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j:·'

.
Dlib'
Cleland is Awarded Entblem
'

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10- Tile

W!nel, Mlckleport.Pomeroy, 0., April II, 1912

LANGSVILLE
Tom
Cleland, 17-year-old son of
Wayne and Anna Cleland of
Langsville, rece ived the
coveted God and j;_ountry
Scouting Emblem in a brief
se rvice at the Langsville
Christian Church Sun·day afternoon . Explorer Post 239
Adv isor James Council
presen~ to Mrs. Cleland the
red cross embedded on a white
shield emblem. Mrs. Cleland,
in turn, pinned the award on
her son. Young Cleland pinned
his mother signilying the honor
bestowed upon the parenl.s.
Prese ~t for the ceremonies .
was MGM District Chairman
· Bill Knight of Point Pleasant, a
former Eagle Seoul.
Torn is a junior at Meigs
High School where he is an
honor student. He has been a
scout fur four years and
presen tly holds the position of
president of the Explorer Post.
He also holds the nink uf "life
scout" alld needs only three
more merit badges to receive
the Eagle award .
The entire post membership
attended the ce remoni es
Tom Cleland, Langsville, pinned his motber, Mrs. Anna
conducted by Advisor Council.
Cleland, SIUiday at ceremonies held at the Langsville
Several friends also attended.
Christian
Church during which Cleland was pre sen~ with a
The Langsville Post ha'
received correspondence and a Scouting God and Country Emblem. He is a member of
Langsville Explorer Post 239.
U. S. fla g from Congressman
Clarence Miller . The accompanying certificate indicates that the flag had flown
over the Capil.al building in
Washington, D, C.

•

Veteran• Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Jack Sharpnack, Racine ; Glen Rice, Point
Pleasant ; Mark Hudson ,
Pomeroy ; Iva Singer, Chester;
Cloyd Brookover, Pomeroy;
Sharon Cunningham , Middleport; Joyce Ann Knapp,
Middleport; Kimberly Sayre,
·Syracuse ; Clyde Sayre II ,
Syracuse; Alice Randolph ,
Pomeroy; Hattie Radcliff,
Leoo, W. Va.; James Hamm,
Racine; Eric Diddle, Middleport; Hattie Armes,
Syracuse; Lizzie Hanning,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Leola
Keck, Thelma Grueser,
Margaret Allen , Beatrice
Juhllng, Waid Spencer, Joan
Conkle.

,.

AUTO RECOVERED
'The Meigs County Sheriff's
rDept. reported a 1971 Cllll)aro,
apparently a stolen vehicle,
was recovered Monday in the
Bear Wallow Ridge area .
Ownership of the vehicle has
not been determined.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, April II

WITH ,
THE WIND

GONE

"G P"
Clark Gable
Viv ien Leigh

Admission :
11 .50Aduib
11.00 Children
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Apriii2-IJ
NOT OPEN

Women's Lib in Middleport
made one giant step forward
Monday night.
The Middleport Boys'
League Baseball Assn. vo~ to
allow women, if qualified, to
mana ge or coach in the
summer program . Amon g
th ose voting nay was Charles
Smith. The women who applied
for the privilege of managing
- assheputit, "if I'm needed"
- was Mrs. Charles (Betty
Lou ) Smith'
Richard Hovatter presided

Wesley Deem
Dies in Marion
Wesley Deem, 71, formerly
of the Morning Star area of
Meigs County, died un expectedly Sunday at his home in
Marlon.
Mr. Deem was preceded in
death by his _parents, George
and Lydia Deem; his wife, Iva
Marks, and seven brothers and
sisters.
Surviving are two children ,

Charles and Jlah Mae Jones, of
Mari on; two brothers, George
and Pearl, both of Racine, and
two siSters, Mrs , Lester Hill,
Chillicothe, and Mrs . Iva
Singer , Chester.
He is also survived by a
number of grandchildren,
great-grandchildren, nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the
Gunder Funeral Home, in
Marion . Graveside services
will be held at approximately 3
p.m. Wednesday at the Chester
Cemetery.

JUST TWO OF OUR MANY
SERVICES · · · ·
We can point out our
bank i ng services with
pride. They' r e des igned to

LOANS

mak e life nice r for folks.
Loa ns? They mak e i t
possib l e to obta in that
dr eam
house.
new
automobile, long awaited
vaca ti on . Chec k ing ac count ? - They help keep
family finances in order .
We've got lots of other

se rvices to offer , too.
That's what's great about a
I Service Bank!

.CHECKING
ACCOUNTS
WftE~

YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGH

when May 6 was set as Tag Day
in Middleport to raise funds for
the program. Business places
will be asked earlier for contributions by a committee of
women.
Proposals to participate in
an expec~ 13-year old league
were accepted, with reserva tions.
The motion was eventually
approved called for participation in both the 13-year
old league and the traditional
H-15 year old league, provided
there are enough boys. The 1415 year old league team roster
will be filled first, however, If
only one roster is completed, it
will be the older one .
Managers of fliOSl of the
teams were selected by
nomination and voting.
However, managers of the two
peewee squads will be made
later.
Two Boys teams (9-12)
getting new managers this
yea r are the Reds to be guided
by Joe Magnotl.a, and the Indian s, with Hovatter in charge .
Tony May was elected to
manage the 13-year old team, il
one competes, and Chet
Tannehill the Pony (14-15)
squad. Another meeting will be
held on a date to be announced
before Tag Day.

Defense

ATHF;NS - Se~en persons
associated . with Ohio · hjgh
schools, two Alhens residents
and a Dayton sports editor
have been selected to .be
honorfl!l at the lith Anilual
Green . .and White Club
Recognition Banquet later this
month.
Virgil Carter, quarterback of
the Cincinnati BengalS, will be
the main speaker at the
banquet, set for a:ao p.m.

Council
-'

•

~

.···

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•..1

PLAYGROUND IMPROVEMENT - Meigs High School welding students installed a
"monkey bar" Monday on the Pomeroy Elementary School playground. The bar is one of
several pieces of equipment made by the welding students for the playground. Teeter totters
were put In place last month, six new swings were hung last week, six more will go up later this
month, and a "giant stride," also built by the welding students, is ready for installation. The
playgroiUid improvement project is sponsored by the Pomeroy PTA .

Is County.Development
The Meigs County Teachers
Assn. spring meeting will be
held Tuesday evening, April25,
at 6 p.m. at the southern High
School in Racine, Mrs. Daisy
Blake s lee , association
president, said teday.
A special program is being
arranged on the theme, "Meigs
County 's Present and Future,"
she said.
A panel will present various
aspecl.s of development. John
Reece, coordinator of public
relations for the Ohio Power.
Co., will present the Gavin
Power Project including the
Meigs Mine, the belt line and
the General James M. Gavin
Plant story. .
Pat Meeker of Surveys
Unlimi~ , the consult.ant of
the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission, will
present the proposals in the
Meigs County comprehensive
plan in connection with
housing , transportation,
edueation, recreation

development, industrial
development and land use.
Charles Knotts, district
supervisor, cooperative extension service, will review
agricultural development in
Meigs CoiUily.
Moderator for the panel will
he c. E. Blakeslee, county
'

extension agent.
Teachers' reservations for
the evening session must be in
by Friday, April 14, to the
building representatives of the
association . Retired teachers
in teres~ in attending may
call 992-2304 after 4 p.m. by
Friday of this week.

ildli.£.te p ack ets H ere

w··

Wildlife packets have been
distributed through the Meigs
Soil.and Water Conservation
office to the following persons :
Harold Abbott, Robert Bailey,
Dale Barr, Ronald Beegle,
Michael Burke , James
Criswell, Mrs. Hartwell Curd,
Mrs . Asa Custer , Lorenzo
Davis, Ben Feallock, Homer
Goodwin, James A. Heaton,
Abe Grueser, Frank Herald,
Fred Hill, Asa Hoskins, Ralph
Johnson; Brady Knolls, Dale
McGraw, Meigs Senior High
School, Mrs. Roger Morgan,

Bruce Morris, Carl Nottingha111,, David Barry, Albert
Peterson, S. G. Pickens,
Walden Roberts, ., Glenna
Sanders, William D. Scott,
Earl Schultz, Elmo Smith,
Steve Sl.afford, James Suttle,
William Thomas, Joseph
Thoren, Jr., Martha Vennari,
John Wells and Robert Young.
This seedling program is
designe&lt;l to meet a specific
need for · small quantities of
trees and shruba in developing
land to attract wildlife and for
erosion control.

(Continued from page I)
next to the park so that
children playing In the · park
won't dash from behind psrked
cars Into the paths of oncoming
vehicles, officials said. Chase
Vias authorized to place a
parking meter near the Erwin
Gulf St.ation on North Second
Ave .
Councilman Vaughan
suggested thai regulations be
put into . effect prohibiting
lefthand turns at the traffic
lighl.s on North Second Ave.
The lefthand turns are creating
bottlenecks in the flow of
traffic,
Vaughan
said.
However, no aclion was l.aken.
Mr. and Mrs. James Brewer
complained to council about
water service on Vine St. They
indicated that they would like
to place two trailer homes near
their property but cannot do so
with the present service.
Mayor Zerkle called a
meeting between the planning
commission and the board of
public affairs for 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday to discuss a
possible solution with the
Brewers.
Charles Williams asked that
no parking be permit~ near
the Ash St. side of his property
since the baseball season is
st.arting at the nearby community park. Parking near his
home by parenl.s and fans
handicaps access to his
property in a business enterprise and also closes off
access to a nearby trailer.
Mayor Zerkle referred the
matter to the safety committee, Ohlinger, Walters and
Mrs. Morgan .
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
reported that public employes
retirement regulations as of
January, 1973 provide that the
village must pay 9.8 pet. and
the employes must pay 8.5 pet.
of their salaries into the fund .
The present rate for employes
is now 7.7 pet.
'
It was repor~ that land

The Ironton Tigers held their
Annual Invitational Track
Meet Saturday night with nine
teams enteriDg in competition.
Ironton's Fighting Tigers held
off ·Adena aad Ashland to
capture Hnl place In the Invitational. Ilonton scored 58%
points to second place Adena's
54%. The Asblmd · Tomcats
claimed lbird place with S3
points.
Other scoring In the IavitaUonal meet were as
llnlahlng, Jackson and Russell
Ued for fourth place with 19
points each; Portsmouth East ·
15%; Gallipolis 9; Poi-tamoutb
West 7%; aud Meigs with 4.
Keith Vanlnwageo of Meigs

SHIRt
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVItE

Robinson's Qeaneis
· 216

·e. 2nd, Pomero~

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downlawn Pomeroy at . 11 a.m,
Tuesday was~ degrees, under
cloudy sk;.es.

protection .
- Establishment of mandatQrY pre-service training at the
department' training academy
for all new probation ana correction officers.
- Implementation of educa- Development of guide,lines lion and work furloughs as apaimed specifically at easing proved by the legislature .
ra cial tensions among staff anJ
inmates.
- Establishment of uniform
--Stepped-up efforl.s'to identi- 'rules and regulations and penfy sex ually vulnerable inmates allies for infractions at all inand provide them with greater stitutions.

•

POMEROY·MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

Interest~

Meig~·Mason

Weather

,

Chance of
thiUidershowers over the ••
tonight and Thursday. ~
tonight in the 40s north ~
central and In the SIB soUit
High Thursday in lhe lower 111
north to the lower IIIli soutb.

Area

.WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1972

}.showers ·)·-·
I

TEN

PHONE 992·2156

WASHINGTON (UPI)Richard G. Kleindienst's attorney general nomination ran
into serious new trouble today
that threatened to spark a
constitutional fight between
the White HOUBe and Congress.
Sen. Sam J . Ervin, 0-N.C.,
revealed that he would fight
the nomination both In the
Judiciary Committee and on

the Senate floor IUIW key aides procured the services of an u t I e r a n c e s
dur i ng
of President Nixon are per- outside financial consultant, congressional debat.S did not
milled to appear before the Richard Ramsden, who wrote extend to conversations becommittee.
a report that led the Justice tween a senator and his aides.
White House spokesman Ro- Department to drop a billion The Department of Justice
IIBld Ziegler announced that dollar antitrust suit against made that claim in prosecuUng
Nixon had invoked executive International Telephone &amp; a case against an aide to Sen.
privilege to prevent his aides Telegraph (ITT).
• Mike Gravel, D-Aiaska, who
Peter Flanigan and Willlam E.
. ..
released the secret Pentagon
Timmons ~oin testifying. - Thrunons has been Identified Papers.
It was Flanigan who as the White House aide who
Ervin said the admade inquiries about how ministration was showing
much money m would con- "poor grace" now in Invoking
X.± .!_Ulbtbb.O.U:.J.h:U:M
~
p
;;(;.;, , ""'~.
tribute to the Republican executive privilege lor While
National Convention and House aides . "It's a double
whether any of that money standard--&lt;Jne
for
the
would go to Nixon's reelection executive branch and another
By United Press Iotemallonal
campaign.
for Congress .
COLUMBUS- STATE HIGHWAY DIRECI'OR J. Philllp
"I'm going to recommend
Tuesday, Henry Petersen,
Richley said Tuesday some Interstate highways in Ohio have
that the committee take · no assistant attorney general in
become a ''freight corridor" and may result in separate high- action on the Kleindienst charge of the criminal division,
ways being designed for trucks and cars.
nomlnlltion until White House testified that a West Coast U.S.
Richley ordered special studies on how to deal with in- aides, who have had contact · district atlorney's conduct was
creased truck traffic "which has overflowed the Interstate with ITT and who have com- "highly improper" during insystem beyond the wildest expectations of designers." Separate municaled with McLaren, vestigation of possible illegal
highways will be studied. "Some of our Interstate highways have appear to testify," Ervin said. campaign contributions to
become freight corridor which require serious thinking about He referred· to Richard W. President Nixon's 1968 election
wbere we wW be In a few years," he said.
McLaren, fonner head of the campaign.
About a year ago, he said, studies showed about a third of the antitrust division in the Justice
But he said the decision by
vehiclee on 1-71 were truCks and traffic Is even heavier on I~ he- Department, who changed his Kleindienst to clear him of any
tween Akron and YoiUigstown where 13 pet. of the vehicles are mind about suing ITT and ''wrongdoing" was justified in
settled out' of court after order to maintain public
trucka.
confidence in law enforcement.
Rlchll)' Mid Olto II COI!Iiderinc ~•I.Jlui the coal of feee for Ranl&amp;lien's report.
Ervin
il1so·
sild
the
adminisCharges that lhe attorney,
cmrslze llhd ova 'weisht trucka. 'lbt slate curm~Uy charges a $2
fee, compared with SIO in Pennlylvanla and S15 In lndlana. "I !ration was claiming in a Harry Steward, ordered
think Ohio should have a fee that would compensate the stale for Supreme: Court lrief that the federal investigators to lay off
constitutional right of a senator the contributors first were pubthe uoe of'its roads," Richley said.
not to have lo answer for his lished by Lile magazine .
ST. LOUIS, MO. -A TORNADO RAGED 111ROUGH the St.
Louil Brell Tuesday afternoon, causing one death, several injuries and considerable property damage. Cheril Van Meb!r, 17,
d. subUrban Florissant, was killed by fiylng glass. Christian
Northwest Hospital said 17 persons were treated for Injuries.
No property damage estimate was available. The tornado
hopped across Florissant and the FlaminA•J Park and Paddock
Meadows subdivisions. Roofing was di.:"1a~··,d and trees and rows
The
Meigs
County through the commissioners.
of uWlty poles were toppled.
Ministerial Assn. has endorsed Passage of the two-tenths of
the community ment.al health one mill levy would qualify
COLUMBUS - U. S. ATTORNEY WILUAM MILIJGAN
and ment.al retardation levy Meigs County, not only for
said Tuesday Colwnbus has been included in the list of cities
which will be voted upon in the slate flUids, but also federal
compiled by the federal government that wW be targets for an all May 2 primaries. ·
funds to carry out the mental
out war on drug pushers.
The two tenths of one mill health program.
Millgan said CleVeland and ClnclnnaU were named earlier levy will make available to the
The ·- Meigs
County
but Colwnbus was added ''within the last two weeks" by Miles citizens of Meigs CoiUity lull Ministerial Assn. today issued
Ambrose, director of the federal office d. Drug Abuse Law En- time mental health services. a statement urging all persolUI
forcement.
At present, a one-day-a-week lo vote for passage In the levy
mental health clinic is staffed on May 2in view of the benefits
PARIB - TilE FRENCH GOVERNMENT ASKED the by a clinical psychologist at to be derived from the levy.
United Slates and South VIetnam today to return to the Veterans Memorial Hospital in m::::~'"i'm.'Sx~w;-;::-:..~f«:*::::~
suspended Paris talks Clll Vietnam. The French appeal came Pomeroy. H the levy should
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
shorUy after lhe North Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegatlom, fail, this service could not
Ohio Extended Oullook for the second. consecutive week, isked that the talks be continue after JIUie 30.
Friday through Sunday:
The community mental
resumed.
A chance of showers
The United States suspended the talks indefinitely on March health and mental retardation Friday, partly cloudy
board which services Ga!!la,
23 on grounds the Communisis were ualng them solely for
Saturday and fair Suaday.
propaganda purpoees and refused to negotiate any of the l!sues Jackson and Meigs CoiUIUes Is Warm
Friday,
then
Involved. Since then the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong presently financed by the becoming colder. Daytime
delegauoris have lsaued almost daily stalementa condemning the county commissioners of the highs In the 60s to mid 70s on
·
Nixon admlniatration for refulll) to negollate an4·demanding an three coiUities.
Friday, dropping to mid 40s
The state is matching $3 to to mid 50s on Sunday.
end to the U. S. )lomb attacks on North Vietnam.
every Sl raised in local funds
Overnight lows In the 40s to
COLUMBUS- PENN CENTRAL RAILROAD was ordered which are now available lower 58s early Friday, fo the
to appear I:!efore an Informal hearing of the Public UWlties
mid 30s to lower 40s Friday
night and by Saturday night
Col11111iasion of Ohio today to explain an oil apill here that city
coo11D1 to the mid 20s to
officials say may ''cause a horrible taste and odor In the water
lower
30s, except for the mid
IIUPPly."
3011
ellreme
south.
Oil slicks were reported Tuesday on a rainoSWollen stream
, e uu
~om.,e"~
that flows through Raymond Memorial Golf Course. Melvin B.
Eight defendants were fined
Dodge, city recreation director, said an estima~ Sf,OOO dll~e
and two others forfel~ bonds
was caused to the loth fairway by the oil.
In the court of Middleport
•
Mayor John Zerkle Tuesday
COLUMBUS - THE FIRST STEP IN Ptm'ING the new nlght.
penitentiary at Lucasville Into operation will COOle Monday when
Fined were George H.
· 35 Jllllrds report lo work. Prisonen will not be tr~erred fu.- Young, 46, Gallipolis, and
over two IIICllltha. Bemett J. Cooper, chief of' the Dlvlaion of Richard T. Van Meter, 51,
Thl[ty-elght positioos are to
Correction; said the 35 guardi were currently wu.-klng at _the Ohio Belleville, w. Va., $100 and be fiiiOj! in this swnmer's Head
costs .and three days In jail, St.art program.
Penitentiary.
Fenlon Taylor, who has been
Lu~ Warden Wilfred WbeaiCIII said he wanted an each on conviction of. driving
while
intoxlca~;
Billy
Joe
named
director of the annual
estimated 110 guards on the job at lhe new prillon'before the first
McDaniel, 33, Middleport, SIO program, has IUIW May 19 to
d. the convicts start moving ln.
and coets; Oley Price, 54, complete the staff for the eight
PHU BAI, VIETNAM - ABOUT 50 American soldiers · Middleport, $5 and costs; ·Jan week program which starts
alrUfted 1o a major U. S. bue refilled for an hour and a half Durst, 36, Middiep!Jrt, SIO and June 5 and lasl.s lUI Iii July 281n
costs and Paul L. Dawson, 83, · the. Meigs Local School
today to move out d.lbe bueCIII patrol.
·
The men were members d. !Nth Ught Infantry Brigade and Middleport, S15 and costs, all District.
for lntoxicatioo; Homer Smith,
Needed for the staff are 10
were part of a 40Gmen contingent floWII Tueactay to Pill Bli, lbe 25,
Mld4Jeport, PI and costs, teachers, 10 teacher aides, a
ool'tlllrnmo8t
but In Vlelnam. Tlie baae II 42 milellsouth of ·
lnloxlcation and disturbing the social worker, a social worker
lbe Demilitarlaetl ZGne (DMZ) and ill near the area where major
•peace, and Paul Miller; 18, . aide, one nurae, a speech
llchtq hal been underway since the North Vlelliamele invaalon Middleport, J5 and 'costs, therapist, a secretary, a
licrols lbe DMZ April!,
,
·
·
squeallng Urea.
· bookkeeper, six ·cooks and six

ATTEND SERVICE
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Milner,
Columbus, were in Pomeroy
Saturday to attend the
graveside services at Beech
Grove Cemetery for Carrie
Nye.

•

...

,

11

;;;

ews•• in Briefi .

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
was called lo Rutland at 11:39
p.m. Monday for Mrs. Esther
Hogue who was ill. She was
l.aken to Holler Medical Center
by Marlirl ambulance.
near the lagoon is apparently
being farmed this spring but
that no payment has been
made. The officials agreed that
payment must be made In the
future.
Mrs. Morgan repor~ on a
study made on insurance
coverage on structures owned
by the community. Another
study on Insurance coverage on
equipment will be made when
the building coverage survey Is
comple~, she said.

,il'

"ACT YOUR AGE," a three-act comedy, will be
presen~ by the junior class at Eastern High School, the first
showing being a matinee Friday afternoon for the student
body followed by the public presentation Saturday at 8:08
p.m. Taking part are, front row, 1-r, Vicki Spencer, Sandy
Wood, Debbie Jeffers, and Robin Humphrey; second row,

automatic washer and dryer
• Perfect lor apartments, homes, mobile homes
• 2 speed, 4 cycle washer ~onnects to
most any slnkt faucet
o 3 cycle dryer plugs Into any adequately wired
120-V. household outlett
• Special cool-down care for no-Iron Permanent Presslabrlcs
(!subject to local codes)

Court Takes

Both models feature
easy·roll casters. Dryer
also includes
.. leveling legs lor
use when unit Is
on stack rack.

Eight

Fine~

38 Jobs m·'
Head start

Hang this
versatile dryer
on a wall.
Stack units to conserve floor space I Dryer
fits on sturdy rack while washer can stand on
floor beneath. Merely pull washer forward
tq lilt lid and load. Convenient rack height
allows easy access Into dryer drum.

See The Urge Selection of Washers • Dlyers -. Refrigerators • Ranges •
I

Trashmashers · Dishwashers .· Dehumidifiers.

u.s.

3rd FLOOR, FURNITURE
DEPT.
.
.

.

·ME ROY

'

COWIIBUS -THE CXIIO WATER POI,.LtJTJON Cmtrol .
Board tadiY certlf1ed propolld water pqllutloo CCIIItrol meuuri!s
rw a DDCielr power llation planned· lor. the Oblo River near
Moaeo1r, Cleunllat C.ty,.

'lbevolebylbeltft ........ baudWM~tll.

Feirfelting bonds well Paul
B. Mulford, 53, Hilliard; $3)0
pc~~ted on a driving while lri- ·
tolicated, and Charles MeCloud, 46, Middleport, P,, for
lntoxlcati!JII charge.

custodians..
a.
ThOle wishing to apply may
write to Fentqn . Taylor,
Porperoy Route 4, or to Taylor
in care of Meigs High SchoOl,
Pomeroy Route 3.

,,

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. ....

Perrin Is On

,··•,~

County Board
The Rev . Wilbur (Bill)
Perrin was named to the Meigs
County Mental Retardation
Board by the Meigs County
Commissioners Tuesday to fill
a vacancy created by the
resigns lion of the Rev. Stanley
Platten burg, who has moved ·
away.
, In other business, the
commissioners approved a

·

ONE OF mE ~ IN THE THREE-ACT comedy
1'Act Your Age" lo be presen~ by the junior class at
Eastern High School shows Vicki Sjiencer as a corpse.
Looking on are S~ve Miilhone, Randy Rolf and Robin
Humphrey. Curtains are a Friday afternoon matinee for
students and at 8:08p.m. Saturday for the public.

AT POMEROY
Meigs will pla)"a match .with
Jackson this afternoon at the
Pomeroy Golf Course and
Thursday they will go to New
Lexington for a match with
New I..exinglon and Zanesville.

.

DETROIT (UPI)-Detroit
put out th'e welcome mat today
for a group of Chinese table
tennis players who are
returning a visit by Americans
to the mainland a year ago
which started the thaw in U.S.Chinese relations.
Security was tightened at
Melropolilan Airport prior to
the scheduled 11 :45 anun. EST
arrival of the 28-member
delegation, but the atmosphere
was one .of cordiallty . .
"We welcome you 1o America," read the display on a
billboard on Inierslate M-the
freeway leading from the
airport to the downtown area.
The slogan, written once in
dlinei!O and once In English,
was posted by the National
AdvertiSing Co. · 1o promote
"the lriendUness of the Detroit
area people arid
the
Chinese."
The ·chinese delegation,
which includes 14 of the world's
best table tennis playefl!, Is
· returning a visit by a U.S. team
a year ago which set the stage
for President Nixon's historic
trip to Peking In Felruary. The
Chineae will spend two wee!ls
louring !he United Slatea.
The visitors, who just
linlshed a tour of canada, w!ll
spendthreediysslghtleeing In
Detroit, catching gllmpaea of
everything from auto auembly
lines to. imer city alums,.prl«

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Jo their match with American
players Friday night before a
sellout crowd at Cobo Hall.
A formal dinner was slated
for tonight at· the Manoogian
Mansion, the official residence
of Mayor Roman S. Gribbs.

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•!:.J:i

Marie"-,

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The Chinese were heavily
favored to dispose of their
American counterparts in the,
same fashion in which they
dealt with them a year ago on
their home court.

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''I don't tlm!k they 'II deltl'!t
til," aaid Graham ~
preaident ol the U.S. Tlti!Ji ·
Teools A.88odaUGI and ~ •
man who led the til$. ,
delegation last April, ''but ~
should win...

Western Hijack Foiled
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI)- A
psychiatric examination. was
ordered for a mild-maooered
56-year-()ldaccountant accused
of threatening lo blow up a
jetliner Tuesday IUIIess lhe
U.S. Treasury paid him half a
million dollars.
Major Burton Davenport,
Vancouver, Wash., was held on
$50,000 bell today for allegedly
boarding a Continental Airliner
bound for Seattle and Hawaii
with a botUe he said contained
nitroglycerin.
The IJUIIPI!!:t .was talked lnlo
surrendering to FBI agents
after he re~ ~~e plane's
crew and 83 p8881!111!er&amp;, thus
ending the West Coait's third
extortion-by-airliner attempt
In five days.
,.
U.S. Magistrate George Juba
Tuesday outlined the charge
·against Davenport, a retired
Air Force teclmical sergeant,
as "Interference with commerce by threat or violence."

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project submitted ·by countY
engineer Theodore Beegle lo
repair a landslide on coun~
road 19 a1 a total cost of S3,~.
The commi88ioners
proved a plot lor .the p
Arbaugh Subdivision In OUYII
Township.
Bids for bitumlno118 material
which were ~ will .b!t
studied and awarded at a liter
dale. SubmitUng blda were
Ashland Petroiewn CornpaJIJ,
Ashland, Ky.; D. E. Materilll
Company, Cambridg~;
Byerllte Company,
and Asphalts Materia),;
Marietta.
~
Attending were Cl!arlea i! l
Karr, Bob Clark and Wanlji.
Ours, commissioners, a!i!!
Martha Chambers, clerk. ..•.

Orlnese TT Squad Seeing Detroit .

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Danny Schultz. (in charge of lighting), Debbie Heallln,'i::
prompter; Randy WoHe, Steve :r,lillhone, and Joyce Myen't:.:
(prompter). The play iiiUider the direction d. Mn. Allee (~
Phillips. Absent were Bob Grassnlckle, Melinda Amlbary,';:&gt; ·
Bob Edwards, David Baker, JW Swain, Byron McCoy and -! ·
Rusty Walker.
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Ministers Ask
Levy Approval

.aaarlpool

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Kleindienst in Trouble

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IUiion-managementdifficul~

at the penal instituUons,
department's chief of lallilf
relationshasbeenprovidedQI!il
full time assistant and an~
is to be hired May 1.
.'!: ·
- Inmate nurses in hospi~
~The hiring of more female anddispensarieswill bepha~
employes at male institutions out and replaced with ~
and male employes at female tered nurses as quickly ij
institutions "to improve the possible.
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enttne

Of The

general social atmosphere .".~
,.C·
- To deal with conUn~

- Formation of inmate counells al all insUtutions.
- Expansion of the institutiona! ombudsman program to
include hiring former offenders
as ombudsmen.
- Implementation of a
minor i I y r ecru i t men t
program .

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VOL XXIV NO. 256

...

ELBERFELDS I

parlment of Corrections into divisions of program services,
organization development,
planning and research and
administrative and fi scal
operations.

1

Devoted To The

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inals," he said. "Most of them
wind up right back in prison
- with even less chance of ever
breaking the cycle .
"The members of this Task
Force worked IUiselfishly and
produced ,what 1 believe to be
"We have seen the cost of an historic document," Gilligan
the old way of doing things," said. "We are working as hard
Gilligan said. "Our prisons now. as we can to implemen t the
are little better than academies recommendations of the Taks
Force."
of crime.
The changes include :
iWe take men in as crimin- Reorganization of the Deals and turn them out as crim-

The office of poet laureate, a
salaried position in the British
royal household, began In 1616
with ·the appointment of Ben
Johnson by James I.

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ing today - and those we have
annoiUiced previously - are all
desjgnE!d to help us rehabilitate
inmiltes and thus return them
to society as produciive citizens," said Gilligan.

Now You Know

FEATURING WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES

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"essential If we are to make
any significant reduc~ons ~
the h1gh cost . of crune m
Ohio."
Gilllgan said the reforms
were his administration's re- .
sponse I~ the recommendations
of the Citizens Task Force on
Corrections which was headed
by Cuyahoga CoiUity Common
PleasJudgeBernardFriedman
who was also acheduled to attend the news conference.
"The s~ps we are annOWIC-

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COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ Gov.
John J. Gilligan, who called
Ohio penal institutions "little
·-· better than academies of ·
crime," today annoWJCed a series of reforms which included
reorganization of the ·Departmen t of Correction and plans
lo reduce racial tension and
homosexuality.
In remarks prepared for a
news conference in the yard of
the 138-year-old Ohio Penitent!ary, Gilligan calle~ the reforms

ELBE.RFELDS IN POMEROY

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Member Federal ,bepqtll .IJQIIIIT.IICI! COrpol'ltloo

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In At 9- 0ut At 5

.MIOD_LEPORT. OHIO

Wednesday, April 26, at . Baker:
Center here.
Tickets for the banquet,'
priced at t6 per person, are
available from members of the
board of directors of the Green
and White Club, Ohio
University booster group
which sponsors the event. They
are also available at
Swearingen's SporUng Goods
In Athens.
The group of recipients In·
eludes ihe three coaches who
led their teams to slate high
school basketball championships recenUy - John
Chavers of Cleveland East
Tech (Class AA/t.), Pat Penn of
Colwnbus Bishop Ready (Class
AA) and Charles Huggins of
Indian Valley South at
Gnadenhutten (~lass A). .
Also included will be Dr.
Phillip J. Woodworth, 'Athens
physician and team physician
for Ohio University; Brandon
T. (Tad) Grover Jr., president
of the Athens National Bank;
and Ritter Collett, sports editor
of the Dayton Journal Herald .
Other recipients of honors
will be Bill Barton, head
football coach at Elyria · High
School; Dave Hurst, football
coach at Cincinnati Sycamore
High School; Dick Fryman,
athletic director at Upper
Arlington High School; and
Howard Converse, baseball
coach at Cincinnati Princeton
High School.

:::::;:;:;:;:~~~~~:i~!:::!$~:::~. ,._.;._ _..;;_ _.;;.~--------------..;.---------------.,

(Continued from page I)
targets in South Vietnam but
there was no report they
followed up Monday's strike
into North Vietniun.
Jieavy cloud and rain
blanke~ the northerrunost
Quang
Trl
Province,
preventing allied strafing and . placed third in the pole vault.
bombing strikes. The Saigon ~«':w.'m».::a.%·,,;;-~:um·;.l:l!l:l$
command claimed more
victories In the area, reporting
321 Communists killed Monday
VIOLIN STOLEN
in three battles. It listed South
REDWOOD CITY, Calif.
Vietnamese losses as six dead (UP!) - A 50-year-old carand 71 wounded.
penter says a Stradivarius
Eight u.s. Navy destroyers violin he once traded a shotgun
and- the guided missile cruiser for was stolen from his car
Oklahoma City, nagship of the while he was shopping. Pal
7th Fleet, pounded suspected
Cole told police he obtained the
North Vietnamese troop, tank, instrument from a traveling
artillery and mort.ar positions musician when he was a
Monday In the Southern sector youngster and once had II
of the DMZ and to the south in appraised at $75,000.
Quang Tri province.
The U.S . command said
three of the destroyers were
fired on .by Communist shore
REAGON COMING
batteries but were not hit. The
CLEVELAND (UP! )
six-Inch guns of the Oklahoma
r.a!ifoJnia
Gov. Ronald Reagan
City were credited with
will
be
the
main speaker at a
destroying two tanks in the
DMZ and setting off secondary $150 a plate Republican fund
explosions and fires, lndicaUng , raising dinner here June 14.
The dinner is sponsored by the
fuel or ammunition was hit.
The attack carriers Midway Cuyahoga-Lake Division of the
and eight other Ships were en' O~io Republican Finance
route from the United States to Committee .
an undisclosed destlnaUon today, the
Navy said,
presumal)ly Southeast Asian
SALES UP
waters. Four . U.S. carriers
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) already are .In the war zone.
Libbey-Owens-Ford Co .
repor~ Monday consolida~
sales of $147,160,000 for the
first quarter of 1912, compared
with $140,240,000 during the
same .period a year ago.

.use OUr Free Parking Lot

Prison Reforms Lauttched by Go Verno~

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·w0 men 's Lib Goes Program for Teachers
Forward Monday.

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Lalit 'l'lw*lclvlng Eve, ~
the same airport, a man +,
became lntenlatlolllll ~
as "D. B. Cooper" ~ ;·
Norlbweat Airline• trlj~,
lrandlshed what appeared : ~
be a bomb In a ~.
collected .-o,ooa and
parachutes In Seattle, tlWI
jumped to obllviCIII 8iilibtflbtie ·
~tween there and Rellif, ·
Nevada.
· '•
It was lbe lblr!l
hljacldng since Friday
skyjacker collected
and fll!ll' paracblttea
Francisco and belled aut
the money over I'I'CI¥0.
The ·FBI arreltld
McCoy .t·hla ~
charlad blm with air
BONDT~
On
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Rodney Ray Sayre,, 22; Speck, • llln
Evallllvllle, Ind., feirfeited a $50 mivtl' lllld .,...,.,.
bond Saturday night when he · ..... 1118418 . .
failed to appear on a reslating
arrest charge In the court of allecediJ
bllbe •'*'""'*d
Racine Mayor Charlea Pyles. 'Padflc
Sllaltw.t

He set bail, named a courtappointed attorney and a
psychiatrist for the case.
Continental's regional direclor Barrie Duggan and FBI
agent VIAcent Reahl ·nnany
persll8ded the suspect to allow
the 83 olher Jl!lssellgers to
. deplane, then the crew, They
they persuaded IUm to give up
the botUe.
"He didn't want -anything
from Continental,' ' Duggan
said. "His demand was more
against the U.S. TreaSW')'. He
felt he had a grievance against
the government, but. never
explained what II wu."

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1 - 'nil! lllllly ,Sfntll\ei,Mld!leport-Pomeroy, 0., APrUIZ, 19'12

Helen·' Help

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~eo~~

By Helen Bonel

NEW YORK (KFS) -Marlon Branclo 's 6

DOUBlE SfANDARD : DOUBLE-CROSS
Dear Helen :
I'm ii5 and my reading material these days lsn 't exactly
"Pilgrim's Progress." My reading, in lact,leavesthe impression
that a married man who travela iB entitled to a "fling," just so
long 88 sbe'sa plck~or a paid-for,and he cares nothing for her.
In my book, this 18 adultery, whether there's emotloll!llinvolvement or not, and his wile has every right to throw him out.
Ript or wrong? - NOT SURE
Dear Not :
Ript: If the wHe wants an excuse to dump her travelling
.man. Sadly enough, many women these days go along With this ·
hu.sband's version : "My wHe Ia a married woman all the time
'(sez he) and she'd better not forget it. But I'M a married man
only when I'm not on the road." - H. .
Dear Helen:
You asked If anyone had ever won a sweepstakes prize by
checking the ''No, I don 'I want the product" square and sending
in his entry.
· Please tell "Still Waiting for My Price" that I'm still waiting,
too, for more years than !want to remember. Often companies
ask you to check on the outside of the envelope whether you're a
purchaser or just a hoper.
To find out whether the ''No" envelopes were ever opened or
just lllllllllllll'Uy dumped, I checked the "No" box - then enclosed In my envelope a stamped, self-addressed card on which I
had written "Entry received." An accompanying note asked that
tile card be mslled at once. 'lbat was back In AprU, 1971, and I'm
IIIII walling l()f' Its arrival.
'
Maybe thll.doean 'I prove anything, but It comes close. - IN
THE· SAME BOAT
Dear Helen :
We had been entering these sweepstakes contests for years,
just as ha_d "Still Waiting lor My Prize." 1 never believed they'd
:~. pay off but couldn't resist.
Then, In January of 1971, my husband won $87,000 from a
magazine subscription houae - and that was the year we didn't
buy magazines!
' We learned later that only one major winner in this par·
Ucular contest had checked tile "Yes" box. All the others hadn't
taken out any suboaipUons, though In our case, )l'e had been
customers 'In prevloull years.
We took a mllllon-to-one chance - and won! It can happen!
-GRAND PRIZE WINNER
Dear P.W.:
Congratulations! But ...
I wish you hadn't told me that! From now on, I'll worry every
time "I throw away a sales pitch sweepstakes offer! - H,
Dear Helen:
Watching the Winter Olympics, we noted the many Japanese
wearing masks over mouth and nose, these not so much to
protect agalnat the cold but from olher people's colda.
How about a nationwide campaign for the use of gauze
llliBkl on public transportation during the cold and flu season?
Each year we face near-epldemiCll, Returning from work on the
subway, I reel like nmnlng for cover when everyone aroiD!d m
coughing and sneezing.
Does anyone agree that face masks might help keep g
from spreading? - E.B.
• Dear 1!1.:
,
YO)U' Idea has merit, bllf somehow [ doubt that protective
face llliBkl will ever make II big In the United States, unless:· !.
We have another flu epidemic of WW-1 proportions or 2. A sinart
laihlon designer Incorporates a mohth and nose covering In a
new lltyle. Wby not work on the lasf suggestion and mebbe make
your fortune whUe stsying healthier1 - H.

,

OBGANJZED C1UME

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pet. of "'lbe Godfather" already has earned him
lllOt'e than a million. Olartie Chaplin lWIChed In
"21" with several jet-lawnera. Comi&lt;;s George

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Jeael and Jack GUford invaded the b4g table to
Ioree chatter on the old gent, and he replied
politely, When they left he turned an&lt;tasked,
"Wbo they!" ... Brllllanl hoofer Bobby Van
leaves ''No, No, Nanette" aftl!r Its first 15
monlhafor.bigher lees elsewhere. Tony Teague
Is on tsp ... Seldom-photoed Garbo Inspired ~ix
pi~tUres ftont,paged In Women's Wear oSily, In
none of wblch ber fabulous face could be aeen - .
hiding behind her Kleenex .
,~ Lindsay's cbarlsma Is at its wispiest
here: he evea waa booed loudly arriving at GU .
Hodges' funeral ... fllnciJng BI'Oil. Circus
already OWIII the famed old 20th Century
Umlted (bought from the N. Y. Central few
years t.u:k); the BlgTop'sbuUding a whole new
train itaelf a~ Its Fla. training quarters for Ohe of
its two troupes.
Caterina Valente at the Americana's Royal
BoxbasonewUd "Problem": she's too versaUie
... Jazz clarinetist Sol Yaged Is among the best
pied pipers around, at Jimmy Weston's very-In
spot ... Later nights when Sol repairs to P. J ,
Oarke's, he hauls It out again, dimes the
jukebox for several jazzpleces be digs - and
heC01111!S an IDlpaid piper. The late-late set love
it almost as much as Sol ... Another non-live
music spot Is Raffles, 'llhere a septet of nk.elooking lads from London, ''The Philanderera,"
collldn't stand the canned music grabbed their
Instruments (guitars bass banjos flute)
domed their bowlers 'and er:chanted lhe stsid
rich rowd
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Looal Bowliug

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A thought for today: American writer George Curtis said,
" Imagination is as good as
many voyages, and how much

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Wednesday Afternoon
league
April5, 1971
Standings
Team
W. L.
W~.~~~r 's As~land
&lt;16 18
Ridenour's T.V.
40 24
Team No.4
34 30

'(

BY JACK O'BRIAN
111ERE'S. MONEY IN

GII'YANO

Us.

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ill

r Voice along Br'Way

"Didn't You Ever Hear of the Pill?"

t .

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db$

--------------------------

I Washington
1

Food ChainsDeny
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Meat Pro fit eel'lDg . -. . ...---..;;:-;====
A l aydOwn

Report

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stapled Into such other pubs as True, Newsweek, Sport , and U. S. News ... Racetrack
wil)ners are hlp to ·neutrsllzlng their taxable
profil,l by saving their losing mutuel ducats.
Naturally they wouldn 'I Just, ~ather losers off
the ground. Doubtless ... New York mag cofounder George Hirsch Is doing a Norman
Cousins. Launching his own, J. Bteslin expects
to be In the contrib&lt;!dJtor list,
·
Pulitzer winner James Michener's Chinasigh : "Saddest thing I "have seen In Peking Is the
deterioration o~ Peking University. It Is now a
moderately good high school." .. .' When Nixon
.sigllt..saw the ' Mtng tombs outside Peking,
scores of seeming holiday strollers dawdled
about listening to transistor radios. Newshawb who dallied after Nixon left saw Chinese
functionaries go round collecting the radios ...
Andree Juliette Brun Is a concert pianist -and
a gourmet cook; so she'll give a Carnegie Hall
concert AprU 21 - followed lmmediately by a
cookout at the Promenade C"{e in Rockefeller

.''
BY KEITH WISECUP
ATHENS - The Meigs
Marauder baseball squad
rolled up their second victory
In as many starts in their
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League opener here TueSday

Jeeps, ·Kc Tilt Ends
Coach James Ross' South
Webster Jeeps rallied from a 60 deficit Tu~sday to tie the
Kyger Creek Bobcats 8-.!1 in a
non·league baseball game
called at the end of resulation
play due to darkness.
Rick Bowman's home run
knotted the score in the bottom
of the sixth Inning ,
Coach Dick Adams' Bobcats
moved into a Z-0 lead in the top
of the first inning on Marshall
French 's leadoff single, a walk
and catcher Danny Hill's
booming triple to leftfield.
The Gallians added four
more runs in the second inning
sending starter Jim Taulbee to
the sidelines. Sophomore third'"
sacker, Clay Hudson, started
the rally by reaching on a walk.
Shortstop John Baird also
walked, starting pitcher,
Richard Mollohan singled to
right scoring Hudson and
French followed with a triple to
left. He scored on a perfect
suicide squeeze bWlt by second
baseman John Roush.
The Jeeps broke the scoring
ice In the second on a walk, two
balks and doubles by Rick
Faulkner and Tim Taulbee . KC
came back with a single tally in

Plaza.
Joe Namath will he on the Oscar show. Not
lor acting ... Oscar favorite Gene Hackman had
knee surgery ... Billy DeWolfe's glee at Gobbler's Knob was generated by the news .he'll
have a star part in next season's "Irene." It's to
he produced by Harry Rigby, whose notion it

was to resuscitate ''No, No, Nanette'' ; and was
nudged out of that goldmlne for an ultimately
Settled $200,000.
"No, No" is long ago In the cash-black ...
David Merrick's "Sugar" will jlave to run 30
weeks of absolutely packed houses before it gets
back its announced $750,000 cost. It may reach
closer to a million - which means 43 weeks of
~llout audiences to break even.
Some Manhattan newsstand&amp; are scalping
$3 for Cosmo's nude of Burt Centerfold Reynold&amp;
... No · new scripts; MGM 's redoing "The
Postman Always Rings Twice" ... Anthony
~Inn blithely IWlched In the Essex House
window on Central Park South while a crowd
gawked every munch ... Jack La Rue's film
comebacklng. In "A Voice in the Night."

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Too Many Prunes
Aren't a P'roblem

:c~*~

Raveling
Is Wasting

No Time ·

.J$

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man Joe Stidham in the third.
Mike
Johnson, . 'senior
righthander, relieved Stidham
with one out in the. fourth.
Taulbee started on the hill for
the Jeeps but was relieved by
Laymore in the second. Hanes,
generally a ca tcher, came on in
the third and pitched fine ball
the rest of the way .
Kyger Creek will host
Hannan Trace Thursday night
in an SV AC contest. The
Bobcats will play Alexander
Friday night and Wellston on
Saturday .
By Innings:
error.
Both teams threatened in the Kyger Creek 241 010 0--8 9 3
seventh but failed to score. South Webster 021 401 0--8 9 2
With two outs, Hill again
walked but was thrown out at
the plate after McCarty
doubled to right South Webster's Faulkner reached third
with two outs in the bottom of
the seventh but was cutdown at
the plate on a bunt attempt.
French and McCarty paced
the Bobcat hitting attack with
two hits each. Bowman and
Claxton had two hits each for
South Webster. Both coaches
used three pitchers.
Mollohan started for the
Bobcats but yielded to Freshthe third frame as Greg McCarty singled and scored on a
double to center by Baird.
South Webster scored its
third rWl "in the third on hits by
Bowman, Phil Claxton and
Gary Hanes.
The Jeeps tied' it for the first
time In 'the fourth inning. Two
walks, two Bobcat errors and
hits by Claxton and Brian
Phipps did the· damage.
The Bobcats broke the tie In
their half of the fifth as Hill
walked, stole second and
trotted · home on a throwing

RACINE - The Southern
Tornadoes knocked off undefeated Eastern here Tuesday
night with a 9-7 win to take over
first place in the Southern
Valley Conference on a 2-11
record.
Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tornndoes, now 2-1 on the season,
took advantage of five Eastern
errors and a flood of wild
pitches anq passed balls by the
Eagles for their nine runs.
Coach Larry Heines' Eagles
dropped to 2-1 both overall and
in the SVAC.
Seven rWls, coming home in
the third inning for the Tornadoes was the differen ce.

error to toad the bases. This
was when sophomore Robbie
Eason decided to boom the ball
hig h and deep into right for a
triple to drive in three
runs, making it six in the
frame. Dailey came on for the
Bulldogs to fan Ash and stop
the sla ughter, temporarily.
Athens came back with two
runs in their home-half of the
fir st on two singles, two stolen
bases, and two walks. They
added another in the second on

a single and a walk .

