<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="2486" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/2486?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T01:02:38+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="12389">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/6206fde18ef2865da9b0179f3f81fda5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>047133bf1771ddebf699c3b73f711c41</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="8925">
                  <text>'

.

.

.'

~,

HOSPITAL
NEWS
Hoizer\ Medical Center, First

lJ-~Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0, April 13, 1971

Suspicion Dogs the President
useful.
One of the "grey areas" involved the matter of just what
colistltutes "American involvement" in Vietnam whim the
President says ''is
·to an end. '' His statement that "you
should bol&lt;l me accountable if I faU," implies that ihe end of
"involvement" wilfcome by November, 19'12.
However, this is pronlised within the context of a di3cussion
which apparently covers only ground forces since nothing is said .
in the speech about ending U. S. air sUpport.
Nimn's flat statement that results of the laotian operation
made it possible for him to say that "Vietnamizatlon ·has succeeded" obviously applies. only to ground forces, since aU the air
SllpJ)«t in the laotian invasion was supplied by. the United
States.
Pentagon and State Department of!leisis have said it will be
necessary for U.S. war planes based on Guam, in ThaUand and
on carriers in the South China Sea to continue their support of
Saigon's troops for some time after American ground forces
ha'le withdrawn.
If this is the case,.ana it appears .to be, the President's new
consultant might suggest the wisdom of preparing the American
public and Congress on this point. Otherwise, the backlash could
be politically devastating when the full plan is revealed.
'

By STEWART HENSLEY
WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Nixon, t.aving publicly
.staked his political Ufe on ending ':American involvement" in
the Vietnam War, must wonder why there continues to be so
much criticism of his· policy and suspicion regarding his in·
tenlions.
He has reduced U.S. ground forces in Vietnam from 545,000
to 284,000 in less than two years and pledged to bring out another

100,000 by Dec. 1. Why then, he must wonder, do so many in
Congress and elsewhere criticize the pace of the disengagement
and doubt his promise to complete it?
Answering suet. questions is supposed to be one of the func·
' tions of the new "consultant" the President is hiring, John Scali
of the American Broadcasting Co. An able and aggressive and
sometimes abrasive diplomatic correspondent, Scali would
appear to be well qualified to give the President a more candid
assessment than that provided by advisors with .a vested in·
terest in one aspect or another of the current strategy.
Arereading of the President's April 7 television report lo ihe
nation suggests some points on whim clarification might be

Answer to Garden Club Puzzle of Monday

Middleport has two students it now has an enrollment of 434 acre site for the schooL It was
done, Dr. Nease recalls, in just
- Joe Stephenson and Pete men and women.
"The spacious campus one week.
Walburn - among the 434 men
consists
of two dormitories, two
.,
"Now, the president noted,
an d women attending the
':,, ~
cl~ssroom
buildings,
&amp;
multithe
college Is going through its
relatively new Nazarene
..,
purpose building, a campus stage of infancy, coming to
College at Mt. Vernon, Ohio.
"•..
center
building, a former barn adolescence and reaching for
A Mansfield , Ohio writer
telling of the new college remodeled into a recreation young adulthood, all with the
,,. l
center, and a tree-surrounded aid of the Nazarene Church, the
writes:
•.'
farm
house turned into a businessmen and citizens of Mt.
t ..'
"The first i.\llpression of Mt.
'
.. ,, ,.
Vernon College is a delight. pleasant administration Vernon.
'
'.. ~'
"Currently, the two year
~·.
.._,.-,..-;:-..
Broad, green lawns sweep building. The majority of the
buildings
.
are
done
in
college
is seeking accreditation
downhill and end at a neat
f.
from the North Central
cluster of clean, red brick, Williamsburg Colonial style.
·
"President
Stephen
W.
Nease
Association of Colleges and DAYLIGHT SAVING
colonial buildings, framed by
the blue haze of the low hills notes that if the Nazarene Secondary Schools. So far, TIME begins at 2 a.m.,
Tells Her
Church were the mother of this Nazarene College &lt;has been Sunday, April 25. Turn
behind them.
"Second impressions are just institution, Mt. Vernon 's elevated to the point of being a cloc:ks ahead one hour.
as good, if not as spectacular. citizens made excellent mid· recognized ca~ didate for ac"Since its doors first op&lt;!ned wives. Shortly after the college creditation. In May, a self study
in October, 1968, the small was chartered in 1966, the city will be presented to the
of Mt~ Vernon raised $211,000 by association for its review. If, in
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D. p r o b i e m 17 years ago has no function during inter- denominational college has subscription to purchase the 208
a year, the review is accepted,
been growing to the point where
Dear Dr. Lamb - Some and suffered for three years course.
accredi ta lion will follow .
months ago, I read in a with a daughter (also two
Tonight, April13
medical column a question years old at the time) who C'L
Mrs. Georgia Thoma. They Miller Friday evening.
" The sc hool is also an
from a mother about her two- was subject to "temper tan· \..dle8
celebrated her birthday and
Becky Cruthers spent last associate member of the Ohio
ON A CLEAR
year-old son who was having trums," also coming on sud· Attendance at Nazarene Kelly's birthday.
week with Mrs. Bess Larkins of College Association and soon
DAY YOU CAN
temper tantrums. She said denly while playing quietly . Church School April 4 was 91. Henry Smith of Athens spent Reedsville' and helped her with hopes to be a full member.
SEE FOREVER ·
he would be playing quietly
Both of us, also my hus"In building plans ~ the
ITechnlcolorl
several days with Mrs. , her house cleaning.
. president hopes to see a new
and then suddenll start to band and son, were emotion- Offering was $57.48.
Bar~ra Streisand
kick and scream. . hope you ally shaken by these out- Mrs. Viola Moon, Mrs. Mabel Richard Barton and famtly.
Mrs. Dons Marks has been til dormitory and a chapel added
Yv&amp;sMontand
' will' publish my letter since bursts which we misinter- VanMeter, local, Mrs. Stella Mrs. Barton returned to Athens with flu .
to the campus by the end of 1972.
I G)
For Rent
I think you can help any preted as tantrums when, in Adkins, Lickskillet, called on with him and visited Mrs. Smith
Sue
Chafin
and
children
of
Cartoons:
parents who have had this reality, she' had epilepsy. Freda Miller and Lenore who is a hospital patient there. Columbus spent a weekend here Students attend the sch?ol from 5 ROOMS. bath, unfurnished
Where Are You
apartment with basement, 751
kind of problem.
Fortunately, a pediatrician Betzing Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Sunday callers were Frank with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hoff. Ohto, West Vtrgm.ta an,d
Happy Days
Brownell Ave., Middleport.
You see, I have had this recommended an electroen- Adkins took supper with them Clark and wife , of Hemlock man and the Chafins at Western Kentucky . This years
Phone 992-3045.
SHOW 5TART57 P.M.
experience myself. To be on cephalogram !brain wave
4-13-3tc
enrollment is estimated to be 27
G
dM
d M Ai h Pomeroy.
the safe side, any mother test) and we were able to and stayed for church.
rove an r. an rs. P a
per cent higher than last year's.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
with this problem should give her proper treatment Mr. and Mrs. Leo King of Smith of Reedsville .
Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Luther "Someday, the liberal arts Lost
Aprll14-15
have her son checked by a and start working on repair· Columbus, Earl Thoma and Mr. and Mrs. Roy Betzing and spen~ the weekend with her school will become a four year MALE BEAGLE. while, black
and tan. near Flora on Rt. 681.
NOT OPEN
neurologist. I had this same ing our shaken and damaged family of Pomeroy, Guy Thoma Mr. and Mrs. Rtch Jones of parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chafin college."
Phone 992·6552. Reward.
personalities.
and family of Flatwoods Road, Pomeroy called on the fqrmer's and attended Sunday School and
4-JJ.Jtc
The guilt' complexes I·had took dinner with their mother, sisters, Letha Wood and Freda church.
for not realizing my daughter's problem took me years
..
to overcome. Epilepsy isn't
always a fit, where one falls
to the ground jerkin~ violently. Many people (mcluding
me) had felt this was the
only form of epilepsy. There
are many, including temper
tantrums.
The outlook is fine . She
took medicine which con·
trolled her outbursts 100 per
cent. She has been off drugs
~ now for six years and is. an
attractive 19-year-old university student.
Had we not sought help
finally, my marriage would
have ended, my daughter
and I would have been emotionally crippled and my son
scarred from the continual
outbursts and scenes we
went through, all the time
thinking we had a ''spoiled" ,
little.girl on our hands. If a · ·
child seems to be playing
quietly and then suddenly
goes into kiclring and
screaming spells for no apparent reason, then I sincerely recommend that outside help be contacted before
more damage is done.
Dear Reader - Thank you
• •
for an excellent letter and
your advice .is right on target. I agree wholeheartedly
that any child with these
symptoms should be 'seen by
a doctor and specifically the
child should be examined for
the•question of epilepsy ~ It is
true that some children have
Check our auto loan rates for yourself
temper tantrums and that is .
all they are, but the types of ·
BENCH NO. 39
TABLE NO, 1107
CHAIR NO. 350
ARM CHAIR NO. I 02
and you'll see why it pays'to have that
tpisodes that you described
Diameter of 'top 21", Height
Seal 37'12" Long,. Height
Soot 16" long, Heighl overofl
Seot 22'/z" lang , Height
are often indicative of ePi·
lepsy and the problem deoveroll 28", Height to seal
27", Height to seal 141/z", overall 26 'lz ", Height Ia seal 14", Cast Iron, 31 'lz lbs.
new car financed through us. Monthly
serves to be · investigated. I
14'!2", Cast iran, 75 lb•
Cost Iron, 36 lbs.
14'!2", Cast Iron, 47 lbs.
am sure your letter will be
helpful to a number of
.payments are arranged to suit your
parents.
,
Dear Dr. L.amb ~ If ·a
, woman has a complete bys·terectomy can she have
intercourse any more• ·
HHfN YOU VISIT P/\I&lt;K HHf
The American game of
baseball is said to have
been originated by Abner
Doubleday at Cooperstown,
N.Y., in 1839. The World
Almanac notes that in 1845
Alexander Cartwright
·made a set of baseball
rules having much in com·
mon with today's game.
Baseball has attracted
many fans in postwar Japan.

'

I '

DR. LAWRENCE

Reader

:.)

,. ' ,

'

Tantrums May' Be Epilepsy

MEIGS THEATRt

t

E
t
er aS

GET

1111!11101

Elberfelds In Pomeroy Spring Furnitpre Sale

IS ...

Lawn and ,Patio Furniture.,.....____.

. 'FINANCED THE

SMART BANK WAY!

Prompt Delivery To YoW' Home· Sensible Credit

·

ELBERFEL·DS ·IN POMEROY

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
.
, Member r:I!Cier1l
Cor!'•·••ion
. Depotif· l"surance
.
.

.A Dear
ReaderOf course. ·
complete
hysterectomy
will remove the· uterus
(womb) and sometimes lbe
outlet to it, called the cervix.
This .should not interfere
with any of the other female
organs. Specifically, It !loes
not involve any of the female
anatomy normally Involved
in intercourse. The function .
act
as auterus,
baby literally,
basket foristhe
of the
to ,
developmen~ of 'II fetus, and

·
• Stree t ·m
m
· ode Is-Push styles, Self Propelled and
Elberfelds Warehouse on Mechamc
Pomeroy
Riders ..
1
·
d
.
H
d
· t er s For Used TVs
- Headquarters for. Lino eums an
ar
' · Hea dquar
Surface Floor Coverings_,.. Armstroligs and
And this weekend- there's a nice selection
Congoleums~ 2 yd. wide _ 3 yard wide and 4 .
of Black _ White and Color TYs. Bargains
whl' le they last.
.
·
'
yard , wide.
-Headquarters for your· favorite make of
ViSit Elberfelds Warehouse on MechaniC . 1
• b
I
d
1
Street. s1·g select1'on. '. sensible credit.
··
~~.!:::L:a:w:n:Mo::w:e:rs::::m:o:t:h:2:;cy:c:.:e:a:n;:c4::c:yc:
.; e : : ; : : : : ; : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : ; : : : . ; ; J

•

.. ',

•

' .'· i

•

Weather
Clea1: and cold tonight witb, '
lows in the upper 20s and low·,
'
30s. Mostly sunny llnd cOOl;.
Thursday. Highs in Ute 4US north,
and low to mid 50S south.
._:

Devot~d To The lntereau Of The Meigs~Mawn Area
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY. APRIL 14, 1971

.,.·.. .

PHONE 992-2156

r

TEN CENlS
. ·'
'

For Rutland HS by Industry
A request for the use of the former Rutland High
School building by a local firm that wants to expand
will be given further consideration.
Meeting in regular · session Tuesday night, the
Meigs Local School District Board of Education heard
two letters read from officers of Decor - a firm
engaged in making artificial flowers - requesting the
use of the fonner Rutland High School as ·a plant.
Decor presently is . located in the former Meigs
Wholesale ffidg., North Second Ave., Middleport.
The letters stated the company presently employs
from eight to 11 persons; will employ an estimated 40
people in two years, and possibly as high as 400 in five
years. The firm would like to relocate liS plant within
90 days and would want the use of the former high
school, rent free, the .next 12 months. The company
then would build a plant and possibly would go into the
manufacture of additional items. According to the
letters, the firm groeaed $62,000 last year and has ll
projected income of $250,000 for 1972. Willie Cundiff is
plant manager.
Board President Frank W. Porter said he would
"do anything to promote industry coming into Meigs

County;" He cited the economic value of only a few
workers to the county.
· However, due to the coal industrial development
certain in the western section of Meigs County, an
increase is expected in students of the Meigs Local
District. It would be ,difficult to give the use of the
building to the business firm for 12 months when it is
not known when additional buildings will he' needed to
house the expected new students.
"A great wave of students could be in the county
next fall and then it might be a year later," Porter
said.
The ''rent free" request also came up for
discussion because of the alterations which might be
necessary to the Rutland building by the commercial
operations·and the money which might be required to
re-convert the building into a satisfactory facility for
classes.
It is also known that the heating plant at the
Rutland building would require thousands of dollars
to correct. Insurance factors, maintenance during the
year's occupancy by the company and other matters

' ase

SAIGON (UPI)-Two battalions of South Vietnamese
infantrymen fought their way
into Fire Support Base 6 today
to Uft a two-week North
Vietnamese siege of the hilltop
outpost near the Laotian and
Cambodian borders. Heavy
fighting raged around the
·approaches to the base.
Field reports said the 1,200
South Vietnamese who broke
through to Base 6 ' met Ught
resistsnce but that another
1·-··-·- --~·bat·taUon '~1!.!8. to.. clea~ the

approaches fought a 16-hour
battle Tuesday night and today.
They killed 96 North Vietnamese and captured a large
quantity of weapons, the
reportll said.
The ARVN troops reported
four dead, 37 wounded and six
missing in the battle.
Three Copters Downed
The base had been under
siege since April 1 when South
Vietnamese units recaptured it
from North Vietnamese troops

B
1 tews ••• zn
rze1 s :

r---~-----------------------,
I
1\T
0
0
~+.
l
1

I

.
By Uulted Press International

would all have to be taken into Consideration.
George Hargraves, superintendent of the district,
and Larry Morrison, assistant superintendent, were
asked to meet with representatives of Decor and learn
more of the expectations and plans of the company
insofar as the Rutland building is concerned.
NEW TEACHERS
The board appointed three new teachers for the
1971-72 school year including Miss Judy King, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil King of Kingsbury in Meigs
County ; Mrs. Jennifer Blakeslee Butcher, daughter of ·
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee of Pomeroy, and Linda
Lear of Gallipolis.
Given three year administrative contra'cts were
principals, Russell Moore,Meigs Junior High School;
Robert Morris, Pomeroy, Middleport and Bradbury;
James Vennari, Rutland, and Roberta Wilson, Salem
Center.
Fenton Taylor was appointed reserve football
coach and John Bentley was named to teach two earth
science classes at the high school for Mrs . Fenton
(Continued on page 10)

escue

I

LAMS

Experience

•

'

Bo.a rd Will Consider Request

•

Two Middleport Men at Mt. Vernon

'.'

VOL. X' NO. 255

Discharges
Alfred D. Abbott, Mrs. Anita
J. Bell, William H. Crouse,
Charles D. Kuhn, Mrs. Richard
H. Lubina and daughter,
Russell D. Morgan, Mrs.
Grover' M. Neville, Mrs.
Richard G. Sibold, Mrs. He~ber
W. VanFossan and daughter,
Mrs. Marvin Wickline, Pamela
M. Woolsey, Mr. Walter Hursey, Andy Leport, Mrs. William
E. Christopher, Garry L.
Chesser, Mrs. lloyd L. Myers,
Mrs. James 0. Norton and
,daughter, and Sherman R.
Parsons.

WORLD ALMANAC
FACTS

' ,j

Paul Bultyan, mythical giant
lumberman, has been the
kubject of poems by Robert
Frost, Carl Sandburg and
Richard Wilbur, an operetta by
W. H. ,\uden and Benjamin
Britten, and a ballet suite by
· William Bergsma. . .
.

a son.

JOE STEPHENSON, CENTER, Middleport, is shojVIl on campus at the Mt. Vernon
Nazarene College. Joe, a psychology major, was one of five students chosen as subjects of a
feabJre sbJdy written about the new college in Mt. Vernon.

'·{,

. Now .You Know

Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-1 and 7-3 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only . on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births
Mr. and Mrs. Timothy D.
· Manion, Jackson, a s~n; Mr.
and Mrs. William J. Bond, Oak
Hili, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Johnnie A. Tucker; Grimms
Landing, a son; and Mr. and.
Mrs. Carl W. Stover, Thurman,

coming

Washington Window

.

I

Big Winds in Texas
·· LUBBOCK, TEX. WINNIE REDIN, 76, walked outside to get
her morning newspapers and the 45-mlle per hour winds blew her
off the front porch. She fractured ber hlp. The winds, whim
reached 60 miles per hour by noon Tuesday, caved in a corner of
the Heath Furniture Co. warehouse. The warehouse was rebuilt in
January after being destroyed May 11 by a tornado.
In Amarillo, the winds filled the air with dust so thick
pedestrians could not see across .the street. Blinded fDOtorists on
\he city's interstate highway plowed into earn other, causing a 21·
car accident. The blowing dual and sand jammed the traffic lights
in Lubbock.

Three Killed in Fire

who had seized it the day
before. The outpost, located 12
miles from both laos and
Cambodia, serves as a barrier
to North Vietnamese designs on
such central highlands population centers as Dak To.
At the same time, military
spokesmen reported the loss of
three American helicopters in
which at least five U.S. Gls
were killed. South Vieinamese
spokesmen said Viet Cong
terrorists attacked a train
between !lue and Da Nang,
killing 20 persons and ·injuring
23 others.
A 1,500-man brigade of
paratroopers along with 4,500
infantry reinforcements were
brought in by helicopter Tuesday to try to relieve the siege
of Fire Base 6.
Eyewitness Reports
UPI photographer David Kennerly reported that infantrymen

north of Fire Base 6 in the
central highlands told of being
attacked by North Vietnamese
troops using flame throwers.
UP! correspondent Stewart
Ke1lerman said dozens of South
Vietnamese helicopters ·carrying wounded arrived at intervals at Dak To and Tan Canh,
located eight and 10 miles
respectively northeast of Fire
Base 6.
U.S. Army Brig. Gen. George
Wear, chief U.S . adviser to
Maj . Gen. N.GO Dzu, conunander of the South .Vietnamese
military region which Includes
F1re Base 6, told Kellerman :
"I think the North Vietnamese are more serious this
year about winning here than
they have been in the past."
Wear said the North Vietnamese hoped to set back the U.S.
timetable for turning the war
over to the Saigon government.

~·• Escapes

A Pomeroy man escaped
injury Wednesday at 2:30 a. m.
when his auto struck a utility
pole on East Main St. and went
over the riverbank. ·
Pomeroy police said the
westbound car was driven by
Dan E. Follrod, Pomeroy.
Follrod was not injured but
damages to the car were heavy .
He has been cited to appear in
the court of Mayor Charles
Legar on a reckless operation
charge.
At 12:25 Tuesday afterl)oon
Pomeroy police took Steve Van
Meter of Pomeroy to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was U:eated for a lacerated
right elbow and abrasions
following a motorcycle accident
on West Main St.
Meanwhile, firemen were
called to Columbia Twp. at 3:30
p. m. Tuesday to extinguish a
brush f.ire

Thompson Frmd over $7,000
The George Thompson
Kidney Fund went over the
$7,000 f1gure Monday night,
Mrs. Robert Lewis, fund drive
chairman, reports.

CINCINNATI -A MAN AND WIFE and their five-year-old
son wete killed and six other persons injured in a fire that broke
Adding considerably to the
out early today in an apartment building. The victims were
identified as Paul Watkins, 'tl, his wife, Joyce, 30, and son, Paul fund were contributions by
friends of the late Emmet
Jr.
,
Shuler who, in accordance with
The cause of the fire, whim was just a few blocks outside the the wishes of the family,
downtown area, was not immediately determined but firemen presented donations to the
said they suspect arson. "You don't have a fire like this at 13th kidney fund in lieu of Dowers at
and Vine anY time of the day or night without it being discovered . the time of Mr. Shuler's death.
(Continued on page 16)

Giving to the fund in memory
ofMr.ShulerwereMr.and Mrs.
Gene Harris, Mr. and Mrs. John
T. Blake, Mr. arid Mrs. Paul
easel, Mr. and Mrs. Carl E.
Brannon, Mary and Ray Bir·
chfield, the Dick Karr, Sr.,
Family, Lucille B. Faris, Mr.
and Mrs. Glenn Rupe, Mr. and
Mrs. Dale Mulford, Mr . and
Mrs. WendeD Roush, Mr. and
Mrs. William Price, Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Scott, Mr. and Mrs.
Lester Roush, Mr. and Mrs .' C.
M. Casto, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur

Casco, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Ralph, "Mr. and Mrs. Marion
Darnell, Mr. and Mrs. Ronial
Jividen, Mr. and Mrs. Fred
Sisson, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Rupe,
Miss Yera Thomas, Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Tate, Ruth
Hawkins, Mary Hughes,
Richard Rawlings, Mrs. Gail
Miller, June Kloes, Nancy
Beaver, Betty Rife, Shoppers
Bonanza, Roger and Phyllis
Spencer, Betty Spencer, Ruth
and Jim Farmer, Donald Karr,
(Continued on page 12)

BADLY DAMAGED is the Pomeroy Churdl of Christ on Pomeroy's West Main Street as
the result of a fire early Monday morning. The Rev. Hoyt Allen stands close to the area where
the electric organ once stood. Damages are expected to run into the thousands of dollars. The
building was insured it was reported. The fire Is believed to have started from a short in the
wiring in the electric organ.

Ashley Resigns·

NEW DELHI (UP!) -The
East Pakistan rebel govern·
ment today named a chief for
Its "Uberation army" and
designated commanders for
the " liberated areas" in
apparent preparation for
protractec! guerrilla warfare
against the Pakistsnl army.
Rebel Premier Tadjuddln
Ahmed, in a broadcast on
Free Bengal Radio, named
"Colonel Osmanlz" as
commander-in-chief of the
Mukll FaU2 (Uberation ar·
my).

Estimate
Approved

Robert G. Ashley, teacher school accounts submitted by
and athletic director at Marilyn Powell.
Southern High School, resigned In other business the board
effective at the end of the approved · a trip to Ohio
present school year, ~alph University for all college bound
Sayre, superintendent reported, students on April 26 from 9:·30
when the Southern Local Board a.m. to 2:30 p.m. The orlen·
met Tuesday night.
ta lion program will help
Ashley resigned as head students to utllize ·facillUes In a
foo.tball coach at the end of the library.
football season.
· Mrs. Lee Lee was granted
Phyllis Greer, guidance permission to lake a group of
counselor and Business Office students to Columbus on Apr\t
Education instructor, also 24 to see "The Lettermen." dn
resigned effective at the end of , May 1, winners in the stan·
the present term.
dardized lesta jt 8olllhtni l'IJI
Teachers hired were Mr•. , attend 'UIIID ·Unlvtrllty lo
Helen Kinder and Mrs. Daisy particlpale In a program for
Cook. Mrs. Letha Ord was hired further testing. '
for the 1971-72 year at an earlier Permlsaion was granted the
meeting, Sayre disclosed.
Alumni Assn. to use the high
The board approved a six school building on May 29.
weeks summer remedial Attending were Sayre,
reading program for grades one Charles Pyles, president;
through three under Title I Clarence lawrence, Denny HiU,
which has been approved by the Gene Yost, and David Nease,
State Department of Education. board members; Sharon Pyles,,
Title III was approv~d. which acting secretary, and Mrs·.
will up~te the language Arts Charles Norris, acting clerk in
department.
the absence of her husband, whd
The board approved the all is in the hospital.

The Meigs County commissioners Tuesday approved
estimates submitted by Meigs
County engineer Theodor '
Beegle for asphalt emulsion and
a stock pile of bituminous cold
mix at a total cost of $48,448.
1
The stock pile estimate ls for
preparation of 4,000 tons of
bituminous cold mix for use
during 1971 for repair of county
roads at a cost of $23,696. The
estim'llte for asphalt emulsion
for county road for dust control
totaled $24,752.
In other business the commission
approved
the Teachers were employed and football coaching position.
engineering contract for three teacher resignations were Representatives from the
reconstruction of county road 75 . accepted Tuesday night when district's Teachers Assn. and
from SR 7 to Pomeroy.
the Eastern Local School from the district's chapter :or
Adele Cullums was granted District board of education met. the Ohio Association of Pubiic
permission to attend the· Given one year contracts School employes were pres~nt
southeastern Ohio Directors were Barbara Kitson, Eleanor to request that the board p~y·
Assn. meeting in Columbus Knight and Alice Phillips, while half of their hospitalization
today.
two year teaching contracts insurance costll. The matter will
Attending were Charles R. went to Donna Chadwell, larry be given further study.
Karr, Bob Clark and Warden Heines, Michael Mo~gan, The board declined par,
Ours, commissioners, and William Phillips, Frank ticipation in a program to use a
Martha Chambers, clerk.
Wooters, Carolyn Franz, Diane driver education simulator, a.
McClure, Carolyn Smith and piece of equipment which
Doris Well.
similates drivjng conditions fo~
Robert Sanders was awarded 16 students simultaneously.
a three year contract with five Expenses and scheduling of the
year contracts going 'to Janice equip.ment led to the board's
Ril(:hie and·Augusta Barnhart. decision against the program. IL
Awarded continuing contracts was also the consensus that the
were Nellie Parker, Pauline present driver education·
Myers, John lambert, Betty program is meeting the needs oi
Roush, lavinia Brannan and students.
•
Goldie Story.
Representatives of t~
Teacher resignation~ ac- Chester PTA were on hand ,Co
cepted included those of Gerald discuss needed sidewalk ini,
Rupe; Jane Bourne,'and Violet provements at the Chestet
Mlllhone.
school. No action was taken, b~ .
Bob Ord was named high the sidewalks will be repair~ •
school principal for two more ~uring · the sununer montbo:
years and athletic personnel Exact steps to be ·followed will,
lll\med on a one year basis were be outlined at the May meetina.
Ord as athletic director, Carl Permission was granted fQi .
Dodrill, junior high school use of the Chester building as
football coach; larry Heines, vacation Bible school locatiob
baseball and freshman for one week in June. Insuranl:!!,
basketball coach ; Michael on buildings was discussed but
Morgan, junior high basketball no action was taken since
coach, and William Phillips, premium figures are nol ·'
head basketball and track available from the compan,..
coach. The board is accepting Two parenl.i interested In ~
applications for the head , (Continued on page 16) '

Teachers Hired

Stores Have Perrin's Look Who's Killing God
BY BOB HOEFLICH
Oneresident - theRev. W. H.
So you've always wanted to Perrin, pastor of the Trinity
write a book? Well, who hasn't? Church in Pomeroy - found the
However, times marches on magic formula, however, and
and most of us never seem to · today his book, Look Who's
get the time or ideas, or possess Killing God was placed on sale
the intellect, drive and other . in stores of the area.
talents necessary to produce the The re~ult of six months of
finished . product - that book writing, the 160-page book, the
which is in each of us.
Pomeroy ,pastor states. was

Racine Driver Otarged·
A Racine man was cited to
Syracuse Mayor Herman ·
London's Court on charges. of
unsafe Qperation following a
single car accident Tuesday a,t
6.:50 p. m. in the village of
Syracuse Milton Varion,
marshall, 'reported.
.
Niles M. Young, 20, Racine,.

was traveling east on SR 124
when he lost control of his car as
he passed another ve~i~le. gojng
in·the same direction. Young's
car went off the highway on
the left and struck a fence
owned by Richard Weaver.
There were no injuries an~
light damage to the vehicle.

Veterans Memorial l;lospltal
TWO ASK DIVORCES ,
ADMITTED - Steve Eblin, Two suits for divorce have
·Pomeroy; John E. Blake, been filed in Meigs County
Pomeroy; Kenneth Frazier, Conimon Plea~ Court, each ·
Middleport; Winnie McKenzie, charging gross neglect of duty
Marietts; George Lpgan, and extreme cruelty. Roy".T.
Hemlock Grove.
'Grueser, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, filed
DISCHARGED - Wilda against Geraldine Grueser,
Brogan, Elmer . Norvell, Pome~oy, Rt. ·3, and Jackie K,
Z~elejla Smith, George·:raylor, Ginther, Chester, filed against
Eunice Sprague.
. Raymond K. Ginther, Chester .

.

.

written in part as explanation
and overall as a· protest to
blasphemies being perpetrated
by those of the clergy and laity
who are making the nation's
sanctuaries np longer places of
worship, but gathering houses
for those Intent upon secQlar,
social activism .
"I just had to write the book,"
the Rev. Mr. Perrin said. He
points to files in his office full of
mod and "rank" literature
being distributed by some
church or;ganizations today to
young people.
"Getting the book published
was an experience in itself," the
·Pomeroy pastor reportll.
One of the larger ·Bible
publishing houses in the cAuntry
held the manuscript for six
weeks while its board of
directors
debated ' Its
publication . Eventually, •the
company
returned , the
manuscript with a statement to
the effect that it was in busineea
to ·print and sell copies of the
Holy Bible but did riot wish to
commit itself to stating whether
or not it believed what the Bible
said. •
"Another experience along
this line might have been
(Continued on Page 6)

i.

...

r

a

Four Defendants Pay .Court Fines .

IJNDA HUBBARD, left, and Phyllis Joachim pt'epare a display .of "Look Who's Killing
God" which went on sale at the Middleport Book Store and other area business houses luday.
The book is the work of the Rev. W.H: Perrin, pastor of the Trinity Cl\urch in Pomeroy. ·
~

-

-

· Four defendants were fined
and a fiflh forfeiled bond in the
court of Middleport Mayor C. 0.
Fisher Tue'liay night.
Fined were Drewy M. Gore.
33, Rutland, nnd Charles W.
Boyles, 33, Middleport, $100 and
· ·costs and three t\ays in jail each
on conviction of drivin~ while
intoidealed; · Thurnwn 1:.

Yarbrough, .25, Barberton, $10
and costs, following anothtr '
vehicle 100 closely, and Haroill.
Sammy LitUe, :IS, Middleport,
$iO and costs, inioxlcation. .;
.

~· orfeiting

his $311 bond PDIIetj
on an intoxication charge • ••
Glenver Bn~gess, 57, i.etan•
~·aus.

.~:·
••

�••

r
2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April14,1971

r------------------------------------------

"So, Speak Up!"

1

BY JACK O'BRIAN
COLLEGE FEES ARE
MO~N'FORMUH~AD

Prudent or Not
But Trust Erodes
By DON OAKLEY

NEW YORK - Israel's cabinet nixed
COI,DlTlercials on TV - whtch should be a great
tour1st attraction .. Best actmg in town was at
the Frtars Club salute to Alan King: King's and
Friar Dean Buddy Howe 's fabrrcated friendly
hellos .... Muhammad Ail's getting $3,500 and up
for his college harangues
Hemy Youngman
polished his act for 50 years before he felt tl good
enough to play Alabama for !he ftrst time· He's
at the Hotel Tutwiler down there-all m Btr·
mingham .... Long Island U is reported due for a
$50 million Rockefeller grant for a med school ....
Pearl Batley's second book, "Talkin' to MyseH"
(for Harcourt Brace), ts due m Oct .... Hundreds
of local ordinances ban gals tn swimsmt-iength
shorts and btkuus; N.Y. City's cancellmg Its old
law to make the streets safe for hot pants about
!he tune you read this . Cover boy you don't see
on many magazmes any more, Uncle Sam, IS on
!he first Liberty mag reVIval.
Age of Vulgartty· !heX-rated porno-fl1ck at
the Penthouse Theater on Bdwy ts "Grunm's
Fairy Tales for Adults;" make tbat Grim
Erstwhile society boy Phrltp van Ftensselaer
says he's no longer a socrety boy because there's
no more society. He first switched h1s appellalion to novelist and JUSt turned up at du Mid1
as a piaywnght. He's off to Key West to show his
first stage try tohts frrend and master Tennessee
Willtams . Who could use a htt hunself .
Edward Albee, so austerely aloof when he had
hits, ts showing up for local mternews now that
his "All Over" drama seems almost titularly
prophetic ... Aclor George Hamilton's antrque •
BARBS
dealer • brother Bill bought s1lent star Mae
By PHIL PASTORET
Murray's trunks (that's luggage, nofswunming)
and found one packed w11h btrd of paradise
Surest way to gam fealhers. No ecological wrorms m Mae's dtstant
pnde m your home tow11 day
ts to move away from It
Eastside pubs With cable TV (which carnes
'
!he Knicks' games) grumble about sports fans
spend half as much as guys and gals who
A fl y· by·mg ht IS an econ- Don't
.
. eli
omy arr coach traveler
JUSt come m to ne, drmkand hold hands ... Lee
Canaan, who once employed Goldie Hawn as an

..

•
•
,•

.,.,•.•·
,•

.~
fl
I~

,.:~

·'

,.:~
•'

::,•

tron got raked over the coals when t\ was found that it had
backed more than $1 m11lion in loans to a Bronx trucking
concern with alleged Mafia connections
Once burned and twice shy, the SBA instttuted a pohcy
of lookmg a bit more closely before 1t loaned. As a result,
tl is now being hopped on by Sen . John V Tunney, D·
Cahl., for mvesttgatmg the " qualities and personal trarts"
of persons applyi ng for dtsaster loans.
Tunney, who was alerted to the practiCe by an rrate
constituent who had apphed for a loan to rebuild after
the Cahfornia earthquake, labels 1t "an mcredtble and mtolerable extension of tile government's mvesbgative
powers and a gnevo us violation of the nght to prrvacy."
The agency defe nds the policy as necessary to safeguard the taxpayers' money . "Character IS a basic element m makmg any busmess loan, " says assistant SBA
administt ator Howard E Russell.
It may be that the SBA has overcorrected. BureaucraCies .have a hab1t of elevating gmdehnes mlo 1ron laws
Or it may be that 11 IS merely exerc1smg the normal
prudence expected of any lendmg mstitution.
But the average person reading Tunney's emotiOncharged, headline-making words can only ·conclude that
the Gestapo ts ahve and well in Washington, and be left
more suspictous and distrustful of h1s government than he
was before

Dilemma ... to U.S.
.·....:· Vietnam
American offictals are already getting uneasy
•

•
•
•
•
'.
,•
::
'•
·:

!;

~:.

·:
::
::
·"
·:
:·,•
•:
. ::
:'
,•

about
the South Vtetnamese presidential election that is sched·
uled for October 3, reports Scripps-Howard wnter R H
Shackford
The worry is that flamboyant VICe President Nguyen
Cao Ky, who ts makmg nmses about runnmg against tn·
cumbent Prestdent Thieu, may actually carry out hts
threats A spilt in the Thteu-Ky ttcket could open the way
for the election of Gen. Duong Van Minh , better known
as "Big Minh "
Ky wanted to run for president m the previOus electiOn
back m 1967 but was pr essured by the military mto takmg
the No 2 spot under Thieu Btg Minh was no threat at that
time because he was tn political exile in Tharland Even
so, Thteu-Ky won only 34 per cent of the popular vote
Big Mmh leans toward a settlement with Hanoi 1o end
the war Ltttle Ky has long advocated carrymg the war
mlo North Vtetnam Medrum-stzed Thteu rs more m the
middle of the road
OffiCtally, the N1xon admmistration 1s keeping hands
off the electiOn But it rs no secret, says Shackford, that
tl wants Th1eu re-elected and would consider electron of
erther of the other two major potential candidates " little
short of a drsaster for Nixon's wrthdrawai plans "
The ~oai of that wrthdrawat, of course, rs tQ leave the
South \lretnamese m a posrhon where they can freely
choose thetr own destmy.

BRUCE BIOSSAT
CBS and 1The Selling of the Pentagon 1

A Case of Rank Deception
WASHINGTON (NEAl
Every Amencan mterested m accurate word about h1s
government-and certam1y everyone 111 the news bust·
ness- ts affected by the modest fur 01 ragmg over the
authenticity of~ CBS television documentary called 'The
Sellmg of the Pentagon "
Its purpose was to lay bare the Pentagon's huge pubhe reialtons machmery and show how 1l1s used
In the course of ed1tmg and compressmg tls mter·
vtews and other matenals, an always dtfftcult task wh1ch
confro nts reporters and edrtors m all parts of the medta,
CBS senousiy altered an mterv1ew 1! had wrth Assrstant
Defense Secretary Daniel Henkm
What tl d1d, plamly and unmistakably , was to so rearrange some of Henkm 's answenng comment that when
he was asked, let's say, questiOn No 3, the televiSIOn
vrewer saw and heard htm reply With words whtch. m
fact, were part of hts answer to another q uestwn entirely. Thts happened more than once m the body of th1s
mterv1ew.
In other words, when Henkm was seen to speak, he
was not always answermg the questron that had Just been
asked Yet the program unmrstakably mtended to g1ve
the 1mpresston he WAS answermg the immed iate question
When the Washmgton Post edtlon ally cnllc1zed thiS
prac!tce, ftrst Rtchard Salant, president of CBS News
and later others, including Reuven Frank, president of
NBC News, wrote letters of protest
The essence of \herr argument was that CBS was bemg
wrongly assa iled for exerciSing the normal necessitres of
JOurnahsm- edJting, condensmg, rearrangmg to get the
story told as compactly as possrble
But thetr nght to do thts was never attacked CBS was
bemg crittctzed very specifically lor deliberately g1vmg
vtewers a wrong 1mpress10n, not for using rts edt\onai
judgment to remforce a correct tmpresswn
To compare the broadcast mtervtew wrth the Henkm
text at crittcal pomts 1s to fmd proof of the doctormg It

IS 1ank deceptron- ol an order which those of us in the
news busmess are forever deplonng when pracltced by
others
Salanl's answer, and Frank's backup, are totally Irrelevant, havmg to do wtth rssues Which were not ra1sed.
Unless we are supposed to believe that these two top
network offic ials are mcred1bly thick-headed, we have to
conclude they are weakl y failing back on that old refuge
- "freedom of the press"
I
In the light of what CBS actually did with the Henkin
mtervtew, thrs amo unts to demandmg the right to dtstort
and dece1ve The comments by Salant especially, as the
man m charge, represent one of the more cymcal exercises of recent years m the name of "press freedom ."
Frank of NBC writes that he finds the criticism of CBS
" fnghte mng " Far more fnghtenmg ts the evidence that
two "responstble" network news execu!tves e1ther can't
or won't understand the argument made agamst the
CBS documentary
Frank also suggests that pubhc self-exammation by
telev1ston or other media is "bormg" stuff. A questionable pomt, at a t1me when many Amencans are troubled
over the credib1hty of government, busmess and the
media , too
Maybe the news busmess is too tough for these fellows
Saiant's program, doctored and hence fictionalized, really
was show busmess Perhaps he should just acknowledge
he 1s m the entertamment field
Playwnghts dealmg in documentary materials often
·present program notes expiatmng that they have "rear ra nged actuality" for drama!tc effects. That's what
CBS d1d , Without telling us
The Henkm mterview was really a bit of a play, wtth
act uahly rearranged to SUit the network's program purposes
In puttmg together this httle entertamment pac kage,
CBS may have told as much about its own dubtous ways
as about the Pentagon's

WORLD ALMANAC

Theater m Washmglon, D.C.,
and fatally shot him Uncoin
dted the next morning.
In 1910 President Wtlltam
Howard Tafl set a precedent by
throwrng out the ftrst ball to
open !he maJor league baseball

FACTS

:.

.·

•

:·

WIN AT BRIDGE
•

Bid and Play End m Draw
NORTH

•'
,•

14

&lt;11 10987
• 942
• Q63
"- Al06

,'
,•

WEST

MS'I'

&lt;!1 52

&lt;!1 A3

¥ QJJOG
t K1082

¥ 753

"- 8 43

"- K952

+9754

SOUTH ( D)

&lt;!1 KQJ64
¥ AK8

t AJ

"' QJ i
None vu lneJable

Nm th
Pass

Pnss

East

South

Pass
Pass

2NT.
3 &lt;II
Pass

Pass

!
),

'•
is

.
~

'
I
I

i
i

!
I

.1
I

Hv Oswald &amp; ,James .Jacoby
South won the open 1n g
heart lead and went 11ght
~Iter trumps East cashe:l
h1s ace and led a second
heart So uth won wrth hts
km g Later on South had to
lose IJoth the c lub and diamond finesses plus a hear t
I&lt;&gt; go down one !trek
South Cllltttzed Not th lo!
his Stayman three-club b1d
He pointed · u11t that with u
4-.1-:l-1 di.s tl'lbutlon 1 North
should hav&lt;' jllst I'UI S&lt;'ri to
fhll'l' no·J I IIII IJ&gt;
Nut•th u ~ r c c d 11IHI til is

m1ght have been a better
b1d but po int ed out that
South should ha ve made four
spades The wmnmg !me of
..
Q
play would be to forget ail
• •
abou t fine sses and play the
•
ace and jack of diamonds
after wrmnng the heart lead
The armadtllo ts a mamTh1s WQuld set up dummy's mal native to th1s hemi·
queen of d t a m on d s for a sphere It has a body cov·
heart drscard before the de- ered by bone, grvmg 11 a
fen se had trme to set up a "sutt of armor" look. The
World Almanac says Artnck rn that sutt
madillos
p r ote c t them.
We feel both South and
North are correct but that selves by rolhng mto a ball
no 1eal cr1me was commit- or by rapidly burrowmg
ted IV&lt;: would prefer a ratse mto the ground
to three no-trump With the
The Almanac
North hand, but can set up
By United Press International
·many hands where fom·
Today 1s Wednesday, April 14,
spades would be a better
the
104th day of 1971.
contract
The moon ts between its full
The play 1s also · close
South n e e d e d one of two phase and last quarter.
finesses to make four spades
The mornmg stars are Venus ,
the way he played the hand Mars and Jupiter,
Thts was a 75 per cent
The evening stars are Mereuchance
North 's suggest ltne of play We!! I
No1th
East
South
works but tl IS easy to set
I &lt;!I
up ha nds w1th one. or both Pass
?
2 It
Pass
finesses r 1 g h t that would
You , South. hold
collapse on the no finesse &lt;!lA K QJ54 ¥K JJ 2 tfo5 •2
line due to bad breaks tn
What do you do now '
l'iubs. di amo nd s or both
A- Birl tho·cc spades. ThiS
Sluts. Our v er drct rs tnat jump after a tY.o level rc!!pfln"'e
North and South were more is an tthsnlutc force.'
11n!ucky than unsktliful
TI)DA \"S Q'IJESTION
You do b1d 1h1 ee spades and
Tli&lt; lm lcl ml-{ '-li:!.!l bc,cn

you1 po1 (11~1 uusL-s you to fmn
What do you d9 now J

spad t~

ry and Saturn.
Those born on th1s date are
under the stgn of Anes.
Bntish Antarctic explorer
Str James Clark Ross was born
Aprtl 14, 1800.
On thts day m h1story.
In 1861 the flag of the
Confederacy was ra1sed over
Ft. Sumter, S.C., as Umon
troops Inside surrendered
In 11165 John Wilkes Booth
crept into the box of Prestdent
Abraham Lincoln at Ford

BfRRr5 WORlD

•
$80 a week Go-Go dancer, can't get her for hts
proffered $10,000 a week at his Revelation
nightclub and was told 1f he upped it to $25,000 he ·
still couldn't get her.
Dolores Hope surprised everyone, including
'husband Bob, when she showed up at his
Chrysler TV show and came on stage to sing
"Embraceable You" after the taping .... Frank
U.ngella of "Mad Housewife" and "12 Chairs" is
expected to make a sane housewife of House
Beautiful's art editor Ruth WeU. They've been
buymg furmture for months .... Woody Allen gets
a !JO.rninute Davtd Frost interview .... It's a new
status thing ; many a star qu1et1y' lobbies via
press agents for the full !JO.rninute spread; a
sunple guest shot now pales mto unimportance
... Woody also will do a Cavettcast, and if the
flurry stirs your wonder, it's because Woody has
a new movie ("Bananas") opening shortly.
Abbe Lane at St. Laurent's Rive Gauche on
Mad . Ave. bought and slunk out with slmg-back
wedg~es , platform._&lt;;o]ed, open-toed and laced up,
and all she needed was a bowl of fruit on her
noggin to· do a Carmen Miranda imitation ...
Who's Carmen Mtranda? You're young! ...
Woody Allen doesn't spend a penny on booze
when he plays clarinet every Wed. night at
Junmy Weston 's E. 54th St. spot: He scuttles
across the street to an ice cream parlor ... Dick
Cavett's frustration: No time to write h1s own
jokes for the opening monologue .... The "Living
Free" film cast on Mncan location started two
volleyball teams for exerctse: One's called the
Chrtstians and !he other (of course) the Lions.
The Times here must've thought Ronald
Reagan's unknown identified him atop a piece
he wrote as "Governor of California" .. .. He can
write all the pieces for them he wants, and he
still won't get !hat old gray blat to say anylhing
ruce about hun .... Early TV's Dagmar could use
a cafe job right now .... If Warners' expectations
for Its "The Presbyter1an &lt;;burch Wager" come
true, Warren Beatty will pick up $2 million as hts
percentage .... Bmg and Kalhy Crosby are off to
Mextco Wlth thetr younkers They run a free
health chnic there; Mrs. Bing, a registered
nurse, also speaks Spanish. Bing ? "Oh, he hwns
tl pretty good," she said.

A couple of years ago the Small Busmess Admrmstra-

novehs l Dmah Cratk satd, "Oh,
my sor 's my son till he gets
htm a wife, but my daughter's
my daughter ali her life "

I

I

____

,....,

0

•

bv Chet Tannehill

·

,_.._....__.._....,....__.-..--.--.-.-------~

reck Athens

arauders
BY DOXIE WALTERS

Ace southpaw Tim Demoskey
of the Meigs 'Marauders survived a 15 mmute rain delay.
got five hits from Dave Boyd
and three hits each from Jljck
Van Matre, Roger Dixon, and
Gene Powell to pitch the
Marauder base ball team past
the very highly regarded
'Athe!lS Bulldogs ~.
This had to be - lacking
official records - the worst
licking any Meigs County high
school baseball team ever put

Tomorrow night baseball players aged peewee to 90 and up,
basf,ball managers, coaches, and the general public are invited to
&lt;ltarlestoo, W. Va. where the Cincinnati Reds are sponsoring a
second baseball cllnic.
.
Jim Vennari, Pomeroy, Rutland elementary sc)lool principal,
who moonlights as a Reds' scout, will be one of the principal
speakers. His IDpic will be pitching and outfield play. Gene
Bennett, a veteran of the Reds' scouting fold, will speak on hit·
ling. Jim and Gene expect Elmer Gray, scouting supervisor, to
make it to Charleston too - but it is not certain that he will- and
If he does, "He'll talk on the things we leave out," according to
Vennari.
i&gt;
The clinic will be in the Morris Harvey College gymnasiwn
wl)lch is on the right side of the Kanawha River, and reached
before one gels to the Charleston baseball park. There is no
charge for !he clinic. Like we say about a revival service,
"Everybody is Welcome."
Sponsors of the clinic is the Charleston Recreation Dept. Its
director is Bob Justis, his assistant, Lyle Wolverton.
By FRED DOWN
The clinic was offered the first time last year about !his same
UPI Sports Writer
time. lt was a great success. Thus the Reds' organization decided
Vida Blue is baseball's new
"boy
wonder"-a pitcher with
to do it again.
so much natural talent that he
IT'S TIME FOR would-be lifeguards and aspiring recreation appears to have no limitations.
The 21-year-old smoke throw·
directors to get their appllcationa in for sununer employment at
the Middleport Municipal swimming pool (and park). Letters er from Mansfield, La., who
fr(ltl!ifeguards stating experience and qualifications (Red Cross pttched a no-httter and a onecertificates ~ld) may be directed to &lt;ltet Tannehill, Recreation hitter last September, turned in
another spectacular perforCommission, Middleport town ball, Middleport, Ohio.
Candidates lor park director should direct letters to the same mance Tuesday when he hurled
place stating educational years of high school and-or college a two-httter in the Oakland
Alhletics' 9-0 victory over the
completed, their "major" m college, and daytime hours they will
Milwaukee Brewers.
be available.
Blue was kayoed in less than
The pool and park season begins on Memorial Day (May 30)
two innings by the Washington
and continues through Labor Day.
Senators on April 5 liut on April
9 he pttched a three-hitter and
TRENTON 200 ENTRIES
struck out 13 batters in a six·
TRENTON, N.J. (UPI)- mnmg vrctory over Kansas
MATCH STOPPED
Nolan Swackhamer's Bobby Unser, AI Unser, Joe City
surging Melgs UDksters, with Leonard, Marro Andretti, Cale
Memorable Rookies
Yarborough,
Mark
Donohue
and
senlor BUI Hensler leading
Baseball hrstory is filled WJth
the way, were ahead of Uoyd Ruby are among early
Athens after seven holes of entrants for the Trentoman 200
play Tuesday when rain lor Umted States Auto Club
QUARTERFINAlS
forced them off the Pomeroy champwnshtp cars April 25 at
HERSEHY, Pa. (UPI)- The
GoH Course. Play will resume Trenton Speedway.
Cleveland Barons meet the
Thursday.
Hershey Bears here tonight in
For a sneak prevlew of
RAINED OUT
what could be the deciding
what could be a chamThe Eastern Eagle baseball game of the quarterlmals of the
pionship match In·the future, team of Coach Larry Hines was
Calder Cup series.
come watch Swack's boys rained out in the second inning
The Barons have a 2-1 edge tn
tangle wlth Athens, Jackson, of its scheduled game w1tlj
!he best-of-ftve series with the
and WeUston, at Pomeroy Nelsonville York, the Eagles
Bears.
Thursday afternoon.
were on the short end of a two to
If Hershey wms, the clincher
one score at the tune.
will be played 1 Thursday in
Cleveland.
The Bears won the serres
'
opener 3-2 in a sudden death
over lime, but Cleveland
snapped back to WJn the next
two, 4-2 and 7-1.

onto an AthellS High SChool
team, at least in modem times.
Demoskey allowed O!IIY an
infield single in his five innings
of work. Rick Van Maire took
over in the sixth and allowed
only two hits the rest of the way.
While Ed Bartels' moundsmen dominated !he opposmg
bitters, the Meigs batsmen were
blasting the Athens staff off the
field.
Steve Dunfee drew a walk to
begin the first inning, Van

hits · off an almost helpless
Bulldog mound staff.
Meigs' 20runscame on 19bits
and 9 walks!
'
The fine Marauder mound
staff struck out seven and
issued six free passes. This was
the second outing in a row in
which Demoskey allowed only
one hit; he shut out Wellston on
one hit on the sixth of April.
Athens starter lind loser Mark
Handley lasted one and oneinsuranCe runs on seven more third inning before be1ng

Maire singled, Powell walked,
Boyd knocked across two runs
with a towering double, Dixon
singled home Boyd, Stan Wilson
walked, and &lt;ltlpper Haggerty
batted in Dixon. The Marauders
applied the clincher in the
second and third by bombarding three Athens prtchers
for II runs on eight hits and five
bases on balls.
From this point Meigs
coasted to victory, adding five

shelled from the mound .
Reliever Mike Green couldn't
stop anybody, and was lifted
after one-third inning in favor of
Jon Kostival. Steve InbodY took
over in the fourth to fmish up.
Athens hurlers famed five and
handed out nme passes.
Slugging first baseman Boyd
enjoyed a perfect day at the
plate with four singles and a
double.
·
Powell, Dtxon and VanMatre
smacked three htts aptece, Stan

Wilson had two while Dunfee ,
Haggerty, and Demoskey
collected one each .
Doo Wood, Kesth Kelley, and
Jim Swearingen provided
Athens three hits . The
Marauders travel to Pt.
Pleasant Thursday afternoon.
Meigs
474 010 4---20 19 0
Athens
000 033 0- 6 3 2
Demoskey (WP), Van Maire
(6), and Dixon. Handley (LP),
Green (2), Kostival (2), Inbody
(4), and Kelly .

-B lue Blanks Brewers, 2-0

© 1971 br NEA , r"c

"Now, tell me, just how high-up are you in
administration circles~"

r------ - -- ---------------1

!Helen Help Us!
'1

By Helen Bottel

,

1

1
OFF AGAIN, ON AGAIN,
GONE AGAIN - NO HOPE
Dear Helen :
My husband and I have separated 14 times in the past two
years Before that, tt wasn't quite so bad, though 10 years of
marrrage hasn't been exacUy heaven.
Two of our brggest problems are: his drinking and his father.
The booze problem got so bad that my husband lost h1s job, but his
97-year-old fa !her (who lives with us and hasn't taken a bath in 12
years) gives hinf $200a week, and he lushes up most of 11.
We bave a llk'oom house, but "Papa" InSISts on sleepmg ltll
noon every day on the living room sofa. His aversion to water
makes things very bad. Between a drunk husband and an overripe father-in-law, my life is not smooth.
I moved out sgain lastweek .l don't think I am even missed. H
I went back, do you think !have any chance of changmg things? CAN'T STAND FAILURE
Dear C.S.F.:
H you haven't "change thtngs" in 14 tries .... well, l~t·s put it
lhiS way: admitting failure IS sometunes the ftrst step toward a
new and better life (I'd rate your last one pretty "rank." )- H.
Dear Helen:
AState Legislator has satd that VD IS the biggest eptdemic to
hit the suburbs since crabgrass.
Isn't.rt time we had massexarrunations at school- or, at the
least, ms1st !hat every student present a certificate from a doctor
before he or she gets report cards each semester?
H smallpox and polio can be aU but elimmated, why not VD?
·
- TERRffiLY WORRIED
Dear Worried·
Venereal disease won't be eradicated until someone diS&lt;:I!vers
a foo~ proof munuruzation, and It becomes as routine as smappox
vaccmations.
.
Control ? - Education, begmning in grade school! H every
child (adult too ) knew all !he facts about VD - symptoms spread,
dangers when left untreated, and comparative ease w1th which it
can be cured (or prevented), the "epidemic" would soon be over.
It's sad that rn these enltghtened times so many teenagers
must write to columnists for information they should be receiving
at home or at school. A typical example :
Dear Helen : It happened just once, and he's my ex-boyfriend
now. I found out too late I was just another notch on his belt.
Helen, I'm scared to death I might have VD, and 1 can't tell my
folks. They'd never..get over the shame. I don't have money for
treatments and, bestdes, our doctor would contact Mom, as I'm
under age - HELP!
Dear Help : There's a County Venereal Disease ffimtc m your
town (almost every large or , medium~ized city has one).
Examination and treatment are free, and your parents are NOT
contacted. VD ts completely curable if caught early and no one in
your family need ever know, unless you wish to tell. '
Find !he address in your telephone book under County
Government Health sernces (or ask the operator for the number).
P.S. These days, most states do not require parental
knowledge lor treatment of venereal disease in teenagers. _ H.

"

$}.00
SAVE TANK FULl

•

Under Major Oil Prices

XE-110 Ethyl- over 100 octane

Certified Gas Stations
992-9981

POMEROY

SJBW. MAIN

SIDE ACTION ON ICE MEET
MONTREAL (UPl)- Mayor
Kevin Wh1te of Boston and
Mayor Jean Drapeau have
made a wager on the outcome
of the current Stanley Cup
playoff senes between the
Boston Brums and Montreal
Canadiens. Whrte has wagered
a jar of Boston ba~ed beans
and three lobsters agamst
Drapeau's gallon of Quebec
maple syrup and a pound of
Oka cheese.

