.m. Monday;
"Lucia," Tuesday, 7 p. m.;
"The
Shadow
of
a
Boomerang," at 7 p. m.,
Wednesday, and "His Land,"
Thursday, 7 p.m.

the services required.
In Ohio nearly 20,000 han·
dicapped children and adults
received services through the
Easter Seal Society aHillates
providing a variety of localized
services lliroughout the-state.
These services are categorized
in five areas of disability In·
eluding Communication lm·
painnents (speech and hearing
disorders screened and
treated) ; Orthopedic;
Neuro(ogical
and
Neuromuscular: Social·
psychologic~!, educational
disorders; and a general
category which includes heart
and circulatory diseases,
respiratory.diseases, qlindness
or visual impairment and
testing and accidental injuries.
The programs in Ohio were
funded in the amount of
$1,303,386 through voluntary
contributions from the public
in 1971 Easter Seal Campaign,
speCial gifts, memberships,
bequests and memorials,
government grants and other
income . . A significant grant

W

lm

Social Calendar

THURSDAY
FEENEY ·BENNETT Post
128, American Legion birthday
observance, dinner 6:30 p.m.
JITNEY Supper, Rutland
Grade School, by the Rutland
Firemen'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. _
SPECIAL MEETING, Shade
River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM,
Thursday, 7;30 p.m. at hall in
Chester, work In EA degree.
All Master Masons Invited.
TWIN CITY Shrine Club,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
clubhouse, Racine. Refresh·
menta.
EASTERN Athletic Boosters
meeting, 7:30 Thursday at high
school to plan for basketbell
banquet.
ST. PATRICK'S DAY card
party, Sacred Heart Catholic
Church, 7:30 p.m. Thursday.
Table and door prizes.
·Donation $1.25. .
WILLING Workers ClaBS,
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~ Williain
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 81o
11 :30 p.m. with the Hilltoppers.

DANCE PARTY, Friday,
High
School
Wahama
auditorium 8 to 11 with the Jays
emceeing, school sponsored.
SA'ruRDAY
DANCE PARTY, Saturday, 8
to 11 p. m., Wa)lama High
School, the Jays emceeing,
school sponsored.
BELLING and shower
honoring Mr, and Mrs. Donald
Randolph 7:30 p. m. Saturday
at Hemlock Grove Grange
Hall.
PUBLIC BEAN and com
bread supper, Saturday,
Tuppers
Plains
United
Methodist Church annex,
serving starting at 4:30 p. m.
AMERICAN LEGION Post
602, Racine, birthday party and
supper, Saturday, 6:30 p.m.
with speaker, for members and
families, games.
SUNDAY
DEDICATION ceremonies
Sunday at Pomeroy Lower
Llgh'l C~urch. The Rev.
Matthew Harden, Ann Arbor,
Mich., will be guest speaker.
Services for dedication of new
Sanctuary will be at 2 p.m.
REVIVAL Monday through
March 24 at Long Bottom
Christian Church, 7:30 each
evening, Lori Brafford,
evangelist. Public welcome.
MONDAY
THEODORUS Councill7, D.
of A., Monday, 7:30 p. m.IOOF
Hall. Brochures on Insurance
program available from Mrs.
Nettie Hayes or Mrs. Henry
Reibel.

New contemporary look of the olfl.fashioned rocker eel•
off area·near~the-entrance with distinction. Low coffee
table plus hrasB-and·gla" lantern complete the compati·
hility of yesterday and today. Exotic texture of screen
and vari-striped wallpaper add unusual touch. By Lon·
dan Style 2 Collection of Vymura WallcoveringB.

SPORl
COAlS:
the costume makers

Curlee
Cricketeer
Sewell .
Eldorado

Watches by Bulova, Accutron and Caravelle
New Costume Jewelry
Charm Bracelets

!dent Bracelets
Birthstone, Linde Star, · Cameo,
Eastern Star, Masonic and
Diamond Onyx.

Crisp, clean lines of sleek white plaBtic furniture mix·

Fashionable fabrics
and colors.

and-match modular and curved lines to exciting advan·
VOY AG[

$1 5 0 TO :u s
W EO "lN G liZ . 50
M AN'S"
~::..
' _ _ _ _ _,_ _ _ _

Officers Elected
Mrs. J. Edward Foster was
elected president of the
Missionary Society of the
Pomeroy First Baptist Church
Thursday night .at the church.
Others elected were Mra.
Oliver Michael, secretarytreuurer; Mrs. Orval Wiles,
while crosa chairman; Mrs.
George Skinner. chairman of
Christian social relations; Mrs.
Ellen Couch, love gift chairman, and Mrs. Albert Smith,
literature.
The Rio Grande Association
spring meeting wu ann~
for March 18 at 2 p. m. at the
Calvary Baptiat Church at Rio
Grande. At that time an invitation will be extended from
the Pomeroy Church for the

I age. Vibrant, bright patterned wallcovering becomes a
calalyBt for the unusual in a small area of the room. By
Loudon Style 2 Collection of Vymura Wallcoverings.

NEW
Just Anived

Kerm 's Komer

BULK GARDEN SEED

New .York Clothing· House
Easter Headquarters For Men '
S: JO p.m. Daily
&amp;

Mason W. Va

Saluruv

'

POMEROY, OHI()

Notes

PTA Scholarship Deadline is .April 1st

'

Mra. 'Beulah Ewing and Mrs.
Helen Norrl! visited relatives

in Kingston and Jackson
Sunday. AI KingstOn, they
were guests of Mrs. Norris'
11011, Eugene, and family, and
in Jacklon they visited Mr. and
Mrs. Lawton Templeton. Mrs.
· Templeton iS · Mrs. Ewing's
sister, Gaye.
Mrs. Charles Davis and
children, Timuni, Lisa and
Thomas, Scottsboro, Ala., were
Tuesday visitors of her fatherin-law, Mr. Richard Davis,
Union Ave.
Mr. and Mrs . William
Radfot'd and Mrs. Glen Glaze
were In Colwnbus Sunday to
visit their nieces, · Ptitricia
Glaze and Denise Byers, both
patients at Children's Hospital.
·While in Columbus they also
vl!ited with Mary Radford who
!snow employee\ In the office at
Doctors' Hospital whil~ con·.
tinulng her nurses training at
the Columbus Technical Institute. She plans to resume
full-time training In the faU.
Mrs. William Folmer was
returned home from the Holzer
Medical Center Wednesday
following surgery there last
week.

service of instaUation.
A white cross report was
given. Mrs. Robert Kuhn was
at the plano for group singing
of "They'll Know We Are
·Christians by Our LOve" and
Mrs. Joseph Cook had prayer.
Scripture in uniaon'was Psalm
24,-1 and Ephesians ·5:1~17.
"Changing Family Patterns" wu the prilgram topic
used by MJ:s. Foster. Mrs.
Skinner read "Hear. the Word
of God" and the closing prayer
was by Mrs. Kuhn. Mrs. Ellen
Couch and Mrs. Albert Smith
were hostesses. Others at the
meeting were Mrs. William
Watson, Mrs. Lester Price,
Mrs. T. T. Shelton and Mrs.
Ivan Walker.

complete schoianhlp I! 1200 a
year for a two year period or a
total of f400. One will be ''
awarded this spring to a Meigs
County senior.
The completed applications
are to be mailed to the
today.
Scholarship Committee, Ohio
Appllcations are available in Congreu of Parents and
all three Meigs County high Teachers,.Inc., 427 East Town
schools to seniors planning to St., Colwnbus, Ohio, 43215.
enter the field of education. A Selection of the recipients
are made by lhcl Ohio PTA
Scholarship Committee which
BURT GETTING BA
will meet In ,\prll. No apJeffrey L. Burt , son of Mr.. pllcations are ·acknowledged
and, Mrs. Marvin Burt, 315 and only those selected are
.
Welzgall St., Pomeroy, will ilotilled.
,
receive hls bachelor of arts · The foUowtng basis guides
degree at Bowling Green the committee In its evaluation
University Saturday when and screening of the ap- '
commencement exercises are pllcants:
· beld.
-Scholarship record as
The deadline lor making
application for a J400 PTA.
scholarahip to be awarded this
spring Is April!, Mrs. Richw-d
Vaughan, president of the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers, advised

.

presented by the tr8111Crlpt of
credits from .the high school
and attached to the ap·
plication.
·
-Recommendations.
-Statements furnished by
the student giving Information
about activities In high school,
and also reasons why he or she
w~nt$ a position In the field of
education.
Only applications completed
according to instructions are
considered.
To receive a scholarship, ills
required
that the student
be ki
h' hmust
ill
ta ng a course w 1c w
l~d
· to teachi!'g
latedor other
educationally r~
ca~eer,
such as counselor, educalional
psychologist, visiting teacher,
II bra ria n, voc a qo n a I
education, school social

Tree Sales to Begin

many

PI'A'I of ONo bGilb.
the llla\1 J'zzn-111 SO' I PI:
~ Jut ,....
An Eaalenl Bicb Bellool
graduate bas reeelncl tba
acholarship for the put two
years.
.
Further lnformaU. an the
achcjlarshlp prCJtllam may be
oblatned from Mn. Vaugbln,
Third Ave., Middleport.

take a fashion break

in~~·

by 1&amp;"~~

feet a break. They
deserve it. Dress them up
in a pair of Summer Coolers from

Thorn MeAn. In go-wlth-anythinggt'lliny
white leathers, SUmmer Coolers are deslgMd
to complement today's colorful warm--ther apparel
for men. Summer Coolers offer the latest looks In fnhion,
from dressy boot and oxford styles to ntw hi&amp;h-h"l
fashion boots. Thorn MeAn's Summer Coolers .. .
designed to make the !ivins easter. Only $14.99

heritage house
FORMERLY KIPS SHOE STORE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

''

• • • How A Good Thing Gets Around.
Come See For Yourself

BAKER
IS

READY
FOR
SPRING

.

Dautahter 's th
.o;rt
·. hdar11 Noted
D~
'-'

ufavWJilldcake;Ic:ecream,
potato chips and 10ft drinks
were served. Gifts were
Mr. and Mra. Steve Houchins
presented to .!Ar.\. Others at·
fending were Tereaa Harden, entertained Saturday af·
'!'riley Riffle, Tanya Salser, temoon with a .party honoring
Kathy Baket and Doug, Cindy ' theli- deughler. Stephanie, on
her seventh bli1hday.
and Brian Warden.
· Games were played with
prizes going to the winners.
Bubb.le pipes were given u
·
favors. Cake and Ice cream
·
·
were served by Mrs. Houchins ·
S.-sgt. and Mrs. Michael who was assisted with the
Capehart of Homestaed Air party by anothe~ daughter, '
Force Base, Florlde, are an- Angela, and her friend, Kim
nounclng the birth of their lint Glull. ·
·
ch!lci, a 110n named Benjamin
Attending the party were
Allen Ray.
Margery Miller, Tanya
The infant wu born on Stobart, Joyce Stewart, ·
March 13 at the Pleasant Susanna Wise, Kimberly
Valley Hospital and weighed Roush, Pam and Cindy Crooks.
five pounds, nine 011n~es. Paula Swisher sent a gift to
Grandparenta are Mr · and Stephanie.
Mrs. Ben Cuto, Muon, W.Va.
and Mrs. Lorraine Theobald,
Columbus. Great·
grandparents are Mn. Forrest
c.to and Jeaee Ly0111, Muon,
W.Va.

HOW

ABOUT

Son Bom Monday

YOU
·z~

PA1 CABJE

BONGFEST SUNDAY
A IOIIIfell will be held at the
'f141perl PI.IIDI Ellmlnlar)'
~at 1:311 p.m. on SUllday,
Mlfdlli, wllh tbe RevelltU0111
Qulrt.tt, the 0wen1 Family and .
the BlaeU M-cen to be

llhipl _.. awaded b)' llle

Give your

SUPPORT ASKED
The teen youth group of the
Pomeroy Church of Christ is
asked to support the new
Church of Christ in Gallipolis
by attending Sunday morning
services there.

RUTLAND - Orders for Arbor Day plantings, the
flowering crabapple trees or garden club members stress
pink and white dogwood trees the Importance of trees in
are .belilg accep!M , ,thi'ough .. estabHshing a balailcecl' ·ert· .. ' .
Marclf 'zil by ·the-'" Rullarid I vlronflleht. Tliefpdiitt out tliaf ' .. ' '
Friendly Gardeners Club.
now Arilerlcans. are burning
·
Peracina wlahlng to order ·more and more fuel and uptrees may call either Mrs. setting the healthful balance of
.Jiarold Wolfe, 742-,1191, or Mrs. oxygen and carbon dioxide in
Larry Edward&amp;, ·742-3781, the the atmosphere. Trees are
civic co.cbalrmen, or contact nature's way of converting
any member of the club.
carbon dioxide into oxygen,
"Keep it clean and green by and they point out that
planting a tree" suggests. the statistics show that one tree
garden club members who produces enough oxygen in a 24
invite residents to join in the hour period to Sl(llsln We for
celebration of Arbor Day. This the same period of time.
year marka tbe centennial of
Trees filter odors and dust
Arbor Day proposed In 1872 by particles from the air, they
J. Sterling Morton.
release moisture that cools the
In urging participation in air and washes it, they are the
beSt answer to erosion, they
help keep pollution from
washing Into streams, they
reduce silt that clogs streams,
and they help prevent flooding;
explain the club members. In
addition · they provide shelter
for birds and wildlife, they
Lori Warden · was ·honored provide shade, and they
Saturday with a party In ob- camouflag~ harsh scenery.
servance of her seventh
The tree sale is an annual
birthday at the home of her part of the Rutland Friendly
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Gardeners annUal cleanup,
Warden.
paintup, and plantup campaign
Games were played with · scheduled this year for the
Michelle Johnson, Kim \ week of May 1 through May 6.
Maynard, Rebecca Lee,
Melanie Weese and Angle
·
7
Glenn winning prizes. Hats,
horns and balloona "'ere given
l&gt; •
II

worker, teacher or the deaf and
bard or hearing, orthopedically
handicapped children, 11M*
with visual handlcapa, the
edtiC8ble menially retarded,
physical, oc;cupatlonal or
speech and hearing therapilt.
All Meigs County Pl'A units
have contributed to the
scbolarship which will be
awarded to a local stucleDt this
year. A total of 233 scholar·

GUARD YOUR HEALTH

BIRTIIDAY OBSERVED
Ronald Barnhart was
honored with a family party In
observance of his birthday
anniversary Sunday at the
home of 'his parents, Mr." and
Mrs. Dale Barnhart. Attending
were Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
Barnhart and four of their five
children, Kathy, Dale, Kenneth
and Leah Ann, and Mr~ and
Mrs. Ernest Barnhart and
daughter, Sherrie, who baked
the birthday cake for her uncle.
Greg, a son of the Ronald
Barnharts, was unable to attend due to his employment.

By Lori Warden

There's that shirt ... those
slacks ... those ties. Find the
missing link: the sport coat
that make~ them into an ensemble. Start looking in our
store. We have the best.

RINGS

"A Church for Otberl" wu methods and auisted In
theprolramloplcpreeenled!Jy solvtne their health probltllll'.
llflsi EIJJabeth O.vla, •At a
f4laa Dl!vla concluded llie
meeting of the WSCS of the worship service by comEnterprise United MelhOdlat mentlng on ~Ur praiae of God
Church at the bonie of Mrs. through Dtir iifferlngs. A penod
Frances Runnel.
of prayer followed and Mrs.
The caD to worship included Hunnel118118 another song.
scripture from Acts 2:46-47.
Mrs. Hunnel presided at the
The leader explained that we meeting with· members giving
. pr8i.tji!God In 11011g wltb''Mrl. ll(llrish ·name In response to
Hunnelllnglnc "Now Thanlt. · rollcaU.Planaweremaclefora
We All Our ~loci:" Aprlyer Bible study on St. Mat!Mw to
froni Africa by' Mia Davia wu begin sometime after Easter,
preceded wllh the comment
Members reported on shut-In
that &lt;;ocfapeaka to tis through visits dtll'ing the past month.
prayer,llld Mrs. Delores Will Mrs. Martha Husted gave a
eJ'tll'wlli"ed scrip~ u a way report on the bOQk, "Ed!ICatlon
God ..,.ks to b)a pecple. 1
of the. Wasp." Announcement
The prdcram lOok the format . wu made of. the Billy Graham
of a dlalocue between a WSCS film crusade to be held March
leader and · a missionary 19·23 at the New Haven
couple, who explained a pilot Theater. Mrs. Bernice Evans
project In Africa where the closed the meeting with
people were taught how to prayer.
improve their agricultural

PerD~al

Birthday Marked

HAS GREAT

Pendants

was awarded In teRoy Klein,
Ph.D, M.D. qf CQe Weste,rn
Reserve Unlvenlty Scllool of
Medicine, Cleveland in his
second stace of the project
initiated last year In the study
of
developmel'tal
and
metabolic boneprbblema Iii the
growing children and animals.
"We are very proud. of our. ·
Society- tiere in Meigs County
and across the nation," !'lid
Rev. Simons '1or the many .
volunteers who make thls.W«'k
possible, for the thousands of
donors who contribute rilckels,
dimes, and dollars to ~lp those
thousands who cannot help
themselves."
The National Easter ·Seal
Society, the nation's oldest and
largest voluntary · health
agency serving the ban·
dicapped, was founded in
Elyria, Ohio In 19!9 by
Rotarian Edgar F. (Daddy)
Allen. The Society now
provides services coast to
coast, in Alaska and Hawali,
and has International Affiliates
throughout the world.

Mrs. Runnel
Hosts WSCS

Pomeroy ...

. ..
',

Y'.l.' ...

1V BIUS AT
JIMMIE'S

.'

~··

FURNITURE

Paslry Shop

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

383 N. Second Ave.
Middleport
992-3555

Authorized Agent

featured.

'

I

"·' .

�'I

:.
8- The Daily Sentinei,Middleport.Pomeroy,o., Marth 16, im

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU APRIL
.. . 9
' t. '

SAVE

Reg.

Reg. 3.39
1

9r
liz

Reg. $1.67
lOO's

_
oz. !!!at-...

spray

...
.....~:;

""::;-

67~

$1.09

--....::::

.CHOC~
IIUL1'1f'L. 1111• • 1111.

.......-...
·-

Chewable,
lrult flavored!

lOO's

'1.59
3 oz.

$1.39

ANALGESIC NASAL DECONGESTANT

REG.NOW 49~

ORANGE FLAVORED

CRAYOI.A
CRAYONS

.JERGENS LOTION
REG.
'1.19

oNLv88e

EXTRA DRY
REG.

1

'1.35

oz.

Reg.

'1.09

REG. 35'

16's

99e

REG. 12.15

REG. 12.00

85's

$1.33

1.33

MINT
OR
PLAIN

Su yoU!
heaU and

PRELL LIQUID
SHAMPOO

ONLY

body can

16 oz.

lOIJ (! Ihcr!

pl~

·-

msp(J&amp;\BLB ~·

REG. '1.19 .
65's

1.69

1

swABs

.
59

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For the whole family

170 SWABS

s1 08

1.69

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INflUENZA
~RUS

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Extra Hold, Scenled and Unscented

NEW

prptein2\
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13 oz

2roRaa~

100's
I

REG. 11.05
100's

SCOPE
SUPER
SIZE

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REG.

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TEGRIN
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Reg. 11.49

2 Ol

ALL ITEMS ARE DISCOUNTED
ALL PRICES GOOD
THRU.--~-~-----.APRJL 9th

Reg. sl.69

6 oz.

TEK

TOOTH
BRUSHES
REG. 69'

2 FOR·
12's

29e

.

'

' '' t

'

.

', &gt;

'

'

..
''

' ,.

' Reaearch, Ohio
Darwin, chief ollhe llurelu of Economic
• Department of Development, Hal Maggled, director of implementation, ilnd John H. Beaaley, exerutive director of the
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Development Division.

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

-·

ROBERT BOWEN, MEIGS OOUNTY ....... blllndent of
schools, presented a trophy let Peggy Snyder, Meigs Junior
High School eighth grader, after she won the county championship at the amual spelling bee In Racine Tlllrsday night.
With Miss Snyder are, from left, Mrs, Nellie Vale, a county
school suPervisor wl)o served as county bee chairman;
Bowen; her mother, Mrs. Earl Snyder of Dexter Route I, and
_,&gt;, Russell Moore, principal of the Meigs Junior High. Miss
' Snyder, besides receiving a personal trophy, won the

29
•

.
' '
.
lllarlea lh"V; IICGIId I'OW, JIDIN anHb, JeDI - . ,
Gene Cole, Robert Hendei'IOII,Iki&amp;n ConnoUy, Kevlii·Jirooks,
Gary Putnam; Mike BisseU, Donald Matheny. Dele Welsh;
third rolr, James OSborne, Jerry Davis, Donald Eynoil,
Danny Browtty, Brian BiaseD, David Putnam, . Greg
Hayman, Mike Baker, and Dennis.Durst. See Page 2for more
pictures of cast.
·
'

GREEN TAILORS 'In . the tlnwct operetta ''Onderella'sSIIpper" which will begin at &amp;o'clock this evening at
Tuppers Plains Elementary school are, front row, I.e, Brl&amp;n
Peterson, Eddie Scyoc, James Banks, Seotty Sprague,
Tommy .Scyoc, Larry. Harril, Thimble Bonnett, Greg
Scarbrough, Kemy Chapman, Ricky Borlng, Greg Cole am

REG. •

3

$ 50

24 OZ.

"

SAVE
NOW
ONLY

• ..

••

•

I\

s2.45

VANILLA,
CHOCOLATE,
CHOCOLATE MINT,
BUnERSCOTCH
1 lb. 8 oz. 30 DAY SUPPLY

t'

mining· •will
lead to a degree
program
.who:'i.lcomplt!i.e
, the .·'for,thOie
two:year i
• ._ ~
' [•
l
• ~
1men for , courl!', 'will piovid~ .tr~ined
in. ~elgs •: men for about. 2,300 new ·jobs
\'COWl!): irill · · this fall. .- . withih 'two years in the Meiea
· ','We have been able to obtain County area, and 'will attract
' froln the Ohio Deparbnenta of . studentS from ··~ areas of lhe
Flanance and Education nation," Welker said.
coOunitments of f/3,500 to · The CIJIII"se wW be offered at
begin this new two-year Meigs Local High' School In
technical course. The depart- Meigs County, and will operate
menta also will llllke , ap. oot of a deep c~ mine "which
plkatlon for federal ,funding · wiD be !he moat-mec~lzed.~ .., .
}fC!IYear wblchrill...ure the .moQ_rn mine in lhe.•countcy;"
eohtinuation of lhe~e studies," according to Welller. ·
Welker disclosed here.
The Iundin&amp; approvlfd for
'
.
Welker•• succeu in , ob• this faU includes · ~,000 for
4NL!tv:, •.id~r. and ~- CllffurdJI.niey. talning the funding capped new equipment purcha~es; ·
tqpp wlmier In lhe DaUy,Selltlnel•s m~ of eflorta by Welker $30,000 for operating expenses
carrier
, _ with lhe new bike he recelv,ed. ' and Meigs Local School and ta,500 for an adult conRunner.up ·na Beth Vaughan, daughter of Mr. and Mn.
Dis\rlct offlclala to obtain tinulng education pro~ram. : ·
Rlcbanl Vali&amp;han, Middleport.
finencial support for the deep (Continued On page 12)

Reg.

AIDS

Regular or Mint
FAMILY SIZE

POWDER

t

' '

FRIDAY, MARCH· 17. 1972

COLUMBUS - (Special) ·,.:. coal ~ cOurse:'·~·
. .,..,.._
State Rep, Ralph Welker ~~ • l"TIIia ~ ~ of ,sllldf. ·

I

gge

EST
TOOTHPASTE

Intimate cleanliness,
intimately understood.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL. XXIV NO. 238

OR LOTION

REDUCING PLAN CANDY

VALUES

71~

NOTE BOOK
FILLER
PAPER REG. 1.29

....,.-J

FOB TIIESE

·

1

Ill. Masse"gill

I

·

I

FLAVORED

A Reg.13 2.25oz.

on

•

Devoted To The lntere." Of The Meigs-Ma1011 Area

TUBE

REG.99'

•

• ~~=~fa:~~~~~~~t

77e

REG. '1.05

27~
1

.

J

•

.

.

TUMS PLAIN

t";~:;;:':il-::::'::::-~ )\mj~!!£;~'!

---

.

89~

200's

REG.

BY BOB HOQLICII
will be Ulld to ~ne m:. . atruu~' lbit r
paying member of till ·
·Ball'-'" and CGIDIIIIIIIIIJ fGrmal1an wblch wiu palat uP look to local' leaderii!IP
Buckeye-Hockins VllleJ .
~ leadll'l taolllli .._
.. ,...._, wllicb ~ualfies ll'e com• cienlapplent.
operation_,Bee:dey ..xi, and IIi· .
· day 111G1111Jra In
of pallble to Meiea County and ita : "We c:u find out the Deed • reiUit can benefit from the
' ·lbeir alUIIIdea.
peclp)t, ,
· and deslne of the CIIIIIDIUility aid which can be Jll'IIVided. ·,
.;· . The ~~~. when cuDpu.d · Oarwla ' aad M&amp;llled but lhe' nsult will Cime only Among lhe questions iDo
'
".Z b7 · lhe Obi' Burea11- of , n,lallaed lUI die com· thrqhcalimwnitJIJ'Uiroot ·cludedinthellll'Ve)'conducted
r Economic Research, llllf pll8llll!. 1111&amp;111 Wleale the
~arbi," ' M!Uted adllaed.'
Thursday , were .!bose per.. ...
· · ~ JII'O¥ide an ll1ll'el' to tbi ~ to be' rtpt far IJt. ' '· ~ o.nrin iald that there. will · talnlng , to purc~aaea and
' q11111kin;,"Wbat IG:Iultrleure' ;lri ties nidi 111e puple ibe "no maP.: bappelljng." He ~ervlclis. for which residenll
. ;',CGIDIJitlble to Melp County !IIIP.''..tfiDdaceeptable,la , , pointed !JUt.that nqt only m_uat ., leave the cmnmunity, what Ia
. '
IUt' cue, cUll• _Ia !be ~try be Induced to come to-'· conlldered to be lhe prlmarJ,~1 , . and Ill people?"
? Tbe~onwuameetin&amp; ~~be~~: a community "but s ., muat , ~~~tbeCGII1J!!IIIllly,llll '.
1.; of ~ residents at • Trlul!y cbanse . tbe ~&amp;ter11 , of • oftenbe!lkenloiTI8lleitsla)i, · greatest -la and benefit&amp;, .~
•: Cburdlwlth Don Dlnrili, chief ' oompatlblllt)'. lhe7 said;
Officials of companies, looklnc. ' which crgenlzations and )n.. .
• Maggied cited edvertising J for loca,tions cOIIRder a large ,dlviduall,have been the molt ..
1 , of lhe Bureau .of .Economic
." {:Releardl, Oblo Department of iuled In publications to Induce · 'I!UDiber . of factors including •, instrumental in developing lbe
.\ ~Deyt~Gpmenti Hal Mauled.. lnduatriea ,to locate, In certain . labor ' fo,r'ce, -l the b"!'klng :!}:r.mR)WIIty,_what.~ hindeled;
• ~ dlrtc\OJ' of ,Implementation,, .• ateas.. ~e pointed out tlu!t ~hi$ .;. climate,-. b~"PIIal fa.cilltles,;-t _the ,. commUJiity the IJIOst, ..
.l· f and JG!m H. Beuley ,.esecutlve ·lucmellmea a quite expensive dis.lance to a &amp;IJ and even 1111:_ ~ que.~ lions rating lti'VIcea of.
~ director: of lhe Buckeye am. metbod, el)llabllng that 'ap- · ccnl.l~on of~ golf coune 'beJnc ~· f-1~ lr)cllldlnl uUllties, and ,
. ; t Hockllll Valley Regiol!ill prodmately $2,600 is Involved only a few, tile bureau' chief,, ;others rating ;the relative ,
.
~ Deve.lopme~t Division, forone-quarterofapagein lhe commen_
ted
..
,. , ~~~ ~1nce of, econmn!c - CJb.:,t
~ Marlettp, ,
.
. , Wall St. Journlll.
. . ... "We ~uat l,ake a new loot ,)ecti~l"· ·: ~ . ,' ··• , ··'i"
. 1 ~' Ulllng a fihn strip, 'Maggied . Citlrig the need for long term into lhe future and make thlngalii&lt; There~ J~, ·Chairman ·,
pointed up the wide sc~ . ot goals and plann~g to make a haiJPen," Darwin uid. ··
· ~ the -~llye ~ttee o1
considei'atioris involved in the com,munity attractive to Jn.
Beasley spoke on the work of the : Meigs. Coulity ..Regktall .
location of induatries. By the dustr,o, Maggied warned that tile Buckeye-Hocking Valley Planning Commission, pte•
strip; he explained aervlces the . plans must be. colllltantly group In providing aasislance s1ded. The Meigs County
n!EREON JOHNli&gt;N, CHAIRMAN of the executive
available to Meigs County rev\sed and updated if a to Meigs County In unraveling · Study Committee and the
committee of the Meigs County rleglonal Planning Comthrough the economic research cOIIlllWllity which is competing red tape which is soliletlmes Meigs County Regional
mission, presided over Ttwrsday 's development seminar
bureau.
not only against otller com- involved in government Planning · Comlilission spon-held at Trinity Church. Jolmson, left, welcomes, I tor, Don
As a part of that service, an munities in the state, otller projects. Meigs County is a sored the meeting.
eight page "~ity at- states and foreign countries is
Illude" survey distributed to to slay In the running for
those ettending.wu Cllqlpleted- consideration, ·
during lhe -.Jon, The rilulta
Both Maggied and Darwin

~

REG. 11.40

Super Size

SUAVE
HAIR
SPRAY

•

•

~

.

FILM

REG. 11.59

7 oz.

I

to New. In.diistries

'

'3''

ONLY

ROCKET
TAPE

SECRET
SPRAY ·

.

~ttituies

·-CX-126-12
. -

REG. 35•

49e

Reg.

CALDWELL'S
LAXATIVE

8

99~

REG.

COTTON

TYPE NO. 108
Reg. $5.69

'17.88

IMPERIAL
REG. '2.15 .

RF.G. '1.49

REG. 79'

! F_ILM

By Scotch lape
REG. 27'
(('fz"x800"

19~

36's

36's

COLOR PACK

REG. '22.95

I

. \

·..__OJ

J

BOnLES

Chewable
Cold Tablets
for Children

99~

love 'em!

I

X·15 CAMERA
OUTFIT By Eastman

·~Jd)c8t-

•
ews•• 1n·
a,.

