<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16519" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16519?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-22T22:12:55+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49656">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/80f2f149772f66ecf7579b733afda893.pdf</src>
      <authentication>d0ee13bd0d7956ed8782c7be2ad962d7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="52800">
                  <text>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.
-~

.

. ·:

.. .

. '

. : .:-

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.

• •I
1
1
1
I
1

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.

.,

'

~0. 2Jl

...VOL XXIV

..

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,

.

MARCH 8, 1972

•

• •

s·
-.
''

·.

.

'

'

'

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 _ ......
·
•"0
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,
'
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

'

.

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.

�(Revenue

PINANCIAL RIPOIT
. Of' TMI IOARD
· Of' IDUCATION .

ller 111101 YH'r ll!flll
Dta•'-11st, " "

_.,... Local'-! Dtatrlct
Mt111 C..1tr
Mltllll.,.rt, Olllit

cttllly
tho
10 I bo
cotrtet.

following report

• Clerk, Tl.r'ewoa'uMrocrCoofmt~o'
"
CAS
l _oar.d Of Educltlon.
RICONCII.IATION
TotI I FNund
1111nceal Dec.
31, 1t71
1303.609.79
OtpotiiOry
lllonc11
:
P::ermer's tank
It Slvtnna
COm!Nn~:
.1, .
- 307 21
Pomeroy, 11. 8enk 110,217.27
Cllil- Nol. Bonk
72,971.10
~~~~!~Not. link
1,103.61
o1• 1 ePOtltory
1 "'Cit
231,,0H3

II

170,291 .6.4
Tot•t Beg.lnn tng Btlance

1111c Adulllducotioo

Bllanct, J•n . 1,1911
• -e ctipts

Plua Rtctlpta
242,6.,.4, Stale ot Ohio Exptndlluros
Oth 0r
Bonds Moturlng ·
105,000.00 Tolal Roco lpll

tnternt on Bonds
62,69 ~.50
Other - 8ond Rtlirtmft\t •

Fund

514.61

3,027.00
. 3.027.00

· Receiptt-Trlnsfen
From General Fund
3.072. 81

5.01l.07 Tolal Tra nsfers

3.072.81

Totel Expend itures - Bonc;t
Total Beginning Bllenct
Rttlrement Fund
172,705.57
Plus Receipts
6,68o&amp;.4t
a 11 ., Dec . 31, 19,•t
69 ,943.92
Exptndlturo·s
Tot•t Expend l turts Plus
Personal S&amp;rvlces 522.00
Bit .• Dec.l1 ,1971 242,649.49
Secr!'tary
Lvncllroom 'und
Personet Service -

Plane at

.Alexander ·Dumped: Eagles Get Portsmouth East

Vegas is
· Directions to the Gym

Damaged

Bal1nce. Jan . 1,1971 31,130.95
Teechers
1,151.50
Rocelplo--lncomo
Office Supplies
.
16.00
Sale of Lun(hes
83,560.70 Other Educational ·
Fedora! SublldV Supplies
871.35
Lunehes
106,842.65 e1,onus
. - Empl oyeei .
NEW YORK (UPI)-An ~
FOdera I SubSidy rl!ftUionol mutlnas 61.3.1 ploaim beavllf damlsed a ·
- Milk
5,562.•• TNchtrs Ret.
Other _ Reve-nue
31.02
Contributions
~18.65 parted Traal World AlrliDII
Totol Receipts _
Employoes Ret.
Income
195,996.81
Contributions
65.66 jetllner -Jy today at Lll
Rectlpts-Trlnsftra
Total Expendlturea
3•• 13.S.. VegaaleiiiGIIJI ilbourufteu
General Fund
500.00 Bal .. Doc. 31, 1971
. 3.07o.t5
Ji'le' plutle bomb aboard ·1 ·
~~~TM~r'~1 ~f
Total Receipts Total Expendltur.s Plu•
(Income and
Bal ., Doc. 31, 1971
6,61H9 TWA 'jet t.d been lfllffed ~~
Dopaall
100.000.00
Tronstorsl
194.494.11
Adult Educollon 100,000.00 Total Boglnnlng Balance
Hlth SchHI
by a lralDed dog at ICennedJ
Totalln•lltmonll
~~:~t 1 n d 1n 0 W 1 ~3~~~·:1.
Plus Receipts
227,627.76 Balann, Jeri, 1, 1971 · 1,553.00 lllternaliorial Airport In New .
ft
. -- ornbtr • 1
&amp;apencllturts
E•tt•ncllturu
' York.
....,
•'
rsonol serv lc • - Maneger Teachers Ret.
·. 197• (o.ductJ
3~, if9 6 . 64 P~
No one was Injured in tbe
. Slllrles lnd Wegn 750.00 ToCiaonl Etrxlbpuetnidonllsuros
3399~.· ~1
Totll - Clerk-TriiiUrtr'S
Penon•l Serv let - Cooks .. , ~
1 t1tnco, ·Dtetmbtr · 31,
Solorlesand Wogos ._. m 01 Bal .. Dec. 31, 1971
1,151.2&amp; blast aboard the plene at
1
"lu¥MAIIY DF cf/it~: 1.! ...Supplies ond F~
126:oso:90 Tolal Expondltures Plus
McCarran Airport In Lea
•L•N s
Equipment
15,152.67
Bal ., Dec . 31 . 1971
1,5.53.00
•
Vegas. The exploalm aiJooit
· ~ ~ _CI • RICiti'TS
Repairs to Equlpmonl 1.450.90 .
OWE Fund
AND IX!OINDITUIIIS
Other_ LunchrHm
Bolonco, Jtn . l, 1971
7•2.88 totally dealroyed the cockpit of
lllalctJ11.1, 1t71
F' nd
Rtt:tlpts-Transftrt
2 753 33
General t=und
112,011 74 T tul
' ·
From General Fund
9,751 .73 the aircraft, bfowing the top
8ond Retirement
72.350:15 c~r.:Om Expenditures - LU'l · Tot11 Transfers
9,751.73 and sides out and shredding tbe
l.onchroom
31,130.95
Fund
.190 929 87 Total R'colpts Pl.us
UnifOrm SchOOl
·1 1 D ll 1971
' 9
Transfers
9.751.73 bottom.
36 '697.a
sup_,u..
391.36 T. ,, ec.
. Total Beginning B•lance
A TWA 11p0kesman in New
Truat
IIUt otel ExpondlturH Plus
Plus Receipts
10,494.61
N DE A Till1 ill
••3 50
Bol., Dec. 31,1971 227,627.76
12
York had stated earlier that 110
• · ·· ·
· ·- ·
Unlfclrm Schaotsufplles Fund
Expenditures
N.D.E.A. Title V
190.00 Balance, Jan. 1,, 97
391. 36 Personal Services bombs were found aboard any
I!.S.E.A. Title!
2•.472.37
Roctlpts- locomo
Teachers
8,910.23
flfA · Tille 11
1,203.70 Solo of workbooks
s,4n.oo Office Suppllos
2.50 rJ ita 250 planes.
A sheriff's department ser4 109 20
53RD BIR'lm&gt;AY - sta~ Cm!mender George D.
'
t~~tct 1nter11t
~:~:r•Rs~lfl~1~'
·
e~r~1:::i:n~rJ:::~~-os 34.50 geant
· would say only when
ADC
U.to
Income
12,586.20 Te-achers Retirement
Siehl of FayettevWe, second from right, was ipllllrer
about the search of the
Moilday evening 1Vhen a birthday diniter ,.. held by
•-countv Prolett
12.~~:~ From ~e,C:~r!rFJ~:nste~~ _ to~:r[!~~~mt~res 1J:U:::~ asked
Bolle Adult
Total Rocolpll Bal., Dec. 31, 1971
265.98 plane· at MeCarran airport
llll!ll1ben of the American Lesion and Auxiliary of.Sml)llEdue~t1on
58~.61
Tnnsfers
6,600.00 Tot11 Expenditures Plus
"We didn't know anylltlng was
Capehart Poet 140 of New Haven. Pictured ar.ound the 6l'd
Adult !duc.-High
Total Reeolpll (Income
Bal., Doc. 31, 1971
10,494.61
aboard."
o~C:OOI
1,553.00
end Transftrs)
19,186.20
Clrttr Orlentltlon
Birthday Calle in the .Wabama Hi«h Scbool cafeteria are,
742.8S Toltl Beginning Balon co
Balance, Jan. I, 1971
972.29
TWA refused to dlacloae if it
Corm Orientation
.from left, Tommy E. Jt;11188, .tate ldjulant; Dtllnt Glltdee,
Ht1t St•rt
:~~:~r P.lus Receipts
19,577.56 From ::~:~~t'Ft,~~nster;_ 286_ 78 t.d been negotiating with an
The 53rd Birthday Amlversary Diniier of tbe New Haven
Fourth District Commander; Harry MIUir, JJ)8IIer of
Totti
301,326.69 Purchose~;'=:~~t::,'o':s 9,145.68 Total Transfer&gt;
2,286.71 unknown eltortloniat ovrt the
Smilb-Capebart American Legion Pilei 140 wu ~Jut night in
ceremonies for the event; Bm Roush, Post 140 Commander,
Total ltctlpts
Purchue or
Total Be; Inning Bal1nce
Gtnorol Fund
1,721.626.2•
sufplles
4 671 99
Plus Rocelpts.
3,259.07 $% mllllon he ~ to the Wabama High School cafeteria with more thaD 125 per80II8
Mr. Siehl and Daniel E . Workman, POst 140 Adjutant. .
lond Rttlrement
170.291.6.4 Tota Expenditures _ U~lfoim
ExpenditUres
reveal where four bombs attending.
Lunchroom
196,.t96.81
School Suppllea
Personal Service 2,1SO.U allegedly had been placed
U~l:."'pp'l).:chool
· Fund
Toachers
State Commander George D. Siehl of Fayettevtlle was lbe
13,817.67
Trull
!9,116.20 Bal .• Dec. 31, 1971
5,759.89 Transportation Em p.
336.00 aboard TWA planes and limed guest speaker of the evening 111d ,save a 111011 interesting lilt! .
13.36 to explode six boars apart.
M0 E A Tllltll
1.JSU3 Toto I Expendlturos Pius
Olllct Supplies
•:s."e.··. .·Titlol
ll,l65.43
Bel .. Doc. 31,1971
19.577.56 Other Educational
·
Pleuant and Fomst H. Hoff, Dowen compUmeni. or the
i,.;S E..;Aintortot
Tlllt II
152,722.21
Trust Fu~d
Supplies
257.46
The Las Vegas plane was informative talk.
3•773.31 Balance. Jon
Master
of
ceremonies
was
Rouah;
Adjudant
Daniel
Spencer
tb Dlst. Commander PO!lt CoDunander. Pr w'lng
. 1, 1971
816.88 Othor - Contraet &amp; Open
,4
01 1
OWA
35,.US.92
. Receipts
order service
13.00 positioned in a parking ramp Harry Miler
I
ih
I
wt
the Workman;
Auxllary
Denver Gandee and 4th the llowen was 1-yur.old
area only yards from the
··-Jy Proltet
l7,.f.... fl6 Bequests, Endowments,
Teachers Retire.
• ·C-·
56,411.31
Gilts
1,554.33
Contributions
416,15 terminal, but apparently no Invocation given by ·the Rev. Piesiclent, Mrl. Ella ·JjoU~b; District Adj Tom J~Terri Roush; daupiM " Mr.
lulc Adult
Total Rocelpts
1,55•.33 Emplovoes Ret.
Mrs. Achsab Miller.
four · local World War I ·
·
-~-·
EducltiOft
6,099.11 Tot•l Beginning Balance
Contributions
65.66 one was near It at the time of
and
Mrl. Arnold Roulb, New
The MC introduced the Veterans, Cliff R0111b and
Two (;old Star Mothers,
0
371
21
2
the
explosion.
The
terminal
apHaven
and~ of the
~~r!er O;lentatlon ;:~:l:;i Plus Rei:~~~dltuns ' ' ~o t~~~:~~sn~1t~fts 3,25~:~~
following peraons: Post 140 Ed&amp;ar LQDe. bolb of . New Thelma Capehart and IYa
HeaciStert
37,169.10 Materlall for Maintenance of Total Expend iture~: Plus
peared undamaged.
Commander, William M. nn., .,... T'Mn11
Captbut, nre Drtlllted Cqnm•z'er. . ~
To':!toiRtcti•ts&amp; 12a:!~-::-6t
Bulldlngo a. Grnds.
550.35 Bal., Dec . ~~!~~~tort 3,259.07
Federal,. county and loCal
Gtntrll Fund"
1.133.6«.91 · Mt':!'~~~s for Equip.
m .11 officials fllirrCIWlded the plane
27 .•2 Balance, Jan. 1, 1971
loncl Rtlirtllltnl
2•2.649.49 Contract 'Repolrs _
Receipts
Lunchroom
227;627.76
Sch Build
so 00 Federal Subsldv .
37.000.00 and a apokesman for the
Uniform School
Totat'Expencfllures
621:w Othor- Rovenue
15'-'0 lheriff's department said It
Tr~~fPIIts
19,577.56 Bel., Dec . Otc. J1, 1971 1,743.44 Adlustments and
CENTER PROPOIIED
2,371 ·2 1 Total Expenditures Plus
Refunds
15.00 appeared c:erta1n lite blut was
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
N.D.E.A. Title ill
26,128.93
Btl .. Doc. 31, 1971
2, 371. 21 Total Rtcolpls
37,169.10 tbe result of a bomb.
N.D.E.A. Title I
190.00
N.D.E .A. Tllltlll Fund
Totti Beginning Balance
Federal officials said it Sell. Frank E. MOils, O.Utab,
E.S.E .A. Tltltl
117,19•. 51
llncludeAppolachil)
Plus Receipts .
37,U0.91
E.S.E.A. Tille II
4.971.01 Bolonce. Jon. 1, 1971
12,363.50 Total Expondlturos
36.537.23 appeared lite bomb had been proposed Tuesday that a
T&amp; I
29.47
Rtctlpts
Bal. , Dec . 31, 1971
1,103.61 placed in a restroom in the national fire testing center be
~t3~tet lntttHt
Coordlnotor-Titlelll 13,765.•3 Total Expenditures Plus
establlahed at the University of
·
ADC
• ·
Total
13,765.43
811. , Dec . 31,1911
37,U0.91 front of the plane.
4
I-Count• Proltct
6!7. 3 Total Beginning Balance
ASSETS AND LIAIILITIES
A TWA spokesman said the Utah. M01111 introduced . a bill · .
61 •420.4!
Plus Receipts
26,12S.93
DECEMII!R 31,1f11
Bill&lt; Adult
aircraft arrived here shortly' which would authorize the
Educltlon
l!xptndttures
6,20J.u Assets :
6
614
Adult Edue High
19,924.95 Doposltorv Balanees (Ac!lve before mldnlcht Tuesday on a secretary of commerce to
• ·" Bal ., Dec. 31, 1971
School ··
Total
EKptndltures
Plus
and Inactive). Ded.uct
fllght from New York and was establish the center at tbe
OWE
1.553 -00
Bal ., Dec. 31. 1971
26, 121.?3
Oulstondlng Warrants
university, wblch c:Urrently
Career Orientation
'~;::::~: 8011 ,:'.-:,Ji:·,~'m,v Fun~ 00 •••estmonls
~U:=:~ believed to have been searched operates
a fire center rJ Ill
Hud Start
37,640.91 Balance, Dec. 31 , 1971
there.
190:00 Inventory Suppllts and
own.
Totol
, • - ·-l •.1.5,319.31 ''Totafi'I!Mp(lldltUNt F!los l."'e.&gt; '
,.M&amp;ttrlol' '· '
. 96,4M,OO
"
· 'tlmdi cto'ill 'I Building T"
ltlpondll.,,.
8 1. "
Gtntrll Fund
· 1,74,P27\51
1"Pl~~ •T '1'1111 1"' Y9iJ 1oo :.~ .I~Sitea, ·Pf1Y9rounds1 .. ·• •·• -. .... ....
r..
19,fto
• .'
Bond Rttlrtmont
172,705157
IS E A Tllltl Fond '
etc. I
62.,060.00
Lunchroom
190 92f 17
• • · ·
Bulldlno•
I
Cost)
(All
Uniform School
' '
Balance, Ja~~~~~:~: 2•' 472. 37
School Buildings) 3,395,070.00
Supplies
13.117.67 F.Odtral Subsidy
Equlpmtnt (Costl CAll
USO APPOINTMENT8
PLANS FOR JOBS
Trull
627.71 . Fund
11 2,353.10 School Building
WASHINGTON (UPI) WASffiNGTON (UPI)
N.D .E.A. Title ill
6,203.91 Other Revenue
•51.660.00
63 .l9 Equipment)
I! .S.E.A. Tltlol
111.821.91 Total
4,977,799.79 VIce President Spiro T. A8Jlew Harvey S. Firestone Jr., of
112,416.49 Total Assets
E.S.E .A. l'ltltll
4,779.77
RtCIIpts- TranJftn
Lllbilltlts
Projectlnttrtlt
46,053.87 From General Fund .t0,305.72 Accounts Payable
167,829.60 met Tuesday with mayors of Akron, bonorary chalmwt of
2wDCA.
l5,782.17 Total Tr1nsters
40,305.72 Bond Indebtedness 1,401.000.00 nine cities to begin plans for a the Firestone Tire and Rubber
668.05 Total Recolpts (Receipts
Total Liabilities
1,568,829.60 summer employment program Co., was named to the board rl
PRESENTED ~IU!. - Gold Star Motbem Thelma Capehart and IYa Capehart
e.counly Proltet
61,.20.47
Plus Transfers
!52,722.21 ExtolS or Deficiency
·
Basic .t.dult
Total Beginning Balance
Of A5Sels
3,.001.970.19 wbich the White House governors of the United Ser·
were pmented flowers In behalf of SmiU.:C.peharl Pilei 140, by Terri Rouah, eigbt ~-aid
Educotion
3,613.54
Plus Receipts
177,194.58 Tolol
4.977,799.79 estimates wW provide jobs for vice Organizations, Inc. (USO)
daughter of Mr. andMrl. Amold Roulh, durlnc lbeBirtltdaydlnner held Monday otpl Jenny
Adult Educ.-High
Totol Expendituros 105,!28.91
SCHOOL DEIT-IOMDS
Tuesday
by
President
Nlmn.
S~;hool
3t.t.7.t
Transftra
Purpose .tor Which Bond
Dodd,
another Gold Star Mother who Ism, was~ a Dower at the hoi!pltal where llbe ilia
about I mllllon needy youths.
1 ~·~~=·~ To General Fund
g::.,.Drl t 11
13,000.00
Deb! wu Created .
·
patient
•537·23 Total Transters
13,000.00
Salisbury-School Construct.
•n a on
H
..
Sttrt
d
36
0 utstanding Jan . 1,
Total
2 441 •77 9 59 Total Expenditures Including
loloaco Dtc " •191 ; •
Transton
111.82S.91
1971
36,000.00
Gtntrol Fund
· ' 14 717 .."" Bal., Dec. 31,1971
58,365.67 Redeemed During Year ·
1971
· 6,000.00
• ·- Total Expenditures Plus
Bond Aollnmonl
69,943.92
Bal., Dec. 31,1971 177,l94.s8 Balance Oulstandlng
3'-'97 -19
t~~~::"~hool
&amp;.s.E.A. Tltltll Fund
Dec. 31,1971
30,000.00
Suppllll
1,203.70 ~!l:~: ~1~al Mot.
5,759 _19 Btlonce, Jan . 1, 1971
197J
a portion ol the coet oflltl!'ling
The Marietta Social Security mental an ombudsman system the past year t.ve led to the stitulion.
1
14
TNruDatE. Title Ill
•
~·.,.
Ftdoral
Sub~~c:\!'~~d
3.773.38
5ttlsbury-5c~ool
Const.
19 • •· Tot•l
Wider MecUCalcl, the
Actions are also being taken home
Office, along with social In the statea. The ombudsmen ~ction of deliclencies and
3 773 38 Outstanding Jan . 1,
· · '" '
N.O.E.A. TttleV
190.00 Total Beginning B1111nce' ·
1971
12.000.00 security offices in 8SO com- would take cunplalnta and tbe UJltll'ldlng of ·care - not to oblaln Slate enforcement of Federal Government does not
E.S.E .A. . Tltltl
51,365.67
Plu&amp; Rtctlpts
4,977.08 Redeemed During Year
E.S.E .A. Tltltll
197.31
!xpondllurts
1971
2,000.00 munities around the country, suggestions about nuralng just lor 16edlcare patlenls, but Medicaid standards. Since the have direct enforcement
~r~lltct lnterHI
l1.7r,::~ Bt'l~~ary School
B~l~~~~~~ Ou!Stlindlng D~O~Ooo.OO has been appointed by hame care and make sure they for all patients in the ill- Federal Government pays only authority,
1•67 1·!! Totaf Expenditures
of
Health, get to the rigbt peciple. They
OAWDCA
Rate oflnt .
3 Secretary
9·- Bal Dee 31 1971
19731 Date of Fin• I Mal.
1975 Education, and Welfare, Elliot would also flrtd out wbat
Boolc Adult
"
· '
·
Middleport Elomn. &amp; Hlth
L. Richardson, as a local nursing borne patlenls think l\d~1~• •dtuloc".. Hig"
3,070.95 To~~~l.~~~~~f,'!~m Plus..,n.oa
School Add. construction
School
"
T &amp; I Funcl
Outstanding Jan . 1.
center to receive complaints not only about the facilltles
owe
'·~~N: Btlance, Jon . 1, 1971
29.47 :r:Jeemod Durin;
163,000.00 about subalandard condltiOII!I where they live, but a1lfo about
H11·' St 1
,. Boi.,Dec . 31,1971
29.47
1103
"
1r
,
·To tat Expenditures Plus
Year 1971
16,000.00 in nursing homes.
alternalives to nursing home
Total
303,609.79 Balance
Balance Outstanding Dec .
Persons who have in· care - ways in which older
CASH lA LANCE,
Dec. ll , 1m
U7,000.00
29 .47 31 , 1971
RICIIPTS AND
ProltCI lnttrost Fund
Rale of Int.
• 112 fonnation about Instances of people may be enabled to stay
BY JACK O'BRIAN
celled tui medallions-and the dallietl here got
IXPENOITURES
Balanee, Jan . 1, 197! 29 ,3•0.56 Dole of Flntl Mal.
1980
poor quality care, neglect, in familiar surroundings illav FUND
Receipts
Pomeroy Elem . Construction
EVASIVE NAVEL AcriON
the story weeks late; all we had to do was Ilk
Genorol Fund:
Stott of Ohio _
Outstanding Jan. 1,
unsanitary, or unsafe con- stead of being insUtutlonallzed.
,
hlancRt Jon1;}• 19R71 11e2,011.74
Olher
.
1971
280,000.00
NEW YORK (KFS)- Belly dancer Taltba, Mike to get It first. What comes ofaollttleN. Y.
6 463 17
The commissioner said
ditions In a nursing home may
HI .,.a- tYtnu
Interest _ Inactive
Redeemed During Ye~r
at
El
Avnlm, gives ringaldera 1 blank biological newspaper competition.
Gt.,,etro't' P(Groptrtly Tax34-5 2~~ea811
Funds
5,924.94 B 1971
.
21.000.00 give that Information to the among stepa already lakeD by
~;·,
e roll
• '~ ·
Other - Revenue
23,077.11 atance Outstanding
Prlncesa Meg II Lord Snowdon UHed IJte 1
Tlllyll»lt Personal Property
Total Receipts
,_. 65 _92 Dec. 31, 1971
259,000.00 nearest social security office In the Department ol s.Jtb, mystery to aolve: she literally had ber navel
35
Tlx (Groaal
25,315.16
Rateotlnt
. ,.,
reiiiOYed by plutlc ugery. Weird!
couple of Cockneya durllig a Mayfair dinner
Foundefion Fund
Total ' Beginning Balance
Date of Flrial Mit.
1983 person, or by letter or phone. if Education, and Welfare to
106
64
48
a.rtalinll Qnassll, 20, juat divorced from pahty and Tony nrisbed home In hiii'O)'II bull
(Grosst
1,267,210.16
Plus Rei:~~!dttvret ' ·
Bedford-Construction
desired, the name of the person guarantee a decent enState of Ohio - School
Improvements _ Old
Outstanding Jan. 1.
Joellolbr,
47,hubernm Bnlnaelected: rich ... ROII88no Bruzl's wife Lydia abed 87 JIOWI(il.
making' the complaints and tbe vironment lor the older penon
1 ..,
4.00
ltuoooPfuorci.h
15,19
Buildings
46,053.17
1971
13,000.00
St.
name of tbe nursing home who Is a nursing home patienl, GennanM!cbFilelt ... "Stlcb&amp;Bonea"moviid Now she's a sylphiUte 198 ... 0~ beauty
" 10 Tot1l Expenditures
46,053.17 Redeemed During Year
Olhtr
15,112.73
9'
19'1
3
000
oo
Bal .. Dec . 31 , 1 , 1
IS ,752.61
•
• .
patient will be kept con- Ball cited Medicare en- lbl!chrf.fromolf.Jidwy.butbun'tacltance. A Peggy Fleming's tailing her lbt. Into
Tultlon - Perents 1nd
Total EKpondltures Plus
Balance Outst1ndlng
forcement aclivitles under bitter, 'pretentious, dreary anti-everything nightclubs with her own portable rinU ... From
Patrons
5,636.60
19'1
Dec 31 1971
10 000 DO fidential, Ball said.
Rentol Of School
Bal., De"o:JJ~ F~nd u ,s06 ·•1 Rate of l~t.
' 2:1s
The soctaleeeurity rlfice wW which more than 1011 extended regQr~llltlon ... "Moonchlldren" got gentle now on it really ahOuld be called the WIIM'bellProPerty
1,4U.OO Bllance, Jan . 1, 1971
14.90 Date of Fintl Mat.
1974
see that tbe complaint gets to care facilities have bad lbelr criticalpatty-palsbutclolesanyway ... The new Runyon Fwtd.
Other - Revenue
1.611.57
ltectipts
Northwtstern-lmprovtment
To1at Revenue
state of Ohio _
Outstanding Jan. 1,
approval tennlnated beca111e Bdwy .. "~" reataurant Ruby Fooe ill
With almoet everything in Howard Hqhu'
Rte.tlp111 I M 1,617,7.0.03
Olhtr
4,21U5
1971
72,000.00 the proper Federal, Slate, or
they
failed
to
meet
beilth
and
local
authority
for
in·
tct P .,_ onrevtnut
Total Receipts
Redeemed
During
Veer
,
1
.
OWi1ed
by
Clucam8f'a
...
"Nanetle"
producer
life
now an open, legal and lllepl, book,
4 2 8 45
Adluatmtnts lnd
Rectit~tt-Tnnsftrs
1971
9,000.00 .vestigation.
safety standards. .
CyJpa Rubin and hulband Sam have spent an Variety's headline statea they're "Near Stqe of
Refunds
2,249.65 From General Fund 13,221.51 Balance Outstanding
As of laat week, be said, evenmllllonmalllnaoveranoldgarmentcenter Who Cares?" ... Andy Warhol's
Tbe designation of the
Slit of Non-Real
Total Transfers
l3,221.51
Dec. 31. 1971
63,000.00
in
355-00 Total Beginn ing Balance
PrOjltrty
Rato ollnt.
.
3.25 nation's aoclitl security offices III!Other 43 facilities are on
clJtrch Into a lhowblz compiH: performing Revolt" transvesUte fag.fllm more ptoperly
Othtr-Nonrevenue 28,211 .56
Plus Rocelpts
11,46 1.16 Date ofF ina I Mat.
1971
as "nursing ~write ilatrnlng notice that unleaa they meet lp8C.'t lor juz, ballet, lheatret for pblyi, ex- shooldbavebeentitled"WomenAreRevollinll"
Total Nonrtvenue
Expenclltur~t
Northwestern-Improvement
Receipts
30,116.21 Personal Service _
Outstanding Jan . 1,
posts" Is preliminary to a plan the •tandar&lt;la they wW be cut perlmental projecll in ~ theatrical dlrectiona. - tbe way Warbolloolla down hla ld at wamen ...
•
••s'''t!""TTrlt•
•s,ten
Teachers
9,028.30
R 1971
30,000.00
From 1 · .e.,... . 1e
announced
by Secretary off from Medicare funds.
Personal Service edeemed During Veer
The Rubin forlwle comea from peddling Who ill "The World's Moet. Popular Actor"?
Fund
13.000.00
Students
5,342.35 1971
3,000.00 Richardson for the establishOn the positive llide, ~
Total Transfers
· 13,000.00 Ex:penus-Emrloyes _
Balance Outstanding
· Fabqe for upwarda rl til mllllon to the Cary Reuters news service polled bozolllcel in 80
thaD 4,000 Medicare IIUI'Veys In
Total Rectlptt !Revenue,
Profession a Meetings 119.76
Dec. 31,19:71
27,000.00
FINE LEVIED
Grant-Fiber&amp;• group.
countries and it's Charles Bronlon. Not liftbe
Nonrevenue and
.
Teachers Retire.
R1teof Int.
.
3
Trenlftrs)
1,721,626.2•
Contributions
995.•1 Date ofF Ina I Mot.
1981
CQLUMBUS (UPI) - The
"Old Tlmell," tbe Pinter play, flopped on USA - John Wayne's winner here, but CI'IIIY·
Totol Boa inning Bo)ance Plus Employoes Rotlre.
Molgs High SchooiTilii-obred
Co.,
of
Waynea·
Bdwy.,UII,OGOwortb: lllca1&amp;1nalcapltallzation homely Bronaon wins evet)Wben elae.
Roctlpls
1,833.6''-''
contributions
297.05
Cons!.
The DIMy S.tlilll
ville in Wama County has
IKIMR411turet
Total Expenditures
15,782.17 Outstanding Jan . 1,
DIVOTEDTO THI
was f!OII,qGO,ao - · s dJulng down lor the
The ratlnga-hopeful blerarehy at CBS-TV
Totol Expondlturos
Bel ., Dte. 31. 1971
1.67S.99 1971
900,000.00 ~ lined •1~ and court costa
INTI RISTO'
rest ... 1neom1nc "Seiling· of tbe Prellident" llavered over "The Damned" to fllbr the
- ACimlnlstretton
60,055.47 Total Expenditures Plus
R~tdeemed During Veer
MIIGI·MASDN iUIA
-Instruction
992,211 .36
Bel ., Doc. 31. 1971
17,461 .16 1971
45,000.00 for ~~Umping animal parts,
CHISTIR L. TANNEHILL,
mumcal 1ot U.QOlw.down on lbe tryout lrlil; Caraon.C.vett CQ~~~~Mtition but, to pt IIIII
-Coordifltte Actlvltlll
AD( Fund
Balance Outstanding
waste flit and greue Into a
Variety noleillt jacbd uP tbe title of the Joseph llldly X-rated ·Wth-lllck on TV at Ill, bid to
6,222.30 Bolon co. Jan . 1, 1971
67U3 ~oc . 3)'.".''
S55.000.00
ROll liT HOifLICH,
- Llbrtrlts
3,069.82
lx,endlturos
Date o1 Fnl ·
•.375 ditch that runs into ~ Little
clly ldltor
McGinnill belkeJier and bUrled the rat ... butcher out Ill tbe revoiUng Mq1I!IICII - tile
- Trantportatlon of
.. Return of U;IUSi!'d
ateo nal Mat .
1990 Miami River.
Publlsft•d dilly •xupt
Pupils
136,476.54
Funds
668 .05 Total - Outstanding Jan .
Saturd1y by Tht Ohio V1ttey Bearded gent tiCOl'IIDI Marian ( Mrl. Sen. result was a diiUtrous miabmub ... Wll'llll'll
- Auxiliary Agone Itt
Total Exponditures
668.05
1, 1971
1,506.000.00
Plobll,hlng Componv . 111
tidied up 40 minutes of ill ercplicit lncelk:lild
224,057.92 Bol., Dec . 31. 1971
9.31 Total - Redetl1\td During Ytar
LEGAL NOTICE
Court St ., Pome:ro.,-, Ohio, Jake) Javlll to tbe "Stlcb • BOnes" debacle
- Operat1on of . School
Total Expenditures Plus
1J71
l05,000.00
The undersigned will sell al 45769. Business Oftice Phone was cab fleet owner Rob't Skull ... "Night moleslatlona • nudity • IKmolel1ullipn 111:.;
Pllftt
16t,099.39
Bal., Dec . 31, 1971
617.43 Tote! - Balance Outstanding public tilt ror cuh the 992-2156, EdiiOrltl Phone 992·
Watch," for alllllfaulll, t.d the best-«eased CBS allced OU\IIIOiber ten mlnutel ... n 11111
- khool Plant
1-County Protect
Dec .
following motor vehicle to bt 2157.
...01 ,000.00 taken from Lloyd J. Sears,
Mtlnlttlonct
2S.OSJ.92 Ballnce, Jon . I, 1971 12.002.05 31, 1971
Second Cllll PGIIage paid It C1pellinc nllbt of tile .,..on.
projected Ill damned sick IOCIII-IIaal bul
-Caplt•l Outlay
1,516.16
ltcllpta-Transfrrs
131 t , 1t
Route 1, C~eshlrt, Ohio:
Pomtroy, Ohio.
1961 Ford
- Tronlftra
132,164.00 From Gtnortl Fund 56,418.38
The ~m~rt money tldnkl Nevada pmb1lng
the conUnulty flulhecl down the chemel.
National ~dV•rtltlftl
Grand Totti hptndlturoa - Total Tronsftrs ·
56,411.38
.131 " Style Pickup
r·tprtstnflllve
lottintlll
·
taa't droOping even tbougb lml'l1 Nortbeut
J,.et tbuuper.ubenla knock Bob IIDpe -bill
General tcund
t,74t,927 .51 tot11 Beolnnlng Bala'lce
Ser. No. F10YCC77175
~llltghor , Inc., 12 Eost •2nd
lal .. Otc. 31, 1971
U,71UO Plus Receipts
6"'20.•7
MOdel FIOO
St ., Ntw York Clly, Ntw York . 111'- (N. Y., N. J. flnt) n ~ legalized · TV special filbed In II pet. of lbe alldlenceTotal !KIM'ndlturn Plus
Expendltura•
The salt will· be held at The
Subscr iPI ion rat11 : De .
MEETING
SET
meanlnC more lolb ntclied Bob'up•""l tban
Itt., Doc. 31, lt71 1,133,644.91 Porsontl Service Farmers Blnk and Savings livered by urrlwr where pmblini: II!ell to IIDince .a slant moneyau• Retlre•eat Fund
Tuchers
53,739.04
The Meiss County Permit Company, 211 west Second av1111ble 50 cents ptr wetk ; 8fllbber 1.1 the Southern Pacific Railroad ... a~ of Ill the other ~~~otwli b et•W t L.
Bllance, J•n. 1, 1971 72,350.15 Per1onal Service Street. Pomeroy, Ohio at 10:00 By Motor Route where cerritr
IH..,tt-llvHut
Clerk
600.00 Holders' Aasociation will meet A.M. on the 22nd t!av of March , t.trlfice
not avallablt : One Good rea1011 : Nevada callinoeln 1971 bauled In Dore Scbary got around to suapecUng cable payin the social room of the Meigs 1972.
Gentr•l Property TIK - Reel Trans . Of empl .. Tea chers
month
Sl
.1S. By m1:1il in Ohio
E1t1t1 fGrotsl
158,639.78 within distr ic t
3,693.63 Inn at 7:30p.m . Thursday. All
The unders ig:red reser"'' lh~ and w. va .. Ont 'ftlr S14.00. f6,15 r.lllllon total profits in case you suspect you TV of Uirns has an enormollS potenUal; Ralph
T•nolble Pertonlf Property
Teachers Retireme t'1 t
rlghl to bid .
Bellamy many years ago (when he ,..
Six months 17.25. Three have 1 chance beiiyjng up to the green baize ...
T1x (GrOIIJ
11 ,651.16 Contributions
· 10.387.80 penni! holders are asked to
Th• :-arm cr1 Bank &amp; monttu S4 .50 . Subscription We printed tbe story herein of N. Y. taxi czar
president Of Actors F.quity) )ll'fliiOIIIICe It .t lu
Tot1t fltevenue
Total !Expenditures
68,420.47 attend or to send represen~ tv~nvs Company
price includtS Sunday Times.
Rtetiptl
17G.291.64 Total l!xpondlturts Plus
Pomer'Oy, Ohio Stnlfntl .
Mike Lazar raiding scads of tali fleet garages
blggaet thlna 1o t.ppen to film folk Iince Edllon
·
Totti ~tetlpta
Bal. , Doc. 31 , 1971 , 68.•20.•1 · tatives.
[3) 8. 15. ;9, 3t
with dolena of violation and can- llmnlld tile lllcb.
·
I

For 1be coilftllleDee iii Melp C4waty f - iii the
Bulen Eqlet wllo plan te so te CbJIJicolhe Tlnlnday
alcJn. EDll 11. ,Haltol Memorial Gym may tie reacbed by
.followlac .._ dlredllm:
. .Trllmlq tn U.S. ftotlte 58, lake tbe MaiD St. exit,
tbtia IID'D left at tbe IIIOp alp at tbe exit'• end. Follow
· tlala St. lor lenni blocb taW reachlwc tbe courtb0111e
. &lt;1111 lJwUwc wltb elodi). Tan! 1'11111, aud 1• tbroagb
YulopeePariL At tbeeadol theJIRrllll tbe 1)'111.

....
~ ,

_

Br Chei Tannehill
'

Post.l40 Dlnner
Well Attended

600 00

::m:::

1

Voice along Br'Way

·ow-

me.

''

••••••••

GaWpoila' Larry Snowden
watiUIIIled Fint Team Class
AA AII·Diatrlct by tile
A11oc1Ated Press today. In
Clau A cirelea, Artbur
Clark, North Gallla, and
Deania Eleblager, Eaotem,
were 1111med. AJI..DIIIrlct by
the AP. Mike H118bea, Soatb
Pojut, wu AA Dlllrlet Coac:b
oftbe Year. Charles McAfee,
Atbens, was IUimed AAA
Dlalrlcl Cotlcb -of the Year
aad
Doug
Latimer,
AleiBllder, waaiUIIIled Class
ADistrlctC!NicboftheYear.
The United Press In·
ternatlonal's AII-Oblo
aelectlouwW be aDDounced '.
abortly before the stale
ton-•-eat'•ter·•••- - ,. ..... m~••.
uuuo

day, March 9 and Saturday, tional. Ironton won the Sym·
March 11.
mes Valley sectional.
In the Thursday game,
Thursday 's winner goes
WaverlY, last year's district against New Lexington, winner
winner meets Ironton. Waverly of the Alexander -tournament.
advanced to lhls point by The winner goes on to regional
, winning tbe Lucasville sec- competition
at
Miami

University at Oxford.
In other basketball action at
Lyne Center, the first Southern
Ohio Buketball Toutnalllent
will be held at Lyne Center
March 22 through 25. Tbe
tourney is sponsored by the

World Champs Rock.

26-1.59.

BY QUARTERS
Alexander
13 25 , 1 12 - 57
Portsmouth East
18 19 12 10 - 59
Officials, Rober! Overly and Ralph Davis.
PROBABLE STARTING-LINE-UPS
EASTERN
PORTSMOUTH EAST
POS PLAYER
HEIGHT PLAYER
PDS
G Bob Caldwell
5-11 6-1 Lowell Welch
G
G Randy Boring
5-9 6-1 SleveSturgill
G
F Randy Young
6-2 6-0 Jim Roney
F
F Alan Duval
6-2 6-1 Mike Clausing
F
C D&lt;!nnls Eiehinger 6-3 6-2 Bob McCann
C

Beach Athletic Club.
CurrenUy there are seven
entries in a proposed 16-team
field. Entry infonnation can be
obtained by contacting the
Beach Athletic Club, Box 332.
Tbe teams currently entered
are: Bob Saunders Quaker
State, Beach A. C. (Marshall
University), Bosters All-Stars.
A. D. Lewis (HunUngton),
Athens Masonery (Ohio
University), Alpha Tau Delta
(Rio Grande) .

SAN DIEGO (UP!) -The
Cincinnati Royals National
Basketball Association team,
reportedly up for sale for $6
million, is the object of
negotiations by three San
the Pirates' 14-ltit attack.
victory -a 9-6 triumph over Diego groups intent on
&amp;t nobody questions the the Chicago White Sox ... bringing the club to this west
Pirates' offense. It's Pitts· CharUe W'llliams closed out the
coast city.
burgh pitching that is the New Yor.k Meta' 9-3 triumph
question mark and the reason over the Detroit Tigers by
. why Virdon was all smiles .retiring the last nine batters in
bJ
for about $37500
Carl
after the game .
a row ... Dill' es by Ron
• · ...
Moose, who had an 11 •7 Swoboda and George Pens Morton also erided his holdout
record and u 1 earned run sparked the New York with the Montreal Expos when
be greed to an estimated
average In 1971, is considered Yankees to eight runs in the ..,2, a
the Pirates' likely No.4 or 5 seventh Inning and a 14-9 ... 500·
Hal McRae's single cl'-·-d
starting pitcher this year . victory over the Texas Ranuo"""'
Vale, ~despite a ghaally 7.04 gers.
the game-wimlng seventh.m.
ERA last sealbn,ls considered
Tbe St. Louis Cardinals ning rally In the Cincinnati
a marginal reliever-starter. announced they have invoked Reds' intra-~quad game ... The
Kison, tbe baby.faced right- ""U'ie ''fenewal. cla\iil!'!"lii'"the Oakland' Alhietks,lln~ced "'
••-• fonner def--'vo~ • star
hamler who helped turn the c~n. traeti"'CJf,lpltMtel"'. '8M-ry ~o~
"''"'·T'
World Series around Wl'th a Re
. uss· llld catcher Ted "'-. Jimmy Pleraall of the Boston
"""
lrilliant relief performance 1n mons, fore~ them to sign for Red Sox haa been hired to lake
the fourth game (after a lh'i theclub's"bestoffer." ... Merv charge of group sales and
record with 3.41 ERA) is Rettenmood, who bit .318 for ticket sales ... Leo Cardenas,
regarded as the most aggres- the Baltimore Orioles last the California Angels' wan·
slve pitcher on the staff and a se&amp;IOil, ended his seven-day derlng shortstop, once again
potential great.
holdout by signing for an asaured the club -this time
In other camps : Charlie estimated f&gt;IO,OOO ... Relief through his wile -that be Is
Manuel's twCH'Illl sixth-Inning specialist Cecil Upshaw, II~ enroute to camp.
· homer paced the Minnesota with 17 saves last season,
Twins to their fourth straight signed with the Allanla Braves

Boston Red Sox 13-1
By United Press International

""'
..._ -m......
•"« ned pt._
··"h•
•nOSe mu...
ers of the world Champwn
·
Pittsburgh Pirates are back In
thenew~ing everyone
except the Pittsburgh Pirates.

8

last play," Nichols said. "&amp;t
I'm very proUd with the way
our kids played tonight."
Corde led the Bobcats with 'II
polnls and LaUch and Bill
Brown added 12 each. Mike
Parker paced Toledo with 22
points and Bob Repp added 14.

.

AT LOWQT PRICES
IN THIS AREA

H&amp;R·
FIRESTONE
.

Home
Improvement ·

Loan
OJr low home improvement

loan rates should be good
enough reason for you to act
now. Fly In today with your
estimates ollhe amounl you
need, and Improve the state
of your mind, as well as the
fine slate of your house.

Meigs Co. Branch
''' •'·" '

·

" '" '• ' ·

..

'" '" '

"''•·• •• '"""

' ,,, The Af!Mif~~ilrv ' " . '
s lh &amp; Lo c 0
•;,.a~cond'S't. •
Pomerov. Ohio
All Aceounls Insured To
s2o.ooo.oo by FSLIC.
,.....
•

!- I
~-· ·'
·;;.·· ·

~
•
"•• • •

KEITH GOBLE·FORD
NEW USED,CAR LOT
3RD AVE.

$1.15 with trade

ANY OF THESE SIZES 7.75 x 14,
7.75 x 15, 8.25 x 14, Tubeless Black·wall $18.00 Plus ~2.1 2 to . ~2.26
Fed. Ex. Tax ~lth trade.

RIZER OIL 00.
.

Up a tree for living
space? See us tor a

AT••• •

6.50 x IJ tubtltn

f

North Gallia
Fans

IN A
GU·ARANTEED
USED ·CAR

plus Ftd. Ex. 111

- FIBERGLASS

EASTERN
"EAGI.ES"

.STOP 'N' SAVE

-

WIDE OVAL

Good Luck!

IAVIWmt GOBLE

In the Ohio Conference
championship game p~yed at
Mount Union College In
Alliance, Wittenberg withstood
a late second half rally to
defeat Kenyon.
Wittenberg, now 111-8 overall,
led 38-33 at the hall and
stretched the advantage to 13
points before Kenyon surged
back to within two poinls, 61-69
with 6:24 left to play. The
Tigers then pulled away again.
Joe Hamilton was high for
Wittenberg with 21 points and
Jim Smith got . 22 points for
Kenyon, now 13-15 overall.

BELTED TIRES

ioo E. MAIN
. .
ff2·2101
POMEROY, OHIO

.

I
.

Waverly (19-2), Ironton (147) and New Lexington (17-4)
play at Rio Grande College's
Paul R. Lyne Center this week
to delernilne the Class AA
district representative. There
wm be 7:30 games on Thura-

The 6-3 junior Whlte led the Spartans with 24 while~ junior
Greg Brooks added 15. White also Jed Aleunder on the boards
with 10. The Spartans had 24 rebounds.
East made a phenomenal 26 of 45 from the field for an
amazing 58 pet. but sank only seven of 17 from the foul line.
Aletander hit but 23 of 66 from the field lor a far.!Jeiow-titeir·
average 35 pet. The Spartans, who made II of 14 from the charity
stripe, hit only five of 31 from the field in the second half for 16
pet.
East, who beat South Webster, New Boston, Green Township, and Portsmouth Clay in their sectional at Portsmouth, is
not tall, but very quick and has a sticky, bail-ltawklng defense.
Al.'I:XANDER (571 - Brooks fT-15, B'r'own 3-0-6, White 8·8-24,
Risley 1-H , Ervin 4-0-8, Dishong 0-0-0. Tota ls 23-11 -51.
PORTSMOUTH EAST (59) - McCann 11 -0-22. Welch 1-2-4,
Sturglll6-1 -13, Clausing 3-1-1, Roney 5-1-11, Stapleton 0-2·2. Tolals'

OU, Wittenberg Win

care

~·I

WaVerly, Ironton Clash'
Thursday In Tourney

THE STANDINGS

Social Security Offices Made into Listening .Posts

\
'-

·~·

Leading the way for the victors was 6-2 senior Bob McCann
with 22while6-1 junior Steve Sturgill added 13and ~senior Jim
Rooney 11. Sturgill and McCann paced East on the boards with
four each of a total of 14.
..