Back Pains Occur
For Many Reasons

It Every T'

me

usefulm tuberculosis bestdes
Jus! the lungs If tuberculous
Infection mvolves bone and
causes enough e r o s t on or
damage to the bone, these
changes can be seen
Dear Dr Lamb- IV o u 1d
yo u gtve a thought to an old
lady of 78 wrth a health problem I have pam m the lower
Jaw wh1ch comes on when I
siidf! down in bed and have
been asleep for some time . 11
I srt up for an hour the pain
wrll go away l have come
to believe it has somethmg
to do wrth the bloOd I have
had all my teeth removed
t h 1 n k 1n g 1t m1ght end the
trouble but rt hasn't
Dear Reader- Your theory
about the pam m your jaw
bemg related to c1rculatton
ts not a bad one It is true
that heart trouble can cause
pam m the jaw, rather than
pam m the chest. It is also
true that w he n the heart
doesn't beat as strong as it
used to, 1! can cause a small
all)ount of flUid to acc umulate m the lungs, parltcularly at mght and can cause
pam.
The fact that your pam
occurs at mght and is related
to your s I e e p 1 n g position.
and ts teheved by srttmg up.
suggests that thiS could well
be the case
Why don't you go see your
doctor for a heart checkup''
He may be able to give you
some .mcdtctne to get rid of
any ~xc:es• tlutit you mav
havf" accumu l.ufed and
" UII SUIU(' l'l'ht•l

•

g1vi.•

spectacular performances by
rookies and other young pitch·
ers, such as Bobo Holloman
who pitched a no-hitter in his
first start, Karl Spooner
strrking out 15 batters in his
debut and ' Tommy Phoebus
pitching two consecutive shutouts at the start of his career.
But Blue's rash of low-hit, highstrikeout performances probably can't be surpassed until the
baseball fans goes hack m
history to Johnny Vander
Meer's two consecutive nohillers as a rookie m 1938.
A six-foot, 1115-pound left·
bander, who had a brilliant
baseball and football career at
Temple High School in Mansfield, Blue has been marked for
stardom since he was signed by
!he Athletics in 1!167. He was

Signup Day Set

;11

Slgnup for Middleport Pee Wee, little League and
Pony League will be Saturday from 1 to 3 p.m. at
Middleport Legion Hall.
All boys wbo wlsb to play are urged to attend.
Tb08e who cannot be there are asked to contact Betty
Smith, Sycamore Street, or Dlck Hovatter, Fifth
Street, Middleport, 1M' contact their coacb of last year.
Insurance for Pony League.is $3 and $2for Pee Wee
and Utile League.

::·
···
=:.

~==

•.•

.!~ =~-: : :=:&gt;.: : :~: : : : : :~: :·: : : : : : ::::::::~:: : : :;:;: : : : ·.·.·:·: :·: : : : : : :·: :.;':·:=:=· :·!·!•'•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•'•! · :· =~ ~

By United Press tnlernalronat
Nattonal League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Poltsburgh
5 2 714
New York
3 2 .600 1
St. LoUis
3 ~ 429 2
Montreal
2 3 400 2
Ch1cago
3 5 .375 2112
Philadelphia 2 4 333 2'12
West
W. L Pet. GB
San Fran
5 2 714
Houston
6 3 667
Atlanta
4 3 571 1
San Diego
3 4 .~29 2
Los Angeles
3 5 375 2'h

American League
East
W. L. Pel.
Baltimore
4 1 800
Cleveland
3 1 750
New York
3 3 500
Boston
3 3 500
Washmgton · 3 5 375
Detroll
2 4 333
West
W. L. Pet.
Minnesota
4 3 571
Milwaukee
3 3 500
Oakland
4 4 500
Kansas City
4 4 500
Chicago
3 4 429
California
3 4 429

C10cmnati

Tuesday's Results
Oakland 2 Milwaukee 0

2

.4

200 2112

Houston at San Fran

St Louis at Los Ang, n1ghl
cago at San Diego, night
Only games scheduled)
RECEIVES ONE VOTE

"

NEW YORK (UPI) - Bob
Cousy, coach of the Cincinnati

Dick Motta of the Chicago
Bulls won the honor, getting 30
,votes in balloting by three
sports writers from each of the
17 NBA member ctlies.

"

The

Wide, low ,RAISED WHITE LETTERED
mueclt JOU tin pt In • tfrel

Exec. Ed.

12,000 traction edpt to

-'" you ' ' " control .t all tlmal

• RewerH Molded- to 11n JOU • wide, flat tread without tiN·
dutrv)'lnc ltut build-up In thl thouhfer aru.

,.

"

'

o RaloM Willie L - Sl!lln&amp;-lo Itt
totllh Um oa JOUr whlltl.

70\:i) P-J
I

'

'

.' '

G

!I!' WOffd knw JG11 howl

1111(

.....

10WAY .

WAf

70.14-12 .72

G 70.15 - 12 ....

Second c:tass postage patd illf

Na1tonal

2 WEEKS SPECIAL
,

Compare Before You Buy. Wheels Balanced

At No Extra Cost.

RIZER OIL CO. H2·2101

700 L Main

2157

Pomeroy , Ohio

I
advert isi ng

representa11ve

Bott.n elli

Gallagher , In c, 12 East 42nd
St. New York City, New York .

I

Subscrtptton rates

De

li'Jered by carrier where
avatlable SO cents per week ;
1By Motor Route where cartter
serv1ce not lvtllablf : One

l'h
l'h

2'12
21h
GB
112

4'12
'12
1
J

Thursday's Games

Calif at Kansas City, night
Oakland at Minnesota
Milwaukee at Chicago
Ball at Cleve, lwltlght
Delroil at New York
I Only games scheduled!

HUNTINGTON , IV Va (UP! )
- The success of Marshall
Umversrty's 1971 football team
was assured Tuesday, frve
months before rt played a
game
Sprmg praclice began
"This represents a great
conumttment by the umversrty
and the communrty," said Jack
Lengyel, the head coach "It
would have been very easy for
them to g1ve rt up."
Although spring football prac·
lice at most colleges is a rather
routine exercise, it is an event
of constderable note at Marshall, where nearly an enttre
team was wtped out m an
arrplane crash five months ago
today.
"I realize !hat it's going to be
a great difficulty and there are
certainly gmng to be some long
and lean Saturdays," Lengyel
said "But I lhink this provides
one of the great lessons In
athletics-to rebuild and come
back from a tragedy like !his."
Forty-three players participated in the first two-hour
workout on !he Astroturf at
Fairfield Stadium', most of
!hem freshmen .
But there were some varsrtyexperienced players who
missed the ill-fated trip to East
Carolina last Nov. 14.
"I'm just trymg to put all the
thmgs that happened in !he
past behind me," said Ed
Carter, a junior offensive tackle
from Wichita Falls, Texas.
Carter was attending his
fa ther's funeral when the
chartered Southern Airways
jetliner crashed trying to land
at Huntington, killing 75 persons mcludmg 36 of Carter's
teammates, Coach· Rick Tolley,
and a large delegabon of fans.
"It's kind of like being a
freshman all over agam,"
Carter said. "We're all starting
fresh, and everyone's trymg to
show the coach what they can
do"

SAVE WITH

loser
Stan Bahnsen scattered II
htts, mcludmg a homer by
Norm Cash, and tripled m a
ft fth-mmng run for lhe
Yankees, who dealt Joe Ntekro
hts second straight lass for the
Tigers Roy Whtte homered for
one Yankee run and scored
another on a smgle by Danny
Cater

NaUtamel Ruffm, one of the practtce two days before the
1970 co-captams, missed the game
death tnp because of an arm
mjury and says he now feels
"funny" pracllcmg without hts
'
old friends.
"I'm !he only guy here who
started with the others as a
freshman tn 1968," Ruffin satd.
"There are only about six
upperclassmen here now and as you add to your savings
we know tt's going to be on our each week at fhe Meigs Co.
Branch of the Athens Co .
shoulders to take !he leadership
Savin11,s and Loan
responslblhty."
.Most. of the players agreed
that meretyl by beiltg able to
continue tts football program,
Marshall is an assured success
this year.
CURRENT
"II we're able to win some
PASSBOOK RATE
games, he should be C9ach-ofthe-year ," satd Joe McMullen,
Save by the lOth, earn
!he new athletic drrector.
from
the I st.
Nobody talked in terms of
wins and losses, because even
at full strength Marshall has
not had a wmnmg sea$0n since
1964, but A. J . McRoberts,
another player who missed the
trtp, ligures lhe Thundering
Herd will have one thing going
The Athens County
for it.
Savings
&amp; Loan Co.
" We should have a great
296 Second St.
mental edge on the teams we
Pomeroy, Ohio
play because we want to prove
to people we can come back,"
said McRoberts, a sophomore
tight end from Pittsburgh. He
,
dld not go to East Carolina
because he sprained an ankle in

Watch Your
$$Grow

4%~

•

SPRING

G.E. Dryer

&lt;Eiec.&gt; A-1

95
Mav+ag
(Gas)
Dryer
~4
t---';.,_'~-;.._-----·u_-1

Electric
t Coppertone)
on this '
Gas Ranae Save
New Vesta Range
~

16 %t FIBERGLAS

RUNABOUT BOAT
WITH MOTOR AND TRAILER
Almost new 100 HP Evinrude motar, Gator
trailer. 12 gas tanks, elec. starting, convertible
· top with back curtain, 6 passenger. sea1s
convert to beds. REAL SHARP!

~ •1795

KEITH-GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LDT ·

Va , One year $14 00
months S7 25
Three

months S4.50 Subscription
pr.ce mcludes Sundtly Times.

frame on a fielder's chmce
Reltever Dave U!Roche ptcked
up !he v1ctory while Vtcente
Romo, who pitched to only two
batters m the JOih, was the

Marshall Begins
Football Drills

---------..

w

Senflnet ~

1h

Calif 3 Ch•cago 1. (10 mnlngs)
New York 5 Detroot 2
Ball at Cleve, ppd ., rain
Kan C1ty 5 Minn 3, night
Boston 5 Wash 3, night
Today's Probable Pilchen
I All Times ESTI
Callforn1a (Wnght 0·2 ) at
Kansas Coty (Rooker 0-1), 8 30
p m.
Oakland iSegul 0-0) at
Mmnesota !Perry 11 ), 2 15
p m.
Milwaukee !Slaton 0 0) at
Ch1cago (Johnson 1-11. 2. 15
p.m.
Baltimore (Cuellar 0-0) at
Cleveland (McDowell 0 OJ.
noon.
Boston (Nagy 0-0) at Wash
mglon (Shellenback 0.1]. 7.30
p.m .
Detroit (Lollch 1-1) at New
York (Peterson o.l), 2 p.m.

mon!h S1 75 By· mail In OhiO

and
Sot

GB
..

and Carl Yastrzemski off
Denny McLam enabled Bostlln 's
Sonny Steber! to pick up h1s
f1rsl vtctory of the season, Wlth
mnth-mmng rehef help from
Sparky Lyle. McLam, m hts
second so~o performance of the
season, was tagged for four
earned runs and seven htts m
f1ve innings
Ken McMullen doubled and
pmch-runner Chtco Ruiz scored
the tte-breakinR run on a single
by Billy Cowan in the !Ulll
mmng
lor the Angels, who
save.
Homers by Duane Josephson scored a second run tn the

Pittsburgh 9 Philadelphia 3,
Cincinnati 5 Atlanta 4 and
Chicago 3 Los Angeles 2 San
Diego at San Franctsco was
rained out.
Paul Schaal's , run-scormg
double off reltever Stan Wtl·
Iiams triggered a three-run
fifth mmng rally which led the
Royals to their v1ctory over the
Twins. Mtke Hedlund wenl ftve
mnings for the wm wtth Ted
Abernathy, the thtrd relief
pitcher, recetvmg credtt for a

•

C1ty Editor
Published dally e1&lt;cept
Saturday by The- OhtOo Valley
Publishing Company, 111
CoUrt St, 'Pomeroy, Oh10 ,
45769 8Us1ness Office Phone
992 2156, Edttor .al Ptlone 99 2

1..,

t nl(ht·Tractlon Tread Plttern-over

Sentinel

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,

• Hu1ky, Spetci.PI'O'ten 4 PfY Nrton Cord Con11ructlon-tht most

"

Dai~

OEVOTEDTOTHE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,

••• performance to spare!
1

brought up prematurely m 1969
and had a 6.21 earned run
average m 42 innings but ln
1970 had a 12-3 record for Iowa
and was the American Assoctation:s pitcher of the year. Hall
of Farner Joe DiMaggto has
been one of hts biggest boosters
and has been credited for at
least part of his development
Kansas City beat the Xinnesota Twms, 5-3, the Boston Red
Sox defeated !he Washington
Senators, 5-3, the Cahfornia
Angels edged the Chtcago White
Sox, 3-1, and New York beat
DetrOit 5-2 in other American
League games. Baltimore at
Cleveland was ramed out.
NL Action
In the National League, 11
was Montreal 4 New York I,
Houston 8 St
Lows 4,

{': :-··:·:·:·:·:·:·: :-: : !·!·!·!·!•!•! : !•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!::0:·!·!:!::::::::::::::::::::::::-:::·:::·:::·:::·:·:0!•!:~~~

Tuesday's Results
Montreat 4 New York 1
Houslon 8 51 Lou1s 4
Pitts 9 Phlia. 3 noght
Cin 5 Atlanta 4, noghl
Chicago 3 Los Ang, 2 mght
San Fran at San Diego, ppd ,
ram
Today's Probable Potchers
tAll Tomes EST)
Poltsburgh (Moose 1 0) at
Philadelphia (FrymanO 1], 7 30
p.m.
Houston (Griffm 0·11. at San
FranCISco (Stone 0 OJ. 4 p m
Cinconnat1 !Cloninger 0-0i at
Atlanta (Niekro 0 0), 8'p m.
St LouiS !Reuss 0-ll at Los
Angeles !Osteen 2-01. 11 p,m
Chicago (Jenkins 1.1) al San
Diego !Arlin 0-0i, 10 30 p.m
New York ISadeck1 0 0) at
Montreal (Stoneman 0-1), 2·15
p.m
Thursday's Games

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-! h a v e
Quickie Quiz
prevrously had TB of the
Q- What mammal has the ktdney. The doctors say 1t is
season.
shortest gestatwn perwd?
cleared up I shll have pains
A~The Vrrgmta opposum, 1n my back and ktdney and
In 1965 Frank Mttchell, 15,
became the first Negro page JUSt 12 days
wonder tf this ts norma l My
urme has been checked a nd
boy rn lhe U.S. House of
Q-How many of the tl shows nothin g Could there
Representalives
" foundtng fathers" Slgned be anythmg else that causes
the U.S Constttutton&gt;
th1s pam m the !ewer nght
A thought for today · Bntish
A-Forty
stde and back' I would also
ltke to know why they ]ust
r------y:~~;'-;:;:;;--;;~::--::-:::::----:=---------, X ray the chest when they
Do
®
know l had TB elsewhere
un.e
and why they don 't check
~V=:==========
you where you have 1!
IOU'VE SEEN HIM Of.l ALL
UNL.ESS WE STOP POLL.lJTING THE
Dear Reader- There are
'THE TAI.K 5140\1/5 ... THE
OZONE, 1-0 L.IYING THING WIL.L. BE
many t h t n g s w h 1c h can
ECOL.OGY EXPERT W~O
~~~\~L.~~~~·THv:M(.)ST
cause pam in the nght ,stde
WARNS OF SLDW
ENVIRONMENT OR
and back, mcludmg probASPHYXI,I..TJON....
WIL.L. DO YOU
Iems of the, colon , parttcuIN• .. · • · --"''"
larly 1f s om eo n e JS under
e m ot I 0 n a ! stless Muscle
pams and abnormahty of
the spme also ca use dlfftculties ml th1s area
Regardmg X rays , the
chest 1s 'most often X rayed
because one can eastly see
stgns of tuberculosis m the
lungs. Thts IS not , tr ue of
r::-----~-,many other or;gans like the
k1dney smce a li l he X ray
often does 1s to outline a
shadow of the shape of the
organ Itself The dtf!et ence
IS that tire lungs
full ol
a1r and a ktdney, lot exa m·
pie. rs not. This IS why 1t IS
'\7.,--- - - --_J bette~ to do exammatrons of
the urine to tell how the kid·
neys are lunt:homng Jhan 11
•s to usc an X-t ay t•xami natton when nm· ,; ioukmg
lot' !ttl&gt;&lt;·• t• ulnsts
Tht•r t&gt; m l' :-;onw oth1.'l t•x
aruplt•.s wht'll' I ht· X 1 .1~ 1s

Hado's They'll

. . . . --.. . ._.. . . .,. .,_._
the Sports Desk ,

:r,.::-----~~--~.;...---·----

Voice along Broadway !

I

,

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.P(Itleroy, 0., April t4 1971

992-3422
Lb~ust St.

Middleport, 0.

$1.00.00

G. E. Dryer (Electric)
36" Gas Range=~ ~:~Ilion $}35•
Elec. Refrigerator Frigidaire
GE

Automatic Washer
4-21"

Your

T.V. Consoles

Choice

•
IGUARANT!iEDl

'69.00

New Riding Mowm and Push Mowers
All On Sale '52.95 to '439.00 ·

H&amp;R Firestone
N. 2nd Ave.

992-2238

--· ....
Middleport, 0.

�••

r
2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April14,1971

r------------------------------------------

"So, Speak Up!"

1

BY JACK O'BRIAN
COLLEGE FEES ARE
MO~N'FORMUH~AD

Prudent or Not
But Trust Erodes
By DON OAKLEY

NEW YORK - Israel's cabinet nixed
COI,DlTlercials on TV - whtch should be a great
tour1st attraction .. Best actmg in town was at
the Frtars Club salute to Alan King: King's and
Friar Dean Buddy Howe 's fabrrcated friendly
hellos .... Muhammad Ail's getting $3,500 and up
for his college harangues
Hemy Youngman
polished his act for 50 years before he felt tl good
enough to play Alabama for !he ftrst time· He's
at the Hotel Tutwiler down there-all m Btr·
mingham .... Long Island U is reported due for a
$50 million Rockefeller grant for a med school ....
Pearl Batley's second book, "Talkin' to MyseH"
(for Harcourt Brace), ts due m Oct .... Hundreds
of local ordinances ban gals tn swimsmt-iength
shorts and btkuus; N.Y. City's cancellmg Its old
law to make the streets safe for hot pants about
!he tune you read this . Cover boy you don't see
on many magazmes any more, Uncle Sam, IS on
!he first Liberty mag reVIval.
Age of Vulgartty· !heX-rated porno-fl1ck at
the Penthouse Theater on Bdwy ts "Grunm's
Fairy Tales for Adults;" make tbat Grim
Erstwhile society boy Phrltp van Ftensselaer
says he's no longer a socrety boy because there's
no more society. He first switched h1s appellalion to novelist and JUSt turned up at du Mid1
as a piaywnght. He's off to Key West to show his
first stage try tohts frrend and master Tennessee
Willtams . Who could use a htt hunself .
Edward Albee, so austerely aloof when he had
hits, ts showing up for local mternews now that
his "All Over" drama seems almost titularly
prophetic ... Aclor George Hamilton's antrque •
BARBS
dealer • brother Bill bought s1lent star Mae
By PHIL PASTORET
Murray's trunks (that's luggage, nofswunming)
and found one packed w11h btrd of paradise
Surest way to gam fealhers. No ecological wrorms m Mae's dtstant
pnde m your home tow11 day
ts to move away from It
Eastside pubs With cable TV (which carnes
'
!he Knicks' games) grumble about sports fans
spend half as much as guys and gals who
A fl y· by·mg ht IS an econ- Don't
.
. eli
omy arr coach traveler
JUSt come m to ne, drmkand hold hands ... Lee
Canaan, who once employed Goldie Hawn as an

..

•
•
,•

.,.,•.•·
,•

.~
fl
I~

,.:~

·'

,.:~
•'

::,•

tron got raked over the coals when t\ was found that it had
backed more than $1 m11lion in loans to a Bronx trucking
concern with alleged Mafia connections
Once burned and twice shy, the SBA instttuted a pohcy
of lookmg a bit more closely before 1t loaned. As a result,
tl is now being hopped on by Sen . John V Tunney, D·
Cahl., for mvesttgatmg the " qualities and personal trarts"
of persons applyi ng for dtsaster loans.
Tunney, who was alerted to the practiCe by an rrate
constituent who had apphed for a loan to rebuild after
the Cahfornia earthquake, labels 1t "an mcredtble and mtolerable extension of tile government's mvesbgative
powers and a gnevo us violation of the nght to prrvacy."
The agency defe nds the policy as necessary to safeguard the taxpayers' money . "Character IS a basic element m makmg any busmess loan, " says assistant SBA
administt ator Howard E Russell.
It may be that the SBA has overcorrected. BureaucraCies .have a hab1t of elevating gmdehnes mlo 1ron laws
Or it may be that 11 IS merely exerc1smg the normal
prudence expected of any lendmg mstitution.
But the average person reading Tunney's emotiOncharged, headline-making words can only ·conclude that
the Gestapo ts ahve and well in Washington, and be left
more suspictous and distrustful of h1s government than he
was before

Dilemma ... to U.S.
.·....:· Vietnam
American offictals are already getting uneasy
•

•
•
•
•
'.
,•
::
'•
·:

!;

~:.

·:
::
::
·"
·:
:·,•
•:
. ::
:'
,•

about
the South Vtetnamese presidential election that is sched·
uled for October 3, reports Scripps-Howard wnter R H
Shackford
The worry is that flamboyant VICe President Nguyen
Cao Ky, who ts makmg nmses about runnmg against tn·
cumbent Prestdent Thieu, may actually carry out hts
threats A spilt in the Thteu-Ky ttcket could open the way
for the election of Gen. Duong Van Minh , better known
as "Big Minh "
Ky wanted to run for president m the previOus electiOn
back m 1967 but was pr essured by the military mto takmg
the No 2 spot under Thieu Btg Minh was no threat at that
time because he was tn political exile in Tharland Even
so, Thteu-Ky won only 34 per cent of the popular vote
Big Mmh leans toward a settlement with Hanoi 1o end
the war Ltttle Ky has long advocated carrymg the war
mlo North Vtetnam Medrum-stzed Thteu rs more m the
middle of the road
OffiCtally, the N1xon admmistration 1s keeping hands
off the electiOn But it rs no secret, says Shackford, that
tl wants Th1eu re-elected and would consider electron of
erther of the other two major potential candidates " little
short of a drsaster for Nixon's wrthdrawai plans "
The ~oai of that wrthdrawat, of course, rs tQ leave the
South \lretnamese m a posrhon where they can freely
choose thetr own destmy.

BRUCE BIOSSAT
CBS and 1The Selling of the Pentagon 1

A Case of Rank Deception
WASHINGTON (NEAl
Every Amencan mterested m accurate word about h1s
government-and certam1y everyone 111 the news bust·
ness- ts affected by the modest fur 01 ragmg over the
authenticity of~ CBS television documentary called 'The
Sellmg of the Pentagon "
Its purpose was to lay bare the Pentagon's huge pubhe reialtons machmery and show how 1l1s used
In the course of ed1tmg and compressmg tls mter·
vtews and other matenals, an always dtfftcult task wh1ch
confro nts reporters and edrtors m all parts of the medta,
CBS senousiy altered an mterv1ew 1! had wrth Assrstant
Defense Secretary Daniel Henkm
What tl d1d, plamly and unmistakably , was to so rearrange some of Henkm 's answenng comment that when
he was asked, let's say, questiOn No 3, the televiSIOn
vrewer saw and heard htm reply With words whtch. m
fact, were part of hts answer to another q uestwn entirely. Thts happened more than once m the body of th1s
mterv1ew.
In other words, when Henkm was seen to speak, he
was not always answermg the questron that had Just been
asked Yet the program unmrstakably mtended to g1ve
the 1mpresston he WAS answermg the immed iate question
When the Washmgton Post edtlon ally cnllc1zed thiS
prac!tce, ftrst Rtchard Salant, president of CBS News
and later others, including Reuven Frank, president of
NBC News, wrote letters of protest
The essence of \herr argument was that CBS was bemg
wrongly assa iled for exerciSing the normal necessitres of
JOurnahsm- edJting, condensmg, rearrangmg to get the
story told as compactly as possrble
But thetr nght to do thts was never attacked CBS was
bemg crittctzed very specifically lor deliberately g1vmg
vtewers a wrong 1mpress10n, not for using rts edt\onai
judgment to remforce a correct tmpresswn
To compare the broadcast mtervtew wrth the Henkm
text at crittcal pomts 1s to fmd proof of the doctormg It

IS 1ank deceptron- ol an order which those of us in the
news busmess are forever deplonng when pracltced by
others
Salanl's answer, and Frank's backup, are totally Irrelevant, havmg to do wtth rssues Which were not ra1sed.
Unless we are supposed to believe that these two top
network offic ials are mcred1bly thick-headed, we have to
conclude they are weakl y failing back on that old refuge
- "freedom of the press"
I
In the light of what CBS actually did with the Henkin
mtervtew, thrs amo unts to demandmg the right to dtstort
and dece1ve The comments by Salant especially, as the
man m charge, represent one of the more cymcal exercises of recent years m the name of "press freedom ."
Frank of NBC writes that he finds the criticism of CBS
" fnghte mng " Far more fnghtenmg ts the evidence that
two "responstble" network news execu!tves e1ther can't
or won't understand the argument made agamst the
CBS documentary
Frank also suggests that pubhc self-exammation by
telev1ston or other media is "bormg" stuff. A questionable pomt, at a t1me when many Amencans are troubled
over the credib1hty of government, busmess and the
media , too
Maybe the news busmess is too tough for these fellows
Saiant's program, doctored and hence fictionalized, really
was show busmess Perhaps he should just acknowledge
he 1s m the entertamment field
Playwnghts dealmg in documentary materials often
·present program notes expiatmng that they have "rear ra nged actuality" for drama!tc effects. That's what
CBS d1d , Without telling us
The Henkm mterview was really a bit of a play, wtth
act uahly rearranged to SUit the network's program purposes
In puttmg together this httle entertamment pac kage,
CBS may have told as much about its own dubtous ways
as about the Pentagon's

WORLD ALMANAC

Theater m Washmglon, D.C.,
and fatally shot him Uncoin
dted the next morning.
In 1910 President Wtlltam
Howard Tafl set a precedent by
throwrng out the ftrst ball to
open !he maJor league baseball

FACTS

:.

.·

•

:·

WIN AT BRIDGE
•

Bid and Play End m Draw
NORTH

•'
,•

14

&lt;11 10987
• 942
• Q63
"- Al06

,'
,•

WEST

MS'I'

&lt;!1 52

&lt;!1 A3

¥ QJJOG
t K1082

¥ 753

"- 8 43

"- K952

+9754

SOUTH ( D)

&lt;!1 KQJ64
¥ AK8

t AJ

"' QJ i
None vu lneJable

Nm th
Pass

Pnss

East

South

Pass
Pass

2NT.
3 &lt;II
Pass

Pass

!
),

'•
is

.
~

'
I
I

i
i

!
I

.1
I

Hv Oswald &amp; ,James .Jacoby
South won the open 1n g
heart lead and went 11ght
~Iter trumps East cashe:l
h1s ace and led a second
heart So uth won wrth hts
km g Later on South had to
lose IJoth the c lub and diamond finesses plus a hear t
I&lt;&gt; go down one !trek
South Cllltttzed Not th lo!
his Stayman three-club b1d
He pointed · u11t that with u
4-.1-:l-1 di.s tl'lbutlon 1 North
should hav&lt;' jllst I'UI S&lt;'ri to
fhll'l' no·J I IIII IJ&gt;
Nut•th u ~ r c c d 11IHI til is

m1ght have been a better
b1d but po int ed out that
South should ha ve made four
spades The wmnmg !me of
..
Q
play would be to forget ail
• •
abou t fine sses and play the
•
ace and jack of diamonds
after wrmnng the heart lead
The armadtllo ts a mamTh1s WQuld set up dummy's mal native to th1s hemi·
queen of d t a m on d s for a sphere It has a body cov·
heart drscard before the de- ered by bone, grvmg 11 a
fen se had trme to set up a "sutt of armor" look. The
World Almanac says Artnck rn that sutt
madillos
p r ote c t them.
We feel both South and
North are correct but that selves by rolhng mto a ball
no 1eal cr1me was commit- or by rapidly burrowmg
ted IV&lt;: would prefer a ratse mto the ground
to three no-trump With the
The Almanac
North hand, but can set up
By United Press International
·many hands where fom·
Today 1s Wednesday, April 14,
spades would be a better
the
104th day of 1971.
contract
The moon ts between its full
The play 1s also · close
South n e e d e d one of two phase and last quarter.
finesses to make four spades
The mornmg stars are Venus ,
the way he played the hand Mars and Jupiter,
Thts was a 75 per cent
The evening stars are Mereuchance
North 's suggest ltne of play We!! I
No1th
East
South
works but tl IS easy to set
I &lt;!I
up ha nds w1th one. or both Pass
?
2 It
Pass
finesses r 1 g h t that would
You , South. hold
collapse on the no finesse &lt;!lA K QJ54 ¥K JJ 2 tfo5 •2
line due to bad breaks tn
What do you do now '
l'iubs. di amo nd s or both
A- Birl tho·cc spades. ThiS
Sluts. Our v er drct rs tnat jump after a tY.o level rc!!pfln"'e
North and South were more is an tthsnlutc force.'
11n!ucky than unsktliful
TI)DA \"S Q'IJESTION
You do b1d 1h1 ee spades and
Tli&lt; lm lcl ml-{ '-li:!.!l bc,cn

you1 po1 (11~1 uusL-s you to fmn
What do you d9 now J

spad t~

ry and Saturn.
Those born on th1s date are
under the stgn of Anes.
Bntish Antarctic explorer
Str James Clark Ross was born
Aprtl 14, 1800.
On thts day m h1story.
In 1861 the flag of the
Confederacy was ra1sed over
Ft. Sumter, S.C., as Umon
troops Inside surrendered
In 11165 John Wilkes Booth
crept into the box of Prestdent
Abraham Lincoln at Ford

BfRRr5 WORlD

•
$80 a week Go-Go dancer, can't get her for hts
proffered $10,000 a week at his Revelation
nightclub and was told 1f he upped it to $25,000 he ·
still couldn't get her.
Dolores Hope surprised everyone, including
'husband Bob, when she showed up at his
Chrysler TV show and came on stage to sing
"Embraceable You" after the taping .... Frank
U.ngella of "Mad Housewife" and "12 Chairs" is
expected to make a sane housewife of House
Beautiful's art editor Ruth WeU. They've been
buymg furmture for months .... Woody Allen gets
a !JO.rninute Davtd Frost interview .... It's a new
status thing ; many a star qu1et1y' lobbies via
press agents for the full !JO.rninute spread; a
sunple guest shot now pales mto unimportance
... Woody also will do a Cavettcast, and if the
flurry stirs your wonder, it's because Woody has
a new movie ("Bananas") opening shortly.
Abbe Lane at St. Laurent's Rive Gauche on
Mad . Ave. bought and slunk out with slmg-back
wedg~es , platform._&lt;;o]ed, open-toed and laced up,
and all she needed was a bowl of fruit on her
noggin to· do a Carmen Miranda imitation ...
Who's Carmen Mtranda? You're young! ...
Woody Allen doesn't spend a penny on booze
when he plays clarinet every Wed. night at
Junmy Weston 's E. 54th St. spot: He scuttles
across the street to an ice cream parlor ... Dick
Cavett's frustration: No time to write h1s own
jokes for the opening monologue .... The "Living
Free" film cast on Mncan location started two
volleyball teams for exerctse: One's called the
Chrtstians and !he other (of course) the Lions.
The Times here must've thought Ronald
Reagan's unknown identified him atop a piece
he wrote as "Governor of California" .. .. He can
write all the pieces for them he wants, and he
still won't get !hat old gray blat to say anylhing
ruce about hun .... Early TV's Dagmar could use
a cafe job right now .... If Warners' expectations
for Its "The Presbyter1an &lt;;burch Wager" come
true, Warren Beatty will pick up $2 million as hts
percentage .... Bmg and Kalhy Crosby are off to
Mextco Wlth thetr younkers They run a free
health chnic there; Mrs. Bing, a registered
nurse, also speaks Spanish. Bing ? "Oh, he hwns
tl pretty good," she said.

A couple of years ago the Small Busmess Admrmstra-

novehs l Dmah Cratk satd, "Oh,
my sor 's my son till he gets
htm a wife, but my daughter's
my daughter ali her life "

I

I

____

,....,

0

•

bv Chet Tannehill

·

,_.._....__.._....,....__.-..--.--.-.-------~

reck Athens

arauders
BY DOXIE WALTERS

Ace southpaw Tim Demoskey
of the Meigs 'Marauders survived a 15 mmute rain delay.
got five hits from Dave Boyd
and three hits each from Jljck
Van Matre, Roger Dixon, and
Gene Powell to pitch the
Marauder base ball team past
the very highly regarded
'Athe!lS Bulldogs ~.
This had to be - lacking
official records - the worst
licking any Meigs County high
school baseball team ever put

Tomorrow night baseball players aged peewee to 90 and up,
basf,ball managers, coaches, and the general public are invited to
&lt;ltarlestoo, W. Va. where the Cincinnati Reds are sponsoring a
second baseball cllnic.
.
Jim Vennari, Pomeroy, Rutland elementary sc)lool principal,
who moonlights as a Reds' scout, will be one of the principal
speakers. His IDpic will be pitching and outfield play. Gene
Bennett, a veteran of the Reds' scouting fold, will speak on hit·
ling. Jim and Gene expect Elmer Gray, scouting supervisor, to
make it to Charleston too - but it is not certain that he will- and
If he does, "He'll talk on the things we leave out," according to
Vennari.
i&gt;
The clinic will be in the Morris Harvey College gymnasiwn
wl)lch is on the right side of the Kanawha River, and reached
before one gels to the Charleston baseball park. There is no
charge for !he clinic. Like we say about a revival service,
"Everybody is Welcome."
Sponsors of the clinic is the Charleston Recreation Dept. Its
director is Bob Justis, his assistant, Lyle Wolverton.
By FRED DOWN
The clinic was offered the first time last year about !his same
UPI Sports Writer
time. lt was a great success. Thus the Reds' organization decided
Vida Blue is baseball's new
"boy
wonder"-a pitcher with
to do it again.
so much natural talent that he
IT'S TIME FOR would-be lifeguards and aspiring recreation appears to have no limitations.
The 21-year-old smoke throw·
directors to get their appllcationa in for sununer employment at
the Middleport Municipal swimming pool (and park). Letters er from Mansfield, La., who
fr(ltl!ifeguards stating experience and qualifications (Red Cross pttched a no-httter and a onecertificates ~ld) may be directed to &lt;ltet Tannehill, Recreation hitter last September, turned in
another spectacular perforCommission, Middleport town ball, Middleport, Ohio.
Candidates lor park director should direct letters to the same mance Tuesday when he hurled
place stating educational years of high school and-or college a two-httter in the Oakland
Alhletics' 9-0 victory over the
completed, their "major" m college, and daytime hours they will
Milwaukee Brewers.
be available.
Blue was kayoed in less than
The pool and park season begins on Memorial Day (May 30)
two innings by the Washington
and continues through Labor Day.
Senators on April 5 liut on April
9 he pttched a three-hitter and
TRENTON 200 ENTRIES
struck out 13 batters in a six·
TRENTON, N.J. (UPI)- mnmg vrctory over Kansas
MATCH STOPPED
Nolan Swackhamer's Bobby Unser, AI Unser, Joe City
surging Melgs UDksters, with Leonard, Marro Andretti, Cale
Memorable Rookies
Yarborough,
Mark
Donohue
and
senlor BUI Hensler leading
Baseball hrstory is filled WJth
the way, were ahead of Uoyd Ruby are among early
Athens after seven holes of entrants for the Trentoman 200
play Tuesday when rain lor Umted States Auto Club
QUARTERFINAlS
forced them off the Pomeroy champwnshtp cars April 25 at
HERSEHY, Pa. (UPI)- The
GoH Course. Play will resume Trenton Speedway.
Cleveland Barons meet the
Thursday.
Hershey Bears here tonight in
For a sneak prevlew of
RAINED OUT
what could be the deciding
what could be a chamThe Eastern Eagle baseball game of the quarterlmals of the
pionship match In·the future, team of Coach Larry Hines was
Calder Cup series.
come watch Swack's boys rained out in the second inning
The Barons have a 2-1 edge tn
tangle wlth Athens, Jackson, of its scheduled game w1tlj
!he best-of-ftve series with the
and WeUston, at Pomeroy Nelsonville York, the Eagles
Bears.
Thursday afternoon.
were on the short end of a two to
If Hershey wms, the clincher
one score at the tune.
will be played 1 Thursday in
Cleveland.
The Bears won the serres
'
opener 3-2 in a sudden death
over lime, but Cleveland
snapped back to WJn the next
two, 4-2 and 7-1.

onto an AthellS High SChool
team, at least in modem times.
Demoskey allowed O!IIY an
infield single in his five innings
of work. Rick Van Maire took
over in the sixth and allowed
only two hits the rest of the way.
While Ed Bartels' moundsmen dominated !he opposmg
bitters, the Meigs batsmen were
blasting the Athens staff off the
field.
Steve Dunfee drew a walk to
begin the first inning, Van

hits · off an almost helpless
Bulldog mound staff.
Meigs' 20runscame on 19bits
and 9 walks!
'
The fine Marauder mound
staff struck out seven and
issued six free passes. This was
the second outing in a row in
which Demoskey allowed only
one hit; he shut out Wellston on
one hit on the sixth of April.
Athens starter lind loser Mark
Handley lasted one and oneinsuranCe runs on seven more third inning before be1ng

Maire singled, Powell walked,
Boyd knocked across two runs
with a towering double, Dixon
singled home Boyd, Stan Wilson
walked, and &lt;ltlpper Haggerty
batted in Dixon. The Marauders
applied the clincher in the
second and third by bombarding three Athens prtchers
for II runs on eight hits and five
bases on balls.
From this point Meigs
coasted to victory, adding five

shelled from the mound .
Reliever Mike Green couldn't
stop anybody, and was lifted
after one-third inning in favor of
Jon Kostival. Steve InbodY took
over in the fourth to fmish up.
Athens hurlers famed five and
handed out nme passes.
Slugging first baseman Boyd
enjoyed a perfect day at the
plate with four singles and a
double.
·
Powell, Dtxon and VanMatre
smacked three htts aptece, Stan

Wilson had two while Dunfee ,
Haggerty, and Demoskey
collected one each .
Doo Wood, Kesth Kelley, and
Jim Swearingen provided
Athens three hits . The
Marauders travel to Pt.
Pleasant Thursday afternoon.
Meigs
474 010 4---20 19 0
Athens
000 033 0- 6 3 2
Demoskey (WP), Van Maire
(6), and Dixon. Handley (LP),
Green (2), Kostival (2), Inbody
(4), and Kelly .

-B lue Blanks Brewers, 2-0

© 1971 br NEA , r"c

"Now, tell me, just how high-up are you in
administration circles~"

r------ - -- ---------------1

!Helen Help Us!
'1

By Helen Bottel

,

1

1
OFF AGAIN, ON AGAIN,
GONE AGAIN - NO HOPE
Dear Helen :
My husband and I have separated 14 times in the past two
years Before that, tt wasn't quite so bad, though 10 years of
marrrage hasn't been exacUy heaven.
Two of our brggest problems are: his drinking and his father.
The booze problem got so bad that my husband lost h1s job, but his
97-year-old fa !her (who lives with us and hasn't taken a bath in 12
years) gives hinf $200a week, and he lushes up most of 11.
We bave a llk'oom house, but "Papa" InSISts on sleepmg ltll
noon every day on the living room sofa. His aversion to water
makes things very bad. Between a drunk husband and an overripe father-in-law, my life is not smooth.
I moved out sgain lastweek .l don't think I am even missed. H
I went back, do you think !have any chance of changmg things? CAN'T STAND FAILURE
Dear C.S.F.:
H you haven't "change thtngs" in 14 tries .... well, l~t·s put it
lhiS way: admitting failure IS sometunes the ftrst step toward a
new and better life (I'd rate your last one pretty "rank." )- H.
Dear Helen:
AState Legislator has satd that VD IS the biggest eptdemic to
hit the suburbs since crabgrass.
Isn't.rt time we had massexarrunations at school- or, at the
least, ms1st !hat every student present a certificate from a doctor
before he or she gets report cards each semester?
H smallpox and polio can be aU but elimmated, why not VD?
·
- TERRffiLY WORRIED
Dear Worried·
Venereal disease won't be eradicated until someone diS&lt;:I!vers
a foo~ proof munuruzation, and It becomes as routine as smappox
vaccmations.
.
Control ? - Education, begmning in grade school! H every
child (adult too ) knew all !he facts about VD - symptoms spread,
dangers when left untreated, and comparative ease w1th which it
can be cured (or prevented), the "epidemic" would soon be over.
It's sad that rn these enltghtened times so many teenagers
must write to columnists for information they should be receiving
at home or at school. A typical example :
Dear Helen : It happened just once, and he's my ex-boyfriend
now. I found out too late I was just another notch on his belt.
Helen, I'm scared to death I might have VD, and 1 can't tell my
folks. They'd never..get over the shame. I don't have money for
treatments and, bestdes, our doctor would contact Mom, as I'm
under age - HELP!
Dear Help : There's a County Venereal Disease ffimtc m your
town (almost every large or , medium~ized city has one).
Examination and treatment are free, and your parents are NOT
contacted. VD ts completely curable if caught early and no one in
your family need ever know, unless you wish to tell. '
Find !he address in your telephone book under County
Government Health sernces (or ask the operator for the number).
P.S. These days, most states do not require parental
knowledge lor treatment of venereal disease in teenagers. _ H.

"

$}.00
SAVE TANK FULl

•

Under Major Oil Prices

XE-110 Ethyl- over 100 octane

Certified Gas Stations
992-9981

POMEROY

SJBW. MAIN

SIDE ACTION ON ICE MEET
MONTREAL (UPl)- Mayor
Kevin Wh1te of Boston and
Mayor Jean Drapeau have
made a wager on the outcome
of the current Stanley Cup
playoff senes between the
Boston Brums and Montreal
Canadiens. Whrte has wagered
a jar of Boston ba~ed beans
and three lobsters agamst
Drapeau's gallon of Quebec
maple syrup and a pound of
Oka cheese.

Back Pains Occur
For Many Reasons

It Every T'

me

usefulm tuberculosis bestdes
Jus! the lungs If tuberculous
Infection mvolves bone and
causes enough e r o s t on or
damage to the bone, these
changes can be seen
Dear Dr Lamb- IV o u 1d
yo u gtve a thought to an old
lady of 78 wrth a health problem I have pam m the lower
Jaw wh1ch comes on when I
siidf! down in bed and have
been asleep for some time . 11
I srt up for an hour the pain
wrll go away l have come
to believe it has somethmg
to do wrth the bloOd I have
had all my teeth removed
t h 1 n k 1n g 1t m1ght end the
trouble but rt hasn't
Dear Reader- Your theory
about the pam m your jaw
bemg related to c1rculatton
ts not a bad one It is true
that heart trouble can cause
pam m the jaw, rather than
pam m the chest. It is also
true that w he n the heart
doesn't beat as strong as it
used to, 1! can cause a small
all)ount of flUid to acc umulate m the lungs, parltcularly at mght and can cause
pam.
The fact that your pam
occurs at mght and is related
to your s I e e p 1 n g position.
and ts teheved by srttmg up.
suggests that thiS could well
be the case
Why don't you go see your
doctor for a heart checkup''
He may be able to give you
some .mcdtctne to get rid of
any ~xc:es• tlutit you mav
havf" accumu l.ufed and
" UII SUIU(' l'l'ht•l

•

g1vi.•

spectacular performances by
rookies and other young pitch·
ers, such as Bobo Holloman
who pitched a no-hitter in his
first start, Karl Spooner
strrking out 15 batters in his
debut and ' Tommy Phoebus
pitching two consecutive shutouts at the start of his career.
But Blue's rash of low-hit, highstrikeout performances probably can't be surpassed until the
baseball fans goes hack m
history to Johnny Vander
Meer's two consecutive nohillers as a rookie m 1938.
A six-foot, 1115-pound left·
bander, who had a brilliant
baseball and football career at
Temple High School in Mansfield, Blue has been marked for
stardom since he was signed by
!he Athletics in 1!167. He was

Signup Day Set

;11

Slgnup for Middleport Pee Wee, little League and
Pony League will be Saturday from 1 to 3 p.m. at
Middleport Legion Hall.
All boys wbo wlsb to play are urged to attend.
Tb08e who cannot be there are asked to contact Betty
Smith, Sycamore Street, or Dlck Hovatter, Fifth
Street, Middleport, 1M' contact their coacb of last year.
Insurance for Pony League.is $3 and $2for Pee Wee
and Utile League.

::·
···
=:.

~==

•.•

.!~ =~-: : :=:&gt;.: : :~: : : : : :~: :·: : : : : : ::::::::~:: : : :;:;: : : : ·.·.·:·: :·: : : : : : :·: :.;':·:=:=· :·!·!•'•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•'•! · :· =~ ~

By United Press tnlernalronat
Nattonal League
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Poltsburgh
5 2 714
New York
3 2 .600 1
St. LoUis
3 ~ 429 2
Montreal
2 3 400 2
Ch1cago
3 5 .375 2112
Philadelphia 2 4 333 2'12
West
W. L Pet. GB
San Fran
5 2 714
Houston
6 3 667
Atlanta
4 3 571 1
San Diego
3 4 .~29 2
Los Angeles
3 5 375 2'h

American League
East
W. L. Pel.
Baltimore
4 1 800
Cleveland
3 1 750
New York
3 3 500
Boston
3 3 500
Washmgton · 3 5 375
Detroll
2 4 333
West
W. L. Pet.
Minnesota
4 3 571
Milwaukee
3 3 500
Oakland
4 4 500
Kansas City
4 4 500
Chicago
3 4 429
California
3 4 429

C10cmnati

Tuesday's Results
Oakland 2 Milwaukee 0

2

.4

200 2112

Houston at San Fran

St Louis at Los Ang, n1ghl
cago at San Diego, night
Only games scheduled)
RECEIVES ONE VOTE

"

NEW YORK (UPI) - Bob
Cousy, coach of the Cincinnati

Dick Motta of the Chicago
Bulls won the honor, getting 30
,votes in balloting by three
sports writers from each of the
17 NBA member ctlies.

"

The

Wide, low ,RAISED WHITE LETTERED
mueclt JOU tin pt In • tfrel

Exec. Ed.

12,000 traction edpt to

-'" you ' ' " control .t all tlmal

• RewerH Molded- to 11n JOU • wide, flat tread without tiN·
dutrv)'lnc ltut build-up In thl thouhfer aru.

,.

"

'

o RaloM Willie L - Sl!lln&amp;-lo Itt
totllh Um oa JOUr whlltl.

70\:i) P-J
I

'

'

.' '

G

!I!' WOffd knw JG11 howl

1111(

.....

10WAY .

WAf

70.14-12 .72

G 70.15 - 12 ....

Second c:tass postage patd illf

Na1tonal

2 WEEKS SPECIAL
,

Compare Before You Buy. Wheels Balanced

At No Extra Cost.

RIZER OIL CO. H2·2101

700 L Main

2157

Pomeroy , Ohio

I
advert isi ng

representa11ve

Bott.n elli

Gallagher , In c, 12 East 42nd
St. New York City, New York .

I

Subscrtptton rates

De

li'Jered by carrier where
avatlable SO cents per week ;
1By Motor Route where cartter
serv1ce not lvtllablf : One

l'h
l'h

2'12
21h
GB
112

4'12
'12
1
J

Thursday's Games

Calif at Kansas City, night
Oakland at Minnesota
Milwaukee at Chicago
Ball at Cleve, lwltlght
Delroil at New York
I Only games scheduled!

HUNTINGTON , IV Va (UP! )
- The success of Marshall
Umversrty's 1971 football team
was assured Tuesday, frve
months before rt played a
game
Sprmg praclice began
"This represents a great
conumttment by the umversrty
and the communrty," said Jack
Lengyel, the head coach "It
would have been very easy for
them to g1ve rt up."
Although spring football prac·
lice at most colleges is a rather
routine exercise, it is an event
of constderable note at Marshall, where nearly an enttre
team was wtped out m an
arrplane crash five months ago
today.
"I realize !hat it's going to be
a great difficulty and there are
certainly gmng to be some long
and lean Saturdays," Lengyel
said "But I lhink this provides
one of the great lessons In
athletics-to rebuild and come
back from a tragedy like !his."
Forty-three players participated in the first two-hour
workout on !he Astroturf at
Fairfield Stadium', most of
!hem freshmen .
But there were some varsrtyexperienced players who
missed the ill-fated trip to East
Carolina last Nov. 14.
"I'm just trymg to put all the
thmgs that happened in !he
past behind me," said Ed
Carter, a junior offensive tackle
from Wichita Falls, Texas.
Carter was attending his
fa ther's funeral when the
chartered Southern Airways
jetliner crashed trying to land
at Huntington, killing 75 persons mcludmg 36 of Carter's
teammates, Coach· Rick Tolley,
and a large delegabon of fans.
"It's kind of like being a
freshman all over agam,"
Carter said. "We're all starting
fresh, and everyone's trymg to
show the coach what they can
do"

SAVE WITH

loser
Stan Bahnsen scattered II
htts, mcludmg a homer by
Norm Cash, and tripled m a
ft fth-mmng run for lhe
Yankees, who dealt Joe Ntekro
hts second straight lass for the
Tigers Roy Whtte homered for
one Yankee run and scored
another on a smgle by Danny
Cater

NaUtamel Ruffm, one of the practtce two days before the
1970 co-captams, missed the game
death tnp because of an arm
mjury and says he now feels
"funny" pracllcmg without hts
'
old friends.
"I'm !he only guy here who
started with the others as a
freshman tn 1968," Ruffin satd.
"There are only about six
upperclassmen here now and as you add to your savings
we know tt's going to be on our each week at fhe Meigs Co.
Branch of the Athens Co .
shoulders to take !he leadership
Savin11,s and Loan
responslblhty."
.Most. of the players agreed
that meretyl by beiltg able to
continue tts football program,
Marshall is an assured success
this year.
CURRENT
"II we're able to win some
PASSBOOK RATE
games, he should be C9ach-ofthe-year ," satd Joe McMullen,
Save by the lOth, earn
!he new athletic drrector.
from
the I st.
Nobody talked in terms of
wins and losses, because even
at full strength Marshall has
not had a wmnmg sea$0n since
1964, but A. J . McRoberts,
another player who missed the
trtp, ligures lhe Thundering
Herd will have one thing going
The Athens County
for it.
Savings
&amp; Loan Co.
" We should have a great
296 Second St.
mental edge on the teams we
Pomeroy, Ohio
play because we want to prove
to people we can come back,"
said McRoberts, a sophomore
tight end from Pittsburgh. He
,
dld not go to East Carolina
because he sprained an ankle in

Watch Your
$$Grow

4%~

•

SPRING

G.E. Dryer

&lt;Eiec.&gt; A-1

95
Mav+ag
(Gas)
Dryer
~4
t---';.,_'~-;.._-----·u_-1

Electric
t Coppertone)
on this '
Gas Ranae Save
New Vesta Range
~

16 %t FIBERGLAS

RUNABOUT BOAT
WITH MOTOR AND TRAILER
Almost new 100 HP Evinrude motar, Gator
trailer. 12 gas tanks, elec. starting, convertible
· top with back curtain, 6 passenger. sea1s
convert to beds. REAL SHARP!

~ •1795

KEITH-GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LDT ·

Va , One year $14 00
months S7 25
Three

months S4.50 Subscription
pr.ce mcludes Sundtly Times.

frame on a fielder's chmce
Reltever Dave U!Roche ptcked
up !he v1ctory while Vtcente
Romo, who pitched to only two
batters m the JOih, was the

Marshall Begins
Football Drills

---------..

w

Senflnet ~

1h

Calif 3 Ch•cago 1. (10 mnlngs)
New York 5 Detroot 2
Ball at Cleve, ppd ., rain
Kan C1ty 5 Minn 3, night
Boston 5 Wash 3, night
Today's Probable Pilchen
I All Times ESTI
Callforn1a (Wnght 0·2 ) at
Kansas Coty (Rooker 0-1), 8 30
p m.
Oakland iSegul 0-0) at
Mmnesota !Perry 11 ), 2 15
p m.
Milwaukee !Slaton 0 0) at
Ch1cago (Johnson 1-11. 2. 15
p.m.
Baltimore (Cuellar 0-0) at
Cleveland (McDowell 0 OJ.
noon.
Boston (Nagy 0-0) at Wash
mglon (Shellenback 0.1]. 7.30
p.m .
Detroit (Lollch 1-1) at New
York (Peterson o.l), 2 p.m.

mon!h S1 75 By· mail In OhiO

and
Sot

GB
..

and Carl Yastrzemski off
Denny McLam enabled Bostlln 's
Sonny Steber! to pick up h1s
f1rsl vtctory of the season, Wlth
mnth-mmng rehef help from
Sparky Lyle. McLam, m hts
second so~o performance of the
season, was tagged for four
earned runs and seven htts m
f1ve innings
Ken McMullen doubled and
pmch-runner Chtco Ruiz scored
the tte-breakinR run on a single
by Billy Cowan in the !Ulll
mmng
lor the Angels, who
save.
Homers by Duane Josephson scored a second run tn the

Pittsburgh 9 Philadelphia 3,
Cincinnati 5 Atlanta 4 and
Chicago 3 Los Angeles 2 San
Diego at San Franctsco was
rained out.
Paul Schaal's , run-scormg
double off reltever Stan Wtl·
Iiams triggered a three-run
fifth mmng rally which led the
Royals to their v1ctory over the
Twins. Mtke Hedlund wenl ftve
mnings for the wm wtth Ted
Abernathy, the thtrd relief
pitcher, recetvmg credtt for a

•

C1ty Editor
Published dally e1&lt;cept
Saturday by The- OhtOo Valley
Publishing Company, 111
CoUrt St, 'Pomeroy, Oh10 ,
45769 8Us1ness Office Phone
992 2156, Edttor .al Ptlone 99 2

1..,

t nl(ht·Tractlon Tread Plttern-over

Sentinel

ROBERT HOEFLICH ,

• Hu1ky, Spetci.PI'O'ten 4 PfY Nrton Cord Con11ructlon-tht most

"

Dai~

OEVOTEDTOTHE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,

••• performance to spare!
1

brought up prematurely m 1969
and had a 6.21 earned run
average m 42 innings but ln
1970 had a 12-3 record for Iowa
and was the American Assoctation:s pitcher of the year. Hall
of Farner Joe DiMaggto has
been one of hts biggest boosters
and has been credited for at
least part of his development
Kansas City beat the Xinnesota Twms, 5-3, the Boston Red
Sox defeated !he Washington
Senators, 5-3, the Cahfornia
Angels edged the Chtcago White
Sox, 3-1, and New York beat
DetrOit 5-2 in other American
League games. Baltimore at
Cleveland was ramed out.
NL Action
In the National League, 11
was Montreal 4 New York I,
Houston 8 St
Lows 4,

{': :-··:·:·:·:·:·:·: :-: : !·!·!·!·!•!•! : !•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!::0:·!·!:!::::::::::::::::::::::::-:::·:::·:::·:::·:·:0!•!:~~~

Tuesday's Results
Montreat 4 New York 1
Houslon 8 51 Lou1s 4
Pitts 9 Phlia. 3 noght
Cin 5 Atlanta 4, noghl
Chicago 3 Los Ang, 2 mght
San Fran at San Diego, ppd ,
ram
Today's Probable Potchers
tAll Tomes EST)
Poltsburgh (Moose 1 0) at
Philadelphia (FrymanO 1], 7 30
p.m.
Houston (Griffm 0·11. at San
FranCISco (Stone 0 OJ. 4 p m
Cinconnat1 !Cloninger 0-0i at
Atlanta (Niekro 0 0), 8'p m.
St LouiS !Reuss 0-ll at Los
Angeles !Osteen 2-01. 11 p,m
Chicago (Jenkins 1.1) al San
Diego !Arlin 0-0i, 10 30 p.m
New York ISadeck1 0 0) at
Montreal (Stoneman 0-1), 2·15
p.m
Thursday's Games

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb-! h a v e
Quickie Quiz
prevrously had TB of the
Q- What mammal has the ktdney. The doctors say 1t is
season.
shortest gestatwn perwd?
cleared up I shll have pains
A~The Vrrgmta opposum, 1n my back and ktdney and
In 1965 Frank Mttchell, 15,
became the first Negro page JUSt 12 days
wonder tf this ts norma l My
urme has been checked a nd
boy rn lhe U.S. House of
Q-How many of the tl shows nothin g Could there
Representalives
" foundtng fathers" Slgned be anythmg else that causes
the U.S Constttutton&gt;
th1s pam m the !ewer nght
A thought for today · Bntish
A-Forty
stde and back' I would also
ltke to know why they ]ust
r------y:~~;'-;:;:;;--;;~::--::-:::::----:=---------, X ray the chest when they
Do
®
know l had TB elsewhere
un.e
and why they don 't check
~V=:==========
you where you have 1!
IOU'VE SEEN HIM Of.l ALL
UNL.ESS WE STOP POLL.lJTING THE
Dear Reader- There are
'THE TAI.K 5140\1/5 ... THE
OZONE, 1-0 L.IYING THING WIL.L. BE
many t h t n g s w h 1c h can
ECOL.OGY EXPERT W~O
~~~\~L.~~~~·THv:M(.)ST
cause pam in the nght ,stde
WARNS OF SLDW
ENVIRONMENT OR
and back, mcludmg probASPHYXI,I..TJON....
WIL.L. DO YOU
Iems of the, colon , parttcuIN• .. · • · --"''"
larly 1f s om eo n e JS under
e m ot I 0 n a ! stless Muscle
pams and abnormahty of
the spme also ca use dlfftculties ml th1s area
Regardmg X rays , the
chest 1s 'most often X rayed
because one can eastly see
stgns of tuberculosis m the
lungs. Thts IS not , tr ue of
r::-----~-,many other or;gans like the
k1dney smce a li l he X ray
often does 1s to outline a
shadow of the shape of the
organ Itself The dtf!et ence
IS that tire lungs
full ol
a1r and a ktdney, lot exa m·
pie. rs not. This IS why 1t IS
'\7.,--- - - --_J bette~ to do exammatrons of
the urine to tell how the kid·
neys are lunt:homng Jhan 11
•s to usc an X-t ay t•xami natton when nm· ,; ioukmg
lot' !ttl&gt;&lt;·• t• ulnsts
Tht•r t&gt; m l' :-;onw oth1.'l t•x
aruplt•.s wht'll' I ht· X 1 .1~ 1s

Hado's They'll

. . . . --.. . ._.. . . .,. .,_._
the Sports Desk ,

:r,.::-----~~--~.;...---·----

Voice along Broadway !