'

Unsafe Water Runni,._g
A t l' . ln
. '3' Pro'/)OrtioRS
'•

Ualted Prell llllemalloaal
OOLUMBUS- HEW SECRETARY ELLIOT Richardson
said today despite a "rather dramatic, even drastic re«dering
'
'
. of our mWiary.dllllestlc priorities," the nation's domestic
Of 64 water samples liken
problems have not disa~~Pt~~red and they will not in the im· during· February, : 43 wer~
mediate future.
,
fOWld to be safe and 21 \UISife,
Rlcl!ardaon, in remark1 to be read at Ohio Stlite University's Charles (Chuck) , Bartels,
winter quarter commencement by hla wife, said the past three · Meigs County Health Depart- 1
years bumen ~~ ~ has grown from 32 pet. to 45 ment ..,ater ins~ tor, uld
pet, of the total fedeTal budget. He said in that same period of today.
,
time defense spend"" baa decllned on precisely paralleilines _
.~rtell pointed out that 146
from 45 to 32 pet. ol the budget.
VISits were made ~ hcmea
.
·
'
. during the-month but.only ~ :
' WASHINGTON - SEN. HUBERT H. HUMPHREY D- samples were tat.n. · Some
Minn., said todly i new govenunent fann report lndl:atet homeowto:n were not at home
farmers Ieee a crlala of r1s1rw grain surpluses and low pricea. and 0~ 1 reflllld; the free
Hump"-· 'on the beets fi an ••"'wlture De rbn nt --1-t water s~mpling • semce,
....3 •
~
,....
PI e ,...,...
Bartell sa1d.
Thursday ifl!llcallnll .~anners lntend to plant 68.5 million acres of
However Bartela Itated that
c:om,uldinutatementthatAgrlculture Secretary EarlL. !lutz familles wishlng to. sell their
ahould be called Immediately-to tell the agrirulture committees properties are urgeCI to have
In CcDcr1ll ''wha~ actions, If any, he now contemplates taking water testa made ~use ' safe
·rectrdlns thll c:rWa." '
.
water Is a valuable alttet to the
Admlnlatratlon farm olftciala, using their Dexible "set sale and unsafe water a
ulde" acreage controll"flCjani, had IIOUght to chop production detriment. Unsafe water ~r.·
ol corn am other feed grains and wheat thll year in the wake of be corrected without excessive
· l't(Ord crope and low PriCes In 1971. A report on farmers' in- expense or time Bartels
'
ten tiona to plant 1972, crops - bued on surven as of March 1 stressed. . ·
lhowed plana_for68.hnillion acret1 ~corn, down 8 pet. from 1971
During February testing,
(Continued ·on page 12)
seven drilled wells, six dug

.

II

\

I

trawllnl pJ-.ae tW her lldloOI. llbt wiD 1ep111 ent the county

in state competition' nat month. Runner~ ln the COWlty
eVent was Charles Follrocl, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Follrod ol l'cJ!neroy, Follrod·miaspe'led "Parochial," which
Will correctly' spelled by Mill ~yder, Who then apeDed lhe
nest word; "Interfered" c;orrectly to ,rut the county title,
Follrod was champion apel!er from the Pomeroy Elementary
School rather tlwllhe alternate, aa wu reported earlier. See
all speDers ori Pase 2. '

,.

ixon Plan Two•Pronged
To Defuse Busing Issue
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Nixon, warning that
an undue emphasis on school
busing for desegregation wW
produce a "lost generation of
,•,•,,·.·.··.·.·.·.....·.·..·.·.·..··..

· Police Look for
Mystery Man (?)

·
weli.S, six cisterns and two
Middleport poUoe oifioera
springs were found unsafe are laveatlgatlq reported
while 20 drilled weDs, 13 dug laotaaces of abnormal
weDs, nine cisterns and one behavior wblch . have been
occurlag Ia lbe commlllllty
spring were ufe.
Barte.la will be working 1n ' tbe past nveral weeki,
Orange Township for the Pollee J. J. Cremeans
remaindel'j of March and aU of dllcloied today.
Chief CremelllJ IIIYB a
April. He will return to Letart
,Township later In the sununer. penoa 11 eacoaate~lng
Anyone needing auiatance in womea on tbe atreet,
dev•loping hla water supply droppllll lbe maaen, aad
may contact Bartell at the thea raaalas. The same
Meigs County Health Depart- iaeldeat bea occurred
ment office 992-3723
several tlmea over lbe past
'
·
f~w weeks, lbe cblel 111ld.
The Ideality of lbe olfender
10 Ill' ha~ been ceqcealed
becauae bls act II performed
Weather
.
Ia dark arees at alght, and Ia
Cloudy and colder tonight, some lllltaaces he - or abe
snow nurries ' north, chance of - has worn e toboggaa
showers changing to snow pulled down over lhe fare.
nurries south. Low tonight in
Evea tile sex of the of·
southeast mid 'lOs to lower 30s. fender haJ not been deter•
Saturday II! tie change in · mlntd, Chlel Cremeans said.
tempera t•.1re.
·::::;::~:~·:-:;}:;"X««~-::.~· ' · · · · -e·:·x:::~

poor children" am disrupted the courts to stop iaaulng acrou a city to an Inferior
lives for those not so poor, has busing orders, since the Constl· school )uat to meet some social
asked Congress to b&amp;n all tution makes the judiciary a planner's concept of what IB
further co~rdeted busing separate but CHQU~l braneh conaidered to be the correct
and to spend $2.S billion to of government with Its racial balance - or what IB
of
powers called •progressive' soeial
improve poverty area schools. separation
Nixon unveiled his proposals provision; . nor did it menti~n policy ,"
Nixon said " The great
on one of the most politlcaUy any specific proposal to further
desegregation
in
lieu
of
the
majority of Americans, white
sensitive lsaues of this election
.
and black, feel strongly that
year ln a broadcast address to busing technique.
"Many (parents) have in· the busing of school children
the nation Thursday nlsht. The
vested
their !He savings in a away from · their own neigh.
formal message covering his
proposals was to be sent to home In a neighborhood they borhoods for the purpose of
chose because It' had good achieving racial balance is
Capitol HUI today.
Nixon's address did not spell schools," Nixon said. ''They do wrong." And he rejected the
out how Congress could order not want their children bused idea of amending the Con·
stitution to tackle the problem,
saying that would take too
long.
Instead, he said, an imme~
dlate moratorium on oew
(Continued on Page 12)

Gallia Man Hurt
In Hit-Run Case
'

Fred Facemire, Jr ., 27,
Gallipolis, is in satisfactory
condition
at
Veterans
Memorial·Hospital foDowlng a
single car accident today at
1:20 a.m. on SR 143, two miles
north of HarrisonvUie.
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept.. said Facemire driving
over the crest of a hUl met an
unidenti£1ed pickup truck
coming toward him on the
wrong side of the highway.

Facemire, in an effort to mlas
the truck, went left of center.
His car moved approximately
6S feet and turned over on its
top in a creek. The truck did
not stop.
Facemire suffered head,
cheat and neck injuries and a
possible skull frecture. 'lbe car
was demolllhed. No citation
was lsaued. He wu removed to
the hcepilal by the Pomeroy ER squad.

Citation Issued
ivan' Chevalier, 68, 1ReedsvUie, was cited for making an
Improper turn following a
minor two car accident at 10
a.m. Thursday on Rt. 124, one
mile east of 681 in ' Meig•
County.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
Hi&amp;hway Pairol said Chevalier
turned into the path of an auto
~rated by Okey D. Barker,
7S, of Reedsville. There was
minor damage to both cars.

�..

.

.

It-The Dilly Sentlnei,Middleport.Pomtl'oy, 0 ., March 15,1972

Meigs-Logan in
Final Girl Play
Meigs and Logan advanced
to the flnals of the Meigs Invitational Girls' Basketball
Tournament Tuesday night,
Meigs defeating Ne~ville
YQI'k fl to 32 and Logan
downing Athens 29 to 21.
Meigs and Logan will play
lor the championship Friday at
8 p,m. at Meigs High Gym.
Athens will play NelsonvilleYork in the (jOOSOiation round
at 6 p.m.
In the Meigs-Nelsonville
contest Meigs trailed 16to It at
the end of the se~:ond quarter.
Meigs rallied in the third
period to lead by one, then
managed to take the lead and
hold it.
Pat Harris was the big gun
for Meigs, scoring 10 of her 13
points from the foul line,
getting 10 out of 11 from the
charity stripe.

Other scorers for Meigs were
. Shertie King with 14, Debbie
Ohlinger 10 and scrappy Ava
Sayre with 4.
In the Logan contest the
game was close until the last
minute of play · when Logan
scored on a fast break. Logan's
McBroom scored 4 points on
foul shots to put the game out of
reach.

