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-Opinions, Desires for 'Which Way Our Schools?'
Plans Foi- Ope~ation Big Switc~
Invited atPublic · consensus .Meeting on May 24

,Hospital AnnoUnces.Additional ~.1 .
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$21 million center May !1 taken c~ of at the old proceaalng inlo the. clinic gq
accilrdlng to Robert Daniel, buildings Wltilllfter the move. more am~y, qui~JI. an(!
administrator of the clinic.
atgtMing Tl\esday, May 30, efficiently. We "11111ot ~ve lo
Regular appoinlments ss well all patients will be seen at the ask nearly •• 1111111y·queaUoni
as walk-in patients will all be new building on Rt. 35. Daniel _when he ~.s bla plutlc car~
·"'d there ·~uld
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•• . be personnel with him.,._
on duty at ihe new cllrilc to Danlel .. ld in the new clinic)
assist patients in finding their the doctors will'be seeing more
doctor's office.
.
pati@nts than they could in lhf .
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· He alliO pointed out that old building, and the increa!led
Holzer Medical Center, First . Pas~ol, Mayme Shaver, brochures containing- a clinic volulrie made the new !denAve. and Cedar St. General Cele~tine Skinner, William floor plan would be given eaGh tiflcatlon carda necessary, He
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m. Stephenson, .Sr., Kenneth patient · to help show the . was quick to poini out that
Maternltyvlsltlnghours2:30to Straight, James Walton, Mrs. various offices lll!d depart- these, cardl, are ooly !den·
4:30 p.m. Parents only on Robert K. Arrr;s and daughter, menlil in the $3 million clinic tlflcation cards and have
Pediatrics' ward.
Mrs.. Bert S. 0 Comor, Jr., and
nothing to do with credit or ·
Births
son, _Mrs . Terry Franklin Wise structure.
Anew service to the patienlil collection pl'QCeduret in the
Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin c. and son, Sandra Canterberry, will be iniUated by the Holzer new. Holzer Medical Center
bnes Jackson a daughter· Tm:ry Halley, Jarod Moore, Medical Cen~ Clinic after the Clinic.
·
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Stephen wlloo.-: ·Kir_nbel'l)' Polcyn, Goldie big move in the form of a
Wellston, a son; Mr. and Mrs. GeiSOr, . Rosa Grltfith, Mary · perman·ent patient lden·
Jmunie D. ·Shepherd Wellston . McGowan, Marjorie M. Fruth, tification caril. Afree card will
DIED EARLY TODAY
a son; Mr. and M~. Wh James McKitterick, Melinda
WEST COLUMBIA - ~ulla
be given each patient ·on bla
Owens, Athens, a daughter, ~eld, Tina Crisp, Gall
VanMatre,
85, West Columbia,
1
and Mr. and· Mrs. Henderson Stzemore, Ruth Waugh " flrst vlslt to the new clinic. This died early today at Holzer
card will contain the patient's
(Mary Ellen), Patriot, a son, Kimberly Klein, Robin Murname, address, and medical Medical Center. She is sur1
and Mr. and Mrs. Theodore A. phy ·
chart nwnber. On the back of vived by four sons, · two
Wooten, Gallipolls1a daughter,· Veterans Memorialijospltal
daughters and ' a sister .•
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Discharges
ADMITTED _ James Hall; the card will be his ap- Funeral services will be an~
pointment schedule and the
Alma Russell, Elizabeth Vinton; Regina Nance,
no!Jnced
by Foglesong. Funeral•
.
Jones, Cleo Caudlll, Mrs. Rutland; Carol Schroeder, telephone number . of his Home.
doctor's department In case he
David L. Keefer and son, Mrs. Parkersburg; . Mark Casto,
should have to call and change
FUNERAL SET
PauiJ. Darst and son, John W. Pomeroy ; Leatha Cowen,
his
appointment.
Funeral
service~ for Wllllanl
Cook, Jr.,Mrs. Michael Wayne Pomeroy; vera Hayman,
"This
card,"
Daniel
IIBid,
F. (Bill) Houdashelt, 49;
and son, Nell Pfancuff, Mrs. Pomeroy.
"should
be
carried
with
the
Pomeroy Route 2, who died:
Ronald Humphreys and son,
DISCHARGED _ Forrest
patient
each
time
he
viBits
the
Monday
will be held at 3 p.ml
Fred Gill, Jr., Cecil Buchanan, Lacy, Steve Schartiger.
clinic
.
It
will
make
.
·
his,
Wednesday at the Ewln11;
Brady Gilbert, Vernon Henry,
Funeral Home where friends
Mrs. Waller Henry Gray and
may call anytime.
son, John D. Jividen, Gaither
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
ALUMNI SETS DATE
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
Miller,Mrs. Robert McClaskey
The Harrisonville Alumni
and daughter, Jerry McKin· called to Laurel St. at 3:21p.m. banquet and dance will be held
l.OOGE TO MEET
ney, Marie Shato, Charles D. Monday for Brenda Mw-ray, on Saturday, May 'll, beginning
A special meeUng of Sluide'
Walton, David Haggerty, Jean 15, who was ill at horne there . at 6:30 p.m. The dance, River Lodge 453, F&amp;AM, will
Kelly, · Ruth Hyrne, Joyce An ambulance was called and beginning at 9, will feature the be held at Bp.m. 'l'llunday with
Douglas, Garnet Stanley, Miss Murray was taken to King Khords of Belpre. work to be conducted in the.
Jason Eric Darst, Christopher Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Reservationa may be made by master mason degree. AU:
Lee, James Roger Timmons,
calHng Mrs. W.11lter Burke, 949- ma110na are invited.
Daphne McLaughlin, Laura
3206.
BOND FORFEITED
FINED $1t, COSTS
Clark, Marjorie Davis, CorGregory
Burdette,
19,
Pl.
Jack
E. Hall, Cbesbire Route,
nella Hutchinson, Christy
CLUB TO MEET
Pleasant
forfeited
a
bond
of
Lynch, Anna Olson, Melvin
The Winding Trail Garden 2, was fined $10 and coats on a:
· $14 .70 in Syracuse Mayor Club will meet at 8 p.m. .speeding convtcUon .Monday;
Herman Lond.on 's cou'rt Wednesday at the home of Mrs. night In the court of Racine:
Monday night.
Mayor Charl01 fyl01.
Earl Thoma:
·
Holzer Medical Center Clinic
physicians will cootinue to see
patients at the First Ave. and
Cedar St. and Sycamore st.
facilities in Gallipolis WJtil
after the big move to the n•w

BY CHARLENE HOEFlJCH
The people of Meigs Local Scho\11 District are invl!ed to
express their views oo etmcaUonallui!es at a public meeting at 7
p.m. Wedhescla)', Ma)o 24 at Meigs lllgh Schl&gt;ol.
PUrpose of the meeting will be 1o arrive at a "coosensus" of
wbilt the public wants and espects done io provide more effective
education, how these things shoUld be financed, and who should
be held accountable for getting tbim done.
Thta local "Search for Conaensus" meeUng Is similar to
others scheduled in Ohio neJ( week in a program to establtah a
aystem ,rJ accountability for educational programB. The Ohio
~t ol Education Ia acting under mand!lte of the Ohio
Legtalature becauSe of the additional millloM of dollars which
have gone to schools In the past few )'ears,
The mandate by the legtalature comes at this time because of
the enactment of the peraonal illcome 'tax in Ohio, a highly
contested legislative matter, with a major pOrtion of the income
tax funds to be channeled inlo education.
On Jme 30 the Stale Department of Educal,lon Is
required .lo 1ubmlt a report to a committee of the
legislature oa edllcalioul aceoaatabiUty.
AI aext Wednl:oday'a , meet"'- tupayen and
studelllll, 18 to 18, may ezpn!H lhelr vlew1 11110 area&amp; of
coocem Ia dbclllalonp;oapa beaded by people oulllde tbe
aehool admlnltlnltlve ud tellehllg profellioa.
Following 45 minute discussion periods, the ·leaders will
Invite resource people (school admlnlstratora and teachers) to

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HOSPITAL NEWS
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plate in Melga cOQnty Spelling Bee, am Denise Deem,
scholastic; second row, 11m Nease, attendance, 11m Thoren,
citizenship, Mike Norton, art, Myra Woods, art, Jaye Ord,
scholastic and Kimberly Winebrenner, citizenship; third
row, Mr. Wolfe.

TEN -STUDENTS OF SYJlACUSE ElEMEtiTARY
. SCHOOL- have been presented honor awards for scholastic,
' right to read, attendanoe, art, compOsition and citizenship
achievements by Larry WoHe, principal. Shown with their'
awards are, front row, 1-r, Tonia Ash, attendance, Tina
Pierce, right to read, Marty Foley, composition , also fourth

•
CYCLES STOLEN

Wallace

TIJC Meigo CoWJty Sheriff's
Dept. is investigating the theft

of two motorcycles Monday
afternoon. The two bikes, a
Su1uke 50 and Honda 350 were
laken from in front of the
Donald Taylor residence,
Minersville Hill. The Suzuke is
reddish orange, . with .chrome
fenders, and bears license No.
GH 65. The Hona is green with
chrome fenders and has '72
lags.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, May 16
Walt Disney's

SONG OF THE SOUTH
ITechnicolor)
AII-Otrtoon feature .

" G"

Disney Cartoons :
Pluto's Kid Brother
Tea( hers are People
Figaro &amp; Frankie
.
Adults: SI.SO Children: 75c

SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Wednesdo.y &amp; Thursdoy
May 17-18
NOT OPEN

MASON DRIVE-IN
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ToniHhl, May i6
Oouble Fhture Program
TWO-LANE
BLACKTOP
( Technicolo r)
Ja mes Taylor

Warren Oates ·

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Laurl Bird

- Pius"TAKING OFF "
I Co Iori
Lynn Carlin
Buck Henry

I Rl

IRl
Wed. -Thur.-Frl.
May 17-18-19
Double Feature Program

THE PANIC IN
NEEDLE PARK
(Color)
AI Paclno
and Kitty Winn I R I
- PLU ~

SEVEN
MINUTES

THE

(Co lor )

Wayne Maunder
Mar ianne M cAndrew

I R)

(Continued from page I )
for that." .She was surrounded
hy Wallace's four children by
his first wHe as she spoke.
The shooting brought dismay
and revulsion from ~ President
Nixon and from Wallace's
pOlitical rivals and his friends.
On ·Nixon's orders, the Secret
Service started protecting two
minor . candidates for the
Democratic presidential
nomination which Wallace was
seeking after winning 10
m!Uion votes as an independent
.in 1968. Agenis hurried to guard Rep.
Wilbur D. Mills, D-Ark., and
Rep. Shirley Chisholm, D-N.Y.,
as well as a non-(:andidate,
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy,
whose own political future felt
the r~coil of the four or five
bullets pumped at close range
intq Wallace 's belly and chest.
A Secret Servic.e agent
wounded with Wallace,
Nicholas Zarvos of the Atlanta
bureau , underwent neck
surgery. Abullet was removed
from his left jaw. Awoman and
an Alabama state trooper, also
wounded, were treated and
released. ·
An instant af~ the shots
rang out, poUce.and the crowd
seized and roughed up Breiner.
Police hurled him into a
cruiser. He was wearing a red,
white and blue outfit and
Wallace bultllns.
Witnesses said Wallace had
finished speaking and mixed
with the crowd, shedding his
jacket in the warm sunshine.
Smiling, shaking hands, he
turned to the -right, then to the
len, respOnding lo a . shout :
"George, governor! Come over
and shake hands with me!"
"! saw him shot in the gut
and he fell straight back," said
Jeff Gines, 15, just 15 feet
away. "There were four shots,
I think."
Governor till Conscious
Cornelia, sobbing, threw her·
seH on the governor, who was
sprawled on the pavement,
conscious but still. Blood
splotched her yellow dress-a
reminder of Jacqueline Kennedy 's embrace of her dying

Homer C. Belt Died on Monday

LONG BO'ITOM - Homer C. Anna Beni2Belt, Long Bottom ;
Belt, 84, Long Bottom Rt. 1, two da~ghters, · Blondena
died Monday evening at Johnson, Charleston, W. Va:,
Veterans Memorial Ho!l(lital. and Wanela Bell, Arlington,
He was born Feb. 28, 1888, the - .Va.; four sons, Homer W. Belt,
son of the late Challenge A. and Calvin W. Bell, John Rolfe Belt
Lauretla Arnold Bell. He was and La Von Belt, all of AUanta,
also preceded in death by a Ga.; two step-sons, Garland W.
sister, Maude Davis.
Milhoan · aitd Wayne Lee
He was a member of Hebron Milhoan, both of Akron; a
Methodist Church and Masonic brother, C. Smith Belt,
Lodge at Spencer, W. Va .
Spencer, and a sister, Sallie
He is survived by ·his wife, Snider, Mt. Gilead; 12 grandchildren, numerous stepgrandchildren and great·
TWO SENTENCED
grandchildren, and several .
Janice Goff and Joe Year· nieces and nephews.
wood, charged -with possession
FW!eral services will be held
of drugs were taken before Thursday at 10:30 a.m. at the
Judge :John C. Bacon Monday Vandal Funeral Home at
on bill of information prepared Spencer, W. Va. Friends may
by Prosecuting Attorney call at Ewing Funeral Home
Bernard Full2 . Golf was given thill afternoon and evening.
a 20 day jail sentence which The body will lie in state at the
was suspended. She paid $300 fWJeral home after I p.m. ·
and costs and was placed on Wednesday. Burial will be in
probation . Yearwood was Hebron Cemetery.
sentenced to one year in the
Cincinnati Workhouse, which
also was suspended. He paid Rex Burson of
$500 and costs and was pillced
Shade is Dead
on probation:
Rex Burson, 73, Pratts Fork,
husband nearly nine years ago. Rt. I, Shade, died Monday
Palmer N. Baken, special
Its inunediate political im· morning at MoWJ t Carmel
Hospital,
Colulnbus.
agent
in charge, .FBI Office,
pact ln .\972 politics, o~ers
Mr. BuriiOn was the son of the Cincinnati, revealed today that
thought, was \0 rtmove for the
late
Rodolph and Bertha Grim James Refford Reynolds, 36,
surviving Kennedy brother,
Burson
. He was also preceded Decatur, Ill ., formerly of
Edward, any lingering temPtation to accept his party's in death by an infant sister nnd Vinton, was c'onvicted May 9
after a jury trial for the May
nomination for the presidency two infant tirothers.
.
Mr.
Burson,
bbrn
in
Athens
18, 1971 armed robbery of the
this year. It is the big bloc of
CoWJ
ty,
Vias
a
retired
mail
Vinton
Bank.
,
Wallace delegates- third
carrier
·out
of
the
Shade
Post
Federal
Judge
Joseph
P.
behind McGovern and Hum·
phrey- which could help Olfice 48 years. He was a Kinneary in U.S. District
create the deadlock . which member of the Harrisonville Court, sentenced Reynolds to a
would cause the convention to Masonic Lodge and of the 15 year term to a federal pen.
Rural
Letter
Carriers Judge Kinneary noted that
turn to Kennedy.
Association
.
with good behavior Reynolds
Charles ~der, Wallace's
He
js
survived
by
his
wife,
night be considered for release
national campaign director,
was asked at the hospital if the Gladys Smith Burson; a sister, in five years.
governor remained a can·. Mrs: Rowland (Helen) Dais, Wendell Emory · of J«:,tson,
didate. "He certainly is," he Pomeroy, . Rt. 2; three Ky ., had previously' been
brothers, Ralph, Burling\.am; sentenced to 10 years in prison
said.
Claire
, Pratts Fork, and for his part in the Vinton Bank
Camp, Wallace's press
Frank,
Rl. I, Shade.
robbery. A third man, Dennis
secretary, said, "The governor
FW!eral services will be Clarence Wilson, alias Ronald
will continue ... I say he ex·
peels to win in Maryland and Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at David Warix, is sought in
Michigan ." He said Wallace Jagers and Son FWJeral Home, connection with the robbery. A
would continue in other Athens, with the Rev. Herbert total of $2,573 was taken in the ·
primaries. "He will campaign Harris officiating. Burial will robbery. .
from a wheelchair if be in Burson Cemetery.
DIVORCE ASKED
Friends may call at the funeral
necessary."
One
suit for divorce has been
home any time.
Pbyslclan Dispatched
filed in Meigs County Common
· Nixon dispatcbed the depuly
Pleas Court and two others
White House physician to Holy
were granted. Ernest W.
Cross Hospital in Silver Spring,
Davidson, Pomeroy, filed suit
and announced the assassination attempt to a crowd of 800
against Clara Davidson,
Clearwater, Fla ., charging
gathered for the reopening of
Mrs:
Olive
M.
Beyler,
59,
gross
neglect of duty _and ex·
renovated portions of the White
North Fort Myers, tla., for- treme~ruelty . James L. Dailey
House.
Wallace's rivals in the two merly of Meigs and Athens was granted a divorce from
primaries, Hubert H. Hum· CoW!ties, died Sunday at Lee Gloria Jean ·Dailey and Velma
phrey and George S.
Hospital in Fort
McGovern, halted their Memorial
Myers.
campaigns. McGovern asked
Mrs. Beyler was the
for "a prayer lor the gover· daughter of the late William
nor's recovery and the healing aild Ada Ross Kephart. She
of our nation."
was a member of the Orange
Humphrey, shaken, rushed Chris tian Church and : an
to the hospital and to .Mrs. employe of the Lee Memorial
Wallace's side.
Hospilal the past five years.
"She is showing great seHShe is survived by her
control,"hesald. "I h9pe I was husband, Willard R.; two
ahle to comfort her. I put my daughters, Mrs, . Robert
arm around her and we talked (Shirley) Boggs, Coolville, and
of their children and our Mrs. Robert (Janet) Robinson,
children."
Belpre ; three brothers, Lyle
Two telephone bomb threats Kephart, Laverne, Calif.;
were received at th,e hospital Wllllam Kephart of Euclid, and
where Zarvos, the wouilded Ronnie Kephart of Penn:
Secret Service agent, was sylvania ; two sisters, Mrs.
treated. No bomb was found. Minnie Flagle and Mrs. Ethel
Officials said they believed the Miller, both of Hollywood, Fla.,
threats came from persons and four grandchildren . A
whO mistakenly thought the brother, Therman Kephart,
shooting susjlect was in the preceded her In death.
·same hpspital.
FWleral services will be held
a:t 2 p.m. Friday at the White
Fimeral Home in Coolville )lith
.
the Rev. James ~senberry
, THE .
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officiating. Burial will be in the
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' Coolville Cemetery. Friends
~~~
may call at the funeral home
anytime alter noon Thursday.

Reynolds Goes
To Pen for

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VISIT ELBERFELDS WARDIOUSE ON
~PJJS - UNOI "IM·-

WGS '~I.MN MOlds-

with its own
. built,.in cushion! (TORO) and (LAWN BOY)

ALL AT SALE PRICES
AT THE WAREHOUSl

Olive Beyler
Dies in South

TIMES

""ongoleu·m•
Ll

by

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ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY·
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~Am:b:u~rg~e~y..:o:ne~f:ro:m:.:Jim:!::::::::::::::,:::~:=::::::::~

HAVE
CHR06ED

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More and more women are using personal checking accounts in today's mod-

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they

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Come in today a ·n d open one.

Port1blt W1shtrs &amp;
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litbenS /4atiONJI PIT~RCH
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MEIGS INN

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LOST AND FOUND
LOST on upper Ludlnil Creek
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plate on collar . Reward :
Phone 742·3262 or m -2709.
S-16-Jtc

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Console Stereo · .
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Ali' Condltlontn

Refrlgentors ·
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ROOMS ·

·Day, Wtek,·Month '

"AI D.DLE PORT. OH 10
Member Federa' J.lell'll'" uis~~~:r.-..,_,~

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Only Frlgkhllre.
Makes Frlgklllrt

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Furnllvrt with

The P1tent.ct

Uft.tlmt spring

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VOL. XXIV NO. 23
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POMEROY·MIODLEPORT, OHIO

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WEDNESDAY ..MAY 17,' 1972

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SILVER SPRING (UP!)
- George Wallace was
allowed to read newspaper
accounta today of bla big
doubleheader election victory
willie bouncing back from an

assalllinatloo attempt.
While still paralyzed ~m
the waist down -POuibly a
permanent .condition u a
reault of ooe of four bullet
wounds received Monday

afternoon at Laurel, Md.,
Wallace was taken off the
crtlcal list at Holy Cross
Hospital.
Th,e director of Wallace's
national campaign for the

Democratic presidential
nominatiOn, Charles Snider,
, said the 5:1.-year~ld Alabama
governor was alert this mor·
ning 851d .one of the first things
he asked for waa a neWip8pei".
He had been infonned late
Tuesday night that he had won

Wallace's spinal cord had been 1o the operation team" that
severed by a bullet still lodged performed five hours of
in his spinal column.
8\R'gery on Wallace Monday
''Atthlstime, despite reports _ night that it would be a miracle
lo the contrary, the exact . If Wallace ever walked again.
nature of injuries lo the spinal
Alabama Docton Arrive
cord . cannot be detennined
A spokesman for WaUace
untll surgery ta performed,"
Dr. Joseph F. Schanno said. 1
"The para!~ of bla lesa
margins, anil he' was pehnltted remains unchanged.":
Schanno had said earlier that
Wallace was paralyzed from
the waist down hy a bullet
Panlylls Unchanged
lodged at the bilse of his spinal
The head of the medical colwnn; The doctors have said
team caring for Wallace denied the paralysis could · be pertoday a report by The manent.
RACINE - Dr. Alphus_R.
Washington
Post
that The Post quoted "sources close
Christensen, president •of Rio
Grande College, will deliver
the commencement address _to
Southern High School seniors
here at 8 p.m. Sunday. ,
Introducing Dr. Christensen
will be Doug Rees·, president of
the graduating class. candy
Hoback ·will deliver a
salutatory 'llddress with
Memorial Day services and will form at 9:30 a.m. on the Loretta Middleswarl giving the
plans for the annual parade upper parking lot in Pomeroy, valedictory address.
Bill Cornell, a class mell)ber,
bere were made by Drew and move at 10 a.m .,
will
give the invocation and
Webster Post 39, American proceeding through town to
John
Eichinger, also a senior,
Legion, Tuesday night.
Butternut Ave., out Butternut
SUnday, May 28, members to Brick St., then onto will give the benediction.
will meet at the post home at 9 Mulberry Ave. and to Beech Providing the music will be the
high 8chool band. ·
a .m. prior to services at Grove Cemetery.
Dr. Christensen will use "We
HemlOck Grove at 10 a.m.
Following services at Beech
Have
Met the Enemy and They
Upon returning, they will atop Grove, the firing squad will go
at Rock Springs cemetery for a to the CathoUc Cemetery to are Us" as the topic of his
salute to the dead at ap- conduct services. In the af. address.
Dr. Christensen
was
proximately 11:30 a.m.
'
ternoon it will take part in
inaugurated as the 12th
Monday, May 29, the parade · (Continued on Page 8) .
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Will Speak at',Eastern
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II)' Uded Prell llllerutloall
PARI8 - 'l1IE VNli'ED STA'ID AND SOUTH VIETNAM '
today Informed the Cooununtat Vletn11118111 that they refused lo
return ~e P11ril Cllllference table blcauae Hanoillld the Viet
Cong llUll refUie to necotlate aerloql)y. 'nit North Vlem.•d Viet Con&amp; demanded Tueaday thlt the U. S. and So~
V!elnlmne delegationl~gree to reiUIIIe the llalled peace tallll
Thinday. The United Slates promptly refuled.
.
EJplainlng their refulal in an aide-memoin delivered to the
Cooununtat delegatlolll tod!ly with coplea .to nf!WI media, the
Wublngton aDCI 81118on delecatlonl uld, "No useful purpoae
would be ll!rVed In holding a plenary mMiintl merelyfor the lake
of conUnulna what you have tranllormed Into an empty ritual.
Therefore we do. not agree to meet May 18. It takea two to
negoliate. When yuu are ready lo do 10, you will find u ready, as
we haw been lhroiJI(Iout the put four ,ean," the announcemll)t
uld.

Molcow.
Nlmn wu expected to renll!n at tiJe mountain hideaway
111111 'lbundiY or Friday. Win 14!1vq the capital Tuesday
nlllit the Prelldeat met with Cardinal Jabn Krol!l Pbllldelpbla,
.. ap111 oo Polilll hlltar7, wbo briefed hlm In prepllatlon for
bii!Up In Poland 1ft« thelloa:uw umnlt meetlnp.

OOUJMBUB-'IUOiUOauPur.mCOURT!Odayupheld
the fit&amp; Jle8rae ~ eGIIYicllon of Sllmuell Edgell, 11,
ul"m•und Ill"- llu lbt dlle ~e lito be aiCIIIed.
'Die bl&amp;b court rljlded 1111 ·IJIPIII bJ EdleR thal a tape
1 ~ . .lantri lballd aat 111ft t...llltrodaeed u evidence
blca• tile evldMice, ''aplrt
lilt tlpe ~ • .,. 10
ova 11,."1"' lblli bla Clba9klllaD Will lllnllllllt beJODd a
rffweNe daabt·" 1111111 wu cDMcted ill the lllyiD&amp; of

rn.

. . . . ._. . In Naill!~-

,

1

DOI1Gift'Y

• I

superintendent of electrical
operations at Lima in 1957. Mr.
Doughty bils served as T&amp;D ·
manager at Canton since
September, 1961.
While in the Navy during
World War II, Mr. Doughty
was a lieutenant and asalslant
ordnance planning officer at
Pearl Harbor.
Mr. Doughty ill a member of
the United Methodist Church,
Free and Accepted Masons,
Scottish Rite, Institute of
Electrical and Electronics
Engineers and the Oh)o Society
of Professional Engineers. In
conjuncUon with the lnsUtute
of Electrical and Electronics
Engineers, Mr. Doughty is a
member of the Engineering
Management Group and is a
pasl chairman of the Power
Group.
•,
Mr. DoughtY Ia the lOll of the
late Herbert C. ·Doughty, Sr.,
who retired in 1941 as manager
of Ohio Power Company's
. f~rmer Ohio Valley ·Division at
Portamouth.

ist

quoted one of the surgeons as
saying ''There is no truth" to
the report.
Two Alabama doct\11'8 wbo
flew here to aid in Wallace's
treatment Insisted that no one
knows yet about the splnlll

damage pAnding a second
operation sometime later.
Snider said today, "There is
no Indication of damage to the
spinal colunm . At the same
time, we don't know of any
(Continued on page 12)

Southern ~gh, Seniors
To Hear Rio President

~~v:~~r.nm~or:~~

Legion Announces
Services, ·Parade

IIEIIBERT

..

TEN CENTS

....,..rillea

•
p
Doughty o f Oh10 ower ~~~~~:r't::nw~~~~;
•

PHONE 992-2156

• •

ace .

ov.

TIIUIIMONT, MD.- PRESIDENT NIXON waa In ·~ecllllion
It c.mp David today, relllq -~ ~Saturday's departure lor

12.1 C~. Ft. Rtfrlttrltot
56" frHztr - 28" wide

Sine• 1909

FR IG.IDAI R'E

'

ADMIRAL

CltiR·

SP.EED QUEEN r::~tn.

ern society. It makes her bookkeeping

.

Rabies Clinic
Fairgrounds'
County Garage
1-4 pm, May 20

Devoted To The lft/ere~IJ Of The Meig,·Mason Area

~

NYLON RUG SALE

•

at y

Clear tonight with lows
generally 50-55. Thursday
sunny and warmer. High in the
70s to around 80 southwest.

INew;'
. :':.in. . . . .Briefi
. .. .

OVAL BRAIDED RUGS ·
(ALL SIZES)
OUR '88.00 12 FOOT WIDE

Harrisonville . Individualized teaching, use of learning
materials, non-graded systems, team teaching, opportunities for
in&lt;fependentlearning are among the topics to be discussed.
Following the discussion periods and the question and answer period with the resource people (schoor administrative
personnel and teachers), a citizen ·opinion survey form yill be
ACCOUNT ABILITY -Mrs. William Swisher, MiddlepOrt. A distributed. No identtlying information will be contained on ·any
general discussion on wbether the schools are accomplishing of the surVey forms which will be collected by the discussion
what thea are supposed to accomplish, who is accountable for :- leaders and deposited in a central location for tabulation by Mrs.
what, teacher evaluation ils the basis for salary increases and Mitch and Mrs. Vaughan.
The opinlonnalres contain statements which are answered
more effective spending of the tax dollar.
by
circling
a number liodicating strongly agree, agree, unFINANCE- Mrs. Harold Lohse, District 16 director of the
Ohio PI'A. Discussion lo involve the property tax dollar, th~ state - decitled, disagree, and strongly disagree.
Each PI'Aunit In the district has been asked to have at least
income tax, distribution of monies from the State, and the
10 members present. AU organizations interested In what takes
equitable use of tax dollar$.
place
in the Meigs Local Schools are asked lo send represenCURRICULUM - MI'IJ. Bob Hoeflich, Pomeroy . Both
tatives
to the public meeting, and students 16 or over are invited
elementary and secondary curriculum to be included in the
discul!sion, alon'g With special services and instructional to participate in the "Search for Consensus."
AcompOsite will be made of the answers to the survey form
techniques aimed at overcoming learning difficulties, the Right
to Read effort, and new areas of study such as ecology, drug as well 8s recommendations from each group for evaluation by
the State Department of Education. ln this way wiih information·
educatioo, and expanded courses in the fine arta.
·
BUILDING FACR.JriES - Mrs. Robert Dugan, Salem coming in from every section of the state, an effort will be made
Center. Discussion will include utilization of existing buildings, to ·determine the adequacy of the school system.
Information will be returned to the local level iJ! the fall and at
maldng the maximum use of the taxpayer's dollar by using the
time Meigs L9C8l School officials will be given the opthat
OOildings year roUIIII and evening to serve the needs of the total
pOrtunity to conalder the adequacies and inadequacies of the
community.
system
and to set up goals for implementation .
INSTRUCTION~ METHODS- Mrs. Charles Barrett, Jr.,
STUDENT RIGHTS AND RESPONSIBR.Jr!ES - · Mrs.
Richard Vaughan, MiddlepOrt. This group aill discuss individual
responsibilities of studenlil, their decisions on curriculum and
conduct, . discipline 'probii!DIS, the question of the value of
education and its relevance as seen by students, etc.

•

W~er

Herbert C. Doughty, trans- Electric Power System public
mission and distribution utility executive course
manager of The Ohio Power ~onducted in 1957 at
Co., whose headquartera are in Georgia Tech and of
Canton, will be speaker for the · llie AEP Advanced Man15th annual commencement to agement Course at the
be held at 8 p.m. Sunday at University or Michigan in 1968.
Eastern High School.
· Mr. Doughty worked for Ohio
Earl)' this year Mr. Doughty Power las a line crew employee
was presented an honorary from 19'!1-33, then became a
doctor 01 engineering degree meter tester In 1934 ai Uma.
by his alma mater, Ohio He was promoted to engineer ·
Northern University .
distribution at Canton in 1935;
Born at AtlanUc City, N.J., served in the Navy from 194:1\'lov. 28,1910, Mr. Doughty was 45, then returned to Canlpn late
graduated from 'Brown High in 1945 as an engineer (sr.)School at Cambridge, Ohio, in distribution.
1929, then earned hla bachelor
of science degree In electrical
He moved to Lima in 1947 aa
engineering from Ohio Nor· · division distribution
them University in 1934. He ta a superintendent and was
graduate of the American promoted
to
division

PORat, LAWN AND
PATIO FURNITURE
(UDYD) •
(JOHN HANCOCK
(REDWooD) ·
(TELESCOPE) •
AND (LAWNUTE)

THE Nd-WAX SHINYL VINYL FLOOR

'

.

.

MEOIANIC STREET IN POMEROY

15 Year Hitch

join the groupa for a ·question am anawer period regarding
speCial'problens. The resource people will not be present for the
genel-al discussion, according to Mrs. Gene Mitch of Pomeroy,
and Mrs. Richard Vaughan of MiddlepOrt, project cbalrmen. The
two have worked with Supt. George Hargraves in developing the
plan to lie carried out at th~ pUblic meeUng.
The discussion lopica and the leaders are:
PERSONNEL - Mrs. Manning Kloes, representing the
r;Jradbury School. This will involve dtacuaslon in such areas as
teacher performance .and periodic evaluation of that per·
formance, educatioruil requirements,' continuing education,
rapport with students and responsiveness 1o individual needs.
SCHOOL-COMMUNITY liEuTIONS - Mrs. Gene Mitch,
PDmeniyEiementary School. Discussion on confidence or lack ol
It In American education, involvement of citizens, effective twoway now of communication, and the role of the schOQl board. '
EDUCATIONAL ORGANIZATION - Mrs. William
Ohlinger, Salisbury Elementary School. Involves school district
boomdary lines and redistricting, the need for increased com·
miDllty control of the schools, reorganization of school district,
change from a 9toa 12monthschoolprogram.
EQUAL EDUCATIONAL' OPPORTUNITY - Mrs. Larry
·Edwards, Rutland. Discussion to · deal with equality of
educational opportomlty, the disadvantaged child, adult
education, and the physically and men.taUy handicapped child,
and the willingness of tbe community to take on extra taxes to ·
provide handicapped classes.

president of Rio Grande
College in 1963. Under his
leadership, lhe college's
enrollment has increased 100
pet. to its present size of 750
students.
During the past nine years
Rio Grande College has added
seven new buildings, including
a physical education building,
library , dining hall, three
dormitories and a married
housing complex to its campus.
Under Dr. Christensen's
guidance the coUe~e received
accreditation by the North
Central Association of CoJ!eges
and Secondary Schools.
A graduate of South Dakota
State
University,
Dr.
Christensen also attended
Augultana College, Sioux
Falls, · South Dakota. He
(Continued on page 12)

DR. CHRISTENSEN

·Schuck to Otair Red Cross

Robert Schuck, 147 So. Third, ' Minutes of the last annual
Mlddlepori, was named meeting were read by Mrs.
chairman of the Meigs County Juanita Sayre, the financial
Chapter of the American Red report showing a balarice of
Croaa at the chapter's annual $983.68 as of May I was given
meeting Monday night al by Mrs. Alwilda Werner.
Veterans Memorial Hospital Bill Fetty, water safety
presided over by Larry Baker, chairman, reported that in the
acllng vlcKhairman.
past year 93 certificates were
Other newljr elected board issued for completion of Red
memben for three year terms Cross courses. Other courses
are Norman . Weber, Naomi given were crawfish and
London, AlwUd!l Werner, C. E. beginner 1, 2, 3, in which 133
Blakeslee, Calvin Simpson, were enrolled, and 33 standard •
Donald Diener, Charles certificates.
Glockner, Harlett Neigler, 'The report of the blood '
Ju!IJiita Sayre, Lula Hampton, ·:program chairman, Ver~on into the armed services while
approved resolutions of
Pam .TheLia, Mary Kautz, Jane Nease, who was absent was thus far in 1972 only six bave
conunendation for Mrs. Sara
Rupe and Mrs. Gladys Major
Graham· ·l !ld Rob4rt Schuck." submitled showing 519 donor• been Inducted from Meigs
.CoiDlty.
who are retiring at the end of
• lt was reported that there
this school year. The clerk was
were no local "disasters." The
RUTLAND - Kim Birch· directed to send copies of these
1972fund drive showedreceiplil , field , Rutland, escaped oa:!tbout re110lutlona to the two teachers
of $1,2M.45. Mr. and Mr~. Will ,injury Tuesday when lite pony . !l"dtorecordthenl in !he board
.
Cundiff were the co,chairmen she was, rldlng thew her ~I minutes. •
Leslie F. Fultz, ·High ~-.
Other officers of the· and (llenn TUrner, Rt. 4, for the March fund drive.
with a car approaching.
The boaril appolnled the ·
Pomeroy, was re-elected execuUve committee 5l8llled Albany, were appointed
AI Justus; Red Croas area
The Meigs County Sheriff's foU~ng teac~. Richard
ctulinnan .of the Meigs County were
Robert
Clark, membera of the ,cenlnli and represent,tlve from the Dept. said Bobb)' Joe Rath- Sweet,
to
Middleport
Republican executive c?m· HartllanVIIIe, vtce ' cbaltman; necutlve clllunltleel lo IIU Columbus Division office, buril, Rutland, was travellric elementary; 1t!ln Tara
mlttee at a blen•lal Mn. lllllabetb Hobalelter, vacancies exlallng In Pomeroy spoke brief!)' on the im· north on the New Uma Road, Palmer, of VInton Cowlty,
. organllatloo ,meeling Tueaday Rulill!d, aemtary, and Mrs. fourth ward and Dyeav!Ue parlance and value of having a In • 11180 Oldamoblll when French and Ellllliah ; David
evening In the Pomeroy Evlll'l! Clark, romeroy, precincts.
. division office In Colwnbua approichlng on the right Bide' J e n kIn 1 , MIddleport , ·
municipal building.
lreaaui'er. Offlcen of ihe
serving local chapters.
were 1wo y.oungsters on'ponles, mathematics, and Delmar
The Ohio Reviaed Code cenlrai committee elected HarryHill,Rt.2, Racine, and
An invitalion was eatendeil ·and on the left llide was Kim Haynes, Jackson, physical .,
PfOICrlbee that pari)' "con- , ~ Daallld Calllnl, Pomeroy, Larry Young, Tuppers Plains, !D all willing to asal.lt the Red Birchfield·riding a pony. Mia science and rnathernatica.
·
lrolllllfl" . committees muat cllilnnlnr ~ KIGpp, ~. I, were welcomed as newly Cross pro1ram. The nett Bircbfilld'a pony Jumped aa
The board Po authorized ·
Ol'laillae wltb!il , 15 4aya lllc:llet Yk:l ~ .and elected members of the meeUng.W be held June 1, at. the car approached, throwing adverlilements to aucUon off ·
foDowiJiil lVIII-~ primary ' Mrt. llellllltla'.-.llry:
,...'Rittee 'from L$rt and 7:30 p.m. In the cafe!et'la at . jts rldar 1o the p-ound. Rail!- the olcl Coalport. School '
elecUCIIII.
Mn, Podit.lflltl, P,tjmn oy, Tujlpln Plains precincts.
Ve~ Menn-lal Holpltal. burn rnanapd to avoid her.
property,'
~ .

Rider Escapes
lnJ'ury in Fall

Fultz to Lead GOP _Again
'

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•,

' __
2- ~Daily Sentinel, Middleport~-PIWor!Hmeri'.AIWIOV~•.OWI..IIIIIMa-y.17••J972-IIIIAIIIII!IM!IIIIII_ _ _ _
11111

The IWy Sentillll

"P¥NWP 7 . 1

INTEli'EST"OF
MEIGS·MASOII! ARE,A

CHESTER L, TANNEHILL·,

Enc . Ed.

ROlE AT HOEFLICH.

Us. • •

CitY' Edt lOr
PUtJi i"Shed doJily ucrpl
Saturday bY Tht Oh io vallty
Publith in; Company . 111

Sy Helen Bottd

Pom,roy , Ohio,
.cS7,9 . 8 ~Jsiness Offict Phone •
Court

St .,

SHABBY SOLtmON TO A PIIORI.F.M
Dear Helen :
l've.read that a girl can ~el "" 1lllll'h as $5.1100 fur" ,..,.,..~1 .
newborn white baby, if she finds a ""'Jilt• wl•• wan~' '""' .b:l!l
enough. It'' a good busim•ss.
· I wouldn't mind bein~ p~ r,•. that ki••l uf t'JL&lt;h. l'h•a.St· givt•
my name and address (41 11&lt;"1~&lt;' whuil'l'ik lluol th&lt;')' 'rt• th"''•-ra~•
to aQopl butcan'tfind a.baby . WAN'I'INt: TO 111-:1.1'
· Dear. W.T .H. :
NO !!,!
What you
,. sn~tlt-1 is illt•!-!oll. innm•ral mwl fallt,.in~ . - H.

H:l 21S6. Ed itorial Phone 992

ll ~7 .

Second CIIU po'Stage pa ;d ' '
· Pomeroy . Ohio.
Nat iona l advert•sing

repreu.,tative

.BOtt inell i·

Gllllagher . Inc . • 12 Eail i2nd
Sl ., New Yor k Cily , New Vork.

Subscription

rates :

De

liv trec:J try carrier where '
IVaiJable SO nnts . per we:ek ;
Bv Motor Route whtre carr ier
serv ice no.! available : One

~-.

BY JACK O'llliAN
HF. .il.urrs RF.D CARPEl' 1
'nlP'.ATMDIT
NP.W YORK ('IG'S~ •• !loles ill l!dwy.
mu.&lt;i&lt;':el&lt; ~~;,V., lx.'&lt;lll clu.'&lt;ive for John llaiU who
st.o1rn~l so hrilli:anlly in U.c ur!~inal "CaroUNCI''
hit. S.i ·"~"' ~··k u••, weal ~~.... " flam,.,.,.skin hit'"' l&lt;iur. 1'hc '""llal:t'IJICnl l(iVCII
.kolmtl•·bt..ttlres•&lt;i~rt•••to,propcrtopbilling,
anyUii~ 1"' w:mL&lt;.. 'l11e

u,.,

producer - John Ita ill.

11M• 1\.'lllor 'lbeillcr t'llllt'd its. revival run of
t:1'illt'&lt;l ''Ten Cooumendmcnts': - and

Plall had a $$,000 to
$'1,510 top price .on .:ts and the St. ReP
Ma~'IQIICUe, $$,000; lhllt'a not a mucb as a

current

.

'

IJIIe

Music Fair 800w.

unay of the Jackal" authot Frederitk

l'orsyth just finil1hed anollier, "The OdeMa
t,le," due next fall froni .VillinK, whaoe
. _ ~elddcnt, Torn Guindlerfl, i~ irate at aN. Y,.
publishing combine lhat ltied to hlislle It away
Irum hill linn.,. Newly elected bookiiUbllshers'
Pres. Hobert H«lllllein can'•t understand ~y
lhc annual book aw~nfi aren 'I oo TV:'" About·a
year ,ago when I turned on TV I found I was
watching the Pal!ly Awards. They're for the
Best Animal Actor oflhe Year! Wben I~
dlairman of the Associalioo of Amerh:an
Publishers, I intend to telephone the best animal
actor and ask him how he got on."
'
The mulli-Tooy Awards to "Follies" lilted
lhat longrun musical's gross almost $17,000 last
week ... Peter Fa1k fielded 81\ IUiexpeeted fmal
line In "Priaoner of 2hd Ave." when he readied
into the set's hall cl01et' to pun out a shovel as
called f~· In the Nell Simon plax.,scripi. No
shovel. Falk made a list and annoWICeil to the
~udll!!lce, "I hllve a shoVel in my hand.' ' ~
audience, always delighted to be ''Ill" on such a
gambit, roared approval.
·
The Rod McKuen Carnegie Han concert
wu enlivened when the loudspeakers carrying
Rod's show: suddeiiJy picked up aN. Y. Meta
baseball game. &amp;Jrreal ... :Upcoming TV shows,
Variety reporta, will have bomoeexual COO!edy,
dangling-wrbt joki!S. In a summer network
situalioo cunedy· aeries, "Corner Bar," an
exaggeratedly swilhlng character will complain about the sad trend in N. Y. parties,
"loaded wllh weirdoe .- all m8rrled couples."
... ABC veep Michllel El$ner said IIO&amp;P opera
illll't what Is llled to be. Now, be sa,_, "John
loves Mary who loves Bruce - wbo .may love
Jolm ." .
.
It wu a rainy off.rught at all midtown
restauranta, 110 Gold Coin owner Bill Otan and
Pen &amp; Pencil proprietor John Bruno walked
over to Danny Slradella's Hideaway and advised Danny: "Our joints are 10 packed we
hllven't even a table for ourselves to have
dinner." Looking around at the snow-blinding
tableclotl18, Bill Chan added, "Can you take

in this year's Vanderbilt
17
NOKTII
Cup. Jacqui Mitchell or New
6654 .
York opened the q~n of
¥KJ5J
clubs
but Mary Jane. F~rell
,
• AKH
of Los Angeles, the world's
•rH
leading woman bridge playWf.ST
t:.4.ST
er, covered with the king.
6KJII17:1
.H2
South had to win lbe t!'!ck.
¥A
¥76 2
Later on when Jac&lt;jUI got
•111r.5 :1
.J7,2
in with the trump ace she
.QH
.K 10H o3
led the nine or clubs. Mary
SUVTII mr
Jane covered with the 10 and
• oHI!l
had obtained the ·lead. She
¥QI09 X4
fired a wade and w h i I t ·
.Q94
· Soutl\·,played lbe nine it did
'Ali
him no goOd. Jacqu1 got out
Nm1t: v.ulncrttblc
. , with the jack of club:f" and
· Wt!sl Nurth •:a~t · s.,uth
waited for her second spade
I¥ . trick.
·
I•
:1.
Pcas!i 4¥
(NEWSPAPER INTilPa1Sl ASSN.)
Pa.'i.o;

~~~~~·~•I t~•c,~~:ntc'~/1 NAT~ 1$rAL
''~: tr:r~:;~
barred- OS '"'··' 'I ".~ lien upon
eslate 01 so ld
Ihis 131h do yo of May
JoM c . Sa&lt;on
Judge of tn .. Probole Co uri
1
(5) 11, 24, 2tMeigs coun Y· Ohio

'' ''
OhNIEHlBtoWARK ,0h Io (UP!) :-The
1 1Society will de0
rca
dlcateanaturetra11May28designed for the blind and disabled at the Flint Ridge State Memoria!. The paved trail hu
sli!Jis in braille and will accomadate wheel dlairs.

''UPGRADE PROORAIIf' · ' ·· hr,oug~l
COLUMBL3 (UP!) .- ,The
Ohio Bureau of Ernployl'ilent
Services has inaugurated an
employe upgrading program,
giving 100 workers the chance
to learn enough to assume
more r"""""sible
jobs in their
""r'"
field.

by 'hie plaintiff; on
their own behalf and on bebalf
Ql all other properly owners
throughout. the 'state of Ohio.
The suit names Governor
John J. Gilligan, Stale Auditor
Joseph T. Ferguson, State
Treasurer Gertrude w.
Donahey,Slale Superintendent ·

dispariUes·'Or inequities In tl)e
present Property Tax. As an
example, the average farmer
is paying an amounl equal 'to
approlimalely 27pcl. of his net
income in property taxes.
There also exisls many
inequities for other individuals·
and sectors of our economy.

.n.v·Oswald &amp;

North's holding is a bare
minimum lor a limit jump
raise to three hearts . He has
11 high-card points but his
distribution is that most unattractive 4·3·3·3. '
'
South has no problem with
the play. of the hand after
W e s t opens the queen of
clubs and East signals comeon with the eight. He sees
that he ·rriust keep East out
of the lead and just lets West
hold the trick . West contlnues clubs. South wins and
leads a trump. West takes
his ace and leads a third
club which South ruffs. South
draws the rest of the
trumps ; cashes the dia,
monds while .making sure to
take the last one in dummy ;
leads a spade and· sticks in
the nine. West wins and is
caught in an end play. He
must either lead from the
king of spades or give South
a ruff and discard .
Strangely enough this con- ·
.tract can be beaten and actually was in an early match

STOKELY .

.