I

,

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.P(Itleroy, 0., April t4 1971

992-3422
Lb~ust St.

Middleport, 0.

$1.00.00

G. E. Dryer (Electric)
36" Gas Range=~ ~:~Ilion $}35•
Elec. Refrigerator Frigidaire
GE

Automatic Washer
4-21"

Your

T.V. Consoles

Choice

•
IGUARANT!iEDl

'69.00

New Riding Mowm and Push Mowers
All On Sale '52.95 to '439.00 ·

H&amp;R Firestone
N. 2nd Ave.

992-2238

--· ....
Middleport, 0.

�~ ·

\

• - $-'-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport..Pumaoy, 0., Allrtll4. lfll .

Motta ·Coach-Of-Year
.

..
,•

-:

.

.,

JEFF MORRIS
MARAUDER CAPTAINS- Jeff Morris, 6-2 center, and
Steve Dun,ee, HI guard, have been appointed co~aptains of
the 1971·72 .Marauder basketball team by head coach Carl

•••

·:

:·

·:'•
:·,.

.,.

;.••

~=

1
~:

·:

..:•••

••
~
••

...:·
·:
:·
. ••.

.....,
••

~

•

.,••••
••••

••
••
••

,.••.,
••
••

~

•'~

~
'·f,

•
••
•

t•
•
•

NBAPlay
To Resume
BALTIMORE (UP!)
Tonight's the night the
Baltimore Bullets find out
which are the real Bullets.
Will they be .the same Bullets
who ran out of gas in the last
period of the first two Eastern
Conference losses to New York
or will they be the Bullets who
ran the Knicks out of the·
Baltimore Civic Center Sunday
afternoon?
The injury-riddled Bullets
faltered in the end and lost both
games in New York but looked
like a different team Sunday in
humiliating the Knicks 114-Mln
the third game of their best-of·
seven series.
The Bullets again will be
wlthout the·., seryic~s o( star
forward Gus Johnson, sidelined
with a knee injury, and Keviii
Loughery is listed as
guard .
questionable
at
Loughery is suffering from a
foot injury but Fred Carter has
been Impressive as a
replacement.
.
Earl Monroe, the Bullets'
leading scorer, had some ankle
problems to go with his chronic
knee troubles, but he poured in
31 points Sunday and looked lil\e
nothing in the world was
bothering him.
The Knicks, obviously
humiliated by their lackluster
performance on Sunday, are
healthy for Game No. -4.

INGLEWOOD, ·Calif. (UP!)
- The Big Green Machine from
Wisconsin - otherwise known
as the Milwaukee Bucks - can
put one more nail in the coffin of
the injury-depleted Los Angeles
Lakers tonight.
The Lakers will be without
Keith Erickson in addition to
Jerry West and Elgin Baylor in
the third game of the teams'
best-of-seven semifinal playoff
series. Pal Riley, a little-used
guard, will replace Erickson.
The Bucks won by 2i and 18
points In the first two contests al
Milwaukee with Erickson, the
Lakers' standout forward·
guard, missing SWJday's game
with what he thought was
stot~a ~.c~a!\lliii• He underwent
surgery for removal of his
appendix Sunday nigh!.
There doesn't appear much
the Lakers can do against the
team that lost only 16 NBA
regular season games and then
took follr out of five from San
Francisco in its initial playoff
series.
In fact, coach Larry Costello
has promised his Bucks, who
won four of five regular season
meetings with Los Angeles, will
be even tougher here.
If Milwaukee wins tonight,
the Bucks can wrap up the
series and the Western Conference Iitle Friday night.

•

••.
•
••

.

'•'·
~

~

~

~
•

,'.•

,.,".

'~

"·'•'•.

'
'.'•

'

i·••

I"

••

~
;.•
~;

.,

.••"••
•'
~

,.k

'

-

Tuesday's Logan -Wellston
NEW YORK (UPI)-Dick NationaiBaskethaUAssociation sports writers f~om ·each of the baseball game was postponed
Motta has had the litst laugh on for guiding the Chicago Bulls to • 17 NBA member cities.. '
_by rain .
those who said he would not be their first winning. season.
Larry Costello, who dtrected
In . other action around the
able to make the transition Motta who came to the Bulls the Milwaukee Bucks lo the league, JaCkson remained hot
·rrom a college basketball coach three y~ars ago from Weber Midwest Division title, finished on the heels of Gallipolis i~ the
to a professional· one.
.StateCollege,wherehecoached second with 11 votes . AI •AtUes Southern Division race by
Motta , i!9, was named coach for eight years, received 30 of ilie San Francisco Warriors blanking Waverly,~ on a twoof the yea!' Tuesday in the votes in a balloting of three was thtrd wtth three votes.
hitter by Dave Swann. Swann
Red Holzman of the New fanned 16 Tigers. The lronmen
York Knicks, winner of the collected six hits.
award a year ago, got two
Jackson is now 2·1 in convotes. Bob Cousy of Cincinnati, ference play, and will host
Joe Mullaney of. Los Angeles, unbeaten GAHS Tuesday.
'
Jack Ramsay of Philadelphia, Waverly is 1).2 in conference
Rolland Todd of Portland and . . action.
Lenny Wilkens of Seattle .got
Gallipolis downed Ironton 2-l
one each.
and Meigs crushed Athens, 21).6.
The Bulls, although eiiminat·
ed in seven games by Los
Angeles in the first round of the Bobcats Trip
By FRED McMANE
Houston Rallies
playoffs, finished second to
UPI Sports Writer
Norm Miller's three-run ho- Milwaukee in the tough Mid· Buckeyes, 7 ·3
The Pittsburgh Pirates are mer and Joe Morgan's 2-run west division during the regular
employing the same philosophy single ignited a five-run ninth season with a 51·31 ·record. It
this season that the Cincinnati inning as Houston rallied to marked the first time the Bulls
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)- Mike
Reds did last season when they defeat St. Louis. Bob Watson had gone over the .500 mark Hannah and Bob Kliber rapped
won the National League also homered for the Astros.
since the team joined the out 'two hits apiece as Ohio
pennant-namely, stay · loose Steve Renko went the dis· league in 1966.
University downed Ohio State 7STEVE DUNFEE
and .have fun .
tance to beat the Mets for the
3 Tuesday in collegiate
The implications of this second straight time and once
baseball.
WoHe. Morris was a third team selection on the 1971).71 All
attitude are that if you're again got batting support from
CLEAMONS MVP
The Bobcats, now 11·1, scored
Southeastern Ohio All-Star team as junior. Dunfee logged
relaxedandenjoyingyourself it batterymate John Bateman. CHICAGO (UP!) - Ohio two runs in the first and second,
considerable time on the varsity. Both will be seniors next
should lead to a positive result Bateman, who drove in three State basketball captain Jim added their fifth run in the third
year.
on the field . So far 1 it appears runs when Renko beat·the Mets Cleamons has been named the and two more runs in the fifth .
to be working for the Pirates. last week, hit a homer in the Big Ten Conference's most Four of the runs were scored on
Not renowned as a long-ball- second inning as the Expos valuable player.
.
sacrifice flies.
Linescores
hilling team, the . Pirates made a successful home debut. Cleamons led the sophomoreThe Buckeyes got one run
Tuesday night unloaded five
Jose Ortiz scored the lie· dominated team to the Big Ten
across in the first but were then
home runs in Philadelphia's breaking run on Don Kessin· championship and a mideasl
By United PreSs International 110 inning s)
blanked until the ninth inning.
Nationa I Laague
Cal if
000 001 000 2- 3 7 2 new Veterans Stadium and ger's eighth-inning single as the regional NCAA win over
New York
Chico 000 001 000 o- 1 3 1 crushed the Phillies 9-3 for Cubs raUied to beat the Marquette, then rated No. 2.
000 000 OlD- 1 8 3 fllle ssersm ith, Laroche (6) their fifth victory In seven Dodgers. Ortiz walked and was He was chosen for the most
Montreal lll 000 Ol x- 4 5 0 and Tor borg, Moses 18) ;
·sacrificed to second before valuable player award by
· Gen lry, McGraw i7l and Bradley, Ramo (10). Eddy 110). games.
Grote; Renko 12-0) and Bate. Kealey ( 10 ) and Herr mann, Jackie Hernandez and Manny Kessinger's key hit, which conference coaches and other
man . LP-Genlry (0-2). HR - Egan (10 ). WP-Laroche (1-0). Sanguillen blasted three-run saddled Dodger ace Bill Singer officials.
BRITISH HEAVIES
Bateman llsll .
LP-Romo Il -l) .
SOLVERHAMPTON, Eng·
homers and Willie StargeU, Bob with his third consecutive loss Iowa's Fred Brown was
land
(UP!) - Jack Bodell is a
Houston 201 000 005- S 10 0 Boston
021 110 ooo- 5 8 3 Robertson and winning pitcher without a victory .
second in the voting, followed
St. Louis 002 010 Ol D--'- 4 9 2. Was h
002 000 001 - 3 5 1
step closer to a title fight with
Billingham, Culver ( 8) , Le- Siebert, Ly le (9) and Jose- Nelson Briles added solo blasts - - - - - - - -- - ~y Purdue 's Larry Weatherford newly
crowned · British
and
Indiana's
George
master (9) and Edwards; phson ; Mcla in, Cox (6), as the Pirates boosted their
heavyweight
champion Joe
Torrez, Taylor (9). Brunet (9) Grzenda (8). Pina (8) and home run output for the season
:r~
McGinnis.
and Simmons. WP-Culver 12-0). Casanova . WP-Siebert (1-0) .
Bugner. Bodwell, 204'h; fought
LP-Torrez (O.l) . HR ~ Wat son LP-McLain 1J. l). HR -Josephson to 10. Other Games
with his left eye tightly closed
(l si). Miller (lsi).
(2nd). Yastrzemski (lsi).
for
more than six rounds
In other National League
Tuesday night but won an easy
PI Its
000 030 042- 9 11 2 Minn
100 100 OlD- 3 8 0
Phil
003 000 ooo- 3 7 3 Kan Ci ly 000 030 20x- 5 4 0 games, Cincilmati edged Allan·
Federal Trncks
Ill-round decision over Mexican
Walker. Nelson IlL Bri les (6) Barber, Wil liams (5), Perra. ta 5-4, Houston defeated St.
'
Manuel
Ramos, 213'14 . Bodell
WASHINGTON - U.S.
and Sangullten ; Short, Selma noski (7) and Millerwald, Louis 8-4, Montreal heat New By Unlted Press International
(8), Champion (9)· and Ryan . Rail iff (8) ; Hed lund, York (7) , York 4-1, Chicago downed Los
federal agencies. includi ng knocked down · Ramos in the
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UP!)- the military, own 302.012
WP-Briles (1-t) . LP-Short (0-2) . Abernathy (8) and Ki rkpa tr ick .
fourth round and took every
HR-Sanguillen ltsll . Briles WP Hedlund 12-0). LP-William s Angeles ~2 and San Diego at Lorenzo "Boom Boom" Trujil· trucks.
round in the bout.
(lsi). Hernandez (lsi). Robert - (O.l). HR -Dii va (2nd) .
San Francisco was postponed lo, 128¥4, Houston, outpointed
son (2nd) , Stargell (5th).
because of rain .
Pablo Jimenez, 123\'4, Puerto
In
American
League
action,
Cin.
031 000 100- 5 11 1
Rico (10).
Oakland blanked Milwaukee
Atlanla 000 001 03Q- 4 8 0
Gullett, Granger 181. Gibbon
2-0, California defeated NEW 'YORK (UPI)-John
(8) and Bench; Jarv is, Stone
Chicago 3-1, New York Clohessy, 206, New York,
(3) , Upshaw (9 ) and King . WPGullett (l -0) . LP-Jarvis (0-2).
beat Detroit 5-2, Kan- slopped Bob Castle, 204, Or·
HR-Bench l3rd) Aaron (3rd) .
sas City topped Minnesota ange, N.J., (3); Bobby 'Mash·
5-3, Boston downed Washington burn, 214, New York, outpointed
San Diego at San Fran, ppd.,
rain
5-3 and Baltimore at Cleveland Lnu Hicks, 190, New York (8).
FOR THE
was postponed because of rain.
.
Chicago 010 ooo no- 3 7 o
Reliever Joe Gibbon bailed , BATTLE CREEK, Mich.
Los Ang 200 ooo 000--- 2 9 o
FAMILY.,,
. Pappas (2-0) and Rudol ph;
ATLANTA (UP!) - Johnny Cincinnati out of a bases-loaded (UPI)-James Park, 168, CleveSinge•, Mikkelsen (9) and Sims, Rench, the home run king last jam in the eighth inning by land, stopped Don Lutz, 174%,
Hailer (9). LP-Singer (0-3). HR season, Is finally getting his getting Hal King to hit into a Milwaukee (4).
Pepitone (2nd).
1971 model gassed up.
double play as the Reds won
American League
Bench socked two homers on their second in a row after four HONOLULU (UPI)-Ben VilBall at Clev ppd ., ra in
Monday night to help the Cin- losses. Johnny Bench hit his laflor, 126, the Philippines,
Detroit 000 001 10o- 2 11 1 cinnati Reds win their first third homer in two nights to knocked out Rafael Lopez, 127,
New York
game of the season after losing pace Cincinnati's attack and Mexico (I); Beto Gon~alez, 142, ·
000 211 lOx- 5 6 0 four straight and he came back: Hank Aaron hit his 595th career Mexico, stopped Miguel Barre·
Niekro. Kilkenny (6) , Palterto, 141, New York (4).
N~xt Door to Elberfelds
son 16). Pallerson (6) Hannan Tuesday night with a single homer for the Braves.
Pomeroy
(7), Timmerman
17) and home run as the Reds got win
Freehan; Bahnsen (1 -1) and
Munson. LP-Niekro 10-2) . HR. No.2.
White !2nd) , Cash (lsi) .
The Reds were leading 5-1
going in to the bottom of the
Oakland 101 000 000 - 2 6 0
but
they
got
Mllwkee 000 000 ooo- o 2 0 eighth,
Blue (2-l) and Dun ca n; in trouble
and
finally
Darsos (0· I) and Roof.
squeaked by with a 5-4 win.
Don Gullett departed the
game in the eighth after loadNHL Playoff standings ·
By United Press International ing the bases and when reliever
I Quarterfinals-Best of 7)
Wayne Granger allowed a sin·
East
gle and a double that scored
Series"''A"
W. L. three runs, Joe Gibbon look lhe
Boston
3 2 mound .
2. 3
Montreal
Gibbon got Hal King to
bounce into a double play to
Series "8"
W. L. second baseman Tonuny Helms
New York
3 2 to end the threat.
Toronto
2 3
The Reds had jumped off to
West
a 3-1 lead in the second inning
Series "C"
W. L. when Woody Woodward doubled
x·Chicago
4 0 home Willie Smith and Hal
Philadelphia
0
4 McRae then scored himseH on a
double by Pete Rose.
·
Series "0"
w. L. In the fourth came Bench's
MinnesMa
3
2 third homer in two nights.
St. Louis
2 3
The Braves scored their first
X-Clinched series
run in the sixth when Hank
Tuesday 's Games
Aaron hit his third home run of
New York 3 Toronto 1
Basion 7 Montreal 3
• the year and 595th of his ca·
'Minnesota 4 St. Louis 3
reer.
No games Today
Tony Perez scored the even•
tual winning run in the seventh
Greg Spence, 2b
2 0 0 inning when he walked with one
John Myers. 3b
2 o o · oul and was driven around by
Bob Bayer!, 1b
2 1 1 successive singles by Bench and
Doug Henry, p
2 o 0 Smitlf.
TOTALS
18 t 3
GAHS BLUE DEVILS (2)
The Reds and Braves end
PLAYER- Pas.
AB R H their tht·ee-game series tonight.
Mark Johnson, 2b
1 1 o
Stan
2 01 01 . · - - - - - - - - - .
DavePerry.
Burnettss, p
.2
Gary Ballard, lf
2 0 1
Torn Prose, lb
2 1 0
John Davis. 3b
2 0 0
Chuck Perroud. c
2 0 0
Kev Sheets. rf
1 0 0
Rick Boone, cf
o o o
TOTALS
. 14 2 3
Your Doptndablo
Score by Innings:
Dtolor For
Ironton
001 OOD-1 -3·0
Galll~olls
200 OX- 2-,3-0
Winning pitcher - Burnett 13·
0) ; Loser - Henry (first, one
AND
on); Bayert, (third, none on) ;
Triple - Kriebel ·; Double Prose. Stolen base - Johnson .
Phone 992·2550
Left on base - GAHS 2, Ironton
2.

Homers, Win

'

::·

.

Tllt Rained Out

Pirates Belt 5

·,

. ''

'

Blue .Dev.ils Up
Record To ·5-0
\

Coach Jim
Osborne's
GaUipolis Blue Devils look a
firm grip on first place in the
Southern Division of the
Southeastern Ohio League
baseball race Tuesday evening
by . turning ba.ck ~efeilding
league champion Ironton 2-1 in
a rain..shortened contest.
Dave Burnett, senior lefty,
was the big gWJ for the undefeated Blue Devils. Burnett
uncorked a tw&lt;H'Uil homer to
deep right field in the first In·
ning, then limited the visiting
Tigers to three hits and one run
before the contest was halted in
the bottom of the fifth inning by

Bob Bayert smashed a home
run 'to deep left field In the third
lnnlDg, it snapped a string of 27
consecuti.ve scoreless innings
recorded by GAHS hurlers.
Jackson's Jim Hale scored off
Burnett in the second inning on
March 30. The Gallians then
blanked WeUston, Waverly and
Fairland in that order - aU on
the road. Burnett had gone 13
straight innings without giving
up a run prior to Bayert's blast
Into
the
trees
along
Chickamauga Creek.
Henry, In suffering his second
mound loss against three wins,
gave up three. hits. ,He fanned
rain.
three and walked two. Awalk.to
Ac\ually , the game was GAHS leadoff batter Mark
halted twice by precipitation. ln Johnson proved fatal. Johnson
the bottom of the fourth, the scored , oq Burnett's game·
umpires stopped action with winning shot to right field in the
the ,Blue Devils at bat with one.l&gt;first inning.
man on base and one out. ·
Tom Prose had a fourth In·
. After a l~ute delay, play ning double for GAHS after
was resumed. GAHS failed to Gary Ballard Jed off with a
score, then Burnett fanned John single. Ballard was called out
. Myers, got Bob Bayert on a for not touching second base,
groundout, and fanned losing thus killing a potential Blue
hurler Doug Henry. That made Devil uprising.
· ·
It an official game.
Ironton'sDaveKriebel led·off
· As the Tigers took the field in the second with a triple .to left,
1 the liottom of the . fiftll, but failed to score. ·Burnett
Memorlal Field was lnuridated retired the final eight Tigers In
by another cloudburst, and that order after Earl Fletcher's
was the ball game.
·
third Inning single. Both teams·
GAHS, now ~ on the year, played errorless haD.
upped Its league record lo 3-0.
Th~y. the Biue DeVils
Ironton drOJl!led to 8-3-1 overall. will hoat Chesapeake ln ·a non·
Inside the Southem Dlvislon, league game on Memorial
the defending chainpions are ~ Field.
2.
Box score:
Burnett, in ~halkillg up hi.s
IRONTON TIGERS (t)
third striight mound victory PLAYER-Pas.
AB R H
111linft 110 ielbacu, pve up Earl Flillcher; rt
2 o 1.
..._
tlree
hi'·.
He
f•••ed
Jim
Payr\f,
ss
2
·o o
one run w
..,
-·•
"Keith Barker, If
2 0 0
four ud wallted none.
Dave Kriebel. c
2 o 1
When Tlget flrll bueman Rick Boykln. cl
2 0 0

9-~

a

••

.HOGG &amp;ZU$.~A-"~
MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

We DeiMir

3

••

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU THURSDAY, APRIL 22nd

.

MEAT

NEW CROP FLORIDA

W.llh the Quality You Like

GRAPEFRUIT

Pork
· ·
Neck Bones lb~
SUPERIOR

lb.

5 for 't gg~

ONIONS 3 bag 29~

HALVES OR SLICED

THANK YOU BRAND

.

..

•.

'

GOOD AT BIG 3 MARKETS
EXPIRES 4-22·71

2~

I

.

•
KRAFT
1 ~xoz49· ~
PIZZA
CHEESE
.

WITH COUPON

99¢
3

PiE FILLING 2~:79

HEATING

4 ROLLS 39e

PEACHES

.

SIZE

, GOLDEN ISLE

• PURE VEGETABLE

•

.

SHORTENING

BEnY CROCKER '

.

.

lb.
• 1

can
'

.

3

CAKE MIX ·
DEVILS FOOD, YELLOW, WHITE,
GERMA.N CHOC.
.

'

'1.15 WITHOUT COUPON
'

..

To
Limit
Quantities

(ASSORTED)

GOLDEN ISLE

.

.

Riehl
Reserved'

CHARM IN
BATHROOM TISSUE

I

JO 80.
DOG FOOD
.

·, :: :! .

Chicken • Beef
Turkey

1b.49e

POLISH SAUSAGE

IIJ;L~~

·! ., •'. :::· :: ::: !;'

NEW TEXAS

6 $1.

:::::·:::::·: :: ..

POT
PIES

PORK ROAST lb.49

i

:. LYONS' MARKET ;)
~=:=:.~:=::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::=~:=:=:=:!)-::::::::::::::~:::::::
:*
. . . . . . ..A;
.....
RUTLAND
DEPT•.. STORE
..
·=: :,

BANQUET

~

BOSTON STYLE

'
AT TUPPERS PLAINS

~ ::::::::::.-·:·.;.:&lt;::: :::::::::::::::~~~~&lt;:::::::::::::~::::::::::-~;::::~;!:!:!:!:!::::~~:::x::::::::::::::;~:

J

PLUMBING

•

MASON

Convenient
Locations

Plumbing-Heating

'

349.95

•,.,'

ANTHONY '·

.

Creamo gold design. Ideal for
bathroom and kitchen walls ;
Mouldir.gs and adhesives available.

•

THIS WEEK

..

95

NEW
fURNinJRE

MASON
FURNITURE

orr

Baked by

4x8
SHEET

3 ROOMS

VERY SPECIAL

-.

Lo.

STYLEBOARD

Three Return from
Florida Vacation

for Summer

FORMULA BREAD

.Rowg~,

Joton

11

~KidS

Chapman's 5

loday·s FU

Youths Attended Rally

...

Casuals

the x-ray mobile unit in given on annual dinners at
Sandusky and Gallipolis, and
PoiT\eroy.
Plans were completed for the the farewell party honoring
sixth annual dinner of the Salon Gladys Mowery.
with Mrs. Hazel Elliott, Ports- Mrs. Walker woo prizes given
mouth , departemental cha· by Mrs, Hackett and Mrs.
peau, as the ho·nored guest. Catherine Welsh. Others at the
The dinner will be served at the meeting were Mrs. Edith Fox,
Middleport Church of Christ on Mrs. Iva Powell, and Mrs. Julia
May 3. Named to the gill Hysell.
committee were Mrs. Mary
Roush, Mrs. Walker , Mrs. Olan
Knapp, and Mrs. Hackett.
Projects to raise money fo r
the nurses scholarship were
discussed after Mrs. Ruth H.
Thorn ton reported $30 in the
fund. A rummage sale brought
in.$127.48.
Mrs . Ferne Cheesebrew
distributed copies of the revised
constitution and by-laws. Mrs.
Eunie Brinker, chapeau;
opened the meeting in
ritualistic form . Mrs. Thornton
announced the pouvior to be
held on May 23 at the Fort Pick ·
Hotel, Columbus. Reports were 6~~\:~ple

Mrs. Coleman Hosts
GA Easter Party

On Page 10
Fight Results

Gullett
Shine

.
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT" OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,
Lions . Clu~, Wednesday noon, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. home of
United Methodist Church. Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre,
Program will be the film "The Apple Grove-Fairvtew Road.
Mekegan Delta."
. '·
' Take wieners and buns for
POMEROY CHAPTER 80 wiener roast.
Departemental Eight and
Royal
Arch Masons, 7: 30 TWIN CITY Shrine ~Jub , Forty officers for 1971-72, inOfficers were elected for the
Wednesday, Pomeroy Masonic Th~sday, 7:30p.m. clubhouse, cluding Mrs. Mary Martin of
1971·7,2 year at Monday night's
Temple.
Racme. Refreshments. Noble Pomeroy for chapeau, were
m,eeting of the Women's Society_
FILM STRIP, "Hold Back the Don Miller presiding.
of Christian Service, Heath
endorsed when Meigs County
Night"
at
7:30
tonight
at
Mid·
ROCK
SPRINGS"
Grange,
8
United Methodist Church,
Salon 710, met Monday night at
die 0 t p t
t 1 Ch h p.m. Thursday, home of Mr. the home of Mrs . Rhoda
Middleport.
P r en ecos a
urc • and Mrs. Amos Leonard.
They are Mrs. Jack Bechtle,
Third Ave., Mtddleport, as part COMMITTEE
b
Cub Hackett.
of
"Sheaves
for
Christ
Project
mem
ers,
president; Mrs. ,.Nan Moore,
, Other officers endorsed were
. "led . Scout Pack 245, Columbus and Evaline Berkley, le demi
for Youth ·,, All you th mvt
vice president; Mrs. Jamea .
· Southe Oh"10 El tr" C 7 30
MIDDLEPORT L"t
• rn . • ec tc o. :
. Criswell, secretary; Mrs. C. F.
chapeau premiere ; Irene Mier,
1 erary Thursday
mght
Hibbs, treasurer; committee on
le demi chapeau deuxieme;
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
·
nominations, Mrs. M. L.
home orM:rs. Rodney Downing RED CROSS, 7:30 p.m. Doris Stanriff, departemental
French, Mrs. Malcolm RoUer,
at
Veterans l'aumonier; Marcella Huston,
. with Mrs. Helen Hayes as Thursday
Mrs. L. W. McComas; Mrs.
hostess.
Memorial Hospital. Discussion Ia archivisle; and Audrey
Forrest Bachtel, Christian
PAST COUNCILORS, Chester on fund drive and annual Glaub, Ia concierge.
social concerns chairman; Mrs.
Mrs. Marie Boyd, children
Council 323, Daughters of meeting.
Max Donahue, chairman of
and
youth chairman, reported
America, Wednesday night at
that $35 had been given to the
missionary education; Mrs.
the ball. Miscellaneous shower
FRIDAY
Rose McDade, spiritual growth
family
of a cystic fibrosis
for Mrs. Laura. Mae Nice. All
AN.NUAL
"Community
chairman; Mrs . Moore,
family . It was voted to purchase
members urged to attend.
Crusade"
at
Asbury
Methodist
program material; Mrs. Jamea
50 children's dresses at a sale
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Church
7:30
p.m.
through
Brewington, Mrs. James
price to be sent to the National
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
All
churches
of
Friday.
Jividen, and Mrs. James Euier,
Jewish Hospital for tubercular
home of Mrs. Harold Lohse,
Syracuse
cooperating
in
sermon
membership coinmittee; Mrs.
children, Denver , Colo.
with Mrs. C. E. 'Blakeslee and
and
song.
Special
numbers
by
Earl Knight, Mrs. M. C. Wilson,
Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Mrs.
Mrs. Russell Brown as colocal
groups,
preaching
nightly
Mrs. Norman Wayland, local
Francis Hunnel, and Mrs.
hostesses . C. E. Blakeslee,
by
pastors.
Public
invited.
church responsibility comMartin will assist this week with
Meigs Extension Agent, to
BAKE
SALE,
Loyal
Women's
Mr. and Mrs. Harold King, Pomeroy, are announcing the
mittee; and Mrs. C. E. Young,
present the program.
Class, Middleport Church of
campus ministry.
engagement and approaching marriage of their grandMIDDLEPORT Uterary Club Christ, Friday, Western Auto
daughter, Donna _,Jean Wilson, to Mr. James Andrew Crwnp,
meeting Wednesday 2 p.m. at
Mrs. Criswell announced the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Issiah Crump, Sr., Point Pleasant, W. · the home of Mrs. Rodney Store, 9:30a.m. to begin .
district WSCS meeting to be
COMMUNITY Crus1de
Va.
Downing. Mrs . Thereon Services being held nightly al
held at Logan and May ·
Miss Wilson is a senior at Meigs High School. Mr. Crwnp,
Johnson will review "Zelba." the Syracuse Asbury Methodist
Fellowship Day lo be observed a 1!Mi8 graduate of Point Pleasant High School, Is assistant
THURSDAY
Church at 7:30 p.m. Monday
on May 7 at Trinity Church.
The Girls in Action iGA) of
manager of the G. C. Murphy Store in Spencer, W.Va. A June
CL-ASS 12, Heath United through Friday. Preaching by the First Southern Baptist
wedding is planned.
Methodist Church, 7:30 Thurs- Syracuse ministers.
Mrs. Wayland reported that
Chapel of Pomeroy enjoyed an
day. Mrs. M. L. · French to TEEN DANCE Friday ,
$138 was made on the rummage
Easter party Thursday, April 8,
present the program; Devotions Wahama High School, 8 to 11 at the home of Mrs. Shirley
sale. Miss Bess Sanbom and
by Mrs. David Entsminger; p.m. Jays will emcee. SponMrs. Etiolla Cassell are
Coleman. •
Hostesses, Mrs. Jack Bechtle, sored by· the FHA.
hospitalized .
Games of Iossing bunny tails
Mrs. John Kincaid, Mrs. Gilkey,
SATURDAY
in the baskets, and drop the
and Mrs. C. E. Young.
Mrs. Criswell, devotional
DANCE, MEIGS Junior High handkerchief were played, and
Youths of the Scioto Valley Later, the group gathered in a
chairman, used a meditation,
ROCK SPRINGS Better School, Middleport, Saturday 8 an Easter egg hunt conducted.
Associati~n of Southern Bap·
"Death Is a Part of llie" with tists attended a recent rally al rap session," with speakers Health Club, Thursday, 1:15 to 11 p.m. Jays will emcee.
Refreshments of cake, ice
for .the evening on a panel
the · 23rd Psalm and prayer.
p.m.
home
of
Mrs.
William
SUNDAY
cr~am, jelly beans, and Koolthe Rolling Hills Baptist Church
Mrs. Bechtle read a poem In Athens where the theme w~s fielding questions asked by the Grueser.
COUNTY
UNION
class
Aid were enjoyed by the girls.
"Easter Sunday" from .Ideals '·'Caution Youth - Respon- young pe.ople. There were 126
meeting, Sunday, 2 lo 4 p.m. Present were Mrs. Shirley
and read an article written by sibility Ahead." Several attending .
Letart
Falls United Brethren Coleman, Mrs. Rhojean Me·
Attending from the Pomeroy
the senator of. Dlinois entitled speakers
Church. Bissell Brothers and Clure, Mary Johnson, Jeannie
brought . brief First Baptist Chapel were Gene
"If a Man Dies Shall He Uve messages on the varied
others singing. Rev. Okay McClure , Melody Snouffer,
Coleman, Mrs. Rhojean McAgain."
Ahart, leader; Rev. Robert Janie Coleman, Susan Wright,
responsibilities facing youths Clure, Jerry Coleman, Gary
Refreshments were served by today.
Shook, host pastor .
and one guest, Bllly McClure.
Snouffer, Jimmy McClure, and
Mrs. John Kincaid, Mrs. Alma Several
youth
choirs
Miller, Mrs. Kenneth Byer, and presented special music. Joey Smith.
Mrs . Harry J . ( Carolyn )
------:----:::-:-:-::::-::--:.l
A
film
clip
from
the
Billy
Young
of
Racine
and
Mr.
and~
·;_
·
----Mrs. C. M. Hennesy.
Sandwiches, Kool-Aid; potato Graham film, For Pete's Sake,
Mrs. James R. Maynard of
chips, and cookies were served was shown, and the youth were
Point Pleasant, W. Va. have
with members of the Rolling urged lo attend this movie when returned from a week 's
Hills Baptist Church serving. it comes to their area. This film
SCHOOL DAYS SET
vacation at Orlando, Fla. where
Vacation Bible School date for
will be shown al the Colony they visited. their parents, Mr.
the First Southern Baptist
Theatre in GaUipolis, starting and Mrs. Dennie Staats, six
5
Chapel of Pomeroy has been set
Thursday to run for one week. brothers, Danny, Charles,
REVIVAL DATES SET $35.00 Downfor June 7 through 11. This year
Revival ·date for the First
Gary, Johnny, David and Billy, Balanl=e On
the Chapel will be conducting an Southern Baptist Chapel of
and . two sisters, Brenda and
ConveRienl
evening Bible School beginning Pomeroy has been set for May
Becky Staats .
al 6 p.m. through 8:30 p.m. 10 through 16. The evangelist
The Buddy Poppy which will
While there they also called Tertr~s.
. There will be classes for will be Jim Green, and song be offered to you on the streets on Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Lee and
children ages 4 years through leader wiD be Bob Mills. Ser· soon is sold by a volunteer. All family of Hialeah, Fla., and
high school. Conunencemenl vices will be held each evening ptoceeds will go to the relief and enjoyed a fishing trip at Long
will be held Sunday, June 13, at at 7:30. Everyone is welcome to welfare of the needy veteran, Key, Fla. taking many pictures
7:30p.m.
his wi.dow and orphans.
Mason, W. Va.
attend ..
along the way.

Donna Jean Wilson to Wed

More Snnrts

Bench,

Pomeroy's Mrs. Martin
Is Chapeau Candidate

Officers
·Elected
,BY WSCS

Logan·Wellston

GOOD AT BIG 3 MARKETS

II

12 Ol.
BOXES

99e

· WITH COUPON

�~ ·

\

• - $-'-The Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport..Pumaoy, 0., Allrtll4. lfll .

Motta ·Coach-Of-Year
.

..
,•

-:

.

.,

JEFF MORRIS
MARAUDER CAPTAINS- Jeff Morris, 6-2 center, and
Steve Dun,ee, HI guard, have been appointed co~aptains of
the 1971·72 .Marauder basketball team by head coach Carl

•••

·:

:·

·:'•
:·,.

.,.

;.••

~=

1
~:

·:

..:•••

••
~
••

...:·
·:
:·
. ••.

.....,
••

~

•

.,••••
••••

••
••
••

,.••.,
••
••

~

•'~

~
'·f,

•
••
•

t•
•
•

NBAPlay
To Resume
BALTIMORE (UP!)
Tonight's the night the
Baltimore Bullets find out
which are the real Bullets.
Will they be .the same Bullets
who ran out of gas in the last
period of the first two Eastern
Conference losses to New York
or will they be the Bullets who
ran the Knicks out of the·
Baltimore Civic Center Sunday
afternoon?
The injury-riddled Bullets
faltered in the end and lost both
games in New York but looked
like a different team Sunday in
humiliating the Knicks 114-Mln
the third game of their best-of·
seven series.
The Bullets again will be
wlthout the·., seryic~s o( star
forward Gus Johnson, sidelined
with a knee injury, and Keviii
Loughery is listed as
guard .
questionable
at
Loughery is suffering from a
foot injury but Fred Carter has
been Impressive as a
replacement.
.
Earl Monroe, the Bullets'
leading scorer, had some ankle
problems to go with his chronic
knee troubles, but he poured in
31 points Sunday and looked lil\e
nothing in the world was
bothering him.
The Knicks, obviously
humiliated by their lackluster
performance on Sunday, are
healthy for Game No. -4.

INGLEWOOD, ·Calif. (UP!)
- The Big Green Machine from
Wisconsin - otherwise known
as the Milwaukee Bucks - can
put one more nail in the coffin of
the injury-depleted Los Angeles
Lakers tonight.
The Lakers will be without
Keith Erickson in addition to
Jerry West and Elgin Baylor in
the third game of the teams'
best-of-seven semifinal playoff
series. Pal Riley, a little-used
guard, will replace Erickson.
The Bucks won by 2i and 18
points In the first two contests al
Milwaukee with Erickson, the
Lakers' standout forward·
guard, missing SWJday's game
with what he thought was
stot~a ~.c~a!\lliii• He underwent
surgery for removal of his
appendix Sunday nigh!.
There doesn't appear much
the Lakers can do against the
team that lost only 16 NBA
regular season games and then
took follr out of five from San
Francisco in its initial playoff
series.
In fact, coach Larry Costello
has promised his Bucks, who
won four of five regular season
meetings with Los Angeles, will
be even tougher here.
If Milwaukee wins tonight,
the Bucks can wrap up the
series and the Western Conference Iitle Friday night.

•

••.
•
••

.

'•'·
~

~

~

~
•

,'.•

,.,".

'~

"·'•'•.

'
'.'•

'

i·••

I"

••

~
;.•
~;

.,

.••"••
•'
~

,.k

'

-

Tuesday's Logan -Wellston
NEW YORK (UPI)-Dick NationaiBaskethaUAssociation sports writers f~om ·each of the baseball game was postponed
Motta has had the litst laugh on for guiding the Chicago Bulls to • 17 NBA member cities.. '
_by rain .
those who said he would not be their first winning. season.
Larry Costello, who dtrected
In . other action around the
able to make the transition Motta who came to the Bulls the Milwaukee Bucks lo the league, JaCkson remained hot
·rrom a college basketball coach three y~ars ago from Weber Midwest Division title, finished on the heels of Gallipolis i~ the
to a professional· one.
.StateCollege,wherehecoached second with 11 votes . AI •AtUes Southern Division race by
Motta , i!9, was named coach for eight years, received 30 of ilie San Francisco Warriors blanking Waverly,~ on a twoof the yea!' Tuesday in the votes in a balloting of three was thtrd wtth three votes.
hitter by Dave Swann. Swann
Red Holzman of the New fanned 16 Tigers. The lronmen
York Knicks, winner of the collected six hits.
award a year ago, got two
Jackson is now 2·1 in convotes. Bob Cousy of Cincinnati, ference play, and will host
Joe Mullaney of. Los Angeles, unbeaten GAHS Tuesday.
'
Jack Ramsay of Philadelphia, Waverly is 1).2 in conference
Rolland Todd of Portland and . . action.
Lenny Wilkens of Seattle .got
Gallipolis downed Ironton 2-l
one each.
and Meigs crushed Athens, 21).6.
The Bulls, although eiiminat·
ed in seven games by Los
Angeles in the first round of the Bobcats Trip
By FRED McMANE
Houston Rallies
playoffs, finished second to
UPI Sports Writer
Norm Miller's three-run ho- Milwaukee in the tough Mid· Buckeyes, 7 ·3
The Pittsburgh Pirates are mer and Joe Morgan's 2-run west division during the regular
employing the same philosophy single ignited a five-run ninth season with a 51·31 ·record. It
this season that the Cincinnati inning as Houston rallied to marked the first time the Bulls
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)- Mike
Reds did last season when they defeat St. Louis. Bob Watson had gone over the .500 mark Hannah and Bob Kliber rapped
won the National League also homered for the Astros.
since the team joined the out 'two hits apiece as Ohio
pennant-namely, stay · loose Steve Renko went the dis· league in 1966.
University downed Ohio State 7STEVE DUNFEE
and .have fun .
tance to beat the Mets for the
3 Tuesday in collegiate
The implications of this second straight time and once
baseball.
WoHe. Morris was a third team selection on the 1971).71 All
attitude are that if you're again got batting support from
CLEAMONS MVP
The Bobcats, now 11·1, scored
Southeastern Ohio All-Star team as junior. Dunfee logged
relaxedandenjoyingyourself it batterymate John Bateman. CHICAGO (UP!) - Ohio two runs in the first and second,
considerable time on the varsity. Both will be seniors next
should lead to a positive result Bateman, who drove in three State basketball captain Jim added their fifth run in the third
year.
on the field . So far 1 it appears runs when Renko beat·the Mets Cleamons has been named the and two more runs in the fifth .
to be working for the Pirates. last week, hit a homer in the Big Ten Conference's most Four of the runs were scored on
Not renowned as a long-ball- second inning as the Expos valuable player.
.
sacrifice flies.
Linescores
hilling team, the . Pirates made a successful home debut. Cleamons led the sophomoreThe Buckeyes got one run
Tuesday night unloaded five
Jose Ortiz scored the lie· dominated team to the Big Ten
across in the first but were then
home runs in Philadelphia's breaking run on Don Kessin· championship and a mideasl
By United PreSs International 110 inning s)
blanked until the ninth inning.
Nationa I Laague
Cal if
000 001 000 2- 3 7 2 new Veterans Stadium and ger's eighth-inning single as the regional NCAA win over
New York
Chico 000 001 000 o- 1 3 1 crushed the Phillies 9-3 for Cubs raUied to beat the Marquette, then rated No. 2.
000 000 OlD- 1 8 3 fllle ssersm ith, Laroche (6) their fifth victory In seven Dodgers. Ortiz walked and was He was chosen for the most
Montreal lll 000 Ol x- 4 5 0 and Tor borg, Moses 18) ;
·sacrificed to second before valuable player award by
· Gen lry, McGraw i7l and Bradley, Ramo (10). Eddy 110). games.
Grote; Renko 12-0) and Bate. Kealey ( 10 ) and Herr mann, Jackie Hernandez and Manny Kessinger's key hit, which conference coaches and other
man . LP-Genlry (0-2). HR - Egan (10 ). WP-Laroche (1-0). Sanguillen blasted three-run saddled Dodger ace Bill Singer officials.
BRITISH HEAVIES
Bateman llsll .
LP-Romo Il -l) .
SOLVERHAMPTON, Eng·
homers and Willie StargeU, Bob with his third consecutive loss Iowa's Fred Brown was
land
(UP!) - Jack Bodell is a
Houston 201 000 005- S 10 0 Boston
021 110 ooo- 5 8 3 Robertson and winning pitcher without a victory .
second in the voting, followed
St. Louis 002 010 Ol D--'- 4 9 2. Was h
002 000 001 - 3 5 1
step closer to a title fight with
Billingham, Culver ( 8) , Le- Siebert, Ly le (9) and Jose- Nelson Briles added solo blasts - - - - - - - -- - ~y Purdue 's Larry Weatherford newly
crowned · British
and
Indiana's
George
master (9) and Edwards; phson ; Mcla in, Cox (6), as the Pirates boosted their
heavyweight
champion Joe
Torrez, Taylor (9). Brunet (9) Grzenda (8). Pina (8) and home run output for the season
:r~
McGinnis.
and Simmons. WP-Culver 12-0). Casanova . WP-Siebert (1-0) .
Bugner. Bodwell, 204'h; fought
LP-Torrez (O.l) . HR ~ Wat son LP-McLain 1J. l). HR -Josephson to 10. Other Games
with his left eye tightly closed
(l si). Miller (lsi).
(2nd). Yastrzemski (lsi).
for
more than six rounds
In other National League
Tuesday night but won an easy
PI Its
000 030 042- 9 11 2 Minn
100 100 OlD- 3 8 0
Phil
003 000 ooo- 3 7 3 Kan Ci ly 000 030 20x- 5 4 0 games, Cincilmati edged Allan·
Federal Trncks
Ill-round decision over Mexican
Walker. Nelson IlL Bri les (6) Barber, Wil liams (5), Perra. ta 5-4, Houston defeated St.
'
Manuel
Ramos, 213'14 . Bodell
WASHINGTON - U.S.
and Sangullten ; Short, Selma noski (7) and Millerwald, Louis 8-4, Montreal heat New By Unlted Press International
(8), Champion (9)· and Ryan . Rail iff (8) ; Hed lund, York (7) , York 4-1, Chicago downed Los
federal agencies. includi ng knocked down · Ramos in the
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (UP!)- the military, own 302.012
WP-Briles (1-t) . LP-Short (0-2) . Abernathy (8) and Ki rkpa tr ick .
fourth round and took every
HR-Sanguillen ltsll . Briles WP Hedlund 12-0). LP-William s Angeles ~2 and San Diego at Lorenzo "Boom Boom" Trujil· trucks.
round in the bout.
(lsi). Hernandez (lsi). Robert - (O.l). HR -Dii va (2nd) .
San Francisco was postponed lo, 128¥4, Houston, outpointed
son (2nd) , Stargell (5th).
because of rain .
Pablo Jimenez, 123\'4, Puerto
In
American
League
action,
Cin.
031 000 100- 5 11 1
Rico (10).
Oakland blanked Milwaukee
Atlanla 000 001 03Q- 4 8 0
Gullett, Granger 181. Gibbon
2-0, California defeated NEW 'YORK (UPI)-John
(8) and Bench; Jarv is, Stone
Chicago 3-1, New York Clohessy, 206, New York,
(3) , Upshaw (9 ) and King . WPGullett (l -0) . LP-Jarvis (0-2).
beat Detroit 5-2, Kan- slopped Bob Castle, 204, Or·
HR-Bench l3rd) Aaron (3rd) .
sas City topped Minnesota ange, N.J., (3); Bobby 'Mash·
5-3, Boston downed Washington burn, 214, New York, outpointed
San Diego at San Fran, ppd.,
rain
5-3 and Baltimore at Cleveland Lnu Hicks, 190, New York (8).
FOR THE
was postponed because of rain.
.
Chicago 010 ooo no- 3 7 o
Reliever Joe Gibbon bailed , BATTLE CREEK, Mich.
Los Ang 200 ooo 000--- 2 9 o
FAMILY.,,
. Pappas (2-0) and Rudol ph;
ATLANTA (UP!) - Johnny Cincinnati out of a bases-loaded (UPI)-James Park, 168, CleveSinge•, Mikkelsen (9) and Sims, Rench, the home run king last jam in the eighth inning by land, stopped Don Lutz, 174%,
Hailer (9). LP-Singer (0-3). HR season, Is finally getting his getting Hal King to hit into a Milwaukee (4).
Pepitone (2nd).
1971 model gassed up.
double play as the Reds won
American League
Bench socked two homers on their second in a row after four HONOLULU (UPI)-Ben VilBall at Clev ppd ., ra in
Monday night to help the Cin- losses. Johnny Bench hit his laflor, 126, the Philippines,
Detroit 000 001 10o- 2 11 1 cinnati Reds win their first third homer in two nights to knocked out Rafael Lopez, 127,
New York
game of the season after losing pace Cincinnati's attack and Mexico (I); Beto Gon~alez, 142, ·
000 211 lOx- 5 6 0 four straight and he came back: Hank Aaron hit his 595th career Mexico, stopped Miguel Barre·
Niekro. Kilkenny (6) , Palterto, 141, New York (4).
N~xt Door to Elberfelds
son 16). Pallerson (6) Hannan Tuesday night with a single homer for the Braves.
Pomeroy
(7), Timmerman
17) and home run as the Reds got win
Freehan; Bahnsen (1 -1) and
Munson. LP-Niekro 10-2) . HR. No.2.
White !2nd) , Cash (lsi) .
The Reds were leading 5-1
going in to the bottom of the
Oakland 101 000 000 - 2 6 0
but
they
got
Mllwkee 000 000 ooo- o 2 0 eighth,
Blue (2-l) and Dun ca n; in trouble
and
finally
Darsos (0· I) and Roof.
squeaked by with a 5-4 win.
Don Gullett departed the
game in the eighth after loadNHL Playoff standings ·
By United Press International ing the bases and when reliever
I Quarterfinals-Best of 7)
Wayne Granger allowed a sin·
East
gle and a double that scored
Series"''A"
W. L. three runs, Joe Gibbon look lhe
Boston
3 2 mound .
2. 3
Montreal
Gibbon got Hal King to
bounce into a double play to
Series "8"
W. L. second baseman Tonuny Helms
New York
3 2 to end the threat.
Toronto
2 3
The Reds had jumped off to
West
a 3-1 lead in the second inning
Series "C"
W. L. when Woody Woodward doubled
x·Chicago
4 0 home Willie Smith and Hal
Philadelphia
0
4 McRae then scored himseH on a
double by Pete Rose.
·
Series "0"
w. L. In the fourth came Bench's
MinnesMa
3
2 third homer in two nights.
St. Louis
2 3
The Braves scored their first
X-Clinched series
run in the sixth when Hank
Tuesday 's Games
Aaron hit his third home run of
New York 3 Toronto 1
Basion 7 Montreal 3
• the year and 595th of his ca·
'Minnesota 4 St. Louis 3
reer.
No games Today
Tony Perez scored the even•
tual winning run in the seventh
Greg Spence, 2b
2 0 0 inning when he walked with one
John Myers. 3b
2 o o · oul and was driven around by
Bob Bayer!, 1b
2 1 1 successive singles by Bench and
Doug Henry, p
2 o 0 Smitlf.
TOTALS
18 t 3
GAHS BLUE DEVILS (2)
The Reds and Braves end
PLAYER- Pas.
AB R H their tht·ee-game series tonight.
Mark Johnson, 2b
1 1 o
Stan
2 01 01 . · - - - - - - - - - .
DavePerry.
Burnettss, p
.2
Gary Ballard, lf
2 0 1
Torn Prose, lb
2 1 0
John Davis. 3b
2 0 0
Chuck Perroud. c
2 0 0
Kev Sheets. rf
1 0 0
Rick Boone, cf
o o o
TOTALS
. 14 2 3
Your Doptndablo
Score by Innings:
Dtolor For
Ironton
001 OOD-1 -3·0
Galll~olls
200 OX- 2-,3-0
Winning pitcher - Burnett 13·
0) ; Loser - Henry (first, one
AND
on); Bayert, (third, none on) ;
Triple - Kriebel ·; Double Prose. Stolen base - Johnson .
Phone 992·2550
Left on base - GAHS 2, Ironton
2.

Homers, Win

'

::·

.

Tllt Rained Out

Pirates Belt 5

·,

. ''

'

Blue .Dev.ils Up
Record To ·5-0
\

Coach Jim
Osborne's
GaUipolis Blue Devils look a
firm grip on first place in the
Southern Division of the
Southeastern Ohio League
baseball race Tuesday evening
by . turning ba.ck ~efeilding
league champion Ironton 2-1 in
a rain..shortened contest.
Dave Burnett, senior lefty,
was the big gWJ for the undefeated Blue Devils. Burnett
uncorked a tw&lt;H'Uil homer to
deep right field in the first In·
ning, then limited the visiting
Tigers to three hits and one run
before the contest was halted in
the bottom of the fifth inning by

Bob Bayert smashed a home
run 'to deep left field In the third
lnnlDg, it snapped a string of 27
consecuti.ve scoreless innings
recorded by GAHS hurlers.
Jackson's Jim Hale scored off
Burnett in the second inning on
March 30. The Gallians then
blanked WeUston, Waverly and
Fairland in that order - aU on
the road. Burnett had gone 13
straight innings without giving
up a run prior to Bayert's blast
Into
the
trees
along
Chickamauga Creek.
Henry, In suffering his second
mound loss against three wins,
gave up three. hits. ,He fanned
rain.
three and walked two. Awalk.to
Ac\ually , the game was GAHS leadoff batter Mark
halted twice by precipitation. ln Johnson proved fatal. Johnson
the bottom of the fourth, the scored , oq Burnett's game·
umpires stopped action with winning shot to right field in the
the ,Blue Devils at bat with one.l&gt;first inning.
man on base and one out. ·
Tom Prose had a fourth In·
. After a l~ute delay, play ning double for GAHS after
was resumed. GAHS failed to Gary Ballard Jed off with a
score, then Burnett fanned John single. Ballard was called out
. Myers, got Bob Bayert on a for not touching second base,
groundout, and fanned losing thus killing a potential Blue
hurler Doug Henry. That made Devil uprising.
· ·
It an official game.
Ironton'sDaveKriebel led·off
· As the Tigers took the field in the second with a triple .to left,
1 the liottom of the . fiftll, but failed to score. ·Burnett
Memorlal Field was lnuridated retired the final eight Tigers In
by another cloudburst, and that order after Earl Fletcher's
was the ball game.
·
third Inning single. Both teams·
GAHS, now ~ on the year, played errorless haD.
upped Its league record lo 3-0.
Th~y. the Biue DeVils
Ironton drOJl!led to 8-3-1 overall. will hoat Chesapeake ln ·a non·
Inside the Southem Dlvislon, league game on Memorial
the defending chainpions are ~ Field.
2.
Box score:
Burnett, in ~halkillg up hi.s
IRONTON TIGERS (t)
third striight mound victory PLAYER-Pas.
AB R H
111linft 110 ielbacu, pve up Earl Flillcher; rt
2 o 1.
..._
tlree
hi'·.
He
f•••ed
Jim
Payr\f,
ss
2
·o o
one run w
..,
-·•
"Keith Barker, If
2 0 0
four ud wallted none.
Dave Kriebel. c
2 o 1
When Tlget flrll bueman Rick Boykln. cl
2 0 0

9-~

a

••

.HOGG &amp;ZU$.~A-"~
MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

We DeiMir

3

••

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU THURSDAY, APRIL 22nd

.

MEAT

NEW CROP FLORIDA

W.llh the Quality You Like

GRAPEFRUIT

Pork
· ·
Neck Bones lb~
SUPERIOR

lb.

5 for 't gg~

ONIONS 3 bag 29~

HALVES OR SLICED

THANK YOU BRAND

.

..

•.

'

GOOD AT BIG 3 MARKETS
EXPIRES 4-22·71

2~

I

.

•
KRAFT
1 ~xoz49· ~
PIZZA
CHEESE
.

WITH COUPON

99¢
3

PiE FILLING 2~:79

HEATING

4 ROLLS 39e

PEACHES

.

SIZE

, GOLDEN ISLE

• PURE VEGETABLE

•

.

SHORTENING

BEnY CROCKER '

.

.

lb.
• 1

can
'

.

3

CAKE MIX ·
DEVILS FOOD, YELLOW, WHITE,
GERMA.N CHOC.
.

'

'1.15 WITHOUT COUPON
'

..

To
Limit
Quantities

(ASSORTED)

GOLDEN ISLE

.

.

Riehl
Reserved'

CHARM IN
BATHROOM TISSUE

I

JO 80.
DOG FOOD
.

·, :: :! .

Chicken • Beef
Turkey

1b.49e

POLISH SAUSAGE

IIJ;L~~

·! ., •'. :::· :: ::: !;'

NEW TEXAS

6 $1.

:::::·:::::·: :: ..

POT
PIES

PORK ROAST lb.49

i

:. LYONS' MARKET ;)
~=:=:.~:=::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::=~:=:=:=:!)-::::::::::::::~:::::::
:*
. . . . . . ..A;
.....
RUTLAND
DEPT•.. STORE
..
·=: :,

BANQUET

~

BOSTON STYLE

'
AT TUPPERS PLAINS

~ ::::::::::.-·:·.;.:&lt;::: :::::::::::::::~~~~&lt;:::::::::::::~::::::::::-~;::::~;!:!:!:!:!::::~~:::x::::::::::::::;~:

J

PLUMBING

•

MASON

Convenient
Locations

Plumbing-Heating

'

349.95

•,.,'

ANTHONY '·

.

Creamo gold design. Ideal for
bathroom and kitchen walls ;
Mouldir.gs and adhesives available.

•

THIS WEEK

..

95

NEW
fURNinJRE

MASON
FURNITURE

orr

Baked by

4x8
SHEET

3 ROOMS

VERY SPECIAL

-.

Lo.

STYLEBOARD

Three Return from
Florida Vacation

for Summer

FORMULA BREAD

.Rowg~,

Joton

11

~KidS

Chapman's 5

loday·s FU

Youths Attended Rally

...