, Meigs started its five-run
outburst in· the third · when
Phalin, leading off, was' hit by
the pitcher. Arter Cooke forced
Phalin , McKinney walked . Ash
also walked following Eason's
strikeout . Burney, however,
un loaded a line double to left to
drive in three runs . Dixon and
Dunfee hit back to back singles
to drive in two more runs. By
now, the damage had been
done as Meigs led 11-3!
Totali~g the Meigs' hits fi nds
Burney leading with a single
and double, Ash and Dunfee,
each two singles, Eason, a
triple , and Cooke and Wigal,
each a single .
Kiser and Bruce Hart, each a
Getting hits for Athens were
single.
Steve Inbody, Mike Green,
Senior second baseman Rick Mark Mace, Steve Deal, Dick
Sanders smacked two of the Baker, and Jim Swearingen,
Eagles' three hits, both singles, each a single,
and Eichinger banged a single,
Meigs is now 2-11 overall and
Souther plays · the North l-0 in league ac tion while
Gallia Pirates at North Gallia Athens is 0-3on the year and 11-2
Thursday night while the in league play. The Marauder
Eagles face non-league op- play at Middleport Thursday
po nent Glouster at home ni ght against the Gallipolis
Thursday.
Blue Devils. The Meigs
reserves play the Southwestern
By innings :
varsity at Middleport tonight
Eastern
000 140 2-7 3 5 Meigs
605 000 0--11 10 I
Southern
107 001 x- 9 9 3 Athens
210 200 1- 6 8 4
Eichinger, (LP), Boring (3), " Wigal, {WP ), Young, (5),
an d Young. Nease, (WP ), and Dixon . Wood, ( LP ),
Hubbard, (6), and Jenkins.
Dailey, (!)and Baker.

on Top in SVAC

Southern, which also got a
run in the first, jumped on
Eastern starter Dennis
Eichinger for three singles,
three walks, and two errors.
The inning saw Steve Jenkins
lead off with a single. Pat
Arnold walked, Rodney
Holman got on by an error and
Stan Kiser followed with a
walk. After Mike Nease got on
by an error, Brett and Bruce
Hart each singled.
Nease started on the hill for
the Tornadoes and got credit
for tlle win , hurlin g the first
five innings and allowing five
runs. The junior righty struck
out six, walked three, and hit

two batters. Jim Hubbard
ca me on in the sixth to
preserv e the win although he
was touched for two runs in his
two innings. He struck out five
and walked four.
· Eichinger was charged with
the loss although the big
righthander gave way to junior
Randy Boring in the third who
finished the game. Eichinger
fanned two and walked five
while Boring struck out three
and issued two free passes.
Hitters for the Tornadoes
were Hubbard, Jenkins, and
Brett Hart, each with two
singles, Jeff Hubbard, a double
and two runs batted in, and

LOOK BETTER ••• FEEL BETTER

SEO Standings
TEAM
Gallipolis
Ironton
Meigs
Logan
Wellston
Waverly
Al~ en s

W
2
1
1
1
1

l R OR
o 21 11
lJ 6 o

o

11

1 12
I
3
I I 12
0 2 17
0 2 7

6

Gillette

7
8
17
24
16

Jackson
TOTALS
7 7 89 89
Tuesday's Results:
Gatllpoll&gt; 8 Jackson 0
Logan 10 Waverly 4
Meigs 11 Athens 6
Ironton 6 Wellston 0
Thursday's Game :
G.atlipot ls at Meigs '(makeup)
Frrday's Games:
Gallipolis at Ironton

Right Guard
Dec&gt;dOiran1 for the whole family
II

a. . ·..

'~··

Eagles Finish
Third in Meet
At He
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R Vl «e

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. $1.09 value

Meigs at Logan
Jackson at Wellston

SPOKANE, Wash. (UP!)· .Washington State University's
new head -basketball coach,
NELSONVILLE - The
Geocge Ravell!!g, wasted little
time his Drat day on the job: He Eastern Eagle track team,
personally contacted 40 lacking depth to compete in all
prospective Cougar basketball events, garnered 24 points in
players and set meetings with placing third here Monday
nigh~ won by Nelsonville-York
"several lop pi'Oilpects."
with
97~ points. Alexander
RaveHng, 33, is the first
black head basketball coach In finished second with 84, and
the Paclflc-8 cooference, and Glouster was last with 6~.
Individual leader of Coach
he comes to WSU from
Roger
Kirkhart's Eagles was
Maryland, where he was chief
Steve
Kirkman
with a third
recruiter for the National
Invitational Tournament place ill the low hurdles, fourth
ln,\he high jump, fourth In the
champions.
Raveling, 33, a former All· IOOyard dash, and fourth in the
America player at Villanova high hW'dles. Bryon McCoy
University, succeeds Bob had a third finish in the mile
Greenwood who resigned ear- run and Steve Grosnick and
lier this year after just one Randy Reed finished second
and third respectively in the
aeason at the Cougar helm.
"This Is probably the two m}!e run,
greatest challenge in my , The·tagles will run against
career as a basketball coach," . the Meigs Marauders and the
Raveling said Tuesday. "But '. Southern Local Tornadoes
beinll ezposed to challenge Is ' !onlght at Meigs.
nothing new to me."
:
"I have no Illusions of
g1'8ndeW', this II going to be an
THISTLE RESULTS
awfuldlfflcultasalgnment,"he
CLEVELAND (UPI)
said. "I'll just have to get up a , Stone Kay took the featured
earlier and go to bed a · eighth race at Thistledown
Utile later, but I can get the job Raceway Tuesday with Lariat
done as WSU."
finishing second and Miss
Ravelln8 ll8kl he has three 'lbym Bomb third. .
long range. goall for WSU'a
The winner, ridden by Allen
baaketball program-to Young, paid •12.60, $8.40 .and
II'OCIUce · a team that iB an- $4.20.
nuaDy conaidered for post.
The 2-7_dally double com, le8101l tournamerilll; me that blnatlon of Bull Skin Lady In
Is nationally ranked; and the first race and Ruben James
·flnaDy, one that Is ultlmately In the second paid $97.40. The
self-utalnlng.
largest payoff of the day waa
To do this, Raveling en- $307 .5(! for the 2-9 ninth race
'visions a bottom-to-top perle eta combination of ·
~ )lt&lt;llram which will Cynthia's King and Bug Bite.
"depend oo a strq1g fresbman
SfARS REVEAL
l'IICI'IIilll18 Protll'BID·.
CHOICES
SALT !AKE crrv (UP!) :The Utah SlarJ revealed
Tueaday their. four colle8e ·
CLAssiC SCHEDULE
.selections made March 2
MILWAUKEE (UP!) -Wis- ~ . lbe IICI'el AmericaD
OOIIIID wW play Yale and Bultetball AIIOCiatlon draft. '
..-.auettewWmeetJUcenat
'lbe cholcelll. the Stars were
December Ill lbe opening Cll'ls Ford, ·I U pard fnm
11111111 of the Milwaukee VIllanova; '!'ravia Grant, &amp;-a
ilutelbell Clalllc.
. forward from Kentucty. Stille;
'lbe tDII'IIIIIMIIt field lila Qlucll Jura, 1-10 center fnm
IDciDdel Soathern Melllodllt Nlllr h ud Bab Nash, &amp;-a
and Al'tlon8fa&amp;wanl from Hawaii.

-utue

1::--•

.

.

struck out five and walked senior ci tizen Don Wolfe and
his one lime sta r infielder at
·rour . ·
Young came on in the fifth . Ra cine, Roger Birch, opened
and did a great job, giving up a the first with Rick Ash )ooping
run on one hit. He fanned two, a single to left. Floyd Burney
grow1ded out for the first out
walked one, and hit one.
Wood , who retired only two but catcher Roger Dixon was
batters, fanned one and walked safe on a fielder's choice. Steve
one while allowing .six runs on Dunfee and Wigal then
four hits. Dailey, in his six pniduced back to back singles.
After senior Robin Phalin
inningS of work, allowed fi \l t
went,
down swin ging, Tom
runs on six hits, whi!fed five,
Cooke
walked, and Lou
walked five, and hit a batter .
-The Marauders, coached by McKinney then was safe on an

Tornadoes Out

Waverly vs. Athens

•s

J

~

LEVY SUPPORTED
The Eastern Athletic
Boosten went on record In
support of lbe operalillg levy
which will be on the May
election ballot. The Eastern
booslera are drawing up
Oyen to explalu the levy and
provide information to all
illteresled people. Tliey also
'urge ·all r'otber " albletlc
boosters and Interested
parenll ID do the same.
:0..
L®.@.•...U.:t.H !.!. bb.d.J. bA;;;

Almanac

...

complete their scoring .
Athens "Scored . two . in the
first , one in the second, two In
the fourth, .all off Meigs'
starter Chester Wigal, and
added a rWl in the seventh off
reliever Ed Young.
The senior righthander
Wigal, out of baseball his
junior year, hurled the first
four innings, allowing five runs
and seven hits. Wigal plainly
had control problems and was
without his usual "stuff." He

In 8-8 Tie Tuesday

Seven-AImost

HOSPITAL
NEWS

afternoon 1 outslugging tjle .came in to put out the fire and
complete the game.
Athens Bulldogs to win li-S.
'l'he surprisidg Marauders
pounded the big Bulldog
The Marauders, however,
starter Don Wood for six runs weren 'I much kinder to Mr.
in the first inning on four hits Dailey. They rapped hinn for
before reliever Larry Dailey five more runs in the third to

•

'"'

.A

•

Marauders .C9ntinue Hot, ,D efeat Athens, 11-6

.

Wednesday Mixed
Sm II~ &amp; Rous~
77 27
Shamrocks
73 31
Try Hards
62 42
"
c .
H&amp;H
54 50 h
Nixon knocied Woody Allen off the News·
Pin Spoilers
&lt;16 56 c eaper.
Atley Gators
48 56
week cover, but It's skedded again. Rodney
Son-0-Guns
32 72
Dangerfield's car stalled, and the man behind
Woolies
22 82
In 1961 Russia laWlched Into got out and wanted to fight. Rodney told him,
Baum 's Lumber
33 31
Team 3 Games - Try Hards
Gaul's Shake Haven
24 40 1861 , Smith &amp; Rous~ IBiS.
space the first human to orbit "Don't hit me, hit the
Team No.1
ll 49
Team Game - Smilh &amp; the earth and return safely.
High Individual Game
New mag "Family Leisure" will come
Roush 655, Try Hards 644.
Barbara Murray 167. -···
Ind. 3 Games - (Men) C.
Second High Ind. Game - Yeager llS. F. Reichart 544 ;
Betty Frederick 145,
(Women) D. Harbour 480. M. 1
I
Hlg~ Series Barbara Rous~ 469.
Murray 412.
Ind. Game - (Men) C.
Second High Series - Dorthy Yeager 222. J . Smith 214:
Karr 396.
(Women) S. Douglas 183. D.
Team High Game - Baom's Harbour 176.
I
I
lumber 276.
I
I
Team High Series - Team
Tuesday Women
No. 4 757.
Hair Harbour
71 32
By clarence
Harts Used Cars
70 34
Mason Fo"rnllure
68 36 I
Miller
I
American Legion
I
Roush Construction
66 38 I
ladies Auxiliary league
M&amp;R Foodliner
62 42
April7, 1972
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Tom Rue Motors
58 &lt;16
Slandlngs
President Nixon has sent to the President cslled for action
Dear Dr. Lamb - Ha ve
Team
20 84 the co"gress
Pis. Ingels Furniture
lengthy
on
his
programs
for
the
elderly
Dear
Dr.
Lamb
How
you
ever heard of fibrou s
8
Jr. Bugaloos
Team 3 Games - M&amp;R
411
message
setting
forth
which
were
submitted
last
many
prunes
a
day
are
too
anemia
(dry bones) ? .. If so
Headquarter Barma ids
38 Foodliner 1854. Harts Used
Cars
1801.
many?
I
eat
five
or
six
evcan
you
tell me the cause
Goble Marauders
initiatives that the Ad- year. His legislative proposals
36
uckeyes
Team Game - Harts Used ministration has taken - or relating to pension plans In- ery evening and need no and cure?
34
eeney Bennett Flyers
30 Cars 659, Tom Rue Motors 638. proposes to take _ to !Jiij)roye eluded
the
following laxative. Am I too dependent
Dear Reader _ I suspect
Rolling Pins
Ind. 3 Games - Belly Baley
30
on
prunes?
I
am
70,
of
normal
this
tel'm refers to loss of
SSS,
Belly
Robinson
523.
High Individual Game
the living conditions of ·older . provisions:
Ind. Game - Betty Batey Americans.
we~ght,
and
In
good
health.
function
of the bone marrow.
Bernice Durst 176.
I. Tax deducUons to enSecond High lnd . Game - 209 , Belly Robinson 195. .
How
much
water
~hould
th~
Normally,
the bone marrow
About one of every 10 persons courpae,.lodepend'lt savings
•Y Martin 171 ,
&amp;
•day
·
maritilacture)l
b 1 o o d ~ells .
average
person
drmk
Sunday Nig~t Early
· this
try today Is 65·yearo toward retirement,.Jndlvldual
Hlg~ Series - Bernice OursI
Wlll
your
recomme~datlon
.
,
When
anything.
happens to it
444,
" up or in- mclude or be. In add1tton, to so that it can no
Ferguson &amp; W~lfe
62 34 '"
of age coun
or older. This compares contrlbut'Ions to ,gro
longer fill
Second High Series - Duncan &amp; Sines
56 40 to one out of 25 in I900. The divldual pension plans would coffee, fru1t JUICes, etc.. I this function an anemia
·Geraldine Kissinger 432.
Goodric~ &amp;Roush
49 47
be
ded tlbl
to
am a faithful ~eader of your results.
48 48 federal budget for Fiscal, Year
made tax
uc e up
Team Hlg~ Game - Rolling Hood &amp;Greene
Pins lOS.
column and !honk 1t is excel·
F 1 t 1 th·
bl
Cremeans &amp;Smilh
44 52. 1973 proposes expenditures of $1,500 or 20 pet. a year lent
or una e y, os pro em
Team Hig~ Series - Jr. Wr i g~t &amp; Smith
42 54 more than $50 billion for aenlor whichever Is less.
·
is relatively rare. It is more
Bugaloos 1396.
Fearsome Four
42 54
2 T ded ti I
·
Wit~ers &amp;Blake
41 ss citizens - an increase of
• ax
UC ons or pensiOn
Dear Reader - You are apt to occur in older people
Team 3 Games - Duncan &amp; almost 150 pet. above that contributions by self-empl!lyed very fortunate . There are a · but it can occur following ex·
Sines, Cremeans &amp; Smit~ .
spent three years ago.
persons. This would raiSe the good many people who would posure to a variety of
Team Game - Duncan &amp;
allimi't to ..,500 10 t like to solve lheir bowel toxins (poisons) and p•:rn
Sines, Duncan &amp; Sines .
One of the major problem annu
.., or pe ·
problem by the simple ex· sometimes as a complication
Ind. 3 Games - (Men! D. areas facing the elderly Is the - whichever Is less.
Concan 566, J. Roong 528; private pensloh system. Mr.
3. A study of pension plan pedient of eating five or six or toxic reaction to certain
(Women! F. Duncan 512. D.
te · lion The Departments prunes a day. Don't worry medicine\.
Sines 510.
Nixon stated that only 21 pet. of
nnma ·
. about being dependent on
Occasionally the spleen is
Ind. Game - (Men) D. couples now on social security of Labor and TreasW'y have them . That is one of the best a factor. A person with this
Duncan 204, R. Cremeans 198: and only 8 pet of the non- been directed to undertake a a~proaches you can use to type of problem needs a comt~."~:;~. ~w.Duncan 221. N. married beneficiaries are also study to delennlne the extent this type of problem. Keep plete evaluation by a specialist in blood diseases
receiving some sort of private of benefit losses as the result of nght on eating them.
pensionasslstance.Fromthese the termination of private
There is no set ru~as . to (hematologist). In some in·
-WIN AT BRIDGE facts, it is apparent that far too pension plans.
how much water a peMon stances, if one can be certain
many ..-elderly persons are · In addition to these should drink. As your letter that the spleen is a factor .
suggests, you do get water in surgery is indicated. In other
Hving on meager Incomes. proposals • there are a number
.
ld 1 lated i
of all the different beverages instances h a r m o n e s and
•
Even though considerable "' e er y.re
P eces
that you drink. Some people other medicines are helpful
By BERNARD BRENNER
Monday said retall prices - declining In February ; but he
effort has been made legislation stalled In the drink very little water be- and sometimes it is necesWASHINGTON (UP!) - A which turned down In many contended this expansion of the
throughout the Industrial Congress . Increased Social cause of. the large amounts sary to provide blood transfood chain spokesman today stores about AprU I -earlier fann.to..-etaU margin was only
community to establlah and Security benefits leglslaUon of cofiee and other drinks, fusions .
denied that retailers have had been boosted by more than a partial catch-up for a squeeze
maintain comprehensive paased by the House last year they consume. I am not a big
NORm
12
profiteered at the expense of was needed to keep pace with food chains suitered because
pension plans, figures sh~ -Is sWI being debal,ed in the fan of coffee because of its
.QJI096
2
farmers and \ consumers by last winter's Increase in catUe they were slow to raise retail ·
that only about half of the Senate.
drug effect, which can alfect
'IIIK
rce
is
covered.
The
pressW'es
of
Inflation
fall
the digestion, the heart and On this day in hisU.ry :
widening their meat profits. prices...
prices last year when farmtl09875 4
actual labor fo
hard
til
llvln
the
nervous system . Fruit
Retail meat prices have
•Void
Adamy told UP! that when wholesale prices began moving
In his message to Congress
eat upon *
g on juices are excellent. There is In 1861 the Civil War began
already dropped and should be sll figures are posted, the up.
WEST
EAST
·' · fixed Incomes. Social Security also water in other ·food , for when Confederate troops
"very favorable" for con- average gain In 1972 food ·: ·we took a beating on the up
•void
- - - - - - - - - -, benefits have Increased, bul example, approximately 70 ~ned fire on Ft. Sumler, S.C.
.QJI09 8 .7 2
aumers through July, said prices compared tD 19711evels side," Adamy said. Overall,
· monds. Jacoby wasn't wor- the boost has not enabled the . per cent of the weight of a In 1945 President Franklin D.
6543
• Q2
Clarence G. Adamy,-president will be smaller than the gain In chains suffered a slight net loss
ried about West holding elderly to keep up with the piece of lean roundsteak is Roosevelt died al Wann
• 63
.1098 76432
three to the queen. Seven spiraling costs of food, goods water.
of the National Association of all consumer Items, and In their margins lronn last fsll
Springs, Ga. Roughly three
Food Chains. He was cslled to smsller than last year's 2.7 per through March, he added.
soum (Dl
.,. and services.
A person's thirst is usually hours later, Vice President
.AK7 543
S.n~ $1 10&lt; JA~O~~ MODE~ boot As one who has aupported a pretty good guide as to how
leU the relsllers' side of the cent gain In food prices.
The retailer spokesman said
to: 'Wrn at s..r~go, (c/o th•~
legislation.designed to provide much water he should drink, Harry S Truman was sworn In
meat price story loday at a_ The Agriculture Department he e:xpected ''very favorable"
tAKJ
paper!, P.O. lor m, Ror/,., Cil'f ...
.
lth unless he has a medical as chief executive.
• House subcommittee In·· has predicted that tm retail meat prices for consumers In
.AKQ
Station. Ntw Yort, N.Y. 10019,
our sen 1or c111 zens w
problem that suggests he
In 1954 Dr. Robert. Oppenheii' veltlgatlon of beef prices.
food prices (excluding restau- coming months because inNorth-South vulnerable
- - - - - - - - - - adequate incomes whUe the should drink more or less. A mer, referred to as the "father
;
Some fann spokesmen at the rant tabs)wlll be up &amp; per cent creasing supplies .of beef and ..West North East South was surely going to be bid war against inOaUon Is being person should drink about
of the atomic bomb," was
opening seuion of lhe Inquiry over last year.
poultry will more than offset
at the other table and all waged, I consider meeting the eightglasses of fluids a day, suspended by the u:s. Atomic
5'111
5.
Pass
'.'They can be wrong. smaller pork supplies.
Jacoby wanted to do was to needs of the elderly a matter of incluaing fruit juices, other, Ji;nergy , &lt;;,ommlsslon as a
Pass Pass
Pass
get the same result as his the highest priority.
beverages, milk and water:
They've made lnistskes every .The increase In beef prices
Opening lead- • Q
opposite number.
,,I,.,J &lt;. possible security risk.
year for the past seven years," earlier this year was a "supply
Adamy aald.
situation", Adamy added.
Hewontheheartoperung ;
B 0
They11· T'L
drew four rounds of trumps ;
ld
J
&amp;
J
b
Adamy
conceded
that
food
The
House
subcommittee
Y swa
ames aco Y cashed the clubs and the ace
J..JU 1t Every T'tme
I
chains were slow in cutting • hearing Adamy and other farm
l
Every time we write about of diamonds ; entered dum- l===========.;,..===;n;==,;,============;
.;
reiaU beef prices after farm and lndustfy wl~sses opened luck in team-of-four matches my with a fifth trump; .led IL _
l
•.
and wholesale prices began Its lle5Sioris Monday but will we remember a hand played a second diamond and r'e- ~? 11-IE JOlt-IT WI~ ~E 'TOUGH·
""D T~E PLACE WI~ ~E VERY
~ IGHFALOTit-1 c:oGI-qy\Et-1· .. 'M41o.T
Holzer Medical Center, First
suspend them Wednesday in the finals of the i935 or !axed happUy when East SCXlt-IDII-6 I-lAME ~A CLIEI-ITELE OF
1936
Spingold,
It
was
'
a
long
produced
the
queen.
Tl\E
VERY
BEST
PEOPLE"
·
•
Kit-ID
OF PEOPLE DOE~ IT
Ave. and Cedar St. General
when the Price Commisslpn
match
and
coming
.Into
the
Jacoby
has
never
said
ATTR/ICT''?
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m. r - - - - - - - - . ;•· opens Its hearings on the same
last set of boards the Four what he would have done If
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
subject. On Thursday, the Aces held a 2500-point lead. East had played a low dla- ..,.._
, The Daily Sentinel
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
House panel headed by Rep. This was before the· days of mond.
DEVOTED TO THE
·
INTEREST 01'
Pediatrics Ward.
Graham
Purcell,
D-Tex.,
wll) IMPs and the matches were• Morris Ells of New York, L:~;;~r
MEIGS-MASON AREA ,
. Births
who played the hand at the r;
hear administration and played at total points .
CHESTER~ . TANNEHILL,
l .u c. l!d .
Oswald Jacoby who sat other table, has committed
Mr. and .Mrs. Gary Swope,
consumer
witnesses
Including
IIO.ERT HOEFLICH.
Middleport, a son; Mr. and
Virginia Knauer, President South picked up one of the himself. He said, "I was goClly Editor
biggest hands he had ever ing to toss a coin and sae
Published
dilly
ex&lt;;epl
Mrs. Unda Yonker, Syracwte,
Nixon's consumer adviser. ·
SaturCIIY by The O~lo Vellf';'
·
held.
He opened with a fore· if you could outguess it." .
a son; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Fl'ubl is f'tlng Comp1nv. 111
ing
tWO·Spade
, bid. West , . (HIWSPlPII IHTIIPIIII ASIN,J
Kiser, Dexter, a 'daughter; Mr. Court St .. Pomeroy , Ohio .
stuck in a non-vulnerable
4U69. 1usln11s Office Pnone
Tbe Almaaae
·and Mrs. James Smith, Bid- 99l-21S6, Edltoriol ~hont t9l nusiance call of five hearts
2lll
.
By United Preas lnlematlonal and Dave Bruce, silting
well, • daughter.
Stcond cltn poste;t p•ld at
J'oday is Wednesday, Aprill2, North, raised to five spades. The biddlnc hu been:
Discharges
Pomeroy , Of'tlo .
the
103rd day of 1972.
.
Nttlonet
tdvert
i
s
i
nu
~erckles Rayburn, (&gt;swald
Needless to say, Jacoby w..t Nortll
Eoot
Seutll
rtprnentatht
Bottlntlll ·
The moon Is between its last went right to seven. He ex1"
Hanes, Fay Russell, John Gtlllghet. Inc .. 12 Eas.i A2nd
peeled to spread the hand I t
I•
Pass
?
Starling, Alma Straight, Karen SL New YOrk City , New' York . quarter and new phase.
' Subscrlp~lon rates : De .
and
claim
as
soon
as
dumYou,
South,
hold:
The
morning
stars
·
are
· Howell, Martha Ousley, Ernest llvertd by carrier where
my hit the table , but the •AKU« •Az tJ •AKIS4
Good, Wendy · Seav~r. Mrs. lvllllble 50 cents per weoek ; Mercury and Jupiter.
What do you do now?
8y Motor Routt where carrltr
The evening stars are Venus, wrong duinmy came down.
. Frl!l1klln Gheen and daughter, servlct not avallablt : Ont
By
this
time
you
can
see
A-Bid
two .,adoo. Wloat
Lucy · Hunt, Irene McGhee, month 11 .7S. By m111 in Ohio Mars and Saturn.
Jacoby's
problem
.
He
could
dse?
·
lnd W. Va ., One Ytlr 514.00,
.
Thoae
born
on
this
day
are
•• Janet Marcum, Mrs. Barto She monthS 51 .2.5 . Thrn
discard three of dummy's
TODAY'S QUESTION
·.; Peanon and daughter, Gerald months $4.50 . Subscription under the sign of Aries.
on the top clubs
You do bid two ipades and
price includiS Sundty Tlmt~ ·
American statesman Henry diamonds
. ~.' Sayre, John Chafles Hall, Jodi Stntlnel.
but there was still a problem your partner jumps to tour
Clay was born AprU 12, 1m, about the queen of dia· . •pades. What do you do now?
]
Ml~er and Betty Martin.

ear."

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Apri112, 1972

4FOR

50¢

14oz.
$1.29 value

51(: 69'(:

Limit .4 per person

500 Personalized Name
and Addren Labels

FREE

' proof of purchase from
With
2 Dr. West's Toothbrushes

~-------~---------------------·

White's Poly-Ply

SEWING
THREAD
Asst'd. Colors
12 spools, 35 yard~ each

. $1 value

57(:

�J

1 - 'nil! lllllly ,Sfntll\ei,Mld!leport-Pomeroy, 0., APrUIZ, 19'12

Helen·' Help

.

~eo~~

By Helen Bonel

NEW YORK (KFS) -Marlon Branclo 's 6

DOUBlE SfANDARD : DOUBLE-CROSS
Dear Helen :
I'm ii5 and my reading material these days lsn 't exactly
"Pilgrim's Progress." My reading, in lact,leavesthe impression
that a married man who travela iB entitled to a "fling," just so
long 88 sbe'sa plck~or a paid-for,and he cares nothing for her.
In my book, this 18 adultery, whether there's emotloll!llinvolvement or not, and his wile has every right to throw him out.
Ript or wrong? - NOT SURE
Dear Not :
Ript: If the wHe wants an excuse to dump her travelling
.man. Sadly enough, many women these days go along With this ·
hu.sband's version : "My wHe Ia a married woman all the time
'(sez he) and she'd better not forget it. But I'M a married man
only when I'm not on the road." - H. .
Dear Helen:
You asked If anyone had ever won a sweepstakes prize by
checking the ''No, I don 'I want the product" square and sending
in his entry.
· Please tell "Still Waiting for My Price" that I'm still waiting,
too, for more years than !want to remember. Often companies
ask you to check on the outside of the envelope whether you're a
purchaser or just a hoper.
To find out whether the ''No" envelopes were ever opened or
just lllllllllllll'Uy dumped, I checked the "No" box - then enclosed In my envelope a stamped, self-addressed card on which I
had written "Entry received." An accompanying note asked that
tile card be mslled at once. 'lbat was back In AprU, 1971, and I'm
IIIII walling l()f' Its arrival.
'
Maybe thll.doean 'I prove anything, but It comes close. - IN
THE· SAME BOAT
Dear Helen :
We had been entering these sweepstakes contests for years,
just as ha_d "Still Waiting lor My Prize." 1 never believed they'd
:~. pay off but couldn't resist.
Then, In January of 1971, my husband won $87,000 from a
magazine subscription houae - and that was the year we didn't
buy magazines!
' We learned later that only one major winner in this par·
Ucular contest had checked tile "Yes" box. All the others hadn't
taken out any suboaipUons, though In our case, )l'e had been
customers 'In prevloull years.
We took a mllllon-to-one chance - and won! It can happen!
-GRAND PRIZE WINNER
Dear P.W.:
Congratulations! But ...
I wish you hadn't told me that! From now on, I'll worry every
time "I throw away a sales pitch sweepstakes offer! - H,
Dear Helen:
Watching the Winter Olympics, we noted the many Japanese
wearing masks over mouth and nose, these not so much to
protect agalnat the cold but from olher people's colda.
How about a nationwide campaign for the use of gauze
llliBkl on public transportation during the cold and flu season?
Each year we face near-epldemiCll, Returning from work on the
subway, I reel like nmnlng for cover when everyone aroiD!d m
coughing and sneezing.
Does anyone agree that face masks might help keep g
from spreading? - E.B.
• Dear 1!1.:
,
YO)U' Idea has merit, bllf somehow [ doubt that protective
face llliBkl will ever make II big In the United States, unless:· !.
We have another flu epidemic of WW-1 proportions or 2. A sinart
laihlon designer Incorporates a mohth and nose covering In a
new lltyle. Wby not work on the lasf suggestion and mebbe make
your fortune whUe stsying healthier1 - H.

,

OBGANJZED C1UME

&lt;5~""..

••

pet. of "'lbe Godfather" already has earned him
lllOt'e than a million. Olartie Chaplin lWIChed In
"21" with several jet-lawnera. Comi&lt;;s George

·

Jeael and Jack GUford invaded the b4g table to
Ioree chatter on the old gent, and he replied
politely, When they left he turned an&lt;tasked,
"Wbo they!" ... Brllllanl hoofer Bobby Van
leaves ''No, No, Nanette" aftl!r Its first 15
monlhafor.bigher lees elsewhere. Tony Teague
Is on tsp ... Seldom-photoed Garbo Inspired ~ix
pi~tUres ftont,paged In Women's Wear oSily, In
none of wblch ber fabulous face could be aeen - .
hiding behind her Kleenex .
,~ Lindsay's cbarlsma Is at its wispiest
here: he evea waa booed loudly arriving at GU .
Hodges' funeral ... fllnciJng BI'Oil. Circus
already OWIII the famed old 20th Century
Umlted (bought from the N. Y. Central few
years t.u:k); the BlgTop'sbuUding a whole new
train itaelf a~ Its Fla. training quarters for Ohe of
its two troupes.
Caterina Valente at the Americana's Royal
BoxbasonewUd "Problem": she's too versaUie
... Jazz clarinetist Sol Yaged Is among the best
pied pipers around, at Jimmy Weston's very-In
spot ... Later nights when Sol repairs to P. J ,
Oarke's, he hauls It out again, dimes the
jukebox for several jazzpleces be digs - and
heC01111!S an IDlpaid piper. The late-late set love
it almost as much as Sol ... Another non-live
music spot Is Raffles, 'llhere a septet of nk.elooking lads from London, ''The Philanderera,"
collldn't stand the canned music grabbed their
Instruments (guitars bass banjos flute)
domed their bowlers 'and er:chanted lhe stsid
rich rowd
'

•re

,&lt;t '

/

Looal Bowliug

'

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A thought for today: American writer George Curtis said,
" Imagination is as good as
many voyages, and how much

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Wednesday Afternoon
league
April5, 1971
Standings
Team
W. L.
W~.~~~r 's As~land
&lt;16 18
Ridenour's T.V.
40 24
Team No.4
34 30

'(

BY JACK O'BRIAN
111ERE'S. MONEY IN

GII'YANO

Us.

'•

•

•

ill

r Voice along Br'Way

"Didn't You Ever Hear of the Pill?"

t .

!bbbb

db$

--------------------------

I Washington
1

Food ChainsDeny
•
,
·
Meat Pro fit eel'lDg . -. . ...---..;;:-;====
A l aydOwn

Report

·

I
1

stapled Into such other pubs as True, Newsweek, Sport , and U. S. News ... Racetrack
wil)ners are hlp to ·neutrsllzlng their taxable
profil,l by saving their losing mutuel ducats.
Naturally they wouldn 'I Just, ~ather losers off
the ground. Doubtless ... New York mag cofounder George Hirsch Is doing a Norman
Cousins. Launching his own, J. Bteslin expects
to be In the contrib&lt;!dJtor list,
·
Pulitzer winner James Michener's Chinasigh : "Saddest thing I "have seen In Peking Is the
deterioration o~ Peking University. It Is now a
moderately good high school." .. .' When Nixon
.sigllt..saw the ' Mtng tombs outside Peking,
scores of seeming holiday strollers dawdled
about listening to transistor radios. Newshawb who dallied after Nixon left saw Chinese
functionaries go round collecting the radios ...
Andree Juliette Brun Is a concert pianist -and
a gourmet cook; so she'll give a Carnegie Hall
concert AprU 21 - followed lmmediately by a
cookout at the Promenade C"{e in Rockefeller

.''
BY KEITH WISECUP
ATHENS - The Meigs
Marauder baseball squad
rolled up their second victory
In as many starts in their
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League opener here TueSday

Jeeps, ·Kc Tilt Ends
Coach James Ross' South
Webster Jeeps rallied from a 60 deficit Tu~sday to tie the
Kyger Creek Bobcats 8-.!1 in a
non·league baseball game
called at the end of resulation
play due to darkness.
Rick Bowman's home run
knotted the score in the bottom
of the sixth Inning ,
Coach Dick Adams' Bobcats
moved into a Z-0 lead in the top
of the first inning on Marshall
French 's leadoff single, a walk
and catcher Danny Hill's
booming triple to leftfield.
The Gallians added four
more runs in the second inning
sending starter Jim Taulbee to
the sidelines. Sophomore third'"
sacker, Clay Hudson, started
the rally by reaching on a walk.
Shortstop John Baird also
walked, starting pitcher,
Richard Mollohan singled to
right scoring Hudson and
French followed with a triple to
left. He scored on a perfect
suicide squeeze bWlt by second
baseman John Roush.
The Jeeps broke the scoring
ice In the second on a walk, two
balks and doubles by Rick
Faulkner and Tim Taulbee . KC
came back with a single tally in

Plaza.
Joe Namath will he on the Oscar show. Not
lor acting ... Oscar favorite Gene Hackman had
knee surgery ... Billy DeWolfe's glee at Gobbler's Knob was generated by the news .he'll
have a star part in next season's "Irene." It's to
he produced by Harry Rigby, whose notion it

was to resuscitate ''No, No, Nanette'' ; and was
nudged out of that goldmlne for an ultimately
Settled $200,000.
"No, No" is long ago In the cash-black ...
David Merrick's "Sugar" will jlave to run 30
weeks of absolutely packed houses before it gets
back its announced $750,000 cost. It may reach
closer to a million - which means 43 weeks of
~llout audiences to break even.
Some Manhattan newsstand&amp; are scalping
$3 for Cosmo's nude of Burt Centerfold Reynold&amp;
... No · new scripts; MGM 's redoing "The
Postman Always Rings Twice" ... Anthony
~Inn blithely IWlched In the Essex House
window on Central Park South while a crowd
gawked every munch ... Jack La Rue's film
comebacklng. In "A Voice in the Night."

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

Too Many Prunes
Aren't a P'roblem

:c~*~

Raveling
Is Wasting

No Time ·

.J$

nn:•·

2.1.

r-------------------------=---------------------------------,

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'

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man Joe Stidham in the third.
Mike
Johnson, . 'senior
righthander, relieved Stidham
with one out in the. fourth.
Taulbee started on the hill for
the Jeeps but was relieved by
Laymore in the second. Hanes,
generally a ca tcher, came on in
the third and pitched fine ball
the rest of the way .
Kyger Creek will host
Hannan Trace Thursday night
in an SV AC contest. The
Bobcats will play Alexander
Friday night and Wellston on
Saturday .
By Innings:
error.
Both teams threatened in the Kyger Creek 241 010 0--8 9 3
seventh but failed to score. South Webster 021 401 0--8 9 2
With two outs, Hill again
walked but was thrown out at
the plate after McCarty
doubled to right South Webster's Faulkner reached third
with two outs in the bottom of
the seventh but was cutdown at
the plate on a bunt attempt.
French and McCarty paced
the Bobcat hitting attack with
two hits each. Bowman and
Claxton had two hits each for
South Webster. Both coaches
used three pitchers.
Mollohan started for the
Bobcats but yielded to Freshthe third frame as Greg McCarty singled and scored on a
double to center by Baird.
South Webster scored its
third rWl "in the third on hits by
Bowman, Phil Claxton and
Gary Hanes.
The Jeeps tied' it for the first
time In 'the fourth inning. Two
walks, two Bobcat errors and
hits by Claxton and Brian
Phipps did the· damage.
The Bobcats broke the tie In
their half of the fifth as Hill
walked, stole second and
trotted · home on a throwing

RACINE - The Southern
Tornadoes knocked off undefeated Eastern here Tuesday
night with a 9-7 win to take over
first place in the Southern
Valley Conference on a 2-11
record.
Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tornndoes, now 2-1 on the season,
took advantage of five Eastern
errors and a flood of wild
pitches anq passed balls by the
Eagles for their nine runs.
Coach Larry Heines' Eagles
dropped to 2-1 both overall and
in the SVAC.
Seven rWls, coming home in
the third inning for the Tornadoes was the differen ce.

error to toad the bases. This
was when sophomore Robbie
Eason decided to boom the ball
hig h and deep into right for a
triple to drive in three
runs, making it six in the
frame. Dailey came on for the
Bulldogs to fan Ash and stop
the sla ughter, temporarily.
Athens came back with two
runs in their home-half of the
fir st on two singles, two stolen
bases, and two walks. They
added another in the second on

a single and a walk .

, Meigs started its five-run
outburst in· the third · when
Phalin, leading off, was' hit by
the pitcher. Arter Cooke forced
Phalin , McKinney walked . Ash
also walked following Eason's
strikeout . Burney, however,
un loaded a line double to left to
drive in three runs . Dixon and
Dunfee hit back to back singles
to drive in two more runs. By
now, the damage had been
done as Meigs led 11-3!
Totali~g the Meigs' hits fi nds
Burney leading with a single
and double, Ash and Dunfee,
each two singles, Eason, a
triple , and Cooke and Wigal,
each a single .
Kiser and Bruce Hart, each a
Getting hits for Athens were
single.
Steve Inbody, Mike Green,
Senior second baseman Rick Mark Mace, Steve Deal, Dick
Sanders smacked two of the Baker, and Jim Swearingen,
Eagles' three hits, both singles, each a single,
and Eichinger banged a single,
Meigs is now 2-11 overall and
Souther plays · the North l-0 in league ac tion while
Gallia Pirates at North Gallia Athens is 0-3on the year and 11-2
Thursday night while the in league play. The Marauder
Eagles face non-league op- play at Middleport Thursday
po nent Glouster at home ni ght against the Gallipolis
Thursday.
Blue Devils. The Meigs
reserves play the Southwestern
By innings :
varsity at Middleport tonight
Eastern
000 140 2-7 3 5 Meigs
605 000 0--11 10 I
Southern
107 001 x- 9 9 3 Athens
210 200 1- 6 8 4
Eichinger, (LP), Boring (3), " Wigal, {WP ), Young, (5),
an d Young. Nease, (WP ), and Dixon . Wood, ( LP ),
Hubbard, (6), and Jenkins.
Dailey, (!)and Baker.

on Top in SVAC

Southern, which also got a
run in the first, jumped on
Eastern starter Dennis
Eichinger for three singles,
three walks, and two errors.
The inning saw Steve Jenkins
lead off with a single. Pat
Arnold walked, Rodney
Holman got on by an error and
Stan Kiser followed with a
walk. After Mike Nease got on
by an error, Brett and Bruce
Hart each singled.
Nease started on the hill for
the Tornadoes and got credit
for tlle win , hurlin g the first
five innings and allowing five
runs. The junior righty struck
out six, walked three, and hit

two batters. Jim Hubbard
ca me on in the sixth to
preserv e the win although he
was touched for two runs in his
two innings. He struck out five
and walked four.
· Eichinger was charged with
the loss although the big
righthander gave way to junior
Randy Boring in the third who
finished the game. Eichinger
fanned two and walked five
while Boring struck out three
and issued two free passes.
Hitters for the Tornadoes
were Hubbard, Jenkins, and
Brett Hart, each with two
singles, Jeff Hubbard, a double
and two runs batted in, and

LOOK BETTER ••• FEEL BETTER

SEO Standings
TEAM
Gallipolis
Ironton
Meigs
Logan
Wellston
Waverly
Al~ en s

W
2
1
1
1
1

l R OR
o 21 11
lJ 6 o

o

11

1 12
I
3
I I 12
0 2 17
0 2 7

6

Gillette

7
8
17
24
16

Jackson
TOTALS
7 7 89 89
Tuesday's Results:
Gatllpoll&gt; 8 Jackson 0
Logan 10 Waverly 4
Meigs 11 Athens 6
Ironton 6 Wellston 0
Thursday's Game :
G.atlipot ls at Meigs '(makeup)
Frrday's Games:
Gallipolis at Ironton

Right Guard
Dec&gt;dOiran1 for the whole family
II

a. . ·..

'~··

Eagles Finish
Third in Meet
At He
l\T lso
'l' 1
R Vl «e

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Meigs at Logan
Jackson at Wellston

SPOKANE, Wash. (UP!)· .Washington State University's
new head -basketball coach,
NELSONVILLE - The
Geocge Ravell!!g, wasted little
time his Drat day on the job: He Eastern Eagle track team,
personally contacted 40 lacking depth to compete in all
prospective Cougar basketball events, garnered 24 points in
players and set meetings with placing third here Monday
nigh~ won by Nelsonville-York
"several lop pi'Oilpects."
with
97~ points. Alexander
RaveHng, 33, is the first
black head basketball coach In finished second with 84, and
the Paclflc-8 cooference, and Glouster was last with 6~.
Individual leader of Coach
he comes to WSU from
Roger
Kirkhart's Eagles was
Maryland, where he was chief
Steve
Kirkman
with a third
recruiter for the National
Invitational Tournament place ill the low hurdles, fourth
ln,\he high jump, fourth In the
champions.
Raveling, 33, a former All· IOOyard dash, and fourth in the
America player at Villanova high hW'dles. Bryon McCoy
University, succeeds Bob had a third finish in the mile
Greenwood who resigned ear- run and Steve Grosnick and
lier this year after just one Randy Reed finished second
and third respectively in the
aeason at the Cougar helm.
"This Is probably the two m}!e run,
greatest challenge in my , The·tagles will run against
career as a basketball coach," . the Meigs Marauders and the
Raveling said Tuesday. "But '. Southern Local Tornadoes
beinll ezposed to challenge Is ' !onlght at Meigs.
nothing new to me."
:
"I have no Illusions of
g1'8ndeW', this II going to be an
THISTLE RESULTS
awfuldlfflcultasalgnment,"he
CLEVELAND (UPI)
said. "I'll just have to get up a , Stone Kay took the featured
earlier and go to bed a · eighth race at Thistledown
Utile later, but I can get the job Raceway Tuesday with Lariat
done as WSU."
finishing second and Miss
Ravelln8 ll8kl he has three 'lbym Bomb third. .
long range. goall for WSU'a
The winner, ridden by Allen
baaketball program-to Young, paid •12.60, $8.40 .and
II'OCIUce · a team that iB an- $4.20.
nuaDy conaidered for post.
The 2-7_dally double com, le8101l tournamerilll; me that blnatlon of Bull Skin Lady In
Is nationally ranked; and the first race and Ruben James
·flnaDy, one that Is ultlmately In the second paid $97.40. The
self-utalnlng.
largest payoff of the day waa
To do this, Raveling en- $307 .5(! for the 2-9 ninth race
'visions a bottom-to-top perle eta combination of ·
~ )lt&lt;llram which will Cynthia's King and Bug Bite.
"depend oo a strq1g fresbman
SfARS REVEAL
l'IICI'IIilll18 Protll'BID·.
CHOICES
SALT !AKE crrv (UP!) :The Utah SlarJ revealed
Tueaday their. four colle8e ·
CLAssiC SCHEDULE
.selections made March 2
MILWAUKEE (UP!) -Wis- ~ . lbe IICI'el AmericaD
OOIIIID wW play Yale and Bultetball AIIOCiatlon draft. '
..-.auettewWmeetJUcenat
'lbe cholcelll. the Stars were
December Ill lbe opening Cll'ls Ford, ·I U pard fnm
11111111 of the Milwaukee VIllanova; '!'ravia Grant, &amp;-a
ilutelbell Clalllc.
. forward from Kentucty. Stille;
'lbe tDII'IIIIIMIIt field lila Qlucll Jura, 1-10 center fnm
IDciDdel Soathern Melllodllt Nlllr h ud Bab Nash, &amp;-a
and Al'tlon8fa&amp;wanl from Hawaii.

-utue

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struck out five and walked senior ci tizen Don Wolfe and
his one lime sta r infielder at
·rour . ·
Young came on in the fifth . Ra cine, Roger Birch, opened
and did a great job, giving up a the first with Rick Ash )ooping
run on one hit. He fanned two, a single to left. Floyd Burney
grow1ded out for the first out
walked one, and hit one.
Wood , who retired only two but catcher Roger Dixon was
batters, fanned one and walked safe on a fielder's choice. Steve
one while allowing .six runs on Dunfee and Wigal then
four hits. Dailey, in his six pniduced back to back singles.
After senior Robin Phalin
inningS of work, allowed fi \l t
went,
down swin ging, Tom
runs on six hits, whi!fed five,
Cooke
walked, and Lou
walked five, and hit a batter .
-The Marauders, coached by McKinney then was safe on an

Tornadoes Out

Waverly vs. Athens

•s

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LEVY SUPPORTED
The Eastern Athletic
Boosten went on record In
support of lbe operalillg levy
which will be on the May
election ballot. The Eastern
booslera are drawing up
Oyen to explalu the levy and
provide information to all
illteresled people. Tliey also
'urge ·all r'otber " albletlc
boosters and Interested
parenll ID do the same.
:0..
L®.@.•...U.:t.H !.!. bb.d.J. bA;;;

Almanac

...

complete their scoring .
Athens "Scored . two . in the
first , one in the second, two In
the fourth, .all off Meigs'
starter Chester Wigal, and
added a rWl in the seventh off
reliever Ed Young.
The senior righthander
Wigal, out of baseball his
junior year, hurled the first
four innings, allowing five runs
and seven hits. Wigal plainly
had control problems and was
without his usual "stuff." He

In 8-8 Tie Tuesday

Seven-AImost

HOSPITAL
NEWS

afternoon 1 outslugging tjle .came in to put out the fire and
complete the game.
Athens Bulldogs to win li-S.
'l'he surprisidg Marauders
pounded the big Bulldog
The Marauders, however,
starter Don Wood for six runs weren 'I much kinder to Mr.
in the first inning on four hits Dailey. They rapped hinn for
before reliever Larry Dailey five more runs in the third to

•

'"'

.A

•

Marauders .C9ntinue Hot, ,D efeat Athens, 11-6

.