(Caallauecl'fnlm p11e I) ··
us bac:k tO the bel'!' I lit t0
day• when tbe letllllture
dldli'1 ban tandllo do." 1
Other opponeall ul!l ~
l:lve le llleu .1!0uld me1 el) tiltll
far a 'IJII"''•l .-loa
wolt
waaa't '''141eted ill eo din,
and Tulley'• Ualilldmlllt ....
tablid, u.a. .. .
•'
'
Rep. aaberi E. N~, ft;
Of Little Men i;a Green
Laura, ~ for • ~ ·
ment to forlid two-term lOY*,·
Pomeroy, Ohio nors to run !lgaln. The oonstl.
March 14, 1972 tution now forbids soveraori\9
Dear Sir :
serve more than lwo ·~
sive" terms.
· '· ··
St. Patrick's Day this year gives ua a lot to reflect on. I can't
~~~ thintildnbagttlof th!~.!'~-~t exiataad in tha~ tmhappy land where
~
..,.,r~ ans
e uu..._,. inste of drivmg out snakes as St. SpeakerCbat:*F.Kurfets,B{
Patrick was reputed to have done. .
· ,
Bo lln8 G
and it · · ·
U Is different for me to comprebend ~ a Christian of any • ne:. v!Xedrflffl, •
WI,':·
faith can resort to violence if he Is truly following the eDII)ple of
IIJ)CII
,· ·
the Prince of Peace. Whathashappenedto·US? Have we lost our
perspective of what Is important, of what Is of eternal worth and
&lt;' ·
what is temporary and purely of materlilllitic origin?
(Continued fnlm page I) f' :
I !mow that from time to time the President of the United da~e. amoQg the nortbetp ·
States proclaims a day of (l'ayer for one reason or another. 1 Democrats.
·
:.
wonder if we as Christians ought not to proclaim St. Patrick's
McGovern of South llak~ : ·
Day a day of prayer for Ireland and for the survival of real lvlth 7 per cent and New
Olristianity and Christian love.Jt might~ better than a green · Mayor John Lindsay with 7111!':
stripe down Broadway or a parade of little men in green.
cent fought an inconclusive ·
In the Pomeroy SeventiHiay Adventist church, 1 have asked battle in their hellcf.to-llead:
that on March 17 all our members pray especially lor peace in match to come out of Floridli'~ :
Ireland. I hope that others will join us.
primary as the leadini conteil:-' .
der from the llemoa"atlc left;
Sincerely, GOP Prllnary Ovenblldow~ .
Totally overshadowed -wiJ ·
Herbert Morgan,
the Republican primary whel'~ :.
Pastor President Nixon roUed to his.
second straight victory,:
wimlng 11'1 per cent the vote,. ·
Rep. John M. Ashbrook of'
Ohio, carrying the banner fOr:
(Continued from (lillie I)
risk a rH'Wt of the recent protracted water-iront tieup.
conservative Republicans; :
finished with 9 per cent, arid
MIAMI- PRESIDENT NIXON WON A LOPSIDED victory Rep. Paul N. MCCioclkey ~
in the Republican presidential pimary Tuesday night, outpolllng Catllornla, who pulled out of
the combined totals of Dberal Paul McCioeli:ey and coiiii!I'Yitlve the race because.he wu broke,
Jolm Ashbrodl: by nearly a nine-to .one margin in Florida. With 99 finished with 4 per cent.
Spurning the pleadings of
pet. of the state's preclnciB in, Nixon.bad 367,230 votes or r1 pet,
Gov.
Reubin Aakew, Floridians
to 16,978or 4pet. for MCCloskey and 36,974 or 9 pet. for Alltbrook.
voted . in 8 ~'straw ballot"
NlxOII's margin was of raut proporUons in every one
thre4i-to-one
in favor of 8 con.
Florida's 12 congressional districts. Rep. C. W. "Bill" Young, RFla., called the vote a "clear endorsement ... of the poDcles and stltutional amendment banning ''forced busing," but at
leadership of President Nixon."
the same time voted four-toone !lga!Rit return to dual
school systems.
'Two Accidents
In another nooblnding ad- .
visory vote, Florida went.four.
Probed By Police
(eontiniieifirom (lillie 1l
Creston Newland, clerk, will to-one in favor of amending the ·
The Meigs County llperiff's
Conatltutlon to allow school
Dept. investigated lwo ac- ask· the county auditor for an prayers.
cidents Tuesday in which no advance on the district's draw
Fewer than 20,000 votes were
to meet the payroll and pay
injuries were reported.
divided among !he fringe
At 4:25p.m. on county road bllls."
candidates wbo did not cam.
52 cars driven by George A. , Approval was given to hold palgn in Florida-Sen. Vance
Perry, 64, Dexter Rt. 1, and vacation Bible school the first Hartke of Incllana, Mayor Sam .
Lauren E. Hoffman, 55, week in June at' Riverview
)'Jm,, llf ..1.#11 .ifi~I!L ;~t .
pexter, Rl. f• ponided at the elementary and ·tbe bucl C!lfUl7
illlbmescit8 and RQ.intersection of cotmty road 52 boosters were autbclrlled to Wllbur Mllla
of Arkanl!as.
and township road 363. There carry out several fund raising
was medhun damage to boUt .progl'81111 for band camp.
' '
COME FOR SERVICE
The '. board recessed until
vehicles. No citations were
Graveside services for Mrs.
March 24 when a study of bids
issued.
Emma
Crou Morrllon · were
AI 3:30 p.m. at the in- on two school buaes wlli be
tersection of US 33 and SR 7 made and awarded.' The board held Friday at the oak Grove
cars driven by Donald W. agreed to ask the state &lt;Mietery with the Rev. Daje
Randolph, 21, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, department of education to McClurg offlclstlng• . CGmlng
and Victoria L. Grate, 17, Rut- claim March 3 as calamity from a distance were Mrs.
land, collided. The accident ill day when school wu dlsmlued Florence Morrison, East
Lansing, Mich., with whom
still under investlgalioo. There due to weather condltlona.
Attending were I. 0. McCoy, Mrs. Morrison had ree1ded the
was light damage to both cars.
Roger Epple, Oris Smith, past four years; David P:
Clyde Kuhn, and Howard Morrison, Korea; Mr. ucfMrs.
TAGS HERE
Paul Simon, Pomeroy deputy CaldweU, Jr., board members, Hugh S. Morrison, Jim 111d
auto registrar, said today 1972 Newland, clerk, and Mr. Bob, Oxford; V. L. Mortlllir(
Eugene Mlrrlson, Ja'rk ·
auto license plates wlli go on Riebel.
Deibert,
Mrs. Roth Petencip,
sale Thursday. Hours are
Mrs. Van Dlvler, Col~:;·
SEOAL WINS
Monday through Friday from
Coaches of the SEOAL Mr. and Mrs. Ben H. fl'ol!i,
9:30 a.m.to 4:30p.m. and from
9 a.m. to noon Salurday. The defeated coaches of the SVAC Mrs. Grace Frank, Glouater;
registrar's office is in the Pick- in a cl011e contest, eo to 77, at Mrs. James Cr011, Llncutiii',
A-Pair Shoe Store, W. Second Southern High School in Recine and Mr. and Mrs. David Croii;
Walhondlns.
· .:
Tueaday night.
St.
'

of

33

J::'•of

First Birthday
Is Cekbrated

UC::

Electi
' ·on ',.

WEST COLUMBIA - stacie
'Annette Hall was honored on
her first birthdliy, Feb. 23, with

a party at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. David
Hall, Rt. 1, West Colmnbla.
Cake, Ice cream and soft
drinks were served to the
following guests: Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Zurcher, Jr., Mr. and
THEY ALSO REBOUND - The baD is at the fingertips of Miss .Devol (15) of NelsonvilleMrs. Marshall Bland and
York and Debbie Ohlinger (14), Meigs High, in a contest for a rebound Tuesday night at Meigs
Becky, Mrs. Marvin Wand,
Tonight &amp; Thursday
High in seml.flnal round of the Girls Invitational BaskethaD Tournament. Meigs won and
March 15·16
Mrs. Lera Hall, Mrs. Frances
advanced
to the finals against Logan Friday night. (Picture by Katie Crow).
NOT OPEN
Saunders, Mr. and Mrs. James
Young, Tammy and Usa, Mr.
Frict.y thru Tuesdoy
and
Mrs. John Miller, John
March 17·21
Stephen and Melllaa, Mrs.
THE
ANDROMEDA STRAIN
Thoinas Russell, and Scottie,
(Technlcolor)
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Miller, Jr.
Arthur Hill
Sending gifts were Mr. and
David Wayne
NEW YORK (UP!) -Four "Shaft." He wore a golden robe posthmnously with the Bing
Mrs. James E. Neal, Sr., Mr.
"G"
Granuny
Awards, including for the occasion.
Crosby Award.
and Mrs. Sherwood Yonker,
C.rtoon:
Aretha Franklin took top
Andy Williams served as
Surch for Mistry
Misses Iva and Lessie Sleeth, 'what are considered the top
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
three,
went
to
singer
Carole
honors
for
the
fifth
straight
master
of ceremonies during
Mrs. William Zuspan and Billy.
King Tuesday in a nationaDy year for the best rhythm and the 9(kninute show. Awards
televised presentation for the blues female performance for which were not presented on
best reconm and perfonners of "Bridge Over Troubled the television show were anPLEASANT VALLEY
Up a tree ~r lhdng
water."
nounced at a banquet imNames of patients admitted the year.
space? See us lor ·l
Her
Granunies
were
for
stephen
Schwartz
won
the
mediately
following the
have · been temporarily
discontinued for publication. recordoftheyear,albwnofthe Grammy for best score from telecast.
DISCHARGES - Denver year, song of the year and best an original cast album,
Parsons, Syracuse; Mrs. feqla)e pop vocal performance. "Godspell," and Lou Rawls
Miss King, who recently edged out Hayes and B.B.
Marvin Luckeydoo, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Clayton Hager, gsve birth, was in California King, last year's wimer, in the
Albany, 0., Danny Burns, Jr.,. and unable to attend the best rhythm and blues male
Henderson; Mrs. Robert presentations at the Felt vocal performance with "A
Anthony, Henderson; Greg Formn auditorium in Madison Natural Man."
A special . award was . Ten defendants were fined by
~r low home Improvement
Clendenin, Mrs . Charles Square Garden.
Her recording of "It's Too presented to Leonard Bern- Middleport Mayor John Zerkle
loin r - should be good
Bledaoe, 'Mrs. John Greenlee,
_.., r..son for )'OU to oct Point Pleasant; Mrs. Joe Late" was judged by members stein for his work in both Tuesday night. Three forfeited
now. Fly In flldly with your
Keathley, Letart; Mrs. Roena of the National Academy of popular and classical music bonds.
•tlmotes ot lht omounl yOU
Recording Arts and Sciences and Louis Armstrong and
Fined were Burton T.
Meadows, Glenwood.
ntld, ond Improve tho stole
as
the
best
record.
She
won
Mahalia
Jackson
were
honored
at )'OUI' mind, 11 well .. the
Dewees, 48, Dexter, $100 and
BffiTHS- March 14, twins,
fino stole ol your house.
costs and three days in jail,
a boy and a girl, to Mr. and best female vocal performance
driving while intoxicated;
Mrs. Donald Pierce, Pomeroy. for the album "Tapestry."
other nominations for best
Cecil Higginbotham, 59,
recqrd were "My Sweet Lord"
. DRIVER CITED
Dexter, $15 and ' COlla, inON MERIT ROLL
Minor damages were by George Harrison, "Joy to
Six Meigs County studenb toxication; Gary M. Rife, ~.
repcrted to lwo autos and one the WOlikl" by Three Dog
have been named to the dean's Middleport, $5 and costs, stop
driver was cited as the result of Night, "Theme from Shaft" by Merit Roll for th~ first sign; lillie M. Lee, ·49, Midan accident on East Main St. at Isaac Hayes and "You've Got a semester at , Rio Grande dleport, and Jerry Ward, 71,
Tht Athens County
4 p.m. Tuesday, Pomeroy Friend" by James Taylor.
Middleport, $5 and cos.ts each,
Sovlngs &amp; Loon Co.
Miss King's "Tapestry" won College. To be named to the fines suspended, both charged
pollee said. A car driven by
296StcondSt.
merit roll, a student must earn
· Pomeroy, Ohio
Harold White, 20, Pomeroy, the album of the year over at least a 3.0 average for the with permitting a dog to run
All Accounts Insured To struck the rear of a car driven "All Things Must Pass" by
semester on a 3.5 scale and loose; Homer Smith, 25,
$20,000.00 by FSLIC.
by Patrick Clifford, 21, Harrison, ~'Carpenters" by must take a minimum of 12 Middleport, $10 and costs,
Pomeroy. Clifford's vehicle The Carpenters, "Jesus Cbrist hours credit. Named to the roll intoxication; Betty Lou Gilkey,
had , stopped in the lane of Superstar" by the original were Robert Burdette, Nancy 41, Middleport, $5 and costs,
traffic. White was cited on an English cast and "Shaft."
speeding; Donald R. Lovett, 48,
She received the song of the Thompson, Racine i Donna Portland, two counts of inassured clear dislance charge.
year Granuny, awarded to Cross, Joan Manuel, Deborah toxication, $35 and costs; John
There were no injuries.
composers, for "You've Got a Roush and Pauline Hill, all of E. Nelson, 26, Middleport, two
Racine.
Friend."
counts of assault and battery,
Hayes received a standing
$25 and costs; Mark Haley, 20,
ovation when he won a
Middleport, $10 and costs,
Granuny for the best original
TAKEN TO HOLZER
assault and battery.
score written for a motion
The Middleport E-R squad
Forfeiting bonds were
picture or television special - answered a caD to the Albert
Joseph Reiser, no age or adShumaker, Jr., residence in dress, $30, intoxication; Dennis
Rutland at 11:15 p.m. Tuesday E. Lane, 29, Gallipolis, $25,
HAYNES REASSIGNED
Max F. (Fred) Haynes, 524 where Shwnaker had ·been speeding, and Aaron HyseD, 41,
Restaur-:~~nt
Eastwood Ave., Lancaster, is injured in a faD from his porch Pomeroy, $30, intoxication.
one of 15 ·field representatives roof. He was taken to Holzer
In The Heart of Middleport
of the Ohio Association of ,Medical Center. At 9:15 a.m.
Public School Employees today the squad took John
(OAPSE) who have been Nelson, Middleport, confined to
assigned to new areas. Hayne's the village jail, to Veterans
new 12-eounty area includes Memorial Hospital where he
was treated for an illness and
Roberto Clendennen, vocalist
Athens, Fairfield, Hocking,
John Kallel, on sa x
Meigs, Morgan, Perry, remanded to the custody of the
John Lynch. drums
Pickaway,
Vinton
and police department.
.__ _ _S•k•lp•Sioie•w•ar•t•
, b.•.••_________.. Washington Counties.

MEIGS THEATRE .

vent'

CapturesFourGra~mies News •.. in Briefs

Home

Improvement

Ten Fined

I.Dan

By Zerkle

DANCE TO UVE ENTERTAINMENT
SATURDAY NIGHT, MARat 18
10 PM 'TIL 2 AM

Martin

of

of

a

Architects ·

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

John Kalleel Combo

Ca)e Coa ., . KRD EHLER~~'­

New and Exciting Ensemble From Our
of "Made-For-Each-Other" Sofas and Chcilrs

l

Bakers are a matchmaker when i' comes 1o creating
3 PIICIS

I . . ,•'•

\ .;.i:l
I

::~~~~~nfli:~~t~~t~=~·ial
advertising .
The readerwilldowelllo scan the great ~

variety of messages for important valLies .
The Daily Sentinel is contributing a
touch of color to he ld th
.
ra
e new season.

~

·

·

·

§._ SAIGON.;&lt;UPI)-ConununJSt

·

.

.-'

W t:.cnt ·lrr ·' '"' h uv IINI' ruro uhu't•.

~'"'

~cyle .

lc•Jk fur
,·um r" r1 nnd
1'-'"N " 'I IH You fill) fm it . . n urt MJ IIIN.ill1~'!j l(o.•l il.
l:hOO.'.P. ('u pl' t:ud hy Kr.,t•hlllr :tnd &gt;""u 'II NCI n .c I(Ualit\' yo u II:! I' fur . .

rijllht dowu L(J Uw l11~ t 111.'1111~ ·~ wurlh . The Kr•11.• h k•r, t: r11(l ~u.., ,; "''hu 111nkt•
CUd LIIC t:. i11oful to the hill h ribndarfl fUT quulit y t hat 'll ltla ,,_-d un
tV~."f:o' 1 1 1~,,,, ur m~ lt:rt ~ l a nd Cllt·r ~· ~t i ldo tl uot 11&lt;1&lt;."' iotto iL ( 'hnt&gt;!tl.'
Cape Cod I•)' Krut•hklr ... i t '~ yt~ur . ,, ,m•r ~&lt;~· of "'1tin11 ~o~'IIM \ ' LIU io:l )' ( l or
f.:&amp; Ill!

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.

I

Vi.s.it the J~d Floor Furniture Dep1rtment lor great SIVings on Kroehler sof1s.
2 - pieC~ su1tes _and sleeper lounges. Modern, trtditlon11, · 5tltnlsh 1nd E1rly
Amertcan stylings. Handsomely tailored in decor1tllr fabrics.

ELBERFELDSriN POMEROY
I

,

·

·

Pomeroy to Host

Ambulance 'Chief

Ftghtlng tapered off '"
Cambodia where a 50,000rnan
South Vietnamese triple task
force has sliced into old
Communist sanctuary areas
but the South Vietnamese
repj!l'led finding an abandoned
Coriimunist base camp five
miles northwest of the Cam-

·

·

·

bodian city of Kampong Trach,
tantry a!ld artillery teams
the fourth such base captured
lilllitil~il'flij~fl'l'l'l~~•.:m~.~~·*:!j:l.~~:::~:i&lt;Wu:*; oured
out
of
their
or destroyed during the drive.
camouflaged jungle camps
This one was blown up.
today and Wednesday night to
No major ground action was
hit army bases and sleepy,
reported elsewhere in Cambotree-llned towns in the heaviest
dia, but Cambodia's main
attacb in more than five
ammunition depot at Pachenmonths, military spokesmen
tong airport 3\l miles outside
reported,
the capital exploded today,
Allied corrunands reported 42 PU:~'!'l&gt;,;:&gt;.':'~:':':'.'l!l'.::&gt;.':':m sending columns of flames and
sheltlngs and ground altl!Cks
Bad Time to lloo smoke hundreds of feet into the
from 6 a.(ll. Wednesday to 6
air.
d
DALY
CITY,
Calli.
(UP!)
The. Olief of Federal · of Their main iflterest in visiting a.m. todaY aga· inst US
.. an
South Vietnamese civilians
Federal Hospital and Am- the area is to reView the status &amp;luth Vietnamese positions, - A Sao Francisco man bore the brunt of the Conunubuluce Programs of the of the proposed regional with dvillans bearing the brunt found It doesn't pay to boo 8 nisi ground attacks, most of
nation's. emergency health emergency medical services of most of the attacks. The judge. Thoma• Harrlooo which occurr.ed in the
presently under Conununist activity spread in booed Judge Charles Becker republic's northern quarter
~ will be in Athens and system
PQillei'OY on Thursday, March development tiy boards of these attacks to the central
while listening to a just below the Demilitarized
commissioners
of
the
counties
23rd,loconferwith Ohio Valley
coastal areas.
Municipal Court hearlu~for Zone (DMZ).
The U.S. command reported a frleDCI Tuesday.
Health Services Found4tion of Athens, Gallia, Hocking,
A bailiff led Harrison · AmerlcanSoldlerWounded
officials and address the seven Jackson, Lawrence, Meigs and two more ''protective reacoutalde and ran a chetk on
county organization's 55- Vinton, .the Foundation, and lion" strikes against North
The Conununisls wounded
Vietnamese anti-aircraft sites
bim. It turned out he o\med one American soidier early
member board of directors at seven area hospitals.
Dr, Nottingham's division Wednesday, the 94th and !~lith
22 oulotaadlng traffic today with a 23-&lt;'ound mortar
ita quarterly meeting.
warraats totallag $422.
barrage on base camp Viking,
Dr. Stuart Nottingham, of has been kept abreast of of the year. The targets were
development
for
local
services
sites
well
north
of
the
"Mr.
Harrison
Is
now
our
just five miles west of 'Da
the U. S. Department of
temporary guest In the Nang, South Vietnam's second
Health, · Education and Billce last September and h~s Demilitarized 1A&gt;oe (DMZ) and
reviewed
locally
developed
·were
antiaircraft
and
missile
county
jail," Sheriff's largest city. The heaviest
Welfare, will be accompaniO\I
Deputy Green Stewart said Conununist assaults were in
by his deputy, Cleve Tyalor, reports and application sites menacing U.S. planes
req11ests
to
other
federal
bombing Ute Ho Chi Minh Trail
Wednesday.
Auang Ngsi Province, cenand radio communications
(Continued on (lillie 10)
in Laos.
\OS:.O!i ,. ;;;;; _; ~!i .. 8.~m&amp;::w.:,:,m tered 320 miles north of Saigon.
engineer, Arthur Griffith .

SURE AND IT'S A HAPPY St . Patrick's Day that Maureen Hennessy of Pomeroy is

wishin' you tomorrow . Afreshman at Meigs High School, Maureen is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Hennessy, 242 Mulberry Ave. She will represent Pomeroy at the Miss Ohio TeenAge Pageant in Dayton this summer . Saturday, Miss HeMessy, in her Irish costuming, will be
a hostss at the Pomeroy National Bank where refresl)ments will be served to visitors from 9a.
m. until noon as a part of the bank's IOOth anniversary. Assisting llllss Hennessy, in addition to
bank personnel, will be Jayne Lee Hoeflich, a Pomeroy Elementary School student.

Weather

Now You Know
If it could be adnlinlstered in
small enough doses a
teaspoon of the vitamin
·riboflavin would meet the
needs of the hmnan body for
approximately 60 years. ·

VOL. XXIV

Cloudy and cooler tonight, a
chance of light rain or drizzle
east and northwest. Low
tonight in the mid to upper 30s.
Cooler Friday with highs in the
mid 50s south.

Devoted To The lntere&amp;U Of The Meig8-Mtuon Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 237

•

ews•• zn
By Ualted Preu!Dterilatlonal

COLUMBUS-STATE AUDROR JOSEPH T. FERGUSON,
who last We!!k issued a highly critical report on the way Ohio
University runs its food ojleraticins, paid a visit to the school in
Alhens lhllweelr, had lunch and dacribed it aa ''first class." The
vialt ~ay had been liclteduled well in advance of.the rePor!:
FerBUIOII said Wednesday he had lunch with OU offictsls in
camp111 ciliunt! hall and could not fault the quality of tile food. '.' It
was'lliat class," he said. "The food we ate was fine. I had ·a
combination sandwich, ssl!Miand coffee."

THURSDAY, MARCH 16, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

TEN CENTS

WASHINGTON. (UPI)-The colwnnist Jack ·Anderson.
Senate Judiciary Committee
It was publication of a
called the president of Intern!'- .confidential memorandum by
tiona! TeleJilone I&amp; Telegraph Mrs. 114:ard that set off a wideback t'o the witness stand today.- ranging lnvestigalioo into how
to nplain why his firm the government set tied out of
destroyed recorda of its Wash- · court a billion dollar anlit,rust
lngton lobbyl.lt, Dlta D. Beard. case agai11,9t ITT.
Harold s. Geneen, ITT
Mrs. Beard linked the setUepresident1 ~ th~ com- ment to a $4.00,000 ITT con• COLUMBUS -THE DIVISION:OF ,VATEBCRAFr of·the · mittee W~ay by iclcbOw· trlbut.ioo to help underwrite the
flllo Department of Natural Resourcea hu· plan• for a boater !edging that company aecqrlty Republicaq National 'Conllfety 'and educatioo program to cut' down on the nmnber of .agents ran the recorda through vention in' San Diego. Mrs.
boating accidents, Natural ReiiOIII'Ces Director Wi)llam Nye said a shredder. Hla testimony Beard is in a Denver, Colo.,
tOday. Nye said $300,000 for the program wlli come from the confinned a charge mede by hospital undergoing treabnent
Waterways Safety Fund and another $600,000 hopefully will be
given in federal funds.
Mainly, the program would involve the hiring of 30 enforcement and education officers who would be concentrated In
areas wbere most of the accidents occur, Nye said, such as Lake
Erie, Indian Lake, Hoover Reservoir,.GriggS Reservoir, Portage
lakes and the Great Miami River near Dayton.

a

'La~ ·Says

for a heart condition.
Asixofllember subconunittee
wiD take direct testimony from
Mrs. Beard in her hospital
room in Denver Mondav.
Coollnaatioo at Stake
At stake In the investigation
is the confirmation of Richard
G. Kleindienst and attorney
general. Anderson · accused
' Kleindienst of lying when he
said he did not have anything to
do with settlement of tbe antitrust case.
Geneen read a 20-page

prepared statement to the
committee late Wednesday
which ~enied any improperly
on the part of the company or
· the government officials who
negotiated the settlement.
Under the settlement, ITT
was permitted to retain the
Hartford Fire Insurance Co.
but was forced to divest Itself
of several · 'other companies
with more thlm $1 billion a year
in revenues.
Under questioning by Sen ..
John V. Tunney, D-Calif.,

Geneen acknowledged that
some of Mrs. Beard's records
were shredded. He said it was a
"reaction to what was happening''-lhat the rues had
been opened up to the publicand that the shredding was
"not an attempt to prevent
Congress" from seeing Mrs.
Beard's documenta.
The rrr president promlaed
a fuD account of the Incident.
Geneen also addressed hlmseU to the confusion about how
much money the company

Confine Vancouver Has Hughes

Dogs in Pomeroy

:0:6~..-:.:o:-:o;.;;-.-.~;·~Q....,!&gt;'•Y..:O:O:o:b:•'o'o)'o'o'O:•'•'•'

VANCOUVER (UPI)- How- his picture, just 20 years
BUI ChUds, manager of Ute · ard Hughes, who said he wants older."
Meigs Inn, was reported · "a change of scenery and a "He had a thiMer face and a
Pomeroy. residents must Recine, $23.70, speeding; Paul wearing bls straightest face change of air," setUed in today few more lines and his hair Is
WASHINGTON -THE POlmCAL AcrlON ARM of
American Milk Producers, Inc., one of the nation's biggest dairy keep dogs confined. ·An or- Parsons, Robert Scarberry, today upon hinting lbat for an apparent lengthy stay in graying. He had just a faint
fal'IDC!j' cooperatives, will have about $'150,000 or more available ' dinance p~ovides penalties William Parsons, Wedsell recluse Howard Hughes, Vancouver, setting up head- suggestion of a beard and
for campaign contributions in the remainder of 1972, according to against owners who permit Phillips, Donald Blankenship, rather !ban being holed up ill ~ quarters in a $4,20Q.a-week mustache. Y011 can almost say
an executive of the group. George L. Mehren, AMP! general dDgs to run loose, Pollee Olief $25 bond each, and each a suite of rooms at the : suite of rooms at the exclusive that he had not shaved."
disturbing the peace (no ad- Baysbore Inn In Vancouver, Bayshore Inn.
manager, said in an Interview that no final decisions had been Jed Webater aald.
Warren Anderson, menager
Meanwhile numerous fines dresses recorded); Bill Arnold, B. C., illstead may be the
Hughes, 66, arrived in Van- of the Bayshore Inn and Its
made yet on how to allocate the funds of the political .affiliate,
were levied and bonds forfeited Pomeroy, $50, .destrUction of tall, bearded gentleman wbo : couver early Tuesday on a Bayshore Towers apartmentcaUed TAPE (Agricultural Trust for Political Education).
What the dair)'!nen are 011t to get for the money when it Is Wednesday night in the weekly property, and $25, intoxication; chetked Into his bosterly late private twin-engine jet. He left hotel annex, said Hughes and
Roy Neece, Middleport, $25, , Wedaesday olgbt.
Nicaragua Monday and ap- his staff had rented the entire
allOcclted, Mehren Jiald, is "uncterstanding" of how their industry court session of Pomeroy
"
.
assured clear distance; Ma~k t.(9.:,:,:::,&gt;,.~~:~:-x;~~'8'-"'~:':':~:~:~.::&gt;.:«&gt;.::,
Mayor
William
Baronick.
. ... parently flew here after a brief 20th top floor and part of the
works and what its problems are. We are not going out to buy
Fined were Harold White, Holcomb, Charleston, $200,
stopover in Los Angeles,
19th floor of the annex.
anybody."
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, assured DWI.
In Los Angeles, Richard Anderson estimated the
clear distance; Billy Joe
Hannah, a· Hughes Tool Co. Hugh•• party included betWASIIING'I'ON- DESPrrE PROTES'111 THAT Amtrak is McDaniel, Middleport, $10 and
88
spokesman,
said the industria- ween 12 to 15 persons. He said
railroading taxpayers to the poorhouse, the House has authorized COils, disturbing the peace;
list was "in Vancouver on a 24 rooms were booked in all.
(Continued on page 10)
Earl Phelps, ::'..;;neroy, $10,
business trip. There Is no in- "The bookings were made
reckless operation, and $5 and
dication yet of the nature of the under the name 'Howward
MASON - Police today business nor of how long he Hughes on an indefinite basis,
costs, reckless operation;
Miss Bess Hoyt Sanborn, continued investigation Into a
George Gillilan, Oleater, $10 id
so we hope he stays a long
eIY known Middl ep0 r I bomb threat received at plans to remain tbere."
and coals, reckless operation .. w
C. K. Scatchard, acting time," Anderson said.
business woman and Church Wahama High School late
The county-wide, bouse-to- following year such programs
Forfeiting bonds were Earl I d died Th sda
·
district
administrator for the
house · American Red Cross as first aid, water safe!)', Shaffer, Pomeroy, $23.70, ea er,
ur ymornmg Wednesday morning that
fund drive in no way Is con- service to military families speeding; Charles Baker, at her home 0n South Third · caused evacuation of buildings lmmigration Department, said
A
however, that Hughes had told
TAGS ON SALE
nected with the West Virginia and the blood program.
ve.
for the remainder of the day . customs offict' als "he planned
Mrs
.
Kenneth Imboden,
Miss Bess" as she was
Buffalo Creek Flood Relief
The following women wiD be
DIVORCE GRANTED
Law enforcement agencies to stay as a visitor in van- Middleport Depty Motor
program.
known in the stressed they will press for the
canvassing .in Middleport unW
Daniel E. Shane has been affectionately
't
Meigs chapter officials the end · of the drive: Eulall granted a divorce from Ruth conununt y, was acuve ·m the maximum •·enaity against couver for up to ·three months Vehicle Registrar, said today
• h
r
for a change of scenery and a that 1972 auto license plates are
emphasized today that money Francis, Edith Spencer, Jane Marte Shane and six other, Sanborn Jewelry Store Whvtc
persons convicted in thiS
' i·n- chance of air."
on sale at 522 Palmer Street
h
ted with her late cident.
llp8C~ed for the Rood rellef
Ann Gilkey, Christine Simons, cases were dismissed ac- · sb e tbopera H I
Scatchard
said
Hughes
had
Monday through Saturday
purpoae is being accepted, but Dorothy RoUer, Rosie Searles, cording to entries today in ro ers, ar ey an d Max
A secretary of the bend area
·
d
th
1
told
CUSiol11ll
officials
also
that
from 9 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. and
women who are canvassing the Virginia DeLegai, Anna Meigs County Common Pleas San bo rn, an
en a one, school was reported to have he would contact them if he evenings 6:30 to 9 p.m. Moo day
area for the Red Cross Wayland, l'lellie Dunn, Helen Court. Cases dismissed were, following their dea~. She was · received a call which "sounded
to stay longer than through Friday.
currently are accepting Kennedy, Becky Roush, Cheryl Alexandrina Lee vs. James an acUve member 0f Mid• like an adult male voice," decides
three months.
donations only for the county Barphart, Debra· McGuffhi, Lee, Louise Rickman vs. dleport's Heath United adVlS
' ing that three bombs had .
. t Ch h h
f
Jolm Jackson, the Canadian
Method IS
drive.
urc w ere or· been placed i'n each bw'ldm
' g customs official who cleared
Mildred Hawley, Wilma . James H. Rickman, · Joan
Marriage Uceose
The money received during Sargent, Patty Might, Sandy Green vs. Francis Green, many years She was one 0 f the and were to go off at 2 p.m.
thl! billionaire recluse on his
Charles Henry Klein, Jr., 25,
the fund drive, which began Might, Eileen Snyder, Gemma Minnie Hutton vs. Ewing faithful church women serving
Mason City police and arrival in Canada Tuesday, Pomeroy, and Victoria Lynn
March 1 and continues through Casci, Mary Boggs, Cindy Hutton, Charles F. Shain vs. FridaY ni ght dinners to the
(Continued on page 101
sat'd Hugh es Iooked "just Iike Walburn, 16, Pomeroy.
MBrch 31, will enable the Hindy, Trudy Road and Cindy Herbert Rose, and Donna R. Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club.
chapter to finance lor the Coffman.
Stobart vs. John W. stobart.
Miss Sanborn was a member
of Return Jonathan Olapter of
the Daughters of the American
Revolution, the Middleport
literary Club and Evangeline
ABILENE, Tex . (UPI)- watermP.Ion.''
fine each.
Chapter 172, Order of Eastern House Speaker Gus F. MutMutschcr was convicted with
