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.
ews.. zn

10- The Dail~ Sentinel, Middleport-POmeroy, 0 ., Feb. 28, lt72

'·

Moore Denies State's Culpability
MAN, W.Va. (UPI)- A min·
ing official's charges of partilil
state responsibility for the dam
collapse which sent a :!().fool·
high wall of ;atcr roaring
through the Buffalo Creek
Valley were denied Monday by
Gov . Arch Moore .
"Let us get the victims and
bury them, then take the time
to see if there is some
derelict ion here," Moore said
after hearing of the charges.
At least 66 persons died in the
flood' whic h swept through the
valley Saturday, and state
police said Monday they ex·
peeled the final toll to be about
100. More than 4,000 persons
were left homeless by the flood.
The state police said 285
residents of the valley were
unaccounted for, but empha·
sized most of them were
believed to have survived the
flood or were not in the valley
at \he lime.
Permit Requests Rejected
Ben Tudor , assistant
superintendent of the Buffalo
Mining Co. a\ Lorado, W.Va.,
which built the dam aliout 18
years ago, said Monday the
firm tried unsuccessfully for a

year to get a state permit to of Pittston Mining Co., New
drain water from a mile.Jong York, parent firm of the
setting pool to relieve pressure Buffalo Mining Co., that ''there
was never such a request made
on the dam.
on
the part of lhe BuHalo
Tudor said the requests were
rejected by the West Virginia . Mining Co," Moore declined to
Department of Natural identify the Pittston official.
Resources because the
The governor , denounced
drainage would pollute nearby
news media for "irresponsible
waterways. •
reporting.''
on the charges. He
Moore denied vehemently
that the state had ever said the Pittston o!Ocial told
received such requests. He him Tudor's remarks were
said he was told by an official taken "entirely out of context."

'

MIDDLEPORt, 0.

Furia, regional admlnistra~:nfor the U.S. Envirorunental
• Protection Agency , · said
:ru&lt;!Or's remarks were "a lame
attempt at a!l excuse for not
properly shoring up lhe sides of

The dam, situated north of
I.mado at the top of Buffalo
Creek Valley, burst Saturday
and unleashed the wall of
water which roiled down tbe 18milelong valley, devastating
everything in its path.

equipment was
lrought Into the valley at
daybreak today to begin
rl!llovlng the debrla of the
more than 4,500 homes destroyed or damaged by the
flood.

the dim.''

Furia said that if govern.
~]lent officials had been in·
formed the dam presented "a
threat to hwnan life ... you can
damn w!ill believe we'd have
done something about it."

ANK ~E

SPRAINED

The Middleport E·R squad
was called Monday at 3:53p.m.
for.Steven Fife, g.year old son

of Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Fife,
who had fallen from a wall. He
was taken .to Holzer Medical
Center and tre·ated for a
sprairkd ankle.

' Gra~roots LobbYing

~
By UDIIed Preullltem•IM"'

'

SAIGON .- THE AlliED COMMANDS today ~ i ·
rl!!llJiogence of OQmunilt atticks In the northern part of Seuth
· VIetnam, and Saigon military sources reported Presided! ·
Nguyen VIlli Thleu had fired a key general at northern military
conference Monday.
Allied spokesme~~ ,reported 130 guen'illu killed in the 2+bour
period ending at mid-afternoon today, 118 II. tlil!ll in a series of
clashes in the northern provinces where B5211 and-U.S. Air Force
and Navy fighter-bombers struck during the day.

a

SOU111 POINT,

omo -

SQU'nl POINT School board

President Carl Crabtxee anoo~mced today the board would meet
Thliradsy to set dates for hearings for three educators woo were
fjred last week, touchlhg off a student strike that began last
'lUesday and continued through today.
'
South Point School SUpeflntendent Joseph Dials, high school
principal Robert Debo and elementary school principal Don
Brammer were dismissed for using cars on loan fn1111 a dealer
without board approval. ,Crabtree beUeves the strike by high
school students !fill end with the meeting Thursday. The students
had demanded the educators be rehired Immediately or hearings
Nixon said~
"There were no secret deals on their ousters 'be set by the board.
of any kind. We have done all
SAN FRANCISCO - HARRY BRIDGF.'I, leader of West
this without giving up any
United Sta.~ commitment to Coast longshoremen, said Monday If the federal Pay Board
strikes down either agreements reached recenUy by dock
any other country."
Nixon also agreed to ~pie­ workers on both coasts, "We both join forces and pull out In every
to-people exchanges, Including port in the United Slates·:•
Bridges bad warned hill union would renew 13Hiay strike if
students, scientists and
cultural groups, increased the board "cuts back our negotiated setUement by as much as I· .
trade and diplomatic contact Jl!!r cent.'' Hewentastepfurther and said hill threat also covered:..
below the level of formal board action on a settlement reached on the East and Gulf
relations.
coasts.
In hts airport .remarks, the
President described the Shang. WASHINGWN - WrrH RETAIL BEEF prices pushlng up :
hai communique as ''Unique in 2.8 per cent to another record high, the Agriculture Department:; ·
oonestly setting 'forth differen- said today average retail food prices rose last mon.th despite all ; :
ces rather than trying to cover earner govenunenf report which portrayed tbem as unchanged;:
them up with diplomatic from December. Department economists said the retail cost of a·:
doulbe talks.''
typical family ''market basket" of farm1"'oduced foods
January was up 0.6 per cent from December' mainly because of a;:
stuu:P rise for meats, and was 5.6 per cent higher fhan a yewi : :
earner.
.:The figures were Included In a monthly report on·spreads~ ·;
fields checking water pumps tween !ann and retail prices for farm-produced foods. 111-:''
and that Jim had fallen and Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS), In its earner food-at-home&lt; ~
broken his leg," she said. "He price report for January, had reported no change from th{ '
·
:~
wanted my husband to go December, 197llndex.
'
''
help.''
'
'
Mrs. Hartstin said she was
'
skeptical about Dalton's story,
65
HEAR
TALK
&lt;·
HOUSE BURNED
but when he mentioned their
Approximately 65 persons;
The Mabel Taylor residence
daughter,Sandy, •'that did it.'' and its contents on Long Run attended a meeting of
' "Where's Sandy living Road near Bashan were .Meigs County Committee onnow?"' she said he asked. "He destroyed by fire Friday at Alcoholism and Drug AbuSe;
said they'd gone to school to· 2:55 a.m. Eight men from the Thursday night at the St. PaUl;
gether.
Bashan Fire Dept. answered Lutheran Church in Pomeroy•~
11
He said, 'Don't you remem- the call.
Speaker was John Yale~.:
ber me?"' she recounted. ''And ~»»!.~~-o "'n&gt;.W:.We?. '!JM Logan , head instructor iri·
I told him, not after all these
police science techoology alEXTENDED OUTLOOK
years."
Ohio extended outlook the Hocking Valley State'
"Klnda l'lot Worried" ·
Thursday through Saturday: College in Nelsonville. The
After her husband and
Mild Thursday with a public is invited to attend all
Dlilton left, she saw a red chance of showers, turnlilg
the committee sessions.
flashing Ught from her kitchen colder Friday with showers
· window. It was the Patrol chaaglng to 'snow flurries
cruiser that had pulled up and continuing Saturday.
DEER KILLED
reliliid the *1-~oo car.
A~eef \ioll~ killed Monda~ tit
Highs Thursday in the 40s
"I klnda got worried so I
11:25
on SR 143 when it ran Into
north and 50s south lowering
called Jim Dalton and of
the path. of a car driven by
course found out it was just a to the 20s uorth and 30s south James C. Cottrill, 18, Syracuse,
story," she said. ''Then I caUed by Saturday. Lows in the 20s The Meigs County Sheriff's
and 30s ThursdaY lowering to
th~ sheriff.''
the teens and 20s Saturday. dept . .sold. There was minor
She deScribed the young man :::=· =~
lT ····rr damage to the car.
with long sideburns as "very
polite and very weU man·
nered" and she ~id she did not
see a gun. ·
"But I guess something he
said just before they left should
have registered If I hadn't been
half asleep. He said to Alex,
'Don't forget your driver's u.
cense.' Of course it was in his
wallet and hill money was in
ther~ too.''
u:·Smith said an alert was
out for the entire staie of Ohio
as well as Kentucky, where
Dalton also was beUeved to
have relatives.
"He could be anyplace,"
&amp;nith said.

Account of Journey is Made
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Nixon called in
Republican and Democratic
leaders of Congress today to
give them a first hand account
of his "journey .for peace" to
China .
!
Nixon was joined by Henry
A. Kissinger , his national
security adviser and Secretary
of State William P. Rogers in a
meeting with 21 senators and
House
members.
The
President gave each a set of
lacquered boxes as souvenirs
of his trip.
White House corridors were
already decorated with framed
color photographs of Nixon's
China trip. Several of the
photos featured Premier Chou
En.lai.
Nixon and his wife,
together with others in the
total party of 300 that made the
20,395·mile trip, returned to
Washington Monday night to a
warm welcome , with the
President assuring a national
broadcast audience - and
allies - that

BAKER'
FURNITURE

At Philadelphia, Edward W. ·

-Heavy

I

'

11

fiO

secret deals"

visa.
cast.
The presidential jetliner
Nixon warned he had not
"Spirit of '76" set down a few brought back any agreements
minutes after 9 p.m. following that would "guarantee peace 1n
a one·stop flight from our time" but he said he
Shanghai. There was a l(J.hour believed his conferences with
rest stop at Anchorage, Alaska, Chinese leaders would reduce
and the presidential plane the risk of confrontation and
deliberately delayed landing war in Asia and the Pacific and
for about 15 minutes while provide a foundation upon
wellwishers reached Andrews which to build peace.
AFB in suburban Maryland.
" ... Peace is too urgent to
A cheering, waving crowd of wait for centuries," Nixon
about 7,000 Cabinet officials, said. "We must seize the
congressional leaders, govern· moment to move toward that
ment employes and foreign goal now, and !hill is what we
diplomats greeted the Ob· have done on this journey."
viously exultant Nixon in a. But all was not roses in the
hangar . He spoke for II · welcome. Conspicuously allminutes in a national broad· sent was Ambassador James

C. H. Shen of Nationalist China
who boycotted the arrival In
protest to Nixon's agreement
to ultimately withdraw all U.S.
forces from Taiwan, which is
claimed by China.
Nixon said that in a communique issued in Shanghai
Sunday, the United States
stated its "established policy
that our forces overseas will be
reduced gradually as tensions
ease and that our ultimate
objective is to withdraw our
forces as a peaceful settlement
is acliieved. "
"We have agreed that we will
not negotiate the fate of other
·nations behind their backs, and
we did not do so in Peking,"

said. "She's enroute to Olive
Hill, Ky., to get him.''
Olive Hill is about 45 miles
south of Portsmouth, about
halfway between Ashland and
Morehead, Ky. Dalton's
whereabout were unknown.
The abduction occurred
shortly after Dalton was
stopped on U. S. 52 several
miles west of Portsmouth by
the unidentified patrolman. As
the officer approached the car,
the driver opened up. None of
the shots hit the patrolman.
Patrol U. J. W. Smith said
the patrolman, who he deelined
to identify, had just walked up
to the Dalton . car when the
driver began shooting.
"He fired three or four shots

· and then fled the scene in the
car," Smith said.
He said a girl who Dalton
apparently had met at a bar
here was with him· when the
shooting started. "She definite·
ly wasn't a hostage and she
jumped out of the car when he
started shooting," Smith said.
Dalton's uncle, also named
James Dalton, lives in a house
near the Hartstins and the gWt·
man concocted a story to get
Hartstln to accompany him.
"At 1:30 someone knocked at
our door," Mrs. Hartstin said
as she waited at home for word
on her husband. "I was up.
Alex wasn't.
"He (Dalton) said be and hill
uncle had been down In the

were made by him and Chou.
This was seen as assurance
that his administration was not
abandoningJts commitment to
defend Tai~n against attack.
Among those attending
Nixo n's
meeling
for
congressional leaders were the
Senate Democralic and
Republican leaders, Mike
Mansfield and Hugh Scott who
have been rumored as possible
visitors to China later this
year.
Mansfield, who served in the
Marines in China in 1921 and
once !aught Oriental hilltory,
said before the meeting that he
had asked for permission to
enter China and if this was
forthcoming, he would seek a

Mrs. Hall Bound Over

Erosion

On Murder Indictment

(Cont!imeil from ·Page I)
agreed. to review both
problems.
Councilman Ohlinger was
named to serve ·on the Mid·
dleport Planning Commission
as council's representative this
year.
Attending the meeting were
Mayor Zerkle, Councilmen
Ohlinger, Dick Vaughan, Fred
Hoffman, William Walters',
Council woman, Jeane
Morgan ; Chase, Clerk·
Treasurer Grate and Chief
Cremeans.

•

BEARS DO IT!
They sleep comfortably through the
winter knowing they have enough to
la st them until spring. Wouldn't y.ou
sleep better too, knowing your money
was working for you in a savings

Gallipolis Municipal Court
Judge Robert S. Betz this
morning bound over to the
GaiHa County Grand • Jury,
Jane Hall, '29, Rt. I, Patriot,
charged with first degree
murder in the shooting death
Feb. 14 of John Henry Burton,
49, Rl. I, Patriot.
The incident occurred at the
Burton ' home located on
Wiseman Rd., near Cadmus.
Testifying on behalf of the
state were Dr . Donald R.
Warehime, Gallia co·unty
Coroner, and Mrs. Stella Ruth
Wiseman, Rt. I , Patriot, a
neighbor.
Dr . Warehime on direct
examination by Assistant
Gallia County Prosecutor
James Bennett, testified
concerning the exact cause of
death, the autopsy performed
on Burton's body and the
projection of the · pullets
allegedly 'fired from a .22
caliber rifle.
Warehime stated Burton .
died from t!Jree bullet wounds
in the head . Burton also
sustained two wounds of the
right shoulder. Dr. Warehim ~
said the bullets were fired from
a gun held by someone stan·
ding approximately three feet
away.
On cross.examination by
Gene Wetherholt, Mrs. Hall's
cciurt..appointed counsel, Dr.
Warehime described the
position in which the body was
lying upon his arrival, the
trajectory of the bullets which
entered the head and other

MEIGS THEATRE ·
Tonight. Feb. 29

account? Open one today .

WILLARD

(TochnicotorJ
Bruce Dav ison

Sondra Locke
" GP"

PITTSBURGH

lilbens ,atiol\81

Featurltte:
Vagabond
3 Stooges
Cartj!Ons:

Loafers

Kissin' Plant

INNATI

Moleculor .
Sky's The Limit
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

MIDDLEPORT. OH.IO
Member Fedefl!! Dtp..;it loswr:ace C. pii~.O... ·

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
March 1·2
'•

.NOT OPEN

aspects of the autopsy.
He revealed the victim had a
high alcoholic content in his
blood.
Attorney Wetherholt asked
the coroner if the victim could
have been shot if he had been
standing. Dr. Warehime said,
"due to his high alcoholic slate,
I don 't believe he would have
been standing. " Mrs . Hall
became very emotional at his
answer.
Mrs. Stella Ruth Wiseman, a
neighbor, said Mrs. Hall came
to her home around 5 p.m. that
evening slating she had shot
and killed her husband . The
state rested after calling its
two witnesses.
· Attorney Wetherholt moved

for a dismissal on the basis that
not enough evidence regarding
the connection of a gun with
· Jane Hall had been admitted.
He also stated that there had
been no introduction into
evidence of a gun, bullets or
testimony from the in·
vesligaling officer of the Gallia
County sheriff's department.
Judge Betz overruled the
motion after reading the exact
definition of a preliminary
ljearlng. He said on the basis of
the testimony given by Mrs.
Wiseman and Dr. Warehime
there was just cause to bolind
the defendant over to the grand
jury. Since first-degree murder
Is punishable by death, no bond
was set.

Victor Shumway Dies in West
CHESTER - Victor R.
Shumway, 61, Niland, Calif.,
formerly of Ches ter, died
Sunday afternoon at the
Veteran s Administration
Hospital at Long Beach, Calif.,
following a brief illness.
Mr. Shumway was employed
at the Cedars of Lebanon
Hospital in Los Angeles several
years . He was a veteran of the
U. S. Army having served in
World War II and was a
member of the Veterans of
Foreign Wars. The son of the
late John F. and Bertha Lewis

School Payments
-

Made to Meigs
State School Foundation
subsidy payme nts totaling
$133,873.21 have been received
by Meigs County's three local
sch •ol districts, Ohio Auditor
Joseph Ferguson announced.
Amounts •received by the
three districts include Eastern,
$22,317.87; Meigs Local,
$68,635.54, and Southern Local,
$22,919.80. Deductions from the
three
districts
before
payments listed above were
made included $4,177 for school
employes retirement and
$20,479.15 for Slate Teachers
Retirement. lr. additiun, the
loeal distric\s and the state
paid to the ~ounty board of
education a total of $8,841.77.

'
, .Urban and Highway Affairs subcommittee would. make the
OOLUMBUS (UPI) - An estimated 250 employes of cost &lt;I. reclamation prohibitive and force Hanna and other
' Ealtel;l,Oh!Q coal firms today visited the statehouse in an coal companies to cease operations.
,
attempt to ollialn changes in a strong strip mine bill now ' "There ts something the matter with our legislators," he
b!efore a Senate subcommittee.
said. ''They sa\d they would give us a bill we could live with,
The miners, many of ~Ill members of the United Mine but this one would make the cost of reclamation prohibitive.
Workers of America, strolled about tbe statehouse grounds,
. •'Our only assets in Belniont County are coal and people.·
congregated in the rotunda and were taken on tours through If they don't Hke the strip mining over there tbey can move to
the statehouse as they waited to talk with key members of the Franklin County and goon their welfare roils," he said.
legislature about the provisions they oppose in the strip mine
The group met iri the rotunda with ·Rep .. Sam Speck, R" bill.
New Concord, the chief sponsorof the bill.
Walter Tacosik of Unionlow!l, an employee of the Hanna
Speck told the miners that the bill which passed the house
Coal Co., said the miners were asked t.O take the day off and unanimolisly lasi year had been studied for eight months anll ·
· visit Columbus to expre&amp;!l tileir opposition.
given 40 pubHc hearings during w~ich testimony was taken
Most of lhe miners were dressed in suits and ties, some from experts from throughout the United Ststes.
"This is not a perfect bill by one heiluva long shot," If
carried sjgns 'such as: ''Mr. Governor- House Bill 928 will
take our jobs and your tax doUars."
Speck said. "But there ts going to be a ~l.amation bill of
Tacosikcomplalned that the bill pending before a sOOate
(Continued on page 16) ·
.
&amp;I\AAI\\AAI\~~~:m;~.;w.;w;w;w;w-:w~~?.;~&lt;·~;"im:.~z::~:~-:.;.-.•~::OJt:.•:~-x·~~~-:«--:.W~/..(..~#.:~:&amp;.~~0~!#.

I

Cabbages, Hopefully, Will be
Set In Letart Falls Bottoms By
March 15, Weather Allowing
NO. XXIV NO. 226

Devoted To 1'he lnter~ll Of 1'he Meig&amp;-MtuOn Area
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT. OH.!O .
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1. 1972
PHONE

.I '

992·21~6

LETART FALLS - Plowed ground and the hundreds of
thousands of cabbage lind tomato plants growing In numerous
greenhouses in this truck fanning conununity are the tip off that
spring is here, almost. James Ray Hill, above, ts one of the
several farmers in the area with large green plants ready for
planting. Hill is.in one of the five greenhouses on his IM,acre
farm he leases from the Hanna Coal Company. The large cabbage plants, ready for plantmg,. will be set by March 15- and
maybe sooner - If the ground is dry enough. Hill plans to set wt
250,000 cabbage plants and 200,000 tomato plants. In addition to
thishesaysheraises peppers and "dabbles a little with flowers.''
Hill has been farming on a large scale eight years. Previous to
his farming venture he worked for the Union Barge Une Company II years. Hill gives his brothers credit for asaisting him in
his farm operation. From now unlli the season ends, Hill wiU be
busy as a bee In his fanning operations.

TEN CENTS

m::

..
....

ttje;

Save All of·Your
Sales/ips
From

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

Shumway, he was also
preceded in death by three
brothers.
Surviving are 'his wife ,
Gladys Worthen Shumway,
Niland; three ~isters, Mrs.
Rubal Deem, Bremen, Ohio ;
Mrs . Evelyn Barranger,
Belpre, and Mrs. Edna
Westfall, Akron, and , several
nieces and nephews. .
Funeral services wiU he held
at 2 p.m. Friday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolville with
burial in Chester Cemetery.
Friends may call at the fimeral
home after 3 p.m. Thursday.

Of course not. It's nobody's business
Furthermore, if your return is
but your own.
audited we will accompany you, at
However, annualJy millions of tax- no extra cost, to the Internal Revepayers bear this kind of pernue Service and explain how
sonal information to people
your return was prepared,
who really shouldn't
even though we will not
know. For what? Just
act as your legal repso they can save a
resentative.
few dollars doing
This means that
their income tax.
H &amp; R Block is
That's some price
ready to offer you
to pay.
ynr 'round tax
, You see, for only .
service for just one
low fee a year, with
a few doUars more )~=;:::~2:~~~
than it costa to do it
no extra charge for
with any amateur who
audits and estimates.
might not know that
Yes, we cost a little bit
work ' clothes in soine inmore than your relatives
stanceS' lire deductible, or that
. or friends or 'neighbors but
income averaging ' might save tax when you think of what we deliver,
doUars, you can bave your tax return you can't afford anything less than
done by a specially trsined member H &amp; R Block.
. ·
of the H &amp; R Block team with complete confidentiality. There are ·thou- DON'T LET AN AMATEUR. DO
sands of them in over 6,000 conveniHaR IJLOCK'I JOB.
.
ently located offices. H &amp; R Block's
,fees start at $5 and the average cost
was under $12.50 for the 7 million
families we served last year.

Flood Claims
Relatives
NEW HAVEN - Marvell
Scarberry, Lorado, W. Va., a
sister of James A. Marks, f'lew
Haven, was one of the victims
of the Buffalo Creek · flood
disaster, apparently by
drowning.
Other local relatives of Mrs.
Scarberry are Mrs. WilHam
Powell, New Haven, a niece,
and Fred Marks, a .nephew.
Other survivors Include three
daughters, a son, three other
brothers and , two other
nephews. It has also' been
reported that a brother of Mrs.
John Sebo, Mulbenr Ave.,
Pomeroy, was killed In (be
tragedy . Mr. and Mrs. Sebo
have been in the disaster area.

to 5 P.M. Mon. lhru Sat.
Phone: 99)-179!

9 A.M.

No Appoinimeni Necessory
OPEN TODAY ·

WASHINGTON (UPI)President Nixon ·has told
congressional leaders he plans
to puU all but 2,000 U.S. troops
out of Taiwan once the Viet·
nam War is settled-with the
residual force staying there
until the NationaUsts and the
Communists resolve their
dilpute.
The troop figures marked the
first elaboration on the communique lsaued by President
Nixon aJlll Premier Coou · Enlai after Nixon's visit to China.
The Shanghai stateillent by the
two countries mentioned no
figures, with the United States
simply saying it would pull out
some troops from Taiwan, with
a .complete withdrawal to
•ivllo" an eulf1f of tenslOJIS In
lhe area.
.

Senate Republican Leader
Hugh Scott-who with his
Democratic counterpart Mike
Mansfield was invited by Chou
'lUesday to visit China~ld
Nixon believes 6,000 of the 8,000
troops now on Talwall could be
removed once the Vietnam
War is over. Their removal
would be possible, .he said,
because their role of support
for U.S. forces in Indochina
would then be over.
Scott and· Mansfield, whose
invitation for a China trip later
this year was · relayed by
President Nixon at a White
House briefing, told newsmen
an end to the con!Hct was a·
major condition Nixon 'attached to hls proml.!&lt; to withdraw troops from ·the

:-. ··.·.·.· ·.·· ..·.. ·.

ews.. in· Bri
BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
COLUMBUS -DON LOSS, TOLEDO, announced today he
had filed suit In the Ohio Suprt!lne Court to have hill name put on
'
the ballot as a candidate for the Republican State Central
Conlmlttee from a district now represented by State GOP
chairman John Andrews . ''The people of Toledo deserve a choice
as to who should represent them on thia most Important body,"
said loss in remarks prepared for a news conference here.''
Freedom of choice should not be frustrated by a supposed
technlcaHty.
'
The Lucas County Bosrd of Elections ruled loss off the ballot
because he failed to file his petitioners affidavit on time. Ro~
Eisenberg, former news secretary to Sen. Robert Taft Jr. now
with a Washington area public relations finn, who arranged
~.Ales's announcement, said he ts no longer connected with Taft
and the move by LQss is oot a part of any attempt by Taft to take
over the GOfl machinery in Ohio now controlled by; Andrews and ·
former governor James A. Rhodes.
SAIGON -THE U. S. COMMAND said today it is sending
oome 4,940 A!nerican servicemen - the secoll!l largest troop
withdrawal since deescalation of the Vietnam War began in 1969.
Simultaneously' officers ordered B52s on 13 bombing runs in the
northern section of the country, marking the highest point in air
attacks against suspected Communist poaltions in more than two
weeks·.
On lhe ground, one American soldier was killed and eight
wounded in skirmishes n~t~~r Saigon. Two South Vietnamese were
killed and seven wounded and Communist casualties were listed
. at 44 killed in the 24! hour period ending at 6 a.m. Twenty.three
Laotian soldiers were killed when a shell hit an ammunition
dump near Long Cheng.

Do you really want
your brother-in-law to
know how. much
you earned last year?

1

Taiwan

CAPE KENNEDY - THE Am. Force launched a secret
surveillance satellite before dawn today and the space agency
plans\!) follow tonight with the !Hght of Pioneer 10 on the first
voyage to Jupiter. Sources said the miHtary spacecraft was the
(Continued on page 16)

, ro

ENTER .SANCTUARY - Sunday, March 5, the
cppgregation of the Pomeroy Lower Ught Church at 9:30
ll.m. will enter its new sanctuary on the Harrisonville Road
(ROute 143) ..The group has been worshiping the past few
years in the smaller buildinl!, at right, above, which will now

304 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Olllo

..

i

Against Tough Strip Act

a

Hostage Released in Kentucky
ASHLAND, Ky . (UP!) - A
gunman abducted a hostage
early today near Portsmouth,
Ohio, after shooting at and
missing an Ohio Highway
Patrolman who had stopped his
car, but he released the abducted man unharmed about
four hours later in a rural area
of Kentucky.
The guman, identified as
James Dalton, 28, Cincinnati,
was still being sought In the
light blue 1964 Chevrolet owned
by his hostage, Alex Rartstin of
Sugar Grove, Ohio . Dalton also
was believed to have taken $100
from his victim.
"Hartstin called his wife and
told her he had been released,"
the Patrol post at Portsmouth

250 Coal Field
.Men Fight . Bill

Eastern Ohio Mining Firms
Give Men Day Off to Put
Their Opinions on 1Hecord

'

•
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Nationalist-held island off
China's coast.
Mansfield said Nixon did not
ask Chou or other Chinese
lea.ders to intercede with North
Vietnam. The Chinese insist
lhe war is a matter for the
United States and the Viet·
namese to settle.
Mansfield said there was
noihing in the trip to encourage

him about prospects for peace

.in Indochina, and he intended
to continue pressing for
passage of legislation setting a
deadline for total tJ.S. with,
drawal from the area.
former
Mansfield,
a
professor of Asian history, is
regarded as the Senate's
foremost authority on the
East. He was last in China In

Far

1921 as an Army .Private and
said he had been trying to
arrange for permission to
return for he last two years.
Scott, an Oriental art collec·
tor, is also an authority on
China.
Details have not been arranged but Mansfield Said he
hoped the visit would co.me in
late spring or early summer.

ITT Deal Denied
WASHINGTON (UPI)President Nixon's carppaign
manager, John N. Mitchell,
has denied charges he was
involved Ill !lie !ettlement oi a
federal antltt'ust suit against
International Telephone and
Telegraph thal . reportedly
resulted In a large ITT
donation , to the Republican
party.
Columnist Jack Anderson
made the charges. He said a
secret ITT memorandum
showed the case was setUed
when the company pledged up
to $400,000 for the GOP
National Convention in San
Diego this summer.
Mitchell served hill last day
as attorney general Tuesday
before becoming director of
Nixon;s re-election drive. He
acknowledged he had talked
about the ITT case once with

Mrs. Dita Beard, an ITT lobbyist Anderson identified as
•author Of the memo:
But Mitchell said he told
Mrs.. Beard that "I - was not
famlliill' )VIfh l)le !Jiatter," and
that ITT would have to discuss
it with the responsible People
at the Justice Departm.~nt.
Mitchell said he "was not
Involved In any way with the
Republican National Com·
mittee or elsewhere dealing
with ITL When the Depart·
ment .of Justice first brought
action against rrr, I removed
myself from all consideration
of such matters." .
ITT also issued a statement
'lUesday saying "there was no
deal of any kind to settle our
antitrust cases."
Lawrence F. O'Brien, the
Democratic national chair·
man, said the Anderson report

Big CoUrt Night

'
Twelve defendants were
fined and six others forfeited
bonds in the court of Mid·
· dlepo~t Mayor John Zerkle
Tuesday night.
Fined wer~ Homer Fields,
34, Akron, $100 and costs and
three days in jail, driving while ·
intoxicated; Robert M. Smith,
Charleston, $!i and costs, in·
toxicalion ; Otto T. Rothgeb, 74,
Cheshire, $19 and costs, in·
toxication ; Glenver Boggess,
, 55, Middleport, $10 and costs,
intoxication ; Lloyd E. Sayre,
62, Ironton, $10 and costs,
speeding; George C. Rowley,
45, Middleport, '$20 and costs,
intoxication; Donald C. Uttle,
37, Middleport, $15 and costs,
intoxication; Paul A. Wolfe, 22,
New Uaven, $15 and costs,

'

Tenor Wins
Top Rating
SYRACUSE - Tenor John
Eichinger, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William Eichinger, was
awarded a Superior (I) rating
in Class A competition at the
Ohio Solo and En semble
Contest at Ohio University
Saturday.
Over 600 students par·
ticipated in the event, either
vocally or instrumentally, with
ratings based on technique,
tone quality, expression and
style.
Ratings are I throu~ V
in classes of A, B, and C. A ( I )
rating in Class Ais the highest
award given . John, a senior at
Southern High School, sang two
selections , "They Rebuke,
Hath Broken His Heart," and
"Behold, and See If There Be
Any Sorrow," from the

Red Cross
On the Job

reckless operation.; Melvin
Durst, 42, Middleport, $15 and
costs, intoxication ; Charles F.
Johnson, 19, Mason, $10 and
costs, speeding; Stacy L.
Morris, 19, Pomeroy, and
Nancy Nune, 29, Pomeroy, 125
and costs each, petty larceny.

American Red Cross staff
members and volunteers have
been on the scene handling the
immediate needs of food and
clothing fqr families left
homelesS by the Buffalo Creek
flood in West Virginia; Mrs.
Cindy Coffman , local Red
Forfeiting bonds were Roy Cross officer, said today.
The Red Cross is also helping
Kesterson, 39, Pomeroy, $30,
with the medical and funeral
misconduct charge; Charles E.
expenses of the· flood victims,
Thomas, 24, South Point, $29,
Mrs. Coffman said.
intoxication; Marvin L. Monk,
Although those left homeless
48, Pomeroy, $30, intoxication;
by
the flood are in need of
Joe James, liS, Hartford, $30, ·
many things, the problem is
intoxication ; Larry K. Adkins,
31, St. Albans, $25, parking in a that there is no warehouse
space for food and clothing
yellow zone resulting in
blocking traffic, and Oscar A. donations, Mrs. Coffman said.
Cordell, 48, Gallipolis, $25, Meigs residents wishing to help
can make out a check to the
speeding.
American Red Cross specifying the West Virginia
Flood to receive benefits.
These checks can be left with
Mrs. Coffman at 549 Beech St.
in Middleport or may be
mailed to the Meigs• County
American Red Cross Chapter
at 549 Beech St., Middlep~rt.
Mrs : Coffman can be reached
by phone at 992-54611.

be quarters for the SUndly School. Everyone attending
Sunday morning Is asked to,meet in ihe small ocilding, t~en
enter the new sanctuary as a group. The Rev. Roy Taylor,
pastor, extends an lnvitatton to the !iublir to attend.
Dedication will be .held later.

' .

raised "grave questions"
about the integrity of the Nixon
administration.
ma new colwnp published
today, Anderson charged that
Richard Kleindienst, who has
been nominated as Mitchell's
replacement at the Justice
Department, '1old an outright
He" about the department's
out-Qf.courl settlement of the
ITT case.
Kleindienst wrote O'Brien
that the negotiations for the
settlement were handled exclusively by Assistant Attorney
General Richard V. McLaren.
Anderson, however, said. he
had learned that Kleindienst
himself "held roughly a half·
dozen secret meetings"on the
ITT case with a company
director before a settlement
was reached.

JOHN EICHINGER

:~ Messiah."

$200 Raised

,~

.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Public Utilities CommissiOn of
Ohio (PUCO) was asked 'lUesday by the Coliunbia Gas System
for permission to refuse service to new residential customers
because of "Intense" pa supply probl11111.
.
Columbia Gaa' two IUbBidi~es, Coliunbia Gu !If Ohio~
Ohio VaHey Gas Co. serves 62 ·0hlo counties. PUCO recently
agreed to aUow all major state gas companies to "Irene" sales
to new Industrial and commercial customers.
"Despite continued efforts on
our part, we will not be able to lumbia Gas System- In comcontract for any more gas mon with almost every other
during the winter of 1972-73 company In the gu indulllry than we have contracts for thill' now face gas 811pply. problems
winter," said W. F. Laird, which continue to become
president of the two firms. more Intense," he Sllit:l.
''Our problem has been com"Next winter we will ·have to
nve within the same volumes pounded by the fact that some
we now have available and the of the Columbua Syatem's Inonly way we can do thill Is to re. terstate pipeline suppliers
have not been able to meet
strict new sales.
Laird said the request would. current delivery schedules,"
have no effect on current com· Laird added. "We don't expect
mitments to tbe firms' more any lnunediate improvement
than 1 miHion existing residen- in these Interstate pipeline
tial, conunercial and industrial deUverles. If anything, thetll
probably lessen.''
customers in Ohio.
"Our companies and the Co-

;:: ;8';:::::::~.::~-m&gt;.:.&lt;5:'~m..::

•

c:

Precautions

Marshall Is In ..,Explained

Dr . Selim J . Blazewicz,
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UPI)
- South Carolloa, Florida Meigs County Health ComState, VIllanova, Providence missioner, issued a statement
and Marshall today accepted today to aUay undue annety
at·large berths In the NCAA created by the recent death of a
Meigs County woman of
Basketball Tournament.
Four other teams were to meningitis .
While the disease is lnreceive bids later In the day.
Pairings were not lm· . fectious and dangerOUs, it Is
not necessarily fatal If -the
mediately announced.
pahent is under the care of a
.. '·x-&lt;;;:·,
..~.,-.~·&gt;
&amp;"""~
8*«&lt;-:.x-:
. ~»-=~·-·~
::«~
physician, Dr. Blazewicz said.
People who have been in
Access Approved close contact with the deceased
..
should consult their family
In a short session Tuesday doctor if they are experiencing
the Meigs County Com· elevated temperature,
m1ss1oners approved a headache, sore throat, or any
resolution granting permission other symptom of an upper
to the S~te of Ohio, Depart· respiratory infection.
ment of Highways, to issue a
Meningitis is spread by
permit for the construction of articles solled by droplet spray
an access for Township Road from the nose and mouth of the
367.
patient. The organism is not
Access to the road was not carried on the clothing or by
given at the time of the con- other household contacts. It
LOCAL TEMPS •
struc tion of the present U. S. has been recommended that all
The temperature in down. Rt. 33. Attending were Charles clothing and other articles be
town. Pomeroy at II a.m. R. Karr, Bob Clark, Warden washed in disinfectant. The
WedneS&lt;Iay was 63 degrees. Ours, commissioners, and incubation of the disease is
under sunny skies.
Martha Chambers, clerk.
from three to 10 days.

RUTLAND - Six members
of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners Club conducted the
heart fund drive here,
collecting $200.01.
Mrs . Homer Parker the
chairman, collected $98.29 .
Other workers and the
amounts collected were Mts .
Harold Wolfe, $11.25 ; ·Mrs.
Bruce Davis, $26 .25; Mrs .
Howard Birchfield , $24.32 ;
Mrs. Richard Fetty , Jr.,
$20.40; Mrs. Larry Edwards,
$19.50.
Mrs. Parker extended thanks
to the workers and to residents
who
donated.
RutlMd
residents not at home when the
volunteers called are asked to
mail their contributions to the
Meigs County Heart Fund in
envelopes left at the homes.

THE VERY' LATEST
The· latest Information on
home lawns, fertilization,
seeding, maintenance and·
weed and pest control will be
, presented .at a public
meeting to be held from 7:30
to 9:30 p.ni. on Thursday,
March 9, at · the Pomeroy
United Methodist Church.
The meeting is sponsored
cooperatively by the' Meigs
County Garden Clubs and the
Meigs County Cooperative
Extension Service.
.x.-..-..~:•:;~;~.;.;..:~:::::~:::::::-:·:!:·:-:v-.·
...·.-.;.;o-.·,·o:···.
.... . .
• •oo ooo'o"oY.o.
. ...v.,o,
,_~

Gas Supply
Is Limited

Fie~

0 0 •• 0 •••

Market, Auction Set

A flea market wiil he staged
Saturd ay at th e Pomeroy
Elementary School to help
finance the school safety patrol
wi p to Washington , D. C.
The market .will open at 9
a.m. and will be in operation all
day . Al 3 p.m. an auction of
furn iture. appliances, and
ulher lnrge items contributed

for the sale will be held . Baked
goods will be fo r sale, along
wi th vegetable soup by the
quart with purchasers to '
provide their own containers. A
popcorn stand will be, ·in
operation throughout the 'day
and quantWes of t ummage will
be lor sate.
Stuffed animals, records,
books, small kitchen ap·

pli~nces ,

tools, some antiques,
jewelry and dishes are among
the items to be sold at the flea
market.
·
Goal of the market is to raise
the additional $600 needed by
the girls and bl&gt;ys of the patrol
for their trip to Waihlngton
next month . Mrs . Thomas
Smith is sale chairman.

.. I

�I.
'

.

times has this happened lietore,
H it's a one-blow-up brannigan, and your moodiness came
from legitimate worry (or perhaps those quite nonnal firsi·Y"fll"·
of-marriage blues), then your wife is JrObably only teachq you
a lesson - and she'll be back by nelt .week. She may already be
wondering if part of it wasn't her fault - and I'd guess it was.
But if you have constantly closed her out over the years,
"reforming" only when she announceS she's through - well, this
may be the final announcement, unless you back up your
apologies with a promise to consult (and heed) a marriage
counselor.
Either way, good luck! - H.

Us. • •

By Helen Bottel

"I WANT HER BACK," WAIU MALE

Dear Helen:
My wife left me. She's at her mother's. II¥ been fo~ a week.
I have to admit the whole affair is my faWt as l have been
moody, mean, .od very much a stupid fool. l either jumped on
berOI' sat around and didn' talk, thinking onlyofmyseif and not
of her feelqa.
I've begged and ple_aded with her that I've changed and know
bow wrong I was, blitshewon't give me another chance. Sle says
'lhe loves me but she 'IVon 't live with my sulky disposition.
I don~ uilderstand. Why can't a woman iorglve? She knows!
lpve her. - H. A.
Dear H:
You left out one important piece of information: How many

I

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a s e :v:u:::· .. 'fn ·q;or: ,

+++

NOTE TO READERS : It's strange how often my
"husband-wtfe" mail follows a pattern. The man writes "I've
been a fool. How can l get her back?" while the woman bristles,
"Don't you agree he's a no-good bum?" cOuld this mean the
female of the species is often more vindictive than the male - or
just that men are more honest about their faults?

" 1111"1£

db

.JU.bbb

.

:1

I

along Br'Way

HOSPITAL
NEWS

roLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio
Slate jwnj,ed back into the Big ·
Ten lead along with Mlnneaota
TUesday night witl1 il rollicking
11J3.70 win ove;· Dllnole as the
previousjtader, Michigan, fell
to Indiana.
.
., The Dllnl came on strong In
the opening moments, grabbing a 5-0 lead and throwing a

Interior·
Exterior

LATEX

BY JACK O'BRIAN
the lionizing he received everywhere, for he was
Holzer Medical Center, First
WINaiELL-AFRIEND
that rare journalistic oddity _ a reporter who Ave. and Cedar St. General
REMEMBERED
"' became more important than the celebrities he visiting hours 2-4 and 7-3 pm.
NEW YORK (KFS) _ Walter Winchell
wrote about.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
died, and we lost an old close friend; Walter's
Walter wasn 't perfect - do you know 4' 30 p.m. Parents only on
·
Pediatrics Ward.
daugbterWaldasaidhedledofficlallyofcancer anyone who is? St. Thomas·said "a good man
Births
all right, but "he really died of a broken heart" · sins seven times a day "- but he was anti-Hitler
Mr . and Mrs . Michael
... Tbat'sbeentrueoverthelastfewyearsasthe first and unfashionably; he was anti- Merritt, New Haven, a son;
old lion dlacovered the ·jackals he'd helped
Communist long before Khrushchev promised Mr. and ll!rs. Richard R.
couldn't walt to rip him apart after he'd retired
to bury us all ; he backed a few bad ones, but he Sweet, Middleport, a daughter,
wblle awaltinR what he knew was approaching
made obscure performers stars and even whole and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence A.
death ... WWhas resj)ecl for the foes who tilted
Bdwy. shows major hits ... And even one of the King; MiddleJ)fll't, a daughter.
with him when he was well.
most virulent attacks on Winchell concluded,
Discharges
In death, the longest drab gray obituary
"His favors can not be bought." ' 'That's my
Anna Cornwell, Edna Lutton,
FACTS
was loaded with inaccuracies ofa sort it therein
Oscar," Walter said.
,
Mae Plants, Ida Shiflet,
Mencken and George Jean Nathan and William Powell, Wetzel Ross,
tccuaed Walter of generating in his columnar
,ears of power; such as: Walter and 11is wile, F.P.A. and Stanley Walker and others high and · Thomas H. Clary ll, Frank
June Magee, never were estranged ; June
secure in news circles recognized his car-· McGhee, Darla Jean Hall, Mrs.
limply dldn~ like the Umellght Walter adored
bona ted gift.s and saluted them; FOR and Everett T. Coy and son, Rothbe
and seldom basked in It at ringside or at his
Eisenhower liked and admired him; just a few P. Carpenter, John W.
ICCIIIIIlmed alsle«at down front on opening
weeks ago, Pres. Nixon sent him a letter at the Blankenship, Merrill Brown,
nights ... His car never was "outfitted with a
hospital where he lay dying since last Mrs. Ora D. Brumfield, Jerry
airen and a red Ught" as the drab grey wrongo· November, in which he saluted Walter's love of F. Harrison, Shelley Hook,
oblthadlt; Walterpaidforhisownpoliceradio
country, his dedicated labors for democracy Charles E. Larkins, Tracy E.
which was the sole extra-equipment of his
and against Nazism and Cornrq.unist; and we Neal, Mrs. Irene Raines,
•pollce-&lt;:all-dlasing decades ... The Damon
salute him now, a man who was unique, Wyman C. Rutt and Hazel I.
Rmlyon F'llld has disbursed more than $36
talented, dilficult - and our friend.
Sheets.
Horsepower is a mechan·
million, not $32 million; he did not "coun. . Walter's death from cahcer was doubly
ical representation eq~iva .
lent to the power requi1·ed
tenance" dilcrimination against Josephine ironic considering the $36 million he'd colleded
SPEAKS IN WEU3l'ON
Baker In the famed Stork Oub incident, and we
for cancer research in the name of t&gt;amon
Mrs . Arnold Richards, to lift a weight of 33,000
were witnesaes to the event.
Runyon ... but there was a deeper, more bitter Middleport, was guest speaker pounds one foot in one min·
ute or 550 pounds one foot
Walter was hauled into it because Stork
irony than just that chilly punchline: for Walter Monday night at a meeting of in one second, The World
Oub owner SllerJUn Bllllngsley's personality, had prostate trouble two whole years before he the American Legion Auxiliary Almanac notes. The watt is
rather lack of one, couldn't keep the Bakerwent to a doctor about it... He simply refused to of Wellston Post 371. Chairman a unit expressing electrical
nlpupa alive beyond a couple of days, and the
believe It was cancer and only sought help after of Americanism for the Eighth
series turned into an anti-Wlnchell carnival ...
he 'd dropped from 165 lbs. to almost 120 lbs ... District, Mrs. Richards used
"Americanism" as her topic.
Reporters who harassed June Magee Winchell
When he received the full tests he urged on
. he
She was accompanied to
at their suburban W--tchester home plagued everyone m
t se cancerofleurotic years, it was Wellston by Mrs. Campbell
her constantly until she was carried out on a
too late- he was operated on and "they closed Harper and Mrs. Allen
stretcher after her first hesrt attack, which
him up," in the grim vernacular of Surgery; it Hampton.
made her an invalid for .life.
..~ "lllllh•ouak hi~."
. '!-!' -u,. Jh uJ '; r. " :'.11'11H tYl't'D.Y ~,, ,.. 1 tJHI-J ., ,. ".Hoi .. ·'t. ~- " •
COURT lf\UI:JINO 1
•
Cllefamousedltortoldi!Boncethathe~ew
. . Walter often caine, t~ o!"' a~artmenLf~r
' · ' '":J'
joumali8ts who hated Walter because he
dinner when he was in town, but his last visit
CARSON CIT1(, !'!\'!· &lt;1/Pl.J. ,
became the highest paid reporter in newspa"':r
was, we l~rned, only to tidy up his affairs; we ha;~~~'::vt~ !~P~:=
history-without an inkltalned apprenticeship
talked to him on the telephone, but he told my
h'ld h th . ht ton ·t ·
virtually every newsman experiences ; that they
wife, "I'm not coming to dirmer - I don't want c 1 au~ erithg th i e sw fmul
·
.
connec on WI
e wrong
21Q E. 2nd
Pomeroy
hated his almost a mIll!nn.,q.vP.Ar mcome
and
you to see me this way."
death of one ·of its parents.
Phone 992-5421

WORLD ALMANAC

GN.

