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•

'

,News Notes

.

-Mothe(s Day Is Next Sunday

By Alma Marshall

You ' ll find a wonderful seledion of gifts for your .mother

on hor· day next Sunday. Sho~ every floor . careluii.Y.
E lberfelds salespeople will be glad lo help you lond the gofl
you want, help you with sizes - colors - styles --card and
gift wrap selections. Shop every week day 9: lO a.m. to S

p.m .- Friday and Saturday ,,Joa.m. lo 9 p.m.

SOME GUYS HAVE ALL THE LUCK - little Mark
Burson, 6, wiU be backed by this line of "baby faces" in the
Salisbury Elementary School minstrel show to be held at 7:32

p.m. Friday and Saturday. With Mark, left to right, are Jena
Welker, Joy Baker, Unda Williams, Camille Swindell, Carol
Morris, Mary Ridgway, Angela Sinclair and Leslie Cole.

The Mason Homemakers meeting Tuesday at the home of
Mrs. Matilda Noble discussed forthcoming events including
Mason's birthday celebration June 19 and the. Mother and
Daughter banquet.
Mrs. George Carson presented the devotionals from Acts,
lOth chapter, 35th verse, and readings "Love Cannot Harm" and
"Know Your Foreign Friends." Mrs. Alburtice Young conducted
the lesson on "Nicaragua." A sample of Nicaragua food was
served by Mrs. Young.
The group agreed to have the Mother and Daughter Banquet
Thursday, May 6, at 6:30 at Roush's Drive-ln. The treasurer's
report was given by Mis. lloyd Williams. Arrangements were
made to take pictures at the Mother and Daughter banquet.
The hostess served refreshments to Mrs. George Carson,
Mrs. Laurene Lewis, Mrs. Ray Fox, Mrs. Alburtice Young, Mrs.
Uoyd Williams, Mrs. George Hudson, Mrs. J. Marshall, Mrs.
Evelyn Stewart, and Mrs. Landon Smith.
MR. AND MRS. GEORGE Zuspan, Jr., are announcing the
birth of a daughter on April 6at Holzer Medical,Center. The infant
named Stacey Darlene, weighed 6 pounds and 3 ounces. Mr. and
Mrs. Zuspan are the parents of a son, George, age 5. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. John L. McDaniel, Mr. and Mrs. George
Zuspan, Sr., al!_of Mason, and great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Emory Hudson, New Cumberland.
THE APRIL MEETING of the New Haven Women's Society
of Christian Service was held at the home of Mrs. Ruth Pickens.
The Rev. Mrs. Achsah Miller of Graham United Methodist Church
COilducted a program on "Patterns." The society was reminded
that God gave us a pattern of life, his b~:laws, the Ten Commandments, and His book of policies and principles is the Bible .
Scriptures used were to enable members to lind "pieces of a
pattern" that might help each to be more like Jesus.
The fourth Friday evening has been set as the meeting dale,
and the May meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Brenda
Merritt, New Haven.
The group decided to make artificial corsages for the
Mother's Day program.
Refreshments were served by Mrs. Pickens to Reverend Mrs.
Miller, Mrs. Erma Roush, Miss Anna Allen and Mrs. Ada Clarke,
Mrs. Woodrow King, Mrs. Brenda Merritt, and a guest, Mrs.
Gladys Gilbert.
THREE AREA persons attended a Postmasters Seminar at
Jackson's Mill from Sunday until Wednesday. Attending were
Dallas Walker, Mason's postmaster ; Margaret Ann Blake ,
postmistress at Clifton, and Bell Shields of Lakin.
MRS. GLENN SHINN, Leon, recently observed her 80th
birthday. The custom of open house was observed. Several of
her sons and daughters, grandchildren and other relal(ves attended. Cake, coffee and punch were served to Mrs. Paul
Graham, Mr. and Mrs. Herman Shinn, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Shinn
and Jill, all of Pt. Pleasant; Mrs. Herbert Capehart, Winfield, W.
Va .; Mrs. Claudia Prunty, Mrs. Granville Smith, Mrs. Leonard
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Shinn, Lowell and Alisa, Mrs. Vernon
Keeler, Mrs. Uonel Keefer, and Mrs. Frank Boles, all of Leon,
and Teresa Byer.
WEST VIRGINIA Artists and Craftsmen Guild met April 30
and May 1at Cedar Lakes near Ripley. Mr. Walden Rousjl, guild
president of Pt. Pleasant, presided.
Elected to the board of directors were Otho "Tubby" FitzRandolph, Ohio River Rd., Pt. Pleasant ; Beatrice "Billie"
Bannerman, and Ancil Cutlip.
Tubby FitzRandolph has told in a news letter of two wood
hand-earved eagles he shipped off to be given to dignitaries in
Washington. Only one was accepted and Tubby has been

two ways of life: Israel and the
U.S.A. How might we profit
from this knowledge and experience? To what extent are
St. Paul Lutheran Church is "European Trip '!or Fun" - Christians responsible lor their
announcing a series of family Slide presentation by Mr. David own happiness and for the
night programs beginning May Bennett. Mr. Bennett's happiness of others? Special
9 for three consecutive Sunday itinerary is a secret. Come and emphasis will be placed on the
evenings, May 16th, and 23rd. see where he went and hear family.
The buffet luncheon will be
The Faith and Ufe Institute what he did. It'll promise to be
served
at 6 p.m. The .speakers
begins each evening at 6 with fun .
dinner an~ the public is Invited Program for 9th, lOth, 11th program will begin at 7 p.m., a
to attend. You may register by and 12th graders - May 9\h worship service will be held in
contacting Mrs. B. R. Vance, "Masculinity and Femininity"; the Church Nave at 8 p.m. and
Box 201, New Raven, W. Va. May 16th - "Sexual Values in each program will end at 8:30
phone 882-3125. Cost of Society"; May 23rd - "Your p.m. The registration fee is to
registration is $!lor adults or 5(1 Personality : The You Others cover the programs and a free
cents per Sunday and 5(1 cents Know." This is a Teenage will offering will be taken at the
per series for Jr. and Sr. High Personal Development Series dinner for the cost of the meal.
School students or 25 cents per and will be led ~Y Pastor Arthur Plan to attend and share in this
/
Sunday.
Lund of St. Paul Lutheran family night program.
The program follows: A Church in Pomeroy , Ohio .
FELLOWSHIP DAY
nursery for infants to Kin- Pastor Lund interned at the
May Fellowship Day will be
celebrated by the Bend Area
DAVID ROACH
dergarten age; Kingergarten, Massachusett s General Church
Women United on May 7
NEW HAVEN - David
1st and 2nd grade students a Hospital in Boston lor his
special program of arls and Clinical Counseling training. He here at 7:30p.m. at the St. Paul Roach, New Haven, made the
crafts Mrs. Dwight Sayre will brings a wealth of technical Lutheran Church. This year's Dean's list at Canton Eleclead May 9th and 16th and Mrs. expertise in the counseling theme, "Focus on the Family in tronlcs Technology Institute
David Simonton will lead on area. There will be filmstrips a New Era," will explore the at Canton, Ohlo, the second
qualities which can make the term. David graduated from
May 23. Third, fourth and fifth and discussions.
The adult program is as family a "family for others. " Wahama High School last
grade students a special
Since the first May year. He visited his parents,
program of Arts and Crafts with follows : May 9th - Rabbi
Mr. Bennett and Mrs. Robert Lewison, Chaplain for Jewish Fellowship Day observances in Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roach,
Thomas as leaders. Mr. Bennett Students at Ohio University. His 1933 it has been traditional for over the weekend and
on May 9th and Mrs. Thomas topic'lolllbe "Israel" : The state church women across the returned on Sunday.
May 16th and 23rd.
of modern Israel, its country to use the first week of
For sixth, seventh and eighth relationship to its neighbors, May to lift an emphasis on the - - - -- - - -- grades: May 9th - "Mexican Middle East Crisis. Israel creative and healing relations·
Odyssey" - A travelogue film Today. Rabbi Lewison lived in among people in every com- brought out by the School Board
slides and exciting tales from ' Israel for two years; during munity. Hen~:e each year ,. was that a good strong P.T.A.ls
the Mayan Civilization of that time he studied Israeli life Church Women United has an asset to the school and that
new ways to express parents and teachers should
Mexico. Mr. Lloyd Roush will and history. Special emphasis found's love
for all men through work toge.ther. AU agreed that a apologizing ever since.
share his experiences on his on family life In Israel. May God
h t
te
h uld b
He said, "Well, I crowed before sunup."
new ea mg sys m s 0
e
He didn't learn that it had not been accepted until the middle
recent trip. Indian history bas 16th - Mr. Jose Riov. Graduate just relationships in society.
Mrs.
carroll
Adams,
Jr.
and
number
one
for
the
sch~l
been a hobby of Mr . Roush's so student from Israel now Mrs. Jack Flesher are serving followed by the need of a multi- of February . He said, "i'm sorry for telling that story (or lie) but
come· and listen to his studylngatOhlo University. His
co-ehairmen of the program pu rpose roo m~·· .
t it was unintentional."
fascinating tales. May 16th - topic will be "Life in the Kib- as
and meeting for the evening. Mr . Bob Gurtis gave .a repor
He went on to say, "The eagles had to be approved by a group
"European Tour with a Pur- butz." From early childhood Special music and en- on the property corrumttee. He of (let's say) experts before acceptance. I got a list of things that
pose," .- a one hour trip to through adolescent years the
. England, France, Italy , children oflsrael are reared not tertainment will be provided in stated that they had mstalled were wrong. They &lt;\urn near picked the eagle clean. When I got
Austria, Germany, Yugoslavia, In the home but in a school addi lion . to the regular the new ~erry-go-round. and him back, I sat him on the dining table and every time I 8at down
Belgium, Holland, and Swit. called the "Kibbutz." There are program. At the conclusion of that there 1s to be a. meetmg of to eat I'd read their criticisms and sit and look at him. It didn't
zerland, Slide presentation of as many different kinds of the evening refreshments wiU the property comm1ttee before help lilY appetite, but it helped my dieting. I've lost 12 pounds and
that durn eagle looks like a hippopotamus to me now. He's been
Wahama students' trip abroad. Kibbutzim as there are schools. be served in the social room of the n~xl P.T.A. meeting.
Presented by Mrs. Russell What is life like in a Kibbutz? the church. All church women Officers for the commg school removed to a dark corner, and some of these days when I get
Capehart, May 23rd
What happens to the parents? in the Bend Area are cordially year were elected: pres~dent, time, I'm going to start "Operation Transplant," to make an
Do the children like this way of invited to attend the meeting. Job~ Wolfe; vace president, eagle of him .
NEW HAVEN PTA
Sheba Goheen; secretary, Hllda
"When I getthrough, !11 have to chain him."
life? Wbat can we learn from
Preceding the New Haven Smith; treasurer, Judy Hesson.
MRS. J . ROBERT ROACH, Mason, recently entertained with
their experiences? May 23rd Dr. Kris Randolph - Coun- P.T.A. regular monthly Mr. Hershner's homeroom won a birthday party in honor of her son, Larryray's eighth birthday.
Tonighl &amp; Thursday
seling Psychologist at the meeting, the Mason County the room count. Refreshments Games were played and prizes won by Karen Brown and Estel
MayH
Center for Psychological Board of Education members were served to those attending. Lavender.
NOT OPEN
BIRTH ANNOUNCED
Ice cream, cake and orangeaid were served by the hostess,
Services at Ohio University. took a guided tour of the
elementary
school
building
.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ronald
Hester
Mrs.
Roach to Mary Ann Tripp, Melany and Dewayne White,
Friday &amp; Salurdoy
.The topic "Stress and Strains of
May 7-8
Family Life." The American Upon completion of the tour the of Mason are announcmg the Debbie and Dean Holstead, Sherry Russell, Karen Brown, Randy,
TAKE THE MONEY
family today. American meeting was called to order by b~th of a 6 pound, 5 ounce b.aby Ronnie and Estel Lavender, Kimmy Johnson, Roger Roach, June
&amp; RUN
the vice-president, Mrs. Shelia gar!. The baby ~as born ~pnl 26
Marriages - , their problems Goheen
I Technlcolor)
at Holzer Med1cal Hospatal and Ann Hutton. Sending gifts were Robbie Keyes, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Woody Allen
and resolutions. How might
·
Devotions
were led by Her- ha~ be. enJ name d Stacey Ann · Randolph, Stella Mae Randolph, Sarah Zuspan and Connie Lewis.
Janet Margolin
husbands and wives improve
NEWLY ELECTED officers of the Mason Grade School PTA_
A Rarity! " M
bert Richards. He read the !39th Th IS IS the flr st Child .of the
their
relationship?
What
to
do
TO COMMIT A
when the children are "grown Psalm and then led the group in Hesters. Mrs. Hester IS the are president, Charles Kitchen; vice president, Robert Barnitz;
MUROER
prayer.
fo~mer Beverly Burns ~f secretary, Mrs. Charles Stanley, and treasurer, Mary Roush.
up" and gone ? Personal values.
&lt;Technicolorl
Following the salute t? the Cbfton, W. Va . Mr . Hester IS
MASON COUNTY HOMEMAKERS Council soon will have-a
Louis Jourdarr
Communication. Interpersonal
flag the vice president in- employed as a techrucaan at the cookbook published with recipes from homemakers that will be
Senta Berger
relationships.
"f'lt"
The Adult program will give trod~ced the members of the Holzer Medical Clinic. Maternal sold. The money earned from this project will be used for the
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
you an opportunity to sompare Mason County School Board to grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. benefit of the Homemakers council.
all present. The meeting was George Burns of Clifton, W. Va.
You can count on it - the recipes will be excellent. Do purturned over to Rev. William Paternal grandparents are Mr · chase a book for 25 cents that contain recipes from Mason County
DeMoss who served as and Mrs. Eugene Hester of New Homemakers. I foWid every one of them to be very good at a
moderator for the panel. The Haven. Male_rnal great - tasting party.
;,
panel from the P.T.A. consisted grandmother IS Mrs., Freda
Here Is one of the reci(ies, which Is called LeR'I on Jello Salad.
of Mrs. Donna Thompson, Mr. Henry of Clifton and paternal
Use 3 apples, 3 bananas, 1 can crushed pineapple (drained).
Bob Gurtis and Mr . Neil great-grandparents are Mr. and
Mix this.into llarge package lemon jeUo.,Let set.
Haymaker and the School Mrs. George Hester of ~ew
Beat 1 egg, add \i cup sugar, 3 T. flour ( 1 T. butter, and the
Board Members Mr. Harry Haven and Mrs. W. F. Momsett pin~pple juice from drained pineapple. COOk until thick. Cool.
of Huntmgton, W. Va.
1
d
Siders, Mr. Bill Wlthers, Mr.
MRS STEELE DIES
Whip package of Dream Whip and add to cooed mixture . Sprea
Ray Sh1elds, Mr. Charles
•
· '
on top of jeilo and sprinkle with nuts. The nuts can be omitted.
Eshenaur. Mr. Ted stevens was 'Word has been recetved of the
absent due to the fact that he 89
death 0 ~sisMa;~ Stee~e, ~ge
THE QUILT SHOW sponsored by the Cultural Arts ('om00
was in ·'the hospital.
;
ipthrl aaug
d. ehtema
et Eer mittee of the Mason County Homemakers Council was •~ success ,
ds Mr.
th Stevens homew
ransent hls regar ' to e P.TA dicott New York Mrs Steele with 90 quilts displayed, as were cushions. The quilts showed
The
topic
for"Edthe tipanel
' n .m1'il hea1·th for ·severa1 excellent workmanship by the homemakers and others.
TONIGHT, MAY 5, 1971
.
.
. has bee
dISCUsston
was
uca on m
d
On the last day of the show a musical program was presented
New Haven Elementary years an passe away 1n a
Sch 1.. Th
ts ked th nursing home in New York by Mrs. Edward Sayre, Letart, and a group from Wood school
'Fhe New Ultra-Modern
00
t. ·
edpathrebn adstr. d toe Burial was held April 27
played the autoharp. Mrs. Sayre played, several selections on
ques 1ons an e oar ae
.
.
.,
'
1 th
A · t N18gara Falls, New York.
her accor,..on.
supp Y e answers.
porn
She was the mother of Mrs.
The cultural ar~ committee is composed of Miss Hattie
Floyd carmacll of New Haven Jordan, chairman; Mrs. Otis Randolph , secretary; Mrs. Walter
and made her home with Mr. Speer, member and Mrs. Aaron Fowler,. helper. Also assisting
and Mrs. Carmack for niany and helping oo make the show a success was Mrs. VIcki Keefer,
years. Among those surviving Mason County Homemakers Agent, and many club members.
are her granddaughters, Mrs.
MRS. NELLIE Schwarz, Mason, received many gins and on
James Layne of New Haven and her 93rd birthday on SatiD'day. Besides gifts of ro5es, a birthday
Your Dependable
125% E. Main
Pome!oY
Mrs. John V. McGrew, Jr .. of cake, hoiiJecoat, bedspreads and hankies,' she received many,
. Deoler Far
Buckhannon, W. Va., also many cards.
'
.
All Mixed Drinks and Legal Beverages
formerly of New Haven.
·'
HOURS: 10:30 ~.M. to 2:30A.M.
AMD
.
are the world's According to Chrislian leg- way to Calvary. lt became
Your Host and Hostess.
birds. They end. the carnation appeared the symbol o( mother·love
to fly as on~th for the first time and, for that a·eason. was
Mr. &amp; Nrs. George F. Jarvis
p.... 992-2550
chosen
Anna .Ja(vis a•

New Haven Social Events

)I

TONI
TODD
The princess
loves the
peasantry

everybody,". These teachers were trying their hand at some of the hundreds of ideas passed on
ID them for application in their own classrooms. '

held hostage in the )lome,
Wilson followed instructions,"
Kilburn said. "Upon his return
home he found his wife and
daughter in the basement, tied
but unharmed."
·
The robbers also took one of

Wilson's cars. It )l'as later fowid
abandoned here. Wilson, contacted by UP! early today,
would not comment on the
ransom.
"I'm sorry, but I cannot
answer any questions at this

Band toTagOnSaturday
The Eastern High School
Band will hold tag day in the
Eastern Local School District
Saturday.
Proceeds from the annual
event are used to help defray
expenses incurred through day
by day operations not covered
by the present budget.
Residents of the district who
have donated towards' the new
uniforms are asked to display
the tags they received so band
members will know when they
visit those homes.

The schedule for Saturday
includes Reedsville at 9:30;
Chester at 1 p. m. and Tuppers
Plains at 3 p. m.
Frank
Wooters, band
director, said that it was his
desire to march iq parade for
each of the three communities
Saturday but that a pressing
schedule of event,s at the school
has made this · impossible.
However the band hopes to
compensate for this as soon as
possible, Wooters said.

time/' Wilson said. "l'm very
tied up right now ."
Kilburn said Wilson told him
the men entered the home
lhrough an unlocked door at
about 10 : 1~ p.m. and kept Wilson and his daughter Susan, 18,
in the living room while they
waited for Mrs. Wilson who was
out for the evening.
Wilson said when his wife
came into the house he explained the situation to her.
The wife and daughter were
taken to the basem•nt where
they were tied up.
Wilson told Kilburn the men
were waiting for the nights receipts from the Lebanon Raceway to be delivered to the bank.
The money was taken to the
bank - under police escort at about II : 30 p.m.
At midnight, Wilson said the
men took him to the barik in
his own car and the money was

removed from f4e night depiOljil~ ;
strong box.

Wilson was allowed to go
the bank alone but the ro~: ,.
carrying two pistols and a riflli; ' • .
reminded him that his wife and ·.
daughter were tied up at ~ '
house.
,. •
Kilburn said Wilson went in~ ·
the bank, disconnected the bur.
glar alarm, got the money anjl
drove to an intersection of Obl!i
63 where the robbers told hliJI
to "kick the money out of tbe
car ."
,
Wilson said he followed ~hi!&gt;
instructions, the men left bin(
and he went home and freed lim
wife and daughter.
.
Wilson told police the men.
wore stocking masks, were wlite and did not threaten nor
barrass the family .
He said they seemed mainly
concerned that Mrs. Wilson·
could get upset.
·

\ ,,

Elberfe~\

Come to
Busy Ready -To Wear [kpartment .
Let us help you with
your gifts for
Mother's Day.

Devoted To 1'lae lnlere.ll Of 1'lae Meiga-Maaon Area

See our beautiful
se le c tion
of

NO. XXIV NO. 16

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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

women 's dresses

THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1971

PHONE 992-2156

tEN CENTS

pants suits - all

we athe r coa ts
culotte dre sses sk1rts - blouses -

Har

sk oot er skirts
sho rts- tops- slacks
- beautiful coor din a te group s ba thi ng su it s -

'

dusters. Co me in lo ok

a r ou n d .

Capable
sa le speo pl e

to

ass ist you . Use our
sPnsibl e cr edit.

MRS. GRETA SUI'I'LE, left, and Mrs. Nellie Vale
display work completed at the workshop. Both county scbool
supervisors they arranged the art workshop.
'

'
50 m
bright
kaleidoscope
of colors and
patterns
to
choose

w0 rk sh 0 p
' '
.
students ~~ng . the. teachers
who are diggmg m siX hours a
day to pick up all tips available
in the field of art - long
neglected in the county schools.
Using simple materials and
supplies provided by Benney
and Smith, Inc., New York,
Miss Angevine is passing on
(Continued 00 page 4)

TEL AVIv (UPI)-Secretary
of State William P. Rogers flew
in from Cairo today with a new
Egyptian peace plan and told
the Israelis they had met the
agonies lof war and now must
meet the agony of making
peace.
It was a tough statement
from Rogers who had conferr,-,ct
earlier in the day with
Egyptian President Anwar Sadat, aDd he quoted President
Nixon as saying Israel's security can come finally only from
peace ,with the Arabs.
The. Israelis were being
equally tough in their statemen Is. Tel Aviv newspapers

from

for Mother's
Day.

from Nixon to Mrs. Meir, said
he was convinced there may
not be a "better opportunity for
.a long time to come" to settle
the Arab-Israeli confilct.
Nixon's letter, he said,
"states his conviction that
Israel's security in the long run
can only coine from a final
binding peace settlement with
ber Arab neighbors ...
"This search for peace will
be the central theme of the
talks I look forward to having
with your prime minister, with
Foreign Minister (Abba) Eban
and with others of your
government, as well as with
members of the Knesset.

~!et:~~~ re~:~~;t e~~~ fr~k ~~e~~~:y ..~lks

to be

Re UDI•0 n
May 29th

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL senior girls appearing in Sun·
day's 2:30 concert by the Meigs Chorale include from the left,
Carol Hargraves, Mary Ferrell, Debbie Crow, Ellen Rice, Lu

..

•'

Ann French, Anita Fultz, Teresa Nlclnsky, Mary Bradbury,
Glenna Sprague, catliy Bunce, Twila Clatworthy, Mary ,.
Brickles, Mary Lou King, Peg Story, Jane Wiae, S!lerrle .•
Turner aqd Donna Willer,

Roge~s made to soften Isr.ael's .
. • ..
policy toward the 'SueZ Canal
'
and other IS&amp;ues dUrtng this last
·:··:::... ..
and most crucial stage of his
Middle East mission.
"Israel has experienced and
met the challenge and agony of
Meigs High School arl
waging war," he said in an The 1971 reunion of the students wiU dl8play samples
arrival statement in the 90 Pomeroy High School Alumni of their work Suoday afdegree heat at Lod Internation- Assn. has been set for Saturday, ternoon In the foyer ol Meiga
By United Press International
al Ajrport. "! am confident that May 29.
High School In conjuoctlon
Tornadoes roarl'd through the
Israel will equally meet the The banquet will be served at with a vocal concert by the plains Wednesday night, demochallenge and indeed the agony 6:30 p. m. at the Pomeroy Melga Chorale.
lishing homes, knocking railA series ol thunderstorms ripped across :
Tbia i&amp; lhe flr&amp;l year of arl road cars from the tracks and
of ~aking ~ace.'' .
Elementary School on'Mulberry
southwestern and central Ohio early today but ;;
He left uruned1ately for Ave., the dance to follow at 9 p. classes at the local_ high causing scores of lnjurle&amp;.
Jerusalem and talks with David m. at the Pomeroy Junior High school. lnstrnctor is Mrs.
most of the damage was confiiled to Marion ;._
At least· one fatality was
County where at least three persons were inLand of Broken Lives
Ben-Gurion, one of Israel's School auditorium.
Margaret Ella Lewis.
reported. Mickey Johnson, 23,
founders, and with Prime Classes having reunions are :,,,,,,,,,. .
jured. Some areas of the state reported over
was killed as a tornado churned
ST. JEAN VIANNEY, QUE -THE FRENCH called it the Minister Golda Melr and other
1921, 1925, 1931, 1936,' 1941, 1946,
three inches of rain in a six hour period.
at tree-top level through Joplin,
Riviere des Terres Rompues - the River of Broken Lands. Today Israeli leaders.
1951, 1956 and 1961. Only
Mo. Authorities said another 40
Marion CoWity Sheriff's Dispatcher J. H.
It 1:! the land of broken lives. Residenta by the hundreds, with
Rogers, carrying a letter mem.bersofreunion classes ~I Cloudy, showers likely south. persons were injured at Joplin,
Butterworth said two persons were ill jured when. : ,.
mattressea, televl:!ions and even baby tricycles strapped on top of
rece1ve alumm assoclallon Uttle change in temperaturea. seven seriously enough to
two house trailers were blown together !ly wlild ~; " ·
their cars, left the area, some sobbing when told that 31 of their
require hospitaliZation.
Cost
of
the
banquet
and.
Friday
partly
cloudy
and
letters.
neighbors were feared dead. Many said !bey never would come
gusts. "The other Injured person was in a trailer •,
Another twister near Marcedance is $4, with $1 of the cooler chance of showers in
that tipped over;" he ·said.
amount to go into the mem- south '
line, Mo., some 200 miles north
back.
"111 be damn~ If I wiU raise my children in this rotten
of Joplin, toppled 67 Santa Fe ·:·:·:=.:···::::::=:::· ~::::::::::=::~::::=:-:::~::·:::: :&lt;:=.=·:=:~~-:~=•. :::-:,::::::::~m~,~==:·m::~;:::~~·.:.:::;w.:::=~::: · ::·:.: :·;:: ·:' ··: ·~·::::" ·· ::::· S!
bership dues fund.
·
town," said a worker for the Aluminum Co. of Canada, one of tbe
·
Reservations, whlch must be
railway freight cars from the at a farm supply company. Into today for a wide area of
major employers in the area. St. Jean Vianney, a quiet village of
Terry L. Miller, Rt. I, in by May 22, may be made by
CAR WASH SET
tracks. A spokesman in Marce- There were no injuries.
the south and central plains. , .
2,000persons on a clad bed along the river, has a history of land- Rutland, escaped injury at 10:30 contacting Mrs. Bessie Hays, Agroup ofl5 Middleport teen- line said about one~lxth of the' · Three other tornadoes were
slides. But the cave-in Tuesday night was the worst. It created a p, m, Wednesday night when he alumni secretary-treasurer, P. agers will ~onduct a car wash town suffered heavy property reported aloft over Nebraska High winds caused powf!'.
pit a mile long and 300feet deep and swallowed 40 homes in tons of swerved and wrecked his car to 0 . Box 202, Pomeroy. Those Saturday from 10 a.tn. to 4 p.m. damage.
but, none waa reported ID have outages as far northeast as ~
muck described as "cold lava.''
a,void sl:'iking two pedestrians wishing tickets returned by at the Ashland Service Station At Conway, Iowa, Mayor touched down.
Chicago area. At least 2,150
walking along Rt. 124, one-tenth mail are to. enclose a stamped on Locust st. Proceeds will go to Dale Kernen looked at the Other twisters were reported persons were without power lp
mile east of Rutland.
'Fina,l Highway Link Assured
envelope. :rtcke~ wiU be placed the George Thompson kidney remains of his iornad~H~truck near the Oklahoma cities of the city and suburbs after hlp
According
to
the
Gallipolis
WASHINGTON- TilE UNITED STATES TODAY signed an
on .sale m several Pomeroy· fund. Cost "for a wash w)ll be house . and asked, "what can Okay, Porter, Coweta, Salina winds, llgtning and heavy railui
Post
'
s
tate
Highway
Patrol,
busmess houses soon.
$1.5(1,
you do with a pile •of aild Haskell.
swept the area late Wednesday'
agreement with Colombia and Panama to construct the final link
Miller
westbound
on
Rt.
124
was
.
,
toothpicks?"
Hail was widespread over the night..
in the 14,IJOO.mile Pan American Highway which will connect
passing
another
'vehicle
when
Eight
of
the
28
homes
in
area,
ranging
from
golfball
size
FW'ther
west,
firefighters:
Alaska to the southern tip of South America.
Conway were destroyed and all in western Missouri and eastern from four states battled hi~
two
The agreements call for construction of a 25().rnlle stretch he observed . the
pedestrians.
He
swerved,
lost
'
suffered dalllllge. Only minor Nebraska to the size of hen's winds to control fires in
across the Darien Gap in Colombia and Panama. The Darien Gap control, ran into a ditch. There
national parks in New Mexloo, ·
is an area of forest, jungles and swamps until recently considered was minor damage to his car: WASHINGTON (UPI) - Ford If the EPa decides manufac- injuries were reported, howev· eggs near Tulsa, Okla.
er. l
Tornado and severe weather and Arizona. Gusts ranged uP. ·
almost impassable by highway.
A second Meigs County ac- and Volkswagen expressed pes- turers cannot do the job despite Another funnel, at Broken warnings remained In ,effect to 5(1 miles an hour.
'
cident
was
at
10:4tp7l1!.
on
Rt.
simism
today
about
their
trying
their
beat,
it
can
grant
a
Bow, Neb., upended cattle
68 Americans Die in Asia
124, one and one-tenth mile west ability to meel automotive one year po11tponement.
loading chutea and hCJt! feeders
SAIGON - SIXTY·EIGRT AMERICANS were killed in ac- of Rt. 7 where trucks driven by antipollution standards and said
tion lait week, the highest death toil in four weeks, the U. S. Dennis L. White, 24, Hamden, .even a successful system could
command announced today .It said 592 Americans were wounded. • and Dennis R. Ragland, 37, boost motorists' gasoline costa
~. .~l
•
.
•.
The command said continuing .U. S. withdrawals, coupled with Beaver, collided. Ragland was by 30 per cent.
Vletnamization of the grbund war, had cut tbe American casualty charged with speed for con- Ford said it had a ''fair
, ,G
(Continued on page 6)
ditions.
chan~" to meet the require.
ment that 1975 model C8l'l
Gailla County Common Pleas appointed defense counsel. . •,
Judge Calbbun ordered that •
reduce carbon monoxide and
Court Judge Ronald R. Calhoun
hydrocarbon emissions 90 per
this morning found Dessie probation report be mad- ·,
Kuhn, 38, Rt. 2, Cheshire, guilty before sentencing. He increaseCI •"
cent from 1970 model levela.
But it said It was "moll
of obtaining Federal Food Mrs. Kuhn's bond from $300 10 , ·•
Stamps under false pre~ .
pessimistic" about achievJnc
She had been Indicted by the
the 90 per cent nitrogen oxide
WASHINGTON (UP!) - In a fears were raised, swordfish is the mercury safety limit still reduction required for 19'16
April term of the Gallla County
According to testimony, Mrjt: ~?.:
virtually unprecedented warn- a minor item. FDA said U.$. can he sold, although the FDA cars.
Grand Jury· for obtaining food Kuhn resided in Meigs Coauatx~ :f,
ing, ' the government today swordfish consuruption totals acknowledged it was unlikely
stamps.
from Galli a County approximately one mile
Volkswagen offered less hope.
advised Americans to stop about 26 million pounds a year, such fish could be found. The
while residing !n Meigs County. the Gallia-Melgs County llnii::E:S'1
"These standards are 110 low
eating swordfish · beca~ of or two ounces per person.. ·( agency offered the possibility that complying with them In a
Testifying for the &amp;tate were She appUed for food stampa
widespread mercury contamin- , FDA Commissioner ~If swordfish might return if the mass production environment
VIrgil Cross, Gailla County Galll(IOils, stating that .... .....
1
a\iJln .
. '
C. Edwards expressed regr~t industry can work out a safety seems highly_Improbable with· 1, · 1
Welfare Director; Mrs. Mary husband, Bobby, bad
for the swordfish industry certification system satilfacto- out a major technological ;'~
Jane Neal, supervisor ror the . temporarily laid off hll job.
food stamp program for the
In her initial Interview,
breakthrough," the firm said of
The Food and Drug Adqllnis- wfh~~ech wnaomsdicesdiigsasnatedter'~ bVly·c~ ry to the government.
0
both the . 1975 and 1976
MIXED QUARtEt -The popular Meigs
county welfare department; Kuh'n told Welfare ofllclala
tration (FDA) announcement
""'
,
chorale quartet will be featured on "If I Loved
Sunday
also lingled out swordfish as Small Business Administratio,~
FDA spokesmen said the standards.
Mrs, Jeanie Fisher, a recorder resided on 'l'llrkey Run
the one item to be eliminated .May 1 because of the mercur)- blanket warning against con- The prepared testimony at 2:30 p.m. when the school's chorale, directed by Mrs.
for the welfare department; Cheshire Twp., and her nlfllt4l
80 far from the American diet problem.
sumption of 'a parllculat food opened two days of hearings Chrlallne Guthrie, presents a program of ' vocal music In
Roy Herrmann, Adele Culllllll8, was granted. However,
as a result of the merciD'y Rut Edwards sai\1 811 of Ill!" was unprecendented except for before the Environmental 1ribute to National Muaic Week. The quartet members, all of
Meigs County Welfare Director, Mary Jane Neal, Gallil ·
acare which surfaced a, year swordfish samples tested we~e a warning of several months Protection Agency (EPa), whom have sung with the Ohio Youth Choir, froin the left,
and Mujori,e Warner of the stamp supervlaor, blvlliii&amp;IMI!
ago and prompted crash testing above the FDA's safety limit ql duration again&amp;! ctNtberries in which must decide whether include carol Hargraves, Anita Fultz, Duane Will and
Meigs
County
Welfare the claim, I~
PfGII'allll by ·government and o:5 parts per million mer
t 1959.,The cranberry hazard was mabufacturers are making a
Richard Dean. Duane Will alsopresented."If With All Your
Departmenl. Bobby Kuhn, Mrs. Kahn dld aol r:=~
husband of the defendant, wu 'l'!lrkey Run Rd:., llat 111
· Industry.
with the average lilore thT caused by a h~zardous \'eed "good faltll" effort to meet the Hearts", the IUllber whiah won him a superior rating in lhe
Compared with tuna and doubl~ the limit, ,•
killer, use of whlGh quickly was standards prescribed in a 1970 dislrict solo and ei)Selllble contest at Athens in February. He
the only witn• , called by Roy ~ JXIPI I)
Thomas 1\toullon, court- Mtlgs Counly.
other eeafoods about which Teclmically, swordfLSh wltljjn ..stopped.
law.
· '
will be accompanied by Glenna Sprague . .

Piclure&amp; and Reporl
By Bob ~oemcb
Fifty Meigs Co~ty . school
teacher~ are putting. m long
hours this week attending. an art
workshop being held. m the
former Pomeroy Jun10r High
Sch~l.
.
.
Miss Bonnie Angevme, mstructor of the workshop,
reports a captive group of
( - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -,----------,
0
I
7\ T
I
I
1 ~ews
I
I
!
.
By United Press International

The season 's
newest neck.
wear
in
a

. ArtShow

t

•
... zn Bne

Ohio ·Struck Hard

S

Weather

W Misses
Pedest nafiS
• .

Furniture Gifts Are Most Welcome
And right now during our Spring Sale you can really save
on Chairs - Bedroom Suites - Living Room Suites . Tables Lamps -·Plqures · Carpeting - Summer Furniture . Appliances - Dinette Sets. In fact, furniture for every room In
your home.

d
Gl
For , VW oomy

three

Food Stamp Fraud:·:
Galli
.
:
.
,
Found ,.m · · a r·:.,

Swordfish No No

Visit
The Drapery
Department on the
2nd Floor for Practica I
Mother's Day Gift Ideas.

ai

MEIGS INN

'

LEBANON, Ohio (UP!) -A
bank president . in this southwestern Ohio city was forced to
band · over more than $100,000
early today to ransom, his wife
and daughter held captive in
their home.
Police said Howard Wilson,
president of Lebanon Citizens
National Bank, his wife and
daughter were held at gunpoint
for more than two hdurs by
three armed men who barged
into their home · and then
directed Wilson to withdraw the
money from the bank.
"Mr. Wilson was directed to
go to the blink, remove the
money ulat had been deposited
following the previous night of
racing at Lebanon Raceway
and take it to a designated
location about four miles west
of Lebanon," Pollee Chief
Lester Kilburn said.
"With his wife and daughter.

Ranso

'

a

(THE MARTIN HOTEl)

'

'

niE ART WORKSHOP at the Pomeroy Junior Higb Scbool offers "something for

!

