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10- The DIUy Sentinel, Mlddlepori-Pomenly, 0., b-clll, II'IZ

Spruce Goose Perhaps·
Golden Bird to Hughes
LOS ANGELES ( UPI )- a year regluing (the wooden
Howard Hughes has gone on fuselage ) and changing en-

spending millions of dollars a gines."
year on the "Spruce Goose" The costa of houslng and ·
the stra~ge, giant flying boat · rnalntalnlng the huge plane are
he built of wood and put into deducted fr!lll the Income of a
storage~ quarter century ago Hughes corporation as "or-and deducts the expense dinary and necessary business
from his corporate Income for expenses," Dietrich said.
tax purposes, according to a . "How can these ordinary and
former top_ a1de.
necessary business ezpense8
Hughes may have more than be justified?" he asked.
$SO million invested in the
"It (the plane) l.s plywood, it
"Spruce Goose" by now, said . has straight wings, Internal
Noah Dietrich, who was a key combustion engines, Its eight
figure in the Hughes empire motors can't fly It more than
until he left in 1957.
200 miles per hour, compared
At that time, Dietrich said in with modem jets of cornan interivew Sunday, Hughes parable size with three or.four
"was spend~g $3 to $4 million jet engines flying 600 miles an

Artie Ebersbach Dies Sunday
Arthur (Artie) H. Ebersbach, 79, of 342 South Sixth
Ave., Middleport, died Sunday
morning at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
Mr . Ebersbach had been
engaged in the sales and
servicing of business machines
many years. He was a member
of Drew Webster Post 39,

Mrs. Smithson
Died SWlday
LETART, W. Va. - Mrs.
Eleanora L. Smithson, 65,
Letart Route 2, died Sunday
evening at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Mrs. Smithson was born July
27, 1906at Mt. Sterling, Ky., the
daughter of the late Marshall
and Jenny Ballard SteWart.
She was a member of the
Asbury United Methodist
Church at Letart and the
American Legion Auxiliary at
Point Pleasant.
Surviving are an aunt,
Amanda Ballard, Winchester,
Ky.; Pat and Kelly Perrine,
who made their home with
Mrs. Smithson-for a number of
years, and several cousins.
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p. m. Wednesday at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Achsah Miller officiating. Burial wiJI be in
Forest Hills Cemetery at Flat
Rock, W. Va. Friends may call
at the funeral home from
Tuesday afternoon until time of
services.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight&amp; Tuosd.ly
~rchU7

Walt Disney's
THE LADY AND
THE TRAMP
(Technicolorl
Disney Fea1urette:

Wet Bock Hound
Disney Cartoon :

Tiger Trouble
Donald's V•cation
Swim Dog , Swim
SHOW START$7 P.M.

Dixie's Colmer
Retiring from

Power .Base

First RolUld of

Play Tonight

Lenten Seroice
Wednesday at

8 in Pomeroy

There are places for saving, and places for bor·
rowing, and places lor getting financial advice,
and so on. Bu1 why run all around, when we
have every service you need in one handy
place? Bank here . "Where Everything's At! "

The Farmers Bank
and Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In. Window Is

Open 9 a.m. lo 7 p.m., (Cootlnuously).
$20,100 MaxlmllDllnsuranee
For Ead! Depositor

I

r

ews•• zn
(Continued from Page 1)
.
'·nearly half the blacu saMples were aplnst sueh bu&amp;q, the
magazine reported, altllough it said there were too few blacks
surveyed to provide a reliable statistical sampling.

hour.
· "No elqM!I'Imenta. are ever
condliCted with it. It 1.s never
out of the hangar, I don't
consider tbls an ordinary or
necesaary btlllneu expense.
"Jets came In 12 years ago.
How can )'Oil jtlltlfy spending
money on a wooden airplane
with piston engines? '' he
osked .
Hughes bullt the. plane,
approximately the size of a
modern jumbo jet, aa part ci a
World War U plan to conslnict
enormous flying boata tbat
could transport a batalllon of
troops to a fighting front In a
single trip, avoiding the danger
of enemy submarines.
The plane was not finished
~mtil after the war however,
and at a cost mUU0111 of dollars
more than the government had
budgeted. ·Hughes personally
piloted the plane on Ita one
short flight, after a stormy
congresslooal hearing In which
crltlca said the plane could not
fly. Hughes vowed to leave the
country forever If It wouldn't.
Hughes was at the controlllln
1947 when the plane roared
through the waves ln Los
Angeles habor, lifted about 70
feet In the air for a mile and
settled back ln the water.
Then the plane was tallied
into a 20-etory high hangar, and
has never been out of It slnce.

American Legion, Pomeroy.
Surviving are his wife,
Edith ; a son, Charles Arthur
Ebersbach, Philadelphia; a
stepdaughter, Linda Atkinson,
Middleport; a granddaughter,
Susan Ebersbach,
Philadelphia; a sister, Mrs.
Carrie M. Neutzling, Pomeroy;
and a brother, Elmer, of Polnt
Pleasant.
Besides hi~ parents, Peter
and Emma Bentz Ehersbach,
he was preceded in death by six
brothers, W. H., Adam, Albert
H., Jacob, Joseph, and
Charles, and two sisters, Kate
and Ann Ebersbach. •
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p. m. Wednesday at the
Ewing Funeral Home with the
Rev. W. H. Perrin officiating.
Members of Drew Webster
Post have been asked by Edgar
Vanlnwagen to attend se~Wices
and conduct the graveside
rites. Friends may call at the
WASHINGTON ( UPI)
funeral home anytime.
Rep. Wllllam M. Colmer, D·
Miss ., who has used his
chairmanship of the House
Rules Committee as a power
baae for House conservatives,
today
announced · his
retirement.
His decision not to seek reThe first round of play in the
Fifth Annual Meigs Girls' election Ia expected to end an
Invitational
Basketball era during which the powerful
Tourney will get underway this committee often opposed
evening at 5 p. m. with liberal Democratic adSouthern going against ministration policies, and
Wahama. At 7 p.m. Logan wiJI somelinles fo~~&amp;ht the House
leadership Itself.
play Kyger Creek.
"There muat be an end to all
Tuesday at 5, Gallipolis will
things,
Including my service in
play Alexander and BelPre
plays NelsonviUe York at 7 p. the Congress," said Colmer, 32,
who will complete hta 20th
m.
Friday at 6 p. m. Athens will House term next January.
play the winner of the "Moreover, after nearly 40
Gallipolis - Alexander game years I desire to spend some
and at 8 p. m. Meigs wiU play time with my family."
Colmer's probable successor
the winner of the SouthemWahama game. All games are would be Rep. Ray J. Madden,
D-Ind., a liberal who likely
at Meigs High School.
would restore the committee to
its historic role as an arm of
House majority leadership
TO PLAN BANQUET
Plans for the annual policy.
basketball · banquet will be
completed at a meeting of the
Southern . Local Athletic
Boosters at 7:3D tonight at the
high school in Racine.

The Bank that
Puts it All Together

•

Pomeroy's community
Lenten service wiD beat 8p. rn.
Wednesday at the St. Paul
Lutheran Church, 231 East
Second St.
This will be the third Wednesday community service
with two more to follow and a
noon to 3p. m. service on Good
Friday.
This Wednesday the service
will include a Lenten drama,
"From Here to There" by
members and guests of the host
congregation. The cast will
include Mrs. Lydia Groth, Mrs.
Ullian Moore, Mn. Jennifer
Anderson , Donald Diener, Jeff
Ridgway and Robert Elberfeld . The drama will be given
in conjunction with the Lenten
sermonette, "He Pointed the
Way" by the host pastor, the
Rev. Arthur C. Lund.
The Lenten drama was
written by the Rev. W. A.
Poovey who is a professor of
Homolitics at Wartburg
Seminary, ~buque, Ia. The
drama comes from his hook,
"What Did Jesua Do" and is
designed to enUven faith and
increase perSOilallnvolvernent
in Lenten worship. The public
is invited .

TEACHER DIES
GRANVILLE, Ohio (UP! )Funeral services will be held
here Wednesday for Ethel It.
Outland, 84, believed the first
woman college journalism
· teacher in the nation. A native
of Iowa, she taught journalism
at Cr,e College from 1913 to 1949
when sh• retired.

CLEVELAND - NICK J, MJLETI, who already owns two
)ror-ionalsporta teama here, conflnned today he has.reached
agreement with Cleveland lndlana.owner Wrnon S~er to buy
the team. The aa1e price was placed at "around $9 million" by a
spokesman for the club.
'
, ·
Miletl, owner of the National Basketball Association
Cavaliers and the American Hockey League Barons, said he and
stouffer would meet Wednesday In Sarasota, Fla., with
Arnerlean League President Joe Cronin and other club owners to
get flnal approval of the transaction.

'

Death 'Wll Passes 100
~

MAN, W. Va. (UP!) - With
five miles of the devasted
Buffalo Creek Valley still to be
searched, the death toll in West
Virginia's Rood disaster has
passed 100.
,
Ten bodies were found
Sunday, bringing the number
killed to 103.
The National Guard said 79
persons still were missing.

Col. William S. Maroney,
commander of National Guard
search teams, said 7D per cent
of the narrow, 18-rnile long
valley had been searched.
Fourteen small mining
conununlties In the valley were.
devastated Feb. 26 when a coal
waste dam collapsed and
unleashed a 3D-foot wall of
water.

Ann Searles of Dayton is Dead
Mrs. Asel (Ann) Searles, 47,
a resident of Dayton and formerly of Middleport, died
unexpectedly around 8: 3D p.m.,
Saturday while bowling with
friends In Dayton.
She was the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Price, formerly of.
Middleport who now reside in
Florida .
TWO RUNS MADE
The Middleport E-R squad
answered a call to the Arthur
Ebersbach residence at 9:47
p.m. Saturday. Mr. Ebersbach,
who was having difficulty
breathing, was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
where he died Sunday morning. At 5:54a.m. Monday, the
squad was called for Mrs. Ben
Merritt on Turkey Run Road,
near Cheshire. Mrs. Merritt,
who was ill, was taken to the
Holzer Medical Center.

She is survived by one son,
Ed, stationed with the armed
forces in Germany, and one
daughter, Becky, at home.
Brothers surviving are
Lewis, Donald, Roxie and
Larry. Two sisters survive,
Juanita Johnson and Wilma
Ward.
Funeral services will be held
1 p.m., Wednesday at the
Morton Funeral Home, 139
South Dixie Drive, Vandalia,
Ohio. Burial will be in the
Dayton area . Friends may can
at the funeral home between 35 and 7-9 p.m., Tuesday.
CIRCLE TO MEET
The Eleanor Circle of the
Heath United Methodist
Church in Middleport will meet
at 7: 3D p. m. Thursday at the
home of Mrs. S. T. Smith with
Mrs . John Krawsczyn as
assisting hostess.

Alleged $40.0,000 Deal
Cloud on.Kleindienst
By United Preso illlenultlonal
Mayor Jbhn V. Lindsay of
New York urged the Senate
&amp;lnday to reject the appointment of Richard Klel!ldlenst as .
atlotney general .because the
International Telephone &amp;
Telegraph flap has · cast a
"cloud over .ihe Justice
Department."
Llndaay, stumping in Jacksonville, Fla., in his campaign
for
the
Democratic
Presidentilll nomination, said
the cloud was spawned by a
purported memo by an m
lobbytat ltnking the dropplng of
an antitrust suit against I'lT
with a t4QO,ooo contribution to
the Republlcan National
Convl!!ltion this summer.
Otherwise, the eyes of the
polltlcal world locu.!ed on the
tiny New England state of New
.Hampshire, where frontrunning Democratic ~andldate
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of
Maine squares off against four .
challengers Tuesday in the
first-in-the-nation presidential
trlmary.
Five candidates debated on
television Sunday night in what
turned out to be a low-keyed
effort to pick up lltli hour
suonort.
In other ?Olitical developmenta:
-Rep. Wilbur D. Mills
fmally became a full-fledged
candidate for the Democratic
nomination.
-Florida Gov . Reubtn
Askew said George _C. Wallace
would win the Sunshine State's
Democratic primary, but
would remain a candidate with
limited appeal.
-And Nixon's republican
opponents, Repa. John M. Ashbrook and Paul N. McCloskey,
contended the President has
abandoned his party,
Despite a heavy rain, Sen.
Henry M. Jackson joined 2,000
persons at a Tampa, Fla.
barbeque at which he attacked
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey's

stand on llualng. "In Texas he
sayo !It's against busing imd
then he comes to Florida and
tella you he's for it."
Hwnpbrey )icked up the
endol'lmltlltl ci three major
Florida dally newspapersToday In Coco!!, ihe Daytona
Beach News.Jo!irnal and .the
St. Petersburg Independent.
Mills went to New , Harnpshire, .where he has spent
$84,000 ln radio-TV adverUalng
on a write-In campaign, to
declare for the first time tbat
certab:dv be and I am

••

...'
..
•

'
BY KA11E CROW
During a question and answer period, he pointed
out .that tne
The Meigs M\ne will generate an amual payroll of $21 mining incmtry ~short on talent. Thl.s brolll!ht up the question of
million, will employ 2,600 persons when completed, and be the · tralnlng ofpersonnel.
safest mine in the. coW!ty:
It was noted that George Hargraves, Meigs Local
. G. W. Wallwork, general mine superintendent, Southern SUperintendent of Schools, and Meigs Local School Board
Ohio Coal Company, told ao persons at the appreciation dinner President Frank W. Porter, are wor'king toward instituting a
Monday night at the Meigs Inn the Meigs Mine, which l.s expected JI'Ogramat Meigs High School to train the students and adults in
.to .be ln operation 3o yeara, has coal reserves sufficient to mining and engineering.
troduce 7'hmlllion tons a year (a total of 230 mUUon Ulns).
It was noted that mines need highly skilled persoMel as
Thl!re will be two mines. Number One wiU be located a mile mining today Ia different from in the past.
east·of Salem .Center and Number Two 0ne mOe east of Point
Wallworkspokeofeoal as "black gold." The coal will be sent
Rock. The larger portion of the mine wiD be loeated in Meigs from underground on a conveyor belt to the Gavin Plant,
County, a lesser part in Vtrlton, and a still smaller section In Wallwork explained.
Ga111a County;_Wallwork said.
J. T. Dowd, project manager, Gavin Power Project,
Hiring at the mine will begin this sununer, wUh 50 men American Electric Power Co., reported on .the overaiJ project.
employed each month, building to 500 employees by the summer
In AprU of 1971 earth movement at Gavln was begun. ln July
of 1973. By 1976, the manpower level of 2 600 men will. be reached ' of 1971 foundation work was started. The stack boiler wiD be
Wallwork said.
completed by July with the first unit to be completed by 1m and
Wallwork polnled out that "Perhaps Meigs County was not Unit Two the following year.
aware of the Impact the mine wiD have on ita economy."
Do'Yd pointed out that cooling towers will prevent hot water
He used colored slides to explain the mine operation. The from being ejected in the river. A stack 1,100 feet high, 100 feet
wage acale for a miner ,!ill be SU&amp; per hour. The
shorter than the Empire State building, wiJJ be erected.
salary per year, 22D days, will tqtal $9,040. The figure dill not
Extensive landscaping and trealment of water before it is
Include overtime employment, Wallwork explained.
·
ejected into streams wiJJ be part of the environmental control,
Of the total men employed, ID pet. wiD be above groWld, with Dowd said. It will be a ''most sophisticated system," DQwd ob2,3QD men worklng below. Wallwork gave an in-depth ouUine of served.
the mining operation.
·
Water at the Meigs Mine wiD be supplied by the Leading

now a candldale lor President'
of the United Slltel."
.
Ashbr,ook an~ McCloskeY,
agreed on CBS-TV's ''Face the
NaUon," that Nb;on has "al{
010111 totallr abandoned the,
_principles ct the Republlcan'
'

party!'

.

.

On a statewide · televtaton '

debate, Sen. George McGovern
aci!Qaed Mualtle of being _a
·lsteAcomer In hl.s o~tton to
the VIetnam war. Muakle said
the opportunity to change an
opinion was a stroll&amp; point in
the American ~tical system.

.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT SLACKS
Regular cut slacks and flare leg styles. Solid
colors and smart new patterns. Si~es 29 to 42
waist.
j

-------

••
...

•

;(

~

JACK KERR, PRESIDENT of the Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce, gave the welcoming address. The "Information
Dinner" at the Meigs Inn was sponsored by lhe Pomeroy
Chamber.

Now You Know

Weather

. In the early 19th cenfurY,
New York_City's night watch,
the forerunner _of the police
· department, were ordered to
guard the Potter's Field
(municipal cemetery) to
prevent medical students from
steallng corpses.

.. . ..

'

A miner has the same goals In life as anyone else and
Meigs County residents will have 1o share with others whal
has been theirs alone for a good many years, Sleeoland
advised.
"We have one chance to make an Impression. This is a
decisive item in having a family move into Meigs County,"
Steenland said.
(Continued on page ID)

mlnlrnwn

Visit Elberfelds Mens Departl)'lent on the 1st
floor and see our fine selection of

,

Creek Water System. Dowd further 'explained that !he first
treference on hiring personnel is to hire local 'people. However, it
will be necessary to go to other areas to recruit if the quota
cannot be met in Meigs County, Dowd noted , in referring to
personnel at the mine. When the Gavin Plant is comple!ed,
operation pei'SOilllel wiJJ total 225 persons, Dowd noted.
Peter R. Steenland, aSsistant vice president and executive
assistant to tbe president, spoke on community development.
He said' a consulting firm on anticipated housing sites had
been retained by the power company. It is making a study of
bousing currently available and eventually work with potential
developers to bring about required housing.
Steenland pointed out that no one should assume that the
demand for housing will come about automatically. Housing will
materialize in Meigs County when the demand arises.
"The question is, where wiD people want to Jive," Steenland
said. He noted the efforts of the regional planning commission
and that not many counties such as Meigs had the foresight to
agree that a great deal had wbe done.

Turning colder tonight,
rainshowers changing to snow
flurries central and south.
Lows in upper 30s and lower 40s
south. Cloudy, colder, chance
of snow north Wednesday.
Highs in tower 40s southeast.

Devoted To The lnter~u Of The Meigi·Mawn Area

VOL. XXIV NO. 230

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PHONE 992-2156

· TU~SDAY, MARCH 7, 1972

TEN CENTS

Spy Suspect Murdered.
BELFAST (UP!) - LitUe
more·than a month ago Marcus
McCausland quit his captain's
post In Northern Ireland's
parttime defense regiment
because he "dldn 'I like the way
It was being run," frlenda said
today.
The bouild, hooded body of
McCausland, a Roman
Catholic and one of Ulster's
wealthiest landowners, was
found shot to death Saturday on
a snowy COW!try road outside
Londonderry.
He died, said the Irish
Republican Army (IRA) because he was a spy for the
Brittah army~ Catbollc who
had betrayed his own kind in
Northern Ireland's maze of
Intrigue and sectarian
bloodshed.
The politically-oriented
','official" IRA wing said
&amp;mday tbat McCausland, 39,
was kidnaped from his home at
Dreenagh, 15 miles east of
Londonderry,
then
interrogated for four hours
before gunmen pumped two
bullets Into his head.
"It was established through
Interrogation that he was
actually worklng for British
Intelligence,"
an
IRA
statement said.
Victim's Friends Disagree
But friends of McCausland,

descendant of one of Northern
Ireland's oldest plantation
families with an aoce.try ·
dating to the 17th Century, aaid
he . resigned from the
paramilitary Ulster Defense
Regiment (UDR) in J81lllary.
"He said he didn't like the
way it was being run," said one
friend, who decllned to giw his
name. "He said be disagreed
with too many things~
matter of c_onscience-tp
continue."
In_another development, a
statement in Dublin by the
mA's militant "Provisional"
wing blamed Protestant extreml.sta for Saturday 's explosion
in a packed Belfast restaurant
which killed two women and
maimed scores of others.
Doctors called the blast at
Abercorn's restaurant the
"bloodiest, most awful" single
act of violence since strife
between Ulster's Catholic minority and Protestant majority
flared into bloodshed · in
August, 1969.
"Of course this is the work of
the IRA-who else?" a police
spokesman said afterwards.
Police and troops rounded up .

.... A'l'f!!:ND~'i'Dl..J&gt;INNI:R.•AT MEIGS·INN·- IMI to.rtgbt, -- ·••
Jaclt Kerr, Pomeroy Chamber President; John Reece, PUblic Mfalrs Coordinator of the Ohio Power Company; .Peter R. Steentand, assistant vice
tresldent and executive alliltant to the president; Joe P. Guts, ~xecuUve

•

ews •• zn

Men's and Young Men's Sport Belts
Fine group of the popular wide bells In sizes 24 walstto 38
waist . Plus reversible belts In black-tan, black-while,
black -rod.
·
.

BY UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
NEW YORK - EMBITI'ERED BY Miss Vicky's wl.sh for a
modelmg career and dist11181ing not her but ''the devil in us all,"
singer Tiny Tim says he has asked that the marriage telecast to
35 mUUon people by Johnny Carson be dl.ssolved by a judge.
Nonetheless, the ukelele -strumming, falsetto-voiced slriger said
Monday, ''the wedding ring wiU always stay on my finger. I'll
always love her ... !love her more now than when I met her. She
is still my sweet angel."
Tiny Tim, who married the former Victoria Budinger on the
Johnny Carson show Dec. 17, 1969, before a national television
audience, said in a telephone interview that he has asked for a
legal separation.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

SAIGON - A U. S. NAVY PHANTOM shot down a stowmoving MIG17 jet in a five-minute dogfight over North Vietnam
Monday, but Radio Hanoi said Communist gunners shot down
two U. S. planeS" with antiaircraft fire.
The dogfight, whid! one U. S. source said was the largest in
Indochina since the cutback in the air war In 1968, took place over
~an Lang Airfield midway between Hanoi and the
DemilitariZO!I Zone (DMZ). The U. S. refused to say how many
U.S. planes took part in the fight but a spokesman said F4s, ASs
and A7s participated. Informed SOil1'Cel !laid about eight U. S.
planes were involved -half of them F4fighter-bombers.

'•
It never
•
•
ra1ns ma
Norge dryer•••

AUTOS DAMAGED
Two cars were damaged and
one driver was cited to court as
the result of an accident on
West Main St., at 11:ID a .m.
Saturday. Pomeroy police said
a car driven by Richard Fetty,
17, Cheshire, struck the rear of
a car driven by Richard Smith,
2D, Middleport, which had
stopped to make a left turn .
Damage was heavy to the
Fetty car and medium to
Smith's. Fetty was cited to
juvenUe court on an assured
clear distance charge.
. CARROLL DIES
BACORATON, Fla. (UPI)Gene Carroll, a pioneer in
Cleveland, television and host
of one of the longest continuing
locat television programs In
the United States, died Sunday
at his winter home here of a
heart attack. He was 75.
Carroll had been at WEWSTV in Cleveland since 19-18.

16 IRA suapecta In the Belfast'
area and seized a quantl1y of
arms and ammnniUon.
The IR"A 'dented responsibility for the blast.
Pomeroy Mardi Stopped
In Pomeroy, 50 rnlles west of
Belfast, civil rights marchers
Sunday stoned police and
Brltl.sh troops in a twice-foiled
attempt to defy a government
ban on marches.
Pollee and troops stopped the
estimated 1,000 marchers at a
barricade and forced them
back into Pomeroy. They had ·
intended to walk seven miles to
Carrlckrnore.
·

MAN, ·W. VA. - A NUMBER OF miner's organizations,
dissatisfied with the makeup of Gov. Arch Moore's "ari hoc"
commission to investigate West Virginia's flood disaster, said
Monday they would conduct their own probe lnUI the Feb. 26
.tragedy. Five more bodies were found ln the flood..-avaged
valley Monda1, raising the death toll to 108.
The Natiohal Guard said 57 persons still were unaccoW!ted
for. The ftrst National Guard troops began pulling out of the
valley Monday night, turning over recllvery and ctean-&lt;1p
(Continued on page IDl

E
by FEDDERS

"Succeu hlngu on the ~bllity
to ••• a lab through once lt't
started."

Decorator knobs and hinges
can make old kitchen
cabinets look like new, and
they're easy to change tool
Come in and look at the large
set.octton we have at THE
POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK COMPANY. II we
haven't got just tho slyle you
want, the " FRIENDLY
ONES" will order It for you

Veterans Memorial Rosptlal
SATURDAY DISCHARGES
- Mildred Bissell, Freda
Turley, Rodney Hill, Ithamer
Neal, Sy!via ZwiiJing, Darlene
Justis, Ruth !lood, Myron
MiiJer, Loshia Mitch~ll .
SUNDAY DJ;JCHARGES - . The Dept. Store of Building
191$,
Richard G:.rfield, Carol Baker. -SiR&lt;t
.

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK 00.
.. ........................

Brief groundbreaking
ceremonies for .the stx'th Ohio
store of The Jones Boys - a
combined discount store and
supermarket using 18,DDD
square feet of building space on Pomeroy's West Main St.
were held this morning.
The store and supermarket
wlll be located In lo1•er
Pomeroy on the site which has
been occupied most recently by
Dannie's Trailer Sales, the
Dayts Ice and Storage
Building, aDd several homes. It
wtU be slrnilar to the Jones
Boys Store In Gallipoll.s at Pine
St. . .
The store, which expects to
employ 40 persons, will have
parking for 100 cars. II Is ex-

.95

air flow, low temperature system help pro-

tong fabric lile. For permanent press you
lust "dry and wear" ... with Norge.
Select a fabric heal . .. set thet.imer lor regular o.r permanent press fabrics . . . and
you're In command of the "sunshine · lor
every load. Model shown- LDE1818A in
electric. Gas models also available.

ING-ELS FURNITURE

992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

Success Expected
WASHINGTON (UPI)--Senate Republican leader Hugh
Scott predicted today Richard
G. .Kleindienst would be confirmed as attorney general
despite charges the Justice
Department settled an antitrust suit in exchange for

State Regent to
Be Here Friday
Mrs. Norman H. Dement,
Defiance, state regent of the
Daughters of the American
Revolution, will be guest
speaker at the annual charter
day luncheon of Return
Jonathan Meigs Chapter
Friday at I p.m. at Grace
Episcopal Parish House.
Special guests for the luncheon
will be the Good Citizens from
the three Meigs County high
schools selected through a
testing program on citizenship,

$400,1100 to help underwrite the
Republican National Convention .
Scott said the Senate
Judiciary Committee In-

Goeglein Hwt
Taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital at 1:58 p.m. Monday ·
was Horner Goeglein, 92,
Pomeroy, Injured when · he
stepped into a moving truck on
West Maln St., Pomeroy.
Police said Mr. Goegletn,
apparently intendlng to cross
the street, stepped Into the
truck's side mirror. He suffered lacerations of the hand
and shoulder and possible
internal injuries. Driver of-the
truck was Eugene Wyatt, 84,
Cheahlre. Goegtein was admitted· to the hospital for
treatment and observation. No
charges will be !Ued ,against
the driver, police ·said.

-

vestigation of the case involving the International
Telephone an_d Telegr_aph
Corp. was "basiCally stalling"
by D¢mocratlc crltlca of the
admintatratlon.
Scott talked with neW811len at
the White House following a
two-hour meeting between
President
Nixon
.and
Republican congressional
leaders.
Scott noted wryly that It was
through queatlons asked by
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, )).
Mass., that the personal
physician of an I'lT lobbyist
trovlded testimony supporting
the admlnlatratlon's position
thet I'lT exercised no Improper
influence.
"I think Mr. Kleindienst will
be conflnned," Scott said.
Then, after a pause, he added,
"Hwe give Sen. KennedY more
time during the hearings to ask
more questl0111."

PETER R. STEENLAND, left, answered the bulk of the questions posed during the
question and answer session of the trogram held at the Meigs IM. F. A. Morrow, right,
presided during the question and answer session.

Junk ers GIVen 72 Hours
e

.

RACINE - Haclne village
residents are being given 72
hours to remove junk and
unlicensed motor vehicles
from village str~ets or see
them hauled away.
Racine council has approved
legl.slation for removal of the
wheels which have no license
plates or motors, or can't be
operated. Such vehicles parked
on town streets for 15 days or
longer will be removed by Ray
Proffitt, who has agreed to
take them for junk. They wiJI
be destroyed, but only if
Proffitt Is given perrnisaion by
the owner in writing.
Those
wishing
such
destruction of vehicles are to
contact Mayor Charles Pyles
or Clerk Mae Cleland,

·· .......,jO!II .. _

Ground Broken

Billowy breezes. moderate temperatures ,
pampering softness and freshness ... it's all
there in your new Norge dryer.
.

Giant I 8 pound capacity drum gives clothes
more room to tumble freely and billow dry.,
-Biggest 1B!I inch fan changes air inside
dryer every 3 seconds white 480 jet ports
gently billow clothes to reduce wrinkles. A
tO minute cool-down period lurther aids In
preventing heat-set wrinkles ... and the high

viceprestdtntef.Ohto,Pwil-; Jehn T.-Dowd~~-managti',Gaviii·Power .
Project, AiilerlcanEiectrlc; J. W; (Bill) iliOn; appointed plant manager of
Gavln Plant, Ohio Power, and Geilly W. Wallwork, general mine superintendent, Southern Ohio Coal.

MIDDL£PORT

I

1
·'•

peeled to be ope'ned this
swnrner. General construction
is by the Carter and Evans
Construction Co., Gallipolis.
The First Jackson Corp. Is
having the building constructed and Ia leasing it to The
Jones Boys. First Jackson
Corp. is owned by a group of
Gallta aild Jackson County
Investors whQ own other retaU
outlets In Ohio and W~st
Virginia.
Jones Boys opened its first
store four years ago In Waverly
Butler Shopping Center using
4,000 square feet of fioor space.
'!'he fllle Jones Boys Stores are
located In Morrow, New
Lexington, Waverly, Galltpolis
llld Jackson.

Fire Chief David Cleland has
met with council recently on
specifications l9r a new !Ire
truck . Council members
concluded that some federal
help may be avallable on such ·

New Bleachers
Are Considered
For Southern
The Southern Athletic
Boosters met Monday evening
at the high school with Billy
Hill, president, In charge. Mr.
Roher, representative from the
Standard Steel Bleacher
Division, Columbus, discussed
the possiblllty of Southern
getting new bleachers for the
football field on the visitors'
side. No decision was made.
It was aLso decided that a
new concession stand will be
built by the boosters this
summer at the football
stadium. •
It was announced that there
will be a basketball game at
the high school March H at 8
p.m. between the coaches of
the SV AC and the SEOAL. The
preliminary game of the
evening wt11 be at 6:30 p.m.
when the sixth grade of Racine
plays the sixth grade of
Syracuse.
·
The annual basketball
banquet will be potluck on
April8 at 6:30p.m. at the high
school.
.·

.·,)(.'.

I"'::. .. '

·Shower at Church
In Middleport

.

TAKING PART IN BRIEF groundbreaklng ceremonies
lor the new Jones Boys Discount Store and &amp;!po1rmarket in
Pomeroy's West Main St. Tuesday mornlng were, from the
left, Pomeroy Mayor William Baronidl; Middleport Mayor
John Zerkle; Robert Wiseman, vice presid,mtof Jones Boys ;
.
'

..

,,

'-

'

•
Jam.,. A. Sttmer, president of Jones Boys; Bernard Fultz,
Meigs Prosecuting Attorney and attorney for Jones Boys,
and Merrill Evans, representing Carter and Evans Construction Co., Gallipolis, general contracting firm on the new
store:

There will be a bouaehold
sbower at the First Baptist
Church In Middleport
Wednesday at 8 p.m. for the
Charles Sheets family whose
home and furnishings were
destroyed by fire this week.
There was no Insurance.

a purchase, and that fire contracts with townships must be
raised. The village currently
.receives $3DD from each
township contract.
The clerk, Mrs. Cleland, has
agreed to take charge of
l.ssulng trash pickup cards at a
fee of $2 each for lour pickups
each month. Anyone wishing to
buy cards for a year's period or
Jess can do so through Mrs.
Cleland. Trash pickup is each
Tuesday In town .
Racine Council members are
Grace Roush, Marie Roush,
Avice Frecker, Glenn Rizer, '
Linley Hart and Larry Wolfe.

31 Projects
unsupported .
The Ohio Department of
Natural Resources is temporarily withholding final
support for federal flood
control projects in Ohio
totaling more than $250 million,
Natural Resources Director
William B. Nye said today.
Nye said the · 31 projects,
proposed by the U. S. Army
Corps of Engineers, but not yet
under construction, could not
receive the final support of his .
department because the local
communities that would be
benefitted do not have
adequate
flood
plan
regulations.
Area protection projects
affected include Cheshire,
Gallia County, along the Ohio
River , $566 ,DOO; . Galli polls,
GaJUa County , along th~ Ohio
River, $3,509,000; . Pomeroy,
Meigs County, along the Ohio
River, $16,800,0DD ; Racine,
Meigll,County, along the river,
$1,11D,DDD'; Syracuse, Meigs
County, along the Ohio Rivet,
$1 ,3?r.,ore.

�••
•

Ohio Workers·Denied 10.6% Raises

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel
NOSY NEIGHBORS NEED NUDGE
Dear Sue land Helen :
This iS another nosy neighbor complaint.
This summer 1 was called a "husband stealer" because a
married man brotlght me home . (I'd been on a date with his
lrother who got sick.)
.
: Another night I was baby-Bitting and this .guy and I were in
tile kitchen with the sllades up. Our neighbor jU.st happened to be
at her window behind the big green .plant she uses for cover.
Anyway, we turned out the kitchen lights and went upstairs to the
family room where there was only a small light burning. She
called lbe police! Why ' Because I was in my house with tM
lights out with a boy! (My cousin and her guy and another couple
were also In that room.)
I'm lbe tramp of the neighborhood because "I do things on
my front porch that she wouldn't do in her bedroom." (Boy, I feel
sorry for her husband!) Actually, I was only kissing my boy
friend goodnight.
And the word went out that I was pregnant because I wore an
empire dress - then went to New York for an abortion, when I
was only visiting friends for tile weekend. When I come out in
hotpants, you should hear the party line !
What do I do about it? -Go out of my way to give Old Nosy
more to talk @bout? Just think of all the fun she'd miss if I quit
providing her with gossip. So I grin and bear it - heavy on the
grin.
Wouldn't you, Sue? - ANOTHER VICTIM OF NOSY
NEIGHBORS
Dear AVONN :
You're right: Grin and bear it. If we stopped to commit
suicide every time somebody gossiped about us, there'd be an
awful mess.
But don 't go out of your way to give Old Nosy something for
the party line. Let others know you think highly of yourself, even
If she doesn 't. And when she peeks from behind the big plant stare her down ! - SUE
Dear Victim :
My daughter, the "grin and bear it" type? I can't believe
what I read!
Hope your parents not only stare down Mrs. Nosy, but also .
put her down hard if she spreads any more rumors. When gossip
become slander, a threatened lawsuit sometimes shuts a big
mouth. - HELEN

FIREARM ARREST
CLEVELAND (UP!) - U.S.
Treasury agents Monday
arrested Joseph M. De Rose,
24, Boardman, on a federal
warrant charging him with
making a false statement in the

.WIN AT BRIDGE

WASHINGTON {UPll ~ The
federal Pay Board late Monday
voted to deny state workers in
Obio a 10.6 •per cent salary in·
crease after mulling over the
request for several months,
and instead offered state of-

fidals two· alternatives to
ponder.
' The options given by tile Pay
Board were a 7 per cent ' in·
crease retroactive to Nov. 14 or
a percentage up oo 10.6 per cent
figured at an annual rate from

Reedsville News, Notes

Mr, and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
attended the 55th wedding
anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Lewis at Newark on
SUnday.
Mr . and Mrs. Milford
Fredericks of Minersville, Mr.
and Mrs. Gay Fields of
Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs.
John .Buchanan visited Mr. and
Mrs. Otis K. Casto recently.
Juli Whitehead spent a
weekend at Columbus with her
sister, Jean, a student at Ohio
State University,.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
and Claude Smith visited with
Mrs. Claude Smith, a patient at
the University Hospital, at
Columbus, Sunday. Mrs. Smith
has been a patient there for
several weeks. Also visiting
with her frequently is her
children, 1he Dale Smith
family and the Marvin Reed
family .
Mr. and Mrs. D. 0. Casto of
Portland drove his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. otis K. Casto to
Columbus where they visited
the Richard Sellers 'family . ·
Mrs . Hazel ' Balderson ,
Vienna, W. Va., spent the
weekend at the WilliamsBalderson home.
Mr. and Mrs . Denver Weber
and sons, visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Weber and
family of Keno.
purchase of a firearm by a conMr. and Mrs . Donald
victed felon .
Coleman and family of
U. S. Attorney Frederick M. Columbus spent a weekend
Coleman said .the indictment with Mrs. Helen Archer.
followed an investigatiOil by
The Communicty Builders
the U.S. Justice Department's Club mel at the home of Mr.
Organized Crime Task Force. and Mrs. Denver Weber

Satuday evening. Ronald
Osborne, presidenl, was in
charge of the business
meeting. Dues were paid and a
commillee report was given.
Refreshments and a social
time were enjoyed by Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Osborne, Mr. and
Mrs . Donald Myers, Mr. and
Mrs. Waller Brown and David,
Mr. and Mrs. Dohrman Reed
and family , Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead and family
and Mr. ·and Mrs.Ernest
Whitehead and family and Mr.
Mrs. Warren Pickens.
- Mrs. L. Balderson

COLLEGE OFFICE ROBBED
OBERUN, Ohio (UPI) The
Oberlin
College
treasurer's office was robbed
at gunpoint Monday of about
$3,800.
Witnesses said one man held
a gun on those in the office
while an accomplice jumped
over a counter and scooped up
the money .
They ran from the office and
disappeared. Police continued
their search today for the pair.