NBA Sttncllngs .
ByUnlltdPr'esslntel'tlltlonat
'EnltrnConfereilct ·
Atlantic Division
·w. l., Pd. GB
Boston
47 23 ,671 ...
New York
42 26 .618 4
Philadelphia 26 41 ,388 19v,
Buffalo
18 .49 .269 27,12
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
29 39 ,426 ..
Atlanta
21 41 ,397 2 ,
Cincinnati · 22 47 ,319 7'12
Cleveland
29 49 .290 9Vi
Western Conference
Midwest DMsion ·
.
W. L. Pet. GB
.Milwaukee 55 15 :786 ,;
Chicago
50 21 .704 5'12
Phoenlx
42 29 .592 13'12
Detroit
.23 46 .333 31 'h
Pacific Division
W. L. Pd. GB
LosAngetes 57 1t .838 ...
Seatlle
43 26 .623 14'12
Golden St.
43 26 .623 14•12
· Houslon
27 40 .403 29'12
Portland
15 57 .208 44
Tuesday's Results
Los Angeles 114 New York 111
Atlanta 99 Buffalo 89
Seattle 118 Baltimore 117, ot ·
Mi lwaukee 131 Detroit 113
.
Chicago 116 Portland 92
Golden State 128 Cincinnati 120
(Only games scheduled I
Wadnelday's Games
Buffalo at Phlladeophta
Sea lite at Delrolt
Cleveland at Boston
Cincinnati vs. Houston
At El Paso
Los Angeles vs. Milwaukee
At Madison
Bal!imoreat Phoenix
.IOnlygamesscheduledl
ABA Sttndings
By United Press tntornallonal
East ·
W. L. Pd. GB
Kentucky
53 14 .191 "'
Virginia
40 27 .591 13
New York
32 J6 .471 21'12
Floridians 28 40 .412 25'12
Carolina
27 40 .403 26
Pittsburgh 23 ol5 .338 30'12
West
W. L. Pel. GB
Utah
47 20 .701 ...
Indiana
37 29 .561 9'12
Dallas
32 37 .464 16
Denver
27 39 .409 19'12
Memphis
24 43 .358 23
Tuosday's Results
Floridians 134 Pittsburgh 126

,,.. ,

l'llti!E

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
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SLB. CHUCK ,ROAST
SLB. ROUND STEAK
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Youf oiler! ·· · EF RlBS
CLEANERS
Weight Approx. 20-30

'992-3502

Cut

&amp;

'
'
'

-...