. ..r. . ' .
lfit ScoreS

j

9 2 95

....

Alexander's Rich White made two free throws with six seconds
left to matte it 59-57, but East froze out tbe clock.
Alexander piled up a 1U margin, after trailing early l&gt;-2,
only to have the hot-ahootlng Portsmouth hit 10 straight points to
lead 18-13 after one period.
A nip and tuck second "'arter, which ·had tl!e lead change
hands nine times, ended with the Spartans coming bock for a 3837 halftime lead.
Holding Alexander scoreless the last four minutes Of the third
quarter and the First two minutes of the fourth quarter, the
defensivHI1inded East squad built a 57..f91ead with two minutes
left. The pressing Spartans, however, couldn't overcome the
tenacious East zone defense.

"Everybody rapped our
'I
Pl chers 1as1 year an d
b d
t0 be
every 0 Y their
seems
ilJestioning
ability this
especi•llytheplayof&amp;-3senlorDennlsEichingerwhotodaywas
':~~@?~~ year," says slugger Willie
elected totbe All-DistrictCiusequadfiratteam (AP).
st gell "Well e
't
Sports Delli's quiet prayer iB that Dennis and team have a
ar . · by ' w w~~
8C!I.I!~ •, 1• ,Hif! bt"li!:lli.)kllil'dU'hursdliy!"
'. '
""', S~
'·!
=&amp;~ts
~
_surprised
what they llid .ut
..
,
,
.
..
the
pennant
race
or lbe World
bt......... Keith ""•"'-•- s probable starting lin"'; " · ·
· ·
·
.._ '" . ·- "!OCl'...
.
,.,.. - . , "" .. :
.,.. •. . under~ated."
Series last season ..They're just
~~~:::~on this page ,today, Eastern wW have some
h
around the baaket but East's guards, both 11-1,
~
andqUick,wWfX!IbeavypressureonEasterngettlngtheball,
'
Manager Bill Virdon unfirst past the 10secondllne then Into shooting range.
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - The veiled three important Pirate
Good Luck, Eagles! '
Cincinnati Reds held their first pitchers Tuesday -Bob Moose,
intrBSC)uad game of tbe spring Bob Veale and Bruce Kison _
Tuesday, with· the Scltergers and they combined in four·
beating the Grammases 3-2 on hitter as the -Pira~s walloped
a IWCH'Illl seventh Inning rally. the Boston Red Sox 13-1. Gene
Hal McRae singled home Alley's four runs balled In and
rookie
outfielder Ken Griffey a horner by Vic Davalillo led
ABA Standings
Phoenix
«
30 .595 13
with
the
wimlng run off pitcher
By United Presslnltrnatlonol Detroll
23 49 .319 33
East
Pedro Borbon.
Poclflc Division
W. L. Pet. GB
'•
The Grammas Squad had
W. L. Pet. GB
Kentucky
58 14 .806 ...
X· LosAngeles 60 12 .133 ...
gotten
the first run, in the third
VIrginia
41 30 .571 16112 Goldon St.
46 26 .639 14
inning, whell Bernie Carbo sinNew York • 35 31 .484' 23
Sealtle
46 28 .622' 15
Floridians 30 42 .417 28
Houston
28 43 .394 31'12 gled home Don Gullett. But the
Carolina
29 43 .403 29
Portland
. 16 59 . .213 4.5 112 Schergers tied it up In the fifth By United Preu lnlernatlcmal Ind., later this week.
Pltts~urgh
24 48 .333 34
~ - Clinched divlllon IItie
when Griffey trippled off
W11t
With juat six seconds left In
Youngstown state defeated
Tuesdey's Results
W. L. Pel. Gil New York 110 Mllwaukoe101
Wayne Simpson to score Joe an overtime period Tuesday Gannon (Pa.) 81-7Jin an NCAA
Utah
so 21 .70-4 ... Phoenix 129 Detroit 121
Morgan.
night, Ohio University Coach College Division Tournament
Indiana
39 30 .565 10
Los Angeles 114 Phlla . 97
The
·game-winning
rally
Jim
Sllyder had a dilemma to game at Akron that was halted
Dallas
34 .00 .-459 17'12 Baltimore 105 Seattle 98
Denver
29 41 .414 20if2 Porlland 98 Buffalo 94
came after a home run . by settle.
with 27 seconds to play when
Memphis
24 41 .338 26
Golden State 119 Cleveland 112 rookie Bill Ferguson sent the
Should
he
give
the
ball
to
Gannon
fans refused to stop
T.... y'sResuHs
tOnlygamesscheduled)
Carolina 116 Floridians 108
Galllpolla'
Tommy high«&lt;ring Torn Corde or throwing debris and coins onto
Kentucky 117 New York 112. ol
Speacer had 1 piDcb bit Todd LaUch when the clock the floor .
Dallas 143 Plltsburgh 108
started again after the
In tbe season-ending game at
slql~ ID tbe aeventll bmbag,
NHL Standings
Utah 116 Denver 108
timeout?
He
chose
LaUch,
end
Columbus,
Ohio state beat
By United Presslnfernollonal
· ('o.ilygomesscheduled)
took tblrd oa Griffey's
Eost
Wednesday's Gomes
Blqle, alld scored 1 run on exclaimed some seconds later, Michigan State 92-'IJ, ending
W. L. T. Pis
Kenlocky ••· Carolina
" that ending sure was the Buckeyes' season at IU
AI Crawford's 8J'Oundout.
48 9 9105
AI Raleigh Boston
something,
wasn1 it?"
overall.
... 11 10 98 Grammases ahead 2-1 in the
New York
Plorldlans vs. VIrginia
39
.
14
12
90
Montreal
Tonight, in the only game ID
Lallch took an inbounds pass,
At Norfolk
top of the seventh.
Toronto
28 21 11 67
Plltsburgh al Ulah then dribbled the length of tbe be played, Findlay and Defi.
2929 967
Detroll
Reds Mansger Sparky An·
tOnlygamesseheduled)
court and hit a 15.foot jwnp ance meet at Defiance to de13 38 IS •t
Buffalo
derson said he would pitch
16 43 6 38
Vancouver
shot at the gun thet gave Ohio dde the NAJA District 22
Gary Nolan, Gullett-and either
NBA Standings
West
U. a ~7 win over Toledo and champion. The winner of that
By Unlltd Prttslnlornallonol
W. L.· T. Pis
Ed Sprague or Borbon in the
the Mid-American Conference game will go to the NAJA
Eastern Confeenct
Chicago
40 11 9 89
Reds' Gr4pefruit League
playoff championship. The vic- Nationals.
Atlantic Division
Mlnnesola
33 23 9 75
W. L. Pet. GB 51. Louis
24 35 9 57 · opener Saturday against tory sends the Bobcats to TenOhio U. Coach Sllyde; said a
8os ton
49 25 .662 ... Philadelphia
21 33 .11 53 Pittsburgh.
nessee
next
Saturday
to
go
key
to his Bobcats' win qver
New York
« 28 .611 4 Calll6rnla
18 32 16 52
Competing for the shortstop
Philadelphia 28 « .389 20
Pittsburgh
21 36 9 51
job when the regular season fialnst powerful Marquette In Toledo was containing the
Buffalo
19 52 .268 28 112 Los Angell!$
11 « 1· 41
tlie NCAA Mideast Regional. Rockets' top-notch center, Tom
opens will be Darrell Otaney
Tuosday•s Rtsulls
Central Dl•lslon
W. L. Pel. GB 51. Louis 4 l.os Angeles .2
and Dave Concepcion, two who · The win was Ohio's lOth con- Kozelko, who was held to just
··
secutive one oyer Toledo, ill- 10 poiri'IS:
(Onlygamescheduled)
Baltimore
33 39 .458
Anderson
feels
are
aboUt
equal
Allan ta
28 -43 .394 4'12
Wednesday's O.mn
Deserved The Win
in the field. He said tbe job will eluding three this season. The
Clnclnnall
23 48 .324 9'12 Chicago at New York
playoff
was
needed
after
both
"We
were double teaming
• Cleveland
21 51 .292 12
Montreal. at Plllsburgh
go to the best hitter.
Detroll at Toronto
, Wtolorn Conltrtne' '
&amp;t Anderson . pointed ~~ teams finished with 7-3 marks Kozelko all nigbt and they just
Midwest DIYislon
Boston at Minnesota
that giving the starting in regular conference play. didn't get it in to him," Sllyder
W. l. Pel. GB Buffaloal California
Ohio Is now 15-10 overall and said.
Milwaukee 51 17 .710
asaisiUilent to one Of them
Phlladlllphla at Vancouver
Kozelko, a 6-loot-4 j111ior, hit
Chicago
51 22 .69D 51f•
(Onlygamesscheduled)
won't bode m for the other Toledo flnlsbed ~~ 18-7.
Wlllellberg Winl OC
only three of eight field goals
necessarily.
In other pmes Tuesday and added four free throws.
"If Concepcion opens the
night,
Wittenberg downed Ken- Toledo coach Bob Nicholas
season at short it doesn't mean
yon
7H8
In the Ohio Confer- conceded Ohio "deserved to
he'll have the job per·
.HIGHLIGHTS
manenUy," Sparky said. "The ence championship game to win it."
.
with Paul Crabtree
same goes for Chaney. They've win a berth_In the NCAA Great "They were able to get the
· Lakes Regtonal at Evansville, good percentage shot on that
both been told that.
CALL POINTVIEW : '192·2505
"I'll try to use the player
"
Adam
12,"
which
Isn't
who's
not playing regularly In
For loeal river fans (and
picked
up
by
either
Ch.
2
or
at least two games a week jllSI
who Isn't?). lhe bright spot
1oday has lobe " Portrallola Ch. 1 lhls week, sllll Is
to keep him sh.arp," he said.
Queen.'' which Is a around to please Its fans .
documontory booed on the although I'm, not one of
., beloved "Delio Queen," IIIII them. Ch.' 4 at s p.m.
' storn-whttllllg her way up
+++
GAME SETFRIDAY
Dlek Cavell has lhe star of
lltd down the Ol)lo by lhe
The Hannan Trace· High
grace of God and an ad of " The Persuaders," Roger
School
faculty will play the
Congress. An hour-long look Moore, as a guest tonight.
•
Golden Voices of Radio Station
.t a well-preserved remnant 11 :30 p.m .. Ch. 6.
+++
WOUB in Atbens at 8 p.m.
Of thi pasl, 7:30p.m.• Ch. 1.
MOVIES:
TheCh.
6
prlmt·
t PolnTVIew Ch: 5 did a
Friday night'U. the high school
half-hour apeclol 'cin .the time film Is "The Pigeon,"
gym. A preliminary game at 7
Queen when she camo INilh Sammy Davis Jr. Also:
"Excuse
My
Dust,"
,
Red
p.m. will feature the two six
through this area lost
Skelton,
4
p.m..
ind
grade teams. Hannan Trace
aummer, and lht program
waa well-rocelved. The folks "Brigham Young/' Dean
defeated
Fairland In a faeultY
11 :30 p.m., both Ch.
who own thi r lvorbolt wore Jaggl'r,
.
10. ·.
.
game earlier this . week .
*lightlullo - k ,with.)
Proceeds will go to the HT
I·
MIDDUPOR1', 0. ·
AthleUc Fund:
I

90

1 '

.

Desk

There was plenty of class In the Chllllcothe District Class A
basketball tournament that opened last evening. I'm not doubtlngall!inute~ ellber, ti)atEalltemHlgh'a Coach liUJ Phillips was
on hand 11:ith his varaity squad to watch Alexander (»3) take on
PortamoutbEast (J2.10) . Eastern, having drawna by~ In the top
!racket, meets the \vlnnerofthe above fracas at 7:30p.m. Thursday at OiiWcotbe, the victor~ to the regional play-off
· at Athens. the following weekend.
Nobody here, just nobody, expected Alexander to loae to
Portamoutl) East last nll!ht. att it did! Portsmouth East came on
strong the second half of the sea111n, having dumped Portsmouth
Clay (14-.'1) to get onto tbe district level.
Our best guess _as of Tuesday afternoon; four hours before
tipoff- was Alexander by 20, say about !JG.70. Rather, it was 5957 Portsmouth 1
Eastern, which carries with it to Chillicothe the best wishes
lor succesa of everyone In Poleiga County, Is moving In high class
company. Of 40 southeastern Ohio Class A clubs coml•.• out of
··-.,
five sectional tournaments, Eastern ill one of the five wlmers
earning a shot at district honors. Reganllesi of what may happen '
at OIUJicolbe Thursday, CoaCh Bill PhiWpa' boys already have
earned the admiration of everyone here .
·
·
· Meiga fans owning lllything with four wheels that turn
"""uld
· to he1p the Eag1es
"''" .be at· ChiWcothe tomorrow even111g
exand Th • thin
ite
'"'"""'" ·
.._.
agalnst Al
er. ere s no g qu 10 u~.... u,g as a ...tg
crowd whooping it up for ita ,favorite team. Perhaps lhls is
n..
1r ho
'dst th
especla..,.
ll'lle away om me, on a strange court, m1
e
tensenessofatournamentgameagalnstastrongopponentwhich
has ample vocal support of ita own.
""•-ne who has watched Eastern play this year has come
~·-•v
away llnpr eased bY the club· ...
,,.e ones I' ve heard a Iways Uked

t:·:t·::

•
•
~

.•

:. the ..Sports

•

.29.3!::::

-.

_,
BY KEll'H WISECUP
ClUWCXYn!E - fortamouth East Tuesday nighl ear,J8d
the right to meet the Eastern Eagles here with 111 upset 59-57 win
over tbe state:s ninth ranked team, the Alexander ~rtans, in
"A" district tournament play.
Portsmouth East, the Cinderella team of tbe Chillicothe
district, takes ita 13-10 slate againslthe,Eagies at Ellis B. Hatton
Gym (Oiillicothe Hlah School) Thursday night at 7:30.
The East-Alexander battle had the packed gymnasium in
high tension from the beginning on. The lead switched 14 times
and was tied three times. The largest lead by either team was
. eigbt, held by East with 2:20remalnlng,at 57-49.
A desperate comeback'by tbe Spartans fell sbort; Alexander
closed out ita season with a 17-tslate. :eoach Doug "Latimer's
AlbaJiy five hit on two field goalund two free lltroWs between the
one and two minute marks to close th,e gap at 57~. But East's
Darrel Stapleton dropped in two free throws with 33 secollds left
to give East the win and him his only points of the night.

''

.. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�(Revenue

PINANCIAL RIPOIT
. Of' TMI IOARD
· Of' IDUCATION .

ller 111101 YH'r ll!flll
Dta•'-11st, " "

_.,... Local'-! Dtatrlct
Mt111 C..1tr
Mltllll.,.rt, Olllit

cttllly
tho
10 I bo
cotrtet.

following report

• Clerk, Tl.r'ewoa'uMrocrCoofmt~o'
"
CAS
l _oar.d Of Educltlon.
RICONCII.IATION
TotI I FNund
1111nceal Dec.
31, 1t71
1303.609.79
OtpotiiOry
lllonc11
:
P::ermer's tank
It Slvtnna
COm!Nn~:
.1, .
- 307 21
Pomeroy, 11. 8enk 110,217.27
Cllil- Nol. Bonk
72,971.10
~~~~!~Not. link
1,103.61
o1• 1 ePOtltory
1 "'Cit
231,,0H3

II

170,291 .6.4
Tot•t Beg.lnn tng Btlance

1111c Adulllducotioo

Bllanct, J•n . 1,1911
• -e ctipts

Plua Rtctlpta
242,6.,.4, Stale ot Ohio Exptndlluros
Oth 0r
Bonds Moturlng ·
105,000.00 Tolal Roco lpll

tnternt on Bonds
62,69 ~.50
Other - 8ond Rtlirtmft\t •

Fund

514.61

3,027.00
. 3.027.00

· Receiptt-Trlnsfen
From General Fund
3.072. 81

5.01l.07 Tolal Tra nsfers

3.072.81

Totel Expend itures - Bonc;t
Total Beginning Bllenct
Rttlrement Fund
172,705.57
Plus Receipts
6,68o&amp;.4t
a 11 ., Dec . 31, 19,•t
69 ,943.92
Exptndlturo·s
Tot•t Expend l turts Plus
Personal S&amp;rvlces 522.00
Bit .• Dec.l1 ,1971 242,649.49
Secr!'tary
Lvncllroom 'und
Personet Service -

Plane at

.Alexander ·Dumped: Eagles Get Portsmouth East

Vegas is
· Directions to the Gym

Damaged

Bal1nce. Jan . 1,1971 31,130.95
Teechers
1,151.50
Rocelplo--lncomo
Office Supplies
.
16.00
Sale of Lun(hes
83,560.70 Other Educational ·
Fedora! SublldV Supplies
871.35
Lunehes
106,842.65 e1,onus
. - Empl oyeei .
NEW YORK (UPI)-An ~
FOdera I SubSidy rl!ftUionol mutlnas 61.3.1 ploaim beavllf damlsed a ·
- Milk
5,562.•• TNchtrs Ret.
Other _ Reve-nue
31.02
Contributions
~18.65 parted Traal World AlrliDII
Totol Receipts _
Employoes Ret.
Income
195,996.81
Contributions
65.66 jetllner -Jy today at Lll
Rectlpts-Trlnsftra
Total Expendlturea
3•• 13.S.. VegaaleiiiGIIJI ilbourufteu
General Fund
500.00 Bal .. Doc. 31, 1971
. 3.07o.t5
Ji'le' plutle bomb aboard ·1 ·
~~~TM~r'~1 ~f
Total Receipts Total Expendltur.s Plu•
(Income and
Bal ., Doc. 31, 1971
6,61H9 TWA 'jet t.d been lfllffed ~~
Dopaall
100.000.00
Tronstorsl
194.494.11
Adult Educollon 100,000.00 Total Boglnnlng Balance
Hlth SchHI
by a lralDed dog at ICennedJ
Totalln•lltmonll
~~:~t 1 n d 1n 0 W 1 ~3~~~·:1.
Plus Receipts
227,627.76 Balann, Jeri, 1, 1971 · 1,553.00 lllternaliorial Airport In New .
ft
. -- ornbtr • 1
&amp;apencllturts
E•tt•ncllturu
' York.
....,
•'
rsonol serv lc • - Maneger Teachers Ret.
·. 197• (o.ductJ
3~, if9 6 . 64 P~
No one was Injured in tbe
. Slllrles lnd Wegn 750.00 ToCiaonl Etrxlbpuetnidonllsuros
3399~.· ~1
Totll - Clerk-TriiiUrtr'S
Penon•l Serv let - Cooks .. , ~
1 t1tnco, ·Dtetmbtr · 31,
Solorlesand Wogos ._. m 01 Bal .. Dec. 31, 1971
1,151.2&amp; blast aboard the plene at
1
"lu¥MAIIY DF cf/it~: 1.! ...Supplies ond F~
126:oso:90 Tolal Expondltures Plus
McCarran Airport In Lea
•L•N s
Equipment
15,152.67
Bal ., Dec . 31 . 1971
1,5.53.00
•
Vegas. The exploalm aiJooit
· ~ ~ _CI • RICiti'TS
Repairs to Equlpmonl 1.450.90 .
OWE Fund
AND IX!OINDITUIIIS
Other_ LunchrHm
Bolonco, Jtn . l, 1971
7•2.88 totally dealroyed the cockpit of
lllalctJ11.1, 1t71
F' nd
Rtt:tlpts-Transftrt
2 753 33
General t=und
112,011 74 T tul
' ·
From General Fund
9,751 .73 the aircraft, bfowing the top
8ond Retirement
72.350:15 c~r.:Om Expenditures - LU'l · Tot11 Transfers
9,751.73 and sides out and shredding tbe
l.onchroom
31,130.95
Fund
.190 929 87 Total R'colpts Pl.us
UnifOrm SchOOl
·1 1 D ll 1971
' 9
Transfers
9.751.73 bottom.
36 '697.a
sup_,u..
391.36 T. ,, ec.
. Total Beginning B•lance
A TWA 11p0kesman in New
Truat
IIUt otel ExpondlturH Plus
Plus Receipts
10,494.61
N DE A Till1 ill
••3 50
Bol., Dec. 31,1971 227,627.76
12
York had stated earlier that 110
• · ·· ·
· ·- ·
Unlfclrm Schaotsufplles Fund
Expenditures
N.D.E.A. Title V
190.00 Balance, Jan. 1,, 97
391. 36 Personal Services bombs were found aboard any
I!.S.E.A. Title!
2•.472.37
Roctlpts- locomo
Teachers
8,910.23
flfA · Tille 11
1,203.70 Solo of workbooks
s,4n.oo Office Suppllos
2.50 rJ ita 250 planes.
A sheriff's department ser4 109 20
53RD BIR'lm&gt;AY - sta~ Cm!mender George D.
'
t~~tct 1nter11t
~:~:r•Rs~lfl~1~'
·
e~r~1:::i:n~rJ:::~~-os 34.50 geant
· would say only when
ADC
U.to
Income
12,586.20 Te-achers Retirement
Siehl of FayettevWe, second from right, was ipllllrer
about the search of the
Moilday evening 1Vhen a birthday diniter ,.. held by
•-countv Prolett
12.~~:~ From ~e,C:~r!rFJ~:nste~~ _ to~:r[!~~~mt~res 1J:U:::~ asked
Bolle Adult
Total Rocolpll Bal., Dec. 31, 1971
265.98 plane· at MeCarran airport
llll!ll1ben of the American Lesion and Auxiliary of.Sml)llEdue~t1on
58~.61
Tnnsfers
6,600.00 Tot11 Expenditures Plus
"We didn't know anylltlng was
Capehart Poet 140 of New Haven. Pictured ar.ound the 6l'd
Adult !duc.-High
Total Reeolpll (Income
Bal., Doc. 31, 1971
10,494.61
aboard."
o~C:OOI
1,553.00
end Transftrs)
19,186.20
Clrttr Orlentltlon
Birthday Calle in the .Wabama Hi«h Scbool cafeteria are,
742.8S Toltl Beginning Balon co
Balance, Jan. I, 1971
972.29
TWA refused to dlacloae if it
Corm Orientation
.from left, Tommy E. Jt;11188, .tate ldjulant; Dtllnt Glltdee,
Ht1t St•rt
:~~:~r P.lus Receipts
19,577.56 From ::~:~~t'Ft,~~nster;_ 286_ 78 t.d been negotiating with an
The 53rd Birthday Amlversary Diniier of tbe New Haven
Fourth District Commander; Harry MIUir, JJ)8IIer of
Totti
301,326.69 Purchose~;'=:~~t::,'o':s 9,145.68 Total Transfer&gt;
2,286.71 unknown eltortloniat ovrt the
Smilb-Capebart American Legion Pilei 140 wu ~Jut night in
ceremonies for the event; Bm Roush, Post 140 Commander,
Total ltctlpts
Purchue or
Total Be; Inning Bal1nce
Gtnorol Fund
1,721.626.2•
sufplles
4 671 99
Plus Rocelpts.
3,259.07 $% mllllon he ~ to the Wabama High School cafeteria with more thaD 125 per80II8
Mr. Siehl and Daniel E . Workman, POst 140 Adjutant. .
lond Rttlrement
170.291.6.4 Tota Expenditures _ U~lfoim
ExpenditUres
reveal where four bombs attending.
Lunchroom
196,.t96.81
School Suppllea
Personal Service 2,1SO.U allegedly had been placed
U~l:."'pp'l).:chool
· Fund
Toachers
State Commander George D. Siehl of Fayettevtlle was lbe
13,817.67
Trull
!9,116.20 Bal .• Dec. 31, 1971
5,759.89 Transportation Em p.
336.00 aboard TWA planes and limed guest speaker of the evening 111d ,save a 111011 interesting lilt! .
13.36 to explode six boars apart.
M0 E A Tllltll
1.JSU3 Toto I Expendlturos Pius
Olllct Supplies
•:s."e.··. .·Titlol
ll,l65.43
Bel .. Doc. 31,1971
19.577.56 Other Educational
·
Pleuant and Fomst H. Hoff, Dowen compUmeni. or the
i,.;S E..;Aintortot
Tlllt II
152,722.21
Trust Fu~d
Supplies
257.46
The Las Vegas plane was informative talk.
3•773.31 Balance. Jon
Master
of
ceremonies
was
Rouah;
Adjudant
Daniel
Spencer
tb Dlst. Commander PO!lt CoDunander. Pr w'lng
. 1, 1971
816.88 Othor - Contraet &amp; Open
,4
01 1
OWA
35,.US.92
. Receipts
order service
13.00 positioned in a parking ramp Harry Miler
I
ih
I
wt
the Workman;
Auxllary
Denver Gandee and 4th the llowen was 1-yur.old
area only yards from the
··-Jy Proltet
l7,.f.... fl6 Bequests, Endowments,
Teachers Retire.
• ·C-·
56,411.31
Gilts
1,554.33
Contributions
416,15 terminal, but apparently no Invocation given by ·the Rev. Piesiclent, Mrl. Ella ·JjoU~b; District Adj Tom J~Terri Roush; daupiM " Mr.
lulc Adult
Total Rocelpts
1,55•.33 Emplovoes Ret.
Mrs. Achsab Miller.
four · local World War I ·
·
-~-·
EducltiOft
6,099.11 Tot•l Beginning Balance
Contributions
65.66 one was near It at the time of
and
Mrl. Arnold Roulb, New
The MC introduced the Veterans, Cliff R0111b and
Two (;old Star Mothers,
0
371
21
2
the
explosion.
The
terminal
apHaven
and~ of the
~~r!er O;lentatlon ;:~:l:;i Plus Rei:~~~dltuns ' ' ~o t~~~:~~sn~1t~fts 3,25~:~~
following peraons: Post 140 Ed&amp;ar LQDe. bolb of . New Thelma Capehart and IYa
HeaciStert
37,169.10 Materlall for Maintenance of Total Expend iture~: Plus
peared undamaged.
Commander, William M. nn., .,... T'Mn11
Captbut, nre Drtlllted Cqnm•z'er. . ~
To':!toiRtcti•ts&amp; 12a:!~-::-6t
Bulldlngo a. Grnds.
550.35 Bal., Dec . ~~!~~~tort 3,259.07
Federal,. county and loCal
Gtntrll Fund"
1.133.6«.91 · Mt':!'~~~s for Equip.
m .11 officials fllirrCIWlded the plane
27 .•2 Balance, Jan. 1, 1971
loncl Rtlirtllltnl
2•2.649.49 Contract 'Repolrs _
Receipts
Lunchroom
227;627.76
Sch Build
so 00 Federal Subsldv .
37.000.00 and a apokesman for the
Uniform School
Totat'Expencfllures
621:w Othor- Rovenue
15'-'0 lheriff's department said It
Tr~~fPIIts
19,577.56 Bel., Dec . Otc. J1, 1971 1,743.44 Adlustments and
CENTER PROPOIIED
2,371 ·2 1 Total Expenditures Plus
Refunds
15.00 appeared c:erta1n lite blut was
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
N.D.E.A. Title ill
26,128.93
Btl .. Doc. 31, 1971
2, 371. 21 Total Rtcolpls
37,169.10 tbe result of a bomb.
N.D.E.A. Title I
190.00
N.D.E .A. Tllltlll Fund
Totti Beginning Balance
Federal officials said it Sell. Frank E. MOils, O.Utab,
E.S.E .A. Tltltl
117,19•. 51
llncludeAppolachil)
Plus Receipts .
37,U0.91
E.S.E.A. Tille II
4.971.01 Bolonce. Jon. 1, 1971
12,363.50 Total Expondlturos
36.537.23 appeared lite bomb had been proposed Tuesday that a
T&amp; I
29.47
Rtctlpts
Bal. , Dec . 31, 1971
1,103.61 placed in a restroom in the national fire testing center be
~t3~tet lntttHt
Coordlnotor-Titlelll 13,765.•3 Total Expenditures Plus
establlahed at the University of
·
ADC
• ·
Total
13,765.43
811. , Dec . 31,1911
37,U0.91 front of the plane.
4
I-Count• Proltct
6!7. 3 Total Beginning Balance
ASSETS AND LIAIILITIES
A TWA spokesman said the Utah. M01111 introduced . a bill · .
61 •420.4!
Plus Receipts
26,12S.93
DECEMII!R 31,1f11
Bill&lt; Adult
aircraft arrived here shortly' which would authorize the
Educltlon
l!xptndttures
6,20J.u Assets :
6
614
Adult Edue High
19,924.95 Doposltorv Balanees (Ac!lve before mldnlcht Tuesday on a secretary of commerce to
• ·" Bal ., Dec. 31, 1971
School ··
Total
EKptndltures
Plus
and Inactive). Ded.uct
fllght from New York and was establish the center at tbe
OWE
1.553 -00
Bal ., Dec. 31. 1971
26, 121.?3
Oulstondlng Warrants
university, wblch c:Urrently
Career Orientation
'~;::::~: 8011 ,:'.-:,Ji:·,~'m,v Fun~ 00 •••estmonls
~U:=:~ believed to have been searched operates
a fire center rJ Ill
Hud Start
37,640.91 Balance, Dec. 31 , 1971
there.
190:00 Inventory Suppllts and
own.
Totol
, • - ·-l •.1.5,319.31 ''Totafi'I!Mp(lldltUNt F!los l."'e.&gt; '
,.M&amp;ttrlol' '· '
. 96,4M,OO
"
· 'tlmdi cto'ill 'I Building T"
ltlpondll.,,.
8 1. "
Gtntrll Fund
· 1,74,P27\51
1"Pl~~ •T '1'1111 1"' Y9iJ 1oo :.~ .I~Sitea, ·Pf1Y9rounds1 .. ·• •·• -. .... ....
r..
19,fto
• .'
Bond Rttlrtmont
172,705157
IS E A Tllltl Fond '
etc. I
62.,060.00
Lunchroom
190 92f 17
• • · ·
Bulldlno•
I
Cost)
(All
Uniform School
' '
Balance, Ja~~~~~:~: 2•' 472. 37
School Buildings) 3,395,070.00
Supplies
13.117.67 F.Odtral Subsidy
Equlpmtnt (Costl CAll
USO APPOINTMENT8
PLANS FOR JOBS
Trull
627.71 . Fund
11 2,353.10 School Building
WASHINGTON (UPI) WASffiNGTON (UPI)
N.D .E.A. Title ill
6,203.91 Other Revenue
•51.660.00
63 .l9 Equipment)
I! .S.E.A. Tltlol
111.821.91 Total
4,977,799.79 VIce President Spiro T. A8Jlew Harvey S. Firestone Jr., of
112,416.49 Total Assets
E.S.E .A. l'ltltll
4,779.77
RtCIIpts- TranJftn
Lllbilltlts
Projectlnttrtlt
46,053.87 From General Fund .t0,305.72 Accounts Payable
167,829.60 met Tuesday with mayors of Akron, bonorary chalmwt of
2wDCA.
l5,782.17 Total Tr1nsters
40,305.72 Bond Indebtedness 1,401.000.00 nine cities to begin plans for a the Firestone Tire and Rubber
668.05 Total Recolpts (Receipts
Total Liabilities
1,568,829.60 summer employment program Co., was named to the board rl
PRESENTED ~IU!. - Gold Star Motbem Thelma Capehart and IYa Capehart
e.counly Proltet
61,.20.47
Plus Transfers
!52,722.21 ExtolS or Deficiency
·
Basic .t.dult
Total Beginning Balance
Of A5Sels
3,.001.970.19 wbich the White House governors of the United Ser·
were pmented flowers In behalf of SmiU.:C.peharl Pilei 140, by Terri Rouah, eigbt ~-aid
Educotion
3,613.54
Plus Receipts
177,194.58 Tolol
4.977,799.79 estimates wW provide jobs for vice Organizations, Inc. (USO)
daughter of Mr. andMrl. Amold Roulh, durlnc lbeBirtltdaydlnner held Monday otpl Jenny
Adult Educ.-High
Totol Expendituros 105,!28.91
SCHOOL DEIT-IOMDS
Tuesday
by
President
Nlmn.
S~;hool
3t.t.7.t
Transftra
Purpose .tor Which Bond
Dodd,
another Gold Star Mother who Ism, was~ a Dower at the hoi!pltal where llbe ilia
about I mllllon needy youths.
1 ~·~~=·~ To General Fund
g::.,.Drl t 11
13,000.00
Deb! wu Created .
·
patient
•537·23 Total Transters
13,000.00
Salisbury-School Construct.
•n a on
H
..
Sttrt
d
36
0 utstanding Jan . 1,
Total
2 441 •77 9 59 Total Expenditures Including
loloaco Dtc " •191 ; •
Transton
111.82S.91
1971
36,000.00
Gtntrol Fund
· ' 14 717 .."" Bal., Dec. 31,1971
58,365.67 Redeemed During Year ·
1971
· 6,000.00
• ·- Total Expenditures Plus
Bond Aollnmonl
69,943.92
Bal., Dec. 31,1971 177,l94.s8 Balance Oulstandlng
3'-'97 -19
t~~~::"~hool
&amp;.s.E.A. Tltltll Fund
Dec. 31,1971
30,000.00
Suppllll
1,203.70 ~!l:~: ~1~al Mot.
5,759 _19 Btlonce, Jan . 1, 1971
197J
a portion ol the coet oflltl!'ling
The Marietta Social Security mental an ombudsman system the past year t.ve led to the stitulion.
1
14
TNruDatE. Title Ill
•
~·.,.
Ftdoral
Sub~~c:\!'~~d
3.773.38
5ttlsbury-5c~ool
Const.
19 • •· Tot•l
Wider MecUCalcl, the
Actions are also being taken home
Office, along with social In the statea. The ombudsmen ~ction of deliclencies and
3 773 38 Outstanding Jan . 1,
· · '" '
N.O.E.A. TttleV
190.00 Total Beginning B1111nce' ·
1971
12.000.00 security offices in 8SO com- would take cunplalnta and tbe UJltll'ldlng of ·care - not to oblaln Slate enforcement of Federal Government does not
E.S.E .A. . Tltltl
51,365.67
Plu&amp; Rtctlpts
4,977.08 Redeemed During Year
E.S.E .A. Tltltll
197.31
!xpondllurts
1971
2,000.00 munities around the country, suggestions about nuralng just lor 16edlcare patlenls, but Medicaid standards. Since the have direct enforcement
~r~lltct lnterHI
l1.7r,::~ Bt'l~~ary School
B~l~~~~~~ Ou!Stlindlng D~O~Ooo.OO has been appointed by hame care and make sure they for all patients in the ill- Federal Government pays only authority,
1•67 1·!! Totaf Expenditures
of
Health, get to the rigbt peciple. They
OAWDCA
Rate oflnt .
3 Secretary
9·- Bal Dee 31 1971
19731 Date of Fin• I Mal.
1975 Education, and Welfare, Elliot would also flrtd out wbat
Boolc Adult
"
· '
·
Middleport Elomn. &amp; Hlth
L. Richardson, as a local nursing borne patlenls think l\d~1~• •dtuloc".. Hig"
3,070.95 To~~~l.~~~~~f,'!~m Plus..,n.oa
School Add. construction
School
"
T &amp; I Funcl
Outstanding Jan . 1.
center to receive complaints not only about the facilltles
owe
'·~~N: Btlance, Jon . 1, 1971
29.47 :r:Jeemod Durin;
163,000.00 about subalandard condltiOII!I where they live, but a1lfo about
H11·' St 1
,. Boi.,Dec . 31,1971
29.47
1103
"
1r
,
·To tat Expenditures Plus
Year 1971
16,000.00 in nursing homes.
alternalives to nursing home
Total
303,609.79 Balance
Balance Outstanding Dec .
Persons who have in· care - ways in which older
CASH lA LANCE,
Dec. ll , 1m
U7,000.00
29 .47 31 , 1971
RICIIPTS AND
ProltCI lnttrost Fund
Rale of Int.
• 112 fonnation about Instances of people may be enabled to stay
BY JACK O'BRIAN
celled tui medallions-and the dallietl here got
IXPENOITURES
Balanee, Jan . 1, 197! 29 ,3•0.56 Dole of Flntl Mal.
1980
poor quality care, neglect, in familiar surroundings illav FUND
Receipts
Pomeroy Elem . Construction
EVASIVE NAVEL AcriON
the story weeks late; all we had to do was Ilk
Genorol Fund:
Stott of Ohio _
Outstanding Jan. 1,
unsanitary, or unsafe con- stead of being insUtutlonallzed.
,
hlancRt Jon1;}• 19R71 11e2,011.74
Olher
.
1971
280,000.00
NEW YORK (KFS)- Belly dancer Taltba, Mike to get It first. What comes ofaollttleN. Y.
6 463 17
The commissioner said
ditions In a nursing home may
HI .,.a- tYtnu
Interest _ Inactive
Redeemed During Ye~r
at
El
Avnlm, gives ringaldera 1 blank biological newspaper competition.
Gt.,,etro't' P(Groptrtly Tax34-5 2~~ea811
Funds
5,924.94 B 1971
.
21.000.00 give that Information to the among stepa already lakeD by
~;·,
e roll
• '~ ·
Other - Revenue
23,077.11 atance Outstanding
Prlncesa Meg II Lord Snowdon UHed IJte 1
Tlllyll»lt Personal Property
Total Receipts
,_. 65 _92 Dec. 31, 1971
259,000.00 nearest social security office In the Department ol s.Jtb, mystery to aolve: she literally had ber navel
35
Tlx (Groaal
25,315.16
Rateotlnt
. ,.,
reiiiOYed by plutlc ugery. Weird!
couple of Cockneya durllig a Mayfair dinner
Foundefion Fund
Total ' Beginning Balance
Date of Flrial Mit.
1983 person, or by letter or phone. if Education, and Welfare to
106
64
48
a.rtalinll Qnassll, 20, juat divorced from pahty and Tony nrisbed home In hiii'O)'II bull
(Grosst
1,267,210.16
Plus Rei:~~!dttvret ' ·
Bedford-Construction
desired, the name of the person guarantee a decent enState of Ohio - School
Improvements _ Old
Outstanding Jan. 1.
Joellolbr,
47,hubernm Bnlnaelected: rich ... ROII88no Bruzl's wife Lydia abed 87 JIOWI(il.
making' the complaints and tbe vironment lor the older penon
1 ..,
4.00
ltuoooPfuorci.h
15,19
Buildings
46,053.17
1971
13,000.00
St.
name of tbe nursing home who Is a nursing home patienl, GennanM!cbFilelt ... "Stlcb&amp;Bonea"moviid Now she's a sylphiUte 198 ... 0~ beauty
" 10 Tot1l Expenditures
46,053.17 Redeemed During Year
Olhtr
15,112.73
9'
19'1
3
000
oo
Bal .. Dec . 31 , 1 , 1
IS ,752.61
•
• .
patient will be kept con- Ball cited Medicare en- lbl!chrf.fromolf.Jidwy.butbun'tacltance. A Peggy Fleming's tailing her lbt. Into
Tultlon - Perents 1nd
Total EKpondltures Plus
Balance Outst1ndlng
forcement aclivitles under bitter, 'pretentious, dreary anti-everything nightclubs with her own portable rinU ... From
Patrons
5,636.60
19'1
Dec 31 1971
10 000 DO fidential, Ball said.
Rentol Of School
Bal., De"o:JJ~ F~nd u ,s06 ·•1 Rate of l~t.
' 2:1s
The soctaleeeurity rlfice wW which more than 1011 extended regQr~llltlon ... "Moonchlldren" got gentle now on it really ahOuld be called the WIIM'bellProPerty
1,4U.OO Bllance, Jan . 1, 1971
14.90 Date of Fintl Mat.
1974
see that tbe complaint gets to care facilities have bad lbelr criticalpatty-palsbutclolesanyway ... The new Runyon Fwtd.
Other - Revenue
1.611.57
ltectipts
Northwtstern-lmprovtment
To1at Revenue
state of Ohio _
Outstanding Jan. 1,
approval tennlnated beca111e Bdwy .. "~" reataurant Ruby Fooe ill
With almoet everything in Howard Hqhu'
Rte.tlp111 I M 1,617,7.0.03
Olhtr
4,21U5
1971
72,000.00 the proper Federal, Slate, or
they
failed
to
meet
beilth
and
local
authority
for
in·
tct P .,_ onrevtnut
Total Receipts
Redeemed
During
Veer
,
1
.
OWi1ed
by
Clucam8f'a
...
"Nanetle"
producer
life
now an open, legal and lllepl, book,
4 2 8 45
Adluatmtnts lnd
Rectit~tt-Tnnsftrs
1971
9,000.00 .vestigation.
safety standards. .
CyJpa Rubin and hulband Sam have spent an Variety's headline statea they're "Near Stqe of
Refunds
2,249.65 From General Fund 13,221.51 Balance Outstanding
As of laat week, be said, evenmllllonmalllnaoveranoldgarmentcenter Who Cares?" ... Andy Warhol's
Tbe designation of the
Slit of Non-Real
Total Transfers
l3,221.51
Dec. 31. 1971
63,000.00
in
355-00 Total Beginn ing Balance
PrOjltrty
Rato ollnt.
.
3.25 nation's aoclitl security offices III!Other 43 facilities are on
clJtrch Into a lhowblz compiH: performing Revolt" transvesUte fag.fllm more ptoperly
Othtr-Nonrevenue 28,211 .56
Plus Rocelpts
11,46 1.16 Date ofF ina I Mat.
1971
as "nursing ~write ilatrnlng notice that unleaa they meet lp8C.'t lor juz, ballet, lheatret for pblyi, ex- shooldbavebeentitled"WomenAreRevollinll"
Total Nonrtvenue
Expenclltur~t
Northwestern-Improvement
Receipts
30,116.21 Personal Service _
Outstanding Jan . 1,
posts" Is preliminary to a plan the •tandar&lt;la they wW be cut perlmental projecll in ~ theatrical dlrectiona. - tbe way Warbolloolla down hla ld at wamen ...
•
••s'''t!""TTrlt•
•s,ten
Teachers
9,028.30
R 1971
30,000.00
From 1 · .e.,... . 1e
announced
by Secretary off from Medicare funds.
Personal Service edeemed During Veer
The Rubin forlwle comea from peddling Who ill "The World's Moet. Popular Actor"?
Fund
13.000.00
Students
5,342.35 1971
3,000.00 Richardson for the establishOn the positive llide, ~
Total Transfers
· 13,000.00 Ex:penus-Emrloyes _
Balance Outstanding
· Fabqe for upwarda rl til mllllon to the Cary Reuters news service polled bozolllcel in 80
thaD 4,000 Medicare IIUI'Veys In
Total Rectlptt !Revenue,
Profession a Meetings 119.76
Dec. 31,19:71
27,000.00
FINE LEVIED
Grant-Fiber&amp;• group.
countries and it's Charles Bronlon. Not liftbe
Nonrevenue and
.
Teachers Retire.
R1teof Int.
.
3
Trenlftrs)
1,721,626.2•
Contributions
995.•1 Date ofF Ina I Mot.
1981
CQLUMBUS (UPI) - The
"Old Tlmell," tbe Pinter play, flopped on USA - John Wayne's winner here, but CI'IIIY·
Totol Boa inning Bo)ance Plus Employoes Rotlre.
Molgs High SchooiTilii-obred
Co.,
of
Waynea·
Bdwy.,UII,OGOwortb: lllca1&amp;1nalcapltallzation homely Bronaon wins evet)Wben elae.
Roctlpls
1,833.6''-''
contributions
297.05
Cons!.
The DIMy S.tlilll
ville in Wama County has
IKIMR411turet
Total Expenditures
15,782.17 Outstanding Jan . 1,
DIVOTEDTO THI
was f!OII,qGO,ao - · s dJulng down lor the
The ratlnga-hopeful blerarehy at CBS-TV
Totol Expondlturos
Bel ., Dte. 31. 1971
1.67S.99 1971
900,000.00 ~ lined •1~ and court costa
INTI RISTO'
rest ... 1neom1nc "Seiling· of tbe Prellident" llavered over "The Damned" to fllbr the
- ACimlnlstretton
60,055.47 Total Expenditures Plus
R~tdeemed During Veer
MIIGI·MASDN iUIA
-Instruction
992,211 .36
Bel ., Doc. 31. 1971
17,461 .16 1971
45,000.00 for ~~Umping animal parts,
CHISTIR L. TANNEHILL,
mumcal 1ot U.QOlw.down on lbe tryout lrlil; Caraon.C.vett CQ~~~~Mtition but, to pt IIIII
-Coordifltte Actlvltlll
AD( Fund
Balance Outstanding
waste flit and greue Into a
Variety noleillt jacbd uP tbe title of the Joseph llldly X-rated ·Wth-lllck on TV at Ill, bid to
6,222.30 Bolon co. Jan . 1, 1971
67U3 ~oc . 3)'.".''
S55.000.00
ROll liT HOifLICH,
- Llbrtrlts
3,069.82
lx,endlturos
Date o1 Fnl ·
•.375 ditch that runs into ~ Little
clly ldltor
McGinnill belkeJier and bUrled the rat ... butcher out Ill tbe revoiUng Mq1I!IICII - tile
- Trantportatlon of
.. Return of U;IUSi!'d
ateo nal Mat .
1990 Miami River.
Publlsft•d dilly •xupt
Pupils
136,476.54
Funds
668 .05 Total - Outstanding Jan .
Saturd1y by Tht Ohio V1ttey Bearded gent tiCOl'IIDI Marian ( Mrl. Sen. result was a diiUtrous miabmub ... Wll'llll'll
- Auxiliary Agone Itt
Total Exponditures
668.05
1, 1971
1,506.000.00
Plobll,hlng Componv . 111
tidied up 40 minutes of ill ercplicit lncelk:lild
224,057.92 Bol., Dec . 31. 1971
9.31 Total - Redetl1\td During Ytar
LEGAL NOTICE
Court St ., Pome:ro.,-, Ohio, Jake) Javlll to tbe "Stlcb • BOnes" debacle
- Operat1on of . School
Total Expenditures Plus
1J71
l05,000.00
The undersigned will sell al 45769. Business Oftice Phone was cab fleet owner Rob't Skull ... "Night moleslatlona • nudity • IKmolel1ullipn 111:.;
Pllftt
16t,099.39
Bal., Dec . 31, 1971
617.43 Tote! - Balance Outstanding public tilt ror cuh the 992-2156, EdiiOrltl Phone 992·
Watch," for alllllfaulll, t.d the best-«eased CBS allced OU\IIIOiber ten mlnutel ... n 11111
- khool Plant
1-County Protect
Dec .
following motor vehicle to bt 2157.
...01 ,000.00 taken from Lloyd J. Sears,
Mtlnlttlonct
2S.OSJ.92 Ballnce, Jon . I, 1971 12.002.05 31, 1971
Second Cllll PGIIage paid It C1pellinc nllbt of tile .,..on.
projected Ill damned sick IOCIII-IIaal bul
-Caplt•l Outlay
1,516.16
ltcllpta-Transfrrs
131 t , 1t
Route 1, C~eshlrt, Ohio:
Pomtroy, Ohio.
1961 Ford
- Tronlftra
132,164.00 From Gtnortl Fund 56,418.38
The ~m~rt money tldnkl Nevada pmb1lng
the conUnulty flulhecl down the chemel.
National ~dV•rtltlftl
Grand Totti hptndlturoa - Total Tronsftrs ·
56,411.38
.131 " Style Pickup
r·tprtstnflllve
lottintlll
·
taa't droOping even tbougb lml'l1 Nortbeut
J,.et tbuuper.ubenla knock Bob IIDpe -bill
General tcund
t,74t,927 .51 tot11 Beolnnlng Bala'lce
Ser. No. F10YCC77175
~llltghor , Inc., 12 Eost •2nd
lal .. Otc. 31, 1971
U,71UO Plus Receipts
6"'20.•7
MOdel FIOO
St ., Ntw York Clly, Ntw York . 111'- (N. Y., N. J. flnt) n ~ legalized · TV special filbed In II pet. of lbe alldlenceTotal !KIM'ndlturn Plus
Expendltura•
The salt will· be held at The
Subscr iPI ion rat11 : De .
MEETING
SET
meanlnC more lolb ntclied Bob'up•""l tban
Itt., Doc. 31, lt71 1,133,644.91 Porsontl Service Farmers Blnk and Savings livered by urrlwr where pmblini: II!ell to IIDince .a slant moneyau• Retlre•eat Fund
Tuchers
53,739.04
The Meiss County Permit Company, 211 west Second av1111ble 50 cents ptr wetk ; 8fllbber 1.1 the Southern Pacific Railroad ... a~ of Ill the other ~~~otwli b et•W t L.
Bllance, J•n. 1, 1971 72,350.15 Per1onal Service Street. Pomeroy, Ohio at 10:00 By Motor Route where cerritr
IH..,tt-llvHut
Clerk
600.00 Holders' Aasociation will meet A.M. on the 22nd t!av of March , t.trlfice
not avallablt : One Good rea1011 : Nevada callinoeln 1971 bauled In Dore Scbary got around to suapecUng cable payin the social room of the Meigs 1972.
Gentr•l Property TIK - Reel Trans . Of empl .. Tea chers
month
Sl
.1S. By m1:1il in Ohio
E1t1t1 fGrotsl
158,639.78 within distr ic t
3,693.63 Inn at 7:30p.m . Thursday. All
The unders ig:red reser"'' lh~ and w. va .. Ont 'ftlr S14.00. f6,15 r.lllllon total profits in case you suspect you TV of Uirns has an enormollS potenUal; Ralph
T•nolble Pertonlf Property
Teachers Retireme t'1 t
rlghl to bid .
Bellamy many years ago (when he ,..
Six months 17.25. Three have 1 chance beiiyjng up to the green baize ...
T1x (GrOIIJ
11 ,651.16 Contributions
· 10.387.80 penni! holders are asked to
Th• :-arm cr1 Bank &amp; monttu S4 .50 . Subscription We printed tbe story herein of N. Y. taxi czar
president Of Actors F.quity) )ll'fliiOIIIICe It .t lu
Tot1t fltevenue
Total !Expenditures
68,420.47 attend or to send represen~ tv~nvs Company
price includtS Sunday Times.
Rtetiptl
17G.291.64 Total l!xpondlturts Plus
Pomer'Oy, Ohio Stnlfntl .
Mike Lazar raiding scads of tali fleet garages
blggaet thlna 1o t.ppen to film folk Iince Edllon
·
Totti ~tetlpta
Bal. , Doc. 31 , 1971 , 68.•20.•1 · tatives.
[3) 8. 15. ;9, 3t
with dolena of violation and can- llmnlld tile lllcb.
·
I

For 1be coilftllleDee iii Melp C4waty f - iii the
Bulen Eqlet wllo plan te so te CbJIJicolhe Tlnlnday
alcJn. EDll 11. ,Haltol Memorial Gym may tie reacbed by
.followlac .._ dlredllm:
. .Trllmlq tn U.S. ftotlte 58, lake tbe MaiD St. exit,
tbtia IID'D left at tbe IIIOp alp at tbe exit'• end. Follow
· tlala St. lor lenni blocb taW reachlwc tbe courtb0111e
. &lt;1111 lJwUwc wltb elodi). Tan! 1'11111, aud 1• tbroagb
YulopeePariL At tbeeadol theJIRrllll tbe 1)'111.

....
~ ,

_

Br Chei Tannehill
'

Post.l40 Dlnner
Well Attended

600 00

::m:::

1

Voice along Br'Way

·ow-

me.

''

••••••••

GaWpoila' Larry Snowden
watiUIIIled Fint Team Class
AA AII·Diatrlct by tile
A11oc1Ated Press today. In
Clau A cirelea, Artbur
Clark, North Gallla, and
Deania Eleblager, Eaotem,
were 1111med. AJI..DIIIrlct by
the AP. Mike H118bea, Soatb
Pojut, wu AA Dlllrlet Coac:b
oftbe Year. Charles McAfee,
Atbens, was IUimed AAA
Dlalrlcl Cotlcb -of the Year
aad
Doug
Latimer,
AleiBllder, waaiUIIIled Class
ADistrlctC!NicboftheYear.
The United Press In·
ternatlonal's AII-Oblo
aelectlouwW be aDDounced '.
abortly before the stale
ton-•-eat'•ter·•••- - ,. ..... m~••.
uuuo

day, March 9 and Saturday, tional. Ironton won the Sym·
March 11.
mes Valley sectional.
In the Thursday game,
Thursday 's winner goes
WaverlY, last year's district against New Lexington, winner
winner meets Ironton. Waverly of the Alexander -tournament.
advanced to lhls point by The winner goes on to regional
, winning tbe Lucasville sec- competition
at
Miami

University at Oxford.
In other basketball action at
Lyne Center, the first Southern
Ohio Buketball Toutnalllent
will be held at Lyne Center
March 22 through 25. Tbe
tourney is sponsored by the

World Champs Rock.

26-1.59.

BY QUARTERS
Alexander
13 25 , 1 12 - 57
Portsmouth East
18 19 12 10 - 59
Officials, Rober! Overly and Ralph Davis.
PROBABLE STARTING-LINE-UPS
EASTERN
PORTSMOUTH EAST
POS PLAYER
HEIGHT PLAYER
PDS
G Bob Caldwell
5-11 6-1 Lowell Welch
G
G Randy Boring
5-9 6-1 SleveSturgill
G
F Randy Young
6-2 6-0 Jim Roney
F
F Alan Duval
6-2 6-1 Mike Clausing
F
C D&lt;!nnls Eiehinger 6-3 6-2 Bob McCann
C

Beach Athletic Club.
CurrenUy there are seven
entries in a proposed 16-team
field. Entry infonnation can be
obtained by contacting the
Beach Athletic Club, Box 332.
Tbe teams currently entered
are: Bob Saunders Quaker
State, Beach A. C. (Marshall
University), Bosters All-Stars.
A. D. Lewis (HunUngton),
Athens Masonery (Ohio
University), Alpha Tau Delta
(Rio Grande) .

SAN DIEGO (UP!) -The
Cincinnati Royals National
Basketball Association team,
reportedly up for sale for $6
million, is the object of
negotiations by three San
the Pirates' 14-ltit attack.
victory -a 9-6 triumph over Diego groups intent on
&amp;t nobody questions the the Chicago White Sox ... bringing the club to this west
Pirates' offense. It's Pitts· CharUe W'llliams closed out the
coast city.
burgh pitching that is the New Yor.k Meta' 9-3 triumph
question mark and the reason over the Detroit Tigers by
. why Virdon was all smiles .retiring the last nine batters in
bJ
for about $37500
Carl
after the game .
a row ... Dill' es by Ron
• · ...
Moose, who had an 11 •7 Swoboda and George Pens Morton also erided his holdout
record and u 1 earned run sparked the New York with the Montreal Expos when
be greed to an estimated
average In 1971, is considered Yankees to eight runs in the ..,2, a
the Pirates' likely No.4 or 5 seventh Inning and a 14-9 ... 500·
Hal McRae's single cl'-·-d
starting pitcher this year . victory over the Texas Ranuo"""'
Vale, ~despite a ghaally 7.04 gers.
the game-wimlng seventh.m.
ERA last sealbn,ls considered
Tbe St. Louis Cardinals ning rally In the Cincinnati
a marginal reliever-starter. announced they have invoked Reds' intra-~quad game ... The
Kison, tbe baby.faced right- ""U'ie ''fenewal. cla\iil!'!"lii'"the Oakland' Alhietks,lln~ced "'
••-• fonner def--'vo~ • star
hamler who helped turn the c~n. traeti"'CJf,lpltMtel"'. '8M-ry ~o~
"''"'·T'
World Series around Wl'th a Re
. uss· llld catcher Ted "'-. Jimmy Pleraall of the Boston
"""
lrilliant relief performance 1n mons, fore~ them to sign for Red Sox haa been hired to lake
the fourth game (after a lh'i theclub's"bestoffer." ... Merv charge of group sales and
record with 3.41 ERA) is Rettenmood, who bit .318 for ticket sales ... Leo Cardenas,
regarded as the most aggres- the Baltimore Orioles last the California Angels' wan·
slve pitcher on the staff and a se&amp;IOil, ended his seven-day derlng shortstop, once again
potential great.
holdout by signing for an asaured the club -this time
In other camps : Charlie estimated f&gt;IO,OOO ... Relief through his wile -that be Is
Manuel's twCH'Illl sixth-Inning specialist Cecil Upshaw, II~ enroute to camp.
· homer paced the Minnesota with 17 saves last season,
Twins to their fourth straight signed with the Allanla Braves

Boston Red Sox 13-1
By United Press International

""'
..._ -m......
•"« ned pt._
··"h•
•nOSe mu...
ers of the world Champwn
·
Pittsburgh Pirates are back In
thenew~ing everyone
except the Pittsburgh Pirates.

8

last play," Nichols said. "&amp;t
I'm very proUd with the way
our kids played tonight."
Corde led the Bobcats with 'II
polnls and LaUch and Bill
Brown added 12 each. Mike
Parker paced Toledo with 22
points and Bob Repp added 14.

.

AT LOWQT PRICES
IN THIS AREA

H&amp;R·
FIRESTONE
.

Home
Improvement ·

Loan
OJr low home improvement

loan rates should be good
enough reason for you to act
now. Fly In today with your
estimates ollhe amounl you
need, and Improve the state
of your mind, as well as the
fine slate of your house.

Meigs Co. Branch
''' •'·" '

·

" '" '• ' ·

..

'" '" '

"''•·• •• '"""

' ,,, The Af!Mif~~ilrv ' " . '
s lh &amp; Lo c 0
•;,.a~cond'S't. •
Pomerov. Ohio
All Aceounls Insured To
s2o.ooo.oo by FSLIC.
,.....
•

!- I
~-· ·'
·;;.·· ·

~
•
"•• • •

KEITH GOBLE·FORD
NEW USED,CAR LOT
3RD AVE.

$1.15 with trade

ANY OF THESE SIZES 7.75 x 14,
7.75 x 15, 8.25 x 14, Tubeless Black·wall $18.00 Plus ~2.1 2 to . ~2.26
Fed. Ex. Tax ~lth trade.

RIZER OIL 00.
.

Up a tree for living
space? See us tor a

AT••• •

6.50 x IJ tubtltn

f

North Gallia
Fans

IN A
GU·ARANTEED
USED ·CAR

plus Ftd. Ex. 111

- FIBERGLASS

EASTERN
"EAGI.ES"

.STOP 'N' SAVE

-

WIDE OVAL

Good Luck!

IAVIWmt GOBLE

In the Ohio Conference
championship game p~yed at
Mount Union College In
Alliance, Wittenberg withstood
a late second half rally to
defeat Kenyon.
Wittenberg, now 111-8 overall,
led 38-33 at the hall and
stretched the advantage to 13
points before Kenyon surged
back to within two poinls, 61-69
with 6:24 left to play. The
Tigers then pulled away again.
Joe Hamilton was high for
Wittenberg with 21 points and
Jim Smith got . 22 points for
Kenyon, now 13-15 overall.

BELTED TIRES

ioo E. MAIN
. .
ff2·2101
POMEROY, OHIO

.

I
.

Waverly (19-2), Ironton (147) and New Lexington (17-4)
play at Rio Grande College's
Paul R. Lyne Center this week
to delernilne the Class AA
district representative. There
wm be 7:30 games on Thura-

The 6-3 junior Whlte led the Spartans with 24 while~ junior
Greg Brooks added 15. White also Jed Aleunder on the boards
with 10. The Spartans had 24 rebounds.
East made a phenomenal 26 of 45 from the field for an
amazing 58 pet. but sank only seven of 17 from the foul line.
Aletander hit but 23 of 66 from the field lor a far.!Jeiow-titeir·
average 35 pet. The Spartans, who made II of 14 from the charity
stripe, hit only five of 31 from the field in the second half for 16
pet.
East, who beat South Webster, New Boston, Green Township, and Portsmouth Clay in their sectional at Portsmouth, is
not tall, but very quick and has a sticky, bail-ltawklng defense.
Al.'I:XANDER (571 - Brooks fT-15, B'r'own 3-0-6, White 8·8-24,
Risley 1-H , Ervin 4-0-8, Dishong 0-0-0. Tota ls 23-11 -51.
PORTSMOUTH EAST (59) - McCann 11 -0-22. Welch 1-2-4,
Sturglll6-1 -13, Clausing 3-1-1, Roney 5-1-11, Stapleton 0-2·2. Tolals'

OU, Wittenberg Win

care

~·I

WaVerly, Ironton Clash'
Thursday In Tourney

THE STANDINGS

Social Security Offices Made into Listening .Posts

\
'-

·~·

Leading the way for the victors was 6-2 senior Bob McCann
with 22while6-1 junior Steve Sturgill added 13and ~senior Jim
Rooney 11. Sturgill and McCann paced East on the boards with
four each of a total of 14.
..

. ..r. . ' .
lfit ScoreS

j

9 2 95

....

Alexander's Rich White made two free throws with six seconds
left to matte it 59-57, but East froze out tbe clock.
Alexander piled up a 1U margin, after trailing early l&gt;-2,
only to have the hot-ahootlng Portsmouth hit 10 straight points to
lead 18-13 after one period.
A nip and tuck second "'arter, which ·had tl!e lead change
hands nine times, ended with the Spartans coming bock for a 3837 halftime lead.
Holding Alexander scoreless the last four minutes Of the third
quarter and the First two minutes of the fourth quarter, the
defensivHI1inded East squad built a 57..f91ead with two minutes
left. The pressing Spartans, however, couldn't overcome the
tenacious East zone defense.

"Everybody rapped our
'I
Pl chers 1as1 year an d
b d
t0 be
every 0 Y their
seems
ilJestioning
ability this
especi•llytheplayof&amp;-3senlorDennlsEichingerwhotodaywas
':~~@?~~ year," says slugger Willie
elected totbe All-DistrictCiusequadfiratteam (AP).
st gell "Well e
't
Sports Delli's quiet prayer iB that Dennis and team have a
ar . · by ' w w~~
8C!I.I!~ •, 1• ,Hif! bt"li!:lli.)kllil'dU'hursdliy!"
'. '
""', S~
'·!
=&amp;~ts
~
_surprised
what they llid .ut
..
,
,
.
..
the
pennant
race
or lbe World
bt......... Keith ""•"'-•- s probable starting lin"'; " · ·
· ·
·
.._ '" . ·- "!OCl'...
.
,.,.. - . , "" .. :
.,.. •. . under~ated."
Series last season ..They're just
~~~:::~on this page ,today, Eastern wW have some
h
around the baaket but East's guards, both 11-1,
~
andqUick,wWfX!IbeavypressureonEasterngettlngtheball,
'
Manager Bill Virdon unfirst past the 10secondllne then Into shooting range.
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - The veiled three important Pirate
Good Luck, Eagles! '
Cincinnati Reds held their first pitchers Tuesday -Bob Moose,
intrBSC)uad game of tbe spring Bob Veale and Bruce Kison _
Tuesday, with· the Scltergers and they combined in four·
beating the Grammases 3-2 on hitter as the -Pira~s walloped
a IWCH'Illl seventh Inning rally. the Boston Red Sox 13-1. Gene
Hal McRae singled home Alley's four runs balled In and
rookie
outfielder Ken Griffey a horner by Vic Davalillo led
ABA Standings
Phoenix
«
30 .595 13
with
the
wimlng run off pitcher
By United Presslnltrnatlonol Detroll
23 49 .319 33
East
Pedro Borbon.
Poclflc Division
W. L. Pet. GB
'•
The Grammas Squad had
W. L. Pet. GB
Kentucky
58 14 .806 ...
X· LosAngeles 60 12 .133 ...
gotten
the first run, in the third
VIrginia
41 30 .571 16112 Goldon St.
46 26 .639 14
inning, whell Bernie Carbo sinNew York • 35 31 .484' 23
Sealtle
46 28 .622' 15
Floridians 30 42 .417 28
Houston
28 43 .394 31'12 gled home Don Gullett. But the
Carolina
29 43 .403 29
Portland
. 16 59 . .213 4.5 112 Schergers tied it up In the fifth By United Preu lnlernatlcmal Ind., later this week.
Pltts~urgh
24 48 .333 34
~ - Clinched divlllon IItie
when Griffey trippled off
W11t
With juat six seconds left In
Youngstown state defeated
Tuesdey's Results
W. L. Pel. Gil New York 110 Mllwaukoe101
Wayne Simpson to score Joe an overtime period Tuesday Gannon (Pa.) 81-7Jin an NCAA
Utah
so 21 .70-4 ... Phoenix 129 Detroit 121
Morgan.
night, Ohio University Coach College Division Tournament
Indiana
39 30 .565 10
Los Angeles 114 Phlla . 97
The
·game-winning
rally
Jim
Sllyder had a dilemma to game at Akron that was halted
Dallas
34 .00 .-459 17'12 Baltimore 105 Seattle 98
Denver
29 41 .414 20if2 Porlland 98 Buffalo 94
came after a home run . by settle.
with 27 seconds to play when
Memphis
24 41 .338 26
Golden State 119 Cleveland 112 rookie Bill Ferguson sent the
Should
he
give
the
ball
to
Gannon
fans refused to stop
T.... y'sResuHs
tOnlygamesscheduled)
Carolina 116 Floridians 108
Galllpolla'
Tommy high«&lt;ring Torn Corde or throwing debris and coins onto
Kentucky 117 New York 112. ol
Speacer had 1 piDcb bit Todd LaUch when the clock the floor .
Dallas 143 Plltsburgh 108
started again after the
In tbe season-ending game at
slql~ ID tbe aeventll bmbag,
NHL Standings
Utah 116 Denver 108
timeout?
He
chose
LaUch,
end
Columbus,
Ohio state beat
By United Presslnfernollonal
· ('o.ilygomesscheduled)
took tblrd oa Griffey's
Eost
Wednesday's Gomes
Blqle, alld scored 1 run on exclaimed some seconds later, Michigan State 92-'IJ, ending
W. L. T. Pis
Kenlocky ••· Carolina
" that ending sure was the Buckeyes' season at IU
AI Crawford's 8J'Oundout.
48 9 9105
AI Raleigh Boston
something,
wasn1 it?"
overall.
... 11 10 98 Grammases ahead 2-1 in the
New York
Plorldlans vs. VIrginia
39
.
14
12
90
Montreal
Tonight, in the only game ID
Lallch took an inbounds pass,
At Norfolk
top of the seventh.
Toronto
28 21 11 67
Plltsburgh al Ulah then dribbled the length of tbe be played, Findlay and Defi.
2929 967
Detroll
Reds Mansger Sparky An·
tOnlygamesseheduled)
court and hit a 15.foot jwnp ance meet at Defiance to de13 38 IS •t
Buffalo
derson said he would pitch
16 43 6 38
Vancouver
shot at the gun thet gave Ohio dde the NAJA District 22
Gary Nolan, Gullett-and either
NBA Standings
West
U. a ~7 win over Toledo and champion. The winner of that
By Unlltd Prttslnlornallonol
W. L.· T. Pis
Ed Sprague or Borbon in the
the Mid-American Conference game will go to the NAJA
Eastern Confeenct
Chicago
40 11 9 89
Reds' Gr4pefruit League
playoff championship. The vic- Nationals.
Atlantic Division
Mlnnesola
33 23 9 75
W. L. Pet. GB 51. Louis
24 35 9 57 · opener Saturday against tory sends the Bobcats to TenOhio U. Coach Sllyde; said a
8os ton
49 25 .662 ... Philadelphia
21 33 .11 53 Pittsburgh.
nessee
next
Saturday
to
go
key
to his Bobcats' win qver
New York
« 28 .611 4 Calll6rnla
18 32 16 52
Competing for the shortstop
Philadelphia 28 « .389 20
Pittsburgh
21 36 9 51
job when the regular season fialnst powerful Marquette In Toledo was containing the
Buffalo
19 52 .268 28 112 Los Angell!$
11 « 1· 41
tlie NCAA Mideast Regional. Rockets' top-notch center, Tom
opens will be Darrell Otaney
Tuosday•s Rtsulls
Central Dl•lslon
W. L. Pel. GB 51. Louis 4 l.os Angeles .2
and Dave Concepcion, two who · The win was Ohio's lOth con- Kozelko, who was held to just
··
secutive one oyer Toledo, ill- 10 poiri'IS:
(Onlygamescheduled)
Baltimore
33 39 .458
Anderson
feels
are
aboUt
equal
Allan ta
28 -43 .394 4'12
Wednesday's O.mn
Deserved The Win
in the field. He said tbe job will eluding three this season. The
Clnclnnall
23 48 .324 9'12 Chicago at New York
playoff
was
needed
after
both
"We
were double teaming
• Cleveland
21 51 .292 12
Montreal. at Plllsburgh
go to the best hitter.
Detroll at Toronto
, Wtolorn Conltrtne' '
&amp;t Anderson . pointed ~~ teams finished with 7-3 marks Kozelko all nigbt and they just
Midwest DIYislon
Boston at Minnesota
that giving the starting in regular conference play. didn't get it in to him," Sllyder
W. l. Pel. GB Buffaloal California
Ohio Is now 15-10 overall and said.
Milwaukee 51 17 .710
asaisiUilent to one Of them
Phlladlllphla at Vancouver
Kozelko, a 6-loot-4 j111ior, hit
Chicago
51 22 .69D 51f•
(Onlygamesscheduled)
won't bode m for the other Toledo flnlsbed ~~ 18-7.
Wlllellberg Winl OC
only three of eight field goals
necessarily.
In other pmes Tuesday and added four free throws.
"If Concepcion opens the
night,
Wittenberg downed Ken- Toledo coach Bob Nicholas
season at short it doesn't mean
yon
7H8
In the Ohio Confer- conceded Ohio "deserved to
he'll have the job per·
.HIGHLIGHTS
manenUy," Sparky said. "The ence championship game to win it."
.
with Paul Crabtree
same goes for Chaney. They've win a berth_In the NCAA Great "They were able to get the
· Lakes Regtonal at Evansville, good percentage shot on that
both been told that.
CALL POINTVIEW : '192·2505
"I'll try to use the player
"
Adam
12,"
which
Isn't
who's
not playing regularly In
For loeal river fans (and
picked
up
by
either
Ch.
2
or
at least two games a week jllSI
who Isn't?). lhe bright spot
1oday has lobe " Portrallola Ch. 1 lhls week, sllll Is
to keep him sh.arp," he said.
Queen.'' which Is a around to please Its fans .
documontory booed on the although I'm, not one of
., beloved "Delio Queen," IIIII them. Ch.' 4 at s p.m.
' storn-whttllllg her way up
+++
GAME SETFRIDAY
Dlek Cavell has lhe star of
lltd down the Ol)lo by lhe
The Hannan Trace· High
grace of God and an ad of " The Persuaders," Roger
School
faculty will play the
Congress. An hour-long look Moore, as a guest tonight.
•
Golden Voices of Radio Station
.t a well-preserved remnant 11 :30 p.m .. Ch. 6.
+++
WOUB in Atbens at 8 p.m.
Of thi pasl, 7:30p.m.• Ch. 1.
MOVIES:
TheCh.
6
prlmt·
t PolnTVIew Ch: 5 did a
Friday night'U. the high school
half-hour apeclol 'cin .the time film Is "The Pigeon,"
gym. A preliminary game at 7
Queen when she camo INilh Sammy Davis Jr. Also:
"Excuse
My
Dust,"
,
Red
p.m. will feature the two six
through this area lost
Skelton,
4
p.m..
ind
grade teams. Hannan Trace
aummer, and lht program
waa well-rocelved. The folks "Brigham Young/' Dean
defeated
Fairland In a faeultY
11 :30 p.m., both Ch.
who own thi r lvorbolt wore Jaggl'r,
.
10. ·.
.
game earlier this . week .
*lightlullo - k ,with.)
Proceeds will go to the HT
I·
MIDDUPOR1', 0. ·
AthleUc Fund:
I