ENROLLMENT UP
ADA, Ohio (UP!) - Ohio
Northern University reports a
12 per cent increase in enrollment this quarter compared
with a year ago.
Registrar James L. Moore
said 2,254 students we;·e enroll·
ed at the start of spring quar·
ler, 142 more than last year.

J-fttDIIIJ!! '"•I,Ml'l

'Readirig Beats Declarer
1

'.

the present date to Nov. 14. The
Altliotigb lbe stale governpay hike enacted last year by ment, figuring on an J,S.rnonth
the Ohio General Assenlbly basis, said lbe requested in·
NORTH
7
called for the 10.6 per cent crease amounted to 9.3 per
.103
increase to 'begin last Jan. 1. · cent, the Pay Board, uSing a IZ.
.¥ J854
~obert TenenLaum, Gov. month standard, said It Callie
tKQJ72
John J . Gilligan's news to 10.6 per cent,
.72
secretary, said the state
Tenenbaum said he was not
WFST
EAST
.J9H2
.K76
Personnel Department was sure whether new 'leglalatlon
YAK
• 97 32
studying the proposals and would be needed 00 niab! the
tl08 4
+
A93
could have a recommendation stale comply with lbe Pay
.1065
"'983
ready by roday.
Board's ruling,
SOUTH (D)
The vole to reject Ohio's
"The PI!Y Board said we
.AQS
request was 11-li, with all the could come back In November
¥Ql06
•• 6 5
board's business represen· and request an additional pay
"'AKQJ4
tatives voting no and the five hike to cover what we 19110
East-West vulnerable
labor representatives voting now," he added.
West
North East South
Gilligan has conlellded Ohio
yes.
The labor members called state workers are underJ)aid In
I"'
Pass It
Pass ·2N.T.
the settlement "irrational, comparlaon with federal
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
inconsistent and petty."
employes In comparable joba
Pass
The decision affects 56,390 an.d state workers In neighOpening lead-· 4
state workers.
bOring states and that the In·
There was a conflict in the crease was needed to bring By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
amount of the increase .
them up to par.
The basic defensive signal
is the play of an unnecessarily hig card to show
strengt
r at least to ask
your p .riner to lead that suit
to you. This is the basic use
of this high-card play.
Suppose it is clear to your
partner that you can't want
.
him to lead this particular
WASHINGTON (UPI) - meeting Monday in Columbus suit. Then what does a high-·
card play mean?
Ohio School Superintendent the superintendents enIt doesn't mean that you
Martin W. Essex scheduled a couraged Essex to "take all are
wasting some spots for
breakfast meeting here roday steps necessary" to get board the sheer joy of wasting
with the state's congressional approval.
them.
delegation to encourage
"This deep concern exhibited
It may be a suit preference
federal Pay Board approval of by the superintendents could signal to ask your partner
pay raises for Ohio school · Iring the impact of the serious· to lead a high-ranking suit
teachers.
ness of the wage conditions in as spades or hearts instead
A new salary scheduled Obio schools to the Ohio con- or a low-ranking suit such as
would boost teachers' pay for a gressional delegation," Essex clubs or diamonds but it is
minimum of $5,200 to $5,600, said late Monday. "They (con- far more likely that you are
retroactive to Jan. i. The gressmen) are In a position to starting a high-low play to
show that you hold an even
minimum would be increased transmit the urgency to the number of cards in the suit.
to $6,400 for the next school persons who make policy/'.
South played dummy's 10
year, but since the hike exEssex maintains the board of spades at trick one. He
ceeds the Pay Board's 5.5 per should approve the pay In· hoped it would hold but East
cent guidelines, it inust be crease although it exceeds the produced the king. South let
it hold but had to win the
approved by the board.
5.5 pet. guideUne, to allow ,spade continuation. Then he
Essex carried with him the Obio teachers to "catch up" led a diamond.
support of superintendents of with other teachers across the
West ducked. He could see
Ohio's 397 school distriCts to be country.
all those potential diamond
affected by the pay hik• ~t. a
winners if he rose with the

Congressmen
Din·e With Teachers

' North

Pass

East

1•

Pass

THE STANDINGS
.

1.

South
?

looal Bowling

You, South, hold:
.98654 ¥A2 t1 "'AKQ76

Veterans Mtmorliit
Hospital League
Fob. 29, 1972
Stalldlngs
Teem
Pis.
Hit &amp; Misses · ,
28
Gutter Bums
20
TheOpens
10
Straight Shooters
8
1-ligh Ind. Game - Bessie
Sylvester 169; Second High
Ind. Game- Salty Savage162.
High Ind. Series - llessle
Sylvester .j65; Second High
Ind. Series - Sue Cundiff' 415.
Team High Game - Htt &amp;
Misses 485.
·
' Team High Series - Hit &amp;
Misses 1326.

What do you do now?
A-Bid one spade. What else?

TODAYIS QUESTION
Your partner continues to one
no- trUITJP· What do you do now?

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TOT HI!
lNTERES;rOF
'
MEIGS-MASON ARI!A
CHESTER LTANNEHILL,

Extc. Ed.
ROBERT HOEF.I;lCH,

City Editor

Published daily exce-pt
Saturday bv The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St ., Pomtroy, Ohio,
45769 . Business Office Phont
992-2156, Editorial Phone 992.

American Legion
Ladles Auxiliary
March 3, 1972
Sttndings

2157.

Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio .
National advertlilng
representative · Bottlntlli-

.,_
I{

I/ I

It;\
.
I ·II j:jlr\

/ /.!. I \1&gt;

•

Gallagher, Inc., 12 Eut 42nd

St .• Ne-w York City, New York .
Subscription ratts: De -

livered by carrier where

available 50 cents per week ;
By Motor Routt where carrier
service not aveileble :· One

month $1 ,75. By mall In OhiO
end w. va., One year Sl•.oo.
Six months S7 .25 . Three
months U .SO . Subscription
price Includes Sundiy Times.
SttnHnel .

Btalnners League
March2, 1972
Standings
.ream
Pis.
Four Aces
36
Misfits
.34
lucky Stars
26
Bombe rs
24
Red
Devils
24
Four Deuces
2•,
High Individual Game Eddie V. 203; Maxine 0 , 166.
Secon'd High Ind. Game :Ciw!ts R. lli.IJ .Judy W. . 161.
" H1gh Sef!les -" Charles ..R.
562; Maxine D. .j61.
SecOnd High Series- Eddie
V. 526; Judy w, 460.
Team High Game - Misfits
743.
Team High Series - .Misfits

Free food given away every day, No
purchase is necessary. Register free when
you visit.

.·'

'I

.

Lots of Gifts!

... and WE INVITE YOU
Ruth Smith &amp; Judy Roberts _ _ _ _ Happy Cashiers
Leslie &amp; Velma Siders

Lots of Favors!

Meat Department

Jay Hill &amp; Kenneth Wilt - - - - -- Stockroom and
Carryout Service

"Come Help Us Celebrate With Phebe"

'

.t

' '

.

Lots of Free Prizes!
Lots of Good
Old Fashioned Values!

USDR

Reg. 79'

CHOICE

59~

pkg

FABRIC SOFTENER

Our Good Ground Beef

Reg. 89'

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v,.!-':

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3 lb. or
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'
i:... Sausage ...~.'.~.~~.~!........................ !~ 65e
~ Sliced· Bacon.~~.~.~.~~~~...... 5 lb 139
i Wieners.~~~.~.?.~~ ......................~~~~ gge
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1
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i oe ryers............................... 39. .
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In New

Don't Forget to Register For Free Food!

Plastic Cup
ANNIVERSARY PRODUCE SALE!

Head Lettuce
Large Solid Heads

25~

BANANA$ ......... !~.1 o~

Second High Series - Dale
Davis 558.
Team High Game - Davis
Warner Ins. 1018.
Team High Series - Davis
Warner tns. 2916.

19e
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10 'oz.
pkg

SPECI~t' PtUt:E

35~

COUPO~

99~

'Bucks Host MSU
In Home Finale

years from now, although I
may not be playing much," he
said.
His win Monday was the 36th
of his career and his second
this year. It also pushed his
money winnings to $94,000, the
best on the tour his winter.
Nicklaus vaulted Into conten·
lion with a third round 64
Sunday after shooting two 71s
on the first two rounds. He
parred the first 13 holes
Monday, then fired birdies on
the 14th and 16th to pull away
from Trevino and Rosburg.

39 of 76.
United Press lnlernalfonal
Rio placed four men in
Ohio Stale closes out its
double figures. Capt. Roger
season
at home tonight and any
BenUey and Ron Lambert each
bad 19. AI Martin had 13 and hopes the Buckeyes have of
going to the NCAA Tournament
Harry Hairston 12.
Defiance led 57-42 at hall- lay on the line at St. John
time. The Yellow Jackets have Arena ..
OSU will host Michigan State
now won 13 in a row since
in
the season-&lt;!nder and a
losing to Urbana earlier In the
victory coupled with a Purdue
year.
win over Minnesota tonight
'RIO GRANDE (911 Bentley, B-3·19; Hairston, 6-0· would give the Bucks a tie for
12 ; lambert, 7-5·19; .Jordan, 1- the Big Ten title and force a
0-2; Bartram, t-1-3; Rouse, 3-2·
8; Botllnger, .J -3-9; Thompson, playoff.
Michigan , however, could
2-0-4; Hart, 1-0-2; Martin, 6·3·
13. TOTALS 39-15-91.
also finish 1().4 to make it a
DEFIANCE 1132) - Am· three-way tie, which · would
stulz, 8·3·19; Nafziger, 6-4-16;
Baer, 10-1-21; Bush, 8-4-20; eliminate Ohio State since the
Reicher. 9·5-23; Shine, 4-3-11; last team to participate in an
Periz, 3·3-9; Amrhein, l·S·7; NC~nament steps aside.
Kramer, 3-0-6. TOTALS 52-28·
OS.!.(_ fell to 9-4 with the loss
132.
Score at half:
Saturf"'y to Indiana . MinDefiance 57 Rio 42 .

nesota, the leader, 4s 16-3 and
Michigan is 6-4.
The Bucks are not lbe only
ones who feel a crisis nearing.
Ohio University meet.
Toledo at Bowling Green
tonight for the Mid-American
Conference ticket to the NCAA
tournament.
The Bobcats and Rockets
need the playoff to decide who
is tourney-bound because both
finished the season with 7-3
records in the MAC, the fifth tie
in conference history.
And while all that is going on
- at Alliance, Wittenberg and
Kenyon will battle for the Ohio
Conference title; and Youngstown State goes against
Gannon (Pa.) In the NCAA
Mideast Regional at Akron.

College Ratings

51ronton
Wrestlers

NEW "YORK IUPI)- The
United Press International top
20 major college basketball
teams with firsl place votes
· and won.lost records as of Sun.,

Final MOC Statistics

In Pairings

QillCKQUIZ

Ohio High School
Basketball Tournament
Results
United Press International
Class AA
Finneytown 70 Sycamore 53

Middle town 78 Oak Hills 62
Eastwood 57 Eaton 56
Mason 70 Little Miami 55
Madison 84 Carlisle 56
Class A
Ridgedale 49 Canal Winchester
48

Moon MuHins
By Fenl Johnson
r-~~~~~~

Nat.innal CartoonlslJ Sociel)'

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Insurance Agency

Urbana
Malone
Rio Grande

Colle·

Ohio Dominican

Cedarville

Eastern High .School
CLASS A
SECTIONAL CHAMPS
Best W'zshes To You
In The

Assorted Flawrs .

SAVE Sl,()() WHEN YOU BUY A
10 oz. Jar of
INSTANT FOLGER'S
COFFEE CRYSTALS

conference in free throw
shooting.
Urbana led the league in
team field goal shooting and in
free th row sh00 t'tng wh"l
1e
Malone won the team
rebounding title.

Market Report

d1"8~

49e

WITH THIS

MRS. WEISS'

round total, 12 under par.
'l\1!vino shot a par 72 Monday
and Rosburg carded a 66.
Amazing Sam Snead, who
will be 60 years old in May, sbot
a par 72 over the 7,028-yard
Dora! Country Club "Blue
Monster" course and finished
alone in fourth place, picking
up a $7,000 check..
Nicklaus has dominated the .
tour of 10 years now, bad bad
news for the rest of the pros on
the rour. He is only halfway
through his career.
"I'll certainly be playing 10

~:::~~

6:0''
6'5"

: ::::,
Jerry Townsend-Malone
Junior ·
6'1"
PaviMclovghlln - OhioDomlnlcan
Senior
6'0''
Oave Maurer - Ohio Dominican ·
Jvnlor
6'2"
Harry Hairston - Rio Grande
Junior
6'5"
At Morton- Rio Grande
Soph.
6'0''
Honorable
Mention
Bob
Stephenson.
Phil
Morzlck,
Malone; Dan Ballinger and Ron Lambert, Rio Grande; Harold
Howe, Urbana ; Lee Eck, Terry Clapp, Rich watson, Cedarville.

· March 5 In parentheses:
!fourteenth week) .
TEAM
POINTS
t. UCLA (35) (25-0)
350
2.
No.
Caro.
121
-41
273
FINAL MID-OHIO BASKETBALL STATISTICS
3. Penn 123·2)
244
STANDINGS
4. So Caro. (22-4)
177
Coni. All Games
5.
Lng
Bch.
St.
(2J.e)
176
TEAM
W-l
W-l
Five Ironton High School 6. Lsvll 122-3)
170
Urbana
8·0 23·6
7. Marq 124-2)
l31
wrestlers
are
entered
in
the
Rio Grande
5-3 14·12
8.
Brig.
Yng
(2H)
Malone
4·4
14-1 4 Class A·AA Ohio High School 9. Mmphs St. (21-5)
~~
Ohio Dominican
2·6
8·16 State WresUing tournament, 10. Marshall (23-3)
37
Cedarville
1-7
6-19 first round pairings of which 11. Souwsl Louis 123-3)
Team Field Goals
A
M Pel.
Missouri (20-4)
~26
Urbana
2142
1134
52.9 are announced today. They 12.
13.
Hawaii
(24-2
)
1851
895
48.4 are:
Rio Grande
14. Maryland· (20-4)
25
Malone
2222
1013
45.6
105
lbs.
Phil
Sanders,
15.
Houston
(20-61
15
Cedarville
7.74
44.6
1737
16.
Minnesota
116·6)
14
Ohio Dominican
1838
788
4.5 Ironton, vs. Steve Stalnaker, 17. Tex . El Paso (20·6)
13
Team Free Throws
A
M Pet. Plain City Jonathan Alder.
lB. Virginia (20-5)
12
Urbana
919 666
12.5
126
lbs.
Ed
Ainsworth,
19.
Prov.
119-S)
9
Ohio Dominican
532
355
71.2
20.
Temple
l23·7l
3
Ironton,
vs.
Joe
Studt,
Akron
Rio Grande
532
353
69.0
Mat one
865
577
66 .9
St. Vincent.
Cedarville
710
444
62 .5
167 lbs. - Robert Smith,
Team Rebounds
RB
AVG.
OHIO COLLEGE
Ironton,
vs. Michael Rice,
Malone
1373
49.0
BASKETBALL RESULTS
1283
44.2 . Canfield.
Urbana
United Pr,ss , tnt~r~ational
1049
43.4
Rio Grande
175
lbs.
Mike
Albrlnk,
NAt Disfllltt22 Playoffs
Ohio Dominican
991
41.0
It has been estimated Cedarville
952
38.1 Ironton, vs. Mike Berry, River Findlay 87 Wilmington 74
Defiance 132 Rio Grande 91
FG FT TP
Avg. View.
that the average family of Individual Scoring
261
131
653
28.4
four in the United States Jim Underwood 1001
185 lbs. - Terry Parker, Xavier 68 Canislus IN .Y.) 67
Mark
Todd
lUI
278
143
699
24.1
eats about 1,000 pounds of
Plunkett t Ul
247
170 664
22.9 Ironton, vs. Rich Koschalk,
fruits and vegetables ~ach Jon
Dave
Maurer
tOOl
179
90
448
19.4 Oregon Cardinal Strltch.
year.
' I
1 Terry Anderson I Ui
217
115
549
19.0
- - - - - - - - - - Individual Shooting
A
M Pet.
408
247
60.5
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Utility, 22.50·23.75; Canners Jon Plunkett ( Ul
John Harrison ICI
131
77
58.8
Hogs: 200-230, 24; No. 1, and Cutters, 18.85-20.10; Bulls, Bill Aikman I Ul
230
126
54.8
402
217
54.0
24.25; 236-240, 23.75; 2~260. 27-31.60; . Stockers
and TerryAndersoniU) .
Harry
Hairslon(R)
240
129
53.7
23.25; 260-280, 22.25; Sows: 350- Feeders: Steer Calves, 32.51).
PHONE 992-2342
Q-When did the Eru;t
A M Pet.
Individual Free Throws
425, 2.10-3.70; 450-Q50, 24.21). 43; Heifer Calves, 28-32.85; Paul Mcloughlin 1001
.
G
erm
a
n
flag
acquire
its
84
70
83.3
Mark Todd (U)
174
143
82.3 present design?
24.80; Boars: 19.90-20.10.
Yearlings, 31).34.60.
Rich
Watson
(C
(
106
87
82.1
A-East Germany's flag
Cattle: Good to Choice, 34Veal Calves : Choice, 51;
Harold HoweiU)
77
60
77.8
was
the same as West Ger·
34.60; Standard-good, 31.60- Good, 48.50; Medium, 46; Baby Bob Stephenson IM)
117
90
76 .9
many's
from 1955 to 1959,
Individual Rebounds
33.80; Holstein, 3Q.4~2.
Calves, 25 to 73,
RB
AVG.
when
the
Communists added
Jim Underwood IOD)
337
14,6
of
arms.
the
coat
Terry
Anderson
(
U
I
363
12.5
Commercial Cowsii'li2ii4-i25Iii.85i;IIII•E•w•e•s•an•d•Lam-•b•s-•32•.Phil Marzick IM)
328
11.7
Q-When were chest proRoger Bentley( R)
213
8.8 tectors introduced into ma·
Jon Plunkett I U)
253
8.7
Offensive Avg. jor league baseball?
A-In 1685. The first chest
Urban~
101. t
protectors
were worn by
Malone
93.0
Rio Grande
89.4 catchers and umpires.
Ohio Dominican
88.1
Cedarville
79.7

·Wednesday Late
Mixed league
March 1, 1972
Standings:
Team
· -Points
Morrow-Moore
46
Cassell-carsey
42
Owen-Holter
42
Rosenbaum -Meadows
38
Fuflz. Benfley
36
Blakeslee-Hoyt
12
High Series Team
Rosenbaum -Meadows 1879,
Morrow-Moore1873, Blakeslee.
Hoyt 1829.
Hlgll Series, Men - D.
Mea do ws 558, L. ougan 530, P.
Ellis 516.
High Game, Men - P. Ellis
202 • o · Meadows 197, L. Dugan
193.
High Game, Tum Rosen· baum-Meadows 691.·
Morrow-Moore 655, Cassell ·
Carsey 620.
High Series, Women _ l
Winebrenner 451, H. Moore 437;
.V. Hoyi•&gt;427,
·High Came, Women - H.
Moore 19' B F 11 I" o
Glaze 161 ~· · u ·' ~. ·

District Tournament

J0 80 DOG FOOD

4 4 ................, ...... ,•

ONIONS.......... 3~~g 19~

586.

•

%gal

OR

¢

w.

MIAMI (UPl)-There sits
the American Dream.
. There sits suntanned,
golden!talred Jack Nicklaus
talking to sports writers about
· his win Monday in the $150,000
DoralEastern Open Golf
Tournament.
He's rich. He's famous. He's
well liked. He loves what he is
doing. He has a lovely family,
and there Is no sign at age 32
that. any of this will end
anytime soon.
What do you do for an encore
if you're Nicklaus a~ this stage
of your great career? You win
a four-way grand slam, that's
what you do.
Nicklaus still insists that the
grand slam is possible.
"I'll have a Hille mental
advantage this year," Nicklaus
said, "because all lour oournainents are on courses I like."
Nicklaus made his com·
· ments after shooting a par 70
on the final round of the raindelayed Dotal tournament.
The $30,000 first prize check
put him ahead of Arnold
Palmer .on the alltime money
winning Hst by $6,000. Nicklaus
now has won nearly $1.5
million.
The "Golden Bear" beat Lee
Trevino and Bob Rosburg by
two strokes with a 276 four-

By United Presa International

FAIRMONT

quart

running their record to 24-1.
Marv Reicher scored 23
points, Bruce Baer 21 and Ken
Bush 20. Rio Grande ended up
at 14-12.
Rio Grande shot 51 pet. from
the field Monday, but the red
hot Yellow Jackets blistered
the nets for 63 pet., sinking 52 of
83 field goal attempts. Rio hit

Nicklaus: Dream Made Real

ICE MILK

NU-MAID

lb.

p.m. at Middleport JDD!or
High Gym.
Pomeroy A Is coached by
Frauk Seth, Middleport Call
by Woody CaU Jr. Pomeroy
A won the regula~ season
c~ampl0111blp wltll a 6-4
record. Middleport Call was

contest will represent District
22 in 1be 1972 NAIA CoUege
Tournament at Kansas City,
Mo., .next week.
In the NAIA contest played
at Findlay, Ken Burgei scored
23 points to pace lbe Oilers.
At Defiance, the Yellow
Jackets' top three players
combined for 64 points in

Ht!t!

