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                  <text>10- Tilt DlllySentlnei,MH' PIIW'aiaeJ,O., IIA'dll!, lfl2

Kenn~dy Says .Puhlic Duped Court

ocks Down Excessive
~7:,;..:6 ~~ ~--::."=~: Residency Voting Restrictio~
Lee w·m·s $1 000 5th T.tl
I e
WASHINGTON (UP!) -

possible device to end outright schools when he was reaDy

schools when he advanced hts
plan to ease forced busing of
school children.
KeMedy' In a Senate speech
Monday, denounced Nixon's
caD lor a moratorium on new
busing plans and expenditure
of $2.5 billion to gpgrade inferior schools. KeMedy said he
was against "Indiscriminate
bu sing that risks Ute health of
children."
"But I also recognize that in
many situations busing has
been and stiU is Ute only

segregated educational
systems where they continue to
exist and penni! to those
districts who have tried to
desegregate the forlorn hope
that they too might return to
the separate but equal system
of Ute past - a system which
while separate had never been
equal."
KeMedy said Nixon "duped
the American public" because
the President implied he was
proposing to add $2.5 billion In
new funds to improve Inferior

25 m' B---~n::i1A

·

.

.. . . .. .. -- --r .. -

· WASHINGTON (UPl) -

The were not on the court when the ·'
CINCINNATI (UPI) SupremeCourtstruckdownas case was argued, did n:ot
Tweaty ftve prilooers, In- unconstitutional today any parUclpate In the ruling.
clutliDJ foar womea llld four state requirementa of a year's Marshall's declaion did not
'
'
.
.
·
mate murder auapeels, siOle residence before a person can rule out relildency requirement
Dal Joon Lee of cieveJandl, $i,ooo with his victory.
2i·10, 21,., 21·13.
weapou and eacaped from vote,in an election.
altogether.
won his fifth sll'aight U. S. Tannehlll · earlier had
Tannehill, Invited to play
lbe Hamilton COUDiy Jill 00
The 6-1 ruling came in a He said "fixing a con- table tennis championship knocked off third-eeecled Earl with the u. s. team to play a
the. a•~•
Door
of
lbe
CO"~
.
Tennessee
test case.
stitutionally acceptable sun day. night at Hofstra Resek 3-0 'In the eighth round, . --ri-••..UCIIII In "
-·
......
wv
The
~ of .......,.
"""
opinion
was
written
by
walling
period
Is
'
surely
a
houte Moaday Dllht after a J ti Th ood M
UniversitY, by defeating John and J. Park of Los Angeles, York City, Waslilngton, D. C.,
trolly pulled 8 guo on 'tusthce urg
arshaU. In matter of degree" and added: Tannehill. of Middleport in the fonner sb:th ranked In Japan, Chicago ai\d San FraDclleo·
I,
e court· also Invalidated
Congress set 30.days when in !)emi fmals three games to one 3-1 In the quarter flnala.
several guanll.
·
during April with a
Two of the es&lt;apees were another part of Tennessee law 1970 it aboUshed long term ln best of five games, then
His match with Lee, who repreaentaUve team fr«n. the ·
captured by police by early which bars people from voting residence requirements as a destroying Jack Howard of appeared in an eJ:bihition with Repul)1ic of China, will par.
today.ItwuflnlbeUevedH If they have not llved In their pre-condition to voting in Seattle,Wash., 3-0intheflnals. Tannehill in Middleport High licipatelfarrangemenllcanbe
pr!Hnen bad escaped bat county for three months.
presidential
and
vice
He picked up a check for School In the spring of 1969, completed for Ume oft tram ibe
aolboriUes said two of diem
Chief Justice Warren E. presidential elections.
went 21·14 Lee, 22-20 Lee, 21o12 Unlvenlty of Clnclnna~ where
were illlbe cell bloek area Burger was the lone dissenter.
I"'LTannehill and 21·16 Lee. he ezpects to begin his
Justice Harry A. Blackman
Y UutpmaD Howard feU to Lee In the finals quarter soon.
.,.
but had not been cooled.
concurred In the result but did Ve~~ns Memorial Hos.Pital _
;;; ;·
! tom®::&lt;~ not join the Marshall opinion . . VISiting hours 2-4 and 7-8:30
PT. PLEASANT
INTO CREEl[
SEWING CLASSES
Justices LewiB F. Powell Jr. ·p.m.
.
eS Ofi
WASHINGTON (UP!)
LIVESTOCK SALES®.
A minor accident was
The Securities and Exchange
Mrs . Robert Bumgarner and William H. Rehnquist who ADMITTED- Nancy Ours,
Lyle E. Chapman , 64 ,
Sen. Robert Taft Jr., R.ohio, Commission ts currently began instructions in Sewing
'·
Racine; Albert Rinehart, Long
Pt. PleaiiDt, W.Va.
reported to the Melp County
Bottom; Lori Maynard, Syracuse, died Monday afwants the Justice Department considering Ute request by with Knits on Thursday af.
Saturday; Mareb 18, 1972
sberlff's office that oceurred
to reconsider its opposition to Arnerican .!ObuytheColumbus temoon at St. Paul Lutheran
Racine; Carol Drake, New ternoon at the Holzer Medical
HOGS-175 tO 220 23.75 to 25, Sunday at 4:30p.m. on SR 143. .
Ute proposed merger of Ute stock. The Justice Department OnD"ch in New Haven with 21
S
Haven; Ada Stigliano, Port- Center.
Heavies 23.10 to 24.70, Ughts 22 John Henry Wright, 25,
land; Mary Wallace, Mid·
Mr. Chapman was born Oct. to 23, Fat Sows 21 to 23.75, Nelsonville, wasll'avelln!lwest
American Electric Power Co. has advised the commission it pupils enroUing In the class.
dleport; James Gibbs, Letart, 8• 1907 at Milton, W. Va., the Boars 19.90 to 21, Pigs 7 to 14, on 143 when his car went off ,
and the Columbus &amp; Southern does not approve of the ~e began with making T·
Ohio Electric Co .
proposal.
~lrtswiththecrewneckorVW. Va.; Pricey Tackett, son of the late Etna and Cora Stock Shoats 22 to 25.
the highway througb lbe Bob
Tan
said
he
released
the
letNeck.
She
also
showed
how
to
S,
0
eS
Ewington;
Jeb
Peckham,
Chapman.
He
retired
four
The Ohio senator Monday re·
CATTLE -Steers 30 to 34.25, Clark yard, stopping partiJ In a
leased Ute text of a letter he ter because the Justice Depart- use self binding 1n trims.
The Carleton Church had an Middleport; Beatrice Juhllng, years ago after working 41 Heifers 25 to 28.50, Fat Cows 23 creek bed. There were no 1n: ·
sent to acting Attorney General ment ''has had sufficient time · . Oasses wiU he held each attendance of 77 on Sunday, Hartford.
i:t":~n c::ocirr;:"~· w~~ ~: to 26.10, Canners· 18.75 to 23, juriea or arrests and no
Riclrard G. Kleindienst on In which to reply.'' He said 'llKirsday begirming at 12:30 at March 12. Offering was $I03.Z3.
DISCHARGED - Bruce Williams Coal Co. at West Bulls 26 to 28.60, Stock Cows damage to the car.
March 2, and in so doing ex- Klelndienat's current preoc- . the tutheran Church Multi- The superintendent, Ralph Caldwell, John Brewer, Col
and Calves 285 to 325, Stock
pressed anger over Ute lack of cupatlon with the Senate Purpose Room for eight weeks. Carl, awarded pins for perfect Kenneth Imboden .
Steers 30·to 37, Stock Heifers 27
LODGE TO MEET
Sumbia, W. Va.
Th
urviving are his wife, to 39, Stock Steer Calves 37 to
a reply from the Justice Judicla ry Committee hear1ngs Thi s
A
special
meeting of Shade
ursday,
Mrs. attendance to Jodi Harr•·on,
"' '•
PL"•"ANT VALI.EY
Emma;
two daughters, Behea 43, Stocl(Heifer Calves 33 to 38. River Lodge 453, FolrAM will he
Department.
onhisconflrmauonas aItomey Bumgarner wtU dem onstrate v,ears, . Garold and Sherman
""""
0
In Ute letter, Taft, said he general should not ''be allowed how t0 kn't
1a
ks
'·
Names
of
patients
admitted
'DeD and Jean Cremeans,
VEAL CALVES - Tops held Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at
1 s c ·
White, 3 years, Helen King, 11 have been temporarily both of RuUand ; three" sons,
was concerned "about the posi- to bamboozle a senator into
54.75, Seconds 53.50, Medium the hall in Olester. lnlpeclion
years, Brenda Ross and her discontinued until further Robert, Syracuse; Edward, In 44.75 to 53.25, common &amp; w1U he held and work will be In
tion of the Department of Jus- silence when he feels the In·
SUPPER SET
brotiher •f 8 years. Worship notice.
Akron, and Charles of Heavies 44.50 to 45, Cuus 42 to the E. A. Degree. AU master
tice that seems to me to be In- terests of his constiluents are
0owed with guest
being
jeopardized."
The
Tuppers
Plains
Com·
serv
ce
o
DISCHARGES:
Mrs.
Robert
Pomeroy;
two sisters, Mrs. 44.25..
correct from the legal point of
masons are Invited.
munity Women's Club wiU minister , Rev. William Craig, Middleport; Sheri Rhoads Norris, WintersVille,
view and contrary to the Inter·
sponsor a spaghetti supper at Garren,
Co
.giving the sennon. Dress, WeUaton, 0.; Mrs. Art and Mrs. Lu1a J ac ks,
ests of the electric consumers
the Tuppers Plains School
mrnun•on service was ob Hartley, Mrs. Jack McNeeley, Springfield; a brother, Martin
in Ohio wbo would receive an $II
begirmlng
at
4
p.m.
Saturday.
'lerved
following the worship Robert Anthony, Point . J., of New Bremen, and 11
miJUon rate reduction and
There iB a reduced rate for services with Rev. Jay Sltles Pleasant; · John Umbarger, grandchildren.
. better service through this ac(Col) linued from l!!i.l! I i
·
children's dinners.
the pastor.
Mason , and Taft Boston,
Funeral services will be held
quisition."
Mrs. CoeUe Hudson, Jim and Letart.
at 2 p.ni. Wednesday at the the Ohio West Area, and Keams, leader of 300,000 church
Victor Counte visited Mr. and
Martin Funeral Home in members In the Ohio EutArea, termed lotteries "a 1u upon the
Mrs.EUCounteofBeUvilleand
SING SCHEDULED
Rutland with the Rev. Ray poor." In letters to Sen. 'lbeodore M. Gray, Jt.Piqua, p1'eljdent
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Counte of
A hymn sing wiU he held Rouse officiating. Burial will P"O-tein of the Oblo Senate, mt Sen. Michael Maloney, ft.
Sheffield Lake, Ohio and they Sunday at 1:30 p.m. at the he in Rock Springs Cemetery. CincinnaU Senate majority leader, lbe chii'Ch leaciera laid a
The Women's Society of
al!lovisitedwithCoeUe'ssister, Stlversville Community FrlendsmaycaUatthefuneral state lottery woulll' be "a cruel lllllcement to those eagerly
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Perkins Church. Everyone iB invited. home any time.
Christian Service met at the
hoping to Improve their lot and to get rich quick."
and family of Marion.
church Tuesday evening.
ByEdliiiKnopp
Mr. Richard Dean, a siudent
Murl Galaway visited her Mrs . Bob Rhodes, misVisiting
recently
with
their
at
Asbury College, Wilmore,
sionary
chairman,
was
in
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Leon Woodrum and cnarge of the program using as parents, Mr. and Mrs. Otto Ky., iB spending a lew days
family in McArthur on her toplc "World Mllslons" Bradford was their sons, Paul horne with his parents, Mr. and
with singing o1 hymn "Let the of Athens, Brian of Wooster, Mrs. John Dean and John
Saturday.
Walter.
Mr . and Mrs. Earl Starkey lower lights he burning" with and Curtils of Findlay.
Steve Lavalley, son of
Miss Mary Lou King, home
ancj Carl Greenlees, Columbia Mrs. Florence Smith at the
Grange, were among the many plano. Scripture from the Bernard and Bernice Lavalley over the weekend from Mount
friends who attended Athena second chapter of James was is home after undergoing an · Vernon Nazarene College,
County Pomona Grange on read followed by Mrs. Bertha appendectomy at Veterans Mount Vernon, visited her
Memorial Hospital.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Thursday evening when the Robinson.
Relatives here for the servies King and family, also her
Mrs. DaUas Hll1 was In
Athena County J)eputies, Mr.
of
Harry Wolfe were Edith grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Walso Poston, were charge of the business
. WE LOVE YOU
honored for their 50th wedding meeting. The rummage sale Grimm of Kent, Archie and Webber W9od and grandanniversary. Mr. Starkey Is wiD he held in April in Racine. Patricia Tarr and children, mother, Mrs. Neva King.
Mrs. Jean Wood, who was
An offering was taken by Shawn and Beth, of Cuyahoga
State Grange Gatekeeoer.
Mrs. JuUa Norris to help with Falls, Th9mas and Barbara confined to Veterans Memorial
the dinner sponsored by the Brutvan and children, Jennifer Hospital, has returned home
AND YOUR OLD·FASHIONED SIZZLE
Cancer Crusade.
and Jeffery of Cincinnati, and iB improved.
Mr. and Mrs. John Perdas
Aget well card was signed by Albert and Jane Wolfe and
'
BY FORMFIT ROGERS
each member to he sent to Mrs. daughter, Susan of Olmstead and Mary of Harrisonville
Tonight, March 21
Mabel Roush who iB ill at her Falls and their son, Ronnie and entertained with a dinner
THE
Margaret
home.
Wolfe
and Sunday. Attending were Mr.
Samanthas prove there's nothing
ANDROMEDA STRAIN
daughters,
Kim
and
T.
J.
of
and
Mrs.
Wayne
Beal,
Karla
Mrs.
Bess
Parsons
gave
the
(Technicolor l
and Denise, Mr. and Mrs.
secretary and treasurer New Jersey.
Arthur Hill
like a white collar and/or a little
Max and Sherry Knopp spent Roger Young and Wesley,
David Wayne
reports. The ·.birthday of Mrs.
"G'
the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Russell WeD, Roger Dixon and
Roy Buck was celebrated.
lace to frame your face. Nothing
Cartoon :
Otis
Knopp.
They
were
acLinda
Beal.
Hostess
lor
the
even!Og
was
Search for Misery
Mr. Richard Hielrnan of
like color to put that sparkle
Mrs. Carroll White and Mrs. companied home by Lynn
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Mallory and Beckie Salser who Hemlock Grove spent Friday
James Hupp.
in your eye. "So becoming, dear!"
spent
the evening with them. afternoon with Mrs. Neva
Others
attending
were
Mrs.
Wl!dnosday &amp; Thursday
Betty and Kenn Cossin and King.
Arnold Hupp,.Mrs. Jack Ables,
March 21·23
as granny would say. Yes , and
children, Debbie and KeMy Jr.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
NOT OPEN
and a guest, Darla White.
and Keith of Columbus visited Mrs. Nev White were Myrtle
so easy to love: all these things
her mother, Mrs. Mildred White of MadiBon, W.Va., Mr.
Turner, who has been ill. They and Mrs. Harold White, local.
fly through the suds without
stayed with her brother
Mr . and Mrs . Walter
Charles and June Baker and llielrnan of BaD Run, Mr. and
a care In the world.
family . While here Linda Mrs. Ralph Chase of Columbus
Burkhart and friend of Detroit, spent Saturday evening with
Mich., accompanied them to Mrs. Neva King and Mr. and
the Gospel Sing at Huntington. Mrs. Harold White.
Mrs. Goldie Pickens and
Mr. and Mrs. Phil Harrison
daughters, Effie Elizabeth and and son, Rodney, of Columbus
Hazel Sellers and grand- visited with Mr. and Mrs. Olen
daughter, Kittle , spent a Harrison recently.
weekend viBiting her mother,
Mr. and Mrs. Dana Murray,
Mrs. Effie Haire, a sister, Mr. Greg and Tina, are spending a
and Mrs. Lester Smith, a few days in Tampa, Florida,.
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard They visited Mrs. Murray's
Short robe P·S·M·L$10.
Haire of East Uverpool and a relatives. They also visited in
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Port Richey with Mr. and Mrs.
Grohin of Freedom, Pa.
Theodore White, Dana's uncle.
Edna Knopp spent Monday
Mr. and Mrs. Peter Sewar of
with her daughter, Lois Ann Albion, New York and Mr. and
'
... IN BANKING TOO!
Sterrett, and grandson, Mike, Mrs . David McDonald of
who were confined to their Columbus visited Mr. and Mrs.
home with the mwnps. .
Eddie King and chlldren ·
Mr. and Mrs. Otis ·Knopp recently.
But the friendliness is still here. Our
accompanied by his brother,
Mrs. Hazel Arnold and
personnel are here to help you with all
doll P·S· M$8.
Mr. and Mrs. Ovle Knopp of Walter had a• recent·
Gay, W. Va., visited Sunday viSitors Mr. ana Mrs. Patitck.
your banking problems, no matter how
I
evening with their sister, Opal Wllllams and children of
small. You'll always get a warm wei·
Pinkerton who Is a patient at McArthur, Mr. and Mrs.
the St. Francis Hospital In RonaldM~NaUy of Athens, Mr.
come and personal service from our peoCharleston.
and ·Mrs. Lester Arnold and
ple. Stop in today and see.
Emma Johnson and son, Billy of Columbuit and Mr. and
Jerry, accompanied her sister, Mrs . William Drake of
Alice SheviUe to her home in Columbus.
Eut Uverpool. She had spent
Mr. and Mrs. John Dean
Short IIOWn P·S·M·L $7.
I'IHf ~ YOU VISil PARK fREE
several weeks vlalting with visited recentiy with Mr .. and
Emma.
Mrs . Clali· Waggoner at
.PITTSBURGH
Bill Beegle of OU In Athens 1·HarriBonvWe, Mr. and Mrs.
and llrtJce of Columbua spent Paul Paynter of Carpenter,
the past weekend here with Mr. and Mrs. John Gillogly and
I
their
parents,
Bob
and
Martha
sons,
Carpenter,
and
Mr.
and
....C.,9HCIHI~AT1 .
. ,
Lou Beegle.
Mrs. Oerold Gilkey and family
Thomas Beegle 1.1 spending at Athena.
this month Yilitlng with his
Richard Dean and Juanita
CGUIIn, Mildred Mercer, In Terrell visited recently with
FICII'icla. Ht will a1ao visit with their aunt and uncle, Mr. and
MIDDLEPORT( OHIO
Don Herbert Powell and visited Mrs. Robert Rled and a1ao with
Melilbelo
me c.·;iiJQ)
with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mr. and Mrs. Walter Terrell of
IIIJiarr lD Atllnla, Ga.
Pateelre!n oil
}

L 1e

Merger Revived

ap.-.

Di M da
Y

KI•ng bur Y
New N t

News ••• in Briefs

Apple Grove

Carpenter

News, Events Dorcas
Social
Notes
News, Event

ELBERFELDS IN POMERO·Y

Tax Repeal
·Could Fall
'

OOLUMBUS (UP!) -The Ohio Education AssociaUon hal
ffied papers with the Ohio SUPreme Court claiming the alate
t;OIIIIltutlon would be violated if a drive to repeal the new Income
tax iB successful.
Wllltiun C. McDonald, president of the OEA, said the
teachers group asked the high Court to _consider the OEA brief
during Its tlellberaUons on another acUon brought by five state ·
representatives, headed by Rep. Joseph Tully, ft.Mentor.
The five lawmakers have asked the court to order Attorney
General William Brown to certify a proposed constitutional
. amendment ending the tax to Secretary of State Ted Brown so It
can he placed on the November bailot.
The amendment if successful, would halt collection of fulfill his duties under the state
the Income tax next Jan. 1.
conatltutlon · and various
The OEA contends the statutes but it cannot order him
amendment would violate that to certify the amendment and
section of the Ohio ConsUtution its ballot summary as drafted
which prohibits the state from by the representaUves.
going Into debt more than
$750,000.
McDonald said that meant
the
attorney general could
In eddition, according to McDonald, the Oea contends tax refuse to certify the amendrepeal would "throw the state ment and summary or allow I~
and the political subdivisions using his jusgment.
The OEA contended If the ~
into financial chaos while such
(conatltutional) questions are come tax question Is submitted
being resolved."
to the electorate and repel!led,
TheOEA,In its brief, said aU it would throw Ohio's school
the Supreme Court can do Is system "Into the most severe
order the Attorney General to financial crisis In history."

HAVE

CHR06ED

CHOOSE YOUR FAVORITE
STYLE IN VIOLET VAMP
OR STRAWBERRY.

litbens·,alional
,_...,_QIJ.a•

SCUFFS TO MATDi

.

.

Cookson Wins·

Route 554 Job
Ben Cookson, Inc., New existing, temporary and new
Philadelphia, was apparent pavement. The estimated
low bidder at $737,994.05 completion date Is Oct. 31.
Tuesday for the improvement
. I&amp;'L '."
and relocaUon of three secUons lCb
of Ohio Rt. 554 In Cheshire
Firemen's Study
Twp.
The engineer's estimated
was $806,700. The project had
been deferred from the first
Begins Friday
quarter flscal1972 construction
1;:
program due to a shortage of
•
&lt;
'
state construction lunda.
p.m. Fijday at llie S.Dd
Ward. 'ftrehoute to beglll
It conalsts of three sections,
lDIIr'aelloa Ia basle· fire
one west of Kyger and two he·
fi&amp;IIIID&amp; melliodl, a part of a
tween Kyger and Cheshire
fire lclleol wbldl Ill to ...
toteUng two and three tl!nths
mllll. -Plans call ior new 26- COiidllelld-a-Dy.. ,. _....
.Tiae Jl.hour coune will be
!0ot pavement and bridges to
taacbl by Capt. Cooley of die
carry Rt. 554 ll'afflc ovar
Albe111 Fire Departmeaf.
Kyger and Jessie ·Creeks and
Alleadaace II ma•datory
township road 17 over Kyger
aiid
oaly lbOH lllvolved 111
Creek. Grades wtU he raised
abllt
wort will 11o esc:med 11
above flood level and alignII reported. Friday mgbt'l
ment wtU he adjusted to im·
prove sight distances . 1esaloa will be approximately three bonn 111
Relocations will bypass lour
leogtb.
Inadequate bridges. Traffic
wlll be maintained over

f~a :! m!o:e::~

•

ews•• rn

MEIGS tHEATRE

TIMES

.

By United Prepjmeraatloaal
COLUMBUS - DISGRUNTLED GUARDS at the 138-year
old Ohio Penitentiary today refused to let inmates out of their
cells untO pison officials agreed to meet a series of guard
demands. The 11,900 Inmates agreed Tuesday night to end a work
strllt:e.
' The guards were angry with conc...ions granted to the
convicts, Including long hair and beards and a boost of $25 a
month lilY, and presented Warden Harold Cardwell with
demands of th~ir own. Cardwell and State Coorectiona &lt;ltlef
Bemett Cooper were to meet today with guards and their unlon
representaUves.

WASHINGTON - THREE INFLUENTIAL union leeders
were reported prepared today to quit President Nixon's Pay
Board and argue for a total labor boycott of the government body
which conll'ols wage incteases. Labor sources said the union
leaders would present their ease at a conference at which labor
will decide whether to continue cooperating with the government
wage program.
The three Pay Board members reported ready to quit were
AFL-CIO President George Meany; Floyd Smith, president ol
the International Association of MachlniBts, and I.
Abel,
president of the United Steelworlters.

w.

CLEVELAND - OHIO ATI'ORNEY General William J.
Brown today filed a 'f45 miJUon damage suit against Dow
Qlemlcal Co., BASF Wyandotte Corp. and Dow Chemical of
Canada for mercury pollution of Lake Erie.
Brown said Ute companies knew or should have known that
mercury or mercury compounds are ,Inherently dangerous
aublltances that can cause pennanent damage to humans. "It 1.1
Ume that thiB wanton use of Lake Erie as a dumping ground for
mel-cury, which could be recycled, be ended, and that the parUee
reeponsible he forced to pay for their role In thiB tragic
sltuatton," said Brown.

..

VOL XXIV NO. 241

Devoud To. The
Intere~ll Of The Meiga·MtUOn
Area
.
~

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO ·

Mus

ELBERFELDS

'.

'

Pace a!J

•

•

Ins,

e

CHICAGO (UP!) - Sen. Edmund S. Muskie revived his faltering Democratic presidential
campaign in Tuesday's IUinois primary, taking more than 60 pet. of Ute vote over Eugene J . McCarthy. Muskie headed for the next big showdown in Wisconsin saying, "This has Ute taste of a clearcut victory."
But there was little or no taste of victory for Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago, Ute Democralic
111rty kingmaker.
His candidate for the pivotal post of Cook County state's attorney was soundly whipped by the
man Daley had dumped as an endorsed candidate, incumbent Edward V. Hanrahan. And his choice
lor the gubernatorial nomination, Lt. Gov. Pavl Simon, was trailing maverick anli-Daleyite'Da niel
Walker.
A massive crossover of 634,623 votes, 63 per cent, to votes and 51 per cent to 566,952
votes and 49 per cent.
Republican voters to the 375,118 votes, 37 per cent.
Hanrahan Clear VIctor
With 45 precincts reporting,
Democratic primary appeared
Hanrahan was a clear victor
to he the key factor in returns indicated Muskie had
threatening Daley wtth a 51 delegates pledged or with 43 per cent of Ute votes in a
him
against three-way race. Daley's pick to
defeat which could grievously favoring
affect his stature as the McGovern's 19. Both Muskie replace him as the party's
Democrat who caDs the shots and McGovern conceded about choice, fonner Chief Traffic
In IUinois and speaks loudly in 80 of the 160 at stake to an Court Judge Raymond Berg,
the councils ol the national "uncommitted" slate com- got31percentandindependent
mitted to the wishes of Daley. contender Donald Page Moore
ll'rty. '
Reiurns from 8,862 precincts 27 per cent.
But for Maine's Muskie,
Rep. Roman Pucinski was
badly needing a comeback showed Walker, who coined the
C!!IEF OF POLICE J. J. CREMEANS and Middleport Mayor John Zerkle display a plastic
victory after biB F1orida fiasco, phtase ''police riot" In Ute the only candidate carrying Ute
replica ol a marijuana plant which will he on exhibi.t in Middleport business houses as a part of
it was not only "a solid vic- "Walker Report" on the 1968 Daley banner who sailed
the drug educaUon program being carried out by village officials. Tuesday the plant replica
Democratic convention disor- through. He had no trouble
' tory" but a double one.
was on display at the Citlzena NaUonal Bank. The schedule for the remainder of the week :
(Continued on Page 20)
In separate voting for 160 ders, leading Simon 599,670
Mark V Store, Wednesday; Western Auto, Thursday ; Cross Hardware, Friday, and Ingels
national convention delegates
Furniiure, Saturday. The artificial plant was secured by Mayor Zerkle.
at stake, biB candidates had an
impressive lead over those of
his chief rival in !biB race, Sen.
GeorgeS. McGovern, O.S.D.
The rundown of the voting In
Dlinols :
With 8,930of the state's 10,868
Mayor John Zerkle and Fire lid or screen to prevent ashes nuisance.
precincts counted, Musk!e led
Burning permits can he McCarthy In the nonbinding
Chief Bob E. Byer today made from flying about the neigh·
borhood.
No
permit
Is
required
obtained
free of charge_from preferential balloting wltb
eJ:pUclt burnlng regulations In
for thiB type burning, providing the fire chief, at Ute Middleport
Middleport.
lunch room from Pete Kloes, or
-~ -~!
' .. .nwere Dated, the no hazard ,.Is created.
Burning
In
the
open
wiD
not
at Dudley's Florist Shop from
BEVERLY, Ohio - James
olficla s said, to clarify
he
allowed
on
Sundays.
~ Mrs. Tom Darst.
C.
Cline, chief chemist here for
questions which have arisen.
-Burning
of
garbage
and
Pennlts,
issued
up
to
one
the Globe Metallurgical
The regulatio(\8 an;:
leaves
wtU not be permitted. week at a time, will he canCorporation,
will be one of a
--Open burnln~ IS not ~rNo
burning
or
permits
to
celled
'should
the
weather
three-man delegation
milled inside village limits
burn
will
he
issued
or
allowed
become
dry
or
windy.
Persons
representing t,he United States
without a burning penni!.
at a meeting the week of March
-Trash .and papers can he where· such .burning will cause needing permits for a longer
violation
of
present
or
future
period
should
contact
Chief
'll of the International Stanburned m a con tamer,
Every
candidate
running
In
ordinances,
or
.
create
a
Byer.
dards
Organization in Moscow,
providing the container has a
the Meigs or Mason County
Russia.
primary
election
for
local,
The meeting wiD be the first
8?-~:!:!:':®;o=!:ws=•n...w~­
DAMAGE MINOR
· Veterans Memorial Hospital State or national office will be
of a committee including 37
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Two cars had minor damage
given
up
to
one
hour
of
free
'ADMITTED
,Faurice
nations formed to cover
Ohio Exteiided OuUook,
in an accident on Second St. In
Neece, Pomeroy ; Cornelia television exposure on PoinT·
sampling, analysis , and
Friday througb SuDday:
JAMES CLINE
Pomeroy at 9:55p.m. Tuesday.
View
Cable
Channel
5.
Bunch,
Pomeroy;
William
product
standards
of
Warming tread through
Pomeroy pollee said one car
Each candidate has been
Buckley, Middleport; Gertrude
ferroalloys and meta!8 on an
period
wllli
a
cbuee
of raiD
driven by Homer Smith, 38,
Drake, Vinton; Paul Rife, notified that he may have up to
international basis.
Pomeroy, backed from a Sunday. Hlgbs mid 40s to Middleport; Clara Grueser , a half-hour of time, with each
Prior to the I.S.O. meeting,
mid 50s Friday cUmblag to
driveway Into the door of a
program
to
be
shown
at
least
Trash Pickup Set COne will visit with friends In
the 60s and upper 50s by Minersville; Berths Robinson,
parked car owned by A. W.
twice.
Racine;
Daniel
Crislip,
Long
Copenhagen, Denmark, and
Sunday. Overnight lows mid.
Nease of Pomeroy. There were
Ohio candidates in the May 2
Bottom; Scott Williams,
20s to low 30s Friday mol'
Free traah pickups In Buesingen, Switzerland. After
no Injuries and no arrests.
primary
will
he
shown
on
Pomeroy;
Alice
Mills,
MidDing rlslag to the upper 30s to
Pomeroy Ill order to forward the Moscow meeting he will he
Channel
5
up
to
April
30.
West
dleport;
Leonard
Lunsford,
mld'40s
by
Sunday
momlug.
the oblecllve of "Clean Up making business calls in
TAXES DISl'RmUl'ED
Virginia
candidates,
whose
~~;:::Tmr;:.:::
o0
n~
Pomeroy; Chester Mundry,
Week" will tiep. Monday Ill Chedde, France, and Geneve,
OOLUMBUS (UPI)- State
LOCAL
TEMPS
Reedsville.
primary
is
May
~·
wiD
appear
Auditor Joseph Ferguson
Ward 1, followed by Ward 2, Switzerland.
The temperature In downon Channel 5 until May 7. AU Tuesday, Ward 3 on Wed·
Cline was the speaker at the
reported $3.6 million In state
DISCHARGED - Evelyn programs will be videotaped in
town
Pomeroy
at
II
a.m.
Income tax money has been
aeaday aiid Thursday, and Racine Alumni meeting last
McCaskey, Sarah· Hoffman , advance.
Wednesday
was
44
degrees,
year. He graduated from RHS
distributed so far this month to
Ward 4 on Friday.
James Stephenson, Glen Rolf.
under
cloudy
skies.
candidates
may
choose
to
Ohio's 88 counUes.
U anyone II missed they In 1951. He has been active as a
use less than the 30 minutes
are uked to call vUJage hall member of a chemist comallotted to them and have the
aad a pickup will be mittee of the American Society
choice of making a personal
for Testing Materials for a
arranged.
statement or engaging in a
number of years . He will be
discussion type program with a
reporting to ASTM at a
A busy Aprll Is planned by of April a community cleanup mothers' night observance on representative of PoinTView.
meeting in Los Angeles ,
the following evening. The club Many candidates have already
the Future Homemakers of day is planned.
following his return to
America at Meigs High School. Putting in a busy year, year will epd with a splash· accepted the offer of free TV
America . The other US
The organization Is currentiy members held a bake sale In down party on May 20.
time. PoinTView will attempt
delegates will be Dr. Saunders
There are 21 members In the to group the candidates run·
observing FHA Week. Ned Pomeroy and Middleport In
of Union Carbide and Dr. Mayo
month, the group will appoint a December and conducted club which has Miss Leda Mae ning for specific offices
Mostly cloudy and colder of U. S. Steel Corporation.
Claus Kraueter, Mrs. Joe Bailey and together, and will present them with a chance of snow flurries
committee to plan mothers' operation Santa
Cline is married to the fornight and will stage a spring gathering up clothes and food Mrs. Robert Roberts as ad- at the same time. Notices of tonight and Thursday. Lows mer Margaret Martin of
fashion show on April 13. The for Lakin Hospital.
visors: Members are Brenda when candidates wiD appear tonight upper 20s to mid 3!S. Syracuse and the father of
state convention will be on Officers wtU be elected for Barton, president; Irene will run in local newspapers Highs Thursday upper 3()9 to three _children, James, Sue,
(Continued on page 2)
April 21-22 and in the last part next year on May 10 with the
and Channel 5.
mid 40s.
and Darla.

James Cline

8 l11'Ding R:..-1
Cl
d
·weS. eare

Delegate to

. f Conference

Candidates to
Be Granted

TV Exposure

FHA Expects Busy April

Weather

4-H Commitment Paid Up
Members of Meigs County's
~H Clubs, their advisors, and
friends were recognized at the
28th Annual 4-H Advisors
·Recognition ceremony in
,Columbus March 16 for having
completed payment of $900 to
the Ohio National ~H Club
Foundation.
Betty Dean, Maidie Mora,
Rosalie Story and Pat Holter,
4·H advisors, received the
award representing fuUlliment
of the Meigs County pledge
from Dean Roy M. Kottman of
The Ohio State University
College of Agriculture and
Horne Economics and Arthur
Dannecker, Chairman of the
. Ohio 4-H Foundation.

SAIGON, - ntOUSANDS OF ADDmONAL 1;outh VIet:

(CGnlilnlld 011

•

McCarthy Su.bmerged by Clearcut
Illinois Primary Decision Tuesday

WASHINGTON - OONTENDING ntAT the graduated
income tax has eroded to ·the point that the average $60,000.
year executive pays taxes at the same rate as his $9,(1()N..year
secretary, a dozen Democratic senators Tuesday opened a new
cam!lllgn lor tax reform.
Led by sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., they Introduced In the
Senate a bill to attack 21 tax "loopholes" and designed to ~
crease the lues of the rich by f!S bUUrn. They said that money
could be passed along to low and middle-income farnillee to
relieve the burden of rl,slng property taxes. President Nixon also
wants to make possible the reduction of property taxee, but hia ·
expected solution Is the imposition of a value-added tax (VAT),
or national sales tax.

namese troo111 poured Into eastern Cambodia today In an effort
to rweep through rugged plantatl"" country and retake lOBI

TENWHS

PHONE 992·2156

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 22, 1972

"

L~FT TO . RIGHT: Arthur Oannecker, Betty bean, Maidie Mora,
Rosalie Story, Pat Holter, and OSU Dean Kottman .

Dr. Charles W. Wer, State
Leader of 4-H in the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Ser·
vice, said 35 Ohio counties, In

addition to Meigs, have
completed their pledges
toward the $182,000 in the drive
which began in 1969. Several
additional counties have made
payments toward their goals.
CounUng pledge payments at
Ute March 16 meeUng, Ute Ohio
National 4-H Foundation Drive
total stood at fl16,000.
. The Ohio 4-H Foundation was
establlshed In 1946 as a part of
The Ohio State University
Development Fund. Only the
interest from money placed in
the fund iB used. Proceeds help
defray the costs of educational
programs for over 113,000 4-H
members and 15,800 volwiteer
leaders reaching every
community in Ohio.
Mrs. Dean, Mrs. Mora and
Miss Story received their fiveyear advisor silver clover
award at the annual. awards

banquet. Mrs. Holter, a 14-year
advisor, represented the Meigs
County 4-H Advisory Committee.
The recosnition ceremony'
" ~H Bridging the Gap" was
presented by John and Mary
Schmidt with - 785 advisors
present. Records show that
1,595 advisors have completed
5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, or 45
years of service for a to14! of
14,100 years of voluntary
service to boys and girls In
Ohio.
Other Meigs County advisors
recognized but not attending
were Carol Pierce, 10 years of
service; Maxine Whitehead,
Farie Cole, Evelyn Well and
Harold Maue for 5 years of
service. All advisors In Ohio
are Invited to the Recognition
' Prp rarn each fiv~ years.

�. I

~-The DaUy Seltlnel. Mlddle!!!l~Ptineroy, 0., March 22,1972

2- The DaUyllenllnel,Midcleport-Polneroy, 0., March II, 1972

"Guess He Followed You All the
Way Home!"

Assembly Moves uickly
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Ohio General Assembly
warming up for a pnmary
election campa1gn recess next
month, took on a wode vanety
of hard-hitting ISSues m a
fullwork day Tuesday
The lawmakers:
- Took fmal leg isla Uve action to place on Ute May 2 primary ballot the question of
whether Oh1o should estabhsh
a state lottery.
- Left up to the House a deCISion on language in a package of 14 constitutional changes which also could go on the
ballot in May if approved m
time.
- Reaffinned the deaUt penalty and Ute current 138-yearold prohibition agamst abortions except when the mother's
life in in danger.
The House worked for more
than five hours on a sweeping
reVISIOn of Ohw's crurunal
laws before adJourning for the
evenmg. Debate was to continue today, begmning at !:3D
p.m.
Elinunatmg capttal punishment and liberalizmg the abortion law were among 15
amendments offered to the 266page crunmal code bill, which
was seven years m Ute makm~.
Goes oo Ballot
The Senate agreed to Ute
House vers10n of the lottery resolution, vote
two
more than the Utree.fiftha majority requ1red on a constitutional amendment.
James R Marsh, elections
counsel to Secretary of State
Ted W Brown, smd necessary
advertisements of the constitutional question would hegm immediately so the ISSUe could
appear on the May 2 ballot.
The resolution, adopted after
a 14-month JOUrney through the
legislature dunng which 11 was
defeated tw1ce and g1ven up for
dead several tunes, calls for
repeal of the constitutional
prohibition aga1nst a stale
lottery
Under the restnctive House
amendment to which the Senate agreed, COIL!!tituhonal bans
on other fonns of gambling
would be retamed This was
viewed as a safeguard agamst
establislunent of off-track hettml! or caSino gamblmg
i/ 11\'e 'Vtller's approve, a specia,l lottery pianmng comnus-·
sloW WID go" to' wor~ Wltliin' a
week to set up a lottery with
proceeds gomg mto the stale
general fund for government
programs
Quick Action Cited
Sen. Ronald M Mottl, D-Parma, who gwded Ute resolution
on Its often-penlous trek
through the Senate and House,
pointed out that Michigan
voters w11l be deciding the
same question May 16, and
PeMSylvama has just begun a
state lotlery.
Mottl sa1d Oh1o could lose
hundreds of thousands of
dollars to netghbormg stales if
qu1ck action 1s not taken.
~uck acbon lS also requll'e011 in Ute House if Ute package

of conslltutoonal changes,
includ-mg settill8 up Iegu!lative
expense
accounts
and
requirmg the governor and
lieutenant governor to be
elected wtth a single vote, are
to appear on tbe May 2 ballot
Major disagreement cropped
up aga1n Tuesday over wheUter
the candidates for governor
and lieutenant governor should
also be required to p8lr up m
Ute pnmary elections well as m
November .
As passed by the House, the
two offices were paired in Ute
prunary But the Senate adopted, 18-11, an amendment by
Sen. Robert J. Corts, R-Eiyrla,
separating Ute candidates m
the prunary but pairing Utem
in the general electiOn by
1
party
State Majonty Whlp Michael
J. Maloney, R.Cmcmnatl, tried
to reverse the action but failed,
12-16, despite an attempt by Lt.
Gov John W. Brown, who was
pres1dmg over Ute Senate, to
help wnte Ute amendment to
his own liking.
Brown, who favors combtn·
mg the offices boUt m the prl·
mary and general election,
smd he would actively oppose
the entire constitullonal
package if Ute language 1s not
changed
The House could demand
that it be changed, or Ute
Senate could retreat from
Tuesday's action.
The proposal lS designed to
make Ute governor and lieutenant governor memhers of the
same party. Brown lS a Republican, while Gov. John J.
G1lbgan 1s a Democrat.
Maloney sa1d separating the
offices on the prm~ary ballot

and combmmg them on the
general electiOn ballot might
produce "two nommees who
don't want any part of each
other but are forced to run to-

gether "
Youngstown BuB Bill
But Sen. Tennyson Guyer, R- I
Findlay, S8ld combining Utem
in Ute primary would ''produce
selection rather tban election"
and permit a strong gubematonal candidate to hand p1ck a
"stooge" as his runnmg mate.
''It would wreck Ute Republican Party," Guyer told Mal-

ney.
Sen. Howard C. Cook, R-Toledo, failed In an attempt to

. ..' '
(

send the package back to the
Judiciary Committee and it
cleared, 25-5.
In other legislative acUon:
- The Senate unanimously
adopted and sent to the governor an emergency bill to allow
Youll8stown to place on the
May ballot an operating levy to
retam transit service.
- The Senate unanimously
agreed to House amendments
and sent Gilligan legislation requiring identification cards
wiUt photographs for welfare
recipients to receive and cash
lhell' checks.
Both chambers return today
at 1:30 p.m.

.

'

,.

NORTH

-

::S: 0 e.C"PV.Jt'UI"'h"""O?F'??".,

ntttJJYbb

LJbbbbd

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
RECAP ON RABBIT
IS WARREN-TED
NEW YORK (KFS) - Jmuny Stewart's
searchmg for a summer stock play "to keep
sharp " Jim d1d "Harvey" w1th Helen Hayes a
season ago and looked very sharp. Not h1s f1rst
time after the or1gmal Frank Fay-starred
"Harvey" had run a couple of seasons, Fay took
a mne-week collapse, and Jimmy fllled , m
which remmded folds he'd started out as a stage
mummer
Fay was the all-hme character 's.
character , m h1s dotage he got rehgwn after a
lot of d1vorces (mciudmg from Barbara Stanwyck, who rephed to someone who asked 1f she
mtended to see Fay m "Harvey" "No, I saw
enough s1x-foot rabbits when I was marrted to
him" ) . Fay's old,age rehg10us return became
fanatiCism He'd do a twomonute spot m front of
St Patrock's Cathedral, kneehng ostentatiously,
hat over heart, murmurmg mcantat10ns whlle
folks Circled round to Usten and watch, as was
Frank's Idea
Aller Fay's deservedly great noltces m the
role ended some 20 years' shabby obscurity,
Fay stopped attendmg Mass at St. Malachy's on
W 49th St , the Actors Church, and began g01ng
to late H1gh Mass Sundays at St Patrick's
Cathedral, m a suol.ably front-pew of course
He arrtved liiliDaculately turned out m Impeccable costumes plpmg on vest, homburg
hat, pomty shmed-shoes, elaborately theatrical
m every move m case anyone mightn't realize
who he was.
Such sudden rejection of h1s old, homey,
comfortable Actor's Church deeply hurt the
pastor at St. Malachy's, who confided to Bert
Wheeler, a great star in hiS day who'd never
suffered the showbiz sin of Ham, and Bert m
turn took the message to the recently selfoverwhelmed Fay.
Wheeler was persuaSive, appealmg, fmally
convmcmg. Fay nobly agreed he would return
to the scene of his poverty-days worshipmg He
would, he assured Bert, be at St. Malachy's for
High Mass the Sunday after next Wonderful,
uld Bert.

I

"But tell Ute pastor," Fay warned, "that he's
best announce I'll be there from the pulpit next
Sunday"
"Harvey" was produced by the late Brock
Pemberton, a legendary and rare decent man
am1d the cymcal Bdwy. hustlers .. . He was one
of but three producers who could put on a play
wtthout fll'st posting a bond wiUt Actors Eqmty
to cover rehearsal and two-weeks' performance
pay. The others were Lee Shubert and a gentleman whose name escapes us at 5:15a.m. as
we two-finger off to press (he produced mexpenslve plays and operated t1ie "Subway CirCUli," paid only bare-nununwn union salaries
- but never welshed a payroll).
"Harvey" ran more than four seasons, won
a Pulitzer, made Brock an even ncher skmfllnt,
for thrifty as well as completely honest was Ute
Pemherton reputation .. One cnt1c (John
Chapman of the N Y.'Daily News) said Brock
had produced "Harvey" as tf certain it would
flop; a chintzy physiCal staging mdeed.
But Brock was a showman, a perceptive,
tasteful pro who'd started as a newspaperman
on the Emporia , Kan., Gazette He later was
drama ed1tor on Ute N. Y Mail, N. Y. World,
and Times, and began h1s backstage apprenticeship with the great gentleman Arthur
Hopkms (champagne fmds 1ts level 1and started
as a pfoducer w1th a hit stra1ght off, "Enter
Madame "
Subsequently he staged "Miss
Lulu Belt," "SlrtcUy Dishonorable, " "SIX
Characters m Search of an Author," "Personal
Appearance," "KISS the Boys Goodbye" etc , to
h1s magnum (Jeroboam !) opus, "Harvey."
There are decent and tasteful producers on
Bdwy. even today, as there were so many more
m earlier greasepamted generations .. Arthur
Hopkins had dozens of great hits ("Poor Utile
Rich Girl/' ~ohn Barrymore's "Hamlet,"
Chekhov and Strlngberg and Sheakespeare and
O'Neill and Philip Barry; cast Leshe Howard
and Bogard In "The Petrifioo Forest," which
made them H'wood superstars, and too many
others to liSt herem ... A permanently
distinguished showman, he refused to produce
filth or shabby scr1pts, and before he d1ed,
hadn 'I produced for many seasons

Evils Seen
In VA Tax
WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep John M. Ashbrook, R·
Ohio, sa1d today the more Ute
tvalue,addOII tax of Ute Nmon
admmlstratlon is explamed
"the more Ill-advised the whole
1dea appears."
The value-added tax - VAT
- 1s a tax addoo to the value of
a material, serVIce or product
as 1t moves through var1ous
stages of production and
diStribution
"This Ism essence a national
sales tax - and a h1dden one at
that - paid by the consumer,"
Ashbrook sa1d. "The admimstrallon is constdering a
proposal to substitute this tax
for the portion of property
taxes that go toward school
fmancmg"

(D)

Lakers Post '6 7th NBA

zz

WEST

EAST

.Ql084
.7
t732
.QJ1085

.195
.QJ10943
tB5

.72

ByUnltedl'relllnlel'IUIUonal
The Los Angeles Latera, who
se,ta consecuUve.game winning
streak for pro team sports of 33
straight Winll during the season,
scored their 67th win of the
campaign Tueaday night when
they defeated the Chicago

Bulls, 109-!04.
The Lakers need one more
Win to Ue and two more to
surpass the NaUonal Basketball
AssoclaUon mark set by
Philadelphia In 1966-37. The
Lakers play at Cleveland
tonight and then will be at
home against Phoenix Friday
night and against SeatUe
Sunday night.
Gail Goodrich scored 39
points and Jerry West 26 for
the Lakers who held a 52-61
halftime margin. Bob Love had
28 points for the Bulls.
Hawks CIIDch Berth
The Atlanta Hawks cUnched a
berth In Ute playoffw when they
overca!he a 17-p~~lnt deficit to
best the Philadelphia 71!ers,117·
l!l. Lou Hudson scored 23 of
his 36 points In the second half
to lead a rally whicH started

.A72

.K5

• AKQJ106

.63
North-South vulnerable
Weol North East South

Pass
Pass

1•
5•
6.

Pass 4N.T,
Pass 5 N.'t.'
Pass 7 N.T.

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead-• Q
By Oswald &amp; Jamu Jaeolly

DR. LAWRENCE E.1AM8

Both. People Need
Fertility Study
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lam I&gt;-Two years
ago I had blood poisoning in
my right ovary and tube. I
had to have them removed
The doctor was able to save
the left ovary and tube. 1
kept trying to get pregnant
but couldn't. A year ago I
went to another doctor and
he gave me one of those
tests you see on TV. The doc·
tor shot blue dye m my tube
and sa1d if the blue dye goes
stra1ght up hke a river that
means I can get pregnant
and if 1t stays m a circle
then the tube tsn't open. The
dye did go straight up, so
the doctor said there wasn't
any reason I couldn't ·get
pregnant It is a year later
now. and I .still llol)-'t ~~v~
the child I pray for every
day. Is there any operation I
can have to help me' What
IS my chance of havmg a
child?
Dear Reader""The fact
that the tube 1s open doesn't
necessarily mean that you
can get pregnant The ovum
has to be released, pass
through the tube, be ferlll·
1zed by sperm and the condihons have to be right for it
to be implanted in the uterus
for the pregnancy to ensue.
There are a lot of steps in
gettmg pregnant besides just
havmg the tube open In
other words, just because
the road is open doesn't
mean there will be a lot of
traffic on it
It also takes two for n
pregnancy to occur This
means an ovum and a sperm.
A good fcrtlhty study in the
person w1th your problem
should 1uvolve a careful exammation of both husband
and Wife. The doctor by speCial tests can tell whether
you are ovulatmg or not and
w h ether you 6ave normal
hormone balance and he can
also tell whether your husband 1s producmg a suffiCient amount of live sperm
If both of vou really want
a child, I would suggest you

go to your gynecologist for
th1s problem and have your
husband also agree that he
will go to a doctor for an examination of himseH.
Even though a couple may
have frequent normal relatLOns, th1s doesn't mean that
adequate live sperm 1s produced or that the female Is
producing ovum nor does it
have any direct relation to
the female's abllity to get
pregnant. Psychological factors can even play a role.
Many a couple has had
their first child after they
have adopted one.
D o c t o r s sometimes give
men thyroid tablets If they
are on the low side of .,thyrotd function, this increases
the number of live sperm
cells and the likelihood' of
pregnancy. Women's fertilIty can be increased by
medicine, too. The new ferllhty pills are responsible for
most of the recent cases of
multiple b1rths

FHA April
(Continued from page I)
Barnes, vice president; Debbie
Knight, hlstor1an; Diana
Lewis, treasurer; Diana
McAngus, secretary; Josie
Morton, song leader, and Unda
Baker, Reginll Bing, Donna
Boyd, Terry Bumgardner,
Unda Burbage, Tressa Hayes,
Jackie Hutton, Debbie Lemley,
Diana Lynch, Cindy Manley,
Debbie McDaniels, Debbie
Mowery, Barbara Price,
Debbie Schoonover and Gail
Sizemore.
Purpose of the organization
lS to learn to live better today
m order that Ute lives of
members and their families
will be better tomorrow. The
motto of the group ts "Toward
New Horizons," and the colors
of the organization are red and
while.