ANTHONY
Plumbing-Heating

.

.•

MEIGS THEATRE

LOUNGE

erPays $100,

Elberfelds In :Pomeroy

Mason County

You can ..teet curtains · draperies : boclsprelds- throw
covers - window shades · lamp s~dts . Kirscll Droptlry
Hardwore and mony other sug,.sllons. Slop In - look
oround - buy what you wan! now.

PLUMBING
HEATING

~--------------------~---·

I

I

.

Elberfelds In

Jf.._

0

~------------------------~
I
.
1 Be sure to register in the 3rd Floor Fur1 niture Department for th, Kroehler Living 1
I Room Suite. No purchase necessary. You 1
I need not be present.to win.
·I

I

··500
.....

J.

curt

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

---·~----Y---

... :-

�.I

. I

.,
' I

3-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. 1 May 6,1971

%-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pom~roy, 0., May 6, 1971

r---------------------------1 ·
[Helen Help Us j
l

By Helen Bottel

·Professor Springs ,Exam
NORTH
4KJ4

.1

6

• 73 2
• Q754
.K64

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
WFST
EAST
"' This column Is for yoong people, their problems and
4872
41696 53
pleasures, their troobles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
• QJl695
.84
. Us!, it welcomes laughs but won't dodge a serioUs question with a
+ KJ
+ 16863
.AI67
.J8
brwlh-off.
SOUTII (D)
Send yow&lt; teenage questions to YOU'll! ASKED FOR IT, care
4AQ
rf. Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
• AK6
','TALK" NOT DINNER MUSIC TO HIM
+ A92
.Q9532
Pear Helen:
Both ,Julnerable
:' Lately my dad has made a rule about no talking at the dinner
Weot North East South
'table. Mlnl doesn'tllke this, but what he says goes.
•. Dad says it is not p-oper to talk while we eat. We think it's good
1•
2•
Pass 3N.T.
10 discuss pleasant things and what we've done during ihe day.
Pass
Pass
Pass
We hardly get to see each other any other time. There are four
Opening lead- • Q
kida In the family.
• Who's right? - LOSING MY APPETITE
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Dear LMA:
The student ducked. the
·. Either your father means "Don't talk with your mouth full" first heart, but had to win
li' "No fighting!", or else he's a TV addict.
the second. It was necessary
·: U he doesn't know the best kind of dinner milsic is pleasant to develop his clubs so he
led a club toward dummy at
oonversation,thenyO\IfliiOther should teachhini! -H.
trick
three. West played the
Dear Helen:
seven and dummy's king
; My motheraa,ld I'm becoming a footfanatic. You see, I wear was put up. The professor
a size 11, very narrow, and that's monstroos.
who sat East dropped the
- Whenever 1 stand next to someone, I can see the Immense · jack. When the student led
difference between their feet and mine, I have to walk down stairs a second club from dummy
West was able to win the
sideways to fit on the steps.
trick with the 10 and lead a
AI the beginning of school, a teacber asked us to write down third heart to clear the suit
one thing that made us unique from others and I put down "Big while he still held the ace
feet!"
of clubs.
The student looked admir' People think size 9or lOis huge, so where does that leave me?
ingly
at the professor. "I
pulslde of cutting off my toes, what can I do, as I can't always sit
would have made the hand
jin mj· feet and short skirts don'\ cover them when you curl up on a against almost anyone else .
jlavenpo~t. - TIRED OF PLAVING FOOTSIE
What a brilliant play!"
"Not at all," replied the
pear Tired:
.
~
. : I once worried aboot MY long narrow feet untO I realized I. professor . "The play of the
·l'l'o one noticed unleaal called attention Ill them; 2. The few who
·(racked wise had worse "defeclll," and 3. Anything that expensive couldn't be all bad! ·
.
Cuckler, Mrs. Clara Karr, Mrs.
: : Who else In your crowd can be fitt,ed only at exclusive shops Ethel Williamson, Mrs. Alfred
.~boseprlce tagsyooshoultlframeyet? -H.
Yeauger, Mrs. Henry Fischer,
~~:
~~~.~~
: · Today my mother came home from the hospital. She had a Fisher, Mrs. Adolph Grueser,
d til
,Mrs. Clara McMaster, Mrs.
)Iarrow escape frlnl ea .I'm so thankful to have her back, that Milton Roush and Randy, Mrs.
. l just had to write this:
: . Yoosee, I'm a teenager.I get sick of hearing, "Down with the Gr~gg Gibbs, Mrs. John Wolfe,
· :P,:stabllshment!" etc.lflt wasn't for the Establishment with all its Mrs. Pat Quinn, Mrs. Sadie
•
Brown, Sherry Russell, Mrs.
p-ogreaa and accomplishmenbl, Heaven help us all. It saved my Denny Evans and Becky, Mrs.
t""om!
'"
Vena Whaley, Mrs. Ethel
i I'm a!Bo sick of hearing kidB put down their parenbl, calling Stewart, Mrs. Glen Smith, Mrs.
{them duDunles and wtH'se, and "MyOid Lady" or "My Old Man." Lillie Starcher, Mrs. Otto
J:K aU of a sudden they 1081 a parent, like I almost did, maybe Hartenbach, Miss Dorothy
;:!hey'd wake up.
Hartenbach,
Mrs . Bert
;: It took me a long time to see that I've been blind.! either took Grueser, Mrs. Herbert Push,
;for granted or ignored the love Mom gave me un~ I almost didn't Miss Marcia Pugh, Mrs. Jim
}have her any more.
Sheets, Mrs. Herschel Rose,
~ Sure, parents can be tough, but It would be even tougher · and Mrs, Karl Grueser.
i,wltllout them. - GLAD .
Others presenting gifts were
.
,' '
,
Mrs. Charles Withrow, Mrs.

l.

.

i·Shower Given .Sharon
Fischer
'
•

!

Mr s. Wllliam Russell anu
;.Mrs. Charles Grueser en(.!ertalned Saturday night with a
t shower honor~?g Miss Sha:on
, Fischer of Williamstown, bnde·
: elect of Mr. Bob Grueser,
; Minersville.
: · The shower was held in the
; social room of the Minersville
\Methodist Olurch. The gift
table decorations featured a
pink "covered umbrella with
streamers extending from the

Ui

"

ce ng.
.
Assorted ~ook1es, coffee and
tea were served. G~es were
played with prizes gomg to Mrs.
Harvey Van Vranken, Mrs.
Brooks Sayre, and Mrs. Wayne
Russell. Mrs. Fannie Phillips
won the door prize.
Other guests were Miss
Esther Joseph, Mrs. Charles
Chauncy, Mrs. Gerald Amberger, Mrs. Joe Hiliid}.M!:!:_
Stella Grueser, Mrs. Gladys

!':r~-"~~~~~r~::;~: ~~~:

Carolyn Evans, Mrs. Bradford
Maag Mrs. Greg Roush, Mrs.
Euge~e Forhes, Mrs. Tracy
Whaley, Mrs. John Sauvage,
Mrs. Victor Hysell, and Mrs.
Walter Grueser
·

Published

dally

except

2157.

Second class postage paid at

Pomeroy , Ohio .
National adverlising
representative
Botl l nell i Gallagh&amp;r, Inc., 12 East 42nd
St ., New York City, New York .
Subscrlplion rates : Delivered by carrier where
t~vallable
cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available : One
month S1 .75 . By mall In Ohio
and W. Va ., One year su.oo .
SIK months f7 . 2S. Three
months $4 .50 . Subscription
price Includes Sunday Times Sentinel.

so

I1I Vol·ce
1

ll

•

·

!

.

d

th

Mrs . Kathryn
Spencer
is
recuperating
at her
home at
Anna -Mar!a, Fla., alter undergoing surgery .last week:at
the . Man_ attee Memorial
1
B d t
H
Hosp1ta. 10 ra en on. _er
addr~§.s_ts ~~ 96.!, Anna ~aria,
Fla. 33501. The Spencers son,
Jon, left last week for a tour of
duty with the U. S. Army in
Vietnam.

~
A

~fMfM~fR

MOTHEn DAY

sumg,

v4 'al
sgect

$25 Given to
Kidney Fund

raoiance.

cam nus n set
8'\fS .

Goessler
JEWELRY

STORE

~

Machine Perks
Perez smashed a three"f'un
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - It
_isn't often that• a '•team- gets-a homer in the seventh off Bill
bonus of seven walks, three Singer and Lee May followed
wild pitches and a hit batter with a solo four-bagger.
" It wouldn't have mattered
and fails to capitalize on that
windfall but the Los Angeles who batted fourth on that .
Dodgers did it Wednesday pitch," said Alston. "Don't fornight.
get Singer struck out Bench beAnd when the Cincinnati Reds lore Perez hit the ball out."
Although SiJlger suffered his
came up with a four"f'un inning
in the seventh, it carried them sixth defeat, Alston said the tall
righthander pitched well at
to an 8-4 victory.
times.
"They gave us a bonus of
" I'm not sure he's physically
two runs but we couldn't come
up with a big hit," mourned sound yet," said AI ston. " H.ts
problem was a combination of
Manager Wall Alston .
control
and stuff not being up
The Reds, however, were
gleeful over their ability to es- to par."
Singer was laid up much of
cape the disaster that seemed
last
season with an attack of
impending when starter Wayne
Simpson went on his wild hepatitis and when he recovered
he suffered a broken finger.
streak.
·
Manager Sparky Anderson, in Simpson, who has never lost
an effort to instill a flame in
his team, switched Tony Perez
from third to fourth place in
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - It
the batting order and moved
was the kind of night Wayne
Johnny Bench to third.
"This is sort of what it was· Simpson would rather forget.
The Cincinnati right-hander,
like last year," Anderson said.
. ' "I moved Perez to fourth and who ran into arm problems last
Bench to third then when we season after a sensational rookran into a bad streak and it ie start, has been working back
paid off."

s~
CANDIES

.

By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
Will success spoil Vida Blue?
That's the only worry Oakland A's Manager Dick Williams has these days as Blue, a
21-year-old left-bander , continues to be the pitching
sensation of the young baseball
season.
"I'd like to keep him in a
glass cage and just send him
out when it's his turn /'
Williams smiled Wednesday
night after Blue won his
seventh straight to boost his
record to 7-1 on a four-hitter as
the A's downed Detroit 5-0.
When he was asked if Blue
could face the pressure of his

SAVE
FOR YOUR OWN

SPECIAL
PURPOSE
Enjoy safety ... plus
extra earning power.

4%%

PASSBOOK RATE
Meigs Co. Branch

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-1 and 7-a p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births

Meigs County
Branch of
The.Athens County.
5avmgs &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

,

sudden success, Williams said,
"I don't think he 's going to
have any problems. He's very
intelligent and he's assumed his
responsibilities without any
problems. He's got a pretty
good guy around him in Tommy
Davis, who's been through all
this himself."
But Blue has only just begun
to cope with his new status as
an instant celebrity and the
pressure on the youngster will
continue to mount if he keeps
pitching this way.
Blue seems to be ·a bit
awed by it aU right now.
"I knew I could win in the
majors, but 7-1.. .. ?"he said. "I
can't believe it. But I'll take 8-1
or S-2 or even S..S."
He added, "it's great to be
compared to a Koufax or a
McDowell but I just try to ue
Vida Blue."
Williams was asked how
many games Blue will win and
he said, "somebody just asked
me that and I said how many
start ~oes he have. I just hope
he stays healthy and can pitch
when it's his turn ." Williams
has been alternating Blue with
three and lour days rest.
Blue's statistics are sqmewhat staggering. He was
knocked out on opening day In
Washington but he's pitched
seven straighl'complete games
since including four shutouts.
He leads the league with 69
strikeouts in 62 innings pitched
and with a 1.02 ERA.
He got into his only jams
when he walked two batters in
the first and fourth innings. He
walked two with one out in the
first and struck out Willie
Horton and Bill Freehan. In the
fourth, he walked Kaline and
Horton and then struck out the
side.
In the other games, Minnesota beat New York 5-3,
1\lilwaukee edged Washington 4-

You can be sure ...

he's
•
IW"'tng
his
Banking

if it's Westinghouse '!:!
AIR CONDITIONER

He's doing it by =il, which gives him '
time to do other things. If you'd like
more free time, try oUr Mail-In Service.

"Window Unit"

The Farmers .Bank
an·d Savings Co.
POMEROY, 0.
Member Federal' Reserve System
On

Fridays Our Drive-'ln Window

is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., (Con·

'

'

5000 BTU - Plugs In like a lamp,

•. ~£d '-"'V.:~~

lib .. .... .............. :....~2.00

I. Especially for You Assortment .... 2~

lb. box $4.35
'
'
C. Mother's Day Gift ...... .... .. 8 oz. box .$1.15

.

'

2 speed fan
Easy mounting
Easy Installation
High and Night Cool

'1l995

ONLY

EASY TERMS

FOREM~"
j

WE

•

I

'

1

•

&amp; A
I' 1

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B. Grueser, 2-:J, Evans :~:1 and]
Will 1-1 .
:
For Foote Mineral Whitlatch;
Gardner and Bird went3-l~ ·
Hindy - 2-1, JUtmson 1-1 an~
Green, 1·1.
,
The bankers' overall record
now is 9-1 for the season,
Tonight the bankers go to
Middleport to play Citizens ·
National Bank at 6:30.
·•

Danville Put Down by 10-3

first two innings and held on t&lt;l
down Danville 12 to 3 Tuesday
evening at Middleport. The
green and gold pounded out 18
hi ts to gain the victory in theii
fir st league contest. Big guns
for the bank were Bruce Hawley
with 4 hits in lour trips antl
Allen Oiler with three hits iii
three trips. Other hitters were
Kendall Dunfee and Bill Halley
each with a single and a double,
Sandy Clonch and Jim FarleY.
with two singles each , and Jerry
Hawley, Tom Hawley and Bill
Cincinnati (Merritt 0-2) at
Wednesday's Results
2, twinight.
Fife each with one single.
,
Boston t Peters 2-2) at Chica- Las Angeles (Osteen 3-2}, night . Syracuse 5 Richmond 4
S1
.
Louis
!Gibson
3-1)
at
Tidewa1er
10
Roches1er
6
112
The
Citizens
National
Bank's
go (Johnson 3-2) .
Philadelphia
(Bunning
1-4) ,
innings)
I Only games scheduled)
nlgh1.
WinMipeg at Charles1oh tppd, next game is with The Farmers
Friday's Gam!s
Bank and Savings Co . this
(Only game s sc heduled)
rai n)
. .
.
Washington at Minnesota, night
Friday's
Games
Toledo
at
Lou
1
sv
•ll
e
{ppd,
ram)
evening
at Middleport.
Boston a1 Milwaukee, night
Chicago at N\onireal nlgh1
New York a1 Chicago, night
·,
Kansas Ci1y at Cleveland, nig~t St. Louis at New York . ninht
1

into shape gradually this season. He may have set the program back quite a bit Wednesday night against the Los An·
geles Dodgers.
Simpson walked seven batters
in little more than two Innings,
hit another and unleashed three

wild pitches before Reds' manager Sparky Anderson mercifully removed him.
There was some consolation,
however. Simpson didn't allow
a hit and the Reds finally won
tpe game S-4.

Blue Wins 7th In Row

L.-..-------..

Would you believe

The Farmers Bank and
Sa~ings Company's, slo.pitch
softball team won its league
'opener Tuesday evening over
Foote Mineral, 11HJ, unleashing
Na1ional League
to the Dodgers and beat them off with a single against reliev- 'By United Press International
a 15-hit onslaught and playing
er Milt Wilcox and, alter two
By
Uni1ed"Press
lnlerna1ional
American
League
twice last year, was saved from
perfect defense in the field .
, East
East
possible defeat by a. combina-" sacrifices, 'SCored on Bill Gra•
W. L. Pel. GB Foote Mineral got only six hits.
'W. L. Pet. GB
15 9 .625 i'•i,
15 8 .652 .. . New York
lion of excellent relief pitching barkewitz's grounder.. h d
Boston
Leading hitters lor the
In
the
seventh
a
pmc
OU· Bai1imore
N\ontreal
10
7
.588
14
9
.6f/l
1
and the extra-base hitting of his
15 11 .577 1 bankers were Whley , 3 lor 4, J.
ble by Jim Stewart and a walk Washington 12 14 .462 41/'2 Pit1sburgh
teammates .
16 12 .571 1 Wolle, 2-1, J. Vanlnwagen 2-3,
II 13 .458 4'1&gt; S1 . Louis
to Cline preceded Perez's hom- Detroi1
Chicago
11 15 .423 s
He left the game in the third
10 13 .435 5
New York
ed wtt· h his · Cleveland
er.
May
then
follow
Philadelphia
8 16 .333 7
8
17
.320
8
without having given up a hit.
Wesl
West
homer.
Both
clubs
scored
In the second, Simpson started
W. L. Pet. Gil
W. L. Pet. GB
meaningless runs in the ninth .
San Francisco 20 7 .741 ...
off by hitting Wes Parker with
Oakland
19
11
.633
The Citizens National Bapk
The victory went to Wilcox, California
14 .12 .538 3 Los Angeles 14 14 .500 61117. slo-potch solt'ball team of
a pitch, loaded the bases on
13 13 .500 6 h
Ci1y 14 12 .538 3 Atlanta .
walks and then threw his sec· who hurled four innings 'and MKansas
Houston
12 14 .462 l lf1 Middleport scored 10 runs in the
innesot{l
12
·
14
.462
5
Cincinnati
10 14 .417 81, ·1
ond wild pitch to score on run. was followed to the mound by Milwaukee
11 13 .458 5
Joe
Gibbon
and
Wayne
GrangSan
Diego
7 19 .269 121 1
Chicago
10 14 .417 6
Two more walks forced in Bill
Wednesday's Results
· er.
Wednesd&amp;V S Results
Buckner.
San Francisco 2 Pitt sburgh 1
.
.
Kansas City 4 ·Cleveland 2
But the lwMun Dodger lead
The Dodgers end Reds close Minnesota· 5 New York 3, night Montreal5 Houston 1. n ight
International League Sta~dmgs
By United Press ln1ernal1onal
lasted only until the third when out the series tonight when N\ilwakee 4 Washng1n 3, night Chicago 5 New York 4, night
Sl.
Lou
is
s
Philadelphia
1,
night
W L Pet. GB
Pete Rose walked, Ty Cline Claude Osteen, 3-2, opposes Jim Oakland 5 ·oetroi1 0, night
San Diego 5 At l 1. 1st twilight Syracuse
12 4 .750 Bos
a1
Chi
,
night,
ppd, rain
singled and Bench doubled in a Merritt, tl-2. Their meeting will Calif at Bait, night, ppd, ,rain A11 3 San Diego 1, 2nd nigh!
. Charles1on
10 6 .625 2
Clnci a Los Angeles 4, night
Louisville
10 6 .625 2
run. Perez followed with a dou- be the second of the season.
Today's Probable Pitchers
Today's
Probable
Pitchers
Richmond
B B .500 4
New
York
(Stoltlemyre
2-0)
ble to score Cline.
Osleen beat Merritt 3-0 in their
Chicago (Hands 3-3) at New W innipeg
6 9 .400 5117
at
Minnesota
tHall
0-21,
night.
The Dodgers tied the game _previous duel. April 23 at Cin· California (Messersmi1h 2-2 York {Seaver -4. 1)
Tidewater
7 ll .389 6
Houston
(Dierk
er
4-0)
at
Rochester
5 9 .357 6
in the fourth when Buckner led cinnati.
and N\ay 2-1} at Bal1imore
Toledo
6 II .353 611&gt;
IN\cNaily 4-1 and Dobson 1-2), N\1ntreal 1Renko 3-6), nigh1.

Kind Of Nrght Simpson Would Rather Forget

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

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Bankers Blank Foote Mineral

UNDERWENT SURGERY

jack of cl ubs was routine.
·
Eisenhower H-ltal in Palm Springs .... Met
BY JACK O'BRIAN
...,.
anything if left in my hand
. ~·s retiring boss Rudolph Bing's going out
and might actually keep my
ff'SOPENSEASON
.-. with a-bang, the-late-Mn,-John D, RockefeUer
partner from the extra en' willed enough cash to stage three of the ternON 111E :AFFLUENT
ntal Rudy's five new productions next
try he would need to estab!ish his hearts. On the other
NEW YORK - Lockamitbl are coining perame
Willi W 1
he .1 his
hand, you had a cinch lor for.tunes in N.Y.- after burglars (mostly drug ~ ;"'
e ,Y er ~':'
qw
y o u r contract !~ you had addicts) bust in .... Late afternoons tbe sedate direc~ sjoboo the 40e&amp;:ats film because he
played correctly·,
Manhattan nelghbvrhootls are being . hit _ wwldn I've been able to qwt dgarets otherwiSe.
Do yo u see where the stu,
k !books tchetl b the ~opelessl
The Italian gov't allocated $65,000,000 m
sna .
Y '' ,
Y lncenUv«&lt;re to try and get ItalD'films back to
dent made his mistake' At women spoc e
trick three he could have unreported hundreds dally on the amuent Eaat abn
I . ....._ U S sh b'
.
., d h
l
, f Sid
s
tton Pia in -----' 1''- own prl ale
orma
....
""'
.
ow IZ unions are
&lt;pOt e t e pro essor S Uti
e "" U
ce CT""""" "' "
V . de-•n~lno Ill
'td te simiJa ••• 000 000
if he just pjayed a low club security army .... The huge Holll1es Security , , __
e gov prodona .a bu r{;'
from (lummy .
firm just jumped Into the induiitrial personnel boost to (llllesUc
uctions t _ow ey
East would have to win security-army business· it's owned by John stand a fat chance .... Playboy bUMies wear
the trick and could make no Mosler, who sold his f~ed safe company to get seemingly daring coslumea (whlcb are built like
better return than a dJa-. t chilling'1
(oding"n "business
steeltonotletltallhangout)buttheN.Y.bunny
mond . It would be up to the 10 0 ~
Yexp
ow
, once llltch has given voyeurs a really unfair teaser:
student to rise with the see donunated only by the Plnkertoos .... Its llle No. Had
t of 'Is bunnl
In the buff f th'
mAY 91k
and clear his club suit. The 1 job lor retired N. Y, cops, especiaUy since they
~08 1
es pose
. .or. ~
'
defense would collect one can get such big pensions after ooly 20 years on mootll s Pla~boy mag - and thiS month s
·heart, one diamond and two the force .... N.Y. City's top police safe-find-loft business Is tripling.
clubs, but the _stude~t would sq ad detective Bob McDerinott joined the
The TV networks swear as sincerely as an
collect the mne tncks he u
.
•
.
'
oldtime gambling joint owner that they lose
needed lor bis contract.
Mosler military .... Mosler hired ex-N.Y. pollee
the'
Ill lele Ill
nd k
.
tNEwsPAm ENTERPRISE •ssN ' commish Leary away from his $45,0IJO.a.year mflllleyh"n~ o~th ~~~(to
cast -cba th eep
0118
piHering-combat job with a huge deparlment g - .. '"
oven:u ea 0 .er ---siore ... One big N.y. store Is threatening to pack Biggest source of TV-workers unemployment: 15
it all in over the positively fierce pilferage, both hours of networ~ time per week mon?pollzed by
The bidding has been:
. from burglary and employe 18rcenies.
mosUy old mOVIes .... .Merv Grllfln,s personal
West North
Easl S~uth . , The American Legion wants to hold a mge congl(llllerate (half dozen radio stations, CATV
I "'
Pass
salule for Bob Hope on Memorial Day but Bob systems, couple of network qillz shows, his own
4~osu4 f~~·fi ~o1d~ A K Q 4&lt;7 4 said positively not ... It'D take the Public Service mldnlghtcasbl, racetrack, closed-circuit.TV) is
What do you bid?
Commission ten months to decide if the phone all!J!s own, and be doesn t have to divulge Its
A-Bid one diamond. Yo_u rate boost is okay: probably can't get !be·right eanungs; but Merv announce~ he did a~t
have a very good hand but thos ph
be
M be th f' t rtalnl the $9,000,000 gross last year - whiCh"means he s
MERLIN SET
response will lead lo the best one num r .... ay
e mes 'ce
Y
babl
·
bli sh tJ
results.
inost spectacular, jazz pianist anywhere - JrO
Y gomg PU C or Y•
'fODAY'S QUESTION
Oscar Peterson ~ Is at the Rainbow Grill; pi r.:rlse.~r w:;nt all _tbe( wa~n!blll~:t
You bid one diamond
d staggering rechnique most powerful since the
ug
nanas moVIe wn
rrec your partner rebids one ~~- -!ale Art Tatum .... ~ Idea of a great collection starred in by ex-husband Woody Allen) on the
trump. What do you do'
we didn't bother to amass during hill recording Mike Douglas Show. Louise was on the way home
years is all of Tatum's magnificent recorded befOI'f! she realized she:d never mentioned It on
virtuosity; serves us right. Someone should put the air .... Robert Klein s Bitter End engagement
them all on LP tapes. When? Where?
takes its ~ncial style fr(llll the nowo111o~e
The look of Jove. .
Daily News' marvelously headlined title for !Jus!ness: He s wvrklng on percentage ·:" LouiS
And Love Rings
the Chinese table tennis champs who may retw'n Prima exploded his special musical artillery at
from ArtCarved
that glow. In
the visit here: "The Ping Dynasty" , .. Bob the Rainbow Grill on percentage and hauled
or
A $25 contribution was made Hope's H'wood dinner raised $2,000,000 for the home a Udy fortune.
.
in soon for
to the George Thompson Kidney
Love Rings to reflect
Fund at a meeting of the
your special light.
Learning about Antique Glass,
Pomeroy Garden Club ~eld at
and Sustainer of Life.
the home of Mrs. Guy Gutnther.
'J:"
r/. '
For further information . k!Carved
Mrs. Howard Nolan, vice
lhe Love Ring
president , conducted the By DEBORAH M. CONKLIN of Action through Ohio state contact the Extension Office,
people
Ext. Agent, Home Eeon.
University, will be presented by 992--3895. Last day to register is
meeting in the absence of Mrs.
Creativity,
Culture,
ComMrs.
Margaret
·
Ermarth,
June
8.
Plan
ahead
and
bring
a
Harvey
Van
Vranken,
president. Thank you notes mitment: That's the theme for Professor of History, Wit- friend!
were read from Miss Lydia the 1971 campus Days . for tenberg University; Dr. CynEbersbach and Mrs. Fred Women Conference on The Ohio thia Wedel, Association
PLAN BAKE SALE
Blaettnar for corsages given State University Campus, June Director, Center for Voluntary
22-24. The topic refers to three Society, Washington D. C., and The Children's Band of the
them at the April meeting.
Little Prayers was the special areas of interest and President, National Council of Mt. Moriah Baptist Church will
devotional topic given by Miss responsibility for today's Churches, and Dr: f.ois Lund, hold a bake sale beginning at 9 Coui-i St.
Pomeroy
Ebersbach and members in women. Your stay on campus at Director, School of Home a.m. Saturday at Dudley 's
response to roll call commented the conference will include Economics.
Florist Shop In Middleport.
classes
and
assemblies.
Those
Choose
as
many
as
six
of
on insect control.
Enemies of Evergreens was who live beyond commuting these classes to attend: Pattern fOIICMIICII-IOIIIICMIICIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICMIICIIIIIIIIIIIIIICM-:JCICICIGIOII-.i
the program topic of Mrs. distance will enjoy a stay in forLivlng,Meatln -the-Freezer,
The Days or Daze,"Panls Fit
.J
Edward Baer in a paper university dormitories. ·
Something
special
has
been
Today,
Space
hge
Home
presented by Mrs. Audrey
Betzing. She used as a reference added to the campus Days' Furnishings, Serving the
MOTHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY, MAY 9th
the book by K. B. Cloud, schedule - the third day of the Hungry, Fun with Food Out.
Evergreens lor Every State. conference will be a "drive-in" doors, Today's Fabrics and the
The group discussed control of day. If your schedule or family Fashion Server, Insuring your
bagworms, tent caterpillars, responsibilities make it im· Future, Children in your
"New"
aphids and moles and proper possible for you to attend all Household, The
three days, plan to attend on Voiunteerism, American
chemicals for control.
Drive-In
Day, a result of many Women Before Age 45, Working
Garden ideas for May were
Toward CommUnity Change,
given by Mrs. Harold Brown requests.
who spoke of ways to improve Such topics as, Women and Current Social Issues, Outdoor
the soil and the use of Their Creative Power, Women's "Living", Drugs of Abuse, The
Commiiment to Today's World, Nation's Income - Who Gets
chloridane for grub control.
The June meeting will be held Home Economics - A capsule What, Reading for Pleasure,
lt wasn't going to be worth

COLLECTIONS NOTED
Stale Treasurer Gertrude W.
Donahey announced today that
sales tax collections for Meigs
County for the month of March
showed an increase of $2,676.95
a total of IZ.93 percent increase.
Last year's tax for March
totaled $20,695.37 while for the
at the home
Dor
with of
Mrs.'Mrs.
Richard
same period this year totaled Schaefer
Jones as the assisting hostess.
$23,372.32.
Floral arrangements "Mother's
Favorite" were displayed by
The Daily Sentinel
Mrs. Nolan, Miss Ebersbach,
DEV.OTED TO THE
Mrs. Betzing and Mrs. Clair
INTEREST OF
·.MEIGS-MASON AREA
Karr. Mrs. Guinther and Miss
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Ebersbach served a dessert
Euc. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
course preceding the meeting .
City Editor
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio,
.45769. Business Office Phone
992 -2156, Editorial Phone 992 -

al·ong Br·oa'dway .

,------------------------------------------:;

WIN AT 'BRIDGE

.,

3 and Kansas City topped
Cleveland 4-2. The California at
Baltimore and Boston at
Chicago games were rained out.
In the National I.Alague, San
Francisco edged Pitblburgh 2-1,
St. Louis beat Philadelphia 5-1,
Chicago edged New York 5-4,
Montreal ripped Houston 5-1,
Cincinnati downed Los Angeles
S-4 and Atlanta beat San Diego
3-1
after
losing
the
doubleheader opener 5-l.
MEIGS THIRD
Nolan Swackhamer's
Meigs Gold Team fiDlshed
third in a four-way meet at
Athens Wednesday night.
Athens was first with a 203,
Logan second with a 220, ,
Meigs had 231 and Nelson·
ville-York, 261. Two Athens
golfers, Randy Adams and
Gary Reese, shared medalist
hono.rs, ~ach with a 37,
Bill :H,ensler and Steve
Story were J~w men for the
Marauders, each wttb u. Bob
Werry had 54, Chuck Han·
nabs 46, and Marty Vaughan,
46.

NEW COMMISSION
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)-Hall
of Farner Jackie Robinson was
named by Gov . Nelson Rocke·
feller Wednesday to succeed
Raymond J. Lee on the New
York State Athletic Commis·
sion . The Stale Senate must
approve Robinson's appoint.
men! to make it official.
Robinson broke the color
barrier in big league baseball
when he joined the Brooklyn
Dodgers In 1947.

Pl1tsburgh at Los Ang, night
Cincinnati at San Diego, night
Atlanta at San Francisco, night

Athens Favored

.
. Leo . Cardenas drove m ~II
flVe Mmnesota runs- three w1th
his first homer in the second
inning-as the Twins beat New
York. Jim Perry, 5-2, went 7 2-3
innings to get the victory and
Stan Bahnsen lasted two
mmngs while suflermg the
defeat.
.
.
A bases-loaded pmch smgle
by Andy Kosco h1ghhghled a
rhubarb-filled seventh mnmg as
Milwaukee edged Washington.
The Rhubarb started when
Andy Kosco went to the bat
circle and Washington Manager
Ted Williams switched pitchers.
Milwaukee manager Dave Bristol then argued he never
actually sent Kosco in as a
pinch-hitler and tried to put
starter Johnny Briggs back into
the game. Bristol was thrown
out and Kosco made it all
academic by driving in two
runs to win the game.
Amos Otis hit a two-run
homer in the four-run sixth
inning as Kansas City beat
slumping Cleveland. Dick Drago, 4-1, went 8 1-3 innings to get
the victory and Steve Dunning
took the loss.

1968 "500" champ Bobby Unser
of Albuquerque, N.M., regis·
tered 170.4 Tuesday.
A.J. Foyt Jr., of Houston,
Tex., made his first appearance
on the track this year in his
newly designed rear-engine
Ford. But the runs only were
for shakedowns.
Rain interrupted practice
twice Wednesday. The second
yellow light kept the track
closed the last three hours. The
course also was shut down two
hours at noon.

defend 1970 titles are Gallia 's
Richard Ferguson (2-mile) and
Steve Stebbins tlong jump ).
Only two new records were
established in 1970 - Greg
Cronacher, Ironton , jumped 12'·
9" in the pole vault and
Gallipolis' Chuck Neal threw
the discus 150'-11" for a new
conference mark.
Here's the existing league
records:
120-high hm·dles, Tom
Spencer, GAHS, 1969, :15; 100yard dash, Mickey Frazier,
Logan, 1960, : 10; mile run, Tom
Smith, Athens, 1966, 4:35.2; 880yardrelay, Athens,1968, 1:34.6.
440-yard dash, Ken DeVeau,
Athens, 1965, :51.2; 180-low
hurdles, Bob Young, Nelsonville, 1957, :21.1; 880-yard run ,
Bob Handley, Athens, 1969, 1:594; 200-yard dash , Mickey
Frazier, Logan, 1960, :22.2; two
mile run, Robbie Alden, Athens,
1969, 10 : 19.6; mile relay,
HILL TO SPEAK
Athens, 1969, 3:35,1; )ligh i.II!UP.
Denver Hill of Foster, W. Va., Steve Chase, Athens, 1961, 6'will speak at weekend services 43J4n ,
Long jump, Tom Spencer,
at the Red ·Brush Church of
Christal 7:30p.m. Saturday, 10 GAHS, 1969, 21'-3\14''; shot
a.m. Sunday and 7 p.m. Sunday. put, Dave Green ,' Athens, 1968,
50'·11" ; discus, Chuck Neal ,
The public is invited.
GAHS, 1970, 150'8"; pole vault,
Greg Cronacher, Ironton, 1970,
BAKE SALE SET
The WSCS of the Racine 12'·9 11 •
Logan won the first six league
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church will hold a bake sale titles, Athens won the next
beginning at 9:30a.m. Saturday seven, followed by Gallipolis'
in the building beside the championship in 1970. The first
Racine Home National Bank. league meet was held In 1957.

Athens' Bulldogs, winner of
seven previous Southeastern
Ohio League track and field
meets, will be favored to caplure the 15th annual event at
Ohio University's Peden
Stadium Friday .
The 1971 meet will begin
around 3 p. m.
Gallipolis, defending league
champion, and Ironton will go
all out to top the Athenians, who
own impressive wins over
several top-notch squads in the
area this spring.
Earlier in the year, Athens
walloped the Blue Devils on
Memorial Field , 87-16.
Jackson and Logan are expeeled to record some firsts in
Friday's annual meet. Wellston ,
Waverly and Meigs have been
soundly trounced by other
league teams during regular
season meets.
Individuals back this year to

Drivers Prepare For 500
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI)
-Mark Donohue apparently has
scrapped his high-speed testing
and started to work on his
plans for the StJO..mile Indianapolis auto race itself.
But some of the drivers
would like to have the extra
miles per hour the Media, Pa.,
speedster is registering even
with a full load of fuel.
Donohue toured the Indianapolls Motor Speedway's 2l'.·mile
track Wednesday for 20 laps
unofficially over 170 miles per
hour. Eighteen were over 172
M.P.H.-faster than the official
one and four-lap average set by
Joe Leonard of San Jose, Calif.,
In a turbocar In 1968. Donohue
later said he was checking car
handling with a full fuel load.
Donohue, who paced to an
unofficial 174.757 M.P.H. on
Monday, was caught at 174.622
for his quickest circuit Wednes·
day.
Two more drive~')l&gt;ined the
170 M.P.H. category in practice. Denis Hulme of New
Zealand, driving a McLaren
racer identical to the one of
Donohue, registered a 172.944
unofficially on the electric eye.
Leonard roared to a 170.1
speed.
,
Hulme's teammate, Peter
Revson of New York City, and

Houston at Philadelph ia, night

Oakland at Baltimore, night

FIGHT OFF
CHICAGO (UPI )- A sche·
duled 12-round fight petween
middleweights Irish Denny
Moyers and Jose Chirino,
booked for May: 15 at Playboy
International's 'Lake Geneva,
Wis., hotel, was cancelled
Wednesday when Moyers sui·
fered training camp injuries.

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3-Tbe Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0. 1 May 6,1971

%-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport.Pom~roy, 0., May 6, 1971

r---------------------------1 ·
[Helen Help Us j
l

By Helen Bottel

·Professor Springs ,Exam
NORTH
4KJ4

.1

6

• 73 2
• Q754
.K64

YOUTH ASKED FOR IT!
WFST
EAST
"' This column Is for yoong people, their problems and
4872
41696 53
pleasures, their troobles and fun. As with the rest of Helen Help
• QJl695
.84
. Us!, it welcomes laughs but won't dodge a serioUs question with a
+ KJ
+ 16863
.AI67
.J8
brwlh-off.
SOUTII (D)
Send yow&lt; teenage questions to YOU'll! ASKED FOR IT, care
4AQ
rf. Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
• AK6
','TALK" NOT DINNER MUSIC TO HIM
+ A92
.Q9532
Pear Helen:
Both ,Julnerable
:' Lately my dad has made a rule about no talking at the dinner
Weot North East South
'table. Mlnl doesn'tllke this, but what he says goes.
•. Dad says it is not p-oper to talk while we eat. We think it's good
1•
2•
Pass 3N.T.
10 discuss pleasant things and what we've done during ihe day.
Pass
Pass
Pass
We hardly get to see each other any other time. There are four
Opening lead- • Q
kida In the family.
• Who's right? - LOSING MY APPETITE
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Dear LMA:
The student ducked. the
·. Either your father means "Don't talk with your mouth full" first heart, but had to win
li' "No fighting!", or else he's a TV addict.
the second. It was necessary
·: U he doesn't know the best kind of dinner milsic is pleasant to develop his clubs so he
led a club toward dummy at
oonversation,thenyO\IfliiOther should teachhini! -H.
trick
three. West played the
Dear Helen:
seven and dummy's king
; My motheraa,ld I'm becoming a footfanatic. You see, I wear was put up. The professor
a size 11, very narrow, and that's monstroos.
who sat East dropped the
- Whenever 1 stand next to someone, I can see the Immense · jack. When the student led
difference between their feet and mine, I have to walk down stairs a second club from dummy
West was able to win the
sideways to fit on the steps.
trick with the 10 and lead a
AI the beginning of school, a teacber asked us to write down third heart to clear the suit
one thing that made us unique from others and I put down "Big while he still held the ace
feet!"
of clubs.
The student looked admir' People think size 9or lOis huge, so where does that leave me?
ingly
at the professor. "I
pulslde of cutting off my toes, what can I do, as I can't always sit
would have made the hand
jin mj· feet and short skirts don'\ cover them when you curl up on a against almost anyone else .
jlavenpo~t. - TIRED OF PLAVING FOOTSIE
What a brilliant play!"
"Not at all," replied the
pear Tired:
.
~
. : I once worried aboot MY long narrow feet untO I realized I. professor . "The play of the
·l'l'o one noticed unleaal called attention Ill them; 2. The few who
·(racked wise had worse "defeclll," and 3. Anything that expensive couldn't be all bad! ·
.
Cuckler, Mrs. Clara Karr, Mrs.
: : Who else In your crowd can be fitt,ed only at exclusive shops Ethel Williamson, Mrs. Alfred
.~boseprlce tagsyooshoultlframeyet? -H.
Yeauger, Mrs. Henry Fischer,
~~:
~~~.~~
: · Today my mother came home from the hospital. She had a Fisher, Mrs. Adolph Grueser,
d til
,Mrs. Clara McMaster, Mrs.
)Iarrow escape frlnl ea .I'm so thankful to have her back, that Milton Roush and Randy, Mrs.
. l just had to write this:
: . Yoosee, I'm a teenager.I get sick of hearing, "Down with the Gr~gg Gibbs, Mrs. John Wolfe,
· :P,:stabllshment!" etc.lflt wasn't for the Establishment with all its Mrs. Pat Quinn, Mrs. Sadie
•
Brown, Sherry Russell, Mrs.
p-ogreaa and accomplishmenbl, Heaven help us all. It saved my Denny Evans and Becky, Mrs.
t""om!
'"
Vena Whaley, Mrs. Ethel
i I'm a!Bo sick of hearing kidB put down their parenbl, calling Stewart, Mrs. Glen Smith, Mrs.
{them duDunles and wtH'se, and "MyOid Lady" or "My Old Man." Lillie Starcher, Mrs. Otto
J:K aU of a sudden they 1081 a parent, like I almost did, maybe Hartenbach, Miss Dorothy
;:!hey'd wake up.
Hartenbach,
Mrs . Bert
;: It took me a long time to see that I've been blind.! either took Grueser, Mrs. Herbert Push,
;for granted or ignored the love Mom gave me un~ I almost didn't Miss Marcia Pugh, Mrs. Jim
}have her any more.
Sheets, Mrs. Herschel Rose,
~ Sure, parents can be tough, but It would be even tougher · and Mrs, Karl Grueser.
i,wltllout them. - GLAD .
Others presenting gifts were
.
,' '
,
Mrs. Charles Withrow, Mrs.

l.