Senior
Senior

~~~~:g~o!~nui~a~~~~gh:~~ ~~.:u;~~y~R~~~r:~~~ND TEAM

ackets Oust Rio

EAGLES

CLOSED SUNDAYS

team ,
The second team has two
juniors - Jerry Townsend
(Malone ) and Dave Maurer
(Ob'to Dorrun
· 1can )• 1wo se·nlors
Paul McLoughlin (Ohio
Dominican) and Harry

Mark Todd - Urbana
Terr~ Anderson - Urbana

goal shooting with a 60 pet.

tiOt\S

Prices ERective Mar, 8-15
Monday Thru Friday

seniors, three of !l'hom played
' e champion' Urbana ·
lor lea•u
Detroit
23 ..a .324 33
•
Pacific Division .
(Todd, Anderson, Plumkett) .
W. l. Pet. GB The olber two first team spots
x-Los Angeles 59 12 .831 ...
.
GoldenState 45 26 .634 14 .wen't to Jim Underwood (ObIo
Seaflle
.j6 27 .630 u
Dominican) and Roger Bently
Houslon
28 43 .394 31
Poritand
15 59 .203 .(!•;, of Rio Grande. It was an·
x'clinches division IIIIo
MOnday's Results
Milwaukee 1J2 ,Boston 127, ot
' (Only game scheduled)
Tuesdty's Games
Mlt.waukee at New York
Phoenix at Detroit
Philadelphia al Los Angeles
Baltimore at Seattle
Buffalo al Porltand
It will be Defiance (24-1) and
Cleveland at Golden State
Findlay (17-10) In the NAIA
!Only games scheduled!
I .
District 22 playoff finals at
Defiance Wednesday night.
Monday night, Defiance
TOURNEY FINAL.
Pomeroy A will . play rolled over Rio Grande College
Middleport Call In liDall of 132-91 while Findlay dumped ·
tbe Meigs Local Slb·llb Wilmington 87-74 in opening
round games.
.gra~e bukelball lea~ue
Winner of Wednesday night's
touiumeat Weclnelday al 6

of Rio
The Co.nference scoring
champion this year was Jim
Underwood of Ohio Dominican
with 28.Spolnts per game; Jim
al so led in rebounding WI'th a
14.5 per game average. Jon
Plunkett (Urbana) led In lield

~~

Meigs County's Oldest and largest

Right reserved to limit Quantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed Food Stamps

CHOC. MILK

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Tri-Covnty league
Feb. 29, 1972
Standings
Name
Pfs.
Larry's A$hland
56
Davis Warner Ins.
50
Rawlings Dodge
42
Pomeror, Cement Block
28
H&amp; R F res tone
26
Holsum
14
High Individual Game
Dale Dovls 2U.
Second Hlqh Ind. Game -

You. WE LIKE"

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POTATO CHIPS

~~m~nd;w~ch~hlo~:l::a:EAM

=~f~=po:~~t~~ ~ean:A'::%h~s~: =:~re AI Morton

Bill Radford·211.
High Series - Bill Radford

Tum
PIS.
Jr. Bugaloos
22
Headquarter Barmaids
20
Rolling Pins
16
Feeney Bennett Flyers
14
Buckeyes
12
Goble Marauders
12
High lndlvldval Game
Mary Martin 160.
Second High Ind. Game lucy McKinney-Geraldine
Kessinger 158.
High Series lucy
McKinney .434.
Second High Series - Mary
Martin 410.
Team High Game
Jr ·
Bugaloos ol55.
Team High Series
Jr.
Bugatoos 1318.

Phebe

Jn'vites
Y.ou
,,,

NIA StttMII~~t~s

ly IIIII~ Press tntem.ttonal
Ea.stern CDilfert~lCt
At.. nllc Division
W. L. Pet, GB
Boslon
49 25 .662
New York
.Q 2J .606 4'12
Phltadel!'!'la 28 .4J . •394 19'12
Buffalo • · 19 51 .271 28
Ctntrat Division
·
W. L, Pet. GB
Baltimore
32 39 .451 ...
Allan.ta
28 .4J .394 4
Cincinnati
23 ..a .324 9
Cleveland
21 50 .296 t t
Western Conference
Midwest Dlvtston
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
57 16 .711 ...
Chicago
51 22 .699 6
Phoenix
.4J 30 .589 14

MAR. 8 TO .15
Free Groceries

OUR
RD

A}} 'MOCAll-MOCDream Team

COLUMBUS -The All-Mid . nounced last week that Un· Hairston (Rio Grande) and one

•

\ NE~PAPEI ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

West

,.

·

ace . South won ip dummy
while East dropped the four .
South returned · to his hand
with a club and led his last
diamond.
If West had ducked thiR
also, South would have
r9mped off with his contract,
but West had no problem at
all. He took his ace and
cleared the ·spade suit.
East had played his lowest
diamond the first time. This
showed an odd number of
cards in the suit. so West
knew that South had started
with just · two diamonds.

The hidding has been!

~llt.l'woy,O.,ICirdl7,1rT2

·
·
d
F•
l
T
'
.
Bentley Narne . Irs earn
..

•

I

NEW YORK (UPI)-Ron
Stewart, a 39-year-old right
wing, who excels as a penally
killer, is back with the New
York Rangers as playoff in·
surance.
Stewart, who spent four
years with the Rangers before
being traded to Vancouver last
November, was re-acquired
from the ·eanucks In a cash
transaction Monday. The Rangers made room lor Stewart by
shipping, rookie Norm Gratton
to Omaha of the Central
League.
·
BUENOS AIRES ( UPI)Carlos Monzon, who successfully defended his world
middleweight championship
with a controversilll technical
knockout over Denny Moyer in
Rome Saturday night, arrived
home Monday . and said he
· would be ready to fight the·
American again "In 15 days if

necessary·."

The .Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9 a.m.

to 7 p.m .• (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum Insurance
For Each Depositor.
'

'·

'

'1'he fight was stopped in tile
fifth round by referee Lorenzo
Fortunato, whowasaccused by
many observers of being too
hasty in his decision.
ST. LOUIS (UPI)-Dick
Voris has resignerl his. post as
an assistant .coach with the
football CardinHis to "pursue
other opportunities." Voris, 49,
was ~&gt;ith the O• rrtina~&gt; for lour
years .

Defensive Avg. .r

91.1

89.8
86.2

92.4

91.3

MONTREAL (UPI )-Boston
Bruin center Phil Esposito
appears to have his second
consecutive National Hockey
League scoring championship
wrapped up with a current
total of ~goals and 119 points,
Jean Ratelle of New York is
second with 109 points, but is
out for the rest of the regular
season with a broken. leg,
leavingo Boston delenseman
Bobby Orr with 101 points as
the closest threat to Esposito.

BATON ROUGE,
La .
(UPl)- Press Marovich, who
gained nstional fame when his
son, Pete, played for him at
Louisiana State, has been fired
as the school's basketball
coach following a 1().16 season .
"I have reluctantly reached
the conclusion that our basket·
btill program will have a better ·
opportunity for success with a
change in the coaching staff,"
said Carl Maddox, the athletic
director at l.SU.

Congratulations. You just saved $5
by doing your own income tax.
And all it cost you was three long,
sleepless nights.
And a slight case of heartburn.
U you had Jone to H &amp; R Block, on the
other hand, you could have relaxed while
lomeone else figured out your

return. Quickly and eonlidenlially. Probably unlike any
way you've ever done it

'iJ,

before.

And, when you figure

your own, you may be
entitled to deduet1ona
you're not takinr and

audited we will aceomptllly
you, at no extra ca~&amp;, to the

Internal Revenue Service
and explain how your re·

turn was prepared, even
though we will not act
u your legal repre·
senlative.

ThiJ means that
H&amp; R Block io ready to

takinc deductions
I_Ou're not entitled to.
For instance. do you

ofrer you year 'round

know all about dedttc'

t8.1. service for juat one

eaaualtr losses? . Or,
that i your income

low fee a year, with
no extra charge for
audits and estimates .
H &amp; R Block'• charges

tiona for child care or

increased over the la!t

feW years, you mar, save
tax:

dollars by 'income
averaging?" And even if

you did, would you ·know how

to go' about "income · averagingu

to begin with? Probably not. And there's
no rea!on why you should , After aU,

start at $5 and the aver·
age c&lt;ist wao under 112.50
for the 7 million families

we served last- year.

Which is 110mewhat less than
wbat you paid.
Not to mention the fact that lffi'8VIIiOD

you're an amateur when it comes to doing isn't tax deductible.
.IDcome tax:.
And we are .
You see, when it comes to income taxes.

amateurs should depend on H 1: R Block.

DON"r LET AN AMATEUR DO

We have over 6,000 conveniently located

HaR BLOCK'S JOB.

trained

H&amp;RBlock.

offices manned by thousand• of specially
personnel. They're wann and

'friendly people who ore anxio.. to help you.
They11 sit you down over a free cup of
DALLAS (UPI) - Running
back Calvin Hill of the Dallas
Cowboys will remain hospita·
li1.ed for 10 days following
surgery to remove damaged
cartila ge from his right knee
The surgery on Monday was
termed su :-.:e s~ ful.

your income taJ: that you might never
have known eJ:isted.
Furthermere, if your retum ia

co£fee and show you some thing• about

9 A.M. To S ~. M. MON. THRU SAT.
PHONE : 992-J79S
NO APPOINTMENT N~CESSARY
OPEN TODAY

304 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.

•

.

�••
•

Ohio Workers·Denied 10.6% Raises

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel
NOSY NEIGHBORS NEED NUDGE
Dear Sue land Helen :
This iS another nosy neighbor complaint.
This summer 1 was called a "husband stealer" because a
married man brotlght me home . (I'd been on a date with his
lrother who got sick.)
.
: Another night I was baby-Bitting and this .guy and I were in
tile kitchen with the sllades up. Our neighbor jU.st happened to be
at her window behind the big green .plant she uses for cover.
Anyway, we turned out the kitchen lights and went upstairs to the
family room where there was only a small light burning. She
called lbe police! Why ' Because I was in my house with tM
lights out with a boy! (My cousin and her guy and another couple
were also In that room.)
I'm lbe tramp of the neighborhood because "I do things on
my front porch that she wouldn't do in her bedroom." (Boy, I feel
sorry for her husband!) Actually, I was only kissing my boy
friend goodnight.
And the word went out that I was pregnant because I wore an
empire dress - then went to New York for an abortion, when I
was only visiting friends for tile weekend. When I come out in
hotpants, you should hear the party line !
What do I do about it? -Go out of my way to give Old Nosy
more to talk @bout? Just think of all the fun she'd miss if I quit
providing her with gossip. So I grin and bear it - heavy on the
grin.
Wouldn't you, Sue? - ANOTHER VICTIM OF NOSY
NEIGHBORS
Dear AVONN :
You're right: Grin and bear it. If we stopped to commit
suicide every time somebody gossiped about us, there'd be an
awful mess.
But don 't go out of your way to give Old Nosy something for
the party line. Let others know you think highly of yourself, even
If she doesn 't. And when she peeks from behind the big plant stare her down ! - SUE
Dear Victim :
My daughter, the "grin and bear it" type? I can't believe
what I read!
Hope your parents not only stare down Mrs. Nosy, but also .
put her down hard if she spreads any more rumors. When gossip
become slander, a threatened lawsuit sometimes shuts a big
mouth. - HELEN

FIREARM ARREST
CLEVELAND (UP!) - U.S.
Treasury agents Monday
arrested Joseph M. De Rose,
24, Boardman, on a federal
warrant charging him with
making a false statement in the

.WIN AT BRIDGE

WASHINGTON {UPll ~ The
federal Pay Board late Monday
voted to deny state workers in
Obio a 10.6 •per cent salary in·
crease after mulling over the
request for several months,
and instead offered state of-

fidals two· alternatives to
ponder.
' The options given by tile Pay
Board were a 7 per cent ' in·
crease retroactive to Nov. 14 or
a percentage up oo 10.6 per cent
figured at an annual rate from

Reedsville News, Notes

Mr, and Mrs. Lawrence Rose
attended the 55th wedding
anniversary of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Lewis at Newark on
SUnday.
Mr . and Mrs. Milford
Fredericks of Minersville, Mr.
and Mrs. Gay Fields of
Pomeroy and Mr. and Mrs.
John .Buchanan visited Mr. and
Mrs. Otis K. Casto recently.
Juli Whitehead spent a
weekend at Columbus with her
sister, Jean, a student at Ohio
State University,.
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Wilson
and Claude Smith visited with
Mrs. Claude Smith, a patient at
the University Hospital, at
Columbus, Sunday. Mrs. Smith
has been a patient there for
several weeks. Also visiting
with her frequently is her
children, 1he Dale Smith
family and the Marvin Reed
family .
Mr. and Mrs. D. 0. Casto of
Portland drove his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. otis K. Casto to
Columbus where they visited
the Richard Sellers 'family . ·
Mrs . Hazel ' Balderson ,
Vienna, W. Va., spent the
weekend at the WilliamsBalderson home.
Mr. and Mrs . Denver Weber
and sons, visited Sunday with
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Weber and
family of Keno.
purchase of a firearm by a conMr. and Mrs . Donald
victed felon .
Coleman and family of
U. S. Attorney Frederick M. Columbus spent a weekend
Coleman said .the indictment with Mrs. Helen Archer.
followed an investigatiOil by
The Communicty Builders
the U.S. Justice Department's Club mel at the home of Mr.
Organized Crime Task Force. and Mrs. Denver Weber

Satuday evening. Ronald
Osborne, presidenl, was in
charge of the business
meeting. Dues were paid and a
commillee report was given.
Refreshments and a social
time were enjoyed by Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Osborne, Mr. and
Mrs . Donald Myers, Mr. and
Mrs. Waller Brown and David,
Mr. and Mrs. Dohrman Reed
and family , Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Whitehead and family
and Mr. ·and Mrs.Ernest
Whitehead and family and Mr.
Mrs. Warren Pickens.
- Mrs. L. Balderson

COLLEGE OFFICE ROBBED
OBERUN, Ohio (UPI) The
Oberlin
College
treasurer's office was robbed
at gunpoint Monday of about
$3,800.
Witnesses said one man held
a gun on those in the office
while an accomplice jumped
over a counter and scooped up
the money .
They ran from the office and
disappeared. Police continued
their search today for the pair.

ENROLLMENT UP
ADA, Ohio (UP!) - Ohio
Northern University reports a
12 per cent increase in enrollment this quarter compared
with a year ago.
Registrar James L. Moore
said 2,254 students we;·e enroll·
ed at the start of spring quar·
ler, 142 more than last year.

J-fttDIIIJ!! '"•I,Ml'l

'Readirig Beats Declarer
1

'.

the present date to Nov. 14. The
Altliotigb lbe stale governpay hike enacted last year by ment, figuring on an J,S.rnonth
the Ohio General Assenlbly basis, said lbe requested in·
NORTH
7
called for the 10.6 per cent crease amounted to 9.3 per
.103
increase to 'begin last Jan. 1. · cent, the Pay Board, uSing a IZ.
.¥ J854
~obert TenenLaum, Gov. month standard, said It Callie
tKQJ72
John J . Gilligan's news to 10.6 per cent,
.72
secretary, said the state
Tenenbaum said he was not
WFST
EAST
.J9H2
.K76
Personnel Department was sure whether new 'leglalatlon
YAK
• 97 32
studying the proposals and would be needed 00 niab! the
tl08 4
+
A93
could have a recommendation stale comply with lbe Pay
.1065
"'983
ready by roday.
Board's ruling,
SOUTH (D)
The vole to reject Ohio's
"The PI!Y Board said we
.AQS
request was 11-li, with all the could come back In November
¥Ql06
•• 6 5
board's business represen· and request an additional pay
"'AKQJ4
tatives voting no and the five hike to cover what we 19110
East-West vulnerable
labor representatives voting now," he added.
West
North East South
Gilligan has conlellded Ohio
yes.
The labor members called state workers are underJ)aid In
I"'
Pass It
Pass ·2N.T.
the settlement "irrational, comparlaon with federal
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
inconsistent and petty."
employes In comparable joba
Pass
The decision affects 56,390 an.d state workers In neighOpening lead-· 4
state workers.
bOring states and that the In·
There was a conflict in the crease was needed to bring By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
amount of the increase .
them up to par.
The basic defensive signal
is the play of an unnecessarily hig card to show
strengt
r at least to ask
your p .riner to lead that suit
to you. This is the basic use
of this high-card play.
Suppose it is clear to your
partner that you can't want
.
him to lead this particular
WASHINGTON (UPI) - meeting Monday in Columbus suit. Then what does a high-·
card play mean?
Ohio School Superintendent the superintendents enIt doesn't mean that you
Martin W. Essex scheduled a couraged Essex to "take all are
wasting some spots for
breakfast meeting here roday steps necessary" to get board the sheer joy of wasting
with the state's congressional approval.
them.
delegation to encourage
"This deep concern exhibited
It may be a suit preference
federal Pay Board approval of by the superintendents could signal to ask your partner
pay raises for Ohio school · Iring the impact of the serious· to lead a high-ranking suit
teachers.
ness of the wage conditions in as spades or hearts instead
A new salary scheduled Obio schools to the Ohio con- or a low-ranking suit such as
would boost teachers' pay for a gressional delegation," Essex clubs or diamonds but it is
minimum of $5,200 to $5,600, said late Monday. "They (con- far more likely that you are
retroactive to Jan. i. The gressmen) are In a position to starting a high-low play to
show that you hold an even
minimum would be increased transmit the urgency to the number of cards in the suit.
to $6,400 for the next school persons who make policy/'.
South played dummy's 10
year, but since the hike exEssex maintains the board of spades at trick one. He
ceeds the Pay Board's 5.5 per should approve the pay In· hoped it would hold but East
cent guidelines, it inust be crease although it exceeds the produced the king. South let
it hold but had to win the
approved by the board.
5.5 pet. guideUne, to allow ,spade continuation. Then he
Essex carried with him the Obio teachers to "catch up" led a diamond.
support of superintendents of with other teachers across the
West ducked. He could see
Ohio's 397 school distriCts to be country.
all those potential diamond
affected by the pay hik• ~t. a
winners if he rose with the

Congressmen
Din·e With Teachers

' North

Pass

East

1•

Pass

THE STANDINGS
.

1.

South
?

looal Bowling

You, South, hold:
.98654 ¥A2 t1 "'AKQ76

Veterans Mtmorliit
Hospital League
Fob. 29, 1972
Stalldlngs
Teem
Pis.
Hit &amp; Misses · ,
28
Gutter Bums
20
TheOpens
10
Straight Shooters
8
1-ligh Ind. Game - Bessie
Sylvester 169; Second High
Ind. Game- Salty Savage162.
High Ind. Series - llessle
Sylvester .j65; Second High
Ind. Series - Sue Cundiff' 415.
Team High Game - Htt &amp;
Misses 485.
·
' Team High Series - Hit &amp;
Misses 1326.

What do you do now?
A-Bid one spade. What else?

TODAYIS QUESTION
Your partner continues to one
no- trUITJP· What do you do now?

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TOT HI!
lNTERES;rOF
'
MEIGS-MASON ARI!A
CHESTER LTANNEHILL,

Extc. Ed.
ROBERT HOEF.I;lCH,

City Editor

Published daily exce-pt
Saturday bv The Ohio Valley
Publishing Company, 111
Court St ., Pomtroy, Ohio,
45769 . Business Office Phont
992-2156, Editorial Phone 992.

American Legion
Ladles Auxiliary
March 3, 1972
Sttndings

2157.

Second class postage paid at
Pomeroy , Ohio .
National advertlilng
representative · Bottlntlli-

.,_
I{

I/ I

It;\
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•

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St .• Ne-w York City, New York .
Subscription ratts: De -

livered by carrier where

available 50 cents per week ;
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end w. va., One year Sl•.oo.
Six months S7 .25 . Three
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price Includes Sundiy Times.
SttnHnel .

Btalnners League
March2, 1972
Standings
.ream
Pis.
Four Aces
36
Misfits
.34
lucky Stars
26
Bombe rs
24
Red
Devils
24
Four Deuces
2•,
High Individual Game Eddie V. 203; Maxine 0 , 166.
Secon'd High Ind. Game :Ciw!ts R. lli.IJ .Judy W. . 161.
" H1gh Sef!les -" Charles ..R.
562; Maxine D. .j61.
SecOnd High Series- Eddie
V. 526; Judy w, 460.
Team High Game - Misfits
743.
Team High Series - .Misfits

Free food given away every day, No
purchase is necessary. Register free when
you visit.

.·'

'I

.

Lots of Gifts!

... and WE INVITE YOU
Ruth Smith &amp; Judy Roberts _ _ _ _ Happy Cashiers
Leslie &amp; Velma Siders

Lots of Favors!

Meat Department

Jay Hill &amp; Kenneth Wilt - - - - -- Stockroom and
Carryout Service

"Come Help Us Celebrate With Phebe"

'

.t

' '

.

Lots of Free Prizes!
Lots of Good
Old Fashioned Values!

USDR

Reg. 79'

CHOICE

59~

pkg

FABRIC SOFTENER

Our Good Ground Beef

Reg. 89'

-....

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PINTO BEANS

4

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v,.!-':

.•-.

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3 lb. or
More

c

..... We Make Our Own and It's Delicious
'
i:... Sausage ...~.'.~.~~.~!........................ !~ 65e
~ Sliced· Bacon.~~.~.~.~~~~...... 5 lb 139
i Wieners.~~~.~.?.~~ ......................~~~~ gge
'(-

~
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Wh
1
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Welkers Grade A
lb
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i oe ryers............................... 39. .
"""
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t

MARGARINE
In New

Don't Forget to Register For Free Food!

Plastic Cup
ANNIVERSARY PRODUCE SALE!

Head Lettuce
Large Solid Heads

25~

BANANA$ ......... !~.1 o~

Second High Series - Dale
Davis 558.
Team High Game - Davis
Warner Ins. 1018.
Team High Series - Davis
Warner tns. 2916.

19e
DAIRY FAIR

% lb

each

crt

SWR'CH C~T FOOD

12

~~

$1

00
• ,.......

r

NOODLES
10 'oz.
pkg

SPECI~t' PtUt:E

35~

COUPO~

99~

'Bucks Host MSU
In Home Finale

years from now, although I
may not be playing much," he
said.
His win Monday was the 36th
of his career and his second
this year. It also pushed his
money winnings to $94,000, the
best on the tour his winter.
Nicklaus vaulted Into conten·
lion with a third round 64
Sunday after shooting two 71s
on the first two rounds. He
parred the first 13 holes
Monday, then fired birdies on
the 14th and 16th to pull away
from Trevino and Rosburg.

39 of 76.
United Press lnlernalfonal
Rio placed four men in
Ohio Stale closes out its
double figures. Capt. Roger
season
at home tonight and any
BenUey and Ron Lambert each
bad 19. AI Martin had 13 and hopes the Buckeyes have of
going to the NCAA Tournament
Harry Hairston 12.
Defiance led 57-42 at hall- lay on the line at St. John
time. The Yellow Jackets have Arena ..
OSU will host Michigan State
now won 13 in a row since
in
the season-&lt;!nder and a
losing to Urbana earlier In the
victory coupled with a Purdue
year.
win over Minnesota tonight
'RIO GRANDE (911 Bentley, B-3·19; Hairston, 6-0· would give the Bucks a tie for
12 ; lambert, 7-5·19; .Jordan, 1- the Big Ten title and force a
0-2; Bartram, t-1-3; Rouse, 3-2·
8; Botllnger, .J -3-9; Thompson, playoff.
Michigan , however, could
2-0-4; Hart, 1-0-2; Martin, 6·3·
13. TOTALS 39-15-91.
also finish 1().4 to make it a
DEFIANCE 1132) - Am· three-way tie, which · would
stulz, 8·3·19; Nafziger, 6-4-16;
Baer, 10-1-21; Bush, 8-4-20; eliminate Ohio State since the
Reicher. 9·5-23; Shine, 4-3-11; last team to participate in an
Periz, 3·3-9; Amrhein, l·S·7; NC~nament steps aside.
Kramer, 3-0-6. TOTALS 52-28·
OS.!.(_ fell to 9-4 with the loss
132.
Score at half:
Saturf"'y to Indiana . MinDefiance 57 Rio 42 .

nesota, the leader, 4s 16-3 and
Michigan is 6-4.
The Bucks are not lbe only
ones who feel a crisis nearing.
Ohio University meet.
Toledo at Bowling Green
tonight for the Mid-American
Conference ticket to the NCAA
tournament.
The Bobcats and Rockets
need the playoff to decide who
is tourney-bound because both
finished the season with 7-3
records in the MAC, the fifth tie
in conference history.
And while all that is going on
- at Alliance, Wittenberg and
Kenyon will battle for the Ohio
Conference title; and Youngstown State goes against
Gannon (Pa.) In the NCAA
Mideast Regional at Akron.

College Ratings

51ronton
Wrestlers

NEW "YORK IUPI)- The
United Press International top
20 major college basketball
teams with firsl place votes
· and won.lost records as of Sun.,

Final MOC Statistics

In Pairings

QillCKQUIZ

Ohio High School
Basketball Tournament
Results
United Press International
Class AA
Finneytown 70 Sycamore 53

Middle town 78 Oak Hills 62
Eastwood 57 Eaton 56
Mason 70 Little Miami 55
Madison 84 Carlisle 56
Class A
Ridgedale 49 Canal Winchester
48

Moon MuHins
By Fenl Johnson
r-~~~~~~

Nat.innal CartoonlslJ Sociel)'

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Insurance Agency

Urbana
Malone
Rio Grande

Colle·

Ohio Dominican

Cedarville

Eastern High .School
CLASS A
SECTIONAL CHAMPS
Best W'zshes To You
In The

Assorted Flawrs .

SAVE Sl,()() WHEN YOU BUY A
10 oz. Jar of
INSTANT FOLGER'S
COFFEE CRYSTALS

conference in free throw
shooting.
Urbana led the league in
team field goal shooting and in
free th row sh00 t'tng wh"l
1e
Malone won the team
rebounding title.

Market Report

d1"8~

49e

WITH THIS

MRS. WEISS'

round total, 12 under par.
'l\1!vino shot a par 72 Monday
and Rosburg carded a 66.
Amazing Sam Snead, who
will be 60 years old in May, sbot
a par 72 over the 7,028-yard
Dora! Country Club "Blue
Monster" course and finished
alone in fourth place, picking
up a $7,000 check..
Nicklaus has dominated the .
tour of 10 years now, bad bad
news for the rest of the pros on
the rour. He is only halfway
through his career.
"I'll certainly be playing 10

~:::~~

6:0''
6'5"

: ::::,
Jerry Townsend-Malone
Junior ·
6'1"
PaviMclovghlln - OhioDomlnlcan
Senior
6'0''
Oave Maurer - Ohio Dominican ·
Jvnlor
6'2"
Harry Hairston - Rio Grande
Junior
6'5"
At Morton- Rio Grande
Soph.
6'0''
Honorable
Mention
Bob
Stephenson.
Phil
Morzlck,
Malone; Dan Ballinger and Ron Lambert, Rio Grande; Harold
Howe, Urbana ; Lee Eck, Terry Clapp, Rich watson, Cedarville.

· March 5 In parentheses:
!fourteenth week) .
TEAM
POINTS
t. UCLA (35) (25-0)
350
2.
No.
Caro.
121
-41
273
FINAL MID-OHIO BASKETBALL STATISTICS
3. Penn 123·2)
244
STANDINGS
4. So Caro. (22-4)
177
Coni. All Games
5.
Lng
Bch.
St.
(2J.e)
176
TEAM
W-l
W-l
Five Ironton High School 6. Lsvll 122-3)
170
Urbana
8·0 23·6
7. Marq 124-2)
l31
wrestlers
are
entered
in
the
Rio Grande
5-3 14·12
8.
Brig.
Yng
(2H)
Malone
4·4
14-1 4 Class A·AA Ohio High School 9. Mmphs St. (21-5)
~~
Ohio Dominican
2·6
8·16 State WresUing tournament, 10. Marshall (23-3)
37
Cedarville
1-7
6-19 first round pairings of which 11. Souwsl Louis 123-3)
Team Field Goals
A
M Pel.
Missouri (20-4)
~26
Urbana
2142
1134
52.9 are announced today. They 12.
13.
Hawaii
(24-2
)
1851
895
48.4 are:
Rio Grande
14. Maryland· (20-4)
25
Malone
2222
1013
45.6
105
lbs.
Phil
Sanders,
15.
Houston
(20-61
15
Cedarville
7.74
44.6
1737
16.
Minnesota
116·6)
14
Ohio Dominican
1838
788
4.5 Ironton, vs. Steve Stalnaker, 17. Tex . El Paso (20·6)
13
Team Free Throws
A
M Pet. Plain City Jonathan Alder.
lB. Virginia (20-5)
12
Urbana
919 666
12.5
126
lbs.
Ed
Ainsworth,
19.
Prov.
119-S)
9
Ohio Dominican
532
355
71.2
20.
Temple
l23·7l
3
Ironton,
vs.
Joe
Studt,
Akron
Rio Grande
532
353
69.0
Mat one
865
577
66 .9
St. Vincent.
Cedarville
710
444
62 .5
167 lbs. - Robert Smith,
Team Rebounds
RB
AVG.
OHIO COLLEGE
Ironton,
vs. Michael Rice,
Malone
1373
49.0
BASKETBALL RESULTS
1283
44.2 . Canfield.
Urbana
United Pr,ss , tnt~r~ational
1049
43.4
Rio Grande
175
lbs.
Mike
Albrlnk,
NAt Disfllltt22 Playoffs
Ohio Dominican
991
41.0
It has been estimated Cedarville
952
38.1 Ironton, vs. Mike Berry, River Findlay 87 Wilmington 74
Defiance 132 Rio Grande 91
FG FT TP
Avg. View.
that the average family of Individual Scoring
261
131
653
28.4
four in the United States Jim Underwood 1001
185 lbs. - Terry Parker, Xavier 68 Canislus IN .Y.) 67
Mark
Todd
lUI
278
143
699
24.1
eats about 1,000 pounds of
Plunkett t Ul
247
170 664
22.9 Ironton, vs. Rich Koschalk,
fruits and vegetables ~ach Jon
Dave
Maurer
tOOl
179
90
448
19.4 Oregon Cardinal Strltch.
year.
' I
1 Terry Anderson I Ui
217
115
549
19.0
- - - - - - - - - - Individual Shooting
A
M Pet.
408
247
60.5
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
Utility, 22.50·23.75; Canners Jon Plunkett ( Ul
John Harrison ICI
131
77
58.8
Hogs: 200-230, 24; No. 1, and Cutters, 18.85-20.10; Bulls, Bill Aikman I Ul
230
126
54.8
402
217
54.0
24.25; 236-240, 23.75; 2~260. 27-31.60; . Stockers
and TerryAndersoniU) .
Harry
Hairslon(R)
240
129
53.7
23.25; 260-280, 22.25; Sows: 350- Feeders: Steer Calves, 32.51).
PHONE 992-2342
Q-When did the Eru;t
A M Pet.
Individual Free Throws
425, 2.10-3.70; 450-Q50, 24.21). 43; Heifer Calves, 28-32.85; Paul Mcloughlin 1001
.
G
erm
a
n
flag
acquire
its
84
70
83.3
Mark Todd (U)
174
143
82.3 present design?
24.80; Boars: 19.90-20.10.
Yearlings, 31).34.60.
Rich
Watson
(C
(
106
87
82.1
A-East Germany's flag
Cattle: Good to Choice, 34Veal Calves : Choice, 51;
Harold HoweiU)
77
60
77.8
was
the same as West Ger·
34.60; Standard-good, 31.60- Good, 48.50; Medium, 46; Baby Bob Stephenson IM)
117
90
76 .9
many's
from 1955 to 1959,
Individual Rebounds
33.80; Holstein, 3Q.4~2.
Calves, 25 to 73,
RB
AVG.
when
the
Communists added
Jim Underwood IOD)
337
14,6
of
arms.
the
coat
Terry
Anderson
(
U
I
363
12.5
Commercial Cowsii'li2ii4-i25Iii.85i;IIII•E•w•e•s•an•d•Lam-•b•s-•32•.Phil Marzick IM)
328
11.7
Q-When were chest proRoger Bentley( R)
213
8.8 tectors introduced into ma·
Jon Plunkett I U)
253
8.7
Offensive Avg. jor league baseball?
A-In 1685. The first chest
Urban~
101. t
protectors
were worn by
Malone
93.0
Rio Grande
89.4 catchers and umpires.
Ohio Dominican
88.1
Cedarville
79.7

·Wednesday Late
Mixed league
March 1, 1972
Standings:
Team
· -Points
Morrow-Moore
46
Cassell-carsey
42
Owen-Holter
42
Rosenbaum -Meadows
38
Fuflz. Benfley
36
Blakeslee-Hoyt
12
High Series Team
Rosenbaum -Meadows 1879,
Morrow-Moore1873, Blakeslee.
Hoyt 1829.
Hlgll Series, Men - D.
Mea do ws 558, L. ougan 530, P.
Ellis 516.
High Game, Men - P. Ellis
202 • o · Meadows 197, L. Dugan
193.
High Game, Tum Rosen· baum-Meadows 691.·
Morrow-Moore 655, Cassell ·
Carsey 620.
High Series, Women _ l
Winebrenner 451, H. Moore 437;
.V. Hoyi•&gt;427,
·High Came, Women - H.
Moore 19' B F 11 I" o
Glaze 161 ~· · u ·' ~. ·

District Tournament

J0 80 DOG FOOD

4 4 ................, ...... ,•

ONIONS.......... 3~~g 19~

586.

•

%gal

OR

¢

w.

MIAMI (UPl)-There sits
the American Dream.
. There sits suntanned,
golden!talred Jack Nicklaus
talking to sports writers about
· his win Monday in the $150,000
DoralEastern Open Golf
Tournament.
He's rich. He's famous. He's
well liked. He loves what he is
doing. He has a lovely family,
and there Is no sign at age 32
that. any of this will end
anytime soon.
What do you do for an encore
if you're Nicklaus a~ this stage
of your great career? You win
a four-way grand slam, that's
what you do.
Nicklaus still insists that the
grand slam is possible.
"I'll have a Hille mental
advantage this year," Nicklaus
said, "because all lour oournainents are on courses I like."
Nicklaus made his com·
· ments after shooting a par 70
on the final round of the raindelayed Dotal tournament.
The $30,000 first prize check
put him ahead of Arnold
Palmer .on the alltime money
winning Hst by $6,000. Nicklaus
now has won nearly $1.5
million.
The "Golden Bear" beat Lee
Trevino and Bob Rosburg by
two strokes with a 276 four-

By United Presa International

FAIRMONT

quart

running their record to 24-1.
Marv Reicher scored 23
points, Bruce Baer 21 and Ken
Bush 20. Rio Grande ended up
at 14-12.
Rio Grande shot 51 pet. from
the field Monday, but the red
hot Yellow Jackets blistered
the nets for 63 pet., sinking 52 of
83 field goal attempts. Rio hit

Nicklaus: Dream Made Real

ICE MILK

NU-MAID

lb.

p.m. at Middleport JDD!or
High Gym.
Pomeroy A Is coached by
Frauk Seth, Middleport Call
by Woody CaU Jr. Pomeroy
A won the regula~ season
c~ampl0111blp wltll a 6-4
record. Middleport Call was

contest will represent District
22 in 1be 1972 NAIA CoUege
Tournament at Kansas City,
Mo., .next week.
In the NAIA contest played
at Findlay, Ken Burgei scored
23 points to pace lbe Oilers.
At Defiance, the Yellow
Jackets' top three players
combined for 64 points in

Ht!t!

Senior
Senior

~~~~:g~o!~nui~a~~~~gh:~~ ~~.:u;~~y~R~~~r:~~~ND TEAM

ackets Oust Rio

EAGLES

CLOSED SUNDAYS

team ,
The second team has two
juniors - Jerry Townsend
(Malone ) and Dave Maurer
(Ob'to Dorrun
· 1can )• 1wo se·nlors
Paul McLoughlin (Ohio
Dominican) and Harry

Mark Todd - Urbana
Terr~ Anderson - Urbana

goal shooting with a 60 pet.

tiOt\S

Prices ERective Mar, 8-15
Monday Thru Friday

seniors, three of !l'hom played
' e champion' Urbana ·
lor lea•u
Detroit
23 ..a .324 33
•
Pacific Division .
(Todd, Anderson, Plumkett) .
W. l. Pet. GB The olber two first team spots
x-Los Angeles 59 12 .831 ...
.
GoldenState 45 26 .634 14 .wen't to Jim Underwood (ObIo
Seaflle
.j6 27 .630 u
Dominican) and Roger Bently
Houslon
28 43 .394 31
Poritand
15 59 .203 .(!•;, of Rio Grande. It was an·
x'clinches division IIIIo
MOnday's Results
Milwaukee 1J2 ,Boston 127, ot
' (Only game scheduled)
Tuesdty's Games
Mlt.waukee at New York
Phoenix at Detroit
Philadelphia al Los Angeles
Baltimore at Seattle
Buffalo al Porltand
It will be Defiance (24-1) and
Cleveland at Golden State
Findlay (17-10) In the NAIA
!Only games scheduled!
I .
District 22 playoff finals at
Defiance Wednesday night.
Monday night, Defiance
TOURNEY FINAL.
Pomeroy A will . play rolled over Rio Grande College
Middleport Call In liDall of 132-91 while Findlay dumped ·
tbe Meigs Local Slb·llb Wilmington 87-74 in opening
round games.
.gra~e bukelball lea~ue
Winner of Wednesday night's
touiumeat Weclnelday al 6

of Rio
The Co.nference scoring
champion this year was Jim
Underwood of Ohio Dominican
with 28.Spolnts per game; Jim
al so led in rebounding WI'th a
14.5 per game average. Jon
Plunkett (Urbana) led In lield

~~

Meigs County's Oldest and largest

Right reserved to limit Quantities
We Glad~ Accept Fed Food Stamps

CHOC. MILK

TOWELS

~. ·I
•It•

,~

59~

lb

GAlA PAPER

••
•;:
....... In Our New
:!: Cello Pkg.

5th and PEARL STS.. RACINE .
"The Store With A Heart

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

PEAK BRAND

...:

..,.
,
...
•••...·
....
......,

69~

gallon

..,

. .~ ·

Tri-Covnty league
Feb. 29, 1972
Standings
Name
Pfs.
Larry's A$hland
56
Davis Warner Ins.
50
Rawlings Dodge
42
Pomeror, Cement Block
28
H&amp; R F res tone
26
Holsum
14
High Individual Game
Dale Dovls 2U.
Second Hlqh Ind. Game -

You. WE LIKE"

BIG VALUE

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

2081.

BUCKEYE

POTATO CHIPS

~~m~nd;w~ch~hlo~:l::a:EAM

=~f~=po:~~t~~ ~ean:A'::%h~s~: =:~re AI Morton

Bill Radford·211.
High Series - Bill Radford

Tum
PIS.
Jr. Bugaloos
22
Headquarter Barmaids
20
Rolling Pins
16
Feeney Bennett Flyers
14
Buckeyes
12
Goble Marauders
12
High lndlvldval Game
Mary Martin 160.
Second High Ind. Game lucy McKinney-Geraldine
Kessinger 158.
High Series lucy
McKinney .434.
Second High Series - Mary
Martin 410.
Team High Game
Jr ·
Bugaloos ol55.
Team High Series
Jr.
Bugatoos 1318.

Phebe

Jn'vites
Y.ou
,,,

NIA StttMII~~t~s

ly IIIII~ Press tntem.ttonal
Ea.stern CDilfert~lCt
At.. nllc Division
W. L. Pet, GB
Boslon
49 25 .662
New York
.Q 2J .606 4'12
Phltadel!'!'la 28 .4J . •394 19'12
Buffalo • · 19 51 .271 28
Ctntrat Division
·
W. L, Pet. GB
Baltimore
32 39 .451 ...
Allan.ta
28 .4J .394 4
Cincinnati
23 ..a .324 9
Cleveland
21 50 .296 t t
Western Conference
Midwest Dlvtston
W. L. Pet. GB
Milwaukee
57 16 .711 ...
Chicago
51 22 .699 6
Phoenix
.4J 30 .589 14

MAR. 8 TO .15
Free Groceries

OUR
RD

A}} 'MOCAll-MOCDream Team

COLUMBUS -The All-Mid . nounced last week that Un· Hairston (Rio Grande) and one

•

\ NE~PAPEI ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

West

,.

·

ace . South won ip dummy
while East dropped the four .
South returned · to his hand
with a club and led his last
diamond.
If West had ducked thiR
also, South would have
r9mped off with his contract,
but West had no problem at
all. He took his ace and
cleared the ·spade suit.
East had played his lowest
diamond the first time. This
showed an odd number of
cards in the suit. so West
knew that South had started
with just · two diamonds.

The hidding has been!

~llt.l'woy,O.,ICirdl7,1rT2

·
·
d
F•
l
T
'
.
Bentley Narne . Irs earn
..

•

I

NEW YORK (UPI)-Ron
Stewart, a 39-year-old right
wing, who excels as a penally
killer, is back with the New
York Rangers as playoff in·
surance.
Stewart, who spent four
years with the Rangers before
being traded to Vancouver last
November, was re-acquired
from the ·eanucks In a cash
transaction Monday. The Rangers made room lor Stewart by
shipping, rookie Norm Gratton
to Omaha of the Central
League.
·
BUENOS AIRES ( UPI)Carlos Monzon, who successfully defended his world
middleweight championship
with a controversilll technical
knockout over Denny Moyer in
Rome Saturday night, arrived
home Monday . and said he
· would be ready to fight the·
American again "In 15 days if

necessary·."

The .Farmers Bank &amp;Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9 a.m.

to 7 p.m .• (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum Insurance
For Each Depositor.
'

'·

'

'1'he fight was stopped in tile
fifth round by referee Lorenzo
Fortunato, whowasaccused by
many observers of being too
hasty in his decision.
ST. LOUIS (UPI)-Dick
Voris has resignerl his. post as
an assistant .coach with the
football CardinHis to "pursue
other opportunities." Voris, 49,
was ~&gt;ith the O• rrtina~&gt; for lour
years .

Defensive Avg. .r

91.1

89.8
86.2

92.4

91.3

MONTREAL (UPI )-Boston
Bruin center Phil Esposito
appears to have his second
consecutive National Hockey
League scoring championship
wrapped up with a current
total of ~goals and 119 points,
Jean Ratelle of New York is
second with 109 points, but is
out for the rest of the regular
season with a broken. leg,
leavingo Boston delenseman
Bobby Orr with 101 points as
the closest threat to Esposito.

BATON ROUGE,
La .
(UPl)- Press Marovich, who
gained nstional fame when his
son, Pete, played for him at
Louisiana State, has been fired
as the school's basketball
coach following a 1().16 season .
"I have reluctantly reached
the conclusion that our basket·
btill program will have a better ·
opportunity for success with a
change in the coaching staff,"
said Carl Maddox, the athletic
director at l.SU.

Congratulations. You just saved $5
by doing your own income tax.
And all it cost you was three long,
sleepless nights.
And a slight case of heartburn.
U you had Jone to H &amp; R Block, on the
other hand, you could have relaxed while
lomeone else figured out your

return. Quickly and eonlidenlially. Probably unlike any
way you've ever done it

'iJ,

before.

And, when you figure

your own, you may be
entitled to deduet1ona
you're not takinr and

audited we will aceomptllly
you, at no extra ca~&amp;, to the

Internal Revenue Service
and explain how your re·

turn was prepared, even
though we will not act
u your legal repre·
senlative.

ThiJ means that
H&amp; R Block io ready to

takinc deductions
I_Ou're not entitled to.
For instance. do you

ofrer you year 'round

know all about dedttc'

t8.1. service for juat one

eaaualtr losses? . Or,
that i your income

low fee a year, with
no extra charge for
audits and estimates .
H &amp; R Block'• charges

tiona for child care or

increased over the la!t

feW years, you mar, save
tax:

dollars by 'income
averaging?" And even if

you did, would you ·know how

to go' about "income · averagingu

to begin with? Probably not. And there's
no rea!on why you should , After aU,

start at $5 and the aver·
age c&lt;ist wao under 112.50
for the 7 million families

we served last- year.

Which is 110mewhat less than
wbat you paid.
Not to mention the fact that lffi'8VIIiOD

you're an amateur when it comes to doing isn't tax deductible.
.IDcome tax:.
And we are .
You see, when it comes to income taxes.

amateurs should depend on H 1: R Block.

DON"r LET AN AMATEUR DO

We have over 6,000 conveniently located

HaR BLOCK'S JOB.

trained

H&amp;RBlock.

offices manned by thousand• of specially
personnel. They're wann and

'friendly people who ore anxio.. to help you.
They11 sit you down over a free cup of
DALLAS (UPI) - Running
back Calvin Hill of the Dallas
Cowboys will remain hospita·
li1.ed for 10 days following
surgery to remove damaged
cartila ge from his right knee
The surgery on Monday was
termed su :-.:e s~ ful.

your income taJ: that you might never
have known eJ:isted.
Furthermere, if your retum ia

co£fee and show you some thing• about

9 A.M. To S ~. M. MON. THRU SAT.
PHONE : 992-J79S
NO APPOINTMENT N~CESSARY
OPEN TODAY

304 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.

•

.

�0

•
4-The IJIIUySentlnel,~·l'mleroy, O., March 7,11112
~

Beatrice Frost Died on Monday

Mets Have ·Another Problem
By Uulted Preso lnternaUonal
The New York Meta, who
have been travelling downhill
since their miracle World
Series victory in 1969, faced a
problem today which they
thought tbey had solved with a
big winter trade.
Jim Fregosi, acquifed from
the California Angels in the
belief that he would become the
first full-time third baseman in
the Mets' history, was discov.
ered Monday to have a broken
right thumb and wiH be
sidelined three to four weeks.
Fregos1 apparently suffered
the Injury during infield drills
last Saturday.
"It's a disturbing mjury
because it's a major injury,"
srud Gil Hodges, the Mets'
1111ualiy unflappable manager.

"I had hoped Fregos1 would gel
to know the National League
pitchers in the exhibition
games. Now he's got to come
back with tbe season already
underway and work hiiDself
ulto shape."
Coach Eddie Yost, who had
been assigned to teach the 29·
year-old Fregqs1, who played
shortsop in his previous rune
seasons m the majors, the art
of playing third, also pointed
out, "now he won't be able to
get his arm into shape before
the season starts."
Fregosi, who batted .233 with .
f1ve homers and 33 runs batted
in for the Angels last season,
was obtained for pitchers
Nolay Ryan and Don Rose and
outfielder Leroy Stanton.
Hodges said Tim Foli , Wayne

Garrett and Teddy Martinez
wlll get trials at third pending
Fregosi's return.
Garrett, Ken Boswell and
pitcher Ray SAdecki dro~e m
two runs each as the Mets beat
lhe Boston SOX, 3-2, IIi Mon.
day's exhibition game ...
Aurelio Rodriguez drove in two
runs with a double and a single
as the Detroit Tigers defeated
the Pittsburgh Pirates, ~.
behind the f1 v~1t pitching of
Tom Timmerman, Bill
Gilbreth and Chuck Seelbach.
Joe Torre, the National
League's MVP in 1971, said he
didn 'I want to be traded by the
St. Louis Cardinals and in·
dicated that he might accept
their offer of a' two-year ron·
tract steppmg from $130,000 in

1972to 150,000in 1973... AUanta
Brave Vice President 'Pdul
Richards anno1111ced that Earl
Williluns, the NL Rookie of the
Year in 1971, baa ''tentatively"
agreed to his t97a contract.
Willie Crawford singled and
, doubled home a pair of I1JilS In
the Los Angeles Dndgers' in·
trasquad game.
Horacio Pina, Mike Paul and
Ron Law pitched a seven-llitter
in the Texas Rangers' 11-4
triumph over the Chicago
White Sox ... General Manager
John Qumn said the
Philadelphia Phillies are in the
market for a right-handed
starting pitcher ... Rookie Bob
Darwin drove in four runs with
a three-run homer and a double
to lead the Minnesota Twins to

BATON ROUGE,
La.
(UP!)- Press Maravich,
whose sJx.year record as head
basketball coach at Louisiana
State looks like a rollercoaster
track, has been fired.
LSU Athletic Director Carl
Maddox announced Monday
the firings of Maravich and
assistant coaches Jay ·Me·
Creary and Greg Brem·
brock.
Maravich's success at LSU
was closely aligned with the
tenture of his famous son"Pistol" Pete Maravich--&lt;In
the varisty squad.
"I have reluctantly reached
the conclusion that our basket·
ball program will have a better
opportunity for success with a
change In the coachmg staff,"
Maddox told a new conference.
Maravich, a native of
Aliquippa, Penn., took over as
head basketball coach at LSU
prior to the 1966-67 season. He
promptly led the Tigers to a 323 season, the worsl in LSU
history.
However, Pete joined the
squad the following year and
coach Maravich's fortunes
turned. That year Pete and his
dad led the Tigers to a 14-12
season .
Maravich's success at LSU
peaked in 1969-70, when he
scored a 22-10 season and an
invitation to the National Jn.
vitational Tournament.
But Pistol Pete left LSU in
1970and his father's luck took a
nosedive, ending with a 14·14
season that year. Maravich

"Electric Heating
is the best
heating
we have
ever had ...
and
probably
ever will have."

6,064 families
in our service area
have
Electrically Heated homes.
Here's what they like:
0 Perfect warmth' Wall to wall. ce1 11ng
to floor
0 No regular serv1c1ng' Great• Just
turn the d•al
0 No pollutants. ms•de or out
0 Clean as ar. 3iectnc light bulbi
0 Instant com!ortt Pleasant as
sunshine
O Modern' Tomorrow as well as to-day
Come five
In the Electric Climate.

COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN
OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

Hall had 13, Terry Hall and
Laurie Burnett 2 each, Kathy
Smith and Debbie Ball'd I each
BY QUARTERS
Southern
9 19 35 45
Wahama
2 6 7 8
9264563
6 - 7 16 21

MEETING CALLED
MASON - Charles Stanley,
president of the Mason Little
League , has announced a
meehng of all interested
parents for 7p.m. Fnday at the
Mason Youth Center. Election
of officers will be held.
DANCE SET
Adance will be held from 9 to
11:30_p.m. Saturday at Southern Higil&gt;- School- with ·muSic
provided by Willie. The South·
ern Band Boosters are spon·
sormg the event.

!

! Of the Bend

~

I

•
Southern and Logan Wm

Logan.
Kyger Creek

a 1;·1 win over the New York
Yankees ... Left-llanders Dan
McGinn and Balor Moore were
praised by ma•ager Gene
Mauc!l after the Montreal
Expos' workout.
Sal Baudo's three-run bomer
and Mike Epstein's solo homer
led the Warren Hackers to a 7.,'1
victory over the Vern
Hoscheits in the Oakland
Athletics' intrasquad game ...
Shortstop Leo Cardenas, who
has been missing without
explanation, notified General
.Manager Harry Dalton of the
Angels that he is enroute ...
Frank Duffy had two hits and
two stolen bases and Buddy
Bell had ll triple and two
smgles in !be Cleveland Jd.
ndians' intra-ll(juad game.

Beat....

ended this sar with a 1().16 on his teams to recruiting
record.
trouble and the large nwnber
His total record at LSU Is 76- of players dropped because of
86.
bad grades.
Maravich smd this year's
Marovich said he plans to
losing season was not aU his continue coaching, but has no
fault.
Idea where he will go.
"For the material we had I
Maddox said Maravlch's ap.
think we did a dam good job," pomtmenl extends one more
he said.
year, and "the university will
He blamed the lack of talent honor its contract."