Reporters scrambling to reStat. The daughter of the late scher, 39, a farm boy who two other men, both legislative port the verdict to their editors
By Ualted Prell latei'JIIItloul unilateraDy and not take Israel bank area It now holds.
Damascns Radio said in a B. W. and Bina L. Hoyt San- became a successful attorney associates, of railroading two accidentally broke a window
ilraeli Prime Minllter Golda into consideration."
Hussein ouWned his pian broadcast today that Syria, born, she ~as born in Tuppers and married a Miss America in banking bills through a 1969 pane in a ·courtroom door .
Melr today rejected a Pi!n by
l(lng Hussein of Jordan to Wednesday .It would set up two Egypt and libya - members Plains Oh April 2(, 1886. She the 1960s, was convicted special session of the Texas . Judge J. Neil Daniel said he
create a seml-autonom~u.s states, Qne in what is now of the Arab Federation - will would have been 86 next Wednesday of plotting to take a Legislature in exchange for would have something to say
PaleiUnian state under his Jordan and the other in the confer with Palestinian month.
illegal stock deals .
bribe while in office.
later about
courtroom
Several
cousins
survive.
guerriUa
leaders
before
artarea
west
of
the
Jordan
River.
, toni'etgnty with Jerusalem as
Prosecutors said they made decorum.
He was the highest state
Funeral services will be held official in Texas history to be more thar. $80,000 on the stock
area,
Including nouncing their position. None
1111 c.pital. "His pian cannot be That
Mrs, Mutscher, of ElDorado,
·uaed u a basis for pea~ with Jerusalem, ' was taken from of the governments have yet at 2 p.m. Saturday at the convicted or a felony . The jury deals, set up and financed by Ark ., who was Miss America in
Jordan during the 1967 war and commented officiaDy on the Rawlings-Coata Funeral Home was ordered to return to hear HO\!ston banker Frank Sharp. 1964, wept when the verdict
llratl/' ibe said.
, plan, although unofflcia! with the Rev. Robert character witnesses and de· Sharp himself was convicted in was read. Later, as the couple
Mrs. Melr told a packed still is occupied by them.
seul~n of the Knesset
In outlining ·the plan, the 37- . reaction has been against it. Baumgarner officiating. lil&gt;ernte punistunert today.
the stock scandal last year and left the courth011se, she took a
However, Iraq has called on Burial wiU be in Middleport
parliament Hussein's plan year-old Jordanian monarch
Mutscher said the verdict given a probated sen!ence .
swing at reporters with her
''doel not offer us peace. Peace said It 'could ~ot be 1m: S~a an~ !igypt to join it to Hill Cemetery. Friends may M10unded him .
The maximum punishment' purse. She misSed.
Ia not menuonecl. '11M ldlia plemented WtW ilrael wi~­ slOp Ute plan, which is said call at the funeral home after
" Unbeliev&lt;ible, ·• he said . for Mut srh ~ !' ;md the others is
The others convicted . were
11
noon on Friday.
llll_lllltl he c~n
act drtw its forces from the west · would destroy Arab unity.
l've never even stolen a five years in prison and a $5,000 Muscher's aide, S. Rush
,,.,.,-._,...,.~~~- "· ······' '-"··""··~,.·

Bomb Call
Mi Bess
was a Dud
Died TodaY

i
';•

PAGE 9

IT&amp;T's Geneen Called Back

Hussein Plan Rejected

'

SUPPER SET
Apublic bean and corn bread
supper wiD be held Saturday in
the annex oc the Tuppers
Plains , Uni:ed 'Methodist '
Church. Serving will start at
4:30p.m

·

11

MARRIAGE LICENSES
Glen Tillou Crisp, 20, Langsville, Rt. I and Margaret
Charlayne Davis, 21, Langsville; WiUiam Michael Jones,
21, Pomeroy, Rl . 3, and
Deborah Ann Laney , 18,
Middleport; David W. Marcum, 23, Rutland, and Janet
Gertrude Searles, 25, Rutland.

beautiful rooms. And here Is just one ol many In our
wondertully wide array ot decorator-designed solos and
choirs - now at very special prices.

. Ben~ Area Merchants are !aunching · : ·

Canvass Is Local

DIVORCES ASKED
Two suits for divorce have
been filed in Meigs County
Conunon Pleas Court, each
charging gross neglect of duty.
They are Gary Roger Tenney,
Middleport, vs. Carol Ann
Tenney, Buckhannon, W. Va.,
and Brenda K. Phelps,
Rutland, vs. Earl E. Phelps,
Pomeroy.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMI'ITED - Holly Friend,
Syracuse; Samuel Barnhart,
Racine.
DISCHARGED - Dana
Howett, Coy Starcher, John
Hanning, Salem Yates.

COmmunists Hit
~,·., A]
. .·o·ng w.·de
'. F'. r'ont I~

Spring Aires

,,

offered to the San Diego convention and ttrurlst bureau to
help subsidize the GOP
National Convention. Rep. Bob
Wilson, R.Calif ., and Mrs.
Beard have said it was up to
$4.00,000.
. 'l')le Pledge
Geneen, however, said the
pledge consisted of three
things.
-A corrunltment that the
presidential headquarters will
be in the Sheraton Hotel
(Sheraton is a subsidiary of

rrr) . .

-A payment of $100,000 in
ca·sh.
- An offer, If needed, to
contribute an additional
$100,000 U matched by other
business organizatiOilS in San
Diego.
"We made this commitment
because our . new hotel waa
about to open and If it could be
launched as presidential headquarters. we would have obtained an outatanding public
exposure worldwide for both
our new hotel and the llleraton
chain at a very modest cost.
We did obtain outside legal
counsel's opinion that the
amtrlbntion was lawful and
proper, that It was deductible
under IRS laws as an ordinary
and necessary bustneas ex!l'nse ...

"There was absolutely no
connectioo between our c:ontributlori and the ·settlement of
our antitrust actions with ihe
Department of JUBilee," Geneen said.

Autos wllide
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. investigated a two car
accident today at 6:40a.m. on
SR 881, six tenths of mile west
of Tuppers Plains.
Earl R. Cremeans, 30,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, traveling west
and Shirley L. Myers; 28,
Reedsville, Rt. 1, traveling
east collided when the Myers
car went left of center. There
·were no injuries or arrests;
medium damage to the
Cremeens car and heavy to ·
Myers.

a

Never .Stole Even a Watermelon
McGinty and Democratic State
Rep. Tommy Shannon of Fort
Worth. They had nothing lo
say, but Mrs. McGinty chided
reporters from the steps of the
coilrthouse:
"I'm going to sit right here
and watch these vultures-the
whole bunch of lying newsmen! "

The bills the trio pressed
thr011gh the statehouse were
later vetoed by Gov. Preston
Smith, but only aner Smith
himself sold his Shai'J)arranged stock for a prcflt of ,
$62,500. He was not indiclld.

�·'

I '

'

Four

Injured in 'Auto Accidents Pat too Busy.: to ,Grow 014

Fo..- pi!I'IOIII, - an infant;
suffered minor injuries In
lnfflc IC:ddenta investigated
Wednesday by the Gallla·
.Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol.
Wanda K. Waugh, 22, O'own
City, and a passenger, five·
month~ld. Tracy K. Waugh,
were removed to .the Holzer
Medical Center for treatment
of minor Injuries following a
singlecarmishapat 10:25a. m.
on Rt. 7, one and five-tenths
miles south of Rt. 218.
The patrol said Mrs. Waugh
lost control of her car which
struck a glUU'draU and went
over an embankment. There
was heayy damage to her car.
No charges were filed .
No charge was filed
following a single car mishap
at !0:30p.m. on Rt. 7, two miles
south of Rt. 218 where Carl H.

Bonecutter, 29, Gallipolis, lost
control of his car which then
dl!ehed. There was moderate
damage to his car.
.
The final Gallia County
accident occurred on Rt. 160 in
Vinton,.where an auto operated
by Albert Snyder, 82, Rt. 2,
Vintoo, struck an auto driven
by Mary Childers, 39, Rl. 2,
Vinton. · ·There was moderate
damage to both cars. Snyder
was cited for faUlng to yield the
right of way.
Dean Lutz, Pomeroy, suf·
fered minor injuries In a single
car accident at 12:10 a. m.
today on Rt. l:U iot the jllftction
of county road 50. The accident
is still under investigation.
A deer waa ktlled in an ac·
cldent on Rt. 33, one mile north
of Rt. 681 at Darwin. The
animal ran Into. the path of a
car operated by Marvin B.

News • . . in Briefs
(Continued from page 9)
$172 millton to keep the company nmnlng.untO July 1, 1973. But
lawmakers cut the pay of Amtrak's tresldent by f85,000.
The House voted ·312 to 63 Wedftesday to travide the financially ailing National Railroad Paasenger Qlrp. with $170 milllon
to continue Ita operations, plus $2milllon for service between the
United Slates and Canada and Mexico .
COLUMBUS -LEGISLATION REQUIRING WELFARE
recipients tD carry •n identification card bearing their
Ji!otograph for presentation when receiving or cashing welfare
checks was unanimously passed by the Ohio House Wednesday
and returned to the Senate.
The meaaure, already passed by the Senate, was changed by
a special HoUBe committee on public assistance. Under the bill,
the identification cards would be Issued tD all persons on general
relief or receiving aid for dependent children. Olief sponsor, Sen.
Tennyson Guyer, R·Findlay, said the purpose of the bill was to
reduce theft and fraud inwlving welfare checks.
CINCINNATI -SEN. EDWARD BROOKS, R-MASS., who
found fault with the Nixon administration's domestic policies
said here Wednesday he supports President for r~lection
"because he Is taking us in the direction of a generation of
peace."
"I am not satisfied with the President's civil rights record,
but his foreign poUcy has been just shol-t of magnificent," Brooke
said at a news conference . Brooke cited Nixon's trip to Olina, the
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks, the nuclear non-proliferation
ireaty and forthcoming meetings with Soviet leaders as Nixon's
accomplislunenta during his first term.
Nixon's showings in the New Hampshire and Florida
prtmartea, he said, indicate he "is the overwhelming choice of
Republicans. He will run str\'flg ln November and be re~lected."

CALL

My

POIN T VIEW :

paternal

9 92 - 2505

grand· his later years, at 8:30p.m..

mother's name was Malone, · Ch . 11.

and that makes me pari·
Irish, and gives me the right
to wish you a (Bang I) Happy
St. Patrick's Day. About the
only &lt;Pow!) calebratlng
being done this year !Ka·
boom!) Is laking place on
th is side of the ocean, since
Ireland Is a land of many
( Plngggg 1) , sorrows right
now. Donold O'Connor will
try to salvage some (Zap!)
humor out ol the day by
offering aspeclal, " Conoid's
Dublin," tonight (Bang I) on
Ch . 2 at 7 p.m. or Ch . 6 a 8.

+++

lnvl!td to th~ Intimate
.
gathering. .
Bl,rthday P'tetlnll have
been
JIOIIrllW In IMn well•
req•nt for her favorite !&gt;lrth'The enUre clan, with the
day cake , - a white Lady ncepUon of tJie Nllon,'11011-in· wilbln throuihOIIt the COIDilry
Balwiwre with boUiidlro8ting, law, Ens. David EllenbcnNr. · and abe IIJo.II.-Jinl a heavy
much like Trlcla's con· will gather for lbe featiY!Uea. backlOg ol fan mall for her lrip
'
trovenlal iredcllnt cake..
aoee fr'ter1ds allo ha~ ' - '. to .Cblna.

'

Lord Byron may have been
a great poet, but he lived a
private life thai would
scandalize Halghf·Ashbury.
See his biography, based on

+++

Dick Cavett Is away this
week, with guest hosts filling
ln. Tonight It's Bill Russell,
who has a new talk show ol
his own, Ch. 6, 11:30 p.m.

+++

MOVIES: "Father's Little
Dividend," wllh Elizabeth
Toylor at 19, 4 p.m., and
"Dark VIctory," a really
good · Bette Davis movie,
11 :30 p.m .. both Ch. o.

+++

FRIDAY: "What Every
Woman Wants lo Know"
looks at President Nixon's
China trip, 10 a.m., Ch. 6,
and VIrginia Graham hosts
two fine actors, mehemlah
Persoll and Vic Morrow, 2
p.m., Ch. 6.

Glasco, 52, Athens. There was
mjnor dalllage to Glasco's
auto.
The final accident occurred
on Rt. 33 at the junction of
County Road 19 where cars
driven by Robert Duckworth,

16, MiddlepOrt, and Gladys
Huffman, 45, Mason, collided.
There was minor damage tD
both cars. · Mrs. Huffman
sustained minor Injuries but
was not Immediately treated.
No charges were filed :

J. L. Ashburn,

.:.

50, Claimed

In Florida
James L. Ashburn, 50, a
resident of 334 Dixieland Dr.,
Ft. Price, Fla., died Wed·
nesday at bis home ln Florida.
He was a former resident of
Langsville.
Mr, Ashburn was born April
13, 1921, ln Glen Mary, TeM.,
son of the late Willlam and
Anna Hamby Ashburn. · He
rn;trried lcey Ann Johnson .in
1949, in Detroit. Sbe survives,
along with the following
children:
Lanny Ashburn, U.S. Navy,
San Francisco; Larry Ash·
burn , Ft. Pierce, Fla.; Danny,
Dean, Rickey, Patricia, Sheila
and Unda, all at home.
Four brothers survive,
James,
Louts , Dayton;
Cleveland; William, Hawaii
and J. C. Ashburn, Marietta,
Ga. Four sisters survive, Mrs.
Lena Huckleby, Cleveland;
Mrs. Lela McKinley, Marietta,
Ga.; Mrs. Lucille Gunter,
Cleveland and Mrs. Marjorie
Vowell, Indiana.
Mr. Ashburn was a World
War ll veteran, and a construction worker . Funeral
services will he held I p.m.,
Saturday at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton, with
Rev. Cloyd Graves officiating.
Burial will be in Vinton
Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. on Friday.

Local Bowling
Mid-Ohio Valley
Late Sunday Mixed League

Standings

Team
W.
Pink Panthers
.20
Strikes &amp;Spares
18
Allin the Family
18
Alley Cats
18
Tacks
12
49'ers
10
H i~ h Individual Game

L.

12
14
14
14
20

EXTENDED OU!'LOOK
Ohio Exteaded Oullook Saturday tbrougb MODday:
Cool
~orth
portion
Saturday and Sunday. Mild
soulb portloa Saturday.
Cooler $unday. Warmer
agalo Moaday. A chaace of
saow flurries north aad
showen soutb Saturday. A
chance of showen Moaday.
Daytime high upper 3Gs to
lower fOs norlll Saturday und
·Sunday and In tbe 50s soutb
Saturday, dropping to upper
fOs and lower 50s Sunday.
Monday highs upper 50s and
lower 808. Ovemlghl lows In
tile 388.

~i:j;;;:w}_;}.@:::::""~"*'-:::.-

FUNNY

Tolay·~

' .. ch

FUNNY will PGJ SI.OO for

or~inal " fulln}"

1MII. Send 90111

to: To4ais FUNNY, 1200 Wtst Th ird
St., Cln•land, Ohio .Ulll

DRIVER HELD
An auto was a total loss and
its driver arrested for driving
while intoxicated and without a
license in an accident on West
Main St. at 7:30 p.m. Wed·
nesday. Police said the driver,
William Dinguss, Dexter, lost
control of his vehicle, which
struck a wall. He was not in·
jured.

1\e iacoaae lu people

ONLY 32 DAYS LEFT
f A.M. To 5 P.M. MON . .THRU SAT.

PHONE : 992-3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
OPEN TODAY

304 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, 0.

II - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March .16, 1972
I

BUIWING PLANS
COLUMBUS (UPI)-A new
54-story condominium office
and apartment building will be
built on the site of the old
Deshler Hotel here, Cleveland
developer Ray T. Miller Jr.
revealed Wednesday,
Miller said the building will
cost $55 million . The one, two
and three berlroom condominiums will sell for $50,MO and up.
Office space will be sold on a
square footage basis, lailore~
for the purchaser 's exact
needs, he said.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Rep. report the measure to the full ments increasing criminal pen·
Sam Speck, R ·New Concord, committee WedneSday.
a lUes, providingl'evenues from .
said Wednesday a strip mine
Speck conced(ll! the subcom· ·the severance. lax on coal fo~
reform bill he authored Is no mittee made ''a nlimber of reclamation, setting up a board
longer acceptable to htm ln the significant improvements. He io look into unreclaimed lands
form apptoved by a Senate . listed 10.
and improving bonding provi·
SUbconimitlee.
·
But. he also expressed con.
"I ~k we'd have difficulty cern about a half-dozen amend·
·supportmg the bUI as it's now · ments he said weakened the
amended," Speck told a news bill.
conference.
"There are some substazitial
'l'he Senate Urban and High- problems in the bill that we
way Affairs subcommittee, would prefer not to live with,"
HINCKLEY, Ohio (UPI) which amended the House-pass- be said.
Residents of this northeastern
ed version last week, was to
Specksaidhefavoredamend· Ohio Community of 300, which
annually attract national
publicity because some 100
buzzards fly into town each
DIE FAB_RIC SHOP, POMEROY
March 15, became worried
early Wednesday afternoon
when none of the birds yet had
been spotted.
For 42 straight years the
huge turkey vultures have
"returned to Hinckley" on
March 15. So, with up to 100,000
persons expected here for
Sunday's annual " Buzzard
Celebration;' ' townspeople
.
'
'
started searching the skies.
Finally at:2:20 p.m. a lone
buzzard was spotted winging
its way into town and a few

IF You Are Going
To Build ANest
(OR AHOME)

I

... or Remodel the Old One

EMS Chief

e Mortgage loans. Do you want to settle down in a house

(~ontinued from page 9)

you can call home? Let's discuss a mortgage loan. Come
in how that money is more available. You'll like our low
rates.

e Home improvement loans. Want to repair or expand the

STRETCH~YOUR­

DOLLARS SALE.
' '

a·

house you already own? We're ready to help you add
·new roof or patio, extra bathroom or remodeled kitchen.
Come talk.
· ·

M1i1 Ord rrli Fll:ed .

(Continued from page 9)
auxiliary officers, assisted by •·
the Sheriff's Department and
State Police, made a thorough
investigation of the premises
after evacuation of the
buildings.

PHONE
-992·3863

O~e Touch Sewing stretches .

CARRYING CASE

399

1

'

•

It

Family Restaurants

your sewability. Get this
Touch &amp; Sew• portflble zig·
zag machine by Singer. One
touch starts a smooth, even
buttonhole. One touch winds
ihe Sing.er.~xc;;tu§J~~Push·,.,,.
Button Bobbin inside the
machine. Choice of great
.Singer stretch stitches.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Working women in Ohio who have
comf!lained:the slate's .female
labor laws were "protecting"
them out of jobs won a legal
victory Wednesday when the
Ohio Supr'eme Court ruled the
laws were superseded by the
1964 Civil Rights A~t.
The .decision means most
Ohio employers must allow
women to compete for jobs on
an equal basis with men working lale shifts, long hours,
lifting heavy weights and
performing what are usually
c;onsidered men's jobs.
However, Frank King, presi·
dent of the Ohio AFL-CIO,
warned that the Supreme Court
ruling could give employers an
excuse to "get rid of a
woman." .The AFL-CIO had

Ohio Assembly
t OLUMBUS ( UPI! -

A

glance at activity Wednesday

in the Ohio General Assembly:
House

COUPONS .GOOD AtiYTIME AT:

Bills Introduced
HB 1130, Rlechel No-fault

1593 EASTERN AVE.,

au to insurance.

HB 1131, R. Hujjhes, requires

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

parents'

SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
McCALL'S &amp; SIMPLICITY PP,TTERNS

.Cheeseburger

2for1.09

2~or39c

wltlt fills coupon

wlrlt fflla coupott

Thlo Ia tho BIG one! A full 'f•·
pound patty "f choice ground
beef, broiled over open flames,
served on a toultd bun, with
lettuce, tomato, aweet onton,

Pomeroy,O.

Security

HB 1133, Fiocca, Requires

pre-marital tests for rebella.

1134,

McNamara,

Exempts all real estate investment tr usts from the
corpor ate franchi se tax.

Bills Passed •
Sub. Sb 427, Guyer, Provides

plc ture Iden tification cards for
recipients of Aid to Depe ndent
Children and poor relief for
cashing welfare checks. Vote :

We have a credit plah
designed to fit yourbudget .

81 -0.
HB 1011, Smith, Includes

• A TriOimaFk II THli1Hi3EA COM PAH 'F'

"

1rx1/o ground beef, brollod
over optn-flllnll, topped
with meltod chiiM.

Gnd with Ch•u•

992-2284

Social

number on chlld:s birth cerliflcale.
HB

115 'If, Second

Super Shef.

..

Vietnam veterans in veter&lt;~ns
groups eligi ble for relief from
Soldier' s Relief Committee.
Senate
No .Session.

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Ham 'n Cheese

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with this colipon

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open-flame broiled beelburgors
topped ;ttlth melted choose, our
spacial sauce and chopped
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_.
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a,,ditions

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M

Jrep0

fought a move to abolish the
law during the last session of
the Ohio General Assembly.
"For the kind of emplayer
that wants tD get rid of a woman ana if she's supposed to be
treated exactly like a man, the
only thing he has to do is to give
her something a man can do
and she can't do," King said.
"With some employers !he
Supreme Court decision will
work OK,'' he said, "but not for
the employer who wants to
take advantage of a woman."
King ad&lt;hld, however, that an
employer who tries to lire a
woman on those grounds ''will
still have trouble with the unions."
Employers affected by the
ruling must have at least 25
e~ployes over a span of , 20 •
weeks in an industry affeeting
interstate commerce.
The slate's highest court, in
its unanimous ruling, said to
enforce the state laws would he
"inconsiStent with the principle of nondiscrimination set
forth In the Civil Rights Act."
The state laws had not been
enforced between September
1969 and September 1970 while
the state Industrial Relations
DeJl!ll'tment awaited. a ruling.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs . Raymond
Eugene Vititoe, Wellston, a
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Eugene Gill, PQmeroy,
a daughter:
DISCHARGED
Jo Ann Rose, Patrick T.
Evick, Mrs. Hughie Scurlock
and dayghter, Ruby M. Miller,
Charles K. Miller, Jr., Alberta
Lewis, James D. Burnell,
Randall U. Justice , Troy
McDaniel, Mrs . Frederick
, McNeal and son, Howard
Newland, Patsy Spires, Mrs.
Bob J. SlaniPy and daughter,
Jennie G. While and Nora E.
Landers.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Names of persons omitted
have been
temporarily
discontinued for publication .
DISCHARGES - Lecta
Duncan, Apple Grove; Mrs.
Howard Tucker, Robertsburg;
Dencil Metheny, Leon ; Mrs.
Roy S!IJiivan, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. Gary Filson, Gallipolis ;
Carl Atkins, Point f'leasant;
Mrs. Leroy Mayes, Henderson;
Clarence Clonch, Henderson;
Mrs. Mose Duncan, Gallipolis
Ferry; Russell Cottrill, Point
Pleailant; Mrs. Charles Uoyd
and son, Apple Grove; Mrs.
Perry ·Sayre, Point Pleasant;
Robert Errett, Kevin Errett,
Point Pleasant ; Donald Long,
Letort.

·,1

13 oz

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THURSDAY
.FRIDAY 'AND SATURDAY

.ONLY 48~

REG. 99'

OLD SPIQ
STICK DEODORANT
2 5/8 oz.
REG. 11.25

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20 TABLETS
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Marguerite•s Shoe Shop
POMEROY

. 102 E. MAIN
I·
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BROWN'S

Boyer said. "They're very shy
and always seem to remember
the area we ·call 'Hinckley

for

with tltis coupon

Flame of Hope Perfumes
Human &amp; Synthetic Wigs

the trees around here," Mrs.

Win in Courts

. THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

Bomb Scare

FIRE STOPS PROGRAM
CINCINNATI
( UPI)-A
short circuit in a monitoring
panel in the control room of
WCPO-TV Wednesday resulted
in a fire that caused $35,000
damage
and
stopped
programming lor an hour.
No one was injured, but
dense smoke spread through
the building a nd caused employes to flee the buiUiing.

HAIR SPRAY

your problems in order.

bout at Miami Beach on April 7
against Vicente Rondon.
The Venezuelan gained
recognition as champion by the
World Boxing Association after
that body had stripped Foster
of the title for failing to defend·
against a suitable opponent.

Koscot Kosmetics

Ridge.'
"We have some tourists here
already," she said, "I understand a family from Maine
named Hinckley was among
the first to spot that first buzzard.
"Now, how about that?" she
said.

Working Women .

.'
I

minutes later two more buz.
zards were ~n.
"Thi~ was the latest sighting
that anyone can remember t''
said a relieved Mrs. Sam Boyer
of the Medina County Gazette.
"But we had some bad weather
early in the day - rain and fog
- so that might have been the
reason."
The birds, with a wingspan of
five or six feet, are believed tD
migrate from the Great Smoky
Mountain area of Tennesee.
They usually depart Hinckley
in October.
"They seem to like to roost in

e Easy to get? You'll be surprised how quickly we can put

LOSE UGLY FAT

Duttt..n Drug S!ore.

slons.
But he · said he opposed
·amendments granting an extra.
six months to complete grad·
ing, requiring the ·slate recla·
mation chief to approve or dis·

Buzzards on SchedUle

COMPLE:TES COURSE
MASON - James R. Proffitt,
Mason, has graduated from the
Cleveland Institute of Electronics technology program.

You c~n start losi ng weight
today . MONADEX Is a tiny
tablet and easy to take .
MONADEX will help curb your
desrre to e)( cess food . Eat tess weigh tess , Contains · no
dangerous drugs and will not
make
you
nervo us . No
strenuou s exercise . Change
vour life .. . star t today .
MONADEX costs S3 .0G for a 20
day supply . Lose ugly f.at or
your monev will be refund ed
with no que s tions asked ."
MONAOE)( iS sold wifh this
Quar~ntee by : ~ wish~r &amp; Lohse
Drugs , 112 E. Main, Pomeroy &amp;

TAMPA, F;la. tUPl)- A determined Bob Foster, "saying,
"I waited a long time to get my
title and nobody is going to take
it away over a table," weighed
180 pounds Wednesday as he
stepped up trainiog for his light
appr~vemining license appllca· by allowing land to be reclaimhea vyweight chRmpionship
tions within 60 days , and re· ed for "wildlife" purposes.
moving a requirement on mini·
" If they mean wildlife pre·
mum depth of lakes.
serves, ,this is Cine/' Speck
'lie als&lt;i said the subcommit· said. "But if it merely means
tee created a possible loophole providing a briar patch for the
br're rabbits of this world, I
think it's open to question ."

Speck Won't Accept Altered Bill

22

OHIO INCOME UP
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
Center for Business and
Economic Research at Ohio
State University reported
Wednesday that the state's
personal income rate in
January was $45.9 billion, up 6
per cent ove1 January, 1971.

H&amp;R 810ck

. .'

agencies for funding support.
In phone conversations, he has
commented upon the local
concept as ~ing "sound" and
the figures "realistic." In his
opinion , according to the
Foundation, the planning effort
and local cooperation and
decision making is "at least a
year in advance" of other rural
areas in the nation.
The Foundation's meeting is
scheduled in the banquet hall of
Meigs Inn, Pomeroy, at 6 p.m.
Chairmen of the seven boards
of · commissioners will be
guests.

RECEIPTS PAID
Meigs County villages have
Max1ne Dugan 176 ; Miles received $5,186in the March 13
Childers 192.
Second High Ind. Game - distribution of gasoline excise
' Maxine Dugan 170 ; Miles tax receipts, Slate Auditor
Childers 191.
Joseph T. Ferguson said today.
High Series - Maxine Dugan
Amounts received by villages
493 ; Miles Childers 552.
Second High Series - Susie were , Middleport, $1,902;
Grueser 462; Gilbert Woods Pomeroy, $1,976; Racine, $398;
445.
Team High Game - Pink Rutland, $432, and Syracuse,
$478.
Panthers 114.
Team High Series
Pink
Panthers 2017.
WELFARE SLUMPS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
slate paid out $47.5 million for
BOWLERS TO MEET
Larry Dugan, president of public welfare in February, a
the Men's Pomeroy Bowling drop of $1.8 million from the
Assn., has announced the month before, state Auditor
annual association meeting for Joseph T. Ferguson reported
1 p.m. Sunday at the Pomeroy Wednesday. Payments for all
Bowling Alleys. Election of welfare programs in the slate
for the fiscal year that began
officers will be held.
last July 1 now totals
$392,550,942, Ferguson said.
Aid to Dependent Children
payments for February totaled
$17,426,m, the largest single
expenditure, he said.

U there'• oome way to 18Ve you money
on your income tu, H &amp; R Block will
know how to do IL
Itemized and otandard dedueliono are
nothing ne'W. We've been preparing re·
lumo for year• uolng both. We'll figure
· out your situation both wayo and then
prepare your return uolng the method
belt for you.
.
You oee, for only a few dollar•
DON'T LI!T AN Allo.A1riUIR DO
more than it coete to do it yourself
H•R BLOCK'S .108.
(with advice maybe from eome
other amateur), you can have your
tax return prepared with complete
eonlidentiality by a opeclally trained
member of the H &amp; R Bloek team.
.
t
H &amp; R Block'o feeo otart at 15
81ld the average co&amp;l wao under'
112.50 for over 7 million families
'
we served Jut y..,.,

WASH~GTON (UPI) -Pat
Nixon h1r""&lt;&lt; 60 today, IQOking
younger &lt;.• ·n that and cunmenting ''I'm just too busy to
grow old."
"I hope that will be the case
forever, " she awed. "I feel
age doesn't make any dlf.
ference. I stU! feel apry."
. The President's wife geta
along on about seven hours
sleep a night, eats sparingly, as
her figure shows, and has no
special beauty secrets - except to fullill her life by "just
keeping busy."
She has watched on the
sidelines this week as the
· President and her two
daughters, Julie Eisenhower
and Tricla Cox, have · been
"scurrying around and
whispering" about their secret
plans for her bifth~y party.
The celebration will be
Friday.in line with the family's
tradition of always celebrating
her birthday on St. Patrick's
Day.
.
The First Lady has put in a

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Four

Injured in 'Auto Accidents Pat too Busy.: to ,Grow 014

Fo..- pi!I'IOIII, - an infant;
suffered minor injuries In
lnfflc IC:ddenta investigated
Wednesday by the Gallla·
.Meigs Post State Highway
Patrol.
Wanda K. Waugh, 22, O'own
City, and a passenger, five·
month~ld. Tracy K. Waugh,
were removed to .the Holzer
Medical Center for treatment
of minor Injuries following a
singlecarmishapat 10:25a. m.
on Rt. 7, one and five-tenths
miles south of Rt. 218.
The patrol said Mrs. Waugh
lost control of her car which
struck a glUU'draU and went
over an embankment. There
was heayy damage to her car.
No charges were filed .
No charge was filed
following a single car mishap
at !0:30p.m. on Rt. 7, two miles
south of Rt. 218 where Carl H.

Bonecutter, 29, Gallipolis, lost
control of his car which then
dl!ehed. There was moderate
damage to his car.
.
The final Gallia County
accident occurred on Rt. 160 in
Vinton,.where an auto operated
by Albert Snyder, 82, Rt. 2,
Vintoo, struck an auto driven
by Mary Childers, 39, Rl. 2,
Vinton. · ·There was moderate
damage to both cars. Snyder
was cited for faUlng to yield the
right of way.
Dean Lutz, Pomeroy, suf·
fered minor injuries In a single
car accident at 12:10 a. m.
today on Rt. l:U iot the jllftction
of county road 50. The accident
is still under investigation.