.

i·Shower Given .Sharon
Fischer
'
•

!

Mr s. Wllliam Russell anu
;.Mrs. Charles Grueser en(.!ertalned Saturday night with a
t shower honor~?g Miss Sha:on
, Fischer of Williamstown, bnde·
: elect of Mr. Bob Grueser,
; Minersville.
: · The shower was held in the
; social room of the Minersville
\Methodist Olurch. The gift
table decorations featured a
pink "covered umbrella with
streamers extending from the

Ui

"

ce ng.
.
Assorted ~ook1es, coffee and
tea were served. G~es were
played with prizes gomg to Mrs.
Harvey Van Vranken, Mrs.
Brooks Sayre, and Mrs. Wayne
Russell. Mrs. Fannie Phillips
won the door prize.
Other guests were Miss
Esther Joseph, Mrs. Charles
Chauncy, Mrs. Gerald Amberger, Mrs. Joe Hiliid}.M!:!:_
Stella Grueser, Mrs. Gladys

!':r~-"~~~~~r~::;~: ~~~:

Carolyn Evans, Mrs. Bradford
Maag Mrs. Greg Roush, Mrs.
Euge~e Forhes, Mrs. Tracy
Whaley, Mrs. John Sauvage,
Mrs. Victor Hysell, and Mrs.
Walter Grueser
·

Published

dally

except

2157.

Second class postage paid at

Pomeroy , Ohio .
National adverlising
representative
Botl l nell i Gallagh&amp;r, Inc., 12 East 42nd
St ., New York City, New York .
Subscrlplion rates : Delivered by carrier where
t~vallable
cents per week ;
By Motor Route where carrier
service not available : One
month S1 .75 . By mall In Ohio
and W. Va ., One year su.oo .
SIK months f7 . 2S. Three
months $4 .50 . Subscription
price Includes Sunday Times Sentinel.

so

I1I Vol·ce
1

ll

•

·

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d

th

Mrs . Kathryn
Spencer
is
recuperating
at her
home at
Anna -Mar!a, Fla., alter undergoing surgery .last week:at
the . Man_ attee Memorial
1
B d t
H
Hosp1ta. 10 ra en on. _er
addr~§.s_ts ~~ 96.!, Anna ~aria,
Fla. 33501. The Spencers son,
Jon, left last week for a tour of
duty with the U. S. Army in
Vietnam.

~
A

~fMfM~fR

MOTHEn DAY

sumg,

v4 'al
sgect

$25 Given to
Kidney Fund

raoiance.

cam nus n set
8'\fS .

Goessler
JEWELRY

STORE

~

Machine Perks
Perez smashed a three"f'un
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - It
_isn't often that• a '•team- gets-a homer in the seventh off Bill
bonus of seven walks, three Singer and Lee May followed
wild pitches and a hit batter with a solo four-bagger.
" It wouldn't have mattered
and fails to capitalize on that
windfall but the Los Angeles who batted fourth on that .
Dodgers did it Wednesday pitch," said Alston. "Don't fornight.
get Singer struck out Bench beAnd when the Cincinnati Reds lore Perez hit the ball out."
Although SiJlger suffered his
came up with a four"f'un inning
in the seventh, it carried them sixth defeat, Alston said the tall
righthander pitched well at
to an 8-4 victory.
times.
"They gave us a bonus of
" I'm not sure he's physically
two runs but we couldn't come
up with a big hit," mourned sound yet," said AI ston. " H.ts
problem was a combination of
Manager Wall Alston .
control
and stuff not being up
The Reds, however, were
gleeful over their ability to es- to par."
Singer was laid up much of
cape the disaster that seemed
last
season with an attack of
impending when starter Wayne
Simpson went on his wild hepatitis and when he recovered
he suffered a broken finger.
streak.
·
Manager Sparky Anderson, in Simpson, who has never lost
an effort to instill a flame in
his team, switched Tony Perez
from third to fourth place in
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - It
the batting order and moved
was the kind of night Wayne
Johnny Bench to third.
"This is sort of what it was· Simpson would rather forget.
The Cincinnati right-hander,
like last year," Anderson said.
. ' "I moved Perez to fourth and who ran into arm problems last
Bench to third then when we season after a sensational rookran into a bad streak and it ie start, has been working back
paid off."

s~
CANDIES

.

By VITO STELLINO
UPI Sports Writer
Will success spoil Vida Blue?
That's the only worry Oakland A's Manager Dick Williams has these days as Blue, a
21-year-old left-bander , continues to be the pitching
sensation of the young baseball
season.
"I'd like to keep him in a
glass cage and just send him
out when it's his turn /'
Williams smiled Wednesday
night after Blue won his
seventh straight to boost his
record to 7-1 on a four-hitter as
the A's downed Detroit 5-0.
When he was asked if Blue
could face the pressure of his

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Meigs Co. Branch

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-1 and 7-a p.m.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
Pediatrics Ward.
Births

Meigs County
Branch of
The.Athens County.
5avmgs &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

,

sudden success, Williams said,
"I don't think he 's going to
have any problems. He's very
intelligent and he's assumed his
responsibilities without any
problems. He's got a pretty
good guy around him in Tommy
Davis, who's been through all
this himself."
But Blue has only just begun
to cope with his new status as
an instant celebrity and the
pressure on the youngster will
continue to mount if he keeps
pitching this way.
Blue seems to be ·a bit
awed by it aU right now.
"I knew I could win in the
majors, but 7-1.. .. ?"he said. "I
can't believe it. But I'll take 8-1
or S-2 or even S..S."
He added, "it's great to be
compared to a Koufax or a
McDowell but I just try to ue
Vida Blue."
Williams was asked how
many games Blue will win and
he said, "somebody just asked
me that and I said how many
start ~oes he have. I just hope
he stays healthy and can pitch
when it's his turn ." Williams
has been alternating Blue with
three and lour days rest.
Blue's statistics are sqmewhat staggering. He was
knocked out on opening day In
Washington but he's pitched
seven straighl'complete games
since including four shutouts.
He leads the league with 69
strikeouts in 62 innings pitched
and with a 1.02 ERA.
He got into his only jams
when he walked two batters in
the first and fourth innings. He
walked two with one out in the
first and struck out Willie
Horton and Bill Freehan. In the
fourth, he walked Kaline and
Horton and then struck out the
side.
In the other games, Minnesota beat New York 5-3,
1\lilwaukee edged Washington 4-

You can be sure ...

he's
•
IW"'tng
his
Banking

if it's Westinghouse '!:!
AIR CONDITIONER

He's doing it by =il, which gives him '
time to do other things. If you'd like
more free time, try oUr Mail-In Service.

"Window Unit"

The Farmers .Bank
an·d Savings Co.
POMEROY, 0.
Member Federal' Reserve System
On

Fridays Our Drive-'ln Window

is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., (Con·

'

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5000 BTU - Plugs In like a lamp,

•. ~£d '-"'V.:~~

lib .. .... .............. :....~2.00

I. Especially for You Assortment .... 2~

lb. box $4.35
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C. Mother's Day Gift ...... .... .. 8 oz. box .$1.15

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2 speed fan
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B. Grueser, 2-:J, Evans :~:1 and]
Will 1-1 .
:
For Foote Mineral Whitlatch;
Gardner and Bird went3-l~ ·
Hindy - 2-1, JUtmson 1-1 an~
Green, 1·1.
,
The bankers' overall record
now is 9-1 for the season,
Tonight the bankers go to
Middleport to play Citizens ·
National Bank at 6:30.
·•

Danville Put Down by 10-3

first two innings and held on t&lt;l
down Danville 12 to 3 Tuesday
evening at Middleport. The
green and gold pounded out 18
hi ts to gain the victory in theii
fir st league contest. Big guns
for the bank were Bruce Hawley
with 4 hits in lour trips antl
Allen Oiler with three hits iii
three trips. Other hitters were
Kendall Dunfee and Bill Halley
each with a single and a double,
Sandy Clonch and Jim FarleY.
with two singles each , and Jerry
Hawley, Tom Hawley and Bill
Cincinnati (Merritt 0-2) at
Wednesday's Results
2, twinight.
Fife each with one single.
,
Boston t Peters 2-2) at Chica- Las Angeles (Osteen 3-2}, night . Syracuse 5 Richmond 4
S1
.
Louis
!Gibson
3-1)
at
Tidewa1er
10
Roches1er
6
112
The
Citizens
National
Bank's
go (Johnson 3-2) .
Philadelphia
(Bunning
1-4) ,
innings)
I Only games scheduled)
nlgh1.
WinMipeg at Charles1oh tppd, next game is with The Farmers
Friday's Gam!s
Bank and Savings Co . this
(Only game s sc heduled)
rai n)
. .
.
Washington at Minnesota, night
Friday's
Games
Toledo
at
Lou
1
sv
•ll
e
{ppd,
ram)
evening
at Middleport.
Boston a1 Milwaukee, night
Chicago at N\onireal nlgh1
New York a1 Chicago, night
·,
Kansas Ci1y at Cleveland, nig~t St. Louis at New York . ninht
1

into shape gradually this season. He may have set the program back quite a bit Wednesday night against the Los An·
geles Dodgers.
Simpson walked seven batters
in little more than two Innings,
hit another and unleashed three

wild pitches before Reds' manager Sparky Anderson mercifully removed him.
There was some consolation,
however. Simpson didn't allow
a hit and the Reds finally won
tpe game S-4.

Blue Wins 7th In Row

L.-..-------..

Would you believe

The Farmers Bank and
Sa~ings Company's, slo.pitch
softball team won its league
'opener Tuesday evening over
Foote Mineral, 11HJ, unleashing
Na1ional League
to the Dodgers and beat them off with a single against reliev- 'By United Press International
a 15-hit onslaught and playing
er Milt Wilcox and, alter two
By
Uni1ed"Press
lnlerna1ional
American
League
twice last year, was saved from
perfect defense in the field .
, East
East
possible defeat by a. combina-" sacrifices, 'SCored on Bill Gra•
W. L. Pel. GB Foote Mineral got only six hits.
'W. L. Pet. GB
15 9 .625 i'•i,
15 8 .652 .. . New York
lion of excellent relief pitching barkewitz's grounder.. h d
Boston
Leading hitters lor the
In
the
seventh
a
pmc
OU· Bai1imore
N\ontreal
10
7
.588
14
9
.6f/l
1
and the extra-base hitting of his
15 11 .577 1 bankers were Whley , 3 lor 4, J.
ble by Jim Stewart and a walk Washington 12 14 .462 41/'2 Pit1sburgh
teammates .
16 12 .571 1 Wolle, 2-1, J. Vanlnwagen 2-3,
II 13 .458 4'1&gt; S1 . Louis
to Cline preceded Perez's hom- Detroi1
Chicago
11 15 .423 s
He left the game in the third
10 13 .435 5
New York
ed wtt· h his · Cleveland
er.
May
then
follow
Philadelphia
8 16 .333 7
8
17
.320
8
without having given up a hit.
Wesl
West
homer.
Both
clubs
scored
In the second, Simpson started
W. L. Pet. Gil
W. L. Pet. GB
meaningless runs in the ninth .
San Francisco 20 7 .741 ...
off by hitting Wes Parker with
Oakland
19
11
.633
The Citizens National Bapk
The victory went to Wilcox, California
14 .12 .538 3 Los Angeles 14 14 .500 61117. slo-potch solt'ball team of
a pitch, loaded the bases on
13 13 .500 6 h
Ci1y 14 12 .538 3 Atlanta .
walks and then threw his sec· who hurled four innings 'and MKansas
Houston
12 14 .462 l lf1 Middleport scored 10 runs in the
innesot{l
12
·
14
.462
5
Cincinnati
10 14 .417 81, ·1
ond wild pitch to score on run. was followed to the mound by Milwaukee
11 13 .458 5
Joe
Gibbon
and
Wayne
GrangSan
Diego
7 19 .269 121 1
Chicago
10 14 .417 6
Two more walks forced in Bill
Wednesday's Results
· er.
Wednesd&amp;V S Results
Buckner.
San Francisco 2 Pitt sburgh 1
.
.
Kansas City 4 ·Cleveland 2
But the lwMun Dodger lead
The Dodgers end Reds close Minnesota· 5 New York 3, night Montreal5 Houston 1. n ight
International League Sta~dmgs
By United Press ln1ernal1onal
lasted only until the third when out the series tonight when N\ilwakee 4 Washng1n 3, night Chicago 5 New York 4, night
Sl.
Lou
is
s
Philadelphia
1,
night
W L Pet. GB
Pete Rose walked, Ty Cline Claude Osteen, 3-2, opposes Jim Oakland 5 ·oetroi1 0, night
San Diego 5 At l 1. 1st twilight Syracuse
12 4 .750 Bos
a1
Chi
,
night,
ppd, rain
singled and Bench doubled in a Merritt, tl-2. Their meeting will Calif at Bait, night, ppd, ,rain A11 3 San Diego 1, 2nd nigh!
. Charles1on
10 6 .625 2
Clnci a Los Angeles 4, night
Louisville
10 6 .625 2
run. Perez followed with a dou- be the second of the season.
Today's Probable Pitchers
Today's
Probable
Pitchers
Richmond
B B .500 4
New
York
(Stoltlemyre
2-0)
ble to score Cline.
Osleen beat Merritt 3-0 in their
Chicago (Hands 3-3) at New W innipeg
6 9 .400 5117
at
Minnesota
tHall
0-21,
night.
The Dodgers tied the game _previous duel. April 23 at Cin· California (Messersmi1h 2-2 York {Seaver -4. 1)
Tidewater
7 ll .389 6
Houston
(Dierk
er
4-0)
at
Rochester
5 9 .357 6
in the fourth when Buckner led cinnati.
and N\ay 2-1} at Bal1imore
Toledo
6 II .353 611&gt;
IN\cNaily 4-1 and Dobson 1-2), N\1ntreal 1Renko 3-6), nigh1.

Kind Of Nrght Simpson Would Rather Forget

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

HOSPITAL
NEWS

Bankers Blank Foote Mineral

UNDERWENT SURGERY

jack of cl ubs was routine.
·
Eisenhower H-ltal in Palm Springs .... Met
BY JACK O'BRIAN
...,.
anything if left in my hand
. ~·s retiring boss Rudolph Bing's going out
and might actually keep my
ff'SOPENSEASON
.-. with a-bang, the-late-Mn,-John D, RockefeUer
partner from the extra en' willed enough cash to stage three of the ternON 111E :AFFLUENT
ntal Rudy's five new productions next
try he would need to estab!ish his hearts. On the other
NEW YORK - Lockamitbl are coining perame
Willi W 1
he .1 his
hand, you had a cinch lor for.tunes in N.Y.- after burglars (mostly drug ~ ;"'
e ,Y er ~':'
qw
y o u r contract !~ you had addicts) bust in .... Late afternoons tbe sedate direc~ sjoboo the 40e&amp;:ats film because he
played correctly·,
Manhattan nelghbvrhootls are being . hit _ wwldn I've been able to qwt dgarets otherwiSe.
Do yo u see where the stu,
k !books tchetl b the ~opelessl
The Italian gov't allocated $65,000,000 m
sna .
Y '' ,
Y lncenUv«&lt;re to try and get ItalD'films back to
dent made his mistake' At women spoc e
trick three he could have unreported hundreds dally on the amuent Eaat abn
I . ....._ U S sh b'
.
., d h
l
, f Sid
s
tton Pia in -----' 1''- own prl ale
orma
....
""'
.
ow IZ unions are
&lt;pOt e t e pro essor S Uti
e "" U
ce CT""""" "' "
V . de-•n~lno Ill
'td te simiJa ••• 000 000
if he just pjayed a low club security army .... The huge Holll1es Security , , __
e gov prodona .a bu r{;'
from (lummy .
firm just jumped Into the induiitrial personnel boost to (llllesUc
uctions t _ow ey
East would have to win security-army business· it's owned by John stand a fat chance .... Playboy bUMies wear
the trick and could make no Mosler, who sold his f~ed safe company to get seemingly daring coslumea (whlcb are built like
better return than a dJa-. t chilling'1
(oding"n "business
steeltonotletltallhangout)buttheN.Y.bunny
mond . It would be up to the 10 0 ~
Yexp
ow
, once llltch has given voyeurs a really unfair teaser:
student to rise with the see donunated only by the Plnkertoos .... Its llle No. Had
t of 'Is bunnl
In the buff f th'
mAY 91k
and clear his club suit. The 1 job lor retired N. Y, cops, especiaUy since they
~08 1
es pose
. .or. ~
'
defense would collect one can get such big pensions after ooly 20 years on mootll s Pla~boy mag - and thiS month s
·heart, one diamond and two the force .... N.Y. City's top police safe-find-loft business Is tripling.
clubs, but the _stude~t would sq ad detective Bob McDerinott joined the
The TV networks swear as sincerely as an
collect the mne tncks he u
.
•
.
'
oldtime gambling joint owner that they lose
needed lor bis contract.
Mosler military .... Mosler hired ex-N.Y. pollee
the'
Ill lele Ill
nd k
.
tNEwsPAm ENTERPRISE •ssN ' commish Leary away from his $45,0IJO.a.year mflllleyh"n~ o~th ~~~(to
cast -cba th eep
0118
piHering-combat job with a huge deparlment g - .. '"
oven:u ea 0 .er ---siore ... One big N.y. store Is threatening to pack Biggest source of TV-workers unemployment: 15
it all in over the positively fierce pilferage, both hours of networ~ time per week mon?pollzed by
The bidding has been:
. from burglary and employe 18rcenies.
mosUy old mOVIes .... .Merv Grllfln,s personal
West North
Easl S~uth . , The American Legion wants to hold a mge congl(llllerate (half dozen radio stations, CATV
I "'
Pass
salule for Bob Hope on Memorial Day but Bob systems, couple of network qillz shows, his own
4~osu4 f~~·fi ~o1d~ A K Q 4&lt;7 4 said positively not ... It'D take the Public Service mldnlghtcasbl, racetrack, closed-circuit.TV) is
What do you bid?
Commission ten months to decide if the phone all!J!s own, and be doesn t have to divulge Its
A-Bid one diamond. Yo_u rate boost is okay: probably can't get !be·right eanungs; but Merv announce~ he did a~t
have a very good hand but thos ph
be
M be th f' t rtalnl the $9,000,000 gross last year - whiCh"means he s
MERLIN SET
response will lead lo the best one num r .... ay
e mes 'ce
Y
babl
·
bli sh tJ
results.
inost spectacular, jazz pianist anywhere - JrO
Y gomg PU C or Y•
'fODAY'S QUESTION
Oscar Peterson ~ Is at the Rainbow Grill; pi r.:rlse.~r w:;nt all _tbe( wa~n!blll~:t
You bid one diamond
d staggering rechnique most powerful since the
ug
nanas moVIe wn
rrec your partner rebids one ~~- -!ale Art Tatum .... ~ Idea of a great collection starred in by ex-husband Woody Allen) on the
trump. What do you do'
we didn't bother to amass during hill recording Mike Douglas Show. Louise was on the way home
years is all of Tatum's magnificent recorded befOI'f! she realized she:d never mentioned It on
virtuosity; serves us right. Someone should put the air .... Robert Klein s Bitter End engagement
them all on LP tapes. When? Where?
takes its ~ncial style fr(llll the nowo111o~e
The look of Jove. .
Daily News' marvelously headlined title for !Jus!ness: He s wvrklng on percentage ·:" LouiS
And Love Rings
the Chinese table tennis champs who may retw'n Prima exploded his special musical artillery at
from ArtCarved
that glow. In
the visit here: "The Ping Dynasty" , .. Bob the Rainbow Grill on percentage and hauled
or
A $25 contribution was made Hope's H'wood dinner raised $2,000,000 for the home a Udy fortune.
.
in soon for
to the George Thompson Kidney
Love Rings to reflect
Fund at a meeting of the
your special light.
Learning about Antique Glass,
Pomeroy Garden Club ~eld at
and Sustainer of Life.
the home of Mrs. Guy Gutnther.
'J:"
r/. '
For further information . k!Carved
Mrs. Howard Nolan, vice
lhe Love Ring
president , conducted the By DEBORAH M. CONKLIN of Action through Ohio state contact the Extension Office,
people
Ext. Agent, Home Eeon.
University, will be presented by 992--3895. Last day to register is
meeting in the absence of Mrs.
Creativity,
Culture,
ComMrs.
Margaret
·
Ermarth,
June
8.
Plan
ahead
and
bring
a
Harvey
Van
Vranken,
president. Thank you notes mitment: That's the theme for Professor of History, Wit- friend!
were read from Miss Lydia the 1971 campus Days . for tenberg University; Dr. CynEbersbach and Mrs. Fred Women Conference on The Ohio thia Wedel, Association
PLAN BAKE SALE
Blaettnar for corsages given State University Campus, June Director, Center for Voluntary
22-24. The topic refers to three Society, Washington D. C., and The Children's Band of the
them at the April meeting.
Little Prayers was the special areas of interest and President, National Council of Mt. Moriah Baptist Church will
devotional topic given by Miss responsibility for today's Churches, and Dr: f.ois Lund, hold a bake sale beginning at 9 Coui-i St.
Pomeroy
Ebersbach and members in women. Your stay on campus at Director, School of Home a.m. Saturday at Dudley 's
response to roll call commented the conference will include Economics.
Florist Shop In Middleport.
classes
and
assemblies.
Those
Choose
as
many
as
six
of
on insect control.
Enemies of Evergreens was who live beyond commuting these classes to attend: Pattern fOIICMIICII-IOIIIICMIICIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIICMIICIIIIIIIIIIIIIICM-:JCICICIGIOII-.i
the program topic of Mrs. distance will enjoy a stay in forLivlng,Meatln -the-Freezer,
The Days or Daze,"Panls Fit
.J
Edward Baer in a paper university dormitories. ·
Something
special
has
been
Today,
Space
hge
Home
presented by Mrs. Audrey
Betzing. She used as a reference added to the campus Days' Furnishings, Serving the
MOTHER'S DAY IS SUNDAY, MAY 9th
the book by K. B. Cloud, schedule - the third day of the Hungry, Fun with Food Out.
Evergreens lor Every State. conference will be a "drive-in" doors, Today's Fabrics and the
The group discussed control of day. If your schedule or family Fashion Server, Insuring your
bagworms, tent caterpillars, responsibilities make it im· Future, Children in your
"New"
aphids and moles and proper possible for you to attend all Household, The
three days, plan to attend on Voiunteerism, American
chemicals for control.
Drive-In
Day, a result of many Women Before Age 45, Working
Garden ideas for May were
Toward CommUnity Change,
given by Mrs. Harold Brown requests.
who spoke of ways to improve Such topics as, Women and Current Social Issues, Outdoor
the soil and the use of Their Creative Power, Women's "Living", Drugs of Abuse, The
Commiiment to Today's World, Nation's Income - Who Gets
chloridane for grub control.
The June meeting will be held Home Economics - A capsule What, Reading for Pleasure,
lt wasn't going to be worth

COLLECTIONS NOTED
Stale Treasurer Gertrude W.
Donahey announced today that
sales tax collections for Meigs
County for the month of March
showed an increase of $2,676.95
a total of IZ.93 percent increase.
Last year's tax for March
totaled $20,695.37 while for the
at the home
Dor
with of
Mrs.'Mrs.
Richard
same period this year totaled Schaefer
Jones as the assisting hostess.
$23,372.32.
Floral arrangements "Mother's
Favorite" were displayed by
The Daily Sentinel
Mrs. Nolan, Miss Ebersbach,
DEV.OTED TO THE
Mrs. Betzing and Mrs. Clair
INTEREST OF
·.MEIGS-MASON AREA
Karr. Mrs. Guinther and Miss
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Ebersbach served a dessert
Euc. Ed.
ROBERT HOEFLICH,
course preceding the meeting .
City Editor
Saturday by The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio,
.45769. Business Office Phone
992 -2156, Editorial Phone 992 -

al·ong Br·oa'dway .

,------------------------------------------:;

WIN AT 'BRIDGE

.,

3 and Kansas City topped
Cleveland 4-2. The California at
Baltimore and Boston at
Chicago games were rained out.
In the National I.Alague, San
Francisco edged Pitblburgh 2-1,
St. Louis beat Philadelphia 5-1,
Chicago edged New York 5-4,
Montreal ripped Houston 5-1,
Cincinnati downed Los Angeles
S-4 and Atlanta beat San Diego
3-1
after
losing
the
doubleheader opener 5-l.
MEIGS THIRD
Nolan Swackhamer's
Meigs Gold Team fiDlshed
third in a four-way meet at
Athens Wednesday night.
Athens was first with a 203,
Logan second with a 220, ,
Meigs had 231 and Nelson·
ville-York, 261. Two Athens
golfers, Randy Adams and
Gary Reese, shared medalist
hono.rs, ~ach with a 37,
Bill :H,ensler and Steve
Story were J~w men for the
Marauders, each wttb u. Bob
Werry had 54, Chuck Han·
nabs 46, and Marty Vaughan,
46.

NEW COMMISSION
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI)-Hall
of Farner Jackie Robinson was
named by Gov . Nelson Rocke·
feller Wednesday to succeed
Raymond J. Lee on the New
York State Athletic Commis·
sion . The Stale Senate must
approve Robinson's appoint.
men! to make it official.
Robinson broke the color
barrier in big league baseball
when he joined the Brooklyn
Dodgers In 1947.

Pl1tsburgh at Los Ang, night
Cincinnati at San Diego, night
Atlanta at San Francisco, night

Athens Favored

.
. Leo . Cardenas drove m ~II
flVe Mmnesota runs- three w1th
his first homer in the second
inning-as the Twins beat New
York. Jim Perry, 5-2, went 7 2-3
innings to get the victory and
Stan Bahnsen lasted two
mmngs while suflermg the
defeat.
.
.
A bases-loaded pmch smgle
by Andy Kosco h1ghhghled a
rhubarb-filled seventh mnmg as
Milwaukee edged Washington.
The Rhubarb started when
Andy Kosco went to the bat
circle and Washington Manager
Ted Williams switched pitchers.
Milwaukee manager Dave Bristol then argued he never
actually sent Kosco in as a
pinch-hitler and tried to put
starter Johnny Briggs back into
the game. Bristol was thrown
out and Kosco made it all
academic by driving in two
runs to win the game.
Amos Otis hit a two-run
homer in the four-run sixth
inning as Kansas City beat
slumping Cleveland. Dick Drago, 4-1, went 8 1-3 innings to get
the victory and Steve Dunning
took the loss.

1968 "500" champ Bobby Unser
of Albuquerque, N.M., regis·
tered 170.4 Tuesday.
A.J. Foyt Jr., of Houston,
Tex., made his first appearance
on the track this year in his
newly designed rear-engine
Ford. But the runs only were
for shakedowns.
Rain interrupted practice
twice Wednesday. The second
yellow light kept the track
closed the last three hours. The
course also was shut down two
hours at noon.

defend 1970 titles are Gallia 's
Richard Ferguson (2-mile) and
Steve Stebbins tlong jump ).
Only two new records were
established in 1970 - Greg
Cronacher, Ironton , jumped 12'·
9" in the pole vault and
Gallipolis' Chuck Neal threw
the discus 150'-11" for a new
conference mark.
Here's the existing league
records:
120-high hm·dles, Tom
Spencer, GAHS, 1969, :15; 100yard dash, Mickey Frazier,
Logan, 1960, : 10; mile run, Tom
Smith, Athens, 1966, 4:35.2; 880yardrelay, Athens,1968, 1:34.6.
440-yard dash, Ken DeVeau,
Athens, 1965, :51.2; 180-low
hurdles, Bob Young, Nelsonville, 1957, :21.1; 880-yard run ,
Bob Handley, Athens, 1969, 1:594; 200-yard dash , Mickey
Frazier, Logan, 1960, :22.2; two
mile run, Robbie Alden, Athens,
1969, 10 : 19.6; mile relay,
HILL TO SPEAK
Athens, 1969, 3:35,1; )ligh i.II!UP.
Denver Hill of Foster, W. Va., Steve Chase, Athens, 1961, 6'will speak at weekend services 43J4n ,
Long jump, Tom Spencer,
at the Red ·Brush Church of
Christal 7:30p.m. Saturday, 10 GAHS, 1969, 21'-3\14''; shot
a.m. Sunday and 7 p.m. Sunday. put, Dave Green ,' Athens, 1968,
50'·11" ; discus, Chuck Neal ,
The public is invited.
GAHS, 1970, 150'8"; pole vault,
Greg Cronacher, Ironton, 1970,
BAKE SALE SET
The WSCS of the Racine 12'·9 11 •
Logan won the first six league
Wesleyan United Methodist
Church will hold a bake sale titles, Athens won the next
beginning at 9:30a.m. Saturday seven, followed by Gallipolis'
in the building beside the championship in 1970. The first
Racine Home National Bank. league meet was held In 1957.

Athens' Bulldogs, winner of
seven previous Southeastern
Ohio League track and field
meets, will be favored to caplure the 15th annual event at
Ohio University's Peden
Stadium Friday .
The 1971 meet will begin
around 3 p. m.
Gallipolis, defending league
champion, and Ironton will go
all out to top the Athenians, who
own impressive wins over
several top-notch squads in the
area this spring.
Earlier in the year, Athens
walloped the Blue Devils on
Memorial Field , 87-16.
Jackson and Logan are expeeled to record some firsts in
Friday's annual meet. Wellston ,
Waverly and Meigs have been
soundly trounced by other
league teams during regular
season meets.
Individuals back this year to

Drivers Prepare For 500
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UPI)
-Mark Donohue apparently has
scrapped his high-speed testing
and started to work on his
plans for the StJO..mile Indianapolis auto race itself.
But some of the drivers
would like to have the extra
miles per hour the Media, Pa.,
speedster is registering even
with a full load of fuel.
Donohue toured the Indianapolls Motor Speedway's 2l'.·mile
track Wednesday for 20 laps
unofficially over 170 miles per
hour. Eighteen were over 172
M.P.H.-faster than the official
one and four-lap average set by
Joe Leonard of San Jose, Calif.,
In a turbocar In 1968. Donohue
later said he was checking car
handling with a full fuel load.
Donohue, who paced to an
unofficial 174.757 M.P.H. on
Monday, was caught at 174.622
for his quickest circuit Wednes·
day.
Two more drive~')l&gt;ined the
170 M.P.H. category in practice. Denis Hulme of New
Zealand, driving a McLaren
racer identical to the one of
Donohue, registered a 172.944
unofficially on the electric eye.
Leonard roared to a 170.1
speed.
,
Hulme's teammate, Peter
Revson of New York City, and

Houston at Philadelph ia, night

Oakland at Baltimore, night

FIGHT OFF
CHICAGO (UPI )- A sche·
duled 12-round fight petween
middleweights Irish Denny
Moyers and Jose Chirino,
booked for May: 15 at Playboy
International's 'Lake Geneva,
Wis., hotel, was cancelled
Wednesday when Moyers sui·
fered training camp injuries.

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~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 6, 1971

~

~ - The Daily Sentinel. MiddlcPDf,t.Pomefoy, 0., May 6, 1971

·\ f

Nelson Classic Underway

MISS BONNIE ANGEVINE, lnstruc.tor, moved about the
auditorium offering tips to teachers as they worked on
projects. Here she chats with Mrs. Kate Jarrell, Pomeroy
;:~ Elementary School teacher, about a decorated box
:,.:;: · procedure.

.,..... -:.
-'"~- -------------------

. --~

'

.j

, Meigs . Property

g.

.

2

Transfers

ROBERT BOWEN, Meigs
County superintendent of
schools, and Jack Bell,
representative lrom SIDney

and Smith, Inc., admire the
work of Mrs. Bert Grimm,
Letart Falls teacher. At left is
Mrs. W. R. Carpenter,

Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, an
elementary teacher In
Middleport.

.

~ James L. Spencer, Irene Shenefield, Parcel, Salem.
~ Spencer to Freeland S. Norris, Clair F. Shenefield, tela B.

· 35 Acres, Sulton.

Raymond H. Butcher, M.
., ~ Kathry~ Butcher to Franklin M.
~ Rizer, Wanda M. Rizer, Lot,
Syracuse-sutton.
,:; Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
· ' Charles H. Cobb, Sandra Sue
Cobb,IOOAcre Lot295, .25Acre,
•~-: Syracuse-sutton.
~ ·William Thomas Souls by,
~~ June Rose Soulsby to Rita
'"f'·Colleen Arnold 1 Lot, Syracuse.
t Allen Gilk~y, dec. to George
, Gilkey, Guy Gilkey, Harry
~ Gilkey, Hazel ' Akers, Rhoda
~,P Lay,, Pearl Gilkey, All. lor
-~ Trans., Salisbury.
~'~ William LoJig to General
· Telephone Co., Right of Way,
Lebanon .
~ Frank Gilkey, Sr., Exec.,
~Jo. Sadie Wolle, dec. to James K.
Haggerty, Lot, Middleport.
-:'i!Z. Leo Taylor, Hazel Taylor to
., John T. Wolfe, Parcels, Letart.
John T. Wolfe to Dwight W.