Wrapped for Freezer.

~~~)
VINGS!!

DEL MONTE

PINEAPPLE
JUICE
'

GREEN
BEANS
~

303
SIZe

cans

Del Monte

Del Monte

SWEET
PEAS

TOMATO

BEEF · ~ STEW

MEAT

Nice 'n' Lite Homogenized

LOW FAT ·MILK

1h gal.

CATSUP
14 oz.
blls.

cans

lb.
WINDSOR

C

SLICED BACON

0

carton

•

..

EVAPORATED

FRUIT
COCKTAIL

MILK

2 lb. French Fries
POTATOES
2 lb. Hash Brown
POtATOES

tall
cans

303

Northern

IVORY
LIQU D

c

•••

Bathroom
Tissue

MIX OR MATCH
bags

4 roll
I

_.,

•

l

By United Press lnlernatlOJ!a]

liHL ·standings
By United Press international
East
w. L. T. Pis
Boston ·
46 8 9 101
41 11 10 92
New York
Montreat
36.14 12 84
Detro! I
28 27 9 65
Toronlo
26 27 11 63
13 35 15 41
Buffalo
Vancouver
16 40 6 38
West
W. L. T. Pis
Chicago
39 . 16 8 86
Mlnnesola
32 21 9 73
St. Louis
22 33 9 53
California
18 31 15 51
Philadelphia
19 32 11 49
Pittsburgh
19 35 9 47
Tuesday's Results
Detroit 8 Vancouver 2
(Only ;ameschedutedl
Wednesday's Games
Cat lfornla at New York
Buffalo al Montreat
Toronto at St .. Louis
Chicago al Los Angeles
(Only games scheduled)

~
••' .

••
•

CARROTS

RIGHT '

AT IIUIINID
RIITI.AND DEPT. StORE

lb.
..

RESERVED
TO

liMiT

QUANTi tiE$

Second-rank'ed North
Carolln.a ·got ·a taste Tu~y
night of just what might
happen in the Atlanlic Coast
Conference Tournament.
, The No. 2Tar Heels, battling
all season long with conference
, powers Maryland and Vlrglnin,
were stunned by North
Carolina State, 85-84. The
Atlantic Coast Conference
tournament decides the team
which goes to the NCAA
regardless of regular season
finish.
Paul Coder scored five points
in the last 41 seconds to Jrovide
Slate with the upset. North
Carolina, which trailed most of
the game thanks largely to the
defensive heroics of 7.foot-4
sopb Tom Burleson, -Md-

l • \

and doesn 'I deserve a cut.
Except for the pitchers and
shortstop Mark Belanger, all of
the Oriole starters still are
unsigned.
Among the other players who
signed TUesday were Fred
Patek and Cookie Rojas of
Kansas City, Felix Millan of
Atlanta,
James ·Rodney
Richard and Jesits Alou of
Houston, Gene Michael of the
New York Yankees, Manny
Muniz and Nellie Garcia of
Philadelphia, Don Bay)or of
Baltimore, Ted Sizemore and
Don Shaw of St. Louis and Ken
McMullen of California.·

HlGHLIGHTS

WEDNElDAY, MARCH 1
Back In the tate Thirties, a 11, but with a r~ther poor
year, don't expect miracles.
couple of guys named Olsen
Our
viewing lip: Watch
&amp; Johnson cancel ved the
Parkersburg South's Sam
Idea for a fast-paced, laugh.
FO!)gin, a sophomore who's
a.mlnute variety show which
they called "Heltzapoppln." going to be a great one. 7:30
1t was a Broadway hit and a · p.m., Ch. 7,
+++
successful movie.
The new Ch. It musical
Tonight, Jack Cassidy
heads a caat lhat r.evtves the series "VIbralions" Is
format of "Heltzapoppln' on designed to present a real
TV. It's on Ch. 12 at' 8:30 and ·mixture that you can leave
on or turn off, as your taste
may be quite good.
poes.
Tonight, fealured at 9,
(B11t It seems to me the
&gt;Sa
Runion
cetttst. I believe
format of lhls variety show
lhis Is one I'll lurn off.
was adapted to TV long
+++
years ago and Is still runMOVIES:
"Wake Me
nina.' If's called "laugh.
When
the
War
ls Over," t~
1
ln.' 1
prtme-&gt;lme
movie
on Ch. 6,
+++
fealurea
Ken
.Berry
and Eva
The West VIrginia Sec.
Gabor
In
a
bll
of
whimsy
al
tiona! Tournament from
Also: "The Savaoa," ~
Parkersburg should be a 9:30.
treat for all btaketball fans p.m. and "The Swan,-,-,.11 : 30
t ·the oree_. Pl. Pteasanllaln p.m., bolh Ch. 10.

·'

~

t
~

r;:::::;.:;;-;;;~..79-7~1 !

the Big Ten against three loss-_
es and made the Bucks 17-5
o""'all. Illinois fell to 4-7 and
&gt;13-hverall.
·
Taylor said he "aPJreciales
the help" Indiana gave his ;s
team, by beating Mlchjgan 79- ~
75, making the Wolverines 11-3. ~
"We'll take help anywhere
we can get It," Taylor said.
Ohio State's next Big Ten :!:'
game will beat Indiana on Sat·
urday.

.

. beat Michigan and O]!lo Slate and Mlnllesola defeated
CHICAGO (UP!' - lndialla
tbeir Big Ten foes Tuesday night to move tbe Buckeyes and the Gopben al!ead of tbe
::=~rines Into a lie lor first place. In another conference game, Wisconsin beat Michigan

j

Indiana held an U.poinl haHtlme lead but Michigan tlgblened the contest in the second
ball and came witbln one point on several occasions. AI the final bllZzer it was Indiana 79,
Michigan 75. Michigan Is now 8-31n the conference and ~~!diana Is f.S.
Allen Hornyak, Luke Wblle and Wardell Jackson combined forced to score 71 points as
Oblo Stille po1ted a IICVrchiDg 183-70 win oyer Illinois. Hornyak hll27, Jackson Z3 and Wille
%1. The Buckeyes were on top 51-36 at the haH. Dllnols never agaiD led after an Initial 5-0
advantage.OSU Ia Win theBigTenand DUnols Is 4-7.
Minnesota tralled Purdue 3!1-37 wltb 5:17 remaining, but a late scoring spree pulled the
game out lor the Gophen who posted a 48-43 win. Minnesota Is !1-3 In the conference and
Purdue Is 5-6.
Wisconsin weal over tbe 100-polnt mark lor the seCW'd time this season to beat
Michigan Stale 101·74. Wisconsin bad five men In double figures led by Leon Howard and
Lee Oler with ZOeach. Conference scoring leader Mike Robinlion led Michigan State wilh
28. Wisconsin is 5-6 lor the conference season and the Spartans are 4-7.

~
ii.'

~~

$
~

(i

~

:~

~
;~

~

t,

;~
Iitle and Alan Colter's career·'·
high 2:j points helped Penn stop ~
»
:;:;
!!~
St. Joseph's. Randy ,NQJl:s 22
·:·:
points boosted Marshall over
'•'•
!~;
UNCOlarlotte.
::::
Ohio State and Minnesota,
who played one of the most
talked about games of the year ,
;.:;;c:::; :. •**::::O~·:-.-=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.;::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=~:::::::::::=::::::f.!:::&amp;:::&amp;:::::::~:::::::::::».:x-.::::::;w~*
earlier this !Ieason, moved
back into a lie for the Big Ten
lead. Ohio State, which
defeated Minnesota in a game
that · earned nation-wide
publicity because of a brawl
and resulted in the suspension
By United Press Intemallonal Ohio State clobbered Big Ten 15 in the first half. Jackson
of two Minnesota players,
Ohio University plays a cru- foe Illinois l03-70 to put the added a career-high 23 points
crushed Winois, 103-70. The cial Mid-American Conference Buckeyes into a first place tie and Witte had 21.
·
The Bucks are now 9·3 in the
victory, combined with Min· game at Western Michigan to- with Minnesota.
Allan
Hornyak,
Wardell
JackBig
Ten. Illinois fell to 4-7.
nesota's 48-43 triumph over night where a loss would toss
At Pittsburgh, Billy Knight's
Purdue and Indiana's 79-75 the Bobcats into a three-way tie son and Luke Witte combined
for
71
points
for
the
Bucks'
win
.
.
21
points and 14 rebounds helpupset of Michigan, left the for first place with Toledo and
ed Pitt survive a second half
B:uckeyes and Gophers tied for Kent State . .
first place.
-- · Ohio U.- ·holds a-s-, 2-MJ\C
Youngstown State fell to 2(J.. rally by Youngstown, now m .
Altllough Pitt was ahead by
Allan Yornyak, Wardell· mark going into the game while 6 when Pitt hung an 112-66 loss
Jackson and Luke Witte Toledo and Kent are each 6-3. on the Penguins , Penn State II points early in the second
combined for 71 points Western Michigan is 4-5.
beat Kent State 61-51. Hiram• hslf, YSU surged back to go
in Ohio . State's victory
In other games, Toledo plays defeated Bethany (W.Va.) 84- ahead by four. But Pitt regain·
and Bobby Nix hit six a non-conference contest 75. Thomas More (Ky.) whip· ed the lead ' at 61-59 with 6:59
left and kept it the rest of the
straight points in the closing against DePaul, Tri-State ped Wright State 81·70.
Hornyak finished high for way,
minutes to cap a 1&amp;-poinl (Ind.; is at Defiance and
Bill McMeans, the Penguins'
Ohio State, which played at
comeback that enabled Minne- Findlay visits Rio Grande.
player at 6-foot.V, led the
tallest
sola to defeat Purdue. Joby
In Tuesday night's action, home, with'!/ points, including
Ohioans with 24 points.
Wright's 26 points carried
Hiram, playing at Bethany,
knows Uhlaender and "don't Indiana to its upset of Michigan
ran
its President's Athletic Con·
worry about him not giving 100 while in the other Big Ten
ference record to 11).2 and its
per cent."
game, Leon Howard and Lee
overall record to 14·9. Hiram,
"When the Reds acquired · Oler hi.~ 20 points ~ch. as
'
led by Larry McCall with 18
him, l said we were getting the Wisconsm downed Michigan
points, already has won the
only player in baseball who ·State, 101·74.
PAC title.
might outollustle Pete Rose."
Penn State's Ron Brown set
Uhlaender, who produced 144
two
school records - most
hits for a .288 batting average
HUNTINGTON,W. Va.(UPI) points and landed .14 rebounds points in a Season by a soph·
last year, is not considered a · College Basketball Resutfs
- Marshall University's basket- for Marshall, 23-2. Onlv Miami omore and most assists in. a
strong throWer. "But as far as l By United Press International
ball team was to find out today of Ohio at Oxford remains season -as the Nittany Lions
could learn that's his only de- Ohio St. 103 Illinois 70
if the NCAA would invite it to Thursday night in the regular downed Kent, now 7·16. Brown
fensive weakness," Anderson Rhode Island 71 Mass. 63
play in the prestigious NCAA season.
LtU 11 lona 67
had 24 points and eight assists.
said.
Allegheny 11 Thiel 57
Tournament.
Marshall shot 47.6 per cent to Dwight Kenner led the Flash·
"Asahltterhemakesagood Adefphl 68 Vermont 66
The Thundering Herd drove a the 49ers' 41.3 per cent. There- es with 15 points.
act, _doesn't strike out Pittsburgh62Ynpstwn66
7&amp;-59 ~pike into the Universi,ty bounding _w~~ even at 38 ap_iece.
h. u_ e's,.a. ll!!"_~
-.•~".-""'a! ' l!enn
St. 6)~.., )St: 51 '";
l~dl,na 79 Mlchigan 75
The Herd extended its milr·
' ·-• . - ~ W,:"" ''J&lt;O
of North Carolina-Charlotte
tier." • · .•.•• • · · · :rcu 89 Texas Tech 88
,,.l •.r: '"
49ers Tuesday night, a per- gin td 38-29 at halftitlte ; and
Outfielders and infielders Kings 76 Btoomsbg 63
4-Pl..Y NYLON CORD
formance that drew the ire of when the 49ers came withiii
11 St. Jos., Pa . 64
Joined pl'tcbers and catchers . -Penn
Delaware 94 Drexel 56
Coach Carl Tacy.
47-40 with 10:33 remaining, the
today for their first full-ecale Amherst 61 Wesleyan 58
Calling it "the worst per- Herd went into a double-teamworkoutsofthespringtraining E. Conn. 74 Keene stt. 64
formance of the season," Tacy ing press. The result was a 12'4
SMU 78 Rice 69
General-Jet
season.
Texas 80 Texas A&amp;M 73
said, "We can't play this way spurt and a 59-44 bulge with
W. N.M. 87 ·Grand Canyon 73 and beat top clubs."
6:44 left.
Denver 81 Lyta, Ill. 70
• Dual Tread
Noil was one of four Herds"We hope we'll have a
Florida 120 Chi. St. 69
Design
chance lo play after we close men in double scoring figures .
Ithaca Sl Alfred 67
• &lt;1-Piy
GIVEN APPOINTMENT
Arkansas 131 Baylor 109
out the regular season."
Mike D'Antoni tallled 15, Rus·
Nylon Cord
FAYETTEVILLE, · Ark. Marshall76 UNC-Chartotte 59
• Our•gen ®
Randy
Noll
popped
in
22
sell
Lee
had
13
and
Ty
Collins
Tread
. (UPI)-Don Trull, former Dartmouth 69 New Hamp. 6S
canned II.
N.C. St. 85 North Car. 84
Rubber
McDONALD NAMED
Baylor quarterback who Louisvt 90 No. Tex. St. 85
Robert Earl Blue of North
SAN DIEGO (UPI)-Rick
played for six seasons in the old Williams 84 Clarkson 74
Carolina, 13-11, topped the visi·
American Football League \ Brandeis 101 Bowdoin 75
McDonald, atluetic trainer at tors by netting 22 points.
With Houston and Boston has Fla. Sou. 111 Fla. A&amp;M 98
United Slates International
AS
.
•
H~ram (0.1 84 Bethony 75
LOW
University
since
1969,
was
be611 given a graduate 'ap. DePauw 103 Wabash 97
AS
pointment as freshman coach Boston Cotl. 41 Conn. 39, ot
nsmed trainer of the San Diego
at the University of Arkan- Wisconsin 101 Mich. St. 74
Chargers of the American
Albright 55 Drew~
Slz:e 6.50·13 tubelns whitew all,
Football Conference NASCAR RACE
sas.
Minnesota 48 Purdue 43
plus SUfi Fed. Ex. Tax and exONTARIO, Calif. (UPl)TUesday.
change cui ng . la rg er sizes
available 11 comparable or lce1 .
The
Ontario,
Calif.
soo.mne
McDonald, 28, who worked
psrt-time for the Chargers race for Nascar Grand
during training camp and at National stock cars-the fourth
home games, succeeds Jim event on this year's Winston
Cup
Grand
National
VanDusen.
scheduled-will roar off on ·
IN NCAA TRIUMPH
Sunday
afternoon.
called a loose ball foul on final quarter to pull away.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)The race figures to attract
Memlnger. If the call had been
Golden State remained in Youngstown State will play an
agalilst West, who had five playoff contention with Seattle opponent yet to be named in a the top names in stock car
foula, he would have fouled out. as Nate Thurmond scored '1:1 first round game of the NCAA racing, including Richard
West, who scored 32 points, pointa to lead the Warrlars past , college division basketball' Petty, who's taken two of the
Ph. 992-7161
year's first three events-the
stayed in the game and scored Cincinnati. Nate Archibald had
championship, it was anWinston Western 500 and the
Middleport, Ohio
two more baskets Including an 38 points and 12 assists for the nounced Tuesday.
Richmond,
Va.
500.
insurance bucket with 21 Royals.
The game will be played
seconds left after New York
Olel Walker scored 30 poinls March 7 at Akron.
narrowed the defldt to 11:&amp;.111. to 11ft Ollcago past Portland in
Winners in eight regional
Memlnger said, "I bad the a game marked by four
tournaments advance to final
ball and made one dribble. My technical fouls and the ejection
rounds March 15-17 at Evansback was to West. I don't see of Bulls' Coach Dick Motta.
ville, Ind.
how they could have called it."
Less Controvenlal Action
In · less controversial NBA
action, Milwaukee beat
Detroit, 131·113, Atlanta topped
Buffalo, !J9.89, Golden State
defeated Cincinnati, 128-~.
and Oiicago ripped Portland,

surged ahead 115-111 with 41
secondsleftwben Coder hit two
baskets and then added a foul
shot with seven seconds leftfor
the victory.
Burleson led N.C. State with
24 points and Coder hit 19 to
provide Coach Norm Sloan
with his 300ib career victory.
Dennus Wuyclk led North
Carolln~ with 30 points.
In other action Involving
ranked clubs, No. 3 Louisville
beat North Texas State, 9(1..85,
Penn (4) defeated St. Joseph's
(Pa.), 77-64 and Marshall (10)
clubbed North Carolina.Qw.
lotte, 7&amp;-59.
Jim Price and Ron Thomas
combined for 43 points in
Louisville's victory, tnauring
the Cardinals at least a tie for
theM!SsOiiri'Viilley Coriferel!ce

~~

Bobcats Need This One

TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - Pete
Rose has been sWitched to left
field and the two-time national
batting champion says "any
place I play is all right wtth

me."
Cincinnati Reds Manager
Sparky Anderson announced
the new position for Rose Tiles·
day and suggested that George
Foster, Bernie Carbo and
Cesar Geronimo will batlle it
out for the right field posllion
manned by Rose since 1988 • .
Anderson said all three up
.•

'

any one ef them has a chance,to
be a right fielder for years to

come."
Rose said Anderson ex·
plained that the new left field
job "should add yean to my
career," and he admitted
jokingly he was a bit puzzled.
"From our dugout at Riverfront Stadium, it's a longer
walk to left field than to right
field, " Rose said.
Ted Uhalender, acquired
from the Oeveland Indians in
the off season Is a· Ukely successor to Bobby Tolan in
centerfield if Tolan's twicetom Achilles tendon Is not up to
par on opening day.
Pitcher .run Merritt said he

Herd Gets Word
Today on NCAA

~

WHITEWALLS

GENERAL
TIRE

Bullets Lose, Shue BtJJ'Ils .Refs

.

~

Hustlin' Pete to
Roam Left Field

AHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W.. L. T. Pis
Boston
36 17 tO 82
Nova Scolia
33 17 12 78
S~rlngfletd
26 23 13 65
Providence
21 29 10 52
Rochester
21' 33 7 49
West
W. L. T. Pis
Baltimore
27 23 10 64
Cleveland
27 25 9 63
Hershey
26 22 10 62
Cincinnati
23 25 13 59
Richmond
22 29 10 54
Tidewaler
17 36 8 42
Tuesday's ResuHs
Boston 5 Cleveland 1
Nova Scotia 5 SRrlngfleld 4
(Oniygamesscheduledl
Wednesday's Games
Providence at Baltimore
Cincinnati at Richmond
(0ntyg 0messcheduled)

·,
with Paul Crabtree
CALL POINTVIEW : 992 · 2505

HEAD LETTUCE
head

'

.,

Witte added 21. :,
Bill Morris was blgh for all·
inoiB with 19.
· Dllnl Coach Harv Schmidt
said the dilference in the game
was ''OSU's aggressiveness."
"Jackson and · Witte,
eapeclally Jackson, destroyed
us," Schmidt i!ald. "And I quit
platooning when they ran
through Our second team's
preas."
.
The win over OSU's ninth in

Tar Heels Edged 85-84

The significance of Aaron's By United Preas lnienultlODII
three-year contract is thst it'll
The referees were on the spot
probably take him that long to in a pair of controversl!ll
crack Babe Ruth's celebrated National Basketball
homer record of 714.
Aasocialion Q1rlllers TUesday
Besides Aaron, the player night.
!
who signed the highest contract
Disputed decisiona by the
TUesday was Mickey Loliah of refs were key factors In
the Detroit Tigers, who signed Seattle's 118-117 overtime
for an estimated $8i,OOO. Lollsh victory over Baltimore and Los
had been shooting for a six· Angeles' 114-lll triumph over
the New York Knick&amp;.
figure contract.
While the Knlcb only mildly
Boog Powell of Baltimore is JrOtested their IOSII, Balllmare
trying to get the same $90,000 Bullet Coach Gene Sbue was so
contract he got last year while infuriated by three overtime
the Orioles . ar~ trying to cut plays that he blasted the of.
him since be had an off-6eason ficlals and even predicted he'd
in 1971. Powell argues he receive a '$2,000 fine for doing
suffered from several injuries it. Asked what ·he'd do .if be's

~

lh gaL

DEL MONTE

•

No official figures were given
out but the best guess is that
the contract )VaS in the $600,000
range for three years. Carl
Yastrzemski of the Boston Red
Sox apparently had been the
highest paid player a year ago
when he signed a three-year
contract for a reported $500,000.
Aaron and President William
Bartholomay said Aaron's was
"probably'' the blghestever.

DEL MONTE

.
Utah i25 Memphis 115
(Ontygamusched_uted)
Wednesday's O.mts
Cau rohtlna atdKentucky
Ia at 1n lana
Virginia at New York
Memphis at Daltu
Floridians at Denver '

..

,..

By United Press International
The nelt question now Is:
wbo wlll be baseball's first
f300,0GCI player?
The 1200,000 figure ap· ·
parently was reached TUesday
when Hank Aaron of the
AUanta Braves signed a threey~rcontract that ''probably is
the highest" in baseball
history.

t COMING UP S.

BIG BIG

"All we tried to do was relax
and· have fun," '!lAid BUcks
Coach Fred Taylor. "We've
been so doggone grim II ha8n~
been enjoyable."
Allan Hornyak led the cbarged-up Bueka wjth 'Q points and
aophomore Wardell Jackson
bit for a career-111gb '2s points
and gamehigh 13 rebounds
even though he sat out 12
minutes of the second half
because of foul tr~ble. Luke.

Pro Standings

..
For Wood &amp; 'Masonry Finishes
,.

pallor over St. John Arena, But
the Bucks came right back
with 13 stralgbt pointa and
piled up a lopsided 51-38
halftime bulge.
With nine minutes left In the
gamei Ohio State was leading .
~and It was just no contest.
With4:ZOlefttheregularawere
taken out.

1

MIND

Dear Worried:
Why don~ you stop the divorce but bide your IDIII'I'iage
certificate?
I&gt;ear Helen:
,,.,........ , ~ . . ,. ~·· .~ ..
What do you think of thle ghastly and esperlllve IMMin'lllll of
deep.freezlng people who are prono111oed '1egally" dead of some
111Ciiratie dlse!lse, ao that later on when a "cure" 18 found they
might be resurrected and l!rought back ·to life? .
Even if It could work (which It can't), Isn't this tampering
with God's will? -SHOCKED AND SICKENED
DearS and S:
.
.
I don't consider this "ghastly" or immoral, but !'Iii alrald
it's wasting from $15,000to $20,000on a very fragile hope.
However, who am I to say what science may do In the future?
... And wouldn't It be great to have a second chance at lite at
some distant tbne when you might profit from the .mlatakes you
made before?- H.

r.&gt;.

BuCks Romp over Illini; Tie for Big Ten Lead

Husbands Think !he Wije always Has to·Forgive ·

Helen Help

~Voice

3- The Dally Sentinel, Mlchlepori-Pttuenty, Q., ~ 1, 1872.

N0.1 liPOT ·
,·
Q.tJII 'ro MEET
· The Laurel C1lff Health Club
HUTCHIN;&gt;UN,
Kan.
•I·
will meet on ~ch 9 at 7:30 (UPI)- Vincennes (Ind.),
pm. at the lvBne of Mrs. SQOrting a per feet 25-0 record.
Frances Hewetaon with Mrs. waa se~ to• the No. 1 lpOt
Marvin Spencer . as the · TUesday in the llnll n1tlmal .
· ·... Or.maybe it's due to e.-ly condllionlng: the old.f81bipned aaslltq hOIIIeSII, Instead .of JunlarcoUege ~dwitha S1.0
but still quite prevalent concept~~ men must beg favors while tblsThursdayiJlght.
record.
women bestow them.
·
... Or perhaps the roNTRITE man Is more Ukely to ask a
columnist's help, while the: 'ellow who Is sure he lB r!ghtfeeiJ be
doesn~ need it - especially from a woman who might take his
wife's side. - H.
'
+++
•
Dear Helen :
My husband and I were married len Y1'81'8 and we started a
divorce last fall. Then we decided to go baek together a month
ago.
I don't want to be married, but only live with him, because ·
we get along beautifUlly when we don~ have that piece of psper
to bind us.
.
Our divorce will be final in two months, In the interests of a
hapjll!·relation$hip, should we let It go through? -WORRIED

..........:-:-:-:-: ;.....·.·.·.·-:····· ·· ..I ···.·.·. ·:-.:·.·.... : .... -: ..··.·...·.....·.·.·.· . .·.··. ·.·.·.·. :.·.-:·:·.·.·.·.····· .·. ·..·.

suspended for his remarks,
Shue said, "I'll resign."
Shue Infuriated
Sbue was Infuriated by three
calls in particular: ·
-With 3:19left In overtime,
Len Wllkens of Seattle drove in
for a la)'lip to give the winners
the lead.' Sbue Insisted Wllkens
was walking.
-With 1:19 left and Seatlle
leading, 118-llS, Wes Unseld
sank a layup far Baltimore. A
foul was called by Referee
Darrell Garretson but the
basket was not allowed and
Unseld was given only one
shot, which be missed.
-With one second left,
Garretson called a jump ball
between Jack Marin and Pete
Qooss after a Marin shot. Shue
insisted Marin was fouled.
The controverslsl call iJi the
Knlck-Laker game came with
4: 19 remaining and the Lakers
ahead, 106-89. Dean Memqer
battled Jerry West for a
reboul1d, controlled the ball
and drjbbled as West swiped)8t
him from beblnd. But the

rer.

SALES

67 FORD
TRUCK

116-92.

.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
scored 34 points as the Bucks
outscored Detroit, 16-2, down
the stretch to win the game.
Pete Maravicb scored 33
points as Atlanta topped
Buffalo. Elmore Smith led the
losers with 23. Atlanta out.
seored the Braves, 28-13, In the

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times has this happened lietore,
H it's a one-blow-up brannigan, and your moodiness came
from legitimate worry (or perhaps those quite nonnal firsi·Y"fll"·
of-marriage blues), then your wife is JrObably only teachq you
a lesson - and she'll be back by nelt .week. She may already be
wondering if part of it wasn't her fault - and I'd guess it was.
But if you have constantly closed her out over the years,
"reforming" only when she announceS she's through - well, this
may be the final announcement, unless you back up your
apologies with a promise to consult (and heed) a marriage
counselor.
Either way, good luck! - H.

Us. • •

By Helen Bottel

"I WANT HER BACK," WAIU MALE

Dear Helen:
My wife left me. She's at her mother's. II¥ been fo~ a week.
I have to admit the whole affair is my faWt as l have been
moody, mean, .od very much a stupid fool. l either jumped on
berOI' sat around and didn' talk, thinking onlyofmyseif and not
of her feelqa.
I've begged and ple_aded with her that I've changed and know
bow wrong I was, blitshewon't give me another chance. Sle says
'lhe loves me but she 'IVon 't live with my sulky disposition.
I don~ uilderstand. Why can't a woman iorglve? She knows!
lpve her. - H. A.
Dear H:
You left out one important piece of information: How many

I

1

a s e :v:u:::· .. 'fn ·q;or: ,

+++

NOTE TO READERS : It's strange how often my
"husband-wtfe" mail follows a pattern. The man writes "I've
been a fool. How can l get her back?" while the woman bristles,
"Don't you agree he's a no-good bum?" cOuld this mean the
female of the species is often more vindictive than the male - or
just that men are more honest about their faults?

" 1111"1£

db

.JU.bbb

.

:1

I

along Br'Way

HOSPITAL
NEWS

roLUMBUS (UP!)- Ohio
Slate jwnj,ed back into the Big ·
Ten lead along with Mlnneaota
TUesday night witl1 il rollicking
11J3.70 win ove;· Dllnole as the
previousjtader, Michigan, fell
to Indiana.
.
., The Dllnl came on strong In
the opening moments, grabbing a 5-0 lead and throwing a

Interior·
Exterior

LATEX

BY JACK O'BRIAN
the lionizing he received everywhere, for he was
Holzer Medical Center, First
WINaiELL-AFRIEND
that rare journalistic oddity _ a reporter who Ave. and Cedar St. General
REMEMBERED
"' became more important than the celebrities he visiting hours 2-4 and 7-3 pm.
NEW YORK (KFS) _ Walter Winchell
wrote about.
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
died, and we lost an old close friend; Walter's
Walter wasn 't perfect - do you know 4' 30 p.m. Parents only on
·
Pediatrics Ward.
daugbterWaldasaidhedledofficlallyofcancer anyone who is? St. Thomas·said "a good man
Births
all right, but "he really died of a broken heart" · sins seven times a day "- but he was anti-Hitler
Mr . and Mrs . Michael
... Tbat'sbeentrueoverthelastfewyearsasthe first and unfashionably; he was anti- Merritt, New Haven, a son;
old lion dlacovered the ·jackals he'd helped
Communist long before Khrushchev promised Mr. and ll!rs. Richard R.
couldn't walt to rip him apart after he'd retired
to bury us all ; he backed a few bad ones, but he Sweet, Middleport, a daughter,
wblle awaltinR what he knew was approaching
made obscure performers stars and even whole and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence A.
death ... WWhas resj)ecl for the foes who tilted
Bdwy. shows major hits ... And even one of the King; MiddleJ)fll't, a daughter.
with him when he was well.
most virulent attacks on Winchell concluded,
Discharges
In death, the longest drab gray obituary
"His favors can not be bought." ' 'That's my
Anna Cornwell, Edna Lutton,
FACTS
was loaded with inaccuracies ofa sort it therein
Oscar," Walter said.
,
Mae Plants, Ida Shiflet,
Mencken and George Jean Nathan and William Powell, Wetzel Ross,
tccuaed Walter of generating in his columnar
,ears of power; such as: Walter and 11is wile, F.P.A. and Stanley Walker and others high and · Thomas H. Clary ll, Frank
June Magee, never were estranged ; June
secure in news circles recognized his car-· McGhee, Darla Jean Hall, Mrs.
limply dldn~ like the Umellght Walter adored
bona ted gift.s and saluted them; FOR and Everett T. Coy and son, Rothbe
and seldom basked in It at ringside or at his
Eisenhower liked and admired him; just a few P. Carpenter, John W.
ICCIIIIIlmed alsle«at down front on opening
weeks ago, Pres. Nixon sent him a letter at the Blankenship, Merrill Brown,
nights ... His car never was "outfitted with a
hospital where he lay dying since last Mrs. Ora D. Brumfield, Jerry
airen and a red Ught" as the drab grey wrongo· November, in which he saluted Walter's love of F. Harrison, Shelley Hook,
oblthadlt; Walterpaidforhisownpoliceradio
country, his dedicated labors for democracy Charles E. Larkins, Tracy E.
which was the sole extra-equipment of his
and against Nazism and Cornrq.unist; and we Neal, Mrs. Irene Raines,
•pollce-&lt;:all-dlasing decades ... The Damon
salute him now, a man who was unique, Wyman C. Rutt and Hazel I.
Rmlyon F'llld has disbursed more than $36
talented, dilficult - and our friend.
Sheets.
Horsepower is a mechan·
million, not $32 million; he did not "coun. . Walter's death from cahcer was doubly
ical representation eq~iva .
lent to the power requi1·ed
tenance" dilcrimination against Josephine ironic considering the $36 million he'd colleded
SPEAKS IN WEU3l'ON
Baker In the famed Stork Oub incident, and we
for cancer research in the name of t&gt;amon
Mrs . Arnold Richards, to lift a weight of 33,000
were witnesaes to the event.
Runyon ... but there was a deeper, more bitter Middleport, was guest speaker pounds one foot in one min·
ute or 550 pounds one foot
Walter was hauled into it because Stork
irony than just that chilly punchline: for Walter Monday night at a meeting of in one second, The World
Oub owner SllerJUn Bllllngsley's personality, had prostate trouble two whole years before he the American Legion Auxiliary Almanac notes. The watt is
rather lack of one, couldn't keep the Bakerwent to a doctor about it... He simply refused to of Wellston Post 371. Chairman a unit expressing electrical
nlpupa alive beyond a couple of days, and the
believe It was cancer and only sought help after of Americanism for the Eighth
series turned into an anti-Wlnchell carnival ...
he 'd dropped from 165 lbs. to almost 120 lbs ... District, Mrs. Richards used
"Americanism" as her topic.
Reporters who harassed June Magee Winchell
When he received the full tests he urged on
. he
She was accompanied to
at their suburban W--tchester home plagued everyone m
t se cancerofleurotic years, it was Wellston by Mrs. Campbell
her constantly until she was carried out on a
too late- he was operated on and "they closed Harper and Mrs. Allen
stretcher after her first hesrt attack, which
him up," in the grim vernacular of Surgery; it Hampton.
made her an invalid for .life.
..~ "lllllh•ouak hi~."
. '!-!' -u,. Jh uJ '; r. " :'.11'11H tYl't'D.Y ~,, ,.. 1 tJHI-J ., ,. ".Hoi .. ·'t. ~- " •
COURT lf\UI:JINO 1
•
Cllefamousedltortoldi!Boncethathe~ew
. . Walter often caine, t~ o!"' a~artmenLf~r
' · ' '":J'
joumali8ts who hated Walter because he
dinner when he was in town, but his last visit
CARSON CIT1(, !'!\'!· &lt;1/Pl.J. ,
became the highest paid reporter in newspa"':r
was, we l~rned, only to tidy up his affairs; we ha;~~~'::vt~ !~P~:=
history-without an inkltalned apprenticeship
talked to him on the telephone, but he told my
h'ld h th . ht ton ·t ·
virtually every newsman experiences ; that they
wife, "I'm not coming to dirmer - I don't want c 1 au~ erithg th i e sw fmul
·
.
connec on WI
e wrong
21Q E. 2nd
Pomeroy
hated his almost a mIll!nn.,q.vP.Ar mcome
and
you to see me this way."
death of one ·of its parents.
Phone 992-5421

WORLD ALMANAC

GN.

NBA Sttncllngs .
ByUnlltdPr'esslntel'tlltlonat
'EnltrnConfereilct ·
Atlantic Division
·w. l., Pd. GB
Boston
47 23 ,671 ...
New York
42 26 .618 4
Philadelphia 26 41 ,388 19v,
Buffalo
18 .49 .269 27,12
Central Division
W. L. Pet. GB
Baltimore
29 39 ,426 ..
Atlanta
21 41 ,397 2 ,
Cincinnati · 22 47 ,319 7'12
Cleveland
29 49 .290 9Vi
Western Conference
Midwest DMsion ·
.
W. L. Pet. GB
.Milwaukee 55 15 :786 ,;
Chicago
50 21 .704 5'12
Phoenlx
42 29 .592 13'12
Detroit
.23 46 .333 31 'h
Pacific Division
W. L. Pd. GB
LosAngetes 57 1t .838 ...
Seatlle
43 26 .623 14'12
Golden St.
43 26 .623 14•12
· Houslon
27 40 .403 29'12
Portland
15 57 .208 44
Tuesday's Results
Los Angeles 114 New York 111
Atlanta 99 Buffalo 89
Seattle 118 Baltimore 117, ot ·
Mi lwaukee 131 Detroit 113
.
Chicago 116 Portland 92
Golden State 128 Cincinnati 120
(Only games scheduled I
Wadnelday's Games
Buffalo at Phlladeophta
Sea lite at Delrolt
Cleveland at Boston
Cincinnati vs. Houston
At El Paso
Los Angeles vs. Milwaukee
At Madison
Bal!imoreat Phoenix
.IOnlygamesscheduledl
ABA Sttndings
By United Press tntornallonal
East ·
W. L. Pd. GB
Kentucky
53 14 .191 "'
Virginia
40 27 .591 13
New York
32 J6 .471 21'12
Floridians 28 40 .412 25'12
Carolina
27 40 .403 26
Pittsburgh 23 ol5 .338 30'12
West
W. L. Pel. GB
Utah
47 20 .701 ...
Indiana
37 29 .561 9'12
Dallas
32 37 .464 16
Denver
27 39 .409 19'12
Memphis
24 43 .358 23
Tuosday's Results
Floridians 134 Pittsburgh 126

,,.. ,

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By United Press lnlernatlOJ!a]

liHL ·standings
By United Press international
East
w. L. T. Pis
Boston ·
46 8 9 101
41 11 10 92
New York
Montreat
36.14 12 84
Detro! I
28 27 9 65
Toronlo
26 27 11 63
13 35 15 41
Buffalo
Vancouver
16 40 6 38
West
W. L. T. Pis
Chicago
39 . 16 8 86
Mlnnesola
32 21 9 73
St. Louis
22 33 9 53
California
18 31 15 51
Philadelphia
19 32 11 49
Pittsburgh
19 35 9 47
Tuesday's Results
Detroit 8 Vancouver 2
(Only ;ameschedutedl
Wednesday's Games
Cat lfornla at New York
Buffalo al Montreat
Toronto at St .. Louis
Chicago al Los Angeles
(Only games scheduled)

~
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QUANTi tiE$

Second-rank'ed North
Carolln.a ·got ·a taste Tu~y
night of just what might
happen in the Atlanlic Coast
Conference Tournament.
, The No. 2Tar Heels, battling
all season long with conference
, powers Maryland and Vlrglnin,
were stunned by North
Carolina State, 85-84. The
Atlantic Coast Conference
tournament decides the team
which goes to the NCAA
regardless of regular season
finish.
Paul Coder scored five points
in the last 41 seconds to Jrovide
Slate with the upset. North
Carolina, which trailed most of
the game thanks largely to the
defensive heroics of 7.foot-4
sopb Tom Burleson, -Md-

l • \

and doesn 'I deserve a cut.
Except for the pitchers and
shortstop Mark Belanger, all of
the Oriole starters still are
unsigned.
Among the other players who
signed TUesday were Fred
Patek and Cookie Rojas of
Kansas City, Felix Millan of
Atlanta,
James ·Rodney
Richard and Jesits Alou of
Houston, Gene Michael of the
New York Yankees, Manny
Muniz and Nellie Garcia of
Philadelphia, Don Bay)or of
Baltimore, Ted Sizemore and
Don Shaw of St. Louis and Ken
McMullen of California.·

HlGHLIGHTS

WEDNElDAY, MARCH 1
Back In the tate Thirties, a 11, but with a r~ther poor
year, don't expect miracles.
couple of guys named Olsen
Our
viewing lip: Watch
&amp; Johnson cancel ved the
Parkersburg South's Sam
Idea for a fast-paced, laugh.
FO!)gin, a sophomore who's
a.mlnute variety show which
they called "Heltzapoppln." going to be a great one. 7:30
1t was a Broadway hit and a · p.m., Ch. 7,
+++
successful movie.
The new Ch. It musical
Tonight, Jack Cassidy
heads a caat lhat r.evtves the series "VIbralions" Is
format of "Heltzapoppln' on designed to present a real
TV. It's on Ch. 12 at' 8:30 and ·mixture that you can leave
on or turn off, as your taste
may be quite good.
poes.
Tonight, fealured at 9,
(B11t It seems to me the
&gt;Sa
Runion
cetttst. I believe
format of lhls variety show
lhis Is one I'll lurn off.
was adapted to TV long
+++
years ago and Is still runMOVIES:
"Wake Me
nina.' If's called "laugh.
When
the
War
ls Over," t~
1
ln.' 1
prtme-&gt;lme
movie
on Ch. 6,
+++
fealurea
Ken
.Berry
and Eva
The West VIrginia Sec.
Gabor
In
a
bll
of
whimsy
al
tiona! Tournament from
Also: "The Savaoa," ~
Parkersburg should be a 9:30.
treat for all btaketball fans p.m. and "The Swan,-,-,.11 : 30
t ·the oree_. Pl. Pteasanllaln p.m., bolh Ch. 10.

·'

~

t
~

r;:::::;.:;;-;;;~..79-7~1 !

the Big Ten against three loss-_
es and made the Bucks 17-5
o""'all. Illinois fell to 4-7 and
&gt;13-hverall.
·
Taylor said he "aPJreciales
the help" Indiana gave his ;s
team, by beating Mlchjgan 79- ~
75, making the Wolverines 11-3. ~
"We'll take help anywhere
we can get It," Taylor said.
Ohio State's next Big Ten :!:'
game will beat Indiana on Sat·
urday.

.

. beat Michigan and O]!lo Slate and Mlnllesola defeated
CHICAGO (UP!' - lndialla
tbeir Big Ten foes Tuesday night to move tbe Buckeyes and the Gopben al!ead of tbe
::=~rines Into a lie lor first place. In another conference game, Wisconsin beat Michigan

j

Indiana held an U.poinl haHtlme lead but Michigan tlgblened the contest in the second
ball and came witbln one point on several occasions. AI the final bllZzer it was Indiana 79,
Michigan 75. Michigan Is now 8-31n the conference and ~~!diana Is f.S.
Allen Hornyak, Luke Wblle and Wardell Jackson combined forced to score 71 points as
Oblo Stille po1ted a IICVrchiDg 183-70 win oyer Illinois. Hornyak hll27, Jackson Z3 and Wille
%1. The Buckeyes were on top 51-36 at the haH. Dllnols never agaiD led after an Initial 5-0
advantage.OSU Ia Win theBigTenand DUnols Is 4-7.
Minnesota tralled Purdue 3!1-37 wltb 5:17 remaining, but a late scoring spree pulled the
game out lor the Gophen who posted a 48-43 win. Minnesota Is !1-3 In the conference and
Purdue Is 5-6.
Wisconsin weal over tbe 100-polnt mark lor the seCW'd time this season to beat
Michigan Stale 101·74. Wisconsin bad five men In double figures led by Leon Howard and
Lee Oler with ZOeach. Conference scoring leader Mike Robinlion led Michigan State wilh
28. Wisconsin is 5-6 lor the conference season and the Spartans are 4-7.

~
ii.'

~~

$
~

(i

~

:~

~
;~

~

t,

;~
Iitle and Alan Colter's career·'·
high 2:j points helped Penn stop ~
»
:;:;
!!~
St. Joseph's. Randy ,NQJl:s 22
·:·:
points boosted Marshall over
'•'•
!~;
UNCOlarlotte.
::::
Ohio State and Minnesota,
who played one of the most
talked about games of the year ,
;.:;;c:::; :. •**::::O~·:-.-=::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.;::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:=~:::::::::::=::::::f.!:::&amp;:::&amp;:::::::~:::::::::::».:x-.::::::;w~*
earlier this !Ieason, moved
back into a lie for the Big Ten
lead. Ohio State, which
defeated Minnesota in a game
that · earned nation-wide
publicity because of a brawl
and resulted in the suspension
By United Press Intemallonal Ohio State clobbered Big Ten 15 in the first half. Jackson
of two Minnesota players,
Ohio University plays a cru- foe Illinois l03-70 to put the added a career-high 23 points
crushed Winois, 103-70. The cial Mid-American Conference Buckeyes into a first place tie and Witte had 21.
·
The Bucks are now 9·3 in the
victory, combined with Min· game at Western Michigan to- with Minnesota.
Allan
Hornyak,
Wardell
JackBig
Ten. Illinois fell to 4-7.
nesota's 48-43 triumph over night where a loss would toss
At Pittsburgh, Billy Knight's
Purdue and Indiana's 79-75 the Bobcats into a three-way tie son and Luke Witte combined
for
71
points
for
the
Bucks'
win
.
.
21
points and 14 rebounds helpupset of Michigan, left the for first place with Toledo and
ed Pitt survive a second half
B:uckeyes and Gophers tied for Kent State . .
first place.
-- · Ohio U.- ·holds a-s-, 2-MJ\C
Youngstown State fell to 2(J.. rally by Youngstown, now m .
Altllough Pitt was ahead by
Allan Yornyak, Wardell· mark going into the game while 6 when Pitt hung an 112-66 loss
Jackson and Luke Witte Toledo and Kent are each 6-3. on the Penguins , Penn State II points early in the second
combined for 71 points Western Michigan is 4-5.
beat Kent State 61-51. Hiram• hslf, YSU surged back to go
in Ohio . State's victory
In other games, Toledo plays defeated Bethany (W.Va.) 84- ahead by four. But Pitt regain·
and Bobby Nix hit six a non-conference contest 75. Thomas More (Ky.) whip· ed the lead ' at 61-59 with 6:59
left and kept it the rest of the
straight points in the closing against DePaul, Tri-State ped Wright State 81·70.
Hornyak finished high for way,
minutes to cap a 1&amp;-poinl (Ind.; is at Defiance and
Bill McMeans, the Penguins'
Ohio State, which played at
comeback that enabled Minne- Findlay visits Rio Grande.
player at 6-foot.V, led the
tallest
sola to defeat Purdue. Joby
In Tuesday night's action, home, with'!/ points, including
Ohioans with 24 points.
Wright's 26 points carried
Hiram, playing at Bethany,
knows Uhlaender and "don't Indiana to its upset of Michigan
ran
its President's Athletic Con·
worry about him not giving 100 while in the other Big Ten
ference record to 11).2 and its
per cent."
game, Leon Howard and Lee
overall record to 14·9. Hiram,
"When the Reds acquired · Oler hi.~ 20 points ~ch. as
'
led by Larry McCall with 18
him, l said we were getting the Wisconsm downed Michigan
points, already has won the
only player in baseball who ·State, 101·74.
PAC title.
might outollustle Pete Rose."
Penn State's Ron Brown set
Uhlaender, who produced 144
two
school records - most
hits for a .288 batting average
HUNTINGTON,W. Va.(UPI) points and landed .14 rebounds points in a Season by a soph·
last year, is not considered a · College Basketball Resutfs
- Marshall University's basket- for Marshall, 23-2. Onlv Miami omore and most assists in. a
strong throWer. "But as far as l By United Press International
ball team was to find out today of Ohio at Oxford remains season -as the Nittany Lions
could learn that's his only de- Ohio St. 103 Illinois 70
if the NCAA would invite it to Thursday night in the regular downed Kent, now 7·16. Brown
fensive weakness," Anderson Rhode Island 71 Mass. 63
play in the prestigious NCAA season.
LtU 11 lona 67
had 24 points and eight assists.
said.
Allegheny 11 Thiel 57
Tournament.
Marshall shot 47.6 per cent to Dwight Kenner led the Flash·
"Asahltterhemakesagood Adefphl 68 Vermont 66
The Thundering Herd drove a the 49ers' 41.3 per cent. There- es with 15 points.
act, _doesn't strike out Pittsburgh62Ynpstwn66
7&amp;-59 ~pike into the Universi,ty bounding _w~~ even at 38 ap_iece.
h. u_ e's,.a. ll!!"_~
-.•~".-""'a! ' l!enn
St. 6)~.., )St: 51 '";
l~dl,na 79 Mlchigan 75
The Herd extended its milr·
' ·-• . - ~ W,:"" ''J&lt;O
of North Carolina-Charlotte
tier." • · .•.•• • · · · :rcu 89 Texas Tech 88
,,.l •.r: '"
49ers Tuesday night, a per- gin td 38-29 at halftitlte ; and
Outfielders and infielders Kings 76 Btoomsbg 63
4-Pl..Y NYLON CORD
formance that drew the ire of when the 49ers came withiii
11 St. Jos., Pa . 64
Joined pl'tcbers and catchers . -Penn
Delaware 94 Drexel 56
Coach Carl Tacy.
47-40 with 10:33 remaining, the
today for their first full-ecale Amherst 61 Wesleyan 58
Calling it "the worst per- Herd went into a double-teamworkoutsofthespringtraining E. Conn. 74 Keene stt. 64
formance of the season," Tacy ing press. The result was a 12'4
SMU 78 Rice 69
General-Jet
season.
Texas 80 Texas A&amp;M 73
said, "We can't play this way spurt and a 59-44 bulge with
W. N.M. 87 ·Grand Canyon 73 and beat top clubs."
6:44 left.
Denver 81 Lyta, Ill. 70
• Dual Tread
Noil was one of four Herds"We hope we'll have a
Florida 120 Chi. St. 69
Design
chance lo play after we close men in double scoring figures .
Ithaca Sl Alfred 67
• &lt;1-Piy
GIVEN APPOINTMENT
Arkansas 131 Baylor 109
out the regular season."
Mike D'Antoni tallled 15, Rus·
Nylon Cord
FAYETTEVILLE, · Ark. Marshall76 UNC-Chartotte 59
• Our•gen ®
Randy
Noll
popped
in
22
sell
Lee
had
13
and
Ty
Collins
Tread
. (UPI)-Don Trull, former Dartmouth 69 New Hamp. 6S
canned II.
N.C. St. 85 North Car. 84
Rubber
McDONALD NAMED
Baylor quarterback who Louisvt 90 No. Tex. St. 85
Robert Earl Blue of North
SAN DIEGO (UPI)-Rick
played for six seasons in the old Williams 84 Clarkson 74
Carolina, 13-11, topped the visi·
American Football League \ Brandeis 101 Bowdoin 75
McDonald, atluetic trainer at tors by netting 22 points.
With Houston and Boston has Fla. Sou. 111 Fla. A&amp;M 98
United Slates International
AS
.
•
H~ram (0.1 84 Bethony 75
LOW
University
since
1969,
was
be611 given a graduate 'ap. DePauw 103 Wabash 97
AS
pointment as freshman coach Boston Cotl. 41 Conn. 39, ot
nsmed trainer of the San Diego
at the University of Arkan- Wisconsin 101 Mich. St. 74
Chargers of the American
Albright 55 Drew~
Slz:e 6.50·13 tubelns whitew all,
Football Conference NASCAR RACE
sas.
Minnesota 48 Purdue 43
plus SUfi Fed. Ex. Tax and exONTARIO, Calif. (UPl)TUesday.
change cui ng . la rg er sizes
available 11 comparable or lce1 .
The
Ontario,
Calif.
soo.mne
McDonald, 28, who worked
psrt-time for the Chargers race for Nascar Grand
during training camp and at National stock cars-the fourth
home games, succeeds Jim event on this year's Winston
Cup
Grand
National
VanDusen.
scheduled-will roar off on ·
IN NCAA TRIUMPH
Sunday
afternoon.
called a loose ball foul on final quarter to pull away.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!)The race figures to attract
Memlnger. If the call had been
Golden State remained in Youngstown State will play an
agalilst West, who had five playoff contention with Seattle opponent yet to be named in a the top names in stock car
foula, he would have fouled out. as Nate Thurmond scored '1:1 first round game of the NCAA racing, including Richard
West, who scored 32 points, pointa to lead the Warrlars past , college division basketball' Petty, who's taken two of the
Ph. 992-7161
year's first three events-the
stayed in the game and scored Cincinnati. Nate Archibald had
championship, it was anWinston Western 500 and the
Middleport, Ohio
two more baskets Including an 38 points and 12 assists for the nounced Tuesday.
Richmond,
Va.
500.
insurance bucket with 21 Royals.
The game will be played
seconds left after New York
Olel Walker scored 30 poinls March 7 at Akron.
narrowed the defldt to 11:&amp;.111. to 11ft Ollcago past Portland in
Winners in eight regional
Memlnger said, "I bad the a game marked by four
tournaments advance to final
ball and made one dribble. My technical fouls and the ejection
rounds March 15-17 at Evansback was to West. I don't see of Bulls' Coach Dick Motta.
ville, Ind.
how they could have called it."
Less Controvenlal Action
In · less controversial NBA
action, Milwaukee beat
Detroit, 131·113, Atlanta topped
Buffalo, !J9.89, Golden State
defeated Cincinnati, 128-~.
and Oiicago ripped Portland,

surged ahead 115-111 with 41
secondsleftwben Coder hit two
baskets and then added a foul
shot with seven seconds leftfor
the victory.
Burleson led N.C. State with
24 points and Coder hit 19 to
provide Coach Norm Sloan
with his 300ib career victory.
Dennus Wuyclk led North
Carolln~ with 30 points.
In other action Involving
ranked clubs, No. 3 Louisville
beat North Texas State, 9(1..85,
Penn (4) defeated St. Joseph's
(Pa.), 77-64 and Marshall (10)
clubbed North Carolina.Qw.
lotte, 7&amp;-59.
Jim Price and Ron Thomas
combined for 43 points in
Louisville's victory, tnauring
the Cardinals at least a tie for
theM!SsOiiri'Viilley Coriferel!ce

~~

Bobcats Need This One

TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - Pete
Rose has been sWitched to left
field and the two-time national
batting champion says "any
place I play is all right wtth

me."
Cincinnati Reds Manager
Sparky Anderson announced
the new position for Rose Tiles·
day and suggested that George
Foster, Bernie Carbo and
Cesar Geronimo will batlle it
out for the right field posllion
manned by Rose since 1988 • .
Anderson said all three up
.•

'

any one ef them has a chance,to
be a right fielder for years to

come."
Rose said Anderson ex·
plained that the new left field
job "should add yean to my
career," and he admitted
jokingly he was a bit puzzled.
"From our dugout at Riverfront Stadium, it's a longer
walk to left field than to right
field, " Rose said.
Ted Uhalender, acquired
from the Oeveland Indians in
the off season Is a· Ukely successor to Bobby Tolan in
centerfield if Tolan's twicetom Achilles tendon Is not up to
par on opening day.
Pitcher .run Merritt said he

Herd Gets Word
Today on NCAA

~

WHITEWALLS

GENERAL
TIRE

Bullets Lose, Shue BtJJ'Ils .Refs

.

~

Hustlin' Pete to
Roam Left Field

AHL Standings
By United Press International
East
W.. L. T. Pis
Boston
36 17 tO 82
Nova Scolia
33 17 12 78
S~rlngfletd
26 23 13 65
Providence
21 29 10 52
Rochester
21' 33 7 49
West
W. L. T. Pis
Baltimore
27 23 10 64
Cleveland
27 25 9 63
Hershey
26 22 10 62
Cincinnati
23 25 13 59
Richmond
22 29 10 54
Tidewaler
17 36 8 42
Tuesday's ResuHs
Boston 5 Cleveland 1
Nova Scotia 5 SRrlngfleld 4
(Oniygamesscheduledl
Wednesday's Games
Providence at Baltimore
Cincinnati at Richmond
(0ntyg 0messcheduled)

·,
with Paul Crabtree
CALL POINTVIEW : 992 · 2505

HEAD LETTUCE
head

'

.,

Witte added 21. :,
Bill Morris was blgh for all·
inoiB with 19.
· Dllnl Coach Harv Schmidt
said the dilference in the game
was ''OSU's aggressiveness."
"Jackson and · Witte,
eapeclally Jackson, destroyed
us," Schmidt i!ald. "And I quit
platooning when they ran
through Our second team's
preas."
.
The win over OSU's ninth in

Tar Heels Edged 85-84

The significance of Aaron's By United Preas lnienultlODII
three-year contract is thst it'll
The referees were on the spot
probably take him that long to in a pair of controversl!ll
crack Babe Ruth's celebrated National Basketball
homer record of 714.
Aasocialion Q1rlllers TUesday
Besides Aaron, the player night.
!
who signed the highest contract
Disputed decisiona by the
TUesday was Mickey Loliah of refs were key factors In
the Detroit Tigers, who signed Seattle's 118-117 overtime
for an estimated $8i,OOO. Lollsh victory over Baltimore and Los
had been shooting for a six· Angeles' 114-lll triumph over
the New York Knick&amp;.
figure contract.
While the Knlcb only mildly
Boog Powell of Baltimore is JrOtested their IOSII, Balllmare
trying to get the same $90,000 Bullet Coach Gene Sbue was so
contract he got last year while infuriated by three overtime
the Orioles . ar~ trying to cut plays that he blasted the of.
him since be had an off-6eason ficlals and even predicted he'd
in 1971. Powell argues he receive a '$2,000 fine for doing
suffered from several injuries it. Asked what ·he'd do .if be's

~

lh gaL

DEL MONTE

•

No official figures were given
out but the best guess is that
the contract )VaS in the $600,000
range for three years. Carl
Yastrzemski of the Boston Red
Sox apparently had been the
highest paid player a year ago
when he signed a three-year
contract for a reported $500,000.
Aaron and President William
Bartholomay said Aaron's was
"probably'' the blghestever.

DEL MONTE

.
Utah i25 Memphis 115
(Ontygamusched_uted)
Wednesday's O.mts
Cau rohtlna atdKentucky
Ia at 1n lana
Virginia at New York
Memphis at Daltu
Floridians at Denver '

..

,..

By United Press International
The nelt question now Is:
wbo wlll be baseball's first
f300,0GCI player?
The 1200,000 figure ap· ·
parently was reached TUesday
when Hank Aaron of the
AUanta Braves signed a threey~rcontract that ''probably is
the highest" in baseball
history.

t COMING UP S.

BIG BIG

"All we tried to do was relax
and· have fun," '!lAid BUcks
Coach Fred Taylor. "We've
been so doggone grim II ha8n~
been enjoyable."
Allan Hornyak led the cbarged-up Bueka wjth 'Q points and
aophomore Wardell Jackson
bit for a career-111gb '2s points
and gamehigh 13 rebounds
even though he sat out 12
minutes of the second half
because of foul tr~ble. Luke.

Pro Standings

..
For Wood &amp; 'Masonry Finishes
,.

pallor over St. John Arena, But
the Bucks came right back
with 13 stralgbt pointa and
piled up a lopsided 51-38
halftime bulge.
With nine minutes left In the
gamei Ohio State was leading .
~and It was just no contest.
With4:ZOlefttheregularawere
taken out.

1

MIND

Dear Worried:
Why don~ you stop the divorce but bide your IDIII'I'iage
certificate?
I&gt;ear Helen:
,,.,........ , ~ . . ,. ~·· .~ ..
What do you think of thle ghastly and esperlllve IMMin'lllll of
deep.freezlng people who are prono111oed '1egally" dead of some
111Ciiratie dlse!lse, ao that later on when a "cure" 18 found they
might be resurrected and l!rought back ·to life? .
Even if It could work (which It can't), Isn't this tampering
with God's will? -SHOCKED AND SICKENED
DearS and S:
.
.
I don't consider this "ghastly" or immoral, but !'Iii alrald
it's wasting from $15,000to $20,000on a very fragile hope.
However, who am I to say what science may do In the future?
... And wouldn't It be great to have a second chance at lite at
some distant tbne when you might profit from the .mlatakes you
made before?- H.

r.&gt;.

BuCks Romp over Illini; Tie for Big Ten Lead

Husbands Think !he Wije always Has to·Forgive ·

Helen Help

~Voice

3- The Dally Sentinel, Mlchlepori-Pttuenty, Q., ~ 1, 1872.

N0.1 liPOT ·
,·
Q.tJII 'ro MEET
· The Laurel C1lff Health Club
HUTCHIN;&gt;UN,
Kan.
•I·
will meet on ~ch 9 at 7:30 (UPI)- Vincennes (Ind.),
pm. at the lvBne of Mrs. SQOrting a per feet 25-0 record.
Frances Hewetaon with Mrs. waa se~ to• the No. 1 lpOt
Marvin Spencer . as the · TUesday in the llnll n1tlmal .
· ·... Or.maybe it's due to e.-ly condllionlng: the old.f81bipned aaslltq hOIIIeSII, Instead .of JunlarcoUege ~dwitha S1.0
but still quite prevalent concept~~ men must beg favors while tblsThursdayiJlght.
record.
women bestow them.
·
... Or perhaps the roNTRITE man Is more Ukely to ask a
columnist's help, while the: 'ellow who Is sure he lB r!ghtfeeiJ be
doesn~ need it - especially from a woman who might take his
wife's side. - H.
'
+++
•
Dear Helen :
My husband and I were married len Y1'81'8 and we started a
divorce last fall. Then we decided to go baek together a month
ago.
I don't want to be married, but only live with him, because ·
we get along beautifUlly when we don~ have that piece of psper
to bind us.
.
Our divorce will be final in two months, In the interests of a
hapjll!·relation$hip, should we let It go through? -WORRIED

..........:-:-:-:-: ;.....·.·.·.·-:····· ·· ..I ···.·.·. ·:-.:·.·.... : .... -: ..··.·...·.....·.·.·.· . .·.··. ·.·.·.·. :.·.-:·:·.·.·.·.····· .·. ·..·.

suspended for his remarks,
Shue said, "I'll resign."
Shue Infuriated
Sbue was Infuriated by three
calls in particular: ·
-With 3:19left In overtime,
Len Wllkens of Seattle drove in
for a la)'lip to give the winners
the lead.' Sbue Insisted Wllkens
was walking.
-With 1:19 left and Seatlle
leading, 118-llS, Wes Unseld
sank a layup far Baltimore. A
foul was called by Referee
Darrell Garretson but the
basket was not allowed and
Unseld was given only one
shot, which be missed.
-With one second left,
Garretson called a jump ball
between Jack Marin and Pete
Qooss after a Marin shot. Shue
insisted Marin was fouled.
The controverslsl call iJi the
Knlck-Laker game came with
4: 19 remaining and the Lakers
ahead, 106-89. Dean Memqer
battled Jerry West for a
reboul1d, controlled the ball
and drjbbled as West swiped)8t
him from beblnd. But the

rer.

SALES

67 FORD
TRUCK

116-92.

.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar
scored 34 points as the Bucks
outscored Detroit, 16-2, down
the stretch to win the game.
Pete Maravicb scored 33
points as Atlanta topped
Buffalo. Elmore Smith led the
losers with 23. Atlanta out.
seored the Braves, 28-13, In the

'

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___

.,

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991·2101

'
'
'
1

i

�4 -The Dlaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, d., March 1,1972

ChiUicothe, POrtsmoUth Advance In Sectional
Chillicothe and Portsmouth
advanced io Cla!is AAA Sectional play at Rio Grande
College TUesday night.
The Cavaliers, however,
were bard-pressed in disposing
of Coach Dick Taylor's fired-up
Logan Chieftains, 61-55. Portsmouth bombed Miami Trace,
76-63.
Chillicothe, now 10-9 on the
year, will take on Portsmouth,
now 11·8, in the second
semifinal galne at Lyn e
Cen~r. beginning at 8:30p.m.,
Friday.
In Friday's first Class AAA
semifinal game at Rio, Lancaster ( 10-9) will take on
Marietla (4-15) beginning at 7
p.m.
In last night's first contest,
: Logan stayed close on the heels

r-------~
,

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight&amp; Thursday
March 1·2
NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturday
March 3-4
CHROME AND
HOT LEATHER
I Technicotorl
William Smith
Tony Young

THE HIRED HAND
tTechnicolor)

GP

Peter Fonda
Warren Qates

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

GP

of Chillicothe thr.oughout the
evening, but' the Cavaliers
pulled away in the final two
minutes to remain alive in
sectional play.
Logan finished its first yea r
under Coach Taylor with a 4-15

... • .

Big Mike l,ovenguth's 23 "" losers, F. Jones and Reno each
points led the PortsDio•th had 12.
Trojans wi"'- over outclassed
Box scores:
Miami Trace. Portsmouth led
Flnt Game
CLASS AA
19-11, 40-29, and 56-44 at the
CHlLUCOTH'i:. (61) ~ J. Columbiana 75 Brookfield 56
quartermarks.
Beverly, 9-6:24; Gauze 2.:1-7; - -St. 'fhomas -Aquinas 59 Can··"1 • ; GaUiff
1·--;:
• • _field
50 Local - 61 Soulhern
D. Jones ..had 13 for the Kuh ner .....
o..
Beaver
1
Ratzlaff 2-1-S; S. ._,verY 3Local 49
6; Blevins ~; Hill ~; Youngstown North 76 East
TOTALS 23-15-61.
·
Palesline 58
Coshocton 73 Cenlral
Ridgewood
LOGAN (55)- Norris 5-2-12; Steubenville
80 61BarCulbertson 3-1-7; Shaw 2-3-7; nesvllle 62
Pierce 4-3-8; Whitcraft 1-3-2; · Shadyside 80 Cadiz 68
play beyond the 1973 season.
evicted Bill Mazeroski from the Smith 3-+IO; Good ().1•1; Angle St. Clalrsv~~~e,:7A'J:'ldgeport 6~
· Clemente Needs 118
second base job, Riehle Hebner 3-2,11, TOTALS 21·13-55.
Portsmouth 76 Miami Trace 63
Clemente, who batted .341 is a fixture at third base and
By Quarters:
Akron Garfield 88 Coventry ~
last season, needs.ll6 hits this Manny Sanguillen is the catch- Chillicothe
15 18 15 1~1. · ~~/,';~~ ~1 ~:t":. ~
year to become the lith player er.
Logan
14 12 14 15-55 Warren Western Reserve 66
in baseball history to get 3,000
Virdon will choose five
Youngstown Ursuline 6~
hits. He also is edging in on starting pitchers from among
Second Game
Warren
Howland
70
Youngstown
Rayen
58
many club records.
Blass, Kison, Briles, Dock Ellis
PORTSMOUTH ( 76)
Cltss A
Willie Stargell had his most (the staff leader last year with Daehler 4-+12; Genlry 7+18; Rittman oi9'Mogadore 31
productive season in 1971, a 19-9 record), Bob Moose, Bob Hopkins 3-1-7; Lovenguth 9+ Smithville sa Dalton 49
leading the majors with 48 Johnson and Luke Walker, the 23; McGlone 1·2'4; Wllllamson
home runs and driving in 125 onlylefthandedcandidate.
6+12; TOTALS 30-11-76.
0
•
m'
runs, but there is no reason to
If Virdon is right-that
MIAMI TRACE (63) - D,
expect he will be a 40-homer- complacency does not set inJones 44-13; F. Jones 6+12;
plus man every year now that the Pirates figure to be as Reno 6-0-12; Goodson 3-2-8;
the Pirates are gone from strong' as they were last year. Braun 2-0-4; Cottrill 0-2-2;
l'orbes Field, with its ma,ssive
" Everyone realizes that aeaver 0-1·1; Gifford 1-3-2;
measurements.
somebody could beat them," Persinger 1-3-2. Stockwell 3-1-7.
The only spot in the lineup Virdon says. "I think they're TOTALS 26-7-63.
tha t is at all up for grabs is going to be competing."
By Quarters:
shortstop, where Jackie HerPortsmouth
19 21 16 20-76
nandez and Gene Alley probaMiami Trace II 18 15 19-63 'NEW CONCORD, C»&gt;io (UP!;
bly last
will year.
split the
work,
as they
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -1 - Pairlngs 1or the 13th am ual
did
Alley,
coming
orr 1
1 postofleason Ohio J:;onference
knee surgery, will be the I
II basketbillltolD'Ilament, which
shortstop if he can perform as
he did in 1966 and 1967 before
opens at two locations ThlD'S·
he was hurt.
1
=dli~gh~y ~~e ~nno:a~~
Al Oliver will be back in 1
center, between Stargell and II
ByMCill'.larcer&gt;nce II
Southern Division,
Clemente,hopinghecangetoff
which Includes five of the top
to a better start than he has in 1
' six finishers, Ohio Wesleyan, 6past years so he will not be
5 In the oc and 11·11 overall,
platooned. Oliver, a lefty, hit
Last week the House passed dltional capital Into small opens the action against host
.262 iast year and righty Gene and sent to the Senate the rowns under 5,500 population. Denison (4-8) and 7-11) at 5
Clines batted .308 in fewer Rural Development Act of 1972.
Rw-al America has been In p.m. The winner of that game
I,

Toumey Scores

Pirates Lineup Unchanged
' By IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
BRAN DENTON ,Fla.( UP I )·
The Pittsburgh Pirates may not
sell many programs this year.
The faces will all be familia ~.
Pittsburgh 's only. move was
to make Bill Virdon the
manager when Danny Murtaugh retired for health reasons
and Virdon, in his quietly
confident way, symbolizes the
optimistic feeling around the
Pittsburgh camp.
Any assessment of the
Pirates na turally begins with
the hit~rs instead of the
pitchers, who elbowed into the
spotlight in the World Series
because of the great games
pitched by Steve Blass (twice),
Nelson Briles and Bruce Kison.
But the heart and soul of the
Pittsburgh team is its 37-yearold rightfielder, Roberto Clemente. Uke fine wine, Cle·
mente seems to get better with
age and, although he peaked in
the World Series, he already
has decided that he will not

fabulous fabrics
tor spring

mark.
J. Beverly paced the cavs ·
with 24 points. Randy Norris
and Gr~g Smith paced the
Chiefs with 12 and 10 points.
Chillicothe led 15-14, 33-26,
and 48-40 at the quariermarks.
•'

for

GasterJ

ga~:b~rtson Flrsi Baseman

In a nutshell, the blll is steady decline since the end of
designed
to improve the living World War II. While national
Bo!} ·Robertson , a slugger
d' ·
d
1
t
1 t' ha in-•sed by
con !liOnS an emp oymen popu a IOU S w ~
rapidly developing as a stand- opportunities in rural areas more than 50 million since 1945,
out fielder, is the first through an expanded federal rural population bas decreased
baseman ,DaveCashhasfirmly commitment to pump ad- . by 23 million persons during
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , the same period. Rural
,
I residents, especially young
II
Let lets of opinion are welcomed. They should be less I people, have been migrating U&gt;
than 390 words long (or be subject to reduction by the editor)
W'ban areas in such masses
I and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be that today 75 pet. of the
I withheld upon publication, however, on request. Letters nation's population occupy
1 should be In good taste, addressing issues, not personalltles. 1 only 2 pet. of the Janel. As
1
I people have moved out because

I

1
1
1

·
•. ••

j).~~fdith
•

:

.:::

large
Selection
TRIMS

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NOW!

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For Spring At The Fabric Shop
• Polyester Double Knits
Plains. Prints, Plaids, Stripes

• Polyester and Cotton Knits
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~-.f_TH_E_FAB_~I_CS_HO_~_..f·
SINGER SALES &amp; SERVICE
McCALL'S &amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS
115

I

folded,"'\(! Wlelll(llp)'lllenl .h.U
!.
.I risen. Surveys show that
February 29, 1972 fourteen million of the nation's
Dear Sir :
25 mUUon poor live In rural
I am writing in concern of the Meigs Junior High gym. It has areas. There are 30•000 small
always been closed on weekends. During this time It is usually rowns without water sy~
doing nothing more than collecting dust. This gym could be open and 130 rural communities
U&gt; basketball players to shoot on when the weather is bad or they without a family physician.
In remarks m~de on the
just plain want to shoot at a decent basket.
House floor prior to the
These (decent baskets) are few and far between in Meigs. I passage of this bill, I ~old D_IY
will tell of a personal experience: one Saturday my friends and I colleagues that thts bill .
(all basketball players at Meigs) tried to get in wask to shoot. "provi~es the common g~d
Sincethebackdoorwaslocked (asweretherest)weknockedso w achi~ve a mor~ balanced
someone would come to let us in. At first we were ignored but population growth.
finally an irate lady came w the door and told us to go home.
The Rw-al Development Act
When we inquired of the reason we were told not to bother her or offers real hope that. we c~
Mr . Hargraves (who was in the building at the time.) This and make greater strtdes In
other things have Jed me to write this letter . Everyone is always reversing these D_tlgratory
asking why Meigs never has a good basketball team. First, trends and encouragmg young
before they blame the coach or players they should look at the people to r~in ~rural areas
other schools who consistently turn out good teams. For instance by m~king tt. easter k&gt; obtain
Waverly and Athens. Both of these schools have gyms open· for ~anCial assistance for farshooting. Meigs has a nice Lola!, zero! This condition could be mmg and other rural
improved now for future years. One last item. One reason we development purposes.
were told we couldn't shoot was because we might damage the
The bill offers a positjve and
floor , a floor which has been used for numerous dances! The workable program to a88ist the
feeling at Middleport right now seems to be, "don't bother us and development of business, In·
du$'y, community services
we won't bother you."
and faclllties, and pollution
Concerned basketball player, Steven Walburn. abatement and control projects
. LUCKY 13
Senior Tom Arnholt of Van-

EVANS HONORED

g!fJb~!~~~~~~~i~~~ri~~s~~t s~~~~~g~~ k~~~!. ~h~e:

wisely retrained from creating
form number 13 when he was within nine rebounds of a another
new
super

:ndop~~j~~~e~n :~~h c~;~i~~

school career record, is the
th e bl ac k mag1c
. num ber ever Mld-Americ~n Conference
992-2284
Pomeroy, 0.
since. And after the first 13 basketball player of the week.
games of this season, his
Evans, a 6-foot-7 senior from
scoring average was 13.0.
Cuyahoga Falls, scored 25
~---...---OO.PM&lt;I~---------"'f points and pulled down 20
rebounds in Kent's 62-78 win
over Bowling Green last

w. Second

. ,. ,._______

Wednesday. He chipped in 16
points and 11 rebounds
Saturday night when the
.
Flashes lost to Virginia Tech.
Evans has scored 90 points
and ta~en 62 rebounds in his

When you know
it's for keeps
Ail your cherished moments
will be foreve r symbolized by .
your diamond engagemenl ri ng.
If the name, Keepsake is in
the ring and on !he tag , you are
assured of fine quality and
lasting satisfactiQn . The
engagement diamond is
flawless, of superb color. an'd
prec ise modern cut .

riNLAiriDI-. $ ISO
ji,LSO TO 210(1
W!DDING II IN ' H . H

LEVI TT 1 300

4L$0 TO It? !I

014MONO

R "I ' GS

1

Ed

ROBER~
~0EFLICH.
.
City !dltor

IUO

ALSO J \50 lO lt 75
WEODI'-IG RI"'G $0

Agriculture Committee
and
t'
f as
a represen 1a 1ve o a
congressional district which
ed
f th
has experienc many 0 e
problems common to all rw-al
areas of the country, I take
personal pride In having
ted f u1 tl
d

aspects of the legislation which

E

Y~~tU~ A

and. the Soil Conservation
Service.
As a member of the

r - - - - - - - - ,1

cH~msri~A~~:::~,tL

REGISTERED

Fanners Home Administration

:~::age
~f ".: ;:c:r
bill. ThoUgh there are some

The Daily Sentinel

K eepea.
.
k
e ·

=~~a~cr:,:;.S'~f:r::l~g!d.

operatln~ authorities of the

last four games.

DEVOTED TO THE
INTERESTOF

BANOUI:TTE 1 3!10
WI!D DIN G I'II NO 12!1

in small towns and the countryside. The House Agriculture
which put the bill together

·

Publ is hed da ily. except
Saturday by The Ohio Volley
Pu oUshinQ
Company
Court
St ., Pomeroy
, ",Oh111
io ,
Business
Phone
945169
92 -21. 56,
EditorieOff
I Pice
hone
992 -'
' m1
.
Second Ctass postage pa id at
Pomeroy. Ohio. .
Na I ion 1 I a d vBotl
e r I inelli
i s i n Q.
reprnentative
Gallagher . Inc .. 12 East A2nd
St ., New York Cily , New York .
Subscr i pt ion rates : De livered by carrier where
avo liable so cents per wook :
a.,·Motor Route wt.ere carrier
service · noo avo lloble ; One
month sus. By moil In Ohio
and
w, Vo .• One year ST1A.OO.
Six months S7 .25 .
hrtf
months u .so Sub~eripo;on
price
includes Sundoy TimeS ·
Stnt inet . ·
L..

I felt coul~ have been bn·
proved, all mall, the measure
shouldhaveabeneflcialeffect
on Southeastern Ohio if it is
enacted into law.
Some of the important
provisions of the bill are:
(1) Using a market value
appraisal m' place of nonnal
· 1s fo r FHAfann
va1ue apprmsa
ownership loans, s1·
f f
(2) Increases ze o ann.
operating
$50000 ioilns from $35,000 to
• ·
(3) Removes the $4 million
l debtednes
elling on
n ·
s c
community water and waate
disposalloanf
•
(4) Provides federal cost
sharing for water quality
management, land treatment
measures, water storage, and
pollution abatement.

·

.

0LEO 1 L8'

I
I
I

3g·

'
WITH
'

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COUPON

·

ONE PER COUPON
ONE COUPON PER PERSON
1
· EXpIRES 3...-~ 2 ,

I.
••
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7
M&amp;R FOODLINER

••••••

JELLO 6 fOR

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59

•

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/to

. ,WITH ~

·
ONE PER COUPON

I

1

• • • •. .

3 OZ. BOX

COUPON

ONE COUPON PER PERSON
EXPIRES 3472

I••

I
I
I
II
I
I

I
1
·
I

I

,., .,.

.

1
JI

2

••••11!1
DOWNEY $1' 29

I·
1 fABRIC
SQr'1TNER
I

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1
I
1

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II ,4.

6
9¢
CH EER
GIANT SIZE
ONE

Coliege fta~n,_
......."6"' I
,
I

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1
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II

UPON

·

PER CO
ONE COUPON PER PERSON

II

1

. ~XPIRES 3472

I
27
irt rarentheses: (Thirteenth . _ _ _
- - - - - - - - - - -. . .
week
T:•~auCialret22lt21-1l Pol~~ I! . ".~~~
¢ WITH 1I
2. Tennessee St. (2) ()8·11250
3. S.F . Austin (2) (2~·2)
211 I
CO
4. Louisiana Tech t11 (23·31194
UPON I
s. Eastern Mich. (21 (21 ·4)145
·
6. Bentley (25·1)
114
I
1. Alabama St. (2;.2)
93
25 OZ. BOX
I
8. Cheyney St. (20-3)
86
9. Evansville( (20-5)
69 1
ONE PER COUPON
I
10. Akron &lt;22-41
43
.

59

M&amp;R FOODLINER

B
' Iz

I)

38
37
36
30
28
1167

·I

ONE COUPON PER PERSON
EXPIRES 3472

I

1-

·

I

I
M&amp;R FOODLINER
..
••• . •••••••••••
·
1
~;: ~~~~o~mW2~lJ&gt; 11~~ 1. ~6~ NESCAFE
1g· I
20. Delta St. (18-31
.
1~
·
I
BAD BILL
·I . .
10 OZ.
JAR I
Bill Bridges, now of th,e
I
Philadelphia 76ers, set the . I
ONE PER COUPON
I.
NBA, record for most fouls
in one season when he was I
ONE COUPON PER PERSON
I
whistled for 368 personals I
during the 1967-66 season. .
1
I · '.
. EXPIRES 3472•
'

.
1

$

~

COFFEE

i
I

.
.-. SAUSAGE
m.UNTRY STYLE

...
=

t

...

if

..
•...

:=

lb.

49~

·~

IGA
CANNED

oio

~

t

........
·ot'

....

,."'z:

-..

lb.

MILK.
'

$

13 oz.

cans

ZESTEE

ZESTEE

BISCUITS

Strawberry
Preserves

SALAD
·DRESSING

4oz.

·~

8

...
j •

TOMATOES
Red
·Ripe

lb.
basket

ROME APPLES
WINESAP
41bo bag 43c

4 LB.
BAG

-'Jfl'?'"

18 oz.
•
Jar

jar

GRAP·E
JAM
111 oz. $

Green Goddess
or
Onion Dreiling

!ill'S

'

"

KRAn

8 OZ.
bois.

llftf./! . ·.
•• ~....d l.J~ CAN

I I"'

Morton House

$

· Al;t~INDS ~

MAGIC
BEEF
STEW BLEACH
~

24 oz.
can

•

33~

POT.ATOES

PEAK PINTO BEANS

~

WHITE
20 lb.

..

4~ 59~

CORN on the COB
FRESH
5·9~
'Pkg. of 5

STOKELY'S
J

GOLDEN YAMS
3 lb. 49~
HEAD LETTUCE
each

SWEEPSTAKES

VAN CAMP'S

Mackerel

PORK&amp;
BEANS

14 Ol.CANS

29 oz.
cans

BUFFET
SUPPERS
· TURKEY STEAK

DUCKEN NOQDLE

Solid
. Crisp

IGA

BUSH'S

BEAN POT Tablerite
BEANS Cheese Loa

$1 ~~..,19~ !! 69~

SLIM JIMS

DONALD DUCK

FRENCH

ORANGE
JUICE

FRIES

BANQUET
APPLE
PIES

2 lb. pkg.

19

20 oz.$
pkgs.

12 oz.

each

can

on~

~.&gt;HJ'.'

'~---------~-

HOUSE

~

32 oz.

''h .......

KRAn

2.49

MAXWELL

•..., ..... .... .o.f

5 lb. box

.lb.

PILLSBURY

'

\

FILLETS
lb.

·SHOPPING CENrEP
\'tiDDL!PORI,

BREADED COD or HADDOCK

'

;.,

...~
.....
..•
• •.•

COUNTRY WRED

Goose Liver

·

.
M&amp;R FOODLINER
~
·----------

M&amp;R

59.~KGn

79e

·(HOPPED
SIRLOIN

TALMADGE FARM

Braunschweiger

1

u .- c
(5) ""'"ates
new authority for
FHA rural development
planning grants and gralita for
hnolneA
and eCOnOmiC
T""
·deftlupment.
(I) Jncr!liel the eel""" on
... 18
·FHS water and waste dlspoul
construction project .,.80 ta
""
.rrom· 'lOt mllUon to '500
mW!on; and
(?)o---•--•~priortty•or
... ~wn:Aw·..,
,,
the location of Federal
••-'""tlln
1'111'"'
are••.
...w.uu
«&amp;
-

12 Ol PKG.

iE

-........

• . ,
'

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RING LIVER
PUDDING

9~

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i

~

LJQUI.D ·

FRENCH
CITY

CHUNK STYlE

a-

•~

I
COUPON
.
·, • I
22 OZ.
; 1

· FOCKE'S

BOLOGNA

OR MORE

.

NU• MA

1

Sam . Hous. St. (21-4)
Fla.Southern(21 ·3l
Capital 117·31
l&lt;entuckySt.(19·5l
Western Wash. (22-2)
W~l,lluammpettltone t(2116_-5sll

HONEYDALE

3 LBS.

.

I "\~~
~-:;
II~~
~

1-

11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
1167 .

•

GROUND BEEF

·

1I

~';,"t_:o;l~t ~~~~J'~~~eP,v~;~~

.

s·AVE· '1.2.9

Southern Division title ganie
ONE PER COUPON
slated for 8 p.m. Saturday
1.
night.
ONE COUPON PER PERSON
1
In the Northern Division
played at Mount Union College:
EXPIRES 347
Kenyon (5-7 and 10-14) meets
M&amp;R FOOD LINER
Heidelberg (:1-10 and 2-18) in ,
••
the Thursday evening opener.
The wimer of that game meets
~
64 OZ.
Wooster (9-,'land 18-7) at 7p.m.
WITH
Friday.
The second game at Mount
COUPON
Union Thursday evening finds .
the host Raiders (5-7 and 12-10)
r 11:.
going agslnst Oberlin (4-7 and
&amp;-ll), with the winner of that
ONE PER COUPON
\
one playing Baldwin-Wallace
ONE COUPON PER PERSON
(5-7 and 10-14) at 9p.m. Friday.
EXPIRES 3 ~ 72
The Northern Division title .
...game 1a a1ao set for 8 p.m. SatM&amp;R FOODLINER
· ~
w-dliy nl«bt with the divisional . . • • •
• • • • • • • • • • •
winners meeting Tuesday,
o1o..
.
'
March 7 at 8 p.m. at Mount
~ ~'::&gt;~
Union with the winner getting a
WITH
berth ln1the NCAA Great Lakes
~,j
·
Regional numament.
'
COUPON

· NEW 'vdRK IUPII..:.The
United Press International top
20 small college basketball

'

I .·

M&amp;R COUPONS
•••••••llililll••,
10 BOWL

~meetti'ridliy atf pJn:, with the

·'
&lt;·

FRESH LEAN

Announced

1 absence of basic conununity and 6-1&amp;). The winners of the
1 semces, communities have Cap-Otterbein and
1 eroded, businesses have Muskingum·Marietta contests

16 BEST PIECES
4 THIGHS
4 BREASTS
4

LB.

WITH

~·a~.

Right Reserved To Lim~ Quantities

BUCKET .CHICKEN·

·,

OC Playoff

will meet
regular
season
champ
Wittenberg
(10-2andJ48), Which crew abye, at 9 p.m.
Friday.
The second game Thursday
evening will pit Otterbein (9-3
and 16:-6) against Capital (&amp;-2
and 18-3). The Crusaders lost
the regular season title and the
No. 1 tournament seed' w_hen
they were upset 77-G9 Saturllay
night by Kenyon.
The third Thursday ·night
game wm pit Muskingum (6-G

I
I

1

· Easter

I

·I

..
SHARP SHARMAN
GboDBY, VERN
Bill Sharman, the Los Angeles L a k e r s' lint-year
Ve'rn Mikkelsen, the sturdy
coacb, stlll .hoi_!Is _\!le ~NB~ f~rward on George Mikan's
c ireer lreffirow percentage MlnneiiJrolis La k e r teams,
fouled out of more games
record,
.884 on
3,143 converslons
of 3,557
attempts.
DOlph than any player in NBA hisScbayes Is in second place tory, ·127. ·
at ·.844.
• • • • • • • •. .• • • • • • • • • • •

Pamng's'

. ·
Washm·gton
Report

$- Tbe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Po111eroy, 0., March 1,1972

I

'

I

PEACHES
29 oz.

CAN

ONLY

LIMIT 6 CANS .

�4 -The Dlaily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, d., March 1,1972

ChiUicothe, POrtsmoUth Advance In Sectional
Chillicothe and Portsmouth
advanced io Cla!is AAA Sectional play at Rio Grande
College TUesday night.
The Cavaliers, however,
were bard-pressed in disposing
of Coach Dick Taylor's fired-up
Logan Chieftains, 61-55. Portsmouth bombed Miami Trace,
76-63.
Chillicothe, now 10-9 on the
year, will take on Portsmouth,
now 11·8, in the second
semifinal galne at Lyn e
Cen~r. beginning at 8:30p.m.,
Friday.
In Friday's first Class AAA
semifinal game at Rio, Lancaster ( 10-9) will take on
Marietla (4-15) beginning at 7
p.m.
In last night's first contest,
: Logan stayed close on the heels

r-------~
,

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight&amp; Thursday
March 1·2
NOT OPEN
Friday &amp; Saturday
March 3-4
CHROME AND
HOT LEATHER
I Technicotorl
William Smith
Tony Young

THE HIRED HAND
tTechnicolor)

GP

Peter Fonda
Warren Qates

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

GP

of Chillicothe thr.oughout the
evening, but' the Cavaliers
pulled away in the final two
minutes to remain alive in
sectional play.
Logan finished its first yea r
under Coach Taylor with a 4-15

... • .

Big Mike l,ovenguth's 23 "" losers, F. Jones and Reno each
points led the PortsDio•th had 12.
Trojans wi"'- over outclassed
Box scores:
Miami Trace. Portsmouth led
Flnt Game
CLASS AA
19-11, 40-29, and 56-44 at the
CHlLUCOTH'i:. (61) ~ J. Columbiana 75 Brookfield 56
quartermarks.
Beverly, 9-6:24; Gauze 2.:1-7; - -St. 'fhomas -Aquinas 59 Can··"1 • ; GaUiff
1·--;:
• • _field
50 Local - 61 Soulhern
D. Jones ..had 13 for the Kuh ner .....
o..
Beaver
1
Ratzlaff 2-1-S; S. ._,verY 3Local 49
6; Blevins ~; Hill ~; Youngstown North 76 East
TOTALS 23-15-61.
·
Palesline 58
Coshocton 73 Cenlral
Ridgewood
LOGAN (55)- Norris 5-2-12; Steubenville
80 61BarCulbertson 3-1-7; Shaw 2-3-7; nesvllle 62
Pierce 4-3-8; Whitcraft 1-3-2; · Shadyside 80 Cadiz 68
play beyond the 1973 season.
evicted Bill Mazeroski from the Smith 3-+IO; Good ().1•1; Angle St. Clalrsv~~~e,:7A'J:'ldgeport 6~
· Clemente Needs 118
second base job, Riehle Hebner 3-2,11, TOTALS 21·13-55.
Portsmouth 76 Miami Trace 63
Clemente, who batted .341 is a fixture at third base and
By Quarters:
Akron Garfield 88 Coventry ~
last season, needs.ll6 hits this Manny Sanguillen is the catch- Chillicothe
15 18 15 1~1. · ~~/,';~~ ~1 ~:t":. ~
year to become the lith player er.
Logan
14 12 14 15-55 Warren Western Reserve 66
in baseball history to get 3,000
Virdon will choose five
Youngstown Ursuline 6~
hits. He also is edging in on starting pitchers from among
Second Game
Warren
Howland
70
Youngstown
Rayen
58
many club records.
Blass, Kison, Briles, Dock Ellis
PORTSMOUTH ( 76)
Cltss A
Willie Stargell had his most (the staff leader last year with Daehler 4-+12; Genlry 7+18; Rittman oi9'Mogadore 31
productive season in 1971, a 19-9 record), Bob Moose, Bob Hopkins 3-1-7; Lovenguth 9+ Smithville sa Dalton 49
leading the majors with 48 Johnson and Luke Walker, the 23; McGlone 1·2'4; Wllllamson
home runs and driving in 125 onlylefthandedcandidate.
6+12; TOTALS 30-11-76.
0
•
m'
runs, but there is no reason to
If Virdon is right-that
MIAMI TRACE (63) - D,
expect he will be a 40-homer- complacency does not set inJones 44-13; F. Jones 6+12;
plus man every year now that the Pirates figure to be as Reno 6-0-12; Goodson 3-2-8;
the Pirates are gone from strong' as they were last year. Braun 2-0-4; Cottrill 0-2-2;
l'orbes Field, with its ma,ssive
" Everyone realizes that aeaver 0-1·1; Gifford 1-3-2;
measurements.
somebody could beat them," Persinger 1-3-2. Stockwell 3-1-7.
The only spot in the lineup Virdon says. "I think they're TOTALS 26-7-63.
tha t is at all up for grabs is going to be competing."
By Quarters:
shortstop, where Jackie HerPortsmouth
19 21 16 20-76
nandez and Gene Alley probaMiami Trace II 18 15 19-63 'NEW CONCORD, C»&gt;io (UP!;
bly last
will year.
split the
work,
as they
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -1 - Pairlngs 1or the 13th am ual
did
Alley,
coming
orr 1
1 postofleason Ohio J:;onference
knee surgery, will be the I
II basketbillltolD'Ilament, which
shortstop if he can perform as
he did in 1966 and 1967 before
opens at two locations ThlD'S·
he was hurt.
1
=dli~gh~y ~~e ~nno:a~~
Al Oliver will be back in 1
center, between Stargell and II
ByMCill'.larcer&gt;nce II
Southern Division,
Clemente,hopinghecangetoff
which Includes five of the top
to a better start than he has in 1
' six finishers, Ohio Wesleyan, 6past years so he will not be
5 In the oc and 11·11 overall,
platooned. Oliver, a lefty, hit
Last week the House passed dltional capital Into small opens the action against host
.262 iast year and righty Gene and sent to the Senate the rowns under 5,500 population. Denison (4-8) and 7-11) at 5
Clines batted .308 in fewer Rural Development Act of 1972.
Rw-al America has been In p.m. The winner of that game
I,

Toumey Scores

Pirates Lineup Unchanged
' By IRA MILLER
UPI Sports Writer
BRAN DENTON ,Fla.( UP I )·
The Pittsburgh Pirates may not
sell many programs this year.
The faces will all be familia ~.
Pittsburgh 's only. move was
to make Bill Virdon the
manager when Danny Murtaugh retired for health reasons
and Virdon, in his quietly
confident way, symbolizes the
optimistic feeling around the
Pittsburgh camp.
Any assessment of the
Pirates na turally begins with
the hit~rs instead of the
pitchers, who elbowed into the
spotlight in the World Series
because of the great games
pitched by Steve Blass (twice),
Nelson Briles and Bruce Kison.
But the heart and soul of the
Pittsburgh team is its 37-yearold rightfielder, Roberto Clemente. Uke fine wine, Cle·
mente seems to get better with
age and, although he peaked in
the World Series, he already
has decided that he will not

fabulous fabrics
tor spring

mark.
J. Beverly paced the cavs ·
with 24 points. Randy Norris
and Gr~g Smith paced the
Chiefs with 12 and 10 points.
Chillicothe led 15-14, 33-26,
and 48-40 at the quariermarks.
•'

for

GasterJ

ga~:b~rtson Flrsi Baseman

In a nutshell, the blll is steady decline since the end of
designed
to improve the living World War II. While national
Bo!} ·Robertson , a slugger
d' ·
d
1
t
1 t' ha in-•sed by
con !liOnS an emp oymen popu a IOU S w ~
rapidly developing as a stand- opportunities in rural areas more than 50 million since 1945,
out fielder, is the first through an expanded federal rural population bas decreased
baseman ,DaveCashhasfirmly commitment to pump ad- . by 23 million persons during
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - . . , the same period. Rural
,
I residents, especially young
II
Let lets of opinion are welcomed. They should be less I people, have been migrating U&gt;
than 390 words long (or be subject to reduction by the editor)
W'ban areas in such masses
I and must be signed with the signee's address. Names may be that today 75 pet. of the
I withheld upon publication, however, on request. Letters nation's population occupy
1 should be In good taste, addressing issues, not personalltles. 1 only 2 pet. of the Janel. As
1
I people have moved out because

I

1
1
1

·
•. ••

j).~~fdith
•

:

.:::

large
Selection
TRIMS

Sewing
NOW!

Everything That's New . .. HERE
For Spring At The Fabric Shop
• Polyester Double Knits
Plains. Prints, Plaids, Stripes

• Polyester and Cotton Knits
• Kettle Cloth • Dotted Swiss
• Nylon Jersey Kni~ • Brushed Denim
e Whipped Creams • Embroidered Ginghams

~-.f_TH_E_FAB_~I_CS_HO_~_..f·
SINGER SALES &amp; SERVICE
McCALL'S &amp; SIMPLICITY PATTERNS
115

I

folded,"'\(! Wlelll(llp)'lllenl .h.U
!.
.I risen. Surveys show that
February 29, 1972 fourteen million of the nation's
Dear Sir :
25 mUUon poor live In rural
I am writing in concern of the Meigs Junior High gym. It has areas. There are 30•000 small
always been closed on weekends. During this time It is usually rowns without water sy~
doing nothing more than collecting dust. This gym could be open and 130 rural communities
U&gt; basketball players to shoot on when the weather is bad or they without a family physician.
In remarks m~de on the
just plain want to shoot at a decent basket.
House floor prior to the
These (decent baskets) are few and far between in Meigs. I passage of this bill, I ~old D_IY
will tell of a personal experience: one Saturday my friends and I colleagues that thts bill .
(all basketball players at Meigs) tried to get in wask to shoot. "provi~es the common g~d
Sincethebackdoorwaslocked (asweretherest)weknockedso w achi~ve a mor~ balanced
someone would come to let us in. At first we were ignored but population growth.
finally an irate lady came w the door and told us to go home.
The Rw-al Development Act
When we inquired of the reason we were told not to bother her or offers real hope that. we c~
Mr . Hargraves (who was in the building at the time.) This and make greater strtdes In
other things have Jed me to write this letter . Everyone is always reversing these D_tlgratory
asking why Meigs never has a good basketball team. First, trends and encouragmg young
before they blame the coach or players they should look at the people to r~in ~rural areas
other schools who consistently turn out good teams. For instance by m~king tt. easter k&gt; obtain
Waverly and Athens. Both of these schools have gyms open· for ~anCial assistance for farshooting. Meigs has a nice Lola!, zero! This condition could be mmg and other rural
improved now for future years. One last item. One reason we development purposes.
were told we couldn't shoot was because we might damage the
The bill offers a positjve and
floor , a floor which has been used for numerous dances! The workable program to a88ist the
feeling at Middleport right now seems to be, "don't bother us and development of business, In·
du$'y, community services
we won't bother you."
and faclllties, and pollution
Concerned basketball player, Steven Walburn. abatement and control projects
. LUCKY 13
Senior Tom Arnholt of Van-

EVANS HONORED

g!fJb~!~~~~~~~i~~~ri~~s~~t s~~~~~g~~ k~~~!. ~h~e:

wisely retrained from creating
form number 13 when he was within nine rebounds of a another
new
super

:ndop~~j~~~e~n :~~h c~;~i~~

school career record, is the
th e bl ac k mag1c
. num ber ever Mld-Americ~n Conference
992-2284
Pomeroy, 0.
since. And after the first 13 basketball player of the week.
games of this season, his
Evans, a 6-foot-7 senior from
scoring average was 13.0.
Cuyahoga Falls, scored 25
~---...---OO.PM&lt;I~---------"'f points and pulled down 20
rebounds in Kent's 62-78 win
over Bowling Green last

w. Second

. ,. ,._______

Wednesday. He chipped in 16
points and 11 rebounds
Saturday night when the
.
Flashes lost to Virginia Tech.
Evans has scored 90 points
and ta~en 62 rebounds in his

When you know
it's for keeps
Ail your cherished moments
will be foreve r symbolized by .
your diamond engagemenl ri ng.
If the name, Keepsake is in
the ring and on !he tag , you are
assured of fine quality and
lasting satisfactiQn . The
engagement diamond is
flawless, of superb color. an'd
prec ise modern cut .

riNLAiriDI-. $ ISO
ji,LSO TO 210(1
W!DDING II IN ' H . H

LEVI TT 1 300

4L$0 TO It? !I

014MONO

R "I ' GS

1

Ed

ROBER~
~0EFLICH.
.
City !dltor

IUO

ALSO J \50 lO lt 75
WEODI'-IG RI"'G $0

Agriculture Committee
and
t'
f as
a represen 1a 1ve o a
congressional district which
ed
f th
has experienc many 0 e
problems common to all rw-al
areas of the country, I take
personal pride In having
ted f u1 tl
d

aspects of the legislation which

E

Y~~tU~ A

and. the Soil Conservation
Service.
As a member of the

r - - - - - - - - ,1

cH~msri~A~~:::~,tL

REGISTERED

Fanners Home Administration

:~::age
~f ".: ;:c:r
bill. ThoUgh there are some

The Daily Sentinel

K eepea.
.
k
e ·

=~~a~cr:,:;.S'~f:r::l~g!d.

operatln~ authorities of the

last four games.

DEVOTED TO THE
INTERESTOF

BANOUI:TTE 1 3!10
WI!D DIN G I'II NO 12!1

in small towns and the countryside. The House Agriculture
which put the bill together

·

Publ is hed da ily. except
Saturday by The Ohio Volley
Pu oUshinQ
Company
Court
St ., Pomeroy
, ",Oh111
io ,
Business
Phone
945169
92 -21. 56,
EditorieOff
I Pice
hone
992 -'
' m1
.
Second Ctass postage pa id at
Pomeroy. Ohio. .
Na I ion 1 I a d vBotl
e r I inelli
i s i n Q.
reprnentative
Gallagher . Inc .. 12 East A2nd
St ., New York Cily , New York .
Subscr i pt ion rates : De livered by carrier where
avo liable so cents per wook :
a.,·Motor Route wt.ere carrier
service · noo avo lloble ; One
month sus. By moil In Ohio
and
w, Vo .• One year ST1A.OO.
Six months S7 .25 .
hrtf
months u .so Sub~eripo;on
price
includes Sundoy TimeS ·
Stnt inet . ·
L..

I felt coul~ have been bn·
proved, all mall, the measure
shouldhaveabeneflcialeffect
on Southeastern Ohio if it is
enacted into law.
Some of the important
provisions of the bill are:
(1) Using a market value
appraisal m' place of nonnal
· 1s fo r FHAfann
va1ue apprmsa
ownership loans, s1·
f f
(2) Increases ze o ann.
operating
$50000 ioilns from $35,000 to
• ·
(3) Removes the $4 million
l debtednes
elling on
n ·
s c
community water and waate
disposalloanf
•
(4) Provides federal cost
sharing for water quality
management, land treatment
measures, water storage, and
pollution abatement.

·

.

0LEO 1 L8'

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ONE PER COUPON
ONE COUPON PER PERSON
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EXPIRES 3472

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ONE COUPON PER PERSON

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27
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- - - - - - - - - - -. . .
week
T:•~auCialret22lt21-1l Pol~~ I! . ".~~~
¢ WITH 1I
2. Tennessee St. (2) ()8·11250
3. S.F . Austin (2) (2~·2)
211 I
CO
4. Louisiana Tech t11 (23·31194
UPON I
s. Eastern Mich. (21 (21 ·4)145
·
6. Bentley (25·1)
114
I
1. Alabama St. (2;.2)
93
25 OZ. BOX
I
8. Cheyney St. (20-3)
86
9. Evansville( (20-5)
69 1
ONE PER COUPON
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10. Akron &lt;22-41
43
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59

M&amp;R FOODLINER

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38
37
36
30
28
1167

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ONE COUPON PER PERSON
EXPIRES 3472

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..
••• . •••••••••••
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20. Delta St. (18-31
.
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BAD BILL
·I . .
10 OZ.
JAR I
Bill Bridges, now of th,e
I
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ONE PER COUPON
I.
NBA, record for most fouls
in one season when he was I
ONE COUPON PER PERSON
I
whistled for 368 personals I
during the 1967-66 season. .
1
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. EXPIRES 3472•
'

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1

$

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COFFEE

i
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.-. SAUSAGE
m.UNTRY STYLE

...
=

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•...

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lb.

49~

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CANNED

oio

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

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-..

lb.

MILK.
'

$

13 oz.

cans

ZESTEE

ZESTEE

BISCUITS

Strawberry
Preserves

SALAD
·DRESSING

4oz.

·~

8

...
j •

TOMATOES
Red
·Ripe

lb.
basket

ROME APPLES
WINESAP
41bo bag 43c

4 LB.
BAG

-'Jfl'?'"

18 oz.
•
Jar

jar

GRAP·E
JAM
111 oz. $

Green Goddess
or
Onion Dreiling

!ill'S

'

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KRAn

8 OZ.
bois.

llftf./! . ·.
•• ~....d l.J~ CAN

I I"'

Morton House

$

· Al;t~INDS ~

MAGIC
BEEF
STEW BLEACH
~

24 oz.
can

•

33~

POT.ATOES

PEAK PINTO BEANS

~

WHITE
20 lb.

..

4~ 59~

CORN on the COB
FRESH
5·9~
'Pkg. of 5

STOKELY'S
J

GOLDEN YAMS
3 lb. 49~
HEAD LETTUCE
each

SWEEPSTAKES

VAN CAMP'S

Mackerel

PORK&amp;
BEANS

14 Ol.CANS

29 oz.
cans

BUFFET
SUPPERS
· TURKEY STEAK

DUCKEN NOQDLE

Solid
. Crisp

IGA

BUSH'S

BEAN POT Tablerite
BEANS Cheese Loa

$1 ~~..,19~ !! 69~

SLIM JIMS

DONALD DUCK

FRENCH

ORANGE
JUICE

FRIES

BANQUET
APPLE
PIES

2 lb. pkg.

19

20 oz.$
pkgs.

12 oz.

each

can

on~

~.&gt;HJ'.'

'~---------~-

HOUSE

~

32 oz.

''h .......

KRAn

2.49

MAXWELL

•..., ..... .... .o.f

5 lb. box

.lb.

PILLSBURY

'

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FILLETS
lb.

·SHOPPING CENrEP
\'tiDDL!PORI,

BREADED COD or HADDOCK

'

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...~
.....
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• •.•

COUNTRY WRED

Goose Liver

·

.
M&amp;R FOODLINER
~
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M&amp;R

59.~KGn

79e

·(HOPPED
SIRLOIN

TALMADGE FARM

Braunschweiger

1

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(5) ""'"ates
new authority for
FHA rural development
planning grants and gralita for
hnolneA
and eCOnOmiC
T""
·deftlupment.
(I) Jncr!liel the eel""" on
... 18
·FHS water and waste dlspoul
construction project .,.80 ta
""
.rrom· 'lOt mllUon to '500
mW!on; and
(?)o---•--•~priortty•or
... ~wn:Aw·..,
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the location of Federal
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PUDDING

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CITY

CHUNK STYlE

a-

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COUPON
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22 OZ.
; 1

· FOCKE'S

BOLOGNA

OR MORE

.

NU• MA

1

Sam . Hous. St. (21-4)
Fla.Southern(21 ·3l
Capital 117·31
l&lt;entuckySt.(19·5l
Western Wash. (22-2)
W~l,lluammpettltone t(2116_-5sll

HONEYDALE

3 LBS.

.

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12.
13.
14.
15.
1167 .

•

GROUND BEEF

·

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.

s·AVE· '1.2.9

Southern Division title ganie
ONE PER COUPON
slated for 8 p.m. Saturday
1.
night.
ONE COUPON PER PERSON
1
In the Northern Division
played at Mount Union College:
EXPIRES 347
Kenyon (5-7 and 10-14) meets
M&amp;R FOOD LINER
Heidelberg (:1-10 and 2-18) in ,
••
the Thursday evening opener.
The wimer of that game meets
~
64 OZ.
Wooster (9-,'land 18-7) at 7p.m.
WITH
Friday.
The second game at Mount
COUPON
Union Thursday evening finds .
the host Raiders (5-7 and 12-10)
r 11:.
going agslnst Oberlin (4-7 and
&amp;-ll), with the winner of that
ONE PER COUPON
\
one playing Baldwin-Wallace
ONE COUPON PER PERSON
(5-7 and 10-14) at 9p.m. Friday.
EXPIRES 3 ~ 72
The Northern Division title .
...game 1a a1ao set for 8 p.m. SatM&amp;R FOODLINER
· ~
w-dliy nl«bt with the divisional . . • • •
• • • • • • • • • • •
winners meeting Tuesday,
o1o..
.
'
March 7 at 8 p.m. at Mount
~ ~'::&gt;~
Union with the winner getting a
WITH
berth ln1the NCAA Great Lakes
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·'
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FRESH LEAN

Announced

1 absence of basic conununity and 6-1&amp;). The winners of the
1 semces, communities have Cap-Otterbein and
1 eroded, businesses have Muskingum·Marietta contests

16 BEST PIECES
4 THIGHS
4 BREASTS
4

LB.

WITH

~·a~.

Right Reserved To Lim~ Quantities

BUCKET .CHICKEN·

·,

OC Playoff

will meet
regular
season
champ
Wittenberg
(10-2andJ48), Which crew abye, at 9 p.m.
Friday.
The second game Thursday
evening will pit Otterbein (9-3
and 16:-6) against Capital (&amp;-2
and 18-3). The Crusaders lost
the regular season title and the
No. 1 tournament seed' w_hen
they were upset 77-G9 Saturllay
night by Kenyon.
The third Thursday ·night
game wm pit Muskingum (6-G

I
I

1

· Easter

I

·I

..
SHARP SHARMAN
GboDBY, VERN
Bill Sharman, the Los Angeles L a k e r s' lint-year
Ve'rn Mikkelsen, the sturdy
coacb, stlll .hoi_!Is _\!le ~NB~ f~rward on George Mikan's
c ireer lreffirow percentage MlnneiiJrolis La k e r teams,
fouled out of more games
record,
.884 on
3,143 converslons
of 3,557
attempts.
DOlph than any player in NBA hisScbayes Is in second place tory, ·127. ·
at ·.844.
• • • • • • • •. .• • • • • • • • • • •

Pamng's'

. ·
Washm·gton
Report

$- Tbe Dally Sentinel, Mlddleport-Po111eroy, 0., March 1,1972

I

'

I

PEACHES
29 oz.

CAN

ONLY

LIMIT 6 CANS .

�•
f·

I

-The Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March I, 1971!

Dtsenchanted In V"zsit to Disney ·world

Gilligan Lists '72 Priorities
vow that no new taxes would be governor's proposed merger of Jo earmark an ·$18 million
needed for the rest of the the department.. of Develop- ·: 'Windfall from additional taxes
biennium. He also said he ment and Urban Mfairs.
stocks and hoods for local
would not ask, during this
Meatal
Healih
1ad gowemment.
legislative sellsion, for support' Correcttoas - Split the
-Name a · commission on
of general obligation bQnd Department of Mental Hygiene employment and economic deissues for new facilities .
and Corrections Into sepatate welopment to design a long"[ have not come to you ask- cabinet-level agencies to range economic strategy for
ing for more money," the gov- upgrade treatment of the Ohio.
ernor said. "While I do not mentally ill and retarded, and
-Continue with programs to
deny that there are many to "turn Ohio's cOrrectional educate potential drug UBef8,
obvious needs throqgbout the institutions from schools for treat drug dependents 8nd pun;
state for new buildings and crime into true institutions of ish drug pusherS.
facilities, and for new services, rehabilitation." cr.eate a
-Propose a no-fault auto in1 firmly believe that we must compensation commission for surance bill.
getouthouseinorderbeforewe crime victims, and act on the
The governor said Ohioans
think of proposing any new gove rnor 's soon-to-be- must be made aware of the
treme.''
spending of any kind ."
submitted recommendations problems and solutions, as well
Collins Impassive
To help him get the house in on probation and parole; work as the accompllshments and
The governor's remarks on order, Gilligan asked the legis- release, furloughs
and advancements, of state
strip mining drew the most lature to act in these areas: . education for inmates.
goveniment.
strenuous applause of the
Envir6nmental Protection Housing-Adopt the recom"Too many Ohioans, I am
evening from Democratic Create a state Environmental mendations of the governor's .afraid believe that the whole of
"turned the corner" in revers- lawmakers, administration Protection Department to Commission on Housing and · last year was devoted to an
ing the bleak image of Ohio he cabinet and staff members, coordinate environmental Community Development, to intermin~le and fruitless
painted in his initial "State of and administration employes programs and spending, and provide additional low and legislative debate .which accomplished nothing," Gilligan
the State" message he de- packing the House galleries. adopt the House version of a ffiggefate-4ncome housing.
Republicans for the most part strip mine control bill no~·v-Ethlcs'--Adoptacodeofethlcs said. "They should know that
livered one year ago.
He also praised the General remained silenbSen. Oakley C. the Senate. "That bill mus ot for elected 81!d appointed state this General Assembly
Assembly for accomplishing Collins, R-lronton, a strip mine be weakened or allowe to officials and employes; and act achieved some extremely
on recommendations to im- significant breakthroughs.
some "extremely significant operator discontent with the !lie," the governor said:-\
Goveromeolal Reorgan- prove the structure and opera"They should know, for in·
breakthroughs" last year, provisions of the bill, sat imstance that ·the tax program
while many Ohioans were passively in a back row seat izallpo :- Pass legislation lion of the legislature.
authorizing
the
governor,
For
his
part,
the
governor
finally approved was one of the
1111d
stared
at
his
text
of
the
under the mistaken impreSsion
it was a d().llothing session. · speech.
subject
to
legislative ssid he would :
great legislative achievements
ratification,
to
make
structural
-Appoint
a
task
fo~ce
of
loof
this century, In that it ended
The
governor
was
inOff-The-Cuff
•
While Gilligan did not terrupted 28 times by applause changes in the administrative cal government experts to the steady and inevitable
mention Hatch by name, it was during his speech. Most of lt branch. Adopt a bill setting up make recommendations for escalation of properly and
Hatch who last weekend ssid if was
from
Democrats. a state Department of Trans· simplifying and streamlining sales taxes and geared revenue
the strong strip mine bill Republicans clapped, and one portation to govern all modes local government.
measures for the first time to
adopted unanimously by the shouted "Right on!" when the of transportation. RatifY the - Ask the General Assembly ability to pay."
House were to clear the Senate, governor said he was not
' his firm would be forced out of asking for more money.
Gilligan said Ohio's governbusiness in Ohio.
The governor was urging ment services were near the
passage of the House version bottom of the barrel when he
COLUMBUS (UP!) -A bill
Also, impact-resistant lenses ing that protective devices be
when he suddenly swerved took office last year.
requiring
eye
protec
tl
ve
devices
would
be required in all eye- furnished free of charge. It
from his prepared text with
N'o Money Request
for certain !K:hool activities and glasses bY,. Dec. 31 and in all was defeated 50-33.
these off-the-cuff remarks:
"! am convinced we have safety lenses in all eyeglasses sunglasses a year later.
Rep.Phale D. Hale,O.Colum"! urge the members of the turned the corner," he said,
bus,
attempted to eliminate the
and
sunglasses
was
passed
73The
eye
protective
devices
Senate to resist and reject the praising . the legislature for
brazen and brutal attempt by "landmark achievement in 10 by the Ohio House Tuesday, cost about $1.50 per pupil, plus requirement and provide only
as legislators returned from a sales tax, and are now avail- that the safety devices be made
the president of a giant coal school financing "
and six-week recess.
able on a voluntary basis to avallable,astheyarenow. That
company to blackmail this clearance of the record f7.7
Both
the
House
and
Senate
students
by boards of educa- amendment was turned back
governlnent by threatening the billion tax and budget bill lives and livelihoods of hun- "the most important single returned today for 1:30 p.m. ses- tion. Under the bill, schools 48-34.
could rent them to students and The bill, .authored by Sen.
dreds of miners and their piece of legislation adopted in sions.
bill , adopted unamiously teachers, or sell them at cost. Clara E. Weisenborn, R-Day:
families.
the state of Ohio in this ' byThe
the Senate last August, was
Rep. Thomas Fries, D- ton ; sets a maximum fine of
generation ."
re turned to the Senate for con- Dayton, said education 1500 for any person convicted
The
governor
said
his
efficiecurrence
in amendments.
costs
were
rocketing of distributing, selling or deWED. ONLY
cy program to get "more .bang
out
of
proportion"
and livering glasses or sunglasses
for the buck " is underway in
The measure would require
the administrative branch and the eye protective devices for offered an amendmentstipulat- not fitted with safety lenses.
is already producing results. ~II pupils, teachers and visi.tors
He said his administration is m classrooms ~here a.ctivllles
adv,artiiiDI! ~"Ohio ls anice ;:Iii are conducted wtthpossl~l~,~",{l­
place io' tafie a business, and ~ ger to eyes. It would liecome
.
'
we intend to keep it that way. effecltve July 31.
.
And we intend to make Ohio
Chemistry and phys1cs !aboFOOTLONG HOTDOGS even more _ a nice place to ratones, vocatiOnal education
raise a family, as well. "
classes and wood and metal
with Sauce 35'
Gilligan repeated an earlier sho.ps would be affected by the
legtsla!Jon.
other Republicans were not
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Demo·
crats and Republicans engaged much more charitable about
in somewhat of an applause Gilligan's speech, criticizing it
contest Tuesday evening as more for what it left out than
Gov. John J. Gilligan delivered what it contained.
"! am disappointed he had
·an annual report to the General
not one word to say about welAssembly.
fare
reform or property tax
Legislative Democrats
joined an enthusiastic group of relief," ssid House Speaker
Gilligan administration of- Olarles F. Kurfess, R-Bowling
ficials and employes cranuned Green. "! think this · reflects
into the House chamber in that this administration is not
·applauding the governor's list · one bit concerned about these
of accomplishments and things."
Gilligan, however, ticked off
proposed programs.
a
host of other priority items
. The outnumbered
Republicans led the applause for this year, including governtwice - when Gilligan said he . mental reorganization, enwas not asking for more money vironmental protection and
or Increased taxes. The rest of transportation .
"It was a comprehensive
the time, most of them sat
speech," said House Minority
silent.
The governor was In- Leader A.G. Lanclone,
terrupted 28 times by applause
in
contrast with hia "State of
USDA CHOICE
the State" message one year
ago, when he was cheered only
twice.
''The governor did learn one
thing from the 1968 Democratic
National Convention," said
Rep. Keith McNamara, ItColumbus. "He learned how to
pack the galleries with public
employes a Ia Mayor (Richard
Daley. I hope they were not
drawing overtime pay."
COLUMBUS (UPf) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan has outlined
his aspirations for priority legislation this year in the ·areas of
envir.onmental ·protection,
governmental reorganization
and transportation.
The governor's 4().rninute address to the General Assembly
Tuesday evening was punctuated by a verbal blast at an
eastern Ohio coal company
president seeking to change the
provisions of a strict strip mine
control bill heralded by con.servationists as close to ideal.
Gilligan's denunciation of
Ralph W. Hatch, president of
the Hanna Coal Co., furnished
the sparks in an otherwise routine assessment of last year's
work and objectives for 1972.
The governor said Ohio has

"His complaints against the
bill are dishonest. His threats
against the orderly process of
goverrunent and against the
pec\ple of this state are an
outrage that I, for one, do not
propose to tolerate or condone.
"To say that the legislation
which passed the House unanimously is a threat to the coal
industry Qf eastern Ohio is a
direct affront to every single
member ol this House. At this
Jaie hour, for him to surface
with arguments like that and
with threats to his own employes is reprehensible in the ex-

on

..

Eye Protection Approved

. BOB'S
THICK SHAKE

n.nce

THE MGM .ORDER OF 111E A.t\ROW
Team
·)lmortned at th~ blue imd gold baiiQtlet o,f Ml~ Cub
SCout Pack~. Bill Knight &lt;i Point Pleasanl is advllor of the
team which Is composed of Tom Reed; ,drimimer; Edward,
David and Kenneth Mitchell, Lanisvllle, Billy and John ·
Knight and Dan Heslap, Point Pleasant, and Fred Fraley,

..1----·
·
-----·---MENS LONG SLEEVE
.
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

DRESS SPORT

165AttendedCub
Blue-Gold Event

Values

ro

FOR
·2.69 EA.

Perfe~t quality . Permanent press
fancy and cotton blends in solids
and multi ·stripes . Tailored with
long point spread collar, ·long
sleeves with 2 button cuffs and
tape red body . Choice of colors in
assorted sizes. S· M· L·XL
.
. . . . .MEN'S SECOND FLO.O~-- ~----

1
I

-LOW, LOW PRICE!!-

LADIES' FASHION

:Republieans·· W"".L"

ROUND USDA cHoiCE
STEAK ••••••...••••••• ~~

BEEF

LEAN
lb.

SMALL SIZE

BORDEN.'S

EGGS

3 OuL'l

89$

ICE CREAM
gal.

99e

FIRST aJTS
PORK CHOPS
lb.

79$

FAVORITE
BREAD

s::~e:s '1

8('0ughton's Grade A

MILK

1.05
SALT FI.SH
gal.

(HERRING)

\lb. 75~

' SAVE 66'. WHEN vou sur A
10 oz,. Jar of
INSTANT FOLGER'S
COFFEE CRYSTAlS

• Best New Colors

Officials said 150 persons
were sUil missing today and
that 4,000 of the valley's 4,952
residents were homeless. Red
Cross emergency shelters
housed 640 of the homeless,
while others move.d in tem·
pOrarlly with relatives ·or '·
·friends .
,.

.I

WHITE &amp;
COLORS

--------------~---------------------REG.

79'

Town and Country
Quick Dry

SPRAY
PAINT
• Interior-Exterior

·1

The
way
you want
to look
when you're
feeling easy,
moving fast.

e NAVY
e BlACK

Chapman's
SHOES
Main Street
POMEROY

I

.

II SHOES
~
00
1•
I•
• Clearance

$

Famous Brand

ILADIES SHOES
1. • Values to '11.99
1 • Clearance Group

·

.

SAVE 25c

.00
pr.

······---.-.--------·-·····1

Chuck Steaks

AND,,

..

UP •

•

l

Phone 992-2556
At the End of Pomeroy Bridge

• •

• lb.89c

Pork Chops
BONELESS s..OKED

Charcoal Steaks . lb. 5)39 Cottage Butts
CUT FROM CHUCK

• •

SWIFT'S PRE.. lU .. VACUU .. PACK

C

-

~et69c

Strawberries •

Good Thru March 4th. At Your
.Friendly A&amp;P Food

SUNKIST CALIFORNIA

10':.~69•

Navel Oranges

INDIAN RIVER
Grapefrult"(HITE sEEDLEss

4~:"6

9
•

of{:oz.

!.OZ. AHTI·PERSPIRANT

Good Thru Merch 4th. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

•'

.

::;
:
:
•
:
:
~
:
:
:,
"
:
:
:
•
:
::·
:,
•
...

...•""

Fa-u.s.w.

:eti~"

ONE PEl FAMILY

TROPICANA-3 DELICIOUS FLAVORS

VALUABLE COUPON

Fruit Drink

Crocker 't1i: .Mixes
5 00 ~~W
pkgs.

3 1

l!lldTelaDie&amp;

During the non·snow off season the U.S. Women's
Alpine Ski Team memben go on the "Ski Team" diet
to lose 20 pounds in two . weeks. ~at'~ right ~ 20
pounds in 14 days! The bas1s of the d1et IS chemtcal
food ,. tion and was devised bl' a famous Colorado
phyr o especially for the U.S. Ski Team. Normal
ene• . ~ .J maintained (very important!) while reduc·
ins .~,. u keep "full" - no starvation-because the diet
is cie. ,ned that way! It's a diet that is easy IQ follow
whet' ,er you work, travel OJ'lltay at home.
.
.
Tt.is·is honestly a fantastically successful d1et. If 11
weren't the U.S. Women's Ski Team wouldn't be permitted 'to use it! Ri~ht? So, give you~lf the Sl!me
break the U.S. Ski 1 ~;am pets. Lose wetaht the sctentific proven way.' Even i you've tried all the other
diet; you owe it to yourself to try the U.S. Women's
Ski Team Diet. That is, if you really do want to lose
20 pounds in two weeks. Order today, Tear this out
as a reminder.
.
.
Send only $2.00 ($ 2. 25 for Rush Service)-2cash.is
' o.K. - to: Ski Team Diet, P.O. Box 15493, San
Qleao Calif. 9211 S. Don't order unle15 you expect
·to 1oie 20 l'_ounds in two weeks! Because that's
what the Ski Team Diet will do!
.

•
COUPON
Good Thru March 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Storo
ONE PER FAMILY

~bottles
•
• •

REGULAR

I

I

I

I

BLUE RIBBON HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS!

Prell Liquid Shampoo
16-oz.
bottle

Crest Toothpaste

$149

61f4•0L7
.
tube

Marvel Ice Cream