90

1 '

.

Desk

There was plenty of class In the Chllllcothe District Class A
basketball tournament that opened last evening. I'm not doubtlngall!inute~ ellber, ti)atEalltemHlgh'a Coach liUJ Phillips was
on hand 11:ith his varaity squad to watch Alexander (»3) take on
PortamoutbEast (J2.10) . Eastern, having drawna by~ In the top
!racket, meets the \vlnnerofthe above fracas at 7:30p.m. Thursday at OiiWcotbe, the victor~ to the regional play-off
· at Athens. the following weekend.
Nobody here, just nobody, expected Alexander to loae to
Portamoutl) East last nll!ht. att it did! Portsmouth East came on
strong the second half of the sea111n, having dumped Portsmouth
Clay (14-.'1) to get onto tbe district level.
Our best guess _as of Tuesday afternoon; four hours before
tipoff- was Alexander by 20, say about !JG.70. Rather, it was 5957 Portsmouth 1
Eastern, which carries with it to Chillicothe the best wishes
lor succesa of everyone In Poleiga County, Is moving In high class
company. Of 40 southeastern Ohio Class A clubs coml•.• out of
··-.,
five sectional tournaments, Eastern ill one of the five wlmers
earning a shot at district honors. Reganllesi of what may happen '
at OIUJicolbe Thursday, CoaCh Bill PhiWpa' boys already have
earned the admiration of everyone here .
·
·
· Meiga fans owning lllything with four wheels that turn
"""uld
· to he1p the Eag1es
"''" .be at· ChiWcothe tomorrow even111g
exand Th • thin
ite
'"'"""'" ·
.._.
agalnst Al
er. ere s no g qu 10 u~.... u,g as a ...tg
crowd whooping it up for ita ,favorite team. Perhaps lhls is
n..
1r ho
'dst th
especla..,.
ll'lle away om me, on a strange court, m1
e
tensenessofatournamentgameagalnstastrongopponentwhich
has ample vocal support of ita own.
""•-ne who has watched Eastern play this year has come
~·-•v
away llnpr eased bY the club· ...
,,.e ones I' ve heard a Iways Uked

t:·:t·::

•
•
~

.•

:. the ..Sports

•

.29.3!::::

-.

_,
BY KEll'H WISECUP
ClUWCXYn!E - fortamouth East Tuesday nighl ear,J8d
the right to meet the Eastern Eagles here with 111 upset 59-57 win
over tbe state:s ninth ranked team, the Alexander ~rtans, in
"A" district tournament play.
Portsmouth East, the Cinderella team of tbe Chillicothe
district, takes ita 13-10 slate againslthe,Eagies at Ellis B. Hatton
Gym (Oiillicothe Hlah School) Thursday night at 7:30.
The East-Alexander battle had the packed gymnasium in
high tension from the beginning on. The lead switched 14 times
and was tied three times. The largest lead by either team was
. eigbt, held by East with 2:20remalnlng,at 57-49.
A desperate comeback'by tbe Spartans fell sbort; Alexander
closed out ita season with a 17-tslate. :eoach Doug "Latimer's
AlbaJiy five hit on two field goalund two free lltroWs between the
one and two minute marks to close th,e gap at 57~. But East's
Darrel Stapleton dropped in two free throws with 33 secollds left
to give East the win and him his only points of the night.

''

.. MIDDLEPORT, 0.

�;

,.

Gophers Capture Big T~n Crown
CfPCAGO (UPI)-Bill Mus·
selman told his Minnesota
Gophers Tuesday night to
prove their image .as the
nation's top delensiye college
hasketball,team. They did and
today they are Big Ten
champions for the first time in
35 years.
Minnesota wrapped up the
crown with a 49-4ll thriller over
Purdue at Lafayette, Ind.,
despite not scoring a pOint in
the _final three minutes. The
Gophers won the conference
with an 11-J slate, ·gaining a
berth in the NCAA Tourney
Ohio State rmished its season
at 10-! after a 92-73 victory over
Michigan State Tuesday night:
Michigan, a 93-70 victory over
Wisconsin Tuesday, is 9-4 and
lakes on Iowa in its final game
Saturday.
'
Mimesota fell behind, 5-0,
then rallied for a 26-18 halftime
lead. Purdue put on a late rally
and closed to within two, 49-47
with 3: 13 left. But the
Boilermakers managed one

free toss with I :59 to go, and
that was the scoring.
'"!be last t3seconds were the
longest of. my. life," said
MUIISelman, who took over the
coaching chores at Minnesota
this season after moving ovet
from Ashland College.
"Time To Prove It"
Jn the timeout just before the
final 13 seconds, "I told my
boys 'you're the No.1 defensive
team In the nation. Now's the
time to prove It,"' MUBSelman
said.

Purdue got two shots at the
bucket in the cloeing seconds
wt neither.. comected as the
Gopher defense protected a
thin edge.
Mussehnan, who at 31 is the
younge$-~ch to win the Big
Ten in baSketball, wasn't even
born when the Gophers shared
the UUe in 1937. Their last
previous outright crown was in
1919.
Purdue Coach George King
praised Gopher Jim Brewer,
saying he broke up a pass to

Bollermake[ , Bob Ford that
could have r'esulted in a winning basket at the close'. ·"I
don't know where 'he c8me.
frotn," 181d 1\ing.
King called Minnesota "as
good a champion' as I've ever
seen. They'D represent the Big
Ten well in the NCAA. I think
they can match up well with
anyone."
Claderella Team
Mussebnan agreed:
"I think we can go to the end.
This Is a great basketball
team. These guys play with
more heart than anybody
around. Yes, I guess this Is a
Cinderella team."
Mime10ta used just five
players. Brewer and Clyde
Turner each scored 12 points
and Dave Winfield got 10. Ford
led all scorers with 24 for

Jn Oilier pmee 'I'IIeldiy ... ~ ... . far ""' . . . . .
Nar1bwestern loll tD ~ a tl-84 vlcloey IIIII ap ill ·.
Indiana, ~. to pill a finn Blil Ten mark tD U. Tile 1111111'1 ·
hold on Iaiii place In the con- Nick WulbaiijMD led .0 ·
terence ~ with a 3-10 scorers will\ 37 polnta, b11 bell
reconUndJanaadvanced to 8-5 night of the !leiiiOII. Iowa
' for finn hold on fourth place In . dropped to f-9 Ill conference
the all!ndlnlis.
play·
The Hoosier attack was led
., \
by John Ritter with 23 points
MARIKINA. RIZAI., ptUllp..
and Steve Downing with 21.
pines
(UPI) -Tbe Ulllled
Mark Sibley led Northwestern
States shut out Slngapote, lq-4,
·With 21.
Tuesday
f!ll' Its fourth llraigbt
At Ch8mpaign, Illinois broke
win
in
the
Third World Men's·
a lie with two and a hall
'
minutes to play and held Iowa Softball Championship.
'

State garile, at Columbus, saw
the Buckeyes post an ·early
lead, 27-15. Then the Spartans
btittled back to within three, 4239, at hallllme. The Buckeyes
started moving again after
halftime and Opened up a 60-46
lead with 13:35 left. Their
widest margin was 22 points,
'18-56 with six and a hall
minutes to go. .
Mike Robinson, the Big Ten's
leading scorer, posted the
game high 30 polnls for
Michigan State which Is ~ in
. conterence play. Wardell
. Jackson led OSU with 19.

Mlclifcao Ww

Michigan's victory over Wisconsin was . a walkaway. The
Wolverines opened with a 6-0
advantage and worked it into v
41-35 at halftime. Their lead
advanced steadily through the
second half.
Lee Oler scored 20 points for .
Wisconsin, which dropped to S8 in conference play. John
Lockard led Michigan with 17
points.

Purdue.

Purdue outscored · the Gophers from the field, 19-17, WI
Minnesota hit 15 free tosses tD
10 filr the Boilermakers.
The Ohio State-Michigan

3·ROOMS

NEW.

FURNITURE
'349.95
535.00 Down

'Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON

.FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

Wellston Plans Cage Tourney

WILDERNESS
JOURNEY

Barbecued
chicken...
cooked indoors!

. AStwELL 69
BEEF Ro
$1
CAliFORNIA STYLE

MENU
Vegetable Soup
· Oven Barbecued Chicken
Risotto-Broccoli
Peaches 'n Cream Cake

r;;] An Ailr,ntlire for

l!!J lhe Whole family!
A RAINBOW ADVENTURE FILM
Prodycecl by CHUCK KEEN
1811 AMERIC-'N NATIONAl !.hiTUIPRISES

TRIMMED
FULL OF FLAVOR •

&gt; CUT FROM CHUCK

' Cube $teak
...

39

I

I

PLUMROSE SLICED

Boiled Ham w~;;,F~:.' ;;;'.d·:-:;:

lb.

I

,
"
,
'1
tt', ,
• • . • lb.
Ground Round

ROUI\IQ !ONE SHOULDER

Swill Steak

OVEN BARBECUED CHICKEN
2'12 lb. broiler/fryer, cut-up
2 tbsps. vinegar .
Flour seasoned with salt &amp; pepper
1 tbsp. sugar
I can (8 oz.) lomato sauce
1 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
I small onion, finely chopped
•;, tsp. salt
2 tbsps. oil
tsp. garlic powdor

1
ll U

Strip Steaks •

I

I

!ONELESS

Delmo1ico Steaks

•

lb. - '

'

$249

lb. ·

Pork Steaks

c

I

lb.

I

Haddock Fillets

14b..

1..., ''Fish·~1: u'r;s:~ ;·
89c Fish Sticlcs • •
7gc D'1nner1
roll
CAr~, '12,H/1,.

,

5429 eun STYLE

1HiCK CUT, !ONE·IN

'*

~RESH LEAN

CAP'N JOHN

)

""'

• Pkr. ;r;r·

I

I

I

CAP'N JOHN

•

•

•

SOM!RERO

Chili Chubs •

I

I

.

CAP'N JOHN

·1*1.;11" .

,..... ' Aik ,

lb.

1-lb

il.tljtDc

·I Ill

•

pq, ~-

HADDOCK

OR PERCH

1

I

Sprinkl e ch icken pieces with seasoned flour . Place skin .si de down in

...

greased baking pan. Bake 1n prehealed 375 " ~ oven 30 minutes. Mean·

Boston

Nova Scotia
Springfield
Providence
Rochester

The Old Ohio River Salt Co.

the na mes of pioneers. Thus
about a mile wide."
In the Geological Survey, the Waggener District was named
late John McCulloch of Point in honor of Col. · Andrew
Pleasant, reported that grape Waggener.
Did you ever wonder about
_v ines often · grew to such
enormous size that some split the mi~,erajllr !lound in West
into rails for fencing; and the Vil'ginia counties? There is
poplars, ·Oaks, black walnuts, Washington limestone found in
wild cherries, hickories, and the northern pari of the slate.
Washington "A" coal is
many other trees attained a
size rarely reached in other fo und in the Ravenswood
District.
parts of the slate.
Washington coal throughout
Townships in Mason County
Jackson
county and a portion
were named to commemorate

'~

'

«

•

...
~

+

"'"

::"

WITH THIS COUPON ON
TOUR PURCHASE OF 2

~

SALISBURY STEAK, CHICKEN
Sultana Dt"nners MEAT
lOAF OR TURKEY

'
••
!
I

!
'

YALUAILE COUPON
C
WITH THIS COUPON
.
ON TOUR PURCHASE
. OFANI-o&amp;.JAI

I
I

SAVE SO

t
t

Maxim
Freeze
Brie•
Coffee
Good Thru Saturday, Morch lith. At Your "

Ceiling Tile

I

Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

I

ONE PER FAMILY

\

YALUAILE COUPON

BeHy Crocker Potato Buds
21•01.

pkg.

.White, .12~'x24"

89'

WITH THIS
COUPON

•

Good Thru S.turday, Morch lith. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

ea.

ONE PER FAMILY

Panama
Washable Finish, 12"Xl2"

· VAlUAILE COUPON -

Final Touch Fabric Softener

Mayfair
Washable Finish, 12°x12';

.

Rondelay
12"xl2" · 22~
Washable,Gniase-ResistantFinish
·

Sonata

59'

ll·oa.
WITH THIS
. bottl•
COUPON
Good Th'u Solurday, Morch lith. At Your
Friendly AAP Food Storo
ONE PER FAMILY

'

lAKER'S

iChi~s

I Nuts •

7

~ 36c Thrill Llt~ui•
20. OF!' LA!EL .

Ilk

I

I

I

DRY

bll.

l)lk

......

I

DO~.

lineal

- ·69c

AlP FltOZEN

Chocolate Brow1ies -~'ki59c

Sandwich Bread • 3~~-- 9-l.iwes Cat Food • ~-..,.,- Tomato Ketchu'
bANE ,ARKER
IDO'/. IIAZl UAN
OUR OWN
,
rAp,le Pie
•
•
Jar
.,.,I O'Clock'~~~.
reaB•as •
l
IRAZIUAN .
34
1oar c I O'Clock Coffee
I

·Furring Strips ·

•

JANE ,ARKEA

I

Accoustic.al Tile, .12"X12"

I

ANN PA&amp;E

I

3-::Sloo

C\

)l '

. ~11Jc

1,

'l

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
We Deliver

MASON

t

)

I I

Mr. Northup graduated
from Wabama High School
willlthe class of 1970 and ill
presently employed with
Mli1011 County Motors in Point

Pl=:~g

. Incomplete.

••

plans

The public utility tax was
explained by Attorn~y Mike
Shaw and approved for the
·second reading during the
regular session of the Mason
Town Council Monday night.
Town attorney Shaw also told
council members ' he would
have the proposed street
paving ordinance written by
the next council me~ting and
would present it at that time.·
Council requested that Mrs.
Lottie Jenks contact the local
telephone company to see if the
company still had house
nwnbers available and council
approved a motion that all
homes in the town of Mason be
nwnbered.
The monthly police report
prepared by Police Chief John
Harrah and patrolman Bob
Dewhurst was read showing 32
calls were answered; four
accidents investigated ; six
meetings attended; two
robberies and two breaking
and enterings probed.
Appearing in traffic court for
the month were Gaylord
Hasey, charged with driving
while intoxjcaled; Willard
Barker, failing to keep safe
ass ured distance; Clarence
Lee, intoxication; Stephen
FlnlaW, running stop sign;
Robert Quillen, and Ben Casto.
speeding and Bob Coffey, no
license.
Bernard Scarberry, water
superintendent, reported the

YOU CAN
COUNT
ONUS!
Service,
Delicious Food,
Soft Drink.s &amp; Dairy D~ssert.

quarter,

MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Lingerfelt
of
2901
Meadowbrook Drive, Point'
Pleasant, are announcing the
engagement of their daugllter,
Viet!, to Mr. Gary Patrick
Northup, son of Mr. and Mrs,
Deryl Northup of .Clifton.
• Vicki iJ p~nUy a senior at
Point Pleasant High Scb:&gt;Ol.
· After graduaUon she plans to
·attend Gallipolis Busines.s
'College beginning at the Jf!lle

..:.at

'

I

VICKI LINGERFELT

Vicki Ann Lingerfelt
~ · Betrothed To
:: Gary Patrick Northup

foot

.

,.,

Class AA

Cleve. Holy

burg

59

Name 62 Twi ns-

Class A

Lancaster Fisher Catholic 93

Newark Catholic 65
Portsmouth East 59 Albany
Alexandria 57
Maplewood 65 Sebring 51
Kirtland 58 Windham 49
loveland 94 East Clinton 40
Indian Valley South 74 Adena

department
bills
were 44
approved for payment in the
amount of $537.54, town of
The
Mason and $1928.65, water
Sunshine Spe,ial
department.
Attending the busy session
were Mayor Harless, Recorder
Buildings
Gary Gibbs, Attorney Mike
up
Shaw, Water secretary, Lottie
Jenks, Water superintendent,
Bernard Scarberry, Police
chief, John Harrah and
Serving: Middleport,
of Mason County.
policeman Bob Dewhurst,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, 0 .
And there was Washington councilmen Fred Samsell, Joe
&amp; Mason Co., W.Va.
Fireclay shale found beneath Jones, Richard Fowler.
lhe Washington CoaL This clay
was
adapted
to
the
manufacture of building brick.
It was found in Jackson ; Mason
and Putnam counties.
Washington Sandstone,
found in the northern part of
Ute state.
And there was little
Washington . Coal,
of
Washington, Pa .

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

'389

e NAVY
e BLACK

Yellow Mums
*4.00

Chapman's
SHOES
Main Street
POMEROY

BAKER
FURNITUR
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

Utility Tax Explained

'

YALUAILE COUPON

CELOTEX

West

Dudley's Florist

••

CARLOAD SillPMENT!

21
22
21

11 85
12 82
13 67
10 54
8 so

~---

·~

LAST DAY

S'AVE 10'

17
17
24
31
34

(Only games scheduled I
Wednesday's Games
Springfield at Hershey'

~

THEATRE
Ph. 992-5303

l. T. Pis

37
35

'I•

High. School' Franklin
Counlv·
·
~'
Martemont High School, Buller
County, and Toledo Woodward
High School, Lucas County.

United Press International
Fairmont Wes t 66 Dayton
Chamlnade 57
Dayton Roosevelt 67 Dayton
.
Patterson 52
West Carrollton 68 Colonel
White 59
Princeton 72 Fairfi eld 64 .
Ham Ilion Taft 82 Lemon
Monroe 68
Geneva 59 Willoughby Soulh 52

Nova Scotia .5 Providence 1
Cleveland 3 Tidewater I

•'

Peaches 'n Cream Cake: Top slices of packaged ch iffon cake with
drained. sliced frozen or canned peaches, whipped topping.

MEIGS

w.

Nye said · "We'll· have some of
our people on hand to advise
the schools on where to get
technical assistance for their
programs, wh~ther they are
concerned with recycling,
water pollution strip mining
' .
'
land use and planntng, or other
environmental problems in
their communities."
Inc1uded m
. th e workshop will
be presentations by four high
schools that conduct.!d suc· fu1 Ear th Week programs
cess
in 1971': Bucyrus High School,
Crawford County; Worthington

Ohio High School
Tournament Scores

W. l . T. Pis
Baltimore
28 24 10 66
Cleveland
28 28 9 65
Hershey
27 22 10 64
Richmond
25 29 10 60
Cincinnati
23 26 13 59
Tidewater
17 38 8 42
Tuesday's Results

r•

Risotto: Lightly brown 1 cup rice in 2 tablespoons oil in a heavy pa n.
Add 2 cup s bouillOn, bring to boi l, cover: reduce heat. Cook 20 minutes,
until rice is tender, liquid absorbed.

HURRY!

East

·

•

whi le, combine remaining ingredientS and bring to boil. Turn ch icken
pieces; brush with sauce. Bake 30 minutes longer. ba sting with sauce
occasionally ..Makes 4 servin gs.

PULLMAN, Wash. (UPI)Larry Donovan, an assistant
football coach at the University
of South Dakota since 1967, will
join the coaching staff at
Washington State University.
Donovan was a .two-year
letterman at the University of
Nebraska under coach Bob
Devaney and was a member of .
the 1962 Husker team that won
the Gotham Bowl.

Small College Basketbafltop 20
·
tea ms for
first.
The Ohio Department of
place
votes1971-n
and with
woh.losl
re&lt;;ordsln parentheses:
Natural Resources and
Ttlm
•
Points Education, and the Ohio Stale
~: ~:~. ~r.~~~ 1 1 fJW" 11 ~~ University School of Natural
3. S. F. Austin (3) (25-21
209
Resources will conduct an
4. la. Tech 111 124-31
201
Earth
Week
planning
5. Ala .. St. (20-2)
125
workshop for high schools on
6. Bentley (25. 1)
93
·
7. Ky. St. 121-Sl
March 20..
90
8 Evnsvll (1) (21·51
84
Teacher student teams
9. E. Mich. 121 -Sl
61
representing about m high
10. Flo . So. Ill (23·31
59
11. Chyny st. (20. 4)
~
schoo1s from th roug hout the
12. Akron !22-41
49 st.ate are expected to converge
13. Sam Hustn St. 122-41
33
on the Agriculture Ad14·
W
.
Wash.
(22-21
27
· trat'ton BUl'ld'mg on the
IS. Assl)1ptn (17. 51
mints
23
16. Fr111nt St. (22-4)
21
Ohio State campus for the day
17. Sacred Hrt (24-21
17 long meeting, The workshop
18. Brckprt (N.Y.) St . Ill (2 1·31
will beithe first of its kind in
14
Oh'
,
12
10.
19. Nrflk St. (20·41
20. Capital 120·41
11
William B. Nye, Natural
Resources director, said the
Ohio College
workshop is to help the schools
Basket.,.tt Scores
involved
plan and promote
United Press International
Ohio State 92 Michigan State 73 local projec ts on the enMid-American Conference
vironment during Earth Week.
Playoff
.
Earth Day will be Saturday,
Ohio U. 69 Toledo 67 IOTl
Ohio Conference
April 22, and Earth Week
'Tournament Championship ac tivities will revolve around
Wittenberg 76 Kenyon 66
that day.
NCAA College Division
Mideast Regional
"The list of possible acYoungstown State 81 Gannon tivities is almost limitless,"
IPa.l 71
By United Press International ·

.