!i?

4(

~~~~s, ~~rpelores

'

Corbin,
· Jean Hayman to Daniel A.
•'
u.ym an, •UIJ-1, Syracuse.
n .. 'f ~~
' ' Andrew Cross, Nora Cross to
,1 ~ E. Will, Dollie Will, Lots,
,;~J Salisbury.
-~ David Pratts, Barbara Pratts
to Dana L. Channell, Judy M.
• . Channell, 21 Acres, Bedford.
Mary H. Francis, Worley N.
Francis to Franklin Real Estate
. ·. Co., 25 .74 Acres, 1'. Int., Salem.
."fi E. Harold Davis, Esther L.
~ Davis to Franklin Real Estate
··::?, Co., 102.46 Acres, Salem.
Robert M. HJ!l, Evelyn L. HJll
., to Clair F. Shenefield, Lela B.

~

Shenefield to Franklin Real
Estate Co., 100.90 Acres, Salem.
• Philip Heilman, dec. to
Hannah Heilman, Albert
Heilman, Waller Heilman,
Addie Heilman,
Felicia
Grueser. Florence Heilman,
Lydia Weyersmiller, Maggie
Smith, 25.74 Acres, Salem.
George Gilkey, Margaret
Gilkey, Guy Gilkey, Blanche
Gilkey, Harry Gilkey, Irene
Gilkey, Hazel Akers, Charles
Akers, Rhoda Lay, Pearl
Gilkey, Clara B. Gilkey, to
Pearl Gilkey, Clara B. Gilkey,
8.39 Acres, Salisbury.
Allee M. Robeson to George
G. Gum, Sr., Fay I. Gum, 1
Acre, Salisbury.
Paul Montgomery, Evelyn
Montgomery to General
Telephone Co., Right of Way,
Salem.

$245.25 Collected
Collections in the Meigs
County American Cancer
Society drive in Olive Township
under the chairmanship of Mrs.
Harlis Frank were $245.25.
Mrs. Frank en lends thanks to
the workers and contributors .
Workers were Mrs. Marilyn
Hannum, Mrs. Ada Bissell,
Mrs. Alice Curtis, Mrs. Marlene
Putnam, Mrs. Elizabeth Smith,
Mrs. Wanda Kimes, Mrs.
Thelma Eagle, Mrs. Thelma
Lantz, the Rev. Eldon Blake
and Johnny Kibble.

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By MIKE RABUN
. UPI Sports Writer
, DALLAS (UP!) - John
Schroeder ranks 87th among
touring golf's money winners,
but he must--at least for the ·
moment--rank as one of the
gallery favorites in the $125,000
Byron Nelson Golf Classic
starting ils 72-hole run today.
The 24-year ..ld Schroeder,
who is-but would like to make
people forget it- the son of
former tennis great Ted
Schroeder, has earned but
$9,500 on the golf trail this
season.
Schroeder owns, however, the
lowest scoring average of any
of the 147 players lashing out at
Preston Trail Golf Club's 7,031yard, par 35-35--70 layout.
He has played Preston Trail
in an ayerage of 68.75 strokes
per round compared with a
69.13 average for Jack Nicklaus, 69.50 for Arnold Palmer
and Dan Sikes, 69.88 for Dave
Stockton and even par 70 for
Lee Trevino--all of theo in the
field here.
It must be · taken into
consideration that Schroeder
has played only one tournament
here, while Nicklaus and
Stockton have played it twice
and Palmer and Trevino all
three times the Nelson has
called the course home .
But, Schroeder's performance
earned the respect of the
galleries and his pro contemporaries because of the circumstances .

.)

Workshop in Art.
· Con tinned from page I
hundreds of ideas which the
teachers - who must fill in the
lack of art instruction - will
take back to their classrooms.
Miss Angevine said the
teachers have been unusually
·enthusiastic and receptive to
the instruction. Informality has
prevailed as the teachers
worked the long hours following
their regular classroom work in
their respective schools.

Materials for the workshop
were provied by Binney and
Smith, represented at the
sessions by Jack Bell. Mrs.
Nellie Vale and Mrs. Greta
S~tlle, county school supervtsors, arranged the workshop
whrch should prove frmtful m
classrooms across the county.
The photographs ~ere taken
d~nng Wednesday." sessiOn
wtth the !mal meett?g of the
group concludmg tomght.

THIS GROUP ol teachers
learned the technique of
painting with melted crayola
crayons.

ENROLLMENT SET
Enrollment for all first grade
students who did not attend
kindergar·ten in the Southern
Local School District during the
past school year will be held
from 9 a. m. to 3:30 p. m. on
Friday, May 14. The pupils are
to enroll at the school they will
attend, Letart, Syracuse, or the
Racine Elementary School.

Neither Side to Budge
By LEE LEONARD
UPi Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)- House
Democratic and Republican
leaders are holding firm on
their conflicting positions regarding Gov. John J. Gilligan's
$9.1 billion budget - tax plan,
which is being readied for a
. House vote expected later this
month.
House Minority Leader A. G.
Lancione, D-BeUaire, said Wednesday his caucus and the governor's office are resisting Republican attempts at compromise. He added that he expects
a showdown when the package
hits the House floor .
House Speaker Charles F.
Kurfess, R-Bowling Green, refused to concede the possibility
that Democrats will agree to a
compromise. He conferred for
about an hour with Gilligan and
stale Finance Director Harold

AK~~:::~idthemeetingwas

mostly about various tax pro- ·
posals,
that appropriations
were
notand
discussed.
He declined
to elaborate.
Gilligan Concerned
The Speaker said Gilligan
was concerned the giant spending and tax plan was falling
behind schedule in its race to.
ward a July 1 enactment deadline .
.,
Kurfess said he assured the
governor he hopes to get the
complex package to the House
floor by mid-May.
Democratic ·soU.ces said the
new target date for a House
vote is May 19.
The legislative leaders report·
ed on the progress of · budget
talks after newsmen observed
an Increasing number of closeddoor meetings among the leadership and the governor's office.
"This is the governor's proChinese Coins
The early .makers ot coins
i~: China shaped each coin to
show what could be bought
with It. !'or exam~le. cotns
shaped like the hu~1an body
were called "dress money"
and were used to bu.v cloth·
in g.
The Padlic Crest Trail Is
m.iles
ltcuis

gram and we're sticking with
it," said Lancione in emphasizing the firm stand his party
plans to take .
The Democratic leader said
Kur!ess told him the Republicans want to cut the budget,
particularly in the area ol weifare .
He said the Speaker wants
the Democrats to back off their
plans to devise a corporation
income tax and eliminate sales
tax loopholes for business.
Instead of a graduated personal income tax, Lancione said the
Republicans want to initiate a
mandatory countywide inco~e
tax .and increase the sales tax
to 51'. or 6 per cent.
Offered Votes
Lancione said Kurfess offered
enough Republican votes to get
a compromise bill through if all

the Democrats agree to go for
it. The Democratic leader said
his party will net submit to
compromise.
. "Either OW' bill passes the
way it is or they (Republicans)
can pass an alternative and it
will be labeled as their bill,"
Lancione said. "We've got them
either way. "

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. He was the "third man" in
last year's memorable 36-hole
final day. head-to-head duel
between Nicklaus and Palmer
in which the two greats wound
up tied for the lead with
Nicklaus winning on the first
extra hole.
Despite the tremendous gallery storming along with the
day's final threesome, Schroeder refused to buckle under the
pressures. He outshot both
Nicklaus and Palmer with a 6967- 136 finish that earned him
$5,900 in a tie for third with
Trevino.
That drew such comments as
"John kept coming at us" and

"John ~epl his cool when he
might have lost it" from
Nicklaus and Palme~.
Schroeder went on to earn
$32,000 in his rookie year.
That isn't much when you
consider both Nicklaus and
Palmer have each already
pocketed more than $100,000
this year.
But, Schroeder hadn't done

well up to this point a year ago.
Now, jlere he is again and he
, feels last year's experience
here will help him over the
hump . ·
"[ certainly think it . will
help," he said. "! definitely
have some positive thoughts
about it. I know I can play this

coUrse;"

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Reserve District No.4
State No. Z23x
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON, OF
.

•
7

·The Farmers Ban·k and Savings COmpany '·

ITEMS

ONLY

.' '

of Pomeroy, Ohio And Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the clos~ of

,business April ZO, 1971, a state banking lnstituUon organized and operating
under lhe banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve
System. Published In accordance with a eall made by the State Banking
Authorities and by the Federal Rellerve Bank of this District.

COLGATE

'

'§OUI'JIOIR

BOX

~}

LARGE SELECTION OF FRESH FL9WERS AND LARGE

.

DISPLAY OF ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS. GET YOUR PORCH
BOXES OF FLOWERS NOW.

~) GIFT BOXES

PERMANENT PRESS

FOR MOTHER

~,,

~~·

SHEETS

OF TOWELS &amp;

PILLOW CASES

0
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IN COLORS

KNIFE
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ONLY

22

WOMEN'S

REG.

22

.

BI·LLFOLDS
WOMEN'S
~~ APRONS
~~

,_ 1 2PRICE
~~F

I, Ruger W. Hysell, Assistant Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby ·
de~lare that this report of condition Is true to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
Roger.W. H~ell, Assistant Cashier .
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of 'this report of
condition and declare that it has been elllimined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief Is true and correct.
1
Leslie F. Fllltz
Harold E. Smith - Directors
.
Fred w. Crow, Jr.
State of Ohjo, County of Meiss ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 4th day of May, 1971. ·
Miry P. YIIIID«, Notary Public •

c

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:t'~

ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - • $780,787.80
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - 1,152,620.61
Obligations of States and political subdivisions • - - - - • - - 575,490.45
Other securities - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - • 21,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell - - - - - - - - - 800,000.00
- - - - 7,973,218.55
Other loans - - - - - - - - - - • - Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises - • 471,432.98
- - 7,135.72
Other assets - - - - - - - - - - - - $11,781,686.11
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - LIABILITIES
Demand deposits ol individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $2,489,474.26
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7,449,751.79
Deposits of United Stales Government - - - - - - - - - -'·' - 36,174.20
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - 550,652.63
Deposits of commercial banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2,276.34
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - - - - - - - - 67,814.06
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - $10,596,143.28
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - $ 2,946,391.49
(b) Total lime and savings deposits - - - - - $ 7,649,751.79
Other liabilities - • • • - - - • • - - - - - - - - ·.:.:_.::...,35"'3,""79"'3""'.5::-2
TOTAL UABJUTIES . • - • - • • • - - • - - - - - $101949,936.88
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up porsuanl to IRS rulin85) • • - - - - - - - • - • • • - $59,388.13
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES - $59,388.13
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$772,361.18
Equity capital, total - - - • - - - 300,000.00
Common stock-total par value • - • - - • No. shares authorized 12,000
No. shares outstanding 12,000
Surplus---------- - - - • - • 400,000.00
• - 72,361.18
Undivided profits - - - - - 772,361.18·
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
. TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
$11,781,686.11
CAPJTALACCOUNTS - • - - MEMORANDA
Average of total dePosits for th~ 15 calendar
days ending with.call dale • - - • - • • - - • - - - - - - $10,567,886.87.
Average of total loans lor the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - - - - - - • - • - - - - - - - $8,617,959.34
.
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORAND,\
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value):
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities •• • - • - - - $1,035,000.00
TOTAL . - • - • - • - - - - - - - - • • • - - $1,035,000.00

~oo

ONLY

•

REG.

FLAT OR FITTED

FLAT OR FITTED

ONLY
SILVER PIECES

•2''
FULL SIZE

99~

ON SHERIDAN

TWIN SIZE

tRAYS,
SERVERS
AND OTHERS

•2''

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FOXCROFT GARZA PERMANENT PRESS SHEETS

MIDQLEPORT,
OHIO

•

I

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~-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 6, 1971

~

~ - The Daily Sentinel. MiddlcPDf,t.Pomefoy, 0., May 6, 1971

·\ f

Nelson Classic Underway

MISS BONNIE ANGEVINE, lnstruc.tor, moved about the
auditorium offering tips to teachers as they worked on
projects. Here she chats with Mrs. Kate Jarrell, Pomeroy
;:~ Elementary School teacher, about a decorated box
:,.:;: · procedure.

.,..... -:.
-'"~- -------------------

. --~

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, Meigs . Property

g.

.

2

Transfers

ROBERT BOWEN, Meigs
County superintendent of
schools, and Jack Bell,
representative lrom SIDney

and Smith, Inc., admire the
work of Mrs. Bert Grimm,
Letart Falls teacher. At left is
Mrs. W. R. Carpenter,

Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, an
elementary teacher In
Middleport.

.

~ James L. Spencer, Irene Shenefield, Parcel, Salem.
~ Spencer to Freeland S. Norris, Clair F. Shenefield, tela B.

· 35 Acres, Sulton.

Raymond H. Butcher, M.
., ~ Kathry~ Butcher to Franklin M.
~ Rizer, Wanda M. Rizer, Lot,
Syracuse-sutton.
,:; Archie E. Lee, June P. Lee to
· ' Charles H. Cobb, Sandra Sue
Cobb,IOOAcre Lot295, .25Acre,
•~-: Syracuse-sutton.
~ ·William Thomas Souls by,
~~ June Rose Soulsby to Rita
'"f'·Colleen Arnold 1 Lot, Syracuse.
t Allen Gilk~y, dec. to George
, Gilkey, Guy Gilkey, Harry
~ Gilkey, Hazel ' Akers, Rhoda
~,P Lay,, Pearl Gilkey, All. lor
-~ Trans., Salisbury.
~'~ William LoJig to General
· Telephone Co., Right of Way,
Lebanon .
~ Frank Gilkey, Sr., Exec.,
~Jo. Sadie Wolle, dec. to James K.
Haggerty, Lot, Middleport.
-:'i!Z. Leo Taylor, Hazel Taylor to
., John T. Wolfe, Parcels, Letart.
John T. Wolfe to Dwight W.

!i?

4(

~~~~s, ~~rpelores

'

Corbin,
· Jean Hayman to Daniel A.
•'
u.ym an, •UIJ-1, Syracuse.
n .. 'f ~~
' ' Andrew Cross, Nora Cross to
,1 ~ E. Will, Dollie Will, Lots,
,;~J Salisbury.
-~ David Pratts, Barbara Pratts
to Dana L. Channell, Judy M.
• . Channell, 21 Acres, Bedford.
Mary H. Francis, Worley N.
Francis to Franklin Real Estate
. ·. Co., 25 .74 Acres, 1'. Int., Salem.
."fi E. Harold Davis, Esther L.
~ Davis to Franklin Real Estate
··::?, Co., 102.46 Acres, Salem.
Robert M. HJ!l, Evelyn L. HJll
., to Clair F. Shenefield, Lela B.

~

Shenefield to Franklin Real
Estate Co., 100.90 Acres, Salem.
• Philip Heilman, dec. to
Hannah Heilman, Albert
Heilman, Waller Heilman,
Addie Heilman,
Felicia
Grueser. Florence Heilman,
Lydia Weyersmiller, Maggie
Smith, 25.74 Acres, Salem.
George Gilkey, Margaret
Gilkey, Guy Gilkey, Blanche
Gilkey, Harry Gilkey, Irene
Gilkey, Hazel Akers, Charles
Akers, Rhoda Lay, Pearl
Gilkey, Clara B. Gilkey, to
Pearl Gilkey, Clara B. Gilkey,
8.39 Acres, Salisbury.
Allee M. Robeson to George
G. Gum, Sr., Fay I. Gum, 1
Acre, Salisbury.
Paul Montgomery, Evelyn
Montgomery to General
Telephone Co., Right of Way,
Salem.

$245.25 Collected
Collections in the Meigs
County American Cancer
Society drive in Olive Township
under the chairmanship of Mrs.
Harlis Frank were $245.25.
Mrs. Frank en lends thanks to
the workers and contributors .
Workers were Mrs. Marilyn
Hannum, Mrs. Ada Bissell,
Mrs. Alice Curtis, Mrs. Marlene
Putnam, Mrs. Elizabeth Smith,
Mrs. Wanda Kimes, Mrs.
Thelma Eagle, Mrs. Thelma
Lantz, the Rev. Eldon Blake
and Johnny Kibble.

A Superb Selection

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May 9th

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By MIKE RABUN
. UPI Sports Writer
, DALLAS (UP!) - John
Schroeder ranks 87th among
touring golf's money winners,
but he must--at least for the ·
moment--rank as one of the
gallery favorites in the $125,000
Byron Nelson Golf Classic
starting ils 72-hole run today.
The 24-year ..ld Schroeder,
who is-but would like to make
people forget it- the son of
former tennis great Ted
Schroeder, has earned but
$9,500 on the golf trail this
season.
Schroeder owns, however, the
lowest scoring average of any
of the 147 players lashing out at
Preston Trail Golf Club's 7,031yard, par 35-35--70 layout.
He has played Preston Trail
in an ayerage of 68.75 strokes
per round compared with a
69.13 average for Jack Nicklaus, 69.50 for Arnold Palmer
and Dan Sikes, 69.88 for Dave
Stockton and even par 70 for
Lee Trevino--all of theo in the
field here.
It must be · taken into
consideration that Schroeder
has played only one tournament
here, while Nicklaus and
Stockton have played it twice
and Palmer and Trevino all
three times the Nelson has
called the course home .
But, Schroeder's performance
earned the respect of the
galleries and his pro contemporaries because of the circumstances .

.)

Workshop in Art.
· Con tinned from page I
hundreds of ideas which the
teachers - who must fill in the
lack of art instruction - will
take back to their classrooms.
Miss Angevine said the
teachers have been unusually
·enthusiastic and receptive to
the instruction. Informality has
prevailed as the teachers
worked the long hours following
their regular classroom work in
their respective schools.

Materials for the workshop
were provied by Binney and
Smith, represented at the
sessions by Jack Bell. Mrs.
Nellie Vale and Mrs. Greta
S~tlle, county school supervtsors, arranged the workshop
whrch should prove frmtful m
classrooms across the county.
The photographs ~ere taken
d~nng Wednesday." sessiOn
wtth the !mal meett?g of the
group concludmg tomght.

THIS GROUP ol teachers
learned the technique of
painting with melted crayola
crayons.

ENROLLMENT SET
Enrollment for all first grade
students who did not attend
kindergar·ten in the Southern
Local School District during the
past school year will be held
from 9 a. m. to 3:30 p. m. on
Friday, May 14. The pupils are
to enroll at the school they will
attend, Letart, Syracuse, or the
Racine Elementary School.

Neither Side to Budge
By LEE LEONARD
UPi Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!)- House
Democratic and Republican
leaders are holding firm on
their conflicting positions regarding Gov. John J. Gilligan's
$9.1 billion budget - tax plan,
which is being readied for a
. House vote expected later this
month.
House Minority Leader A. G.
Lancione, D-BeUaire, said Wednesday his caucus and the governor's office are resisting Republican attempts at compromise. He added that he expects
a showdown when the package
hits the House floor .
House Speaker Charles F.
Kurfess, R-Bowling Green, refused to concede the possibility
that Democrats will agree to a
compromise. He conferred for
about an hour with Gilligan and
stale Finance Director Harold

AK~~:::~idthemeetingwas

mostly about various tax pro- ·
posals,
that appropriations
were
notand
discussed.
He declined
to elaborate.
Gilligan Concerned
The Speaker said Gilligan
was concerned the giant spending and tax plan was falling
behind schedule in its race to.
ward a July 1 enactment deadline .
.,
Kurfess said he assured the
governor he hopes to get the
complex package to the House
floor by mid-May.
Democratic ·soU.ces said the
new target date for a House
vote is May 19.
The legislative leaders report·
ed on the progress of · budget
talks after newsmen observed
an Increasing number of closeddoor meetings among the leadership and the governor's office.
"This is the governor's proChinese Coins
The early .makers ot coins
i~: China shaped each coin to
show what could be bought
with It. !'or exam~le. cotns
shaped like the hu~1an body
were called "dress money"
and were used to bu.v cloth·
in g.
The Padlic Crest Trail Is
m.iles
ltcuis

gram and we're sticking with
it," said Lancione in emphasizing the firm stand his party
plans to take .
The Democratic leader said
Kur!ess told him the Republicans want to cut the budget,
particularly in the area ol weifare .
He said the Speaker wants
the Democrats to back off their
plans to devise a corporation
income tax and eliminate sales
tax loopholes for business.
Instead of a graduated personal income tax, Lancione said the
Republicans want to initiate a
mandatory countywide inco~e
tax .and increase the sales tax
to 51'. or 6 per cent.
Offered Votes
Lancione said Kurfess offered
enough Republican votes to get
a compromise bill through if all

the Democrats agree to go for
it. The Democratic leader said
his party will net submit to
compromise.
. "Either OW' bill passes the
way it is or they (Republicans)
can pass an alternative and it
will be labeled as their bill,"
Lancione said. "We've got them
either way. "

For Elegance in Pipe
Smoking Pleasure, Select a
Pipe that Needs
Breaking ln.

No

Tawney Jewelers
422 Second Ave.

I

Ohio

USE ROBINSON'S

FREE STORAGE!
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ROBINSON'S
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only or
Coin-Op

216 E. SEcbND

orders.

POMEROY, otfiO

PH. 992-5428

. He was the "third man" in
last year's memorable 36-hole
final day. head-to-head duel
between Nicklaus and Palmer
in which the two greats wound
up tied for the lead with
Nicklaus winning on the first
extra hole.
Despite the tremendous gallery storming along with the
day's final threesome, Schroeder refused to buckle under the
pressures. He outshot both
Nicklaus and Palmer with a 6967- 136 finish that earned him
$5,900 in a tie for third with
Trevino.
That drew such comments as
"John kept coming at us" and

"John ~epl his cool when he
might have lost it" from
Nicklaus and Palme~.
Schroeder went on to earn
$32,000 in his rookie year.
That isn't much when you
consider both Nicklaus and
Palmer have each already
pocketed more than $100,000
this year.
But, Schroeder hadn't done

well up to this point a year ago.
Now, jlere he is again and he
, feels last year's experience
here will help him over the
hump . ·
"[ certainly think it . will
help," he said. "! definitely
have some positive thoughts
about it. I know I can play this

coUrse;"

10% OFF

LADIES NYLON

TO

PAIRS

FIRST

Juniors and Seniors
Can Save ABig
10% When They
Purchase Their

QUALITY

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see our new look!
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COSTUME JEWELRY

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WHOLE CASE TO CHOOSE FROM

44

Reserve District No.4
State No. Z23x
CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDmON, OF
.

•
7

·The Farmers Ban·k and Savings COmpany '·

ITEMS

ONLY

.' '

of Pomeroy, Ohio And Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the clos~ of

,business April ZO, 1971, a state banking lnstituUon organized and operating
under lhe banking laws of this State and a member of the Federal Reserve
System. Published In accordance with a eall made by the State Banking
Authorities and by the Federal Rellerve Bank of this District.

COLGATE

'

'§OUI'JIOIR

BOX

~}

LARGE SELECTION OF FRESH FL9WERS AND LARGE

.

DISPLAY OF ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS. GET YOUR PORCH
BOXES OF FLOWERS NOW.

~) GIFT BOXES

PERMANENT PRESS

FOR MOTHER

~,,

~~·

SHEETS

OF TOWELS &amp;

PILLOW CASES

0
(J

3 PC.

IN COLORS

KNIFE
SET
.

REG. s1.79
ONLY

22

WOMEN'S

REG.

22

.

BI·LLFOLDS
WOMEN'S
~~ APRONS
~~

,_ 1 2PRICE
~~F

I, Ruger W. Hysell, Assistant Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby ·
de~lare that this report of condition Is true to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
Roger.W. H~ell, Assistant Cashier .
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of 'this report of
condition and declare that it has been elllimined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief Is true and correct.
1
Leslie F. Fllltz
Harold E. Smith - Directors
.
Fred w. Crow, Jr.
State of Ohjo, County of Meiss ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 4th day of May, 1971. ·
Miry P. YIIIID«, Notary Public •

c

.

:t'~

ASSETS
Cash and due from banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - • $780,787.80
U.S. Treasury securities - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • - - - 1,152,620.61
Obligations of States and political subdivisions • - - - - • - - 575,490.45
Other securities - - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - • 21,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell - - - - - - - - - 800,000.00
- - - - 7,973,218.55
Other loans - - - - - - - - - - • - Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
other assets representing bank premises - • 471,432.98
- - 7,135.72
Other assets - - - - - - - - - - - - $11,781,686.11
TOTAL ASSETS - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - LIABILITIES
Demand deposits ol individuals, partnerships,
and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - $2,489,474.26
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - - - - - - 7,449,751.79
Deposits of United Stales Government - - - - - - - - - -'·' - 36,174.20
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - 550,652.63
Deposits of commercial banks - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 2,276.34
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - - - - - - - - 67,814.06
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - $10,596,143.28
(a) Total demand deposits - - - - - $ 2,946,391.49
(b) Total lime and savings deposits - - - - - $ 7,649,751.79
Other liabilities - • • • - - - • • - - - - - - - - ·.:.:_.::...,35"'3,""79"'3""'.5::-2
TOTAL UABJUTIES . • - • - • • • - - • - - - - - $101949,936.88
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt losses on loans
(set up porsuanl to IRS rulin85) • • - - - - - - - • - • • • - $59,388.13
TOTAL RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES - $59,388.13
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$772,361.18
Equity capital, total - - - • - - - 300,000.00
Common stock-total par value • - • - - • No. shares authorized 12,000
No. shares outstanding 12,000
Surplus---------- - - - • - • 400,000.00
• - 72,361.18
Undivided profits - - - - - 772,361.18·
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
. TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
$11,781,686.11
CAPJTALACCOUNTS - • - - MEMORANDA
Average of total dePosits for th~ 15 calendar
days ending with.call dale • - - • - • • - - • - - - - - - $10,567,886.87.
Average of total loans lor the 15 calendar
days ending with call date - - - - - - • - • - - - - - - - $8,617,959.34
.
SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORAND,\
Pledged assets and securities loaned (book value):
U.S. Government obligations, direct and guaranteed,
pledged to secure deposits and other liabilities •• • - • - - - $1,035,000.00
TOTAL . - • - • - • - - - - - - - - • • • - - $1,035,000.00

~oo

ONLY

•

REG.

FLAT OR FITTED

FLAT OR FITTED

ONLY
SILVER PIECES

•2''
FULL SIZE

99~

ON SHERIDAN

TWIN SIZE

tRAYS,
SERVERS
AND OTHERS

•2''

..... ... ·.. · .. ,
.·.. ' ·. .. ' ''" .
:

'

..

I, I .

FOXCROFT GARZA PERMANENT PRESS SHEETS

MIDQLEPORT,
OHIO

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Nonna Gru.eser Died Wednesday

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 6, 1971

Worst-Ever Vote Says OEA

Beside her husbimd, she is
survived by i.. son, Lawrence,
l:'imsacola, Fla.; a d~ghter,
~aren Lynn Grueser, Athens; a
broiher, Hollie Harden,
Mrs. Grueser was a member Colwnbus; two grandchildren,
of the Syracuse EUB Church. four great-grandchildren and

Mrs . Norma (Cora ) L.
Grueser, 72, Minersville, died
Wednesday at · Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
·

COLUMBUS (UP! )- Calling in a sta!ement. · ·
the public s~'hoois . Tlu!y .want
.Tuesday's primary election " It is. obvious to all who wiU good schools, but they also
'"l'!le w~rst primary election in stu~y the results th;it Ohio's want a fa ir and equitable means ·
. Ohm's h1story," the Ohio Educa- citizens do not ~ant to increase . to ·finance the educational systtorrAssoclatlon has urged-the-local properly taxes to support -~ tern," the OEA added.
General Assembly to "move
Voters Tuesday approved only
with dispatch" to solve the
33.9 per 'cent of the new money
state's school finance probleJ1)S. Veterans Memorial Hospital requests for school operating
In a statement Wednesday,
ADMITTED James rates, the lowest ever at a May
the association said voters had Folden, Rutland ; Opal primary election.
indicated they are looking for Cremeans, Coolville ; Larry E. The assoc.iation said literally
the state .legislature for tax Spencer, Racine ; · April hundreds of school districts
solutions to meet the money Hayman, Middleport; B&lt;&gt;bby face collapse unless action by
needs of the public schools.
Ord, Syracuse; Earla Pickens the General Assembly is forth· ''No one can view Tuesday 's Racine ; Sandra Yates, Mid: coming.
dection without gelling the dleporl ; Rosalie &lt;Clark, New
very clear message that the Haven.
people are asking the General DISCHARGED - Everett
Assembly to move with dispatch Bobo, Tony Amburgey, Helen
to provide an equitable means Spears, Bertha Samorano
to finance the public schools," Horace Karr, Elizabeth Hysell
the association leadership said and Lucille Shook.

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1969 VOLKSWAGEN................... '1995
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1968 OODGE.. ......................... '1995
Coronet500, 4 door, V~. T·Flite, p. steering, air cond., one
owner, very clean.

1970 GMC '6 ton .. ,.... :..............'2695
Pickup, V-8, p. steering, 3 speed, long bed, step bumper,
custom cab.

1968 DODGE 'n ton ... ;............ ..'1895
Picltup,l28" wheel base, V~. 3speed, sharp and ready to
'go .
See the "Dependable&amp;" at Rawlings .
Pearl Ash, Emerson Jones, Hilton Wolfe, Wallace Am·
berger, Dick Rawlings.
992-2152

992-2151

RAWLINGS DODGE CITY
1

MIDDLePORT, 0.

ON. SUNDAY, MAY
'

Give Mother the comfort she
so much deserves for hours
of relaxation.

0

•I

HOUSE
DRESSES

SKIRTS, SHORTS, SLACKS
TOPS, BLOUSES,
SCOOTER SKIRTS

•
Brr,e
• ifis
ews•.• r,n

Nelson~
To reward Mom
on Mother's Day
in a special.
thoughtful way.

'DRESSES
SUITS

NEW SHIPMENT'
OF AILEEN

~or

washablo

ONLY 3.50
1

SCARFS
,r;R-olv'E';;i'R'

A GIFT
I cERTIFICATE
I FROM THE 1

Gift/
l_~H~~!~_J
_.i.._ __ ,_ _

THE SHOE BOX

·oNLY 39~ BOX

Cologne Spray Mist
and Perfume Sets

CHOCOLATES

Good at the Middleport Dept. Store
New

·TOASTER
Reg. 26.95
ONLY •.1 4.99

store Hours

Md
on ay 1hru

F;;~~Y

CLAIR
TRUE-TO-LIGHT

POLAROID

COLORPACK II

Qhi

PIan

CAMERA

FIT fOR AQUEEN ••
-

Reg. 127.99

Reg. 99'

18

"

MAX FACTOR

;nr~J

FABERGE

LEMON GO LIGHTLy

I

t

Reg. '2.25

HANDCRAFTED

"Special"

1
95_J;1~R:~~S~r1

1_...;G;;;re;.;e;;lt;'n;lg~·--L----l~~~~~
SMALL APPLIANCES
. TOASTERS.· MIXERS .• COFFEE POTS
.BLENDERS .· HAIR DRYERS

BOX

.1.25.

BLENKO
FROM

Sl

25 UP

.

•1.29
I
I

ltw.tex·
,
psclf-uujustin~

LADIES'

TIMEX
WATCHES

'6.95 UP~

I

tampons

!

.---··-"'"". .'"-··-" " '"' J

· Regular or Super
Reg, 11.79

30's

.... . ................ . ....., ....._::_
.

··-

~,

gge

KOTEX

~,

Reg . $5.95

6%0l

MASSENGILL ·
POWDER

Reg; 75'
25's

RINSE

Rea. '2.00

1

'

49'
12 oz:
size

SELSUN
BWE

4 oz.

'

66~

•

SHAMPOO'

SHAMPOO

'1.89 HURRY

'

S}.29

GUARANTEED 12 YRS.

HAfillltiMAY IIDIII

· 63~'

•1.39
Reg. 69' .
24's

BROMQ
SI:LTZI!R

Extra Strong Double
Ply Vinvl.

GIRCCM
&amp;.C LEAN®

Reg. 98'
..

Reg. 11.98

77t;

GA~DEN HOSE

REGULAR 1.59

'1.38

RINSE AWAY
THE AmR 14 oz.

77e

MEDICATED POWDER

I

Regular or Super

' 40's

Reg. 11.29
4lh oz.
KING SllE

MENS REG. 99'

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

3 oz.

BROMO SELTZER

e

Reg. s1.29
14 oz.

~fii~UMtO I"LC

.

59~

LISTERINE

Re~ 79'

13 oz.

Sl.33

&amp;Ws

49

MEDIUM SIZE

TALC

Reg . $2 .25

Reg. s1.39

Reg. '1.17
100's

SCOPE .
MOUTHWASH

DREAM FLOWER
PERFUMED

hairspmy

GLASSWARE

oz.

2 9~

NEW
J&gt;r!&gt;tein 2l

•3.88

77~

2.19 VAWE

5

Reg. 85'

Fabulous News From Clalrol

Reg.
$5.49.

40's ONLY

PUFFS PRINTS
OF 175 ONLY

f'OLARotD .
COLORPACK .
NO. 108 FILM

Denture ,Bath

53~

SPRAY-ON HAIR
LIGHTENER

Newest &amp;.Latest

include the state instructional ~----,.~--. .- - - - ; . ._ _
subsidy for students of private
professional schools.
The bill is identical to Gilli·
gan's in that it would have
graduates repay at 2 per cent
of their adjusted annual gross
income, minus $100. The minimwn annual payment would be
$40and the maximum $2,000. No
repayments would be required
of graduates who became wives
with no income, graduate
students or members of the
armed forces or Peact Corps.

12lh

99~

FREE .. ••110 Value

Reg. 95'

Rei 11.75

Reg.

$1.85

say

HAIR SPRAY

CLAIROL

FARMER

SP RA.Y M1ST •R~.5eg0. •300

49~

oz.

CX-126·12

HALLMARK AND
AMERICAN GREETING

.SUDDEN
BEAUTY

INSTANT
DRY
SHAMPOO

6 OZ. ONLY

FILM

66 ~

1.78 VALUE

1

•3.50

. ONLy

FABERGE, KIKI, SPLASH ON

Free Hair Set Tape

BATH OIL BEADS

BY
FANNY

PRINCE MATCHABELLI
WINDSONG BATH DUEnE
'5.50 VALUE

a woman
never forgets ...
the man who
rememb

ONLY

SAUVE BUBBLING

HEAYEN SCENT

'2.40 lb .

$28.33

ONLY

on tter Day

$8

MAKE UP MIRROR

$34.95

COLOGNES OMt1
}~:(t!ec~

•9.99

ONLY

$14.99

1

Saturday
9til9

NO. 1826
Reg. 119.95

COLOGNE

H

By American

Purse partn er s of Cologne Spray Mist
and matching Crown Perfum e - ga y
with color , highlighted with a patterned
ribbon . Available in : Wind Song, Golden
53.50 each
Autumn , and Beloved.
$6.50 Value

Reg.
'26.99

DOMINION
AUTOMATIC
4-SLICE

Give Mom A Gift CertHicate

Sh

PleasantVaileyHospital
ADMISSIONS Cloyd
~nett, Leon; Angela Ewing,
Pomt Pleasant; John Hoscnar,
West Columbia; Paul Bush,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. William
Blake , Nitro; Lawrence
Lambert, Point Pleasant;
Dorset McCoy, Henderson;
Sidney Boggess, Letart.
DISCHARGES - Wendell
James, Usa Stump, Catherine
Willis, Lisa Johnson, Mrs.
Warren Morrison, Eva Henry,
Mrs. James Thomas, Lewis
Woodall, Marcia. Hyatt, Frank
Thomas, Roma Childers, Mrs.
Leonard Riffle, Mrs . Paul
Runyon.

'''·

CHERRIES

HANDBAGS
-.-.. SCARFS
GLOVES, SHOES,
·SANDALS, SLIPPERS

MAKE UP
MIRROR

HANDBAGS
.HOSE

'·•

HAIR DRYER

o;s:tru~cti='on~---~-.!::::::::::::::::::::::::=

to

..'