Casuals

the x-ray mobile unit in given on annual dinners at
Sandusky and Gallipolis, and
PoiT\eroy.
Plans were completed for the the farewell party honoring
sixth annual dinner of the Salon Gladys Mowery.
with Mrs. Hazel Elliott, Ports- Mrs. Walker woo prizes given
mouth , departemental cha· by Mrs, Hackett and Mrs.
peau, as the ho·nored guest. Catherine Welsh. Others at the
The dinner will be served at the meeting were Mrs. Edith Fox,
Middleport Church of Christ on Mrs. Iva Powell, and Mrs. Julia
May 3. Named to the gill Hysell.
committee were Mrs. Mary
Roush, Mrs. Walker , Mrs. Olan
Knapp, and Mrs. Hackett.
Projects to raise money fo r
the nurses scholarship were
discussed after Mrs. Ruth H.
Thorn ton reported $30 in the
fund. A rummage sale brought
in.$127.48.
Mrs . Ferne Cheesebrew
distributed copies of the revised
constitution and by-laws. Mrs.
Eunie Brinker, chapeau;
opened the meeting in
ritualistic form . Mrs. Thornton
announced the pouvior to be
held on May 23 at the Fort Pick ·
Hotel, Columbus. Reports were 6~~\:~ple

Mrs. Coleman Hosts
GA Easter Party

On Page 10
Fight Results

Gullett
Shine

.
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
POMEROY • MIDDLEPORT" OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612,
Lions . Clu~, Wednesday noon, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. home of
United Methodist Church. Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre,
Program will be the film "The Apple Grove-Fairvtew Road.
Mekegan Delta."
. '·
' Take wieners and buns for
POMEROY CHAPTER 80 wiener roast.
Departemental Eight and
Royal
Arch Masons, 7: 30 TWIN CITY Shrine ~Jub , Forty officers for 1971-72, inOfficers were elected for the
Wednesday, Pomeroy Masonic Th~sday, 7:30p.m. clubhouse, cluding Mrs. Mary Martin of
1971·7,2 year at Monday night's
Temple.
Racme. Refreshments. Noble Pomeroy for chapeau, were
m,eeting of the Women's Society_
FILM STRIP, "Hold Back the Don Miller presiding.
of Christian Service, Heath
endorsed when Meigs County
Night"
at
7:30
tonight
at
Mid·
ROCK
SPRINGS"
Grange,
8
United Methodist Church,
Salon 710, met Monday night at
die 0 t p t
t 1 Ch h p.m. Thursday, home of Mr. the home of Mrs . Rhoda
Middleport.
P r en ecos a
urc • and Mrs. Amos Leonard.
They are Mrs. Jack Bechtle,
Third Ave., Mtddleport, as part COMMITTEE
b
Cub Hackett.
of
"Sheaves
for
Christ
Project
mem
ers,
president; Mrs. ,.Nan Moore,
, Other officers endorsed were
. "led . Scout Pack 245, Columbus and Evaline Berkley, le demi
for Youth ·,, All you th mvt
vice president; Mrs. Jamea .
· Southe Oh"10 El tr" C 7 30
MIDDLEPORT L"t
• rn . • ec tc o. :
. Criswell, secretary; Mrs. C. F.
chapeau premiere ; Irene Mier,
1 erary Thursday
mght
Hibbs, treasurer; committee on
le demi chapeau deuxieme;
Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
·
nominations, Mrs. M. L.
home orM:rs. Rodney Downing RED CROSS, 7:30 p.m. Doris Stanriff, departemental
French, Mrs. Malcolm RoUer,
at
Veterans l'aumonier; Marcella Huston,
. with Mrs. Helen Hayes as Thursday
Mrs. L. W. McComas; Mrs.
hostess.
Memorial Hospital. Discussion Ia archivisle; and Audrey
Forrest Bachtel, Christian
PAST COUNCILORS, Chester on fund drive and annual Glaub, Ia concierge.
social concerns chairman; Mrs.
Mrs. Marie Boyd, children
Council 323, Daughters of meeting.
Max Donahue, chairman of
and
youth chairman, reported
America, Wednesday night at
that $35 had been given to the
missionary education; Mrs.
the ball. Miscellaneous shower
FRIDAY
Rose McDade, spiritual growth
family
of a cystic fibrosis
for Mrs. Laura. Mae Nice. All
AN.NUAL
"Community
chairman; Mrs . Moore,
family . It was voted to purchase
members urged to attend.
Crusade"
at
Asbury
Methodist
program material; Mrs. Jamea
50 children's dresses at a sale
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Church
7:30
p.m.
through
Brewington, Mrs. James
price to be sent to the National
Gardeners, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
All
churches
of
Friday.
Jividen, and Mrs. James Euier,
Jewish Hospital for tubercular
home of Mrs. Harold Lohse,
Syracuse
cooperating
in
sermon
membership coinmittee; Mrs.
children, Denver , Colo.
with Mrs. C. E. 'Blakeslee and
and
song.
Special
numbers
by
Earl Knight, Mrs. M. C. Wilson,
Mrs. Myrtle Walker, Mrs.
Mrs. Russell Brown as colocal
groups,
preaching
nightly
Mrs. Norman Wayland, local
Francis Hunnel, and Mrs.
hostesses . C. E. Blakeslee,
by
pastors.
Public
invited.
church responsibility comMartin will assist this week with
Meigs Extension Agent, to
BAKE
SALE,
Loyal
Women's
Mr. and Mrs. Harold King, Pomeroy, are announcing the
mittee; and Mrs. C. E. Young,
present the program.
Class, Middleport Church of
campus ministry.
engagement and approaching marriage of their grandMIDDLEPORT Uterary Club Christ, Friday, Western Auto
daughter, Donna _,Jean Wilson, to Mr. James Andrew Crwnp,
meeting Wednesday 2 p.m. at
Mrs. Criswell announced the
son of Mr. and Mrs. Issiah Crump, Sr., Point Pleasant, W. · the home of Mrs. Rodney Store, 9:30a.m. to begin .
district WSCS meeting to be
COMMUNITY Crus1de
Va.
Downing. Mrs . Thereon Services being held nightly al
held at Logan and May ·
Miss Wilson is a senior at Meigs High School. Mr. Crwnp,
Johnson will review "Zelba." the Syracuse Asbury Methodist
Fellowship Day lo be observed a 1!Mi8 graduate of Point Pleasant High School, Is assistant
THURSDAY
Church at 7:30 p.m. Monday
on May 7 at Trinity Church.
The Girls in Action iGA) of
manager of the G. C. Murphy Store in Spencer, W.Va. A June
CL-ASS 12, Heath United through Friday. Preaching by the First Southern Baptist
wedding is planned.
Methodist Church, 7:30 Thurs- Syracuse ministers.
Mrs. Wayland reported that
Chapel of Pomeroy enjoyed an
day. Mrs. M. L. · French to TEEN DANCE Friday ,
$138 was made on the rummage
Easter party Thursday, April 8,
present the program; Devotions Wahama High School, 8 to 11 at the home of Mrs. Shirley
sale. Miss Bess Sanbom and
by Mrs. David Entsminger; p.m. Jays will emcee. SponMrs. Etiolla Cassell are
Coleman. •
Hostesses, Mrs. Jack Bechtle, sored by· the FHA.
hospitalized .
Games of Iossing bunny tails
Mrs. John Kincaid, Mrs. Gilkey,
SATURDAY
in the baskets, and drop the
and Mrs. C. E. Young.
Mrs. Criswell, devotional
DANCE, MEIGS Junior High handkerchief were played, and
Youths of the Scioto Valley Later, the group gathered in a
chairman, used a meditation,
ROCK SPRINGS Better School, Middleport, Saturday 8 an Easter egg hunt conducted.
Associati~n of Southern Bap·
"Death Is a Part of llie" with tists attended a recent rally al rap session," with speakers Health Club, Thursday, 1:15 to 11 p.m. Jays will emcee.
Refreshments of cake, ice
for .the evening on a panel
the · 23rd Psalm and prayer.
p.m.
home
of
Mrs.
William
SUNDAY
cr~am, jelly beans, and Koolthe Rolling Hills Baptist Church
Mrs. Bechtle read a poem In Athens where the theme w~s fielding questions asked by the Grueser.
COUNTY
UNION
class
Aid were enjoyed by the girls.
"Easter Sunday" from .Ideals '·'Caution Youth - Respon- young pe.ople. There were 126
meeting, Sunday, 2 lo 4 p.m. Present were Mrs. Shirley
and read an article written by sibility Ahead." Several attending .
Letart
Falls United Brethren Coleman, Mrs. Rhojean Me·
Attending from the Pomeroy
the senator of. Dlinois entitled speakers
Church. Bissell Brothers and Clure, Mary Johnson, Jeannie
brought . brief First Baptist Chapel were Gene
"If a Man Dies Shall He Uve messages on the varied
others singing. Rev. Okay McClure , Melody Snouffer,
Coleman, Mrs. Rhojean McAgain."
Ahart, leader; Rev. Robert Janie Coleman, Susan Wright,
responsibilities facing youths Clure, Jerry Coleman, Gary
Refreshments were served by today.
Shook, host pastor .
and one guest, Bllly McClure.
Snouffer, Jimmy McClure, and
Mrs. John Kincaid, Mrs. Alma Several
youth
choirs
Miller, Mrs. Kenneth Byer, and presented special music. Joey Smith.
Mrs . Harry J . ( Carolyn )
------:----:::-:-:-::::-::--:.l
A
film
clip
from
the
Billy
Young
of
Racine
and
Mr.
and~
·;_
·
----Mrs. C. M. Hennesy.
Sandwiches, Kool-Aid; potato Graham film, For Pete's Sake,
Mrs. James R. Maynard of
chips, and cookies were served was shown, and the youth were
Point Pleasant, W. Va. have
with members of the Rolling urged lo attend this movie when returned from a week 's
Hills Baptist Church serving. it comes to their area. This film
SCHOOL DAYS SET
vacation at Orlando, Fla. where
Vacation Bible School date for
will be shown al the Colony they visited. their parents, Mr.
the First Southern Baptist
Theatre in GaUipolis, starting and Mrs. Dennie Staats, six
5
Chapel of Pomeroy has been set
Thursday to run for one week. brothers, Danny, Charles,
REVIVAL DATES SET $35.00 Downfor June 7 through 11. This year
Revival ·date for the First
Gary, Johnny, David and Billy, Balanl=e On
the Chapel will be conducting an Southern Baptist Chapel of
and . two sisters, Brenda and
ConveRienl
evening Bible School beginning Pomeroy has been set for May
Becky Staats .
al 6 p.m. through 8:30 p.m. 10 through 16. The evangelist
The Buddy Poppy which will
While there they also called Tertr~s.
. There will be classes for will be Jim Green, and song be offered to you on the streets on Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Lee and
children ages 4 years through leader wiD be Bob Mills. Ser· soon is sold by a volunteer. All family of Hialeah, Fla., and
high school. Conunencemenl vices will be held each evening ptoceeds will go to the relief and enjoyed a fishing trip at Long
will be held Sunday, June 13, at at 7:30. Everyone is welcome to welfare of the needy veteran, Key, Fla. taking many pictures
7:30p.m.
his wi.dow and orphans.
Mason, W. Va.
attend ..
along the way.

Donna Jean Wilson to Wed

More Snnrts

Bench,

Pomeroy's Mrs. Martin
Is Chapeau Candidate

Officers
·Elected
,BY WSCS

Logan·Wellston

GOOD AT BIG 3 MARKETS

II

12 Ol.
BOXES

99e

· WITH COUPON

�•

•

.'

7 - l'lle D~~Uy Sentinel, Mlddleport-l&gt;cmeroy, 0 ., April14, 19'/1

'·

Perriri·'s Book on Sale·Today
"

. ·(Continued !~om page 1)
considered humorous were it
not for the flagrant lack of truth
involved," .the. Rev . Mr. Perrin
recalled.
"A publishing house had
printed a book dealing with a
lewd religious · sex cult. The
wri ting bordered on por·
nograph~·, and lampoon~ all
faith in God. When I \vrote the
comp~ny requesting permission
to submit my manuscript as a
defense of Christianity , I
received a terse reply that 'the
company did not deal in books
of a religious nature .' "
Continuing on his experience
of trying to break into the world
of publications, the Pomeroy
pastor said :
''The _ very word , 'c on ~
servatlve,' got me locked out of
a number of publishing houses
immediately. All I had to dowas

mention having a manuscript of
a 'theologically conservative'
trend to get doors slammed in
my face. I began to appreciate
what clergymen on the right
side of the fence were referring
to when they spoke of 'the
conspiracy of silence' being
enforced by the far left . I began
to appreciate even more what J .
Edgar Hoover had written in
Masters of Deceit about
clergymen being influenced to
keep
silent.
Through
Congressman Ashbrook of Ohio,
who directed me to a friend of
his in the ministry, I finally
contacted Dr. E. J. Daniels and
his publishing company which
began the printing of Look
Who's Killing God.
The Rev. Mr, Perrin toyed
with the idea of writing a book a
nwnber of years ago, even
·while in seminary training . Now
- he can hold up tbe flnisheil

FOOD fOR AMERICANS

a~·~~~~~"::.! r~:::;~

6:_ The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April14, 1971

.Readers of Look Who 's ;:t::
Killing God will fi nd a , tr~
fasci nating account of the
product - enhanced by a cover their religious lives on ,Jesus that I was informed 'by two · calling of the Rev. Mr . Perrin in · :x
taken froin an original water Christ and the word of God, and ordained clergymen, both ilie foreword of the book. At the
pain!ing done by Pomeroy want to see Biblically based . prominent .church leaders, that age o[ 14 he · was planning to DAYTON (UPl ) - Gov. John
artist, Bill Mayer .
Christianity preserved in the I must learn to cooperation with become a miilister but his life J. Gilligan said Tuesday his
Commenting on his book, the church. In view of the communism on issues on which went in the opposite direction . proposed $9 billion· budget for
pastor said :
raQicalism sweeping the ranks Christianity and communiSm His calling to the ministry came the next two years would "mak~
"This book is not a lengthy of the church today; in view of were agreed; that it was un- in a flop house in San Francisco life in Ohio a great deal more
theological dissertation. It is the proposed merger of fortunate that I had permitted where he was living a number of attractive " than it has been.
written in language which denominations into a vast social my experiences in the infantry years later. He did not enter Gilligan met with Dayton and
laymen of the .church can un- action agency which will leave in the Korean War to warp my seminary until he was 32 years Montgomery county officials as
he continued to seek support for
d.erstand. I have not attempted God on the outside looking in ; in views of the true benefits of old.
to mince any words, or skirt the view.oJ the infiltration into the communism as a world
Look Who's Killing God went his budget proposals.
issues. Readers will find it to be · church of efements intent upon movement.
on sale· today at Elberfelds, "To many people these
Biblically based, interesting, its destruction, I believe this "They explained to me , for Swisher·Lohse Drugs and proposals seem stifli ng," said
informative, perhaps , even book to be a necessity.
example, that General Motors Nelson Drugs in Pomeroy; Gilligan . " But they do
shocking reading, which may "Persons with more liberal is the greatest persecutor of Middleport Book Store, Dutton represent, in the aggregate,
well answer a great many of tende ncies will, no doubt, people on earth ; their con- Drugs, M. &amp; R. Bargainland large 'sums of money.
their questions in regard to clamor that this book is far too tention being that General and Village Pharmacy in ''You can't do anything in a
what's happening to the church conservative. I feel no com- Motors, controlling
the Middleport; The Log Cabin state of II million people
in this generation, and what pulsion, however, toward Congress of \lle United Slates, Book Store in Gallipolis, ansi at
might well be done about it.
apologizing for my own con- simply forced Congress into all Nelson's Drug Stores in --~~------"The preface to Look Who's servatism. There was, truth- making Roosevelt declare war Parkersburg and Marietta. The Rev. Mr. Perrin has been
Killing God makes perfectly fully, a time when I had just when GM saw its overseas Persons wishing to order copies pastor of Trinity Church the
clear that this book constitutes about decided to fore go investments being threatened by mail may do so at $2.25 per past seven years. He and Mrs.
a call to the commitment on the publication of the book: It waS back in the 1940's. After a few copy , by writing Box 429, Perrin have three children,
part of all Christians w)lo base during this period of indecision hours of listening to such talk, I Pomeroy.
·
Faith, Beth and John,

:n

i{\

,L

Ohio For Onioans ·

hi

•·

without &lt;unning up into those
boxcar !igu·res," said Gilligan.
"We think that this proposal
will mean an about face for the
state of Ohio meetinl!, its
obligations and its respon·
sibili ties.
"These new revenues will
make life in Ohio a grea\ deal
more attractive for the people
in Ohio than it has been
heretOfore," sa)d Gilligan.

More than 200 orphans of
veterans of veterans are being
cared for in the Veterans of
Foreign Wars National Home in
Eaton Rapids, Michigan. A
portion of the cost is raised
through the annual sale of
V.F.W. Buddy' Poppies.

"

"

POLLY'S POINt'EBS

~.

DOUBLE MANTLE

An Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs judges' school to
be held in Columbus next
Tuesday is open to area gar·
deners, Mrs. Robert Lewis,
Region 11 publicity chairman,
reports.
. The school will be held at
Ramada Inn North In Columbus
and reservations are to be made
with Mrs. Gilbert Cullen, 208'
Chamberlain Drive, Marietta,
Mrs. Vance C. Hendricks,
Orient, will present "Advanced
Design and Judging Same" at 9
a.m. Dr. Elton Smith, exlensloil
specialist in landscape horticulture who .Is correlaling the
Cooperative Extension work fo.r ·
Ohio State University and 'the
De~tment of Agriculture, will
leach the second part of tbe
morning program cin "Piani ··
Identification."
Immediately after lunch, the,
horticulture section of the oneday school wUI be taught by
Mrs. Jack Aljewalt of Kettering.
Her iUbject wiD be "Daffo,dlls"
· and. the UJe of a scorecard for

Judclnl daffodll~~Jeclmelll. She

II 111 ac:eredlted judge of tbe
AmM'Iean Daffodil Suelely,
Mbll«&lt;u well¥ judgell~n

OPEN 9·5 MON. THRU THURS. • 9-8 FRIDAY - 9·9 SATURDAY

CAMP LANTER
eCOMPARES AT '18.99
1 PORCELAIN FINISH
1 HEAT-RESISTANT PYREX

..•
•

11

100 YARD RADIUM

..•

DISCOUNT SAVINGS

'

CRESTLINE" MOTORIZED

_....,

•,.
~

!'.
•
:
:

·HOODED
BBQ
GRILLS

~
~:

•·
•

10 FOOT SECTIOR BY 18W' HIGH

• Chrome Plated Grill With Handles
• Penna-Uti Grid Positioner

FOLDING WIRE FENCE

$

e BEAUTIFIES &amp; PROTECTS LAWNS .

e COATED WITH

DUPONT VINYL

,a· ~ .

~

Judges Set

Having Excess Paper

'

•

School for

DEAR BE'M'Y: It's time ·somebody went on record as
saying that when a marriage doesn't work out it isn't
always the man's fa ult. There's another side, so why
does everybody always feel sorry for the woman? I've
been through this with my eldest son. He's divorced now·
and living at home.· My youngest son will be married
next month aild I know this won't work out any better
than his b,rother's marriage. His·fiancee talks about noth·
ing but ".women's rights !" My son ~nows blood is thicker ·
QEAR FLOR.IDA : I'll bet you have the best fans 'in than water and that he can always return to his own
home.-LOVING MOTHER
•
·
the world-your family.- BETTY

••

128 MILL ·sT.
MIDDLEPORT

,.

Complete

3 Pc. Set

Reg. $1.89

Plastic
Drapes

~

:, l!

Section

;·
r

..'

Anchor-Hocking

•••

••

LILT .:
SPECIAL

LINED

1':

. '

~

~.

FIRE-KING

:·

BAKEWARE

· ••
;·
;_
':
..

~

r

,~

::
:;;
•·
_
·;;
~

100 Ct. 7 oz.

'Flashlight
Set

FOAM

.

CUPS

-·
..,
:;;;.
:::
:'
:::
,.,..
:
:::
-

100 Ct. 9 ln.

6 Piece

-

-PAPER
PLATES

'

.....

-·~-

.---....
---·
....
"""

c

~

20" Cut · 3

~

5 WEB ALUMINUM

LAW·N
·cHAIRS
,. '

'

'

.

.

'·.

.

99

'·POWER .·.
MOWERS·'
e Brigp and SbaHon En~ne

·

---....
--....
---...,

4 Cycle

.'

eWATERF~LL

ARMS
• EASY TO ·FOLD
1 STURDY VINYL WEBS

H~po~r.

. \ ,.
• Remote Engine Control with ,Choke .

I

6" WSW WheelS

..

FAMOUS D'JULIA ·

. DECOlATIVI CERAMIC .

WALL~LAQUES$
'

.2 FOR

99

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

'·· ~

&lt;

..

Com plate..

;:

Middleport
Personal Notes

Easter dinner guests of Mr.
and
Mrs. L. E. Reynolds were
By POLLY CRAMER
Mr. and Mrs. Val Reynolds and
children,
Lynn, Gwynn and Val
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with dress patterns
which have to be cut apart and the excess paper trimmed Edgar, Morgantown, W. ya.;
by the user before work can be started. 'The manufac· Coach and Mrs. Josee.~ D.
turers claim the :f.do this "so you don't lose little pieces." McKay and children, !~Arab,
This iS sllly if you use the pattern a~ain, and I do, for 'Cinda and Vicl&lt;&gt;r, Warren ; Mr.
you can lose them just as easily. Th1s seems merely a and·Mrs. G..V. Rupe and Mr. H.
device for them to save money and annoy the users.H. McElhinny, Middleport,
DOTTIE
Route I. Other visitors at the
s---IIIIIIIII!IIIIII ·Polly's Problem ----~ Reynolds home were Mr, and
Mrs. George P. Stace of FindDEAR POLLY- When writing a letter to a girl
lay, and Mrs. Gerald Powell,
or woman and you do not know whether or not the
Pomeroy.
person Is married, should one address the letter to
Miss or Mrs.?-JUDY
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Erwin
*illiiiitW!l! !i ] U%i.W.:i&amp;it..4¥Pr!l ~~:l:::: Il l ::ti1~ ,
and children, Morgantown, W.
• ·- ·-.. ,
'I
DEAR GIRLS-Fruit stains should be treated lmme· Va. spent lhe weekend here with
dlately. The bolllng water treatmell't Is usually recom· Mr. and Mrs. Chesler Erwin.
mended for cotton or linen and may not work on old or Joining lhem for Easter were
"sel" stains. Do not use soap on such stains but sponge ' Mr. and Mrs. Don Erwin and
with cold water, work glycerin Into the stain, Jet stand daughter, Amy, Middleport.
a few hours, apply a lillie vinegar and rinse well. SomeMr. and Mirs. Dale Roush,
times old stains can be bleached out and this may be Steven and Katby, Apple Creek,
necessary for the tea towels. If acid from fruit causes
were week~nd guests of Mr, and
any change In color In a·
Mrs. B. F. Turner, Middleport.
fabric, restore It with amOther visitors were Mr. and
mont a water. These remedies are for washable fabMirs. Floyd Cleland, Rutland;
rics. AI ways lest ftrst.Mrs. Joe Turner, Mr. and Mrs.
POLLY
Milton Hood, Middleport; Mrs.
Robert Turner, Bucyrus; Mr.
DEAR POLLY- To keep .
and·
Mrs. Robert Roush, Mr.
clel!ning U[l at a min!mum
durmg baking sess1ons,
and Mrs. Raymond Miller and
place a piece of waxed
daughter, Sidney, Mrs. Royal
paper over the area where
Thomas, Columbus, and Owen
the work Is to be done and
Watson, Racine.
then place m i x i n ~ bowl, .
. ·
.
Bart Custer, son of Mr. and
spoons and all other 1tems to be used, such as Hour , sugar
and shortening, on the paper. When the baking is in the Mrs. Robert Custer, Beckley,
oven, just piclc up the paper with the mess on it and spent the past week witll his
discard all at one time .~MRS . E. M.
·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Criswell, Fairlane
Drive.
Williamson.
Searls,
Mr. !l"d Mrs. Roy Jenkins of Miss Carolyn
Belmont, W. Va. spent the Colwnbus, was the weekend
holiday weekend here with her guest of her parents, Mir. and
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Don Mrs. Leo Searls.
Usle.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Russell,
Columbus, were Easter
Easter guests of Mrs. Charles weekend guests of his parents,
Warner were Mr. and Mrs. John Mr, and Mrs. Truman Russell.
Sewell and Mrs . Betty They came especially due to the
Matheney, Marietta. The group death of an uncle, Ray Calvin
dined at ·Bob Evans in Rife, Ch~shire.
Gallipolis.
Mrs. James Werry and
children, Miss Kathy Werry,
"The middle years can be the
DAUGHTER BORN
arid Mrs. Charles Werry were Mr. and Mrs. Alan Wallace of most fulfilling time of life for It
Monday visitors of Mrs .. James Ashville are announcing the is then that knowledge, exStaats In Point Pleasant.
birth of their first child, a perience , and still youthful
Mr. and Mrs. James Sheets daughter, on Monday, April 12, vigor are united. "
and son, Jared, of Hillsboro, at the St. Ann's Hospital,
This was the program theme
and John Lohse, student at Ohio Columbus. The six pound, ·nine used by 1\frs.l{erbert Parker at
State University, wtre home for ounce girl ohas been named a recent meeting of the
the Easler holiday with Mr. and Allison Marie. Grandparents Women's Society of Christian
Mrs. Harold Lohse. A pre- are Mr . and Mrs. Dwight Service, United Methodist
Easter dinner was held Friday Wallace of Middleport and Mr. Church, Syracuse.
night with Miss Beverly and Mrs. Raymond Leddy of
Using, "The Middle Years,
Thompson of Rutland and Mrs. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. G. C. the Time for 'New Risks" as her
Herman Lohse of Middleport Knox of McConnelsville are topic with ,material from the
joining the group.
··
study book, "Risk and Realty,"
great-grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. RC~bert Gard·
Mirs. Park~r defined the purner, Sr. and Dr. and Mrs. The V.F.W. Buddy Poppy is a pose of her program as an effort
Robert Gardner, Jr. and family symbol of the sacrifices made to shed new light on some of the
of Columbus were Easter by the 1\Btlon's war dead in the problems which may beset
weekend guests of' Mrs. Phil great conflicis for peace.
!bose of middle age. She was
assisted by Mrs. Orville Crooks,
Mrs. William Houdashelt, Mrs.
.-----------------~ Dana Winebrenner, Mrs. T. G.
Hilldore, and Mrs . ·John
Sauvage.
MeeUng. at the home of Mrs.
"Thanks to our wondetful friends." .
Dana Wlhebrenner with Mirs.
William .W'mebrenner as cohostess, the meeting · opened
with devotions by Mrs. Wllliam
In appreciation to th e great
Eichinger who used an article
responSe of. our patroris at
from Guideposts, "The Way of
our e..ter Buffet, we will
Humility."
be open every Sun~y.
Twelve · shut-ln calls were
reported and the l)irtbday of
•
Mrs.
Sauvage was noted. A free
1 hOO AM • 5:00 PM
will .offering and a special
Lenten offering were taken. A
ONLY THE BEST MEATS
letter was read from Mrs.
Hattie Campbell ·asking
Special meat cuts by Ny . Marvin· Daw$0!1 of
members
D&amp;D Meat Distributors. ' You'll love · the
.
. to visit her cousin '
Mrs. Ethel Slice, 'at the
cfelldous quality.
·
Syracuse Nursing Home and to
·'

Pomeroy ....

Personal Notes

Dinner in
Minersville

Shrimp-bean st uffed tomatoes match that mood of spring in ai r.
Mr. and Mrs , Dewey Hudaon
entertained with an Easler
dinner at their home in
1 package (7 uz.) froze n
By AILEEN CLAIRE
Minersville with eight of their
cut green beans ,
NEA Food Editor
ten children and their families
cooked
attending.
'onions have f i g u r e d in •;, teaspoon powdered
Present were Mr. and Mirs. wars for health purposes,
,
mustard
George Hudson and daughter, from Alexander the Great to •;, cup 'ollve or salad oil
Mason, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Gen. Ulysses Grant, and in
I tablespoon white vinegar
Sherman Williams, Chester, w. the home. Now a new pack·
insta nt m i n r e ~
Va .; Mr . and Mirs. Bernar d aging sidesteps the fresh on· 2 teaspoons
onion
.
ion
and
thus
stor.s
tears
in
Hd
d
1ami1y, 'the kitchen. Th1s involves
u son
an
1/ 16 teaspoon ground black
Painesville; Mr, and Mrs. the half·dozen or more forms
pepper
Sonny Hudson ilnd son, Mr. and of dehydrated onion for soup,
Cut '14 ·inch·thick s I i c e s
Mrs. Guy Bush and family, stew, sauce, salad or sand· fro m stem end of each to·
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Pomeroy; Mir, and Mrs. Ken- 'wich filling or for sauteing. malo. Scoop out centers and
April14 - 15 Specials
nethEblin and family, RuUand; , Just remember that old dice. Invert tomato shells to
Charlotte Jones and Denver family r e c i p·e s calling for drain ; chill. Reserve 6 whole
SUNDAE - --- ------- --1~
Hudson, Akron, and Charles fres h onion are easily up· shrimp for garn ish; dice re·
Hudson, Minersville. Afternoon dated. Use just about une· maining shrimp . c 0 ITl b i 11 e
FLOAT --------- --- --· 19c
e i g hth as much ins t a n t diced tomato, shhmp and
callers at tlle Hudson residence llJ.inced 0 n i 0 n as mineeel beans in med ium bowl: Re·
Thur sday and Friday ,.
were Mr. and Mrs. Junior fresh onion. If using onion friger ate. Mix powdered
April15 - 16 Special ·
Autherson
and
family , flakes mix four parts onion mu s tard with 'h ·teas poon
Ul..... DOG!!li!!.!~.~I.!.·- 19C
Pomeroy.
flakes to three parts water. warm 'water. Let stand 10
K e e pi n g this advice in minutes for fl avor to de.
Fridav- Apri 116 Only
mind try a special Shrimp ve(op . Combine m u s tar d
FRENCH FRIES
19c
and Bean·Stuffed T om at o with remainin g ingredients;
•DINNER .GUESTS
dish this weekend for familv mix well. Pour over tomato
Sounds good . ·. .
· mixture. Refrigerate u n t i 1
·Easter dinner guests of Mr. or fri ends.
well chilled . When ready lo
let's eat • at
and Mrs. Charles Werry,
serve
spoon
mixture
into
to.
AND
BEAN
SHRIMP
.
.
-+- -+Pomeroy, were Mr. and Mrs.
mato
shells.
Garnish
with
re.
STUFFED TOMATOES
Dick Werry, Hundred, W, Va. ;
served whole shrimp. Serl'e
Mr. and Mirs. Mike Werry, 6 large tomatoes
as luncheon main course.
Middleport, 0. ·
·992·5248
Belpre; Mir. and Mrs. James •; , pound cooked, peeled
4th &amp; Locust
Makes 6 portions.
and develned shrimp
Werry and family, Racine ;
Miss Ava Sayre, Pomeroy, and
Bob and Kathy Werry.

Join Sonny In
Celebrating Hill
14th Ann_iversary

"SPECIALS"

·---

McCLURE'S ' dally JS!e ~

'

..

'311

Adults

1110 Child

Under 12

In addition to lflular men~.
PWS: IRMANO AT THE ORGAN

The 11arti
·n
·
R•~urant
0
••MI D EPOif;'O.
-

NURSES TO MEET
The' Ohio Nurses Assp.,
District If, wUI hold. Ita regular
meetmg at St. Paul School in
Athens on Aprll lli at 7:30p.m.
The progriUI\ wUI be a report on
an address by Hildegard Peplau
which sh~ recenUy gave in
Clevelaod, on ''Issues of Nursing. PracUce Tllday and Its
Impliciltlons for Southeaatem
Ohio." All nurses ate Invited
whether ONA member' .or not.

FEDDERS
\

Save up to·sso if you buy before May 1,1971

consider a service project for
the residents there.
The annual meeting of the
Athens District WSCS was
announced for April 14, Emmanuel Methodist Church, 9:30
a.m. To conclude the meeting,
Miss Marcia Karr commented
on the value of the Lord's
Supper as explained by the Rev.
Charles Ray Goff, former
pastor of the Chicago Temple,
to give a deeJI!"r
,., appreciation
for Maundy Thursday . .

•
•
•
•

'
It's portable
It's quiet
It's trim
It's goOd·looklng

• It's feature filled
• And ll's a Fedders,
most famous air
conditioner of
them alii

"

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

BELlONE
Hearing Aid
Service Center

ARMAND SAYS:

' Buffet with ' Choice of a Hot Entl'ee .,.... Baked
Ham , Ro;~st B~f, Fried Ch.icken •

.

SAJ.;E ANNOUNCED
The Middleport Alumni Assn.
will hold a bake sale Saturday
at the Western Auto Store
beginning at 9 a.m. Con.
tributions to the sale are to be
taken to the store.

Middle Years Offer
Blessings to All

=
-""'
....

'

DE AR PAPA: Have filed your kids' address for my
kids. I\'s under MP for Marriage Prospects.- BETTY

DEAR BETTY: Hm:rah f_or sayin~· what we've sai~ for
DEAR LOVING: My best wishes to your son and his
years. In sp1te of our m·laws, my Wife and I have reared prospective wife for a happy wec:lding day. I suppose all
four wonderful kids. The boys don't think it's "feminine" you ·want me to wish you is "Many Happy Returns of
to wash dishes and my dau!lhter doesn't consider her- Your Sons."-'-BETTY
" ·self "masculine" even if she 1s the best mechanic in the
famil y.- PROUD PAPA

Made to
A donation was made to the
George Thompson Kidney Fund
and assistance with a project to
provide vases for the O'Bleness
Hospital at Athens was planned
during a recent meeting of the
Star Garden Club at the home of
Miss Ruby Diehl.
Members were asked to take
their vases for the hospital
project to the next meeting.
Plans were made to meet
Tuesday with the Good Luck
Garden Club at the Athens
Mental . Health Center for a
therapy program.
Mrs. Virgil Atkins volunteered· to prepare the Green
Thumb Notes for The Daily
Sentinel on July l. Miss Diehl
reported she has provided an
arrangement for her church.
Arrangements were made for
the club to purchase a flowering
crabapple tree to be phioled at
the Forest Acres Park by the
l!lvlc committee.
Mrs . ·James Nicholson ,
president, conduoted the
meeting with members namlpg
\heir favorite song bird In
response to roll call. Communications were · read
regarding the slide contest for
next year and the Region 11
meeting to be held at Rutland on
April 24,
A card was signed for Mrs.
Jess Nelson who will observe
her 90th birthday soon . She Is a
former member of the club.
Ribbon winners in . the
arrangements of the month
made in either an orange or
grapefruit shell were Mrs.
Norman Will, f\J'st; Mrs. P. H.
Nelson, second; and Mrs. Orior
Nelson, third . .
The traveling prize donate()
, by .Mrs. Lawrence Chapman
was awarded to Mrs. Grover
Stout, and Mrs, tioliert jeweii
won the hostess gift.
Members exchanged bulbi.
Miss Diehl gave an article on
care and selection of foliage ·
plants . and Mrs. Nicholson
talked on soli for houseplants.
The Easter theme waa
carried out in refreshments·
served by Mrs. Virgil Atkins.

DEAR BETTY : I love your New Rules for Boys! My
husband 1s an 18-year Air. Force man and I have four
boys a,nd two girls. We have reared them to be "human."
The grrls love t~rget shooting with rifle or bow and the
boys can c~ok-;-even the 8-year-old, My 14-year-old boy .
loves all kmds of art WOFk. They help with household
chores and nobody calls anything "girl's work" or " boy's
work." Ther: is no man on earth. more of a man than
my husband but he is a very gentle person. The only .
car acc1dent he ever had was to avoid hitting a puppy.
Good for you! I heartily share your opinion !- FLORIDA
FAN
· .
.
· '

Pet Peeve: Patterns

Donation
-Kidney-'FOnd

Instant ·Onions Save Tears

,_Mo,re Than Puppy-dogs' Tails

. . .,..

Model AST07F2EY
The air conditioner
with the hand-craf1ed look

Mr. Noel Harlowe
Will Be At
La Sa lie Hole I
Middleport. OhiQ
On
Thursday, AprillS
,
From
9 A.M. to 12 Noon

Now's the savings time to get.a quality Fedders air conditioner
Fedders wraps·up bl&amp; Pre·Season sa ~lnss for
you with a bri&amp;ht red ribbon . You wrap up
summer in a package of cool. These sensa·
tionally priced Fedders models ere less than
24" wide - to grace regular and eve:n narrow
doubl e·hunc windows. Yet. ca~cliln range as
high as 15,000 BTU's of multi-room coolin&amp;.
Fine 1eatures include: Fo~mous, quiel Sound
Barrier desian, Su p ~ r Cool and ultra-quiet l o
Cool, precision automatic thermostat. finger·
tip vo~ r ia bl e air direction, even pull -out sides
lor ~ asy, do·it·yourself installat ion .Think early,
thi nk qLI,ajity, and pocket the big saYinRS.

To repair and service
hearing aids.
Batieries and supplies
tor a.ll makes for sale.
Mr. Harlowe· will be
glad to give you a free
hearing test with the
l~te~t · Bel tone Elec·
Ironic e · ui ment.

BELlONE .

18,000 B:ru's

111 volts, ?.l i mps

111 ~o l ts, 12 .amps

.t lllerUt 011 tolft

~

only$14995 $19995 o lr $29995
230 '"' 201 ""'

: nly

SAVE SlO.OO
~ or

!Mi ler bedroo ms,
other mtdlum·dtt room •
Model AST07F2EY

ldtll

SAVE $30.00
Cotls llrlt n.as,
•~•n two ror~ms
Model ACT11Fl EV

~A..V

E SSO.OO

!'deal tor llrlt optft·JIIft
·llvlnt ·dlnlnl .areas
' Model ACT15F7EY

Ingels Furniture·

'

'

Hearing Aid Center

'

504 Tenth St.
Huntin!lton, W.Va.
Phone.S25-7221

1

8,000 BTU'S

·fEDDERS-World's Largest Selling Air Conditioners .

If hearing is your
problem Bellone is
. the answer

.

6,000 BTU'S

M2·2635
•

'

OPEN. FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

MIDDUPOII'

�•

•

.'

7 - l'lle D~~Uy Sentinel, Mlddleport-l&gt;cmeroy, 0 ., April14, 19'/1

'·

Perriri·'s Book on Sale·Today
"

. ·(Continued !~om page 1)
considered humorous were it
not for the flagrant lack of truth
involved," .the. Rev . Mr. Perrin
recalled.
"A publishing house had
printed a book dealing with a
lewd religious · sex cult. The
wri ting bordered on por·
nograph~·, and lampoon~ all
faith in God. When I \vrote the
comp~ny requesting permission
to submit my manuscript as a
defense of Christianity , I
received a terse reply that 'the
company did not deal in books
of a religious nature .' "
Continuing on his experience
of trying to break into the world
of publications, the Pomeroy
pastor said :
''The _ very word , 'c on ~
servatlve,' got me locked out of
a number of publishing houses
immediately. All I had to dowas

mention having a manuscript of
a 'theologically conservative'
trend to get doors slammed in
my face. I began to appreciate
what clergymen on the right
side of the fence were referring
to when they spoke of 'the
conspiracy of silence' being
enforced by the far left . I began
to appreciate even more what J .
Edgar Hoover had written in
Masters of Deceit about
clergymen being influenced to
keep
silent.
Through
Congressman Ashbrook of Ohio,
who directed me to a friend of
his in the ministry, I finally
contacted Dr. E. J. Daniels and
his publishing company which
began the printing of Look
Who's Killing God.
The Rev. Mr, Perrin toyed
with the idea of writing a book a
nwnber of years ago, even
·while in seminary training . Now
- he can hold up tbe flnisheil

FOOD fOR AMERICANS

a~·~~~~~"::.! r~:::;~

6:_ The Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April14, 1971

.Readers of Look Who 's ;:t::
Killing God will fi nd a , tr~
fasci nating account of the
product - enhanced by a cover their religious lives on ,Jesus that I was informed 'by two · calling of the Rev. Mr . Perrin in · :x
taken froin an original water Christ and the word of God, and ordained clergymen, both ilie foreword of the book. At the
pain!ing done by Pomeroy want to see Biblically based . prominent .church leaders, that age o[ 14 he · was planning to DAYTON (UPl ) - Gov. John
artist, Bill Mayer .
Christianity preserved in the I must learn to cooperation with become a miilister but his life J. Gilligan said Tuesday his
Commenting on his book, the church. In view of the communism on issues on which went in the opposite direction . proposed $9 billion· budget for
pastor said :
raQicalism sweeping the ranks Christianity and communiSm His calling to the ministry came the next two years would "mak~
"This book is not a lengthy of the church today; in view of were agreed; that it was un- in a flop house in San Francisco life in Ohio a great deal more
theological dissertation. It is the proposed merger of fortunate that I had permitted where he was living a number of attractive " than it has been.
written in language which denominations into a vast social my experiences in the infantry years later. He did not enter Gilligan met with Dayton and
laymen of the .church can un- action agency which will leave in the Korean War to warp my seminary until he was 32 years Montgomery county officials as
he continued to seek support for
d.erstand. I have not attempted God on the outside looking in ; in views of the true benefits of old.
to mince any words, or skirt the view.oJ the infiltration into the communism as a world
Look Who's Killing God went his budget proposals.
issues. Readers will find it to be · church of efements intent upon movement.
on sale· today at Elberfelds, "To many people these
Biblically based, interesting, its destruction, I believe this "They explained to me , for Swisher·Lohse Drugs and proposals seem stifli ng," said
informative, perhaps , even book to be a necessity.
example, that General Motors Nelson Drugs in Pomeroy; Gilligan . " But they do
shocking reading, which may "Persons with more liberal is the greatest persecutor of Middleport Book Store, Dutton represent, in the aggregate,
well answer a great many of tende ncies will, no doubt, people on earth ; their con- Drugs, M. &amp; R. Bargainland large 'sums of money.
their questions in regard to clamor that this book is far too tention being that General and Village Pharmacy in ''You can't do anything in a
what's happening to the church conservative. I feel no com- Motors, controlling
the Middleport; The Log Cabin state of II million people
in this generation, and what pulsion, however, toward Congress of \lle United Slates, Book Store in Gallipolis, ansi at
might well be done about it.
apologizing for my own con- simply forced Congress into all Nelson's Drug Stores in --~~------"The preface to Look Who's servatism. There was, truth- making Roosevelt declare war Parkersburg and Marietta. The Rev. Mr. Perrin has been
Killing God makes perfectly fully, a time when I had just when GM saw its overseas Persons wishing to order copies pastor of Trinity Church the
clear that this book constitutes about decided to fore go investments being threatened by mail may do so at $2.25 per past seven years. He and Mrs.
a call to the commitment on the publication of the book: It waS back in the 1940's. After a few copy , by writing Box 429, Perrin have three children,
part of all Christians w)lo base during this period of indecision hours of listening to such talk, I Pomeroy.
·
Faith, Beth and John,

:n

i{\

,L

Ohio For Onioans ·

hi

•·

without &lt;unning up into those
boxcar !igu·res," said Gilligan.
"We think that this proposal
will mean an about face for the
state of Ohio meetinl!, its
obligations and its respon·
sibili ties.
"These new revenues will
make life in Ohio a grea\ deal
more attractive for the people
in Ohio than it has been
heretOfore," sa)d Gilligan.

More than 200 orphans of
veterans of veterans are being
cared for in the Veterans of
Foreign Wars National Home in
Eaton Rapids, Michigan. A
portion of the cost is raised
through the annual sale of
V.F.W. Buddy' Poppies.

"

"

POLLY'S POINt'EBS

~.

DOUBLE MANTLE

An Ohio Association of
Garden Clubs judges' school to
be held in Columbus next
Tuesday is open to area gar·
deners, Mrs. Robert Lewis,
Region 11 publicity chairman,
reports.
. The school will be held at
Ramada Inn North In Columbus
and reservations are to be made
with Mrs. Gilbert Cullen, 208'
Chamberlain Drive, Marietta,
Mrs. Vance C. Hendricks,
Orient, will present "Advanced
Design and Judging Same" at 9
a.m. Dr. Elton Smith, exlensloil
specialist in landscape horticulture who .Is correlaling the
Cooperative Extension work fo.r ·
Ohio State University and 'the
De~tment of Agriculture, will
leach the second part of tbe
morning program cin "Piani ··
Identification."
Immediately after lunch, the,
horticulture section of the oneday school wUI be taught by
Mrs. Jack Aljewalt of Kettering.
Her iUbject wiD be "Daffo,dlls"
· and. the UJe of a scorecard for

Judclnl daffodll~~Jeclmelll. She

II 111 ac:eredlted judge of tbe
AmM'Iean Daffodil Suelely,
Mbll«&lt;u well¥ judgell~n

OPEN 9·5 MON. THRU THURS. • 9-8 FRIDAY - 9·9 SATURDAY

CAMP LANTER
eCOMPARES AT '18.99
1 PORCELAIN FINISH
1 HEAT-RESISTANT PYREX

..•
•

11

100 YARD RADIUM

..•

DISCOUNT SAVINGS

'

CRESTLINE" MOTORIZED

_....,

•,.
~

!'.
•
:
:

·HOODED
BBQ
GRILLS

~
~:

•·
•

10 FOOT SECTIOR BY 18W' HIGH

• Chrome Plated Grill With Handles
• Penna-Uti Grid Positioner

FOLDING WIRE FENCE

$

e BEAUTIFIES &amp; PROTECTS LAWNS .

e COATED WITH

DUPONT VINYL

,a· ~ .

~

Judges Set

Having Excess Paper

'

•

School for

DEAR BE'M'Y: It's time ·somebody went on record as
saying that when a marriage doesn't work out it isn't
always the man's fa ult. There's another side, so why
does everybody always feel sorry for the woman? I've
been through this with my eldest son. He's divorced now·
and living at home.· My youngest son will be married
next month aild I know this won't work out any better
than his b,rother's marriage. His·fiancee talks about noth·
ing but ".women's rights !" My son ~nows blood is thicker ·
QEAR FLOR.IDA : I'll bet you have the best fans 'in than water and that he can always return to his own
home.-LOVING MOTHER
•
·
the world-your family.- BETTY

••

128 MILL ·sT.
MIDDLEPORT

,.

Complete

3 Pc. Set

Reg. $1.89

Plastic
Drapes

~

:, l!

Section

;·
r

..'

Anchor-Hocking

•••

••

LILT .:
SPECIAL

LINED

1':

. '

~

~.

FIRE-KING

:·

BAKEWARE

· ••
;·
;_
':
..

~

r

,~

::
:;;
•·
_
·;;
~

100 Ct. 7 oz.

'Flashlight
Set

FOAM

.

CUPS

-·
..,
:;;;.
:::
:'
:::
,.,..
:
:::
-

100 Ct. 9 ln.

6 Piece

-

-PAPER
PLATES

'

.....

-·~-

.---....
---·
....
"""

c

~

20" Cut · 3

~

5 WEB ALUMINUM

LAW·N
·cHAIRS
,. '

'

'

.

.

'·.

.

99

'·POWER .·.
MOWERS·'
e Brigp and SbaHon En~ne

·

---....
--....
---...,

4 Cycle

.'

eWATERF~LL

ARMS
• EASY TO ·FOLD
1 STURDY VINYL WEBS

H~po~r.

. \ ,.
• Remote Engine Control with ,Choke .

I

6" WSW WheelS

..

FAMOUS D'JULIA ·

. DECOlATIVI CERAMIC .

WALL~LAQUES$
'

.2 FOR

99

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

'·· ~

&lt;

..

Com plate..

;:

Middleport
Personal Notes

Easter dinner guests of Mr.
and
Mrs. L. E. Reynolds were
By POLLY CRAMER
Mr. and Mrs. Val Reynolds and
children,
Lynn, Gwynn and Val
DEAR POLLY- My Pet Peeve is with dress patterns
which have to be cut apart and the excess paper trimmed Edgar, Morgantown, W. ya.;
by the user before work can be started. 'The manufac· Coach and Mrs. Josee.~ D.
turers claim the :f.do this "so you don't lose little pieces." McKay and children, !~Arab,
This iS sllly if you use the pattern a~ain, and I do, for 'Cinda and Vicl&lt;&gt;r, Warren ; Mr.
you can lose them just as easily. Th1s seems merely a and·Mrs. G..V. Rupe and Mr. H.
device for them to save money and annoy the users.H. McElhinny, Middleport,
DOTTIE
Route I. Other visitors at the
s---IIIIIIIII!IIIIII ·Polly's Problem ----~ Reynolds home were Mr, and
Mrs. George P. Stace of FindDEAR POLLY- When writing a letter to a girl
lay, and Mrs. Gerald Powell,
or woman and you do not know whether or not the
Pomeroy.
person Is married, should one address the letter to
Miss or Mrs.?-JUDY
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Erwin
*illiiiitW!l! !i ] U%i.W.:i&amp;it..4¥Pr!l ~~:l:::: Il l ::ti1~ ,
and children, Morgantown, W.
• ·- ·-.. ,
'I
DEAR GIRLS-Fruit stains should be treated lmme· Va. spent lhe weekend here with
dlately. The bolllng water treatmell't Is usually recom· Mr. and Mrs. Chesler Erwin.
mended for cotton or linen and may not work on old or Joining lhem for Easter were
"sel" stains. Do not use soap on such stains but sponge ' Mr. and Mrs. Don Erwin and
with cold water, work glycerin Into the stain, Jet stand daughter, Amy, Middleport.
a few hours, apply a lillie vinegar and rinse well. SomeMr. and Mirs. Dale Roush,
times old stains can be bleached out and this may be Steven and Katby, Apple Creek,
necessary for the tea towels. If acid from fruit causes
were week~nd guests of Mr, and
any change In color In a·
Mrs. B. F. Turner, Middleport.
fabric, restore It with amOther visitors were Mr. and
mont a water. These remedies are for washable fabMirs. Floyd Cleland, Rutland;
rics. AI ways lest ftrst.Mrs. Joe Turner, Mr. and Mrs.
POLLY
Milton Hood, Middleport; Mrs.
Robert Turner, Bucyrus; Mr.
DEAR POLLY- To keep .
and·
Mrs. Robert Roush, Mr.
clel!ning U[l at a min!mum
durmg baking sess1ons,
and Mrs. Raymond Miller and
place a piece of waxed
daughter, Sidney, Mrs. Royal
paper over the area where
Thomas, Columbus, and Owen
the work Is to be done and
Watson, Racine.
then place m i x i n ~ bowl, .
. ·
.
Bart Custer, son of Mr. and
spoons and all other 1tems to be used, such as Hour , sugar
and shortening, on the paper. When the baking is in the Mrs. Robert Custer, Beckley,
oven, just piclc up the paper with the mess on it and spent the past week witll his
discard all at one time .~MRS . E. M.
·
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Criswell, Fairlane
Drive.
Williamson.
Searls,
Mr. !l"d Mrs. Roy Jenkins of Miss Carolyn
Belmont, W. Va. spent the Colwnbus, was the weekend
holiday weekend here with her guest of her parents, Mir. and
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Don Mrs. Leo Searls.
Usle.
Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Russell,
Columbus, were Easter
Easter guests of Mrs. Charles weekend guests of his parents,
Warner were Mr. and Mrs. John Mr, and Mrs. Truman Russell.
Sewell and Mrs . Betty They came especially due to the
Matheney, Marietta. The group death of an uncle, Ray Calvin
dined at ·Bob Evans in Rife, Ch~shire.
Gallipolis.
Mrs. James Werry and
children, Miss Kathy Werry,
"The middle years can be the
DAUGHTER BORN
arid Mrs. Charles Werry were Mr. and Mrs. Alan Wallace of most fulfilling time of life for It
Monday visitors of Mrs .. James Ashville are announcing the is then that knowledge, exStaats In Point Pleasant.
birth of their first child, a perience , and still youthful
Mr. and Mrs. James Sheets daughter, on Monday, April 12, vigor are united. "
and son, Jared, of Hillsboro, at the St. Ann's Hospital,
This was the program theme
and John Lohse, student at Ohio Columbus. The six pound, ·nine used by 1\frs.l{erbert Parker at
State University, wtre home for ounce girl ohas been named a recent meeting of the
the Easler holiday with Mr. and Allison Marie. Grandparents Women's Society of Christian
Mrs. Harold Lohse. A pre- are Mr . and Mrs. Dwight Service, United Methodist
Easter dinner was held Friday Wallace of Middleport and Mr. Church, Syracuse.
night with Miss Beverly and Mrs. Raymond Leddy of
Using, "The Middle Years,
Thompson of Rutland and Mrs. Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. G. C. the Time for 'New Risks" as her
Herman Lohse of Middleport Knox of McConnelsville are topic with ,material from the
joining the group.
··
study book, "Risk and Realty,"
great-grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. RC~bert Gard·
Mirs. Park~r defined the purner, Sr. and Dr. and Mrs. The V.F.W. Buddy Poppy is a pose of her program as an effort
Robert Gardner, Jr. and family symbol of the sacrifices made to shed new light on some of the
of Columbus were Easter by the 1\Btlon's war dead in the problems which may beset
weekend guests of' Mrs. Phil great conflicis for peace.
!bose of middle age. She was
assisted by Mrs. Orville Crooks,
Mrs. William Houdashelt, Mrs.
.-----------------~ Dana Winebrenner, Mrs. T. G.
Hilldore, and Mrs . ·John
Sauvage.
MeeUng. at the home of Mrs.
"Thanks to our wondetful friends." .
Dana Wlhebrenner with Mirs.
William .W'mebrenner as cohostess, the meeting · opened
with devotions by Mrs. Wllliam
In appreciation to th e great
Eichinger who used an article
responSe of. our patroris at
from Guideposts, "The Way of
our e..ter Buffet, we will
Humility."
be open every Sun~y.
Twelve · shut-ln calls were
reported and the l)irtbday of
•
Mrs.
Sauvage was noted. A free
1 hOO AM • 5:00 PM
will .offering and a special
Lenten offering were taken. A
ONLY THE BEST MEATS
letter was read from Mrs.
Hattie Campbell ·asking
Special meat cuts by Ny . Marvin· Daw$0!1 of
members
D&amp;D Meat Distributors. ' You'll love · the
.
. to visit her cousin '
Mrs. Ethel Slice, 'at the
cfelldous quality.
·
Syracuse Nursing Home and to
·'

Pomeroy ....

Personal Notes

Dinner in
Minersville

Shrimp-bean st uffed tomatoes match that mood of spring in ai r.
Mr. and Mrs , Dewey Hudaon
entertained with an Easler
dinner at their home in
1 package (7 uz.) froze n
By AILEEN CLAIRE
Minersville with eight of their
cut green beans ,
NEA Food Editor
ten children and their families
cooked
attending.
'onions have f i g u r e d in •;, teaspoon powdered
Present were Mr. and Mirs. wars for health purposes,
,
mustard
George Hudson and daughter, from Alexander the Great to •;, cup 'ollve or salad oil
Mason, W. Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Gen. Ulysses Grant, and in
I tablespoon white vinegar
Sherman Williams, Chester, w. the home. Now a new pack·
insta nt m i n r e ~
Va .; Mr . and Mirs. Bernar d aging sidesteps the fresh on· 2 teaspoons
onion
.
ion
and
thus
stor.s
tears
in
Hd
d
1ami1y, 'the kitchen. Th1s involves
u son
an
1/ 16 teaspoon ground black
Painesville; Mr, and Mrs. the half·dozen or more forms
pepper
Sonny Hudson ilnd son, Mr. and of dehydrated onion for soup,
Cut '14 ·inch·thick s I i c e s
Mrs. Guy Bush and family, stew, sauce, salad or sand· fro m stem end of each to·
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Pomeroy; Mir, and Mrs. Ken- 'wich filling or for sauteing. malo. Scoop out centers and
April14 - 15 Specials
nethEblin and family, RuUand; , Just remember that old dice. Invert tomato shells to
Charlotte Jones and Denver family r e c i p·e s calling for drain ; chill. Reserve 6 whole
SUNDAE - --- ------- --1~
Hudson, Akron, and Charles fres h onion are easily up· shrimp for garn ish; dice re·
Hudson, Minersville. Afternoon dated. Use just about une· maining shrimp . c 0 ITl b i 11 e
FLOAT --------- --- --· 19c
e i g hth as much ins t a n t diced tomato, shhmp and
callers at tlle Hudson residence llJ.inced 0 n i 0 n as mineeel beans in med ium bowl: Re·
Thur sday and Friday ,.
were Mr. and Mrs. Junior fresh onion. If using onion friger ate. Mix powdered
April15 - 16 Special ·
Autherson
and
family , flakes mix four parts onion mu s tard with 'h ·teas poon
Ul..... DOG!!li!!.!~.~I.!.·- 19C
Pomeroy.
flakes to three parts water. warm 'water. Let stand 10
K e e pi n g this advice in minutes for fl avor to de.
Fridav- Apri 116 Only
mind try a special Shrimp ve(op . Combine m u s tar d
FRENCH FRIES
19c
and Bean·Stuffed T om at o with remainin g ingredients;
•DINNER .GUESTS
dish this weekend for familv mix well. Pour over tomato
Sounds good . ·. .
· mixture. Refrigerate u n t i 1
·Easter dinner guests of Mr. or fri ends.
well chilled . When ready lo
let's eat • at
and Mrs. Charles Werry,
serve
spoon
mixture
into
to.
AND
BEAN
SHRIMP
.
.
-+- -+Pomeroy, were Mr. and Mrs.
mato
shells.
Garnish
with
re.
STUFFED TOMATOES
Dick Werry, Hundred, W, Va. ;
served whole shrimp. Serl'e
Mr. and Mirs. Mike Werry, 6 large tomatoes
as luncheon main course.
Middleport, 0. ·
·992·5248
Belpre; Mir. and Mrs. James •; , pound cooked, peeled
4th &amp; Locust
Makes 6 portions.
and develned shrimp
Werry and family, Racine ;
Miss Ava Sayre, Pomeroy, and
Bob and Kathy Werry.

Join Sonny In
Celebrating Hill
14th Ann_iversary

"SPECIALS"

·---

McCLURE'S ' dally JS!e ~

'

..

'311

Adults

1110 Child

Under 12

In addition to lflular men~.
PWS: IRMANO AT THE ORGAN

The 11arti
·n
·
R•~urant
0
••MI D EPOif;'O.
-

NURSES TO MEET
The' Ohio Nurses Assp.,
District If, wUI hold. Ita regular
meetmg at St. Paul School in
Athens on Aprll lli at 7:30p.m.
The progriUI\ wUI be a report on
an address by Hildegard Peplau
which sh~ recenUy gave in
Clevelaod, on ''Issues of Nursing. PracUce Tllday and Its
Impliciltlons for Southeaatem
Ohio." All nurses ate Invited
whether ONA member' .or not.