In the first round of play
Mondy of the Girls' Fifth
Annual Basketball Tourney
held at Meigs High School,
Southern won easily over
Wahama, 45 to 8.
For Southern, Janie Rees
was the leading scorer with 15
followed by Debbie West with
a, Pam Hill and Connie Warner
7 each, and Teresa Gooch, Jill
Warner, Donna Proffitt and
Carol Michael 2 each.
For Wahama, Karen Froendt
and Judy Lieving had 3 each
and Jackie Camp and Martha
Jones I each.
In the Logan and Kyger
Creek contest, Logan's Susan
McBroom chipped In 22 points
to lead her team to a 63 to 21
victory .
Other scorers for tile winners
were Marty GiiSiel': with 17,
Becky Bell 16, Kathy Korn·
miller 7 and Bev Peppers 1.
For Kyger Creek, Shelley

•

r--------------~---~--------·
I
I
I
I
I
I

Maravich the Elder Fired

I By Rob Hoeflich

I

I

I

Former Meigs County residents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lan.
daker, now of Woodrow, Colo., will observe their 70th weddmg
anmversary on March 19 and would love to hear from Meigs
Countians.
Mr. Ulndaker was92on Feb. 26and Mrs. Landaker will be 90
on Nov. 4. Considering their ages, Mr. and Mrs. Ulndaker are
both reported to be in good health despite a recent hospitalization
for Mrs Ulndaker.
The rouple regularly attend church and Mrs. Landaker goes
to the church basement every Wednesday mght to jom other
women of the church m quilting sessions. The Landakers
recently purchased a new automobile and drive 50 miles to their
doctor. They own vast acreage which Is now rented out but Mr.
Landaker still does some gardening and keeps about 50 chickens
on hand to supply eggs for the rouple and their neighbors.
The Landakers have two sons who hve within a 40 mile
radius. There are no grandchildren.

POMEROY BOYS ARE reminded that Sunday from I to 3
p.m. will be the final opportunity for them to sign for participation in the pony, peewee and little league activities. Those
who don't. register at the Pomeroy City Hall by 3 p.m. Sunday
won't be permitted to take part, league officials say.
At the conclusion of the signup period Sunday, a meetmg will
be held for managers and ali parents who wish to take a role in
this summer's program.
AN INTERESTING ARTICLE appeared in "The Scene," a
Sandusky area newspsper recently under the by-tine of Charlotte
Herlihy, granddsughter of Mrs. Eva Hollon of Chester and
daughter of the former Betty Kimes of the Chester area.
The story dealt with a grandmother, Mrs. Walter Manning,
entertaining a goat overnight at her home to give her ·two
granddaughters a chance to get acquainted with the animal
which had been given to them. As it turned out, the goat was a
pretty well behaved house pet even thOugh he did eafa·part of a
cape dating back to the 1890s- a psrt of the antique collection of
Mrs. Manning.
MIDDLEPORT ARTIST, Ruth Gosney, is a good Indian.
Ruth consistently gives the Pomeroy National Bank a hand with
special proj!lcts they are carrying out. For the past two
weekends, Ruth has provided the special settings carrying out
themes used for serving refreshments at the bank on Satutd3y
mornings as a part of the Institution's tOOth anniversary. In·
elden tally, Ruth has purchased the spscious Grant home at the
:omer of Sixth and Main in Middleport and is busy remodeling it
'or her personal residence.

Mns. Beatrice Ellen Couslna
Frost, 62, died Monday af.
temoon at her Belpre, Route 1
residence following &amp;I) ex·
tended illness.
She was the wife of the Rev.
Wallet A. Frost, a Unlled
Methodist Minister who bad
served In Meigs County over 14
years.
Mrs. Froat was born March
21, 1909 in Vinloo County, the
daughter of the late George W.
and Estella McAfree Cousins.
She was married in 1923. Mrs.
Forst was a member of the
Pleasant
View
United
Methodist Church at Belpre,
Route 1, a member of the
Circle and Uldies Aide, and a
member of the Society of
Christian Endeavor of the
Umled Methodist Church.
Surviving besides her
husball\\.are two sons, Donald,
Arcade, N. Y., and Walter B.
Frost, Checotah, Okla.; a
daughter, Mrs. Gary (Bar·
bara) Marshall, Arlington; 17
grandchildren; a brother,
Myron Cousins, Ligeoga,
MISS.; two siSters, Mrs Irene
Emerick and Mrs. Eileen
Edens, both of Lemon Grove,

Calif.; her stepmother, Mrs.
Florence Cousins, Vienna, W.
Va.; three aunts, Mrs. Pearl
Cousins, Belpre; Mrs. Grace
Mooney, Marietta, and Mrs.
Nora McAfee, Flenuning.
Mrs. Frost was preceded in
death by a son, Robert, In 1967;
a great-grandson in 1967, and a
sister, Beatrice Dils, this year.
to'uneral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Spencer Funeral Home with
the Rev. Joseph R. Graham,
Athims, officiating. Burial wiU
be in .){ocldand Cemetery at
Belpre. Friends may call at the
funeral home in Belpre
anytime.

PLACE CHANGED
LETART, W'. Va .. - Funeral
services for Mrs. Eleanora L.
Smithson, 65, Letart Route 2,
bave been changed. Instead of
being on Wednesday at 1 p.m.
at the Foglesong Funeral
Home, they will be at the
Scobee Funeral Home in
Winchester, Ky. on Wed·
nesday.

. Over 150 guests attended the
annual
Inspection
of
EVangeline Chapter 172, Order
of the Eastern Star, Saturday
night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
Mn. Marlene Logston,
deputy grand matron of
District 25, was the inapecting
officer. Mrs. Jenevee Chellber,
worthy matron, and Harry
Chesher, worthy patron, in·
troduced the distinguished
guests including Roberta K.
MiDdling, past grand matron;
Maxine Jeffries, grand
organist of the Grand Chaplet
of West Virginia; Bernadine
Watts, deputy grand matron of
District 18; Violet Knowlton,
srand representative of New
Jersey In Ohio; Catherine
grand represlm·
tattve of Virginia in Ohio; and
Corlne Whittington, grand
representative of Puerto Rico
in West Virginia.
Also presented were 14
worthy matrons from District
25 and 2 from District 24, 10
worthy patrons, Ben Phllaon,
deputy grandmaster of the 12th
Masohlc District; and past
matrons and past patrons of
Evangeline Chapter,
District officers present

RODS

COLORFUL YARN

HAIR TIES

12 74C

Ea.
BOYS 13!4 OZ.

"ACELE" ACETATE

WOMEN$ PANTIES
White and pastel colors.
Elastic leg Hollywood
brief style. Size 5-6-7.

27~

Wesiirn
Dungarees
Flare leg style. Pre·
shrunk, handstlched at
points of strain. Size 6 to
16.

FOR

..

4~ACI
ON?

Peonies, Carnations, Rosebuds, Mums,
Tulip, Lilac, Jasmine Picks, Zinnias,
Marigold, Swee!J!ea, Daffodil, Hyacinth,
Dahlia, African Viole~ Mom Rose, Petuala,

EACH

NEW DESIGNS! NEYi COLORS!

mer By Charlene Hoeflich
Another $150 and the Pomeroy Elementary School safety
• patrol will be all set financiaUy for that April trip to Washington,
D.C.
Saturday's ftea market was a tremendous success, April
Smith, chairman, reports. Over $400 was raised during the day. A
large amount of clothing not sold was loaded up and taken to the
Lakin state Hospital, the Salvation Army, and the Meigs County
Children's Home.
•·
April extends her thanks to the many parents who not only
spent their Satilrday at the sale, but bours and hours before hand
getting things together and arranged, and especially to Jim
• Carnahan and Dan Smith who donated their services to auction
off some of the furniture and other household items during the
afternoon.
Several funny things happened during the day.
Mrs. James Soulsby donated numerous games. WhUe she was
home from the market for a bite of lunch, her children walked up
to the sale. What did they buy? The games their mother had
donated the day before!
April sat down at an old school desk to do the clerk work for the
auctioneers. It was hours later that she realized the desk had
been donated for the sale and they had forgotten to put it up for
bid.
And so It went -

MENS SHORT SLEEVE ·

27

No Iron Polyester$
, and cotton blends.
Printed designs or
· solid colors.

UP .

LIGHTWEIGHT ALUMINUM

BRUIH

'389
BAKER
FURNITUR
MIDDLEPORT, O.

KIDDIES HAIR

GIRLS PLASTIC

BARREnES

HAIR BANDS

14FOR

46C

PAD&amp;

c•v••
sn

Siltcone treated cover I
speeds Ironing, Is staia
and scorch reslstaat.
Cushioned foam pad,

~TOitl

and Lori and Lynn Kloes had
solos. Each of the reslllents
was . presented wlth a car·
nation. Cookies and lee cream
were served.
Others of the circle attending
besidesthosenamedwereMns.
Paul Smart, Mrs. Dana
Hamm,
Mrs.
Isabelle
Winebrenner, Mrs. John
Werner, and Mrs. Charles
Simons. C. R. Karr was a
guest.
~

~

A THIRD ART CLASS for elementary students has been
organized in Meigs County, this one at the Chester Elementary
school.
Mrs. Donna Chadwell, the instructor, is conducting classes
on three grade levels. Currently there are 18 enrolled in the class
for sixth, seventhandeighthgraders~ 14 for third, fourth and fifth
graders, and eight for first and second graders.
The response and interest at all three schools where art
instruction Is being offered bas been tremendous. Last report
showed about 110 taking part in the program at the Middleport
school which Includes children from the Bradbury, Salem
Center, and Rutland schools.
Next Monday night at the Pomeroy PTA, parents will have
an opportunity to see their children dabbling In oils. In lieu of a
more formal cultural arts program, plans are for the works of
· the children over the past several months to be .on display arid for
: the children to be there doing their thing.

••

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Meeting Set
A field service orientation
meeting has been scheduled for
2 to 5 p.m. on March 19 at the
American Legion Hall in
Middleport for all legionnaires,
auxiliary members and juniors
over 15:
In announcing the meeting,
Mrs . Charles Kessinger,
Eighth District president for
the
American
Legion
good
Auxiliary,
urged
representation of posts at the
meeting.
Plana are also being made by
the district presi!lent for a
counly·wide initiation of new
members to be held at 2 p.m.
on March 26. The inillatory will
be for both junior and senior
members of aU units. A tea will
be held following the Initiatory
work with all units to take
cookies enough for their own
members.
On March 15, the junior
members of District 8 will have
a community service part at
the Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center, Athens.

~ ,~

POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
RAM, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.,
special !!E'SSion at temple; most
excellent masters degree to be
conferred. All offl&amp;et.t {lnd
companions invited.
~
FRIDAY
..
RETURN JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, DAR, charter
day luncheon, I p.m. Friday,
Grace Episcopal Parish House.
CATHOUC Women's Club,
Fridsy, following 7:30 p.m.
service.
DANCE, Royal Oak Park,
Friday, 8 to 11 p.m. Music by
Willies, sponsored by Meigs
VICA Club.
HERE THIS WEEK
Clifford Jenkinson is
recuperating at hts East
Second St., Pomeroy, home
following
four
weeks'
hospitalization at Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treat·
men t of pneumonia. His
daughter and granddaughter,
Mrs. Robert Russell and Mrs.
Ned Grant of Crook.sville are
here this week to assist in bis
care.

Worried About

FALSE TEETtt
WEEKEND VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tribble and
daughter, Kim, of St. Albans,
W. Va . spent the weekend
visiting her parents 1 Mr. and
Mrs. George Hackett, Sr·.,
Middleport.
,

'.

Corning Loose?
Alrald laio&lt; teeth

wilt

drop at the

wro111 time? A denture adhesive ean

dhetp,. FAST1EETH•fl Powder civeo
en uret!l 1. on~:er, rmer, 1teadier
hold. Why beembarrwedl For mo..
security and comfort, uoe FAS·
TEETH Denture Adheeivtl Powder
Dentu,.. that ftt a.. -.tttal ,.;
, health. See ~our dontlat """lari)'.

·-

ProduCICI Dy CHUCK KEEN
.. U71 .._MERIC.t.N ~AfiOf'Ml fit'HERf'fliiSES

i

VILMA PIKKOJA, HOSPITALIZED at the Holzer Medical
f Center for the past week, was discharged Monday and expects to
, get back Into the swing of things thl.s week. ·

FOR

Df:PARTME.NT

·"prizes going to Miss Joyce
Ebersbach and Mrs. Davis.
Miss Ebersbach also won the
door prize, and Mrs. Ellen
Ebersbach won the traveling
prize donated by Mrs.
Vaughan. The March 16
meeting will be at the Rutland
home of Mrs. Ebersbach.
Sandwiches, deviled e~gs,
pickles, chips and coffee were
aerved by the hoales,! to those
named and Mrs. Ethel Clifford,
Mrs. Florence Windon, and
Mns. Grace Pratt.

WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. Wedneaday, Middleport
Legion Hall, initiation of
candidates.
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2
p.m: Wednesday, Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. (postponed
Friday due to the snow.)
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, Wednesday, 8 p.
m., Columbus and Southern
Ohio ElectriC Co. social room.
Mrs. Edgar Reynolds, Mrs.
Guy Reynolds, Mrs . Nina
Bland, co·hostesses.
POMEROY.· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club noon luncheon,
Wednesday, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
POMEROY CHAPTER 110,
RAM, state convocation, 7' 30
p.m. Wednesday at temple.
MEIGS COUNTY Fish and
Game Associahon, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, club rooms,
Syracuse.
EXECUTIVE
Board,
Pomeroy PTA, I p.m. Wednesday at the school. Ali
members asked to attend.
THURSDAY
ROCK Springs Grange
meeting, scheduled for tonight
~s been cancelled due to
illness.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
Uniled Methodist Church, 7:30
Thursday, home of Mns. S. T.
Smith. Mrs. John Krawsczyn
assisting hoatess.
. B~BURfPI'A~~ P;ffi· 1 P.t f , t, 1., •• , .,J1,..,11• -~
-~~b,ri!~dbury , . School ,, .... , , .....,...~... ~... ,

" RAINBOW I&gt;.DVENTURE FILM

6 56C

A OIS(OUNT

THE PlJGHT OF THE CYSTIC fibrosis child and hls
parents will be pointed up vividly tonight in t!]e Marcus Welby
show on Channell3, at !Op.m., and members of the Meigs County
Sal011710, Eight and Forty, urge that you tune in.
For the past several years, the local Eight and Forty .)a)on
has conducted annual fund drives for cystic fibrosis· and has
attempted to educate the public on the disease. The show, they
say, will give excellent insight.

IRONING BOARD

¢

A $1.00 VALUE!
4 STYLES

Uj.

britnfati8n .:

'

HUGE ASSORTMENT JUST ARRIVED !

SPORT
SHIRTS

•' Ill '

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Reese Cups," Henhey,
Clark bars, Zagnut,
Krackle, Welch's,
Mllkshake and otben.

pick, giveaway and many

~

.1\1

BARS

ARTIFICIAL PLASTIC

WASHABLE! LIFE LIK~! !~~~ ~~~:~h

II

.... CANDY :~·

WHO HAS A BETT

DISCOUNT
. PRICED!

S:unsh"ne Boi"" rvtl'1"d
•

REGULARs,

$28!

Nellie Zerkle decorated the
dining room using yellow
baskets of spring flowers,
yellow candles, and yellow
mint baskets. Yellow and White
mums in crystal swans were
used on the refreslunent table.

P:
G
•
t
1. , .{;
birthday rogram tven a 1nprmary

44c

$ 99

Virginia Buchanan registered
the guests.
Refreshments of sand·
wiches, relish plates, party
mix, coffee and punch were
served by Ann Thomas,
Kathryn
Knight, Clara
Criswell, and Oma Nelson.
Jackie Gaddis, associate
conductress, presided .at the
punch bowl, and Lena Bunce,
conductress, poured the coffee.

•.

Dauahter

CURTAIN

Country Western, pop, rock, spirituals. Favorite
artists, hit tunes. New assortments arrive twice a
month.

were Martha Muae, president,
and Janet Finley, vice
president. Fifty year members
recognized 'lr4n Inez Wilson or
Eudora Chapter, Neilonville;
Evelyn Lewis (58 yean),
Grace French, and Helen
Reynolds, Evangeline Chapter.
Glen Evanil, vocalist, sang
"Each Step I Take."
Naomi King was acting
chaplain ' in the absence of
Maryin Wilcox, unable to at·
tend due to a sprained ankle.
Mrs. Wilcox Ia also treasurer of
District 25.
Robert King made the Bible
presentations to four new
members initialed during the
meeting. Marie Hawkins and

Members brought gifts for 8
sunshine box to be sent to Mns.
Anna Leifheit Heft, a nursing
h~ patient in South Gate,
Mich. when the Kin Club met
recently at the home of Mrs.
LuclUe Vaughan.
During the meeting presided
over by Mrs. Gamet Har·
brecht, thank you notes were
read from Mrs. Annice
Oblinger for fruit and Mrs.
Veda Davis for Dowers during
Honored~m recent lllne8il.
,
~'
·
Games were played with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van Meter
entertained recently with a
party honoring their daughter
Becky, on her fourth
anniversary.
Gllllell were played and gifts
Residents of the Meigs
were presented to Becky. County !nflnnary were en.
Cake, lee cream and Kool·Aid tertalned Sunday afternoon
were served, Guests at the with a program and party by
party were Carol O'Brien, members of the Love Joy
Mellua, Lol.s and Kathy lhle, Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
and Melanie Van Meter. Missionary Society.
Kimmy Hamm sent a gift.
Mrs. Manning Kloes
Olhen present were Mrs. Jim presented devotions wlth Mns.
Bell, Mrs. Larry O'Brien, Mrs. Dale Walburn giving a
Olarles lhle; Mrs. Clark lhle meditation on the dogwood
and Mrs. Richard Weaver.
tree. Jill Walburn read a poem,

ARE OUR EVERYDAY PRICES
COMPLETE
NEW
SELECTION I

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT LOOge 363,
F&amp;AM, Tueaday, 7:30 p.m. at
temple. All Master Masons
invited. Grand Master's visit
Wednesday, dinner, 6:30p.m.,
ladies invited.
GOLDEN RULE Clasa of
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 7:30
p,m. Tuesday at home of Mrs.
Louis Osborne.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Pnt Sorority,
Tuesday, 8:15p.m. Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Becky Anderson and Donna
Nease to give cultural program
on dance. Election of officers;
Phyllis Bennett and Martha
McPhail as hostesses.
POMEROY Chapter 't86,
OES, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
temple. Members requested to
pay dues at that time.

992-5292

150 ·~ttend Inspection.

)

A thought for today: Ameri·
can author Ambrose Bierce
said, "Marnage: A community
consisting of a master, a
mistress, and two slaves,
making it two in all."

News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
March 5 at the Free Methodist
Church was 127. Offering for
' the day was $190.
Mrs. Raymond Gill, Cam·
bridge,Is visiting her son, Rev.
Eugene Gill and family .
I Mr and Mrs. Charles Diehl
were in Colwnbus this week.
Mr. Diehl-went to University
Hospllal for medical treat·
ment.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl,
Stockdale, and Mr. and Mrs.
Fritz Stahl, New Marshfieid,
recently called on Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Archer,
Colunlbus, spent a Sunday
'--c recently with Mrs. Georgia
• Diehl, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Diehl.
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Jacobs
and children, Southshore, Ky.
recently spent the weekend
wlth Mr. Jacobs' parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs . •
Mr and Mrs . Clifford
Jacobs, Mrs. James Gilmore,
Mr Pearl Jacobs attended the
funeral of Rev E. E Jacobs of
Galion
Mr and Mrs. Erme Haggy
VIsited recently w1th Mr. and
Mr . Thomas Darst and
children, Alton .
Mrs Bertha Parktr has'
relurned home from Colwnbus
after spendmg a month with
her son-In-law, Mr. Hugh
F'erguson and Mrs. Ferguson,
who \\ as a pallent m Doctors
Hospllal, North for 24 days.
M1·s. Ferguson IS much im·
pn,ved.
Mr and Mrs. Phili Wise,
Be ve rly , al t•,.ded church
sl'I'Vic~s a1 tile IocRI &lt;burch,
aPd visi1cd h1s pAl Clll :o;, Rev .
anc' Mrs Crl'll W1sc.

Charlene Hoeflich

~

"JUDD"

.~ \

Social
Calendar

Sh~nefleid,

COMPARE

Laurel (]iff

.
Tbe Alllwlft
by,United PrHa latcnalilul
Today ~ Tuelday, March 7,
the 67th day of 19'12.
The moon is between Its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning star Is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mereu.
ry, Mars, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
Noled American botanist
Luther Burbank was born
March, 7, 1849.
On this day in bistory:
· In 1932 about 3,000 men rloled
lor jobs at 'the betroit plant o(
Ford Motor Company in the
midst of the depression. Four
men were killed.
In 1936, Adolf Hitler ordered
h1s Nazi troops into the
Rhineland, violating the Ver·
sailles Treaty.
In 1945 the U.S. First Army
crossed th~ Rhine River at
Remagen, German, as World
War li drew near its end in
Europe. The war ended In May.

3 FRI ENOL Y STORES!
• PT. PLEASANT
• GALLI POLlS
• MASON
OPEN Tl LL 9 ·p.M.-

'f

t

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STARTS TOMORROW

'

JUST BACK FROM A DELIGHTFUL llklay vacation in
• Florlds are Mr. and Mrs. Jack Follrod and daughter, Kim. They
were,guests of Mrs. Mabel Lax of Fort Uluderdale, and Ulrry
!Circle; Morebaven.
C
Highlights of their trip included a visit to Disneyworld,
Uon'1
Safari, and Silver Springs, and a cruise through the ·
1
•Everglades. In Terlnessee they toured Rock City on Lookout
1Mountain end v!slted Ruby Falls.

ONE DAY ONLY

l

MEIGS THEATRE

I

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blue, f! avende:r
uffy white
now at participating
don't you wait be·
., nnl 2.

h,

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z'

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4"1

J ....

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•
4-The IJIIUySentlnel,~·l'mleroy, O., March 7,11112
~

Beatrice Frost Died on Monday

Mets Have ·Another Problem
By Uulted Preso lnternaUonal
The New York Meta, who
have been travelling downhill
since their miracle World
Series victory in 1969, faced a
problem today which they
thought tbey had solved with a
big winter trade.
Jim Fregosi, acquifed from
the California Angels in the
belief that he would become the
first full-time third baseman in
the Mets' history, was discov.
ered Monday to have a broken
right thumb and wiH be
sidelined three to four weeks.
Fregos1 apparently suffered
the Injury during infield drills
last Saturday.
"It's a disturbing mjury
because it's a major injury,"
srud Gil Hodges, the Mets'
1111ualiy unflappable manager.

"I had hoped Fregos1 would gel
to know the National League
pitchers in the exhibition
games. Now he's got to come
back with tbe season already
underway and work hiiDself
ulto shape."
Coach Eddie Yost, who had
been assigned to teach the 29·
year-old Fregqs1, who played
shortsop in his previous rune
seasons m the majors, the art
of playing third, also pointed
out, "now he won't be able to
get his arm into shape before
the season starts."
Fregosi, who batted .233 with .
f1ve homers and 33 runs batted
in for the Angels last season,
was obtained for pitchers
Nolay Ryan and Don Rose and
outfielder Leroy Stanton.
Hodges said Tim Foli , Wayne

Garrett and Teddy Martinez
wlll get trials at third pending
Fregosi's return.
Garrett, Ken Boswell and
pitcher Ray SAdecki dro~e m
two runs each as the Mets beat
lhe Boston SOX, 3-2, IIi Mon.
day's exhibition game ...
Aurelio Rodriguez drove in two
runs with a double and a single
as the Detroit Tigers defeated
the Pittsburgh Pirates, ~.
behind the f1 v~1t pitching of
Tom Timmerman, Bill
Gilbreth and Chuck Seelbach.
Joe Torre, the National
League's MVP in 1971, said he
didn 'I want to be traded by the
St. Louis Cardinals and in·
dicated that he might accept
their offer of a' two-year ron·
tract steppmg from $130,000 in

1972to 150,000in 1973... AUanta
Brave Vice President 'Pdul
Richards anno1111ced that Earl
Williluns, the NL Rookie of the
Year in 1971, baa ''tentatively"
agreed to his t97a contract.
Willie Crawford singled and
, doubled home a pair of I1JilS In
the Los Angeles Dndgers' in·
trasquad game.
Horacio Pina, Mike Paul and
Ron Law pitched a seven-llitter
in the Texas Rangers' 11-4
triumph over the Chicago
White Sox ... General Manager
John Qumn said the
Philadelphia Phillies are in the
market for a right-handed
starting pitcher ... Rookie Bob
Darwin drove in four runs with
a three-run homer and a double
to lead the Minnesota Twins to

BATON ROUGE,
La.
(UP!)- Press Maravich,
whose sJx.year record as head
basketball coach at Louisiana
State looks like a rollercoaster
track, has been fired.
LSU Athletic Director Carl
Maddox announced Monday
the firings of Maravich and
assistant coaches Jay ·Me·
Creary and Greg Brem·
brock.
Maravich's success at LSU
was closely aligned with the
tenture of his famous son"Pistol" Pete Maravich--&lt;In
the varisty squad.
"I have reluctantly reached
the conclusion that our basket·
ball program will have a better
opportunity for success with a
change In the coachmg staff,"
Maddox told a new conference.
Maravich, a native of
Aliquippa, Penn., took over as
head basketball coach at LSU
prior to the 1966-67 season. He
promptly led the Tigers to a 323 season, the worsl in LSU
history.
However, Pete joined the
squad the following year and
coach Maravich's fortunes
turned. That year Pete and his
dad led the Tigers to a 14-12
season .
Maravich's success at LSU
peaked in 1969-70, when he
scored a 22-10 season and an
invitation to the National Jn.
vitational Tournament.
But Pistol Pete left LSU in
1970and his father's luck took a
nosedive, ending with a 14·14
season that year. Maravich

"Electric Heating
is the best
heating
we have
ever had ...
and
probably
ever will have."

6,064 families
in our service area
have
Electrically Heated homes.
Here's what they like:
0 Perfect warmth' Wall to wall. ce1 11ng
to floor
0 No regular serv1c1ng' Great• Just
turn the d•al
0 No pollutants. ms•de or out
0 Clean as ar. 3iectnc light bulbi
0 Instant com!ortt Pleasant as
sunshine
O Modern' Tomorrow as well as to-day
Come five
In the Electric Climate.

COLUMBUS AND SOUTHERN
OHIO ELECTRIC COMPANY

Hall had 13, Terry Hall and
Laurie Burnett 2 each, Kathy
Smith and Debbie Ball'd I each
BY QUARTERS
Southern
9 19 35 45
Wahama
2 6 7 8
9264563
6 - 7 16 21

MEETING CALLED
MASON - Charles Stanley,
president of the Mason Little
League , has announced a
meehng of all interested
parents for 7p.m. Fnday at the
Mason Youth Center. Election
of officers will be held.
DANCE SET
Adance will be held from 9 to
11:30_p.m. Saturday at Southern Higil&gt;- School- with ·muSic
provided by Willie. The South·
ern Band Boosters are spon·
sormg the event.

!

! Of the Bend

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Southern and Logan Wm

Logan.
Kyger Creek

a 1;·1 win over the New York
Yankees ... Left-llanders Dan
McGinn and Balor Moore were
praised by ma•ager Gene
Mauc!l after the Montreal
Expos' workout.
Sal Baudo's three-run bomer
and Mike Epstein's solo homer
led the Warren Hackers to a 7.,'1
victory over the Vern
Hoscheits in the Oakland
Athletics' intrasquad game ...
Shortstop Leo Cardenas, who
has been missing without
explanation, notified General
.Manager Harry Dalton of the
Angels that he is enroute ...
Frank Duffy had two hits and
two stolen bases and Buddy
Bell had ll triple and two
smgles in !be Cleveland Jd.
ndians' intra-ll(juad game.

Beat....

ended this sar with a 1().16 on his teams to recruiting
record.
trouble and the large nwnber
His total record at LSU Is 76- of players dropped because of
86.
bad grades.
Maravich smd this year's
Marovich said he plans to
losing season was not aU his continue coaching, but has no
fault.
Idea where he will go.
"For the material we had I
Maddox said Maravlch's ap.
think we did a dam good job," pomtmenl extends one more
he said.
year, and "the university will
He blamed the lack of talent honor its contract."

In the first round of play
Mondy of the Girls' Fifth
Annual Basketball Tourney
held at Meigs High School,
Southern won easily over
Wahama, 45 to 8.
For Southern, Janie Rees
was the leading scorer with 15
followed by Debbie West with
a, Pam Hill and Connie Warner
7 each, and Teresa Gooch, Jill
Warner, Donna Proffitt and
Carol Michael 2 each.
For Wahama, Karen Froendt
and Judy Lieving had 3 each
and Jackie Camp and Martha
Jones I each.
In the Logan and Kyger
Creek contest, Logan's Susan
McBroom chipped In 22 points
to lead her team to a 63 to 21
victory .
Other scorers for tile winners
were Marty GiiSiel': with 17,
Becky Bell 16, Kathy Korn·
miller 7 and Bev Peppers 1.
For Kyger Creek, Shelley

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Maravich the Elder Fired

I By Rob Hoeflich

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Former Meigs County residents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lan.
daker, now of Woodrow, Colo., will observe their 70th weddmg
anmversary on March 19 and would love to hear from Meigs
Countians.
Mr. Ulndaker was92on Feb. 26and Mrs. Landaker will be 90
on Nov. 4. Considering their ages, Mr. and Mrs. Ulndaker are
both reported to be in good health despite a recent hospitalization
for Mrs Ulndaker.
The rouple regularly attend church and Mrs. Landaker goes
to the church basement every Wednesday mght to jom other
women of the church m quilting sessions. The Landakers
recently purchased a new automobile and drive 50 miles to their
doctor. They own vast acreage which Is now rented out but Mr.
Landaker still does some gardening and keeps about 50 chickens
on hand to supply eggs for the rouple and their neighbors.
The Landakers have two sons who hve within a 40 mile
radius. There are no grandchildren.

POMEROY BOYS ARE reminded that Sunday from I to 3
p.m. will be the final opportunity for them to sign for participation in the pony, peewee and little league activities. Those
who don't. register at the Pomeroy City Hall by 3 p.m. Sunday
won't be permitted to take part, league officials say.
At the conclusion of the signup period Sunday, a meetmg will
be held for managers and ali parents who wish to take a role in
this summer's program.
AN INTERESTING ARTICLE appeared in "The Scene," a
Sandusky area newspsper recently under the by-tine of Charlotte
Herlihy, granddsughter of Mrs. Eva Hollon of Chester and
daughter of the former Betty Kimes of the Chester area.
The story dealt with a grandmother, Mrs. Walter Manning,
entertaining a goat overnight at her home to give her ·two
granddaughters a chance to get acquainted with the animal
which had been given to them. As it turned out, the goat was a
pretty well behaved house pet even thOugh he did eafa·part of a
cape dating back to the 1890s- a psrt of the antique collection of
Mrs. Manning.
MIDDLEPORT ARTIST, Ruth Gosney, is a good Indian.
Ruth consistently gives the Pomeroy National Bank a hand with
special proj!lcts they are carrying out. For the past two
weekends, Ruth has provided the special settings carrying out
themes used for serving refreshments at the bank on Satutd3y
mornings as a part of the Institution's tOOth anniversary. In·
elden tally, Ruth has purchased the spscious Grant home at the
:omer of Sixth and Main in Middleport and is busy remodeling it
'or her personal residence.

Mns. Beatrice Ellen Couslna
Frost, 62, died Monday af.
temoon at her Belpre, Route 1
residence following &amp;I) ex·
tended illness.
She was the wife of the Rev.
Wallet A. Frost, a Unlled
Methodist Minister who bad
served In Meigs County over 14
years.
Mrs. Froat was born March
21, 1909 in Vinloo County, the
daughter of the late George W.
and Estella McAfree Cousins.
She was married in 1923. Mrs.
Forst was a member of the
Pleasant
View
United
Methodist Church at Belpre,
Route 1, a member of the
Circle and Uldies Aide, and a
member of the Society of
Christian Endeavor of the
Umled Methodist Church.
Surviving besides her
husball\\.are two sons, Donald,
Arcade, N. Y., and Walter B.
Frost, Checotah, Okla.; a
daughter, Mrs. Gary (Bar·
bara) Marshall, Arlington; 17
grandchildren; a brother,
Myron Cousins, Ligeoga,
MISS.; two siSters, Mrs Irene
Emerick and Mrs. Eileen
Edens, both of Lemon Grove,

Calif.; her stepmother, Mrs.
Florence Cousins, Vienna, W.
Va.; three aunts, Mrs. Pearl
Cousins, Belpre; Mrs. Grace
Mooney, Marietta, and Mrs.
Nora McAfee, Flenuning.
Mrs. Frost was preceded in
death by a son, Robert, In 1967;
a great-grandson in 1967, and a
sister, Beatrice Dils, this year.
to'uneral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday at the
Spencer Funeral Home with
the Rev. Joseph R. Graham,
Athims, officiating. Burial wiU
be in .){ocldand Cemetery at
Belpre. Friends may call at the
funeral home in Belpre
anytime.

PLACE CHANGED
LETART, W'. Va .. - Funeral
services for Mrs. Eleanora L.
Smithson, 65, Letart Route 2,
bave been changed. Instead of
being on Wednesday at 1 p.m.
at the Foglesong Funeral
Home, they will be at the
Scobee Funeral Home in
Winchester, Ky. on Wed·
nesday.

. Over 150 guests attended the
annual
Inspection
of
EVangeline Chapter 172, Order
of the Eastern Star, Saturday
night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
Mn. Marlene Logston,
deputy grand matron of
District 25, was the inapecting
officer. Mrs. Jenevee Chellber,
worthy matron, and Harry
Chesher, worthy patron, in·
troduced the distinguished
guests including Roberta K.
MiDdling, past grand matron;
Maxine Jeffries, grand
organist of the Grand Chaplet
of West Virginia; Bernadine
Watts, deputy grand matron of
District 18; Violet Knowlton,
srand representative of New
Jersey In Ohio; Catherine
grand represlm·
tattve of Virginia in Ohio; and
Corlne Whittington, grand
representative of Puerto Rico
in West Virginia.
Also presented were 14
worthy matrons from District
25 and 2 from District 24, 10
worthy patrons, Ben Phllaon,
deputy grandmaster of the 12th
Masohlc District; and past
matrons and past patrons of
Evangeline Chapter,
District officers present

RODS

COLORFUL YARN

HAIR TIES

12 74C

Ea.
BOYS 13!4 OZ.

"ACELE" ACETATE

WOMEN$ PANTIES
White and pastel colors.
Elastic leg Hollywood
brief style. Size 5-6-7.

27~

Wesiirn
Dungarees
Flare leg style. Pre·
shrunk, handstlched at
points of strain. Size 6 to
16.

FOR

..

4~ACI
ON?

Peonies, Carnations, Rosebuds, Mums,
Tulip, Lilac, Jasmine Picks, Zinnias,
Marigold, Swee!J!ea, Daffodil, Hyacinth,
Dahlia, African Viole~ Mom Rose, Petuala,

EACH

NEW DESIGNS! NEYi COLORS!

mer By Charlene Hoeflich
Another $150 and the Pomeroy Elementary School safety
• patrol will be all set financiaUy for that April trip to Washington,
D.C.
Saturday's ftea market was a tremendous success, April
Smith, chairman, reports. Over $400 was raised during the day. A
large amount of clothing not sold was loaded up and taken to the
Lakin state Hospital, the Salvation Army, and the Meigs County
Children's Home.
•·
April extends her thanks to the many parents who not only
spent their Satilrday at the sale, but bours and hours before hand
getting things together and arranged, and especially to Jim
• Carnahan and Dan Smith who donated their services to auction
off some of the furniture and other household items during the
afternoon.
Several funny things happened during the day.
Mrs. James Soulsby donated numerous games. WhUe she was
home from the market for a bite of lunch, her children walked up
to the sale. What did they buy? The games their mother had
donated the day before!
April sat down at an old school desk to do the clerk work for the
auctioneers. It was hours later that she realized the desk had
been donated for the sale and they had forgotten to put it up for
bid.
And so It went -

MENS SHORT SLEEVE ·

27

No Iron Polyester$
, and cotton blends.
Printed designs or
· solid colors.

UP .

LIGHTWEIGHT ALUMINUM

BRUIH

'389
BAKER
FURNITUR
MIDDLEPORT, O.

KIDDIES HAIR

GIRLS PLASTIC

BARREnES

HAIR BANDS

14FOR

46C

PAD&amp;

c•v••
sn

Siltcone treated cover I
speeds Ironing, Is staia
and scorch reslstaat.
Cushioned foam pad,

~TOitl

and Lori and Lynn Kloes had
solos. Each of the reslllents
was . presented wlth a car·
nation. Cookies and lee cream
were served.
Others of the circle attending
besidesthosenamedwereMns.
Paul Smart, Mrs. Dana
Hamm,
Mrs.
Isabelle
Winebrenner, Mrs. John
Werner, and Mrs. Charles
Simons. C. R. Karr was a
guest.
~

~

A THIRD ART CLASS for elementary students has been
organized in Meigs County, this one at the Chester Elementary
school.
Mrs. Donna Chadwell, the instructor, is conducting classes
on three grade levels. Currently there are 18 enrolled in the class
for sixth, seventhandeighthgraders~ 14 for third, fourth and fifth
graders, and eight for first and second graders.
The response and interest at all three schools where art
instruction Is being offered bas been tremendous. Last report
showed about 110 taking part in the program at the Middleport
school which Includes children from the Bradbury, Salem
Center, and Rutland schools.
Next Monday night at the Pomeroy PTA, parents will have
an opportunity to see their children dabbling In oils. In lieu of a
more formal cultural arts program, plans are for the works of
· the children over the past several months to be .on display arid for
: the children to be there doing their thing.