3 ,'

"I he Stnre With A. Heart

BARTLETT PEARS..............................., cans $ :
HUNT'S PEACHES.....................~ ..........3 ":~~ 1
MH~~PR~
~· ·
FAVORITE BREAD............................... 5 • 1

',

You. WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantittt.
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food S~mps

Prices Effective

May 10.17

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
saturday 9 to 9

CLOSED SUNDAYS

I '

STANDARD PAC~

..

TOMATOES.......................................
REG~ 69' DEL MONTE

.llrlf

RJUiEHif.R'S-

CRYSTALS
lrfCIII I'II!Cf
llfl1t 1'1!IS CDU191

99~

•K •K •54

..
~· Schaus

"3'

SPECIAL MONEY-SAVER

'

•

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are Sens

N. 2nd

·

FAIRMONT

PORK
CHOP·
s
.
.

.

C.

BUTTERMILK

FRENCH CITY

Lean
Center
Cuts

..

,

•..

FRESH, TASTY

USDA. CHOICE

,.

'lb.

Salel YELLOW ON

19'

'~::J.:~~~~~. . . . 20 ~,, 89~
REAL IIICE FRESH

.

.... ......:.....•....~

~~ ~

I

'

.,

'

"but thai's Pete. He's always
thinking of something."
" If our pitcher (Bryant i

nipped Ailanta, S-5, Cincinnati
swept San FranciSco, 4-3 and 20, and Los Angeles shut out San
Diego, 2-(),
In American League play,
New York do.wned Cleveland,
3-1, Chicago shaded Minnesota,
2-1, Kansas City whipped
Texas, 5-0, Boston defeated
!11ilwaukee, 5-1, in 10 innings,
Baltimore bombed Detroit, 8-3,
and California trimmed
Oakland, 4-2.
Bud Harrelson's two-run sin- •
gle capped a four-run second
irming rally thaI enabled the
Mets to defeat Monireal and
give Tom Seaver his sixth
victory. Chuck Taylor pitched 3
2-3 innings of scoreless relief to

doesn 't go. lo sleep, he never three-run homer by Julian
gels a chance to hit al the Javier in the first game for the
ball," said a disgruntled Giants lleds' other runs.
manager Charlie Fox. " It's
Slone pitched well enough in
mistakes like thallhal cost ball the nightcap to win, but he
games."
walked six batters and one of
Rose Gets Clincher
them fig wed in Cincinnati's
The Reds managed only nine fifth i.nning rally.
hits dwing the lwo games, fuw
Ted Uhlaender singled to
in the first and five ·in the lead off the inning, the first hit
second, as Gary Nolan ( 4;1) off Slone, and one out later
and Jack Billingham (I~) Steve walked Dave Chaney.
'picked up victories.
Billingham bun ted them along
Bryant ( 1-3) and Steve Stone and then Rose applied the
(0-3) were the San Francisco clincher, a solid single to
losers. Bryant was lagged for a cenler to score both runners.

MAJOR
LEAGUE

8,

.)

"

preserve the victory.
Richie Hebner's threiH'Iln
homer in the first inning helped
the Pirates.. defeat lhe Cardlnals and move over the .500
mark for the first time since
April 26. The victory was the
sevenlh in lhe last nit)e games
for the. Pirates and the loss
pushed the Cards deeper ' inttl
last place in the NL East.
Utility infielder Bobby Fenwick doubled in the winning
riDI in the eighth inning to lead
the Astros over the Braves.
Fenwick, playing lor the injured Torruny Helms, drove in
Bob Watson, who had tripled in
the tying run.
Dave Concepcion scored

from second as third baseman
Jim Hart bobbled a groiUid ball ·
for the decisive run in the
Reds ' opening game victory
over San Francisco, Pete
Rose's two-run single in the
fifth inning of lhe second game
and the lhree-hit pitching of
Jack Billingham produced the
doubleheader sweep,
Duke Sims doubled home one
run and Willie Davis tripled
home. the other as the Dodgers
beat the Padres for the 12th
consecutive lime at San Diego.
Bill Singer pitched a foor-hitter
and Bill Buckner had four hits
as the Dodgers maintained a
one-game lead over Houston in
the NL West.

Named P 1lrdue Coach

INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UPI) wall during practice for the

already qualified lor the May

-Art Pollard was more con- 500-mile auto race. The
cerned about his wife than lhe Medford, Ore., veteran

'r/ classic, could be repaired in

By Un.ited Press lnter.national

National League
East
W. L. Pet.
New York
19 7 .731
Philadelphia 15 II .577
Pillsburgh
13 12 .520
Mon treal
13 13 .500
Chicago
12 13 .480
St. Louis
10 18 .357
We•t
Los Angeles
Hous ton

Pol(.ard. Kenyon had a lap at
182.260.
Bruce Wallrup, St. Paul, Ind.,
and · rookie Merle Bettenhausen, Tinley Park, ID.,
were out for the first time.
Bettenhausen passed the 160
m.p.h. phase of his freshman
exam. Walkup drove the
backup car of Mike Mosley,

help him."
McLain disconnected the
telephone at hiS East Bay home
and told newsmen he would
contact them when he is ready
to make a statement.
" AI the moment, I'm not
sure of anything yet," he said.
There were indicatiol)S !l(cLain· iS suffering from a sore

..

JUST DIDN'T REACH
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Edward J. DeBartolo, owner of
Thistledown Race Track,
revealed Tuesday he offered
$8.1 million for Norlhfleld Park
·earner lhla ygr.
DeBartolo 1e11t a certified
check for .,000 with lhls ·
Brewleler llnlabed tblrit.
Tbe w dali1 dauble Ctm· offer to Northfield owner
,blnatloo al Lady Bye Bye In the Walter Michael. Michael CGillllellted : "It just
lint 1'111 llld
Cal!if In ~·t
reach."
the IICIIld wu wfll1h ••
;

.

Cle .... eland

4

Baltimore

51/ 1

6

First After Win
•

Coach Ken Justice's Symmes
Valley Vikings moved into a
first place lie with Southern in
the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference baseball tille race
Tuesday night wilh an II~
victory over the Eastern
Eagles.
·
Symmes Valley and the
Tornadoes of Coach Hillon
Wolfe, Jr., shared lhe top spot
.with 7-1 records. Kyger Creek
is in second place at 6-2 while
· Eastern dropped to 5-3. The
Eagles play in the disirict
tournament this afternoon at
Chillicothe.
Symmes Valley will play the
Eastern-Whiteoak winner
Thursday night.

DISNEY WORLD
COME IN FOR OUR FREE FOLDER FOR CHOICE OF

10 VACATION TRIPS
4

.

992-9981

538 W, Main

POMEROY, 0.

WJ honor BiiikAmerlcard and Master Charge

Boston

10

GB
18 10 .64 j ·
16 10 .61 5 1

W. L. Pet.

14 13 .5 19

Jlh

.300 10

Tuesdav's Results
New York 7 Montreal 3

Chicago 8 Philadelphia 1
Pittsburgh 4 St. Lou is 3
Houslon 6 Allanla 5

Clnci 4 San Fran 3, 1st

Clnci 2 San Fran 0, 2nd

Los Ang 2 San Diego o
Today's Probable Pitcher.
Montreal (McAnally 0·2) al
New York (Gentry 2·1) , 8:05
p.m.
Ch icago (Hands 2.1) al
Ph iladelphia (Carlton 5·2). 7:35
p.m.
St. Louis (Cleveland 3·1) al
Pittsburgh (Blass 3.1) 8:05 p.m.
Allan fa I Reed 1·4) a! Houston
IDierker 2·2l. 8:30 p.m .
Los Angel es (John 3·2) al San
Diego (Nct&lt;man 2·2), 10 :30 p.m .
Cincinnati (Grimslel !.0) at

GB

W. L. Pet.

GB

Minnesota
Oak!and '
Chicago

16
14
15

Kansas City

11 IS .423

)2 16 .429 6 Te•as
10 17 .370 7'h California_

San Francisco 9 21

Pet.
.609
.565
.542
.429
.39'1
.286

I
1'12

4'
5
)

7 .696
8 .636
9 .625

10 15 .400

10 15 .400

Ph

l'h
6'11 7
7

Tuesda y's Re sults
New York 3 Cleveland 1
Chicago 2 Mi"nnesota l
· Kansas Ci ty 5 Texas 0
Boston 5 Milw l, 10 i nns

Baltimore 8 Detroit 3
California 4 Oak land 2

Today's Probable Pitchers

IAll Times EDT)
Boston (Siebert 2·1) al
Milwa ukee (Lonborg 0-1) . 8:30

p.m .

Oakland ( Holl zman 4-2) at
California (May 0·2l. II p.m.
Texas

( Bosman

2-4)

at

Kansas City (Splitlorft 2-3) ,
8:30 p.m.
Ba ltim ore (Dobson 3·3) at
Detroit (Lolich 6·1), 9 p.m.
New York I Kline 2·1l at
Cleveland (Ti dro'w J-2), 7:30
p.m.

Minne;iofa (Biyleven 4-2 ) at

Sar Francisco (Mari chal 1·6). .4 Chicago !Bradley 4-IJ. 2:15
p.m.
p.m .

Thursday's Games

Montreal · at New York
Cinci at San Francisco

Chicago at St. Louis, night
Hou slon at Los Ang , night

(Onl y games soheduled)

Thursday's Games

Oakland at Calif. lwi
Boston at Detroit. night
COnl y games scheduled)
Texas
000 000 llOO- 0 4 2
Kan City 010 001 30x- 5 7 1
Hand. Paul (6). Panthe r (7),
Lindblad (7) and Billings,·
Suarez (7) ; Rooker (2·0) and
Kirkpatrick . LP- Hand (0·3) .

a 11 the pes Is, the
'pest 1'm 1'sl' 1·5 ·•he
" '' '' '· ~ ·
I W!lrst , · .8!&gt; ~. optiflilstic
and enjoy il ,safe &lt;rid~
with fre• n new lire$
Ri 7er Ot'l.

See Your
Old
Uncle Frank
Right
Now

(2nd game!
Cincinnati 000 020 ooo- 2 5 I
San Fran
000 000 ooo- 0 3 I
Billingham (l .s) and Plum·
The Vikings jwnped inlo a 3-0
mer ; Stone, McMahon (9) and
lead in the first inning behind a _Healy.
LP- Stone (0-3).
lea ky Eagle defense. Two
American League
. walks, a singie by Jamie Lafon New York 000 030 ooo- 3 7 1
and an error produced three Cleveland 000 000 01~ 1 4 1
Kekich , Lyle (9) and Mun·
IDiearned' runs.
son;, Hargan. Lamb (5),
Four more runs scored in the Rlddleberger (6) , Farmer (9)
second inning, lhree on a left- and Fosse. WP-Kekich (3·2) .
LP- Hargan (().1) , .
field homer by Jene Myers.
Eastern. plated five runs in
the second on walks to Rick
Sanders and Randy Young, a
double by Bob Caldwell and
single by Alan Duvall.
By Innings :
S. Valley
343 000 1- 11 6 1
Eastern
OliO 100 &lt;1- 6·s 5
David Aiison (W) Corn (5)
and Dennett. Duvall (L) Blake
(3) and Young.

•

1967·VOLKSWAGEN

G. E •. with Mini Bask.!!t

G. E.
2 Door

Combinalion

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G.E.
30" Self Cleaning Oven

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It W9n't be on the lot very long. So be
the first to test drive if .• ', a~d Zoooom

G. E.

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12

15 cu. ft. Frost Free

RANGE
'299•

TELIVISIONS
$ 88.00
15"--- - $109.95
12"

••

3 Temp.

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REAL SHARP

G.E.Dryer

Auf9matic Washer

BEETLE, 5.!!N ROOF,
.
GOOD TIRES,

Off Safely,

Detroit

( 7th ).

•

Certified
·Gas
Stations
•

East
W. L.
14 9
13 10
•13 II
9 12
9 14
6 15
West

New York
6lh Milwauk ee

Vikings Tied for

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

~;·-r.·

GB

pitching shoulder. It was
disclosed he had seen a
physician on Sunday and was
given a change of medication
pres~ribed by team doctors.
100 010 001- 3 10 1
McLain figures he'll remain Sl.Louis
Pi
Its
400
000 OOx- 4 8 1
in seclusion at least until the
Wise I3-3) and Simmons;
birth of hiS fourth child. His Walker , Giusti (7) and Sanguil ·
wife is in an East Bay bospital len. WP- Walker (l·ll . HRHebner (5th) .
awaiting the event .
Four years ago, McLain was Montreal
001 002 ooo- 3 10 o
the
toast
of
the
baseball
world
N.Y
.
041
000 20•- 7 11 o
CLOSES FAST
when he won 31 games for
Morlon, Gilbert (3). Walker
CINCINNATI (UPI)
· H
·
(5). Renko (6). Lemaster (81
Loons Buster closed fast on the Detrotl. e won 24 games 10 and Boccabella ; Seaver. Taylor
1969 but was suspended for hlllf (6) and Grote. WP-Seaver (6·
outside and nosed out Do Me So of
the 1970 season for alleged 1) . LP- Morton (1 .3). HRlo win the featured eight race . 1
I·
bo krnak'mg Staub (4th) .
at River Downs Tuesday. Third mvo vemen m a o
operation and was again Atlanta
011 JOO/W\_5 113
was. A Higher Cut. .; ·· "'
suspended after he dlimped ·"' Houoton ,! ' 120~010 ~ 6 9 o
The 9-5 favorite raced the 's ix bucketsof·watA!I'on two &gt;Detroit . Schueler, !Jpol!ow, r~J. Slone
fur(oeigs over a'muddy track in
(8). Jarvis (8) and Willi lams; .
• "
sports
writers.
Reuss,
Culver 141', Ray· (8) and
the $2,500 Starter Allowance
After
the
1970
season,
Edwards.
WP- Ray (6-0) . LPrace in I: 12 2~.
McLain was traded to the then Upshaw (O·IL HRs-Cepeda 2
· Shannon D and Vergennes Washington Senators. He be- (2nd &amp; 3rdl. Baker (lstl .
won the first two races, giving
carne the biggest loser in ·the Los Ang
000 000 11~ 2 10 o
holders of the 7-9 daily double majors with the Senators in San Diego 000 000 ooo- o 4 o
tickels $154.20.
1971, posting a 10-22 record,
Singer (3-3) and Sims ; Greif,
Schaeffer (8), Acosta (8),
The 3,009 thoroughbred
before being · traded to Caldwell (9) and Kendall . LPracing fans wagered a total of Oakland.
Greif (3·4) .
·
$256,917.
Ilot game)
Cinci nnati 030 000 01~ 4 4 0
San Fran 000 200 Olo- 3 7 1
Nolan, Carroll tBJ and Bench ;
Bryant, McMahon (8), Barr (91
and Rader, Healy ' (9). WP·
Nolan (4·1). lP-Bryant (l.JJ.
HRs-Javler (1st), Kingman

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

a..

San Diego
Atlanla

Am~rican League

Chicago
401 110 too- B14 0
Phil a
000 100 ooo- 1 J 0
Hoolon (J-3) and Hundley ;
Champion, Brandon (41. Shct&lt;t
(6), Twitchell IBJ and Mccar.
ver. LP- Champion (J. IJ . HRs
- Monday 3 (Jrd, 4th &amp; 51hL
Luzinski (6th).

time. The spOkesman blamed
broken leg he sustained Tu* sustained a broken left leg but lhe crash on "hub design
· failure ."
day at the Indianapolis Motor no other major injuries.
Rookie Jerry Karl, Manches·
~ay.
Still strapped in the cockpit
Pollard's car was damaged of his machine, Pollard told ter, Pa., escaped injury when
extenalvely in a tangle with the fellow driver Mel Kenyon, his racer wun in lhe same turn
Lebanon, Ind., to call his wife, earlier in the day. Karl said his
Pat, and tell her he wasn't hurt machine struck a rabbit which
HAl'PY MONDAY
seriously. Kenyon did and Mrll. hlld wondered onto the track,
Clermont,
CLEVELAND (UPI)
In all, Ind.
24 cars were · out - . .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Pollard was on hand at . The car spiUI twlce·but did not
Happy Monday · was the Mefbodlsl . Hospital when her hit the wall.
Tuesday, including three which
"Try It, You1l Like It"
Tuesday winner of the featured lllsband was brought in.
Pollard, prior to his· crash, have already been qualified. In
elghlh race at ThiStledown.
Kenyon was rwming behind had been running la(ie In the addition to Pollard, Jolutny
Clem's Ace was second and Pollard when the right rear 184 miles per hour range, Rutherford, Fort Worth, Tex.,
Bull Sl1n third.
and Wally Dallenbach, East
wheel came off the racer in the second best of the day.
The seven-yeir-old was No.3 turn. The car hit the wall,
The !~est lap of the day wu BrunswiCk, I'I.J., had their
ridden by Mike Perotta w spun, went 380 feet, scraped the a 185.032 m.p.h. by Bill qualified machineS out for
victory in 1:00 3-6 over the five wall again and traveled Vukovldl, Fresno, Calif.; In a practice l'IU18.. '
furlongs.
This weel!end marks lbe .
another 'l2ll feet before sto~ car wbidl banged lbe \fall
file :14 dally double pairing ping in the middle of lbe north . Sunday prior to the start of final round of time trials with
ol Black Buckeye and Bimdo lhort dlute.
lime trials. .
the 33 fastellt madllnes making
Jrd Ave.
reltlrned 156.40. The sexenlh
Next fastest was a 18U39 by the boU\wy weekend rice.
A spokesman for car-owner
Middlepprt
·race qulnella on the U com- Andy Granatelllsald It was nef
bination gf Just Utile and lmown whether the machine,
LET'S GO TO ·
Facllble returned $462.60.
• · FEATURED WINNER
NORTHFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- Dillalr won ' the featured
elghU! trot at Norlhfleld- Pari
Tuelday nllht.tler Quinta Tag
wu puahed Into aecood place
for Interference In the llretch.
Tbe wimilr' nmnlnl the mile
In 1:01.1, Wl8 driven by John
SUtlallnd. The payoff wu
$'1.10, $1.40 .ad $3.00. 8peedj

STANDINGS

Denny McLain Mulls Over Future ByU~~~;~ional

Broken Leg Forces
Pollard From. '500'

,.

The
Ulcola
. .

unawares ," said Grammas,

!':.

..

,

Both Concepcion and third
base coach Alex Grammas
said they were as swprjsed as
!tart when Pete hit the baiL
"Sure, he caught me

~

PUDDING CUPS..........................~.. · .
HOME MADE
,
SMOKED
, THE,
fa!lliiJ $
TIDE DETERGENT.~................:...........:. ~.. ~ · Sausage Ham Salad Stew Meat·
$
A~ 1 8LEACH......................................~. 39'·; ~.79t;' at~
SPECIAL ECONOMY SIZE.

the difference.
· "He (Bryant ) threw those
firsllwo pitches awful close,"
said Rose, "So I de!!ided to lake
a swipe allhe next one if it was
as close. •·

Southern Association. He started five games for the A's this
season and failed to finish any
•
of them.
~
':'
When he was shipped to the
.,
Class AA Southern Association,
'
McLain had a 1·2 record, sky•
high earned-run average of 6.01
·•
and a $73,000 salary. Since he is
:,
not on the Birmingham
,:
payroll, he remains on the
Oakland payroll.
•
·
"He was a good fellow and
didn'tcauseusanyproblems,"
said A's manager Dick Wil·
~
•
Iiams. "Maybe the wanner
:: LAFAYETTE, Iod. (UPI)- lheir first National llaskEtball NBA Wesle;n Divisoon cham- ' weather in Alabama . might
~ George .King, Pll{due ~ead ~ ,:\ssocia ti\W.. ,WPI;llj. . t;bampi'!- 1,PjPQ~ip~ ,.in"1~62, .,199:!, 1965,
baskelhallcoacli the past seven h~i.(l,.;:.... •• ":~"' •
., ~D~ l!lll6.,. .. ..
, "' .,, ..
' ' '
· ·' ·
years and athletic director fi!r
Hesa1d in LOs Angeles
Before ,going to the Lakers, " "REDSKINS BEATEN "i
• the past 15 months, announced had decided to take the Purdue Schaus wasallhe University of
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI)
" Tuesday lhat Fred Schaus, position because he missed West Virginia, where he com- - Donn Seidholz doubled in
; general manager of the Los coaching during hiS five years • piled a 146-37 record as the two runs Tuesday to give In~ Angeles Lakers,' will succeed as an administrator and wanted Mountaineers ca ptured lhe diana a 2-1 victory over Miami
: him as coach.
lo return to a college eveniron- Sou!hern Co n(ere nce cham- of Ohio in lhe firsl game of a
• Although King resigned as ment.
pionshlp all six seasons he was non-conference doubleheader.
: coach of the Boilermakers, he
The S-5 Schaus coach~ the head coach. The school played Miami took the nightcap 4-3.
will remain as director of Lakers for seven seasons from in the NCAA Tournament all
Bro Johnson balled in the
• Purdue's Alblelic Department. 1961 through 1967, compiling a six seasons.
winning run for Miami in thE}
Schaus, 46, was coosldered 315-243 record to win the title of
King was Schaus' assistant at fifth inning of the second game
the moving force behind the the winningesl active coach in West Virginia in the 1959 and lo give pitcher Jack Kucek the
Lakers this year- his fifth as lhe NBA at lhat time . Under 1960 season and succeeded him win. Kip Balsley was the
general manager-as lhey won Schaus, the Lakers won the as head coach of the Mountai." winning pitcher for Indiana in
neers.
the opener .

tJle
e;etUee·/atltilf!:.

,

1
49'

303

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Dave
Wottle of Bowling Green, who
ran a 3:511.5 mile in the Martin
Luther King Games at
Philadelphia Sunday, was the
unanimous choice lor MidAmerican Conference athlete
of lhe week today.
WotUe, a 145-pound Olympic
prospect, won the mile on a
rainsweplltack against a field
that included Jim Ryun . On
Saturday, Wottle won the 880 in
a triangular meet with Toledo
and Eastern Michigan .
The Philadelphia win gave
him the all-time outdoor mile
record for MAC runners. Kent
Stale 's Sam Hair previously
held the record, of 3:58.7.

•

~OICE

..

runs in his first lhree ai-bats star said. "It's something no
and drove in five runs Tuesday athlete can explain. Usually
night as the Chleago Cubs I'm a slow .starter, a horrendefeated lhe Philadelphia Phil- dous starter, in fact."
lies, S.l.
Monday's hilling heroics
"It's taken me six years to backed the thretHiit.pitching of
have a nighl like this," the rookie Burt Hooton, who pitformer Arizona State bonus . ched a · n&lt;Hiitter against the
Phils on April 16. Greg
Lozinski's 5(J().foot horne run in
the fourth irmmg, hiS sixth of
lhe sea59n, accounted for the
, lone Philadelphia run.
The loss dropped the secondplace Phils four games behind
New .York, which beat Monireal, 7-3, in the National
"A 3:54 mile is not out of League Eastern Division race.
Dave's realm and since he has In olhcr NL games, Pittsburgh
good nat speed, 1,500 meters edged St. Louis, 4-3, Houston
(the Olympic diStance) should
be an ideal race for him," his
coach, Mel 'Brodt, says of the
Canton, OhiQ, native.
" If he learns lo move out on
his own rather than wail back
in lhe pack,· then he can he a
WALNUT CREEK, Calif.
great one," Brodt said.
(UPI)-Former 31-game
Other nominees considered WiMer Denny McLain, now the
by a panel of newsmen for the highest paid minor leaguer in
weekly award were Miami's history, mulled his baseball
Ken Daniels in tennis, Ohio future today while awa!ting the
University's Doug Diamond in . birth of his fourth child.
in track, Toledo's Barry FiSher
The 28-year-old righthander
in track, and Western was optlooed by the Oakland
Michigan 's Larry Kulscar in Athleti~s Monday to their
basebalL
Birmingham farm in the

Wottle Athletes.
Of Week In MAC

EDUpA'nON MONEY
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Auditor Joseph Fergt1100 18,_
the statehaupent t33.8 million ·
more oo higher education lhis
year lban Jut year;
'lbelarcest amount out olthe
total ~U4 miDion waa t&amp;0.9
million allocated to Ohio State
Univenlty.

cans

~kg.

'

Dairy Buy!
Wltll YOU IUY l

4

.

By JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
It may have been Tuesday
everywhere else but it was
Monday in Philadelphia .
"Everybody has his day and
this one was mine," said Rick
Monday after he crashed home

•

303 • .,

The first two pitches by
Bryant to Rose missed the
plate by about a foot. Between
the second and third pitch Rose

engaged Gianls rookie catcher
Dave Rader in conversation
and while he was talking he
inched a lillie closer to the
plale. Thus, when ball three
came across, missing the plate
by inches, Rose was in position
to slap a hit.
.
Shortstop Surprtsed
His tap lo third caught Jim
Ray Hart completely by surprise and he missed the ball for
an error. While shortstop Chris
Speier scrambled .for the ball,
Concepcion came all the way
around for the run lhal made

·

SANDALS AND CANVASS
. ~SUALS . .~

Charlie Nash, chltlrman of
Ohio Farmers Unioo stated,
"'As far ·as we' know''thls suit
will be the first of' Ita kind
either state ,or nationally.
Olher suits have been brought
wilh the 'principal objecUve
being equal distribution. Wblle
this will he a part of lhls suit,
the principle objective will be
to prove the inequities of
Properly Taxes themselves."

for

SLICED OR HALVES

51Jl and PEARL STS.. RAUNE

1•1•

Income Tax."

bxs.$1.

Gianls.
..
With the Reds leading by just
a run, 3-2, in the eighth of the
first game, llose came to bat
with Dave Concepcion on
second and one out. The Giants
elected to walk Rose inlentionally so that Ron Bryant,
a leflhander , could. pitch to the
lefthanded swinger Joe
Morgan and Bobby Tolan.

Cubs Romp, Monday Hits 3 HOmers

The bidding has heen :
We•l North ' Eul South
Pass 1 •
Pass
Pass 2 •
?
Pass
3•
Pass
You, South hold:
J 54
8 76
,.Q 101
.
What do you do now?
A-Bid ·four •I&gt;Odes. Your
partner is look inc for more inforiJilltiOn. Y~r &amp;pode roise,wos
very iound and you have good
spades at...
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding one spade
'your parlner has jumped to two
spades over your one heart.
What do r.ou do now?

USDA

*

,
CAKE MIXES..............................

'
James Jacoby
.

The suit will be beneficial to all
people. Farmers Union Tax
Suit calls for the removal of
Property Taxes as a s'll'":e of
revenue for education. This
revenue 1o be replaced .by

'·

'

ose

atr,

Cil'lclnnati

Plus Quality Food Values the Whole Week Thru

()fiR 111£/FM/tll ARE10/#'PR/MI/
PIUSBURY

Pa ss

. OrJCnin~ lead - • Q

Class Suit Fil~d for Taxpayers

.,..u

Puss

By JOE SARGIS
UPI Sports Writer
SAN FRANCfSCO.(UPI)'J'IIey say about winning ball
players that somehow they will
find a way to beat you.
Never was this better
demonstrated than Tuesday
" night and th.e perpeltator was
none. other than Pete Rose.
Rose uco'nned '' the Reds to a
4-3 victory in the opener of a
· twi-nighl doubleheader and
then drove in both riUIS of the
nightcap for a 2-4 triumph and
a sweep of the San Francisco

•

weep

.Contract .Can Be Beaten .

weeks, 011y l.as VejlaS can compete· ... Ergo,

liavill !;lin cam in

•

WIN AT IIRIDGI!

the ~n Room of the

folluwc•l ·it with a filllrraled "X" ruck, "l'l&gt;r·
sonills"
... Heave a huge sigh of relief - the
month SUS. By mall in Oh io
mviar shortage has ended: Arnold Hansenend W. v, .. Ont . Ytlr su.oo.
Silt mont·hS ,S7.1S . Three
Strwn,
pres. of Romanoff Caviar, just r~
mo"ths $.4. . 50 . S.ubs.crlptlon
pr ice includes Sundey Times .
from Iran and prompUy reported to us lbat
I I I
Stnf inel .
more than l'tlough preCious Beluga is being
Dear Helen :
. I can see a girlmakin~ '""' mist.:•k••:md dt'Clrling to keep her airlifted to. him now to more than l:Over
dlild, but Whl'll sh• has U1r"' or so out of wedlock - often with shortages.
The street peddlers, who illegally tom .5th
different !albers - and goes oil welfarelo support them it's
time
'
Avenue sidewalks into blockades, give It a
to get Iough.
rundown
look, aile! take customers away Jrom
Wby doo 'I they make a rule that sj/,gle women on welfare
'
LEGAL NOTICE
the rent and tax-paying sllops, get a lot ol
C1r1 Moles , addre-ss unknown , must give up any baby after lhe f1rst illegitimate one? There are
Evel .vn
Moles .
address so many couples who want to adopt these da)'s and can't find ' sympalhy from passersby as lhey're loaded into
unknown. the Unknown heirs of
police v811l1 Blld hauled off. But it's. a nllgglng
Evelyn Moie~ . etll of Whose children. A don 'I· care mother wouldO't provide a good horneaddr"esses are unknown and and an wunarried woman who doesn't take precautio1111 Is cerManhattan problem. The city's Economic
cennot with
reasonable
Development Administration plans to seize
diligence be a,cerfalned , will tainly "don't-care."
take notice that on the 11th. day
Seems a logieal way to hetp everyone, including lbe child. peddlers' merchandise. To dispel anyone
of May, 1972, Plalnfifl, Ber·nlce
suspecting they're sad types there to pick up a
Bowen flied her complaint May he it would inspire thOle careless.women to take The Pill
against fhem In the Court· of
dollar or two recession money, please he adCommon Pleas of M elo1i which isofferedfrl!l!to welfare people.- T. D.
vised the EDA surveyed the average sales ol
County , Oh io; the same bei ng Dear T.:
Case No. 15,0731n sa id court, lor
such street peddlers and they take in m&lt;re than
Your plan might inspire an even greater black market in
an action lo quiet t itle In tht
following des cribed reel esrate, while babies. If a woman knows she must give up her child, slle
$33 a day! Many do better.
to.wlt :
Dick Cavett's a star all right: he now eVen
Situated in the VIllage of might try 101' the highest bidder (and many are bidding lhese
Middleport, Me igs County , days - adoptable Caucasian babies being very scarce) .
hashisowndisease-he'sbeennamednatiooal
Ohio.
dlairffian of the Concerned Youth for Cerebral
Being Lot No . 104 In Behan './5
It could also place considerably more "hard-to-adopt"
Addition to the sa id VIllage or dlUdren in institutions or inadequate temporary homes.
Palsy ,.. Over the decades, stars hltve added
Middleport, For more ctellnife
dlarities, rnosUy illness-fighters, to their ac,
description , reference is made
Besides, this "solution" strikes me as cold-blooded. What do
to the Plat of said Village .
tivilies. Wmchell a-eated the Damon Rwlyoo
others
think?
~
H.
The demand of the complaint
Is for fhe quletlnb of the t1tle of
Fund, Ed Sullivan has the Heart Fund,~- .
+++
the Defendants based on t
, Victor Borge has an ambivalent attitude
contract or purchase dated June Dear Helen :
toward his Danish accent: "Wben rtalk I can 'I
10, 1957, which was abandoned
After he read about The International Society of Girl Walby the Defendants carl Moles
hear an accent. But when I listen to a radio or
and Evelyn Moles, and for olher doers In our paper, my husband joined. He got some little
re~'!1.l oerendanls are; required adhesive. backed paper sUckers lhat men are supposed to attach TV tape, it's there."
'lbe fine Manhattan nightclubs and hotel
to asnwer said complain I wllh ln to women's clolhes when lbey aren't looking. The "Watcluible
21 d•vs after the last dlfe ·or A da"
Um
supper club!J ciJ)'t lure big stars any more.
publlcallon. which dole is June war saycomp entarythings, butitstillburnsmelhatrny
Can't alford the lees demaflded. Sammy Davis,
21 , 1912.
husband would look at an IDIImown girl so intently lhat he'd want
Bernard
v.
Fultz
·
to
give
her
an
award.
for Instance, just played lite Westbury, loog
Webster and Fultz
Island, Music Fair and woiUid up wilh about
P.
o.
Box
723
He's
learned
all
the
teclmlques
for
girl
watching,
so
Ilia!
no
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
$200,000
of a total $32:!.000 theater grOliS far two
Altorneys for Plalnllfl one lmows, not even his wife. But I lind awards on my clothes
(5117, 24, 31 (617,14, 21. 6t
quite often.
·
care of us?"
~
.t
.
Now, he sa,_ he's going to inveni .Orne ·"Unwatchable
·'
Awards" for women wbo look grubby~ or are in hair rollers, or
I NOTICE OF FILING
expose fat lmees in hot pants.
·
AUTHENTICATED COPY
... And If somebody finda out who stuck one of lhese on her,
Ohio· Farmers Union and of Public InStruction Martin
ot
,,
Will
~:i~~:t~
he'U
be
scalped.
·
.
Melvin
Borton of Wauseon, Essex, lhe Stale Board of
111110
0
Otctuod.
What do you do with a man like that? _ WATCHING A Ohio, farmer ; and · Area Educalion, also Fulton County
Nollce
Is
hereby
given
lhal
W•'TCHER
Di' reclor o1 0rganlZa
· I'ton for officials Kenneth
Moll.
Romo c . Rothgeb, Execulrlx ol "'
lhtf?Sialeot Dee Wilt Rolhgeb. Dear WAW:
National Farmers Union, filed Auditor, Grace Amstutz,
late
of
Point
Pleasanl
,
West
So
I
·
.
,
·
a
•·· Fed era1 cour1 ·m Treasur
' er • Wauseon Board of
VIrginia, deceased, on lhe 131h
onguhesticksto 'Watchable Awards" (especially fOI'
""'sw't ID
~~~b:l.'~~~rt'~:'.Y.!\~·: c~un'•~~ you), and maintains a ~If policy (except for you), consider Toledo, May 8.
Education and Superintendent
Ohio, an aulhenllco ted copy ot him an honest apprecrator.
The suit challenges the William Pees, aU in !,heir oflhe Leiters ol AdmlniSirollon of
But discourage the "Un•atchable Awards,. J Bea in
conslitullonality of real ficial capacities, not as inuld Eolole .granted jn Counly
,.
· oe
g •
t la
f dividuals.
court of Mason county. west president of the "International Society of Girl Watchers" might
proper Y xes as a source o
In Ia end thai .lhe claim or dr
hi- • 1 Of the
nlzali
·
raising revenue for schools.
Borton said, ' "The suit is
on;r credllor or urn
oo '
orga
on. - H, ,
...
ThiS suit is a class action suit being brought because of the

LEGAL NOTICE

"

along.Br'Way

Helen Help

DEVOTED TO THE

'
1-'lbellllllySentlnel,~,O.,May 17,1972

.

'

cu. ft.

G.E.

DISHWASHER
Deluxe Mobile · Made

Color Telauision
·' Enly American

23" Con sot.

~1~9·~·~--~Sl~~~-9~5~~~~~~~

&amp;R .IRES

MPM! "''itT, O.

�•
•,

' __
2- ~Daily Sentinel, Middleport~-PIWor!Hmeri'.AIWIOV~•.OWI..IIIIIMa-y.17••J972-IIIIAIIIII!IM!IIIIII_ _ _ _
11111

The IWy Sentillll

"P¥NWP 7 . 1

INTEli'EST"OF
MEIGS·MASOII! ARE,A

CHESTER L, TANNEHILL·,

Enc . Ed.

ROlE AT HOEFLICH.

Us. • •

CitY' Edt lOr
PUtJi i"Shed doJily ucrpl
Saturday bY Tht Oh io vallty
Publith in; Company . 111

Sy Helen Bottd

Pom,roy , Ohio,
.cS7,9 . 8 ~Jsiness Offict Phone •
Court

St .,

SHABBY SOLtmON TO A PIIORI.F.M
Dear Helen :
l've.read that a girl can ~el "" 1lllll'h as $5.1100 fur" ,..,.,..~1 .
newborn white baby, if she finds a ""'Jilt• wl•• wan~' '""' .b:l!l
enough. It'' a good busim•ss.
· I wouldn't mind bein~ p~ r,•. that ki••l uf t'JL&lt;h. l'h•a.St· givt•
my name and address (41 11&lt;"1~&lt;' whuil'l'ik lluol th&lt;')' 'rt• th"''•-ra~•
to aQopl butcan'tfind a.baby . WAN'I'INt: TO 111-:1.1'
· Dear. W.T .H. :
NO !!,!
What you
,. sn~tlt-1 is illt•!-!oll. innm•ral mwl fallt,.in~ . - H.

H:l 21S6. Ed itorial Phone 992

ll ~7 .

Second CIIU po'Stage pa ;d ' '
· Pomeroy . Ohio.
Nat iona l advert•sing

repreu.,tative

.BOtt inell i·

Gllllagher . Inc . • 12 Eail i2nd
Sl ., New Yor k Cily , New Vork.

Subscription

rates :

De

liv trec:J try carrier where '
IVaiJable SO nnts . per we:ek ;
Bv Motor Route whtre carr ier
serv ice no.! available : One

~-.

BY JACK O'llliAN
HF. .il.urrs RF.D CARPEl' 1
'nlP'.ATMDIT
NP.W YORK ('IG'S~ •• !loles ill l!dwy.
mu.&lt;i&lt;':el&lt; ~~;,V., lx.'&lt;lll clu.'&lt;ive for John llaiU who
st.o1rn~l so hrilli:anlly in U.c ur!~inal "CaroUNCI''
hit. S.i ·"~"' ~··k u••, weal ~~.... " flam,.,.,.skin hit'"' l&lt;iur. 1'hc '""llal:t'IJICnl l(iVCII
.kolmtl•·bt..ttlres•&lt;i~rt•••to,propcrtopbilling,
anyUii~ 1"' w:mL&lt;.. 'l11e

u,.,

producer - John Ita ill.

11M• 1\.'lllor 'lbeillcr t'llllt'd its. revival run of
t:1'illt'&lt;l ''Ten Cooumendmcnts': - and

Plall had a $$,000 to
$'1,510 top price .on .:ts and the St. ReP
Ma~'IQIICUe, $$,000; lhllt'a not a mucb as a

current

.

'

IJIIe

Music Fair 800w.

unay of the Jackal" authot Frederitk

l'orsyth just finil1hed anollier, "The OdeMa
t,le," due next fall froni .VillinK, whaoe
. _ ~elddcnt, Torn Guindlerfl, i~ irate at aN. Y,.
publishing combine lhat ltied to hlislle It away
Irum hill linn.,. Newly elected bookiiUbllshers'
Pres. Hobert H«lllllein can'•t understand ~y
lhc annual book aw~nfi aren 'I oo TV:'" About·a
year ,ago when I turned on TV I found I was
watching the Pal!ly Awards. They're for the
Best Animal Actor oflhe Year! Wben I~
dlairman of the Associalioo of Amerh:an
Publishers, I intend to telephone the best animal
actor and ask him how he got on."
'
The mulli-Tooy Awards to "Follies" lilted
lhat longrun musical's gross almost $17,000 last
week ... Peter Fa1k fielded 81\ IUiexpeeted fmal
line In "Priaoner of 2hd Ave." when he readied
into the set's hall cl01et' to pun out a shovel as
called f~· In the Nell Simon plax.,scripi. No
shovel. Falk made a list and annoWICeil to the
~udll!!lce, "I hllve a shoVel in my hand.' ' ~
audience, always delighted to be ''Ill" on such a
gambit, roared approval.
·
The Rod McKuen Carnegie Han concert
wu enlivened when the loudspeakers carrying
Rod's show: suddeiiJy picked up aN. Y. Meta
baseball game. &amp;Jrreal ... :Upcoming TV shows,
Variety reporta, will have bomoeexual COO!edy,
dangling-wrbt joki!S. In a summer network
situalioo cunedy· aeries, "Corner Bar," an
exaggeratedly swilhlng character will complain about the sad trend in N. Y. parties,
"loaded wllh weirdoe .- all m8rrled couples."
... ABC veep Michllel El$ner said IIO&amp;P opera
illll't what Is llled to be. Now, be sa,_, "John
loves Mary who loves Bruce - wbo .may love
Jolm ." .
.
It wu a rainy off.rught at all midtown
restauranta, 110 Gold Coin owner Bill Otan and
Pen &amp; Pencil proprietor John Bruno walked
over to Danny Slradella's Hideaway and advised Danny: "Our joints are 10 packed we
hllven't even a table for ourselves to have
dinner." Looking around at the snow-blinding
tableclotl18, Bill Chan added, "Can you take

in this year's Vanderbilt
17
NOKTII
Cup. Jacqui Mitchell or New
6654 .
York opened the q~n of
¥KJ5J
clubs
but Mary Jane. F~rell
,
• AKH
of Los Angeles, the world's
•rH
leading woman bridge playWf.ST
t:.4.ST
er, covered with the king.
6KJII17:1
.H2
South had to win lbe t!'!ck.
¥A
¥76 2
Later on when Jac&lt;jUI got
•111r.5 :1
.J7,2
in with the trump ace she
.QH
.K 10H o3
led the nine or clubs. Mary
SUVTII mr
Jane covered with the 10 and
• oHI!l
had obtained the ·lead. She
¥QI09 X4
fired a wade and w h i I t ·
.Q94
· Soutl\·,played lbe nine it did
'Ali
him no goOd. Jacqu1 got out
Nm1t: v.ulncrttblc
. , with the jack of club:f" and
· Wt!sl Nurth •:a~t · s.,uth
waited for her second spade
I¥ . trick.
·
I•
:1.
Pcas!i 4¥
(NEWSPAPER INTilPa1Sl ASSN.)
Pa.'i.o;

~~~~~·~•I t~•c,~~:ntc'~/1 NAT~ 1$rAL
''~: tr:r~:;~
barred- OS '"'··' 'I ".~ lien upon
eslate 01 so ld
Ihis 131h do yo of May
JoM c . Sa&lt;on
Judge of tn .. Probole Co uri
1
(5) 11, 24, 2tMeigs coun Y· Ohio

'' ''
OhNIEHlBtoWARK ,0h Io (UP!) :-The
1 1Society will de0
rca
dlcateanaturetra11May28designed for the blind and disabled at the Flint Ridge State Memoria!. The paved trail hu
sli!Jis in braille and will accomadate wheel dlairs.

''UPGRADE PROORAIIf' · ' ·· hr,oug~l
COLUMBL3 (UP!) .- ,The
Ohio Bureau of Ernployl'ilent
Services has inaugurated an
employe upgrading program,
giving 100 workers the chance
to learn enough to assume
more r"""""sible
jobs in their
""r'"
field.

by 'hie plaintiff; on
their own behalf and on bebalf
Ql all other properly owners
throughout. the 'state of Ohio.
The suit names Governor
John J. Gilligan, Stale Auditor
Joseph T. Ferguson, State
Treasurer Gertrude w.
Donahey,Slale Superintendent ·

dispariUes·'Or inequities In tl)e
present Property Tax. As an
example, the average farmer
is paying an amounl equal 'to
approlimalely 27pcl. of his net
income in property taxes.
There also exisls many
inequities for other individuals·
and sectors of our economy.

.n.v·Oswald &amp;

North's holding is a bare
minimum lor a limit jump
raise to three hearts . He has
11 high-card points but his
distribution is that most unattractive 4·3·3·3. '
'
South has no problem with
the play. of the hand after
W e s t opens the queen of
clubs and East signals comeon with the eight. He sees
that he ·rriust keep East out
of the lead and just lets West
hold the trick . West contlnues clubs. South wins and
leads a trump. West takes
his ace and leads a third
club which South ruffs. South
draws the rest of the
trumps ; cashes the dia,
monds while .making sure to
take the last one in dummy ;
leads a spade and· sticks in
the nine. West wins and is
caught in an end play. He
must either lead from the
king of spades or give South
a ruff and discard .
Strangely enough this con- ·
.tract can be beaten and actually was in an early match

STOKELY .

.

3 ,'

"I he Stnre With A. Heart

BARTLETT PEARS..............................., cans $ :
HUNT'S PEACHES.....................~ ..........3 ":~~ 1
MH~~PR~
~· ·
FAVORITE BREAD............................... 5 • 1

',

You. WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantittt.
We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food S~mps

Prices Effective

May 10.17

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
saturday 9 to 9

CLOSED SUNDAYS

I '

STANDARD PAC~

..

TOMATOES.......................................
REG~ 69' DEL MONTE

.llrlf

RJUiEHif.R'S-

CRYSTALS
lrfCIII I'II!Cf
llfl1t 1'1!IS CDU191

99~

•K •K •54

..
~· Schaus

"3'

SPECIAL MONEY-SAVER

'

•

THE SHOE BOX
Where Shoes are Sens

N. 2nd

·

FAIRMONT

PORK
CHOP·
s
.
.

.

C.

BUTTERMILK

FRENCH CITY

Lean
Center
Cuts

..

,

•..

FRESH, TASTY

USDA. CHOICE

,.

'lb.

Salel YELLOW ON

19'

'~::J.:~~~~~. . . . 20 ~,, 89~
REAL IIICE FRESH

.

.... ......:.....•....~

~~ ~

I

'

.,

'

"but thai's Pete. He's always
thinking of something."
" If our pitcher (Bryant i

nipped Ailanta, S-5, Cincinnati
swept San FranciSco, 4-3 and 20, and Los Angeles shut out San
Diego, 2-(),
In American League play,
New York do.wned Cleveland,
3-1, Chicago shaded Minnesota,
2-1, Kansas City whipped
Texas, 5-0, Boston defeated
!11ilwaukee, 5-1, in 10 innings,
Baltimore bombed Detroit, 8-3,
and California trimmed
Oakland, 4-2.
Bud Harrelson's two-run sin- •
gle capped a four-run second
irming rally thaI enabled the
Mets to defeat Monireal and
give Tom Seaver his sixth
victory. Chuck Taylor pitched 3
2-3 innings of scoreless relief to

doesn 't go. lo sleep, he never three-run homer by Julian
gels a chance to hit al the Javier in the first game for the
ball," said a disgruntled Giants lleds' other runs.
manager Charlie Fox. " It's
Slone pitched well enough in
mistakes like thallhal cost ball the nightcap to win, but he
games."
walked six batters and one of
Rose Gets Clincher
them fig wed in Cincinnati's
The Reds managed only nine fifth i.nning rally.
hits dwing the lwo games, fuw
Ted Uhlaender singled to
in the first and five ·in the lead off the inning, the first hit
second, as Gary Nolan ( 4;1) off Slone, and one out later
and Jack Billingham (I~) Steve walked Dave Chaney.
'picked up victories.
Billingham bun ted them along
Bryant ( 1-3) and Steve Stone and then Rose applied the
(0-3) were the San Francisco clincher, a solid single to
losers. Bryant was lagged for a cenler to score both runners.

MAJOR
LEAGUE

8,

.)