A deer waa ktlled in an ac·
cldent on Rt. 33, one mile north
of Rt. 681 at Darwin. The
animal ran Into. the path of a
car operated by Marvin B.

News • . . in Briefs
(Continued from page 9)
$172 millton to keep the company nmnlng.untO July 1, 1973. But
lawmakers cut the pay of Amtrak's tresldent by f85,000.
The House voted ·312 to 63 Wedftesday to travide the financially ailing National Railroad Paasenger Qlrp. with $170 milllon
to continue Ita operations, plus $2milllon for service between the
United Slates and Canada and Mexico .
COLUMBUS -LEGISLATION REQUIRING WELFARE
recipients tD carry •n identification card bearing their
Ji!otograph for presentation when receiving or cashing welfare
checks was unanimously passed by the Ohio House Wednesday
and returned to the Senate.
The meaaure, already passed by the Senate, was changed by
a special HoUBe committee on public assistance. Under the bill,
the identification cards would be Issued tD all persons on general
relief or receiving aid for dependent children. Olief sponsor, Sen.
Tennyson Guyer, R·Findlay, said the purpose of the bill was to
reduce theft and fraud inwlving welfare checks.
CINCINNATI -SEN. EDWARD BROOKS, R-MASS., who
found fault with the Nixon administration's domestic policies
said here Wednesday he supports President for r~lection
"because he Is taking us in the direction of a generation of
peace."
"I am not satisfied with the President's civil rights record,
but his foreign poUcy has been just shol-t of magnificent," Brooke
said at a news conference . Brooke cited Nixon's trip to Olina, the
Strategic Arms Limitation Talks, the nuclear non-proliferation
ireaty and forthcoming meetings with Soviet leaders as Nixon's
accomplislunenta during his first term.
Nixon's showings in the New Hampshire and Florida
prtmartea, he said, indicate he "is the overwhelming choice of
Republicans. He will run str\'flg ln November and be re~lected."

CALL

My

POIN T VIEW :

paternal

9 92 - 2505

grand· his later years, at 8:30p.m..

mother's name was Malone, · Ch . 11.

and that makes me pari·
Irish, and gives me the right
to wish you a (Bang I) Happy
St. Patrick's Day. About the
only &lt;Pow!) calebratlng
being done this year !Ka·
boom!) Is laking place on
th is side of the ocean, since
Ireland Is a land of many
( Plngggg 1) , sorrows right
now. Donold O'Connor will
try to salvage some (Zap!)
humor out ol the day by
offering aspeclal, " Conoid's
Dublin," tonight (Bang I) on
Ch . 2 at 7 p.m. or Ch . 6 a 8.

+++

lnvl!td to th~ Intimate
.
gathering. .
Bl,rthday P'tetlnll have
been
JIOIIrllW In IMn well•
req•nt for her favorite !&gt;lrth'The enUre clan, with the
day cake , - a white Lady ncepUon of tJie Nllon,'11011-in· wilbln throuihOIIt the COIDilry
Balwiwre with boUiidlro8ting, law, Ens. David EllenbcnNr. · and abe IIJo.II.-Jinl a heavy
much like Trlcla's con· will gather for lbe featiY!Uea. backlOg ol fan mall for her lrip
'
trovenlal iredcllnt cake..
aoee fr'ter1ds allo ha~ ' - '. to .Cblna.

'

Lord Byron may have been
a great poet, but he lived a
private life thai would
scandalize Halghf·Ashbury.
See his biography, based on

+++

Dick Cavett Is away this
week, with guest hosts filling
ln. Tonight It's Bill Russell,
who has a new talk show ol
his own, Ch. 6, 11:30 p.m.

+++

MOVIES: "Father's Little
Dividend," wllh Elizabeth
Toylor at 19, 4 p.m., and
"Dark VIctory," a really
good · Bette Davis movie,
11 :30 p.m .. both Ch. o.

+++

FRIDAY: "What Every
Woman Wants lo Know"
looks at President Nixon's
China trip, 10 a.m., Ch. 6,
and VIrginia Graham hosts
two fine actors, mehemlah
Persoll and Vic Morrow, 2
p.m., Ch. 6.

Glasco, 52, Athens. There was
mjnor dalllage to Glasco's
auto.
The final accident occurred
on Rt. 33 at the junction of
County Road 19 where cars
driven by Robert Duckworth,

16, MiddlepOrt, and Gladys
Huffman, 45, Mason, collided.
There was minor damage tD
both cars. · Mrs. Huffman
sustained minor Injuries but
was not Immediately treated.
No charges were filed :

J. L. Ashburn,

.:.

50, Claimed

In Florida
James L. Ashburn, 50, a
resident of 334 Dixieland Dr.,
Ft. Price, Fla., died Wed·
nesday at bis home ln Florida.
He was a former resident of
Langsville.
Mr, Ashburn was born April
13, 1921, ln Glen Mary, TeM.,
son of the late Willlam and
Anna Hamby Ashburn. · He
rn;trried lcey Ann Johnson .in
1949, in Detroit. Sbe survives,
along with the following
children:
Lanny Ashburn, U.S. Navy,
San Francisco; Larry Ash·
burn , Ft. Pierce, Fla.; Danny,
Dean, Rickey, Patricia, Sheila
and Unda, all at home.
Four brothers survive,
James,
Louts , Dayton;
Cleveland; William, Hawaii
and J. C. Ashburn, Marietta,
Ga. Four sisters survive, Mrs.
Lena Huckleby, Cleveland;
Mrs. Lela McKinley, Marietta,
Ga.; Mrs. Lucille Gunter,
Cleveland and Mrs. Marjorie
Vowell, Indiana.
Mr. Ashburn was a World
War ll veteran, and a construction worker . Funeral
services will he held I p.m.,
Saturday at the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton, with
Rev. Cloyd Graves officiating.
Burial will be in Vinton
Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m. on Friday.

Local Bowling
Mid-Ohio Valley
Late Sunday Mixed League

Standings

Team
W.
Pink Panthers
.20
Strikes &amp;Spares
18
Allin the Family
18
Alley Cats
18
Tacks
12
49'ers
10
H i~ h Individual Game

L.

12
14
14
14
20

EXTENDED OU!'LOOK
Ohio Exteaded Oullook Saturday tbrougb MODday:
Cool
~orth
portion
Saturday and Sunday. Mild
soulb portloa Saturday.
Cooler $unday. Warmer
agalo Moaday. A chaace of
saow flurries north aad
showen soutb Saturday. A
chance of showen Moaday.
Daytime high upper 3Gs to
lower fOs norlll Saturday und
·Sunday and In tbe 50s soutb
Saturday, dropping to upper
fOs and lower 50s Sunday.
Monday highs upper 50s and
lower 808. Ovemlghl lows In
tile 388.

~i:j;;;:w}_;}.@:::::""~"*'-:::.-

FUNNY

Tolay·~

' .. ch

FUNNY will PGJ SI.OO for

or~inal " fulln}"

1MII. Send 90111

to: To4ais FUNNY, 1200 Wtst Th ird
St., Cln•land, Ohio .Ulll

DRIVER HELD
An auto was a total loss and
its driver arrested for driving
while intoxicated and without a
license in an accident on West
Main St. at 7:30 p.m. Wed·
nesday. Police said the driver,
William Dinguss, Dexter, lost
control of his vehicle, which
struck a wall. He was not in·
jured.

1\e iacoaae lu people

ONLY 32 DAYS LEFT
f A.M. To 5 P.M. MON . .THRU SAT.

PHONE : 992-3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
OPEN TODAY

304 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, 0.

II - The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March .16, 1972
I

BUIWING PLANS
COLUMBUS (UPI)-A new
54-story condominium office
and apartment building will be
built on the site of the old
Deshler Hotel here, Cleveland
developer Ray T. Miller Jr.
revealed Wednesday,
Miller said the building will
cost $55 million . The one, two
and three berlroom condominiums will sell for $50,MO and up.
Office space will be sold on a
square footage basis, lailore~
for the purchaser 's exact
needs, he said.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Rep. report the measure to the full ments increasing criminal pen·
Sam Speck, R ·New Concord, committee WedneSday.
a lUes, providingl'evenues from .
said Wednesday a strip mine
Speck conced(ll! the subcom· ·the severance. lax on coal fo~
reform bill he authored Is no mittee made ''a nlimber of reclamation, setting up a board
longer acceptable to htm ln the significant improvements. He io look into unreclaimed lands
form apptoved by a Senate . listed 10.
and improving bonding provi·
SUbconimitlee.
·
But. he also expressed con.
"I ~k we'd have difficulty cern about a half-dozen amend·
·supportmg the bUI as it's now · ments he said weakened the
amended," Speck told a news bill.
conference.
"There are some substazitial
'l'he Senate Urban and High- problems in the bill that we
way Affairs subcommittee, would prefer not to live with,"
HINCKLEY, Ohio (UPI) which amended the House-pass- be said.
Residents of this northeastern
ed version last week, was to
Specksaidhefavoredamend· Ohio Community of 300, which
annually attract national
publicity because some 100
buzzards fly into town each
DIE FAB_RIC SHOP, POMEROY
March 15, became worried
early Wednesday afternoon
when none of the birds yet had
been spotted.
For 42 straight years the
huge turkey vultures have
"returned to Hinckley" on
March 15. So, with up to 100,000
persons expected here for
Sunday's annual " Buzzard
Celebration;' ' townspeople
.
'
'
started searching the skies.
Finally at:2:20 p.m. a lone
buzzard was spotted winging
its way into town and a few

IF You Are Going
To Build ANest
(OR AHOME)

I

... or Remodel the Old One

EMS Chief

e Mortgage loans. Do you want to settle down in a house

(~ontinued from page 9)

you can call home? Let's discuss a mortgage loan. Come
in how that money is more available. You'll like our low
rates.

e Home improvement loans. Want to repair or expand the

STRETCH~YOUR­

DOLLARS SALE.
' '

a·

house you already own? We're ready to help you add
·new roof or patio, extra bathroom or remodeled kitchen.
Come talk.
· ·

M1i1 Ord rrli Fll:ed .

(Continued from page 9)
auxiliary officers, assisted by •·
the Sheriff's Department and
State Police, made a thorough
investigation of the premises
after evacuation of the
buildings.

PHONE
-992·3863

O~e Touch Sewing stretches .

CARRYING CASE

399

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Family Restaurants

your sewability. Get this
Touch &amp; Sew• portflble zig·
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touch starts a smooth, even
buttonhole. One touch winds
ihe Sing.er.~xc;;tu§J~~Push·,.,,.
Button Bobbin inside the
machine. Choice of great
.Singer stretch stitches.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Working women in Ohio who have
comf!lained:the slate's .female
labor laws were "protecting"
them out of jobs won a legal
victory Wednesday when the
Ohio Supr'eme Court ruled the
laws were superseded by the
1964 Civil Rights A~t.
The .decision means most
Ohio employers must allow
women to compete for jobs on
an equal basis with men working lale shifts, long hours,
lifting heavy weights and
performing what are usually
c;onsidered men's jobs.
However, Frank King, presi·
dent of the Ohio AFL-CIO,
warned that the Supreme Court
ruling could give employers an
excuse to "get rid of a
woman." .The AFL-CIO had

Ohio Assembly
t OLUMBUS ( UPI! -

A

glance at activity Wednesday

in the Ohio General Assembly:
House

COUPONS .GOOD AtiYTIME AT:

Bills Introduced
HB 1130, Rlechel No-fault

1593 EASTERN AVE.,

au to insurance.

HB 1131, R. Hujjhes, requires

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

parents'

SINGER SALES&amp; SERVICE
McCALL'S &amp; SIMPLICITY PP,TTERNS

.Cheeseburger

2for1.09

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wltlt fills coupon

wlrlt fflla coupott

Thlo Ia tho BIG one! A full 'f•·
pound patty "f choice ground
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served on a toultd bun, with
lettuce, tomato, aweet onton,

Pomeroy,O.

Security

HB 1133, Fiocca, Requires

pre-marital tests for rebella.

1134,

McNamara,

Exempts all real estate investment tr usts from the
corpor ate franchi se tax.

Bills Passed •
Sub. Sb 427, Guyer, Provides

plc ture Iden tification cards for
recipients of Aid to Depe ndent
Children and poor relief for
cashing welfare checks. Vote :

We have a credit plah
designed to fit yourbudget .

81 -0.
HB 1011, Smith, Includes

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1rx1/o ground beef, brollod
over optn-flllnll, topped
with meltod chiiM.

Gnd with Ch•u•

992-2284

Social

number on chlld:s birth cerliflcale.
HB

115 'If, Second

Super Shef.

..

Vietnam veterans in veter&lt;~ns
groups eligi ble for relief from
Soldier' s Relief Committee.
Senate
No .Session.

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Jrep0

fought a move to abolish the
law during the last session of
the Ohio General Assembly.
"For the kind of emplayer
that wants tD get rid of a woman ana if she's supposed to be
treated exactly like a man, the
only thing he has to do is to give
her something a man can do
and she can't do," King said.
"With some employers !he
Supreme Court decision will
work OK,'' he said, "but not for
the employer who wants to
take advantage of a woman."
King ad&lt;hld, however, that an
employer who tries to lire a
woman on those grounds ''will
still have trouble with the unions."
Employers affected by the
ruling must have at least 25
e~ployes over a span of , 20 •
weeks in an industry affeeting
interstate commerce.
The slate's highest court, in
its unanimous ruling, said to
enforce the state laws would he
"inconsiStent with the principle of nondiscrimination set
forth In the Civil Rights Act."
The state laws had not been
enforced between September
1969 and September 1970 while
the state Industrial Relations
DeJl!ll'tment awaited. a ruling.

HOSPITAL NEWS
Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p. m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
BIRTHS
Mr. and Mrs . Raymond
Eugene Vititoe, Wellston, a
daughter, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald Eugene Gill, PQmeroy,
a daughter:
DISCHARGED
Jo Ann Rose, Patrick T.
Evick, Mrs. Hughie Scurlock
and dayghter, Ruby M. Miller,
Charles K. Miller, Jr., Alberta
Lewis, James D. Burnell,
Randall U. Justice , Troy
McDaniel, Mrs . Frederick
, McNeal and son, Howard
Newland, Patsy Spires, Mrs.
Bob J. SlaniPy and daughter,
Jennie G. While and Nora E.
Landers.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Names of persons omitted
have been
temporarily
discontinued for publication .
DISCHARGES - Lecta
Duncan, Apple Grove; Mrs.
Howard Tucker, Robertsburg;
Dencil Metheny, Leon ; Mrs.
Roy S!IJiivan, Point Pleasant ;
Mrs. Gary Filson, Gallipolis ;
Carl Atkins, Point f'leasant;
Mrs. Leroy Mayes, Henderson;
Clarence Clonch, Henderson;
Mrs. Mose Duncan, Gallipolis
Ferry; Russell Cottrill, Point
Pleailant; Mrs. Charles Uoyd
and son, Apple Grove; Mrs.
Perry ·Sayre, Point Pleasant;
Robert Errett, Kevin Errett,
Point Pleasant ; Donald Long,
Letort.

·,1

13 oz

SAVE! SAVE! SAVE!
THURSDAY
.FRIDAY 'AND SATURDAY

.ONLY 48~

REG. 99'

OLD SPIQ
STICK DEODORANT
2 5/8 oz.
REG. 11.25

59e

ONL~

ALKA·SELTZER PLUS
COLD TABLETS
20 TABLETS
Reg. ~r

Reg. 1.49
5

ONLY

Marguerite•s Shoe Shop
POMEROY

. 102 E. MAIN
I·
"

ll.

Mason tJ ., w. va .

Q

.,.,.

&lt;
zQ

"'
..,.
;I

-z
..,.
,.&lt;
-z
Q

m
SPRAY DEODORANT

ONLY

VICKS·
VapoRub
...._
..... ...

_

~-

.

~

--

'

VICKS
VAPORUB
3.1

oz.

ONLY
REG. '1.19

CEPACOL
MOUTHWASH/GARGLE
~
.
-

GILLETTE SUPER STAINLESS
RAZOR B~...
PACKAGE OF 10

14 oz.
Reg. $1.29

4 Reg~tered

Serwin9: Mtddteror'
Pr.morov . Gdllipoh fl, 0 .

-z

89e

4.00 up

. Dudley's Aorist

"a

FAST HOME PERMANENT

Blooming Plants
5

.,.

ONLY

:Ia

PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE

BETTY OHLINGER

Mlddl~nort.

WE ALWAYS TREAT YOU RIGHT

992-5113

JUST WONDERFUL

Beautiful

Complete s'eiection of
new spring styles.
We carry narrow widths.

•

_,...,.,...

BROWN'S

Boyer said. "They're very shy
and always seem to remember
the area we ·call 'Hinckley

for

with tltis coupon

Flame of Hope Perfumes
Human &amp; Synthetic Wigs

the trees around here," Mrs.

Win in Courts

. THE ATHENS COUNTY
SAVINGS &amp; LOAN CO.

Bomb Scare

FIRE STOPS PROGRAM
CINCINNATI
( UPI)-A
short circuit in a monitoring
panel in the control room of
WCPO-TV Wednesday resulted
in a fire that caused $35,000
damage
and
stopped
programming lor an hour.
No one was injured, but
dense smoke spread through
the building a nd caused employes to flee the buiUiing.

HAIR SPRAY

your problems in order.

bout at Miami Beach on April 7
against Vicente Rondon.
The Venezuelan gained
recognition as champion by the
World Boxing Association after
that body had stripped Foster
of the title for failing to defend·
against a suitable opponent.

Koscot Kosmetics

Ridge.'
"We have some tourists here
already," she said, "I understand a family from Maine
named Hinckley was among
the first to spot that first buzzard.
"Now, how about that?" she
said.

Working Women .

.'
I

minutes later two more buz.
zards were ~n.
"Thi~ was the latest sighting
that anyone can remember t''
said a relieved Mrs. Sam Boyer
of the Medina County Gazette.
"But we had some bad weather
early in the day - rain and fog
- so that might have been the
reason."
The birds, with a wingspan of
five or six feet, are believed tD
migrate from the Great Smoky
Mountain area of Tennesee.
They usually depart Hinckley
in October.
"They seem to like to roost in

e Easy to get? You'll be surprised how quickly we can put

LOSE UGLY FAT

Duttt..n Drug S!ore.

slons.
But he · said he opposed
·amendments granting an extra.
six months to complete grad·
ing, requiring the ·slate recla·
mation chief to approve or dis·

Buzzards on SchedUle

COMPLE:TES COURSE
MASON - James R. Proffitt,
Mason, has graduated from the
Cleveland Institute of Electronics technology program.

You c~n start losi ng weight
today . MONADEX Is a tiny
tablet and easy to take .
MONADEX will help curb your
desrre to e)( cess food . Eat tess weigh tess , Contains · no
dangerous drugs and will not
make
you
nervo us . No
strenuou s exercise . Change
vour life .. . star t today .
MONADEX costs S3 .0G for a 20
day supply . Lose ugly f.at or
your monev will be refund ed
with no que s tions asked ."
MONAOE)( iS sold wifh this
Quar~ntee by : ~ wish~r &amp; Lohse
Drugs , 112 E. Main, Pomeroy &amp;

TAMPA, F;la. tUPl)- A determined Bob Foster, "saying,
"I waited a long time to get my
title and nobody is going to take
it away over a table," weighed
180 pounds Wednesday as he
stepped up trainiog for his light
appr~vemining license appllca· by allowing land to be reclaimhea vyweight chRmpionship
tions within 60 days , and re· ed for "wildlife" purposes.
moving a requirement on mini·
" If they mean wildlife pre·
mum depth of lakes.
serves, ,this is Cine/' Speck
'lie als&lt;i said the subcommit· said. "But if it merely means
tee created a possible loophole providing a briar patch for the
br're rabbits of this world, I
think it's open to question ."

Speck Won't Accept Altered Bill

22

OHIO INCOME UP
COLUMBUS ( UPI) - The
Center for Business and
Economic Research at Ohio
State University reported
Wednesday that the state's
personal income rate in
January was $45.9 billion, up 6
per cent ove1 January, 1971.

H&amp;R 810ck

. .'

agencies for funding support.
In phone conversations, he has
commented upon the local
concept as ~ing "sound" and
the figures "realistic." In his
opinion , according to the
Foundation, the planning effort
and local cooperation and
decision making is "at least a
year in advance" of other rural
areas in the nation.
The Foundation's meeting is
scheduled in the banquet hall of
Meigs Inn, Pomeroy, at 6 p.m.
Chairmen of the seven boards
of · commissioners will be
guests.

RECEIPTS PAID
Meigs County villages have
Max1ne Dugan 176 ; Miles received $5,186in the March 13
Childers 192.
Second High Ind. Game - distribution of gasoline excise
' Maxine Dugan 170 ; Miles tax receipts, Slate Auditor
Childers 191.
Joseph T. Ferguson said today.
High Series - Maxine Dugan
Amounts received by villages
493 ; Miles Childers 552.
Second High Series - Susie were , Middleport, $1,902;
Grueser 462; Gilbert Woods Pomeroy, $1,976; Racine, $398;
445.
Team High Game - Pink Rutland, $432, and Syracuse,
$478.
Panthers 114.
Team High Series
Pink
Panthers 2017.
WELFARE SLUMPS
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
slate paid out $47.5 million for
BOWLERS TO MEET
Larry Dugan, president of public welfare in February, a
the Men's Pomeroy Bowling drop of $1.8 million from the
Assn., has announced the month before, state Auditor
annual association meeting for Joseph T. Ferguson reported
1 p.m. Sunday at the Pomeroy Wednesday. Payments for all
Bowling Alleys. Election of welfare programs in the slate
for the fiscal year that began
officers will be held.
last July 1 now totals
$392,550,942, Ferguson said.
Aid to Dependent Children
payments for February totaled
$17,426,m, the largest single
expenditure, he said.

U there'• oome way to 18Ve you money
on your income tu, H &amp; R Block will
know how to do IL
Itemized and otandard dedueliono are
nothing ne'W. We've been preparing re·
lumo for year• uolng both. We'll figure
· out your situation both wayo and then
prepare your return uolng the method
belt for you.
.
You oee, for only a few dollar•
DON'T LI!T AN Allo.A1riUIR DO
more than it coete to do it yourself
H•R BLOCK'S .108.
(with advice maybe from eome
other amateur), you can have your
tax return prepared with complete
eonlidentiality by a opeclally trained
member of the H &amp; R Bloek team.
.
t
H &amp; R Block'o feeo otart at 15
81ld the average co&amp;l wao under'
112.50 for over 7 million families
'
we served Jut y..,.,

WASH~GTON (UPI) -Pat
Nixon h1r""&lt;&lt; 60 today, IQOking
younger &lt;.• ·n that and cunmenting ''I'm just too busy to
grow old."
"I hope that will be the case
forever, " she awed. "I feel
age doesn't make any dlf.
ference. I stU! feel apry."
. The President's wife geta
along on about seven hours
sleep a night, eats sparingly, as
her figure shows, and has no
special beauty secrets - except to fullill her life by "just
keeping busy."
She has watched on the
sidelines this week as the
· President and her two
daughters, Julie Eisenhower
and Tricla Cox, have · been
"scurrying around and
whispering" about their secret
plans for her bifth~y party.
The celebration will be
Friday.in line with the family's
tradition of always celebrating
her birthday on St. Patrick's
Day.
.
The First Lady has put in a

..

•

REG. 11.69
ONLY

99~

THROAT
'
LOZENGES

¢

Antleeptlo
THftOAT LOZI!NGI!S

lilO.IENGES

'-" ........,.., ,.,_,Ill trtitiM ,., lhfHI -WI

18 SIZE
REG. 79•"

Pharmac~ts

to Serve You!
OPEN DAILY 8:00 A.M. TO 10 P.M. - SUNDAY 10:30 A.M. TO 12:30 P.M. &amp;5 TO 9 P.M.

�•

•
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ~arch 16, 19i2

Prints·Make Instant Mix
l'rlnts are pleasing to all
spring fashions. Flowers,
geometries, stripes, dots
and Victorian prints freshen-u p day and evening
wear.
,
Oversized tlot"al· designs
on soft chilfons drift ele~an tly lnt.o evening hours

on long gowns.

Putting lt all together for
colorful combinations are
dots. checks, stripes and
olaids. Seen in dresses. mul-

it-layer looks and print-onprint sportswear, prints
take instant mix out ot the
kitchen and into fashion .
Nautical prints, such as
anchor and boat patterns,
0 et the roya l salute ln beach
and playwear.
Victorian prints add pure
dynamite to demure little
dre.. es that captivate plenty of admiring glances.
Geometries show up everywhere for new boldness

In day and night looks.

FOR. EASTER

Accents
For

Easter!
Flowers,

ropes,

pin

&amp;

ea r sets, en·
dles s

hoo p

ea rr ing s,

Soulous.

All

th e new pieces
ar e h_ere now .

Cam eo Brooche s S2

The

Smile Ring . 52.50

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
COURT ST.

POMEROY, 0.

Cra ts Make .Itl
The nostalgic look ot
spring fashions has inspired
a widespread Interest in aU
sorts of do-lt-yourself crafts
projects.
There are kits to make
almost anythln~ !rom a
macrame fringe to handcrafted suede sandals.
Macrame - pronounced
mak-ra-may - is the art ot
decorative knotting, an ancient art that has become
the hottes t thing ln fashion.
· Whlle macrame looks
compllcated, even a child
can do lt. Actually lt Involves tying only two basic
knots, but using varied materials llke'. strlng1 twine,
yarn, rope lind satin cord
ot various thicknesses. one
can make Jewelry, vests,
belts. even wall hangings
and sculpture.
There's a patchwork kit
available, containing 180
tour-inch pinked cotton
squares, plus unconventional patterns tor a mini. mid!
or max! skirt, a poncho, a
shoulder tote bag, kerchief,
hot pants, bolero and slacks.
The patches are all cut
fr om American classic
prints : Colonial stenclls,
p!Uow tickings, tlour sack
patterns, bandanas. They
go with anything tram denIm and chino to rumed organdy.
Other home crafts proJects enjoying sudden revival are needlepoint (now
avallable In vibrant new
modern designs), feather
work, ru~ hooking, crocheting, appllaue work, and
smocking.
More and more women
a'e designing and making
their own clothes, too. Some
even draft their own patterns. uslpg a new picture
book method.
All this activity takes
space, and many women
tlnd themselves frustrated
bY the setting- up chore. Just
when the project ls all laid
out, the table ls needed tor
the next meal. Or company's coming and all the
supplies must be gathered
Into the sewing basket.
A new solution to this
pro blem ls the sell-contained sewing center. Designed to tit right In with

Evening Is
·Long, Bare .

tightly cuffed at the wrist,
or drltt Into Chinese butter·
tiY points. Short sleeves are
olten putted school-girl

.; venlng gowns are a long
•tory this year, wllh lulllength fashions almost
completely dominating the
scene after dark. Gowns
reminiscent ot Harlow and
Hayworth uncover a Jot ol
bare truths, with plunging
neckll11es, halters. and utterly uncovered backs.
Others ate completely
covered, all the way to Kitty
Foyle collars and matching
llttle white cults.
Favorite fabrics are drapey .crepes, sllnky Jersey ·
and tlowinJ&gt;; chilTon. Romantic rumed talreta ahd
crisp tlowered organdies also make the scene.
.
Sleeves, It they're there
at all. tlow loosely · to be

taahlon.

It In doubt, wear blaek
with rhinestones to match
a starry night.

87 Mill St:
Middleport. o.

matching modular wall
units, it olfers storage and
table top space for a sewing
machine, an extension table
for extra work, and specially compartmentalized
drawers to house an sew-

Sinclair
Carl Platter

CHASE HARDWARE
' PLUMBING &amp; HEATI ....G
Prompt, Dependable Service

..

Same Phone 992-2511

1
1
I'

'

REPAIR &amp; SERVICE

right this year with all the
new nautical whites. rannv
pants ·and bare - back
dresses. Quilted leathers,
suedes and felts are very
popular.
Spring shoe styles mark
a return to openness and
temlnlnlty. Toes are peeping out more and more

I

iJ~J. ¥=6_

I

'

Time for nostalgia : the spring hat revival
features head-hugging cloches like this,
in felt with face-framing brim and gros·
grain hand, circa 1930. Time for now :
elegant watches tailored for him and her.
Watches by Bulova.

II
I

FOR DRESS &amp;·
COAT ENSEMBLES
POLYESTER
KNITS
DRESS CREPES

'498 &amp; *5 98

Jhe(lr

INGELS

eJ
ON

CARPETING

Right On, Jack
IJ

8-SGT. McKOWN

S-Sgt. McKown
Assigned as
Area R~ruiter

YOU INSTALL
AND SAVEl

Amana
Whole House Air Conditioning
.Cools Many 5 to 6 Room Houses

ONLY.

Suddenly, its

A native of Ashland, Ky. has
moved to Gallipolis to assume
duties at the Army Recruiting
Station, 404 Second Avenue. He
is Staff Sgt. Tommie McKown,
reporting to the local
recruiting station Dec. 15 from
a similar assignment in New
York .
Sgt. McKown was graduated
from high school in Ashland in
1958 and entered the Army !he
following year, During his 12year Army -career he has
served in the United States,
Germany, Korea and Vietnam.
Among his awards and
decorations are the l'urple
Heart Medal, The Good Conduct Medal, and the Vietnamese Service and Campaign
Medals.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Grover McKown of Ashland.
Sgt. McKown and his wife, !he
former Sara Bowling of
Huntington, are residing at 447
Second Ave., Gallipolis.

'I

WE OFFER QUALITY MEMORIALS •••
ORDER NOW FOR EARLY SPRING SffiiNG
•

AVOID THE MEMORIAL DAY RUSH
Our Prices Are "Specials" All Year

Round.

Similar Saving On
Other Models

SPRING

Magic Carpet
Many ot the season's most
attractive carpets come
with their own built-in
cushioning as well as bulltln CI'Onomy,
Originally designed lor
outdoor areas such as pool
or patio, "O!'le-plece" carpeting soon found Its way
indoors.
The kitchen. the family
room and other areas where
durable, inexpensive carpeting could be non-protesslonally installed became
natural places.

FASHIONS IN MEN'S
WEAR
•

Call On "Us Today

Somebody DESER
Remembered.
.

Stop By and Compare
I

LEGAR MONUMENT CO.
.•

W. MAIN

992-5314

~

POMEROY 0.

N. 2nd AVE.

992·5321

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

The Latest In

MENS SUITS

$45 .oo to $115°0

PROFESSIONAL TUNE-UP

1795

8
cyl .

1595

Mens Sport

Includes
6
Q!Jalily
cyl. Nat. Adv .

o;;~z~s 3 °0 to $72°0

5·. IN SIZE

Parts

Is your car acting up? Has the winter
been hard on your auto? Now's the
lime to have a tune-up. We can have
your car running smoothly In no lime.
Save money at Moore's.

35 to 52
SUITS AND SPORT COATS IN .

MOORE'S

Expertly lnatalh

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT-

KITCHEN CARPET

,,, Yd.
'

Look for smocks ln all
lengths, Chinese mandarin
collars and ·qll!ltlng, naval
officers' coats, shoulder pads
and dropped sleeves, and
long coats cut on the bias
to cover maxi dresses and
skirts.
or. at the other extreme,
short shlrtcoats and smock
tops worn with weather resistant pants.
The newest rabrlc: "oncloths" - llOiyurethanes,
clear plastic coated ginghams in great big tablecloth
checks. Canvas. seersucker
and chino are also very
much on the scene, along
with cotton poplins, denims
and rugged tlaxen wea vd.

.

. Sq.

SHOCKS
BRAKES

.

lJOUBLE
KNITS &amp; WOOL BLENDS
.

Service Center
124 W. Main

'

"MUFFLERS

1 RACK MIN'S
SUITS AND SPORT

Pomerov.

Ph.99H~8

TAIL PIPES

"

'

•

TS

·lf2 PRICE

~IH'RCLOTHI
.

MIODLEPORT. 0.

PT .
PLEASANT
Secretary of State John D.
(Jay ) Rockefeller IV, candidate for the Democrat
nomination of governor, will
campaign Saturday in Mason
County .
Mrs. Lynn Durst, chairman
of Mason County Citizens for
Rockefeller ,
said
that
Secretary of Slate John D.
Rockefeller wiil be in Mason
Cotmty this Saturday.
He wlll be appearing in all
parts of !he county in order to .
)lave the opportunity to meet
and speak with as many
citize ns as possible, Mrs . Durst
said.
Rockefeller will arrive in
Mason County at 9 a.m. and
wi,ll speak at
Letart
Elementary School. At 9:30
a.m. he is due to arrive at the
parking lot at New Haven
Supermarket. At 10:30 he will
be in Hartford In the parking
area to !he rear of the l'ost
Office, and at II a.m. he plans
· to be in Mason in !he front of
City Hall .
noon
Beginning
at
Rockefeller will com~ to the
business area of Point
Ple. sant, moving freely in the
downtown area . At 1:30 he will
go to !he stockyard in Point
Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Powers
will be receiving all interested
Henderson people in their