FEDDERS
\

Save up to·sso if you buy before May 1,1971

consider a service project for
the residents there.
The annual meeting of the
Athens District WSCS was
announced for April 14, Emmanuel Methodist Church, 9:30
a.m. To conclude the meeting,
Miss Marcia Karr commented
on the value of the Lord's
Supper as explained by the Rev.
Charles Ray Goff, former
pastor of the Chicago Temple,
to give a deeJI!"r
,., appreciation
for Maundy Thursday . .

•
•
•
•

'
It's portable
It's quiet
It's trim
It's goOd·looklng

• It's feature filled
• And ll's a Fedders,
most famous air
conditioner of
them alii

"

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

BELlONE
Hearing Aid
Service Center

ARMAND SAYS:

' Buffet with ' Choice of a Hot Entl'ee .,.... Baked
Ham , Ro;~st B~f, Fried Ch.icken •

.

SAJ.;E ANNOUNCED
The Middleport Alumni Assn.
will hold a bake sale Saturday
at the Western Auto Store
beginning at 9 a.m. Con.
tributions to the sale are to be
taken to the store.

Middle Years Offer
Blessings to All

=
-""'
....

'

DE AR PAPA: Have filed your kids' address for my
kids. I\'s under MP for Marriage Prospects.- BETTY

DEAR BETTY: Hm:rah f_or sayin~· what we've sai~ for
DEAR LOVING: My best wishes to your son and his
years. In sp1te of our m·laws, my Wife and I have reared prospective wife for a happy wec:lding day. I suppose all
four wonderful kids. The boys don't think it's "feminine" you ·want me to wish you is "Many Happy Returns of
to wash dishes and my dau!lhter doesn't consider her- Your Sons."-'-BETTY
" ·self "masculine" even if she 1s the best mechanic in the
famil y.- PROUD PAPA

Made to
A donation was made to the
George Thompson Kidney Fund
and assistance with a project to
provide vases for the O'Bleness
Hospital at Athens was planned
during a recent meeting of the
Star Garden Club at the home of
Miss Ruby Diehl.
Members were asked to take
their vases for the hospital
project to the next meeting.
Plans were made to meet
Tuesday with the Good Luck
Garden Club at the Athens
Mental . Health Center for a
therapy program.
Mrs. Virgil Atkins volunteered· to prepare the Green
Thumb Notes for The Daily
Sentinel on July l. Miss Diehl
reported she has provided an
arrangement for her church.
Arrangements were made for
the club to purchase a flowering
crabapple tree to be phioled at
the Forest Acres Park by the
l!lvlc committee.
Mrs . ·James Nicholson ,
president, conduoted the
meeting with members namlpg
\heir favorite song bird In
response to roll call. Communications were · read
regarding the slide contest for
next year and the Region 11
meeting to be held at Rutland on
April 24,
A card was signed for Mrs.
Jess Nelson who will observe
her 90th birthday soon . She Is a
former member of the club.
Ribbon winners in . the
arrangements of the month
made in either an orange or
grapefruit shell were Mrs.
Norman Will, f\J'st; Mrs. P. H.
Nelson, second; and Mrs. Orior
Nelson, third . .
The traveling prize donate()
, by .Mrs. Lawrence Chapman
was awarded to Mrs. Grover
Stout, and Mrs, tioliert jeweii
won the hostess gift.
Members exchanged bulbi.
Miss Diehl gave an article on
care and selection of foliage ·
plants . and Mrs. Nicholson
talked on soli for houseplants.
The Easter theme waa
carried out in refreshments·
served by Mrs. Virgil Atkins.

DEAR BETTY : I love your New Rules for Boys! My
husband 1s an 18-year Air. Force man and I have four
boys a,nd two girls. We have reared them to be "human."
The grrls love t~rget shooting with rifle or bow and the
boys can c~ok-;-even the 8-year-old, My 14-year-old boy .
loves all kmds of art WOFk. They help with household
chores and nobody calls anything "girl's work" or " boy's
work." Ther: is no man on earth. more of a man than
my husband but he is a very gentle person. The only .
car acc1dent he ever had was to avoid hitting a puppy.
Good for you! I heartily share your opinion !- FLORIDA
FAN
· .
.
· '

Pet Peeve: Patterns

Donation
-Kidney-'FOnd

Instant ·Onions Save Tears

,_Mo,re Than Puppy-dogs' Tails

. . .,..

Model AST07F2EY
The air conditioner
with the hand-craf1ed look

Mr. Noel Harlowe
Will Be At
La Sa lie Hole I
Middleport. OhiQ
On
Thursday, AprillS
,
From
9 A.M. to 12 Noon

Now's the savings time to get.a quality Fedders air conditioner
Fedders wraps·up bl&amp; Pre·Season sa ~lnss for
you with a bri&amp;ht red ribbon . You wrap up
summer in a package of cool. These sensa·
tionally priced Fedders models ere less than
24" wide - to grace regular and eve:n narrow
doubl e·hunc windows. Yet. ca~cliln range as
high as 15,000 BTU's of multi-room coolin&amp;.
Fine 1eatures include: Fo~mous, quiel Sound
Barrier desian, Su p ~ r Cool and ultra-quiet l o
Cool, precision automatic thermostat. finger·
tip vo~ r ia bl e air direction, even pull -out sides
lor ~ asy, do·it·yourself installat ion .Think early,
thi nk qLI,ajity, and pocket the big saYinRS.

To repair and service
hearing aids.
Batieries and supplies
tor a.ll makes for sale.
Mr. Harlowe· will be
glad to give you a free
hearing test with the
l~te~t · Bel tone Elec·
Ironic e · ui ment.

BELlONE .

18,000 B:ru's

111 volts, ?.l i mps

111 ~o l ts, 12 .amps

.t lllerUt 011 tolft

~

only$14995 $19995 o lr $29995
230 '"' 201 ""'

: nly

SAVE SlO.OO
~ or

!Mi ler bedroo ms,
other mtdlum·dtt room •
Model AST07F2EY

ldtll

SAVE $30.00
Cotls llrlt n.as,
•~•n two ror~ms
Model ACT11Fl EV

~A..V

E SSO.OO

!'deal tor llrlt optft·JIIft
·llvlnt ·dlnlnl .areas
' Model ACT15F7EY

Ingels Furniture·

'

'

Hearing Aid Center

'

504 Tenth St.
Huntin!lton, W.Va.
Phone.S25-7221

1

8,000 BTU'S

·fEDDERS-World's Largest Selling Air Conditioners .

If hearing is your
problem Bellone is
. the answer

.

6,000 BTU'S

M2·2635
•

'

OPEN. FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

MIDDUPOII'

�.'.

..

I

,·

.

'

•

'

.-

I

•

.

,

'

\

Beef· Steak
Turkey -

Right Reserved
To ·LimitQuantities! .
.

·_, ""

.

.

WHOLE
.

Large Knob
, TEXAS .

LARGE HEADS

.

GREEN·ONIONS

•

I

'

-

4 Sticks 1 lb. pkg.

SPECIAL CUT
THE WAY

t

SWEEPSTAKES .

I

·bunch

..:' J

ONLY

"YOU"

~~

/·'

LB.

WANT IT

•/

., .
l

II

22

1 LB. CAN

II

l'

oz.
•

BOTTLE
'

1 LB. BOX
I.CJ;.~.
.

SLICED
%PORK LOIN
•

•

•

CENTERS .
.

~ND

FIRST CUTS
MIXED

.

. SWIFT PREMIUM

·. ·

·. PORK .· .:$ 19 SLICED
TENDERLOIN · ~-lb. BACON ·.
&lt;".

.

l

lB.

',

j

'

'

'

I

llll p11g.

'

"

CARTON
OF 8

TOMATO
JUICE

16 Ol
BOTTLES
ONLY

LB.

Plus Deposit

.

., HALO .

·Regular .

ONLY ·
BONELESS

••

LISTERIN-E.

Toot
p '

'

•

•

ONIONS .·

46 ot can

Hai-r
Spray

-

NEW YELLOW

. H~rd · To Hold ·

CAN

·Giant
Bag OJ.

WALL

.COLGATE

MEN'S

.

.·RAPID.

.

OVERALL

ANELING

SHAVE

·PANTS
R~gular.

..-

11 oz.
. .CAN ·.

Sheets

. ONlY .

NOW
ONLY

"i··

.

..

PAIR ONLY

4' X 8'
'

8'8

99

and
up

•

Check
Our Prices

On All
Gutters .
Downspouts
;Drain Pipe ·
Hot &amp; Cold
Water Pipe .·
· Roof Paint
·, Large

House ·
Paint · ·

Dept
. '

'

.

.

'

•

.

.'
.

';

�.
·'

..
10- The DaUy Sentinel, Middlep(.rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., AprilH, 1971

High School, each one evening a week for abOut an hotu:
and a half for baton classes. The charge ivlll be $5 for
each building.
.
DECLINES DEAL ·
· The boaro turned thumbs down on coopel'atlvely
suppOrting the use of a driver education "simulator"
· with the Gallipolis City Schools. The equipment
simulates driving conditions for some 16 driver
education students at a time and Is valued at 11.bout .
$35,000. The bo8rd would have to be ~ponslble for
payment of Instructors; malntenarice, inSurance, costs
of moving and otller ewenses. It was the conseDBWI
that the present system of driver education, conducted
af~IJ'egular school hours, Is satisfactory.
Porter reported that The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. is interested in placing three schedule
boards on school properties, probably In Pomeroy,
Middleport and Rock Springs on the three major sports
-baseball, basketball and footbliU.n was agreed that
Morrison and Hargraves will take the matter up for
f'urther consideration. The bid of the Davis Co. at
Langsville was accepted on a bus body. The bid was for
$3,480 and was the only one submitted.
Attending tile meeting were those named above
and Board Members Virgil King and Hiram Slawter,
Clerk L. W. McComas · and Miss Mary Bradbury
representing the
Council.
--·-Melgs
- High--School
- Student
.

~

r--------------------------, Board.to Study Of

distributive eduCation program for the next tiehool
.tter year. Son:te 36 btisiness people have been invited liy
Hargraves to attend a meeting at 10 a.m. on April'!/ in
an attempt to learn of interest in such a program by
area business people.
(Continued from Page 1)
Porter brought before tbe board recommendations
•Taylor, who has been given leave of absence.
for solving wet conditions which exist constantly at the
Miss Allison Sny(ler was appointed a teacher, grade
Salisbury Elementary Sch!l&lt;ll playgrowtd. A plan for
one, of the Rutland Elementary School, replacing Mrs.
' ditching and installation of drain tile has been
, Donna Morrison who resigned ·March 19 to move to
recommended. It is estimated that the cost will be in
Florida . The resignations of Mrs. Morrison and Mrs.
the neighborhood of $1,000. It was agreed to seek some .
Betty Hutchison were accepted by the board last nlght.
help !rom the township officials as well as to contact
.Appointed as substitute teachers were Miss Sallie
the PTA of'tbe school for whatever financial aid it
Davis, Miss Connie Jlimp and Joe Hughes. The trio
might provide. The Meigs Soil Conservation Office is
have been approved by tile county board of ellucation.
expected to assist also.
Porter and Joseph Sayre were named to represent
A request was also received from the Pomeroy
the Meig~ Local Board in a discussion witll
PTA asking for more playground equipment and the
' representatives of' the Meigs Local Teachers Assn. on
use of a high schooJ department in making and
April 20.
repairing such equipment. The board agreed that the
Hargraves reported that as a member of the Ohio
improvements.should be made for the Pomeroy school.
Advisory Council on Vocational Education, a three
·Hargraves reported th~t water checks for safeness
year term starting in July,hemay have to be out of tile
are being made weekly at the salem Center School and
community some six times each year. Porter
the •water has been all right for a number of weeks
congratulated tile superintendent for having been
according to the tests.
selected as a council member.
It was agreed that the Meigs Loclll School Boaro
The superintendent also reported that he has been
will again serve as the fiscal agent for the eight county
advised by the architect on the new high school that
special education project for the 1971-72 year pendiug ·
there will be a number of bids on the .air conditioning
the approval of the units involved and the provision of
for the core section of the new building. Bids are due on
funding by the Ohio Department of Education.
April 19.
Miss Gloria Buck was given permission to use the
A report was given on the possible inception of a
Pomeroy Elementary School and the Meigs Junior

! Washington !
I
1

!
I
I

R. ··
·

.· ep0 rt
'

By Clarence

Miller

I
I

a

l
I
I

I

...

On December 15, 1967, the It is Imperative that current
bridge connecting Point governmental efforts to
Pleasant, W. Va ., and Kanauga, upgrade the quality of bridge
Ohio (In Gallia County), inspection be acceler~ted to
collapsed. Forty-six persons detect strength flaws and
bridge structure tolerance to
died in the accident.
varying
traffic loads and
· The collapse of the bridge
·began on the Ohio side of the diverse weather conditions.
span as the result of an eyehar Specifically; the Safety
.cleavage failure. Within a Board's report states that the
period of about one minute, the existing program to improve
701).foot center span, the two bri&lt;!ge safety should include
380-foot side spans, and · the efforts to :
- Identify those bridge
towers had fallen .
building
materials used over
This synopsis is taken from
the final National Tran- the past, as well as those
sportation Safety Board report presenUy 'in use, which are
susceptible to.slow flaw growth
on the tragedy.
According to this com- by any of the suspected
prehensive report just made mechanisms . ..
- Investigate thse same
public, the cleavage fracture
was caused by the development materials to determine critical
of a. critical size ilaw as the flaw size under various stress .
n:sult of the joint action of levels.
- Develop a new generation
stress corrilsion and corrosion
of inspection equipment for use
. fatigue.
The Safety Board's study under field conditions to detect
represents more than three critical or near critical flaws in
years of tedious work. Among heavy structures.
the elements listed as ha'ving - Devise techniques ior
contributed to the failure of the repair, protection or salvage of
bridge are three points worth bridges damaged by internal
flaws.
.
highlighting:
.
Expand
our
knQwledge
of
I. In 1927, when the bridge
was designed, the phenomena of the loading history and life
stress corrosion and corrosion expectancy of bridges.
The Federal · Aid ·Highway
fatigue were not known to occur
in the classes of bridge material Act of 19611 requires that bridges
used under conditions of ex- in the federal-aid-highway .
posure normally encountered in system meet rigorous federal
.standards for inspection and
rural areas.
2. The location of the flaw was maintenance. Unfortunately •
inaccessible to visual in· statistics reveal that over 70 per
cent of the approximately
spec lion.
3. The use of only two eyebars 563,~00 highway bridges in the
per link in the eyebar chain. United States are not in the
This ma&lt;le the total ·failure of Federal-Aid-System. Ninetythe chain inevitable once the four per cent of the apfracture occurred. Had there proximately 373,000 bridges on
been three more eyebars per county secondary roads, rural
link, there would have been the roads, and city streets were
possibility that the failure of one built prior to 1935.
To move toward preventing
bar would not have led to
any bridge acc:dents in the
disaster..
future,
we must establish
.
The report states that the
relatively rare combination of . uniform national standards
these and additional factors providing for flawless concharacteristic of the Silver struction, regular maintimance;
Bridge makes the possibility of and In-depth inspection of all
the reoccurrence of this exact bridges. Projects at any level
type of failure remote. The only which involve the public 's
other bridge In the cowttry to safety should be subject to the
combine all factors of the Silver hlghestsafetystandards.
Bridge is at St. Mary's, W. Va~.·
and dismantling of that
stru.cture is presently un·
derway.

However, the report points
out that many other bridge
structures in the United States
presently possess one or more
factors in their design which
contributed to the fall of the
Silver Bridge.

HOSPITAL
'NEWS
....
··ll'li'
..

-~~

•

AUi·('d

Gas c0 Will Spend _$3.5 Million
To Expand Natural Gas Supply
.

•
While most Ohioans are
beginning to relax from the
rigors of the winter just ending,
the Ohio Fuel Gas Co. already is
looking ahead to next winter
and embarking on a $3\2 million
1971 drilling program in search
of new supplies of natural gas in
Ohio, and to continue to expand
and improve its natural gas
stofage facilities in the state.
Ohio Fuel supplies natural
gas to Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Inc., and 25 other gas companies in Ohio. Columbia Gas of
Ohio and Ohio Fuel both are
part of the Columbia Gas
System, Inc.
C. T. Cassell, Columbia Gas of
Qhio manager in the Middleport
. '·Pomeroy area, and John
Koebel in Gallipolis, said more
than $1.3 million will be used to
drilll4 new production wells in
·
· wayn_e,
variOus
area_s m
1
Homes
and Rtchland Counties
and for geophysical surveys and
exploratory drilling to probe
rock formations more than two
miles deep in Ohio in search of
additional supplies of natural
gas.'
They said this drilling

Foreign
wmmentary Pakist~

program is part of an intensive
effort on the part of the
Columbia System to find add!tional reserves of natural gas
in its traditional Southwest and
Appalachian supply areas.
They added that the System
also has developed and initiated
a diverse program aimed at
developing entire new areas of
supply including the importation of natural gas in liquid
form by ship from overseas,
lapping the prolific gas
reserves of Canada and Alaska
and conducting research that
may lead to the production of
pipeline quality gas from coal.
Sixty new storage wells and 10
replacement storage wells also
will be drilled, and ~0 existing
storage wells will be reconditioned to help assure continued dependable natural gas
· to the company's
servtce
customers next winter. Total
cost of this work will be almost
$2.2million ($2,197,000) , Cassell
said.
All of the storage wells will be
drilled in Ohio Fuel's 14 existing
storage fields, which are
located strategically

I

Tragedy

SNIRT
FINISHING

•

Robinson's Cleaners:

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

·(;~·
."
~ur
For her day - Mot.her'8 Day
.
·
May 9th
·
Twin bands of solid 14 Karat Gold to
recall her lvedding day ; , . 'wiih a Ius·
trous synthetic ·stone, of the month to
m.ark the birtlidayof each of her children

i

-I

-

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kendall
NEW HAVEN - Miss Linda
Lou Townsend, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Virgil Townsend, 301
Fifth st., Greenup, Ky., and
·Richard Gordon Kendall, son of

Special Low Price ~ Save Cash!

All A&amp;P Chickens Are U.S. Gov't. lnspt•

NEW HAVEN -Mr. and Mrs. Johnson S. Scarberry of
New Haven are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Betty Jane, to Patrick Wallace Kimble, son of
Kathryn B. Kimble and the late Loren W. Kimble of
Kalamazo&lt;!, Mich.
Miss Scarberry, a 1966 graduate ofWahama High School,
received her Bachelor of Arts Degree in English from
Marshall University in 1970. She is 'presently employed by
Westerii Michigan University, Kalamazoo, where she is also
attending graduate school to earn a Master of Arts Degree in
English.
Mr. Kimble was graduated from St. Augustine High
School, Kalamazoo, attended Kellogg Community College,
Battle Creek, and received a degree in architectural drafting
from the Gale !ttstitute, Chicago, Illinois. He is a member of
the Portage Police Department, Portage, Michigan,
presently assigned as a patrolman in the traffic. division.
Wedding plans are incomplete.
LIMIT 4 PLEASE

Mason County

"SUPER-RIGHT1' LEAN

PAN READY

Cut-up
fryers
• •
News Notes
Fryer ,Breasts
•
By Alma Marshall
"
Chicken Liven •
3Y
New residents of the Letart-New Haven area are Mr. and
Mrs. Darwyn Enevoldsen and their five adopted boys and girls, , Routing Chickens
Leigh, 16; Jo Lynn, 15; Melanle, 13; Tim, 9and Steve, 5.
Another son, Charles, was ordained to the priesthood on April
.~~:" fryers
• .
3atthe Emmanuel Episcopal Church at Portsmouth, Va. Mr. and

time afld dep1. ln1tull it wMre th.
woth U- anywhenyou «l" ttl Cl!dt~
wiring, plumbing and """"'' '"'pHd
Wod!erdoes fo111ify Nl•laadt wittllegular
and Dtlicot. mti"9L Flowino Htot Dryer

I

hen Core in both waaher Pd drywr.

FRESH!

'$389
FURNITURE
BAKER. MIDDlEI'ORT; 0.

Impress
yourself
while you
express
yourself.
•Why not treat yourself right
When you've got something pleasant to
say,say it on a phone that's a pleasure to use .
The Styleline extension telephone.
It's our newest model and it shows it
It's up to date, feels right and
looks great
'
To make it easier to use,
we've put the dial in the
handset so it's always at
your fingertip .
And. there's ev}'; a recall
button beneatlt the dial
so you don't have to hang
up to hang up.
It's so handy calling's
a breeze. ·
'
And :ovho knows, using the ·
'mod Styleline telephonemay
impre~:; you enough to help
. you impress others more.

.I

,&gt;i~ l

I • Ill,. 'HI

CAP'N JOHN BREADED

•· ,..,

.

I

Beef Noodle Soup
1acu- Bruce's Hot Sauce
11i"''·10c Whole Potatoes •
Green Beans • •

····1t Soap Pads
A&amp;P
Sauerkraut
HENNY PENNY
10' Doc·food RJ~~~~:
BROADCAST
.~10' PoHed Meat

•

I

I

I

TWIN PET

KING COLE DIAGONAl CUT

•

•

.

I

Waffles
•
'
Frosting Mix
Spud Flakes •
Bix Mix • •
I

I

I

I

I

•
I

•

~o:· lt
•

t.~·
· 10c
pk ...

I

• •

VINE-RIPE

GRAPEFRUIT

TOMATOES

·
c
10

iNDIAN ..
RIVER

.

Cabbage

1·0~.

' E~(h ·

•

. ~ 1t

• • ~~1t

I

•l'i....

I

pkl.

I

. I

lO~ach

Save 1t .!g · Green Onions
Jouthan APfltt

::59(

I

pkr-11'

1

DIET

WHITE SEEDLESS

•

I

Orange Drink • •
10c Pancake Mix •
·Napkins .
• •
,..... . ,oc Faygo Beverages • . !:-1t
I

I

MARTHA WHITE

BORDENS.GOURMET FLAVORED

I

NORTHERN ASSORTED

MARTHA WHtTE

I

I

I

I

AMERICAN BEAUTY

•

AUNT JEMIMA

.

CHARM-ALL FLAVORS

KING COLE

•

REAL GOLD

SUNNYFIELD FROZEN

BuHer Beans •
Mixed Vegetabl!S
Tomato Juice
Instant Potatoes

•

TEEN RITE

A&amp;P BRAND

AMERICAN BEAUTY BABY

•

...b

I

I

I

pkc.

I

I

•

CANDY BARS-15c SIZE

KING COLE SLICED OR

I

oU

MOTT'S

pkr.

I

RESCUE

Cup Cakei u~~t~EO
";:1t Apple Juice •.
~~10' Baby Ruth ••
~1t Dog Food • • •

I

. 1-&lt;JL

•

I

JANE PARKER FRESH

LOUISIANA

I

lb.

"SUPER-RIGHT" ASSORTED

lb•

WYLER'S-MtX.CHOICE OF FLAVORS
I

•

I

SPECIAL LOW PRtCEI

"SUPER-RIGHT" TENDER-LEAN

•

COUNTRY TREAT-WHOLE HOG

I

I

Gravy Mix • . .
freach Fries
•
Cat Food • •
Golden Hominy • • 1~10'

•

)I

I

PORK-ROAST

BONELESS ENGLISH

I

.

LEAN BUTT·STYLE

·f,

I
• •
. .... . . . . , .
t•l ,o\\ ' " •hJ Hb _, fl hJI'l10'1

I

EXTRA DRUMSTICKS!

Wax-Tex Bags
Cake Mixes
Browaie Mix
Pie Crust Mix •

~.

I

I

I

I

I

•

CAP'N JOHN FRIED

lib..,.

BONELESS ROAST

4 TO 4-LB. AVG.

Mrs. Enevoldsen attended the service and visited their daughterin-law, Gall and grandson, Christian.
.
The following day, Sunday, Aprll 4Mr. and Mrs. Enevoldsen
went to Akron where they attended a "This Is Your Ufe"
program for Mrs. Enevoldsen's brother, the Rev. Kenneth ~et­
Uewell, on his 15th annlversary at the United · Presbytenan
Church.
The Enevoldsens love tbeir new home and are happy to be KEEP SANDWICHES FRESH
together. Enevoldsen retired 4 years ago after being in tbe navy
• I
23 years and now !he family can be together all tbe time, and not CHARM ASSORTED
just part of the time.
Mrs. Enevoldsen (Eleanore) a registered nurse, followed her
• • •
husband to be with him when she could while he was in the ser- • CHARM-FUDGE·
vice.
Although Enevoldsen retired from the navy - he is far from
• •
•
retired in the area- he is Chief of Electrical Construction at the CHARM FLAKY
new Gavin plant and is employed by American Electric.
•
The family vacation a lot and plan to go to Georgia as soon as
school it out.
Timmy's birthday will be observed on May 1 with a cookout,
homemade ice cream and the works.
Besides their love of children, their Jove of anlmals are ap·
parent. They have three horses, four dogs, eight Siamese cats and
guineas. Mr. and Mrs. Enevoldsen moved to the former Doug
Roush property from New Concord, Ohio.
' It was here that Mrs. Enevoldsen (Eleanore) grew up with
John Glenn, (first astronaut to orbit the earth) and went to school
with htm and his wife.
CUFTON- Harry Jo VanMeter, a junior at Glenville State,
visited hi.s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Van Meter over the weeke?d.
Also Mrs. Lloyd Williams and Jackie spent the weekend at Indian
Head, Mich., where they visited Mrs. Williams' son, Tom
Williams and family.
.
MR. AND MRS. LOUIS PETERS, Clifton, are announcing the PILLSBURY-CHICKEN
birth of a son, Kevin Ray, on April6 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
•,'
The infant weighed 7 pounds and 7 ounces. They have three other
children. Gr,andparents are Mr . and Mrs. Bent Blake and Mrs. SULTANA FROZEN
Margaret Peters, all of Clifton. .
.
..
• •
MASON -Mrs. Wlian Singer, 90, a restdent of Mason, d1ed
on Saturday morning at a Mas~iUon, Ohio hospital. Mrs. Singer, a SWITCH BRAND
former resident of Massillon, made )ter home here with Mrs. Lee
I
I
Richardson, Third St. Funeral services were held Monday at 3
p.m. at Massillon, Ohio. Survivors include one son, Dr. Murl AMERICAN .BU,UTY.WHITE OR
Singer of Usbon, Ohio.
·
• ,
NEW HAVEN- Mr. and Mrs. Paul HWlt and two daughters,
Heather and Paula, and son, Mickey Hunt of the U..S. Air force,
Richard Rhinehart and Mary Huff, all of Fostoria, Ohio, and John
'Sayre, Evans, w. Va., were weekend· guests of Mr. aqd MrS .
~ar Casto and Saughters, Shelley an~ Kim at New Haven,
.
CUFTON .::.. George Blake of Fairbanks, Alaska called hiS
parents Mr. and Mrs. Artley Blake at clifton on Easter.
HERE AND THERE ,... Mr. and Mrs. Don QUisenberry and
family, s. Charleston, 'visited Mt. and Mrs.- Oscar Henry IllS!
week. Visiting on Easter were Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Coleman and
children of CollimbuS; Mr. and Mrs. Terry ·Henry and two sons, of
.
.
Mason.
·
DINNER GUESTS of Mr. and Mrs·. Billie S~ith at their home
in Cllfton on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Stewart and
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Smith and son, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert E. Sayre, Mrs. Mike Rodgers and Bobby Roush .
MR. AND MRS. JIMMY Forshee and tl)~ee sons from .Bar·
berton, Ohio visited Mrs. Mollie Fox over the weekend, and Betty
Ault of New Albany, -Ohio viSited over the weekend wi.th her
mother, Mrs. Winnie Holland .

I

BUDOIG

I

A TASTY TREAT! FRESH

driet clothes tunthine fftsh, ~"'"'"'"'

Ground Round Steak t•-99' Pork Chops ~J~ • • ···69c Braunschweicer Am~u lb. 45'
.
(I
h
Stl
k
:
,
;
:
"
;
.
.,~
.
•s
10
s ~
Chipped ~eats •
Sirloin Tip •
5 5
···&amp;ac
Ocean
Perch
2.~;.
1'
Pork Steaks • • •
••-79c Eye of Round • •
59' fresh Sauuce • . ~~~; It
1o~:t~ss Picnic
Charcoal
Steaks
• •
'"ar
~ 4t
Bacon End Slices 5 ~~ 98c Lunch Meat .
.lAc Enzlish Roast ·o~ms: •
.,.,BONELESS ROAST

I

I

"SUPER.RIGHT" FRESH CHUNK .

CENTER CUTS INCLUDED

I

I

FRESH MEATY

So~

•

")

II

. Betty Jane Scarberry Betrothed

lijij '•
&amp;I;OERAL TElEPitiJIE
Styleline· Extensions

1o

Transfers ·

Sunday Schdol attendance on
April 11 was 98 .. The offering
was $36.71. Jesus Loves Me was ·
sung by three primary girls and
Tamrny Heiser spoke. Worship
services were h~ld at 11, with
the Rev. Lavender bringing the
Easter message. ·
Easter Sunrise Services were
held at 6 o'clock, with an attendance of 47..10. The program,
"He Goeth Beiore," along with
singing and recitations by the
small folk . were given under
direction of Doris Dillinger.
The pre-Easter services held
at the Orange Christian Church
· were well attended and much
enjQyed.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
and family and Mrs. Ella Yost
of Sugar · Grove spent the
weekend with Genevieve
Guthrie and attended services
at both the Orange and the
Alfred churches.
Easter gtrests of Clara
Follrod and Nina Robinson
were Mr. and Mrs. Billy Follrod
and Sue. Ann of Athens, and
S\evie Follrod.
Mrs. William Carr and
daughters spent Easter Sunday
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert White at Keno.

tit Baker's .. ~

•
Terrance
Charles Robert
Meigs
The Rev. Don:ild Young of
Kendall
or
Day
tori,
0.,
served
as
Danville j&gt;errormed the d•uble
ring candlelight ceremony at best man . Ushers were Mark
7;30p.m. before an altar setting Grinstead of New Haven, and
of palms, candelabra holding Ronald Watson of Dayton.
The ~eception took. place in
lighted yellow tapers and
the
Tennessee Gas Club house
arrangements .of yellow and
while carnations and ·gladioli. at Lynn. The bride's table was
Traditional . wedding music ~Qvered with a yellow c}oth with David R. Yates, Norma Jean
was presented by Miss Pamela while net overlay, centered with Yates to Everett L. SChultz,
Harmon of Louisville, pianlst. a three tiered wedding cake and Beulah B. Schultz, Lot, Tuppers
The bride, given in. marriage nanked by an arrangement of Plains-Orange.
by her father, wore a formal yellow and while carnations. George G. Gum, Sr., Fay I.
length gown of peau de ~oie and
lace. The princess styled gown Assisting were Mrs . Daniel · Gum to French City Baptist
featured a bouffant skirt, Cooksey, Mrs. Ronnie Back and Church, Lot,, Pomeroy.
Bishop sleeves and mandarin Miss Faye Walker.
Clara Belle Yinger, Adm.,
neckline. The chapel train was
bordered with matching lace. · The bride's mother wore a Homer !,ovett, dec'd., lo Gayle
' Her shoulder. length veil of sUk beige coat and dress ensel)1ble , Salyer, Art":! Salyer, Parcels,
illusion was attached to a brown accessories and a cor· Lebanon.
Cecil V. Vance , Melva E'
profile headdress of lace sage of yellow and white carnations
.
The
bridegroom's
Vance
to Cecil L. Stacy, .14
flowers accented with pearls
and sequins. She carried a Bible mother wore a blue dress, navy Acres, Salem.
Boneta June Darst, Gdn.,
tOpped with a. cascade bouquet blue accessories and a ·yellow
of yellow roses and white and white carnation corsage . Samson Darst, Minor by Gdn. to
The bride is a graduate of Ohio Power ·Co., Ease.,
carnations.
Miss Dorothy Ann Townsend Greenup High School and . Rutland.
Harley J. Hoffman to Lauren
of Frankfort was maid of honor: Morehead State University and
is
employed
by
the
Federal
E.
Hoffman , Leslie G. Hoffman, ·
She wore · a modified A-line
Parcels, Salem.
green floor length gown of Youth Center, Ashland.
Lucy F. Gainer, dec'd ., to
imported .Saki, styled with
Jesse Gainer, Cert. of Trans.,
empire bodice and short sleeves Th~ bridegroom is a graduate
edged with matching Venice of Wahama High School, at. Lebanon .
Lottie Roush to Roger L.
lace . and detachable Wateau tended · Morehead State
Manley, Sr., Connie M. Manley,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Kendall, train. She wore a headdress of University and is employed by Lot, Pomeroy.
New Haven, W. Va . were yellow and white carnations Appalachian Power Co., St . Ina Virginia Riethmiller to
married Feb. 27 in the Uberty with yellow streamers and Albans, W. Va . Mr. and Mrs. Ray Riethmiller, Cert. or
United Methodist Church at carried a nosegay of yellow and Kendall are residing at Bar- Trans ., Sutton. ·
boursville.
white carnations.
Lynn, Ky. ·

Property

Sol'illl Note~

--~ -- -·

per cent of the gas used by gas
throughout Ohio.
They are Lucas and Pavonia company customers comes
.
in Ashland and Richland from underground storage.
During the winter just ended,
Counties; Weaver, in Ashland,
Richland and Knox Counties; a record 2.1 billion cubic feet of
Laurel, in Hocking County; gas was withdrawn from these
Benton, in Hocking and Vinton storage fields in a single day.
As customers' demands for
Counties; Holmes in Holmes
County; Wellington, in Lorain gas increase, the gas company
and Medina Counties; Wayne, must increase the amount of
in Wayne, Ashland and Holmes gas stored and step up the input
Counties; Medina, in Medina and output rate of the gas to and
County ; McArthur, in Vinton from storage. The amount of
County; Lorain, in Lorain gas that can be taken out of
County; Guernsey, in · Guern- storage areas on cold winter
sey, Muskingum and Coshocton days, or stored on warm
Counties; Knox, in · Knox summer days, depends largely
the
number
and
County , and Zane, in on
Muskingum Cq,unty.
deliverability of storage wells.
Twenty-five of the new
storage wells will be drilled in
Weaver Storage Field . Eighteen
will be in Pavonia, nine in The sale of Buddy Poppies
preceding Memorial Day is the
Laurel,
five
in
Wayne
and
three
tr
.
.
· L
Th
ad't'
t tona1 way to brmg
at•
1
m
th ucas. e exact ocatton of te nt'1on to the sacn.f.1ces rna de
e I 0 replacement wells and 50 b th
t' ,
d d . th .
existing wells to be recon- . Y e na ton s war ea. m etr
ditioned will be determined struggle to keep Amertca fre~.
later this year.
. Buy a Buddy .Poppy and wear 11
About 95 per cent of the gas on Memonal Day.
used · by gas company
customers is purchased outside
Ohio, mostly in the Southwest.
During the summer, gas
transported to Ohio through
long-distance pipelines is stored
SAME DAY
Jti1!1t!~r::g:]J@~!iiilii%iiit!i!Ii~liffJtlil~tf\:\:}I11~A~~!1!1i~!~fFf :nRm:::: :~: :::::::~:~::r:~t : ::;:;J:~: ;):! ::m:~:r : :Jt~~:~~~::\ :::: · ~:!: :;:;:::}}~·: :::t:: :i:::~;~::::~:i~ in the 14 underground storage
SERVICE
fields - natural sandstone rock
·'
In At 9-0ut At 5
formations thousands of feet
Use'Our Free Parking Lot
underground that once held
native gas.
Thus the gas is available for
use the following winter. on the
In Pakistan the world is witnessing the break weeks ago they exploded.
2
coldest
winter days, about 55 · . . .2.;1•6 •E•
.m•e•ro•v•-.
. •"•d,•P•o•
up of one of its largest nations and a tragedy
Since the first day there has been no clear
which is just beginning.
word of Sheik Mujibur Rahman whose Awami
Between ita divided halves a new migration is League had won a clear majority not only in the
under way reminiscent of the one which ac- East Pakistan provincial parliament but in the
companied its founding in 1947 when Moslems central government as welL Presumably he is a
and Hindus divided the subcontinent into Hindu prisoner or dead .
India and Moslem Pakistan, the latter in turn
The central government declares it is
divided Into halves separated by 1,000 miles .
restoring normalcy to East Pakistan but it is
Racial and cultural origins determine the.new apparent that its control extends to the cities and
migration between the Bengalis of the east and not to the countryside. Estimates of East
the Punjab! of tbe west.
Pakistan dead now run to more than 5,000 but
Pakistan is a country which never should have could be many times that number.
existed in the first place and now probably never
Special Irony
can again even though the 50,000 to 78,000 West
There is a special irony to Pakistan's tragedy
Pakistan troops imported into the east succeed in that it came despite the efforts of honest men.
for the moment in putting down the movement'
President Yahya Khan seemed truly bent on
which began as a demand for autonomy within a restoring democracy to the whole of Pakistanunited Pakistan and now calls itself Bangia Desh after years of military rule. Sheik Mujibar R.ah·
or "Bengal nation. 11
man sought autonomy, not independence.
Error Is Compounded
And as the tragedy runs its course, economic
H the creation of Pakistan was an error in the ruin also looms. Pakistan's foreign currency
first place, then it also was an error compounded reserves are expected to be exhausted in less
over the years by man's short-sightedness.
than three months. Cut off from the east, West
The·new nation was less than seven years old Pakistan industry is .losing 40 per cent of its
when increasing East Pakistan demands for normal outlets. aa'nk payments are blocked.
autonomy began making themselves felt at the
And to add to human suffering is the imminent
election polls. But if the west heard, it did not approach of the monsoon season;·
listen and resentments mounted until three

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave . .and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p..m. Parents only on
' Pediatrics Ward.
Blrlhs
Mr. and Mrs. Willard L. Call,
Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Alva B. Clurk, Pomeroy, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
D. Lewis, Oak Hill, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Beldon V. Grady,
Buffalo, W.Va., a daughter and
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E.
Masters, Gallipolis, a son.
· Discharges
Mrs, Leo Bean, Eric J.
Boring, Glendon D. Flaker,
Mrs. Henry Hill and daughter,
Dallas Ughtfoot, Mrs. Opal F.
Queen, Mrs. Foster L.
Strickland and son, Mrs.
Charles F. Templeton and
State Truck Taxes
daughter, M~s. Sanford C.
WASHlNGTON - An
Vallance, Mrs. Florence avcrnge large truck pays as
Manlskas, Mrs. Robert Mc- much in state highway use
Carley, and Stephen Bowman. taxes as 31 passenger cars.

11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.PIIneroy. 0., Aprill4, 1971

b•••k

1Qc.

. MAl¥11.

I

·Neapolitan Ice Cream ·A
White Bru• .~~:. • a::.T
Punut BtHer ~::l . • • u;:-1

�.
·'

..
10- The DaUy Sentinel, Middlep(.rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., AprilH, 1971

High School, each one evening a week for abOut an hotu:
and a half for baton classes. The charge ivlll be $5 for
each building.
.
DECLINES DEAL ·
· The boaro turned thumbs down on coopel'atlvely
suppOrting the use of a driver education "simulator"
· with the Gallipolis City Schools. The equipment
simulates driving conditions for some 16 driver
education students at a time and Is valued at 11.bout .
$35,000. The bo8rd would have to be ~ponslble for
payment of Instructors; malntenarice, inSurance, costs
of moving and otller ewenses. It was the conseDBWI
that the present system of driver education, conducted
af~IJ'egular school hours, Is satisfactory.
Porter reported that The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. is interested in placing three schedule
boards on school properties, probably In Pomeroy,
Middleport and Rock Springs on the three major sports
-baseball, basketball and footbliU.n was agreed that
Morrison and Hargraves will take the matter up for
f'urther consideration. The bid of the Davis Co. at
Langsville was accepted on a bus body. The bid was for
$3,480 and was the only one submitted.
Attending tile meeting were those named above
and Board Members Virgil King and Hiram Slawter,
Clerk L. W. McComas · and Miss Mary Bradbury
representing the
Council.
--·-Melgs
- High--School
- Student
.

~

r--------------------------, Board.to Study Of

distributive eduCation program for the next tiehool
.tter year. Son:te 36 btisiness people have been invited liy
Hargraves to attend a meeting at 10 a.m. on April'!/ in
an attempt to learn of interest in such a program by
area business people.
(Continued from Page 1)
Porter brought before tbe board recommendations
•Taylor, who has been given leave of absence.
for solving wet conditions which exist constantly at the
Miss Allison Sny(ler was appointed a teacher, grade
Salisbury Elementary Sch!l&lt;ll playgrowtd. A plan for
one, of the Rutland Elementary School, replacing Mrs.
' ditching and installation of drain tile has been
, Donna Morrison who resigned ·March 19 to move to
recommended. It is estimated that the cost will be in
Florida . The resignations of Mrs. Morrison and Mrs.
the neighborhood of $1,000. It was agreed to seek some .
Betty Hutchison were accepted by the board last nlght.
help !rom the township officials as well as to contact
.Appointed as substitute teachers were Miss Sallie
the PTA of'tbe school for whatever financial aid it
Davis, Miss Connie Jlimp and Joe Hughes. The trio
might provide. The Meigs Soil Conservation Office is
have been approved by tile county board of ellucation.
expected to assist also.
Porter and Joseph Sayre were named to represent
A request was also received from the Pomeroy
the Meig~ Local Board in a discussion witll
PTA asking for more playground equipment and the
' representatives of' the Meigs Local Teachers Assn. on
use of a high schooJ department in making and
April 20.
repairing such equipment. The board agreed that the
Hargraves reported that as a member of the Ohio
improvements.should be made for the Pomeroy school.
Advisory Council on Vocational Education, a three
·Hargraves reported th~t water checks for safeness
year term starting in July,hemay have to be out of tile
are being made weekly at the salem Center School and
community some six times each year. Porter
the •water has been all right for a number of weeks
congratulated tile superintendent for having been
according to the tests.
selected as a council member.
It was agreed that the Meigs Loclll School Boaro
The superintendent also reported that he has been
will again serve as the fiscal agent for the eight county
advised by the architect on the new high school that
special education project for the 1971-72 year pendiug ·
there will be a number of bids on the .air conditioning
the approval of the units involved and the provision of
for the core section of the new building. Bids are due on
funding by the Ohio Department of Education.
April 19.
Miss Gloria Buck was given permission to use the
A report was given on the possible inception of a
Pomeroy Elementary School and the Meigs Junior

! Washington !
I
1

!
I
I

R. ··
·

.· ep0 rt
'

By Clarence

Miller

I
I

a

l
I
I

I

...

On December 15, 1967, the It is Imperative that current
bridge connecting Point governmental efforts to
Pleasant, W. Va ., and Kanauga, upgrade the quality of bridge
Ohio (In Gallia County), inspection be acceler~ted to
collapsed. Forty-six persons detect strength flaws and
bridge structure tolerance to
died in the accident.
varying
traffic loads and
· The collapse of the bridge
·began on the Ohio side of the diverse weather conditions.
span as the result of an eyehar Specifically; the Safety
.cleavage failure. Within a Board's report states that the
period of about one minute, the existing program to improve
701).foot center span, the two bri&lt;!ge safety should include
380-foot side spans, and · the efforts to :
- Identify those bridge
towers had fallen .
building
materials used over
This synopsis is taken from
the final National Tran- the past, as well as those
sportation Safety Board report presenUy 'in use, which are
susceptible to.slow flaw growth
on the tragedy.
According to this com- by any of the suspected
prehensive report just made mechanisms . ..
- Investigate thse same
public, the cleavage fracture
was caused by the development materials to determine critical
of a. critical size ilaw as the flaw size under various stress .
n:sult of the joint action of levels.
- Develop a new generation
stress corrilsion and corrosion
of inspection equipment for use
. fatigue.
The Safety Board's study under field conditions to detect
represents more than three critical or near critical flaws in
years of tedious work. Among heavy structures.
the elements listed as ha'ving - Devise techniques ior
contributed to the failure of the repair, protection or salvage of
bridge are three points worth bridges damaged by internal
flaws.
.
highlighting:
.
Expand
our
knQwledge
of
I. In 1927, when the bridge
was designed, the phenomena of the loading history and life
stress corrosion and corrosion expectancy of bridges.
The Federal · Aid ·Highway
fatigue were not known to occur
in the classes of bridge material Act of 19611 requires that bridges
used under conditions of ex- in the federal-aid-highway .
posure normally encountered in system meet rigorous federal
.standards for inspection and
rural areas.
2. The location of the flaw was maintenance. Unfortunately •
inaccessible to visual in· statistics reveal that over 70 per
cent of the approximately
spec lion.
3. The use of only two eyebars 563,~00 highway bridges in the
per link in the eyebar chain. United States are not in the
This ma&lt;le the total ·failure of Federal-Aid-System. Ninetythe chain inevitable once the four per cent of the apfracture occurred. Had there proximately 373,000 bridges on
been three more eyebars per county secondary roads, rural
link, there would have been the roads, and city streets were
possibility that the failure of one built prior to 1935.
To move toward preventing
bar would not have led to
any bridge acc:dents in the
disaster..
future,
we must establish
.
The report states that the
relatively rare combination of . uniform national standards
these and additional factors providing for flawless concharacteristic of the Silver struction, regular maintimance;
Bridge makes the possibility of and In-depth inspection of all
the reoccurrence of this exact bridges. Projects at any level
type of failure remote. The only which involve the public 's
other bridge In the cowttry to safety should be subject to the
combine all factors of the Silver hlghestsafetystandards.
Bridge is at St. Mary's, W. Va~.·
and dismantling of that
stru.cture is presently un·
derway.

However, the report points
out that many other bridge
structures in the United States
presently possess one or more
factors in their design which
contributed to the fall of the
Silver Bridge.

HOSPITAL
'NEWS
....
··ll'li'
..

-~~

•

AUi·('d

Gas c0 Will Spend _$3.5 Million
To Expand Natural Gas Supply
.

•
While most Ohioans are
beginning to relax from the
rigors of the winter just ending,
the Ohio Fuel Gas Co. already is
looking ahead to next winter
and embarking on a $3\2 million
1971 drilling program in search
of new supplies of natural gas in
Ohio, and to continue to expand
and improve its natural gas
stofage facilities in the state.
Ohio Fuel supplies natural
gas to Columbia Gas of Ohio,
Inc., and 25 other gas companies in Ohio. Columbia Gas of
Ohio and Ohio Fuel both are
part of the Columbia Gas
System, Inc.
C. T. Cassell, Columbia Gas of
Qhio manager in the Middleport
. '·Pomeroy area, and John
Koebel in Gallipolis, said more
than $1.3 million will be used to
drilll4 new production wells in
·
· wayn_e,
variOus
area_s m
1
Homes
and Rtchland Counties
and for geophysical surveys and
exploratory drilling to probe
rock formations more than two
miles deep in Ohio in search of
additional supplies of natural
gas.'
They said this drilling

Foreign
wmmentary Pakist~

program is part of an intensive
effort on the part of the
Columbia System to find add!tional reserves of natural gas
in its traditional Southwest and
Appalachian supply areas.
They added that the System
also has developed and initiated
a diverse program aimed at
developing entire new areas of
supply including the importation of natural gas in liquid
form by ship from overseas,
lapping the prolific gas
reserves of Canada and Alaska
and conducting research that
may lead to the production of
pipeline quality gas from coal.
Sixty new storage wells and 10
replacement storage wells also
will be drilled, and ~0 existing
storage wells will be reconditioned to help assure continued dependable natural gas
· to the company's
servtce
customers next winter. Total
cost of this work will be almost
$2.2million ($2,197,000) , Cassell
said.
All of the storage wells will be
drilled in Ohio Fuel's 14 existing
storage fields, which are
located strategically

I

Tragedy

SNIRT
FINISHING

•

Robinson's Cleaners:

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

·(;~·
."
~ur
For her day - Mot.her'8 Day
.
·
May 9th
·
Twin bands of solid 14 Karat Gold to
recall her lvedding day ; , . 'wiih a Ius·
trous synthetic ·stone, of the month to
m.ark the birtlidayof each of her children

i

-I

-

Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kendall
NEW HAVEN - Miss Linda
Lou Townsend, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Virgil Townsend, 301
Fifth st., Greenup, Ky., and
·Richard Gordon Kendall, son of

Special Low Price ~ Save Cash!

All A&amp;P Chickens Are U.S. Gov't. lnspt•

NEW HAVEN -Mr. and Mrs. Johnson S. Scarberry of
New Haven are announcing the engagement of their
daughter, Betty Jane, to Patrick Wallace Kimble, son of
Kathryn B. Kimble and the late Loren W. Kimble of
Kalamazo&lt;!, Mich.
Miss Scarberry, a 1966 graduate ofWahama High School,
received her Bachelor of Arts Degree in English from
Marshall University in 1970. She is 'presently employed by
Westerii Michigan University, Kalamazoo, where she is also
attending graduate school to earn a Master of Arts Degree in
English.
Mr. Kimble was graduated from St. Augustine High
School, Kalamazoo, attended Kellogg Community College,
Battle Creek, and received a degree in architectural drafting
from the Gale !ttstitute, Chicago, Illinois. He is a member of
the Portage Police Department, Portage, Michigan,
presently assigned as a patrolman in the traffic. division.
Wedding plans are incomplete.
LIMIT 4 PLEASE

Mason County

"SUPER-RIGHT1' LEAN

PAN READY

Cut-up
fryers
• •
News Notes
Fryer ,Breasts
•
By Alma Marshall
"
Chicken Liven •
3Y
New residents of the Letart-New Haven area are Mr. and
Mrs. Darwyn Enevoldsen and their five adopted boys and girls, , Routing Chickens
Leigh, 16; Jo Lynn, 15; Melanle, 13; Tim, 9and Steve, 5.
Another son, Charles, was ordained to the priesthood on April
.~~:" fryers
• .
3atthe Emmanuel Episcopal Church at Portsmouth, Va. Mr. and

time afld dep1. ln1tull it wMre th.
woth U- anywhenyou «l" ttl Cl!dt~
wiring, plumbing and """"'' '"'pHd
Wod!erdoes fo111ify Nl•laadt wittllegular
and Dtlicot. mti"9L Flowino Htot Dryer

I

hen Core in both waaher Pd drywr.

FRESH!

'$389
FURNITURE
BAKER. MIDDlEI'ORT; 0.

Impress
yourself
while you
express
yourself.
•Why not treat yourself right
When you've got something pleasant to
say,say it on a phone that's a pleasure to use .
The Styleline extension telephone.
It's our newest model and it shows it
It's up to date, feels right and
looks great
'
To make it easier to use,
we've put the dial in the
handset so it's always at
your fingertip .
And. there's ev}'; a recall
button beneatlt the dial
so you don't have to hang
up to hang up.
It's so handy calling's
a breeze. ·
'
And :ovho knows, using the ·
'mod Styleline telephonemay
impre~:; you enough to help
. you impress others more.

.I

,&gt;i~ l

I • Ill,. 'HI

CAP'N JOHN BREADED

•· ,..,

.

I

Beef Noodle Soup
1acu- Bruce's Hot Sauce
11i"''·10c Whole Potatoes •
Green Beans • •

····1t Soap Pads
A&amp;P
Sauerkraut
HENNY PENNY
10' Doc·food RJ~~~~:
BROADCAST
.~10' PoHed Meat

•

I

I

I

TWIN PET

KING COLE DIAGONAl CUT

•

•

.

I

Waffles
•
'
Frosting Mix
Spud Flakes •
Bix Mix • •
I

I

I

I

I

•
I

•

~o:· lt
•

t.~·
· 10c
pk ...

I

• •

VINE-RIPE

GRAPEFRUIT

TOMATOES

·
c
10

iNDIAN ..
RIVER

.

Cabbage

1·0~.

' E~(h ·

•

. ~ 1t

• • ~~1t

I

•l'i....

I

pkl.

I

. I

lO~ach

Save 1t .!g · Green Onions
Jouthan APfltt

::59(

I

pkr-11'

1

DIET

WHITE SEEDLESS

•

I

Orange Drink • •
10c Pancake Mix •
·Napkins .
• •
,..... . ,oc Faygo Beverages • . !:-1t
I

I

MARTHA WHITE

BORDENS.GOURMET FLAVORED

I

NORTHERN ASSORTED

MARTHA WHtTE

I

I

I

I

AMERICAN BEAUTY

•

AUNT JEMIMA

.

CHARM-ALL FLAVORS

KING COLE

•

REAL GOLD

SUNNYFIELD FROZEN

BuHer Beans •
Mixed Vegetabl!S
Tomato Juice
Instant Potatoes

•

TEEN RITE

A&amp;P BRAND

AMERICAN BEAUTY BABY

•

...b

I

I

I

pkc.

I

I

•

CANDY BARS-15c SIZE

KING COLE SLICED OR

I

oU

MOTT'S

pkr.

I

RESCUE

Cup Cakei u~~t~EO
";:1t Apple Juice •.
~~10' Baby Ruth ••
~1t Dog Food • • •

I

. 1-&lt;JL

•

I

JANE PARKER FRESH

LOUISIANA

I

lb.

"SUPER-RIGHT" ASSORTED

lb•

WYLER'S-MtX.CHOICE OF FLAVORS
I

•

I

SPECIAL LOW PRtCEI

"SUPER-RIGHT" TENDER-LEAN

•

COUNTRY TREAT-WHOLE HOG

I

I

Gravy Mix • . .
freach Fries
•
Cat Food • •
Golden Hominy • • 1~10'

•

)I

I

PORK-ROAST

BONELESS ENGLISH

I

.

LEAN BUTT·STYLE

·f,

I
• •
. .... . . . . , .
t•l ,o\\ ' " •hJ Hb _, fl hJI'l10'1

I

EXTRA DRUMSTICKS!

Wax-Tex Bags
Cake Mixes
Browaie Mix
Pie Crust Mix •

~.

I

I

I

I

I

•

CAP'N JOHN FRIED

lib..,.

BONELESS ROAST

4 TO 4-LB. AVG.

Mrs. Enevoldsen attended the service and visited their daughterin-law, Gall and grandson, Christian.
.
The following day, Sunday, Aprll 4Mr. and Mrs. Enevoldsen
went to Akron where they attended a "This Is Your Ufe"
program for Mrs. Enevoldsen's brother, the Rev. Kenneth ~et­
Uewell, on his 15th annlversary at the United · Presbytenan
Church.
The Enevoldsens love tbeir new home and are happy to be KEEP SANDWICHES FRESH
together. Enevoldsen retired 4 years ago after being in tbe navy
• I
23 years and now !he family can be together all tbe time, and not CHARM ASSORTED
just part of the time.
Mrs. Enevoldsen (Eleanore) a registered nurse, followed her
• • •
husband to be with him when she could while he was in the ser- • CHARM-FUDGE·
vice.
Although Enevoldsen retired from the navy - he is far from
• •
•
retired in the area- he is Chief of Electrical Construction at the CHARM FLAKY
new Gavin plant and is employed by American Electric.
•
The family vacation a lot and plan to go to Georgia as soon as
school it out.
Timmy's birthday will be observed on May 1 with a cookout,
homemade ice cream and the works.
Besides their love of children, their Jove of anlmals are ap·
parent. They have three horses, four dogs, eight Siamese cats and
guineas. Mr. and Mrs. Enevoldsen moved to the former Doug
Roush property from New Concord, Ohio.
' It was here that Mrs. Enevoldsen (Eleanore) grew up with
John Glenn, (first astronaut to orbit the earth) and went to school
with htm and his wife.
CUFTON- Harry Jo VanMeter, a junior at Glenville State,
visited hi.s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Van Meter over the weeke?d.
Also Mrs. Lloyd Williams and Jackie spent the weekend at Indian
Head, Mich., where they visited Mrs. Williams' son, Tom
Williams and family.
.
MR. AND MRS. LOUIS PETERS, Clifton, are announcing the PILLSBURY-CHICKEN
birth of a son, Kevin Ray, on April6 at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
•,'
The infant weighed 7 pounds and 7 ounces. They have three other
children. Gr,andparents are Mr . and Mrs. Bent Blake and Mrs. SULTANA FROZEN
Margaret Peters, all of Clifton. .
.
..
• •
MASON -Mrs. Wlian Singer, 90, a restdent of Mason, d1ed
on Saturday morning at a Mas~iUon, Ohio hospital. Mrs. Singer, a SWITCH BRAND
former resident of Massillon, made )ter home here with Mrs. Lee
I
I
Richardson, Third St. Funeral services were held Monday at 3
p.m. at Massillon, Ohio. Survivors include one son, Dr. Murl AMERICAN .BU,UTY.WHITE OR
Singer of Usbon, Ohio.
·
• ,
NEW HAVEN- Mr. and Mrs. Paul HWlt and two daughters,
Heather and Paula, and son, Mickey Hunt of the U..S. Air force,
Richard Rhinehart and Mary Huff, all of Fostoria, Ohio, and John
'Sayre, Evans, w. Va., were weekend· guests of Mr. aqd MrS .
~ar Casto and Saughters, Shelley an~ Kim at New Haven,
.
CUFTON .::.. George Blake of Fairbanks, Alaska called hiS
parents Mr. and Mrs. Artley Blake at clifton on Easter.
HERE AND THERE ,... Mr. and Mrs. Don QUisenberry and
family, s. Charleston, 'visited Mt. and Mrs.- Oscar Henry IllS!
week. Visiting on Easter were Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy Coleman and
children of CollimbuS; Mr. and Mrs. Terry ·Henry and two sons, of
.
.
Mason.
·
DINNER GUESTS of Mr. and Mrs·. Billie S~ith at their home
in Cllfton on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Stewart and
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Smith and son, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert E. Sayre, Mrs. Mike Rodgers and Bobby Roush .
MR. AND MRS. JIMMY Forshee and tl)~ee sons from .Bar·
berton, Ohio visited Mrs. Mollie Fox over the weekend, and Betty
Ault of New Albany, -Ohio viSited over the weekend wi.th her
mother, Mrs. Winnie Holland .