~~~~

ALL
FLAVORS

COUPO~t

Good Thr~erch 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

'.

14·••·99c
•••

WITH
THIS
COUPON

Good Thru March 41h. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

VALUAIIU COUPO!'I

Total Cereal

Pll FAMILY .

9c

Lysol Spray Disinfectant

ONE PEl fAMILY

. VALUAILI COUPON

~N~

•

1•1·

ONE Pll fAMILY

.

•

VACUUM PACK COFFEE

Eight O'Clock Coffee . . 3.'!a $1,99

s~~44c

'

Scott Towels

.

1

WITH
THIS
COUPON
.Good Thru Ma rch 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

-ox

VALUABLE COUPON

lb. $189
Blue Bonnet Marg. • 31bs.s1oo Chase &amp;Sanborn
2cnn
JANE PARKER
ANN PAGE
.,
....
ggc
4
While Bread
Ketchup ••••• , 3::~s1oo

Medal Flour .

-

ONE PER fAMILY

A 32oz.$}00

VALUAILE COUPON .

. . . .33c

WITH
THIS
COUPON
Thru Merch 4th. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

Whole Kernel Corn • • •4~·88c
Cut Green Beans • • • •4=88c
Fruit ·cocktail . • • • • 4~sro

ONE PEl fAMILY

WITH
THIS

Sweet Corn • • 5.... 59c

lb.

••
••'
•
•
'

YJ~~~~;HASE

ON
OF A·IO.OZ. JAR

FRESH

bag

LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!
'

Save 4t

Cooking Onions. 3.!,29c

WHITE
POTATOES
s 89

ONE PER FAMILY

.

YOU SAVE

Good Thru Ma rch 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

~·~ ONE PEl FAMILY

YWOW

U.S. NO. 1, SIZE A ALL PURPOSE

WITH
THIS
bottle
COUPON
Good Thru March 4th. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Slore ·

VE 15c

$63'WITH
THIS
. COUPON

Good Th'" Moreh 4th. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

Vel Liquid Detergent

39

)b,

can

Folger's Instant CoHee

VALUAILI COUPON

32-oz.

8

ONE PIR 'AMILY

Ground Chuck ... lb.89c Sliced Bacon ••

~~~ Good Thru Merch 4th. At
~
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store
. ONE PER FAMILY

to FREE

• lb.99•

••b. 79c
Skinless Wieners .....

• lb. SJ39

! .lb. PKG. OR LA.RGER

OUNCE
ION US
IOlTLE

• •

SWIFrS PREMIUM

Cube Steaks
WITH
THIS
COUPON

• lb.89•

Fryer Quarters . , lb.38c

• •

BONELESS

ONE PER fAMILY

-

Jl,4-lb.
Avr. •

LEG OR BREAST

Swiss Steaks

Good Thru March 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Stor.

lb.

QUARTERED LOIN

ROUND lONE SHOULDER

Secret Deodoran*

•

1---~---------------------~-----~--1 Values to '11e99

DAIRY VALLEY

18-lb.

WELL TRIMMED

: ~--------~~---------,

:
':
:

Famous Brand

I

HRKfi¥S

••

~

Big Group

NOW OPEN DAILY

Foliage c.dens

:

•

Joe Derouin spent the week
end with relatives at Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Mrs. Erma Wilson called on
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Barnitz at
Pomeroy Friday.

U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED GRADE "A"

s3.00 up
Dudley's Florist

2 :s·$1 ·00

• 13 oz. can
• Reg. 79' Can

i ladies Famous-Brand

Returning

communities.

for

~---------------------~
I
Values To 58.99
. · .·

Refugees
MAN, W. Va. (UP!)
Weary refu ge~s in West
VIrginia's worst•flood disaster
returned to their shattered
valley in increasing numbers
today, determined to rebuild
their homes and to oppose any
plans to replace a crumbled
coal waste dam.
At least 71 residents of
Buffalo Creek Valley, most or'
theHJ coal miners and tl&gt;eir
families died S{lturd§y when a
mile-long waste water
reservoir burst and sent a 30foot wall of slime gushing
through 14 Appalachian mining

IN

• Dries in Minutes

We have all sorts of sandwiches, soft
drinks &amp; dairy desserts.

I

Eradication

.oo

lb.1.29

GROUND
CHUCK

To Shorten

Perfect quality. Sleeveless or long sleeve
sty les with slim or fu ll skirts. Assorted
fabric s in all over prints, sol.ids or so lid
lops and print ski rt . Some 2 piece styles.
Broke n siles .
READY TO WEAR DEPT.

.19

SIRLOIN
STEAK

GROUND

:: ·U
. 'SDA p•l---

VALUES
TO 12100

BETTER EATING FOR LESS!

Approximately 165 cub gold arrow point, webelos book
scouts, parents, scouting of- and his colors for entering into
ficials and guests attended the the webelos den ; Tony Scott
o annual blue and gold ,banquet and Randy Batey, wolf patch
of Middleport Cub Scout Pack and gold arrow point; Ray
245 Thursday night at the Stewart, gold arrow point;
American Legion hall in Bobby Fox, two year service
. Middleport.
pin, wolf patch and bear book;
Highlighting the event was and Greg Bush, bobcat pin.
the presentation of awards, a Webelos awards presented
performance of the Order of by Milford Hysell went to ·
the Arrow dance te8m, and a Danny Smith, engineer and
talk by Willlam Knight, Sr., citizenship badge; David·
MGM !llstrict hfflclal.
Hysell, spo~tsman activity
S. T. Smith, retiring cub- badge; Jeff Lauderll)ill,
master, extended a welcome craftsman badge.
preceding the dinner served by Knight spoke on the !K:Outing
Mrs. Slanley Doss, chairman, program and its role in youth
Mrs •.S.T. Smith, Mrs. Marion development before in·
Francis, Miss Debbie Mulford, troducing the Order of .the
Miss Tanuny Tyree, and Miss Arrow dance team. Fred
Brenessa Hood. .
Fraley described for the group
·' Others who assisted In the costuming worn by the
·Plailning the dinner were Mrs. dance team members who
Frances Whittington, Mrs . . were Tom Reed, Pomeroy,
· Uoda Lane, Mrs. Jean Kelly, drummer, and dancers, Ed' and Mrs. Milford Hysell.
ward, David and Kenneth
· Smith Introduced new Mitchell of Langsville, Billy
conunlttee members Including and John Knight and Dan
fred Scott, awards chairman; Heslop of Point Pleasant, and
Marl.on Francis, registration ; Fred Fraley of Gallipolis.
· Mrs . Charles K. . Byer, Heslop is chapter chief.
, treasurer, and Stanley ·Doss
Presented and awarded
the new cubmaster.
certificates of appreciation
He presented awards to were Paul Haptonstall for
: Ricky Hall, Timmy Justis, and Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
: Randy Hall, bobcat pins; Mark sponsor of the pack; Jim
....:l'Y ,lyear.
plp!l"da , Roach,,,, instlll!tion.al
~
··'
representative; Knight, MGM
district scouting · official and
.UUUl
advisor of the Order of the
'
Arrow Dance team; Mrs.
Milford Hysell and Mrs. Jean
Thomas, past den leaders.
Certificates will also be
presented to Edison Baker,
chairman of the SOAR Project,
Robert Parker, Marshall
WASHINGTON (UP!)_ The McMillian, and Mrs. Linda
: Agriculture Department plans Humphrey, who have been
· to step up a cooperative bru- active in pack work, and
: cellosis eradication campaign representatives of The Dally
• in hopes of eliminating the live- Sentinel,
The
Athens
: stock disease from the United Messenger, and WMPO railio.
: States by 1975, officials ssid toRecognized at the banquet
·. were Mrs . Della Stahl,
•• day.·
: Al present rates the disease president of the American
: wiD not be er~dlcated until Legion Auxiliary , Feeney' 1980, a spokesman noted. But Bennett Post 128; Mrs. Golda
: officials . said Agriculture Mourning, secretary, "'"' ''rs.
: Secretary 'Earl L. Butz has Helen Kennedy , f ;
"i&lt;:e
t given his blessing to a stepped· president of the unit
: up ~ort which had been enThe flag ceremon• tv open
: dorsed ea~ller . by state . the banquet was le tiy 'I.e
• agriculture departments and · webelos with Mark J!. .n&gt;l ""d
: the U.S. Animal Health Danny Smith as flag uca1 ct·s.
~ Association.
Hysell is the leader. Tom Kelly
: Butz said great effort.. by the gave the prayer.
: livestock Industry will be need·
: ed to wipe out the disease
LOVELY
• which causes millions of
: dollars In livestock. losses on
: top of the $40 million now spent
: ·annually on eradication·work.
Greenhouse Fresh
: When the disease is eliminated
: In animals the source of human
~ lrucellosia - also called un·
: dulant fever - will be gone,
: Butz noted.
Serving: Gallipolis,
: So far brucelloSis has been
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0 .
• eradicated in cattle in 24 states
•
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va •
• and from swine in five states.

WE GIVE YOU
ROMPT SERVICE

News, Events
NEW CUBMASTER -Stanley Doss of Middleport, Route 1, center, is the new cubmaster
of Middleport cUb Scout Pack 245. His appointmentwasannouncedat the annual Blue and Gold
Banquet last week. Pictured with him are Mrs. Frances Whittington, assista~t banquet
chairman, her son, Leslie, and Mrs. Doss, banquet chairman and son, Ke!th,left to right.

into a·clinic,at Florence, S.C.
at 10 a.m.· and lit 2 p.m. s~
walked out of the clinic wiura
full set of new teeth. The cost
she said was only $40.
MASON GRADE School
Parent Teacher's meeting will
resume on March 13.

.Bring The:·
Family

Apple Grove

. GaJllpolls.

Silent, Mo~tly

2 lb.

POMEROY OHIO

·MAIN STREET

The Riffles were former
residents of Mason .
'
COULD HARDLY believe
the story of a Clifton lady told
about her new teeth. But
kJlowing the story teller personally , 1 know she :tells only
the truth. She said she went

BV ALMA MARSHALL
: NEW HAVEN - Mr. and
Mrs . Philip Smith and
daughter, Stephanie, went lu
Florida, mainly for one purpose, to visit Disney World.
Well,. their anticipation to a
World of Fun was short lived.
Disney World they found was
too crowded and they had to
wait in line for an hour and ten
minutes for a hamburger. The
Smiths enjoyed their visit with
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Riffle and ·
family, at New Port Richie.

)
t')

.

f~'}ji."rrt~ffill~~jJlj

'!&gt;~gat
carton

59C

WITH
THIS
COUPON
Good Thru March 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Storo
.

ONE PER

FAMILY ~

.

·· Cheer Detergent
Giant
;3·lb.
l •DL

69'

WITH
THIS
f. 1111
COUPON
' 't3ood Thr~ Morch 41h. At'Yo•r •
. Fri~ndly A&amp;N~od Store
ONI PER fAMILY ·

.

�•
f·

I

-The Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March I, 1971!

Dtsenchanted In V"zsit to Disney ·world

Gilligan Lists '72 Priorities
vow that no new taxes would be governor's proposed merger of Jo earmark an ·$18 million
needed for the rest of the the department.. of Develop- ·: 'Windfall from additional taxes
biennium. He also said he ment and Urban Mfairs.
stocks and hoods for local
would not ask, during this
Meatal
Healih
1ad gowemment.
legislative sellsion, for support' Correcttoas - Split the
-Name a · commission on
of general obligation bQnd Department of Mental Hygiene employment and economic deissues for new facilities .
and Corrections Into sepatate welopment to design a long"[ have not come to you ask- cabinet-level agencies to range economic strategy for
ing for more money," the gov- upgrade treatment of the Ohio.
ernor said. "While I do not mentally ill and retarded, and
-Continue with programs to
deny that there are many to "turn Ohio's cOrrectional educate potential drug UBef8,
obvious needs throqgbout the institutions from schools for treat drug dependents 8nd pun;
state for new buildings and crime into true institutions of ish drug pusherS.
facilities, and for new services, rehabilitation." cr.eate a
-Propose a no-fault auto in1 firmly believe that we must compensation commission for surance bill.
getouthouseinorderbeforewe crime victims, and act on the
The governor said Ohioans
think of proposing any new gove rnor 's soon-to-be- must be made aware of the
treme.''
spending of any kind ."
submitted recommendations problems and solutions, as well
Collins Impassive
To help him get the house in on probation and parole; work as the accompllshments and
The governor's remarks on order, Gilligan asked the legis- release, furloughs
and advancements, of state
strip mining drew the most lature to act in these areas: . education for inmates.
goveniment.
strenuous applause of the
Envir6nmental Protection Housing-Adopt the recom"Too many Ohioans, I am
evening from Democratic Create a state Environmental mendations of the governor's .afraid believe that the whole of
"turned the corner" in revers- lawmakers, administration Protection Department to Commission on Housing and · last year was devoted to an
ing the bleak image of Ohio he cabinet and staff members, coordinate environmental Community Development, to intermin~le and fruitless
painted in his initial "State of and administration employes programs and spending, and provide additional low and legislative debate .which accomplished nothing," Gilligan
the State" message he de- packing the House galleries. adopt the House version of a ffiggefate-4ncome housing.
Republicans for the most part strip mine control bill no~·v-Ethlcs'--Adoptacodeofethlcs said. "They should know that
livered one year ago.
He also praised the General remained silenbSen. Oakley C. the Senate. "That bill mus ot for elected 81!d appointed state this General Assembly
Assembly for accomplishing Collins, R-lronton, a strip mine be weakened or allowe to officials and employes; and act achieved some extremely
on recommendations to im- significant breakthroughs.
some "extremely significant operator discontent with the !lie," the governor said:-\
Goveromeolal Reorgan- prove the structure and opera"They should know, for in·
breakthroughs" last year, provisions of the bill, sat imstance that ·the tax program
while many Ohioans were passively in a back row seat izallpo :- Pass legislation lion of the legislature.
authorizing
the
governor,
For
his
part,
the
governor
finally approved was one of the
1111d
stared
at
his
text
of
the
under the mistaken impreSsion
it was a d().llothing session. · speech.
subject
to
legislative ssid he would :
great legislative achievements
ratification,
to
make
structural
-Appoint
a
task
fo~ce
of
loof
this century, In that it ended
The
governor
was
inOff-The-Cuff
•
While Gilligan did not terrupted 28 times by applause changes in the administrative cal government experts to the steady and inevitable
mention Hatch by name, it was during his speech. Most of lt branch. Adopt a bill setting up make recommendations for escalation of properly and
Hatch who last weekend ssid if was
from
Democrats. a state Department of Trans· simplifying and streamlining sales taxes and geared revenue
the strong strip mine bill Republicans clapped, and one portation to govern all modes local government.
measures for the first time to
adopted unanimously by the shouted "Right on!" when the of transportation. RatifY the - Ask the General Assembly ability to pay."
House were to clear the Senate, governor said he was not
' his firm would be forced out of asking for more money.
Gilligan said Ohio's governbusiness in Ohio.
The governor was urging ment services were near the
passage of the House version bottom of the barrel when he
COLUMBUS (UP!) -A bill
Also, impact-resistant lenses ing that protective devices be
when he suddenly swerved took office last year.
requiring
eye
protec
tl
ve
devices
would
be required in all eye- furnished free of charge. It
from his prepared text with
N'o Money Request
for certain !K:hool activities and glasses bY,. Dec. 31 and in all was defeated 50-33.
these off-the-cuff remarks:
"! am convinced we have safety lenses in all eyeglasses sunglasses a year later.
Rep.Phale D. Hale,O.Colum"! urge the members of the turned the corner," he said,
bus,
attempted to eliminate the
and
sunglasses
was
passed
73The
eye
protective
devices
Senate to resist and reject the praising . the legislature for
brazen and brutal attempt by "landmark achievement in 10 by the Ohio House Tuesday, cost about $1.50 per pupil, plus requirement and provide only
as legislators returned from a sales tax, and are now avail- that the safety devices be made
the president of a giant coal school financing "
and six-week recess.
able on a voluntary basis to avallable,astheyarenow. That
company to blackmail this clearance of the record f7.7
Both
the
House
and
Senate
students
by boards of educa- amendment was turned back
governlnent by threatening the billion tax and budget bill lives and livelihoods of hun- "the most important single returned today for 1:30 p.m. ses- tion. Under the bill, schools 48-34.
could rent them to students and The bill, .authored by Sen.
dreds of miners and their piece of legislation adopted in sions.
bill , adopted unamiously teachers, or sell them at cost. Clara E. Weisenborn, R-Day:
families.
the state of Ohio in this ' byThe
the Senate last August, was
Rep. Thomas Fries, D- ton ; sets a maximum fine of
generation ."
re turned to the Senate for con- Dayton, said education 1500 for any person convicted
The
governor
said
his
efficiecurrence
in amendments.
costs
were
rocketing of distributing, selling or deWED. ONLY
cy program to get "more .bang
out
of
proportion"
and livering glasses or sunglasses
for the buck " is underway in
The measure would require
the administrative branch and the eye protective devices for offered an amendmentstipulat- not fitted with safety lenses.
is already producing results. ~II pupils, teachers and visi.tors
He said his administration is m classrooms ~here a.ctivllles
adv,artiiiDI! ~"Ohio ls anice ;:Iii are conducted wtthpossl~l~,~",{l­
place io' tafie a business, and ~ ger to eyes. It would liecome
.
'
we intend to keep it that way. effecltve July 31.
.
And we intend to make Ohio
Chemistry and phys1cs !aboFOOTLONG HOTDOGS even more _ a nice place to ratones, vocatiOnal education
raise a family, as well. "
classes and wood and metal
with Sauce 35'
Gilligan repeated an earlier sho.ps would be affected by the
legtsla!Jon.
other Republicans were not
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Demo·
crats and Republicans engaged much more charitable about
in somewhat of an applause Gilligan's speech, criticizing it
contest Tuesday evening as more for what it left out than
Gov. John J. Gilligan delivered what it contained.
"! am disappointed he had
·an annual report to the General
not one word to say about welAssembly.
fare
reform or property tax
Legislative Democrats
joined an enthusiastic group of relief," ssid House Speaker
Gilligan administration of- Olarles F. Kurfess, R-Bowling
ficials and employes cranuned Green. "! think this · reflects
into the House chamber in that this administration is not
·applauding the governor's list · one bit concerned about these
of accomplishments and things."
Gilligan, however, ticked off
proposed programs.
a
host of other priority items
. The outnumbered
Republicans led the applause for this year, including governtwice - when Gilligan said he . mental reorganization, enwas not asking for more money vironmental protection and
or Increased taxes. The rest of transportation .
"It was a comprehensive
the time, most of them sat
speech," said House Minority
silent.
The governor was In- Leader A.G. Lanclone,
terrupted 28 times by applause
in
contrast with hia "State of
USDA CHOICE
the State" message one year
ago, when he was cheered only
twice.
''The governor did learn one
thing from the 1968 Democratic
National Convention," said
Rep. Keith McNamara, ItColumbus. "He learned how to
pack the galleries with public
employes a Ia Mayor (Richard
Daley. I hope they were not
drawing overtime pay."
COLUMBUS (UPf) - Gov.
John J . Gilligan has outlined
his aspirations for priority legislation this year in the ·areas of
envir.onmental ·protection,
governmental reorganization
and transportation.
The governor's 4().rninute address to the General Assembly
Tuesday evening was punctuated by a verbal blast at an
eastern Ohio coal company
president seeking to change the
provisions of a strict strip mine
control bill heralded by con.servationists as close to ideal.
Gilligan's denunciation of
Ralph W. Hatch, president of
the Hanna Coal Co., furnished
the sparks in an otherwise routine assessment of last year's
work and objectives for 1972.
The governor said Ohio has

"His complaints against the
bill are dishonest. His threats
against the orderly process of
goverrunent and against the
pec\ple of this state are an
outrage that I, for one, do not
propose to tolerate or condone.
"To say that the legislation
which passed the House unanimously is a threat to the coal
industry Qf eastern Ohio is a
direct affront to every single
member ol this House. At this
Jaie hour, for him to surface
with arguments like that and
with threats to his own employes is reprehensible in the ex-

on

..

Eye Protection Approved

. BOB'S
THICK SHAKE

n.nce

THE MGM .ORDER OF 111E A.t\ROW
Team
·)lmortned at th~ blue imd gold baiiQtlet o,f Ml~ Cub
SCout Pack~. Bill Knight &lt;i Point Pleasanl is advllor of the
team which Is composed of Tom Reed; ,drimimer; Edward,
David and Kenneth Mitchell, Lanisvllle, Billy and John ·
Knight and Dan Heslap, Point Pleasant, and Fred Fraley,

..1----·
·
-----·---MENS LONG SLEEVE
.
1
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

DRESS SPORT

165AttendedCub
Blue-Gold Event

Values

ro

FOR
·2.69 EA.

Perfe~t quality . Permanent press
fancy and cotton blends in solids
and multi ·stripes . Tailored with
long point spread collar, ·long
sleeves with 2 button cuffs and
tape red body . Choice of colors in
assorted sizes. S· M· L·XL
.
. . . . .MEN'S SECOND FLO.O~-- ~----

1
I

-LOW, LOW PRICE!!-

LADIES' FASHION

:Republieans·· W"".L"

ROUND USDA cHoiCE
STEAK ••••••...••••••• ~~

BEEF

LEAN
lb.

SMALL SIZE

BORDEN.'S

EGGS

3 OuL'l

89$

ICE CREAM
gal.

99e

FIRST aJTS
PORK CHOPS
lb.

79$

FAVORITE
BREAD

s::~e:s '1

8('0ughton's Grade A

MILK

1.05
SALT FI.SH
gal.

(HERRING)

\lb. 75~

' SAVE 66'. WHEN vou sur A
10 oz,. Jar of
INSTANT FOLGER'S
COFFEE CRYSTAlS

• Best New Colors

Officials said 150 persons
were sUil missing today and
that 4,000 of the valley's 4,952
residents were homeless. Red
Cross emergency shelters
housed 640 of the homeless,
while others move.d in tem·
pOrarlly with relatives ·or '·
·friends .
,.

.I

WHITE &amp;
COLORS

--------------~---------------------REG.

79'

Town and Country
Quick Dry

SPRAY
PAINT
• Interior-Exterior

·1

The
way
you want
to look
when you're
feeling easy,
moving fast.

e NAVY
e BlACK

Chapman's
SHOES
Main Street
POMEROY

I

.

II SHOES
~
00
1•
I•
• Clearance

$

Famous Brand

ILADIES SHOES
1. • Values to '11.99
1 • Clearance Group

·

.

SAVE 25c

.00
pr.

······---.-.--------·-·····1

Chuck Steaks

AND,,

..

UP •

•

l

Phone 992-2556
At the End of Pomeroy Bridge

• •

• lb.89c

Pork Chops
BONELESS s..OKED

Charcoal Steaks . lb. 5)39 Cottage Butts
CUT FROM CHUCK

• •

SWIFT'S PRE.. lU .. VACUU .. PACK

C

-

~et69c

Strawberries •

Good Thru March 4th. At Your
.Friendly A&amp;P Food

SUNKIST CALIFORNIA

10':.~69•

Navel Oranges

INDIAN RIVER
Grapefrult"(HITE sEEDLEss

4~:"6

9
•

of{:oz.

!.OZ. AHTI·PERSPIRANT

Good Thru Merch 4th. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

•'

.

::;
:
:
•
:
:
~
:
:
:,
"
:
:
:
•
:
::·
:,
•
...

...•""

Fa-u.s.w.

:eti~"

ONE PEl FAMILY

TROPICANA-3 DELICIOUS FLAVORS

VALUABLE COUPON

Fruit Drink

Crocker 't1i: .Mixes
5 00 ~~W
pkgs.

3 1

l!lldTelaDie&amp;

During the non·snow off season the U.S. Women's
Alpine Ski Team memben go on the "Ski Team" diet
to lose 20 pounds in two . weeks. ~at'~ right ~ 20
pounds in 14 days! The bas1s of the d1et IS chemtcal
food ,. tion and was devised bl' a famous Colorado
phyr o especially for the U.S. Ski Team. Normal
ene• . ~ .J maintained (very important!) while reduc·
ins .~,. u keep "full" - no starvation-because the diet
is cie. ,ned that way! It's a diet that is easy IQ follow
whet' ,er you work, travel OJ'lltay at home.
.
.
Tt.is·is honestly a fantastically successful d1et. If 11
weren't the U.S. Women's Ski Team wouldn't be permitted 'to use it! Ri~ht? So, give you~lf the Sl!me
break the U.S. Ski 1 ~;am pets. Lose wetaht the sctentific proven way.' Even i you've tried all the other
diet; you owe it to yourself to try the U.S. Women's
Ski Team Diet. That is, if you really do want to lose
20 pounds in two weeks. Order today, Tear this out
as a reminder.
.
.
Send only $2.00 ($ 2. 25 for Rush Service)-2cash.is
' o.K. - to: Ski Team Diet, P.O. Box 15493, San
Qleao Calif. 9211 S. Don't order unle15 you expect
·to 1oie 20 l'_ounds in two weeks! Because that's
what the Ski Team Diet will do!
.

•
COUPON
Good Thru March 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Storo
ONE PER FAMILY

~bottles
•
• •

REGULAR

I

I

I

I

BLUE RIBBON HEALTH AND BEAUTY AIDS!

Prell Liquid Shampoo
16-oz.
bottle

Crest Toothpaste

$149

61f4•0L7
.
tube

Marvel Ice Cream