DUSTERS
·PANTIES

KENT, OHIO - A SIT-IN BY 40 DIEHARD student
demonstrators who camped for a second straight night outside a
Kent State University building which houses ROTC offices ended
· 1Y wa lked away. Thd
. thetrs·
.
e emonstrators satd
wbeth
n ey sunp
had been a "symbolic struggle."
Six students remained near the entr~~es but the doors.we~e
opened and other students and campus pollcemen were movmg m

,
Funeral se .
f E
rv~eesor
Haynes 44 Middlepor! Rtrma
1
who
Wednesday
·. '
at Veterans Memorial Hosp~:~
will be Saturday at 2p.m. at the
Rutland Nazarene Church with and out of the building without
the Rev. Uoyd Grimm officiating. Burial will be in
Memory Gardens.
Friends may call ai the
8W
88
Marlin Funeral Home a(tel"
.
noon Friday until one hour prior
to services when the bod¥ will
0
be taken to the church to fie in
state.
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Slate
Sen. Robert R. Shaw, chairman
or the powerful Finance Committee, has introduced a modi·
ON DEAN'S LIST
lied "Ohio Plan" which would
John Krawsczyn, Jr., son of require students at state-supMr. and Mrs. John Krawsczyn ported universities to repay the
Middleport, made the dean'~ cost or their education.
list for the past quarter at Ohio
The Republican's bill, similar
University where he is a to that proposed by Gov. John
sophomore.
J. Gilligan, would require college seniors to sign a repayment agreement with the university at the start of the year
as a condition of maintaining
student status.
. They would begin to repay
the state after graduation when
they were earning at least
$7,500 a year.
9th
Republican legislators have
scoffed at Gilligan's proposal,
but Shaw's bill could receive
better treatment by the GOP·
dominated legislature.
Under Shaw's measure, the
Board of Regents would reconstruct four-year bachelor pro·
grams to thre~-year programs
by Sept. 1, 1973. Pre-law, pre·
I
dentist, pre-medical and preveterinary programs would be

LUDEN'S
atOC..COVERED

GOWNS • SLIPS • HOSIE

Sit-inners Just Walk Away

di~

DOMINION
PORTABLE

by PRINCE MATCHABELLI

T

~~~~~ r~~;~:n~r~ould also

For That
Little Extra'

I)

r

Funeral Day Set

1969 atEVROLET.................... ..S2095

..

Come To

1,

USED CARS

..'

)

1969 OPEL. ..................... ~ ...... '1595

DEPENDABLE

J

••

Deluxe Z door, automatic transmission, sharp.

You Can't Miss

II

.,.., .

ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)-James
Reston said Wednesday night he
A PONY CHORUS of "tramps" make up one of several
believes the United States has
dance lines in the "Be A Clown" minstrel of the Salisbury
emerged from several years of
Elementary School at 7:32 p. m. Friday and Saturday.
campus disorders . "strongDirection is by John Usle. From left are Kathleen Ney,
er than ever ."
' Bonnie Morris, Nancy Stanley, Judy Pugh and 'Mary Car·
The vice president of the
swell.
,
New York Times, speaking at
.
Ohio University, said, "No gen- 7\.
eration before has faced the '
problems and reality more dt·
rectly than this generation in
.
(Continued from page 1)
this country."
rate m half.
"No geneijlllion has ever anDuring the first four months of this year, ,879 American ser·
alyzed problems more fearless· .vicemen were killed in action,· spokesmen said, .and 5,657 were
iy," he said . "It is possible that wounded. During the same period last year, there were 1,754 U.S.
in this self-scrutiny we will tear battle deaths and 13,198 wounded. But last week's death toil of 68
ourselves apart, but the nation was the heaviest since the week ending April 3, when 88
has come out of the last three Americans were killed.
or four years of disorder strong- Steel Prices U,p Ag.·az'n
er than ever."
..
PITTSBURGH
TilE
U.
S. STEEL CORP., taking the in·
Reston said be sees a striking
difference between the attitudes duslry lead, Wednesday announcE!Q a 6Y• pet . increase in the price
of today and those of a year of the steel used in autos, appliances and other durable consumer
goods. The nation's largest steel producer said prices for large
ago regarding disorder .
"AI that time we found our- volwne steel she~t and strip products would go up $8.50 to $13 a ·
selves at the edge of a ton, beginning· with shipments June 16 and July I. Other steel
precipice and we did not like producers were expected to announce shortly similar increases.
what we saw/' he said.

Dodge City -News

fhe.Dailly_Se·ntinel,Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., May 6, 1971

several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services .will be at 2
p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. L.
R. Carmichael and the Rev .
Paul Sellers officiating. BuriaJ .
will be ·in Beech Grove
Cemetery, Friend~ may call at
the funeral home anytime.

•o•IIPftT
. JO!iNSON

liquici'white
POLISH

gge

TH. DUIAN LDDK
I

r,;;::;:..... ' F0 R ME N

Reg. 11.00 ·

4 oz.

66c

'

ROCKET
.
TAPE
By Scotch Tape
Regular 27c

lh"x800"

Reg. 11.49

7 Ol.

99' .

'

'

�.

.
•

r

Nonna Gru.eser Died Wednesday

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., May 6, 1971

Worst-Ever Vote Says OEA

Beside her husbimd, she is
survived by i.. son, Lawrence,
l:'imsacola, Fla.; a d~ghter,
~aren Lynn Grueser, Athens; a
broiher, Hollie Harden,
Mrs. Grueser was a member Colwnbus; two grandchildren,
of the Syracuse EUB Church. four great-grandchildren and

Mrs . Norma (Cora ) L.
Grueser, 72, Minersville, died
Wednesday at · Veterans
Memorial HospitaL
·

COLUMBUS (UP! )- Calling in a sta!ement. · ·
the public s~'hoois . Tlu!y .want
.Tuesday's primary election " It is. obvious to all who wiU good schools, but they also
'"l'!le w~rst primary election in stu~y the results th;it Ohio's want a fa ir and equitable means ·
. Ohm's h1story," the Ohio Educa- citizens do not ~ant to increase . to ·finance the educational systtorrAssoclatlon has urged-the-local properly taxes to support -~ tern," the OEA added.
General Assembly to "move
Voters Tuesday approved only
with dispatch" to solve the
33.9 per 'cent of the new money
state's school finance probleJ1)S. Veterans Memorial Hospital requests for school operating
In a statement Wednesday,
ADMITTED James rates, the lowest ever at a May
the association said voters had Folden, Rutland ; Opal primary election.
indicated they are looking for Cremeans, Coolville ; Larry E. The assoc.iation said literally
the state .legislature for tax Spencer, Racine ; · April hundreds of school districts
solutions to meet the money Hayman, Middleport; B&lt;&gt;bby face collapse unless action by
needs of the public schools.
Ord, Syracuse; Earla Pickens the General Assembly is forth· ''No one can view Tuesday 's Racine ; Sandra Yates, Mid: coming.
dection without gelling the dleporl ; Rosalie &lt;Clark, New
very clear message that the Haven.
people are asking the General DISCHARGED - Everett
Assembly to move with dispatch Bobo, Tony Amburgey, Helen
to provide an equitable means Spears, Bertha Samorano
to finance the public schools," Horace Karr, Elizabeth Hysell
the association leadership said and Lucille Shook.

America
Stronger

Bell!lr 4door, V~, automatic, p. steering, one owner, very
sharp car.

1969 DODGE.......................... ..S2495
Polara 4 door, V-8, T-Flite, p. steering, one owner, air
conditioned.
'

1968 DODGE............................'1895
Charger R-T, 4 speed, 440 magnwn, sharp as a '71 modeL

1969 VOLKSWAGEN................... '1995
Kadel! wagon, 4 speed, very nice little car.

1968 OODGE.. ......................... '1995
Coronet500, 4 door, V~. T·Flite, p. steering, air cond., one
owner, very clean.

1970 GMC '6 ton .. ,.... :..............'2695
Pickup, V-8, p. steering, 3 speed, long bed, step bumper,
custom cab.

1968 DODGE 'n ton ... ;............ ..'1895
Picltup,l28" wheel base, V~. 3speed, sharp and ready to
'go .
See the "Dependable&amp;" at Rawlings .
Pearl Ash, Emerson Jones, Hilton Wolfe, Wallace Am·
berger, Dick Rawlings.
992-2152

992-2151

RAWLINGS DODGE CITY
1

MIDDLePORT, 0.

ON. SUNDAY, MAY
'

Give Mother the comfort she
so much deserves for hours
of relaxation.

0

•I

HOUSE
DRESSES

SKIRTS, SHORTS, SLACKS
TOPS, BLOUSES,
SCOOTER SKIRTS

•
Brr,e
• ifis
ews•.• r,n

Nelson~
To reward Mom
on Mother's Day
in a special.
thoughtful way.

'DRESSES
SUITS

NEW SHIPMENT'
OF AILEEN

~or

washablo

ONLY 3.50
1

SCARFS
,r;R-olv'E';;i'R'

A GIFT
I cERTIFICATE
I FROM THE 1

Gift/
l_~H~~!~_J
_.i.._ __ ,_ _

THE SHOE BOX

·oNLY 39~ BOX

Cologne Spray Mist
and Perfume Sets

CHOCOLATES

Good at the Middleport Dept. Store
New

·TOASTER
Reg. 26.95
ONLY •.1 4.99

store Hours

Md
on ay 1hru

F;;~~Y

CLAIR
TRUE-TO-LIGHT

POLAROID

COLORPACK II

Qhi

PIan

CAMERA

FIT fOR AQUEEN ••
-

Reg. 127.99

Reg. 99'

18

"

MAX FACTOR

;nr~J

FABERGE

LEMON GO LIGHTLy

I

t

Reg. '2.25

HANDCRAFTED

"Special"

1
95_J;1~R:~~S~r1

1_...;G;;;re;.;e;;lt;'n;lg~·--L----l~~~~~
SMALL APPLIANCES
. TOASTERS.· MIXERS .• COFFEE POTS
.BLENDERS .· HAIR DRYERS

BOX

.1.25.

BLENKO
FROM

Sl

25 UP

.

•1.29
I
I

ltw.tex·
,
psclf-uujustin~

LADIES'

TIMEX
WATCHES

'6.95 UP~

I

tampons

!

.---··-"'"". .'"-··-" " '"' J

· Regular or Super
Reg, 11.79

30's

.... . ................ . ....., ....._::_
.

··-

~,

gge

KOTEX

~,

Reg . $5.95

6%0l

MASSENGILL ·
POWDER

Reg; 75'
25's

RINSE

Rea. '2.00

1

'

49'
12 oz:
size

SELSUN
BWE

4 oz.

'

66~

•

SHAMPOO'

SHAMPOO

'1.89 HURRY

'

S}.29

GUARANTEED 12 YRS.

HAfillltiMAY IIDIII

· 63~'

•1.39
Reg. 69' .
24's

BROMQ
SI:LTZI!R

Extra Strong Double
Ply Vinvl.

GIRCCM
&amp;.C LEAN®

Reg. 98'
..

Reg. 11.98

77t;

GA~DEN HOSE

REGULAR 1.59

'1.38

RINSE AWAY
THE AmR 14 oz.

77e

MEDICATED POWDER

I

Regular or Super

' 40's

Reg. 11.29
4lh oz.
KING SllE

MENS REG. 99'

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

3 oz.

BROMO SELTZER

e

Reg. s1.29
14 oz.

~fii~UMtO I"LC

.

59~

LISTERINE

Re~ 79'

13 oz.

Sl.33

&amp;Ws

49

MEDIUM SIZE

TALC

Reg . $2 .25

Reg. s1.39

Reg. '1.17
100's

SCOPE .
MOUTHWASH

DREAM FLOWER
PERFUMED

hairspmy

GLASSWARE

oz.

2 9~

NEW
J&gt;r!&gt;tein 2l

•3.88

77~

2.19 VAWE

5

Reg. 85'

Fabulous News From Clalrol

Reg.
$5.49.

40's ONLY

PUFFS PRINTS
OF 175 ONLY

f'OLARotD .
COLORPACK .
NO. 108 FILM

Denture ,Bath

53~

SPRAY-ON HAIR
LIGHTENER

Newest &amp;.Latest

include the state instructional ~----,.~--. .- - - - ; . ._ _
subsidy for students of private
professional schools.
The bill is identical to Gilli·
gan's in that it would have
graduates repay at 2 per cent
of their adjusted annual gross
income, minus $100. The minimwn annual payment would be
$40and the maximum $2,000. No
repayments would be required
of graduates who became wives
with no income, graduate
students or members of the
armed forces or Peact Corps.

12lh

99~

FREE .. ••110 Value

Reg. 95'

Rei 11.75

Reg.

$1.85

say

HAIR SPRAY

CLAIROL

FARMER

SP RA.Y M1ST •R~.5eg0. •300

49~

oz.

CX-126·12

HALLMARK AND
AMERICAN GREETING

.SUDDEN
BEAUTY

INSTANT
DRY
SHAMPOO

6 OZ. ONLY

FILM

66 ~

1.78 VALUE

1

•3.50

. ONLy

FABERGE, KIKI, SPLASH ON

Free Hair Set Tape

BATH OIL BEADS

BY
FANNY

PRINCE MATCHABELLI
WINDSONG BATH DUEnE
'5.50 VALUE

a woman
never forgets ...
the man who
rememb

ONLY

SAUVE BUBBLING

HEAYEN SCENT

'2.40 lb .

$28.33

ONLY

on tter Day

$8

MAKE UP MIRROR

$34.95

COLOGNES OMt1
}~:(t!ec~

•9.99

ONLY

$14.99

1

Saturday
9til9

NO. 1826
Reg. 119.95

COLOGNE

H

By American

Purse partn er s of Cologne Spray Mist
and matching Crown Perfum e - ga y
with color , highlighted with a patterned
ribbon . Available in : Wind Song, Golden
53.50 each
Autumn , and Beloved.
$6.50 Value

Reg.
'26.99

DOMINION
AUTOMATIC
4-SLICE

Give Mom A Gift CertHicate

Sh

PleasantVaileyHospital
ADMISSIONS Cloyd
~nett, Leon; Angela Ewing,
Pomt Pleasant; John Hoscnar,
West Columbia; Paul Bush,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. William
Blake , Nitro; Lawrence
Lambert, Point Pleasant;
Dorset McCoy, Henderson;
Sidney Boggess, Letart.
DISCHARGES - Wendell
James, Usa Stump, Catherine
Willis, Lisa Johnson, Mrs.
Warren Morrison, Eva Henry,
Mrs. James Thomas, Lewis
Woodall, Marcia. Hyatt, Frank
Thomas, Roma Childers, Mrs.
Leonard Riffle, Mrs . Paul
Runyon.

'''·

CHERRIES

HANDBAGS
-.-.. SCARFS
GLOVES, SHOES,
·SANDALS, SLIPPERS

MAKE UP
MIRROR

HANDBAGS
.HOSE

'·•

HAIR DRYER

o;s:tru~cti='on~---~-.!::::::::::::::::::::::::=

to

..'

DUSTERS
·PANTIES

KENT, OHIO - A SIT-IN BY 40 DIEHARD student
demonstrators who camped for a second straight night outside a
Kent State University building which houses ROTC offices ended
· 1Y wa lked away. Thd
. thetrs·
.
e emonstrators satd
wbeth
n ey sunp
had been a "symbolic struggle."
Six students remained near the entr~~es but the doors.we~e
opened and other students and campus pollcemen were movmg m

,
Funeral se .
f E
rv~eesor
Haynes 44 Middlepor! Rtrma
1
who
Wednesday
·. '
at Veterans Memorial Hosp~:~
will be Saturday at 2p.m. at the
Rutland Nazarene Church with and out of the building without
the Rev. Uoyd Grimm officiating. Burial will be in
Memory Gardens.
Friends may call ai the
8W
88
Marlin Funeral Home a(tel"
.
noon Friday until one hour prior
to services when the bod¥ will
0
be taken to the church to fie in
state.
COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Slate
Sen. Robert R. Shaw, chairman
or the powerful Finance Committee, has introduced a modi·
ON DEAN'S LIST
lied "Ohio Plan" which would
John Krawsczyn, Jr., son of require students at state-supMr. and Mrs. John Krawsczyn ported universities to repay the
Middleport, made the dean'~ cost or their education.
list for the past quarter at Ohio
The Republican's bill, similar
University where he is a to that proposed by Gov. John
sophomore.
J. Gilligan, would require college seniors to sign a repayment agreement with the university at the start of the year
as a condition of maintaining
student status.
. They would begin to repay
the state after graduation when
they were earning at least
$7,500 a year.
9th
Republican legislators have
scoffed at Gilligan's proposal,
but Shaw's bill could receive
better treatment by the GOP·
dominated legislature.
Under Shaw's measure, the
Board of Regents would reconstruct four-year bachelor pro·
grams to thre~-year programs
by Sept. 1, 1973. Pre-law, pre·
I
dentist, pre-medical and preveterinary programs would be

LUDEN'S
atOC..COVERED

GOWNS • SLIPS • HOSIE

Sit-inners Just Walk Away

di~

DOMINION
PORTABLE

by PRINCE MATCHABELLI

T

~~~~~ r~~;~:n~r~ould also

For That
Little Extra'

I)

r

Funeral Day Set

1969 atEVROLET.................... ..S2095

..

Come To

1,

USED CARS

..'

)

1969 OPEL. ..................... ~ ...... '1595

DEPENDABLE

J

••

Deluxe Z door, automatic transmission, sharp.

You Can't Miss

II

.,.., .

ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)-James
Reston said Wednesday night he
A PONY CHORUS of "tramps" make up one of several
believes the United States has
dance lines in the "Be A Clown" minstrel of the Salisbury
emerged from several years of
Elementary School at 7:32 p. m. Friday and Saturday.
campus disorders . "strongDirection is by John Usle. From left are Kathleen Ney,
er than ever ."
' Bonnie Morris, Nancy Stanley, Judy Pugh and 'Mary Car·
The vice president of the
swell.
,
New York Times, speaking at
.
Ohio University, said, "No gen- 7\.
eration before has faced the '
problems and reality more dt·
rectly than this generation in
.
(Continued from page 1)
this country."
rate m half.
"No geneijlllion has ever anDuring the first four months of this year, ,879 American ser·
alyzed problems more fearless· .vicemen were killed in action,· spokesmen said, .and 5,657 were
iy," he said . "It is possible that wounded. During the same period last year, there were 1,754 U.S.
in this self-scrutiny we will tear battle deaths and 13,198 wounded. But last week's death toil of 68
ourselves apart, but the nation was the heaviest since the week ending April 3, when 88
has come out of the last three Americans were killed.
or four years of disorder strong- Steel Prices U,p Ag.·az'n
er than ever."
..
PITTSBURGH
TilE
U.
S. STEEL CORP., taking the in·
Reston said be sees a striking
difference between the attitudes duslry lead, Wednesday announcE!Q a 6Y• pet . increase in the price
of today and those of a year of the steel used in autos, appliances and other durable consumer
goods. The nation's largest steel producer said prices for large
ago regarding disorder .
"AI that time we found our- volwne steel she~t and strip products would go up $8.50 to $13 a ·
selves at the edge of a ton, beginning· with shipments June 16 and July I. Other steel
precipice and we did not like producers were expected to announce shortly similar increases.
what we saw/' he said.

Dodge City -News

fhe.Dailly_Se·ntinel,Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 ., May 6, 1971

several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services .will be at 2
p.m. Friday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev. L.
R. Carmichael and the Rev .
Paul Sellers officiating. BuriaJ .
will be ·in Beech Grove
Cemetery, Friend~ may call at
the funeral home anytime.

•o•IIPftT
. JO!iNSON

liquici'white
POLISH

gge

TH. DUIAN LDDK
I

r,;;::;:..... ' F0 R ME N

Reg. 11.00 ·

4 oz.

66c

'

ROCKET
.
TAPE
By Scotch Tape
Regular 27c

lh"x800"

Reg. 11.49

7 Ol.

99' .

'

'

�.
•
_,

'

Swisher assisted in the sanc- &amp;\~art, Mrs. John Fultz, and tuary at the meeting. The Mrs. Sue Imboden, assisted by
committee preparing the dinner representatives from each of
three circles.
were
Edwards, Mrs.•Paul

'

Tributes Highlighted-Banquet
j

For a ham loaf to hit the spot, one of the recipes below Should
fill the bill.
They all come - taste tested - from our readers, so off to the
'kitchen with yoo. Young homemakers particularly appreciate
good recipes •nd a~e anxious to take a little more 'time to come up
with something which will change an ordinary meal into an event.
We might say that sometimes, a better flavo ~ is just a spice
away. And husbands, how they appreciate it! Probably one of the
nicest gifts a woman with a reputation for being a good cook could
give a young bride is a well-fllledrecipe box.
like icing on the cake, the sauce seems to be the secret to a
lastier ham loaf. Recipes were submitted for three kinds - the
lraditional horseradish, cranberry, and mustard. These along
with several different ham loaf recipes (not nearly all we
received) are given below :
HAM LOAF - From Sara Roush, Minersville:
4 cups ground cooked ham; 2 tablespoons chopped ortions ; I
teaspoon all spice; I tablespoon horseradish; I cup fine bread
crumbs; 'h cup unsweetened pineapple juice; 2eggs, beaten.
Mix and .pack into a loaf pan. ·
Combine 2 tablespoons brown sugar, 'h teaspoon dry
mustard, I tablespoon unsweetened pineapple juice, and I
lablespoon light corn syrup. Spread this on top of the loaf. Bake at
350 degrees 45 minutes.
FROM Mrs. Jyhn Smith:
I pound offresti pork, ground; I pound of ham, ground ; I'• cup
of sweet milk, 2small eggs; I cup of graham cracker crumbs.
MiX and put in loaf pan.
Cook the following ingredients five minutes and pour over the
: 1m loaf : one can tomato sauce, I cup hrown sugar, 'h cup
vinegar, I teaspoon dry mustard. Bake at 350 degrees until done.
SEVERAL OF THE RECIPES called for soda cracker or
bread crumbs, one called for oats, and another for wheaties.
Among those sending in recipes - and do keep that mail corning
- were Lemma Lighter, Middleport, Mrs. Harold Chase of
Middleport, Mrs. Jean Smith of Wintersville, Mrs. Eldon Weeks,
Pomeroy.
HAM LOAF SAUCE RECD'ES- From Mrs. Fred Goeglein:
~ cup currant jelly; I 'h teaspoon orange peel;, 2 teaspoons
ocange juice; 1 lablespoon horseradish.
Heat and stir until smooth, then serve.
FROM Mrs. Harold Chase :
'h cup whipped cream;·2% Tablespoons drained horseradiSh;
2 and one-third tablespoons salad dressing.
Mix thoroughly and serve.
FROM Mrs. William Reibel:
Heat I cup milk; add 2 heaping tablespoons flour; I heaping
tablespoon sugar; pinch of salt; 1 beaten egg.
Cook unlll thickens, remove from stove, add two or three
tablespoons horseradish.
Mrs. Reibel tells us this custard sauce was handed down from
her mother and is not only delicious on ham loaf and other meats,
but also as a dressing for salads.
.FROM MRS. IDA M. COWDERY of Reedsville carne the
recipe for boiling water pie crust requested last week by Mrs.
Elizabeth 'Clay of Long Bottom.
BOILING WATER PIE CRUST- I'• cup boiling water ; 'h
cup shortening; m cups flour; 'h teaspoon baking powder; 'h
111t.:.. ' ... te· · • th h te ·
ii teas~oqn
~
. ·.at un til creamy.
mgwa rover es or nmgan dbe
.; ~ O!D'""

Sift in the flour, baking powder and salt. Stir together. Form into
a ball and chill, !ben roll out to one-eighth inch thickness on a
llghQy floured board. The recipe makes two nine-Inch crusts.
MRS. MARCIA KELLER OF near Chester shares with,us her
salad dressing recipe. It's especially dellcious on potato salad,
sbe tells us.
HOMEMADE SALAD DRESSING - ¥• cup vinegar; V. cup
sugar; 'f• cup water; 1 teaspoon prepared mustard; salt and
pepper.
Bring to boil, add two beaten eggs very slowly, cook, cool and
add I cup salad dressing.

IThe an~ual mother-daughter
banquet o( the B. H. Sanborn
Missio.nary Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church Monday night was'
highlighted by a program of
tributes and the installation of
new officers.
A yellow and green color
scheme was carried out in the
decorations by Mrs . Martha·
King. Baskets of yellow mums
were used on the tables and
favors were corsages of burlap
flowers and yellow netting.
Mrs. John Werner, president,
welcomed the guests with Mrs.
Gerald Anthony announcing the
program. There was a trumpet
trio by Barbara Anthony, Judy
Owen and Peggy Imboden ,
accompanied by Mrs. Anthony,
playing, The Last Chord and
!low Great Thou Art. Mrs. King
read a poem Mother, and Mrs.
Manning Kloes·gave a reading,
The Mother 's Creed.

White, secretary; · Mrs. Fred United' of Meigs County.
May Fellowship Day was
Hoffman , treasurer , Ad·
artnounced
for Friday at Trinity
ministration Division; Mrs.
Tony Fowler, vice president Church. A]so announced was
-...
,\(tlf&lt;)(J,lf\NI ~~111
;md program , Mrs . King, the Ohio B'aptist Women's
communications, Division of Conference, June 2!hluly I, at
Interpretation ; Elizabeth Otterbein College in WesterFrldly &amp;S.tvrdiy l&amp;y 7 and
Slavin , vice president, Mrs. ville.
An organ prelude by Mrs.
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
Fred Lewis, special interest
Gerald
Anthony
opened
the
missionaries, and Mrs. Janice
Gibbs, white cross, Division of meeting and Mrs. White gave
i
Mission s; Mrs. White, vice devotions using "Keepers of the
Springs"
as
her
top,
i
c.
The
love
president, Mrs. Charles Edwards, Christian social gift dedication was by Mrs.
relations, and Mrs. Simons, Slavin.
Trina Gibbs and Velvet
Div)sion of Christian Service;
Mrs. Willis Anthony, vice
1
president; Mrs. Gerald An·
thony, spiritual ·growth ; Miss You can start losing weigh!
Rhoda Hill, literature, and Mrs. today. MONAD EX is a tiny
tablet and easy to take .
11
Isabelle
Winebrenner, MONADEX will help curb your
scholarship , Division of desire for excess food. Eat less Leadership Development.
weigh less. Contains no
Circle chairmen appointed dangerous drugs and wlll "hot
· th
lin
Mr
make you nervous. No
durmg
e rnee g were s. strenuous exercise. Change
- PLUS
Fowler, EJecta ; Mrs. O~en , your life ... start today .
John Casia'lllel
Dorcas, and Mrs . Dale MONADEX costs S3.00 for a 20
Ancl
Walburn , Love Joy .
day supply. Lose ugly fat or .
Britt Ekl1ncl
During the business meeting your money will be refunded
it was voted io have monthly with no questions asked.
In
·
MONADEX Is sold with this
rather than quarterly meetmgs guarantee by: Swisher &amp; Lohse
as were held durmg the past . Pomeroy &amp; DuHon Drug Store
Wingett.
llatecl GP
Mrs . Chlorus
Grimm , year. Mrs . Searles was ap· · . Middleport - Mail Orders
pointed
lay
woman
from
the
Filled.
assisted by Ruth Barnitz,
presented 25 year pins to Mary church to the Church Women
Louise Ours, B.ernice Carpenter , Louise Stewart, Ferne
Hayman , and June Wicker·
sham.
• Initiatory work was presented
by the following officers who
assisted the worthy matron and ---lm::=a"\"',
worthy patron:•
.fd~:t'i lA,--.
GET A NORGE
Chlorus Grimm, a ssociate "'
matron ; Ralph Webb, associate ..
patron;
Letha
Morris,
secretary; Greta Simpson , .-u.nr'\ ' ' ' ~~~;~
treasurer ; Cora Webb, con·
ductor; Lillian Weese, associate
conductor; Ben Philson ,
chaplain ; Laura Circle, marshall; Velma Quillen, organist;
Mary Baldwin, Adah; Bernice
Carpenter, Ruth ; Phyllis
Knighting, Esther ; Bernice It's the INIOI~IGiel
Theiss, pro tern Martha;
Margaret West, Electa; WASHER for big, family-sized loads
A SOAK CTCLI WASHER WITH TWO·
Kathleen McNickle, warder;
Charles Hensley, sentinel.
SPIED PIRMANINT·PRISS HELP
The chapter room was
e Two-speed' - normol and gentle agitation and spin
decorated with spring flowers
e 2-to-16-pound capaCity e Permanent-prou setHngs on
by Maxine Wingett. The dining
control panel e Automatic 110ak cycle e Three wof\r·leYol
room featured floral pieces by
selections e Three wash ., twin rinse- temperature setection1
Lillian Hayman and Greta
e Fountain-Filter ~ lint rflrn_rwale Wide-arc 1plral acltatlon
Simpson.
Refreshments were served by
Clara Adams and her corn·
miltee at the conclusion of the
chapter.

A playlet, This Is Your Life,
telling the story of a girl from
birth through her life, was
narrated by Mrs . Richard
Owen. Parts were taken by
Betty Becker and Chr!s Becker,
the mother and child ; Mrs.
Beulah White, Carol Simons,
Michl King, the teacher and
Sunday school class; Jill
Walburn , Velvet Swisher ,
school girls; Marla Neutzling,
the graduate; Joyce Riley, an
engaged girl; Texanna Well, the
bride, Mrs. Fred Hoffman,
Tami Hoffman , Beverly lloff.
man , mother and children; and
Isabel Winebrenner , Louise
Thompson ,
and
Nan cy
Thompson , the three women .
Installed by Mrs. Charles
Simons who used the theme,
"Hear the Wor(l )d of God :
Listen, Love, Live," in a candlelighl ceremony were the
following officers:
Mrs. Werner, president; Mrs.

MASON
•'

Middleport

I

DRIVI·IH

..

GODFREY CAMBRIPGE

..:I'M' NOT

LOSE UGLY FAT

l WAS WORi&lt;ING
()1.1 THE L()(J( ,,Ar-ID
THe T~Ll'-ll&lt; LID
SLAMMED ~H UT 1

0~,

J THOUG~T T~AT WAS
WHERE T~E~ . '•NED
PHONii.

INTERESTED IN
SPEEC~ SO!JNDS t

In

GeT Me our'

~ATERMELON

MAN

~
j

-R-

"

~~:..:..:::.-____ t •

LANCE LOT
AH'LL WAITOUTSIDE,
SON. AH HEERD IT1
WH EN AH WAS B y,._
-AN' FUM 11-I' SAME
OLE BAT!.'~-

MACHINE GUN McCAIN

VAUEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00. ·
992-27Dt

Ml

Cash &amp; Carry

DUIUY'S FlDRIST
st N. Second si.

··-·-

46 Court St.

;

•

'

n

.

,_

WINNIE WINKLE
WELL~ERRY

/

WHY DID
THE. lAST
LEAVE 1
WINNIE?

u1N6LE

DIDN' 1 WAeTE

MUCH TlME. HE'&amp;

AND GOOD RIDOANCE TO HER!
1 DIDN'T TRUST '!HAT GIRL ...
SEEMED SHE WAS ALWAY!!J
SNOOPING AROUND WHERE
SHE ~DN'T
!

1 HAVE NO IDEA r

MOM 16HE JUeT
UP:i!IND OUT

ADVEI&lt;T161 NG FOR
A MODEL AGAIN !

REVIVAL PLANNED
A revival will be held at the
First Southern Baptist Chapel,
220 East Main Street, Pomeroy,
beginning Monday through
Sunday. Jim Green of the
Fairwood Baptist Church of
Columbus will be the evangelist
and the song leader is Bob Mills,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. each
evening. The public is cordially
invited.

OOP, WE'LL NEEP A
tllJNCH Of SIG~IN,
FI.AT ROO&lt;$
IGSYT"MJRKON •• •

eiJ-011 oo! oo-tJo-oo-

....__·_, t.lo-00! -;---

INGELS FURNITURE

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

'

OPEN ,FRI.&amp; SAT. NIGHTS
PH. 992-2635
Ml DpLEPORT

... THE TRIJE COOK DOeSN'T mP
A RECIPE ..... BUT H~ART E!ru- Qf

1.Qa

IT HAS HO NAME, ANNIE! I
TO WATCH MY MOTHER
MAKE IT WHEN I \1/Al; A
CHILD! SHE US~D TO

her&gt;

e.

fOR THOSI: WHO WILL
1H~ MEAL SHf PRfPI\R~S!

OF MYSTER'! MOT FAR FROM:

Tl!~

KAKS!Oll ....

~AT

SAY •...

MAY 9th

with the

DAILY CROSSWORD

finest

1. Italian rlver

outcasts,

5. Thessallan

~_!.A~BEA~=U~T:Y~Q:U{EEN~~?;Cii&lt;rt
MOL.ENE?''

~

-HIG~

5CHO()l.

~

A

lf_

@
.

·

·~'~110 ~ ·
.~LL.n&amp;

j
B-PIECE SNACK ET, whi" wil h
Swiss Chalet desi8n. Federal Class .'
ovenproof plates with place for cup.

8. Byron poem
D. Irrttate
13. Senorita's
''love''
14. Hitch

"LOOK'.'
1~. Electrical
Swab
&lt;O.Wrr'T' r~;;==;-"1 16.

·

'~

it'""'

,

ttfu"""'&lt;Ji:,;,,~

nonslip back for bull et "iugg lers"
4 c: ups an d 4 plates.

·

(2 wds. )

2~.