-·

f~~I~~;:~~ Workshop On Earth Week Set

AHl Standings

'

fun an~ flavor ol outdoor cookery to your dining roam table. An extra plus
- use I he same sauce outdoors to baste charcoal.grilled chicken .

By Uulled Press International
. Sl'OCKTON, Calif. (UPI) Two centers, UCLA's "Super
Soph" Bill Walton and John
Gianelli of Pacific, share
places on the Coaches All-star
basketball team in the West,
along with three guards.
The backcourt men picked
were Ed Ratleff of Long Beach
State, Freddy Boyd of Oregon
State and Paul Westphal of
Southern Catilornia. The selec!ions were made by the
National Association ol
Basketball Coaches in the
NCAA Region 8.

'

'.
1

Easy and different! Zesty tqmato barbecue sauce helps you bring lhe

Briefs

-

BY ALMA MARSHALL
MASON, W. Va.- The Ohio
River Salt Co, buildings as they
looked many years ago, porUons Of wliich remain In use
today, remind me of one of the ·
earllht . Industries in · West
Vlrgiriii. Many of the founders
ot the · town of Ma8on were
employed in the making of salt
and brilmlne.
. Jn 1855 R. C. Lovell,
·Kanawha 1)8lt manufacturer,
bored w~ and erected a large
furnace abOut · ball way be.tween West Columbia and
Hartford and laid out the town
. w.ruch he ealled "Mason City,"
(according to a very old West
Virginia Geological Survey).
The back part of Hogg and
Zuspan Ma'terials Building in
Mason which is used for storing
lumber and building supplies is
part of Ohio River Salt
Buildings. The front part of the
I Zuspan Biiilding Is new.
~ The old building in back of
.· the Zuspan Building has the
'. lettering "Ohio River Salt "
'
visible Iron\ the Pomeroy side
~ · .of the river. '!'he upstairs of this
• building was where the offices
~ of the Salt company were
· · located. •
·
In 1860 Daniel Polsey of Pt.
'Pleasant (Once Lieutenant
Governor of West Virginia and
son of w,ston Polsey) drilled a
well near Letart, W. Va. to
depth of 600ft. In search of salt
water. The well was abandoned later. It did not reach
. salt bearing rocks.
Besides salt, the remarkable
growth os timber in Ma~on
County attracted the attenllon
of early explorers. George
, Washington in his Journal
dated October 30, 1770
described the country around
Letart Falls, referring to the
large trees.
early explorer was
• theAnotherfamous
pioneer
Christopher Gist, who was sent
out from Virginia as an ex·
ploring agent of the Ohio
Company. He visited the
Mason County area in 1751 and
~u·.aJJaJn In m2. On"F$, .•24, J7~
' r'he'*l-ote of the Great Kanawha
bottoms near the mouth of
· · Thirteetr Mile creek, as "fine
land and being very rich."
Again·on Feb. 23, he referred
to the Ohio River Valley, a few
milell above Point Pleasant, as
;. "fine rich land,&lt;' the "bottoms

I

I

nesday, March 22 at 7 p.m.
There will be two games
each night starting at 6:30p.m.
Games will consist of two,
twenty minute halves ( 40
minute games) .
Entries should be sent to
Tom Evans, Wellston High
School, Wellston, Ohio,

'

r

FIFTH GRADE BASKETBALL SQUAD at Syracuse
E~ementary, front row, '"'· Mark Davis, Randy Brickey, and

The Wellston High School
Athletic ·Boosters will sponsor
an Independent basketball
tourney March 27, 28, 29, 30, 31
and final April 7 and 8. It's
hoped to have 16 teams entered
and trophies will go to the top
three teams.
The tourney will be single
elimination with the losers of
the semi-finals playing for
third place.
The entry fee will be $25 and
the drawing will lake place at
Wellston High School Wed-

Salt Was Base of Early
Industry in Mason Co.
a

AN A..P CONSUMER SERVICE
Billy Roush; second row, KeMy Koehler, Jon Houdashelt
and Ra~ ~old, and third row, Donald Salmons, assistant
coach. Wtlliam Baer was head coach.

'

'

.

.

5- Tile Diu, llentlnel, M~'fl~ ort-Pouaoy, o.,March 8 1m

ni8bt

Adolph's Dairy
Valley
.
.

· Phone 992-2556
AI The End Of Pomeroy !Widge

streets had been cleaned as
well as the ditches and storm
sewers and asked council's
approval for the purchase of
eight new water meter clocks
which was approved. The
clocks will cost ·approximately
$8 each.
Mayor
Roy
Harless
announced the Mid-Ohio Valley
Mayors Association will hold a
dinner on March 8 at Marietta,
Ohio. Planning to attend is
Mayor Harless, Recorder
Gibbs, councilmen Richard
Fowler, Joe Jones and Fred
Samsell.
The financial report was
given as follows : Town of
Mason, balance on January 31,
$4,185.24, receipts $2,267.79,
expenses $2002.97-balance on
February 29, $3,650.06.
Water department balance
on January 31, $18.01, receipts,
$3500.06, expelol'es, $3,455.06balance on Feb. 29, $68.01.
· The town and water

New
ALBERTO V05

Save the "long green" money on the big green bags!

Shampoo wilh Acrasil
- Reguiar, Dry or
Super lather '
15 oz.
$1.98 value

Gulf 30-gaUon

TOTEM
BAGS
TRASH BAGS ·
1pkg. of 10 for 59¢ or
3 pkgs. for $1.39-30 bags!

~
· . ::::.....6

Giant bags al giant savings - buy enough Totem Bags for the grass cutting season
now! Each package of 10 is a 98¢ value - now just 59~ .
llmR 6 ptcktps ptr customer.

i=dff

LUSTRE CREME

HlirSpny

~~ DIAL Anti-Perspirant

BARBASOL
Shave Cream

Regular, Extra-Hold
or Unscented
12 oz. B9e value
.vo.-..

Concentrated lather Regular or Menthol
Stock up and save!
oz.
value

dial

-

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

~~~Jthe-clock
protection

6 oz.
C:::::::::::::l $1.29

~~

VISINE

Clear, non-staining
eye drops in
plastic brJitle

15 cc.
$1. 50 val

Johnson &amp; Johnson
Swabs

It can happen to you!
Ufe can be better! You can
become a new person ... You
can solve your problems.
Attend this great ser!es ol
Bible-oriented discussions
designed to help you live
more abundantly in every
way in the world of the 70's,

CALGON Bath 0~ Beads

200 double-tipped swabs

$1.08 value

16 oz.
$1.19value

69¢

Is Jesus for Real!

GET IN ON THIS
'

POMEROY
ADVENTIST CHURCH
Mulberry Heights Rd.
Porfleroy
1

ST. PATRICK'S DAY SALE
MA~~H 9

THURSDAY -

MARCH 10

FRIDAY ,

.

Helps keep rooms fresh
14 oz.

$1.89 value

Skin-softening. wafer-softening
fragrant beads f&lt;lf the bath

THURSDAY'S TOPIC:
7:30P.M.
Tues., Thurs., &amp; Sat.

LYSOL
Spray Disinfectant

MARCH 1 t

SATURDAY .

· FLAIR Pens

· The new way to write!

· Smooth, tough nylon
" poinl stays sharp - 12
colors.

Each pen Is a 49¢ value.

�;

,.

Gophers Capture Big T~n Crown
CfPCAGO (UPI)-Bill Mus·
selman told his Minnesota
Gophers Tuesday night to
prove their image .as the
nation's top delensiye college
hasketball,team. They did and
today they are Big Ten
champions for the first time in
35 years.
Minnesota wrapped up the
crown with a 49-4ll thriller over
Purdue at Lafayette, Ind.,
despite not scoring a pOint in
the _final three minutes. The
Gophers won the conference
with an 11-J slate, ·gaining a
berth in the NCAA Tourney
Ohio State rmished its season
at 10-! after a 92-73 victory over
Michigan State Tuesday night:
Michigan, a 93-70 victory over
Wisconsin Tuesday, is 9-4 and
lakes on Iowa in its final game
Saturday.
'
Mimesota fell behind, 5-0,
then rallied for a 26-18 halftime
lead. Purdue put on a late rally
and closed to within two, 49-47
with 3: 13 left. But the
Boilermakers managed one

free toss with I :59 to go, and
that was the scoring.
'"!be last t3seconds were the
longest of. my. life," said
MUIISelman, who took over the
coaching chores at Minnesota
this season after moving ovet
from Ashland College.
"Time To Prove It"
Jn the timeout just before the
final 13 seconds, "I told my
boys 'you're the No.1 defensive
team In the nation. Now's the
time to prove It,"' MUBSelman
said.

Purdue got two shots at the
bucket in the cloeing seconds
wt neither.. comected as the
Gopher defense protected a
thin edge.
Mussehnan, who at 31 is the
younge$-~ch to win the Big
Ten in baSketball, wasn't even
born when the Gophers shared
the UUe in 1937. Their last
previous outright crown was in
1919.
Purdue Coach George King
praised Gopher Jim Brewer,
saying he broke up a pass to

Bollermake[ , Bob Ford that
could have r'esulted in a winning basket at the close'. ·"I
don't know where 'he c8me.
frotn," 181d 1\ing.
King called Minnesota "as
good a champion' as I've ever
seen. They'D represent the Big
Ten well in the NCAA. I think
they can match up well with
anyone."
Claderella Team
Mussebnan agreed:
"I think we can go to the end.
This Is a great basketball
team. These guys play with
more heart than anybody
around. Yes, I guess this Is a
Cinderella team."
Mime10ta used just five
players. Brewer and Clyde
Turner each scored 12 points
and Dave Winfield got 10. Ford
led all scorers with 24 for

Jn Oilier pmee 'I'IIeldiy ... ~ ... . far ""' . . . . .
Nar1bwestern loll tD ~ a tl-84 vlcloey IIIII ap ill ·.
Indiana, ~. to pill a finn Blil Ten mark tD U. Tile 1111111'1 ·
hold on Iaiii place In the con- Nick WulbaiijMD led .0 ·
terence ~ with a 3-10 scorers will\ 37 polnta, b11 bell
reconUndJanaadvanced to 8-5 night of the !leiiiOII. Iowa
' for finn hold on fourth place In . dropped to f-9 Ill conference
the all!ndlnlis.
play·
The Hoosier attack was led
., \
by John Ritter with 23 points
MARIKINA. RIZAI., ptUllp..
and Steve Downing with 21.
pines
(UPI) -Tbe Ulllled
Mark Sibley led Northwestern
States shut out Slngapote, lq-4,
·With 21.
Tuesday
f!ll' Its fourth llraigbt
At Ch8mpaign, Illinois broke
win
in
the
Third World Men's·
a lie with two and a hall
'
minutes to play and held Iowa Softball Championship.
'

State garile, at Columbus, saw
the Buckeyes post an ·early
lead, 27-15. Then the Spartans
btittled back to within three, 4239, at hallllme. The Buckeyes
started moving again after
halftime and Opened up a 60-46
lead with 13:35 left. Their
widest margin was 22 points,
'18-56 with six and a hall
minutes to go. .
Mike Robinson, the Big Ten's
leading scorer, posted the
game high 30 polnls for
Michigan State which Is ~ in
. conterence play. Wardell
. Jackson led OSU with 19.

Mlclifcao Ww

Michigan's victory over Wisconsin was . a walkaway. The
Wolverines opened with a 6-0
advantage and worked it into v
41-35 at halftime. Their lead
advanced steadily through the
second half.
Lee Oler scored 20 points for .
Wisconsin, which dropped to S8 in conference play. John
Lockard led Michigan with 17
points.

Purdue.

Purdue outscored · the Gophers from the field, 19-17, WI
Minnesota hit 15 free tosses tD
10 filr the Boilermakers.
The Ohio State-Michigan

3·ROOMS

NEW.

FURNITURE
'349.95
535.00 Down

'Balance On
Convenient
Terms.

MASON

.FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

Wellston Plans Cage Tourney

WILDERNESS
JOURNEY

Barbecued
chicken...
cooked indoors!

. AStwELL 69
BEEF Ro
$1
CAliFORNIA STYLE

MENU
Vegetable Soup
· Oven Barbecued Chicken
Risotto-Broccoli
Peaches 'n Cream Cake

r;;] An Ailr,ntlire for

l!!J lhe Whole family!
A RAINBOW ADVENTURE FILM
Prodycecl by CHUCK KEEN
1811 AMERIC-'N NATIONAl !.hiTUIPRISES

TRIMMED
FULL OF FLAVOR •

&gt; CUT FROM CHUCK

' Cube $teak
...

39

I

I

PLUMROSE SLICED

Boiled Ham w~;;,F~:.' ;;;'.d·:-:;:

lb.

I

,
"
,
'1
tt', ,
• • . • lb.
Ground Round

ROUI\IQ !ONE SHOULDER

Swill Steak

OVEN BARBECUED CHICKEN
2'12 lb. broiler/fryer, cut-up
2 tbsps. vinegar .
Flour seasoned with salt &amp; pepper
1 tbsp. sugar
I can (8 oz.) lomato sauce
1 tsp. Worcestershire sauce
I small onion, finely chopped
•;, tsp. salt
2 tbsps. oil
tsp. garlic powdor

1
ll U

Strip Steaks •

I

I

!ONELESS

Delmo1ico Steaks

•

lb. - '

'

$249

lb. ·

Pork Steaks

c

I

lb.

I

Haddock Fillets

14b..

1..., ''Fish·~1: u'r;s:~ ;·
89c Fish Sticlcs • •
7gc D'1nner1
roll
CAr~, '12,H/1,.

,

5429 eun STYLE

1HiCK CUT, !ONE·IN

'*

~RESH LEAN

CAP'N JOHN

)

""'

• Pkr. ;r;r·

I

I

I

CAP'N JOHN

•

•

•

SOM!RERO

Chili Chubs •

I

I

.

CAP'N JOHN

·1*1.;11" .

,..... ' Aik ,

lb.

1-lb

il.tljtDc

·I Ill

•

pq, ~-

HADDOCK

OR PERCH

1

I

Sprinkl e ch icken pieces with seasoned flour . Place skin .si de down in

...

greased baking pan. Bake 1n prehealed 375 " ~ oven 30 minutes. Mean·

Boston

Nova Scotia
Springfield
Providence
Rochester

The Old Ohio River Salt Co.

the na mes of pioneers. Thus
about a mile wide."
In the Geological Survey, the Waggener District was named
late John McCulloch of Point in honor of Col. · Andrew
Pleasant, reported that grape Waggener.
Did you ever wonder about
_v ines often · grew to such
enormous size that some split the mi~,erajllr !lound in West
into rails for fencing; and the Vil'ginia counties? There is
poplars, ·Oaks, black walnuts, Washington limestone found in
wild cherries, hickories, and the northern pari of the slate.
Washington "A" coal is
many other trees attained a
size rarely reached in other fo und in the Ravenswood
District.
parts of the slate.
Washington coal throughout
Townships in Mason County
Jackson
county and a portion
were named to commemorate

'~

'

«

•

...
~

+

"'"

::"

WITH THIS COUPON ON
TOUR PURCHASE OF 2

~

SALISBURY STEAK, CHICKEN
Sultana Dt"nners MEAT
lOAF OR TURKEY

'
••
!
I

!
'

YALUAILE COUPON
C
WITH THIS COUPON
.
ON TOUR PURCHASE
. OFANI-o&amp;.JAI

I
I

SAVE SO

t
t

Maxim
Freeze
Brie•
Coffee
Good Thru Saturday, Morch lith. At Your "

Ceiling Tile

I

Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

I

ONE PER FAMILY

\

YALUAILE COUPON

BeHy Crocker Potato Buds
21•01.

pkg.

.White, .12~'x24"

89'

WITH THIS
COUPON

•

Good Thru S.turday, Morch lith. At Your
Friendly A&amp;P Food Store

ea.

ONE PER FAMILY

Panama
Washable Finish, 12"Xl2"

· VAlUAILE COUPON -

Final Touch Fabric Softener

Mayfair
Washable Finish, 12°x12';

.

Rondelay
12"xl2" · 22~
Washable,Gniase-ResistantFinish
·

Sonata

59'

ll·oa.
WITH THIS
. bottl•
COUPON
Good Th'u Solurday, Morch lith. At Your
Friendly AAP Food Storo
ONE PER FAMILY

'

lAKER'S

iChi~s

I Nuts •

7

~ 36c Thrill Llt~ui•
20. OF!' LA!EL .

Ilk

I

I

I

DRY

bll.

l)lk

......

I

DO~.

lineal

- ·69c

AlP FltOZEN

Chocolate Brow1ies -~'ki59c

Sandwich Bread • 3~~-- 9-l.iwes Cat Food • ~-..,.,- Tomato Ketchu'
bANE ,ARKER
IDO'/. IIAZl UAN
OUR OWN
,
rAp,le Pie
•
•
Jar
.,.,I O'Clock'~~~.
reaB•as •
l
IRAZIUAN .
34
1oar c I O'Clock Coffee
I

·Furring Strips ·

•

JANE ,ARKEA

I

Accoustic.al Tile, .12"X12"

I

ANN PA&amp;E

I

3-::Sloo

C\

)l '

. ~11Jc

1,

'l

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN
We Deliver

MASON

t

)

I I

Mr. Northup graduated
from Wabama High School
willlthe class of 1970 and ill
presently employed with
Mli1011 County Motors in Point

Pl=:~g

. Incomplete.

••

plans

The public utility tax was
explained by Attorn~y Mike
Shaw and approved for the
·second reading during the
regular session of the Mason
Town Council Monday night.
Town attorney Shaw also told
council members ' he would
have the proposed street
paving ordinance written by
the next council me~ting and
would present it at that time.·
Council requested that Mrs.
Lottie Jenks contact the local
telephone company to see if the
company still had house
nwnbers available and council
approved a motion that all
homes in the town of Mason be
nwnbered.
The monthly police report
prepared by Police Chief John
Harrah and patrolman Bob
Dewhurst was read showing 32
calls were answered; four
accidents investigated ; six
meetings attended; two
robberies and two breaking
and enterings probed.
Appearing in traffic court for
the month were Gaylord
Hasey, charged with driving
while intoxjcaled; Willard
Barker, failing to keep safe
ass ured distance; Clarence
Lee, intoxication; Stephen
FlnlaW, running stop sign;
Robert Quillen, and Ben Casto.
speeding and Bob Coffey, no
license.
Bernard Scarberry, water
superintendent, reported the

YOU CAN
COUNT
ONUS!
Service,
Delicious Food,
Soft Drink.s &amp; Dairy D~ssert.

quarter,

MATERIALS CO.
773-5554

Mr. and Mrs . Charles
Lingerfelt
of
2901
Meadowbrook Drive, Point'
Pleasant, are announcing the
engagement of their daugllter,
Viet!, to Mr. Gary Patrick
Northup, son of Mr. and Mrs,
Deryl Northup of .Clifton.
• Vicki iJ p~nUy a senior at
Point Pleasant High Scb:&gt;Ol.
· After graduaUon she plans to
·attend Gallipolis Busines.s
'College beginning at the Jf!lle

..:.at

'

I

VICKI LINGERFELT

Vicki Ann Lingerfelt
~ · Betrothed To
:: Gary Patrick Northup

foot

.

,.,

Class AA

Cleve. Holy

burg

59

Name 62 Twi ns-

Class A

Lancaster Fisher Catholic 93

Newark Catholic 65
Portsmouth East 59 Albany
Alexandria 57
Maplewood 65 Sebring 51
Kirtland 58 Windham 49
loveland 94 East Clinton 40
Indian Valley South 74 Adena

department
bills
were 44
approved for payment in the
amount of $537.54, town of
The
Mason and $1928.65, water
Sunshine Spe,ial
department.
Attending the busy session
were Mayor Harless, Recorder
Buildings
Gary Gibbs, Attorney Mike
up
Shaw, Water secretary, Lottie
Jenks, Water superintendent,
Bernard Scarberry, Police
chief, John Harrah and
Serving: Middleport,
of Mason County.
policeman Bob Dewhurst,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, 0 .
And there was Washington councilmen Fred Samsell, Joe
&amp; Mason Co., W.Va.
Fireclay shale found beneath Jones, Richard Fowler.
lhe Washington CoaL This clay
was
adapted
to
the
manufacture of building brick.
It was found in Jackson ; Mason
and Putnam counties.
Washington Sandstone,
found in the northern part of
Ute state.
And there was little
Washington . Coal,
of
Washington, Pa .

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

'389

e NAVY
e BLACK

Yellow Mums
*4.00

Chapman's
SHOES
Main Street
POMEROY

BAKER
FURNITUR
MIDDLEPORT, 0 .

Utility Tax Explained

'

YALUAILE COUPON

CELOTEX

West

Dudley's Florist

••

CARLOAD SillPMENT!

21
22
21

11 85
12 82
13 67
10 54
8 so

~---

·~

LAST DAY

S'AVE 10'

17
17
24
31
34

(Only games scheduled I
Wednesday's Games
Springfield at Hershey'

~

THEATRE
Ph. 992-5303

l. T. Pis

37
35

'I•

High. School' Franklin
Counlv·
·
~'
Martemont High School, Buller
County, and Toledo Woodward
High School, Lucas County.

United Press International
Fairmont Wes t 66 Dayton
Chamlnade 57
Dayton Roosevelt 67 Dayton
.
Patterson 52
West Carrollton 68 Colonel
White 59
Princeton 72 Fairfi eld 64 .
Ham Ilion Taft 82 Lemon
Monroe 68
Geneva 59 Willoughby Soulh 52

Nova Scotia .5 Providence 1
Cleveland 3 Tidewater I

•'

Peaches 'n Cream Cake: Top slices of packaged ch iffon cake with
drained. sliced frozen or canned peaches, whipped topping.

MEIGS

w.

Nye said · "We'll· have some of
our people on hand to advise
the schools on where to get
technical assistance for their
programs, wh~ther they are
concerned with recycling,
water pollution strip mining
' .
'
land use and planntng, or other
environmental problems in
their communities."
Inc1uded m
. th e workshop will
be presentations by four high
schools that conduct.!d suc· fu1 Ear th Week programs
cess
in 1971': Bucyrus High School,
Crawford County; Worthington

Ohio High School
Tournament Scores

W. l . T. Pis
Baltimore
28 24 10 66
Cleveland
28 28 9 65
Hershey
27 22 10 64
Richmond
25 29 10 60
Cincinnati
23 26 13 59
Tidewater
17 38 8 42
Tuesday's Results

r•

Risotto: Lightly brown 1 cup rice in 2 tablespoons oil in a heavy pa n.
Add 2 cup s bouillOn, bring to boi l, cover: reduce heat. Cook 20 minutes,
until rice is tender, liquid absorbed.

HURRY!

East

·

•

whi le, combine remaining ingredientS and bring to boil. Turn ch icken
pieces; brush with sauce. Bake 30 minutes longer. ba sting with sauce
occasionally ..Makes 4 servin gs.

PULLMAN, Wash. (UPI)Larry Donovan, an assistant
football coach at the University
of South Dakota since 1967, will
join the coaching staff at
Washington State University.
Donovan was a .two-year
letterman at the University of
Nebraska under coach Bob
Devaney and was a member of .
the 1962 Husker team that won
the Gotham Bowl.

Small College Basketbafltop 20
·
tea ms for
first.
The Ohio Department of
place
votes1971-n
and with
woh.losl
re&lt;;ordsln parentheses:
Natural Resources and
Ttlm
•
Points Education, and the Ohio Stale
~: ~:~. ~r.~~~ 1 1 fJW" 11 ~~ University School of Natural
3. S. F. Austin (3) (25-21
209
Resources will conduct an
4. la. Tech 111 124-31
201
Earth
Week
planning
5. Ala .. St. (20-2)
125
workshop for high schools on
6. Bentley (25. 1)
93
·
7. Ky. St. 121-Sl
March 20..
90
8 Evnsvll (1) (21·51
84
Teacher student teams
9. E. Mich. 121 -Sl
61
representing about m high
10. Flo . So. Ill (23·31
59
11. Chyny st. (20. 4)
~
schoo1s from th roug hout the
12. Akron !22-41
49 st.ate are expected to converge
13. Sam Hustn St. 122-41
33
on the Agriculture Ad14·
W
.
Wash.
(22-21
27
· trat'ton BUl'ld'mg on the
IS. Assl)1ptn (17. 51
mints
23
16. Fr111nt St. (22-4)
21
Ohio State campus for the day
17. Sacred Hrt (24-21
17 long meeting, The workshop
18. Brckprt (N.Y.) St . Ill (2 1·31
will beithe first of its kind in
14
Oh'
,
12
10.
19. Nrflk St. (20·41
20. Capital 120·41
11
William B. Nye, Natural
Resources director, said the
Ohio College
workshop is to help the schools
Basket.,.tt Scores
involved
plan and promote
United Press International
Ohio State 92 Michigan State 73 local projec ts on the enMid-American Conference
vironment during Earth Week.
Playoff
.
Earth Day will be Saturday,
Ohio U. 69 Toledo 67 IOTl
Ohio Conference
April 22, and Earth Week
'Tournament Championship ac tivities will revolve around
Wittenberg 76 Kenyon 66
that day.
NCAA College Division
Mideast Regional
"The list of possible acYoungstown State 81 Gannon tivities is almost limitless,"
IPa.l 71
By United Press International ·

.

-·

f~~I~~;:~~ Workshop On Earth Week Set

AHl Standings

'

fun an~ flavor ol outdoor cookery to your dining roam table. An extra plus
- use I he same sauce outdoors to baste charcoal.grilled chicken .

By Uulled Press International
. Sl'OCKTON, Calif. (UPI) Two centers, UCLA's "Super
Soph" Bill Walton and John
Gianelli of Pacific, share
places on the Coaches All-star
basketball team in the West,
along with three guards.
The backcourt men picked
were Ed Ratleff of Long Beach
State, Freddy Boyd of Oregon
State and Paul Westphal of
Southern Catilornia. The selec!ions were made by the
National Association ol
Basketball Coaches in the
NCAA Region 8.

'

'.
1

Easy and different! Zesty tqmato barbecue sauce helps you bring lhe

Briefs

-

BY ALMA MARSHALL
MASON, W. Va.- The Ohio
River Salt Co, buildings as they
looked many years ago, porUons Of wliich remain In use
today, remind me of one of the ·
earllht . Industries in · West
Vlrgiriii. Many of the founders
ot the · town of Ma8on were
employed in the making of salt
and brilmlne.
. Jn 1855 R. C. Lovell,
·Kanawha 1)8lt manufacturer,
bored w~ and erected a large
furnace abOut · ball way be.tween West Columbia and
Hartford and laid out the town
. w.ruch he ealled "Mason City,"
(according to a very old West
Virginia Geological Survey).
The back part of Hogg and
Zuspan Ma'terials Building in
Mason which is used for storing
lumber and building supplies is
part of Ohio River Salt
Buildings. The front part of the
I Zuspan Biiilding Is new.
~ The old building in back of
.· the Zuspan Building has the
'. lettering "Ohio River Salt "
'
visible Iron\ the Pomeroy side
~ · .of the river. '!'he upstairs of this
• building was where the offices
~ of the Salt company were
· · located. •
·
In 1860 Daniel Polsey of Pt.
'Pleasant (Once Lieutenant
Governor of West Virginia and
son of w,ston Polsey) drilled a
well near Letart, W. Va. to
depth of 600ft. In search of salt
water. The well was abandoned later. It did not reach
. salt bearing rocks.
Besides salt, the remarkable
growth os timber in Ma~on
County attracted the attenllon
of early explorers. George
, Washington in his Journal
dated October 30, 1770
described the country around
Letart Falls, referring to the
large trees.
early explorer was
• theAnotherfamous
pioneer
Christopher Gist, who was sent
out from Virginia as an ex·
ploring agent of the Ohio
Company. He visited the
Mason County area in 1751 and
~u·.aJJaJn In m2. On"F$, .•24, J7~
' r'he'*l-ote of the Great Kanawha
bottoms near the mouth of
· · Thirteetr Mile creek, as "fine
land and being very rich."
Again·on Feb. 23, he referred
to the Ohio River Valley, a few
milell above Point Pleasant, as
;. "fine rich land,&lt;' the "bottoms

I

I

nesday, March 22 at 7 p.m.
There will be two games
each night starting at 6:30p.m.
Games will consist of two,
twenty minute halves ( 40
minute games) .
Entries should be sent to
Tom Evans, Wellston High
School, Wellston, Ohio,

'

r

FIFTH GRADE BASKETBALL SQUAD at Syracuse
E~ementary, front row, '"'· Mark Davis, Randy Brickey, and

The Wellston High School
Athletic ·Boosters will sponsor
an Independent basketball
tourney March 27, 28, 29, 30, 31
and final April 7 and 8. It's
hoped to have 16 teams entered
and trophies will go to the top
three teams.
The tourney will be single
elimination with the losers of
the semi-finals playing for
third place.
The entry fee will be $25 and
the drawing will lake place at
Wellston High School Wed-

Salt Was Base of Early
Industry in Mason Co.
a

AN A..P CONSUMER SERVICE
Billy Roush; second row, KeMy Koehler, Jon Houdashelt
and Ra~ ~old, and third row, Donald Salmons, assistant
coach. Wtlliam Baer was head coach.

'

'

.

.

5- Tile Diu, llentlnel, M~'fl~ ort-Pouaoy, o.,March 8 1m

ni8bt

Adolph's Dairy
Valley
.
.

· Phone 992-2556
AI The End Of Pomeroy !Widge

streets had been cleaned as
well as the ditches and storm
sewers and asked council's
approval for the purchase of
eight new water meter clocks
which was approved. The
clocks will cost ·approximately
$8 each.
Mayor
Roy
Harless
announced the Mid-Ohio Valley
Mayors Association will hold a
dinner on March 8 at Marietta,
Ohio. Planning to attend is
Mayor Harless, Recorder
Gibbs, councilmen Richard
Fowler, Joe Jones and Fred
Samsell.
The financial report was
given as follows : Town of
Mason, balance on January 31,
$4,185.24, receipts $2,267.79,
expenses $2002.97-balance on
February 29, $3,650.06.
Water department balance
on January 31, $18.01, receipts,
$3500.06, expelol'es, $3,455.06balance on Feb. 29, $68.01.
· The town and water

New
ALBERTO V05

Save the "long green" money on the big green bags!

Shampoo wilh Acrasil
- Reguiar, Dry or
Super lather '
15 oz.
$1.98 value

Gulf 30-gaUon

TOTEM
BAGS
TRASH BAGS ·
1pkg. of 10 for 59¢ or
3 pkgs. for $1.39-30 bags!

~
· . ::::.....6

Giant bags al giant savings - buy enough Totem Bags for the grass cutting season
now! Each package of 10 is a 98¢ value - now just 59~ .
llmR 6 ptcktps ptr customer.

i=dff

LUSTRE CREME

HlirSpny

~~ DIAL Anti-Perspirant

BARBASOL
Shave Cream

Regular, Extra-Hold
or Unscented
12 oz. B9e value
.vo.-..

Concentrated lather Regular or Menthol
Stock up and save!
oz.
value

dial

-

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

~~~Jthe-clock
protection

6 oz.
C:::::::::::::l $1.29

~~

VISINE

Clear, non-staining
eye drops in
plastic brJitle

15 cc.
$1. 50 val

Johnson &amp; Johnson
Swabs

It can happen to you!
Ufe can be better! You can
become a new person ... You
can solve your problems.
Attend this great ser!es ol
Bible-oriented discussions
designed to help you live
more abundantly in every
way in the world of the 70's,

CALGON Bath 0~ Beads

200 double-tipped swabs

$1.08 value

16 oz.
$1.19value

69¢

Is Jesus for Real!

GET IN ON THIS
'

POMEROY
ADVENTIST CHURCH
Mulberry Heights Rd.
Porfleroy
1

ST. PATRICK'S DAY SALE
MA~~H 9

THURSDAY -

MARCH 10

FRIDAY ,

.

Helps keep rooms fresh
14 oz.

$1.89 value

Skin-softening. wafer-softening
fragrant beads f&lt;lf the bath

THURSDAY'S TOPIC:
7:30P.M.
Tues., Thurs., &amp; Sat.

LYSOL
Spray Disinfectant

MARCH 1 t

SATURDAY .

· FLAIR Pens

· The new way to write!

· Smooth, tough nylon
" poinl stays sharp - 12
colors.

Each pen Is a 49¢ value.

�\
'
.6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
0., Mareh 1,1972
.;'

992-5292

. \

·Pomeroy ·Club Plans · ;
Sociai .Ca~endar
Open Meeting in May
An open meeting to be held in
May was planned during
Monday night's meeting of the
Pomeroy Garden Club held at
the home of Mrs . Fred
Blaettnar.
Mrs. Roy Betzing and Mrs.
Ed Baer will he hostesses for
the open meeting and each
member will take a guest. Mrs.
L. C. Karr presided at the
meeting during which time the
spring flower show of the
Chester Garden Club was
announced and members were
urged to attend. Mrs . Howard
Nolan will contribute the next
Green Thumb Notes for The
Daily Sentinel.
Mrs. E. W. Coates, a contri~uting hostess for the
meeting, sent her thanks to tile
club members for a flower sent
at Christmas. A round-robin
card was signed for Mrs.
Coates who remains ill at

Gardeners Meet

Surprise Given
Mrs. Stephenson
A surprise birthday party
was given lor Mrs. William R.
Stephenson, Sr. at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Colmer
recentiy.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Stephenson and cake and ice
cream were served. Attending
were William R. Stephenson,
Sr., Nancy, ·Randy, Tammy
and Jimmy Snider, Paulette
Leach and sons, Jamie and
Davy, Anita Neece, Harold
Whittekind, the Rev. and Mrs .
Clyde Henderson and grandson, R. E. Henderson, Freda
Mossman, Patty Capehart, and
Mr. and Mrs. Colmer and
childr en, Shari , Billy and
Timmy.

Shower at Church

In Middleport

,

CJ ~ r

••
ere will he a household
shower at the First Baptist
Church In Middleport
Wednesday at 8 p.m. for the
Charles Sheets family whose
home aud furnishings were
destroyed by ,Iire this week.
There was no insurance.

$1'''"''''''@:?i'•'I'"~~·:l&gt;&gt;W"•mr:~~t&lt;m~~~

In Your Garden" by Howard

Thompson. She also read some
old fashioned remedies for
illness using fox glove, daf.
fodils, lilies of the valley and
other flowers and herbs having
medicinal qualities. A general
discussion by the club members on the subject concluded
the program.
In response to roll call
members named a bird they
.like and told why.
The St. Patrick's Day theme
was carried out in the table
decorations. White carnations
tinted green and baby mums
flanked by white tapers in crystal centered the table which
was covered in green. A salad
course was served by the
hostesses , Mrs. Malcolm
Roller, chairman, Mrs. B. B.
Zeigler, Mrs. Hennesy, and
Mrs. Crary Davis. Miss Zerkle
presided at the coffee service.
Displayed at the meeting
was an arrangement of forced
forsythia in a green container
featuring a red bird figurine
made by Mrs. Roller. An
arrangement using dark green
glass grapes as an accessory
was used on the buffet.

.

,.

\.

Plans for hosting members
of the Cheshire Garden Club at
a summer meeting in the
spacious home of Mrs. Sibley
Slack were made by the
Middleport Garden Club
Monday night at the home of
Mrs. C. M. Hennesy .
During the meeting conducted by Miss Nellie Zerkle in
the absence of Mrs. Michael
Fry , president, the club
members voted to entertain the
Cheshire club members.
It was reported that 75 tray
favors had been sent to
veterans Memorial Hospital on
Va 1e n t i n e • s
D a y ..
Arrangements were made to
provide a column lor the Green
Thumb Notes of The Daily
Sentinel in June. Welcomed
into club membership was
Mrs. Irene Anderson Davis.
Miss Lucille Smith presented
the program using "Witchcraft

..

home.
Mrs. Blaettnar gave the
devotions using a Lenten
meditation from Portals of
Prayer. The program was
presented by Mrs. Nolan who
used as her topic, "Let's Plan
an Herb Garden ." She
discussed herb garden plans,
gave a description of the plants
and ways to grow them, noting
that they can be arranged like
flowers but do not need such a
rich soil.
Displayed at the meeting by
Mrs. Roy Betzing was an
arrangement of fantasy
flowers made of fake fur.
Meinbtii's responded to roll call
with an Irish saying. Attending
besides those named were Mrs.
Harold Brown, Miss Lydia
Ebersbach, Mrs. Richard
Jones, Mrs. J. W. McMurray,
Mrs. Harvey VanVranken, and
Mrs. Martha Jane WIUiams.

.

Annual Tea is Held

"Meaningful Contributions prizes distributed.
of Women" was the program
Attending from Meigs
topic presented by Miss County were Carla Salser,
Rosalie Story at the annual Future Teachers Association
recruitment tea· of Alpha sponsor at . Eastern High
Omicron Chapter of Delta School, Theodosia Frecker
Kappa Gama recently at the F~y Sauer, Anna Turner,•
home of Anna Maude Fehr- Mildred Hawley, Martha
man, Jackson.
Husted, Roberta Wilson, Miss
Miss Story spoke of the St&lt;&gt;ry, Ruth Euler and Nellie
changing role of women, noting Parker .
that they can withdraw from
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Van the problems of the times or Alfred
Vranken entertained Sunday meet the challenge. Women
with a surprise dinner party today, she said, can work in
and open house honoring Mrs. developing individuals and
Sunday School attendance on
Van Vranken's aunt, Mrs. helping others. She spoke of the March 5 was , the offering
43
Gladys Cockier on her 77th problems of abundance, $15.80. Easter Sunrise services
birthday anniversary.
technology'
needs
and were set for 6:30 at the church
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. discontentments of the have- here with Linda Williams
Tracy Whaley, Mr. and Mrs. nots, environment factors, and program chairman.
'
Bud Wilson, Mrs. Clara Karr, peace.
Worship services were held
Mrs. Vena Whaley, Mrs. Ethel
"Is peace just the absence of March 5 at 11 with the Rev .
Stewart, Pomeroy; Mr. and war?" was the question posed Jacob Lehman speaking from
Mrs. Richard Hyland, Lllri and by the program chairman to John 15: 9-17, "God.Lllves You.
Jennifer, Mr. and Mrs. Gratis the chapter members. She He is no respector of persons."
Bryan , Mr . and Mrs. Ed commented on the need ·to Attendance at this
.
Bryan, Sharon. and Jimmy, acknowledge the right of 30.
servlce was
Powhattan Pomt; Mr. and others, their individllalily and
VereS tz
·
· .
Mrs. Terry Ohlinger, Jay and convictions and the necessity
th' h warh remAJalnsqwtelll
'J
M
'
.
a lS orne ere. so Herman
J on,
h
Ph 10;
rs . Karl forusingpersuas10n cheerand T 1 1
.
Gruese~;Minersville; Mr. am!, , •beUef in others to b;uld rather ·•"w~rti~~ s not 50 ~ell, at thls
Mrs. BtU King, Newark; Mrs. .. than to destroy.
•·•·
_.;
.
Evelyn Lucke, Syracuse; Mrs.
Edith Hoffman presided at RoCbllansraon vFLS
.olltelrdodMranddNMlna
J ohn werry, Hemlock Grove, the meeting with Ruth Owens Vera Swartz on d ' an rs ·
1
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Hayes, welcoming the future teacher
Mr and M eGay ladstweek.
Mr and Mrs Bill Woodd 11
ts Ma .
.
·
rs. era Swartz
·
·
·
e ' gues · rcl8 Shields, student and family of Marietta 0
Mrs. Mlk~ KosUval, Athens; at Rio. Grande College ac- visited Clara Follrod and 'Ni.;;
Mrs . Ed1th Whaley, Dale compamed the group singing Robms
'
d h'
Whaley, AJbany, and the hosts'
Refreshments of cookies . and Monr an H LSbpatrenSts, Mr.
h'ld
'
s
o ar
wartz
c L ren, Jan, Scott and punch and coffee were served s d
fie
Matthew.
Favors were given and d~
~~Ya~d ~~~"Delbert Yost

Aunt Honored
At Open House

Church ,Launches Religion C/jf_s
Classes
in
religious
education will begin Friday
night at the Naomi Baptist
Church in Pomeroy.
The local classes, a part of
tlle Providence Area School of
Religion, . will be ·cOnducted

.,
&gt;!
p.m. Thursday at hall in
Chester. All Master Masons
invited, Denver Well, worshiplul master .
FRIDAY
YOUNG ADULT Class,
Bradford Church of Christ, 7
p.m. Friday night at the
church.
DANCE Friday, 8 until 11
p.m. at Wahama High School
Auditorium, Jays emceeing,
sponsored by Wahama Athletic

WEDNESDAY
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 CHAPTER 80,
· RAM, state convocation, 7:30
p.m . Wednesday at temple . .
MEIGS COUNTY Fish and
Game Association , 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday , club rooms,
Syracuse .
(
THURSDAY
ROCK .Springs Grange
meeting, scheduled for tonight
has been cancelled due to
illness.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
United Methodist Church, 7:30
Thursday, home of Mrs. S. T.
Smith. Mrs. John Krawsczyn
assisting hostess.
BRADBURY PTA, I p.m. at
the
Bradbury
School
auditorium.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
RAM, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.,
special session at temple; most
excellent masters degree to be
conferred . All officers · and
companions invited:
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club, 7:30 Thursday
night at home of Mrs. Frances
Hewetson with Mrs . Judy
Spencer as co-hostess.
FELLOWCRAFT Degree,
when Shade River Valley
Masonic Lodge meets at 7:30

Griffiths
. at
Band Concert
In Colmnbus

.

\ ~~

.

'

Q
. UJCK QUIZ

..JI.li

over a six week
llld .are
open to menmen~or\ii area
churches. The Rev. Sernnel
Jackson of Col1JIIIIIu4~ ' be ·
thelnstructorfOftheclr; nato
be held from 7 to t pa.•1'l1lale
enrolled will 1111e the ltn11'VOk,
''Man of Faith In a
~" ,
The registration for the entire
program ill $1. . ,&gt;. \

, 1be Scbool of Millie, College
of the Arll, Ohio State
University, presented the
Buckeye Gray Band and the
Buckeye Scarlet Band in
concert Sunday at Mershon
· Audltorlwn, Columbus.
j(aren Griffith, Pomeroy,
plays flnt lrUmpet with the 82plece Buckeye Scarlet · Band
which Is made up almost enllrelr pt mllllc majors. Attending the ~~;ert were Mr.
llld Mrs. Charles Griffith,
Karen's parents, and her
grandmother, Mrs. Anna
Qgdin, all local, and Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Jones, Connie
. and Keith, Dublin .
Before returning home Mr.
and Mrs. GiifOth visited Mrs.
Floyd Griffith, the · f9rmer
.Glenna Clark, who is a patient
at Grant Hospital, room 828,
and underwent major surgery
Tuesday.

NfJ

Q- Who wrote under the ~----~-..-!l!f!ilaiif
pen name of Ellery Queen? ·
·
·

1

.2'11uo_
I.I D·,· ..··.
. Yf\ ,

A- This was the pen name
of two cousins, Frederic
Dannay
andthe
Manfred
B. their
Lee·,
and
is also
name of
chief. fictional character.

Bo~_:~E, Royal

Oak Park,
Friday, 8 to 11 p.m. Music by
Willies, sponsored by Meigs
VICA Cl b
u .
'
RETURN
JONATHA N
te DAR,carter
h
. Ch
Me1gs
· apr,
.
day luncheon, I p.m. Friday,
Grace Episcoppl Parish House.
CATHOIJC Women's Club,
Friday, following 7:30 p,m.
service.
SATURDAY
DANCE, Southern High
School, Racine, Saturday 9 til
II : 30, sponsored by Southern .
Band Boosters, music· by
Willie.
DANCJ;: WAHAMA High
School, Saturday, 9 til . midnight, .school sponsored, Jays
emceeing.
BAKE SALE, Saturday, 9 to
II :30 ·a.m. ·at DaviS'Warner
Insurance
Co.
offices,
Pomeroy, by Meigs VICA Club.

Q- ln what city will th e
1972 su m me r . 0./ympic
Games be held?

A- Munich, Germany.

CLEAN·I'NG~

· .

.'

(UpOn Request) :~·

ROBINSON'S

' .

.

..

CLEANE.Rs·:-

Q- I n Greek mythology,

who
the father
of Zeus? · ··•o· c~.lnd ·. , ·~
. ., home-•
A- was·
K rono
.,
~·
•• ,
s, th e G r e· e k'· •''
.
Phone·m.
5421 · .·

name for Saturn.

igh ·Living Expenses.
·Cut Them Down With
.

CERTIFIED GAS
Certified Gas Stations
•

992-9981

' ' I

•1

'

538 W. Main
Pomerqy, &lt;). '
We Honor BankAmericard and Master Ch;lrgii
·~

'

··
Em~a Morrison ~ies in Michigan

and Richard of Sugar Grove,
0., spent the weekend with
Genevieve Guthrie and attended church here Sunday
morning.
Friends here have received
word that Clyde White of the
neighboring corrununity has
suffered a stroke and has been
laken to the Holzer Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. William Carr
attended worship service here
with their daughters Sunday
for the first time since Mrs.
Carr 's hospitalization and
convalescence. She is showing
steady Improvement now.