When you hold pressure
cards in three suits you may
be able to work a doublesqueeze m which you
squeeze boUt your opponents.
South bid his hand with all
the delicacy of a steam roller. When North admitted
possession of two aces and
two kings, South counted 12
top tricks and felt that the
Lord would provide a 13th
for him. The game was duplicate so SouUt placed Ute
grand slam In no-trump.
The queen of clubs lead
was encouraging. It looks as
If West might be the only
player to be able to stop
clubs Then 1f East was the
only man able to stop either
of the major suits a doublesqueeze would be automatic.
He won the club and
cashed fl ve diamonds while
discarding one card in each
su1t from dummy. West discarded two clubs, East three
hearts.
That gave South all the information he needed. E a s t
was obviously very long in
hearts. Thus S o u t b was
ready to put real pressure
on West.
He led a heart to dummy's
S.nd $1 lo&lt; JACOIY MODEIIH llool:

to. "Win af Jridtt." (c/o this ntws~
poper!, P0. lor 419, I!Mio Cifr
Stotion, H.., York, H Y. 10019.

NEW FACE In town In
Ottowa Is Yao Kuang, 51,
ace and came back to his
career dl-plomal who Is · king-o •Wes1 dlsearded · 'a
Peking'a new amlla11ador •spade. Now· South ' led tbll r
to Canada. In preytou• ••· •. last diamond 'arid WBBt bad 1
algnmeots In Wanaw, he
to let another spade go. He
participated In sporadic
was still under club prestalb with American dlplosure.
mala In tbe PoU1h capllal
Dummy's nine of clubs
for fears preceding Prell- was thrown and East let his
den Nixon's visit to Chlua.
club go. Now South's last
club was led to dummy and
East had to throw a spade.
.Dummy's heart had squeezed
him. smce West held a club
and East a heart, no one
TWO DIE IN CRASH
DELAWARE, Ohio (UPI)- could have spades stopped
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
Rodney Ratcliff, 32, and
Vashaw Lipes, 52, both of
Columbua, were killed Monday
in the crash of their twinThe b1ddi!ll hu been
engine plane In a field about 10 West North East
miles oorlheast of here.
Pass
The cause of the crash waa Po"' I .
Pass
3
•
Pass
not immediately determined.
You, South, hold:
Ratcliff was the pilot and
Lipes, a passenger, was an • AK854 • AZ • J .AK854
ofiicer in the firm of
Hocka&lt;lenLipes-Rousculp,
Inc., a Columbus consultlt!g
engineering firm which owned residents In bordering stales at
the aircraft.
lower prlcea, officials said
Monday,
Liquor
Department
UQUOR SAI.Fii LOST
spokesmen said Increased
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The activity is planned to stop
State lost $6 mlllion in liquor illegal traffic In liquor acroaa
sales during !971 because state lines which they desabout 263,000 gallons of liquor cribed as a "form of
were purchased by Ohio bootlegging . • •

Jail Breakouts Unst1•-prising

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Ham- a place just not big enough to
The Oh1o Republican sa1d, Ilton County Sheriff Dan Tehan hold thm.
however, he becomes skeptical sa1d today county jail pnsoners
"This place was built In 1917
when there IS talk of replacing "sit around 24 hours a day to house 150 prisoners."
one tax wtlh another because of planmng an escape" and 1t
Some '112 prisoners were at
Ute posstbility 1t w1ll escalate should not come as any sur- Ute jail at the time of the
mto more taxes
prose when they break out as 24 lx'eakout, under the super" If a 3 per cent VAT were did here Monday mght.
VISIOn of only seven guards.
enacted on the federal level, do
Fifteen of the 24 escapers
Authorities apparently
you doubt that Ute rate would were still at large today
learned of the smuggled gun
soon climb to 4 or 5 per cent or
"This kind of thing can hap- from Arthur Tarpley, 23, one of
even higher' " he asked.
OJOn any place," Tehan said. the nine prl.!oners who had
"lt's happening In the big pen- been recaptured by late
itentiaries
all over the country. Tueaday.
The Daily Sentinel
''This ~ould happen again,"
Largest Local Break
DEVOTEDTO~HE
I~TERESTOF
he said. "We are not playing
Tarpley told police the leaMEIGS -MA&gt;ON AREA
with
kids.
These
people
s1t
ders
of the escape "threatened
CHESTER L TANNEHILL.
Exec. Ed
around 24 hours a day planning to blow my brams wt If I didn't
ROBERT HOEFLICH .
to escape.
go along."
Cilv Editor
Pubi•Shed dally except
"They have all day to learn
The escape, largest In the
Saturday by Tl'le Oh 10 Valley
everything
about
the
jail
and
history, prompted county
jail's
Publ•sh 1ntjl Company , 111
Court St, Pomeroy . Onto, plan a break. Our people are
prosecutor Simon Lela Jr. to
45769 Business Off 1ce Phone
only
In
here
for
eight
hours
at
a
call
for a special grand juty
992 2156, Ed•lor.el Phone 992
01
2157
Ume,
invesllptlon, l'relltllnc ComSecond ctns posraoe pa •d at
Gun
011
Strlq
mon Pleas Judie William GuaPomeroy. Oh•o
National adverttstng
Authorities are reaSonably weller said he would do that
reprtstntative
Bott•n•tll
today. ''They will be returnGlllagher . Inc , l2 East 42nd sure that a woman visitor to
Sl , New York c,ty , New York
the courUtourse building start- able on Friday and will report
Subscr•PI•on ra1u
De
l1vered by carrier where Oil the mass escape by smuggl- within a week," he said.
ava.tabte SO cents per week , 1118 a gun to a prisoner In the
The escape was obviously
By Motor Route where carr •er
Sixth floor jail by tymg it to a well planned and went off withserv 1ce not evoll!1ble One
month $1 75 8'; ma11 m Oh io strmg lowered out of a jail
out a hitch. The prisoners took
anct w Vo , One yeor $14 00
window.
over Ute jail and remained
S1x monlhs S1 25
Three
"It's
not
a
matter
of
semonths S-4 50 Subscr1pflon
there for nearly an hour before
prt ce 1ncludes Sunday T1mes
curity,"
Tehan
Insisted.
"With
fleeing
the building wiihwt
sent mel
us. It's just too many people In a!JYOne being aware of any

trouble.
fled through a rear garage
''This waa a very well plann- door.
ed operation going back three
Another grwp escaped down
or possibly four months," Te- the main stairs of Ute bUilding,
han said.
but not before they enTehan said William Butts, 28, countered Judge Joseph
a jall trusty, and calvin Roc· Luebbers and a court house
quemore, 41, mastennlnded guard.
the break.
Luebbers and the gllard were
Butta sold candy to Ute oUter forced to Ue on the noor of the
lmnates for tlie county and was lobby while Ute escapees Ued
the only prisoner permitted to their hands behind them. Nel·
enter Ute jail office to pick up Iller man was hermed bit the
Ute.candy and return w1th the prlaoners took Sl30 from the
money.
guard,
Federal fugitive warranta
Money and Weapo111
were lasued fbr the escapee~
When the break started and the FBI entered the
about 8:15 p.m. Butts entered manhunt, resulting in the
the office as he nonnally capture of four men In a houae
would, but once Inside he on the city's west aide late
~Nlled a pistol and forced the Tueaday.
guards on duly to walk lnto~e
_FBI.-'Ienta and local pollee
cell block where two other surrounded the house of Mrl.
guards already had been Ella Johnson and Uten ldcbd
overpowered.
In the door. Robert Glbbe, 211,
The prisoners used the an aCCUMd murderer, 'fVU 8hot
guards' keys to open the and wounded as he fled out the
property room and took three bact door of the house.
handguns, a tear gas rifle and 0Two, of the priaoners were
about Sl,OOO In cash, much of apprehended Monday night,
which belonged to other two women surrendered to
prlaoners.
'
authoritiea Tuesday, and
Some of the escapees used another man was plcbd up by
the jall elevator to In vel to the pollee in Dayton, Ohio,
basement of the bullcling and Tuelday.

-

Findlay Ace Heads

NBA St1ndongs
By United Pnnlntern~tion.l
Eutern Conterenct
Atlantic Division
W. l Pd. GB
x-Boslon
S3 26 .671 ...
New York
-46 32 590 6'1•
Philadelphia 30 49 380 23
Buffalo
22 56 .282 30'1&gt;
Centrtt Division
W. l Pd. GB
COLUMBUS (UPI)
school scoring record, heads dominated by northwesterr
x Baltimore 37 41 m
Carrottopped
Ken
Brooks
of
the 1972 United Pr~ lJ&gt;. Ohio p)l&lt;yers.
Atlanta
33 -46 418 4'h
Clncinnall
27 51 3-46 10
Brooks, a 6-2 senior guard,
Findlay, who broke former ternational Class AAA AD.()hlo
Cleveland , 22 56 282 15
.polled
more Ulan one-third
Trojan
star
Dave
Sorenson's
basketball
team
,
which
IS
Wntem Conference
more votes than his two
with the Hawks trailing, 47-30, -n points and had 17 rebounds
• Midwest Division
W.
l
Pet.'
GB
nearest r1vals, guard Jay
m the second period. Billy for Milwaukee who bea! the
x
Milwaukee
61
19
763
Powell of Boardman and
Cunningham scored 31 points Houston Rockets after enjoying Chicago
55 25 688 6
forward
Scott May of Sanfor Ute 71!ers.
· a 26-pl)lntlead at halftime. The ~Phoenix
48 32 600 13
dusky, easily taking the player25 53 321 35
The Hawks' vic~t- Rockets closed to 89-83 with Detroit
Pacific
Division
of-the-year honors.
ed the CinclnnaU Royals, who just over live minutes left in
W. L. Pet. GB
Joining Brooks, Powell and
would have eliminated them· the game but the Bucks ran off x-LosAngeles 67 12 848
May
on the fii'St team are Co49 30 620 18
selves anyway when they five straight points to cement Golden St.
1h
~eallle
47
JJ
.588
20
South's
Brian
COLUMBUS (UPI) - After gional finals at Columbus to the lumbus
bowed to the Detroit Platona, the victory. calvin Murphy Hooslon
31 47 397 35'1• 21 years, Celina's Dean While eventual state champion, Col- Williams, a junior, and Curt
120-117. Bob Lanier had 33 scored 21 pomts for the Portland
18 63 222 so
Shellabarger of top-ranked
has finally reached the Pinna· umbus Walnut Ridge.
x-Ciinched dlvlsoon title
points and 22 rebounds, Dave Rockets
Results
Tuesday's
White
picked
up
26
of
the
75
Celina.
cleofhisprofesaion, being namBing IICOl'ed 'ZI points and
Elmore SmiUt scored 29 Buffalo 114 Ba llmorelOO
Brooks, a three-year starter
ed
Tuesday
as
the
United
Press
votes
cast
from
throughout
the
Jimmy Walker 21 to lead Ute points and Randy Smith and Oelroi\ 120Cinclnnatl117
International Class AAA coach- stale by his fellow coaches, for Coach John SIO'Zich, fmishPistons. Nate Archibald scored Bob Kaumiwm each had 25 as Atlanla117 Philadelphia 111
Los
Angeles
109
Chicago
104
of
-the-year.
sportswnters and sports- ed the season w1Ut 519 pomts m
37 points for the Royals-the the Buffalo Braves downed the
Milwaukee 11 Houston9.4
22gamesfor a 23.6 average. He
While, a graduate of Mus- casters.
lOth straight game and 21st In _ Baltimore Bullets. The Braves Phoenix 160 Portland 128
In
the
space
provided
for
the
hit 201 of his 386 field goal atkingwn
College
m
1951,
gwded
the last 28 that he topped 30. led, 57-39, at halftime and Ute
(OnlygatnesschO\luled)
• Wellnesday's Games
h1s team to an w\beaten regu- voters to comment on lhell' se- tempts for 54.9 per cent and
In other NBA games, Mil· Bullets never got closer than
Philadelphia
at
Boston
lar
season mark of 18-() and lections, the most often used connected on 73.6 per cent of
waukee !rimmed Houston, 111· eightpomts the rest of the way. Buffalo at New York
mto this weekend's slate tour- remark was· "The record his free throws.
94, Buffalo !ripped Baltimore, Dave StallworUt and Mike Detroit at Cincinnati
speaks for Itself."
Brooks' career total of 994
nament semi-finals
114-100, and Phoenix whipeed Riordan scored 18 points each Houston at Atlanta
Los
Angeles
at
Cleveland
Barberton's .Jack Greynolds pomta eclipsed the school
Th~ Bulldogs, currently 24-0,
Portland, 166-!28.
for the Bullets.
Golden State at Baillmore
fimshed
second w the balloting scoring mark of Sorenson, the
were voted the top Class AAA
Bucks Beal Rockets
Phoenix placed seven men in
(Onlygamesscheduledl
team In the state by Ute UPI to White wtUt eiRht. followed fonner Ohio State star now
KareemAbdui..Jabbar scored double figures against Portland
by Columbus South's Dick wtlh Ute Cleveland Cavaliers,
Board of Coaches.
and the Suns' 160 pomts
ABA Standings
White coached nme seasons Ricketts with six and Don who had 967 points while a
surpassed the previous club By United Press lnternattonal
East
Henderson of Springfield TroJan player.
rec!}l'd of 140 set against San
W. L. Pd. GB at Roseville, near his native
Pure Sbooter
Zanesville, before gomg to Bel- North, Alan Burns of BoardDiego in 196ll. Clem Haskins led x-Kentucky 62 16 795 .
man
and
Paul
Frey
of
Cin43 35 .551 19
An injury his sopromore
lefontame for four seasons .
the j\VInners With 28 points Virginia
42
37
532
20'1•
New
York
cinnati
Elder
with
four
each.
year
which forced him to sit out
a double gave the Phils a I-ll followed by Paul Silas with 24 Florld~ans
35 45 .423 29
He
is
presenUy
in
his
eighth
Others wiUt more than one SIX games kept Brooks from
and Connie Hawkins with 23. Carolina
lead In the second Inning
32 48 400 31
year
at
Celina
and
his
Bulldog
vote
included Bunk Adams of surpasing the 1,000 point mark.
The Reds tied the score at 1-1 Portland'sSidneyWicks topped Pittsburgh 24 54 308 38
West
teams have won 111 and lost Toledo Scott, John D'Angelo of
Brooks, who has been called
In the sixth when Bobby Tolan all scorers with 31 as he
W. L. Pet. GB 45 durill8 that span.
"a
pure shooter with a great
Painesville"
Harvey,
John
Stozopened with a triple and his became' the eighth rookie in x-Utah
57 23 .713 ..
White's ' team last season, ich of Findlay, Harry Fails of stroke" by college recruiters,
44 34 .564 12
pinch rilnner, Cesar Geronimo, NBA history to score more than lnd1ana
Dallas
38
41
481
18'12
comprised
of four juniors and Alliance Jim Kirk of Galton, scored 43 points In his top percame home on a Johnny Bench 2,000 points.
Denver
32 47 .405 24'1• one semor, had a 17-1 regular and Luther Stover of Cam- fonnance Ute past season, hitts1118ie.
Memphis
26 53 329 30112
season mark and lost in the re- bridge.
mg on 20 of 'ZI shots from the
x-Ciinched
division
IItie
The Reds had 12 hits to the
RULE AMENDED
Tuesday's ResuHs
floor. He averaged less than 17
Phils' seven.
BOSTON (UPI)-The NCAA Indiana 139 Pittsburgh 116
shots per game.
107 Floridians 90
Hockey Rules Committee Dallas
Powell, a three-year letterKentucky 102 MemphtS 99
amended a rule Tuesday to Utah 132 Denver 120
man was the leading scorer on
(Only games scheduled)
allow body checking on all
a Boardman team which lost
Wednesday's Games
parts of the 1ce. Under the P1ttsburgh
only to Farrell, Pa., during the
at Kentucky
current rule, a collegiate V~rglma at Indiana
regular season and was voted
Carolina
at
New
York
hockey player 1s prphib1ted
second to Celina In the UPI
of former major leaguer Gus from checking In his offensive
Denver at Dallas
Board of Coaches ratings.
(Only games scheduled)
Bell, had three singles and a
A6-2 senior, Powell, aoolher
zone.
double but the Cleveland Inof the blue-chip college prodians bowed to the San Diego
COLUMBUS (UPII - The Collinwood, Larry Dempsey, spects, averaged 21.5 points
Padres, 4-3, on Rafael Robles'
North;
Mike
1971 -72 Un1ted Press In Columbus
ternatlonal Class AAA.AII-Ohlo Daugherty, Bedford. Steve per game, hitting 48 per\ cent
seventh-innmg 'sacrifice fly.
Basketball Team 'With height, Even, Cambridge,
Bob from Ute floor and 80 per cent
The Lotte Orlons of Tokyo
. 1 '
grade and scoring average:
Flickinger, Wooster, Brad fromthe free throw line, up 10
continued their Impressive
FIRST TEAM
Frank, Lorain,
Dennis
Ken Brooks, Findlay, 6 2, Sr, Greenwald, Cleveland from his junior year. He alao
play against big league op23 6.
Heights; Chuck Goodyear, led the team in aBSlats,
position when they played a 1·1
Jay Powell, Boardman, 6 2, Columbus Walnut Ridge ; averaging 7.1 per contest.
10-lniilng tie with the San
Kalvln Goodwin, Winlers&gt;4He
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)-Sparky you're asked, you're getting Sr,215.
Sandulky's May In probably
Scott May, Sandusky, 6-5,
Franclaco Giants. Fwn1o Nari- Anderson may be "getUng paid to wear the hair the way
Clance Ham"lPn, Columbus the best all aroond 111gb lchool
30 1.
Central, Dave Rurley, Mansta, a ({Inner 20-«ame winner in tough" with his Cincinnati Reds they ask, to me those are Sr',Brian
Williams, Columbus field Dr., Ken Harris, Walnut athlete In the slate. He was a
, the Ja)181!ese,League, went the this ' year, but the difference Utings that are aske4 by that Soulh, 6-4, Jr, 25 4
Hills, Jerome Holland, Dayton first team all-Ohio end In footdistance for tlie Orlons, alloW· hardly Is perceptible.
Curt
Shellabarger,
Celina,
6Roosevelt; Carl Hall, Trotwood ball and must decide w)lich
company.
7, Sr , 16.6
Madison,
Tom Hollins,
ing fo,u r 1!11,!' -~ s~ llU,t, • Anderson says he will not
"Now, if you don't agree with
SECONO
TEAM
Cambridge;
Earl - Hill, sport he wants to play at one ot
six ... Orlando Ce~'s two- chall8e the way he operates as 11, then don't work. ' Go
Craig Lynch, Toledo Start, 6 Alliance, Ed Kane, WhltehoiL the more than 200 colleges
run double and ,the six-bit manager. He will insist, howev- somewhere else. If you want to 6, Sr , 28 7; Bradley Robinson, Mark Klein, Norloo; Greg which have contacted him.
pitching of Pat JarviS and er, that hiS players follow the go with a firm that wants to Akron Centroi-Hower, 6 6, Sr, Laravle, Kettering Alter; Rick
ToppedaUll
18.4,
James
Abrams, Lilienthal, Cambridge; Jeff
Gary Neibauer enabled Ute rules he §at down for Utem at
allow this, then do it, that's all Clevelond East Tech, 6 4, Sr, Maee, Youngstown Wilson ,
A 6-5, 210-pounder, May avAtlanta Braves to beat the the start of spring trainmg IF
0; Dave Hanners, Columbus Dave Mllosbvlch, Cleveland St eraged 30.1 points per game for
I don't think that's getting 20
Walnul Ridge, 6-0, Sr , 17 4, Ignatius; Rick Mosier, Ceona;
Montreal Expos, 4-l.
!hey don't 1t wtll cost them tough.
Crlag Taylor, Springfield Len Matuszek, Cincinnati the Blue Streaks thla seuon,
money.
North, 6-9. Sr , 18.1
Moeller, Archie Mays, Fair- hitting 51 per cent from the
NHLStand1ngs
THIRD TEAM
view ,
Dudley
Murphy,
The
first
project
was
The
Right
Way
By Unoted Press International
Tom Brabson, Barberton, 6- Cleveland Latin , Todd Miller, floor and 71 per cent on his free
Sparky's weight-watchers pro"I feel real strong on It, and 4, Sr , 20 7, Dearr White, Celina,
throws. He also picked off 14
East
Dover
W. L. T. PIS gram, where he told his players maybe I'm wrong," Anderson 6-0, Sr, 16 0; Archie Aldridge,
Keith Neal, Columbus rebounds per game.
54 10 10 112 what they were to weigh when continued, "but I still feel that Mtddletown, 6-4, Jr., 28.4, Jeff Central; Bernard Pope, Toledo
Boston
48 13 11 107
New York
Collier, Sidney, 610, Sr , 20.0, Scott; Chuck Rogers, findlay;
(Continued on page 4)
44 15 13 t01 they reported. Most made it, professional' athletes owe it to Randy Felhaber, Oregon Clay,
Montreal
Dave
Routt,
Cincinnati
30 29 13 73 although some had to lose 20 the kids across this country to 6 3, Sr , 22.9.
Toronto
Withrow, John Reed, Warren
31 JJ 9 71 pounds and oUters, like Tony show them the right way, and I
Detroit
SPECIAL MENTION
Harding,
Duke
Ribar,
14 42 17 45
Buffalo
Larry
Allen,
Hamilton
Taft;
Steubenville;
Gordie
Rawlyk,
18 47 7 43 Perez, now weigh less · than mean right on down the tine." Carl Brown, Cincinnati Pur· Troy, Courtney Snyder, FOYTWINNER
Vancouver
West
they have in seven years.
Anderson says he has not cell, Lawrence Bolden, Steubenville, Randy Shade,
NEW YORK (UPI)-A. J
W. L. T. Pis
Even Anderson lost five established a set of fines Cleveland East Tech, Dave Reynoldsburg , Greg Shannon, Foyt, who won the biggest
x Chicago
42 17 43 97
Bromle~, Kettering Fairmont
Defiance, Craig Stinnett,
Minnesota
35 27 10 80 pounds, but he f1gures that's because he wants to remain West, Bob Crawford, Mans- Springfield North; Dave Nascar race of the sea11011-4le
flexible He also lS realistic fteld Malabar, Mark Colopy, Sackett, Greenville; Mike Daytona 500-whlle walling for
St LOUIS
25 36 11 61 part of the program.
California
21 34 18 60
Ken
Coon, Schoen, Bellevue; Bill Sutton,
"I will not scream at them," enough to realize-and admit- Zanesville;
Philadelphia
23 36 12 58 he says. "I won't come In after that no manager can treat Greenville, Randy Emmons, Marlett11 Leicester Stovell, the USAC season to begin, was
Pittsburgh
23 37 12 58
Ashland, Randy Foster, Cleveland Heights, Ron Vargo, named Monday as Ute monthly
Los A~s
t8 48 8 44 a game and ever make a. every play ON THE CLUB Newark, Paul Fazekas, Painesville Harvey; Chuck winner for February In the
x-Ciin
division title
Boardman, Randy Gates, Williams, Columbus East.
remark. I never have and I THE same way.
Hickok "Professional Athlete of
Tutsdty's ResuHs
Howland . Edgar Jeffries,
Player-of-the-year - Ken the Year" Award.
now.
won't
start
Minnesota 4 California 2
East.
Bob Brooks, Findlay
"You can never treat a Youngstown
Obey The Rules
Detroit 7 Vancouver 5
Kramer,
Cincinnati
Edler,
!Onlygamesscheduled)
"The only thing I belleve is (Johnny) Bench and (Pete) Mike Lovenguth, Portsmouth,
Wednesday's Games
this-A player does not have to Rose, truthfully, the same as Scott McDavid, Gallon, Bob
Buffalo at Pittsburgh
Beavercreek, Andy
like a manager, and he does not you treat a young kld Smyth,
Toronto at Montreal
Sllegemeler,
Kent Roosevelt ,
California at St Louis
have to respect a manager. All because, let's face it, they've Joe Westerfield, Celina, Keith
Detroit at Los Angeles
he has to do Is obey the rules been here a while, they're stars Williams, Lima Sr
(Onlygamesscheduledl
HONORABLE MENTION
"So I don't ask them to in thts game."
John
Arnold, Findlay; Don
Sometimes, Anderson says, Bland, Tiffin
respect me. I have enough
Columbian , Joe
confidence that Utey will Bench tells him he sounds like Beverly, thlllicothe; Barry
AHL Standings
Burgert, Upper Arlington ,
a "preacher."
By United Press International respect me because of what I
M1ke
Banks, Youngstown
"Maybe I am a preacher," he Ursuline,
do. But I don't ask them to do
East
Bob Brykalskl ,
W. L. T. Pis this. I think you have to earn sa1d, "but I feel we owe Canton Lincoln, Gary Burns,
Boston
39 19 13 91 it."
baseball, we owe things to this Ptqua ;
Tim
Capehart,
Nova Scotia
37 19 13 87
Columbus Walnut Ridge, Jim
game,
and
I'm
strong
on
that
Anderson admits he may be
Springfield
29 27 14 72
Chellis, Columbus Hartley;
111tt
Providence
24 35 10 58 old-fashioned, stressing as he feeling"
Tom
Doaty,
Cleveland
Rochester
2536858 does to his players traditional
West
~ \\)·
W. L. T. Pis valuea like cleanliness, mother~~~~
Baltimore
31 27 11 73 hood and Ute Cincmnati Reds,
Hershey
29 27 11 69 but he says if anyone doesn't
Cleveland
30 32 9 69 like it, they can leave.
Cincinnati
27 26 14 68
"They have to obey the
Richmond
28 31 10 66
1-S lb. Ham Free when you buy Dayton
Tidewater
20 40 9 49 rules," he repeated. "Because
Tuesday's Results
Tires totaling $49.99 - Premium .
when you're getting paid by
Cleveland 7 Balli more 1
any f1rm, I don't care if it's
Rayons . dual white and full 4 plys.
Bostoo 2 Nova Scotia 2
(Onlygamesscheduledl
baseball or Hughes Aircraft,
First line tire &amp; tubeless.
Wednesday's Games
to
be
Utere
you're
getting
psid
Cievelandat Hershey
on time and you're getting paid
Provldf!llce at Tidewater
IOnlygamesscheduledl
to wear the uniform the way

Ohio AAA Dream Team

Win, Need 2 For MaJ"k

SOUTH

Election Loss

PT. PLEASANT - Rev C.
L Frum, Recrwter for Adult
BaSic Education m Mason
County, W. Va., renunds all
students home on break from
college th'lt now would be a
good time to 'brUSh up' on thelireading skills and studies by
taking advUntage of the opportunities available at the
Adult Learmng Center located
at the Mason County
Vocational Center, Ohio River
Road. All thiS 1s offered "absolutely free ."
Many students have been
commg to Ute Learning Center
to unprove lhe1r reading skills
w1Ut practices on the Cra1g
Reading machines. Some of the
students have doubled, even
tripled, Utell' reading speed " Police Admmistrat10n and
and comprehension.
CIVIl InvestigaUon" by Arco;
The AutoTutor offers an Programmed Texts as follows·
opportunity for college bound "Calculus for the Phys1cal
student to get a head start on Sc1ences"; 0 Pre·Calculus
many subjects; for Ute student Mathematics - Algebra";
already enrolled in college 1t "Pre-Calculus MaUtemabcs offers them an opportunity to Analyttc "

Doubte-

.K63
.A862
• 94
.AK94

In Florida's

At Point Center

Long Suit
Squeeze

Silver Lining

Brush Up Offered

jfnD81'

'

Hammond p romoted
AdmmlStrator William E Counselor, Claims Examiner,
Garnes of the Ohio Bureau of Equal Employment
Employment Services an- Representative and State
nounced Monday appointment SuperviSOr for the Work Inof Ralph A. Hammond as centive Program (WIN)
District Manager of Distrtct V
District V lS set up to mclude
Franklin (Columbus), Union,
Delaware, Uckmg, Madison,
Fayette, P1ckaway, Fairfield,
Ross, Hockmg, Pike, Vmton,
Athens, Sc1oto, Jackson,
Me1gs, Lawrence and Gall1a
Counlles Under the new
structure, all local Office
Managers m District F1ve will
report to Hammond's Office
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Sen.
and he m turn Will report to Ute
Edmund S. Muskie, paying a
Central Off1ce In Columbus
Hammond IS a graduate of VISit here on the day of the
The Ohio Stale University and illinoiS prunary, said Tuesday
stii11s officiating at al11ts track hiS poor showing in the Florida
pnmary last -week helped
meets
Hammond has served 18 rather than hurt his campaign.
"In fact, our supporters told
years w1Ut Ute Bureau He has
worked a. an fnterVlewer, us Utey would work even
~.arder for us," the Mame
senator sa1d at a bnef meeting
with newsmen before a private
fund-ralSmg dmner here.
He later flew back to IllinoiS
to awa1t the results of that
state's prunary where he was
pilmg up an unpressive margin
over his Democrallc opponents.
In the New Hampshire
study on courses they may be pnmary, he receivoo more
plannmg m a future semester votes than oUter Democrallc
An excellent selection of films candidates, but not a majority
are available for the In the Florida race he fmlShed
AutoTutor, and espectally so on fourth
Muskie sa1d he had no mmath and the relatro fields.
.
lentions of dropping out of the
presidential
race
New materials are con"lim oertamlf not getting
stantly being added to lfle large
selection already available at out," Muskie sa1d. "I am Ute
Ute Learning Center. If you only candidate who has won
cannot visit the Center and look anything. No other candidate
over the materials, you are has victories like ours."
A recent poll showed Muskie
invited to call the Vocational
trailing
Mmnesota Sen. Hubert
Center, 675-3039
Humphrey:
Some of the new courses
"I can recall all kmds of
recently added at Ute Center
polls,"
Muskie said. "Some
are: "Management and Ad·
mimstration Quizzer" by Arco; were up, some were down. Of
"Clerical,
Typing
and course, we like Ute ones that
Stenographic Tests" by Arco; are up"

WIN AT

UNANIMOUS CHOICE
NEWYORK(UPI)-BillWalton, the 6-loot-11 sophomore
center who sparked UCLA to a
26-0 regular season record, Is
Ute lone unanimous choice 011
the National Basketball Association coaches 1972 college All·
America team.
Others named to the sqUIId
were Ed RaUeff, Long Beach
St.; Bob McAdoo, North Caroli·
na; Bud Stallworth, KanSas
and Dwight Lamar, Southwest
LouiSiana.

Celina's White
AAA's Top Coach

Cincy Is Beaten 2·1

111IRD GRAND PRIX

.CORTINA D'AMPEZZO
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - The
Italy ( UPI) - Yoko Kasaya
of
Japan,
the Cincinnati Reds outhit the
Olympic Games 70 • meter Philadelphia Phils Tuesday but
jwnp gold medalist, woii- the still lost, 2-1, for their seventh
third Grand Prix of NaUons ski defeat in 10 Grapefruit League
jumping competition Tuesday. games.
Cincinnati pitcher Mike
Kasaya made two jumps of
Ruddell,
a
20-year-old
over 'ZIO feet on the final day of
~tition to beat out 54 righUtander, walked In the
winning run In the e1ghlh in·
jwnpers from 12 naUons.
nlng after a smgle, a walk and

1972 Class AAA

·Darwin Sparks Twins
By Uoled Preas lntematlonal White Sox, 7~1.
Bobby Darwin's dream of
The last of three straight

hecomlng a major leaguer
appears to be coming true at
last-10 .long years after he
started In organized baseball
aa a 19-year-old rpokie pitcher
wiUt San Jose In Ute California
League.
Darwin Is now an outfielder
with the Mirmesota Twins and
the hitting sensation of the
spring training season.
[le 1 1~inutl'l ~ ,,SJ\Igging
'1\!eftday., when he hit two
lximer~e of about 450 feet
and the other of about 400 feet
-In the Twins' 4-2 victory over
1 the Boston Red Sox. Jim Perry,
tagged for both Boston runs In
the sixth inning, was the
winning pitcher.
In Other Camps
In other camps: Dock Ellis
became the first Pittsblrgh
Pirate pitcher to go seven
Innings Utis sprmg, allowmg
three runs and five hits In a 5-3
victory over the St. Louis
Cardinals. Riehle Zisk's thri!erun homer In the seventh waa
the big blow for the Pirates
after Bob Gibson shut them out
for five innings .. . Rich
McKinney and John Ellis hit
two-run homers and Johnny
Caillson hit a triple and two
singles as the New York
Yankees defeated the Chicago

walks by 2Q..year-old Mike
Ruddel) forced home Deron
Jomson In the eighth inning
and gave the Philadelphia
Pbilliea a Z.l triumph over the
Cincinnati Reds ... Ed Kranepool hit a two-run homer and
rookie Jon Matlack allowed
one run m six innings In Ute
New York Mets' 4-2 victory
over the Baltimore Orioles.
'I

'l\yP171A, ~\IIWJ~~ ljy ~.OJ\
Hansen and Jose Martinez
sparked 11 five-run 1 elghth ~
inning rally which lifted the
Kansas City Royals to a 9-7
decision over the Texas
Rangers ... Billy Willi.ams had
two singles to lead a !O-bit
attack that brought the
Olicago CUfls a 5-3 triumph
over the Milwaukee Brewers
despite a pair of doubles by Joe
Lahood ... The Los Angeles
Dodgers and Houston Astros
played a 2-210-inning tie called
to allow Ute teams to leave
Daytona Beach, Fla., for Ute1r
regular !raining bases.
Four and Four
Ken Holtzman allowed four
hits and struck out four In siX
innings as the Oakland Alhletics scored a 8-0 victory over
the Califorma Angels. Dick
Green drove in three runs for
the Athletics ... Buddy Bell, son

To keep the family
Happy and bright,
Dnve 'em out to the
Dauy Valley tonight!
Anxious to serve you at The Dairy Valley
Drive ln. Tempting cones. sundaes. shakes in
all flavors. Come as you are and eat in your
car.

THE DAIRY VALLEY
Phone 992-2556
At The End of Pomeroy Bridge

CALL POINTVIEW: 992 - 2505
The National Commission
on Marijuana and Drug
Abuse, a very conserva11ve
group
appointed
by
President Nixon, jolted the
nallon, last month by ob
servln~ that pot Isn't nearly
as dangerous, addictive or
harmful as we have been
told. Tonight, a rolnted
spacial tha! Is wei worth
attention, "Shafer's Repor1
oo Marijuana," Involving the
members of the commission,
shows up on Ch It, 9 p m.
As Important as the
marijuana spacial may be,
we'd bet that a lot of folks
will want to see Jimmy
Stewart taking one more
crack at his famous role In
"Harvey," the fey chap
whose best friend Is a sixfoot Invisible rabbit. Helen
Hayes co-stars In the
Hallmark Hall of Fame, and

I All-Ohio Squad

Sparky Expects Reds

To F~llo:W His Rules

Rizer's Easter Tire Sale

,,~l.~~

~

1969 FORD

DYess·UJ:&gt; l)f

4 DOOR SEDAN
Radto, heater, power steering, a1r
conditiOn.

only $1795

MOVIES "River ol Gold"
Is , the Ch. 6 prime-time
feature , with Dick Rambo, 8
p. m. Also "Magnificent
Yankee," Louis Calhern, 4 p

THURSDAY Don't miss
Bob Braun'.s SO-SO Club
loday It's a special salute to
WLW, !hat grand old rad1o
stallon which Is celebrat1ng
Its 50th anniversary Noon on
Ch. 4, and highly recom
mended.

s,,.

"~tf.

2&amp; 7

m , and "Fighting Ken tuckian," John Wayne, 11 30
p. m , bolh Ch. 10.

~

,.,,

It's a goodie 8 30 p. m. , Chs.
Is Muskle through In '72'
Was Ed dead when Wallace
led? A look al the wounded
front runner Is 1eken in
"Public Affair Election
72," on Ch. 11 at 8 p m

'ntnoN,

GUARANTY PLASTIC
OUTSIDE

WHITE PAINT

gal.'6'5
Just wash out your
brush with soap &amp;
water.

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
MIDDLEPORT. 0.

Sale Ends April 1st At Noon

Need Ttres? (Buy now install later)

Dual White Wall • 735·14 E78x14
Dual White Wall • 775-14 F78x14
Dual White Wall • 875-14 G78x14
Dual White Wall • 825-15 G78x15
Dual White Wall • 845·15 H78x15

S26.

Plus Fed. Exc. Tax 2.24 to 2.81

FREE MOUNTING-OLDTIRES

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT
Jrd Ave.

Middleport

RIZER OIL CO.
992-2101
TOO E. Main

Pomeroy

Try Us You'll

lie Us

�. I

~-The DaUy Seltlnel. Mlddle!!!l~Ptineroy, 0., March 22,1972

2- The DaUyllenllnel,Midcleport-Polneroy, 0., March II, 1972

"Guess He Followed You All the
Way Home!"

Assembly Moves uickly
COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Ohio General Assembly
warming up for a pnmary
election campa1gn recess next
month, took on a wode vanety
of hard-hitting ISSues m a
fullwork day Tuesday
The lawmakers:
- Took fmal leg isla Uve action to place on Ute May 2 primary ballot the question of
whether Oh1o should estabhsh
a state lottery.
- Left up to the House a deCISion on language in a package of 14 constitutional changes which also could go on the
ballot in May if approved m
time.
- Reaffinned the deaUt penalty and Ute current 138-yearold prohibition agamst abortions except when the mother's
life in in danger.
The House worked for more
than five hours on a sweeping
reVISIOn of Ohw's crurunal
laws before adJourning for the
evenmg. Debate was to continue today, begmning at !:3D
p.m.
Elinunatmg capttal punishment and liberalizmg the abortion law were among 15
amendments offered to the 266page crunmal code bill, which
was seven years m Ute makm~.
Goes oo Ballot
The Senate agreed to Ute
House vers10n of the lottery resolution, vote
two
more than the Utree.fiftha majority requ1red on a constitutional amendment.
James R Marsh, elections
counsel to Secretary of State
Ted W Brown, smd necessary
advertisements of the constitutional question would hegm immediately so the ISSUe could
appear on the May 2 ballot.
The resolution, adopted after
a 14-month JOUrney through the
legislature dunng which 11 was
defeated tw1ce and g1ven up for
dead several tunes, calls for
repeal of the constitutional
prohibition aga1nst a stale
lottery
Under the restnctive House
amendment to which the Senate agreed, COIL!!tituhonal bans
on other fonns of gambling
would be retamed This was
viewed as a safeguard agamst
establislunent of off-track hettml! or caSino gamblmg
i/ 11\'e 'Vtller's approve, a specia,l lottery pianmng comnus-·
sloW WID go" to' wor~ Wltliin' a
week to set up a lottery with
proceeds gomg mto the stale
general fund for government
programs
Quick Action Cited
Sen. Ronald M Mottl, D-Parma, who gwded Ute resolution
on Its often-penlous trek
through the Senate and House,
pointed out that Michigan
voters w11l be deciding the
same question May 16, and
PeMSylvama has just begun a
state lotlery.
Mottl sa1d Oh1o could lose
hundreds of thousands of
dollars to netghbormg stales if
qu1ck action 1s not taken.
~uck acbon lS also requll'e011 in Ute House if Ute package

of conslltutoonal changes,
includ-mg settill8 up Iegu!lative
expense
accounts
and
requirmg the governor and
lieutenant governor to be
elected wtth a single vote, are
to appear on tbe May 2 ballot
Major disagreement cropped
up aga1n Tuesday over wheUter
the candidates for governor
and lieutenant governor should
also be required to p8lr up m
Ute pnmary elections well as m
November .
As passed by the House, the
two offices were paired in Ute
prunary But the Senate adopted, 18-11, an amendment by
Sen. Robert J. Corts, R-Eiyrla,
separating Ute candidates m
the prunary but pairing Utem
in the general electiOn by
1
party
State Majonty Whlp Michael
J. Maloney, R.Cmcmnatl, tried
to reverse the action but failed,
12-16, despite an attempt by Lt.
Gov John W. Brown, who was
pres1dmg over Ute Senate, to
help wnte Ute amendment to
his own liking.
Brown, who favors combtn·
mg the offices boUt m the prl·
mary and general election,
smd he would actively oppose
the entire constitullonal
package if Ute language 1s not
changed
The House could demand
that it be changed, or Ute
Senate could retreat from
Tuesday's action.
The proposal lS designed to
make Ute governor and lieutenant governor memhers of the
same party. Brown lS a Republican, while Gov. John J.
G1lbgan 1s a Democrat.
Maloney sa1d separating the
offices on the prm~ary ballot

and combmmg them on the
general electiOn ballot might
produce "two nommees who
don't want any part of each
other but are forced to run to-

gether "
Youngstown BuB Bill
But Sen. Tennyson Guyer, R- I
Findlay, S8ld combining Utem
in Ute primary would ''produce
selection rather tban election"
and permit a strong gubematonal candidate to hand p1ck a
"stooge" as his runnmg mate.
''It would wreck Ute Republican Party," Guyer told Mal-

ney.
Sen. Howard C. Cook, R-Toledo, failed In an attempt to

. ..' '
(

send the package back to the
Judiciary Committee and it
cleared, 25-5.
In other legislative acUon:
- The Senate unanimously
adopted and sent to the governor an emergency bill to allow
Youll8stown to place on the
May ballot an operating levy to
retam transit service.
- The Senate unanimously
agreed to House amendments
and sent Gilligan legislation requiring identification cards
wiUt photographs for welfare
recipients to receive and cash
lhell' checks.
Both chambers return today
at 1:30 p.m.

.

'

,.

NORTH

-

::S: 0 e.C"PV.Jt'UI"'h"""O?F'??".,

ntttJJYbb

LJbbbbd

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
RECAP ON RABBIT
IS WARREN-TED
NEW YORK (KFS) - Jmuny Stewart's
searchmg for a summer stock play "to keep
sharp " Jim d1d "Harvey" w1th Helen Hayes a
season ago and looked very sharp. Not h1s f1rst
time after the or1gmal Frank Fay-starred
"Harvey" had run a couple of seasons, Fay took
a mne-week collapse, and Jimmy fllled , m
which remmded folds he'd started out as a stage
mummer
Fay was the all-hme character 's.
character , m h1s dotage he got rehgwn after a
lot of d1vorces (mciudmg from Barbara Stanwyck, who rephed to someone who asked 1f she
mtended to see Fay m "Harvey" "No, I saw
enough s1x-foot rabbits when I was marrted to
him" ) . Fay's old,age rehg10us return became
fanatiCism He'd do a twomonute spot m front of
St Patrock's Cathedral, kneehng ostentatiously,
hat over heart, murmurmg mcantat10ns whlle
folks Circled round to Usten and watch, as was
Frank's Idea
Aller Fay's deservedly great noltces m the
role ended some 20 years' shabby obscurity,
Fay stopped attendmg Mass at St. Malachy's on
W 49th St , the Actors Church, and began g01ng
to late H1gh Mass Sundays at St Patrick's
Cathedral, m a suol.ably front-pew of course
He arrtved liiliDaculately turned out m Impeccable costumes plpmg on vest, homburg
hat, pomty shmed-shoes, elaborately theatrical
m every move m case anyone mightn't realize
who he was.
Such sudden rejection of h1s old, homey,
comfortable Actor's Church deeply hurt the
pastor at St. Malachy's, who confided to Bert
Wheeler, a great star in hiS day who'd never
suffered the showbiz sin of Ham, and Bert m
turn took the message to the recently selfoverwhelmed Fay.
Wheeler was persuaSive, appealmg, fmally
convmcmg. Fay nobly agreed he would return
to the scene of his poverty-days worshipmg He
would, he assured Bert, be at St. Malachy's for
High Mass the Sunday after next Wonderful,
uld Bert.

I

"But tell Ute pastor," Fay warned, "that he's
best announce I'll be there from the pulpit next
Sunday"
"Harvey" was produced by the late Brock
Pemberton, a legendary and rare decent man
am1d the cymcal Bdwy. hustlers .. . He was one
of but three producers who could put on a play
wtthout fll'st posting a bond wiUt Actors Eqmty
to cover rehearsal and two-weeks' performance
pay. The others were Lee Shubert and a gentleman whose name escapes us at 5:15a.m. as
we two-finger off to press (he produced mexpenslve plays and operated t1ie "Subway CirCUli," paid only bare-nununwn union salaries
- but never welshed a payroll).
"Harvey" ran more than four seasons, won
a Pulitzer, made Brock an even ncher skmfllnt,
for thrifty as well as completely honest was Ute
Pemherton reputation .. One cnt1c (John
Chapman of the N Y.'Daily News) said Brock
had produced "Harvey" as tf certain it would
flop; a chintzy physiCal staging mdeed.
But Brock was a showman, a perceptive,
tasteful pro who'd started as a newspaperman
on the Emporia , Kan., Gazette He later was
drama ed1tor on Ute N. Y Mail, N. Y. World,
and Times, and began h1s backstage apprenticeship with the great gentleman Arthur
Hopkms (champagne fmds 1ts level 1and started
as a pfoducer w1th a hit stra1ght off, "Enter
Madame "
Subsequently he staged "Miss
Lulu Belt," "SlrtcUy Dishonorable, " "SIX
Characters m Search of an Author," "Personal
Appearance," "KISS the Boys Goodbye" etc , to
h1s magnum (Jeroboam !) opus, "Harvey."
There are decent and tasteful producers on
Bdwy. even today, as there were so many more
m earlier greasepamted generations .. Arthur
Hopkins had dozens of great hits ("Poor Utile
Rich Girl/' ~ohn Barrymore's "Hamlet,"
Chekhov and Strlngberg and Sheakespeare and
O'Neill and Philip Barry; cast Leshe Howard
and Bogard In "The Petrifioo Forest," which
made them H'wood superstars, and too many
others to liSt herem ... A permanently
distinguished showman, he refused to produce
filth or shabby scr1pts, and before he d1ed,
hadn 'I produced for many seasons

Evils Seen
In VA Tax
WASHINGTON (UP!) Rep John M. Ashbrook, R·
Ohio, sa1d today the more Ute
tvalue,addOII tax of Ute Nmon
admmlstratlon is explamed
"the more Ill-advised the whole
1dea appears."
The value-added tax - VAT
- 1s a tax addoo to the value of
a material, serVIce or product
as 1t moves through var1ous
stages of production and
diStribution
"This Ism essence a national
sales tax - and a h1dden one at
that - paid by the consumer,"
Ashbrook sa1d. "The admimstrallon is constdering a
proposal to substitute this tax
for the portion of property
taxes that go toward school
fmancmg"

(D)

Lakers Post '6 7th NBA

zz

WEST

EAST

.Ql084
.7
t732
.QJ1085

.195
.QJ10943
tB5

.72

ByUnltedl'relllnlel'IUIUonal
The Los Angeles Latera, who
se,ta consecuUve.game winning
streak for pro team sports of 33
straight Winll during the season,
scored their 67th win of the
campaign Tueaday night when
they defeated the Chicago

Bulls, 109-!04.
The Lakers need one more
Win to Ue and two more to
surpass the NaUonal Basketball
AssoclaUon mark set by
Philadelphia In 1966-37. The
Lakers play at Cleveland
tonight and then will be at
home against Phoenix Friday
night and against SeatUe
Sunday night.
Gail Goodrich scored 39
points and Jerry West 26 for
the Lakers who held a 52-61
halftime margin. Bob Love had
28 points for the Bulls.
Hawks CIIDch Berth
The Atlanta Hawks cUnched a
berth In Ute playoffw when they
overca!he a 17-p~~lnt deficit to
best the Philadelphia 71!ers,117·
l!l. Lou Hudson scored 23 of
his 36 points In the second half
to lead a rally whicH started

.A72

.K5

• AKQJ106

.63
North-South vulnerable
Weol North East South

Pass
Pass

1•
5•
6.

Pass 4N.T,
Pass 5 N.'t.'
Pass 7 N.T.

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opemng lead-• Q
By Oswald &amp; Jamu Jaeolly

DR. LAWRENCE E.1AM8

Both. People Need
Fertility Study
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lam I&gt;-Two years
ago I had blood poisoning in
my right ovary and tube. I
had to have them removed
The doctor was able to save
the left ovary and tube. 1
kept trying to get pregnant
but couldn't. A year ago I
went to another doctor and
he gave me one of those
tests you see on TV. The doc·
tor shot blue dye m my tube
and sa1d if the blue dye goes
stra1ght up hke a river that
means I can get pregnant
and if 1t stays m a circle
then the tube tsn't open. The
dye did go straight up, so
the doctor said there wasn't
any reason I couldn't ·get
pregnant It is a year later
now. and I .still llol)-'t ~~v~
the child I pray for every
day. Is there any operation I
can have to help me' What
IS my chance of havmg a
child?
Dear Reader""The fact
that the tube 1s open doesn't
necessarily mean that you
can get pregnant The ovum
has to be released, pass
through the tube, be ferlll·
1zed by sperm and the condihons have to be right for it
to be implanted in the uterus
for the pregnancy to ensue.
There are a lot of steps in
gettmg pregnant besides just
havmg the tube open In
other words, just because
the road is open doesn't
mean there will be a lot of
traffic on it
It also takes two for n
pregnancy to occur This
means an ovum and a sperm.
A good fcrtlhty study in the
person w1th your problem
should 1uvolve a careful exammation of both husband
and Wife. The doctor by speCial tests can tell whether
you are ovulatmg or not and
w h ether you 6ave normal
hormone balance and he can
also tell whether your husband 1s producmg a suffiCient amount of live sperm
If both of vou really want
a child, I would suggest you

go to your gynecologist for
th1s problem and have your
husband also agree that he
will go to a doctor for an examination of himseH.
Even though a couple may
have frequent normal relatLOns, th1s doesn't mean that
adequate live sperm 1s produced or that the female Is
producing ovum nor does it
have any direct relation to
the female's abllity to get
pregnant. Psychological factors can even play a role.
Many a couple has had
their first child after they
have adopted one.
D o c t o r s sometimes give
men thyroid tablets If they
are on the low side of .,thyrotd function, this increases
the number of live sperm
cells and the likelihood' of
pregnancy. Women's fertilIty can be increased by
medicine, too. The new ferllhty pills are responsible for
most of the recent cases of
multiple b1rths

FHA April
(Continued from page I)
Barnes, vice president; Debbie
Knight, hlstor1an; Diana
Lewis, treasurer; Diana
McAngus, secretary; Josie
Morton, song leader, and Unda
Baker, Reginll Bing, Donna
Boyd, Terry Bumgardner,
Unda Burbage, Tressa Hayes,
Jackie Hutton, Debbie Lemley,
Diana Lynch, Cindy Manley,
Debbie McDaniels, Debbie
Mowery, Barbara Price,
Debbie Schoonover and Gail
Sizemore.
Purpose of the organization
lS to learn to live better today
m order that Ute lives of
members and their families
will be better tomorrow. The
motto of the group ts "Toward
New Horizons," and the colors
of the organization are red and
while.