(abbr.)
10. Place of
punish-

unit
11. Girl's nain.e

18.Giraudoux
play

a·doop" girl

lenge ·

3~ . Immov·

able

with·

11. Actor,

22. "Boop-boop·

32. Chal·

ship
30. Fellow

Sam -

36, Rq

BoliO&lt;'•

out

lrtends

12. Expunge

IBOLTAC

''Jlrl''

23. Mualcal

composition

25. Old-time

pretty and
useful gift for Mother.
Electr ic Shaver with selfsharpening edges. perfect
for less and underarm s.

a rapier
28 ..Wintry

$595

31."-

WHAT iJ.IE,eAeOL..IN&amp;
TYCOON
HI&amp; .
RKEAI'.CH stAFF 10 J;tl

..,_I'

Now .........

~~~~ •

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tofonn&amp;hl=
. paiN
111111 llllll!rtM.....

sa. II

(~awe,
Jaonbl.., CHUTI AlAR IWDYI DAMAR '

•••I

,

-t-+-1~~~;!(I~I::;,)THI( I I I] (I I)

21. Part or

I\ $\1.95 value .

I

I KIJ

1

26. Gale

10 1 -

1:1.'1::=:.-

6-,1-+-+-+-+--1 ~r;;;..u=rL::.;G:;.;;O,..'N~--r.:i"·~r· ~:
j
~ ~
.

_.

radio's
"VIc and

LADY SCHICK
CAPRICE SHAVER

0

GDTlJ)

Alan

movie

· (3 wds.)

21. Oklahoma
city

I DANGL

29. Wor·

figuratively

U~~~m~~~~blelhele four Jumbleo,
ont lttter to each ~quare, to

form four ordinary word•.

Ladd

ment,

20. Functions

o~

JJWlWOOltJ!:;IJ.J~·=~t! ..J

•

figuratively 19. lm·
plant
13wds.)
20. Edict
4. Swlss .
23. R088el·
river
Unl
5. Out ot favor
film
(3 wdo.)
2~ . De·
6. Consider
stroy
7. Lawyer

mountain

SCHOOL ANNUALS
OFiEN TELL A LOT
ABOUT PEOPLE.

16. step

2. Runyon
S. Roster of

ACROSS

was

&amp;ay:lng"

82.0xford
fellow
Altar words
Capital

HOME ·lAUNDRY

OORSAGES
10% O~F

1

NORGE

r--------..

$19.95 buys 1 gallon at Arau Termite Central Concentrate.
Add an Arab h_.nd spray Applicator a!ld')IOU're rNdy
to completely ltrmlle-proofthe average J-bedroom home I
Saves YCHJ over $100 compared to the cdst at calling lri a
profnal1111111ellfermloafor. Buy Arab and do both you and
your home a flv!l". 1Pr'lce may vary ~~~~hHy.

-

And

AUTOMATIC WASHER

Relatives Attend Funeral Services·

and

\

~#@)

Personal Notes

SAVE ,•100 OR MOll

'

SAVE MONEY AT INGELS' GREEN TAG SALEI

THE "FUN wtrH . FOODS" mail this week has been ,
fascinating . Had such a nice letter from Mrs. Duane Johnson of
Olanute, Kansas, a Sentinel reader, who sent us a couple of
recipes we'll be using later. One, incidentally,ls for a cranberry
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bailey,
cake l!l&amp;de with salad dreSl!ing.
Cleveland, who have l:!een here
Anyway, Mrs. Johnson is ·a former Meigs Countian, and her visiting Mrs . Con Young,
parents live at Rutland.
returned to their home Monday.
Anyways, Mrs : Johnson is a former Meigs Countian, and her
Mr. and Mrs. George W.
parents live at Rutland.
Price, David, Penny, Debbie
Then there was a letter and a number of recipes from Jeannie and Randy of Bloomington, _
Smith of Wmtersvllle. These, too, we'll be using in the weeks Ind., were weekend guests of
ahead.
Mrs . Golda Mourning. On
NEXT WEEK - Pies, two crust lemon, lime delight, fresh Saturday evening they were
strawberry, peanut butter cream pie, an easy soda cracker pie, joined for a dinner by Mr. and
·Mrs. J. H. Mourning of Tuscon,
and an oatmeal pie.
Ariz. David Price spent Sunday
in Point Pleasant with Mr. and
..•
Mrs. Tom Walters.
RACINE _ Relatives at- ShTieber-King Funeral Horne in
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Worner
tending fun~ral services for Yo.ungstown last Thursday and Mrs. Geneva Yates were
Mrs . M~rtln Matteson (the were Mrs. Donald Hupp, Mrs. recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
former Myrtle Parsons) at Carroll White, Mr . and Mrs. Riley Piggott and Mis. Marie
Dorsa Parsons, Mrs. Paul Swan, Long Bottom. A recent
Wolfe, Mrs. Irene Rhodes, Mrs. guest of Mrs. Yates was Mrs.
Frances Parsons, Mrs. Edna Mildred Donahue, Letart.
Parsons and son Mark; and
Visitors at the Ed Templeton
Preston Parsons, all of Racine horne Saturday were Gary Lee
RD; Mr . and Mrs. Everette and daughters, Elyria. They ,
Parsons, Neyley, Ohio; Mrs. carne to Pomeroy especially to
LAUNDRY
Chester Durst, Niles; Mrs . pick up Miss Brenda Lee,
Jessie
Parsons, sons George daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
CALL 992-2057 ·
and Roger, Ashland, and Mrs. ·Lee, who returned to Elyria
PiCkup &amp; Delivery
Gerald Wells, Syracuse.
with the farnilyand will care for
Interment was in Deerfield the Lee children 'while Mrs. Lee,
Cemetery beside her late the former Dorothy Howell is
husband, Harvey Hoschar.
hospitalized . Mrs. Lee's
mother, Mrs. Belly Howell, will
also be there. Mrs. Lee who is
seriously ill, will undergo major
surgery Friday. Her address Is
Allen Memorial Hospital,
Oberlin, Ohio.
M~ .
and Mrs. Gilbert,
DeWeese of Point ,Pleasant
were recent vi$11Drs of Mrs.
Golda Mourning.

'S DAY
BLOOM lNG PUNTS

I

,

ESTELLA PARSONS

112 at Inspection
Twenty-one chapters were
represented by 112 members
when Racine Chapter 134, Order
of the Eastern Star, met
Monday night for inspection.
Barbara Dugan , worthy
matron , and Richard Dugan,
worthy patron, presided. Wilma
Styer, deputy grand matron,
was the inspecting officer.
Following the flag presentation distinguished guests
presented were Roberta K.
Mindling, past grand matron ,
who was given honorary
. membership in Racine Chapter
by Louise Stewart; Mrs. Styer,
deputy grand !natron; Mary
Casto, Grand Adah of West
Virginia Grand Chapter;
. Winifred Hooper, · Grand
Representative of . British
Columbia in Ohio, and
Catherine Shenefield, Grand
Representative of Virginia in
Ohio.
Worthy matrons and patrons
of visiting chapters, past
matrons and past patrons of
Racine Chapter , honored
Masons, Ben Philson, deputy
grand master, and Thomas
Wolfe, master of Racine Lodge,
along with District 25 officers,
Janet Bolin, president, anJ
June Stanley, treasurer, were
also introduced.
Those having former grand
appointments, past matrons
and past patrons of other
chapters were also among those
welcomed by the worthy
matron.
.
Two members from Racine
Chapter, Elberta Nothsline and
Ann Coe, received 50 year pins
from Grand Chapter. The pins
were presented by their sisters,
Cora Wel:!b and Maxine

\

I

""""" 11.,. IUp lithe •w.U,.1- A SHADI AI0,¥1
THIITIIn

of the

Baham..

8

36.Preaently
BT. StepB In
36. B~~r•
. 39. Links Item

DESERT

FLOW~R

SPRAY
COLOGNE,
SUEDE CLUTCH PURSE

l o~es

~ eg .

in fo ld-over French pursE' styl e. Has 2
comparlments, zipper POCket
and card pocket. Choices of t olars
and tr ims. '
'

$2.00 now

$135

~~ .......... ...~2.00

•

I.Especially for You Assortment. ·. 2~ lb. box
C. Mother's Day Gift ... .. ... . . .. 8 oz. box $1.

th e shamP!XJ that helps
"beat th e frlnies".
Far. Regular. Oily ar, Dry
Ha1r: 7 ounces. \
$1 .59 'Jalue

DENTAL CREAM,
J oi. Med . Tube
69C\Iil lut&gt;, now
1-1

3

g~
...

992-3106 .

UP"

DOWN'

CAP!' AIN EASY

''

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia. LONGFELLOW
One letter almply stands for' another. In this ll&amp;lllple A Ia
-u10d for the three L'o, X tor the two O'a, etc.- Single letters,
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the word11 are all
hlntl. Each &amp;y the cOde letters are different,
.

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A Oryplocram. Quotation

t

LHR
HV

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DUTTON .PH

AND LINE

1. Texas
shrine

99C

CASHMERE BOUQUET BODY POWQE~
51,, Ol. pl,lSIIC !Jollie

'IOU KNOW WHAT'!i 60iN6
TO i1AP~EN SOMED/Jil?

DAILY (IRYPTOQUOTE-Hen!'s how to work It:

''

JUST WONDERFUL PROFESSIONAL 40~ .
HAIR SPRAY ..... 98¢ va l..,, now
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THE 8U5,

40. ~~an

PRDT.Ei N 2 I

a Shullon fragrance mother

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IKVF

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!II

l'oo&amp;enlaJ'a Ci)opWqao&amp;ei PATIUO'l'ISM IS NpT lllNOUOR.
I MUST HAVIS NO HATRED OR Bl'I'T.II:RNBSII 'tOW..UWS
ANYOMJII.-I:D1'1'H C,AVJlLL
.,

HNLOillf-UCKKJ

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,

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'

Swisher assisted in the sanc- &amp;\~art, Mrs. John Fultz, and tuary at the meeting. The Mrs. Sue Imboden, assisted by
committee preparing the dinner representatives from each of
three circles.
were
Edwards, Mrs.•Paul

'

Tributes Highlighted-Banquet
j

For a ham loaf to hit the spot, one of the recipes below Should
fill the bill.
They all come - taste tested - from our readers, so off to the
'kitchen with yoo. Young homemakers particularly appreciate
good recipes •nd a~e anxious to take a little more 'time to come up
with something which will change an ordinary meal into an event.
We might say that sometimes, a better flavo ~ is just a spice
away. And husbands, how they appreciate it! Probably one of the
nicest gifts a woman with a reputation for being a good cook could
give a young bride is a well-fllledrecipe box.
like icing on the cake, the sauce seems to be the secret to a
lastier ham loaf. Recipes were submitted for three kinds - the
lraditional horseradish, cranberry, and mustard. These along
with several different ham loaf recipes (not nearly all we
received) are given below :
HAM LOAF - From Sara Roush, Minersville:
4 cups ground cooked ham; 2 tablespoons chopped ortions ; I
teaspoon all spice; I tablespoon horseradish; I cup fine bread
crumbs; 'h cup unsweetened pineapple juice; 2eggs, beaten.
Mix and .pack into a loaf pan. ·
Combine 2 tablespoons brown sugar, 'h teaspoon dry
mustard, I tablespoon unsweetened pineapple juice, and I
lablespoon light corn syrup. Spread this on top of the loaf. Bake at
350 degrees 45 minutes.
FROM Mrs. Jyhn Smith:
I pound offresti pork, ground; I pound of ham, ground ; I'• cup
of sweet milk, 2small eggs; I cup of graham cracker crumbs.
MiX and put in loaf pan.
Cook the following ingredients five minutes and pour over the
: 1m loaf : one can tomato sauce, I cup hrown sugar, 'h cup
vinegar, I teaspoon dry mustard. Bake at 350 degrees until done.
SEVERAL OF THE RECIPES called for soda cracker or
bread crumbs, one called for oats, and another for wheaties.
Among those sending in recipes - and do keep that mail corning
- were Lemma Lighter, Middleport, Mrs. Harold Chase of
Middleport, Mrs. Jean Smith of Wintersville, Mrs. Eldon Weeks,
Pomeroy.
HAM LOAF SAUCE RECD'ES- From Mrs. Fred Goeglein:
~ cup currant jelly; I 'h teaspoon orange peel;, 2 teaspoons
ocange juice; 1 lablespoon horseradish.
Heat and stir until smooth, then serve.
FROM Mrs. Harold Chase :
'h cup whipped cream;·2% Tablespoons drained horseradiSh;
2 and one-third tablespoons salad dressing.
Mix thoroughly and serve.
FROM Mrs. William Reibel:
Heat I cup milk; add 2 heaping tablespoons flour; I heaping
tablespoon sugar; pinch of salt; 1 beaten egg.
Cook unlll thickens, remove from stove, add two or three
tablespoons horseradish.
Mrs. Reibel tells us this custard sauce was handed down from
her mother and is not only delicious on ham loaf and other meats,
but also as a dressing for salads.
.FROM MRS. IDA M. COWDERY of Reedsville carne the
recipe for boiling water pie crust requested last week by Mrs.
Elizabeth 'Clay of Long Bottom.
BOILING WATER PIE CRUST- I'• cup boiling water ; 'h
cup shortening; m cups flour; 'h teaspoon baking powder; 'h
111t.:.. ' ... te· · • th h te ·
ii teas~oqn
~
. ·.at un til creamy.
mgwa rover es or nmgan dbe
.; ~ O!D'""

Sift in the flour, baking powder and salt. Stir together. Form into
a ball and chill, !ben roll out to one-eighth inch thickness on a
llghQy floured board. The recipe makes two nine-Inch crusts.
MRS. MARCIA KELLER OF near Chester shares with,us her
salad dressing recipe. It's especially dellcious on potato salad,
sbe tells us.
HOMEMADE SALAD DRESSING - ¥• cup vinegar; V. cup
sugar; 'f• cup water; 1 teaspoon prepared mustard; salt and
pepper.
Bring to boil, add two beaten eggs very slowly, cook, cool and
add I cup salad dressing.

IThe an~ual mother-daughter
banquet o( the B. H. Sanborn
Missio.nary Society of the
Middleport First Baptist
Church Monday night was'
highlighted by a program of
tributes and the installation of
new officers.
A yellow and green color
scheme was carried out in the
decorations by Mrs . Martha·
King. Baskets of yellow mums
were used on the tables and
favors were corsages of burlap
flowers and yellow netting.
Mrs. John Werner, president,
welcomed the guests with Mrs.
Gerald Anthony announcing the
program. There was a trumpet
trio by Barbara Anthony, Judy
Owen and Peggy Imboden ,
accompanied by Mrs. Anthony,
playing, The Last Chord and
!low Great Thou Art. Mrs. King
read a poem Mother, and Mrs.
Manning Kloes·gave a reading,
The Mother 's Creed.

White, secretary; · Mrs. Fred United' of Meigs County.
May Fellowship Day was
Hoffman , treasurer , Ad·
artnounced
for Friday at Trinity
ministration Division; Mrs.
Tony Fowler, vice president Church. A]so announced was
-...
,\(tlf&lt;)(J,lf\NI ~~111
;md program , Mrs . King, the Ohio B'aptist Women's
communications, Division of Conference, June 2!hluly I, at
Interpretation ; Elizabeth Otterbein College in WesterFrldly &amp;S.tvrdiy l&amp;y 7 and
Slavin , vice president, Mrs. ville.
An organ prelude by Mrs.
DOUBLE FEATURE PROGRAM
Fred Lewis, special interest
Gerald
Anthony
opened
the
missionaries, and Mrs. Janice
Gibbs, white cross, Division of meeting and Mrs. White gave
i
Mission s; Mrs. White, vice devotions using "Keepers of the
Springs"
as
her
top,
i
c.
The
love
president, Mrs. Charles Edwards, Christian social gift dedication was by Mrs.
relations, and Mrs. Simons, Slavin.
Trina Gibbs and Velvet
Div)sion of Christian Service;
Mrs. Willis Anthony, vice
1
president; Mrs. Gerald An·
thony, spiritual ·growth ; Miss You can start losing weigh!
Rhoda Hill, literature, and Mrs. today. MONAD EX is a tiny
tablet and easy to take .
11
Isabelle
Winebrenner, MONADEX will help curb your
scholarship , Division of desire for excess food. Eat less Leadership Development.
weigh less. Contains no
Circle chairmen appointed dangerous drugs and wlll "hot
· th
lin
Mr
make you nervous. No
durmg
e rnee g were s. strenuous exercise. Change
- PLUS
Fowler, EJecta ; Mrs. O~en , your life ... start today .
John Casia'lllel
Dorcas, and Mrs . Dale MONADEX costs S3.00 for a 20
Ancl
Walburn , Love Joy .
day supply. Lose ugly fat or .
Britt Ekl1ncl
During the business meeting your money will be refunded
it was voted io have monthly with no questions asked.
In
·
MONADEX Is sold with this
rather than quarterly meetmgs guarantee by: Swisher &amp; Lohse
as were held durmg the past . Pomeroy &amp; DuHon Drug Store
Wingett.
llatecl GP
Mrs . Chlorus
Grimm , year. Mrs . Searles was ap· · . Middleport - Mail Orders
pointed
lay
woman
from
the
Filled.
assisted by Ruth Barnitz,
presented 25 year pins to Mary church to the Church Women
Louise Ours, B.ernice Carpenter , Louise Stewart, Ferne
Hayman , and June Wicker·
sham.
• Initiatory work was presented
by the following officers who
assisted the worthy matron and ---lm::=a"\"',
worthy patron:•
.fd~:t'i lA,--.
GET A NORGE
Chlorus Grimm, a ssociate "'
matron ; Ralph Webb, associate ..
patron;
Letha
Morris,
secretary; Greta Simpson , .-u.nr'\ ' ' ' ~~~;~
treasurer ; Cora Webb, con·
ductor; Lillian Weese, associate
conductor; Ben Philson ,
chaplain ; Laura Circle, marshall; Velma Quillen, organist;
Mary Baldwin, Adah; Bernice
Carpenter, Ruth ; Phyllis
Knighting, Esther ; Bernice It's the INIOI~IGiel
Theiss, pro tern Martha;
Margaret West, Electa; WASHER for big, family-sized loads
A SOAK CTCLI WASHER WITH TWO·
Kathleen McNickle, warder;
Charles Hensley, sentinel.
SPIED PIRMANINT·PRISS HELP
The chapter room was
e Two-speed' - normol and gentle agitation and spin
decorated with spring flowers
e 2-to-16-pound capaCity e Permanent-prou setHngs on
by Maxine Wingett. The dining
control panel e Automatic 110ak cycle e Three wof\r·leYol
room featured floral pieces by
selections e Three wash ., twin rinse- temperature setection1
Lillian Hayman and Greta
e Fountain-Filter ~ lint rflrn_rwale Wide-arc 1plral acltatlon
Simpson.
Refreshments were served by
Clara Adams and her corn·
miltee at the conclusion of the
chapter.

A playlet, This Is Your Life,
telling the story of a girl from
birth through her life, was
narrated by Mrs . Richard
Owen. Parts were taken by
Betty Becker and Chr!s Becker,
the mother and child ; Mrs.
Beulah White, Carol Simons,
Michl King, the teacher and
Sunday school class; Jill
Walburn , Velvet Swisher ,
school girls; Marla Neutzling,
the graduate; Joyce Riley, an
engaged girl; Texanna Well, the
bride, Mrs. Fred Hoffman,
Tami Hoffman , Beverly lloff.
man , mother and children; and
Isabel Winebrenner , Louise
Thompson ,
and
Nan cy
Thompson , the three women .
Installed by Mrs. Charles
Simons who used the theme,
"Hear the Wor(l )d of God :
Listen, Love, Live," in a candlelighl ceremony were the
following officers:
Mrs. Werner, president; Mrs.

MASON
•'

Middleport

I

DRIVI·IH

..

GODFREY CAMBRIPGE

..:I'M' NOT

LOSE UGLY FAT

l WAS WORi&lt;ING
()1.1 THE L()(J( ,,Ar-ID
THe T~Ll'-ll&lt; LID
SLAMMED ~H UT 1

0~,

J THOUG~T T~AT WAS
WHERE T~E~ . '•NED
PHONii.

INTERESTED IN
SPEEC~ SO!JNDS t

In

GeT Me our'

~ATERMELON

MAN

~
j

-R-

"

~~:..:..:::.-____ t •

LANCE LOT
AH'LL WAITOUTSIDE,
SON. AH HEERD IT1
WH EN AH WAS B y,._
-AN' FUM 11-I' SAME
OLE BAT!.'~-

MACHINE GUN McCAIN

VAUEY WMBER &amp; SUPPLY 00. ·
992-27Dt

Ml

Cash &amp; Carry

DUIUY'S FlDRIST
st N. Second si.

··-·-

46 Court St.

;

•

'

n

.

,_

WINNIE WINKLE
WELL~ERRY

/

WHY DID
THE. lAST
LEAVE 1
WINNIE?

u1N6LE

DIDN' 1 WAeTE

MUCH TlME. HE'&amp;

AND GOOD RIDOANCE TO HER!
1 DIDN'T TRUST '!HAT GIRL ...
SEEMED SHE WAS ALWAY!!J
SNOOPING AROUND WHERE
SHE ~DN'T
!

1 HAVE NO IDEA r

MOM 16HE JUeT
UP:i!IND OUT

ADVEI&lt;T161 NG FOR
A MODEL AGAIN !

REVIVAL PLANNED
A revival will be held at the
First Southern Baptist Chapel,
220 East Main Street, Pomeroy,
beginning Monday through
Sunday. Jim Green of the
Fairwood Baptist Church of
Columbus will be the evangelist
and the song leader is Bob Mills,
beginning at 7:30 p.m. each
evening. The public is cordially
invited.

OOP, WE'LL NEEP A
tllJNCH Of SIG~IN,
FI.AT ROO&lt;$
IGSYT"MJRKON •• •

eiJ-011 oo! oo-tJo-oo-

....__·_, t.lo-00! -;---

INGELS FURNITURE

U'ITLE ORPHAN ANNIE

'

OPEN ,FRI.&amp; SAT. NIGHTS
PH. 992-2635
Ml DpLEPORT

... THE TRIJE COOK DOeSN'T mP
A RECIPE ..... BUT H~ART E!ru- Qf

1.Qa

IT HAS HO NAME, ANNIE! I
TO WATCH MY MOTHER
MAKE IT WHEN I \1/Al; A
CHILD! SHE US~D TO

her&gt;

e.

fOR THOSI: WHO WILL
1H~ MEAL SHf PRfPI\R~S!

OF MYSTER'! MOT FAR FROM:

Tl!~

KAKS!Oll ....

~AT

SAY •...

MAY 9th

with the

DAILY CROSSWORD

finest

1. Italian rlver

outcasts,

5. Thessallan

~_!.A~BEA~=U~T:Y~Q:U{EEN~~?;Cii&lt;rt
MOL.ENE?''

~

-HIG~

5CHO()l.

~

A

lf_

@
.

·

·~'~110 ~ ·
.~LL.n&amp;

j
B-PIECE SNACK ET, whi" wil h
Swiss Chalet desi8n. Federal Class .'
ovenproof plates with place for cup.

8. Byron poem
D. Irrttate
13. Senorita's
''love''
14. Hitch

"LOOK'.'
1~. Electrical
Swab
&lt;O.Wrr'T' r~;;==;-"1 16.

·

'~

it'""'

,

ttfu"""'&lt;Ji:,;,,~

nonslip back for bull et "iugg lers"
4 c: ups an d 4 plates.

·

(2 wds. )

2~.

(abbr.)
10. Place of
punish-

unit
11. Girl's nain.e

18.Giraudoux
play

a·doop" girl

lenge ·

3~ . Immov·

able

with·

11. Actor,

22. "Boop-boop·

32. Chal·

ship
30. Fellow

Sam -

36, Rq

BoliO&lt;'•

out

lrtends

12. Expunge

IBOLTAC

''Jlrl''

23. Mualcal

composition

25. Old-time

pretty and
useful gift for Mother.
Electr ic Shaver with selfsharpening edges. perfect
for less and underarm s.

a rapier
28 ..Wintry

$595

31."-

WHAT iJ.IE,eAeOL..IN&amp;
TYCOON
HI&amp; .
RKEAI'.CH stAFF 10 J;tl

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Now .........

~~~~ •

ht_WI •

tofonn&amp;hl=
. paiN
111111 llllll!rtM.....

sa. II

(~awe,
Jaonbl.., CHUTI AlAR IWDYI DAMAR '

•••I

,

-t-+-1~~~;!(I~I::;,)THI( I I I] (I I)

21. Part or

I\ $\1.95 value .

I

I KIJ

1

26. Gale

10 1 -

1:1.'1::=:.-

6-,1-+-+-+-+--1 ~r;;;..u=rL::.;G:;.;;O,..'N~--r.:i"·~r· ~:
j
~ ~
.

_.

radio's
"VIc and

LADY SCHICK
CAPRICE SHAVER

0

GDTlJ)

Alan

movie

· (3 wds.)

21. Oklahoma
city

I DANGL

29. Wor·

figuratively

U~~~m~~~~blelhele four Jumbleo,
ont lttter to each ~quare, to

form four ordinary word•.

Ladd

ment,

20. Functions

o~

JJWlWOOltJ!:;IJ.J~·=~t! ..J

•

figuratively 19. lm·
plant
13wds.)
20. Edict
4. Swlss .
23. R088el·
river
Unl
5. Out ot favor
film
(3 wdo.)
2~ . De·
6. Consider
stroy
7. Lawyer

mountain

SCHOOL ANNUALS
OFiEN TELL A LOT
ABOUT PEOPLE.

16. step

2. Runyon
S. Roster of

ACROSS

was

&amp;ay:lng"

82.0xford
fellow
Altar words
Capital

HOME ·lAUNDRY

OORSAGES
10% O~F

1

NORGE

r--------..

$19.95 buys 1 gallon at Arau Termite Central Concentrate.
Add an Arab h_.nd spray Applicator a!ld')IOU're rNdy
to completely ltrmlle-proofthe average J-bedroom home I
Saves YCHJ over $100 compared to the cdst at calling lri a
profnal1111111ellfermloafor. Buy Arab and do both you and
your home a flv!l". 1Pr'lce may vary ~~~~hHy.

-

And

AUTOMATIC WASHER

Relatives Attend Funeral Services·

and

\

~#@)

Personal Notes

SAVE ,•100 OR MOll

'

SAVE MONEY AT INGELS' GREEN TAG SALEI

THE "FUN wtrH . FOODS" mail this week has been ,
fascinating . Had such a nice letter from Mrs. Duane Johnson of
Olanute, Kansas, a Sentinel reader, who sent us a couple of
recipes we'll be using later. One, incidentally,ls for a cranberry
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bailey,
cake l!l&amp;de with salad dreSl!ing.
Cleveland, who have l:!een here
Anyway, Mrs. Johnson is ·a former Meigs Countian, and her visiting Mrs . Con Young,
parents live at Rutland.
returned to their home Monday.
Anyways, Mrs : Johnson is a former Meigs Countian, and her
Mr. and Mrs. George W.
parents live at Rutland.
Price, David, Penny, Debbie
Then there was a letter and a number of recipes from Jeannie and Randy of Bloomington, _
Smith of Wmtersvllle. These, too, we'll be using in the weeks Ind., were weekend guests of
ahead.
Mrs . Golda Mourning. On
NEXT WEEK - Pies, two crust lemon, lime delight, fresh Saturday evening they were
strawberry, peanut butter cream pie, an easy soda cracker pie, joined for a dinner by Mr. and
·Mrs. J. H. Mourning of Tuscon,
and an oatmeal pie.
Ariz. David Price spent Sunday
in Point Pleasant with Mr. and
..•
Mrs. Tom Walters.
RACINE _ Relatives at- ShTieber-King Funeral Horne in
Mr. and Mrs. Harlan Worner
tending fun~ral services for Yo.ungstown last Thursday and Mrs. Geneva Yates were
Mrs . M~rtln Matteson (the were Mrs. Donald Hupp, Mrs. recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs.
former Myrtle Parsons) at Carroll White, Mr . and Mrs. Riley Piggott and Mis. Marie
Dorsa Parsons, Mrs. Paul Swan, Long Bottom. A recent
Wolfe, Mrs. Irene Rhodes, Mrs. guest of Mrs. Yates was Mrs.
Frances Parsons, Mrs. Edna Mildred Donahue, Letart.
Parsons and son Mark; and
Visitors at the Ed Templeton
Preston Parsons, all of Racine horne Saturday were Gary Lee
RD; Mr . and Mrs. Everette and daughters, Elyria. They ,
Parsons, Neyley, Ohio; Mrs. carne to Pomeroy especially to
LAUNDRY
Chester Durst, Niles; Mrs . pick up Miss Brenda Lee,
Jessie
Parsons, sons George daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
CALL 992-2057 ·
and Roger, Ashland, and Mrs. ·Lee, who returned to Elyria
PiCkup &amp; Delivery
Gerald Wells, Syracuse.
with the farnilyand will care for
Interment was in Deerfield the Lee children 'while Mrs. Lee,
Cemetery beside her late the former Dorothy Howell is
husband, Harvey Hoschar.
hospitalized . Mrs. Lee's
mother, Mrs. Belly Howell, will
also be there. Mrs. Lee who is
seriously ill, will undergo major
surgery Friday. Her address Is
Allen Memorial Hospital,
Oberlin, Ohio.
M~ .
and Mrs. Gilbert,
DeWeese of Point ,Pleasant
were recent vi$11Drs of Mrs.
Golda Mourning.

'S DAY
BLOOM lNG PUNTS

I

,

ESTELLA PARSONS

112 at Inspection
Twenty-one chapters were
represented by 112 members
when Racine Chapter 134, Order
of the Eastern Star, met
Monday night for inspection.
Barbara Dugan , worthy
matron , and Richard Dugan,
worthy patron, presided. Wilma
Styer, deputy grand matron,
was the inspecting officer.
Following the flag presentation distinguished guests
presented were Roberta K.
Mindling, past grand matron ,
who was given honorary
. membership in Racine Chapter
by Louise Stewart; Mrs. Styer,
deputy grand !natron; Mary
Casto, Grand Adah of West
Virginia Grand Chapter;
. Winifred Hooper, · Grand
Representative of . British
Columbia in Ohio, and
Catherine Shenefield, Grand
Representative of Virginia in
Ohio.
Worthy matrons and patrons
of visiting chapters, past
matrons and past patrons of
Racine Chapter , honored
Masons, Ben Philson, deputy
grand master, and Thomas
Wolfe, master of Racine Lodge,
along with District 25 officers,
Janet Bolin, president, anJ
June Stanley, treasurer, were
also introduced.
Those having former grand
appointments, past matrons
and past patrons of other
chapters were also among those
welcomed by the worthy
matron.
.
Two members from Racine
Chapter, Elberta Nothsline and
Ann Coe, received 50 year pins
from Grand Chapter. The pins
were presented by their sisters,
Cora Wel:!b and Maxine

\

I

""""" 11.,. IUp lithe •w.U,.1- A SHADI AI0,¥1
THIITIIn

of the

Baham..

8

36.Preaently
BT. StepB In
36. B~~r•
. 39. Links Item

DESERT

FLOW~R

SPRAY
COLOGNE,
SUEDE CLUTCH PURSE

l o~es

~ eg .

in fo ld-over French pursE' styl e. Has 2
comparlments, zipper POCket
and card pocket. Choices of t olars
and tr ims. '
'

$2.00 now

$135

~~ .......... ...~2.00

•

I.Especially for You Assortment. ·. 2~ lb. box
C. Mother's Day Gift ... .. ... . . .. 8 oz. box $1.

th e shamP!XJ that helps
"beat th e frlnies".
Far. Regular. Oily ar, Dry
Ha1r: 7 ounces. \
$1 .59 'Jalue

DENTAL CREAM,
J oi. Med . Tube
69C\Iil lut&gt;, now
1-1

3

g~
...

992-3106 .

UP"

DOWN'

CAP!' AIN EASY

''

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia. LONGFELLOW
One letter almply stands for' another. In this ll&amp;lllple A Ia
-u10d for the three L'o, X tor the two O'a, etc.- Single letters,
apoatrophea, the length and formation of the word11 are all
hlntl. Each &amp;y the cOde letters are different,
.

•
'•..

t,

A Oryplocram. Quotation

t

LHR
HV

•

DUTTON .PH

AND LINE

1. Texas
shrine

99C

CASHMERE BOUQUET BODY POWQE~
51,, Ol. pl,lSIIC !Jollie

'IOU KNOW WHAT'!i 60iN6
TO i1AP~EN SOMED/Jil?

DAILY (IRYPTOQUOTE-Hen!'s how to work It:

''

JUST WONDERFUL PROFESSIONAL 40~ .
HAIR SPRAY ..... 98¢ va l..,, now
""

THE 8U5,

40. ~~an

PRDT.Ei N 2 I

a Shullon fragrance mother

' GET OFF

IKVF

NLG

KVYGTC

AHUVN

HS

K

JKV

I'M KIDDING ... IT'Ll
NEYER HAf'PEN ..

MKVJG

POEF

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VGGXTo RtTNLHBN .OHCNTUVY GKJL

!II

l'oo&amp;enlaJ'a Ci)opWqao&amp;ei PATIUO'l'ISM IS NpT lllNOUOR.
I MUST HAVIS NO HATRED OR Bl'I'T.II:RNBSII 'tOW..UWS
ANYOMJII.-I:D1'1'H C,AVJlLL
.,

HNLOillf-UCKKJ

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M'UCJlKOTU

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,

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10 - T he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 6, 1971

r"~s:;;:,&amp;~~&amp;~;r;:~ia~~~i&amp;d: -----Car.d of Thanks
THE FAMILY of Don Gorby
w-ishes fo- t~an k Dr . John
Ridgw~y , fh e nursing staff ,
nur $&amp;5 aides, candystrlper s,
and all w ho helped in any wa y

for the care he received while
he was in Veterans Meirlorial

Hospital. We wish also to
thank the Martin

Musser and Jay Stiles, for the

word s.

th e

si ngers . Gracie and Delores
King and mo t her , the
patfbea rer s and all relati ves,

fr iends and neighbors who
sent cards. before and after
hi s death , and especially, fhe
ladles who worked so

generously to prepare the

food for th~ family at the
Langsville Fellowship Room .
OJr thanks to all others who
helped In any way to lighten
our burden and sorrow.
5-6· lie

I WANT to extend my sincere
thanks to all my friends and
neighbors for fhelr kind expressions of sympathy at the
death of my husband, Clyde J.
Frazier. Special thanks to the

wond,erful doctors and nurses
at Holzer Medical Center,
Rev . O' Dell Manley, the
singers,
Rawlings - Coals

Funeral Home, and Mr .

Simpson tor being so ni ce.
Your thoughtfulness will
never be forgotten .
I
Wife, Betty J. Fraz.l er
5-6-ltc

- - - - -- Notice

EFFECTIVE Monday, May 10,
the price of hair cufs will be
$1.75 in Rac ine.
5-6-3tc
~-----

REDUCE safe and fast with
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
4-14-601p
GUNSHOOT, Friday, May 7, 7
p.m., Mile Hill Road. Hams,
bacons, half hogs. sronsored
by Racine Fire Dep .
, 5-4-4tc
OVEN FRESH bakery products. Jimmy's Pastry Shop,
N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport.
Phone 992-3555.
4-29-JOtc
KOSCOT Kosmetlcs, wigs and
accessories. May and June
special. Kleanslng Kream ,

$2.25. Distributors, Brown's .
Ph one 992·5113.
4-23-lfc

----SAVE UP to one half. Bring

your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy .
4-23-lfc
SMALLEY ' S
Gift
Shop ,
Chester, Ohio. Flowers for
Mother's Day and Memorial
Day. $.88 and up. Phone
Chesfer 985-3537 .
' •
"~ • • 4:23-12tc
WILL PICK up merchandise

and take to auction on a

percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland .
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc
RUBBER· STAMPS made fo
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Ohio.
2-12-90tc
REG ISlER ED

walker

Tennessee

stud

Harrisonville,
742-5862.

service .

Oh io.

Phone

-========4-=2:_0 ·:::30t~c
,-

Meip County
Dog·Warden Is
Lowell Greer
To Contact
Phone 992-9947
Dogs found with no tags will
be picked up.
Board of Meigs
County Commissioners

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

Write Box 729-E, C·O The
Dail y SentineL Pom er oy,
Ohio:
5-5-4tc

Wanted To Buy

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
" Ditching. Electri c sewer
TELEPHONES, brass beds,
cleaning ." Reasonable ra tes.
c locks, dishes, old furniture,
· Phone
John
Russell,
etc. Write M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis 446-4782.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
4-7-tfc
·
4-2r-ttc
ANTIQUES :
Dishes, BULLDOZER work . e.isement,
ponds, landscaping . We do all
telephones, tin , brass beds,
kinds of dozer work . Haul fill
lamp s, et c . Lee Rudisill ,
dirt
and top soli. See or call
Phone 9'12-3403.
Bob Jeffers after 7 p. m.
4-23-JOtp
Phone 992-3525.
4-23-30tc

- -------,-

For Rent

CONCRETE
2 BEDROOM mobile home. READY-MIX
delivered
right
to your
Racine area. Phone 992-6329.
project. Fast and easy . Free
5-3-7tc
estimates. Phone 992 -3284 .
------:-=-::-:-:--::-....,....-:-:--~
Goegleln Ready -Mi x Co.,
4 ROOMS, bath, unfurnished
Middleport, Ohio.
.
apartment. Also, 4 rooms,
6-30-tfc
bath, furnished apartment.
J raller space wlfh patio.
Albert HilL phone 949 -2261. O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Servi ce .
Commercial , residential and
4-30-Ttc
Industrial wiring. Phone 247UNFURNISHED 3 - room
2113.
· 3-12-lfc
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
1-31-lfc
ROOFING,
Spouting
and
Painting . Also, metal storage
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
building 10x10, concrete floor,
'1&gt;-mlle north of new Meigs
erected, for 5300. Richard
High School . Phone 992-2941 .
Will, Phone 992 -2889.
3-5-lfc
4-12-30tc
----~
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-lfc AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
-------~:..:::..:.:.::
cancelled?
Lost
your
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
operator' s license? Call 992Court, Rt. 124, ~~se
,
2966.
Ohio. 992-2951_,......,.6-15-lfc
4-2- fc
- - - -----U-7:N::-:F::-:U-::R~N'"'t"'sH"'E"'D;:--:3:---r 00
apartment .
Inquire
at
.
.
apartment 16, Coats Bldg., GENTLE Buckskm rldmg pony,
Middleport. For Information
53 Inch, $60. Saddle w ith
phone 992-3641.
padded seatmg , like new, $65 .
Phone 992-3980.
4_27 _121 c
.,.-::-=---- - - 5-2-6tc
GOOD 6-room, bath, 3 bedroom
700X18 TRUCK tires, small

- - -- - -

,lnsurance

or Sa Ie

home, gas heat, basement,

garage. Well locafed. Write,
giving references, to Box 729- ·
L, C-0 The Dally Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
5-4-6fc

~--~---'-'-_;_S:..:-·2-tfc

Auto Sales
1969 BUICK LeSabre , 2-dr.
hardtop, power sfe;erln8,
power brakes , air , 18,0 0
miles. E.cellent condition.
Phone 9'12-2288.
11-10-lfc
1967 OLDSMOBILE 442~ Cragar
SS wheels, automatic tran-

smission, 4-speaker stereo,
power steering and brakes.
Contact Jim Crow, phone 9922441 after S p.m.
5-4-61c

•

For Sale

BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
5-4-30

MODERN walnut stereo radio combination , dual

volume control, 4 speakers, 4
speed changer , separate
controls . Balance $71.43. Use
our budget ferms. Call 9923352.
5-6-6tc

-- - COLONIAL maple stereo-radio

combination, Am, Fm radio,
tour speakers, 4 speed In termixed changer, separate
controls . Balance $78 .59. Use
our budget ferms. Call 992·
3152.
S-6-6fc

Warren' s Mower Shop, 248
Condor St. , Pomeroy. Phone

sprays,
baskets.
Ar·
rangements, 69c and u~ .
4-7H -3U1C

· 5-5-31 c

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, May 9, 1
p. m . 12-16-20gauge. Assorted
meals. Racine Gun Club.
5-6-3tc

-----=-YARD SALE every Friday and

Ohio, Memorial Day wre8ths,

BUILDING lots. Also, Bolen
tractor
and
roto-tlller ,

mower, snowblower, like

new, one new hassock fan:
two lawn mowers. Alber! Hill,
phone 949-2261.
4-30-7fc

Saturday. Some antiques on =-:-cc-:::::-::-:-c::-:-:=- -:-::::--:;;Larklns St . In Rutland.
PAINT DAMAGE - 1971 Zlg Zag Sewing Machines . Still in
-S-5-3tc

orig inal cartons. No at GUN SHOOT, Sunday, May 9, 12

tachrnents

needed, as

controls are built-in. Sews

Club.

with I or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sews on buttons,
monO!lrams, and blind hem
sli tch. Full cash price, 538.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
S-4-61c

- - -- - -

GALA · AUCTION opening Frida y, l)llay 7 at 7 p.m .