home for coffee, in order for
them to meet Jay. AI 4:20 l'tfr.
Rbckefeller will be in Leon
beside the Post Office .
Concluding his day in )llason
Coun ~, there ·•ill be " public
meeting a! the· Point Pleasant
Junior Hi glr~"afete ria "1. 7:30
p.n..

•

, I

Jl

l

.

\1

•

BRING IN
YOUR
ROOM
..
~.

MEASUREMEITS
WELL DO THE Ant

INSTALL NOW!

501
NYLON

Rocky IV in
Bend Area
Sattirday

Moore'• Service Center

SEE US TODAY

NYLON

Fabul ous c: h oi~ • of colon , fird
quality

REG. TO

$7.95

~ -.

·rRIJIJIII.I:·1=1~1:1:
llRI,fiNii••~

105,000 BTU

What to wear ln the rain
this spring? The same new
colorlul coat, tent or topper you wear In the wind
and the sun.
All-weather Is the watchword, and the new silhouettes of the season are
styled to go anywhere, anytime.

MEMORIALS MEAN SO MUCH!

FCJR

Gas Furnace

Drizzle Or
Dazzle, It's
.Rainwear

Lowest In The Area.

Tune Into A TUNE-u·p Here, Soon

Includes CR 2 Condenser , 20' A-Coil.
Tubing and Thermostat.

l

•'

00

$

Feminine footnotes. Clockwise, from, top left : ghillietie; round-toed pump ; tri-tone suede sa"'ldal; ~lack and
white patent high·cut tie; tri-tone T-strap sandal ; multipastel wedge sandal in suede. Shoes by Mademoiselle,
Mi" Wonderful, Town and Country, Auditions, and
Socialites.

Dear Mr. Editor :
Jack W. Crisp,
President of Leading Creek Conservancy District
Dear Sir :
I would like to take !his opportunity to commend you
publicly on !he way you announced !he bids on !he 121\Rssenger vart to be purch!l8ed by the district : This Is the
(\,roper" and "just" way for 'biils tobe'handled.
Even though this • dealership was the highest bidder, I
take pleasure in seeing !he bld awarded to the lowest bidder.
In this case, the other two dealers were only $5 apart and you
slllllive up to the policy of "lowest bidder gets the sale. " This
may start a new concept in buying In !he county. AI least it
"shows" that there IS a fair way &lt;if doing thinss here, and
hopefully it will open a few eyes to ihefacl that competition is
not a "dirty" word.
Once again, Jack, "right on".
Sincerely,
R. H. Rawlings Sons Co., Richard W. Rawlings

The tr"uc coconut ha s the
largest of all known seeds.

G'S
CLASSICS!

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At 5

/ ':,.:.-:.

ficiating of the Eastern (Meigs) Portsmouth East Sectional
Basketball playoff in Chillicothe, March 9.
This was one of the poorest officiated games I have ever
watched. It seems to me that if these officials were state selected, our state men need to watch a few of !he games they referee.
· There Is no doubt that the Eastern Eagles could have won the
Sectional if they were playing only five players, but it did!)'t look
!hat way.
The Eagles have earned !he honor of playing in the Sectionals for three straight years and !he officiating was just a
rerun from last year's game .
I am not making excuses for Great Eastern team, because l
know as well"as many; many other fans, !hey were the number
one team, if the game had been called as it should have been.
Signed: An Eastern Fan
Betty Millhone

SUPPLY

Dramatic or understated,
there'• something tor every
costume In spring's fashion
JewelrY.
Plashing cjrcles ot golden
or slivery metal appear as
necklaees - then repeat
themselves at the ear lobes.
Rings assume domed, contoured shapes - sometimes
covering two tlngers - or
are as delicate as small

SHIRT
FINISHING
'

sculptures.
Cult bracelets appear at
each wrist, chain belts circle
the waist, small plnf can
adorn a suit or dress. · ·
Pearls, ln single or multiple strands - in choker or
opera· lengths ~ make •a
nostalgic reappearance.

Jewelry Trends

Shoulder -slung or In
hand, evening bags are
scaled down versions or
box-bags, envelopes, clutches, totes, mlnaudleres and
shoulder bags. And, . their
nlghtworks display Is dazzllng with jewellng, dellcate
chains, laney closures.

I
I
II
I

. .

Officiating Blam~d for Loss
I would like to make a few statements concerning the of-

OINT
OFFICE
•

Suede In . spring colcrs
heads the hit parar;le, with
smooth patent coming on
strong as an elegant alternative. Crush~ Bnd crinkle
patent are stUI beln2 used
as basics.
White, the classic color
tor spring and summer
ba~s. ls going to be double-

through front openings In
sandals and pumps. Heels.
are higher; toes are rounder,
and colors are bright and
clear. Two and three colors
are often used, especially In
sandals.
Jewelry is he a vier and
more imposing to set off
bare necklines and shoulders. Multl-strands at pearls
or gold chains are used with
evening dresses. Chunky
plastic "fun" pieces go well
with summer's skimpy tops.
Bare should~rs also give
new importance to little
shawls alld capelets, !ringed
or dalntlly edged with colored embroidery. Scarves
and dickies are used to vary
the classic layered look.
Spring gloves are dashing
and pretty with contrasting cults and openings - at
the back ol t he hand, the
knuckles. or around the
wrist.

lbu3GO words.long (or be subjectto reduction by the editor)
ud must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be
wllbheld upoo publication, however, on request. Letters
should be In good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

lI ••• ?Jtt. uuwr,:

* ELECIRIC.OR MANUAL
*FREE ESTIMATES
*WORK GUARANTEED
*PICKUP &amp; DELIVERY

TOUCH OF GREEN
Spring green emerges this
year as the season's great
new accessory color - in all
Its various shades. used ln
small ·subtle touches. Small
and subtle are the guide
words : a Kelly green belt
on a slinky black dress; lettuce green gloves with a
hopsacklng suit; green and
white spectator pumps. Just
a dash-nothing big, nothln2 chlinky.

Whenenr clothes go sprlnK Is small. Bnug
cilwlc, accesaorles take on cloches, llke those In "No,
new Importance. 'l'hll sea- No Nanette," and the old
son's tlnlihlnc touches come Greta Garbo lllnu are at the
aQrOU wlth"a bing - color·
top ol the f118hlon picture.
ful, &lt;large, emphatic, and
The turban is the new
very ·otten nostalgic. ·
spring wrapup, Remember
Hats achieve a triumCarmen Miranda? It was
phant comeback, especially
one of the major a,ccessortes
clochesi.liturbans and saUors,
ot the Thirties anclll'oltles,
all · wi
the look ot ·the
and It's shaplnsz: ·up to beThirties. 8Qlt letts, Jerii!'YB
come a .maJor lOok tor the
and taffetas are the fabrics
Seventies, too - especially
to watch for. Trlme Include
In stretch Jersey or.terry, or
nautical emblems, lloppy
crackling talteta plaid. .
tlowers and art deco pins.
All sorts of sallor hats,
Colors are . vibrant, The
Including sou'wester shapes,
mood is . fun -and a llttle . are used with nautical out•
bit costurne.y,
tits.
The look ot the head tor
Handbags are- big, and

II
.

and craft supplles.
The umt takes no more
space than a small desk or
bookcase, and tits into any
room ·tn the house . It Is
avaUable In heirloom or antique pine tlnlsh.

gettln~ bfgger, with suede
· and IDlOOth patent the most
Important sprinR malerlals.
Despite talk ol top-handle
bags and clutche~c women
are c!lnglng to weir big
shoulder bags, some with
adjustable straps, which
can convert to handles or
be removed entirely.

I--------------------------~I
I
Lell~rs of opinion are welcomed. They should be less I

TYPEWRITERS. OR ADDING MACHINES

In~~:

Hats Back, Shoes Open
Bags Bigger_Than Ever

Cha~les

CLEAN~UP
A mixture of prints on today's young fashions and accessori~s can create individual, creative touches. Here, a
savvy little shirt anJ scarf pull an exciting new look
together. Side-tie top is a &gt;nake-it·youroelfer in a
melange of colorful prints. A Butt erick Pattern.

Accessories and Classics Click

NEW OWNERS

NEW LOCATION

'

!3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Murdll6, 1972

99
SQ.

YD.

KODEL I ACRILAII
Poly11ler &amp; acrylic pill in heavy
plush. Popular color• ifl fvll rolt t ,

TERMS!
REG, TO

BANK RATE
FINANCING

$11.95

FHA APPROVED

SHAG
CARPET.
$• 95

Cushionflor
LINOLEUM

Choice
of
Colors

79
SQ. YD.

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

'

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

MIDDLEPORT

'----'-"'..,j._....,______
~-----------.---...1
•

'
\

.

')

�•

•
12- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ~arch 16, 19i2

Prints·Make Instant Mix
l'rlnts are pleasing to all
spring fashions. Flowers,
geometries, stripes, dots
and Victorian prints freshen-u p day and evening
wear.
,
Oversized tlot"al· designs
on soft chilfons drift ele~an tly lnt.o evening hours

on long gowns.

Putting lt all together for
colorful combinations are
dots. checks, stripes and
olaids. Seen in dresses. mul-

it-layer looks and print-onprint sportswear, prints
take instant mix out ot the
kitchen and into fashion .
Nautical prints, such as
anchor and boat patterns,
0 et the roya l salute ln beach
and playwear.
Victorian prints add pure
dynamite to demure little
dre.. es that captivate plenty of admiring glances.
Geometries show up everywhere for new boldness

In day and night looks.

FOR. EASTER

Accents
For

Easter!
Flowers,

ropes,

pin

&amp;

ea r sets, en·
dles s

hoo p

ea rr ing s,

Soulous.

All

th e new pieces
ar e h_ere now .

Cam eo Brooche s S2

The

Smile Ring . 52.50

GOESSLER'S
JEWELRY STORE
COURT ST.

POMEROY, 0.

Cra ts Make .Itl
The nostalgic look ot
spring fashions has inspired
a widespread Interest in aU
sorts of do-lt-yourself crafts
projects.
There are kits to make
almost anythln~ !rom a
macrame fringe to handcrafted suede sandals.
Macrame - pronounced
mak-ra-may - is the art ot
decorative knotting, an ancient art that has become
the hottes t thing ln fashion.
· Whlle macrame looks
compllcated, even a child
can do lt. Actually lt Involves tying only two basic
knots, but using varied materials llke'. strlng1 twine,
yarn, rope lind satin cord
ot various thicknesses. one
can make Jewelry, vests,
belts. even wall hangings
and sculpture.
There's a patchwork kit
available, containing 180
tour-inch pinked cotton
squares, plus unconventional patterns tor a mini. mid!
or max! skirt, a poncho, a
shoulder tote bag, kerchief,
hot pants, bolero and slacks.
The patches are all cut
fr om American classic
prints : Colonial stenclls,
p!Uow tickings, tlour sack
patterns, bandanas. They
go with anything tram denIm and chino to rumed organdy.
Other home crafts proJects enjoying sudden revival are needlepoint (now
avallable In vibrant new
modern designs), feather
work, ru~ hooking, crocheting, appllaue work, and
smocking.
More and more women
a'e designing and making
their own clothes, too. Some
even draft their own patterns. uslpg a new picture
book method.
All this activity takes
space, and many women
tlnd themselves frustrated
bY the setting- up chore. Just
when the project ls all laid
out, the table ls needed tor
the next meal. Or company's coming and all the
supplies must be gathered
Into the sewing basket.
A new solution to this
pro blem ls the sell-contained sewing center. Designed to tit right In with

Evening Is
·Long, Bare .

tightly cuffed at the wrist,
or drltt Into Chinese butter·
tiY points. Short sleeves are
olten putted school-girl

.; venlng gowns are a long
•tory this year, wllh lulllength fashions almost
completely dominating the
scene after dark. Gowns
reminiscent ot Harlow and
Hayworth uncover a Jot ol
bare truths, with plunging
neckll11es, halters. and utterly uncovered backs.
Others ate completely
covered, all the way to Kitty
Foyle collars and matching
llttle white cults.
Favorite fabrics are drapey .crepes, sllnky Jersey ·
and tlowinJ&gt;; chilTon. Romantic rumed talreta ahd
crisp tlowered organdies also make the scene.
.
Sleeves, It they're there
at all. tlow loosely · to be

taahlon.

It In doubt, wear blaek
with rhinestones to match
a starry night.

87 Mill St:
Middleport. o.

matching modular wall
units, it olfers storage and
table top space for a sewing
machine, an extension table
for extra work, and specially compartmentalized
drawers to house an sew-

Sinclair
Carl Platter

CHASE HARDWARE
' PLUMBING &amp; HEATI ....G
Prompt, Dependable Service

..

Same Phone 992-2511

1
1
I'

'

REPAIR &amp; SERVICE

right this year with all the
new nautical whites. rannv
pants ·and bare - back
dresses. Quilted leathers,
suedes and felts are very
popular.
Spring shoe styles mark
a return to openness and
temlnlnlty. Toes are peeping out more and more

I

iJ~J. ¥=6_

I

'

Time for nostalgia : the spring hat revival
features head-hugging cloches like this,
in felt with face-framing brim and gros·
grain hand, circa 1930. Time for now :
elegant watches tailored for him and her.
Watches by Bulova.

II
I

FOR DRESS &amp;·
COAT ENSEMBLES
POLYESTER
KNITS
DRESS CREPES

'498 &amp; *5 98

Jhe(lr

INGELS

eJ
ON

CARPETING

Right On, Jack
IJ

8-SGT. McKOWN

S-Sgt. McKown
Assigned as
Area R~ruiter

YOU INSTALL
AND SAVEl

Amana
Whole House Air Conditioning
.Cools Many 5 to 6 Room Houses

ONLY.

Suddenly, its

A native of Ashland, Ky. has
moved to Gallipolis to assume
duties at the Army Recruiting
Station, 404 Second Avenue. He
is Staff Sgt. Tommie McKown,
reporting to the local
recruiting station Dec. 15 from
a similar assignment in New
York .
Sgt. McKown was graduated
from high school in Ashland in
1958 and entered the Army !he
following year, During his 12year Army -career he has
served in the United States,
Germany, Korea and Vietnam.
Among his awards and
decorations are the l'urple
Heart Medal, The Good Conduct Medal, and the Vietnamese Service and Campaign
Medals.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Grover McKown of Ashland.
Sgt. McKown and his wife, !he
former Sara Bowling of
Huntington, are residing at 447
Second Ave., Gallipolis.

'I

WE OFFER QUALITY MEMORIALS •••
ORDER NOW FOR EARLY SPRING SffiiNG
•

AVOID THE MEMORIAL DAY RUSH
Our Prices Are "Specials" All Year

Round.

Similar Saving On
Other Models

SPRING

Magic Carpet
Many ot the season's most
attractive carpets come
with their own built-in
cushioning as well as bulltln CI'Onomy,
Originally designed lor
outdoor areas such as pool
or patio, "O!'le-plece" carpeting soon found Its way
indoors.
The kitchen. the family
room and other areas where
durable, inexpensive carpeting could be non-protesslonally installed became
natural places.

FASHIONS IN MEN'S
WEAR
•

Call On "Us Today

Somebody DESER
Remembered.
.

Stop By and Compare
I

LEGAR MONUMENT CO.
.•

W. MAIN

992-5314

~

POMEROY 0.

N. 2nd AVE.

992·5321

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

The Latest In

MENS SUITS

$45 .oo to $115°0

PROFESSIONAL TUNE-UP

1795

8
cyl .

1595

Mens Sport

Includes
6
Q!Jalily
cyl. Nat. Adv .

o;;~z~s 3 °0 to $72°0

5·. IN SIZE

Parts

Is your car acting up? Has the winter
been hard on your auto? Now's the
lime to have a tune-up. We can have
your car running smoothly In no lime.
Save money at Moore's.

35 to 52
SUITS AND SPORT COATS IN .

MOORE'S

Expertly lnatalh

FOREMAN &amp; ABBOTT-

KITCHEN CARPET

,,, Yd.
'

Look for smocks ln all
lengths, Chinese mandarin
collars and ·qll!ltlng, naval
officers' coats, shoulder pads
and dropped sleeves, and
long coats cut on the bias
to cover maxi dresses and
skirts.
or. at the other extreme,
short shlrtcoats and smock
tops worn with weather resistant pants.
The newest rabrlc: "oncloths" - llOiyurethanes,
clear plastic coated ginghams in great big tablecloth
checks. Canvas. seersucker
and chino are also very
much on the scene, along
with cotton poplins, denims
and rugged tlaxen wea vd.

.

. Sq.

SHOCKS
BRAKES

.

lJOUBLE
KNITS &amp; WOOL BLENDS
.

Service Center
124 W. Main

'

"MUFFLERS

1 RACK MIN'S
SUITS AND SPORT

Pomerov.

Ph.99H~8

TAIL PIPES

"

'

•

TS

·lf2 PRICE

~IH'RCLOTHI
.

MIODLEPORT. 0.

PT .
PLEASANT
Secretary of State John D.
(Jay ) Rockefeller IV, candidate for the Democrat
nomination of governor, will
campaign Saturday in Mason
County .
Mrs. Lynn Durst, chairman
of Mason County Citizens for
Rockefeller ,
said
that
Secretary of Slate John D.
Rockefeller wiil be in Mason
Cotmty this Saturday.
He wlll be appearing in all
parts of !he county in order to .
)lave the opportunity to meet
and speak with as many
citize ns as possible, Mrs . Durst
said.
Rockefeller will arrive in
Mason County at 9 a.m. and
wi,ll speak at
Letart
Elementary School. At 9:30
a.m. he is due to arrive at the
parking lot at New Haven
Supermarket. At 10:30 he will
be in Hartford In the parking
area to !he rear of the l'ost
Office, and at II a.m. he plans
· to be in Mason in !he front of
City Hall .
noon
Beginning
at
Rockefeller will com~ to the
business area of Point
Ple. sant, moving freely in the
downtown area . At 1:30 he will
go to !he stockyard in Point
Pleasant.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Powers
will be receiving all interested
Henderson people in their
home for coffee, in order for
them to meet Jay. AI 4:20 l'tfr.
Rbckefeller will be in Leon
beside the Post Office .
Concluding his day in )llason
Coun ~, there ·•ill be " public
meeting a! the· Point Pleasant
Junior Hi glr~"afete ria "1. 7:30
p.n..

•

, I

Jl

l

.

\1

•

BRING IN
YOUR
ROOM
..
~.

MEASUREMEITS
WELL DO THE Ant

INSTALL NOW!

501
NYLON

Rocky IV in
Bend Area
Sattirday

Moore'• Service Center

SEE US TODAY

NYLON

Fabul ous c: h oi~ • of colon , fird
quality

REG. TO

$7.95

~ -.

·rRIJIJIII.I:·1=1~1:1:
llRI,fiNii••~

105,000 BTU

What to wear ln the rain
this spring? The same new
colorlul coat, tent or topper you wear In the wind
and the sun.
All-weather Is the watchword, and the new silhouettes of the season are
styled to go anywhere, anytime.

MEMORIALS MEAN SO MUCH!

FCJR

Gas Furnace

Drizzle Or
Dazzle, It's
.Rainwear

Lowest In The Area.

Tune Into A TUNE-u·p Here, Soon

Includes CR 2 Condenser , 20' A-Coil.
Tubing and Thermostat.

l

•'

00

$

Feminine footnotes. Clockwise, from, top left : ghillietie; round-toed pump ; tri-tone suede sa"'ldal; ~lack and
white patent high·cut tie; tri-tone T-strap sandal ; multipastel wedge sandal in suede. Shoes by Mademoiselle,
Mi" Wonderful, Town and Country, Auditions, and
Socialites.

Dear Mr. Editor :
Jack W. Crisp,
President of Leading Creek Conservancy District
Dear Sir :
I would like to take !his opportunity to commend you
publicly on !he way you announced !he bids on !he 121\Rssenger vart to be purch!l8ed by the district : This Is the
(\,roper" and "just" way for 'biils tobe'handled.
Even though this • dealership was the highest bidder, I
take pleasure in seeing !he bld awarded to the lowest bidder.
In this case, the other two dealers were only $5 apart and you
slllllive up to the policy of "lowest bidder gets the sale. " This
may start a new concept in buying In !he county. AI least it
"shows" that there IS a fair way &lt;if doing thinss here, and
hopefully it will open a few eyes to ihefacl that competition is
not a "dirty" word.
Once again, Jack, "right on".
Sincerely,
R. H. Rawlings Sons Co., Richard W. Rawlings

The tr"uc coconut ha s the
largest of all known seeds.

G'S
CLASSICS!

SAME DAY
SERVICE
In At 9- 0ut At 5

/ ':,.:.-:.

ficiating of the Eastern (Meigs) Portsmouth East Sectional
Basketball playoff in Chillicothe, March 9.
This was one of the poorest officiated games I have ever
watched. It seems to me that if these officials were state selected, our state men need to watch a few of !he games they referee.
· There Is no doubt that the Eastern Eagles could have won the
Sectional if they were playing only five players, but it did!)'t look
!hat way.
The Eagles have earned !he honor of playing in the Sectionals for three straight years and !he officiating was just a
rerun from last year's game .
I am not making excuses for Great Eastern team, because l
know as well"as many; many other fans, !hey were the number
one team, if the game had been called as it should have been.
Signed: An Eastern Fan
Betty Millhone

SUPPLY

Dramatic or understated,
there'• something tor every
costume In spring's fashion
JewelrY.
Plashing cjrcles ot golden
or slivery metal appear as
necklaees - then repeat
themselves at the ear lobes.
Rings assume domed, contoured shapes - sometimes
covering two tlngers - or
are as delicate as small

SHIRT
FINISHING
'

sculptures.
Cult bracelets appear at
each wrist, chain belts circle
the waist, small plnf can
adorn a suit or dress. · ·
Pearls, ln single or multiple strands - in choker or
opera· lengths ~ make •a
nostalgic reappearance.

Jewelry Trends

Shoulder -slung or In
hand, evening bags are
scaled down versions or
box-bags, envelopes, clutches, totes, mlnaudleres and
shoulder bags. And, . their
nlghtworks display Is dazzllng with jewellng, dellcate
chains, laney closures.

I
I
II
I

. .

Officiating Blam~d for Loss
I would like to make a few statements concerning the of-

OINT
OFFICE
•

Suede In . spring colcrs
heads the hit parar;le, with
smooth patent coming on
strong as an elegant alternative. Crush~ Bnd crinkle
patent are stUI beln2 used
as basics.
White, the classic color
tor spring and summer
ba~s. ls going to be double-

through front openings In
sandals and pumps. Heels.
are higher; toes are rounder,
and colors are bright and
clear. Two and three colors
are often used, especially In
sandals.
Jewelry is he a vier and
more imposing to set off
bare necklines and shoulders. Multl-strands at pearls
or gold chains are used with
evening dresses. Chunky
plastic "fun" pieces go well
with summer's skimpy tops.
Bare should~rs also give
new importance to little
shawls alld capelets, !ringed
or dalntlly edged with colored embroidery. Scarves
and dickies are used to vary
the classic layered look.
Spring gloves are dashing
and pretty with contrasting cults and openings - at
the back ol t he hand, the
knuckles. or around the
wrist.

lbu3GO words.long (or be subjectto reduction by the editor)
ud must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be
wllbheld upoo publication, however, on request. Letters
should be In good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

lI ••• ?Jtt. uuwr,:

* ELECIRIC.OR MANUAL
*FREE ESTIMATES
*WORK GUARANTEED
*PICKUP &amp; DELIVERY

TOUCH OF GREEN
Spring green emerges this
year as the season's great
new accessory color - in all
Its various shades. used ln
small ·subtle touches. Small
and subtle are the guide
words : a Kelly green belt
on a slinky black dress; lettuce green gloves with a
hopsacklng suit; green and
white spectator pumps. Just
a dash-nothing big, nothln2 chlinky.

Whenenr clothes go sprlnK Is small. Bnug
cilwlc, accesaorles take on cloches, llke those In "No,
new Importance. 'l'hll sea- No Nanette," and the old
son's tlnlihlnc touches come Greta Garbo lllnu are at the
aQrOU wlth"a bing - color·
top ol the f118hlon picture.
ful, &lt;large, emphatic, and
The turban is the new
very ·otten nostalgic. ·
spring wrapup, Remember
Hats achieve a triumCarmen Miranda? It was
phant comeback, especially
one of the major a,ccessortes
clochesi.liturbans and saUors,
ot the Thirties anclll'oltles,
all · wi
the look ot ·the
and It's shaplnsz: ·up to beThirties. 8Qlt letts, Jerii!'YB
come a .maJor lOok tor the
and taffetas are the fabrics
Seventies, too - especially
to watch for. Trlme Include
In stretch Jersey or.terry, or
nautical emblems, lloppy
crackling talteta plaid. .
tlowers and art deco pins.
All sorts of sallor hats,
Colors are . vibrant, The
Including sou'wester shapes,
mood is . fun -and a llttle . are used with nautical out•
bit costurne.y,
tits.
The look ot the head tor
Handbags are- big, and

II
.

and craft supplles.
The umt takes no more
space than a small desk or
bookcase, and tits into any
room ·tn the house . It Is
avaUable In heirloom or antique pine tlnlsh.

gettln~ bfgger, with suede
· and IDlOOth patent the most
Important sprinR malerlals.
Despite talk ol top-handle
bags and clutche~c women
are c!lnglng to weir big
shoulder bags, some with
adjustable straps, which
can convert to handles or
be removed entirely.

I--------------------------~I
I
Lell~rs of opinion are welcomed. They should be less I

TYPEWRITERS. OR ADDING MACHINES

In~~:

Hats Back, Shoes Open
Bags Bigger_Than Ever

Cha~les

CLEAN~UP
A mixture of prints on today's young fashions and accessori~s can create individual, creative touches. Here, a
savvy little shirt anJ scarf pull an exciting new look
together. Side-tie top is a &gt;nake-it·youroelfer in a
melange of colorful prints. A Butt erick Pattern.

Accessories and Classics Click

NEW OWNERS

NEW LOCATION

'

!3-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Murdll6, 1972

99
SQ.

YD.

KODEL I ACRILAII
Poly11ler &amp; acrylic pill in heavy
plush. Popular color• ifl fvll rolt t ,

TERMS!
REG, TO

BANK RATE
FINANCING

$11.95

FHA APPROVED

SHAG
CARPET.
$• 95

Cushionflor
LINOLEUM

Choice
of
Colors

79
SQ. YD.

INGELS FURNITURE
992-2635

'

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

MIDDLEPORT

'----'-"'..,j._....,______
~-----------.---...1
•

'
\

.

')

�'

.

s;;rti;~TCi~;;i]ieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results! .

'

I
(AltED

ME

1\}ITH A

'Ttl BATTLE

&amp;JGI.E: I

. ''

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
· DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Belor•
Publication
Monday Deadltn~ 9 a .m.

QUALITY

will

The

not

be

responsible for more than one
incorrect insertion.

3-3-tfc
ONE LARGE trailer spa.ce,
Velma G. Zuspan, 773-5750,

Signed : Rober! C. Salser, Bo•
21. Racine .

3-16-3tp

Rd ., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.

10·3-tfc
RUMMAGE Sale. Saturday ,
M arch 18, 10 a.m., 620 Loc ust
Street, M idd leporl.

3-14-61c

THE

tifying amount and paying for

ad.

3-14· 141c

SHABOO. female, fawn color,
Great Dane, no tag, lost in
Columbia Township . Reward .

Phone 698-5943.

3-16.41C

SHAFT and universal join t
from Power Take-Off on 1961
ford Dump Truck . If found
lS l Butternut Ave .• Pomeroy ..
ca ll 985-3582 or see Charles
11 -11 -lfc
Bissell. Chester, Ohio .

3-14-31c

3· 16· 31 P PIANO and Organ lessons,
- - -- - - - - - Gerald Hofl ner. Phone 992- Wanteti To Buy
3825.
3-9-121c OLD FURNITURE , dishes,
clocks.

Now's Time To

1 WILL NOT be responsible for
any debls contracled by

ORDER
-FIELD SEEDS

anyone other

than

myself.

Signed : Earl E. Phelps, 106
Brick St .. Pomeroy, Ohio.
3-15-3tp

FERTILIZER

- - --

----::--

March

18,

at

the

beds,

silver

dol lars
or . complete
h ~useholds . Wrtl e M. p.

M1ll er, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Oh1o.
Call 992·6271.

3- 16·1fc

Mobile Homes For Sale

Racine

Planing Mill al6 p.m. Faclory

Order Now &amp; Save!

GUN SHOOT. also rifle malches
GUN SHOOT, Su nda y. March
19. I p m. fa clory choked

- open sites only, Forked
Run Sportsman Club. Sunday ,
March 19, 12 noon .

3- 1S.Jic

guns only . Second place
shooters get free shot in next A SHOTGUN and rifle malch
will be held Sunday, March
mat ch . Assorted meats .
19, at 12 o'clock, Rulland Gun
Rac ine Gun Club.

3-16·31c
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; Flame
of Hope Perfumes. Human &amp;
synthetic wigs. No need to
leave Meigs or Mason County
for lack of money . If in.

teres led ca ll 992·5113.

Club, New Lima Road. Hand

12' · 14' · 24' · WIOE

3-lHic

BUZZ-IN
DEPENDABLE CITY
HAS AN EXTRA PRE-SPRING

GIMMICK"

Extra
special
pre-spring
"gimmick" from Dependable
City ... buy any of these used
cars and we'll install air conditioning for only $150 ... we
can even add it into your contract if desired ... this includes
parts, labor, complete installation of a 1972 Thermo-King
unit in the cars listed below ...
these are the only used cars this
offer applies to.

1970 HORNET. ................ '2195

~lx.

3 speed.

1968 REBEL .................... ! 1595
SST 2 Dr. H.T., V-8, automatic. p. -steering.

1968 AMERICAN .......... ~1495
4

Dr . St. Wagon, six, automatic.

1968 DODGE.................~1495
Coronet

4 dr.

sedan, six,

3

speed .

1967 PLYMOUTH ......... ~1195
Fury II I. 2 dr . H.T., V-8, 3 speed .

1964 DODGE ................... ~595
Custom 880 4 dr. sed., V-8, T· Flite, p.-,steering.

1968 DODGE ................!159S
Coronet R·'r 2 Dr. H. T.• V-8, T-Fiile, p. ·
steering .
Hurry .. . Hurry .. , Hurry ... offer expires
in 30 days .
See Emerson Jones. Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger. Dick Rawlings.

RAWLINGS
DEPENDABLE CITY .

992·2151 OR 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT
OPEN UNTIL 8:00P.M. each evening
exc:ept Saturday &amp; Sunday.

3-16-31p
1965 BUICK WILDCAT, 2 door

PH. 992·3629

2143 or 992-2142.

For Sale

MOBILE HOMES

842 d 211

d

ev~nings. ay

5

and

3·16·61c
SAVE $2,000 to $3.000 on a
modular home. Due to a local
dealer closing his sales lot, 2
- 24x50 Kit Modular homes

and I -

2~-~~

Tek Modular

home will be sold at absolute
dealers cost. Shown by ap -

pointment only. Call Belpre.
Ohio, area code 61~- ~13 -9531
for appointment.

3·16·61c

110 Mechanic Street

has returned the i.n-vestment in one year. As.king only "'

$69.43. Use our budget terms.
Ca ll 991-7085.
3-15·61c
~-------

NEW 1971 ZIG·ZAG Sewing
Machine in original 1actory

ca rton . Zlg .zag lo make
but ton holes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with just the twist of a

sing le·dial . Lefl In lay.away
and never been used. Will sell
tor only $47 cash. or credil
terms a-vailable . Phone 992-

homes. One of lhe oldesl and

3-15·6tc
ELECTROLUX

Va cuum

Cleaner complete with at
tachments, cordwinder and
paint spray . Used but in like
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget pl~n a-vailabl e.

Phone

9?2 - 56~1.

J.15·61c
KOSCOT

Oil

of

Mink.

Kosmetics , Wigs . For free
dem ons tra non, call for ap ·
pointment, Mr s. John (Ann }
Sauvage, Syracuse, Oh io, 9923272.

best names in lhe industry .
Don' I walt. Stopnowal Berry Miller Mobile Homes Sales,
3-9-121p
705 Farson Street. Belpre,
Ohio, across the railroad
tracks
from
Kaiser
1 GOOD Stoke-a-mali c heater ;
Aluminum. Phone area code
phone 742-4211 &lt;lays, 741·5501
61 ~ - 423 - 9531. Open 7 days a
evenings.
week.

3-10-6tc

3-16-61c

'poODLE pupptes. Si lver Toy,

Employment Wanted

Park view Kennels, Phone992·

5443.

DRY ·wALL Finisher co n8·15-tk
1ractor. R. I. Dubbeld, phone · - - - - - - - - _ , ; . - ' - - 7~2 -5825.
TROPICAL FI S.H, fancy
3·13·51c
guppies, angels and breeders,
- - - - - - - -- Bellas and supp lies .. Pnone
PART TIM E secretary; lypi ng ,
992-5443.
12·30·11C
shorlhand, office machines
skills ; in your place of em pl oyment or my home. Phone

992 -5427 .
3-16·61c

Help Wanted
____
_
....:_

_,

WANTED!

MASON
. and
HARTFORD
Nol A

Motor Route .

The Daily Sentinel
Ph. 614-992·2156
FEMA LE

cook

and

hous eparent , over 40 , for
Children's Home. Salary plus