I

BUDOIG

I

A TASTY TREAT! FRESH

driet clothes tunthine fftsh, ~"'"'"'"'

Ground Round Steak t•-99' Pork Chops ~J~ • • ···69c Braunschweicer Am~u lb. 45'
.
(I
h
Stl
k
:
,
;
:
"
;
.
.,~
.
•s
10
s ~
Chipped ~eats •
Sirloin Tip •
5 5
···&amp;ac
Ocean
Perch
2.~;.
1'
Pork Steaks • • •
••-79c Eye of Round • •
59' fresh Sauuce • . ~~~; It
1o~:t~ss Picnic
Charcoal
Steaks
• •
'"ar
~ 4t
Bacon End Slices 5 ~~ 98c Lunch Meat .
.lAc Enzlish Roast ·o~ms: •
.,.,BONELESS ROAST

I

I

"SUPER.RIGHT" FRESH CHUNK .

CENTER CUTS INCLUDED

I

I

FRESH MEATY

So~

•

")

II

. Betty Jane Scarberry Betrothed

lijij '•
&amp;I;OERAL TElEPitiJIE
Styleline· Extensions

1o

Transfers ·

Sunday Schdol attendance on
April 11 was 98 .. The offering
was $36.71. Jesus Loves Me was ·
sung by three primary girls and
Tamrny Heiser spoke. Worship
services were h~ld at 11, with
the Rev. Lavender bringing the
Easter message. ·
Easter Sunrise Services were
held at 6 o'clock, with an attendance of 47..10. The program,
"He Goeth Beiore," along with
singing and recitations by the
small folk . were given under
direction of Doris Dillinger.
The pre-Easter services held
at the Orange Christian Church
· were well attended and much
enjQyed.
Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Yost
and family and Mrs. Ella Yost
of Sugar · Grove spent the
weekend with Genevieve
Guthrie and attended services
at both the Orange and the
Alfred churches.
Easter gtrests of Clara
Follrod and Nina Robinson
were Mr. and Mrs. Billy Follrod
and Sue. Ann of Athens, and
S\evie Follrod.
Mrs. William Carr and
daughters spent Easter Sunday
with their parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert White at Keno.

tit Baker's .. ~

•
Terrance
Charles Robert
Meigs
The Rev. Don:ild Young of
Kendall
or
Day
tori,
0.,
served
as
Danville j&gt;errormed the d•uble
ring candlelight ceremony at best man . Ushers were Mark
7;30p.m. before an altar setting Grinstead of New Haven, and
of palms, candelabra holding Ronald Watson of Dayton.
The ~eception took. place in
lighted yellow tapers and
the
Tennessee Gas Club house
arrangements .of yellow and
while carnations and ·gladioli. at Lynn. The bride's table was
Traditional . wedding music ~Qvered with a yellow c}oth with David R. Yates, Norma Jean
was presented by Miss Pamela while net overlay, centered with Yates to Everett L. SChultz,
Harmon of Louisville, pianlst. a three tiered wedding cake and Beulah B. Schultz, Lot, Tuppers
The bride, given in. marriage nanked by an arrangement of Plains-Orange.
by her father, wore a formal yellow and while carnations. George G. Gum, Sr., Fay I.
length gown of peau de ~oie and
lace. The princess styled gown Assisting were Mrs . Daniel · Gum to French City Baptist
featured a bouffant skirt, Cooksey, Mrs. Ronnie Back and Church, Lot,, Pomeroy.
Bishop sleeves and mandarin Miss Faye Walker.
Clara Belle Yinger, Adm.,
neckline. The chapel train was
bordered with matching lace. · The bride's mother wore a Homer !,ovett, dec'd., lo Gayle
' Her shoulder. length veil of sUk beige coat and dress ensel)1ble , Salyer, Art":! Salyer, Parcels,
illusion was attached to a brown accessories and a cor· Lebanon.
Cecil V. Vance , Melva E'
profile headdress of lace sage of yellow and white carnations
.
The
bridegroom's
Vance
to Cecil L. Stacy, .14
flowers accented with pearls
and sequins. She carried a Bible mother wore a blue dress, navy Acres, Salem.
Boneta June Darst, Gdn.,
tOpped with a. cascade bouquet blue accessories and a ·yellow
of yellow roses and white and white carnation corsage . Samson Darst, Minor by Gdn. to
The bride is a graduate of Ohio Power ·Co., Ease.,
carnations.
Miss Dorothy Ann Townsend Greenup High School and . Rutland.
Harley J. Hoffman to Lauren
of Frankfort was maid of honor: Morehead State University and
is
employed
by
the
Federal
E.
Hoffman , Leslie G. Hoffman, ·
She wore · a modified A-line
Parcels, Salem.
green floor length gown of Youth Center, Ashland.
Lucy F. Gainer, dec'd ., to
imported .Saki, styled with
Jesse Gainer, Cert. of Trans.,
empire bodice and short sleeves Th~ bridegroom is a graduate
edged with matching Venice of Wahama High School, at. Lebanon .
Lottie Roush to Roger L.
lace . and detachable Wateau tended · Morehead State
Manley, Sr., Connie M. Manley,
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Kendall, train. She wore a headdress of University and is employed by Lot, Pomeroy.
New Haven, W. Va . were yellow and white carnations Appalachian Power Co., St . Ina Virginia Riethmiller to
married Feb. 27 in the Uberty with yellow streamers and Albans, W. Va . Mr. and Mrs. Ray Riethmiller, Cert. or
United Methodist Church at carried a nosegay of yellow and Kendall are residing at Bar- Trans ., Sutton. ·
boursville.
white carnations.
Lynn, Ky. ·

Property

Sol'illl Note~

--~ -- -·

per cent of the gas used by gas
throughout Ohio.
They are Lucas and Pavonia company customers comes
.
in Ashland and Richland from underground storage.
During the winter just ended,
Counties; Weaver, in Ashland,
Richland and Knox Counties; a record 2.1 billion cubic feet of
Laurel, in Hocking County; gas was withdrawn from these
Benton, in Hocking and Vinton storage fields in a single day.
As customers' demands for
Counties; Holmes in Holmes
County; Wellington, in Lorain gas increase, the gas company
and Medina Counties; Wayne, must increase the amount of
in Wayne, Ashland and Holmes gas stored and step up the input
Counties; Medina, in Medina and output rate of the gas to and
County ; McArthur, in Vinton from storage. The amount of
County; Lorain, in Lorain gas that can be taken out of
County; Guernsey, in · Guern- storage areas on cold winter
sey, Muskingum and Coshocton days, or stored on warm
Counties; Knox, in · Knox summer days, depends largely
the
number
and
County , and Zane, in on
Muskingum Cq,unty.
deliverability of storage wells.
Twenty-five of the new
storage wells will be drilled in
Weaver Storage Field . Eighteen
will be in Pavonia, nine in The sale of Buddy Poppies
preceding Memorial Day is the
Laurel,
five
in
Wayne
and
three
tr
.
.
· L
Th
ad't'
t tona1 way to brmg
at•
1
m
th ucas. e exact ocatton of te nt'1on to the sacn.f.1ces rna de
e I 0 replacement wells and 50 b th
t' ,
d d . th .
existing wells to be recon- . Y e na ton s war ea. m etr
ditioned will be determined struggle to keep Amertca fre~.
later this year.
. Buy a Buddy .Poppy and wear 11
About 95 per cent of the gas on Memonal Day.
used · by gas company
customers is purchased outside
Ohio, mostly in the Southwest.
During the summer, gas
transported to Ohio through
long-distance pipelines is stored
SAME DAY
Jti1!1t!~r::g:]J@~!iiilii%iiit!i!Ii~liffJtlil~tf\:\:}I11~A~~!1!1i~!~fFf :nRm:::: :~: :::::::~:~::r:~t : ::;:;J:~: ;):! ::m:~:r : :Jt~~:~~~::\ :::: · ~:!: :;:;:::}}~·: :::t:: :i:::~;~::::~:i~ in the 14 underground storage
SERVICE
fields - natural sandstone rock
·'
In At 9-0ut At 5
formations thousands of feet
Use'Our Free Parking Lot
underground that once held
native gas.
Thus the gas is available for
use the following winter. on the
In Pakistan the world is witnessing the break weeks ago they exploded.
2
coldest
winter days, about 55 · . . .2.;1•6 •E•
.m•e•ro•v•-.
. •"•d,•P•o•
up of one of its largest nations and a tragedy
Since the first day there has been no clear
which is just beginning.
word of Sheik Mujibur Rahman whose Awami
Between ita divided halves a new migration is League had won a clear majority not only in the
under way reminiscent of the one which ac- East Pakistan provincial parliament but in the
companied its founding in 1947 when Moslems central government as welL Presumably he is a
and Hindus divided the subcontinent into Hindu prisoner or dead .
India and Moslem Pakistan, the latter in turn
The central government declares it is
divided Into halves separated by 1,000 miles .
restoring normalcy to East Pakistan but it is
Racial and cultural origins determine the.new apparent that its control extends to the cities and
migration between the Bengalis of the east and not to the countryside. Estimates of East
the Punjab! of tbe west.
Pakistan dead now run to more than 5,000 but
Pakistan is a country which never should have could be many times that number.
existed in the first place and now probably never
Special Irony
can again even though the 50,000 to 78,000 West
There is a special irony to Pakistan's tragedy
Pakistan troops imported into the east succeed in that it came despite the efforts of honest men.
for the moment in putting down the movement'
President Yahya Khan seemed truly bent on
which began as a demand for autonomy within a restoring democracy to the whole of Pakistanunited Pakistan and now calls itself Bangia Desh after years of military rule. Sheik Mujibar R.ah·
or "Bengal nation. 11
man sought autonomy, not independence.
Error Is Compounded
And as the tragedy runs its course, economic
H the creation of Pakistan was an error in the ruin also looms. Pakistan's foreign currency
first place, then it also was an error compounded reserves are expected to be exhausted in less
over the years by man's short-sightedness.
than three months. Cut off from the east, West
The·new nation was less than seven years old Pakistan industry is .losing 40 per cent of its
when increasing East Pakistan demands for normal outlets. aa'nk payments are blocked.
autonomy began making themselves felt at the
And to add to human suffering is the imminent
election polls. But if the west heard, it did not approach of the monsoon season;·
listen and resentments mounted until three

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave . .and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p..m. Parents only on
' Pediatrics Ward.
Blrlhs
Mr. and Mrs. Willard L. Call,
Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Alva B. Clurk, Pomeroy, a
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur
D. Lewis, Oak Hill, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Beldon V. Grady,
Buffalo, W.Va., a daughter and
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E.
Masters, Gallipolis, a son.
· Discharges
Mrs, Leo Bean, Eric J.
Boring, Glendon D. Flaker,
Mrs. Henry Hill and daughter,
Dallas Ughtfoot, Mrs. Opal F.
Queen, Mrs. Foster L.
Strickland and son, Mrs.
Charles F. Templeton and
State Truck Taxes
daughter, M~s. Sanford C.
WASHlNGTON - An
Vallance, Mrs. Florence avcrnge large truck pays as
Manlskas, Mrs. Robert Mc- much in state highway use
Carley, and Stephen Bowman. taxes as 31 passenger cars.

11-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.PIIneroy. 0., Aprill4, 1971

b•••k

1Qc.

. MAl¥11.

I

·Neapolitan Ice Cream ·A
White Bru• .~~:. • a::.T
Punut BtHer ~::l . • • u;:-1

�''\

.'

12-The Daily Sentill!'l. Middleport-Pomeroy.' 0. , April If, I!I'll

r---------------------------,II

I
I
I

Beat~.••

G-T Net Off 24%

I
I
I.
I
I
I

l Of the Bend
I
I
l By Bob Hoeflich

MARION - Increased cosls
in 1970 forced a sharp decline of
more than 24 pet. in net income
for General Telephone Co. of
Ohio, the company nolcd in ils
annual report to shareowners
released today.
Robert M. Wopat of Marion,
president, blamed the drop on
mushrooming taxes and interest expense, plus general
increased cos ts of doing

I

I

I
'

I

-

Firemen are more than pleased by the excellent handling of
traffic during Friday'~ fire which was a real panic.
It was a holiday weekend and traffic would have been heavy
anyWay but the news of the fire really brought out the sightseers. It Could have been bedlam.
However, the Pomeroy and Middleport Police Dejlartments
Joined banda - and with the help of volunteers - kept traffic
moving at li good pace and cleared paths for emergency vehicles
which had to be moved from one location to another quite
hurriedly.
Also lending a good .helping hand to the fire fighters were
employes of the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. who
moved into the Liberty Lane area with a large dozer to help fight
the fast moving fire.
.

!

i
~

·••'

I
I
~

$5,558,451, compared to
$6,918,012 in 1969. Opemting
revenues were up almost 7 pel;

I

I'\

.,
' '
DISPLAYS UNIFORMS -Rick Knight, Pt. Pleasa~t, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Knight
Tuesday ~layed ~arms he has ~de for the Lakin Hospital troop to its scoutmaster:
Rl~n Miller. The uniforms are a mer1t badge project of young Knight's in his activities to
achieve the rank of Eagle Scout.
·

More Loans Questioned
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state Auditor's office may
request Gov. John J. Gilligan to
investigate 20 state loans ob·
tained through Crofters, Inc.,
Columbus, for out-of-state
developers.
Deputy State Auditor Richard
Borror said Tuesday the $4.4
million in School Employes

in

weal Bowling

MORNING GLORIES
April6, 1971
Standings
Team
Points
Newell
Sunoco
152
in Athens, 0.
Fraley &amp; Schilling
123
The Women's Society of Gibbs Grocery
117
107
Christian Service will hold its Domlgan Soh1o
Lou's
Ashland
103
next meeting on Tuesday Bailey's Sunoco
94
evening, Aprll20, at the home of 'High Team 3-Games
Osie Follrod, with Helen Woode Newell Sunoco 2347; Domigan
' Sohlo 2324; Lou's Ashland 2195.
program leader.
High Team game - Newell
Sunoco 843; Domlgan Sohlo 831 ;
Bailey's Sunoco 805.
The best\ way to personally
High Ind. 3 games - Sandy
ah&lt;¥'"6o~ g'ra!tttide fo'l- fne · Korn 464 ; Vicky Gill ilan 462 ;
sacrifices of our disabled Jackie Guinther 455.
High Ind. game - Sandy
veterans is to buy a Buddy . Korn 190; Jackie Guinther 179;
Poppy,
Carolyn Teaford 172.

Social Notes
Circleville, 0. came Saturday to
visit Mr. and Mrs. Wi!Uam Carr
and daughters, and their
paren~, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
D. Woode and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert White. Conni Sue, who
had spent her Easter vacation
with relatives here, returned

I
I ..................._
·

· , _,, h!P!l• ·~~~~-Jlll'ents ~unday
· evening. - •
Q
Garner Griffin spent Easter

tol&lt;lling $55,855,621, but were
. offset by an BA pet. increase in
operating expenses and taxes
($44,246,605).
The report noted the company
put $30.8 million into gross

Retirement System (SERS)
loans may be jeopardized.
:•The auditor's office is
seriously thinking of asking
Governor Gilligan to order an
investigation of the 20 SERS
loans obtained through the
efforts of Crofters Inc., for outof-state developers," Borror
said. Crofters obtained high
finders fees for arranging loans,
including those to the Four
Seasons Nursing Homes which
later filed for bankruptcy.
Borror said he was wary of
other SERS loans because of the
Four Seasons transaction which
cost the state more than $4
million and figured in the
gubernatorial campaign of
Republican Roger Cloud, who
was state auditor at the time.
Borror said he feared- the
SERS board will approve
Friday an agreement to provide
more than $4.4 million to Twin
Lakes Manufacturtng Co. which
is building a project in Tampa,
Fla.
"It looks like the board plans

to go ahead on the project
despite serious legal questions
raised by . Attorney General
William J: Brown .at a special
meeting held last week "
'
'
Borror said.
"If a Gilligan-Ordered investigation doesn't halt things,
maybe Attorney General Brown
will have to obtain a legal order
to prevent completion of the
deal," he addep.
FAIRVIEW
Mr . and Mrs . Gene Sayre and
daughter, Lou Ann, of Kanauga
and Brice Sayre of Rio Grande
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre. Mr . and Mrs.
Glenn Arnott of McArthur
called on the Sayres in the afternoon . .
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Roush and
family .
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
called on Mrs. Esther Price
Sunday afternoon at Portland.

(Continued from Page 1)
Jann Rickman, Lena BWlce ,

Citizens-' Committee to Study General Assembly
.

additions, or about $2.6million a added 335 employes in 1970, for
monlh . Investment in telephone a to.~ ! of 3,424.
,
·
plant exceeded $2:!2.6 milli&lt;m,
General of Ohio filed a rate ·
up lOA pet. over the previous application with the Public
year.
Utilities Commission of Ohio on
A gain of 18,793 telephones April 7, 1970. Hearings started
was recorded in 1970, boosting · last January 20. If approved, it
the company's to~lto 414,996 at would yield more than $9
year end. In 1961 the company million annually in operating
had 248,893 telephones. Also revenues, the report noted.
noted were increases in local
Facilities of General's 179
and long dis~nce calling. In exc hanges extend into 70
1970, customers placed 2,197,074 counties, covering more than 30
local calls on an average day, pet. of Ohio's land area. The .
an increase of almost 7pe t. over company is a wholly-Owned
1969. An average day's toll subsidjary · of
General
messages reached 102,300, a Telephone &amp; Electronics Corp.,
boost of nearly 8 pet.
New York . Northern Ohio
Local calling has increased Telephone, also a GTE suban ave1·age of 6.4 pet. annually sidiary, is not included in
since 1961, and toll messages General's annual report.
almost 8 pet. The company

Kidney Fund

CATIIY FULTZ TELZROW and her husband AI of
Brecksville both made perfect four point grades for the w~ter
quarter only recently completed at Kent State.
Cathy, daughter of Mr. and'Mrs. Leslie F. Fultz Pomeroy is
a Junior in the college of education and Ails a senior the coll~ge
af buatness.
Their recorda again prove thai !he large majority of students
are not Interested in demonstrating, rioting or fighting the
"Establlslmient." They want to obtain an education without in·
terference from a ama1J but highly organized minority bent on
dlaruptlon.

~'

~
~

business. Net income_ was

MUCH COOKING THIS weekend, and it's kind of "go go"
weather.
Seniors d. Meigs High sChool will stage their annual play
Friday evening. On Saturday and Sunday from 5:30 a.m. to 7
p.m., aralnbow trout derbY will be held at Forest Acres Park on
the New Uma Road out of Rutland .
Friday night from 8 to midnight, a square dance for the
benefit of the Geocge Thompson Kidney Fund will be held at the
archery building at Royal Oak Park. Guy Thoma and the Corn
Huskers will be donating their services to the worthwhile event
which is sponsored by the Flve Point Star Stitchers 4-11 Club.
Ellen Thoma is heading the benefit.
For those who like the "beat" eight professional bands from
, the area will take part in a concern from I to 7 p.m. Sunday at the
Meigs Junior High School in Middleport. The bands will play at 45
"'lninute sets throughout the period. Proceeds will be divided
between the George Thompson and the Dave Dunn kidney fund
drives. Dum is from Vinton.
And, Sunday, the annual open house will he held all day at
Forked Run State Park.

13 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,()., April14, 1971

Methodist Church, Star Grange
778, Mrs. Joe Bailey's job
lrainidg class at Meigs High
School, Twin City Shrine Club,
Mi-. and Mrs. William Radford,
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church, Cub Scout.&lt; of Den I,
Winding Trail Junior Garden
Club, Robert F. Hawk and
Family, Mr. and Mrs, Geoffrey·
Wilson , Mr. and Mrs. Paul
And reWs, Mr. an d Mr s. D. W.
Roush, Chillicothe; Mr. and
Mrs. Adolph Saelens, Dairy
Valley ; Marion P. Darnell,
Lowell and Helen Carper,
Martha Bible Class of Bradbury
Church of Christ, Carper's
Nursery, Mr. and Mrs. Rollin
Bearhs, Mr . and Mrs. James
Bearhs, John W. Easterday,
Pomeroy Garden Club, contribution in memory of Matilda
Amon and Barbara Smith in
lieu of memorial flowers, L. P.
Summerfield, Mr. and Mrs.
Gomer Richards, Rio Grande,
Shell Employes of Bel·
pre, C. C. Lewis, Jr., of
Old Town Farms, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Guy Young,
Bidwell, Salem Center PTA,
and Eastern Letart WSCS.

McHaffie Family, Mr . and Mrs.·
George Faris, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Will Schell, Fremont;
Corabelle Russell , Wilma
Stobart, Glady Lu Simpson,
Adolph Saelens, Mr. and Mrs.
Sherman Parsons, Gene McDaniel, Billy Joe McDaniel, Mr.
· and Mrs. Millard Spaulding,
Kenneth Cooke, Mickey Scholl,
Bern.etta Young, Beatrice
Russell , Charles Burdette, Jim
Conwell, Chuck Wright, Bob
Ruffner, Ernest Gripun, Mrs.
James Walker, Owen Fink,
Thehna Banks, Swap Shop, Bill
Pullins, Dan Meadows, Mrs.
Earl Davenport, Robert W.
Reed , Mary Jane Scaggs; Mr.
and Mrs. Cash Bahr, Wallace
Jewelry, "Ingles Furniture,
Molly McGhee, Dorothy
Nicholson, Sylvia Byer, Mid·
dleport Lunch Room , Mr. and
Mrs. Judson White, Willoughby
Hill, Pat and Don Mills, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Morris, Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Rife, Mr. and Mrs.
Ra ymo nd
Zerkle ,
Vera
Thomas.
Other contributors to the fund
since the· last report include
Drew Webster Post 39, The V.F.W. Buddy Poppy is
American Legion ; Mrs. John assembled by disabled and
Lietwiler, Chester Garden Club, needy veterans in hospitals
St. Paul Lutheran Sunday throughout the United States.
School, ·the . Hom~ League Funds raised through their sale
Ladies of the Salvation Army , by Veterans ot Foreign Wars
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cohen, Post and Auxiliaries are used
Catholic Women 's Club, Loyal exclusively for aid to veterans
Helpers Class of Syracuse .and their dependenls .

... ..
CX!LUMBUS (UP!) - The petmanent officers.
Legislative Session Tuesday Among ·the prominent
n.a~ed a s~ecial member members ·are Frank W. Ktng,
e~tize~ comrruttee to study the president of the'(lhio AFLCIO;
operation of the Ohto General Robert C. Dix, Jr.. , pubiisher of
Assembly and make recom· the Martins Ferry Times •
mendatioliS for improving it. Leader; Howard Collier, for·
Appoinln)ent of the com- mer state finance director·
mittee took place 10 months
'
after a bill authoriZing it was
enacted, To rr.Jk~ up for the
delay, House Majority Leader
Rep. Robert E. Levitt, RCanton submitted a bill to extend the life of the conunittee by
4.,. months to next Jan. 31.
EDITORS'S NOTE: On April
Named temporary Chairman 21, John J. Gilligan wiD have
of the committee was James B. been governor for 100 days, the
Clark, Jr., a Cincinnati attorney tradltiomilperlodforevaluatiag
and fonner House member. The new governors and presidents.
committee is to meet within 10 The following Is an assessment
days to organize and elect of the GUUgan regime based on
the observations of legislative
leaders, newsmen, political
friends and fOe&amp;, and the goveroor himself.

Joseph W. Bartunek,' CUyahoga
County Democratic· Chairman;
Judge Robert Franklin of Lucas
County Comlllon Pleas Court,
andCharlesMechem,chalrman
of the board of Taft Broad·
casting Co. and son of fonner
Senate President Pro Tempore

StanleJ ltlecham.
Jl!JlleB J . .COndit, Cincinnati
Other members are Mrs.' Dse · attorney; James A. Ford, Sr., a
. Bachman of McConnellsvilie, county commissioner from
former Ohio ' Democratic Xenia; George Hammond,
. commitieewoman; Dom P. Columbus; former executive
Boffo, Shadyside, retired director of Ohio Retail Mer·
utilities executive; Sal Butera, chant.&lt;, and William G. Kogler,
Canton advertising executive; public relations director of the

.

.

.

Kroger eo .•Cincinnati.
Also, · Blair Kos t of the
Citizens League, Cleveland;
James C. MacDonald, associate
professor of journalism at Ohio
~te University and former
editor of !he Toledo Blade;
Clyde Mann of the Ohio Savings

Dr. Also, Ed Rabbitt of ' OwensJames A. Norton of Greater Illinois, Toledo; Charles
Cleveland Associated Foun- Slanklin, Columbus attorney;
dations; Mrs. Charles E. Peck, . John sklpton of the to!arathon · ·
Perrysburg; Rex Potter, Oil Co., Findlay; John S. Stith,
executive vice president' of the Cincinnati attOrney, and Ed
Springfield Area Chamber of Wright, Jr., editor of !lie Forest.
Commerce.
Hills JOUI'I)al, Cincinnati.
&amp; Loan League, Columbus;

.

Gilligan: Still a uestion Mark

Fairview
Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Fisher McGrath
of Alliance and Miss Tillie
Postal of Ravenna were called
here due to the&gt;.death of their
brother-in-law, Huie Donohue,
and attended funera l services
Tuesday at · the East Letart
Church.
Mrs. Ida Donohue is visiting
indefinitely with Mr . and Mrs.
Bill Robinson at Racine.
Robert Varian returned home
Sunday from Easl Uverpool.
His nephew, Frank Varian ,
accompanied him .
Mrs. Don Hupp and two sons
and Terry Knighting called on
Mrs. Kate Rowe and Ada
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson
called Sunday on Mr. and Mrs.
Di amond Lawson at MI.
Moriah.
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Lawson
and son of Letart, W. Va ., spent
S,.turday with Mr. and Mrs.
C~arl es Lawson. Mr . and Mrs.
Bob Lawson and family spent
Sun day in the Lawson home.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Simpson of Racine and Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Shields spent Saturday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre and helped them
celebrate their birthdays. Mrs.
Shields presented them a cake.
Mrs. Edna Roush of Racine
spent a weekend with Mr . and
Mrs. Russell Roush and family.
Rev. Edward Griffith of
Bashan called on Mrs. Herbert
Roush and Roger Saturday
morning.

Chairman John S. Andrews.
of National Guard troops in are having as good a time with complain the governor asked et."
disturbances, and bas helped him as they ever had with for 1\lo much money without
Gilligan himself subscribes to "I'm not being critical of the
settle several labor disputes Rhodes.
detailing what is to be done this view. "I'm not saying any- delay . The delay is understand·
through mediation.
A New Weed Patch
with it.
·
thing new that! didn't say dur- able. But it is certainly ac·
They said he would bring a
One newspaper (the Dayton
"AU we're getting is the dol- ing the campaign on every curate to say that not a hell of
dynamic, highly • educated, in- Daily News) carried a devas· Jar amounts," said House stump I could climb," he said. a lot has been accomplished so
novative team into the State- tating cartoon after Gilligan de- Speaker Charles F. Kurfess, R· "The reaction to our plan for far. ''
house to work on solving Ohio's livered his "State.of the State" Bowling Green. "We want the tax reform has been better House Democratic Leader A.
problems. He has.
· ,- .. message to the legislature. It programs and then we'll put in than we could have hoped for." G. Lancione says the Republi·
They also said he would try to showed a woman · watching the dollar amounts."
The governor still believes can legislative leadership is
sell "flaming liberal" schemes television at the goyernor's "I ·don't see any adequate chances are "very good" a promoting a slowdown to make
to Ohioans. Yet he propose.d a mansion and calling out : demonstration of need for this substailtial'portion of his budg- Gilligan look bad.
By LEE LEONARD
controyersial . "Ohio Plan" "How'd it go, .Jack?" Behind kind of moner all in one bite," et will get through the legisla- "I don't feel he (Gilligan) is
UPI Statehouse Reporter
which would require studenls to her, two men were carrying in said Senate Majority Whip Mi- ture. He does not believe "con- dragging his feet," Lartcione
COLUMBUS (UP!) - John help pay back the cost of their the governor covered with tar chael J. Maloney, R.Cincinnati. servative" Ohioans oppose his said. "Legislative action has
Joyce Gilligan has been Ohio's college education - hardly de- and feathers.
His success with the budget is massive spending and tax been maredly slow, and this
slow pace is not an accident.
62nd governor for three months signedtoattractcollegestudent.&lt;
A Statehouse pressroom car- going to hang with how much plans.'
now, but he's still very much or anybody who wants some- toonist used .·to . draw the he can justify this bite."
"The term conservative is It is designed to permit the
a question mark in the minds thing for nothing.
"James A. Rhodes Memorial . Maloney is one Republic~n · often misused, " Gilligan said. legislative leaders to belabor
of many Statehouse denizens.
Shrugs Off Reports
Weedpatch" - a dense thicket , who believes Gilligan's propos- "If you are ill and go to one the governor for inaction."
Follo~ing eight years of highThey said he would bring a to which Rhodes was said to als have fallen flat with the doctor and he says to take a All agree on one thing - the
ly prediCtable actions by for- . new style to the governor's of. retreat when he did not want public.
couple of aspirins and go to governor has assembled a bril·
me~ Gov. James A. Rhodes, flee, replacing the showy, hard· to comment on touchy items.
"The bottom's kind of fallen bed, and you go to another doc- liant young staff and cabinet to
Gtlhga~ has kept all but his driving salesmanship of Rhodes
Most recently, the sign next to out," Maloney said. "The shot tor and he says you need surg- help him do his job. Gilligan
o~Yn off1ce people off· balanc.e with a reasoning, intellectural the weedpatch has had Rhodes' was fired and here we sit."
ery, you are going to take the
w1th h1s performance thus far. approach to the job, He has.
name replaced with Gilligan's.
No Squad Needed
first doctor's advice.
Much of his energy has been They also said the red ·haired Balloons coming out of the un- Another Republican legislator
People Changing
devoted to putting togetljer a governor was temperamental dergrowth say : "What Kick· said the GOP had ptanned to
"You are going to take the
"whooping" (by his own stand- and could be goaded into say- backs? " and "What Uquor have a "truth squad" follow . easy and cheap way. But if the
ards).$9billion budget and the ingthingsforwhichhewouldhe Agencies?"inreferencetonews the governor as he toured the aches and pains persist, you
$1.6 billion package of new tax- sorry. So far, he has shrugged stories about alleged kickbacks state trying to sell· his budget are going to eventually come
es needed to finance it over off several references to from Democratic liquor agenls and taxes.
around to the second doctor
the next two. years. .
"scandal" in the new Demo- and deputy auto registra~§.
"But when we saw how bad and I think the people of Ohi~
The mass1ve spendmg pro- .cratic regime.
Gilliganhimselfminimizesthe he was received in Columbus are beginning to realize that
gram seemed to take the breath In some ·respect.&lt;, Gilligan effect of these stories and even and Cleveland," the lawmaker time has come."
away from Republican lawmak· appears· to he just a new· type takes them as a sort of tribute. said, "there was nothing we
Republicans and Democrat!;
ers and even SO!lle Democtats. Rhodes. Instead of trying to sell
"Anybody is bound to be ir- coJJid say that would have alike have been disturbed at
"He wants to cure all the evils industriaidevelopment,jobsand rita ted about things like that," made him look any worse."
the slow start by the Gilligan
we've had ever since the days tomato juice, he is touring the he said. "It's like people stand- Democratic State Chairman administration. But the Demoof Julius Ca~ar," said one
state tryi~g to sell a $1 billion ing around telling dirty stories William A. Lavelle disagrees. crat excuse it and the Repub·
castle Republican.
mcrease m welfare over the about your family. But they are "He's just as popular now as licans have been as understand·
Once the Republican • con- next two years and a $1.1 bii· minor irritations. The people when he was elected," Lavelle ing as possible.
!rolled General Assembly plays lion i~crease in spending on who are trying to stir up a said. "That's because there
"They are off to a slow
Its cards on th~ budget and tax education.
political broUhaha are having to were no surprises in the budg- start," said Republican State
Issue, 11 will be more apparent lnstead of disappearing to ·go to great lengths because
what kind of a governor Gil· points unknown for days at a there is nothing substantial ,._,....,..,..,.,..,.......,,.,.........,,.,..,.......,_,.,....,....,.....,,.,......_
ligan is.
time, Gilligan makes well-an- going on in the way of political
Some Surprises
nounced flight.&lt;; out of the state warfare.
The oO-year-oid former to attend party f~ctions on the
"If I was up there throwing
-~
English professor from Cincin- national level or lobby the fed· rocks at the legislature and
Convey your deepest thoughts, when words
nati is neither predictable nor eral government for more mon- they were throwing,rocoks back
are hard to find.
; 1
lila!
'
unpredictable .
ey for Ohio.
at me, the reporters, wouldn't
Of
NAME
"'""\
They said he would offer the Instead of pushing the State have to reach so far," he con' Your FTD'•"
ADDRESS
·
most massive demsnds for new Fair 1 Gilligan is trying to build tinued. "So I think it's sort of
Florist
773-5196
SAVE 12.00
taxes and spending iri the his- up the Ohio Arts Festival.
a backhanded tribute to the coRepairmen
On serv1ce'~ll.
tory of Ohio. He did.
"He's doing the same things operative spirit oi this adminisD
b'
Expires
4-21 -71. To be re.
992-5560
Tbey also said he would serve Rhodes did, only he's not as tration.
J ur
'
turned
with
service order .•
"
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
as an immediate rallying point good at it yet," observed one
Republican lawmakers have
59 N. 2nd AVE.
for student protesters and labor newsman.
·
been concentrating on Gilligan's
organizations. Instead he has Indeed, the newspapers which budget-tax plan, which they say
..............,..,.......,,.,.,.,.,........,,............,,.,....,.....,_,,....,.....
set down firm guidelines for use endorsed Gilligan by and large "overwhelmed" them. They

TELEVISION
REPAIR I

Sunday, April 25. Turn
clocks ahead one hour.
Nostradamus
Nostradamus, 16th-century
French astrologer, is said to
have foretold the coming of
World War II. Interest in
him was revived in the
1930s, when many persons
thought. his writings prophesied the rise of Hitler.

Serving

sar-

Point Pleasant and Meigs Mason Area·

EVERYBODY
Shops the

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE CO.

Sym'pathy Flowers

WANT AD WAY
For Sale
F·30 FARMALL tractor, runs
good on rubber. ~ ft. disc,
5300. Phone 992-6048.
4·14-3tp
FT. HOUSEBOAT. Fiberglass and wood. V Hull.
Equipped with 1967 60 H. P.
Johnson motor . Used 150
hours, 51.200, 992-2351 days,
992-3835 aft•r 5.
. 4-13-6tc

I.
•

couldn't agree more.
"This is the youngest, bright- ·
est, best educated, most active
and most innovative bunch 91
guys at the cabinet and ·staff
level that has ever been
brought into state· government/ ' he said.
Staff Relieves Pressure
And the governor ,.plans to
use them by delegating responsibility and taking some of the
pressure off himself.
"I need an Ill-hour day, a 10.day week and a 40-day month
to do this job," he said. "I
handle only the hot ones here.
As Harry Truman said, the
buck stops here, and I take
o~iy the ones that are too hot
to handle."
Impartial observers note Gil·
ligan is making greater use of
his cabinet and sub-cabinet per·
sonnel than did Rhodes, who
surrounded himself with a
handful of trusted aides to
make key decisions.

COLOR

DAYLIGHT SAVING
TIME begins· at 2 a.m.,

32

' .:,.P1~\ ~7~~.4~~,',. ..... ~~· !'IIlii 'DIIil~'ili:i!
' "~'·~

..

tm
m
Chuck--lnscore

~,.,.

Phebe Says:

Ajax Cleanser ·
14 oz.

can

•
v1ronmen a
ion I

8~

WITH
COUPON

WITHOUT COUPON, 2 for 39'
'

4 to 7 lb.

-At Racine Food Maillet On~
EXPIRES: APRIL 20, 1971

DOOR BUSTER!

Average

PEAK BRAND

PINTO BEANS

GEBHARPTS .

JENO'S

HOTDOG
SAUCE

PIZZA

'

what's happening to our environment? What's happen·
ing is a crime . .. committed against all of us, but

.•
•

commi~ed

'

,,
•

If you ask, "What 1an I do alone?" the answer is

lution, environmental destruction ... these words spell out

simple. You alone 1an make sure that your home

BEEF STEW

o real horror story, the story of what's happening to the air

premises are neat, orderly and in good repair ..• that

Right reseiVed to limit quantities '

·MEAT

we breathe, the, land around us, the living things that

healing, plumbing, cleaning and 1ooking systems fun!·

We Glad~ Accept Fed.

share our world, the water that supports life, the very

lion with the minimum of waste ... thlll home garbage

Prices Effective Apr. 14-20

life we live. {ontominotion, pollution, environmental de:

Fortun~ely, !~ere's

another word: Responslbi!ity. li can

.

.

.

.

.

'

r

Serving The Meigs-Mason Area

'

Clean Up Contamination, Now

'

..

'·:::: :::: : ::,: . ·: ·: ::r. :: :.,;: ':. :..

.
.I

'

•' : :· •' .. ·:: :: :: ·.·:.
··:·.··

'

·' :. ::

.

·::

,,••,

::. :. : .. ::

lb.

~

.

.:: ::

.

:::;: ::

'•.

:: ,: : :;. :·

•,

:·
-: •i

SELECTED PRODUCE VALUES

r

Red Ripe ·
:TOMATOES

Golden Yams

SWEET
POTATOES

t'
f

..:
' ~- ::

I .

•'

,·, '•

.

.

2' lb.
··:
'• '·.

:: :: ': .;:

tube

29~
,.

:::

.. :::. ····: ..

'

on~
,•

: ::

:: ·.

39~

GERBER'S BABY FOOD . ~~~~~~~.~........... lO~B tor ·Sl
MARGAR IN E... ~!m\~Wt.~~. . :-. ~~!!~. ~~~~. :................. ~~:.39~
PORK &amp;BEANS . ~~~~~~ ...... ~ .........:.........:.3 ~~· 99~
CHERRY' PIE ,.FILLI NG. ~~~~. ~~.~ ...............~~:.~.~-:.39~
·.
STANT
·p· .~ . · E. SUPREME IDAHO · .. 61h oz. 29.~
01"10 ~ ~~~~"~-~~~ ............ .. ~ .......:~~·..
IN
.
..
.. . . -.
AUSTIN'S
. . 32
lastic
4
01shwash1ng Detergent . ~~.~.~~.~~.~~~ ........ ~.~~.. 49

•

'
STEAK
.
..............
PORK

'

The. Daily·Sentinel.

,,

CHOICE
'

.To clean up the crime of containinalion, dean up!

.

yet to come, is to dean up crimes -the crimM

lb.79~ USDA
FRESHSLICED .

cho~ge o story Of horror into .ci story of hope and happi·

~enerations

,.

dean by refusing to be a tiHerbug.

'

'

Open Mon.-fri. 9 to 7 .
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

disposal is handled dea~ly ... that.yo~-maintain "your
1ar in dean operating order •.. that you help keep all

· slrudion spell· danger.

Food Stamps

With Cheese

WITH 110.00 OR
MORE ORDER

Sth and PEARL STS., RACINE· lb. 29~
''The Store With AHeart, ,
You, WE LIKF
.

ness. Our rMponsibilily, to others and to ourselves, to

!

BEEF LIVER

responsibility.

outdoo~
I.

Sliced

against our environment. Each of us shores this

unfortunately committed by all pi us. Contamination, pol·

'

;::::::!:~::::::::~::::::."::::::::~:~:::,

' ·::::::::::::::::':!::::::::=~ :~:

size

s· ..

'

· •· Golden Ripe

'•' '

'.

·

w

.

'BANANAS
'•

TOPP BRAND

'

:.
;:

lb.
·: ·

---.

..:· '• .: :: ·. ': :·. ':'.: :.. : ·:· .: :·.
'

-::.

.

·~

::~.:
,,,,,.

· JOY BRAND

'

•

ROOT BEER ~~ . OOG .· FooD
1fl pl.
bottle

39
.

.;.: ·:

~ il

• ·n
~:;~
•••;

;:;:;

251b.
bau
It '

2

.

~

�''\

.'

12-The Daily Sentill!'l. Middleport-Pomeroy.' 0. , April If, I!I'll

r---------------------------,II

I
I
I

Beat~.••

G-T Net Off 24%

I
I
I.
I
I
I

l Of the Bend
I
I
l By Bob Hoeflich

MARION - Increased cosls
in 1970 forced a sharp decline of
more than 24 pet. in net income
for General Telephone Co. of
Ohio, the company nolcd in ils
annual report to shareowners
released today.
Robert M. Wopat of Marion,
president, blamed the drop on
mushrooming taxes and interest expense, plus general
increased cos ts of doing

I

I

I
'

I

-

Firemen are more than pleased by the excellent handling of
traffic during Friday'~ fire which was a real panic.
It was a holiday weekend and traffic would have been heavy
anyWay but the news of the fire really brought out the sightseers. It Could have been bedlam.
However, the Pomeroy and Middleport Police Dejlartments
Joined banda - and with the help of volunteers - kept traffic
moving at li good pace and cleared paths for emergency vehicles
which had to be moved from one location to another quite
hurriedly.
Also lending a good .helping hand to the fire fighters were
employes of the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co. who
moved into the Liberty Lane area with a large dozer to help fight
the fast moving fire.
.

!

i
~

·••'

I
I
~

$5,558,451, compared to
$6,918,012 in 1969. Opemting
revenues were up almost 7 pel;

I

I'\

.,
' '
DISPLAYS UNIFORMS -Rick Knight, Pt. Pleasa~t, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Knight
Tuesday ~layed ~arms he has ~de for the Lakin Hospital troop to its scoutmaster:
Rl~n Miller. The uniforms are a mer1t badge project of young Knight's in his activities to
achieve the rank of Eagle Scout.
·

More Loans Questioned
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
state Auditor's office may
request Gov. John J. Gilligan to
investigate 20 state loans ob·
tained through Crofters, Inc.,
Columbus, for out-of-state
developers.
Deputy State Auditor Richard
Borror said Tuesday the $4.4
million in School Employes

in

weal Bowling

MORNING GLORIES
April6, 1971
Standings
Team
Points
Newell
Sunoco
152
in Athens, 0.
Fraley &amp; Schilling
123
The Women's Society of Gibbs Grocery
117
107
Christian Service will hold its Domlgan Soh1o
Lou's
Ashland
103
next meeting on Tuesday Bailey's Sunoco
94
evening, Aprll20, at the home of 'High Team 3-Games
Osie Follrod, with Helen Woode Newell Sunoco 2347; Domigan
' Sohlo 2324; Lou's Ashland 2195.
program leader.
High Team game - Newell
Sunoco 843; Domlgan Sohlo 831 ;
Bailey's Sunoco 805.
The best\ way to personally
High Ind. 3 games - Sandy
ah&lt;¥'"6o~ g'ra!tttide fo'l- fne · Korn 464 ; Vicky Gill ilan 462 ;
sacrifices of our disabled Jackie Guinther 455.
High Ind. game - Sandy
veterans is to buy a Buddy . Korn 190; Jackie Guinther 179;
Poppy,
Carolyn Teaford 172.

Social Notes
Circleville, 0. came Saturday to
visit Mr. and Mrs. Wi!Uam Carr
and daughters, and their
paren~, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
D. Woode and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert White. Conni Sue, who
had spent her Easter vacation
with relatives here, returned

I
I ..................._
·

· , _,, h!P!l• ·~~~~-Jlll'ents ~unday
· evening. - •
Q
Garner Griffin spent Easter

tol&lt;lling $55,855,621, but were
. offset by an BA pet. increase in
operating expenses and taxes
($44,246,605).
The report noted the company
put $30.8 million into gross

Retirement System (SERS)
loans may be jeopardized.
:•The auditor's office is
seriously thinking of asking
Governor Gilligan to order an
investigation of the 20 SERS
loans obtained through the
efforts of Crofters Inc., for outof-state developers," Borror
said. Crofters obtained high
finders fees for arranging loans,
including those to the Four
Seasons Nursing Homes which
later filed for bankruptcy.
Borror said he was wary of
other SERS loans because of the
Four Seasons transaction which
cost the state more than $4
million and figured in the
gubernatorial campaign of
Republican Roger Cloud, who
was state auditor at the time.
Borror said he feared- the
SERS board will approve
Friday an agreement to provide
more than $4.4 million to Twin
Lakes Manufacturtng Co. which
is building a project in Tampa,
Fla.
"It looks like the board plans

to go ahead on the project
despite serious legal questions
raised by . Attorney General
William J: Brown .at a special
meeting held last week "
'
'
Borror said.
"If a Gilligan-Ordered investigation doesn't halt things,
maybe Attorney General Brown
will have to obtain a legal order
to prevent completion of the
deal," he addep.
FAIRVIEW
Mr . and Mrs . Gene Sayre and
daughter, Lou Ann, of Kanauga
and Brice Sayre of Rio Grande
spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre. Mr . and Mrs.
Glenn Arnott of McArthur
called on the Sayres in the afternoon . .
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Lewis of
Clifton spent Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Russell Roush and
family .
Mr . and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
called on Mrs. Esther Price
Sunday afternoon at Portland.

(Continued from Page 1)
Jann Rickman, Lena BWlce ,

Citizens-' Committee to Study General Assembly
.

additions, or about $2.6million a added 335 employes in 1970, for
monlh . Investment in telephone a to.~ ! of 3,424.
,
·
plant exceeded $2:!2.6 milli&lt;m,
General of Ohio filed a rate ·
up lOA pet. over the previous application with the Public
year.
Utilities Commission of Ohio on
A gain of 18,793 telephones April 7, 1970. Hearings started
was recorded in 1970, boosting · last January 20. If approved, it
the company's to~lto 414,996 at would yield more than $9
year end. In 1961 the company million annually in operating
had 248,893 telephones. Also revenues, the report noted.
noted were increases in local
Facilities of General's 179
and long dis~nce calling. In exc hanges extend into 70
1970, customers placed 2,197,074 counties, covering more than 30
local calls on an average day, pet. of Ohio's land area. The .
an increase of almost 7pe t. over company is a wholly-Owned
1969. An average day's toll subsidjary · of
General
messages reached 102,300, a Telephone &amp; Electronics Corp.,
boost of nearly 8 pet.
New York . Northern Ohio
Local calling has increased Telephone, also a GTE suban ave1·age of 6.4 pet. annually sidiary, is not included in
since 1961, and toll messages General's annual report.
almost 8 pet. The company

Kidney Fund

CATIIY FULTZ TELZROW and her husband AI of
Brecksville both made perfect four point grades for the w~ter
quarter only recently completed at Kent State.
Cathy, daughter of Mr. and'Mrs. Leslie F. Fultz Pomeroy is
a Junior in the college of education and Ails a senior the coll~ge
af buatness.
Their recorda again prove thai !he large majority of students
are not Interested in demonstrating, rioting or fighting the
"Establlslmient." They want to obtain an education without in·
terference from a ama1J but highly organized minority bent on
dlaruptlon.

~'

~
~

business. Net income_ was

MUCH COOKING THIS weekend, and it's kind of "go go"
weather.
Seniors d. Meigs High sChool will stage their annual play
Friday evening. On Saturday and Sunday from 5:30 a.m. to 7
p.m., aralnbow trout derbY will be held at Forest Acres Park on
the New Uma Road out of Rutland .
Friday night from 8 to midnight, a square dance for the
benefit of the Geocge Thompson Kidney Fund will be held at the
archery building at Royal Oak Park. Guy Thoma and the Corn
Huskers will be donating their services to the worthwhile event
which is sponsored by the Flve Point Star Stitchers 4-11 Club.
Ellen Thoma is heading the benefit.
For those who like the "beat" eight professional bands from
, the area will take part in a concern from I to 7 p.m. Sunday at the
Meigs Junior High School in Middleport. The bands will play at 45
"'lninute sets throughout the period. Proceeds will be divided
between the George Thompson and the Dave Dunn kidney fund
drives. Dum is from Vinton.
And, Sunday, the annual open house will he held all day at
Forked Run State Park.

13 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,()., April14, 1971

Methodist Church, Star Grange
778, Mrs. Joe Bailey's job
lrainidg class at Meigs High
School, Twin City Shrine Club,
Mi-. and Mrs. William Radford,
Rock Springs United Methodist
Church, Cub Scout.&lt; of Den I,
Winding Trail Junior Garden
Club, Robert F. Hawk and
Family, Mr. and Mrs, Geoffrey·
Wilson , Mr. and Mrs. Paul
And reWs, Mr. an d Mr s. D. W.
Roush, Chillicothe; Mr. and
Mrs. Adolph Saelens, Dairy
Valley ; Marion P. Darnell,
Lowell and Helen Carper,
Martha Bible Class of Bradbury
Church of Christ, Carper's
Nursery, Mr. and Mrs. Rollin
Bearhs, Mr . and Mrs. James
Bearhs, John W. Easterday,
Pomeroy Garden Club, contribution in memory of Matilda
Amon and Barbara Smith in
lieu of memorial flowers, L. P.
Summerfield, Mr. and Mrs.
Gomer Richards, Rio Grande,
Shell Employes of Bel·
pre, C. C. Lewis, Jr., of
Old Town Farms, Point
Pleasant; Mrs. Guy Young,
Bidwell, Salem Center PTA,
and Eastern Letart WSCS.

McHaffie Family, Mr . and Mrs.·
George Faris, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Will Schell, Fremont;
Corabelle Russell , Wilma
Stobart, Glady Lu Simpson,
Adolph Saelens, Mr. and Mrs.
Sherman Parsons, Gene McDaniel, Billy Joe McDaniel, Mr.
· and Mrs. Millard Spaulding,
Kenneth Cooke, Mickey Scholl,
Bern.etta Young, Beatrice
Russell , Charles Burdette, Jim
Conwell, Chuck Wright, Bob
Ruffner, Ernest Gripun, Mrs.
James Walker, Owen Fink,
Thehna Banks, Swap Shop, Bill
Pullins, Dan Meadows, Mrs.
Earl Davenport, Robert W.
Reed , Mary Jane Scaggs; Mr.
and Mrs. Cash Bahr, Wallace
Jewelry, "Ingles Furniture,
Molly McGhee, Dorothy
Nicholson, Sylvia Byer, Mid·
dleport Lunch Room , Mr. and
Mrs. Judson White, Willoughby
Hill, Pat and Don Mills, Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Morris, Mr. and Mrs.
Austin Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Rife, Mr. and Mrs.
Ra ymo nd
Zerkle ,
Vera
Thomas.
Other contributors to the fund
since the· last report include
Drew Webster Post 39, The V.F.W. Buddy Poppy is
American Legion ; Mrs. John assembled by disabled and
Lietwiler, Chester Garden Club, needy veterans in hospitals
St. Paul Lutheran Sunday throughout the United States.
School, ·the . Hom~ League Funds raised through their sale
Ladies of the Salvation Army , by Veterans ot Foreign Wars
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Cohen, Post and Auxiliaries are used
Catholic Women 's Club, Loyal exclusively for aid to veterans
Helpers Class of Syracuse .and their dependenls .

... ..
CX!LUMBUS (UP!) - The petmanent officers.
Legislative Session Tuesday Among ·the prominent
n.a~ed a s~ecial member members ·are Frank W. Ktng,
e~tize~ comrruttee to study the president of the'(lhio AFLCIO;
operation of the Ohto General Robert C. Dix, Jr.. , pubiisher of
Assembly and make recom· the Martins Ferry Times •
mendatioliS for improving it. Leader; Howard Collier, for·
Appoinln)ent of the com- mer state finance director·
mittee took place 10 months
'
after a bill authoriZing it was
enacted, To rr.Jk~ up for the
delay, House Majority Leader
Rep. Robert E. Levitt, RCanton submitted a bill to extend the life of the conunittee by
4.,. months to next Jan. 31.
EDITORS'S NOTE: On April
Named temporary Chairman 21, John J. Gilligan wiD have
of the committee was James B. been governor for 100 days, the
Clark, Jr., a Cincinnati attorney tradltiomilperlodforevaluatiag
and fonner House member. The new governors and presidents.
committee is to meet within 10 The following Is an assessment
days to organize and elect of the GUUgan regime based on
the observations of legislative
leaders, newsmen, political
friends and fOe&amp;, and the goveroor himself.

Joseph W. Bartunek,' CUyahoga
County Democratic· Chairman;
Judge Robert Franklin of Lucas
County Comlllon Pleas Court,
andCharlesMechem,chalrman
of the board of Taft Broad·
casting Co. and son of fonner
Senate President Pro Tempore

StanleJ ltlecham.
Jl!JlleB J . .COndit, Cincinnati
Other members are Mrs.' Dse · attorney; James A. Ford, Sr., a
. Bachman of McConnellsvilie, county commissioner from
former Ohio ' Democratic Xenia; George Hammond,
. commitieewoman; Dom P. Columbus; former executive
Boffo, Shadyside, retired director of Ohio Retail Mer·
utilities executive; Sal Butera, chant.&lt;, and William G. Kogler,
Canton advertising executive; public relations director of the

.

.

.

Kroger eo .•Cincinnati.
Also, · Blair Kos t of the
Citizens League, Cleveland;
James C. MacDonald, associate
professor of journalism at Ohio
~te University and former
editor of !he Toledo Blade;
Clyde Mann of the Ohio Savings

Dr. Also, Ed Rabbitt of ' OwensJames A. Norton of Greater Illinois, Toledo; Charles
Cleveland Associated Foun- Slanklin, Columbus attorney;
dations; Mrs. Charles E. Peck, . John sklpton of the to!arathon · ·
Perrysburg; Rex Potter, Oil Co., Findlay; John S. Stith,
executive vice president' of the Cincinnati attOrney, and Ed
Springfield Area Chamber of Wright, Jr., editor of !lie Forest.
Commerce.
Hills JOUI'I)al, Cincinnati.
&amp; Loan League, Columbus;

.

Gilligan: Still a uestion Mark

Fairview
Notes
By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr . and Mrs. Fisher McGrath
of Alliance and Miss Tillie
Postal of Ravenna were called
here due to the&gt;.death of their
brother-in-law, Huie Donohue,
and attended funera l services
Tuesday at · the East Letart
Church.
Mrs. Ida Donohue is visiting
indefinitely with Mr . and Mrs.
Bill Robinson at Racine.
Robert Varian returned home
Sunday from Easl Uverpool.
His nephew, Frank Varian ,
accompanied him .
Mrs. Don Hupp and two sons
and Terry Knighting called on
Mrs. Kate Rowe and Ada
Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lawson
called Sunday on Mr. and Mrs.
Di amond Lawson at MI.
Moriah.
Mr . and Mrs. Harold Lawson
and son of Letart, W. Va ., spent
S,.turday with Mr. and Mrs.
C~arl es Lawson. Mr . and Mrs.
Bob Lawson and family spent
Sun day in the Lawson home.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Simpson of Racine and Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Shields spent Saturday
evening with Mr. and Mrs.
Herbert Sayre and helped them
celebrate their birthdays. Mrs.
Shields presented them a cake.
Mrs. Edna Roush of Racine
spent a weekend with Mr . and
Mrs. Russell Roush and family.
Rev. Edward Griffith of
Bashan called on Mrs. Herbert
Roush and Roger Saturday
morning.