When you hold pressure
cards in three suits you may
be able to work a doublesqueeze m which you
squeeze boUt your opponents.
South bid his hand with all
the delicacy of a steam roller. When North admitted
possession of two aces and
two kings, South counted 12
top tricks and felt that the
Lord would provide a 13th
for him. The game was duplicate so SouUt placed Ute
grand slam In no-trump.
The queen of clubs lead
was encouraging. It looks as
If West might be the only
player to be able to stop
clubs Then 1f East was the
only man able to stop either
of the major suits a doublesqueeze would be automatic.
He won the club and
cashed fl ve diamonds while
discarding one card in each
su1t from dummy. West discarded two clubs, East three
hearts.
That gave South all the information he needed. E a s t
was obviously very long in
hearts. Thus S o u t b was
ready to put real pressure
on West.
He led a heart to dummy's
S.nd $1 lo&lt; JACOIY MODEIIH llool:

to. "Win af Jridtt." (c/o this ntws~
poper!, P0. lor 419, I!Mio Cifr
Stotion, H.., York, H Y. 10019.

NEW FACE In town In
Ottowa Is Yao Kuang, 51,
ace and came back to his
career dl-plomal who Is · king-o •Wes1 dlsearded · 'a
Peking'a new amlla11ador •spade. Now· South ' led tbll r
to Canada. In preytou• ••· •. last diamond 'arid WBBt bad 1
algnmeots In Wanaw, he
to let another spade go. He
participated In sporadic
was still under club prestalb with American dlplosure.
mala In tbe PoU1h capllal
Dummy's nine of clubs
for fears preceding Prell- was thrown and East let his
den Nixon's visit to Chlua.
club go. Now South's last
club was led to dummy and
East had to throw a spade.
.Dummy's heart had squeezed
him. smce West held a club
and East a heart, no one
TWO DIE IN CRASH
DELAWARE, Ohio (UPI)- could have spades stopped
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN)
Rodney Ratcliff, 32, and
Vashaw Lipes, 52, both of
Columbua, were killed Monday
in the crash of their twinThe b1ddi!ll hu been
engine plane In a field about 10 West North East
miles oorlheast of here.
Pass
The cause of the crash waa Po"' I .
Pass
3
•
Pass
not immediately determined.
You, South, hold:
Ratcliff was the pilot and
Lipes, a passenger, was an • AK854 • AZ • J .AK854
ofiicer in the firm of
Hocka&lt;lenLipes-Rousculp,
Inc., a Columbus consultlt!g
engineering firm which owned residents In bordering stales at
the aircraft.
lower prlcea, officials said
Monday,
Liquor
Department
UQUOR SAI.Fii LOST
spokesmen said Increased
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The activity is planned to stop
State lost $6 mlllion in liquor illegal traffic In liquor acroaa
sales during !971 because state lines which they desabout 263,000 gallons of liquor cribed as a "form of
were purchased by Ohio bootlegging . • •

Jail Breakouts Unst1•-prising

CINCINNATI (UPI) -Ham- a place just not big enough to
The Oh1o Republican sa1d, Ilton County Sheriff Dan Tehan hold thm.
however, he becomes skeptical sa1d today county jail pnsoners
"This place was built In 1917
when there IS talk of replacing "sit around 24 hours a day to house 150 prisoners."
one tax wtlh another because of planmng an escape" and 1t
Some '112 prisoners were at
Ute posstbility 1t w1ll escalate should not come as any sur- Ute jail at the time of the
mto more taxes
prose when they break out as 24 lx'eakout, under the super" If a 3 per cent VAT were did here Monday mght.
VISIOn of only seven guards.
enacted on the federal level, do
Fifteen of the 24 escapers
Authorities apparently
you doubt that Ute rate would were still at large today
learned of the smuggled gun
soon climb to 4 or 5 per cent or
"This kind of thing can hap- from Arthur Tarpley, 23, one of
even higher' " he asked.
OJOn any place," Tehan said. the nine prl.!oners who had
"lt's happening In the big pen- been recaptured by late
itentiaries
all over the country. Tueaday.
The Daily Sentinel
''This ~ould happen again,"
Largest Local Break
DEVOTEDTO~HE
I~TERESTOF
he said. "We are not playing
Tarpley told police the leaMEIGS -MA&gt;ON AREA
with
kids.
These
people
s1t
ders
of the escape "threatened
CHESTER L TANNEHILL.
Exec. Ed
around 24 hours a day planning to blow my brams wt If I didn't
ROBERT HOEFLICH .
to escape.
go along."
Cilv Editor
Pubi•Shed dally except
"They have all day to learn
The escape, largest In the
Saturday by Tl'le Oh 10 Valley
everything
about
the
jail
and
history, prompted county
jail's
Publ•sh 1ntjl Company , 111
Court St, Pomeroy . Onto, plan a break. Our people are
prosecutor Simon Lela Jr. to
45769 Business Off 1ce Phone
only
In
here
for
eight
hours
at
a
call
for a special grand juty
992 2156, Ed•lor.el Phone 992
01
2157
Ume,
invesllptlon, l'relltllnc ComSecond ctns posraoe pa •d at
Gun
011
Strlq
mon Pleas Judie William GuaPomeroy. Oh•o
National adverttstng
Authorities are reaSonably weller said he would do that
reprtstntative
Bott•n•tll
today. ''They will be returnGlllagher . Inc , l2 East 42nd sure that a woman visitor to
Sl , New York c,ty , New York
the courUtourse building start- able on Friday and will report
Subscr•PI•on ra1u
De
l1vered by carrier where Oil the mass escape by smuggl- within a week," he said.
ava.tabte SO cents per week , 1118 a gun to a prisoner In the
The escape was obviously
By Motor Route where carr •er
Sixth floor jail by tymg it to a well planned and went off withserv 1ce not evoll!1ble One
month $1 75 8'; ma11 m Oh io strmg lowered out of a jail
out a hitch. The prisoners took
anct w Vo , One yeor $14 00
window.
over Ute jail and remained
S1x monlhs S1 25
Three
"It's
not
a
matter
of
semonths S-4 50 Subscr1pflon
there for nearly an hour before
prt ce 1ncludes Sunday T1mes
curity,"
Tehan
Insisted.
"With
fleeing
the building wiihwt
sent mel
us. It's just too many people In a!JYOne being aware of any

trouble.
fled through a rear garage
''This waa a very well plann- door.
ed operation going back three
Another grwp escaped down
or possibly four months," Te- the main stairs of Ute bUilding,
han said.
but not before they enTehan said William Butts, 28, countered Judge Joseph
a jall trusty, and calvin Roc· Luebbers and a court house
quemore, 41, mastennlnded guard.
the break.
Luebbers and the gllard were
Butta sold candy to Ute oUter forced to Ue on the noor of the
lmnates for tlie county and was lobby while Ute escapees Ued
the only prisoner permitted to their hands behind them. Nel·
enter Ute jail office to pick up Iller man was hermed bit the
Ute.candy and return w1th the prlaoners took Sl30 from the
money.
guard,
Federal fugitive warranta
Money and Weapo111
were lasued fbr the escapee~
When the break started and the FBI entered the
about 8:15 p.m. Butts entered manhunt, resulting in the
the office as he nonnally capture of four men In a houae
would, but once Inside he on the city's west aide late
~Nlled a pistol and forced the Tueaday.
guards on duly to walk lnto~e
_FBI.-'Ienta and local pollee
cell block where two other surrounded the house of Mrl.
guards already had been Ella Johnson and Uten ldcbd
overpowered.
In the door. Robert Glbbe, 211,
The prisoners used the an aCCUMd murderer, 'fVU 8hot
guards' keys to open the and wounded as he fled out the
property room and took three bact door of the house.
handguns, a tear gas rifle and 0Two, of the priaoners were
about Sl,OOO In cash, much of apprehended Monday night,
which belonged to other two women surrendered to
prlaoners.
'
authoritiea Tuesday, and
Some of the escapees used another man was plcbd up by
the jall elevator to In vel to the pollee in Dayton, Ohio,
basement of the bullcling and Tuelday.

-

Findlay Ace Heads

NBA St1ndongs
By United Pnnlntern~tion.l
Eutern Conterenct
Atlantic Division
W. l Pd. GB
x-Boslon
S3 26 .671 ...
New York
-46 32 590 6'1•
Philadelphia 30 49 380 23
Buffalo
22 56 .282 30'1&gt;
Centrtt Division
W. l Pd. GB
COLUMBUS (UPI)
school scoring record, heads dominated by northwesterr
x Baltimore 37 41 m
Carrottopped
Ken
Brooks
of
the 1972 United Pr~ lJ&gt;. Ohio p)l&lt;yers.
Atlanta
33 -46 418 4'h
Clncinnall
27 51 3-46 10
Brooks, a 6-2 senior guard,
Findlay, who broke former ternational Class AAA AD.()hlo
Cleveland , 22 56 282 15
.polled
more Ulan one-third
Trojan
star
Dave
Sorenson's
basketball
team
,
which
IS
Wntem Conference
more votes than his two
with the Hawks trailing, 47-30, -n points and had 17 rebounds
• Midwest Division
W.
l
Pet.'
GB
nearest r1vals, guard Jay
m the second period. Billy for Milwaukee who bea! the
x
Milwaukee
61
19
763
Powell of Boardman and
Cunningham scored 31 points Houston Rockets after enjoying Chicago
55 25 688 6
forward
Scott May of Sanfor Ute 71!ers.
· a 26-pl)lntlead at halftime. The ~Phoenix
48 32 600 13
dusky, easily taking the player25 53 321 35
The Hawks' vic~t- Rockets closed to 89-83 with Detroit
Pacific
Division
of-the-year honors.
ed the CinclnnaU Royals, who just over live minutes left in
W. L. Pet. GB
Joining Brooks, Powell and
would have eliminated them· the game but the Bucks ran off x-LosAngeles 67 12 848
May
on the fii'St team are Co49 30 620 18
selves anyway when they five straight points to cement Golden St.
1h
~eallle
47
JJ
.588
20
South's
Brian
COLUMBUS (UPI) - After gional finals at Columbus to the lumbus
bowed to the Detroit Platona, the victory. calvin Murphy Hooslon
31 47 397 35'1• 21 years, Celina's Dean While eventual state champion, Col- Williams, a junior, and Curt
120-117. Bob Lanier had 33 scored 21 pomts for the Portland
18 63 222 so
Shellabarger of top-ranked
has finally reached the Pinna· umbus Walnut Ridge.
x-Ciinched dlvlsoon title
points and 22 rebounds, Dave Rockets
Results
Tuesday's
White
picked
up
26
of
the
75
Celina.
cleofhisprofesaion, being namBing IICOl'ed 'ZI points and
Elmore SmiUt scored 29 Buffalo 114 Ba llmorelOO
Brooks, a three-year starter
ed
Tuesday
as
the
United
Press
votes
cast
from
throughout
the
Jimmy Walker 21 to lead Ute points and Randy Smith and Oelroi\ 120Cinclnnatl117
International Class AAA coach- stale by his fellow coaches, for Coach John SIO'Zich, fmishPistons. Nate Archibald scored Bob Kaumiwm each had 25 as Atlanla117 Philadelphia 111
Los
Angeles
109
Chicago
104
of
-the-year.
sportswnters and sports- ed the season w1Ut 519 pomts m
37 points for the Royals-the the Buffalo Braves downed the
Milwaukee 11 Houston9.4
22gamesfor a 23.6 average. He
While, a graduate of Mus- casters.
lOth straight game and 21st In _ Baltimore Bullets. The Braves Phoenix 160 Portland 128
In
the
space
provided
for
the
hit 201 of his 386 field goal atkingwn
College
m
1951,
gwded
the last 28 that he topped 30. led, 57-39, at halftime and Ute
(OnlygatnesschO\luled)
• Wellnesday's Games
h1s team to an w\beaten regu- voters to comment on lhell' se- tempts for 54.9 per cent and
In other NBA games, Mil· Bullets never got closer than
Philadelphia
at
Boston
lar
season mark of 18-() and lections, the most often used connected on 73.6 per cent of
waukee !rimmed Houston, 111· eightpomts the rest of the way. Buffalo at New York
mto this weekend's slate tour- remark was· "The record his free throws.
94, Buffalo !ripped Baltimore, Dave StallworUt and Mike Detroit at Cincinnati
speaks for Itself."
Brooks' career total of 994
nament semi-finals
114-100, and Phoenix whipeed Riordan scored 18 points each Houston at Atlanta
Los
Angeles
at
Cleveland
Barberton's .Jack Greynolds pomta eclipsed the school
Th~ Bulldogs, currently 24-0,
Portland, 166-!28.
for the Bullets.
Golden State at Baillmore
fimshed
second w the balloting scoring mark of Sorenson, the
were voted the top Class AAA
Bucks Beal Rockets
Phoenix placed seven men in
(Onlygamesscheduledl
team In the state by Ute UPI to White wtUt eiRht. followed fonner Ohio State star now
KareemAbdui..Jabbar scored double figures against Portland
by Columbus South's Dick wtlh Ute Cleveland Cavaliers,
Board of Coaches.
and the Suns' 160 pomts
ABA Standings
White coached nme seasons Ricketts with six and Don who had 967 points while a
surpassed the previous club By United Press lnternattonal
East
Henderson of Springfield TroJan player.
rec!}l'd of 140 set against San
W. L. Pd. GB at Roseville, near his native
Pure Sbooter
Zanesville, before gomg to Bel- North, Alan Burns of BoardDiego in 196ll. Clem Haskins led x-Kentucky 62 16 795 .
man
and
Paul
Frey
of
Cin43 35 .551 19
An injury his sopromore
lefontame for four seasons .
the j\VInners With 28 points Virginia
42
37
532
20'1•
New
York
cinnati
Elder
with
four
each.
year
which forced him to sit out
a double gave the Phils a I-ll followed by Paul Silas with 24 Florld~ans
35 45 .423 29
He
is
presenUy
in
his
eighth
Others wiUt more than one SIX games kept Brooks from
and Connie Hawkins with 23. Carolina
lead In the second Inning
32 48 400 31
year
at
Celina
and
his
Bulldog
vote
included Bunk Adams of surpasing the 1,000 point mark.
The Reds tied the score at 1-1 Portland'sSidneyWicks topped Pittsburgh 24 54 308 38
West
teams have won 111 and lost Toledo Scott, John D'Angelo of
Brooks, who has been called
In the sixth when Bobby Tolan all scorers with 31 as he
W. L. Pet. GB 45 durill8 that span.
"a
pure shooter with a great
Painesville"
Harvey,
John
Stozopened with a triple and his became' the eighth rookie in x-Utah
57 23 .713 ..
White's ' team last season, ich of Findlay, Harry Fails of stroke" by college recruiters,
44 34 .564 12
pinch rilnner, Cesar Geronimo, NBA history to score more than lnd1ana
Dallas
38
41
481
18'12
comprised
of four juniors and Alliance Jim Kirk of Galton, scored 43 points In his top percame home on a Johnny Bench 2,000 points.
Denver
32 47 .405 24'1• one semor, had a 17-1 regular and Luther Stover of Cam- fonnance Ute past season, hitts1118ie.
Memphis
26 53 329 30112
season mark and lost in the re- bridge.
mg on 20 of 'ZI shots from the
x-Ciinched
division
IItie
The Reds had 12 hits to the
RULE AMENDED
Tuesday's ResuHs
floor. He averaged less than 17
Phils' seven.
BOSTON (UPI)-The NCAA Indiana 139 Pittsburgh 116
shots per game.
107 Floridians 90
Hockey Rules Committee Dallas
Powell, a three-year letterKentucky 102 MemphtS 99
amended a rule Tuesday to Utah 132 Denver 120
man was the leading scorer on
(Only games scheduled)
allow body checking on all
a Boardman team which lost
Wednesday's Games
parts of the 1ce. Under the P1ttsburgh
only to Farrell, Pa., during the
at Kentucky
current rule, a collegiate V~rglma at Indiana
regular season and was voted
Carolina
at
New
York
hockey player 1s prphib1ted
second to Celina In the UPI
of former major leaguer Gus from checking In his offensive
Denver at Dallas
Board of Coaches ratings.
(Only games scheduled)
Bell, had three singles and a
A6-2 senior, Powell, aoolher
zone.
double but the Cleveland Inof the blue-chip college prodians bowed to the San Diego
COLUMBUS (UPII - The Collinwood, Larry Dempsey, spects, averaged 21.5 points
Padres, 4-3, on Rafael Robles'
North;
Mike
1971 -72 Un1ted Press In Columbus
ternatlonal Class AAA.AII-Ohlo Daugherty, Bedford. Steve per game, hitting 48 per\ cent
seventh-innmg 'sacrifice fly.
Basketball Team 'With height, Even, Cambridge,
Bob from Ute floor and 80 per cent
The Lotte Orlons of Tokyo
. 1 '
grade and scoring average:
Flickinger, Wooster, Brad fromthe free throw line, up 10
continued their Impressive
FIRST TEAM
Frank, Lorain,
Dennis
Ken Brooks, Findlay, 6 2, Sr, Greenwald, Cleveland from his junior year. He alao
play against big league op23 6.
Heights; Chuck Goodyear, led the team in aBSlats,
position when they played a 1·1
Jay Powell, Boardman, 6 2, Columbus Walnut Ridge ; averaging 7.1 per contest.
10-lniilng tie with the San
Kalvln Goodwin, Winlers&gt;4He
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)-Sparky you're asked, you're getting Sr,215.
Sandulky's May In probably
Scott May, Sandusky, 6-5,
Franclaco Giants. Fwn1o Nari- Anderson may be "getUng paid to wear the hair the way
Clance Ham"lPn, Columbus the best all aroond 111gb lchool
30 1.
Central, Dave Rurley, Mansta, a ({Inner 20-«ame winner in tough" with his Cincinnati Reds they ask, to me those are Sr',Brian
Williams, Columbus field Dr., Ken Harris, Walnut athlete In the slate. He was a
, the Ja)181!ese,League, went the this ' year, but the difference Utings that are aske4 by that Soulh, 6-4, Jr, 25 4
Hills, Jerome Holland, Dayton first team all-Ohio end In footdistance for tlie Orlons, alloW· hardly Is perceptible.
Curt
Shellabarger,
Celina,
6Roosevelt; Carl Hall, Trotwood ball and must decide w)lich
company.
7, Sr , 16.6
Madison,
Tom Hollins,
ing fo,u r 1!11,!' -~ s~ llU,t, • Anderson says he will not
"Now, if you don't agree with
SECONO
TEAM
Cambridge;
Earl - Hill, sport he wants to play at one ot
six ... Orlando Ce~'s two- chall8e the way he operates as 11, then don't work. ' Go
Craig Lynch, Toledo Start, 6 Alliance, Ed Kane, WhltehoiL the more than 200 colleges
run double and ,the six-bit manager. He will insist, howev- somewhere else. If you want to 6, Sr , 28 7; Bradley Robinson, Mark Klein, Norloo; Greg which have contacted him.
pitching of Pat JarviS and er, that hiS players follow the go with a firm that wants to Akron Centroi-Hower, 6 6, Sr, Laravle, Kettering Alter; Rick
ToppedaUll
18.4,
James
Abrams, Lilienthal, Cambridge; Jeff
Gary Neibauer enabled Ute rules he §at down for Utem at
allow this, then do it, that's all Clevelond East Tech, 6 4, Sr, Maee, Youngstown Wilson ,
A 6-5, 210-pounder, May avAtlanta Braves to beat the the start of spring trainmg IF
0; Dave Hanners, Columbus Dave Mllosbvlch, Cleveland St eraged 30.1 points per game for
I don't think that's getting 20
Walnul Ridge, 6-0, Sr , 17 4, Ignatius; Rick Mosier, Ceona;
Montreal Expos, 4-l.
!hey don't 1t wtll cost them tough.
Crlag Taylor, Springfield Len Matuszek, Cincinnati the Blue Streaks thla seuon,
money.
North, 6-9. Sr , 18.1
Moeller, Archie Mays, Fair- hitting 51 per cent from the
NHLStand1ngs
THIRD TEAM
view ,
Dudley
Murphy,
The
first
project
was
The
Right
Way
By Unoted Press International
Tom Brabson, Barberton, 6- Cleveland Latin , Todd Miller, floor and 71 per cent on his free
Sparky's weight-watchers pro"I feel real strong on It, and 4, Sr , 20 7, Dearr White, Celina,
throws. He also picked off 14
East
Dover
W. L. T. PIS gram, where he told his players maybe I'm wrong," Anderson 6-0, Sr, 16 0; Archie Aldridge,
Keith Neal, Columbus rebounds per game.
54 10 10 112 what they were to weigh when continued, "but I still feel that Mtddletown, 6-4, Jr., 28.4, Jeff Central; Bernard Pope, Toledo
Boston
48 13 11 107
New York
Collier, Sidney, 610, Sr , 20.0, Scott; Chuck Rogers, findlay;
(Continued on page 4)
44 15 13 t01 they reported. Most made it, professional' athletes owe it to Randy Felhaber, Oregon Clay,
Montreal
Dave
Routt,
Cincinnati
30 29 13 73 although some had to lose 20 the kids across this country to 6 3, Sr , 22.9.
Toronto
Withrow, John Reed, Warren
31 JJ 9 71 pounds and oUters, like Tony show them the right way, and I
Detroit
SPECIAL MENTION
Harding,
Duke
Ribar,
14 42 17 45
Buffalo
Larry
Allen,
Hamilton
Taft;
Steubenville;
Gordie
Rawlyk,
18 47 7 43 Perez, now weigh less · than mean right on down the tine." Carl Brown, Cincinnati Pur· Troy, Courtney Snyder, FOYTWINNER
Vancouver
West
they have in seven years.
Anderson says he has not cell, Lawrence Bolden, Steubenville, Randy Shade,
NEW YORK (UPI)-A. J
W. L. T. Pis
Even Anderson lost five established a set of fines Cleveland East Tech, Dave Reynoldsburg , Greg Shannon, Foyt, who won the biggest
x Chicago
42 17 43 97
Bromle~, Kettering Fairmont
Defiance, Craig Stinnett,
Minnesota
35 27 10 80 pounds, but he f1gures that's because he wants to remain West, Bob Crawford, Mans- Springfield North; Dave Nascar race of the sea11011-4le
flexible He also lS realistic fteld Malabar, Mark Colopy, Sackett, Greenville; Mike Daytona 500-whlle walling for
St LOUIS
25 36 11 61 part of the program.
California
21 34 18 60
Ken
Coon, Schoen, Bellevue; Bill Sutton,
"I will not scream at them," enough to realize-and admit- Zanesville;
Philadelphia
23 36 12 58 he says. "I won't come In after that no manager can treat Greenville, Randy Emmons, Marlett11 Leicester Stovell, the USAC season to begin, was
Pittsburgh
23 37 12 58
Ashland, Randy Foster, Cleveland Heights, Ron Vargo, named Monday as Ute monthly
Los A~s
t8 48 8 44 a game and ever make a. every play ON THE CLUB Newark, Paul Fazekas, Painesville Harvey; Chuck winner for February In the
x-Ciin
division title
Boardman, Randy Gates, Williams, Columbus East.
remark. I never have and I THE same way.
Hickok "Professional Athlete of
Tutsdty's ResuHs
Howland . Edgar Jeffries,
Player-of-the-year - Ken the Year" Award.
now.
won't
start
Minnesota 4 California 2
East.
Bob Brooks, Findlay
"You can never treat a Youngstown
Obey The Rules
Detroit 7 Vancouver 5
Kramer,
Cincinnati
Edler,
!Onlygamesscheduled)
"The only thing I belleve is (Johnny) Bench and (Pete) Mike Lovenguth, Portsmouth,
Wednesday's Games
this-A player does not have to Rose, truthfully, the same as Scott McDavid, Gallon, Bob
Buffalo at Pittsburgh
Beavercreek, Andy
like a manager, and he does not you treat a young kld Smyth,
Toronto at Montreal
Sllegemeler,
Kent Roosevelt ,
California at St Louis
have to respect a manager. All because, let's face it, they've Joe Westerfield, Celina, Keith
Detroit at Los Angeles
he has to do Is obey the rules been here a while, they're stars Williams, Lima Sr
(Onlygamesscheduledl
HONORABLE MENTION
"So I don't ask them to in thts game."
John
Arnold, Findlay; Don
Sometimes, Anderson says, Bland, Tiffin
respect me. I have enough
Columbian , Joe
confidence that Utey will Bench tells him he sounds like Beverly, thlllicothe; Barry
AHL Standings
Burgert, Upper Arlington ,
a "preacher."
By United Press International respect me because of what I
M1ke
Banks, Youngstown
"Maybe I am a preacher," he Ursuline,
do. But I don't ask them to do
East
Bob Brykalskl ,
W. L. T. Pis this. I think you have to earn sa1d, "but I feel we owe Canton Lincoln, Gary Burns,
Boston
39 19 13 91 it."
baseball, we owe things to this Ptqua ;
Tim
Capehart,
Nova Scotia
37 19 13 87
Columbus Walnut Ridge, Jim
game,
and
I'm
strong
on
that
Anderson admits he may be
Springfield
29 27 14 72
Chellis, Columbus Hartley;
111tt
Providence
24 35 10 58 old-fashioned, stressing as he feeling"
Tom
Doaty,
Cleveland
Rochester
2536858 does to his players traditional
West
~ \\)·
W. L. T. Pis valuea like cleanliness, mother~~~~
Baltimore
31 27 11 73 hood and Ute Cincmnati Reds,
Hershey
29 27 11 69 but he says if anyone doesn't
Cleveland
30 32 9 69 like it, they can leave.
Cincinnati
27 26 14 68
"They have to obey the
Richmond
28 31 10 66
1-S lb. Ham Free when you buy Dayton
Tidewater
20 40 9 49 rules," he repeated. "Because
Tuesday's Results
Tires totaling $49.99 - Premium .
when you're getting paid by
Cleveland 7 Balli more 1
any f1rm, I don't care if it's
Rayons . dual white and full 4 plys.
Bostoo 2 Nova Scotia 2
(Onlygamesscheduledl
baseball or Hughes Aircraft,
First line tire &amp; tubeless.
Wednesday's Games
to
be
Utere
you're
getting
psid
Cievelandat Hershey
on time and you're getting paid
Provldf!llce at Tidewater
IOnlygamesscheduledl
to wear the uniform the way

Ohio AAA Dream Team

Win, Need 2 For MaJ"k

SOUTH

Election Loss

PT. PLEASANT - Rev C.
L Frum, Recrwter for Adult
BaSic Education m Mason
County, W. Va., renunds all
students home on break from
college th'lt now would be a
good time to 'brUSh up' on thelireading skills and studies by
taking advUntage of the opportunities available at the
Adult Learmng Center located
at the Mason County
Vocational Center, Ohio River
Road. All thiS 1s offered "absolutely free ."
Many students have been
commg to Ute Learning Center
to unprove lhe1r reading skills
w1Ut practices on the Cra1g
Reading machines. Some of the
students have doubled, even
tripled, Utell' reading speed " Police Admmistrat10n and
and comprehension.
CIVIl InvestigaUon" by Arco;
The AutoTutor offers an Programmed Texts as follows·
opportunity for college bound "Calculus for the Phys1cal
student to get a head start on Sc1ences"; 0 Pre·Calculus
many subjects; for Ute student Mathematics - Algebra";
already enrolled in college 1t "Pre-Calculus MaUtemabcs offers them an opportunity to Analyttc "

Doubte-

.K63
.A862
• 94
.AK94

In Florida's

At Point Center

Long Suit
Squeeze

Silver Lining

Brush Up Offered

jfnD81'

'

Hammond p romoted
AdmmlStrator William E Counselor, Claims Examiner,
Garnes of the Ohio Bureau of Equal Employment
Employment Services an- Representative and State
nounced Monday appointment SuperviSOr for the Work Inof Ralph A. Hammond as centive Program (WIN)
District Manager of Distrtct V
District V lS set up to mclude
Franklin (Columbus), Union,
Delaware, Uckmg, Madison,
Fayette, P1ckaway, Fairfield,
Ross, Hockmg, Pike, Vmton,
Athens, Sc1oto, Jackson,
Me1gs, Lawrence and Gall1a
Counlles Under the new
structure, all local Office
Managers m District F1ve will
report to Hammond's Office
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Sen.
and he m turn Will report to Ute
Edmund S. Muskie, paying a
Central Off1ce In Columbus
Hammond IS a graduate of VISit here on the day of the
The Ohio Stale University and illinoiS prunary, said Tuesday
stii11s officiating at al11ts track hiS poor showing in the Florida
pnmary last -week helped
meets
Hammond has served 18 rather than hurt his campaign.
"In fact, our supporters told
years w1Ut Ute Bureau He has
worked a. an fnterVlewer, us Utey would work even
~.arder for us," the Mame
senator sa1d at a bnef meeting
with newsmen before a private
fund-ralSmg dmner here.
He later flew back to IllinoiS
to awa1t the results of that
state's prunary where he was
pilmg up an unpressive margin
over his Democrallc opponents.
In the New Hampshire
study on courses they may be pnmary, he receivoo more
plannmg m a future semester votes than oUter Democrallc
An excellent selection of films candidates, but not a majority
are available for the In the Florida race he fmlShed
AutoTutor, and espectally so on fourth
Muskie sa1d he had no mmath and the relatro fields.
.
lentions of dropping out of the
presidential
race
New materials are con"lim oertamlf not getting
stantly being added to lfle large
selection already available at out," Muskie sa1d. "I am Ute
Ute Learning Center. If you only candidate who has won
cannot visit the Center and look anything. No other candidate
over the materials, you are has victories like ours."
A recent poll showed Muskie
invited to call the Vocational
trailing
Mmnesota Sen. Hubert
Center, 675-3039
Humphrey:
Some of the new courses
"I can recall all kmds of
recently added at Ute Center
polls,"
Muskie said. "Some
are: "Management and Ad·
mimstration Quizzer" by Arco; were up, some were down. Of
"Clerical,
Typing
and course, we like Ute ones that
Stenographic Tests" by Arco; are up"

WIN AT

UNANIMOUS CHOICE
NEWYORK(UPI)-BillWalton, the 6-loot-11 sophomore
center who sparked UCLA to a
26-0 regular season record, Is
Ute lone unanimous choice 011
the National Basketball Association coaches 1972 college All·
America team.
Others named to the sqUIId
were Ed RaUeff, Long Beach
St.; Bob McAdoo, North Caroli·
na; Bud Stallworth, KanSas
and Dwight Lamar, Southwest
LouiSiana.

Celina's White
AAA's Top Coach

Cincy Is Beaten 2·1

111IRD GRAND PRIX

.CORTINA D'AMPEZZO
TAMPA, Fla. (UPI) - The
Italy ( UPI) - Yoko Kasaya
of
Japan,
the Cincinnati Reds outhit the
Olympic Games 70 • meter Philadelphia Phils Tuesday but
jwnp gold medalist, woii- the still lost, 2-1, for their seventh
third Grand Prix of NaUons ski defeat in 10 Grapefruit League
jumping competition Tuesday. games.
Cincinnati pitcher Mike
Kasaya made two jumps of
Ruddell,
a
20-year-old
over 'ZIO feet on the final day of
~tition to beat out 54 righUtander, walked In the
winning run In the e1ghlh in·
jwnpers from 12 naUons.
nlng after a smgle, a walk and

1972 Class AAA

·Darwin Sparks Twins
By Uoled Preas lntematlonal White Sox, 7~1.
Bobby Darwin's dream of
The last of three straight

hecomlng a major leaguer
appears to be coming true at
last-10 .long years after he
started In organized baseball
aa a 19-year-old rpokie pitcher
wiUt San Jose In Ute California
League.
Darwin Is now an outfielder
with the Mirmesota Twins and
the hitting sensation of the
spring training season.
[le 1 1~inutl'l ~ ,,SJ\Igging
'1\!eftday., when he hit two
lximer~e of about 450 feet
and the other of about 400 feet
-In the Twins' 4-2 victory over
1 the Boston Red Sox. Jim Perry,
tagged for both Boston runs In
the sixth inning, was the
winning pitcher.
In Other Camps
In other camps: Dock Ellis
became the first Pittsblrgh
Pirate pitcher to go seven
Innings Utis sprmg, allowmg
three runs and five hits In a 5-3
victory over the St. Louis
Cardinals. Riehle Zisk's thri!erun homer In the seventh waa
the big blow for the Pirates
after Bob Gibson shut them out
for five innings .. . Rich
McKinney and John Ellis hit
two-run homers and Johnny
Caillson hit a triple and two
singles as the New York
Yankees defeated the Chicago

walks by 2Q..year-old Mike
Ruddel) forced home Deron
Jomson In the eighth inning
and gave the Philadelphia
Pbilliea a Z.l triumph over the
Cincinnati Reds ... Ed Kranepool hit a two-run homer and
rookie Jon Matlack allowed
one run m six innings In Ute
New York Mets' 4-2 victory
over the Baltimore Orioles.
'I

'l\yP171A, ~\IIWJ~~ ljy ~.OJ\
Hansen and Jose Martinez
sparked 11 five-run 1 elghth ~
inning rally which lifted the
Kansas City Royals to a 9-7
decision over the Texas
Rangers ... Billy Willi.ams had
two singles to lead a !O-bit
attack that brought the
Olicago CUfls a 5-3 triumph
over the Milwaukee Brewers
despite a pair of doubles by Joe
Lahood ... The Los Angeles
Dodgers and Houston Astros
played a 2-210-inning tie called
to allow Ute teams to leave
Daytona Beach, Fla., for Ute1r
regular !raining bases.
Four and Four
Ken Holtzman allowed four
hits and struck out four In siX
innings as the Oakland Alhletics scored a 8-0 victory over
the Califorma Angels. Dick
Green drove in three runs for
the Athletics ... Buddy Bell, son

To keep the family
Happy and bright,
Dnve 'em out to the
Dauy Valley tonight!
Anxious to serve you at The Dairy Valley
Drive ln. Tempting cones. sundaes. shakes in
all flavors. Come as you are and eat in your
car.

THE DAIRY VALLEY
Phone 992-2556
At The End of Pomeroy Bridge

CALL POINTVIEW: 992 - 2505
The National Commission
on Marijuana and Drug
Abuse, a very conserva11ve
group
appointed
by
President Nixon, jolted the
nallon, last month by ob
servln~ that pot Isn't nearly
as dangerous, addictive or
harmful as we have been
told. Tonight, a rolnted
spacial tha! Is wei worth
attention, "Shafer's Repor1
oo Marijuana," Involving the
members of the commission,
shows up on Ch It, 9 p m.
As Important as the
marijuana spacial may be,
we'd bet that a lot of folks
will want to see Jimmy
Stewart taking one more
crack at his famous role In
"Harvey," the fey chap
whose best friend Is a sixfoot Invisible rabbit. Helen
Hayes co-stars In the
Hallmark Hall of Fame, and

I All-Ohio Squad

Sparky Expects Reds

To F~llo:W His Rules

Rizer's Easter Tire Sale

,,~l.~~

~

1969 FORD

DYess·UJ:&gt; l)f

4 DOOR SEDAN
Radto, heater, power steering, a1r
conditiOn.

only $1795

MOVIES "River ol Gold"
Is , the Ch. 6 prime-time
feature , with Dick Rambo, 8
p. m. Also "Magnificent
Yankee," Louis Calhern, 4 p

THURSDAY Don't miss
Bob Braun'.s SO-SO Club
loday It's a special salute to
WLW, !hat grand old rad1o
stallon which Is celebrat1ng
Its 50th anniversary Noon on
Ch. 4, and highly recom
mended.

s,,.

"~tf.

2&amp; 7

m , and "Fighting Ken tuckian," John Wayne, 11 30
p. m , bolh Ch. 10.

~

,.,,

It's a goodie 8 30 p. m. , Chs.
Is Muskle through In '72'
Was Ed dead when Wallace
led? A look al the wounded
front runner Is 1eken in
"Public Affair Election
72," on Ch. 11 at 8 p m

'ntnoN,

GUARANTY PLASTIC
OUTSIDE

WHITE PAINT

gal.'6'5
Just wash out your
brush with soap &amp;
water.

H&amp;R FIRESTONE
MIDDLEPORT. 0.

Sale Ends April 1st At Noon

Need Ttres? (Buy now install later)

Dual White Wall • 735·14 E78x14
Dual White Wall • 775-14 F78x14
Dual White Wall • 875-14 G78x14
Dual White Wall • 825-15 G78x15
Dual White Wall • 845·15 H78x15

S26.

Plus Fed. Exc. Tax 2.24 to 2.81

FREE MOUNTING-OLDTIRES

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT
Jrd Ave.

Middleport

RIZER OIL CO.
992-2101
TOO E. Main

Pomeroy

Try Us You'll

lie Us

�Howsun Rites, Slated Friday
CINCINNATI' (UPJ) Funeral ilerVicea will be beld in
Denver Friday for Lee
Howsam father of Cincinnati
RedJ ~neral Manager 'Bob
Howsam.
Howsam died in Denver
Tuesday night at the age of 88.
He bad been hospitalized since

Local Bowling
American Leaglon
Ladles Auxiliory League

· March 17, 1972
Standings

IUiferillg a stroke in J.-ry.
1 Howum and b1l 110111, Lee

·and Earl, were aellve :v.n
ago In lhe foundlnll ~d
operation of ,lbe Denver Beata
ba~~eballlealll in the Amelfcan
Associall011 and the Denver
Broncos of lbe Amerlcu
Football League,
CollefiO Basketball RnuHs
·ay Unifeil PrnslntirMIIonill

NatlonallnvltoHanTourtlllmont .
AIN.WYork
tQuortarflnal Round)
Niagara 65 Princeton 60
St. John's IN.Y.I U
Oral Roberts 78

WE- RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES .

Y• SLICED PORK LOIN

Jr.
Bugaloos
32 • - - - - - - - .
Team
Pis.
Headquarter Barmaids
28
Beautiful
Buckeyes
24
Feeney Bennett F Jyers
22
Goble Marauders
20
Rolling Pins
18
• Easter UliHigh Individual Game ow
Pam Henderson 162.
Second High Ind. Game e Hyd~geas
Brenda Cunningham 158.
High Series Brenda
Cunningham 395.
Secone High Series - Delma
Karr 394.
Team High Game Serving: Mlddltporl,
Headquarter Barmaids 504.
Pomeroy,
Gil II polls, 0. ·
Team High Series &amp; Mason
W. V1.
Headquarter Barmaids 1380.

Center
and
First Cuts

flowering Plants

e Azaleas .
Dudley's fkrist

THE SIXTH GRADE BASKETBAlL squad at Harrisonville Elementary ended Its season
with a 6-3 record. Team members, front row, 1-r, Jinuny Haning, Tony King, Ricky Yost,
01ester Fox, Dave Arix , Rod Hill and Carl Gheen, Jr., back row, Paul Steinmetz, Dale Bin~.
Albert McMurray, Everett Gilmore, Brent Stanley, Randy Hollandworth and Greg McCall,
coach.

CARLOAD SHIPMENT!

•

Findlay Ace Heads
Ohio AAA Dream Team
(Continued from page 3)
May's high game of the year
was 39 points and in 13 of Sandusky's games he scored between 'l:l and 39 points.
Williams, a twa-year regular
for South Coach Dick Ricketts
although only a junior,
averaged 25.4 points per game
this season, hitting a torrid 63
pe cent of his floor shots, 202 of
320.
He was the team's leading
rebounder and scored over 20
points in 15 of the Bulldog's 21
games with a high of 37.
In two years, the 6-4 Williams
has been held under double
figures only once in 42 games.
Super Ball Player
Ricketts, who can look forward to having Williams
another season, said, "Anyone
who has seen him play knows
he is a super ball player."
Shellabarger's statistics are
not as impressive as the other
- - four first .team members because he played on a well-llalanced Celina team which Had
four players averageing right
at the 16pointsper game mark.
Shellabarger, a 6-7 senior,
was the high average scorer at
16.6 per contest, but because he
missed a game with an injury
was not high in total points.

MEMBERS OF THE FIFTH GRADE basketball squad at Harrisonville wete, front row, 1r, Lewis Harper, Tony Reeves, Jolm Eblin, Robbie Welsh, and David Riggs; back row, Ben
COtterill, Steve Arnold, Charles Oberholzer, Ernest Mitchell, Donald Steirunetz, and Greg
McCall, coach.
of 12.5 per cent.
Industrial machinery r epairmen- 175,000 in 1968 and
220,000 in 1980, for a growth
rate of 25.7 per cent
Many of the trades are entered through form a 1 apprenticeship programs s e t
up by joint committees representing labor and management and administered by
the Labor Department's Bureau of Apprenticeship and
Training and/ or State Apprenticeship Councils, embodying on the job training
and related classroom instructions. In some cases
high schools and vocational
schools offer courses to prepare students for entry-level
iobs.

SO YOU WANT TO BE

A two-year starter, he
averaged 13 reb"ounds per
game, sbot52 per cent from the
floor and 68 per cent from the
free throw line.
Coach of the Year
Shellabarger, along with
Dean (Scooter) White, named
to the third team, Joe
Westerfield and Rick Mosier,
guided the Bull.&lt;Jogs to an

Prospects Good for
Repairmen, Mechanics
By ERNIE HOOD

Rio Tourney
Starts Tonight
The first annual Southern
Ohio and West Virginia sportsmen basketball tournament
will start at Rio Grande's Lyne
Center this evening.
First game at 5:30 pits
Quaker
State
Service
Center against A. D. Lewis of
Huntington .
'
The second game will be
A.T.D. Fraternity against
(&gt;eorge H. Wright of Huntingl(m, The ,third game will be
Beach Athlet!e•Ciub· $nd All
American Russell Lee against
Action Inc. of Huntington .
In the final game of the night
it will be the Gallipolis coaches
under the sponsorship of Jim
Halley's Ashland going against
Superior Drugs of Hunlington.

-

-

I

CELOTEX

Ceiling Tile

NEW
FURNITURE

7$

l~'~xJ_2" ·.

_Ronde lay ,

Furring Strips

lineal

foot

ENGLI.SH ROAST
'

'

Terms .

MASON

MATERIALS

FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

773-5554

CO.

We Deliver

SHORTENING
MASON

Glad~

We

CHOICE

can

16 oz.

Fairmont ·

can

2% MILK
2 ~:age

lb.

Accept Fed. Food Stamps

..

SPARE RIBS ......... ........!~:.65 ~

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

Delicious Ham by Rath

French City

'

CANNED HAM .........~. '-~·. .~ 5

6

ClOSED SUNDAYS

LIVER
PUDDING

'

lb. sge

~

WASHER
~ 69e
YES!
We Have Easter
·..'

'

~'

'

..

CANDY
BASKETS
and Lots of Oiner Goodies.

·,~.

COOKIE SPECIAL!

KEEBLER

COOKIES

3

P~$1

Iced Raisin Bar, Oatmeal,
Old Fashioned Sugar

$

Camp beII s Soup... . . &amp;~~ 1
Evap. Milk. ;;~.~.~~. . . .5~~ s1
t·
c
t
4
$1
.
Toma o asup... . . . . .
4
Salad Dressing.~.~. 149
Vegetable-Beef

Hunt's

14 oz.
bol\

OUR PRODUCE SPECIALS!

1f2

ORANGES

10~

CARROTS

can

14~

CERTIFIED

'

SEED-POTATOES

SPAGHETTI or
MACARONI

49~ '

HI-C

.Pkgs.

16 OUNCE

PINK OR WHITE

ORANGES

l-Ib.

SPACK

BANQUET

GRAPEFR,Uil......~.. 5~~69$

CARROtS
15e lib:~

50 lb.
bag

FLORIDA

.5 lb. bag

TV DINNERS

Sib.
bag

C

ORANGE and
GRAPE DRINK
46oz.

can
' FOR

cans
for

I
'·
- i

~:

Light
·Chunk

DELMONICO
.

"\, ~

\'

RED RADISHES

\

·12 $1

J().BO DOG FOOD Mix or Match
SWITCH CAT FOOD...........................

Whitney Tuna

cello
pkg.

AUSTIN'S
WINDSHIELD

large
bunch

gallon
jug

Florida Juicy

J

p~

·cELERY

can

MAGIC BLEACH

Prices Effective Mar. 22-29
Monday Thru Friday

12 oz.

THANK YOU

DAIRY BUY!

'

Right reserveo to limit quant1t1es

12 oz.

Focke's
Quality

our's Treet

~

31b.

Cherry Pie Filling

USDA

FRESH CALLIES

lb.

lb.49~

'

You'll Like Our Good USDA Choice Meats

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

lb..

Country
Style

HOGG &amp;. ZUSPAN

·s..tance On
Convenient

Fresh Pork Shoulder

PORK SAUSAGE

.19

Boneless
Waste-Free

SLICED BACON
Waldort
1
~79~
Brand

LOIN PORK CHOPS
lb. 89~

Mayf-.lr
Washable- Finish, 12"x12''

e

lb.

77~

lb.

lb.

Washabie-·i=mish, 12"x12"

RK ROAST

RIB PORK CHO·PS

White, 12"x24"

3 ROOMS

$35 .00 Down

Nature knows nothing of
rights. She knows only laws.
Man, on the other hand, has
ide a I s and aspirations.James, Truslow Adams. his·
torian.

STE.AK

22$
Washable,Grease-ResistantFinish
Sonata
2'.2$
Accoustical T,ile, 12"x12"

'349.95

Center
'Cut

PORK

Panama

·BONELESS
BOSTON ROLL

I

NEW RED

.10 lb. bag

POTATOES

.19

�Howsun Rites, Slated Friday
CINCINNATI' (UPJ) Funeral ilerVicea will be beld in
Denver Friday for Lee
Howsam father of Cincinnati
RedJ ~neral Manager 'Bob
Howsam.
Howsam died in Denver
Tuesday night at the age of 88.
He bad been hospitalized since

Local Bowling
American Leaglon
Ladles Auxiliory League

· March 17, 1972
Standings

IUiferillg a stroke in J.-ry.
1 Howum and b1l 110111, Lee

·and Earl, were aellve :v.n
ago In lhe foundlnll ~d
operation of ,lbe Denver Beata
ba~~eballlealll in the Amelfcan
Associall011 and the Denver
Broncos of lbe Amerlcu
Football League,
CollefiO Basketball RnuHs
·ay Unifeil PrnslntirMIIonill

NatlonallnvltoHanTourtlllmont .
AIN.WYork
tQuortarflnal Round)
Niagara 65 Princeton 60
St. John's IN.Y.I U
Oral Roberts 78

WE- RESERVE THE RIGHT
TO LIMIT QUANTITIES .

Y• SLICED PORK LOIN

Jr.
Bugaloos
32 • - - - - - - - .
Team
Pis.
Headquarter Barmaids
28
Beautiful
Buckeyes
24
Feeney Bennett F Jyers
22
Goble Marauders
20
Rolling Pins
18
• Easter UliHigh Individual Game ow
Pam Henderson 162.
Second High Ind. Game e Hyd~geas
Brenda Cunningham 158.
High Series Brenda
Cunningham 395.
Secone High Series - Delma
Karr 394.
Team High Game Serving: Mlddltporl,
Headquarter Barmaids 504.
Pomeroy,
Gil II polls, 0. ·
Team High Series &amp; Mason
W. V1.
Headquarter Barmaids 1380.

Center
and
First Cuts

flowering Plants

e Azaleas .
Dudley's fkrist

THE SIXTH GRADE BASKETBAlL squad at Harrisonville Elementary ended Its season
with a 6-3 record. Team members, front row, 1-r, Jinuny Haning, Tony King, Ricky Yost,
01ester Fox, Dave Arix , Rod Hill and Carl Gheen, Jr., back row, Paul Steinmetz, Dale Bin~.
Albert McMurray, Everett Gilmore, Brent Stanley, Randy Hollandworth and Greg McCall,
coach.

CARLOAD SHIPMENT!

•

Findlay Ace Heads
Ohio AAA Dream Team
(Continued from page 3)
May's high game of the year
was 39 points and in 13 of Sandusky's games he scored between 'l:l and 39 points.
Williams, a twa-year regular
for South Coach Dick Ricketts
although only a junior,
averaged 25.4 points per game
this season, hitting a torrid 63
pe cent of his floor shots, 202 of
320.
He was the team's leading
rebounder and scored over 20
points in 15 of the Bulldog's 21
games with a high of 37.
In two years, the 6-4 Williams
has been held under double
figures only once in 42 games.
Super Ball Player
Ricketts, who can look forward to having Williams
another season, said, "Anyone
who has seen him play knows
he is a super ball player."
Shellabarger's statistics are
not as impressive as the other
- - four first .team members because he played on a well-llalanced Celina team which Had
four players averageing right
at the 16pointsper game mark.
Shellabarger, a 6-7 senior,
was the high average scorer at
16.6 per contest, but because he
missed a game with an injury
was not high in total points.

MEMBERS OF THE FIFTH GRADE basketball squad at Harrisonville wete, front row, 1r, Lewis Harper, Tony Reeves, Jolm Eblin, Robbie Welsh, and David Riggs; back row, Ben
COtterill, Steve Arnold, Charles Oberholzer, Ernest Mitchell, Donald Steirunetz, and Greg
McCall, coach.
of 12.5 per cent.
Industrial machinery r epairmen- 175,000 in 1968 and
220,000 in 1980, for a growth
rate of 25.7 per cent
Many of the trades are entered through form a 1 apprenticeship programs s e t
up by joint committees representing labor and management and administered by
the Labor Department's Bureau of Apprenticeship and
Training and/ or State Apprenticeship Councils, embodying on the job training
and related classroom instructions. In some cases
high schools and vocational
schools offer courses to prepare students for entry-level
iobs.