~- Emma Cross ~orrlson, Columbus; Ben Cross, Athens

!If, formerly of Racine and County' and Willie Cross,
For
The
Freezer

(15)

10 LB. GROUND BEEF
10 LB. SLICED PORK LOIN
5 LB. BULK SAUSAGE
3
LB.
ALL
MEAT
WIENERS

s

5 LB. GROUND BEEF

Someone In The
Hospital?
Send A
Cheery Com.paet

(17)

-·
Vase Arrangement

S LB. CHUCK ROAST
S LB. ROUND STEAK
5 LB. PORK CHOPS

. s LB. I=RESifsA'OsA'GE

'

S L~, SLICED BACbN

Phone .Us
.Your Order!( 18) 5s I.B.
LB. GROUND BEEF
CHUCK ROAST

To Brighten Their Da

Dudley's Aorist

992 3502

Serving : Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, o.
&amp;

10 LB. GROUND BEEF
10 LB. CHUCK ROAST
112 SEMI-BONELESS HAM
4 FRYING CHICKENS
(Whole or Cut Up!

Columbus, died Tuesday Racine; a· haU-eillter, Mrs.
morning at Lansing, Mich., Mayme . Mallory' Racine,
follo1rlng a several months several grandchildren, nieces
lllnesB.
and nephews. Mrs. Morrison
Mrs MorriJon 1s
, ..
survived by was II lifelong member of the
~OSOIIII, Hugh of Oxford, Ohio, Methodist Church. She was
arid David, servirig with the u. preceded In deatll by her
s.,Anny In Korea; three half, husband Tilden· a son Paul .
Cross, and a W:ughter.'Ruth. '
'
brothers,
Carl
Graveside services will be
held at 3 p.m. Friday at the
Oak Grove Cemetery, Racine,
with the Rev. Dale McClurg
SON BORN FEB. Z8
officiating.
Mr. arid Mrs. Roger Osborne
of Marietta, Rirute 4, are announcing the birth of a son,
CONFINED AT HOME
Christopher Todd, on Feb. 28 at
Melody Roberts, daughter of
St. J01eph Hospital. The·inf;mt Mrs. Mildred Roberts and a
weighed eight pounds, 10 freshman 111 Eastern High
L .&lt;:&gt; .•. Jtl~l~ grand· ·~h09l, remains confined to·her
,,.jllll'ents are 1 Mr . .and Mrs. hOme in Chfstei- by illness. She
Jamea Queen of Middleport will not be permitted to return
aitd the paternal grandparents to school for some time. Cards
are Mr. and Mrs. Herald may be sent to her at P. 0. Box
,Osborne, Long Bottom . .
·84, Chester, Ohio 45720.

•

Mason Co., W.Va.

.

Accept
•
•
•
•
•
•• ••••
•
•
•
•
•
•
••••••• •••••

l YOIIS MARKET

RI GHT
RESE RVEO
TO
LI M IT

AT RllllMD

QUA ~T I T I ES

··
·
P
ork
Roast
C
____________
lb. PIZZA
Fresh Lean

RUTlAND DEPT. STORE

1

Golden Isle

,,•

..•

'I

,I
'

•\
' '

'..

·

P~

PORK STEAK
Fresh Lean

SUGAR
5 lb.
bag

65~

Wagners

ORANGE
3
DRINK ' ~L
MAGIC

·2 9

.

Fresh Lean

SPARE RIBS

lb.

Dairy Specials

Fami~
Size

Salad Bowl

Pkg. llf 6

I

·

Frozen
Foods

Banquet

BUFFET

NEW SPRING

SPORTSWEAR
Select a new spring sports-

Brooks now. Coordinates,

Jumbo Size

00

DRESSES

quarter.sleev e
Long tuck -in ,

won't
ride up. Si zes S, M, L,
XL .

-3frAS265

Spring's Classics! Dresses to live ln.
Polished. Pretty. Set to II ven up
. srrlng's mood. See !hem here, at
S IIIIer's! Juniors, misses, and hali·
sizes.

Men's Plain and Fancv

9

Wash and Wear

High-count sanforized
colton broadcloth that
needs no ironing . Rein- .
f~o ced at s tr ~ ss· ~oints,

Bell Bottom Denim

Ladies Maverick flare

51ZPS 28·52.

JEANS

&gt; ~.

Men's Bell Bottom denim (eans.
long wearing and easy to wash.
Levi' s great fashion look at small
money . Right now! Sizes 29 to 42.

WALLPAPERS

Cl ean up, fix up, paper up
. every room · in the house.
·Washable finish .

59~

to

99

98~

Men's campus Short Sleeve

SPORT
SHIRTS

Men's campus perm . press short
slee~e sport shirts In solids and
laney palterns. Sizes 5-M-L-XL.

up. In

Big Selection Fine Wood Framed

OILETIE
PICTURES

Non -to)(ic, safe for
children's things .
Dri
In just .LO
mi
Large color ·

(

whit e and

decorator colors.

RUGS$
Oblong and oval shapes. Plain or
fringed, In a big assortment of
colors. Polyester-nylon.rayon .

each

·:

6,064 Ism/lies
In our service area
have
Electrically Heated homes.

CloseQut Group!
ASSORTED

COLUMBUS AND
'

OHID ELECTRIC COMPANY

qt

' .

I I

r

Regular 1.79

THROW RUGS

· Comelllfe
In the Electric Cllmtle.

bag

16"x20"
22"x28"

Riot at Stiffler's

Here'• whet they like:
0 Perfect warmth! Wall to wall, ceiling
to floor .
0 No regular servicing! Great! Just
turn the dial.
0 No pollutants, inside or out.
0 Clean as ao electric light bulbi
0 Instant comfort! Pleasant as
sunshine.
.
0 Modern! Tomorrow as well as to-day.

Slb.49e

•

JEANS

New 1972 Vinyl Coated

Dries in 30 minutes' to
glare-fr ee
finish. Water wash

10 lb. bag

I

SHORTS·
.·.· · _ _ · . ,,3 _ror$2 65

a hard ,

gge

00

Ladies New
HAND BAGS

Tee
Shirts
Soft. colton

cans ·

\

'•2

Men's Soft Cotton

WALL
PAINT

POTATOES .69e
FLORIDA

'10'!

'1''

Town and Counby Latex Aat

Produce Buys

Idaho Baking

3 for

.Ladies New Spring

cans

3ro~~

Soft, spr ingy, absorbent
. cotton
knit.
Cut
tor
ma
x
imum
comfort
and
'
,
·\
\
1
smooth fit . Sizes 34-54.

FROM

4 39c

PAPER
TOWELS

ATHLETIC SHIRTS

slacks , jamaicas, hot pants,
tuni c tops and shells . You' re
sure to find it In our store.

'

Try these new spring go.
everwhere oantsults. StrldA
carefree whei'ever you travel
th is spring . Classic pantsuits
suit your life.

Men's Cotton Knit

wear wardrobe by Bobble

Pillsbury

NORTHERN

-ANTS
SUITS

Brc)()ks

pkg.

BISCUITS

pa tter n'S .

·

wrd
I""

prett y

B_li)iC

pair

49c

Cheese

se lect ion ol

'

•aoo

chef Boy-Ar-Dee
With
- 15 oz.

·SOUP Beef

59¢·
BLEACH-39~ CHEESE
DRUM STICKS ·
5
g~
SALAD
39~

DRESSING

Food Stamps

Boston Butt

AT !UPPERS PlAINS

.'

Federal

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 11 .

AT RACINE
WAID CROSS SONS

BmTHDAY OBSERVED
The 21st birthday anniversary of Pat Collins was
ob~rved recently with a
surprise party al the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Collins,
Pomeroy, hoe ted by Kenda
Chaney. Games were played
and refreshm~'lll of cake, ke
cream, ~- and mints were
served. Atle1/iling besides the
honored guest and the hostess
were Norman Reynolds, Rick
and Nancy Colllll!l, Nancy St.
Clair and Mike Burns.

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

We

•••

M. Pikkoja, Dianna S. George,
Eva Johnson and Wendy R.
Gatewood,

5 LBW'!ORK CHOPS
5 LB. SLICED BACON

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

- ·-·

Beverly Sue Byus, Tracy
Wolfenba)ier, Mrs. Frank E. .
Rainey afld son, Karen L.
Humphreys, Mrs. TI!omas Lee
Petry and daughter' Mrs. .
Kenneth Yerian and daughter,
Clayton S. Beard, Katherine E. .
Frost, James Hall, Albert R.
Keeton, Golda M. Mourning,
Gary L. Smeltzer, Parmer
Taylor, S. Ray Phllllps, Vilma

3·"

THIS THURSDAY •. FRIDAY • SATURDAY •

Dhtchart~es

:I

Socia/lVotes

POMEROY

.

'·

Polyester

A blg specia l spr ing ·
assortment of plai n and •
lan ey · doubl e
kn i t
fabr ics in a grea t

-

Hol~~er Medlclil Center, First
Ave.
and Cedar St. General
.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Powers of Middleport are anvisiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
oounclng the forthcoming marriage of their daughter,
Maternity
visiting hours 2:30 to
Deborah Ann Laney, to William Michael Jones, son of Mr.
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
and Mrs. Roy Jones of Columbus.
l'ediatrics
Ward.
Ml$1 Laney ill a 197l graduate of Meigs High SchOol and ·
Bb1hs
Is employed at th~ Dutton Drug Store In Middleport. Her
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roger Dale
fiance Is a · 1969 graduate of Eastmoor High School in
Col111Jl~ and a junior at Ohio University. He is presently · ·Brewer, Wellston, a son and
Mr. and Mrs. James Alvin
employed at the Royal Crown Boltllng Co. in Middleport. The
Sims,
Wellston, a daughter.
weddlrig will be an event of Marcb 18.

1

1~

DOUBLE KN.IT
FABRICS

HOSPITAL NEWS

Deborah Ann Laney to Marry .

.

64''-66';

••
.... ,\ .
,', I
I

• VaL to 99'
• Amted
Colols
·• Manufacturer
.I Closeout

18"x24"
24"x48"

'2.99

POMEROY

OHIO

DECORATOR

Regular 1.19
20" x 30" SIZE

ACCENT RUGS

THROW RUGS

• Size 22x36
• Assorted
Colors
• Machine
Washable
'

$1.99

.

$
EA.

Decolator Rup
Assorted Colors
• Manufacturer
Closeouts

•

�\
'
.6- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy,
0., Mareh 1,1972
.;'

992-5292

. \

·Pomeroy ·Club Plans · ;
Sociai .Ca~endar
Open Meeting in May
An open meeting to be held in
May was planned during
Monday night's meeting of the
Pomeroy Garden Club held at
the home of Mrs . Fred
Blaettnar.
Mrs. Roy Betzing and Mrs.
Ed Baer will he hostesses for
the open meeting and each
member will take a guest. Mrs.
L. C. Karr presided at the
meeting during which time the
spring flower show of the
Chester Garden Club was
announced and members were
urged to attend. Mrs . Howard
Nolan will contribute the next
Green Thumb Notes for The
Daily Sentinel.
Mrs. E. W. Coates, a contri~uting hostess for the
meeting, sent her thanks to tile
club members for a flower sent
at Christmas. A round-robin
card was signed for Mrs.
Coates who remains ill at

Gardeners Meet

Surprise Given
Mrs. Stephenson
A surprise birthday party
was given lor Mrs. William R.
Stephenson, Sr. at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Colmer
recentiy.
Gifts were presented to Mrs.
Stephenson and cake and ice
cream were served. Attending
were William R. Stephenson,
Sr., Nancy, ·Randy, Tammy
and Jimmy Snider, Paulette
Leach and sons, Jamie and
Davy, Anita Neece, Harold
Whittekind, the Rev. and Mrs .
Clyde Henderson and grandson, R. E. Henderson, Freda
Mossman, Patty Capehart, and
Mr. and Mrs. Colmer and
childr en, Shari , Billy and
Timmy.

Shower at Church

In Middleport

,

CJ ~ r

••
ere will he a household
shower at the First Baptist
Church In Middleport
Wednesday at 8 p.m. for the
Charles Sheets family whose
home aud furnishings were
destroyed by ,Iire this week.
There was no insurance.

$1'''"''''''@:?i'•'I'"~~·:l&gt;&gt;W"•mr:~~t&lt;m~~~

In Your Garden" by Howard

Thompson. She also read some
old fashioned remedies for
illness using fox glove, daf.
fodils, lilies of the valley and
other flowers and herbs having
medicinal qualities. A general
discussion by the club members on the subject concluded
the program.
In response to roll call
members named a bird they
.like and told why.
The St. Patrick's Day theme
was carried out in the table
decorations. White carnations
tinted green and baby mums
flanked by white tapers in crystal centered the table which
was covered in green. A salad
course was served by the
hostesses , Mrs. Malcolm
Roller, chairman, Mrs. B. B.
Zeigler, Mrs. Hennesy, and
Mrs. Crary Davis. Miss Zerkle
presided at the coffee service.
Displayed at the meeting
was an arrangement of forced
forsythia in a green container
featuring a red bird figurine
made by Mrs. Roller. An
arrangement using dark green
glass grapes as an accessory
was used on the buffet.

.

,.

\.

Plans for hosting members
of the Cheshire Garden Club at
a summer meeting in the
spacious home of Mrs. Sibley
Slack were made by the
Middleport Garden Club
Monday night at the home of
Mrs. C. M. Hennesy .
During the meeting conducted by Miss Nellie Zerkle in
the absence of Mrs. Michael
Fry , president, the club
members voted to entertain the
Cheshire club members.
It was reported that 75 tray
favors had been sent to
veterans Memorial Hospital on
Va 1e n t i n e • s
D a y ..
Arrangements were made to
provide a column lor the Green
Thumb Notes of The Daily
Sentinel in June. Welcomed
into club membership was
Mrs. Irene Anderson Davis.
Miss Lucille Smith presented
the program using "Witchcraft

..

home.
Mrs. Blaettnar gave the
devotions using a Lenten
meditation from Portals of
Prayer. The program was
presented by Mrs. Nolan who
used as her topic, "Let's Plan
an Herb Garden ." She
discussed herb garden plans,
gave a description of the plants
and ways to grow them, noting
that they can be arranged like
flowers but do not need such a
rich soil.
Displayed at the meeting by
Mrs. Roy Betzing was an
arrangement of fantasy
flowers made of fake fur.
Meinbtii's responded to roll call
with an Irish saying. Attending
besides those named were Mrs.
Harold Brown, Miss Lydia
Ebersbach, Mrs. Richard
Jones, Mrs. J. W. McMurray,
Mrs. Harvey VanVranken, and
Mrs. Martha Jane WIUiams.

.

Annual Tea is Held

"Meaningful Contributions prizes distributed.
of Women" was the program
Attending from Meigs
topic presented by Miss County were Carla Salser,
Rosalie Story at the annual Future Teachers Association
recruitment tea· of Alpha sponsor at . Eastern High
Omicron Chapter of Delta School, Theodosia Frecker
Kappa Gama recently at the F~y Sauer, Anna Turner,•
home of Anna Maude Fehr- Mildred Hawley, Martha
man, Jackson.
Husted, Roberta Wilson, Miss
Miss Story spoke of the St&lt;&gt;ry, Ruth Euler and Nellie
changing role of women, noting Parker .
that they can withdraw from
Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Van the problems of the times or Alfred
Vranken entertained Sunday meet the challenge. Women
with a surprise dinner party today, she said, can work in
and open house honoring Mrs. developing individuals and
Sunday School attendance on
Van Vranken's aunt, Mrs. helping others. She spoke of the March 5 was , the offering
43
Gladys Cockier on her 77th problems of abundance, $15.80. Easter Sunrise services
birthday anniversary.
technology'
needs
and were set for 6:30 at the church
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. discontentments of the have- here with Linda Williams
Tracy Whaley, Mr. and Mrs. nots, environment factors, and program chairman.
'
Bud Wilson, Mrs. Clara Karr, peace.
Worship services were held
Mrs. Vena Whaley, Mrs. Ethel
"Is peace just the absence of March 5 at 11 with the Rev .
Stewart, Pomeroy; Mr. and war?" was the question posed Jacob Lehman speaking from
Mrs. Richard Hyland, Lllri and by the program chairman to John 15: 9-17, "God.Lllves You.
Jennifer, Mr. and Mrs. Gratis the chapter members. She He is no respector of persons."
Bryan , Mr . and Mrs. Ed commented on the need ·to Attendance at this
.
Bryan, Sharon. and Jimmy, acknowledge the right of 30.
servlce was
Powhattan Pomt; Mr. and others, their individllalily and
VereS tz
·
· .
Mrs. Terry Ohlinger, Jay and convictions and the necessity
th' h warh remAJalnsqwtelll
'J
M
'
.
a lS orne ere. so Herman
J on,
h
Ph 10;
rs . Karl forusingpersuas10n cheerand T 1 1
.
Gruese~;Minersville; Mr. am!, , •beUef in others to b;uld rather ·•"w~rti~~ s not 50 ~ell, at thls
Mrs. BtU King, Newark; Mrs. .. than to destroy.
•·•·
_.;
.
Evelyn Lucke, Syracuse; Mrs.
Edith Hoffman presided at RoCbllansraon vFLS
.olltelrdodMranddNMlna
J ohn werry, Hemlock Grove, the meeting with Ruth Owens Vera Swartz on d ' an rs ·
1
Mr . and Mrs. Charles Hayes, welcoming the future teacher
Mr and M eGay ladstweek.
Mr and Mrs Bill Woodd 11
ts Ma .
.
·
rs. era Swartz
·
·
·
e ' gues · rcl8 Shields, student and family of Marietta 0
Mrs. Mlk~ KosUval, Athens; at Rio. Grande College ac- visited Clara Follrod and 'Ni.;;
Mrs . Ed1th Whaley, Dale compamed the group singing Robms
'
d h'
Whaley, AJbany, and the hosts'
Refreshments of cookies . and Monr an H LSbpatrenSts, Mr.
h'ld
'
s
o ar
wartz
c L ren, Jan, Scott and punch and coffee were served s d
fie
Matthew.
Favors were given and d~
~~Ya~d ~~~"Delbert Yost

Aunt Honored
At Open House

Church ,Launches Religion C/jf_s
Classes
in
religious
education will begin Friday
night at the Naomi Baptist
Church in Pomeroy.
The local classes, a part of
tlle Providence Area School of
Religion, . will be ·cOnducted

.,
&gt;!
p.m. Thursday at hall in
Chester. All Master Masons
invited, Denver Well, worshiplul master .
FRIDAY
YOUNG ADULT Class,
Bradford Church of Christ, 7
p.m. Friday night at the
church.
DANCE Friday, 8 until 11
p.m. at Wahama High School
Auditorium, Jays emceeing,
sponsored by Wahama Athletic

WEDNESDAY
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 CHAPTER 80,
· RAM, state convocation, 7:30
p.m . Wednesday at temple . .
MEIGS COUNTY Fish and
Game Association , 7:30 p. m.
Wednesday , club rooms,
Syracuse .
(
THURSDAY
ROCK .Springs Grange
meeting, scheduled for tonight
has been cancelled due to
illness.
ELEANOR CIRCLE, Heath
United Methodist Church, 7:30
Thursday, home of Mrs. S. T.
Smith. Mrs. John Krawsczyn
assisting hostess.
BRADBURY PTA, I p.m. at
the
Bradbury
School
auditorium.
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
RAM, Thursday, 7:30 p. m.,
special session at temple; most
excellent masters degree to be
conferred . All officers · and
companions invited:
LAUREL CLIFF Better
Health Club, 7:30 Thursday
night at home of Mrs. Frances
Hewetson with Mrs . Judy
Spencer as co-hostess.
FELLOWCRAFT Degree,
when Shade River Valley
Masonic Lodge meets at 7:30

Griffiths
. at
Band Concert
In Colmnbus

.

\ ~~

.

'

Q
. UJCK QUIZ

..JI.li

over a six week
llld .are
open to menmen~or\ii area
churches. The Rev. Sernnel
Jackson of Col1JIIIIIu4~ ' be ·
thelnstructorfOftheclr; nato
be held from 7 to t pa.•1'l1lale
enrolled will 1111e the ltn11'VOk,
''Man of Faith In a
~" ,
The registration for the entire
program ill $1. . ,&gt;. \

, 1be Scbool of Millie, College
of the Arll, Ohio State
University, presented the
Buckeye Gray Band and the
Buckeye Scarlet Band in
concert Sunday at Mershon
· Audltorlwn, Columbus.
j(aren Griffith, Pomeroy,
plays flnt lrUmpet with the 82plece Buckeye Scarlet · Band
which Is made up almost enllrelr pt mllllc majors. Attending the ~~;ert were Mr.
llld Mrs. Charles Griffith,
Karen's parents, and her
grandmother, Mrs. Anna
Qgdin, all local, and Mr. and
Mrs. Herbert Jones, Connie
. and Keith, Dublin .
Before returning home Mr.
and Mrs. GiifOth visited Mrs.
Floyd Griffith, the · f9rmer
.Glenna Clark, who is a patient
at Grant Hospital, room 828,
and underwent major surgery
Tuesday.

NfJ

Q- Who wrote under the ~----~-..-!l!f!ilaiif
pen name of Ellery Queen? ·
·
·

1

.2'11uo_
I.I D·,· ..··.
. Yf\ ,

A- This was the pen name
of two cousins, Frederic
Dannay
andthe
Manfred
B. their
Lee·,
and
is also
name of
chief. fictional character.

Bo~_:~E, Royal

Oak Park,
Friday, 8 to 11 p.m. Music by
Willies, sponsored by Meigs
VICA Cl b
u .
'
RETURN
JONATHA N
te DAR,carter
h
. Ch
Me1gs
· apr,
.
day luncheon, I p.m. Friday,
Grace Episcoppl Parish House.
CATHOIJC Women's Club,
Friday, following 7:30 p,m.
service.
SATURDAY
DANCE, Southern High
School, Racine, Saturday 9 til
II : 30, sponsored by Southern .
Band Boosters, music· by
Willie.
DANCJ;: WAHAMA High
School, Saturday, 9 til . midnight, .school sponsored, Jays
emceeing.
BAKE SALE, Saturday, 9 to
II :30 ·a.m. ·at DaviS'Warner
Insurance
Co.
offices,
Pomeroy, by Meigs VICA Club.

Q- ln what city will th e
1972 su m me r . 0./ympic
Games be held?

A- Munich, Germany.

CLEAN·I'NG~

· .

.'

(UpOn Request) :~·

ROBINSON'S

' .

.

..

CLEANE.Rs·:-

Q- I n Greek mythology,

who
the father
of Zeus? · ··•o· c~.lnd ·. , ·~
. ., home-•
A- was·
K rono
.,
~·
•• ,
s, th e G r e· e k'· •''
.
Phone·m.
5421 · .·

name for Saturn.

igh ·Living Expenses.
·Cut Them Down With
.

CERTIFIED GAS
Certified Gas Stations
•

992-9981

' ' I

•1

'

538 W. Main
Pomerqy, &lt;). '
We Honor BankAmericard and Master Ch;lrgii
·~

'

··
Em~a Morrison ~ies in Michigan

and Richard of Sugar Grove,
0., spent the weekend with
Genevieve Guthrie and attended church here Sunday
morning.
Friends here have received
word that Clyde White of the
neighboring corrununity has
suffered a stroke and has been
laken to the Holzer Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. William Carr
attended worship service here
with their daughters Sunday
for the first time since Mrs.
Carr 's hospitalization and
convalescence. She is showing
steady Improvement now.

~- Emma Cross ~orrlson, Columbus; Ben Cross, Athens

!If, formerly of Racine and County' and Willie Cross,
For
The
Freezer

(15)

10 LB. GROUND BEEF
10 LB. SLICED PORK LOIN
5 LB. BULK SAUSAGE
3
LB.
ALL
MEAT
WIENERS

s

5 LB. GROUND BEEF

Someone In The
Hospital?
Send A
Cheery Com.paet

(17)

-·
Vase Arrangement

S LB. CHUCK ROAST
S LB. ROUND STEAK
5 LB. PORK CHOPS

. s LB. I=RESifsA'OsA'GE

'

S L~, SLICED BACbN

Phone .Us
.Your Order!( 18) 5s I.B.
LB. GROUND BEEF
CHUCK ROAST

To Brighten Their Da

Dudley's Aorist

992 3502

Serving : Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis, o.
&amp;

10 LB. GROUND BEEF
10 LB. CHUCK ROAST
112 SEMI-BONELESS HAM
4 FRYING CHICKENS
(Whole or Cut Up!

Columbus, died Tuesday Racine; a· haU-eillter, Mrs.
morning at Lansing, Mich., Mayme . Mallory' Racine,
follo1rlng a several months several grandchildren, nieces
lllnesB.
and nephews. Mrs. Morrison
Mrs MorriJon 1s
, ..
survived by was II lifelong member of the
~OSOIIII, Hugh of Oxford, Ohio, Methodist Church. She was
arid David, servirig with the u. preceded In deatll by her
s.,Anny In Korea; three half, husband Tilden· a son Paul .
Cross, and a W:ughter.'Ruth. '
'
brothers,
Carl
Graveside services will be
held at 3 p.m. Friday at the
Oak Grove Cemetery, Racine,
with the Rev. Dale McClurg
SON BORN FEB. Z8
officiating.
Mr. arid Mrs. Roger Osborne
of Marietta, Rirute 4, are announcing the birth of a son,
CONFINED AT HOME
Christopher Todd, on Feb. 28 at
Melody Roberts, daughter of
St. J01eph Hospital. The·inf;mt Mrs. Mildred Roberts and a
weighed eight pounds, 10 freshman 111 Eastern High
L .&lt;:&gt; .•. Jtl~l~ grand· ·~h09l, remains confined to·her
,,.jllll'ents are 1 Mr . .and Mrs. hOme in Chfstei- by illness. She
Jamea Queen of Middleport will not be permitted to return
aitd the paternal grandparents to school for some time. Cards
are Mr. and Mrs. Herald may be sent to her at P. 0. Box
,Osborne, Long Bottom . .
·84, Chester, Ohio 45720.

•

Mason Co., W.Va.

.

Accept
•
•
•
•
•
•• ••••
•
•
•
•
•
•
••••••• •••••

l YOIIS MARKET

RI GHT
RESE RVEO
TO
LI M IT

AT RllllMD

QUA ~T I T I ES

··
·
P
ork
Roast
C
____________
lb. PIZZA
Fresh Lean

RUTlAND DEPT. STORE

1

Golden Isle

,,•

..•

'I

,I
'

•\
' '

'..

·

P~

PORK STEAK
Fresh Lean

SUGAR
5 lb.
bag

65~

Wagners

ORANGE
3
DRINK ' ~L
MAGIC

·2 9

.

Fresh Lean

SPARE RIBS

lb.

Dairy Specials

Fami~
Size

Salad Bowl

Pkg. llf 6

I

·

Frozen
Foods

Banquet

BUFFET

NEW SPRING

SPORTSWEAR
Select a new spring sports-

Brooks now. Coordinates,

Jumbo Size

00

DRESSES

quarter.sleev e
Long tuck -in ,

won't
ride up. Si zes S, M, L,
XL .

-3frAS265

Spring's Classics! Dresses to live ln.
Polished. Pretty. Set to II ven up
. srrlng's mood. See !hem here, at
S IIIIer's! Juniors, misses, and hali·
sizes.

Men's Plain and Fancv

9

Wash and Wear

High-count sanforized
colton broadcloth that
needs no ironing . Rein- .
f~o ced at s tr ~ ss· ~oints,

Bell Bottom Denim

Ladies Maverick flare

51ZPS 28·52.

JEANS

&gt; ~.

Men's Bell Bottom denim (eans.
long wearing and easy to wash.
Levi' s great fashion look at small
money . Right now! Sizes 29 to 42.

WALLPAPERS

Cl ean up, fix up, paper up
. every room · in the house.
·Washable finish .

59~

to

99

98~

Men's campus Short Sleeve

SPORT
SHIRTS

Men's campus perm . press short
slee~e sport shirts In solids and
laney palterns. Sizes 5-M-L-XL.

up. In

Big Selection Fine Wood Framed

OILETIE
PICTURES

Non -to)(ic, safe for
children's things .
Dri
In just .LO
mi
Large color ·

(

whit e and

decorator colors.

RUGS$
Oblong and oval shapes. Plain or
fringed, In a big assortment of
colors. Polyester-nylon.rayon .

each

·:

6,064 Ism/lies
In our service area
have
Electrically Heated homes.

CloseQut Group!
ASSORTED

COLUMBUS AND
'

OHID ELECTRIC COMPANY

qt

' .

I I

r

Regular 1.79

THROW RUGS

· Comelllfe
In the Electric Cllmtle.

bag

16"x20"
22"x28"

Riot at Stiffler's

Here'• whet they like:
0 Perfect warmth! Wall to wall, ceiling
to floor .
0 No regular servicing! Great! Just
turn the dial.
0 No pollutants, inside or out.
0 Clean as ao electric light bulbi
0 Instant comfort! Pleasant as
sunshine.
.
0 Modern! Tomorrow as well as to-day.

Slb.49e

•

JEANS

New 1972 Vinyl Coated

Dries in 30 minutes' to
glare-fr ee
finish. Water wash

10 lb. bag

I

SHORTS·
.·.· · _ _ · . ,,3 _ror$2 65

a hard ,

gge

00

Ladies New
HAND BAGS

Tee
Shirts
Soft. colton

cans ·

\

'•2

Men's Soft Cotton

WALL
PAINT

POTATOES .69e
FLORIDA

'10'!

'1''

Town and Counby Latex Aat

Produce Buys

Idaho Baking

3 for

.Ladies New Spring

cans

3ro~~

Soft, spr ingy, absorbent
. cotton
knit.
Cut
tor
ma
x
imum
comfort
and
'
,
·\
\
1
smooth fit . Sizes 34-54.

FROM

4 39c

PAPER
TOWELS

ATHLETIC SHIRTS

slacks , jamaicas, hot pants,
tuni c tops and shells . You' re
sure to find it In our store.

'

Try these new spring go.
everwhere oantsults. StrldA
carefree whei'ever you travel
th is spring . Classic pantsuits
suit your life.

Men's Cotton Knit

wear wardrobe by Bobble

Pillsbury

NORTHERN

-ANTS
SUITS

Brc)()ks

pkg.

BISCUITS

pa tter n'S .

·

wrd
I""

prett y

B_li)iC

pair

49c

Cheese

se lect ion ol

'

•aoo

chef Boy-Ar-Dee
With
- 15 oz.

·SOUP Beef

59¢·
BLEACH-39~ CHEESE
DRUM STICKS ·
5
g~
SALAD
39~

DRESSING

Food Stamps

Boston Butt

AT !UPPERS PlAINS

.'

Federal

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 11 .

AT RACINE
WAID CROSS SONS

BmTHDAY OBSERVED
The 21st birthday anniversary of Pat Collins was
ob~rved recently with a
surprise party al the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Collins,
Pomeroy, hoe ted by Kenda
Chaney. Games were played
and refreshm~'lll of cake, ke
cream, ~- and mints were
served. Atle1/iling besides the
honored guest and the hostess
were Norman Reynolds, Rick
and Nancy Colllll!l, Nancy St.
Clair and Mike Burns.

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

We

•••

M. Pikkoja, Dianna S. George,
Eva Johnson and Wendy R.
Gatewood,

5 LBW'!ORK CHOPS
5 LB. SLICED BACON

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

- ·-·

Beverly Sue Byus, Tracy
Wolfenba)ier, Mrs. Frank E. .
Rainey afld son, Karen L.
Humphreys, Mrs. TI!omas Lee
Petry and daughter' Mrs. .
Kenneth Yerian and daughter,
Clayton S. Beard, Katherine E. .
Frost, James Hall, Albert R.
Keeton, Golda M. Mourning,
Gary L. Smeltzer, Parmer
Taylor, S. Ray Phllllps, Vilma

3·"

THIS THURSDAY •. FRIDAY • SATURDAY •

Dhtchart~es

:I

Socia/lVotes

POMEROY

.

'·

Polyester

A blg specia l spr ing ·
assortment of plai n and •
lan ey · doubl e
kn i t
fabr ics in a grea t

-

Hol~~er Medlclil Center, First
Ave.
and Cedar St. General
.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Powers of Middleport are anvisiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
oounclng the forthcoming marriage of their daughter,
Maternity
visiting hours 2:30 to
Deborah Ann Laney, to William Michael Jones, son of Mr.
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
and Mrs. Roy Jones of Columbus.
l'ediatrics
Ward.
Ml$1 Laney ill a 197l graduate of Meigs High SchOol and ·
Bb1hs
Is employed at th~ Dutton Drug Store In Middleport. Her
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Roger Dale
fiance Is a · 1969 graduate of Eastmoor High School in
Col111Jl~ and a junior at Ohio University. He is presently · ·Brewer, Wellston, a son and
Mr. and Mrs. James Alvin
employed at the Royal Crown Boltllng Co. in Middleport. The
Sims,
Wellston, a daughter.
weddlrig will be an event of Marcb 18.

1

1~

DOUBLE KN.IT
FABRICS

HOSPITAL NEWS

Deborah Ann Laney to Marry .

.

64''-66';

••
.... ,\ .
,', I
I

• VaL to 99'
• Amted
Colols
·• Manufacturer
.I Closeout

18"x24"
24"x48"

'2.99

POMEROY

OHIO

DECORATOR

Regular 1.19
20" x 30" SIZE

ACCENT RUGS

THROW RUGS

• Size 22x36
• Assorted
Colors
• Machine
Washable
'

$1.99

.

$
EA.

Decolator Rup
Assorted Colors
• Manufacturer
Closeouts

•

�•

PTAJu

..

g

Rlgotl R-rved Ia
llmll Quantities!

.I
I.

Rules Set. Down

MR~ANDMRS.JERRVW.HARPER

Marlyn Mcintyre Is Bride
Of Jerry Wayne Harper
Miss Marlyn Mcintyre
became the bride of Jerry
Wayne Harper in a doublering ceremony, performed by
the Rev. Jim Lewis at the
Seventh Day Advent Church in
Pomeroy, Ohio, February 24.
The bride is a daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Mcintyre
of Min~rsville, Ohio, and the
groom is a son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ellis Harper of Apple Grove.
Immediately following the
ceremony, a reception was
held in the social room of the
church. The couple is residing
in Minersville, Ohio.
Those
attending
the
wedding and reception were
Clara Mcintyre, Mrs. Kenneth
Matson and Mary; Mrs. Patsy
Spires, Mrs. Irma Bailes, Mrs.
Rita Wright, Mrs. Rhoda
Bailes, Kristy Matson, Dixie
Snyder, George T. Luster and
lhe Rev. Mr. Jim Lewis.
Peggy Cha ney, George
Young, Sue Cunningham.

Jacob Bush and family; Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Pigott and
lis : Connie Dailey, Roy H.
Bush, Peggy and Billy; Elsie
Ltpscomb and Elyna and
Robert ; Janet and John
McDaniel, Ellen McDaniel,
Bob Bush.
Faye Harper, Ellis Harper
Sharon Vance, Scotty Kiser,
Effie
Black,
Louise
Pennington, Bonnie Dailey,
Brenda Cunningham, Mrs .
Walter France , the Rev.
Hubert C. Morgan, Mrs. John
D. Uppol, Connie ush,. Rusty
Thueter , Mr. and Mrs.
Lourina B~sh.
Mrs. Angte Bronty, Herbert 1
Mcintyre, Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence Mcintyre and Kim:
Phyllis Mcintyre, Herbie
Mcintyre, Roy Gilmore,
Charles Hatfield, Marjorie
Gtbbs, Ruth Hobbs and John
and Carmen Ktser, students at
Meigs
High
School
Costmttholgy.

Bar}Jtt.st

·~==:::::::::-~:::=::.-~~=:::::::~::::::~~~».!~::::~::;:;:;~,:,~:;:;:~:::~:$:~:;:;,:;:,:,:::::,:,;;:~,:~:~::::::::: •

....

GifrScoufr: ~

•

I Diary
0:•:

Final arrangementa fw the
judging of cultural art exhibits
for the Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers have
been announced by Mrs.
Richard Vaughan, president.
For local units, Mrs.
Vaughan suggests first, second
and third place ribbon awards
in each of the categories of
visual art, music, poetry and
essays .1111 each arade level.
All blue ribbon wlnnet,l, or
first place awarda, ire to. be
exhibited at the Meigs County
Council of Parents and
Teachers meeting to be held on
April 6 at Riverview.
Prior to that meeting and not
later than ~arch 24, all local
units are to submit to Mrs, C.
E. Blakeslee, all blue ribbon
winners In the essay and poetry
categories. Judging on these
will be completed prior to the
Council meeting,
Mrs.
Vaugllan reports.
The visual art judging will be
done at the Council meeting,
and all blue ribbon winners will
be announced at that time.
Mrs. Vaughan advises that
Meigs County will exhibit these
blue ribbon winners at the
spring conference of District

g_ The Dlllly SenUnei,MidciJeport.POIDI!I'O~,.o., M.m ,, 1m

I

•

'I .'

they

16, -but that
will ·not be
entered into. competition. AU
Meigs ~ounty blue rib!lol!
winlll!l'll in all ca,tegories will
go dlrecUy Into competition at
the Ohio Congress of Parents
and Teachers convention to be
held in October in Columbus.
Council judgins will be
handled as follows, acctrdlng
to Mrs. Vaughan: The flrel
pla~e Y(innen from eaciL
category on each grade level in
the 11 partlclpatlns units will
bejudgedagainsteachother. A
blue ribbon winner will be
seleeled from this group.
The blue ribbon winners
from each grade will then oo
judged In the categories of
primary- kindergarten, first,
second and third grades; in·
termediate, fourth, fifth and
sixth grades; and junior high,
seventh and eighth grades.
The best entry in each of the
categories of visual arts,
poetry, essay, and music ln .the
three grade levels will then be
selected as the winning .entries
or division champions , to be
displayed at the spring district .
conference and to go Into
competition at the state convention.

AUNT JEMIMA 21b. box
~ PANCAKE ·MIX ...........................
AUNT JEMIMA

.

MAPLE SYRUP.&lt;
.........~~. ~

CR'I GO

Women Meet

A scholarship fund contribulion of $25.50 was reported
by Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner
when the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society met
Monday night at the Middleport First Baptist Church.
The white cross quota, the
group's mtsston sewing
project, was discWIIIed by Mrs.
Fred Gibbs who noted that the
list of Items needed will be
reported in the March issue of
the church paper.
Mrs. Charles Searles
reported on the Lenten break·
fast held at Trinity Church
Pomeroy, noting that Mrs:
John Werner, Mrs. Bert
Bodimer Mrs. Paul Smart
and M~. Danny Thompso~
also attended.
A letter was read from Mrs.

SHORTENING

clllll1qittee were Mrs. · John
Fultz, Mrs. Manning Kloos,
and Mrs. Richard Owen.
Mrs. Charles Simons, love
gilt chainnan, was assisted
with the dedication by Mrs.
Searles, Mrs. Fred Lewis, and
Mrs. Leora Sigman. Several
readings were given.
The program by Mrs. Owen ·
was a playlet entitled, "Am I
My Brother's Keeper." Mrs.
Searles was the voice of the
world. Others taking roles
were Mrs. Willis Anthony,.Mrs.
Dale Walburn and Mrs. Kloos. '
An organ prelude to open Ote
meetlngwaspresentedbyMrs.
Gerald Anthony. Mrs. Werner
had prayer, and Mrs. Walburn
of the Love Joy Circle gave
devotions using scripture from
Hebrews and a meditation on ,

3 lb. can ·

·Limit 1 Can

~=rk~~~:r~~~~~: fa~~~ roll call of circles .
.
'
~ - · !lllnouncing 1\te·· ~!!Ml ~.'(~~ II from DOrcas, nine
,...

',.. ~'Bniftilil"1!leetirtg to 'be fie!rf'ilh
March 18 at the Jackson
Baptist Church. The theme will
be "Almost Time".
~
Mrs. Werner thanked those
~ members who assisted with the
~. fellowship tea last month.
!.~.;.: Appointed to the nominating

By Charlene Hoeflich

Leaders who are ellgible for &amp;, 10, 1&amp;, or 20 year membership
pins are requested to advise Mrs. Wllllam Ohlinger some time
this week.
The pins will be presented during recognition services at the
Four Rivers Girl Scout Council's annual spring luncheon to be
held at Williamstown on April 26. Price of the luncheon is $1.75
and leaders, committee members, or others planning to attend
are to send their reservations to Mrs. Ohlinger.
On March IS, a meeting of the Big Bend Neighborhood will be
held at the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Volunteers to serve as neighborhood chairman, a position
open due to the resignation of Mrs. Ohlinger, and as day camp
director are needed. Anyone willing to serve in either capacity is
asked to contact Mrs. Ohlinger.
A TOTAL OF ~.616 boxes of girl scout cookies were sold in
Meigs County in the annual sale which not only builds troop funds
f•lr special activities but provides equipment for camps.
Mrs. Thomas Smith, cookie sale chairman, reports that due
to demand 10 more cases of cookies are being ordered. If you're
h1terested, contact her.
SALISBURY CADE'ITE TROOP 208
Macrame - the art of tying knots - was started Thursday
night when the Salisbury Cadettes met at the school with their
leader. Mrs. Ohlinger.
Using colored cord, the girls started belts of square knots.
Plans were made to complete work on the social dependahility
challenge and the hostess bsdge at a troop birthday party to be
held next week.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
In observance of Girl Scout Sunday, members of Troop 39
will attend church in a group at the Middleport First Baptist
Oturch. Mrs. Roscoe Wise, leader, reminds that the girls are to
wear their uniforms.
At last week's meeting of the troop a service project was
carried out. The girls collected Jitter within two blocks of the
Heath United Methodist Church where they meet. Brownies and
Kool-Aid were served by the troop leaders as a reward for their
work on the project.
At Monday night's meeting, the sixth grade girls completed
plans for a scout own . Patrol I, the Groovy Grunters, did skits for
their troop dramatic badge, and Julie Byer, Kim Payne and
Carin Bailey presented a skit on borne, health and safety. Patrol
4, the Badgers, completed requirements for my troop badge.
Cookie money is to be turned into Mrs. Wise by Friday .
SALISBURY BROWNIE TROOP 22G
Tote bags to be used for camping are being made by the
Brownies of Troop 220. The bags are of vivid materials and have
drawstring tops. Camp skills are being studies in preparation for
summer outings.

Local Bowling
Women's Thursday
Allernoon League
March 2, 1972
Team
Stondings
L
Dave's Tire Land
~· 22
Pomeroy Lanes
40 32
N. Y. Clothing House
38 34 o •
Simon's Mkt.
30 42
Forest Run Block
30 42
Smllh's Body Shop
28 44
High Team 3 games - New
York Clothing 1804; Forest Run
Block 1794 ; Dave's Tire Land
1708.
High Team game -

624 .

High Ind . Series - Drema
Smllh SOl ; Julie Boyles 478 ;

Maxine Dugan 473.
High Ind . game - Keith Ann
Whitlatch. Drema Smith 187 ;

Searls

·..&lt;·

GREEN GIANT
17 Ql.

DANCE AT PARK
A teen dance wlll be staged
Friday night at Royal Oak
Park in the archery building ·
under sponsorship of VICA of
Meigs High School. Music for
dan~ing will be. provided by
"TheWlllle."Thedancewillbe
held from 8 to 11 p.m. and the
cost will be 7~ cents a person.
The public is invited.

PEAS 4ror'l

Eileen

00

CAMP BELLS
VEGETABLE SOUP

Forest

Run Block 686 ; New York
Clothing 664 ; Dave's Tire Land .

Orema Smith 183 ;

'frblil;l.ove Joy, and five 1fr0ffi&gt;
Electa with two guests. '
The St. Patrick's Day theme
was carried out in the refreshment table decorations. An
arrangement of jonquils and
Ivy were used on the table.
Hostesses were Mrs. Bodiriler,
Mrs. Harold Hubbsrd, Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. Searles,
and Mrs. Milton HJ""'.

BOARD TO MEET
The Southern Local School
District Board of Education
will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday
at the high school rather than
on Thursday, March 9.

'' $

No. 1 ·

179.

.00

cans
·Boneless
Delmonico
Waste
free
:ISil~ENCH

CITY

OR
YH tiYGRADE

MAN '$ 1!1!1

L .- 'DY ' S $e:l .SO

l.!:i.\Keepea.ke•
~ ltii ... D1'T101111H.

WKOOINQ

. LB.

JUICE46 oz.
YELLOW

lib. pkg.

t
LADY ' . 112.. !10

STEAK
'
79

STOKELYS
PINEAPPLE

CHEftoY~RDEE
1~

oz.

DINN
'WITH
MEAT
LADY arnv·

PRUNE
JUICE 32 oz.
F_,ZEN JENO PIZZAS
SAUSAGE

PEP~E~NI

69C

ll% oz. '
!JIII-I-~
Right Reserved "
To ~lmll

ONION SETS

WEINERS

'

IUNOI

DREAM RINGS
INITIATION NOTE
Members of the American
Ltllon Auxiliary of Racine
P&lt;lst' 802 who have not been
initialed are asked to contact
Mrs.
Grella
Simpson,
.secretary, or Mrs. Herschel
Noms, treasurer, by March 14

.'

if they can participate in the
Meigs County joint initiation
ceremony on Sunday, March 26
at Middleport. Materials for
use in the initiatory work have
to be ordered and reservations
with the Middleport unit most
be made by the Marc)! H date.

Elegant design and line crattsmanshlp highlight
.these perleclly matched Keepsake wedding rings.
Your choice ot 14K yellow or while gold.

SLICED

lib. pkg.

BACON·.

Iii--

Visit Ow Building Supply Dept.

MIDDLEPORT
'

OHIO

'
I I

I
'J

I

�•

PTAJu

..

g

Rlgotl R-rved Ia
llmll Quantities!

.I
I.

Rules Set. Down

MR~ANDMRS.JERRVW.HARPER

Marlyn Mcintyre Is Bride
Of Jerry Wayne Harper
Miss Marlyn Mcintyre
became the bride of Jerry
Wayne Harper in a doublering ceremony, performed by
the Rev. Jim Lewis at the
Seventh Day Advent Church in
Pomeroy, Ohio, February 24.
The bride is a daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Herb Mcintyre
of Min~rsville, Ohio, and the
groom is a son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ellis Harper of Apple Grove.
Immediately following the
ceremony, a reception was
held in the social room of the
church. The couple is residing
in Minersville, Ohio.
Those
attending
the
wedding and reception were
Clara Mcintyre, Mrs. Kenneth
Matson and Mary; Mrs. Patsy
Spires, Mrs. Irma Bailes, Mrs.
Rita Wright, Mrs. Rhoda
Bailes, Kristy Matson, Dixie
Snyder, George T. Luster and
lhe Rev. Mr. Jim Lewis.
Peggy Cha ney, George
Young, Sue Cunningham.

Jacob Bush and family; Mr.
and Mrs. Willard Pigott and
lis : Connie Dailey, Roy H.
Bush, Peggy and Billy; Elsie
Ltpscomb and Elyna and
Robert ; Janet and John
McDaniel, Ellen McDaniel,
Bob Bush.
Faye Harper, Ellis Harper
Sharon Vance, Scotty Kiser,
Effie
Black,
Louise
Pennington, Bonnie Dailey,
Brenda Cunningham, Mrs .
Walter France , the Rev.
Hubert C. Morgan, Mrs. John
D. Uppol, Connie ush,. Rusty
Thueter , Mr. and Mrs.
Lourina B~sh.
Mrs. Angte Bronty, Herbert 1
Mcintyre, Mr . and Mrs.
Clarence Mcintyre and Kim:
Phyllis Mcintyre, Herbie
Mcintyre, Roy Gilmore,
Charles Hatfield, Marjorie
Gtbbs, Ruth Hobbs and John
and Carmen Ktser, students at
Meigs
High
School
Costmttholgy.