"

preserve the victory.
Richie Hebner's threiH'Iln
homer in the first inning helped
the Pirates.. defeat lhe Cardlnals and move over the .500
mark for the first time since
April 26. The victory was the
sevenlh in lhe last nit)e games
for the. Pirates and the loss
pushed the Cards deeper ' inttl
last place in the NL East.
Utility infielder Bobby Fenwick doubled in the winning
riDI in the eighth inning to lead
the Astros over the Braves.
Fenwick, playing lor the injured Torruny Helms, drove in
Bob Watson, who had tripled in
the tying run.
Dave Concepcion scored

from second as third baseman
Jim Hart bobbled a groiUid ball ·
for the decisive run in the
Reds ' opening game victory
over San Francisco, Pete
Rose's two-run single in the
fifth inning of lhe second game
and the lhree-hit pitching of
Jack Billingham produced the
doubleheader sweep,
Duke Sims doubled home one
run and Willie Davis tripled
home. the other as the Dodgers
beat the Padres for the 12th
consecutive lime at San Diego.
Bill Singer pitched a foor-hitter
and Bill Buckner had four hits
as the Dodgers maintained a
one-game lead over Houston in
the NL West.

Named P 1lrdue Coach

INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UPI) wall during practice for the

already qualified lor the May

-Art Pollard was more con- 500-mile auto race. The
cerned about his wife than lhe Medford, Ore., veteran

'r/ classic, could be repaired in

By Un.ited Press lnter.national

National League
East
W. L. Pet.
New York
19 7 .731
Philadelphia 15 II .577
Pillsburgh
13 12 .520
Mon treal
13 13 .500
Chicago
12 13 .480
St. Louis
10 18 .357
We•t
Los Angeles
Hous ton

Pol(.ard. Kenyon had a lap at
182.260.
Bruce Wallrup, St. Paul, Ind.,
and · rookie Merle Bettenhausen, Tinley Park, ID.,
were out for the first time.
Bettenhausen passed the 160
m.p.h. phase of his freshman
exam. Walkup drove the
backup car of Mike Mosley,

help him."
McLain disconnected the
telephone at hiS East Bay home
and told newsmen he would
contact them when he is ready
to make a statement.
" AI the moment, I'm not
sure of anything yet," he said.
There were indicatiol)S !l(cLain· iS suffering from a sore

..

JUST DIDN'T REACH
CLEVELAND (UP!)
Edward J. DeBartolo, owner of
Thistledown Race Track,
revealed Tuesday he offered
$8.1 million for Norlhfleld Park
·earner lhla ygr.
DeBartolo 1e11t a certified
check for .,000 with lhls ·
Brewleler llnlabed tblrit.
Tbe w dali1 dauble Ctm· offer to Northfield owner
,blnatloo al Lady Bye Bye In the Walter Michael. Michael CGillllellted : "It just
lint 1'111 llld
Cal!if In ~·t
reach."
the IICIIld wu wfll1h ••
;

.

Cle .... eland

4

Baltimore

51/ 1

6

First After Win
•

Coach Ken Justice's Symmes
Valley Vikings moved into a
first place lie with Southern in
the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference baseball tille race
Tuesday night wilh an II~
victory over the Eastern
Eagles.
·
Symmes Valley and the
Tornadoes of Coach Hillon
Wolfe, Jr., shared lhe top spot
.with 7-1 records. Kyger Creek
is in second place at 6-2 while
· Eastern dropped to 5-3. The
Eagles play in the disirict
tournament this afternoon at
Chillicothe.
Symmes Valley will play the
Eastern-Whiteoak winner
Thursday night.

DISNEY WORLD
COME IN FOR OUR FREE FOLDER FOR CHOICE OF

10 VACATION TRIPS
4

.

992-9981

538 W, Main

POMEROY, 0.

WJ honor BiiikAmerlcard and Master Charge

Boston

10

GB
18 10 .64 j ·
16 10 .61 5 1

W. L. Pet.

14 13 .5 19

Jlh

.300 10

Tuesdav's Results
New York 7 Montreal 3

Chicago 8 Philadelphia 1
Pittsburgh 4 St. Lou is 3
Houslon 6 Allanla 5

Clnci 4 San Fran 3, 1st

Clnci 2 San Fran 0, 2nd

Los Ang 2 San Diego o
Today's Probable Pitcher.
Montreal (McAnally 0·2) al
New York (Gentry 2·1) , 8:05
p.m.
Ch icago (Hands 2.1) al
Ph iladelphia (Carlton 5·2). 7:35
p.m.
St. Louis (Cleveland 3·1) al
Pittsburgh (Blass 3.1) 8:05 p.m.
Allan fa I Reed 1·4) a! Houston
IDierker 2·2l. 8:30 p.m .
Los Angel es (John 3·2) al San
Diego (Nct&lt;man 2·2), 10 :30 p.m .
Cincinnati (Grimslel !.0) at

GB

W. L. Pet.

GB

Minnesota
Oak!and '
Chicago

16
14
15

Kansas City

11 IS .423

)2 16 .429 6 Te•as
10 17 .370 7'h California_

San Francisco 9 21

Pet.
.609
.565
.542
.429
.39'1
.286

I
1'12

4'
5
)

7 .696
8 .636
9 .625

10 15 .400

10 15 .400

Ph

l'h
6'11 7
7

Tuesda y's Re sults
New York 3 Cleveland 1
Chicago 2 Mi"nnesota l
· Kansas Ci ty 5 Texas 0
Boston 5 Milw l, 10 i nns

Baltimore 8 Detroit 3
California 4 Oak land 2

Today's Probable Pitchers

IAll Times EDT)
Boston (Siebert 2·1) al
Milwa ukee (Lonborg 0-1) . 8:30

p.m .

Oakland ( Holl zman 4-2) at
California (May 0·2l. II p.m.
Texas

( Bosman

2-4)

at

Kansas City (Splitlorft 2-3) ,
8:30 p.m.
Ba ltim ore (Dobson 3·3) at
Detroit (Lolich 6·1), 9 p.m.
New York I Kline 2·1l at
Cleveland (Ti dro'w J-2), 7:30
p.m.

Minne;iofa (Biyleven 4-2 ) at

Sar Francisco (Mari chal 1·6). .4 Chicago !Bradley 4-IJ. 2:15
p.m.
p.m .

Thursday's Games

Montreal · at New York
Cinci at San Francisco

Chicago at St. Louis, night
Hou slon at Los Ang , night

(Onl y games soheduled)

Thursday's Games

Oakland at Calif. lwi
Boston at Detroit. night
COnl y games scheduled)
Texas
000 000 llOO- 0 4 2
Kan City 010 001 30x- 5 7 1
Hand. Paul (6). Panthe r (7),
Lindblad (7) and Billings,·
Suarez (7) ; Rooker (2·0) and
Kirkpatrick . LP- Hand (0·3) .

a 11 the pes Is, the
'pest 1'm 1'sl' 1·5 ·•he
" '' '' '· ~ ·
I W!lrst , · .8!&gt; ~. optiflilstic
and enjoy il ,safe &lt;rid~
with fre• n new lire$
Ri 7er Ot'l.

See Your
Old
Uncle Frank
Right
Now

(2nd game!
Cincinnati 000 020 ooo- 2 5 I
San Fran
000 000 ooo- 0 3 I
Billingham (l .s) and Plum·
The Vikings jwnped inlo a 3-0
mer ; Stone, McMahon (9) and
lead in the first inning behind a _Healy.
LP- Stone (0-3).
lea ky Eagle defense. Two
American League
. walks, a singie by Jamie Lafon New York 000 030 ooo- 3 7 1
and an error produced three Cleveland 000 000 01~ 1 4 1
Kekich , Lyle (9) and Mun·
IDiearned' runs.
son;, Hargan. Lamb (5),
Four more runs scored in the Rlddleberger (6) , Farmer (9)
second inning, lhree on a left- and Fosse. WP-Kekich (3·2) .
LP- Hargan (().1) , .
field homer by Jene Myers.
Eastern. plated five runs in
the second on walks to Rick
Sanders and Randy Young, a
double by Bob Caldwell and
single by Alan Duvall.
By Innings :
S. Valley
343 000 1- 11 6 1
Eastern
OliO 100 &lt;1- 6·s 5
David Aiison (W) Corn (5)
and Dennett. Duvall (L) Blake
(3) and Young.

•

1967·VOLKSWAGEN

G. E •. with Mini Bask.!!t

G. E.
2 Door

Combinalion

REFRIGERATOR

G.E.
30" Self Cleaning Oven

AM·FM RADIO

It W9n't be on the lot very long. So be
the first to test drive if .• ', a~d Zoooom

G. E.

Upright Freezer
12

15 cu. ft. Frost Free

RANGE
'299•

TELIVISIONS
$ 88.00
15"--- - $109.95
12"

••

3 Temp.

'26CJOO

G. E. Black &amp; While.

REAL SHARP

G.E.Dryer

Auf9matic Washer

BEETLE, 5.!!N ROOF,
.
GOOD TIRES,

Off Safely,

Detroit

( 7th ).

•

Certified
·Gas
Stations
•

East
W. L.
14 9
13 10
•13 II
9 12
9 14
6 15
West

New York
6lh Milwauk ee

Vikings Tied for

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

~;·-r.·

GB

pitching shoulder. It was
disclosed he had seen a
physician on Sunday and was
given a change of medication
pres~ribed by team doctors.
100 010 001- 3 10 1
McLain figures he'll remain Sl.Louis
Pi
Its
400
000 OOx- 4 8 1
in seclusion at least until the
Wise I3-3) and Simmons;
birth of hiS fourth child. His Walker , Giusti (7) and Sanguil ·
wife is in an East Bay bospital len. WP- Walker (l·ll . HRHebner (5th) .
awaiting the event .
Four years ago, McLain was Montreal
001 002 ooo- 3 10 o
the
toast
of
the
baseball
world
N.Y
.
041
000 20•- 7 11 o
CLOSES FAST
when he won 31 games for
Morlon, Gilbert (3). Walker
CINCINNATI (UPI)
· H
·
(5). Renko (6). Lemaster (81
Loons Buster closed fast on the Detrotl. e won 24 games 10 and Boccabella ; Seaver. Taylor
1969 but was suspended for hlllf (6) and Grote. WP-Seaver (6·
outside and nosed out Do Me So of
the 1970 season for alleged 1) . LP- Morton (1 .3). HRlo win the featured eight race . 1
I·
bo krnak'mg Staub (4th) .
at River Downs Tuesday. Third mvo vemen m a o
operation and was again Atlanta
011 JOO/W\_5 113
was. A Higher Cut. .; ·· "'
suspended after he dlimped ·"' Houoton ,! ' 120~010 ~ 6 9 o
The 9-5 favorite raced the 's ix bucketsof·watA!I'on two &gt;Detroit . Schueler, !Jpol!ow, r~J. Slone
fur(oeigs over a'muddy track in
(8). Jarvis (8) and Willi lams; .
• "
sports
writers.
Reuss,
Culver 141', Ray· (8) and
the $2,500 Starter Allowance
After
the
1970
season,
Edwards.
WP- Ray (6-0) . LPrace in I: 12 2~.
McLain was traded to the then Upshaw (O·IL HRs-Cepeda 2
· Shannon D and Vergennes Washington Senators. He be- (2nd &amp; 3rdl. Baker (lstl .
won the first two races, giving
carne the biggest loser in ·the Los Ang
000 000 11~ 2 10 o
holders of the 7-9 daily double majors with the Senators in San Diego 000 000 ooo- o 4 o
tickels $154.20.
1971, posting a 10-22 record,
Singer (3-3) and Sims ; Greif,
Schaeffer (8), Acosta (8),
The 3,009 thoroughbred
before being · traded to Caldwell (9) and Kendall . LPracing fans wagered a total of Oakland.
Greif (3·4) .
·
$256,917.
Ilot game)
Cinci nnati 030 000 01~ 4 4 0
San Fran 000 200 Olo- 3 7 1
Nolan, Carroll tBJ and Bench ;
Bryant, McMahon (8), Barr (91
and Rader, Healy ' (9). WP·
Nolan (4·1). lP-Bryant (l.JJ.
HRs-Javler (1st), Kingman

THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL

a..

San Diego
Atlanla

Am~rican League

Chicago
401 110 too- B14 0
Phil a
000 100 ooo- 1 J 0
Hoolon (J-3) and Hundley ;
Champion, Brandon (41. Shct&lt;t
(6), Twitchell IBJ and Mccar.
ver. LP- Champion (J. IJ . HRs
- Monday 3 (Jrd, 4th &amp; 51hL
Luzinski (6th).

time. The spOkesman blamed
broken leg he sustained Tu* sustained a broken left leg but lhe crash on "hub design
· failure ."
day at the Indianapolis Motor no other major injuries.
Rookie Jerry Karl, Manches·
~ay.
Still strapped in the cockpit
Pollard's car was damaged of his machine, Pollard told ter, Pa., escaped injury when
extenalvely in a tangle with the fellow driver Mel Kenyon, his racer wun in lhe same turn
Lebanon, Ind., to call his wife, earlier in the day. Karl said his
Pat, and tell her he wasn't hurt machine struck a rabbit which
HAl'PY MONDAY
seriously. Kenyon did and Mrll. hlld wondered onto the track,
Clermont,
CLEVELAND (UPI)
In all, Ind.
24 cars were · out - . .• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Pollard was on hand at . The car spiUI twlce·but did not
Happy Monday · was the Mefbodlsl . Hospital when her hit the wall.
Tuesday, including three which
"Try It, You1l Like It"
Tuesday winner of the featured lllsband was brought in.
Pollard, prior to his· crash, have already been qualified. In
elghlh race at ThiStledown.
Kenyon was rwming behind had been running la(ie In the addition to Pollard, Jolutny
Clem's Ace was second and Pollard when the right rear 184 miles per hour range, Rutherford, Fort Worth, Tex.,
Bull Sl1n third.
and Wally Dallenbach, East
wheel came off the racer in the second best of the day.
The seven-yeir-old was No.3 turn. The car hit the wall,
The !~est lap of the day wu BrunswiCk, I'I.J., had their
ridden by Mike Perotta w spun, went 380 feet, scraped the a 185.032 m.p.h. by Bill qualified machineS out for
victory in 1:00 3-6 over the five wall again and traveled Vukovldl, Fresno, Calif.; In a practice l'IU18.. '
furlongs.
This weel!end marks lbe .
another 'l2ll feet before sto~ car wbidl banged lbe \fall
file :14 dally double pairing ping in the middle of lbe north . Sunday prior to the start of final round of time trials with
ol Black Buckeye and Bimdo lhort dlute.
lime trials. .
the 33 fastellt madllnes making
Jrd Ave.
reltlrned 156.40. The sexenlh
Next fastest was a 18U39 by the boU\wy weekend rice.
A spokesman for car-owner
Middlepprt
·race qulnella on the U com- Andy Granatelllsald It was nef
bination gf Just Utile and lmown whether the machine,
LET'S GO TO ·
Facllble returned $462.60.
• · FEATURED WINNER
NORTHFIELD, Ohio (UP!)
- Dillalr won ' the featured
elghU! trot at Norlhfleld- Pari
Tuelday nllht.tler Quinta Tag
wu puahed Into aecood place
for Interference In the llretch.
Tbe wimilr' nmnlnl the mile
In 1:01.1, Wl8 driven by John
SUtlallnd. The payoff wu
$'1.10, $1.40 .ad $3.00. 8peedj

STANDINGS

Denny McLain Mulls Over Future ByU~~~;~ional

Broken Leg Forces
Pollard From. '500'

,.

The
Ulcola
. .

unawares ," said Grammas,

!':.

..

,

Both Concepcion and third
base coach Alex Grammas
said they were as swprjsed as
!tart when Pete hit the baiL
"Sure, he caught me

~

PUDDING CUPS..........................~.. · .
HOME MADE
,
SMOKED
, THE,
fa!lliiJ $
TIDE DETERGENT.~................:...........:. ~.. ~ · Sausage Ham Salad Stew Meat·
$
A~ 1 8LEACH......................................~. 39'·; ~.79t;' at~
SPECIAL ECONOMY SIZE.

the difference.
· "He (Bryant ) threw those
firsllwo pitches awful close,"
said Rose, "So I de!!ided to lake
a swipe allhe next one if it was
as close. •·

Southern Association. He started five games for the A's this
season and failed to finish any
•
of them.
~
':'
When he was shipped to the
.,
Class AA Southern Association,
'
McLain had a 1·2 record, sky•
high earned-run average of 6.01
·•
and a $73,000 salary. Since he is
:,
not on the Birmingham
,:
payroll, he remains on the
Oakland payroll.
•
·
"He was a good fellow and
didn'tcauseusanyproblems,"
said A's manager Dick Wil·
~
•
Iiams. "Maybe the wanner
:: LAFAYETTE, Iod. (UPI)- lheir first National llaskEtball NBA Wesle;n Divisoon cham- ' weather in Alabama . might
~ George .King, Pll{due ~ead ~ ,:\ssocia ti\W.. ,WPI;llj. . t;bampi'!- 1,PjPQ~ip~ ,.in"1~62, .,199:!, 1965,
baskelhallcoacli the past seven h~i.(l,.;:.... •• ":~"' •
., ~D~ l!lll6.,. .. ..
, "' .,, ..
' ' '
· ·' ·
years and athletic director fi!r
Hesa1d in LOs Angeles
Before ,going to the Lakers, " "REDSKINS BEATEN "i
• the past 15 months, announced had decided to take the Purdue Schaus wasallhe University of
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI)
" Tuesday lhat Fred Schaus, position because he missed West Virginia, where he com- - Donn Seidholz doubled in
; general manager of the Los coaching during hiS five years • piled a 146-37 record as the two runs Tuesday to give In~ Angeles Lakers,' will succeed as an administrator and wanted Mountaineers ca ptured lhe diana a 2-1 victory over Miami
: him as coach.
lo return to a college eveniron- Sou!hern Co n(ere nce cham- of Ohio in lhe firsl game of a
• Although King resigned as ment.
pionshlp all six seasons he was non-conference doubleheader.
: coach of the Boilermakers, he
The S-5 Schaus coach~ the head coach. The school played Miami took the nightcap 4-3.
will remain as director of Lakers for seven seasons from in the NCAA Tournament all
Bro Johnson balled in the
• Purdue's Alblelic Department. 1961 through 1967, compiling a six seasons.
winning run for Miami in thE}
Schaus, 46, was coosldered 315-243 record to win the title of
King was Schaus' assistant at fifth inning of the second game
the moving force behind the the winningesl active coach in West Virginia in the 1959 and lo give pitcher Jack Kucek the
Lakers this year- his fifth as lhe NBA at lhat time . Under 1960 season and succeeded him win. Kip Balsley was the
general manager-as lhey won Schaus, the Lakers won the as head coach of the Mountai." winning pitcher for Indiana in
neers.
the opener .

tJle
e;etUee·/atltilf!:.

,

1
49'

303

COLUMBUS ( UPI) - Dave
Wottle of Bowling Green, who
ran a 3:511.5 mile in the Martin
Luther King Games at
Philadelphia Sunday, was the
unanimous choice lor MidAmerican Conference athlete
of lhe week today.
WotUe, a 145-pound Olympic
prospect, won the mile on a
rainsweplltack against a field
that included Jim Ryun . On
Saturday, Wottle won the 880 in
a triangular meet with Toledo
and Eastern Michigan .
The Philadelphia win gave
him the all-time outdoor mile
record for MAC runners. Kent
Stale 's Sam Hair previously
held the record, of 3:58.7.

•

~OICE

..

runs in his first lhree ai-bats star said. "It's something no
and drove in five runs Tuesday athlete can explain. Usually
night as the Chleago Cubs I'm a slow .starter, a horrendefeated lhe Philadelphia Phil- dous starter, in fact."
lies, S.l.
Monday's hilling heroics
"It's taken me six years to backed the thretHiit.pitching of
have a nighl like this," the rookie Burt Hooton, who pitformer Arizona State bonus . ched a · n&lt;Hiitter against the
Phils on April 16. Greg
Lozinski's 5(J().foot horne run in
the fourth irmmg, hiS sixth of
lhe sea59n, accounted for the
, lone Philadelphia run.
The loss dropped the secondplace Phils four games behind
New .York, which beat Monireal, 7-3, in the National
"A 3:54 mile is not out of League Eastern Division race.
Dave's realm and since he has In olhcr NL games, Pittsburgh
good nat speed, 1,500 meters edged St. Louis, 4-3, Houston
(the Olympic diStance) should
be an ideal race for him," his
coach, Mel 'Brodt, says of the
Canton, OhiQ, native.
" If he learns lo move out on
his own rather than wail back
in lhe pack,· then he can he a
WALNUT CREEK, Calif.
great one," Brodt said.
(UPI)-Former 31-game
Other nominees considered WiMer Denny McLain, now the
by a panel of newsmen for the highest paid minor leaguer in
weekly award were Miami's history, mulled his baseball
Ken Daniels in tennis, Ohio future today while awa!ting the
University's Doug Diamond in . birth of his fourth child.
in track, Toledo's Barry FiSher
The 28-year-old righthander
in track, and Western was optlooed by the Oakland
Michigan 's Larry Kulscar in Athleti~s Monday to their
basebalL
Birmingham farm in the

Wottle Athletes.
Of Week In MAC

EDUpA'nON MONEY
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Auditor Joseph Fergt1100 18,_
the statehaupent t33.8 million ·
more oo higher education lhis
year lban Jut year;
'lbelarcest amount out olthe
total ~U4 miDion waa t&amp;0.9
million allocated to Ohio State
Univenlty.

cans

~kg.

'

Dairy Buy!
Wltll YOU IUY l

4

.

By JOE CARNICELLI
UP! Sports Writer
It may have been Tuesday
everywhere else but it was
Monday in Philadelphia .
"Everybody has his day and
this one was mine," said Rick
Monday after he crashed home

•

303 • .,

The first two pitches by
Bryant to Rose missed the
plate by about a foot. Between
the second and third pitch Rose

engaged Gianls rookie catcher
Dave Rader in conversation
and while he was talking he
inched a lillie closer to the
plale. Thus, when ball three
came across, missing the plate
by inches, Rose was in position
to slap a hit.
.
Shortstop Surprtsed
His tap lo third caught Jim
Ray Hart completely by surprise and he missed the ball for
an error. While shortstop Chris
Speier scrambled .for the ball,
Concepcion came all the way
around for the run lhal made

·

SANDALS AND CANVASS
. ~SUALS . .~

Charlie Nash, chltlrman of
Ohio Farmers Unioo stated,
"'As far ·as we' know''thls suit
will be the first of' Ita kind
either state ,or nationally.
Olher suits have been brought
wilh the 'principal objecUve
being equal distribution. Wblle
this will he a part of lhls suit,
the principle objective will be
to prove the inequities of
Properly Taxes themselves."

for

SLICED OR HALVES

51Jl and PEARL STS.. RAUNE

1•1•

Income Tax."

bxs.$1.

Gianls.
..
With the Reds leading by just
a run, 3-2, in the eighth of the
first game, llose came to bat
with Dave Concepcion on
second and one out. The Giants
elected to walk Rose inlentionally so that Ron Bryant,
a leflhander , could. pitch to the
lefthanded swinger Joe
Morgan and Bobby Tolan.

Cubs Romp, Monday Hits 3 HOmers

The bidding has heen :
We•l North ' Eul South
Pass 1 •
Pass
Pass 2 •
?
Pass
3•
Pass
You, South hold:
J 54
8 76
,.Q 101
.
What do you do now?
A-Bid ·four •I&gt;Odes. Your
partner is look inc for more inforiJilltiOn. Y~r &amp;pode roise,wos
very iound and you have good
spades at...
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of bidding one spade
'your parlner has jumped to two
spades over your one heart.
What do r.ou do now?

USDA

*

,
CAKE MIXES..............................

'
James Jacoby
.

The suit will be beneficial to all
people. Farmers Union Tax
Suit calls for the removal of
Property Taxes as a s'll'":e of
revenue for education. This
revenue 1o be replaced .by

'·

'

ose

atr,

Cil'lclnnati

Plus Quality Food Values the Whole Week Thru

()fiR 111£/FM/tll ARE10/#'PR/MI/
PIUSBURY

Pa ss

. OrJCnin~ lead - • Q

Class Suit Fil~d for Taxpayers

.,..u

Puss

By JOE SARGIS
UPI Sports Writer
SAN FRANCfSCO.(UPI)'J'IIey say about winning ball
players that somehow they will
find a way to beat you.
Never was this better
demonstrated than Tuesday
" night and th.e perpeltator was
none. other than Pete Rose.
Rose uco'nned '' the Reds to a
4-3 victory in the opener of a
· twi-nighl doubleheader and
then drove in both riUIS of the
nightcap for a 2-4 triumph and
a sweep of the San Francisco

•

weep

.Contract .Can Be Beaten .

weeks, 011y l.as VejlaS can compete· ... Ergo,

liavill !;lin cam in

•

WIN AT IIRIDGI!