SO YOU WANT TO BE

A two-year starter, he
averaged 13 reb"ounds per
game, sbot52 per cent from the
floor and 68 per cent from the
free throw line.
Coach of the Year
Shellabarger, along with
Dean (Scooter) White, named
to the third team, Joe
Westerfield and Rick Mosier,
guided the Bull.&lt;Jogs to an

Prospects Good for
Repairmen, Mechanics
By ERNIE HOOD

Rio Tourney
Starts Tonight
The first annual Southern
Ohio and West Virginia sportsmen basketball tournament
will start at Rio Grande's Lyne
Center this evening.
First game at 5:30 pits
Quaker
State
Service
Center against A. D. Lewis of
Huntington .
'
The second game will be
A.T.D. Fraternity against
(&gt;eorge H. Wright of Huntingl(m, The ,third game will be
Beach Athlet!e•Ciub· $nd All
American Russell Lee against
Action Inc. of Huntington .
In the final game of the night
it will be the Gallipolis coaches
under the sponsorship of Jim
Halley's Ashland going against
Superior Drugs of Hunlington.

-

-

I

CELOTEX

Ceiling Tile

NEW
FURNITURE

7$

l~'~xJ_2" ·.

_Ronde lay ,

Furring Strips

lineal

foot

ENGLI.SH ROAST
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Terms .

MASON

MATERIALS

FURNITURE
Mason, W. Va.

773-5554

CO.

We Deliver

SHORTENING
MASON

Glad~

We

CHOICE

can

16 oz.

Fairmont ·

can

2% MILK
2 ~:age

lb.

Accept Fed. Food Stamps

..

SPARE RIBS ......... ........!~:.65 ~

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

Delicious Ham by Rath

French City

'

CANNED HAM .........~. '-~·. .~ 5

6

ClOSED SUNDAYS

LIVER
PUDDING

'

lb. sge

~

WASHER
~ 69e
YES!
We Have Easter
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CANDY
BASKETS
and Lots of Oiner Goodies.

·,~.

COOKIE SPECIAL!

KEEBLER

COOKIES

3

P~$1

Iced Raisin Bar, Oatmeal,
Old Fashioned Sugar

$

Camp beII s Soup... . . &amp;~~ 1
Evap. Milk. ;;~.~.~~. . . .5~~ s1
t·
c
t
4
$1
.
Toma o asup... . . . . .
4
Salad Dressing.~.~. 149
Vegetable-Beef

Hunt's

14 oz.
bol\

OUR PRODUCE SPECIALS!

1f2

ORANGES

10~

CARROTS

can

14~

CERTIFIED

'

SEED-POTATOES

SPAGHETTI or
MACARONI

49~ '

HI-C

.Pkgs.

16 OUNCE

PINK OR WHITE

ORANGES

l-Ib.

SPACK

BANQUET

GRAPEFR,Uil......~.. 5~~69$

CARROtS
15e lib:~

50 lb.
bag

FLORIDA

.5 lb. bag

TV DINNERS

Sib.
bag

C

ORANGE and
GRAPE DRINK
46oz.

can
' FOR

cans
for

I
'·
- i

~:

Light
·Chunk

DELMONICO
.

"\, ~

\'

RED RADISHES

\

·12 $1

J().BO DOG FOOD Mix or Match
SWITCH CAT FOOD...........................

Whitney Tuna

cello
pkg.

AUSTIN'S
WINDSHIELD

large
bunch

gallon
jug

Florida Juicy

J

p~

·cELERY

can

MAGIC BLEACH

Prices Effective Mar. 22-29
Monday Thru Friday

12 oz.

THANK YOU

DAIRY BUY!

'

Right reserveo to limit quant1t1es

12 oz.

Focke's
Quality

our's Treet

~

31b.

Cherry Pie Filling

USDA

FRESH CALLIES

lb.

lb.49~

'

You'll Like Our Good USDA Choice Meats

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

lb..

Country
Style

HOGG &amp;. ZUSPAN

·s..tance On
Convenient

Fresh Pork Shoulder

PORK SAUSAGE

.19

Boneless
Waste-Free

SLICED BACON
Waldort
1
~79~
Brand

LOIN PORK CHOPS
lb. 89~

Mayf-.lr
Washable- Finish, 12"x12''

e

lb.

77~

lb.

lb.

Washabie-·i=mish, 12"x12"

RK ROAST

RIB PORK CHO·PS

White, 12"x24"

3 ROOMS

$35 .00 Down

Nature knows nothing of
rights. She knows only laws.
Man, on the other hand, has
ide a I s and aspirations.James, Truslow Adams. his·
torian.

STE.AK

22$
Washable,Grease-ResistantFinish
Sonata
2'.2$
Accoustical T,ile, 12"x12"

'349.95

Center
'Cut

PORK

Panama

·BONELESS
BOSTON ROLL

I

NEW RED

.10 lb. bag

POTATOES

.19

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. · 7-~Dd:JE I' U'.'l; ~

1-The Dilly Sentinel, Middlepott-Pocnavy, 0., Mareh 22.1m

Starkey Will Address Grangers

'...
.•
Charlene Hoeflich

l'lans were completed for the
annual granae banquet April 7
at the Salisbury School when
. Pomona Grange met .Friday
night at the Rock Springs
Grange hall with Laurel
Grange as the host unit.
Earl Starkey of Carpenter,
state grange gatekeeper, will
speak following the dinner
which will be served at 7:15
p.m.
Decorating for the banquet
will be done by members of the

992-5292

Salon 710 's Anniversary
To be Observed May 1st
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The seventh anniversary of
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, will be observed
with a dinner party May I at
the Middleport Church of
Christ fellowship hall.
Meeting Monday night at the
home of Mrs. Ruth H. Thornton, plans were made for the
dinner which will be served by
the Philathea Society of the
church. Reservations are to be
made with Mrs. Julia Hysell.
Special guests will be members
of the Athens, Gallla County
and Wood County Salons. All of
the three Salons will be invited
to bring members who are
ready for Initiation.
Mrs. Edith Fox was named
decorating chairman for the
event, and Mrs. Mary Roush,
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, Mrs. Eileen
Searles and Mrs. Thornton will
serve on the loot bag committee.
Among the guests to be invited will be Mrs. Hazel Elliott,

.~ PTA

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national pouvior member ;

Mrs. VIolet Aichholz, second
member of the national finance
committee; Evallna Berkley,
first deml chapeau premiere;
Irene Mler, second demi
chapeau duelleme; Doris
Stanriff, l'aumonla; Marcella
Houston, Ia archlviste; Audrey
Glaub, Ia concierge; Esther
Edgar, Susie Soninstine, Arree
Marshall and Mary Welsand,
chapeau passes of depar·
temental. Ruth Durant,
Audrey Geary, Grace Evans,
Reva Cihlo, and Betty Fellows.
Mrs. Pearl Knapp reported
that a radio has been con-·
tributed by Osby Martin for a
fund raisin&amp; project for the
nurse's scholarship. A jewelry
sale Is being'held by the Salon
with Mrs. Eileen Searles as
chairman. It was reported thst
the members are invited to the
annual dinner of the Gallipolis
Salon on April 6.
Reports were given on the

pouvior in Columbus and It was
noted thst the next one will be
held on May 20 in Columbus.
Contributions made included f5 ·
more for parties at the
National Jewish Hospital ln
Denver; $4 on cystic fibrosis
research, making a total for
the salon of $50 to the Columbus
Chapter, and $4 for summer
camps at Toledo and
Cleveland.
A rummage sale was set for
the first Friday in April at the
American Leaton hall In
Raclne.ln conjunction with the
rummage, a bake sale will be
held along with the sale of
furniture, dishes, fancy work,
and odds and ends. Coffee and
sandwiches will be served from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Cherry delight, coffee, punch
and salad were served by Mrs.
Thornton and Mrs. Catherine
Welsh, president, who was cohostess. A St. Patrick's day
theme was carried out.

Sees Film on Drugs

Carl Hysell, Jr. and Jim
Roach of the Meigs County
Alcoholic
and
Drua
Association , were guest
speakers at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Syracuse PI'A. •
A fiim, "Trip Back" was
shown by Hysell and Roach
who discussed drug problems
and answered questions
concerning the use and abuse
of drugs.

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wilt,
Lancaster, were weekend
visitorsofherparents,Mr.and
Mrs. Felix Alkire, Route 4,
Pomeroy.
Tim Rutherford of Los
Angeles, Calif. visited Monday
with his uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. D. A. Canaday.
Mr.and Mrs. William Jacobs
of Columbus spent the weekend
here with Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs.
Guests of the Rev. and Mrs.
Eugene GUI Monday were his
parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Raymond Gill, Cambridge.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Beach
and children of Sabina, were
the weekend guests of Mrs.
Henry Beach, Bradbury, and
other relatives.

Mrs. Ettamae Norton
presided at the meeting during
which time the PI' A voted to
address a
letter to
Congressman Clarence Miller
requesting assistance in getting the Federal Pay Board to
authorize release of funds for
teacher salary increases as
approved by the Ohio State
Legislature.
Mrs. Dorothy Forbes, Mrs.
Dorothy Amberger, and Mrs.
Mary Chancey were appointed
to the auditing committee. The

.Anniversary
Is Observed
Tbe 23rd aMiversary of the

Third Friday Club was observed Friday night with a
dinner at Crow's Steak House
and a party following at the
home of Mrs. Mabel Wolfe.
Read at the meeting was a
history complied by Mrs.
Carrie Neutzllng. Tbe club was
organized on Feb. 18, 1949 with
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart as first
president. Charter members
recognized
were
Mrs.
Meinhart, Mrs. Wolfe, Mrs.
Ruby Erb, Mrs. Edna Reibel,
Mrs. Neutzling, and Mrs.
Bertha Ebersbach.
The history was a month-tomonth report of activities from
1949 to 1958, with a consolidation of activities since
that time. The anniversary
cake for the celebration was
baked by Mrs. Philip Meinhart
and served with other refreshments.
Games were played with
prizes going to Miss Erma
&amp;nith, Mrs. Eva Dessauer,
2io· E. 2nd
Pomeroy ' Mrs. Carrie Meinhart and
Mrs. Reibel. Husleu gifts w~re
Phone.,H428
.
prese•ted to Mrs. Wolfe.

2-HOUR
CLEANING

nominating committee
reported that the incumbent
officers would serve for
another year.
It was announced that the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers will
meet on April 6 at Riverview
School at which time the unit
winners of the cultural arts
eldlibit will be displayed.
A rummage sale was
planned for April '6 and 7 at the
King Builder's Supply
Building. Residents with items
to contribute may leave them
at the school or contact Mrs.
Norton or Mrs. Shirley Huston
for pickup.
It was reported that Southern
Local
School
District
Supmntendent Ralph Sayre
and members of the school
board will be present to discuss
the new tax levy to be voted on
in the May primary election. At
that meeting the first grade
will serve refreshments. The
room banner was won by the
fourth grade. A vote of thanks
was extended to those assisting
with and attending the grade
school ball games. Proceeds
were $85.80.
DAUGHTER BORN
The Rev. and Mrs. Eugene
Gill of Laurel Cliff are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Betty Jean, on
March 14 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed
eight pounds and 12 ounces.
The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Gill
have four other daughters.

.(Upon Request)

Back Interest

·ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

'The popularity of bactlen
dresses bas created a new
fad. It's Jewelry to co with
II. Aad lbey look like ueeklaces worn backwards, which
Is just whalthey are. A peadol or chain daacllai down
lbe back laslead of the froat.

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For
The

'.,

Freezer

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1'•

S lb.
S lb.
4 lb.
3 lb.

,,'
·'l

5 lb.
Sib.
S lb.
S lb.
3 lb.

·I,r

(25)

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..•••,,'
;j

.••••,
•,

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Phone Us
Your Order!

992-3502

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CHUCK ROAST
GROUND BEEF
ROUND STEAK
SLICED SLAB BACON

'

SLICED SLAB BACON
'
BULK SAUSAGE
CHUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
SLICED PORK SHOULDER

10 lb.
10 lb.
5 lb.
41b.

CHUCK ROAST
GROUND BEEF
ROUND STEAK
SLICED SLAB BACON

(26)
10 lb. PORK CHOPS
10 lb. GROUND BEEF
4lb. ROUND STEAK

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Rock Sf•rlnp Grange. Mendal I ; Harrisonville, April 1'6; Rock Sprlnas represented
Jordan Is ticket chairman. Alfred, April Z2; HemloCk, Pomona in the state finals in
Tickets will be avallable from May 6; Ohio Valley, May 11; Columbus and Mia. Atklna
all masters of grangea.
Chester, May 23; Rock reporte(l that all entries "carrie
.Mrs. Virgil Abdns, women's Springs, June 8; CoiiDilbla, outinthemoney."lnthegroup
actlvltieo chairman, an- June 9, and Racine, June :111. · ftl'1! Roy Grueser and Roy
nounced thai the state and ' i..eo Story, lf81slatlve apnt, Holter, doubles; Holter, men's
national sewing contest reported on the state· Ill event: Rock Springs team,
judging will lake place at the legi8Jative committee meeting men's team; · and Harold
May 5 Pomona meeting.
held In Columbus. Attending Blackston, men's singles.
Tentative lnapecUon dates were Story, Stanford Stockton, It was announced that Star
announced by Deputy Master and Starkey.
grange will bust the May 5
Virgil Atkins are as follows:
Mrs. Atldns announced the meeting.
Laurel, March 25; Star, April results of the bowlinR contest. Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan used
"Ecology" u the theme for 111e
protram. The a roup sang
"America the lleliutiful." Mrs.

Frances Goe&amp;leln gave ..t.lk
on ecolOgy and enW'onment, ·
followejl by a ..dllcuMion fl!l
ecology , and our IDcreall!ll ,
population. Mrs. Leiba Mcrrll .
dl.scussed ~It .fiOIIIIIIId
their dangers,~ Mrs•.~
commented on,the part arance
takes in Improving the ecology.
Earl Starkey read "~t an
Ecology Tree." Ill embers
responded to roll call '!lth a pet
peeve on pollution In our
county.
_.., ·
The contest was on "Let's Do
Ideas."

Projects Mrs. Weatherman is
.
Planned Hoste~s Of Garden Club
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Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clark will celebrate their golden
wedding anniversary Sunday with an open house at their
Racine residence.
Hosting the _observance will be their four children, Guy
Thomas, Wellington, 0.; Mrs. B. M. (Maxine) O'Brien
Junction City; Carmin, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Cecil J:
(Marlene) Hill, Lima . Mr. and Mrs. Clark were married on
March 22, 1922. Mr. Clark Is retired, but Mrs. Clark, the
former Estella Gainer, is a parttime employe at Crow's
Steak House. They have II grandchildren and 2 greatgrandchildren.

Parkers Honored on
Silver Anniversary
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Parker were honored
with a surprise dinner and
reception in observance of
their 25th (silver) wedding
anniversary Sunday at the
home of their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James
Carpenter and son, Jay, in
Coolville. The Parkers were
married March 17, 1947 by the
late Rev. Homer McMillen at

Look '40s

Middleport.
The reception table was
covered in white lace overlay
over green, and centered with
an arrangement of white
mums, accacia , yellow
jonquils, leatherleaf fern,
greenery and pussywillow,
with yellow candles in silver
holders on either side.
A large cake iced in white
and trimmed with roses in
white, green and silver, inscribed "Happy Anniversary,
Jean and Homer," was served

You can achieve lbe look
of the '401 wltb bold appll·
quea made at home. With
lron-oa Iabrie• you can make
your owa fruit clusters of
grapes or apples. First lind
!he design, by thumbing
through magazines or post·
en, then trace It aad cut II
out. Then all you have to do
Is Iron It oa your favorite
outfit.

Barrette Brightening
Hand-painted leather barrettes will brighten up those
curly heads for spring. Barrettes may be purchased
without any desiga so you
can paint your own creations .
SPILL TRIAL SET
COSAN, Ohio (UPI) - Atrial
date of April 4 has been set in
•Perry County Court on two
counts of dumping on land
lodged against the Orwig Oil
Co. by the Department of Natural Resources.
Officials said the oil spill occurred at the firm 's plant here
March 7. Each count carries a
maximum $500 fine .

with punch and coffee. White
and silver anniversary napkins
completed the table. Pictures
and movies were taken and the
honored guests opened their
many beautiful gifts.
Attending the dinner were
Mr. and Mrs. Parker, her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Snowden; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
May and children, Debbie and
Mike, all of Rutland; Douglas
Uttle,MiddleportRD; Mr. and
Mrs. Carrol Snowden and
daughter Annette of Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Slmpkins
and children, Charla, MeUSB4,
and Chuck, of Columbis, and
the hosts, the Carpenters.
Aturkey and ham dinner was
served with all the trimmings
at tables decorated with spring
bouquets of mixed flowers with
white napkins decorated with
bright yellow jonqu!ls.
Joining the group for the
reception were Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Parker and children,
April and Aaron, of Long
Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Parker of Syracuse, and Mr.
and Mrs. Wllber Parker and
e~n Eddie, Pomeroy RD 3.

BUY CERTIFIED

A parcel post sale and an
Election Day dinner were
pla.'Uled Monday night b)' the
Women's Society of Chrlstlal)
Service of the wesleyan United
Methodist Church.
Mrs.
Dale
McClure
dlltributed cards containing a ·
poem on the sale to each of the
members who will mall them
to friends and relatives. Plans
were made for the annual
Election Day dinner, and the
menu was selected. It was
~greed to purchase two new
fcJiding tables for the annex
before thst time.
.
Mrs. Eileen Rees presided at
lbe meeting with Mrs. Ubby
Willford giving the program on
Easter.
It was noted thst the society
has purchased new church
paraments in the four colors.
Mrs. Willford closed with
prayer, and a salad course with
coffee and tea was served by
the hostesses, Mrs. Clara Mae
Sargent and Mrs. Rees, to
those named above and Jl!rs.
Allee WoHe, Mrs. Margaret
West, Mrs. Etta Mae Hill, Mrs.
Mattie Circle and Mrs. Lavinl•
Simpson.

If you're one of those
women who claims sbe can ·
never fiad the right shade of
makeup, thea solve the problem by blending your own.
Not from scratch, of course.
Bu! you can buy make-up
tbat comes with a bSBe plus
t u b e s of light and dart
blenders. The rlgbt shade
dilemma will be solved, es·
peclally when tanning time
comes around.

Spray and Curl
For a quickie set, electric
rollers are life-savers. But
they can dry the hair. To
prevent any drying, use
spray-on creme rinse before
setting. The rinse will help
the curl hold and prevent
the hair from becoming dry
and brittle.

Main

992-9981

Pomeroy, o·.

We Honor BankAmericard and Master Charge

~ CllrotllaCOior 100
plciUre tube
a'!"NU n11n 101

Social ·Calendar

Decal .Removal

New Books

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Home Health Care is
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Explained for PTA

POLLV'S POI.t'YTEBS

WEDNEsDAY
FRIDAY
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Prager, Arthur, Rascals at
REVIVAL, Clifton United
Li0111 Club, Wed11esday noon, Methodist Church, Friday Large, or, The Clue in the Old
Pomeroy United Methodist. through Sunday, 7:30p.m. with Nos\algla.
........'11.
Godwin, John, Occult ·
Dr. Connie Dickens, district
.OHIO VALLEY Com' superintendent, speaker.
America.
mandery 24, Knights Templar,
Handlin, Oscar, Facing Life:
DANCE, Wahama High
stated conclave,. 7:30 Wed- School 8 to II p.m. Jays will Youth and the Family in
American History. ·
neiday night with · full form emcee. School sponsored.
Parry, John Hilrace, Trade
operilng. AU Sir Knlghta and
PANCAKE SUPPER Friday
their families Invited to 5 to 8 p.m. Salem Center and Dominion.
Peters, William, A Class
covtftd dish dinner at 6:30 School. Adults $1, children 50c.
p.m.
Divided.
Pancakes, sausage and eggs.
Milne, Lorus Johnson, The
RUTLAND . FRIENDLY
SATURDAY
Cougar
Doesn't Uve Here Any
Gardeners, Wednesday, home
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
of Mrs. Tom Stewart.
F&amp;AM Saturday 7:30 p.m. at More: ·
AMERICAN . LEGION hall in Chester, Inspection and · 'Gersh, Marvin J., The
Auxlll•ry, 7:30 p.m. Wed- work In E.A. ·dearee . All Handbook of Adolescence.
Lowman, Edward W., The
neidaJ, Feeney-Bennett Post Master Masons invited.
128, MldiUeport. •
.
TUPPERS PLAINS Com, How-Not-To-M iss-The ·
· THURSDAY
munlly , Women's Club will Cocktail-Hour Cookbook.
Hood, Graham, American
. WILDWOOD Garden Club sponsor a pubUc spaghetti
Thunilay, 7:30 p.m. at supper, Saturday, at Tuppers Silver; a History of Style.
Bliss, Edward, Writing News
Columbia Gas Co. office for Plains School serving to start
for Broadcast.
cooking · demonstration at 4 p.m.
The Best American Shorl
bUsineSs meetinR to follow. '
SUNDAY
Stories.
TWIN-CITY SHRINETI'ES,
CHOIR WILL present Don
Laycock, George, Alaska ;
Thursday, 7:30p.m. Columbus Grant's cantata, ~~were You
the
EmbatUed Frontier .
.and Southern Ohio Electric Co. There?" at 7:30p.m. Sunday at
Geoffrey, Ashe, The Quest
Miss · Joanna Distler to the AsbUry United Methodist
for
America.
demonstrate portable kitchen Church, .Syracuse. Public
DuMaurler, Dame D., Don't
appliances.
welcome.
Look
Now.
REACH OUT for life service,
HYMN SING Sunday 1:30
Dunphy, Jack, An Honest
Pomeroy Adventist Church p.m. Stiversville Community
Woman.
7:30 p.m. Thursday. Topic' Church. Everyone welcome.
• Epstein, Seymour, The
"Discovered; a &amp;,IJOO.year-old'
REVIVAL, POMEROY Dream Museum.
remedy for ten81on".
Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
Horman, Wim, The Stones
· WOMEN'S Fellowship, each evening, Sunday through
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at March 31, with Fred Albrecht Cry Out.
Cabrera Infante, Guillermo,
Bradford Church of Christ.
speaker.
Three Trapped Tiggers.
WOMEN'S ASSN. at Mid·
SOI:JGFEST, Sunday, 1:30
Kent, Alexander, The Flag
dleporl
First
United p.m. at Tuppers Plains School
Presbyterian Church, 7:30 with The RevelationS Quartet, Captain.
Lovesey, Peter, The
p.m. Thureday. Invitation Owens .Family and Bissell
extended to Women's Assn. of Messengers as featured Detective Wore Silk Drawers.
MacDonald, John D., Pale
Syracuse Church. Program, A singers.
Gray for Guilt.
·sacred drama, "Tbe Challenge
Mann, Jessica, A Charitable
of the Cruss". Devotional
End.
~
CHARGES
DROPPED
leader, Mrs. Michael Zirkle:
Power, Patricia, This Deadly
COLUMBUS (UPI)-The
hoetesses, Mrs. Joseph Bailey,
Ohio
Civil
Service
Employes
Grief.
Mrs. Eddie CroOks, Miss~
Roy, Archie E., The Cur·
Park and Mrs. Paul Hap- Association Monday urged
to
drop
all
talned
Sleep.
state
officials
tonstall.
Carson, Mary, Ginny; a True
MIDDLEPORT Child criminal charges against 30
Story.
former
workers
at
Lima
State
Conservation League, 7:30
Bsihop, James Zlonzo, The ·
p.m. ~sday. Guest night to Hospital for the Criminall~
Days
of Martin Luther King Jr.
be obs&lt;!rved. Meeting will be lisane.
Charges against tbe first of
Hopkins, Jerry, Elvis; a
held at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Chqrch auditorium. 31 persons to come to trial on Biography.
BRADBURY P.T . A. brutality charges were Straus, Dorothea, Threshspagll!ltti, dinner, Thursday, droPPed because of lack of olds:
If you would lie to have a
serving from 4:30 to 7:30p.m. evidence last week . The
association said attempts to try book please call. 992-3745.
in the schQOI 'auditorium.
MIDQLEPORT Cub Scout the other cases would "smack
Pack :Mi, {p.m. Thursday, at of a vendetta."
the Arru!rican Legion Hall.
to be
'' liTptJIWALE'~:~
.. ·~ '' LIST'COR~ '
ofi RAVENNA,, bhib ('(J~) - ··· ·The " &lt;'.i.. '.' f Sc ''1W •~
..
will ~· held
" n"''fP .~ o&lt; ,oue was
Parenti an4 Teachers, Funera I servtces
.,.
erroneously reported as Scott
ExecuU~e committee meeting, here W~esday for ~rry White in the honor roll of the
10 a.m. ThUrsday, home of Stockdale, mv~tor ofthe htgh- Southern Junior High School
Mrs. iuchard Vaughan. Of. pressure fire fighting hose . He for the fourth six weeks
fleers, chairmen, PTA died Sunday at the age of 84. grading period. Scott made all
president, newly elected
He was the father of state A's for the grading period
president Invited to attend. ·
Sen. Robert Stockdale, R-Kent.
·

. Is Simplified
By POLLY CRAMER

R.~EDSV ILLE

- Mrs.
Elizabeth Smith, R.N .,
· DEAR POLLY and Bill-Taking decals off furniture is presented a program on Home
no problem as decal removers (very inexpensive) can Health Care 1at the Ma!:ch
be bought at stores that sell decals. They are a treated meeting of · the Riverview
paper that Is made wet and then placed over the decal
for a few hours or whatever time the directions say. Alter P.T.A., assisted by Mrs. Olive
Osborn and Mrs. Teresa
this treatment they will simply lift off.- JANE H.
Collins, R.N.
DEAR 'POLLY.:..when we moved into our house I had
Slides on the topic were
the same problem as Bill with decals on the wood doors. shown, and Mrs. Smith, exI removed mine by · heating some jlistilled white vinegar
and generously applying jt to the decals with a rag . But plaining how home health
do be careful not ·to expand beyond them so as not to service works in Mejgs county,
said with this new service the
harm the finish.-JANICE
length of time - thus the cost
il!ll;":m ,
ww m Polly's Problem IW£-~n:,_ - spent in a hospital may be
DEAR POLLY-Since moving to Florida, every- ~ shortened. Leaflets on this
. thing put on my gold tooled-leather desk top leaves
program were distributed to
a mark. Now it is badly marred, which makes me ·~' all.
!&lt; very sad. ! ·would like som.e suggestions for renew·
The meeting was opened
~ ing or rejuvenating it.-MRS. F. M. A.
with
a reading, "Just a Utile
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:®:Ui~U.©Vffi*:W \!I f@
_
• w :
U'll~--Song" by Mrs. Eleanor Knight.
DEAR POLLY- When going camping, put each egg to The pledge io the flag was led
be taken along in a small
by Mr. Fred Kissinger. A
plastic bag and t h e n put
reading
circle book and atthem all back in the cartendance banner were
ton. If one should break, it
awarded
to Mrs . Osborn 's
will not make such a mess
but will be contained in its
room for the most parents
bag.-ALLEN
attending.
The District Spring ConDEAR POLLY- My Pet
ference P.T.A. meeting will be
Peeve concerns garbage
collection days. People do
April 29 at Jackson. Three
not bring their cans in or
representatives are needed
a f t e r pick up sometimes
from this P.T.A. The County
the garbage man does not put the cans far enough back
and they blow into the street. This has almost caused me Council P.T.A. will meet here
to have an accident while driving more than one time. April 6. There will be art
If you ·swerve to miss the can the traffic is coming right exhibits and installation of
officers.
at you nine times out of !{)-LUCY P.
New drapes for ·the three
DEAR POLLY- When the water trickles from a shower
head instead of gushing out as it should, you can easily
fix it yourself. Just unscrew the shower head and soak
it for about a day in a rather strong vinegar and water
solution. That is all . I have done this twice and know it
works.-MRS. C. S.

I

N.

1

E!E A GOOD NE'IGH60R.
HEt.P THE GOOD

NEIGHBOR.

lower classrooms have been
ordered and are to be installed
soon. Mrs. Elizabeth &amp;nith,
Mrs. Teresa Collins, and Mrs.
Marilyn Bannum are to work
on drape project for the doors
Iii the auditorium.
The Ohio University Players
will present the program for
the April meeting.
Officers submitted by the
nominating committee were,
president, Teresa Collins; vice
president, Orva Jean Holter ;
secretary, Elizabeth Smith,
RULES SELF OUT-Rep.
and treasurer, Margaret
Wllllam M. Colmer, D·
Brown. Named to the auditing
Miss., showa gIvIng the
Washington sceae a calm
committee were Mrs. Marlene
onceover,
h a s announced
Putman, Mrs. Frances Reed,
he
will
aot
run for reelecand Mrs. Ruth Dillon.
tion, thus v a c a tl a g Ills
Mrs. Knight reported on the
chalrmaasblp of the "govright to read program.
erning" House Rules ComVolunteers are needed for the
mittee. Conservative Colmer, 82, has been a House
story hour for Bookmobile
member
for four decades.
slops. Refreslunents using the
St. Patrick's theme were
served. Greeters from Girl Jo Ellen Wells. - Mrs. Lyle
Scout Troop 6'1 were Sara and Balderson.

Happiness
is a new home.
Ay in when you
need a Mortgage

Want to start
.something
great?

Give your growing family
lhe room they need ... the
yard they'd love to play ln.
Give them a wonderful
piece to coli home with one
of our speedy home mOrtgages . Our appraisers
work as If lhey had wings .

Our terms come to terms
with your family 's budget.

National Cartoonist.s Socict)'

Watch For Grand Opening

, 81~~ _&amp; LE.~'S MU~!C ~E~JER
SATURDAY, APRIL 1st
All types of musical instruments,
stereo tapes, records, sheet music.

The. Athens Counly

Savmgs &amp; Loan Co
"• 296 Second Sf.' ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

All Accounts Insured To
$20,000.00 by FSLIC.

,,., .•

Star! tha Hualcy 1 1254 and start get-

ling uaed to a 6-apeed tra ctor that
can move out at H4 m.p.h. or plow
.ontumed ground at leta than 1
m.p.h. Convenient power take-o!l
letll you awilch attllchmenta wltl'l
the graateat ol ease. Con trolled

d!fterentlal majchn tra ctor to h.trf
lor 1tablllt~ and belter l rtC\Ion.
Plu1 1olld 1tate Ignition lor 1Uf1!
atartlln •ny Wl!•,ther. qome In and ..
see It ... ata:r1 tometl'llng In ~our • •
neighborhood.

GENERAL TIRE SALES
992-7161

•

POMEROY, OIDO

~,_ 8olld-8t.te super
Oold VIdeo Oulrd Tun•r

•

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 25
AT RACINE
MD CROSS SINS

.

hlndcref!M~

INGELS
FURNITURE
992-2635

AT tuPPERS PUIIIS
LYONS MMIET

MIDDLEPORT

AT 111111MD
·IIIIIINID DEPT. SIOIE

SUGAR . . . . . . . .~. ~~~. ~.~.~ . 6 9 ~
BEEF STEW. . ~~ . ~~. ~~.
3
9
9
~·
PEAR HALVES.........
8
CORN OIL........... ~.~.~.~~~·..

Produce Specials
Fresh Crisp

RIGHT

RESERVED

NEW CABBAGE .............'~::

TO

LIMIT

QUANTITIES

TOMATOES

g~

· s9~

ARMOUR

59~

STOKLEY

303
cans

~

MAZOIA

We Accept Federal Food Stamps!

(

AND

ROAST

Red .. m The Coupon

10~ OFFI
.•

EVAPORATED MILK

ORANGE JUICE

PARKAY

Margarine
NABISOO

· ~~ECHUCK
ROAST
.
;.)~
~
.
~~TERCHUCK· ROAST. . }~: . 69~
SMOKED CALL_
IES. . . . .'.~.47~
'

'

II

8oz.

VANILLA
WAFERS
Keebler Red Tag Sale!

3

PKGS ·

303

cans

1.00
II

3
lb.

PO

TEEN QUEEN

ASSORTED COOKIES

$

can

PECIAL

' Tfiere ular· . . .
priceo,
4Ya
ounce 'an$ or . .

WI:LSON
Pomeroy, .0 .

INSTANT
COFFEE

Frosty Acres

B~low For E:riro Sovinf•!

'

Tasters Choice

FROZEN FOOD

·cHUCK

I

I

SAVE ·

Certified Gas Stations
538 W.

cards to residents ·of the
Elmwood Re~ Home.
Mrs. Grace Stout presented
the
program , entitled,
"Arrangements for your
Church." She also demonstrated with three special
arrangements illustrating her
suggestions.
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs. Harold Massar was
won by Mrs. Ulah Swan. Door
prize given by the hostess was
won by Mrs. Charles Carr.
Refreshments carrying out a
St. Patrick's Day theme were
served by the hostess.
The. April meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs. James
Stout, at which time Mrs.
Mildred Van Meter of Pomeroy
Flower Shop will be present for
a workshop on the making of
corsages.

Blend Your Own

YOU'LL BE SATISFIED .

SAVE UP TO '1.00
A TANKFUL

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
March meeting of the Rose
Garden Club was held at the
home of Mrs. Niesel
Weatherman with Mrs. Carl
Barnhill, president, presiding.
Mrs. Floyd Stout gave
Easter devotions and an
Easter Prayer followed by the
Lord's Prayer in unison by
members. Mrs. Harold
Massar read the verse of the
month. Roll call was answered
by an exchange of seeds by
members:
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith is to
write Green Thumb notes for a
May newspaper article. Mrs.
Harold Massar was appointed
chairman of decoration
committee to decorate Eastern
High School for commenCement and baccalaweate
exercises. It was agreed that
members would send Easter

·,~.Eddy's

~

1:: 294

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. · 7-~Dd:JE I' U'.'l; ~

1-The Dilly Sentinel, Middlepott-Pocnavy, 0., Mareh 22.1m

Starkey Will Address Grangers

'...
.•
Charlene Hoeflich

l'lans were completed for the
annual granae banquet April 7
at the Salisbury School when
. Pomona Grange met .Friday
night at the Rock Springs
Grange hall with Laurel
Grange as the host unit.
Earl Starkey of Carpenter,
state grange gatekeeper, will
speak following the dinner
which will be served at 7:15
p.m.
Decorating for the banquet
will be done by members of the

992-5292

Salon 710 's Anniversary
To be Observed May 1st
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The seventh anniversary of
Meigs County Salon 710, Eight
and Forty, will be observed
with a dinner party May I at
the Middleport Church of
Christ fellowship hall.
Meeting Monday night at the
home of Mrs. Ruth H. Thornton, plans were made for the
dinner which will be served by
the Philathea Society of the
church. Reservations are to be
made with Mrs. Julia Hysell.
Special guests will be members
of the Athens, Gallla County
and Wood County Salons. All of
the three Salons will be invited
to bring members who are
ready for Initiation.
Mrs. Edith Fox was named
decorating chairman for the
event, and Mrs. Mary Roush,
Mrs. Pearl Knapp, Mrs. Eileen
Searles and Mrs. Thornton will
serve on the loot bag committee.
Among the guests to be invited will be Mrs. Hazel Elliott,

.~ PTA

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national pouvior member ;

Mrs. VIolet Aichholz, second
member of the national finance
committee; Evallna Berkley,
first deml chapeau premiere;
Irene Mler, second demi
chapeau duelleme; Doris
Stanriff, l'aumonla; Marcella
Houston, Ia archlviste; Audrey
Glaub, Ia concierge; Esther
Edgar, Susie Soninstine, Arree
Marshall and Mary Welsand,
chapeau passes of depar·
temental. Ruth Durant,
Audrey Geary, Grace Evans,
Reva Cihlo, and Betty Fellows.
Mrs. Pearl Knapp reported
that a radio has been con-·
tributed by Osby Martin for a
fund raisin&amp; project for the
nurse's scholarship. A jewelry
sale Is being'held by the Salon
with Mrs. Eileen Searles as
chairman. It was reported thst
the members are invited to the
annual dinner of the Gallipolis
Salon on April 6.
Reports were given on the

pouvior in Columbus and It was
noted thst the next one will be
held on May 20 in Columbus.
Contributions made included f5 ·
more for parties at the
National Jewish Hospital ln
Denver; $4 on cystic fibrosis
research, making a total for
the salon of $50 to the Columbus
Chapter, and $4 for summer
camps at Toledo and
Cleveland.
A rummage sale was set for
the first Friday in April at the
American Leaton hall In
Raclne.ln conjunction with the
rummage, a bake sale will be
held along with the sale of
furniture, dishes, fancy work,
and odds and ends. Coffee and
sandwiches will be served from
9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Cherry delight, coffee, punch
and salad were served by Mrs.
Thornton and Mrs. Catherine
Welsh, president, who was cohostess. A St. Patrick's day
theme was carried out.

Sees Film on Drugs

Carl Hysell, Jr. and Jim
Roach of the Meigs County
Alcoholic
and
Drua
Association , were guest
speakers at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Syracuse PI'A. •
A fiim, "Trip Back" was
shown by Hysell and Roach
who discussed drug problems
and answered questions
concerning the use and abuse
of drugs.

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Wilt,
Lancaster, were weekend
visitorsofherparents,Mr.and
Mrs. Felix Alkire, Route 4,
Pomeroy.
Tim Rutherford of Los
Angeles, Calif. visited Monday
with his uncle and aunt, Mr.
and Mrs. D. A. Canaday.
Mr.and Mrs. William Jacobs
of Columbus spent the weekend
here with Mr. and Mrs. Pearl
Jacobs.
Guests of the Rev. and Mrs.
Eugene GUI Monday were his
parents, Mr . and Mrs.
Raymond Gill, Cambridge.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Beach
and children of Sabina, were
the weekend guests of Mrs.
Henry Beach, Bradbury, and
other relatives.

Mrs. Ettamae Norton
presided at the meeting during
which time the PI' A voted to
address a
letter to
Congressman Clarence Miller
requesting assistance in getting the Federal Pay Board to
authorize release of funds for
teacher salary increases as
approved by the Ohio State
Legislature.
Mrs. Dorothy Forbes, Mrs.
Dorothy Amberger, and Mrs.
Mary Chancey were appointed
to the auditing committee. The

.Anniversary
Is Observed
Tbe 23rd aMiversary of the

Third Friday Club was observed Friday night with a
dinner at Crow's Steak House
and a party following at the
home of Mrs. Mabel Wolfe.
Read at the meeting was a
history complied by Mrs.
Carrie Neutzllng. Tbe club was
organized on Feb. 18, 1949 with
Mrs. Carrie Meinhart as first
president. Charter members
recognized
were
Mrs.
Meinhart, Mrs. Wolfe, Mrs.
Ruby Erb, Mrs. Edna Reibel,
Mrs. Neutzling, and Mrs.
Bertha Ebersbach.
The history was a month-tomonth report of activities from
1949 to 1958, with a consolidation of activities since
that time. The anniversary
cake for the celebration was
baked by Mrs. Philip Meinhart
and served with other refreshments.
Games were played with
prizes going to Miss Erma
&amp;nith, Mrs. Eva Dessauer,
2io· E. 2nd
Pomeroy ' Mrs. Carrie Meinhart and
Mrs. Reibel. Husleu gifts w~re
Phone.,H428
.
prese•ted to Mrs. Wolfe.

2-HOUR
CLEANING

nominating committee
reported that the incumbent
officers would serve for
another year.
It was announced that the
Meigs County Council of
Parents and Teachers will
meet on April 6 at Riverview
School at which time the unit
winners of the cultural arts
eldlibit will be displayed.
A rummage sale was
planned for April '6 and 7 at the
King Builder's Supply
Building. Residents with items
to contribute may leave them
at the school or contact Mrs.
Norton or Mrs. Shirley Huston
for pickup.
It was reported that Southern
Local
School
District
Supmntendent Ralph Sayre
and members of the school
board will be present to discuss
the new tax levy to be voted on
in the May primary election. At
that meeting the first grade
will serve refreshments. The
room banner was won by the
fourth grade. A vote of thanks
was extended to those assisting
with and attending the grade
school ball games. Proceeds
were $85.80.
DAUGHTER BORN
The Rev. and Mrs. Eugene
Gill of Laurel Cliff are announcing the birth of a
daughter, Betty Jean, on
March 14 at the Holzer Medical
Center. The infant weighed
eight pounds and 12 ounces.
The Rev. Mr. and Mrs. Gill
have four other daughters.

.(Upon Request)

Back Interest

·ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS

'The popularity of bactlen
dresses bas created a new
fad. It's Jewelry to co with
II. Aad lbey look like ueeklaces worn backwards, which
Is just whalthey are. A peadol or chain daacllai down
lbe back laslead of the froat.

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For
The

'.,

Freezer

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1'•

S lb.
S lb.
4 lb.
3 lb.

,,'
·'l

5 lb.
Sib.
S lb.
S lb.
3 lb.

·I,r

(25)

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:t.,
..•••,,'
;j

.••••,
•,

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Phone Us
Your Order!

992-3502

.

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CHUCK ROAST
GROUND BEEF
ROUND STEAK
SLICED SLAB BACON

'

SLICED SLAB BACON
'
BULK SAUSAGE
CHUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
SLICED PORK SHOULDER

10 lb.
10 lb.
5 lb.
41b.

CHUCK ROAST
GROUND BEEF
ROUND STEAK
SLICED SLAB BACON

(26)
10 lb. PORK CHOPS
10 lb. GROUND BEEF
4lb. ROUND STEAK

'

Rock Sf•rlnp Grange. Mendal I ; Harrisonville, April 1'6; Rock Sprlnas represented
Jordan Is ticket chairman. Alfred, April Z2; HemloCk, Pomona in the state finals in
Tickets will be avallable from May 6; Ohio Valley, May 11; Columbus and Mia. Atklna
all masters of grangea.
Chester, May 23; Rock reporte(l that all entries "carrie
.Mrs. Virgil Abdns, women's Springs, June 8; CoiiDilbla, outinthemoney."lnthegroup
actlvltieo chairman, an- June 9, and Racine, June :111. · ftl'1! Roy Grueser and Roy
nounced thai the state and ' i..eo Story, lf81slatlve apnt, Holter, doubles; Holter, men's
national sewing contest reported on the state· Ill event: Rock Springs team,
judging will lake place at the legi8Jative committee meeting men's team; · and Harold
May 5 Pomona meeting.
held In Columbus. Attending Blackston, men's singles.
Tentative lnapecUon dates were Story, Stanford Stockton, It was announced that Star
announced by Deputy Master and Starkey.
grange will bust the May 5
Virgil Atkins are as follows:
Mrs. Atldns announced the meeting.
Laurel, March 25; Star, April results of the bowlinR contest. Mrs. Elizabeth Jordan used
"Ecology" u the theme for 111e
protram. The a roup sang
"America the lleliutiful." Mrs.

Frances Goe&amp;leln gave ..t.lk
on ecolOgy and enW'onment, ·
followejl by a ..dllcuMion fl!l
ecology , and our IDcreall!ll ,
population. Mrs. Leiba Mcrrll .
dl.scussed ~It .fiOIIIIIIId
their dangers,~ Mrs•.~
commented on,the part arance
takes in Improving the ecology.
Earl Starkey read "~t an
Ecology Tree." Ill embers
responded to roll call '!lth a pet
peeve on pollution In our
county.
_.., ·
The contest was on "Let's Do
Ideas."

Projects Mrs. Weatherman is
.
Planned Hoste~s Of Garden Club
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Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clark
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Clark will celebrate their golden
wedding anniversary Sunday with an open house at their
Racine residence.
Hosting the _observance will be their four children, Guy
Thomas, Wellington, 0.; Mrs. B. M. (Maxine) O'Brien
Junction City; Carmin, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Cecil J:
(Marlene) Hill, Lima . Mr. and Mrs. Clark were married on
March 22, 1922. Mr. Clark Is retired, but Mrs. Clark, the
former Estella Gainer, is a parttime employe at Crow's
Steak House. They have II grandchildren and 2 greatgrandchildren.

Parkers Honored on
Silver Anniversary
RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Parker were honored
with a surprise dinner and
reception in observance of
their 25th (silver) wedding
anniversary Sunday at the
home of their son-in-law and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James
Carpenter and son, Jay, in
Coolville. The Parkers were
married March 17, 1947 by the
late Rev. Homer McMillen at

Look '40s

Middleport.
The reception table was
covered in white lace overlay
over green, and centered with
an arrangement of white
mums, accacia , yellow
jonquils, leatherleaf fern,
greenery and pussywillow,
with yellow candles in silver
holders on either side.
A large cake iced in white
and trimmed with roses in
white, green and silver, inscribed "Happy Anniversary,
Jean and Homer," was served

You can achieve lbe look
of the '401 wltb bold appll·
quea made at home. With
lron-oa Iabrie• you can make
your owa fruit clusters of
grapes or apples. First lind
!he design, by thumbing
through magazines or post·
en, then trace It aad cut II
out. Then all you have to do
Is Iron It oa your favorite
outfit.

Barrette Brightening
Hand-painted leather barrettes will brighten up those
curly heads for spring. Barrettes may be purchased
without any desiga so you
can paint your own creations .
SPILL TRIAL SET
COSAN, Ohio (UPI) - Atrial
date of April 4 has been set in
•Perry County Court on two
counts of dumping on land
lodged against the Orwig Oil
Co. by the Department of Natural Resources.
Officials said the oil spill occurred at the firm 's plant here
March 7. Each count carries a
maximum $500 fine .

with punch and coffee. White
and silver anniversary napkins
completed the table. Pictures
and movies were taken and the
honored guests opened their
many beautiful gifts.
Attending the dinner were
Mr. and Mrs. Parker, her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Snowden; Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
May and children, Debbie and
Mike, all of Rutland; Douglas
Uttle,MiddleportRD; Mr. and
Mrs. Carrol Snowden and
daughter Annette of Gallipolis;
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Slmpkins
and children, Charla, MeUSB4,
and Chuck, of Columbis, and
the hosts, the Carpenters.
Aturkey and ham dinner was
served with all the trimmings
at tables decorated with spring
bouquets of mixed flowers with
white napkins decorated with
bright yellow jonqu!ls.
Joining the group for the
reception were Mr. and Mrs.
Howard Parker and children,
April and Aaron, of Long
Bottom; Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Parker of Syracuse, and Mr.
and Mrs. Wllber Parker and
e~n Eddie, Pomeroy RD 3.

BUY CERTIFIED

A parcel post sale and an
Election Day dinner were
pla.'Uled Monday night b)' the
Women's Society of Chrlstlal)
Service of the wesleyan United
Methodist Church.
Mrs.
Dale
McClure
dlltributed cards containing a ·
poem on the sale to each of the
members who will mall them
to friends and relatives. Plans
were made for the annual
Election Day dinner, and the
menu was selected. It was
~greed to purchase two new
fcJiding tables for the annex
before thst time.
.
Mrs. Eileen Rees presided at
lbe meeting with Mrs. Ubby
Willford giving the program on
Easter.
It was noted thst the society
has purchased new church
paraments in the four colors.
Mrs. Willford closed with
prayer, and a salad course with
coffee and tea was served by
the hostesses, Mrs. Clara Mae
Sargent and Mrs. Rees, to
those named above and Jl!rs.
Allee WoHe, Mrs. Margaret
West, Mrs. Etta Mae Hill, Mrs.
Mattie Circle and Mrs. Lavinl•
Simpson.

If you're one of those
women who claims sbe can ·
never fiad the right shade of
makeup, thea solve the problem by blending your own.
Not from scratch, of course.
Bu! you can buy make-up
tbat comes with a bSBe plus
t u b e s of light and dart
blenders. The rlgbt shade
dilemma will be solved, es·
peclally when tanning time
comes around.

Spray and Curl
For a quickie set, electric
rollers are life-savers. But
they can dry the hair. To
prevent any drying, use
spray-on creme rinse before
setting. The rinse will help
the curl hold and prevent
the hair from becoming dry
and brittle.

Main

992-9981

Pomeroy, o·.