Wednesday Mixed
Sm II~ &amp; Rous~
77 27
Shamrocks
73 31
Try Hards
62 42
"
c .
H&amp;H
54 50 h
Nixon knocied Woody Allen off the News·
Pin Spoilers
&lt;16 56 c eaper.
Atley Gators
48 56
week cover, but It's skedded again. Rodney
Son-0-Guns
32 72
Dangerfield's car stalled, and the man behind
Woolies
22 82
In 1961 Russia laWlched Into got out and wanted to fight. Rodney told him,
Baum 's Lumber
33 31
Team 3 Games - Try Hards
Gaul's Shake Haven
24 40 1861 , Smith &amp; Rous~ IBiS.
space the first human to orbit "Don't hit me, hit the
Team No.1
ll 49
Team Game - Smilh &amp; the earth and return safely.
High Individual Game
New mag "Family Leisure" will come
Roush 655, Try Hards 644.
Barbara Murray 167. -···
Ind. 3 Games - (Men) C.
Second High Ind. Game - Yeager llS. F. Reichart 544 ;
Betty Frederick 145,
(Women) D. Harbour 480. M. 1
I
Hlg~ Series Barbara Rous~ 469.
Murray 412.
Ind. Game - (Men) C.
Second High Series - Dorthy Yeager 222. J . Smith 214:
Karr 396.
(Women) S. Douglas 183. D.
Team High Game - Baom's Harbour 176.
I
I
lumber 276.
I
I
Team High Series - Team
Tuesday Women
No. 4 757.
Hair Harbour
71 32
By clarence
Harts Used Cars
70 34
Mason Fo"rnllure
68 36 I
Miller
I
American Legion
I
Roush Construction
66 38 I
ladies Auxiliary league
M&amp;R Foodliner
62 42
April7, 1972
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Tom Rue Motors
58 &lt;16
Slandlngs
President Nixon has sent to the President cslled for action
Dear Dr. Lamb - Ha ve
Team
20 84 the co"gress
Pis. Ingels Furniture
lengthy
on
his
programs
for
the
elderly
Dear
Dr.
Lamb
How
you
ever heard of fibrou s
8
Jr. Bugaloos
Team 3 Games - M&amp;R
411
message
setting
forth
which
were
submitted
last
many
prunes
a
day
are
too
anemia
(dry bones) ? .. If so
Headquarter Barma ids
38 Foodliner 1854. Harts Used
Cars
1801.
many?
I
eat
five
or
six
evcan
you
tell me the cause
Goble Marauders
initiatives that the Ad- year. His legislative proposals
36
uckeyes
Team Game - Harts Used ministration has taken - or relating to pension plans In- ery evening and need no and cure?
34
eeney Bennett Flyers
30 Cars 659, Tom Rue Motors 638. proposes to take _ to !Jiij)roye eluded
the
following laxative. Am I too dependent
Dear Reader _ I suspect
Rolling Pins
Ind. 3 Games - Belly Baley
30
on
prunes?
I
am
70,
of
normal
this
tel'm refers to loss of
SSS,
Belly
Robinson
523.
High Individual Game
the living conditions of ·older . provisions:
Ind. Game - Betty Batey Americans.
we~ght,
and
In
good
health.
function
of the bone marrow.
Bernice Durst 176.
I. Tax deducUons to enSecond High lnd . Game - 209 , Belly Robinson 195. .
How
much
water
~hould
th~
Normally,
the bone marrow
About one of every 10 persons courpae,.lodepend'lt savings
•Y Martin 171 ,
&amp;
•day
·
maritilacture)l
b 1 o o d ~ells .
average
person
drmk
Sunday Nig~t Early
· this
try today Is 65·yearo toward retirement,.Jndlvldual
Hlg~ Series - Bernice OursI
Wlll
your
recomme~datlon
.
,
When
anything.
happens to it
444,
" up or in- mclude or be. In add1tton, to so that it can no
Ferguson &amp; W~lfe
62 34 '"
of age coun
or older. This compares contrlbut'Ions to ,gro
longer fill
Second High Series - Duncan &amp; Sines
56 40 to one out of 25 in I900. The divldual pension plans would coffee, fru1t JUICes, etc.. I this function an anemia
·Geraldine Kissinger 432.
Goodric~ &amp;Roush
49 47
be
ded tlbl
to
am a faithful ~eader of your results.
48 48 federal budget for Fiscal, Year
made tax
uc e up
Team Hlg~ Game - Rolling Hood &amp;Greene
Pins lOS.
column and !honk 1t is excel·
F 1 t 1 th·
bl
Cremeans &amp;Smilh
44 52. 1973 proposes expenditures of $1,500 or 20 pet. a year lent
or una e y, os pro em
Team Hig~ Series - Jr. Wr i g~t &amp; Smith
42 54 more than $50 billion for aenlor whichever Is less.
·
is relatively rare. It is more
Bugaloos 1396.
Fearsome Four
42 54
2 T ded ti I
·
Wit~ers &amp;Blake
41 ss citizens - an increase of
• ax
UC ons or pensiOn
Dear Reader - You are apt to occur in older people
Team 3 Games - Duncan &amp; almost 150 pet. above that contributions by self-empl!lyed very fortunate . There are a · but it can occur following ex·
Sines, Cremeans &amp; Smit~ .
spent three years ago.
persons. This would raiSe the good many people who would posure to a variety of
Team Game - Duncan &amp;
allimi't to ..,500 10 t like to solve lheir bowel toxins (poisons) and p•:rn
Sines, Duncan &amp; Sines .
One of the major problem annu
.., or pe ·
problem by the simple ex· sometimes as a complication
Ind. 3 Games - (Men! D. areas facing the elderly Is the - whichever Is less.
Concan 566, J. Roong 528; private pensloh system. Mr.
3. A study of pension plan pedient of eating five or six or toxic reaction to certain
(Women! F. Duncan 512. D.
te · lion The Departments prunes a day. Don't worry medicine\.
Sines 510.
Nixon stated that only 21 pet. of
nnma ·
. about being dependent on
Occasionally the spleen is
Ind. Game - (Men) D. couples now on social security of Labor and TreasW'y have them . That is one of the best a factor. A person with this
Duncan 204, R. Cremeans 198: and only 8 pet of the non- been directed to undertake a a~proaches you can use to type of problem needs a comt~."~:;~. ~w.Duncan 221. N. married beneficiaries are also study to delennlne the extent this type of problem. Keep plete evaluation by a specialist in blood diseases
receiving some sort of private of benefit losses as the result of nght on eating them.
pensionasslstance.Fromthese the termination of private
There is no set ru~as . to (hematologist). In some in·
-WIN AT BRIDGE facts, it is apparent that far too pension plans.
how much water a peMon stances, if one can be certain
many ..-elderly persons are · In addition to these should drink. As your letter that the spleen is a factor .
suggests, you do get water in surgery is indicated. In other
Hving on meager Incomes. proposals • there are a number
.
ld 1 lated i
of all the different beverages instances h a r m o n e s and
•
Even though considerable "' e er y.re
P eces
that you drink. Some people other medicines are helpful
By BERNARD BRENNER
Monday said retall prices - declining In February ; but he
effort has been made legislation stalled In the drink very little water be- and sometimes it is necesWASHINGTON (UP!) - A which turned down In many contended this expansion of the
throughout the Industrial Congress . Increased Social cause of. the large amounts sary to provide blood transfood chain spokesman today stores about AprU I -earlier fann.to..-etaU margin was only
community to establlah and Security benefits leglslaUon of cofiee and other drinks, fusions .
denied that retailers have had been boosted by more than a partial catch-up for a squeeze
maintain comprehensive paased by the House last year they consume. I am not a big
NORm
12
profiteered at the expense of was needed to keep pace with food chains suitered because
pension plans, figures sh~ -Is sWI being debal,ed in the fan of coffee because of its
.QJI096
2
farmers and \ consumers by last winter's Increase in catUe they were slow to raise retail ·
that only about half of the Senate.
drug effect, which can alfect
'IIIK
rce
is
covered.
The
pressW'es
of
Inflation
fall
the digestion, the heart and On this day in hisU.ry :
widening their meat profits. prices...
prices last year when farmtl09875 4
actual labor fo
hard
til
llvln
the
nervous system . Fruit
Retail meat prices have
•Void
Adamy told UP! that when wholesale prices began moving
In his message to Congress
eat upon *
g on juices are excellent. There is In 1861 the Civil War began
already dropped and should be sll figures are posted, the up.
WEST
EAST
·' · fixed Incomes. Social Security also water in other ·food , for when Confederate troops
"very favorable" for con- average gain In 1972 food ·: ·we took a beating on the up
•void
- - - - - - - - - -, benefits have Increased, bul example, approximately 70 ~ned fire on Ft. Sumler, S.C.
.QJI09 8 .7 2
aumers through July, said prices compared tD 19711evels side," Adamy said. Overall,
· monds. Jacoby wasn't wor- the boost has not enabled the . per cent of the weight of a In 1945 President Franklin D.
6543
• Q2
Clarence G. Adamy,-president will be smaller than the gain In chains suffered a slight net loss
ried about West holding elderly to keep up with the piece of lean roundsteak is Roosevelt died al Wann
• 63
.1098 76432
three to the queen. Seven spiraling costs of food, goods water.
of the National Association of all consumer Items, and In their margins lronn last fsll
Springs, Ga. Roughly three
Food Chains. He was cslled to smsller than last year's 2.7 per through March, he added.
soum (Dl
.,. and services.
A person's thirst is usually hours later, Vice President
.AK7 543
S.n~ $1 10&lt; JA~O~~ MODE~ boot As one who has aupported a pretty good guide as to how
leU the relsllers' side of the cent gain In food prices.
The retailer spokesman said
to: 'Wrn at s..r~go, (c/o th•~
legislation.designed to provide much water he should drink, Harry S Truman was sworn In
meat price story loday at a_ The Agriculture Department he e:xpected ''very favorable"
tAKJ
paper!, P.O. lor m, Ror/,., Cil'f ...
.
lth unless he has a medical as chief executive.
• House subcommittee In·· has predicted that tm retail meat prices for consumers In
.AKQ
Station. Ntw Yort, N.Y. 10019,
our sen 1or c111 zens w
problem that suggests he
In 1954 Dr. Robert. Oppenheii' veltlgatlon of beef prices.
food prices (excluding restau- coming months because inNorth-South vulnerable
- - - - - - - - - - adequate incomes whUe the should drink more or less. A mer, referred to as the "father
;
Some fann spokesmen at the rant tabs)wlll be up &amp; per cent creasing supplies .of beef and ..West North East South was surely going to be bid war against inOaUon Is being person should drink about
of the atomic bomb," was
opening seuion of lhe Inquiry over last year.
poultry will more than offset
at the other table and all waged, I consider meeting the eightglasses of fluids a day, suspended by the u:s. Atomic
5'111
5.
Pass
'.'They can be wrong. smaller pork supplies.
Jacoby wanted to do was to needs of the elderly a matter of incluaing fruit juices, other, Ji;nergy , &lt;;,ommlsslon as a
Pass Pass
Pass
get the same result as his the highest priority.
beverages, milk and water:
They've made lnistskes every .The increase In beef prices
Opening lead- • Q
opposite number.
,,I,.,J &lt;. possible security risk.
year for the past seven years," earlier this year was a "supply
Adamy aald.
situation", Adamy added.
Hewontheheartoperung ;
B 0
They11· T'L
drew four rounds of trumps ;
ld
J
&amp;
J
b
Adamy
conceded
that
food
The
House
subcommittee
Y swa
ames aco Y cashed the clubs and the ace
J..JU 1t Every T'tme
I
chains were slow in cutting • hearing Adamy and other farm
l
Every time we write about of diamonds ; entered dum- l===========.;,..===;n;==,;,============;
.;
reiaU beef prices after farm and lndustfy wl~sses opened luck in team-of-four matches my with a fifth trump; .led IL _
l
•.
and wholesale prices began Its lle5Sioris Monday but will we remember a hand played a second diamond and r'e- ~? 11-IE JOlt-IT WI~ ~E 'TOUGH·
""D T~E PLACE WI~ ~E VERY
~ IGHFALOTit-1 c:oGI-qy\Et-1· .. 'M41o.T
Holzer Medical Center, First
suspend them Wednesday in the finals of the i935 or !axed happUy when East SCXlt-IDII-6 I-lAME ~A CLIEI-ITELE OF
1936
Spingold,
It
was
'
a
long
produced
the
queen.
Tl\E
VERY
BEST
PEOPLE"
·
•
Kit-ID
OF PEOPLE DOE~ IT
Ave. and Cedar St. General
when the Price Commisslpn
match
and
coming
.Into
the
Jacoby
has
never
said
ATTR/ICT''?
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m. r - - - - - - - - . ;•· opens Its hearings on the same
last set of boards the Four what he would have done If
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
subject. On Thursday, the Aces held a 2500-point lead. East had played a low dla- ..,.._
, The Daily Sentinel
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
House panel headed by Rep. This was before the· days of mond.
DEVOTED TO THE
·
INTEREST 01'
Pediatrics Ward.
Graham
Purcell,
D-Tex.,
wll) IMPs and the matches were• Morris Ells of New York, L:~;;~r
MEIGS-MASON AREA ,
. Births
who played the hand at the r;
hear administration and played at total points .
CHESTER~ . TANNEHILL,
l .u c. l!d .
Oswald Jacoby who sat other table, has committed
Mr. and .Mrs. Gary Swope,
consumer
witnesses
Including
IIO.ERT HOEFLICH.
Middleport, a son; Mr. and
Virginia Knauer, President South picked up one of the himself. He said, "I was goClly Editor
biggest hands he had ever ing to toss a coin and sae
Published
dilly
ex&lt;;epl
Mrs. Unda Yonker, Syracwte,
Nixon's consumer adviser. ·
SaturCIIY by The O~lo Vellf';'
·
held.
He opened with a fore· if you could outguess it." .
a son; Mr. and Mrs. Roger Fl'ubl is f'tlng Comp1nv. 111
ing
tWO·Spade
, bid. West , . (HIWSPlPII IHTIIPIIII ASIN,J
Kiser, Dexter, a 'daughter; Mr. Court St .. Pomeroy , Ohio .
stuck in a non-vulnerable
4U69. 1usln11s Office Pnone
Tbe Almaaae
·and Mrs. James Smith, Bid- 99l-21S6, Edltoriol ~hont t9l nusiance call of five hearts
2lll
.
By United Preas lnlematlonal and Dave Bruce, silting
well, • daughter.
Stcond cltn poste;t p•ld at
J'oday is Wednesday, Aprill2, North, raised to five spades. The biddlnc hu been:
Discharges
Pomeroy , Of'tlo .
the
103rd day of 1972.
.
Nttlonet
tdvert
i
s
i
nu
~erckles Rayburn, (&gt;swald
Needless to say, Jacoby w..t Nortll
Eoot
Seutll
rtprnentatht
Bottlntlll ·
The moon Is between its last went right to seven. He ex1"
Hanes, Fay Russell, John Gtlllghet. Inc .. 12 Eas.i A2nd
peeled to spread the hand I t
I•
Pass
?
Starling, Alma Straight, Karen SL New YOrk City , New' York . quarter and new phase.
' Subscrlp~lon rates : De .
and
claim
as
soon
as
dumYou,
South,
hold:
The
morning
stars
·
are
· Howell, Martha Ousley, Ernest llvertd by carrier where
my hit the table , but the •AKU« •Az tJ •AKIS4
Good, Wendy · Seav~r. Mrs. lvllllble 50 cents per weoek ; Mercury and Jupiter.
What do you do now?
8y Motor Routt where carrltr
The evening stars are Venus, wrong duinmy came down.
. Frl!l1klln Gheen and daughter, servlct not avallablt : Ont
By
this
time
you
can
see
A-Bid
two .,adoo. Wloat
Lucy · Hunt, Irene McGhee, month 11 .7S. By m111 in Ohio Mars and Saturn.
Jacoby's
problem
.
He
could
dse?
·
lnd W. Va ., One Ytlr 514.00,
.
Thoae
born
on
this
day
are
•• Janet Marcum, Mrs. Barto She monthS 51 .2.5 . Thrn
discard three of dummy's
TODAY'S QUESTION
·.; Peanon and daughter, Gerald months $4.50 . Subscription under the sign of Aries.
on the top clubs
You do bid two ipades and
price includiS Sundty Tlmt~ ·
American statesman Henry diamonds
. ~.' Sayre, John Chafles Hall, Jodi Stntlnel.
but there was still a problem your partner jumps to tour
Clay was born AprU 12, 1m, about the queen of dia· . •pades. What do you do now?
]
Ml~er and Betty Martin.

ear."

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., Apri112, 1972

4FOR

50¢

14oz.
$1.29 value

51(: 69'(:

Limit .4 per person

500 Personalized Name
and Addren Labels

FREE

' proof of purchase from
With
2 Dr. West's Toothbrushes

~-------~---------------------·

White's Poly-Ply

SEWING
THREAD
Asst'd. Colors
12 spools, 35 yard~ each

. $1 value

57(:

�•
'

•- ~ Dall.f s.~att, MldcleiJOrt..p.._oy. o., AprU 12, 1m

,.

Pm St.ndingl,
~ IIA Ployoff Ston11in.s

ByUn.l.tedPrtsslnternahonal
. IAIIStritS BestofSovenl ·
Eolltrh Conlertnct
·
Somifinols
• -Boston
Atlanta
•:New York
S.ltlmore

jta10
· r
.

• .· ..

.

.

'

·

,

'

.

I

I

Issue"Settled,

W. L. Pel.

4 2 :607
2 4 .333

W. ·L. Pel.
4 2 .61&gt;7
2 • . 333

But Strike ContinUes

Western Conference
Fino Is

NEW YORK (UPI)'--The started the sirlke- the funding scheduled to meet Tl)ursday in
pension
fund dispute has been of the pension fund-was Olicago.
W. L. Pet.
. 1 0 1.000 settled but the baseball settled when the players ·
Milwaukee •·
The long day of negotiations
Los Angeles
0 I .000 players' strike continued today agreed lo the owners' proposal started about 10:30 a.m.
•·clinched series
because of a stalemate on the offer of a $500,000 increase in Tue$1ay morning in the Four
Tvt!sdiy's Reouits
New York 107 Baltimore 101 Issue o! back pay for the pension fund. The money Seasons resl!lurant. Miller's
!Onlygamescheduled) ,
will come from surplUs money office is · located In a
rescheduled games.
Wtdntlday'oGam01
· Shortly after I a.m. (EST) already In the fund and not skyscraper 38 Doors above the
Milwaukee at Los Angeles
Wednesday, the negotiations from any addl\lonal owners' restaurant. Miller wasluiddled
(Oillygom.eschedultd)
with the 24 player represenbroke off when the i&gt;wners contribution.
fo!HL P..yoff 5tondln~s
Sides
Seem
Close
tatives
and occasionally talked
By United Prnslnttrnoftonol rejected the players' proposal
The two Sides seem so close by phone with John Gaherln, .
I AIISerltsatst·Of·Sevenl that they be docked a
Sirles A
maximum of one day's pay if now that a quick setuement Is the counsel for the owners who
W. l. 11 II the teams play an entire 162- likely but the Issue of back pay was .in touch with the owners'
4 1 18 10
•·Boston
will become a bigger one with Player Relati!Jilll Committee.
Toronto
1 4 10 18 game schedule.
The owners rejected that each passing day as the After mignight, the players
Sirles a
claiming they want number of games to be were asked to leave from the
w. L. 11 1a· toproposal,
restaurant and moved up to
dock the players a day's pay rescheduled builds up.
New York
J 2 16 12
Marvin Miller, executive Miller's off!~.'
Montreal
2 J 12 16 for every game that is
The Issue of the pension fund
rescheduled as part of a director . of the Players
Series C
Association,
said
he
had
a
call
was
settled first.
W. L 11 II doubleheader. Both sides agree
4 0 14 8 the players will be paid for ·from Federal Mediator Curtis BackPayBecomesParamount
•·Chicago
0 4 8 14 games made up on open dates Counts Ia te Tuesday night and
Pittsburgh
But once the issue of the
agreed
to
a
Wednesday
pensions
was settled, the issue
or- as split doubleheaders.
Sirles D
w. L.gf 11 .The original issue that meeting .. The owners are of back pay became paraMinnesota
3 2 16 13
St. Louis
2 3 13 16
x-CIInched Series
Tuesdoy's Results
Boston 3 Toronto 2
Montreal 2 New York 1
MinnHota Ht. Louis 3
(Onlygamesscheduled)
WedntSdoy'sGames
(No games scheduled),
AHL Pilyoff Standings'
lly United lnttrnolional
!All Strlts list-of seven)
StritS A
W. L. gf 91
3 1 17 12
Boston
1 3 12 17
Providence
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
FlrstGameinBoslon
The New York-Baltlmor"t
New
York
Knicks
disposed
of
The
first
game
of
the
series
sixth
game went right down to
Series a
one
tough
foe
and
now
take
on
will
be
played
in
Boston
the
wire
in the fourth quarter
W. L. gf 9a
3
1
17
5
Nova Scotia
another as they hook up with Thursday night. The second ill as the Bullets grabbed a five
Springfield
1 J 5 17
the Boston Celtlcs in the best- scheduled for New York on point lead at 9~ with 4:14 to
of-seven
National Basketball &amp;mday, the third in Boston on go, only to have New York take
Sirles C
W. L. gt ga
Association's Eastern Con- Wednesday; April 19, and the the lead for good at .97-95 on
2 2 15 11
Baltimore
ference playoff final.
fourth back in Madison Squsre Bradley's jumper from the left
2 2 11 15
Cleveland
It took the Knlcks six games Garden on Friday, April 21.
baseline with .2:23left.
to eliminate Baltimore, closing
If additional games are'
Frazier Adds FoalSbols
Sirles D
w. L. ot 9• out the series Tuesday with a needed, No. 5 will be in Boston Frazier added a pair of foul
•·Cincinnati
4 o 20 9
Hershey
0 4 9 20 107-101 victory over the Bullets. on Sunday afternoon, April 23, shots to build the New York
"Boston is one of the ' the sixth In New York, April 26, lead to !1&amp;-97. ·
•-clinched serle•
Tuesdoy's Results
strongest teams in the league,"· and the seventh in Boston on
"Thill victory is a tribute to
Booton 5 Providence ~ loll \ said Knick Coach Red Holz· Friday, April 28.
the tesm," Frazier said later.
Cleveland 5 Baltimore 3
man, '1hey'realwaystough for
The Western Conference fin- "With Willis Reed and Dick
Cincinnati 3 ~rsehey I
us. We split the six-game als resumes tonight in Los Barnett hurting at various
!On~~amesatheduledl
nelday's G1mes
season series so nobody goes Angeles with the Lakers· times, they showed determina·
Springfield at Nova Scotia
into this ooe with any edge." meeting the defending cham- lion."
Cleveland at Baltimore
(Onlygamess~heduled)
Walt Frazier, who shares · pion Milwaukee Bucks In the
Somebody asked losing
Tuesday's scoring honors with second game of the best~!- Coach Gene Shue why he was
. .
. ·
,
Knick center Jerry Lucas, with seven series. The Bucks won smiling after being eliminated
-~cHon
' or.·~ 22 poliltl ilch, thought the the opener! '· 91172' Sundiy' -~·from the playoffs and he
~'
,
. o matcl!!IPI between New York holding the Ulkers oo qnly eifiht r~ptied: "As long as you:re
and B9"1on were even, and points In the third quarter. alive, you should smile."
Shue never lost his cool
agreed that the club must Tonight's game will be seen on
contain the Celtics' fast break the ABC-TV network beginning during the game as he urged
oo slay alive.
at 10 p.m. EST.
the Bullets on. He thought the

mount.
"We're concerned about the ·
inequity from town to town,"
Detroit catcher Bill Freehan' .
said. "Under the ·owners
iJropoS!Il. some l!!ams would be
P!!nallzed more severely than
others .'' · '·"
The owners w~ht to dock lhe
play~ ' day's pay whenever
they rescheduled a game as
part of a doubleheader. The
players countered . with a
proposal that the players ~­
docked a half-day's !)ay for the.
fli'SI two games rescheduled as .
doubleheaders-for a
maximum of one day's pay.

I.G.A.
26 oz.
box

The players also agreed to
waive all the ,rules (cr the ·
scheduling of games, such as ...
allowing night games on
getaway days or a daY double- :
header after a night game. 1•

BARONS TRIUMPH
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Gordon LaBossiere and Dennis
Giannini acored back-to.back
goals within 57 seconds in the
first periQd and· Giannini
pounded home another goal in
the third period to power the
Cleveland Barons to a ~
victory over the Baltimore
Clippers in Calder Cup quarterfinals action Tue$1ay night.
The Cleveland win evened
tile beat-of-.even aeries aI :!-all,
\he fifth contest will be played
.In Baltimore tonight. The sixth
game will be played here
Friday and the ·seventh, If
needed, will be ·In Baltimore
Saturday.
-Cleveland goalie Gilles
Gllbert, who held Baltimore
accrel0111 in the first Period,
finished with 22 saves.
Baltimore's Jim Shaw blocked
23 attempts.

.. $

. .SHIRT
FINISHING

29 oz.

LB.

.00

I

IDAHO
POTATOES
10 lb.
bag

DOG FOOD
s
~oo
cans

N~y(~bbage

•

\'

~·

Solid &amp; Green

PAL
IMITATION

Peanut·Butter

15th Year; Eyes _4th Win
Gurney' second entry and the
two for Simon will be powered
by turbo.Qffenhausers.
•The Chevy racer w11s entered
for rookie Tom Bigelow of
White water, Wis. Bigelow has
gained experience on the
United States Auto Club spring
and midget circuits.
Practice for this year's race
starts April 29 with time trials
scheduled for the weekends of
May 13-14 and May 2().21.
SWORDS WIN
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - Paul
Andrea scored two goals to
lead the Cincinnati Swords to a
3-1 victory over Hershey here
Tuesday night and a straight
four-game sweep of the best,)f.
seven quarter-final American
!;Iockey League Calder Cup

LB.
KENNEBEC

2¥2 lb.

They know that their
dollars earn higher ear .
nings here with complete

I.G.A.

SEED
POTATOES

Toilet Tissue

50.lb. bag

safety! We lnvltt you to

"oet wise" to our savings

programs. plus the many

other banking services
offered at

-

'Meigs Co. Branch·

.@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
294 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

All Accounts Insured To

$20,000.00 by FSLIC.

4 roll
packs

series.

each carded a 43. Topper Orr
The Swords meet the winner
played, and finished with a 42 of the Cleveland-Baltimore
series in the semi-final round.
lor GAHS.
Steve Story's 39 led the
Marauders, Jon Buck had a
42, Jim Story 43, Marty Vaughn
45, Randy Chafin·48 and Ro••r
Dillard 64.
The Blue Devils, now 4-1 in
two outings, play at Wahama
this afternoon.

.00

.19

$

BAG

Give him everything ...
the time, the day, the date

~.,.

Accutron®
by Bulova

EXPIRES APRIL 15th

.08

DOMINO

SUGAR

So exact is the Accutron tuning fork
movement, that accuracy is guaran.
reed to within a minute a month. •

W~h

10 lb..ba&amp;_
·U~IT

GRADE TMEDHJM

OAT£ AHD OAf "I"
$111nlen stul. Blue
IIIII 11\d stnp, $1 J!l ,

1·

c

BAG

J0-80

Save Here!

I

ORANGES

cans

Wise Owls

$1 00

-·
-----------·
FLORIDA

L

PEACHE

Foyt Enters Indy 500 For

Coach John Milhoan 's
Gallipolis Blue Devil golfers
defeated hOilt Meigs 161-169 on
the. Pomeroy cou.iie · Tuesday
evening behind Kenny New's
two-&lt;Jver-par 37.
·
Brett Epting fired a fO for
GAHS while Dow Saunders
finished with a 41. John Cunningham -and John Saunders

c

I

10 oz.

Will
EXPIRES APRIL 15th Coupon
ONE PER PERSON
.
1
M&amp;R FOODLINER
..

I

DEL
MONTE
.

fifth foul picked up by center
Wes Unseld enable4 New York
to gain better control of the
boards.
The
Knlcks
oulrebounded the Bullets, ~
34 . ...
New York had a balanced
scoring effo&gt;;:ts, something they
hope can prevail in the Boston
series. Frazier and Jerry
Lucas each scored 22 points.
Up front, forwards Dave
DeBusschere and Bradley
conlributed 20 points apiece.
Archie Clark of Baltimore led
all scorers with 31 points, Jack
Marin added 21 and former
Knick Mike Rklordan netted 19
for the Bullets.

Dowswell

Blue Devils Top
Meigs by Eight

I.COFFEE

'

Playoffs, Face Celts

INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UPI)
Four other racers were
- A.J. Foyt Jr. officially en- entered Tuesday, four days
lel'!'d the Indianapolis 50!knile before the midnight Saturday
race Tuesday for the 15th deadline. The field now numconsecutlve year and could bers 40. Speedway officials
become the classic's first four- said they expect about 30 more
time winner. ·
- entries to be mailed before the
Foyt, who now buUds as well time expires:
as races his own cars, entered
Other entries Tuesday intwo of hia creation.
eluded two by owner-driver
Another two of the turix&gt;' Dick Simon, Salt Lake City; a
charged Ford Coyotes were · backup Dan Gurney Eagle for
entered In the name of J . H. Bobby Unser who had an
Greer of Houston where Foyt earlier entry, and a turbohas his garage. A.J. Fay! Sr. ciy!rged Chevrolet-powered
was named crew chief for all car by Ray w. Smith of Eaton,
four cars .
Ohio.

1NESCAFE
I INSTANT

ALT

.

Knicks Advance In NBA

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
Univenity oophomore javelin
thrower Rick Do8well has been
named the Mid-American
Conference's ·first "Spring
Athlete ol the Week" for 1972.
Doswell sel a Kentucky
Relays record last week in the
javelin with a toss of 2f6.feel-4lnches, second best throw in
the nation so far this year.
Runner-up in the conference
balloUng · was Kent State's
Jacques Accambray, who set a
hammer 'throw mark al
Kentu9ky with a heave of 215feet.
Other nominees included
Bowling Green's Steve mowers
and Ken Walters, who tied for
runnerup In the Marshall Invitational Golf with one over
par 73s; pitcher-shortstop
Gary Cooper of Miami; Toledo
catcher Tom Goyer and
Western Michigan pole vaulter
Wry Robards.

·.·.

'EGGS
cDozen

DATI AHD DAY "U"
Stlinles!. si11L Silver
dill,
$171.

SAME DAY
SERVItE

.

GREEN GIANT-

This

Coupon
1 PER COUPON

4

'

In At~Out At 5

111 I. 1111..........,
)

•we will 1111ust to this tolerance: if '@tCI'lllry, Gllrant11 it tor 01e )'Ur.

,... _,
-

y

'

....

~

•
't

'

'

�•
'

•- ~ Dall.f s.~att, MldcleiJOrt..p.._oy. o., AprU 12, 1m

,.

Pm St.ndingl,
~ IIA Ployoff Ston11in.s

ByUn.l.tedPrtsslnternahonal
. IAIIStritS BestofSovenl ·
Eolltrh Conlertnct
·
Somifinols
• -Boston
Atlanta
•:New York
S.ltlmore

jta10
· r
.

• .· ..

.

.

'

·

,

'

.

I

I

Issue"Settled,

W. L. Pel.

4 2 :607
2 4 .333

W. ·L. Pel.
4 2 .61&gt;7
2 • . 333

But Strike ContinUes

Western Conference
Fino Is

NEW YORK (UPI)'--The started the sirlke- the funding scheduled to meet Tl)ursday in
pension
fund dispute has been of the pension fund-was Olicago.
W. L. Pet.
. 1 0 1.000 settled but the baseball settled when the players ·
Milwaukee •·
The long day of negotiations
Los Angeles
0 I .000 players' strike continued today agreed lo the owners' proposal started about 10:30 a.m.
•·clinched series
because of a stalemate on the offer of a $500,000 increase in Tue$1ay morning in the Four
Tvt!sdiy's Reouits
New York 107 Baltimore 101 Issue o! back pay for the pension fund. The money Seasons resl!lurant. Miller's
!Onlygamescheduled) ,
will come from surplUs money office is · located In a
rescheduled games.
Wtdntlday'oGam01
· Shortly after I a.m. (EST) already In the fund and not skyscraper 38 Doors above the
Milwaukee at Los Angeles
Wednesday, the negotiations from any addl\lonal owners' restaurant. Miller wasluiddled
(Oillygom.eschedultd)
with the 24 player represenbroke off when the i&gt;wners contribution.
fo!HL P..yoff 5tondln~s
Sides
Seem
Close
tatives
and occasionally talked
By United Prnslnttrnoftonol rejected the players' proposal
The two Sides seem so close by phone with John Gaherln, .
I AIISerltsatst·Of·Sevenl that they be docked a
Sirles A
maximum of one day's pay if now that a quick setuement Is the counsel for the owners who
W. l. 11 II the teams play an entire 162- likely but the Issue of back pay was .in touch with the owners'
4 1 18 10
•·Boston
will become a bigger one with Player Relati!Jilll Committee.
Toronto
1 4 10 18 game schedule.
The owners rejected that each passing day as the After mignight, the players
Sirles a
claiming they want number of games to be were asked to leave from the
w. L. 11 1a· toproposal,
restaurant and moved up to
dock the players a day's pay rescheduled builds up.
New York
J 2 16 12
Marvin Miller, executive Miller's off!~.'
Montreal
2 J 12 16 for every game that is
The Issue of the pension fund
rescheduled as part of a director . of the Players
Series C
Association,
said
he
had
a
call
was
settled first.
W. L 11 II doubleheader. Both sides agree
4 0 14 8 the players will be paid for ·from Federal Mediator Curtis BackPayBecomesParamount
•·Chicago
0 4 8 14 games made up on open dates Counts Ia te Tuesday night and
Pittsburgh
But once the issue of the
agreed
to
a
Wednesday
pensions
was settled, the issue
or- as split doubleheaders.
Sirles D
w. L.gf 11 .The original issue that meeting .. The owners are of back pay became paraMinnesota
3 2 16 13
St. Louis
2 3 13 16
x-CIInched Series
Tuesdoy's Results
Boston 3 Toronto 2
Montreal 2 New York 1
MinnHota Ht. Louis 3
(Onlygamesscheduled)
WedntSdoy'sGames
(No games scheduled),
AHL Pilyoff Standings'
lly United lnttrnolional
!All Strlts list-of seven)
StritS A
W. L. gf 91
3 1 17 12
Boston
1 3 12 17
Providence
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
FlrstGameinBoslon
The New York-Baltlmor"t
New
York
Knicks
disposed
of
The
first
game
of
the
series
sixth
game went right down to
Series a
one
tough
foe
and
now
take
on
will
be
played
in
Boston
the
wire
in the fourth quarter
W. L. gf 9a
3
1
17
5
Nova Scotia
another as they hook up with Thursday night. The second ill as the Bullets grabbed a five
Springfield
1 J 5 17
the Boston Celtlcs in the best- scheduled for New York on point lead at 9~ with 4:14 to
of-seven
National Basketball &amp;mday, the third in Boston on go, only to have New York take
Sirles C
W. L. gt ga
Association's Eastern Con- Wednesday; April 19, and the the lead for good at .97-95 on
2 2 15 11
Baltimore
ference playoff final.
fourth back in Madison Squsre Bradley's jumper from the left
2 2 11 15
Cleveland
It took the Knlcks six games Garden on Friday, April 21.
baseline with .2:23left.
to eliminate Baltimore, closing
If additional games are'
Frazier Adds FoalSbols
Sirles D
w. L. ot 9• out the series Tuesday with a needed, No. 5 will be in Boston Frazier added a pair of foul
•·Cincinnati
4 o 20 9
Hershey
0 4 9 20 107-101 victory over the Bullets. on Sunday afternoon, April 23, shots to build the New York
"Boston is one of the ' the sixth In New York, April 26, lead to !1&amp;-97. ·
•-clinched serle•
Tuesdoy's Results
strongest teams in the league,"· and the seventh in Boston on
"Thill victory is a tribute to
Booton 5 Providence ~ loll \ said Knick Coach Red Holz· Friday, April 28.
the tesm," Frazier said later.
Cleveland 5 Baltimore 3
man, '1hey'realwaystough for
The Western Conference fin- "With Willis Reed and Dick
Cincinnati 3 ~rsehey I
us. We split the six-game als resumes tonight in Los Barnett hurting at various
!On~~amesatheduledl
nelday's G1mes
season series so nobody goes Angeles with the Lakers· times, they showed determina·
Springfield at Nova Scotia
into this ooe with any edge." meeting the defending cham- lion."
Cleveland at Baltimore
(Onlygamess~heduled)
Walt Frazier, who shares · pion Milwaukee Bucks In the
Somebody asked losing
Tuesday's scoring honors with second game of the best~!- Coach Gene Shue why he was
. .
. ·
,
Knick center Jerry Lucas, with seven series. The Bucks won smiling after being eliminated
-~cHon
' or.·~ 22 poliltl ilch, thought the the opener! '· 91172' Sundiy' -~·from the playoffs and he
~'
,
. o matcl!!IPI between New York holding the Ulkers oo qnly eifiht r~ptied: "As long as you:re
and B9"1on were even, and points In the third quarter. alive, you should smile."
Shue never lost his cool
agreed that the club must Tonight's game will be seen on
contain the Celtics' fast break the ABC-TV network beginning during the game as he urged
oo slay alive.
at 10 p.m. EST.
the Bullets on. He thought the

mount.
"We're concerned about the ·
inequity from town to town,"
Detroit catcher Bill Freehan' .
said. "Under the ·owners
iJropoS!Il. some l!!ams would be
P!!nallzed more severely than
others .'' · '·"
The owners w~ht to dock lhe
play~ ' day's pay whenever
they rescheduled a game as
part of a doubleheader. The
players countered . with a
proposal that the players ~­
docked a half-day's !)ay for the.
fli'SI two games rescheduled as .
doubleheaders-for a
maximum of one day's pay.

I.G.A.
26 oz.
box

The players also agreed to
waive all the ,rules (cr the ·
scheduling of games, such as ...
allowing night games on
getaway days or a daY double- :
header after a night game. 1•

BARONS TRIUMPH
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Gordon LaBossiere and Dennis
Giannini acored back-to.back
goals within 57 seconds in the
first periQd and· Giannini
pounded home another goal in
the third period to power the
Cleveland Barons to a ~
victory over the Baltimore
Clippers in Calder Cup quarterfinals action Tue$1ay night.
The Cleveland win evened
tile beat-of-.even aeries aI :!-all,
\he fifth contest will be played
.In Baltimore tonight. The sixth
game will be played here
Friday and the ·seventh, If
needed, will be ·In Baltimore
Saturday.
-Cleveland goalie Gilles
Gllbert, who held Baltimore
accrel0111 in the first Period,
finished with 22 saves.
Baltimore's Jim Shaw blocked
23 attempts.

.. $

. .SHIRT
FINISHING

29 oz.

LB.

.00

I

IDAHO
POTATOES
10 lb.
bag

DOG FOOD
s
~oo
cans

N~y(~bbage

•

\'

~·

Solid &amp; Green

PAL
IMITATION

Peanut·Butter

15th Year; Eyes _4th Win
Gurney' second entry and the
two for Simon will be powered
by turbo.Qffenhausers.
•The Chevy racer w11s entered
for rookie Tom Bigelow of
White water, Wis. Bigelow has
gained experience on the
United States Auto Club spring
and midget circuits.
Practice for this year's race
starts April 29 with time trials
scheduled for the weekends of
May 13-14 and May 2().21.
SWORDS WIN
CINCINNATI (UPI ) - Paul
Andrea scored two goals to
lead the Cincinnati Swords to a
3-1 victory over Hershey here
Tuesday night and a straight
four-game sweep of the best,)f.
seven quarter-final American
!;Iockey League Calder Cup

LB.
KENNEBEC

2¥2 lb.

They know that their
dollars earn higher ear .
nings here with complete

I.G.A.

SEED
POTATOES

Toilet Tissue

50.lb. bag

safety! We lnvltt you to

"oet wise" to our savings

programs. plus the many

other banking services
offered at

-

'Meigs Co. Branch·

.@
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
294 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

All Accounts Insured To

$20,000.00 by FSLIC.

4 roll
packs

series.

each carded a 43. Topper Orr
The Swords meet the winner
played, and finished with a 42 of the Cleveland-Baltimore
series in the semi-final round.
lor GAHS.
Steve Story's 39 led the
Marauders, Jon Buck had a
42, Jim Story 43, Marty Vaughn
45, Randy Chafin·48 and Ro••r
Dillard 64.
The Blue Devils, now 4-1 in
two outings, play at Wahama
this afternoon.

.00

.19

$

BAG

Give him everything ...
the time, the day, the date

~.,.

Accutron®
by Bulova

EXPIRES APRIL 15th

.08

DOMINO

SUGAR

So exact is the Accutron tuning fork
movement, that accuracy is guaran.
reed to within a minute a month. •

W~h

10 lb..ba&amp;_
·U~IT

GRADE TMEDHJM

OAT£ AHD OAf "I"
$111nlen stul. Blue
IIIII 11\d stnp, $1 J!l ,

1·

c

BAG

J0-80

Save Here!

I

ORANGES

cans

Wise Owls

$1 00

-·
-----------·
FLORIDA

L

PEACHE

Foyt Enters Indy 500 For

Coach John Milhoan 's
Gallipolis Blue Devil golfers
defeated hOilt Meigs 161-169 on
the. Pomeroy cou.iie · Tuesday
evening behind Kenny New's
two-&lt;Jver-par 37.
·
Brett Epting fired a fO for
GAHS while Dow Saunders
finished with a 41. John Cunningham -and John Saunders

c

I

10 oz.

Will
EXPIRES APRIL 15th Coupon
ONE PER PERSON
.
1
M&amp;R FOODLINER
..

I

DEL
MONTE
.

fifth foul picked up by center
Wes Unseld enable4 New York
to gain better control of the
boards.
The
Knlcks
oulrebounded the Bullets, ~
34 . ...
New York had a balanced
scoring effo&gt;;:ts, something they
hope can prevail in the Boston
series. Frazier and Jerry
Lucas each scored 22 points.
Up front, forwards Dave
DeBusschere and Bradley
conlributed 20 points apiece.
Archie Clark of Baltimore led
all scorers with 31 points, Jack
Marin added 21 and former
Knick Mike Rklordan netted 19
for the Bullets.

Dowswell

Blue Devils Top
Meigs by Eight

I.COFFEE

'

Playoffs, Face Celts

INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UPI)
Four other racers were
- A.J. Foyt Jr. officially en- entered Tuesday, four days
lel'!'d the Indianapolis 50!knile before the midnight Saturday
race Tuesday for the 15th deadline. The field now numconsecutlve year and could bers 40. Speedway officials
become the classic's first four- said they expect about 30 more
time winner. ·
- entries to be mailed before the
Foyt, who now buUds as well time expires:
as races his own cars, entered
Other entries Tuesday intwo of hia creation.
eluded two by owner-driver
Another two of the turix&gt;' Dick Simon, Salt Lake City; a
charged Ford Coyotes were · backup Dan Gurney Eagle for
entered In the name of J . H. Bobby Unser who had an
Greer of Houston where Foyt earlier entry, and a turbohas his garage. A.J. Fay! Sr. ciy!rged Chevrolet-powered
was named crew chief for all car by Ray w. Smith of Eaton,
four cars .
Ohio.

1NESCAFE
I INSTANT

ALT

.

Knicks Advance In NBA

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
Univenity oophomore javelin
thrower Rick Do8well has been
named the Mid-American
Conference's ·first "Spring
Athlete ol the Week" for 1972.
Doswell sel a Kentucky
Relays record last week in the
javelin with a toss of 2f6.feel-4lnches, second best throw in
the nation so far this year.
Runner-up in the conference
balloUng · was Kent State's
Jacques Accambray, who set a
hammer 'throw mark al
Kentu9ky with a heave of 215feet.
Other nominees included
Bowling Green's Steve mowers
and Ken Walters, who tied for
runnerup In the Marshall Invitational Golf with one over
par 73s; pitcher-shortstop
Gary Cooper of Miami; Toledo
catcher Tom Goyer and
Western Michigan pole vaulter
Wry Robards.

·.·.

'EGGS
cDozen

DATI AHD DAY "U"
Stlinles!. si11L Silver
dill,
$171.

SAME DAY
SERVItE

.

GREEN GIANT-

This

Coupon
1 PER COUPON

4

'

In At~Out At 5

111 I. 1111..........,
)

•we will 1111ust to this tolerance: if '@tCI'lllry, Gllrant11 it tor 01e )'Ur.

,... _,
-

y

'

....

~

•
't

'

'

�.

6- The Daily Semlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Aprill2, 1972
Poge 20 . D,eed Records Me i ~ s

,
LEGAL NOTICE

County , -Oh1o ,
1,__
·
You r~r t req tJi r ed to answer
IN THE COMMON · PLEAS
·th e Petiti on w i thln twenty eigfll
COURT OF
dayS after th,. 1asf pub lica lion ot
· MEIGS cou"Tv; OHIO
th is notlce • •..:J m ety, by not later
- PR08AT. DIVISION th an lt}c 21st . d i~~ V of Jun e, 1972,
, m"",n"t"str•' ·rM1••• Ryfh_e r . Ad · or
lvdgment bV def~ult w il l be
r ender ed against 'fOU .
1
af the Estate ol
Anna M . Ryt~er ,
George w. Moore, Deceased.
Admini Stratr i x .Of the
. Pl•lntiff,
· ~s ta te of George w.
vs.
f'/!oore, Deceased ,
Betty Mouman, et al .,
. Plaintiff
Defendants .
Crow , Crow &amp; Por t er ,
No. 20594 A ttorn eys tor Plain ti ff
- NOTICE BY

1&lt;1

The Defendants, Paul Moore,
Jr ., and Mrs . Paul Moore , j r .,
his spouse, and th e unknown
heirs , devisees , legat ees ,
executors. admin istrators or
~ assigns 01 Paul Moore , Jr . and
Mrs . Paul '\\oore, Jr ., w ill lake
notice that on the 26th. ct:av of
Ja·n varv , 1972", a Pelltl.on wa s
filed In the Probate Di v ision of
the Common Pleas r::ourt of
M eigs County , OhiO , wher ei n
you have been named . defen ' dants praying for sale of the
entire "Interest iri th e real estate
tlereinaner described In order
to pay the debts of the deced ent,
George w. Moore, Decea sed ,
end the co5ts of administrati on .
The real estat e Is descr ibed as
IOIIOWS :
The fo-llow i ng re al estat e
situate In the V illage of Mid ·
dteport , Meigs County , Ohio ,
described es follows : Th e
lollowlng real estate situate In
One Hundred Acre Lot No . 309
In Town No. 1: Range No . 13 in
said Countv of Meigs, and State
of Ohio, tnat Is to say a lot of two
acres and ninety -three hun .
dredths of an acre on which
Ratph .Spooner· formertv resided
on the Hill near the forks ol th e
road about naif a mile north ·
west of Middleport , on the road
to Rutland and more par ·
tlcularly described as follow s.
to -w i t :
Beg i nn ing at 11 st one with a
brink on top of 11 , w,hich b ears
soutt-1 83112 · degrees west 66112
ftet rrom the north -west corner
of sa id Spooners house being in
line w ith the north end of the
ume ; thence north 71112
degrees east 4 chains and 36
links ; thence north aa•n degrees
e-ast three chaIns and nin ety two
links ; thence South 7'h degrees
east 3 c~ains and 1S link ~ to a
stake : tnence south 72 degrees
west 6 Chains and 17 links to a
corner et the road ; thertce north
4514 degrees west 3 chains and
21 links to 1 stone ; thence north
U V2 degrees west 1 chain 38
links to the place of beg inning ;
saving and excepting th e cOal
under said premises and th e
r ight to rpine the same as
heretofore reserved .
Also the follow ing premises,
to -wit : Beginning at the Nor ·
theast
corner
of
above
described premi ses ; .. thenc e
south Slf2 degrees east 3 cha ins
and 2llinks to Jo seph Fleming s
lot ; thence North 12 degrees
1111 79 links ; thence north S•h
d!tQrees east 2 cha ins and 93
llilks ; thence west one ·Chain
and n111e links to the place of
beolnnlng , containing 29-lOD of
In acre, excepting,. !he coal and
other minerals and the right to
mine the same .
Excepting and reserv ing
from the abOve descr ibed real
estate three parcels of land
which were prev iously con veyed as felllows : One to Roy
Ru11ell by deed recorded In VoL
111, Page 435, Deed Records
Meigs County, Oh lo, and the.