Bar}Jtt.st

·~==:::::::::-~:::=::.-~~=:::::::~::::::~~~».!~::::~::;:;:;~,:,~:;:;:~:::~:$:~:;:;,:;:,:,:::::,:,;;:~,:~:~::::::::: •

....

GifrScoufr: ~

•

I Diary
0:•:

Final arrangementa fw the
judging of cultural art exhibits
for the Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers have
been announced by Mrs.
Richard Vaughan, president.
For local units, Mrs.
Vaughan suggests first, second
and third place ribbon awards
in each of the categories of
visual art, music, poetry and
essays .1111 each arade level.
All blue ribbon wlnnet,l, or
first place awarda, ire to. be
exhibited at the Meigs County
Council of Parents and
Teachers meeting to be held on
April 6 at Riverview.
Prior to that meeting and not
later than ~arch 24, all local
units are to submit to Mrs, C.
E. Blakeslee, all blue ribbon
winners In the essay and poetry
categories. Judging on these
will be completed prior to the
Council meeting,
Mrs.
Vaugllan reports.
The visual art judging will be
done at the Council meeting,
and all blue ribbon winners will
be announced at that time.
Mrs. Vaughan advises that
Meigs County will exhibit these
blue ribbon winners at the
spring conference of District

g_ The Dlllly SenUnei,MidciJeport.POIDI!I'O~,.o., M.m ,, 1m

I

•

'I .'

they

16, -but that
will ·not be
entered into. competition. AU
Meigs ~ounty blue rib!lol!
winlll!l'll in all ca,tegories will
go dlrecUy Into competition at
the Ohio Congress of Parents
and Teachers convention to be
held in October in Columbus.
Council judgins will be
handled as follows, acctrdlng
to Mrs. Vaughan: The flrel
pla~e Y(innen from eaciL
category on each grade level in
the 11 partlclpatlns units will
bejudgedagainsteachother. A
blue ribbon winner will be
seleeled from this group.
The blue ribbon winners
from each grade will then oo
judged In the categories of
primary- kindergarten, first,
second and third grades; in·
termediate, fourth, fifth and
sixth grades; and junior high,
seventh and eighth grades.
The best entry in each of the
categories of visual arts,
poetry, essay, and music ln .the
three grade levels will then be
selected as the winning .entries
or division champions , to be
displayed at the spring district .
conference and to go Into
competition at the state convention.

AUNT JEMIMA 21b. box
~ PANCAKE ·MIX ...........................
AUNT JEMIMA

.

MAPLE SYRUP.&lt;
.........~~. ~

CR'I GO

Women Meet

A scholarship fund contribulion of $25.50 was reported
by Mrs. Isabelle Winebrenner
when the B. H. Sanborn
Missionary Society met
Monday night at the Middleport First Baptist Church.
The white cross quota, the
group's mtsston sewing
project, was discWIIIed by Mrs.
Fred Gibbs who noted that the
list of Items needed will be
reported in the March issue of
the church paper.
Mrs. Charles Searles
reported on the Lenten break·
fast held at Trinity Church
Pomeroy, noting that Mrs:
John Werner, Mrs. Bert
Bodimer Mrs. Paul Smart
and M~. Danny Thompso~
also attended.
A letter was read from Mrs.

SHORTENING

clllll1qittee were Mrs. · John
Fultz, Mrs. Manning Kloos,
and Mrs. Richard Owen.
Mrs. Charles Simons, love
gilt chainnan, was assisted
with the dedication by Mrs.
Searles, Mrs. Fred Lewis, and
Mrs. Leora Sigman. Several
readings were given.
The program by Mrs. Owen ·
was a playlet entitled, "Am I
My Brother's Keeper." Mrs.
Searles was the voice of the
world. Others taking roles
were Mrs. Willis Anthony,.Mrs.
Dale Walburn and Mrs. Kloos. '
An organ prelude to open Ote
meetlngwaspresentedbyMrs.
Gerald Anthony. Mrs. Werner
had prayer, and Mrs. Walburn
of the Love Joy Circle gave
devotions using scripture from
Hebrews and a meditation on ,

3 lb. can ·

·Limit 1 Can

~=rk~~~:r~~~~~: fa~~~ roll call of circles .
.
'
~ - · !lllnouncing 1\te·· ~!!Ml ~.'(~~ II from DOrcas, nine
,...

',.. ~'Bniftilil"1!leetirtg to 'be fie!rf'ilh
March 18 at the Jackson
Baptist Church. The theme will
be "Almost Time".
~
Mrs. Werner thanked those
~ members who assisted with the
~. fellowship tea last month.
!.~.;.: Appointed to the nominating

By Charlene Hoeflich

Leaders who are ellgible for &amp;, 10, 1&amp;, or 20 year membership
pins are requested to advise Mrs. Wllllam Ohlinger some time
this week.
The pins will be presented during recognition services at the
Four Rivers Girl Scout Council's annual spring luncheon to be
held at Williamstown on April 26. Price of the luncheon is $1.75
and leaders, committee members, or others planning to attend
are to send their reservations to Mrs. Ohlinger.
On March IS, a meeting of the Big Bend Neighborhood will be
held at the Columbus and Southern Ohio Electric Co.
Volunteers to serve as neighborhood chairman, a position
open due to the resignation of Mrs. Ohlinger, and as day camp
director are needed. Anyone willing to serve in either capacity is
asked to contact Mrs. Ohlinger.
A TOTAL OF ~.616 boxes of girl scout cookies were sold in
Meigs County in the annual sale which not only builds troop funds
f•lr special activities but provides equipment for camps.
Mrs. Thomas Smith, cookie sale chairman, reports that due
to demand 10 more cases of cookies are being ordered. If you're
h1terested, contact her.
SALISBURY CADE'ITE TROOP 208
Macrame - the art of tying knots - was started Thursday
night when the Salisbury Cadettes met at the school with their
leader. Mrs. Ohlinger.
Using colored cord, the girls started belts of square knots.
Plans were made to complete work on the social dependahility
challenge and the hostess bsdge at a troop birthday party to be
held next week.
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
In observance of Girl Scout Sunday, members of Troop 39
will attend church in a group at the Middleport First Baptist
Oturch. Mrs. Roscoe Wise, leader, reminds that the girls are to
wear their uniforms.
At last week's meeting of the troop a service project was
carried out. The girls collected Jitter within two blocks of the
Heath United Methodist Church where they meet. Brownies and
Kool-Aid were served by the troop leaders as a reward for their
work on the project.
At Monday night's meeting, the sixth grade girls completed
plans for a scout own . Patrol I, the Groovy Grunters, did skits for
their troop dramatic badge, and Julie Byer, Kim Payne and
Carin Bailey presented a skit on borne, health and safety. Patrol
4, the Badgers, completed requirements for my troop badge.
Cookie money is to be turned into Mrs. Wise by Friday .
SALISBURY BROWNIE TROOP 22G
Tote bags to be used for camping are being made by the
Brownies of Troop 220. The bags are of vivid materials and have
drawstring tops. Camp skills are being studies in preparation for
summer outings.

Local Bowling
Women's Thursday
Allernoon League
March 2, 1972
Team
Stondings
L
Dave's Tire Land
~· 22
Pomeroy Lanes
40 32
N. Y. Clothing House
38 34 o •
Simon's Mkt.
30 42
Forest Run Block
30 42
Smllh's Body Shop
28 44
High Team 3 games - New
York Clothing 1804; Forest Run
Block 1794 ; Dave's Tire Land
1708.
High Team game -

624 .

High Ind . Series - Drema
Smllh SOl ; Julie Boyles 478 ;

Maxine Dugan 473.
High Ind . game - Keith Ann
Whitlatch. Drema Smith 187 ;

Searls

·..&lt;·

GREEN GIANT
17 Ql.

DANCE AT PARK
A teen dance wlll be staged
Friday night at Royal Oak
Park in the archery building ·
under sponsorship of VICA of
Meigs High School. Music for
dan~ing will be. provided by
"TheWlllle."Thedancewillbe
held from 8 to 11 p.m. and the
cost will be 7~ cents a person.
The public is invited.

PEAS 4ror'l

Eileen

00

CAMP BELLS
VEGETABLE SOUP

Forest

Run Block 686 ; New York
Clothing 664 ; Dave's Tire Land .

Orema Smith 183 ;

'frblil;l.ove Joy, and five 1fr0ffi&gt;
Electa with two guests. '
The St. Patrick's Day theme
was carried out in the refreshment table decorations. An
arrangement of jonquils and
Ivy were used on the table.
Hostesses were Mrs. Bodiriler,
Mrs. Harold Hubbsrd, Mrs.
Elizabeth Slavin, Mrs. Searles,
and Mrs. Milton HJ""'.

BOARD TO MEET
The Southern Local School
District Board of Education
will meet at 7:30p.m. Monday
at the high school rather than
on Thursday, March 9.

'' $

No. 1 ·

179.

.00

cans
·Boneless
Delmonico
Waste
free
:ISil~ENCH

CITY

OR
YH tiYGRADE

MAN '$ 1!1!1

L .- 'DY ' S $e:l .SO

l.!:i.\Keepea.ke•
~ ltii ... D1'T101111H.

WKOOINQ

. LB.

JUICE46 oz.
YELLOW

lib. pkg.

t
LADY ' . 112.. !10

STEAK
'
79

STOKELYS
PINEAPPLE

CHEftoY~RDEE
1~

oz.

DINN
'WITH
MEAT
LADY arnv·

PRUNE
JUICE 32 oz.
F_,ZEN JENO PIZZAS
SAUSAGE

PEP~E~NI

69C

ll% oz. '
!JIII-I-~
Right Reserved "
To ~lmll

ONION SETS

WEINERS

'

IUNOI

DREAM RINGS
INITIATION NOTE
Members of the American
Ltllon Auxiliary of Racine
P&lt;lst' 802 who have not been
initialed are asked to contact
Mrs.
Grella
Simpson,
.secretary, or Mrs. Herschel
Noms, treasurer, by March 14

.'

if they can participate in the
Meigs County joint initiation
ceremony on Sunday, March 26
at Middleport. Materials for
use in the initiatory work have
to be ordered and reservations
with the Middleport unit most
be made by the Marc)! H date.

Elegant design and line crattsmanshlp highlight
.these perleclly matched Keepsake wedding rings.
Your choice ot 14K yellow or while gold.

SLICED

lib. pkg.

BACON·.

Iii--

Visit Ow Building Supply Dept.

MIDDLEPORT
'

OHIO

'
I I

I
'J

I

�10-Tben.IIJ !lefttlnel,Midllepoo:~. o., lbrch l,lt'l't

I

Sentin~lClasSi/ieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
WANt ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M.
Da y
Before
Publlcallon
Monday Oeadlln'l 9 a. m.
Cancellation &amp; Correction•
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for,
'
Day of Publlcation 1 ·
REGULATIONS
The Publisher .reserves the
right to edit or reje ct an y ads
dee med ob jectional. The
·pu blis her wi II not be

Notice

3-8-llc

LEG CRAMPS? Try Supplical
with calci um , onl y 11.98 al
Nelson Drugs.

3-8-llc

res ponslbl ~ for more than one
~corr ect Insertion. .
·

RATES
For Want Ad Service

s cents per Word one Insert ion
12

Minim um Cha rge 7Sc
,
cents per wor d three ·

consecutive insert ions.

----RE DUCE excess flu ids with

FLUIDE X. 11.69 - LOSE
WEIGHT safely with Dex-AOie l, 98c at Nelson Drugs.
3-B-llc

- -- - SHOOTING Ma tc h, Sat urda y,
Marc h 11 , at

• 18 cents per word six c6n-

the Racine

Planing Mill a16 p.m. Factory

'.:iecuf lve inserfions..

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2SICIIS
Of
QUALRY

NER VOUS? Can't sleep? Try .
"Sleepers." SATISFACTION
GUARAN TE ED OR MON EY
BACK . On l y 98c . Nelson
Drugs.

:,I ' For Sale

' .
1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE
12095
_, V-8 eng ine. automatic trans .• p. steering, tactory ai r
conditioned. good w-w tires. rad io, da rk green finish with
spotless lo!erlor.
.
1967 PONTIAC GRANO PRIX
.
$1395
Convertible, V-8 auto.. P.S., P. B., ti lt steering wheel, ta pe
player , good I ires, dark blue. like new top while. white
bucket S(·ats with console, nice and c lean 1owner car .

1 4INSIOE Doors (2 - 2' 8" wide,
6' &amp;" long - 2 panel and 2- 2'
1·
- 6" wide, 6' 8" loog - 2 panel) ; ·
1 locks and hinges. Phone· !"12·
2587
1
·
3.7.31,

--:---------,-

1961 'FIAT, • door, mileage
45,000 ; In A·1 condition.
priced reaoonably. Phone 9854137 or contact Carl Findling,
Alfred.

~~----3-7-3tp

ONE New Idea one row plant
seller on rubber ; 90 gal.
I water lank ; phone 247-2344,
Robert 0. A•htey.
J.7-6tc

1967CH EVELLE MALIBU HTCPE.

SU95

Med. grn . f inish. Nice.

1

onl y. Assor ted
Sponsored by th e
Syracuse Fire Dept.

mea t.

ads and ads paid withi n 1(

da ys.
CAkD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

3-8-31c

- -- -- -

!·

Pomeroy Motor Co.

$1.50 fo r 50 word minimu m.' GUN SHOOT, also rifl e matches
OPEN !YES. I:GO P.M.
- open sltes only, Forked
Each additional word 2c.
Run
Sport•man
Cl
ub,
Sunda
y,
fiPII!ROY, OHIO
BLIND ADS
March 12, 12 noo~.
. Ad ditiona l 2Sc Charge per
3-8-31c 1-------~--- - -- - - . J I
Advertisement.
Wanted To Buy
OF FICE HOURS
Notice
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally, THE Southeastern Ohio Polled
4 WHE EL drive jeep. Phone
Heref ord A ssoc iat ion is
8: 30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon
KOStOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
Flame
after 5 p.m. 992-3062.
selling SO head Friday night,
Sa turday.
of
Hope
Perfumes.
Human
&amp;
2-27-121c
Marc h 31st•at the Meigs Co.
synthetic wigs. No need to
Fai rgrou nd s. For catalogs
leave Meigs or Mason County OLD FURNi~E . Round Oak
write: Sharon Sturbois, Rt. 4,
f
or lack of money. If in Help Wanted
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
teres ted call 992-511 3.
clocks , and -or complete
3-8-31c
TIME EQUALS MON EY. Two
3-7-lfc
households . Wrl.te M. · D.
wom en or men to handle
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
incr eased demand for our ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...- .A:N YON E inter ested in learning
Call 992-6271.
overweight ladles, teens and
fa mous household pr oducts.
crafts
and
making
flowers
men Interested In a Weight
Rawlelgh Co., Dept. 7116,
contact Eulah Francis at 992 Watchers (R) Class In 5884.
Freepor t, Ill. , phone 81 5-232'
7416.
Pomeroy write: Weight
3-2-6tp For Rent
Watchers (R) . 1863 Sedlon
J.a-llc
ONE LARGE trailer space,
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 4523i.
Velma G. Zuspan, 773-5750,
Employment
Wanted
• 10·3-tfc
Mason.
W. Va .
DRY WALL Finisher co n3-7-18tp
SAVE up toone hall . Bring your
tra ctor. R. I. Dubbeld, Phone
-sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
742-5825:
APARTMENT.
3
rooms
and
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
3-6-Stc
bath, furnished , North 2nd
Ave., Middleport. Phone 995·
11 -21-tfc
5293..
3-7-tfc
' WIN AT BRIDGE - - - -- - - - I
FARM LAND. 6.5 acres for
corn, other land for truck
farming , would rent tOO acres

Carriers For
MASON
and
HARTFORD

The Dai~ Sentinel
Ph. 614-992·2156
FEMALE

cook

and

houseparent , over _.0, for

ON YOUR DIAL
w···w '&amp;dl·u: ~= ~

·.:~;~;-ili$::t~lmllll'.ll'
· ·-~~r··llllqllll
· -~·-!l8ic"
?'

Helen Help

Us. • •
.

ByHelen Hottel

'

NORTH

WMP0/1390

Children's Home. Salary plus
room and board. Phone 304·
428-3721 before 5 p.m. , ask for
Mrs. Ooby.
3-7-lllc

1

Setting Trick
Can Be Lost

.We talk to you
like a. peiSOI1.

4 8

'

-- -

·'

SOME MORE ''QUIET DESPERATION"
Dear.;'\
Helen :
1,ve been married 12 years, and for at least hall of them, I
haven '!loved my husband, though ldon'thatehimyet. We never
had a good marriage (both of us were too young for such a
decision), butl've tried to suppress my feelings and put on a good
show - for the children, the world, and sometimes I guess I even
fool my husbana.
But I wonder whether living this way is more hurt to all of us
than a quick, clean divorce? I constanUy think that's what I'll get
when the kids are l!fOwn, but then It will be too late for both him
and me to start over. Don't suggest a COIUlselor - we tried tha t
and it failed.
We hardly ever fight any more . Rarely even argue. But we
don 't talk about anythlng ,vital either. He just broods or makes
snide remarks or barks at the kids - and I shrug and try to cover
for him.
I never wanted to be the dominant figure, but he's pushed me
into it. On one hand, I feel like my husband's mother and, on th e
other, he treats me like a child, wanting me to ask l'ermtsston for
every little thing. If the children come to me for a decision he
resents it, but they know they'll get an automatic "No," with all
kinds of selfi&gt;ilying complaint.&gt;! if they approach him.
He resents me and belittles me - probably because he
senses I don't care about him, As you once said, Helen, two
mismatched people can be polson for each other, where If they
had different mates, they might become really great humans.
I find myself deliberately baiting him (then lapsing Into
pro tective silence) as though to make him want to be r id of me.
We separated once for a month, and it was the loveliest time of
our li ves. The children and I felt so much peace and enjoyed so
mll1y things together - but all the while I felt very guilty. Am I
be ;ng selfish?- CONSIDERING DIVORCE
[l(ar C.D.:
When two people have grown as fa r apart as you describe,
the greatest seliishness, it seems to me, would be In staying
t&lt;Jgether for the sake of appearances, finances, "th e children,"
or just lplain lethargy.
A bad marriage brings out the worst in each partner - and
the children often suffer the greatest Injuries. If you 're "constanlly thinking of divorce," then for heaven's sakes - SAY it.
Get your feelings out in the open where you both can deal with
themand, lf you can't make a radical change for the better, then
part now while ther e's a chance for a better future.- H.

+++
Dear Helen :
About six years ago a wife wrote you a very touching letter
about her mls-marriage, how she'd tried to make a go of It , but in
spite of herself had fallen in love with a man wbo had everything
her husband lacked - kindness, empathy, love for children,
honesty ,.. You surprised advice-column buffs by understanding
her ·and Intimating it wasn't always best to stay with a doomed
marriage- even though there wasn't any outright cruelty In·
volved, At that time "lovelorn" columns were so stereotyped
that your comments created shok waves. Thank goodness you've
helped open them up !

•
We're wondering : did you ever hear from Utls woman again?
Did llhe choose duty over l)appiness? As I recall, you told her that
her husband might be as unhappy as she, but trying to make the
best of a bad alliance for the same reasonll she was - the
chUdren, unwllllngnesa to • imll faUure, social life,
Any developnents?- INTERESTED

Dear Interested:

Yes, the Wlbappy and tempted wife wrote to me last.about
two years.ago. She wa1 atill with her husband, still Wlhappy, still
resisting temptadon - and stlllln love with the other man who
"walt• but doesn't push."
She and her husband had Involved themselves II) so many
civi~ and business affairs that they SCllrcely spoke of personal
things. She said, "I guess it's beUer this way." Bull wonder ... If
I hear from her again after this column Is published, I'll let my
readers know the outcome, six years later. - H,

R

.K QJ104
• 10 9 7
... 9 7 32
WEST
EAST ( D )
4 74
• 92
• 8762
¥ A9 &gt;
• Q 32
t A KJH4
... KJ 85
. Q l04
SOUTH
4 A K QJ 106 53
. 3
• 65
... A 6
East- West vuln erable
w~st
NOI·th East Suuth
I+ 44
Pass , Pass
PaSjl

Op•ning lead- 2 +

only charge is proper fer .
lilizin~

and reseed to Qrass, 2

mi. North ot Wilke•vllle on
Salem Rd . Call Hassel
Justice, 766-3740 or write Box
106, Kouts. Ind. 46347. J.7.6tp
2 BEDROOM, lfz double, fur nished on 41h &amp; College in
Syracuse. Phone 992-2749.
3-7-61c
TR AILE R, Brown' s Tra ile r

WRITIEN WARRANTY
coli eottect.•~_
...s2-3158
•
~lTV
"1ill 1

Spin Dryer ; Zenith Portable Stereo; Riding lawnmower ; phone 992-7315.
3-7-101c

-- - - 1970 HONDA 350, exce!fent

condition, call 985-3ll28 alter 6
p.m.
3-7-6tc

MARCH
STARCRAFT
SPECIALS: 18' 7" - 53,299
for $2,_575; 20' 7" - 53,854 for
$2,999; 22' 7" -

$3,361 ; All

self-contained, sleeps six and
c ompressor .

Star Master

Campers - $1 ,650 for $1,325.
We sell-service and quality.
Camp Conley Siarcraft Sales,
Rt. 62, North of Point
Pleasant.
3-8-31c

------

'5.55
On Most American Cars.

i.

Phone 992-2094
·
. ..... ----

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Qpen ITiiS
Monda~

thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, b.

Wanted To Rent

3·2-6tc

:''' 7''' ......... ,,,,,,,,, ..~

free •

SAVE -SO.OO
FLO
0~ SAMPLE
CLEARANCE

:
•
;
,
•
:

J:i

- -- - - --

-==========:;Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.

For Sale .

Aluminum
Sheets

-----,-- -

Salt

The
Daily Sentinel

- - -- --

- - -- - -

742-4761

12' · 14' · 24' •

MillER
MOBILE tOMES

\

,.

SUNBEAM 2-SLICE

SUNBEAM

BELL &amp;

PERCOLATOR

.

$1677

.I

HOWEL~

TOASTER

· SUPER 8

ior, twist lock Mlftty top. light signals wh~n
readW' to Mrve. ICftp~ coli.. K! rving·hot outomoticollv. Stainfeu steel vessel, bask.- and
pump.

Make reserv•tlons tor your · ~
private parties. banqu~t~· 1
_
special occaslono.
-Ideal for meeting place with or without kitchen
privileges.
·
Individual Catering
Will seat up to 150 people,

,992-3975

.
• Automatic Threading onto toke up
ree l e Still &amp; Reverse Control for humor·
ous effect s e Brilliant Pictur e -Zoom
lens

HECK'S
REG. s13.96

HECK'S.REG. $19.96

.

6-1G-tfc
'

SEWING MACHINES. Rej,atr
oervlce, all makes. 992-2284.
Tile Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Saln and .
.Service. We Sharpen Sct.-s.
,

.

Why buy new furniture? Have
that old made new by Sylvia's
Upholstering Shop, Mrs.
Woodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
Syracuse.-Ohio.
·2,10C30fp

HECK'S
REG.

e 11 posit ion switch • ·10 lpUdl • .Twin
, powtrlul chrome btoten I UQhtwtight far
portable mi~ing I fingertip control I Ar.~to­
motic beater release.

357-Z

$t)88

3-29-tfc
I

VW-58

HECK'SREG. $15.18

HECK'S REG. $25.96

JIWiliYIPT.

JIWillr IPT.

P-S90
-

--------.) ,., ,. Yl..• ,-

A'o"'
)' '

;ORTUNEI!oo•Aw1

!..

~

o .• I lloo

....

'--..

'"l.I'AYfJET1,,,.,_, h"'·&gt;·· ' ., :·_-;
~·

I

'

HEATING PAD

·GENEIA'L ELECTRIC ., '

8-TRACK PORTABLE

Politiv. fixed heats . .. lo w ... med ium ..
high . Woshob le, removoble t over. Lighted
swilt h. 1 year warranty. M ois tr.~re resistant .

_FM-AM

STEREO TAPE PLAYER
Stereo 8 tope plus a bonus ol AM·FM radio. Ploy i' on

Atab ..lo"'~ . llthG. I . fflifli,
""""" ..... brlftJI you good fill /AN. ~ ..

....,e
......._ vw 110 • ttltot~~•e~ Gr•
........, . . _ QrQiil for ....... Hnt,.,.

llf1 . Wit h -•phco ... Oft d IOU tollt ll l
-..,;111 fllana. Ni.,. Too..,;lloPI , "Z V. "'

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

'"'"'',,r.

GENERAL ELECTRIC

SUNBEAM

ot

AM CLOCK RADIO

STEAM IRON
h du.O.., widt--on, lt ""' fell IJIIoPdl , _.,.,, Mi l·
OvPe&gt;111 doubl.-coolttl Ttlloll 10'-·

dtl&gt;tollipp~!

This G. E. AM Clock Radio with snooze

plott plt ...ftll nGrdl bulld ·wp . U ..,II lot 111011•
lll~lllllooM. Switch11 10 "d•1" 111111)1111)1 .
,_,.,. ""'"' · Wott• .....,.. ~ · Stoi..a.u , ...1

h•-••ut

IG~ k

$1377

Dated thiS 26th day of

Februar y, 1972.

John C. BICon

Judge

HECK'SIIG. $16.96

Cou rt of Common Pl111,
Division

JIWiliY •111.

Olarr!' fits perfedly in all surro.undings.

HECK'SitiG. $19;96

'

35MMCAMERA

JIWillr IIIPr.
C~420

KIT

PUSSYCAT OR TIGER

the United Methodist Church

Parsonage at Reedsville, Ohio,
the parsonage rtal estete. on
March 9, 1972, at 2:00 O'Clock
P.M. The property Will be IOid
·to the highest bidder ; rtltrvlng
to. tj'le Trustees the right to

$1688

YASHICA

SPARTUS

NOTICE

The undersigned will offer for
sele, by auctlon,at tht prtmlaes

SUNSET

WALL CLOCK
• · Animated Electric dod(

blinking .e y•••

_tn the .

Edward Blake

HECK'S
REG.

Ben Buckley
Charles Hensley

$t.49

event It Is deemed lnaurtlclent.

Dana· Hoffman, Sr.

Harold Brannon

Eo~y

to reod

•

e' Swinging tail and
doc~

CAMERAe TRI-POD
3 Section Leg s

Geored Elevator-13"
Ri.. • Extended Height
· 18 ll" • Telescoped 22 ll "

loco

'5''

JEWli.IY DEI'T.

·
Truattu,
Reedsv ille Clrc;ult of

1,

a. st

HECK'SREG. $14.81

IIWliiY DEPT.

JIWIUY/IIPT.

4-Pt..Y NYLON CORD

WHITEWAllS

LADIES' SHAVER

·Mi crogroove TM floating heads follow
fhe contours of your fa ce for close, fast ,
comfortable shaves . . . as close or clos·
er than a blade in 2 out of 3 sha ves!

SHAVER lho"'•

Micro-twin shoving head . . . one •ide for under,
arms,·the other side for legs. Fast ~ sofe ond
Mnooth .fel(!inine: gro~ming action.
·

Nt• COMFOif CONTlOl SYSTEM

Mfl

jvol • lghtl01 ~ t ij . Sv ~" lhGtp !tEPl ACE AIH E

IIVJlfS kfop lho"'11iQ lit.,. Puth·vi&gt; &lt;Oftll01 ••·
1'1Ad1 11Md1 f or dt(Mioog or cho"Gin' b.loclt1. Truly
Cl l~-loadod _, ~ ...., ""haft(!- gifl
Ullt ..~h ·~ttCI III of blodU

REG.

• O r.~11 Tte ld
Ott lgn
I 4-PIW'

TRIPLE HEAD SH

MAN'S

ttECK'S
,

NOIILCO

REMINGTON

SUNBEAM

$JJ88

HECK'S REG.
$73.96

Untied Methodist Church

s, 6,

$988

HECK'SRIG. $12.18

HECK'S REG.

$98 .88

their claims with aald fiduciary
within four months.

UJ 3,

PORTABLE

RADIO

WITH AM·FM RADIO
ordinary flashlight batteries or plus it into any convenient
110 volt AC outlet. Automatic tap e program changing
and lighted program indicator. AC power cord i5- c~n­
loined in convenient storage compartment of bock of u~it .

HECK'S
RIG.
$3.99

Estate ot Ellie D. Smith Blackburn, deceased, latt of Meigs
County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to file

retect the hlghell bid

C•y•lol (Grfrld~~t l Wt ithl Orltr )I'O.,..dl

$2177

Pomeroy, Oh io, has been duly
appointed Ekecutor of the

Of

I •·S.,..d f llfft!Oblt I So-lid $loto '-•lotlt\aMo I l ug·
Dt d l'o l y.,lly lt~ t Colt .tl l\ " Oyftolllic Spnhr I
lvll l · l ~ •.s .,,., • •cord S1oro ' ' • ' • p· Up • ~ 1 ~111
Adopl'l• • Oval S,.ft~ S9pphirt Slplvs I Moftau•"'

I Ftoh'" ' controlled cooking temptrolvrts I
Has big 12 inch sq. cooking oreo I Till -top lid
elimi nate~ most spaHtr I Oelu n 1i:te tokti
care of big family ne'ed• I Easily brovght to
dinner table!

Notice Is hereby given that

IJJ 1. 8. 15, Jt

HECK'S
REG. 112.44

G. E. PHONOGRAPH

G. E. FRY PAN

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cltt No. 2U21
Eslate of ELSIE D. SMITH
BLACKBURN, Decealtd.

Prob~te

77

Pt Pleasant Store On~

LEGAL NOTICE

Smith,

$11

JEWELRY DEPT.

JIWiliYIIIPT.

.

L.

HAIR DRYER

$84.96

HECK'SREG. $14.96

. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates, Ph. 446--,
4782. Gallipolis. John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator,
.
, S-12-tfc ·

Theophllus

SUNBEAM
HAT BOX FlAIR

.

PORTABLE10SPEED
CHROME MIXER
.

'HARRISON'S TV and Anterilla
Service. Phone 992·2522.

·

VANWYCK

Tloo.s

Pl Pleasant Store On~

JIWillr IIPT. .

992-5786

88

$

PROJECTOR

Phone

- -- - --

CLELAND
REALTY

I

STAINLESS

742-3947 '

The
Orchid 'Rooril. .

MOtORS. INC.

- ••..,.. , :

&lt; , ..~

Slim beautv breW\ 4to 8 cups, Slrength seJec-

Ph. 992-2174

ti ckets, no purchase reqoired. •
a t the Bright Star Market :
South's vulnerable four· next to the Drive-In Theatre, :
spade bid would not mee t ~~~~~n~co~:ent~~~~r~~': ;
with the ar.proval of a nyone are fea tured every day, check : Elec. &amp; Gas Ranges
who doesn t like to ta ke any the fo llowing prices and stock :
2 White Electric
chances but it certainl y · y our larder . Fav orite or :
meets with ours. South has Bonus brand white bread 7 : 1 Coppertone Elec.
- -----,nine top tricks. He has an loaves $1 with $10 additional
1 White Gas
excellent chance to pick up purchase. Broughton 's 2 pet. :
NOW '50 OFF
.•
a tenth if his partner can swee t milk gal. 99c. Bologna :
:
produce any cards at all or in piece lb. 59c, grade Asmall •
'f th d f
II
egg s 3 doz. $1, smoked slab :
.ltciiW.c.ntw,~. ,
1 e e ense s ps.
bacon whole or ·half lb. 49c. •
l'ttllt0t914'111
:
The defense star ts with Van Camp 29 oz. can pork and '••• ••• • • ••••••• •••••••• ••••• ·
three round s of diamonds. beans 2 cans 59,, Hart's whole SHOWALTER'S Wei Pet Shop,
Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
South trumps th e third lead kernel cor n 5 cans $1 .
and if he wants to put the Broughton's Ice Milk Ice
Tropical fi sh and supplies.
.
Slop
In and compare.
I
19
C
G
h
maximum press ure on the
ream , a . Sl. • w 1te
3·1·271P
defense he will lead his three potatoes 50 lb. bag $1.59,
of hearts immediately.
Complete assortment of laney
Eaoter goodies Including POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy , --If East lets dummy hold Eas ter Baskets from $1.49 to
Park view Kennels,.Phone 992·• HOUSE In Long Bollom. phone
just _one heart trick it will s20. We accept Federal Food
5443.
98'-3529.
12-17-901c ;
be all over . South will run Coupon. Stretch your money,
8-15-lfr.
1·28-ffc
.
.
out the rest of the tricks for food coupons and lime, •ee us
=
------his contract.
for seed potatoes. onion sets Auto Sales
HOUSE, 16~2 Lincoln t-te1ghts. oiX ROOM house. 133 Butternut .
Call Danny Thompson. 992- Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 21371
What sort of East player and garden plants as needed .
Wadsworth Drive. Columbus. •
2196.
Save
In
many
ways
a
t
Bright
1965 BUICK Wildcat. 2 door
wil I grab that firs t heart ? Star Markel, nex t to Drive-In
Ohio.
phone 237-4334.
7-18-ttc
Hardtop, 1 local owner, exThe sort of player who al- Thea tre, Mason, w. Va.
_
-------...,.,.,.. , ,
11·21 -tfc
cellen t condillon, good tires~
ways takes his aces a t the
3-7-tf ext ra good finish. Phone 992- N tL~ 2-otory home with full
.
basement.
2
lots,
new
forced
BUILDit,IG
lots
In
Branchwood
first opportunity will come - - - - -- - - 2143 or 992-2142.
furnace. Near Pomeroy.' Subdlvl•lon at Rock Springs.
out very well here.
GREEN MAYTAG dishwasher,
J.7-31c . air
Elementary
School. Phone T. P. water, phone 992-2789.
How about a good player? 1 year old, phone 247-2~4 .
992-73ll4
to
see.
.
3-1-12tc
CHEVELLE SS 396, 4 speed
It he is playing wi th a poor
3-S-6tc '69transml
1p .tfc. =--......,----.. ion, Hurst Shifter,
partner he is very likely to
AM-FM radio, vinyl roof,
3· BEDROOM
ranch typeTuppers
home;
Arbaugh Addition,
go wrong on th e theory that TR OPI CA L F ISH , fan cy excellent condition, phone r
guppies.
angels
and
breeders,
882-31
52.
All
.
new
with
total
Plains.
South m i g ht we ll have
Bella•
and
suppl
ies.
Pho
ne
3-7-Jtp
electric
and
centra~
atr ·
jumped to four spades with
conditioning,
bath
and
'4
fully
992-5~43
.
-just a seven card suit.
carpeted, full basement ...
12·30·11&lt;· 1971 FIAT, 6,000 miles, $1,900 or
garage In baSt!ment. SOli by ,
take over payments - $81.47.
If the good player is play· - - --.,- - - -appointment, phone 992-2196 ·
Phone 992-6911 .
ing with a good partner there
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
J.7-61p
Broker
Financing available,
·
110 Mechanic St.
Stnd II I&lt;K JACOBY MODfRN loook
'
12·30-ffc
'66 THUNDERBIRD. V-8,
Pomeroy, 0 ., 45769
automatic, power steering,
to: 'Win ot Bridge," (c/o tllis ntwspower brakes, power win36" X 23' 1 X .009
poper) , P.O. Box 489, kadio Cit r
NEW LISTING
dows, phone 992-5637.
175
ACRE
STOCK FARM-2
Stolion, N1w Yorll , N.Y. 10019.
3-5-61p
barn&gt;. 2 ponds, 2 •prings, 3
dug wells, and water tap,
will be no way for him to go
paid. 9 room renovated older
Mobile Homes For
. Offlce992·2259
home. Plenty of good
wrong. When South leads the
Residence
'92·2568
·
WOU LD YOU like to order your pasture. Free ga s wlfh own
Pomeroy,
01110
three of hearts good player
mobile home to suit your taste gas well . Would you ,belleve
BUSINESS INVESTMENT
West will play the eight spot.
and
needs? If so, let Robert on ly $42.500.00.
USED
OFFSEl
PLATES
Large
ti le and brick
This play will tell his partDixon show you the easy way
building.
2 story, 4 apart.
4 BEDROOMS
to custom build your home
ner Ihat he has an even numMA~~\ISES
menls,
(3
furnished) 2
COUNTRY
HOME
Hot
and have delivery wUhln 3
ber of hea rts. II won't rebusine ss rooms , storage
water
heat,
1'
1
2
baths
.
weeks. Come and see the new
quire m u c h thought on
room , present business goes
Greenbriar . It Is the home for Modern kitchen. Recreation
20~
East's par t to decide that
with the building. $29,500.
room . 2 drilled well s.
lhose who appreciate the
FAMILY HOME
this is s howing four, so East
better thin gs ot life . Foundation for 2nd house. 10
4
bedrooms.
balh , porches,
will go right up with his
8 for Sl.OO
Manufactured by the largest acre•. NOW only 120.000.00.
forced
air
heal,
large barn
ac e, ret urn the ni ne of trump
builders of mobile homes. Our
NEW LISTING
and
storage
building
. $8,900.
and wail fo r the setting
12 fl . wide Arlington Homes 7 ACRES - On Route 7 near
IOACRES
,
start at $3,695, delivered and Ea•lern School. Ideal lor
trick.
RUTLAND
TOWNSHIP
se t- up. We serv ice what we
housing project or small
~NIW S P A PI R l HTUPAI$E • SS N.)
Ph slory frame home, 7
sell . Meigs Mobile Home•. farm , A bargain at
rooms,
balh, cellar, large
Tuppers Plains, Ohio, 667- 510,000.00.
barn.
crib.
Implement bldg.,
3891. Ca ll collect for ap.
MODERN
chicken house, milk house.
pol nlmenl.
R\.ITLAND - 3 bedrooms,
Clo•e to the new mines.
3-8-61c hot water healing . Nice
Th~ bidding ha ~ hL•cn:
111 Court St.
$171600.
CHEAP HOME
kitchen with dishwasher,,
West
Nnrth
Ea."it
Pomeroy, Ohi~
1'1• stor y frame, 6 rooms. 3
cook and bake u'nlts. Fully
bedrooms , bath, utility
carpeted . Carport and
Pass
1¥
Pas.~
room.
some hardwood floors,
..
fen
ced
yard.
$20.000.00.
Pass
1 N.T.
Pass
12 FT. WI DE trailer with air
gas
forced
air heat, flllrch,
MIDDLEPORT
cond iti oning, washer &amp; dryer
You. South, hold:
$3
,
500.
Immediat e
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, cute
- $3,700 ; see Ha ~old Johnson,
49U 54 .A 2 +J ... AKQ 7 R
possession
.
kitchen, large living and
Chester, Ohio.
1 story flame, 2 bedrooms.
What do yo\1 do nuw'!
dining. G., age. All on corner
'3-5-6tp
cabinets
· In
kitchen,
lot for only $10,000 .~.
A- This iN a tOU ilh one. \\'c
basement,
large
lot.
All In
sligluly ra\·ur a 1\\'n-spatie bid GOOD mIxed hay , Phone
WiDE
.
excellent
condition.
Juot
Wilkesville
669-4777.
WANT
A
GOOO
PRICE
FOR
but wuuld hB\'C nn ~:r ilithun ul
S1.900,
3-5-6tc
YOUR
PROPERTY,
LIST
f.'lt hct· a lWU• t lub bid nr a pn~s .
WE HAVE 35 PROPER----'---WITH US. AND START
TIES,
ONE OF WHICH MAY
TOll A \''S QUF.STIO~
LOOKING.
3 BEDROOM \ lndale mobile
SUIT
VOlt.
COME TO THE
' ,.
lm•IPod of biddin).( ono..· nuhome , 1112 bt. lhs 1; n choice
OFFICE
OR
CALL, WE
HElEN L. TEAFORD,
ll·ump. :V()Ut· P&lt;l l'l nt•r hal-! t't•hid
r en tal lot. HPrr:nan Bol i nger ,
WILL
IE
GLAD
TO SHOW
1220 Wa.hlnglon Blvd.
ASSOCIATE
1\.\·o ht.'IHi s. What do \' UII dct
992-)570.
THEM TD YDU.
nnw'!
992-ms
m.ma
J-S-6Ip 1---Bt_l_pr_e._o_h_to_ ___.~
Henry Cit land, Realtor
' - - - .o -~~---l

·I

. We are: fully insurtd

SMITH .NELSON

-

m. 992-3401.

and nut Easter egg . See them •••

A_P7.~

marquees. aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob. sales
representative. For free
ANo t:iozER· v,o..k.
estimates. _phone Charles ' BACKHoe
Septic
tanks
Installed. Georao!
Li sle, Syra cuse. V. V.
(Bill
I
Pullins.
Phone 992-24fs. :
Johnson and Son. Inc.
. -- - ~·tfc
3-2-llc- - -- - - - ·~
. ,.
O'DELL WHEEL allghment AUT oMOBILE Insurance lie..;',
cancelled?
Lost . your .
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
Call .992operator's
license?
Complete front end service.
2966.
tune up and brake service,
6--15-tfc
Wheels balanced elec ..
troAically,, ,.,Au
work
. . · H-nilll
guaranteed.
Reasonable R!:AOY·MIX CONCRETE de~'
rates. Phone 992-3213.
livered right to your prolect.
7-27-tfc
Fa1l and easy. Free _
- ::-:-:- - : - : - - esttmateo . Phone 992-3284.
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Goegleln Rea~y - Mix ·co. ,
Complete Service
Middleport. Ohio.
· ·
Phone 949-3821
6·30-lfc;
Racine, Ohio
Crill Br~dford .
5-1 -t.c

Centurion, new condition ,
never raced. Phone after 6 p.

on a free giant $20 Easter

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

992-~898

doors and windows, carports,

1970 KAWASAKI, model G-31 ,

FREE tickets are now available

your

992-5803

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm

changer. Balance $7~. 34 . Use
our budget terms. Call 992·
7085 .
'
3-8-61c

For Sale

get

From the largest' T'"ICk·
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.
. Nathan Blggl. _
Rldlotor Speciollst

EBLEN

speakers', 4 speed automatic

---~--

and

spoullnt repotr. lnllrlor or
exllrior .corpontry. Coiling
tile ond Ptneling ond Sldfno.
·complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550
We havo 24 hr. emtf'lenc,

-iate

beaullful Early American
slyl_e , with AM-FM radio, four

F-URNiSHED and ~nfurntsi.-;.d
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc

loday

yur around. No mellor wut

INTER lOR and exterior
painting. R. I. Dubbeld. phone
742-5825.
.
3-6-5tc

- - - - --

-:-:=:'--::::---:----:-~

chocolate

your need. Complelt rtOI or

service.

-GUARANTEE~

Conllct

3-3-tfc

large

M•inttnii'JCI 5trvict tht

U3MifnSI.
lanesville, Ohio

TWIN NEEDLE Sewing
O_
U_
S_
E _B~U~I7
L~O=E=Rs~.~
CALL
Machine 1971 Model in walnut MODE RN3 or 4 bedroom home. _H_
stand. All features built-In to
GUY oNEIGLER, RACINE,
Phone 992-3062.
make fancy designs and do
3-2-lfc OHIO.
stretch sewing . Also but3·S-30tc
lonholes. blind hems, etc.
$43.35 cash price or term•
·sEPTIC tanks cieane.t. ·Miller'
available. Phone 992-5641.
Real Estate For Sale
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
J.8-6tc
662-3035.
- - - - - -- 2_12 _11, :
,
VACUUM CLEANERS. Electro
Hygiene New Demonstrator
ALLSIOE Builder&gt; &amp; Conhas all cleaning attachments
struction Co. We specialize in
plus the new Electro Suds for
aluminum. vinyl and steel
shampooing carpet . Only
siding; fiberglas. brick and ·
S27.50 cash price or terms
•tone ; complete line of
available. Phone 992·5641.
residential · and commercial
3-8-6tc
roofl.ng ;
remod e l i ng ,
.
building, su•pended ceilings,
MODERN Walnut Stereo-radio
Interior and exterior paincombination. four speed Inting ; complete line of
VERA
term IKed changer, four
Masonry work , All work'
992-3020
speaker sound system,
guaranteed to .customer
separale controls. Balance
N. 2nd
Middleport
satisfaction. we are fully
569.40. Use our budget terms.
Insured for your protection. 32
Call 992-7085.
N. Second, ph. 992-3918.
3-B-61c
2-15-Jotc

phone 992-3324.

Easter bunny and large trvlt

y
EXT£.RM
. INAJION

EXPERT '
Whpel _Mignment

Court , Miners vill e, Ohio, COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio,

Baske t

240 Uncoln St.
Mltldtepol'l, Ollio
Dbo AnlllonV Plumlling
We hive 1 complelt HOmo

&amp;

-----~

WANTED!

TERMITES. •TERMITES,_ ALL WEATHER IKiofiNG
Gel Rid of Them
WI will protect ony single
&amp; CONSTRUCJION '
c1w 111
'den- tor
• na rest 1 149,50
l' PWMBING CO.

Free Estimate
ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONOmONING

For Appoil)tment
Phone 949-2803

-- - - SPE EO Queen Portable Washer

choke guns

25 Per Cent Discount. on pale

r::::;:::=======::;-;:::==:::::::;::::;::::::::;:::===;-;:=:::;;::;=::::=:::j:;
--;;;;;;;;;;;o:;
--

B&amp;W Hra•
gtJING 00.'

,

I

327 engl'le.. 4 speed trans., clean inter ior &amp; good tires.

·Busi.Dess Services-

HECK'S

$~~?99 $2088

$1.99

JEWELRY
DEPT.

Nylon Cord

• Ouragtne

Tri ad
Aubber

AS ·
lJJN
AS

$1978

Size 825· 1 ~ - TuDtlen ·
whitewall, plus S2.32 Ftct.
Ex. Tax and exchange
casing .

Larger

slzts

available at comparabla
•
prlceo. '
FrM Mounting
&amp;lltanclng

HECK'S REG.$21.99

HAMILTON BEACH

CAN OPENER/KNIFE
SHARPENER

•7

NORELCO

LADIES SACHET

JEWELRY DEPT•.