We Honor BankAmericard and Master Charge

~ CllrotllaCOior 100
plciUre tube
a'!"NU n11n 101

Social ·Calendar

Decal .Removal

New Books

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Home Health Care is
'
Explained for PTA

POLLV'S POI.t'YTEBS

WEDNEsDAY
FRIDAY
POMEROY· MIDDLEPORT
Prager, Arthur, Rascals at
REVIVAL, Clifton United
Li0111 Club, Wed11esday noon, Methodist Church, Friday Large, or, The Clue in the Old
Pomeroy United Methodist. through Sunday, 7:30p.m. with Nos\algla.
........'11.
Godwin, John, Occult ·
Dr. Connie Dickens, district
.OHIO VALLEY Com' superintendent, speaker.
America.
mandery 24, Knights Templar,
Handlin, Oscar, Facing Life:
DANCE, Wahama High
stated conclave,. 7:30 Wed- School 8 to II p.m. Jays will Youth and the Family in
American History. ·
neiday night with · full form emcee. School sponsored.
Parry, John Hilrace, Trade
operilng. AU Sir Knlghta and
PANCAKE SUPPER Friday
their families Invited to 5 to 8 p.m. Salem Center and Dominion.
Peters, William, A Class
covtftd dish dinner at 6:30 School. Adults $1, children 50c.
p.m.
Divided.
Pancakes, sausage and eggs.
Milne, Lorus Johnson, The
RUTLAND . FRIENDLY
SATURDAY
Cougar
Doesn't Uve Here Any
Gardeners, Wednesday, home
SHADE RIVER Lodge 453
of Mrs. Tom Stewart.
F&amp;AM Saturday 7:30 p.m. at More: ·
AMERICAN . LEGION hall in Chester, Inspection and · 'Gersh, Marvin J., The
Auxlll•ry, 7:30 p.m. Wed- work In E.A. ·dearee . All Handbook of Adolescence.
Lowman, Edward W., The
neidaJ, Feeney-Bennett Post Master Masons invited.
128, MldiUeport. •
.
TUPPERS PLAINS Com, How-Not-To-M iss-The ·
· THURSDAY
munlly , Women's Club will Cocktail-Hour Cookbook.
Hood, Graham, American
. WILDWOOD Garden Club sponsor a pubUc spaghetti
Thunilay, 7:30 p.m. at supper, Saturday, at Tuppers Silver; a History of Style.
Bliss, Edward, Writing News
Columbia Gas Co. office for Plains School serving to start
for Broadcast.
cooking · demonstration at 4 p.m.
The Best American Shorl
bUsineSs meetinR to follow. '
SUNDAY
Stories.
TWIN-CITY SHRINETI'ES,
CHOIR WILL present Don
Laycock, George, Alaska ;
Thursday, 7:30p.m. Columbus Grant's cantata, ~~were You
the
EmbatUed Frontier .
.and Southern Ohio Electric Co. There?" at 7:30p.m. Sunday at
Geoffrey, Ashe, The Quest
Miss · Joanna Distler to the AsbUry United Methodist
for
America.
demonstrate portable kitchen Church, .Syracuse. Public
DuMaurler, Dame D., Don't
appliances.
welcome.
Look
Now.
REACH OUT for life service,
HYMN SING Sunday 1:30
Dunphy, Jack, An Honest
Pomeroy Adventist Church p.m. Stiversville Community
Woman.
7:30 p.m. Thursday. Topic' Church. Everyone welcome.
• Epstein, Seymour, The
"Discovered; a &amp;,IJOO.year-old'
REVIVAL, POMEROY Dream Museum.
remedy for ten81on".
Church of Christ, 7:30 p.m.
Horman, Wim, The Stones
· WOMEN'S Fellowship, each evening, Sunday through
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at March 31, with Fred Albrecht Cry Out.
Cabrera Infante, Guillermo,
Bradford Church of Christ.
speaker.
Three Trapped Tiggers.
WOMEN'S ASSN. at Mid·
SOI:JGFEST, Sunday, 1:30
Kent, Alexander, The Flag
dleporl
First
United p.m. at Tuppers Plains School
Presbyterian Church, 7:30 with The RevelationS Quartet, Captain.
Lovesey, Peter, The
p.m. Thureday. Invitation Owens .Family and Bissell
extended to Women's Assn. of Messengers as featured Detective Wore Silk Drawers.
MacDonald, John D., Pale
Syracuse Church. Program, A singers.
Gray for Guilt.
·sacred drama, "Tbe Challenge
Mann, Jessica, A Charitable
of the Cruss". Devotional
End.
~
CHARGES
DROPPED
leader, Mrs. Michael Zirkle:
Power, Patricia, This Deadly
COLUMBUS (UPI)-The
hoetesses, Mrs. Joseph Bailey,
Ohio
Civil
Service
Employes
Grief.
Mrs. Eddie CroOks, Miss~
Roy, Archie E., The Cur·
Park and Mrs. Paul Hap- Association Monday urged
to
drop
all
talned
Sleep.
state
officials
tonstall.
Carson, Mary, Ginny; a True
MIDDLEPORT Child criminal charges against 30
Story.
former
workers
at
Lima
State
Conservation League, 7:30
Bsihop, James Zlonzo, The ·
p.m. ~sday. Guest night to Hospital for the Criminall~
Days
of Martin Luther King Jr.
be obs&lt;!rved. Meeting will be lisane.
Charges against tbe first of
Hopkins, Jerry, Elvis; a
held at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Chqrch auditorium. 31 persons to come to trial on Biography.
BRADBURY P.T . A. brutality charges were Straus, Dorothea, Threshspagll!ltti, dinner, Thursday, droPPed because of lack of olds:
If you would lie to have a
serving from 4:30 to 7:30p.m. evidence last week . The
association said attempts to try book please call. 992-3745.
in the schQOI 'auditorium.
MIDQLEPORT Cub Scout the other cases would "smack
Pack :Mi, {p.m. Thursday, at of a vendetta."
the Arru!rican Legion Hall.
to be
'' liTptJIWALE'~:~
.. ·~ '' LIST'COR~ '
ofi RAVENNA,, bhib ('(J~) - ··· ·The " &lt;'.i.. '.' f Sc ''1W •~
..
will ~· held
" n"''fP .~ o&lt; ,oue was
Parenti an4 Teachers, Funera I servtces
.,.
erroneously reported as Scott
ExecuU~e committee meeting, here W~esday for ~rry White in the honor roll of the
10 a.m. ThUrsday, home of Stockdale, mv~tor ofthe htgh- Southern Junior High School
Mrs. iuchard Vaughan. Of. pressure fire fighting hose . He for the fourth six weeks
fleers, chairmen, PTA died Sunday at the age of 84. grading period. Scott made all
president, newly elected
He was the father of state A's for the grading period
president Invited to attend. ·
Sen. Robert Stockdale, R-Kent.
·

. Is Simplified
By POLLY CRAMER

R.~EDSV ILLE

- Mrs.
Elizabeth Smith, R.N .,
· DEAR POLLY and Bill-Taking decals off furniture is presented a program on Home
no problem as decal removers (very inexpensive) can Health Care 1at the Ma!:ch
be bought at stores that sell decals. They are a treated meeting of · the Riverview
paper that Is made wet and then placed over the decal
for a few hours or whatever time the directions say. Alter P.T.A., assisted by Mrs. Olive
Osborn and Mrs. Teresa
this treatment they will simply lift off.- JANE H.
Collins, R.N.
DEAR 'POLLY.:..when we moved into our house I had
Slides on the topic were
the same problem as Bill with decals on the wood doors. shown, and Mrs. Smith, exI removed mine by · heating some jlistilled white vinegar
and generously applying jt to the decals with a rag . But plaining how home health
do be careful not ·to expand beyond them so as not to service works in Mejgs county,
said with this new service the
harm the finish.-JANICE
length of time - thus the cost
il!ll;":m ,
ww m Polly's Problem IW£-~n:,_ - spent in a hospital may be
DEAR POLLY-Since moving to Florida, every- ~ shortened. Leaflets on this
. thing put on my gold tooled-leather desk top leaves
program were distributed to
a mark. Now it is badly marred, which makes me ·~' all.
!&lt; very sad. ! ·would like som.e suggestions for renew·
The meeting was opened
~ ing or rejuvenating it.-MRS. F. M. A.
with
a reading, "Just a Utile
'
:®:Ui~U.©Vffi*:W \!I f@
_
• w :
U'll~--Song" by Mrs. Eleanor Knight.
DEAR POLLY- When going camping, put each egg to The pledge io the flag was led
be taken along in a small
by Mr. Fred Kissinger. A
plastic bag and t h e n put
reading
circle book and atthem all back in the cartendance banner were
ton. If one should break, it
awarded
to Mrs . Osborn 's
will not make such a mess
but will be contained in its
room for the most parents
bag.-ALLEN
attending.
The District Spring ConDEAR POLLY- My Pet
ference P.T.A. meeting will be
Peeve concerns garbage
collection days. People do
April 29 at Jackson. Three
not bring their cans in or
representatives are needed
a f t e r pick up sometimes
from this P.T.A. The County
the garbage man does not put the cans far enough back
and they blow into the street. This has almost caused me Council P.T.A. will meet here
to have an accident while driving more than one time. April 6. There will be art
If you ·swerve to miss the can the traffic is coming right exhibits and installation of
officers.
at you nine times out of !{)-LUCY P.
New drapes for ·the three
DEAR POLLY- When the water trickles from a shower
head instead of gushing out as it should, you can easily
fix it yourself. Just unscrew the shower head and soak
it for about a day in a rather strong vinegar and water
solution. That is all . I have done this twice and know it
works.-MRS. C. S.

I

N.

1

E!E A GOOD NE'IGH60R.
HEt.P THE GOOD

NEIGHBOR.

lower classrooms have been
ordered and are to be installed
soon. Mrs. Elizabeth &amp;nith,
Mrs. Teresa Collins, and Mrs.
Marilyn Bannum are to work
on drape project for the doors
Iii the auditorium.
The Ohio University Players
will present the program for
the April meeting.
Officers submitted by the
nominating committee were,
president, Teresa Collins; vice
president, Orva Jean Holter ;
secretary, Elizabeth Smith,
RULES SELF OUT-Rep.
and treasurer, Margaret
Wllllam M. Colmer, D·
Brown. Named to the auditing
Miss., showa gIvIng the
Washington sceae a calm
committee were Mrs. Marlene
onceover,
h a s announced
Putman, Mrs. Frances Reed,
he
will
aot
run for reelecand Mrs. Ruth Dillon.
tion, thus v a c a tl a g Ills
Mrs. Knight reported on the
chalrmaasblp of the "govright to read program.
erning" House Rules ComVolunteers are needed for the
mittee. Conservative Colmer, 82, has been a House
story hour for Bookmobile
member
for four decades.
slops. Refreslunents using the
St. Patrick's theme were
served. Greeters from Girl Jo Ellen Wells. - Mrs. Lyle
Scout Troop 6'1 were Sara and Balderson.

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National Cartoonist.s Socict)'

Watch For Grand Opening

, 81~~ _&amp; LE.~'S MU~!C ~E~JER
SATURDAY, APRIL 1st
All types of musical instruments,
stereo tapes, records, sheet music.

The. Athens Counly

Savmgs &amp; Loan Co
"• 296 Second Sf.' ·
Pomeroy, Ohio

All Accounts Insured To
$20,000.00 by FSLIC.

,,., .•

Star! tha Hualcy 1 1254 and start get-

ling uaed to a 6-apeed tra ctor that
can move out at H4 m.p.h. or plow
.ontumed ground at leta than 1
m.p.h. Convenient power take-o!l
letll you awilch attllchmenta wltl'l
the graateat ol ease. Con trolled

d!fterentlal majchn tra ctor to h.trf
lor 1tablllt~ and belter l rtC\Ion.
Plu1 1olld 1tate Ignition lor 1Uf1!
atartlln •ny Wl!•,ther. qome In and ..
see It ... ata:r1 tometl'llng In ~our • •
neighborhood.

GENERAL TIRE SALES
992-7161

•

POMEROY, OIDO

~,_ 8olld-8t.te super
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•

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU MARCH 25
AT RACINE
MD CROSS SINS

.

hlndcref!M~

INGELS
FURNITURE
992-2635

AT tuPPERS PUIIIS
LYONS MMIET

MIDDLEPORT

AT 111111MD
·IIIIIINID DEPT. SIOIE

SUGAR . . . . . . . .~. ~~~. ~.~.~ . 6 9 ~
BEEF STEW. . ~~ . ~~. ~~.
3
9
9
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PEAR HALVES.........
8
CORN OIL........... ~.~.~.~~~·..

Produce Specials
Fresh Crisp

RIGHT

RESERVED

NEW CABBAGE .............'~::

TO

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QUANTITIES

TOMATOES

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ARMOUR

59~

STOKLEY

303
cans

~

MAZOIA

We Accept Federal Food Stamps!

(

AND

ROAST

Red .. m The Coupon

10~ OFFI
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EVAPORATED MILK

ORANGE JUICE

PARKAY

Margarine
NABISOO

· ~~ECHUCK
ROAST
.
;.)~
~
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~~TERCHUCK· ROAST. . }~: . 69~
SMOKED CALL_
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8oz.

VANILLA
WAFERS
Keebler Red Tag Sale!

3

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1.00
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ASSORTED COOKIES

$

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' Tfiere ular· . . .
priceo,
4Ya
ounce 'an$ or . .

WI:LSON
Pomeroy, .0 .

INSTANT
COFFEE

Frosty Acres

B~low For E:riro Sovinf•!

'

Tasters Choice

FROZEN FOOD

·cHUCK

I

I

SAVE ·

Certified Gas Stations
538 W.

cards to residents ·of the
Elmwood Re~ Home.
Mrs. Grace Stout presented
the
program , entitled,
"Arrangements for your
Church." She also demonstrated with three special
arrangements illustrating her
suggestions.
The traveling prize donated
by Mrs. Harold Massar was
won by Mrs. Ulah Swan. Door
prize given by the hostess was
won by Mrs. Charles Carr.
Refreshments carrying out a
St. Patrick's Day theme were
served by the hostess.
The. April meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs. James
Stout, at which time Mrs.
Mildred Van Meter of Pomeroy
Flower Shop will be present for
a workshop on the making of
corsages.

Blend Your Own

YOU'LL BE SATISFIED .

SAVE UP TO '1.00
A TANKFUL

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
March meeting of the Rose
Garden Club was held at the
home of Mrs. Niesel
Weatherman with Mrs. Carl
Barnhill, president, presiding.
Mrs. Floyd Stout gave
Easter devotions and an
Easter Prayer followed by the
Lord's Prayer in unison by
members. Mrs. Harold
Massar read the verse of the
month. Roll call was answered
by an exchange of seeds by
members:
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith is to
write Green Thumb notes for a
May newspaper article. Mrs.
Harold Massar was appointed
chairman of decoration
committee to decorate Eastern
High School for commenCement and baccalaweate
exercises. It was agreed that
members would send Easter

·,~.Eddy's

~

1:: 294

�..

•

•

a- The
... Dilly Sentinel, MldcBeport.Pomeroy, 0 .. March 22, lim
,

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

Gavin Stor

Cranberry-Fowl Chinese Treat

John Reece, pubUc .affairs
coordinator for the.Ohio Power
Co.'s Gavin Plant, was guest
speake~ at· the Monday night
meeting of the .Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Oub.
Meeting at the Columbia Gas
Co. office, Reece outlined with
slides and commentary details
of the construction, economic
Impact, and the measures
being taken to eliminate
pollutants in building the plant
itt Cheshire.
He described the process
FRED ALBRECHT
whereby Ute water uaed will be
Frett A. Albrecht, Mc- cooled and treated before being
Connelsville, will be speaker returned to the Ohio River, and
al evangelillltc services to be how the soot and dirt from coal
held al lhe Pomeroy Church used in the plant will be taken
of Cbrlsl beginning Sunday, out of emissions from Ute
exleodlng lbrough Friday. A smoke stack into the at·
graduate of Kentucky mosphere. _
Christian College In 1959, he
Ree~. with Ohio Power for
has served churches In the past eight years, was in·
Frazeysburg, Beverly ·and traduced by Nellie Vale,
New Marshfield, and chairman of the world affairs
congregations In McCoonels· commlttee. He commented on
ville since 1966. Mr. Albrecht the landscaping being done at
conducled a revival at lhe the plant site noting that the
Pomeroy church to lhe faD of plantings not only beautify, but
1966. The public Is tnvtled. also absorb some of the noise
Services will begin nightly at and dust resulting from the
7:30.
work th.ere.
Employment in the fall of
1973, he said, will be about·3,000
Cranberry Turkey Cantonese is perfect for sweet-ond-sour devotees
and remain at that level for
1i~
ahoutstxmonths.Thefrrstuntt
b
and Sour Sauce
cup cider vinegar, I can 06·
is expected to be completed by
d Th
By AILEEN CLAIRE
~.x;~Pl~e ~~~rd~e~ ~·ot ~~~
. (below)
ounce) whole berry cranSeptember1974,andthesecond
NE~ Food Editor
and drink. But lew there are \14 cup cooking oil
berry sauce. 3 tablespoon.s n1 ~
TI1
in September 1975. He reported
Those who watched the who can appreciate taste.'"
2 cups cooked turkey.
soy sauce. Cook ove~ medl·
·yy
that one reason for selecting
television coverage of Presi· These words are highlighted
chicken or pork, cubed urn heat, stmmg, unhl sauce ·
the Meigs-Gallia area for
dent
and
Mrs
.
Nixon's
trip
to
by
Buwei
Van~
Chao,
author
I large onion, cubed
becomes
thick
and
bubbly.
Mr
and
Mrs
Charle•
w
constructlonofthenewplantis
P king and read newspaper
t
k
d E 1
1 I g g e n pper
Keep warm
·
·
" ·
.
of "How o oo an
a
ar e r e pe
'
. ·.
.
Moore of Fairborn, former the good labor relatrons. He
e
0
10
thickly
residents of Pomeroy. are also discussed briefly the
ings" are to the Chinese. in c a 1if 0 r n i a. Mrs. Chao
sliced
pepper , mushrooms.' Stir fry announcing the engagement Meigs Mine operation.
Many of the observations says "Good cooking consists
2 small tomatoes, cubed
until tender-crisp, about 3 and approa&lt;;hing ~arrrage of
A gift was presented to
stem from Confucius, for ex- of making the best use of
I can (16-ounce) pineapple minutes. Add sweet. sour therr daughier, Miss Teresa Reece by Mrs. Vale. Others on
ample, and m ~ ~ Y from the eating material." Here is
chunks, drained, hot
sauce. tomatoes and pine· Lrm Moore, to Mr. William D. the planning commJttee for the
Chairman Mao. VrsJtors. too. an Americanized version of
4 cups cooke~ rice
apple. Stir and cool until all Burnette of Fairborn·. The program were Mrs. Beulah
get into the habit of sum· a Cranberry T u r keY Can- To make Cranberry Sweet ingredients are coated wrth wedding will be an event of Strauss, Mrs. Edna M. Swick,
up· thoughts
life or
or tonese dish.
and Sour Sauce : In medium s
sauce and heated M
through.
·
aming
specific
event in on
a line
k 6 July I. ·
two. This definitely apphes
CRANBERRY TURKEY
size saucepan combine 'h erve over rrce . a es
The bride-elect a graduate
· h Ch"•·
CANTONESE
cup packed brown sugar, 2 servings ·
. . High• School r·s
to those involved wrt
of Fairborn
I
I
C
b
S
I
tablespoons
cornstarch,
•
;
,
•
nese cooking. Confucius, lor
rec pe ran erry wee
employed at Wright State

Tj
e

sa

M

Holy Week Services Planned
LETART FALLS - Special vices each evening at 7:30p.m.
Holy Week services are to be starting March 26 and con·
held at the Letart Falls United tinning through April I.
Methodist Church with ser·
The theme for these services
will be, "The Immortal Story
Retold," built around the last
week in the earthly life of
i
.
Jesus.
There will be Ea~ter Sunrise
services at both Wesleyan and
East Let.art United Methodist
Churches at 6 a.m. The lour
churches at which Rev. W.
Dale McOurg preaches will
TUPPERS PLAINS - The hold regular church school
Tuppers Plains School classes.
Boosters met on a recent
The week's special services
Monday evening in the school will be closed with a combined
gym with the president, James worship service on Easter
Stout, presiding. Mrs. Bonnie Sunday at 11 a.m. This service
Hackney led the group in the will be conducted at the
pledge to the flag. The Wesleyan United Methodist
nominating committee ap· Church of Racine.
pointed to select nominees for
An invitation is extended to
offices for the comJng year are everyone. Special music will be
Mrs. Bonnie Hackney, provided.
chalnnan; Mrs . On leta Cole,
and Mrs. Janice Young. They
are to report at the April
Babying Hair
meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Envelson and
Mild baby shampoo is es·
Mr. and Mrs. Lehman were sential for the girl who
welcomed as new members. washes her hair every day.
Roger Kirkhart's sixth grade It cleans but doesn't dry the
so the hair keeps its
class presented an interesting hair.
healthy shine.
science display in which each
student had completed an
experiment and notebook on a
Science project. Each project
was on a different subject
matter. Mrs. Kirkhart's sixth
grade class won the room
banner and $3 cash prize for
having 20 parents present.
Refreshments were served
by Lavina Brannon's third
grade class. Room mothers
assisting were Mrs. Joyce
Ritchie, Mrs. Janet Chichester,
Mrs. Ruth Ann Scarbrough,
Mrs. Inez Boring· and Mrs.
Dorothy Stout.
L--:;1~~
The next meeting will be
April 10 at 7:30 p.m. at the
school gym. The meeting was
closed by prayer by Rev. Jacob 3·11
Lehman .

Boosters Meet

in School at

Tuppers Plains

m~:l:::oms,

Mason Area

Mrs. Farie KeM .I IJKI Mrs. , Mrs. Harold sargent
Nanna Wilson. . . . Edith .ted that t62'1.72 hid belli
....:... halnnan ~ted in MlddlepGrt for tbe
Forrest Is prog,,'""''.c
Jfelrt Fwld. She thanked Ill
for the club.
·.. '
bu'-' .....
Mrs. Grace Prat~ded at · IIICIIe wbo conlrl ""' .....
the meeting and rulidtnced the thole who worked -menlianlng
52nd annual state con\'enUon ~ ~y Mrs. Edith Jividen
be held in Oeveland,.May 21. A JIIO ~vaured lbe bualneu .
letter was read from Elizabeth .lrlct. )tis. Jividen is not a
.
·
Yearing, distrl_ct director, lilmber of the club.
announcing the JPrir11 meeting . ' The travelinl prize donated
of the district to be held on
' Kathy King 'I'D won by
Aprill6. At that
Mrs. ~· Sargent. Ilefrelhmlmta
Jane
the · We served by Mrs. Vale, Mrs.
speaker.
are to
andMril. KennedY with · ·
be made by April
ltn. Swick contributing.
··

.usa

Ad~eaL~kle~n ~~~~~ s~~;~

University as a key punch
operator. Mr . Burnette
graduated from Park Hills
High SChool of .Fairborn and is
Roger Enunish, 53, formerly Routsong Funeral Home in employed at" Texas Truck
of Middleport, died unex- Centerville. Burial will be at Center, Vandalia.
pectedly Monday night at his Centerville.
home in Centerville. Death was
attributed to a heart attack.
Mr. Emmish, a 1935
graduate of Middleport High
School,
attended Ohio
University. He operated his
Holter Medical Center, First
own business in Centerville as
Ave. and Cedar St. General
a manufacturer 's represenvisiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
tative.
Surviving are his wife, the The " Civilisation" film Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
former Louise Drake. who was series returns to Rio Grande 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
a teacher at the Middleport College after a week's absence, Pediatrics Ward.
Births
High School and operated the with two segments scheduled
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Cox,
Martin Restaurant lor a period for showing Utis week . "The
in later years; two daughters, Smile of Reason ••will be shown Galllpolla, a daughter and Mr.
Miss Betsy Emmish, a teacher Thursday and "The Worship of and Mrs. James Gregory,
Wellston, a son.
at the University of North Nature" on Friday.
Discharges
Carolina, and Mrs. James
Each film will be shown
Evelyn S. Albright, Steven
(Sally) Rodgers of Centerville; twice, at 1:40 and 8:30p.m., in
Don
Wamsley, Betty Crawford,
a grandson, Jimmy Rodgers; Anniversary
224.
The
his mother. Mrs . C. A. "Civilisation" series is open to Unda J. Perry, Mrs. Richard
· D. Greene and daughter,
EmmJsh, Middleport, and two the public wiUtout charge.
sisters. Mrs. Earl (Willett.a ) Thursday's film is a study of Jeannett Mahley, Carol Jean
Bougher, Columbus, and Mrs. the art and sculpture of the 18th Mowery, Ann M. Biland, Mrs.
Donald (Josephine ) Burkey of century, a period that can be Ronald E. Gill and daughter,
Marietta.
characterized as a gallery of Mrs. William Johnson and
Funeral services will be held smiles. Friday's segment deals daughter, Robert Allan Young,
Thursday at the Bowser and with Romantics like Rousseau, Lillie P. Caldwell, Harry A.
Goethe and Wordsworth, men Davis and James Virgil Eads.
who stressed a return to nature
Avocado Treatment
and put more value on emotion
VISIT PARENTS
Avocados are good, and and the senses than on in·
RUTLAND
- Mr. and Mrs.
not for just eating. You can tellect. They were a revolt
use the lllslde of the skiD of against the rationalism that Charles Simpkins, Charla,
avocados on your dryesl had dominated the 18th cen· Melissa and Chuck, of
spoto-e I how s, heels and tury
Columbus spent Saturday night
knees. Avoeados smooth and Frlday•s film is the eleventh with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
moisturize.
in the 13-part "Civilisation" Roy Snowden here.
.
.
series, with the final two
Suds tn Your Harr
segments scheduled for April
Many hairdressers still 13 and 20. The last two films
claim that the best ·solution are "The Fallacies of Hope"
Triple
for hard-to-curl harr rs beer. and "Heroic Materialism" a
All you need IS about an
.
•
Treat
ounce used on the hair after study of the thmgs that express
shampooing, then comb the deepest feelings and
through, set and dry.
aspirations of our time.
Keepsake Bridal sets ... fo r her,

Roger Enunish Died Monday

Film Series
Returns To
Rio College

HOSPITAL
Jo(i}s~bin.
NEWS

MAGNETIC

··PHOTO ·
.i
f ALBUMS

Olltt.S

~~.

·~ • Floral Covers

'1'.!
Black
Patent
Sizes
12112·3
Ladies
5-10

Chapman's

•

•
KI.NG
TAPE

SHOES
Pomeroy, Ohio

• %H X 60 yds.

" • 49' Value

;:' 14~rol

match ing wedding ring Qualit y
c rafted and guarant eed.

•

.• Contllns 2
. Flashlites ' ~
S2 00
W ED . R IN G 62 . 50
MAN ' S 7 5

ANYWAY YOU LOOK AT IT!

BAKER'S
Is The Place To Get Real Values

IN HOME FURNISHINGS

BAKER

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

•'·

Earl
Weaver they don't make h1m prthls hand on a Bible and swear to
.tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help
h1m God.
.
The way it is now he can't be held for perjury when he says II
doesn't bother hil{l at aU that he never has been named manager
II !be year.
.
Oh no, It doesn't bother the raapy-voiced little Baltimore
manager, It kll1s hlm. It bothers h1m so mucb he shows his
wi~t ~~It sometimes. Uke the other day. ·
newmnan asked h1m a question pettaiJiing to the other
, the American I.AIIIfllle West, and Weaver's answer was
~Uyc:urt.
''I ckmno," be· -pped. "Wb;y don't yw go ask (Dick)
WJDIID!I? Hewumanap'oflheyear, not me."
· In 3~ yean with the (kiolel, Weaver is managing a cool .750, a
figure T)' Cobb never cwld match either as a ballplayer or a
IIWiager.
lfr"'l'll 'l'hree Fall Yean
Weaver actually has IIWiaged the Orioles only three full
seuona, blvUw taken over lor Hank Bauer on July II, 1968.
Baltimore finished second that year and has won the American
League pennant every year since piuathe World Series once.
The
blve never lOIII a playoff game. They've won nine
in a row the last three seasons and last year they beat the
Ollkland A's, ~were hancDed by the man designated ·manager
lithe year. The Orioles also estahUahed a league record for most
victories in three consecutive seasons in 1969-70-71 but that didn't
matter in the balloting,
Sporta writers and sportscuters wbo voted for the manager of
the year prued over Weaver each ilme. The general feeling was
the Orioles were so strong anybody coold've won with them.
. That IMUDiptlon doesn't always bold water. Sometimes it's
tougher to IIWiage a clUb lolllled with stars than it js one made up
Jil'lmarily of rinkydlnks. Ask Leo Durocher.
: More than that, Earl Weaver generally is .two jumps ahead of
inost of the otber managers in his league. He has brains, he has
heart and 1don't know of any manager in the league who knows
Ills players better.
;
Tille Not Too lmporlaol
;. The title manager ri the year doesn't really mean a whole lot.
ii certainly doesn't mean as much as, say, the Most Valuable
Player and Cy Ywng awards which are voted on by the Baseball
Writers Association of America, but deep down I know Weaver
liu'*tl about lt.
f: "Does It hurt yw thiit you've never been voted manager of the
~ar?" I asked Weaver.
~- 1'Naab," he uld. "It can't."
~ 11\Vhy can't it?"
"Well, look at it thiB way: You go .around and ask a good
~seball tan, not a sports writer, but a real fan, who Is the
N.otionalo r..ague manager of the year and he can't even tell you."
.
1'weaver paused a moment.
f: "Uyou'retrylngtorememberwhollls,"he said, "I'll give you
~ hint. It wasn't the world championship manager."
;· "Okay "l said to Weaver, ''who was It?"
f. '"FOI,': he answered triumphantly. ''Now tell me his first

f

·

.

r. "Charlie " 1 said.
·
;: "All filht," said Weaver, giving me that much. "It would've
jurt maybe 11 everybody lgqored me but they didn '1. I got the
park qrlftlth AWard In Wsshington; the Will Harridge Award in
j:hlcago and the Outstanding Man of the Year Award in St. Louis
two years In a row. So I did okay."
·
·
· ''What about the lou to Pittsburgh in the series?" I asked him.
'
''Are
you avflt that now?"
.;. "A long Ume ago," he said. "Tilt real bad feeling lasted only
· tillbour. I went home; I cried, then I threw up and wheo I walked
out 11 the bathroom I immediately began thinking about this

'1t"!
PAINT PAN
'

· and

1e SALE

..'

·., ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPI)-It's a gOod thing for

Dame?"

C " R IOC•
13 50 TO 7:10
W EO R I NG 2 !J , 75
M"'-N ' . 3t . 75

c.

SET

~~\t

SHOES
·

\o\

9'v•

Values to 10.99 in the clearance
group of ladies' famous brands
shoes, broken sizes. Save 112 and
more on this group heels · fiats.
Brown, black, red and many
smart styles, out they go. You
save big here. ·

' · \; • 9 inch Pill ·

we.m.n.aer. too.

,

·

'

~

Great
Selection

Ladies ·Fashion Right
New Spring and Easter

At
Stiffler's .

.00

$

Juniols • Misses · Half Sims
Shop now for your new spring and
Easter dresses. Our selection is
great in a price range that will .
please your budget. Fine new
fabrics in a variety of spring
colors and patterns. Famous
brands. Jr . Misses and Half Sizes.

PAIR

'

Mens Sandy McGee
New Spring ·

99 $

OXFORDS • LOAFERS
You save Wee · Big on every pair of
famous Sandy McGee oxfords and
loafers. Select from our wide range of
~pular styles. All budget priced to meet
your Easter budget. Yes, you save at
Stiffler's.
·

DEPT.

'I"

. to

LADIES NEW

'12"

SPRING COATS
Have A New-Ught Aair
You'll lolie the many new looks of the
season. Including the latest cape styles
and smart designs- they're here in an
outstanding collection of spring coats,
priced for your budget. Get double
your fashion dollar. Use our easy lay·
away plan. Yes you save when you
shop at Stiffler's. Shop our Second
Floor Ready-to-Wear Dept.

FAMOUS BRANDS

SPRING FOOTWEAR.
.

'3'' '4'' '5''

,....---1~'

AND TO '8.99

L~DIES

AND CHILDREN

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$

SPORT SNEAKERS

00

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CHILDREN • BOYS • GIRLS • NEW

SHOE

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•

· CLOSE OUT GROUP • SHOE DEPT.

99

00

to

'

pair

131 1111DAILD81

RUG

Fashion Wigs

Hl&amp;"b quality rug
blcii:U llllde frml
carpeUng. AIIOrted
.-ttern and cob'l.

The Wig that gives you beauty plus
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to wear. It's your beauty assurance from
this day forth. 100 per cent Kan~kalon
Modacryllc it has the natural look and
feel of real hair, never loses its curl •
doesn't need to be set. Changes from one
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brush.

•
•
•
•

Blond Frost • .
Darkest Brown
Chestnut Brown
Smoky Ash

•
•
•
•
•

-Decorated Candy Filled
Easter Basket and

14~ea.

NOVELTIES
Select your Easter gift now
from our great selection of
fancy cello wrapped baskets
and novelties.

Ladies' New Spring
Styles!

Black Per!
Coffee Brown
Hazeltone
Ash Blond
Med. Auburn

EACH.
REG. '1.39 VALUE
FAMOUS

MT. MIST QUILT

Hi-Brow &amp; Olarm Step•

SEWING FABRICS

RUG RIOT
24x60 Runner
20x32 Asst. Colors

THROW RUGS
1.79

1

TO

• large Table

99

1.

CANNON TOWEL ENDS
One large table of values lo

39c of famous Cannon towel

PR.

ends. Yes, you save at

Stiffler's.

1'

~---.----~~--------~
REGULAR 1.00 YARD

PRINTS
c

44 Inch and 45 Inch

64 IDd 66 indl
1110% Polyester

ea.

LARGE TABLE

36 Inch
Courtesy

prices.

'

99

$100

save on every day low

• 24x60
• 20x32 .
• Asst. Colors

Great new •IYiea lor l1!liq[
and Eutflt. "Draa, eUul1
imd sport atylea at Budaet
Prices. .

45 inch Wash and Wear

Reg. 1.39 famous · Mt.
Mist Quill Balls. Shop
early Sllfller's -Main
Floor, shop here and

~ New Soring Colors

FOOTWEAR

SALE OF NEW SPRING

FLOCK DOTS

BATTS
$

(I

K_S

00

'

Good enough to be ntallllllflt of the year. In my book, anyway.

\

Values To •.10.99
LADIES

,~:~; WeaVflt has 110111e Case Stengel in hlm. When Stengel was

once liked at lbe hellht of bis succeaa with the Yankees what
IDidit l!I11111Jch a pod JIWIIllflt, he bad the perfect answer. .
''MJ pllyen," be said..
r
. . . . feela lbe way.
''I tblrik we aot the greatelll kids wbo ever prl on clothes," he
soya "I don't only mean baaebaiJ unllonns. I'm talking about
coa~ and Ilea. The Palmers, McNallys, Robinsons, Blairs,
~ Rettenmundl, Bulorcla and Belangers, all of 'em. You
don't meet bitter peop~."
.·
, .
· Elll'l
Isn't such bad people himlelf. He s a good

FRIDAY·
SATURDAY

OPEN 9:30 to 9:00

(klo•

and wedding rings . For him. a

B E L G IUM

News, Notes

SPQrt Parade

-~.2~

Miss Robin's spunky
new tie with bra,ss
trimmed eyelets.
Fashioned with careful
attention to fitand price.

stunning diamo nd engagement

DUTTON'S

Mu••

Today's

ST IRON
SKILLit
.,' SET

TIED-UP TO
PERFECT FIT

· sHotS iolf

UUie
Le111ae · offlcen elected
Yllllb
-ree lly Illite
Colder were Ray Tacker,
pa •Hat; CUriel S&amp;uley,
. vice pre1ldeal; Jack E .
f.ira. GWya GUbltrt, for. llmJa, HCrelcry; Ja.e t . H.
merly . of Maaon,
Is" Smhlr,lreuver, ... Robert
recuperatl,lllln Wuhington, D. Oliver, park r-•!qlcmn,
Her addreu is The · Mr, Tacker IDDODDced
RD*vtlt Room ·141, 2101 lila! liP ap ·claYJ lor Pee
tllh St. Norlh West, Wee ud LIUit ~ wiD
Wuhlngton, W. C. 20CMXI.
i1e belli oa April 'ltb, 1111, Utb
Mr. and.Mrl. uonen Herd· ud. 11111 al MaHa Youth
man of Elli:haft,. Indiana Center Ia MuoD. The time
vllllted 011 Saturday with his
wiD be unouaced later.
parenta, Mt. and, Mrs. Roy
Herdmlii In Muon and with . ·: : .·· . . ..
. .. ··.
Mn. Llonell . Herdman's
VACATION ENDED
plll'entt, Mr. and . Mrs.
LETART, W.Va.- Mr. and
Rool8velt · McGraw at Cedar Mrs. Harry Staats, Letart,
Grove, W. Va. · ·
"have returned frJml a month's
Mrs. Everett Thlllllas has vacation. They "went tO New
home after spending Orleana and Wianer, Louisiana
several "Weeki visiting her and from there to Florida
dli~ter and -son.fn-law, Mr. where !bey visited Mr. Staat's
and Mrs. .Dar Ebersbach in sister and husband, Mr. and
Florida.
·
Mrs. .Charles Clark, at Palm
:;yra. Kennelh Reynolds City.
·
e~lertalned on Sunday with a
..CLASS MEETS
birthday dinqer at her home
MASON - Mrs. Oarence
f~ her mother.Jn..law• Mrs. Baier and Mrs. Matilda Noble
I;indon Soil!h. Atlending were were hostesses when the
:rdn. Smith'a.motber, Mrs. R. Sunshine Class of Mason
King bl Henderson; Mr. and United Methodist Church met
Mra.NelaonReynoldaandJay; · on Thursday evening in the
'N«man Reynolds, Mr. Ken. church social rooms.
neth Reynolds and Mr· Landon
Mrs. Re~ben Stewart read
sjnlth.
'"l'l)e Cross of Dogwood" as
part of the .devoUonals. Mrs.
Noble read the Eastar Scriplure from Matthew which was
followed by praying the Lord's ,
BIRTHDAY NOTED
Prayer and silent prayer for
CUFI'ON - Cheater Oliver the Billy Graham film crusade
recently celebrated his birtn. which wiD continue through
day at home here. The birthday March 23 at New Haven
dinner was ·given by his wife · · theatre.
and those attending were Mr,. The group voted to allot $75
and Mrs. Luther Tucker and to be used towards paneling the
110M, Terry, Timmy, Tod and Sunday School classrooms.
Troy; Mr. and Mrs. Robert. Refreshments were served by
Oliver, Lynn'and Vance, all of . the above named hostesses at
Muon.
the ~luaion of the meeting,

c:

d
e

'

IWoN - . _

relu!'ned

oore

t
rutnS 0

~~~~~~ g~~h~~;~~~e!~,!~: ~~r~h~~e~~i~a~!~ct ~~~ ~~~:

I

Double Knits
-~ P~in $399

• Asst. Fancy

yd.

COMFY
FOAM FIL-LED

BED PILLOWS
Reg. sl 59 Value
Comly loam Ill led
bed pillow, non .
allergenic, foam
filled wllh floral
prin 1 cover .

~
ea.

• Assorted
Patterns
• 44" &amp; 45"

• Regular
1.00 Value

�..

•

•

a- The
... Dilly Sentinel, MldcBeport.Pomeroy, 0 .. March 22, lim
,

FOOD FOR AMERICANS

Gavin Stor

Cranberry-Fowl Chinese Treat

John Reece, pubUc .affairs
coordinator for the.Ohio Power
Co.'s Gavin Plant, was guest
speake~ at· the Monday night
meeting of the .Middleport
Business and Professional
Women's Oub.
Meeting at the Columbia Gas
Co. office, Reece outlined with
slides and commentary details
of the construction, economic
Impact, and the measures
being taken to eliminate
pollutants in building the plant
itt Cheshire.
He described the process
FRED ALBRECHT
whereby Ute water uaed will be
Frett A. Albrecht, Mc- cooled and treated before being
Connelsville, will be speaker returned to the Ohio River, and
al evangelillltc services to be how the soot and dirt from coal
held al lhe Pomeroy Church used in the plant will be taken
of Cbrlsl beginning Sunday, out of emissions from Ute
exleodlng lbrough Friday. A smoke stack into the at·
graduate of Kentucky mosphere. _
Christian College In 1959, he
Ree~. with Ohio Power for
has served churches In the past eight years, was in·
Frazeysburg, Beverly ·and traduced by Nellie Vale,
New Marshfield, and chairman of the world affairs
congregations In McCoonels· commlttee. He commented on
ville since 1966. Mr. Albrecht the landscaping being done at
conducled a revival at lhe the plant site noting that the
Pomeroy church to lhe faD of plantings not only beautify, but
1966. The public Is tnvtled. also absorb some of the noise
Services will begin nightly at and dust resulting from the
7:30.
work th.ere.
Employment in the fall of
1973, he said, will be about·3,000
Cranberry Turkey Cantonese is perfect for sweet-ond-sour devotees
and remain at that level for
1i~
ahoutstxmonths.Thefrrstuntt
b
and Sour Sauce
cup cider vinegar, I can 06·
is expected to be completed by
d Th
By AILEEN CLAIRE
~.x;~Pl~e ~~~rd~e~ ~·ot ~~~
. (below)
ounce) whole berry cranSeptember1974,andthesecond
NE~ Food Editor
and drink. But lew there are \14 cup cooking oil
berry sauce. 3 tablespoon.s n1 ~
TI1
in September 1975. He reported
Those who watched the who can appreciate taste.'"
2 cups cooked turkey.
soy sauce. Cook ove~ medl·
·yy
that one reason for selecting
television coverage of Presi· These words are highlighted
chicken or pork, cubed urn heat, stmmg, unhl sauce ·
the Meigs-Gallia area for
dent
and
Mrs
.
Nixon's
trip
to
by
Buwei
Van~
Chao,
author
I large onion, cubed
becomes
thick
and
bubbly.
Mr
and
Mrs
Charle•
w
constructlonofthenewplantis
P king and read newspaper
t
k
d E 1
1 I g g e n pper
Keep warm
·
·
" ·
.
of "How o oo an
a
ar e r e pe
'
. ·.
.
Moore of Fairborn, former the good labor relatrons. He
e
0
10
thickly
residents of Pomeroy. are also discussed briefly the
ings" are to the Chinese. in c a 1if 0 r n i a. Mrs. Chao
sliced
pepper , mushrooms.' Stir fry announcing the engagement Meigs Mine operation.
Many of the observations says "Good cooking consists
2 small tomatoes, cubed
until tender-crisp, about 3 and approa&lt;;hing ~arrrage of
A gift was presented to
stem from Confucius, for ex- of making the best use of
I can (16-ounce) pineapple minutes. Add sweet. sour therr daughier, Miss Teresa Reece by Mrs. Vale. Others on
ample, and m ~ ~ Y from the eating material." Here is
chunks, drained, hot
sauce. tomatoes and pine· Lrm Moore, to Mr. William D. the planning commJttee for the
Chairman Mao. VrsJtors. too. an Americanized version of
4 cups cooke~ rice
apple. Stir and cool until all Burnette of Fairborn·. The program were Mrs. Beulah
get into the habit of sum· a Cranberry T u r keY Can- To make Cranberry Sweet ingredients are coated wrth wedding will be an event of Strauss, Mrs. Edna M. Swick,
up· thoughts
life or
or tonese dish.
and Sour Sauce : In medium s
sauce and heated M
through.
·
aming
specific
event in on
a line
k 6 July I. ·
two. This definitely apphes
CRANBERRY TURKEY
size saucepan combine 'h erve over rrce . a es
The bride-elect a graduate
· h Ch"•·
CANTONESE
cup packed brown sugar, 2 servings ·
. . High• School r·s
to those involved wrt
of Fairborn
I
I
C
b
S
I
tablespoons
cornstarch,
•
;
,
•
nese cooking. Confucius, lor
rec pe ran erry wee
employed at Wright State

Tj
e

sa

M

Holy Week Services Planned
LETART FALLS - Special vices each evening at 7:30p.m.
Holy Week services are to be starting March 26 and con·
held at the Letart Falls United tinning through April I.
Methodist Church with ser·
The theme for these services
will be, "The Immortal Story
Retold," built around the last
week in the earthly life of
i
.
Jesus.
There will be Ea~ter Sunrise
services at both Wesleyan and
East Let.art United Methodist
Churches at 6 a.m. The lour
churches at which Rev. W.
Dale McOurg preaches will
TUPPERS PLAINS - The hold regular church school
Tuppers Plains School classes.
Boosters met on a recent
The week's special services
Monday evening in the school will be closed with a combined
gym with the president, James worship service on Easter
Stout, presiding. Mrs. Bonnie Sunday at 11 a.m. This service
Hackney led the group in the will be conducted at the
pledge to the flag. The Wesleyan United Methodist
nominating committee ap· Church of Racine.
pointed to select nominees for
An invitation is extended to
offices for the comJng year are everyone. Special music will be
Mrs. Bonnie Hackney, provided.
chalnnan; Mrs . On leta Cole,
and Mrs. Janice Young. They
are to report at the April
Babying Hair
meeting.
Mr. and Mrs. Envelson and
Mild baby shampoo is es·
Mr. and Mrs. Lehman were sential for the girl who
welcomed as new members. washes her hair every day.
Roger Kirkhart's sixth grade It cleans but doesn't dry the
so the hair keeps its
class presented an interesting hair.
healthy shine.
science display in which each
student had completed an
experiment and notebook on a
Science project. Each project
was on a different subject
matter. Mrs. Kirkhart's sixth
grade class won the room
banner and $3 cash prize for
having 20 parents present.
Refreshments were served
by Lavina Brannon's third
grade class. Room mothers
assisting were Mrs. Joyce
Ritchie, Mrs. Janet Chichester,
Mrs. Ruth Ann Scarbrough,
Mrs. Inez Boring· and Mrs.
Dorothy Stout.
L--:;1~~
The next meeting will be
April 10 at 7:30 p.m. at the
school gym. The meeting was
closed by prayer by Rev. Jacob 3·11
Lehman .

Boosters Meet

in School at

Tuppers Plains

m~:l:::oms,

Mason Area

Mrs. Farie KeM .I IJKI Mrs. , Mrs. Harold sargent
Nanna Wilson. . . . Edith .ted that t62'1.72 hid belli
....:... halnnan ~ted in MlddlepGrt for tbe
Forrest Is prog,,'""''.c
Jfelrt Fwld. She thanked Ill
for the club.
·.. '
bu'-' .....
Mrs. Grace Prat~ded at · IIICIIe wbo conlrl ""' .....
the meeting and rulidtnced the thole who worked -menlianlng
52nd annual state con\'enUon ~ ~y Mrs. Edith Jividen
be held in Oeveland,.May 21. A JIIO ~vaured lbe bualneu .
letter was read from Elizabeth .lrlct. )tis. Jividen is not a
.
·
Yearing, distrl_ct director, lilmber of the club.
announcing the JPrir11 meeting . ' The travelinl prize donated
of the district to be held on
' Kathy King 'I'D won by
Aprill6. At that
Mrs. ~· Sargent. Ilefrelhmlmta
Jane
the · We served by Mrs. Vale, Mrs.
speaker.
are to
andMril. KennedY with · ·
be made by April
ltn. Swick contributing.
··

.usa

Ad~eaL~kle~n ~~~~~ s~~;~

University as a key punch
operator. Mr . Burnette
graduated from Park Hills
High SChool of .Fairborn and is
Roger Enunish, 53, formerly Routsong Funeral Home in employed at" Texas Truck
of Middleport, died unex- Centerville. Burial will be at Center, Vandalia.
pectedly Monday night at his Centerville.
home in Centerville. Death was
attributed to a heart attack.
Mr. Emmish, a 1935
graduate of Middleport High
School,
attended Ohio
University. He operated his
Holter Medical Center, First
own business in Centerville as
Ave. and Cedar St. General
a manufacturer 's represenvisiting hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m.
tative.
Surviving are his wife, the The " Civilisation" film Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
former Louise Drake. who was series returns to Rio Grande 4:30 p.m. Parents only on
a teacher at the Middleport College after a week's absence, Pediatrics Ward.
Births
High School and operated the with two segments scheduled
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Cox,
Martin Restaurant lor a period for showing Utis week . "The
in later years; two daughters, Smile of Reason ••will be shown Galllpolla, a daughter and Mr.
Miss Betsy Emmish, a teacher Thursday and "The Worship of and Mrs. James Gregory,
Wellston, a son.
at the University of North Nature" on Friday.
Discharges
Carolina, and Mrs. James
Each film will be shown
Evelyn S. Albright, Steven
(Sally) Rodgers of Centerville; twice, at 1:40 and 8:30p.m., in
Don
Wamsley, Betty Crawford,
a grandson, Jimmy Rodgers; Anniversary
224.
The
his mother. Mrs . C. A. "Civilisation" series is open to Unda J. Perry, Mrs. Richard
· D. Greene and daughter,
EmmJsh, Middleport, and two the public wiUtout charge.
sisters. Mrs. Earl (Willett.a ) Thursday's film is a study of Jeannett Mahley, Carol Jean
Bougher, Columbus, and Mrs. the art and sculpture of the 18th Mowery, Ann M. Biland, Mrs.
Donald (Josephine ) Burkey of century, a period that can be Ronald E. Gill and daughter,
Marietta.
characterized as a gallery of Mrs. William Johnson and
Funeral services will be held smiles. Friday's segment deals daughter, Robert Allan Young,
Thursday at the Bowser and with Romantics like Rousseau, Lillie P. Caldwell, Harry A.
Goethe and Wordsworth, men Davis and James Virgil Eads.
who stressed a return to nature
Avocado Treatment
and put more value on emotion
VISIT PARENTS
Avocados are good, and and the senses than on in·
RUTLAND
- Mr. and Mrs.
not for just eating. You can tellect. They were a revolt
use the lllslde of the skiD of against the rationalism that Charles Simpkins, Charla,
avocados on your dryesl had dominated the 18th cen· Melissa and Chuck, of
spoto-e I how s, heels and tury
Columbus spent Saturday night
knees. Avoeados smooth and Frlday•s film is the eleventh with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
moisturize.
in the 13-part "Civilisation" Roy Snowden here.
.
.
series, with the final two
Suds tn Your Harr
segments scheduled for April
Many hairdressers still 13 and 20. The last two films
claim that the best ·solution are "The Fallacies of Hope"
Triple
for hard-to-curl harr rs beer. and "Heroic Materialism" a
All you need IS about an
.
•
Treat
ounce used on the hair after study of the thmgs that express
shampooing, then comb the deepest feelings and
through, set and dry.
aspirations of our time.
Keepsake Bridal sets ... fo r her,

Roger Enunish Died Monday

Film Series
Returns To
Rio College

HOSPITAL
Jo(i}s~bin.
NEWS

MAGNETIC

··PHOTO ·
.i
f ALBUMS

Olltt.S

~~.

·~ • Floral Covers

'1'.!
Black
Patent
Sizes
12112·3
Ladies
5-10

Chapman's

•

•
KI.NG
TAPE

SHOES
Pomeroy, Ohio

• %H X 60 yds.

" • 49' Value

;:' 14~rol

match ing wedding ring Qualit y
c rafted and guarant eed.

•

.• Contllns 2
. Flashlites ' ~
S2 00
W ED . R IN G 62 . 50
MAN ' S 7 5

ANYWAY YOU LOOK AT IT!

BAKER'S
Is The Place To Get Real Values

IN HOME FURNISHINGS

BAKER

FURNITURE
Middleport, 0.

•'·

Earl
Weaver they don't make h1m prthls hand on a Bible and swear to
.tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, so help
h1m God.
.
The way it is now he can't be held for perjury when he says II
doesn't bother hil{l at aU that he never has been named manager
II !be year.
.
Oh no, It doesn't bother the raapy-voiced little Baltimore
manager, It kll1s hlm. It bothers h1m so mucb he shows his
wi~t ~~It sometimes. Uke the other day. ·
newmnan asked h1m a question pettaiJiing to the other
, the American I.AIIIfllle West, and Weaver's answer was
~Uyc:urt.
''I ckmno," be· -pped. "Wb;y don't yw go ask (Dick)
WJDIID!I? Hewumanap'oflheyear, not me."
· In 3~ yean with the (kiolel, Weaver is managing a cool .750, a
figure T)' Cobb never cwld match either as a ballplayer or a
IIWiager.
lfr"'l'll 'l'hree Fall Yean
Weaver actually has IIWiaged the Orioles only three full
seuona, blvUw taken over lor Hank Bauer on July II, 1968.
Baltimore finished second that year and has won the American
League pennant every year since piuathe World Series once.
The
blve never lOIII a playoff game. They've won nine
in a row the last three seasons and last year they beat the
Ollkland A's, ~were hancDed by the man designated ·manager
lithe year. The Orioles also estahUahed a league record for most
victories in three consecutive seasons in 1969-70-71 but that didn't
matter in the balloting,
Sporta writers and sportscuters wbo voted for the manager of
the year prued over Weaver each ilme. The general feeling was
the Orioles were so strong anybody coold've won with them.
. That IMUDiptlon doesn't always bold water. Sometimes it's
tougher to IIWiage a clUb lolllled with stars than it js one made up
Jil'lmarily of rinkydlnks. Ask Leo Durocher.
: More than that, Earl Weaver generally is .two jumps ahead of
inost of the otber managers in his league. He has brains, he has
heart and 1don't know of any manager in the league who knows
Ills players better.
;
Tille Not Too lmporlaol
;. The title manager ri the year doesn't really mean a whole lot.
ii certainly doesn't mean as much as, say, the Most Valuable
Player and Cy Ywng awards which are voted on by the Baseball
Writers Association of America, but deep down I know Weaver
liu'*tl about lt.
f: "Does It hurt yw thiit you've never been voted manager of the
~ar?" I asked Weaver.
~- 1'Naab," he uld. "It can't."
~ 11\Vhy can't it?"
"Well, look at it thiB way: You go .around and ask a good
~seball tan, not a sports writer, but a real fan, who Is the
N.otionalo r..ague manager of the year and he can't even tell you."
.
1'weaver paused a moment.
f: "Uyou'retrylngtorememberwhollls,"he said, "I'll give you
~ hint. It wasn't the world championship manager."
;· "Okay "l said to Weaver, ''who was It?"
f. '"FOI,': he answered triumphantly. ''Now tell me his first

f

·

.

r. "Charlie " 1 said.
·
;: "All filht," said Weaver, giving me that much. "It would've
jurt maybe 11 everybody lgqored me but they didn '1. I got the
park qrlftlth AWard In Wsshington; the Will Harridge Award in
j:hlcago and the Outstanding Man of the Year Award in St. Louis
two years In a row. So I did okay."
·
·
· ''What about the lou to Pittsburgh in the series?" I asked him.
'
''Are
you avflt that now?"
.;. "A long Ume ago," he said. "Tilt real bad feeling lasted only
· tillbour. I went home; I cried, then I threw up and wheo I walked
out 11 the bathroom I immediately began thinking about this

'1t"!
PAINT PAN
'

· and

1e SALE

..'

·., ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (UPI)-It's a gOod thing for

Dame?"

C " R IOC•
13 50 TO 7:10
W EO R I NG 2 !J , 75
M"'-N ' . 3t . 75

c.

SET

~~\t

SHOES
·

\o\

9'v•

Values to 10.99 in the clearance
group of ladies' famous brands
shoes, broken sizes. Save 112 and
more on this group heels · fiats.
Brown, black, red and many
smart styles, out they go. You
save big here. ·

' · \; • 9 inch Pill ·

we.m.n.aer. too.

,

·

'

~

Great
Selection

Ladies ·Fashion Right
New Spring and Easter

At
Stiffler's .

.00

$

Juniols • Misses · Half Sims
Shop now for your new spring and
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great in a price range that will .
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PAIR

'

Mens Sandy McGee
New Spring ·

99 $

OXFORDS • LOAFERS
You save Wee · Big on every pair of
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your Easter budget. Yes, you save at
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·

DEPT.

'I"

. to

LADIES NEW

'12"

SPRING COATS
Have A New-Ught Aair
You'll lolie the many new looks of the
season. Including the latest cape styles
and smart designs- they're here in an
outstanding collection of spring coats,
priced for your budget. Get double
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shop at Stiffler's. Shop our Second
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FAMOUS BRANDS

SPRING FOOTWEAR.
.

'3'' '4'' '5''

,....---1~'

AND TO '8.99

L~DIES

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SPORT SNEAKERS

00

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SHOE

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•

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99

00

to

'

pair

131 1111DAILD81

RUG

Fashion Wigs

Hl&amp;"b quality rug
blcii:U llllde frml
carpeUng. AIIOrted
.-ttern and cob'l.

The Wig that gives you beauty plus
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Modacryllc it has the natural look and
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•
•
•
•

Blond Frost • .
Darkest Brown
Chestnut Brown
Smoky Ash

•
•
•
•
•

-Decorated Candy Filled
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14~ea.

NOVELTIES
Select your Easter gift now
from our great selection of
fancy cello wrapped baskets
and novelties.

Ladies' New Spring
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Black Per!
Coffee Brown
Hazeltone
Ash Blond
Med. Auburn

EACH.
REG. '1.39 VALUE
FAMOUS

MT. MIST QUILT

Hi-Brow &amp; Olarm Step•

SEWING FABRICS

RUG RIOT
24x60 Runner
20x32 Asst. Colors

THROW RUGS
1.79

1

TO

• large Table

99

1.

CANNON TOWEL ENDS
One large table of values lo

39c of famous Cannon towel

PR.

ends. Yes, you save at

Stiffler's.

1'

~---.----~~--------~
REGULAR 1.00 YARD

PRINTS
c

44 Inch and 45 Inch

64 IDd 66 indl
1110% Polyester

ea.

LARGE TABLE

36 Inch
Courtesy

prices.

'

99

$100

save on every day low

• 24x60
• 20x32 .
• Asst. Colors

Great new •IYiea lor l1!liq[
and Eutflt. "Draa, eUul1
imd sport atylea at Budaet
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45 inch Wash and Wear

Reg. 1.39 famous · Mt.
Mist Quill Balls. Shop
early Sllfller's -Main
Floor, shop here and

~ New Soring Colors

FOOTWEAR

SALE OF NEW SPRING

FLOCK DOTS

BATTS
$

(I

K_S

00

'

Good enough to be ntallllllflt of the year. In my book, anyway.

\

Values To •.10.99
LADIES

,~:~; WeaVflt has 110111e Case Stengel in hlm. When Stengel was

once liked at lbe hellht of bis succeaa with the Yankees what
IDidit l!I11111Jch a pod JIWIIllflt, he bad the perfect answer. .
''MJ pllyen," be said..
r
. . . . feela lbe way.
''I tblrik we aot the greatelll kids wbo ever prl on clothes," he
soya "I don't only mean baaebaiJ unllonns. I'm talking about
coa~ and Ilea. The Palmers, McNallys, Robinsons, Blairs,
~ Rettenmundl, Bulorcla and Belangers, all of 'em. You
don't meet bitter peop~."
.·
, .
· Elll'l
Isn't such bad people himlelf. He s a good

FRIDAY·
SATURDAY

OPEN 9:30 to 9:00

(klo•

and wedding rings . For him. a

B E L G IUM

News, Notes

SPQrt Parade

-~.2~

Miss Robin's spunky
new tie with bra,ss
trimmed eyelets.
Fashioned with careful
attention to fitand price.

stunning diamo nd engagement

DUTTON'S

Mu••

Today's

ST IRON
SKILLit
.,' SET

TIED-UP TO
PERFECT FIT

· sHotS iolf

UUie
Le111ae · offlcen elected
Yllllb
-ree lly Illite
Colder were Ray Tacker,
pa •Hat; CUriel S&amp;uley,
. vice pre1ldeal; Jack E .
f.ira. GWya GUbltrt, for. llmJa, HCrelcry; Ja.e t . H.
merly . of Maaon,
Is" Smhlr,lreuver, ... Robert
recuperatl,lllln Wuhington, D. Oliver, park r-•!qlcmn,
Her addreu is The · Mr, Tacker IDDODDced
RD*vtlt Room ·141, 2101 lila! liP ap ·claYJ lor Pee
tllh St. Norlh West, Wee ud LIUit ~ wiD
Wuhlngton, W. C. 20CMXI.
i1e belli oa April 'ltb, 1111, Utb
Mr. and.Mrl. uonen Herd· ud. 11111 al MaHa Youth
man of Elli:haft,. Indiana Center Ia MuoD. The time
vllllted 011 Saturday with his
wiD be unouaced later.
parenta, Mt. and, Mrs. Roy
Herdmlii In Muon and with . ·: : .·· . . ..
. .. ··.
Mn. Llonell . Herdman's
VACATION ENDED
plll'entt, Mr. and . Mrs.
LETART, W.Va.- Mr. and
Rool8velt · McGraw at Cedar Mrs. Harry Staats, Letart,
Grove, W. Va. · ·
"have returned frJml a month's
Mrs. Everett Thlllllas has vacation. They "went tO New
home after spending Orleana and Wianer, Louisiana
several "Weeki visiting her and from there to Florida
dli~ter and -son.fn-law, Mr. where !bey visited Mr. Staat's
and Mrs. .Dar Ebersbach in sister and husband, Mr. and
Florida.
·
Mrs. .Charles Clark, at Palm
:;yra. Kennelh Reynolds City.
·
e~lertalned on Sunday with a
..CLASS MEETS
birthday dinqer at her home
MASON - Mrs. Oarence
f~ her mother.Jn..law• Mrs. Baier and Mrs. Matilda Noble
I;indon Soil!h. Atlending were were hostesses when the
:rdn. Smith'a.motber, Mrs. R. Sunshine Class of Mason
King bl Henderson; Mr. and United Methodist Church met
Mra.NelaonReynoldaandJay; · on Thursday evening in the
'N«man Reynolds, Mr. Ken. church social rooms.
neth Reynolds and Mr· Landon
Mrs. Re~ben Stewart read
sjnlth.
'"l'l)e Cross of Dogwood" as
part of the .devoUonals. Mrs.
Noble read the Eastar Scriplure from Matthew which was
followed by praying the Lord's ,
BIRTHDAY NOTED
Prayer and silent prayer for
CUFI'ON - Cheater Oliver the Billy Graham film crusade
recently celebrated his birtn. which wiD continue through
day at home here. The birthday March 23 at New Haven
dinner was ·given by his wife · · theatre.
and those attending were Mr,. The group voted to allot $75
and Mrs. Luther Tucker and to be used towards paneling the
110M, Terry, Timmy, Tod and Sunday School classrooms.
Troy; Mr. and Mrs. Robert. Refreshments were served by
Oliver, Lynn'and Vance, all of . the above named hostesses at
Muon.
the ~luaion of the meeting,

c:

d
e

'

IWoN - . _

relu!'ned

oore

t
rutnS 0