r oom and board . Phone 304428·312 1 before 5 p.m., ask for

::11.1

Mrs. Doby.
3'7· 1l lc

----For Rent

1 BEDROOM, ' ' double. fu r.
nished on 4th &amp; College in
Syracuse. Phone 992 ·2749.
3-IS 1 fc

-------- --· __
,

..

&amp; CONSTRUCTION

5.55
On Most American Can.

&amp;- PLU.BING CO.

5

U'LABNER

•

Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open I TitS
thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomoroy, 0.
Mo~ay

•

•

M,._Y I HA.VE THE

SPONGE,PL£A5E

SEEMS 'It) BE

••• SI~H!

i'IOTHING BUT .0. l.li.ST
!Xt&gt;ANSE OF SOILED
WINDOWS!

r ",,.....,,_,...,
~--

......

We have 24 hr. .emergency
service.

992-SIO!
992·3898 742·4161
· We are fully Insured
.

.

.-

-

HEV, 1.001&lt;! IT'S

•..

j

For

•

•

•

• C** ,.,...,

CURLY /IH 1H' .
~Of TH' BOIS!

...

READY·MIX CONCRETE de·
Uvered right to your prolect.
Fast and ·· easy. Free ,
. Phone 992.3284.
• utlmates
Goegleln Reatfy. l','lx Co ..
· '
Middleport, Ohio. ·
_
6·JO.Ifc.'

Oft'ner &amp; .~etor. ·

•

~

THE WHO!.&amp; WOta.D

Middlff'Orl, Ohio
Dbo AnllloftY Plumbing
We hove a eomplelt Home
Malnten~nct Service the
year around. No matter whit
your need. Completo roof or
spouting repair . .Interior or
..ierlor carpentry. C.lllng
tile and Paneling and Siding.
Compleie Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
DIY Number 992·2550

-

acre of land. City water and gas.·

.

'4t lm·.. MU.,Ior. T.lll, .... US. N . OH.

240 Lincoln St.

-GUARANTEED-

•

• • "' '

3· '"

-992·1

.CLELAND
REALTY.

.:OWE l&lt;lf: 1\IAT lHIIJio
AI.ID "ET SICK. 10
1-0.\E~!

UTrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

,_-=-::::::=:::::::::::-,:_...,..;_-,

q.c, YOtJ QOT 41111'
l!OttON '1/HO IT
Itt, CHIEF~

Aswdate

ACROSS
I, Caeaar's

$;

NEWS, like garage. storm
doors. windows, etc. Clo se to
shoppi ng, excellent location .

NO PARKING AREA story frame , balh,

2

bedrooms, basement, forced

air heal, porches. IN GOOC

today and ge t \'Our free
tickets , no purchase required , · COND ITI ON. $5,900.00.
next to the Drive. In Thealr€·,
Mason. W. Va . where low
prices and con-venient ser-vice
are featured every day, check
lhf? following prices and stock
your l arder. Favor i te or
Bonus brand white bread 7
loaves $1 with 510 addi l!onal
purchase . Broug ht on's 2 pet .
sweet milk gal. 99c, Bologna
in oiece lb. 59c , grade A small

HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
REALTOR

.store

in

Middleport.

~:,:·rl Falls - 10 r~m h~~~
with bath. basement, fenced·

in lawn, lwo buildings, fuel oil
heal, 5 lots, · lhree ot lllem
loco ted on· the river . tront,
sc lli ngdu.e·to.lllhealth,..

bacon whole or half lb. 49c,
Van Camp 29 oz . can pork and
beans~ cc1ns 59c, Hart's whole 1
kernel corn 5 cans Sl , ..
Br ough ron's Ice Milk Ice 1

· ·:. ·

•· ·1-fom·e ha! two porches· .
one enclo5ed, wllhln walkln1
dt,tance of school.
Several Lots tors."'
I Need li~ling~ lor Far~~ and
Homes. Also Handle Rent•ls,

we

eggs 3 doz. $1, smoked slab

FlOor

r

operatron . ·
of water
Au to .

level

con ol. ' L fn-1~
Filter
Power
.Fin Agitator .
\ Ptrmt -Prus · ·

or

Ma,.tag
· Halo ol Heat

I

Dryers
Surround ctdth•s .
with g~ntlt , ,.,.n~
heat . No hot spots,~
· no overdrytng ,!
·Fine Mesh lln1
Filter. ,
·
We -.,t.c&amp;lf1u In

MAYTAG

Rect Carpet

Strvlee

~2 ~UT~~~ !~~N IT~~~~d. o._

· ·::

:;

·

··

BUSJN£st·
OPPORTUN. .,IJY
,0:...~ ~"·· ,y:,...,'
·.

1

,.'

..

ceuor

DICll: TRACY

L Ea1er
41. Whet·
L Bll
atone
eb-ln U. Eleetrle
rhubarbs
11. VIrna of
DOWN
ftlml
I,
ThUI
U. Eaoolller
(Lat.)
and
beunlile :t. Exuper·
a led
l:S. Fully
S. AbiDdon
rnen&amp;ed
C. Active
lC. Youna
quality
pi(

A I 00 TI&lt;OUSANO
. IN TEL.EPWONE,
A 100 TJ.IOU5ANO
IN MOTO~
AND A 100 TJ.IOUSAND
IN OILS.

.~RGE EST~U.~l!&gt;; CI)MPA.NY

CENTURY
OLD CATOLOG
BUSINESS
_ ...
.. .....
1

·

"'

··

Montgomery Ward is IQoking for Sales
Agents. Husband-Wife team on a full.
.time basis. Experienced in Sales and
Management.

JJ!YMIDlb!l;-"-~

I . O.T. boot
(var.)
7, Potables
I. Futile
t. Malayalon
stale
lt. Seek a

form four onUnarr worda.

I FETAC

loan

18. A wifely
lob
11. Pretl·
dential

niotname

%5. Corner
za. Quite old
U. Wing-ding
S3.Riverput

lll'ft-

H. Old·time

zz. Mutual
ment

ZS.More
slender

Plsa

dat~~er

31. See 18
Down

wood

TIM!M0NC7T R!TURNEI7.

•
·'.
·'
''

.

Hampahlre

V

..

L..l_.....,;flil=-=--=•=•:=IB=IIn.:.....
., _.....JI ( I I I

M.Hound'a
New

II

NowurupU.cbchUat'm
~ to f - .thuwp;lw • ••· ••
~-==·=~·==-~::-~::::~~~~.:-~::.:•=:'::::.::IIJ~thullcnoecata m.

ll. DenoliD1
ahlp'l
ea)llelly
Incentive
H. Cit)' In ~

I KJ

IBUCHYB ~
KALILA

Sir-"

,llf·WENT OUT SOME

II

I
II I I

fo~rt

zt. "IJttle

·'
'

(A:eswua I

'rt-t-t-

Ye~terda,'•

••

I

Ja..w.., SNOWY GliMI VIIIIUI AWI.
A.w~ Dt:MCHUfrcllort U. the raia- "IHOW-111"

n.cm~lry

aldetmrll
zt. Cloy
st. So that'•

This Franc:hise does not require a
large investment. Program Is
desig!led to furnish Agent with a ready
market, pre-sold customers and im·
mediate commissions.
Everything is made available from
store fixtures, display material .and
Catalogs to your training with capable
and trained assistance. You will retain
a favorable perc:entage of the profits.
Write today, giving your name, ad.
dress and telephone number with
complete qualifications to:
Agency Development Department, 4-1
Montgomery Ward &amp; Company, Inc.
1000 South ¥onroe Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21232 .

, bowl
st. Aeeel·
ented
st. Grows fat
Sll. Cuekoo

3t. Relion

3?.Foment

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'• how to work It:

AXYDLBAAX.
L-..,.....__..,.W!;
Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter limply standt for another. In IIIII lllllple A II If ~00 HIT A I-lOME RI!N,M!W6E
uaed for tbe three L'o, X for the two O'a, ete. Single !etten, WE'LL ALL GIVE '1UO A 1&lt;1§§!
apoatropbea, the lenllb and foi'IIUIUon of 11M words are all 1 - hlnta. Eaeh dl)'· the c:ode letlen are dl!ereet. '
CBYPTOQUOTB8.
GW
BZ

X

GL

ZSSQVSLL

QUBNZ'Q

y-..,.,

WB

EBPU

NXWSU

DBPi.S .- EUBRSUO

Cf7ptoquole: THE TROUBLE WITH . THE

FUTURE IS THAT IT USUALLY ARRIVES BEFORE WE 1.!::!:-....;;c
[ ARE READY FOR lT.-ARNOLD H. GLASGOW
(tl ItTl

Kin~

I'd
'l

·-!,1

"
•i

Ftat\lrtl Syndlt&amp;tt, Int.)

·-- -~--

l
.'

1/
I

..·· "'-'c

Unoeramble 1'- four Jumbleo,
one letter to each oquue, to

lt. Printin1

,.

'

5. Annoy

15.1Jkuea
17. strip of

,'

\

lt. Uppity
person
4t. Less
ebubby

predO.

-

and nut Ea, ler egg. See lhem

--·· ..

"'

Ohio Power. Only sli,OQO.OO.
" ~ .~
' S.f2.tfc SE\VI NG MACHINES. · Repair·
OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE
- - - ~-;:: ,.
. service, all makes. 992·2284.
']'lie Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. '
High land abo~~e flood for build in g. Low land for faun ·
INTERIOR &amp;. oxterlor paint·
Aufhorlzed Singer Sa!a and ,
ching, fishing, ·and swimming. Asking $16,50Q.OO.
·
lng.-' R·, I. "Dobbeld, pho"e
Service. We Shorpen Scluors.
742
5825
2 BUSINESS BUILDINGS
. ,
.
·
! ·
3·13-Stc
' .
3:29·tic ,
POMEROY - Buy now before they get higher and scarce.
~
Bolh on East.'Main. · ··
•. · " •. Real Estal&amp;'
Sale
AU~DMOBitE Insurance IIH!I 1 •
'
•.
, ·~ncelled? '
Lost . your .
WHAT WE NEED IS MORE LAND. MORE FARMS,
30 ACRES, 3 bed!oom home,
cijierator's license? Call
HOMES ' fN MJDD'LEPORT, RIVE-R FRONTAGE, A,NO ~
'electric heat, · vinyl slijjng, · 2966.,
HIGHWAY PROPE~TIES~ WE HAVE SEV!!RAL
.TP&amp;C water disi'rlct: J'mlles ,. ·'•:I'
6·15-tfc
THINGS COOKING. WANT TO SHARE IN MONEY TO
soutl&gt;
of
Tupptrs·
Plains
lust
.
·,
....
.
--·
.
-BE MADE IN MEIG S COUNTY. THEN LI ST WITH US,
off Rt. 7 on County Rpad 28, :. B'-CI&lt;HOE AND DOZER work.
IF NO SALE, YOU PAY NOTHING . .
$18,000; phone 667·3336.
· StDtlc tanks installed. Gsrge ,
. "·
· 3·]2-Jtp
(_1!)111 Pullins. Phone 992·1478. •
992·3325 HELEN L. TEA-FOR.[), ASSOCIATE 992·2378 •
.~---'"--'.. .
.4-25-tfc
L..-----· ----,..---:-------=--.......J~ s ROOM &lt;lf)artinent, grocery
MODERN 3or4'bedroombome.
stor.e- combined; Yl!f'Y good A1:.1.:SiOE Builders &amp; Con·
Structlon Co. We specialize In
Phone ,992·3062.
stock of mercliandlse; pl01'1fy
aluminum. vinyl and steel
3-2·tfc
ot equipment also .. lncluded ;
dolno a vety _good bUSiness In _siding; 'fiberglas, brick and
s.tone; complete line of
r
a grqwlng area; Price 118,000.
•
•George Hoinl&amp;lter, Jr., Real "'esldentlal . ansf commercial
r~modellno•
· Estate Broker, Hilton Wolfe, ·r.ootlng ;
building, suspeniled..&lt;:elllngs,
. Salesman. Phone- 949·32-11.
608 Easl Main Street
· .J·I2:61p -Interior .and exterior pain·
ttng : complete liM of:
PO~EROY, OHIQ
.
·
. · · M'asonry work . All work'
992·22/9titl ~: 00
~ICE 2·story home with lull · guoral'lleed lo customer'
Sunday &amp; Evenings
basell\e.nt •.2·1ots, new forced
utJsfaallon. We are fully ,,
992·25611.
air furnace. • Near Pomeroy. , . lnsuredforyoulprotectlon. J2 ,.
etementary School. Phone ' . ·N. Second, ph. 992-3918. ·
:~
Co~Wt.
BEAUTY AND CHARM
99~·7384 to ¥"·
' •
, _ 2-IS·3Dtc .. ·~
Almost new BR ICK-3 large
~ERUBUN •
11·'-tfc .
~
bedrooms
with
dou"''ie
992.3020
---. ------., SEE US FOR: AWnings, storm '•
close ts . The kitchen is a · 192 N. 2nd
Middleport -51-X ROOM house, 133 Butternut
doors and windows, ~~rports, ~:
housewife 's dream ... 11h.
AYe. Contact -Ed Hfjdrlck, 2137 1 marquees. al~mlnum siding .; .
baths •. carpeted, recreat ion
PERFECT-ION PLUS is our
Wadsworth Drive, ~lumb\ls, •
and railing. A. 'Jacob, sales ;.:
room has everything, utl1ity
·
representafiYe. For tree ,.
ratir_g for th is · b~uilt~l • Ohio, phone . 237.433~.
•
. · •
. 11 ·21·1fc
, e~llmates, -phone C~arles
· room , carport. About 1 acre - decorated 3 bedroom. w~
Lis le, Syracuse, ..- V. ~ v.
of ground. $"28,500.00.
bath home•.· Compl'i!tely •
Johnson and Son, Inc.
carpeted. · Incl udes
all
HOUSE I• t.:qng Bollom, phone
3-2-lf&lt;
.,,,
WANTED
'985'-3529, '
drapes, venetian blinds, air
.
~
. ~,·
311EOROOM HOMES
co ndition. Kitchen; with
·•
1·28·1fc O'DE.LL 'WHE E'f allghment :.,
All PRlCES,
• bulll·in le.'i1ures. Located In ~~--.....,--~located at Cros$f.oads RUU. : "'
CALL CLELAND'S
Complete front end 1service, '
Pomeroy on · larg~ lot wllh FOR .TH&amp;.BEST deal ·ln a new
tune. up and br~ke service. . • J
garden and atta,hed garpge, • or used mobile home. try
·
lt:an~uga
Mobile
Home
Sales,
Wh.,ls
balanced • elec. ~
WHY PAY RENT? $5,900.00
Must be seen . to. be ap.
.Kanauga, Ohio.
Jrootcally.
All
work r
buys 2 bedroom horne iO
precialed, $18,000. ·
·
12·17-9Dici
guaranteed.
Reasoila!lle·
''
good condition, in excellent
-...,------::---,-· rates. Phone 992·3213.
·
i
bedroom,
1
balh,
Spacious
neighborhood, ni ce yard or
7·.2i.tfc \
brick home, beautiful bullt.Jn 6DX11, 1·bedroom. -all-electric,
garden, ca ll now .
air conditioned, Bx2D ft . Porch -;;.:-:::::==7-:--,-...:.._
kitchen. Located .within
and alomlnum awning, C; BRADFORD, Auctioneer ' );
walking distance jo shopping.
SELL TOOAY, .
aluminum skirting; com.
Complete SerYice
I i
6
Room ·2 bath home;
pletely setup. Beautiful,
Phone 9-19·3821
· ·1
CALL CLI!'LAND1S
(shingle). cellar house,
lxallon. Owne. r teav.lng state. , ·
Racine, Ohlp ·
,
garage,
plus
exira
lois.
One
lot
·
Phone
949,492
-·or
992·5272.'
'
•·
Crltt
Bradford
•
·J
CAS H T:t\ LKS - $12,90Q full .
has wi!lkways, sel up· tor ,
'
&gt;
1·1D.Ifc. '
S-l-Ife -,
price, 2 story trame , 3
trailer . Localed in buslni!'ss i;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiii~ii;;;;;:;;:;;;;.,;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ 'I)
bedrooms, 11n baths, tots of
district. across from the A&amp;P ·
1~

FARMS WANTEO

Complete assor tme nt of fancy
Ea sie r goodies I ncluding
Eas1er Baskets fr om $1.49 to
S20. We accept Federal Food
Cou pon. Stretch your money .
tood coupons and lime, see us
l··r Seed potatoes, oni on sets
and garden p1ants as needed .
Save in man~ wa ~ · Brigh t
S !t~r Marke1. n ext·· · ~ Drl .... e In
Thf'tnE;&gt;. M; .w n, ·w va .
3-) .I f

Wheel Alignment

. BABY FARM
.
" " .,.,.
29 ACRES - with free gos, oil and gas income. 6 room • · , ,_
' _ _ _ __::.•";7"=3...,·=
S·301c
home, baJh, cellar, barn, and fruit. Only $13,500.00.
..Sf.PtiC !i'F~,j;J.EANED'
·. 3 ·BEDROOMS
.
REASONA
ralta. Ph. 4-46~
RENOVATED - Neat older home. Gas furnace, bath,
~7tl , Gallipolis.' John Russell,

FREE tickets are now ava ilable
on a free gia nt $20 Easter
large
chocola te
Ba ske t
Easter bunny and large fruit

Cream, Gal . Sl.l9, white
po1a 1oes 50 lb . bag S1.59.

.

'

at lhe Bright Slar Market

Carrlen For

I

7
"s"'e"'
·P=T""
tc=,.-=
-ti""
i&lt;s--=-"'ci"'ea=-n-:id"'·...,
,M
" 111ei
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662·3035.
2·12·1fC

Langsville, Ohio .

paneling . Garage.

.'.

ALL WEATHER ROOFING

EXPERT

HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992·2522.
6.1Mfc

.Pomeroy,Ohio 45769

120.000.00.

t4/'tiD •••

'149.50

·.

EXCELLENT INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY is knocking. We'have a business which

bin alion, four speaker sound
system, 4 speed changer,
separale con trols. Balance

Get Rid of Them
We will protect any single
dwellinG 11sidence for

Zlnesvillo, Ohio

HOUSE, 16~2 Lincoln Heights.'
Call Danny Thompson, 992· .
2196.
7·18·1fC

. 10NIC:JHT ?

TERMITES. •TERMITES,

For Appointment
Phone 949·2803

Real Estate For Sale

CHASIN6 CRIMINALS

CANCELli);

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Mlln St.

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

3·15·3lc

CLASS W.$ BUN

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect 6f4·452·31S8

12·30· 11~:

and sma.ll.

LET&amp; SPLIT, BIMO,

I WANT 10 BE CERTAIN
I CAN GET A ECAT ON
~E. 81.16 •

Pomeroy

Pit.

The
Orchid Room

priced right. John T. Ledile,

5641.
READ THIS! You can sa-ve.
literal ly hundreds (ev en
thousands) of dollars on a late
model used or re-possessed
mobile home. Before you buy
any mobile home stop and :iee
the huge se lection of 8, 10 and
12 wide mobile homes that we
have on display. We arrange
financing for you. Low down
payments. Easy credit terms.
Don't forget we are the area
dealer for " Detroiter" mobile

616 Main St.
Belpre, 0.
423-6551

\Uu'RE !'RETrY
GOOD. ARE 'IOU

LETS GO IWO 1HE GYM,
6&lt;51. BWm:R. I I'EED
TO PRACTICE
M'l MCNE6!

.' ·'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
992·2174

B&amp;W HEATING 00.

J42 -550l

3166lc

From 'the lar~st
Bulldozer Rodiator lo .the
Smallest Heater Core.
Nolhon Biaas
Rodiator Specialist

MARimA
TYPEWRITER

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITION lNG

•

' '

'

----~~

Call 992·7085.
705 Farson Slreel , Balpre,
3-15·61c
phone 423-9531.
l- l 0-6lc _W
_A_L_N_ U
_ T_S_t_e_re-0--r_a_d_io- co m·

mode l s of mobile homes .
Phone area code 614-423-9531.

3·16·61c

Real Estate For Sale

write : Sharon Sturbois, Route
4, Athens, Oh io.

Belpre, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and paintings, glass
,installation , free
loaner
cars
and
estimates, also
mechanical repairs.
Phone 992-3793

1966 V.W., 1970 CL-70 Honda, 1 HOUSE, 5 rooms and balh, full
Slihl Cha in Saw, phone 992- ba sement at808 E. Main Sl. $7500. phone 992-3919 or 992·
3954.
3-15-31c
3 BEDROOM ranch type hor;;O,"
2129.
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
3-16-3tc
Plains. All . new with total
21" Black &amp; While, Crosley TV
electric and cenfra~ . air
on sw ivel . good condition,
home, basemen!,
conditioning, bath and&gt;;, fully
reasonably pr iced' Phone 991· 3 BEDROOM
2 acres , fruit frees and
carpeted, full ~asement; ·
6313.
berries, closed· in porches, -all
J-16-31p
garage In basement. See by ,
electric. For further in appointment, phone 992·2196
---------forma tion call 1-667 ·362.4 .
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson . .
1 RIDING HORSES, 1 pony, 2
3-16-31c
Financing aYallable.
·
saddles, Arnold Grate, phone

50 head se ll. For calalogs

1220 Washington BIYd.

OFFICE·
MACHINE
REPAIR

S37 High St.

hardtop, 1 local owner, ex cel lent condition , good tire s,
ex tra good finish . Phone 992-

March 31st,,7 p.m. Meigs ~o .
Fairgrounds, Pomeroy , Oh1o .
Southeastern Ohio Polled
Hereford · Associa l ion ' s
Second Annual Graded Sale.

MILLER

SST 2 dr. sedan, V-8, automatic, p.·steering .

1969 AMERICAN...........'1695

991·5795.

BUY POLLED ECONOMY,

CASH paid for all makes and

2 Dr. sedan.

.

3·15·31c
choked shotguns wilt be
handicapped. Rifles will be in · SAVE nunc:lreds of doll ars ori
used and repossessed Mobile STEREO. Beaullful Colonial
two classes. Open sights and
Homes .
Also
franchise
scope, bench rest and off
Maple Slereo, AM·FM radio,
dealer's for new Oelrolter's.
hand. ·Rifle shoolers will
four speakers, four speed
We have a variet1 o,f 8, 10 and
furnlsh own shells. Any
aulomatic
~hanger. Balance
12wides - onejustforyou . R.
calibre of rifle, muzzle
$79.47. Use our budget terms.
A. M iller Enterprises, Inc.,
loaders included .

3-7.tlc

11

run s good, good tires, phove

by
Day, Week, Month

Medium. large

3-15-31c

V-8,

1965 MERCURY Monterey,

FRESH EGGS! Fine Quallly.

choke guns only. Assorted
mea l. Sponsored by the
Sy racuse Fire Dept.

THI./NDERBIRD,

3-12·61p

BEAUTY Shop equ ipment.
Phone 742·3386.
3·15·3tc

'

SHOOTING Match, Salurday,

SEED CORN

brass

OOLONIAL
AUIO BODY

Free Estimate

automatic. power steering,
power brakes, power windows, phone 992 -51137.

Libera I Rafes

SAVE up to one half . Bring your
noon,
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,

Gun Shoot,
Sunday. March 19, Broad Run
Gun Club , New Haven,
sponsored by Post 9926.
Mason, W. Va .

MEIGS INN
ROOMS

Lost

-----:-::--:--

V.F.W .

Auto Sale.s
'66

Wotchers (RJ. 1863 Seclion

I WILL not be responsibl e for
an y debts contracted by
anyone other tha n myself.

3-12-71p

3-7·181p

OFFICE HOURS
;-ound
8:30a .m. lo 5:00 p.m. Da ily, Notice
MONEY,
Monday, March 13, 10
8:30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noon ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT
a.m. in Irani of Liquor Store.
overweight ladies. teens and
Saturday .
Owner may ha-ve by iden men interested In a Weight

Notice

TO MATO seed : Organically
grown. God's miracle mlxed ;
pr:u..:ket of 7 different varieties
SOc. 3 packets for Sl . Posl ·
paid . Don' t miss this big
'iurp.r i se! Big Toma1o Gfir.
den s, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.

Mason, W. Va .

Advertisement.

( R) Class in
write : Weight

3·1-27tp

- - - - -- -

phone 992-3314.

EVES. 1:00 P.M.
f'j)MEROY, OHIO

Watchers
Pomeroy

Stop in and compare.

TRAILER , .Brown's Trailer
Court. Miner sv ill e, Ohio,.

"~EH

Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per

3-14-61p

-

3·14·61c

Pomeroy Motor Co.

$1.50 for SO word minimum .

Chester.

bath , nic e yard and lot of
priva cy. Phone 992 ·2502 .

1961 CHEVROLET EL CAMINO
$1695
Custom, V-8 engine, auto. trans ., power steeri ng, good ww ti res. cover for body . beautiful red fini sh. Priced to
move

days.
CAIID OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Business Services

$3,800; See Howard Johnson,

10-18-tfc

3-10-6tc SHOWALTER"S Wei Pet Shop,
Chesler, Ohio, Phone 985-3356:
NICE 2 bedroom house with
Tropical tish and supplies .

$1395
377 engine. 4 speed tran s.. clean .interior &amp; good tires.
Med . grn . finish . Nice.

RATES

apartments. Close to sct'oo 1•
Phone m -5434.

Phone 949·2261.

1961CHEVElLEMALIBU HTCPE.

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
, 18 cents per word six c~n ­
~ecu ti ve insertio ns .
'25 Per Cent Disc ount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10

ll

11 FT . \'"' E trailer, air CO{I ·
ditioned, washer and dryer -

FURNISHED 5 room apart - 80 H.P. MERCURY oulboard
ment, newly decora te d,
mo tor, phone 985-4225.
ground fl por, Albert Hill.
.
. 3· 1~·5tp '

1961 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
$1395
Conver tibl e. V·8 auto., P, S.. P. B.. tilt steering wheel. tape
player . good tires , dark blue, like new top wh ite, white
bu cket seats with console, nice and clean 1 owner car .

r ight to edlt or rejeCt any ads
publisher'

FURI'liSHED a nd · ~nlurnished

OF

REGULATIONS
The Publisher .r.eServes the
objectional.

Pomeroy.·
Motor Co. .

2 SIGNS

Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted untll9 a .m . for,
'
Day of Publication,

deemed

For Sale

For Rent

...

. I
'

\

l

ac&amp;l

�'

.

s;;rti;~TCi~;;i]ieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results! .

'

I
(AltED

ME

1\}ITH A

'Ttl BATTLE

&amp;JGI.E: I

. ''

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
· DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Belor•
Publication
Monday Deadltn~ 9 a .m.

QUALITY

will

The

not

be

responsible for more than one
incorrect insertion.

3-3-tfc
ONE LARGE trailer spa.ce,
Velma G. Zuspan, 773-5750,

Signed : Rober! C. Salser, Bo•
21. Racine .

3-16-3tp

Rd ., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.

10·3-tfc
RUMMAGE Sale. Saturday ,
M arch 18, 10 a.m., 620 Loc ust
Street, M idd leporl.

3-14-61c

THE

tifying amount and paying for

ad.

3-14· 141c

SHABOO. female, fawn color,
Great Dane, no tag, lost in
Columbia Township . Reward .

Phone 698-5943.

3-16.41C

SHAFT and universal join t
from Power Take-Off on 1961
ford Dump Truck . If found
lS l Butternut Ave .• Pomeroy ..
ca ll 985-3582 or see Charles
11 -11 -lfc
Bissell. Chester, Ohio .

3-14-31c

3· 16· 31 P PIANO and Organ lessons,
- - -- - - - - - Gerald Hofl ner. Phone 992- Wanteti To Buy
3825.
3-9-121c OLD FURNITURE , dishes,
clocks.

Now's Time To

1 WILL NOT be responsible for
any debls contracled by

ORDER
-FIELD SEEDS

anyone other

than

myself.

Signed : Earl E. Phelps, 106
Brick St .. Pomeroy, Ohio.
3-15-3tp

FERTILIZER

- - --

----::--

March

18,

at

the

beds,

silver

dol lars
or . complete
h ~useholds . Wrtl e M. p.

M1ll er, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Oh1o.
Call 992·6271.

3- 16·1fc

Mobile Homes For Sale

Racine

Planing Mill al6 p.m. Faclory

Order Now &amp; Save!

GUN SHOOT. also rifle malches
GUN SHOOT, Su nda y. March
19. I p m. fa clory choked

- open sites only, Forked
Run Sportsman Club. Sunday ,
March 19, 12 noon .

3- 1S.Jic

guns only . Second place
shooters get free shot in next A SHOTGUN and rifle malch
will be held Sunday, March
mat ch . Assorted meats .
19, at 12 o'clock, Rulland Gun
Rac ine Gun Club.

3-16·31c
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; Flame
of Hope Perfumes. Human &amp;
synthetic wigs. No need to
leave Meigs or Mason County
for lack of money . If in.

teres led ca ll 992·5113.

Club, New Lima Road. Hand

12' · 14' · 24' · WIOE

3-lHic

BUZZ-IN
DEPENDABLE CITY
HAS AN EXTRA PRE-SPRING

GIMMICK"

Extra
special
pre-spring
"gimmick" from Dependable
City ... buy any of these used
cars and we'll install air conditioning for only $150 ... we
can even add it into your contract if desired ... this includes
parts, labor, complete installation of a 1972 Thermo-King
unit in the cars listed below ...
these are the only used cars this
offer applies to.

1970 HORNET. ................ '2195

~lx.

3 speed.

1968 REBEL .................... ! 1595
SST 2 Dr. H.T., V-8, automatic. p. -steering.

1968 AMERICAN .......... ~1495
4

Dr . St. Wagon, six, automatic.

1968 DODGE.................~1495
Coronet

4 dr.

sedan, six,

3

speed .

1967 PLYMOUTH ......... ~1195
Fury II I. 2 dr . H.T., V-8, 3 speed .

1964 DODGE ................... ~595
Custom 880 4 dr. sed., V-8, T· Flite, p.-,steering.

1968 DODGE ................!159S
Coronet R·'r 2 Dr. H. T.• V-8, T-Fiile, p. ·
steering .
Hurry .. . Hurry .. , Hurry ... offer expires
in 30 days .
See Emerson Jones. Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger. Dick Rawlings.

RAWLINGS
DEPENDABLE CITY .

992·2151 OR 992·2152 MIDDLEPORT
OPEN UNTIL 8:00P.M. each evening
exc:ept Saturday &amp; Sunday.

3-16-31p
1965 BUICK WILDCAT, 2 door

PH. 992·3629

2143 or 992-2142.

For Sale

MOBILE HOMES

842 d 211

d

ev~nings. ay

5

and

3·16·61c
SAVE $2,000 to $3.000 on a
modular home. Due to a local
dealer closing his sales lot, 2
- 24x50 Kit Modular homes

and I -

2~-~~

Tek Modular

home will be sold at absolute
dealers cost. Shown by ap -

pointment only. Call Belpre.
Ohio, area code 61~- ~13 -9531
for appointment.

3·16·61c

110 Mechanic Street

has returned the i.n-vestment in one year. As.king only "'

$69.43. Use our budget terms.
Ca ll 991-7085.
3-15·61c
~-------

NEW 1971 ZIG·ZAG Sewing
Machine in original 1actory

ca rton . Zlg .zag lo make
but ton holes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and make fancy
designs with just the twist of a

sing le·dial . Lefl In lay.away
and never been used. Will sell
tor only $47 cash. or credil
terms a-vailable . Phone 992-

homes. One of lhe oldesl and

3-15·6tc
ELECTROLUX

Va cuum

Cleaner complete with at
tachments, cordwinder and
paint spray . Used but in like
new condition. Pay $34.45
cash or budget pl~n a-vailabl e.

Phone

9?2 - 56~1.

J.15·61c
KOSCOT

Oil

of

Mink.

Kosmetics , Wigs . For free
dem ons tra non, call for ap ·
pointment, Mr s. John (Ann }
Sauvage, Syracuse, Oh io, 9923272.

best names in lhe industry .
Don' I walt. Stopnowal Berry Miller Mobile Homes Sales,
3-9-121p
705 Farson Street. Belpre,
Ohio, across the railroad
tracks
from
Kaiser
1 GOOD Stoke-a-mali c heater ;
Aluminum. Phone area code
phone 742-4211 &lt;lays, 741·5501
61 ~ - 423 - 9531. Open 7 days a
evenings.
week.

3-10-6tc

3-16-61c

'poODLE pupptes. Si lver Toy,

Employment Wanted

Park view Kennels, Phone992·

5443.

DRY ·wALL Finisher co n8·15-tk
1ractor. R. I. Dubbeld, phone · - - - - - - - - _ , ; . - ' - - 7~2 -5825.
TROPICAL FI S.H, fancy
3·13·51c
guppies, angels and breeders,
- - - - - - - -- Bellas and supp lies .. Pnone
PART TIM E secretary; lypi ng ,
992-5443.
12·30·11C
shorlhand, office machines
skills ; in your place of em pl oyment or my home. Phone

992 -5427 .
3-16·61c

Help Wanted
____
_
....:_

_,

WANTED!

MASON
. and
HARTFORD
Nol A

Motor Route .

The Daily Sentinel
Ph. 614-992·2156
FEMA LE

cook

and

hous eparent , over 40 , for
Children's Home. Salary plus
r oom and board . Phone 304428·312 1 before 5 p.m., ask for

::11.1

Mrs. Doby.
3'7· 1l lc

----For Rent

1 BEDROOM, ' ' double. fu r.
nished on 4th &amp; College in
Syracuse. Phone 992 ·2749.
3-IS 1 fc

-------- --· __
,

..

&amp; CONSTRUCTION

5.55
On Most American Can.

&amp;- PLU.BING CO.

5

U'LABNER

•

Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open I TitS
thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomoroy, 0.
Mo~ay

•

•

M,._Y I HA.VE THE

SPONGE,PL£A5E

SEEMS 'It) BE

••• SI~H!

i'IOTHING BUT .0. l.li.ST
!Xt&gt;ANSE OF SOILED
WINDOWS!

r ",,.....,,_,...,
~--

......

We have 24 hr. .emergency
service.

992-SIO!
992·3898 742·4161
· We are fully Insured
.

.

.-

-

HEV, 1.001&lt;! IT'S

•..

j

For

•

•

•

• C** ,.,...,

CURLY /IH 1H' .
~Of TH' BOIS!

...

READY·MIX CONCRETE de·
Uvered right to your prolect.
Fast and ·· easy. Free ,
. Phone 992.3284.
• utlmates
Goegleln Reatfy. l','lx Co ..
· '
Middleport, Ohio. ·
_
6·JO.Ifc.'

Oft'ner &amp; .~etor. ·

•

~

THE WHO!.&amp; WOta.D

Middlff'Orl, Ohio
Dbo AnllloftY Plumbing
We hove a eomplelt Home
Malnten~nct Service the
year around. No matter whit
your need. Completo roof or
spouting repair . .Interior or
..ierlor carpentry. C.lllng
tile and Paneling and Siding.
Compleie Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
DIY Number 992·2550

-

acre of land. City water and gas.·

.

'4t lm·.. MU.,Ior. T.lll, .... US. N . OH.

240 Lincoln St.

-GUARANTEED-

•

• • "' '

3· '"

-992·1

.CLELAND
REALTY.

.:OWE l&lt;lf: 1\IAT lHIIJio
AI.ID "ET SICK. 10
1-0.\E~!

UTrLE ORPHAN ANNIE

,_-=-::::::=:::::::::::-,:_...,..;_-,

q.c, YOtJ QOT 41111'
l!OttON '1/HO IT
Itt, CHIEF~

Aswdate

ACROSS
I, Caeaar's

$;

NEWS, like garage. storm
doors. windows, etc. Clo se to
shoppi ng, excellent location .

NO PARKING AREA story frame , balh,

2

bedrooms, basement, forced

air heal, porches. IN GOOC

today and ge t \'Our free
tickets , no purchase required , · COND ITI ON. $5,900.00.
next to the Drive. In Thealr€·,
Mason. W. Va . where low
prices and con-venient ser-vice
are featured every day, check
lhf? following prices and stock
your l arder. Favor i te or
Bonus brand white bread 7
loaves $1 with 510 addi l!onal
purchase . Broug ht on's 2 pet .
sweet milk gal. 99c, Bologna
in oiece lb. 59c , grade A small

HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
REALTOR

.store

in

Middleport.

~:,:·rl Falls - 10 r~m h~~~
with bath. basement, fenced·

in lawn, lwo buildings, fuel oil
heal, 5 lots, · lhree ot lllem
loco ted on· the river . tront,
sc lli ngdu.e·to.lllhealth,..

bacon whole or half lb. 49c,
Van Camp 29 oz . can pork and
beans~ cc1ns 59c, Hart's whole 1
kernel corn 5 cans Sl , ..
Br ough ron's Ice Milk Ice 1

· ·:. ·

•· ·1-fom·e ha! two porches· .
one enclo5ed, wllhln walkln1
dt,tance of school.
Several Lots tors."'
I Need li~ling~ lor Far~~ and
Homes. Also Handle Rent•ls,

we

eggs 3 doz. $1, smoked slab

FlOor

r

operatron . ·
of water
Au to .

level

con ol. ' L fn-1~
Filter
Power
.Fin Agitator .
\ Ptrmt -Prus · ·

or

Ma,.tag
· Halo ol Heat

I

Dryers
Surround ctdth•s .
with g~ntlt , ,.,.n~
heat . No hot spots,~
· no overdrytng ,!
·Fine Mesh lln1
Filter. ,
·
We -.,t.c&amp;lf1u In

MAYTAG

Rect Carpet

Strvlee

~2 ~UT~~~ !~~N IT~~~~d. o._

· ·::

:;

·

··

BUSJN£st·
OPPORTUN. .,IJY
,0:...~ ~"·· ,y:,...,'
·.

1

,.'

..

ceuor

DICll: TRACY

L Ea1er
41. Whet·
L Bll
atone
eb-ln U. Eleetrle
rhubarbs
11. VIrna of
DOWN
ftlml
I,
ThUI
U. Eaoolller
(Lat.)
and
beunlile :t. Exuper·
a led
l:S. Fully
S. AbiDdon
rnen&amp;ed
C. Active
lC. Youna
quality
pi(

A I 00 TI&lt;OUSANO
. IN TEL.EPWONE,
A 100 TJ.IOU5ANO
IN MOTO~
AND A 100 TJ.IOUSAND
IN OILS.

.~RGE EST~U.~l!&gt;; CI)MPA.NY

CENTURY
OLD CATOLOG
BUSINESS
_ ...
.. .....
1

·

"'

··

Montgomery Ward is IQoking for Sales
Agents. Husband-Wife team on a full.
.time basis. Experienced in Sales and
Management.

JJ!YMIDlb!l;-"-~

I . O.T. boot
(var.)
7, Potables
I. Futile
t. Malayalon
stale
lt. Seek a

form four onUnarr worda.

I FETAC

loan

18. A wifely
lob
11. Pretl·
dential

niotname

%5. Corner
za. Quite old
U. Wing-ding
S3.Riverput

lll'ft-

H. Old·time

zz. Mutual
ment

ZS.More
slender

Plsa

dat~~er

31. See 18
Down

wood

TIM!M0NC7T R!TURNEI7.

•
·'.
·'
''

.

Hampahlre

V

..

L..l_.....,;flil=-=--=•=•:=IB=IIn.:.....
., _.....JI ( I I I

M.Hound'a
New

II

NowurupU.cbchUat'm
~ to f - .thuwp;lw • ••· ••
~-==·=~·==-~::-~::::~~~~.:-~::.:•=:'::::.::IIJ~thullcnoecata m.

ll. DenoliD1
ahlp'l
ea)llelly
Incentive
H. Cit)' In ~

I KJ

IBUCHYB ~
KALILA

Sir-"

,llf·WENT OUT SOME