Chairman John S. Andrews.
of National Guard troops in are having as good a time with complain the governor asked et."
disturbances, and bas helped him as they ever had with for 1\lo much money without
Gilligan himself subscribes to "I'm not being critical of the
settle several labor disputes Rhodes.
detailing what is to be done this view. "I'm not saying any- delay . The delay is understand·
through mediation.
A New Weed Patch
with it.
·
thing new that! didn't say dur- able. But it is certainly ac·
They said he would bring a
One newspaper (the Dayton
"AU we're getting is the dol- ing the campaign on every curate to say that not a hell of
dynamic, highly • educated, in- Daily News) carried a devas· Jar amounts," said House stump I could climb," he said. a lot has been accomplished so
novative team into the State- tating cartoon after Gilligan de- Speaker Charles F. Kurfess, R· "The reaction to our plan for far. ''
house to work on solving Ohio's livered his "State.of the State" Bowling Green. "We want the tax reform has been better House Democratic Leader A.
problems. He has.
· ,- .. message to the legislature. It programs and then we'll put in than we could have hoped for." G. Lancione says the Republi·
They also said he would try to showed a woman · watching the dollar amounts."
The governor still believes can legislative leadership is
sell "flaming liberal" schemes television at the goyernor's "I ·don't see any adequate chances are "very good" a promoting a slowdown to make
to Ohioans. Yet he propose.d a mansion and calling out : demonstration of need for this substailtial'portion of his budg- Gilligan look bad.
By LEE LEONARD
controyersial . "Ohio Plan" "How'd it go, .Jack?" Behind kind of moner all in one bite," et will get through the legisla- "I don't feel he (Gilligan) is
UPI Statehouse Reporter
which would require studenls to her, two men were carrying in said Senate Majority Whip Mi- ture. He does not believe "con- dragging his feet," Lartcione
COLUMBUS (UP!) - John help pay back the cost of their the governor covered with tar chael J. Maloney, R.Cincinnati. servative" Ohioans oppose his said. "Legislative action has
Joyce Gilligan has been Ohio's college education - hardly de- and feathers.
His success with the budget is massive spending and tax been maredly slow, and this
slow pace is not an accident.
62nd governor for three months signedtoattractcollegestudent.&lt;
A Statehouse pressroom car- going to hang with how much plans.'
now, but he's still very much or anybody who wants some- toonist used .·to . draw the he can justify this bite."
"The term conservative is It is designed to permit the
a question mark in the minds thing for nothing.
"James A. Rhodes Memorial . Maloney is one Republic~n · often misused, " Gilligan said. legislative leaders to belabor
of many Statehouse denizens.
Shrugs Off Reports
Weedpatch" - a dense thicket , who believes Gilligan's propos- "If you are ill and go to one the governor for inaction."
Follo~ing eight years of highThey said he would bring a to which Rhodes was said to als have fallen flat with the doctor and he says to take a All agree on one thing - the
ly prediCtable actions by for- . new style to the governor's of. retreat when he did not want public.
couple of aspirins and go to governor has assembled a bril·
me~ Gov. James A. Rhodes, flee, replacing the showy, hard· to comment on touchy items.
"The bottom's kind of fallen bed, and you go to another doc- liant young staff and cabinet to
Gtlhga~ has kept all but his driving salesmanship of Rhodes
Most recently, the sign next to out," Maloney said. "The shot tor and he says you need surg- help him do his job. Gilligan
o~Yn off1ce people off· balanc.e with a reasoning, intellectural the weedpatch has had Rhodes' was fired and here we sit."
ery, you are going to take the
w1th h1s performance thus far. approach to the job, He has.
name replaced with Gilligan's.
No Squad Needed
first doctor's advice.
Much of his energy has been They also said the red ·haired Balloons coming out of the un- Another Republican legislator
People Changing
devoted to putting togetljer a governor was temperamental dergrowth say : "What Kick· said the GOP had ptanned to
"You are going to take the
"whooping" (by his own stand- and could be goaded into say- backs? " and "What Uquor have a "truth squad" follow . easy and cheap way. But if the
ards).$9billion budget and the ingthingsforwhichhewouldhe Agencies?"inreferencetonews the governor as he toured the aches and pains persist, you
$1.6 billion package of new tax- sorry. So far, he has shrugged stories about alleged kickbacks state trying to sell· his budget are going to eventually come
es needed to finance it over off several references to from Democratic liquor agenls and taxes.
around to the second doctor
the next two. years. .
"scandal" in the new Demo- and deputy auto registra~§.
"But when we saw how bad and I think the people of Ohi~
The mass1ve spendmg pro- .cratic regime.
Gilliganhimselfminimizesthe he was received in Columbus are beginning to realize that
gram seemed to take the breath In some ·respect.&lt;, Gilligan effect of these stories and even and Cleveland," the lawmaker time has come."
away from Republican lawmak· appears· to he just a new· type takes them as a sort of tribute. said, "there was nothing we
Republicans and Democrat!;
ers and even SO!lle Democtats. Rhodes. Instead of trying to sell
"Anybody is bound to be ir- coJJid say that would have alike have been disturbed at
"He wants to cure all the evils industriaidevelopment,jobsand rita ted about things like that," made him look any worse."
the slow start by the Gilligan
we've had ever since the days tomato juice, he is touring the he said. "It's like people stand- Democratic State Chairman administration. But the Demoof Julius Ca~ar," said one
state tryi~g to sell a $1 billion ing around telling dirty stories William A. Lavelle disagrees. crat excuse it and the Repub·
castle Republican.
mcrease m welfare over the about your family. But they are "He's just as popular now as licans have been as understand·
Once the Republican • con- next two years and a $1.1 bii· minor irritations. The people when he was elected," Lavelle ing as possible.
!rolled General Assembly plays lion i~crease in spending on who are trying to stir up a said. "That's because there
"They are off to a slow
Its cards on th~ budget and tax education.
political broUhaha are having to were no surprises in the budg- start," said Republican State
Issue, 11 will be more apparent lnstead of disappearing to ·go to great lengths because
what kind of a governor Gil· points unknown for days at a there is nothing substantial ,._,....,..,..,.,..,.......,,.,.........,,.,..,.......,_,.,....,....,.....,,.,......_
ligan is.
time, Gilligan makes well-an- going on in the way of political
Some Surprises
nounced flight.&lt;; out of the state warfare.
The oO-year-oid former to attend party f~ctions on the
"If I was up there throwing
-~
English professor from Cincin- national level or lobby the fed· rocks at the legislature and
Convey your deepest thoughts, when words
nati is neither predictable nor eral government for more mon- they were throwing,rocoks back
are hard to find.
; 1
lila!
'
unpredictable .
ey for Ohio.
at me, the reporters, wouldn't
Of
NAME
"'""\
They said he would offer the Instead of pushing the State have to reach so far," he con' Your FTD'•"
ADDRESS
·
most massive demsnds for new Fair 1 Gilligan is trying to build tinued. "So I think it's sort of
Florist
773-5196
SAVE 12.00
taxes and spending iri the his- up the Ohio Arts Festival.
a backhanded tribute to the coRepairmen
On serv1ce'~ll.
tory of Ohio. He did.
"He's doing the same things operative spirit oi this adminisD
b'
Expires
4-21 -71. To be re.
992-5560
Tbey also said he would serve Rhodes did, only he's not as tration.
J ur
'
turned
with
service order .•
"
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
as an immediate rallying point good at it yet," observed one
Republican lawmakers have
59 N. 2nd AVE.
for student protesters and labor newsman.
·
been concentrating on Gilligan's
organizations. Instead he has Indeed, the newspapers which budget-tax plan, which they say
..............,..,.......,,.,.,.,.,........,,............,,.,....,.....,_,,....,.....
set down firm guidelines for use endorsed Gilligan by and large "overwhelmed" them. They

TELEVISION
REPAIR I

Sunday, April 25. Turn
clocks ahead one hour.
Nostradamus
Nostradamus, 16th-century
French astrologer, is said to
have foretold the coming of
World War II. Interest in
him was revived in the
1930s, when many persons
thought. his writings prophesied the rise of Hitler.

Serving

sar-

Point Pleasant and Meigs Mason Area·

EVERYBODY
Shops the

MASON COUNTY
T.V. SERVICE CO.

Sym'pathy Flowers

WANT AD WAY
For Sale
F·30 FARMALL tractor, runs
good on rubber. ~ ft. disc,
5300. Phone 992-6048.
4·14-3tp
FT. HOUSEBOAT. Fiberglass and wood. V Hull.
Equipped with 1967 60 H. P.
Johnson motor . Used 150
hours, 51.200, 992-2351 days,
992-3835 aft•r 5.
. 4-13-6tc

I.
•

couldn't agree more.
"This is the youngest, bright- ·
est, best educated, most active
and most innovative bunch 91
guys at the cabinet and ·staff
level that has ever been
brought into state· government/ ' he said.
Staff Relieves Pressure
And the governor ,.plans to
use them by delegating responsibility and taking some of the
pressure off himself.
"I need an Ill-hour day, a 10.day week and a 40-day month
to do this job," he said. "I
handle only the hot ones here.
As Harry Truman said, the
buck stops here, and I take
o~iy the ones that are too hot
to handle."
Impartial observers note Gil·
ligan is making greater use of
his cabinet and sub-cabinet per·
sonnel than did Rhodes, who
surrounded himself with a
handful of trusted aides to
make key decisions.

COLOR

DAYLIGHT SAVING
TIME begins· at 2 a.m.,

32

' .:,.P1~\ ~7~~.4~~,',. ..... ~~· !'IIlii 'DIIil~'ili:i!
' "~'·~

..

tm
m
Chuck--lnscore

~,.,.

Phebe Says:

Ajax Cleanser ·
14 oz.

can

•
v1ronmen a
ion I

8~

WITH
COUPON

WITHOUT COUPON, 2 for 39'
'

4 to 7 lb.

-At Racine Food Maillet On~
EXPIRES: APRIL 20, 1971

DOOR BUSTER!

Average

PEAK BRAND

PINTO BEANS

GEBHARPTS .

JENO'S

HOTDOG
SAUCE

PIZZA

'

what's happening to our environment? What's happen·
ing is a crime . .. committed against all of us, but

.•
•

commi~ed

'

,,
•

If you ask, "What 1an I do alone?" the answer is

lution, environmental destruction ... these words spell out

simple. You alone 1an make sure that your home

BEEF STEW

o real horror story, the story of what's happening to the air

premises are neat, orderly and in good repair ..• that

Right reseiVed to limit quantities '

·MEAT

we breathe, the, land around us, the living things that

healing, plumbing, cleaning and 1ooking systems fun!·

We Glad~ Accept Fed.

share our world, the water that supports life, the very

lion with the minimum of waste ... thlll home garbage

Prices Effective Apr. 14-20

life we live. {ontominotion, pollution, environmental de:

Fortun~ely, !~ere's

another word: Responslbi!ity. li can

.

.

.

.

.

'

r

Serving The Meigs-Mason Area

'

Clean Up Contamination, Now

'

..

'·:::: :::: : ::,: . ·: ·: ::r. :: :.,;: ':. :..

.
.I

'

•' : :· •' .. ·:: :: :: ·.·:.
··:·.··

'

·' :. ::

.

·::

,,••,

::. :. : .. ::

lb.

~

.

.:: ::

.

:::;: ::

'•.

:: ,: : :;. :·

•,

:·
-: •i

SELECTED PRODUCE VALUES

r

Red Ripe ·
:TOMATOES

Golden Yams

SWEET
POTATOES

t'
f

..:
' ~- ::

I .

•'

,·, '•

.

.

2' lb.
··:
'• '·.

:: :: ': .;:

tube

29~
,.

:::

.. :::. ····: ..

'

on~
,•

: ::

:: ·.

39~

GERBER'S BABY FOOD . ~~~~~~~.~........... lO~B tor ·Sl
MARGAR IN E... ~!m\~Wt.~~. . :-. ~~!!~. ~~~~. :................. ~~:.39~
PORK &amp;BEANS . ~~~~~~ ...... ~ .........:.........:.3 ~~· 99~
CHERRY' PIE ,.FILLI NG. ~~~~. ~~.~ ...............~~:.~.~-:.39~
·.
STANT
·p· .~ . · E. SUPREME IDAHO · .. 61h oz. 29.~
01"10 ~ ~~~~"~-~~~ ............ .. ~ .......:~~·..
IN
.
..
.. . . -.
AUSTIN'S
. . 32
lastic
4
01shwash1ng Detergent . ~~.~.~~.~~.~~~ ........ ~.~~.. 49

•

'
STEAK
.
..............
PORK

'

The. Daily·Sentinel.

,,

CHOICE
'

.To clean up the crime of containinalion, dean up!

.

yet to come, is to dean up crimes -the crimM

lb.79~ USDA
FRESHSLICED .

cho~ge o story Of horror into .ci story of hope and happi·

~enerations

,.

dean by refusing to be a tiHerbug.

'

'

Open Mon.-fri. 9 to 7 .
Saturday 9 to 9
CLOSED SUNDAYS

disposal is handled dea~ly ... that.yo~-maintain "your
1ar in dean operating order •.. that you help keep all

· slrudion spell· danger.

Food Stamps

With Cheese

WITH 110.00 OR
MORE ORDER

Sth and PEARL STS., RACINE· lb. 29~
''The Store With AHeart, ,
You, WE LIKF
.

ness. Our rMponsibilily, to others and to ourselves, to

!

BEEF LIVER

responsibility.

outdoo~
I.

Sliced

against our environment. Each of us shores this

unfortunately committed by all pi us. Contamination, pol·

'

;::::::!:~::::::::~::::::."::::::::~:~:::,

' ·::::::::::::::::':!::::::::=~ :~:

size

s· ..

'

· •· Golden Ripe

'•' '

'.

·

w

.

'BANANAS
'•

TOPP BRAND

'

:.
;:

lb.
·: ·

---.

..:· '• .: :: ·. ': :·. ':'.: :.. : ·:· .: :·.
'

-::.

.

·~

::~.:
,,,,,.

· JOY BRAND

'

•

ROOT BEER ~~ . OOG .· FooD
1fl pl.
bottle

39
.

.;.: ·:

~ il

• ·n
~:;~
•••;

;:;:;

251b.
bau
It '

2

.

~

�l.

'

•

.....

•

•
•

14- The Daily Senlinel,Middleport..Pomeroy, 0 ,, Aprill4, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and,More Bargains In Sentinel ·Classi.fieds
,...-~-"·

Roush.
During the business meeting
it was announced thai there
would be a County Council
meeting held In the near future,
with Miss Mary Phillips,
president, and Mrs. WUUam
Chisler representing the club. A
quilt show or exhlbltls also to be
held in the Courthouse Annex at
Point Pleasant. Mrs. G. B.
Hazlett, Mrs. Clarence Thomas
and Mrs. 0 . 0. Sayre will
represent the club at this affair.
The group also voted to sell
paring knives.
The lesson for the evening,
"Nicaragua in the Heart of the
Americans" was discussed by
Mrs. Albert Roush.
Those attending the meeting
were Mrs. Vebna Roush, Mrs.
T. Bert Roush, Mrs. 0. 0.
Sayre, Mrs. G. B. HaZlett, Miss
Mary Phillips, Mrs. Clarence
Thomas, Mrs. Charles Jewell,
Mrs. Robert Hoffman, Mrs.
William Chisler, Mrs. Albert
-Roush, members, and Kay
Roush and Lisa Thomas,
guesta.
ANNOUNCES ARRIVAL
Mr. and Mi-s. Larry GU!and of
Y'New &amp;x,n are announcing the
• arrival of a daughter. Her name
is Bethany Jo Gilland.· The
mother Is the former Brenda
Kirby, Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Unford (Bob) Kirby
and Mr. and Mrs. Blaine
Gilland, all of New Haven.

Missouri several days last
week.
Mrs. Burrell Dawson is a
patient at Cabell-Huntington
H!ISpital.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry
LeMasters and son were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Howard.
Mrs. Ray Weaver was a
recent surgical patient at West
Virginia University Hospital,
where she underwent ear
surgery.
Lilah Powell is a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald F .
Roush and Sheryl left Friday
for Las Vegas, New Mexico,
where they spent the Easter
holidays with' Mr. and Mrs.
Fr~_Pomeroy and family.
Mrs. Donald A. Smith, Mrs.
Herman LaYne, Mrs.. Uoyd
Roush, Mrs. James Moy, Mrs.
Ray Proffitt and Mrs. N. P.
Swackhamer attended the
annual Spring luncheon of the
Col. Charles Lewia Chapter
NSDAR, Saturday at the Moose
Lodge Hall In Point Pleasant.
Rev. William DeMoss has
returned to~ borne here .after
being a medical patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Bruce Adams, son of Mr. and
Mrs. carroll Adams, Jr. and
Jane Haymaker, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Nell Haymaker
were in Morgantown from
Friday until Sunday attending
the
Junior
Executive
Leadership Conference which
was held at the t.~ountain Lair
Student Center on the
University Campus. Also In
Morgantown at the same time
were Mike Howard, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Howard and
David Morgan, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Morgan, wbo were
sponsored by the New Haven
Rotary Club as representatives
at the World Affairs Institute,
abo held at the University. The
four were accomp~nied tr
Morgantown by Mr. and Mrs
John Morgan, wbo spent th&lt;
weekend, returnlpg home o~
Saturday and bringing David
Morgan and Mike Howard with
them. Mr. and Mi-s. carroll
Adams, Jr. drove to Morgantown on Sunday and brought
their sons·and Jane·Haymaker
horne.

'iE KEEP
A LEETLE
SECRET;

ELVINEV?

_ _ _.....;...._--:---..:.-....:.__ _,For Rent

Pomeroy
l'otor Co.

2 SfGNS

New Haven Social Events
The program at. the Thursday
evening cjinner meeting of the
New Haven Rotary Club was
pr!!Jenll!d by Jack Flesher, who
showed movies of a recent
District Rotary meeting held at
Oglebay Park in Wheeling, and
also movies of the Centennial
Train on its visit through New
Haven a few years ago.
Those attending the meeting
were Dick Ord, John Thorne, ·
James N. Roush, Uoyd Roush,
He~man Layne, Donald ·F.
Roush, Jack Flesher, Harry
Miller, Clyde Foley, Rome
Williamson, Russell C&amp;peharl
and Karl Wiles. ·
,
CLUB MEm
The
Rhodeodendron
Homemaker$' Club mel
· Thuuday afternoon at the
clubho~ with Mrs. G. H.
Hazlett and Mrs. Charles Jewell
as hostesses. The meeting
opened with the salute to the
flag followed with the devotions.
The scripture was read by Mrs.
Hazlett and was followed with a
prayer, and also a poem "What
Is Spring?" by Mrs. Albert

CA~

oF

QUALITY

UNFURNI SHE D 3 - room
apartmenl. Phone 992-2288.
1-31-lfc

cab, R·step bumper, chrome Int. bumper , radio, white &amp;

red finish . Good tires .
1966 CHEVROLET
2 Ton Cab-Chassis, 84"-cab to a~le. Good

11695
B25~20 . 11res . 2·

speed rear axle, cl~n cab, 292 cu . in . 6 cyl. ~ngine .

1963 CHEVROLET
1695
2 Ton cab &amp; chassis, 102" cab to axle, good 825x20 tires,
clean cab, 292 cu. in . 6 cyl. engine.

.

.

Pomeroy ilotor Co.
OPEH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

.

WANT AD '

@

5 P·.M. Oav Before Publication
,..,ndey Deadline 9 a.m .
... Cancellation &amp;·corrections
Will be accepted untn 9 a .m. f .
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS .
'right to edit or reject any ads.
The Publisher reserves the

·deemed
obJectional.
The
publisher will not be responaible
for · more than one Incorrect
il'lsertlon. "

ANTIQUES. Phone 992-5327.
4-6-301c
COAL limestone. Excelslo,. ·
Sail · Works, E. Malo St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-38tf.
.t-9-lk
BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
4-4'30fc
ALUMINUM car too boats, 10·
12-13 foot . Lorenzo D. Davis,
Kingsbury Road.
3-24-30tc
KILL TERMITES and yard
insects with ARAB "You-Do-· .
II." King Builders Supply
Company, Middleport.
2-21 -601c
Pair of quilting frames. Two
oak lawn c~airs, white.

GUN SHOOT every Saturday
night at 6 p.m. near Racine
Planing Mill. Assorted meats.
Sponsored by Syracuse Fire
Department.
4-14-3tc

For Want Ad Se'rvice

5 cents~er Word one lnse_rt ion

- · ~inTmumCiiirlie 75c--·-

12 cents per word three
consecutive . Insertions.
18 cents ' per word sJx con ,
secutive insertions . .
.
, 25 Per cent Discount on peid·

ads lind ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
tiLIND ADS

Cindy aark

32

4 Piece Band
And Vocalist
from Beverly, Ohio

FT .
HOUSEBOAT,
Fiberglass and wood . V Hull .
Equipped with 1967 60 H.P.
Johnson motor. Used 150

hours. $1,200, 992-2351 qays,
992-2385 afler 5.
4·13-6tc

Whispering Pines

SINGER Cabinel Model Sewing
Machine, equipped wilh dial
conlrol for zig-zag, but-

Nite Cub

tonhole, and fancy design
· work as well as beautiful

straight sewing. Will sacrifice
for $51.60 cash or terms
available. Phone 992-5641.
4·1J.61c

Additional 25c
Advertlnment.

Cha'rge per
·
RUBBER STAMPS made to
QFFICE HOURS
order . 24 hour service. Dwain
8 :30a .m. to 5:00p .m. Da ily,
or
Wilma Casto, Portland,
8:30 a .m . to 12 :00 Noon
Ohio.
·
.Saturday .

ELECTROLUX Cleaner Large
delu xe model. Complete with
all cleaning tools and paper
2-12-90tc
bags. Used but cleans like

•

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of Effie
Flo Manuel who departed this
life three years ago, April 14,
1968.
Sadly missed by Max T.
Manuel and Family .

new. Wi II sell for $28 cash or
terms available. Phone 992-

Lost

5641.

4-13-61c

OU CAN BUY AT LANDMARK

Everyone Can}

at
MAN'S
GLASSES
Our heart Is just as broken
automatic
car
wash
in
Our eyes for you still weep.
Pomeroy.
Phone
843-2703.
The memory of you just as dear
4-14-31c
Our love Is just as deep. .
4-14-11c

Card of Thanks

. Roofing
. &amp;Carpenter
Work '
.
Spouting, .Roof
Painting

CHECK 'lORE NAME
OFF TH' LIST

t
~

.

•

DEXTER. 0 . 45726
PHONE 742·3945

ll/IL~ VOUR. F0\.1&lt;.$ 9E U~IGHT
W~EN

'!)lEV HEAR

'IOU AND SHARI&lt;

YOU'VE TO~() .;---....
THEM.'f.

CF 6000 BEHAIIIOR. WHO

HE~PEJ&gt; SHARI&lt; ENGINEER.

-sET A CO~~EGiATE
KISSING RECORD~

You will have something of value to show fpr the$$$ you

. I-IF: HAPP!:NS ltl BE A MODEL

I PllONEJ&gt; THEM THAT I

NE.VER.G•VES f{IS MOTHER

THE WOR.L.D'$ .LONGEST
SCHOOL BUSS~

01&lt;! ME' ANY

..i·

P~OB LEMS!

•&lt;

.'·

,_1 . '

spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain an
Income Tax benefit, you build an equity and you are nof

I nsurect-E xperlenced

Work Guaranteed

bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
•

EXPERJ'

..

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home. V.A., F. H. A.,
And Conventional Loans.

-Wheel .Alignment

Wanted To Buy
OLD furnllure, dishes, brass
beds, etc. Write M.D. Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992-6271.
9-1 -lfc

$5.55

Come See Us At 971;, N. Second St.. Middleport.

·

Sale Prices Thru April
HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Low As
63.9S
RIDING MOWERS
As Low As · •
211.95
ECONOMY TILLERS
As Low As
134.95

LANCEWT

'

r"
Homes,
Inc.
lGreen Hill

FORTCHNUTLY, TH'
TH' LONGER
AHIS

992-7129
Evenings Call: 992·2534 992·3433 992-2510
Crow
Spencer
Dutton

606 E., Maln, Pomeroy, 0.

STUCK

HERE ..

"BOlLIN' POINTERS"
IS OFF ON T HAR
ANNOOAL NATURE
TRIP THIS m:.~:. "'--

WHICH GIVES M E
TILL MOI-JDAY

-AN'GITMIM
SAFEL'I

MORN IN' TO GIT
OUTA H EP.E--

REPULSIVE
AGI"-1 !! ·

-

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most ~ofitable
Time You Ever Spent.
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
ieWINSOR
«BUDOY

-tCHAMPION
iCVAN DYKE

.

EXPERIENCED
RadiatOr Service.
'

.ALSO
DOUBLE-WI DES

.

WINNIE WINKLE

.

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pqmeroy, Ohio
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
bath, gas forced air furnace
with
air
conditioning.
Beautiful kitchen wllh cook
and oven units. Nice 2 car ·
garage. $14,500.00.

Mason Area

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-lfc

® 1HA'Tll FUNNY...uERRi
&lt;JINGLE AlD'IE AT A
TABLE FOR 'IWO ....
AND CANDY A'vON
DAWDLING BACK
AT 'THE OFF'CE .

From the Largest Truck , ,.
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~mallest Heater Core.

BtAETTNARS
Ph. 992-2143

.

.

------

WE'LL, IN ART C~ASS
TODAY, TE'ACHEI'I: SAIP

YIPEJ WHAT
HAPPENE:!?

WHY, 11'5 ALMOST A51H()UGH
SHE WANTED 10 GET
HID OF ME 50
SHE COULD

WE COULD P'AINT
ANYTHING WE
WANTED...

T' HINI?

SNOOP

A~N D/

Pomeroy

-------

ROOF PAINTING, roof repair.
BACK HOE and end-loader
Free estimates. Experienced.
work. Septic tanks Installed.
Oris Hubbard, phone 992·22311.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
4·14-31c
992-2478.
11-29-tfc SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
" Ditching . Electric sewer
cleaning." Reasonable rates .
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
·-Phone
John
Russell,
Complete Service
Gallipolis 446-4782.
Phone 949-3821
4-7-lfc
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
CONCRETE
S·l·lfc READY -MIX
delivered rlghl to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
ROOFING, Spouting and
Painting . Also, metal storage eslimales. Phone 992-3284 .
building 10x10, concrete floor, Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
erected. for $300. Richard
6-30-lfc
Wilt, Phone 992-2889.
4·12-301c
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial, residential 'and
NEIGLER Construction . For
induslrlal wiring. Phone 247building or remodeling your
2113.
home, Call Guy Nelgler,
. 3-12-llc
Racine, Ohio.
7-31 -lfc O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Cro.sroads. Rt. 124.
RALPH'S
CARPET
Complete front end service,
Upholstery Cleaning Service. June up and brake service.
Free
estimates.
Phone
Wheels balanced elec·
Gallipolis 446-0294.
All
work ·
Ironically.
3-12-lfc guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. 992-3213.
3-17-30tc
MINOR automotive repair .
Warren's Mower Shop. 248
Condor St., Pomeroy. Phone FOR expert electrical work call
992-7357.
' 992-5179.
4·6-241p
4-13-31

- - - - - -and
TREE -TRIMMING

GASOLINE ALLEY

You qot :a nave

lmoneui;' qit in t'

Gee car
raein'

RufuG·

THE BORN WSER
i't.co:;Ay /RAISE MY

PA'/, OR
RR6 ME 1SO I CAA r.r

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LE,A6T DAA'J SEI/ERAioiC.E!"
'" ANO 'OIHee-t'I'SONLY A MATTER
OF TIME UHTll OTHER UNSCRUPULOUS
~RATES LIKE CAPTAIN
AHAB DISCOVER OUR FEW POOR

GOlO·HUNGRY

GEN UINE TREASURES" ·

AT i1U..'5'AV!

111AT'5

IT'S THE WISH OF M'( PEOPLE THAT
lHE'f BE PRESERVED BY FRIENDS
LIKfi l'OUR.SELF TO

\ (

THE DAY WHEN

0

0

'/

liTUSTRIOUS !

Insurance

•;

removal. Fully Insured. Free
estimates. Call after 5 p.m., AUTOM;:iBi LE Insurance been·
cancelled?
Lost
your
Dick
Hayman ,
collect
Call
992·
operator's
license?
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
2966.
Hayman, Chester 985·3509.
6-15-ttc
3-28-301p

PAPER-HANGING, painting,
plastering, dry wail. Arthur
Musser. Phone ·992-3630.
3-28-301p
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service. all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aulhorlz~ Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
- - - - - - - - -3--29-lfc
HARRISON'S TV AND AN.
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.
6-10-lfc

l

•
"l

·'

c3~Bo~y~?\t?.
!.~.
water

DAILY
AOROSS

ITEM: Tom Hill. He play'
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears 1nd
Mama Cass. But he play
Moonlight Serenade an
Andy Williams too. Varle
Is the spice of our music.

:1. Brazilian

DICK TRACY

•J-. Cuch.ul a.lnn'n

Fl NE S'TONE-EIUT
AGAIN-IT MAY NOT
REGISTERED.

15 A

wife

•

WMP0/1390

:13. Fancy
dessert
(2 wds.)

island

expec ..

1. Old·Ume

tatlon

l6.Borest
16. Scottish

8. Sub -

ranean

note

county

9, Dark

H . Uprising

18. Mend

encounter

TERRY
YES, 51R!
lOU MUST
I

In

oldsonp
38.Whale

hunter
amino
33, Incessantly 39. Valuation
stone

31S. Therefore

42. Se• (Fr.l

APT 10 KNO'II

THAN
.

MUCII
Nl5 NAME. HEH,

I

I []

custody

4,Q. Pork

.

.

(2 wds.J
4.3. Advanced

·Yetlerday••

tiJ

+--+
WHAT THE

TO

~

..

ecstasy

Sitting .
and
drawing
4.6. Cavolry

~5 .

·

\
'
I
',•

..• .
'

..
'
'.
'

PIA'\i\ IS

iHIG

LETTER 1\IAT

\til! RECEIVED ~

weapon
DOWN ·

l. Bablsm
founder

2. Ancient
Persian
proVince

DAlLY CRYF.J:OQUQTE~Here's how to wcirk It :
.
ll

AXYDLllAAXR
LONGFEL:LOW

One letter simply stands for, .another. In thi s sample A ·Is
used ·for the three L's, X tor the two o·~ , etc. Single letters.
nposlrophe.ll, th~ Jength aild tormdlon' ot the word~ arc all

hints. Each day the code . le tter.~~ are dlt!erent . .
A Cryt•togram Quot8.Hon

· .A.LV WVCJVDA• SC X AP QRPJX , 'rD
AP PAJ'l'KV Al' FV Sl.CA XPN STDf,
. .A. .. FV Al.PNQLA AI' FV . .
' l'r•t.·~y'M

• DPM~CAVD

Cryploquotc: JGNORANCEJ lS DEQRADLNG·

I

l'"~·ahm.'H Srmlh ·aio·, ftw )

r

Wfi.l.. 1 611€%
l CAN IINDE~TA~D
KOW ~0~ FEEL ..

AT

THE 8Et:r FACTORY.

An1wer1 Cle.at..lighted peoplt!! 1eldom "{1178
u.,.! for tJa;. -"IYIWASH"

••. Fill with

CAPTAIN EASY

SAID

~E \\O~ERS

Jumble" GASSY JEWEL . CAUGHT IIDIUG

slowly

(C llrH K'inlf

•

/BIJAIJE

33. Nigerian
city
36. Take lnlo

ONLY WHEN FOUND 1l{ COMPANY \VlTH: RlCREa, ·SOHOPENHAUER
.

0

I K J

specialty

• .Based on family Income of ss,ooo wllh three
c~lldren, taxes and insurance not Included.

M2-70M or ' 1·261·

... NOT THAT AAYSOOY'5

HEARD

.

.,

two
31.Embark

Will Buy ANew
3 Bedroom Ranch Home

Park &amp; Sycamor~ Sts. ,
Middleport, Ohto

37. Refrain

oct

20.Perlod

JEMO ASSOCIATE5

'28.Ralnfonned
trenches
32•.Ascorblc

34-. :Mi.!!ehlevous 41. Precious

Do·
Lillse

With wall-to-wall carpeting, •fumliiUiri
siding, F.A. gu heal, built-in coblnets,
etc. etc.

'h-

25. Cockney's

&amp;nd

19. Comedian1

~S.On

;,.__

26. Through

10. IAceratc

19. Forensic

AI 2~ Park St. ~ Middleport, or ,r.all AI
Moody, 992-7034 •. tor appointment.

Boy

6, Medlter-

amount

See Today ,

24 .

1Usoloted

17.Large

PER
MONTH*

as

wine

Catltornla

shrine

U111Cramble these foor Jumbleo,
one tetter to each oquare, to
form four ordinary word1.

turcs,

5, City in

v---~---:-:=::-"Jll.Texas

ON THE ~ER llANO HERE

ftfl~h\fl.!}&gt;H ~ -~ Joi:::•:U:::t ....J C

~ \!:1,1 ~~~~ *"'~-

22. Ma-

seaport
G. Deserve

Cleland Realty

Louts,

'

;

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

* ASTACK OF WORTHlESS RECEIPTS! ! *

All Weather Roofl.ng &amp;
Construction Co.

SENTINEL
CARRIER

*

J

'

•

•

NEW .. OLD WORK

News Notes

.

")

i

THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

WE WISH to express our sincere thanks to ali our friends
POMEROY
and neighbors for their many
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
kindnesses and expressions &gt;f
Phone 992-2111
SYRACUSE - 4 bedrooms,
sympathy during the illness·
bath, dining with !I replace.
and death ot our brother and
Full basemen!. Gas furnace. 3
father, Robert Clifford Steele. Wanted
1968 GMC 'h- ton pickup, 23,000
porches
, Modern kitchen ,
Sister, Elizabeth Gardner,
mile&amp;, new tires, camper top, ·
paneled
.
Large garden.
PATIENTS
lo
care
for
in
my
and the children.
good conditi on. Phone 992Asking
513,000.00.
home.
Phone
Mason•
773-5712.
4·14.-liP
4-6-12tc 2805, Eldon Walburn. 3-28-tfc
MIDDLEPORT
COM·
MERCIAL
LOTNext
toM.
Notice
GARAGE to rent . Phone MODERN I'.(ALNUT stereoand
R.
Only
53,500.00.
Chester 985·3840.
radio combination. 4 speaker
LEG CRAMPS? Try Supplical
4-13-3tc sound system, 4 · speed MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
with calcium, only $1.98 for a
changer, separate controls .
bottle of 60 tablets at Nelson
one story house near stores.
Balance 568 .3 1. Use out
Drugs.
Bath, large kitchen and
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
4-14-llp Help Wanted
dining area. 2level lots. Only
4·8-6tc
$5,000.00.
GARDEN CLUB
------GUNSHOOT, Forked Run
MAPLE STEREO -radio COUNTRY HOME - 4 nice
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
The Nehacllma Garden Club
WANTED
combination AM&amp;FM radio,
April
18,
12
noon.
bedrooms, modern bath, and
met on )lfonday evening at the
four speakers, 4 speed
4-14-3tc
kitchen. Gas furnace . Drilled
· automatic chc;nger, dual
Alex4uiJ!en Memoria)Bullding Easter dinner guests of Mr.
well . Good cellar. 57 ACRES
volume control. Use our
Minerals . Asking 510,1100.00.
for their regular monthly and Mrs. Russell capehart were REDUCE safe and fast with
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
budgellerms, or pay balance
meeting.
Mrs.
Harold Mrs. Diane Self and two sons,
water pills, Nelson Drugs.
of $83.29. Call 992-3352.
76 ACRES - 20 tractor land.
Bumgarner, vice president, Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. John
4-14-601p
4-8-61c
Good implement shed and
presided at the meeting.
Slsaon and famlly, Mason; Mr.
cellar. 8 room older home
PICK up merchandise
TREAT RUGS right, they'll he
with 4 bedrooms. Running
The Mother • Daughter and Mrs. Charles Cohen, WILL
and take to auction on a
a delight If cleaned with Blue
water. 513,500.00.
Banquet wlll be held at the Pomeroy.
percentage basis. Call Jim
Lustre .
Rent
electric
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.
Hartford Methodist Church on Mrs. Barbara Van Vranken
shampooer, Sl. Baker FUr- NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
Phone
7
42·441-1.
niture, Middleport.
BEFORE
THEY
GO
May 3 at 6:30 p.m. Committees . and chlldren of Florida are
9-23-tfc
4-14-6tc
HIGHER.
CALL
US
TODAY.
were appoi~ted : Decorating, visiting her parents, Mr. and
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
AUCTION - WHEN? Each ' - - - - - - - - - - - ' REDUCE excess fluids with
Mrs. David Simonton, Mrs. Blll Mrs. Blisa Wllson.
ASSOCIATE
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
992-3325
Grinstead and Mrs. A. L.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry
FLUIDEX
$1.69.
LOSE
Hayman's Auction House, MA'N FOR yard work. Prefer
WEIGHT safely with Dex·A·
Sprouse ; Program, Mrs. Roy Bwngardner and three sons of
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7 one who owns his own mower. Diet, 98 cents, at Nelson 24 ACRE FARM, LOng Bottom,
Jones, Mrs. Robert Layne, Mrs. MoundsviUe, W. Va. visill!d
Pomeroy
Middleport By- Write P. 0 . Box 588, Mason, Drugs.
with or without farm
W. Va .
·
pass
.
machinery . House with 3
Harold Bwngarner.
Easter witli his mother, Mrs.
4-14-llp
4-14-0tc
2-7-lfc
bedrooms, dining room, living
Three members from Hen- George Bwngardner in Mason.
room, 1'12 baths, enclosed
NERVOUS?
Can't
sleep?
Try
derson Garden Club presenll!d
Pvt. Paul D. Johnson, Jr., WILL D.O tailoring and TAKE CARE of lawn on Lincoln
back porch, wall to wall
"Sleepers ."
Satisfaction
Hili. Must have own mower. guaranteed
upholstery. Phone 992-3561.
the program for the meeting. stationed at Fl. Knox, Ky .,
or money back.
carpeting. Aluminum siding, ,
Clinton Fisher, Lincoln Hill , Only 98 cents. Nelson Drugs.
3-31-30tc
awning, storm windows and
Members brought a salad, visited his parents, Mr. and
Pomeroy. Phone 992-5427.
4-14-llp
storm doors. City water.
4-14-61c
aandwiches or desse~t and a Mrs. Paul D. Johnson, Sr., and I WILL not be responsible for
Selling due to Ill heallh. Phone
buffet was served to those at.. his sister Mrs. Merlin H.
614-985-3938.
any debls conlracted b{ HOUSEWIVES heeded for 16 FT. WEAVER skiff, 3'12-hp.
anyone other than mysel . product testing. Write Mrs. outboard motor, pair of oars,
4-9-12tp
tending.
Tr
J '
d
Ste h
SPECfAL SERVICE
acy, r., an son,
p en
Evelyn Blythe, Box 133,
Libman. 34 W. Carpenter, anchor, two life jackets, $200.
Racine, Ohio.
On Sunday, April 18, at 9, 45 Michael, ~ver the weekend.
Phone Mason n3-5147 , '
Athens,
Ohio.
4-13-3tp
4·14-lfc
4-14-6tc
.. a.m. worship service at the New
'
.
.
.
Naturalized
ANOTHER big load of mer- --.- - - - - - Raven Unill!d Methodist Church
RIDING lawn mower. Phone
chandlse at Harman's WOMAN for companion to Chesler 985-31129.
608 East Main Street
In 1917. at tbe outbreak of
several events will be taking
Auction
Friday
nigh.
Good
.
elderly
lady.
Light
POMEROY
4-14-31p
place. District Superintendent tbe Russian rev o 1uti on',
clean electric range, break·
housekeeping and cooking:
TUPPERS PLAINS- Route 7
Rev. Connie Dic~ens and wife Rachmaninoff, the Russian
fast •et, one sel ot glassware.
Phone 992-5397.
- 1 LEVEL ACRE, 7 rooms.
14 FOOT fiberglass boat, 50-hp
composer. fted the country
4·12-31c Mercury motor, trailer, skis
Be
sure
and
follow
the
crowd
bath, 4 · bl!drooms, cellar.
will be pr-esent for the and came to the United
garage, city water and deep
to Hayman 's Auction.
and
life
jackets.
Phone
992dedication of several different States. He became an Amerl·
well. 59,308.
7008.
.
4 13 3
worship accessories. New hymn can citizen in 1943, the year - - - - - -- ' - tc For Rent
4-14-51c
POMEROY - 2 story trame, 6
OVEN
FRESH
bakery 5 ROOMS, ,bath, unfurnished
books, new pulpit, lectern, of his death.
rooms. 3 bedrooms. bath,
producls . Jimmy's Pastry
apartment
with
basement,
751
'pulpit chairs, bapUsmal font,
London's Worst Smog
$3,750.
Shop, N. 2nd Ave., Mid·
Brownell Ave., Middleport. Auto Sales
offering plates and new chime
One .of the worst smogs in
dleport. Phone 992-3555.
Phone 992-3045.
VOLKSWAGEN Karmann NEAR CARPENTER- FARM
3-28-30tc
system will be dedicated to God. history occurred in London
4-13-3tc 1966
Ghia . Excellent economy car. - aboul 170 acr&lt;is. 3 barns,
The second part of the service · between Dec . 4 and 9, 1952,
Good condition. Phone 992-. silo, pond, 2 wells, other
will be devoted to the and caused the deaths of REVI.VAL starling Mongay, 6 ROOM farm hous.e wllhln one 5570.
buildings. Home has new
Aprrl 19, at 7: 30 p.m ..
.
about 4,000 persons, acc6rd·
mile of Dexter. Come to
4q.6tc
Alum .. siding, 4 bedrooms,
Freedom
Gospel
Mission,
sacrament of .baptism and tng to Encyclopaedia Britan·
Dexter Grocery store and ask - - - - - - - bath.
$20,000.
Bald Knob Evangelist, Rev.
reception of new members. nica.
tor Ealrly Dowell.
Roy Deeler, Coolville. Rev.
4-14-31p 1969 BUICK LeSabre. 2-dr .
TO BUY OR SELL
Infants and adults will be
Lawrence Gluesencamp Is Ihe - - - - - - : - - hardtop, power steering ,
CALL US
baptized and new members will
pastor. 'The public Is invited. TRAILER LOTS. Bob'~ Mobile
in the Middle Ages. the
power brakes, air, 18,1XJO
. HEN:l.f~g~AN~
'
4-13-6tc Courl, Rt . 124, Syracuse, " miles. Excellent condition.
be received by transfer and people of E u r o p e made
Office 992-2259
. . 992 2951
Phone 992-2288.
.
by
reading
the
Bible.
maps
Oh
profession' of faith. At 12 noon
10.
•
• Residence 992-2568
11 .1o.11....
AT-TENTION ladies! Would you
4-2-lfc
,
~
.
4-lJ.6tc
ever)'one is asked to come back Certain medieval maps were
like to · try a wig on in the
made square because the
and
balh,
1959
CHEVROLET,
6
cylln~ers,
'
HOUSE
privacy
qf
your
own
home?
to the church for a covered dish Bible speaks of the four corTRAILER , Brown's Trailer
standard shill. Phone 992h •762 rooms
You
can
.
.Jus·
f
call
us.
We
also
fellowship .dinner. Everyone· is ners of the ,earth.
Park , Minersville. Phone,992'
7001 .
P one 4 ·:1613. ·
have the 'Mink Oil Kosmellcs,
4-11 -121c
welcome to attend.
3324'
4·14-41c
, Kosc.o t, . of
course.
4-9-6tc
Distributors. Brown's. Phone
LEGAL
NOTICE
.'
Middleport 992-stlJ.. .
. _2_R_O_O_M-, -,_b,a7th-,. -f-ur7n-ished 1965 -CHEVROLET 6el Ak, 4- .
NOTICE ·OF
'
.
·
.
'
.
12.-31-11&lt;
door iledan, Radio, while wall
Personals
APPOINTMENT
apartment, Mulberry ·Ave., · tires. Standard .Jransmlsslon.
. Cue No. 20423 tiOME sewing . Phone 992-5327.
·Mrs. Lee Gibbs of Hartford,
Pomeroy. · Reference.s 6 cylinder. Phone 992-3863 or
Estale of Esther E. Gibbons
required. Phone 992-6698.
'. 992-5844.
preSident of the New Raven' ~eceosed.
.. · \'
'
3-30-301c
·
4-13-lfc
4-14-3tc
Notice
Is
hereby
oven
-that
4·8-6tc
Garden Club, and Mfs. Donald
William Wayne Gibbons of the
•
F. Roush attended the recent Village of Middleport, Ohio, ~as
TWO OR three bedroom home, 1969 INTERNAT.IONAL HOUSE, . 1640 Lincoln His.,
state meetlllg ' of 'the West been duty appointed ExecUtor ~----------. ~--Cottage Road. Syracuse.
Travelall, air conditioned, · . Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
of the Estate of ·Esther E..
1
'
10.25-tfc
VirgJnllt Glrden Club, Inc., held Gibbons, deceosed, tate of the 1 Classified Ads , 1 Adulls .only. Phone 992-5133.
poWer
steering,
power
3·2-lfc
brakes. automatic Iranat the Greenbrier Holel In White Village of Middleport, Meigs 1
Counly, Ohio:
· I
I
. smlsslon. Equipped lo pull CONVENIENT but secluded
Sulphur Sprlngl.
Crrdltors· arr required to 111e
I TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33, trailer, $3,000. Phone 992-2121, · building lois on · T79 al Rock
. brIng you
1 lil-mlle north of new Meigs
Springs, Within walking
lAIIIer OhUnger IIIII returned their claims wilh told fldicuary ·I
Ben Ewing.
with in four months. •
:I
High
Schoo).
Phone
992·2'14]
.
d111ance
•of Mel~s High
4·14·61c
.
t.O bll home after ha\'IDJ eye
Date~ this 101h day of April ' ·I
8X t r8 C8Sh
I.
3-5-tfc ·
·
·
School,
a
5 ml~ute drive from
,
I
I - - - - - - - -llll'lel'1 at the ,HGbir Jltdical 1971. .
Pomeroy. Clll or !lOe BUI
·.1964 f'ORD Galexle, 's m or will
F. H. O' Brlen
·rar'
I
Witte
weekends, or after 5,
1
FURNISHED
and
unfurnlslied
trade
for
motorcycle.
,
Larry
Probage Judge
1
p.m.
weekdays.
Phone 992·
apartments.
Close
to
school
.
_Sellers.
120
State
St,
ReY. 'James MOJ waa a
. ofsaidCountv ·I shopplna: sprees .I
6887.
'·
P
hone
992-S..34i
Pomeroy
.
(4l t•, 21, 28, 3tc · ________ ,.. _____ I
b
viiiJtGr a( 81,
· ·
10-18-llc
?-1-llc
• 4· l4-31p

Oln....

$

i

THINK ABOUT ITI

Dinette set. M;&gt;ytag square '
wringer washer, twin
' -(OUARANTEEDrinse tubs, all in good conPhone 992.2094
dition. Phone Chester 9853840.
Pomeroy Home &amp;'Auto
4-13-3tc

Friday and
Saturday Nights

$1.50 for 50 word·' minimum
Each l!lddltlonal word 2c.

8ZZZ

!I'
I1

Business ·Services

tub

and the Night Riders

RATES ·

DURN MY HIDE!!
)I. CLEAN FERGOT TO

LAND 0'

21" ELECTRIC window fan.

Notice

INFORMATION .
DEADLINES

Bzzz

!

For Sale

1968 FORD
$1895
'i2 ,Ton 8' Styleside Pickup, V-Bengine, std. trans., custom

CROSS
M'f HEART
AN' HOPE
- TO .OIE,
LOWEE'Z!/

�l.

'

•

.....

•

•
•

14- The Daily Senlinel,Middleport..Pomeroy, 0 ,, Aprill4, 1971

Bargains, Bargains, and,More Bargains In Sentinel ·Classi.fieds
,...-~-"·

Roush.
During the business meeting
it was announced thai there
would be a County Council
meeting held In the near future,
with Miss Mary Phillips,
president, and Mrs. WUUam
Chisler representing the club. A
quilt show or exhlbltls also to be
held in the Courthouse Annex at
Point Pleasant. Mrs. G. B.
Hazlett, Mrs. Clarence Thomas
and Mrs. 0 . 0. Sayre will
represent the club at this affair.
The group also voted to sell
paring knives.
The lesson for the evening,
"Nicaragua in the Heart of the
Americans" was discussed by
Mrs. Albert Roush.
Those attending the meeting
were Mrs. Vebna Roush, Mrs.
T. Bert Roush, Mrs. 0. 0.
Sayre, Mrs. G. B. HaZlett, Miss
Mary Phillips, Mrs. Clarence
Thomas, Mrs. Charles Jewell,
Mrs. Robert Hoffman, Mrs.
William Chisler, Mrs. Albert
-Roush, members, and Kay
Roush and Lisa Thomas,
guesta.
ANNOUNCES ARRIVAL
Mr. and Mi-s. Larry GU!and of
Y'New &amp;x,n are announcing the
• arrival of a daughter. Her name
is Bethany Jo Gilland.· The
mother Is the former Brenda
Kirby, Grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Unford (Bob) Kirby
and Mr. and Mrs. Blaine
Gilland, all of New Haven.

Missouri several days last
week.
Mrs. Burrell Dawson is a
patient at Cabell-Huntington
H!ISpital.
Mr. and Mrs . Larry
LeMasters and son were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bill
Howard.
Mrs. Ray Weaver was a
recent surgical patient at West
Virginia University Hospital,
where she underwent ear
surgery.
Lilah Powell is a patient at
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald F .
Roush and Sheryl left Friday
for Las Vegas, New Mexico,
where they spent the Easter
holidays with' Mr. and Mrs.
Fr~_Pomeroy and family.
Mrs. Donald A. Smith, Mrs.
Herman LaYne, Mrs.. Uoyd
Roush, Mrs. James Moy, Mrs.
Ray Proffitt and Mrs. N. P.
Swackhamer attended the
annual Spring luncheon of the
Col. Charles Lewia Chapter
NSDAR, Saturday at the Moose
Lodge Hall In Point Pleasant.
Rev. William DeMoss has
returned to~ borne here .after
being a medical patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Bruce Adams, son of Mr. and
Mrs. carroll Adams, Jr. and
Jane Haymaker, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Nell Haymaker
were in Morgantown from
Friday until Sunday attending
the
Junior
Executive
Leadership Conference which
was held at the t.~ountain Lair
Student Center on the
University Campus. Also In
Morgantown at the same time
were Mike Howard, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Howard and
David Morgan, son of Mr. and
Mrs. John Morgan, wbo were
sponsored by the New Haven
Rotary Club as representatives
at the World Affairs Institute,
abo held at the University. The
four were accomp~nied tr
Morgantown by Mr. and Mrs
John Morgan, wbo spent th&lt;
weekend, returnlpg home o~
Saturday and bringing David
Morgan and Mike Howard with
them. Mr. and Mi-s. carroll
Adams, Jr. drove to Morgantown on Sunday and brought
their sons·and Jane·Haymaker
horne.

'iE KEEP
A LEETLE
SECRET;

ELVINEV?

_ _ _.....;...._--:---..:.-....:.__ _,For Rent

Pomeroy
l'otor Co.

2 SfGNS

New Haven Social Events
The program at. the Thursday
evening cjinner meeting of the
New Haven Rotary Club was
pr!!Jenll!d by Jack Flesher, who
showed movies of a recent
District Rotary meeting held at
Oglebay Park in Wheeling, and
also movies of the Centennial
Train on its visit through New
Haven a few years ago.
Those attending the meeting
were Dick Ord, John Thorne, ·
James N. Roush, Uoyd Roush,
He~man Layne, Donald ·F.
Roush, Jack Flesher, Harry
Miller, Clyde Foley, Rome
Williamson, Russell C&amp;peharl
and Karl Wiles. ·
,
CLUB MEm
The
Rhodeodendron
Homemaker$' Club mel
· Thuuday afternoon at the
clubho~ with Mrs. G. H.
Hazlett and Mrs. Charles Jewell
as hostesses. The meeting
opened with the salute to the
flag followed with the devotions.
The scripture was read by Mrs.
Hazlett and was followed with a
prayer, and also a poem "What
Is Spring?" by Mrs. Albert

CA~

oF

QUALITY

UNFURNI SHE D 3 - room
apartmenl. Phone 992-2288.
1-31-lfc

cab, R·step bumper, chrome Int. bumper , radio, white &amp;

red finish . Good tires .
1966 CHEVROLET
2 Ton Cab-Chassis, 84"-cab to a~le. Good

11695
B25~20 . 11res . 2·

speed rear axle, cl~n cab, 292 cu . in . 6 cyl. ~ngine .

1963 CHEVROLET
1695
2 Ton cab &amp; chassis, 102" cab to axle, good 825x20 tires,
clean cab, 292 cu. in . 6 cyl. engine.

.

.

Pomeroy ilotor Co.
OPEH EVES. 1:00 P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

.

WANT AD '

@

5 P·.M. Oav Before Publication
,..,ndey Deadline 9 a.m .
... Cancellation &amp;·corrections
Will be accepted untn 9 a .m. f .
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS .
'right to edit or reject any ads.
The Publisher reserves the

·deemed
obJectional.
The
publisher will not be responaible
for · more than one Incorrect
il'lsertlon. "

ANTIQUES. Phone 992-5327.
4-6-301c
COAL limestone. Excelslo,. ·
Sail · Works, E. Malo St.,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-38tf.
.t-9-lk
BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
4-4'30fc
ALUMINUM car too boats, 10·
12-13 foot . Lorenzo D. Davis,
Kingsbury Road.
3-24-30tc
KILL TERMITES and yard
insects with ARAB "You-Do-· .
II." King Builders Supply
Company, Middleport.
2-21 -601c
Pair of quilting frames. Two
oak lawn c~airs, white.

GUN SHOOT every Saturday
night at 6 p.m. near Racine
Planing Mill. Assorted meats.
Sponsored by Syracuse Fire
Department.
4-14-3tc

For Want Ad Se'rvice

5 cents~er Word one lnse_rt ion

- · ~inTmumCiiirlie 75c--·-

12 cents per word three
consecutive . Insertions.
18 cents ' per word sJx con ,
secutive insertions . .
.
, 25 Per cent Discount on peid·

ads lind ads paid within 10 days.
CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
tiLIND ADS

Cindy aark

32

4 Piece Band
And Vocalist
from Beverly, Ohio

FT .
HOUSEBOAT,
Fiberglass and wood . V Hull .
Equipped with 1967 60 H.P.
Johnson motor. Used 150

hours. $1,200, 992-2351 qays,
992-2385 afler 5.
4·13-6tc

Whispering Pines

SINGER Cabinel Model Sewing
Machine, equipped wilh dial
conlrol for zig-zag, but-

Nite Cub

tonhole, and fancy design
· work as well as beautiful

straight sewing. Will sacrifice
for $51.60 cash or terms
available. Phone 992-5641.
4·1J.61c

Additional 25c
Advertlnment.

Cha'rge per
·
RUBBER STAMPS made to
QFFICE HOURS
order . 24 hour service. Dwain
8 :30a .m. to 5:00p .m. Da ily,
or
Wilma Casto, Portland,
8:30 a .m . to 12 :00 Noon
Ohio.
·
.Saturday .

ELECTROLUX Cleaner Large
delu xe model. Complete with
all cleaning tools and paper
2-12-90tc
bags. Used but cleans like

•

In Memory
IN LOVING memory of Effie
Flo Manuel who departed this
life three years ago, April 14,
1968.
Sadly missed by Max T.
Manuel and Family .

new. Wi II sell for $28 cash or
terms available. Phone 992-

Lost

5641.

4-13-61c

OU CAN BUY AT LANDMARK

Everyone Can}

at
MAN'S
GLASSES
Our heart Is just as broken
automatic
car
wash
in
Our eyes for you still weep.
Pomeroy.
Phone
843-2703.
The memory of you just as dear
4-14-31c
Our love Is just as deep. .
4-14-11c

Card of Thanks

. Roofing
. &amp;Carpenter
Work '
.
Spouting, .Roof
Painting

CHECK 'lORE NAME
OFF TH' LIST

t
~

.

•

DEXTER. 0 . 45726
PHONE 742·3945

ll/IL~ VOUR. F0\.1&lt;.$ 9E U~IGHT
W~EN

'!)lEV HEAR

'IOU AND SHARI&lt;

YOU'VE TO~() .;---....
THEM.'f.

CF 6000 BEHAIIIOR. WHO

HE~PEJ&gt; SHARI&lt; ENGINEER.

-sET A CO~~EGiATE
KISSING RECORD~

You will have something of value to show fpr the$$$ you

. I-IF: HAPP!:NS ltl BE A MODEL

I PllONEJ&gt; THEM THAT I

NE.VER.G•VES f{IS MOTHER

THE WOR.L.D'$ .LONGEST
SCHOOL BUSS~

01&lt;! ME' ANY

..i·

P~OB LEMS!

•&lt;

.'·

,_1 . '

spend when you buy your own home - plus, you gain an
Income Tax benefit, you build an equity and you are nof

I nsurect-E xperlenced

Work Guaranteed

bound by the terms of a rental agreement.
•

EXPERJ'

..

Let Us Show You How You Can Become A Homeowner We Do The Paperwork On Farmer's Home. V.A., F. H. A.,
And Conventional Loans.

-Wheel .Alignment

Wanted To Buy
OLD furnllure, dishes, brass
beds, etc. Write M.D. Miller,
Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio. Call
992-6271.
9-1 -lfc

$5.55

Come See Us At 971;, N. Second St.. Middleport.

·

Sale Prices Thru April
HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Low As
63.9S
RIDING MOWERS
As Low As · •
211.95
ECONOMY TILLERS
As Low As
134.95

LANCEWT

'

r"
Homes,
Inc.
lGreen Hill

FORTCHNUTLY, TH'
TH' LONGER
AHIS

992-7129
Evenings Call: 992·2534 992·3433 992-2510
Crow
Spencer
Dutton

606 E., Maln, Pomeroy, 0.

STUCK

HERE ..

"BOlLIN' POINTERS"
IS OFF ON T HAR
ANNOOAL NATURE
TRIP THIS m:.~:. "'--

WHICH GIVES M E
TILL MOI-JDAY

-AN'GITMIM
SAFEL'I

MORN IN' TO GIT
OUTA H EP.E--

REPULSIVE
AGI"-1 !! ·

-

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most ~ofitable
Time You Ever Spent.
Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!
ieWINSOR
«BUDOY

-tCHAMPION
iCVAN DYKE

.

EXPERIENCED
RadiatOr Service.
'

.ALSO
DOUBLE-WI DES

.

WINNIE WINKLE

.

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.
MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B.

TEAFORD
SR.

Broker
110 Mechanic St.
Pqmeroy, Ohio
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
bath, gas forced air furnace
with
air
conditioning.
Beautiful kitchen wllh cook
and oven units. Nice 2 car ·
garage. $14,500.00.

Mason Area

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
662-3035.
2-12-lfc

® 1HA'Tll FUNNY...uERRi
&lt;JINGLE AlD'IE AT A
TABLE FOR 'IWO ....
AND CANDY A'vON
DAWDLING BACK
AT 'THE OFF'CE .

From the Largest Truck , ,.
Bulldozer Radiator to the
~mallest Heater Core.

BtAETTNARS
Ph. 992-2143

.

.

------

WE'LL, IN ART C~ASS
TODAY, TE'ACHEI'I: SAIP

YIPEJ WHAT
HAPPENE:!?