~~~~~~ g~~h~~;~~~e!~,!~: ~~r~h~~e~~i~a~!~ct ~~~ ~~~:

I

Double Knits
-~ P~in $399

• Asst. Fancy

yd.

COMFY
FOAM FIL-LED

BED PILLOWS
Reg. sl 59 Value
Comly loam Ill led
bed pillow, non .
allergenic, foam
filled wllh floral
prin 1 cover .

~
ea.

• Assorted
Patterns
• 44" &amp; 45"

• Regular
1.00 Value

�,.

·Minimum Tax Demanded

Peace.in the Pen
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Penitentiary officials made
peace with inmates Tuesday
night to end a twO·dBY
"strike," but today they must
contend with disgruntled
guards.
The 1,900 inmates agreed to
go back to their assigned jobs
at the pre-Civil War prison
here today after meetings with
officials.netted them a series of
changes in regulations, i!Jcluding how long they may wear
their hair.
The Hconcesslons" were
later explained to guards, who
were displeased by what they
regarded as a surrender to the
convicts and upset about
unrelated pay issues. They
planned to meet with Teamsters Union officials this
morning to discuss whether to
go on strike themselves.
Barring strike action by the
guards, the inmates were freed
today from their cells for the
first time since Monday when
the work stoppage began in the
dining room. Since then, the
prisoners have remained
locked in their cells and meals
have been brought in from the
outside, mostly in the form of
quick.&lt;Jrder hamburgers by the
thousands.
Sympathy Sitdowos
At two other penal facilities
around the state, inmates took
note of the strike action Tuesday by likewise refusing to do
their tasks. All but 400 of the

11300 prisoners at (,ondon State
Correctional Institute and all
950 at Chillicothe Institute
maintained a "silent sit-down
strike" In sumll&amp;thy with the
Columbus prisoliers.
t.ondon Superintendent E. B.
Haskins said the prisoner
action there "appears to be
well organized."
The guards vented their ire
at the decisions at the slate
prison here in remarks to
newsmen, although they
refused to be identified.
One said, "these guys (In·
mates) create an emergency
and get what they want In one
day. We can't get what we want
after batUing for it for years."
The guards had lhrestened to
walk out at the 6 p.m. Tuesday
shift change, but 185 went off
duty and a like number came
on and the walkout did not OC·

cur.
Their complaints Include the
apparent loss of 12 to 15 cents
an hour in "hazard" pay that
was · expected in new wage
scales approved by the Ohio
General Assembly.
BooatiDPay
Among a list of requests approved by the convicts was for
a "convict council'' which
would meet regnlarly with
irunates and authorities to air
grievances.
Others agreed to by Warden
Harold Cardwell and state Cor·
rections Chief Bennett Cooper

WASHJNGTON (UPI) -Ex·
(nsSing shock ·that
Steel
Corp. paid no federal taxes in
1971 despite sales of about $4.8
bUllon, Rep. Charles Vanlk, [).
Ohio, called '!'uesday for
creation of a minimum tax so
all firms woulcl pay something
.each year.
Vanik made the suggestion
during an appearance before
Congress' Joint· Economic
Conunlttee.
Sen. William Ptoxlmire, [).
. Wis., chairman of the conunittee, told Vanik the obvious explanation for no taxes being
paid In 1971 by U.S. Steel,_ the
nation's 12th largest cor·
COUNT mM IN. Terry poration- was that the finn
Sanford, former governor made no profit that year.
of North Carolina, has en·
"For the life of me," Proxtered the Democratic
presidential no mlnatlon mlre told Vanik, "! can't see
sweepstakes. The late en· your putting so much emphasis
try, now president of on U.S. Steel paying no taxes in
Duke University, was au a year in which they made no
early key . supporter In money."
John F. Kennedy's suc·
Yanik replied he felt the fll1ll
cessfull960 umpalgn for still should be required to pay
the nomination. '
at least a token lax since the

u.s.

Included a boost in pay from
$25 to $50 a month; revision of
parole board procedures;
allowing hair to be worn "as
long as it's reasonable," and
expanding visitation rules.
Alao the prison officials went
along with the assignment of
jobs on the basis of
"qualification only,"
placement of an ombudsman In
the prison and allowing Black
Muslim.s to be visited by leaders of that faith.
Cooper said he does not consider the requests to be "con-

cessions."
'"l'hese things were already
in our operating plan and had
been already approved by the
governor," he Said. "We were
going to give them thtise thlnga
anyway. We just moved up our
tilnetable a bit."
Cooper and Cardwell
rejected several suggestions,
he said, including aUowing
inmates to pick their
celhnates.

ration escaped 1111 tnatlon.
urcinl • • itudy be

poratlona. He said fl&amp;urel are .
often clOaked In the firm's anroal reporta.
.
He said he waa wUiing to
wager that at 1eaat onH!fth It
the top 500 corporatlona In the

corporation. receives considerable services from the
government. ·
Vanik then left the witness
stand and restudied the firm's
anntJal statement from 1971.
He said he then discovered
Proxmire's statement wu
,wrong and that U.S. Steel In
1911 had earnings of $154.5
million.
The annual report, a public
document, said the .firm paid
no taxes because af the operation af a number of tax...aving devices in the law Including
special lax deferments for
minerals production, tax
deferral on Income earned by
foreign subsidiaries and tax
credits left over from the
!vestment tax credit before its ·
repeal in 1968·.
Vanik then returned to the
hearing room and wrote Proxmire a note revealing his discovery and later told newsmen
one of the "great secrets" of
the American tax system is the
actual income of large cor-

lkrlaken, Vlllik

C

11\Jf, '

AmeriCIII peap1e are ealltled
to lmOII wblcb of 0111' C!CII'JMftl.e
~·-"-"
partnen are. ...,..._..,.,

ITALIAN NIGHT
AT .

·

Marlin

the

In

,.,_rt of Middleport

WEDNESDAY NIGHT
6:30 To 10:30 March 22
·I

Spaghetti with homemade Italian sauce;

''Featuring Maxine At The Organ".

we care~-----...
PERMANENT·PRESS
DRESS SHIRTS

WASJUNGTON (UP!) - A
federal judge warned if Robert
Short, former Democratic National Committee treasurer
who now owns a major league
baseball team, fails to show up
in court today "he will suffer
the consequences."
Short was called to be a government witness in the trial in
U. S. District Court in which
United
Mine
Workers
President W. A. "Tony" Boyle
is charged with making illegal
political contributions from
union funds .
Government attorneys told
Judge Charles R. Richey Tues·
day that Short, owner of the
new Texas Rangers baseball
team, could not make it today.
11
1 don't care who he is,"
Judge Richey retorted. "You'd
better call back and tell Mr.
Short he better be here."
Principal witnesses Tuesday
were Lee Nunn, who currently

works for the conunlttee to re·
elect President Nixon and who
directed GOP fund-raising
galas In 1967,1968 and 1969, and
Jess Larsen, who directed
Democratic congressional
fund-raisers in the same
period.
Larsen told of contributions
totaling $12,500 for tickets to
the Democratic affairs which
allegedly came from Boyle and
two other union officlals.
Suzanne Richards, Boye's
executive assistant, also
testified that the union "always
bought a tsble" at Democratic
party congressional dinners.
She said it was a "routine

matter."
The goverment has charged
Boyle and two other union of.
fleers with tunnelling $50,000 of
union funds · to various
pollticans and politlcal parties
in violation af federal labor and
conupt ~actices laws.

Chaplain Charged

For

Sale

. NEW JOHN boat, all finished
but bottom, $25. Phone Otis
Bailey 9~· 2854 .
3-22·31p

Real Esiate for Sale
HOUSE AND lot .on Vine St.,
Racine. Phone Otis Bailey,

949·.2854.
3·22·31p

LADIES
SKIRTS

PolyeJiar and nylon
knit sheels in chic jew·
el , ieoop , or v·neck
\lyling. C~oo~e from
1leevelen or short
sluve models ond lilac, blue, white, or red
colors . Sizes, S-M-l.

attradive regular

'~!:;,,~and doby ~tripe
p

A'Phasnation

Sim, U!;

BONE IN

Del Monte, Campbell, Nabisco, Heinz, Kraft ... just to name a few.

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These exclusive A&amp;P Brands have earned their
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CLOTH/II' IEPT.

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SWIFT PREMIUM
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$249
Sl"
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B
VACUUM
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•
lb.
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ILADE CUT
lb. $139 SUPERIOR
2
lb. SJ39
Cross Rib Roast ·•
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$ Jt WHOLE. HALF OR END CUT
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Chuck Fillet Steak • lb. 1 Sl.. Balin • , •. , ,a~&gt;.w- lilt PI• ; , , 5=.SJ 00

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$1.88

""'·
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18 PLUSH

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no one else has!

HECK'S
REG.

ror

CALIFORNIA BEEF ROAST •••
SPLIT FRYERS
• • ••••
PORK CHOPS
•••••1~».79c ·

ousbrands

HECK'S

REG.
TO

HECK'S REG.

. '
These double knits ore something that
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Availoble in lour colors. Sizes, 29·42

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TOYIEPT.

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•

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LADIES'

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Heck's
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13.44

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ClOTH/It&amp;
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$13"

evidence" to support the
charges against Jensen whlcb,
he said, could be the result of
"aggressive females upset
over rejection."
Under croSHxaminalion by
civilian defense attorney Jack
R. Blackmon of Corpus Onistl,
Tex., Mrs. Curran said she had
relations with Jensen for the
first time on the afternoon of
Aug. 9, 1970, and that night she
drove to St. Augustine and had
dinner and registered at a
motel with an unnamed Jack·
sonvllle man.
"I had had a pretty good bit
to drink," she said. "what did It
really matter after there were
two whether there would be
three or four?"
.
Mrs. Curran, dressed In a
prim white jacket and purple
skirt and· wearing her blonde
hair shoulder-length, said she
met Jensen In 1970 shortly after
her husband was transferred to
Cec · Field from a Nary base
at B.:evllle, Tex. She said her
husband, Navy pUot Lt. Joseph
Lawrence Curran Jr., engaged
Jensen as a marriage counse.
lor.
Mrs. Curran said her Intimacies with Jensen occurred over
a seveiHilonth period during
1970-71. Mrs. Gudbranson said
she was Intimate with Jensen
four times in May and July of
1971, which would have been
shortly after Mrs. Curran said
her affair with the chaplain
ended.
Mrs. CUrran, a registered
nurse, testified that on one
occasion she went to the Jensen
home to nurse the chaplain's
ailing wife at his request. .
"Mrs. Jensen said she SOFT
thought her husband was
having an affair," said Mrs.
Curran.

Gilts

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NE PER FAMILY

I

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. 3;;::;.51°0
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box
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Good Thru Sat., March 25 At
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PKG

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$1.39

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A beautiful
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of
prints, solids,
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13.48

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With Bad Conduct
JACKSONVILLE , Fla .
(UPI ) - The blonde wife of a
Navy flyer told a court-martial
board Tuesday that she went to
a chaplain for marriage
counseling and began a sevenmonth affair with him.
Mary Ann Curran, 24, said
she had sexual relations 17 or
18times with Cmdr. Andrew F.
Jensen, 43, in various motels,
her apartment and the chaplain's office at Cecil Field
Naval Air Station.
Jensen, a slim 17-year Navy
veteran, is charged with
conduct unbecoming an officer
for alleged affairs with Mrs.
CUrran and with Lori Gudbranson, the blonde wife of a Navy
supply officer.
Jensen, the father of two
children whose wife waits
outside the courtroom, has
denied the charges and has the
backing of the American
Baptist Convention which is
refusing to supply any more
chaplains to the Navy because
of the handling of the case.
Herman M. Benner,a former
Navy chaplain who Is attending
the trial as an observer for the
American Baptist Convention,
said there was "no firm

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00

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·Minimum Tax Demanded

Peace.in the Pen
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Penitentiary officials made
peace with inmates Tuesday
night to end a twO·dBY
"strike," but today they must
contend with disgruntled
guards.
The 1,900 inmates agreed to
go back to their assigned jobs
at the pre-Civil War prison
here today after meetings with
officials.netted them a series of
changes in regulations, i!Jcluding how long they may wear
their hair.
The Hconcesslons" were
later explained to guards, who
were displeased by what they
regarded as a surrender to the
convicts and upset about
unrelated pay issues. They
planned to meet with Teamsters Union officials this
morning to discuss whether to
go on strike themselves.
Barring strike action by the
guards, the inmates were freed
today from their cells for the
first time since Monday when
the work stoppage began in the
dining room. Since then, the
prisoners have remained
locked in their cells and meals
have been brought in from the
outside, mostly in the form of
quick.&lt;Jrder hamburgers by the
thousands.
Sympathy Sitdowos
At two other penal facilities
around the state, inmates took
note of the strike action Tuesday by likewise refusing to do
their tasks. All but 400 of the

11300 prisoners at (,ondon State
Correctional Institute and all
950 at Chillicothe Institute
maintained a "silent sit-down
strike" In sumll&amp;thy with the
Columbus prisoliers.
t.ondon Superintendent E. B.
Haskins said the prisoner
action there "appears to be
well organized."
The guards vented their ire
at the decisions at the slate
prison here in remarks to
newsmen, although they
refused to be identified.
One said, "these guys (In·
mates) create an emergency
and get what they want In one
day. We can't get what we want
after batUing for it for years."
The guards had lhrestened to
walk out at the 6 p.m. Tuesday
shift change, but 185 went off
duty and a like number came
on and the walkout did not OC·

cur.
Their complaints Include the
apparent loss of 12 to 15 cents
an hour in "hazard" pay that
was · expected in new wage
scales approved by the Ohio
General Assembly.
BooatiDPay
Among a list of requests approved by the convicts was for
a "convict council'' which
would meet regnlarly with
irunates and authorities to air
grievances.
Others agreed to by Warden
Harold Cardwell and state Cor·
rections Chief Bennett Cooper

WASHJNGTON (UPI) -Ex·
(nsSing shock ·that
Steel
Corp. paid no federal taxes in
1971 despite sales of about $4.8
bUllon, Rep. Charles Vanlk, [).
Ohio, called '!'uesday for
creation of a minimum tax so
all firms woulcl pay something
.each year.
Vanik made the suggestion
during an appearance before
Congress' Joint· Economic
Conunlttee.
Sen. William Ptoxlmire, [).
. Wis., chairman of the conunittee, told Vanik the obvious explanation for no taxes being
paid In 1971 by U.S. Steel,_ the
nation's 12th largest cor·
COUNT mM IN. Terry poration- was that the finn
Sanford, former governor made no profit that year.
of North Carolina, has en·
"For the life of me," Proxtered the Democratic
presidential no mlnatlon mlre told Vanik, "! can't see
sweepstakes. The late en· your putting so much emphasis
try, now president of on U.S. Steel paying no taxes in
Duke University, was au a year in which they made no
early key . supporter In money."
John F. Kennedy's suc·
Yanik replied he felt the fll1ll
cessfull960 umpalgn for still should be required to pay
the nomination. '
at least a token lax since the

u.s.

Included a boost in pay from
$25 to $50 a month; revision of
parole board procedures;
allowing hair to be worn "as
long as it's reasonable," and
expanding visitation rules.
Alao the prison officials went
along with the assignment of
jobs on the basis of
"qualification only,"
placement of an ombudsman In
the prison and allowing Black
Muslim.s to be visited by leaders of that faith.
Cooper said he does not consider the requests to be "con-

cessions."
'"l'hese things were already
in our operating plan and had
been already approved by the
governor," he Said. "We were
going to give them thtise thlnga
anyway. We just moved up our
tilnetable a bit."
Cooper and Cardwell
rejected several suggestions,
he said, including aUowing
inmates to pick their
celhnates.

ration escaped 1111 tnatlon.
urcinl • • itudy be

poratlona. He said fl&amp;urel are .
often clOaked In the firm's anroal reporta.
.
He said he waa wUiing to
wager that at 1eaat onH!fth It
the top 500 corporatlona In the

corporation. receives considerable services from the
government. ·
Vanik then left the witness
stand and restudied the firm's
anntJal statement from 1971.
He said he then discovered
Proxmire's statement wu
,wrong and that U.S. Steel In
1911 had earnings of $154.5
million.
The annual report, a public
document, said the .firm paid
no taxes because af the operation af a number of tax...aving devices in the law Including
special lax deferments for
minerals production, tax
deferral on Income earned by
foreign subsidiaries and tax
credits left over from the
!vestment tax credit before its ·
repeal in 1968·.
Vanik then returned to the
hearing room and wrote Proxmire a note revealing his discovery and later told newsmen
one of the "great secrets" of
the American tax system is the
actual income of large cor-

lkrlaken, Vlllik

C

11\Jf, '

AmeriCIII peap1e are ealltled
to lmOII wblcb of 0111' C!CII'JMftl.e
~·-"-"
partnen are. ...,..._..,.,

ITALIAN NIGHT
AT .

·

Marlin

the

In

,.,_rt of Middleport

WEDNESDAY NIGHT
6:30 To 10:30 March 22
·I

Spaghetti with homemade Italian sauce;

''Featuring Maxine At The Organ".

we care~-----...
PERMANENT·PRESS
DRESS SHIRTS

WASJUNGTON (UP!) - A
federal judge warned if Robert
Short, former Democratic National Committee treasurer
who now owns a major league
baseball team, fails to show up
in court today "he will suffer
the consequences."
Short was called to be a government witness in the trial in
U. S. District Court in which
United
Mine
Workers
President W. A. "Tony" Boyle
is charged with making illegal
political contributions from
union funds .
Government attorneys told
Judge Charles R. Richey Tues·
day that Short, owner of the
new Texas Rangers baseball
team, could not make it today.
11
1 don't care who he is,"
Judge Richey retorted. "You'd
better call back and tell Mr.
Short he better be here."
Principal witnesses Tuesday
were Lee Nunn, who currently

works for the conunlttee to re·
elect President Nixon and who
directed GOP fund-raising
galas In 1967,1968 and 1969, and
Jess Larsen, who directed
Democratic congressional
fund-raisers in the same
period.
Larsen told of contributions
totaling $12,500 for tickets to
the Democratic affairs which
allegedly came from Boyle and
two other union officlals.
Suzanne Richards, Boye's
executive assistant, also
testified that the union "always
bought a tsble" at Democratic
party congressional dinners.
She said it was a "routine

matter."
The goverment has charged
Boyle and two other union of.
fleers with tunnelling $50,000 of
union funds · to various
pollticans and politlcal parties
in violation af federal labor and
conupt ~actices laws.

Chaplain Charged

For

Sale

. NEW JOHN boat, all finished
but bottom, $25. Phone Otis
Bailey 9~· 2854 .
3-22·31p

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949·.2854.
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PolyeJiar and nylon
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$249
Sl"
d
B
VACUUM
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ILADE CUT
lb. $139 SUPERIOR
2
lb. SJ39
Cross Rib Roast ·•
Frankles , • • , pq.
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WHY PAY MOREl
$ Jt WHOLE. HALF OR END CUT
JAt $11\.TNI/I , -.
Chuck Fillet Steak • lb. 1 Sl.. Balin • , •. , ,a~&gt;.w- lilt PI• ; , , 5=.SJ 00

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IEPT.

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ror

CALIFORNIA BEEF ROAST •••
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• • ••••
PORK CHOPS
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ousbrands

HECK'S

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TO

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These double knits ore something that
you can really get into . 100% palyes·
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Availoble in lour colors. Sizes, 29·42

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LADIES'

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Heck's
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ClOTH/It&amp;
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Not every store canoffer you this. A&amp;P can ... and does.
Shouldn't A&amp;P be your store.?

$13"

evidence" to support the
charges against Jensen whlcb,
he said, could be the result of
"aggressive females upset
over rejection."
Under croSHxaminalion by
civilian defense attorney Jack
R. Blackmon of Corpus Onistl,
Tex., Mrs. Curran said she had
relations with Jensen for the
first time on the afternoon of
Aug. 9, 1970, and that night she
drove to St. Augustine and had
dinner and registered at a
motel with an unnamed Jack·
sonvllle man.
"I had had a pretty good bit
to drink," she said. "what did It
really matter after there were
two whether there would be
three or four?"
.
Mrs. Curran, dressed In a
prim white jacket and purple
skirt and· wearing her blonde
hair shoulder-length, said she
met Jensen In 1970 shortly after
her husband was transferred to
Cec · Field from a Nary base
at B.:evllle, Tex. She said her
husband, Navy pUot Lt. Joseph
Lawrence Curran Jr., engaged
Jensen as a marriage counse.
lor.
Mrs. Curran said her Intimacies with Jensen occurred over
a seveiHilonth period during
1970-71. Mrs. Gudbranson said
she was Intimate with Jensen
four times in May and July of
1971, which would have been
shortly after Mrs. Curran said
her affair with the chaplain
ended.
Mrs. CUrran, a registered
nurse, testified that on one
occasion she went to the Jensen
home to nurse the chaplain's
ailing wife at his request. .
"Mrs. Jensen said she SOFT
thought her husband was
having an affair," said Mrs.
Curran.