12, 19, 26 lSI

J,

RIVI;lRVIEW
The
· Riverview Girl Scoot Troop ~
of Reedsville recently -com~
pleted a Community Service
project In which U1e scouts
have been making rabbits frop1
milk cartons for several

10, 17, 24, 71

sea led propo sal s will be
r eceiv ed at the VI llage Clerk 's
Offi ce, M iddl eport Vi ll age,

Race Street , Middl eport, Ohio
A number of students at.
until 4:00P .M. April 27, 1972 and lendinu the Hocking Technical
opened as soOn as practicable
e
thereafter, for perform lng and College at Nelsonville from the
e~ecl,ltlng the Contract for : Meigs area were named to the
Midd le port F ire Department ,
·Race Street at North Fourth dean's · list lor . the winter
quar~r .

..!..

Making a four point average
A• Lamp Of near
was J Ud'th
I
herein , prepared by Auble - Coolville. In the 3.4 to-the '3.999
Mitche l L- Burgess
and g
Assoc iat es, .t1 V1 we st stat e
roup of Studen ts for the
Stree t, Athens , Ohio 45701, 1188 quarter were Stanley R.
Pipp in Road , Cinc inna ti, Ohio Lemley, Middleport; Roy R.
45239.
Plans and specifications ma y Vaughan, Pomeroy; Lynn L. ·
be pic ked up at th e Ar chit ec t 's 'Mallory, Racine ·, Michael L.
olfice of at the M iddleport
Villag e Clerk 'S Office : .t'h West Fisher, near Shade; Robert c.
State Street , Ath ens, Ohio Bak S
1 th ' 3 to
45701; Ra ce Street, Middlepor t., ..
er, yracuse. n e ·
Oh to,
· 3.499 group were Russell L.
Adeposit lsreQulred ascalled Day near Coolville· Thomas
for In the "Instruction to Bid ·
'
'
ders." Bids shall be sealed and . E. Hoffner, Middleport; James

~~f~~:::d 'Po ~.,:e~~~:~k.:n~:~rte~

237 'Ra ce St .• M iddleport, Ohio

NOTICE OF

.45760.
The Envelope shall be e['l ·
dorsed as fotjows in th e upper
left hand corn er :
Proposal for
tlndicate c1 ass of work )
For :
(Indicate P'ro ject l
Add itional Informa t ion may
be secured from the Office of
Aub·te -Mitchelt - Burgess &amp;
Associates. 4'12 W. State SJreet ,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
Each bid must be ac -

APPOINTMENT
Cue No : 20661
Est ate of Besse Anne weed
Decea sed .
Notice is hereby given that
lthamar D . weed of 3753
Harvard Acres , Cinc innati ,
Oh io 45227 has been duly ap .
pointed Eucutor of the Esta te
of Besse Anne weed. deceased ,
late of The VIllage of Pomeroy ,
Meigs County, OhfG .
Creditors are required to file
their claims with sa id fiduciary
com~on l od by. o bid bond of 10 with in four months .
pet . of the proposed conlra ol at
Dat ed thi s 7th day of April

the time of bid opening and the 1972.

succeutul
required

bidder

will

be

to post a 100 pet .

performance bond based on his

bid total. This. amount must be (41
stlt!d in doll• rs and cen ts.
The owners reserve the right
to r~lect any or all bids, or to
acc!pl the bid wh ich embra ces
such combination of alternate
pro~osats as may promote the
best Interests ·ot the VIllage of .

John c. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
ol said County

12, 19, 26, 3t

April 5, 12, 19, 26, 4tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

·
Case No. 20662
Estate of OLEN G. DOER FER
Deceased .
Noti ce is hereby g iven that
Darlene R ltch le ot Route 1,
Rutland , Ohio , has been duly
appoin t ed adm inistratri x of the
Estate of Ol en G. Doer fer,
deceased, late of Me igs Coun ty,

Creditors are re(luired to fil e
their claims with sa id fi duciary
with in tour month s.
Dated th is 8th dav ot Apri l

BOX FAN

SAVE UP TO '1.00

Certified Gas Stations
o.

WEDNESDAY
MEIGS SALON 710, Eight
and Forty, Wednesday, 7:30
home of Mrs. Eileen Searles.
Take botUe caps and pecans.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. James Titus,
Rutland. Mrs. Charles Gaskill
will talk on her trip to South
America.

Anniversary
Is Celebrated

SATURDAY, APRIL 15th.

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

•ALUMINUM
eVINYL WEBS

e2 SPEED

13 INCH

CHAISE
LOUNGE
-ALUMINUM
•VINYL WEBS

24 INCH

oMlll l't1ims

• 3!8"x50 FT.
eBRASS COUPUNGS

I POII l!Ofl GI\A.L

VINYL

PLASTIC LINED

WINDOW.

SOLID &amp;FLORAL

~ SHADES
•36" Cl01H l 6'

9&amp;.

COMFY

BED PILLOWS
eREG. 1.39

eNON-ALLERGIC

...

PICKET FENCE 72160$288
7M0$388

4 . ,00

nx••$4

DRAPES

turned in from coupons.
Mrs. Gene Wils on, , Mrs.
Brown, and Mrs. Lyle
Balderson were named to a
committee to talk to the new ·
lock master, Robert Beagle,
about a garden club project
and a thank-you was read from
Mrs, Claremont Harris lor
the gift she received while a
patient·in the hospital.
For the April meeting plans
were made to drive out and
tour Collett's Greenhouse at

Made from golden wheat. Plus_
a bonus helping of the iron ®you' need.
These are Kellogg's 40% Bran
Fl~kes. Crisp. Light. Flavoriilled.
Try 'em now and save 7¢.

I'R ONJ
~SIDEPA~

Mr . Bllli Mrs. William R.
Dean, the former Imogene
Sayre, of Rutland, celebrated
their sliver wedding an·
nlversary on Easler Sunday,
April 2.
A dinner was given In their
honor at the home o! their
daughter and ·son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Danny R. Tillis, the
former Saundra Dean. Green
tapers flanked a floral centerpieCe used on the dining
room table. Cake and coffee
were served following the
dinner and gift~ of silver were
presented to Mr. and Mrs.
Dean.
The couple was married in
Ravenswood, W. Va. by the
Rev . r rederlck Va!entine on
AJ!ril2, 1947. 'lbey have resided
in' Rutland for the past 20
years. Mr. and Mrs . Dean have
another daughter, Teresa, who
is marrlejl to Leo o. Wood m,
whose daughter, Heather
Alayne, Is Mr. and Mrs. Dean 's
only grandchild.
Out~f·town guests were Mr .
and Mrs. David Wickline, Mrs.
Mary Dean, Davy Wickline,
and Mlas Sherrie Roberts,
BldweU; Mr. and Mrs. Ruby
Sayre, Cottagevllle, W. Va .;
Mr . and Mrs. Dan McDermott,
Cottageville, W. Va.

REGULAR meeting,_ Shade
River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM Thursday 7:30 p.m., at hall '' in
Chester. Work in the
Fellowcraft degree. All Master
Masons invited to attend .
SOUTHERN Local School
Boar~ Thursday 7: 30 p.m. at
the high school.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange 8
p.m. Thursday with Hemlock
Grove as guests. Baking and
sewing contests to be held .
AFTERNOON Circle, Heath
Methodist Church, 2 p.m.
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
David EntSminger. Mrs. M. L.
French to present the
program.
FRffiAY
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapt er, Da ught ers of the
American Revolution, lun·
cheon, I p.m. Friday at the
home of Mrs. 0 . P. Klein.
Assisting hostesses will be
Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs. J. E.
Harley and Mrs . Charles
Lewis. The hostesses ask that
regrets be telephoned to 992·
3156 by Thursday.
SUNDAY
COUNTY UNION Class
mee ting at Letart Falls United
Brethren Church Sunday 2 to 4
p.m. Okey A. Hart, leader.
Rev. Rob Shook, pastor, ex·
lends an invitation to the public
to attend.

REEDSVILLE WSCS
REEDSVILLE
The
Reedsville WSCS met with
Mrs .
Nancy . Buckley.
Devotions consisted of Easter
readings and prayers. Mrs.
Vesta Wyncoop gave an in·
leresting
message
on
missionary work.
Business session conducted
by the president, Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, was a donation voted .
to a home for needy children in
Texas and to buy 16 folding
chairs lor the church . A white
.elephant auction was helQI.
Refreshments were served to
the ,above and Mrs. Hazel
Buckley , Mrs. Rose Thomas,
Mrs. Dorotha Riebel, Mrs.
Vivian Humphrey, Mrs. Nell
Wilson, Mrs. Ruth Dillon, Mrs.
Alberta Edwards and Mrs.
Vesta Wyncoop guests, and
Mrs. Lllllari Pickens. Next
meeting with Mrs. Dillon. Mrs.
Pickens was' awarded the door
prize .
LUNCHEON SET
Members of the Rutland
Firemen's Auxiliary will serve
a luncheon at the Hysell sale on
Main st., Rutland, Saturday.

Belpre:
The program consisted of
"Now is the Time To," by Mrs.
Brown, and "Preparing Your
Lawn lor Spring," by Mrs.
Putman. She told the need of
weed and insect control, how to
fertilize, and watering and
mowing of the lawn. '
Games were directed by
Mrs. Frank Bise. Prizes went
to Mrs. Herman Grossnickle,
Mrs. Wilson, Mrs . Harliss
t' rank, Mrs. Putman, Mrs. Roy
Hannum, and Mrs. Brown.
Door prize went to Mrs .
Balderson.
Plans lor an Arbor Day
Program at Riverview School
are to be announ ced.
Easter favors and refresh·
ments were served to the above
named and Mrs. R. L. Larkins,
Mrs. Ronald Osborne and Mrs.
Ernest Whi tehead.
'~'

RANDY HAYNES
RUTLAND - Randy
Haynes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Basil Haynes of the Rutland
area, bas heen selected as a
delegal~ to Boys' Stale this
summer
represenling
Rutland American Legion
Posl467. Haynes, a Junior al
Meigs High School, is a
member of the · National
Honor
Society,
vice
president ,of lbe Colo Club
and is employed at Kroger's
in Pomeroy. He attends the
Rutland Church of the

Send A

Flowering Plant
To A Friend
They Help to Hea 1 &amp;
Mend.

Dudley's Aorist
Serving : Middleport
Pomeroy, Gollipolls, 0 .
&amp; Muon Co., W. Vo.

Scripture readings between
musical numbers made up the
Easter sunrise service at the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church arranged by the Youth
Fellowship assisted by Mrs. Ed
Bowen and Mrs. Don Hunnel.
The pulpit was covered in
white with the words "God SO
Loved" across tt&gt;e fr on t. A
bluelight refle cted on th e
words. Palms were also used in
the decorations. Miss Emma
Lou Davis opened the program
with a piano prelude. Beverly
Will gave the call to worship,
introit was by the choir, and
Dale Davis read scripture
preceding "Were You There?"
by the choir.
Scriptures included John 19,
1-6, by Jenny Warth, John 19,
17-22 by Mrs. Phil Ohlinger ;
Matthew 'l:l , 45-61 by'''li'ecky
Will ; unison reading of the 13th
Chapter of I Corinthians by
Nazarene. Boys Stale will he
held June 15-23 at Ashland
College, Ashland, Ohio.

the choi r , and a selection from

St. Matthew by Brenda Will .
Musical numbers were "A
Crown of Thorns" by Becky
Will and Rodney Pullins; "Man
on the Middle Cross," by Phil ,
Ann and Laura Ohlinger ; "Had
It Not Been, " by Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Davis ; "For God So
Loved," by the choir, and
"Hallelu" by Mrs. Stahten
Smith and daughter,
Janie.
,

A dialogue, "On the RQad to
Emmaus," was p r~sented by
Beverly Will and li'icky
Johnson. There ivas a poem,
"My Risen Lord," by the
c on~rega tio n , and a hymn "He
Lives" by the congregation to
concl ude the service.

IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. Low~ ll (Ruby ) Bush of
lhe·Bashan area is confined to
lhe Camden Clark Hospital,
Room 331, Parkersburg, W.
Va. Mrs. Bush fell recently in
front of Dutton 's Drug Store in
Middleport fracturing her arm
in two places and receiving a
shoulder injury.

Spring flowers decorated ~
tables for a breakfast served to
approximately 50 persons by
the yo uth group. During the
Sunday school hour reci tations
were given by the children. An
egg hunt was held for the
children.

ITALIAN NIGHT
AT
Martin Restaurant
In tile Heart of Middleport
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
6:30 To 10 : 30 April 12
~

IN CINCINNATI
Mr . and Mr s. Thomas
Bowen, Pomeroy, were in
Cincinnati over ' the weekend
for a bowling tournament.

Spaghetti with homemade Italian sauce.

"Featuring Maxine At The Organ"

we care---

WOULD
A PROFESSIONAL
.GARDENER·USE
A&amp;P PREMIUM
LAWN PRODUCTS?·

Beef Rib Roast ~:t We~Y • ....spt DelmoniCo Steaks Bfe~~· •
Beef Roast c~u~RNI: • • .···99' Charcoal Steak 83~:· . •

•••. $249

•

'

I

lb.$139

You bet ... and many do, because
they have learned that A&amp;P Premium Lawn Products
are equal to the best. And yet, they cost much less.

-.

1).f.'J

~·
..........

LAWN BUILDER
Alontleedi~ slow-releaselert•lizer, dust-(ree
1
and iiiflt-weight. Rd in the'nutr ients grasi needs· • '.I I , 'II ,p
nitrogen 1231. phosphoric acid I 71. potash (7)
I
WEED &amp;FEED
A double-duty product,gelS ud of un si ghtly oroad·lealed
weeds and feeds your lawn.

.

0 • '.

an In one applicat ion

CRABGRASS CONTROL llAWN BUILDER
Another boon to the home gardener. th is line product
stops crabgrass before it starts and it feeds the lawn too.

LAWN SEED

a.HI: ,...tum

An al l perenn ial seed . A tine -tedured midure .containina

25% Mer ion Bluegrass. II produces a tru lybeautiful lawn.

Prices Good Thru Sat., April
YALUAILI COUPON

Sliced Bacon

,.b. aft. ...,
pkr. 7T" .,..,.