~~~~

ALL
FLAVORS

COUPO~t

Good Thr~erch 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

'.

14·••·99c
•••

WITH
THIS
COUPON

Good Thru March 41h. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

VALUAIIU COUPO!'I

Total Cereal

Pll FAMILY .

9c

Lysol Spray Disinfectant

ONE PEl fAMILY

. VALUAILI COUPON

~N~

•

1•1·

ONE Pll fAMILY

.

•

VACUUM PACK COFFEE

Eight O'Clock Coffee . . 3.'!a $1,99

s~~44c

'

Scott Towels

.

1

WITH
THIS
COUPON
.Good Thru Ma rch 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

-ox

VALUABLE COUPON

lb. $189
Blue Bonnet Marg. • 31bs.s1oo Chase &amp;Sanborn
2cnn
JANE PARKER
ANN PAGE
.,
....
ggc
4
While Bread
Ketchup ••••• , 3::~s1oo

Medal Flour .

-

ONE PER fAMILY

A 32oz.$}00

VALUAILE COUPON .

. . . .33c

WITH
THIS
COUPON
Thru Merch 4th. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

Whole Kernel Corn • • •4~·88c
Cut Green Beans • • • •4=88c
Fruit ·cocktail . • • • • 4~sro

ONE PEl fAMILY

WITH
THIS

Sweet Corn • • 5.... 59c

lb.

••
••'
•
•
'

YJ~~~~;HASE

ON
OF A·IO.OZ. JAR

FRESH

bag

LOSE 20 POUNDS
IN TWO WEEKS!
'

Save 4t

Cooking Onions. 3.!,29c

WHITE
POTATOES
s 89

ONE PER FAMILY

.

YOU SAVE

Good Thru Ma rch 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

~·~ ONE PEl FAMILY

YWOW

U.S. NO. 1, SIZE A ALL PURPOSE

WITH
THIS
bottle
COUPON
Good Thru March 4th. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Slore ·

VE 15c

$63'WITH
THIS
. COUPON

Good Th'" Moreh 4th. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

Vel Liquid Detergent

39

)b,

can

Folger's Instant CoHee

VALUAILI COUPON

32-oz.