88 RE:~~~96

3-LS

HECK'S
REG. s24.46
Pl Pleasant Store On~

GENERAL
TIRE ·
SALES
•

Pit. 992-7161
Mlclclleport, Ohio

(,

'

t

88

�10-Tben.IIJ !lefttlnel,Midllepoo:~. o., lbrch l,lt'l't

I

Sentin~lClasSi/ieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
WANt ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M.
Da y
Before
Publlcallon
Monday Oeadlln'l 9 a. m.
Cancellation &amp; Correction•
Will be accepted until 9 a.m. for,
'
Day of Publlcation 1 ·
REGULATIONS
The Publisher .reserves the
right to edit or reje ct an y ads
dee med ob jectional. The
·pu blis her wi II not be

Notice

3-8-llc

LEG CRAMPS? Try Supplical
with calci um , onl y 11.98 al
Nelson Drugs.

3-8-llc

res ponslbl ~ for more than one
~corr ect Insertion. .
·

RATES
For Want Ad Service

s cents per Word one Insert ion
12

Minim um Cha rge 7Sc
,
cents per wor d three ·

consecutive insert ions.

----RE DUCE excess flu ids with

FLUIDE X. 11.69 - LOSE
WEIGHT safely with Dex-AOie l, 98c at Nelson Drugs.
3-B-llc

- -- - SHOOTING Ma tc h, Sat urda y,
Marc h 11 , at

• 18 cents per word six c6n-

the Racine

Planing Mill a16 p.m. Factory

'.:iecuf lve inserfions..

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2SICIIS
Of
QUALRY

NER VOUS? Can't sleep? Try .
"Sleepers." SATISFACTION
GUARAN TE ED OR MON EY
BACK . On l y 98c . Nelson
Drugs.

:,I ' For Sale

' .
1969 CHEV. IMPALA CPE
12095
_, V-8 eng ine. automatic trans .• p. steering, tactory ai r
conditioned. good w-w tires. rad io, da rk green finish with
spotless lo!erlor.
.
1967 PONTIAC GRANO PRIX
.
$1395
Convertible, V-8 auto.. P.S., P. B., ti lt steering wheel, ta pe
player , good I ires, dark blue. like new top while. white
bucket S(·ats with console, nice and c lean 1owner car .

1 4INSIOE Doors (2 - 2' 8" wide,
6' &amp;" long - 2 panel and 2- 2'
1·
- 6" wide, 6' 8" loog - 2 panel) ; ·
1 locks and hinges. Phone· !"12·
2587
1
·
3.7.31,

--:---------,-

1961 'FIAT, • door, mileage
45,000 ; In A·1 condition.
priced reaoonably. Phone 9854137 or contact Carl Findling,
Alfred.

~~----3-7-3tp

ONE New Idea one row plant
seller on rubber ; 90 gal.
I water lank ; phone 247-2344,
Robert 0. A•htey.
J.7-6tc

1967CH EVELLE MALIBU HTCPE.

SU95

Med. grn . f inish. Nice.

1

onl y. Assor ted
Sponsored by th e
Syracuse Fire Dept.

mea t.

ads and ads paid withi n 1(

da ys.
CAkD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

3-8-31c

- -- -- -

!·

Pomeroy Motor Co.

$1.50 fo r 50 word minimu m.' GUN SHOOT, also rifl e matches
OPEN !YES. I:GO P.M.
- open sltes only, Forked
Each additional word 2c.
Run
Sport•man
Cl
ub,
Sunda
y,
fiPII!ROY, OHIO
BLIND ADS
March 12, 12 noo~.
. Ad ditiona l 2Sc Charge per
3-8-31c 1-------~--- - -- - - . J I
Advertisement.
Wanted To Buy
OF FICE HOURS
Notice
8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Dally, THE Southeastern Ohio Polled
4 WHE EL drive jeep. Phone
Heref ord A ssoc iat ion is
8: 30 a.m . to 12:00 Noon
KOStOT
KOSMETICS
&amp;
Flame
after 5 p.m. 992-3062.
selling SO head Friday night,
Sa turday.
of
Hope
Perfumes.
Human
&amp;
2-27-121c
Marc h 31st•at the Meigs Co.
synthetic wigs. No need to
Fai rgrou nd s. For catalogs
leave Meigs or Mason County OLD FURNi~E . Round Oak
write: Sharon Sturbois, Rt. 4,
f
or lack of money. If in Help Wanted
tables, Brass beds, dishes,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
teres ted call 992-511 3.
clocks , and -or complete
3-8-31c
TIME EQUALS MON EY. Two
3-7-lfc
households . Wrl.te M. · D.
wom en or men to handle
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
incr eased demand for our ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ...- .A:N YON E inter ested in learning
Call 992-6271.
overweight ladles, teens and
fa mous household pr oducts.
crafts
and
making
flowers
men Interested In a Weight
Rawlelgh Co., Dept. 7116,
contact Eulah Francis at 992 Watchers (R) Class In 5884.
Freepor t, Ill. , phone 81 5-232'
7416.
Pomeroy write: Weight
3-2-6tp For Rent
Watchers (R) . 1863 Sedlon
J.a-llc
ONE LARGE trailer space,
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 4523i.
Velma G. Zuspan, 773-5750,
Employment
Wanted
• 10·3-tfc
Mason.
W. Va .
DRY WALL Finisher co n3-7-18tp
SAVE up toone hall . Bring your
tra ctor. R. I. Dubbeld, Phone
-sick TV to Chuck's TV shop,
742-5825:
APARTMENT.
3
rooms
and
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
3-6-Stc
bath, furnished , North 2nd
Ave., Middleport. Phone 995·
11 -21-tfc
5293..
3-7-tfc
' WIN AT BRIDGE - - - -- - - - I
FARM LAND. 6.5 acres for
corn, other land for truck
farming , would rent tOO acres

Carriers For
MASON
and
HARTFORD

The Dai~ Sentinel
Ph. 614-992·2156
FEMALE

cook

and

houseparent , over _.0, for

ON YOUR DIAL
w···w '&amp;dl·u: ~= ~

·.:~;~;-ili$::t~lmllll'.ll'
· ·-~~r··llllqllll
· -~·-!l8ic"
?'

Helen Help

Us. • •
.

ByHelen Hottel

'

NORTH

WMP0/1390

Children's Home. Salary plus
room and board. Phone 304·
428-3721 before 5 p.m. , ask for
Mrs. Ooby.
3-7-lllc

1

Setting Trick
Can Be Lost

.We talk to you
like a. peiSOI1.

4 8

'

-- -

·'

SOME MORE ''QUIET DESPERATION"
Dear.;'\
Helen :
1,ve been married 12 years, and for at least hall of them, I
haven '!loved my husband, though ldon'thatehimyet. We never
had a good marriage (both of us were too young for such a
decision), butl've tried to suppress my feelings and put on a good
show - for the children, the world, and sometimes I guess I even
fool my husbana.
But I wonder whether living this way is more hurt to all of us
than a quick, clean divorce? I constanUy think that's what I'll get
when the kids are l!fOwn, but then It will be too late for both him
and me to start over. Don't suggest a COIUlselor - we tried tha t
and it failed.
We hardly ever fight any more . Rarely even argue. But we
don 't talk about anythlng ,vital either. He just broods or makes
snide remarks or barks at the kids - and I shrug and try to cover
for him.
I never wanted to be the dominant figure, but he's pushed me
into it. On one hand, I feel like my husband's mother and, on th e
other, he treats me like a child, wanting me to ask l'ermtsston for
every little thing. If the children come to me for a decision he
resents it, but they know they'll get an automatic "No," with all
kinds of selfi&gt;ilying complaint.&gt;! if they approach him.
He resents me and belittles me - probably because he
senses I don't care about him, As you once said, Helen, two
mismatched people can be polson for each other, where If they
had different mates, they might become really great humans.
I find myself deliberately baiting him (then lapsing Into
pro tective silence) as though to make him want to be r id of me.
We separated once for a month, and it was the loveliest time of
our li ves. The children and I felt so much peace and enjoyed so
mll1y things together - but all the while I felt very guilty. Am I
be ;ng selfish?- CONSIDERING DIVORCE
[l(ar C.D.:
When two people have grown as fa r apart as you describe,
the greatest seliishness, it seems to me, would be In staying
t&lt;Jgether for the sake of appearances, finances, "th e children,"
or just lplain lethargy.
A bad marriage brings out the worst in each partner - and
the children often suffer the greatest Injuries. If you 're "constanlly thinking of divorce," then for heaven's sakes - SAY it.
Get your feelings out in the open where you both can deal with
themand, lf you can't make a radical change for the better, then
part now while ther e's a chance for a better future.- H.

+++
Dear Helen :
About six years ago a wife wrote you a very touching letter
about her mls-marriage, how she'd tried to make a go of It , but in
spite of herself had fallen in love with a man wbo had everything
her husband lacked - kindness, empathy, love for children,
honesty ,.. You surprised advice-column buffs by understanding
her ·and Intimating it wasn't always best to stay with a doomed
marriage- even though there wasn't any outright cruelty In·
volved, At that time "lovelorn" columns were so stereotyped
that your comments created shok waves. Thank goodness you've
helped open them up !

•
We're wondering : did you ever hear from Utls woman again?
Did llhe choose duty over l)appiness? As I recall, you told her that
her husband might be as unhappy as she, but trying to make the
best of a bad alliance for the same reasonll she was - the
chUdren, unwllllngnesa to • imll faUure, social life,
Any developnents?- INTERESTED

Dear Interested:

Yes, the Wlbappy and tempted wife wrote to me last.about
two years.ago. She wa1 atill with her husband, still Wlhappy, still
resisting temptadon - and stlllln love with the other man who
"walt• but doesn't push."
She and her husband had Involved themselves II) so many
civi~ and business affairs that they SCllrcely spoke of personal
things. She said, "I guess it's beUer this way." Bull wonder ... If
I hear from her again after this column Is published, I'll let my
readers know the outcome, six years later. - H,

R

.K QJ104
• 10 9 7
... 9 7 32
WEST
EAST ( D )
4 74
• 92
• 8762
¥ A9 &gt;
• Q 32
t A KJH4
... KJ 85
. Q l04
SOUTH
4 A K QJ 106 53
. 3
• 65
... A 6
East- West vuln erable
w~st
NOI·th East Suuth
I+ 44
Pass , Pass
PaSjl

Op•ning lead- 2 +

only charge is proper fer .
lilizin~

and reseed to Qrass, 2

mi. North ot Wilke•vllle on
Salem Rd . Call Hassel
Justice, 766-3740 or write Box
106, Kouts. Ind. 46347. J.7.6tp
2 BEDROOM, lfz double, fur nished on 41h &amp; College in
Syracuse. Phone 992-2749.
3-7-61c
TR AILE R, Brown' s Tra ile r

WRITIEN WARRANTY
coli eottect.•~_
...s2-3158
•
~lTV
"1ill 1

Spin Dryer ; Zenith Portable Stereo; Riding lawnmower ; phone 992-7315.
3-7-101c

-- - - 1970 HONDA 350, exce!fent

condition, call 985-3ll28 alter 6
p.m.
3-7-6tc

MARCH
STARCRAFT
SPECIALS: 18' 7" - 53,299
for $2,_575; 20' 7" - 53,854 for
$2,999; 22' 7" -

$3,361 ; All

self-contained, sleeps six and
c ompressor .

Star Master

Campers - $1 ,650 for $1,325.
We sell-service and quality.
Camp Conley Siarcraft Sales,
Rt. 62, North of Point
Pleasant.
3-8-31c

------

'5.55
On Most American Cars.

i.

Phone 992-2094
·
. ..... ----

Pomeroy Home &amp;Auto
Qpen ITiiS
Monda~

thru Saturday
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, b.

Wanted To Rent

3·2-6tc

:''' 7''' ......... ,,,,,,,,, ..~

free •

SAVE -SO.OO
FLO
0~ SAMPLE
CLEARANCE

:
•
;
,
•
:

J:i

- -- - - --

-==========:;Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.

For Sale .

Aluminum
Sheets

-----,-- -

Salt

The
Daily Sentinel

- - -- --

- - -- - -

742-4761

12' · 14' · 24' •

MillER
MOBILE tOMES

\

,.

SUNBEAM 2-SLICE

SUNBEAM

BELL &amp;

PERCOLATOR

.

$1677

.I

HOWEL~

TOASTER

· SUPER 8

ior, twist lock Mlftty top. light signals wh~n
readW' to Mrve. ICftp~ coli.. K! rving·hot outomoticollv. Stainfeu steel vessel, bask.- and
pump.

Make reserv•tlons tor your · ~
private parties. banqu~t~· 1
_
special occaslono.
-Ideal for meeting place with or without kitchen
privileges.
·
Individual Catering
Will seat up to 150 people,

,992-3975

.
• Automatic Threading onto toke up
ree l e Still &amp; Reverse Control for humor·
ous effect s e Brilliant Pictur e -Zoom
lens

HECK'S
REG. s13.96

HECK'S.REG. $19.96

.

6-1G-tfc
'

SEWING MACHINES. Rej,atr
oervlce, all makes. 992-2284.
Tile Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Saln and .
.Service. We Sharpen Sct.-s.
,

.

Why buy new furniture? Have
that old made new by Sylvia's
Upholstering Shop, Mrs.
Woodrow T. Zwilling, Prop.,
Syracuse.-Ohio.
·2,10C30fp

HECK'S
REG.

e 11 posit ion switch • ·10 lpUdl • .Twin
, powtrlul chrome btoten I UQhtwtight far
portable mi~ing I fingertip control I Ar.~to­
motic beater release.

357-Z

$t)88

3-29-tfc
I

VW-58

HECK'SREG. $15.18

HECK'S REG. $25.96

JIWiliYIPT.

JIWillr IPT.

P-S90
-

--------.) ,., ,. Yl..• ,-

A'o"'
)' '

;ORTUNEI!oo•Aw1

!..

~

o .• I lloo

....

'--..

'"l.I'AYfJET1,,,.,_, h"'·&gt;·· ' ., :·_-;
~·

I

'

HEATING PAD

·GENEIA'L ELECTRIC ., '

8-TRACK PORTABLE

Politiv. fixed heats . .. lo w ... med ium ..
high . Woshob le, removoble t over. Lighted
swilt h. 1 year warranty. M ois tr.~re resistant .

_FM-AM

STEREO TAPE PLAYER
Stereo 8 tope plus a bonus ol AM·FM radio. Ploy i' on

Atab ..lo"'~ . llthG. I . fflifli,
""""" ..... brlftJI you good fill /AN. ~ ..

....,e
......._ vw 110 • ttltot~~•e~ Gr•
........, . . _ QrQiil for ....... Hnt,.,.

llf1 . Wit h -•phco ... Oft d IOU tollt ll l
-..,;111 fllana. Ni.,. Too..,;lloPI , "Z V. "'

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

'"'"'',,r.

GENERAL ELECTRIC

SUNBEAM

ot

AM CLOCK RADIO

STEAM IRON
h du.O.., widt--on, lt ""' fell IJIIoPdl , _.,.,, Mi l·
OvPe&gt;111 doubl.-coolttl Ttlloll 10'-·

dtl&gt;tollipp~!

This G. E. AM Clock Radio with snooze

plott plt ...ftll nGrdl bulld ·wp . U ..,II lot 111011•
lll~lllllooM. Switch11 10 "d•1" 111111)1111)1 .
,_,.,. ""'"' · Wott• .....,.. ~ · Stoi..a.u , ...1

h•-••ut

IG~ k

$1377

Dated thiS 26th day of

Februar y, 1972.

John C. BICon

Judge

HECK'SIIG. $16.96

Cou rt of Common Pl111,
Division

JIWiliY •111.

Olarr!' fits perfedly in all surro.undings.

HECK'SitiG. $19;96

'

35MMCAMERA

JIWillr IIIPr.
C~420

KIT

PUSSYCAT OR TIGER

the United Methodist Church

Parsonage at Reedsville, Ohio,
the parsonage rtal estete. on
March 9, 1972, at 2:00 O'Clock
P.M. The property Will be IOid
·to the highest bidder ; rtltrvlng
to. tj'le Trustees the right to

$1688

YASHICA

SPARTUS

NOTICE

The undersigned will offer for
sele, by auctlon,at tht prtmlaes

SUNSET

WALL CLOCK
• · Animated Electric dod(

blinking .e y•••

_tn the .

Edward Blake

HECK'S
REG.

Ben Buckley
Charles Hensley

$t.49

event It Is deemed lnaurtlclent.

Dana· Hoffman, Sr.

Harold Brannon

Eo~y

to reod

•

e' Swinging tail and
doc~

CAMERAe TRI-POD
3 Section Leg s

Geored Elevator-13"
Ri.. • Extended Height
· 18 ll" • Telescoped 22 ll "

loco

'5''

JEWli.IY DEI'T.

·
Truattu,
Reedsv ille Clrc;ult of

1,

a. st

HECK'SREG. $14.81

IIWliiY DEPT.

JIWIUY/IIPT.

4-Pt..Y NYLON CORD

WHITEWAllS

LADIES' SHAVER

·Mi crogroove TM floating heads follow
fhe contours of your fa ce for close, fast ,
comfortable shaves . . . as close or clos·
er than a blade in 2 out of 3 sha ves!

SHAVER lho"'•

Micro-twin shoving head . . . one •ide for under,
arms,·the other side for legs. Fast ~ sofe ond
Mnooth .fel(!inine: gro~ming action.
·

Nt• COMFOif CONTlOl SYSTEM

Mfl

jvol • lghtl01 ~ t ij . Sv ~" lhGtp !tEPl ACE AIH E

IIVJlfS kfop lho"'11iQ lit.,. Puth·vi&gt; &lt;Oftll01 ••·
1'1Ad1 11Md1 f or dt(Mioog or cho"Gin' b.loclt1. Truly
Cl l~-loadod _, ~ ...., ""haft(!- gifl
Ullt ..~h ·~ttCI III of blodU

REG.

• O r.~11 Tte ld
Ott lgn
I 4-PIW'

TRIPLE HEAD SH

MAN'S

ttECK'S
,

NOIILCO

REMINGTON

SUNBEAM

$JJ88

HECK'S REG.
$73.96

Untied Methodist Church

s, 6,

$988

HECK'SRIG. $12.18

HECK'S REG.

$98 .88

their claims with aald fiduciary
within four months.

UJ 3,

PORTABLE

RADIO

WITH AM·FM RADIO
ordinary flashlight batteries or plus it into any convenient
110 volt AC outlet. Automatic tap e program changing
and lighted program indicator. AC power cord i5- c~n­
loined in convenient storage compartment of bock of u~it .

HECK'S
RIG.
$3.99

Estate ot Ellie D. Smith Blackburn, deceased, latt of Meigs
County, Ohio.
Creditors are required to file

retect the hlghell bid

C•y•lol (Grfrld~~t l Wt ithl Orltr )I'O.,..dl

$2177

Pomeroy, Oh io, has been duly
appointed Ekecutor of the

Of

I •·S.,..d f llfft!Oblt I So-lid $loto '-•lotlt\aMo I l ug·
Dt d l'o l y.,lly lt~ t Colt .tl l\ " Oyftolllic Spnhr I
lvll l · l ~ •.s .,,., • •cord S1oro ' ' • ' • p· Up • ~ 1 ~111
Adopl'l• • Oval S,.ft~ S9pphirt Slplvs I Moftau•"'

I Ftoh'" ' controlled cooking temptrolvrts I
Has big 12 inch sq. cooking oreo I Till -top lid
elimi nate~ most spaHtr I Oelu n 1i:te tokti
care of big family ne'ed• I Easily brovght to
dinner table!

Notice Is hereby given that

IJJ 1. 8. 15, Jt

HECK'S
REG. 112.44

G. E. PHONOGRAPH

G. E. FRY PAN

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
Cltt No. 2U21
Eslate of ELSIE D. SMITH
BLACKBURN, Decealtd.

Prob~te

77

Pt Pleasant Store On~

LEGAL NOTICE

Smith,

$11

JEWELRY DEPT.

JIWiliYIIIPT.

.

L.

HAIR DRYER

$84.96

HECK'SREG. $14.96

. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates, Ph. 446--,
4782. Gallipolis. John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator,
.
, S-12-tfc ·

Theophllus

SUNBEAM
HAT BOX FlAIR

.

PORTABLE10SPEED
CHROME MIXER
.

'HARRISON'S TV and Anterilla
Service. Phone 992·2522.

·

VANWYCK

Tloo.s

Pl Pleasant Store On~

JIWillr IIPT. .

992-5786

88

$

PROJECTOR

Phone

- -- - --

CLELAND
REALTY

I

STAINLESS

742-3947 '

The
Orchid 'Rooril. .

MOtORS. INC.

- ••..,.. , :

&lt; , ..~

Slim beautv breW\ 4to 8 cups, Slrength seJec-

Ph. 992-2174

ti ckets, no purchase reqoired. •
a t the Bright Star Market :
South's vulnerable four· next to the Drive-In Theatre, :
spade bid would not mee t ~~~~~n~co~:ent~~~~r~~': ;
with the ar.proval of a nyone are fea tured every day, check : Elec. &amp; Gas Ranges
who doesn t like to ta ke any the fo llowing prices and stock :
2 White Electric
chances but it certainl y · y our larder . Fav orite or :
meets with ours. South has Bonus brand white bread 7 : 1 Coppertone Elec.
- -----,nine top tricks. He has an loaves $1 with $10 additional
1 White Gas
excellent chance to pick up purchase. Broughton 's 2 pet. :
NOW '50 OFF
.•
a tenth if his partner can swee t milk gal. 99c. Bologna :
:
produce any cards at all or in piece lb. 59c, grade Asmall •
'f th d f
II
egg s 3 doz. $1, smoked slab :
.ltciiW.c.ntw,~. ,
1 e e ense s ps.
bacon whole or ·half lb. 49c. •
l'ttllt0t914'111
:
The defense star ts with Van Camp 29 oz. can pork and '••• ••• • • ••••••• •••••••• ••••• ·
three round s of diamonds. beans 2 cans 59,, Hart's whole SHOWALTER'S Wei Pet Shop,
Chester, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
South trumps th e third lead kernel cor n 5 cans $1 .
and if he wants to put the Broughton's Ice Milk Ice
Tropical fi sh and supplies.
.
Slop
In and compare.
I
19
C
G
h
maximum press ure on the
ream , a . Sl. • w 1te
3·1·271P
defense he will lead his three potatoes 50 lb. bag $1.59,
of hearts immediately.
Complete assortment of laney
Eaoter goodies Including POODLE puppies. Sliver Toy , --If East lets dummy hold Eas ter Baskets from $1.49 to
Park view Kennels,.Phone 992·• HOUSE In Long Bollom. phone
just _one heart trick it will s20. We accept Federal Food
5443.
98'-3529.
12-17-901c ;
be all over . South will run Coupon. Stretch your money,
8-15-lfr.
1·28-ffc
.
.
out the rest of the tricks for food coupons and lime, •ee us
=
------his contract.
for seed potatoes. onion sets Auto Sales
HOUSE, 16~2 Lincoln t-te1ghts. oiX ROOM house. 133 Butternut .
Call Danny Thompson. 992- Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 21371
What sort of East player and garden plants as needed .
Wadsworth Drive. Columbus. •
2196.
Save
In
many
ways
a
t
Bright
1965 BUICK Wildcat. 2 door
wil I grab that firs t heart ? Star Markel, nex t to Drive-In
Ohio.
phone 237-4334.
7-18-ttc
Hardtop, 1 local owner, exThe sort of player who al- Thea tre, Mason, w. Va.
_
-------...,.,.,.. , ,
11·21 -tfc
cellen t condillon, good tires~
ways takes his aces a t the
3-7-tf ext ra good finish. Phone 992- N tL~ 2-otory home with full
.
basement.
2
lots,
new
forced
BUILDit,IG
lots
In
Branchwood
first opportunity will come - - - - -- - - 2143 or 992-2142.
furnace. Near Pomeroy.' Subdlvl•lon at Rock Springs.
out very well here.
GREEN MAYTAG dishwasher,
J.7-31c . air
Elementary
School. Phone T. P. water, phone 992-2789.
How about a good player? 1 year old, phone 247-2~4 .
992-73ll4
to
see.
.
3-1-12tc
CHEVELLE SS 396, 4 speed
It he is playing wi th a poor
3-S-6tc '69transml
1p .tfc. =--......,----.. ion, Hurst Shifter,
partner he is very likely to
AM-FM radio, vinyl roof,
3· BEDROOM
ranch typeTuppers
home;
Arbaugh Addition,
go wrong on th e theory that TR OPI CA L F ISH , fan cy excellent condition, phone r
guppies.
angels
and
breeders,
882-31
52.
All
.
new
with
total
Plains.
South m i g ht we ll have
Bella•
and
suppl
ies.
Pho
ne
3-7-Jtp
electric
and
centra~
atr ·
jumped to four spades with
conditioning,
bath
and
'4
fully
992-5~43
.
-just a seven card suit.
carpeted, full basement ...
12·30·11&lt;· 1971 FIAT, 6,000 miles, $1,900 or
garage In baSt!ment. SOli by ,
take over payments - $81.47.
If the good player is play· - - --.,- - - -appointment, phone 992-2196 ·
Phone 992-6911 .
ing with a good partner there
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.
J.7-61p
Broker
Financing available,
·
110 Mechanic St.
Stnd II I&lt;K JACOBY MODfRN loook
'
12·30-ffc
'66 THUNDERBIRD. V-8,
Pomeroy, 0 ., 45769
automatic, power steering,
to: 'Win ot Bridge," (c/o tllis ntwspower brakes, power win36" X 23' 1 X .009
poper) , P.O. Box 489, kadio Cit r
NEW LISTING
dows, phone 992-5637.
175
ACRE
STOCK FARM-2
Stolion, N1w Yorll , N.Y. 10019.
3-5-61p
barn&gt;. 2 ponds, 2 •prings, 3
dug wells, and water tap,
will be no way for him to go
paid. 9 room renovated older
Mobile Homes For
. Offlce992·2259
home. Plenty of good
wrong. When South leads the
Residence
'92·2568
·
WOU LD YOU like to order your pasture. Free ga s wlfh own
Pomeroy,
01110
three of hearts good player
mobile home to suit your taste gas well . Would you ,belleve
BUSINESS INVESTMENT
West will play the eight spot.
and
needs? If so, let Robert on ly $42.500.00.
USED
OFFSEl
PLATES
Large
ti le and brick
This play will tell his partDixon show you the easy way
building.
2 story, 4 apart.
4 BEDROOMS
to custom build your home
ner Ihat he has an even numMA~~\ISES
menls,
(3
furnished) 2
COUNTRY
HOME
Hot
and have delivery wUhln 3
ber of hea rts. II won't rebusine ss rooms , storage
water
heat,
1'
1
2
baths
.
weeks. Come and see the new
quire m u c h thought on
room , present business goes
Greenbriar . It Is the home for Modern kitchen. Recreation
20~
East's par t to decide that
with the building. $29,500.
room . 2 drilled well s.
lhose who appreciate the
FAMILY HOME
this is s howing four, so East
better thin gs ot life . Foundation for 2nd house. 10
4
bedrooms.
balh , porches,
will go right up with his
8 for Sl.OO
Manufactured by the largest acre•. NOW only 120.000.00.
forced
air
heal,
large barn
ac e, ret urn the ni ne of trump
builders of mobile homes. Our
NEW LISTING
and
storage
building
. $8,900.
and wail fo r the setting
12 fl . wide Arlington Homes 7 ACRES - On Route 7 near
IOACRES
,
start at $3,695, delivered and Ea•lern School. Ideal lor
trick.
RUTLAND
TOWNSHIP
se t- up. We serv ice what we
housing project or small
~NIW S P A PI R l HTUPAI$E • SS N.)
Ph slory frame home, 7
sell . Meigs Mobile Home•. farm , A bargain at
rooms,
balh, cellar, large
Tuppers Plains, Ohio, 667- 510,000.00.
barn.
crib.
Implement bldg.,
3891. Ca ll collect for ap.
MODERN
chicken house, milk house.
pol nlmenl.
R\.ITLAND - 3 bedrooms,
Clo•e to the new mines.
3-8-61c hot water healing . Nice
Th~ bidding ha ~ hL•cn:
111 Court St.
$171600.
CHEAP HOME
kitchen with dishwasher,,
West
Nnrth
Ea."it
Pomeroy, Ohi~
1'1• stor y frame, 6 rooms. 3
cook and bake u'nlts. Fully
bedrooms , bath, utility
carpeted . Carport and
Pass
1¥
Pas.~
room.
some hardwood floors,
..
fen
ced
yard.
$20.000.00.
Pass
1 N.T.
Pass
12 FT. WI DE trailer with air
gas
forced
air heat, flllrch,
MIDDLEPORT
cond iti oning, washer &amp; dryer
You. South, hold:
$3
,
500.
Immediat e
3 BEDROOMS - Bath, cute
- $3,700 ; see Ha ~old Johnson,
49U 54 .A 2 +J ... AKQ 7 R
possession
.
kitchen, large living and
Chester, Ohio.
1 story flame, 2 bedrooms.
What do yo\1 do nuw'!
dining. G., age. All on corner
'3-5-6tp
cabinets
· In
kitchen,
lot for only $10,000 .~.
A- This iN a tOU ilh one. \\'c
basement,
large
lot.
All In
sligluly ra\·ur a 1\\'n-spatie bid GOOD mIxed hay , Phone
WiDE
.
excellent
condition.
Juot
Wilkesville
669-4777.
WANT
A
GOOO
PRICE
FOR
but wuuld hB\'C nn ~:r ilithun ul
S1.900,
3-5-6tc
YOUR
PROPERTY,
LIST
f.'lt hct· a lWU• t lub bid nr a pn~s .
WE HAVE 35 PROPER----'---WITH US. AND START
TIES,
ONE OF WHICH MAY
TOll A \''S QUF.STIO~
LOOKING.
3 BEDROOM \ lndale mobile
SUIT
VOlt.
COME TO THE
' ,.
lm•IPod of biddin).( ono..· nuhome , 1112 bt. lhs 1; n choice
OFFICE
OR
CALL, WE
HElEN L. TEAFORD,
ll·ump. :V()Ut· P&lt;l l'l nt•r hal-! t't•hid
r en tal lot. HPrr:nan Bol i nger ,
WILL
IE
GLAD
TO SHOW
1220 Wa.hlnglon Blvd.
ASSOCIATE
1\.\·o ht.'IHi s. What do \' UII dct
992-)570.
THEM TD YDU.
nnw'!
992-ms
m.ma
J-S-6Ip 1---Bt_l_pr_e._o_h_to_ ___.~
Henry Cit land, Realtor
' - - - .o -~~---l

·I

. We are: fully insurtd

SMITH .NELSON

-

m. 992-3401.

and nut Easter egg . See them •••

A_P7.~

marquees. aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob. sales
representative. For free
ANo t:iozER· v,o..k.
estimates. _phone Charles ' BACKHoe
Septic
tanks
Installed. Georao!
Li sle, Syra cuse. V. V.
(Bill
I
Pullins.
Phone 992-24fs. :
Johnson and Son. Inc.
. -- - ~·tfc
3-2-llc- - -- - - - ·~
. ,.
O'DELL WHEEL allghment AUT oMOBILE Insurance lie..;',
cancelled?
Lost . your .
located at Crossroads. Rt. 124.
Call .992operator's
license?
Complete front end service.
2966.
tune up and brake service,
6--15-tfc
Wheels balanced elec ..
troAically,, ,.,Au
work
. . · H-nilll
guaranteed.
Reasonable R!:AOY·MIX CONCRETE de~'
rates. Phone 992-3213.
livered right to your prolect.
7-27-tfc
Fa1l and easy. Free _
- ::-:-:- - : - : - - esttmateo . Phone 992-3284.
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Goegleln Rea~y - Mix ·co. ,
Complete Service
Middleport. Ohio.
· ·
Phone 949-3821
6·30-lfc;
Racine, Ohio
Crill Br~dford .
5-1 -t.c

Centurion, new condition ,
never raced. Phone after 6 p.

on a free giant $20 Easter

Bv Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

992-~898

doors and windows, carports,

1970 KAWASAKI, model G-31 ,

FREE tickets are now available

your

992-5803

SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm

changer. Balance $7~. 34 . Use
our budget terms. Call 992·
7085 .
'
3-8-61c

For Sale

get

From the largest' T'"ICk·
Bulldozer Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.
. Nathan Blggl. _
Rldlotor Speciollst

EBLEN

speakers', 4 speed automatic

---~--

and

spoullnt repotr. lnllrlor or
exllrior .corpontry. Coiling
tile ond Ptneling ond Sldfno.
·complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.
Day Number 992-2550
We havo 24 hr. emtf'lenc,

-iate

beaullful Early American
slyl_e , with AM-FM radio, four

F-URNiSHED and ~nfurntsi.-;.d
apartments. Close to school.
Phone 992-5434.
10-18-tfc

loday

yur around. No mellor wut

INTER lOR and exterior
painting. R. I. Dubbeld. phone
742-5825.
.
3-6-5tc

- - - - --

-:-:=:'--::::---:----:-~

chocolate

your need. Complelt rtOI or

service.

-GUARANTEE~

Conllct

3-3-tfc

large

M•inttnii'JCI 5trvict tht

U3MifnSI.
lanesville, Ohio

TWIN NEEDLE Sewing
O_
U_
S_
E _B~U~I7
L~O=E=Rs~.~
CALL
Machine 1971 Model in walnut MODE RN3 or 4 bedroom home. _H_
stand. All features built-In to
GUY oNEIGLER, RACINE,
Phone 992-3062.
make fancy designs and do
3-2-lfc OHIO.
stretch sewing . Also but3·S-30tc
lonholes. blind hems, etc.
$43.35 cash price or term•
·sEPTIC tanks cieane.t. ·Miller'
available. Phone 992-5641.
Real Estate For Sale
Sanitation. Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
J.8-6tc
662-3035.
- - - - - -- 2_12 _11, :
,
VACUUM CLEANERS. Electro
Hygiene New Demonstrator
ALLSIOE Builder&gt; &amp; Conhas all cleaning attachments
struction Co. We specialize in
plus the new Electro Suds for
aluminum. vinyl and steel
shampooing carpet . Only
siding; fiberglas. brick and ·
S27.50 cash price or terms
•tone ; complete line of
available. Phone 992·5641.
residential · and commercial
3-8-6tc
roofl.ng ;
remod e l i ng ,
.
building, su•pended ceilings,
MODERN Walnut Stereo-radio
Interior and exterior paincombination. four speed Inting ; complete line of
VERA
term IKed changer, four
Masonry work , All work'
992-3020
speaker sound system,
guaranteed to .customer
separale controls. Balance
N. 2nd
Middleport
satisfaction. we are fully
569.40. Use our budget terms.
Insured for your protection. 32
Call 992-7085.
N. Second, ph. 992-3918.
3-B-61c
2-15-Jotc

phone 992-3324.

Easter bunny and large trvlt

y
EXT£.RM
. INAJION

EXPERT '
Whpel _Mignment

Court , Miners vill e, Ohio, COLONIAL Maple stereo-radio,

Baske t

240 Uncoln St.
Mltldtepol'l, Ollio
Dbo AnlllonV Plumlling
We hive 1 complelt HOmo

&amp;

-----~

WANTED!

TERMITES. •TERMITES,_ ALL WEATHER IKiofiNG
Gel Rid of Them
WI will protect ony single
&amp; CONSTRUCJION '
c1w 111
'den- tor
• na rest 1 149,50
l' PWMBING CO.

Free Estimate
ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONOmONING

For Appoil)tment
Phone 949-2803

-- - - SPE EO Queen Portable Washer

choke guns

25 Per Cent Discount. on pale

r::::;:::=======::;-;:::==:::::::;::::;::::::::;:::===;-;:=:::;;::;=::::=:::j:;
--;;;;;;;;;;;o:;
--

B&amp;W Hra•
gtJING 00.'

,

I

327 engl'le.. 4 speed trans., clean inter ior &amp; good tires.

·Busi.Dess Services-

HECK'S

$~~?99 $2088

$1.99

JEWELRY
DEPT.

Nylon Cord

• Ouragtne

Tri ad
Aubber

AS ·
lJJN
AS

$1978

Size 825· 1 ~ - TuDtlen ·
whitewall, plus S2.32 Ftct.
Ex. Tax and exchange
casing .

Larger

slzts

available at comparabla
•
prlceo. '
FrM Mounting
&amp;lltanclng

HECK'S REG.$21.99

HAMILTON BEACH

CAN OPENER/KNIFE
SHARPENER

•7

NORELCO

LADIES SACHET

JEWELRY DEPT•.

88 RE:~~~96

3-LS

HECK'S
REG. s24.46
Pl Pleasant Store On~

GENERAL
TIRE ·
SALES
•

Pit. 992-7161
Mlclclleport, Ohio

(,

'

t

88

�'

..,•

'
'-

.

~

..