the ~n Room of the

folluwc•l ·it with a filllrraled "X" ruck, "l'l&gt;r·
sonills"
... Heave a huge sigh of relief - the
month SUS. By mall in Oh io
mviar shortage has ended: Arnold Hansenend W. v, .. Ont . Ytlr su.oo.
Silt mont·hS ,S7.1S . Three
Strwn,
pres. of Romanoff Caviar, just r~
mo"ths $.4. . 50 . S.ubs.crlptlon
pr ice includes Sundey Times .
from Iran and prompUy reported to us lbat
I I I
Stnf inel .
more than l'tlough preCious Beluga is being
Dear Helen :
. I can see a girlmakin~ '""' mist.:•k••:md dt'Clrling to keep her airlifted to. him now to more than l:Over
dlild, but Whl'll sh• has U1r"' or so out of wedlock - often with shortages.
The street peddlers, who illegally tom .5th
different !albers - and goes oil welfarelo support them it's
time
'
Avenue sidewalks into blockades, give It a
to get Iough.
rundown
look, aile! take customers away Jrom
Wby doo 'I they make a rule that sj/,gle women on welfare
'
LEGAL NOTICE
the rent and tax-paying sllops, get a lot ol
C1r1 Moles , addre-ss unknown , must give up any baby after lhe f1rst illegitimate one? There are
Evel .vn
Moles .
address so many couples who want to adopt these da)'s and can't find ' sympalhy from passersby as lhey're loaded into
unknown. the Unknown heirs of
police v811l1 Blld hauled off. But it's. a nllgglng
Evelyn Moie~ . etll of Whose children. A don 'I· care mother wouldO't provide a good horneaddr"esses are unknown and and an wunarried woman who doesn't take precautio1111 Is cerManhattan problem. The city's Economic
cennot with
reasonable
Development Administration plans to seize
diligence be a,cerfalned , will tainly "don't-care."
take notice that on the 11th. day
Seems a logieal way to hetp everyone, including lbe child. peddlers' merchandise. To dispel anyone
of May, 1972, Plalnfifl, Ber·nlce
suspecting they're sad types there to pick up a
Bowen flied her complaint May he it would inspire thOle careless.women to take The Pill
against fhem In the Court· of
dollar or two recession money, please he adCommon Pleas of M elo1i which isofferedfrl!l!to welfare people.- T. D.
vised the EDA surveyed the average sales ol
County , Oh io; the same bei ng Dear T.:
Case No. 15,0731n sa id court, lor
such street peddlers and they take in m&lt;re than
Your plan might inspire an even greater black market in
an action lo quiet t itle In tht
following des cribed reel esrate, while babies. If a woman knows she must give up her child, slle
$33 a day! Many do better.
to.wlt :
Dick Cavett's a star all right: he now eVen
Situated in the VIllage of might try 101' the highest bidder (and many are bidding lhese
Middleport, Me igs County , days - adoptable Caucasian babies being very scarce) .
hashisowndisease-he'sbeennamednatiooal
Ohio.
dlairffian of the Concerned Youth for Cerebral
Being Lot No . 104 In Behan './5
It could also place considerably more "hard-to-adopt"
Addition to the sa id VIllage or dlUdren in institutions or inadequate temporary homes.
Palsy ,.. Over the decades, stars hltve added
Middleport, For more ctellnife
dlarities, rnosUy illness-fighters, to their ac,
description , reference is made
Besides, this "solution" strikes me as cold-blooded. What do
to the Plat of said Village .
tivilies. Wmchell a-eated the Damon Rwlyoo
others
think?
~
H.
The demand of the complaint
Is for fhe quletlnb of the t1tle of
Fund, Ed Sullivan has the Heart Fund,~- .
+++
the Defendants based on t
, Victor Borge has an ambivalent attitude
contract or purchase dated June Dear Helen :
toward his Danish accent: "Wben rtalk I can 'I
10, 1957, which was abandoned
After he read about The International Society of Girl Walby the Defendants carl Moles
hear an accent. But when I listen to a radio or
and Evelyn Moles, and for olher doers In our paper, my husband joined. He got some little
re~'!1.l oerendanls are; required adhesive. backed paper sUckers lhat men are supposed to attach TV tape, it's there."
'lbe fine Manhattan nightclubs and hotel
to asnwer said complain I wllh ln to women's clolhes when lbey aren't looking. The "Watcluible
21 d•vs after the last dlfe ·or A da"
Um
supper club!J ciJ)'t lure big stars any more.
publlcallon. which dole is June war saycomp entarythings, butitstillburnsmelhatrny
Can't alford the lees demaflded. Sammy Davis,
21 , 1912.
husband would look at an IDIImown girl so intently lhat he'd want
Bernard
v.
Fultz
·
to
give
her
an
award.
for Instance, just played lite Westbury, loog
Webster and Fultz
Island, Music Fair and woiUid up wilh about
P.
o.
Box
723
He's
learned
all
the
teclmlques
for
girl
watching,
so
Ilia!
no
Pomeroy. Ohio 45769
$200,000
of a total $32:!.000 theater grOliS far two
Altorneys for Plalnllfl one lmows, not even his wife. But I lind awards on my clothes
(5117, 24, 31 (617,14, 21. 6t
quite often.
·
care of us?"
~
.t
.
Now, he sa,_ he's going to inveni .Orne ·"Unwatchable
·'
Awards" for women wbo look grubby~ or are in hair rollers, or
I NOTICE OF FILING
expose fat lmees in hot pants.
·
AUTHENTICATED COPY
... And If somebody finda out who stuck one of lhese on her,
Ohio· Farmers Union and of Public InStruction Martin
ot
,,
Will
~:i~~:t~
he'U
be
scalped.
·
.
Melvin
Borton of Wauseon, Essex, lhe Stale Board of
111110
0
Otctuod.
What do you do with a man like that? _ WATCHING A Ohio, farmer ; and · Area Educalion, also Fulton County
Nollce
Is
hereby
given
lhal
W•'TCHER
Di' reclor o1 0rganlZa
· I'ton for officials Kenneth
Moll.
Romo c . Rothgeb, Execulrlx ol "'
lhtf?Sialeot Dee Wilt Rolhgeb. Dear WAW:
National Farmers Union, filed Auditor, Grace Amstutz,
late
of
Point
Pleasanl
,
West
So
I
·
.
,
·
a
•·· Fed era1 cour1 ·m Treasur
' er • Wauseon Board of
VIrginia, deceased, on lhe 131h
onguhesticksto 'Watchable Awards" (especially fOI'
""'sw't ID
~~~b:l.'~~~rt'~:'.Y.!\~·: c~un'•~~ you), and maintains a ~If policy (except for you), consider Toledo, May 8.
Education and Superintendent
Ohio, an aulhenllco ted copy ot him an honest apprecrator.
The suit challenges the William Pees, aU in !,heir oflhe Leiters ol AdmlniSirollon of
But discourage the "Un•atchable Awards,. J Bea in
conslitullonality of real ficial capacities, not as inuld Eolole .granted jn Counly
,.
· oe
g •
t la
f dividuals.
court of Mason county. west president of the "International Society of Girl Watchers" might
proper Y xes as a source o
In Ia end thai .lhe claim or dr
hi- • 1 Of the
nlzali
·
raising revenue for schools.
Borton said, ' "The suit is
on;r credllor or urn
oo '
orga
on. - H, ,
...
ThiS suit is a class action suit being brought because of the

LEGAL NOTICE

"

along.Br'Way

Helen Help

DEVOTED TO THE

'
1-'lbellllllySentlnel,~,O.,May 17,1972

.

'

cu. ft.

G.E.

DISHWASHER
Deluxe Mobile · Made

Color Telauision
·' Enly American

23" Con sot.

~1~9·~·~--~Sl~~~-9~5~~~~~~~

&amp;R .IRES

MPM! "''itT, O.

�;

-

,.

t - Tile DailySeriinol,Middltport.P_.,y,O., May 17,1972

5-The DaUy SeMinel,Mlddleport,.PCIIIllroy, 0., May i7. 1972

RIGA

FOOD. LINE~

~

From
Your·

•

~

•

•V

A SLICED

'1
RIGHT RESERVED

8 . RGAINS

TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES.

··'

PORK
LOIN

,.. .'

•'

•

•

.f'

WIENERS

-

OL

'

pkg.

All Meat Wieners
Hygrade

LB.

All Beef W1e11ers .

'

79C

'

·'"'

Cam ivai

WASTE FREE

BONELESS

WIENERS

ENGLISH

16 BEST-P.IECES

lb.

pkg.

ROAST

PORK
SAUSAGE

4 Wings

49~ LB,

.,'
'
'

KRAFT~s

"

1

.10

US. No. 1

ORANGE
JUICE

$}39

Country Style

4 Breasts

4 Legs
4 Thighs

'

.

lb.

BUCKET OF
CHICKEN
.

.• ~ ''·

Spare Ribs

4

I '

.

,

Buffet Suppers

•

WHITE POTATOES

2 lb. pkg.

'1 19

Sliced Bologna

gal. ·79~

1 lb. pkg.

CIRCLE F

LB.
BAG

SLICED

!~pi&amp;·

4

IGA

,.

CRACKERS
CAMPBELL
VEGETABLE
BEEF

KRAFT$
SOFT ~

PARKAY
OLEO
l~b.

pkg.

SNOW-KREEM
.. -·· SHORTENING

CREMORA
16 Ol JAR

•
'

ONE PER PERSON

5 9~ WITH

·

COUPON

chicken, the Colonel 's special
gravy, hot rolls.
THE IIARIIfl. has 21 pieces df
chicken.

••
ll•••••••••••

ONLY
'

BATH
VORY ,SIZE
19
With
• FABRIC SOFTENERS
wm.
BARS
SOAP
Caujlon I
~lNG siZE
aJUPO~
ONE PER PERSON
EXPIRES 5/20
M&amp;R FOODUNER LEXPIRES 5/20
ONE PER PERSON
M&amp;R FOODUN~
l.iiii.iiili.iii.-.....1
...1
.............1.1_1... --------- -------~---

1

.IGA .FOODLINEJ :

MIDDLEPORT, 'OHIO
'

CROW;S STEAK HOUSE

3 LB~

CAN

BOX

r~- oc;~~;;---~~------

E T

•

·-

·•

1

THE BUCKrr has 15 ple&lt;:es of

Offer good thru May 25-1972

50 Books To A Box

ENS

'h gal.

••
••
••
••
••
••
••
••~fried &amp;kieka.:
Good At : Crow's Steak House

19

.

9e

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
American Leaglon
Ladies Auxiliary League
May 12, 1972
Standings
Pts .
68 .
62
56

54

4

39~

~

'

ROOT
BEER .

••
•• -DOLLAR
•• on a ltuck•t or llarrel
••
••·
••
••
••
•
per purchase.

50
42

I.
B

SOUP

TOPPS

1 lb. box

~

. CLEVELAND ·(UPI) - New York Yankees .
NEY{ YORK (UPI)- ""e two coolestants couldn't be more Thanks to a Detroit loss, the
The series continues here tOnight'with
Steve Kline (.l-( ·'I
eyeball,f.IH!yehall had !!ley lried.
Oeveland Indians are still sole
the
Yankees
going agairu¢
A vein ilr the temple of one of them throbbed and bulged · possessors today of first place
periodically and sometimes seemed as if it might even pop out. in the American League East. Dick Tidrow (3-2). ·
The Yanks held Cleveland to
As the Detroit. Tigers, one
Pure and simple, this was strictly a con lest of brute force.
just
four hits. The only run
Finally, the stockle.r of the two men put aU his 245 pounds game back of the Tribe, were
behind one last mighty lry and that did it. His opponent was being clobbered 8-3 by Balli· came in the eighth when pinchmore Tuesday night, so were hitter Adolfo Phillips, wbo was
licked.
"The winner and still world champion," amounced the re- the Indians losing 3-1 to the walked, came !).orne on a force
play .
feree," "Jim Dolcini!"
"You don't win ball gimes
Everybody in the·auditorium .went wild.
when you only get four hits,''
Huh1 You never heard of Jim Dolcini1
commented Indians manager
To be honest with you neither did I until only the other day.
Ken Aspromonte, noting that
That was when I found out he has won the World Wrlstwrestllng
the club has won only two out of
Championship three y~rs in a ro": now.and l!e'll he putting his
five games against lefthanded
title on the. line Saturday in Petaluma, Calif., where the event
pitchers.
wiU be taped by ABC's Wide World of Sports and carried
"If we dQn't get a better resometime later.
sponse hitting lefthanders, I
The %Oth Time
may have to start platooning,"
This marks the 20th time the event will be !Jeld and there are
he said.
Wayn e Turner , · Melva
three different divisions, one for the heavyweights 200 pounds
It still only was the Indians'
Turner
to
Edith
Blevins,
Lois,
third loss in the )ast 13 outings.
andover, another for those between 175 and 200 and stlll another
Columbia-Carpenter.
The loss went to Steve Harfor the little guys under 175.
G.
Swan,
Mabel
Swan
to
J.
gan,
who was making hlB first
There also Is a special woman's division in which a petite
Franklin Real Estate Co., start of the season alter a 1-13
policewoman from Boston is expected to defend her title
Ease., Meigs.
record last year. ·
Saturday.
·
Carrie B. Stout, Clarence L.
Hargan pitched his way out
"We're audaciou.s enough to call lt. the world championShip Bobo, Claudia Bobo to Jewell J.
because everybody's invited," says Jack Hornet, who is vice Jones, Pearl Jones, Correction, of trouble in the first three Innings, but the Yankees unloadpresident of the Wristwrestlers' Corporatlon, head referee and · ·Columbia.
'
ed
three runs in the filth that
~rainer of the Los Angeles Baseball Dodgers along with Bill
Jewell J. Jones, Pearl E. chased him from the mound.
Buhler, when not involved with his first love, which happens to be Jones to Robert Edward
"I had a good fast ball but I
wristwrestling.
Preston, Patricia S. Preston, 80 just couldn't keep the ball
Jack Hornet is 60 years old but nobody messes with him.
Acres, 59.2 Acres, Columbia. down," Hargan, who walked
He's still probably one of the strongest men in basebaU but
J. 0 . Grim, Mollie B. Grini to four in.his 4 1-3 innings, said.
nobody can ever get him to admit it.
Andrew J. Brozah, Jr., Joan
ABpromonte said he believes
Actually it was Home! who started this whole wrlstwrestllng Brozah, 1.75 Acre, Colwnbia. Hargan wUI be better •'when be
championship business and it began in a place you mlght figure a
Marie B. Marcus to James A. puts it aU together."
thing like this would- in a bar in Petalwna. ·
Marcus, Int. in 108.50 Acres,
"Sometimes his pitching mo- ,
Undefeated for ZO Yem
Lebanon.
lion Is off. Then :when he gets
Marie B. Marcus to .lames A. that down, his leg Is out," M"I had been undefeated in wristwrestllng for 20 years when a
matCh was arranged in this bar between a farmer from Marcus , Jnt. in Mine ra ls, promontesald. "Right now, his
Petaluma, Oliver Kulberg, and myself,"·' Homel says. ''The Lebanon.
lull concimlratlon Is not there."
Wilmer
A.
Rice,
Nora
E.
·
Bobby Murcer blooped a sinmatch ended up in a draw because the table coUapsed. This
caused me to feel we had to have a table that could withstand the Rice to Intra State Pipe Une gle off Hargan to start tbe Mh
iMlng raUy. It was his first hit
pressure. I personally built lt. It's a regulation table with elbow Co., Right of Way, Olive.
in 23 at-bats.
cups. Your elbows camot col)le out of the cups."
Murcer was driven home by
Jack Home! who withdrew from competition 17 years ago has
a
Ron
Blomberg double for the
been challenged by many peaple in his time. Even by suma
first run. Roy White beat a
wresUers in Japan, a!l of whom he beat.
International League Standings throw to the plate for the secHe was the Detroit Tigers' trainer for many years but never
By United Press International ond one and Rich McKinney
wanted to "go" against ballplayers becau'se he was afraid they
W. L. Pci. GB singled home Blomberg lor the
might hurt their arms.
Tidewater
17 12 .586
final run.
"
17 12 .586
"The twp best ballplayers I ever saw at wristwrestllng," Rochester
Ray Lamb took over from
Richmond
15 11 .577 •;,
Home! says, "were Red Wilson and Eric Tipton. Remember Charleston
11 12 .478 3
Hargan with one out in the fifth
them1 They were both tough ."
Louisville
12 14 .462 3'h and pitched out the inning.
Peninsula
13 16 .448 4
The wrlstwresUers have .their own corporation and their own
Then Denny Riddleberger
Syracuse
12 15 .444 4
slogan-"Pure strength a!'(l raw courage ." Usually a match Toledo ,
11 16 .407 5
came on for three innings, givbetween two contestants will be over in 3 or 4 seconds although
Tuesday's Results
Ing way to Ed F•nner in the
Peninsula 6 Charleston 4
some have lasted as long as 4 minutes.
ninth.
Tidewater 2 Richmond 1
During the 20 years the event has been held there has been only Rochester 7 Toledo 6
Mike Keklcb got the pitching
one injury and that occurred last year when_a competitor broke Louisville 13 Syracuse 0 (1st win, making him 3-2. Sparky
game!
his elbow.
Syracuse 5 Loyisyll!e 3 (2nd Lyle held the Indians hltlea
AB many as 2,000 persons shoehorn their way -into the' game)
tl\e flnaltwo ~.r
~
1+':,
'
• 1
• '"'.'\
il~
auditorium to watch the event each year and the fan reactlo1111 Is
•.
tremendous. The winner gets hla choice of an all-expenses paid
trip for two via Western Airlines either to Hllwall or Acapulco.
Their RomaoUc Side
GOOD WITH THIS COUPON ONLY
Sometimes the matches have their romantlc side also.
"I remember one fellow who came to compete from Hawaii,"
Home! says. "His name was Homer and he arrived in Petaluma
with a pretty little girl he said he had met In San Francisco. He
went up against a husky meat packer from HoUywood In a match
which lasted nearly four minutes. All the time the match was
go~n the pretty Utile girl kept screaming 'C'mon, Homer,'
and 'Dinh get hurt, Homer.' We thought it was his girl friend .
"Homer finally got beat, but his opponent thought so much of
him that he picked up his tab for a three-week vacation in
Hollywood. ,And later on, the feUow from Hollywood wound up
marrying Homer's 'girl.'"
Generally though, the wristwrestlers are all business. ,
Monday throug~ Tliur•tlr•v
"We think wristwrestllng should be Included among the
~~
Brina this coupon to save Sl on
Olympic events,t' says Home!, who Uves in Petaluma and has
finger ilckln' good Ken.tu clky
Fried Chicken prepared acco1rd·
helped make it the wristwrestllng capital of the world.
lng to the Colonel's own
"It's a serious thing in our part of the eoulltry," he adds .
recipe with 11 different herbs
"Wilen the little old ladles of Petalwna go out for tea, they
and spices. '
wristwrestle· each other for the check."
No substitutions. One cou pon

Y111t the Colonel

- ~~dale

2
lf

,.

•••••

Dlicken, Dumplinp,
Chow Mein

.
•

.

.,..

.. ,.

Steak, Turkey:

MICHIGAN

~

By MILTON' RICHMAN
UPI Sports Wriler

Transfers

Country Style
12

.Six!.rt Parade .·.First A
. fter Loss

Meigs
Property

'

,.

ORK
STEAK

"

CENTER AND
FIRST CUTS
·.· MIXED

20~G.
ELM HILL

1

'

.

..

'~-

'

CARPET SALE

SAVE -2 0'
CAN

100 Pet. FHA Approved Nylon Carpet

2 ROOMS AND HAll

...••••• ..

Includes:

COMP~~~E\1.~!I~~LED

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?'·x12' Dining Rm FOR
S'x12' Hall
· ONLY

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.. tecklns installatloh • .Choice ot 12 cOlon. choice· of 12' or 15' width• ...
Guaranteed by Ingels, thenamt)Ou know and trust.
·

.. DEL
'l40NTE

1/z

can

INGELS .FURNITURE
FOR

�;

-

,.

t - Tile DailySeriinol,Middltport.P_.,y,O., May 17,1972

5-The DaUy SeMinel,Mlddleport,.PCIIIllroy, 0., May i7. 1972

RIGA

FOOD. LINE~

~

From
Your·

•

~

•

•V

A SLICED

'1
RIGHT RESERVED

8 . RGAINS

TO LIMIT
QUANTITIES.

··'

PORK
LOIN

,.. .'

•'

•

•

.f'

WIENERS

-

OL

'

pkg.

All Meat Wieners
Hygrade

LB.

All Beef W1e11ers .

'

79C

'

·'"'

Cam ivai

WASTE FREE

BONELESS

WIENERS

ENGLISH

16 BEST-P.IECES

lb.

pkg.

ROAST

PORK
SAUSAGE

4 Wings

49~ LB,

.,'
'
'

KRAFT~s

"

1

.10

US. No. 1

ORANGE
JUICE

$}39

Country Style

4 Breasts

4 Legs
4 Thighs

'

.

lb.

BUCKET OF
CHICKEN
.

.• ~ ''·

Spare Ribs

4

I '

.

,

Buffet Suppers

•

WHITE POTATOES

2 lb. pkg.

'1 19

Sliced Bologna

gal. ·79~

1 lb. pkg.

CIRCLE F

LB.
BAG

SLICED

!~pi&amp;·

4

IGA

,.

CRACKERS
CAMPBELL
VEGETABLE
BEEF

KRAFT$
SOFT ~

PARKAY
OLEO
l~b.

pkg.

SNOW-KREEM
.. -·· SHORTENING

CREMORA
16 Ol JAR

•
'

ONE PER PERSON

5 9~ WITH

·

COUPON

chicken, the Colonel 's special
gravy, hot rolls.
THE IIARIIfl. has 21 pieces df
chicken.

••
ll•••••••••••

ONLY
'

BATH
VORY ,SIZE
19
With
• FABRIC SOFTENERS
wm.
BARS
SOAP
Caujlon I
~lNG siZE
aJUPO~
ONE PER PERSON
EXPIRES 5/20
M&amp;R FOODUNER LEXPIRES 5/20
ONE PER PERSON
M&amp;R FOODUN~
l.iiii.iiili.iii.-.....1
...1
.............1.1_1... --------- -------~---

1

.IGA .FOODLINEJ :

MIDDLEPORT, 'OHIO
'

CROW;S STEAK HOUSE

3 LB~

CAN

BOX

r~- oc;~~;;---~~------

E T

•

·-

·•

1

THE BUCKrr has 15 ple&lt;:es of

Offer good thru May 25-1972

50 Books To A Box

ENS

'h gal.

••
••
••
••
••
••
••
••~fried &amp;kieka.:
Good At : Crow's Steak House

19

.

9e

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
American Leaglon
Ladies Auxiliary League
May 12, 1972
Standings
Pts .
68 .
62
56

54

4

39~

~

'

ROOT
BEER .

••
•• -DOLLAR
•• on a ltuck•t or llarrel
••
••·
••
••
••
•
per purchase.

50
42

I.
B

SOUP

TOPPS

1 lb. box

~

. CLEVELAND ·(UPI) - New York Yankees .
NEY{ YORK (UPI)- ""e two coolestants couldn't be more Thanks to a Detroit loss, the
The series continues here tOnight'with
Steve Kline (.l-( ·'I
eyeball,f.IH!yehall had !!ley lried.
Oeveland Indians are still sole
the
Yankees
going agairu¢
A vein ilr the temple of one of them throbbed and bulged · possessors today of first place
periodically and sometimes seemed as if it might even pop out. in the American League East. Dick Tidrow (3-2). ·
The Yanks held Cleveland to
As the Detroit. Tigers, one
Pure and simple, this was strictly a con lest of brute force.
just
four hits. The only run
Finally, the stockle.r of the two men put aU his 245 pounds game back of the Tribe, were
behind one last mighty lry and that did it. His opponent was being clobbered 8-3 by Balli· came in the eighth when pinchmore Tuesday night, so were hitter Adolfo Phillips, wbo was
licked.
"The winner and still world champion," amounced the re- the Indians losing 3-1 to the walked, came !).orne on a force
play .
feree," "Jim Dolcini!"
"You don't win ball gimes
Everybody in the·auditorium .went wild.
when you only get four hits,''
Huh1 You never heard of Jim Dolcini1
commented Indians manager
To be honest with you neither did I until only the other day.
Ken Aspromonte, noting that
That was when I found out he has won the World Wrlstwrestllng
the club has won only two out of
Championship three y~rs in a ro": now.and l!e'll he putting his
five games against lefthanded
title on the. line Saturday in Petaluma, Calif., where the event
pitchers.
wiU be taped by ABC's Wide World of Sports and carried
"If we dQn't get a better resometime later.
sponse hitting lefthanders, I
The %Oth Time
may have to start platooning,"
This marks the 20th time the event will be !Jeld and there are
he said.
Wayn e Turner , · Melva
three different divisions, one for the heavyweights 200 pounds
It still only was the Indians'
Turner
to
Edith
Blevins,
Lois,
third loss in the )ast 13 outings.
andover, another for those between 175 and 200 and stlll another
Columbia-Carpenter.
The loss went to Steve Harfor the little guys under 175.
G.
Swan,
Mabel
Swan
to
J.
gan,
who was making hlB first
There also Is a special woman's division in which a petite
Franklin Real Estate Co., start of the season alter a 1-13
policewoman from Boston is expected to defend her title
Ease., Meigs.
record last year. ·
Saturday.
·
Carrie B. Stout, Clarence L.
Hargan pitched his way out
"We're audaciou.s enough to call lt. the world championShip Bobo, Claudia Bobo to Jewell J.
because everybody's invited," says Jack Hornet, who is vice Jones, Pearl Jones, Correction, of trouble in the first three Innings, but the Yankees unloadpresident of the Wristwrestlers' Corporatlon, head referee and · ·Columbia.
'
ed
three runs in the filth that
~rainer of the Los Angeles Baseball Dodgers along with Bill
Jewell J. Jones, Pearl E. chased him from the mound.
Buhler, when not involved with his first love, which happens to be Jones to Robert Edward
"I had a good fast ball but I
wristwrestling.
Preston, Patricia S. Preston, 80 just couldn't keep the ball
Jack Hornet is 60 years old but nobody messes with him.
Acres, 59.2 Acres, Columbia. down," Hargan, who walked
He's still probably one of the strongest men in basebaU but
J. 0 . Grim, Mollie B. Grini to four in.his 4 1-3 innings, said.
nobody can ever get him to admit it.
Andrew J. Brozah, Jr., Joan
ABpromonte said he believes
Actually it was Home! who started this whole wrlstwrestllng Brozah, 1.75 Acre, Colwnbia. Hargan wUI be better •'when be
championship business and it began in a place you mlght figure a
Marie B. Marcus to James A. puts it aU together."
thing like this would- in a bar in Petalwna. ·
Marcus, Int. in 108.50 Acres,
"Sometimes his pitching mo- ,
Undefeated for ZO Yem
Lebanon.
lion Is off. Then :when he gets
Marie B. Marcus to .lames A. that down, his leg Is out," M"I had been undefeated in wristwrestllng for 20 years when a
matCh was arranged in this bar between a farmer from Marcus , Jnt. in Mine ra ls, promontesald. "Right now, his
Petaluma, Oliver Kulberg, and myself,"·' Homel says. ''The Lebanon.
lull concimlratlon Is not there."
Wilmer
A.
Rice,
Nora
E.
·
Bobby Murcer blooped a sinmatch ended up in a draw because the table coUapsed. This
caused me to feel we had to have a table that could withstand the Rice to Intra State Pipe Une gle off Hargan to start tbe Mh
iMlng raUy. It was his first hit
pressure. I personally built lt. It's a regulation table with elbow Co., Right of Way, Olive.
in 23 at-bats.
cups. Your elbows camot col)le out of the cups."
Murcer was driven home by
Jack Home! who withdrew from competition 17 years ago has
a
Ron
Blomberg double for the
been challenged by many peaple in his time. Even by suma
first run. Roy White beat a
wresUers in Japan, a!l of whom he beat.
International League Standings throw to the plate for the secHe was the Detroit Tigers' trainer for many years but never
By United Press International ond one and Rich McKinney
wanted to "go" against ballplayers becau'se he was afraid they
W. L. Pci. GB singled home Blomberg lor the
might hurt their arms.
Tidewater
17 12 .586
final run.
"
17 12 .586
"The twp best ballplayers I ever saw at wristwrestllng," Rochester
Ray Lamb took over from
Richmond
15 11 .577 •;,
Home! says, "were Red Wilson and Eric Tipton. Remember Charleston
11 12 .478 3
Hargan with one out in the fifth
them1 They were both tough ."
Louisville
12 14 .462 3'h and pitched out the inning.
Peninsula
13 16 .448 4
The wrlstwresUers have .their own corporation and their own
Then Denny Riddleberger
Syracuse
12 15 .444 4
slogan-"Pure strength a!'(l raw courage ." Usually a match Toledo ,
11 16 .407 5
came on for three innings, givbetween two contestants will be over in 3 or 4 seconds although
Tuesday's Results
Ing way to Ed F•nner in the
Peninsula 6 Charleston 4
some have lasted as long as 4 minutes.
ninth.
Tidewater 2 Richmond 1
During the 20 years the event has been held there has been only Rochester 7 Toledo 6
Mike Keklcb got the pitching
one injury and that occurred last year when_a competitor broke Louisville 13 Syracuse 0 (1st win, making him 3-2. Sparky
game!
his elbow.
Syracuse 5 Loyisyll!e 3 (2nd Lyle held the Indians hltlea
AB many as 2,000 persons shoehorn their way -into the' game)
tl\e flnaltwo ~.r
~
1+':,
'
• 1
• '"'.'\
il~
auditorium to watch the event each year and the fan reactlo1111 Is
•.
tremendous. The winner gets hla choice of an all-expenses paid
trip for two via Western Airlines either to Hllwall or Acapulco.
Their RomaoUc Side
GOOD WITH THIS COUPON ONLY
Sometimes the matches have their romantlc side also.
"I remember one fellow who came to compete from Hawaii,"
Home! says. "His name was Homer and he arrived in Petaluma
with a pretty little girl he said he had met In San Francisco. He
went up against a husky meat packer from HoUywood In a match
which lasted nearly four minutes. All the time the match was
go~n the pretty Utile girl kept screaming 'C'mon, Homer,'
and 'Dinh get hurt, Homer.' We thought it was his girl friend .
"Homer finally got beat, but his opponent thought so much of
him that he picked up his tab for a three-week vacation in
Hollywood. ,And later on, the feUow from Hollywood wound up
marrying Homer's 'girl.'"
Generally though, the wristwrestlers are all business. ,
Monday throug~ Tliur•tlr•v
"We think wristwrestllng should be Included among the
~~
Brina this coupon to save Sl on
Olympic events,t' says Home!, who Uves in Petaluma and has
finger ilckln' good Ken.tu clky
Fried Chicken prepared acco1rd·
helped make it the wristwrestllng capital of the world.
lng to the Colonel's own
"It's a serious thing in our part of the eoulltry," he adds .
recipe with 11 different herbs
"Wilen the little old ladles of Petalwna go out for tea, they
and spices. '
wristwrestle· each other for the check."
No substitutions. One cou pon

Y111t the Colonel

- ~~dale

2
lf

,.

•••••

Dlicken, Dumplinp,
Chow Mein

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Steak, Turkey:

MICHIGAN

~

By MILTON' RICHMAN
UPI Sports Wriler

Transfers

Country Style
12

.Six!.rt Parade .·.First A
. fter Loss

Meigs
Property

'

,.

ORK
STEAK

"

CENTER AND
FIRST CUTS
·.· MIXED

20~G.
ELM HILL

1

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CARPET SALE

SAVE -2 0'
CAN

100 Pet. FHA Approved Nylon Carpet

2 ROOMS AND HAll

...••••• ..

Includes:

COMP~~~E\1.~!I~~LED

$288

With Foam Rubber PM!

12'x15' Living Rm ALL .
?'·x12' Dining Rm FOR
S'x12' Hall
· ONLY

'·\ Quality name brand carpet 501 Nylon witt&gt; G oz. loam rubber pad, tllpert
.. tecklns installatloh • .Choice ot 12 cOlon. choice· of 12' or 15' width• ...
Guaranteed by Ingels, thenamt)Ou know and trust.
·

.. DEL
'l40NTE

1/z

can

INGELS .FURNITURE
FOR

�,-

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I'

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~

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•

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C;n~.~;~;;;&amp;phi~. ;d . ~ sOc.i.;i....)],lOOA
. tte.nd'.]os:p_..z;ky . Afr:.~~:.B~=-~~=~..
i Qb
r-~J
~
i_'.:

. An explanation of the. Search how the taxpayer reallY, feelS
for Concensus, a syste111 for about schools in the district.
establishing a melhod of ac- She asked for' at least 10
countability for educattonal representatives from the
· the state of Oh'10, Middleport PTA
· and no ted that
.programs 1n
· wasexpl•ined by Mrs. Richaf(l organizations outside the
· ~ a1 Sch oo1 schools are being asked to sen d
Vaug ha n, Me1gs
Disu1c
•·· t Search f Consensus representatives tot he meeting.
· man, a t Mond ay
Mrs . R. ay!Jlon d St ewar t ,
co-c ha1r
night's meeting of the Mid- president, said that new
dleport PTA.
chairmen for the 1972-73school
Mrs . Vaughan announced ,year will be announced at a
lha I a dlSulc
. ti ng · later date . The attendance
. •-· t-wlde mee
will be held at 7 p.m. on May 24 award w~s won by Mrs. Jen:
at Meigs High . School and nifer Butcher's room. Refresh·
urged that taxpayers get out ments were served by tile
and express themselves about exel-utive board. The pledge to
the !&gt;felgs Local · School the flag and Lord's Prayer to
Disli"iCt. .
.
open the meeting was given by
A cltl2en opinion survey will Barbie'Custer, Pam and Cindy
be a part of the Search for Crook~, and Mindy Long.
Consensus program and Mrs.
Vaughan assured the PTA
members that no numbers or
~
Other Information Will be U···d

=

to mark the survey forms for
the benefit of scho61 oflicials or
others who might want to
determine which Individual
filled Out Which form. s. .
Mrs. Vaughan urged a good
representation of parents at
the May 24 meeting so that a
ti"ue evaluation can be made on

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Candystripers

I

Are Honored

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Seniors were recognized and
presented charms at a meeting
of the Candystripers of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday night:
Receiving the charms were
Opal Beery, Jim Be !zing, Terry
Bird, DeLene DeLegal 1 Andrea
Dewhurst!, Sheila Folmer,
Vicki Grate, Nancy Greenlee,
Connie Smith, Melanie
Hackett, Jill Harris, Julia
Holler, Connie Radford, Pam
·Manley, Sherrie McCain, Ann
Ohlinger, Debbie Ohlinger,
Karen Price, Melissa Proffitt,
Connie Lanning, Milisa Rizer,
Leanne Sebo, Debbie Stewart,
Debbie Werry, Becky Wright.
New officers ·eJected were
Diane Norris, president; Susie
Card, vice president; Connie
Smith, secretary;' Kathy
Pickens, treasurer, and Chris
Miller, newspaper reporter.

aI'en·dar

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lifo c·

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WEDNESDAY
BIG BEND Neighborhood
1
11
9 30
Scout
meeDay
ng,camp
: · planning
a.m. a
KJ'ashuta.
sess
' ion . U.nitleaders, helpers
and olher volunteers asked to
be there. Cabin will be cleaned
and those attending are asked
to
. take supplies.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Mrs.
Earl Thoma, hostess.
THURSDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
special meeting, Thursday, 8
p.m. Work in Master Mason
degree ; all Master Masons
invited.
'
-XI GAMMA MU Thursday
7' 45 p.m. horne 0 1 Mrs. NeIIie
Brown. Inslallatlon of officers.
Vera Crow, co-hostess.
The annual homecoming of
WILLING workers Class,
the Naomi Baptist Church will Enterprise United Methodist
be held Sunday beginning with Ch h Th sd
7 30
Sunday School with Oscar
urc ' ur ay, :. p.m.
home of Mrs .. Ben Buck.
Qualls, superintendent, In
AFTERNOON CIRCLE
charge.
Hea.th Uhited Methodisi
At 11 a.m. services will be Church, Middleport, annual
held with the Rev. A. J. Ruffin, luncheon. Members to take
pastor of the Second Jeru••lem
~
covered dish and own table
Baptist Church, Ur)&gt;ana, service; meat and roll furspeaking. At 12 noon there will nished, 1 p.m .
be fellowship and dinner. The
MIDDLEPOI{T CHILD
Rev. Grover Turner , Pal.nl Conservation League, ceramic
Creek Baptist Church, will be demonstration 7:30 p.m.
speaker for the 2 p.m. services. Thursday at the home of Mrs.
The Rev. Mr . Turner will be Alice Mills, Second St., Midaccompanied by his choir. The dleport. Installation of officers
public is invited.
and business meeting at the
home of Mrs. Don Grueser;
also white elephant sale.
TRIP TM(EN
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Middleport first grade
Health
Club, home of Mrs.
students of Mrs. Bradford
Malig and Mrs. Wilson Car- Harold Blackston, 1:15 p.m.
penter took a trip Monday to Thursday.Mrs.ArleeAbbottto
the Bob Evans Farm and have the program, ¥rs.
William Witte the contest.
Hidden Valley.
Election of officers. Weights to
be taken 'lor special fund
WIFE SURPRISED
Mrs. Ancil (Gloria ) Cross raising project.
SOUTHERN Local Board of
was honored with a surprise
birthday party given by her Education; 8 p.m. Thursday at
husband Friday at their home
on Lincoln Street In Mid- high school.
WILLING WORKERS Class
dleport. A(lendlng. were Mr.
of
United Methodist Church,
and Mrs. Michael Nicholson,
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Cowan, Mr. Enterprise Thursday 7 p.m.
and Mrs. Roy Williams, Mr. home of Beatrice Buck.
HARRISONVILLE
and Mrs. George Grate, Mrs.
Carolyn Haley, Mr. and Mrs. CHAPTER, O.E.S., grand
Phil Mowery' and Miss Beverly inspection at 8 p.m. Thursday
at
the
Harrisonville
Thompson.
Elementary School. Dinner at
8:30· p.m. preceding. Reser. '
'··· •.. vations to be made with Mrs.
Avanell George, Rulland.

Homecomina Set

For'split -second timing

Accutron®
by Bulova

FRIDAY
INSPECTION of Racine
Chapter 134, O.E.S. 7:30 Friday
at the Masonic Temple.
Marlene Logston, deputy
grandmatron, inspecting officer.
SATURDAY
LOT OWNERS of Carleton
Cem~tery will elect trustees
Saturday, 7:30p.m. at Carleton
Church.

The heart of an Accutron watch is
a tiny, tuning fork that splits a second
into 360 equal intervals.
Accutron time is so nearly perfect
that8uiova guarantees monthly
accuracy to wit~ln 60 seconds. •
Sti!Mir tint llltcllon of AeeUHon

'

WIIChll todiJ. From'$110.

RETURNS SOUTH
Miss Sue Weaver, graduate
of. Meigs High School with the
class of 1971, has returned to
Jacksonville, Fla ., where she is
working as secretary for the
Gulf Life Tower. MisS Weaver
worked for the past year at
Elberfelds Department Store .

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7- The DaUy Sentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Ml!Y 17, 1~ ·

41

ACC'ilnON

"Wt will tdjust \Q this \Qi mnce, II n1cuury.

427" 2,.·hcur

ditl, "'ltroa!l

Appro~ ed.

f12S.

Sympathy
Flowers

Guarant11 Is lor ont y1ir.

"Let Us Help You
Right
Select the
Flowers"

Dudley's Aorist
Serving : Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.,
&amp; Mason Co .. W.Va.

'Seroance

· ·

'

\.TfUUtJates jf'v/ff

· •

RiO Cum l.audf:,

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Reibel
were presen ted fiowers and a
gift in recognition of being the
J01eph R. BaUey, son of
·
d
lh
ld
t
Mr.
aoct'Mn. "-·
oldest father an
e o es
""• Bailey,
Cb esI er, rece I ve d bl s
mol her ailend'mg the mo lherdaug ht.er, fath er-son o· b- bachelor of B&lt;lence deg ree,
servance of Trinity .Church
cam laade, al the 961b 111Sunday night&gt;
.
nlvenarycommencemealof
Youngest mother present
Rio Gralllle College Sunday
Whitlat
h
h
was. Mrs. Harvey
c
eld on lhe CoIIege . a· reen.
who was given a !lower, and
.Bailey and hll ·Wile, lhe
the youngest lather was John
former Lourelta Kay
Lisle, who received a gift.
Sargent, reside at Rio
Approximately 100 attended Gl'!lnde.
tbe event which began wilh a
· Golag lor the compotluck dlnner. The Rev. W. H. mencemenl and a barbecue
Perrin gave grace. Tributes picnic following allbe Balley
were given by Mary H•len · home were Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Blaettnar to-the mothers, Mrs.
Bailey, Mr, and Mrs.' Larry
John Blaettnar to the • Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
daughters, Joe Rosenbaum, to Baum, - Nancy and Tlm,
Ch
.
the fathers, and Fred Blaettester; Mr.andMrs.Harry
nar, to the sons.
Lee BaUey,. Pomer~y; Mr.
Mrs. ·pat Holter read "I Am and Mrs. Charles Sargent,
the Flag of the United States" Carol and Chuck, CoolvUie;
to background music by Mrs. Howie Caldwell, Mr. and
M
S
Ben Neutzling. Tbere was a
rs. La17Y peacer, Brian
piano duet by Mrs. Nancy Jo aad Karen, Tuppers Plains,
Clatworthy and Miss Mercedes and Mr. and Mrs. T. F.
Condon. Mrs. Clatworthy · Sargeat, Belpre. .
accompanied for group
singing. Skits included
"Mother and Others" by Bethh
11
1
Perrin and Barbara Whltatc,
'J
" Somebody's Mother," by
Faith
Perrin,
Ricky
Blaettnar' I;&gt;avid Burt,
The birthday anniversary of
Harvey Whitlatcb, Jr., Ed- Mrs. Thelma Grueser of 105
die
Holler, and : Jim .Plum St., Pomeroy, was obRosenbaum; and . "Grand- servedrecentlywithasurprise
parents Almanac" by Lisa and party.
Becky Thomas and Linda. Gifts were presented to Mrs .
Rosenbaum. Jim Rosenbaum Grue:ser and cake, ice cream,
had a monologue entitled coffee and punch were served.
"Parents Can Make the Dif- Guests were Mrs. Frank
ference ."
Grtmm, Norma Ba ker, Ricky
Mrs. Carolyn Thomas was . and Angie, Mrs. Icy Miller,
narrator for . "White Loved Mrs. Jack Duffy and David,
Best" with Faith Perrin, Mrs. Robert Halley and Amy,
Danny Thomas, Beth Perrin, Mrs. Larry Hudson and Lori,
Maria Legar taking parts. Mrs. Jack Miller and Joey'
Special music was by John Mrs. Minnie Johnson, Mrs.
Lisle and Don ·Harden, a solo, Robert Arnold, Mrs. Maxine
"Ma She's Maklng Eyes· a t Phillips, Miss Nettle Moore,
Me" by Chuckle Kennedy, and Mrs. Aileen Martiq, Brian
vocals by Brian Teaford, Beth Beeler, Miss Melanie Grueser,
Teaford and Mark Burson. Rodney and Misty, and Glenn
Cathy Blaettnar had the and David Grueser . The
closing prayer, "Forgive Me honored guest also received a
Lord. "
' Eleanor Logan.
gift from Mrs.

Part Given fior
TJ'he/:ma GrueSer

School Planned
Oates have been set for a
community' daily vacation

1

SALE PLANNED
The Kyger Creek Ladies Aid
will sl;lge a rummage sale

installed as president of the
Bradbury PTA at a meeting
held Thursday at the school.
William King served as the
installing officer. D!li'ing the
meeting· the PTA pledged

BeC.k._,.
'11

ht R On"'"'M a1.J,&lt;''bower

rr T

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'~lY

VII

Miss Becky Wright, brideelect of Airman 1-CJohn .Card
was .honored with a personal.
shower Tuesday·nigt.t at the
home of Mrs. Michael Wright,
Middleport.
A pink and yellow ' color
'!!!heme was carried out in the
decorations, Cake and
lemonade were served. Games
were played with prizes going
to Debbie Ohlinger, Milisa
Rizer, Mrs. Robert Card 'and
DINNER GIVEN
Mr:andMrs. Charles Woode,
CMster, entertained Mother's
Day with a family dinher.
Guests were Mr. _and Mrs.
Willard Hines, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs . Ray Hines, David and
Doug, Belpre, and Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Hines, Amy and
Andrea, Gallipolis.
AUCTION TONIGHT
A silent auction will be held·
at tonight's meeting of the Past
Presidents of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion
Auxiliary, at the home of Mrs.
Rarry Davis.
SUPPER GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Russell
.and daughter, Tammy, of
'columbus entertained
Saturday night with a supper at
·their farm home near Chester.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Grueser, Glenn, Melanie,
Rodney and Misty, Mr. and
Mrs, Larry Hudson and Lori,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halley
and Amy, and ·Mr . .and Mrs;
Gerald Hogue and Wendy.

~'rs. Uoytf .Wright. Others
_attending the shower were
Pam ·Manley, Mrs . Keith
.
. Phalin, · Cara 1ynn
an d
Maralynn Tracy, 'Liz, Susie
and Becky Card.
·
.
Others presenting gifts were
Jennifer and Bridget Gobel,
Jill Harris, Mrs. John Hood,
. lfene Barnes, Sherrie Reuter,
and Jo Ellen Diehl.

toa

UNBEATABLE COMBINATION
FOR ASUCCESSFUL

BEAUTY CAREER

~·~p

INTI

NATIONAL

The Scott-Martin Beauty Schools now have
included in their already famous method of
training the
"PIVOT
POINT
IN ·
TE RNA TIONAL" hairstyling training
method. ·
Available lh this area ONLY at

response we are expanding
our staff to serve you better,
Phone now for appointment
446-4736 or 446-9300.

Accredited
Approved for

Register
now for classes
starting June
and October

City •••••• •• State,,. Zip ••

439 R. Second Ave.

~Sa~tur~da~y~ati:th:·e~h=a=ll~f~ro:m~l:OJ==~G~a~JI~ipo~·1~;s~,o~h~i·~=~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~

Bible
schoolChurch
to be held
at the a.m. to 5 p.m.
Pomeroy
of Christ.
According to Thelma Osborne,
director, tbere will be a kickoff
wiener roast on Saturday, June
3, at the Route 33 roadside
park. This will also be a time
for pre-registration.
· Tbe school will be held from
6:30 to 9 p.m., June 5 through
~une 9. The closing program .
will be held on Saturday, June
10. Children of the community
are welcome.
·

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MASON
One of the
highlights of the school year is
the annual awards assembly .
·which was held on Monday
morning at Wahama High
School. Principal Ed ~xton
annoWlced the Balforoj Awards
.went to the Valedictorian,

Charlotte
Snyder,
and
Salutatorian, RoxAnne Wallis.
Recipients of the Danforth
Award were RoxAnne Wallis
and David Smith.
'The Daughters of American
Revolution Citizenship Award

was presented by Miss Lelah
Jane Powell to George Johnson, Marilyn Goodnite and
RoxAnne ·Wallis. New Haven
American Legion SmithCapehart Postl40 awards went
to Debbie Werry and Michael
While .
Voca tiona! School outstanding students recognized
by Ed Sommers..director, were
Charlqtte Snyder, Shorthand
II;
Debbie .
Werry ,
_ Theaimu&lt;~l Mother-Daughter Larry Hesson, Debbie Hesson, Typing II ; Paul Fi~lds,
banquet sponsored by the Mrs. Frank Van Pelt, Jr., Hookkeeplng 1!, Ray Fields,
Women's Society of ChriStian Orenda Love.
second place in .the state
Service of the 'New Haven
Mrs. Wayne Carter, Becky of West Virginia in WeldMethodist Chur'ch was held Carter, Mrs. Howard Burris, ing ; Benny Hickel , ,fourth
May 5, at 6 p.m. in the social Becky · Burris, Mrs. Harold
room ol the church.
Bumgarner, Mary Bumgarner,
The welcome was extended Mrs. Otho Lievlng, Mrs. Estyl.
by Mrs. Harold Bumgarner, Clark, Mrs. Bobby Joe Roush, ·
president of lhe organization.' Mrs. Jack Flesher, Mrs. Tyllie
Mrs. Howard Burris read the Roush, Mrs. Ottie Roush, Mrs.
scripture . The group sang Ray Weaver, Mrs, William ·
"How Great Thou Art,"· and Grlnste~d, Anna Louise
prayer followed the singing of Grinstead, Mrs. John Thorne,
this number by Mrs. Bernard Marcia Thorne, Mrs. Roland
Uevlrig. Mrs. Carolyn Hesson Lidel and Marcie Liden .
CLUB MEETS
gave a reading, and Miss Mary
Mrs.
Howard
Wagenhals was
Bumgarner entertained the
hostess
at
.
the
Tuesday afgroup with a vocal number
"Pass It On" by Kl!l'l Kaiser. ternoon meeting of the Julia T.
The program closed with lhe Bryant Sewing Club. A dessert
course was served to Miss
benediction.
Attending were Mrs. Ber- Lelah Jane Powell, Mrs. Ottie
nard Lleving, Mrs. Paul Roush, Mrs. Donald Smith,
Hesson, Mrs. Philip Batey, Mrs. Herman Layne, ·Mrs.
Mrs. Tom Hoffman, Mrs. Fred John C. Fry, Mrs. Fred Batey,
Batey, Mrs. Thelm~ Capehart, Mrs. Lloyd Roush and the
Mrs. George Jewell, Mrs. hostess.
The time and place of the
Harry Miller, Mrs. Wllllllll1
next
meeting will be an·
DeMoss, Michell DeMoss, Mrs.
nounced later.
ladies' spring and summer pant s suits and
PERSONALS
dresses' regrouped for clearance . Easy ca re new
Mrs. Melvin Knapp, Mr. and
miracle fabri cs. i'Jo -irons, famous brands . Out
Mrs. Thomas Grinstead and
they
go! Shop Stiffler's first and save !
Mrs. Mary Aumiller of Hartford were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Grinstead
at Canton, Ohio.
Holzer Medical Center, First
GROUP 1-VALUES TO '25.00
Jesse
Brown is a surgical
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-11 p.m. patient at Holzer Medical
· Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Center.
Mr.' and Mrs . Bill Roush
4:30 pm. , Parents only on
spent the weekend with
Pediatrics Ward.
relatives in Kentucky.
Births
Mrs. Danny Rickard,. Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Fred
Roush, Mrs: Thelma
Reynolds, Mason, a daughter;
Mr. an,d Mrs. Floyd Moore, Capehart, and Mrs. Achsah
Oak Hill, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Miller attended the spring
GROUP 2-VALUES TO '17.99
Ralph Leach, Jackson, a conference of ·the American
Legion
Auxiliary
held
at
Cedar
daughter; Mr. and Mrs .
Wendell Johnson, Oak Hill, a Lakes, Sunday.
Mrs. Kermit Ford has
son, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
- returned. home after being a
Case, McArthur, a son.
patient at St. Joseph Hospital
Dlacharges
'
lor
the past two weeks.
Bessie Wamsley, Patricia
Gray, Betile Harlley, Mrs: ~t Mr. and Mrs.· Donald F.
"
Benjamin C. Imes and Roush were In Columbus
Saturday
to
attend
the
wedding
daughter, Arnold Childers,
.
'
Catherine Betts, Charles of Miss Sherry Foreman,
GROUP 3--VALUES TO '12.99
Matthew Barnett , John daughter o! Mr. and Mrs.
James
Foreman,
to
Mr.
Steve,
Mercer, Anlhony West, KeUie
Keatts, Orsen Kitchen, Mary Speers.
Downard, Martisha Miller,
Crystal L. Thacker, Judy
Rellitt, John Baker, Zola
Holeman , Jill Jeffers, Bobbi
Kunath, Ralph l'jlcKenzie ,
Ralph Perry and. Vennie
Watkins.

New Haven Social Events

.9.

...

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.Meigs
Property .
Markers For Transfers

4 :.

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Richard L. Bearhs, Jr., June
Ann Bearhs to James . E .
Folmer, Elsie M. Folmer, 1.07
Acres, Chester.
William 'A. Clonch, Martha
E. Clonch to Doyle T. Hudson,
Nellie
N. Hudson, Lot 19,-Pt.
Richard Danbury of New
Lot
18,
lfwln &amp; Wilson Add.,
Haven appeared before the
MaljOil County Court during its Harrisonville-Scipio.
Carrie Wears, Hershel
regular meeting .Monday
Wears,
Mae Lee, Dale H. Lee,
evening and made a request for
markers for veterans graves Barbara Sheets, Beulah Stahl,
on cemeteries in the bend area: Wallace C. Stahl, Edward
No action was taken for this, Sheets to James Roger Sheets,
but it was indicated that funds Jennifer L. Sheets, 61 Acres, 70
are not available for this year. Acres, Rutland .
Lela Ross, Gerald Ross to
Other court action centered
around routine matters by lhe Clinton' Jones, Rosetta 'Jones,
three commissioners who are · Lots, Pomeroy.
Wilbert G. Weaver, Helen
Lawrence Gerlach Jr. ,
Clarence Adkins and Elvin E. Lois Weaver to Columbus &amp;
SouthernOhioEiec. Co ., EaSe.,
"Pete" Wedge.
Chesler.
Orace Wellington Meadows,
Esta Meadows to Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio !!:lee. Co., Ease.,
Columbia.
R~bert
Hartenba_ch,
·
Shenfl, Rebecca Dye Pr1ce,
'
·
Usa Dye, Madge Dye Blackwood \0 Thaddeus Dye, Par· '
Qffiecels, Columbia.
'
· Harley Godfrey, Alma
Godfrey to Robert L. Godfrey,
New Haven · American Barbara S. Godfrey, Parcel,
Legloit Post 140 has purchaMCI Olive.
·
eight acres of ground along the
Annli M. Ryther, Corrun.,
riverfroot In New Haven' for William Smith Graham, deed.,
the new location of the Post 140 to Goldie Graham, Lot 12,
Legion Home.
Rutland.
Laura Mae Nice, Harold •T.
Plana for the new home will Nice · to Edgar J. Hartung,
be dilcu8led at a meeting of K
lh L Ha
P
I
lbe Poll 'l.'uettdlly at lbe old
enne
. rtung, arce '
Chester.
.
-- LeciiiiHcme. Amemberoflbe
Garrett H. Walkins, Ruth W.
Poll Ilk! Ieday ccptructlon Walkins to Intra State Pipe
for tbe new home wiD be8ln Une Co., Right of Way, Olive.
when 1be old Legion lluildln8
Nora E. Rice, Willner,.A.
., baa been BOld.
. Rice to Intra Slate Pipe Une
eo., Right ot·way, Olive.
Tenatlve plana lor the new
Robert K. Wllaon, Pati"icia L.
bulldlnc 1!1111 for 3300 cubic Wlllon to CCJiumbua &amp; Soulhent
feet and wiD be I OIIHiory Ohio Elec. CQ,, Eue., Cheater.
lrictltructure.
LeoR.Story,LucU!e B. S1&lt;q
Offlllll'l wiD be eleetld at to Col!llllbua • Soutbern :Ohio
'l'lllldaJ'I .-tiDe and all Elec. Co., Eue., Bedford.
m.,aben todiJ were Homer Bailey, A1pba Bailey'
Jtq~ to be Jill 1M. ·
to Coh111bal • Soutbern Ohio
"
' i
• . Co., Eue., Bedford.

Vets Asked

INSPECTION SET
Annual inspection of Racine
Chapter 134, Order of the
Eastern Star, will be held
Friday, 7:30 p.m. at the ·
Masonic Temple. Inspecting
officer will be Marlene
Logston, deputy grand matron.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb are
the worthy matron and patron
of lhe chapter and Grella
Simpson is the secretary.
'chapter members are asked to
take sandwiches or cookies or a
dessert salad for the social
hour~
·

Lan d BOUght

hterlor

Power StetrinJ

'

"IT TAKES A HEAl' OF Ur/NG ••.
TO MAKF. A HOUSE A .HOME/"

Rldio-'AM
Whttl CowtfS
Whitewall Tires
Clock

Std.
Std.
Std.
6U1
Std.

Protective
Whe!!llip
Bell Moldin1
Orip Moldin1
SMI MoldinJ
Tot1l

For Post 140
- • n·.
L egiOll

••• It Takes Some Furniture Too!
Tht Fintsf Selection
And Tht Its# roluts

ANYWHERfl

-~IZID OIALIOt

BAKER FURNITUR~·

CIOAA

0

CNRvaLEA
iiliiitiitJ coo-nOli

We're trying to put more Joy 1~ your car
buying and driving

IN MIIMM 1 PORJ

399 South )d Ale., Middleport, Ohio
TOM RUE
MOTORS,
'
1

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Chapman's Shoes

EROY OHIO

EACH ··:

Graves Of

Power Brak11

DISCOUNT
On All Shoe Purchases

Brooks • Aileen • Jeanie

SPORTSWEAR
Spring and Summer Styles
Clean up group of Spring and
Summer famous Bobbie Brooks Aileen - Jeanie Ladies' Sportswear, Shorts - Knit Tops; SportPants, Coordinates. All this spring
new merchandise. See this large
group and save at Stiffler's second
floor ready-to-wear .

' I ,. ~

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PARENTS VISITED'
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hogue
and
daughter,
Wendy,
Darlington, Pa. spent the
weekend here wilh her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Grueser
and family, 105 Plum St.,
Pomeroy.

~~~lomllic Tums.

ATTENTION GRADUATES!

00

Street·••••••••••••••••••••

training!

•

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'

S~\.\.

Name •••••• ·••••••••••••• ,

the best

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.

c$1 .·500
. EACH

V!teran and

by gelling

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/

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llOSPITAL
NEWS

Nationally

Be the Best

.

Pants Suits &amp;Dresses

613 Avery St.

available

Many . Awards Made By Wahama

Cleanup! Ladies' Spring and Summer

Parkersburg , W. Va .
428-2844

Student loans

Smith.
· Also, Chemistry, John
Mitchell ; Physics, David
Morgan; Biology, . Debbie
Stewart ; Social · Studies,
Beverly Bates; Typing I,
Mason County Homemakers Anitra Wriston; Arion Award,
Award, presented to Karen . Ric~ Connolly; Ali Around
Frond!, by Mrs. Torn Fry; Girl, Nancy Aldridge; Ali
America n History to Marilyn Around Boy, Randy Crawford ;
Goodnite; Lion's Club ~m- Alumni Scholarship, Bevedy
mercia! award, Cindy Lievmg . Bates and Debbie Stewart;
Also, Christian Living, Schola·rship Band Award,
Carolyn Barnette ; , Betty Anitra Wriston ; Scholarship
Crocker Homemaker, Anitra Athletic Award,
David
Wriston; Agricultural Award, Morgan, and Student Council
David . Smith; Art, Mike Scholarship, $100, Millard
Lieyi,ng·, English, Charlotte H.arr 1·s . .
Snyder; Literary, ' Anitra
Awards for service went to
Wriston; Dramatics, David . St~de~t Counc-i\ President·,
Morgan;
FHA
(Home Randy Clark; Studen\ Council
Economics)·, Frances Wristpn; vice president, Don . Machir ;
FHA Activities, Linda Roush secretary, Beverly Knapp.
Other special awards,
(Junior ); Mathematics, David

SHOP FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY UNTIL 9 P.M.

PARKERSBURG
BEAUTY COLLEGE

training

of enthusiastic

COMMERCIAL &amp;
DOMESTIC CLEANING

•

tQbeheldatMelgsHighSchool
on May 24 ilnd urgl.ll a good
representation- of parehts. A
committee was appointed to
assist in promoting the Meigs
Local School District operating
levy to be voted on In a special
election, JWle 20.
Mrs . William Swisher
reported on the District 16
spring conference held at
Jackson and presented Mrs.
Phyllis Hac~ett with a · cert1'ficate for
pet. teacher
enrollment. " report oJtl, the
Meigs County Council meeting
was given by Mrs. Jean
Thoinas.
A film "The Wonderful
WortH of Ohio," was shown at
the meeting.
'J

Rehabilitation

DOMESTIC
CLEANING AGENCY
B~cause

camping trip. Mrs. Sabra
Morrison outlined plans lor the
event taking place !his we~k in
Jackson County.
·
Mrs. Kloes outlined the

r
National Honor Society Band and was the recipient of ol'the Year . Gerald Simmons is
Scholarship , Joyce Goodnite ; the trhphy for the Honor Band the direc tor.
New Haven Woman 's Club
Scholarship , Jane Haymaker;
Boys State, sponsored by
I.
.
American Legion ' SmithCapehart Pos! 140 of New .
Haven, John BwTis and ' Don
· Machir , alternate, Mike
Foreman; Girls State, sponsored by Auxiliary of Post 140,
Jayne Hart and Christine
Hoffman. Aternates, Frances
Wriston and Carol Circle;
Camp Horsehose, Judy Lieving
and ,Vernon Roush (both
Juniors ). and alternates,
Kathy Keyes and Jeff Riley.
Miss Nancy Aldridge,
president of the Hand council,
accepted a trophy for the
school. Wahama's . White
MAIN ST.
POMEROY
Falcon Band was chosen 1972
West Virginia State Honor

•

c:

OFF

t
'700
~~~
. EACH

REGULAR
PRICE

REG. 15.99 9'xl2'
VINYL FORTIFIED SURFACE

VALUES TO 11.59
IADI£S-MISSES-CHILDREN

ROOM SIZE RUGS
9'x12' linoleum Rugs assort!!d
patterns
featuripg vinyl fortified
surface, big choice ot
pattern s. Reg . $6.00
value.

SPORT SNEAKERS

'4'88
EACH

Reg . $1.59 ladies
misses - children's'
molded sole American
made sport sneakers in
white, red, blue. All
sizes . Yes you save
money at Stiffler's.

Paint Values At Stiffler's!
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY LAID FLAT

WALt PAINT

Regul ar 3.99 gallon, odorless, dries in
minutes. In most wanted colors. Stock up
now at Stiffler's.

2

u,,
••

TOWN &amp;

VALUES TO '1.59

THROW RUGS
0I
e.

PAIR

Viscose lOop and shag
throw rugs. Sizes 24x34
and 26x32 and other
assorted sizes. large •
assortment of colors and
styles · and fancy fringe
trim.

Values to 3!r

REG. s2.99 VAWE

ASST.

MENS AND BOYS

33

GLASSWARE
Values to 39c In this
large table of close out
asst. glasswear- cups,
9.1asses, mugs . And
many other items.

1

.

EA.

BASKETBALL
SHOES
Men's

and

boys '

basketball shoes . In
white and black high
and low cui. Reg. $2.99.

5.00
19!
'1''PAIR
COUNTRY GLOSS WHITE
GAL

FOR

I

HOUSE PAINT

Regular 5.98 gallon. Fume
resisting and mildew
r~sistlng . White. Save at ·
Stiffler's!

.,
4
•

gal

REG. •1.59 VALUE
"~OMFY" FOAM FILLED

BED PILLOWS

•

Reg .
$1.59
comfy
shreeded foam filled
pillows. Floral cover, 'big
size, a big savings passed
on to you. Stoop at Sill·
fler's.

IWxllW SIZE
INDOOR·OUTDO.OII

RUGS.

;=s1aoo

1n.:fin

i.d--;;.i~nl

ond oolon.

bcii .

EASY
36" x 6'
"INOQL PLASTIC

30 .QUART FOAM STYRENE 0001 ER

.

.

CHESTS
.
.

ltMpo · fooda and Hnl'- ·
ool4 for 11oun ...:.. for
tr..ol, .patio or

00
bell

WINDOW.SHADES
~'lit 11

¥\.Ill!

\IJ '

\/1/
•It I

IN~·

lll
~'l'
~I,/

uu

''"'
11p

11./

\I . '

'&lt;I , I

ol • •

,J~I .
l 'I '

. I \ II •

. Ill

·'\'

White, Tan or Green :sup.
ported plastic window sheCiel.
Complete wllh roller.

'1 OOEACH.

�,-

'

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"'
~

~
I'

~s
~

~

•

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~

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C;n~.~;~;;;&amp;phi~. ;d . ~ sOc.i.;i....)],lOOA
. tte.nd'.]os:p_..z;ky . Afr:.~~:.B~=-~~=~..
i Qb
r-~J
~
i_'.:

. An explanation of the. Search how the taxpayer reallY, feelS
for Concensus, a syste111 for about schools in the district.
establishing a melhod of ac- She asked for' at least 10
countability for educattonal representatives from the
· the state of Oh'10, Middleport PTA
· and no ted that
.programs 1n
· wasexpl•ined by Mrs. Richaf(l organizations outside the
· ~ a1 Sch oo1 schools are being asked to sen d
Vaug ha n, Me1gs
Disu1c
•·· t Search f Consensus representatives tot he meeting.
· man, a t Mond ay
Mrs . R. ay!Jlon d St ewar t ,
co-c ha1r
night's meeting of the Mid- president, said that new
dleport PTA.
chairmen for the 1972-73school
Mrs . Vaughan announced ,year will be announced at a
lha I a dlSulc
. ti ng · later date . The attendance
. •-· t-wlde mee
will be held at 7 p.m. on May 24 award w~s won by Mrs. Jen:
at Meigs High . School and nifer Butcher's room. Refresh·
urged that taxpayers get out ments were served by tile
and express themselves about exel-utive board. The pledge to
the !&gt;felgs Local · School the flag and Lord's Prayer to
Disli"iCt. .
.
open the meeting was given by
A cltl2en opinion survey will Barbie'Custer, Pam and Cindy
be a part of the Search for Crook~, and Mindy Long.
Consensus program and Mrs.
Vaughan assured the PTA
members that no numbers or
~
Other Information Will be U···d

=

to mark the survey forms for
the benefit of scho61 oflicials or
others who might want to
determine which Individual
filled Out Which form. s. .
Mrs. Vaughan urged a good
representation of parents at
the May 24 meeting so that a
ti"ue evaluation can be made on

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Candystripers

I

Are Honored

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Seniors were recognized and
presented charms at a meeting
of the Candystripers of
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Monday night:
Receiving the charms were
Opal Beery, Jim Be !zing, Terry
Bird, DeLene DeLegal 1 Andrea
Dewhurst!, Sheila Folmer,
Vicki Grate, Nancy Greenlee,
Connie Smith, Melanie
Hackett, Jill Harris, Julia
Holler, Connie Radford, Pam
·Manley, Sherrie McCain, Ann
Ohlinger, Debbie Ohlinger,
Karen Price, Melissa Proffitt,
Connie Lanning, Milisa Rizer,
Leanne Sebo, Debbie Stewart,
Debbie Werry, Becky Wright.
New officers ·eJected were
Diane Norris, president; Susie
Card, vice president; Connie
Smith, secretary;' Kathy
Pickens, treasurer, and Chris
Miller, newspaper reporter.

aI'en·dar

-~

lifo c·

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iij

·
::S
WEDNESDAY
BIG BEND Neighborhood
1
11
9 30
Scout
meeDay
ng,camp
: · planning
a.m. a
KJ'ashuta.
sess
' ion . U.nitleaders, helpers
and olher volunteers asked to
be there. Cabin will be cleaned
and those attending are asked
to
. take supplies.
WINDING TRAIL Garden
Club, 8 p.m. Wednesday, Mrs.
Earl Thoma, hostess.
THURSDAY
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
special meeting, Thursday, 8
p.m. Work in Master Mason
degree ; all Master Masons
invited.
'
-XI GAMMA MU Thursday
7' 45 p.m. horne 0 1 Mrs. NeIIie
Brown. Inslallatlon of officers.
Vera Crow, co-hostess.
The annual homecoming of
WILLING workers Class,
the Naomi Baptist Church will Enterprise United Methodist
be held Sunday beginning with Ch h Th sd
7 30
Sunday School with Oscar
urc ' ur ay, :. p.m.
home of Mrs .. Ben Buck.
Qualls, superintendent, In
AFTERNOON CIRCLE
charge.
Hea.th Uhited Methodisi
At 11 a.m. services will be Church, Middleport, annual
held with the Rev. A. J. Ruffin, luncheon. Members to take
pastor of the Second Jeru••lem
~
covered dish and own table
Baptist Church, Ur)&gt;ana, service; meat and roll furspeaking. At 12 noon there will nished, 1 p.m .
be fellowship and dinner. The
MIDDLEPOI{T CHILD
Rev. Grover Turner , Pal.nl Conservation League, ceramic
Creek Baptist Church, will be demonstration 7:30 p.m.
speaker for the 2 p.m. services. Thursday at the home of Mrs.
The Rev. Mr . Turner will be Alice Mills, Second St., Midaccompanied by his choir. The dleport. Installation of officers
public is invited.
and business meeting at the
home of Mrs. Don Grueser;
also white elephant sale.
TRIP TM(EN
ROCK SPRINGS Better
Middleport first grade
Health
Club, home of Mrs.
students of Mrs. Bradford
Malig and Mrs. Wilson Car- Harold Blackston, 1:15 p.m.
penter took a trip Monday to Thursday.Mrs.ArleeAbbottto
the Bob Evans Farm and have the program, ¥rs.
William Witte the contest.
Hidden Valley.
Election of officers. Weights to
be taken 'lor special fund
WIFE SURPRISED
Mrs. Ancil (Gloria ) Cross raising project.
SOUTHERN Local Board of
was honored with a surprise
birthday party given by her Education; 8 p.m. Thursday at
husband Friday at their home
on Lincoln Street In Mid- high school.
WILLING WORKERS Class
dleport. A(lendlng. were Mr.
of
United Methodist Church,
and Mrs. Michael Nicholson,
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Cowan, Mr. Enterprise Thursday 7 p.m.
and Mrs. Roy Williams, Mr. home of Beatrice Buck.
HARRISONVILLE
and Mrs. George Grate, Mrs.
Carolyn Haley, Mr. and Mrs. CHAPTER, O.E.S., grand
Phil Mowery' and Miss Beverly inspection at 8 p.m. Thursday
at
the
Harrisonville
Thompson.
Elementary School. Dinner at
8:30· p.m. preceding. Reser. '
'··· •.. vations to be made with Mrs.
Avanell George, Rulland.

Homecomina Set

For'split -second timing

Accutron®
by Bulova

FRIDAY
INSPECTION of Racine
Chapter 134, O.E.S. 7:30 Friday
at the Masonic Temple.
Marlene Logston, deputy
grandmatron, inspecting officer.
SATURDAY
LOT OWNERS of Carleton
Cem~tery will elect trustees
Saturday, 7:30p.m. at Carleton
Church.

The heart of an Accutron watch is
a tiny, tuning fork that splits a second
into 360 equal intervals.
Accutron time is so nearly perfect
that8uiova guarantees monthly
accuracy to wit~ln 60 seconds. •
Sti!Mir tint llltcllon of AeeUHon

'

WIIChll todiJ. From'$110.

RETURNS SOUTH
Miss Sue Weaver, graduate
of. Meigs High School with the
class of 1971, has returned to
Jacksonville, Fla ., where she is
working as secretary for the
Gulf Life Tower. MisS Weaver
worked for the past year at
Elberfelds Department Store .

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7- The DaUy Sentlnel,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., Ml!Y 17, 1~ ·

41

ACC'ilnON

"Wt will tdjust \Q this \Qi mnce, II n1cuury.

427" 2,.·hcur

ditl, "'ltroa!l

Appro~ ed.

f12S.

Sympathy
Flowers

Guarant11 Is lor ont y1ir.

"Let Us Help You
Right
Select the
Flowers"

Dudley's Aorist
Serving : Gallipolis,
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0.,
&amp; Mason Co .. W.Va.

'Seroance

· ·

'

\.TfUUtJates jf'v/ff

· •

RiO Cum l.audf:,

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Reibel
were presen ted fiowers and a
gift in recognition of being the
J01eph R. BaUey, son of
·
d
lh
ld
t
Mr.
aoct'Mn. "-·
oldest father an
e o es
""• Bailey,
Cb esI er, rece I ve d bl s
mol her ailend'mg the mo lherdaug ht.er, fath er-son o· b- bachelor of B&lt;lence deg ree,
servance of Trinity .Church
cam laade, al the 961b 111Sunday night&gt;
.
nlvenarycommencemealof
Youngest mother present
Rio Gralllle College Sunday
Whitlat
h
h
was. Mrs. Harvey
c
eld on lhe CoIIege . a· reen.
who was given a !lower, and
.Bailey and hll ·Wile, lhe
the youngest lather was John
former Lourelta Kay
Lisle, who received a gift.
Sargent, reside at Rio
Approximately 100 attended Gl'!lnde.
tbe event which began wilh a
· Golag lor the compotluck dlnner. The Rev. W. H. mencemenl and a barbecue
Perrin gave grace. Tributes picnic following allbe Balley
were given by Mary H•len · home were Mr. and Mrs. Rex
Blaettnar to-the mothers, Mrs.
Bailey, Mr, and Mrs.' Larry
John Blaettnar to the • Bailey, Mr. and Mrs. Delmar
daughters, Joe Rosenbaum, to Baum, - Nancy and Tlm,
Ch
.
the fathers, and Fred Blaettester; Mr.andMrs.Harry
nar, to the sons.
Lee BaUey,. Pomer~y; Mr.
Mrs. ·pat Holter read "I Am and Mrs. Charles Sargent,
the Flag of the United States" Carol and Chuck, CoolvUie;
to background music by Mrs. Howie Caldwell, Mr. and
M
S
Ben Neutzling. Tbere was a
rs. La17Y peacer, Brian
piano duet by Mrs. Nancy Jo aad Karen, Tuppers Plains,
Clatworthy and Miss Mercedes and Mr. and Mrs. T. F.
Condon. Mrs. Clatworthy · Sargeat, Belpre. .
accompanied for group
singing. Skits included
"Mother and Others" by Bethh
11
1
Perrin and Barbara Whltatc,
'J
" Somebody's Mother," by
Faith
Perrin,
Ricky
Blaettnar' I;&gt;avid Burt,
The birthday anniversary of
Harvey Whitlatcb, Jr., Ed- Mrs. Thelma Grueser of 105
die
Holler, and : Jim .Plum St., Pomeroy, was obRosenbaum; and . "Grand- servedrecentlywithasurprise
parents Almanac" by Lisa and party.
Becky Thomas and Linda. Gifts were presented to Mrs .
Rosenbaum. Jim Rosenbaum Grue:ser and cake, ice cream,
had a monologue entitled coffee and punch were served.
"Parents Can Make the Dif- Guests were Mrs. Frank
ference ."
Grtmm, Norma Ba ker, Ricky
Mrs. Carolyn Thomas was . and Angie, Mrs. Icy Miller,
narrator for . "White Loved Mrs. Jack Duffy and David,
Best" with Faith Perrin, Mrs. Robert Halley and Amy,
Danny Thomas, Beth Perrin, Mrs. Larry Hudson and Lori,
Maria Legar taking parts. Mrs. Jack Miller and Joey'
Special music was by John Mrs. Minnie Johnson, Mrs.
Lisle and Don ·Harden, a solo, Robert Arnold, Mrs. Maxine
"Ma She's Maklng Eyes· a t Phillips, Miss Nettle Moore,
Me" by Chuckle Kennedy, and Mrs. Aileen Martiq, Brian
vocals by Brian Teaford, Beth Beeler, Miss Melanie Grueser,
Teaford and Mark Burson. Rodney and Misty, and Glenn
Cathy Blaettnar had the and David Grueser . The
closing prayer, "Forgive Me honored guest also received a
Lord. "
' Eleanor Logan.
gift from Mrs.

Part Given fior
TJ'he/:ma GrueSer

School Planned
Oates have been set for a
community' daily vacation

1

SALE PLANNED
The Kyger Creek Ladies Aid
will sl;lge a rummage sale

installed as president of the
Bradbury PTA at a meeting
held Thursday at the school.
William King served as the
installing officer. D!li'ing the
meeting· the PTA pledged

BeC.k._,.
'11

ht R On"'"'M a1.J,&lt;''bower

rr T

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I'V
· 'f"U.
'~lY

VII

Miss Becky Wright, brideelect of Airman 1-CJohn .Card
was .honored with a personal.
shower Tuesday·nigt.t at the
home of Mrs. Michael Wright,
Middleport.
A pink and yellow ' color
'!!!heme was carried out in the
decorations, Cake and
lemonade were served. Games
were played with prizes going
to Debbie Ohlinger, Milisa
Rizer, Mrs. Robert Card 'and
DINNER GIVEN
Mr:andMrs. Charles Woode,
CMster, entertained Mother's
Day with a family dinher.
Guests were Mr. _and Mrs.
Willard Hines, Pomeroy; Mr.
and Mrs . Ray Hines, David and
Doug, Belpre, and Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Hines, Amy and
Andrea, Gallipolis.
AUCTION TONIGHT
A silent auction will be held·
at tonight's meeting of the Past
Presidents of Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion
Auxiliary, at the home of Mrs.
Rarry Davis.
SUPPER GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Russell
.and daughter, Tammy, of
'columbus entertained
Saturday night with a supper at
·their farm home near Chester.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Grueser, Glenn, Melanie,
Rodney and Misty, Mr. and
Mrs, Larry Hudson and Lori,
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Halley
and Amy, and ·Mr . .and Mrs;
Gerald Hogue and Wendy.

~'rs. Uoytf .Wright. Others
_attending the shower were
Pam ·Manley, Mrs . Keith
.
. Phalin, · Cara 1ynn
an d
Maralynn Tracy, 'Liz, Susie
and Becky Card.
·
.
Others presenting gifts were
Jennifer and Bridget Gobel,
Jill Harris, Mrs. John Hood,
. lfene Barnes, Sherrie Reuter,
and Jo Ellen Diehl.

toa

UNBEATABLE COMBINATION
FOR ASUCCESSFUL

BEAUTY CAREER

~·~p

INTI

NATIONAL

The Scott-Martin Beauty Schools now have
included in their already famous method of
training the
"PIVOT
POINT
IN ·
TE RNA TIONAL" hairstyling training
method. ·
Available lh this area ONLY at

response we are expanding
our staff to serve you better,
Phone now for appointment
446-4736 or 446-9300.

Accredited
Approved for

Register
now for classes
starting June
and October

City •••••• •• State,,. Zip ••

439 R. Second Ave.

~Sa~tur~da~y~ati:th:·e~h=a=ll~f~ro:m~l:OJ==~G~a~JI~ipo~·1~;s~,o~h~i·~=~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~

Bible
schoolChurch
to be held
at the a.m. to 5 p.m.
Pomeroy
of Christ.
According to Thelma Osborne,
director, tbere will be a kickoff
wiener roast on Saturday, June
3, at the Route 33 roadside
park. This will also be a time
for pre-registration.
· Tbe school will be held from
6:30 to 9 p.m., June 5 through
~une 9. The closing program .
will be held on Saturday, June
10. Children of the community
are welcome.
·

•

j

MASON
One of the
highlights of the school year is
the annual awards assembly .
·which was held on Monday
morning at Wahama High
School. Principal Ed ~xton
annoWlced the Balforoj Awards
.went to the Valedictorian,

Charlotte
Snyder,
and
Salutatorian, RoxAnne Wallis.
Recipients of the Danforth
Award were RoxAnne Wallis
and David Smith.
'The Daughters of American
Revolution Citizenship Award

was presented by Miss Lelah
Jane Powell to George Johnson, Marilyn Goodnite and
RoxAnne ·Wallis. New Haven
American Legion SmithCapehart Postl40 awards went
to Debbie Werry and Michael
While .
Voca tiona! School outstanding students recognized
by Ed Sommers..director, were
Charlqtte Snyder, Shorthand
II;
Debbie .
Werry ,
_ Theaimu&lt;~l Mother-Daughter Larry Hesson, Debbie Hesson, Typing II ; Paul Fi~lds,
banquet sponsored by the Mrs. Frank Van Pelt, Jr., Hookkeeplng 1!, Ray Fields,
Women's Society of ChriStian Orenda Love.
second place in .the state
Service of the 'New Haven
Mrs. Wayne Carter, Becky of West Virginia in WeldMethodist Chur'ch was held Carter, Mrs. Howard Burris, ing ; Benny Hickel , ,fourth
May 5, at 6 p.m. in the social Becky · Burris, Mrs. Harold
room ol the church.
Bumgarner, Mary Bumgarner,
The welcome was extended Mrs. Otho Lievlng, Mrs. Estyl.
by Mrs. Harold Bumgarner, Clark, Mrs. Bobby Joe Roush, ·
president of lhe organization.' Mrs. Jack Flesher, Mrs. Tyllie
Mrs. Howard Burris read the Roush, Mrs. Ottie Roush, Mrs.
scripture . The group sang Ray Weaver, Mrs, William ·
"How Great Thou Art,"· and Grlnste~d, Anna Louise
prayer followed the singing of Grinstead, Mrs. John Thorne,
this number by Mrs. Bernard Marcia Thorne, Mrs. Roland
Uevlrig. Mrs. Carolyn Hesson Lidel and Marcie Liden .
CLUB MEETS
gave a reading, and Miss Mary
Mrs.
Howard
Wagenhals was
Bumgarner entertained the
hostess
at
.
the
Tuesday afgroup with a vocal number
"Pass It On" by Kl!l'l Kaiser. ternoon meeting of the Julia T.
The program closed with lhe Bryant Sewing Club. A dessert
course was served to Miss
benediction.
Attending were Mrs. Ber- Lelah Jane Powell, Mrs. Ottie
nard Lleving, Mrs. Paul Roush, Mrs. Donald Smith,
Hesson, Mrs. Philip Batey, Mrs. Herman Layne, ·Mrs.
Mrs. Tom Hoffman, Mrs. Fred John C. Fry, Mrs. Fred Batey,
Batey, Mrs. Thelm~ Capehart, Mrs. Lloyd Roush and the
Mrs. George Jewell, Mrs. hostess.
The time and place of the
Harry Miller, Mrs. Wllllllll1
next
meeting will be an·
DeMoss, Michell DeMoss, Mrs.
nounced later.
ladies' spring and summer pant s suits and
PERSONALS
dresses' regrouped for clearance . Easy ca re new
Mrs. Melvin Knapp, Mr. and
miracle fabri cs. i'Jo -irons, famous brands . Out
Mrs. Thomas Grinstead and
they
go! Shop Stiffler's first and save !
Mrs. Mary Aumiller of Hartford were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Grinstead
at Canton, Ohio.
Holzer Medical Center, First
GROUP 1-VALUES TO '25.00
Jesse
Brown is a surgical
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-11 p.m. patient at Holzer Medical
· Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to Center.
Mr.' and Mrs . Bill Roush
4:30 pm. , Parents only on
spent the weekend with
Pediatrics Ward.
relatives in Kentucky.
Births
Mrs. Danny Rickard,. Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Fred
Roush, Mrs: Thelma
Reynolds, Mason, a daughter;
Mr. an,d Mrs. Floyd Moore, Capehart, and Mrs. Achsah
Oak Hill, a son; Mr. and Mrs. Miller attended the spring
GROUP 2-VALUES TO '17.99
Ralph Leach, Jackson, a conference of ·the American
Legion
Auxiliary
held
at
Cedar
daughter; Mr. and Mrs .
Wendell Johnson, Oak Hill, a Lakes, Sunday.
Mrs. Kermit Ford has
son, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
- returned. home after being a
Case, McArthur, a son.
patient at St. Joseph Hospital
Dlacharges
'
lor
the past two weeks.
Bessie Wamsley, Patricia
Gray, Betile Harlley, Mrs: ~t Mr. and Mrs.· Donald F.
"
Benjamin C. Imes and Roush were In Columbus
Saturday
to
attend
the
wedding
daughter, Arnold Childers,
.
'
Catherine Betts, Charles of Miss Sherry Foreman,
GROUP 3--VALUES TO '12.99
Matthew Barnett , John daughter o! Mr. and Mrs.
James
Foreman,
to
Mr.
Steve,
Mercer, Anlhony West, KeUie
Keatts, Orsen Kitchen, Mary Speers.
Downard, Martisha Miller,
Crystal L. Thacker, Judy
Rellitt, John Baker, Zola
Holeman , Jill Jeffers, Bobbi
Kunath, Ralph l'jlcKenzie ,
Ralph Perry and. Vennie
Watkins.

New Haven Social Events

.9.

...

'

.Meigs
Property .
Markers For Transfers

4 :.

•

Richard L. Bearhs, Jr., June
Ann Bearhs to James . E .
Folmer, Elsie M. Folmer, 1.07
Acres, Chester.
William 'A. Clonch, Martha
E. Clonch to Doyle T. Hudson,
Nellie
N. Hudson, Lot 19,-Pt.
Richard Danbury of New
Lot
18,
lfwln &amp; Wilson Add.,
Haven appeared before the
MaljOil County Court during its Harrisonville-Scipio.
Carrie Wears, Hershel
regular meeting .Monday
Wears,
Mae Lee, Dale H. Lee,
evening and made a request for
markers for veterans graves Barbara Sheets, Beulah Stahl,
on cemeteries in the bend area: Wallace C. Stahl, Edward
No action was taken for this, Sheets to James Roger Sheets,
but it was indicated that funds Jennifer L. Sheets, 61 Acres, 70
are not available for this year. Acres, Rutland .
Lela Ross, Gerald Ross to
Other court action centered
around routine matters by lhe Clinton' Jones, Rosetta 'Jones,
three commissioners who are · Lots, Pomeroy.
Wilbert G. Weaver, Helen
Lawrence Gerlach Jr. ,
Clarence Adkins and Elvin E. Lois Weaver to Columbus &amp;
SouthernOhioEiec. Co ., EaSe.,
"Pete" Wedge.
Chesler.
Orace Wellington Meadows,
Esta Meadows to Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio !!:lee. Co., Ease.,
Columbia.
R~bert
Hartenba_ch,
·
Shenfl, Rebecca Dye Pr1ce,
'
·
Usa Dye, Madge Dye Blackwood \0 Thaddeus Dye, Par· '
Qffiecels, Columbia.
'
· Harley Godfrey, Alma
Godfrey to Robert L. Godfrey,
New Haven · American Barbara S. Godfrey, Parcel,
Legloit Post 140 has purchaMCI Olive.
·
eight acres of ground along the
Annli M. Ryther, Corrun.,
riverfroot In New Haven' for William Smith Graham, deed.,
the new location of the Post 140 to Goldie Graham, Lot 12,
Legion Home.
Rutland.
Laura Mae Nice, Harold •T.
Plana for the new home will Nice · to Edgar J. Hartung,
be dilcu8led at a meeting of K
lh L Ha
P
I
lbe Poll 'l.'uettdlly at lbe old
enne
. rtung, arce '
Chester.
.
-- LeciiiiHcme. Amemberoflbe
Garrett H. Walkins, Ruth W.
Poll Ilk! Ieday ccptructlon Walkins to Intra State Pipe
for tbe new home wiD be8ln Une Co., Right of Way, Olive.
when 1be old Legion lluildln8
Nora E. Rice, Willner,.A.
., baa been BOld.
. Rice to Intra Slate Pipe Une
eo., Right ot·way, Olive.
Tenatlve plana lor the new
Robert K. Wllaon, Pati"icia L.
bulldlnc 1!1111 for 3300 cubic Wlllon to CCJiumbua &amp; Soulhent
feet and wiD be I OIIHiory Ohio Elec. CQ,, Eue., Cheater.
lrictltructure.
LeoR.Story,LucU!e B. S1&lt;q
Offlllll'l wiD be eleetld at to Col!llllbua • Soutbern :Ohio
'l'lllldaJ'I .-tiDe and all Elec. Co., Eue., Bedford.
m.,aben todiJ were Homer Bailey, A1pba Bailey'
Jtq~ to be Jill 1M. ·
to Coh111bal • Soutbern Ohio
"
' i
• . Co., Eue., Bedford.

Vets Asked

INSPECTION SET
Annual inspection of Racine
Chapter 134, Order of the
Eastern Star, will be held
Friday, 7:30 p.m. at the ·
Masonic Temple. Inspecting
officer will be Marlene
Logston, deputy grand matron.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Webb are
the worthy matron and patron
of lhe chapter and Grella
Simpson is the secretary.
'chapter members are asked to
take sandwiches or cookies or a
dessert salad for the social
hour~
·

Lan d BOUght

hterlor

Power StetrinJ

'

"IT TAKES A HEAl' OF Ur/NG ••.
TO MAKF. A HOUSE A .HOME/"

Rldio-'AM
Whttl CowtfS
Whitewall Tires
Clock

Std.
Std.
Std.
6U1
Std.

Protective
Whe!!llip
Bell Moldin1
Orip Moldin1
SMI MoldinJ
Tot1l

For Post 140
- • n·.
L egiOll

••• It Takes Some Furniture Too!
Tht Fintsf Selection
And Tht Its# roluts

ANYWHERfl

-~IZID OIALIOt

BAKER FURNITUR~·

CIOAA

0

CNRvaLEA
iiliiitiitJ coo-nOli

We're trying to put more Joy 1~ your car
buying and driving

IN MIIMM 1 PORJ

399 South )d Ale., Middleport, Ohio
TOM RUE
MOTORS,
'
1

•

Chapman's Shoes

EROY OHIO

EACH ··:

Graves Of

Power Brak11

DISCOUNT
On All Shoe Purchases

Brooks • Aileen • Jeanie

SPORTSWEAR
Spring and Summer Styles
Clean up group of Spring and
Summer famous Bobbie Brooks Aileen - Jeanie Ladies' Sportswear, Shorts - Knit Tops; SportPants, Coordinates. All this spring
new merchandise. See this large
group and save at Stiffler's second
floor ready-to-wear .

' I ,. ~

.,

.

•

PARENTS VISITED'
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Hogue
and
daughter,
Wendy,
Darlington, Pa. spent the
weekend here wilh her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Dave Grueser
and family, 105 Plum St.,
Pomeroy.

~~~lomllic Tums.

ATTENTION GRADUATES!

00

Street·••••••••••••••••••••

training!

•

.

'

S~\.\.

Name •••••• ·••••••••••••• ,

the best

•

.

c$1 .·500
. EACH

V!teran and

by gelling

•

J

,.

/

..

llOSPITAL
NEWS

Nationally

Be the Best

.

Pants Suits &amp;Dresses

613 Avery St.

available

Many . Awards Made By Wahama

Cleanup! Ladies' Spring and Summer

Parkersburg , W. Va .
428-2844

Student loans

Smith.
· Also, Chemistry, John
Mitchell ; Physics, David
Morgan; Biology, . Debbie
Stewart ; Social · Studies,
Beverly Bates; Typing I,
Mason County Homemakers Anitra Wriston; Arion Award,
Award, presented to Karen . Ric~ Connolly; Ali Around
Frond!, by Mrs. Torn Fry; Girl, Nancy Aldridge; Ali
America n History to Marilyn Around Boy, Randy Crawford ;
Goodnite; Lion's Club ~m- Alumni Scholarship, Bevedy
mercia! award, Cindy Lievmg . Bates and Debbie Stewart;
Also, Christian Living, Schola·rship Band Award,
Carolyn Barnette ; , Betty Anitra Wriston ; Scholarship
Crocker Homemaker, Anitra Athletic Award,
David
Wriston; Agricultural Award, Morgan, and Student Council
David . Smith; Art, Mike Scholarship, $100, Millard
Lieyi,ng·, English, Charlotte H.arr 1·s . .
Snyder; Literary, ' Anitra
Awards for service went to
Wriston; Dramatics, David . St~de~t Counc-i\ President·,
Morgan;
FHA
(Home Randy Clark; Studen\ Council
Economics)·, Frances Wristpn; vice president, Don . Machir ;
FHA Activities, Linda Roush secretary, Beverly Knapp.
Other special awards,
(Junior ); Mathematics, David

SHOP FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY UNTIL 9 P.M.

PARKERSBURG
BEAUTY COLLEGE

training

of enthusiastic

COMMERCIAL &amp;
DOMESTIC CLEANING

•

tQbeheldatMelgsHighSchool
on May 24 ilnd urgl.ll a good
representation- of parehts. A
committee was appointed to
assist in promoting the Meigs
Local School District operating
levy to be voted on In a special
election, JWle 20.
Mrs . William Swisher
reported on the District 16
spring conference held at
Jackson and presented Mrs.
Phyllis Hac~ett with a · cert1'ficate for
pet. teacher
enrollment. " report oJtl, the
Meigs County Council meeting
was given by Mrs. Jean
Thoinas.
A film "The Wonderful
WortH of Ohio," was shown at
the meeting.
'J

Rehabilitation

DOMESTIC
CLEANING AGENCY
B~cause

camping trip. Mrs. Sabra
Morrison outlined plans lor the
event taking place !his we~k in
Jackson County.
·
Mrs. Kloes outlined the

r
National Honor Society Band and was the recipient of ol'the Year . Gerald Simmons is
Scholarship , Joyce Goodnite ; the trhphy for the Honor Band the direc tor.
New Haven Woman 's Club
Scholarship , Jane Haymaker;
Boys State, sponsored by
I.
.
American Legion ' SmithCapehart Pos! 140 of New .
Haven, John BwTis and ' Don
· Machir , alternate, Mike
Foreman; Girls State, sponsored by Auxiliary of Post 140,
Jayne Hart and Christine
Hoffman. Aternates, Frances
Wriston and Carol Circle;
Camp Horsehose, Judy Lieving
and ,Vernon Roush (both
Juniors ). and alternates,
Kathy Keyes and Jeff Riley.
Miss Nancy Aldridge,
president of the Hand council,
accepted a trophy for the
school. Wahama's . White
MAIN ST.
POMEROY
Falcon Band was chosen 1972
West Virginia State Honor

•

c:

OFF

t
'700
~~~
. EACH

REGULAR
PRICE

REG. 15.99 9'xl2'
VINYL FORTIFIED SURFACE

VALUES TO 11.59
IADI£S-MISSES-CHILDREN

ROOM SIZE RUGS
9'x12' linoleum Rugs assort!!d
patterns
featuripg vinyl fortified
surface, big choice ot
pattern s. Reg . $6.00
value.

SPORT SNEAKERS

'4'88
EACH

Reg . $1.59 ladies
misses - children's'
molded sole American
made sport sneakers in
white, red, blue. All
sizes . Yes you save
money at Stiffler's.

Paint Values At Stiffler's!
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY LAID FLAT

WALt PAINT

Regul ar 3.99 gallon, odorless, dries in
minutes. In most wanted colors. Stock up
now at Stiffler's.

2

u,,
••

TOWN &amp;

VALUES TO '1.59

THROW RUGS
0I
e.

PAIR

Viscose lOop and shag
throw rugs. Sizes 24x34
and 26x32 and other
assorted sizes. large •
assortment of colors and
styles · and fancy fringe
trim.

Values to 3!r

REG. s2.99 VAWE

ASST.

MENS AND BOYS

33

GLASSWARE
Values to 39c In this
large table of close out
asst. glasswear- cups,
9.1asses, mugs . And
many other items.

1

.

EA.

BASKETBALL
SHOES
Men's

and

boys '

basketball shoes . In
white and black high
and low cui. Reg. $2.99.

5.00
19!
'1''PAIR
COUNTRY GLOSS WHITE
GAL

FOR

I

HOUSE PAINT

Regular 5.98 gallon. Fume
resisting and mildew
r~sistlng . White. Save at ·
Stiffler's!

.,
4
•

gal

REG. •1.59 VALUE
"~OMFY" FOAM FILLED

BED PILLOWS

•

Reg .
$1.59
comfy
shreeded foam filled
pillows. Floral cover, 'big
size, a big savings passed
on to you. Stoop at Sill·
fler's.

IWxllW SIZE
INDOOR·OUTDO.OII

RUGS.

;=s1aoo

1n.:fin

i.d--;;.i~nl

ond oolon.

bcii .

EASY
36" x 6'
"INOQL PLASTIC

30 .QUART FOAM STYRENE 0001 ER

.

.

CHESTS
.
.

ltMpo · fooda and Hnl'- ·
ool4 for 11oun ...:.. for
tr..ol, .patio or

00
bell

WINDOW.SHADES
~'lit 11

¥\.Ill!

\IJ '

\/1/
•It I

IN~·

lll
~'l'
~I,/

uu

''"'
11p

11./

\I . '

'&lt;I , I

ol • •

,J~I .
l 'I '

. I \ II •

. Ill

·'\'

White, Tan or Green :sup.
ported plastic window sheCiel.
Complete wllh roller.

'1 OOEACH.

�.•
'

a- The o.ny sentinel, Mlddlepori-Pcmeroy, o., Mar 11, 1m

.

'

2 Primaries

S~ept
~.

lllllted Prell IDtet'1!811oaal
George Corley . wvlace
nrept the presidential
prilparlea In Mlchl!!an ·and ·
Maryland Tuesday' bu1 ' his
p-eatell pollticalsuccesa 10 far
was marred by the pain of
bullet wounds and the
.reallzatlm he may never walk
Illln.
Robbed of his legs, perhaps
forever, by ·a would-be
asaal!&amp;ln, and ledated against
his suffering, Wallace Jay
partialfy paralyud in a Silver

Spring, Md., hospital as
Michigan and· Maryland
awarded him two · clear-rut
victories.
Not only did WaUace easily
outdistance Hubert H. HumphteY and George S.
McGovern, the two main
challengers for the Democratic
presidential nomination, bul he
moved into second place in the
munber of del"'!ates to the
convention and into first place
in the number of primary wins.
-It aJIPe~ed that Wallace
picked up 112 delegates to give
him a total of 311 from primary
and nonprlmiry states. MeGovern added 42 for a leading
total of 423; and Humphrey
picked up 30 for a total of
Wallace now has won five
primaries - Michigan, MaryWEST COLUMBIA, W. Va. land, Florida, TeM~e. and
- Mrs. Julia F. Van Maire, 85, Nortll Carolina. McGovern won
died Taeaday at the Holzer in Wisconsin, Massachusetts,
Medical Center.
and Nebraska; Humphrey in
A member of the· West
Columbia United Methodist
Church, Mrs. Van' Matre was Frances Yeager ·
born Jan. 31, 1887 in Missouri,
the daughter of the late Henry Dies in Columbus
and Deborah McDaniel
. Mrs. Frances L. Yeager, 58,
Stewart. ·
She was preceded in death former Meigs County resident,
also by her husband, Howard Columbus, dled·Taesday at the
D. VanMatre, who died in 1957, Munteray Nursing Inn at
and three sons, Harvey, Ralph Columbus.
She is survived by a sorl,
and Claude.
Surviving are four sons, Keith Stansbury, of Columbus;
IDavld, Arnold and Wilbur, ali three brothers, Leslie Price,
of West Columbia, and Andrew Pomeroy, and Lawrence Price
of Clifton; two daughters, Mrs. and Oakley Price, 9oth of
Eskew (Anna) Johnson, Columbus; a sister, Mrs.
Mason, and Mrs. Donald Emma Neighborgall,
(Deborah) Lewis, Vienna; a Columbus, four grandsons, and
sister, Mrs. Maude Van Meter, several nieces and nephews.
Clifton; 24 grandchildren, 31 Funeral services will be at 1
great-grandchildren, and one .p.m. Thursday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
great-great-grandchild. ·
Arthur
Lund officiating. Burial
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the will be in Beech G'rove
Foglesong Funeral Home with Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Rev. Mrs. Bernice Winkler the funeral home anytime.
and the Rev. George Hoschar
officiating. Burial will be in
· Graham · Cemetery. Frienlls
may call at te fuheral home
anyUme.

Julia Van Matre

Dies on Tuesday

m.

BELTONE
HEARING AID
SERVICE CENTER

Legion

Mr. H. Wm. Milttingly
Will Be AI
(Con lillued from page I )
Meigs Inn
services at Chester, meeting
Pomeroy, Ohio
there at 1:30 p,m.
on
Dr. Mike ·chakeres, post
Thursday, May 18, 1972
department commander of
From
011Jo1 will be the guest speaker
9 a.m . to 12 Noon ·
at ~h Grove ·and Chester
•
cemeteries. ·
To repair and service
· In other business, · Don ·
Runnel announced the Meigs hearing aids.
Batteries and supplies
Legion llaseball schedule for
for
all makes for sale.
, the 11e11son and asked members
Ill help with the sale of boosier
carda. Money from the project
Mr. Mattingly will be
will be used to finance the
glad to give you a free
baseball team.
hearing test with the
The next chicken barbecue,
latest 1leltone Elec ··
which wiU be sponsored jointly
ironic equipment.
by Legion members and
Pomeroy firemen, will be held
If hearing is your
regatta weekend, June 17 and
problem Bellone is
18.
the answer
Post everlasting services
were conducted by Chaplain
.Gilmore for the departed
comrade, Arthur Ebersbach.
Delegates for the district
convention on June 18 at
Hearing Aid Center
CrookaviUe are Paul Case!,
. 601 Sixth Avenue
Frank Vaughan 1 Leonard
Huntington. W.Va .
Jewell and Charles Swalzel.
Phone: 525-7221
Refreshments were served
by Roy Reuter.
·

'

•- Tile Illllysn~Del,~ac~oy.o., May 11.1m

enough -yet • to watch 'the
prb!ulry returnS on television, ,
- was given the gOod tidings by .
hLII wife, Cornelia, who has
·ke"'
"' a bedside vigil since the
During .Impressive can- Painela Sams, Barbara Well, · ·Pulllns, report.er • ·""' Cathy·
attempted assassination late · dlelight services 16 memllers Bonnie Welsh, and Sandy Coates, recreation leader.
.
~da8l~d-e ••'d that Walla
of the Eastern High School Wood.
.
Mr,s. Janice Ritchie;adviaot,
ce, Future Homemakers Assn. · Offleers installed during.the was presented a cwl8ge as
from hla hnonjtaJ
....,. bed, acknow- chapter were honored Tuesday ceremony were Sandy' Wood, · . was eac h of the office...
••· . .,
!edged the returns ''witb a big night when they received the presidtmt ·, Cathy Pickens, vice
·Janice Dixon received the
smlle
and
a
nod"
and
other
members of the Wallace en- 1 junior degree, the firs~ step president;
Iris . Pigott, state degree in April at the
toward a state· degree. The secretary; Joyce My· ers, state convention in . ColUJII~US.
. tourage were determined to go junior degree is the first honor treasurer ; Cindy Farrar, She 8SSIS
· 1s wlth the FHA at
ahead "from a wheelchllir, if received in FHA work.
historian; Rosemary Reed, . Eastern. · Following , the
:~e=~ry'' to the con··. Gir.ls honored were ·JaniCe song leader· Bonnie Welsh program a style show was held
Boggs, Marcia Cerr, Barbara parliameniarlan ; · .loan~ followed by refreslunents ..
'Wallace's chief political aide
In California said that unleai Coates, Cathy Coa~LConnie ·, • • • • • • • • • • • • •
H • • • • • !
the giUI!!hot woiDida make it Dailey, Cathy DaviS,. i''rances e
.
Impossible; the Alabama Hawk, Cindy Farrar, . Cethy •
-·· Trade In Tune At Mason Fum~ure .
· .: '
governor will enter the Pickens, Iris Pigott, Joann •
•
,
:
•
California primary as a write- Pullins, 1 Roseroar.y · Reed, :
' .,
in candlidate.
·
vet
M r1 IH I I e
.
' . .
e
ButHIDDphreytoldreporters
AD~~E~~ ~ei~P:at •. FOR YOUR OLD LIVING' ROOM :
that Wallace's twin victories
"do not mean a thing" and . tox, Pomeroy; Corbett Cleek e '
SUITE
.
•
Racine; . Inez Randolph,
must be weighed In the light of Pomeroy ; Jesse Geyer, •
'
•
When You Purchase Any
•
"most IDiusual, tragic clrc!DD- Pomeroy; Alice· Holliday, •
stan&lt;:es."
Dexter; Judith J!lllers, South- •
NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE
•
Flanked by his wife Muriel, side, w. Va.; Mayo Ralph •
•.
Hmnphrey said he would keep B 1
•
·
on with his ali:Qut campaign
a es, J~ .. Bidwell.
d
·
DISCHARGED - Homer •.
e
an even though he knew "of Milla, Dorsel Biggs, Belinda
•
tb~~lblllties of danger and Deem, Jack Sarpnack, Lela : . 773-5592
Herman Grate
Mason, W. Va . •
r ·
Cremeans, Koleen Parsons. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

.

Pennaylvanlli, Ohio, Indiana,, eaCh.
_
and Well VIrginia; and EdJn Michigan, returns from 13
inund S. Muskle in New per cent of the precincts
Hampshire and Illinois.
showed Wallace with 638,253
1111 Greatest Prize
votes or 50 per cent; McGovern
Michigan gave WaUace hLII nf,f! with 345,249 or 27 per cent;
greatest prize-41 presidential and Humphrey third with
primary victory in a northern 208,()43 or 16 ~ cent. The
industrial . state.
And remainder was shared by foil'
Maryland, where he was oiher CJndidates.
gunned down while camWith
132
convention
psigning Monday, added to the delegates at stake In Michigan,
moment of glory.
·, . Wallace Jed for 71, McGovern
Mc&lt;l9venl beat Humphrey for. 38 and HumpQI'ey for 23.
for second place in Michigan
With Walla.;'e now out of
and Humphrey beat McGovern danger, Humphrey and Mefor runnerup in Maryland.
Govern were expected to
Returns from 99 percent of continue their camP&amp;igns, con·
the Maryland precincts showed centrating on the winner.takeWallace with 216,019 or 40 per aJJ primary in California and
cent; Humphrey second with its lode of 2'11 delegate votes .
144,849 or 2'1 per cent; and
Before that contest, the two
McGovern third with 118,311 or Midwest senators have to get
22 per cmt ..' The ·remaining through the Oregon and Rhode
votes were scattered among Island
primaries nell
the seven other candidates.
Taesday. Oregon Is Considered
Wallace was leading loo 41 of locked up lor McGovern and
Maryland's 53 delegates and neither candidate has bothered
McGovern and Humphrey for 6 with Rhode Island's primary.
Wallace, apparently not well

'65.00

e·

-we care~-----

LEAN TENDER

Chuck Steak •.

You bet .•. and many do, beeauae
they have learned tllat AlP Premium Lawn Products
are equal to tile beat. And yet, tlley cost mueh Jess. ,
LAWN BUilOER
Alo~·fttding, slow:release fert il izer, dust·hee
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mtrocen {23), phosphoric acid (1J. pota!h 17).

W£EDlFEED

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~tops crabiress belOle it starts and it feeds the l.awn too.
lk;;'CI

--.:.".

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1";:~:::;::'7 ""til pe1~nnia l !teed. A fin~ll!•tured millure conttininl
v::
25% Mtuon Bluearass. II produees atrul~ beautiful lawn .

Be&lt;all!e all tllese produ&lt;ta bear the AlP Seal,
they ore unct&gt;nditionally guilranteed or your money back

RONDI!LA ~-·-------2~$

· square
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HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

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'nl-5554

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~'

CHE[R THE SICK
WITH A

Spring Bouquet
"Yoyr Thoughtfulness
can Bring -Happiness"

Dudley's Aoris(
Serving : Gallipolis,
.P omeroy, Middleport, o.,
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va .

For Prompt
Service,
. Delicious Food,

.

Soft Drinks &amp; Dairy Dessert.

BY GARY CLARK
The host Wahama White Falcons suffered a 4-1 season finale
set back Tuesday in the Section 1 Region 8 Tournament at the
hands of the Poca Dots of Putnam County.
Wahama managed only two hits as the four White Falcon
seniors ended their high school career. The Roush Twins, Curtis
and Chester. and Co-Captains Randy Clark and Mike White will
never again wear a White Falcon baseball uniform ..
--

stjNDAY'S CONCERT BY THE All;Qhio Youth Choir at
~eiga Hlg1l School was well received by a receptive audience.
Wayne Well, son of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Well of the Hemlock
Grove area, the only vocal soloist of the concert, was featured on
"H018DJ18" from "Jesus Christ, &amp;lperstar". Karen Griffith also
Curtis, Chester and Clark ·
WHS-1
made an effective appearance with her 'trumpet .in the closing
have
earned
4
varsity
baseball
·
AB
selection, "Battle Hymn of the Republic". She's the daughter of
R H E
letters while White is a 3 year Ch. Roush
4 0 0 0
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Griffith and an alumnus of the choir.
letterman. Randy Clark and
Seven-year~id Lynn Kloes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
3 0 I 0
Manning Kloes of Middleport, was selected by Glenville Thomas, the Roush Twins are the last White
3 0 0 0
players left from the 1!169
choir director, to lead the vocal group through "School Days". Wahama State Tournament Clark
2 000
Lambert
Lynn Is a cousin of Melanie Hackett, a choir member.
Baseball Team ..
Cu.Roush
3 0 0 0
Some 12 former members of the ~holr among the audience
Belcher
2 0 0 0
were recognized by the director.
Hesson
I I 0 0
Rick Hesson suffered the los:;
2
0 t 1
Gardner
'
W. W. WARD, AFORMER Meigs County resident now Jiving as Poca plated two runs in the Lewis
/o o o o
first Inning with four
at 3490 French Road, Beaumont, Tex., writes of his newspaper
consecutive singles. The Dots
days at the Pomeroy Daily Independent many years ago. Ward
other two runs came in the 4th.
has been in Pomeroy only once since 1913, in 1936, and then he As a result of an error, a
just sort of "drove through."
, double, and a single.
He remembers the Lochary, Hobstetter, Hartley, Slagel, '
Tracy, Webster, Long and Elselstein names and wonders if
The White Falcons only
members of the families are still around the Big Bend.
threat came In the seventh
'
ELEVEN ARRESTED
inning when, after one out,
.
PAPERS FILED
Rick Hesson drew a walk and
TOLEDO (UP!) - Seven
scored on Danny Gardner's
adults addicts
and four juveniles
·
·
I'me dr'1ve tr'1p1e to cen ter fi eJd .
.L.._
rrestalld Ar t'IC 1es o1 mcorporat10n
...-"11
• were a
e have been filed in Columbus
Wahama'sonly two hits were
::efte, ~sday bnslreablk4 DP a with Secretary of State Ted w. an infield single by Mike W)lite
r . g respo
e .or 130 , Bro"fll . by the Letart t'all.\ in the third !l'ld Gardrier's
37 ' United ~ethodist'Cilurch· with ""se'•enth lluung blast. The White'
~ llrid anllillt•
ahto theftl during the past Donald ·Bell, Ernest Shuler, "' Falcon's managed seven bases
year, ~ce said.
Paul Beegle all- trustees, and on balls while Poea played
Pollee said they. recovered Ernest Shuler' Route 2, errorless baseball. For the
$4,000 In Jewelry, appliances Racine, agent
through Dots, Atkinson was the winning
N. 2nd Ave.
and other items and knew Webster and Fir!~ , allllrneys, pitcher while Powlands
where another $4,000 worth for non-p ofl't
contributed two singles.
was hidden.
r ·

Adolph's Dairy Valley

I 0 0 0 Gardner ; Errors-Lambert;

Haymaker
TOTAL

21 I 2

POCA-4
AB
Spaulding
Rowlands
Donaldson
Donaldson
Hager
Witt
Thompson
Darby
Atkinson
Erwin

R .H E
3 0 1 I

LOB-Wah.-6, Poca.S.
IP Runs Hits K Walk E.R.
LP-Hesson 7 4 9 50 3(5-3)
WP-H
WP-Atkinson 7 1 2 4 7 1

Phone 992-2556
At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge

4 I 2 0

4 I 1 0
4 I 1 0
3 0 I 0
3 I I 2

3 1 1 0
2 0 0 0
3 0 1 0
3 0 I I

28 4 9 4

TOTAL

5
3
5
4

For
The
Freezer

Wahama 00 0 000 I· I
Poca 2002 00().4
3b· H··
2b·H

lb.
lb .
lb.
lb.

ROUND STEAK
SLICED BACON
GROUNB BEEF.
ALL MEAT WIENERS

5 lb. ROUND STEAK
10 lb. GROUND BEEF
5 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST

Middle

rt, 0 .

$

oo·

$

lb . GROUND BEEF
lb. ROUND STEAK
IIi. ~HU ClK~!ROACSTr&lt;~ v
lb. ALL MEAT WIENERS
112 SEMI BONELESS HAM
6·7 lb. Average
10
S
8
2

'.,,Phone ~.us.

Your Order!
992~3502

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

ONE PEl FAMILY
,YALUAILE COUPON

Big John Beans
Pl4 .... 3a.. WITH THIS
r
Cllll

--

·AT RACINE

F~~~s

Stock UparulSavel

COUPON

6ootl Thru s.tunl.y, tolay 20tr..
At AH A., Food 5ftrtt

BIG: 3 MEAT SPECIALS

AT tuPPERS ruuiA

LODWICK MARKET

Cut Green Beans • • • • •
Golden Corn o'1:~~~~~tE
• •
s·weet Peas • • • • • • • •
Green Beans F~~fr • • • •
Prun~ Juice • • • • • • • • •• -:r-47c
Tomato Catsup • • • • • •

AT RUilMD

FROZEN FOODS

RIGHT

RESERVED
TO
LIMIT

COOL

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU MAY 20th

I

-SUGAR
10 lb. bag ']35

~44C WITH THIS

COU,ON
Good Thru S•twd 1 y, M•y 20th.

\

At All AlP Food Staret~

~@!'!!! ONE PU FAMILY

STEA-K
'1 09

9 oz. crtn.

·WHIP'

lb.

,,

STAR KIST
LIGHT CHUNK

Golden Isle

Pillsbury Four

ROUND

Birdseye

QUANTITIES

llllllAIID DEPT. STORE

YALUAILE COUPON

\2

Boneless Round

STEAK

TUNA ·
o%_ol...can

99~

h$1 19

VALUABLE COUPON ,

A

Pillsbury Frosting
Oooblo Fo.d?'· 3 lkL$100 WITH THIS
CrteMy V1n1tlt
COUfON
pkp.

6ood Tlmt S.turd1y, Mey 20tlt. .

At All AlP FoH Starts

·
Spec!.! Low Prkel

ONE PEl FAMILY .

Realemon Juice •

Pillsbury .Cake Mixes
..ukl.$100

Cllocol:t.,
Whit. ••

WITH THIS

Yollow
'lpkp.
COUPON
Good Thru Sttunl.y, May 2Dt~.
At All AAP Fo041 Stom

._. l!C- R8. WITH THIS

;n•

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.....Atn..
S.t.H:y. "'" • .
All AlP Feetll St.na
ONI Pll FAI!liLY

.·

Ice Cream • • • •
CMd.O-Iit lndl•ldu•l Wr•p

Cheese Slices •

• • •

Che~rcoal • • • • • • • -::;-

Alax Detergent
boll

All Fftvor

~, ,

YALUAILI COUI'OM

-

lordeft'1

Prell Cone. Shampoo

• •

$

149
:Yetetabfes&amp;, .. 4=·$100
White Bread • • • • 4 ~ f9c
'
Fordllook Lim• or Baby

J: .. '""'

Llmu, Ret. or Fr. Style G..-

:: '123

~

••.

l"

•

~

....... I

Crest Toothpaste

____::7J.....;

.

.

'AJAX

TREET
12 ot can 59°

l

Prell Liquid Shampoo
11.._$423

--

-

WAID CROSS SONS

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

FAMILY

12"x 12"

.........,, '""-

Good Thru Saturday, M•y 2oth.
At AU AlP Food Storn

foot

foot

I .

YOU CAN
COUNT
ON US!

. ·
S;k
Wahama Manages· Only Two Hits ,

Hunt's Tomato Sauce
59c WITH
THIS
5..._
...,.
COUPON

SAVE!

,

EXPENSIVE INSTRUMENT-The Marimba, a. new $2,000 jazz-band instrument
resembling a xylophone, has been purchased for the Wahama High School band by the Band
Boosters. Band Director Charles Yeago, far right, demonstrates the new instrument as Band
Director Gerald Simmons and Supt. of Schools Charles Withers looks on.

It was the third time the
locals bave beaten Buffalo this
year , They also defeated Poca
in a single game this year, !Hi,
but the Dots came up with 10
hits in that one.
So, Thursday, we sbaii see
what we shaH see.

~

1ilk to your prdener about these premium products.
Have him read this and.see if he doesn't .;.y:
"''lw1k you, Darling, Gee, I'm glad I manied you."

ONE PER FAMILY

12'~x12"

•

*""

CRABGRASS CONTROl .LAWN BUILDER

At All A&amp;P Foocl Sto,..

square

All GOOD
$139
·. • ::.$149
.
· 51"1ce· d Baeon
lb.

weeds and leeds yoUr lawn, all in (ll1e application

&amp;oocl Tnru S.l•d•y, twl•v 2oth.

' .'

79c Cube-Steak
CUT FRO.. CHUCK

1
b.

•

TILE

foot

JENNINGS (ACE) WAYLAND of Middleport has bee~­
named operationa manager of the new Meigs IM. BIU Childs,
although somewhat limited due to a health problem right now,
will continue as general manager. ·

A double-duly product; gets rid of ur~sightl~ tnoad·l!aled

Wesson Oil
11-oo. 84c WITH THIS
bll.
COUPON

~

ILL AT THE HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER in Gallipolis are
~s, Mrs. Mary Schaefer, room · 301, and Mrs. Jean
· Seldenabel, rOOD\ :!38. Mrs. Seidenabel has undergone major
surgery. Both are sisters of Mrs. Thelma White.

$109 FRESHLY GROUND •
ClftL ANY SIZE PIECE
Swiss Steak .. "·
Ground Chuck •lb.o7- Bologna ••• • ·lb.SCJc·
BONELESS
$139 IUTI STYL£
7ft.!
DECKER'S
Charcoal Steak lb. . Pork Steaks • •lb. 7- Jumbo Franks ::.$169

1

square

•.

ROUND lONE SHOULDER

YAL UAILE CI)UPON

square

•

''Su r-Right'' Quali

PER FAMILY

foot

KAREN GRIFFITil, AN OHIO SI'ATE University student
majoring in animal science, will manage the Royal Oak Park
riding stables ·near Five Points beginnll18 Memorial Day
weekend. Karen will operate the facility on ·a dally basis for
campers and the public after June 9. The riding service was
unavailable at the park last summer. Billy Wella, now of Rio
Grande, formerly of Middleport, inaugurated the stables four
years ago.
·

'

CEILING

--------1.1 Y2 ~
12"x12"
·
PANAMA ·-----16% ~
12"x12" .
1
MAYFAIR-----· 18 Y2

•• •

. PAINT SUIT FILED
MIDDLETOWN; Ohio (UP!)
- A $102,500 suit was flied
against a local hardware store
lll)d two paint companies Taesday by Mrs. Brenda·Carroll of
Middletown, whOse !().monthold daughter, Sue, allegedly bit
newly painted furniture and
suffered acute lead poisoning.

Poca eliminated David ArriW~ WBhama White Falcons in
the opener up there yesterday, 4-1 . The Falcons ended with an 88 slate on the season.
.
PPHS, held to only four hits, used bases im balls, and Bison
errors, to eliminate Gary Adkins' Buffalo Putnam crew, 9-3 in
the second game. Buffalo finished up with a 4-11 record . They
had lost last Friday at Seth, 19-10.
Sophomore Randy Warner, coming on in re~f of soph Jim
Chandler, picked up the victory for the Big Blacks, his fourth as
against two wins.
Buffalo's Tim Thornton was stingy with base hits, giving up
only four, but he walked 10, and his mates committed four
damaging miscues behind him.

The Rev. Dallas L . Browning found reproductions of the
ciaues d. 1908 and 1909 in a recent edition of The Dally Sentinel
quite interesting.
.
'I'I!e Rev. Mr. Browning ts a 1918 graduate of Rutland High
School. He graduated· from Ohio University and 'the Garrett
TheolQglcal Seminary. His pastorages in Ohio were in Athens,
Glouster, London, Columbus and Sidney, and from 1944 to 1965 he
served chul'ches in Indiana including a term as superintend~nt of ·
the Evansville Dislrict
•
,
·
The Rev. Mr. Browning now U~s at 6 Seabreeze Drive,
Orn1ond by the Se~ •. Ormond 'Beach, Fla.

•-•.AI •

Manwich Sandwich Sauce
lkl. 35c WITH THIS
· ..,.
COUPON

square

Section 1 Region 8 tournament title tomorrow at 4 p.m. at
Bachtel Field in Mason.

•

Mason Furn' lture

Goocllhru S1fu~•Y• U1y 2oth.
At All AlP f&lt;lod Sto,..

1

, (9-5) against Skipper Bob Lumley's Poca Dots (9-5 ) for the

e• • • • • •

.
YALUAILE COUPON

12"x24"
WHITE

BY JACKROGElfs .
It will be Coach Jim Carpenter's Point Pleasant Big Blacks

.,N . . ·

~ OI~E PER FAMILY

Buy Now!

Win On Only 4 Hits .

l6,FHA Memhers ·Honare·d

by Wallace

BELlONE

New Shipment·

'

I

3

ll &amp; JIIS ..

BACON
lb• •

,~
'

'l

69°

giant size

.DUNCAN

99C

h79~

POPIJR SUCED

IJUNDRY DETERGENT

KRAFT

GRAPE JEtLY

.•

BEEF
STEW MEAT

HU~ES
'

,CAK'EMIX
Yelllw

Deli! FDOCI
Willie

•

PRODUCE BUYS
Red Ripe

Golden Ripe

TOMATOES
2 lb• .box

.BANANAS

59e . 2

lb.

2Se

SPECIAL 1'111;1
Willi IllS CIIUNI

99~

�.•
'

a- The o.ny sentinel, Mlddlepori-Pcmeroy, o., Mar 11, 1m

.

'

2 Primaries

S~ept
~.

lllllted Prell IDtet'1!811oaal
George Corley . wvlace
nrept the presidential
prilparlea In Mlchl!!an ·and ·
Maryland Tuesday' bu1 ' his
p-eatell pollticalsuccesa 10 far
was marred by the pain of
bullet wounds and the
.reallzatlm he may never walk
Illln.
Robbed of his legs, perhaps
forever, by ·a would-be
asaal!&amp;ln, and ledated against
his suffering, Wallace Jay
partialfy paralyud in a Silver

Spring, Md., hospital as
Michigan and· Maryland
awarded him two · clear-rut
victories.
Not only did WaUace easily
outdistance Hubert H. HumphteY and George S.
McGovern, the two main
challengers for the Democratic
presidential nomination, bul he
moved into second place in the
munber of del"'!ates to the
convention and into first place
in the number of primary wins.
-It aJIPe~ed that Wallace
picked up 112 delegates to give
him a total of 311 from primary
and nonprlmiry states. MeGovern added 42 for a leading
total of 423; and Humphrey
picked up 30 for a total of
Wallace now has won five
primaries - Michigan, MaryWEST COLUMBIA, W. Va. land, Florida, TeM~e. and
- Mrs. Julia F. Van Maire, 85, Nortll Carolina. McGovern won
died Taeaday at the Holzer in Wisconsin, Massachusetts,
Medical Center.
and Nebraska; Humphrey in
A member of the· West
Columbia United Methodist
Church, Mrs. Van' Matre was Frances Yeager ·
born Jan. 31, 1887 in Missouri,
the daughter of the late Henry Dies in Columbus
and Deborah McDaniel
. Mrs. Frances L. Yeager, 58,
Stewart. ·
She was preceded in death former Meigs County resident,
also by her husband, Howard Columbus, dled·Taesday at the
D. VanMatre, who died in 1957, Munteray Nursing Inn at
and three sons, Harvey, Ralph Columbus.
She is survived by a sorl,
and Claude.
Surviving are four sons, Keith Stansbury, of Columbus;
IDavld, Arnold and Wilbur, ali three brothers, Leslie Price,
of West Columbia, and Andrew Pomeroy, and Lawrence Price
of Clifton; two daughters, Mrs. and Oakley Price, 9oth of
Eskew (Anna) Johnson, Columbus; a sister, Mrs.
Mason, and Mrs. Donald Emma Neighborgall,
(Deborah) Lewis, Vienna; a Columbus, four grandsons, and
sister, Mrs. Maude Van Meter, several nieces and nephews.
Clifton; 24 grandchildren, 31 Funeral services will be at 1
great-grandchildren, and one .p.m. Thursday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
great-great-grandchild. ·
Arthur
Lund officiating. Burial
Funeral services will be held
at 1:30 p.m. Thursday at the will be in Beech G'rove
Foglesong Funeral Home with Cemetery. Friends may call at
the Rev. Mrs. Bernice Winkler the funeral home anytime.
and the Rev. George Hoschar
officiating. Burial will be in
· Graham · Cemetery. Frienlls
may call at te fuheral home
anyUme.

Julia Van Matre

Dies on Tuesday

m.

BELTONE
HEARING AID
SERVICE CENTER

Legion

Mr. H. Wm. Milttingly
Will Be AI
(Con lillued from page I )
Meigs Inn
services at Chester, meeting
Pomeroy, Ohio
there at 1:30 p,m.
on
Dr. Mike ·chakeres, post
Thursday, May 18, 1972
department commander of
From
011Jo1 will be the guest speaker
9 a.m . to 12 Noon ·
at ~h Grove ·and Chester
•
cemeteries. ·
To repair and service
· In other business, · Don ·
Runnel announced the Meigs hearing aids.
Batteries and supplies
Legion llaseball schedule for
for
all makes for sale.
, the 11e11son and asked members
Ill help with the sale of boosier
carda. Money from the project
Mr. Mattingly will be
will be used to finance the
glad to give you a free
baseball team.
hearing test with the
The next chicken barbecue,
latest 1leltone Elec ··
which wiU be sponsored jointly
ironic equipment.
by Legion members and
Pomeroy firemen, will be held
If hearing is your
regatta weekend, June 17 and
problem Bellone is
18.
the answer
Post everlasting services
were conducted by Chaplain
.Gilmore for the departed
comrade, Arthur Ebersbach.
Delegates for the district
convention on June 18 at
Hearing Aid Center
CrookaviUe are Paul Case!,
. 601 Sixth Avenue
Frank Vaughan 1 Leonard
Huntington. W.Va .
Jewell and Charles Swalzel.
Phone: 525-7221
Refreshments were served
by Roy Reuter.
·

'

•- Tile Illllysn~Del,~ac~oy.o., May 11.1m

enough -yet • to watch 'the
prb!ulry returnS on television, ,
- was given the gOod tidings by .
hLII wife, Cornelia, who has
·ke"'
"' a bedside vigil since the
During .Impressive can- Painela Sams, Barbara Well, · ·Pulllns, report.er • ·""' Cathy·
attempted assassination late · dlelight services 16 memllers Bonnie Welsh, and Sandy Coates, recreation leader.
.
~da8l~d-e ••'d that Walla
of the Eastern High School Wood.
.
Mr,s. Janice Ritchie;adviaot,
ce, Future Homemakers Assn. · Offleers installed during.the was presented a cwl8ge as
from hla hnonjtaJ
....,. bed, acknow- chapter were honored Tuesday ceremony were Sandy' Wood, · . was eac h of the office...
••· . .,
!edged the returns ''witb a big night when they received the presidtmt ·, Cathy Pickens, vice
·Janice Dixon received the
smlle
and
a
nod"
and
other
members of the Wallace en- 1 junior degree, the firs~ step president;
Iris . Pigott, state degree in April at the
toward a state· degree. The secretary; Joyce My· ers, state convention in . ColUJII~US.
. tourage were determined to go junior degree is the first honor treasurer ; Cindy Farrar, She 8SSIS
· 1s wlth the FHA at
ahead "from a wheelchllir, if received in FHA work.
historian; Rosemary Reed, . Eastern. · Following , the
:~e=~ry'' to the con··. Gir.ls honored were ·JaniCe song leader· Bonnie Welsh program a style show was held
Boggs, Marcia Cerr, Barbara parliameniarlan ; · .loan~ followed by refreslunents ..
'Wallace's chief political aide
In California said that unleai Coates, Cathy Coa~LConnie ·, • • • • • • • • • • • • •
H • • • • • !
the giUI!!hot woiDida make it Dailey, Cathy DaviS,. i''rances e
.
Impossible; the Alabama Hawk, Cindy Farrar, . Cethy •
-·· Trade In Tune At Mason Fum~ure .
· .: '
governor will enter the Pickens, Iris Pigott, Joann •
•
,
:
•
California primary as a write- Pullins, 1 Roseroar.y · Reed, :
' .,
in candlidate.
·
vet
M r1 IH I I e
.
' . .
e
ButHIDDphreytoldreporters
AD~~E~~ ~ei~P:at •. FOR YOUR OLD LIVING' ROOM :
that Wallace's twin victories
"do not mean a thing" and . tox, Pomeroy; Corbett Cleek e '
SUITE
.
•
Racine; . Inez Randolph,
must be weighed In the light of Pomeroy ; Jesse Geyer, •
'
•
When You Purchase Any
•
"most IDiusual, tragic clrc!DD- Pomeroy; Alice· Holliday, •
stan&lt;:es."
Dexter; Judith J!lllers, South- •
NEW LIVING ROOM SUITE
•
Flanked by his wife Muriel, side, w. Va.; Mayo Ralph •
•.
Hmnphrey said he would keep B 1
•
·
on with his ali:Qut campaign
a es, J~ .. Bidwell.
d
·
DISCHARGED - Homer •.
e
an even though he knew "of Milla, Dorsel Biggs, Belinda
•
tb~~lblllties of danger and Deem, Jack Sarpnack, Lela : . 773-5592
Herman Grate
Mason, W. Va . •
r ·
Cremeans, Koleen Parsons. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •

.

Pennaylvanlli, Ohio, Indiana,, eaCh.
_
and Well VIrginia; and EdJn Michigan, returns from 13
inund S. Muskle in New per cent of the precincts
Hampshire and Illinois.
showed Wallace with 638,253
1111 Greatest Prize
votes or 50 per cent; McGovern
Michigan gave WaUace hLII nf,f! with 345,249 or 27 per cent;
greatest prize-41 presidential and Humphrey third with
primary victory in a northern 208,()43 or 16 ~ cent. The
industrial . state.
And remainder was shared by foil'
Maryland, where he was oiher CJndidates.
gunned down while camWith
132
convention
psigning Monday, added to the delegates at stake In Michigan,
moment of glory.
·, . Wallace Jed for 71, McGovern
Mc&lt;l9venl beat Humphrey for. 38 and HumpQI'ey for 23.
for second place in Michigan
With Walla.;'e now out of
and Humphrey beat McGovern danger, Humphrey and Mefor runnerup in Maryland.
Govern were expected to
Returns from 99 percent of continue their camP&amp;igns, con·
the Maryland precincts showed centrating on the winner.takeWallace with 216,019 or 40 per aJJ primary in California and
cent; Humphrey second with its lode of 2'11 delegate votes .
144,849 or 2'1 per cent; and
Before that contest, the two
McGovern third with 118,311 or Midwest senators have to get
22 per cmt ..' The ·remaining through the Oregon and Rhode
votes were scattered among Island
primaries nell
the seven other candidates.
Taesday. Oregon Is Considered
Wallace was leading loo 41 of locked up lor McGovern and
Maryland's 53 delegates and neither candidate has bothered
McGovern and Humphrey for 6 with Rhode Island's primary.
Wallace, apparently not well

'65.00

e·

-we care~-----

LEAN TENDER

Chuck Steak •.

You bet .•. and many do, beeauae
they have learned tllat AlP Premium Lawn Products
are equal to tile beat. And yet, tlley cost mueh Jess. ,
LAWN BUilOER
Alo~·fttding, slow:release fert il izer, dust·hee
a?d li&amp;ht·wtilht. Rich in the nlltrienl5 &amp;rass n~t.!•·
mtrocen {23), phosphoric acid (1J. pota!h 17).

W£EDlFEED

Anothef boon lo lht OOmr prdeMr, this lint product
~tops crabiress belOle it starts and it feeds the l.awn too.
lk;;'CI

--.:.".

LAWN SEED

1";:~:::;::'7 ""til pe1~nnia l !teed. A fin~ll!•tured millure conttininl
v::
25% Mtuon Bluearass. II produees atrul~ beautiful lawn .

Be&lt;all!e all tllese produ&lt;ta bear the AlP Seal,
they ore unct&gt;nditionally guilranteed or your money back

RONDI!LA ~-·-------2~$

· square
SONATA, accustlca~--22~ foot

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN

M*' '1 Co.

'nl-5554

Mason

~'

CHE[R THE SICK
WITH A

Spring Bouquet
"Yoyr Thoughtfulness
can Bring -Happiness"

Dudley's Aoris(
Serving : Gallipolis,
.P omeroy, Middleport, o.,
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va .

For Prompt
Service,
. Delicious Food,

.

Soft Drinks &amp; Dairy Dessert.

BY GARY CLARK
The host Wahama White Falcons suffered a 4-1 season finale
set back Tuesday in the Section 1 Region 8 Tournament at the
hands of the Poca Dots of Putnam County.
Wahama managed only two hits as the four White Falcon
seniors ended their high school career. The Roush Twins, Curtis
and Chester. and Co-Captains Randy Clark and Mike White will
never again wear a White Falcon baseball uniform ..
--

stjNDAY'S CONCERT BY THE All;Qhio Youth Choir at
~eiga Hlg1l School was well received by a receptive audience.
Wayne Well, son of Mr. and Mrs. Denver Well of the Hemlock
Grove area, the only vocal soloist of the concert, was featured on
"H018DJ18" from "Jesus Christ, &amp;lperstar". Karen Griffith also
Curtis, Chester and Clark ·
WHS-1
made an effective appearance with her 'trumpet .in the closing
have
earned
4
varsity
baseball
·
AB
selection, "Battle Hymn of the Republic". She's the daughter of
R H E
letters while White is a 3 year Ch. Roush
4 0 0 0
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Griffith and an alumnus of the choir.
letterman. Randy Clark and
Seven-year~id Lynn Kloes, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
3 0 I 0
Manning Kloes of Middleport, was selected by Glenville Thomas, the Roush Twins are the last White
3 0 0 0
players left from the 1!169
choir director, to lead the vocal group through "School Days". Wahama State Tournament Clark
2 000
Lambert
Lynn Is a cousin of Melanie Hackett, a choir member.
Baseball Team ..
Cu.Roush
3 0 0 0
Some 12 former members of the ~holr among the audience
Belcher
2 0 0 0
were recognized by the director.
Hesson
I I 0 0
Rick Hesson suffered the los:;
2
0 t 1
Gardner
'
W. W. WARD, AFORMER Meigs County resident now Jiving as Poca plated two runs in the Lewis
/o o o o
first Inning with four
at 3490 French Road, Beaumont, Tex., writes of his newspaper
consecutive singles. The Dots
days at the Pomeroy Daily Independent many years ago. Ward
other two runs came in the 4th.
has been in Pomeroy only once since 1913, in 1936, and then he As a result of an error, a
just sort of "drove through."
, double, and a single.
He remembers the Lochary, Hobstetter, Hartley, Slagel, '
Tracy, Webster, Long and Elselstein names and wonders if
The White Falcons only
members of the families are still around the Big Bend.
threat came In the seventh
'
ELEVEN ARRESTED
inning when, after one out,
.
PAPERS FILED
Rick Hesson drew a walk and
TOLEDO (UP!) - Seven
scored on Danny Gardner's
adults addicts
and four juveniles
·
·
I'me dr'1ve tr'1p1e to cen ter fi eJd .
.L.._
rrestalld Ar t'IC 1es o1 mcorporat10n
...-"11
• were a
e have been filed in Columbus
Wahama'sonly two hits were
::efte, ~sday bnslreablk4 DP a with Secretary of State Ted w. an infield single by Mike W)lite
r . g respo
e .or 130 , Bro"fll . by the Letart t'all.\ in the third !l'ld Gardrier's
37 ' United ~ethodist'Cilurch· with ""se'•enth lluung blast. The White'
~ llrid anllillt•
ahto theftl during the past Donald ·Bell, Ernest Shuler, "' Falcon's managed seven bases
year, ~ce said.
Paul Beegle all- trustees, and on balls while Poea played
Pollee said they. recovered Ernest Shuler' Route 2, errorless baseball. For the
$4,000 In Jewelry, appliances Racine, agent
through Dots, Atkinson was the winning
N. 2nd Ave.
and other items and knew Webster and Fir!~ , allllrneys, pitcher while Powlands
where another $4,000 worth for non-p ofl't
contributed two singles.
was hidden.
r ·

Adolph's Dairy Valley

I 0 0 0 Gardner ; Errors-Lambert;

Haymaker
TOTAL

21 I 2

POCA-4
AB
Spaulding
Rowlands
Donaldson
Donaldson
Hager
Witt
Thompson
Darby
Atkinson
Erwin

R .H E
3 0 1 I

LOB-Wah.-6, Poca.S.
IP Runs Hits K Walk E.R.
LP-Hesson 7 4 9 50 3(5-3)
WP-H
WP-Atkinson 7 1 2 4 7 1

Phone 992-2556
At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge

4 I 2 0

4 I 1 0
4 I 1 0
3 0 I 0
3 I I 2

3 1 1 0
2 0 0 0
3 0 1 0
3 0 I I

28 4 9 4

TOTAL

5
3
5
4

For
The
Freezer

Wahama 00 0 000 I· I
Poca 2002 00().4
3b· H··
2b·H

lb.
lb .
lb.
lb.

ROUND STEAK
SLICED BACON
GROUNB BEEF.
ALL MEAT WIENERS

5 lb. ROUND STEAK
10 lb. GROUND BEEF
5 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST

Middle

rt, 0 .

$

oo·

$

lb . GROUND BEEF
lb. ROUND STEAK
IIi. ~HU ClK~!ROACSTr&lt;~ v
lb. ALL MEAT WIENERS
112 SEMI BONELESS HAM
6·7 lb. Average
10
S
8
2

'.,,Phone ~.us.

Your Order!
992~3502

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

ONE PEl FAMILY
,YALUAILE COUPON

Big John Beans
Pl4 .... 3a.. WITH THIS
r
Cllll

--

·AT RACINE

F~~~s

Stock UparulSavel

COUPON

6ootl Thru s.tunl.y, tolay 20tr..
At AH A., Food 5ftrtt

BIG: 3 MEAT SPECIALS

AT tuPPERS ruuiA

LODWICK MARKET

Cut Green Beans • • • • •
Golden Corn o'1:~~~~~tE
• •
s·weet Peas • • • • • • • •
Green Beans F~~fr • • • •
Prun~ Juice • • • • • • • • •• -:r-47c
Tomato Catsup • • • • • •

AT RUilMD

FROZEN FOODS

RIGHT

RESERVED
TO
LIMIT

COOL

PRICES EFFECTIVE
THRU MAY 20th

I

-SUGAR
10 lb. bag ']35

~44C WITH THIS

COU,ON
Good Thru S•twd 1 y, M•y 20th.

\

At All AlP Food Staret~

~@!'!!! ONE PU FAMILY

STEA-K
'1 09

9 oz. crtn.

·WHIP'

lb.

,,

STAR KIST
LIGHT CHUNK

Golden Isle

Pillsbury Four

ROUND

Birdseye

QUANTITIES

llllllAIID DEPT. STORE

YALUAILE COUPON

\2

Boneless Round

STEAK

TUNA ·
o%_ol...can

99~

h$1 19

VALUABLE COUPON ,

A

Pillsbury Frosting
Oooblo Fo.d?'· 3 lkL$100 WITH THIS
CrteMy V1n1tlt
COUfON
pkp.

6ood Tlmt S.turd1y, Mey 20tlt. .

At All AlP FoH Starts

·
Spec!.! Low Prkel

ONE PEl FAMILY .

Realemon Juice •

Pillsbury .Cake Mixes
..ukl.$100

Cllocol:t.,
Whit. ••

WITH THIS

Yollow
'lpkp.
COUPON
Good Thru Sttunl.y, May 2Dt~.
At All AAP Fo041 Stom

._. l!C- R8. WITH THIS

;n•

COUPON

.....Atn..
S.t.H:y. "'" • .
All AlP Feetll St.na
ONI Pll FAI!liLY

.·

Ice Cream • • • •
CMd.O-Iit lndl•ldu•l Wr•p

Cheese Slices •

• • •

Che~rcoal • • • • • • • -::;-

Alax Detergent
boll

All Fftvor

~, ,

YALUAILI COUI'OM

-

lordeft'1

Prell Cone. Shampoo

• •

$

149
:Yetetabfes&amp;, .. 4=·$100
White Bread • • • • 4 ~ f9c
'
Fordllook Lim• or Baby

J: .. '""'

Llmu, Ret. or Fr. Style G..-

:: '123

~

••.

l"

•

~

....... I

Crest Toothpaste

____::7J.....;

.

.

'AJAX

TREET
12 ot can 59°

l

Prell Liquid Shampoo
11.._$423

--

-

WAID CROSS SONS

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

FAMILY

12"x 12"

.........,, '""-

Good Thru Saturday, M•y 2oth.
At AU AlP Food Storn

foot

foot

I .

YOU CAN
COUNT
ON US!

. ·
S;k
Wahama Manages· Only Two Hits ,

Hunt's Tomato Sauce
59c WITH
THIS
5..._
...,.
COUPON

SAVE!

,

EXPENSIVE INSTRUMENT-The Marimba, a. new $2,000 jazz-band instrument
resembling a xylophone, has been purchased for the Wahama High School band by the Band
Boosters. Band Director Charles Yeago, far right, demonstrates the new instrument as Band
Director Gerald Simmons and Supt. of Schools Charles Withers looks on.

It was the third time the
locals bave beaten Buffalo this
year , They also defeated Poca
in a single game this year, !Hi,
but the Dots came up with 10
hits in that one.
So, Thursday, we sbaii see
what we shaH see.

~

1ilk to your prdener about these premium products.
Have him read this and.see if he doesn't .;.y:
"''lw1k you, Darling, Gee, I'm glad I manied you."

ONE PER FAMILY

12'~x12"

•

*""

CRABGRASS CONTROl .LAWN BUILDER

At All A&amp;P Foocl Sto,..

square

All GOOD
$139
·. • ::.$149
.
· 51"1ce· d Baeon
lb.

weeds and leeds yoUr lawn, all in (ll1e application

&amp;oocl Tnru S.l•d•y, twl•v 2oth.

' .'

79c Cube-Steak
CUT FRO.. CHUCK

1
b.

•

TILE

foot

JENNINGS (ACE) WAYLAND of Middleport has bee~­
named operationa manager of the new Meigs IM. BIU Childs,
although somewhat limited due to a health problem right now,
will continue as general manager. ·

A double-duly product; gets rid of ur~sightl~ tnoad·l!aled

Wesson Oil
11-oo. 84c WITH THIS
bll.
COUPON

~

ILL AT THE HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER in Gallipolis are
~s, Mrs. Mary Schaefer, room · 301, and Mrs. Jean
· Seldenabel, rOOD\ :!38. Mrs. Seidenabel has undergone major
surgery. Both are sisters of Mrs. Thelma White.

$109 FRESHLY GROUND •
ClftL ANY SIZE PIECE
Swiss Steak .. "·
Ground Chuck •lb.o7- Bologna ••• • ·lb.SCJc·
BONELESS
$139 IUTI STYL£
7ft.!
DECKER'S
Charcoal Steak lb. . Pork Steaks • •lb. 7- Jumbo Franks ::.$169

1

square

•.

ROUND lONE SHOULDER

YAL UAILE CI)UPON

square

•

''Su r-Right'' Quali

PER FAMILY

foot

KAREN GRIFFITil, AN OHIO SI'ATE University student
majoring in animal science, will manage the Royal Oak Park
riding stables ·near Five Points beginnll18 Memorial Day
weekend. Karen will operate the facility on ·a dally basis for
campers and the public after June 9. The riding service was
unavailable at the park last summer. Billy Wella, now of Rio
Grande, formerly of Middleport, inaugurated the stables four
years ago.
·

'

CEILING

--------1.1 Y2 ~
12"x12"
·
PANAMA ·-----16% ~
12"x12" .
1
MAYFAIR-----· 18 Y2

•• •

. PAINT SUIT FILED
MIDDLETOWN; Ohio (UP!)
- A $102,500 suit was flied
against a local hardware store
lll)d two paint companies Taesday by Mrs. Brenda·Carroll of
Middletown, whOse !().monthold daughter, Sue, allegedly bit
newly painted furniture and
suffered acute lead poisoning.

Poca eliminated David ArriW~ WBhama White Falcons in
the opener up there yesterday, 4-1 . The Falcons ended with an 88 slate on the season.
.
PPHS, held to only four hits, used bases im balls, and Bison
errors, to eliminate Gary Adkins' Buffalo Putnam crew, 9-3 in
the second game. Buffalo finished up with a 4-11 record . They
had lost last Friday at Seth, 19-10.
Sophomore Randy Warner, coming on in re~f of soph Jim
Chandler, picked up the victory for the Big Blacks, his fourth as
against two wins.
Buffalo's Tim Thornton was stingy with base hits, giving up
only four, but he walked 10, and his mates committed four
damaging miscues behind him.

The Rev. Dallas L . Browning found reproductions of the
ciaues d. 1908 and 1909 in a recent edition of The Dally Sentinel
quite interesting.
.
'I'I!e Rev. Mr. Browning ts a 1918 graduate of Rutland High
School. He graduated· from Ohio University and 'the Garrett
TheolQglcal Seminary. His pastorages in Ohio were in Athens,
Glouster, London, Columbus and Sidney, and from 1944 to 1965 he
served chul'ches in Indiana including a term as superintend~nt of ·
the Evansville Dislrict
•
,
·
The Rev. Mr. Browning now U~s at 6 Seabreeze Drive,
Orn1ond by the Se~ •. Ormond 'Beach, Fla.

•-•.AI •

Manwich Sandwich Sauce
lkl. 35c WITH THIS
· ..,.
COUPON

square

Section 1 Region 8 tournament title tomorrow at 4 p.m. at
Bachtel Field in Mason.

•

Mason Furn' lture

Goocllhru S1fu~•Y• U1y 2oth.
At All AlP f&lt;lod Sto,..

1

, (9-5) against Skipper Bob Lumley's Poca Dots (9-5 ) for the

e• • • • • •

.
YALUAILE COUPON

12"x24"
WHITE

BY JACKROGElfs .
It will be Coach Jim Carpenter's Point Pleasant Big Blacks

.,N . . ·

~ OI~E PER FAMILY

Buy Now!

Win On Only 4 Hits .

l6,FHA Memhers ·Honare·d

by Wallace

BELlONE

New Shipment·

'

I

3

ll &amp; JIIS ..

BACON
lb• •

,~
'

'l

69°

giant size

.DUNCAN

99C

h79~

POPIJR SUCED

IJUNDRY DETERGENT

KRAFT

GRAPE JEtLY

.•

BEEF
STEW MEAT

HU~ES
'

,CAK'EMIX
Yelllw

Deli! FDOCI
Willie

•

PRODUCE BUYS
Red Ripe

Golden Ripe

TOMATOES
2 lb• .box

.BANANAS

59e . 2

lb.

2Se

SPECIAL 1'111;1
Willi IllS CIIUNI

99~

�r

rr r rr rtr rrrr rrrrr r rr

rrr

• •

10- Tbe Dally Sellllnel.~, 0 ., May 17,19'12

Sentinel ~la~si/ieds Get Action! Sentinel Cl~tssifieds Get·Results!.
INo"EOARo'tm~N
r·
Z
B
s
•
@) Of
roy
u
'
·
S
ID
.
ess·
.
'
'
e
rvt
•
.
ces
"·:
• WANT ADS

t

. ·'

S P.M. Day Beton~ PUblication

·

·

Notice

1

Mon~or Deadline 9 o.m . . REDUCE excess fluids •viii I
ConcellotlonCorrtctionl
· h• .
Wilt
be accepted until
9 a.m. for . Flu ldex , $1 .69 - \..OSe welg
Day 01 Publication
safely with Dex·A·Diet, 98c al
REGULATIONS
Nelson Drugs.
The Publisher reserves the
5-17-lt,::

•

right lo edit or reject any ods
dtemed ob jec tional. The GUN SHOOT. May 20, 6:30p.m
r,ubllsher will not be responsible Mile Hill Rd. Fire Dept.
or more than one Incorrect Building. Assorted meats and
Insertion. RATES
lfz hog. cut' up. Ringed and
For Want Ad Service
! c~nts per Word one Insertion

sleeved guns shot every other
niatch .

Minimum Charge75c

12

cents

per

word

corri~~~~epl~:·';!~onds . I
secuttve ln~ertlons..

r

2.5 Per Cent D lsc.ount on paid
adsandadspa ldwithln 10days.

8: 30a .m . to 5:00p .m. Daily ,
a .m . to 12 :00 Noon

Saturday.
CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE.
Memorial Day Polled Plants,
75c up, Pansies, Petunias;
number of bedding plants;
vegetable plants. Geraldine
Cleland. E.' Main St .. Racine.
5-16-lfc

,-------

KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
wigs. Need exira money? Just
sell these products. No
restricted territories. Phone
992-5113.
4-2-lfc
::
C-:A:L:-L-:f:-or- :fr_e_e_f:-a-cl:a-:-1-a-nd7 application of famous Mink 011
Kosmetlcs . Ann Sauvage ,

Syracuse, Ohio 992-3272.
5-10-121p
O'DELL'S CAB Co., 24 hr.
Service, Phone 992-2927 ,
Middleport. Ohio.
5-10-6to&gt;

LEGAL NOTICE
Bids will be received as of
pub tie auction for the sale of the
prem rses known as the coal
Port School . The property was
aequlred bV deeds recorded In
Vol . ,.,. pages 139-41, 188, 2J2.,
Meigs County Deed RecGrd to
wh len reference Is hereby

made. A survey description ls

on •file in the Office of the Clerk
of the Board of Education . The
pr.emfses are on Liberty
Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio, where
the auction will be he.ld at 7:30

p.m. Monday. June 19, 1972.

Termsotsale : CIUh . The r ight
Is reserved to reject any and all

bidS .

Lee W . McComas
Clerk, Board of Educa tion
Meigs Local School District

15) H, 24, 31 (6) 7,

41

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
-PROVATE DIVISION-

Myrllt Haning, Administratrix ,

of lho Estote of

Atbteca Hudnall,
DtctUed,
Plllfltlff,
Yl.

.

Clarence Hudnall, et al.,
Dtftndanll.

IUALITY

.VI

portsman lub1 Sunday, 12
noon Al so ri fle mat t hee open

It ·

"'

s es on 1y.

Lancaster , will be preach ing .
Special singing each evening .

sewing . Also · buttonholes ,
blind hems, etc . $43 .35 tash

use
1967 FORD 1oo PICKUP
4 wheel drive, practically new 15" 1st line tires, 6 cy l.
engine, needs overhauling , fran~ drive axle in good con-

'l_Outh every night prior to

Evangelistic Service. Pastor

Chester Tennant.

5-14-3tc

----1 WILL NOT be responsible for
anyon~ other than myself.

Signed : Ern est William

" Rink " Davi dson .

price or terms available.
· Phone 992-.5641.
5·17-6tc

r'=========='IF=::::::::::;::;:::;:::::::::::::;::::::::=:::;r====-'=====::;;;,--~

TERMITES .. TERMITES

14' H. Duty pl•tform body, V-8 engine, 15,000 lb. 2 speed

Will do any average single
. dwelling for

...,

rear axle, 825 x 20 tires, solid cab. PrJced ~o move now.

,,

1966 CHEVROLEHHON
1795
. 8 fl . wide body, side mldg ., good tires, 6 cyl. engine, radio.

'Domeroy Moto·r Coe
r-1

@)
fl.
·.

always available at ...

nias . We also sell Garden
seeds, onion sets and seed

MOBILE HOMES

grov,er, more than 600,000
plants grown annualy In our

greenhouses. Bob's Market
and Plant Sales. Mason, W.
'Ia . 773-5308, near lhe
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE , O.

Limestone,

5-17·6tc:

, LOSE weight with New Shape
Tablets • .10 day tupply only
$1.49. Dutton Drug Co.,
Middl ew.or
· t. N
. e 1son Drug
Store• omeoy · ·
Ameri can s1ereo-radio
combination , AM -FM radio, 4

speaker sound system. 4
speed au.lomatl f changer.
Balance $78.34 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
5-17-61c
AMC refr igerator $45, Tappan
range SlO. couch $10. Contact
740 High St .. Middleport,
Ohio.
5-17-3tp

5· Year Written Guarantee. ,

·
Call . 614~949-3511, if nO answer, ~aii614·4U•3158; ,,

'

Y.CITY EXTERMI"ATION
321ThirdSt.
Racine, Olllo

Spring
Painting?
SEE US
EXPERIENCED IN
INTERIOR ANil
EXTERIOR
PAINTING
Phone 742-5825
or 992.6576

R. I. DOBBELD

12 X 60 2 BEDROOM railer,
adults only. Phone 742-5641.
5-17-31c

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
4782, Galllpoli&gt;nJohn Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator ,

5-12-tfc

named, as they are still green
when ripe, sweet, firm and

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

or styrofoam cups, lSC each

Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
· Critt Bradford

or $1.60 oozen . B. Quisenberry , Syracuse, Ohio.
5-5-lOip

Complete Service

your

motor .

Pomeroy, Ohio, Phone 992-

3830.

5-16-30tc

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
- PROBATE DIVISION -

Anna
M.
Ryther ,
Ad ·
m l nistratrh;
of the Estate of
George w. Moore, Deceued ,
Plaintiff,

vs.

Betty Monman. et al.,
Defendants .
,:
·
No. 2059"

Pets For

- -- -Gift
-Shop.'
S MAL ~ EY ' S

Chester, Ohio. Have large
assortment of flower s for all
occasions. Arrangem ent s for
Mother 's Day ; pots and
baskets for M emor ia l Day,

Sale
PART German Shepherd male BALDWIN piano and organ tc
99c and up. Phone 985-3537.
be picked up in th is area . May
pup needs good hom e; pllone
4-28-12tc
be
purchased
together
or
' 985-3890.
5-16-3fp separately for balances due .
Write Credit Department : BEAUTIFUL selection flowers ,
-----baskets and wreaths for
GRAVES PIANO &amp; ORGAN
Employment Wanted
Memorial Day, Cliff's Shoe
CD., 383 E. Broad Street ,
Repair, Middleport, Ohio.
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
WILL DO daytime baby sitting
5·?-231c
S-ll-61c
in Racine area . call 949·4422.
4-l9-30ip
P.A. SYSTEM, loud speakers &amp;
amplifiers, Motoro la and all
WILL PAINT roofs or houses.
speakers,
SlOO; phone 882tr im and cut trees; clean
2506.
attics ; basements, e tc. Phone
5·16-3tc
949-3221 .
5-2-30tc WE HAVE a nice selection of

SPECIAL

No. 20~38
- NOTICE BY Wanted Tc Buy
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATIONPUBLICATION
Defendants , Pau l Moore , OLD FURNITURE, dishes .
The Defendants. Stanl&amp;y Jr The
clocks, brass beds, sliver
Mrs . Paul Moore , Jr .,
McCou/y, Franklin McCouly, his., and
dollars
or
complete
spouse,
and
the
unknown
Harold Wilson and Mrs. Harold heirs , devisees,
households . Write M. D.
legatees ,
Wilson. Marie New and Mr. executors, admin istrators or
Miller. Rt. '· Pomeroy, Ohio.
New, hlJSband of Marie New, assigns of Pau l Moore , Jr . and
Ca
II 992-6271.
and
the unknown tlelrs , Mr s. Paul 'V!oore, Jr ,, will take
3-16-tlc
devisees, legatees, ex.ecutors, not.lce lhet on the 26th. day ·or
administrators or ass igns of January , 1972 , a Pet ition w as
Lennie Wilson , Deceased , wJII

flowers for Decoration , 97c to

S5:so for baskets. wreaths ,
cr osses, , sprays ,

SMITH N£1t'ftN
MOJO.RS,·J.liU
IN·c.,·

· Pomel'ily

5-1-lfc

repair . For estimates ,call 9922239.
5-14-6tc

hearts ,

MOWERS
&amp; TILL.ERS

Economy Tiller. 3'fz h.p. B&amp;S
144.95

Bibles. We have a lot of high
class fl owers for all of our old

engi ne. Reg . 159.95

customers at a reasonable
price. Reynolds Flower Shop.
Mason, W. Va ., up near DriveIn Theatre .

Turf Trim Mower, B&amp; S J '/2
h.p. eng ine. In carton 70.2.5

5-16:6tc
~,---:----­

'

Help

woz SICK
OF HOME

HE

HOMESICK

0...9'·'*~ .
~E.V, !:&gt;IG

FI~AL l
THE FillST T~IRO ELIM· ·
INATED GeT A
THE

nUS

•c;

~HAW;
......... p ... ~~.~

.......

AND THE LAST THI~O

.-. ~.~ ~.

GeT AN "A " ·

spoutini repair. Interior ar

&amp;
&amp;

Adding Machine Repair.
Pick-up &amp; Delivery

PHONE 675-3628
Pl. Pleasant

KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
,. 304 E. Main St .
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992·3795
or M;lson 773.5535

o GOMTfto(.TLI~

Ttll tAM.

1------ --

••n•

1 Hu.. ....,

..·C'..ONfE al! ..

Dozer &amp; End loader. Wort!,
basement, lind·
scaplng. We hne 2 sl11
doters, 2 sire loaders. Work
done by hour or a~~~trod •.
Free Estim1les. we also
haul fill dirt, top SGit. Dump
trucks and low·bor for hire.
See Bob or Roger J-'fers,
Pomeroy. Phone 9t2·352S
offer 7 p.m. or phone 992· '
ponds ,

.. LElS 61T!.

OF Us TORIE:S ...

AH J.00K LIKE A GHOST?
DOES AH 50UNP L1 KE ONE?
DOES AH PU,.,CH LIKE ONE."'

...

NOPE- BL!TTHIS$1,000
GOVAMJI(IT CHECK SA'/5 YO'
IS ONE - AN'THA55 GOOD
'NUFF FO' ME!!

i

sm.

IF'YOU DON' T,
WE'LL SCiii:EAM
AND HOLLER
THAT 'IOU' RE
A Cf.IEAPSKATi!

'

'
EXPERT
. Wheel Alignment ·

I

'5.55

Pomeroy Home &amp;· Auto

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEARLY NEW
.
NEAR NEW COAL Ml NE - 4 bedroorl)s. large pla y room,
l'h baths, radiant panel heal. Nice kitchen with cook and
bake units. Double stainless steel sink. 2 drilled wells and
foundation for 2nd house. 10 acres of land for only

$20,000.00.

RENOVATED
COUNTRY HOME - Yet has ci ly water, natural gas
furnace . J bedroom s, bath, paneling , garage, and l;,. acr e.
Nice wrap around concrete porch with wrought iron posts.

Only $]1,000.00.

• .
MIDDLEPORT
..
3 BEDROOMS - flh baths. large living, front and back
parches. Utility llulldlng on level lot near M&amp;R. Only
$8,500.00.
•
NEAT
2 BEDROOMS - Bath. lovely oak floors, and small
garden . Basement. outbuild ing . Front parch . Asking only
'

NEW
3 BEOROOMS - With large closets, bath has shower. ni ce
ki tchen. stove and refrigerator Included . Carpel in living
and dining, nice level lot with metal utility building . Will
listen to an offer .
RIVER VIEW
4 BEDROOMS , Older home, 2 baths, carpeting.
paneling, screened front parch. Full ~sement , city

OpeniTIU
Mond.,.lhru S1lurday
61M E. Main, Po.,..,..,y,c;,.

HiH! HRHf t KNIW
~TID

WILL do house roof and ~rn
painting ; Interior painting ;
fr ... estimates ; phone 992-

H00W.

•

~1M!

7085.

5-9-JOtc ;
S~E;;;E;;:;:U;;S::;F:;O~R:-:-A;-w-n-:ln_g_s_
, s-;-tormdoor$ and windows, carpor1s,

marquees, aluminum siding
and rolling. A. Jacob, sal~
representative .

For

free

estimates , phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse , V. V!
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3·2-tfe
7
7
-=-se=w
= lN(); --;MA--:-:C-Hi N
- E:-S:-.- R
-epair
service, all makn. '19:!-m4.
The Fabric $hop, Porrieroy.
Authorlred Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3·29-tlc ·

- - -CONCRETE
-READY -MIX

delivered r ight to rour
pro,ect. Fast and easy. Free
esf mates . Phone 992·328&lt;;
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

For Sale.

-------

Aluminum
Sheets

Da~y

-------

JJ&amp;WID1Lrn;-IJ..t ~ ,_, c

CULAND

Sentinel

•!"'----

"indeed"

bill

18. Occur
earlier
M.Ins·
ciblllty
U.-Calhoun
offtlms
D. Disarray
II. Not verse
Z5.Auall
M.Didnot
walk
1'1. T1lk
hoarsely
II. U.S.S.R.
city

Real Estate For Sale

Auto Sales

------

We tall to Jill
flke .. ,....

Fresh From F•rm

WMP0/1390 ·

-,...-----ROOM

5-16·31C

Celand's Greenhouse
E. Main St.

R1clne

5- 17 ·31~

ON YOUR .DIAL .
'

Farm

..

o.
Hemlock Grove, o.

•
Phontt-992-6394
This Week Onl
·
.

UntCramble the10 foor Jumble~
one -letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

11

Ecce

homo"
pro-.

rlaimer
(2 wds.)
I. Approve
10. Least In·
. . .
. expensive Y~M~erd•1'• A'Diwer
16
, • ~~~~
Z5. Ignoble ·

u. ~:~~-

!~~~~

27
·
2!1. Badger's

amount

I

USJ'EA

f

~"IW-0:~~·

mlfu

city

IS.
[
17. Nourished -

.....

()

.----~~
vm~'JAH [

relaUve
38. Inert: gas
11. Vacuous

z:a. ~~te

Q

OP

J

I

II

::=~tine ~i~and 1RDI .[ (J

I

QUILID '

V 'i

V'

1\. ..A

I
'i

f-.._ _..A

I~----

WHAi A lOP HAl
M II:IHi MAKE:.

,Now.......,. the circled letten

to form the ltlrpriH anawer, u
ltliJOitecl by the abovt eartoon.

I YOUR (IllJ(! IX)
(~n

Jumbleoo

lamarraw)

VIIYE TOOTH DEYICI IANNII

Vt..llt'lia~···
•
•
' \ AJnwert Try and pe lieU lo a pruoMr- THI VIIDICT

ella"

eompaser

11,''-

victUI"

IS. Devoured
lt. Waterfall

Jli5T llECAI!5E SHE'&amp; HIS OLDER
515TER, SHE THREW HIM OUT...
I CAN'T BELIEVE IT ...

(Sect.)

U.PrlnUng
goofs
17.morgana
II. Member
ohmob
U •.Oid,old
IChool

ROOM

·
Day
POTTED PlANTS
75 up

8.

II. ••etnder·

.i

WELKER'S
Grade A EGGS Medium Sill
·25$-,

DOWN
I. Acute
!.One who
models
S. Surpass
In wlrked·
ness
(2 wds.)
4. Threefold
(comb.
form)
5. Wisen·
helmer
G. The-,
Netherlands
7. Beverage

Lll"-1'1 · 11. Craggy

For Rent

!===:::=====~:;

to. Corporeal
U. Sand bill

ACROSS .
l. NoUce
5. Formed
11. Period of
time
12. Molly of
song
13.ltallan
wine rlty
H. Program
15. Altall
16. Colleen's

REALTY

t

•

©

SGW.e'IHIJJG ~N!.

EARTH MOVING

-

.~,

~-

5-17

i"r.s E)(Pf:Cll:D

The

(51, 10. 1_7, 24, 31 (61 7, 14, 21, .11

p~~-

.,

"" -::- -I

;

~NMENT

16 REALLY
CRACI&lt;JNG DOWN
ON 1RI..fl11 IN

~.

Contact :· I cilte
VERA EBt.£M ·

•

11-iE

UP' Elll

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

~eal Estate For Sale

WHITE "

Altornoys tor Plaintiff

........,..

,.~

o i'ALoU 111Tl4

SECON I&gt; TH I Rl&gt; A •!!.~.

tiled In t tle Probate Di v is ion of
LOST b'right carpet cbtors ...
Wante~
the Common Pleas court ot
r esto r e them with Blue
Me igs County , Ohi o, wh er ein ADULT housekeeper to live-in
Lust re.
Ren,_t
el ectric
you ha &gt;Je been named defen utilities plus river frontage. Garages .
and ca re for 3 year old girl ;
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
shampoqer S1 . Ben Franklin
dant s praying to r sale of the
modern home in country ;
Septic tanks Installed. George
Store,
200
Ma
in
St.
,
Pomeroy,
entire interest In th e real estate
Phone
992-3629,
ask
for
Mary
SOMETHING
NEW
EVERY
WEEK.
WE
TAKE
A
(8111) Pullins. Phone 992·2•78.
Ohio.
hereinafter described In order
Shamblin .
PICTURE OF YOUR PROPERTY FOR OUR OFFICE
5-l6-6tc
•-25-tfc
to pay the debts of the deceden t,
36" X 23" X .009
5·16·61c
WALL WHEN YOU LIST WITH US.
Georg e W. Moore, Deceased,
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
and the c.osts, of administration .
1957 CHEVROLET 21fz ton
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
The rea l estate Is .described as KITCHEN helper to train as
Service. Phone 992-2527.
992-ms
truck , tandem a lC:Ie; 1965
RES.992·2371
follows :
cook; see Chef at Me igs Inn ,
Yamaha-YDS-3,
phone
6986-lO.ttc
The follow ing real estate
Pomeroy .
3290, Warren Reeves .
sltuale In tile VIllage of Mid ·
5-16-3fc
O' DELL WHEEL alignment'
5-J6.6fc
dleport. Me igs County , Ohio ,
located al Crossroads, Rt. 124..
JOHN
described as follows : The
Township, Meigs County, Oh io. follow ing real estate situate in WE ' LL SE ND
BRI GH T, GRAV EL Ytraclor. mower , and
Complete front end service, '
bounded and described as One Hundred Acre Lot No. 309
YOUNG MEN TO SCHOOL
tune up and brake service.·
sul ky , 1970 Honda CL-70 road
follow s : Beginning at the in
USED OFFSET PLATES
FOR
RADAR
JOBS
IN
Town No . 1, Range No. 13 in
Wheels
balanced elecbroke,
1959
Dodge
l·ton
truck.
southeast corner of Section 31 , said County of Meigs . and State
HAYS.
EUROPE. If you'd like to live
t
ronically
.
All
work
V-8.
Ph
one
992·3954
after
5
·Town 3, Range 13 In Bedford of
6illl
E.
Main,
Pomeroy
MANY USES
Ohio , that Is to 'Say a lot of two
and work In Europe, there's
p.m.
Township , thence West along acres
guaranteed.
Reasonable:
IIEALTY)
and n lnefy .fhree hun an elC:ci ting job waiting for
the south line of said Section 31 dredths of an acre on which
rates. Phone 992-3213. .
5·16·31c
YOU HAVE A DATE
to the southeast corner of Ralph Spooner formerly resided
you with loday's Army. You'll
7-27-lfc
With us today to see -how
Xavi er Thoma's 95 acre tract of on the Hilt nea r the fork s of the
learn to supervise and control 500 CC KAWASAKI Mach Ill ,
,, .,
land ln Sect ton 31, thence North road about half a mlte north much real living you will gel AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
ground surveillance radar
contact Larry Hill , Chester .
along the east line of sa id west of Middleport, on th e road
out
of this charm ing brick.
units
.
With
full
pay
while
985-4105.
8 for Sl.OO
cancelledl" Lost
your
Xavi er Thoma's 95 acre tract of to Rutland and more par you
're
in
school.
And
lots
of
About
8 years old, 3 large
operator's license? Call 9925-16-31c
,Jnct to the north•ast corner ot ti cul arly described as follow s.
.
992-1020
other benefits. Like 30 days
2966.
.
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, v~ry
Slid Xa&gt;Jier ThOma's 9.5 acre to ,wit :
pa
id
vacation
a
year.
If
you're
tract of land to the northnst
160
Coal
St.
M~leport
modern
kitchen
,
full
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
6-15-lfc
Beg inn ing at a stone wlth a
corner Of Thoma's tract ; thence brink on top of It, which bea rs
looking for lhls kind of
basement with a dream rec.
Park view Kennels, Phone 992West along the norttlline of said SOlJfh 83 1h degrees west 66 1h
challenge and excitement .
room, utility room, 1 acre
f'AGEVILLE
3
5443.
Thoma 's fracl to -the southeast feet from ' the north -w est corner
Today's Army wants lo loin
' 8-15-tfc
ground, large carport .
corner of Emily Thoma 's 13.17 ot said Spooners hl;)use being in
bedroom
,
bath,
home.
you. For complete details call
128,500.00 Pomeroy. Lincoln
acre tract of land in said Section line w ith the north en d ot th e
593·3022.
garage,
large
LBIG SALE, Reynolds' Flower
31 , thence north westerly alono same ; th ence nort h 11'1~
His. area.
5-16-31c
the easter ly tine of Si!tld Emily degrees east 4 cha ins and 36
Shop In Mason . W. Va. has lhe
4-23-JOtp
111
Co,
u
rt
St.
·
shaped
porch.
home
BUILDING SITES
Thoma'!. tract to a po int whrch links; thence north 88'/1 degrees
biggest selection of flowers In
Appro'x.
30
acres,
Chester
Pomeroy. Ohio
has
paneling
and
is south 66 l!A degrees , west 55
for Mother's Day and also f&lt;Jr
three chains and ninety two MAN to work on dairy farm.
water, close to Pomeroy, SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller ·:
rods and 10 lin ks from the road east
must know how to m ilk .
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _-.....,~ carpet. Located on 1'12
links ; thence south 71h degrees
Decoration
Day
.
We
can
save
Sanlfallon, Stewart. Ohio. PI\ . ·
builders don' t pass lhls one
leading from Woll Pen to east 3 chains and 15 links to a
Hou se furni shed . Phone 9"49·
662·JOJ5.
you
money
on
your
flower
s.
- · acres all level. In
Bunker Hill Churcll, thence
up .
; thence south 12 degrees
3833 or contact Arvil HeUer,
This is our 20th year In the 1969 HARLEY Sprint 350 cc, serene . rural com ·
2-12-tlc .
North 66V.. degrees East ss rods stake
we-s t 6-cha lns and 11 li nks to a
POMEROY- Spring Ava.
Ba sh an .
busi ness. You name it, we've
and IC links to the road leading corner
ex
ce
uenr
cona1T1on,
new
•
.
at
the
road
;
thence
north
-;F;-:A:-;R;-:M:;-::E-;;R-;S-;-fo
r-::
lh
-e--:l
a-rgesf
2 story frame, new siding,
5-14-6tc
from Wolf Pen to Bunker Hill .AS VA degr ees west 3 cha ins and
got It, 98c 1o $6.50, any basket
battery, $499. Phone 992 _5324 .
unt 1y, 10 mtnu es
new
roof,
new
carport,
needs
Church,
thence
In
a 211inh to a stone ; thence north ·
number A. I. Cattle Sires. :
or spray as long as they last.
S-15-6tc from Rutland . · Has
southeasterly direction with the l.4 1h deg rees west 1 cha in 38
paint Inside, 3 bedrooms,
Minimum $8 fee per animal.
Elnora Reynolds, 773-5147.
meanderlnus of said road to Its links to the place of beginning ,
-------many varieties of fruit
~th . These ore few, and far
Phone Leland Parker, 9925-14-1
31p
Intersection with the east line of saving and excepting the coal TRAILER , Brow n's Tra iler
betwe.n.
$5,500.00.
2264,
Pomeroy.
trl)es
s7,950.
Slid Section 31 ; thence South under said prem ises and the
Park 1 Miner s.ville , Ohio .
MIDDLEPORT-Mulberry
5-4-12lc
MODERN walnut style stereoalong ttle ent line of sa id right to mine the same as
I
Phone 992 -3324.
4
BEDROOM,
fwo
story
house,
Ave.
Section 31 to the southeut heretofore res er ved .
r
adio
,
4
speaker
so
und
5-11 -lfc
One of · Pomeroy's
small
barn
and
other
corner of said Section 31 , the · Also the follow ing prem ises,
system , 4 speed automtic
Nice 1'12 story brick, 2 large
place of beginning , containing to .wlt : Beginning a-t the Nor .
buildings . 1 acre on Rt. 1 in
changer
.
Balance
$67
.59
.
Use
bedrooms;
~fh , carpeted,
finest
.homes.
3
TRAILER
spaces
overlooking
29 .85 acres, ore or less .
,
CORVAIR, ' speed, good
Tuppers Plains. Phone 667 our
budget
terms.
Ca
ll
\192.
theast
corner
ot
abo&gt;Je
level
lot.' storage 1964
paneled,
1
Pomeroy
.
Velma
G.
Zuspan
Par ce l No. 2: Ttle fol lowing described premises ; th en ce
bedrooms. 1 12 baths,
condlflon, $32S: phone 9923956.
7085.
building. In excellent con:
phone Mason, 773-5750.
dnc rlbed real estate situated in so uth 5'12 degrees east 3 chains
2360.
5-14-ltp full, dry basement.
5-17·61c
Salisbury Townsh i p. Meigs and 211/n k. s to Joseph F lemings
dillon on !he Inside and the
• 5 - 11 - 30t~