8

ONE PIR 'AMILY

Ground Chuck ... lb.89c Sliced Bacon ••

~~~ Good Thru Merch 4th. At
~
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store
. ONE PER FAMILY

to FREE

• lb.99•

••b. 79c
Skinless Wieners .....

• lb. SJ39

! .lb. PKG. OR LA.RGER

OUNCE
ION US
IOlTLE

• •

SWIFrS PREMIUM

Cube Steaks
WITH
THIS
COUPON

• lb.89•

Fryer Quarters . , lb.38c

• •

BONELESS

ONE PER fAMILY

-

Jl,4-lb.
Avr. •

LEG OR BREAST

Swiss Steaks

Good Thru March 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Stor.

lb.

QUARTERED LOIN

ROUND lONE SHOULDER

Secret Deodoran*

•

1---~---------------------~-----~--1 Values to '11e99

DAIRY VALLEY

18-lb.

WELL TRIMMED

: ~--------~~---------,

:
':
:

Famous Brand

I

HRKfi¥S

••

~

Big Group

NOW OPEN DAILY

Foliage c.dens

:

•

Joe Derouin spent the week
end with relatives at Pittsburgh, Pa.
Mrs. Herbert Roush and
Mrs. Erma Wilson called on
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Barnitz at
Pomeroy Friday.

U.S. GOV'T. INSPECTED GRADE "A"

s3.00 up
Dudley's Florist

2 :s·$1 ·00

• 13 oz. can
• Reg. 79' Can

i ladies Famous-Brand

Returning

communities.

for

~---------------------~
I
Values To 58.99
. · .·

Refugees
MAN, W. Va. (UP!)
Weary refu ge~s in West
VIrginia's worst•flood disaster
returned to their shattered
valley in increasing numbers
today, determined to rebuild
their homes and to oppose any
plans to replace a crumbled
coal waste dam.
At least 71 residents of
Buffalo Creek Valley, most or'
theHJ coal miners and tl&gt;eir
families died S{lturd§y when a
mile-long waste water
reservoir burst and sent a 30foot wall of slime gushing
through 14 Appalachian mining

IN

• Dries in Minutes

We have all sorts of sandwiches, soft
drinks &amp; dairy desserts.

I

Eradication

.oo

lb.1.29

GROUND
CHUCK

To Shorten

Perfect quality. Sleeveless or long sleeve
sty les with slim or fu ll skirts. Assorted
fabric s in all over prints, sol.ids or so lid
lops and print ski rt . Some 2 piece styles.
Broke n siles .
READY TO WEAR DEPT.

.19

SIRLOIN
STEAK

GROUND

:: ·U
. 'SDA p•l---

VALUES
TO 12100

BETTER EATING FOR LESS!

Approximately 165 cub gold arrow point, webelos book
scouts, parents, scouting of- and his colors for entering into
ficials and guests attended the the webelos den ; Tony Scott
o annual blue and gold ,banquet and Randy Batey, wolf patch
of Middleport Cub Scout Pack and gold arrow point; Ray
245 Thursday night at the Stewart, gold arrow point;
American Legion hall in Bobby Fox, two year service
. Middleport.
pin, wolf patch and bear book;
Highlighting the event was and Greg Bush, bobcat pin.
the presentation of awards, a Webelos awards presented
performance of the Order of by Milford Hysell went to ·
the Arrow dance te8m, and a Danny Smith, engineer and
talk by Willlam Knight, Sr., citizenship badge; David·
MGM !llstrict hfflclal.
Hysell, spo~tsman activity
S. T. Smith, retiring cub- badge; Jeff Lauderll)ill,
master, extended a welcome craftsman badge.
preceding the dinner served by Knight spoke on the !K:Outing
Mrs. Slanley Doss, chairman, program and its role in youth
Mrs •.S.T. Smith, Mrs. Marion development before in·
Francis, Miss Debbie Mulford, troducing the Order of .the
Miss Tanuny Tyree, and Miss Arrow dance team. Fred
Brenessa Hood. .
Fraley described for the group
·' Others who assisted In the costuming worn by the
·Plailning the dinner were Mrs. dance team members who
Frances Whittington, Mrs . . were Tom Reed, Pomeroy,
· Uoda Lane, Mrs. Jean Kelly, drummer, and dancers, Ed' and Mrs. Milford Hysell.
ward, David and Kenneth
· Smith Introduced new Mitchell of Langsville, Billy
conunlttee members Including and John Knight and Dan
fred Scott, awards chairman; Heslop of Point Pleasant, and
Marl.on Francis, registration ; Fred Fraley of Gallipolis.
· Mrs . Charles K. . Byer, Heslop is chapter chief.
, treasurer, and Stanley ·Doss
Presented and awarded
the new cubmaster.
certificates of appreciation
He presented awards to were Paul Haptonstall for
: Ricky Hall, Timmy Justis, and Feeney-Bennett Post 128,
: Randy Hall, bobcat pins; Mark sponsor of the pack; Jim
....:l'Y ,lyear.
plp!l"da , Roach,,,, instlll!tion.al
~
··'
representative; Knight, MGM
district scouting · official and
.UUUl
advisor of the Order of the
'
Arrow Dance team; Mrs.
Milford Hysell and Mrs. Jean
Thomas, past den leaders.
Certificates will also be
presented to Edison Baker,
chairman of the SOAR Project,
Robert Parker, Marshall
WASHINGTON (UP!)_ The McMillian, and Mrs. Linda
: Agriculture Department plans Humphrey, who have been
· to step up a cooperative bru- active in pack work, and
: cellosis eradication campaign representatives of The Dally
• in hopes of eliminating the live- Sentinel,
The
Athens
: stock disease from the United Messenger, and WMPO railio.
: States by 1975, officials ssid toRecognized at the banquet
·. were Mrs . Della Stahl,
•• day.·
: Al present rates the disease president of the American
: wiD not be er~dlcated until Legion Auxiliary , Feeney' 1980, a spokesman noted. But Bennett Post 128; Mrs. Golda
: officials . said Agriculture Mourning, secretary, "'"' ''rs.
: Secretary 'Earl L. Butz has Helen Kennedy , f ;
"i&lt;:e
t given his blessing to a stepped· president of the unit
: up ~ort which had been enThe flag ceremon• tv open
: dorsed ea~ller . by state . the banquet was le tiy 'I.e
• agriculture departments and · webelos with Mark J!. .n&gt;l ""d
: the U.S. Animal Health Danny Smith as flag uca1 ct·s.
~ Association.
Hysell is the leader. Tom Kelly
: Butz said great effort.. by the gave the prayer.
: livestock Industry will be need·
: ed to wipe out the disease
LOVELY
• which causes millions of
: dollars In livestock. losses on
: top of the $40 million now spent
: ·annually on eradication·work.
Greenhouse Fresh
: When the disease is eliminated
: In animals the source of human
~ lrucellosia - also called un·
: dulant fever - will be gone,
: Butz noted.
Serving: Gallipolis,
: So far brucelloSis has been
Pomeroy, Middleport, 0 .
• eradicated in cattle in 24 states
•
&amp; Mason Co., W. Va •
• and from swine in five states.

WE GIVE YOU
ROMPT SERVICE

News, Events
NEW CUBMASTER -Stanley Doss of Middleport, Route 1, center, is the new cubmaster
of Middleport cUb Scout Pack 245. His appointmentwasannouncedat the annual Blue and Gold
Banquet last week. Pictured with him are Mrs. Frances Whittington, assista~t banquet
chairman, her son, Leslie, and Mrs. Doss, banquet chairman and son, Ke!th,left to right.

into a·clinic,at Florence, S.C.
at 10 a.m.· and lit 2 p.m. s~
walked out of the clinic wiura
full set of new teeth. The cost
she said was only $40.
MASON GRADE School
Parent Teacher's meeting will
resume on March 13.

.Bring The:·
Family

Apple Grove

. GaJllpolls.

Silent, Mo~tly

2 lb.

POMEROY OHIO

·MAIN STREET

The Riffles were former
residents of Mason .
'
COULD HARDLY believe
the story of a Clifton lady told
about her new teeth. But
kJlowing the story teller personally , 1 know she :tells only
the truth. She said she went

BV ALMA MARSHALL
: NEW HAVEN - Mr. and
Mrs . Philip Smith and
daughter, Stephanie, went lu
Florida, mainly for one purpose, to visit Disney World.
Well,. their anticipation to a
World of Fun was short lived.
Disney World they found was
too crowded and they had to
wait in line for an hour and ten
minutes for a hamburger. The
Smiths enjoyed their visit with
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Riffle and ·
family, at New Port Richie.

)
t')

.

f~'}ji."rrt~ffill~~jJlj

'!&gt;~gat
carton

59C

WITH
THIS
COUPON
Good Thru March 4th. AI Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Storo
.

ONE PER

FAMILY ~

.

·· Cheer Detergent
Giant
;3·lb.
l •DL

69'

WITH
THIS
f. 1111
COUPON
' 't3ood Thr~ Morch 41h. At'Yo•r •
. Fri~ndly A&amp;N~od Store
ONI PER fAMILY ·

.

�.••

';

I

..
.
.
**""
drrT
k
.
iii Banquet Cappe
rr ee·

' a-'l'beDall)'~inel Mlll4eport,l'lllneroy, o.,Marchl,lm

. ·· ·blbi:L............ ...... "
-' t

-

.

,

,-

· ·

. · ·

::::m. ........ mc• •

Fun Wzth Food

f,;

Social
Calendar

A banquet at tlie Rutland Allen of EIYril!, an artist,
· ·
;:;: Grade School Thursday magician, and ventriloquist.
By Charlene Hoeflich
~g evening highilghted' Youth The Rev. Mr. Aljlln was
·='· Week observances at the speaker for . the weekend
There were many sidelights !c) the trip to Washington taken Rutland Church of ihe revival which concluded Youth
WEDNE;SDAY
Nazarene.
Weeli. Each night he did an art
by Mrs. VIlma Pikkoja, a ·delegate to the White House ConQUARTEIU. Y Luncheon
The observance began on work and on Sunday night
ference on Aging.
Club,
noon Wednesday, home
Wednesday night with the these were awarded 1D the
A tour of the White House ... a view of the President alighting youth of the church having Individuals bringing the IJIOSt of Mrs. Phil Williamson.
from his helicoPter ; a dinner at the home of Mrs. Margaret charge of the prayer service people tD the weekend revival.
CHESTER GARDEN Club, 8
Hannigan, Washlng!Dn librarian.
with special music by the choir
The winners were Pebble p. m. WidnesWiy, home of Mrs.
At tba't-dinner Mrs. Hannigan served a variety of salads, and the orchestra. Forty-two · Jewett, first; ~illy Hall, Oris Gl.nther. Members are tD
cblps and dips, fruit cups, and desserts, most of which she attended the Thursday banquet second; Janice Smith, third; take items for the silent auc~
.prepared prior to the beginning of the White House Conference which featured the Rev. Mac and Georgene Grate, fourth. tio" and also personal items for
since she, too, was a delegate. About a d~en attended her dinner
the men at the Gallipolis State
'
party.
Institute.
So tasty·was a tuna casserole that Mrs. Pikkoja requested "r.
J MIDDLEPORT Literary
the recipe from her hostess who graciously obliged, Mrs. Han- .1
aueclub,2p.m.Wednesday,home
nigan elqllained that she prepares the casseroles in advance of
.
of Mrs. Nan Moore. Reviews:
dinners, freezes them, and then simply thaws and heats before
Contributions to the Red Mrs. Roger Morgan, and Mrs. "Five Day \g Glory" by Glen
serving. One casserole serves eight to 10.
Sunderland to be reviewed by
Cross and the Heart Fund were Clifford Leifheit.
TUNA CASSEROLE
made when the Rock Springs
M.rs. W. A., Morgan Mrs. Roy Cassell; "Time of
2large cans of tuna, 2 cans of mushroom soup, undlluated,-% Prange met Thursday night at presented the program on Drums" prepared by Mrs.
cup of water, 2 cups diced celei'y, 1 cup chopped onion, I cup the nome of Mr . and Mrs. Amos ecology . Readings included Larry Spencer to be read by
chopped parsley, ¥• pound of Cashew nuts, I can slivered Leonard.
"Grandma Had Great Ideas" Mrs. Walter Waddell. ·Comalmonds, and 2 cans dried Chinese noodles.
Communications were read by Mrs . Amos Leonard ; ment on war between the states
Mix everything together and bake in an oven at 325 degrees from the state legislative agent "Research for Tomorrow" by as response.
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
until it Is heated through.
and the national master. Mrs .
Fred
Leifheit;
Auxiliary
, _7:30 p.m . Wed. For additional flavor, Mrs. HaMigan suggests the addition Reported ill were Mr. " Pesticides" by William
of Wiler chestnuts and-or mushroomS which should be sauted and Mrs. Homer Rad- Grueser; "Noise Abatement" nesdayat the hall, with Mrs .
first If they are fresh. In the event the chestnuts and-or ford, Joe Weyersmille, by Mrs. James Conkle ; "How David Zirkle and Mrs. Norman
Pesticides Helped" by Mrs. Wayland as hostesses.
mushrooms are used then she recommends that the % cup water
THURSDAY
Fred
Goeglein ;
and
in the recipe be replaced by the liquid or juice from the chestnuts
EVANGELINE
• Chapter
"Recycling Food Process
and muahrooms.
OES, 7:30 Thursday night,
Waste" by Fred Goeglein,
The Almaoac
Refreshments were served Masonic Temple, regular
SERVING CASSEitoLES is one way which the budget
By UDlled Preu lnternatlooal by Mr. and Mrs. Leonard.
meeting and practice for inconscious homemaker has of fighting the high cost of food Today Is Wednesday, March
spection to be held Saturday
I, the 6!st day of 1972.
meat In particular, since justa lltlle can goa long way.
night, 7:30 p.m. with Mrs.
· The moon·is between its full
In the second edition of "Tried and True Recipes" compiled
Marlene Logston, Belpre,
by the Middleport Amateur Gardeners, Elizabeth Lohse has a phase and last quarter.
deputy grand matron of
The morning star is Jupiter.
recipe for "Sausage En Casserole" - tasty, Inexpensive to
SERVICE TONIGHT
District 25 as inspecting ofPomeroy
Community
Lenten
The evening stars are Mer(l'epare, and nutritious. It serves six.
.cury,
Venua, Mars and Saturn. services will be held at 8 thls fleer.
. SAUSAGE EN CASSEROLE
Those born on this day are evening at the Sacred Heart MEWS F~LLOWSHIP~
Blink sausages, I onion, I green pepper, ~'• teaspoon pepper,
Church. Speaker will be the Enterpnse Uruted Methodist
2 tablespoons flour, 2\i. cups canned tomatoes, 3 cups cooked under the sign of Pisces.
British actor David Niven Rev. Donal O'Carroll, chair- Church, 7:30p. m. Thursday at
spaghetU, and I 'ri. teaspoons salt.
man of the Diocesan the home of Thomas Bentz.
was born March I, 1910.
cut the sausages in abort lengths. Fry until lightly
Ecumenical Commission.
On this day In history:
!town: Add sliced on1on and green pepper and brown slightly.
FRIDAY
In 1781 the American colonies
Add seasoning, Door, tomato and spaghetti. Transfer to a baking
DANCE
FRIDAY
at
COMING SUNDAY
adopted Articles of Confederadish. Bake 30 minutes in a moderate oven.
The Gospelaires of Rutland Wahama High School 8 to 11
tion, · paving the way for a
will be guest singers at the p.m. School sponsored. Jays
federal union ,
SUBMIT YOUR FAVORITE recipes to "Fun with Foods,"
In 1803 Ohio became the 17th Langsville Christian Church at will emcee.
The 0:.Uy Sentinel, Pomeroy.
·
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2
member of the United States. 7:30 p.m . • Sunday. Homer
In 1932 the 2().month-old son Stephens, pastor, extends an p.m. Friday at the Sacred
Heart Church, sponsored by
of flyer Charles Undbergh was Invitation lo the public.
Church
Women United of
kidnaped near Hopewell, N.J.
Meigs County, Mrs. Campbell
The boy's body was (ound on
Harper, president.
ARTICLES FILED
May 12 and Bruno Hauptmann
BIRTII RECORDED
DAUGHTER BORN
SATURDAY
Articles of incorporation
was electrocuted for the
CLIFTON - Mr. and .Mrs.
DANCE
Saturday following
have been filed in Coiwnbus
Gary Clark are announcing the
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. kidnap-murder in 1936.
In 1954 five congressmen with Secretary of State Ted W. Wahama Basketball game 9:30
birth of a daughter on Donald VanMeter are anp.m. to 12 midnight. Jays will
February 27, at Pleasant nouncing the birth of a were wounded when Puerto Brown by the Flatwoods emcee.
Valley Hospital. The infant daughter, Deborah Ann, on Rican Nationalists fired at United Methodist Church, a
weighed 6 pounds and 8 ounces February 13 at Holzer Medical them from the gallery of the non-profit organization. Agent
is Robert H. Eason, Pomeroy
and has been named Kristin Center. The infant weighed 6 U.S. House of Representtlves.
Route
3, and trustees are Edna
Leigh. The mother is the for- pounds and 7 ounces. The
Morgan, Ivan Well and John
mer Vickie Lynn Young . mother is the former Ann
Bailey.
Grf!!1d~renls are Mr. and HowarcL.G~iDdparen~are Mr.
iff~. Harold Young, Clifton ; and Mrs. Okey Howard, Jr.,
•
l'' REVrVAL TO BEGIN
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Clark, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
A weekend revival will he
TWO DAYSALE
New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. William VanMeter, Clifton .
held
March
3-5
at
the
Hysell
The Toppers Plains ComCharles Zimmerman, Clifton. Great-grandparents are Mr.
Run
Free
Methodist
Church
munity
Women's Club will hold
Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Okey Howard, Sr:,
with
Kenneth
Keesee
of
Galion
a rummage sale Friday and
and Mrs. Alburtice Young, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
as
evangelist.
Services
at
7:30
Saturday
at the Fry building,
Clifton, and Mrs. Estyle Clark, Benton Blake, Mrs. Maude
each evening are open to the Mill Si., Middleport, from 9
Serving: Gallipolis,
New Haven.
VanMeter, aU of Clifton.
Pomeroy; Middleport
public.
a.m. to S p.m. each day.
&amp; Muon Co., W. Va.

WO

]e.b ;JeLong Honored on Birthday Anniversary

D onattons
• M ··

ed Atteft••ft•
Mr. and' Mra. Carl DeLong w~re serv .
:-"' w"':
entertained wUh a party ~ch~el d'~: =Y· T~~
reeently honoring their son, . ;'~kV
c-g~Gum
Jeff, on his , birthday an- :nnie Ca~~~lvet
niversary.
.
Bo 1 Bob nd Carol
Games were played andDe
PatLoty . ~sit W~er Gina
after Jeff opened hi.s gifts,
ng, , 0
'

.. ·

,

and Cindy 1'h0nljllon, lllid tbe
,honcred gu~'• 1111«, C.U.,.
Also attending _.. Mq.
Karmel DeLong, Pomeroy,
Mr. and Mra. Arthur Eblen, :
Lancaster, and an AIUit,.Mn.
Harley McDonald, Glo\!lter.

Swlshei': .

refreshments
of potato
cake,chips
Ice
cream,
punch and

~----------1111!11--~---,
I

-~--~---~

I

Ml

'uw
The
of ·Carl Ebersbach
waa unintentionally omitted
from 8 list of deceased
veterans honored In post
everlasUng services·of FeeneyBennett t&gt;oat 128, American
u!gton, Paul Haptonstall,
commander, reports.
NAME 0

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name

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·tVIFIIIRD•Wl:·

Yii

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Ul.ft .,~.
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Uo'.l.li,iloelft:
~
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"('

DAUGII'I'ER BORN
•Mr. and Mra. Arland King,
Middleport, are announcing
the birth of a daugh!!!r, Marsha ·
Beth, born Monday night at the
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed eight pounds, 12
ounces. They have a son,
Michl, age two. GrandparentS
are Mr. and Mrs. Tony Fowler
and Mr. and Mra. Clarence
King, Middleport.

:·

lr,fldat~ :
.Tol'll ....;-!Tilt.

•ArtDfngJ
And nwe·.sw,. ·
Wonl.Ciiok

SEE BAI$'S IN .MIDPI.fPGIR
·FOR THAT •BRAND NflY"lOOK.!

SUNDAY
LOVE JOY Circle, Middleport First Baptist Church,
to meet at the church at 2:15
p.m. to go to Meigs County
Infirmary for a program.

SUNBEAM
HI DOME

"

TLB

EvangeUstic Crusade

DeWeerC: ·
Speaker

Pennville, Indiana

"''!'"''MIDDLEPORT
.. rlf
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

~

0

•

'

••

'

0

'

.,.. '

..

I

Special Music
Eacli Night

,,

CHOJ··ce

lb.

Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Pianist

Bacon OSCAR MAYER
ds &amp; Slic. Bologna

Pieces
51b. $ 39
pllg.

lb.

'hgal

WIENERS

crts.

Pl Pleasant Store

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE ;
r 'The Store With A Heart :;
You; WE LIKE"
.'
Ri!!ht reserved to umn quantities .:' ·
'f

18- oz.
;ar
FOR DESSERTS &amp; TREATS 14 oz.

SMOOTH &amp; CRUNCHY

•

I

59.~

49~

~turday

:. FAVORITE

CLOSED

BREAD.

Regular
1.49

--

990' ·

'
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9 to

iUND~

•

HKI&lt;'s lit· $8.4P

Pl Pleasant Store On~

?l Pleasant Store On~

HIS AND HERS

SCHICK

e 2·woy control switch Blows hof and cold air I
Styles in minutes e Dries in minutes for that profe s·

priud

e htro·lorv• fiDDd oc &lt;orn~ttl ti&gt;t
l&gt;iv11••t ralltl" w it~ room 10 \IIO&lt;•
I fa.,. lempera1urt 1eftin9• lro"' ~ol
to cool (plu• f"'ttftt !Otfl •~Q ioo "'' 911
• Fold• awor m me ta&lt;~c h o l e: lin\ilt •

$699

for IIO!Oi!t Dr lnno!l

$1888

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$9.88

$10.96

HECK'S REG.$23.88

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JEWElRY DIP~

$·~~

c
·,;,,

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JfWEliY

' '·:~ .... . :,

JEWElRY DII'T.

SUNIEAM

ANTIMONY· JEWEL BOXES
ASSORTMENT

600FT. 5" REEL

FAST BACK SHAV;:..,..:::;;ER~,
-17

G.E. 2-SLICE
TOASTER
Heck's
Reg. 112.96

·HECK'S

$1 Q88

RE~e4.88
· PL Pleasant St.e

Pl Pleasant Store

--..
-

NEW RED

-..

ONIONS 21b. ~

•

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.....•

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741

• ..01/ti"""' 1tyltd .• . ff_,..•&lt;oll,

sionollook • U. l: approved

$788

741 ·

PRO STYLE HAIR DRYER

STYLINGe DRYER

.$1.19

20 lb. bag

J

ss~.!

HECK'S REG. $8.99

HECK'S REG •

POTATOES

Wall Clocks

$6''

Help s keep your skin dry and
fres h looki ng .

RECORDING TAPE

U. S. NO. 1

SPARTUS
PUSSY CAT
OR TIGER

•

SUNBEAM
SHAVER

SUN LAMP AND HOLDER

SUNSET

. '

Pl Pleasant Store On~

0

SYLVANIA

:1

'5''
LADIES

• . ;.o:•·

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT•

'8.88

JEWElRY DEPT.

$16.96

·-. H-1003
H.-16

Heck's Reg,

HECK'S REG. $13.88

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
29 1 EACH

•
••
•

LElTUCE ........~: ..

FLASH CUBE's)

••

29(

''

'

Fresh &amp; T~der
Large Heads :

1.00

SYLVANIA

~~·

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,

oge~.

•\

2FOR

.
·'

9:00 to 7:UU

Everyday Low Price!

5

..

.. .

polystyrene cob1·

$999 ,

Eli minate ovhide noise with th is AM rt1d io
b)' Triumph. Soft cushion ear pieces. Vol·
ume control a nd stotion selector. Keeps oil
Olllisde noiSI! a way from yo ur •ecep tion.
Ideal fo r a d Yih, teen ag ers ; or all

BATTERIES

''
•'

Monday Thru Friday

.,oo
•,6.
.,00
.,oo

'

e Eosy-to·deon

net with fully molded bock

HEAD HUGGER RADIO

9-VOLT RADIO

'

lvs for

~~-~ ·

$666

HECK'S

'

. $9.96

4-QUART MIRRO
PRESSURE. PAN

low priced GE Clock Radio with value _pocked f~o ­
lures. • Wakes you to mu sic, 9-~''l"lf\'' f~Jir,,, ~~Q, , ~
eos.y-to-reod clockfo ce e Saves space on !''gnt t~ ·
ble- iust 8" wide

~. · -i

JEWElRY DEPT.

HECK;S REG .

87/97

G. E. '
AM CLOCK RADIO

l ',.lj:;;mf&gt;lle ine~ en sive , t05.Y ·to-use and, attractive. Ideal 1t1
the econOmy mindecr'perso n. ,, ... ·~ ·
'

~

On~

C4503

JEWElRY DEPT.

AUTOMATIC SLIDE VIEWER

JEWElRY DEPT.

""

• l ·tpeed fing etfip o;: ontrol • large
nan·lp lo ih chrome·ploted beat~rs •
Fin gertip bea ter e jector • Avo.loble
in d ecora tor co lon - yellow , pink ,
tu rquoise and white ... • De tachable
Cord

$599

.

AIRQUIPT

JEWElRY DEPT•

HEATING

- ---··1
t -

JEWElRY DEPT.

$14.96

.
Prices E,.ctlve Mar. 1-1 • :

Jif Peanut Butter...........................................
•
.
.
.
Angel Flake Coco~nut........:.................... p~
0

•

0

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food StamPS :

•

·

•
•

•

Steele's Yams ....~~~~~.~.~~~~~~~....................... 3 N~~~ 89$
HIP-0-UTE
9 oz.
h
II
C
Mars ma . ow rente ................................ ~lastic 29$
Luncheon Loaf....~~~~~~~·~': .............................. 3 1~::Jerzee Dry Milk ... ~~~-~~.~~.~~.............................. ~qt
.5tan
. dard Toma t oes..............................
LOW PRICED
5 cans
303
.Chicken Broth .. ~~~~..~.~~...................~...... 6 1 ~~oz.

'28.88

-·.

3-SPEED MIXER

Heck's Reg. '199

59~

SD361

....••••
,.
....

LTON BEACH

s2488

boiiH~CK;S"R~G:'"o' ""P

HECK~
R&lt;G.
$8.76

·'2''

t

"' - --

10/ 11

What'~

Alo cm' ""'

of your ' fovo ;ite records or stereo FM. No matter
where you sit, you're on the perfect spot to ~ear
excellently separated stereo . lightweight ear~teces

'

•

(~ock

Low cost, yet gives the "best seat in the house" fee~ ­
ing to stereo FM broadcast recor d or tape. Yo u ~tt
relaxed , isolated f_rom all external so~r~~s of dt ~­
troctiOn surroutrdeJI by only the mognJ.f~ ci!tft t, !!l~!'·t~lf

PAD

12 oz. pkg.

59~

•

MIL~

French City

---··-

Ra dio . lh 'lo rge lig hted numerals ore ea sy to read , day or nigh_!.
mo re, you
can go to sleep to your favori te broadcast and woke the llt'.d mo rrm•g to a gentl e elec·
Ironic to rte o r jiOUr fa vorite f M or AM mum. If you ' re still sleepy, just push the z_nooz

HECK'S
REG.

.,•.

FAIRMONT
NICE.'.N LITE
HOMOGENIZED

. Lean!

~-

Ever a waken from a sound 5!ee p won de ring wha t. the tim~ i$, ~ut h~ ti tate to di1trv ~ ~thj
e s by turn ing on a lig ht ? Your ans wer to th is dtlemma •s tht ~ r~ lta ble FM/ AM Dtgtlo

without irritation .

0

s

•

AM DIGITAL
CLOCK RADIO

and soft foampla stic ea rmuffs i,ncrease you~ llst ~ n ­
ing comfort,_lets you en joy long hours of hstenrng

Enjoy Our Good Meats At Lowest Possible Prices!
Fresh!
Pure!

ss988

l..

JEWil/IY DEPT.' . "

STEREO
HEADSET

•

GROUND ROUND

s158a
$18.96

WE~TRON {f(-

sOng Leader

Compod modern styling ." High·i mpoct molded housing leo lure~ ottroc ·
tive two ·toned decorator st yling . Look 1 good onyw h!re . Sr.~gle use tunc,;
tlon hy s- eoch dea rly mor~ ed . R ai~ed plu\ bar moh~ \u re target .
Ety·Lock Muhiplicotion key simpiifies ~n.d ~peed~ up, oil repe~t _o~ra ·
tio n ~ . fully automatic o perot ion- a dd1hon , ~oub t rot l• on, multtpl.cot.on.
total. subtotal Qnd true credi t bala nce . Add1 10 ... to r ol ~ II '1 color
ribbon.

STEAM. Touch 0 butl on for extra concent rated steam. Wrpes o u t stu b·
· born Wrinkles ea~il y . Puh in prol enia11 o l·type c reo~es .. 36 'tea m ve nt~.
Swito;: hes to d ry iron in g ins tantly. Permanent Pnm ~oe ll• ng . Safe ty Heel
Re!l. Wo ter level ga uge .

Heck's Reg. 118.88

\ I;

7:30 Nightly .

Rev. Charles Simons,

CSGK

ADDING MACHINE

SHOT'O STEAM IRON

NEW! " SHOT OF STEA .Y. " IRON RE·GUL AR PLUS IN S ~ANT EXT RA

GENERAL ELECTRIC

Feb. 27
THRU
March 5
II

CAN OPENER
KNIFE SHARPENER

BOHN ELECTRIC

SUNBEAM

HECK'S
REG.

' r. l'~

"

'

Pl Pleasant Store

;

JUS DR

'

.

SUNBEAM

•

O pe n s a ny Sta nda rd ~ i :r.e o;:on
S harpens kn ives to o kee n ed ge .
8uil t-in rest for eosji scisso rr shar p·
en ing . Removable stoinleH sr eel cut·
ling wheel.

ANNUAL COMMUNITY

Dudley's f1clrist

0

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..
.
.
**""
drrT
k
.
iii Banquet Cappe
rr ee·

' a-'l'beDall)'~inel Mlll4eport,l'lllneroy, o.,Marchl,lm

. ·· ·blbi:L............ ...... "
-' t

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::::m. ........ mc• •

Fun Wzth Food

f,;

Social
Calendar

A banquet at tlie Rutland Allen of EIYril!, an artist,
· ·
;:;: Grade School Thursday magician, and ventriloquist.
By Charlene Hoeflich
~g evening highilghted' Youth The Rev. Mr. Aljlln was
·='· Week observances at the speaker for . the weekend
There were many sidelights !c) the trip to Washington taken Rutland Church of ihe revival which concluded Youth
WEDNE;SDAY
Nazarene.
Weeli. Each night he did an art
by Mrs. VIlma Pikkoja, a ·delegate to the White House ConQUARTEIU. Y Luncheon
The observance began on work and on Sunday night
ference on Aging.
Club,
noon Wednesday, home
Wednesday night with the these were awarded 1D the
A tour of the White House ... a view of the President alighting youth of the church having Individuals bringing the IJIOSt of Mrs. Phil Williamson.
from his helicoPter ; a dinner at the home of Mrs. Margaret charge of the prayer service people tD the weekend revival.
CHESTER GARDEN Club, 8
Hannigan, Washlng!Dn librarian.
with special music by the choir
The winners were Pebble p. m. WidnesWiy, home of Mrs.
At tba't-dinner Mrs. Hannigan served a variety of salads, and the orchestra. Forty-two · Jewett, first; ~illy Hall, Oris Gl.nther. Members are tD
cblps and dips, fruit cups, and desserts, most of which she attended the Thursday banquet second; Janice Smith, third; take items for the silent auc~
.prepared prior to the beginning of the White House Conference which featured the Rev. Mac and Georgene Grate, fourth. tio" and also personal items for
since she, too, was a delegate. About a d~en attended her dinner
the men at the Gallipolis State
'
party.
Institute.
So tasty·was a tuna casserole that Mrs. Pikkoja requested "r.
J MIDDLEPORT Literary
the recipe from her hostess who graciously obliged, Mrs. Han- .1
aueclub,2p.m.Wednesday,home
nigan elqllained that she prepares the casseroles in advance of
.
of Mrs. Nan Moore. Reviews:
dinners, freezes them, and then simply thaws and heats before
Contributions to the Red Mrs. Roger Morgan, and Mrs. "Five Day \g Glory" by Glen
serving. One casserole serves eight to 10.
Sunderland to be reviewed by
Cross and the Heart Fund were Clifford Leifheit.
TUNA CASSEROLE
made when the Rock Springs
M.rs. W. A., Morgan Mrs. Roy Cassell; "Time of
2large cans of tuna, 2 cans of mushroom soup, undlluated,-% Prange met Thursday night at presented the program on Drums" prepared by Mrs.
cup of water, 2 cups diced celei'y, 1 cup chopped onion, I cup the nome of Mr . and Mrs. Amos ecology . Readings included Larry Spencer to be read by
chopped parsley, ¥• pound of Cashew nuts, I can slivered Leonard.
"Grandma Had Great Ideas" Mrs. Walter Waddell. ·Comalmonds, and 2 cans dried Chinese noodles.
Communications were read by Mrs . Amos Leonard ; ment on war between the states
Mix everything together and bake in an oven at 325 degrees from the state legislative agent "Research for Tomorrow" by as response.
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
until it Is heated through.
and the national master. Mrs .
Fred
Leifheit;
Auxiliary
, _7:30 p.m . Wed. For additional flavor, Mrs. HaMigan suggests the addition Reported ill were Mr. " Pesticides" by William
of Wiler chestnuts and-or mushroomS which should be sauted and Mrs. Homer Rad- Grueser; "Noise Abatement" nesdayat the hall, with Mrs .
first If they are fresh. In the event the chestnuts and-or ford, Joe Weyersmille, by Mrs. James Conkle ; "How David Zirkle and Mrs. Norman
Pesticides Helped" by Mrs. Wayland as hostesses.
mushrooms are used then she recommends that the % cup water
THURSDAY
Fred
Goeglein ;
and
in the recipe be replaced by the liquid or juice from the chestnuts
EVANGELINE
• Chapter
"Recycling Food Process
and muahrooms.
OES, 7:30 Thursday night,
Waste" by Fred Goeglein,
The Almaoac
Refreshments were served Masonic Temple, regular
SERVING CASSEitoLES is one way which the budget
By UDlled Preu lnternatlooal by Mr. and Mrs. Leonard.
meeting and practice for inconscious homemaker has of fighting the high cost of food Today Is Wednesday, March
spection to be held Saturday
I, the 6!st day of 1972.
meat In particular, since justa lltlle can goa long way.
night, 7:30 p.m. with Mrs.
· The moon·is between its full
In the second edition of "Tried and True Recipes" compiled
Marlene Logston, Belpre,
by the Middleport Amateur Gardeners, Elizabeth Lohse has a phase and last quarter.
deputy grand matron of
The morning star is Jupiter.
recipe for "Sausage En Casserole" - tasty, Inexpensive to
SERVICE TONIGHT
District 25 as inspecting ofPomeroy
Community
Lenten
The evening stars are Mer(l'epare, and nutritious. It serves six.
.cury,
Venua, Mars and Saturn. services will be held at 8 thls fleer.
. SAUSAGE EN CASSEROLE
Those born on this day are evening at the Sacred Heart MEWS F~LLOWSHIP~
Blink sausages, I onion, I green pepper, ~'• teaspoon pepper,
Church. Speaker will be the Enterpnse Uruted Methodist
2 tablespoons flour, 2\i. cups canned tomatoes, 3 cups cooked under the sign of Pisces.
British actor David Niven Rev. Donal O'Carroll, chair- Church, 7:30p. m. Thursday at
spaghetU, and I 'ri. teaspoons salt.
man of the Diocesan the home of Thomas Bentz.
was born March I, 1910.
cut the sausages in abort lengths. Fry until lightly
Ecumenical Commission.
On this day In history:
!town: Add sliced on1on and green pepper and brown slightly.
FRIDAY
In 1781 the American colonies
Add seasoning, Door, tomato and spaghetti. Transfer to a baking
DANCE
FRIDAY
at
COMING SUNDAY
adopted Articles of Confederadish. Bake 30 minutes in a moderate oven.
The Gospelaires of Rutland Wahama High School 8 to 11
tion, · paving the way for a
will be guest singers at the p.m. School sponsored. Jays
federal union ,
SUBMIT YOUR FAVORITE recipes to "Fun with Foods,"
In 1803 Ohio became the 17th Langsville Christian Church at will emcee.
The 0:.Uy Sentinel, Pomeroy.
·
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2
member of the United States. 7:30 p.m . • Sunday. Homer
In 1932 the 2().month-old son Stephens, pastor, extends an p.m. Friday at the Sacred
Heart Church, sponsored by
of flyer Charles Undbergh was Invitation lo the public.
Church
Women United of
kidnaped near Hopewell, N.J.
Meigs County, Mrs. Campbell
The boy's body was (ound on
Harper, president.
ARTICLES FILED
May 12 and Bruno Hauptmann
BIRTII RECORDED
DAUGHTER BORN
SATURDAY
Articles of incorporation
was electrocuted for the
CLIFTON - Mr. and .Mrs.
DANCE
Saturday following
have been filed in Coiwnbus
Gary Clark are announcing the
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. kidnap-murder in 1936.
In 1954 five congressmen with Secretary of State Ted W. Wahama Basketball game 9:30
birth of a daughter on Donald VanMeter are anp.m. to 12 midnight. Jays will
February 27, at Pleasant nouncing the birth of a were wounded when Puerto Brown by the Flatwoods emcee.
Valley Hospital. The infant daughter, Deborah Ann, on Rican Nationalists fired at United Methodist Church, a
weighed 6 pounds and 8 ounces February 13 at Holzer Medical them from the gallery of the non-profit organization. Agent
is Robert H. Eason, Pomeroy
and has been named Kristin Center. The infant weighed 6 U.S. House of Representtlves.
Route
3, and trustees are Edna
Leigh. The mother is the for- pounds and 7 ounces. The
Morgan, Ivan Well and John
mer Vickie Lynn Young . mother is the former Ann
Bailey.
Grf!!1d~renls are Mr. and HowarcL.G~iDdparen~are Mr.
iff~. Harold Young, Clifton ; and Mrs. Okey Howard, Jr.,
•
l'' REVrVAL TO BEGIN
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Clark, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
A weekend revival will he
TWO DAYSALE
New Haven; Mr. and Mrs. William VanMeter, Clifton .
held
March
3-5
at
the
Hysell
The Toppers Plains ComCharles Zimmerman, Clifton. Great-grandparents are Mr.
Run
Free
Methodist
Church
munity
Women's Club will hold
Great-grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Okey Howard, Sr:,
with
Kenneth
Keesee
of
Galion
a rummage sale Friday and
and Mrs. Alburtice Young, New Haven; Mr. and Mrs.
as
evangelist.
Services
at
7:30
Saturday
at the Fry building,
Clifton, and Mrs. Estyle Clark, Benton Blake, Mrs. Maude
each evening are open to the Mill Si., Middleport, from 9
Serving: Gallipolis,
New Haven.
VanMeter, aU of Clifton.
Pomeroy; Middleport
public.
a.m. to S p.m. each day.
&amp; Muon Co., W. Va.

WO

]e.b ;JeLong Honored on Birthday Anniversary

D onattons
• M ··

ed Atteft••ft•
Mr. and' Mra. Carl DeLong w~re serv .
:-"' w"':
entertained wUh a party ~ch~el d'~: =Y· T~~
reeently honoring their son, . ;'~kV
c-g~Gum
Jeff, on his , birthday an- :nnie Ca~~~lvet
niversary.
.
Bo 1 Bob nd Carol
Games were played andDe
PatLoty . ~sit W~er Gina
after Jeff opened hi.s gifts,
ng, , 0
'

.. ·

,

and Cindy 1'h0nljllon, lllid tbe
,honcred gu~'• 1111«, C.U.,.
Also attending _.. Mq.
Karmel DeLong, Pomeroy,
Mr. and Mra. Arthur Eblen, :
Lancaster, and an AIUit,.Mn.
Harley McDonald, Glo\!lter.

Swlshei': .

refreshments
of potato
cake,chips
Ice
cream,
punch and

~----------1111!11--~---,
I

-~--~---~

I

Ml

'uw
The
of ·Carl Ebersbach
waa unintentionally omitted
from 8 list of deceased
veterans honored In post
everlasUng services·of FeeneyBennett t&gt;oat 128, American
u!gton, Paul Haptonstall,
commander, reports.
NAME 0

,n••••

' .

name

·-;~ ..·
,. ,...... .....
"· \ lh.,l,:

·tVIFIIIRD•Wl:·

Yii

·wioOioj:
Ul.ft .,~.
.. . ··.

.

~~
Uo'.l.li,iloelft:
~
'"¥, ... • . ~
"('

DAUGII'I'ER BORN
•Mr. and Mra. Arland King,
Middleport, are announcing
the birth of a daugh!!!r, Marsha ·
Beth, born Monday night at the
Holzer Medical Center. The
infant weighed eight pounds, 12
ounces. They have a son,
Michl, age two. GrandparentS
are Mr. and Mrs. Tony Fowler
and Mr. and Mra. Clarence
King, Middleport.

:·

lr,fldat~ :
.Tol'll ....;-!Tilt.

•ArtDfngJ
And nwe·.sw,. ·
Wonl.Ciiok

SEE BAI$'S IN .MIDPI.fPGIR
·FOR THAT •BRAND NflY"lOOK.!

SUNDAY
LOVE JOY Circle, Middleport First Baptist Church,
to meet at the church at 2:15
p.m. to go to Meigs County
Infirmary for a program.

SUNBEAM
HI DOME

"

TLB

EvangeUstic Crusade

DeWeerC: ·
Speaker

Pennville, Indiana

"''!'"''MIDDLEPORT
.. rlf
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL

~

0

•

'

••

'

0

'

.,.. '

..

I

Special Music
Eacli Night

,,

CHOJ··ce

lb.

Mrs. Robert Kuhn, Pianist

Bacon OSCAR MAYER
ds &amp; Slic. Bologna

Pieces
51b. $ 39
pllg.

lb.

'hgal

WIENERS

crts.

Pl Pleasant Store

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE ;
r 'The Store With A Heart :;
You; WE LIKE"
.'
Ri!!ht reserved to umn quantities .:' ·
'f

18- oz.
;ar
FOR DESSERTS &amp; TREATS 14 oz.

SMOOTH &amp; CRUNCHY

•

I

59.~

49~

~turday

:. FAVORITE

CLOSED

BREAD.

Regular
1.49

--

990' ·

'
~·-....-

9 to

iUND~

•

HKI&lt;'s lit· $8.4P

Pl Pleasant Store On~

?l Pleasant Store On~

HIS AND HERS

SCHICK

e 2·woy control switch Blows hof and cold air I
Styles in minutes e Dries in minutes for that profe s·

priud

e htro·lorv• fiDDd oc &lt;orn~ttl ti&gt;t
l&gt;iv11••t ralltl" w it~ room 10 \IIO&lt;•
I fa.,. lempera1urt 1eftin9• lro"' ~ol
to cool (plu• f"'ttftt !Otfl •~Q ioo "'' 911
• Fold• awor m me ta&lt;~c h o l e: lin\ilt •

$699

for IIO!Oi!t Dr lnno!l

$1888

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

$9.88

$10.96

HECK'S REG.$23.88

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JEWElRY DIP~

$·~~

c
·,;,,

JEWElRY
DEPT.

JfWEliY

' '·:~ .... . :,

JEWElRY DII'T.

SUNIEAM

ANTIMONY· JEWEL BOXES
ASSORTMENT

600FT. 5" REEL

FAST BACK SHAV;:..,..:::;;ER~,
-17

G.E. 2-SLICE
TOASTER
Heck's
Reg. 112.96

·HECK'S

$1 Q88

RE~e4.88
· PL Pleasant St.e

Pl Pleasant Store

--..
-

NEW RED

-..

ONIONS 21b. ~

•

-.~

.....•

l

· II

-

.J ....

~~•I "~-----~-· . • .--.,_ '-'-"'-~-'"-----

' -~--~---

ll

- - ··-··

0

•

741

• ..01/ti"""' 1tyltd .• . ff_,..•&lt;oll,

sionollook • U. l: approved

$788

741 ·

PRO STYLE HAIR DRYER

STYLINGe DRYER

.$1.19

20 lb. bag

J

ss~.!

HECK'S REG. $8.99

HECK'S REG •

POTATOES

Wall Clocks

$6''

Help s keep your skin dry and
fres h looki ng .

RECORDING TAPE

U. S. NO. 1

SPARTUS
PUSSY CAT
OR TIGER

•

SUNBEAM
SHAVER

SUN LAMP AND HOLDER

SUNSET

. '

Pl Pleasant Store On~

0

SYLVANIA

:1

'5''
LADIES

• . ;.o:•·

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT•

'8.88

JEWElRY DEPT.

$16.96

·-. H-1003
H.-16

Heck's Reg,

HECK'S REG. $13.88

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
29 1 EACH

•
••
•

LElTUCE ........~: ..

FLASH CUBE's)

••

29(

''

'

Fresh &amp; T~der
Large Heads :

1.00

SYLVANIA

~~·

")
,

oge~.

•\

2FOR

.
·'

9:00 to 7:UU

Everyday Low Price!

5

..

.. .

polystyrene cob1·

$999 ,

Eli minate ovhide noise with th is AM rt1d io
b)' Triumph. Soft cushion ear pieces. Vol·
ume control a nd stotion selector. Keeps oil
Olllisde noiSI! a way from yo ur •ecep tion.
Ideal fo r a d Yih, teen ag ers ; or all

BATTERIES

''
•'

Monday Thru Friday

.,oo
•,6.
.,00
.,oo

'

e Eosy-to·deon

net with fully molded bock

HEAD HUGGER RADIO

9-VOLT RADIO

'

lvs for

~~-~ ·

$666

HECK'S

'

. $9.96

4-QUART MIRRO
PRESSURE. PAN

low priced GE Clock Radio with value _pocked f~o ­
lures. • Wakes you to mu sic, 9-~''l"lf\'' f~Jir,,, ~~Q, , ~
eos.y-to-reod clockfo ce e Saves space on !''gnt t~ ·
ble- iust 8" wide

~. · -i

JEWElRY DEPT.

HECK;S REG .

87/97

G. E. '
AM CLOCK RADIO

l ',.lj:;;mf&gt;lle ine~ en sive , t05.Y ·to-use and, attractive. Ideal 1t1
the econOmy mindecr'perso n. ,, ... ·~ ·
'

~

On~

C4503

JEWElRY DEPT.

AUTOMATIC SLIDE VIEWER

JEWElRY DEPT.

""

• l ·tpeed fing etfip o;: ontrol • large
nan·lp lo ih chrome·ploted beat~rs •
Fin gertip bea ter e jector • Avo.loble
in d ecora tor co lon - yellow , pink ,
tu rquoise and white ... • De tachable
Cord

$599

.

AIRQUIPT

JEWElRY DEPT•

HEATING

- ---··1
t -

JEWElRY DEPT.

$14.96

.
Prices E,.ctlve Mar. 1-1 • :

Jif Peanut Butter...........................................
•
.
.
.
Angel Flake Coco~nut........:.................... p~
0

•

0

We Gladly Accept Fed. Food StamPS :

•

·

•
•

•

Steele's Yams ....~~~~~.~.~~~~~~~....................... 3 N~~~ 89$
HIP-0-UTE
9 oz.
h
II
C
Mars ma . ow rente ................................ ~lastic 29$
Luncheon Loaf....~~~~~~~·~': .............................. 3 1~::Jerzee Dry Milk ... ~~~-~~.~~.~~.............................. ~qt
.5tan
. dard Toma t oes..............................
LOW PRICED
5 cans
303
.Chicken Broth .. ~~~~..~.~~...................~...... 6 1 ~~oz.

'28.88

-·.

3-SPEED MIXER

Heck's Reg. '199

59~

SD361

....••••
,.
....

LTON BEACH

s2488

boiiH~CK;S"R~G:'"o' ""P

HECK~
R&lt;G.
$8.76

·'2''

t

"' - --

10/ 11

What'~

Alo cm' ""'

of your ' fovo ;ite records or stereo FM. No matter
where you sit, you're on the perfect spot to ~ear
excellently separated stereo . lightweight ear~teces

'

•

(~ock

Low cost, yet gives the "best seat in the house" fee~ ­
ing to stereo FM broadcast recor d or tape. Yo u ~tt
relaxed , isolated f_rom all external so~r~~s of dt ~­
troctiOn surroutrdeJI by only the mognJ.f~ ci!tft t, !!l~!'·t~lf

PAD

12 oz. pkg.

59~

•

MIL~

French City

---··-

Ra dio . lh 'lo rge lig hted numerals ore ea sy to read , day or nigh_!.
mo re, you
can go to sleep to your favori te broadcast and woke the llt'.d mo rrm•g to a gentl e elec·
Ironic to rte o r jiOUr fa vorite f M or AM mum. If you ' re still sleepy, just push the z_nooz

HECK'S
REG.

.,•.

FAIRMONT
NICE.'.N LITE
HOMOGENIZED

. Lean!

~-

Ever a waken from a sound 5!ee p won de ring wha t. the tim~ i$, ~ut h~ ti tate to di1trv ~ ~thj
e s by turn ing on a lig ht ? Your ans wer to th is dtlemma •s tht ~ r~ lta ble FM/ AM Dtgtlo

without irritation .

0

s

•

AM DIGITAL
CLOCK RADIO

and soft foampla stic ea rmuffs i,ncrease you~ llst ~ n ­
ing comfort,_lets you en joy long hours of hstenrng

Enjoy Our Good Meats At Lowest Possible Prices!
Fresh!
Pure!

ss988

l..

JEWil/IY DEPT.' . "

STEREO
HEADSET

•

GROUND ROUND

s158a
$18.96

WE~TRON {f(-

sOng Leader

Compod modern styling ." High·i mpoct molded housing leo lure~ ottroc ·
tive two ·toned decorator st yling . Look 1 good onyw h!re . Sr.~gle use tunc,;
tlon hy s- eoch dea rly mor~ ed . R ai~ed plu\ bar moh~ \u re target .
Ety·Lock Muhiplicotion key simpiifies ~n.d ~peed~ up, oil repe~t _o~ra ·
tio n ~ . fully automatic o perot ion- a dd1hon , ~oub t rot l• on, multtpl.cot.on.
total. subtotal Qnd true credi t bala nce . Add1 10 ... to r ol ~ II '1 color
ribbon.

STEAM. Touch 0 butl on for extra concent rated steam. Wrpes o u t stu b·
· born Wrinkles ea~il y . Puh in prol enia11 o l·type c reo~es .. 36 'tea m ve nt~.
Swito;: hes to d ry iron in g ins tantly. Permanent Pnm ~oe ll• ng . Safe ty Heel
Re!l. Wo ter level ga uge .

Heck's Reg. 118.88

\ I;

7:30 Nightly .

Rev. Charles Simons,

CSGK

ADDING MACHINE

SHOT'O STEAM IRON

NEW! " SHOT OF STEA .Y. " IRON RE·GUL AR PLUS IN S ~ANT EXT RA

GENERAL ELECTRIC

Feb. 27
THRU
March 5
II

CAN OPENER
KNIFE SHARPENER

BOHN ELECTRIC

SUNBEAM

HECK'S
REG.

' r. l'~

"

'

Pl Pleasant Store

;

JUS DR

'

.

SUNBEAM

•

O pe n s a ny Sta nda rd ~ i :r.e o;:on
S harpens kn ives to o kee n ed ge .
8uil t-in rest for eosji scisso rr shar p·
en ing . Removable stoinleH sr eel cut·
ling wheel.

ANNUAL COMMUNITY

Dudley's f1clrist

0

0

.'

'

-·---~·

�'. '

\

'

..

-

•

'

.

•

'

1/

10 - The DallySentlnei,Mlddleport-Ponieroy, O., MMch 1,1172. ·

OPEl DAILY

•

OPEl DAILY ·

-Nil
10 TO 9 ..

10 TO 9

•

lOTO 9

I

/ \.

.' ' ''

;,,

I

'

GARCIA
300
4

14 oz.

oz.

PROTEIN 21

BAN DRY

REG. DRY OR OILY
SHAMPOO

SPRAY DEODORANT

99(

58&lt;
HECK'S REG. 96'

COSMETIC DEPT.

SPIN

200Z.

16 oz.

CEPACOL

.STYLE

88&lt;

HAIR SPRAY

REEL

Black finish . Small si ze lor

REG. HARD-TO-HOLD

HECK'S REGr $1 .99

$1.28

COSMITIC DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

COMBINATION

fresh·wa1er use. Two spools.

'
·
.
.
'
I

Thumb handle knob. Standard

59&lt;

HECK'S REG.

ZEBCO 1245
ROD&amp;REEL

ret~ieve .

$

HECK' S REG. 87'

.

·-·

4%

COSMETIC DEPT.

BAND AID BRAND
SHEER STRIPS

TALC

28(

HECK'S REG.
1

.

100Z.

~

oz.

- · ~ ·· "

•

HECK'S REG. $1.24
•

COSMETIC DEPT.

·.;:::::

QUART

VANGUARD
· VAC.
66

HECK'S REG.

J &amp;J BABY

$1.24

? ·liJitd

COSMETIC DEPT.

'

COSMETIC DEPT•

LUNCH KIT WITH BOTTLE

•$]22

s1

Not As Illustrated

'12 oz.

FORMICA

77(
HECK'S REG.

HECK 'S REG. $1 .03

NOUSEWARE DEPT.

44(

·acr

NOUSEWARE DEPT.

6 QUART

60Z.

COOKING MAGIC BAGS

ENDUST

..~ . · , '"T; I•,.,_..,......._
~

~

NOUSEWAIE DEPT.

LE.TTERS GALORE

0-CEDAR

FRESH-0-MATIC

STATIONERY

ANG.LER BROOM

18 Shee ts of s lat ion e~&gt;·· a nd 14 en ve lopes .

39~
HECK'S REG. 66'

SHITSIIIPT.

$1.94

S/IOITSIIIPT.

0-CEDAR

HECK'S

WET MOP

••
Sf/IOITS

HECK'S REG. $11.97

HECK'S REG. $3.99

SI'OITJ IIII'T.

SI'UTS IJEI'T.

,

I

-

'

seml·ha rd

·-

HECK'S
REG.
TO

$3.4 8

$277

$688
FISHING VEST

99'

HECK'S REG.

SPORTS DEPT.

$3.99

39c
HECK'S
REG.

59'

SH#TS
IIIPT.

HECK'S
REG.

• Pockets in front • Sheep 'kin pa tch •
Zipper front dosv re Color: 0.0. Size1: SM·l·Xl

$9.88

$"t66

SPORTS
DEPT.

oil.~

SHITS DEPT.

TRILENE OR STREN 5254
4· 6-8- 10 TEST

Camper's speci al ... thi s slee ping bog is idea l for'· those
sp rin g camp ing t r ips co ming up . Worm fibe r with water
resistant outer .

SINKERS

lli'T.

t 2.

M&amp; HSLEEPING BAG

SPLIT-SHOT

RIG.

hornen. Sizes 6 to

HECK'S REG.

SI'OITS DEPT.

toe .

Comple te wtllt on
ad ivllable knee

LINE

100 YDS.

HECK'S
REG .

HECK'S REG. $7.99
SPOITS /lfi'T,

~;;;;;;;,-----~~--------1

'

BERKLEY
100 YARD SPOOL

MONO FISHING LINE

To

COLEMAN COOLER

6-8-10-12-15-20 POUID lEST

$3.99

SI'OITS
DEI'T.

A conve nien t answer to tke grea t
' numbe r of low profile ~ to rage spoc~:n
fovnd in modern co n , boaa, trailt&gt;r~
a nd cab in s. Ma intains large load
lilaroge c:opoc.ity, incorporates delu11.e
fea tures of ex tra large cooler .

SPORTS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

$20.99

I

NOUSEWARE DEPT.
P~ITHEI MAITII

$144

HECK'S
REG.

99'

.

88(

NYLON $2'4

$2 . 19

'

HOUSEWAII DEPT.

HOUSEWAIIE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
· 81' EACH

SHITS 111'1.

COTTON $222 .

HECK'S REG.

SPINNER

SPINNER

0-CEDAR

DUST MOPS

TENT SPECIALS

SHYSTEI' TOIIADO

HOOKs
·
1

SIZE THROUGH 14
100COUIT

SHITS IIIPT.

-&amp;gc
.

2FOR

.
·

s100
.

•

CHICK THESE SAVIIKS 01
QUALITY IEIITS

ssn

PUP TENT .. .....
9'x9' UMBRELLA

~3999 ~_;,.....;~------------

CHAIN STRINGER

'KG,

I

HECK'S
REG.

12'112' DININC
CANOPY ...

'

$1918

HECK'S
REG.

-99!

44!

28(

•

SIWTS•f.

•
•

SI'OITS IIIPT.

$1.59

HECK'S REG. 69'

NOUSEWAIE DEPT.

$166 .

99&lt;

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

70Z.
~~

HICK'SREG. TO $1.99

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

NOUSEWAIE
DEPT.

hardened e Thumb &lt;antral bulfon I Con·
!.font arlfi -rnene I 75 yd1 . line.

HECK'S REG. *3.99

·69(

U. 5. (oDII G!lord opproudlif• p,....,..,, ...11 kcpak
lilliod, mode ot '"~d mor•nt fobri u . Yokt otrt. .. ,,
knp\ wto•tr in~ "'~tlll dl •P "' po1it i~n o t olf time•.
Aooilob'- '" wlid po'k ~·~"99 · Smofl. Mtd . olld lo•o• ·

Colorlul 2 piece 10 quart,
non-floati ng type ·

6PACK

HECK'S REG.
TO $2.98

HECK'S REG. 79'

AIR FRESHENER

MIIIOW BUCKET

$147

HECK'S REG.

99

$

• St(l inleu II ee l spinnerhead ,_nitrate

$266

.

LIFE VEST

lOQT.

glo1.-$ that indvde wire ·

NOUSEWARE DEPT.

69'

.

1un

HOOKS

HECK'S REG.

~~

High 1tyle
rims,

. '1.18

SQUEEZE MOPS

PKG. ·49~KG.

in wtiQk! on d q tH t~o in &lt;l(lion
h clu&gt;ivt ltbto h!!td l~u"' b u&gt;nual Wo•g ~o I ~
oun&lt;" · ( omple~ wilk Dpp r o oi malel ~ 17.\ ydo. o l 6lb
'"'' monolilomutti....

)

TO

SNELLED

0-CEDAR

6 BAGS
PER

SPIN CAST REEL

li t;~ kotr

DIP
NET

NOISIWAII DEPT.

\

NOUSEWARE DEPT.

. SPIN CAST REEL
New modtl 33

sass

SI'OITS DEI'1.

ll"xl4"

~;In,.---

REG.

HECK'S REG. $7.99

lEBC020l

The1e fine hip
wad ers ore- fu ll y
¥u lcon in d wi t h
double ~nee , multigrip cl eat ed so le ,
molded hee l and

SAUCE PAN SET

$1.58

ZEBCO 33

99

$

Co nsisting of 5x7 Block, 5x7 Walnut, 8x10 Block, ond
8x1 0 Walnu t . . . 44' Each . Also 1lx 14 Black
and 1 h 14 Wol nutlor 89• Each. SIZES 5":r7" TO

NOUSEWARE DEPT.

$1 .05

Ang ler BJJJ black 6 ft. cork handle,
3 gui des. medium weight .

DOCUM!NT FRAMES

$1.97

HECK'S

smoot h action. The ~tainleu ' !ee l boi l ha s
a ha rd chrom ed line ro ller guide . Spool
hood and reel body ore d ie cou a lum i·
num.

SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

(
88

2-PIECE ROD

SPIN REEL

A ~ iQ h ouality reei will\ o powerful 3.2 to
I retrieve. AU-metal gea r1- 1quare cut fo r

$12.97

3-PIECE ·

PINE-SOL

FLOOR SHINE

'
'

COSMETIC DEPT.

$122

NOUSEWARE
DEPT.

''

ANGLER

'

CAKE PLATE &amp; COVER

$4.67

22 oz.

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

FESCO PLASTIC

HECK'S~m~

NOUSEWARE

"

REEL
HECK'S
REG.

74(

baby
powder

$1.58

'

HECK'S REI&gt;.

BERKLEY

JOHNSON 100B

LOTION

~~

HECK'S REG.

''

$7.99

• · Slectro·Dial, multipleshoe drag • Right or left
hand ret;ieve • Dual' anti-reverse • Flare-hardened Permal loy gears e Tung sten-carbide pickup pine Cia-Chrome rotor
e Stainless steel crank and drive shafts.

90Z.

• ==-

.99(

·~

''

$ 99

fo r comf ort and control.

COSMETIC DEPT.

POWDER

..... ...

SPOII'fS DEPT.

$1.94

'

EYE DROPS

$16.97

HECK'S
REG.

COSMETIC DEPT.

'J &amp;J BABY

J &amp;J BABY OIL

VISINE

REG.

•

420

84'

24

maae 1n Amenco, with match ing lebco
2020 ro d. Ree l body ond 'covm o f hig11 impocl Kro lastic. Adjuuo ble d rag . Com·
plete with o pprol\ . 75 yds. 10 lb. te~tl i n e
on irlferc hongeob le spoo l. Rod is 5 ' 3"
two-piece fiber gloss. Cork grip angled

15's

HECK'S REG.

COSMETIC DEPT.

1/2 oz.

$2.52

58&lt;

$129

48'

COSMETIC DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

BATH OIL
BEADS

INJECTOR

HECK'S REG.

I'

202 Zee8ee, lowe~l·pri~d fool proof reel

SCHICK RAZOR BLADES

JERGENS

APRIL SHOWERS

70'S

88

oz.

·:

.

Combi nation No. 1245 0 190) . Popular

~ECK'S

JOHNSON &amp; JOHNSON

..: J

"t It/

9 I

...._

I

,,

�.. '

.

(

,

'

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,.....
,
ro
10

OPRIA&amp;Y
10 TO 9 .

10 ro 9

9

IOYS'

:MIN'S

SHORT SLEEVE

FLARE

I

SWEAT

MEN'S

SHORT SLEEV(

JEANS
Dross him in those long

STANLEY

STANLEY

Good fo r most
model cars.

PRUNER GRASS

6

$

HECK'S REG. $3.37

HARDWARE
DEPT

$ 88
HECK'S
REG.
$4.99

HECK'S REG.
$2.28

HARDWARE DEPT.

7x4x4 FOLDING

LAWN

ASSORTED
STYLES AND
SIZES

lipped wi th a non -mar plas tic cop. Spin sealed double tubular
a rms accent the comfo rt contoured sea t ond bo ck . Extra Jf rono
square bends lor greater dura bility, Ea ch piece fqlds lo o slim
silhouette for com pacl lloroge whe n nol in use.

$499
READY-MIX
WINDSHIELD WASHER

MOTOR OIL
LIMIT 5 QTS.

lt

SOLVENT .

QT.

' HECK~S REG. 591
I .

" AI/TO~OTIVE ll!frf. .... ," ".
1

lS OZ.

IL~CK

7x9 CHAISE
LOUNGE

FLAG

ANT&amp;ROACH
BOMB

66

~ HEC~;. REG.

gallon

' P.t Pleasant Store Only

HECK'S RlG.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

SYLVANIA

3-WAY

LIGHTBULBS

HOFFMAN
COW MANURE

ENGINE
SCOUR

.

48~ACH
HECK's
REG.
72 1

HARDWARE
DEPT.

88&lt;
HECK'S
REG.

$1.29

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

79&lt;

BAnERY
POST

100%.

DuPONT

\

'

&amp;

WAX

TERMINAL

LICHT

CLEANER

BULBS

$100
AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

39'

STOP &amp;TAIL

.

HECK' S REG .
99•

Heck's Reg. sl.39

AITOMOTIVI

Pt Pleasant Store On~

"''·

I

I .

I

BOYS'

MEN'S

Classy Permanent Pre ss Spo rt
Shirto. Available in •olids, stripes,
. and pnnh. Sizes 3·7 and 6·16.

3

FOR

JEANS

Dress the little one in these
rough but comfortable
permanent press pa_]_ts .
Ava ilable with o zip fly ,
half boxer waist, and two
pockets . Solid colors. Sizes:
3 to 7.

Sanforized , washable, and
reinforced at points af strain.
Sizes 29·42 Waist.

$177
HECK'S REG.
HECK'S REG.
$1.99 EACH
ClOTIII/If •r.

$2.44

HECK'S REG.
$4.99

ClOTNIB

Cl0111RIU9T.

•r. .

TODDLERS'

TODDLER BOYS'

TRAINING PANTIES

FLARE LEG
Suit

Double thickness for extra long wear. Four
pairs in a package.

TODDLERS'

COVERALLS

PANTS
him up
In

th ese

modern flar e slacks with
button front . Choose from
sol id s, str.ipes.
I
4 to

and plaids .
qif1t~

!li

Rugged coveralls with a zipper
front that really lasts. They are
permanent"))ress poplili." Sizes: 2 ta

4.

$199

LAUREL GREEN

GRASS SEED
4 LIS.

HECK'S REG.
HECK'S REG.

ClOJU/f IJII'T.

ao~DE,.T.

'

'1.66 ·

ClOTII/Jif

""'·

LADIES'

$137

GOWNS

HECK'S
REG.

Ladies Dacronf Cotton gowns
in l}'xurious long and waltz
lengths. Make your solectioh
from embroidered or lace trim
and blue, pink, mint, and
!110ize colors. Sizes, S·M·l and

HAIIWA/11
DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE
HOSE

CLAMP
PLIERS

I

00

HECK'S RIG. 12,99
Cl0TIIItlf69T.

$1.28

LADIIS'

LADIES'

NYLON

HALF SLIPS

PAJAMAS
Ladies nylon
pajamas in
comfortable
short sleeves
and long log .
Sius : 32--40.
Available in all
pastel colo rs.

LADIES ·

COTTON

Ladies .non·cling half.slips in
antron and nylon. Available in
four styles of the all new '1
length . Choo•e from Wh ites
and pastel•. Sim, S·M·l.

P.J.'s

LADII5'

POlYESTER
COTTON

PANTS
Lodi11 PermoPress Potytattr· ·
Cotton Pant
with button
fr ont ond two
pod!eta. AYOil·
able in OIIOrf·
ed colon. Sia:es: 8to 16.

$266

LADIES' COnON

HECK'S
REG • .

HECK'S
REG. ·

$3.48 .

$1.66

HECK'S RIG.
$3 .. .

HECK'S REG.
,t3.44

KNIT TOPS
HICK'S
REG.
$4.96

Pt Pleasant

,.,.

Store On~

aoT~M

Stylish lod ie1calio n knit
.t op .. with comforta ble
Mort ........ Avaikiblt in
stripes ond JOiidl. Sitelzs-

$266

M·L

HICK'S

,,.

AII,.,OnVI

· HECK' S
REG.
77'

MULBERRY lUSH OR

Pt Pleasant StOJe

BELT GRIP

.,,,.

AUTOMOnVE

.12 OZ.·DOW ·

2FOR

BRAKE FLUID

On~

HAPPY BIRTHDAY POCKET

.TIRE
PLASTIC

DUNE
BUGGIES
e CHOOSE FROM 3 STYLES

c
. HECK'S
REG.

u•

HICK:s
RIG;
69•

IACH
.

AITOIItTWI

f

,.,,

AlroMOnVI

RADIO
IY "SHIR PIIICf

ChHse from Trumpet,
Saxophone or Clarinet!

GAUGE

• 46j)• lOlLING POINT
• FOR DRUM 01 DISC
IIAKIS

66'
"

"''·

Heck's Reg. 11.99

APIIIT

'

ClOJW/If

a..,,,,,,

'

HICK'S
RIG.
$1 .34

CLEANER

e PACKED II TUIIS

HECK'S REG • .

$1.48

CARBURETOR

AUTOMOnlll
DEPT.

. RALLY CREAM

ENGINE-BRITE
. ~EROSOL

SNAP

HECK'S
REG.

99 '

GUNK

'4.99

T0 :1 10.99

AIITOMOnVI
DII'T.

HARDWARE
DEPT.
15 oz.

PLA NT NOW ~ OR SUMMER! These bulbs are imported fro m Holland
where they are hand se lected . A Iorge selection to choose from.

66'

ao,.,..,r.

Available in tl1ree styles and asoorted colors. Sizes S·M·l·Xl.

$1.66

· R BULBS

BATTERY
TERMINAL ENDS

JACKETS

Available in four assorted styles. Sizes 7 to
14.

4QTS.

NAIDWAII
DEPT.

50-100-150 WATT

$4.991ACH
. ClO'IIIIIIf111'1.

SPORT SHIRTS . PANTS

HOT PANTS-SKIRT
'

$1.09 ·

HAIDWAIIE
DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

.SHORT SLEEVE

WIND BREAKER

99

ssoo

HECK'S REG.

$1.45

.

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

BOYS'

MEN'S NYLON
.

tlOTI(IMG DEPT.

$3.99
EACH

FERTILMIX
POTTING SOIL

· 5 LBS.

HECK'S REG.

FL

ClOTrlllf/111'1.

2FOR

72&lt;

17.7 oz.

'2,9.9

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

HECK'S
REG.

HARDWARE DEPt.

ROSE FOOD

10 LIS.

$1.09

HECK'$ REG.

HARDWARE DEPT.

Each

77&lt;

HECK'S
REG.
99'

DRILLs12

HICK'S
REG.

LAWN &amp; GARDEN FERTILIZEIS &amp; PLANT FOODS
FOOD
5 LBS.

lJa" DRILL
$799

33'

$866 '

HARDWARE
. ,DEPT. 1 .

AZALEA &amp;EVERGREEN

. EDISON

GIRLS'

Made of the sam e fi ne qual ity construction as the
chairs for your comfort.

cies. SizeoS·M+Xl.

plain or stunning fancies. Also·
availqble in .:nsorted colors.
Sizes, 29·38 .

Easy to install car mirrors that
are just right for your car.

CHOICE

, solid s', stripes, or fa n·

FOR
.
.

CAR
MIRRORS

frames of tubular a lum inum. Sturdy pa tio leg1 on each piece o re
comp li mente d by on u truded a lu mi num br ace. Each leg Is

10W30

McGRAW

ROBERK

Accla imed by decorato rs a nd sa tisfied u1ers a li ke a s o leader in
ih field . Equally ap propriate for patio, poohide or lawn, this
CUllom ou tdoo r f urniture is svpe rior in style, co mfort and
durabili ty, Heavy-duty, wea ther -resistant webbing on rugged

VALVOLINE

..

McGRAWJfa
VARIABLE SPEED

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

PECO

3

Stylish shoit sleeve knit
shirts of polyostori and
cottons. Choos'e from

' Make your , selection from

ors. Sixes 8 to 18.

..

KNIT SHIRTS

DRESS
SLACKS

wearing, flare le,g jeans.
Choose from assorted col-

BUMPER
JACK ·

MEN'S

64&lt;

HECK'S REG.
'
99 4

I:IECK'S RIG. 781

.,.,,

AITOMOnVE

25 PIECE
PLASTIC

TEA, COFFEE AND .
KITCHEl SET

·sac
,,.,,.,,

HICK'SIIG. $1.28

TOY HORNS
PLASTIC

BABY DOLLS
61/2"

INIIFANTS' SEAT OR
41/2" II lOCKa

e FULLY
JOINTED

EACH

HECK'S
REG.

72c

,.,,.,.

HECK'S RIG. 14c

CHOICE

58'
,.,,.,,

AURORA

RAZZYRACER

CHOICE

RACE SET

A$SEENOITV

$299

,..,,.,.

HICK'S RIG. $3.99

HECK'S
RIG.
$2.44

TOY

"''·

t·
'

I

I

''

�r

I

(
14- Tho l)lllv Sentinel, Mlddleport.flwlleroy. 0., .._..1, 117'

Heart Attack ·can
Resemble Angina

1 ,.

r r·r,.. r 1 r t ·, ·,

1

r t 'r

r ·, r r '

'

'•

'

'

Get Results~
. .. . . .
. . . .:

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds
. DR.LAWRENCEE.'LAMB

r

. ,. . , -·- -2 51115 . 1Po•er•

~~~~A~N

~b~~~~r..

o.y

'iii'
~

Before

c:Zt,~t'~:.:.-,:;.

....&amp;
01
-AL- " ~·r
.., II I

.li .

eo..
.. ,

•

l

. -

MJ. WEATHER ROOFifiJ;
CONSTRUCTION
PLUMBING CO.

R
'-

I

I

HAVE 'IE GOT
A FUlL"WIOTH
MI.R ROR?