II

I
II I I

fo~rt

zt. "IJttle

·'
'

(A:eswua I

'rt-t-t-

Ye~terda,'•

••

I

Ja..w.., SNOWY GliMI VIIIIUI AWI.
A.w~ Dt:MCHUfrcllort U. the raia- "IHOW-111"

n.cm~lry

aldetmrll
zt. Cloy
st. So that'•

This Franc:hise does not require a
large investment. Program Is
desig!led to furnish Agent with a ready
market, pre-sold customers and im·
mediate commissions.
Everything is made available from
store fixtures, display material .and
Catalogs to your training with capable
and trained assistance. You will retain
a favorable perc:entage of the profits.
Write today, giving your name, ad.
dress and telephone number with
complete qualifications to:
Agency Development Department, 4-1
Montgomery Ward &amp; Company, Inc.
1000 South ¥onroe Street
Baltimore, Maryland 21232 .

, bowl
st. Aeeel·
ented
st. Grows fat
Sll. Cuekoo

3t. Relion

3?.Foment

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here'• how to work It:

AXYDLBAAX.
L-..,.....__..,.W!;
Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter limply standt for another. In IIIII lllllple A II If ~00 HIT A I-lOME RI!N,M!W6E
uaed for tbe three L'o, X for the two O'a, ete. Single !etten, WE'LL ALL GIVE '1UO A 1&lt;1§§!
apoatropbea, the lenllb and foi'IIUIUon of 11M words are all 1 - hlnta. Eaeh dl)'· the c:ode letlen are dl!ereet. '
CBYPTOQUOTB8.
GW
BZ

X

GL

ZSSQVSLL

QUBNZ'Q

y-..,.,

WB

EBPU

NXWSU

DBPi.S .- EUBRSUO

Cf7ptoquole: THE TROUBLE WITH . THE

FUTURE IS THAT IT USUALLY ARRIVES BEFORE WE 1.!::!:-....;;c
[ ARE READY FOR lT.-ARNOLD H. GLASGOW
(tl ItTl

Kin~

I'd
'l

·-!,1

"
•i

Ftat\lrtl Syndlt&amp;tt, Int.)

·-- -~--

l
.'

1/
I

..·· "'-'c

Unoeramble 1'- four Jumbleo,
one letter to each oquue, to

lt. Printin1

,.

'

5. Annoy

15.1Jkuea
17. strip of

,'

\

lt. Uppity
person
4t. Less
ebubby

predO.

-

and nut Ea, ler egg. See lhem

--·· ..

"'

Ohio Power. Only sli,OQO.OO.
" ~ .~
' S.f2.tfc SE\VI NG MACHINES. · Repair·
OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE
- - - ~-;:: ,.
. service, all makes. 992·2284.
']'lie Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. '
High land abo~~e flood for build in g. Low land for faun ·
INTERIOR &amp;. oxterlor paint·
Aufhorlzed Singer Sa!a and ,
ching, fishing, ·and swimming. Asking $16,50Q.OO.
·
lng.-' R·, I. "Dobbeld, pho"e
Service. We Shorpen Scluors.
742
5825
2 BUSINESS BUILDINGS
. ,
.
·
! ·
3·13-Stc
' .
3:29·tic ,
POMEROY - Buy now before they get higher and scarce.
~
Bolh on East.'Main. · ··
•. · " •. Real Estal&amp;'
Sale
AU~DMOBitE Insurance IIH!I 1 •
'
•.
, ·~ncelled? '
Lost . your .
WHAT WE NEED IS MORE LAND. MORE FARMS,
30 ACRES, 3 bed!oom home,
cijierator's license? Call
HOMES ' fN MJDD'LEPORT, RIVE-R FRONTAGE, A,NO ~
'electric heat, · vinyl slijjng, · 2966.,
HIGHWAY PROPE~TIES~ WE HAVE SEV!!RAL
.TP&amp;C water disi'rlct: J'mlles ,. ·'•:I'
6·15-tfc
THINGS COOKING. WANT TO SHARE IN MONEY TO
soutl&gt;
of
Tupptrs·
Plains
lust
.
·,
....
.
--·
.
-BE MADE IN MEIG S COUNTY. THEN LI ST WITH US,
off Rt. 7 on County Rpad 28, :. B'-CI&lt;HOE AND DOZER work.
IF NO SALE, YOU PAY NOTHING . .
$18,000; phone 667·3336.
· StDtlc tanks installed. Gsrge ,
. "·
· 3·]2-Jtp
(_1!)111 Pullins. Phone 992·1478. •
992·3325 HELEN L. TEA-FOR.[), ASSOCIATE 992·2378 •
.~---'"--'.. .
.4-25-tfc
L..-----· ----,..---:-------=--.......J~ s ROOM &lt;lf)artinent, grocery
MODERN 3or4'bedroombome.
stor.e- combined; Yl!f'Y good A1:.1.:SiOE Builders &amp; Con·
Structlon Co. We specialize In
Phone ,992·3062.
stock of mercliandlse; pl01'1fy
aluminum. vinyl and steel
3-2·tfc
ot equipment also .. lncluded ;
dolno a vety _good bUSiness In _siding; 'fiberglas, brick and
s.tone; complete line of
r
a grqwlng area; Price 118,000.
•
•George Hoinl&amp;lter, Jr., Real "'esldentlal . ansf commercial
r~modellno•
· Estate Broker, Hilton Wolfe, ·r.ootlng ;
building, suspeniled..&lt;:elllngs,
. Salesman. Phone- 949·32-11.
608 Easl Main Street
· .J·I2:61p -Interior .and exterior pain·
ttng : complete liM of:
PO~EROY, OHIQ
.
·
. · · M'asonry work . All work'
992·22/9titl ~: 00
~ICE 2·story home with lull · guoral'lleed lo customer'
Sunday &amp; Evenings
basell\e.nt •.2·1ots, new forced
utJsfaallon. We are fully ,,
992·25611.
air furnace. • Near Pomeroy. , . lnsuredforyoulprotectlon. J2 ,.
etementary School. Phone ' . ·N. Second, ph. 992-3918. ·
:~
Co~Wt.
BEAUTY AND CHARM
99~·7384 to ¥"·
' •
, _ 2-IS·3Dtc .. ·~
Almost new BR ICK-3 large
~ERUBUN •
11·'-tfc .
~
bedrooms
with
dou"''ie
992.3020
---. ------., SEE US FOR: AWnings, storm '•
close ts . The kitchen is a · 192 N. 2nd
Middleport -51-X ROOM house, 133 Butternut
doors and windows, ~~rports, ~:
housewife 's dream ... 11h.
AYe. Contact -Ed Hfjdrlck, 2137 1 marquees. al~mlnum siding .; .
baths •. carpeted, recreat ion
PERFECT-ION PLUS is our
Wadsworth Drive, ~lumb\ls, •
and railing. A. 'Jacob, sales ;.:
room has everything, utl1ity
·
representafiYe. For tree ,.
ratir_g for th is · b~uilt~l • Ohio, phone . 237.433~.
•
. · •
. 11 ·21·1fc
, e~llmates, -phone C~arles
· room , carport. About 1 acre - decorated 3 bedroom. w~
Lis le, Syracuse, ..- V. ~ v.
of ground. $"28,500.00.
bath home•.· Compl'i!tely •
Johnson and Son, Inc.
carpeted. · Incl udes
all
HOUSE I• t.:qng Bollom, phone
3-2-lf&lt;
.,,,
WANTED
'985'-3529, '
drapes, venetian blinds, air
.
~
. ~,·
311EOROOM HOMES
co ndition. Kitchen; with
·•
1·28·1fc O'DE.LL 'WHE E'f allghment :.,
All PRlCES,
• bulll·in le.'i1ures. Located In ~~--.....,--~located at Cros$f.oads RUU. : "'
CALL CLELAND'S
Complete front end 1service, '
Pomeroy on · larg~ lot wllh FOR .TH&amp;.BEST deal ·ln a new
tune. up and br~ke service. . • J
garden and atta,hed garpge, • or used mobile home. try
·
lt:an~uga
Mobile
Home
Sales,
Wh.,ls
balanced • elec. ~
WHY PAY RENT? $5,900.00
Must be seen . to. be ap.
.Kanauga, Ohio.
Jrootcally.
All
work r
buys 2 bedroom horne iO
precialed, $18,000. ·
·
12·17-9Dici
guaranteed.
Reasoila!lle·
''
good condition, in excellent
-...,------::---,-· rates. Phone 992·3213.
·
i
bedroom,
1
balh,
Spacious
neighborhood, ni ce yard or
7·.2i.tfc \
brick home, beautiful bullt.Jn 6DX11, 1·bedroom. -all-electric,
garden, ca ll now .
air conditioned, Bx2D ft . Porch -;;.:-:::::==7-:--,-...:.._
kitchen. Located .within
and alomlnum awning, C; BRADFORD, Auctioneer ' );
walking distance jo shopping.
SELL TOOAY, .
aluminum skirting; com.
Complete SerYice
I i
6
Room ·2 bath home;
pletely setup. Beautiful,
Phone 9-19·3821
· ·1
CALL CLI!'LAND1S
(shingle). cellar house,
lxallon. Owne. r teav.lng state. , ·
Racine, Ohlp ·
,
garage,
plus
exira
lois.
One
lot
·
Phone
949,492
-·or
992·5272.'
'
•·
Crltt
Bradford
•
·J
CAS H T:t\ LKS - $12,90Q full .
has wi!lkways, sel up· tor ,
'
&gt;
1·1D.Ifc. '
S-l-Ife -,
price, 2 story trame , 3
trailer . Localed in buslni!'ss i;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiii~ii;;;;;:;;:;;;;.,;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ 'I)
bedrooms, 11n baths, tots of
district. across from the A&amp;P ·
1~

FARMS WANTEO

Complete assor tme nt of fancy
Ea sie r goodies I ncluding
Eas1er Baskets fr om $1.49 to
S20. We accept Federal Food
Cou pon. Stretch your money .
tood coupons and lime, see us
l··r Seed potatoes, oni on sets
and garden p1ants as needed .
Save in man~ wa ~ · Brigh t
S !t~r Marke1. n ext·· · ~ Drl .... e In
Thf'tnE;&gt;. M; .w n, ·w va .
3-) .I f

Wheel Alignment

. BABY FARM
.
" " .,.,.
29 ACRES - with free gos, oil and gas income. 6 room • · , ,_
' _ _ _ __::.•";7"=3...,·=
S·301c
home, baJh, cellar, barn, and fruit. Only $13,500.00.
..Sf.PtiC !i'F~,j;J.EANED'
·. 3 ·BEDROOMS
.
REASONA
ralta. Ph. 4-46~
RENOVATED - Neat older home. Gas furnace, bath,
~7tl , Gallipolis.' John Russell,

FREE tickets are now ava ilable
on a free gia nt $20 Easter
large
chocola te
Ba ske t
Easter bunny and large fruit

Cream, Gal . Sl.l9, white
po1a 1oes 50 lb . bag S1.59.

.

'

at lhe Bright Slar Market

Carrlen For

I

7
"s"'e"'
·P=T""
tc=,.-=
-ti""
i&lt;s--=-"'ci"'ea=-n-:id"'·...,
,M
" 111ei
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662·3035.
2·12·1fC

Langsville, Ohio .

paneling . Garage.

.'.

ALL WEATHER ROOFING

EXPERT

HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service. Phone 992·2522.
6.1Mfc

.Pomeroy,Ohio 45769

120.000.00.

t4/'tiD •••

'149.50

·.

EXCELLENT INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY is knocking. We'have a business which

bin alion, four speaker sound
system, 4 speed changer,
separale con trols. Balance

Get Rid of Them
We will protect any single
dwellinG 11sidence for

Zlnesvillo, Ohio

HOUSE, 16~2 Lincoln Heights.'
Call Danny Thompson, 992· .
2196.
7·18·1fC

. 10NIC:JHT ?

TERMITES. •TERMITES,

For Appointment
Phone 949·2803

Real Estate For Sale

CHASIN6 CRIMINALS

CANCELli);

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Mlln St.

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

3·15·3lc

CLASS W.$ BUN

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect 6f4·452·31S8

12·30· 11~:

and sma.ll.

LET&amp; SPLIT, BIMO,

I WANT 10 BE CERTAIN
I CAN GET A ECAT ON
~E. 81.16 •

Pomeroy

Pit.

The
Orchid Room

priced right. John T. Ledile,

5641.
READ THIS! You can sa-ve.
literal ly hundreds (ev en
thousands) of dollars on a late
model used or re-possessed
mobile home. Before you buy
any mobile home stop and :iee
the huge se lection of 8, 10 and
12 wide mobile homes that we
have on display. We arrange
financing for you. Low down
payments. Easy credit terms.
Don't forget we are the area
dealer for " Detroiter" mobile

616 Main St.
Belpre, 0.
423-6551

\Uu'RE !'RETrY
GOOD. ARE 'IOU

LETS GO IWO 1HE GYM,
6&lt;51. BWm:R. I I'EED
TO PRACTICE
M'l MCNE6!

.' ·'

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
992·2174

B&amp;W HEATING 00.

J42 -550l

3166lc

From 'the lar~st
Bulldozer Rodiator lo .the
Smallest Heater Core.
Nolhon Biaas
Rodiator Specialist

MARimA
TYPEWRITER

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITION lNG

•

' '

'

----~~

Call 992·7085.
705 Farson Slreel , Balpre,
3-15·61c
phone 423-9531.
l- l 0-6lc _W
_A_L_N_ U
_ T_S_t_e_re-0--r_a_d_io- co m·

mode l s of mobile homes .
Phone area code 614-423-9531.

3·16·61c

Real Estate For Sale

write : Sharon Sturbois, Route
4, Athens, Oh io.

Belpre, Ohio

Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and paintings, glass
,installation , free
loaner
cars
and
estimates, also
mechanical repairs.
Phone 992-3793

1966 V.W., 1970 CL-70 Honda, 1 HOUSE, 5 rooms and balh, full
Slihl Cha in Saw, phone 992- ba sement at808 E. Main Sl. $7500. phone 992-3919 or 992·
3954.
3-15-31c
3 BEDROOM ranch type hor;;O,"
2129.
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
3-16-3tc
Plains. All . new with total
21" Black &amp; While, Crosley TV
electric and cenfra~ . air
on sw ivel . good condition,
home, basemen!,
conditioning, bath and&gt;;, fully
reasonably pr iced' Phone 991· 3 BEDROOM
2 acres , fruit frees and
carpeted, full ~asement; ·
6313.
berries, closed· in porches, -all
J-16-31p
garage In basement. See by ,
electric. For further in appointment, phone 992·2196
---------forma tion call 1-667 ·362.4 .
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson . .
1 RIDING HORSES, 1 pony, 2
3-16-31c
Financing aYallable.
·
saddles, Arnold Grate, phone

50 head se ll. For calalogs

1220 Washington BIYd.

OFFICE·
MACHINE
REPAIR

S37 High St.

hardtop, 1 local owner, ex cel lent condition , good tire s,
ex tra good finish . Phone 992-

March 31st,,7 p.m. Meigs ~o .
Fairgrounds, Pomeroy , Oh1o .
Southeastern Ohio Polled
Hereford · Associa l ion ' s
Second Annual Graded Sale.

MILLER

SST 2 dr. sedan, V-8, automatic, p.·steering .

1969 AMERICAN...........'1695

991·5795.

BUY POLLED ECONOMY,

CASH paid for all makes and

2 Dr. sedan.

.

3·15·31c
choked shotguns wilt be
handicapped. Rifles will be in · SAVE nunc:lreds of doll ars ori
used and repossessed Mobile STEREO. Beaullful Colonial
two classes. Open sights and
Homes .
Also
franchise
scope, bench rest and off
Maple Slereo, AM·FM radio,
dealer's for new Oelrolter's.
hand. ·Rifle shoolers will
four speakers, four speed
We have a variet1 o,f 8, 10 and
furnlsh own shells. Any
aulomatic
~hanger. Balance
12wides - onejustforyou . R.
calibre of rifle, muzzle
$79.47. Use our budget terms.
A. M iller Enterprises, Inc.,
loaders included .

3-7.tlc

11

run s good, good tires, phove

by
Day, Week, Month

Medium. large

3-15-31c

V-8,

1965 MERCURY Monterey,

FRESH EGGS! Fine Quallly.

choke guns only. Assorted
mea l. Sponsored by the
Sy racuse Fire Dept.

THI./NDERBIRD,

3-12·61p

BEAUTY Shop equ ipment.
Phone 742·3386.
3·15·3tc

'

SHOOTING Match, Salurday,

SEED CORN

brass

OOLONIAL
AUIO BODY

Free Estimate

automatic. power steering,
power brakes, power windows, phone 992 -51137.

Libera I Rafes

SAVE up to one half . Bring your
noon,
sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,

Gun Shoot,
Sunday. March 19, Broad Run
Gun Club , New Haven,
sponsored by Post 9926.
Mason, W. Va .

MEIGS INN
ROOMS

Lost

-----:-::--:--

V.F.W .

Auto Sale.s
'66

Wotchers (RJ. 1863 Seclion

I WILL not be responsibl e for
an y debts contracted by
anyone other tha n myself.

3-12-71p

3-7·181p

OFFICE HOURS
;-ound
8:30a .m. lo 5:00 p.m. Da ily, Notice
MONEY,
Monday, March 13, 10
8:30 a.m. to 12 :00 Noon ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT
a.m. in Irani of Liquor Store.
overweight ladies. teens and
Saturday .
Owner may ha-ve by iden men interested In a Weight

Notice

TO MATO seed : Organically
grown. God's miracle mlxed ;
pr:u..:ket of 7 different varieties
SOc. 3 packets for Sl . Posl ·
paid . Don' t miss this big
'iurp.r i se! Big Toma1o Gfir.
den s, Syracuse, Ohio 45779.

Mason, W. Va .

Advertisement.

( R) Class in
write : Weight

3·1-27tp

- - - - -- -

phone 992-3314.

EVES. 1:00 P.M.
f'j)MEROY, OHIO

Watchers
Pomeroy

Stop in and compare.

TRAILER , .Brown's Trailer
Court. Miner sv ill e, Ohio,.

"~EH

Each additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
Additional 25c Charge per

3-14-61p

-

3·14·61c

Pomeroy Motor Co.

$1.50 for SO word minimum .

Chester.

bath , nic e yard and lot of
priva cy. Phone 992 ·2502 .

1961 CHEVROLET EL CAMINO
$1695
Custom, V-8 engine, auto. trans ., power steeri ng, good ww ti res. cover for body . beautiful red fini sh. Priced to
move

days.
CAIID OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Business Services

$3,800; See Howard Johnson,

10-18-tfc

3-10-6tc SHOWALTER"S Wei Pet Shop,
Chesler, Ohio, Phone 985-3356:
NICE 2 bedroom house with
Tropical tish and supplies .

$1395
377 engine. 4 speed tran s.. clean .interior &amp; good tires.
Med . grn . finish . Nice.

RATES

apartments. Close to sct'oo 1•
Phone m -5434.

Phone 949·2261.

1961CHEVElLEMALIBU HTCPE.

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertions.
, 18 cents per word six c~n ­
~ecu ti ve insertio ns .
'25 Per Cent Disc ount on paid
ads and ads paid within 10

ll

11 FT . \'"' E trailer, air CO{I ·
ditioned, washer and dryer -

FURNISHED 5 room apart - 80 H.P. MERCURY oulboard
ment, newly decora te d,
mo tor, phone 985-4225.
ground fl por, Albert Hill.
.
. 3· 1~·5tp '

1961 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
$1395
Conver tibl e. V·8 auto., P, S.. P. B.. tilt steering wheel. tape
player . good tires , dark blue, like new top wh ite, white
bu cket seats with console, nice and clean 1 owner car .

r ight to edlt or rejeCt any ads
publisher'

FURI'liSHED a nd · ~nlurnished

OF

REGULATIONS
The Publisher .r.eServes the
objectional.

Pomeroy.·
Motor Co. .

2 SIGNS

Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted untll9 a .m . for,
'
Day of Publication,

deemed

For Sale

For Rent

...

. I
'

\

l

ac&amp;l

�.

16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport..Pcxneroy, 0., March 16, 1972

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

! Washington

I
I

F

•

! Report

IJy ciarcnct'
• MiJicr

1

l
l!
I
I

LEGAL NOTICE

9 :30 a . m . for the purpose of
re ceiv in g
tes timony
and
e'lidence from wh ic h the Board
will adop t an amended im pl ementation schedule for th e
mun icipalities and ind ustries in
th e Upper Ohio River (upstrea m of Portsmouth to the
Ohio -Pennsy lva nia stat e line)".
In ter ested persons are en cou r aged to otter pert inent
tes timony before the Board .
Based on th e re cord of in f or mation pr es ented at the
hearing the Board wi ll es tablish
new Impl ementation schedules
tor appropriate municipalities
and in dustries.
Pers on s
i nterested
In
receiving a copy of the proposed
a m en ded i mpl emen tation
sc hedul e should wr i te to Mr .
John E . Ri chards, Acting Chief,
Di'l lsion of Engineering , Ohio
Department of Heal th , P. 0 .
Box. 118, Columbus, Ohio 432 16.
T. A. Gardner, M.D.
Chairman , Water Pollution
Cont ro l Board
(Jl 16, 23, 30, J t c

.

STORE OPEN 9:30 UlVfiL 9 AT NlGiff'FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ·

Just received in time for the Friday-Saturday
Sale - A big shipment of

Mens 5.95

Women's "Smart Set" Frocks
Short sleeve a nd s leeveless sty les. Dan River
Fabrics . Regular and half sizes.

8.98

Large Size Card.igan Sweaters
.

100 per cent acrylic - cable stitch patte rn . raglan
s lt;eves · long sleeves. Colors include navv blue .
bnght pink and white. Sizes 40 to 46 .

SLIPOVER SWEATERS
SPECIAL 2.98
Fashioned of 100 per cent acrylic - short raglan
sleeves · solid and stripes. Sizes small, medium
and large in orchid, black , navy blue, bright pink
and white.

Women's New Spring Dresses
Sale! Women's Uniforms

NOT OPEN

C. 0 . NeWla nd,
Cler k

(2 ) 24 (l) l. 9, 16, 41

THE
ANDROME DA ST RAIN
(Tec hnicolor)
Arthur Hill
Davi d Wayne

--------------1
: • ayo ur phone wiJl j l n1hl
I "c"h ntultt", too, trhtnl
y ou place an action lant I

"G"

I Ad. You can sell furn i ture,

l•pplhncu, cloth•••••do • l
1uns of othtr unu .. d .but
1uu ru1 lt••• l
I

Ca rtoon :
Search for

Misery
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

L..-------------1

Good si ze - all white handkerchiefs. Spec ia l

price.

hf,
PO"'."''
pomeror
rullond'natl!;»na
bank
t he bank ol

I he century
eslubtished 1872

Member Federal

Deposit

Insuran ce Corporation

Sale s.oo
Sale 5.00
Sale 4.00
Sale 3.65
Sale 3.25

Mug Trees

Jacquards· Brocades · Tapestry . Crepes.' For Pants . Skirts .
Suils - Dresses etc . 58"-60" wide. Machine washable. All
selective fancy paHerns - 2 and 3 color weaves . A very· good
assortmenf .

3.99 . 5.49 • 5.99 yd.
Group

QJRTAINS and
SHORTY DRAPERIES

SERENE
BED PIUOWS

Discontinued styles - In-

Fortrel7 Filling
With new durable press
cover !standard size) .
Special Friday
and Saturday

Drapes in 36", 45" and 63"

lenglhs.

·your choice 2.00

2.00

sale 3.00
4.95 BOYS SLACKS
SALE 4.00

5.49 BOYS SLACKS
SALE 4.50
· 5.95 BOYS SlACKS
SALE 5.00
6.95 BOYS SLACKS
. SALE 6.00
8.95 BOYS SLACKS
SALE 7.00

;

1\
I

~- .

colored design . "Treasure'' · white design .

New Shipment!

Softly, Spring arrives, heralded by the singing
of the birds, the blooming of the flowers

Sole! Friday ond Saturday

QUADRIGA CLOTH
100 per cent
Guaranteed fast
Solid colors and
(Ideal fabric for
qullts).

Cotton.
colors.
print.
piecing

"Red Heart"

and aH the lavtly looks of 1 new

1.39 Wintuck and'
· Knitting Waisted

~n.

oz .. 4 ply skein&gt;. All
colors. Two day sale.

99~

skein

Spring In fashion ••. feminine

Mens 4.95 Slacks-Jeans

SALE 4.00
Mens 5.95 Slacks-Jeans

SALE 5.00

1.69 TWIN CANDLE HOLDERS

Mens 7.95 Slacks-Jeans

SALE 6.50
SALE 7.00

1.00
$1.29

See the New Norelco Triple Header Ill

POLYFIL
-- '

100% PURE
POLYESTER FIBER
99~

Supe; M ic r ogroove flo at ing heads for fa ster. closer contour
shavmg .

bag

On Sale in First Floor Cosmetics Department
Also see the newest model in Sunbeam Electric
Shavers.

'MAGIC CHEF.

2.95

3 PIECE CHILD'S
FEEDING SETS
Circus designs. Set i n -

cludes all purpose plale,
soup-cerea l bowl, tu mbler ,

1.00

2.00 a set

handsome and colorful for

While They Last

New washable - hundreds
of uses. Ideal for filling .
Special

Men! For more comfortable, easier shaving

and ftonering for you,

Black enameled. Complete with candl(!s.
Friday and Saturday

Mens 6.95 Slacks-Jeans

SALE 6.00

It's Spring, beautiful

,4

69$ yard

•

·~

Colored background with

9.95

Saturday . A fine selection.

Em bossed des ign . Tree
and well plaller.
Friday and Saturday

'II ~1\J'I

Full or Twin Size

Coltons - Brushed denims
Regular denims. All on
le lhls Friday and

CHROME TRAYS

.\ 1/1

i

Easy care - preshrunk - machine washable, rounded corners

All sizes 28 to 42 waist.

1.59

'*

.

1~1(

with bullion fringe. " Parfaet" - while background with

Mens 8.95 Slacks-Jeans

3;95 boys slacks

; \,

4.99

100% COTTON

Corduroys - Dacron and

Mens Blue Denim

right for school and dress
wear .

D

COLOR PLUSH BEDSPREADS

day sale of mens slacks.

Ready for your selection . Ideal for warm
weather wear. Work caps and sport caps in all
sizes. Stop in . See this fine selection and buy
yours.

polyester-cottons. An excellent selection of styles jus!

-a~

"No lron 11

-

Men's Lighter Weight Caps and Hats

Regular sizes 8 to 18. Slim
sizes 8 to 18. F Iare leg ~t y les in
brushed denim s - knits .

D

S6.9S

cluded In lhls group are
some Cope Cods, Cottage
sets, Teer Curtains, Shorty

4 Colorful pottery mug s on
a black ena mel ed tree.
Friday and Saturday

5 for 1.00

Boys' Slacks
and Jeans

with minimum interest and wi thout ~elay .
let's talk it over soon .

SOLID POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS
YARN DYED POlYESTER DOUBLE .KNITS

•

On !he 1st lloor a big two-

Sale!

We can put our money to work on your home

New Spring Colors and .Patterns

Sale! Men's
and
Young·Men's
SLACKS
and Jeans

Friday and Saturday

---~---r-B:.o~ys Department- 1st Floor

Just ask lor them by name ... George, Abe. Alex.

w,

10 for 1.00

Good heavy weight - solid colors a nd patterns
wash cloths in this group. Some are irreg ulars.
Some are discontinued patterns.

2 pair 6.75

up youR ltoME?

.

.CANNON WASH CLOTHS

Sanforized shrunk. zipper fly. Tough 10
ounce blue denim. Sizes 29 to 44 waist.
All lengths.
Save Friday and Saturday

TO

ACRILAN FABRIC
'

.•

For You to Sew and Wear

2.95

SHEETS AND
PIU.OWCASES

WORK DUNGAREES

SOME MEN

3.59

Mens 5.98 Wrangler Super Lean Jeans
Mens 5.98 Wrangler Fuller Cut Jeans
Boys 4.95 Wrangler Jeans Huskies · •
Boys 4.50 Wrangler Flare Jeans · - ,
Boys 3.98 Wrangler Super ·Lean Jeans
(Regulars or Slims)

Presiden t

Friday thru Tuesday
March 11·21

SPECIAL 1.88 yard

Complete selection of sizes for men and for boys. Me.nS sizes
28 to 44 w a ist . Boys sizes 8 to 18 in Slims, Regulars a nd
Huskies.
·

Cannon R,.,al Familv Bath Ensembles

T onight, M arc h 16

2 pair 1.00
-

SALE lh PRICE

pa ssen ger schoo l bus bodies .
2 66 passenger schoo l bus
bodies .
Specificatio n s
for
this
equipment is on fil e at the offi ce
o f the clerk ol th e board .
. The board will reserve the
r~ghl to accept or reject an\" or
a ll bids.
I . 0 . M cCoy,

Friday and Saturday Sale

WRANGLER BLUE .DENIM
JEANS FOR MEN AND BOYS

MEN'S WHITE
HANDKERCHIEFS

TEN CEN~

SPRING FASHION EDITION

.•

Machine Washabl~. Solids .
plaids : fancies In light and
dark shades.

Save This Week-End On

Friday. Saturday Sale!

POMEROY-MIDD _EP.ORT. OfUO

MARCH 16, 1972

.

Lid &lt;;over and 21x3f frlnged
mat. Machine washable machine dryable. Gotd;
Blue, AVocado, Tan.gerlne,
Gold.
TWo Day Sale

navy blue - hunter green.

3.99

Devoled To 'Be lnleroem Of 'Be Meiga-Mcuoia Area

. BAlHMAT SETS

100% CRESLAN

Fits sizes 10 tO1i White black . brown . charcoal .

Mens 4.. 95 Long Sleeve
Work Shirts to Match
This Sale

Pc ~

$4 .99 2

"Montage" 54"

BAN LON·
DRESS SOCKS

. navy blue - charcoaigrey.

FOR FAMILY
AND HOM1E

SALE PRICE 1.49

Mens 69c

Si zes 29 to 44 waist .
Famous make. Dark green

'

SOper cent Dacron Polyester . 50 per cent Cotton.
Permanent press. Good patterns . Floral - Early
American . Green · ~pphlre . -, Gold .: Red.

.2 pair.1.00

so per cent Forlrel
Polyester - 50 per cent
Cotlon. Scotchgard finish .

Womens Short Sleeve

Katz Sleepwear

size I its all stzes 10 to
13. Excellent selection, of
solid colors and white.
Friday and Soturdoy

DRAPERY
FABRIC
48" Width

One

4.99

A Special Purchase of Womens

SPECIAL 4.98

Orion Sport Socks

Friday-Saturday

A PREVIEW
OF . FASHION

Specia I Purchase! .

Mens 69c

·WORK
TROUSERS

.

•

at

RIDAYand SATURDAY SAL~ELBERFELDS INPOMERO

like a floating lid which has
risen over the dct·ades as the
federal debt lws swelled. If the
past record is any forecast ul
Sale!
the future, I tend to believe that
the so-called temporary $20bi lll on debt limit increase
approved by U1C House will, in
A special group of womens new spring dresses.
reality, be temporary only to
Select
from our regular stock - latest styles.
the extent that CQngress is
fabrics and sizes. Take advantage of this great
putting ofl the inevitable unless
savings.
Misses · Juniors . Half sizes.
over-spending is checked.
According to economists, the
l'eiling's original purpose was
to hn pose a measure of
Many styles to choose from including pa nts
discipline un the federal
uniforms. Not all sizes in all styles . Wh ite and
budget. TI1e debt limit was
colors .
designed to control GovernJunirs - Misses and Half sizes.
ment spending by balancing its
ability lo borrow against its
inclination to tax.
Reg . 7.95 to 13.95 Uniforms · Sale 3.00
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Unfortun ately, the taxReg . 14.00 to 32.50 Uniforms - .
Sale 5.00
Case No . 20,636
payer's dollars ha ve been Estat e of Olaf
Peterson
spent without due regard lor Deceased .
Just Arrived!
While they lasl ...
Notice is hereby gi ven that
the ceiling as a permanent Al ma G . Peterson of Route 1,
Pequot No-Iron Fancy
fixture. In short, many have Rutland , Oh io. ha s been duly
appointed Ad m inis tratr-i x of the
l 'UITIC to accept the ceiling's
Esta t e of Olaf Peterson ,
upward spiral ns a simple lact deceased . ra t e of Route 1,
Buy the new spring styles
, Meigs County , Ohio ,
of budgetary life. As one who is Rutland
now in our First Floor
Credit or s are reoui r ed to file
Lingerie Department.
dec1&gt;ly disturbed by the lact thei r cla ims with s~id fiduciary
Reg. 3.99 Full Size
with four months,
tl1at the American taxpayer is
Dat ed this 28th day at
Reg. 2.99 Twin Size
Waits Gowns - Pa iamas .
paying $43,000 a minute just to Februa ry 1972.
Reg. 2.49 pr. Pillowcases
Long Gowns - Ensembles John c. Bacon
pay the interest on the present
Robes - Mini Gowns . Baby
·
Jud9e
natio nal debt, r don't subscribe
Court of Co mmon Pleas
Dolls.
to the reckless "spend · and · 131 2, 9, 16, Jt Probate Olv rsr on
we'll · worry · about · the •
Special Purchase!
L·onscquences
later"
philosophy .
ADVERTISEMENT
In the lace or approving a $20
FOR BIOS
"I'
IJ
Sealed
proposals
Will
be
Ch
fl
I
·
t
billioi1 request lor added debt receive d by lhe Boor d . 01
OOSe Ora pnn Or SO l"d
I
CO IOr Ve Iura .
capacity, this country has the Ed ucation, of the Eas ter n Local
Sc~ool District, Reedsvi lle ,
REG 2 SO BATH TOWE
·
largest federal deficit since Ohoo,
45772 a1 the oftice of lhe
· ·
·
LS · · · · · · SALE 1.59
World War II . It is estimated clerk , ~eeo sv111e , Ohio, until
REG. 1.59 HAND TOWELS . . . . . . SALE 99c
12 : 00 o cloc k noon eastern
RE
W
that the FY 72 budget deficit slandard
lime, Morch 17. 197l, 1-~~G~
. _s9_c__A_s_H_c_L~O_T_H_s_-~--·_·_.__
. ~s,_A_.,L~E=--4-9;.c.,_/
will run about $40 billion . As I and at that ttme opened by the
cl erk ot said boa rd. as provided
have stated in the past; I Ieel by
49c &amp; S9c Values
law, for
that we're at a liscal
2 trucks chassis suitable 66

MEIGS lHEATRE

•

.

'

Like clockwork each year the crossroads. We either exercise
fiscal wizards ol the Exec'lltive some consistent , orderly
Branch ask the CQngress to restraint on federal spending •
raise th e authorized national or lace again a dangerous
debt ceiling in order to berrow resurgence ol rampant inadditional monies to .pay lor nation .
With this country deep in
oullays which exceed tax
receipts. From 1967 through debt it should be obvious by
last year the debt limit was now that the solutions to this
jacked up three times, by a pressing problem demand
lola! of $65 billion. The present more than just wishful
natio nal debt ceiling is a thinking.
staggering $130 billion, and
only rc"Cently the House passed
legislation authori zing om
increase in the debt limit by yet
A NNOUNCEMENT OF
PUBLIC HEARING
another $20 billion to an allPurs u an l to Chapter 6111 ,
time record $450 hilliuu .
Ohio Revised Code, th e Ohio
I strongly opposed this Water Poll ut ion Con tro l Bo8rd
ll meet and hold a publi c
lcgisl;ltion. Since 1917, wi
hea rm g In Hearing Room NO 2
Congress has actctl 54 limes lo Ohio Depa rtments Build ing, · 65
Sou th Front Str ee t, Columbus,
ad just this limit upwards . 'lllC Ohio,
on th e 6.fh of April , 1972, at

debt ceiling hasn 't bt-en a very
sturdy rool. It has been more

'

lhisone
continuously
cleans
Itself

HALF PRICE SALE

TABLE COVERS

him, grown-up and great for

Round · oval · oblong. MOst
all sizes 3.99 to 10.89 Table
Covers - while they last.
Half price.

the children, gracious In your

2.00 to 5.45
home~
• Speciollllleoted oven liners
and oven door liner dluipalo
normal oven soil
•Lilt-up, ramovobto coaktop

Discover Spring now,

in the pages of this newspaper.

• Removable oven door
• Removabta rack runnera

• Fluornconl cooktop light
• Removobte cooklop hrHII
• Dvon window ond light
• Clock with 1-hour timer

sALE! MAGIC CHEF

Teflon Coated

G~

ALUMINUM COOKWARE
Fired on , no stick interior, for metal
2.89 1 quart Saucepans . • . • .
3.39 2 quart Saucepans • . • • .
3.29 8 inch Skillets . - .
3.95 10
Skillets . . •

RANGES ·

AND MAGIC CHEF

1oob.
Sale 2.00
Sale 2.50
Sale 2.50
Sale 3.00

ELECTRIC RANGES

All Weather

OUTDOOR FURNITURE COVERS
~tormpruof · ~alnproof - Sunproof - Protection to
fit standard size glider. Green vinyl with elastic
bottom.

On Sale
Elberfelds Annex ·
Middle Block

2.99

I;

A line new selection In
while - awcado . Harvest
gotd: Many of these Magic
Chef ranges have selfcleaning· ovens. You'll like
the looks of these Magic
Chef Ranges - Their
performance and you' ll
like the way you can save
dur1ng this sale.

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Be thrifty! Save all,of your saleslips from

ELBERFELD$

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IN POMEROY .

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Wearing Apparel For Your Family and Furnishings For Your Home.
••

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