••

1

Meeting Set
A field service orientation
meeting has been scheduled for
2 to 5 p.m. on March 19 at the
American Legion Hall in
Middleport for all legionnaires,
auxiliary members and juniors
over 15:
In announcing the meeting,
Mrs . Charles Kessinger,
Eighth District president for
the
American
Legion
good
Auxiliary,
urged
representation of posts at the
meeting.
Plana are also being made by
the district presi!lent for a
counly·wide initiation of new
members to be held at 2 p.m.
on March 26. The inillatory will
be for both junior and senior
members of aU units. A tea will
be held following the Initiatory
work with all units to take
cookies enough for their own
members.
On March 15, the junior
members of District 8 will have
a community service part at
the Southeastern Ohio Mental
Health Center, Athens.

~ ,~

POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
RAM, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.,
special !!E'SSion at temple; most
excellent masters degree to be
conferred. All offl&amp;et.t {lnd
companions invited.
~
FRIDAY
..
RETURN JONATHAN
Meigs Chapter, DAR, charter
day luncheon, I p.m. Friday,
Grace Episcopal Parish House.
CATHOUC Women's Club,
Fridsy, following 7:30 p.m.
service.
DANCE, Royal Oak Park,
Friday, 8 to 11 p.m. Music by
Willies, sponsored by Meigs
VICA Club.
HERE THIS WEEK
Clifford Jenkinson is
recuperating at hts East
Second St., Pomeroy, home
following
four
weeks'
hospitalization at Veterans
Memorial Hospital for treat·
men t of pneumonia. His
daughter and granddaughter,
Mrs. Robert Russell and Mrs.
Ned Grant of Crook.sville are
here this week to assist in bis
care.

Worried About

FALSE TEETtt
WEEKEND VISITORS
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Tribble and
daughter, Kim, of St. Albans,
W. Va . spent the weekend
visiting her parents 1 Mr. and
Mrs. George Hackett, Sr·.,
Middleport.
,

'.

Corning Loose?
Alrald laio&lt; teeth

wilt

drop at the

wro111 time? A denture adhesive ean

dhetp,. FAST1EETH•fl Powder civeo
en uret!l 1. on~:er, rmer, 1teadier
hold. Why beembarrwedl For mo..
security and comfort, uoe FAS·
TEETH Denture Adheeivtl Powder
Dentu,.. that ftt a.. -.tttal ,.;
, health. See ~our dontlat """lari)'.

·-

ProduCICI Dy CHUCK KEEN
.. U71 .._MERIC.t.N ~AfiOf'Ml fit'HERf'fliiSES

i

VILMA PIKKOJA, HOSPITALIZED at the Holzer Medical
f Center for the past week, was discharged Monday and expects to
, get back Into the swing of things thl.s week. ·

FOR

Df:PARTME.NT

·"prizes going to Miss Joyce
Ebersbach and Mrs. Davis.
Miss Ebersbach also won the
door prize, and Mrs. Ellen
Ebersbach won the traveling
prize donated by Mrs.
Vaughan. The March 16
meeting will be at the Rutland
home of Mrs. Ebersbach.
Sandwiches, deviled e~gs,
pickles, chips and coffee were
aerved by the hoales,! to those
named and Mrs. Ethel Clifford,
Mrs. Florence Windon, and
Mns. Grace Pratt.

WEDNESDAY
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
p.m. Wedneaday, Middleport
Legion Hall, initiation of
candidates.
WORLD DAY of Prayer, 2
p.m: Wednesday, Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. (postponed
Friday due to the snow.)
MIDDLEPORT Amateur
Gardeners, Wednesday, 8 p.
m., Columbus and Southern
Ohio ElectriC Co. social room.
Mrs. Edgar Reynolds, Mrs.
Guy Reynolds, Mrs . Nina
Bland, co·hostesses.
POMEROY.· MIDDLEPORT
Lions Club noon luncheon,
Wednesday, Pomeroy United
Methodist Church.
POMEROY CHAPTER 110,
RAM, state convocation, 7' 30
p.m. Wednesday at temple.
MEIGS COUNTY Fish and
Game Associahon, 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday, club rooms,
Syracuse.
EXECUTIVE
Board,
Pomeroy PTA, I p.m. Wednesday at the school. Ali
members asked to attend.
THURSDAY
ROCK Springs Grange
meeting, scheduled for tonight
~s been cancelled due to
illness.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
Uniled Methodist Church, 7:30
Thursday, home of Mns. S. T.
Smith. Mrs. John Krawsczyn
assisting hoatess.
. B~BURfPI'A~~ P;ffi· 1 P.t f , t, 1., •• , .,J1,..,11• -~
-~~b,ri!~dbury , . School ,, .... , , .....,...~... ~... ,

" RAINBOW I&gt;.DVENTURE FILM

6 56C

A OIS(OUNT

THE PlJGHT OF THE CYSTIC fibrosis child and hls
parents will be pointed up vividly tonight in t!]e Marcus Welby
show on Channell3, at !Op.m., and members of the Meigs County
Sal011710, Eight and Forty, urge that you tune in.
For the past several years, the local Eight and Forty .)a)on
has conducted annual fund drives for cystic fibrosis· and has
attempted to educate the public on the disease. The show, they
say, will give excellent insight.

IRONING BOARD

¢

A $1.00 VALUE!
4 STYLES

Uj.

britnfati8n .:

'

HUGE ASSORTMENT JUST ARRIVED !

SPORT
SHIRTS

•' Ill '

~

Reese Cups," Henhey,
Clark bars, Zagnut,
Krackle, Welch's,
Mllkshake and otben.

pick, giveaway and many

~

.1\1

BARS

ARTIFICIAL PLASTIC

WASHABLE! LIFE LIK~! !~~~ ~~~:~h

II

.... CANDY :~·

WHO HAS A BETT

DISCOUNT
. PRICED!

S:unsh"ne Boi"" rvtl'1"d
•

REGULARs,

$28!

Nellie Zerkle decorated the
dining room using yellow
baskets of spring flowers,
yellow candles, and yellow
mint baskets. Yellow and White
mums in crystal swans were
used on the refreslunent table.

P:
G
•
t
1. , .{;
birthday rogram tven a 1nprmary

44c

$ 99

Virginia Buchanan registered
the guests.
Refreshments of sand·
wiches, relish plates, party
mix, coffee and punch were
served by Ann Thomas,
Kathryn
Knight, Clara
Criswell, and Oma Nelson.
Jackie Gaddis, associate
conductress, presided .at the
punch bowl, and Lena Bunce,
conductress, poured the coffee.

•.

Dauahter

CURTAIN

Country Western, pop, rock, spirituals. Favorite
artists, hit tunes. New assortments arrive twice a
month.

were Martha Muae, president,
and Janet Finley, vice
president. Fifty year members
recognized 'lr4n Inez Wilson or
Eudora Chapter, Neilonville;
Evelyn Lewis (58 yean),
Grace French, and Helen
Reynolds, Evangeline Chapter.
Glen Evanil, vocalist, sang
"Each Step I Take."
Naomi King was acting
chaplain ' in the absence of
Maryin Wilcox, unable to at·
tend due to a sprained ankle.
Mrs. Wilcox Ia also treasurer of
District 25.
Robert King made the Bible
presentations to four new
members initialed during the
meeting. Marie Hawkins and

Members brought gifts for 8
sunshine box to be sent to Mns.
Anna Leifheit Heft, a nursing
h~ patient in South Gate,
Mich. when the Kin Club met
recently at the home of Mrs.
LuclUe Vaughan.
During the meeting presided
over by Mrs. Gamet Har·
brecht, thank you notes were
read from Mrs. Annice
Oblinger for fruit and Mrs.
Veda Davis for Dowers during
Honored~m recent lllne8il.
,
~'
·
Games were played with
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van Meter
entertained recently with a
party honoring their daughter
Becky, on her fourth
anniversary.
Gllllell were played and gifts
Residents of the Meigs
were presented to Becky. County !nflnnary were en.
Cake, lee cream and Kool·Aid tertalned Sunday afternoon
were served, Guests at the with a program and party by
party were Carol O'Brien, members of the Love Joy
Mellua, Lol.s and Kathy lhle, Circle of the B. H. Sanborn
and Melanie Van Meter. Missionary Society.
Kimmy Hamm sent a gift.
Mrs. Manning Kloes
Olhen present were Mrs. Jim presented devotions wlth Mns.
Bell, Mrs. Larry O'Brien, Mrs. Dale Walburn giving a
Olarles lhle; Mrs. Clark lhle meditation on the dogwood
and Mrs. Richard Weaver.
tree. Jill Walburn read a poem,

ARE OUR EVERYDAY PRICES
COMPLETE
NEW
SELECTION I

TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT LOOge 363,
F&amp;AM, Tueaday, 7:30 p.m. at
temple. All Master Masons
invited. Grand Master's visit
Wednesday, dinner, 6:30p.m.,
ladies invited.
GOLDEN RULE Clasa of
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 7:30
p,m. Tuesday at home of Mrs.
Louis Osborne.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter,
Beta Sigma Pnt Sorority,
Tuesday, 8:15p.m. Columbus
and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Becky Anderson and Donna
Nease to give cultural program
on dance. Election of officers;
Phyllis Bennett and Martha
McPhail as hostesses.
POMEROY Chapter 't86,
OES, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at
temple. Members requested to
pay dues at that time.

992-5292

150 ·~ttend Inspection.

)

A thought for today: Ameri·
can author Ambrose Bierce
said, "Marnage: A community
consisting of a master, a
mistress, and two slaves,
making it two in all."

News Notes
BY BERTHA PARKER
Sabbath School attendance
March 5 at the Free Methodist
Church was 127. Offering for
' the day was $190.
Mrs. Raymond Gill, Cam·
bridge,Is visiting her son, Rev.
Eugene Gill and family .
I Mr and Mrs. Charles Diehl
were in Colwnbus this week.
Mr. Diehl-went to University
Hospllal for medical treat·
ment.
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Stahl,
Stockdale, and Mr. and Mrs.
Fritz Stahl, New Marshfieid,
recently called on Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Schaefer.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Archer,
Colunlbus, spent a Sunday
'--c recently with Mrs. Georgia
• Diehl, and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Diehl.
Mr . and Mrs. Paul Jacobs
and children, Southshore, Ky.
recently spent the weekend
wlth Mr. Jacobs' parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Jacobs . •
Mr and Mrs . Clifford
Jacobs, Mrs. James Gilmore,
Mr Pearl Jacobs attended the
funeral of Rev E. E Jacobs of
Galion
Mr and Mrs. Erme Haggy
VIsited recently w1th Mr. and
Mr . Thomas Darst and
children, Alton .
Mrs Bertha Parktr has'
relurned home from Colwnbus
after spendmg a month with
her son-In-law, Mr. Hugh
F'erguson and Mrs. Ferguson,
who \\ as a pallent m Doctors
Hospllal, North for 24 days.
M1·s. Ferguson IS much im·
pn,ved.
Mr and Mrs. Phili Wise,
Be ve rly , al t•,.ded church
sl'I'Vic~s a1 tile IocRI &lt;burch,
aPd visi1cd h1s pAl Clll :o;, Rev .
anc' Mrs Crl'll W1sc.

Charlene Hoeflich

~

"JUDD"

.~ \

Social
Calendar

Sh~nefleid,

COMPARE

Laurel (]iff

.
Tbe Alllwlft
by,United PrHa latcnalilul
Today ~ Tuelday, March 7,
the 67th day of 19'12.
The moon is between Its last
quarter and new phase.
The morning star Is Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mereu.
ry, Mars, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Pisces.
Noled American botanist
Luther Burbank was born
March, 7, 1849.
On this day in bistory:
· In 1932 about 3,000 men rloled
lor jobs at 'the betroit plant o(
Ford Motor Company in the
midst of the depression. Four
men were killed.
In 1936, Adolf Hitler ordered
h1s Nazi troops into the
Rhineland, violating the Ver·
sailles Treaty.
In 1945 the U.S. First Army
crossed th~ Rhine River at
Remagen, German, as World
War li drew near its end in
Europe. The war ended In May.

3 FRI ENOL Y STORES!
• PT. PLEASANT
• GALLI POLlS
• MASON
OPEN Tl LL 9 ·p.M.-

'f

t

•

STARTS TOMORROW

'

JUST BACK FROM A DELIGHTFUL llklay vacation in
• Florlds are Mr. and Mrs. Jack Follrod and daughter, Kim. They
were,guests of Mrs. Mabel Lax of Fort Uluderdale, and Ulrry
!Circle; Morebaven.
C
Highlights of their trip included a visit to Disneyworld,
Uon'1
Safari, and Silver Springs, and a cruise through the ·
1
•Everglades. In Terlnessee they toured Rock City on Lookout
1Mountain end v!slted Ruby Falls.

ONE DAY ONLY

l

MEIGS THEATRE

I

I I
I

'

blue, f! avende:r
uffy white
now at participating
don't you wait be·
., nnl 2.

h,

~

.

•• ,.)

."

z'

'

~~-

4"1

J ....

�- oJ-Tbe.Illll7 8eitlnel, Ml4clepo.t-Pwevy' 0., March 7' 19'12

Red Cross Disaster·Relief in Action
Disaster relief efforts of the
American Reel Cross are in full
operation in the tra,·!dY·
stricken Buffalo Creek Vt lley
in West VIrginia.
The massive Red Cross
shelter and feeding operation
,continues. Last Wednesday
night Red Cross shelters were
open in W~arton, Man,
Amherstdale, and Sharpies.
Three hot meals each day were
~erved in ali shelters and by
four Rl!(l Cross disaster vana at
the scene, in addition to snacks
at aU hours to aU comers. The
number of people being cared
lor and fed in the shelters
nuctuates between 800 and
1,500.
Rt.ml OSBORNE
Red Cross first aid teams
JACK SHUFF
and feeding vans moved up the
PROMOTIONS MADE - Ruth A. Osborne, Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Comdevastated valley with cleanpany, has recently been appointed personnel director. She joined the Company in March, 1!151,
up crews· and an increasing
as a Stenographer Clerk In thP. .:Employee Relations Department and has been Insurance Clerk,
number of residents who were
Insurance and Annuities Clerk, and Supervisor of Employee Benefits. JACK W. SHUFF is the
beginning to return to their
new Wage and Salary Supervisor. He graduated from Otterbein College In June, 1951, with a
home communities to begin the
bacheiof of science degree In secondary «Jucalion. Shuff joined the Company in February,
heart rending job of salvaging
1955,asa Personnel Representative, and was promoted to Personnel Supervisor in September,
personal effects and cleaning
1967. WilLIAM J. FINISSI, representative, residential construction sales, has been made
up their homes - if they were
employment supervisor. He graduated from the University of West Virginia in June, 1954, and
still standing.
spent a year in the Special Service Deparbnent of the U. S. Army. He is attending Xavier
The Red Cross first aid
University In Cincinnati, working towards a master o(science degree in psychology.
teams !!'iii have immediate aid
to those who might be injured
while working to clear debris,
and to be available in the off.
chance that Oood survivors
might be discovered.
Seventeen Meigs High School girls who have been recomSixty-one national Red Cross
girls were guests for a Buckeye mended by the high school as
staff
and disaster reserve
Holzer Medical Center, First Girls State interviewing tea academically · eligible for
Ave., and Cedar St. General held Sunday at the Middleport Buckeye Girls State. Five, and workers have been sent to
serve at the scene so far, and
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m. American Legion Post.
perhaps slx, will be selected to
reports indicate there will be
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
Representatives of both the attend.
4:30 p.m. Parents only on American Legion Auxiliary of
Before announcement of the
Pediatrics Ward.
Drew o Webster Post 39 and girls selected can be made,
Birtbs
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 were they must be accepted by the
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. present for the screening of the Girls State committee.
Rainey, Gaiilpolls Ferry, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Harley E.
Hendricks, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter ; Mr . and Mrs .
Milford L. Howard, Jr .,
Jackson, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
David D. Moore, Oak Hill, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Wiiilam W.
Arbaugh, Tuppers Plalns, a
daughter and Mr. and Mrs. '
Everett Lee Hutton, Albany, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Keels,
Oak Hill, a daughter and Mr.
and Mrs. James L. Yocum,
Gallipolis, a son.
Discharges
John W. Burdette, Jr., Mrs.
Michael Merrill and son, Mary
Ellen Wiles, Jessie Sickles,
Mary L. Houser, Jackie
Shepherd, Robert T. Wilson,
Douglas E. DeLong, Charles F.
WHEN BIG (AND LITTLE) THINGS start to get you
,, GIIJI!and, Harry C. Brown,
do'l!ll, p,~t ~. d!Y, It's time'!! get out of town. Leave your
· .lohn'V. Grimes, Dicie L. Hall,
cal'ft (and the canvassers) far behind, but take The Dally
Dana E. Hoffman, Mrs .
Sentinel along with.you on vacation. Just call us at 992-2156
Clarence A. King and · and we'll aend it. That's how to keep up with THEY'LL DO IT
daughter, Okey Martin, James
EVERY TIME, plus all the latest local news, at your
Rhodes, Roderick Gordon,
vacation address.
Hosmer L. Ro,ush, Mrs.
Richard R. Sweet and
daughter,
Wendell
H.
Willlams, Donald C. Weed, Emma Brumfield, Timothy L. L. King, Morris F. Blazer,
Lewis C. Miller.
Dalvs, Mary Frances Frazer, Audrey Breece, Alfred D.
Preston Anderson, Cheryl M. Holly N. Friend, Mrs. Wilmer Ferguson,
Hildreth
A.
Perry, Phyllis L. Martin, Iva E. Halfhill and son, Calvin Gringsby, Mrs. Doni van R.
C. Boston, Lewis A. Henderson, Layne, Ruth L. Montgomery, Barger and daughter, Mrs.
David E. Poetker, Janet S. Mrs . David Raynor and J811les Harris and daughter,
Pauley, Ruth Ellen Hodgson, daughter , Edna Simmons, Cindy L. Harrington, Donald
Patsy •Sue Moore, Gladys M. George P. Smith, Edward R. Isaac, Mrs. William McCreedy
Blankenship, Ralph C. Hulls, Spencer.
and daughter, Mrs. Robert L.
Brenton Phillips, Melissa
Emma Forthe, Donald R. Ruff and son, Richard 0. ·
Rouse, William C. Moore, Bailes, Karen L. Ervin, Jacob Smith, Timothy Smith.

-

HOSPITAL 17 Girls Inteniew.e d

NEWS

more as the need requires.
Among the cfi¥ster reserve
workers Is Mrs. Helen Taylor
of Columbus, a veteraJI Red
Cross disaster wor(ter who has
~erved in disasters (n many
states since 1959.
The local chapter of the
President Richard M.
NiJ:on ud Ohio Gov. John
Gilligan ban proclaimed
March as ''Red Cross
Month" when' the publi~ 18
urged to join ud contribute.
to
the humanitarian
programs carried oat under
charter by the American
Red Cross.
------American Red · Cross is appealing for funds to continue
the relief work. So far no
estimate· of the losses is
available, but continuing
feeding and sheltering
operations will be needed for
some time, In addition to the
task of cleaning up and
rebuilding the 16 communities
devastated by the flood
disaster.
At 10 a.m. Tuesday, the local
chapter received word that
inquiries on the health and
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. William Folmer,
Pomeroy, underwent surgery
this morning at the Hoizrr
Medical Center. Her room
number is 235.

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE PORK
'

CENTER CUTS

I

welfare of affected famillea . .-----------~~~~~~~. .. ,
were being 'taken. The Service
to
Military · Families
professional case workers .
handle the inqulrles. In the
past, such requests W.re taken
immediately, but experienCI!
proved that nothing could be
done until workers were on the
scene and in the meantime
replies could not be bandied.
According to the Service to
· For
Military Families Director
Mrs, Mary Carolyn Newton,
the new system Ia working far
more effectively. ·
,
Disaster Relief Is one of the
Flower:s,
ropes,
pin , &amp;
Charter obligations of the
ear
sets,
~·
American Red CrosS, \vhlch
dless
hoop
has a cOngressional Diandate to
earrings,
aid victims of all disasters as
Soutous.
All
the official disaster relief
the new pieces
agency.
are ..re now.
Donations may be ~ent to:
Cindy Coffman, Meigs County
Chapter, Am~ican Red Cross,
549 Beech St., Middleport,
Ohio.

PORK CHOPS

Accents

Easter!

$1 TO $15

'

~

,•

•••

~..
••
...

Cameo Brooches S2

comes back to an empty
house," he told a meeting of the
Ohio Funeral Directors
Association.
Blackwell, an expert on
thanatology - the study of
death- disdained the contemporary philosophy which
"teaches that what a person
does is more Important than
what he is."
"A society that ignores a
man's death raises · serious
questions about the value of his
life," he said.
He said people shoul~ stop
making excuses for staying
away from funerals. "!'here is

CALL POINTVIEW: 992 · 2505
PolnTVIew Cable w:ll film
the Pomeroy Chamber of

Commerce

Appreciation

Dinner Program Monday
night at the Meigs Inn .
Upcoming plans and future
developments of Meigs
to!lnty. will be discussed
with ten American Electric
and Ohio Power Companies
officials. VIdeo replay will be
Tuesday at 1 p.m. on
Channel 5.
The first primary in the"
nation will be history by the
end of this day, with New
Hampshire voters dech11ng
fhe merits of President
Nixon against Reps. Paul
McCloskey and .Ohlo's John
Ashbrook . Thereare a pile of
Democrats In the race, with
the Granite State expected to
go heavily for fellow DownEasterner Sen . Edmund
Muokle. There'll be bulletins
all evening, with both NBC
ana CBS sche1ullng specia l
programs at 16:30 p.m., and
ABC with 10 minutes •' 10· ZO

\

and 20 minutes at 11: 40, All
network cl:lannels. 1Also, a ~
recap on " To.day " Wed ne sday morning, Chs. 2 &amp; 11.

+++

Big problem :

'

How can you deny the kids

a chance to watch the annual
re vi va l of that eternal
llellght, " The Wizard of Oz,' '
when Ohio State Is playing
Michigan State up in
Columbus? Both start at
1:30, with Judy Garland

doing her thing on Chs. 2 &amp; 7,
and AI Hornyak doing his on
Ch . ' ·
I You can resolve family

crises like these with . a
second cable TV connection
- only one dollar a month
for peace and quiet .)

+ ++

MovIES :
"Roseanna
McCoy ," bas.d on the
famous feud , but not very

well done, 4 p.m., and "Love
Has Many Faces ,"

wi th

lana Turner !who should
know), 11 : 30 p.m., bath Ch.
10.

nothing wrong with tears," he
said. "A funeral is a place to
tell someone you really care."
Blackwell said Ohio State
University plans to offer a
course entitled "Death in Society," \vhlch deals with concepts of death.

Birthday Observed
Mr. and Mrs. Don Roush
entertained Saturday af·
lernoon at their home in
Minersville honoring their son,
Darin, :on his fifth birthday.
Games were played and
prizes awarded. Refreshments
of ice cream, soft drinks, and
potato chips were served to
Mrs. E. E. Follrod, Mrs. Terry
Fulks, Mrs. Icy Miller, Mrs.
Jack Duffy, Lee, Eddie and
Davis, Mrs. Marvin Stafford
and Deron, Mrs . Richard
Poulin and Joey, Mrs. Jack
. Walker and Jackie, Kyle
Woods, Kim Follrod, Lori
- Grueser, Robert and Debbie
Brown, and David and Gina
Follrod.
VISITS PARENTS

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner,
Sandy, Gary and Debbie, !l'ld a
friend, Terry Gentry, of
Bucyrus, spent the weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Turner, Middleport.
COURSE COMPLETED
Airmao David H. Mora, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald C.
Mora of Rt. 3, Pomeroy, has
graduated at Lowry AFB,
Colo., from the training course
for U. S. Air Force weapons
mechanics. A 1969 graduate of
Eastern High School, Mora
received his Associate degree
in ceramic engineering in 1971
from Tri-Count)' Technical
Institute, Nelsonville, Ohio.

•

A

,,..•

SUPERIORS "BUDGET BACON"

"lb

FARM SAUSAGE ........................ ~~..79e

Y4

1

PORK

lb

LOIN •.....•·.•

.

SUPERIORS TASTY

Butts

Superiors USDA
Choice Pork
.

694'

.

BRAUNSCHWEIGER
lb

Fresh

SUPERIORS FAMILY PACK

SLICED BACON

•

BALlARD'S

~

~~:K -. . . . . ... .~.&amp; g~

e

lb.

(
~

• The Smile Ring. S2.50 .

·. ROBINSON'S
·cLEANERS
Phone 992-5428

·~

·~

, (Upon Request)

Pomeroy

·,Polish Sausage ...-~~~.~~!~~~ ................
~.. . .
HOMEMADE .
lb · 59~
P,ork ..Jellusage
...........
~ ..................... ~········
:.Picnic Hams ..•~~!~~~.~~~.~.~.~~..~~.~~~..... ~~ .. 55*
.All .Meat Wi~ners ...~.~~.~~~~~~........... J~ .. 69~
·· ·························
, d ·s··1r1o1n
usoA BEEF
· lb 89*
Choppe
!~-··· ....·.

·~

2-HOUR
CLEANING

210· E. 2nd

1~.~- 69~

-~

•••
..•

JEWELRY STORE
COURT ST.

"·~

·••

GOESSLER'S
1

::

,,•

POMEROY, 0.

•
w

THURSDAY ONLY SALE!

LARGE UNClASSIAED.

EGGS·

doz. 39~

REGUlAR 59' MR. BEE

LOW PRICE SPECIAL! SOLO CUP

Bath room Dispenser

POTATO CHIPS
pkg.

49~

With 25
Free
Cups

NOWONLY

INSTANT COFFEE CREAMER

9~;
Regular 99'

COFFEE MATE ...................... .~.~~.~~.. 69
1

4

'DEL MONTE

PINEAPPLE·
ORANGE
DRINK

46 oz"

cans

SCOT LAD ALL PURPOSE

ROUND CRACKERS......... 3Hb bxs

1OO
OYSTER STEW...................~.~~.~..~~.-. 394
SCOT LAD COOKIES ........~~.~~.~~. 49 4
12
EGG NOODLES ................ 3
~ PAPER TOWELS .............. 3'
HILTON

DEL MONTE

cans$

CUT GREEN

Interest Waning in Death
CINCINNATI (UP!) Thantatologlst Roger D.
Blackwell said M9nday night
"!lie human support system
that used to surround death is
crumbling" and urged the
building of interest again in
funerals.
"People are growing away
from churches," Blackwell, an
associate profes.90r of adminis·
trative sciences at Ohio State
University, said. "They no
longer know their neighbors.
The family structure is
disintegrating.
''Today a widow -and 70 per
cent of survivors are widows-

~

lb.

FOR EASTER

You 're talking
lightning strikes and burns
to a friend on
upyourconversation;ora builder
the phone.
excavating a site accidentally pulls
Suddenly,
up a line cutting off hundreds of
c I i c kca lls at once.
you'retalkUnfortunately these things
ing to yourself.
can and do happen occasionally.
What happened? Fuses can blow, elecWhen they do our men are
tromechanical equipment purn out or a - ' " 1.
out rain or shine,
switch may malfunction. If your conday or night get·
versation is interrupted call retingyourlinesback
pair service. Your report will
in service as fast as
help us find the trouble. And
possible.
help prevent its recurrence.
We know that any interHowever, if your line goes
ruption in your phone service is
dead we want you to know that a great many aserious matter. For you. And for us. We urge
disconnects are caused .by unpredi ctable your cooperation, and patience, when an in·
acts of man or nature. For example: a tree terruption occurs.while we strive to get you
falls and takes your phone line down with it; back on the line.

for

BEANS

''

VANillA OR CHOCOLATE SANDWICH
DELMONICO .

oz

pkgs

DEL MONTE

SCOT lAD

WHOLE KERNEL

jumbo
rolls

YELLOW CORN

am

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

'

SUPER ·MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun.
We Accept Fedt!NLI. food Stumps
PHONE: 992·3480

'

. I

I,

\

..

I

I

Corner Mill ana Secontl Sts,
. " We ~mrve
.

The

Ri gel

"lo

L i mit Ouantities"

MIODLE?ORT,O.

�- oJ-Tbe.Illll7 8eitlnel, Ml4clepo.t-Pwevy' 0., March 7' 19'12

Red Cross Disaster·Relief in Action
Disaster relief efforts of the
American Reel Cross are in full
operation in the tra,·!dY·
stricken Buffalo Creek Vt lley
in West VIrginia.
The massive Red Cross
shelter and feeding operation
,continues. Last Wednesday
night Red Cross shelters were
open in W~arton, Man,
Amherstdale, and Sharpies.
Three hot meals each day were
~erved in ali shelters and by
four Rl!(l Cross disaster vana at
the scene, in addition to snacks
at aU hours to aU comers. The
number of people being cared
lor and fed in the shelters
nuctuates between 800 and
1,500.
Rt.ml OSBORNE
Red Cross first aid teams
JACK SHUFF
and feeding vans moved up the
PROMOTIONS MADE - Ruth A. Osborne, Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Comdevastated valley with cleanpany, has recently been appointed personnel director. She joined the Company in March, 1!151,
up crews· and an increasing
as a Stenographer Clerk In thP. .:Employee Relations Department and has been Insurance Clerk,
number of residents who were
Insurance and Annuities Clerk, and Supervisor of Employee Benefits. JACK W. SHUFF is the
beginning to return to their
new Wage and Salary Supervisor. He graduated from Otterbein College In June, 1951, with a
home communities to begin the
bacheiof of science degree In secondary «Jucalion. Shuff joined the Company in February,
heart rending job of salvaging
1955,asa Personnel Representative, and was promoted to Personnel Supervisor in September,
personal effects and cleaning
1967. WilLIAM J. FINISSI, representative, residential construction sales, has been made
up their homes - if they were
employment supervisor. He graduated from the University of West Virginia in June, 1954, and
still standing.
spent a year in the Special Service Deparbnent of the U. S. Army. He is attending Xavier
The Red Cross first aid
University In Cincinnati, working towards a master o(science degree in psychology.
teams !!'iii have immediate aid
to those who might be injured
while working to clear debris,
and to be available in the off.
chance that Oood survivors
might be discovered.
Seventeen Meigs High School girls who have been recomSixty-one national Red Cross
girls were guests for a Buckeye mended by the high school as
staff
and disaster reserve
Holzer Medical Center, First Girls State interviewing tea academically · eligible for
Ave., and Cedar St. General held Sunday at the Middleport Buckeye Girls State. Five, and workers have been sent to
serve at the scene so far, and
visiting hours 2-4 and 7~ p.m. American Legion Post.
perhaps slx, will be selected to
reports indicate there will be
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
Representatives of both the attend.
4:30 p.m. Parents only on American Legion Auxiliary of
Before announcement of the
Pediatrics Ward.
Drew o Webster Post 39 and girls selected can be made,
Birtbs
Feeney-Bennett Post 128 were they must be accepted by the
Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. present for the screening of the Girls State committee.
Rainey, Gaiilpolls Ferry, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Harley E.
Hendricks, Pt. Pleasant, a
daughter ; Mr . and Mrs .
Milford L. Howard, Jr .,
Jackson, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
David D. Moore, Oak Hill, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Wiiilam W.
Arbaugh, Tuppers Plalns, a
daughter and Mr. and Mrs. '
Everett Lee Hutton, Albany, a
son; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Keels,
Oak Hill, a daughter and Mr.
and Mrs. James L. Yocum,
Gallipolis, a son.
Discharges
John W. Burdette, Jr., Mrs.
Michael Merrill and son, Mary
Ellen Wiles, Jessie Sickles,
Mary L. Houser, Jackie
Shepherd, Robert T. Wilson,
Douglas E. DeLong, Charles F.
WHEN BIG (AND LITTLE) THINGS start to get you
,, GIIJI!and, Harry C. Brown,
do'l!ll, p,~t ~. d!Y, It's time'!! get out of town. Leave your
· .lohn'V. Grimes, Dicie L. Hall,
cal'ft (and the canvassers) far behind, but take The Dally
Dana E. Hoffman, Mrs .
Sentinel along with.you on vacation. Just call us at 992-2156
Clarence A. King and · and we'll aend it. That's how to keep up with THEY'LL DO IT
daughter, Okey Martin, James
EVERY TIME, plus all the latest local news, at your
Rhodes, Roderick Gordon,
vacation address.
Hosmer L. Ro,ush, Mrs.
Richard R. Sweet and
daughter,
Wendell
H.
Willlams, Donald C. Weed, Emma Brumfield, Timothy L. L. King, Morris F. Blazer,
Lewis C. Miller.
Dalvs, Mary Frances Frazer, Audrey Breece, Alfred D.
Preston Anderson, Cheryl M. Holly N. Friend, Mrs. Wilmer Ferguson,
Hildreth
A.
Perry, Phyllis L. Martin, Iva E. Halfhill and son, Calvin Gringsby, Mrs. Doni van R.
C. Boston, Lewis A. Henderson, Layne, Ruth L. Montgomery, Barger and daughter, Mrs.
David E. Poetker, Janet S. Mrs . David Raynor and J811les Harris and daughter,
Pauley, Ruth Ellen Hodgson, daughter , Edna Simmons, Cindy L. Harrington, Donald
Patsy •Sue Moore, Gladys M. George P. Smith, Edward R. Isaac, Mrs. William McCreedy
Blankenship, Ralph C. Hulls, Spencer.
and daughter, Mrs. Robert L.
Brenton Phillips, Melissa
Emma Forthe, Donald R. Ruff and son, Richard 0. ·
Rouse, William C. Moore, Bailes, Karen L. Ervin, Jacob Smith, Timothy Smith.

-

HOSPITAL 17 Girls Inteniew.e d

NEWS

more as the need requires.
Among the cfi¥ster reserve
workers Is Mrs. Helen Taylor
of Columbus, a veteraJI Red
Cross disaster wor(ter who has
~erved in disasters (n many
states since 1959.
The local chapter of the
President Richard M.
NiJ:on ud Ohio Gov. John
Gilligan ban proclaimed
March as ''Red Cross
Month" when' the publi~ 18
urged to join ud contribute.
to
the humanitarian
programs carried oat under
charter by the American
Red Cross.
------American Red · Cross is appealing for funds to continue
the relief work. So far no
estimate· of the losses is
available, but continuing
feeding and sheltering
operations will be needed for
some time, In addition to the
task of cleaning up and
rebuilding the 16 communities
devastated by the flood
disaster.
At 10 a.m. Tuesday, the local
chapter received word that
inquiries on the health and
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. William Folmer,
Pomeroy, underwent surgery
this morning at the Hoizrr
Medical Center. Her room
number is 235.

SUPERIORS USDA CHOICE PORK
'

CENTER CUTS

I

welfare of affected famillea . .-----------~~~~~~~. .. ,
were being 'taken. The Service
to
Military · Families
professional case workers .
handle the inqulrles. In the
past, such requests W.re taken
immediately, but experienCI!
proved that nothing could be
done until workers were on the
scene and in the meantime
replies could not be bandied.
According to the Service to
· For
Military Families Director
Mrs, Mary Carolyn Newton,
the new system Ia working far
more effectively. ·
,
Disaster Relief Is one of the
Flower:s,
ropes,
pin , &amp;
Charter obligations of the
ear
sets,
~·
American Red CrosS, \vhlch
dless
hoop
has a cOngressional Diandate to
earrings,
aid victims of all disasters as
Soutous.
All
the official disaster relief
the new pieces
agency.
are ..re now.
Donations may be ~ent to:
Cindy Coffman, Meigs County
Chapter, Am~ican Red Cross,
549 Beech St., Middleport,
Ohio.

PORK CHOPS

Accents

Easter!

$1 TO $15

'

~

,•

•••

~..
••
...

Cameo Brooches S2

comes back to an empty
house," he told a meeting of the
Ohio Funeral Directors
Association.
Blackwell, an expert on
thanatology - the study of
death- disdained the contemporary philosophy which
"teaches that what a person
does is more Important than
what he is."
"A society that ignores a
man's death raises · serious
questions about the value of his
life," he said.
He said people shoul~ stop
making excuses for staying
away from funerals. "!'here is

CALL POINTVIEW: 992 · 2505
PolnTVIew Cable w:ll film
the Pomeroy Chamber of

Commerce

Appreciation

Dinner Program Monday
night at the Meigs Inn .
Upcoming plans and future
developments of Meigs
to!lnty. will be discussed
with ten American Electric
and Ohio Power Companies
officials. VIdeo replay will be
Tuesday at 1 p.m. on
Channel 5.
The first primary in the"
nation will be history by the
end of this day, with New
Hampshire voters dech11ng
fhe merits of President
Nixon against Reps. Paul
McCloskey and .Ohlo's John
Ashbrook . Thereare a pile of
Democrats In the race, with
the Granite State expected to
go heavily for fellow DownEasterner Sen . Edmund
Muokle. There'll be bulletins
all evening, with both NBC
ana CBS sche1ullng specia l
programs at 16:30 p.m., and
ABC with 10 minutes •' 10· ZO

\

and 20 minutes at 11: 40, All
network cl:lannels. 1Also, a ~
recap on " To.day " Wed ne sday morning, Chs. 2 &amp; 11.