,

OPEl DAILY

~~~.,

. . . IAI.Y
10'TO 9

10 TC) 9

10 ro 9 ·

------------·-

----~~----BOY'S

.

MEN'S NYLON

PERMANENT PRISS .

WINDBREAKERS

SUNDAY MAR. 12, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

PRICES II .EFFECT

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, MAR. 12, WHILE QUANTITIES:LAST

;

FLARE JEANS

lADIES'

.

Washable , nylon jock·
eh that never need
ironing . A wonderful
asso rtment of· six styles

-

I

Sharp flarel'g jeans
·with contrasting pock;
ets. Choose f~om cor..
foon or brustled mod~

and many colors . Size~

S·M·L·XL.

f,ls. All in assorted cCilorS. Size: .S.to 18.

INC SUPPLIES?

WITH·PRICES LIKE THESE O·NYOUR PL

MESH
MEN'$

WESTERN
JEANS

MEN'S

KNIT SHIRTS ,

Men's assorted short sleeve

BOY'S
2-PIECE

HECK'S
REG.
$3.99

knit shi rts in cardiga n styl·

Wa shington
brand
heavy weight, western

ing. Available in solid col·
ors or fancies with plackets

jeans. These jeans ore
sanforized and rein -

ond the mod layered look.

forc.ed at points of
strain. Sizes: 29-42 .

Never need !. ironing .

SLACK SET
with match·

Sizes S,M,L &amp; Xl.

Permanenl Pre~! sloch
ing short slee~e shir t. Slat~ 1 ore with
half bo•er waist and belted . The se t
is available ir1 solid color~ and 1izes
41o 7.

1

HECK'S REG. $2.99
CiOTNINii DEPT.

/
I ;

'

i

'

j''iI

.

\
.., \

~

HECK'S REG.

ClOTN/Nii DEPT.

......
i

L-ADIES' PANTS
Ladies polyester(cotlon blend pants with
contrasting pockets and zip or button
front. Complete with flare leg and many
colors to choose from . Sizes: 8 to 16.

$ 99
HECK'S REG. $4.88

ClOTHING DEPT.

,

,

sac

SHIRTS

Infants' Hi -Ri se training
panties with double
thickneH
~t re n gth .

for

extra

Sizes 2 to 4.

HECK'S REG.

GIRLS'

A wi de assortm ent of collar
styles in these ~oil sleeve shirts.
Choose from solids and prints.
Sizes 32·44 .

. $1.06

.,,,,,.,,

GOWNS

Ch" pormo"t n! pr•u wo l•t
lonQih 90•n1 . Compl• lo in

COSMETIC
DEPT.

4 OZ. VASELINE

BATH OIL
c

~~

sse
HECK'S
REG.
$1.29
COSMETIC
DEPT.

COPPER

UNION

. '

. VALVE

57(

99(

""'
~

20(
HECK'S REG.

27 4

.,,.,,

'~ 'h" 1ohJ44'ftOPPEI

WITH FLANGE
'

PIPE
10 n. L'QJ.GTH

$1!!

'h"COPPII

112'' COPPER

COUPLING

6(

ELBOW

8&lt;

lfa" COPPII

TEE

13(

poi"'l Ot IOiidt . ~It I~ !o 14

$177

HECK'S
REG.

78'
CI.OTNING
DEPT.

18

oz.

MICRIN

4" OCTAGON

·HECK'S REG.
$2 .48

HECK'S RIG.
48' EACH

CI.OTNING DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

DOLLS

. 170 COUNT

8 \-7" bab y doll with .t\1 "
baby ~is le' doll . Choote from

ggc

27

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK'S
$1.28

· COSMETIC
DEPT.

4c
HECK'S
REG.
96 '
COSMETIC
DEPT.

~~ -1'

----

~---~ - - ~~~t'~..;,-.-::-:~- .!

h '
'

:~

•--~ .. - ;
•
'

HECK'S
REG .

TOY
DEPT.

1

SWITCHES

66(
Tea
&amp;
Dinner

1

16 ox. SHAMPOO GOLDEN WITH EGG

13 OZ. HAIR SPRAY

16 OZ. CREME RINSE
CHOICE

39(
HECK'S
REG.
T084'
COSMETIC
DEPT.

TOTEM
BAGS

DUPLEX OUTLETS
II OWN

DUPLEX PLATES
IROWN

HICK'S IIG. TO 42'

4" ALUMINUM

RIDEM
~ONY

OR

TEA AND

DINNER SETS
· CHOICE
HECK'S

· REG.
$;1.77

VENTKIT $

277

· 350PC.

ADULT
PICTURE
PUZZLE

NIGHT LIGHT
Ideal for your Safety
and Convenience.

TUB AND SHOWER

SEAL-A-CRACK

TANKVALV

11/2" BY 10FT.

PLASTIC PIPE

0

1.3

44c

HECK'S REG.
HECK'S REG.
$1.60

HECK'SIIG.

. 58'

TOYigT.

I

5 FT.
FILL HOSE

NAIIJWAII III'T.
FLUSH

IVORY

COISTRKTIOII

Tor DEPT.

.,,

IIAI/JWAII

31~

DIIRUl£ PLASTIC

68&lt;

3o•

BROWN

4 Style

COSMETIC
DEPT.

TOGGLE PLATES

HECK'S REG,

HECK'S REG. TO 37 1

NAIIWA/If

SINGLE POLE

87'

SUAVE

VASELINE
INTENSIVE CARE

BATH OIL
BEADS

r ·~ "'

IVORY

36 1

J style~. ·

CHOICE

HECK'S
REG.
$1.19

24(
28(

HECK' S
REG.
HECK'S REG.

HANDY BOX

.I ROWN

27C ·.

LITTLE SWEETHEART

Q-TIPS

DUPLEX OUnETS

·WORKBOX

ELECTRIC BOX

HECK'S REG.
$2.38
ClOTNINii
DEPT.

DRAGSTER OR RACERS.

...__.........
.. ,I

1h"

..;

WAX SEAL

~E,EPTACLE

LADIES'

ROLL SLEEVE

ors and size~ 5 to 8.

. PUL

TOYDEPT.

88'

'"'

W'COPPIR .

"'

'

ADAPTER

PORCELAIN

TRAINING
PAttltES
·

fort of satin. Available
in white and pa stel col-

DEODORANT

HECK'S
REG .

I\.

HECK'S
REG.
$1.02

$199

ClOTNINii
DEPT.

lan nylon with the com-

GJLETTE FOAMY

I

COPPER PIPE·AND FITTINGS

WASHER KIT

Tailored, permanent 'press and
available in prints an~ solid$.

GROUND

.

HECK'S REG. $2.31
ClOTNINii DEPT.

ladies ' br ief panties
that ore made of co pro-

II OL

•

.

FIX ALL

INFANTS'

BRIEF
PANTIES

HECK'S
REG.

IIAIIIWAII

PAJAMAS

·$]22

LADIES'

88

$1.16

GIRLS'

M·l.

$12

BASKET STRAINER

. $1.35

CI.OTHING
DEPT.

ClOTNINii DEPT.

14-2 WITH GROUND 250 FT.

To $22.50

HECK'S
REG,

HECK'S
REG. ·
$4.99

. from so lids or stripes. Sizes: 5-

'

)

$10°

2SOn.$1888

12-2WITH

rr

Chic ladies co tton kni t tops
with scoop neck a nd pla cket
styling . Make your selecti on

I

1

Heck's ·Reg.
2 pair
2 PAIR P'KG~ ·

' TOPS

r ' \., .\ .

;

0-.'k'rl

STAINLESS STEEL

ROMEXWIRE

.SIN&lt; CLEANER

0

LADIES'
COTTON KNIT

f
\\
\
i(
I

NYLON
HOSE

HECK 'S REG.
$4.99

HECK'S REG .
$4.99

· ClOTHING DEPT.

/ t;.,.it\

~.

3FOR ·

$

$199

CI.DTNING
DEPT.

25FT.

,,
I .

,, I

$3.79

HECK'S REG.

$2.40

�•.

n

_..,

OPEIIA!LT
10 TO 9

10 TOt···

SH!Jl(-I
IMoN

DON'T 'IE

~ .tJAIT

TILL HE 6ITS .,:iiS
NAP OUT·· HOW LOAAS's
HE BEEN St.EEPIN' .
ENNIIHOW?

GII!R AN'
.WAICE PAW UP IF
I Ill! CM1e
. 'DIU&lt; 10
HIM,
LUI&lt;EVI'

PRICES II EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUIDAY, MAR. 12, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
JOH
SPIN
. CAST REEL·.

RSHINGVEST
Super dtlv.xe, 5 pockets, r.or

• 266

zipptred, concealed po&lt;ht,

On~

saaa

po.pular Johnson century
reel. Famous Johnson Century features include Selec· ·
tro-Dial drag action, dual
HECK'S REG.
anti· rovorso .
$l 2 , 9 ~ ,

9x9
UMBRE~LA TENT

Heck's Reg. 1199

Pt Pleasant Store

King siz:e version of the ·

NATIONAL

net i'lni. netted tear panel ,
license hokler, lltetpU!in hook
potch. Sfztt S, M, L.

Sewn-in floor, largo nylon
screen door. Awning lets down
to become storm door. Last
18"x24" nylon screen rear
window has outside roll up
storm flaps . Complete with
aluminum frame ropes and

STEEL

BASKETBALL RIM

$288

$AV,
DOEC
YOUR OLD
BUG ~Oli
A80UT I.ONG WAtR ~

YI!LLS

IJS

WII&gt;T~ ~. "'-

·
LONG latR.1

NEVER.;

huld• ~~~~out , tho" '' pl1~l~ ol tfllolltr.

Clooc.lll foalltrll , ••••d r~~tloml"' p11~1
,.,...,. !h. lllumi~11111 Hlly oM cowl 1..- do:iu·
Wo protect~... floe ipaolll •"'lt''f A.IS plft.
tic with o g,padty letr 2.)0 r••tfl of l ·lb . hill
M.... On tt.llaiAiou.•'-' loa~ .......... D '""""
ch_,j.pleted ~~fan rail...,.... that •~llli·
not11 lro~blil.. lllllln• f10y .

steel stakes.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

'

l!ff!ER SENP 1HE
RIOT 6QUAP, _ . ,
S6T. ' I!II.OneR.

·&amp;0 HOW KIN
WE SOLVE.

$ 99

99

AH'D TAKE MAH

TI-l' "POTTEtol
P.ALPHIE'

~OFF'IO'IO'­

IFAHOAST-

PROei.Uiol"

EVEREADY

MAGNET FLASHLIGHT
WITH lA TTERIES

$166

WIU. 'VA QUIT HOIISitol' AltOUtoiO
WtTI' 'TWAT 400111LLA AN' HT

IJ.I&gt;Cte T' WOI!I&lt; r

HECK'SIEG. $1.99

TENSOR

DISPOSABLE FLASHLIGHT
ANGLER

SPOITS

99c

DEPT.

$188

5
FT.
SPINCAST
ROD
Cork handle, 3 guides, and me·
dium weight.

HECK'S REG. $2.U

..

KEROSENE
LANTERNS

-

BY ASH FLASH

" ··-

WINCHESTER

12'~

1 :,~~·
l•:.c·

I(\.

•&lt;"

High

'~..._....,

WESTBEND

7Pc.TEFLON
SET
$
88

washer! Toke1 lr;ou'ilhut punilh ·

.as•

TEfl&lt;)N II finish con rtallr take it .

SPOITS DEPT.

IW&gt;!TIIl~ •

1010XE50F
50 ROUNDS EACH

. llMVS ... lH.6.T
· &lt;:1\JMT IS /oUVOI

$599
HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

ments without chipping, erod ing
or flak in g . DuP on t Super-Hard

•

t U)l Cloi'T

$155

Here is new beauty color crafted
in karnst, flame and o¥acado to '
motch•mohr your kitchen. Won't ;
lode or discolor. Safe in the di1h·

HECK'S
REG.

·GOLF. -·

CAPS

"&lt;,

.. /

99

WILDCAT

10 f.or $1.80

SO 'tOU AND l'OU~

$199

HECK'S REG.
$19.8

COli\ PLAN

I~

TQ

MOTOREADORS T~INK SI!TUP~!S
OF OUR GROUP
•l'QI.J"CAN 6CR.IJ8
~l OV~R. THE
THESE LICE OUT OF
EXIIIoT!NCf WITH
COUHTR'(, MR.

SPOITS DEPT.

PROPfR FIMArtCING?

ANVIL!

NOUSEWAIIE

DEPT.

Johnsons Future
ACRYLIC FLOOR FINISH

• If' \
~.r.'

f
II~

\\\
lQ

wu

'169

WONDER FOLD

FOLDING
DOORS

Heck's Reg. 11.99

Pt Pleasant
Store Only

~
-~ 5' I
NOUSEWAIE
---- 46 oz.

t

WoOLITE

SPRAY

·SL GUUIDtee ••• Tradl·
tlonol bit
II. Likewise
of
lore
"-Four·

COLUMBIAN WARE

n

"i~~s $122

88(

REG.

11.45

.
Pt Pleasant Store

$1. 44

NOUSEWARE

EACH

DEPT.

22
HICK'S
REG.
$3.49

CHOICE

HECK'S

OUTSTANDING
FEA TURES , • Made of extra
heavy, tough, du rable vinyl
plastic. Seams heat sea led.·
• Rich fobric textured
embossed pattern. Styled
for simplicity. • Fits openings up to 32" by 80". e
Adjustable lead post.

s

A. 3 QT. COVERED SAUCE PAll
B. 2 PC. SAUCE PAll SET
C. • QT. COVERED SAUCE POT
D. 4 QT. PARTY BOWL

Foam Rug Cleaner

Poster

UAdolea-

cent

11. Tnle of
domestic
help

DOWN
L Dumb&amp;irl
I. Border on

ANCHOR HOCKING

a. Topic In

I-PIECE ·

the news
4. Ca!Dip
s. SUbJuaate
I. Put forth

SET
PARSONS TABLES. BEVERAGE
e
CHOOSE FROM
AVOCADO GOLD OR
BLUE,

Excellent for all your utility needs. Fitswoll
in oil surroundings. ·

enerv

7.Prehfor

medor

meditate

CHOICE

$599

$100

HECK'S REG. $9.44

HECK'S REG. $1.77

.

II. Rush-hour
rider, ft&amp;·
uratlvely

. DRA.UF . •:::.-a::=.-

v......, .........

1'1. Lole one'•
ceol
18. Pieced
zt.Sympa(out)
. thetlc exll.lllmle
clamation
IL Relief
3S.
Otherwise
a. stilled
u.
Lunch
eraftaman
time
U.Putry
sa. Old boat
Joocl7
n. Holllburc
U.Budpt

ortrllbJ

lt.m

II I II
LUSTYS

II
"Tt-\!5E 1/CNE."f

K)

ARRANe!MEN'l'S
M16Hi 1.001( FI5K'I'. ·

DEPT.
(.b.we~ ...........J

Pinesol

-f i

" -- ... .........1

~
.,.. ,........ .

-

SWING-AWAY

ANCHOI HOCKING

CAN OPENER

l·PIECE
MIIIIGBOWL

$188

SET

WINDOW SHADES

$128

White ... 37"

HECK'S REG.

$2.44

•

-·

SWEATER
16 QZ. LYSOL

TOILET BOWL
CLEANER

37(

.

28oz.
btl.

lllliil..
• fUIIII
•

15 OZ. LYSOL

CLEANER

44(

BOX

ANCHOI HOCKING

71/c" VASE

Heck's Rec, 11.18

37c

aa~
Pt Plelsant Store On~

9'h" YASI • , •

88$
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
.A XYDLBAAXR
It LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for anotber. In thil sample A Is
Uled for .the th,ree Vs, X for the 1111'0 0'1, etc. Single lettel'l,
1postrophes, the lenath and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day lhe code letters are dllrerent.
'
CRYPTOQ\JOTIIA

IJ,Q5

HZG

ULR , XZC

PLYKKTR .\

UC

UTT

GXTROD HZGL 1'/Xi\ YO YX U · OKTYXC .
-

MLUXW OPGTTH
'

!~ Tll AT PART OF
WEi\I,TH WIIICH IS IJEVO'rEil TO 011'1'.\INING fTIITHER
WEi\!,TII.- ALt'RE]) MARSHA hi •.

Yesterday's Cryploquole: CAPITAL
c.--.

I

.I

.

-

Z:IALOY

nil ,.,., """""' .,_. nory
e/um• -IYS PARISH

I DON'T KNOiJ,
FRANKLIN ..

Heck's Reg;

55'

I

Jem"ooo SIXTY PLUSH fiNERY

y eettfillaf'•

'

. ....

tt•7:! )\iuv l\•alurr•,c ~ )"t~&lt;ll•·uh·.

l11e·."t

�•.

n

_..,

OPEIIA!LT
10 TO 9

10 TOt···

SH!Jl(-I
IMoN

DON'T 'IE

~ .tJAIT

TILL HE 6ITS .,:iiS
NAP OUT·· HOW LOAAS's
HE BEEN St.EEPIN' .
ENNIIHOW?

GII!R AN'
.WAICE PAW UP IF
I Ill! CM1e
. 'DIU&lt; 10
HIM,
LUI&lt;EVI'

PRICES II EFFECT NOW THROUGH SUIDAY, MAR. 12, WHILE QUANTITIES LAST
JOH
SPIN
. CAST REEL·.

RSHINGVEST
Super dtlv.xe, 5 pockets, r.or

• 266

zipptred, concealed po&lt;ht,

On~

saaa

po.pular Johnson century
reel. Famous Johnson Century features include Selec· ·
tro-Dial drag action, dual
HECK'S REG.
anti· rovorso .
$l 2 , 9 ~ ,

9x9
UMBRE~LA TENT

Heck's Reg. 1199

Pt Pleasant Store

King siz:e version of the ·

NATIONAL

net i'lni. netted tear panel ,
license hokler, lltetpU!in hook
potch. Sfztt S, M, L.

Sewn-in floor, largo nylon
screen door. Awning lets down
to become storm door. Last
18"x24" nylon screen rear
window has outside roll up
storm flaps . Complete with
aluminum frame ropes and

STEEL

BASKETBALL RIM

$288

$AV,
DOEC
YOUR OLD
BUG ~Oli
A80UT I.ONG WAtR ~

YI!LLS

IJS

WII&gt;T~ ~. "'-

·
LONG latR.1

NEVER.;

huld• ~~~~out , tho" '' pl1~l~ ol tfllolltr.

Clooc.lll foalltrll , ••••d r~~tloml"' p11~1
,.,...,. !h. lllumi~11111 Hlly oM cowl 1..- do:iu·
Wo protect~... floe ipaolll •"'lt''f A.IS plft.
tic with o g,padty letr 2.)0 r••tfl of l ·lb . hill
M.... On tt.llaiAiou.•'-' loa~ .......... D '""""
ch_,j.pleted ~~fan rail...,.... that •~llli·
not11 lro~blil.. lllllln• f10y .

steel stakes.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

'

l!ff!ER SENP 1HE
RIOT 6QUAP, _ . ,
S6T. ' I!II.OneR.

·&amp;0 HOW KIN
WE SOLVE.

$ 99

99

AH'D TAKE MAH

TI-l' "POTTEtol
P.ALPHIE'

~OFF'IO'IO'­

IFAHOAST-

PROei.Uiol"

EVEREADY

MAGNET FLASHLIGHT
WITH lA TTERIES

$166

WIU. 'VA QUIT HOIISitol' AltOUtoiO
WtTI' 'TWAT 400111LLA AN' HT

IJ.I&gt;Cte T' WOI!I&lt; r

HECK'SIEG. $1.99

TENSOR

DISPOSABLE FLASHLIGHT
ANGLER

SPOITS

99c

DEPT.

$188

5
FT.
SPINCAST
ROD
Cork handle, 3 guides, and me·
dium weight.

HECK'S REG. $2.U

..

KEROSENE
LANTERNS

-

BY ASH FLASH

" ··-

WINCHESTER

12'~

1 :,~~·
l•:.c·

I(\.

•&lt;"

High

'~..._....,

WESTBEND

7Pc.TEFLON
SET
$
88

washer! Toke1 lr;ou'ilhut punilh ·

.as•

TEfl&lt;)N II finish con rtallr take it .

SPOITS DEPT.

IW&gt;!TIIl~ •

1010XE50F
50 ROUNDS EACH

. llMVS ... lH.6.T
· &lt;:1\JMT IS /oUVOI

$599
HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.

ments without chipping, erod ing
or flak in g . DuP on t Super-Hard

•

t U)l Cloi'T

$155

Here is new beauty color crafted
in karnst, flame and o¥acado to '
motch•mohr your kitchen. Won't ;
lode or discolor. Safe in the di1h·

HECK'S
REG.

·GOLF. -·

CAPS

"&lt;,

.. /

99

WILDCAT

10 f.or $1.80

SO 'tOU AND l'OU~

$199

HECK'S REG.
$19.8

COli\ PLAN

I~

TQ

MOTOREADORS T~INK SI!TUP~!S
OF OUR GROUP
•l'QI.J"CAN 6CR.IJ8
~l OV~R. THE
THESE LICE OUT OF
EXIIIoT!NCf WITH
COUHTR'(, MR.

SPOITS DEPT.

PROPfR FIMArtCING?

ANVIL!

NOUSEWAIIE

DEPT.

Johnsons Future
ACRYLIC FLOOR FINISH

• If' \
~.r.'

f
II~

\\\
lQ

wu

'169

WONDER FOLD

FOLDING
DOORS

Heck's Reg. 11.99

Pt Pleasant
Store Only

~
-~ 5' I
NOUSEWAIE
---- 46 oz.

t

WoOLITE

SPRAY

·SL GUUIDtee ••• Tradl·
tlonol bit
II. Likewise
of
lore
"-Four·

COLUMBIAN WARE

n

"i~~s $122

88(

REG.

11.45

.
Pt Pleasant Store

$1. 44

NOUSEWARE

EACH

DEPT.

22
HICK'S
REG.
$3.49

CHOICE

HECK'S

OUTSTANDING
FEA TURES , • Made of extra
heavy, tough, du rable vinyl
plastic. Seams heat sea led.·
• Rich fobric textured
embossed pattern. Styled
for simplicity. • Fits openings up to 32" by 80". e
Adjustable lead post.

s

A. 3 QT. COVERED SAUCE PAll
B. 2 PC. SAUCE PAll SET
C. • QT. COVERED SAUCE POT
D. 4 QT. PARTY BOWL

Foam Rug Cleaner

Poster

UAdolea-

cent

11. Tnle of
domestic
help

DOWN
L Dumb&amp;irl
I. Border on

ANCHOR HOCKING

a. Topic In

I-PIECE ·

the news
4. Ca!Dip
s. SUbJuaate
I. Put forth

SET
PARSONS TABLES. BEVERAGE
e
CHOOSE FROM
AVOCADO GOLD OR
BLUE,

Excellent for all your utility needs. Fitswoll
in oil surroundings. ·

enerv

7.Prehfor

medor

meditate

CHOICE

$599

$100

HECK'S REG. $9.44

HECK'S REG. $1.77

.

II. Rush-hour
rider, ft&amp;·
uratlvely

. DRA.UF . •:::.-a::=.-

v......, .........

1'1. Lole one'•
ceol
18. Pieced
zt.Sympa(out)
. thetlc exll.lllmle
clamation
IL Relief
3S.
Otherwise
a. stilled
u.
Lunch
eraftaman
time
U.Putry
sa. Old boat
Joocl7
n. Holllburc
U.Budpt

ortrllbJ

lt.m

II I II
LUSTYS

II
"Tt-\!5E 1/CNE."f

K)

ARRANe!MEN'l'S
M16Hi 1.001( FI5K'I'. ·

DEPT.
(.b.we~ ...........J

Pinesol

-f i

" -- ... .........1

~
.,.. ,........ .

-

SWING-AWAY

ANCHOI HOCKING

CAN OPENER

l·PIECE
MIIIIGBOWL

$188

SET

WINDOW SHADES

$128

White ... 37"

HECK'S REG.

$2.44

•

-·

SWEATER
16 QZ. LYSOL

TOILET BOWL
CLEANER

37(

.

28oz.
btl.

lllliil..
• fUIIII
•

15 OZ. LYSOL

CLEANER

44(

BOX

ANCHOI HOCKING

71/c" VASE

Heck's Rec, 11.18

37c

aa~
Pt Plelsant Store On~

9'h" YASI • , •

88$
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
.A XYDLBAAXR
It LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for anotber. In thil sample A Is
Uled for .the th,ree Vs, X for the 1111'0 0'1, etc. Single lettel'l,
1postrophes, the lenath and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day lhe code letters are dllrerent.
'
CRYPTOQ\JOTIIA

IJ,Q5

HZG

ULR , XZC

PLYKKTR .\

UC

UTT

GXTROD HZGL 1'/Xi\ YO YX U · OKTYXC .
-

MLUXW OPGTTH
'

!~ Tll AT PART OF
WEi\I,TH WIIICH IS IJEVO'rEil TO 011'1'.\INING fTIITHER
WEi\!,TII.- ALt'RE]) MARSHA hi •.

Yesterday's Cryploquole: CAPITAL
c.--.

I

.I

.

-

Z:IALOY

nil ,.,., """""' .,_. nory
e/um• -IYS PARISH

I DON'T KNOiJ,
FRANKLIN ..

Heck's Reg;

55'

I

Jem"ooo SIXTY PLUSH fiNERY

y eettfillaf'•

'

. ....

tt•7:! )\iuv l\•alurr•,c ~ )"t~&lt;ll•·uh·.

l11e·."t

�..

.

~

.. .. ...•

..

·,

.;

,.

. ... . .....

.. ~..

5 MustangS Added to Evans' Herd

I

11-fMDII)Jh4h•l,Mid"*'__._..;:rwwoy.O.• "

Beitha Clark

cb 1172

Ashbrook in -for SiX Months

Dies Tuesday

CONCORD, N.H. (UPI) -Rep. Joba ~. AlllbJwk, R·
Obi(!, oald today tblo cO!Im'Votlve·dollle!lle lo Pmlilellt
. Nixoo'• rmominatloa will contlllae for at leut uotloer ab::
moathl, but bow esteasive 11 wiD be depeadl Oil bow mlido
more·campalgD money be caa raise.
Alter besiiD&amp; pndletl-tballoe 'lioald DOt talile It per
cent of the vote in New Hampablre'o P1mary 'l'aeldayhe was boldlng at juot e:qctly 11 per eeat of tbe leta! Ashbrook oatd: "We will 1tay In Ibis raee lor at leall the
next itx mootba. Our reaetloo bere Is reaDy one of
qualified joy, and we will do loetter -far better -.lbaD tile
ZO per cent we co011der solid lor F1orlda," in tloat olate'o
primary aext week.

LETART, W. Va. - Mrs.
Bertha E. Clark, 90, of the
Broad Run Community, was
cleat!, on UTival a\ 'veterans
Memorial Hospital Tuesday
evening where !lite wu taken
after.becoming ill al her hOme. ·
Mrs. Clark Wail born Nov. 7,
. ~ 111:11 at the Oak Grove Community, the daughter of the
late Moses and Susan Ball
Hoffman. Besides her parents
she ..,., preceded In death by
her huSband, WUJlain Walter
Clark In 1950; three daughters,
Delphia, Betha, and Margaret,
and a son, Lawrence.
SurviVing are six sons, Clark
and Leo, Letart; Hoyt, of
Kanauga;
William,
of
e8
Pomeroy; Franklin, of . .WEST COLUMBIA _ Mrs.
Klltiand, Dl., and Harry of De· Margie Ann Nesbitt, 43, 6547
Kalb, Dl.; three daughters, Briarmeade Drive Dallas
Mrs. Helen Grinstead, Mrs. Texas, formerly df Maso~
Theresa Ohlinger. and Mrs. County, died Monday In the
l!lliza Roush, all of Letart; 34 Richardson General Hospital
grandchildren, 57 great- In Da)las.
ll'andchlldren, and one greatMrs. Nesbitt was born Feb. I,
great-grandchild.
1929 In West Columbia, ihe
Funeral services will be held daughter of the late Harry O.
at 1 p.m. saturday at the and Grace Frances Hoffman,
Foglesong Funeral Home With
Surviving are her husband,
the Rev. George Weirick of- Willey· two sons Michael and
ftclatlng · Burial will be In Paul :U,d a da~ter Susan
Hoffman ~tery · Friends aU ai home; two aunis, Mrs:
may call at the funeral home Helen Stewart Mason and
anytimeafter3p.m. Thursday. Mrs, Etta Young, ' West
Columbia, and several cousins,
Roundlable
to be nieces and nephews.
.
-Funeral services will be held
Thur,sday at 7:30 at I :30 P.J1l· Thursday at the
The monthly Boy Scout Foglesong Funeral Home with
Leaders RoUndtable of the M- the Rev. Mrs. Bernice Winkler
G-M Dlltrlct will be held officiating; Burial will be In
'l'bunday-, March 9, at 7:30 Lone Oak Cemetery. Friends
p.m., at the American Legion may caU at the funeral home
Plill 121, South 4th Ave. and from 7 to 9 tonight.
W!U!em• St., Middleport.
The Jll oguom emphasia lor
MEETING SET
April, to be covered at the
The Harrisonville • Scipio
meeting, ill Cub Scout, Circus
AIUJ111li
Aasll. will meet at 8
World; Webelos Activity
Badge, Forester; Boy Scout, p.m. Friday at the HarrisonBike IItke and International ville Presbyterian Church. AU ·
Scouting. AU leaders are urged officers and members are ·
requested to be present.
to attend.

Muskie, McGoverri Contented
•

MANcm'3l'ER,Ni H. (u;.I)
·-The caravan of candldatea iD
· the
l'(ew
llampahlr.e
Prelldentlal primary hellded
South today, with Sen. l!ldmund
S. Muakie claiming hill "third
vic!Alry In a row" and Sen.
George S. McGovern's candidacy boosted by a sur. ·prislngly strong f1nlsh.
Waiting for them in Florida
were four more majOr candl.·
dates for the Deinocralic
pi'OIIdential nomination, who
COLUMBUS (UPI) bypassed but could not Ignore,
Nearly 500 Ullltecl Mille
the nation's first primary. ·
Worken llllloll memben
Despite hill triumph, Muakle,
who work olrlp mlueo II!
a weU.known, well-liked neigh. .
Eastern Ohio crowded Into
bor from Maine, fell slightly
the rolll!lda of the Slate
lhort of a majority in what
Capitol today to lobby
orlglnaUy was anticipated as a
aJalJIIIt the Houoe paned
big win designed to send him on·
strip mine coali-tl bill.
the long road to nomination as
Hanna
Coal
Co.
the odds-on favorite. The New
Prestdeat Ralph Hatch
Hampshire results ;:.ot in doubt
said late Tue.day at lbe
his role as the front-running
firm's headqua~ters Ia
candidate.
·
Cadiz he hoped tloere woald
McGovern, who began IllS
be no, ~demonstnlloaa'
active campaign mote than a
here today wbea a seute
year ago and spent much more
sub&lt;ommlttee e0111iden
time in New ,Hampshlre yo&amp;n
tile leglslatlooo.
Muskle, exceeded by a Wide
The mlaen, maooy of
margin his npeclations of 25
lbem earrylag slgas oaylag
per cent of the vote. It was the
"Amend 1128" the aumber
kind of effort he wanted to spiD'
of the bill came Into the
hl:l.campa~ot so much in
capitol at about ·9 a.m.
Florida - but in WiBconsin,
farther
down the line.
...... ... -.
Overshadowed by the Presidential preference primary
was the selection ~ pledged
delegates
to the Democntlc
Three defendants were fined
and three others forfeited National ConventiQn where
bonds In the court of Mid- MU8kle appeared to be leading
dleport Mayor John Zerkle in most, if not aU 20 places.
As •expected, President
Tuesday night.
Fined $10 and costs I!Bch on Nixon scored a decisive victory
conviction of intoxication were in. the Republican primaryRoger Warth, 37, and Lewill crushing opposition from the
Scarbe, 59, both of HarUord, lefl and right-although he did
and Dorothy Roller, Mid· not campaign in New Ramp,
dleport, was fined $5 and costs. shire. Tbe victory was hailed
forfatlbigtoyieldrlghtolway. .by GOP .leaders, lncludillg
Jess Zimmerman, 30, Vice-President Spiro T,
Stewart, and Ben Davidson, 67, Agnew, as a strong en·
Middleport, forfeited bonds of qorsement of Nixon's policies
and his admlnlatratlon. The
~
$30each posted for intoxication President also captured all It
and a $25 bond posted on a stop
.. sign violation was forfeited by delegates · to August's GOP
(ConUnued from page 1)
.
James A. Drummond, 24, National ConvenUon.
Nixon did not achieve the 79
nation second busiest port have reached a contract agreement , GaiUpolis. ·
per
cent he scored In 1968. But
that WID avert a threatened March 15 strike. Negotiators for the
four years ago he had only ooe
International Longlhoremen's Association (!LA) and the New
opponent -George Romney - ,
OrleansBieamshlp Association (NOSSA) announced approval'of
who had pulled out 12 days
PLEASANT VAIJ.EY
the pact Tuesday.
Names of patients admitted before but stayed on the baDot,
.Alfred.Cblttenclen, president of !LA Local 1418, called the .
and a wrtle-Ul 10!' ]'lew Yor!l
CQOriCr''llle belt In the nation," It cille for an hourly wage Nll:e tempor~ omllted. ·
Gov.
Nelson RoCkefeller.
DISCHARGES: L.ucllle
of
above the current '4.60 over the three years of the con- Moreland,
Rep. Paul N. McCloskey, a
Mrs. Carl Gillispie
tract, tncreaaed fringe benefits and a guaranteed annual wage. and daughter,
California
Iibera[ who camMrs. John
Prisner and son, Mrs. Roger paigned on an antiwar platPutney and son, Orville White, fonn, oaid he would pull out of
Point Pleasant; Helen the race if his final total dipped
Thacker, Pliny; Mrs. Jackie below 20 per cent. H not, Mc-Lyons, Pomeroy; Johnnie Closkey said he would go on to
Roush, New Haven, and Mrs. Massachusetts, Rhode lsland,
Charles Litchfield, Southside. and Oregon. Rep. John M. Ashlrook of Oblo, carrying the
banner for GOP conservatives,
finished third.
CLUB TO FORM
The DemO«ratic primary
All
~ Five Point&amp; Star Stlt- · llaUot showed, with 77 per cent
2 Ply Polyester Sizes
· chen 4-H Club will be of the precincts counted:
2 Ply Fiberglass
~pnized at a meeting to be Muskie, 34,220 votes and 48 per
beld at 8:30p.m. Tbunday at cent of the vote; McGovern,
White Wall or Black Walls
the home of Mrs. Roy Holter on 25,882 votes and 36 per cent;
Route 7.
Mayor Ssm Yorty of Los
Angeles, 4,534 votes and 6 per
cent; Sen. Vance . Hartke fi
RIDERS TO MEI!."1'
Indiana, 2,125 votes and 3 per ·
A 4-H Riding Club will be cent; Rep. WDbur Mills of
organ Ireel at 1p.m. Saturday at Arkansas, 3,208 votes and 5 per
the home of Larry and Jan cent, and Sen. Edward M.
Jones at Sycamore Grove.
Kennedy of Massachusetts, 8M
votes and 1 per cent.
The Republican ballot, with
TAX INCLUDED
77 per cent of the precincts'
LOCAL TEMPS
counted
showed Nixon, 60,3$2
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m. votes and 69 per cent of the
Wednesday was 38 degrees, vote; McCloskey, 17,508 votes
282 W. Main
Ph. 992-2995
Pomeroy, 0.
and 20 per cent, and Ashbrook,
under sunny skies.
8,363 votes and 10 per cent.
Nixon swept all14 delegates
to the GOP National Convention. Muskle with 33per cent o(
the precincts In was leading for
16 of 20 delegates to the
Democratic National Convention while McGovern had four.

..

'

•

&gt;

i Small
"Karefrfe"
.

VINYL RUGS

Margie Nesbitt
Di m
• Texas

-~-

..2.19.Size .•....-..............;Sale 1A9
3.19 Size.~-··-· ....... Sale 2A9
.,._
r:...
___. ..
3.19
$3.49 "Imperial" ·

2.95'· COMET

RUGS
With Sure-Grip Latex backing for skid resistance
and safety. Fringed and unfrlnged ends.
Machine washable - preshrunk - machine
dryable. All colors in this 24x42" rug.
Sale
This Weekend

1.99

, All Purpose

Throw Rugs . Throw Rugs.

'
24x45"
Hit and Miss Pattern
In br lght woven
stripes.

Reversible
washable - quick
drying. 24" wldl! . 45"
Long.

, Sale

Sea The New DI'Gperl•
·W.
. Ith
Pradlcal .Thermal
'

'·

r

That keep heat out during summer and
cool out during winter. Thanks to new
· acrylic foam · lln,ng - . 'Completely
washable and permanent press.

84''
a~d .90" lengths
.
'
in a I09d selection
patterns and colors

·Latex.. ·Eolna,. Pillows

KiiiK!_., · .

.
Air-vented for cool sleeping 1 co.mfort ,
Molded one piece 100 percent Latex foam
zippered removable ·cover • attractive daisy
print · non-allergenic.
'

REMINGTON
BIAS BELTED

Beautiful' Windows Made Easy
Dacron Ninon 100% Polyester

TIRES

TAILORED CURTAINS

"'

-··

.

Machine washable- Little or no ironing. 80" wide
per pair . Beautiful shades - White, Eggshell,
Maize, Corai,'Rose, Min.t, Avocado, Blue.

'

,.

"

36" ......... 3.69
45" ......... 3.89
54" ......... 4.19
..... ;; .. 4.59

72" ······•· 4.79
81" ......... 4.99
90'' .... ···~· 5.39

See!

Size 24x48 - fringed ends. Oriental pattern In redgold. Thursday. Friday and Saturday.

In the second round of pl&amp;f,
Tuesday of the Meigs Girla'
Basketball Tourney,
Ro4nd ·
and Retangular Shags with
Nelaonville-York squeezed by'
, fringed ends·. All colors.
Belpre 38 to 34 and Gallipolis
$7.95 3 Ft. ROUND . . - - - ..• SALE H.UU
defeated Aleunder 44 to 30. .'•
$1i.U 3d
· · • • ,
SAL
For GaWpolla Carolyn Swain·.
led with 15 points followed· by1
Helen Akers with 14, CarOl ~
Sale! At E, ............... ........ ~~ ""'"'"" ......... .... ,.. c.·~••If
. Folden 9, Jackie Beiln~tt ,'
Sherrie King and Connie Cotton:.
I
2 each.
:
For Alexander, Buckley had '
i!py• and girl• blcycies In COI]Vtntlonel' 26 Inch size - Tho
12, Allbaugh 7, Moore·6, Gault • ·P"pular 20 Inc!&gt; bikes with blne!l'i SHts and hi-rise handle .
'!!a"· Boys and girl• bikes with trainer wheels - plus a big
and Hayhurst 2 each, and HaU
Mlecllon ot games tor boys and girls. Fine telectlon of Jig
I.
Saw puzzles at sale prices. Doll Furnll\lre - Tricycles For· Nelsonville Dexter had
Wagons.
Slop In -look aroond. 'l'oo c1n r•lly save during Elberfelds·
17, Coffman II, Duffy 7, Conrad
Sale In the new Annex"'oli Molin Strtet.
2 and Devol I.
For Belpre, Scritchfield had
17, Moore 6, Lagston 3, S.
Moore, Lewill, Cooper and
Be Thrjftyt Save All of ·YoQr
.MiUer 2 each.
Friday, Albens will play •
GaUipolla at 8 p.m. and Meigs
wiU go against Southern at 8
p.m:

()lllitJ Alii Accent Rues

·.Ovais

.,

·INGELS FURNITURE
! ·.
!!

MIDDLEPORT
PH. 992-2635

'

'

• '

.

~

·I

'

'

I

, •

loll f

.
GOO!) SELEC'P{ON
..
.
..
' ;.. .,,.,

'

.

'

.ggt .
'

Size
18x%4,

FAST INSTAllATION-NO WAtnNG!

.

. ''.

'

......

-

;'·

-

,

NO. XXIV .

NO. 232

1' ' .

.

'

larceny and forgery. ·
A Hughes spokesman in Los
Angeles declined immediate
comment "until further studies
of the indictments."
The indictments followed
investigations of more than a
month which heard testimony
from scores of acquaintances
of the lrvings and former
associates of Hughes.
The tangled case first broke
into the news with the announcement Dec. 7 by
McGraw-Hill Inc. that it would
publish Irving's book on March
'rl. The publishing company
said the book was based on a
series of face-to-face interviews with Hughes that

Irving claimed to have made
over several months.
A spokesman for Hughes,
who was then on Paradise
Island in the Bahamas, immediately branded Irving's
claim 11 Untrue" and said
Hughes knew nothing of a
$65(),000 publisher's payment to
him for the book. Irving said he
gave two checks "personally"
to Hughes and a third to a
trusted Hughes aide.
Irving produced canceled
checks endorsed " H . R.
Hughes" and said the funds
had been deposited in numbered Swiss bank accounts.
But on Jan. 21 the Swiss Credit
Bank of Zurich revealed the
accounl supposedly held by

Hughes and which held
deposits of $650,000 from
McGraw-Hill and
Life
magazine , which had con·
tracted to publish excerpts, did
not belong to Hughes.
-

.

Both McGraw-HiU and Life
decided to delay publication.
Early in February.. Irving
suddenly confessed that hla
wife, using the name "Helga R.
Hughes," had deposited the
publishers' checks in the Swiss
bank. Following that admission, Swiss authorities
charged Mrs. Irving, the
mother of two young boys, with
forgery, perjury, counterfelUng and larceny and
asked for her extradition.

Kleindeinst Said Unfit
. WASHINGTON (UP!) -Columnist Jack !Anderson
charged today that Richard G.
Kleindienst was "unfit to be
attorney general" because of
the ''major role" he played in
settlement of antitrust cases
against International
Telephone &amp; Telegraph Corp.
Anderson appeared as a
witness before the Senate

Judiciary ~ComDiittee , WhiCh is
considering President Nixon's
appointment of Kleindien,st as
Attorney General and charges
that settlement ol the ITT
cases was linked with an ITT
offer of $400,000 to underwrite
the 1972 Republican National
Convention.

''There can be no doubt that
Mr. Kleindienst played a major

role in the settleml'!lt J)f the .
ITT antitrust cases," Anderson
said in prepared testimony.
"He helped bring about a
settlement experts have denounced as a sham."
'Anderson said Kleindienst is
a man who "has trouble
recognizing a crime when he
sees one." The columnist said
Kleindienst had protested it
was "customary" for political
conventions to receive such
contributions, although, An·
derson said, the practice
"directly and clearly violates"
the Corrupt Practices Act.
"This country needs as its
top law enforcement officer a
man who understands the law
and respecls the truth," Anderson said.
"Richard
Kleindienst is not such a man.
He is unfit to be attorney
general."
Kleindienst emphatically has
denied knowledge of the convention contribution offer or
any other impropriety in the
setUement of the case. He was
nominated to succeed John N.
Mitchell, who left the attorney
general's office March 1 to
manage Nixon's re-election
campaign.
Anderson, whose disclosures
have helped fuel the rrr
controversy, also testified he
had information that ITT

planned an ''all-out effort to
discredit" Dita D. Beard, its
washington lobbyist. Anderson
earlier published a memo by
Mrs. Beard linking the $1
billion antitrust settlement
with the convention con·
tribution. She is being treated
in a Denver hospital for a heart
condition.
Anderson said that earlier
testimony before the Committee indicated that former
Kentucky Gov: Louie B. Nunn
"has perhaps the most erratic
memory in the history of
American politics."
Nunn told the committee
about an ''embarrassing'' con·
frontation between Mrs. Beard
and Mitchell at a postKentucky Derby party at the
Kentucky , governor's mansion
last May.
But when his colunm on the
Beard memorandum first was
·published, Anderson said,
Ntuon said he did not know
whether Mitchell had met Mrs.
Beard at his home.
Anderson described as
~'false" Mitchell's statement
that he was not involved in
Republican Convention
negotiations and had no
knowledge of anyone from the
GOP Commit~&lt;~ or elsewhere
dealing with ITT. Anderson
(QmUnued on page 12)

IN CONCERT - Meigs Junior High School instrumental

students are hard at rehearsals preparing for their annual
seventh and eighth grade bands concert Friday night at 8 in
the school auditorium. Here's the flute section of the eighth

24136.
,

~~

"

1\

S.lalp From

·...

\(

---

Mostly cloudy and cold
tonight with a chance of light'
snow north. Lows In the upper
teens and 20s. Variable
cloudiness and warmer Friday
with highs in lhe 30S north and
upper 40S and lower 50s south
an.d central.

grade band. From the lefl are Sandie Sayre, l!lsther Lowery,
' Brenda Bolin, Crystal Glaze, Terri Owens, Katrina Batey,
Mary Rusche!, Tina Duffy and Ida Case!. See band program
and rosters on page 4.

Senate Revising Mining Bill
COLUMBUS (UPI)-A
Senate s ubco mmittee
reworking a House-passed
strip mine control bill today
adopted amendmends setting
up a special board to study
reclamation of "orphaned"
lands, and diverting half the
receipts from Ohio's natural

resources severance tax
toward reclamation.
The work of the Senate Urban and Highway Affairs subcommittee took place in relative quiet, with only a small
audience present. Wednesday,
the three-man panel had worked before a capacity crowd of
251).300 persons, mostly from
mining companies.
Sen. Harry L. Armstrong, RLogan, chairman of the subcommittee, proposed the
amendment on the severAnce
tax. He said the severance tax

Welker Manages
Bill on Floor

Weather

Size
•

TEN CENTS

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

on coal of four cents per ton
Also adopted was an amend·
would produce $3.2 million for ment offered by Meshel, set·
reclamation during the bienni- ting up a seven member board
um .
to study restoration of or·
The money would be placed phaned land and report to the
in an unreclaimed land lund to legislature by Aprll 30, 1973.
pay for cleaning up water polOther amendments adopted
lution and resto ring "or· would:
phaned" lands - those
- Require mining comstripped in days before strip panies to have soU tests made
mining controls were in before they attempt to
existence and deserted by the revegetate stripped areas.
mining companies.
- Allow the state ReclamaArmstrong and Sen. Harry tion chief to set standards for
Meshel,
D-Youngstown,
adopted the amendment
without a vote. The third
subcommittee member, Sen.
David S. Holcomb, R-Dayton
who had favored the House
version with a minimum of
change, arrived at the meeUng
late and left it to conduct a
television interview in the
HARRISBURG, Pa. (UPI)corridor.
Boyd F. Douglas, the for.ger,
impersonator and two-time
convict whO was an informant
against the Harrisburg seven,
thought he would like to be an
FBI man after his parole-or
at least work for the Bureau as
a career.
That was his testimony
Wednesday on cross~xamina­
tion in the case of the Rev.
Philip F _ Berrigan and six
other opponents of the Vietnam
war being tried on char~es of

MA!YORS A'M'END DINNER MEETING - :J'hree Meigs-Mason towns
were represented at the Wednesday night dinner meeting of the Mid.Ohio
Valley Mayor's Association In Marietta where a report on President Nixon's
proposed revenue sharing plan was given. Above are mayors of towns
rep~esented and Association officials, from left, J. Carl Rhillehart, mayor of
Pennsboro, W. Va., president of the West Virginia Council of Towns and
Cities: William Baronick, mayor of Pomeroy ;·Margaret Bowersock, mayor
of Belpre and treasurer of the Mld.Ohio Valley Mayor's As&gt;;oclation: P. A.
Nitzley, mayor of Parkersbur~ and president of the Mid.Ohiv Valle)'
L

Mayor's Association ; John Musgrave , mayor of Point Pleasant; Roy
Harless, mayor of Mason, and Mayor James Swigert, ~ecretary of the
organization and mayor of Marietta. Council and other representatives from
Meigs-Mason area also present were Jack Juniper and Leonard E. Riffle,
councilmen, Point Pleasant; Fred Samsel, Joe Jones and Richard Fowler,
Mason councilmen, and Gary Gibbs, Mason recorder ; Donald Collins,
councihnan of Pomeroy, and Charles Legar, Board of Public Affairs,
Pomeroy .

the use of explosives In strip
mining. Such standards were
written into the House-passed
version of the bill.
Rep. Sam Speck, R-New
Concord, chief sponsor the bill,
said he believed the proposals
on the severance tax and the
reclamation fund for orphaned
lands were "probably a good
idea." He said he had Included
similar provisions in his original biU but they were removed
in the House.

Informer Wanted
Work With FBI

Jury

'

'

'· I~,~·..

;).:,

' ~

.,
ELBERFELD$' IN 'POMERO~··

l

wild horses, which are known
in the business as ''mustangs."
The classic definition of
Mustang is, a 1111111U, wiry but
tough horse directly descended
by blood from the horses the
Spaniards .used In their land
invasions of the .southwestern
lands. of what now are Texas,
Arizona, New Mexi.co and
Colorado in the 16th and 17th
Centuries.
Through the centuries since,
the Spanish horse interbred
with other strains including
those brought into the region
by American settlers later.
Today the Musl;lng is
(ConUnued on page 5)

flrwoted To The lnleres" Of The Meigs-Mason .4rea
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT OH!O
THURSDAY. MARCH 9, 1972
PHONE 992-2156

COLUMBUS
State
Representative Ralph Welker
(,R-Pomeroy) was floor
manage~ for the bill passed
recently to increase by over ~
miUion pension benefits to
police and firemen . The bill
was sent to the Senate for
concurrence to House amend·
ments.
''Those who have served our
communities In protecting us
against the ravages of crime
and destruction, subjecting
themselves to great risks,
certainly deserve the greater
benefits of this bill," said
Welker, who co-sponsored the
bill.

Win in 2nd Round

.·a,cvcuGiaque.'.Aa,a.Rugs

now rou can afford
wall·tO• Will
carpeting for all
rour tloon.

NEW YORK (UPI) - Author
Clifford Irving, his wife and a
researcher were indicted by a
New York County grand jilry
today on charges of perjury,
fraud and grand larceny
arising from the now officially
discredited "autobiography"
of eccentric billionaire Howard
Hughes.
A federal grand jury, which
has also been investigating the
bizarre case, was expected to
announce its actions shortly.
Irving
and
author-.
researcher Richard Suskind
were indicted by the county
panel on charges of grand
larceny, forgery and perjury in
the second degree. Mrs. Edith
Irving was charged with grand

NEW YORK - THE 100 LARGEST corporations in the
nation made $29.4 billion in profits last year - a 76 per cent increase, according to Gallagher Presidents' Report. General
Motors Corp. made the largest gain - 217.9 per cent, the report
said Wednesday. The gain compared with a sharp drop in the
company's 1970prolits because of a long strike late in that yearNot counting GM's results, the other 99 firms showed a 70.8
per cent rise in aggregate after-tax profits, to $27.5 billion. The
report said the 76 per cent rise in profits was made on a 10 per
(Continued on page 12)

. N-Y ' Gallipolis

Come!

· DEUVERED EVANS' MUSTANGS - Mary Ann (Sue)
Chandler, 21, left, and Mrs. Jan Edgerton, neighbors and
friend&amp; of Gusher, Utah, drove a pickup truck from there to
the Bob Evans' Farms at Rio Grande loaded with five wild
horses. They were lui use guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bob Evans,
· Gallipolis, from Saturday until Wednesday _ '

By United Pressllllernational
SAIGON - AN AMERICAN SECURITY patrol tripped a
guerrilla booby trap near Da Nang Wednesday, wounding eight
soldiers, the u.S. Command said today. Two U.S. jets were
Jlowned in separate incidents and two pilots were reported
missing.
In other action in the widening air war, U. S. Phantom F4s
made three "protective reaction" strikes against Communist
"'811Uaircraft sites, all of them strafing runs by the fighter·
bom~rs after Communist gunners opened fire on unarmed
recomaissance aircraft .

POMEROY' SUNOCO

Now!

he said.
Mrs. Edgerton is all
Western . When she and her
·husband were married they
took a homestead In Alaska .
After 15 years they sold out and
bought a SOQ.acre catUe and
sheep ranch at Gusher, a town
barely big enough to be
recorded on highway maps. It
Is about IOOmlles east of Provo
and 20 miles south of-Vernal,
which is on old Route 40 in
northeastern Utah. Alarge Ute
Indian reservation is nearby.
In places, next door neighbors
live 50 miles away!
As a sort of hobby, the
Edgertons catch and breed

'Grand

Sale 1.39

~.39

·Visit ·the Drapery· Dep~rtment •

••.so

Thousands
Of Yards Of
Carpeting
In AVast
Array of
Cobs

above Bob Evans Sausage
House. .
"We'lladd some more mares
and build a herd of as pure
mustang stock as possible,"
said Evans Saturday. They will

ago. No other 'such sales are
· known , besides that to Evans.
So why has EvaiU", whose·
sausage is a by-word fn three
states, this thing going on
Mustangs ?
"When I was out West a year
or so ago on vacation I saw
herds of wild horses,
something we've- all read
about, heard about, saw picturesof, but have never seen in
U1e flesh in Ohio," Evans said.
"It seemed like a good idea
to have some Mustangs on our
farm in Gallia County as
another attraction for the
Uoousands of people, young and
old, who visit us every year,"

$1.89 Mt. Maid

All r:"urpose

•
B
•
News • • • zn rze s

All in Stock

Wild horses, or the
'old Welit', are another
attraction on Evans
Farms at Rio Grande.

serve no farm or recreational
purpose.
'IIWedon't plan to break them
to riding," said Billy Wells,
who operates a riding stables
on the Evans Farm, parUy for
lhe convenience of Rio Grande
College students who take their
riding instruction for college
credit from Wells. It was Wei~
who went to old Mexico last
year to go with natives there to
capture "in the wild" the first
four mustangs on Evan s '
Farm.
Evaqs' herd will be unique,
or nearly so, east of the
Mississippi. Two animals were
sold in Florida several years

_"'"":

Three Fined

Savinp on

Mustangs already on his farm
obtained last year in Mexico .
Nine Mustangs - tho&lt;e
mares and six stallions - will
be quartered on the hillside

__ _

-"-{{:.

.CARPETING

RIO GRANDE -Wanta buy
a Mustan&amp;? And catch it \001•
· You can buy one for $35, and
$10 each for aU after the first,
on the Ute Indian lleservation
near Gusher, Utah. But the
trouble is you have to catch
him , That requires more
energy and know-bow than
most "easterners" possess.
That's one way to get your
Mustang, according to Mrs.
Jan Edgerton of Gusher. The
best way is as Bob Evans,
president of Bob Evans Fanns
Inc., Rio Grande, did it. He
bought five recenUy from a
neighbor rancher of Mrs.
Edgerton's to add to four

in Session

The Meigs County grand jury
was in session Thursday at the
court house considering
evidence for possible indictments as presented by
Prosecuting Attorney Bernard
Fultz.
Making up the jury are
Ronald E. Hart, Margaret E.
Ohlinger, Dallas Hill , M.
Josephine Hargraves, Nancy
B. Reed, Margie Benedum,
Charles VanCooney, David
Grate, Leo Morris, Charles E.
White, William H. Hoback,
Granville Stout, Nick Grueser,
Jessa ·M. Brannon and Grace
Price. Mrs. Reed is forelady .

plotting to kidnap Presidential
adviser , Henry A. Kissinger,
sabotage Washington heating
tumels and vandalize draft
boards.
Douglas has testified he
smuggled letters between the
imprisoned Berrigan and the
other defendants while he, too,
was a prisoner in 1970 in
Lewisburg Penitentiary. He.
turned FBI informant on June
3, !970 and gave the Bureau
copies of the alleged conspiratorial messages.
But even before that, he said,
when he heard Berrigan
talking about blowing up the
heating ducts, he m~ de copies
because "it was my intent in
the future to make sure the FBI
had this information."
"So you were collecting
evidence for the FBI 'without
their knowledge, or consent-it
was your own idea :" asked
defense attorney Paul O'D·
wyer .
"My own idea," Douglas
replied.
..
He met with FBI agents that
June to make arrangements
for his informant work, he Said,
and later met . again with
Special
Agent
Delmar
(Continued on Page

.

. '

I

9)

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="723">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11123">
                <text>03. March</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="52802">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52801">
              <text>March 8, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="205">
      <name>clark</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="265">
      <name>hoffman</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7866">
      <name>nesbitt</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