Kuhl 's Auction Barn, every
Friday, Tuppers Plains, Ohio,
at caution light on Rt . 7.
S-2-6tc

- - -- HAYMAN'S Auc t ion House ,

Laurel Cliff, Rt . 7 PortieroyMiddleporl Bypass . Auction
each Friday night, 7 p.m. This
week, May 7, one tru ckload of
general merchandise, one
rarge ,lot of assorted tools,
featuring ohe rug loom .
5-2-6tc

-'------Morning.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

Time You Ever Spent.
Drive
ilWINSOR
-tiBUDDY

36

Miles and Save A Bundl e !
.. CHAMPION
*VAN DYKE

.~EE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

You wlll have something of va lu e to show for the SSS you
spend when you buy your home - plu s, you gain an Income Ta x benefit, you build an equity and you are not
bound bY the term s of a r ental agreement.
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.
Come See Us Al97'i' N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992-7129

- ------

POLLED
Hereford
bulL
purebred, 1,300 lbs., excellent
health. Route 338, p;, miles
below Ravenswood Ferry.
Paul Sayre, phone 843-2286 .
5-5-3tc

- - -- - SUPER STUFF, sure null!

That's Blue Lustre for
cleaning
carpels . · Rent
electric shampooer, $1. Baker
Furnlfure, Middleport.

5-5·6fC

HAVE NINE Yorkshire pigs.
Males have been gelded .
Phone 949-2726 on old Portland Road . E. D. Johnson.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _5
_ -4-3tp
AUTOMATIC wafer softener
and cold water tank , like new.
Lowell Bing . Phone Chesler
985-3816.
5-4-3tp

-----ORGAN - Baldwin home organ

with rhythm, to be picked up
In this area . Pay remaining

balance

or

take

over

payments . May be seen
locally .
Write
credlf

RE STAUR A NT and equipm ent
with gam e room, Ma son, W.
Va. Phone Rutl and 742-5265.
4-30-61p
F IVE ROOM house, t wo
bedr oo m s, bath, basem ent,
wal l to wa ll car pet in livi ng
room , bedrooms, and bath.
Gas f or ce d ai r fur nace .
M iddlepor t, ph one 992-3420.
4-25-tfc

FREE STORAGE

EXPERIENCED

For Your Garments

Radiator Service

All you pay for is cleaning
and pressing. Pay when you
gel them back.
' FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
OELIVERY
SERVICE
CALL 773-SS43.
Please! No Free Storing on
Bulk Cleaning .

ABC CLEANERS
773-5543

Mason, W. Va .

Roofing &amp; carpenter
· Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting
NEW &amp; OLD WORK

$5.55
-

606 E. Maln, Pomeroy, 0 .

Custom meat cutting
Pleasant Ridge Road
Pomeroy, 0.

r~=========~

Dick Vaugh an

JOHNSON MASONRY

Dale Little

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

992-3374
992 -6346
O' DE L L WH E EL alignment
loca ted at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Compl ete front end ser vi ce,
tune up and brak e ser v ice.
Wh ee l s
bal anced
el ec tr on icall y .
All
work
guar antee d .
Reasonable
r ates. Phone 992 -3213.
4-22-JOtc

2 YEARS OLD: - 3 bedrooms
w ith large cl osets , 1112
cera mi c tile 1bath s, ga s furna ce and central air conditioning . Garage. A-1 condition . $26, 500.00.
NEES HOMES FR0Mi8,500.00
TO i 12,500.00. CALL 992-3325.
HELEN l . TEAFORD, .
Associate
4-30-6tc

2 speed operat ion .
Choice of water
temps .
Au t o .

level
L i nt

F!lter or Power
F m Ag Itator .
Perma-Press ·
Maytag

Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heet . No hot spots ,
no overdry l ng .
Flne Mesh Lint
Filter.
We Speciallre In

MAYTAG
Red Carpet

Service

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Rutland,

SALE of the _CENTURY I

this Week,
May 7 thru May 16

PRO STYLE

HAIR SERER

CAN OPENER AND .
KNIFE SHARPENER

• Sleek, new styling • Extra-farge bouffant

0.

hood-compare it to commercial dryers e Yet.

fOil quo R ~ kllilt ond tch·
011r1 lhar~MI , S!oinlll"
IIHI culli nt whe1 l i1
rt111ovabfo for tl:ll'f

Heck's
Reg,

•"

llto ~i~g .

Cord ••orogo

it's portable . . . folds to hatbox size t Remote

· control heat settings • Extra-efficient air de·

._parlmenl ' OpMUIII)'

Pondc".l ,.u, can. Mog·

fttllc

li ~

litter,

~MM ' po~~t~ . ~

'14•

livery for lost drying.

w--...
., . ,

s1··sss

$11 77

306

NEW LIMA ROAD - 4 large
bedroom s, bath, nice modern
kitchen , gas lOg fireplace, full
ba sement, 200,000 btu natural
ga s for ced air furna ce.
Bea ut iful large front lawn and
por ch. 15 acres . On l y
$22, 000.00.

Ari)Oid Grate

SCHICK
A u1n opu10 - pl~•· •

Big Capacity
Maytag
Automatics

742 -4211

317

879

2 Slice .Toaster

BELOW MIDDLEPORT - o
bedroom s, bath, ga s floor
furnace , wel l. Garage, and
outce ll ar . $ma ll ga rden.
Ask ing $7,000.00.

water
con tr o l .

96

Hamillorrleach

SR.

SEWING MACH IN ES. Repa ir
servi ce, all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Author ized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

Shop and Save

-D9T.

Broker
110 Mechanic 51.
Pqmeroy, Ohio

742-4902

Bo!ICKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septi c tanks installed . George
(Bill) Pullin s, Phone 992-2478.
4-25-lfc

JEWElRY

MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
bath , larg e liVing, side porch
and ga rage . Want $10,500.00.

THE SHOP

•39

HECK'S
REG.
$19.96

GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds .

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios ·

'49.96

Pomeroy

Backhoe And
End loader Work

Complete
Remodeling

Re£ Price

BLAmNARS

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

742-4902

Upright
Sweeper

Noult with Trlpte Position Brud\,
Giant Oisposoble Bags. One Year
Guarantee .

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Sm•llest Heater Core.

PHONE 74! -3945

JOHNSON MASONRY

G. E.

Above the Floor Cleaning), Swivel

DEXTER, 0 . 45726

Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed

SWEEPER
VAC
Grip Handle, Snap Stand, Crevice
T~l ond Upholstery Noule (for

EXPERT
-Wheel Alignment

.--·,

U-5

erful 2 Speed Motor. Feotu re1 in·
etude Po~er Dlol, ~1tclusive Mid·

Ph. 9'12 -2143

.

.. FROM , MOTHER'S

centl. Ughtweight Vac with Pow·

Construction Co.

at low low prices.

BEAUTIFUL seleciton .of
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
flowers, baskets , wreaths ,
Cleaner complete with atand sprays for Memorial Day.
lachments, cordwlnder and
Cliff ShOt Repair, Middleport.
paint spray . Used but In like
4-21 -tfc
new .condition . Pay $37.45 7
N;::T~IQ::-U;;:E:::S, ;::Ph:-:on
-::-e-:-;;;9'1:;;2-;
-53::;;;27.
cash
or
credit
terms A:-:
4·6-30tc
available. Phone 992-5641 ,
S-Hic

,

QUANTITIES LAST

Colo'rt r A¥ocodo with Pearl Ac·

All Weather Roofing &amp;

Quality Mobile Homes
BREEDING rabbits :
two ~ucks . Randall

WH

SI:IETLAND

------

AI Llndm1rk, Everyone
Can! .
HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Low As
63.95
RIDING MOWERS
As Low As
271.95
ECONOMY TILLERS
As Low As
13US

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW .THROUGH SUNDAY, MAY 9

Evenings Call992 -2534, Dale Dutton

finish, Baldwin, will be picked
up In this area. Assume
paymenfs or refinance. May
be seen locally. Write, Credit
3-~9 - tfc
Manager, Graves Plano and
Organ Company , 383 E. Broad SEPTI C tank s cleaned . Miller
St., .Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Sanitation , Stewart , Ohio. Ph .
662
-3035.
---2-12-lfc

'S. \\"1·: ~_I!_)HEA

POMEROY - 3 bedroom hom e
with apartment , GARDEN
HOUSE, 4 room s, bath, 2 lots,
SPACE , 2 bat hs, ga r age,
loca ted in Sy ra cuse. Call after
stor a ge bu i lding , GOOD
3 p.m . weekday s 992-2806.
CONDITION . $10,000.
5-5-6tc
----=~
MIDDLEPORT LARGE
24 ACR E FARM, Long Bottom ,
YARD FOR CHILDREN - 2
w i th or
wit hout farm
story frame , 3 bedroom s,
machi ner y . House w i th 3 bath , CLOSE TO SHOPPING,
bedroo ms, dining room, living
full basement. $9,500.
rocim , llh bath s, encl osed PROPERTIES ARE SELLING
back por ch, waH to wall
carpeting. Alum inum siding ,
LIST WITH US TODAY
awning, storm windows and
HENRY CLELAND
storm doo r s. City wa.t er .
REALTOR
Se ll ing due to ill health. Phone
Office 992-2259
61 4-985-39 38.
S-2-61 c
4-25 -18tp

OPEN DAILY ·10 TO 9 -SUNDAY 1 TO 7

S TV AND AN manager, Graves Plano and HARRISON'
TENNA
SERVICE
. Phone
Organ Company, 383 E. Broad
992-2522.
St., Columbus, Ohio 43215.
6-10-lfc
5-4-3t c

-PIANO- - -Spinet plano, walnut

POMEROY
Mulberr y
Aven ue, 2 s.tory f ram e, .:1
bedr oo m s, l'i&gt; bath s, f v ll
· base men!,
garag e with
rem odeled r oom s over , LOTS
OF ROOM FOR LARGE
FAMILY. $18,500.

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

----NICE BUFFET, $30. Early
American sofa bed , $30 .
Collecfions of old bottles.
Phone 997 -5960.
5-5.3tp

Cleland Realty

-.,.-·----::--::-

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

What Do You Have For The$$$ You Pay In Rent?

Real Estate For Sale

'\-?-Mr

i'ALSO
DOUBLE - WIDES

1

HICK'S
lEG.
$13.96

HECK'S REG. $23.88

IIWiliY DIPT.

JIWEUY IEPT.

TEFLON

FRY PAN
1969 Chevrolet Caprice 4 Dr.

1971 Opel Kadett

·Muhi-cooker frypon, c•rtlfied
Tetlan II. U•t metal spatula 1
DuPont's hflon s~o~rfact it

$3295

Loca l owner with less than 15,000 miles, Comfortron air
conditioning, power st ~rlng, automati c trans ., Astra
front seat, bla ck nylon Interior. Beautiful green f ini sh
w ith bla ck vi nyl roof. Radio &amp; all other popular acces sor ies, outstanding car w ith fine features .

'2195

2 Dr. Deluxe Station Wagon , 7,000 m i les by local owner. 90
H. P. engine, H. duty 4- ~peed transmission, Frt. disc
brakes, red f inish , with body wood grain applique, blk.'
vinyl Interior, w-w t ires, a ,great saving for so little use.

Kratch·rtslstantl High

NE-500

MUNSE\'

• CALROD
OVEII
loa'''

10!'•'--nt lor bro!WII(I olld
lilt. bott0111 for baillftg ond tOCHI·

Int . Cltor wit ~~t g l an daar , thr H
,.lr; po ~iorlt, Orlp troy, d.ra1111
fiR I ~h

ir11lda o~d au!, thtrii'Otlat
tltl'lltlll co11trol up to j()O' htoll

ftoftll bolfllldtt wMn on.._,,..,,"

$1988

• HICK'S REG. $26.88

JIWELIY /JI1T.

1970 Chevrolet Impala HT Sedan '3695
front brakes, new set w-w belted tires, radio, guards,
skirt , beautiful white finish with blue vinyl roof &amp; matching interior. Factory air conditlof1ed, new car t itle &amp;
bal. of S yr ., 50,000 miles.

Had's
Reg.
.'22"

1969
Chevelle '2150 1968 Olds
•
Malibu 4 Dr . hardfop, V-8
engine, automatic trans ..
power steering, radio . Like
new white-wall tires, vinyl
roof &amp; green finish .

'1895

Cutlass 4 Door Sedan, V-8
engine, automatic tran S.,
P· steering &amp; brakes, vinyl
Interior , radio, white over
furq. f inish, good tires.
Local 1 owner car.

1967 Ford '1765 1963Chevy 11 ,1595

4Doorsedan L.T. D., power
steering, power brakes, air
, conditioning . V! nyl in terlor , blk . vinyl roof,
maroon fin ish, radio, new
w-w fires .

1967 Ford

$1495

_
Nova • 2 Dr., 1 owner car,
clean Interior, like new w-w
fires, white finish, 6 cyl.
engine, automatic trans.
Radio . See It today .

Nice Selection

64- 67 CARS
IN ALL

MAKES &amp; MODELS

A

.-

Pomeroy .Motor Co.
.

Your Chevy Dealer
.

FM-AM

$}888

e Worms rolls and cofftt at

$1277

fooch en tht kitchen ron;t.

HICK'S lEG.

$18.88

JIWiliY

HICK'SIIG.
$16.96

11wn•r, ,

PORTABLE
MIXER

$2788

•it

HICK'S
REG.

HICK'SIIG.
$1.96

$33.96

,,

CAMERA

Electronic ·,hutter and electric
eye· automatically set correct
exposure, make flash pictures
as perfectly as pictures in daylight. Dual image, non-folding
coupled ronge and viewfin·

· Big 3 U.·"x4 'A" pictures.

' JIWillY

PROCTOR

STEAM
&amp;SPRAY IRON
e
Exciting new, avocado hondle •
Visible water le.-1 fill avoids spilling .
• Plenty of steam for Easler ironing
• Easy-to-10e fabric dial •• • leakproof • llghtweig~t •• .I

HICK'SIIG.
$34.96

1' ipHd puahbutton' , , , ont for ..,..
try blencilr operation and 10lid ttatel
NrN "flolh llendt" lwtton for aplit
stcond bltnding. A~rtomotlc timer
shut1 oft bltndlng with prtcislon . .S
cup heat rnl1tant clo¥trltof glan jar.
2.piece lid, buitl·ln cord atorog~ .

J1WIUY . .T.

FOLDING
POLAROID COLOR

Aquolnt , con~t. ·

totlon pltct wall

clack fashioned
offer Grand111o'i
old

cookJtovt .
Compl•tt •••11 to
thl copper caffet

WHISTLING

otond thttl..,u·
r.ated
fire box.

$177

$12;81

HICK'S
. .G.
$6.79

. ,••, . .r.

llrMIY

HICK'S
110.
$2.59

$3988
HICK'S
110.
$12.96

HICK'IIIO.

.

f'K-14

BREWMASTER

$499

$977

$2877

BLENDER

5-SPIED

Dtluxe 5·Spttd chrornt
hand mhttr . Thil deluxt
unit comet in glistening
chrome to match any
chen dtcor, 5 speeds fo
mut every mixing n..d.
Push buHon. Wall storag•
too. Twin htovy duly

IJIPT.

WARING
14 SPEED .

VANWYCK

chrome btattn.
'

RADIO

$1477

I ROlLER-BAKER

RF619

1970 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Cpe. s3395
400 cu. in. engine, a ~ tomatlc 'trans. , power steering &amp;
power di sc front brakes, G-70-15 w-w tires, Rally wheels,
tinted glass , fa ctory a ir conditioned , bumper guards,
Pos ifractlon , radio &amp; R.S. speaker console with bucket
seats, beaut iful beige color with blk. vinyl roof. New car
titl e &amp; bal. of 5 yr ., 50,000 mi tes. See thi s one.

pM-lC
•
MUNSEY
the tame time • Claar, ecnity
read dial for heat setting •
Prtports as big a YOriety of

~me

wnltd covtr. Rtmo'lablt heal
control for Immersible dean·
ing. Pedestal lfgt protect to·
ble. Double handle .

Pl Pleasam Only

400 cu. in. engine, automatic, power steering &amp; power disc

. Mustang, 6 cyl ., auto.
trans ., conSole , maroon
finish, all good w-w f ires,
radio. Real Nice.

zestful time ·for some .
people. Double dJsmal
for others. Jim Mees
somehow gets us ~II

togerher every day.

Ford tractor, small manurespreader . Pet lamb. Call 9493073.
5-2-6tc

our

noon. Forked Run Sportsman
5-S' 3tc

RALPH'S
CARPET
Upholstery Clean ing Service.
Free estimates .
Phone
Gallipolis 446-0294.
3-12-tfc

MEIGS boy' s gold class ring
with blue sel, 1971, initials
G. L. Call 992-2766 If found.
5-4-3tc

ELLEN' S Glff Shop, Reedsville,

IT EM:

Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

Lost

Adults only. Phone 992-5592.

FOR SALE .
DELILAH Mays r eal estate,
46.67 at r es in Olive Township,
M eig s County will be so ld to
highest bi dder for nol less
than appr aise d pr i ce of
SL200.00, Satur day, May 8,
197 1 allO:OO a.m. at the otti ce
of J . 8 . O' Br ien , attorney,
1 001!:~ Cour t Street, Pomer oy,
for f urther in form ati on ca ll
992-2720.

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

EARN AT hom e addr ess ing
5-1-tt c
env·el opes . , Rush stam ped
self-addressed envelope to t he
Ambrose Company, 4325 NEIGLER Construction . For
Lakeborn , Da vis bu r g , building or remodel i ng your
home, Call Guy Nelgler,
Michigan, 48019.
Racine, Ohio .
4-30-30tp
7-31 -tfc

- - - -For MINOR automotive repair.
992-7357 .

Business Services

evening meal and stay_'nights
wi th shut -in. Private r oom
and ba th, no nur sing care.

1967 HO.N DA 160 Scrambler.
Phone 992-6021.
_ _ __ _ __ _5_-6-3tp

Pomeroy, 0.

Rt. 3

RE~INED woman to pr epare

2;;-'B;;;E"'D;;:R;;:O;;:O~M..---=m:-:o-::-b;;-lle:-.-:h-ome.

Real Estate For Sale

'

Funera l

Home , the ministers, Robert
comf orting

For Sale

Help Wanted

z'-i

..,.

SLICING KNIFE
• Slice a vprlety of differiont
foods quickly ond e.-rify • Hoi·
low Ground Stainless Steel
Blades-retain their shorpnen,
ond snop in ond out for easy
cleaning .

•

$999
HICK'S IIIG. $12.11

�•
.I

10 - T he Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., May 6, 1971

r"~s:;;:,&amp;~~&amp;~;r;:~ia~~~i&amp;d: -----Car.d of Thanks
THE FAMILY of Don Gorby
w-ishes fo- t~an k Dr . John
Ridgw~y , fh e nursing staff ,
nur $&amp;5 aides, candystrlper s,
and all w ho helped in any wa y

for the care he received while
he was in Veterans Meirlorial

Hospital. We wish also to
thank the Martin

Musser and Jay Stiles, for the

word s.

th e

si ngers . Gracie and Delores
King and mo t her , the
patfbea rer s and all relati ves,

fr iends and neighbors who
sent cards. before and after
hi s death , and especially, fhe
ladles who worked so

generously to prepare the

food for th~ family at the
Langsville Fellowship Room .
OJr thanks to all others who
helped In any way to lighten
our burden and sorrow.
5-6· lie

I WANT to extend my sincere
thanks to all my friends and
neighbors for fhelr kind expressions of sympathy at the
death of my husband, Clyde J.
Frazier. Special thanks to the

wond,erful doctors and nurses
at Holzer Medical Center,
Rev . O' Dell Manley, the
singers,
Rawlings - Coals

Funeral Home, and Mr .

Simpson tor being so ni ce.
Your thoughtfulness will
never be forgotten .
I
Wife, Betty J. Fraz.l er
5-6-ltc

- - - - -- Notice

EFFECTIVE Monday, May 10,
the price of hair cufs will be
$1.75 in Rac ine.
5-6-3tc
~-----

REDUCE safe and fast with
Gobese tablets and E-Vap
water pills. Nelson Drugs.
4-14-601p
GUNSHOOT, Friday, May 7, 7
p.m., Mile Hill Road. Hams,
bacons, half hogs. sronsored
by Racine Fire Dep .
, 5-4-4tc
OVEN FRESH bakery products. Jimmy's Pastry Shop,
N. 2nd Ave ., Middleport.
Phone 992-3555.
4-29-JOtc
KOSCOT Kosmetlcs, wigs and
accessories. May and June
special. Kleanslng Kream ,

$2.25. Distributors, Brown's .
Ph one 992·5113.
4-23-lfc

----SAVE UP to one half. Bring

your sick TV to Chuck's TV
Shop, 151 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy .
4-23-lfc
SMALLEY ' S
Gift
Shop ,
Chester, Ohio. Flowers for
Mother's Day and Memorial
Day. $.88 and up. Phone
Chesfer 985-3537 .
' •
"~ • • 4:23-12tc
WILL PICK up merchandise

and take to auction on a

percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland .
Phone 742-4461.
9-23-tfc
RUBBER· STAMPS made fo
order. 24 hour service. Dwain
or Wilma Casto, Portland,
Ohio.
2-12-90tc
REG ISlER ED

walker

Tennessee

stud

Harrisonville,
742-5862.

service .

Oh io.

Phone

-========4-=2:_0 ·:::30t~c
,-

Meip County
Dog·Warden Is
Lowell Greer
To Contact
Phone 992-9947
Dogs found with no tags will
be picked up.
Board of Meigs
County Commissioners

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

Write Box 729-E, C·O The
Dail y SentineL Pom er oy,
Ohio:
5-5-4tc

Wanted To Buy

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.
" Ditching. Electri c sewer
TELEPHONES, brass beds,
cleaning ." Reasonable ra tes.
c locks, dishes, old furniture,
· Phone
John
Russell,
etc. Write M.D. Miller, Rt. 4,
Gallipolis 446-4782.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 992-6271 .
4-7-tfc
·
4-2r-ttc
ANTIQUES :
Dishes, BULLDOZER work . e.isement,
ponds, landscaping . We do all
telephones, tin , brass beds,
kinds of dozer work . Haul fill
lamp s, et c . Lee Rudisill ,
dirt
and top soli. See or call
Phone 9'12-3403.
Bob Jeffers after 7 p. m.
4-23-JOtp
Phone 992-3525.
4-23-30tc

- -------,-

For Rent

CONCRETE
2 BEDROOM mobile home. READY-MIX
delivered
right
to your
Racine area. Phone 992-6329.
project. Fast and easy . Free
5-3-7tc
estimates. Phone 992 -3284 .
------:-=-::-:-:--::-....,....-:-:--~
Goegleln Ready -Mi x Co.,
4 ROOMS, bath, unfurnished
Middleport, Ohio.
.
apartment. Also, 4 rooms,
6-30-tfc
bath, furnished apartment.
J raller space wlfh patio.
Albert HilL phone 949 -2261. O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Servi ce .
Commercial , residential and
4-30-Ttc
Industrial wiring. Phone 247UNFURNISHED 3 - room
2113.
· 3-12-lfc
apartment. Phone 992-2288.
1-31-lfc
ROOFING,
Spouting
and
Painting . Also, metal storage
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
building 10x10, concrete floor,
'1&gt;-mlle north of new Meigs
erected, for 5300. Richard
High School . Phone 992-2941 .
Will, Phone 992 -2889.
3-5-lfc
4-12-30tc
----~
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-lfc AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
-------~:..:::..:.:.::
cancelled?
Lost
your
TRAILER LOTS. Bob's Mobile
operator' s license? Call 992Court, Rt. 124, ~~se
,
2966.
Ohio. 992-2951_,......,.6-15-lfc
4-2- fc
- - - -----U-7:N::-:F::-:U-::R~N'"'t"'sH"'E"'D;:--:3:---r 00
apartment .
Inquire
at
.
.
apartment 16, Coats Bldg., GENTLE Buckskm rldmg pony,
Middleport. For Information
53 Inch, $60. Saddle w ith
phone 992-3641.
padded seatmg , like new, $65 .
Phone 992-3980.
4_27 _121 c
.,.-::-=---- - - 5-2-6tc
GOOD 6-room, bath, 3 bedroom
700X18 TRUCK tires, small

- - -- - -

,lnsurance

or Sa Ie

home, gas heat, basement,

garage. Well locafed. Write,
giving references, to Box 729- ·
L, C-0 The Dally Sentinel,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
5-4-6fc

~--~---'-'-_;_S:..:-·2-tfc

Auto Sales
1969 BUICK LeSabre , 2-dr.
hardtop, power sfe;erln8,
power brakes , air , 18,0 0
miles. E.cellent condition.
Phone 9'12-2288.
11-10-lfc
1967 OLDSMOBILE 442~ Cragar
SS wheels, automatic tran-

smission, 4-speaker stereo,
power steering and brakes.
Contact Jim Crow, phone 9922441 after S p.m.
5-4-61c

•

For Sale

BESTLINE PRODUCTS. Call
Myron Bailey, Phone 992-5327.
5-4-30

MODERN walnut stereo radio combination , dual

volume control, 4 speakers, 4
speed changer , separate
controls . Balance $71.43. Use
our budget ferms. Call 9923352.
5-6-6tc

-- - COLONIAL maple stereo-radio

combination, Am, Fm radio,
tour speakers, 4 speed In termixed changer, separate
controls . Balance $78 .59. Use
our budget ferms. Call 992·
3152.
S-6-6fc

Warren' s Mower Shop, 248
Condor St. , Pomeroy. Phone

sprays,
baskets.
Ar·
rangements, 69c and u~ .
4-7H -3U1C

· 5-5-31 c

GUN SHOOT, Sunday, May 9, 1
p. m . 12-16-20gauge. Assorted
meals. Racine Gun Club.
5-6-3tc

-----=-YARD SALE every Friday and

Ohio, Memorial Day wre8ths,

BUILDING lots. Also, Bolen
tractor
and
roto-tlller ,

mower, snowblower, like

new, one new hassock fan:
two lawn mowers. Alber! Hill,
phone 949-2261.
4-30-7fc

Saturday. Some antiques on =-:-cc-:::::-::-:-c::-:-:=- -:-::::--:;;Larklns St . In Rutland.
PAINT DAMAGE - 1971 Zlg Zag Sewing Machines . Still in
-S-5-3tc

orig inal cartons. No at GUN SHOOT, Sunday, May 9, 12

tachrnents

needed, as

controls are built-in. Sews

Club.

with I or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sews on buttons,
monO!lrams, and blind hem
sli tch. Full cash price, 538.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 992-5641.
S-4-61c

- - -- - -

GALA · AUCTION opening Frida y, l)llay 7 at 7 p.m .

Kuhl 's Auction Barn, every
Friday, Tuppers Plains, Ohio,
at caution light on Rt . 7.
S-2-6tc

- - -- HAYMAN'S Auc t ion House ,

Laurel Cliff, Rt . 7 PortieroyMiddleporl Bypass . Auction
each Friday night, 7 p.m. This
week, May 7, one tru ckload of
general merchandise, one
rarge ,lot of assorted tools,
featuring ohe rug loom .
5-2-6tc

-'------Morning.

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!
40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

Time You Ever Spent.
Drive
ilWINSOR
-tiBUDDY

36

Miles and Save A Bundl e !
.. CHAMPION
*VAN DYKE

.~EE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER OR BOB CROW

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W. VA.

* ASTACK OF WORTHLESS RECEIPTS! ! *

You wlll have something of va lu e to show for the SSS you
spend when you buy your home - plu s, you gain an Income Ta x benefit, you build an equity and you are not
bound bY the term s of a r ental agreement.
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.
Come See Us Al97'i' N. Second St., Middleport.
PH. 992-7129

- ------

POLLED
Hereford
bulL
purebred, 1,300 lbs., excellent
health. Route 338, p;, miles
below Ravenswood Ferry.
Paul Sayre, phone 843-2286 .
5-5-3tc

- - -- - SUPER STUFF, sure null!

That's Blue Lustre for
cleaning
carpels . · Rent
electric shampooer, $1. Baker
Furnlfure, Middleport.

5-5·6fC

HAVE NINE Yorkshire pigs.
Males have been gelded .
Phone 949-2726 on old Portland Road . E. D. Johnson.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _5
_ -4-3tp
AUTOMATIC wafer softener
and cold water tank , like new.
Lowell Bing . Phone Chesler
985-3816.
5-4-3tp

-----ORGAN - Baldwin home organ

with rhythm, to be picked up
In this area . Pay remaining

balance

or

take

over

payments . May be seen
locally .
Write
credlf

RE STAUR A NT and equipm ent
with gam e room, Ma son, W.
Va. Phone Rutl and 742-5265.
4-30-61p
F IVE ROOM house, t wo
bedr oo m s, bath, basem ent,
wal l to wa ll car pet in livi ng
room , bedrooms, and bath.
Gas f or ce d ai r fur nace .
M iddlepor t, ph one 992-3420.
4-25-tfc

FREE STORAGE

EXPERIENCED

For Your Garments

Radiator Service

All you pay for is cleaning
and pressing. Pay when you
gel them back.
' FOR FREE PICKUP &amp;
OELIVERY
SERVICE
CALL 773-SS43.
Please! No Free Storing on
Bulk Cleaning .

ABC CLEANERS
773-5543

Mason, W. Va .

Roofing &amp; carpenter
· Work
Spouting, Roof
Painting
NEW &amp; OLD WORK

$5.55
-

606 E. Maln, Pomeroy, 0 .

Custom meat cutting
Pleasant Ridge Road
Pomeroy, 0.

r~=========~

Dick Vaugh an

JOHNSON MASONRY

Dale Little

Virgil B.
TEAFORD

992-3374
992 -6346
O' DE L L WH E EL alignment
loca ted at Crossroads, Rt . 124.
Compl ete front end ser vi ce,
tune up and brak e ser v ice.
Wh ee l s
bal anced
el ec tr on icall y .
All
work
guar antee d .
Reasonable
r ates. Phone 992 -3213.
4-22-JOtc

2 YEARS OLD: - 3 bedrooms
w ith large cl osets , 1112
cera mi c tile 1bath s, ga s furna ce and central air conditioning . Garage. A-1 condition . $26, 500.00.
NEES HOMES FR0Mi8,500.00
TO i 12,500.00. CALL 992-3325.
HELEN l . TEAFORD, .
Associate
4-30-6tc

2 speed operat ion .
Choice of water
temps .
Au t o .

level
L i nt

F!lter or Power
F m Ag Itator .
Perma-Press ·
Maytag

Halo of Heat
Dryers
Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heet . No hot spots ,
no overdry l ng .
Flne Mesh Lint
Filter.
We Speciallre In

MAYTAG
Red Carpet

Service

RUTLAND FURNITURE
Rutland,

SALE of the _CENTURY I

this Week,
May 7 thru May 16

PRO STYLE

HAIR SERER

CAN OPENER AND .
KNIFE SHARPENER

• Sleek, new styling • Extra-farge bouffant

0.

hood-compare it to commercial dryers e Yet.

fOil quo R ~ kllilt ond tch·
011r1 lhar~MI , S!oinlll"
IIHI culli nt whe1 l i1
rt111ovabfo for tl:ll'f

Heck's
Reg,

•"

llto ~i~g .

Cord ••orogo

it's portable . . . folds to hatbox size t Remote

· control heat settings • Extra-efficient air de·

._parlmenl ' OpMUIII)'

Pondc".l ,.u, can. Mog·

fttllc

li ~

litter,

~MM ' po~~t~ . ~

'14•

livery for lost drying.

w--...
., . ,

s1··sss

$11 77

306

NEW LIMA ROAD - 4 large
bedroom s, bath, nice modern
kitchen , gas lOg fireplace, full
ba sement, 200,000 btu natural
ga s for ced air furna ce.
Bea ut iful large front lawn and
por ch. 15 acres . On l y
$22, 000.00.

Ari)Oid Grate

SCHICK
A u1n opu10 - pl~•· •

Big Capacity
Maytag
Automatics

742 -4211

317

879

2 Slice .Toaster

BELOW MIDDLEPORT - o
bedroom s, bath, ga s floor
furnace , wel l. Garage, and
outce ll ar . $ma ll ga rden.
Ask ing $7,000.00.

water
con tr o l .

96

Hamillorrleach

SR.

SEWING MACH IN ES. Repa ir
servi ce, all makes. 992-2284
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Author ized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.

Shop and Save

-D9T.

Broker
110 Mechanic 51.
Pqmeroy, Ohio

742-4902

Bo!ICKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septi c tanks installed . George
(Bill) Pullin s, Phone 992-2478.
4-25-lfc

JEWElRY

MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
bath , larg e liVing, side porch
and ga rage . Want $10,500.00.

THE SHOP

•39

HECK'S
REG.
$19.96

GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

Septic Tanks
And Leach Beds .

Kitchens, Baths
Room Additions
And Patios ·

'49.96

Pomeroy

Backhoe And
End loader Work

Complete
Remodeling

Re£ Price

BLAmNARS

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

742-4902

Upright
Sweeper

Noult with Trlpte Position Brud\,
Giant Oisposoble Bags. One Year
Guarantee .

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Sm•llest Heater Core.

PHONE 74! -3945

JOHNSON MASONRY

G. E.

Above the Floor Cleaning), Swivel

DEXTER, 0 . 45726

Insured- Experienced
Work Guaranteed

SWEEPER
VAC
Grip Handle, Snap Stand, Crevice
T~l ond Upholstery Noule (for

EXPERT
-Wheel Alignment

.--·,

U-5

erful 2 Speed Motor. Feotu re1 in·
etude Po~er Dlol, ~1tclusive Mid·

Ph. 9'12 -2143

.

.. FROM , MOTHER'S

centl. Ughtweight Vac with Pow·

Construction Co.

at low low prices.

BEAUTIFUL seleciton .of
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
flowers, baskets , wreaths ,
Cleaner complete with atand sprays for Memorial Day.
lachments, cordwlnder and
Cliff ShOt Repair, Middleport.
paint spray . Used but In like
4-21 -tfc
new .condition . Pay $37.45 7
N;::T~IQ::-U;;:E:::S, ;::Ph:-:on
-::-e-:-;;;9'1:;;2-;
-53::;;;27.
cash
or
credit
terms A:-:
4·6-30tc
available. Phone 992-5641 ,
S-Hic

,

QUANTITIES LAST

Colo'rt r A¥ocodo with Pearl Ac·

All Weather Roofing &amp;

Quality Mobile Homes
BREEDING rabbits :
two ~ucks . Randall

WH

SI:IETLAND

------

AI Llndm1rk, Everyone
Can! .
HAND PUSH MOWERS
As Low As
63.95
RIDING MOWERS
As Low As
271.95
ECONOMY TILLERS
As Low As
13US

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW .THROUGH SUNDAY, MAY 9

Evenings Call992 -2534, Dale Dutton

finish, Baldwin, will be picked
up In this area. Assume
paymenfs or refinance. May
be seen locally. Write, Credit
3-~9 - tfc
Manager, Graves Plano and
Organ Company , 383 E. Broad SEPTI C tank s cleaned . Miller
St., .Columbus, Ohio 43215.
Sanitation , Stewart , Ohio. Ph .
662
-3035.
---2-12-lfc

'S. \\"1·: ~_I!_)HEA

POMEROY - 3 bedroom hom e
with apartment , GARDEN
HOUSE, 4 room s, bath, 2 lots,
SPACE , 2 bat hs, ga r age,
loca ted in Sy ra cuse. Call after
stor a ge bu i lding , GOOD
3 p.m . weekday s 992-2806.
CONDITION . $10,000.
5-5-6tc
----=~
MIDDLEPORT LARGE
24 ACR E FARM, Long Bottom ,
YARD FOR CHILDREN - 2
w i th or
wit hout farm
story frame , 3 bedroom s,
machi ner y . House w i th 3 bath , CLOSE TO SHOPPING,
bedroo ms, dining room, living
full basement. $9,500.
rocim , llh bath s, encl osed PROPERTIES ARE SELLING
back por ch, waH to wall
carpeting. Alum inum siding ,
LIST WITH US TODAY
awning, storm windows and
HENRY CLELAND
storm doo r s. City wa.t er .
REALTOR
Se ll ing due to ill health. Phone
Office 992-2259
61 4-985-39 38.
S-2-61 c
4-25 -18tp

OPEN DAILY ·10 TO 9 -SUNDAY 1 TO 7

S TV AND AN manager, Graves Plano and HARRISON'
TENNA
SERVICE
. Phone
Organ Company, 383 E. Broad
992-2522.
St., Columbus, Ohio 43215.
6-10-lfc
5-4-3t c

-PIANO- - -Spinet plano, walnut

POMEROY
Mulberr y
Aven ue, 2 s.tory f ram e, .:1
bedr oo m s, l'i&gt; bath s, f v ll
· base men!,
garag e with
rem odeled r oom s over , LOTS
OF ROOM FOR LARGE
FAMILY. $18,500.

GREEN HILL HOMES, INC.

----NICE BUFFET, $30. Early
American sofa bed , $30 .
Collecfions of old bottles.
Phone 997 -5960.
5-5.3tp

Cleland Realty

-.,.-·----::--::-

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

What Do You Have For The$$$ You Pay In Rent?