5-JO.tfc
Countr , and State ot Ohio , and lot ; thence Nor th 72 degrees
every room including
outside. $6,950.00.
In Sec Jon 36, Town 2 and Range east 79 llnkS i th ence north Slh
HOMt:: grown tomato plants, RACINE - room house: bath. kitchen and both baths · A REAL TOR
IS
A 1967 DODGE Dart convertible;
13, and bounded and described degrees east 2 ct(alns and 93 4 ROOM furnished apartment.
'utility room, gor~ge, $10,000;
Improved Mex ican, Hei n z
f'ROFESSIONAL
REAL
Reyno ld s Flowe• Shop,
power steering, automatic.
as follow': Beg inn ing at · the l ink s; t hen ce West one chain
have carpeting; anphone 949-4195 .
1350, large Supersonic and
Mason, W. Va.
ESTATE
IS
HIS
northent corner of Section 36, an d nine links to the place ot
dark blue fin ish, phone 9493-31 -tlc tique Satin drapes; air·
Yellow
Jubilee:
also
Town 2, Range 13, in Salisbury beginning, conta ining 29-100 of
, 5-U-6tp
PROF.ESSION. SEE YOUR
201~ .
Township , thence West alono an acre, excepting the ...coal and
Mangoes, Hot Peppers and
REALTOR
FOR
YOUR
conditioning
and
many
5·17-410
the north line of said Section 36, other minerals and the r ight to 2 BED~OOM mobile home.
Earl y Cabbage Plan is. 500ft. SIX
REAL
ESTATE
NEEDS
house
,
133
Butternut
to the Northeast corner of m ine the sa·me .
other items stay with
Racine area , 10 miles above above fhe Syracuse State
1967 6 CYL. Chevrolet pick-up
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
TODAY.
,Jessie W. Slys 23 acre tr act of
Exce pting and reserv ing
Park
on
Rt.
124,
Thomas
house - $-17,000.
Pomeroy.
Phone
992-6329.
truck, 4 new tires, two mud
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
land In said Section 36, thence In from the abov e descr ibed real
HENRY
E.
CLE.
L
AND
SR.
5·12-tfc Hayman , Syracuse, Ohio.
1 Southeasterly direCtion along e-state three par ce ls or land
and snow tires , re-built
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
REALTOR
-~:-:---:--4-30-JOtc
the eastern line of sa id Jessie
11-21 -lfc 3 BEDROOM house with bath,.
radiator: body fair, motor
were pre&gt;J·iously con - 3 AND 4 'ROOM fur nished and
Dlol992-2259
W. Slys 23 acre tract to the north vwhich
OK. 1400. Phone 992-4773.
eyed as follows : One to Roy
112 acre lot, on public water
If
no
onl'ftr
"2·2568
line of Emma J . Slys "40.50 acre Russell by deed recorded in Vo l.
unfurnished
apartments . 7 YEAR OLD Tennessee Walker NICE 2-story home with full ·
5-17-llc
tract of land In Section 36 , 111
system o/• mile from· Chester
mare, palom ino, gentle but
Phone 992·5434.
, Pag e 43.5, Deed Records
basement, 2 lots, new forced
thence east atono the north line Meigs County , Oh!o , and the
on Coun ly Rt. 5. Phone 985·
4·12-tfc spir ited, neck reins . John
air turna&lt;e. Near Pomeroy.
of nld Emma J . Slys 40 .50 acre other two to Jacob Young by
4262.
Sa
uvage,
·
Syracuse
Oh
io,
Elementary School. . Phone
tract to the east line of said de e~s recorded In Vol. 116, Pag e
phone
992·3272.
5- IHie
NEW,
12
x
60,
two
bedroom
Stctlon ' 36. thence North along l26&gt;ana·vol . 117, Page 590. Deed
992-7384 to see.
mobile home across from
5-10-121p '
11-7-lfc ----~
tne east line of said Section 36 to Records of Meigs County, Ohio .
Bradbury School. Call 992·
the- northeast corner of said
Reference Oeed : Vol . 117,
Section 36 the po int of begin - Page
5308
or see Charles Lewis, 2nd
3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
20, Deed Records Mei gs
ning, containing 37 acres, more County , Oh io.
house south from Bradbury
•
Mem..n~l
Arballi!h Addition, Tuppers
or Int .
·
School. Pets welcome.
ar e re-qui red to answer
"'IIG
Plains . All new wlfh total
Reference Deed : Vol. 164, theYou
within twenty eight
5·5-tfc
electric and central air
Page 551, Deed Records M eigs dav sPetition
after the le~st publicat ion of
I
conditioning, ~lh and 'IHully
County. Ohio.
th is notice, namely , by not tater
apartment,
You are require~ to answer ttlan the 21st. day of June; 1972, UNFURNISHED
carpeied, full basement,
the Petition within twenty eight or Judgment. by default will be
phone 992-2780 or 992-3432. ·
$
garage In basement. See by
days after the last publicat ion of rendered
.
5-4-tfc ,
apf)ol~tment, phone 992-2196
against you .
thla notice, namely, by not later
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
M
·
.
~yther,
Anna
1hon the 20th. day of July, 1#~,
Administratrix of the 2 'BEDROOM mobile h~me,
Financing available.
O.ily
or judgment by def•ult w!ll be
Estate of George w.
12-30-lfc
adults only . Ptlone 992·5592. Pan$ies, Pe1uni~s, number
rendered against you . · ·
Bring
egg
basket.
Moore , Deceased,
Myrtle Haning,
5-IJ.ffc of Bedding Plants &amp;
247 Mulberry Ave.
Vegetable Plants.
Admini stratrix of the Crow , Crow &amp; Porter , Pla int iff
Phone,
HOUSE , 104 SPRING : AVE.,
.
Estate of Attorn eys ror Plaint iff
5
·&amp; bath furnished
Phon-992·3736
POMEROY. CAN BE SEEN
Rtbecc• Hudnall, Deceased .
hou~e, $50 a month, Ebenezer
Of\1 WEEK~NDS ONLY.
Crow. Crow &amp; Porter,
(•I 12, 19, 26 Il l 3, tO, 17 , 2~ : · 71
St., Pomeroy, phone 992-7784.
ROBERT RUSSELL.
tekt notice that on the 8th . da y
of May , 1972, a Petition wa s
flied In the Probate Div is ion of
tht Common Pleas court of
Meigs County , Oh io, wher~ln
you have been named defen .
dents praying for sate of the
entir e fnterest In the real estate
herelnefter 'described ln order
to PIV the debts of the decedent,
Rebecca Hudnall , ·a nd ttl e. cost s
of administration . The rea l
estate Is described as follows :
Parcel No. 1: Ttle lot lowing
real estate situate In Bedford

HE STALKED OfF -•

..

- year oround. N• malttr wNII
your neod. Complete roof or

We have 24 hr. ttMflllllcY
;-.;'
.
sen ice.
t u .lf47
992-SIOl
'898 742-4761
We ue '""' in-.;ured

'TO f\EAA IT AU. ...
R1 IOKT, DOCToR ?

il.J,II.IJT

On M;ost Am.eJ"ip:n C~

$6 ,500 .00 .

POMEROY
···• •- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Aifl
Phone 992-2181

THAT'S HOW COME

ES.IT X .SUPR:l'E 'rOJ ,

TI:\It.J6S OOT
~ETT'I' D.JlL
-"FTGR ll1AT !

Dor Numbtr992·1554

Complete tide of office

424 Main 51.

DON 'T 'IE FRET, CLARISSV
JUNE -· HE'LL COME BACK
ONE OF THESE DA'IS WHEN
HE GiTS .GOOD AN'

exterior corflttllr'l. Coiling
tile o,cc Pontlingand Sidiot. · ·
Complelt
P1umbi"'
&amp; ·
.
Huttng.
. ~

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY
equipment, furniture
supplies.. Typewriter

liN MAN VERNIE STALKED
OCJ!' Of TH' HOOSE THREE
DA'IS AGO. LOOEEZV• .
. AN' I AIN'T
SEEN HAIR
NER HIDE OF
HIM SINCE

-=
--==~
... AI&lt;JD ;rl£1&lt;l M'l FeT
GOLDFISH DIED!

I':;•

Mainten•nct Service , the

Excelsior - - - - - - - - -

PIANO luning, Lane Daniels,
•W. y lOth lhru June 25th.
Phone 992-2082. Reference, For Rent or Sale
Elberfelds.
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
CAMPER , 16 fl . sleeps 6, good
5-16-12tc 985-3529.
condition , SI,OOO. Phone 992- - - - -- 5-9-lfc
, 6329.
BOAT LICENSE - for your
Available at Simon's Plck·A·
Pair Shoe Store, 108 W. Main.

Micldlepor1. ohio

Dbl AnthonY Plumbing
we have • cempleh Hom•

Aadia_
l or Specialist

Sp.ecializing· ln
Small Businesses

----ROOF painting and minor

Salt Works, E. Main St .. SY RACUSE Drive-In , phone
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
992-2088 .
5-4-12lp '
4-12-tfc

boat, , for

•

.

240 Lina.fn St.

· Nathan Biggs

Ph. f92-2174

General Contractor

PLANTS : Tasty
EVE~GREENS are correctly

•

PWMBING 00.

Bulldozer' Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

HONDA 160 like new, lots of
chrome . Phone 949-5953.
5-17-6tc

TOMATO

·

• -. -

5·11-31c

! EARLY

BOTTLE gas range. $10. old
Edison" disc records $1.50
each . Phone 367-7729.
5-12-lOtp

For Sale
COAL ,

.

low acid content. In Jiffypats

MILLER

potatoes, for best quality and
selecllqn buy direct from 1he

availabl_
e . Phone 992-5641.

·

From the largest

''149.50

sham~ooinq carpet . Only

$27.50 cash . price, or terms

ALL WEATHER ROOf'NG
i
&amp; CONSTRUCTION ·

Get Rid of Tllem

VAC.UUM cleaner. Electro
Hygiene. new demonstrator
has all .ch?aning attachme.tlts

·

e

. . .

plus the new Electro Suds for

$1095

Rev. Roy Taylor, Pastor,
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
welcomes everyone .
.P~EROY, OHIO
5-17-3tc
- - - - - - -- REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
Mo.b"e
Homes F.or Sale
Service. sso Reg. mares, S40 Nutice
H
Grade, Francis Benedum .
Phone 667-3856.
·
Season Is now in CASH paid for all 'makes and
5-17-30tp GARDENING
models of mobile hom es.
full swing and Bob's Markel
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
rn .Mason, W. Va . can offer
SAVE up to ,orle half . Bring your
4-13-tfc
you the best variety selection
si.ck TV to Chuck's TV Shop.
and
the
finest
of
quality
in
1S1 ~utternvt Ave., Pomeroy.
Garden Plants in the Tri4-4-tlc
County area . This season, Bob
-=,...--,--- ·Air Copditioners
is featuring Two new wonREVIVAL meeting with
derful
tomato
Hybrids
In
•Awnings
·evangelist Giles and Dorothy
Better Boy and Hybrid Beef
Elliot! of Buchanan. Services
·Underpinning
Easier !Beef Steak ty,;e) :
will begin Tuesday. May 16
along
with
13
other
tomato
through !he 28th af 7:30p.m.
mobile home
at the Mason Assembly of God"J se lections. a full line of Complete
service plus g igantic
cabbage
and
pepper
plants
Church, Second St.. Mason, l
display of 'mobile homes
and
almost
every
flowering
W. Va. Also special singing
annual from Aster s to Zinand special services for the

'

1971 model In wafnul stand. '
All 1ea1ures buIll .1n 1o make
·
fancy designs and do stretch

eo·
· •

1967 DoDGE D-500

.GUS N SHOOTC, Forked Run

any debts contracted by

LEGAL NOTICE

Jl.-&amp;or

l

TWIN needl.e ' sewing m!1chine

5-17-3tc

CARD OF THANKS
5-17-31c
,. OBITUARY
'suo for 50 ·word min im um . WEEKEND revival at the
Pomeroy Lower Ltr,ht Church
.;ach additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
on
the Harrlsonvll e Rd .. Rt .
Additional 25c Charge per
AdvertiSement.
143, beginning May 18 thru the
OFFICE HOURS
21st. Rev . Dallas Ford .

a: 30

~ .·

... ·
Ill

dition.

lhree

s x cQn -

.

' For Sale

Po
'

ttJMir ·
.JIVIIIIOII

•

._, --· . ·---

••

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Her(e how to work It:
.

AXYDLBAAX!t
Ia _ L o' N G F B L L 0 W
WH'/fm?lf'I HOIIJ IIJOULD
One letter simply at1ndt for uother. In IIIli eanlple A Is WERE OLDEK I'D 1(00 LIKE IT
uaed for the tbj'ee L'i, X for the two o· •. ete. SU.,Ie !etten. THROW 4{0U OOT! IF I TH~EW
apoatropbea, the lenelh 111d fo11111Uon· of the worda are all
'IOU alT?
.
hlnta.l!aeh day the code lettera are dll!erent.

'.

caYJ'TOQUOTIS
· I 0 H ll VEL Y N . L t W v·v P L FA V J .T J1
VYXTH. UTVU:\V .T'E MGGKLHE, KFR
'
'
VJTHWVV-PLFA VOH VllF.-K . · W.

.

"

B II N'W KF R
YNterdaJ't ~llole: LET KE Bl!:' A LITI'LE KINDER,
LET liE BE A LJTrLII: BLINDER TO 'niJ: FAliLTS OF
THOSE AROUND KE, LET liE PRAISE A L1'l"1'LB MORE.-

BDGAR GUEST
•
&lt;0 lt'llllor Joolon• IJo.-tt,lat.)

'

'

\

.

I'M AGIRL!!

�r

rr r rr rtr rrrr rrrrr r rr

rrr

• •

10- Tbe Dally Sellllnel.~, 0 ., May 17,19'12

Sentinel ~la~si/ieds Get Action! Sentinel Cl~tssifieds Get·Results!.
INo"EOARo'tm~N
r·
Z
B
s
•
@) Of
roy
u
'
·
S
ID
.
ess·
.
'
'
e
rvt
•
.
ces
"·:
• WANT ADS

t

. ·'

S P.M. Day Beton~ PUblication

·

·

Notice

1

Mon~or Deadline 9 o.m . . REDUCE excess fluids •viii I
ConcellotlonCorrtctionl
· h• .
Wilt
be accepted until
9 a.m. for . Flu ldex , $1 .69 - \..OSe welg
Day 01 Publication
safely with Dex·A·Diet, 98c al
REGULATIONS
Nelson Drugs.
The Publisher reserves the
5-17-lt,::

•

right lo edit or reject any ods
dtemed ob jec tional. The GUN SHOOT. May 20, 6:30p.m
r,ubllsher will not be responsible Mile Hill Rd. Fire Dept.
or more than one Incorrect Building. Assorted meats and
Insertion. RATES
lfz hog. cut' up. Ringed and
For Want Ad Service
! c~nts per Word one Insertion

sleeved guns shot every other
niatch .

Minimum Charge75c

12

cents

per

word

corri~~~~epl~:·';!~onds . I
secuttve ln~ertlons..

r

2.5 Per Cent D lsc.ount on paid
adsandadspa ldwithln 10days.

8: 30a .m . to 5:00p .m. Daily ,
a .m . to 12 :00 Noon

Saturday.
CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE.
Memorial Day Polled Plants,
75c up, Pansies, Petunias;
number of bedding plants;
vegetable plants. Geraldine
Cleland. E.' Main St .. Racine.
5-16-lfc

,-------

KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
wigs. Need exira money? Just
sell these products. No
restricted territories. Phone
992-5113.
4-2-lfc
::
C-:A:L:-L-:f:-or- :fr_e_e_f:-a-cl:a-:-1-a-nd7 application of famous Mink 011
Kosmetlcs . Ann Sauvage ,

Syracuse, Ohio 992-3272.
5-10-121p
O'DELL'S CAB Co., 24 hr.
Service, Phone 992-2927 ,
Middleport. Ohio.
5-10-6to&gt;

LEGAL NOTICE
Bids will be received as of
pub tie auction for the sale of the
prem rses known as the coal
Port School . The property was
aequlred bV deeds recorded In
Vol . ,.,. pages 139-41, 188, 2J2.,
Meigs County Deed RecGrd to
wh len reference Is hereby

made. A survey description ls

on •file in the Office of the Clerk
of the Board of Education . The
pr.emfses are on Liberty
Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio, where
the auction will be he.ld at 7:30

p.m. Monday. June 19, 1972.

Termsotsale : CIUh . The r ight
Is reserved to reject any and all

bidS .

Lee W . McComas
Clerk, Board of Educa tion
Meigs Local School District

15) H, 24, 31 (6) 7,

41

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
-PROVATE DIVISION-

Myrllt Haning, Administratrix ,

of lho Estote of

Atbteca Hudnall,
DtctUed,
Plllfltlff,
Yl.

.

Clarence Hudnall, et al.,
Dtftndanll.

IUALITY

.VI

portsman lub1 Sunday, 12
noon Al so ri fle mat t hee open

It ·

"'

s es on 1y.

Lancaster , will be preach ing .
Special singing each evening .

sewing . Also · buttonholes ,
blind hems, etc . $43 .35 tash

use
1967 FORD 1oo PICKUP
4 wheel drive, practically new 15" 1st line tires, 6 cy l.
engine, needs overhauling , fran~ drive axle in good con-

'l_Outh every night prior to

Evangelistic Service. Pastor

Chester Tennant.

5-14-3tc

----1 WILL NOT be responsible for
anyon~ other than myself.

Signed : Ern est William

" Rink " Davi dson .

price or terms available.
· Phone 992-.5641.
5·17-6tc

r'=========='IF=::::::::::;::;:::;:::::::::::::;::::::::=:::;r====-'=====::;;;,--~

TERMITES .. TERMITES

14' H. Duty pl•tform body, V-8 engine, 15,000 lb. 2 speed

Will do any average single
. dwelling for

...,

rear axle, 825 x 20 tires, solid cab. PrJced ~o move now.

,,

1966 CHEVROLEHHON
1795
. 8 fl . wide body, side mldg ., good tires, 6 cyl. engine, radio.

'Domeroy Moto·r Coe
r-1

@)
fl.
·.

always available at ...

nias . We also sell Garden
seeds, onion sets and seed

MOBILE HOMES

grov,er, more than 600,000
plants grown annualy In our

greenhouses. Bob's Market
and Plant Sales. Mason, W.
'Ia . 773-5308, near lhe
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.

1220 Washington Blvd.
423-7521
BELPRE , O.

Limestone,

5-17·6tc:

, LOSE weight with New Shape
Tablets • .10 day tupply only
$1.49. Dutton Drug Co.,
Middl ew.or
· t. N
. e 1son Drug
Store• omeoy · ·
Ameri can s1ereo-radio
combination , AM -FM radio, 4

speaker sound system. 4
speed au.lomatl f changer.
Balance $78.34 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
5-17-61c
AMC refr igerator $45, Tappan
range SlO. couch $10. Contact
740 High St .. Middleport,
Ohio.
5-17-3tp

5· Year Written Guarantee. ,

·
Call . 614~949-3511, if nO answer, ~aii614·4U•3158; ,,

'

Y.CITY EXTERMI"ATION
321ThirdSt.
Racine, Olllo

Spring
Painting?
SEE US
EXPERIENCED IN
INTERIOR ANil
EXTERIOR
PAINTING
Phone 742-5825
or 992.6576

R. I. DOBBELD

12 X 60 2 BEDROOM railer,
adults only. Phone 742-5641.
5-17-31c

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates . Ph. 446·
4782, Galllpoli&gt;nJohn Russell ,
Owner &amp; Operator ,

5-12-tfc

named, as they are still green
when ripe, sweet, firm and

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

or styrofoam cups, lSC each

Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
· Critt Bradford

or $1.60 oozen . B. Quisenberry , Syracuse, Ohio.
5-5-lOip

Complete Service

your

motor .

Pomeroy, Ohio, Phone 992-

3830.

5-16-30tc

LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
COURT OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
- PROBATE DIVISION -

Anna
M.
Ryther ,
Ad ·
m l nistratrh;
of the Estate of
George w. Moore, Deceued ,
Plaintiff,

vs.

Betty Monman. et al.,
Defendants .
,:
·
No. 2059"

Pets For

- -- -Gift
-Shop.'
S MAL ~ EY ' S

Chester, Ohio. Have large
assortment of flower s for all
occasions. Arrangem ent s for
Mother 's Day ; pots and
baskets for M emor ia l Day,

Sale
PART German Shepherd male BALDWIN piano and organ tc
99c and up. Phone 985-3537.
be picked up in th is area . May
pup needs good hom e; pllone
4-28-12tc
be
purchased
together
or
' 985-3890.
5-16-3fp separately for balances due .
Write Credit Department : BEAUTIFUL selection flowers ,
-----baskets and wreaths for
GRAVES PIANO &amp; ORGAN
Employment Wanted
Memorial Day, Cliff's Shoe
CD., 383 E. Broad Street ,
Repair, Middleport, Ohio.
Columbus, Ohio 43215.
WILL DO daytime baby sitting
5·?-231c
S-ll-61c
in Racine area . call 949·4422.
4-l9-30ip
P.A. SYSTEM, loud speakers &amp;
amplifiers, Motoro la and all
WILL PAINT roofs or houses.
speakers,
SlOO; phone 882tr im and cut trees; clean
2506.
attics ; basements, e tc. Phone
5·16-3tc
949-3221 .
5-2-30tc WE HAVE a nice selection of

SPECIAL

No. 20~38
- NOTICE BY Wanted Tc Buy
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATIONPUBLICATION
Defendants , Pau l Moore , OLD FURNITURE, dishes .
The Defendants. Stanl&amp;y Jr The
clocks, brass beds, sliver
Mrs . Paul Moore , Jr .,
McCou/y, Franklin McCouly, his., and
dollars
or
complete
spouse,
and
the
unknown
Harold Wilson and Mrs. Harold heirs , devisees,
households . Write M. D.
legatees ,
Wilson. Marie New and Mr. executors, admin istrators or
Miller. Rt. '· Pomeroy, Ohio.
New, hlJSband of Marie New, assigns of Pau l Moore , Jr . and
Ca
II 992-6271.
and
the unknown tlelrs , Mr s. Paul 'V!oore, Jr ,, will take
3-16-tlc
devisees, legatees, ex.ecutors, not.lce lhet on the 26th. day ·or
administrators or ass igns of January , 1972 , a Pet ition w as
Lennie Wilson , Deceased , wJII

flowers for Decoration , 97c to

S5:so for baskets. wreaths ,
cr osses, , sprays ,

SMITH N£1t'ftN
MOJO.RS,·J.liU
IN·c.,·

· Pomel'ily

5-1-lfc

repair . For estimates ,call 9922239.
5-14-6tc

hearts ,

MOWERS
&amp; TILL.ERS

Economy Tiller. 3'fz h.p. B&amp;S
144.95

Bibles. We have a lot of high
class fl owers for all of our old

engi ne. Reg . 159.95

customers at a reasonable
price. Reynolds Flower Shop.
Mason, W. Va ., up near DriveIn Theatre .

Turf Trim Mower, B&amp; S J '/2
h.p. eng ine. In carton 70.2.5

5-16:6tc
~,---:----­

'

Help

woz SICK
OF HOME

HE

HOMESICK

0...9'·'*~ .
~E.V, !:&gt;IG

FI~AL l
THE FillST T~IRO ELIM· ·
INATED GeT A
THE

nUS

•c;

~HAW;
......... p ... ~~.~

.......

AND THE LAST THI~O

.-. ~.~ ~.

GeT AN "A " ·

spoutini repair. Interior ar

&amp;
&amp;

Adding Machine Repair.
Pick-up &amp; Delivery

PHONE 675-3628
Pl. Pleasant

KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE
,. 304 E. Main St .
. Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992·3795
or M;lson 773.5535

o GOMTfto(.TLI~

Ttll tAM.

1------ --

••n•

1 Hu.. ....,

..·C'..ONfE al! ..

Dozer &amp; End loader. Wort!,
basement, lind·
scaplng. We hne 2 sl11
doters, 2 sire loaders. Work
done by hour or a~~~trod •.
Free Estim1les. we also
haul fill dirt, top SGit. Dump
trucks and low·bor for hire.
See Bob or Roger J-'fers,
Pomeroy. Phone 9t2·352S
offer 7 p.m. or phone 992· '
ponds ,

.. LElS 61T!.

OF Us TORIE:S ...

AH J.00K LIKE A GHOST?
DOES AH 50UNP L1 KE ONE?
DOES AH PU,.,CH LIKE ONE."'

...

NOPE- BL!TTHIS$1,000
GOVAMJI(IT CHECK SA'/5 YO'
IS ONE - AN'THA55 GOOD
'NUFF FO' ME!!

i

sm.

IF'YOU DON' T,
WE'LL SCiii:EAM
AND HOLLER
THAT 'IOU' RE
A Cf.IEAPSKATi!

'

'
EXPERT
. Wheel Alignment ·

I

'5.55

Pomeroy Home &amp;· Auto

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
NEARLY NEW
.
NEAR NEW COAL Ml NE - 4 bedroorl)s. large pla y room,
l'h baths, radiant panel heal. Nice kitchen with cook and
bake units. Double stainless steel sink. 2 drilled wells and
foundation for 2nd house. 10 acres of land for only

$20,000.00.

RENOVATED
COUNTRY HOME - Yet has ci ly water, natural gas
furnace . J bedroom s, bath, paneling , garage, and l;,. acr e.
Nice wrap around concrete porch with wrought iron posts.

Only $]1,000.00.

• .
MIDDLEPORT
..
3 BEDROOMS - flh baths. large living, front and back
parches. Utility llulldlng on level lot near M&amp;R. Only
$8,500.00.
•
NEAT
2 BEDROOMS - Bath. lovely oak floors, and small
garden . Basement. outbuild ing . Front parch . Asking only
'

NEW
3 BEOROOMS - With large closets, bath has shower. ni ce
ki tchen. stove and refrigerator Included . Carpel in living
and dining, nice level lot with metal utility building . Will
listen to an offer .
RIVER VIEW
4 BEDROOMS , Older home, 2 baths, carpeting.
paneling, screened front parch. Full ~sement , city

OpeniTIU
Mond.,.lhru S1lurday
61M E. Main, Po.,..,..,y,c;,.

HiH! HRHf t KNIW
~TID

WILL do house roof and ~rn
painting ; Interior painting ;
fr ... estimates ; phone 992-

H00W.

•

~1M!

7085.

5-9-JOtc ;
S~E;;;E;;:;:U;;S::;F:;O~R:-:-A;-w-n-:ln_g_s_
, s-;-tormdoor$ and windows, carpor1s,

marquees, aluminum siding
and rolling. A. Jacob, sal~
representative .

For

free

estimates , phone Charles
Lisle , Syracuse , V. V!
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3·2-tfe
7
7
-=-se=w
= lN(); --;MA--:-:C-Hi N
- E:-S:-.- R
-epair
service, all makn. '19:!-m4.
The Fabric $hop, Porrieroy.
Authorlred Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
3·29-tlc ·

- - -CONCRETE
-READY -MIX

delivered r ight to rour
pro,ect. Fast and easy. Free
esf mates . Phone 992·328&lt;;
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
6-30-tfc

For Sale.

-------

Aluminum
Sheets

Da~y

-------

JJ&amp;WID1Lrn;-IJ..t ~ ,_, c

CULAND

Sentinel

•!"'----

"indeed"

bill

18. Occur
earlier
M.Ins·
ciblllty
U.-Calhoun
offtlms
D. Disarray
II. Not verse
Z5.Auall
M.Didnot
walk
1'1. T1lk
hoarsely
II. U.S.S.R.
city

Real Estate For Sale

Auto Sales

------

We tall to Jill
flke .. ,....

Fresh From F•rm

WMP0/1390 ·

-,...-----ROOM

5-16·31C

Celand's Greenhouse
E. Main St.

R1clne

5- 17 ·31~

ON YOUR .DIAL .
'

Farm

..

o.
Hemlock Grove, o.

•
Phontt-992-6394
This Week Onl
·
.

UntCramble the10 foor Jumble~
one -letter to each ~quare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

11

Ecce

homo"
pro-.

rlaimer
(2 wds.)
I. Approve
10. Least In·
. . .
. expensive Y~M~erd•1'• A'Diwer
16
, • ~~~~
Z5. Ignoble ·

u. ~:~~-

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27
·
2!1. Badger's

amount

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f

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mlfu

city

IS.
[
17. Nourished -

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vm~'JAH [

relaUve
38. Inert: gas
11. Vacuous

z:a. ~~te

Q

OP

J

I

II

::=~tine ~i~and 1RDI .[ (J

I

QUILID '

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V'

1\. ..A

I
'i

f-.._ _..A

I~----

WHAi A lOP HAl
M II:IHi MAKE:.

,Now.......,. the circled letten

to form the ltlrpriH anawer, u
ltliJOitecl by the abovt eartoon.

I YOUR (IllJ(! IX)
(~n

Jumbleoo

lamarraw)

VIIYE TOOTH DEYICI IANNII

Vt..llt'lia~···
•
•
' \ AJnwert Try and pe lieU lo a pruoMr- THI VIIDICT

ella"

eompaser

11,''-

victUI"

IS. Devoured
lt. Waterfall

Jli5T llECAI!5E SHE'&amp; HIS OLDER
515TER, SHE THREW HIM OUT...
I CAN'T BELIEVE IT ...

(Sect.)

U.PrlnUng
goofs
17.morgana
II. Member
ohmob
U •.Oid,old
IChool

ROOM

·
Day
POTTED PlANTS
75 up

8.

II. ••etnder·

.i

WELKER'S
Grade A EGGS Medium Sill
·25$-,

DOWN
I. Acute
!.One who
models
S. Surpass
In wlrked·
ness
(2 wds.)
4. Threefold
(comb.
form)
5. Wisen·
helmer
G. The-,
Netherlands
7. Beverage

Lll"-1'1 · 11. Craggy

For Rent

!===:::=====~:;

to. Corporeal
U. Sand bill

ACROSS .
l. NoUce
5. Formed
11. Period of
time
12. Molly of
song
13.ltallan
wine rlty
H. Program
15. Altall
16. Colleen's

REALTY

t

•

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SGW.e'IHIJJG ~N!.

EARTH MOVING

-

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5-17

i"r.s E)(Pf:Cll:D

The

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~NMENT

16 REALLY
CRACI&lt;JNG DOWN
ON 1RI..fl11 IN

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Contact :· I cilte
VERA EBt.£M ·

•

11-iE

UP' Elll

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992·2094

~eal Estate For Sale

WHITE "

Altornoys tor Plaintiff

........,..

,.~

o i'ALoU 111Tl4

SECON I&gt; TH I Rl&gt; A •!!.~.

tiled In t tle Probate Di v is ion of
LOST b'right carpet cbtors ...
Wante~
the Common Pleas court ot
r esto r e them with Blue
Me igs County , Ohi o, wh er ein ADULT housekeeper to live-in
Lust re.
Ren,_t
el ectric
you ha &gt;Je been named defen utilities plus river frontage. Garages .
and ca re for 3 year old girl ;
BACKHOE AND DOZER work.
shampoqer S1 . Ben Franklin
dant s praying to r sale of the
modern home in country ;
Septic tanks Installed. George
Store,
200
Ma
in
St.
,
Pomeroy,
entire interest In th e real estate
Phone
992-3629,
ask
for
Mary
SOMETHING
NEW
EVERY
WEEK.
WE
TAKE
A
(8111) Pullins. Phone 992·2•78.
Ohio.
hereinafter described In order
Shamblin .
PICTURE OF YOUR PROPERTY FOR OUR OFFICE
5-l6-6tc
•-25-tfc
to pay the debts of the deceden t,
36" X 23" X .009
5·16·61c
WALL WHEN YOU LIST WITH US.
Georg e W. Moore, Deceased,
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
and the c.osts, of administration .
1957 CHEVROLET 21fz ton
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
The rea l estate Is .described as KITCHEN helper to train as
Service. Phone 992-2527.
992-ms
truck , tandem a lC:Ie; 1965
RES.992·2371
follows :
cook; see Chef at Me igs Inn ,
Yamaha-YDS-3,
phone
6986-lO.ttc
The follow ing real estate
Pomeroy .
3290, Warren Reeves .
sltuale In tile VIllage of Mid ·
5-16-3fc
O' DELL WHEEL alignment'
5-J6.6fc
dleport. Me igs County , Ohio ,
located al Crossroads, Rt. 124..
JOHN
described as follows : The
Township, Meigs County, Oh io. follow ing real estate situate in WE ' LL SE ND
BRI GH T, GRAV EL Ytraclor. mower , and
Complete front end service, '
bounded and described as One Hundred Acre Lot No. 309
YOUNG MEN TO SCHOOL
tune up and brake service.·
sul ky , 1970 Honda CL-70 road
follow s : Beginning at the in
USED OFFSET PLATES
FOR
RADAR
JOBS
IN
Town No . 1, Range No. 13 in
Wheels
balanced elecbroke,
1959
Dodge
l·ton
truck.
southeast corner of Section 31 , said County of Meigs . and State
HAYS.
EUROPE. If you'd like to live
t
ronically
.
All
work
V-8.
Ph
one
992·3954
after
5
·Town 3, Range 13 In Bedford of
6illl
E.
Main,
Pomeroy
MANY USES
Ohio , that Is to 'Say a lot of two
and work In Europe, there's
p.m.
Township , thence West along acres
guaranteed.
Reasonable:
IIEALTY)
and n lnefy .fhree hun an elC:ci ting job waiting for
the south line of said Section 31 dredths of an acre on which
rates. Phone 992-3213. .
5·16·31c
YOU HAVE A DATE
to the southeast corner of Ralph Spooner formerly resided
you with loday's Army. You'll
7-27-lfc
With us today to see -how
Xavi er Thoma's 95 acre tract of on the Hilt nea r the fork s of the
learn to supervise and control 500 CC KAWASAKI Mach Ill ,
,, .,
land ln Sect ton 31, thence North road about half a mlte north much real living you will gel AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
ground surveillance radar
contact Larry Hill , Chester .
along the east line of sa id west of Middleport, on th e road
out
of this charm ing brick.
units
.
With
full
pay
while
985-4105.
8 for Sl.OO
cancelledl" Lost
your
Xavi er Thoma's 95 acre tract of to Rutland and more par you
're
in
school.
And
lots
of
About
8 years old, 3 large
operator's license? Call 9925-16-31c
,Jnct to the north•ast corner ot ti cul arly described as follow s.
.
992-1020
other benefits. Like 30 days
2966.
.
bedrooms, 1'12 baths, v~ry
Slid Xa&gt;Jier ThOma's 9.5 acre to ,wit :
pa
id
vacation
a
year.
If
you're
tract of land to the northnst
160
Coal
St.
M~leport
modern
kitchen
,
full
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
6-15-lfc
Beg inn ing at a stone wlth a
corner Of Thoma's tract ; thence brink on top of It, which bea rs
looking for lhls kind of
basement with a dream rec.
Park view Kennels, Phone 992West along the norttlline of said SOlJfh 83 1h degrees west 66 1h
challenge and excitement .
room, utility room, 1 acre
f'AGEVILLE
3
5443.
Thoma 's fracl to -the southeast feet from ' the north -w est corner
Today's Army wants lo loin
' 8-15-tfc
ground, large carport .
corner of Emily Thoma 's 13.17 ot said Spooners hl;)use being in
bedroom
,
bath,
home.
you. For complete details call
128,500.00 Pomeroy. Lincoln
acre tract of land in said Section line w ith the north en d ot th e
593·3022.
garage,
large
LBIG SALE, Reynolds' Flower
31 , thence north westerly alono same ; th ence nort h 11'1~
His. area.
5-16-31c
the easter ly tine of Si!tld Emily degrees east 4 cha ins and 36
Shop In Mason . W. Va. has lhe
4-23-JOtp
111
Co,
u
rt
St.
·
shaped
porch.
home
BUILDING SITES
Thoma'!. tract to a po int whrch links; thence north 88'/1 degrees
biggest selection of flowers In
Appro'x.
30
acres,
Chester
Pomeroy. Ohio
has
paneling
and
is south 66 l!A degrees , west 55
for Mother's Day and also f&lt;Jr
three chains and ninety two MAN to work on dairy farm.
water, close to Pomeroy, SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller ·:
rods and 10 lin ks from the road east
must know how to m ilk .
.__ _ _ _ _ _ _-.....,~ carpet. Located on 1'12
links ; thence south 71h degrees
Decoration
Day
.
We
can
save
Sanlfallon, Stewart. Ohio. PI\ . ·
builders don' t pass lhls one
leading from Woll Pen to east 3 chains and 15 links to a
Hou se furni shed . Phone 9"49·
662·JOJ5.
you
money
on
your
flower
s.
- · acres all level. In
Bunker Hill Churcll, thence
up .
; thence south 12 degrees
3833 or contact Arvil HeUer,
This is our 20th year In the 1969 HARLEY Sprint 350 cc, serene . rural com ·
2-12-tlc .
North 66V.. degrees East ss rods stake
we-s t 6-cha lns and 11 li nks to a
POMEROY- Spring Ava.
Ba sh an .
busi ness. You name it, we've
and IC links to the road leading corner
ex
ce
uenr
cona1T1on,
new
•
.
at
the
road
;
thence
north
-;F;-:A:-;R;-:M:;-::E-;;R-;S-;-fo
r-::
lh
-e--:l
a-rgesf
2 story frame, new siding,
5-14-6tc
from Wolf Pen to Bunker Hill .AS VA degr ees west 3 cha ins and
got It, 98c 1o $6.50, any basket
battery, $499. Phone 992 _5324 .
unt 1y, 10 mtnu es
new
roof,
new
carport,
needs
Church,
thence
In
a 211inh to a stone ; thence north ·
number A. I. Cattle Sires. :
or spray as long as they last.
S-15-6tc from Rutland . · Has
southeasterly direction with the l.4 1h deg rees west 1 cha in 38
paint Inside, 3 bedrooms,
Minimum $8 fee per animal.
Elnora Reynolds, 773-5147.
meanderlnus of said road to Its links to the place of beginning ,
-------many varieties of fruit
~th . These ore few, and far
Phone Leland Parker, 9925-14-1
31p
Intersection with the east line of saving and excepting the coal TRAILER , Brow n's Tra iler
betwe.n.
$5,500.00.
2264,
Pomeroy.
trl)es
s7,950.
Slid Section 31 ; thence South under said prem ises and the
Park 1 Miner s.ville , Ohio .
MIDDLEPORT-Mulberry
5-4-12lc
MODERN walnut style stereoalong ttle ent line of sa id right to mine the same as
I
Phone 992 -3324.
4
BEDROOM,
fwo
story
house,
Ave.
Section 31 to the southeut heretofore res er ved .
r
adio
,
4
speaker
so
und
5-11 -lfc
One of · Pomeroy's
small
barn
and
other
corner of said Section 31 , the · Also the follow ing prem ises,
system , 4 speed automtic
Nice 1'12 story brick, 2 large
place of beginning , containing to .wlt : Beginning a-t the Nor .
buildings . 1 acre on Rt. 1 in
changer
.
Balance
$67
.59
.
Use
bedrooms;
~fh , carpeted,
finest
.homes.
3
TRAILER
spaces
overlooking
29 .85 acres, ore or less .
,
CORVAIR, ' speed, good
Tuppers Plains. Phone 667 our
budget
terms.
Ca
ll
\192.
theast
corner
ot
abo&gt;Je
level
lot.' storage 1964
paneled,
1
Pomeroy
.
Velma
G.
Zuspan
Par ce l No. 2: Ttle fol lowing described premises ; th en ce
bedrooms. 1 12 baths,
condlflon, $32S: phone 9923956.
7085.
building. In excellent con:
phone Mason, 773-5750.
dnc rlbed real estate situated in so uth 5'12 degrees east 3 chains
2360.
5-14-ltp full, dry basement.
5-17·61c
Salisbury Townsh i p. Meigs and 211/n k. s to Joseph F lemings
dillon on !he Inside and the
• 5 - 11 - 30t~
5-JO.tfc
Countr , and State ot Ohio , and lot ; thence Nor th 72 degrees
every room including
outside. $6,950.00.
In Sec Jon 36, Town 2 and Range east 79 llnkS i th ence north Slh
HOMt:: grown tomato plants, RACINE - room house: bath. kitchen and both baths · A REAL TOR
IS
A 1967 DODGE Dart convertible;
13, and bounded and described degrees east 2 ct(alns and 93 4 ROOM furnished apartment.
'utility room, gor~ge, $10,000;
Improved Mex ican, Hei n z
f'ROFESSIONAL
REAL
Reyno ld s Flowe• Shop,
power steering, automatic.
as follow': Beg inn ing at · the l ink s; t hen ce West one chain
have carpeting; anphone 949-4195 .
1350, large Supersonic and
Mason, W. Va.
ESTATE
IS
HIS
northent corner of Section 36, an d nine links to the place ot
dark blue fin ish, phone 9493-31 -tlc tique Satin drapes; air·
Yellow
Jubilee:
also
Town 2, Range 13, in Salisbury beginning, conta ining 29-100 of
, 5-U-6tp
PROF.ESSION. SEE YOUR
201~ .
Township , thence West alono an acre, excepting the ...coal and
Mangoes, Hot Peppers and
REALTOR
FOR
YOUR
conditioning
and
many
5·17-410
the north line of said Section 36, other minerals and the r ight to 2 BED~OOM mobile home.
Earl y Cabbage Plan is. 500ft. SIX
REAL
ESTATE
NEEDS
house
,
133
Butternut
to the Northeast corner of m ine the sa·me .
other items stay with
Racine area , 10 miles above above fhe Syracuse State
1967 6 CYL. Chevrolet pick-up
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
TODAY.
,Jessie W. Slys 23 acre tr act of
Exce pting and reserv ing
Park
on
Rt.
124,
Thomas
house - $-17,000.
Pomeroy.
Phone
992-6329.
truck, 4 new tires, two mud
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
land In said Section 36, thence In from the abov e descr ibed real
HENRY
E.
CLE.
L
AND
SR.
5·12-tfc Hayman , Syracuse, Ohio.
1 Southeasterly direCtion along e-state three par ce ls or land
and snow tires , re-built
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
REALTOR
-~:-:---:--4-30-JOtc
the eastern line of sa id Jessie
11-21 -lfc 3 BEDROOM house with bath,.
radiator: body fair, motor
were pre&gt;J·iously con - 3 AND 4 'ROOM fur nished and
Dlol992-2259
W. Slys 23 acre tract to the north vwhich
OK. 1400. Phone 992-4773.
eyed as follows : One to Roy
112 acre lot, on public water
If
no
onl'ftr
"2·2568
line of Emma J . Slys "40.50 acre Russell by deed recorded in Vo l.
unfurnished
apartments . 7 YEAR OLD Tennessee Walker NICE 2-story home with full ·
5-17-llc
tract of land In Section 36 , 111
system o/• mile from· Chester
mare, palom ino, gentle but
Phone 992·5434.
, Pag e 43.5, Deed Records
basement, 2 lots, new forced
thence east atono the north line Meigs County , Oh!o , and the
on Coun ly Rt. 5. Phone 985·
4·12-tfc spir ited, neck reins . John
air turna&lt;e. Near Pomeroy.
of nld Emma J . Slys 40 .50 acre other two to Jacob Young by
4262.
Sa
uvage,
·
Syracuse
Oh
io,
Elementary School. . Phone
tract to the east line of said de e~s recorded In Vol. 116, Pag e
phone
992·3272.
5- IHie
NEW,
12
x
60,
two
bedroom
Stctlon ' 36. thence North along l26&gt;ana·vol . 117, Page 590. Deed
992-7384 to see.
mobile home across from
5-10-121p '
11-7-lfc ----~
tne east line of said Section 36 to Records of Meigs County, Ohio .
Bradbury School. Call 992·
the- northeast corner of said
Reference Oeed : Vol . 117,
Section 36 the po int of begin - Page
5308
or see Charles Lewis, 2nd
3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
20, Deed Records Mei gs
ning, containing 37 acres, more County , Oh io.
house south from Bradbury
•
Mem..n~l
Arballi!h Addition, Tuppers
or Int .
·
School. Pets welcome.
ar e re-qui red to answer
"'IIG
Plains . All new wlfh total
Reference Deed : Vol. 164, theYou
within twenty eight
5·5-tfc
electric and central air
Page 551, Deed Records M eigs dav sPetition
after the le~st publicat ion of
I
conditioning, ~lh and 'IHully
County. Ohio.
th is notice, namely , by not tater
apartment,
You are require~ to answer ttlan the 21st. day of June; 1972, UNFURNISHED
carpeied, full basement,
the Petition within twenty eight or Judgment. by default will be
phone 992-2780 or 992-3432. ·
$
garage In basement. See by
days after the last publicat ion of rendered
.
5-4-tfc ,
apf)ol~tment, phone 992-2196
against you .
thla notice, namely, by not later
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
M
·
.
~yther,
Anna
1hon the 20th. day of July, 1#~,
Administratrix of the 2 'BEDROOM mobile h~me,
Financing available.
O.ily
or judgment by def•ult w!ll be
Estate of George w.
12-30-lfc
adults only . Ptlone 992·5592. Pan$ies, Pe1uni~s, number
rendered against you . · ·
Bring
egg
basket.
Moore , Deceased,
Myrtle Haning,
5-IJ.ffc of Bedding Plants &amp;
247 Mulberry Ave.
Vegetable Plants.
Admini stratrix of the Crow , Crow &amp; Porter , Pla int iff
Phone,
HOUSE , 104 SPRING : AVE.,
.
Estate of Attorn eys ror Plaint iff
5
·&amp; bath furnished
Phon-992·3736
POMEROY. CAN BE SEEN
Rtbecc• Hudnall, Deceased .
hou~e, $50 a month, Ebenezer
Of\1 WEEK~NDS ONLY.
Crow. Crow &amp; Porter,
(•I 12, 19, 26 Il l 3, tO, 17 , 2~ : · 71
St., Pomeroy, phone 992-7784.
ROBERT RUSSELL.
tekt notice that on the 8th . da y
of May , 1972, a Petition wa s
flied In the Probate Div is ion of
tht Common Pleas court of
Meigs County , Oh io, wher~ln
you have been named defen .
dents praying for sate of the
entir e fnterest In the real estate
herelnefter 'described ln order
to PIV the debts of the decedent,
Rebecca Hudnall , ·a nd ttl e. cost s
of administration . The rea l
estate Is described as follows :
Parcel No. 1: Ttle lot lowing
real estate situate In Bedford

HE STALKED OfF -•

..

- year oround. N• malttr wNII
your neod. Complete roof or

We have 24 hr. ttMflllllcY
;-.;'
.
sen ice.
t u .lf47
992-SIOl
'898 742-4761
We ue '""' in-.;ured

'TO f\EAA IT AU. ...
R1 IOKT, DOCToR ?

il.J,II.IJT

On M;ost Am.eJ"ip:n C~

$6 ,500 .00 .

POMEROY
···• •- Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Aifl
Phone 992-2181

THAT'S HOW COME

ES.IT X .SUPR:l'E 'rOJ ,

TI:\It.J6S OOT
~ETT'I' D.JlL
-"FTGR ll1AT !

Dor Numbtr992·1554

Complete tide of office

424 Main 51.

DON 'T 'IE FRET, CLARISSV
JUNE -· HE'LL COME BACK
ONE OF THESE DA'IS WHEN
HE GiTS .GOOD AN'

exterior corflttllr'l. Coiling
tile o,cc Pontlingand Sidiot. · ·
Complelt
P1umbi"'
&amp; ·
.
Huttng.
. ~

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY
equipment, furniture
supplies.. Typewriter

liN MAN VERNIE STALKED
OCJ!' Of TH' HOOSE THREE
DA'IS AGO. LOOEEZV• .
. AN' I AIN'T
SEEN HAIR
NER HIDE OF
HIM SINCE

-=
--==~
... AI&lt;JD ;rl£1&lt;l M'l FeT
GOLDFISH DIED!

I':;•

Mainten•nct Service , the

Excelsior - - - - - - - - -

PIANO luning, Lane Daniels,
•W. y lOth lhru June 25th.
Phone 992-2082. Reference, For Rent or Sale
Elberfelds.
HOUSE In Long Bottom, phone
CAMPER , 16 fl . sleeps 6, good
5-16-12tc 985-3529.
condition , SI,OOO. Phone 992- - - - -- 5-9-lfc
, 6329.
BOAT LICENSE - for your
Available at Simon's Plck·A·
Pair Shoe Store, 108 W. Main.

Micldlepor1. ohio

Dbl AnthonY Plumbing
we have • cempleh Hom•

Aadia_
l or Specialist

Sp.ecializing· ln
Small Businesses

----ROOF painting and minor

Salt Works, E. Main St .. SY RACUSE Drive-In , phone
Pomeroy, Phone 992-3891 .
992-2088 .
5-4-12lp '
4-12-tfc

boat, , for

•

.

240 Lina.fn St.

· Nathan Biggs

Ph. f92-2174

General Contractor

PLANTS : Tasty
EVE~GREENS are correctly

•

PWMBING 00.

Bulldozer' Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

HONDA 160 like new, lots of
chrome . Phone 949-5953.
5-17-6tc

TOMATO

·

• -. -

5·11-31c

! EARLY

BOTTLE gas range. $10. old
Edison" disc records $1.50
each . Phone 367-7729.
5-12-lOtp

For Sale
COAL ,

.

low acid content. In Jiffypats

MILLER

potatoes, for best quality and
selecllqn buy direct from 1he

availabl_
e . Phone 992-5641.

·

From the largest

''149.50

sham~ooinq carpet . Only

$27.50 cash . price, or terms

ALL WEATHER ROOf'NG
i
&amp; CONSTRUCTION ·

Get Rid of Tllem

VAC.UUM cleaner. Electro
Hygiene. new demonstrator
has all .ch?aning attachme.tlts

·

e

. . .

plus the new Electro Suds for

$1095

Rev. Roy Taylor, Pastor,
OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
welcomes everyone .
.P~EROY, OHIO
5-17-3tc
- - - - - - -- REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
Mo.b"e
Homes F.or Sale
Service. sso Reg. mares, S40 Nutice
H
Grade, Francis Benedum .
Phone 667-3856.
·
Season Is now in CASH paid for all 'makes and
5-17-30tp GARDENING
models of mobile hom es.
full swing and Bob's Markel
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
rn .Mason, W. Va . can offer
SAVE up to ,orle half . Bring your
4-13-tfc
you the best variety selection
si.ck TV to Chuck's TV Shop.
and
the
finest
of
quality
in
1S1 ~utternvt Ave., Pomeroy.
Garden Plants in the Tri4-4-tlc
County area . This season, Bob
-=,...--,--- ·Air Copditioners
is featuring Two new wonREVIVAL meeting with
derful
tomato
Hybrids
In
•Awnings
·evangelist Giles and Dorothy
Better Boy and Hybrid Beef
Elliot! of Buchanan. Services
·Underpinning
Easier !Beef Steak ty,;e) :
will begin Tuesday. May 16
along
with
13
other
tomato
through !he 28th af 7:30p.m.
mobile home
at the Mason Assembly of God"J se lections. a full line of Complete
service plus g igantic
cabbage
and
pepper
plants
Church, Second St.. Mason, l
display of 'mobile homes
and
almost
every
flowering
W. Va. Also special singing
annual from Aster s to Zinand special services for the

'

1971 model In wafnul stand. '
All 1ea1ures buIll .1n 1o make
·
fancy designs and do stretch

eo·
· •

1967 DoDGE D-500

.GUS N SHOOTC, Forked Run

any debts contracted by

LEGAL NOTICE

Jl.-&amp;or

l

TWIN needl.e ' sewing m!1chine

5-17-3tc

CARD OF THANKS
5-17-31c
,. OBITUARY
'suo for 50 ·word min im um . WEEKEND revival at the
Pomeroy Lower Ltr,ht Church
.;ach additional word 2c .
BLIND ADS
on
the Harrlsonvll e Rd .. Rt .
Additional 25c Charge per
AdvertiSement.
143, beginning May 18 thru the
OFFICE HOURS
21st. Rev . Dallas Ford .

a: 30

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... ·
Ill

dition.

lhree

s x cQn -

.

' For Sale

Po
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DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Her(e how to work It:
.

AXYDLBAAX!t
Ia _ L o' N G F B L L 0 W
WH'/fm?lf'I HOIIJ IIJOULD
One letter simply at1ndt for uother. In IIIli eanlple A Is WERE OLDEK I'D 1(00 LIKE IT
uaed for the tbj'ee L'i, X for the two o· •. ete. SU.,Ie !etten. THROW 4{0U OOT! IF I TH~EW
apoatropbea, the lenelh 111d fo11111Uon· of the worda are all
'IOU alT?
.
hlnta.l!aeh day the code lettera are dll!erent.

'.

caYJ'TOQUOTIS
· I 0 H ll VEL Y N . L t W v·v P L FA V J .T J1
VYXTH. UTVU:\V .T'E MGGKLHE, KFR
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VJTHWVV-PLFA VOH VllF.-K . · W.

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B II N'W KF R
YNterdaJ't ~llole: LET KE Bl!:' A LITI'LE KINDER,
LET liE BE A LJTrLII: BLINDER TO 'niJ: FAliLTS OF
THOSE AROUND KE, LET liE PRAISE A L1'l"1'LB MORE.-

BDGAR GUEST
•
&lt;0 lt'llllor Joolon• IJo.-tt,lat.)

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I'M AGIRL!!

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12 - ,The Daily &amp;;ntlnel, Mlddleport.¥ame, o.• lolaJ 17, lflll

Aikman

New IHS
•

Mentor

iit'IJJP'PI1

'?'

News.

7 Americans Die In Copter's Fall.

~TENDED

OUTLOOK
Ohio ntnded outlook
Friday lhrouch Sllllday
Mostly fair over the
comlllg weekeJI!I eltept for a
chance of showen. SWiday.
Days wDI lie warm 8lld
nights mUd With high tem·
perature&amp; .averaging m.,.tly
In the 80s and lows at oiglll
mainly Ia the 110s Friday
thrtpgb Sunday.
·

SAIGON (UPI) -' Com· airfield 2110, miles north of
muniat 12bm rocket fire 'Salgoo and the rocket l;lur8ts
loday ll(ruck a U. S. Air Force destroyed .the 8mmo 81 well,
C1, tranlpol't plane u " wu UPI repoi'ter Matt Franjola
tailing off from Kontum ~­ said.
field In the Cemal lflchlandi.
Seven Americans were
Seven of the nine Americans wounded Tuesday in two
aboard were · ldlled In the similar roctet and mortar
crash, lli!ld repc.ts lolld.
attad!a on Kontwn, a lllrateglc
The big fllur41Cine llercule~~ · · JI'Ovlnce cspltal, and two South
had just completed unloedlng a Vletname11e Air Force Cl32
suppiy of ammunltioo at the tTBiliPOrt planes destroyed.
The eoildition of the two
crewmen who survived loday's
NOW YOU KNOW
crash was not bpmediately
Orlando A. "Brick" &amp;nd, known. The plane was hit at
one of the foremost of 19th least lwtce.and Crashed into a
Century buffalo hunters, Jd!led river east ofKontum, Franjola
6,183 of the beasiB in a few said.
weeks in the fall of 1874 near
One week ago, 32 Americsn
Dodge City, Kan., alternating servicemen were ltilied when a
with twQ riDes which aides kept CH47 Chinook hellcovter
dipping in buckel!l of water as crashed from unknown causes
!hey became overheated.
20 miles east of Saigon.

Paul Aikman, former hea~
football and basketbaU coach
at North Gallia, has been hired
·.
as head basketball coach at w&gt;.::w.:s:::::::::;r.-:;w.;:;:;».:s~».'(.iW.«·
Ironton High School. Aikman
replaces William Northrup, 30,'
of Warrenville Heights, Ohio,
who, was hired last week but ·
did not take the job.
A graduate of Ohio
University, Aikman this past
year, served as a graduate
Eight defendants were lined
assislant at Ohio University - two on charges of driving
where he continued his while intoxicated - and one
graduate work. He served l!s forfeited bond In the court of
assistant basketball coach in Middleport Mayor John Zerkle
1969-70 at Glouster and befor'e , Tu~sday night.
that was an assistant football
Fined were Thomas Stone,
coach at Athens High School 28, Pomeroy, and Martin
~derDonEskeyandetLogan Major,Jr., 24,Middleport, $100
$91'~,559
H1gh School.
and costs and three days in jail C I
fl4
'61
Aikman's 1970-71 North each on driving while in·
Gallia Pirates were co- lllxicated; Mark Haley, 20,
Pomeroy Village funds as of $7,517.16 ; boat dock, no
champions of the Southern Middleport, $10 and costs, April 30 totaled $92,558,70, receipts, no expenditures,
Valley Athletic Conference. inlllxlcatlon; William Reeves, accordingtothereporto!Cierk $702.95 ; sewer, $4,764.37,
Aikman's overall mark at 46,Pomeroy,$20andcosts, two Jane Walton submitted to $12,074.01, $15, 717.72; fire
North Gallia was 15-4.
_counts of inlllxication; Otto H. Pomeroy Council Monday department, $2,781.51 ,
Johnson, 68, Pomeroy, $20 and night. Receipts, disbur.sements $1,722.15, $2,503.17; cemetery,
costs, two counts of In· and clerk's balance, respec- $1,262.50, $526.95, $931.03;
PLEASANT VALLEY
toxlcation; William Gardner, lively in the active f.und were : street, no re~ipls, $2,461.15,
Names of persons admitted 63, Cheshire, $10 and cos~.
General $7;552.01, $10,791.62, $2,937.46; state highway, no
are not released by .hospital intoxication ; _Leo F. Young,
receipts, $34.88, $2,135.33;
authorities.
Jr., 43, Letart, W. Va., $10 and
0V
e
utility, $5,463.02, $1,001.10,
DISCHARGES: Mrs. Loman costs, inlllxlcation and $10 anp
. .
·
$17,267.23 ; water operating,
Jones, Point Pleasant; Warren costs, disturbing the peace,
(Continued ~rom page ~)
$8,053.60, $7,606.33, $3,995.74;
Sydenslricker, Southside; and Harley C. Saylor, 61, sensations he Ia able lo feel water improvement, no
Everyn Rainey, Apple Grove; Mldaleport, $10 ·and costs, (from the waist down.)" .
receipts , no expenditures, ·
Caroline Pritts, Claude Moore, intoxication.
There had been one report $15.61 ; guaranty meter, $100,
Point Pleasant; Thomas . Forfeiting his $25 bond that a Wallace aide had $87, $4,213.66 ; parking meter
Vaughn , Huntington , and posted for running a stop sign mentioned the governor had fund , $1 ,399.00, $2,232.89,
Warren Stewart, Leon.
was James L. Spangler, 34, some feeling In the lower part $11,789.51; sanitary sewer
• BIRTHS: May 16, a daughter Middleport.
of his body. But from aU In· construction, no receipts, no
to Mr . and Mrs. David
dicatlons, he has been para- expenditures, $5.58.
Cheesebrew, Point Pleasant.
lyzed In the lower ~ of biB
Re.ceip(S, disbursements and
TWO SUITS FILED
body
and
both
legs
smce
being
clerk's
balance respectively in
Two divorce suits have been
shot
after
speaking
at
a
rally
the
inactive
fund include
filed in Meigs County Common
PROJECT IS ON
special street bond.retirement:
The Meigs County Com- Pleas Court. Carol Will, Monday afternoon.
PlaDI
Proceedillg
'
$2,871.80, ~,155. 79, $1,595.64;
missioners Tuesday approved Syracuse, filed suit against
Dr.
Baltazar
Perez,
a
neurobond
retirement, $8,194.52,
a project submitted by County James A. Will, Syracuse,
surgeon who Ia part of a team $216.35, $20,896.65; sewer bond
Engineer Theodore Beegle to charging gross neglect of duty
on
the · Wallace case, was repa!,!' and improvement, no
rep;dr a landslide on Twp . Rd. and extreme cruelly, and
quoted
,by a Wallace aide as receipts, no expenditures
444 In Orange Township at an Sandra K. Fields filed against saying, ''There is absolutely no $334.26.
·
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estimated cost of $9,076.66. Michael A. Fields, Reedsville,
Receipts, disbursements and
Attending were Charles Karr, charging gross neglect of duty. truth to the report that th~
spinal cord has been severed.
ba)ances in all funds respecBob Clark and Warden Ours,
Tbere was no word when the lively totaled $42,382.33,
POP CONCERT SET
commissioners, and Martha
second
oparat!!)n might take $41,910.22, $92,558.70.
Selected vocal students of
Chambers, clerk.
place,
or
whether he might be
Meigs Junior High School
taken back to Alabanul before
directed by Harry Gunther will
MEETING SET
that.
present a program Tuesday
RACINE
- Members of the
Snider was Interviewed on
'
afternoon at the school. The the NBC-TV Today show this. Southern Htg~ School junior
Tonight &amp; Thurldoy
program will include four morning.
class and their mothers who
Nay 17-18
spirituals and six "pop"
are
planning tQ help serve the
Snider said plana were
NOT OPEN
numbl!rs. This morning the
alumni
banquet at the school
II'Oceedlng fllr continuing the
program was presented to wanace campaign and said "I are asked to be present at a
Friday lhru Tuesday
elementary school students. certainly do," when asked if be meeting to be held at 7:30p.m.
· - May 19·23
BILLY JACK
thought, Wallace had a chance Thursday at the school to
(Tochnlcolorl
YOUTH CITED
to get the Democratic complete plans.
Tom Laughlin
Delores Taylor
A ReedsvDie youth was cited presidential nomination at
(G P)
to Meigs County Court on Mianil Beach In July.
Ftolure and cartoons
charges
of excessive speed for
While Wallace aides have
U
SHOW STARTS 1 P.M.
road conditions following a said he wouta camJ)Iign from a
(Continued from page 1)
single car accident today on wheel chair if necessary, there
Twp. Rd. 91 , Chesler Twp., the appeared to be little if any
Meigs County Sheriff's Dept. chance he could be well enough
MASON DRIVE·IN
reported. Frank Frederick to make such public appearanBise, 17, was traveling south · ces prior to the convention
' , ''
when he lost control in a curve which starts July 10.
Tonight. Thur.Frl.
and drove over an emBut Snider said ''we are
May 17. 18-19
bankmenl on the left. There talking now about phase 3" of
DoUble Feature Program
were no Injuries and mediwn the campaign and that "the
THE PANIC IN
danage to the car.
type of indivld111l he is, we
NEEDLE PIIRK
don't look for him (Wallace) to
(Color) ·
BOND POSTED
be down very long."
AI Paclno
The
Meigs
County
Sheriff's
and Kitty Wlnn 1R)
Dept. reported today Daniel
- PLUsMichael Salvin!, Stewart St.,
THE SEVEN
Athens, has posted bond in the
MINUTES
amount
of $3,000 on charges of
(Color!
Wayne Maunder
possession of cocaine and
Marianne McAndrew
. possession of cocaine for sale.
( Rl
Salvini was represented by a
Cleveland attorney.

8 fm
· ed b-Y
Town Mayor·

•

VOL XXV

296 S.cond St.

Pomeroy, Ohio

POM EROY·MIDDLEPORT, OH 10

24

• 100" soH foam filled
• covered In care-free heavy
supported vinyl ·
• exira thick 4" seats
Treat yourself to comforl and beauty and at the same
time give your palio a fresh new look with colorful
'ioral print replacement CU'$hlons.

SAIGON (UPI)-U.S. Air
Force jets knock~ out six
lridges aroilnd North Vietnam's southernmost port city
and turne4 a big swage area
near the Demilitarized Zone
(DMZ) into an inferno of exploll\ng supplies and ammunition, military spokesmen
said today.
The U.S. command reported
that American warplanes
pounded the north with 390
strike sorties In the two4ay
- pe11od lelldlns at &amp; p,m. Wednesday delplte heavy an·
tialrcraft fire . They hit road

Dra~ery Department · 2nd Floor. Select your replacement
cush~ons. for aluminum chair~· gliders ·. chaise lounges . chair
cushion sets and for your Redwood furniture .

REINFORCED VINYL GARDEN HOSE
With weather-flex additives
fl exi bl e e"Ven below zero . k ink
res istant . coil s eas ily . solid brass

couplings.
so foot lengths . Housewares Dept.

Special.

•

'3.50
Another New

•

FURNITURE SALE
'
On The 3rcl Floor
Saye now on the furniture yo.u need. Special sale

pnc~s on fine quality, well known makes o'f

furntture inc lltding:
E.a~y Chairs • Dinette Sets · Be!lroom · Suites •
L1vmg Room Suites· Love.Seats. Sofas . Hide-ABeds and Sleep or Lounges. ·
Buy your furniture now and use Elberfelds own
sensible credit service.

DANFORTH AWARDS at Southern High School went to
Debra Weal, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Gordon West, and
Stan Kiser, son of Mr. Okey Kiser, both of Racine. The award
is presented to the outstaooing senior boy and girL

Graduation Gifts

Shipment

Airway

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS .

Seapot1 Hammered
Verdi.c t Upheld
ith U. S. Bombs

replacement cushions

SO foot Lenghts, our regular $4.49

THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1972

MRS. E. F. ROBINSoN was one of many receiving the
special blessings of the new priest, the Rev. Father Donald
Wehrung during a reception in his honor following his or·
dination at Sacred Hearl Church Wednesday night.

Debra .West, Stan Kiser
Are Danforth Students

LANE CEDAR CHESTS

Discovery
LUGGAGE
\

Ideal Gift
For The
Graduate
Be sure to
· see this fine
lele1cti13n - Furniture
Department on the
3rd floor. Maple. welnuf,
oak. pecan · your
of Sile and styles.

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::

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DELUXE

.•
:~

Tht Athens County
So•lngs &amp; L~n Ca.

enttne

Devoted To The lntereJII Of The Meigs-Mason Area

Make your selections now.

..@·

the aliar to greet af,feclionately
members of his family sealed
in U1e Iron l pew.s of the church.
He then (eturned to the front of
the altar area and there _ad·
ministered his first communion as a priest. Members
of the congregation £iled by
Father Wehrung to receive the
communion.
At a reception which
followed in the ch urch
auditoriwn the new priest was
busy giving his first blessings.
It is traditionally said that the
blessings of a new priest are
"special."
Father Wehrung attended St.
John Vianney Seminary
following his graduation from
high school in 1963. He received
a Bachelor of Arts from the
College of Steubenville in 1968.
After being ordained to the
IContinued on page 2)

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cosmetic bags and tole
bags.
· ·
Stop In on the 2nd floor.

Meip Co. Branch

Church. With the family from the left are the Rev. Father
Bernard Krajcovic, pastor of Sacred Heart Church, and
Bishop John King Mussio who presided over .the ordination
ceremonies.
·

IT WAS A PROUD MOMENT for Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
Wehrung, right, Wednesday evening when their son, Donald,
center, was ordained as a Catholic priest at the Sacred Heart

Weekender bags . war.
drobes • Two suiters .

s~. per cent per year
on one year Cer tificates of Deposit.
$5,000 .00 Minimum.
Interest
Payable
Quarterly . 90 day
interest penalty If
cashed
before
maturity.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Nine years '·ago, Donald
Wehrung, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Wehrung of Pomeroy,
graduated from the Pomeroy
High School.
Wednesday evening he
returned tO' Pomeroy to be .
. ordai,ned a Catholic priest at
the Sacred· Hearl Church.
Conducting the colorful
Impressive ordination
ceremonies - rich in the
tradition of the· Ca tholic
Chutch -"'vas Bishop John
King Mussio of Steubenville
who ·was joined by priests
throughout. the Steubenville
Diocese to assist. Enhancing
the ordination was an excellen•
choir from the' St. John
Vianney
Seminary
at
Bloomingdale.
Near the end of the
ceremonies, the new prieslle!l

rfelds In Pomero·y ~ · .Wearing Apparel
Yc)ur Family and Furniture For Your Home

NeW colors for men and
women · new design that's
stronger and lighter.

Certificates
Of Depoilt

.

'

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MEIGS THEATRE

INTEREST On

Don Wehrung Ordained

(Continuec!' from page 1f
Two baltallons of South Hue, under cover of heavy air
Vletn8illese troopa aboard u. strikes, naval gunfire and ldentllled die dead u Kathy Blair, 12, JICk,U,•and AI, t. 8181r;
S. 111d govenunent helicopters 175mm artillery barrages.
end lila wife were taken 1o General Medical Center for treatment ~
SJOep! unopposed inlo a secood They entered the -base without of burns ad lbock.
·
·
~ ·:
abandoned base near Hue opposltioo.
" . 1
I
loday; e~pandlng What field
In Walblnglon, U. S. ·defense
·
commanders caned a "circle officials said IIIeY believe four
!!liGON -VICE PRESIDENT SPIRO T. AGNEW made'a:
of ~" protecting the ctty. North Vietnamese army lhreH!our stopover in Saigon today to ~· the military:
About ~0 government divisions now· may be in · situatioo with President Nguyen Van Tbleu Bl!d other South ·
soldiers were airlifted 1n u. s. position to attack Hue ·at any Vletn1111- and U. S. offlcia~J . .ftebb1e government IOIIJ'Ctll .
and South • Vietnamese , time. Tbeysaidlt•"coilldbethe s.iid Apew gave Thleu renewed lliurance of cmtlnued .
helicopters into Artillery Base decisive .battle of the cam- Ainerican support for South Vietnam both militarily and i
Rakkasan, 15 nilles weSt of ·paign."
economically. .
·.
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Wallace
·

So lhern

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• • .in ·BriefS:. '

Domeroy uas

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RACINE - Two Danforth Debra Wesl, vocal music.
Awards, for outstanding senior
Girls' basketball awards
boy and girl, went to Debra went to Connie Warner. Debra
West and Sian Kiser Wed- West, Donna Proffitt, Teresa
nesday allhe awards assembly Gooch, Pam Hill, Nancy
at Southern High School.
Crown, Carol Michael, Brenda
Key awards went to Ray Ha yes, Jill Warner, Janie
Frank, agricluture; Candy Re es, An gie Hubbard and
Hoback, social studies ; John Janie Allen. All were presented
Eichinger, dramatics; Connie trophies. ·
Bush, home economics; Ed
Student council certificates
Cross, Science;
Candy were presented to John
Hoback, typing and com- Eichinger, Terri Ash, Doug
mercia!; Loretta Middleswarl, Rees, Larry Wilcoxen, Vicky
Mathematics; Bill Wheeler, Joh'1Ston, Monty H;Irt, Greg
band; Beth Theiss, French apd Donohew , Loretta Mid·
English ; Nancy Ours, Eng!iJ!h; dleswarl, Darrell Roush,
John Eichinger, Activities; Jeannie Sellers, Ronia Nease,
Stan Kiser; Cili•enshlp; Della Cross, Barbara Nease,
Melisa Proffitt and John Mike Nease, Alan Pugh,
Manuel, perfect attendance; Stephanie Ord, Connie Warner,
Candy Hoback, Salutatorian; Bill Cornell, Stan Rizer and Jil
Loretta Middleswart, Warner.
valedictorian and Reader's
So¢iety of Outstanding
Digest Award.
· · American High School
Pins went to Jane Allen, Students certificates went to
Terri Ash, Renee Burke, Bob Loretta Middleswarl, Candy
Cummins, John Eichinger, Hoback, Sian Kiser, Debra
Ray Frank, Candy lloback, LaValley, Debra West, Beth
Loretta Mlddleswar.t, Melisse Theiss, Bill Cornell, 'Teresa
Proffitt, Randy ·Pyles, Doug Gooch, Larry Wilcoxen, Judy
Rees, . Connie Warner, . and Roberts and Mike Nease.

•

ews•• .zn

of the ciy and a fourth15 miles the conunand said in a com-

to the solh. Two briges on munique .
routes 104 and 105 to the east Ground action in the south
were heavily damaged ad remained at a relatively low
''render ed
unu s u~bl e," level on the 50th day of the
~mmunlst general offensive.
spokesmensaid.
Today was the eve of the 82nd
· They said a strike by F4 anniversary of the birth of Ho
Phantom crews near the DMZ Chi Minh and allied conunanknocked out _n tru~ks and nine ders were prepared for a surge
warehouses Including one con· in activity by the Communists
talnlng ammunition. "Twenty-· to mark the·occasion.
tl_lree large secon~ explo- Military s~kesmen reported
s1ons and 21 sustamed !Ires · that South Vietnamese troops
r~¥...!::,'.1!""•lj)e~ ~tr~es_,': . Wed'!!'i!daY battled .liD

ed 500 Communist soldiers only
40 miles east of Saigon in
Phuoc Tuy province and killed
97. It was the . first lime in
nearly four years a full bat·
t.alion of Communists had been
spotted in Phuoc Tuy.
The South Vietnamese suffered six dead and 13 wounded
in the fight,ing within sight of
Nul Dat base, which was occupied by Australian forces
until they were withdrawn
from Vletn/!IJl last year.

.tB
d
I
v
•
A
=k~~~!~~~;~~~;~~J . on .s sue ote
ug. I 5·

missile sites. A sortie is one
mission by one plane.
A Navy A7 Corsair from the
carrier USS Constellation was
shot down Wednesday about
100 miles above the DMZ but
the pilot parachuted over the
Tonkin Gulf and was rescued
by an a1r force HH53 "JoUy
Green Giant" helicopter as
U.S. planes strafed Communist
surface vessels trying to
capture him.
A delayed report issued
today said two crewmen of an
Air Force FIOS Thunderchier
were missing since May 11 1n
the crash of t.he~ aircraft 60
mUes southwest of Hanoi.
Eight American planes have
been reported lost in Hanoi
area raids on May 11·12 and 14
of the 16 crewmen Involved are
officially listed as missing In
action.
Spokesmen said the latest
raids around bong Hoi, 38
miles from the DMZ, destroyed
three bridges within three mils

IS

Voters of the Eastern Local
School District will go to the
polls in a special election on
Tuesday , Aug. 15, to decide the
fate of a 2.75 mill bond issue
· which, if passed, would proyide
funds for building additional
classrooms and furnishing
them.
The issue, which would
produce $250,000, is for a 24year period and would provide
lor construction of addilions
and improvements to the
existing high school, acquiring
furniture and equipment and
making school site improvements.
The issue has been discussed
many times at board of
education meetings. It has
been the hope of school officials
to build ar. addition onlll the
high school providing room for
seventh and eighth graders of
the enUre diStrict, thereby
relieving congestion in the
elementary schools . Plans also

provide for the construction of be involved in the special
additional fa cilities for band election are North Chesler ,
and vocal music students.
South Chesler, Portland, Long
Bottom, Olivedale, Reedsville,
Voting precincts which will Alfred, and Tuppers Plains.

Susie Soulsby
First Entry in
Queen Contest

The first announced entry In
the annual Big Bend Regatta
Weekend queen contest is Susie
Souisby, daughter ,of Mr. and
Mrs. James So!!lsby, Union
Ave., Pomeroy,.
Miss Soulsby will graduate
!his spring frofll Meigs High
SchflOl where she is pre~ldent
of the Girls Athletic Assn. and
a member of the association'•
bowling team.
She has been a cheerleader
for six years and was secretary
of her class during her
sophomore and junior years.
i=::::8:8!:::::?.?.~:;:;::-:;:::::::::::::::::::::=::::::::::::;::::::~;.:::::::;:~:;~-:;."?.~~!~!!Y.!:!!t..::::::::::::::::.)":;~:!;~:?.::!:~o!~ She was an al lerna te delegate
:·:·
?,! to Buckeye Girls Slate in her
~~
Her Ded~cation Recognized
W junior year and is a pep club
.·.&lt;
·
.... memb~:. She was a senior
~l
Monday evenlog Mr. and Mn. MMvlll Willoa were :~ homecoming queen attendant,
hosts to 1 diner at Metg1 Inn Ia PG811N)' willie Salem ·ill Labor, Da)' queen in Pomeroy,
:· Center teacben and IDvlted guests ~rea Mri. Gllllln.' ~ Meigs County's Queen of
· · Maj•uponberrellremelltafterll,.rtla,llleclulnolll. f;j Hearts this year, and was
FortbepaaU3yeanasfintlflllleteacberatlbeSalem ix second runner-up In the Meigs
~. Center Elementary School, abe bu been respouibie for
County 1972 Junior Miss
:·i con test.
: helping many boyund Clrll gel off to alOUd 11811.
:
Her co-worken pmented ber w'llllacold necklace and ::1· She has been a member of
§; eal'I'IDcsetlaa~elaiiGOofbermuyyeanohervlce.
:::: the Big Bend Minstrel
!!1
Those preseat besides lbe
ntea were Anna ::1 Association several years.
Flhobeth Tlll'ller, OUve Page, Mr. and Mn. Charles Me· :;~ Miss Souls,by Is a member of
Mana~, Mr. and Mn. ltim Neal .and Nellie Vale. Mn. :): the Pomeroy United Methndisl
Wilson 18 prtuclpal Ill lbe Salem Center Sebool.
;~~ Church.
~;
Girls - 1972 graduates of
~~~~(.W:~:-n~-::::~·;:-::"&lt;::?*:~::~:::::::::~.:::::::::=&lt;$'X::::::x'P.~~*::;:~-;w-»,:::~::::J: high schools in Athens, flallia