+++

Big problem :

'

How can you deny the kids

a chance to watch the annual
re vi va l of that eternal
llellght, " The Wizard of Oz,' '
when Ohio State Is playing
Michigan State up in
Columbus? Both start at
1:30, with Judy Garland

doing her thing on Chs. 2 &amp; 7,
and AI Hornyak doing his on
Ch . ' ·
I You can resolve family

crises like these with . a
second cable TV connection
- only one dollar a month
for peace and quiet .)

+ ++

MovIES :
"Roseanna
McCoy ," bas.d on the
famous feud , but not very

well done, 4 p.m., and "Love
Has Many Faces ,"

wi th

lana Turner !who should
know), 11 : 30 p.m., bath Ch.
10.

nothing wrong with tears," he
said. "A funeral is a place to
tell someone you really care."
Blackwell said Ohio State
University plans to offer a
course entitled "Death in Society," \vhlch deals with concepts of death.

Birthday Observed
Mr. and Mrs. Don Roush
entertained Saturday af·
lernoon at their home in
Minersville honoring their son,
Darin, :on his fifth birthday.
Games were played and
prizes awarded. Refreshments
of ice cream, soft drinks, and
potato chips were served to
Mrs. E. E. Follrod, Mrs. Terry
Fulks, Mrs. Icy Miller, Mrs.
Jack Duffy, Lee, Eddie and
Davis, Mrs. Marvin Stafford
and Deron, Mrs . Richard
Poulin and Joey, Mrs. Jack
. Walker and Jackie, Kyle
Woods, Kim Follrod, Lori
- Grueser, Robert and Debbie
Brown, and David and Gina
Follrod.
VISITS PARENTS

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner,
Sandy, Gary and Debbie, !l'ld a
friend, Terry Gentry, of
Bucyrus, spent the weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Joe Turner, Middleport.
COURSE COMPLETED
Airmao David H. Mora, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Donald C.
Mora of Rt. 3, Pomeroy, has
graduated at Lowry AFB,
Colo., from the training course
for U. S. Air Force weapons
mechanics. A 1969 graduate of
Eastern High School, Mora
received his Associate degree
in ceramic engineering in 1971
from Tri-Count)' Technical
Institute, Nelsonville, Ohio.

•

A

,,..•

SUPERIORS "BUDGET BACON"

"lb

FARM SAUSAGE ........................ ~~..79e

Y4

1

PORK

lb

LOIN •.....•·.•

.

SUPERIORS TASTY

Butts

Superiors USDA
Choice Pork
.

694'

.

BRAUNSCHWEIGER
lb

Fresh

SUPERIORS FAMILY PACK

SLICED BACON

•

BALlARD'S

~

~~:K -. . . . . ... .~.&amp; g~

e

lb.

(
~

• The Smile Ring. S2.50 .

·. ROBINSON'S
·cLEANERS
Phone 992-5428

·~

·~

, (Upon Request)

Pomeroy

·,Polish Sausage ...-~~~.~~!~~~ ................
~.. . .
HOMEMADE .
lb · 59~
P,ork ..Jellusage
...........
~ ..................... ~········
:.Picnic Hams ..•~~!~~~.~~~.~.~.~~..~~.~~~..... ~~ .. 55*
.All .Meat Wi~ners ...~.~~.~~~~~~........... J~ .. 69~
·· ·························
, d ·s··1r1o1n
usoA BEEF
· lb 89*
Choppe
!~-··· ....·.

·~

2-HOUR
CLEANING

210· E. 2nd

1~.~- 69~

-~

•••
..•

JEWELRY STORE
COURT ST.

"·~

·••

GOESSLER'S
1

::

,,•

POMEROY, 0.

•
w

THURSDAY ONLY SALE!

LARGE UNClASSIAED.

EGGS·

doz. 39~

REGUlAR 59' MR. BEE

LOW PRICE SPECIAL! SOLO CUP

Bath room Dispenser

POTATO CHIPS
pkg.

49~

With 25
Free
Cups

NOWONLY

INSTANT COFFEE CREAMER

9~;
Regular 99'

COFFEE MATE ...................... .~.~~.~~.. 69
1

4

'DEL MONTE

PINEAPPLE·
ORANGE
DRINK

46 oz"

cans

SCOT LAD ALL PURPOSE

ROUND CRACKERS......... 3Hb bxs

1OO
OYSTER STEW...................~.~~.~..~~.-. 394
SCOT LAD COOKIES ........~~.~~.~~. 49 4
12
EGG NOODLES ................ 3
~ PAPER TOWELS .............. 3'
HILTON

DEL MONTE

cans$

CUT GREEN

Interest Waning in Death
CINCINNATI (UP!) Thantatologlst Roger D.
Blackwell said M9nday night
"!lie human support system
that used to surround death is
crumbling" and urged the
building of interest again in
funerals.
"People are growing away
from churches," Blackwell, an
associate profes.90r of adminis·
trative sciences at Ohio State
University, said. "They no
longer know their neighbors.
The family structure is
disintegrating.
''Today a widow -and 70 per
cent of survivors are widows-

~

lb.

FOR EASTER

You 're talking
lightning strikes and burns
to a friend on
upyourconversation;ora builder
the phone.
excavating a site accidentally pulls
Suddenly,
up a line cutting off hundreds of
c I i c kca lls at once.
you'retalkUnfortunately these things
ing to yourself.
can and do happen occasionally.
What happened? Fuses can blow, elecWhen they do our men are
tromechanical equipment purn out or a - ' " 1.
out rain or shine,
switch may malfunction. If your conday or night get·
versation is interrupted call retingyourlinesback
pair service. Your report will
in service as fast as
help us find the trouble. And
possible.
help prevent its recurrence.
We know that any interHowever, if your line goes
ruption in your phone service is
dead we want you to know that a great many aserious matter. For you. And for us. We urge
disconnects are caused .by unpredi ctable your cooperation, and patience, when an in·
acts of man or nature. For example: a tree terruption occurs.while we strive to get you
falls and takes your phone line down with it; back on the line.

for

BEANS

''

VANillA OR CHOCOLATE SANDWICH
DELMONICO .

oz

pkgs

DEL MONTE

SCOT lAD

WHOLE KERNEL

jumbo
rolls

YELLOW CORN

am

GEnERAL TELEPHOnE

'

SUPER ·MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun.
We Accept Fedt!NLI. food Stumps
PHONE: 992·3480

'

. I

I,

\

..

I

I

Corner Mill ana Secontl Sts,
. " We ~mrve
.

The

Ri gel

"lo

L i mit Ouantities"

MIODLE?ORT,O.

�'
.

•

J

.

.

• ne Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. March 7, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Actio·n ! Sentinel Classifieds Pet Results(j
WANt ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Before
· Publ icat ion
Monday · Oeadlln• 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
'Viii be accepted untl l 9a .m. for,
Day of

Publ ication ~

Found
may

ha ve

by

Phone 992-7t75.

identify ing .

"P ubl is her

wi ll

The

ri ot

leave Me igs or Mason County
for lack of money . If in -

be

r esponsi ble for more t han on£
· ~t~ co rr ec t

teres led call 992-5113 .

Insertion .

RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one inser t ion
12

M ini mum Charge 7Sc
ce nts per word three

consecutive insert ion s.
.... 18

cents per

~ecutive insertions.

J?fayer, good tires, dark blue, like new top white, white

25 Per Cent Discount on paid

-

ABOUT _YOUR . WEIGHT ..

ads and ads paid within 10

overweight lad1es, tee ns and
m en interested in a Weight

da ys

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUI!RY

Wat chers ( R) Cla ss in
Pomeroy write : Weiqht

Sl.SO for 50 word mi nimum .
E ach additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
•
Add itional 25c Charge pe r
Ad vert ise ment.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. lo 5:00p.m. Dally,
8:3 0 a. m. to 12 : 00 N oon

Wat che rs { R), 1863 Sect1on
Rd., Cin ci nna ti, Ohio 45237 .

t0-3-IIc

4

WHEEL drive jeep. Phone
after 5 p.m. 992-3062.
2-27-121c

Mary F. Diehl
3-7-ltp· OLD FURNITURE, Round Dak
- - - - -tables, · Brass beds, dishes,
A SPEC IAL prayer of thanks t'o clocks, and -or complete
our F a f h er w h ic h is in
households . Wr ite M. D.
Hea ven, to th ose many
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
friends and relat ives w ho
Call 992-627 1.
-12-17-tfo
have visi led , offered prayers
and ·sent many cards wi th
pr ayer s and cheers to help me
th r ough my many t rying
ti me s a t Holzer Medical
Center ; for my many dif ferent Doc tor s, nurses , aides
an d orderl ies wh o have
work ed hard to bring me
away from death's door many
times. For my Mother here at

t967 CHEVELLE MALIBU HT CPE.

Helo Wanted

WANTED!

system ,

1970 KAWASAKI, model G-31 ,
Centur ion , new conditian ,
never raced . Phone after 6 p .

$1395

m. 992-3401.

Med . grn. finish . Nice.

3-2-6lc

Pomeroy Motor Co.

MALE Norwegian Elkhound
pups, 10 weeks old - S25 ;
phone 992-2362.
3-5-3tp

OPEN EYES. 1:00 P.M.
f'l)MEROY, OHIO

............................•

-: - - -- -

-

SAVE -50.00

:•

CLEARANCE

•

TRAILER , Brown's Traile r
Court. Minersv ille, Ohio,
:-:-::-c.,--------,--phone 992-3324.
NEW, 12x60, iwo bedroom
mobile home across from - -- - - - - - - -3--3-tfc
Bradbury School. Call 992- FURI'liSHED. and ~nfurnlshed
5308 or see Charles Lewis, 2nd
apartments. Close to school.
house south lrom Bradbury
Phone 992-543&lt;1.
School. Pets welcome.
10-18-lfc
2-21 -tfc
- -- - - - -- 2 BEDROOM mobile home In For Sale
Racine area . Phone 992-6329. 4INSIDE Doors 12 - 2' 8" wide,
2-16-tfc
6' 8" _long - 2 panel and 2- 2'
-:--- - -----,
6" w1de, 6' 8" long - 2 panel);
ONE LARGE trailer space,
locks and hinges . Phone 992Velma G. Zuspan, 773-5750,
2587
.
Mason, W. Va .
3-7-18tp - - -- - - - -- 3-7-31c

•
:
:

!
:
•

---- --- - .

1961

FIAT,

•••

.•- ,.FLOOR SAMPLE

For Rent

TWO BEDROOM mobile home,
Call 992-5623.
H -3tc

APARTMENT, 3 rooms and
bath, furnished. North 2nd

sound

Balance $63 .99 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992 -7085.
3-t·6fc

327 engine, 4 sP"eed trans., clean interior &amp; good tires .

For Rent
Wanted To Buy

STEREO-Radio Combination,
lovely WALNUT finish, fo~r
speed Intermixed changer, 4

clean ., owner car .

151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .

Card c• Thanks
I WIS H Ia than k a ll' who sen t me
birthda y card s. I appreci a ted
ever y one of them . And you all
ha ve m y lave and bes t wishes .

bvcket seats with console, nice and

SAVE up to one half . Bring your
sic k TV to Chuck:s TV shop,

Saturday.

3-1-6tc

------speaker

A NY ONE int er est ed in learning
cr a ft s and making fl ower s
co ntact Eulah Francis a t 992-

5664.
-------=c-,----3-·2_-6tp

7085 .

spotless Inte rior .

1967 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
$1395
Convertible, V-8 auto .. P.S .. P. B., till steering wheel. tape

speaker sound

our budget terms. Call 992·

1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.
12095
v.a engine, automati c trans ., p. steering, factory -a ir
conditioned, good w-w tires, radio, dark green finish with

3-7-llc

.

word si)( cdn - ·

~

,. system, Balanc'l $79.32 . Use

·I

Notice

REGULATIONS
KOSMETI CS &amp; Flame
The Publisher . reser.ves t he KOSCOT
of Hope Perfumes . Human &amp;
ri ght to edit or reject any ads
sy nthetic wigs. No need to

dee m ed object ional.

changer,

4 door, mileage

:

&amp;G R
ec.
as anges
2 White Electric
1 Coppertone Elec.
l White Gas
1

El

NOW 50 Off

•

•

•••
•
•

.•
:

......
co........ .:
,...............

~~ •

I'OMIRft •

•

:.. ·~·~~-~~ .. ~·~~···~·
..~·~··
0

Me m or i al Gaa r de ~t~s
reasonable., Phone 949-4962:
·
3-1-61c
- - -- - - -- SHOWALTER'S Wei Pel Shop,
Chesler, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
Tropical fish and supplies.
Stop in and compare.

EXPERT

' Wh~ . Alignment

$5.55

On Mo~l American Cars,

- GUARANTEED- · .
Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Open 8Ti15
Monday thru Salurday
606 E. Main, PomtrGy, 0.

TERMITES. •TERMITES,

...
Gel Rid of Them'
· We will proloct any single
dwelling residence tor

'149.50
WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect 614-452-3158

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main St.
Zanesville, Ohio

From the lar~st
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .
• Natftan ~ns

Radio tor Spoci11ist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, ·INC.
Ph. 992-2174
Free Estimate

ON
CENmAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

B&amp;W HEATING 00.
For Appointment
Phone 949·2803
... ..
ALLSIDE Bullaers 11. l.on-

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUCTION
l 'PWMBING CO.

HARTFORD
The
Sentinel

.-----...\I

l

•

Wt&lt;EV

~

P. 0. Box 35, Langsville, Ohio.
3-1-6tp

···~

.

..'

... AND R'E6f611NG
ARRE6T.
NONE OF TI!E RECENT
AS'I'RO!IAU'I'S.COUU)
APPEAR AT OUR.

Mldditparl, 01111
Dbl Anthony Ptumllilltl
Wt hiYO I . . . . .,. HolM
Main:tenln« S.rvlct tht

SPACE •SYtllf'OStUM

year around. No m11ttt' your noed. Compltlt ...., or
·spaullng rtflllr. lnr.rlor or
exterior corpontrY. Coiling
lilt 1nd hnellnt and Sl&lt;llng.
Complete Plumbing A
HNiina.
·
·
Doy Number m-2550
We have 24 hr. tmorgoncy
service.
992-5103
742-3947
992-3898 742-4761
We are fully Insured

.- -

'

WE ~AC&gt; TO SETTLE FOR
AN ALMOST-FORGOTTEN "'--- I

SPACE PIONEER.

STiLL, tf
MUST ~AVE
COST A LOT
TO GET
HIM .f

U'LABNER .
HEUKEWISE
15tRRITATEO
ATTH'SIGHT

lht

Ulol6POKE.

Orchid Room..

ARMS-

guaranteed to customer
satisfaction. We are fully
i nsured for your protection. 32

Pomeroy area. A. W. Watson,

- .--... ...

·'
t~

2441 Lincoln St.

MODERN J or 4 bedroom home.
Phone 992-3062.
3-2-lfc

TWO Bedroom home In Albany.
Langsville . Middleport .

ONI.ESS WE SOI.VES rH'
'ROTTEN FIAI.Pt-liE• ~

NO DOGPATCH KID'I.L REACH
TH' AGE 0' NINE!! ,.-----'

.........
'•,

SEPTIC ranks clenid. Mille-.'
Sanllollon, Stewart, atto. Ph.
N. Second, ph: 992·3918.
662-3035.
'.
2-15-301c
2-12·11&lt;
SEE US-FOR :· Awnings, storm HousE· - eun.'DERs;
doors and windows, carports,
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
marquees , aluminum siding
OHIO.
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
3·5-301c
representative . For free
- R-- a- n""if"··=
' ."'"xt"'"erlor
estimates, phone Charles '"tN_T_E_R-10
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
painting . R. l. Oubbeld, phone
Johnson and Son, Inc.
742·5125.
3-2-lfc:- - - - - - J-6.51c

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

-----

Virgil B.

Teaford, Sr.

We talk to you
like a.

----

- - -- -

t:

WMP0/1390

·.

·- - - -

ON YOUR DIAL

r Voice along Br'Way

CLELAND
REALTY

..

$1495
Karr &amp;Van Zandt

WHITE

Contact
VERA EBLEN

Homes For

For Sale

Aluminum
Sheets

..

The
Daily ·Sentinel

12t - 14' • 24t - WiDE

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES

.RUTlAND ·FURNITURE·, .
o:

Ij

.!iUoTmR

FROM TK£
lltllDQUAR'InS
or THt

MO'I'OIIIAPORS,
IRQK,MJKF.
Jll!VIL HOLI)S

~a:!

LEGAL NOTICE

'68 CHEVY NOVA
4 DOOR

'

i

·c:,.n

- - - - - -

PH. 992-3629

1

,.

- - -- - -

Wanted To Rent

Ph. 614-992-2156

MEIGS INN .
ROOMS

OF THAR,TOO

'

Make reservations for your ;
private parties, bonquelf, 1
struction Co. We specialize in
occasions.
special
aluminum, vinyl antl steel ·
,
Ideal
far
meellng plac:, - '
siding; fiberglas, brick and,
·with
or
w~th'auf..J!.J.t.dhen •
stone; complete line of
privileges.
·
residential and commercial
Individual
Catering
roofing ;
remodeling,
building, suspended c~lllngs, Will seat up to 150 people.
interior and exterior painPhone
ting ; complete line of
Masonry work. All work 1 ,992-3975
992-5786

- -- - --

and

I GOT RUN OUT

I 1'\lN'T, ':&gt;N,Ut-t·Y

Business Services

45,000; in A-1 condition,
3-1-27tp
priced reasonably. Phone 985Ave ., Middlep or t, Phone 9954137 or contact Carl Findling , 1971 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine
5293
.
Real Estate For SaiP.
Alfred .
home and Aunt Madge Taylor
lefl in layawar . Beautiful
J.7.1fc
3-7-3tp
of Hun tin9ton Park, Calli.,
pastel color, lui size model. HOUSE, t642 Lincoln Heights:
- -----Call Danny Thompson. 992·
wh o never forget y ou in their
All
built-In lo buttonhole, do
FARM LAND. 6.5 acres for ONE New Idea one row plant
2196.
pr ayers and card s on all
stretch sewing and fancy
corn, other land for truck
seller on rubber; 90 gal. stitching. Pay just $48.75 cosh
7-18-llc
special occasions . A special
farming , would rent 100 acres
water tank : phone 247-2344, or terms available. Trade~ ins ~=---~
prayer of the bes t of heallh
on ly charge is proper fer Robert D. Ashley.
HOU.SE In Long Bottom ,' phone
and happiness throug hout lhe
accepted. P~one 992-5641.
tilizin!=! and reseed to qrass, 2
985-3529.
res 1 of our lives here on ear th ;
3-7-6tc
3-1-6tc
mi. North of Wilkesville on -----------to ou r almigh ty Fa ther in the
Dai~
Salem Rd . Call Hassel SPEEDQueen Portable Washer VACUUM Cleaner. new 1971 - - - - - ' - - -- 1-28-lfc
name of Chris t Jesus, our
Jus tic~, 766-3740 or write Box
&amp; Spin Dryer ; Zenilh Par- model. Complete with all
L ord and Savi or , Amen.
NICE 2-stary home with lull · O'DELL WHEE'l alighment' READY-MIX CONCRETE 'de:' . :
106, Kouls, Ind. 46347. 3-7-6ip
table Stereo; Riding lawn cleaning tool s. SmaU paint
Char les La rk in s, Chester ,
basement, 2 lois, new forced
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
livered right to your proltet. .
m ower ,· phone 992-7315 .
damage in shipping. -Witl take
Ohi o
air
furnace.
Near
Pomeroy.
.
Complete
front end sefvlce,
1
Fast and easy. Free.
2 BEDROOM, 12 double, fur 3-7-10ic 127 cash or · budget plan
Elementary. School. Phone ' tune up and brake service.
3-7-ltc FEMALE
esllmales. Phone 992-3214. ·. :
cook
and
nished on 4t h &amp; College in
- - - -- 992-7384 to see.
Wheels balanced elecavailable . Phone 992-5641.
Gaegleln Rea-y.Mix Co., : :
h ou separent, o ver 40 , for
Syracuse . Phone 992-2749 .
t970
HONDA
350,
excellent
3-1-6tc
11
-'
·'fc
WE WI SH to extend our sincere
troglcally .
All
work
Middleport,
Ohio.
•1 ·
Ch i ldren 's Home. Salary plus
3-7-6tc
condition, call 985-3828 after 6
thanks to relat ives , neighbors
Reasonable
guaranteed.
6-JO.tfc
r oom and board . Phone 304p.m.
'. . .
and lriends th rau~haul Me igs
rates. Phone 992-3213,
428-3721 before 5 p.m., ask for Wanted To Do
------.,.---,-,-,.....,-i'
3-7-6tc POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
and Athens Coun ties for their
7-27-lft AUTOMOBILE lnsurinc:e bteii
Mrs. Daby .
Park view Kennels, Phone 992~,
ki ndness and sympathy ex 3-7-lllc BABYSITTING in my home, FREE tickets are now available
Lost . your 1,
cancelled?
5~43 .
tended to us during the loss of
C.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
Mrs . Glenn Smith, Rock on a free gian t S20 Easter
operator's license? Cill...n-j ··
8-15-tfc
our dear wif e and mother ,
Complete Service
Springs
Rd.,
phone
992·6187.
2966 .
:
Idonia Johns ton. Maywood LADY TO live in with elderly
Basket large chacalale
Phone 949-3821
3-1-61c
6-15-lfc
,
Joh nston, Paul Brooks and
Easter
bunny
and
large
fruit
Racine. Ohio
Auto Sales
lady , light houseke eping.
Tw ila Powers .
and nul Easter egg. See lhem
Broker
Crill Bradford
phone 949-4904 or 667-3319.
AND l)()zeR _.t ..
loday and get your free 1965 BUICK Wildcat, 2 door
3-7-llp
110 Mechanic St.
5·1-tfc BAI.KHOE
3-5-3tc Employment Wanted
Septic
tanks
Installed. ~ i·
Hardtop,
1
local
owner,
extickets,
no
purchase
required
,
- - - -- --OR Y WALL Finisher con ·
Pomeroy, 0., 45769
- -- - -(Bill) Pullins. Phonetr.l-24';
cellent condition, good tires,
1 WISH to e xtend my sincere
traclor ., R. I. Dubbeld, Phone at lhe Bright Star Market
.
. . " .425:-tfcl
extra good finish . Phone 992Real Estate For Sale
next to the Drive-In Theatre ,
thank s to Dr . Harder a t
742-5825.
NEW
LISTING
--:. -~.c--.--,_,-_-_..,,, .;;
_;.._.~: .
2143
or
992-2142.
Mason, W. Va . where low
Hpj zer Mecl ical Center ; lo the
3 - 6~ 5t c
Sl
X
ROOM
house,
133
Butternut'
175
ACRE
STOCK
FARM2
'
SEP.TI.C TANkS CLEANID .~
3-7-Jtc
n (lrses , n'u f se'' s aides) and all
prices and convenien t service
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 21371 REASONABLfHoln
barns, 2 ponds, 2 springs, 3
For Rent
Ph. 4.16-. 'il
o ther persons i nvolved, for
are featured every day, check - -- - -- Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,•
dug
wells,
and
water
tap,
4782,
Gallipolis.
John
Runell, f
'69
CHEVELLE
SS
396,
4
speed
the excellen t care given m e
the following prices and stock
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
paid . 9 room renovated older
ONner
&amp; Operator.
•l
transmissi on, Hurst Shifter,
dur ing
my
rec ent
your larder . Favorite or
11-21 -llc
home. Plenty of good
,
• 5-12-tfe i t,
hosp italiza ti on. Also to my
Bonus brand while bread 7 AM-FM radio, vinyl roof,
excellent condition, phone
pasture. Free gas with own
THE
friends and re latives for the
loaves Sl with $10 additional
BUILDING lots In Branchwood Why buy ne~ furniture? HiiV.'' '
882-3152
.
well. Would you believe
gas
many cards and other kindpurchase . Broughton's 2 pet.
Subdivision at Rock Springs,
sweel milk gal. 99c, Bologna
3-7-3tp only $42,500.00. '
nesses shown me ahd to Rev .
T. P. water, phone 992-2789. thai old mede new by Sylvla'a
Upholstering Shop, MrJ.
Zavit z f o_r his vi si ts and
4BEDROOMS
3-1-l21c Woodrow
in piece lb. 59c, grade A small 1971 FIAT, 6,000 miles. 11 ,900 or
T. Zwilling, Prop:,
pr ayer .
eggs 3 doz. $1 , smoked slab
COUNTRY HOME - Hot
Syracuse,
Ohio.
bacon whole or half lb. 49c,
take over payments- $81.47.
Da vid H. Mills, Sy racu se.
water heat, 11!2 baths . 3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
per5C)ri.
2-10-301p
Van Camp 29 oz. can pork and
Phone 9'12-6911.
3-7 ~ He
Modern kitchen . Recreation
..,
Arbaugh
Addition,
Tuppers
beans 2 cans 59c, Hart's whole ___ _ __ _ _ _3_-7-6tp roam . 2 drilled wells.
~W
~
I S~H~I-o~
tha~
nk__m
__
y-many
All.
new
with
total
Plains.
sewiNG MACHINes~ Rf!MI,;. .::
kernel c orn 5 cans $1 ,
Foundat ion for 2nd house. 10
elec1ric and cen1ra~ air
service, all makes. 992~2214.
fri ends and relatives f or the
by
Broughton' s Ice Milk lt e '66 THUNDERBIRD, V-6, acres. NOW only $20,000.00 .
conditlonlng, balh and &gt;;, fully
Tl)e
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. ;•
ca rd s, fl owe rs and t he
Day, We•k. Month
Cream , Gal . $1.19, white
automatic, power steering ,
carpeted, full basement;
NEW LISTING
Authorized
Singer Saltl and ,.
thoughtfu l deed s sh own me
potatoes 50 lb. bag $1.59 ,
Liberal Rates
power brakes, power win garage In basement. See by
7
ACRES
On
Route
7
near
Service.
We
Sharpen ScfiiOI"I. ;:
dur ing my r ecen t slay in
Complete assortment of fancy
dows, phone 992-5637 .
appointment, phone 992-2196
Eastern
School.
Ideal
for
Holzer Hos pita l. Your ki nd J.29.1fc ·:
Easter goodies including
3-5-6tp housing project or small
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson. ------.
ness wa s deeply apprecia ted .
Easter Baskets from $1 .49 to - - - - - - -- Financing available.
Kathlee n Scott
HARRISON' S TV and Anltnllil :•
$20. We accept Federal Food 1963 FORD with 12 ft. dump, farm . A bargain at
12-30-lfc
110,000.00.
3-7-ltc
Service. Phone 992-2522,
'·
Coupon . Stre tch your money ,
new paint, priced to sell,
MODERN
6-10-lfc :·
food coupons and time, see us
phone 9'12-3165.
RUTLAND
3
bedrooms,
for seed potatoes, onion sets
3·5·31c hal water healing . Nice
-·
and garden plants as needed.
:
Save in many ways at Bright 1970 FORD Camper Special,
kitchen with dishwasher,!
•
Star Markel, next to Drive-In
cock and bake units. Fully
automatic, power steering,
Theatre, Mason, W. Va.
•'
power brakes, phone 992-3954. carpeted. Carport and
LEGAL NOTICI
3-7-tt
. Office 992-2259
3-5-31c fenced yard. $20,000.00.
BY JACK O'BRIAN
The underslgn•d 'JJ Pl!frJnf
Residence 992-2561
Mantle are down to their current if~omes ... - -- - - - - MIDDLEPORT
for salt the houat and lot owntd
Pomeroy, Ohio
CANNON'S DY AN NOT
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, cute
The "Cabaret" film smash added more profits TROPICAL '1SH, fancy
by the lett C11re Gtrltnd In
BUSINESS
INVESTMENT
guppies, angels and breeders,
kitchen. large living and
This
Week's
Special
Welchtown, Minersville, OhiO.
· TO MEETCHA
to the already prosperous nearby showbiz
Large tile and brick
Beltas and supplies. Phone
Property apprailld et $6,500.00
dining. Garage. All on corner
NEW YORK (KFS) - Dyann Cannon's
building
, 2 story , 4 aparthengout, La Scala.
and cannot be sold for tn1 than
992-5443.
lot lor only $10,000.00.
ments, 13 furnished! 2 the appraised value. All In12-30-tlc '
desperate clim~ to recognition hes this postCatholic philosopher Jacques Maritaln, 89,
terested persons contact M.ry
business rooms, storage
WANT A GOOD PRICE FOR
script: now she dons Afro wig and smoked
Harris, Executrix, Mlntrtvllle,
will become a monk .. . If Alberto Roc hi is at the GREEN M'i&gt;.YTAG di shwasher ,
r oom , present business goes
YOUR PROPERTY, LIST
Ohio . Telephone 992-3327. Silo
with lhe building . $29,500.
cheaters to go to the neighborhood nickers:
1 year old, phone 247-2664 .
Chateau Madrid, can Ava Gardner be far
WITH US, AND START
subject to the approv11 of the
FAMILY
HOME
3-5-6tc
When you get whet you want, it serves you right
Probate Court, Meigs County,
LOOKING.
behind ? .. . Prison screws expect trouble at
4 bedrooms, bath, porches,
Ohio .
USED
CARS
-... Paula Pritchett will display just about
forced air heaL large barn
Lewisburg ... Chutzpah: Clifford Irving offered NEW PONTOON boats, 3 good
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
and
storage building . $8,900.
Mary Harris, Exe-cutrix
everything in Bob Mitchum's "Wrath of God"
used
boats
,
runabout
and
his quick-book about his whole finagle to Time
ASSOCIATE
SO
ACRES
ol the Estotool
cabin
cruiser
.
Boat
Repairs
,
except her voice; plays an Indian mute ...
Inc. for $600,000 - enough to pay off the missing
992-3325
992-2371
Clara
E. G•rtand,
RUTLAND
TOWNSHIP
Middleport Boat Shop, Pearl
Dtceased
"Applause" producer Joe Kipness next will try
llh story frame home, 7
cache of cash. He'd go to the pokey anyway if
Street, Dick Karr 992-5367.
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
rooms,
bath,
cellar,
large
a domestic tragedy .
3-5-31c
Attorneys
proven a fraud; but It could ameliorate the
barn, crib, implement bldg .,
Gold
with
matching
Int.,
6
JOHN
"Night Watch" at the Morosco is a mildly
sentence.
chicken house, milk house.
(3 ) 5, 6, 7, 31
12 FT. WIDE trailer with air
cyl. , auto .. radio and w-s-w
fa scinating lesser-Agathe Christie-like manyClose to the new mines.
It's so tough to get a N.Y. cab to drive a
conditi oning, washer &amp; dryer
tires.
$17,600.
clued drama , interesting a great deill of the way
- 13.700; see Harold Johnson,
JFK Airport arrival to nearby ~eens sad sackCHEAP HOME
Chester, Ohio.
but hardly riveting, as "Sleuth" is ; it's by
carrier&lt;' are thumbing rides ; the greedy hackies
11!2 story frame, 6 rooms, 3
NOTIC!
3-5-6tp
bedrooms, bath , utlllly
Lucille Fletcher, who fashioned "Sorry Wrong
The undersigned will offer for
all
want
the
$12.50
to
$1~ into-Manhettan run ... - - - - - - - REALTY
•
sale, by a·uction, at fht premlsn
room , some hardwood floors,
Number" so many radio-drama years ago ...
The new &lt;E. 86th St. Gimbel's is a smash, ar- GOOD mixed hay. Phone
of the United Mtthodltl Church
gas
farced
air
heat,
por1h,
Wilkesville 669-4777 .
Parsonage a.t Rtedsvllle, Ohio,
The ending is a trifle expedient but Joan
tistically and financially , and the management
$3,500 . lmmedla e
" You ' ll Like Our Quality
~iate
3-5-61c
the
porsonoge rool 11totol on
possession .
Hac kett's too-mannered playing also blunted
Way of Doing Business ."
isn't stinting on the peripherals: such as the - - - - - March 9, 1972, at l ;OO O'C ock
1 story frame, 2 bedrooms, _P.M. The property will bo sola
GMAC FINANCING
the final moments : author Fletcher provided Marian McPartland Trio playing in the 3 BEDROOM Vindale mobile
to the highest blddtr; rtltNint
cabinets
992-3020
In
kitchen,
992-5342
Pomeroy
home, Ph baths on choice
her specialty - a telephone sequence, which Wurlitzer showroom (Mon-Wed-Frl; 5 to 6 p.m.)
to. t)le Trusteeo tho rtaht to
Iorge
lot.
All
In
basement,
· Open Evenings 'Ti18:oo
192 N. 2nd
Middleport
rental lot. Herman Bolinger,
reject the hlghlll bid Jn · tho ,
Miss Hackett played more Bea Lillie-ish then
excellent
condition.
Just
.
Til!
P.M.
Sat.
... Jimmy McPartland is tootillg his el!llberant
992-5570 .
event It Is detmtd lnsuHtcltnt,
LOOKING for investmen~ $7,900.
menacingly; made tepid the terminal chill with
Dixieland horn at the.Queen's Tavern in Our.
Edw1rd lloko
3-5-6tp
property? Fantastic Is theo WE HAVE 35 PROPERDone
Hoflmon, Sr.
laughs instead of grim irony .. . Keene Curtis'
ban, S. Africa, for a month.
word for lhls spacious 12 .. TIES, ONE OF WHICH MAY
Bon Buckley
MObi~
Sale
expertly epicene neighbor-rol e was vividly
Chtrlll H11t1lty
room , 2-balh all brick home, SUIT YOU. COME .TO THE
Let's rate the TV raWlchies : the Dean
OR CALL.- WE
Harald Brannon
expository but then loose-ended, ultimately Martin Show rates an R-for-raunchy ... Count
FOR THE BEn deal In a new setup as duplex, or can be . OFFICE
WILL
BE
GLAD TO SHOW
Ttusttn,
used as offices. Located In
or
used
mobile
home,
fry
Reedsville Circuli of
useless, sloppily ignored by the plot ... "Night
THEM
TO
YOU
.
.
Basie's marvelous big band will test the
Middleport's
business
district
Kanauga Mobile Home SaLes,
Unlled Methodist Church·
Henry Cleland, Realtor
Watch" stayed away from Bdwy . in a post- stabilizers on the Queen Elizabeth 2's two-week
overlooking the Oh_io River .
36" X 23" X .009
Kanauga, Ohio.
(3) 3, s, 6, 1, 8, st
12-17-90tc 6 Roam -2 balh home,
ponement geared to polish its plot but the cruise. The stately old Queen Liz - Queen Mary
!shingle), cellar house,
glossiness of quality isn't there.
were repositories for all the antique British
60Xl 2, 2·bedroom , all -elec tric,
garage, plus ext ra lot s. One lot
Las Vegas tycoon Del Coleman is one of the
air conditioned, 8x 20 ft. Porch
musicians they co~ld prop up; no more .::_ the
has walkways, set up for
and
alum i num
awnirig,
"Night Watch" backers .. . After theater, the
trailer . Located in business
new QE2 has everything from rock to swing to
aluminum skirt i ng , com ~
dislricl.
across from lhe A&amp;P
"21" crowd dashed to the lounge's color sets to
Basie's virtuoso eruptions ... Guess who's
pletely setup. Beautitu I. Store In · Middleport. Floor
applaud Pres. Nixon's homecoming .. . Hottest writing a book about the Big Band era? A nun,
l x ation. Owner leaving state .
.furn. Asking ... $20,0011 for all.
U•ED
OFFSET
PLATES
Phone 94?-4892 or 992·5272. '
ticket in town - none to be hed - is the Boys Sister Marie 'ilierese of Chestnut ~ill College,
HAVE
;
1-10-tfc. Lo t wilh partial garage,
Clubs' "The Godfather" premiere Mar. 14 plus Pa.
MANY USES
(needs roof) 90 fl . frontage, .
far large troller ·or
suitable
big hesh at "21" ... Tennessee Williams gave up
Lamy Ross is coming out of retirement for
small business. In business
vodka and stuck to it on l"e Cavettcast - on a mid-March date at the Palm Beach
20~
district, across from the A&amp;P
which he only swilled amontillado wine ... Vegas Everglades Cl~b . That's where Leonard BernSture , Middleport, Ohio.
Asking ... $4,000.
odds are heavily on Muskie for the DerD's nod stein wasn 't we)come ... Empty stores are so
B for $1.00
Letart Falls - 10 room house
and Nixon to beat him comfortably. Opera star widespread in the near-Bdwy. area, landlords
with bath , basement, fenced .
Rise Stevens underwent major surgery at can't even find gypsies to fill 'em temporarily ...
in lawn , two buildings, fuel oil
Lenox Hill Hospital. '
heat , 5 lots, three of them
The perky translator who closed the coml oca ted on the river ·rronl,
Sonny &amp; Cher over at these eyes are a TV mWliCations gap between Chou and Nixon, Miss
selling due to ill heatlh, $25,000
guest-act, oot series stars .. . Virtually all the T'ang Wen-sheng , was just plain Nancy Tang
for all . Home has two por,ches,
golf dubs (more than 90 pet.) peddled in Japan when she romped in Greenwich Village (lith
one enclosed, w it hin walking
distance of school.
- are made In the USA .. . Arnold Palmer's the St .) before her pop hauled her back to Red
111 Court St.
I
alltime golf earner ($1,500,000) but he's stashed China .. . Dick Cavett's dream : "'ro discover the
I Need Listings for Form sand
t220 Washington Blvd.
Poineruy,. Ohio.
Homes. Also Handle Rentols.
Btlprt, Ohio .
away $5,000,000 off the conrse ... Namath &amp; FoWltain of Height."
?42-4211
Arnold Grate
Rutllnct,

Carriers For
MASON

NOPE .. NOT NO MORE

I

EARLY AMERICAN Stereo,
AM -FM radio, 4 $pe'd

Motor Co.