Business ·Services

1

Will ba occepted unlll9 a.m. for ·
_
Day of Publlcaflon1 ·
'll.a ·
REGULATIONS
·
IIIC
1
Tht Publlllher restrves IM
'" CHEV. CAMAROCPE.
mso
&amp;
&amp;
right to edit or reltct any ads
I C)'j., auto. trans., power steering, console, rodlo, vinyl
n-l.'d
are perfectly correct In tell· deemed oblectlonal . . The
roof .. !:Jne owner, low mileage.
UUilll
_. ...
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
ing you they won't hurt you. 'publisher will not be
S.rvJce
Make reservations tor your
Dear Dr. Lamb - I read The discomfort you have ex· responsible for more than one
I'rom the largeat
241 Ll-ln St.
private parties. banquets
your article on nitroglycerin perlenced has been success" Incorrect Insertion,
1967 CHEVELLE MALIBU HTCPE.
11395
Bulldozer Radiator to
Middleport, Ohio
Ions
1
tablets. In 1966 I had a myo- fullu relieved by the tablets
RATES
327 engine, 4 speed trans., clean Interior &amp; good tires
s
H
"
·
Core
Dill
Anlllony
Plumb!""
sld~~llaforoccmaseetlng,
place -·
· 'ts lf · dla
~•For Want Ad Service
Med. grn. finish. Nice.
·
· ! ma 11es1 taoilr
,
...
••
cardial infarction, and in whi'h
c m 1 e IS a
gnoow: 5 cents per Word one Insertion
,
...,lllan Bins
We have a complete Home with or without kitchen
March, 1971, I had a heart test for your problem. It Ill
Minimum Charge 15c
.
llodt.tor Speclollst
Mal.ntenance Servl,co the yeer
orlvlleges.
attack. It is now diagnosed an entirely different matter 12 cents per word three
' ·.·
s· M
- I'I'IJ N..... Mil around. No matter what you~
' Individual Catering
as severe angina. I am to be taking nitroglycerin conse&lt;;utlve Insertions.
ltuVOLKSWAGEN SQ. BA'CK SEDAN
$1095
11n !;._WA
need. Complete roof or . Nlllseat up to 150 people.
taking nitroglycerin pills aU tablets for recurring attacks • 18 cents per word six cOn·
New ring lob. clean Interior, good tires. radio, heater.
apoutlng repair. Interior or
·
Sharp f?iack finish.
,
'.
.
. · ' exterior carpentry. Ceiling
Phone ·
the time and they do help the of chest pain that are known secuttvo Insertions.
~·
992-2174
Pomeroy
II
I
.
e
and
Paneling
and
Siding.
.992-3975
992·5786
pain. Doctors have told me tQ be angina as opposed tli ~5 Per C..t Discount on paid .
1
10
the nitroglycerin t a b I e t s the first episode of chest pain ·ads and ads paid within
j
Co!"plete
Plumbing a.
would not hurt me. In case after months of no difficulty . day~ARD OF THANKS
Auto Sales
Healing,
·'l
of another heart attack and I whatsoever.
•
a OBITUARY
.
~
P.Y Numberm.uso
.
l
am taking nitroglycerin tabBasically, if a person has S1.50 for SO·.word minimum.
OI'!N EVI!S. 1100 P.M.
"i
1969 OODGE SuperBee, 383 cu. We hilve ·24 hr. emergency
1
lets is it death or shock? Is not had angm·al discomfort Each addBLIIIINonaD IAwDorSd 2c.
.
ilf)M!ROY, atiiO
ln., 4speed, posllracllon, good service.
Alignm~
1
lad r tl
d
condition - $1,600, or toke
992·5103-742-:tf47
it possible that one of the f
o me an
Additional 25c Charge per
over payments. Phone. 992992-3898-742-4761
'
.,
anginal pains could be the or a ong per
2511 or 992·3205 .
Weare fully i!lfllred.
start of another heart at" then suddenly has an episode Advertlsemlflt. .
it
is
more
likely
heart
attack.
·
OFFICE
HOURS
For
Sale
2-29-Jtc
~========~
tack? Also, what are the
1 understand your concern 8:30a .m. to 5:00 p:m. Dally
Notice
r
-GUARANTEED- I
right amounts in the taking that one of your anginal epi· ~30 a.m. to 12 · 00 Noon1 YARD sale, Friday and GASOLINE golf carl with 1962 DODGE, 4 door sedan, 6
POMEROY
of these pills?
Phone 992·2094
:.,
sodes mi~t be a heart at·
lurday.
Saturday, 1284 Powell Street,
fiberglas body. Mechanical
cylinder, standard shift '
l
ng
I
can
Notl'ce
Middleport.
Few
antiques,
old
and
body
work
needed
S100"
5200,
Call
Hilton
Wolfe,
Dear Reader- A myocar· tack and e best thi
HOME
&amp;
AUTO
Phone
992-5523.
·
..
Racine,
949-3211.
PomefOY Home
&amp;
Auto ;'
0 Illamps, dl shes. m Isc. ltems.
_28 _3tc ··.,
dial infarction and a heart tell you is that a person who
2-29-ltp
.
.
2
1
992-2094
Open8TIU
i
MAJOR
H3tc - - - - - - - '
attack are the same thing. So repeatedly takes nitroglycer"
Mond1y
thru
S1turday
basically you have had two in for angina does develop a
606
E.
Main
Pomeroy
Chemical Meeting
UPHOLSTERING SERVICe,
1960 THUNDER Bl RD Con' 606 E. Moln, Pomeroy, 0 .
episodes of the same prob· tolerance to the medicine. WED ESDAY A
vertible, new top, 36,000 ac·
complete •election of fabrics
1
lem, both of which are com' Thus, one pill is not likely to
N
'M R.
andvlnylloctroosefrom. Pick For Sale
tual. miles, phone 742-3386 . .
,.SEPTIC tanks · cleaned. Mlfie~
2-27-61c
8:00P.M.
up and delivery . Slater NERVOUS? Can't sleer.? Try
plications of coronary artery cause any major problems in
Sanitation, Stewart, Olrio: Pft
LANDMARK STORE
Upholstering. Rt. 3, Pomeroy. "S/'eepers." Satis action
and.
disease. Angina or chest dis- someone who has been re·
662-3035
.
:
Pomeroy
phone m -3617 .
comfort that you have is also peatedly taking the pills for Moin St.
or money back. \iobile Homes
Sale
2-12"11,
Q-3-301p guaranteed
Only 98c, Nelson Drugs.
a manifestation of coronary an~inal pain. Now, If the Chuck Mitchell, Chemical
---:--- ' '
3-1-lie 60 X 10, 2 BEDROOM trailer, Stop In and See Our O;UE ll WHE
patn or discomfort is un- Speclall•t. will be here to
artery disease.
E.L allghmenf
wall to wall carpeting 'floo
1
located at Crossroads, Rf. 12~;
It is quite true that the on- usually severe or consider· give us the latest In- A SI~ObeT ~ydNS andd rlfiMaemahtch _L_E_G-Cr_a_m_ps_?_T_r_y_S_u_p-pilcal
everywhere except bathroom L--r,.....,,...•s_p_a_Y_·_ _ _....J
Complete front end servl"'
set of a heart attack can be ably different than previous formation on all chemicals.
w
e un ay,
rc 5,
with calcium. only $1.98 at
and kitchen. Call 992·5947.
al
12
o'clock.
Rutland
Gun
tune
up and brake servia.~'
episodes,
then
you
would
be
Refreshments
exactly like angina. In fact
3-Htc SEWING MACHINES. Repaor
Club, New lima Road. Hand
Nelson Drugs.
Wheels balanced elec
wise
to
contact
the
doctor.
Door
Prizes
one of the old medical differ·
service, all makes. 992-2284.
choked shotguns will be
3-1-ltc
All
wor
troAically.
l'he Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Information
entiations between the two is The other point that will keep
I
guaranteed.
Reasonable'.
handicapped. Rilles will be In _R_E_D_U_C_E-ex-c-es_s_fl_u_id-s-with
Authorized Singer Sales anc
THE BEST deal In a new
You Are Invited 1
that if the chest discomfort you out of trouble is that if
rates . .Phone m -3213.
•
two classes . Open sites and
FLUIDEX, $1.69 _ LOSE FOR
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
or
used
mobile
home,
try
one
pill
doesn't
work
and
the
scope, bench rest and olf
1·21 · 11~
lasted for more than "half of
3·29-tk - - - - , - - - ",
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
hand. Rille shooters will WEIGHT safety with Dex-Aa quarter of an hour," It was discomfort persists, It 18 not
Kanauga,
Ohio.
furnl•h
own
shells.
Any
Diel,
98c
at
Nelson
Drugs.
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
more than just angina. The angina. Don't take another
12-17-901c SIGNS, posters, marl boxes arlo
Complete Service
favorite saying; hand letcalibre of &lt;JJieL muzzle -========3:-1:_·1-tc.,
implication being that it was tablet. See your doctor, since
Phone 949-3821
loaders
lnclud~
·,..
In your favorite style.
as I stated above true angi·
a heart attack.
3-l-41c
60Xi2, 2-bedroom: all-electric, tered;
R.ac lne, Ohio
David
Hooker,
Rl.
2,
Albany,
Crill'
BrGdford
Now· it is quite all right for nal attacks are of short
air conditioned. 8x2011. Porch Olrlo 45710 &lt;Pagetown).
GUN SHOOT,alsorifie matches
and aluminum awning,
5-1-tlc
you to be taking nitroglycer- duration .
2-6·301&lt;:
open
sites
only,
Forked
aluminum
skirting,
com
(NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE
ASSN.)
in tablets and your doctors
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
36" X 23" X .009
pletely setup. Buullfu
buy new furniture? Have HARRISON'S l'V and Antenrll!
March s. 12 noon .
location. Owner leaving state . Why
Service. Phone 992-2522.
Friday &amp; Saturday
thai old made new by Sylvia's
Phone 949·4892 or 992·5272.
3 3t
6-10-tlc
Upholstering
Shop,
Mrs.
, Night
1. 1o.tfc
_
,_
c
·
Woodrow
T.
Zwilling,
Prop.,
WIN AT BRIDGE
10 TII2 ·
ALLSIOE Builders &amp; CorL·
SHOOTING Match, saturday,
Syracuse. Ohio.
·
struclion Co. We specialize II\
March 4, at the Racine
2- 10-JOip
aluminum, vinyl and steel
Music By: Lowell Thom1s &amp;
Planing Mlllal6p.m. Faclory
siding; fiberglas, brick and
The Outcosts.
choke guns only. Assorted
stone; complete line of
meat. Sponsored by the
4 pc. Band, Country Music,
Real Estate For Sale
resldenlial and commercia!
Syracuse
Fire
Dept.
The
maestro
was
r
i
g
h
t
Soft
Rock
from
Belpre,
Ohio.
NORTH
USED
OFFSET
PLATES
1
roofing ;
remodeling;.
3-l-31c
about the safety play. South
HAVE
• K85
LIST your farm, home or
building,
suspended
celllngt,:
wanted to make three no· WILL , DO bookkeeping, tax
MANY USES
¥ K6
business wllh us. No charge
Interior and exterior. pain.
trump and was sure or it if ~~,;:;•;es k~!~e .,"''("c-yof my ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
unless your real eslale Is sold.
• 85
ling ; com plele lin.e of
12' • 141 • 24' • WiDE
John While Realty, Vera
Masonry work . All work'
... QJ10543
East held the club·kmg. phone .949·374r, Racine oung, overweight ladles. teens and
Eblen.
Associate.
Middleport,
guaranteed
to customer
However, the maestro mtght
.2
c
men
interested
In
a
Weight
.
WEST
EAST
2 1 121
phone
992·3020
.
satisfaction.
We
are tully
have
assessed
the
full
$10.
Watchers
(
R
l
Class
In
• Q642
.97
2-27-6tc
Insured
for
your
protection.
3~
8 for Sl.OO
Suppose East held three KOSCOT KOSMETICS, Flame WPomt ehroy &lt;Rw1rit1e86:3 ,wSeclelght
"'QJ7
"'Al0542
N. Second, ph. 992-3918.
'
1
b
·
of
Hope
Perfumes
Human
a
c
ers
•
lion
• QJJ0 64
t 732
c u s to the kmg. So u t h and Synthetic wig~. We're
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
BUILDING lots In Branchwood
2-15-JOtc:
of&gt;K
,fo9 76
1220 Washington Blvd.
Subdivision at Rock Springs,
here for rour convenience.
10.3-lfc
Belpre, Ohio
soum &lt;DJ
T. P, water, phone 992•2789. READY-MIA \.VN\.KETE de-:
992
5113
S••~}L~! {A,c;QI~ MODE~N book Please cal
- · 2_25 _tfc SAVE up to one half. Bring your
3·1·12tc llvers.~:tght to Y,our pr,o.l~.'
·- - - .AJ!OJ
to: 'Wm Gt lmiJt, (c/o ,,.,,..,,.,_
sick TV to Chuck'$ TV shop,
¥983
-==~==~
·
:
--"=~::
·~
- '·esll
F11Wt" ' ;jjld en'y. ''"Freo~
r·
mates. 'Phone 992-3284 '
pop.,!, , .0. lox ~. Radio ' City LOSE weight with New Shape
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
t AK9
Goeglein
Really-Mix Co,,
... A82
Stotion Ne• Yo'~ N y 10019
Tablets, 10 days tupply only
11 -21 -lfc
LOOKING for Investment
Middleport Ohio.
:
•
'
·
•
·
$1.49
at
Nelson
Drugs.
111 Court St .
Both vulnerable
property? Fantastic Is the
6-30-tlc.
2 28 31
word for this specious 12West North Ea.•t South
Pomeroy, Ohio
- - - - - - ---. P Wanted To· Buy
would
get
three
club
tricks
room, 2-bath all brick home,
· lN.T.
·IN'rERIOR &amp; exterior t&gt;alntlnQ.
setup
as duplex, or can be
but
would
not
be
able
to
gel
Wanted
T
0
Do
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
4 WHEEL drive leep. Phone
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-5825.
used as offices. located In
back to dummy to r~n the
after 5 p.m. 992-:!062.
Pass
GUN cabinet, cherry wood, 1 Middleport's
2-28-5tc
Broker
business dlalrlct
rest of the suit Or if West BABYSITTING In my home,
2-27-121c gun capacity, phone 992-2936 . overlooking the
-.
Opening lead- t Q
110
Medlonlc
St.
Ohio River.
h ld th th
1b
h
Mrs . Glenn Smith, Rock
GET ·· your boat ready for
2-29-3tc White Really Co.. Vera Eblen,
e
e ree c u s to t e Springs Rd .. phone 992-6187
Pomeroy,
0
.,
45769
summerl Call D. Karr, 992kmg, South would get three
3·1-6tc T.V. tower . Phone Mason 773·
associate, phone 992·3020.
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby club tricks but would not be :5446.
1968 FORD 100, V-8, 360, pickup
·
5367.
" _ _ _ _ _ __,:_
2-29-6tc
NEW LISTING
2-29-3tc truck, 8 fl . bed ; '12 Arabi a~
2-27-6tc
0
Here is another hand from
0
MOBILE
HOME-10x50.
2
,
riding
horse,
phone
992-9943.
Wanted To Rent
Culbertson's '.'Battle RoyaL "
OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
AUTOMOiliLE ·insurance bHi,
2-29-3tp HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights. nice bedrooms, bath, oil
Ca II Danny Thompson, m - heel. lot 50x200. Both for
Before, he fined South the Or if West held the three ·rwo Beoroom home ln.Aibany. tables, Brass beds. dishes,
cancelled?
lost . yout.
2196.
operator's license? Call ~
full $10 for a bad bid and clubs to the king he could langsville - Middleport . clocks, and-or complete TWIN rinse tubs on rollers Only
$3500.00.
7-18-tlc
households . Write M. D.
$15; R. D. Brown. Danville,
2966.
:
with the sa me lady as de- let the first club finesse go Pomeroy area. A. W. Watson,
2 APARTMENTS
Miller,
Rt.
4,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
and
shut
out
the
club
suit
Jn
P.
0
.
Box
35,
langsville,
Ohio.
phone
742-5408.
6·15-11$
clarer this time, he let her
3 BEDROOMS-Bath,
Call 992-6271.
3-1·61p
2·29-31c SIX ROOMhouse,133 Butlernut furnace heal. Storm doors
off with minimum fine of the same manner.
~-17-lfc
OOZER WORK. Reasonabl~
Ave, Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
$2.50,
(NEWSPAPEl EHTEAP'ltSt: ASSN .)
--------~WHY
PAY ..MORE? Re.
rates. ACHD 11, Phone o;
Wadsworth Drive, Columb.us, and windows. 1 Bedroom
West opened the queen of
apartment
down.
Only
Olrlo,
phone
237-4334.
Karr, 992-~7.
frlgeralors $35 up ; elect ..
Help Wanted
diamonds. South won ; engas ranges $25 up ; buill-In
11-21 -lfc $7500.00 THIS MONTH.
"7.:::::::::-:::7:::c:--:-_:2:.,:·
27 -61J!
tered dummy .vlth the king
TIME-MONEY. Two women or ovens $30; washers from $35;
RURAL
SEPTIC
TANKS
CLEANEu
',
men to handle Increased
dryers $30. All appliances NICE 2-story home with full 3 BEDROOMS-Nice bath,
of spades and led the queen
REASONABLE
rates.
Ph.
4~
Tho
bidding
has
been:
demand
for
our
famous
clean,
GUARANTEED
.
basement, 2 lots, new forced modern kitchen. double sink,
of clubs lor a finesse. West
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell/
Furniture: Jenny Lind beds,
household products. Rawlelgh
air furnace. Near POmeroy . gas furnace. Drilled well. 6
North East South
took in the trick with his West
Owner &amp; Operator.
, ·:
Co.,
Dept.
1116,
Freeport,
Ill.,
complete
;
dinettes;
Elementary
School.
Phone
Pus
lots.
Business
building
30x44.
si ngleton king and led the
5-12-tf~
phone 815-232-7416.
hideabeds ; dressers, chests;
992-7384 to see.
Dble
2+ 3t
queen of hearts. Five heart 1+
3-1-llc cabinet sewing machines .
fP-tic All for $21,500.00.
BACKHOE ANDD-OZ~E-.R
- worK;
3¥
Pass 3 •
3 HOUSES
tricks followed quickly and Pass
-----Kuhl's Bargain Center, Rt. 7,
Septic
tanks
lndalled.
Georaf
Pass
4•
Pass
'
South was down two.
2
RENTED
Main
house
Tuppers Plains. 0 . "at HOUSE In Long BOttom, phbne
(Bill)
Pullins.
Phone
992·2418!
has
3
bedrooms,
bath,
gas
caullon
light."
Ph
.
667-3858.
985-3529.
'
" Sorry," said the maestro .
You, South, hold:
women on Friday, March 3 at
~5- ltc
Closed Mondays.
1-28-tfr ,furnace. Fully carpeted and
"You failed to make a safety • 98 6H ¥A Q 6 t A 3 Z ... H United Methodist Church in
2-25-61c
play on th e hand. It will cost
' on one floor . FREE GAS, In
What do you do now?
New Haven, West Virginia at
' I
LEGAL
3 BEDROOM ranch type home, all three. 19 acres. Only
you $2.50."
A-P15s.
What
else?
You
are
7:30p.m.
Thetheme,lobeused
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers $16,000.00. This' month,
NOTICE OF
" Is thai so ?" she asked.
in
the
right
&lt;onlracl
In
similar
gal!lerlngs
In
169
Park
view
Kennels,
Phone
992Plains. All . new with total
APPOINTMENT
::
better hurry.
"Just what did I do wrong?"
5443
.
and
contra~
air
electric
CUtN0.206tf
TODAY'S QUESTION
countries, is "All Joy Be
NEW LISTING
" You failed to lay down
Estate of Paul Zlrklt Oeceaue~- !
8-15-tlc. conditioning, bath and :14 fully
4
BEDROOMS
-1V2 bath,,
the club-ace lo allow for the
In stead of bidding three Yours." Mrs. B. R. Vance wiU
Nollce Is hereby given th.,ii
carpeted, full basement;
gas
furnace,
nice
birch
Norma
Zirkle of Pomeroy~
possibility that West held the hearts, your partner has bid aerve as leader for the service
HOUSE . on Cave Streel, garage In basement. See b~
~ncl
Ohio, hea been dulr appolnt•l
kitchen
.
Full
basement,
appofnlment,
phone
992-2196
singleton king . You were four diamonds over your three Since the first smali
Pomeroy. Also house and 4
as Adm lnlstratrlx o the Est at
sure of your contract if East diamonds. What do you do now? gatherings In the United Stales
lots In Harrisonville. Priced or m -3585. Danny Thompson, Iron! porch. Garage, lot
of Paul Zirkle, deceased, late tit
10x209. Only 110,000.00.
Meigs County , Ohio.
•l
held that card ."
for quick sale. Phone 742·5432. Financing available.
85 years ago, the Idea of united
12-30-lfc
MODERN
Creditors are required to '""'
2·2Hip
their claims with said flduclar"
Dai~
prayer by women around the
3 BEDROOMS-1'12 baths,
within four months.
r;
TROPI~Al
FISH, fancy
gas forced air furnace .. Wall
world from sun tli · sun has
Oated
this
12th
day
ofj
Ph. 614-992·2156
guppies, angels and breeders,
to wall carpeting In living February 1972.
· ,
increasingly captured the
Bellas and supplies. Phone
John c . Bacon ~
and
dining
rooms.
Beaufllul
imagination of community
992-5443.
Judg&amp; ~
kitchen with dlspotal,
Mr . and Mrs. John Dyer Bingo with everyone winning a
Employment Wanted
(2) 16, 23 (3) 1, 3!
12-30-tl&lt;
groups. Today, World Day of
freezer
·
refrigerator,
nice
Layne of Danville, Pa. are prize. Those in attendance
WALL Finisher con'
Prayer, can be described as DRY
range with oven and controls
tractor, R. I. Dubbeld, phone EAHL r AMERICAN Stereo
announcing the birth of a son were Mrs. Ellon Clevenger,
.
I
NOTICE OF
742-5825.
over, gos fireplace. 2 lots. 2
the most Important ecumenical
AM-FM radio, 4 spee~
on February 26 at 6:45 p.m. Mrs. Robert Dye, Mrs. Her·
APPOINTM!NT
car
garage.
2-28-51c changer, ~ speaker sound
occasion during the year. This
Case No. 20,621
The baby weighed 7 lbs., % ozs. man Knapp, Mrs. Earl Ewing,
NEW LISTING
system. Balance $79.32. Use
Otfrc..'12-2259 TIII4:00
Estate ot ELSIE D. SMITH
celebration is the most widely
and has been named John Mrs. Gary Roush, Mrs. Eugene
Evenings 992,25641
our budget terms. Call 992·
NEW BLOCK-2 bedroom
BLACKBURN,. Dectlled
,.
For Rent
obaerved
activity
of
Church
7085.
Notice 11 hereby glveri thaiY:
home,
bath, and garage. Lot
Allen.
Hudnall, Mrs. C. M. Adiunl, Women United, which is the
L. Smith, ot
2 BEDROOM mobile home
3·1-61c Why Walt?
200x150. IN THE COUNTRY. Thtophllus
Maternal grandparents are Jr ., Miss Usa Scott, Mrs.
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
has been dul~ i
Bob's
Mobile
Court:
ecumenical expression of
lppolnted Executor of the·
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Parsons Winnie McKenzie, Mrs. Adrian
Syracuse, phone 992-2951.
STEREO-Radio
Comblnallon,
POMEROYBeautiful
1
story
INVEST IN PROPERTY, Estate of Elsie o . SITilth Blacl(.~.
Protestant, Orthodox and
brick - 3 large bedrooms MONEY
""Vienna, W. Va . The paternal Lathey, all guests. Members
2·27-lfc lovely WALNUT finish, four
WON'T KEEP, burn, deceased, tete of MeiO(:
Roman
Catholic
women
who
speed lnlermlxed changer, 4
with double closets, 1'12 baths,
County, Ohio.
.,
grandparen Is are Mr . and Mrs. attending were Mrs . Don
kllchen has everything, BUT REAL ESTATE WILL.
NEW, 12x60, two bedroom speaker sound syslem,
Creditors an required to fll&amp;tl
wish
to
mobilize
around
Harry Layne of New Haven. Bwngardner, Mrs. Kenneth
carpeted, carport, basement PROPERTY PICTURES ON their ctelms with seld flduclar\'.:·
mobile home acrou from Balance S63.99. Use our
Within four months
•;
with excellent recreation OUR OFFICE WALL
Mrs. H. L. Dyer of New Haven Vickers, Mrs. Jack Hesson, common goals and channel
Bradbury School. Call 992· budget terms. Call 992-1085.
Doted
thIs
26ih
day
,;
lhelr
energies
lnlo
effective
room, about 1 acre of ground.
0
3'1 ·6tc
5301 or see Charles lewis, 2nd
is the great-grandmother.
Mrs, Dan Edwards, Mrs. Paul
February, 1972.
~
$28,500,
action. The goal of Church
house soulh from Bradbury
HELEN l. TEAFORD,
John
C.
Bacon
WOMAN'S CLUB
Powell, lltrs. Chester Curry, Women United 18 to fonn a
4 GRAV.E lol al Meigs
School . Pets welcome.
ASSOCIATE
Judge
The New Haven Woman's Mrs. Emo Wood, Mrs. Tom
Memorial Gardens, Prices will be higher tnls 992-3325
2-21
-tfc
Court of Col'rlmon Pleas,
"2·2371
visible
fellowship
of
believers
spring.
·
reasonable.
Phone
949·4962.
Club met for their ·~nnual guest Hoffman, Mrs. Phil Batey,
{3) i, a, 15 , 31 Probate Olvloron
3-Htc
night and covered dish dinner Mrs. William Russell, Mrs. in Christ, and move in every TRAILER, Brown' s Trailer
POMEROY- 1 story frame; 2
Court, Minersville, Ohio, SHOWALTER'S W t P 1 Sh
on Tuesday, February 22, at Harold ·Bumgarner, Mrs . community and nation a1 In·
bedrooms, full basement,
phone
992-33U.
e
e
·
op,
good neighborhood, trailer
6:30 in the Club Room at the Arthur Hart, Mrs. Jesse Abel, slrwnents of reconciling love.
2.2Htc Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
space, 2'12 lots . $3,900.
There are 2,300 unlta of CWU In
- - - - - - - - Tropical fish . and supplies.
New Haven Ubrary.
Mrs. Jack Flesher, Mrs . the United Slates.
Stop In and compare.
FURI'IISHED and untu•nlshed
Devotions were led by Mrs. Charles Smith, Mrs. Thelma
3· 1·27tp Want to sell or trade your farm?
Close
to
school.
apartments.
Call Cleland's .
.
Jerry Scott. Following the Scally, Mrs. Mark Ward, Mrs.
Phone 992-5434.
1971
ZIG-ZAG
Sewing
Machine
mealJI!rs. Kenneth Thompson, R. G. Greene, Mrs. Eugene
10·11·1lc lett In layawar· Beaullful MIDDLEPORT - 1 story
vice ·president, in the ab!Miuce Hester, Sr., Mrs. David Roush,
pastel color, ful size model . frame, 2 bedrooms, bath,
2
BEDROOM,
'
1
2
double,
fur
All
built-In to bultonhole, do dining room, large level lot,
of the president, called the Mrs , Donald F, Roush, Mrs.
nished on 4th &amp; College In stretch sewing and fancy
glassed
front
porch,
meeting lo order. Regular Charles Dodd, · Mrs. Kenneth
Syracuse. Phone 992·2149:
SlS.OO Dowtt ·
slltchlng. Pay lusl S48.75 cash
basement. 11.900.
2·2f.61c or terms available. Trade-Ins
reports were given and 1))- Thompson, Mrs. John Morgan,
Balance On
accepted. Phone 992- ~1.
Want to seil? Call Cleland's.
proved , The state convention Mrs. Jerry Scott, .and ·Mrs.
Convenient
oPACIOUS unfurnished
3'1-61c
was announced for March 1&amp;-18 Harold ROlle.
·
Terms. ·
apartment In Mason, 4 rooms - - -- - - - - RACINE '- 2 story frame,~
al The Greenbrier, White
&amp; bath. electric haat; phone VACUUM Cleaner, new 1971
DAY OF PRAYER
bedrooms. bath, dining room,
173·5975.
modeL Complete with all
tull basement, 2 extra lots,
Sulphur Springs, W. Va. Mrs.
The Church Women United In
2·2Hic
cleaning
toofs.
Small
pelnl
outbuilding,
glassed porch In
Geor~· Circle was accepted as the Bend 'Area will . obaerve
~damage In shipping. Will take roar, fronl porch, forced-air
a ne ,. member of lhe club.
World Day of Prayer, the In·
2 BEDROOM mobile home In S27 cash or budGet plan gas heat,
Henry Cltland, Rullor
The remainder of the ternational celebration of ·faith
Ra~lne area. Phone 992-6329, available. Phone 991- ~1 .
ON YOUR DIAL
Mason, W.Va.
H61c
2·2Htc
2-16-lfc
evening was spent In playing and unity 111110ng Christian

Po••roy Motor (••

GO lOOK IN TH'
FUll- lENGTH
MIRROR,
LOWEEZV

MOTORS. IN.C.

®
IN'

·

·

. .R
YOU STilL SPN THE GOOD PI!Or::E;SSOR •'

TJ.IIS rS T~E FIFTH TrME
SHARI&lt; ~AS KAt&gt; JACK SITTr!OG
IN i-llS PLACE ... WITf.IOLIT
A/Cib NOTrC I NG)

ISN'T NEAR$1GHTED?
J· /

EXPERT

Wheel

...

.. ·. '5.55

OFFICE SUPPUES

For

-

FURNITURE

I'?- '/ES,
M'/ NAME.
1$ MAR"/IAMA
WIDOW··

HEW!l.RN'T
SH'I,MA'MHE WIOP.E

DOES'/0' .
REMEMf&gt;ER

·aiG&amp;tU:

&amp;OrnJMI.£'1?

---

o·

DANa

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

--------

ror
r1 Sale

GliT Ylll I!IIFUNO
AT WINDOW Fl\li ...

llttiGLII ••• SWICk~J

I CAN SeE WHERE
SOME PEOPLE MIGHT

I APPRECIATE ')OUR RECOMMENDING 1HI5
RE&amp;T,AJJRANT, Ml~ WINKLE;
~UT

ITe 50 FOPULAR, I~'r
SEEM TO GET A TAI3lE:.

MISINTERPRET MY

ATTENTON TO

MIND IF

lHAT~!J'\."'

MAN

\OURS

Aluml·num
Sheets

Missed Safety Play---Uip!

------

The

MILLER
MOBIL£ HOMES

"oanrselftltrel

r

Vh:gil B.
Teaford, Sr.

•

~ ,.

t':'~u~ t~~t ~~~\) t~:~:::r.

WANTED!

---------

•Carriers For
MASON

HARTFORD
The
Sentinel

New Haven Social Events

NOTICE

GOOD ~ORNING, CH!LDRE~~ CHICKEH

LiTTlE IS HERE AHD WE. ALL KNO!I/
WHAT THAT MEAMS, D0t1'1 WE??
I'VE GOT GOOD!fS !N MY POCKET ..,
JU~T ~EANT FOR 'fOU'

-~

illlYMW~;I4J.:::~!...Jr.=
~111"11\11~~'''''

ACROSS
LPromote
the sale of

S.From

Berne
Just
thisOld-time
soldier
IS. Court
order
U. Turkish
city
15. Norse
goddeas
18. One of the
Curies
n. Tenth of
a sen .
11. Passed
' along
18. Foil
behind
n Pitcher
II. Allot
II. Trod
the
boards
Rellslous
headdress
U. Undlaauiled
1'1. Bombast

.

------

Cleland
Realty ·

__________

:

·.

3 ROOMS

FURNITURE
'349.95

That Luten,
To You

MASON
.FURNITURE

WMP0/1390
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.

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

---~----~~

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Yetterd•1'• Amwer

12. Forest
%5. Lion's
guardian
pride
prop
16. Watched 1'1. Ebb
DOWN
19. Over·
. , Z9. Tele·
1. Touah
whelmed
graphed
problem
22. Candy
30. Dickens
flavor
character
!. Loosen
23. Lessened 31. Addict
S. Hester
38. Thessal·
Prynne's 24. Body of
uga, with
govern"
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mental
mountain
ad•lsers
S?. Bute
4. Hold It! ·

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tof_lhe_jWIHIIIIIWtr,U
llllftltlted by the abooe eartoon.

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.

ur rr r J'

(AMwerf lo ... rrow)

...,.•.

v~ue

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Jo.W..• ILITI SNARL OPIATI MOITAR
A-wen TMal•rperfomuJnrr• nol OJII'R lo flit

p•bll&lt; -OPIRATIONS

dentia1
nickname
n. Exploded.
. asa
time.
bomb
3Z. Wee bird
31. H!Jhway
buard
14. "Bali - "
'11. Complete

- - - - --

The Station

Unteramble th.elour Jumbla.
one letter to eadt JICIUII't, to
form four ordlnar1 worda.

5. Drool
6. Dwindled
?. Squid's
output
8. Buller's
love ·

n. Prest·

------

NEW

3?. Profound
SB. Conyeyed
legally
39. Hibernia
ct•.Kind
of
school
41. Magi-

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TRLI!,.

sur HI!'!!'
FlYING

IIACK Ill'

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I~ fA~Y.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. 1n this sample A i•
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the word• are all
hints. Each ~ay the code letters are different.

THe~!!
A6AIN~

A Cryptogram Quotation
T

J'K Z D H D W D•T F

FOCH
KQ

OZOWHDKF:

H·SO

FOCH

H SD F N [,

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WZTBNO
Yestenloy•a Cryptoquote: WHY SHOULD A WORM TURN?
IT IS PROBABLY TilE SAME ON THE OTHER SlllE.1RVIN S. COBB
(" 19721Cinsr ll'eajuret~ SynrHeat~, lne.)

THAT'S M'( iDfA
CiliJI.D
S/lH 1'0 ME ...

~ETHIN6 i(()V

IT I~M JU:H Ar.l IDEA ...

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I

(
14- Tho l)lllv Sentinel, Mlddleport.flwlleroy. 0., .._..1, 117'

Heart Attack ·can
Resemble Angina

1 ,.

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Get Results~
. .. . . .
. . . .:

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds
. DR.LAWRENCEE.'LAMB

r

. ,. . , -·- -2 51115 . 1Po•er•

~~~~A~N

~b~~~~r..

o.y

'iii'
~

Before

c:Zt,~t'~:.:.-,:;.

....&amp;
01
-AL- " ~·r
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MJ. WEATHER ROOFifiJ;
CONSTRUCTION
PLUMBING CO.

R
'-

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I

HAVE 'IE GOT
A FUlL"WIOTH
MI.R ROR?

Business ·Services

1

Will ba occepted unlll9 a.m. for ·
_
Day of Publlcaflon1 ·
'll.a ·
REGULATIONS
·
IIIC
1
Tht Publlllher restrves IM
'" CHEV. CAMAROCPE.
mso
&amp;
&amp;
right to edit or reltct any ads
I C)'j., auto. trans., power steering, console, rodlo, vinyl
n-l.'d
are perfectly correct In tell· deemed oblectlonal . . The
roof .. !:Jne owner, low mileage.
UUilll
_. ...
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
ing you they won't hurt you. 'publisher will not be
S.rvJce
Make reservations tor your
Dear Dr. Lamb - I read The discomfort you have ex· responsible for more than one
I'rom the largeat
241 Ll-ln St.
private parties. banquets
your article on nitroglycerin perlenced has been success" Incorrect Insertion,
1967 CHEVELLE MALIBU HTCPE.
11395
Bulldozer Radiator to
Middleport, Ohio
Ions
1
tablets. In 1966 I had a myo- fullu relieved by the tablets
RATES
327 engine, 4 speed trans., clean Interior &amp; good tires
s
H
"
·
Core
Dill
Anlllony
Plumb!""
sld~~llaforoccmaseetlng,
place -·
· 'ts lf · dla
~•For Want Ad Service
Med. grn. finish. Nice.
·
· ! ma 11es1 taoilr
,
...
••
cardial infarction, and in whi'h
c m 1 e IS a
gnoow: 5 cents per Word one Insertion
,
...,lllan Bins
We have a complete Home with or without kitchen
March, 1971, I had a heart test for your problem. It Ill
Minimum Charge 15c
.
llodt.tor Speclollst
Mal.ntenance Servl,co the yeer
orlvlleges.
attack. It is now diagnosed an entirely different matter 12 cents per word three
' ·.·
s· M
- I'I'IJ N..... Mil around. No matter what you~
' Individual Catering
as severe angina. I am to be taking nitroglycerin conse&lt;;utlve Insertions.
ltuVOLKSWAGEN SQ. BA'CK SEDAN
$1095
11n !;._WA
need. Complete roof or . Nlllseat up to 150 people.
taking nitroglycerin pills aU tablets for recurring attacks • 18 cents per word six cOn·
New ring lob. clean Interior, good tires. radio, heater.
apoutlng repair. Interior or
·
Sharp f?iack finish.
,
'.
.
. · ' exterior carpentry. Ceiling
Phone ·
the time and they do help the of chest pain that are known secuttvo Insertions.
~·
992-2174
Pomeroy
II
I
.
e
and
Paneling
and
Siding.
.992-3975
992·5786
pain. Doctors have told me tQ be angina as opposed tli ~5 Per C..t Discount on paid .
1
10
the nitroglycerin t a b I e t s the first episode of chest pain ·ads and ads paid within
j
Co!"plete
Plumbing a.
would not hurt me. In case after months of no difficulty . day~ARD OF THANKS
Auto Sales
Healing,
·'l
of another heart attack and I whatsoever.
•
a OBITUARY
.
~
P.Y Numberm.uso
.
l
am taking nitroglycerin tabBasically, if a person has S1.50 for SO·.word minimum.
OI'!N EVI!S. 1100 P.M.
"i
1969 OODGE SuperBee, 383 cu. We hilve ·24 hr. emergency
1
lets is it death or shock? Is not had angm·al discomfort Each addBLIIIINonaD IAwDorSd 2c.
.
ilf)M!ROY, atiiO
ln., 4speed, posllracllon, good service.
Alignm~
1
lad r tl
d
condition - $1,600, or toke
992·5103-742-:tf47
it possible that one of the f
o me an
Additional 25c Charge per
over payments. Phone. 992992-3898-742-4761
'
.,
anginal pains could be the or a ong per
2511 or 992·3205 .
Weare fully i!lfllred.
start of another heart at" then suddenly has an episode Advertlsemlflt. .
it
is
more
likely
heart
attack.
·
OFFICE
HOURS
For
Sale
2-29-Jtc
~========~
tack? Also, what are the
1 understand your concern 8:30a .m. to 5:00 p:m. Dally
Notice
r
-GUARANTEED- I
right amounts in the taking that one of your anginal epi· ~30 a.m. to 12 · 00 Noon1 YARD sale, Friday and GASOLINE golf carl with 1962 DODGE, 4 door sedan, 6
POMEROY
of these pills?
Phone 992·2094
:.,
sodes mi~t be a heart at·
lurday.
Saturday, 1284 Powell Street,
fiberglas body. Mechanical
cylinder, standard shift '
l
ng
I
can
Notl'ce
Middleport.
Few
antiques,
old
and
body
work
needed
S100"
5200,
Call
Hilton
Wolfe,
Dear Reader- A myocar· tack and e best thi
HOME
&amp;
AUTO
Phone
992-5523.
·
..
Racine,
949-3211.
PomefOY Home
&amp;
Auto ;'
0 Illamps, dl shes. m Isc. ltems.
_28 _3tc ··.,
dial infarction and a heart tell you is that a person who
2-29-ltp
.
.
2
1
992-2094
Open8TIU
i
MAJOR
H3tc - - - - - - - '
attack are the same thing. So repeatedly takes nitroglycer"
Mond1y
thru
S1turday
basically you have had two in for angina does develop a
606
E.
Main
Pomeroy
Chemical Meeting
UPHOLSTERING SERVICe,
1960 THUNDER Bl RD Con' 606 E. Moln, Pomeroy, 0 .
episodes of the same prob· tolerance to the medicine. WED ESDAY A
vertible, new top, 36,000 ac·
complete •election of fabrics
1
lem, both of which are com' Thus, one pill is not likely to
N
'M R.
andvlnylloctroosefrom. Pick For Sale
tual. miles, phone 742-3386 . .
,.SEPTIC tanks · cleaned. Mlfie~
2-27-61c
8:00P.M.
up and delivery . Slater NERVOUS? Can't sleer.? Try
plications of coronary artery cause any major problems in
Sanitation, Stewart, Olrio: Pft
LANDMARK STORE
Upholstering. Rt. 3, Pomeroy. "S/'eepers." Satis action
and.
disease. Angina or chest dis- someone who has been re·
662-3035
.
:
Pomeroy
phone m -3617 .
comfort that you have is also peatedly taking the pills for Moin St.
or money back. \iobile Homes
Sale
2-12"11,
Q-3-301p guaranteed
Only 98c, Nelson Drugs.
a manifestation of coronary an~inal pain. Now, If the Chuck Mitchell, Chemical
---:--- ' '
3-1-lie 60 X 10, 2 BEDROOM trailer, Stop In and See Our O;UE ll WHE
patn or discomfort is un- Speclall•t. will be here to
artery disease.
E.L allghmenf
wall to wall carpeting 'floo
1
located at Crossroads, Rf. 12~;
It is quite true that the on- usually severe or consider· give us the latest In- A SI~ObeT ~ydNS andd rlfiMaemahtch _L_E_G-Cr_a_m_ps_?_T_r_y_S_u_p-pilcal
everywhere except bathroom L--r,.....,,...•s_p_a_Y_·_ _ _....J
Complete front end servl"'
set of a heart attack can be ably different than previous formation on all chemicals.
w
e un ay,
rc 5,
with calcium. only $1.98 at
and kitchen. Call 992·5947.
al
12
o'clock.
Rutland
Gun
tune
up and brake servia.~'
episodes,
then
you
would
be
Refreshments
exactly like angina. In fact
3-Htc SEWING MACHINES. Repaor
Club, New lima Road. Hand
Nelson Drugs.
Wheels balanced elec
wise
to
contact
the
doctor.
Door
Prizes
one of the old medical differ·
service, all makes. 992-2284.
choked shotguns will be
3-1-ltc
All
wor
troAically.
l'he Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Information
entiations between the two is The other point that will keep
I
guaranteed.
Reasonable'.
handicapped. Rilles will be In _R_E_D_U_C_E-ex-c-es_s_fl_u_id-s-with
Authorized Singer Sales anc
THE BEST deal In a new
You Are Invited 1
that if the chest discomfort you out of trouble is that if
rates . .Phone m -3213.
•
two classes . Open sites and
FLUIDEX, $1.69 _ LOSE FOR
Service.
We Sharpen Scissors.
or
used
mobile
home,
try
one
pill
doesn't
work
and
the
scope, bench rest and olf
1·21 · 11~
lasted for more than "half of
3·29-tk - - - - , - - - ",
Kanauga Mobile Home Sales,
hand. Rille shooters will WEIGHT safety with Dex-Aa quarter of an hour," It was discomfort persists, It 18 not
Kanauga,
Ohio.
furnl•h
own
shells.
Any
Diel,
98c
at
Nelson
Drugs.
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
more than just angina. The angina. Don't take another
12-17-901c SIGNS, posters, marl boxes arlo
Complete Service
favorite saying; hand letcalibre of &lt;JJieL muzzle -========3:-1:_·1-tc.,
implication being that it was tablet. See your doctor, since
Phone 949-3821
loaders
lnclud~
·,..
In your favorite style.
as I stated above true angi·
a heart attack.
3-l-41c
60Xi2, 2-bedroom: all-electric, tered;
R.ac lne, Ohio
David
Hooker,
Rl.
2,
Albany,
Crill'
BrGdford
Now· it is quite all right for nal attacks are of short
air conditioned. 8x2011. Porch Olrlo 45710 &lt;Pagetown).
GUN SHOOT,alsorifie matches
and aluminum awning,
5-1-tlc
you to be taking nitroglycer- duration .
2-6·301&lt;:
open
sites
only,
Forked
aluminum
skirting,
com
(NEWSPAPER
ENTERPRISE
ASSN.)
in tablets and your doctors
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
36" X 23" X .009
pletely setup. Buullfu
buy new furniture? Have HARRISON'S l'V and Antenrll!
March s. 12 noon .
location. Owner leaving state . Why
Service. Phone 992-2522.
Friday &amp; Saturday
thai old made new by Sylvia's
Phone 949·4892 or 992·5272.
3 3t
6-10-tlc
Upholstering
Shop,
Mrs.
, Night
1. 1o.tfc
_
,_
c
·
Woodrow
T.
Zwilling,
Prop.,
WIN AT BRIDGE
10 TII2 ·
ALLSIOE Builders &amp; CorL·
SHOOTING Match, saturday,
Syracuse. Ohio.
·
struclion Co. We specialize II\
March 4, at the Racine
2- 10-JOip
aluminum, vinyl and steel
Music By: Lowell Thom1s &amp;
Planing Mlllal6p.m. Faclory
siding; fiberglas, brick and
The Outcosts.
choke guns only. Assorted
stone; complete line of
meat. Sponsored by the
4 pc. Band, Country Music,
Real Estate For Sale
resldenlial and commercia!
Syracuse
Fire
Dept.
The
maestro
was
r
i
g
h
t
Soft
Rock
from
Belpre,
Ohio.
NORTH
USED
OFFSET
PLATES
1
roofing ;
remodeling;.
3-l-31c
about the safety play. South
HAVE
• K85
LIST your farm, home or
building,
suspended
celllngt,:
wanted to make three no· WILL , DO bookkeeping, tax
MANY USES
¥ K6
business wllh us. No charge
Interior and exterior. pain.
trump and was sure or it if ~~,;:;•;es k~!~e .,"''("c-yof my ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...
unless your real eslale Is sold.
• 85
ling ; com plele lin.e of
12' • 141 • 24' • WiDE
John While Realty, Vera
Masonry work . All work'
... QJ10543
East held the club·kmg. phone .949·374r, Racine oung, overweight ladles. teens and
Eblen.
Associate.
Middleport,
guaranteed
to customer
However, the maestro mtght
.2
c
men
interested
In
a
Weight
.
WEST
EAST
2 1 121
phone
992·3020
.
satisfaction.
We
are tully
have
assessed
the
full
$10.
Watchers
(
R
l
Class
In
• Q642
.97
2-27-6tc
Insured
for
your
protection.
3~
8 for Sl.OO
Suppose East held three KOSCOT KOSMETICS, Flame WPomt ehroy &lt;Rw1rit1e86:3 ,wSeclelght
"'QJ7
"'Al0542
N. Second, ph. 992-3918.
'
1
b
·
of
Hope
Perfumes
Human
a
c
ers
•
lion
• QJJ0 64
t 732
c u s to the kmg. So u t h and Synthetic wig~. We're
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
BUILDING lots In Branchwood
2-15-JOtc:
of&gt;K
,fo9 76
1220 Washington Blvd.
Subdivision at Rock Springs,
here for rour convenience.
10.3-lfc
Belpre, Ohio
soum &lt;DJ
T. P, water, phone 992•2789. READY-MIA \.VN\.KETE de-:
992
5113
S••~}L~! {A,c;QI~ MODE~N book Please cal
- · 2_25 _tfc SAVE up to one half. Bring your
3·1·12tc llvers.~:tght to Y,our pr,o.l~.'
·- - - .AJ!OJ
to: 'Wm Gt lmiJt, (c/o ,,.,,..,,.,_
sick TV to Chuck'$ TV shop,
¥983
-==~==~
·
:
--"=~::
·~
- '·esll
F11Wt" ' ;jjld en'y. ''"Freo~
r·
mates. 'Phone 992-3284 '
pop.,!, , .0. lox ~. Radio ' City LOSE weight with New Shape
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
t AK9
Goeglein
Really-Mix Co,,
... A82
Stotion Ne• Yo'~ N y 10019
Tablets, 10 days tupply only
11 -21 -lfc
LOOKING for Investment
Middleport Ohio.
:
•
'
·
•
·
$1.49
at
Nelson
Drugs.
111 Court St .
Both vulnerable
property? Fantastic Is the
6-30-tlc.
2 28 31
word for this specious 12West North Ea.•t South
Pomeroy, Ohio
- - - - - - ---. P Wanted To· Buy
would
get
three
club
tricks
room, 2-bath all brick home,
· lN.T.
·IN'rERIOR &amp; exterior t&gt;alntlnQ.
setup
as duplex, or can be
but
would
not
be
able
to
gel
Wanted
T
0
Do
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
4 WHEEL drive leep. Phone
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-5825.
used as offices. located In
back to dummy to r~n the
after 5 p.m. 992-:!062.
Pass
GUN cabinet, cherry wood, 1 Middleport's
2-28-5tc
Broker
business dlalrlct
rest of the suit Or if West BABYSITTING In my home,
2-27-121c gun capacity, phone 992-2936 . overlooking the
-.
Opening lead- t Q
110
Medlonlc
St.
Ohio River.
h ld th th
1b
h
Mrs . Glenn Smith, Rock
GET ·· your boat ready for
2-29-3tc White Really Co.. Vera Eblen,
e
e ree c u s to t e Springs Rd .. phone 992-6187
Pomeroy,
0
.,
45769
summerl Call D. Karr, 992kmg, South would get three
3·1-6tc T.V. tower . Phone Mason 773·
associate, phone 992·3020.
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby club tricks but would not be :5446.
1968 FORD 100, V-8, 360, pickup
·
5367.
" _ _ _ _ _ __,:_
2-29-6tc
NEW LISTING
2-29-3tc truck, 8 fl . bed ; '12 Arabi a~
2-27-6tc
0
Here is another hand from
0
MOBILE
HOME-10x50.
2
,
riding
horse,
phone
992-9943.
Wanted To Rent
Culbertson's '.'Battle RoyaL "
OLD FURNITURE, Round Oak
AUTOMOiliLE ·insurance bHi,
2-29-3tp HOUSE, 1642 Lincoln Heights. nice bedrooms, bath, oil
Ca II Danny Thompson, m - heel. lot 50x200. Both for
Before, he fined South the Or if West held the three ·rwo Beoroom home ln.Aibany. tables, Brass beds. dishes,
cancelled?
lost . yout.
2196.
operator's license? Call ~
full $10 for a bad bid and clubs to the king he could langsville - Middleport . clocks, and-or complete TWIN rinse tubs on rollers Only
$3500.00.
7-18-tlc
households . Write M. D.
$15; R. D. Brown. Danville,
2966.
:
with the sa me lady as de- let the first club finesse go Pomeroy area. A. W. Watson,
2 APARTMENTS
Miller,
Rt.
4,
Pomeroy,
Ohio.
and
shut
out
the
club
suit
Jn
P.
0
.
Box
35,
langsville,
Ohio.
phone
742-5408.
6·15-11$
clarer this time, he let her
3 BEDROOMS-Bath,
Call 992-6271.
3-1·61p
2·29-31c SIX ROOMhouse,133 Butlernut furnace heal. Storm doors
off with minimum fine of the same manner.
~-17-lfc
OOZER WORK. Reasonabl~
Ave, Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
$2.50,
(NEWSPAPEl EHTEAP'ltSt: ASSN .)
--------~WHY
PAY ..MORE? Re.
rates. ACHD 11, Phone o;
Wadsworth Drive, Columb.us, and windows. 1 Bedroom
West opened the queen of
apartment
down.
Only
Olrlo,
phone
237-4334.
Karr, 992-~7.
frlgeralors $35 up ; elect ..
Help Wanted
diamonds. South won ; engas ranges $25 up ; buill-In
11-21 -lfc $7500.00 THIS MONTH.
"7.:::::::::-:::7:::c:--:-_:2:.,:·
27 -61J!
tered dummy .vlth the king
TIME-MONEY. Two women or ovens $30; washers from $35;
RURAL
SEPTIC
TANKS
CLEANEu
',
men to handle Increased
dryers $30. All appliances NICE 2-story home with full 3 BEDROOMS-Nice bath,
of spades and led the queen
REASONABLE
rates.
Ph.
4~
Tho
bidding
has
been:
demand
for
our
famous
clean,
GUARANTEED
.
basement, 2 lots, new forced modern kitchen. double sink,
of clubs lor a finesse. West
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell/
Furniture: Jenny Lind beds,
household products. Rawlelgh
air furnace. Near POmeroy . gas furnace. Drilled well. 6
North East South
took in the trick with his West
Owner &amp; Operator.
, ·:
Co.,
Dept.
1116,
Freeport,
Ill.,
complete
;
dinettes;
Elementary
School.
Phone
Pus
lots.
Business
building
30x44.
si ngleton king and led the
5-12-tf~
phone 815-232-7416.
hideabeds ; dressers, chests;
992-7384 to see.
Dble
2+ 3t
queen of hearts. Five heart 1+
3-1-llc cabinet sewing machines .
fP-tic All for $21,500.00.
BACKHOE ANDD-OZ~E-.R
- worK;
3¥
Pass 3 •
3 HOUSES
tricks followed quickly and Pass
-----Kuhl's Bargain Center, Rt. 7,
Septic
tanks
lndalled.
Georaf
Pass
4•
Pass
'
South was down two.
2
RENTED
Main
house
Tuppers Plains. 0 . "at HOUSE In Long BOttom, phbne
(Bill)
Pullins.
Phone
992·2418!
has
3
bedrooms,
bath,
gas
caullon
light."
Ph
.
667-3858.
985-3529.
'
" Sorry," said the maestro .
You, South, hold:
women on Friday, March 3 at
~5- ltc
Closed Mondays.
1-28-tfr ,furnace. Fully carpeted and
"You failed to make a safety • 98 6H ¥A Q 6 t A 3 Z ... H United Methodist Church in
2-25-61c
play on th e hand. It will cost
' on one floor . FREE GAS, In
What do you do now?
New Haven, West Virginia at
' I
LEGAL
3 BEDROOM ranch type home, all three. 19 acres. Only
you $2.50."
A-P15s.
What
else?
You
are
7:30p.m.
Thetheme,lobeused
POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers $16,000.00. This' month,
NOTICE OF
" Is thai so ?" she asked.
in
the
right
&lt;onlracl
In
similar
gal!lerlngs
In
169
Park
view
Kennels,
Phone
992Plains. All . new with total
APPOINTMENT
::
better hurry.
"Just what did I do wrong?"
5443
.
and
contra~
air
electric
CUtN0.206tf
TODAY'S QUESTION
countries, is "All Joy Be
NEW LISTING
" You failed to lay down
Estate of Paul Zlrklt Oeceaue~- !
8-15-tlc. conditioning, bath and :14 fully
4
BEDROOMS
-1V2 bath,,
the club-ace lo allow for the
In stead of bidding three Yours." Mrs. B. R. Vance wiU
Nollce Is hereby given th.,ii
carpeted, full basement;
gas
furnace,
nice
birch
Norma
Zirkle of Pomeroy~
possibility that West held the hearts, your partner has bid aerve as leader for the service
HOUSE . on Cave Streel, garage In basement. See b~
~ncl
Ohio, hea been dulr appolnt•l
kitchen
.
Full
basement,
appofnlment,
phone
992-2196
singleton king . You were four diamonds over your three Since the first smali
Pomeroy. Also house and 4
as Adm lnlstratrlx o the Est at
sure of your contract if East diamonds. What do you do now? gatherings In the United Stales
lots In Harrisonville. Priced or m -3585. Danny Thompson, Iron! porch. Garage, lot
of Paul Zirkle, deceased, late tit
10x209. Only 110,000.00.
Meigs County , Ohio.
•l
held that card ."
for quick sale. Phone 742·5432. Financing available.
85 years ago, the Idea of united
12-30-lfc
MODERN
Creditors are required to '""'
2·2Hip
their claims with said flduclar"
Dai~
prayer by women around the
3 BEDROOMS-1'12 baths,
within four months.
r;
TROPI~Al
FISH, fancy
gas forced air furnace .. Wall
world from sun tli · sun has
Oated
this
12th
day
ofj
Ph. 614-992·2156
guppies, angels and breeders,
to wall carpeting In living February 1972.
· ,
increasingly captured the
Bellas and supplies. Phone
John c . Bacon ~
and
dining
rooms.
Beaufllul
imagination of community
992-5443.
Judg&amp; ~
kitchen with dlspotal,
Mr . and Mrs. John Dyer Bingo with everyone winning a
Employment Wanted
(2) 16, 23 (3) 1, 3!
12-30-tl&lt;
groups. Today, World Day of
freezer
·
refrigerator,
nice
Layne of Danville, Pa. are prize. Those in attendance
WALL Finisher con'
Prayer, can be described as DRY
range with oven and controls
tractor, R. I. Dubbeld, phone EAHL r AMERICAN Stereo
announcing the birth of a son were Mrs. Ellon Clevenger,
.
I
NOTICE OF
742-5825.
over, gos fireplace. 2 lots. 2
the most Important ecumenical
AM-FM radio, 4 spee~
on February 26 at 6:45 p.m. Mrs. Robert Dye, Mrs. Her·
APPOINTM!NT
car
garage.
2-28-51c changer, ~ speaker sound
occasion during the year. This
Case No. 20,621
The baby weighed 7 lbs., % ozs. man Knapp, Mrs. Earl Ewing,
NEW LISTING
system. Balance $79.32. Use
Otfrc..'12-2259 TIII4:00
Estate ot ELSIE D. SMITH
celebration is the most widely
and has been named John Mrs. Gary Roush, Mrs. Eugene
Evenings 992,25641
our budget terms. Call 992·
NEW BLOCK-2 bedroom
BLACKBURN,. Dectlled
,.
For Rent
obaerved
activity
of
Church
7085.
Notice 11 hereby glveri thaiY:
home,
bath, and garage. Lot
Allen.
Hudnall, Mrs. C. M. Adiunl, Women United, which is the
L. Smith, ot
2 BEDROOM mobile home
3·1-61c Why Walt?
200x150. IN THE COUNTRY. Thtophllus
Maternal grandparents are Jr ., Miss Usa Scott, Mrs.
Pomeroy,
Ohio,
has been dul~ i
Bob's
Mobile
Court:
ecumenical expression of
lppolnted Executor of the·
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Parsons Winnie McKenzie, Mrs. Adrian
Syracuse, phone 992-2951.
STEREO-Radio
Comblnallon,
POMEROYBeautiful
1
story
INVEST IN PROPERTY, Estate of Elsie o . SITilth Blacl(.~.
Protestant, Orthodox and
brick - 3 large bedrooms MONEY
""Vienna, W. Va . The paternal Lathey, all guests. Members
2·27-lfc lovely WALNUT finish, four
WON'T KEEP, burn, deceased, tete of MeiO(:
Roman
Catholic
women
who
speed lnlermlxed changer, 4
with double closets, 1'12 baths,
County, Ohio.
.,
grandparen Is are Mr . and Mrs. attending were Mrs . Don
kllchen has everything, BUT REAL ESTATE WILL.
NEW, 12x60, two bedroom speaker sound syslem,
Creditors an required to fll&amp;tl
wish
to
mobilize
around
Harry Layne of New Haven. Bwngardner, Mrs. Kenneth
carpeted, carport, basement PROPERTY PICTURES ON their ctelms with seld flduclar\'.:·
mobile home acrou from Balance S63.99. Use our
Within four months
•;
with excellent recreation OUR OFFICE WALL
Mrs. H. L. Dyer of New Haven Vickers, Mrs. Jack Hesson, common goals and channel
Bradbury School. Call 992· budget terms. Call 992-1085.
Doted
thIs
26ih
day
,;
lhelr
energies
lnlo
effective
room, about 1 acre of ground.
0
3'1 ·6tc
5301 or see Charles lewis, 2nd
is the great-grandmother.
Mrs, Dan Edwards, Mrs. Paul
February, 1972.
~
$28,500,
action. The goal of Church
house soulh from Bradbury
HELEN l. TEAFORD,
John
C.
Bacon
WOMAN'S CLUB
Powell, lltrs. Chester Curry, Women United 18 to fonn a
4 GRAV.E lol al Meigs
School . Pets welcome.
ASSOCIATE
Judge
The New Haven Woman's Mrs. Emo Wood, Mrs. Tom
Memorial Gardens, Prices will be higher tnls 992-3325
2-21
-tfc
Court of Col'rlmon Pleas,
"2·2371
visible
fellowship
of
believers
spring.
·
reasonable.
Phone
949·4962.
Club met for their ·~nnual guest Hoffman, Mrs. Phil Batey,
{3) i, a, 15 , 31 Probate Olvloron
3-Htc
night and covered dish dinner Mrs. William Russell, Mrs. in Christ, and move in every TRAILER, Brown' s Trailer
POMEROY- 1 story frame; 2
Court, Minersville, Ohio, SHOWALTER'S W t P 1 Sh
on Tuesday, February 22, at Harold ·Bumgarner, Mrs . community and nation a1 In·
bedrooms, full basement,
phone
992-33U.
e
e
·
op,
good neighborhood, trailer
6:30 in the Club Room at the Arthur Hart, Mrs. Jesse Abel, slrwnents of reconciling love.
2.2Htc Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
space, 2'12 lots . $3,900.
There are 2,300 unlta of CWU In
- - - - - - - - Tropical fish . and supplies.
New Haven Ubrary.
Mrs. Jack Flesher, Mrs . the United Slates.
Stop In and compare.
FURI'IISHED and untu•nlshed
Devotions were led by Mrs. Charles Smith, Mrs. Thelma
3· 1·27tp Want to sell or trade your farm?
Close
to
school.
apartments.
Call Cleland's .
.
Jerry Scott. Following the Scally, Mrs. Mark Ward, Mrs.
Phone 992-5434.
1971
ZIG-ZAG
Sewing
Machine
mealJI!rs. Kenneth Thompson, R. G. Greene, Mrs. Eugene
10·11·1lc lett In layawar· Beaullful MIDDLEPORT - 1 story
vice ·president, in the ab!Miuce Hester, Sr., Mrs. David Roush,
pastel color, ful size model . frame, 2 bedrooms, bath,
2
BEDROOM,
'
1
2
double,
fur
All
built-In to bultonhole, do dining room, large level lot,
of the president, called the Mrs , Donald F, Roush, Mrs.
nished on 4th &amp; College In stretch sewing and fancy
glassed
front
porch,
meeting lo order. Regular Charles Dodd, · Mrs. Kenneth
Syracuse. Phone 992·2149:
SlS.OO Dowtt ·
slltchlng. Pay lusl S48.75 cash
basement. 11.900.
2·2f.61c or terms available. Trade-Ins
reports were given and 1))- Thompson, Mrs. John Morgan,
Balance On
accepted. Phone 992- ~1.
Want to seil? Call Cleland's.
proved , The state convention Mrs. Jerry Scott, .and ·Mrs.
Convenient
oPACIOUS unfurnished
3'1-61c
was announced for March 1&amp;-18 Harold ROlle.
·
Terms. ·
apartment In Mason, 4 rooms - - -- - - - - RACINE '- 2 story frame,~
al The Greenbrier, White
&amp; bath. electric haat; phone VACUUM Cleaner, new 1971
DAY OF PRAYER
bedrooms. bath, dining room,
173·5975.
modeL Complete with all
tull basement, 2 extra lots,
Sulphur Springs, W. Va. Mrs.
The Church Women United In
2·2Hic
cleaning
toofs.
Small
pelnl
outbuilding,
glassed porch In
Geor~· Circle was accepted as the Bend 'Area will . obaerve
~damage In shipping. Will take roar, fronl porch, forced-air
a ne ,. member of lhe club.
World Day of Prayer, the In·
2 BEDROOM mobile home In S27 cash or budGet plan gas heat,
Henry Cltland, Rullor
The remainder of the ternational celebration of ·faith
Ra~lne area. Phone 992-6329, available. Phone 991- ~1 .
ON YOUR DIAL
Mason, W.Va.
H61c
2·2Htc
2-16-lfc
evening was spent In playing and unity 111110ng Christian

Po••roy Motor (••

GO lOOK IN TH'
FUll- lENGTH
MIRROR,
LOWEEZV

MOTORS. IN.C.

®
IN'

·

·

. .R
YOU STilL SPN THE GOOD PI!Or::E;SSOR •'

TJ.IIS rS T~E FIFTH TrME
SHARI&lt; ~AS KAt&gt; JACK SITTr!OG
IN i-llS PLACE ... WITf.IOLIT
A/Cib NOTrC I NG)

ISN'T NEAR$1GHTED?
J· /

EXPERT

Wheel

...

.. ·. '5.55

OFFICE SUPPUES

For

-

FURNITURE

I'?- '/ES,
M'/ NAME.
1$ MAR"/IAMA
WIDOW··

HEW!l.RN'T
SH'I,MA'MHE WIOP.E

DOES'/0' .
REMEMf&gt;ER

·aiG&amp;tU:

&amp;OrnJMI.£'1?

---

o·

DANa

WHISPERING PINES
NITE CLUB

--------

ror
r1 Sale

GliT Ylll I!IIFUNO
AT WINDOW Fl\li ...

llttiGLII ••• SWICk~J

I CAN SeE WHERE
SOME PEOPLE MIGHT

I APPRECIATE ')OUR RECOMMENDING 1HI5
RE&amp;T,AJJRANT, Ml~ WINKLE;
~UT

ITe 50 FOPULAR, I~'r
SEEM TO GET A TAI3lE:.

MISINTERPRET MY

ATTENTON TO

MIND IF

lHAT~!J'\."'

MAN

\OURS

Aluml·num
Sheets

Missed Safety Play---Uip!

------

The

MILLER
MOBIL£ HOMES

"oanrselftltrel

r

Vh:gil B.
Teaford, Sr.

•

~ ,.

t':'~u~ t~~t ~~~\) t~:~:::r.

WANTED!

---------

•Carriers For
MASON

HARTFORD
The
Sentinel

New Haven Social Events

NOTICE

GOOD ~ORNING, CH!LDRE~~ CHICKEH

LiTTlE IS HERE AHD WE. ALL KNO!I/
WHAT THAT MEAMS, D0t1'1 WE??
I'VE GOT GOOD!fS !N MY POCKET ..,
JU~T ~EANT FOR 'fOU'

-~

illlYMW~;I4J.:::~!...Jr.=
~111"11\11~~'''''

ACROSS
LPromote
the sale of

S.From

Berne
Just
thisOld-time
soldier
IS. Court
order
U. Turkish
city
15. Norse
goddeas
18. One of the
Curies
n. Tenth of
a sen .
11. Passed
' along
18. Foil
behind
n Pitcher
II. Allot
II. Trod
the
boards
Rellslous
headdress
U. Undlaauiled
1'1. Bombast

.

------

Cleland
Realty ·

__________

:

·.

3 ROOMS

FURNITURE
'349.95

That Luten,
To You

MASON
.FURNITURE

WMP0/1390
'-'

.

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

---~----~~

....
"

l

'

•

.,

~-

'

I •

9.

!~uence

I MEFAD

"l:l.t:o\t=:-

Yetterd•1'• Amwer

12. Forest
%5. Lion's
guardian
pride
prop
16. Watched 1'1. Ebb
DOWN
19. Over·
. , Z9. Tele·
1. Touah
whelmed
graphed
problem
22. Candy
30. Dickens
flavor
character
!. Loosen
23. Lessened 31. Addict
S. Hester
38. Thessal·
Prynne's 24. Body of
uga, with
govern"
!art
· "The"
mental
mountain
ad•lsers
S?. Bute
4. Hold It! ·

elan's

YONEY

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I
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CWTVC

LV,PPIT
.

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.

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Now Ul'UIIII the elrclttlletten
tof_lhe_jWIHIIIIIWtr,U
llllftltlted by the abooe eartoon.

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.

ur rr r J'

(AMwerf lo ... rrow)

...,.•.

v~ue

I

Jo.W..• ILITI SNARL OPIATI MOITAR
A-wen TMal•rperfomuJnrr• nol OJII'R lo flit

p•bll&lt; -OPIRATIONS

dentia1
nickname
n. Exploded.
. asa
time.
bomb
3Z. Wee bird
31. H!Jhway
buard
14. "Bali - "
'11. Complete

- - - - --

The Station

Unteramble th.elour Jumbla.
one letter to eadt JICIUII't, to
form four ordlnar1 worda.

5. Drool
6. Dwindled
?. Squid's
output
8. Buller's
love ·

n. Prest·

------

NEW

3?. Profound
SB. Conyeyed
legally
39. Hibernia
ct•.Kind
of
school
41. Magi-

oll\111111 1

TRLI!,.

sur HI!'!!'
FlYING

IIACK Ill'

.!1,0 DO

I~ fA~Y.

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. 1n this sample A i•
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the word• are all
hints. Each ~ay the code letters are different.

THe~!!
A6AIN~

A Cryptogram Quotation
T

J'K Z D H D W D•T F

FOCH
KQ

OZOWHDKF:

H·SO

FOCH

H SD F N [,

T

KQ

H S0

LHTHOLXTF ,

AOFOl!THDKF . -G .

Q,

WZTBNO
Yestenloy•a Cryptoquote: WHY SHOULD A WORM TURN?
IT IS PROBABLY TilE SAME ON THE OTHER SlllE.1RVIN S. COBB
(" 19721Cinsr ll'eajuret~ SynrHeat~, lne.)

THAT'S M'( iDfA
CiliJI.D
S/lH 1'0 ME ...

~ETHIN6 i(()V

IT I~M JU:H Ar.l IDEA ...

�' " 1''1

l

II- 'lbe Dilly Sentinel, Mickltport.f'uMoy. 0 ., March l,lf/2

.lfrs. Johnston

News • •. • in.Briefs

On~ S~rior

Dies Wednesda
!Continued from page I) ·
Rattng zs· Won
·,
Y third In a new series of space sentinels designed to give Air
Defense Command an almost lnstantaneow; alert of a missile
PORTLAND - •Mrs. Idonia attack from land or sea.
,
May Johnston, 69, Portland,
A triple-barreled Titan 3C rocket propelled the 1,100-pound
Rt. 1, died early today at · satelll~ toward a stationary orbit 22,01X) miles hig~ . Sources
Ve~raliS Memorial Hospital
close to the program said the craft was equipped with a powerful
following an ex~nded illness. infrared radiation ~lescope to gaze down at earth and watch for
The daugh~r of the late heat emitted from a ~le's exhaust.
William B. and Ada Hannum
COLUMBUS, - COLUMBUS POUCE Chief Dwight W. .
Barrett, she was also preceded Joseph said Tuesday "l 've just had enough pt It," and annoWJced
in death by her first husband, his resignation, effective April!. Joseph, a 26-year veteran of the
James R. Brooks; her second force, has been chief since March 15, 1970.
husband, John C. Parker,and a
Asked how Republican Mayor Tom Moody accepted his
!lster.
Urement Jo~ said: "I don't think he was broken-Ilea~
Mrs. Johnston was a former re
..
··
de
over
~earlng
a
t
11.
Moody
~as
critical
of
the
pollee
partschool teacher, a licensed
ment
an!l
the
way
It
was
ad11111llsleN!d
during
last
fall's
mayoral
oractical
nurse ,
and
correspondent for The Daily campaign.
WASHINGTON -SENS. WIIJJAM SAXBE and Robert Taft
SenUnelln the Old Town Flau
·area. She was a member of the hoth R.Ohio, were split In their votes on Tuesday's school busing
Tuppers Plains Christian amendrnenu . Taft voted for the amendment ol Sen. Robert P.
Church and the D of A Lodge at Griffin, R-Mich., to limit busing, while Saxbe voted against it.
The amendment was defeated 50-47.
Chester.
Aless stringent compromise bill, olfered by Sen. Mike MansShe is survived by her
husband, Maywood Johnston, a field, D-Mont., and Sen. Hugh Scott, R'Pa., was then approved
son, Paw Brooks, Coolville; 63-34, with Saxbe voting for the compromise and Taft against it.
one daughter, Mrs. Twila
BOLES GRADUATES
DIVORCE ASKED
Powers, Clearwater, Fla.; two
.PT.
PLEASANT - Marine
An action for divorce and a
sisters, Mrs . Lavinna Brannon,
Reedsville, and Mrs. Ilene suit for money have been filed Pvt. Herm.an L. Boles, son of
Leonard, Carroll, Ohio; 10 in Meigs County Common Mrs. Gevetta A. Boles of 101
grandchildren, and seven Pleas Court. Ernestine Seventh St., has .graduated
Campbell, Pomeroy, Rt. 2, from basic training at the
great-grandchildren.
Funeral sei'Vices will be held asks divorce from David F. Marine Corpe Recruit Depot at
Saturday at I p.m. at the White Campbell, Pomeroy, charging Parris Island, S. C.
Funeral Home in Coolville with gross neglect of duty. F &amp; R
Veterans Memorial Hospital
burial in Tuppers Plains Lazarus Co., Columbus, filed
DISCHARGED
Bea
Christian Cemetery. Friends suit for money against Marcia
may call at the fWieral home Capehact, Pomeroy, Rt. I, in Autherson, Fred Kesterson,
Hildred Clark, Rev . Roy
the amount of $5511.49.
after 7 p.m. Thursday.
Brown, Brenda Holsinger,
William Bentley, Gerald
SEARLES BIG GIVER
Drenner, Milford Frederick,
Charles Searles, Middleport, Justie Molden, Fred Durham.
LODGE TO ME;ET
Ohio Valley Commandery 24, became a six-gallon donot at
S,IGN UP DAY
Knights Templar, will meet at Monday's bloodmobile, Vernon
Sign up for boys wishing to
7 p.m. Friday at the temple. Nease reported. Searles' name
was
not
listed
Tuesday
among
take
part in the Pomeroy Boys
The order of the Temple degree
the donors.
Utile League activities this
will be conferred.
summer will be held from I to 3
p.m. both Saturday and Sunday
at the Pomeroy city hall.

Tough -Strip Mine Act
Continued from · Page I

some sort passed this year.
"We would be glad to take your input," he said.
one of the miners asked a qu~on about the reclamation
timetable.
''Where were you during the eight months of hearings,"
Speck asked.
'!be group of mlner8 was considerably larger than the
group which llhowed up at the Capital on Tuesday.
CMI Tueaday the miners Issued a statement saying unless
changes are made in the bW, "the mine workers who have
been working for so many years to support their families will
be011t of work and will also affect the economy in this area."

BELTED TIRES
WIDE OVAL - FIBERGlASS
''NO CASING NEEDING

SPECIAL

H&amp;R
FIRESTONE
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Tax Collections
Total $662,942
..

. Eastern High School in·
stnunental music pupils of
Charles L. Wills won a (!)
"superior" rating, five '.'excellent" (2) ratings and o~
"good" ratfng (3) In: the Ohio
Music Education Associ~~on
sol~ a~d ensemble competition
at Oh1o University Saturday.
Re~eivlng a grade of
super1or was Steph_en Hauber,
snare drum solo • ..excellent
ratings .went to Teresa Buckley
for a pJano solo and a cornet
solo • Teresa Carr for a clarinet
solo\ a saxophone quartet
composed of Karen Reed,
Regina Kimes, Denise Dean
and Bill Hayes, and to a brass
quartet composed of Steve
Follrod, Steve Goebel, Robin
Humphrey, and David Weber.
Diana Pullins won a "good" for
her clarinet solo.

Real estate tax · collections
lor the first half of 1971,
completed last week, totaled
$662;941.18, Meigs County
Treasurer Howard Frank
announced today.
Total coUections in the
various subdivisions for the
period included : Bedford,
$26,603.83; Chester, $49,264.38;
Chester-Salisbury, $2,148.25;
Columbia, $67,754; Lebanon
East, $3,434.35; Lebanon South,
$27,84S.l4: Letart, $18,989.04;
Olive , $28,513.67 ; Orange,
$22,913.29 ; Rutland Township,
$29,850.07 ;. Rutland Village ,
$16,357.01 ; Rutland Water,
$'.!,029.0i ; Salem, $35,596.06;
Salisbury, $45,614.78; Middl eport Village , $86,108.14;
Middleport sewer, $305.93;
Pomeroy Village, $110,585.37;
Scipio , $20,715.93 ; Sutton,
$37,169.38; Sutton-Pomeroy,
$810.79 ; Racine Village,
Aidmen Called
$13,754.81 ; Racine Water,
Two calls were answered by $341.88; Syracuse, $16,243.60;
the Pomeroy E-R squad Syracuse Water, $3.07.
Tuesday. At 9:39 a.m. to the
home of Mrs. Lena Ebersbach,
PLEASANT VALLEY
102 Peacock Ave., who was ill
Names of persons · admitted
and taken to Veterans have been
temporarily
Memorial Hospital and ad- discontinued until further
mitted.
notice.
At 1:03 p.m. the squad was
DISCHARGES : Mrs . John
called for Miles Pickens who Cheesebrew and son, Roy
was ill at the Mulberry Inn. He Fisher, Point Pleasant; Clifwas taken to Veterans
ford James, West Columbia;
Memorial Hospital where he
Mrs. James Reynolds, son,
was treated and released.
Pomeroy; Mrs. Angela Mc-

SALES NOTED
TheodoreT. Reed, Jr., Meigs
County Volunteer savings
bonds chairman, reported
January sales of savings bonds
in the cotinty were $18,068. The
county achieved 5.8 percent of
its annual sales goal as · of
January 31.

CLUB TO MEET
The Pomeroy Garden Club
will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
at the home of Mrs. Fred
The
Middleport E-R squad ·
Blaettnar with Mrs. E. W.
went to the home of Mrs.
Coates assisting hostess.
Mattie Sprouse, Happy Hollow
ZERKLE IS HOME
Road, at 6: 18 a.m. today for
William R. Zerkle, Syracuse, Mrs. Sprouse, who was having
has returned home after being difficulty breathing . She was
confined at Veterans Memorial taken to Holzer Medical
Hospital.
Center.

.

·.

'

·
Peggy Snyder , 13, an eighth
gradderMand d~ug~ter S~fyd':·
an
rs.
ar
•
Pomeroy, Tuesday became
champion speller of the Meigs
JWiior .High School ' She wll'
represent th e junior high
school at the annual all-county
spelling bee to be held March

It never
•

•

ra1ns ma

Daniel, son, Clifton; Kimberly
Cottrill, Leon; Katherine Bush,
Point Pleasant; Susan Bush,
Point Pleasant; Naomi
Bergay, Gallipolis; Mrs.
Clarence Adkins, Letart, and
Jimmie
Cooper,
Point
Pleasant.

NOR

E

by FEDDERS
Billowy breezes, moderate tem r eralures.
pampering softness and fresh n e ~3 . . it's all
there in your new Norge dryer
Giant 16 pound ca pacity drum gives clothes
more room to tumble lreely and billow dry.

- Biggesl 18!\ inch fan changes air inside
dryer every 3 seconds while 480 jet ports •

genlly billow clothes 10 red uce wrinkles . A

stolen . Then your vacation or

business tr ip would be
ruined . Thet 's why the wise
ones always carr y First
National Cllv Travelers
Checks . No wonder! They

are welcomed at more than

95

10 minute cool-down penod further a1ds m
preventing heat-set wrinkles ... and the high

air flow. low temperal ure system he lp pro-

1,000,000 hotels, shops and
restaurants worldw ide refunded on the spot at more
than 30.000 bonklnP. offices
worldwide . They re · con .
venlent . They ' re safe .
They 're. an ''Open Sesame!"
everywhere. That 's why we
hope vou 'll fly In for them
next tlme you 're on the go.

•

•
'

'""'

HAROLD SAUER, a
gufdanee counselor al Meigs
High School, checks a
schedule of numerous
. speakers wbowlll be at the
school next week to address
groups or aspects of a wide
range of professions.

I

Mohawk Nylon
Carpeting
15 foot and 12 foot widths. Buy
the length you need for rooni
stze rugs or wall-to-wall carpeting - Choice of colors.

One Used

Lawn Boy Mowen

Upright Piano

Pre season sale brings real savings.
21 inch 129.95 Lawn Boys sale 109.95 - 19
inch 119.95 Lawn Boy mowers sale 94.95.

In Good Condition

'

·,·,
·'
.,.,'

Sale $sr

-----~--~~--------~~~lnx.~.-~~~~00«--~

Television Sets

Used

Reconditioned
set s.

Good

Fine Selection

lrade-in
se l ection .

No

Black and while and
color . Consol es and
portables.

'uCarp.ting

1

of Unoleum
wax

12' width. Ideal for par-

Cushl.onflor
9' and 12'

ches

linoleum in
widlhs. Bring In your

Other Speeials at Elbelfelds Warehouse
Armstrong Oeca lon room size rugs In 9x12 . 1h12 and
12xl5 sizes. Television antenna · mounting brackets mast poles - stand-offs. Vinyl wall covering 54 inches
wide . counter topping .

..

l(lfchens

bathrooms-utl.llty rooms.
Easy to lay. Now Is an
excellent time to buy .

measurements,

Use our free parking
lot at the ·Mechanic
· Street
Warehouse
a Iso on · Second
Street across from
the store.

Elberfelds In Porneroy

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU
SATURDAY, MARCH 5th

While QlUlntities Last! !
GIRLS'

SPRING

DRESSES

lNG SHO

.SUES UX

MD 7-14

99

oNEW STYLES &amp; all.ORS

88

oSilES 5-10
PAIR

3 Piece

PLASTIC

CAST IRON

Garbage
Cans

Skillet
oBI CUlURY

~' r

oFUU. SIZE

areas,

~~.
SCOT LAD

Two Sentenced
DWI Cotmts

$1~

•CEDARIZED
aREG. 1 1~

$

INGELS FURNITUR-E
992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. fliGHTS

Tht Atlltns County
Sovlngs &amp; loon Co.
2" Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

100 FT.

on

49

All Accounl$ · Insured To

aHARDV«llD
a79' VALUE

MIDDLEPORT

'.

72 COUNT

CLOTHES LINE Spring Clothes Pins

$20,000.00 by FSLIC.

•

•

I

J

•24"X36"
24"X45"
aR~ISIIl£

I

THURSDAY MARCH 2, 1972

..

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

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

Plan for

EMS to
j

/

J
AT RIGHT Ron
Buckenroth, left, and Steve
Pickett, OSU students, were
projectionists for the threescreen film presentation
entitled "You Can Make a
World of Differ~nce" 'given
by lbe Ohio Stale team at
Meigs -·Hlgb Scllool. ·Wednesday.

...
'

THE CHAU.ENGE OF CAREER OPPORTUNITIES in
agriculture and home economics was· presented at Meigs
High School Wednesday by a team from Ohio State
University under the cooperative sponsorship of the Meigs
County Extension Service and Meigs High School. Left to
right are Principal James Diehl and Mrs. Jennifer Sheets,
Meigs. extension agent, with Rick Dafler, ·OSU faculty
coordinator, and Linda Pursley and Mike Pullins, OSU
students who presented the program.

......

.

·:~;:::;:::::::::::r~.~::::~~::.'":m::=:::~:x:::::::~::::::::::~~::::::::~:::::.-:=::::1·

ews .. in Briefs.
By United Press .International

J.

Bench Vacated
The judgeship of the Meigs
County Probate Court became
vacant Wednesday upon the
resignation of F. H. O'Brien
becoming effective.
Until a successor is appointed and qualified , the
duties of the probate and
juvenile courts will be per·
formed by Judge John C.
Bacon , Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.

"In 1957, 1958 and part of 1959
under the provisions of the
same law , .I likewise presided
over •· the comp1on ple~s,
probate and juvenile co~rts.
"Then, as now, the Ohio
General Assembly has made
no provision for additional
salary for the judge who is
required to assume the added
work of the probate and
juvenile courts.
11
The circurr,s tan ces are
"1 am honored t~ serve the
familiar," Judge Bacon said. people 10 any capacity, but the
additional hours and responsibility deserve an appropriate
salary," the judge concluded.

WASHINGTON - THE NATIONAL ·Institutes of Health
(Nnt) !Oqay announced a major advance in the development of a
totally artificial , nuclear-powered heart. NIH spokesmen said
the heart, which would be used to fight the nation's leading killer
disease, had been successfully tested :ln calves.
WASHINGTON - THE PENTAGON hopes to keep total
draft calls below 50,000 this year, the smallest number· in 23
years. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird . made the announcement in an appearance on .Capitol Hill Wednesday . He
Four defendants were fined repeated that the administration could do away· with the draft
No one was injured in a two- two on charges of driving entirely by June 30, 1973, 1£ there are enough volunteers for the
car accident today at 7:55a. m.
while intoxicated in military services.
MAN, w: VA. -RED CROSS officials here said Wednesday · at the intersection of U. S. Rt.
Pomeroy Mayor William
Baronick's Court Wednesday no further shipments of clothing are needed by the flood refugees 33 and County Road 19. '
of the Buffalo Creek di8aster . Red Cross spokesman Patrick
Sheriff Robert C. Har ·
night.
Fined $100 and costs each O'Brien has asked people and organizations to "stop sending te nbach's Dept. said Roger
anc~ given three day jail senclothes.
·
Calvin Smith, 26, Pomeroy, Kt.
tences for DWI were Bernard
"The n,e_ed resulting from the loss has been replaced , both in 3, was traveling north on 33
Lavalley, Jr., 18, Racine, and the area of used clothing and new clothing,'' O'Brien said. "And, when a car driven by Orvil\e
Thomas Roach, 20, Pomeroy. the same situation is true for food ."
Dale Graham, 66, Pomeroy,
Fined on three charges was
pulled out of County Road 19
COLUMBUS - LEGISLATION giving the state Department inlo the path of Smith's vehicle.
Willia~ach , 23, Middleport,
$5 for.pxcessive speed for road of Natural Resources greater control over de velopment projects Smith swerved but could not
conditions, $6 for passing on a in wilderness and recreational areas ol Ohio's rivers was avoid a collision. Smith's car
went 125 feet north before
double yellow line, and $10 and WJanimously pa~ by the Ohio Senate Wednesday·
The measure requires any governlnental agency or political coming to a stop headed south .
costs for reckless operation.
The fourth defendant, Perry subdivision Ill get approval from the department before building There were no arrests . There
Ba~er, 22, Le~t, W. Va., was oreniarglng any roa,1. ..r structure, or modifying the ch~ nne l of a was medium da ma~e to the
fined $10 and cosu for running river in designated areas. Present law requires only consultation Smi th car l nd light to
a red light
·
with department officials.
,.
GrHhH m\.

All these, it was pointed out,
require trained people .
Ecology and resource
(Continued on Page 12)

DAYTIME 30'S

STORAGE CHEST

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT OH!O

·OSU Students
Relate Careers
To Environment

were health, space, beauty and
diversity. The challenge is to
maintain healthy soil, water
and air in a productive society, ,
to keep the environmen'
diverse ~4 protecting the
natural things · including
wildlife, securing the beauty
through park development and
landscaping, and reserving
space for planned recreational

ular or permanent t res s fabr ics . . and
you 're in command of the ··sunsh ine " for

every load. Model shOwn- LDE t818A in
eleclric. Gas models also available.

NO. 227

'' nourishing environment''

s 00

.

NO. XXIV

By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
"No deposit, no return what you put into life is what
you get out of It," declared an
Ohio State University student
team in a multi-medium film
presentation on environmentrelated careers Wednesday at
Meigs High School.
Titled "YOU Can Make a
~p~l~ _ij~ Dlf!~tij)ce',', •. the
objecUve of the prOgram was
to inform high school students
of areas of study available and
to encourage enrollment in
agriculture
and
home
economics, fields that involve
treatment, preservation and
control of environment.
A unique three-screen fihn
presentation backed by music
of popular rock groups
described the "Spacecraft
Earth" as being in peril
because of air, water and land
pollution, along with over
population.
The disease of vegetation,
the problems of pesticides and
the slow progress in solving all
these led to the question, "Is
man the Maddest of Animals?"
Linda Pursley, an Ohio Sta~
University home economics
education major, and Mike
Pullins, an OSU junior in
at:riculture, introduced the
subject of a "nourhishing
environment", the ideal in
surroundings, and described
opportWiities and careers open
to students.
Given as components of the

-·

lADIES'

Devoted To The lnter#!$16 Of The Meills·Mason Area

)

Meigs Co. Branch

long fabric life. For ".permanent press you

ius! "dry and wear ·... with Norge .
Selec;l a fabric heat ... set lhe llmer for reg·

SOLOMRIZK

.'

o'MlOII FRAME

ROLLS

Flash Flood Alert Sounded

Petty Officer Da ugherty,
Uni ted Sta tes Navy; Carl ·
Yates, United Co mpanies,
Wave rly, insurance ; D~_vid
Wr ig ht, Southern Ohio Coal
Cu., civil engineerin g; Richard
R. Howard, guidance coonselor, Scioto County Technical ·
. College ; Sgt. Maxwell, United
Sta tes Army; W. V. Langfitt,
dlreclor, Compute r Trai ni ng
Center, Inc., Huntington; L. D.
Te lle. · M.D.,
Veterans
Memori al Hospital, physiciansJrgeon; Edna Russell, R.N.,
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
health care ser~ices; James
J:lavis,
Hockin g
State
Technical College, computer
science, and Thomas C.
Breech, Gallipolis Business
College.

'

FRAMED PICTURES
•~ IAIIDSCN'ES
00

· 2 ROLL PKG

public relations , Cleve l a ~ d U. S. Postal Services ; Vernon Maxin e Griffi th, cash ier , r lorist, florist business ; Sa lly
Engineer ing Insti tu te; To m Weber, Quality Print SlqJ, Pomeroy Na ti onal Bank, Howard, hume service;Jdvisor,
Ma'rtin , Marlin Funeral Home, Middiepur·t, printing; Dorothy ba r ~kin g.
C&lt;ilumbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.,
Rutland ;
Bert
Walter. Jenkins, chief operator. Betty
'home economi st ; Charlene
Mountain State College; Frank P e l lerson, perso nne l
THURSDAY .:.. Bernard E. Hoeflich. P"mer oy, society
w.' Porter, Jr. , law, Crow, representative, Portsmouth, Murphy, Jr., assistant director edil&lt;ll' , The Daily Sentinel,
Crow and Porter; Pomeroy ; General Telephone Co . of Ohio; of admissions, Rio Grande jour nalism; Dr. Harold Brown.
Kenneh Mark ins, Aaron Za hl, Paul Crabtree, Point Pleasa nt, College; Willis Anlhony, Pome roy, dentistry; Kenneth
Henry C. ·Peery, carpentry ; cable TV ; J ayne Graham, Middlepor t, plumbing; Reino Gr over , Grover 's Studio ;
Do1·sel Smith , coal mining; la bora tor y tec hn ic ia n , Lind, Pomeroy, bricklaying; Middleport, ph otogra phy;
Maxine Hobstetter, R. N., Veterans Memorial Hospital ; Ed Cunningham, Cleveland, Charles P. Riffle, Pomeroy,
nursing, .Veterans Memorial Marilyn Davis, RN, nursing, Electronics Technology In- Swisher and Lohse Drugs,
Hospital ; Patrick Edwards, Ve terans Memorial Hospita l; sti lute ; Bill Francis, Francis pharmacy; Emogene E.
Donna Grohne , Veterans
Simms , Veterans Memorial
Memorial Hospital, physical
Hospital , x-ra y technician;
therapy.; Sue Tracy, medical
John Yates, Hocking Sta te
secretary , Veterans Memorial
Technical College, Nelsonville,
Hospital ; Mary Lou Akers,
law
enforcement ; Kim
di etician , Holzer Medical .
U. Ernest Wigglesworth, commander of
Bonewi t, Hocking State
Center and Veterans Memorial
the Gallia-Meigs State Highway Patrol Post
Technica l College, hotelHospital.
.
.
announced today a flash flood alert effective
reslaura nt management.
WEDNESDAY - Mary
FRIDAY - William Price,
noon tod~y through 1 p.m. Friday in Hocking,
Waugh, Holzer School or
Hocki
ng Sta te Technical
Jackson. Vinton, Fairfield, Athens, Meigs,
Nursing; John Wickh am,
College, forestry, recreation
Gallia, Lawrence, Perry and Washington
Hun tington Barber College; K.
and wildlife; Ron Bradley,
Counties.
L. Schultz, General Motors
Huntington, W, Va., Bell and
Institute; Bowling Green State
Heavy . rains are expected late this af·
Howell Schools; E. J . Sheets.
University representative;
ternoon and throughout tonight. Residents are
Pomeroy, State Highway PaMack 0 . Ellis, Federal Bureau
trol careers ; T.Sgt. Ronald
urged to take preca ution:iry action.
of Investigation ; James S.
Rife, S-Sgt. Anita Ayers
Soulsby, Pomeroy Postmaster,
(WAF ), U. S. Air Force; Chief

.•

STOLEN, WRECKED
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. is investigating the !belt
and wrecking of a 1961
Chevrolet station wag6n
Monday night owned by Eurl
Gorham, Racine, Rt. 2. Taken
from in front of Gorham's
home, 1l!e car was found
wrecked at Nease Hollow in
Sutton Township Tuesday
night.

Paper Towels

· ,Professions and trades,
which make possi ble the
"pursuit of happine.ss" part of
the Ame1·ican Dream , will be
placell on view next week to
sludehlll •of Meigs High School
during the annual Vocational
Corrierence Week Program.
The
program ,
unde r
· direction of Harold Sauer and
Mrs.
Martha
Vennari , '.
guidance counselors, will open
Monday with a gener al
assembly when Solom Rizk,
nationally kn own author and
leCiurer, will be the keynote
speaker.
Tuesday, local residents
engaged in a variety of
professi ons will begin visits to
the school to speak to groups
interested. in particular
vocations. These visits will
continue through Friday.
The schedule for speakers is :
TUESDAY - S.Sgt. Jerry
Stoval, Parkersburg, U. S.
Marine Corps; Richard Brown,
admissions counselor • West•
Virginia Career Institute;
Michael Kriska, director of

'

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

II might be lost . It might be

.,~

Famous make . mill ends · up -to
15 foot widths. You can really
· save on this special lot · priced
now for quick sale .
•

129 MILL STREET

FiJSt National City ·
TraveleiS Checks

--

...

Pro essions, Trades on Stage Next Week

''2enith" correctly to win the
~hampi'onsh lp over approximately ' 36 other pon-.
ltestanu .
- .
·
the words iru '
. ~o~:c:elens and judges
~ Mrs Emalene Pratt and
wer . .
I . all. faculty
Charles Down e,
members.

One and Two of ·a
Kind Rugs

porations; therefore, the fiscal in this market, Bob.Evans said.
1971 operations have been
restated to include a provision
for state income taxes. Ac- .
cordingly, 1971 net income was
reduced $37,500 or $.06 per
share from amounts previously
reported, Mr. Evans said ;
· A regular quarterly dividend
of 15 cenu per share to
shareholders of re ~ord on
February 11, 1972, was
declared payable March I, Mr.
Evans said.
The company has enjoyed
favorable market conditions
and good profit margins,
Robert L. Evans, President,
BOYS'
said. However, he noted· that
raw material prices have been
FLARE LEG
moving very rapidly in an
upward trend and higher costa
should continue for several
months and this could reduce
•CAIITUOIIS • ~DS
the company's profit mar~ins.
The company opened ill!
oBIUSHED D£NIM
sixth restaurant unit in Cincinnati. Performance of this
unit. has exceeded expectations. Units No. 7 and 8 in
Toledo, Ohio, are well under
PAIR
construction and are scheduled
for opening this summer.
Negotiations for unit No. 9, In
Cincinnati, located just off
Interstate 75 on Sharon Road
have been completed .
Acceptance of the company's
product in the newly opened
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania,
area has necessitated the
addition of another sales route

If you care a hoot
about your money.
carry

Norge dryer...

16 at Southern Htgh School In
Ra .
.
~~~~er-up Tuesday was
14 . hth
d
Kathy Rupe, , eJ8 . gra er,
daugh~r of Mr · and Mrs.
Floy_d:Rupe of near Dexter.
· Miss Rupe_ "'lsspelled
"wondrous"· which was spelled
correctly by Miss Snyder, who
then spelled the ne~ word,

.

JEANS

'•

-

Sale! At Elberfelds Warehouse
· ~
----·· ..___ On Mechan1·c Street ·--·--

Evans Farms Sales Rise 41 Per Cent
Consolidated sales of Bob
Evans Farms, Inc., and ils
subsidiaries for the nine
inonthS ehdeq Jahliary 28, li172,
were $16,336,855. This is an
Increase of 41 pet. over sales of
$11,571,409 in the like period in
fiscal 1971, which ended
January 22, 1971, Daniel E.
Evans, Chairman of the Board
annoWJced.
Net income was $1,107,327 or
$1.75 per share, as compared
with the previous year's
$953,083 or $1.50 per share as
restated.
The State of Ohio has revised
the laxing structure of cor-

.

.
P~ Synder Best Speller In Junwr m·
.

'·

No One Injured
In Collision

Be Tried
Emergency squad leaders,
funeral directors , county
commissioners and possibly
members of the Meigs County
hospital commission will be
invited to settle on a proposal
lor upgrading emergency
services.
A meeting for that purpose
will be announced later, it was
decided last night at the
courthoUse where 35 persons
met to discuss upgrading of
emergency services.
Bob Clark, commissioner,
said the purpose of the
proposed meeting is to submit.
a proposal best suited for the
county in regard to emergency
service.
D. J. Uoyd of the Ohio Valley
Health Services, and two
representatives of the Ohio
Health Department met with
the 35 persons attending.
At an earlier meeting Lloyd
explained that the Ohio Valley
Health Services is the official
health planning agency fo• the
seven county area including
Meigs, Gallla ,
Athens ,
Lawrence; Vinton, Hocking
and Jackson counties.
On the establishment of
emergency medical services in
the seven-county area the
agency is attempting to
produce a plan acceptable to
the people and also to the slate
and federal government. There
is a financial committment of
$429,000 involved in lmplementing the program which
would include purchase of
ambulances and equipment, a
radio system so that hospitals
in the area could communicate
with each other and with the
· emergency vehicles, training
attendants on em~rgency runs
and upgrading emergency
room personnel and equipment
in hospitals of the seven
· counties.
·
Clark pointed out that of the
eight emergency units in volved, Meigs County has folir .
Clark sugges ted r.teigs
County might obtain finahcial
aid through the Appalacian
Regional Council to upgrade E·
(Continued on page 12)

.

MRS. SHEETS, COUNTY AGENT

Jennifer -Sheets

.Is Courity Agent
Mrs. Jennifer Lohse Sheets has been appointed County
Extension Agent, Home Economics, for Meigs County by the
Board of Trustees of Ohio State University effective 1mmediately, according to Dorsey Jordan , Vice.Chairman o~ the
Meigs County Extension Advisory Committee. Mrs. Sheets has
been working since October as CoWity Home Economics
· Assistant.
'
Mrs. Sheets is the wife of James R. Sheets, Route 1, Rutland,
and they hlive a 16-rnonth old son, Jared Andrew. Mrs. Sheets is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Lohse , Wolfe Drive,
Pomeroy ,
Mrs. Sheets has a brilliant
background
in
Home lhe Outstanding Senior Woman
Economics and 4-H club work. Award in the College ol
Since graduating magna . Agric ult ure
and
Home
cum laude from Ohio State Economics. She was a member
University, she has served 2'h of Alpha Lambda De lta ,
years as County Extension Mirrors, Chimes, and Mortar
Agent, Home Economics, at Board honoraries and Delta
Hillsboro where she conducted Zeta sorority and served as
an
outstanding
Home president of the Women's Self
Eco nomics program and Government Association and a
assisted in the ·4·H club member of the Council on
prDgram. She was selected to Student Affairs in addi tion to
report on certain aspects of her her many other activities and
county home economics honors.
prog ram at the 1969 Annual
Mrs. Sheets has an outConference of all Ohio ~x­ stand ing 4-H Clu b record
tension age nts.
behind her, having completed
Mrs. Sheets attended Ohio. 10 years membership in the
State where she received her Pomeroy Bend 4-H Club. Her
Bac helor 's and Maste r's highest honors in 4-H were
deg rees in Home Economics being selected as Meigs County
with a major in Food and Achievement Awa rd Winner
Nutri tion. Mrs. Sheets was the "nd being selected to attend
highest ranking student in the National 4-H Club Congress in
en tire 1967 graduating class of Chicago. She has also served as
Ohio State and was selected as a counselor at Ohio 4-H Club
putstanding Senior Woman . Congress and more recently as
She was also the co-winner ol
(Continued o n page 12)

Piersall Retires
Leroy E. Piersall retired
March I as chief of civil construction at General James M.
Gavin Plant, now being built by
Ohio Power Co. near Cheshire.
Starling in 1923, the Indiana
nat ive
went
wherever
1\.merican Eleclric Power
System construction work' was
going on. He worked at Logan,
Windsor, Philo, Glen Lyn,
Tidd, Philip Sporn , Kanawha ,
Tanners Creek, Kyger Creek,
Clinch River, Smith Mountain,
Cabin Creek, Big Sandy, Tidd,
Muski ngam River, Cardinal,
Mil chell, Amos and Gavin
pl" nls located in Ohio, West
VjrginiH. Virgi nia. Kenlucky
rmd

ln ~li m.a .

During retirement, Mr.
Piersall and his wife, La Vera,
plan to do some traveling and
. to spend mos t of their swnmers
on a farm in southwestern
Virginia.
Mr. Piersall is a member of
Trini ty United Methodist
Church. at Point Pleasant
where he resides, and of the
AF&amp;AM :'lasonic Lodge at
Loga n, W. Va. The PiersaUs
have lhree daughters, Mrs.
Belt.y Jean Lish and Mrs.,Cora
Yeag ~ r , b£•1h of Mason , W. Va.,
and Mrs. Ca1herine Fenton .of
Smi thfield , Ohio. There are
seven g rand r hildr~n and three
g1·ea t-gr·a ndchild ren.
...

.

\

LEROY E. PIERSALL, left, Chief of Civil Construction
at Ohio Pt wer's Gavin Plant, displays th e watch he received
from Fred R. Carman, Resident Engineer on·the project, at a
retirement party given in Mr. Piersall 's honor held recentl y
at Osca r ·~ Restau r;uit in Gallipolis.

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