Gilts

YAWAILI COUPON
Wllh Thb Coupon

PURE VE6ETABLE

SHORTENING
~~~
~~
COUPON

WONDERFOIL
WITH
# ..J1.
' 12"1125'
roll ·
THIS .
COUPON

BOYS'

24C

3 79c

.~

#

Good Thru Sot., March 25 At
Your Friendly AlP Store.

Good Thru Sot., Morch 26 At
Your Friondly AlP Store.
ONE PER FAMILY

YALUAILE COUPON
WITH THIS COUPON

VALUAILI COUPON
DETERGENT

PINE-SOL CLEANER

79c

28·•L

bottlt

PEAT HUMUS

.

Good Thru Sot., March 25 At
Your Friendly AlP Store.

SUNNYFIELD REG.

Pancake Mix

NE PER FAMILY

I

THANK YOU

Purple Pluii)S

GENERAL MILLS

. 3;;::;.51°0
-.,$ 00
• • •3.... 1
I

JENO'S DOUILE

EATIES

Cheese Pizza Mix •

29

WITH

12•oL
C
THIS
box
COUPON
Good Thru Sat., March 25 At
Your Friendly A&amp;P Store.

:111\0of&gt;L.,...
pkr.

BRUCE'S

Cut Yams •••

I

Iii-

...... 49c
e&amp;n

50 LB BAG

·990 .

EIGHT O'CLOCK

Instant Coffee • • o ~It
EIGHT O'CLOCK
Bean Coffee • • • ,3~; s199
AlP FROZEN

Orange Juice • •
ALL FLAVORS - lORDEN'S

YOIIrf • •

I

SILVER DUST
2·1:.~t...&amp;gc
pkt .

Good Thr: Sot., Morell 26 At
Your Friendly AlP Store.

COVPO~

ONE PEl FAM(LY

HICK'S
IIG.
$499

• 4:; 5100

INFANTS' &amp; TODDLERS'

conoN ..
KN.IT SHIRTS

Good Thru Sot., Morch 25 At
Your Friendly A&amp;P Storo.

GENERAL MILLS

Available ln 0110r1ed
,ty~et and colon. Sint
9 to 2" month• ond 1

CHIPPOS
plg.

1~1~
COUPON

Good Thru Sot., Morell 26 At
Your Friendly A&amp;P Store.

Hot Croa Buns • • • pkr.3t Elbow Macaroni
JANE PAUER

COUPON
BAKER'S

Ancel Flake Coconut
14..L
L

ll•t•

59C

WITH
THIS
COUPON

•

Good Thru Sot., March 25 AI
Your Friendly A&amp;P Store.

.

...h4t
• • , ~-:· 4t

Italian Dreai11

ANN PAGE

ANN "A&amp;E

ANN PA&amp;l THIN

s,apettl •

I

I

I

I

4l.U..$100

Pud~ln11 • • •

I
·- ~

•

•

--

Your Friendly A&amp;P Store.

I

~1t

I

4~ 5100 Right luard

I

I

c.... He
I

I

eaft

.uu

..

PER FAMILY

Chiffon largarine

•

l·lb.

I

pq.

3ftc
iJ
I

I

·I

et front. Sizes: S·
M·l.

'

I

Ladies

HECK'S
REG.

HOSE

$4.88

2 pair
PKG

30e
. REG. 77' PKG.

'2''

Stole

Pt Pleasant
Store On~

GIRLS'
COTTON KNIT

LADIES' BIKINI

POLO SHIRTS
Comfortable cot·
ton knit polo shirts
availcible in a
wonderful QSSOrt -·
. ment of colors .
Sizes} to 14.

GYM

BAG
ClDTIIIM
IBT.

'

Pl Pleasant Store On~

Pl Pleasant

$1.39

pkc,

DEODORANT

I

HECK'S REG. $2.48

Comfortable snop
crotch and plock·

A beautiful
selection
of
prints, solids,
and jacquords
to
choose
from.
Extra
heavy . . .
large size ...
Reg. $2.99 if
perfect.

HECK'S
REG.

ANN PAGE

Spanish Bar Cakes •
Chocolate Tl,s

10 ~•

A&amp;P Coffee .
Goocl Thru Sot., Morell 25 At

ANN PAGE RIG,O.TONI OR

JANE PARKER

,YA~UA.IU

•

VACUUM PACK

BATH TOWELS

Fancy ladies' ter·
sey body shirt' in
assorted prints.

Reg.
13.48

Rvoo•d colton knit
shirts for tht liH\e OMI.

39c

Paiamas

WITH
THIS

ONE_.~_R_F~M!~Y

9.5•0L

Lounger

Heck's

.~3t

I

Sizes
6-14

JEANS

Durable permanent
press, denim jeans that
last. Choose from car·
toon models, fancies,
and sizes Bto 18.

SHIRT

Sizes 6-14
Pt Pleasant Store On~

DEPT.

Sizes 32·38, 40-44

BODY

CANNON

With Bad Conduct
JACKSONVILLE , Fla .
(UPI ) - The blonde wife of a
Navy flyer told a court-martial
board Tuesday that she went to
a chaplain for marriage
counseling and began a sevenmonth affair with him.
Mary Ann Curran, 24, said
she had sexual relations 17 or
18times with Cmdr. Andrew F.
Jensen, 43, in various motels,
her apartment and the chaplain's office at Cecil Field
Naval Air Station.
Jensen, a slim 17-year Navy
veteran, is charged with
conduct unbecoming an officer
for alleged affairs with Mrs.
CUrran and with Lori Gudbranson, the blonde wife of a Navy
supply officer.
Jensen, the father of two
children whose wife waits
outside the courtroom, has
denied the charges and has the
backing of the American
Baptist Convention which is
refusing to supply any more
chaplains to the Navy because
of the handling of the case.
Herman M. Benner,a former
Navy chaplain who Is attending
the trial as an observer for the
American Baptist Convention,
said there was "no firm

KNIT
SHELLS

'Y$ 24

iump into spring with
stylish short sloove
shirts. Co'mplote

Big Democrat
Must Show Up

14'' FILLED
EASTER
BASKRS

MEN'S

$

00

16" gyin bag with full top zipper
and vinyl grain pottern .

Cl DTI/IIIf DIIT.

PANTIES
Lace trim and brief In pastel
colors. Sizes: 5 to 7.

Heck's Reg.

2
FOR

7r

.,oo

Clothing Dept
Pl Pleasant Store

�..

·"'*'"' '

• - .•

~

.

..........

~

.. .
I
~-

_....,

OPRIAU
10 TO 9

1o"to •

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FRY PAN

MIST CONDITIONER ·

!lMd to ''pot·watch ."

power. 20.rollers.,

$ ll

Hed'olleg.
$5.96

. Pt Pleasant SIDle

HECK'-$
REG.
$21.96

88

$

G.E.

·.

SUNBEAM

HOT POTS
HECK'S REG. $2.77

HECK'S REG.
$29.96

CAN OPENER

HAIR DRYER

e

ceramic magnet and handy cord storage. cireo
Comes in brushed chrome on a white case-compact

JEWElRY

HAMILTON BEACH

GENERAL ELECTRIC .

TOASTER

PORTABLE MIXER

HEATING PAD

Custom two slice; end co'ntr~l toa~ter in
polished chro.me with block end panels.

$

3 -Speed contro1 . Chrome

---·t

88

7

plated beaters. fingertip
beater ejector. Available in
decorator colors. De.tachable

SOUNDESIGN
AM.fM Stereo

Multiplex
...
-- .

..

-

'79

No. 4487-600
.•

44

Heck's Reg. '99.88

¥J)~IE

1 .' ;;

Pt Pleasant Store

JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

Heck's Reg. $5.59

HAIR STYLING PRYER

LADIES' SHAVER
Micro-twin shaving head ..
. one side for underarms,
the other hde for legs. Fast,
safe and smooth fem ini ne

On~

16's

66(

99(
HECK'S REG. $1.39
.. ,~;

COSMETICS DEPT.
2.5

HECK'S REG. 97'

COSMETIC DEPT.

oz.

BAN
ROLL-ON
DEODORANT

Stylos, grooms and drit1 hair for a fuller, natural
look. Includes attachments and campad travol
coso. 110.120 volts. A. C. 60 cycle. 330 Watts

I

I

'

ban.:
J:

I

•

I

--~

Ami SlAVE lOTIOI

99(

44(

HECK'S REG. $1.48

HECK'S REG. 58'

COSMETIC DEPT.

COSMEnC DEPT.

40Z.

VESPRE

CUTEX
POLISH
REMOVER

EDGE

Heck's Reg, 4.44
1

Pl Pleasant Store On~

24 oz

SHAVE CREAM
.
REG ••• MEITIOL , • , LIME

HICK'S RIG,

99'

44 1

COSMETIC
DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPT.

\

'

COSMETIC
DIIT.

REGAL WARE
36 CUP

PARTY PERC

$~~~9 ·

.

'

Heck's Reg.
133.96

SUNBEAM

CAN OPENERKNIFE SHARPENER

CORDLESS
RAZOR

JEWillr "'T.

•

'

$14.56

JIWil•r DEIT.

$1288

AIRQUIPT

AUTOMATIC
SLIDE VIEWER

"""'''!.'':wJr~w·~.

RWEUr•r.
C-60

1•.

HECK"S lEG.

88
HECK'S REG.
$32.81

COSIIITit S.T.

CS6K

Open ony standard si1e con. Shorpenf kniYeS to a kwn edoe.
lt.lih-ir.- retl for eoty KiiiOn sharpening. Remowable ttoinleu
P..t cutting whHI.

Use with or without cord. Power pOck in case permits.shoving
without recharge. Racer fall "QUICK-CHARGE." Sebring
Green .

HECK'S
REG.
$1.49

I

88
'28
AX-30

Pt Pleasant Store Only

RECORDING TAPE

REG..
'1.68

On~

~~

KODAK
INSTAMATIC CAMERA
KIT

88

CASSEnE

.

•a••

Heck's
Reg,
1

Pl Pleasant. Store

MEN'S SUNBEAM

$199

HECK'S

HECK'S

$1 .28
HECK'S
REG.

SJ

JEWn•r

10.99

lnltur•r.

8-TRACK BLANK
TAPE

SCOPE

HECK'S
· REG • .

$1.24

COSMETIC
DI'T.

JEWEU-T.

HECK'S RIG, $18.96

I

Great ''slant shape" design
puts the duo I stoin~ss steel
heads at on angle for faster
shaving. long hair slats. SiK
precision honed surgical
steel blades. Professional
barber-type trimmer. Pad·
dod grip. Pushbutton hood
release for easier c.leaning.
Comes in handsome gift
case. Cord spool.

~~J

$ 34

HECK'S REG.
$1.89

MAl'S ELECTRIC
SHAVER

HECK'S6"1G.
$1 ..J.,t,..:

COSMETit
S.T.
61/402:.

HECK'S
REG.

JEWEL BOXES

SO MINUTE

GELUSIL
TABS

s1588

HECK'SIIG. $24.88 '

"2.5 oz.

100's

SUNBEAM

HECK'S
REG.
$1.69

HICK'S
REG.
$1.88

Maximum.

JEWil., IJEPT.

ANTIMONY

.aac·

COLOGIE

•r.

HICK'S REG: $9.11

HECK'S
REG.
$8.99

SKIIIYDIP

JIIIIUY

grooming action.

HECK'S
REG.
1'.19

4 OZ. SPLASH ON
OR 2 OZ. SPRAY

H5-300

STYLING DRYER

a oz.

VASELINE
JAR

OLD SPICE

.POWDER OR MIST

c
I

oz.

$6''

OR SLIDE .

JEWElRY DEPT.

54-D

16 oz.
SIZE

4l/4

HIS&amp;HERS
2·way control switch. Blows hat and cold
air. Styles in minutes. Drie&amp; in minutes for
tho professional look. U. l. approved.

s

Pt Pleasant SIDle On~

lnltur•r.

C-4335

Prepaid, processing mailers for Slides or Movies. Koda·
chorme ... Ektachrome, Fuiichrome.

HECK'S
REG.
$10.9f»

SHAMPOO
SOMINEX

HICK'S lEG. $36.96

PROCESS MAILERS

J&amp;JBABY

GERITOL
TABLETS
20's

S]188

SUNBEAM

LS-21
306

G.E. FM-AM DIGITAL CLOCK RADIO

HECK'S REG.
$13.96

88

cord.

HECK'S REG. $9.96

·-

(With 8 Track Player)

Gives more steam coverage. Better ironi
results.

$1 oss

JIWIUYDEPT.

STEAM IRON

wo.hable cover.

Knows no limits when it comes to
""rsatilo carving. Design features
"hole in the handle" for perfed
carving balance. Recessed switch
provides an extra measure of ·
contour comfort. Handy 8-foot
cord. In contemporary styling for
·contemporary decor.

77

IC-15

87

HECK'S REG.
$14.96

$

SUNBEAM

I year guorol'ltte. l pasiti.._. Mat
settln91, wetproof plasti~ jodet.
A.emavab~

ELECTRIC KIIFE

JIWEliY

HECK'S REG.
$11.96'

HAMILTON BEACH

HAMILTON IEA(H

Compatiblo monaural crystal
cartridge with dual synthetic
sapphire Styli won't damage
stereo records. High-impod
polystyrene case. Four-spHd
changer . .. .4S RPM spindle
included . . . Powerful 6" oval
dynamic speaker.

HD-14

. JEWEliYDEPT.

On~

Pl Pleasant SIDle

JEWillr DEPT.

AUTOMATIC ·PHONOGRAPH

$ 88

$

JIWillrDEPT.

G. E.

and conwmient

HECK'S
REG.
$12.44

HECK'S REG.
$33.96
M-46

P-977

• Opens cans in a snap, even sardine and.-ham cans!•
Built-in knife sharpener on top of ca.a:-easy to get
at- gives keen edges in ~conds • Features. built-in

Stylish purse size portability. Molded plastic case. Large
ca p and collapsible hos.e store inside. 4 position heal
control. Fast drying .

88

$

JEWiliYDEPT.

SK-16

CERAMIC

Variable speed control with 12 indicated speeds . Maintains constant
speed. Two marked adjustable bowl
pOsitions. Front beater ejector. Fin·
gertip speed control. Two stainless
steel mixing bowls.

HECK'S REG.
$17.96 .

JIWiliY DEPT.

On~

• Buift-in cord, two-way power e
Solid·state design e Battery saver
circuit • 3¥1" dynamiC speaker •
Shoulder strap included e Switch·
able AFC on FM Tw.o antennas,
28 11 whip for FM, ferrite rod for
AM e Plays up to 130 hours on 4
11
AA" penlite batteries.

$

exclusive conditioner and special formula ·far extra body and curl

·stAND
MIXER

RADIO

·

.Triple tre.a t for your hair! This unique new Kindness Hoirsetter set.
Moidurizes, deep-condition's aU at once. · .. or ~t sets your hair with
water-mist .... or it sets your hair ,as is . Co mes complete with

G. E. DELUXE

FM AM PORTABLE

Controlled temperature prevents burning-eliminate1

HAIRSEUER

SHAG RU~
VAOJ.Of?\
ATTACHMENT

GENERAL
ELECTRIC

GENERAL
ELECTRIC
.
.

·:1:':': · . ;\)
; -~
'1:~!\\:0.•l~-~

IIG.
$1.76

.

,

JEWIUYI9T.

.

I

,I
' '

I

'

�..

.,

,..

.

. ~··

..,

,.

'.

.

-

•

'.

•

.........,

-··I.Y

10 TO 9

10109

---~PR_ICES II EFFECT THROUGH SIIDAY, MAR_._26-.,_WH_I_u...__ _ _
44 QUART PLASTIC
10 QUART .
SWING TOP
PLASTIC
BIN

_..._ _ __

PRICES II EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY, MAR. 26,

GOLF CART
•
Adjustable bog
brackets. • 12" Boll
bearing wheels.

PAIL

32 QT. ROUND
PLASTIC

ZEBC0909
EVEREADY
6VOLT
..

32 QT.

WASTE BASKET

SIT-ON H~PER

47&lt;

HECK'S
REG.
$4.37

NOUSIWARE
DEPT.

LANTERN
Heck's Reg, .•
33

$199

HECK'S REG.

HECK'SREG• .
$3.88

88'
NOIISEWARE IIPT.

2

$2.77

NOISEWAII DEPT.

Pt Pleasant Store On~

THIMBLE

I
II

••

. BOWLBRUSH
SQUEEZE MOP
&amp;HOLDER

.:

4601.

UTILITY TUB
HECK'S
REG.
$1 .41

HECK'S
REG.
$2 .98

FUTURE

69(

FLOOR FINISH

1101/SEWARE
DEPT.

$159
HECK'SREG. $1.99

HOUSEWAIII DEPT.

NOUSEWAIE DEPT.

260Z.

HICK'S lEG.
$11.99

HOUSIWAII
DEPT.

ANGLER BROOM

WET MOP

. 1101/SEWA/11 DEPT.

280 COUNT
t

HECK'S
REG.
$1.59

HECK'S
REG.
$2.19

.•.

FACIAL PUFFS
HECK 'S
REG.
79 '

VANISH
BOWL CLEANER

HOUSIWA/11 ·
DEPT.

HECK'S lEG.

SET
SET IICWDES:
AND DISH MOP.

E!~'H

HECK'S REG.
$17.99

SHITS/JliT.

On~

IIKEHELMU

BUBBLE SHIELD
• Plastie sh;.ld ftiHis Z2.1 standards. • Stitamlino
shape cuts turbulence. • Will a"ach to all helmets with
front snop1. e Dual1nop1 permit UM with 1un visor. •
Colors, Clear, Smoke, Blue.

$2~...

$
HECK'S REG.
$13.99

. REG • .

$4 ...

SPOITS/J9T.
COLEMAN

.

COOLER

FOAM COOLER

World's finest insulation, unbrookable 'liners,
reinforced rust proof bciu , handle for easy
carrying, and fast adion drain.

A convenient answer to the great number of low profile storage
spaces ~ound in modern cars, boats, trailers and cabins.

c
HECK'S REG.
$23.99

HECK'S RE~ •.$1.44

•·

SHITSDUT.

VINYL

$133

PONCHO

HECK'S
REG.
63'

Little

RAIN
SUIT

GALLON FOAM JUG

BATS

"'"

.66

/IOUSEWA/tl
DEPT.

Heavy outer two-piece rain
suit compltto with hooded
parka, full zipper coat ..
.plus panll.

$4'' '

15, oz.

DOWN
UNDER

HECK'S
DETERGENT
REG.

Pt Pleasant Store

A light-we ight spinning reel with internal bail release,
ad justable smooth disc drag, stainless steel bail, hard chrome
line roller, and positive anti-reverse. Corrosion-resistant
throughout. The handle i1 anodized alum .. with fixed reel
seot.

-

~2:tf ''"
SHITIII'T.

3201.

HECK 'S

'-11''

SPIC&amp;SPAN

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

Heck's Reg. 49' Box
Housewares Dept

$15.99

-·.--···-'""'"T""----~·

$199

4-PIECE PLASTIC

TR ~Y

HOUSIWAII
DEPT.

Heck's Reg.

99

30QUART

Sfonoll in lin, big an ptrformonce. Fitt tM tmollett hands, fishes
comlor1abl. in tM loroe•t and w.ighs just .. oooces. Und1r ill
, tou.gh mokMd AIS ·co*l, ther._'s more muKie per ounc1. Allmttal gean, lan;-lastint bearin;t and a poli&amp;hed stainless ttHI
,' splnnerheod with~i ght poinfS for instant pickup.

TIDY RACK , DI SHPAN , SO AP

NOIISEWAIE
DEPT.

, Whon o c001pw ;, •·loot way " - '-o oncl olltlat'• llo~ ••• him
ancl a ')GOd rNfl,t"roloop ;. a dooping bog, H hod boltot bo com-.
blo,
. ..
.

SPINNING ROD &amp;REEL

CAST REEL

480Z.

88

$

BA&amp;

BERKLEY

ZEICO'US76

•'

9t

,.·-. · ·-·

SHITS,.T.

HECK'S REG.
TO $1.12

0-CEDAR

RAIN BARREL

corryin; hondl• . Outdoor
spar ¥Grnish finish.

HECK'S
REG.
$1.28

0-CEDAR

$18.88
SPOITS DEPT.

boll1, epoxy fini 5h . S1l1c:t
hardwood
lot h1· lurn1d
mall1h with 6" h1ads.
Threaded hondl 11. R1d
1nameled rack with tilv1r
tubular ttul upri;M• and

Made of qual ity , poly material . •ilk
screened in three and four colors.

HECK'S
REG.
$2.97

$13

HECK'S
REG.

NO 400
.

3" compreued hard maple

BATH MATS

~

PLASTIC
18 QT. ROUND

e Totally salt waterproof, maintenance-free, • Wide·
range drag , sensitive power selection. • Se~f­
lubricoting gears run smooth, silent. • Complete w1th
pren1ium monofilament line.

CROQUET
SET

'

iG

W.ASH.ABL!
3 .LBS. NYLON

SPIN CAST REEL

6-PLAYa

0-CEDAR

~

1:::"
1.,,

..

4 FOR

WINDEX
AEROSOL
GLASS CLEANER

STORACE CABINET

49(

Fits neatly unde r the si nk. A convenient space
sa ver tha t is ideal for storage of detergents
and other cleansing items.

$1 00

HECK'S REG.
$1.58

SI'OITS llPT.

HECK'S

HECK'S REG. 59'

6VOLTBAmRY

IIOISIWAII DEPT.

$499

KLEEIEX TO_
WELS .
4 FOR

HECK'S REG.
$7.77

MOP

49(

HECK'S
REG.
79 '

HECK'S REG.
41' EACH

----

NOUSEWAII DEPT.

$100

IIOIISIWAII DEPT. ,

LONG JOHN

PACK-OF-SPONGES

(

SCOTCHCiARD
FDRIC PROTECTOR

Hettrick
UMBRELLA

s.a13

TENT
HECK'S REG.
$1.99

SHITSIIR.

SPOITS/J9T.

PUP TENT

.99

$

HECK'S REG.
99'

NATIONAL

$577

Heck's Reg.
149.99
Pt Pleasant Store On~

...____

HECK'51EG. $6.99

SPOIT$1191.

oz.

$188
SCOTCH4iAID FOR TIES • • S1.12
SCOTCHSAID FOISHOES • $1.12
SCOTCH4iAID FOISUEDE • $1.55

REG. and LEMON

14"
PATIO&amp;
GARAGE

HECK'S REG.
$1.08

/IOIISEWAII IJlPT.

EASTER

YARN
TOYS IU~Kn

BROOM

$.1~
..
,.,r..:
,

66'

NOUSEWAII
DEPT.

Great protection on tht linko . .fight tho glaring
sun , dusty wind, or the gentle rain with these
comfortable golf cop1.

,.,,,.,,

PLEDGE

BUCKET
OF
SPONGES ··
PKG.
HECK'S
REG.

14

GOLF CAPS

HICK'SIIG.
$5.99

$1.38
SPOITS IJIIIT.

Pt Pleasant Store On~

7c

JUMBO

21" lATH TUB

HECK'S REG.

HECK'$ REG.

$2.l8

•snus

SQUISHIES
By Mattei
Odd boll or witch style
as seen on TV.

$1 .31

48( $158

,,

IACH
HICK'SIIG.
69'

HECK'S
REG.

NOISI,WAII

HICK'SIIG.
. $1.99

DOLL
CLOTHES

10SnLES
flt' 11 ); " Foahion Dolls.
2FOI

$100

Plastic
PLASYIC

EASTER EGGS

UTTLE

1211 ••,

·CHOPPER

39(

WITH HOC CHUTE

,,,,

HKK'SIIG
•4•

66c .

HICK'S IIG. 14'

Roller Skates

$}18

PLUSH

T. V.RABBIT

$166

Heck's Reg. $1.99
· Pt Pleasant
Store On~

HICK'SIIG.
$2.44

,.,,.,

RABBITS
CHOICE

e SmiNG Otl CROUCHING
lA IIlTS
o DRESSED lOY01 GIRL
!AllIT

$277
HKK'S IIG. $3.51

'

•'

~

II

•

'

'

�....

I

•

'·
11 -: ne-e
Ittl
......
· •*.

• "'""D'lao
~. h·r-oy,O.,Ibrch22,1m

1282~ Delegates lor Muskie

.Big Ed Big in First Biossat Poll

OPEIIAI'
10TO 9

8 7 BRUCE BIOSSAT

&lt;,

OLD ANCHOR
BASEMENT

DUPONT

HEADQUARTERS

LUCilE

PAINT

• Skip the stirring , thinning , priming; best of
all . .. skip the "ordinary point" dripping •
Skip tro uble!!-ome clean -up ... tools come
clean in just soap Ond water • Skip the incon·
venience ... dr ies .in only 30 minutes •
Choose from a wide range of new colors in
gallons and qua rts.

$]66
HECK'S REG. $4.97

HAIIJWAIE IJHT.

GALLON

$ 39
7" ROLLER REFILLS
21N PACK

HECK'S
REG.
59 1

llTt.;lrfE

LUCITE

Interior
Enamel
__ ..... _, . .......
-··"''"•

WALL PAINT ·

2 GALLON CAN

~

DUPONT

DUPONT

LUCITE
INTERIOR ENAMEL

lons.

• •

LUCjlft
....House
- .........-Paint
.....

• Medium gloss.
e Dries in on hour.
e Easy water dean:up.

HECK'S
REG.

HARDWARE
IJEIT.

$ 39
HECK'S REG.
$7.68

HARDWARE
DEPT.

5 GAUONCAN '

HAIIJWARE
DEPT.

BURGESS
PAINT .
SPRAYER

2.FT.

HECK'S REG.

1 should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.
I
£l

1

I
I

1
1

The motor 11 compact and
spork·free reciproce~ti ng type.

l/4" MASKING
TAPE

7" PAINT TRAY AND

$4.4S

33(

ROLLER
HECK'S
RIG.
771

9'x 12'

PLASTIC DROP
CLOTH

14(

HECK'S REG.

CHARCOAL

ANTIQUE
KIT

10 LBS.

PAINT THINNER
GALLON

lets you antique in two

easy steps, same day.
Included ore ba~e coa t
glaze •ondpapei'
thH~ecloth .

READY MIX
SPACKLING COMPOUND
HECK'S
REG.
$1.80

Heck's Reg. 99'
Hardware Dept

$1~!

25 LBS.
HAIIJWARE
DEPT.

DURO

PU.NT NOW FOR SUMMEit ! These bulbs

HECK'S REG. $2.99

WHEELS

SPRAY
PAINT

0 ,.

inpor1ed fr om Holland where thty are hand se ·

A$sorted sizes lo ·chc:&gt;ose from .

99(

lected. A Io rge selection to choo~e: from .

Ofo OFF
P~ICE

HARDWARE DEPT.

HAIIJWARI DIIT.

LAWN MOWER

SPARK
PLUG
Fits most mowers

LAWN MOWER

9"

IWJFFLER
UniYersal small
engine muffler.
Fits most mowers.

II O:L

HECK'S
REG.

sa•

9DITSIJIPT.

HECK'S
REG.
99 1

1/AnWAIIIIIPTo

$1.34

1/AIIJWAR!
DEPT.

CAULKING
COMPOUND

22(

STANLEY

GRASS SHEAR

$188

DUPONT

RALLY CAR WAX

$133

HECK'S
REG. 28 1

HECK'S REG, $2.28

HAHWAil DIPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

13 OZ. VINYL

13 OZ. 'FABRIC

WHISK
BROOM

TOP &amp;SEAT
. .
CL.ANER

UPHOLSTERY
CLEANER

66~

66(

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG.

99 1

aa•

AIJTOMDTIVI
DHT.

AIJTDMD"'/1

,.,

.. .

8 Y Clarenee

Miller

I

1

1

'!

G
T
s
0 n ross a1es ax

Storys Run

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S
REG.
$1.38

HECK'S REG. TO
$1.09

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

HECK'S
REG.

LAWN MOWER

RUST
PREVEIITIVE

FLOWER BULBS.

and

$1''

I

R.epOrl

Cabe in Pontiac to fight iJl..

tegration plam; several years
ago, rent a rr.1tel room each

!Turns Thumbs Down ~~~~~ty"~nd93w!te~~~ th~

Property
'f·...

New fortifying latu base

• Smokeless
e Odorless

,d~
/)HL "j:J}·/=6 ~

I

EV ANGEUSTIC SERVICES will begin this Palm
&amp;mday,March26andcontinuethroughEasterSWlday, April
2, at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene with Mr. and M~s.
Arnold (Doc) Sexton of Ashland, Kentucky as spec1al
workers. Rev. Garnet Sexton will be preaching and Mr.
Sexton will be in charge of the music. They sing specials
together. Services will be .held each evening at 7:30p.m. and
10:30 a.m. on Sunday mornings. A cordial invitation is extended to the public.

large sleeping campers
that travel with them.
"Mayor Orville Hubbard of
Dearborn (Mich.) sent us a
sound truck Tuesday SO we

1\joO

McDonalds' Burger TallY
Goes' up Quick by 4,000

66(
HECK'S
REG.

sa•

AITDMDTIVI
IEIT, ·

'
1·

11

II

could play marching music to
help us alon~," said Mrs.,ldc·
Cabe. "We plan to walk about
15 miles today but we ptobably
will end up doing a little better
than that."
The marchers with Mrs. McCabe are Mrs. Lorene Fligger,
40; Mrs. Ardith Heneman, 45,
Mrs. Lucille Rood, 37; Mrs.
Betty Lake, 37; and Mrs. Judy
Shaw, 30, all from Pontiac.

When the perishable/uts
on the imperishable, an the
mortal puts on immortality,
then shall come to ptl.!s the
saying that is wri tten:
"Death is swallowed up in
victory." "0 death , where is
thy victory?"

uc

deeth,

where is thy sting?"-I Cor.
15 :54. 55.

OR

DER YOUR

EASTER
f1 ·QWERS
EARLy
L; .

Dudl-'s Florist
..1

Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis,
&amp;tMsonCo.,W.Va.

o.

•-------"""!'-!========~

SPRING SPECIALS

Polyester Double Knits
Values To 6.99 yd .

$279yd. To $388 yd.

-----------------------Cotton Canvas ..........~~.~~.":'..~~..'109 yd.

Denim Prints........... ~~.~~~.~~. s1!1! yd.
Drip 01y Cottons...... ~~..~~~.~~ . 59' yd.

M

1/AIIJWAIE
DEPT.

RED DEVIL

publleatiOil, however, on request. Letters

I

MR. AND MRS. ARNOW SEXTON

FREMONT, Ohio, (UPI ) Mrs. Irene McCabe continued
to lead her five supporters in
their walk across northern ·
Ohio today en route tQ
Washington D.C., a march to
·dramatize l.heir efforts to get a
constitutional amendment on
school busing.
"We have tired feet, tired
backs and tired legs," Mrs.
McCabe, Pontiac, Mich, told
UPI today. "But I feel even
more encouraged about the
march now than I did before we
left - simply because people
have been so beautifuL"
She said more than $1,000 in
donations had been received
along the route to help b~X
Items the women need during
the trek.
"People along the way have
given so much food we don't
have any more room in the
vans for it," she added
The six women, members of
of the National Action Group
(NAG), formed by Mrs. Me-

The Department
Trans- derived
possible from
and user
that taxes
revenues
portation
(DOT) hasof recombe ·
Mason's Town CoWJcil at a .regular meeting Monday
1
mended a program under channeled into a Trust FWld evening approved an ordinance concerning a utility tax, showed
which money from the High- for the completion and im- disapproval of a gross sales tax, heard a report on garbage
way Trust Fund would - for prov~ent of the nation's high- diSposal and gave the second reading of a proposed street
FoUow Meigs' Lead
the first time - be used for ways. If we violate the in- paving ordinance . .
P. 0. Drawer~ something other than highway· tegrity of the Trust FWld to
Gary Gibbs, recorder, gave the third reading of a new
Athens,Ohlo45701 related programs. I, for one, divert its monies tq non- ordinance concerning utility taxes. After considerable
, .20 March 1972 have reservations about some highway purposes, we will discussion, coWJcilrnan Richard Fowler made a motion and Joe
Dear Sir:
of the provisions of this have neither good highways Jones gave the second for the action passing the ordinance.
The "Gem of Egypt" (Giant Earth Mover in the Egypt program. In the Secretary's nor good urban transportation. CoWJcilrnen Fred Samsel also favored it in voting and Gibbs
Valleyo!BelmontCoWlty, Ohlo)is the largest of the strip mining 1972 Highway Needs Report to The Administration'.• plan voted against it.
Is
b' rds Han Coal Congress, recommendations would pWJcture the Highway
In discussion it was indicated Department of Natural
power shovels. Its bucket capacity 130cu •cya ·
na
were made which would aUow Fund with a hole that wiU grow
Company Intends to move the ''Gem" across Interstate Highway Trust Fund re•Jenues to be used larger each year WI til the Fund this tax is put on the power Resources, but he has land
70, blocking traffic for an Indefinite period. Uniquely • Hanna has to finance mass urban public is drained dry. Without a high ~:J,':!' co~~an/0:r:Xa~~ available and has equipment
necessary to cover the disposal
retained ownership of a section of ianfdCbeneath 1-7~ ~~ ~n- transportation projects.
level of fWlds, the highway water department. It would net daily. Young noted he will
nlng Conunlttee and the Chamber o ornmerce
wn
The Report called for the system will deteriorate and we the
town
of
Mason
towardwhichthe ' 'Gem"isheaded,Barnesville,arenotpleased creation of a Single Urban will have spelled the end to a approximately $5,000 inform coWJcil as soon as he
with strip mining. They seem to be left with no economic alter- Fund (~UF) to be authorized at successful program.
additional annual revenue and gets approval from the Health
and
the
native. Barnesville is In trouble with strip mining or without it. $1 billion for FY 1974. The FWld
would only cost the average Department
Department of Natural
'l1tl8 common dUemma ls being faced In many population centers would be increased to $1.850
resident about $10 per year for
Resources.
throughout Appalachia today.
billion for FY 1975and to $2.250
o
all the utilities combined.
Councilmen Fowler and
In 1965 Harrison County, then the largest of the stripped coal billion for fiscal years 1976
eJ.gS
Discussion also centered Samsel made plans to meet
producers In Ohio, ranked third in corporate income and 84th in through 1969. The plan would
aroWld a gross sales tax, with with Robert McCartney to
per capita income out of 880hlo counties. Today Harrison County make SUF monies available
·
town officials stating such tax survey certain property after
Is 1~ aU counties in arrears on payment of property taxes, for use by States and
would not be imposed sln~e McCartney appeared before
and ifarrlson's per capita Income falls below the Appalachian metropolitan areas for public
they did not favor it. Frank council requesting sewer and
average. Arq solution to this problem must include rebuilding transportation projects
Board, a local resident and water taps for four lots located
~·'d~epmliliDg industry. An lnfuslon of the capltal·now ~ded ·- p'twntl¥ oltllrf.ed froQ! Trust
lil'nS~ers
businessman, was ·(II'I!SOnt and , between BroWn-and Anderson
for •trip mining would speed up conversion to safer, more ef. Fund financing.
.1. Q.a.l. 1.1
entered the discussion at the on First Street.
flclent long waU mining techniques.
The SUF fWld ':'ould conrequest of council. Board
In other action, coWJcilman
Peter E. Walburn, Romaine expressed that he d[d not Fowler read the proposed
A reasonable increase in the price of coal would stimulate solldate all exlstmg urban
the hiring of healtiHafety and other noniJI'O(Iuctlon persoMel. highway and mass transit K. Walburn to Sherman D. object to the utility tax, but street paving ordinance for .a
'l1tis would greaUy Improve deep mine working conditions and programs with the exce.ption of Buskirk, Effie M. Buskirk, strongly opposed the gross second reading, with council
reduce da
·
the Interstate Highway one'third acre, Middleport.
sales tax.
officially accepting the second
ngers.
.
Program
and
an
urban
Ma
R
H
I
It also appears that economic recovery will move more
h d de
tr 11
Lila l Winters, Harold D.
yor oy ar ess gave a reading and the legal
researc
an
mons
a
on
w·
te
Ch
1
An
Be
tz
to
report
attendance at. publication.
pi
trl
rnlnln
d
sw®y. lf strip mining ls phased out, as s p
g e etes
m rs, ery
n n
.on recent
0 am Similarly aU rural
1 1 .
1
Others present, in addition to
resources while providing negligible be.neflts to .the depressed ~-fway ·programs' would be Dale S. Machir, 1.40 ACre, .45 a Reg10na P anrung CoWICI
u-If the d rnlnln ind try 18 all0 wed fur
'""
· Acre, 3.6 Acre, Orange- which was held in Logan. A those previously mentioned
economy. rum~ver,
eep
g us .
.•
consolidated Into a Rural Chester.
group including Mayor Harless were Charlotte Jenks, water
!her to deteriorate, ~s railroad passenger sernce was, we will Federal-Aid System and a
protested the preliminary
soon be conunltted by default to strip mining the entire 500 Rural General Transportation MDalGe L. McGBrbawL, Wsilmla Mk. Regio. n n iayo.ut and r:1uested · secretary and Harry Roush
c raw to o . pur oc ,
square mUes of eaa te m Ohl othat hold strlppabl.e coa I•
Fund.
that Mason County be oc~.ed
'"'·
m1
ht
t
Jannie
F.
Spurlock,
42'h
Acres,
hn
G
Therefore, Governor Jo
.....,an
g no approve
The Rural Federal-Aid
as it was before with CabeU,
movement of the "Gem" across 1-70. Following the Meigs County System would take effect in FY 3 Acres, Sutton.
Wayne, Lincoln and Mason
1 .~.,
Iii 11 of he d mining
Anastasis Staats, George
lead, the Governor can support rehab ta on t eep
1974 with a !Widing breakdown Staats to Richard A. comprising Region Il
lndllBily. To of!let any slump in the Barnesville area economy, of $800 million in FY 74, FY 75 Siggelkow, Rose M. Siggelkow,
Several town officials
the Governor can Identify a source of temporary development and through FY 76-79.
Parcel, Olive.
recently attended a Mid.()hio
~ while the Buckeye Hllls-llocl!lng. V.alley Regional
The Rural General TransLouise Harbrecht, Robert F. Valley Mayor's Association
Dev~opment District's (rogram, the State Hlghway 800 Plan; ' portatlon Fund would be Harbrecht, Margaret Har- meeting held in Marietta, 0.
awalll Implementation.
federally funded with the brecht, Phil J, Harbrecht, Mayor Harless, recorder Gibbs
A 80Uilll economy in eastern Ohio depends upon thoughtlul states on a 71).30 matching TerryHarbrecht to Richard w. and councilman Fowler
planning and the phasing out of strip mining.
basis.
Vaughn, Ruby A. Vaughn, Lot, reported on this trip.
Sincerely,
DOT said changes in the Pomeroy.
CoWlcilrnen Jones and Samsel
EdwardMacDonaldDolmon present law are necessary to
RobertJ. Brown,RobbleLee also attended this convention.
chlanrepresentative
create
"a
llalanced
national
B
Joe YoWlg appeared before
Appala
rown to J . D. Hayes, Lots ,
Friends of the Earth transportation system and Pomeroy.
coWJcil concerning disposal of
solve the problems of inJ k
Prod Cr Assn to garbage. Young explained that
...
hha
ff
creasing. urban congestion." Obiacson
o power co., Ease., Meigs. e s not o icially heard from
Certainly there ls no doubt
Jackson Prod. ·er. Assn. to the Health DePill'tment or the
Others Agreed, Fan Says
I
that we must address ourse ves Ohio Power Co., Ease., Meigs.
Mar. 20,1972 to the problems of mass transC. C. Howard, Lena Boward
portation. But there are many to Jerry L. Cline, Phyllia M.
Mr. Editor:
.
In regard to the letter from Syracuse on the officiating of the difficulties with the Ad· Cline , p arce1s, Scip1o.
Mrs . Marie Keefer and
Helen M. Williams, Kenneth
ministration's proposal, the
Diatrlct Basketball game between Eastern-Portsmouth East.
Debbie
of Leon , W. Va., Mrs.
I not only thought the officiating was poor, but people from foremost of which would be the D. Williams, Arlene Williams, Dolores Riggs and children of
the auillcothe area commented on how unfair it seemed for the demise of the highway Lois Ann Pauley, Paul J. Letart, W. Va ., Mary Rosa
program as we know it.
Pauley, Robert D. Williams,
Eagles. Elplain this with them being from another area.
It
Is a weD-known fact that Patricia Williams, Linda Lou Keefer of Uon, Mrs. Rose
And as far as theN. G. fans not blaming the referees for their
there will not be enough money Austin, Wayne Austin, Sally Jo Mary Fife and Cristi of little
lllss~ there was no w,ay possible they could honestly blame them,
in the Trust Fund to take care Lambert, Clarence A. Lam- Kyger, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
becao*e Ibis was an almost perfect played game with all the
ci all of our highway needs in bert, Chery1L. Gould , Harry K. File, Jr. and children of
Eagles hitting. You would have to. agree if you attended this the 1970's. Between now and Gould
to Robert D. Williams, Turkey Run were recent
game.
1985, It has been estimated that Patricia Williams, Parcels, visitors of Rev. and Mrs.
Signed: Betty Millhone over f300 billion will be needed Rutland.
Raymond Fife.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Leach
p.s. It is much easier to take defeat when It is in all fairness. to Improve roadways to meet
and
children and Mrs. Joe
. Right?
.
increasing traffic demands.
Leach spent an evening with
Many of our primary and COURT ADDED
secondary highways are
SYDNEY, Australia (UPI)- Mr. and Mrs. Donald Leach
already obsolete or sub· Former Wimbledon champion and children.
standard. In addition, large Margaret Court, who gave birth Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rife, Rt. I
SUIIlS of money are desperately
tQ a son on March 5, has been Guysville, called on Mr. and
needed for more effective high- provisionally added to the Mrs . Alex Shuler a day
way safety programs to reduce Australlan team to play against recently. Other callers were
All work was halted Monday fatalities and minimize the United States in the Bonnie Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rupe and
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Shuler and
Penitentiary officials were except in the hospital and economic losses from ac· Bell tennis tournament •at Michael.
cidents.
• Cleveland In July.
forced to order out for ham- power plant.
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Rife
The
Congress
Intended
that
The other members of the
Seven
representatives
of
the
. burgers and French fries
attended the birthday dinner a
Monday when inmates who dining room crew gave Card- the Interstate Highway System team ate reigning Wimbledon recent Sunday in the home of
- t In the prison dining room well a list of five grievances, be completed as soon as champion Evonne Goolagong, Mr. and Mrs. Charles YoWlS at
Helen Gourlay, Lesley Hunt and
including revision of the Adult
refilled to prepare meala.
Kyger . Birthdays observed
Kerry Melville.
Warden Harold Cardwell Parole Authority, mare pay for
were those of Mr. Y.oWlg, Mrs.
placed an order with Mc- prlsoo work, a convict council,
Glenn YoWlg and Steve YoWlg.
llonllf• Restauranll for 4,000 right to grow beards and long
haum~gera and 2,000 orders hair, and right to pick
of Frtilcb frlei to feed the 1,900~ cellmates.
But if .some of the
Later in the day' the warden
branches were broken off.
lnma&amp;e., who ftre kept In their
and you. a wild olive shoot .
cella, tbroulh the day. ~ started to meet with 30
were gmfted i 11 their place
order cost $1,200. Dinner prisoners · to negotiate the
to s/wre the ric/mess of tile
consiatecl of sweet-roill and ~l)l8llds, but it broke up when
o/.ive
tree. do not boast over
·milk from priJon supplies. . they' i!emanded that an Inmate
t~ bra nc ile ~ ij ~" do
C.dweD aald he planned to serving 10 to 60 years for
boast. remember it is not
keep the Pt;soners in their cells riotlns at the prison in 1968 be
yo11 that support s t11e rooi.
bi&lt;t tile root tilltl suppori .&lt;
until detn•nda given him preaent at the ml!eting. CardJ/(HL - Rom(llu; 11.17. J ·~ .
seeking c~es ani seftened, weD refused.

HECK'S REG.
$8.99

1/ARIJWARE DEPT.

UpoD

I

II •••''Vl" ~: ...J.a-=•

$688
HECK'S
REG.
$3.l9 .

Lettm of optnl011 are welcomed. They should be less

I ,wtlhlleld

STEP
LADDER

I Paint llroiner to help pre·
vent dogging . • Glau jar
with a 24 o~ . capacity, and
marked for eo1y mecuuring. li

w
hingt'0 n
I as

-------------------------- 1
1

I ::!::!~~:~;h~=~~~~l: :::e~~N~~=: ~~~0~

6FT. WOOP

STEP STOOL

·

c ategory totaling 680 votes . vass, is that the massive,
Included was California's well.structured Muskie cam271 to be assigned. on a win. paign edifice is badly jarred
ner-~ke-aU b a s 1 s In the and loosened but is still holdstates JWJe 6 primary.
· ing.
In t h I s and subsequent
The consensus is that
surveys, Biossat t a p s the Muskie must quickly be~in
best political judgments he to do weU in the primanes
can fmd in the v a r i o u s and the o t h e r tests just
states. As the campaign ad- ahead, and that he surely
vances, ·the holding of prl- will crumble if he does not.
maries and state conven- H u mph r e y is the man
lions will ''harden" these viewed as the almost auto.
counts and reduce the ele- malic fall-back choice, but
men! of ·educated guesswork that idea is resisted in some
they necessarily contain.
quarters. McGovern is given
This first review caught no chance. Wallace worries
the Democratic leadership the party but has no chance, .
and electorate at a cross- Ted Kennedy is a potential
roadsbfu· uzzled by front-run· alternative not yet talked
ner
uskie's loo·mlld tri- about very much.
umph in New Hampshire
Democrats want to choose
and his stiff Florida reverse, Muskie if he will only per·
but generally unwiUing yet •form well enough so they
to believe that he is marked can. They fear they may
for collapse. The correct flounder without him.
thing to say, from this can-

$299

I '

. 24 1

1/AIIJWARE
DEPT.

fie!d. dominated by the sur·
pnsmgGov. George WaUace.
· This count, to be followed
·by others in the weeks leading to the Democrats' July
10 conventfon at Mia m 1
Beach, placed Sen. Hubert
Humphrey a distant second
with 4112 v o t e s. His very
modest runner.up showing
In F I o r i d a has not yet
boosted his delegate poten.
tial materially.
Sen. George McGovern
s c o r e s third with 287¥.
votes, Wallace fourth with
220, Sen. He n r Y Jackson
fifth with 102, New y 0 r k
Mayor John Lindsay sixth
with a mere 42.
, ~bout a hWldred more are
tie to Ie,sser•.candidates like
Re,P. W II b u r MiUs Rep.
Bhlfley Chisholm, first black
woman c a n d i d a t e and
lumped with huge bloCks of
uncommitted in a broad

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

I

HARDWARE DEPT.

GALLON

$6.6S

33~.,,

ROOF COATING

• Skip priming on most bare woods- it has
·its own primer • Skip frequent repaintingnow it lasts even longer t~an before • Skip
waiting for second coats- it dries in only an
hour • Skip lengthy cleanup lime-tools
come clean in just soap and water e Wide
range Of colors, piUs white, ,in quarts and gal-

, W~NGTON - (NEA)
-A Snaken Sen:' · EdmWJd
Muakle may n e v·e r again
reach so high a water mark
but with 1509 votes needed
for nomination he bas piled
up a Potent I a 1 of '1282¥.
votes m the first 1972 NEANational Observer D e m o. ~ratic Box .Score on the pres.
1 ~l)Cy, ' !mown as The Bi·
ossat Poll.
The 50-s t a t e telephone
canvass by Bruce Biossat
~A's Washington Bureau
Chief, was conaucted before
and during
the period of
the
........
:.;;;, pol t h e Florida
UI\NIU\
I P r 1 m a· r y
.
which struck
a hard blow
at M u s k I e
b¥ thrusting
·
him to fourth
place in a big

72

HECK'S

HOUSEPAINT

Hike Continues

NEW SHIPMENT

Cotton Knits ... ········............... slm Jb.
Velour Remnants ..................... s1so lb.
Bias Tape ..-.• · : -. - - · - · · - -, 20 For, 1.00
Zippers- Jacket &amp; Dress · - - 20 For 1.00
Nylon Fleece . . . - - . - . . - - - . 90c lb.
Stretch Lace - - - - - - -' - . . - . 2.40 lb .
Sheets · · . . . . - - - - - - . - . 1.25 lb .

-New Knits From South-

THE COTTON GIN
Route7

Addison, Ohio

�....

I

•

'·
11 -: ne-e
Ittl
......
· •*.

• "'""D'lao
~. h·r-oy,O.,Ibrch22,1m

1282~ Delegates lor Muskie

.Big Ed Big in First Biossat Poll

OPEIIAI'
10TO 9

8 7 BRUCE BIOSSAT

&lt;,

OLD ANCHOR
BASEMENT

DUPONT

HEADQUARTERS

LUCilE

PAINT

• Skip the stirring , thinning , priming; best of
all . .. skip the "ordinary point" dripping •
Skip tro uble!!-ome clean -up ... tools come
clean in just soap Ond water • Skip the incon·
venience ... dr ies .in only 30 minutes •
Choose from a wide range of new colors in
gallons and qua rts.

$]66
HECK'S REG. $4.97

HAIIJWAIE IJHT.

GALLON

$ 39
7" ROLLER REFILLS
21N PACK

HECK'S
REG.
59 1

llTt.;lrfE

LUCITE

Interior
Enamel
__ ..... _, . .......
-··"''"•

WALL PAINT ·

2 GALLON CAN

~

DUPONT

DUPONT

LUCITE
INTERIOR ENAMEL

lons.

• •

LUCjlft
....House
- .........-Paint
.....

• Medium gloss.
e Dries in on hour.
e Easy water dean:up.

HECK'S
REG.

HARDWARE
IJEIT.

$ 39
HECK'S REG.
$7.68

HARDWARE
DEPT.

5 GAUONCAN '

HAIIJWARE
DEPT.

BURGESS
PAINT .
SPRAYER

2.FT.

HECK'S REG.

1 should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.
I
£l

1

I
I

1
1

The motor 11 compact and
spork·free reciproce~ti ng type.

l/4" MASKING
TAPE

7" PAINT TRAY AND

$4.4S

33(

ROLLER
HECK'S
RIG.
771

9'x 12'

PLASTIC DROP
CLOTH

14(

HECK'S REG.

CHARCOAL

ANTIQUE
KIT

10 LBS.

PAINT THINNER
GALLON

lets you antique in two

easy steps, same day.
Included ore ba~e coa t
glaze •ondpapei'
thH~ecloth .

READY MIX
SPACKLING COMPOUND
HECK'S
REG.
$1.80

Heck's Reg. 99'
Hardware Dept

$1~!

25 LBS.
HAIIJWARE
DEPT.

DURO

PU.NT NOW FOR SUMMEit ! These bulbs

HECK'S REG. $2.99

WHEELS

SPRAY
PAINT

0 ,.

inpor1ed fr om Holland where thty are hand se ·

A$sorted sizes lo ·chc:&gt;ose from .

99(

lected. A Io rge selection to choo~e: from .

Ofo OFF
P~ICE

HARDWARE DEPT.

HAIIJWARI DIIT.

LAWN MOWER

SPARK
PLUG
Fits most mowers

LAWN MOWER

9"

IWJFFLER
UniYersal small
engine muffler.
Fits most mowers.

II O:L

HECK'S
REG.

sa•

9DITSIJIPT.

HECK'S
REG.
99 1

1/AnWAIIIIIPTo

$1.34

1/AIIJWAR!
DEPT.

CAULKING
COMPOUND

22(

STANLEY

GRASS SHEAR

$188

DUPONT

RALLY CAR WAX

$133

HECK'S
REG. 28 1

HECK'S REG, $2.28

HAHWAil DIPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

13 OZ. VINYL

13 OZ. 'FABRIC

WHISK
BROOM

TOP &amp;SEAT
. .
CL.ANER

UPHOLSTERY
CLEANER

66~

66(

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG.

99 1

aa•

AIJTOMDTIVI
DHT.

AIJTDMD"'/1

,.,

.. .

8 Y Clarenee

Miller

I

1

1

'!

G
T
s
0 n ross a1es ax

Storys Run

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S
REG.
$1.38

HECK'S REG. TO
$1.09

HECK'S REG.
$3.99

HECK'S
REG.

LAWN MOWER

RUST
PREVEIITIVE

FLOWER BULBS.

and

$1''

I

R.epOrl

Cabe in Pontiac to fight iJl..

tegration plam; several years
ago, rent a rr.1tel room each

!Turns Thumbs Down ~~~~~ty"~nd93w!te~~~ th~

Property
'f·...

New fortifying latu base

• Smokeless
e Odorless

,d~
/)HL "j:J}·/=6 ~

I

EV ANGEUSTIC SERVICES will begin this Palm
&amp;mday,March26andcontinuethroughEasterSWlday, April
2, at the Rutland Church of the Nazarene with Mr. and M~s.
Arnold (Doc) Sexton of Ashland, Kentucky as spec1al
workers. Rev. Garnet Sexton will be preaching and Mr.
Sexton will be in charge of the music. They sing specials
together. Services will be .held each evening at 7:30p.m. and
10:30 a.m. on Sunday mornings. A cordial invitation is extended to the public.

large sleeping campers
that travel with them.
"Mayor Orville Hubbard of
Dearborn (Mich.) sent us a
sound truck Tuesday SO we

1\joO

McDonalds' Burger TallY
Goes' up Quick by 4,000

66(
HECK'S
REG.

sa•

AITDMDTIVI
IEIT, ·

'
1·

11

II

could play marching music to
help us alon~," said Mrs.,ldc·
Cabe. "We plan to walk about
15 miles today but we ptobably
will end up doing a little better
than that."
The marchers with Mrs. McCabe are Mrs. Lorene Fligger,
40; Mrs. Ardith Heneman, 45,
Mrs. Lucille Rood, 37; Mrs.
Betty Lake, 37; and Mrs. Judy
Shaw, 30, all from Pontiac.

When the perishable/uts
on the imperishable, an the
mortal puts on immortality,
then shall come to ptl.!s the
saying that is wri tten:
"Death is swallowed up in
victory." "0 death , where is
thy victory?"

uc

deeth,

where is thy sting?"-I Cor.
15 :54. 55.

OR

DER YOUR

EASTER
f1 ·QWERS
EARLy
L; .

Dudl-'s Florist
..1

Serving: Middleport,
Pomeroy, Gallipolis,
&amp;tMsonCo.,W.Va.

o.

•-------"""!'-!========~

SPRING SPECIALS

Polyester Double Knits
Values To 6.99 yd .

$279yd. To $388 yd.

-----------------------Cotton Canvas ..........~~.~~.":'..~~..'109 yd.

Denim Prints........... ~~.~~~.~~. s1!1! yd.
Drip 01y Cottons...... ~~..~~~.~~ . 59' yd.

M

1/AIIJWAIE
DEPT.

RED DEVIL

publleatiOil, however, on request. Letters

I

MR. AND MRS. ARNOW SEXTON

FREMONT, Ohio, (UPI ) Mrs. Irene McCabe continued
to lead her five supporters in
their walk across northern ·
Ohio today en route tQ
Washington D.C., a march to
·dramatize l.heir efforts to get a
constitutional amendment on
school busing.
"We have tired feet, tired
backs and tired legs," Mrs.
McCabe, Pontiac, Mich, told
UPI today. "But I feel even
more encouraged about the
march now than I did before we
left - simply because people
have been so beautifuL"
She said more than $1,000 in
donations had been received
along the route to help b~X
Items the women need during
the trek.
"People along the way have
given so much food we don't
have any more room in the
vans for it," she added
The six women, members of
of the National Action Group
(NAG), formed by Mrs. Me-

The Department
Trans- derived
possible from
and user
that taxes
revenues
portation
(DOT) hasof recombe ·
Mason's Town CoWJcil at a .regular meeting Monday
1
mended a program under channeled into a Trust FWld evening approved an ordinance concerning a utility tax, showed
which money from the High- for the completion and im- disapproval of a gross sales tax, heard a report on garbage
way Trust Fund would - for prov~ent of the nation's high- diSposal and gave the second reading of a proposed street
FoUow Meigs' Lead
the first time - be used for ways. If we violate the in- paving ordinance . .
P. 0. Drawer~ something other than highway· tegrity of the Trust FWld to
Gary Gibbs, recorder, gave the third reading of a new
Athens,Ohlo45701 related programs. I, for one, divert its monies tq non- ordinance concerning utility taxes. After considerable
, .20 March 1972 have reservations about some highway purposes, we will discussion, coWJcilrnan Richard Fowler made a motion and Joe
Dear Sir:
of the provisions of this have neither good highways Jones gave the second for the action passing the ordinance.
The "Gem of Egypt" (Giant Earth Mover in the Egypt program. In the Secretary's nor good urban transportation. CoWJcilrnen Fred Samsel also favored it in voting and Gibbs
Valleyo!BelmontCoWlty, Ohlo)is the largest of the strip mining 1972 Highway Needs Report to The Administration'.• plan voted against it.
Is
b' rds Han Coal Congress, recommendations would pWJcture the Highway
In discussion it was indicated Department of Natural
power shovels. Its bucket capacity 130cu •cya ·
na
were made which would aUow Fund with a hole that wiU grow
Company Intends to move the ''Gem" across Interstate Highway Trust Fund re•Jenues to be used larger each year WI til the Fund this tax is put on the power Resources, but he has land
70, blocking traffic for an Indefinite period. Uniquely • Hanna has to finance mass urban public is drained dry. Without a high ~:J,':!' co~~an/0:r:Xa~~ available and has equipment
necessary to cover the disposal
retained ownership of a section of ianfdCbeneath 1-7~ ~~ ~n- transportation projects.
level of fWlds, the highway water department. It would net daily. Young noted he will
nlng Conunlttee and the Chamber o ornmerce
wn
The Report called for the system will deteriorate and we the
town
of
Mason
towardwhichthe ' 'Gem"isheaded,Barnesville,arenotpleased creation of a Single Urban will have spelled the end to a approximately $5,000 inform coWJcil as soon as he
with strip mining. They seem to be left with no economic alter- Fund (~UF) to be authorized at successful program.
additional annual revenue and gets approval from the Health
and
the
native. Barnesville is In trouble with strip mining or without it. $1 billion for FY 1974. The FWld
would only cost the average Department
Department of Natural
'l1tl8 common dUemma ls being faced In many population centers would be increased to $1.850
resident about $10 per year for
Resources.
throughout Appalachia today.
billion for FY 1975and to $2.250
o
all the utilities combined.
Councilmen Fowler and
In 1965 Harrison County, then the largest of the stripped coal billion for fiscal years 1976
eJ.gS
Discussion also centered Samsel made plans to meet
producers In Ohio, ranked third in corporate income and 84th in through 1969. The plan would
aroWld a gross sales tax, with with Robert McCartney to
per capita income out of 880hlo counties. Today Harrison County make SUF monies available
·
town officials stating such tax survey certain property after
Is 1~ aU counties in arrears on payment of property taxes, for use by States and
would not be imposed sln~e McCartney appeared before
and ifarrlson's per capita Income falls below the Appalachian metropolitan areas for public
they did not favor it. Frank council requesting sewer and
average. Arq solution to this problem must include rebuilding transportation projects
Board, a local resident and water taps for four lots located
~·'d~epmliliDg industry. An lnfuslon of the capltal·now ~ded ·- p'twntl¥ oltllrf.ed froQ! Trust
lil'nS~ers
businessman, was ·(II'I!SOnt and , between BroWn-and Anderson
for •trip mining would speed up conversion to safer, more ef. Fund financing.
.1. Q.a.l. 1.1
entered the discussion at the on First Street.
flclent long waU mining techniques.
The SUF fWld ':'ould conrequest of council. Board
In other action, coWJcilman
Peter E. Walburn, Romaine expressed that he d[d not Fowler read the proposed
A reasonable increase in the price of coal would stimulate solldate all exlstmg urban
the hiring of healtiHafety and other noniJI'O(Iuctlon persoMel. highway and mass transit K. Walburn to Sherman D. object to the utility tax, but street paving ordinance for .a
'l1tis would greaUy Improve deep mine working conditions and programs with the exce.ption of Buskirk, Effie M. Buskirk, strongly opposed the gross second reading, with council
reduce da
·
the Interstate Highway one'third acre, Middleport.
sales tax.
officially accepting the second
ngers.
.
Program
and
an
urban
Ma
R
H
I
It also appears that economic recovery will move more
h d de
tr 11
Lila l Winters, Harold D.
yor oy ar ess gave a reading and the legal
researc
an
mons
a
on
w·
te
Ch
1
An
Be
tz
to
report
attendance at. publication.
pi
trl
rnlnln
d
sw®y. lf strip mining ls phased out, as s p
g e etes
m rs, ery
n n
.on recent
0 am Similarly aU rural
1 1 .
1
Others present, in addition to
resources while providing negligible be.neflts to .the depressed ~-fway ·programs' would be Dale S. Machir, 1.40 ACre, .45 a Reg10na P anrung CoWICI