3-5-3tp

------

'~

For Sale

Pollieny ·

RIN G f ound ih Pomeroy . CNmer

)'

I HE~R TELL 'IO'RE
IN TH' DOGHOUSE,

...
'

'

...

3. .Assigns,

AC&amp;OSS
1. "City Of
Witches"
6. Type of

U.lncite
20. Card
game
21. Opposite
of max.
22. Third-

contract
C. ReKister·
lng
5, Chinese

cigar

'
DiCK TRACY

~WI~~;~:=" I...J=

11. Sports

VIP

setting

6. Crepitate
· T. Latvian
II. Pain
9. Regretted
10. Boston
Bruins
stalwart
lt. Victor
Borge, to
Mrs.
Borge?
18. Work unit

12. Happen
again
U. Social
aftair
15. Facillt.y
16. Scolded
n.vapor
19.NewYork
city
22. Bragan is
one style
26. Living
it up ·
28. Percussion in·
· strument
29. Counted
calories
30. Be fright·
ened
31. Get in
condition
3C.San-,
Italy
38. What the
Siamese
twins did
U.Spry
41. Playing
marble
42. Subsided
43. Hold back

class

accommo-

Ufll&lt;ftlllblelheoefeurJumbln,
..,. letter to. each oquue, to
for• four ordinary wordt.

I

IXTYS

Y•teNa,-'• AMWer

33. Qualified
dations
35. State
"
23. Peppery
(Fr.)
:U. Have
36. Distribute
creditors
37. Frank25. Terml·
furt's
nate
river
27. Lubricate
38. Kind of
30. Heaped
crow
31. Caesarean
39.Family
attire
member
32. Destroy

SULPH

()

'I YERFIN

[)

I

I tJ I

...

'THIS G0!5 AJI'.OUNP ,

Al~ EYE'RY CHU~H.

Ja 01 ~1eo• fiUIT PROXY HUNTII UNPAID
Yetlenl•y'e
"_ - L - ,
. Ani~Rrt HoMI rltfy al'l'fHd at tile lllltbrella ,.._.,. •n·

\

nunlohimfiK- THIY POUIID IN

_

DOWN
I. Meat
flavoring
2. Region

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's

how to work It:
' AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW
One tetter simply stands for another. In Ibis sample A is
used for the three L's, X far the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints.' Each day the code letters are dlflerent.
. CRYPTOQUOTES
SFYOKFA OH KXFK YFIK
NXOSX

OH . TMRVKMT

DCIKXMI

NMFAKx . -

KV

VU NM F AKX

FADIMT EFtHXFAA

Yestr 'oy's Crypll'quate: THE SHOULDER.~ OF A BOR·
llO'WEI RE ALWAYS A. LITTLE STRAIGHTER THAN
THOSE .. t' A B.EGGER.- MORRIS 1.. ERNST
lA"·~ J9i ~ J&lt; inJ,:"

'

VGKFOBOBL

lo' ralur1•:-: :-; ,\' IHi it·a ll•, iJw .i

1-1

L-----..l.---1

�'
.

•

J

.

.

• ne Daily Sentlnel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. March 7, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Actio·n ! Sentinel Classifieds Pet Results(j
WANt ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
Before
· Publ icat ion
Monday · Oeadlln• 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
'Viii be accepted untl l 9a .m. for,
Day of

Publ ication ~

Found
may

ha ve

by

Phone 992-7t75.

identify ing .

"P ubl is her

wi ll

The

ri ot

leave Me igs or Mason County
for lack of money . If in -

be

r esponsi ble for more t han on£
· ~t~ co rr ec t

teres led call 992-5113 .

Insertion .

RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one inser t ion
12

M ini mum Charge 7Sc
ce nts per word three

consecutive insert ion s.
.... 18

cents per

~ecutive insertions.

J?fayer, good tires, dark blue, like new top white, white

25 Per Cent Discount on paid

-

ABOUT _YOUR . WEIGHT ..

ads and ads paid within 10

overweight lad1es, tee ns and
m en interested in a Weight

da ys

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUI!RY

Wat chers ( R) Cla ss in
Pomeroy write : Weiqht

Sl.SO for 50 word mi nimum .
E ach additional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
•
Add itional 25c Charge pe r
Ad vert ise ment.

OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. lo 5:00p.m. Dally,
8:3 0 a. m. to 12 : 00 N oon

Wat che rs { R), 1863 Sect1on
Rd., Cin ci nna ti, Ohio 45237 .

t0-3-IIc

4

WHEEL drive jeep. Phone
after 5 p.m. 992-3062.
2-27-121c

Mary F. Diehl
3-7-ltp· OLD FURNITURE, Round Dak
- - - - -tables, · Brass beds, dishes,
A SPEC IAL prayer of thanks t'o clocks, and -or complete
our F a f h er w h ic h is in
households . Wr ite M. D.
Hea ven, to th ose many
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
friends and relat ives w ho
Call 992-627 1.
-12-17-tfo
have visi led , offered prayers
and ·sent many cards wi th
pr ayer s and cheers to help me
th r ough my many t rying
ti me s a t Holzer Medical
Center ; for my many dif ferent Doc tor s, nurses , aides
an d orderl ies wh o have
work ed hard to bring me
away from death's door many
times. For my Mother here at

t967 CHEVELLE MALIBU HT CPE.

Helo Wanted

WANTED!

system ,

1970 KAWASAKI, model G-31 ,
Centur ion , new conditian ,
never raced . Phone after 6 p .

$1395

m. 992-3401.

Med . grn. finish . Nice.

3-2-6lc

Pomeroy Motor Co.

MALE Norwegian Elkhound
pups, 10 weeks old - S25 ;
phone 992-2362.
3-5-3tp

OPEN EYES. 1:00 P.M.
f'l)MEROY, OHIO

............................•

-: - - -- -

-

SAVE -50.00

:•

CLEARANCE

•

TRAILER , Brown's Traile r
Court. Minersv ille, Ohio,
:-:-::-c.,--------,--phone 992-3324.
NEW, 12x60, iwo bedroom
mobile home across from - -- - - - - - - -3--3-tfc
Bradbury School. Call 992- FURI'liSHED. and ~nfurnlshed
5308 or see Charles Lewis, 2nd
apartments. Close to school.
house south lrom Bradbury
Phone 992-543&lt;1.
School. Pets welcome.
10-18-lfc
2-21 -tfc
- -- - - - -- 2 BEDROOM mobile home In For Sale
Racine area . Phone 992-6329. 4INSIDE Doors 12 - 2' 8" wide,
2-16-tfc
6' 8" _long - 2 panel and 2- 2'
-:--- - -----,
6" w1de, 6' 8" long - 2 panel);
ONE LARGE trailer space,
locks and hinges . Phone 992Velma G. Zuspan, 773-5750,
2587
.
Mason, W. Va .
3-7-18tp - - -- - - - -- 3-7-31c

•
:
:

!
:
•

---- --- - .

1961

FIAT,

•••

.•- ,.FLOOR SAMPLE

For Rent

TWO BEDROOM mobile home,
Call 992-5623.
H -3tc

APARTMENT, 3 rooms and
bath, furnished. North 2nd

sound

Balance $63 .99 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992 -7085.
3-t·6fc

327 engine, 4 sP"eed trans., clean interior &amp; good tires .

For Rent
Wanted To Buy

STEREO-Radio Combination,
lovely WALNUT finish, fo~r
speed Intermixed changer, 4

clean ., owner car .

151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy .

Card c• Thanks
I WIS H Ia than k a ll' who sen t me
birthda y card s. I appreci a ted
ever y one of them . And you all
ha ve m y lave and bes t wishes .

bvcket seats with console, nice and

SAVE up to one half . Bring your
sic k TV to Chuck:s TV shop,

Saturday.

3-1-6tc

------speaker

A NY ONE int er est ed in learning
cr a ft s and making fl ower s
co ntact Eulah Francis a t 992-

5664.
-------=c-,----3-·2_-6tp

7085 .

spotless Inte rior .

1967 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX
$1395
Convertible, V-8 auto .. P.S .. P. B., till steering wheel. tape

speaker sound

our budget terms. Call 992·

1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE.
12095
v.a engine, automati c trans ., p. steering, factory -a ir
conditioned, good w-w tires, radio, dark green finish with

3-7-llc

.

word si)( cdn - ·

~

,. system, Balanc'l $79.32 . Use

·I

Notice

REGULATIONS
KOSMETI CS &amp; Flame
The Publisher . reser.ves t he KOSCOT
of Hope Perfumes . Human &amp;
ri ght to edit or reject any ads
sy nthetic wigs. No need to

dee m ed object ional.

changer,

4 door, mileage

:

&amp;G R
ec.
as anges
2 White Electric
1 Coppertone Elec.
l White Gas
1

El

NOW 50 Off

•

•

•••
•
•

.•
:

......
co........ .:
,...............

~~ •

I'OMIRft •

•

:.. ·~·~~-~~ .. ~·~~···~·
..~·~··
0

Me m or i al Gaa r de ~t~s
reasonable., Phone 949-4962:
·
3-1-61c
- - -- - - -- SHOWALTER'S Wei Pel Shop,
Chesler, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
Tropical fish and supplies.
Stop in and compare.

EXPERT

' Wh~ . Alignment

$5.55

On Mo~l American Cars,

- GUARANTEED- · .
Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Open 8Ti15
Monday thru Salurday
606 E. Main, PomtrGy, 0.

TERMITES. •TERMITES,

...
Gel Rid of Them'
· We will proloct any single
dwelling residence tor

'149.50
WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect 614-452-3158

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main St.
Zanesville, Ohio

From the lar~st
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core .
• Natftan ~ns

Radio tor Spoci11ist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS, ·INC.
Ph. 992-2174
Free Estimate

ON
CENmAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

B&amp;W HEATING 00.
For Appointment
Phone 949·2803
... ..
ALLSIDE Bullaers 11. l.on-

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp;CONSTRUCTION
l 'PWMBING CO.

HARTFORD
The
Sentinel

.-----...\I

l

•

Wt&lt;EV

~

P. 0. Box 35, Langsville, Ohio.
3-1-6tp

···~

.

..'

... AND R'E6f611NG
ARRE6T.
NONE OF TI!E RECENT
AS'I'RO!IAU'I'S.COUU)
APPEAR AT OUR.

Mldditparl, 01111
Dbl Anthony Ptumllilltl
Wt hiYO I . . . . .,. HolM
Main:tenln« S.rvlct tht

SPACE •SYtllf'OStUM

year around. No m11ttt' your noed. Compltlt ...., or
·spaullng rtflllr. lnr.rlor or
exterior corpontrY. Coiling
lilt 1nd hnellnt and Sl&lt;llng.
Complete Plumbing A
HNiina.
·
·
Doy Number m-2550
We have 24 hr. tmorgoncy
service.
992-5103
742-3947
992-3898 742-4761
We are fully Insured

.- -

'

WE ~AC&gt; TO SETTLE FOR
AN ALMOST-FORGOTTEN "'--- I

SPACE PIONEER.

STiLL, tf
MUST ~AVE
COST A LOT
TO GET
HIM .f

U'LABNER .
HEUKEWISE
15tRRITATEO
ATTH'SIGHT

lht

Ulol6POKE.

Orchid Room..

ARMS-

guaranteed to customer
satisfaction. We are fully
i nsured for your protection. 32

Pomeroy area. A. W. Watson,

- .--... ...

·'
t~

2441 Lincoln St.

MODERN J or 4 bedroom home.
Phone 992-3062.
3-2-lfc

TWO Bedroom home In Albany.
Langsville . Middleport .

ONI.ESS WE SOI.VES rH'
'ROTTEN FIAI.Pt-liE• ~

NO DOGPATCH KID'I.L REACH
TH' AGE 0' NINE!! ,.-----'

.........
'•,

SEPTIC ranks clenid. Mille-.'
Sanllollon, Stewart, atto. Ph.
N. Second, ph: 992·3918.
662-3035.
'.
2-15-301c
2-12·11&lt;
SEE US-FOR :· Awnings, storm HousE· - eun.'DERs;
doors and windows, carports,
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
marquees , aluminum siding
OHIO.
and railing. A. Jacob, sales
3·5-301c
representative . For free
- R-- a- n""if"··=
' ."'"xt"'"erlor
estimates, phone Charles '"tN_T_E_R-10
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V.
painting . R. l. Oubbeld, phone
Johnson and Son, Inc.
742·5125.
3-2-lfc:- - - - - - J-6.51c

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

-----

Virgil B.

Teaford, Sr.

We talk to you
like a.

----

- - -- -

t:

WMP0/1390

·.

·- - - -

ON YOUR DIAL

r Voice along Br'Way

CLELAND
REALTY

..

$1495
Karr &amp;Van Zandt

WHITE

Contact
VERA EBLEN

Homes For

For Sale

Aluminum
Sheets

..

The
Daily ·Sentinel

12t - 14' • 24t - WiDE

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES

.RUTlAND ·FURNITURE·, .
o:

Ij

.!iUoTmR

FROM TK£
lltllDQUAR'InS
or THt

MO'I'OIIIAPORS,
IRQK,MJKF.
Jll!VIL HOLI)S

~a:!

LEGAL NOTICE

'68 CHEVY NOVA
4 DOOR

'

i

·c:,.n

- - - - - -

PH. 992-3629

1

,.

- - -- - -

Wanted To Rent

Ph. 614-992-2156

MEIGS INN .
ROOMS

OF THAR,TOO

'

Make reservations for your ;
private parties, bonquelf, 1
struction Co. We specialize in
occasions.
special
aluminum, vinyl antl steel ·
,
Ideal
far
meellng plac:, - '
siding; fiberglas, brick and,
·with
or
w~th'auf..J!.J.t.dhen •
stone; complete line of
privileges.
·
residential and commercial
Individual
Catering
roofing ;
remodeling,
building, suspended c~lllngs, Will seat up to 150 people.
interior and exterior painPhone
ting ; complete line of
Masonry work. All work 1 ,992-3975
992-5786

- -- - --

and

I GOT RUN OUT

I 1'\lN'T, ':&gt;N,Ut-t·Y

Business Services

45,000; in A-1 condition,
3-1-27tp
priced reasonably. Phone 985Ave ., Middlep or t, Phone 9954137 or contact Carl Findling , 1971 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine
5293
.
Real Estate For SaiP.
Alfred .
home and Aunt Madge Taylor
lefl in layawar . Beautiful
J.7.1fc
3-7-3tp
of Hun tin9ton Park, Calli.,
pastel color, lui size model. HOUSE, t642 Lincoln Heights:
- -----Call Danny Thompson. 992·
wh o never forget y ou in their
All
built-In lo buttonhole, do
FARM LAND. 6.5 acres for ONE New Idea one row plant
2196.
pr ayers and card s on all
stretch sewing and fancy
corn, other land for truck
seller on rubber; 90 gal. stitching. Pay just $48.75 cosh
7-18-llc
special occasions . A special
farming , would rent 100 acres
water tank : phone 247-2344, or terms available. Trade~ ins ~=---~
prayer of the bes t of heallh
on ly charge is proper fer Robert D. Ashley.
HOU.SE In Long Bottom ,' phone
and happiness throug hout lhe
accepted. P~one 992-5641.
tilizin!=! and reseed to qrass, 2
985-3529.
res 1 of our lives here on ear th ;
3-7-6tc
3-1-6tc
mi. North of Wilkesville on -----------to ou r almigh ty Fa ther in the
Dai~
Salem Rd . Call Hassel SPEEDQueen Portable Washer VACUUM Cleaner. new 1971 - - - - - ' - - -- 1-28-lfc
name of Chris t Jesus, our
Jus tic~, 766-3740 or write Box
&amp; Spin Dryer ; Zenilh Par- model. Complete with all
L ord and Savi or , Amen.
NICE 2-stary home with lull · O'DELL WHEE'l alighment' READY-MIX CONCRETE 'de:' . :
106, Kouls, Ind. 46347. 3-7-6ip
table Stereo; Riding lawn cleaning tool s. SmaU paint
Char les La rk in s, Chester ,
basement, 2 lois, new forced
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
livered right to your proltet. .
m ower ,· phone 992-7315 .
damage in shipping. -Witl take
Ohi o
air
furnace.
Near
Pomeroy.
.
Complete
front end sefvlce,
1
Fast and easy. Free.
2 BEDROOM, 12 double, fur 3-7-10ic 127 cash or · budget plan
Elementary. School. Phone ' tune up and brake service.
3-7-ltc FEMALE
esllmales. Phone 992-3214. ·. :
cook
and
nished on 4t h &amp; College in
- - - -- 992-7384 to see.
Wheels balanced elecavailable . Phone 992-5641.
Gaegleln Rea-y.Mix Co., : :
h ou separent, o ver 40 , for
Syracuse . Phone 992-2749 .
t970
HONDA
350,
excellent
3-1-6tc
11
-'
·'fc
WE WI SH to extend our sincere
troglcally .
All
work
Middleport,
Ohio.
•1 ·
Ch i ldren 's Home. Salary plus
3-7-6tc
condition, call 985-3828 after 6
thanks to relat ives , neighbors
Reasonable
guaranteed.
6-JO.tfc
r oom and board . Phone 304p.m.
'. . .
and lriends th rau~haul Me igs
rates. Phone 992-3213,
428-3721 before 5 p.m., ask for Wanted To Do
------.,.---,-,-,.....,-i'
3-7-6tc POODLE puppies, Sliver Toy,
and Athens Coun ties for their
7-27-lft AUTOMOBILE lnsurinc:e bteii
Mrs. Daby .
Park view Kennels, Phone 992~,
ki ndness and sympathy ex 3-7-lllc BABYSITTING in my home, FREE tickets are now available
Lost . your 1,
cancelled?
5~43 .
tended to us during the loss of
C.
BRADFORD,
Auctioneer
Mrs . Glenn Smith, Rock on a free gian t S20 Easter
operator's license? Cill...n-j ··
8-15-tfc
our dear wif e and mother ,
Complete Service
Springs
Rd.,
phone
992·6187.
2966 .
:
Idonia Johns ton. Maywood LADY TO live in with elderly
Basket large chacalale
Phone 949-3821
3-1-61c
6-15-lfc
,
Joh nston, Paul Brooks and
Easter
bunny
and
large
fruit
Racine. Ohio
Auto Sales
lady , light houseke eping.
Tw ila Powers .
and nul Easter egg. See lhem
Broker
Crill Bradford
phone 949-4904 or 667-3319.
AND l)()zeR _.t ..
loday and get your free 1965 BUICK Wildcat, 2 door
3-7-llp
110 Mechanic St.
5·1-tfc BAI.KHOE
3-5-3tc Employment Wanted
Septic
tanks
Installed. ~ i·
Hardtop,
1
local
owner,
extickets,
no
purchase
required
,
- - - -- --OR Y WALL Finisher con ·
Pomeroy, 0., 45769
- -- - -(Bill) Pullins. Phonetr.l-24';
cellent condition, good tires,
1 WISH to e xtend my sincere
traclor ., R. I. Dubbeld, Phone at lhe Bright Star Market
.
. . " .425:-tfcl
extra good finish . Phone 992Real Estate For Sale
next to the Drive-In Theatre ,
thank s to Dr . Harder a t
742-5825.
NEW
LISTING
--:. -~.c--.--,_,-_-_..,,, .;;
_;.._.~: .
2143
or
992-2142.
Mason, W. Va . where low
Hpj zer Mecl ical Center ; lo the
3 - 6~ 5t c
Sl
X
ROOM
house,
133
Butternut'
175
ACRE
STOCK
FARM2
'
SEP.TI.C TANkS CLEANID .~
3-7-Jtc
n (lrses , n'u f se'' s aides) and all
prices and convenien t service
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 21371 REASONABLfHoln
barns, 2 ponds, 2 springs, 3
For Rent
Ph. 4.16-. 'il
o ther persons i nvolved, for
are featured every day, check - -- - -- Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,•
dug
wells,
and
water
tap,
4782,
Gallipolis.
John
Runell, f
'69
CHEVELLE
SS
396,
4
speed
the excellen t care given m e
the following prices and stock
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
paid . 9 room renovated older
ONner
&amp; Operator.
•l
transmissi on, Hurst Shifter,
dur ing
my
rec ent
your larder . Favorite or
11-21 -llc
home. Plenty of good
,
• 5-12-tfe i t,
hosp italiza ti on. Also to my
Bonus brand while bread 7 AM-FM radio, vinyl roof,
excellent condition, phone
pasture. Free gas with own
THE
friends and re latives for the
loaves Sl with $10 additional
BUILDING lots In Branchwood Why buy ne~ furniture? HiiV.'' '
882-3152
.
well. Would you believe
gas
many cards and other kindpurchase . Broughton's 2 pet.
Subdivision at Rock Springs,
sweel milk gal. 99c, Bologna
3-7-3tp only $42,500.00. '
nesses shown me ahd to Rev .
T. P. water, phone 992-2789. thai old mede new by Sylvla'a
Upholstering Shop, MrJ.
Zavit z f o_r his vi si ts and
4BEDROOMS
3-1-l21c Woodrow
in piece lb. 59c, grade A small 1971 FIAT, 6,000 miles. 11 ,900 or
T. Zwilling, Prop:,
pr ayer .
eggs 3 doz. $1 , smoked slab
COUNTRY HOME - Hot
Syracuse,
Ohio.
bacon whole or half lb. 49c,
take over payments- $81.47.
Da vid H. Mills, Sy racu se.
water heat, 11!2 baths . 3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
per5C)ri.
2-10-301p
Van Camp 29 oz. can pork and
Phone 9'12-6911.
3-7 ~ He
Modern kitchen . Recreation
..,
Arbaugh
Addition,
Tuppers
beans 2 cans 59c, Hart's whole ___ _ __ _ _ _3_-7-6tp roam . 2 drilled wells.
~W
~
I S~H~I-o~
tha~
nk__m
__
y-many
All.
new
with
total
Plains.
sewiNG MACHINes~ Rf!MI,;. .::
kernel c orn 5 cans $1 ,
Foundat ion for 2nd house. 10
elec1ric and cen1ra~ air
service, all makes. 992~2214.
fri ends and relatives f or the
by
Broughton' s Ice Milk lt e '66 THUNDERBIRD, V-6, acres. NOW only $20,000.00 .
conditlonlng, balh and &gt;;, fully
Tl)e
Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. ;•
ca rd s, fl owe rs and t he
Day, We•k. Month
Cream , Gal . $1.19, white
automatic, power steering ,
carpeted, full basement;
NEW LISTING
Authorized
Singer Saltl and ,.
thoughtfu l deed s sh own me
potatoes 50 lb. bag $1.59 ,
Liberal Rates
power brakes, power win garage In basement. See by
7
ACRES
On
Route
7
near
Service.
We
Sharpen ScfiiOI"I. ;:
dur ing my r ecen t slay in
Complete assortment of fancy
dows, phone 992-5637 .
appointment, phone 992-2196
Eastern
School.
Ideal
for
Holzer Hos pita l. Your ki nd J.29.1fc ·:
Easter goodies including
3-5-6tp housing project or small
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson. ------.
ness wa s deeply apprecia ted .
Easter Baskets from $1 .49 to - - - - - - -- Financing available.
Kathlee n Scott
HARRISON' S TV and Anltnllil :•
$20. We accept Federal Food 1963 FORD with 12 ft. dump, farm . A bargain at
12-30-lfc
110,000.00.
3-7-ltc
Service. Phone 992-2522,
'·
Coupon . Stre tch your money ,
new paint, priced to sell,
MODERN
6-10-lfc :·
food coupons and time, see us
phone 9'12-3165.
RUTLAND
3
bedrooms,
for seed potatoes, onion sets
3·5·31c hal water healing . Nice
-·
and garden plants as needed.
:
Save in many ways at Bright 1970 FORD Camper Special,
kitchen with dishwasher,!
•
Star Markel, next to Drive-In
cock and bake units. Fully
automatic, power steering,
Theatre, Mason, W. Va.
•'
power brakes, phone 992-3954. carpeted. Carport and
LEGAL NOTICI
3-7-tt
. Office 992-2259
3-5-31c fenced yard. $20,000.00.
BY JACK O'BRIAN
The underslgn•d 'JJ Pl!frJnf
Residence 992-2561
Mantle are down to their current if~omes ... - -- - - - - MIDDLEPORT
for salt the houat and lot owntd
Pomeroy, Ohio
CANNON'S DY AN NOT
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, cute
The "Cabaret" film smash added more profits TROPICAL '1SH, fancy
by the lett C11re Gtrltnd In
BUSINESS
INVESTMENT
guppies, angels and breeders,
kitchen. large living and
This
Week's
Special
Welchtown, Minersville, OhiO.
· TO MEETCHA
to the already prosperous nearby showbiz
Large tile and brick
Beltas and supplies. Phone
Property apprailld et $6,500.00
dining. Garage. All on corner
NEW YORK (KFS) - Dyann Cannon's
building
, 2 story , 4 aparthengout, La Scala.
and cannot be sold for tn1 than
992-5443.
lot lor only $10,000.00.
ments, 13 furnished! 2 the appraised value. All In12-30-tlc '
desperate clim~ to recognition hes this postCatholic philosopher Jacques Maritaln, 89,
terested persons contact M.ry
business rooms, storage
WANT A GOOD PRICE FOR
script: now she dons Afro wig and smoked
Harris, Executrix, Mlntrtvllle,
will become a monk .. . If Alberto Roc hi is at the GREEN M'i&gt;.YTAG di shwasher ,
r oom , present business goes
YOUR PROPERTY, LIST
Ohio . Telephone 992-3327. Silo
with lhe building . $29,500.
cheaters to go to the neighborhood nickers:
1 year old, phone 247-2664 .
Chateau Madrid, can Ava Gardner be far
WITH US, AND START
subject to the approv11 of the
FAMILY
HOME
3-5-6tc
When you get whet you want, it serves you right
Probate Court, Meigs County,
LOOKING.
behind ? .. . Prison screws expect trouble at
4 bedrooms, bath, porches,
Ohio .
USED
CARS
-... Paula Pritchett will display just about
forced air heaL large barn
Lewisburg ... Chutzpah: Clifford Irving offered NEW PONTOON boats, 3 good
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
and
storage building . $8,900.
Mary Harris, Exe-cutrix
everything in Bob Mitchum's "Wrath of God"
used
boats
,
runabout
and
his quick-book about his whole finagle to Time
ASSOCIATE
SO
ACRES
ol the Estotool
cabin
cruiser
.
Boat
Repairs
,
except her voice; plays an Indian mute ...
Inc. for $600,000 - enough to pay off the missing
992-3325
992-2371
Clara
E. G•rtand,
RUTLAND
TOWNSHIP
Middleport Boat Shop, Pearl
Dtceased
"Applause" producer Joe Kipness next will try
llh story frame home, 7
cache of cash. He'd go to the pokey anyway if
Street, Dick Karr 992-5367.
Crow, Crow &amp; Porter,
rooms,
bath,
cellar,
large
a domestic tragedy .
3-5-31c
Attorneys
proven a fraud; but It could ameliorate the
barn, crib, implement bldg .,
Gold
with
matching
Int.,
6
JOHN
"Night Watch" at the Morosco is a mildly
sentence.
chicken house, milk house.
(3 ) 5, 6, 7, 31
12 FT. WIDE trailer with air
cyl. , auto .. radio and w-s-w
fa scinating lesser-Agathe Christie-like manyClose to the new mines.
It's so tough to get a N.Y. cab to drive a
conditi oning, washer &amp; dryer
tires.
$17,600.
clued drama , interesting a great deill of the way
- 13.700; see Harold Johnson,
JFK Airport arrival to nearby ~eens sad sackCHEAP HOME
Chester, Ohio.
but hardly riveting, as "Sleuth" is ; it's by
carrier&lt;' are thumbing rides ; the greedy hackies
11!2 story frame, 6 rooms, 3
NOTIC!
3-5-6tp
bedrooms, bath , utlllly
Lucille Fletcher, who fashioned "Sorry Wrong
The undersigned will offer for
all
want
the
$12.50
to
$1~ into-Manhettan run ... - - - - - - - REALTY
•
sale, by a·uction, at fht premlsn
room , some hardwood floors,
Number" so many radio-drama years ago ...
The new &lt;E. 86th St. Gimbel's is a smash, ar- GOOD mixed hay. Phone
of the United Mtthodltl Church
gas
farced
air
heat,
por1h,
Wilkesville 669-4777 .
Parsonage a.t Rtedsvllle, Ohio,
The ending is a trifle expedient but Joan
tistically and financially , and the management
$3,500 . lmmedla e
" You ' ll Like Our Quality
~iate
3-5-61c
the
porsonoge rool 11totol on
possession .
Hac kett's too-mannered playing also blunted
Way of Doing Business ."
isn't stinting on the peripherals: such as the - - - - - March 9, 1972, at l ;OO O'C ock
1 story frame, 2 bedrooms, _P.M. The property will bo sola
GMAC FINANCING
the final moments : author Fletcher provided Marian McPartland Trio playing in the 3 BEDROOM Vindale mobile
to the highest blddtr; rtltNint
cabinets
992-3020
In
kitchen,
992-5342
Pomeroy
home, Ph baths on choice
her specialty - a telephone sequence, which Wurlitzer showroom (Mon-Wed-Frl; 5 to 6 p.m.)
to. t)le Trusteeo tho rtaht to
Iorge
lot.
All
In
basement,
· Open Evenings 'Ti18:oo
192 N. 2nd
Middleport
rental lot. Herman Bolinger,
reject the hlghlll bid Jn · tho ,
Miss Hackett played more Bea Lillie-ish then
excellent
condition.
Just
.
Til!
P.M.
Sat.
... Jimmy McPartland is tootillg his el!llberant
992-5570 .
event It Is detmtd lnsuHtcltnt,
LOOKING for investmen~ $7,900.
menacingly; made tepid the terminal chill with
Dixieland horn at the.Queen's Tavern in Our.
Edw1rd lloko
3-5-6tp
property? Fantastic Is theo WE HAVE 35 PROPERDone
Hoflmon, Sr.
laughs instead of grim irony .. . Keene Curtis'
ban, S. Africa, for a month.
word for lhls spacious 12 .. TIES, ONE OF WHICH MAY
Bon Buckley
MObi~
Sale
expertly epicene neighbor-rol e was vividly
Chtrlll H11t1lty
room , 2-balh all brick home, SUIT YOU. COME .TO THE
Let's rate the TV raWlchies : the Dean
OR CALL.- WE
Harald Brannon
expository but then loose-ended, ultimately Martin Show rates an R-for-raunchy ... Count
FOR THE BEn deal In a new setup as duplex, or can be . OFFICE
WILL
BE
GLAD TO SHOW
Ttusttn,
used as offices. Located In
or
used
mobile
home,
fry
Reedsville Circuli of
useless, sloppily ignored by the plot ... "Night
THEM
TO
YOU
.
.
Basie's marvelous big band will test the
Middleport's
business
district
Kanauga Mobile Home SaLes,
Unlled Methodist Church·
Henry Cleland, Realtor
Watch" stayed away from Bdwy . in a post- stabilizers on the Queen Elizabeth 2's two-week
overlooking the Oh_io River .
36" X 23" X .009
Kanauga, Ohio.
(3) 3, s, 6, 1, 8, st
12-17-90tc 6 Roam -2 balh home,
ponement geared to polish its plot but the cruise. The stately old Queen Liz - Queen Mary
!shingle), cellar house,
glossiness of quality isn't there.
were repositories for all the antique British
60Xl 2, 2·bedroom , all -elec tric,
garage, plus ext ra lot s. One lot
Las Vegas tycoon Del Coleman is one of the
air conditioned, 8x 20 ft. Porch
musicians they co~ld prop up; no more .::_ the
has walkways, set up for
and
alum i num
awnirig,
"Night Watch" backers .. . After theater, the
trailer . Located in business
new QE2 has everything from rock to swing to
aluminum skirt i ng , com ~
dislricl.
across from lhe A&amp;P
"21" crowd dashed to the lounge's color sets to
Basie's virtuoso eruptions ... Guess who's
pletely setup. Beautitu I. Store In · Middleport. Floor
applaud Pres. Nixon's homecoming .. . Hottest writing a book about the Big Band era? A nun,
l x ation. Owner leaving state .
.furn. Asking ... $20,0011 for all.
U•ED
OFFSET
PLATES
Phone 94?-4892 or 992·5272. '
ticket in town - none to be hed - is the Boys Sister Marie 'ilierese of Chestnut ~ill College,
HAVE
;
1-10-tfc. Lo t wilh partial garage,
Clubs' "The Godfather" premiere Mar. 14 plus Pa.
MANY USES
(needs roof) 90 fl . frontage, .
far large troller ·or
suitable
big hesh at "21" ... Tennessee Williams gave up
Lamy Ross is coming out of retirement for
small business. In business
vodka and stuck to it on l"e Cavettcast - on a mid-March date at the Palm Beach
20~
district, across from the A&amp;P
which he only swilled amontillado wine ... Vegas Everglades Cl~b . That's where Leonard BernSture , Middleport, Ohio.
Asking ... $4,000.
odds are heavily on Muskie for the DerD's nod stein wasn 't we)come ... Empty stores are so
B for $1.00
Letart Falls - 10 room house
and Nixon to beat him comfortably. Opera star widespread in the near-Bdwy. area, landlords
with bath , basement, fenced .
Rise Stevens underwent major surgery at can't even find gypsies to fill 'em temporarily ...
in lawn , two buildings, fuel oil
Lenox Hill Hospital. '
heat , 5 lots, three of them
The perky translator who closed the coml oca ted on the river ·rronl,
Sonny &amp; Cher over at these eyes are a TV mWliCations gap between Chou and Nixon, Miss
selling due to ill heatlh, $25,000
guest-act, oot series stars .. . Virtually all the T'ang Wen-sheng , was just plain Nancy Tang
for all . Home has two por,ches,
golf dubs (more than 90 pet.) peddled in Japan when she romped in Greenwich Village (lith
one enclosed, w it hin walking
distance of school.
- are made In the USA .. . Arnold Palmer's the St .) before her pop hauled her back to Red
111 Court St.
I
alltime golf earner ($1,500,000) but he's stashed China .. . Dick Cavett's dream : "'ro discover the
I Need Listings for Form sand
t220 Washington Blvd.
Poineruy,. Ohio.
Homes. Also Handle Rentols.
Btlprt, Ohio .
away $5,000,000 off the conrse ... Namath &amp; FoWltain of Height."
?42-4211
Arnold Grate
Rutllnct,

Carriers For
MASON

NOPE .. NOT NO MORE

I

EARLY AMERICAN Stereo,
AM -FM radio, 4 $pe'd

Motor Co.

3-5-3tp

------

'~

For Sale

Pollieny ·

RIN G f ound ih Pomeroy . CNmer

)'

I HE~R TELL 'IO'RE
IN TH' DOGHOUSE,

...
'

'

...

3. .Assigns,

AC&amp;OSS
1. "City Of
Witches"
6. Type of

U.lncite
20. Card
game
21. Opposite
of max.
22. Third-

contract
C. ReKister·
lng
5, Chinese

cigar

'
DiCK TRACY

~WI~~;~:=" I...J=

11. Sports

VIP

setting

6. Crepitate
· T. Latvian
II. Pain
9. Regretted
10. Boston
Bruins
stalwart
lt. Victor
Borge, to
Mrs.
Borge?
18. Work unit

12. Happen
again
U. Social
aftair
15. Facillt.y
16. Scolded
n.vapor
19.NewYork
city
22. Bragan is
one style
26. Living
it up ·
28. Percussion in·
· strument
29. Counted
calories
30. Be fright·
ened
31. Get in
condition
3C.San-,
Italy
38. What the
Siamese
twins did
U.Spry
41. Playing
marble
42. Subsided
43. Hold back

class

accommo-

Ufll&lt;ftlllblelheoefeurJumbln,
..,. letter to. each oquue, to
for• four ordinary wordt.

I

IXTYS

Y•teNa,-'• AMWer

33. Qualified
dations
35. State
"
23. Peppery
(Fr.)
:U. Have
36. Distribute
creditors
37. Frank25. Terml·
furt's
nate
river
27. Lubricate
38. Kind of
30. Heaped
crow
31. Caesarean
39.Family
attire
member
32. Destroy

SULPH

()

'I YERFIN

[)

I

I tJ I

...

'THIS G0!5 AJI'.OUNP ,

Al~ EYE'RY CHU~H.