Real Estate For Sale

'\-?-Mr

i'ALSO
DOUBLE - WIDES

1

HICK'S
lEG.
$13.96

HECK'S REG. $23.88

IIWiliY DIPT.

JIWEUY IEPT.

TEFLON

FRY PAN
1969 Chevrolet Caprice 4 Dr.

1971 Opel Kadett

·Muhi-cooker frypon, c•rtlfied
Tetlan II. U•t metal spatula 1
DuPont's hflon s~o~rfact it

$3295

Loca l owner with less than 15,000 miles, Comfortron air
conditioning, power st ~rlng, automati c trans ., Astra
front seat, bla ck nylon Interior. Beautiful green f ini sh
w ith bla ck vi nyl roof. Radio &amp; all other popular acces sor ies, outstanding car w ith fine features .

'2195

2 Dr. Deluxe Station Wagon , 7,000 m i les by local owner. 90
H. P. engine, H. duty 4- ~peed transmission, Frt. disc
brakes, red f inish , with body wood grain applique, blk.'
vinyl Interior, w-w t ires, a ,great saving for so little use.

Kratch·rtslstantl High

NE-500

MUNSE\'

• CALROD
OVEII
loa'''

10!'•'--nt lor bro!WII(I olld
lilt. bott0111 for baillftg ond tOCHI·

Int . Cltor wit ~~t g l an daar , thr H
,.lr; po ~iorlt, Orlp troy, d.ra1111
fiR I ~h

ir11lda o~d au!, thtrii'Otlat
tltl'lltlll co11trol up to j()O' htoll

ftoftll bolfllldtt wMn on.._,,..,,"

$1988

• HICK'S REG. $26.88

JIWELIY /JI1T.

1970 Chevrolet Impala HT Sedan '3695
front brakes, new set w-w belted tires, radio, guards,
skirt , beautiful white finish with blue vinyl roof &amp; matching interior. Factory air conditlof1ed, new car t itle &amp;
bal. of S yr ., 50,000 miles.

Had's
Reg.
.'22"

1969
Chevelle '2150 1968 Olds
•
Malibu 4 Dr . hardfop, V-8
engine, automatic trans ..
power steering, radio . Like
new white-wall tires, vinyl
roof &amp; green finish .

'1895

Cutlass 4 Door Sedan, V-8
engine, automatic tran S.,
P· steering &amp; brakes, vinyl
Interior , radio, white over
furq. f inish, good tires.
Local 1 owner car.

1967 Ford '1765 1963Chevy 11 ,1595

4Doorsedan L.T. D., power
steering, power brakes, air
, conditioning . V! nyl in terlor , blk . vinyl roof,
maroon fin ish, radio, new
w-w fires .

1967 Ford

$1495

_
Nova • 2 Dr., 1 owner car,
clean Interior, like new w-w
fires, white finish, 6 cyl.
engine, automatic trans.
Radio . See It today .

Nice Selection

64- 67 CARS
IN ALL

MAKES &amp; MODELS

A

.-

Pomeroy .Motor Co.
.

Your Chevy Dealer
.

FM-AM

$}888

e Worms rolls and cofftt at

$1277

fooch en tht kitchen ron;t.

HICK'S lEG.

$18.88

JIWiliY

HICK'SIIG.
$16.96

11wn•r, ,

PORTABLE
MIXER

$2788

•it

HICK'S
REG.

HICK'SIIG.
$1.96

$33.96

,,

CAMERA

Electronic ·,hutter and electric
eye· automatically set correct
exposure, make flash pictures
as perfectly as pictures in daylight. Dual image, non-folding
coupled ronge and viewfin·

· Big 3 U.·"x4 'A" pictures.

' JIWillY

PROCTOR

STEAM
&amp;SPRAY IRON
e
Exciting new, avocado hondle •
Visible water le.-1 fill avoids spilling .
• Plenty of steam for Easler ironing
• Easy-to-10e fabric dial •• • leakproof • llghtweig~t •• .I

HICK'SIIG.
$34.96

1' ipHd puahbutton' , , , ont for ..,..
try blencilr operation and 10lid ttatel
NrN "flolh llendt" lwtton for aplit
stcond bltnding. A~rtomotlc timer
shut1 oft bltndlng with prtcislon . .S
cup heat rnl1tant clo¥trltof glan jar.
2.piece lid, buitl·ln cord atorog~ .

J1WIUY . .T.

FOLDING
POLAROID COLOR

Aquolnt , con~t. ·

totlon pltct wall

clack fashioned
offer Grand111o'i
old

cookJtovt .
Compl•tt •••11 to
thl copper caffet

WHISTLING

otond thttl..,u·
r.ated
fire box.

$177

$12;81

HICK'S
. .G.
$6.79

. ,••, . .r.

llrMIY

HICK'S
110.
$2.59

$3988
HICK'S
110.
$12.96

HICK'IIIO.

.

f'K-14

BREWMASTER

$499

$977

$2877

BLENDER

5-SPIED

Dtluxe 5·Spttd chrornt
hand mhttr . Thil deluxt
unit comet in glistening
chrome to match any
chen dtcor, 5 speeds fo
mut every mixing n..d.
Push buHon. Wall storag•
too. Twin htovy duly

IJIPT.

WARING
14 SPEED .

VANWYCK

chrome btattn.
'

RADIO

$1477

I ROlLER-BAKER

RF619

1970 Chevrolet Monte Carlo Cpe. s3395
400 cu. in. engine, a ~ tomatlc 'trans. , power steering &amp;
power di sc front brakes, G-70-15 w-w tires, Rally wheels,
tinted glass , fa ctory a ir conditioned , bumper guards,
Pos ifractlon , radio &amp; R.S. speaker console with bucket
seats, beaut iful beige color with blk. vinyl roof. New car
titl e &amp; bal. of 5 yr ., 50,000 mi tes. See thi s one.

pM-lC
•
MUNSEY
the tame time • Claar, ecnity
read dial for heat setting •
Prtports as big a YOriety of

~me

wnltd covtr. Rtmo'lablt heal
control for Immersible dean·
ing. Pedestal lfgt protect to·
ble. Double handle .

Pl Pleasam Only

400 cu. in. engine, automatic, power steering &amp; power disc

. Mustang, 6 cyl ., auto.
trans ., conSole , maroon
finish, all good w-w f ires,
radio. Real Nice.

zestful time ·for some .
people. Double dJsmal
for others. Jim Mees
somehow gets us ~II

togerher every day.

Ford tractor, small manurespreader . Pet lamb. Call 9493073.
5-2-6tc

our

noon. Forked Run Sportsman
5-S' 3tc

RALPH'S
CARPET
Upholstery Clean ing Service.
Free estimates .
Phone
Gallipolis 446-0294.
3-12-tfc

MEIGS boy' s gold class ring
with blue sel, 1971, initials
G. L. Call 992-2766 If found.
5-4-3tc

ELLEN' S Glff Shop, Reedsville,

IT EM:

Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

Lost

Adults only. Phone 992-5592.

FOR SALE .
DELILAH Mays r eal estate,
46.67 at r es in Olive Township,
M eig s County will be so ld to
highest bi dder for nol less
than appr aise d pr i ce of
SL200.00, Satur day, May 8,
197 1 allO:OO a.m. at the otti ce
of J . 8 . O' Br ien , attorney,
1 001!:~ Cour t Street, Pomer oy,
for f urther in form ati on ca ll
992-2720.

C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer

EARN AT hom e addr ess ing
5-1-tt c
env·el opes . , Rush stam ped
self-addressed envelope to t he
Ambrose Company, 4325 NEIGLER Construction . For
Lakeborn , Da vis bu r g , building or remodel i ng your
home, Call Guy Nelgler,
Michigan, 48019.
Racine, Ohio .
4-30-30tp
7-31 -tfc

- - - -For MINOR automotive repair.
992-7357 .

Business Services

evening meal and stay_'nights
wi th shut -in. Private r oom
and ba th, no nur sing care.

1967 HO.N DA 160 Scrambler.
Phone 992-6021.
_ _ __ _ __ _5_-6-3tp

Pomeroy, 0.

Rt. 3

RE~INED woman to pr epare

2;;-'B;;;E"'D;;:R;;:O;;:O~M..---=m:-:o-::-b;;-lle:-.-:h-ome.

Real Estate For Sale

'

Funera l

Home , the ministers, Robert
comf orting

For Sale

Help Wanted

z'-i

..,.

SLICING KNIFE
• Slice a vprlety of differiont
foods quickly ond e.-rify • Hoi·
low Ground Stainless Steel
Blades-retain their shorpnen,
ond snop in ond out for easy
cleaning .

•

$999
HICK'S IIIG. $12.11

�·- 11 1 1 \ \ 1 ' \ l l ' l

''·

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.

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12 -TreDailySenWooi, Mid~epolr~~P~om;;e~ro~y~,O~.~·Ma~y~6~;1~97~1~. . . . . . . . . . . . . .~\. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .._. . . .~~. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..,

Make ,Elberfelds In Pomeroy Your Shopping Cen.ter

Social
.Calendar

&gt;

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FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT Women's
Christian Temperance Union,
7:30 Friday night, Middleport
First Baptist Church.
MEIGS COUNTY Pomona
Grange, 8 p. m. Friday, RoCk
Springs Grange Hsll, Rock
Springs Grange, host. Mrs.
Elizabeth Jordan, lecturer, in
charge of program and national
Handbags For Mom
sewing contest to be ju~ed.
A tr'uly excellent selection of handbags perfect
BIBLE STUDY at Mt. Herfor Mother's Day Gifts .
m9n U. B. Church Friday 7:30
STRAWS - VINYLS - SUEDES - LEAlHERS
pm., Church is located 2'1.1
miles northeast·of Five Points. White, navy, red, black, brow.n, checkerboard- plus many
beautiful color combinations just right for this season.
Flbnstrips ·from the Visuallzed
Bible Study Series will be shown Choose her favorite style and shape. Any ot the salespeople
by Ma~in White, of Pomeroy will help you make your s.election.
Rt. 3. Everyone is welcome. 1"'----------~,_..------~
EASTERN BAND Boosters
From Elberfelds
. will hold a fUllllll8ge sale
Friday and Saturday in the
A Pretty Dress 1s
Booth building on Pomeroy's
East Main Street.
The Nicest Gift
'
WAHAMA HIGH school
You
Can Give
cheerleaders sponsor dance
party with the Jays Friday,
Your Mother
M&amp;y 7, at the Wahama High
auditorium from 8 p.m. to 11
p.m.
.
. SA11JRDAY
Hundreds of beautiful
DANCE SATURDAY night,
tiresses to choose from
Melgs' Junior Hig~ auditoriURI
in casual and dressy
in Middleport, 8:30p.m. to II :30
styles. A wide assortp.m. The Jays will emcee.
mentof the latest styles,
SUNDAY
fabrics and colors.
MEETING ALL World War I
Come in and let us show
veterans, 1:30 p. m. Sunday at
you the complete line.
American Legion Hall, Mid·
You are sure to find j~t
&lt;lleport.
what you want.
/
MQN!)AY
WSCS at Heath Methodist
Church, Middleport, 7:30 p. m.
Monday. Combined meeting
with Class 12and Eleanor Circle
invited guests. ·

Pomeroy....

/

/'
'.'/'
f.'

•

! (;

700X18 TRUCK tires. Small

farm tractor, small manure
S·Htc

MEIGS tHEATRE
Tonight, Moy 6
NOT OPEN .
Frldoy &amp; S.lurdoy
May7..
TAKE THE MONEY
&amp; Rt,.tN
.
f Ttdlaiatlorl
Woody Allen
J~~~ttMirgolln

' Altarllyl "M
TO COMMtf A
MURDIR
fTidlllklllorl
L!IUia .leurdan
$tntl .. ,..,

Choose from our wide
selection of popular
pants ·suits · 2 and 3
piece styles to choose
from .
Washable
polyester
knits
pastels and dark tones.
Sizes Include juniors,'
misses and- half sizes:

Angel Tread
Slippels
A fino new HftCtlon just

arrived In time lor
Mother's Day giving.
S!nall, mtdlum 1nd large
tlzti. ~ couldn't
a

years.

Choose her

favorite style . favorite

brands such as Phil·

color . You're bound to
please.

Maid - Katz - Form Fit
Rogers, Movie Star

2 1.50
for

ington.
.
Further meeUngs were ~ng
held following the air tour.
The fact Rogers l!,llreed to
take a look at these regions in
his own plane represented a
compromise with Israeli officials, who wanted him to take
Israeli transport and disembark
at the locations to see them
first hand.
Israel's hope, as expressed by
Mrs. Meir, was ·that i( Rogers
saw · the occupied territOries
and frontiers first-hand he
might change his mind aboui
calling for a withdrawal from

them.
.
'
· Shatm .Ei Sheikh is ·the Red·
Ji!:a: fl!l'l!'ess ISrael capture!!
from Egypt in 1967. Jerusalem
has said since that it wiD never
be given up. It guards the
entrance to the back-door port
at Eilat, controlling Israel's
shipping routes to· Asia arid
Africa. ·
Rogers' itinerary called then
for a visit to a kibbutz outsi&lt;\e
Jerusalem, lunch with ·the'
. Knesset (Parliament) Security
and Foreign Af(airs Committee
- Rogers is the first foreigner
(Continued on Page 12)

NINE SJ;:NJOR ·BOYS will appear in the 2:30 p. m. From the left are Gary E!Us, Fred Rayburn, Bob Couch, Paul
Sunday concert by the Meigs Chorale at Meigs High School. Card, Sherman Mills, Randy Becker, Duane Will, Wayne
Well and Richard Dean.

Warners . Bestform ·

Playfex.
Select Baby Doll
Pajamas , Long
Pajamas, Bermudas,
Mini Gowns, Waltz
length. and long gowns,
.Gown and Robe sets . ,
Full and half slips In
nylon,

cotton,

SELECT
HER
A:GIFT

Select · your gift
wrapping on the 1st
floor . Ribbons - Bows
· Card enclosures. All
arranged for your
easy selection. And if
you wish Elber.
felds will gift wrap
properly what you
have selected for
your mother .

dacron

and cotton blends .
Panties , Bras and
Girdles.

You'll find her correct
size from petite through
ex tra, extra large.

Let us help you with
gift wr,pping in
the lingerie departmen1.
your

Lingerie Department_-

1st floor .

A tremendous selection of dusters - robes and
shifts.
Complete size selection in white, solid colors.
prints.
long .and short lengths - all arranged for your
easy selection .

is

.'

VOL. XXIV . NO. 17

brand
jamaica

. WASHINGTON (UPI) -Unemployment rose in April to 6.1
per cent of the work force and
the jobless rate for Negro
workers reached the highest
point in more than seven years,
the government said today.
The April increase from the
6.0 per cent rate in March put
national joblessness just under
a nine-year high of 6.2 per cent

shorts · culottes · jeans .
slacks - blouses . vests .

\

jackets - skirts.

assortment at 69c a box .·

Variety of styles, patterns
and si zes. Boxed ready to

give -

Give Her tbiety

Plus Hallmark

buy.

TOSS CUSHIONS

lsi floor and select
hosiery . Ideal for
Mother's Day gift .
A complete selection of

'-"'Qu,een Casuals"
-"Wrangler"
-"laura Mae"
-"Miss Fashionality"
-"Devon Knitwear"
-"Dotty ·Mann"
-"Schwartz"
- "Kayser Switcllmiate:;'~

Big selection of
patterns in solids and
prints.

sl ~es In a wide choice of

colors just right for
wearing now.

1.99
Berkshire · Kayser - Spirit and
Panty Hose
Support Hose
Service Weight Hose

Flallernit brands.
Hip.Hose
Nylon Stockings
Knee·Hi's

TABLE LAMPS
For Mother's
Day Giving

WOMEN'S BILLFOLDS
•2.00

Colognes · Powder- Perfume . Bath Oil . Bubble Bath . Hand
lotions . Shampoos . Deodorants . Hand Cream . Cologne
Stick.
Easy to buy - Easy to Gift Wrap .,- Excellenlfo receive.

You'll like our
Fine Selection

JEWELRY

Eliminates paste and
corners. Just lift
transparent
plastic
film . Place photos on
chemically
treated
page· and photos will
stay .firmly In place
with
complete
protection .

4.25

WEARING THE COSTUME in the numbers they will appear in the variety show to be
staged at Southern High School Saturday night are, j.,., Renee Burke, Basin street;P am Buck,
The Charleston, and Jill Warner, Modern Dance. See Page 4 for more pictures and story by
Katie Crow.

Hallmark Mother's Day Cards
You really should take time to browse through · the tine
assortment of Mother's Day Cards by Hallmark.
Cards w.llh the appropriate mes~ge - For new mother .
cards from son to mother · daughter to mother . Grand· ·
mothers · cards for wives . cards from Both of Us and many,

.
! News ... in Briefs ! Barnhill to
r--------------------:------~

many more.

Stop in- Select your Mother's Day Card now for
next Sunday.

By UDlted Press Jnternauooal
CINCINNATI- AMERICAN FINANCIAL CORP., a lot:ally
based investment company, took control of the Cincinnati
Enquirer Thursday and announced Francis L. Dsie would continue as publiSher. Carl H. Linder, chainnan of the board of
American Financial; said no personnel changed were contemplated for the morning newspaper.
AFC purchased the 60 per cent controlling interest in the
newspaper from E. W. Scripps Co. for $20 million after the U. S.
Justice Deparbnent ordered Scripps to divest itself of ownership.
Scripps also published the afternoon Post and Times.Star. Lindner said the corporation bought the newspaper to keep it under
local control. The Enquirer, be said, "has been and is one oHhe
great newspapers in the United States."

Stop In The Music Department 2nd Floor
You'll find many good gift Ideas. Select a radio . black and
white or color TV . sheet music . 8 track stereo tapes . record
albums (choose from thousands) . car tape players . stereo
record players with AM.FM stereoradlos - pianos and many
other Items.
Will be giad to assist you and demonstrate the
item you'd like.

The Big
WASHINGTON - CLEVELAND AND Toledo, originaUy
excluded under the·new federally reorganized passenger train
routes, will have service after aU.
The National Rail Passenger Corporation, known now as
Amtrak, announced Thursday passenger routes have been
restored to Ohio's two northern cities.
The stops will be on a New York to Chicago route, with one
westerly and one easterly train a day.

Timex Watches
See the excellent selection of
fine quality Timex Watches for
mothers of all ages. . .
All wonderfully packed In snap close
cases ready to give. Every one a real
bargain.

Pills
CLEVELAND - PIW SEIZED from actress Jane Fonda
when she was arrested Nov. 3 at Cleveland Hopkins International
Airport on drug smuggling charges have been found to be the
vitamins she claimed they were, according tO a Cleveland Press
report. ·
.
Assistant U. S. Attorney Edward F. Marek, however,
declined to confil'm or deny the report Thursday.
MtssFonda,32, was detained by customs agents at the airport
as she arrived from Toronto, Canada. A search of her luggage
turned up 105 vials, each contining 40 pills.
.
She was charged with bringing Uiegal drugs into the country.

Give Mother A Pretty

Easy Care
-Earrings
-Chokers
-Neckties
-Key Chains and Rings

Introducing• •.
RGf's .~lfolds · Attaches • K&amp;J Cases •

· Ciprette Hddels • French OutChes
Ideal gift for your mother.

We invite you to stop In on the 1st floor. See this
fine new line of leather accessories by Rolf's and
buy what you need.

t----..'C. A.MIRA Glm
'

Magnetic
Photo
Albums

Perfect Mother's Day
Gift - Choose red,
green or blue.

Most Mothers like
plenty of jewelry to
match or contrast.
Select her favorite •
lewelry In white, red,
red·whlte and blue
plus a big selection of
fashion colors.
- Necklaces
-Ropes
- Chains
-Pins
.
-Scarf Pins
- Belts
-Bracelets

Big selection right
now for you to buy .
Modern,
Early
American,
Spanish
and
Contemporary
styles.

""':'!-.;,..----------~

Throws
Covers for chairs,
davenos. most sofas
and extra large sofas.
These covers -ere
machine washable permanent press and
all elegantly styled.
Foam backing keeps
them from slipping,
Choice of smart
decorator
colors.
Select one or two for
Mother's Day Giving ,
\

BEDSPREAD THIS Y·EA·R
Brighten her bed~oom with a ·new spread from
our excellent selection ready for you to buy.
Solid colors · smart patterns and handsome plaid
designs . Twin and full bed sizes.

Dayton
WARSAW-ADAM MUELLER, the Polish-born American
convicted here of giving industrial and military secrets to the
West, has been sentenced to flve years in prison. His attorneys
(Continued on Page 12)

SALE! VINYL TOP TABLE OOVERS
With cotton flannel back~

Solid colbrs and neat patterns in your favorite
color.
· ·
, ,
.
' 52 by $2 inches - .• • • • • . • •. _ _
52 by 70 lnclles . . • . . • __ • ,
1.99
52 by 70 inches (oval) : .• ~ • • • •
~-:: .
52 by 90 inches . • • · • , • · • _ · ·
' · ,
99
60 inches·round . • • • • • • • • • _ -- ·:
~:
Be sure to see all the other table covers - rndy for your
selection, Many, many colors. All sizes. Permanent press
Excellent gift for Nlothor.
·
·

.I....

'

•

I

---~---------~------~----Stqc:k
on film .lor Picture Takillll Mother's
AI sizes. Black and white or color. All at

ur

(

Hit-Skipper is
Wanted by Law

Carl Barnhill, Tuppers
Plains, was elected chairman of
the Meigs County Extension
Advisory Committee at the
meettng of the group held
recently . Elected as vicechairman was Dorsey Jordan of
Carpenter, and Roy Miller of
Chester was elected secretary.
This group, comprised of
representatives from all parta
of Meigs County and from the
various project areas, provides
guidance to the Extension
program and . the Extension
agents, assists in the
preparation of budget request,
and provides liaison with the
State Extension Advisory
Committee. It has recom·
mended the study committee
approach to community
resource development.
Mrs. Roy Holter, Route 3,
Pomeroy, is serving as the
Jackson Area representative on
the State Extension Advisory
Committee.
Serving as officers of the
Advisory Committee for the
past year have been Roy MiUer,
chairman; Dorsey Jordan, vice·
chairman ; and Frances
Spencer, secretary.

Commission of Ohio a petition
seeking an increase in its
electric rates.
The proposed new rates-up
approximately 12.5 pet. •would provide the company
with approximately $24 million
in additional revenue and would

half 9f the requested amount
would be required for federal
income taxes and for Ohio's 4
pet. gross receipts tax.
Joe P. Gills, Canton,
executive vice president, said
that the company has postponed
as long as possible its request

••

••
••. ,

·=•••

••
I

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:

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,

communities we serve, and as a
reault of this strict ecooomy
program, we have been able to
keep our request to a minimum
amount," he added.
Gil:s explained that the
reque&amp;ted increase w9uid apply.
to all of the company's filed
tariffs for residential·, commercia! and industrial service
throughout its service area.
He used these eumpies
based on February, 1971,
billings to show tbe effect of the
increase on
residential
customers : A reaidentiai
customer now paying a twomonth bill of $14.47 would pay
$16.29 under the proposed new
rates. If the bill Ia $19.49, it
would~ $21.90; if it Ia $28.52, it
would be $29.80. If it Is $34.~, it
(Continued on Page 5)
,
.

·=

'i

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-

..,

JOE GILLS

manufacturing of energy in
Gallia and Meigs Counties.
The plant, named in honor of
World War II hero Gen. James
M. Gavin, will be one of the
largest generating plants in the
world with a capacity of
2,600,000 kilowatts and will cost
488 million dollars. Completion
date for the first unit is ilet for
1974. The second unit will be
finished in 1975. Each unit will
have a capacity of 1,300,000
kilowatts, The two .units will
require 7 million tons of coal
annually and will produce
power for the seven state
system.
,
GUis, former executive vice
president of Appalachian Power
Co., Roanoke, bas been Ohio
WinsPower Co.'s executive vice
. .aeAa .
president at Canton sir/ce
. December, 1969. Appalachian
and Ghio Power are · sister
companies and pari of the
American Electric Power
COLUMBUS - Location and System.
design ap~roval for the Tickets for the cl,inner
proposed replas;ement of a meeting may be purcli'Ued
narrow, deficient bridge locally from John Allen, Roger
carrying county road 20, for- Barron and Gallipolis Chamber
merly old Rt. 33, over Thomas of Commerce.
Fork (East Branch) in Chester
Townshl p in MeIgs Coun ty , ..;:~~-~:1~:· ...~:-:-»=::,.;:~,:«·~·~:.:~:~~:::~~::~.~-.·:~~::;:;~:r:~ii
requested by the board of
EXTENDED OUTWOK ·
county commissioners, has
Extended Ohio weather
been granted by the Ohio Outlook .- Suadlly throu&amp;b .
Department of Highways.
Tuetdly:
·
The Improvement, 1.6 mUes
Mild on Sunday fOllowed by
nortl\oftheO.hio7 ·andOhioJ24 · chnee of •bowen Moaday
junction wil\1 US 33 includes and Tuelldlly. Hilhl ........,
new approsches arid guard from the tos aortb to the low
ralls:·
or mid 70s aouth. Lowl-dr
Mape and sketchea and all from the mid 4tt to add Ill.
other lnformation concerning .;::=::::~::.~::;~:::~m~~~::::~~~:::::::;:~::~:~~~::~~:.:::;::::;::::=~:..
the proposal are available to the
public for viewing at the Meigs
Board of Comniisaioners Office
JUUE TO BE MA'I'IlQN
in the courthouse at Pomeroy. WASHINGTON (U.PI) I
Tricia Nixon his eelec:t.d •
sister, Julie E~nboww, to lilt
LOC,\L TEMPI! ,
Temperature In 1downt~wn matron of honl'f al her"- tt
PQI1Jeroy Friday at ll a.m. was wedding, an(! Ihas uted IIIII'
60 degrees under partly cloudy future sister-in-law, Ann Oil, to·
be bridesmaid.
'
skies.

IJesian

State's OK

iN HoSPITAL
Homer liawkins, Rutland
Road, near Pomeroy, has been
returned to the Holzer Medical
Center on Sycamore St. His
room number is 108.

NEW!.Y ElECTED omCERS of tbe Student Council at Southern High School are, 1~· ,

John Eichinger, president, Coq•J!e Wa"!er, vice president, Loretta Middleswart, secretary and
Bill COrnell, treasurer ,
..
·

siderable success. Principal Robert Morris wiU again direct it. If
By George Hargraves, Superintelldeot
you are given the opportunity for your child to particiRate, don't
Meils Local Sc:booi Dlstrict
A summer.program is planned for about 120 students in pass it up.
We can't take all the students whom we woilld like to help.
grades one through eight which will concentrate on "catching up"
Therefore; please do not agree to have your child participate
un'I!!SS you wUI make certain that he or she wiU, in fact, attepd
Speaking of Schools--:No. 187
regularly. This program has just 120 openings and we want them
I
to be filled every day during the six weekll of the program. ·
in reiuiing and other areas. We will have sm.ali group instruction
THIS YEAR'S sENIOR CLASS in our high school and in all
ali the way. We plan to have zt teachers working with these high schools is going to be faced with a very tight job market.
,
'
youngsters.
COil~ge seniors face the same proapect. YoU should do all you can
We operated thiS kind of program last summer with con- to help these young people flili emplOyment. They wiil need your

'

~~:-:··~:.t-:--.:-:-W:«-:- " ::.:::···~~-:;:;·;.,"*i""•" •"'-"•" • •"" ~X:·" ' " «&lt;:•·• ••

,

. .P Upl'1S
·
·

,..••
•

Average hourly earnings of
rank and file workers went up
two cents in March to $3.39 and
average weekly earnings increased 73 cents to $124.75. The
work week increased by one
tenth of an hour to 37 .I hours
but factory overtime was
unchanged at 2.8 hours.

Gills to Speak
Of New ~ Venture

reductions, but the rising cost of
doing business has finally
forced us to apply for an increase in the charge for our
service," he said.
"We have reduced expenses
in every way we krtow short of
jeopardizing the quality of our

'

I

ment gains in state and local
government, contract construction and finance, insurance and
real estate were largely offset
by declines in manufacturing
and transportation and public
utilities," the BLS said.
·

Olair Group Ohio Power Asks Rate Increase
Co. today filed apply to Ohio Power's 540,000 for an increase in rates. ''We electric service and our
Of Advisers withOhio thePowerPublic
utilities customers. Approximately one: have a 51).year history of rate obligations as clllzelll or the

.

99

Be sure to register in the Furniture Department on the 3rd fl
· for the Kroehler Living Room Suite. No purchilse necessaoor
You need not· b' present to win.
·
rv.

LEBANON, Ohio (UPI )- The
three stocking-masked men
wasted no words.
"We've spent a lot of time
and money on this project. We
are committed to it and will
ldll if we have to."
That sole threat sent Howard
Wilson to the bank of which he
Is president to withdraw $110,000 and toss it from his car at
• designated spot. The money
was ransom for his wife and
teenaged daughter, tied up in
the basement of the family
home here.
Police continued a massive
search today for the three gunmen who entered the Wilson
home through an unlocked door
late Wednesday night and car-

Summer Catch Up Program ·Can Take 12o

A gift that"s really appreciated for years to
come. In our Camera Department, 1st floor Complete selection of Kodak Cameras •
Prolectors. - FUm 1 Camera Accessories - Plus
c;ol!'lplete Hle~tlon of Polaroid Cameras In·
. dudtng .the new Focused Flash models.

increased joblessness among · went up .
adult women . The unemploy- The number of unemployed
ment rate for white workers pe~sons dropped by 480,000 last
remained at 5.6 per cent . · · month to just under 4.7 million,
Although the jobless rate which was about average for
moved upward, the BLS report April.
said "the employment situation The number of workers with
was essentially unchanged in jobs went up by 700,000, silghtly
April" because the 6.1 per cent more than average, to reach
unemployment rate was "not 78.2 million, primarily because
significantly different" from of increased agricultur¥1 emthe 6 per cent -figure in March . ployment.
The BLS said the number of The BLS said jobless rates
jobless workers declined in for most major groups in the
April while total employment labor force showed ilttle or no
change in April.
ried out their clockwork plan to
"Over the month, employsteal the just deposted receipts
from Lebanon Raceway that
night.
"They didn't harm us at ail,"
Mrs. Wilson, who was tied up
along with her daughter, Susan, A hit-11kip accident was in18, and left in the basement for vestigated by the Meigs County
her husband to find when he Sheriff's Dept. Friday at
returned home.
midnight on SR 7, one mile Joe P. GU!s, executive yice
"They told us to do what north of Pomeroy.
presiden~ of the Ohio Power
they said and no harm would
Robert K.. Williams, 23; Compahy, wiii -~ to the
come to us," she said. ·
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, ivAs traveling Southeastern Ohio ~Walo11al
Wilson, who had to discon- north when an unidenWied car Council Membership og;Frtdlly,
nect the burglar alarm at the came left of center, glanced off May 14 at Rio Grande Colle&amp;e.
Citizens National Bank ·to get to Williams'· car, and proceeded E. E. Davis, president of
the ransom money, was philo- south without stopping. There SEORC, said it will be a dinner
sophicai. "When you're in this was damage to the left front meeting beginning at 7 p.m. in
business there's always a risk fender and headlight, but no the college dining hail.
of this kind of thing happen- injuries. The arocident is under Gills' topic will be Ohio
ing," he said.
investigation.
Power'S new v.enture in the

reached last December.
After holding steady at 9.4
per cent since December,
joblessness for Negro workers
rose to 10 per cent during April.
This was the highest since
January, 1964, the Labor
Depariment's Bureau of Labor
Statistics said.
The increase in black unemployment resulted mainly from

No Words Wasted

.

VIsit Elbertelds accessories department -

TEN CENTS

Ap17il obless at 6.1 %

a special

boxed stationery In a new
assortment you' II want to

PHONE 992·2156

FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1'971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

shorts . tops · short

Select stationery for
that little inexpensive
gift.
Featured

Devoted To The lnteretll Of The Meigs-MIJM)n Area

Choose from a fine
selection of better
sportswear
names -

Cloudy, mild
through
Saturday, chance of scattered
afternoon and nighttime
showers. or thundershowers in
extreme south . Fair and cool
tonight. ·

The speaker who begins
by saying .he's not much
of a speaker has already
made his point.

FROM OUR
SPORTSWEAR
DEPARTMENT

Gift of
Stationery

DUSTERS AND ROBES

Weather

Now You Know

HAU.MARK
GIFT WRAPPINGS

You'll find many gift ideas for Mother in the cosmetic
Department on the 1st floor. Famous brands such as Max .
Factor · Coty · Evening In Paris . Jean Nate'.

MOTHER
A PREID
PANTS ·sUIT

949·

for

COSMETIC GIFTS

GIVE

Squares
oblongs
In
Chiffon and
twills. .Solid
q:&gt;lors and color
combination
prints.

Act esso.ries department -

You'll find well-known .

iF

Mrs. Fred Rosenbaum Is
home after vacationing in
Florida. lier son and daughter·
in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Rosenbaum and ·children, Jbn
as seen in
and Unda, flew to Dania, Fla. to
VOGUE
drive Mrs. Rosenbaum home.
They arrived here Sunday.
1---~---~--~-..:-----~-----l
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Warner
are home after wintering in
Naples, Fla.
Mrs. Pat Quinn, Cindy and
Pat, Columbus, Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Fischer, Williamstown,
and their daughter, Sharon, a
senior at Glenville State
College, were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Karl Grueser,
Larry and Bob. Bob, also a
senior at Glenville, is currently
doing his student teaching in
physical education at Ravenswood.
'
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Mourning
of Tuscan, Ariz. and Mrs. Golda
Mourning, Middleport, were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr. and
Mrs . William Nelson and ·
famUy .

MlMEN'S · SCARFS

lsi floor ..A big selection of
fine quality Buxton jewelry
boxes for a gift that lasts

.

TEL AVIV (UPI)-Secretary · ry of State was.able to see both
of State William P.Hogers took the Mediterranean coasUine
an aerial tour of Israel's and the Jordan River cease-fire
defense lines today before line in the eJ!sl. His route took
getting down to specifics on the him over the Red Sea fortress
diplomatic dispute between the at Sharm El Sheikh and
United States and Israel.
northwards toward the Suez
Rogers was accompanied by Canal.
Israeli Chief of Staff Lt. Gen. The plane tour came after
Hsbn · Bar-Lev and Military the opening round of discus. Intelligence Chief Maj. Gen. sions Thursday with Prime
Aharon Yariv on the flight Minister Golda Meir, a meeting
aboard Air Force . TWo, tire described as "animated" by a
Boeing 707 that has carried him u.S. spokesman. This indicated
on his tour of Europe and the the Israelis were resisting
Middle East.
softening in the peace
From 30,000 feet the Secreta- maneuvering sought by Wash-

Special Sale

JEWEL BOXES

Excellent quality Crest· Craft billfolds - Clutches
- French Purses.
The new fashion colors including the popular
red. white and blue. Easy to buy · easy to wrap ·
excellent to give on Mother's Day next Sunday.

All
SIZE
RANGES

Personal Notes

.

'

'

. BUXTON

Be sure to
shop the Lingerie
Department on the
1st Floor for
Mothers Day Gifts

'/ '

3 73.

•

For Mother's Day Gi s ·

THORSDAY
EVANGELINE Chapter 172,
Store open both Friday and Saturday nigl:lts until
OES, 7:.30 Thursday, Masonic
9 P.M. for your shopping convenience. Use our
Temple. Past matrons and past
patrons to be honored.
free parking lot on 2nd Street or ilur lot on
CATHOLlC .Women's Club~ f
Me~hanic Street if you're shopping for Lawn
p.m . Thursday, Sacred Heart
Mowers, Linoleum, Indoor-Outdoor Carpet. used
Church, following Mass and
TV Sets in our warehouse .
Rosary at 7: 15p..ljl·. Program on
drug abuse by the Rev. Arthur 1------------~-1,----_,
Llind. Hostesses, Mrs.' David
Ohlinger, Mrs. George Miller,
Helen Waddell; Mabel Waddell,
and Anna McGee.
MEIGS CHAPTER of the
American Red Cross Thursday
7:30 p.m. Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Reports on fund drive
and annual .meeting.
PHILATHEA Society, 7:30
p.m. Thurs(!ay Middleport
Church of Christ, Mother's ·Day
program with Mrs. Don Erwin
in charge.
·
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club, 7:30 Thursday
night, home of ~s. Lawrence
Eblin. Program ' on Mother's
Day with each member to ·
contribute.

sg· reader, pet lamb. Call

•

·

help.
.DRUG ABUSE is a widely discussed topic. As a parent I share
!he ~;p~~cerns ofali parenla about the rapid growth of this problem.
I hope you had the OI!Portunlty to see the segment on last
Tuesday's edition of "First Tuesday" on NBC. II showed portions
of a !ibn made by young people about young people who use
·reroin.
Those who pjay with drugs ...,. hard or soft - are courting a
bleak future. The vacant stare, the stumbling speech patterns, the
lethargic movements of these addicts is frightening . They said it
was "for fun" at first, but after a few times i\:is no longer fun •l
1Continued on .Page 2)

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