15th

IWIFr
u• 8""
FfQft k5 PUMIUMooeo
ooouoooouo pkr. 7 -

FOLGER'S INSTANT COFF~E
~~~P~~s

Pork Roast
Luncheon Meat

FRESH WHOLE
o PICNIC o
ALL

•

sttJ~~TtES

I

=· 79'

10 ; 99c

Good Thru Sat., Af"il 15th At A&amp;P or A·Marl Storos
LI~IT

ONE COU,ON

VAWAIL! COUPON

MARVEL ICE CREAM
ALL
FLAVORS

ll·raL
otn.

s·9,

WITH THIS
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Good Thru Sat., April 15th At A&amp;P or A-Mart Storos
Lt,.IT ONE COUPON
VALUAILE COUPON

ROBIN HOOD FLOUR

5 .u..

44~ WITH THIS
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.'
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LJ~IT

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ALCOA WRAP

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SCOniES TISSUE

W~~Tii~~D

4

Aluminum

$100
.

Fon

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ASSORTED
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110-Ct.

3II"~·· 89~

BOUNTY TOWELS

-WI

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f'WIC[f) LlSS

THANA
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THAN A

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I

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ARMOUR'S TREET
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Good Thru Sat., April 15th At A&amp;P 'or A.Morl Stores
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FURNITURE
THRoWS ·

MINIMUM DAILY
ADULT REQUIREMENT OF -

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GARDEN HOSE
13" DIAMETEIIIIU

ONEOUIICE
CONTAINS

BAR·B·Q GRILL

Bar·B·Q Grill
eMARSIW.LEN

POMEROY-Middleport
Lions Club, Wednesday, noon,
United Methodist Church.
Lions urged to attend.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, stated meeting.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Most excellent masters degree
to be cooferred on a number or
candidates. Refreslunents will
be served.
THURSDAY
PIDLATHEA Society·, 6 p.m.
Thursday, covered dish dinner.
New officers to be installed.
BRADBURY PTA, 7 p.m.
Thursday night at the school.
New officers to be installed .
Meeting to be followed by an
operetta.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority ; 7: 45
p.m. Thursday home o! Mrs.
Mary Carolyn Wiley, New
Haven . Ritual of jewels ,
honorary degree, and order of
roses to be conferred. Mem·
bers urged to be present.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, 7:30
p.m. Thurldar. ~tJieal!l :United
Methodisf Chu'rcli, Mfadleport,
Rev. W, H. '· Perrin, guest
speaker. Hostesses , Mrs .
Roscoe Wise , Mrs . Ernie
Fraser and Mrs. Eddie Blake,
Jr.

Phone 992-2556
At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge

LAWN CHAIR

REEDSVILLE The
Riverview Garden Club met at
the home of Mrs. Walter Brown
for the March meeting. Cohostess was Mrs . Donald ·
Myers. Devotions were, "It
Take.s Courage," and "Scatter
Sunshine," by Mrs. R. E.
Williams. Roll call was answered by memb~rs naming
the .month of. their birth, its
flower and birth.stone .
The business meeting was
conducted by the Pres. Mrs.
Donald Putman when $10 was

("'
"
"'
"
......
""''""'' -w=~
.··'; Socia·l Calendar .

•

Scripture, Music Feature; Easter

Mrs, Walter Brown Hosts·
Riverview Garden Club

»&gt;;: -•· •• onn~·~~~~· . -

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU

• McGRAW·EDISON

WOOD

.YOU'LL BE SATISFIED

Adolph's ·Dairy Valley

John C. Bac on
Ac ting Judge
Court of Com m on Pleas ,
Probate Div ision
(A) 12, 19, 26, lt

MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

EASTER EGG HUNT
REEDSVIlLE - An Eastir
egg hunt WftS held at the
Reedsville Ball Park on March ·
31 sponsored by the Olive
Township Ladles Auxiliary.
Parerits donated 33 dozen
colored eggs:
Prizes were given to the
children finding the most eggs
and golden eggs. Chocolate
Easter Bunnies were given to
Rocky Van Meter, Scotty Van
Meter and Missy Barber for
finding the most eggs. One
dollar was given to each of the
children finding the golden
eggs who were Theresa
Browning, Mike Hauber and·
Todd Moodlspaugh. Games
and contests were conducted
for the children and prizes
awarded. Refreshments of
rupcakes, Kooi1Ald and
chocolate eggs were served by
.the ladles to over 1\)0 children.

.BUY CERTIFIED .

For Prompt:
Service, '
Delicious Food, .
Soft Drinks &amp; Dairy Dessert.

Ohio.

ZO INCH

or

The llwanf( lfo, or Yellow, "China's sorrow" because
CI..ASS PARTY SET
River
is popularly known aa its devastoting floods.
,
The Happy Harvesters Cbiss .
o! Trinity · Church, Pomeroy',
will have .a "come ad you are"
delivered.
party Friday evening at the
One rabbit was delivered by church. A6p.m. dinner will he
one of too .icouts to Mrs. served by hostesses , Mrs.
Eunice Shumway who Is 94 Carrie Neutzling, Mrs. ·
years old, a patient at . the Frances Reibel, Mrs. Ruby
Arcadia Nursing Home at Erb, Mrs. Marie Dailey and
Coolvilie. The girls were Mrs. Frieda Duffy.
presented with chocolate
rabbits and eggs before
delivering the rabbits.
sCou~ taking part were Lisa .
Body's Content
Masters, Patricia Boston, Jo
In an : ~ v e r~ ge healthy
Ellen Wells, Sheila Bucha~J&lt;tn, young man, fat constitutes
Theresa Browning, Bonnie about 15 per cent o! total
Dalley, Judy Holler, Diana body weight, water about 23
Evans, Candy DaUey, Vicky per cent, cells or active tis·
992-9981
sue 58 per cimt and bone
Chevalier, Susan Hannum, mineral.
Pomer11y,
538
W.
Main
4 per cent, accord·
Kim Reed, Kay Balderson, ing to Encyclopaedia Britan·
We Honor BankAmericard and Master Charge
Debra LeWis, and Sara Wells. nica .

YOU CAN
COUNT
ONUS!

Middleport .
Gene- Grate, Clerk
Vlllao• ot Middleport

129

I

B. Broderick, Pomeroy;
Thaddeus S. J)ye, Pomeroy ;
Marvin J. Qllmore, ·Pomeroy;
Gary. Norris, Racine; Kenneth
R. Theiss, Racine ; James
Fink, Rutland.

In accordan ce w ith the plans
and sp ec ifications , and all
contract documents contained

othtr two to Jocob Young by 1912.
dHd S recorded in Vol . 116, Page
226, ond Vol. 117, Page 590, Deed
RfiCOrds of Meigs County , Ohio .
Ref.,-enc:e Deed : Vol. 117,

meetings·. The Thursday'
evening , licfore Easter the
rabbits w re lllled with Candy
and delivered to the .sick and
elderly of the communities of
Reedsville and Long Bottom.
Around SO rabl!its were

Several ListecLOn Tech Lists

INVIHTION TO BID

street, Middleport. Ohio ,

7- The DIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Aprill2, 1972

.

Girl Scouts Complete Project

•

PUBLICATION-

.

.

I

... ot
$}19 WITH THIS
reratar Wo
•
COUPON
Good Thnr S1t., April 15th At A&amp;P or A:M1rt Stor.,
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IVORY LIQUID
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POMEROY, OHIO
'

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Choppe• Mushrooms

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.

THESE- ITEMS PRICED LESS THAN A YEAR AGO!

TISSUEe~

•

$100

..

~·

Fresh Donuts •
FROZEN A&amp;P
Han•i Whip •

•

3doz.$100 Bean Coffee ·-~aAN •
•

,• .• 6.....
_ .....
,I ·

EIGHT O'CLOCK

JANE PARKER

PR.INTS OR
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SOLIDS
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' Good Thru Sat., April 15th At A&amp;P or A·Mort Stor11
1111 UMIT ONE COUPON

2~79~ Cooked $quash

• • •
o

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DAILY

Doc Food

• • • • •

I

�.

6- The Daily Semlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, O.,Aprill2, 1972
Poge 20 . D,eed Records Me i ~ s

,
LEGAL NOTICE

County , -Oh1o ,
1,__
·
You r~r t req tJi r ed to answer
IN THE COMMON · PLEAS
·th e Petiti on w i thln twenty eigfll
COURT OF
dayS after th,. 1asf pub lica lion ot
· MEIGS cou"Tv; OHIO
th is notlce • •..:J m ety, by not later
- PR08AT. DIVISION th an lt}c 21st . d i~~ V of Jun e, 1972,
, m"",n"t"str•' ·rM1••• Ryfh_e r . Ad · or
lvdgment bV def~ult w il l be
r ender ed against 'fOU .
1
af the Estate ol
Anna M . Ryt~er ,
George w. Moore, Deceased.
Admini Stratr i x .Of the
. Pl•lntiff,
· ~s ta te of George w.
vs.
f'/!oore, Deceased ,
Betty Mouman, et al .,
. Plaintiff
Defendants .
Crow , Crow &amp; Por t er ,
No. 20594 A ttorn eys tor Plain ti ff
- NOTICE BY

1&lt;1

The Defendants, Paul Moore,
Jr ., and Mrs . Paul Moore , j r .,
his spouse, and th e unknown
heirs , devisees , legat ees ,
executors. admin istrators or
~ assigns 01 Paul Moore , Jr . and
Mrs . Paul '\\oore, Jr ., w ill lake
notice that on the 26th. ct:av of
Ja·n varv , 1972", a Pelltl.on wa s
filed In the Probate Di v ision of
the Common Pleas r::ourt of
M eigs County , OhiO , wher ei n
you have been named . defen ' dants praying for sale of the
entire "Interest iri th e real estate
tlereinaner described In order
to pay the debts of the deced ent,
George w. Moore, Decea sed ,
end the co5ts of administrati on .
The real estat e Is descr ibed as
IOIIOWS :
The fo-llow i ng re al estat e
situate In the V illage of Mid ·
dteport , Meigs County , Ohio ,
described es follows : Th e
lollowlng real estate situate In
One Hundred Acre Lot No . 309
In Town No. 1: Range No . 13 in
said Countv of Meigs, and State
of Ohio, tnat Is to say a lot of two
acres and ninety -three hun .
dredths of an acre on which
Ratph .Spooner· formertv resided
on the Hill near the forks ol th e
road about naif a mile north ·
west of Middleport , on the road
to Rutland and more par ·
tlcularly described as follow s.
to -w i t :
Beg i nn ing at 11 st one with a
brink on top of 11 , w,hich b ears
soutt-1 83112 · degrees west 66112
ftet rrom the north -west corner
of sa id Spooners house being in
line w ith the north end of the
ume ; thence north 71112
degrees east 4 chains and 36
links ; thence north aa•n degrees
e-ast three chaIns and nin ety two
links ; thence South 7'h degrees
east 3 c~ains and 1S link ~ to a
stake : tnence south 72 degrees
west 6 Chains and 17 links to a
corner et the road ; thertce north
4514 degrees west 3 chains and
21 links to 1 stone ; thence north
U V2 degrees west 1 chain 38
links to the place of beg inning ;
saving and excepting th e cOal
under said premises and th e
r ight to rpine the same as
heretofore reserved .
Also the follow ing premises,
to -wit : Beginning at the Nor ·
theast
corner
of
above
described premi ses ; .. thenc e
south Slf2 degrees east 3 cha ins
and 2llinks to Jo seph Fleming s
lot ; thence North 12 degrees
1111 79 links ; thence north S•h
d!tQrees east 2 cha ins and 93
llilks ; thence west one ·Chain
and n111e links to the place of
beolnnlng , containing 29-lOD of
In acre, excepting,. !he coal and
other minerals and the right to
mine the same .
Excepting and reserv ing
from the abOve descr ibed real
estate three parcels of land
which were prev iously con veyed as felllows : One to Roy
Ru11ell by deed recorded In VoL
111, Page 435, Deed Records
Meigs County, Oh lo, and the.

12, 19, 26 lSI

J,

RIVI;lRVIEW
The
· Riverview Girl Scoot Troop ~
of Reedsville recently -com~
pleted a Community Service
project In which U1e scouts
have been making rabbits frop1
milk cartons for several

10, 17, 24, 71

sea led propo sal s will be
r eceiv ed at the VI llage Clerk 's
Offi ce, M iddl eport Vi ll age,

Race Street , Middl eport, Ohio
A number of students at.
until 4:00P .M. April 27, 1972 and lendinu the Hocking Technical
opened as soOn as practicable
e
thereafter, for perform lng and College at Nelsonville from the
e~ecl,ltlng the Contract for : Meigs area were named to the
Midd le port F ire Department ,
·Race Street at North Fourth dean's · list lor . the winter
quar~r .

..!..

Making a four point average
A• Lamp Of near
was J Ud'th
I
herein , prepared by Auble - Coolville. In the 3.4 to-the '3.999
Mitche l L- Burgess
and g
Assoc iat es, .t1 V1 we st stat e
roup of Studen ts for the
Stree t, Athens , Ohio 45701, 1188 quarter were Stanley R.
Pipp in Road , Cinc inna ti, Ohio Lemley, Middleport; Roy R.
45239.
Plans and specifications ma y Vaughan, Pomeroy; Lynn L. ·
be pic ked up at th e Ar chit ec t 's 'Mallory, Racine ·, Michael L.
olfice of at the M iddleport
Villag e Clerk 'S Office : .t'h West Fisher, near Shade; Robert c.
State Street , Ath ens, Ohio Bak S
1 th ' 3 to
45701; Ra ce Street, Middlepor t., ..
er, yracuse. n e ·
Oh to,
· 3.499 group were Russell L.
Adeposit lsreQulred ascalled Day near Coolville· Thomas
for In the "Instruction to Bid ·
'
'
ders." Bids shall be sealed and . E. Hoffner, Middleport; James

~~f~~:::d 'Po ~.,:e~~~:~k.:n~:~rte~

237 'Ra ce St .• M iddleport, Ohio

NOTICE OF

.45760.
The Envelope shall be e['l ·
dorsed as fotjows in th e upper
left hand corn er :
Proposal for
tlndicate c1 ass of work )
For :
(Indicate P'ro ject l
Add itional Informa t ion may
be secured from the Office of
Aub·te -Mitchelt - Burgess &amp;
Associates. 4'12 W. State SJreet ,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
Each bid must be ac -

APPOINTMENT
Cue No : 20661
Est ate of Besse Anne weed
Decea sed .
Notice is hereby given that
lthamar D . weed of 3753
Harvard Acres , Cinc innati ,
Oh io 45227 has been duly ap .
pointed Eucutor of the Esta te
of Besse Anne weed. deceased ,
late of The VIllage of Pomeroy ,
Meigs County, OhfG .
Creditors are required to file
their claims with sa id fiduciary
com~on l od by. o bid bond of 10 with in four months .
pet . of the proposed conlra ol at
Dat ed thi s 7th day of April

the time of bid opening and the 1972.

succeutul
required

bidder

will

be

to post a 100 pet .

performance bond based on his

bid total. This. amount must be (41
stlt!d in doll• rs and cen ts.
The owners reserve the right
to r~lect any or all bids, or to
acc!pl the bid wh ich embra ces
such combination of alternate
pro~osats as may promote the
best Interests ·ot the VIllage of .

John c. Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
ol said County

12, 19, 26, 3t

April 5, 12, 19, 26, 4tc

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

·
Case No. 20662
Estate of OLEN G. DOER FER
Deceased .
Noti ce is hereby g iven that
Darlene R ltch le ot Route 1,
Rutland , Ohio , has been duly
appoin t ed adm inistratri x of the
Estate of Ol en G. Doer fer,
deceased, late of Me igs Coun ty,

Creditors are re(luired to fil e
their claims with sa id fi duciary
with in tour month s.
Dated th is 8th dav ot Apri l

BOX FAN

SAVE UP TO '1.00

Certified Gas Stations
o.

WEDNESDAY
MEIGS SALON 710, Eight
and Forty, Wednesday, 7:30
home of Mrs. Eileen Searles.
Take botUe caps and pecans.
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
home of Mrs. James Titus,
Rutland. Mrs. Charles Gaskill
will talk on her trip to South
America.

Anniversary
Is Celebrated

SATURDAY, APRIL 15th.

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!

•ALUMINUM
eVINYL WEBS

e2 SPEED

13 INCH

CHAISE
LOUNGE
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•VINYL WEBS

24 INCH

oMlll l't1ims

• 3!8"x50 FT.
eBRASS COUPUNGS

I POII l!Ofl GI\A.L

VINYL

PLASTIC LINED

WINDOW.

SOLID &amp;FLORAL

~ SHADES
•36" Cl01H l 6'

9&amp;.

COMFY

BED PILLOWS
eREG. 1.39

eNON-ALLERGIC

...

PICKET FENCE 72160$288
7M0$388

4 . ,00

nx••$4

DRAPES

turned in from coupons.
Mrs. Gene Wils on, , Mrs.
Brown, and Mrs. Lyle
Balderson were named to a
committee to talk to the new ·
lock master, Robert Beagle,
about a garden club project
and a thank-you was read from
Mrs, Claremont Harris lor
the gift she received while a
patient·in the hospital.
For the April meeting plans
were made to drive out and
tour Collett's Greenhouse at

Made from golden wheat. Plus_
a bonus helping of the iron ®you' need.
These are Kellogg's 40% Bran
Fl~kes. Crisp. Light. Flavoriilled.
Try 'em now and save 7¢.

I'R ONJ
~SIDEPA~

Mr . Bllli Mrs. William R.
Dean, the former Imogene
Sayre, of Rutland, celebrated
their sliver wedding an·
nlversary on Easler Sunday,
April 2.
A dinner was given In their
honor at the home o! their
daughter and ·son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Danny R. Tillis, the
former Saundra Dean. Green
tapers flanked a floral centerpieCe used on the dining
room table. Cake and coffee
were served following the
dinner and gift~ of silver were
presented to Mr. and Mrs.
Dean.
The couple was married in
Ravenswood, W. Va. by the
Rev . r rederlck Va!entine on
AJ!ril2, 1947. 'lbey have resided
in' Rutland for the past 20
years. Mr. and Mrs . Dean have
another daughter, Teresa, who
is marrlejl to Leo o. Wood m,
whose daughter, Heather
Alayne, Is Mr. and Mrs. Dean 's
only grandchild.
Out~f·town guests were Mr .
and Mrs. David Wickline, Mrs.
Mary Dean, Davy Wickline,
and Mlas Sherrie Roberts,
BldweU; Mr. and Mrs. Ruby
Sayre, Cottagevllle, W. Va .;
Mr . and Mrs. Dan McDermott,
Cottageville, W. Va.

REGULAR meeting,_ Shade
River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM Thursday 7:30 p.m., at hall '' in
Chester. Work in the
Fellowcraft degree. All Master
Masons invited to attend .
SOUTHERN Local School
Boar~ Thursday 7: 30 p.m. at
the high school.
ROCK SPRINGS Grange 8
p.m. Thursday with Hemlock
Grove as guests. Baking and
sewing contests to be held .
AFTERNOON Circle, Heath
Methodist Church, 2 p.m.
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
David EntSminger. Mrs. M. L.
French to present the
program.
FRffiAY
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
Chapt er, Da ught ers of the
American Revolution, lun·
cheon, I p.m. Friday at the
home of Mrs. 0 . P. Klein.
Assisting hostesses will be
Mrs. Nan Moore, Mrs. J. E.
Harley and Mrs . Charles
Lewis. The hostesses ask that
regrets be telephoned to 992·
3156 by Thursday.
SUNDAY
COUNTY UNION Class
mee ting at Letart Falls United
Brethren Church Sunday 2 to 4
p.m. Okey A. Hart, leader.
Rev. Rob Shook, pastor, ex·
lends an invitation to the public
to attend.

REEDSVILLE WSCS
REEDSVILLE
The
Reedsville WSCS met with
Mrs .
Nancy . Buckley.
Devotions consisted of Easter
readings and prayers. Mrs.
Vesta Wyncoop gave an in·
leresting
message
on
missionary work.
Business session conducted
by the president, Mrs. Mamie
Buckley, was a donation voted .
to a home for needy children in
Texas and to buy 16 folding
chairs lor the church . A white
.elephant auction was helQI.
Refreshments were served to
the ,above and Mrs. Hazel
Buckley , Mrs. Rose Thomas,
Mrs. Dorotha Riebel, Mrs.
Vivian Humphrey, Mrs. Nell
Wilson, Mrs. Ruth Dillon, Mrs.
Alberta Edwards and Mrs.
Vesta Wyncoop guests, and
Mrs. Lllllari Pickens. Next
meeting with Mrs. Dillon. Mrs.
Pickens was' awarded the door
prize .
LUNCHEON SET
Members of the Rutland
Firemen's Auxiliary will serve
a luncheon at the Hysell sale on
Main st., Rutland, Saturday.

Belpre:
The program consisted of
"Now is the Time To," by Mrs.
Brown, and "Preparing Your
Lawn lor Spring," by Mrs.
Putman. She told the need of
weed and insect control, how to
fertilize, and watering and
mowing of the lawn. '
Games were directed by
Mrs. Frank Bise. Prizes went
to Mrs. Herman Grossnickle,
Mrs. Wilson, Mrs . Harliss
t' rank, Mrs. Putman, Mrs. Roy
Hannum, and Mrs. Brown.
Door prize went to Mrs .
Balderson.
Plans lor an Arbor Day
Program at Riverview School
are to be announ ced.
Easter favors and refresh·
ments were served to the above
named and Mrs. R. L. Larkins,
Mrs. Ronald Osborne and Mrs.
Ernest Whi tehead.
'~'

RANDY HAYNES
RUTLAND - Randy
Haynes, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Basil Haynes of the Rutland
area, bas heen selected as a
delegal~ to Boys' Stale this
summer
represenling
Rutland American Legion
Posl467. Haynes, a Junior al
Meigs High School, is a
member of the · National
Honor
Society,
vice
president ,of lbe Colo Club
and is employed at Kroger's
in Pomeroy. He attends the
Rutland Church of the

Send A

Flowering Plant
To A Friend
They Help to Hea 1 &amp;
Mend.

Dudley's Aorist
Serving : Middleport
Pomeroy, Gollipolls, 0 .
&amp; Muon Co., W. Vo.

Scripture readings between
musical numbers made up the
Easter sunrise service at the
Enterprise United Methodist
Church arranged by the Youth
Fellowship assisted by Mrs. Ed
Bowen and Mrs. Don Hunnel.
The pulpit was covered in
white with the words "God SO
Loved" across tt&gt;e fr on t. A
bluelight refle cted on th e
words. Palms were also used in
the decorations. Miss Emma
Lou Davis opened the program
with a piano prelude. Beverly
Will gave the call to worship,
introit was by the choir, and
Dale Davis read scripture
preceding "Were You There?"
by the choir.
Scriptures included John 19,
1-6, by Jenny Warth, John 19,
17-22 by Mrs. Phil Ohlinger ;
Matthew 'l:l , 45-61 by'''li'ecky
Will ; unison reading of the 13th
Chapter of I Corinthians by
Nazarene. Boys Stale will he
held June 15-23 at Ashland
College, Ashland, Ohio.

the choi r , and a selection from

St. Matthew by Brenda Will .
Musical numbers were "A
Crown of Thorns" by Becky
Will and Rodney Pullins; "Man
on the Middle Cross," by Phil ,
Ann and Laura Ohlinger ; "Had
It Not Been, " by Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Davis ; "For God So
Loved," by the choir, and
"Hallelu" by Mrs. Stahten
Smith and daughter,
Janie.
,

A dialogue, "On the RQad to
Emmaus," was p r~sented by
Beverly Will and li'icky
Johnson. There ivas a poem,
"My Risen Lord," by the
c on~rega tio n , and a hymn "He
Lives" by the congregation to
concl ude the service.

IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. Low~ ll (Ruby ) Bush of
lhe·Bashan area is confined to
lhe Camden Clark Hospital,
Room 331, Parkersburg, W.
Va. Mrs. Bush fell recently in
front of Dutton 's Drug Store in
Middleport fracturing her arm
in two places and receiving a
shoulder injury.

Spring flowers decorated ~
tables for a breakfast served to
approximately 50 persons by
the yo uth group. During the
Sunday school hour reci tations
were given by the children. An
egg hunt was held for the
children.

ITALIAN NIGHT
AT
Martin Restaurant
In tile Heart of Middleport
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
6:30 To 10 : 30 April 12
~

IN CINCINNATI
Mr . and Mr s. Thomas
Bowen, Pomeroy, were in
Cincinnati over ' the weekend
for a bowling tournament.

Spaghetti with homemade Italian sauce.

"Featuring Maxine At The Organ"

we care---

WOULD
A PROFESSIONAL
.GARDENER·USE
A&amp;P PREMIUM
LAWN PRODUCTS?·

Beef Rib Roast ~:t We~Y • ....spt DelmoniCo Steaks Bfe~~· •
Beef Roast c~u~RNI: • • .···99' Charcoal Steak 83~:· . •

•••. $249

•

'

I

lb.$139

You bet ... and many do, because
they have learned that A&amp;P Premium Lawn Products
are equal to the best. And yet, they cost much less.

-.

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LAWN BUILDER
Alontleedi~ slow-releaselert•lizer, dust-(ree
1
and iiiflt-weight. Rd in the'nutr ients grasi needs· • '.I I , 'II ,p
nitrogen 1231. phosphoric acid I 71. potash (7)
I
WEED &amp;FEED
A double-duty product,gelS ud of un si ghtly oroad·lealed
weeds and feeds your lawn.

.

0 • '.

an In one applicat ion

CRABGRASS CONTROL llAWN BUILDER
Another boon to the home gardener. th is line product
stops crabgrass before it starts and it feeds the lawn too.

LAWN SEED

a.HI: ,...tum

An al l perenn ial seed . A tine -tedured midure .containina

25% Mer ion Bluegrass. II produces a tru lybeautiful lawn.

Prices Good Thru Sat., April
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~~~P~~s

Pork Roast
Luncheon Meat

FRESH WHOLE
o PICNIC o
ALL

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otn.

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ROBIN HOOD FLOUR

5 .u..

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.

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ONEOUIICE
CONTAINS

BAR·B·Q GRILL

Bar·B·Q Grill
eMARSIW.LEN

POMEROY-Middleport
Lions Club, Wednesday, noon,
United Methodist Church.
Lions urged to attend.
POMEROY Chapter 80,
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
Wednesday, stated meeting.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Most excellent masters degree
to be cooferred on a number or
candidates. Refreslunents will
be served.
THURSDAY
PIDLATHEA Society·, 6 p.m.
Thursday, covered dish dinner.
New officers to be installed.
BRADBURY PTA, 7 p.m.
Thursday night at the school.
New officers to be installed .
Meeting to be followed by an
operetta.
XI GAMMA MU Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority ; 7: 45
p.m. Thursday home o! Mrs.
Mary Carolyn Wiley, New
Haven . Ritual of jewels ,
honorary degree, and order of
roses to be conferred. Mem·
bers urged to be present.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, 7:30
p.m. Thurldar. ~tJieal!l :United
Methodisf Chu'rcli, Mfadleport,
Rev. W, H. '· Perrin, guest
speaker. Hostesses , Mrs .
Roscoe Wise , Mrs . Ernie
Fraser and Mrs. Eddie Blake,
Jr.

Phone 992-2556
At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge

LAWN CHAIR

REEDSVILLE The
Riverview Garden Club met at
the home of Mrs. Walter Brown
for the March meeting. Cohostess was Mrs . Donald ·
Myers. Devotions were, "It
Take.s Courage," and "Scatter
Sunshine," by Mrs. R. E.
Williams. Roll call was answered by memb~rs naming
the .month of. their birth, its
flower and birth.stone .
The business meeting was
conducted by the Pres. Mrs.
Donald Putman when $10 was

("'
"
"'
"
......
""''""'' -w=~
.··'; Socia·l Calendar .

•

Scripture, Music Feature; Easter

Mrs, Walter Brown Hosts·
Riverview Garden Club

»&gt;;: -•· •• onn~·~~~~· . -

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU

• McGRAW·EDISON

WOOD

.YOU'LL BE SATISFIED

Adolph's ·Dairy Valley

John C. Bac on
Ac ting Judge
Court of Com m on Pleas ,
Probate Div ision
(A) 12, 19, 26, lt

MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

EASTER EGG HUNT
REEDSVIlLE - An Eastir
egg hunt WftS held at the
Reedsville Ball Park on March ·
31 sponsored by the Olive
Township Ladles Auxiliary.
Parerits donated 33 dozen
colored eggs:
Prizes were given to the
children finding the most eggs
and golden eggs. Chocolate
Easter Bunnies were given to
Rocky Van Meter, Scotty Van
Meter and Missy Barber for
finding the most eggs. One
dollar was given to each of the
children finding the golden
eggs who were Theresa
Browning, Mike Hauber and·
Todd Moodlspaugh. Games
and contests were conducted
for the children and prizes
awarded. Refreshments of
rupcakes, Kooi1Ald and
chocolate eggs were served by
.the ladles to over 1\)0 children.

.BUY CERTIFIED .

For Prompt:
Service, '
Delicious Food, .
Soft Drinks &amp; Dairy Dessert.

Ohio.

ZO INCH

or

The llwanf( lfo, or Yellow, "China's sorrow" because
CI..ASS PARTY SET
River
is popularly known aa its devastoting floods.
,
The Happy Harvesters Cbiss .
o! Trinity · Church, Pomeroy',
will have .a "come ad you are"
delivered.
party Friday evening at the
One rabbit was delivered by church. A6p.m. dinner will he
one of too .icouts to Mrs. served by hostesses , Mrs.
Eunice Shumway who Is 94 Carrie Neutzling, Mrs. ·
years old, a patient at . the Frances Reibel, Mrs. Ruby
Arcadia Nursing Home at Erb, Mrs. Marie Dailey and
Coolvilie. The girls were Mrs. Frieda Duffy.
presented with chocolate
rabbits and eggs before
delivering the rabbits.
sCou~ taking part were Lisa .
Body's Content
Masters, Patricia Boston, Jo
In an : ~ v e r~ ge healthy
Ellen Wells, Sheila Bucha~J&lt;tn, young man, fat constitutes
Theresa Browning, Bonnie about 15 per cent o! total
Dalley, Judy Holler, Diana body weight, water about 23
Evans, Candy DaUey, Vicky per cent, cells or active tis·
992-9981
sue 58 per cimt and bone
Chevalier, Susan Hannum, mineral.
Pomer11y,
538
W.
Main
4 per cent, accord·
Kim Reed, Kay Balderson, ing to Encyclopaedia Britan·
We Honor BankAmericard and Master Charge
Debra LeWis, and Sara Wells. nica .

YOU CAN
COUNT
ONUS!

Middleport .
Gene- Grate, Clerk
Vlllao• ot Middleport

129

I

B. Broderick, Pomeroy;
Thaddeus S. J)ye, Pomeroy ;
Marvin J. Qllmore, ·Pomeroy;
Gary. Norris, Racine; Kenneth
R. Theiss, Racine ; James
Fink, Rutland.

In accordan ce w ith the plans
and sp ec ifications , and all
contract documents contained

othtr two to Jocob Young by 1912.
dHd S recorded in Vol . 116, Page
226, ond Vol. 117, Page 590, Deed
RfiCOrds of Meigs County , Ohio .
Ref.,-enc:e Deed : Vol. 117,

meetings·. The Thursday'
evening , licfore Easter the
rabbits w re lllled with Candy
and delivered to the .sick and
elderly of the communities of
Reedsville and Long Bottom.
Around SO rabl!its were

Several ListecLOn Tech Lists

INVIHTION TO BID

street, Middleport. Ohio ,

7- The DIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., Aprill2, 1972

.

Girl Scouts Complete Project

•

PUBLICATION-

.

.

I

... ot
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~·

Fresh Donuts •
FROZEN A&amp;P
Han•i Whip •

•

3doz.$100 Bean Coffee ·-~aAN •
•

,• .• 6.....
_ .....
,I ·

EIGHT O'CLOCK

JANE PARKER

PR.INTS OR
WITH THIS
SOLIDS
. ot • ;
COUPON
' Good Thru Sat., April 15th At A&amp;P or A·Mort Stor11
1111 UMIT ONE COUPON

2~79~ Cooked $quash

• • •
o

I

•

• •:: 59c

3i!~

I

DAILY

Doc Food

• • • • •

I

�I

r .

a- The DIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pop&gt;eroY, 0., Aprill2, 1Q7~

Clx1rlene 1-locj/idJ

:~:::::::::::::::::;~:::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::~::::::::;:::::::::;:::::::;::::::::::::~::::::_;.:~

I Girl Scout
I Di ary
~

992-5292

By Charlene Hoofl&lt;h

WSCSMeets
An officers training session
to be held at the Heath United
MethodiSt Church on April 27
from 7:3o to 9:30 p.m. was
announced during Monday
night's meeting of the Women's
Society of Christian Service.
Mrs. Nan Moore conducted
the meeting in the absence of
Mrs. Jack Bechtle, president.
A profit of $168 was reported
from a r~nt rummage sale at
the church. It was noted"that
during the past month ·16 sick
calls had been made.
"Conservation in Human
Development" was lhe
progrll(ll topic presented by
Mrs. L. W. McComas and Mrs.
Mary Rhinehar t. Emphasis
was on poverty in undeveloped
countries, sell-identity, self
esteem, family planning, and
the physical and emotional
needs of others. Mrs. McComas
also discussed the role of the
WSCS in meeting needs around
the world. She read an article
entitled "Human Needs and
Aspirations."
Mrs. Rhinehart gave
devotions using Psalm 9 and 10

'

Homebuilders ClasS of the
Middleport Church ol Chrisi
staged a party Tuesday pight
for .44 patients. at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center.
·
Assisting with the party were
Carl Wright and four other
employes at the Health Center.
Games were play_ed with prizes
of washcloths, soap, jewelry,

N

and the group sang ."God of
Grace and · God or Glory."
There I was a poem , "'fh e

Bridge Builders," by Mrs.
Moore .
· · Refreshmenl.'l were served
by Mrs. Moore, Mrs. Kenneth
Byer, and Mrs. Rose McDade,
with Mrs. 0. P. Klein was a
contributing hostess.

Day camp has been scheduled lor June athrough June 9 with
Mrs. Phi16hlinger to serve as director. Assisting Mrs. Ohlinger
with the camp program will be the Meigs County Senior Girl
Scout Troop.
The camp will be held at the Chester Boy Scout Camp fro!" 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. aod will cost each girl $4.
Registration with troop leaders iii to be completed by May I.
Jo Ellen Diehl and Ann Ohlinger will serve as business managers
lor the day camp with Debbie Ohlinger to handle ariil and cra!l.'l.
Senior aides will work' in each unit.
·

TROOP CAMP TRAINING WILL BE HELD at Camp Sandy
w':;:'&amp;':::&gt;.~:&gt;.~:::::::&lt;:&gt;.&gt;.&gt;.:w:'0:&gt;.'";?;:::~&gt; · Bend, Aprll22 and 23 with registration on ·b~th mornings at 10
PARRY TO SPEAK
a.m.
David Parry, Meigs Soil
Those attending are to take a sack June? and $2 to cnver
and Water Service eon·
expenses of the )X'ogram. Leaders lllld otll"~ volunteer camp
servatlonist, will be guest
workers are asked to send their registration in to the scout office
speaker when Return
at Parkersburg immediately.
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
Daughters of the American
, A training session on setting up tenl.'l W!IS held Monday by
Revolution, meets Friday at
Troop 39 on the lawn of Dr. R. R. Pickens.
·•
the home of Mrs. Francis
Plans were made during the meeting for a skallilg party to
Klein In Middleport. The
be held at the' Skate-a-Way Rink from I :30 to 4:30p.m. Saturday.
meeting will get underway
Members are to meet at Heath United Methodist Church at I :30
wllb a 1 p.m. luncheon. Mrs.
to board the Skate-a-Way bus. Written permiSsion slips from
Theron Johnson Is progr~m
parents are required.
chairman.
Mrs. Roscoe Wise, leader, requests that all girls take their
handbook to the meeting Monday night.

.

Patien~s

Party Given for

I.
I

t:-''lbe lllolly Sentinei,M~port-fomeroy,g.• APril12, 1rn

.

. S~plltt of the five mlll levy and distributed literature on it.
Officers lor the 1972-73 school
Local School District in the year were elected following a
May primary was piedged report by Mrs. Bob Bishoj),
when the Rutland PTA met nominating committee
Monday ~ight. at the school. chairman: elected were Mrs.
Principal James Vennari George Grate, vice president;
· discussed necessity of the levy Mrs.
Keith · · Kennedy ,

to be voted on in the Meigs

"To Comfort the living"

-,

Call

Dudley's Fkrist
Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gatti polls, o.,
&amp; Mason Co .• W.•Va. '

FLOOR TILE
.,

12

•'
I

FACTORY WAXED

POIYtllfr •nd

1

•

''

'

5-Qt.,Pall

Pllyilt CARD~

'••

HOGG .&amp;ZUSPAN
-- - ' J ' -

J

MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

We Deliver

MASON

,

•

. /0"1 • '"' ~Utttl. C!\Oott Gl

I

~

I

I .:,..

III;QIIlHO P•lltlnl Ap ·

t"O• . 1~ ~ 26·m 1&lt;/e$

JUMBO
ROLLS

··ll·l!lft®
. TOOTII PASTE

PAPER

TOWELS

·:. .. .

,.,, ol10

48~

WIPE-UPS

•

IVORY
LIQUID
22

oz.

KLEENEX TISSUE~
125- Co u nt. While a n d
colors .

.... ,......•

Good At : Big J Mkts.
Expires : 4-15-72

~

low, low price you can lill·oul
~ bru1h tc• t¥t&lt; r job ., bllh•oom
bowl, dolh 1nd ton k, bot11t , pu lry,
IK! II~ llld •to;JII I blll bfllll\tt,

IOOIS I lt~tiS , SIW HIS , hack SIWI ,
hammers, wrenches, pliers , drill sal s,
and many, many morel
fS ·IIf. Roll

LINING PAPER

IIIAMPOOS

. .. 97~
•••

13 -on '" od t

gliu~d (o (HSh
Ult

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL

Carrots. ~ . . 2P~ 25e
'
p . .
3 lb. 79e
SH0RTE.NING. v~~:table
.................~.~..
·

GOLDEN ISLE

•

'

...

y

Pa isl1y prin l s, white &amp; colon .

.

~~ ~~~;~

,.'

'

Maxwell House

~

64

2 lb. can

KRAFT

With ss.oo Purchase
or More.

C~ • o me ,

tor tre1 d tl rea . 2h 15•

11110n CIUII mo ~.

, , II

'
24172,1n.

Ourlble, while pl1stlc fencing, wroUght
Two-lone tWMd Cotofl , •• 1~ 1QOj) pile
pol~prOP)'If~

Oltll" yarn . St1in ruislanl

· carpel with waathtr-realsttn1Dae- lng

••

Iron styling. Will not faOt. ~1rp , ru11. fOI.
peel o~ dent! T,rlm 1nd protect your 11Wn
or garden.

BOXED
GREETING '"";'"'"'·
AII·Oc~t•""· gti·WOII,
m'"''
CARDS
•

·

lint,ju.....,iltlnd tlirth ·
day uaortmtnts. 10 to
21 carcbperbol .

.AT IIACIIIE
WAID CIKISS SOU

L'IOIIS IIMKET

' 19~
hlndy pl•ttlc ~ll*lM'·

QUANTITIES

'

LIMIT

BEN

Twin ltytr ~ ld ol
~u vy

Onw..-d ' Yt-in. " ldt , on

RALL ·

RESERVED

·AT RUIUIID
IIUIIMD OUT. S1011£

CEUO TAPE

TO

RIGHT

f67

1501-I!KIItl

••

''

·-

WASH DIY
ai4PAD

• IW4e1Mctfon

SIZE

· AT JIIIPDS PlAIIIS

dllu•• $po11Qt mop or

=

••

46
cans

Reg. l2.H
SAVE $1 .G2

Cnlld ·slze ... rough and
rugged plastic wtlh ,!rae·

FOOD STAMPS

·-·

Bog &lt;16 · 0 r t•t t
e111 CIUIII. uno.

15VJ·il'l.

HUNTS

'

37

11o01. lotion or
, .... blbt.

500shnts. 2·1)ty, per roll.

" P tx ie " 1l1r m c lo Ck .
Euy·10 · rlld l Swup
secoru:l ha nd . Depend·
1ble alarm. White cl!e.

I
l

SALE
\-SIARTS
THURSDAY
'

·,'

FRANKLII)I
MIDDLEPORT, 0 •.

\

Wh ole

EUy•IO ·

'" ll)tl tiUn

38~

.-''

WITH THII COU,.ON

thi~

your wo rlo:shop .. . replace worn-oui

SANI·fLUSII

Celery. ... ..... ~.~~~~ . Ige

TENDER LEAF

=

At

Your CI'Iolu ;

Produce Specials

· · · 2 oz.·6t·e
TOMATO JUICE..................
CLOROX BLEACH .................~~:. 59e
e
~.1
COFFEE
49 -=
TEA BAGS ...............:.................... ~?~.. 69
'149
. ...............9oz.iar. 1·9e
PREPARED MUSTARD
-..i
=

· TISSUES

Hoaehol•
BRUSHES

TOOL SPECIALS!

lOVING
lJ\KI

8J•
S•oxEs 99• J~:s'
BATHROO.

38~Pkg.

~

~OIL

11·Gil.

BOOTH

· ·· - --------- -- -- -- -------- -- - - ~---~·
lllttttt~

'

,

~----------------~
Frozen Food Buys

·. ' \ ....

15-q t. lor big jobs ... 5-qt.
for smaller jobs. Pour spouts
and bail handles.

Sheartld prinlsl!ld woven

PRICES EFFECTIV_E THRU APRIL 15th

'PORK ROAST..~?.~~~~..~.~~~.................!~·. 55~
PORK STEAKS.~i-~.~~~-- ....................1~:. 89~
·
Our own
SAUSAGE ...~.~~~.~~.~~ ..............:..........1~·. 69~
SLICED BACON ..~~~.~.~~.................... ~~·..49~

ICitehen
TOWELS

47~ ....

blth

''

I
I I
'•

5-Qt, Pall .... Reg. 2k
15-Qt. Pall . . . Reg. Nc
Total Value . . . , , SU7

DIAPERS

Absorbent, llushable and pleated for betler
fit. Time savers .. baby savers'

19~

I

t

DISPOSABLE

Indo• SJJt

125 count, 2·ply lhetls.

2;~ $}19

I

When you buy •. ,

Whitt and colors.

· STEAK

No prr ma r needed . Cri es i n ona
hour While only

atu mr num lrame and durable piastre
webbmg . W,ilher- r11sitlaM

JROlu 8J•

PORK

ci nes

Tinkles®

•

pkg.

most surfaces

in one hour. All co lor ~

74-rn . tong. 2411-rn . wide. S t ront;~l ub ~o~lar

Smeri wo~ •n suipu iiJ ctlorc;:e
of color t ombo'l Flire l.gs
l nd bour w•lst

'•

FILLET

co~trs

Ju'l.nlle lora ' Slttl: llo 7

~

14 oz.

GAL.

or $3.97 Gallon

NOW
ONLY

.Phone Us·-::::--""""'-:'"~"""::::::.-~;;:--t
YoUr 0.rder.I
$
_
992 3502

PERCH

GAL.

Flare

$

•

2 7°0

2 5°0

box

$

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

SAVE 32c

WALL PAINT HOUSE PAINT
or $2.97 Gallon

Fold'"'

Legion panty hose ...
one size lits women 5'
to 5'7" -between 100
and 150 lbs. Fashion
colors.

•

April 12

Aluminum
CHAISE LOUNGE

Reg. $1 .59

.PANTY
HOSE.
-

'

••

.68

ENSENADA WHITE

$

1

~13~ s;~~ ;;c

•

'•

KENTILE ·
Vinyl Asbestos Tile

SALE STARTS THURSDAY

PRICE
'

l

45 Pes. 12"x12"xl/16"
(45' square feet)
To The Box

L•t•x Exterior

Latex Interior

•'•

F78x14

'

Rutland PTA wilt · host a
meeting of the Council on May
4 at the school and Mrs. Bishop
· was named chairman lor
re!reshmenl.'l. The attendance
banner was won by Mro. Ann
Webs.ter's second grade.
Program at the ,neeting was

'

Mr. and Mrs. William R. StephellliOn, Sf. are announcing the forthcoming marriage of her · daughter,
· Nancy Leah Snider, to Mr. Harold Lee Whlttekln,d, son of
Mr. Wbodrow Whitteklnd of Marietta. Tbe couple will be
married at the Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene on
Sunday, Aprilt6. The Rev. Clyde V. Henderson will officiate .

Wide Oval

~

Williamson, Mrs. Bill Gaddis,
Mrs. Jerry Eads, Mrs. Bishop,
and Mrs. Eldon Vining ,
alternates. Apresident is yet to
be elected.
·
The membership chairman
reported that a total of 118
parents . are enrolled . T.he

DINE TOGETHER
Mr . and Mrs. John Weeks,
Tommy and Mary Beth ,
Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Jones , Columbus,
joined Mrs. Frances Scholl and
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Weeks of
Pomeroy for dinner Sunday at ·
the Meigs High School Cancer
Crusade event.

FlowerS

Cindy Glaze at the piano, with
a duet, ~~Ivory Palaces/' being
presented by Miss Glaze and
Tammy Mowery. Refresh·
ments of cookies, fruit, candy
bars, gum and soft drinks were
served. Representing the

BELTED TIRE SALE

•

secretary ; Mrs. Joe Bolin,
treasurer; Bob Snowden, Mrs.
furoid Carson, Mrs. Bruce
Davis,. Mrs. Jim Quillen', and
Mrs. Rayrnond Wilcox,
·delegates to the Meigs County
Co uncil of Parents and
Teachers, and Mrs. , Fred

members of the class and theiiguesl.'l.are invited to attend.

POTLUCK PLANNED
presented by · John Reece ,
Past teachers will be
public relations cooz:~inator for
the Gavin plant. H~ showed a honored when the Young Adult
series of slides em the industrial Class holds a potluck supper
complex noting the technology Friday night at the Bradford
and equipment being employed Church of Christ. The supper
to prev&lt;!nt environmental will be served at 7 p.m. and all
damage. He commented on the
role of the cooling towers, the , - - - - - - -- - height of the stacks, and the presided at the meeting which
landscaping being done.
opened with the pledge to the
Mrs. Larry Edwards fla g.

•

A hymn sing was held with

Plan to Serve Canteen

~

·•

Sympathy

pens, Pencils, scarves.

MEETING POSTPONED
MEETING CANCELLED
Meeting of the Middleport
LEAGUE TO MEET
The meeting of Ohio Valley
Amateur Gardeners has been
The Pomeroy Boys' League
Grange
2612 Letart Falls
postponed from tonight to April
'
Association will meet at 7 p.m.
Arrangements to serve the Poulin, Mrs. Doris Reinhart, 19. Place of the meeting will he scheduled for Thursday
Friday at Pomeroy Village bloadmobile canteen on April and Mr$. Katie Biron.
evening has been cancelled.
announced later.
Hall.
24 at the Pomeroy Elementary
School were ma_de during .a
recent meeting of the Catholic
Women 's Club at the Sacred
Heart Church.
Cookies and sandwiches are
needed from women of the
church lor the canteen. The
group also discussed the Junior
For
America n Legion Auxiliary
(34) 5 lb. SLICED BACON
District 8 conference to be held · The
S lb. PORK STEAK
Freezer
at the church on April 29. A
S lb. GROUND BEEF
luncheon will be served for the
group .
It was noted by Mrs. Barbara
Mullen that clothing and other
items va lued at about $laO had
(35) 10 lb. GROUND BEEF
been sent to the West Virginia
S lb. ROUND STEAK
flood · disaster victims. Mrs.
3 lb. SLICED BACON
Loretta Beegle was named
chairman of a committee to
secure shrubs for the churCh
entrance .
Plus Fed. &amp;S. Tax
5 lb. ROUND STEAK
Thank you notes were read
(36) IOJb.
,
GROUND BEEF '
from Mrs. Elizabeth Conde,
No Casing Needed
s lb . PORK CHOPS
Miss Katie Guth, and Miss
Una Guth. It was noted that
5 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
Mrs.
Rose
Sisson,
Mrs.
Janet
·
Larger
and Smaller Sizes
Available
'
Duffy and Mus, Phyllis,• Hen' ' ~
'.
.
I
,
nesy had collected lor the heart
. (37)
lund in the Pomeroy business
tO lb. ROUND STEAK
district.
·
10 lb. GROUND BEEF
The meeting was preceded
10 lb . CHUCK ROAST
by Mass and rosary. RefreshMiddleport, 0.
ments were served by Mrs.
Vera Buchanan, Mrs. Pearl
~

(

Rtttland Parent-Teacher Group Pledges Sc~ool Levy Support

church were Mr: an~ Mrs.
Lawrence Stewart, ~- and
Mrs. Osby Martin, Herman
Kincaid, Mrs. Denver 'Rl~,
Mrs . .Norman Yeauger, Mills
Glaze , Miss Mowe_ry, and .the
Rev. Raullin Moyer who
concluded the party wit)l
prayer.·

cosmetics, gum, candy, socks,

.Nancy Leah Snider to Wed

...

non•t tip

QtmiGt m 1nd
g1mtlt- H••• r
cotton d"ll co• tr .

�I

r .

a- The DIUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pop&gt;eroY, 0., Aprill2, 1Q7~

Clx1rlene 1-locj/idJ

:~:::::::::::::::::;~:::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::~::::::::;:::::::::;:::::::;::::::::::::~::::::_;.:~

I Girl Scout
I Di ary
~

992-5292

By Charlene Hoofl&lt;h

WSCSMeets
An officers training session
to be held at the Heath United
MethodiSt Church on April 27
from 7:3o to 9:30 p.m. was
announced during Monday
night's meeting of the Women's
Society of Christian Service.
Mrs. Nan Moore conducted
the meeting in the absence of
Mrs. Jack Bechtle, president.
A profit of $168 was reported
from a r~nt rummage sale at
the church. It was noted"that
during the past month ·16 sick
calls had been made.
"Conservation in Human
Development" was lhe
progrll(ll topic presented by
Mrs. L. W. McComas and Mrs.
Mary Rhinehar t. Emphasis
was on poverty in undeveloped
countries, sell-identity, self
esteem, family planning, and
the physical and emotional
needs of others. Mrs. McComas
also discussed the role of the
WSCS in meeting needs around
the world. She read an article
entitled "Human Needs and
Aspirations."
Mrs. Rhinehart gave
devotions using Psalm 9 and 10

'

Homebuilders ClasS of the
Middleport Church ol Chrisi
staged a party Tuesday pight
for .44 patients. at the
Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center.
·
Assisting with the party were
Carl Wright and four other
employes at the Health Center.
Games were play_ed with prizes
of washcloths, soap, jewelry,

N

and the group sang ."God of
Grace and · God or Glory."
There I was a poem , "'fh e

Bridge Builders," by Mrs.
Moore .
· · Refreshmenl.'l were served
by Mrs. Moore, Mrs. Kenneth
Byer, and Mrs. Rose McDade,
with Mrs. 0. P. Klein was a
contributing hostess.

Day camp has been scheduled lor June athrough June 9 with
Mrs. Phi16hlinger to serve as director. Assisting Mrs. Ohlinger
with the camp program will be the Meigs County Senior Girl
Scout Troop.
The camp will be held at the Chester Boy Scout Camp fro!" 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. aod will cost each girl $4.
Registration with troop leaders iii to be completed by May I.
Jo Ellen Diehl and Ann Ohlinger will serve as business managers
lor the day camp with Debbie Ohlinger to handle ariil and cra!l.'l.
Senior aides will work' in each unit.
·

TROOP CAMP TRAINING WILL BE HELD at Camp Sandy
w':;:'&amp;':::&gt;.~:&gt;.~:::::::&lt;:&gt;.&gt;.&gt;.:w:'0:&gt;.'";?;:::~&gt; · Bend, Aprll22 and 23 with registration on ·b~th mornings at 10
PARRY TO SPEAK
a.m.
David Parry, Meigs Soil
Those attending are to take a sack June? and $2 to cnver
and Water Service eon·
expenses of the )X'ogram. Leaders lllld otll"~ volunteer camp
servatlonist, will be guest
workers are asked to send their registration in to the scout office
speaker when Return
at Parkersburg immediately.
Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
Daughters of the American
, A training session on setting up tenl.'l W!IS held Monday by
Revolution, meets Friday at
Troop 39 on the lawn of Dr. R. R. Pickens.
·•
the home of Mrs. Francis
Plans were made during the meeting for a skallilg party to
Klein In Middleport. The
be held at the' Skate-a-Way Rink from I :30 to 4:30p.m. Saturday.
meeting will get underway
Members are to meet at Heath United Methodist Church at I :30
wllb a 1 p.m. luncheon. Mrs.
to board the Skate-a-Way bus. Written permiSsion slips from
Theron Johnson Is progr~m
parents are required.
chairman.
Mrs. Roscoe Wise, leader, requests that all girls take their
handbook to the meeting Monday night.

.

Patien~s

Party Given for

I.
I

t:-''lbe lllolly Sentinei,M~port-fomeroy,g.• APril12, 1rn

.

. S~plltt of the five mlll levy and distributed literature on it.
Officers lor the 1972-73 school
Local School District in the year were elected following a
May primary was piedged report by Mrs. Bob Bishoj),
when the Rutland PTA met nominating committee
Monday ~ight. at the school. chairman: elected were Mrs.
Principal James Vennari George Grate, vice president;
· discussed necessity of the levy Mrs.
Keith · · Kennedy ,

to be voted on in the Meigs

"To Comfort the living"

-,

Call

Dudley's Fkrist
Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gatti polls, o.,
&amp; Mason Co .• W.•Va. '

FLOOR TILE
.,

12

•'
I

FACTORY WAXED

POIYtllfr •nd

1

•

''

'

5-Qt.,Pall

Pllyilt CARD~

'••

HOGG .&amp;ZUSPAN
-- - ' J ' -

J

MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

We Deliver

MASON

,

•

. /0"1 • '"' ~Utttl. C!\Oott Gl

I

~

I

I .:,..

III;QIIlHO P•lltlnl Ap ·

t"O• . 1~ ~ 26·m 1&lt;/e$

JUMBO
ROLLS

··ll·l!lft®
. TOOTII PASTE

PAPER

TOWELS

·:. .. .

,.,, ol10

48~

WIPE-UPS

•

IVORY
LIQUID
22

oz.

KLEENEX TISSUE~
125- Co u nt. While a n d
colors .

.... ,......•

Good At : Big J Mkts.
Expires : 4-15-72

~

low, low price you can lill·oul
~ bru1h tc• t¥t&lt; r job ., bllh•oom
bowl, dolh 1nd ton k, bot11t , pu lry,
IK! II~ llld •to;JII I blll bfllll\tt,

IOOIS I lt~tiS , SIW HIS , hack SIWI ,
hammers, wrenches, pliers , drill sal s,
and many, many morel
fS ·IIf. Roll

LINING PAPER

IIIAMPOOS

. .. 97~
•••

13 -on '" od t

gliu~d (o (HSh
Ult

WE ACCEPT
FEDERAL

Carrots. ~ . . 2P~ 25e
'
p . .
3 lb. 79e
SH0RTE.NING. v~~:table
.................~.~..
·

GOLDEN ISLE

•

'

...

y

Pa isl1y prin l s, white &amp; colon .

.

~~ ~~~;~

,.'

'

Maxwell House

~

64

2 lb. can

KRAFT

With ss.oo Purchase
or More.

C~ • o me ,

tor tre1 d tl rea . 2h 15•

11110n CIUII mo ~.

, , II

'
24172,1n.

Ourlble, while pl1stlc fencing, wroUght
Two-lone tWMd Cotofl , •• 1~ 1QOj) pile
pol~prOP)'If~

Oltll" yarn . St1in ruislanl

· carpel with waathtr-realsttn1Dae- lng

••

Iron styling. Will not faOt. ~1rp , ru11. fOI.
peel o~ dent! T,rlm 1nd protect your 11Wn
or garden.

BOXED
GREETING '"";'"'"'·
AII·Oc~t•""· gti·WOII,
m'"''
CARDS
•

·

lint,ju.....,iltlnd tlirth ·
day uaortmtnts. 10 to
21 carcbperbol .

.AT IIACIIIE
WAID CIKISS SOU

L'IOIIS IIMKET

' 19~
hlndy pl•ttlc ~ll*lM'·

QUANTITIES

'

LIMIT

BEN

Twin ltytr ~ ld ol
~u vy

Onw..-d ' Yt-in. " ldt , on

RALL ·

RESERVED

·AT RUIUIID
IIUIIMD OUT. S1011£

CEUO TAPE

TO

RIGHT

f67

1501-I!KIItl

••

''

·-

WASH DIY
ai4PAD

• IW4e1Mctfon

SIZE

· AT JIIIPDS PlAIIIS

dllu•• $po11Qt mop or

=

••

46
cans

Reg. l2.H
SAVE $1 .G2

Cnlld ·slze ... rough and
rugged plastic wtlh ,!rae·

FOOD STAMPS

·-·

Bog &lt;16 · 0 r t•t t
e111 CIUIII. uno.

15VJ·il'l.

HUNTS

'

37

11o01. lotion or
, .... blbt.

500shnts. 2·1)ty, per roll.

" P tx ie " 1l1r m c lo Ck .
Euy·10 · rlld l Swup
secoru:l ha nd . Depend·
1ble alarm. White cl!e.

I
l

SALE
\-SIARTS
THURSDAY
'

·,'

FRANKLII)I
MIDDLEPORT, 0 •.

\

Wh ole

EUy•IO ·

'" ll)tl tiUn

38~

.-''

WITH THII COU,.ON

thi~

your wo rlo:shop .. . replace worn-oui

SANI·fLUSII

Celery. ... ..... ~.~~~~ . Ige

TENDER LEAF

=

At

Your CI'Iolu ;

Produce Specials

· · · 2 oz.·6t·e
TOMATO JUICE..................
CLOROX BLEACH .................~~:. 59e
e
~.1
COFFEE
49 -=
TEA BAGS ...............:.................... ~?~.. 69
'149
. ...............9oz.iar. 1·9e
PREPARED MUSTARD
-..i
=

· TISSUES

Hoaehol•
BRUSHES

TOOL SPECIALS!

lOVING
lJ\KI

8J•
S•oxEs 99• J~:s'
BATHROO.

38~Pkg.

~

~OIL

11·Gil.

BOOTH

· ·· - --------- -- -- -- -------- -- - - ~---~·
lllttttt~

'

,

~----------------~
Frozen Food Buys

·. ' \ ....

15-q t. lor big jobs ... 5-qt.
for smaller jobs. Pour spouts
and bail handles.

Sheartld prinlsl!ld woven

PRICES EFFECTIV_E THRU APRIL 15th

'PORK ROAST..~?.~~~~..~.~~~.................!~·. 55~
PORK STEAKS.~i-~.~~~-- ....................1~:. 89~
·
Our own
SAUSAGE ...~.~~~.~~.~~ ..............:..........1~·. 69~
SLICED BACON ..~~~.~.~~.................... ~~·..49~

ICitehen
TOWELS

47~ ....

blth

''

I
I I
'•

5-Qt, Pall .... Reg. 2k
15-Qt. Pall . . . Reg. Nc
Total Value . . . , , SU7

DIAPERS

Absorbent, llushable and pleated for betler
fit. Time savers .. baby savers'

19~

I

t

DISPOSABLE

Indo• SJJt

125 count, 2·ply lhetls.

2;~ $}19

I

When you buy •. ,

Whitt and colors.

· STEAK

No prr ma r needed . Cri es i n ona
hour While only

atu mr num lrame and durable piastre
webbmg . W,ilher- r11sitlaM

JROlu 8J•

PORK

ci nes

Tinkles®

•

pkg.

most surfaces

in one hour. All co lor ~

74-rn . tong. 2411-rn . wide. S t ront;~l ub ~o~lar

Smeri wo~ •n suipu iiJ ctlorc;:e
of color t ombo'l Flire l.gs
l nd bour w•lst

'•

FILLET

co~trs

Ju'l.nlle lora ' Slttl: llo 7

~

14 oz.

GAL.

or $3.97 Gallon

NOW
ONLY

.Phone Us·-::::--""""'-:'"~"""::::::.-~;;:--t
YoUr 0.rder.I
$
_
992 3502

PERCH

GAL.

Flare

$

•

2 7°0

2 5°0

box

$

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

SAVE 32c

WALL PAINT HOUSE PAINT
or $2.97 Gallon

Fold'"'

Legion panty hose ...
one size lits women 5'
to 5'7" -between 100
and 150 lbs. Fashion
colors.

•

April 12

Aluminum
CHAISE LOUNGE

Reg. $1 .59

.PANTY
HOSE.
-

'

••

.68

ENSENADA WHITE

$

1

~13~ s;~~ ;;c

•

'•

KENTILE ·
Vinyl Asbestos Tile

SALE STARTS THURSDAY

PRICE
'

l

45 Pes. 12"x12"xl/16"
(45' square feet)
To The Box

L•t•x Exterior

Latex Interior

•'•

F78x14

'

Rutland PTA wilt · host a
meeting of the Council on May
4 at the school and Mrs. Bishop
· was named chairman lor
re!reshmenl.'l. The attendance
banner was won by Mro. Ann
Webs.ter's second grade.
Program at the ,neeting was

'

Mr. and Mrs. William R. StephellliOn, Sf. are announcing the forthcoming marriage of her · daughter,
· Nancy Leah Snider, to Mr. Harold Lee Whlttekln,d, son of
Mr. Wbodrow Whitteklnd of Marietta. Tbe couple will be
married at the Pomeroy Church of the Nazarene on
Sunday, Aprilt6. The Rev. Clyde V. Henderson will officiate .

Wide Oval

~

Williamson, Mrs. Bill Gaddis,
Mrs. Jerry Eads, Mrs. Bishop,
and Mrs. Eldon Vining ,
alternates. Apresident is yet to
be elected.
·
The membership chairman
reported that a total of 118
parents . are enrolled . T.he

DINE TOGETHER
Mr . and Mrs. John Weeks,
Tommy and Mary Beth ,
Gallipolis, and Mr. and Mrs.
Wilbur Jones , Columbus,
joined Mrs. Frances Scholl and
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Weeks of
Pomeroy for dinner Sunday at ·
the Meigs High School Cancer
Crusade event.

FlowerS

Cindy Glaze at the piano, with
a duet, ~~Ivory Palaces/' being
presented by Miss Glaze and
Tammy Mowery. Refresh·
ments of cookies, fruit, candy
bars, gum and soft drinks were
served. Representing the

BELTED TIRE SALE

•

secretary ; Mrs. Joe Bolin,
treasurer; Bob Snowden, Mrs.
furoid Carson, Mrs. Bruce
Davis,. Mrs. Jim Quillen', and
Mrs. Rayrnond Wilcox,
·delegates to the Meigs County
Co uncil of Parents and
Teachers, and Mrs. , Fred

members of the class and theiiguesl.'l.are invited to attend.

POTLUCK PLANNED
presented by · John Reece ,
Past teachers will be
public relations cooz:~inator for
the Gavin plant. H~ showed a honored when the Young Adult
series of slides em the industrial Class holds a potluck supper
complex noting the technology Friday night at the Bradford
and equipment being employed Church of Christ. The supper
to prev&lt;!nt environmental will be served at 7 p.m. and all
damage. He commented on the
role of the cooling towers, the , - - - - - - -- - height of the stacks, and the presided at the meeting which
landscaping being done.
opened with the pledge to the
Mrs. Larry Edwards fla g.

•

A hymn sing was held with

Plan to Serve Canteen

~

·•

Sympathy

pens, Pencils, scarves.

MEETING POSTPONED
MEETING CANCELLED
Meeting of the Middleport
LEAGUE TO MEET
The meeting of Ohio Valley
Amateur Gardeners has been
The Pomeroy Boys' League
Grange
2612 Letart Falls
postponed from tonight to April
'
Association will meet at 7 p.m.
Arrangements to serve the Poulin, Mrs. Doris Reinhart, 19. Place of the meeting will he scheduled for Thursday
Friday at Pomeroy Village bloadmobile canteen on April and Mr$. Katie Biron.
evening has been cancelled.
announced later.
Hall.
24 at the Pomeroy Elementary
School were ma_de during .a
recent meeting of the Catholic
Women 's Club at the Sacred
Heart Church.
Cookies and sandwiches are
needed from women of the
church lor the canteen. The
group also discussed the Junior
For
America n Legion Auxiliary
(34) 5 lb. SLICED BACON
District 8 conference to be held · The
S lb. PORK STEAK
Freezer
at the church on April 29. A
S lb. GROUND BEEF
luncheon will be served for the
group .
It was noted by Mrs. Barbara
Mullen that clothing and other
items va lued at about $laO had
(35) 10 lb. GROUND BEEF
been sent to the West Virginia
S lb. ROUND STEAK
flood · disaster victims. Mrs.
3 lb. SLICED BACON
Loretta Beegle was named
chairman of a committee to
secure shrubs for the churCh
entrance .
Plus Fed. &amp;S. Tax
5 lb. ROUND STEAK
Thank you notes were read
(36) IOJb.
,
GROUND BEEF '
from Mrs. Elizabeth Conde,
No Casing Needed
s lb . PORK CHOPS
Miss Katie Guth, and Miss
Una Guth. It was noted that
5 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
Mrs.
Rose
Sisson,
Mrs.
Janet
·
Larger
and Smaller Sizes
Available
'
Duffy and Mus, Phyllis,• Hen' ' ~
'.
.
I
,
nesy had collected lor the heart
. (37)
lund in the Pomeroy business
tO lb. ROUND STEAK
district.
·
10 lb. GROUND BEEF
The meeting was preceded
10 lb . CHUCK ROAST
by Mass and rosary. RefreshMiddleport, 0.
ments were served by Mrs.
Vera Buchanan, Mrs. Pearl
~

(

Rtttland Parent-Teacher Group Pledges Sc~ool Levy Support

church were Mr: an~ Mrs.
Lawrence Stewart, ~- and
Mrs. Osby Martin, Herman
Kincaid, Mrs. Denver 'Rl~,
Mrs . .Norman Yeauger, Mills
Glaze , Miss Mowe_ry, and .the
Rev. Raullin Moyer who
concluded the party wit)l
prayer.·

cosmetics, gum, candy, socks,

.Nancy Leah Snider to Wed

...

non•t tip

QtmiGt m 1nd
g1mtlt- H••• r
cotton d"ll co• tr .

�•

_.t

'

..

.

.'

t ,. . ·,,·.,.

•t i; t. ,

iN1a=~:~i;.

. ..

~

.

!cir~~~~:~~":, 1~ 1 rl~•.

2

dl ua•. :

.
. .
'CA'IID OF TH.O.f'IKS•
&amp; OIITUARY
SUO 'Ior. so· w.ord mlnl'"um:
. ·Eoch addltfonot word' .?C. ·
, ,. nrND ·ADS
• Additional lk Chorgo
· ...,
••vorti••m~t.· • . , por
- ,..,
·,
OFFICE HOURS-,1:31! l.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
1:·30 .l.m . to 12:00 Noon

c•

': .

,··

~tur~r.· ,..
· 1n Memory

.. .

"

. ·
IN11 ' MEMORY of William
Butk'i" Menlty who paned
' IWIY
II '12, 1,69,
.
. onct 1" ~ golden
R.m.m ...
"' trlei•, to hreak all
a Jn,'Duth
. Ch_
"'
In·r-1/lln J
·,io hlvt, 10 IDYl, · _lnd ,then to1
t I sorrowo
.P.rl&gt;l1thegru11

STARTING Salary SID.660. I'm
lpaklng_ lor a~ Intelligent.
.enth~slastlc and reliable
person )n the Pomeroy area ...
!bmeone w~o would like to
. uaume -th,e operation of a
multiple line Insurance
ogeocv. Sflland service auto.
flr•.... •Hfe-hea,lth•. and ·busl.nes_s
lnsurtan". Fulll•olnlnt wrll
be provldtd ·at no cost for the
man selected, plus 1 salary

11f~~&lt;!d~:-"c!.:rM':.'~;,~~:6~
1 446 4707 t
an ap
~
polntmont.

1 ·•

or

4-12-Jic

•
®~

...

2

;

.

'

Of
QUALifY

.

.

'.

Po•e'roy .
Motor·(O.

1969 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE ·

V8 t
tl ·t
p S p B hit , . . h blk
r.. . • au oma
c rans., . ·• .. . . , w e .JMIS ,
.
1
vfnyllnt~rlor .
'

l'.

1

®

,

I

I
l

1

OP.I!M IVES. 1:00. P.lrl.
f~E-ROY, OHIO .
• '

,

' ..,..

For Sale

· ·

.
j.'

For Sale

'

':1 ·

• ··

INTERNATIONAL 7 fl . cut AKC puppies -- Schnauzers,
mower. pow~r lift, new ,tire.
Poodles, Cairn Terriers,
good knife, ready to mow. healthy home r~ised, perPolled

Hereford

· Bulls,

manent Injections. wormed -

Purebred, Paul Sayre, Rte.
338, Great Bend Road, 843 .

$75-$85; Coolville 667-6214.
4.12.J2tp

4· 12·31P

h'
TWIN needle sewina rnac rne
1971 Model In walnut stand.
All features built-in to make
fancy desigrls and do stretch
sew ing . Also buttonholes ,
blind hems etc. $4:1.35 cash
~rice or ferms available.
h
~ .,
one" 2 ·~ 4 1·
, _12 _61 c

2286., Portland. Oh io .

area, spacious liv ing room ,
Jlh baths , utility room ,
recreation
roOm.
full

basement,

all

carpeted,

~a;~s~wft~T:,':ea~29,00o.

POINT OFFICE
·· SUPPLY
Com'plote

of office

lin~

equipment,

·t urnl1ure

&amp;

suppli'n. Typewriter &amp;
AciCilng Machine . Repair.

MARimA
•
.TYPEWRITER

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

PHONE 675-3628
424 M&lt;lin St.

Pl. Pleasant

A

WASUINGTON 'OUNTY
8 y~~r
Qld' brickoverlooking lake Veto , 3
Iaroe bedrooms. beautiful
bath. a kitchen ro su;t any
housewife complete with
ref. , ranoe end oven , d;ning
room, corner fireplace In the

living room, full basement ,

utility · space, rec . room ,
garage, corner lot. about ~.
acres . 525 ·000 ·00 ·
Large B~i?d'i"n~Rf~~ storage,
covers about 3 lots , has about

OFFICE
MACHINE
REPAIR

IC!ITCHEN
:and

616 Main St.
Belpre, 0.
. -423-6551

Johnsoo

50N

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator. to
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
RadialorSpodolist

'

HEverything In Home

Mm~ry

Let us show our samples.

30,000 foot storage space, out

of ali floods , easy loading,
rentedatpresent,3olherlots

.
MEIGS, W.VA. 25260

for trailer space, S8,300.0D.

THESE ARE SCARCE
! bedroom freme. (new bath ,
fcreed air furnace , hot water
tank! . n1ce 1o·t , goo d netgll
· borhood . Why pay renl?
15,500.00
WORTH THE MONEY

MEI'GS 992-7151
MASON 773-5634

TERM ITl!S. .TERMITES,

Main.tenance''

REA!&gt;I~G

WAS
HIS BIGGEST

.

.w

.Cird

Got f!id ofThem
We will pfot,ct any single
dwelling r'sidence lor

. '1,9.50

·

WANTED!

pv•r.

llfMEDl4L REMEDIAL

WREN I WANT
SOME 'OOUL: FOOD. ..

$5.55

On foiost A111er!~an

cw

U'LABNER

-GUARANTEE[).-:
Phone 992-2094

Pome!OY Home J Auto
··.-

Free Estimate

EARTH MOVING

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

=
C&lt;&gt;ff'"

AU WEATHER ROOFING
CONSTRUCTION
PLUMBING CO•.

VERA EBLEN

OH·OH! A PARKII-J'
COP 15 PU~LII-J' UP
T'MY CAR!

WE GOiTA
OUR

t'

FE'R

Lit-JED

WINNIE WINKLE
HE'S JUST AS N05YAS \'OU
ARE, AND ABOUT A5 TACT-

llHIN!&lt;- SO1
TOO JA NIE. WE:
HAD AFANTASTIC
WEEK lOGElHER.

··

MOWERS
TIU£RS

AND GREENS .

- AFTEJ:t HE FLUNI&lt;E!&gt;

EXPERT
'Mlpel .~i&amp;nment

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

____

Thanks

I MEAN A HAM6URI&amp;ER,
FRIES AND A 6HAKE.

Let-Us -Do-Over-Your
Bathroom or J!;llcheo
Open 8Tll5
Insured-But best of all
Mond•y thru Saturday
"WE'RE HONEST
Pit. 992-7608 Pomeroy, Ohio · . l-_6_06_E_._Mo_i_n,_P_•_mo_ro_y_,_o_. ...J

'

THE DAILY
SEN'TINEL

THEN, FOJ:t SOMS
REASON, HE JUST ·
GAVE UP~

DID ~E TRV
REMEf&gt;IAL
llEAf&gt;iNGi

["""'-"'"'' FER.GYf

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

2 story .frame (new siding,
Dorer &amp; End loader work,
M TAG
hi
h'
roof and carport). J
ponds, _basement, land·
AY
was ng mac rne.
bedrooms, bath , low taxes.
round tub, wringer type , $50;
•
good ne1g
· h b or h oo d .
scaping. We have 2 size
742 4404
dozers, 2 sire loaders. Work
· phone
.
'
4-1~- IOip VACUUM cleaner. Electro ~6~~reE o~uPED WITH
done by hour or contract.
WRITTEN WARRANTY
Hygiene New Demonstrator A LOT OF BALLY HOODFree Estim•tes. We 11lsa
Call Col loci m-452-31Sll
OR
'
STRAWBERRY plants, Charles
has all cleaning attachments LIST WITH THE BROKER
' 51 ~ 1 Y mlshd by atopFosler, Rt. 338, near Racine
plus the new Electro Suds lor THAT
SELLS . YOUR
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
,
. fllhtr, slslen and brotli1r1.
L k h
shampooing carpet. Only PROPERTY .
trucks and low-boy for hire.
'
' '
'
..
. 12-,ltp
OC s, P one 2"7.2309 ·
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
~.CITY
992-2156
4-12-12tc
$27.50 cash prite or terms~-----------'
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
CourtSI.
Pomeroy
available. Phone 992-5641.
r--.~iftml
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
EXTE~MINATION
WALNUT, modern style, with
4-12-6tc
_ofr
alter
7 p.m.
&lt;·
For
Appointment
mMainSI.
••
•• .
•
NEED lady lor spring cleaning.
AM -FM radio, 4 speaker - - - - - - - -Za~sville, Ohio
WISH to tHank IICH tnd . phone 992-7226.
sound system , 4 speed 2 RIDING horses. phone 949Plfone 949.-2803
.· . WE'
.
~trYOM of our frlflllls and
4-11
-31c
automatic
changer.
Balance
3196
.
.' .
·. rtlttlvH who ·so grlclovsl~
$83.17. Use our budget terms.
4-5-71p
VINYL and ,aluminum siding ,
.•.
.: .Mnt.tlowan·an thli CK!Cnlon or RE'SPGNSIBLE · person for
Call 992-7085.
free estimltes ; references ;
·. fii!C. . S!)!h . -; wtildlnt , on.
esllbllshtel dry cleaning
4-12-61c
call coliec1 446-3608, Byerly
rout1. A.B.C. Cleaners.
. :• nlvraar~. ~1•1 ltrtnka to
Construction Co., Gallipolis.
&amp;
.•••
w
'"
'
.· . ll'(tlPomtroy Ftowltr Sllap for
mt~IOnl
• , ••
BEAUTIFUL Early American
3-2001p
&amp;
,,
4·5-llc 'style, stereo-radio com· · ·tl'tlllr'~tlon, tho Adult Blbl1
'
Cont~d.
IStilciate
.'
. · Cltll' ~ .~· Ch~t'ch of Christ __: ·
bination, 4 speaker sound
Make
reservations
for
your
' and nl&lt;iriy •Qtl\«1. Thanks to
system, 4 speed automatic
&amp;
private parties, banquets, ·
· udh ' 11rtd ·. everyone· wtlo
changer, separate controls. Economy Tiller, 3'12 hp B&amp;S
Real
Estate
For
Sale
·
special
oc:c:aslons .
. broullht ·iQ , mi!IIY· glfta and
992-3020
Bolance $79.56. Use our engine, Reg. 159.95
144.95
240 Lincoln 51.
Ideal for meeting pla ce •ttelided ind lor
•100
"0 Coal St.
Middleporf 8 ACRES of land on St. Rt. 143.
budget terms._ ~11 992-7085.
Middlepor1, Ohio
with or without kllchen
approximately 1 mile SE of
'torda thlt WI received from
.
·
.
4-12-6tc Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S Jlf2
Dbo Anthony Plumbing
HarrlsonviUe. water tap paid ;
privileges.
1 IJ!IIcl~. ·1114 ..) Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT
70.25
We have a complete Home
·, ol IINII·. B:.n1&lt; .end many
phone
742-;1095.
Individual Catering
COPPERTONE Hoover po·r- hp eng in e. In carton
S Third - 3 BR, bath, house
4-6-12tp Maintenance Service fhe
·. · olbtn · ID'O numeroua to
Will seat up to 150 people.
table washer with stainless Fertilizer, Garden Seeds and
is
all
carpeted
and
paneled
.
·: ·mintiO!I. , ·W. will trNsure
steel tub; S70; phone 992-2359.
carpeted util. rm ., suitable WANTED - Homes $10,000 and year around. No matter what
·lhtm lhtrastol our llvH from
Phone
4·12-3tc O'lion Sets.
your need. Complete roof or
for family room. two-car
·. lht bo~ of · our htlrts.
under ; any condifion i buyers spouling repair. Interior or
.992-3975
992-5786
POMEROY
garage. nice lawn , walking
will repa ir: Wh ile Realty exterior Cilrpentry . Ceiling
Tlttnk )'Oil.
ONE' tRAINcase,;r. pullman, .... _ JockW . Corsey, Mgr .
distance
to
shopping
,
Mr. · ond· Mrs. Hirry ' Not A Motor , Rou.e.
Office 992 -3020.
SIS: one wardrobe case, $5 ;
...
Phone 992-2181
$11.130.00. Must be seen to be
4·6·61c tile and Paneling and Siding.
Olbornt, Sr.
U' Electric range SIO ; phone
apprec iated.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
, .;.12-·l lc
lkilu' l'....G.o..l'
992-3818. ,
ALUMINUM ca r -l op boa is,
Healing.
·
~...:....-----..:..."ll'llllJ .._IIIIRn
.,. ·
4·7-lOtp won•• rusl or rot, safe and
3 b.r ., 1112 baths, carpet, one
Day
Number
992-2S50
ah' ~ 99
lighlweight. I0 ,12 13and 14tt. closet is cedar lined, marble
We hne 24 ·hr. emergency
-~
1'
• ; :. ; ' 'i. · ;
·· r .. • •61
· 't' 2•2156 ,
R
.. EMIN~QN )Mdel 700 ADL , in s rock now . Phone 992·6256
window sills, beauf'i!ul builtservice.
.
.
M~·.
!
;lt
.P~bll~
House
.
•
.
·
,
-&gt;'J"'
b
*Whb
scope,
cost
over
afrer
5 p. m.
in kitchen,. close tO..pool and
,'
m -3947
992-5803
&lt;se!urday, APril 15th,
. ,' 1
spedal new, $125; phone
3-30-JOi c
park in Middleport. $25,000.
992-!898
742-4761
. , 1 t om,•. 1t Ca,rl .Hysell
. : " 1 ,
•.
742·3656.
GeorgeS. Hobsteller Jr.,
I car garage, brick front,
We are fully in,ured
,- Property, Rulllnd:
, ON6 . B~OROOM trailer
4-7-)0ip SHOWALTER'S Wei Pet Snop, Good financing on fhis one .
Broker
wall
lo wall carpel.
.·
4-12-Jip
.
a~rtmentsldeol
for
couples.
Chester.
Ohio.
Phone
985-l356.
·.l.
LOTS
Phone 985-41
'
~UN SHOOT 1 &lt; iffe lch11 Cilnfact McClure's Dairy Isle. Goo·D MIXED second culling Tropical fish and supplies.
21ots, in Pomeroy's business
BACKHOE AND OOZEifworT&lt;.'
Hilton Wolfe S , le man
ONLY $13,750
\·•'·..
3·28 ·301 P district.
·
,lsor. ma
992-5248 or m-3436.
clover. timothy , alfalfa. hay.
Septic tanks Installed. ~ge
Pltone 9 • 11
. : - ape!! . all~ only, Fl?"ktd
4-9-6tc
•Sc per "ale. phone 985-3809. --....,.-.;__ _ _ __
3A acre located at Rts . 33 &amp; 7.
!Bill) Pullins . Pllone 992-2•7e . We ' spttclallze In aluminum
. R"''PI!I'fJmi~Ciub,Sundly,
v
"
"STAR;' kills •a ts quickly : 2 lots, on B~oadway
1
4.25-tfc \llnvl 1and steel sid ing ;
. April 16, 12 noon. .
. . . 3 AND~ ROOM furnished ,nd
•
4-9- 0ic Sure. 2'h lbs. $1 .69 ; Ebers - Large home, with extra river
fiberglaS , brick and stone ;
For all your Real
'
: '
•
.;.12·31c
unfurnished apartments. 16 FT. TRAVEL trailer. self· ba ch Hdwe., Sugar Run Mills , front lots, at Letart.
l ine of resldenl lal
SEPTIC TANKS ..CLEANED . complete
and commercial roofing ;
Estate
needs
see
or
REDUCE ex~ fl~l\11 with
f&gt;tlont m -5434 ·
_
_
c
cpnfalned,
ready
to
go,
hitch
Pickens
Hdwe.
,
Mason
.
REASONAI\LE rate!II"Ph. 446-. remodeling, bUild i ng,
4 12 11
· FLOIDEX~ ·. sl'M c"f • LOSE
··
lrtcluded. Phone 713·5651.
3-19-JOtp I have two nice homes, under
(all us .
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell. sus~ended ceiling'S, Interior
$10,000, one in Rutland, one
.. WI!IGHT Hftly with· Dex-Ao
Mason , W. Va.
and exterior painting ; ('rrt•.
ONner &amp; Operator .
'
, 2 BEDROOM mobile home wllh
'
4-5-llc
in Pomeroy.
P.O. Box 101 , Pomeroy
plete line of Muonry work . .,.. ,
l
5-12-llc
. Dill, 91c 11 !Miaon Orugo.
er:2 11
air conditioning In Racine
•J
work guaranteed to customer
'
,.;. • p
area; phone 992-6329. .
ALLIS CHALMERS WC lraofor
satisfaction . We are tully
HOUSE BUILDERS, CAll Insured f'lr your protec,lon . 32
..:.-:--:-.- - - " ' - - - ' - J.2J.Ifc
and equipment. $550. Allis
GUY NEIGLER. RACINE. N. 2nd .,992-3918 ,
WILL do seWing el all kinds In
Chalmers Combine. $350.
OHIO.
lt)Y home; Phone m -6179.
ROOM &amp; , BOARD. Chester,
~hone 7•2-3656.
I
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
3-5-JO!c
· .... ·.
3-26-301p
Phone 985-3371.
~
"
4-9-101p
·•
CONSTR. CO.
R'OSCOT KOSMEfl'tS and
H -l2tp - - - - - - - 36'' x 23" X .009
INTERIOR
and
exterior
110 ~Iechanic Street
wlp. Nlod exlrt nloney? Just
200 BALES mi xed hay : phone
paint ing; R. I. Dubbeld, pllone HOUSE &amp; roof painting and
thHe products . No
Wanted
Rent .
992-6214.
742-5825.
repair work . Free es11mates.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
4-10-51c
rntrlctod ltrrltorlts. Pllont HOUSE on small farm, phone
4-11-31c
Phone 992-7085.
m.mJ.
'
985-3805
4 - 12~tc
.,
4·2-lfc
' , -- ~ o~- 7 .61 c CLEMATIS ROOTS. Ready to
(:. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
NEW LISTING
~~~..,-.,--.:.......,....u.
-..
be transplanted ; purple, red.
Complete Service
SEPTIC Jenks cleaned. Mnler:
POMEROY - 8 rooms carpeted. 3 bec;lrooms,
PIAliO ind orgln loasons.
pink and , wh ite ; cabbage.
Pltone 949-3821
Sanitation, Siewert, Ohla ..Ph ,.
modern kitchen . bath. gas forced air furnace .
. ~·~lei Hoffner; phone 992- For I Sale" or Trade
tomato. broccoli , lettuce,
Racine,
Oh
io
662•3035
,
I •
USED OFFSET .PLATES
1
Bradford
Crill
2
·
12~tft
. ' 312~. .
•11;l21c '67 FIAT, '4 d/,., sedar&gt;. wlll .sell
&lt;;ll~llllo;yer, brussel sprouts.
Front
and
back
porches.
Lots
of
shrvbbery
.
HAllE
~
or ' trad• tor older model
_pansy,·petunio,.snapdragons,
5-1·11 . -~~~:::----~·
MANY USES
Full basement . 2 car garage . A real nice piece
marigolds and nemesla
. • ! ',
·o ; o·EL.L WHEEL ollghmenl
===--===-=-~
plants; also overbearing and
of property. $21,000.00 .
'
SEWING-- MACHINES. Repair
..... . : te;ENAGE Hop, Meigs Junior truck. ~hone 985-3920. 4·12·61c other
located at Crossroads, Rf. 124. '
varieties of strawberry
service, all makes. 992-2284.
· ·'·' High, ~rillS.,? p.m. 111111:30
Complete
front enp~ service,'
plants; Midway Market, W.
·, p.m .. Procltdf tor Can~er ;
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
tune
up
and
brake - .vice ..
.
4 BEDROOMS
Main Street. Pomeroy; phone .
· live "luslc by Cogwell Con- Auto Sales
Authorized
Singer
Sales
and
1
Wheels
balanced
elec··
992-2582.
8 for . $1.00
, ·ventlon.
·'
·
10 ACRES - Ranc.h style home, 1'12 oaths, hot
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
troDicolly .
Ail
w11.rk
4-11 -31c
' '•i.
· ' . .
;l-11 -41c lfU PONTIAC Lemens, 326
3·29·11&lt;
guaranteed.
Reaspnll,le,
water heal, 2 drilled wells, and foundation for
rates. Pltone 992 - 321~
: ;
engine, autom.allc, radio,
another home. Salem Townsh ip on 124 . .Only
GUN SHOOT, S.turdly, -April
7-27-tle.,
Good !Ires. Pllone 992-2«8 SPRING GARDEN SAVINGS
~ ' .. '
15th,• p.m. and Su~dey; April
$20,000.00.
!•
6efore 5 ~m . or 992-5275 after SALE - See our complete
- ==--.- .. -.-.,-~
assortment of garden seeds,
Mobile Homes For Sale --UPHOLSTER
. 16th, 1, p.m ..Metts. Qi'oetrln
5 p.m.
lNG SERVICE,
.
DOUBLE
APARTMENT
i
· ~ 20 1~ . a!Mk .. Ch shoot;
4-10-61c also Frost Proof Cabbage
complete
selection
of fabrics
1970 12 X 60. 3 BEDROOM
11 ROOMS - 5 with bath, up, 6 with bath
plants. 49c doz ..; Maine
IKGnel ~11ce ahoot*' gota free -:-:-::--and
vinyl
to
choose
from .
mobile home , $4,000; or $800
Kennebec Seed Potatoes,
shot; . all aleeve'l and ring 1963 FORO VAN. good engine,
down . Large living-dining . Ideal for a ·roomlng
Pick -up and delivery . Slater
and
lake
over
payments
of
guns will be handicapped;
$4.99 100 Jbs.; Garden Fernew snow 11~1 , $125 ; 1963
Uphol stering , Rt . 3, Pomeroy,
111 Court St.
house. Uptown location , on 2 lots wi.IH large
$70.11 . Phone 992-2292.
tilizer $1.99 - 50 lbs.; Yellow
Mile Hill Rd .; Ratl~e Fire
Ford 4 dr ., 6 cylinder;
phone
992-3617.
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-9-61p
Dript. Bulldl!IQ:.
porch and room for several cars to , park .
automatic, power steering, 4 on ion sets, 98c gal. ; 3 doz. cln.
3-28-JOtp
---'----eggs 79c; Heiner's Bonus or
4-11 -Sic
new tires, S250; 1962 Falcon
$23.500.00.
· 60X12, 2-bedroom. ail -electric,
•
·
=,...-,--_;_Favorite Bread 7 - 16 oz.
engine, $25 ; Ray Young ,
air conditioned, 8x20it. Porch : AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
' I
loaves $1 with $10 purchase, 5
REGISTERED ~palooae stud
Success Road, Coolville,
and aluminum . awning, 1 cancell~d?
Lost • yourl
- Sl wltllout purchase; Lean Real Estate For Sale
sitrvlet •. S50 Rag. Marts, S&lt;IO
NEW LISTING
phone 667-3462.
aluminum
skirting,
com
..
of,erator
I
license?
Call~- ~
·- ,Grld11 Francia Benedum,
FreshPork
·Steak69clb.;
Van
ROME ROY - J bedrooms. living pa'neled,
4-11 -31c
2 66 ·
Camp
Pork
&amp;
Beans
large
29
HOUSE
and
lot
on
Laurel
pletely
setup.
Beautlful
1
Phon• 667-3156.
6· 15· He ,
l:&gt;eotlon. ~r leaving stat,e.
_
oz. cans, 4 - sl : Troll Blazer Street, 1 Pomeroy ,
wos
carpet In 2 ·rooms, bath, new gas furnace .
· 3-JO•JOtc 1960 P-500 FARM truck. green
Pltone 949-&lt;1892 or 992·5272. , ·.
· ·~
Dog Food, 15 oz. con. 7 - Sl ; damaged by tire ; phone 992 ·
Storm doors and windows. Side porch, full
··
bid-cattle racks. good tires,
3
5
1
1-10-Hc
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
3
Broughton's
Sweet
Milk
2
pel.
9.
b
t
$10
000
00
FIGHT f•tigue wllh Zlppl .. , the
good condition, Harold
99c gallon; All grinds Max-.
4-12-6tc
asemen ·
,
. .
livered right to your proleet.
· grot Iron pill. Only S1,98 al
Brewer , Long Bottom.·phone
·
.
'
Fast anij easy . Free,
well
House
Coffee,
3
lb.
can
ACREAGE
. Notaon Drugs.
·
985-3554.
~ estimates. Phone 992-:r.IU. 1
$2.29 with $10 purchase. We RACINE' - 6roomhoUse,1iath,
7 ACRES - On Route 7 cleared, ready for
·
3-17-JOtp .
4-9-llc
Goegleln Rea•y -Mix Co .• .
have hundreds more discount
ullllly room . garage. $10,000 ;
· Middleport, Ohio.
·
price . Check them soon. We
phone 949-4195.
housing . Water tap. Only $10,000.00. . ,
CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE : - - - - - - - . .
6-30-Hc1
,
MIIml, Goronlums, Pansies, '57 CHEVROLET. 283 cu. ln .,
accept
Federal
.Food
3-31 -llc
; ,
.
••• Petunias. G1r1ldlne
standard shift : '63 Chevrolet
SEE us FOR;·' Awnlngs,.. storm ·
':.~':"'!~· ~~~~~t ~~~r T~~~:~; .:-:::=====-=-=~~~
YOU HAVE THE PROPERTY, 'f'H~ BANK
..;:111nel, E: Meln St .. Racine.
Nova, 6 cylinder, automat ic
doors and windows. carports,
Mason, W.Vo .
JBEDROOMrenchlypfhome,
HAS THE MONEY, AND WE HAVE · THE
...
4-2-Hc
transmission, Vincent
marquees, aluminum siding
··•
Broderick, . Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
~~~h Al~~~;_on:.Vithup~~
IDEAS. PROPERTY IS GETTING BETTER
. . ~AVEuptoanlhlil.. 8rlngyour
and rolling. A. Jacob, soles
.
4-12-61c
.
.
,.
MUST sacrlllce due to divorce:
electric and centra~ olr
AND HIGHER, THINK OF IT, THEN: USE
r~presentative. For free .
·· alck· TV to Chuck's TV Shop, ·
estimates,
phone Charles·
1
151 .Buttornul Avo.• Pomeroy. 1972 FORO Pinto, cell 992-3436 197012x60mobilehome; take
YOUR RENT MONEY TO BUY. SEE U~ FOR
over remainder of.payments ; ~~~~~~~~g,f~(h ~~~:'m~~ f..
Lisle. Syracuse , v. v.:
·
. 4-4-lfc
or 992·5248.
1961, Comet, S100. ·Call 61&gt;7·
gerroge In basement. See by
.DETAILS.
Johnson and Son, Inc .
4-12-6tc 3031,
Tuppers. Plains.
3-2-llc:--:------....__
appointment,
J&gt;llone
992-2m,
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATIO
rwi.i\tc~
a~y4-9~1p
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson. I
992-3325
.
99~·2378
HARffl SON'S 'r\i ... .
mo W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442.
'1220Wtlhlngton Blvd.
F'tll!ilrfi.JiiE, di"shu .
automatic. 'factory stereo CHECK whh Kuhl 's first lor
Service. Pltone ·
Belpre, Ohio
Financing available. 12·30-lfc'' 1tope ; lots ol extras ; really low-priced, guaranteed ap·
cl~kl; brill bed•, allver
nice: prlcet! right ; phone 992· pllcinces and used furnl;ture. 3 I!IODROOM home on two·
Ctrillara . or ' complete
thirds acre lot ; all con households. Write M. D.
2441 after 5 P·""·
Chest:lype freezer $85 ; Kuhl 's
Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohld.
veniences; at Gallipolis
3-31 -tlc
Bargain Center, Rt. 7, "at the
See Our Complete Line of
WhHis •• Fine Quality At Low Cost
Call m -6271.
·
Ferry. W. Va. only $10,000;
caution
light
,"
Tuppers
3-16-Hc 1961 FORO truck tractor, 220
come
see
;
Call615-3666or
675Plains, Ohio. Open to 6 p.m.,
3886 Pl. Pleasant, W. Ve.
Carefully Mounted By ExpertS
-;:=::======~~
Cummins
diesel,
si11011er
cab,
closed
Mondays , phone 61&gt;74-4-ISlp
·,.,
air ·tag ·a¥11. Will trade.
3858.
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,
•EYSTDNl
KEYSTONE
phone '115,3554, ·
ANSEN
·NICE 'i -story home
K·RALLY
TRACTION
SLOT
•·
4-9-Hc
SPRINT
GOOD relrlgeralor, $50; go 4 . basement. 2 lots.
Sr'" •'"'/'ptf&lt;'f ~l ull,.f
:' ~··• ..l •tho l
Tlw ,... , ,u, ~l •lol
air furnace. Near
miles east T~ppers Plains,
.. 11.~ 1 di'!'I)CII
~.;. h.,.! Uu~ Ill"'
fi"-1(11 "'"''~
Elementary
School
.
·For Sale •
.·
· 'fhat
t111d
S
KM!.
Rt. 681. turn right, !lrd house.
1hmunmu
~2-7384.'0 .,e.
~~~ d~HK ,4.
TIMOTHY hOy, 60t bela; call
4-9-IOip
prrmlnr!U 111&gt;&gt;kl
•
..,....
orio
11"11\'
11 •"u!hl (llt'lllll'l
morning &amp;~ L. E. Amos 985·
,4127.
TROPICAL FISH,
fancy ·· - · -- · ---·
- .• .
4·11 ·31&lt;
pples. angels end breeders, HOUSE In Long Bottom . phone
--~-----• tltos and supplies. Phone · 985•3529 · ·
·
CUB tractor plus equipment, ·. ms 443.
·
1·28-tlc
McCulloogh -power MAC 6
. •
12-JO.tfc
RACINE - 10 room house,
.
aaw, oil furnace and· lank,
milker fW 1 COW I phane 949- POODL.E puppies, Sliver Toy. oath, basement, garage, two
·'
1ols. Phone 949-4313.
:1726.
Park view Kennels, Phone992·
- 4-5-JOtp
.. r
5443.
• '
··1I ;
8-15-111