Ja 01 ~1eo• fiUIT PROXY HUNTII UNPAID
Yetlenl•y'e
"_ - L - ,
. Ani~Rrt HoMI rltfy al'l'fHd at tile lllltbrella ,.._.,. •n·

\

nunlohimfiK- THIY POUIID IN

_

DOWN
I. Meat
flavoring
2. Region

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - Here's

how to work It:
' AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW
One tetter simply stands for another. In Ibis sample A is
used for the three L's, X far the two O's, etc. Single letters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints.' Each day the code letters are dlflerent.
. CRYPTOQUOTES
SFYOKFA OH KXFK YFIK
NXOSX

OH . TMRVKMT

DCIKXMI

NMFAKx . -

KV

VU NM F AKX

FADIMT EFtHXFAA

Yestr 'oy's Crypll'quate: THE SHOULDER.~ OF A BOR·
llO'WEI RE ALWAYS A. LITTLE STRAIGHTER THAN
THOSE .. t' A B.EGGER.- MORRIS 1.. ERNST
lA"·~ J9i ~ J&lt; inJ,:"

'

VGKFOBOBL

lo' ralur1•:-: :-; ,\' IHi it·a ll•, iJw .i

1-1

L-----..l.---1

�10- The Daily Sentinel, Mlddlepor1-Ptcioeroy, 0., March 7, 19'12
~·

News ••• in Briefs ·

'
(Continued from page
1)
operations to local residents hired by state and federal agencies,
Moore said.

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND -A BOMB blew "a hole
tbe size of a bus" today in the floor of a Belfast department.store,
but an attempted mach\negun assassination of part-time
soldier failed when the Intended victim punched one of his
assailants in the nose.
Ari army spokesman said the intended victim, a member of
the Paramilitary Ulster Defense Regin1ent, then drove off his
two attackers with a shotgun . Four members of the defense
regiment have been killed this year, two of them in Ule past
week .

a

Kleindienst Recalled to ,Stand

RANDOLPH, Vt. (UPII - While lhe stale ol N""
Hainpsbl,.., ran off Its expensive, well1JIIblldzed
Presidential primary today, lbe town ol Ranclolpb populatloo 3,8112 - was holding Its owu $%3 presldeutlal
WASHINGTON (UP() - A
primary.
Senate committee asked AttorIn what was belleved 1o be the natiou'• only mii.Dieipal
ney General-ct..signale·Richard
Presidential primary, veters in Raadolph were giveu a
G. Kleindienst to testify again
single •not rontaiolug die nameool Preoldent Nixon, two
today in i ts investigation .of
other GOP contenders, 10 dem\)Crats and one splinter
charge~ the Jus:ice Pepart·
mentsettled an antitrust suit in
party candidate.
exchange for $400,000 to help
Reoideula say the primary is Ranclolpb's lint brush
underwrite the Republican Nawtlh natloual polltlcs since 191% when Theodore Roosevelt
tional Convention.
took his Ball Moose ticket to the town. The current elecBut the key witness in the
tion was the brnlnehlld of Rober1 SmUll wbo last year got ~
case, Lobbyist Dita Beard of
his fellow townsmen to agree to pay lor the contest - $%3
the International Telephone &amp;
for prinllng the ·• nota.
Telegraph Corp., remained in a
" Denver hospital, and her

CHICAGO - A SERIES OF NINE tremendous explosions
destroyed a five-acre suburban fireworks factory Monday,
demolishing 16 of 16 plant buildings and sending shock waves as
far as Gary, Ind ., 25 miles away . At least three· persons were
killed and 17 others injured in the blasts at the Melrose Display
Fireworks Co., in nearby Orland Park. None of the injured was
seriously hurt.
The blast knocked out windows in homes and schools. The
fireworks complex looked like a giant , smouldering )unkyard.
Authorities said the three dead had not been identified, but did
say the only empl oy~s not 'occounted for were Marty Olson, of
Orland Park, Richard Seraphin, of Calumet City and Robert
Seneca l of Palos Hills.
MANCHESTER, N. H. - AWARDED the title of leading
contender almost two years ago, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of
Maine today faced the voters for the first time since he became a
candidate for the Democratic Presidential nomination. He was
favo red over his only serious challenger, Sen. George S.
McGovern, in New Hampshire's inaugaral1972 primary.
Despite a lack of issues, an overpopulated field, the threat of ·
snow and a pervading apathy, the first-in-the-nation primary
was expected to provide a preliminary indication of Democratic
sentiment on a challenger for President Nixon . Between 60,000
and 70,000 voters were expected to vote in Ule Democratic
primary.

Mrs. Ray Roush Dies on Monday
MASON - Mrs. Ray (Ruth
E.) Roush,. 46, Mason, died
Monday at Holzer Medical
Center following a brief illness.
Mrs. Roush was born May 4,
1925 in Minersville, the
daughter of the late David and
Clara Genheimer Joseph. She
was also preceded in de aU1 by a
brother who was killed In the
Second World War in 1944.
Mrs. Roush is survived by
her husband, Ray, a daughter,
Mrs. Richard (Beverly )
Plymale, Plymouth, Ohio; one
son, Rod ney Ray, at home ; two
grandchildren; two brothers,
f'loyd
Joseph,
South
Charleston, and Willis (Bud ),
Racine, and seven sisters, Mrs.

Edith McGerreis, Mrs. Mabel
Hughes, Mrs. Mary Farley and
Mrs. Martha Swain, all of

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, March 7
Walt Disney 's
THE LADY AND
THE TRAMP
I Technicolor)
Di snev Fealurette :

Wet Back Hound
Disney Cartoon :
Tiger Trouble
Don ald's Vacation

Swim Dog, Swim
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

Monroe, Mich.; Mrs. Florence
Custer, Middleport; Mrs.
Phyllis Harris, Racine, and
Miss Esther Joseph, Minersville.
·
Funeral services wiU be held
Friday at I :30 p.m. at the
Foglesong Funeral Home with
the Rev. Parker Hinzman
officiating. Burial will be in
Gilmore Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
Thursday from 2to' 4 and 7 to 9
p.m.
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EXTENDED OUT~OOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Thursday through Saturday :
Cold Thursday with
moderating temperatures
Friday and Saturday.
Chan&lt;e of snow Friday and
rain or snow Saturday. Highs
In the 20s and low 30s Thurs·
day, rising to upper 30s and
40• by Saturday. Overnight
lows 5to 15 north and 10 to 20
soulh Thursday morning and
In the teens and low 20s
Friday and Saturday
mornings.

physician said Senate investigators would not be
allowed to question her ll Ulere
was a chance it would ·•cause
her more stress."
"We don't base our statements on what they think back
in Washington or what their
problems are," ·or. David
Garland said. "All we are
thinking about is what's best
for the patient. We cannot, in
good -faith or practice, expect
to subject her to interviews
during her stay."
The physician said Mrs.
Beard, 53, was suffering from a
heart condition. She haS. been
identified by columnist Jack
Anderson as Ule writer of a
memorandum June 25 which
linked out-of«&gt;art settlement
of an antitrust suit against !TI
with 'an offer · from an ITI
subsidiary of contributions up
to $400,000 to help the
Republicans stage their
national convention in San
Diego in August.
Mrs. Beard 'Disturbed'?
Mrs. Beard's private physi.clan, Dr. Yictor Liszka of
Arlington, Va., told the Senate
Judiciary Committee Monday
that Mrs. Beard told him she
was "j'ust mad and disturbed"
when she wrote .the memo.
"She definitely stated that
lhere was no connection between the convention going to
San Diego and the settlements," Liszka testified. "She
stated she didn't mean to imply
lbings she seemed to imply in
that memo."

ART STUDENTS at Syracuse Elementary· School will participate in_.an Art contest to be
held April 6 at Riverview Elementary School. Displaying work in pastels, water color and
charcoal are art students of Larry Wolfe. Front row, 1-r, Danny Riffle, Tim Nease· back row
- The Art contest is being
'
Brent Arnold, Mike Nor1on, Jean Ritchhar1, and Myra Woods.
spon·'
sored by the Meigs County Council of Parents and Teachers.

Teachers Freed in Election
COLUMBUS (UPI) - John
Hall, chief lobbyist for the Ohio
Education Association, said
Monday night OEA members
will be left to their own discretion whether to support legislators who voted against the in·
come t8l&lt; last year.
The announcement came as
a surprise since Ule OEA had
exerted considerable political
push toward passing the tax.
"The OEA members in each
House legislative district will
decide who to support, but I'm
sure they will endorse some on
Ule basis of their overall support for education even if they

voted against the income tax,"
Hall said.

Han.na veeps

WARNING GIVEN
COLUMBUS (UPI)- PerLOCAL TEMPS
sons needing an exterminator
The temperature in down- should make sure the one tbey
town Pomeroy at II a.m. hire is licensed by the state,
Tuesday was 56 degrees under Ohio Agriculture Director
partially sunny skies.
Gene Abercrombie warns.
The license means tbat Ule
exterminator is wellgrounded
in Ule use and application of
pesti~ides in houses or gardens. Also, he must have in·
surance and be bonded by Ule
state.
An unlicensed firm may not .
be covered by insurance and in
case the work Is faulty will not
refund the expense.
Abercrombie said license
checks may be made through
his department by Ule general
public.

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COMPANY CLOSES
CLEVELAND (UPI )National Can Corp. announced
Monday it was closing its plant
here June 15, eliminating 104
jobs.
· The company cited severely
declining profits caused by
sharp pricing competition, in
the domestic can industry as
reason for Ule closing.

HaD also said Ule OEA will
ask the legislature next year
"for as little as possible, al·
though the OEA convention
will decide what we put before

Con£er
WI.th
1(
Governor
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
John J. Gilligan met Monday
with two vice presidents of
Consolidation Coal Co., the
parent firm of Hanna Coal Co.,
to discuss the House passed
strip mine bill. The coal of.
!icials said they would like to
see three amendments considered.
MeeUng with Gilligan were
Thomas J. Whyte, Consolidation vice president and
general counsel and executive
vice president Ralph E. Bailey.
"Without the changes, Ule
coal industry cannot prosper in
Ohio," Whyte said after the two
hour meeting.
Tbe proposed amendments
were:
- Widening the bill's antihighwall provisions to allow
alternatives to returning the
land to a slope not greater than
the approximate original
contour of the land.
- Permitting more time for
reclamation. The House bill
requires grading to begin
ping and replanting to be
within
three within
months the
of stripcompleted
next
growing season.
-Broadening the range of
uses for land after mining.
State Natural Resources
director William Nye said his
department, which administers the strip mine law,
sympathizes with only Ule third
amendment but would study
the first two.

the legislature next January."
School appropriations were
boosted by Ule General Assembly last year $388 million to
$1.488 billion.
1faU declined to identify who
will receive OEA support, but
most of those who opposed the
taz in the House and Senate
were Republicans. He
predicted Democrats would
wrest control of the House from
Republicans this fall, but that
the GOP would retain at least a
twovote majority In the Senate.

Bessie Cottrell
Dies on Monday
Bessie Fugate Cottrell, died
· Monday morning at Grant
Hospital in Columbus. Mrs.
Co ttrell , a former Me_igs
County resident, lived in
Columbus the past six years.
She Is survived by her
husband, Adam B.; three sons,
Buddy Lee Fugate, Clarence
Adron Fugate and Charles
William Fugate, all of
Charleston; one daughter,
Ruby Cantley, Columbus; four
brothers, Everett Ransom ,
Racine; Charles and Eddie
Ra nsom, Mammo th , w. va.,
and Roy Ransom, Ward, w.
Va .; two sisters, Amy Ferrell,
Charleston, and Ursula Fraley
in Indiana ; 15 grandchildren,
four great-grandchildren, and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral se,rvices will be held
Thursday at 1 p.m. at Ewing
Chapel. Burial will be in Letart
Cemetery.Friendsmaycallat
the funeral home anytime.

Liszka said Mrs. Beard had
suffered from "irrational and
distorted" behavior for four
years. He said her condition
resulted from a heart blockage
that reduced the flow of blood
to the brain.
The Justice Department last
year filed suit to block ITI's
proposed merger with the
Hartford Life !nsur31)ce Co.
However, the department later
dropped its suit, allowing an
out-of-eourt settlement and the
largest merger in U.S. corporate history.
ITI Head Geneen
In Ule memorandum, Mrs.
Beard contended Ule $400,000
gift to Ule Republicans "has
gone a long way toward our
nego_ti~!ions on· Ule mergers
eventually coming out as (ITI
president Harold Geneen) Hal
wants them."
Liszka. said the anger Mrs.
Beard referred to apparently
stemmed from a confrontation
she had with former Attorney
General John N. Mitchell in
Louisville, Ky ., during the

Kentucky Derby celelration in CongreBS to 1'in a lavor~
last May. He ~id lbat at that 11Uiemellt for ITr; IIICI Mit.:
time Mrs. Beard approached chell warned Iier to go throug~
Mitchell at a party about ITI's him.
;
financial troubles resulting · Boll!
Mitchell
lilt/
!r!)lll ihe lintitrusl suit.
Klllndlenlt have den"" 1111:
knowledge ol the contributio~~;:
"I just had a dressing down Kleindienst told the committee:
bythe atiorney gen(!l'al sueh as last week he met with rrt:
I never received in my life," officials four tlmea last yeu:
Liszka quoted Mrs. Beard as . prior to the settlement.
'·
saying. h said the attorney
In otht!l' developments :
general told her she was going
- Anderson ssld In Boston. ~:
through "improper channels,"
Liszka said.
,
believed rrr planned to tll1w;
Mrs. Beard "to the wolves.~ ··
Anderson has contended in He said he had learned from
Ilia column that Mitchell, who "very good source" that :rri
is managfngl'i'eslilent Niion's would offer Mrs. Beard. 11
campaign for re~lection, substantial pension if shl\
dressed down Mrs. Beard would "just behave" aJ1(1 hoi~
because she had been lobbying her tongue "a little."

- i'M:h-lmllllb belter_Imown aa

1111 (q6h allll only In • 40'root lOIIfl pool' ot n dopee
.1iatlr 50 feet beknr. ground
'level at Devil'• Hole In Aah
tin llpw, Nev.

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...VOL XXIV

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PO.MEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

,

It was also asked if zo~ing Jaws would be considered. ;
Steenland said "yes."
1

Steenland also noted that doctors and dentists are needed. He
said miners like to bowl, In relerring to recreational activities,
Mr. Hargraves said Sl!lte Rep. Ralph Welker has Introduced;
a bill in Ule legislature seeking $112,290 to be used .to begili .'
training youtll and adults for mining operations at Meigs High
School.
Opening remarks were made by J. R. Reece, public affairs co-ordinator for Ule Ohio Power Company. F. A. Morrow,&lt;
manager of lhe local Ohio Power Company, was in charge of the ;
question and answer period.
;·
Fred Crow Introduced lbe conunittee who arranged thO:;
evening, Earl Ingles, Paul Cascl and WUile Cundiff. And erow'
added lbat since everyone muat have a Utile fun In life, persons
attending should join llie.Fnlg ClUb
iilillhdtile Frill! Jum~
during the Big Bend Regatta In June,
Jack Kerr, Pomeroy Chamber president, weloomed tile
guests on behalf of· the Chamber who sponsored the dinner
meeting.
·

ani!

MAKE ELBERFELOS IN POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER.
WEARING APPAREL FOR YOUR FAMiLY AND FURNISHINGS
FOR YOUR HOME

WEDNE~DAY,

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MARCH 8, 1972

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Co~ty

Board to Review Problem

·A problem several months new school year begins.
old- that of students Uliing In
School officials said payment
the Eastern Local School of tuition is required by Ohio

District attending classes In
Meigs Local School District
schools - again confronted the
Meigs County Board of
Education In regular session
TUesday night.
Last autwnn it was ·round
tllat 15 students, living In the
Eastern District actually,
through error, were attending
claws In the Meigs District.
The county board and lhe'
Meigs and Eastern I,oeal
Boards reviewed the matter at
lenglb, finally deciding that the
children of familles living in
the Eastern area but going to
Meigs Loc.al Schools could
continue to attend Meigs Local
Schools for the duration of their
school careers.
However, the agreement
_l()ecified that children of new
families
moving
Into
properties In question were to
attend Eastern Local Schools
In the future.
Last month, the Meigs Local
District board of education
decided to notUy parents of the
· students that they would have
to pay tuition if their children
wlshed to continue attending
classes in the Meigs District,
effective next faD when the

The county board also
adopted a resolution In support
of tax levies to be voted on in
all three local school districts
In the May 2 primaries. It ilJ
reported that all school
districts must approve levies In
order to qualify for state
foundation funds, the new
minimum requirement being
22 mills for schools. To meet
the requirement, voters of
Southern and Melgs Local
Districts will be faced wllh five
mill levies in new taxes In May,
while the Eastern District
voters will face a three mill
new tax.
Attending Tuesday night's
meeting were board members
George Perry, VirgU Atkins,
Harold Roush and Gordon
Collins, and County Supt.
Bowen.

School laws for the Meigs Local
District to qualify for receiving
state foundation funds for the
Eastern students which it has
accepted.
Tuesday night, a delegation
of parents from !he familles
Involved attended the Meigs
County Board ol Education
meeting. Earlier they had
presented a request that the
territory in question be trans·
ferred to the Meigs Local
Sehoo.l District. Last night, In
view of the tuition payment
which bas arisen, the parents
renewed that request wiUt lhe
county board.
The county board heard the
parents but took no action.
The problem will be studied
by the county board which
would be responsible for transferring lbe territory.ln question
to the Meigs Local District, if It
Is transferred.
During the meeting, the
board authorized County SUpt.
Robert Bowen to attend a
vocational education workshop
NOTED - ,Allbaugh ollk:lll grGUJldbrellllng certm!lllies for the ,Jones Boys
The Allied Appraisal Co. of
In Zanesville on April 19-21.
,
ClncinnaU
bas been awarded a
dlleouirt and 111permarket on POmeroy's West Main St. Were oot held until TUesday mornil)g,
Bus driver certUicates were
consldt!l'able progress has been made at tbe aile of the n,. building which will contalri 18,000
Issued to Buster Barrett, Paul contract to reappraise all real
IIQU81'e ,eet of floor space. In this .area li tldck stone wall IS being constructed. It wUI serve as
Steinmetz and Herbert estate in Meigs County, County
·Auditor Gordon Caldwell said
Whaley.
tlii re1r of the store and as a retaining w811 for Cole St
·
today.
Seven firms submitted bids
on the reappraisal, with Allied
being the lowest on Its bid of
•
f89,250. Other firrnB and lheir
bids included, Automated
Valuation Services, ~bens·
burg; i&gt;a.;tr62;olio; tl!e' 3. ·w.
A.bld received {rOll) Mrs. J. Pomeroy's Main St. It wu recall~ that a lilrVey of the question Is marked with signs, attend a Mayors Assn. dinner
Cleminshaw
Co., Cleveland,
meeting this evening In
0 . ~el for two town:OWOed .pOinted out that vacant stores area is being made ·by and has painted curbing.
Colwnbus ,and Sou~ Ohio
Mayor William Baronlck Marietta and Mayor Baronick $110,000; General Appraisal
lots located adjaeent to the are available for such use.
bOolanobile known aa the "D. ·Guido Glrolami, Pomeroy, Electric Co., which will belp said he believed council will will attend~ meeting Tjluraday Co., Springfield, $78,000;
V. ·.Horton Dlvislon," was · suggeeted·tblit ~rhapa counCil determine the . ~t of n,. cooperate wllb residents In the in Ripley, W. Va., In regard to Nationwide Appraisal Ser·
vices, Cleveland, $72,800; Cole,
neighborhood. He and Jim re-routing of U. S. 33.
rejected by Pomeroy Council could provide an area In lbe lighting.
Lay, Trwnble Co., Dayton,
Meeting also with council Mees will check lhe area to
Tuesday night.
town for the sale of produce
CoUncil also diacWJSed ac- $72,500, and United Appraisal
Council earlier had ad· rather then having the dealers was Dick Newell of Polntview work out a solution. The mayor cepting bids on the pollee
vertised for bids on the go ellewhere. It was also Cable TV In regard_to com· also noted that the streets thete cruiser which it received Co., f/2,500.
The Cincinnati firm wlll
property. The only bid sub- suggested that permits be plallits that cable TV on Condor. are scheduled for sweeping and earlier and bad not awarded. It
begin
the reappraisal wllbln 80
milled was by Mrs. Roedel, Issued for the sale of produce. St. and Mulberry Heights has washing down, and lbat cars was agreed .tllat the safety
will have to move out of the committee will review the bids days and must have the project
offering $1,011 and the cost of
Councilwoman Elma Russell been left incomplete.
Newell said lbe complaints area when that work Is done. and make recomrilendations to completed by June I, 1974. The
advertising.
pointed out there is an orlast reappraisal In Meigs
Mayor Baronlck read a letter council.
, Coljncllman Wllllam dlnance prohibiting Placing have been taken care of, and
Snouffer felt that since council baskets or boxes on village added that of lbe 683 signers for from Syracuse Mayor Herman
Council also ~ a County was placed on lbe tax
cable TV, 500 had been In· London asking the mayor, suggestion made by the mayor duplicate In 1968, baving been
had owned the property sidewalks.
several years It might be better
Anderson pointed out lbat stalled. Areas to be completed Collins, E. F. Robinson, and In regard to the purchase of started In 1966.
to retain the lots In the event merchants have ·to use the are Mulberry Heights, Uncoln Charles Legar, members of the bulk gas tanks which could be
they prov.e more valuable sidewalks for freight. He Heights and upper Pomeroy. board of public affairs; Fred . placed at the Pomeroy pum(than $1,011) to lhe town later suggested that t!te ordinan&lt;e Those who bave not signed for Craw, village solicitor,.and lhe ping station. No action was .
on. Snouffer was not on council · be reviewed, and Counclbnan cable artd wish to do so may engineer for the propoeed new taken.
when it was agreed tO ask bids. Don Collins suggested lbat lhe call the cable TV office, Newell water system of Pomeroy
Calvin Lane, street supt.,
said.
Village
to
meet
with
Syracuse
Meeting wilb council were matter be relerred to the
reported gravel and cinders
Melvin Hood asked councll CouncU' Friday night at 1 p.m. have been placed on Barber St.
Bili 'Anderson, representing safety committee,
Henry Werry, Pomeroy Fire as requested.
Elberfelds Department Store,
McCullough also brought up about a parking situation In
and
Ken
McCullough, the subject ol additional Monkey Run. Cars in the area Chief, asked if something can
Attending were the mayor,
representing Swisher and lighting on tile parking lots are parked on each side of the be d!lfle to clean up the area at Ralph Werry, Snouffer,
·the . intersection of Nye Ave. Ruasell, ~ees and Collins,
Lohse Drugs Store.
which bali been suggested at a s~t, Hood said.
Council pointed out that It and East Main St. as the fire council members; Jane
previous meeting. Collins said
· McCullough asked council to the idea had merit If council has no right to tell people how plug there is covered by we&lt;da. Walton, clerk, and Phyllis
Home owners in Meigs
actopt an ordinance to prohibit had the money to fund lbe to park their cars. The area In · The mayor and Mees will Hennessy, treasurer.
County are Invited to learn the
the . p,le of produce from the project.
latesl Information on how to
parking • spaces
along
Councilman Jim Mees
ma!ntaip a good lawn Thurs· day eV.nlng, March t, at 7:30
p.m. ln the parlor of the United
Methodist Church, Second
Street in Pomeroy.
RUTLAND - Rutlant Mayor asaist In pickin~ up loose dogs. Meeting with Rutland
Also 1o be explained will be ·
By Utllted Pre•• blleruatloaal
Eugene Thompson said today
Owners ol dogs running council Tuesday night were thestepaineslabllshlnga_good
CAC'HE8 o1 dynamite have been dogs running loose In Rlllland loose '!rilbout a license wUI be members of the Rutland lawn. Instructors will be John
COLUMBUS _ ......
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t be lopped immedla'•l
·......
nail f
ca.covereclalongani-170segmentunderconstructionherelnthe mus
s
... y. · aase...... a pe Y or no1 Friendly Garden Club and the Underwood, Area Extension
- Iasttwodays,FOIIrteenone-poundsUckaofdynamitewerefound
Thompaonnotedthallherels purchasing allcense and also RutlandGardenClublnregard Agent, Agronomy; and C. E.
In a dll!:h Tuesday a short distance from the Intersection where a village ordinance that covers be forced to buy a license, to cleadup week. Mayor Blakeslee, County Extension
50 roun&lt;Ls of frozen explollves were discovered Monday.
a 12-montha period prohibiting Thompeon said.
Thompaon said free trash Agent,ddiAgrlculture.
Fire Capt. Roliert Grashel said Investigators have "ab- dogs to run loose.in the village. · "The situation II&amp;' become a pickups during Cleanup Week
In a 'lion to malntetlan~
. P 11
'd
He warned that owners of nul~nce," .Thomp1on In· will be Ma• 2 and 3.
and establillunent, Underwood
aoluteiy no cluei" as to who planted the dynamite. o ce 8111
dogs running lOose clefinltely,
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tbJd. have tealon to believe the cjynamite wiB hidden by thieves
dlcated.
Members of theihgarden clubs wlllhow gltove delimlnatall~~lrectibgrons on
"1
,
,
.
• _,,
the
· will be f~. He said he has
ct.EANl1P SET
also dlacusaed wi council the
e
"' era ass,
tdlll stole a car Sunday and b•ew It up. "We oeueve car was asked the county dog warden · Meanwhile, Cleanup Week bi nuisance being caueed by dogs · control dandellons, and other
!l!bien,by people who wanted to practice .using dynamite," an and the Rutland marshal t6 Rutland has been set for May. running loose. Mayor Thomp- weeds In the lawn. The event Is
tittelll8ence squad officer said; "There doesn't seem to be any
In
ted
·
son told them action open to everyone teres
other reuon for the lbelt."
·
will be taken lmme· an d is sponsoreel by the Me1gs
dlately to correct the County Garden Club.'l and the
BELFAST, NOR'111ERN IltELAND - BRITISH troops
situation.
Cooperative Extenolon Serckl"ed· with
In Be,Hast
_ an~
Londonderry
during
the
ni8'h
_
.t
.
.
.
the
.,
In other business
street v1ce.
and ~everlli bomb expiOsiO!II !111 the i»nunerclal section of
·
committee was asked to
Loftdoilcierry loday. No ~Illes were .,ported li) the bombing. The Blinual blrthday.par1y of that would f~dlltate tile ser- correct' the water running on .
.
A Brltllb arniy spokesman' said 0111! solcler In l.A)ndonderry Drew Webster Post 39, vice to lair pel'~, one ~ Norlh Ma.in ~1. fr1!iJI ~~lly
received a hal"'~. buU~ . . . . . trOops said lbey believed Am~rican ~lion, ~· set for ad~ addltloRalllihta II\ the, clogged sewers i1ld t!pvewaya.
1\ley ~ot two llfipen. Aiwther, in!Pit fired 10 shots at \n!OPII Saturday, 'Mateb te, at 7 p.m. park~ area. Legion members The situation will be corrected .
patro~ Uie city wall in Londonderry bit the troopa held their at the post home'Wheri lbe post voll'd to Ulllllle the duties of w!lbln tb!l ned two weeks,
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ore.
·
rriet Tuesday night.
parkingc&amp;rllatthlayear'sfair. Thomspon said.
Ohio C9uncll of Churches
. The amual event Is for
Council will meet In special Issue&lt;) its ratings of legislators
WA8111NGTON - A GOVERNMENT • sponsored public members and their families .In other business, It wu session Friday at 7 p.m. to ~esday , and while admitting
not every person .m every
· opjnlon poll today showl!fl that six.out of 10. American adults . and auxiliary members. All voted to pay life membershipe adopt a building ordinance.
Attending were Thompaon, pew" will agree wilb them,
favor abortions ,for reasons other than saving a mother's ~e. are urged to attend. Following for all World War I veterans
the
dinner,
a
dance
will
be
held
.who
had
paid
and
were
In
good
councU
members Bill Brown, most Democrats were at the
w~ hlllf woqld remove aU legal restrictions on lbe operaUoJB.
. The lllii'VI!Y, whicb will be Included in a report delivered with organ music to be standing !hill year. The only Harvey Erlewlne, Jerry Eads, top and most Republicans were
&amp;mday to Praldent Nixon and Congress b)" the u. S. Com·' provided by Armand Turley. ' requirement Is that ·these James Fry, Robert Snowden at the bo'.:Om.
Charles Swatzel repor1ed on veterans muat 111bmll either a and Emest Nicholson, and
Based for the most part on
mluion on PGpU)ation Growth and the American Future, also
·
how they voted on the Income
.. lhowed 17 pet. of Americans believe the government should a meeting w!lh the Meigs birth certificate or service Vemon Weber, clerk.
County
Fair
B011rd
In
regard
lcl
discharge
In
order
to
compute
,.
tax,
budget a~d welfare
· :- make birth eonllollnformatlon Ulliversally avall!lble. The Jepor\
said par10111 favoring liberalized abortion tended to be younger, parking of cars at the aMual the number of years. It was VeleraliiMemorlaiHOipltal ·le gl~ l~ti o n last year, the
Meigs County Fair which estimated that16members will
DISCHARGED - Sylvia co~ nc 1l top-rated Senate
better educated and earning higher Incomes.
Legion members have done qualify for life. membership. Wolfe, GQldie Carson, Leonard De m o c r a t s ·' e r r Y
several
years.· Swatzel made
Re!reshmen:s w~re served Lu.·sford, Annette Gallo, Carl O'Shaughnessy of Columbus,
NEW ORLEANS - SIUPPERS AND longshoremen in the
recommendations lu :l ~ u\Hli ~ by lloy ll ~ utrr .
Still, J~.
Robert Secrest or Cambridge,
(Continued on page 18) .

' · · PRoGREss

7 Bid on
Tax Job

Lawn Care

Know-How to

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Special in the Furniture Department on the 3rd floor.
Just arrived a fine selection of beautifully framed pictures. Many sizes
and_shapes and frame styles with or without glass. Carefully selected
subjects.

ELBERFELD$ • POMEROY

·~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;:::::::::~::::::::::::

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-21 56

of Students Paying Tuition at Meigs .

(ConUnued from page!)
Joe P. Gills, executive vice president of the Ohio Power
Company, summarized others' remarks. He said the firSt
electric company in Meigs County was the Pomeroy-Middleport
Electric Company which began in A1Jgust of 1689.
Ohio Power Company was introduced In Meigs County In
1925, and since has been a rapidly expanding company Gills said.
QUESTION-ANSWER
During the question and answer period it was asked if outside.
developers were interested in housing development in Meigs
County.
Steenland, who answered most of the questions, said, "Yes,
there were."
Steenland noted that the future and success of Meigs County
in regard to housing should not be tied to fly by night developers.
Ohio Power is going to be here a long time, and we want to.
live in comfort over the next 30years, Steenland observed.
The best product with the best price is what should be sfudled
here, Steenland said. He also pointed out' that the Ohio Power
Company was not in tbe housing business.
Questions on churches and highways were also asked.
It was pointed out by Porter Ulat SR 124 would be upgraded
from the Rt. 7bypass to Salem Center. It is hoped that a 20 to 24 ·
ft. two~ane highway will be built bypassing RuUand and Langsville . Work on Ule highway may begin Ulls summer. It is a high
priority item, P.prter said.
Aquestion was asked if any otber Chamber of Commerce in
the five-eounty area has asked for a slmilar meeting. Steenland
·

and
colder today and tantsht w!lb a
chance of III10W nurrtea today,
and northeut tonight. tllgha ·
today in the upper 201 and 301. · ·
Lows tonight ~ to 1$. M01Uy ' ·
sunny and cold Thunday wllb
highs in the 30s.
'

Devolftl To The .l nura" Of The Meiga.MtUon Area

Mine: Big Operation

replied, "no."

Weather
.
Variable cloudlneu

at

c,prtndodaD dillballl,lll '

a

LODGE TO MEET
A regular meetiqg of Shade
River Masonic Lodge will be
held at 7:30p.m. Thursday at
the hall in Chester. The
Fellowcraft degree will be
conferred. All master masons
are invited, Denver Well ,
worshipful master, said.

Be Explained

...

ews•• zn

·

·

snipers
_

L~ose

Dogs in Trouble

.Rart. y D
. lJte se,.·

SACRED Ln.. Y - H you can't renJeiilber to water yow
houseplants, or never have lbe right containers, then the .
sacred JUy of India Is for you, Above, Mrs. Norman (Edna)
Schaefer, Laurel Cliff, shows one of the rare plants which for ·
the first time this winter grew to six feet, eight inches.
Primarily brown wilb accents of yellow and pale ormge In
the lily throst, the plant grows from a bulb which rests on a
dinner plate. It requires no water. During Its peak gro~
period, the lily grew two feet in 24 hours. The lily and siOf;t
will n0J17 brealr olf and the bulb will be planted lhLs spring
outdoors. It will resemble a palm tree this IIUIIIIIIel'. In tbe .
fall the palm tree b~ks await and !be~~ lJ taken _lnd6ort
to start 111 cycle again, ·generally in late "December,
Nwnerous perso!B, particularly garden club JRein!!en, have
vlsited the Schaefer home to see the unuaual plant. Mrs.
Schaefer received the bulb two yeBI'll ago from a relaUve in
NeW Marshfield. It waa the size ol an egg at that time. It now
has a cireumlerence ol25.,. Inches and is five inches high.

· 2 Accidents

Coaches Wdl

Tangle Tuesday
A baatetbaU game between lhe cOIIC:beo of the
~outberu Valley Athletic
Conference and SEOAL
wUI be held Tuesday, March
, 14, at8p.m. at Southern 111gb
School.
The event 11 belne I(IORsored by the Soalltern
Atbletlc Boosten. Proceedl
are to be uaed lor new
bleacben for tbe lootbaU
·field. Tbe boollers plaa to
make tbe game an BDDual
event. Adm1ulon wUI be $1
lor adulll and 50 cents for
atndeuts.
Prior to tbe ap.m. game,
at 1:30 a game between
Racine and Syracuse sixth
grades wUI be played.

IIISI!U Ill@: :::::=I.WI"""'*':Ht.
SERVICE TONIGHT
Pomeroy's weekly community Lenten service will be
held at 8 tonight at st. Paul
Lutheran Church. A Lenten
drama, "From Here to There"
will be presented and the Rev.
Aithur Lund, 'host paotor, wlll
use "He Pointed the Way" as
the sub_ject of hts sermonette.
CALLED TO FIRE
Pomeroy Firemen were
called to u.s. Route 33 near the
Richard Young home at 2 p.m.
Tuesday to extinguish a brush
fire.
.

Reported
The Meigs County Sheriff'•
Dept. Investigated two ac· ·
cldents Tuesday,
At 3: 15 p.m. ·a truck
belonging to the Ohio Fuel Gas
Company, driven by Richard ·,
Garland Gardner, 38, Albena,
was backed across lownlhlp
road 140 In Lebanon Towrilhlp,
five tenths of a mile north of
county road 35 at Old Town
Flats, making a repair 011 1
regulator. Part of the hJabway
was blocked with a flagman at
the soutll end of the road.
A car driven by David
Michael Pierce, 2i, Portlaild,
Rt. 1, came down the !'Old,
apparently hlld no brakes, lilt
the fender of the truck, went ·
north to hit a fence j,ost and a·
. mallbox, then rolled 500 feet
more before cbming to a .top.
There were no lnjurlee or '
arrests. There was llghl
damage to the truck and .
mediwn to the car.
At 11:22 p.m. on the SR 7 .
bypass, James C. Birchfield, .
. 17, Rutland, wu l{avelbig
norlh, .and d\lll to the;wet high.
way, the car· •••u ..... off. the.
~
highway to the left, turned .
over, and stopped on Ita
wheels.
Birchfield susta ihed .
lacerations to both legs and left
hand but was not Immediately ·
treated. The car wu :.
demolished. No citation was
Issued.
,
:
·
t

Pew Holders Admittedly Won 't ~
A~
!If~

GRANGE TO MEET
LETART FALLS - Ohio
Valley Grange 2612, will meet
Thursday at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy Donohew at 7:30
p.m. Potluck refreshments will
be served.

BEGIN SENTENCES
Taken to Mansfield Refor·
matory today by Ule Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept. to begin
serving indeterminate terms
were Gary Dale Black,-18, and
David Lee Triplett, 17, both of
Portland, Rt. I The two, in
Veterans Memorial Hospital juvenile court SaturdAy, we.re
DISCHARGED - Veatrice sentenced by Judge John C.
Nice , Lena Ebersbach, Bacor, for theft&gt; in the Portland
Florence Stern .
area .

'.

r,

•

.Now.
You Kno~.
1'111

I.

I

1'

M. Morris Jackson and An·
thony Calabrese of Cleveland
and Republican Paul Malia of
Fairview Park ; and In lbe
House, Donald Peace , D·
Oberlin.
At the bottOm in the Senate
were Harry Armstrong R·
Logan, wllb a score ofelght out
of a possible 49 points and
Donald Lukens, R-Middletown,
with 15 points. ·
Rep. John Bechtold, R·
Cincinnati, had the lowest
rating In the House.
"We're trying to keep this
from being a political club

· 1 ;•
although I think it 11 going to i.e_;
uaedlbatwayln(liln)ip~ctl~·l •:
said Robert Graeb, iegllllllivt •.
agent for the council.
~ ·•
"I feel rather confident that .•
inthel972ratlngstherewlllnoi
be
the gap between
Republicans and Democrat&amp;
allbough htllllhllik ~ will
be a strong cant toward u'beril
issues since that's the dlrec:tioa
most church leaden are going,,
"Not every person in every
. pew will agree wllh Ibis report
but 11 does reflect the view af
the h~aders of the church •
bodi•.s," Graetz ~ld.

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