WHY, 11'5 ALMOST A51H()UGH
SHE WANTED 10 GET
HID OF ME 50
SHE COULD

WE COULD P'AINT
ANYTHING WE
WANTED...

T' HINI?

SNOOP

A~N D/

Pomeroy

-------

ROOF PAINTING, roof repair.
BACK HOE and end-loader
Free estimates. Experienced.
work. Septic tanks Installed.
Oris Hubbard, phone 992·22311.
George (Bill) Pullins. Phone
4·14-31c
992-2478.
11-29-tfc SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
" Ditching . Electric sewer
cleaning." Reasonable rates .
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
·-Phone
John
Russell,
Complete Service
Gallipolis 446-4782.
Phone 949-3821
4-7-lfc
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford
CONCRETE
S·l·lfc READY -MIX
delivered rlghl to your
project. Fast and easy. Free
ROOFING, Spouting and
Painting . Also, metal storage eslimales. Phone 992-3284 .
building 10x10, concrete floor, Goegleln Ready -Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.
erected. for $300. Richard
6-30-lfc
Wilt, Phone 992-2889.
4·12-301c
O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
Commercial, residential 'and
NEIGLER Construction . For
induslrlal wiring. Phone 247building or remodeling your
2113.
home, Call Guy Nelgler,
. 3-12-llc
Racine, Ohio.
7-31 -lfc O' DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Cro.sroads. Rt. 124.
RALPH'S
CARPET
Complete front end service,
Upholstery Cleaning Service. June up and brake service.
Free
estimates.
Phone
Wheels balanced elec·
Gallipolis 446-0294.
All
work ·
Ironically.
3-12-lfc guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. 992-3213.
3-17-30tc
MINOR automotive repair .
Warren's Mower Shop. 248
Condor St., Pomeroy. Phone FOR expert electrical work call
992-7357.
' 992-5179.
4·6-241p
4-13-31

- - - - - -and
TREE -TRIMMING

GASOLINE ALLEY

You qot :a nave

lmoneui;' qit in t'

Gee car
raein'

RufuG·

THE BORN WSER
i't.co:;Ay /RAISE MY

PA'/, OR
RR6 ME 1SO I CAA r.r

LITTLE ORPHAN ANNIE

LE,A6T DAA'J SEI/ERAioiC.E!"
'" ANO 'OIHee-t'I'SONLY A MATTER
OF TIME UHTll OTHER UNSCRUPULOUS
~RATES LIKE CAPTAIN
AHAB DISCOVER OUR FEW POOR

GOlO·HUNGRY

GEN UINE TREASURES" ·

AT i1U..'5'AV!

111AT'5

IT'S THE WISH OF M'( PEOPLE THAT
lHE'f BE PRESERVED BY FRIENDS
LIKfi l'OUR.SELF TO

\ (

THE DAY WHEN

0

0

'/

liTUSTRIOUS !

Insurance

•;

removal. Fully Insured. Free
estimates. Call after 5 p.m., AUTOM;:iBi LE Insurance been·
cancelled?
Lost
your
Dick
Hayman ,
collect
Call
992·
operator's
license?
Coolville 667-3041 or Tom
2966.
Hayman, Chester 985·3509.
6-15-ttc
3-28-301p

PAPER-HANGING, painting,
plastering, dry wail. Arthur
Musser. Phone ·992-3630.
3-28-301p
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service. all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Aulhorlz~ Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
- - - - - - - - -3--29-lfc
HARRISON'S TV AND AN.
TENNA SERVICE . Phone
992-2522.
6-10-lfc

l

•
"l

·'

c3~Bo~y~?\t?.
!.~.
water

DAILY
AOROSS

ITEM: Tom Hill. He play'
Blood, Sweat &amp; Tears 1nd
Mama Cass. But he play
Moonlight Serenade an
Andy Williams too. Varle
Is the spice of our music.

:1. Brazilian

DICK TRACY

•J-. Cuch.ul a.lnn'n

Fl NE S'TONE-EIUT
AGAIN-IT MAY NOT
REGISTERED.

15 A

wife

•

WMP0/1390

:13. Fancy
dessert
(2 wds.)

island

expec ..

1. Old·Ume

tatlon

l6.Borest
16. Scottish

8. Sub -

ranean

note

county

9, Dark

H . Uprising

18. Mend

encounter

TERRY
YES, 51R!
lOU MUST
I

In

oldsonp
38.Whale

hunter
amino
33, Incessantly 39. Valuation
stone

31S. Therefore

42. Se• (Fr.l

APT 10 KNO'II

THAN
.

MUCII
Nl5 NAME. HEH,

I

I []

custody

4,Q. Pork

.

.

(2 wds.J
4.3. Advanced

·Yetlerday••

tiJ

+--+
WHAT THE

TO

~

..

ecstasy

Sitting .
and
drawing
4.6. Cavolry

~5 .

·

\
'
I
',•

..• .
'

..
'
'.
'

PIA'\i\ IS

iHIG

LETTER 1\IAT

\til! RECEIVED ~

weapon
DOWN ·

l. Bablsm
founder

2. Ancient
Persian
proVince

DAlLY CRYF.J:OQUQTE~Here's how to wcirk It :
.
ll

AXYDLllAAXR
LONGFEL:LOW

One letter simply stands for, .another. In thi s sample A ·Is
used ·for the three L's, X tor the two o·~ , etc. Single letters.
nposlrophe.ll, th~ Jength aild tormdlon' ot the word~ arc all

hints. Each day the code . le tter.~~ are dlt!erent . .
A Cryt•togram Quot8.Hon

· .A.LV WVCJVDA• SC X AP QRPJX , 'rD
AP PAJ'l'KV Al' FV Sl.CA XPN STDf,
. .A. .. FV Al.PNQLA AI' FV . .
' l'r•t.·~y'M

• DPM~CAVD

Cryploquotc: JGNORANCEJ lS DEQRADLNG·

I

l'"~·ahm.'H Srmlh ·aio·, ftw )

r

Wfi.l.. 1 611€%
l CAN IINDE~TA~D
KOW ~0~ FEEL ..

AT

THE 8Et:r FACTORY.

An1wer1 Cle.at..lighted peoplt!! 1eldom "{1178
u.,.! for tJa;. -"IYIWASH"

••. Fill with

CAPTAIN EASY

SAID

~E \\O~ERS

Jumble" GASSY JEWEL . CAUGHT IIDIUG

slowly

(C llrH K'inlf

•

/BIJAIJE

33. Nigerian
city
36. Take lnlo

ONLY WHEN FOUND 1l{ COMPANY \VlTH: RlCREa, ·SOHOPENHAUER
.

0

I K J

specialty

• .Based on family Income of ss,ooo wllh three
c~lldren, taxes and insurance not Included.

M2-70M or ' 1·261·

... NOT THAT AAYSOOY'5

HEARD

.

.,

two
31.Embark

Will Buy ANew
3 Bedroom Ranch Home

Park &amp; Sycamor~ Sts. ,
Middleport, Ohto

37. Refrain

oct

20.Perlod

JEMO ASSOCIATE5

'28.Ralnfonned
trenches
32•.Ascorblc

34-. :Mi.!!ehlevous 41. Precious

Do·
Lillse

With wall-to-wall carpeting, •fumliiUiri
siding, F.A. gu heal, built-in coblnets,
etc. etc.

'h-

25. Cockney's

&amp;nd

19. Comedian1

~S.On

;,.__

26. Through

10. IAceratc

19. Forensic

AI 2~ Park St. ~ Middleport, or ,r.all AI
Moody, 992-7034 •. tor appointment.

Boy

6, Medlter-

amount

See Today ,

24 .

1Usoloted

17.Large

PER
MONTH*

as

wine

Catltornla

shrine

U111Cramble these foor Jumbleo,
one tetter to each oquare, to
form four ordinary word1.

turcs,

5, City in

v---~---:-:=::-"Jll.Texas

ON THE ~ER llANO HERE

ftfl~h\fl.!}&gt;H ~ -~ Joi:::•:U:::t ....J C

~ \!:1,1 ~~~~ *"'~-

22. Ma-

seaport
G. Deserve

Cleland Realty

Louts,

'

;

WHAT DO YOU HAVE FOR

* ASTACK OF WORTHlESS RECEIPTS! ! *

All Weather Roofl.ng &amp;
Construction Co.

SENTINEL
CARRIER

*

J

'

•

•

NEW .. OLD WORK

News Notes

.

")

i

THE $$$ YOU PAY IN RENT?

WE WISH to express our sincere thanks to ali our friends
POMEROY
and neighbors for their many
J. W. Carsey, Mgr.
kindnesses and expressions &gt;f
Phone 992-2111
SYRACUSE - 4 bedrooms,
sympathy during the illness·
bath, dining with !I replace.
and death ot our brother and
Full basemen!. Gas furnace. 3
father, Robert Clifford Steele. Wanted
1968 GMC 'h- ton pickup, 23,000
porches
, Modern kitchen ,
Sister, Elizabeth Gardner,
mile&amp;, new tires, camper top, ·
paneled
.
Large garden.
PATIENTS
lo
care
for
in
my
and the children.
good conditi on. Phone 992Asking
513,000.00.
home.
Phone
Mason•
773-5712.
4·14.-liP
4-6-12tc 2805, Eldon Walburn. 3-28-tfc
MIDDLEPORT
COM·
MERCIAL
LOTNext
toM.
Notice
GARAGE to rent . Phone MODERN I'.(ALNUT stereoand
R.
Only
53,500.00.
Chester 985·3840.
radio combination. 4 speaker
LEG CRAMPS? Try Supplical
4-13-3tc sound system, 4 · speed MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedroom
with calcium, only $1.98 for a
changer, separate controls .
bottle of 60 tablets at Nelson
one story house near stores.
Balance 568 .3 1. Use out
Drugs.
Bath, large kitchen and
budget terms. Call 992-3352.
4-14-llp Help Wanted
dining area. 2level lots. Only
4·8-6tc
$5,000.00.
GARDEN CLUB
------GUNSHOOT, Forked Run
MAPLE STEREO -radio COUNTRY HOME - 4 nice
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
The Nehacllma Garden Club
WANTED
combination AM&amp;FM radio,
April
18,
12
noon.
bedrooms, modern bath, and
met on )lfonday evening at the
four speakers, 4 speed
4-14-3tc
kitchen. Gas furnace . Drilled
· automatic chc;nger, dual
Alex4uiJ!en Memoria)Bullding Easter dinner guests of Mr.
well . Good cellar. 57 ACRES
volume control. Use our
Minerals . Asking 510,1100.00.
for their regular monthly and Mrs. Russell capehart were REDUCE safe and fast with
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
budgellerms, or pay balance
meeting.
Mrs.
Harold Mrs. Diane Self and two sons,
water pills, Nelson Drugs.
of $83.29. Call 992-3352.
76 ACRES - 20 tractor land.
Bumgarner, vice president, Colwnbus; Mr. and Mrs. John
4-14-601p
4-8-61c
Good implement shed and
presided at the meeting.
Slsaon and famlly, Mason; Mr.
cellar. 8 room older home
PICK up merchandise
TREAT RUGS right, they'll he
with 4 bedrooms. Running
The Mother • Daughter and Mrs. Charles Cohen, WILL
and take to auction on a
a delight If cleaned with Blue
water. 513,500.00.
Banquet wlll be held at the Pomeroy.
percentage basis. Call Jim
Lustre .
Rent
electric
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.
Hartford Methodist Church on Mrs. Barbara Van Vranken
shampooer, Sl. Baker FUr- NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY
Phone
7
42·441-1.
niture, Middleport.
BEFORE
THEY
GO
May 3 at 6:30 p.m. Committees . and chlldren of Florida are
9-23-tfc
4-14-6tc
HIGHER.
CALL
US
TODAY.
were appoi~ted : Decorating, visiting her parents, Mr. and
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
AUCTION - WHEN? Each ' - - - - - - - - - - - ' REDUCE excess fluids with
Mrs. David Simonton, Mrs. Blll Mrs. Blisa Wllson.
ASSOCIATE
Friday night, 7 p.m. Where?
992-3325
Grinstead and Mrs. A. L.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry
FLUIDEX
$1.69.
LOSE
Hayman's Auction House, MA'N FOR yard work. Prefer
WEIGHT safely with Dex·A·
Sprouse ; Program, Mrs. Roy Bwngardner and three sons of
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7 one who owns his own mower. Diet, 98 cents, at Nelson 24 ACRE FARM, LOng Bottom,
Jones, Mrs. Robert Layne, Mrs. MoundsviUe, W. Va. visill!d
Pomeroy
Middleport By- Write P. 0 . Box 588, Mason, Drugs.
with or without farm
W. Va .
·
pass
.
machinery . House with 3
Harold Bwngarner.
Easter witli his mother, Mrs.
4-14-llp
4-14-0tc
2-7-lfc
bedrooms, dining room, living
Three members from Hen- George Bwngardner in Mason.
room, 1'12 baths, enclosed
NERVOUS?
Can't
sleep?
Try
derson Garden Club presenll!d
Pvt. Paul D. Johnson, Jr., WILL D.O tailoring and TAKE CARE of lawn on Lincoln
back porch, wall to wall
"Sleepers ."
Satisfaction
Hili. Must have own mower. guaranteed
upholstery. Phone 992-3561.
the program for the meeting. stationed at Fl. Knox, Ky .,
or money back.
carpeting. Aluminum siding, ,
Clinton Fisher, Lincoln Hill , Only 98 cents. Nelson Drugs.
3-31-30tc
awning, storm windows and
Members brought a salad, visited his parents, Mr. and
Pomeroy. Phone 992-5427.
4-14-llp
storm doors. City water.
4-14-61c
aandwiches or desse~t and a Mrs. Paul D. Johnson, Sr., and I WILL not be responsible for
Selling due to Ill heallh. Phone
buffet was served to those at.. his sister Mrs. Merlin H.
614-985-3938.
any debls conlracted b{ HOUSEWIVES heeded for 16 FT. WEAVER skiff, 3'12-hp.
anyone other than mysel . product testing. Write Mrs. outboard motor, pair of oars,
4-9-12tp
tending.
Tr
J '
d
Ste h
SPECfAL SERVICE
acy, r., an son,
p en
Evelyn Blythe, Box 133,
Libman. 34 W. Carpenter, anchor, two life jackets, $200.
Racine, Ohio.
On Sunday, April 18, at 9, 45 Michael, ~ver the weekend.
Phone Mason n3-5147 , '
Athens,
Ohio.
4-13-3tp
4·14-lfc
4-14-6tc
.. a.m. worship service at the New
'
.
.
.
Naturalized
ANOTHER big load of mer- --.- - - - - - Raven Unill!d Methodist Church
RIDING lawn mower. Phone
chandlse at Harman's WOMAN for companion to Chesler 985-31129.
608 East Main Street
In 1917. at tbe outbreak of
several events will be taking
Auction
Friday
nigh.
Good
.
elderly
lady.
Light
POMEROY
4-14-31p
place. District Superintendent tbe Russian rev o 1uti on',
clean electric range, break·
housekeeping and cooking:
TUPPERS PLAINS- Route 7
Rev. Connie Dic~ens and wife Rachmaninoff, the Russian
fast •et, one sel ot glassware.
Phone 992-5397.
- 1 LEVEL ACRE, 7 rooms.
14 FOOT fiberglass boat, 50-hp
composer. fted the country
4·12-31c Mercury motor, trailer, skis
Be
sure
and
follow
the
crowd
bath, 4 · bl!drooms, cellar.
will be pr-esent for the and came to the United
garage, city water and deep
to Hayman 's Auction.
and
life
jackets.
Phone
992dedication of several different States. He became an Amerl·
well. 59,308.
7008.
.
4 13 3
worship accessories. New hymn can citizen in 1943, the year - - - - - -- ' - tc For Rent
4-14-51c
POMEROY - 2 story trame, 6
OVEN
FRESH
bakery 5 ROOMS, ,bath, unfurnished
books, new pulpit, lectern, of his death.
rooms. 3 bedrooms. bath,
producls . Jimmy's Pastry
apartment
with
basement,
751
'pulpit chairs, bapUsmal font,
London's Worst Smog
$3,750.
Shop, N. 2nd Ave., Mid·
Brownell Ave., Middleport. Auto Sales
offering plates and new chime
One .of the worst smogs in
dleport. Phone 992-3555.
Phone 992-3045.
VOLKSWAGEN Karmann NEAR CARPENTER- FARM
3-28-30tc
system will be dedicated to God. history occurred in London
4-13-3tc 1966
Ghia . Excellent economy car. - aboul 170 acr&lt;is. 3 barns,
The second part of the service · between Dec . 4 and 9, 1952,
Good condition. Phone 992-. silo, pond, 2 wells, other
will be devoted to the and caused the deaths of REVI.VAL starling Mongay, 6 ROOM farm hous.e wllhln one 5570.
buildings. Home has new
Aprrl 19, at 7: 30 p.m ..
.
about 4,000 persons, acc6rd·
mile of Dexter. Come to
4q.6tc
Alum .. siding, 4 bedrooms,
Freedom
Gospel
Mission,
sacrament of .baptism and tng to Encyclopaedia Britan·
Dexter Grocery store and ask - - - - - - - bath.
$20,000.
Bald Knob Evangelist, Rev.
reception of new members. nica.
tor Ealrly Dowell.
Roy Deeler, Coolville. Rev.
4-14-31p 1969 BUICK LeSabre. 2-dr .
TO BUY OR SELL
Infants and adults will be
Lawrence Gluesencamp Is Ihe - - - - - - : - - hardtop, power steering ,
CALL US
baptized and new members will
pastor. 'The public Is invited. TRAILER LOTS. Bob'~ Mobile
in the Middle Ages. the
power brakes, air, 18,1XJO
. HEN:l.f~g~AN~
'
4-13-6tc Courl, Rt . 124, Syracuse, " miles. Excellent condition.
be received by transfer and people of E u r o p e made
Office 992-2259
. . 992 2951
Phone 992-2288.
.
by
reading
the
Bible.
maps
Oh
profession' of faith. At 12 noon
10.
•
• Residence 992-2568
11 .1o.11....
AT-TENTION ladies! Would you
4-2-lfc
,
~
.
4-lJ.6tc
ever)'one is asked to come back Certain medieval maps were
like to · try a wig on in the
made square because the
and
balh,
1959
CHEVROLET,
6
cylln~ers,
'
HOUSE
privacy
qf
your
own
home?
to the church for a covered dish Bible speaks of the four corTRAILER , Brown's Trailer
standard shill. Phone 992h •762 rooms
You
can
.
.Jus·
f
call
us.
We
also
fellowship .dinner. Everyone· is ners of the ,earth.
Park , Minersville. Phone,992'
7001 .
P one 4 ·:1613. ·
have the 'Mink Oil Kosmellcs,
4-11 -121c
welcome to attend.
3324'
4·14-41c
, Kosc.o t, . of
course.
4-9-6tc
Distributors. Brown's. Phone
LEGAL
NOTICE
.'
Middleport 992-stlJ.. .
. _2_R_O_O_M-, -,_b,a7th-,. -f-ur7n-ished 1965 -CHEVROLET 6el Ak, 4- .
NOTICE ·OF
'
.
·
.
'
.
12.-31-11&lt;
door iledan, Radio, while wall
Personals
APPOINTMENT
apartment, Mulberry ·Ave., · tires. Standard .Jransmlsslon.
. Cue No. 20423 tiOME sewing . Phone 992-5327.
·Mrs. Lee Gibbs of Hartford,
Pomeroy. · Reference.s 6 cylinder. Phone 992-3863 or
Estale of Esther E. Gibbons
required. Phone 992-6698.
'. 992-5844.
preSident of the New Raven' ~eceosed.
.. · \'
'
3-30-301c
·
4-13-lfc
4-14-3tc
Notice
Is
hereby
oven
-that
4·8-6tc
Garden Club, and Mfs. Donald
William Wayne Gibbons of the
•
F. Roush attended the recent Village of Middleport, Ohio, ~as
TWO OR three bedroom home, 1969 INTERNAT.IONAL HOUSE, . 1640 Lincoln His.,
state meetlllg ' of 'the West been duty appointed ExecUtor ~----------. ~--Cottage Road. Syracuse.
Travelall, air conditioned, · . Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
of the Estate of ·Esther E..
1
'
10.25-tfc
VirgJnllt Glrden Club, Inc., held Gibbons, deceosed, tate of the 1 Classified Ads , 1 Adulls .only. Phone 992-5133.
poWer
steering,
power
3·2-lfc
brakes. automatic Iranat the Greenbrier Holel In White Village of Middleport, Meigs 1
Counly, Ohio:
· I
I
. smlsslon. Equipped lo pull CONVENIENT but secluded
Sulphur Sprlngl.
Crrdltors· arr required to 111e
I TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33, trailer, $3,000. Phone 992-2121, · building lois on · T79 al Rock
. brIng you
1 lil-mlle north of new Meigs
Springs, Within walking
lAIIIer OhUnger IIIII returned their claims wilh told fldicuary ·I
Ben Ewing.
with in four months. •
:I
High
Schoo).
Phone
992·2'14]
.
d111ance
•of Mel~s High
4·14·61c
.
t.O bll home after ha\'IDJ eye
Date~ this 101h day of April ' ·I
8X t r8 C8Sh
I.
3-5-tfc ·
·
·
School,
a
5 ml~ute drive from
,
I
I - - - - - - - -llll'lel'1 at the ,HGbir Jltdical 1971. .
Pomeroy. Clll or !lOe BUI
·.1964 f'ORD Galexle, 's m or will
F. H. O' Brlen
·rar'
I
Witte
weekends, or after 5,
1
FURNISHED
and
unfurnlslied
trade
for
motorcycle.
,
Larry
Probage Judge
1
p.m.
weekdays.
Phone 992·
apartments.
Close
to
school
.
_Sellers.
120
State
St,
ReY. 'James MOJ waa a
. ofsaidCountv ·I shopplna: sprees .I
6887.
'·
P
hone
992-S..34i
Pomeroy
.
(4l t•, 21, 28, 3tc · ________ ,.. _____ I
b
viiiJtGr a( 81,
· ·
10-18-llc
?-1-llc
• 4· l4-31p

Oln....

$

i

THINK ABOUT ITI

Dinette set. M;&gt;ytag square '
wringer washer, twin
' -(OUARANTEEDrinse tubs, all in good conPhone 992.2094
dition. Phone Chester 9853840.
Pomeroy Home &amp;'Auto
4-13-3tc

Friday and
Saturday Nights

$1.50 for 50 word·' minimum
Each l!lddltlonal word 2c.

8ZZZ

!I'
I1

Business ·Services

tub

and the Night Riders

RATES ·

DURN MY HIDE!!
)I. CLEAN FERGOT TO

LAND 0'

21" ELECTRIC window fan.

Notice

INFORMATION .
DEADLINES

Bzzz

!

For Sale

1968 FORD
$1895
'i2 ,Ton 8' Styleside Pickup, V-Bengine, std. trans., custom

CROSS
M'f HEART
AN' HOPE
- TO .OIE,
LOWEE'Z!/

�,, 1 ' •'

''~

'

'

1

'' ~~-r1~rT~r-~--~-&lt;·~~~----------~--·r--------------------~----~---------------~~~--~-·~~·~~~- --~~--~--~------~~--~--~.~--------~-.,-----------------------------------------------~-----,r-----------------------~~------~--~~------------------~--~----·--~------~----~--------~----------~--------~~

.

'

~

16 - The DaUy sentinel, i·: ..ddleport-Pome~oy, o.';Apri114,1971

.

.

.

Rules Could Hurt Good Strippers
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
president of the Hanna Coal
Co., the largest coal mining
firm in Ohio, conceded Tuesday night strip mine legislation
would probably help reclamatio~ efforts but would penalize
responsible operators.
Ralph W. Hatch of Cadiz,
Ohio, testified before the House
Environment Committee, which
is considering strict strip mine
legislation to require quick and
thorough reclamation.
" It probably would helf'
Hatch said of the bill sponsored by Rep. A. G. Lancione,
D-Bellaire, "but you'd be penalizing the operators who are doing· the job."
Hatch said his firm has been
reclaiming strip mined land
properly under existing law
since it began operating in east..
ern Ohio in 1940.
"Our company has spent
thousands upon thousands 'of
dollars and hours in devising
new methods of reclamation
back when it was not very
popular among coal operators
to reclaim their land," Hatch
said. "We have a deep moral
responsibility to the citizens of
our area."
He said there are some irresponsible strip mine operators

Arn"tstrong
Claimed
Early Today

in Ohio who are 'not meeting
the requirements of the law,
but" he said his firm has even
gone beyond the requirements.
Some Changes Needed
"If what you've done is desirable, then you've made a
good case for changing the
Jaw," observed Rep. Kenneth
B. Creasy, committee chairman .
"There have to be some
changes in the law," Hatch
conceded.
Creasy said another hearing
wiil be held Thursday to complete opposition testimony on
the bill. After that, it will be
placed in a subcommittee for
further study which is expected
to include consideration of provisions in an even more encompassing biil offered by Rep,
Sam Speck, R-New Concord.
Hatch presented a series of
color slides showing his company 's reclamation efforts in
Harrison, Jefferson and Belmont counties, and said con·
trary to adverse publicity, Hanna Coal has done an "excellent" reclamation job over the
years.
He said 27,000 acres have
been reclaimed - 80 to 85 per
cent of it well enough to support grazing and trees.

..
A benefit for George
Thompson, Pomeroy and
Dave Dunn, Vinton, Kidney
Funds will be held Sunday
from 1 to 7 p.m. at Meigs
Junior High School in Mid·
dleport.
Eight professional bands,
country and western, from
Marietta, Parkersburg,
Cheshire and Ga!Upolis will
be partiCipating.
Arrangements for the
benefit were made by Pee
Wee Parsons and Barbara
McGrath. Members of the
Meigs County Sheriff's
Department wm be accepting
donations. There will be no
charge for admission.

.. Hatch said immediate back- Hatch said .the bill before the
filling of strip pits to the origi- committee would cost his firm
nal contour of the land would an extra $1.25 to $2.50 per ton
pose a hardship to his firm, of coal to reclaim the land. He
w~Ich sometimes is forced by· said smaller operators have
economics to leave open pits told him it would cost them be'and go to more lucrative coal tween SO cents and $1 per ton.
seams, only to return later.
Hatch declined to voice acBill Provisions Costly
cepU.nce of specific provisions
"We plan to reclaim every of the bill, but indicated .a
bit of land we've stripped," he compromise might be worked
told the committee. "Our goal out.
is to try to reclaim the same , "I've been in business a long
number of acres each year that time, " he said, "and l realize
we affect."
life is a series of compro-

COLUMBUS (UP!) - More
than 300 bills, including Gov.
John J . Gilligan's public employe negotiations measure and
controversial "Ohio Plan" for
universities, hit the floor of t:Je
Ohio House of RepresenU.tives
Tuesday as members slipped
new bills m under the deadline.
The curfew on new legislation
was unposed by House Speaker
Charles F. Kurfess,.and except
for administration programs,
the House must approve any

One for Write-in
Only one candidate filed a
declaration of intent to run as a
write-in for any post in
Pomeroy and Middleport in the
Middleport primary electiOns
as of the 4 p. m. deadline
Tuesday.
He was Raymond M. Baker,
Middleport, a republican, who
filed his petition to r~n as a
write-in candida te for the
Middleport Board of Public
Affairs.

New Hearing Set

,.

t DRIVE-IN

f

BANKING

further bill introductions this
session.
Amid the flurry of offerings,
the senate and House each
passed a p~ir of bills.
The Senate unanimously accepted a timely bill sponsored

!

!

!

f FMMERS BANK

f
ii
f
i

and SAVINGS 00.

ouse

f

f.

Fires Prompt LegislaUon
It was the ~year-old Deil&lt;l Queen's fir"ilrone superstructure
which almost forced her off tbe river. Two disastrous fires on
cruise ships prompted legisla lion requiring passenger ships to
bave metal superstructures,. ·
Green Line went to the National Aeronautics and Space Adnmustration (NASA) for some belp in keeping the Queen on the
rivers. Removing all of lhe wood in the superstructure would
bave meant virtual destruction of the 44-yearo(lld boat.
Instead the Queen received a coaling of a fire-reU.rdent paintlike substance, developed and tested by NASA which guarantees
the boat to be fire.proof.
Other wOoden areas of the boat have been scraped free of old
paint and resurfaced with fire-&lt;'el&lt;lrdent Aibi 107X intumescent
paint.

PEKING (UP!) - Premier
Chou En-Lai told a visiting
American U.ble tennis team
today their trip to Communist
China means "a new page" in
relations with the United
SUites.
Chou said that ••more Americans will come in the future ,"
including correspondents '•in
batches." U.S. journalists were
allowed to accompany the 15member team into China.
Today's meeting with Chou
was the first such audience
granted Americans since the
Peoples' Republic was esU.bUshed 22 years ago.
'A New Start'
The Chinese premier asked
the American players "to
return home with regards of
the Chinese people to the
American people." He met for
nearly two hours with table
tennis players from the 'United
States Canada Colombia
N igeri~ and Brilaln, but almost
half the session was devoted to
the American group.
China's top diplomat, looking
fit and much younger than his
73 years, made remarks on a
wide field of subjects ranging
from his opinion of hippies to
the subject of u.s. correspondents in China .
To the Americans, the largest
organized group of U.S. citizens
ever to meet with Chou slnce
he and Communist Party
Chairman Mao Tse-tung esf&lt;l·
blished the Peoples' Republic of
China in 1949, the premier said:
"In the past, there were lots
of American friends in China,
and you have made a new
slarl Americans will come in
the future, including correspon·
dents in batches.
'New Page Has Been Opened'
"In the past there were many
Sino-American exchanges,
These have been cut off for a
long time but with the
accepting by you ol China's
invitation to visit our country, a
new page has been opened in
relations between our two
peoples."
While Chinese and American
television crews clustered
around him with cameras and
lights, Chou said "this renewal
of friendship will meet with
approval and support of our
peoples. Do you agree?"
His reply was a burst of
applause from the American

News•.• in Bri·efo

~0. XXIV ~O._l_

~ING TORN

DOWN is this two story, old frame home
on Butternut Ave. In Pomeroy. The house, owned by John
Sauvage, retired Pomeroy businessman, is next door !I' the
Sauvage residence.

..

r---------------------------,
! News ••• in Briefs !
1

By United Press lnlernaUooal

I

Eban Hoping for Suez Accord
ISRAEU FOREIGN MINISTER ABBA EBAN said today he

hoped for an accord with Egypt on reopening the Suez Canal. Such
an agreement, he said, could "be a defusing" of the tense atmOijlbere In the Middle East. Eban, In an Interview with the
Jei'UIIIlem Poll, 11ld Egypt and the 'Soviet Union stood to gain
more from reopening the canal, but Israel' and the United SUites
would reap enough benefits to make a settlement possible.
"The canal is the only place at which the Soviet • American
equation is superimposed on the Israeli · Egyptian equation and
lherefore it is a problem not only for the Middle East but for all
mankind," he said., Eban said he hoped for an accord because
"Egypt is more likely to agree to a canal opening than to the kind
of overaU settlement that Israel would accept."

Cabbies Turn on Union Bosses
NEW YORK- NEW YORK CITY CAB drivers, disgruntled
over a recent fare Increase which many claim has cost them
money, turned on their union leadership Wednesday night in a
brawl which broke up a mass membership meeling at the
Manhattan Center. More than 3,000 taxi drivers were jammed
Into the midtown auditorium when the melee broke out after
dissident cabbies demanded to know why they were now taking
home less money, even though taxi fares bave Increased by
nearly 50 per cent.
Union President Harry VanArsdale Jr. was driven from tbe
auditorium stage under a bail of folding cbalrs hurled at the
veteran laiJ9r leader and his associates by drivers called together
to ratify their new contract.

ELBERFELD$
•

'

'

for girls who know the name of the game

Guardrail Ripped Out
Heavy damages were
reported in a one-car accident
Wednesday at 9 p. m. on
Country Road 5 north of
Bradbury school.
The Meigs County ' Sheriff's
Dept. said Bob~y Joe Rathburn,
31, Rutland, driving north,. lost
control of his ·auto when the
steering gear failed. The

vehicle tore out 90 feet of
guardrail , then broke off a
telephone pole.
Rathburn ., suffering
lacerations and bruises, was
U.ken to Veterans Memorial
Hospil!ll by private car where
he was treated and released. No
citation was issued.

Ameri~ans

April22nd.

PARIS (UPl)-North Viet..
nam today announced a threepoint list of basic requirements
long rejecred by the Allies and
said they must he accepted In
Washington and Saigon if there
was to be peace in Vietnam.
Xuan Thuy, North Vietnam's
·chief delegate, laid the rephrased version of standing
Communist demands before
Allied negotiators at today's
109\h Vietnam conference session. Thuy showed up today for
the first time since Feb. 25.
Thuy demahded the ~omplete
withdraw a£ of American and·all
other foreign troops from South
Vietnam by June 30, or an
"accepl&lt;lble" tirilel&lt;lble for
withdrawal. He insisted the
United States must fully halt
bombing raids on North Vietnam and urged again the
toppling of the Saigon regime
and its replacement by a
provisional coalition cabinet.
All these demands have been
proposed in various forms since
the start of the peace talks in
January, 1969, and firmly
rejected by lhe Allies. The
Allies rejected them again
today.
Thuy, fresh from consultations in Moscow with Hanoi
leader~ atten~ing the recent
Soviet party congress, made no
departure from the long.
condemned eommunist negotiating offers.
He -urged U.S. Ambassador
Davie K. E. Bruce to "give a
serious response to the points
we bave just raised."
Thuy and ' his Viet Cong
colleague, Madame Nguyen Thi
Binh, bitterly criticized President Nixon's April 7 sU.tement
upholding American policies of
gradual phasing out of the U.S.
armed forces and their replacemen! by South Viefllamese
troops under the Vietnamization
program.

"'

'Endurables'

'·

NeW shipm ent of spring Oueen caSutils dacron and co tton .
First cl ass.fraveters and a happy cho l~e l o~ your pctlve life.
Perfect' fit In switch and mh. par ts of stay crisp, s.o11 release

permanent press Dacron Polyester and cotton. Pull ·on
Pants' Tunic . Culottes, Pl acket front knit tops. A·l ln.e Skirts.

Womens and Girls
Ready To Wear'
on.the 2nd Floor'

Pq nt Shirts, Jam,a•ca Shorts, Pant Dresses . Pant Skirt$, Knll "
stripe s leeveless Top, plain sleeveless top and Casual .dress
lorry doth Shor,t6 and rap. ' ,
'

IN ,SIZES 8 10 20
r-~,_

....... _.

.,-.1~

. .... _ _ _ _ _ _ ._....,,_ ,,_,, _, _ _ _ __

-~berf~l!s,". --l~n.,.....Po_m_ero..:;_,_}
Save Now • llbert.lds Spring Fumltu,. Sa.. 0.. 1M 3rd flo4111'
•

This paint swells upon exposur:e to name and forms a black,
carbon-like cushion of insulation that protects ,the wooden
surface from beat and flame.
Some unexpected discoveries were made as workmen
scratched and scoured away accumulations of old paint. Brass
and bronze castings were uncovered under the guilded main
sl&lt;lircase railing. Oak and mahogany woodwork was restored to
its original finish ,
But fire.proofing the old paddlewheelcr was only a beginmng.
Although the Queen will never see the ocean, she's ready for
the experience if need be.
'
.
Carries
Large Rafts
The craft has been equipped with six large aircraft-type mflatable life rafts, like those used for emergency evacuation of
aircraft downed at sea. Each raft can support 50 persons.

New Drive
SAIGON (UP!)-South Viet..
namese forces supported by
U.S. planes and artillery today
opened a new drive to break
the Communist threat to the
central highlands. Fighting
eased around Fire Base 6 but
the South Vietnamese commander said North Vietnamese
objective remains '"to capture
Fire Base 6, then Dak To and
Ben Het."
Action around Fire Base 6,
located 12 miles from both Laos
and Cambodia, slackened to
sporadic shelling and sniper
fire, prompting Maj . Gen. Ngo
Dzu, commander of the II
MiliU.ry Region, to say "the
Communist operation appears
to he slowing down."
Dzu said the Communists' ISday-old central highlands offen-

Flying to Shanghai

second series of "friendly"
matches tonight. The Chinesethe world champion table tennis
team- won the first series of
matches Tuesday 10 to 7.
There alse will be a "jubil~e
cup" competition between older
Chinese and three over-40
American officials with the
team, including Tim Brogan, of
Detroit, vice president of the
U.S. Table Tennis Federation;
George Buhen, also of Detroit,
Damages Light
president of the Michigan Table
' Auto Collis•'on Tenilis Association,; and Richm
ard Miles, a nine-time AmeriDamages to two cars were can tab!~ tennis champion.
light, but the driver of on~ of
'
them was cited to mayor's court
following an accident on West
AUTOGRAPH DAY
Main St. at 7:25 p. m. WedThe Rev. W. H..Perrin, pastor
nesday.
'
Pomeroy police said 111. ·car of Trinity Church in· Pomeroy,
driven by Donald C. Brown, will be on the second floor of
Middleport, pulle,d from the Elberfelda all day Saturday to
DairY Valley at the,bridge and autograph copies of his book,
collided with a car driven by "Look 'Who's Killing God,"'
Debora Conklin, Athens, which went on sale in area
Wednesday , The
traveling easf. There .were no stores
injuries. BroW!) was cited to autograph day is sponsored by
court on cbarges of failing to the Meigs County Ministerial
Assn.
yield right ,of way.

SHANGHAI, China (UPI)American table tennis players
bid a fond farewell to newfound . Chinese friends in the
capiU.l of Peking today and
flew to Shanghai, Communist
China's largest city.
During the two-hour night,
the Americans were told by
Chinese officials accompanying
them they will play their

Queen Casuals' Dacron• 11nd cottbn

MEIGS THEATRE.

$500,000 Worth of Space Age Gadgetry
The sea survival kits, sails and fishing gear have been left out
since the trip from the Queen to the shore would, at most, be a
matter a few hundred yards, making chances of being left adrift
for days a rather slim proposition.
The Queen, like all sternwheelers, runs on steam. But when
the steam is off, the Queen isn'tdead in the water.
A complete diesel-iJOwered electrical system has been insUl lied so all electrical systems, including lighting and air conditioning , will continue to function.
New electrocally powered pumpa for fire and water mains and
new automatic sprinkler systems also are a part of the boat.
An air compressor was insl&lt;llled to provide imitatiOn steam
pressure to operate the engines and pumps to get the Queen out
(Conlinued on Page 6)

____
PO_M_ER_OY_·M
_ID_D_LE_PO_RT_. _OH_IO_ _ _ _T
_H_
UR_SD_AY_._AP_R_
IL _15_, _
19_
7l~_ _ _P
_H_ON_E_99_2·_215.6_ __TE__
N_CE_NTS

'•

j

years f!&amp;odel is loaded wit~

North
Won't
Budge

Teachers

Thursday 9:30 to 5:00
Both Friday and Saturday
9:30 to 9:00 P.M.

But this

Devoted To 1M lntereJf$ Of The Meigs-Mawn Area

Cho.u Offers New Page

t
t
ti
t
t

.,

By TERRY FLYNN
CINCINNATI (UP!)- The Delta Queen is the last overnight
paddlebilat plying the Mississippi and Ohio Rivers. When she
makes her first voyage of 1971 on Aprill6, she will look much
like riverboats of 100 years ago but will carry $500,000 worth of
sp11ce age hardware.
The Delta Queen was ordered off the rivers last ye;~r because
her wooden superstru~lure did not meet federal safety standards . PetiUons to save this piece of Americana came from every
cwner, and the vener~b1e old paddlewheeler was exempted
fr!B'O the 1966 safety-a~ act-with some condiUons.
Since-Jan. 4, the Queen has been resting in dry dock at New
Orleans, wtiere workers "lifted her skirts and replated over IS
per cent of her iron bottom," according to a spokesman for her
owner, Green Line Streamers, Inc.

P&amp;H Society
Will Meet on

...................
t A Thought t
t ·For Today "'t

.f. ·It's* Quick!* Easy*

By United Press InternaUonai ·
COLUMBUS - MRS. EDYTHE KLUMPP of Cincinnati,
whose death sentence was commuted In 1961 one day before she
was to be exe~uted will be released from prison May 112. Mrs.
Klumpp pleaded guilty to the 1958 slaying of Louise Bergen, ~e
of her boyfriend, William Bergen. Mrs. Bergen had been shot to
death and her body set afire.
•
Mrs. Klumpp, sentenced to die in the electric chair by the
Hamilton County Common Pleas Court, later told the jury she ba(!
taken the blame for Bergen. She was to be executed Jan. 5, 1961,
but Michael DiSalle, governor at the time,listened to her story the j
day before while she was under the Influence of sodium amyta!, ~
the sa&lt;alied truth serum.
COLUMBUS - THE ATTORNEY general's office and the
Ohio Water Pollution Control Board are _preparing court cB!e~ I
against three towns and two companies lor alleged violation ol
anti-pollution laws. C. Ray Marvin, an assistant attorney general, 1
revealed Tuesday during the regular meeling of the stat~ board
that the office plans to prosecute Chesapeake, Coal Grove and
Obetz, the Pr:ide of Liam Provision Co. In Allen County and
Bernard Industrial Park in Summit County.
by Sen. Howard C. Cook, R.' the support of symphony asChesapeake and Coal Grove are located along the Ohio River.
Toledo, prohibiting anyone pre- sociations and other musical or- Obetz is a suburb of Columbus. Martin also said some type of legal
paring income U.x returns from ganizations.
.
· action, perhaps injunctive, was being considered agajnst
disclosing information about the
The House unammously pass- Broadview Heights near Cleveland; A&amp;P Cannery Co. of
returns.
ed a bill ailowmg cou;ts to sus· Bloomdale ; Wilkoff co. of Youngstown, and Forrest Hills Utility
The Senate also passed a bill pend sentences for misdemean- Co. m
. L'ICk'mg county .
authorizing counties and county ors, even If the sentences have
CLEVELAND _ FmE LATE TUESDAY night swept a 52school district.-; to contribute to already been Imposed.
yearo(lld downtown hotel that had undergone a $1 million
remodeling in 1969. Fire officials said at least six persons were
killed in the blaze at the Pick-Carter Hotel. The fire which started
about 10p.m. in a banquet room off the main lobby spread quickly
and killed two men, two women and two childdren. Fireii\en were
checking rooms early today for other possible victims.
Hotel General Manager Andrew T. Girunan said "it just
happened so quickly we didn't know what to do. It spread faster
PEKING (UPI) -Chinese table tennis players defeateij
than you would expect a fire to spread." About 135 firemen with
the visiting Unlled States team 10-7 Tuesday in the first
more than 20 pieces of equipment, including six hook and ladder
sports event involving Americans in Red China. The U. S.
trucks, fought the blaze.
played without the services of America's No. 2 player John
WASHINGTON -FIRMS THAT PREPARE income tax
TannehiU, 19, Middleport, Ohio, was was ill.
returns for wealthier Americans are barred from selling or
"We offer blm sympathy and regards," the announcer
disclosing personal data. Firms catering to the less affluent are
said as be introduced the team. Tbe sports sU.dium was
not. In separate interviews, this situation was acknowledged bf
slruug with banners proclaimlng in three-foot letters
Officials of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the Federa.l
"Welcome to the U. S. Table tennis team" and "Long live the
Trade Commission (FTC) and by tax profession leaders.
.
Unity of Peoples of the World."
The lack of controls on the largest and fa~test growing segment
of the tax preparation business has prompted an FI'C in~
vestigation of allegations that some · firms sell their clients:
players with the Canadians, always go through var ious names, Income figures and other personal information to mailing
Colombians, Nigerians and Sri- experiences and this should be list houses, ~ores , insurance companies and others.
·
allowed ...
tish joining in .
Chou On Hippies
'Doing One's Own Things'
After his chats, conducted
"If through doing one's own
•
through an interpreter, Chou things, one discovers it is not
\,
said there was still time to correct, then one should
answer some questions.
change. This is our opinion and
Long-haired Glenn Cowan, 19, only a ·suggestion ," the premier
(Continued from page I)
a labie tennis player from Santa added.
earlier," said City Fire Marshall James Ebersole.
Monica, Calif., said he was
curious about what the premier
Everybody fo.r a Dossier.
thought of the hippie movement
WASHINGTON -SEN. EDMUNDS. MUSKIE said today the
m the Umted SUites today.
Without changing expression, (Continued from page 1)
FBI spied on last year's Earth Day rallies, including one he was
Chou ~aid, "I am not very clear football coaching position were involved in. He said this kind of thing threatens to smother
about It. Second, I can only give in attendance. Larry Ritchie freedom with fear, and suggested the FBI's activities be macte
coached the Eagles last season.
you a superficial opinion.
subject to review by an independent board.
. ~~
Present for the meeting were
. "The youth ?f the world are
The Maine Democrat, in a speech prepared for the senate,
dissatisfied w1th the present board members Don Mora, I. 0. released a document on official FBI sl&lt;ltionery which deU.Ued
situation and are looking for the McCoy , Ernest Whitehead, Earth Day activitie~ in Washington April22. He said there were 40
truth . In the course of changes Roger Epple and Oris Smith, to 60 similar Intelligence reports filed on other Earth Day obin the ide~logy of your people, Supt. John Riebel, Pr:incipal servances across the nation. "If antipollution rallies are a subject
vanous thmgs occur before the Bob Ord , Meigs County of intelligence concern, is anything inunune?" Muskie asked. "Is
changes take form," the Superintendent Robert Bowen there any citizen involved in politics who is not a potential subject
and C. 0 . Newland, district
premier said.
for an FBI do~ier? "
·
"In seeking the truth you clerk.

Bills Flood

She may look like RiverbOats of 1871,

the new Delta ueen
opens season April 16

' jn
mining machines as written
the bill.
He also disagreed that cer·
lain areas are impossible to reclaim under the present law;
told the committee contour
backfilling would cause erosion;
said lime neutralization was
costly but would help eliminate
acid mine drainage, and urged
authorization of water Impoundments on stripped land.
Boyer also said pre-planning
-of mining operations is a necessity for proper reclamation .

1

Alonzo Armstrong, 65, of 855
Third Ave.; Gallipolis, died at
3:45a.m., today in the Holzer
Medical Center on Fourth Ave.
He had been in falling health the
past eight months, and In
serious c&lt;indition the past six
weeks.
PLEASANT VALLEY
Mr. Armstrong was employed
ADMISSIONS : Mrs. Charles
by the Ohio Pr:oduce Co., for 4S
Bissell, Chester, 0.; Charles
years. He was born Sept. 7, 1905,
Whittington, Point Pleasant;
In Gallipolis, son of the late
Mrs. WilHam Hunter, CotEdward and Mary Allen Arm·
tageville; Mrs. George Dabney,
strong.
Henderson;
Debra Woomer,
He is survived by the
SHOW SATURDAY
Point Pleasant; Mrs. James
following children: Mrs .
.The Tuppers Plains school Jeffers, Glenwood ; Linda Marr,
Howard (Phyllis) English,
boosters
will sponsor a variety West Columbia; Neal Thom2s,
Pomeroy; Mrs. Helen Anshow at the Tuppers Plains Henderson; Mrs. Melvin Bush,
derson, Gallipolis; Mrs. Colston
(Donna) Collins, Vinton ; elemenU.ry school auditorium Gallipolis Ferry.
DISCHARGES
Roy
Alonzo, Jr., Philadelphia; BIU, Saturday night. CurU.in time is
8.
Oldaker, Mrs . Genevieve
Gallipolis, and Mrs . Ervin
Taylor, Mrs. Emmon Thomas,
(Hattie) Reed, Springfield,
Mrs. Ralph Fisher Sr.
Ohio. Twentyo(lne grand and
MARRIAGE LICENSE
BIRTH - A son to Mr. and
four great-grandchildren
Franklin Lee Ryan, 24,
Mrs
. Michael Pnce, Midsurvive.
Ravenna, and Barbara Ann
dleport, 0.
The following brothers and Clark, 18, Middleport, Rt. 1.
sisters survive: George,
Columbus; Mrs . Ernest
TWO FINED
(Levotta) Smith, Columbus;
Fined in the court of Pomeroy
8 DIE IN BUS CRASH
Mrs. Henry (Naomi) Williams, GUADALAJARA, Mexico Mayor Charles Legar Tuesday
Gallipolis; John, Gallipoli's; (UPI) - Eight persons were night were Keith E. French,
Mrs. Howard (Eleanor ) Bates, killed early today and ten others Middleport, $2S and costs,
Columbus, and Mrs. Lawrence crit(cally injured when a conviclion of squealing tires,
(Edna) Marshall, Columbus. speeding bus smashed into a and $50 and costs on reckless
One brother and two sisters group of passengers who had operation, and Robert K.
preceded him In death. He spent just left a bus disabled in a Williams, Pomeroy, $10 and
all his life In Gallia County.
previous accident.
costs, reckless operation.
He is a member of the Paint
Creek Baptist Church.
Funeral services will be held
2 p.m., Friday at the WaughHailey-Wood Funeral Home
I
with Rev. Elbert McGhee ofPT . PLEASANT - Once April26, 1971. Legal counsel for
ficiating. Burial win be in Pine
more a hearing - on a 3-1 vote all par ties concerned in the
Street Cemetery.
- has been scheduled to hear hearing shall be notified that
Friends may call at the
ch,arges
against Mason the hearing shall he on confuneral home between 2-4 and 7County's School Superintendent tinuous days except Sunday,
9 p.m., Thursday.
l. Brooks Smith. Also Tuesday until it is concluded." Withers
night, an assisU.nt principal joined in with Fields and
was appointed for Wahama Eshenaur to approve the motion
High School and two delegations while Siders was the lone
PLACE TO WRITE
Racine residents wishing to were heard in executi ve dissenter.
lodge complaints against air sessions as the Board of Supt. Smith [llet a ~nag when
pollution allegedly being caused Education considered a long he recommended an assisU.nt
by Foote Mineral at New Haven agenda in a regular meeting. principal for Wahama High
With one of the five-member School, Virgil Burris Jr., a
·are asked to write Carl G.
Beard, Director of Air board absent, BiU Withers was regular teacher.
After objections, Smith
Pollution, Charleston, W. Va ., made temporary chairman;
Mrs. Mae Cleland, village clerk, Ted Stevens, president, was recommended Jack Lovejoy of
reported in the hospital.
Hamlin and on a motion by
said today .
Just before the long meeting Eshenaur and a second by
ended, member Ray Fields Fields, the board gave its spread a motion concerning the proval in a 3-1 vote. Siders did
hearing: "I move that the not agree .with this action. This
Board of Education meet on appointment becomes effec tive
...
The quarterly meeting of the
April 24, 1971 at 9:30 a. m. in the tOday.·
Meigs Pioneer and Historical
Mason
County
Courthouse
to
Early
in
the
meeting
the
: Keep your face to the
Society will be held next week,
-tl sunshine and you ca nno1 -tr hear the charges agamst Mr. l. .board went "into executive Thursday, April 22, at 1 p.m. at
-11 see th e shadows .
-11 Brooks Smith that were sesssion at the request of Dr. the Episcopal Parish House in
presented to the . board during Jack Buxton who appeared Pomeroy.
- Helen Keller
the Special Session on April 7, before it stating, "Because of The top two winners from
i971. I further move that the the nature of what l have to each school in both the
hearing be brought to a speedy discuss."
historical essay and speecll
conclusion if at all possible on
contest will be invited to attend
April 24, 1971, and if not possible
the meeling. The Rev. SU.nley
to be continued at 9:30 a. m. on
Piattenburg has secured the
. BISHOP COMING
The Rt. Rev. John Krumm, judges. Essays and speeches
Cincinnati, new bishop of the should be turned In to The Rev.
-II
Fridays Only
:
Southern Ohio Diocese of the Mr. Plattenburg by April 15.· ·
The Dr!v~·ln Window -11'
Episcopal Church, will mak~ If there are entries from the
Tonight &amp; Thursday
-11
1s Open '
. -11
his first visit to Grace Episcopal Albany school from Meigs
Aprii14-1S
-II
9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
-II
NOT OPEN '·
.Church in Pomeroy Thursday County students, they' could be
I Continuously)
evening. A poUuck dinner at the turned in lhrough the l:Ounty
Friday
thru
Tuesday
parish house at 6:30p.m. will be superintendent's office. '
...
.
...
-t&lt; Other &amp;Inking Houts 9 lo -11
held after which time the new The quarterly mae ling Is open
Apri116-20
... 3 and 5 to 7 u usual on :
to everyone in the county inbishop wilt" speak.
: Fridays,
:
Well Disney's
terested in the background of
WILD COUN:rRY
Meigs County history as a basis
(Tochnicolorl
THEY'LL SERVE
for further development, acStave Forrest
The lad(es auxiliary of the cording to C. ' E. , Blakeslee,
Ver~ Miles
~
Chester Fire dept, will serve at president.
(Gl
POMEROY, OHIO
the Pr:ice sale Saturday in
NICK; ,
LOCAL TEru&gt;8
+:
Member FOIC
·. :
Tilt Orphan Elephant
Chester. Anyone wishing to· Temperature -in downtown
Member Fedtrat
il
IT~hnlcolarl
donate pies may take them to Pomeroy Wedntaday at 11 a.m.
R-ve Sysltm
il
SHOW ITARTS 7 P:M.
the sale or lea~ them at the was 48 degrees under sunny
........................
home of any member.
skies.

t

mlses."
James F. Boyer Jr., a geologiSt with Bituminous Coal Re·
search, Inc., Monroeville, Pa.,
said Ohio's present Jaw is adequate if properly enforced.
"Your present law conU.ins
the principles for adequate reclamation," Boyer said. "If you
enforce it, I don't think there
should be any problems."
Royer urged fle:x,ible backfilling requirements to permit reclamatlon "as soon as possible"
instead of 300 yards behind the

Overnight Wire

In Peking the Chinese players
were on hand . to see the
Americans off. There was a
good · deal of handshaking,
exchanges of a~dresses, and
promises between members of
the two teams to write.
In Shanghai, which has a
population of 10 million , the
welcome was as enthusiastic as
in Peking. Shanghai players

PEKING (UPU) - John
Tannehill, the table tennis
player from ·. MJddl~port,
Ohio, wbo previously said he
tmgbt slay longer In Red
China than his fellow
American team members,
said II all depends on liis
health.
Taonehill, the No. 2 ranked
lable teuis player in the
United States, said Wedoesday be wat feeling better
· after being 01 the day before.
· He attended the inteniiew
given by Premier Chou. En·
La!.

and officials were at the airport
to welcome the team members,
and everybody posed for
photographs.
On the 20-minute di'ive into
town from the airport, the
Americans saw rice and wheat
fields on either side of the road,
and when they noticed a
number of young people '!'ilh
packs and umbrellas used for
protection against the sun one
of the Chinese officials explained they were students
hiking to nearby communes on
one-day exc~sions.
The first order of business for
the Americans in Shanghai was
a banquet in their honor offered
by Yang Chin-ya, head of. the
local branch of the •China
ASsociation for Friendly Relations with Foreign Countries.
In a toast, Yang referred to
U:Ie friendship between , the
Chinese and American people .
Graham Steenhoven, of Detroit,
head of the U.S. delegation ,
reciprocated by praising the
Chinese for the "warm friend·
ship" shown towards them
throughout their tour .

ened

sive was, nevertheless, active.
Base 6 has long served as a
barrier to Communist designs
on Dak To and Ben Het, both
central highlands population
centers.
MiiiU.ry sources said the 28th
(Continued on Page 8)

THIS AREA, ~ Mecbanic St. and Butternut
Ave. In Pomeroy is being used by some as a solid waste
dump, obviously not the "handful type." The village has now
posted "No Dumping" signs at the location to discourage
those who would convert the area into a dump. About two
years ago, Dr. Ray Heaton and others proposed a communitypark on this site.

·. ..

2 Meigs Singers
In State Choir
Singing at Rio
The Ohio Youth Choir
which is scheduled to tour
Europe this summer will
present a concert Sunday at 3
p. m. at Rio Grande College.
Making up the group from
Meigs County are Anita Fultz
and Duane Will. From Kyger
Creek Is Joyce Swisher. The
choir will be in England,
Wales , Belgium, Holland,
Switzerland, Denmark and
France during July.

PROMPTEIIS ,- For the cast of "Perfect Idiot" to be presented by Meigs Senior Class
mell!bers Friday at 8 p. m, are, frorit row, 1-r, Sherry Turner, Debbie Harbrechl, Judy
McKnight, Debbie Laney, and Cathy Bunce; back row, Chuck Hamahs, Paul Card, Jeff Tyo,
Bob Couch and Becky Triplett.

'

·-{

.

'

SENIOR CLASS PLAY CAST - Taking roles in the
Senior Class Play at Meigs High School are, front row, 1-r,
Ellen Rice, Patty Jeffers, Becky Houdashelt, Carol
Hargraves, Jennifer Goble, andNa,pcyThdmpson; back row,
Mickey ChUds, Chip Haggerty, Duane Will, Richard Dean,

I

,

•

George Hawley, Ed Brown, FrankUn Rizer, and Gary Ellil. •
Not present was Nancy Jo Mayer. The three-act comedy, •
"Perfectldlot", wiU be presented Friday alB p.m. at the lll8h
school under the direction of Mrs. David Bowen asailted by
Jeffrey Wyckoff, student teacher from Ohio Unlveni!Y.
t

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="75">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="1733">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="8927">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="8926">
              <text>April 14, 1971</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