' an•,' • "heart. .

·The 'yeers m~y lP. c:~ut · rneriy
·· .lhi," "l,llul·li)fl lhlii' wipe out
,.. ..
n.,..er;
_,
~ memliry of thou happ71
• r•Y,'iho~ 1111. WI ~ .,

I DON'r CARE W-!AT
lHEY CALL Q.IICKEN

CLATI'ER

Ph. 99!-2174

'FOR THE BEST IN
CERAMIC TILE

CONSJ.

,.

SHOOTIN'ATSOME
WILD VARMINTS

'
Service

.&amp;Remodeling

I

.,

/ 7 ,•

t-1'/ MAN SNUFFV

'Bus'm·ess Servl··ces

SI X ROOM house. 133 BuHernUt'
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick , 2137 '
Wadsworth Drive. Columbus.
Ohio. pllone 237-4334.
1i -2J.IIc •
CLELAND REALTY
~;:~ceft2-2259 Eveningsm.
DE;SIGNED FOR
GRACIOUS LIVING
LOVELy BRICK - 3 large
bedrooms (double closets), a
dream kitchen and din ing

FIDDLE.·
DEE ·DEE ·THAT WUZ J EST .

-.. ~- · ·

-

2 wr~ge,
LARGE cellar
lots, 6$8.500;
rooms.MagJiie
bath,
hrllington , Depot St .,
I Rutland, Ohro.
4·7·301p
i·

ramer.•, Motor, .( ..··~ ·. ~
··

D

·- ··-:-- ··

,·

$899

4d

. .

.,. ReaiEstate F~r _Sale

•
1970 F.ORD C\JSTOM ST. WAG. . '
$1999
351 V-8 eng., automatic trans., power brakes, good tires, .
clean l'}teriof, beig9 finish , radio.
.
•
·
.
·
• 1970FORDGALAXIE500
$2095
H.T. Coupe,V-8englne,P.S.,P.B .• whiletires, blackvinyl
top. good w-s·w llr_es. clean lnter)or, and radio .

1970 STARCRAFT fold-down
camper, sleeps 8, phone 992·
5007. James Hollon.
4. 12-6tp

CARRIER
WANTED IN
ro·M
' EROY

.

r

1\1&gt;1'
.

"NOT'.111CE''

..

·

EmploYm•!J1 'ljanted-...

. DEADLINES
. TERDexter,
· work '·Ohio
ol any
. .·· ~ ·fi.M:
Doy
Btlort C.t.RPEN
kind · Phone
742. Publl!'lltlon .
.
,;19 · ....
,
,
' ' MIHI!I•v ·Deodll!lt 9 o.m.
.
.. •
3-28-30tp
CMcallotlon &amp; C:Orrtcllona ·
· •
Will btlccapttllunlll 9a.m . lor, DRY • WALL Finisher con·
o1y of Publlcttior\
tl!actor; R. I. Dubbeld, pllone
REGULATIONS
742-5825.
T1il Publisher .reaerves tho
4-10-5tc
rlghtto odlt or .ri,echny ada ' OC . . . . . .
--- ·. dttmtd obit&lt;! ona.l. ' The L , ~L "'eider, has portable
. .p~bll•h•r will not • be welder "!~nls Wflding lobs.
· r.-P&lt;rr!,lbllfor .morethanQile · ahy time, 7 days a week.
. lncorrla~ Jriset1Jon. -.·.
.· : Phone 992-5271.
. ., ,
·RA'l'IES
,
.
4-7-61p
,
' For · W•nt 'A4 Servlct • 1
· '5 cont. Jill' Word. onolnllrflan Help Wanted
. MlnlmumChorgo75o
, SOMEONE to stay with elderly
12 ctnte per word thrll '
Good
•
canucutlw lnurllans.
"
la~r In I Rutlend.
pay .
ll cents ._,. word . she cOn- . tal 7•2-468l j
L.--uflve'lnMrlions.
4-12-Jtc

' .'

..

:,'/·;·'S~;t;;;{Cl~'tiifieds'
Get
Action!
Sentinel
Ciassifieds
·Get
Results!
t.
· .·.·:•

I

.

-'

FUL! AND I'LL 61VE YOU
11-IE SAME ANSWER I
GAVE HIM .... NO, NOT YET!

The

·Orthid Room

Carrlen For
MASON
ancl .

HARTFORD

The

Notice

·.

·

3.. BR
HOME

·

Fo.r:R.i;ll'' ·•

REAL £STATE ·

·· • "noo;

'

.

.··-

U1TLE ORPHAN ANNIE

---

For Sale .

uu

AHD HflPLESS THE

lA8l Ti~~WU·SPill

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

Aluminum

.To

~HDlOU SAY SANDY

WAS li!ANQUILliZED

,.
.•

to. Storage

ACROSS
8. Well·
battery
1. Galileo's
known
penitent
terminal
· birthplace
9. Relieve
I. Redolence U.Hammer
part
11.-'sale
12. Bank
employee
,
11. Refection
l&amp;. Tabard Yes1erday • An~wer
DOWN
lS. Flank
1. Outmoded
U. Disin·
and
29. Frost·
2. Stupid
Garter
covered
dined
one
15. --dlsant
19. Shep·
30. Social
11: Wrath · 3. Somerset '
herd's
order
17. Brynner
Maugh~m
31. Wyoming
pipe
character 22. Card
is one
mounlaln
4. Soul (Fr.)
1L-trlholding
range
5. Turkish
angle
23. Convince · 36. Japanese
mountain 24. Unrealiz·
20. Prefix
1 salad
6. Make
meaning
able
·· plant
merry
dream
defective
31. Vitality,
21. Bivouac
1. Unclose
25. Former
inform(poet.)
need
21. Withdraw
ally
22. Court
attendant
23. Hurts
25. Beer 26. Wearing
shoes
21. Afore-

------~

Sheets

.

'lg

DICK TRACY

The

Daily Sentinel

de-:

·bt.o·

..

l'

f

..

,.

' I "

•

o

'I

o\GSS

•

$

•••••

2

""-' 1M .......... , _ , . . , ,.. -

..... l.,oo -MAKIIT INAPPT' .

. .

DID l-IE E'/ER 1R'{ ~I$\T(N6
A 1-lUNDREP·AND·FIFW·
POUND CAT?

,,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
'•

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
uaed for the lbree L's, X for the two O's, ete. Single lettero, . ...........~""
apostrophes, the lenath and fonnaUon of \)le words are all
hints. E1ch day ,the .eode letters are different.
'
·!l'AUl'HEIS 6011!61)8'/E .~

·

r-------,-----,·,.---:-----:---,

.

CRYPTOQUOTES
TDS'C XL WPGWVT CD CWEL W XVM
HCLZ

VP

KWS'C
HYWRR

DSL .VH

KGDHH

W

Vg_:rVKWCLT;
KNWHY

6BYZH. - JVRRVWY

VS

LON6· LA~TIN6 •
I'ENICILUN ~1-l&lt;ry'...

A '

ADB
CJD

RRDAT

MLDGML
YeNrdltY'i Cryp!&lt;Miuote: NO MAN HAS ~ RJGI.fT TO
.WHAT HE PLEASES, EXCEPT WHEN HE PLEASES TO DO
RIGHT.-CHARLES SIMMONS .

Do

992·7161

.... ..... ·-"··· 1/ ~

-

,...

POKID MASH ·MOIGUI PAYING

anew

GENERA·L TIRE SALES

I

,.......,...I

I

31. Vitality
38. Dlslnte-,
grated
39. Within

:ro ·You

OI'YDutDIAL

II I

port

LuleM

'

.....

35. Begin

The St.tion

..

(J

1

r

3t. New
Guinea

·-----------------.:....'i -----l

··. WMP0/1390
.

III

.

over

.MOBILE tll4

---.,.----

J

J rll

maker,

.MILLER

.ro

;

·===:c..

LDfGUP'

JIXI:CE

,;

.

~.

for short
33. Glaze

;1!' · 14' - 24' · WiDE

·· -

.'

It

men-

Uoned
28. British
actor
Alastair
29. Recant
32. Peace-

------

«---------·--n:

• t
1

(C 1972 Kine ;Feature~
i .'

\I

'!'

,

Syndi~a~ 1

Inc.)

..

.'

&lt;•

1

•

•

.,

.r '

'

•

.'

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v
'

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'

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.

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t ,. . ·,,·.,.

•t i; t. ,

iN1a=~:~i;.

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.

!cir~~~~:~~":, 1~ 1 rl~•.

2

dl ua•. :

.
. .
'CA'IID OF TH.O.f'IKS•
&amp; OIITUARY
SUO 'Ior. so· w.ord mlnl'"um:
. ·Eoch addltfonot word' .?C. ·
, ,. nrND ·ADS
• Additional lk Chorgo
· ...,
••vorti••m~t.· • . , por
- ,..,
·,
OFFICE HOURS-,1:31! l.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
1:·30 .l.m . to 12:00 Noon

c•

': .

,··

~tur~r.· ,..
· 1n Memory

.. .

"

. ·
IN11 ' MEMORY of William
Butk'i" Menlty who paned
' IWIY
II '12, 1,69,
.
. onct 1" ~ golden
R.m.m ...
"' trlei•, to hreak all
a Jn,'Duth
. Ch_
"'
In·r-1/lln J
·,io hlvt, 10 IDYl, · _lnd ,then to1
t I sorrowo
.P.rl&gt;l1thegru11

STARTING Salary SID.660. I'm
lpaklng_ lor a~ Intelligent.
.enth~slastlc and reliable
person )n the Pomeroy area ...
!bmeone w~o would like to
. uaume -th,e operation of a
multiple line Insurance
ogeocv. Sflland service auto.
flr•.... •Hfe-hea,lth•. and ·busl.nes_s
lnsurtan". Fulll•olnlnt wrll
be provldtd ·at no cost for the
man selected, plus 1 salary

11f~~&lt;!d~:-"c!.:rM':.'~;,~~:6~
1 446 4707 t
an ap
~
polntmont.

1 ·•

or

4-12-Jic

•
®~

...

2

;

.

'

Of
QUALifY

.

.

'.

Po•e'roy .
Motor·(O.

1969 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE ·

V8 t
tl ·t
p S p B hit , . . h blk
r.. . • au oma
c rans., . ·• .. . . , w e .JMIS ,
.
1
vfnyllnt~rlor .
'

l'.

1

®

,

I

I
l

1

OP.I!M IVES. 1:00. P.lrl.
f~E-ROY, OHIO .
• '

,

' ..,..

For Sale

· ·

.
j.'

For Sale

'

':1 ·

• ··

INTERNATIONAL 7 fl . cut AKC puppies -- Schnauzers,
mower. pow~r lift, new ,tire.
Poodles, Cairn Terriers,
good knife, ready to mow. healthy home r~ised, perPolled

Hereford

· Bulls,

manent Injections. wormed -

Purebred, Paul Sayre, Rte.
338, Great Bend Road, 843 .

$75-$85; Coolville 667-6214.
4.12.J2tp

4· 12·31P

h'
TWIN needle sewina rnac rne
1971 Model In walnut stand.
All features built-in to make
fancy desigrls and do stretch
sew ing . Also buttonholes ,
blind hems etc. $4:1.35 cash
~rice or ferms available.
h
~ .,
one" 2 ·~ 4 1·
, _12 _61 c

2286., Portland. Oh io .

area, spacious liv ing room ,
Jlh baths , utility room ,
recreation
roOm.
full

basement,

all

carpeted,

~a;~s~wft~T:,':ea~29,00o.

POINT OFFICE
·· SUPPLY
Com'plote

of office

lin~

equipment,

·t urnl1ure

&amp;

suppli'n. Typewriter &amp;
AciCilng Machine . Repair.

MARimA
•
.TYPEWRITER

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

PHONE 675-3628
424 M&lt;lin St.

Pl. Pleasant

A

WASUINGTON 'OUNTY
8 y~~r
Qld' brickoverlooking lake Veto , 3
Iaroe bedrooms. beautiful
bath. a kitchen ro su;t any
housewife complete with
ref. , ranoe end oven , d;ning
room, corner fireplace In the

living room, full basement ,

utility · space, rec . room ,
garage, corner lot. about ~.
acres . 525 ·000 ·00 ·
Large B~i?d'i"n~Rf~~ storage,
covers about 3 lots , has about

OFFICE
MACHINE
REPAIR

IC!ITCHEN
:and

616 Main St.
Belpre, 0.
. -423-6551

Johnsoo

50N

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator. to
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathan Biggs
RadialorSpodolist

'

HEverything In Home

Mm~ry

Let us show our samples.

30,000 foot storage space, out

of ali floods , easy loading,
rentedatpresent,3olherlots

.
MEIGS, W.VA. 25260

for trailer space, S8,300.0D.

THESE ARE SCARCE
! bedroom freme. (new bath ,
fcreed air furnace , hot water
tank! . n1ce 1o·t , goo d netgll
· borhood . Why pay renl?
15,500.00
WORTH THE MONEY

MEI'GS 992-7151
MASON 773-5634

TERM ITl!S. .TERMITES,

Main.tenance''

REA!&gt;I~G

WAS
HIS BIGGEST

.

.w

.Cird

Got f!id ofThem
We will pfot,ct any single
dwelling r'sidence lor

. '1,9.50

·

WANTED!

pv•r.

llfMEDl4L REMEDIAL

WREN I WANT
SOME 'OOUL: FOOD. ..

$5.55

On foiost A111er!~an

cw

U'LABNER

-GUARANTEE[).-:
Phone 992-2094

Pome!OY Home J Auto
··.-

Free Estimate

EARTH MOVING

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

=
C&lt;&gt;ff'"

AU WEATHER ROOFING
CONSTRUCTION
PLUMBING CO•.

VERA EBLEN

OH·OH! A PARKII-J'
COP 15 PU~LII-J' UP
T'MY CAR!

WE GOiTA
OUR

t'

FE'R

Lit-JED

WINNIE WINKLE
HE'S JUST AS N05YAS \'OU
ARE, AND ABOUT A5 TACT-

llHIN!&lt;- SO1
TOO JA NIE. WE:
HAD AFANTASTIC
WEEK lOGElHER.

··

MOWERS
TIU£RS

AND GREENS .

- AFTEJ:t HE FLUNI&lt;E!&gt;

EXPERT
'Mlpel .~i&amp;nment

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

____

Thanks

I MEAN A HAM6URI&amp;ER,
FRIES AND A 6HAKE.

Let-Us -Do-Over-Your
Bathroom or J!;llcheo
Open 8Tll5
Insured-But best of all
Mond•y thru Saturday
"WE'RE HONEST
Pit. 992-7608 Pomeroy, Ohio · . l-_6_06_E_._Mo_i_n,_P_•_mo_ro_y_,_o_. ...J

'