i

f.

I

bolt.-

Judges Gordon Gray and
Homer Abele of the Court of
Appea ls have affirmed that a
driver who makes a left turn
immediately in the face of
oncoming traffic is guilty of
willful and wanton misconduct.
. A Meigs County jury on Sept.
9, 1971, returned a $10,000
ve rdict in favor of Russell
Bailey as Administrator
aga inst Harry Glenn Brown , in
the wrongful death of Barbara
Jean Bailey . On May 26, 1969,
Brown, then 16 years of age,
tur ned left immediately before
the approaching auto driven by
Fomisl Bllrnell, its lights visi:
ble along the straight stretch of
highway for a quarter mile.
The youth
and his
passengers, Patti Sexton and
the deceased , Barbara Jean
Bailey, had attended com. mencemenl at Eastern High
School and intended to participate in a party at a
residence on County Road 36.

Miss Bailey had been
salutatori an of the Eastern
High School Class o!1969.
...
.
The court of appeals upheld
Judge John C. Bacon that it
was a matter for the jury to
decide under proper instructions. Judge Earl
Stephenson of Portsmouth
dissented in an opinion saying ·
that Judge Bacoh should have
direcll!d' a verdict for the
defendant.
Asked to comment, Judge
Bacon said!
"Naturally, the trial judge
prefers to ,, be upheld by
reviewing courts. I would add
this, thai the case graphically
portrays the 'tight-rope' the
trial judge must walk each
time he conducts a jury !rial.
"And I understand and
appreciate the agonizing the
jurors must experience as they
deliberate upon matters
submi Ited to them ."

Hanoi Bombed
(~)~Hanoi

SUSIE SOUL'IBY
and tyleigs Counties - are
invited to enter the competition
for the regatta queen tltle. This
year's queen· will be selected
by a panel of judges in contrast·
to last year's selection by
ballot. Girls must have at least
a "B" scholastic · average to
enter.
Mrs. Ronald Riffle, Pomeroy
Route 2, is heading the contest
on behalf of Ohio Ela Phi
Chapter of Bela Sigma Phi
Sorority. Girls wishing information on entering may
conlacl Mrs. Ritne at 992-5072.

SAIGON
Radio reported that ''waves of Ameri"can planes" today struck Hanoi, the .port of Thanh Hoa and Uie
big rail and road center of Bac Giang barely 50 miles from the
border of Chins.
The broadcast which claimed five American planes were shot .
down today followed reports by militarY spokesmen In Saigon
that U.S. Air Force jets knocked out six bridges around North
Vietnam's southernmost port city of Dong Hoi In earlier attacks
and turned the area into an inferno of exploding supplies and
ammunition.
American naval strength off VIetnam lncrea'sed steadily and a
u.s. Navy spokesman said plsnes from the carrier USS
Saratoga, which arrived recently, carried out their first strikes
today. The planes hit Communist poeitlons near beleaguered An
Loc, 60 miles north of Saigon, and In the Mekong Delta.
Hanoi Radio said the Americsn planes struck "densely
populated areas" of the three cities and that one American jet
was downed ovlll' Hanoi, one over Than Hoa which Is 75 miles
south of Hanoi, and three over Bac Giang, which Is 25 miles
northeast ·of Hanoi .
The main railroad supply line from China to Hanoi runs
through BacGiang, also known as Ha Bac, as doea a major highway. Another lesSer Une~ narrow gauge leadlrig from Hanoi
northwestward toward China- was' cut several times earlier.

..

::::~::::=:::::::::::::::::::!:::~:~?.:::=::~:!:!::::::--::::::~~:::::::;:

WORKERS LISTED
Olive Twp. workers in the
Meigs County Cancer Crusade
are, Co-Chairmen, Mrs. Teresa
Co)lins and Mrs. Elizabeth
Smith, with Doris Gibbs
Connie Reed, Audra Wyers:
Enuna Durst, Mary Allee Bise,
Marlene Putnam, Orva Jean
Holter, Marilyn Hannum, .
Phy IUs Larkins and Nancy .
:;:::::~f.?.::::~:::::=!:::::::::::::::::::::.-=:::::~..':".::::::::::: Coll(ns.
OUTLOOK
Ohio extended outlo.ok
Saturday thru Monday.
Mostly lair weather Is
indicated with warin days
and mtld nights for the
period Saturday tbrougb
Monday. Dally higb tem·
perature a the 80s and lows
at olgbt in the 50s.

In

WA8111NG~~Unl~:r~~.S · ~lsaton

to
Moscow mixt week will be bighllghled by fr-mg~, lengthy
talks with Kremlin leaders, a bit Ill ligiKaeeliig aiKI two ~­
state banquell. Nlsoo 'will be the ~ American chief
aecutlve to villi the ~t Union since Franklin D. Roosevelt
went to Y.U. ln .1941 to meet wltb Joseph Stalin and British
Prime Minlllllr wtnaton Dlurcblll.
Nllon, hoping lo 01"'1! 1 new era Ill negotlationa rather than
confronlaliaae, will-t 111'1th !be Soviet leaden at a time Wben
u. 8. • Rulliln relallolii are at a crltlcsl .polnt bJ Vietnam, wt
1UiJW In Europe", The White House Wectnaday unveiled a .
flllltchy ~tqnry of N!Joo'a tw"""ilt trip 1o Austria, the Soviet
~ 1r1n and Poland Prllidlll~ PriM Secretary Ronald L.
, Zlest•'uld the found trip, liart!na Saturday nmmlng, will carer
1• 010 air llilles with 1 total flying time of 34 hours and 25
"'
·

toulln•

Chances Less· .than 50~50 to

SILVER SPRING, Md .
(UPI) - Doctors now give
George Corley Wallace "less
lhsn a ~ chance" to walk
· again. &amp;lrgeons 'Aid Wednelday they would operate a ·
eeeonci time on the Alabama
IO¥miDr in the next week or 10
days to remove a . .38 caliber
buUet lodged In his sp~
m!JIItea.
column. I
'
"Whether be will be able to
. WASHINGTON - A 88NATI: .RIDJCL\BY lllbccmnlttee walk a1aln . ltf optn to
hu aaned Ill prbldple to !'!PO"" lq4!alled lllillatilll ban- quealion, uid Dr. Ja.(Ccillui.id
IJ)
.
Garber Galbraith of the

.

r. .....

•

T.Jnlveralty · of Alabama
Medlcal School.
Galbraith reported Clll Walla·
ce's lllbt to
frcm
seven bullet wounds lnflil:led
by a would-be a•la••n Monday
at I Laurel, Md., lhopplllg
center. 'l'he ~atlc· presidelltlal candidate remained
~ frtm the hipl Clown.
Glllnlth,, who II helping
treat Wallace at
Craai
IWIIlllll, uld WaUaee 1r11
of bla c:andltlllll.
''He limply Aid be 1r11

recover

Rolf

\

golnl! to fight It and he

would
make it," Galbraith 1181d.
· The doctor said Wallace
could apect lo recover from
hiS fOil' CWUJhol wounds within
· sill weeki 'barring ·unforeseen
, ·comp)lcaU.... But be sald It
wu .toO early to determine
wh,tber the bullet which
remtlned In the governor's
boCb' bad severed the spinal
coiUDIII.
.
Wallace, 62, was ~
WedDesday by reading
ll!l....,.plll' accounts of his

impressive victories in the headline read.
·Maryland· and Michigan
Wallace's press secretary,
Jl'bnaries. Wallace and biB Billy Joe t;:amp, said that "our
wife Comella posed briefly for plans are 1o cootinue" with the
his personal photographer. _\ Wallace presidential campaign'
I
'
picture ·' taken
at the ' photo despite the candidate's
&amp;e~~lon showed Mrs. Wallace hospitalization. Camp sald 1
leanir)g over her husbend's howev~r, that no decision haa ·
shoulder as he lay rai~ 'In been made whether to enbed, holding a l'Opy of the courage a write-in.campaigi\ In
Baltimore SUn with his unin- the . California prlmar~
jured left ann.
scheduled June 6.
"Wallace wins In Marrland;
Security wu tightened at the
Michigan; hospital takes him . Baltimore County JaU in
off the critical list," the TOWIOn, Md., Wednesday after

threats were received against
the life of Wallace's accused
assallant, Arthur H. Bremer, •
21, Milwaukee . .
Bre.lier, arrested at the
scene of the lbooting; was
guarded by FBI agentS and . 1
U.S. marshalil. He was visited
Wednesday by his lather,
William Bremer, ·68, a
Milwaukee truck driver, and a
brother, Roger, · 18. The
relatives .woold not talk with
neWJ~~~en.

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