THE DAILY
SEN'TINEL

THEN, FOJ:t SOMS
REASON, HE JUST ·
GAVE UP~

DID ~E TRV
REMEf&gt;IAL
llEAf&gt;iNGi

["""'-"'"'' FER.GYf

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Pomeroy

2 story .frame (new siding,
Dorer &amp; End loader work,
M TAG
hi
h'
roof and carport). J
ponds, _basement, land·
AY
was ng mac rne.
bedrooms, bath , low taxes.
round tub, wringer type , $50;
•
good ne1g
· h b or h oo d .
scaping. We have 2 size
742 4404
dozers, 2 sire loaders. Work
· phone
.
'
4-1~- IOip VACUUM cleaner. Electro ~6~~reE o~uPED WITH
done by hour or contract.
WRITTEN WARRANTY
Hygiene New Demonstrator A LOT OF BALLY HOODFree Estim•tes. We 11lsa
Call Col loci m-452-31Sll
OR
'
STRAWBERRY plants, Charles
has all cleaning attachments LIST WITH THE BROKER
' 51 ~ 1 Y mlshd by atopFosler, Rt. 338, near Racine
plus the new Electro Suds lor THAT
SELLS . YOUR
haul fill dirt, top soil. Dump
,
. fllhtr, slslen and brotli1r1.
L k h
shampooing carpet. Only PROPERTY .
trucks and low-boy for hire.
'
' '
'
..
. 12-,ltp
OC s, P one 2"7.2309 ·
HENRY E. CLELAND Sr.
~.CITY
992-2156
4-12-12tc
$27.50 cash prite or terms~-----------'
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
CourtSI.
Pomeroy
available. Phone 992-5641.
r--.~iftml
Pomeroy . Phone 992-3525
EXTE~MINATION
WALNUT, modern style, with
4-12-6tc
_ofr
alter
7 p.m.
&lt;·
For
Appointment
mMainSI.
••
•• .
•
NEED lady lor spring cleaning.
AM -FM radio, 4 speaker - - - - - - - -Za~sville, Ohio
WISH to tHank IICH tnd . phone 992-7226.
sound system , 4 speed 2 RIDING horses. phone 949Plfone 949.-2803
.· . WE'
.
~trYOM of our frlflllls and
4-11
-31c
automatic
changer.
Balance
3196
.
.' .
·. rtlttlvH who ·so grlclovsl~
$83.17. Use our budget terms.
4-5-71p
VINYL and ,aluminum siding ,
.•.
.: .Mnt.tlowan·an thli CK!Cnlon or RE'SPGNSIBLE · person for
Call 992-7085.
free estimltes ; references ;
·. fii!C. . S!)!h . -; wtildlnt , on.
esllbllshtel dry cleaning
4-12-61c
call coliec1 446-3608, Byerly
rout1. A.B.C. Cleaners.
. :• nlvraar~. ~1•1 ltrtnka to
Construction Co., Gallipolis.
&amp;
.•••
w
'"
'
.· . ll'(tlPomtroy Ftowltr Sllap for
mt~IOnl
• , ••
BEAUTIFUL Early American
3-2001p
&amp;
,,
4·5-llc 'style, stereo-radio com· · ·tl'tlllr'~tlon, tho Adult Blbl1
'
Cont~d.
IStilciate
.'
. · Cltll' ~ .~· Ch~t'ch of Christ __: ·
bination, 4 speaker sound
Make
reservations
for
your
' and nl&lt;iriy •Qtl\«1. Thanks to
system, 4 speed automatic
&amp;
private parties, banquets, ·
· udh ' 11rtd ·. everyone· wtlo
changer, separate controls. Economy Tiller, 3'12 hp B&amp;S
Real
Estate
For
Sale
·
special
oc:c:aslons .
. broullht ·iQ , mi!IIY· glfta and
992-3020
Bolance $79.56. Use our engine, Reg. 159.95
144.95
240 Lincoln 51.
Ideal for meeting pla ce •ttelided ind lor
•100
"0 Coal St.
Middleporf 8 ACRES of land on St. Rt. 143.
budget terms._ ~11 992-7085.
Middlepor1, Ohio
with or without kllchen
approximately 1 mile SE of
'torda thlt WI received from
.
·
.
4-12-6tc Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S Jlf2
Dbo Anthony Plumbing
HarrlsonviUe. water tap paid ;
privileges.
1 IJ!IIcl~. ·1114 ..) Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT
70.25
We have a complete Home
·, ol IINII·. B:.n1&lt; .end many
phone
742-;1095.
Individual Catering
COPPERTONE Hoover po·r- hp eng in e. In carton
S Third - 3 BR, bath, house
4-6-12tp Maintenance Service fhe
·. · olbtn · ID'O numeroua to
Will seat up to 150 people.
table washer with stainless Fertilizer, Garden Seeds and
is
all
carpeted
and
paneled
.
·: ·mintiO!I. , ·W. will trNsure
steel tub; S70; phone 992-2359.
carpeted util. rm ., suitable WANTED - Homes $10,000 and year around. No matter what
·lhtm lhtrastol our llvH from
Phone
4·12-3tc O'lion Sets.
your need. Complete roof or
for family room. two-car
·. lht bo~ of · our htlrts.
under ; any condifion i buyers spouling repair. Interior or
.992-3975
992-5786
POMEROY
garage. nice lawn , walking
will repa ir: Wh ile Realty exterior Cilrpentry . Ceiling
Tlttnk )'Oil.
ONE' tRAINcase,;r. pullman, .... _ JockW . Corsey, Mgr .
distance
to
shopping
,
Mr. · ond· Mrs. Hirry ' Not A Motor , Rou.e.
Office 992 -3020.
SIS: one wardrobe case, $5 ;
...
Phone 992-2181
$11.130.00. Must be seen to be
4·6·61c tile and Paneling and Siding.
Olbornt, Sr.
U' Electric range SIO ; phone
apprec iated.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
, .;.12-·l lc
lkilu' l'....G.o..l'
992-3818. ,
ALUMINUM ca r -l op boa is,
Healing.
·
~...:....-----..:..."ll'llllJ .._IIIIRn
.,. ·
4·7-lOtp won•• rusl or rot, safe and
3 b.r ., 1112 baths, carpet, one
Day
Number
992-2S50
ah' ~ 99
lighlweight. I0 ,12 13and 14tt. closet is cedar lined, marble
We hne 24 ·hr. emergency
-~
1'
• ; :. ; ' 'i. · ;
·· r .. • •61
· 't' 2•2156 ,
R
.. EMIN~QN )Mdel 700 ADL , in s rock now . Phone 992·6256
window sills, beauf'i!ul builtservice.
.
.
M~·.
!
;lt
.P~bll~
House
.
•
.
·
,
-&gt;'J"'
b
*Whb
scope,
cost
over
afrer
5 p. m.
in kitchen,. close tO..pool and
,'
m -3947
992-5803
&lt;se!urday, APril 15th,
. ,' 1
spedal new, $125; phone
3-30-JOi c
park in Middleport. $25,000.
992-!898
742-4761
. , 1 t om,•. 1t Ca,rl .Hysell
. : " 1 ,
•.
742·3656.
GeorgeS. Hobsteller Jr.,
I car garage, brick front,
We are fully in,ured
,- Property, Rulllnd:
, ON6 . B~OROOM trailer
4-7-)0ip SHOWALTER'S Wei Pet Snop, Good financing on fhis one .
Broker
wall
lo wall carpel.
.·
4-12-Jip
.
a~rtmentsldeol
for
couples.
Chester.
Ohio.
Phone
985-l356.
·.l.
LOTS
Phone 985-41
'
~UN SHOOT 1 &lt; iffe lch11 Cilnfact McClure's Dairy Isle. Goo·D MIXED second culling Tropical fish and supplies.
21ots, in Pomeroy's business
BACKHOE AND OOZEifworT&lt;.'
Hilton Wolfe S , le man
ONLY $13,750
\·•'·..
3·28 ·301 P district.
·
,lsor. ma
992-5248 or m-3436.
clover. timothy , alfalfa. hay.
Septic tanks Installed. ~ge
Pltone 9 • 11
. : - ape!! . all~ only, Fl?"ktd
4-9-6tc
•Sc per "ale. phone 985-3809. --....,.-.;__ _ _ __
3A acre located at Rts . 33 &amp; 7.
!Bill) Pullins . Pllone 992-2•7e . We ' spttclallze In aluminum
. R"''PI!I'fJmi~Ciub,Sundly,
v
"
"STAR;' kills •a ts quickly : 2 lots, on B~oadway
1
4.25-tfc \llnvl 1and steel sid ing ;
. April 16, 12 noon. .
. . . 3 AND~ ROOM furnished ,nd
•
4-9- 0ic Sure. 2'h lbs. $1 .69 ; Ebers - Large home, with extra river
fiberglaS , brick and stone ;
For all your Real
'
: '
•
.;.12·31c
unfurnished apartments. 16 FT. TRAVEL trailer. self· ba ch Hdwe., Sugar Run Mills , front lots, at Letart.
l ine of resldenl lal
SEPTIC TANKS ..CLEANED . complete
and commercial roofing ;
Estate
needs
see
or
REDUCE ex~ fl~l\11 with
f&gt;tlont m -5434 ·
_
_
c
cpnfalned,
ready
to
go,
hitch
Pickens
Hdwe.
,
Mason
.
REASONAI\LE rate!II"Ph. 446-. remodeling, bUild i ng,
4 12 11
· FLOIDEX~ ·. sl'M c"f • LOSE
··
lrtcluded. Phone 713·5651.
3-19-JOtp I have two nice homes, under
(all us .
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell. sus~ended ceiling'S, Interior
$10,000, one in Rutland, one
.. WI!IGHT Hftly with· Dex-Ao
Mason , W. Va.
and exterior painting ; ('rrt•.
ONner &amp; Operator .
'
, 2 BEDROOM mobile home wllh
'
4-5-llc
in Pomeroy.
P.O. Box 101 , Pomeroy
plete line of Muonry work . .,.. ,
l
5-12-llc
. Dill, 91c 11 !Miaon Orugo.
er:2 11
air conditioning In Racine
•J
work guaranteed to customer
'
,.;. • p
area; phone 992-6329. .
ALLIS CHALMERS WC lraofor
satisfaction . We are tully
HOUSE BUILDERS, CAll Insured f'lr your protec,lon . 32
..:.-:--:-.- - - " ' - - - ' - J.2J.Ifc
and equipment. $550. Allis
GUY NEIGLER. RACINE. N. 2nd .,992-3918 ,
WILL do seWing el all kinds In
Chalmers Combine. $350.
OHIO.
lt)Y home; Phone m -6179.
ROOM &amp; , BOARD. Chester,
~hone 7•2-3656.
I
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
3-5-JO!c
· .... ·.
3-26-301p
Phone 985-3371.
~
"
4-9-101p
·•
CONSTR. CO.
R'OSCOT KOSMEfl'tS and
H -l2tp - - - - - - - 36'' x 23" X .009
INTERIOR
and
exterior
110 ~Iechanic Street
wlp. Nlod exlrt nloney? Just
200 BALES mi xed hay : phone
paint ing; R. I. Dubbeld, pllone HOUSE &amp; roof painting and
thHe products . No
Wanted
Rent .
992-6214.
742-5825.
repair work . Free es11mates.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
4-10-51c
rntrlctod ltrrltorlts. Pllont HOUSE on small farm, phone
4-11-31c
Phone 992-7085.
m.mJ.
'
985-3805
4 - 12~tc
.,
4·2-lfc
' , -- ~ o~- 7 .61 c CLEMATIS ROOTS. Ready to
(:. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
NEW LISTING
~~~..,-.,--.:.......,....u.
-..
be transplanted ; purple, red.
Complete Service
SEPTIC Jenks cleaned. Mnler:
POMEROY - 8 rooms carpeted. 3 bec;lrooms,
PIAliO ind orgln loasons.
pink and , wh ite ; cabbage.
Pltone 949-3821
Sanitation, Siewert, Ohla ..Ph ,.
modern kitchen . bath. gas forced air furnace .
. ~·~lei Hoffner; phone 992- For I Sale" or Trade
tomato. broccoli , lettuce,
Racine,
Oh
io
662•3035
,
I •
USED OFFSET .PLATES
1
Bradford
Crill
2
·
12~tft
. ' 312~. .
•11;l21c '67 FIAT, '4 d/,., sedar&gt;. wlll .sell
&lt;;ll~llllo;yer, brussel sprouts.
Front
and
back
porches.
Lots
of
shrvbbery
.
HAllE
~
or ' trad• tor older model
_pansy,·petunio,.snapdragons,
5-1·11 . -~~~:::----~·
MANY USES
Full basement . 2 car garage . A real nice piece
marigolds and nemesla
. • ! ',
·o ; o·EL.L WHEEL ollghmenl
===--===-=-~
plants; also overbearing and
of property. $21,000.00 .
'
SEWING-- MACHINES. Repair
..... . : te;ENAGE Hop, Meigs Junior truck. ~hone 985-3920. 4·12·61c other
located at Crossroads, Rf. 124. '
varieties of strawberry
service, all makes. 992-2284.
· ·'·' High, ~rillS.,? p.m. 111111:30
Complete
front enp~ service,'
plants; Midway Market, W.
·, p.m .. Procltdf tor Can~er ;
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
tune
up
and
brake - .vice ..
.
4 BEDROOMS
Main Street. Pomeroy; phone .
· live "luslc by Cogwell Con- Auto Sales
Authorized
Singer
Sales
and
1
Wheels
balanced
elec··
992-2582.
8 for . $1.00
, ·ventlon.
·'
·
10 ACRES - Ranc.h style home, 1'12 oaths, hot
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
troDicolly .
Ail
w11.rk
4-11 -31c
' '•i.
· ' . .
;l-11 -41c lfU PONTIAC Lemens, 326
3·29·11&lt;
guaranteed.
Reaspnll,le,
water heal, 2 drilled wells, and foundation for
rates. Pltone 992 - 321~
: ;
engine, autom.allc, radio,
another home. Salem Townsh ip on 124 . .Only
GUN SHOOT, S.turdly, -April
7-27-tle.,
Good !Ires. Pllone 992-2«8 SPRING GARDEN SAVINGS
~ ' .. '
15th,• p.m. and Su~dey; April
$20,000.00.
!•
6efore 5 ~m . or 992-5275 after SALE - See our complete
- ==--.- .. -.-.,-~
assortment of garden seeds,
Mobile Homes For Sale --UPHOLSTER
. 16th, 1, p.m ..Metts. Qi'oetrln
5 p.m.
lNG SERVICE,
.
DOUBLE
APARTMENT
i
· ~ 20 1~ . a!Mk .. Ch shoot;
4-10-61c also Frost Proof Cabbage
complete
selection
of fabrics
1970 12 X 60. 3 BEDROOM
11 ROOMS - 5 with bath, up, 6 with bath
plants. 49c doz ..; Maine
IKGnel ~11ce ahoot*' gota free -:-:-::--and
vinyl
to
choose
from .
mobile home , $4,000; or $800
Kennebec Seed Potatoes,
shot; . all aleeve'l and ring 1963 FORO VAN. good engine,
down . Large living-dining . Ideal for a ·roomlng
Pick -up and delivery . Slater
and
lake
over
payments
of
guns will be handicapped;
$4.99 100 Jbs.; Garden Fernew snow 11~1 , $125 ; 1963
Uphol stering , Rt . 3, Pomeroy,
111 Court St.
house. Uptown location , on 2 lots wi.IH large
$70.11 . Phone 992-2292.
tilizer $1.99 - 50 lbs.; Yellow
Mile Hill Rd .; Ratl~e Fire
Ford 4 dr ., 6 cylinder;
phone
992-3617.
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-9-61p
Dript. Bulldl!IQ:.
porch and room for several cars to , park .
automatic, power steering, 4 on ion sets, 98c gal. ; 3 doz. cln.
3-28-JOtp
---'----eggs 79c; Heiner's Bonus or
4-11 -Sic
new tires, S250; 1962 Falcon
$23.500.00.
· 60X12, 2-bedroom. ail -electric,
•
·
=,...-,--_;_Favorite Bread 7 - 16 oz.
engine, $25 ; Ray Young ,
air conditioned, 8x20it. Porch : AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
' I
loaves $1 with $10 purchase, 5
REGISTERED ~palooae stud
Success Road, Coolville,
and aluminum . awning, 1 cancell~d?
Lost • yourl
- Sl wltllout purchase; Lean Real Estate For Sale
sitrvlet •. S50 Rag. Marts, S&lt;IO
NEW LISTING
phone 667-3462.
aluminum
skirting,
com
..
of,erator
I
license?
Call~- ~
·- ,Grld11 Francia Benedum,
FreshPork
·Steak69clb.;
Van
ROME ROY - J bedrooms. living pa'neled,
4-11 -31c
2 66 ·
Camp
Pork
&amp;
Beans
large
29
HOUSE
and
lot
on
Laurel
pletely
setup.
Beautlful
1
Phon• 667-3156.
6· 15· He ,
l:&gt;eotlon. ~r leaving stat,e.
_
oz. cans, 4 - sl : Troll Blazer Street, 1 Pomeroy ,
wos
carpet In 2 ·rooms, bath, new gas furnace .
· 3-JO•JOtc 1960 P-500 FARM truck. green
Pltone 949-&lt;1892 or 992·5272. , ·.
· ·~
Dog Food, 15 oz. con. 7 - Sl ; damaged by tire ; phone 992 ·
Storm doors and windows. Side porch, full
··
bid-cattle racks. good tires,
3
5
1
1-10-Hc
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
3
Broughton's
Sweet
Milk
2
pel.
9.
b
t
$10
000
00
FIGHT f•tigue wllh Zlppl .. , the
good condition, Harold
99c gallon; All grinds Max-.
4-12-6tc
asemen ·
,
. .
livered right to your proleet.
· grot Iron pill. Only S1,98 al
Brewer , Long Bottom.·phone
·
.
'
Fast anij easy . Free,
well
House
Coffee,
3
lb.
can
ACREAGE
. Notaon Drugs.
·
985-3554.
~ estimates. Phone 992-:r.IU. 1
$2.29 with $10 purchase. We RACINE' - 6roomhoUse,1iath,
7 ACRES - On Route 7 cleared, ready for
·
3-17-JOtp .
4-9-llc
Goegleln Rea•y -Mix Co .• .
have hundreds more discount
ullllly room . garage. $10,000 ;
· Middleport, Ohio.
·
price . Check them soon. We
phone 949-4195.
housing . Water tap. Only $10,000.00. . ,
CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE : - - - - - - - . .
6-30-Hc1
,
MIIml, Goronlums, Pansies, '57 CHEVROLET. 283 cu. ln .,
accept
Federal
.Food
3-31 -llc
; ,
.
••• Petunias. G1r1ldlne
standard shift : '63 Chevrolet
SEE us FOR;·' Awnlngs,.. storm ·
':.~':"'!~· ~~~~~t ~~~r T~~~:~; .:-:::=====-=-=~~~
YOU HAVE THE PROPERTY, 'f'H~ BANK
..;:111nel, E: Meln St .. Racine.
Nova, 6 cylinder, automat ic
doors and windows. carports,
Mason, W.Vo .
JBEDROOMrenchlypfhome,
HAS THE MONEY, AND WE HAVE · THE
...
4-2-Hc
transmission, Vincent
marquees, aluminum siding
··•
Broderick, . Rt. 2, Pomeroy.
~~~h Al~~~;_on:.Vithup~~
IDEAS. PROPERTY IS GETTING BETTER
. . ~AVEuptoanlhlil.. 8rlngyour
and rolling. A. Jacob, soles
.
4-12-61c
.
.
,.
MUST sacrlllce due to divorce:
electric and centra~ olr
AND HIGHER, THINK OF IT, THEN: USE
r~presentative. For free .
·· alck· TV to Chuck's TV Shop, ·
estimates,
phone Charles·
1
151 .Buttornul Avo.• Pomeroy. 1972 FORO Pinto, cell 992-3436 197012x60mobilehome; take
YOUR RENT MONEY TO BUY. SEE U~ FOR
over remainder of.payments ; ~~~~~~~~g,f~(h ~~~:'m~~ f..
Lisle. Syracuse , v. v.:
·
. 4-4-lfc
or 992·5248.
1961, Comet, S100. ·Call 61&gt;7·
gerroge In basement. See by
.DETAILS.
Johnson and Son, Inc .
4-12-6tc 3031,
Tuppers. Plains.
3-2-llc:--:------....__
appointment,
J&gt;llone
992-2m,
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD,
ASSOCIATIO
rwi.i\tc~
a~y4-9~1p
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson. I
992-3325
.
99~·2378
HARffl SON'S 'r\i ... .
mo W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442.
'1220Wtlhlngton Blvd.
F'tll!ilrfi.JiiE, di"shu .
automatic. 'factory stereo CHECK whh Kuhl 's first lor
Service. Pltone ·
Belpre, Ohio
Financing available. 12·30-lfc'' 1tope ; lots ol extras ; really low-priced, guaranteed ap·
cl~kl; brill bed•, allver
nice: prlcet! right ; phone 992· pllcinces and used furnl;ture. 3 I!IODROOM home on two·
Ctrillara . or ' complete
thirds acre lot ; all con households. Write M. D.
2441 after 5 P·""·
Chest:lype freezer $85 ; Kuhl 's
Miller. Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohld.
veniences; at Gallipolis
3-31 -tlc
Bargain Center, Rt. 7, "at the
See Our Complete Line of
WhHis •• Fine Quality At Low Cost
Call m -6271.
·
Ferry. W. Va. only $10,000;
caution
light
,"
Tuppers
3-16-Hc 1961 FORO truck tractor, 220
come
see
;
Call615-3666or
675Plains, Ohio. Open to 6 p.m.,
3886 Pl. Pleasant, W. Ve.
Carefully Mounted By ExpertS
-;:=::======~~
Cummins
diesel,
si11011er
cab,
closed
Mondays , phone 61&gt;74-4-ISlp
·,.,
air ·tag ·a¥11. Will trade.
3858.
Harold Brewer, Long Bottom,
•EYSTDNl
KEYSTONE
phone '115,3554, ·
ANSEN
·NICE 'i -story home
K·RALLY
TRACTION
SLOT
•·
4-9-Hc
SPRINT
GOOD relrlgeralor, $50; go 4 . basement. 2 lots.
Sr'" •'"'/'ptf&lt;'f ~l ull,.f
:' ~··• ..l •tho l
Tlw ,... , ,u, ~l •lol
air furnace. Near
miles east T~ppers Plains,
.. 11.~ 1 di'!'I)CII
~.;. h.,.! Uu~ Ill"'
fi"-1(11 "'"''~
Elementary
School
.
·For Sale •
.·
· 'fhat
t111d
S
KM!.
Rt. 681. turn right, !lrd house.
1hmunmu
~2-7384.'0 .,e.
~~~ d~HK ,4.
TIMOTHY hOy, 60t bela; call
4-9-IOip
prrmlnr!U 111&gt;&gt;kl
•
..,....
orio
11"11\'
11 •"u!hl (llt'lllll'l
morning &amp;~ L. E. Amos 985·
,4127.
TROPICAL FISH,
fancy ·· - · -- · ---·
- .• .
4·11 ·31&lt;
pples. angels end breeders, HOUSE In Long Bottom . phone
--~-----• tltos and supplies. Phone · 985•3529 · ·
·
CUB tractor plus equipment, ·. ms 443.
·
1·28-tlc
McCulloogh -power MAC 6
. •
12-JO.tfc
RACINE - 10 room house,
.
aaw, oil furnace and· lank,
milker fW 1 COW I phane 949- POODL.E puppies, Sliver Toy. oath, basement, garage, two
·'
1ols. Phone 949-4313.
:1726.
Park view Kennels, Phone992·
- 4-5-JOtp
.. r
5443.
• '
··1I ;
8-15-111

' an•,' • "heart. .

·The 'yeers m~y lP. c:~ut · rneriy
·· .lhi," "l,llul·li)fl lhlii' wipe out
,.. ..
n.,..er;
_,
~ memliry of thou happ71
• r•Y,'iho~ 1111. WI ~ .,

I DON'r CARE W-!AT
lHEY CALL Q.IICKEN

CLATI'ER

Ph. 99!-2174

'FOR THE BEST IN
CERAMIC TILE

CONSJ.

,.

SHOOTIN'ATSOME
WILD VARMINTS

'
Service

.&amp;Remodeling

I

.,

/ 7 ,•

t-1'/ MAN SNUFFV

'Bus'm·ess Servl··ces

SI X ROOM house. 133 BuHernUt'
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick , 2137 '
Wadsworth Drive. Columbus.
Ohio. pllone 237-4334.
1i -2J.IIc •
CLELAND REALTY
~;:~ceft2-2259 Eveningsm.
DE;SIGNED FOR
GRACIOUS LIVING
LOVELy BRICK - 3 large
bedrooms (double closets), a
dream kitchen and din ing

FIDDLE.·
DEE ·DEE ·THAT WUZ J EST .

-.. ~- · ·

-

2 wr~ge,
LARGE cellar
lots, 6$8.500;
rooms.MagJiie
bath,
hrllington , Depot St .,
I Rutland, Ohro.
4·7·301p
i·

ramer.•, Motor, .( ..··~ ·. ~
··

D

·- ··-:-- ··

,·

$899

4d

. .

.,. ReaiEstate F~r _Sale

•
1970 F.ORD C\JSTOM ST. WAG. . '
$1999
351 V-8 eng., automatic trans., power brakes, good tires, .
clean l'}teriof, beig9 finish , radio.
.
•
·
.
·
• 1970FORDGALAXIE500
$2095
H.T. Coupe,V-8englne,P.S.,P.B .• whiletires, blackvinyl
top. good w-s·w llr_es. clean lnter)or, and radio .

1970 STARCRAFT fold-down
camper, sleeps 8, phone 992·
5007. James Hollon.
4. 12-6tp

CARRIER
WANTED IN
ro·M
' EROY

.

r

1\1&gt;1'
.

"NOT'.111CE''

..

·

EmploYm•!J1 'ljanted-...

. DEADLINES
. TERDexter,
· work '·Ohio
ol any
. .·· ~ ·fi.M:
Doy
Btlort C.t.RPEN
kind · Phone
742. Publl!'lltlon .
.
,;19 · ....
,
,
' ' MIHI!I•v ·Deodll!lt 9 o.m.
.
.. •
3-28-30tp
CMcallotlon &amp; C:Orrtcllona ·
· •
Will btlccapttllunlll 9a.m . lor, DRY • WALL Finisher con·
o1y of Publlcttior\
tl!actor; R. I. Dubbeld, pllone
REGULATIONS
742-5825.
T1il Publisher .reaerves tho
4-10-5tc
rlghtto odlt or .ri,echny ada ' OC . . . . . .
--- ·. dttmtd obit&lt;! ona.l. ' The L , ~L "'eider, has portable
. .p~bll•h•r will not • be welder "!~nls Wflding lobs.
· r.-P&lt;rr!,lbllfor .morethanQile · ahy time, 7 days a week.
. lncorrla~ Jriset1Jon. -.·.
.· : Phone 992-5271.
. ., ,
·RA'l'IES
,
.
4-7-61p
,
' For · W•nt 'A4 Servlct • 1
· '5 cont. Jill' Word. onolnllrflan Help Wanted
. MlnlmumChorgo75o
, SOMEONE to stay with elderly
12 ctnte per word thrll '
Good
•
canucutlw lnurllans.
"
la~r In I Rutlend.
pay .
ll cents ._,. word . she cOn- . tal 7•2-468l j
L.--uflve'lnMrlions.
4-12-Jtc

' .'

..

:,'/·;·'S~;t;;;{Cl~'tiifieds'
Get
Action!
Sentinel
Ciassifieds
·Get
Results!
t.
· .·.·:•

I

.

-'

FUL! AND I'LL 61VE YOU
11-IE SAME ANSWER I
GAVE HIM .... NO, NOT YET!

The

·Orthid Room

Carrlen For
MASON
ancl .

HARTFORD

The

Notice

·.

·

3.. BR
HOME

·

Fo.r:R.i;ll'' ·•

REAL £STATE ·

·· • "noo;

'

.

.··-

U1TLE ORPHAN ANNIE

---

For Sale .

uu

AHD HflPLESS THE

lA8l Ti~~WU·SPill

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. ·Broker

Aluminum

.To

~HDlOU SAY SANDY

WAS li!ANQUILliZED

,.
.•

to. Storage

ACROSS
8. Well·
battery
1. Galileo's
known
penitent
terminal
· birthplace
9. Relieve
I. Redolence U.Hammer
part
11.-'sale
12. Bank
employee
,
11. Refection
l&amp;. Tabard Yes1erday • An~wer
DOWN
lS. Flank
1. Outmoded
U. Disin·
and
29. Frost·
2. Stupid
Garter
covered
dined
one
15. --dlsant
19. Shep·
30. Social
11: Wrath · 3. Somerset '
herd's
order
17. Brynner
Maugh~m
31. Wyoming
pipe
character 22. Card
is one
mounlaln
4. Soul (Fr.)
1L-trlholding
range
5. Turkish
angle
23. Convince · 36. Japanese
mountain 24. Unrealiz·
20. Prefix
1 salad
6. Make
meaning
able
·· plant
merry
dream
defective
31. Vitality,
21. Bivouac
1. Unclose
25. Former
inform(poet.)
need
21. Withdraw
ally
22. Court
attendant
23. Hurts
25. Beer 26. Wearing
shoes
21. Afore-

------~

Sheets

.

'lg

DICK TRACY

The

Daily Sentinel

de-:

·bt.o·

..

l'

f

..

,.

' I "

•

o

'I

o\GSS

•

$

•••••

2

""-' 1M .......... , _ , . . , ,.. -

..... l.,oo -MAKIIT INAPPT' .

. .

DID l-IE E'/ER 1R'{ ~I$\T(N6
A 1-lUNDREP·AND·FIFW·
POUND CAT?

,,

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work it:
'•

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Is
uaed for the lbree L's, X for the two O's, ete. Single lettero, . ...........~""
apostrophes, the lenath and fonnaUon of \)le words are all
hints. E1ch day ,the .eode letters are different.
'
·!l'AUl'HEIS 6011!61)8'/E .~

·

r-------,-----,·,.---:-----:---,

.

CRYPTOQUOTES
TDS'C XL WPGWVT CD CWEL W XVM
HCLZ

VP

KWS'C
HYWRR

DSL .VH

KGDHH

W

Vg_:rVKWCLT;
KNWHY

6BYZH. - JVRRVWY

VS

LON6· LA~TIN6 •
I'ENICILUN ~1-l&lt;ry'...

A '

ADB
CJD

RRDAT

MLDGML
YeNrdltY'i Cryp!&lt;Miuote: NO MAN HAS ~ RJGI.fT TO
.WHAT HE PLEASES, EXCEPT WHEN HE PLEASES TO DO
RIGHT.-CHARLES SIMMONS .

Do

992·7161

.... ..... ·-"··· 1/ ~

-

,...

POKID MASH ·MOIGUI PAYING

anew

GENERA·L TIRE SALES

I

,.......,...I

I

31. Vitality
38. Dlslnte-,
grated
39. Within

:ro ·You

OI'YDutDIAL

II I

port

LuleM

'

.....

35. Begin

The St.tion

..

(J

1

r

3t. New
Guinea

·-----------------.:....'i -----l

··. WMP0/1390
.

III

.

over

.MOBILE tll4

---.,.----

J

J rll

maker,

.MILLER

.ro

;

·===:c..

LDfGUP'

JIXI:CE

,;

.

~.

for short
33. Glaze

;1!' · 14' - 24' · WiDE

·· -

.'

It

men-

Uoned
28. British
actor
Alastair
29. Recant
32. Peace-

------

«---------·--n:

• t
1

(C 1972 Kine ;Feature~
i .'

\I

'!'

,

Syndi~a~ 1

Inc.)

..

.'

&lt;•

1

•

•

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.r '

'

•

.'

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'

'

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.

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.

11-'J11eDally8emlnei,Middleport.pomeroy,O,, Aprill2, 1972

•

NEW HEAD COACH

Fine Arts· ~Program· at
West Colt1mbia Friday

·
·
·of the scopic organisms will b!: enCOLUMBUS (UP! - . The near Moscow, Clermont .about 2r miles southeast ol power companies in Cin·
0
Ohio water Pollution Control County. ·
Clnclnns'ti, wBB given a passing cinn!lti, D;lyton and Columb\J.&lt;, water discharged into the river dangered, the effect will be
Board tQday was expected 1AJ . The board meeting was 1AJ grade Tuesday In a special would meet state and regional to 10 degrees above the oonnal "l.rl$1gniflcant IAJ the local Ohio
certify proposed water .begin at 10 a.m.
· · report presenle!l. IAJ the board. temperature and pollution water temperaiure at the point River ecosystem," the report
pollution control measures for
The proposed William H.
ol discharge.
The report, prepared by Bat- starxlards.
said.
Radioactive waste
This would be reduced to one
a nuclear power station Zimmer generating station, io telle Memorial Institute, said The as.page report said coolJliscbarges
oollunans and fish
ing
towers
at
the
station
would
degree
above
normal
150
feet
planned lor the Ohio River be located on a 632-acre site the facility, a joint venture by
away from the point, the report life will be "lnslglflcant
said, "easily within" the state compared with natural
and regional standarda, ac- background exposures," the
report said.
cording to the report.
There are no discharges .
Precautions wUI be taken IAJ
prevent all but small fish from planned into Little Indian
being trapped in Intake ' Creek or IniAl groundwater,
, AkRON (UPI) - Thr case of grand jury Tuesday under of nine men and six woll)~n milllon.
mechanisms, and while micr~&gt;o according IAl the report.
Hils financial dealings came
quick-return lnvestm.ent whiz . heavy secrecy.
would report Its finding!:··
D. Donald Lowers, who owes
County Prosecutor Robert
Lowers an attorney·; was de· Wlder scrutiny when he was
more than
million to more Mohler said he would ~ll some clared bankrupt last month af. oospila!ized In mid-December
· than 1,100 creditors, was taken 36 witnesses this week. He said ter listing a!!5els of about $1 with undulant fever and was
up by the Summit County he did nbl know when the jury million and debts totaling .11.2 Wlable to conduct his busliless.
He had been promising returns
Don Cheadle was in a group
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Leist
of up IAJ 30 per cent interest on
which
attended a Feed School
and
children,
Clarksburg,
short-term Investments made
Program
and IAJured research
In the form of personal loans to Maryland, were weekend
guests of her parents, Mr. and centers in Illinois and Indiana.
hlmaelf.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier
Investors, who included doc- Mrs. William Thomas. Other
of
Gallipolis visited her
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The faster than the normal pr~&gt;o positive action.
tors and university officials as guests were 1\'.r, and Mrs. John
mother, Mrs. Goldie Gillogly
Ohio ·Water Pollution Control cedure of calling each finn be- • The companies Involved are well as auiAJ mechanics and Kimes, Columbus.
and
other relatives here.
•
Mrs.
C.
B.
Dwelley,
Orlando,
Board unanimously adopted a fore the board to present testi· General Tire and Rubber Co., factory workers, were told
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Carl
Greenlees
resolution Tuesday warning mony.
Detrex Chemical Corp., Cabot their money was being used IAJ · Florida, has been spending
seven Industries polluting a
Marvin sald 10 plants Corp., · Olin Corp., Diamond buy up unclaimed shipments of some lime here with her SOlli· and Rilla Rhoades were Easter
stream In Ashtabula County operated by the companies Shamrock Corp., Reactive heavy machinery .and other in-law and daughters, MJ:, and dinner guests of · their
Mrs. Granville Stout, Jimmie daughter; Mrs. Rose Hooper
that their waste discharge per· along Fields Brook, a tributary Metals and Sherwin-Williams. salvagable Items. ·
Common Pleas Judge I..A. and George, and Mr. and Mrs. and daughters of Athens and
mlts are to he rejected at the of the Ashtabula River, have
board's May 9 meeting.
been discharging excessive
Lombardi ordered the grand Clay Jordan, Dale and Bar· also were In Belpre IAJ visit her
The United States imports jury IAJ take testimony under bara . Mrs. Dwelley, Mrs. brother-In-law and sister, Mr.
C. Raymond Marvin, deputy · amounts of wastes for eight or
one-third: or 50-mil· expanded secrecy provisions. Jordan and Barbara, and Mrs. and Mrs. Donald Smith and
almost
attorney. general, who recom- nine years, creating discoloralion pounds, of the 170·mil·
daughter.
mended the action, said the tion and noxious odors.
lion pounds of the world Witnesses' names were kept Stout and George visited
Mr. and Mrs. Max McCallie,
The companies are Immune pepper production annually, secret and the judge ordered relatives at Oak Hill, W.' Va.,
resolution might force the In·
Ann Arbor, Mich., are spend·
dustrles to request a meeting from enlorcem.ent, Marvin according to Encyclopaedia witnesses not to reveal their recently.
lng
a vacation here with her
Holy
Week
services
at
MI.
said,
because
they
received
Britannica.
testimony.
with a board hearing officer
mother,
Mrs. Faye Jordan and
Union Church included a
within 60 days. Marvin said their penni! by default - the
candlelight communion ser· other relatives.
this would get the matler be- board faUed to act on it '\tilhin
vice on Friday evening at the
60
days
rather
than
by
fore the board and disposed of
church, Easter Sunrise services on the hill near .the Earl ·
Starkey home, the annual egg
hunt for the children following
ANNOUNCEMENT
Sunday School, and regular
services on Sunday evening.
Mrs. Linda Ross and
Governor John J. Gilligan EBI'th Week.
today urged Ohioans to visit
"There's something in Ohio's children of Circleville, Mr. and
Ohio's "fine slate parks, natural areas for just about Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don, Kathy
forests and wildlife areas" everyone," Natural Resources and Rexie, Rudiger and
ENERAL PRAcTiCE
during the third amual Earth Director William B. Nye said. Kristina Baumgaeriel and
Oil ice Temporarily
Week, Aprlll7·23. All facilities "There are activities lor Mella Fisher joined' Mr. .and
Located in
will be open on !!:arth Day, boaters, hikers, campers, Mrs. William Cheadle lor an
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday, April 22.
picnickers and fishers. And we Easter Day celebration
Pomeroy, Ohio
Among them are Forked Run ' have vacation lodges at honoring M~tta Fisher's
Telephone "2-2t04
Ext. 28
State Park and Shade River Hueston Woods, Punderson birthday.
state Forest In Meigs and and Burr pak state parks lor
Tycoon Lake and Tycoon those who just want IAJ relax."
Wildlife area In Gallia CoWlty.
"Sometimes It's easy lor
There are many state parks,
those of us who live In cities to forests and wildlife areas
forget that Ohio still hBB large within an hour's drive from
areas of forest land and each of Ohio's major
thousands of acres of parka and population centers.
wildlife areas," Gilligan .said.
"We must all deVelop a
Ranger XLT, Auto. Trans. P.S., P.B. New Tires
"The land is there lor Ohioans better appreciation for our
$35.00 Down
natural
environment
before
we
to
enjoy,"
tl)e
~p~~or
said.
.......
Sal~n~(l . Qn .
....
The Ohio t:lepartment of can ever hope to undersiand
Convenient
Natural Resources manages it," Nye said. "And since man
Terms.
'
more than 150 natural areas, is reliant on nature, his future
Including inore than 138,000 depends on a proper un·
acres In 37 state parks, 168,000 derstanding of the enacres In 17 state forests, and vironment. A visit to one ol our
72,000 acres In 60 wildlife fine facilities may help to ln·
Mason, W.Va.
areas. All will be open during crease that understanding."

Secrecy Around Investment Whiz ·

'INTERMEDIATE GRADES of west €olumbia School taking part in the dance line of the
Fine Arts Program to be held Friday at Wahama High School Gym at 7:30 are, front row,I-r,
Rhoda Ferguson, Jeff Fisher, carol G!bbs, and Keith Johnson; bock row, Jane VanMatre,
James Young, Terry Bumgarner and Charlie Rickard. Coordinators of the program are Mrs.
Elizabeth Mattox, Mrs. Nancy SUllivan, Mrs. Dixie Jarvis and Ed Koon. Other schools laking
part are Letart, Broadrun, New Haven, Hartford and Mason.

·DEAF?

Carpenter News, Event

'.
!NTERMEDIATE CLASS MEMBERS of West Columbia School making up the chorus
group in the Fine Arts Program to be staged Friday night at Waliama HighSchool Gym at 7:30
p.m. are, front row, 1-r, Cheryl Wbitl, Diane Marr: back row, steve Hill, Tammy Jewell,
Debbie Bumgarner and Connie Roush. Other schools participating In the event are Letart,
Broadrun, New Haven, Hartford, and Mason.
...,. ""
.

...

:!';.'!.. i~ .' 1
~-, "+;

THESE STUDENTS of the
Bradbury School at right,
rehearse a scene from their
operetta, "Sunny of Sunnyside" which will be
presented IAJ the public at
7:30 p.m. both Thursday and
Friday evenings. The group
includes, seated, floor, from
the left, Kim Batey, Brett
Carter, Tim Ebersbach;
seated on benches from the
left, Tony Venoy, Ronnie
Ca,sci, Trina Gibbs, Megan
lliiner, Jennifer Wise .lnd Jill
Walburn.
A WELL-TRAINED vocal
chorus, right, lower picture,
will he taking pan in the
operella of the Bradbury

Ohioans Urged
To Visit Parks

'
'

:.•.
..:.•.

School, " Sunny of Sun-

nyside" Thursday and
Friday evenings. Running
through a number as Mrs.
Phyllis
Hackett
ac·
companies

are

Paula

Ashley, Carin Bailey, Rita
Bailey, Greg Becker, Joyce ·

ti mg,
" Pall"'~QY"I'es, Tracy

Burdette, ~Mti \e Coleman,
Ruby Cundiff, Angela
Dailey, Carol DeLong, Terri
Fife, Ann ' Fitch, Judy
Gilkey, Ricky Glaze, Ricky
Hovatter, Penny Hysell,
Patty Jewell, Sharon Karr,

Queen, Rochelle Robinson, ~
Brenda Sayre, Usa Scagp, !:
David Smith, Marianne ;:
Welsh, Terri Zirkle. The ;:
operetta will be preaenled ::
Thursday afternoon to ::
students of the Rutland :;
Elementary School.
;.

Kevin King, Julia Kitchen,
Paula Kloes, Cyothla Lane,
Angela. Martin, Jo McKin·
ney, Janie Miller, Terri
Miller, Taml MUIIron, JoDI
Murray, Lisa Nash, Cindy
Norman, Ann Pearch, Tolli
Pope, Pam Powers, Debbie

•

e.£

HEARING
1f~l-._ WORKSHOP
FRIDAY, APRIL 14,1971
MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO
,

9 a.m . to 6 p.m.

FREE GIFTS
for everyone

FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING
TEST
Find out If you really have a hearing problem

FR,EE SERVICE
on

all makes of hearing aids

FREE CONSULTATION
on

all hearing aid problems

FREE WIND NOISE. REDUCER

AAROM BOONSUE,

for some types of aids

FREE DEMONSTRATIONS
ofi.i'lewesf ·~~·~~e hearing aid models
•

w

'

DON1 PUT UP WITH WHimiNG
a

new custom earmold could help

liz PRICE ONLY DURING THIS WORKSHOP

SPEQAL! Batteries ·1,1 price
(Llmlt one P~Q. per customer)

3 ROOMS
NEW
FURNITURE

Truck

!.

·.Most hearing problems
can be helped

1970 FORD
F-100

.. .
::

'.

of

ACT .NOWI

M.D.

1h Ton Pickup, VB

CAUIOUN SIGNED

'

Seven Industries Warned

Sunnyside," an operetta Ia
be presented Thursday and
Friday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
at the Bradbury School
revolves around the evenll
which occur at an orphanage
where "Sunny" played by
Velvet Swisher Is one of the
children Uvlng at the institution. Final rehearsal•
are being held for the
presentation. Above,
working In one of the scenes
are, seated, from the left,
Greg Becker, Roy Bares·
will; seated on benches,
from left, Connie Burton,
Bonn,le Burton, twins;
Valerie Lewis, Miss Swisher
and Marty Krawsczyn;
standing is Steven Stanley.
Absent
, when the pictures of
the principal characters was
taken was Greg Arnold. AU
of tbe principals have understudies In case of
illnesses or other mishaps
among the cast.

-'

WHY :BE

.

THE PLOT of "Sunny of

.

at the Unlveraity ol California Pemsylvanla, their: No. 1 draft
since 1868, hal been .named choice, was signed Tuesday by
. head coacllat the University of the llboenlx Suns. ·
Reno-Nevada..
Jerry Colangelo, general
Padfltllt, who has a 1~year manager of the Suns, said that
college ' record of 219-89, wt11 Calhoun had, the IAJols IAJ be a
replace Jack Spencer,
great pro player.

reduce tempe '8tures

·•n

,

;

;,.r:~·:.:~:~~ · FO~~~Nl~r:2c.~:!r:

Contro s Aureed
on J+or
Moscow :Atomic Plan.t
eJ • ·
~

12- The Daily Sefttinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., aprill2, 1972

.,

If you can't come In for this
Hearing Workshop, our Consultant will come
to you. Call for home appointment.

1349.95

.-\

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

HEARING.AID CENTER

MASON
FURNITURE

601 SIXTH AV·ENUE
HUNTINGTON, W. VA.

,•

Mabel C. ROush

Parents to Improve Wahama School

,·
..
.
Died Tuesday •'

':

...

.,:.

Surv.iving are h~r husband:' .
Early Roush; a daughter, Mrs.
Roy (Eileen) Buck, Racine
Route 2; a brother, Herbert
(fete) Shields, Racine Route
2; two grandchildren, Mrs. Don
(Sue Ann) Beegle and Pamela
Buck, and two great·
grandchildren, Tracy and Zane
Beegle., ·

Cambodia Fighting Opens up
SAIGON (UPI )-Olmmo;Jist
forces allacked South Vietna·
mese and cambodlan troops
Inside Cambodia, opening a
new front of their multipronged Indochina offensive,
government officials said
IAJday.
Fighting that followed the
North Vietnamese Invasion
across the Demilitarized Zone
(DMZ) April 1 had until now
:~een centered in South Vietnam. Bul the Saigon and
Phnom Penh commands IAJday
reported lighting under way In
cambodia near its border.with
South Vietnam.
Military spokesmen in
1 • "Saigon said the clash started
Tuesday along Highway 3,
about 84 miles south ..southwest
of the Cambodian capital of
Phnom Penh. They said the
battle with South Vietnamese
troops there cost the Com·
munists at least 251 dead, while
government losses were seven
dead and 29 wounded.
They said the Commiutists
attacked after dumping 600
rounds of rocket and mortar
lire on the South Vietnamese.
In Phnom Penh, the Cambodian high command said
fighting was under way' between Cambodian and Com·
.munist fotces In the same area
where the South Vietnamese
were attacked . II also reported

I

'

general Communist activity in
a number of other sectors of
cambodia.
The U.S. command in Saigon
said two American advisers
were wounded early today
when at least 14 roWlds of
mortar lire were dumped on
the big army hase at Bien Hoa,
lo miles northeast of Saigon.
Another three U.S. advls~­
no Americans are reported in·
volved in the ground fightingwere wounded Tuesday when a
South Vietnamese unit operating on Highway 13 about 41
miles north of Saigon was hit
by Communist rockets.

In addition, two U.S. Army
helicopters were hit by groundfire Tuesday Snd one of them,
an OH6, crashed five miles
northwest ol Pleiku woundlng
REMODj;:UNG OF THE MATH room at Wahama
one crewman. An OH58 obser- Junior Higlf Schopl has been completed by parents and
vation chopper was hit over faculty members of the school. The room has had new lights
Blnh Dlnh Province on the installed, waDs painted and the floor sanded and varnished,
central coast, but did not VIsiting the school Tuesday were parents who worked on the
crash. However, one crewman · p-oject along with school officials. Front row, seated, John
was wounded.
Watl\lns, math inalruciAJr; back row, 1.,:, Mary Berry,
Other ground lighting was Charles Withers, Superlhtendent of Mason County Schools',
reported across South Vietnam
Donna Gibbs, Charles Chambers, assistant superintendent,
Tuesday, Including a major
La
Vera Yeager and Edgar ThaxiAln, school principal. AlSo
hattie just south of the DMZ,
continued clashes around An working on the project were Bertie Roush · and Clarence
Wamsley, cusrodians .
~ 60 miles north of Saigon,
and In .the Mekong Delta.

Reeds ville News, Notes
By Mrs. 1.. Halden ·· ,,
Mrs. Gladys Sm . has
returned home after &gt; ·... ·..ding
several weeks at University
Hospital, Colwnbus.
Easter Sunday guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Ben Buckley were
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Coulson,
and daughters, Joy and Kay, ol
Torch, and Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Buokley and daughter,
Ann. Visiting the Buckleys in
the .afternoon were Mrs.,.Peg
Buckley, Mrs. Pam Hollman
and daughter Kris'tl. The
children enjoyed an egg hunt in
the afternoon.
Mrs. Bess Larkins spent f·

· Sunday with Mrs. Doris Marks
of Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Kibble of
Parkersburg, W. Va. visited
Sunday at the R. E. Williams
home, and with Mrs. Hazel
Barton .
· The Lowell Chevalier of
canron visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs . Edward
Chevalier.
Mr. and Mrs. carl Barnl\art
spent a weekend with Sgt. and
Mrs, Gary Barnhart and
family of Sumter, S. C.
Mr ..and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
recently visited with Mr. and
Mrs. · Thomas J. Rose and

Phebe Says:
GET THESE •..

Mrs. Roush was a member oi:
the Apple Grove Unlte4:
Methodist Church arid Ohiq:
Valley Grange 21112 at Lelurl
Falls.
·

SIXTH GRADE STUDENTS taking part In the dance line of the Fine Arts Program to be
staged Friday at Wahama High School Gym al7:30 p.m, are,l-r, Jeanie Ingels, Sarah Zuspan,
Tammie Cook, Mary McFarland, Jacquillne VanMeter, Sllndy Roush, Unda Hobbs, Mary
Nlcewander, Tammie Buck ahd Valerie Cadle. The students are members of Miss Lucy
Bulmer's class. CoordlnaiAJrs of the program are Mrs. Elizabeth MaiiAJx, Mrs. Nancy Sullivan,
Mrs. Dixie Jarvis and Ed Koon. Other elementary schools participating in the program are
Letart, Broadrun, New Haven, Hartford and West Columbia.

'

Reduced This Week!

Mrs. Mabel C. Roush, 74,::
Racine Route 2, died Tuesday:;
at Veterans
Memorial:;
Hospital.
::

I

'I

Ham Price

;

Mrs .. Roush was preceded In
death by a sister, Mrs. Hazel
Allen, and a brother, Clarence
Shields,
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Friday at the Letart
Falls United Methodist Church
with the Rev. Dale McClurg
and the Rev. Charles Norris
officiating. Burial wi11 be In the
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home anyllme.
·
·.·.·.· ·.·.·.

EXISTING

Laurel Cliff News Notes
Ted Mathew, Huron, spent the
weekend with Miss Karr'a
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlea
Karr.
Mr. •nd Mrs. Clarence
Chance and children, Haggers-' i' ·
town, Ind., recently. visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Norman C.
Hysell and ,family.'
Mrs .. Elplse ~flerty, Maine, home the same day.
- - - - -- - -- and Roger' Roush of .Bailey
Mr. and Mrs. Vern SIAlry,
family of Akron. · .
Run, recently called on Mrs. Columbus, and Mr. Wyatt
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Martin Rafferty's aunt, Mrs. Georgia Schaefer, Mt. Vernon, spent
and son of Alexandria, Va., Diehl.
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
spent a weekend with her
Mrs. R:athy Pullins fell at her Norman Schaefer. Callers at·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grant home Sunday. She was taken \0 the Schaefers Sunday were Mr.
Boring, and Mike.
Holzer
Hospital
for and Mrs. Fritz Stahl, New
examination and was returned Marsnfield; Mr . and Mrs.
By Bertha Parker
Sabbolh School attendance
April9 was 98, offering for the
morning was $95.25.
Mr. and Mrs . Phil Wise,
McConnelsville, attended
worship service Sunday
morning at the local church.
Mi!!S Polly Karr and friend,

(

.

..·

..

·.···

L19HT8, at :

left, llld coadillol Ill lbe .'
ceillDI Ill - of !be e1au ;
I'GOIIII

it Wahama .J aler

HIP Seboll.

·l'aretlli 111111 •

facallf member• of tile
juu,lor 111111 aelaoal bave ,
batiaed tecelber ta eMace
the brterlor of the U rwalta
tbe lcilool

--

.....'

Larry, Smith and children,

Chester, and Mr. John Stahl,
local.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
look Mr. and Mrs, John
Douglas to ~olumbus Salur·
day. Mr. Douglas entered
Universi\y Hospital for heart
sUi'gery.

.,...

GOLFERS

·!
llfelp plafed Ironton and
Porllmouth Manday ~It the
E1U Country Cali al Partamouth. Playlnt four men,
l'ofllmouth PI 1.82; lrantai(
IIIII and Melp IlL
.;

""....

lot •• •

wd'

''

I

SUPERIORS
.

.and PEARL siS., RACjNE
' The Store With AHeart: ~
You, -·WE LIKE"
.
'

FAIRMO.NT

SEMI~BONELESS
.

· Nla 'N' LITE.

HA

Right !!served to limit quantities

MILK
HAlf OR WHOLE

2 158
Meat Loaf Mix............... ·
19
·
Loa
·
f.
%'rsE 2lb. 1
.Luncheon

We Glad~ Accejlt F~d. Food Sqmps·

BEEF &amp; PORK

Prices Effective April 12·19
Monday Thru Friday ·
. 9:00 to 7:00 .
Saturday 9 to 9

·SPICED·······

2 ~:

89~

VALLEY BEU

lb.

amAGE QIEESE

can

30or.
crt.

·

CITY
. 20 Ct.g
·
· g~
.W
.1eners.....FRENCH
·........~ ......................... pq. .

59~

8

CLOSED SUNDAYS
"'" e:~.uur:m.rmm ···

:uu:ao

DEL MONTE

CATSUP....................~~~~!..
.

N~· 2~$

'.

., "·.·.· ·.·.·.·······:-:·:·:·:··

·.·... .·

TOILET
TISSUE
.....
KRAFT BARBEQJE

Oranges
5 1~.
jar

(AT 'FOOD...~!.~:.

SA UCE••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
. .
14 qt.$
JERZEE
.
size
DRY MILK.......................

sMUCKER'S (BlACK RASPBERRY)

DISH DETERGENT

TOMATOES............

· cans

'•

. PUSS &amp;BOOTS .
;-

'

Vnty T1111e
.

11 oz. jar

PRESERVES::.!:'!!:=..=~....

Plain, Hot, Onion

.

Florida

..

. CORONET

Family

•

STANDARD ·.

JMPJU .·.·.··:·:·:···: ..·.··..·.··,·,.:-.. :·.·... . ..,..·.·.·. 'Jbbb

a

II '!'1':.

·Bakers

on~

.

.

22 or.

IVORY LIQUID.................:.
I'

c

'

Grapefruit
511.bie 59•
.,

.
J

j.
~

�-

..( .

./

{

I

'

.

. l

.

11-'J11eDally8emlnei,Middleport.pomeroy,O,, Aprill2, 1972

•

NEW HEAD COACH

Fine Arts· ~Program· at
West Colt1mbia Friday

·
·
·of the scopic organisms will b!: enCOLUMBUS (UP! - . The near Moscow, Clermont .about 2r miles southeast ol power companies in Cin·
0
Ohio water Pollution Control County. ·
Clnclnns'ti, wBB given a passing cinn!lti, D;lyton and Columb\J.&lt;, water discharged into the river dangered, the effect will be
Board tQday was expected 1AJ . The board meeting was 1AJ grade Tuesday In a special would meet state and regional to 10 degrees above the oonnal "l.rl$1gniflcant IAJ the local Ohio
certify proposed water .begin at 10 a.m.
· · report presenle!l. IAJ the board. temperature and pollution water temperaiure at the point River ecosystem," the report
pollution control measures for
The proposed William H.
ol discharge.
The report, prepared by Bat- starxlards.
said.
Radioactive waste
This would be reduced to one
a nuclear power station Zimmer generating station, io telle Memorial Institute, said The as.page report said coolJliscbarges
oollunans and fish
ing
towers
at
the
station
would
degree
above
normal
150
feet
planned lor the Ohio River be located on a 632-acre site the facility, a joint venture by
away from the point, the report life will be "lnslglflcant
said, "easily within" the state compared with natural
and regional standarda, ac- background exposures," the
report said.
cording to the report.
There are no discharges .
Precautions wUI be taken IAJ
prevent all but small fish from planned into Little Indian
being trapped in Intake ' Creek or IniAl groundwater,
, AkRON (UPI) - Thr case of grand jury Tuesday under of nine men and six woll)~n milllon.
mechanisms, and while micr~&gt;o according IAl the report.
Hils financial dealings came
quick-return lnvestm.ent whiz . heavy secrecy.
would report Its finding!:··
D. Donald Lowers, who owes
County Prosecutor Robert
Lowers an attorney·; was de· Wlder scrutiny when he was
more than
million to more Mohler said he would ~ll some clared bankrupt last month af. oospila!ized In mid-December
· than 1,100 creditors, was taken 36 witnesses this week. He said ter listing a!!5els of about $1 with undulant fever and was
up by the Summit County he did nbl know when the jury million and debts totaling .11.2 Wlable to conduct his busliless.
He had been promising returns
Don Cheadle was in a group
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Leist
of up IAJ 30 per cent interest on
which
attended a Feed School
and
children,
Clarksburg,
short-term Investments made
Program
and IAJured research
In the form of personal loans to Maryland, were weekend
guests of her parents, Mr. and centers in Illinois and Indiana.
hlmaelf.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Frazier
Investors, who included doc- Mrs. William Thomas. Other
of
Gallipolis visited her
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The faster than the normal pr~&gt;o positive action.
tors and university officials as guests were 1\'.r, and Mrs. John
mother, Mrs. Goldie Gillogly
Ohio ·Water Pollution Control cedure of calling each finn be- • The companies Involved are well as auiAJ mechanics and Kimes, Columbus.
and
other relatives here.
•
Mrs.
C.
B.
Dwelley,
Orlando,
Board unanimously adopted a fore the board to present testi· General Tire and Rubber Co., factory workers, were told
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Carl
Greenlees
resolution Tuesday warning mony.
Detrex Chemical Corp., Cabot their money was being used IAJ · Florida, has been spending
seven Industries polluting a
Marvin sald 10 plants Corp., · Olin Corp., Diamond buy up unclaimed shipments of some lime here with her SOlli· and Rilla Rhoades were Easter
stream In Ashtabula County operated by the companies Shamrock Corp., Reactive heavy machinery .and other in-law and daughters, MJ:, and dinner guests of · their
Mrs. Granville Stout, Jimmie daughter; Mrs. Rose Hooper
that their waste discharge per· along Fields Brook, a tributary Metals and Sherwin-Williams. salvagable Items. ·
Common Pleas Judge I..A. and George, and Mr. and Mrs. and daughters of Athens and
mlts are to he rejected at the of the Ashtabula River, have
board's May 9 meeting.
been discharging excessive
Lombardi ordered the grand Clay Jordan, Dale and Bar· also were In Belpre IAJ visit her
The United States imports jury IAJ take testimony under bara . Mrs. Dwelley, Mrs. brother-In-law and sister, Mr.
C. Raymond Marvin, deputy · amounts of wastes for eight or
one-third: or 50-mil· expanded secrecy provisions. Jordan and Barbara, and Mrs. and Mrs. Donald Smith and
almost
attorney. general, who recom- nine years, creating discoloralion pounds, of the 170·mil·
daughter.
mended the action, said the tion and noxious odors.
lion pounds of the world Witnesses' names were kept Stout and George visited
Mr. and Mrs. Max McCallie,
The companies are Immune pepper production annually, secret and the judge ordered relatives at Oak Hill, W.' Va.,
resolution might force the In·
Ann Arbor, Mich., are spend·
dustrles to request a meeting from enlorcem.ent, Marvin according to Encyclopaedia witnesses not to reveal their recently.
lng
a vacation here with her
Holy
Week
services
at
MI.
said,
because
they
received
Britannica.
testimony.
with a board hearing officer
mother,
Mrs. Faye Jordan and
Union Church included a
within 60 days. Marvin said their penni! by default - the
candlelight communion ser· other relatives.
this would get the matler be- board faUed to act on it '\tilhin
vice on Friday evening at the
60
days
rather
than
by
fore the board and disposed of
church, Easter Sunrise services on the hill near .the Earl ·
Starkey home, the annual egg
hunt for the children following
ANNOUNCEMENT
Sunday School, and regular
services on Sunday evening.
Mrs. Linda Ross and
Governor John J. Gilligan EBI'th Week.
today urged Ohioans to visit
"There's something in Ohio's children of Circleville, Mr. and
Ohio's "fine slate parks, natural areas for just about Mrs. Rex Cheadle, Don, Kathy
forests and wildlife areas" everyone," Natural Resources and Rexie, Rudiger and
ENERAL PRAcTiCE
during the third amual Earth Director William B. Nye said. Kristina Baumgaeriel and
Oil ice Temporarily
Week, Aprlll7·23. All facilities "There are activities lor Mella Fisher joined' Mr. .and
Located in
will be open on !!:arth Day, boaters, hikers, campers, Mrs. William Cheadle lor an
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday, April 22.
picnickers and fishers. And we Easter Day celebration
Pomeroy, Ohio
Among them are Forked Run ' have vacation lodges at honoring M~tta Fisher's
Telephone "2-2t04
Ext. 28
State Park and Shade River Hueston Woods, Punderson birthday.
state Forest In Meigs and and Burr pak state parks lor
Tycoon Lake and Tycoon those who just want IAJ relax."
Wildlife area In Gallia CoWlty.
"Sometimes It's easy lor
There are many state parks,
those of us who live In cities to forests and wildlife areas
forget that Ohio still hBB large within an hour's drive from
areas of forest land and each of Ohio's major
thousands of acres of parka and population centers.
wildlife areas," Gilligan .said.
"We must all deVelop a
Ranger XLT, Auto. Trans. P.S., P.B. New Tires
"The land is there lor Ohioans better appreciation for our
$35.00 Down
natural
environment
before
we
to
enjoy,"
tl)e
~p~~or
said.
.......
Sal~n~(l . Qn .
....
The Ohio t:lepartment of can ever hope to undersiand
Convenient
Natural Resources manages it," Nye said. "And since man
Terms.
'
more than 150 natural areas, is reliant on nature, his future
Including inore than 138,000 depends on a proper un·
acres In 37 state parks, 168,000 derstanding of the enacres In 17 state forests, and vironment. A visit to one ol our
72,000 acres In 60 wildlife fine facilities may help to ln·
Mason, W.Va.
areas. All will be open during crease that understanding."

Secrecy Around Investment Whiz ·

'INTERMEDIATE GRADES of west €olumbia School taking part in the dance line of the
Fine Arts Program to be held Friday at Wahama High School Gym at 7:30 are, front row,I-r,
Rhoda Ferguson, Jeff Fisher, carol G!bbs, and Keith Johnson; bock row, Jane VanMatre,
James Young, Terry Bumgarner and Charlie Rickard. Coordinators of the program are Mrs.
Elizabeth Mattox, Mrs. Nancy SUllivan, Mrs. Dixie Jarvis and Ed Koon. Other schools laking
part are Letart, Broadrun, New Haven, Hartford and Mason.

·DEAF?

Carpenter News, Event

'.
!NTERMEDIATE CLASS MEMBERS of West Columbia School making up the chorus
group in the Fine Arts Program to be staged Friday night at Waliama HighSchool Gym at 7:30
p.m. are, front row, 1-r, Cheryl Wbitl, Diane Marr: back row, steve Hill, Tammy Jewell,
Debbie Bumgarner and Connie Roush. Other schools participating In the event are Letart,
Broadrun, New Haven, Hartford, and Mason.
...,. ""
.

...

:!';.'!.. i~ .' 1
~-, "+;

THESE STUDENTS of the
Bradbury School at right,
rehearse a scene from their
operetta, "Sunny of Sunnyside" which will be
presented IAJ the public at
7:30 p.m. both Thursday and
Friday evenings. The group
includes, seated, floor, from
the left, Kim Batey, Brett
Carter, Tim Ebersbach;
seated on benches from the
left, Tony Venoy, Ronnie
Ca,sci, Trina Gibbs, Megan
lliiner, Jennifer Wise .lnd Jill
Walburn.
A WELL-TRAINED vocal
chorus, right, lower picture,
will he taking pan in the
operella of the Bradbury

Ohioans Urged
To Visit Parks

'
'

:.•.
..:.•.

School, " Sunny of Sun-

nyside" Thursday and
Friday evenings. Running
through a number as Mrs.
Phyllis
Hackett
ac·
companies

are

Paula

Ashley, Carin Bailey, Rita
Bailey, Greg Becker, Joyce ·

ti mg,
" Pall"'~QY"I'es, Tracy

Burdette, ~Mti \e Coleman,
Ruby Cundiff, Angela
Dailey, Carol DeLong, Terri
Fife, Ann ' Fitch, Judy
Gilkey, Ricky Glaze, Ricky
Hovatter, Penny Hysell,
Patty Jewell, Sharon Karr,

Queen, Rochelle Robinson, ~
Brenda Sayre, Usa Scagp, !:
David Smith, Marianne ;:
Welsh, Terri Zirkle. The ;:
operetta will be preaenled ::
Thursday afternoon to ::
students of the Rutland :;
Elementary School.
;.

Kevin King, Julia Kitchen,
Paula Kloes, Cyothla Lane,
Angela. Martin, Jo McKin·
ney, Janie Miller, Terri
Miller, Taml MUIIron, JoDI
Murray, Lisa Nash, Cindy
Norman, Ann Pearch, Tolli
Pope, Pam Powers, Debbie

•

e.£

HEARING
1f~l-._ WORKSHOP
FRIDAY, APRIL 14,1971
MEIGS INN, POMEROY, OHIO
,

9 a.m . to 6 p.m.

FREE GIFTS
for everyone

FREE ELECTRONIC HEARING
TEST
Find out If you really have a hearing problem

FR,EE SERVICE
on

all makes of hearing aids

FREE CONSULTATION
on

all hearing aid problems

FREE WIND NOISE. REDUCER

AAROM BOONSUE,

for some types of aids

FREE DEMONSTRATIONS
ofi.i'lewesf ·~~·~~e hearing aid models
•

w

'

DON1 PUT UP WITH WHimiNG
a

new custom earmold could help

liz PRICE ONLY DURING THIS WORKSHOP

SPEQAL! Batteries ·1,1 price
(Llmlt one P~Q. per customer)

3 ROOMS
NEW
FURNITURE

Truck

!.

·.Most hearing problems
can be helped

1970 FORD
F-100

.. .
::

'.

of

ACT .NOWI

M.D.

1h Ton Pickup, VB

CAUIOUN SIGNED

'

Seven Industries Warned

Sunnyside," an operetta Ia
be presented Thursday and
Friday evenings at 7:30 p.m.
at the Bradbury School
revolves around the evenll
which occur at an orphanage
where "Sunny" played by
Velvet Swisher Is one of the
children Uvlng at the institution. Final rehearsal•
are being held for the
presentation. Above,
working In one of the scenes
are, seated, from the left,
Greg Becker, Roy Bares·
will; seated on benches,
from left, Connie Burton,
Bonn,le Burton, twins;
Valerie Lewis, Miss Swisher
and Marty Krawsczyn;
standing is Steven Stanley.
Absent
, when the pictures of
the principal characters was
taken was Greg Arnold. AU
of tbe principals have understudies In case of
illnesses or other mishaps
among the cast.

-'

WHY :BE

.

THE PLOT of "Sunny of

.

at the Unlveraity ol California Pemsylvanla, their: No. 1 draft
since 1868, hal been .named choice, was signed Tuesday by
. head coacllat the University of the llboenlx Suns. ·
Reno-Nevada..
Jerry Colangelo, general
Padfltllt, who has a 1~year manager of the Suns, said that
college ' record of 219-89, wt11 Calhoun had, the IAJols IAJ be a
replace Jack Spencer,
great pro player.

reduce tempe '8tures

·•n

,

;

;,.r:~·:.:~:~~ · FO~~~Nl~r:2c.~:!r:

Contro s Aureed
on J+or
Moscow :Atomic Plan.t
eJ • ·
~

12- The Daily Sefttinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., aprill2, 1972

.,

If you can't come In for this
Hearing Workshop, our Consultant will come
to you. Call for home appointment.

1349.95

.-\

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

HEARING.AID CENTER

MASON
FURNITURE

601 SIXTH AV·ENUE
HUNTINGTON, W. VA.

,•

Mabel C. ROush

Parents to Improve Wahama School

,·
..
.
Died Tuesday •'

':

...

.,:.

Surv.iving are h~r husband:' .
Early Roush; a daughter, Mrs.
Roy (Eileen) Buck, Racine
Route 2; a brother, Herbert
(fete) Shields, Racine Route
2; two grandchildren, Mrs. Don
(Sue Ann) Beegle and Pamela
Buck, and two great·
grandchildren, Tracy and Zane
Beegle., ·

Cambodia Fighting Opens up
SAIGON (UPI )-Olmmo;Jist
forces allacked South Vietna·
mese and cambodlan troops
Inside Cambodia, opening a
new front of their multipronged Indochina offensive,
government officials said
IAJday.
Fighting that followed the
North Vietnamese Invasion
across the Demilitarized Zone
(DMZ) April 1 had until now
:~een centered in South Vietnam. Bul the Saigon and
Phnom Penh commands IAJday
reported lighting under way In
cambodia near its border.with
South Vietnam.
Military spokesmen in
1 • "Saigon said the clash started
Tuesday along Highway 3,
about 84 miles south ..southwest
of the Cambodian capital of
Phnom Penh. They said the
battle with South Vietnamese
troops there cost the Com·
munists at least 251 dead, while
government losses were seven
dead and 29 wounded.
They said the Commiutists
attacked after dumping 600
rounds of rocket and mortar
lire on the South Vietnamese.
In Phnom Penh, the Cambodian high command said
fighting was under way' between Cambodian and Com·
.munist fotces In the same area
where the South Vietnamese
were attacked . II also reported

I

'

general Communist activity in
a number of other sectors of
cambodia.
The U.S. command in Saigon
said two American advisers
were wounded early today
when at least 14 roWlds of
mortar lire were dumped on
the big army hase at Bien Hoa,
lo miles northeast of Saigon.
Another three U.S. advls~­
no Americans are reported in·
volved in the ground fightingwere wounded Tuesday when a
South Vietnamese unit operating on Highway 13 about 41
miles north of Saigon was hit
by Communist rockets.

In addition, two U.S. Army
helicopters were hit by groundfire Tuesday Snd one of them,
an OH6, crashed five miles
northwest ol Pleiku woundlng
REMODj;:UNG OF THE MATH room at Wahama
one crewman. An OH58 obser- Junior Higlf Schopl has been completed by parents and
vation chopper was hit over faculty members of the school. The room has had new lights
Blnh Dlnh Province on the installed, waDs painted and the floor sanded and varnished,
central coast, but did not VIsiting the school Tuesday were parents who worked on the
crash. However, one crewman · p-oject along with school officials. Front row, seated, John
was wounded.
Watl\lns, math inalruciAJr; back row, 1.,:, Mary Berry,
Other ground lighting was Charles Withers, Superlhtendent of Mason County Schools',
reported across South Vietnam
Donna Gibbs, Charles Chambers, assistant superintendent,
Tuesday, Including a major
La
Vera Yeager and Edgar ThaxiAln, school principal. AlSo
hattie just south of the DMZ,
continued clashes around An working on the project were Bertie Roush · and Clarence
Wamsley, cusrodians .
~ 60 miles north of Saigon,
and In .the Mekong Delta.

Reeds ville News, Notes
By Mrs. 1.. Halden ·· ,,
Mrs. Gladys Sm . has
returned home after &gt; ·... ·..ding
several weeks at University
Hospital, Colwnbus.
Easter Sunday guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Ben Buckley were
Mr. and Mrs. Randy Coulson,
and daughters, Joy and Kay, ol
Torch, and Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Buokley and daughter,
Ann. Visiting the Buckleys in
the .afternoon were Mrs.,.Peg
Buckley, Mrs. Pam Hollman
and daughter Kris'tl. The
children enjoyed an egg hunt in
the afternoon.
Mrs. Bess Larkins spent f·

· Sunday with Mrs. Doris Marks
of Chester.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Kibble of
Parkersburg, W. Va. visited
Sunday at the R. E. Williams
home, and with Mrs. Hazel
Barton .
· The Lowell Chevalier of
canron visited recently with
Mr. and Mrs . Edward
Chevalier.
Mr. and Mrs. carl Barnl\art
spent a weekend with Sgt. and
Mrs, Gary Barnhart and
family of Sumter, S. C.
Mr ..and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
recently visited with Mr. and
Mrs. · Thomas J. Rose and

Phebe Says:
GET THESE •..

Mrs. Roush was a member oi:
the Apple Grove Unlte4:
Methodist Church arid Ohiq:
Valley Grange 21112 at Lelurl
Falls.
·

SIXTH GRADE STUDENTS taking part In the dance line of the Fine Arts Program to be
staged Friday at Wahama High School Gym al7:30 p.m, are,l-r, Jeanie Ingels, Sarah Zuspan,
Tammie Cook, Mary McFarland, Jacquillne VanMeter, Sllndy Roush, Unda Hobbs, Mary
Nlcewander, Tammie Buck ahd Valerie Cadle. The students are members of Miss Lucy
Bulmer's class. CoordlnaiAJrs of the program are Mrs. Elizabeth MaiiAJx, Mrs. Nancy Sullivan,
Mrs. Dixie Jarvis and Ed Koon. Other elementary schools participating in the program are
Letart, Broadrun, New Haven, Hartford and West Columbia.

'

Reduced This Week!

Mrs. Mabel C. Roush, 74,::
Racine Route 2, died Tuesday:;
at Veterans
Memorial:;
Hospital.
::

I

'I

Ham Price

;

Mrs .. Roush was preceded In
death by a sister, Mrs. Hazel
Allen, and a brother, Clarence
Shields,
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Friday at the Letart
Falls United Methodist Church
with the Rev. Dale McClurg
and the Rev. Charles Norris
officiating. Burial wi11 be In the
Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home anyllme.
·
·.·.·.· ·.·.·.

EXISTING

Laurel Cliff News Notes
Ted Mathew, Huron, spent the
weekend with Miss Karr'a
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlea
Karr.
Mr. •nd Mrs. Clarence
Chance and children, Haggers-' i' ·
town, Ind., recently. visited
with Mr. and Mrs. Norman C.
Hysell and ,family.'
Mrs .. Elplse ~flerty, Maine, home the same day.
- - - - -- - -- and Roger' Roush of .Bailey
Mr. and Mrs. Vern SIAlry,
family of Akron. · .
Run, recently called on Mrs. Columbus, and Mr. Wyatt
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Martin Rafferty's aunt, Mrs. Georgia Schaefer, Mt. Vernon, spent
and son of Alexandria, Va., Diehl.
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs.
spent a weekend with her
Mrs. R:athy Pullins fell at her Norman Schaefer. Callers at·
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grant home Sunday. She was taken \0 the Schaefers Sunday were Mr.
Boring, and Mike.
Holzer
Hospital
for and Mrs. Fritz Stahl, New
examination and was returned Marsnfield; Mr . and Mrs.
By Bertha Parker
Sabbolh School attendance
April9 was 98, offering for the
morning was $95.25.
Mr. and Mrs . Phil Wise,
McConnelsville, attended
worship service Sunday
morning at the local church.
Mi!!S Polly Karr and friend,

(

.

..·

..

·.···

L19HT8, at :

left, llld coadillol Ill lbe .'
ceillDI Ill - of !be e1au ;
I'GOIIII

it Wahama .J aler

HIP Seboll.

·l'aretlli 111111 •

facallf member• of tile
juu,lor 111111 aelaoal bave ,
batiaed tecelber ta eMace
the brterlor of the U rwalta
tbe lcilool

--

.....'

Larry, Smith and children,

Chester, and Mr. John Stahl,
local.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Harmon Fox
look Mr. and Mrs, John
Douglas to ~olumbus Salur·
day. Mr. Douglas entered
Universi\y Hospital for heart
sUi'gery.

.,...

GOLFERS

·!
llfelp plafed Ironton and
Porllmouth Manday ~It the
E1U Country Cali al Partamouth. Playlnt four men,
l'ofllmouth PI 1.82; lrantai(
IIIII and Melp IlL
.;

""....

lot •• •

wd'

''

I

SUPERIORS
.

.and PEARL siS., RACjNE
' The Store With AHeart: ~
You, -·WE LIKE"
.
'

FAIRMO.NT

SEMI~BONELESS
.

· Nla 'N' LITE.

HA

Right !!served to limit quantities

MILK
HAlf OR WHOLE

2 158
Meat Loaf Mix............... ·
19
·
Loa
·
f.
%'rsE 2lb. 1
.Luncheon

We Glad~ Accejlt F~d. Food Sqmps·

BEEF &amp; PORK

Prices Effective April 12·19
Monday Thru Friday ·
. 9:00 to 7:00 .
Saturday 9 to 9

·SPICED·······

2 ~:

89~

VALLEY BEU

lb.

amAGE QIEESE

can

30or.
crt.

·

CITY
. 20 Ct.g
·
· g~
.W
.1eners.....FRENCH
·........~ ......................... pq. .

59~

8

CLOSED SUNDAYS
"'" e:~.uur:m.rmm ···

:uu:ao

DEL MONTE

CATSUP....................~~~~!..
.

N~· 2~$

'.

., "·.·.· ·.·.·.·······:-:·:·:·:··

·.·... .·

TOILET
TISSUE
.....
KRAFT BARBEQJE

Oranges
5 1~.
jar

(AT 'FOOD...~!.~:.

SA UCE••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
. .
14 qt.$
JERZEE
.
size
DRY MILK.......................

sMUCKER'S (BlACK RASPBERRY)

DISH DETERGENT

TOMATOES............

· cans

'•

. PUSS &amp;BOOTS .
;-

'

Vnty T1111e
.

11 oz. jar

PRESERVES::.!:'!!:=..=~....

Plain, Hot, Onion

.

Florida

..

. CORONET

Family

•

STANDARD ·.

JMPJU .·.·.··:·:·:···: ..·.··..·.··,·,.:-.. :·.·... . ..,..·.·.·. 'Jbbb

a

II '!'1':.

·Bakers

on~

.

.

22 or.

IVORY LIQUID.................:.
I'

c

'

Grapefruit
511.bie 59•
.,

.
J

j.
~

�•·

14 - ThP Daily Sentinel, Middleport.PGmery, 0., April 12, Jr/2

, Board Backs Better Wahama . Lighting
.

'

PT. PLEASANT - .Mason
Cuunty's Board of Education
took another step to upgrade
Wnhama Simior.JUfliOt High
School, leading to its acceptance by the North Central
Association , with the appropriation 'TUesday night of
money for improved lighting.
This action, which was
tmanimous on a motion by
Charles Eshenaur, was taken
along with several other school
matters in a regular meeting
held Tuesday evening in the
board office.
Supt. Charles Withers
re r&gt;orted on a renovation
project at VVahama that has
been completed by a group of
interested citizens in tliat area.
He poin ted out these volunteer
\\ or.kmen went into one of the

poorly lighted ·rooms several
weeks ago In a major
renovation project and didn't
stop until the finishing touches
were pul onoo .it this past
weekend.
·
Supt. Withers, after viewing
the project Tuesday with
assistant Charles Chambers,
recommended to the board that
it purchase 98 lights at a cost of
$27.50 each. He explained thst
installation of the lights wlil be
done by volunteers and there
will be no cost to the board for
labor.
Paul Baker of the Ap·
pa lachian Power Company
was given credit fo,r assisting
in recommendations for proper
lighting in the classrooms.
Poor lighting had been cited j)y
a NCA.
· It was announced that four
members of the board wiD
attend the National School
Board Association meeting ·to

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday
· NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturday

Aprll14-t5
MAD DOGS AND
ENGLISHMEN
rtechnicolor)

·.Joe Cocker

Leon Ru!Sell
Color Cartoons:

Lucky Number ·

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Energy Crisis
Poo~d ·

CLEVELAND (UP!) -II. research associate for the Atom·
ic Energy Colllllllsslon said
Tuesday statements by electric
power companies that the nation faces an energy crisis "is
the biggest fraud gnlng."
Dr. Jdul W. Gofman, an association at the AEC Lawrence
Radiation Laboratory, UVer·
more, CaiU., here for a speech,
said Industry's own statistics
relule these statements.
He said statistics from Edl·
son Electric Institute showed
power generating capability in
the country in December, for
example, was 39 per cent
greater than peak consumption.

be held in San Franci!co,
Calif., April 14-20. These ar~'·
Harry Siders, Bill Withers,
flay Fields and Charles
Eshenaur.
President Ted Stevens was
unable to be present for
opening of the session because
of business reasons and Blil
Withers presided pro-tem.
Included in further action,
the board:
- Agreed for Jack Crank,
transportation _supervisor, to
advertise lor bids for two small
type school buses for Kin·

dergarten for next year with I and 6, to RaVe!IIIWood April 22';
funds to be provided by &lt;the track team to Rave111wood
slate department; Supt. · April 11; Point. Pleasant and
Withers · said bus trans· Wahama students to par·
portation in Mason County is Ucipate in State Science Fair
costing '}Jj ,7 cents per student and SY.JIII&gt;OilwnAprill4, 15, 16;
per day. .
·'
Point Pleaaant Junior .lfigh to
play b&amp;JkelbaU at Ripley_High
- Granted permission to AprU 20; Hannan High Band to
Grant Barnett, Robert' Keesee Ravenswood AjlrU 22; Point
and Jack Lovejoy to aJtend the Pleasant Jwlior High Special
West Virginia Secondary Education to &amp;inr;lse April 18.
School principals in Clarks~ On Supt. · Wlthers 1
burg Apiil13-14.
recommendation; ·employed
. - Granted bus trans- the following teaching perpllrtation request8'for Wahama sonnel: Phyllis Ashley as
High Band to Huntington Miy 5 Guidance Counselor; Paula

Is Poo

t

.

T ta
· . de
· ·

'

Haffim, and Flilrence McCoy in
elementary eduCJltlon; Barbara F. Butcher, teacher In
Handicapped program; Joyce
Goodson as
substitute
elementary ·teacher; Homer
~~. ~oodary edu~tioo.

Placements are to be made
~ter.

~Acce~led the resignations
'ol •Dan Adams and Cathy
Adams, who were previously
employed for next school year.
DoriS McCune, R.N ., in Nurses
Aide Instructor due to heaiUt
reasons. Granted a leave of
absence to Wbmie McKenzie at
New Haven.
- Employed the followinll
teaching personnel: Miles
Millon as substitute bus
driver; Mrs. James Sturgeon
and Mrs. Richard Haycraft as
substitute custodian for

;m

...I

,

•
D. MORROW
WASHINGToN, Pa. (UPI)~omised her Hfe in exchange
for cooperation with the prosecutor, Annette L. Gilly, a
youthful looking 32, pleaded
guUty Tuesday to Ute murder
ol mine unloo leader Joseph A.
Yablonski. Mn. GlllyimpUcated two new suspects in the
murder.
Mrs. Gllly, slim and blonde,
responding to the questions of
specl!tl pr011ecut.or Rlcltard A.
Sprague in monoeyllables, im·
pllcatad both her father and
her husband, in the Dec. 31, 1969
murder of Yablonski, hb wife
and daughter in their f!ll'lll·
near here.
Sprague aild Mrs. GUiy had
been given only two promises,
· tbat the jll'otecutlon would not
seek the death perialty for first
degree murder and that rela-

muse

.
.
Haqnan High gymnasium;
Pauline Bower at Arbuokle aa
substitute for HaJ\nu High
gymnasiwn; Pauline BOWer at
Arbuckle as subStitute cook·
Connie Christy as subetitu~
custodian south of Kanawha
River area. All passed
unanlmously with the ·ex.
ceptloo of Milton and Harry
Sidefs voted ''no "
~ Accepted . ~estgnations
from J. L. Ukens, custodian at
Central· Mrs Helen Ho ard
cook at' Wah~ High "
'
- Heard Supt. Withers
repor
· t on prg.rated saiar' f
les or
t~achers as requested by
Siders. Seventy-three are paid
1n 10 months and 215 10
· 1 ~m ths
~ Us statutory mee'ting
for April IS and a regular
meeting for April '!1.

s.i

Water Service
Is Long Prot-t
~~~

LBJ Walks
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UP!) hospital.
- Fonner President Lyndon
He had a portable elecB. Johnson, Joo!Qng pale and trocardiogram unit taped to his
s_trained after a flight from chest and was accompanied by
Virgiitla where he suffered a · three men, two of them docheart attack five days ago, tors.
w!llked Into the Brooke Army
Doctors did not explain how.
Medical Center under his own Johnson was able .to make the
power today.
I,SOO..mile trip Jess than live
Johnson, 63, motioned away days after suffering what had
a hospital attendant who ap- been called a massive heart
· proached him With a attack. But hospital officials in
wheelchliir and walked slowly Charlottesville, Va., where
and wiUt a noticeable stoop Johnson has been treated since
from his station wagon iitto the his attack, issued this
statement an hour after he
abruptly left Tuesday night:
"Mter several days of steady
improvement from his heart
Thomas K. Woods, June M. attack of last F).iday, Mr.
Murphy from Robert A. Johnson flew to San Antonio
Murphy and Wanda S. Blaine where he will finish
recuperating at Brooke Army
from Michael E. Blaine.
The case of Jettle M. Arix Hospital."
versus Earl Arix was
di$missed.

~~'

•,••
,;

Falcons ·Trail

'. '

In Track
.Meet
.
9:1111.35

100
yd .
Dash-Rymer,
Ravenswood 10.4 Sec. . ·· •·. ~
120 yd. High Hurdles-;
Seagraves-Ravenswood : i6:6~
o••

.

~.

47.9.Sec.

Y Yio. "*h

Collecting

0''d

p ay Boar'

HaS N·ew
p hiem

11ewspapers

•

INGELS FURNITURE
Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights

'

'

Mlclcllepott

IN HOLZER .

Nora Camtiran, &lt;Middleport,
Rt. I, Ia a patient at Holzer
Medical Center. .

FE~f~a::!·o~:!;.

Susan Tracy, Ina Singer,
wanda Findling, Raymond

~.

FIELD EVENTS

'•

.
Pole Vault-Fuller-Ravenswood :

9'

•

High Jwnp-Fox-Ravenswood:
5'5''

t' ....

Shot Pui'~.Kiger-Williamstown:
43' 4'11"
•
Discus-Kiger-Williamstown
12~ '

-

..

was three feet high on. one County RO..d 345. Beegle said a
section of his property and number of trees were down
Lowell ~ice said a dog house across roads which also were
was moved, his dog almost covered with debris.
Culverts were plugged up
.drowned, his driveway and
and a small bridge in Salem
shrubbry damaged.
Brewer said he had met with Township nea&lt; the Gallia Line
~illage olficials before the , was out.
The
State
Highway
Wednesday night storm to ask
lor improve!llents on Viite St Department in this county
not only in drainage but water reported Route 124 West, 143
service. He said he was turned and 692 closed, and water was
down, and·. told Utat it would be . over U. S. 33 at Burlingham.
Schools were in session, but
two months before even a ditch
near the L. D. Hartinger in the Meigs District parents
property could be cleaned out. were asked to pick up their
- Brewer said the Vine St. area children in instances where
is receiving heavy drainage flood waters apparently are to
from the Middleport Hill have roads blocked off by
Cemetery area in heavy rains. evening.
Upriver, farmers who have
Meantime, backwaters were
s
pring
crops out reported no
causing roads to be closed
problems. ·
about the county.
Residents of the Laurel Cliff
Meigs County Engineer
community
reported water
Theodore Beegle reported the
ciQSing of County Road 10 pouring from hillsides into
between Langsville and yards of their homes. Cellars
Dexter west of Dexter; County were flooded, they : sa id .
Road 19, known as the Pe~ch Properties repor ted affected
Fork Road, one mile west of U. were thos,e of the Fox, Carman
S. 33, and Story's Run-Road, and Diehl families.

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Tolal Points-Ravenswood 74,:
Williamstown 57, Wahama 41:;
.

I

Sporn Plan~.
Wm" S Award
NEW HAVEN - The ,
National Safety Council has :
announced ~e Phllip Sporn ~
Plant of Central Operating Co., ,
located near here, has been ,
presented the council's Award ,
of Merit lor its excellent safety':
record.
•
The award is presented only ·
where an establishment's
record
satisfied
rigid .·
requiremen Is laid down in the ;
council's award plan · for
rec ognizing good Industrial :
safety records...
·
Howard pyle, president or ;
the National Safety Council, in :
a letter of congratulatloo to :
Eugene H. Gloss, plan(
manager of the eentral •'
Opera\ll)g Company,·~ ·
that the' local plant qUauftbi
lor. the award beca118e of Its
Injury-free period of 1,015,888
man-hours from April 25, 1970
00 Dec . 31, 1971.

.,

I

night's storm. The sign is located at the end of the road going
under the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge .

THIS LARGE BILLBOARD was wrapped around a
utility pole in lower Pomeroy as a result of Wednesday

Long Jump -Seagr aves ,
Ravenswood 18'6"
'

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ELBERFELD_
S IN ·POMEROY
WarehouM On M.Chanlc Street

' , who live on the
Milliron
Leading Creek Road near
Route 7 below Middleport,
reported high wind blew over a
two car garage at their mobile
home.
In Middleport in the Vine St.
area, residents lodged strong
complaints when a storm
sewer failed to carry off the
heavy run-off from. cemetery
hill .
James Brewer said water

•
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A suit for divorce has been
filed in Meigs Cowtty Common
·
Pleas Court and five other
divorces have been granted.
Ruth A. Henry, Pomeroy, Rt.
lively JDinor federal charges 4, filed against Carl F. Henry;
would be dropped. However, it address unknown, charging
was reported Mrs. Gilly would gross neglect of duty and
"'n"nit'
be perinltted to plead guUty to desertion .
.L I
Ul.r
second
degree
murder
Divorces were granted to
char
Mary Irene Gilmore from ,
A :;.ge statement signed' Harold Eugene Gilmore, Mary Roger Pickens, Christopher
by Mrs. GWywas introduced in A. Koenig from Arthur D. C. Dlnguss, and Michael
evidence by an Fm agent who Koenig, Mary L. Woods from Taylor, who were sentenced to
lnterrog!lted
her
in
••,_
one year in the Cincinnati
1\r
Philadelphia April 4. Its
workho?se on c~nvlctlon of
''
contents were not disclosed iit
dposseSSion of manjuana, have
court.
been returned with t~e . The Youth Fellowship of
BuL ao- in .Wa!dtin3ton,
.. execution !!f Ute remal!lclllr PI :!'.l'lnity ~Jnw~4. Pomeroy, is
Pa., and · Washtngion, D.C.,
their aentence suspended and sponsoring· · a newspaper
said Uie itateQ)OIIt says that
the three placed on probation, collection drive during the Two Mile Relay-Ravenswood
two officials of United Mine
according to an entry in the inonth of April.
Workers (UMW) Dialrict 19,
Meigs County clerk of courts.
Money received by the group .
which covers ealllern Kentucky
from a recycling plant will be
and eastern Tennessee, paid
~o
DEER KU..LED
given to charity. They are
. MEIGS APPROVED
Mrs. Gilly, her father and her
. .I.'
A doe deer was killed asking residents of Pomeroy
Meigs High School has been
Marriage Uceue
husband to organize the mur·
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Wednesday at 12:26 a.m. when and nearby communities to placed on the Jist of secondary
Harold
Lee Whltteklnd. tl,
ders.
reorganized Pay Board faced it ran into the path of a car please save their newspapers schools·approved for 1971-72 by
Marietta,
and Nancy Leah
the North Central Association
II was learned that ·Mrs. key policy decisions on traveling south on SR 7, six during this month.
Gilly's statement would be professional athletes and miles south of Tuppers Plains,
~ollection dates and of Colleges and Secondary Snider, 18, Pomeroy.
brought before a federal grand entertainers today in lis first the Meigs County Sheriff's . le ephone numbers for persons Schools, James Diehl, prin·
Jury today or Tllll'sday and meeting since four labor Depj. reported. The driver of not able to take their papers to cipal, announced today. Diehl
LOCAL TEMPS
lnd)ctmenta would be Issued. members quit in protest and the car was Dorsey c. the church will be announced said the notification has
Temperature In downtown
following
the Pomeroy Wednesday' at 11 a.m.
The Indictments probably . President Nixon dismissed an Burkhammer, 41, Coolville, Rt. the week of April 24. All con- arrived
would be 00 similar federal equal number of business 2. Therewasdamagetotheleft tributlons will be appreciated, association's annual meeting was 66 degrees under sunny
"holding charges" under members.
front fender and grill.
Richard Nease, an advisor of held March 22 in Chicago.
skies.
which the FBI arrested · the
Th
u
h
th
the
group,
reports.
1
eques ooo1 we erpay , ............................................................................... .
orl&amp;lnal five suspects in increases for athletes and
Cleveland.
entertainers should be limited
THE NEW 1972 LINES OF
They were acc:uaed of strip- to. the board's 5.5 per cent
ping Yablonski of his rights as general guideline came before
a union member under the the board amid a 12-day-old
Landrum-Griffith Act by strike by major league
ARE NOW ON SALE THIS WEEK-END AT
kiU1ng him.
baseball players over pension
MB. GWy agreed to testify issues.
aaalnat her father, Slllous
The problem of limiting
HuddlestQn, a, prealdent of a athlet.lc and entertainment
small UMWiocallli aFollette, stars to a 5.5per cent raise was
Tenn., at his murder trisl next highlighted by the case . of
week, Sprague said.
Oakland Athledc pitcher Vida
Huddleston, Mrs. Gilly, her Blue. Blue was paid ,14,500 in
husband Paul, a Cleveland 1971 as a rookie, but after he
oouspalnter; Aubran Martin, won 24 games and lost 8, wiUt
23, and 08ude E. Vealey, 28, an e ....
of 1112,
alleged triggermen In the
arncu run average ·
he asked for $92,000 for the 1972
murder, were arrested in seaS&lt;ln. Oakland owner Charlea
Cleveland in early 1970. Vealey Finley offered $5tl,OOO.
:....
confe!Sed and testified at the
H limited to the 5.S per cent
trials of Martin and Gilly • who guideline, Blue could get lese
were sentenaflli to death.
than an $11011 pay iitcrealll! In
1972. But if be does as well 011
the field as last. season, he
PLEASANT VAU.EY
obviously will be much more
Names of penous admitted valuable to the team's succeaa
have been discontinued by and the Oakland gale receipt&amp;
oospltal authorities.
than that, compared with other
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Burdell players being piud more.
Hayes, Robertsburg; Mrs.
/
.The only rule laid down so far
Uifford Cornell, Mn. Cedi by the Pay Board
.· /
Dean, David Selby, Mrs. exempt from its guidelines any
James
Kelly,
Lucille income from playoff gamea,
Moreland, KenneUt JOOI!I, Wirt All-Star games, World Series
Robbins, Don Gillispie, and other posHeason contests.
Richard Neal, all Point
Pleaunt; Orion ijrlnker,
VeteriDI Memorllll H01pllll
Mason; Randall ·' Hogsett,
Visiting Hows 2-4 and 7-4:30.
Also on sale at Elberfelds warehouse
HIUltlngton; .,... Mont Hill,
ADMITTED Faurlce
12 and 15 foot width carpet 'lit sale prices
Leon; Mrs. David Sblrley and Neece, Pomeroy; Harry
Ar"/str~:~rrund Gold Seal Unoleurn Floi)t,l
1011; LiDle Walker, GalllpoliB
Covering in 9 and 12 loOt widths
Ferry; Thel'ell Walker, West Wyatt, Pomeroy ; Lydia Ebersbach, Pomeroy; Lucy Mcewle,
Sp · 1 1 0 f
Cobunbla; 'l'bomu Williams, Addison ; Walter Walker,
ecta sa e
Ozite lndoor·OIItdoor · Ca(.
peting · 12 foot wide
.
·•
New HaVIll; Mrs. Carl Ralr, Pomeroy; Don Gosney,
Co 1
din, Hlrlfotd.
Middleport; John Hanning,
,.
mp ete line of Lawn Boy mowers
Toro Mowers
BIR'l'HS: AprQ 10, ·a BOD to
Mr. and Mrs. Duane TutUe, ~==~y~l~.;,. ~~=:
Plus 54" inch Wall Covering • Rug Border' .:
.m ... J
Shade
•
Metal Stripping for linoleum and car·~
Racille, Ohio, and a 1011 to Mr. M
88011; IWIO\III ones,
;
· t 11 1""''
~d Mn· . Donald McCarty,
Usa Bolen, Pomeroy. .
tns a a ton
.
dleshtre, 0..
.
DISCHARGED - Clara
Our Own Sensible Credit

Sentence Eased

....

Meigs .Couroty apparently
fared well , compared to
surrounding areas, in a severe
thunderstorm which struck the
county rhursday night.
Both the Colu.mbus and
Southern Ohio Electric Co. and
the Ohio Power Co. reported no
outages ol power as a result ol
the·storm wHich brought heavy
rain, lightning and claps of
thunder.
Mr . and Mrs . Marvin

:

880
yd.
Run-Cline·:
WIIUamstown 2:13 Sec. .
•
220yd.
Dash-Petty-t
Williamstown 24.5 Sec.
f
180 Yd. Low Hurdles-Matlcs;::
Ravenswood 22.55 Sec.
•!
Mile Relay • Wahama 3:ol.t

...

...

•

t

Elberfelds Warehouse On Mechanic St.

11

.

880 yd. Relays-Wahama .~&gt;~U
Mile . Run - Butcher-•.
Ravenswood 5;15.4
.
440 yd. Dash~hester Roush,
Wahalna 55.5
~
440 yd. Relays-Ravenswood~

state."
The· White Falcon sprinters
scored 40 of their 41 points in
the running events. Curti_s
Roush, Danny Gillispie, Barry
Harris and Tom Samsell led
the Falcon charges to a very
imporlant first place honor in
the 880 yard relays. Wahama
posted a time of 1:38.4 which
bettered Williamstown by six
tenths of a second.
· Williamstown won this event
at the Fairmont Relays.
Chester Roush perfonned a
one-man show as he totaled
points in all three events he
participated ln. Chesler vested
the entire field iit Ute 440 yard
dash with a 55.5 second
clocking. Mike Lewis was
second with an imoressive 56.3
timing. _Chester was awarded
third place in the IOOyard dash
and teamed with his brother
Curtis, Tom Samsell and Mike
Lewis as Wahama el&lt;j)loded for
a convincing Mile Relay
victory.
The Wahama tracksters will
travel to one of the biggest
track events of the season this
Saturday. The White Falcons
will participate as one of a field
of thirty to forty teams at the
Beckley Relays. Coach Dave
Arritt is expected oo take, a
"select squad" that will
probably concentrate almost
entirely on lite running events.
Coach Arritt expressed
extreme optimism for the
coming season .
TRACK EVENTS

'•'

PORCH AND LAWN FURNITURE

•
~r:.z:ER..
Cl

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'

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.
·
. . James Brewer, Vine Sl.,
Middleport, told .The · DaUy . The \YahjUllll White Falcons
Senllllel today be bas been opened their 197ll track season
attempting to aecun belter with a three-team track meet
.water, service from Mid, held at Ravenswood. In the
. dleport Village officials on fiit.al 'tQtals Ravenswood took
VIDe St. lbe past 18 months. all honors with 74 points,
Brewer ~ailed lbat as followed by Williamstown with
recent. as two weeks ago be 57 points and Wahama with 41
a!lfllled lor permits to place ooints.
111'8 ~eblle homes. on his
Coach Dave Arritts Falcons .
property; however .be faced two of the best track
, believes that better water teams
in
the state.
service should be pnvlded
Ravenswood
was
honored as
rec-rdlesa of whether be
the
second
best
.
l
ean\
in the
·
proCeeds wllb plans to place
state of 'west Virginia last
lbe mobile bomes.
year. Last week Williamstown
Brewer said he has 12 · was runner-up out of a field of
pounds of water pressure at
fifteen schools at the Fairmont
bls r~ldenee.
Relays. Coach Arritt termed
last
nights meet as "good
r!J!M®m.~-experience against some of the
most rigid competition in the

5 Win Marital Freedom

• h Court
Wit

By STEP~

Improvement of

; !b.UJJJ•.db l L! J

NO MEAT CONTROLS
WASHINGTON (UPI) What the nation needa, he
Tbe
admlnJslratlon urged
said, II not more power plants
the
Price
Comm.fulo1i today
but connections between all
to shy away from any,price
plants to counteract shortages
controls
on meat, despite
caused by poor planning 1!1
what
II
called emotional
aome areas. He said the utili.
appeals
from
consumers
ties are opposed to this because
angered by price bikes.
they are afraid of federal conAssistant Agrltlllure
trol.
Seeretary Richard E. Lyng, ·
''To say that thllre is an
In testlmoay prepared for
energy crisis and that we need
lhe opening of a twa-day
nuclear [lOwer.to solve It is the
Price Commission bearing
biggest fraud," said Gofman.
on food prices, said any
Gofman has also been an outconlnls wblch biDder "fair"
spoken critic of nuclear plants.
farm prices would lead to
"Everytlme a company says a
cutbacks In sappUe• and
nuclear plant is safe I consider
resultant blgber prlcea.
that statement to be crimlnal
fraud," he said.

Mrs Gilly Makes
· ·,

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)

I

en tine

'

Devoted To The lnteresh Of The Meigs-Mason Area
JAMES BREWER, VINE ST., MIDDLEPORT, points to
the area on his property which was Hooded iit Wednesday
night's near cloudburst. Brewer said Utat at one point late
Wednesday night water in the area was 38 inches deep. He
said the stonn seiver serving Ute neighborhood Is lnadquate
to carry off water which Vine st. residents get during heavy
rains. Water flows off Ute Middleport Hill Cemetery area
onto Ute street during stonns. Brewer also said ditches are
not cleared to allow a free flow of water. Brewer happened to
be in conference wlUt village officials Wednesday night
before the storm discussmg the drainage jll'oblem. and im·
jii'Oved water service. Lowell ~ice owning property also OQ
VIne st., reported damages from the storm. His children's
pel dog was the object of a rescue mission to prevent it from
being drowned.

VOL. XXIV NO. 257

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Contract on

Beltline Let

•

Eastern Hires
... "

Bonding Firm
The highly-rated bonding
firm of Squire, Sanders and
Dempsey , Cleveland, was
employed to solve the legal
problems of ·a bond issue in
connec(ion with the ·proposed
building program in the
Eastern Local &amp;hool District
by the district 's board of
education Tuesday night.

The ' expansion program,
which has been discussed
frequently by the board, now
tentatively calls for additional
rooms to the Eastern High
School plant to .accommodate
the 7th and 8th grades. Thb
move would free needed space
in the elementary buildings ol
the district where the seventh
and eighth grades now attend .
classes.
JUNIOR FAIR BOARD OFFICERS - Recently elected
The building program aiso
Junior Fair Board officers met Wednesday night at the Meigs
would include facilities lor
County Extension Office to plan the upcoming Meigs County
band and vocal music at the
high school and possibly
repairs and improvements to
other buildings of Ute district.
A group of teachers and non.· teaching employes met with
the board tQ discuss a proposal
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - Mem· that a part or all of the emSeventy-eight Democrats Whealey for Congress, and
bers of the Ohio Constitutional ployes' hospitalization in· from 10 of the 13 counties in the John E. Halliday, Harry
Revision Commission do not surance costs be paid by the Tenth Congressional District Crewson and Delbert Ford·
believe voters on May 2will re- board . No action was taken, heard a State Highway ham for the State House of
ject a package of 14 amend· however.
department executive promote Representatives, in three
menta to the stale coostltution.
The group also discussed the Gov . John· Gilligan's proposed · separate diStricts.
The occasion was the bi·
Commission Chairman Rich- three and one-half mill new tax State Deparlment ol Tran·
monthly
meeting of the
ard H. Carter of Fostoria said levy to be voted on at the May 2 sportation Wednesday night iit
in a news conference here election. Approval of the levy the Rio Grande College diniitg Democrat Action Club, next
session of which wilt be June
Wednesday he views the was indicated by the group.
hall. ·
package as "coherent" and
Gay Perrin and Nancy Kirby
Don Kindt, deputy director of 14, probably in Athens, ac·
'1oglcal" and not likely to were placed on 'the approved the highway department cording to President Hanley
confuse the voter.
Jist of substitute teachers and (personnel), also put In a Hackett, Marietla.
R. William (Bill) Jenkins,
Two controversial Items in Robert Sanders, seventh grade "plug'' for Senator Ed Muskle
candidate lor the Democratic
Ute package are expense teacher, was authorized to for President.
allowances for legislators and ~rovide home instruction for
The only other speakers were nomination for Gallia county
Ute removal of the lieutenant Mark Gross nickle . who is legislative candidates: Jack probate judge and secretary of
governoraspresldlngofficerof unable to attend clbsses.
W. Crisp and Dr. Rob!!rl H. the party executive committee,
the Ohio Senate. Other Items
The board voted to send
deal with "housekeeping" type letters of cornmencation to
changes In the day~to·day Mrs. Doris Ann Well and Miss
operations of the General Diane McClure for .conducting
Assemb.y.
adult reading classes at the·
John A. SkipoonofFindln, a Chester Elementary School.
commtuion member, said he
A contract with the
thinkJ voters will approve Ute Honeywell Co., Charleston, W.
· expen.se allowances.
. va.;·was discussed on furnace
"In the past four years, 38 repairs. It was agreed to have
states have Increased salary or a representative of Ute comenacted travel or eJIIH!Ilse al· pany check furnaces in all of
lowances,' he !lllid. "This is the schools of the dlstrlct
simple recognition of Ute in· before any contract is agreed
crealling demands on a. state upon.
..., ....
Bills were approve d f or
1-isl-'-."
. Alao 111 the May 2 ballot, but payment. The meeting was
ttepltlte of the 14 amend- recessed unW April 21 when
rnents, Is a constitutional teacher contracts will be
amendment which would . discu!Sed.
penniI the stale to operate a
Attending the meeting were .
lotiery · ·
Howard Caldwell, Jr., Roger
Carter said the package of Epple, Clyde Kuhn and Oria
arnendlntnlt the COIIIIIIIIIion Smith, board inembers,
II propo.qll onlJ the 111'1t of Creston Newland, clerk; John
__.. panned for the next Riebel, superintendent, and
foar or live ,.... 011 the sub!- Bob Ord, principal. .
tell of powera.of tile pva nor,
Ute fiJIJIICII and debt limit
•d loell plat11Ddll.
. LOCAL TEMPS
The loCI! aonmmenl
The temperature in down·
JOHN E. HALLIDAY, UNOPPOSED Democratic
dlnltl, Cartar 1ald, will town Pomeroy at 11 a. m.
candidate fur 92nd district "ate representa\lve, prominent
problbiTite 1111 ''llllllt •calt 'lblrsdly waa 64 degrees under
Gallia Attorney, llatens to .colllllltuent at DAC dinner.
1141 cwtrov•lllltl Ill." · cloudy llldes. ·

Prospect
Good lor
11
•
•
ReVISIOD

· A contrac t for work 'o n a 1().
mile conveyor from Southern
Ohio Coal Co.'s new Meigs
Mine near Pomeroy has been
awarded to Power Constructors Co., Cleveland. Work
will begin in mid-April and is
scheduled for completion . by
mid-November.
,
The contract calls fo
mo•ing more than 2%-millton
cubic yards of earth and the
erection of seven structures
and some 10,000 linear feet of

bridges.
The conveyor will move coal
from the Meigs Mine to Ohio
Power Co.'s new General
James M. Gavin Plant at
Cheshire. Southern OhioCoalla
a subsidiary of OblQ PQwer,
. · . · .. -. . , " .
Power Constructors had
prevlou~ly performed con·
struction work in connection
with Ohio Power's Musklngwn
River Plant, located between
Marietta and Zanesville.

·-NJ&gt;,•,•,•
··-·.w...•......
m..·.····-·""·'~'"

Two Declare

;.:.•.~o;,!;"'-v;•;,•;,'Zf•O•~~

Absentee Ballots
Available Now at
Election Board
Disabled voters in Meigs
County should request apo
pllcatloos for ballots for the
May % primary election at
Ibis lime.
Tbe Meigs County Board of
Eleclio111 said It Is necessary
for a physician to olgn the
application. Also Utls year,
the local board bas been
informed that the Secretary
some of State, Ted W. Brown, will
president,
gave
highli ghts of the club's history . not condone precinct of·
Roll call showed onl y llclals "going to cars" at
Morgan, Noble and Perry polling places to assist
counties unrepresented.
voters.
It showed Gallia had 25,
Therefore, all disabled
Ja ckso n 11, Meigs 9, voters should make requeots
Washington 9, Fairfield 7, at once by phone or In
Athens 7, Vinoon 3, Muskingum writing to the Meigs County
3, Hocking 2, and Lawrence 2. Board of Elections, Masonic
Temple, Pomeroy, Oblo. The
deadline date Is April 27 at 4
p.m.

Junior Fair . They are, Steven stanley, president, seated;
standing, I tor, Jyl Beaver, secretary; Daniel Midkiff, vice
president ; ,Lynne Baker, treasurer; 5!laron Holter and
Debbie Milliron, co-chairman of publicity .

Democrats Dine and Talk Shop

..

\,1

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

THURSDAY, APRIL 13, 1972

'V

welcomed the crowd to this
county .
Prof. Sam S. Smith, chair·
man of the division of social
sciences, Jackson co unty
chairman, welcomed the
partisans to the campus.
Ernest A. (Bud) Wingett,
Racine, Meigs coun ty chairman and former DAC

Two Win High Wahama Awards
An air of tenseness, any that.
hangs over an event ' when
cOveted awards winners are
named , was prevalent Wednesday night during the annual
Future Farmers of America
Parent-Son banquet held at
Wahama High School.
Some 150 persons were
present to see John Ord Jr., a
junior and son of Mr. and Mrs.
John Ord Sr. of Letart and
Bobby Roush, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Marvin Roush of New
Haven receive the · two top
awards.
James Dunn, FFA advisor,

stepped to the podium and
announced . the top winners,
presenting young Ord with the
Star Chapter Fanner Award
and the Livestock Production
Award , while Bobby was
named the Star Greenhand .

Candidacies
Two residents have declared
intention of being write-in
candidates in the May primary
elections, the Meigs County
Board of Elections said
Wednesday following the 4 p.
m. deadline.
The two write-in candidates
are
Geotge
Meinhart,
Republican, for central
committeeman in Middleport's
First Ward, and Albert Bolen,
Democrat, for central committeeman poet of his party in
the Dexter ~eciitct.
Meinhart has been appointed
, to fill the central committeeman post in Mid·
dleport's First Ward. The
vacancy was created by the
death of David 0 . Jen~. The
term of the late Mr. Jenkins
expires at the end of this year.

•

Understudies are Ready
In Sunny of Sunnyside

Broadway and Hollywood
actors have understudies , so
why not pupil-actors of the
Bradbury School?
Partly cloudy and a little
There 1S no reason "why
cooler tonight and Friday. Low not," so those with principal
tonight in the 40s north and in parts in an operetta, "S1111ny of
the 50s south. High Friday in Sunnyside," to be presented at
the 60s north and in the 70s it\ 7:30 p. m. Thursday and
the central and south.
Friday eveniitgs do have understudies ready to step into
.
the roles at the riSe of a curlain.
Mrs. Phyllis Hackett, faculty
member who has directed the
25 Strip Miners May Shut Down
presentation and is ac·
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The state Natural ·companist, reports that
Resources Department reported today that up to 25 because of Illness or other
strip mine operators in Ohio may .be forced to stop ?lrcum~tanc~ could mak~ it
. . . .
.
.·
. tmposstble for "the show to go
mmmg temporarily before the state IS prepared to on" 1n the tradition of show
re-license them under the new strip mine control buslnesss, understudies have
law, hopefully next month.
been traiited'ln each main role.
Ernest J. Gebhart, chief of the division of
Making up the understudy
forestry and reclamation which administers the Ia w', group are Toni Pope, Marianne
said the licenses of nine coal strip mine operarors Welsh, Carin Bailey, Greg
expire this month and 16 lnore next month.
Becker, Trlna Gibbe, Ricky
~W,m;·~·········:-:·&gt;····•· · ········································&lt;·'·'·'::O:•'•'·' •'•X•WJ•'•'•'•'ili:'«'' HKov.atterKI, RobTimert DeLong,

Weather

-

. .ijil~
. ~. .

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...- "!$~=-;~
.-...:::::::::::,*:*;:;:::::::::::;:;:;:::;::::::::::::::;:$.:~:!::-.:.
~ ........... ......... .. ......

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

evm

ng,

Carol DeLong, Jon! Murray, Jo
McKinney, Ricky .Blevins,
!"alty Boyles, Trpcy Burdette,
Ann Pearch and Ricky Smith.
A circus presentation Ia
woven into the theme. of the
operetta which deals with the
trials and tribulations of
"Sunny," played by Velvet
Swisher and children at the
orphanage known as "Sun·
J.
nyside". '
Taking part in the circus will
be Greg Arnold, ringmaster,
and Patty Boyles, Ann Pearch,
Brett Carter, Ricky Smith, Tim
Ebersbach, Tim Mowery,
ca~1 DeLontl. Kim Batey,
Toni ·Pope, BIU Geclrge, Jeft
DeLong, Scotl Warner, Carin

Bailey,

Gras Bee~. RoJtert

. DeLong, Ricky Hovattar,
Kevin King, Jo McKinney, JODI
Murray ,.Marianne Wellb, Jobn ,
Clark, Jeff DeLon1, BIU
George, Mark Maanotla,
Kenny Rouah, Jobn Stnert,
Mark Venoy, Scott Warner aad
··
Mowery, Joe Walklnl.

.

,

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