u-If the d rnlnln ind try 18 all0 wed fur
'""
· Acre, 3.6 Acre, Orange- which was held in Logan. A those previously mentioned
economy. rum~ver,
eep
g us .
.•
consolidated Into a Rural Chester.
group including Mayor Harless were Charlotte Jenks, water
!her to deteriorate, ~s railroad passenger sernce was, we will Federal-Aid System and a
protested the preliminary
soon be conunltted by default to strip mining the entire 500 Rural General Transportation MDalGe L. McGBrbawL, Wsilmla Mk. Regio. n n iayo.ut and r:1uested · secretary and Harry Roush
c raw to o . pur oc ,
square mUes of eaa te m Ohl othat hold strlppabl.e coa I•
Fund.
that Mason County be oc~.ed
'"'·
m1
ht
t
Jannie
F.
Spurlock,
42'h
Acres,
hn
G
Therefore, Governor Jo
.....,an
g no approve
The Rural Federal-Aid
as it was before with CabeU,
movement of the "Gem" across 1-70. Following the Meigs County System would take effect in FY 3 Acres, Sutton.
Wayne, Lincoln and Mason
1 .~.,
Iii 11 of he d mining
Anastasis Staats, George
lead, the Governor can support rehab ta on t eep
1974 with a !Widing breakdown Staats to Richard A. comprising Region Il
lndllBily. To of!let any slump in the Barnesville area economy, of $800 million in FY 74, FY 75 Siggelkow, Rose M. Siggelkow,
Several town officials
the Governor can Identify a source of temporary development and through FY 76-79.
Parcel, Olive.
recently attended a Mid.()hio
~ while the Buckeye Hllls-llocl!lng. V.alley Regional
The Rural General TransLouise Harbrecht, Robert F. Valley Mayor's Association
Dev~opment District's (rogram, the State Hlghway 800 Plan; ' portatlon Fund would be Harbrecht, Margaret Har- meeting held in Marietta, 0.
awalll Implementation.
federally funded with the brecht, Phil J, Harbrecht, Mayor Harless, recorder Gibbs
A 80Uilll economy in eastern Ohio depends upon thoughtlul states on a 71).30 matching TerryHarbrecht to Richard w. and councilman Fowler
planning and the phasing out of strip mining.
basis.
Vaughn, Ruby A. Vaughn, Lot, reported on this trip.
Sincerely,
DOT said changes in the Pomeroy.
CoWlcilrnen Jones and Samsel
EdwardMacDonaldDolmon present law are necessary to
RobertJ. Brown,RobbleLee also attended this convention.
chlanrepresentative
create
"a
llalanced
national
B
Joe YoWlg appeared before
Appala
rown to J . D. Hayes, Lots ,
Friends of the Earth transportation system and Pomeroy.
coWJcil concerning disposal of
solve the problems of inJ k
Prod Cr Assn to garbage. Young explained that
...
hha
ff
creasing. urban congestion." Obiacson
o power co., Ease., Meigs. e s not o icially heard from
Certainly there ls no doubt
Jackson Prod. ·er. Assn. to the Health DePill'tment or the
Others Agreed, Fan Says
I
that we must address ourse ves Ohio Power Co., Ease., Meigs.
Mar. 20,1972 to the problems of mass transC. C. Howard, Lena Boward
portation. But there are many to Jerry L. Cline, Phyllia M.
Mr. Editor:
.
In regard to the letter from Syracuse on the officiating of the difficulties with the Ad· Cline , p arce1s, Scip1o.
Mrs . Marie Keefer and
Helen M. Williams, Kenneth
ministration's proposal, the
Diatrlct Basketball game between Eastern-Portsmouth East.
Debbie
of Leon , W. Va., Mrs.
I not only thought the officiating was poor, but people from foremost of which would be the D. Williams, Arlene Williams, Dolores Riggs and children of
the auillcothe area commented on how unfair it seemed for the demise of the highway Lois Ann Pauley, Paul J. Letart, W. Va ., Mary Rosa
program as we know it.
Pauley, Robert D. Williams,
Eagles. Elplain this with them being from another area.
It
Is a weD-known fact that Patricia Williams, Linda Lou Keefer of Uon, Mrs. Rose
And as far as theN. G. fans not blaming the referees for their
there will not be enough money Austin, Wayne Austin, Sally Jo Mary Fife and Cristi of little
lllss~ there was no w,ay possible they could honestly blame them,
in the Trust Fund to take care Lambert, Clarence A. Lam- Kyger, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
becao*e Ibis was an almost perfect played game with all the
ci all of our highway needs in bert, Chery1L. Gould , Harry K. File, Jr. and children of
Eagles hitting. You would have to. agree if you attended this the 1970's. Between now and Gould
to Robert D. Williams, Turkey Run were recent
game.
1985, It has been estimated that Patricia Williams, Parcels, visitors of Rev. and Mrs.
Signed: Betty Millhone over f300 billion will be needed Rutland.
Raymond Fife.
Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie Leach
p.s. It is much easier to take defeat when It is in all fairness. to Improve roadways to meet
and
children and Mrs. Joe
. Right?
.
increasing traffic demands.
Leach spent an evening with
Many of our primary and COURT ADDED
secondary highways are
SYDNEY, Australia (UPI)- Mr. and Mrs. Donald Leach
already obsolete or sub· Former Wimbledon champion and children.
standard. In addition, large Margaret Court, who gave birth Mr. and Mrs. Roy Rife, Rt. I
SUIIlS of money are desperately
tQ a son on March 5, has been Guysville, called on Mr. and
needed for more effective high- provisionally added to the Mrs . Alex Shuler a day
way safety programs to reduce Australlan team to play against recently. Other callers were
All work was halted Monday fatalities and minimize the United States in the Bonnie Mr. and Mrs. Leo Rupe and
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Shuler and
Penitentiary officials were except in the hospital and economic losses from ac· Bell tennis tournament •at Michael.
cidents.
• Cleveland In July.
forced to order out for ham- power plant.
Mr. and Mrs. Marlin Rife
The
Congress
Intended
that
The other members of the
Seven
representatives
of
the
. burgers and French fries
attended the birthday dinner a
Monday when inmates who dining room crew gave Card- the Interstate Highway System team ate reigning Wimbledon recent Sunday in the home of
- t In the prison dining room well a list of five grievances, be completed as soon as champion Evonne Goolagong, Mr. and Mrs. Charles YoWlS at
Helen Gourlay, Lesley Hunt and
including revision of the Adult
refilled to prepare meala.
Kyger . Birthdays observed
Kerry Melville.
Warden Harold Cardwell Parole Authority, mare pay for
were those of Mr. Y.oWlg, Mrs.
placed an order with Mc- prlsoo work, a convict council,
Glenn YoWlg and Steve YoWlg.
llonllf• Restauranll for 4,000 right to grow beards and long
haum~gera and 2,000 orders hair, and right to pick
of Frtilcb frlei to feed the 1,900~ cellmates.
But if .some of the
Later in the day' the warden
branches were broken off.
lnma&amp;e., who ftre kept In their
and you. a wild olive shoot .
cella, tbroulh the day. ~ started to meet with 30
were gmfted i 11 their place
order cost $1,200. Dinner prisoners · to negotiate the
to s/wre the ric/mess of tile
consiatecl of sweet-roill and ~l)l8llds, but it broke up when
o/.ive
tree. do not boast over
·milk from priJon supplies. . they' i!emanded that an Inmate
t~ bra nc ile ~ ij ~" do
C.dweD aald he planned to serving 10 to 60 years for
boast. remember it is not
keep the Pt;soners in their cells riotlns at the prison in 1968 be
yo11 that support s t11e rooi.
bi&lt;t tile root tilltl suppori .&lt;
until detn•nda given him preaent at the ml!eting. CardJ/(HL - Rom(llu; 11.17. J ·~ .
seeking c~es ani seftened, weD refused.

HECK'S REG.
$8.99

1/ARIJWARE DEPT.

UpoD

I

II •••''Vl" ~: ...J.a-=•

$688
HECK'S
REG.
$3.l9 .

Lettm of optnl011 are welcomed. They should be less

I ,wtlhlleld

STEP
LADDER

I Paint llroiner to help pre·
vent dogging . • Glau jar
with a 24 o~ . capacity, and
marked for eo1y mecuuring. li

w
hingt'0 n
I as

-------------------------- 1
1

I ::!::!~~:~;h~=~~~~l: :::e~~N~~=: ~~~0~

6FT. WOOP

STEP STOOL

·

c ategory totaling 680 votes . vass, is that the massive,
Included was California's well.structured Muskie cam271 to be assigned. on a win. paign edifice is badly jarred
ner-~ke-aU b a s 1 s In the and loosened but is still holdstates JWJe 6 primary.
· ing.
In t h I s and subsequent
The consensus is that
surveys, Biossat t a p s the Muskie must quickly be~in
best political judgments he to do weU in the primanes
can fmd in the v a r i o u s and the o t h e r tests just
states. As the campaign ad- ahead, and that he surely
vances, ·the holding of prl- will crumble if he does not.
maries and state conven- H u mph r e y is the man
lions will ''harden" these viewed as the almost auto.
counts and reduce the ele- malic fall-back choice, but
men! of ·educated guesswork that idea is resisted in some
they necessarily contain.
quarters. McGovern is given
This first review caught no chance. Wallace worries
the Democratic leadership the party but has no chance, .
and electorate at a cross- Ted Kennedy is a potential
roadsbfu· uzzled by front-run· alternative not yet talked
ner
uskie's loo·mlld tri- about very much.
umph in New Hampshire
Democrats want to choose
and his stiff Florida reverse, Muskie if he will only per·
but generally unwiUing yet •form well enough so they
to believe that he is marked can. They fear they may
for collapse. The correct flounder without him.
thing to say, from this can-

$299

I '

. 24 1

1/AIIJWARE
DEPT.

fie!d. dominated by the sur·
pnsmgGov. George WaUace.
· This count, to be followed
·by others in the weeks leading to the Democrats' July
10 conventfon at Mia m 1
Beach, placed Sen. Hubert
Humphrey a distant second
with 4112 v o t e s. His very
modest runner.up showing
In F I o r i d a has not yet
boosted his delegate poten.
tial materially.
Sen. George McGovern
s c o r e s third with 287¥.
votes, Wallace fourth with
220, Sen. He n r Y Jackson
fifth with 102, New y 0 r k
Mayor John Lindsay sixth
with a mere 42.
, ~bout a hWldred more are
tie to Ie,sser•.candidates like
Re,P. W II b u r MiUs Rep.
Bhlfley Chisholm, first black
woman c a n d i d a t e and
lumped with huge bloCks of
uncommitted in a broad

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

I

HARDWARE DEPT.

GALLON

$6.6S

33~.,,

ROOF COATING

• Skip priming on most bare woods- it has
·its own primer • Skip frequent repaintingnow it lasts even longer t~an before • Skip
waiting for second coats- it dries in only an
hour • Skip lengthy cleanup lime-tools
come clean in just soap and water e Wide
range Of colors, piUs white, ,in quarts and gal-

, W~NGTON - (NEA)
-A Snaken Sen:' · EdmWJd
Muakle may n e v·e r again
reach so high a water mark
but with 1509 votes needed
for nomination he bas piled
up a Potent I a 1 of '1282¥.
votes m the first 1972 NEANational Observer D e m o. ~ratic Box .Score on the pres.
1 ~l)Cy, ' !mown as The Bi·
ossat Poll.
The 50-s t a t e telephone
canvass by Bruce Biossat
~A's Washington Bureau
Chief, was conaucted before
and during
the period of
the
........
:.;;;, pol t h e Florida
UI\NIU\
I P r 1 m a· r y
.
which struck
a hard blow
at M u s k I e
b¥ thrusting
·
him to fourth
place in a big

72

HECK'S

HOUSEPAINT

Hike Continues

NEW SHIPMENT

Cotton Knits ... ········............... slm Jb.
Velour Remnants ..................... s1so lb.
Bias Tape ..-.• · : -. - - · - · · - -, 20 For, 1.00
Zippers- Jacket &amp; Dress · - - 20 For 1.00
Nylon Fleece . . . - - . - . . - - - . 90c lb.
Stretch Lace - - - - - - -' - . . - . 2.40 lb .
Sheets · · . . . . - - - - - - . - . 1.25 lb .

-New Knits From South-

THE COTTON GIN
Route7

Addison, Ohio

�'..

18-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov.

o:,March 22, 1972

'

Sentinel Classifieds Get.Action! Sentinel Classifieds . Get
WANt ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
BeforE
Publication
.
Monday Deadltn, 9 a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be aceepled unl119 a.m. lor.
Day of Publication
·
'
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
publisher will not be
responsible for more than one

incorrect Insertion.

5 cents per Word one insertion

12

Minimum Charge75c
cents

per

word

consecutive Insertions.
18

cents per

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of

QUAliTY

three

word six ctm.

Secutlve Insertions.

1966 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN

11095

New ring ·job. d ean interior, good tires. rad io. hea ter .
Sharp black finish

ONLY 1595

Sl.SO for 50 word minimum.

Each additional word 1c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 15c Charge per
Advertisement.

ONLY$895

Wanteti To Buy
OLD FURNITURE , dishes,
clocks, brass beds, silver
dollars
or
complete

HIGH

3·22·31c

SCHOOL SENIORS .

locations in the US. See your
local Army represen tative for

llotor Co.

collect 593·3022.

3·20-ll lc

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
~PMEROY, OHIO

WANTED!

Monday thru Saturday

choke guns only . Assorted
meat. Sponsored by the
Sy racu se Fire Dept.

3·22·31c

The KING'S ARMS
(lonnerly Hl-7 Club)

cartons.

No at -

tachments needed as our
controls are built ln. Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and blind hem

slitch . Full cash price, $38.50
or budgel plan available.
Phone 992-5641 .
3-12-6tc

facls aboul the 180· 0ay VACUUM Cleaner new 1971
Delayed Enlry Program and model. Complete wllh all
the Army's new pay raise.
For more informallon call

OFFICE HOURS
Notice
8:30a.m. lo 5:00p.m. Dally , Notice
8:30 a.m. to 11:00 Noon ABOUT YOUR WtiGHT .. . REDUCE excess fluids with
Saturday.
FLUIDEX. $1.69 - LOSE
overweight ladies, teens and
WEIGHT safely with Dex.Amen interested in a Weight
In Memor,
Oiet, 98c at Nelson Drugs .
Watchers I R) Class In
J.n.lfp
Pomeroy
write
:
Weight
IN LOVING memory of Rev . T.
Watchers IRJ. 1863 Section
A. Cleland, who passed away,
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 . GUN Shoo t, also rifle matches
March 22, 1969.
. 10·3-!lc - open sites only, Forked
looking back with memories,
Run Sportsman Club. Sunday,
Along the road we trod ;
March
26, 12 noon.
We bless the years we had you,
3-21·11C
And leave the rest with God.
Entertainment
Sadly missed by wile, sons,
SHOOT ING Malch, Saturday,
daughters and grandchildren .
March 25, at the Racine
Nightly
3-22·11c
Planing Mill at 6 p.m . Factory
4 OR 5 ROOM house In country .
Phone 992·7311.
3·21 ·2ft

original

interview.

1966 PLY. FURY Ill

Two seats f . wagon, gold finish , V-8 engine. P. steering &amp;
brakes, auto. tran s.• luggage r ac k, radio, w-w tires .

.

Wanted To Rent

MIDWAY MARKET. 2 women PAINT DAMAGE. 1'971 Zlg.zag
sewing machines. Still In
wanted, phone 992·2565 for

Korea, Hawaii, or selected

- - - : - - = --,---

cleaning tools. Small paint

damage in shipping. Will take
S27 · cash or budge! plan
available. Phone 992-5641.
3-12·6fc
WALNUT.Storeo radio com ·
blnatlon, four speed in termixed changer, four

Carrlen For

speaker sound sr.stem, dual
volume contra. Balance

MASON

$68.42. Use our budget terms.

Call 992·7085.

and

3-11-6tc

- - -- - -

HARTFORD

BEAUTIFUL colonial maple
stereo, AM·FM radio, four
speakers. 4 speed automatic
changer, separate controls.

· Not A Motor Route.

The Daily Sentinel
Ph. 614·992-2156
For Rent
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to schoof.

Phone 992·5434.
10-18-tfc
.-~-~-~-

UP TH'
'iE .
'

ITWUZ
. EASY
AS PIE,
ELVINEV

IWr THE

~~·_/

'

1.

Stat ion . Complete chicken
dinner $1.50, chicken only $1.

Bulldozer Radiator to !he
Sm'allest Heater Core.
Nathoo Biggs
Radiator Specialist

"Everything In HolM

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS.· INC.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy

MASON, W.VA. 25260
MEIGS992-2151
MASON m-5634

a.m . in fr ont of Liquor Store .
Ovmer may have by iden ·
lify ing amount and paying for

ad .

3·14·141 c

Help Wanted

WANTED
PAPER CARRIER
IN

MIDDLEPORT
Phone 992-5592
Mrs. Faye Manley
Or 992·21S6

TU4P . CU'IT . NO . 0 322 H

MEN WANTED
CATTLE
AND

LIVESTOCK
BUYERS
We want men in this 1r1a.
Tnin to buy ca ttle, sheep
•nd hogs .
We will train qualified men
with some li\lestock experience. For local interview,
write today with your background. Include your full
address and phone number.

CATTlE BUYERS, INC.
4120 Madlton

KanNo City, olo. 64111

KOSCO T

Oil

of

Mink , SAVE $1,000 lo $3,000 on a

Kosmetics, Wigs. For free
demonstration, call for ap.
pointmen t, Mrs. John (Ann)
Sauvage, Syracuse. Ohio, 992-

3171.

J.9·12tp
MEIGS boa I shop -

new

pontoon boats in stock,
severa l used boats and 2
fishing boals. Dick Karr, Jr .,

modular home. Due to a local
dealer closing his sales lot. 2

- 24x50 Kit Modular homes
and 1 - 24x44 Tek Modular
home will be sold at absolule
dealers cost. Shown by appoinlmenl only. Call Belpre
Ohio, area code 614·413.953l
for appointment.

3·16·61c

Pearl St., Middleporl. Phone READ THIS! You can save
992·5367.
literally hundreds (even
3·19·61c thousands) of doll ars on a late
FREE ticke ts are now available
on a free giant $20 Easler
Ba sket
large chocolate
Easter bunny and large fruit
and nut _Easler egg. See them

today and gel your free

tickets, no purchase required,
at lhe Bright Star Market
next to the Drive. In Theatre,
MasOn, W. Va . where low
pr ic es and convenient service
are featured every day, check
the foll owing pr ices and stock
you r larder . Favorite or
Bonus brand white bread 7
loaves -.1 witi·1 $10 additional
pur chase . Br ough ton's 2 pet.
swee t milk gal. 99c, Bologna
in pi.ece lb. 59c, grade A small

eggs 3 doz. $1, smoked slab
bacon whole or half lb. 49c,

model used or re-possessed
mobile home. Before you buy
any mobile home stop and see .

lhe huge seleclion of 8, 10 and
12 wide mobile homes that we
have on display. We arrange
financing for you . LOw down
payments . Easy credit terms .
Don' t forget we are the area
dealer for "De troi ter " mobile

homes. One of lhe oldest and
besl names In the industry.
Don'l wail . Stop now at Berry.
Mi ller Mobile Homes Sa les,
705 Farson Slreel, Belpre,
Ohi o, acr oss th e railroad
tra ck s
from
Kaiser
Alumi num . Phone area code

614·423·9531 . Open 7 day s a
week .

3·16·61c

Van Camp 29 Ol . ca n pork and
beans 2 cans 59c, Hart's whole
kernel corn 5 cans SL

Complete assortment of fancy
Easter goodies including
Easter Baskets from $1.49 to

$20. We accept Federal Food

537 High St.

1111

EX~ERT

Orthid Room.
'

.Whl!ll Ali&amp;nrilent

Make reservllftM lor your
private partl~
~benquets,

Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and paintings, glass
installation,
free
loaner
cars
and
e s t i m a t e-s , a I so
mechanical
repairs.
Phone 992-3793

.special occasl

I

~~

'5;55 .

Coupon . Stre ich your money,
food coupons and lime, see us

for seed potaloes, onion sels

and garden plan Is as needed.
Save in many ways at Bright

Star Markel, next lo Drive. In
Theatre, Mason, w. Va.
, 3.7.11

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

·

MIL'LER

MOB IL£ HOMES
1220Washinaton Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
~------------

Cgji

Phoile 99~ :2094_ ..

Pomeroy
Home &amp;
..
. Auto.

®

OpenS Ti15
Monday thru Solurday
6116 E. Main,
0.

·;·
' . 992-5786

•

I

iSofarit's
tbeen edraw
betuleen the
· ROtten Elf
· andme·~

Free Estimate

It'S

Ifahwjns,he'll
beth'fjrstYokum

e,-&gt;sy- Yes!!
-but Clfl·

who ever went
-chUCkle!- rotten!!

Ah'S

LUinnin'!.~

\

h011e1t!.'

"'

Will he beth'
fust ·sOIJ!·Yolcum
usGoodGuvs

,,

ever loSt?

\

\

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

THE~'S MV TiACHER! I'M

B&amp;W HEATING
. 00.

NEW
,
3 BEDROOM-paneled home, nice bath wllli' wer.

&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Natural gas forced air furnace, 6 rooms. carport

l PWMBING CO.

large

lot on Route 114. NOW ONLY $18,000.
f
5 BEDROOMS
LIKE NEW - l'h baths, lots of closets. AW
trlc,
hardwood floors, basement. • acres overlooklnt ..,te 7.
Asking $27,500.00.'
3 BEDROOMS
RUTLAND-Nearly all paneled. Balh, gas heat, city
water. l'h lots, near schools. Only $6,1100.00.
'
2 BEDROOMS
OAK FLOORS - Nice dining, bath, gas heat. aa.ment,
front porch. Utility building . Asking $6,500.00. r,•
SYRACUSE
,'
4 ROOM5-Full basement, city water and gas. Nice level
tot. Asking $2,500.00.
'
HOUSING LAND
'
110 ACRE5-Ciean farm land, some limber. Good location
'" !he country. Chesler water, Ohio Power. ldtal for
housing project.
•
CHESHIRE
•1,
BLOCK BUilDIN~On Route 7. Good location lor a

WHEN MR. JOHNSON

MORE FLOWERS

•oR WINNIE? OH , MYI

'TOLD ME A60UT
YOU, HE AL.&amp;O 'TOLD

HAS!

SERIOUS.'

MEET HER ...
'TllROLGH

YOU!

StrYICt tht

brid~

could

ant.~

We have 2~ hr. emergency
servlet. ·

. 742.JU7
742·4761
· -Weare tully lllsuricr ·
Ci.':J~Mi, (.{)fiE, ~E...

OJ $it.)(. R:VER IS A

COP-ovr!

APPOLOOSA

STUD SERVICE
$50 Reg. Mares
$40 Grade

608 East Main Street
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259 tll4: 00
Sunday &amp; Evenings
992·2568

'IOU tlON'T SEEM
. TOO HAPPY ABOUT
'f'OIIR VICTOR'f,

FRANCIS BENEDUM

WfLL, •DAoor"
"" t VIAS
THIN KIN'.-•

AliNIE!

Phone 667-3856

10 ACRES
Home aboul 8 years old, 3
bedrooms with closets, bath,
dining room, Coal Oil Forced
air Heal, lull basemen!,

•TERMITES,
RidoiThtm
will protect any single
clw,llina residence lor

Stucco finish . Possession lsi

1

of June. $9,500.00.

A.CROSS

1. Upper
hand
5. Joel
Chandler

149.50

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Ctll Colli&lt;! 614-452-3151

2 STORY FRAME

- - .

J bedrooms, llf2 baths, front

11. U.S.S.R.
lake

Y-CITY .
EXTERMINATION
· 63fMain5t.
.

and side porches, double
garage, storm doors and
windows, close to shopping,

excellent location . $12,900.00.

Get one's

"IN OUR USE OF

MHD, Af.N MAC&lt;NETIC

.on·v.AAIX CONCREt'i:' de~ 1
right to yO\Jr prolecl.l ;

room, carpeted , paneled ,
liled,
porch,
storage

an d

building . $6,950.00.

easy.

OR C.RAVITATIONAL
PULL IS AMPLIFIED
MILLIONS OF TIMEs:•

Free, '

estimates. Phon, 992·32U.~t
Goegleln Rea~y.Mix Co.; ~
Middleport, Ohio.
· · ·

MAKE AN OFFER
2 story frame, 6 rooms, 3

6.JO..tfc 1 •

neigh -

'I t

~S-;;:£;;-W~IN~G;:-:M';':A:":C::'
· H:::lN:':'E~~~
· . ~R"."t-pa..,.tr' :
service, all makes .. 992·2284. 1
' T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.!'
1'1. Authorized Singer Sales and I'
;} ,Service. We Sharpen Scissors: '
.,,
3-2'/·lfC t',
Brick St ., 5 rma . ~bath, or
•
· :I!
set up as two op,omplete slE US FOR : Awnings, storm •

WE HAVE IMMEDIATE
SALE FOR ALL TYPE
HOMES AND FARMS,
CALL TODAY.
HENRY E. CLE~AND SR.
REALTOR
SIX ROOM house, 133 BuHernut
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 1137 ·
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus.
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
11·21·flc

with extra lot,
trailer .

tabte for

doors and windows. carports,.:
marquees, aluminum sld~ng
and railing. A. Jacob. sales "
representative. For free
..est I mates, phone Charle~ :;

;.
Carry .ou t and ,drlve·in located In Pomeft}:l Showing
exeellent returns. ~

.. &lt;
Many other lfsti'nu on
homos and bustnus spots.

Lisle, Syracuse, V .
Johnson and Son, Inc.
J.2.ffc
.

TERRY

v.,-.·

:14. Model for

Aows

3. Country
under
military
rule
4. Slippery
5. Capital

¥~smania

Women's

10. More ex·
orbitant
16.. Birth·
mark
19. Relish
ZO. Roll
the

Lib ·
25. Painful
27. Lurch
30. Elevate
31. Barm
33. Trim
36. Sunder

23.

37.

g~:,Sned

~!~'s

I (
LNOBEEG

I

~~ ~~~~(J~'-l~l~l-1
MOAPED
f:, ..J

23. Picked
25. Up till
now
28. Grant a
lease
27. Simpleton
1!8. Gaelic
29. Highway
branch

~

&amp;TI'I&lt; 10 'THE
CONDUC10R!

Now

arr~~~~~t the clrcleclleiten

I
,d .~~=to=fjorm
.
..noon.
':41'-lf--~~~~~~
C=r~:~i~'i~~~
--+-+-! I
l'rillltt SIIIISUIISWIIIIIn J D ( l I I l )
,.,-+-+-1-

aucreoted
the abon
thebyourprltt1111wer,
u

(Aatwcn
Ye1terday'•

Jumble, GAUZE

le~HrrowJ

PANDA IAMIOD ENTAIL

WfiA1'5 THAT 7

crowns

37. Operatic
air
38. Intact
39. Diana or
Lanny

DAILY

CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

AXYDLBA.A.XR
iJr LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two· O's, etc. Single l•tters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are all
hinls. Each day lhe code letters are different .

-:-:-:-:-=.....,.----1_1._7...,.1f,c:t.!l. r'DE~L WHEEL ollghment·
MODERN Jor4bodl~ homo:
localtdatCroura.dl, Rl. m. '
Phone 992·3061,
Complttt lrclnt Inti service •
.tune up lfld brjlt(o service: :
Wheels balanced iloc.
All
w.qrk
tro•lcally.
t3 BE
uarantoed.
Re.. onl,lel
'"· Phon• 992-3213.
,.
•.'
7·27·1fc

CRYPTOQUOTES
· KO

CEYAY'M

MYAGJTC

I

.

feet

tlnleramble thOle four Jumblu,
one letter to ...h oquare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

candidate
33.-.Cam·
brian
34. Scottish
explorer
315. Papal

9'12-fa;(:

. 12·30-Hc ~

gibbon
16. Lambkin's
cry
17. Give
(Scot.)
18. Newspaper
employee
ZG. Break
11. Seaman
U. Whet·

DOWN
1. Symbol
of
America
2. Have cold

JJW/Ml]3ltJ];::t::!!:O -t.c

6. Region
7. Slower
(mu'!o)
8. May, 1793
to August,
1794, in
France
9. Where
the
Wabash

3lA. A.

·t

WMP0/1390

~~;iUM,;:";;:Eie:l]i;GL£DJ
U, Happen
~
15.
Malay

40. Become
low·
· pitched
41. Stew

stone

RU TLAdND - 6 drobaomh house,
.:.·
1aun ry room an
1 , paved
drive and carport. city water ~~~~:.~_~•~li~n:gs~l~or:..:_F=or~m~•~•:~Jd 'L .RRISON'S tV 1·nd Antenna:,;
Jl'll'
and gas, garden, large yard,
excellent location . Phone 742·
·
Service. Phone 992-2522. . 1:
S0-45.
60X12, 1-bedrooin, all · electrlc ; ~
(&gt;.11»tfc 1•
air
conditioned,
lx20
ft.
Porch
·
.
•:
21.·3fc and aluminum awning , '.I#.CKHOE AND DOZER work :'"
--:---:---:---- -- 3,·_
HOUSE. 1641 Lincoln Heights.' aluminum skirting, com. teptlc tanks Installed.~ :
Ca ll Danny Thompson, 992. , 1P1el1e11y ~~~p, Beautiful, (BUll Pullins. Phone
1196.
oca on. vm"'r '-"lng state. ' •
. .. ol.2s.tft
• 18 11
Phone 949-•892 ot'lf92·5272. · 1 ·-. r;
-·
:
:;::;
.
:;::::;;·
-;::"~~;,;;;;;;,:::.;
..
, _ · c.
' 1·1D.Ifc, AUTOMOBILE Insurance been'
HOUSE In Lonn B0 It
cancelled?
Lost
your
985·352'1.
•
orn, pnone ~NICE ' 2.'story'-h~
wllh" tufi: operator's llcense'l call.tn., ·
1·28·flc
basement, 2 lot
forced , 29M.
·:
--------air furnace. Nliii-, Pomeroy.j
6·15-tfc &gt;
Elementary Sclllil. Phone
·'
992-7384 10 .,.. .
,,

'j,

bearings
U. Bacterium

DICK TRACY

Zanesville, Olllo

I'll STORY BRICK
2 bedrooms, bath, dining

~
~

mnN

Bl.AMIIJI, 'lOUR

REGISTERED

CLELAND
REALTY

ON YOUR DIAL

'TRANQUILIZERS! / "''"""

Ill IS 1$ GETTING-

ME 'lt;JU HAD A
GORGEOUS
DAUGHTER. I
WAS HOPING
t06ETTO

oround. No inoHtr what
nltd. Complete roof or
ropolr. Interior or
Ctlllnt
Siding,
(amplote Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
D•y Number'992·2550

COLLECTORS : HOLZER MEDICAL
DE.DICATION COINS .. .999+pct. SILVER $1.
992.JJ25 HELEN L TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

To Yoii

MUST I!IE' TAI&lt;IN'

240 Uncoln St.
Middleport, Oliio
Dlla Anthony Plumbing
hove • complllt Homo

,

good

5~1!

(OULP... HE'
CERTAINLY

WE ARE A LAND AND REAL ESTATE BANK . PUT
YOUR PROPERTIES IN OUR LISTING FILES FOR
BEST RESULTS TRY US, WE MEAN BUSINESS.'

bedrooms ,
borhood.

HELLO"

YOU HAVEN'T SEEN
OSCAR LA'TiiLY !
HASN'T HE GR0Y&lt;N
A LOn r.-:=-('
YES ...

WEATHER ROOFING

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

WATE!roi!ESS!

'TO HER!

For Appoin,tment
Phone 949-2803

110 Mechanic Street

HI, MISS

'---r---r GoNNA SAY
11

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. - Broker

business.

I'M GOING ON
AN UNDERCOVER
ASSI&lt;QNMENT. ..

-GUI\RANTEEI)....;

·Ideal for metll
place - '
with or wllhou kitchen
privileges.
Individual
ring
WHI seat up to :, ,; people. ·

Pho

I WANT 10 E!LENO IN
'---, · WllH lHE OlHER
WOMEN ...

c, 1911 t, HU, lA(

t.~ostAIIJ.!!:!~an

:

--Real Estate For Sale

That Li&amp;tenl
12' • 14' • 2.4' • WiDE

EVE!t'l TIME l SCHEIIIJLE
AN EAAM, TWii CLASS CALLS .
FOR A ~E~ERENDUM

M8inttniRCI".

OOLONIAL
AUTO BODY

The Station

Broughlon's Ice Milk Ice
Cream , Gal. $1.19, while
polaloes so lb. bag $1 .59,

l!UT 1 HAVE lD WEAR
lHE CURLERG,
56f E!J..OTT£R.

·,

light run on gas or electric;

Found

MONEY . Monday , Mar ch 13, 10

..

MA~INE

From the 11rgest

lrailer, 1 bedroom, 10
CHICKE N Barbecue Easter SMALL
miles nortlh of Pomeroy - $65 1971 SCOTTY Camper, never
Su nday , April 2, from 11 a.m.
a monlh; phone 992·7479.
used, refrigerator and stove
to 5 p.m . at the Racine Fire
3·22·11c with oven; refrigerator and

Generation Rap

close

,•

,.992-3975
Balance $79.56 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
3·12·6fc SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller'
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
USED Norge refrigerator, good
662-3035.
condition, Harold Boston, Rt.
2·12-llc
I. Reedsville, Ohio.
3·12-3tc
INTERIOR and exterior
BOAT, motor and trailer . Phone
pain ling. R.I. Dubbeld. phone
667-3031.
741·5825.
3·22·6fc
J.20·51c

also has heal ; phone 742·3005.
3·22·9fc FIRST FLOOR, furnished I
bedroom apartment, phone
households. Write M. 0 .
3·22·3fc
LOSE weight with New Shape
992·3874.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy . Ohio.
3·17-lfc OLD trailer about 8' x 20'.
Tablets. 10 day supply only
Call 992-6271.
THE BRADBURY School PTA
$1.49 at Dutton Drug Co .,
suitable to place on river.
3·16-ttc
will have a Spaghelt i Supper,
Middleport and Nel son Drug TRAILER, Brown's Trail er
$400; phone 991·5786.
Thursday, Ma rch 23. 1971
Store, Pomeroy.
3·21·6tc
from 4:30 lo 7:30p.m. al the
Notice
Court. Min ersvil le , Ohio,
3-20·31
p
Bradbury School. Adulls,
phone 992·3324.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; Flame
SUO and Children, $1.
3-3-ttc STRAWBERRY Plan is, Charlie
of Hope Perfumes. Human &amp;
Foster near ·Racine · Locks ;
3-11 -3fc FIGHT fa tig ue with Zippies, the
synthetic wigs. No need to
phone
247·2309.
pill
.
Only
$1.98
at
grea
t
iron
::::-:-:-:::-=---:--:--:~
ONE LARGE trailer spa,ce.
leave Meigs or Mason County REDUCE
3·22·6fp
sate &amp; fa st with
Nelson Drugs.
Velma G. · Zuspan , 773-5750,
for lack of money. If in·
GoBese Tablets &amp; E· Vap
3· 17 30fp
Mason, W. Va .
lerested call 992.5113.
8 ROOMS and balh with
"water pills ' at Nelson Drugs .
3·7·18tp basement, double lot, garage
3·7-tlc
3·17·201p PIANO and Organ lessons,
in Pomeroy. Phone 992·5570
- - -- - - Gerald Hoffner. Phone 992·
1h double, fur ·
2
BEDROOM,
after
6 p.m. or anytime
3815.
ni shed on 4th &amp; College in
weekends.
3·9·121c
Syracuse. Phone 992·2749.
3·22·6fp
3·1S.Jfc
CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE.
"STAR" kills rats qui ck ly ,
Racine will have available
Sure. 2'12 lbs. $1.69; Ebers·
April lst, pansies, mums and Auto Sales
By Helen and Sue Bottel
bach Hdwe., Sugar Run Mills,
geraniums.
3·19.tfc 1965 BUICK WILDCAT, 2 door
Pickens Hdwe., Mason .
ACOSTLY CHANGE OF MIND
3·19:30tp
hardtop, 1 local owner, ex .
Dear Helen and Sue :
cellenl
condition,
good
tires,
CHECK with Kuhl 's, firsl for
extra good finish . Phone 992 - ~HOWAL TER'S Wet Pet Shop,
low-priced, guaranteed apI had plans for a large wedding. My five bridesmaids gave
Chesler, Ohio, Phone 985.3356.
2143 or 992·2142. S795.
pliances and used furniture.
me three showers, with many lovely gifts. They also put deposits
Tropical fish and supplies.
3-16·6TC
See listing in Sunday Sentinel.
Stop in and compare.
of $25 each on their gowns, which were specially made and can't
Kuht S. Bargain Cen ter. Rt. 7,
3·1·271p
" at the caution light," Tup·
be· returned.
pers Plains, Oh io. Open to 6 For Sale
Then - I realized I didn't love the guy and broke owp.m ., closed Mondays. Phone 8 X35TRAI LER, converled into DOUBLE KNIT Fabric - S3.50 .
engagement.
camper .t ype home ; plus
$3.75 per yd . Pass school at
667·3858.
allached new bathroom and 2
Tupper s Plains, 5 miles to
3·10·61c
It's three months later and my new guy is from a neighboring
bedroom building; can easily
county road 50 then 2 miles;
city. We've made different friends. We're planning to be
be moved ; ideal for the
1211 to Eden Ridge near
OUTDOORSMAN · WhO wants
church is county road then 111
married. I had a feeling things were going this way, so I didn 't
a good, bul cheap dwelling a!
mile. Phone 378-6276.
FERTILIZER
return the shower gifts and put off a decision on the $25 deposits
le.
Phone
Frank
3·17·6fp
a
campsi
Order now . ge t early
(which I know I should refund to my girl friends). My wedding
Gheen,
949·4651
,
or
Carl
discount. Bag , bulk and
Gheen, 741·5841.
GOT AN EYE FOR A BUY?
dress is still at the shop, waiting.
liquid
fertilizer
Take
3·22-6tc
Zenith Floor Sample Sale .
delivery from our area
Now the bombshell: my fiance doesn't want anything in ow- - - - - -- - Color, Black and White,
warehouse at Pomeroy .
wedding that will remind him of my last engagement. That
BEEGLE pups, 6 months old, Stereo. Brand new 72 Zenith
TV, Stereos and a few 71's ;
$15 male and female, phone
ASK
ABOUT
COMPLETE
means I must choose new bridesmaids, return all the gifts and
All cab inet sty les; some units
CUSTOM SPRAY SERVICE
742·3656.
just start all over!
J.22·101p
are slightly scratched; all are
- - - -----pr iced to sell. See them
Besides being out a lot of money for the gowns, I also ca n't
Order Your
tonight
. Ridenour TV &amp; Ap.
Seed Corn Now
1968 16 FT. SHASTA trailer,
face the hassle of returning all those presents when there's going
p!
iance.
Chester, Ohio, phone
sleeps six, with patio awning,
to be a wedding, after all. What must I do? - UNCERTAIN
985·3307
.
excellent conditio n , S900;
POMEROY
3·17·61c
CINDY
phone 949·2163.
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
3·21 ·3fp
Phone 992·2181
Dear Cindy:
2 RIDING horses, I pony, 2
I can understand why a man might feel strange, being the
saddles, Arnold Grate, phone
SPECIAL- Showalter's Wet
Employment Wanted
742·4211 days and 742·5501
only replacement in an already planned, showered, and outfitted
Pet Shop, Chester, Ohio, 10
evenings.
gallon aquarium $5.75.
wedding. But he'd save a tremendous lot of trouble if he'd accept DRY ·wALL Finisher con ·
3·19.6tc
3·21 ·6fc
your arrangements. After all, bridesmaids, gowns, etc . are the
tractor . R. I. Dubbeld, phone
742-5815.
!ride's choice, and I rather imagine the girls who were to serve
puppies, Silver Toy,
3-20-5tc TROPICAL FIS.H, fancy POODLE
Park view Kennels, Phone 992·'
in your first wedding party are old and dear friends.
-------guppies, angels and breeders,
5443. .
Beltas and supplies. Phone
A3 for gifts. Those from your former fiance's friends and PART TIME secretary ; typ ing,
8·15-tk
992·5443.
relatives shOuld be returned - they're long overdue.
shorthand. office machines
11-30.1fc
skills ; in your place of em.
Your own special people will probably want you to keep their
Mobile Homes For Sale
ploymenl or my home. Phone
1966
HARLEY .DAVIDSON CASH paid for all makes and
shower presents for the next try - and let's hope it takes ! After
991·5427.
Sprint, $300, 2 rid ing mowers,
all, this saves planning additional parties .
3·16·61c
models ot mobile homes.
$25 and SIOO, phone 985.3833,
Phone area code 61.4·423·9531.
Anything to add, Sue? - HELEN
Harry Brown, Chester, Ohio.
3·16·6tc
Dear Cindy:
3-19·6fp
Wow! I don't suppose it would help to say you should have
been sure in the first place. What a Iotta hassling when you
OOULD he nothing but happy.
Your new man friend sounds pretty self&lt;entered or insecure
to insist that you get rid of ally our old memories - even your old
friends. H he doesn't cool it - well, maybe this is a preview of
what your married life will be.
Tell him he has YOU, so why not go practical and accept
your former plans? Think of the money you'll save for your
honeymoon , if you don 't have lo buy a new dress or make refund'&gt;
on five others. - SUE
Dear Rap:
I'm almost 18, a girl in my last yea r of high school. Af.
terwards, I plan on working for a while, saving my money to buy
a van. I want lo travel around America. This, because I MUST
learn who I am and how I affect others. It's hard to express the
ldnd of longing inside of me, but I want to be free and live life to
the fullest, know all types of people- LIVE .
My parents think I'm crazy. They're into this old drag of:
education, work, stay
to home , meet a nice boy and marry
him, then produce grandchildren .. . and they think a big wedding
is what·every girl should dream of most. Laler maybe; not now!
llove and respect my folks - they've given me everything to
make me happy. Must I repay them by giving up MY dream ? LONGING
Dear Longing :
Your parents are understandably fri ghtened about a young
girl tootling 'off on a cross-country van trip, because they're
thinking in terms of "right now." It's hard lo Visualize their chick
as anyone other than a 17-year-old schoolgirl, whet eas, at 20
(when you can afford the odyssey), you'll be mature enough to
handle it.
Hyourdream lasts, then I think yoil should go out and pw-sue
it. Everybody needs dreams - to strive for and to realize . Enjoy !
-HELEN
Dear Longing:
Your van trip sounds fun . I might even join you, if you 'll drop
by in a couple of years or so. (And thanks, Mom , lor your okay,
thougb I'll het you and Dad would "be frightened about THEm
chick," too. )
lt'syour life and your dream . Live it' - SUE

OF 'IOR'N
GARDEN
LOWEEZ'I?

( IIJW·,~

I JESTSORTA
THAT'S WHAR I ·HID
M'l BUTTER·AN'-AIG
MONEY

'

DID '4E EVER

GIT THAT LA'Z.'I HUSBAND

Business

GALLON water tank, SSO.
WOMAN to do spring cleaning. 1100
CaH Waller Cleland of the
Write C· O The Dally Sentinel,
Racine Fire Department at
Box 72'/.E, Pomeroy, Ohio.
949·3471.
.
3·21·6fc
3-12-41c

green f inish .

Pt~neroy

~ IN 'THUNDER

.

~anted

Enlist now - stay home until
after graduation. Guaranteed
assignments to Europe,

St. Wag on . Loca l ow ner, good tire s. std . trans .. radio.

25 Per Cent Discount on pa ld

ads and ads paid within 10 '
days.
CAIID OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Help

esultsl

-----~-"'-

1965 CHEV . V.s

RATES
For. Want Ad Servit.e

.

MPHYCEKTD

. (;. BRADFORD, AucllonMr
Complete ·Sorwlce
Ph.,. 9-49·3121 .
Racine, Olllo
Crltt Bradford

JTXCEKTD

EJCYM
OPA

CP

CEY

J
UP

ZVIQKR
KC ' M

ZVIQKR .- NKT

EVIIJAU
Yeslerdty's Cryptoquote: PROSPERITY IS SOMETHING
THE RUSINESSMAN CREATED FOR POLITICIANS TO
TAKE CREDIT FOR-BRUNSWICK (GA.) PILOT

"""'------'-.......:5:...:·Hie :

jf': 1072 KinK fo'\•11tUre11 Syndirnle, Inc . ~

'

I

61\I'E ME ~OUR J.IAND,
AND I'LL SHOW '&lt;'OU ..

THE~'RI? FVN
TO HOLD!

�'..

18-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomerov.

o:,March 22, 1972

'

Sentinel Classifieds Get.Action! Sentinel Classifieds . Get
WANt ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P.M.
Day
BeforE
Publication
.
Monday Deadltn, 9 a .m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be aceepled unl119 a.m. lor.
Day of Publication
·
'
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any ads
deemed objectional. The
publisher will not be
responsible for more than one

incorrect Insertion.

5 cents per Word one insertion

12

Minimum Charge75c
cents

per

word

consecutive Insertions.
18

cents per

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

2 SIGNS
Of

QUAliTY

three

word six ctm.

Secutlve Insertions.

1966 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN

11095

New ring ·job. d ean interior, good tires. rad io. hea ter .
Sharp black finish

ONLY 1595

Sl.SO for 50 word minimum.

Each additional word 1c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 15c Charge per
Advertisement.

ONLY$895

Wanteti To Buy
OLD FURNITURE , dishes,
clocks, brass beds, silver
dollars
or
complete

HIGH

3·22·31c

SCHOOL SENIORS .

locations in the US. See your
local Army represen tative for

llotor Co.

collect 593·3022.

3·20-ll lc

OPEN EVES. 1:00 P.M.
~PMEROY, OHIO

WANTED!

Monday thru Saturday

choke guns only . Assorted
meat. Sponsored by the
Sy racu se Fire Dept.

3·22·31c

The KING'S ARMS
(lonnerly Hl-7 Club)

cartons.

No at -

tachments needed as our
controls are built ln. Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and blind hem

slitch . Full cash price, $38.50
or budgel plan available.
Phone 992-5641 .
3-12-6tc

facls aboul the 180· 0ay VACUUM Cleaner new 1971
Delayed Enlry Program and model. Complete wllh all
the Army's new pay raise.
For more informallon call

OFFICE HOURS
Notice
8:30a.m. lo 5:00p.m. Dally , Notice
8:30 a.m. to 11:00 Noon ABOUT YOUR WtiGHT .. . REDUCE excess fluids with
Saturday.
FLUIDEX. $1.69 - LOSE
overweight ladies, teens and
WEIGHT safely with Dex.Amen interested in a Weight
In Memor,
Oiet, 98c at Nelson Drugs .
Watchers I R) Class In
J.n.lfp
Pomeroy
write
:
Weight
IN LOVING memory of Rev . T.
Watchers IRJ. 1863 Section
A. Cleland, who passed away,
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 . GUN Shoo t, also rifle matches
March 22, 1969.
. 10·3-!lc - open sites only, Forked
looking back with memories,
Run Sportsman Club. Sunday,
Along the road we trod ;
March
26, 12 noon.
We bless the years we had you,
3-21·11C
And leave the rest with God.
Entertainment
Sadly missed by wile, sons,
SHOOT ING Malch, Saturday,
daughters and grandchildren .
March 25, at the Racine
Nightly
3-22·11c
Planing Mill at 6 p.m . Factory
4 OR 5 ROOM house In country .
Phone 992·7311.
3·21 ·2ft

original

interview.

1966 PLY. FURY Ill

Two seats f . wagon, gold finish , V-8 engine. P. steering &amp;
brakes, auto. tran s.• luggage r ac k, radio, w-w tires .

.

Wanted To Rent

MIDWAY MARKET. 2 women PAINT DAMAGE. 1'971 Zlg.zag
sewing machines. Still In
wanted, phone 992·2565 for

Korea, Hawaii, or selected

- - - : - - = --,---

cleaning tools. Small paint

damage in shipping. Will take
S27 · cash or budge! plan
available. Phone 992-5641.
3-12·6fc
WALNUT.Storeo radio com ·
blnatlon, four speed in termixed changer, four

Carrlen For

speaker sound sr.stem, dual
volume contra. Balance

MASON

$68.42. Use our budget terms.

Call 992·7085.

and

3-11-6tc

- - -- - -

HARTFORD

BEAUTIFUL colonial maple
stereo, AM·FM radio, four
speakers. 4 speed automatic
changer, separate controls.

· Not A Motor Route.

The Daily Sentinel
Ph. 614·992-2156
For Rent
FURNISHED and unfurnished
apartments. Close to schoof.

Phone 992·5434.
10-18-tfc
.-~-~-~-

UP TH'
'iE .
'

ITWUZ
. EASY
AS PIE,
ELVINEV

IWr THE

~~·_/

'

1.

Stat ion . Complete chicken
dinner $1.50, chicken only $1.

Bulldozer Radiator to !he
Sm'allest Heater Core.
Nathoo Biggs
Radiator Specialist

"Everything In HolM

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS.· INC.
Ph. 992-2174
Pomeroy

MASON, W.VA. 25260
MEIGS992-2151
MASON m-5634

a.m . in fr ont of Liquor Store .
Ovmer may have by iden ·
lify ing amount and paying for

ad .

3·14·141 c

Help Wanted

WANTED
PAPER CARRIER
IN

MIDDLEPORT
Phone 992-5592
Mrs. Faye Manley
Or 992·21S6

TU4P . CU'IT . NO . 0 322 H

MEN WANTED
CATTLE
AND

LIVESTOCK
BUYERS
We want men in this 1r1a.
Tnin to buy ca ttle, sheep
•nd hogs .
We will train qualified men
with some li\lestock experience. For local interview,
write today with your background. Include your full
address and phone number.

CATTlE BUYERS, INC.
4120 Madlton

KanNo City, olo. 64111

KOSCO T

Oil

of

Mink , SAVE $1,000 lo $3,000 on a

Kosmetics, Wigs. For free
demonstration, call for ap.
pointmen t, Mrs. John (Ann)
Sauvage, Syracuse. Ohio, 992-

3171.

J.9·12tp
MEIGS boa I shop -

new

pontoon boats in stock,
severa l used boats and 2
fishing boals. Dick Karr, Jr .,

modular home. Due to a local
dealer closing his sales lot. 2

- 24x50 Kit Modular homes
and 1 - 24x44 Tek Modular
home will be sold at absolule
dealers cost. Shown by appoinlmenl only. Call Belpre
Ohio, area code 614·413.953l
for appointment.

3·16·61c

Pearl St., Middleporl. Phone READ THIS! You can save
992·5367.
literally hundreds (even
3·19·61c thousands) of doll ars on a late
FREE ticke ts are now available
on a free giant $20 Easler
Ba sket
large chocolate
Easter bunny and large fruit
and nut _Easler egg. See them

today and gel your free

tickets, no purchase required,
at lhe Bright Star Market
next to the Drive. In Theatre,
MasOn, W. Va . where low
pr ic es and convenient service
are featured every day, check
the foll owing pr ices and stock
you r larder . Favorite or
Bonus brand white bread 7
loaves -.1 witi·1 $10 additional
pur chase . Br ough ton's 2 pet.
swee t milk gal. 99c, Bologna
in pi.ece lb. 59c, grade A small

eggs 3 doz. $1, smoked slab
bacon whole or half lb. 49c,

model used or re-possessed
mobile home. Before you buy
any mobile home stop and see .

lhe huge seleclion of 8, 10 and
12 wide mobile homes that we
have on display. We arrange
financing for you . LOw down
payments . Easy credit terms .
Don' t forget we are the area
dealer for "De troi ter " mobile

homes. One of lhe oldest and
besl names In the industry.
Don'l wail . Stop now at Berry.
Mi ller Mobile Homes Sa les,
705 Farson Slreel, Belpre,
Ohi o, acr oss th e railroad
tra ck s
from
Kaiser
Alumi num . Phone area code

614·423·9531 . Open 7 day s a
week .

3·16·61c

Van Camp 29 Ol . ca n pork and
beans 2 cans 59c, Hart's whole
kernel corn 5 cans SL

Complete assortment of fancy
Easter goodies including
Easter Baskets from $1.49 to

$20. We accept Federal Food

537 High St.

1111

EX~ERT

Orthid Room.
'

.Whl!ll Ali&amp;nrilent

Make reservllftM lor your
private partl~
~benquets,

Middleport, Ohio
Complete body repairs
and paintings, glass
installation,
free
loaner
cars
and
e s t i m a t e-s , a I so
mechanical
repairs.
Phone 992-3793

.special occasl

I

~~

'5;55 .

Coupon . Stre ich your money,
food coupons and lime, see us

for seed potaloes, onion sels

and garden plan Is as needed.
Save in many ways at Bright

Star Markel, next lo Drive. In
Theatre, Mason, w. Va.
, 3.7.11

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

·

MIL'LER

MOB IL£ HOMES
1220Washinaton Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio
~------------

Cgji

Phoile 99~ :2094_ ..

Pomeroy
Home &amp;
..
. Auto.

®

OpenS Ti15
Monday thru Solurday
6116 E. Main,
0.

·;·
' . 992-5786

•

I

iSofarit's
tbeen edraw
betuleen the
· ROtten Elf
· andme·~

Free Estimate

It'S

Ifahwjns,he'll
beth'fjrstYokum

e,-&gt;sy- Yes!!
-but Clfl·

who ever went
-chUCkle!- rotten!!

Ah'S

LUinnin'!.~

\

h011e1t!.'

"'

Will he beth'
fust ·sOIJ!·Yolcum
usGoodGuvs

,,

ever loSt?

\

\

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

THE~'S MV TiACHER! I'M

B&amp;W HEATING
. 00.

NEW
,
3 BEDROOM-paneled home, nice bath wllli' wer.

&amp; CONSTRUCTION

Natural gas forced air furnace, 6 rooms. carport

l PWMBING CO.

large

lot on Route 114. NOW ONLY $18,000.
f
5 BEDROOMS
LIKE NEW - l'h baths, lots of closets. AW
trlc,
hardwood floors, basement. • acres overlooklnt ..,te 7.
Asking $27,500.00.'
3 BEDROOMS
RUTLAND-Nearly all paneled. Balh, gas heat, city
water. l'h lots, near schools. Only $6,1100.00.
'
2 BEDROOMS
OAK FLOORS - Nice dining, bath, gas heat. aa.ment,
front porch. Utility building . Asking $6,500.00. r,•
SYRACUSE
,'
4 ROOM5-Full basement, city water and gas. Nice level
tot. Asking $2,500.00.
'
HOUSING LAND
'
110 ACRE5-Ciean farm land, some limber. Good location
'" !he country. Chesler water, Ohio Power. ldtal for
housing project.
•
CHESHIRE
•1,
BLOCK BUilDIN~On Route 7. Good location lor a

WHEN MR. JOHNSON

MORE FLOWERS

•oR WINNIE? OH , MYI

'TOLD ME A60UT
YOU, HE AL.&amp;O 'TOLD

HAS!

SERIOUS.'

MEET HER ...
'TllROLGH

YOU!

StrYICt tht

brid~

could

ant.~

We have 2~ hr. emergency
servlet. ·

. 742.JU7
742·4761
· -Weare tully lllsuricr ·
Ci.':J~Mi, (.{)fiE, ~E...

OJ $it.)(. R:VER IS A

COP-ovr!

APPOLOOSA

STUD SERVICE
$50 Reg. Mares
$40 Grade

608 East Main Street
POMEROY, OHIO
992-2259 tll4: 00
Sunday &amp; Evenings
992·2568

'IOU tlON'T SEEM
. TOO HAPPY ABOUT
'f'OIIR VICTOR'f,

FRANCIS BENEDUM

WfLL, •DAoor"
"" t VIAS
THIN KIN'.-•

AliNIE!

Phone 667-3856

10 ACRES
Home aboul 8 years old, 3
bedrooms with closets, bath,
dining room, Coal Oil Forced
air Heal, lull basemen!,

•TERMITES,
RidoiThtm
will protect any single
clw,llina residence lor

Stucco finish . Possession lsi

1

of June. $9,500.00.

A.CROSS

1. Upper
hand
5. Joel
Chandler

149.50

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Ctll Colli&lt;! 614-452-3151

2 STORY FRAME

- - .

J bedrooms, llf2 baths, front

11. U.S.S.R.
lake

Y-CITY .
EXTERMINATION
· 63fMain5t.
.

and side porches, double
garage, storm doors and
windows, close to shopping,

excellent location . $12,900.00.

Get one's

"IN OUR USE OF

MHD, Af.N MAC&lt;NETIC

.on·v.AAIX CONCREt'i:' de~ 1
right to yO\Jr prolecl.l ;

room, carpeted , paneled ,
liled,
porch,
storage

an d

building . $6,950.00.

easy.

OR C.RAVITATIONAL
PULL IS AMPLIFIED
MILLIONS OF TIMEs:•

Free, '

estimates. Phon, 992·32U.~t
Goegleln Rea~y.Mix Co.; ~
Middleport, Ohio.
· · ·

MAKE AN OFFER
2 story frame, 6 rooms, 3

6.JO..tfc 1 •

neigh -

'I t

~S-;;:£;;-W~IN~G;:-:M';':A:":C::'
· H:::lN:':'E~~~
· . ~R"."t-pa..,.tr' :
service, all makes .. 992·2284. 1
' T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.!'
1'1. Authorized Singer Sales and I'
;} ,Service. We Sharpen Scissors: '
.,,
3-2'/·lfC t',
Brick St ., 5 rma . ~bath, or
•
· :I!
set up as two op,omplete slE US FOR : Awnings, storm •

WE HAVE IMMEDIATE
SALE FOR ALL TYPE
HOMES AND FARMS,
CALL TODAY.
HENRY E. CLE~AND SR.
REALTOR
SIX ROOM house, 133 BuHernut
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 1137 ·
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus.
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
11·21·flc

with extra lot,
trailer .

tabte for

doors and windows. carports,.:
marquees, aluminum sld~ng
and railing. A. Jacob. sales "
representative. For free
..est I mates, phone Charle~ :;

;.
Carry .ou t and ,drlve·in located In Pomeft}:l Showing
exeellent returns. ~

.. &lt;
Many other lfsti'nu on
homos and bustnus spots.

Lisle, Syracuse, V .
Johnson and Son, Inc.
J.2.ffc
.

TERRY

v.,-.·

:14. Model for

Aows

3. Country
under
military
rule
4. Slippery
5. Capital

¥~smania

Women's

10. More ex·
orbitant
16.. Birth·
mark
19. Relish
ZO. Roll
the

Lib ·
25. Painful
27. Lurch
30. Elevate
31. Barm
33. Trim
36. Sunder

23.

37.

g~:,Sned

~!~'s

I (
LNOBEEG

I

~~ ~~~~(J~'-l~l~l-1
MOAPED
f:, ..J

23. Picked
25. Up till
now
28. Grant a
lease
27. Simpleton
1!8. Gaelic
29. Highway
branch

~

&amp;TI'I&lt; 10 'THE
CONDUC10R!

Now

arr~~~~~t the clrcleclleiten

I
,d .~~=to=fjorm
.
..noon.
':41'-lf--~~~~~~
C=r~:~i~'i~~~
--+-+-! I
l'rillltt SIIIISUIISWIIIIIn J D ( l I I l )
,.,-+-+-1-

aucreoted
the abon
thebyourprltt1111wer,
u

(Aatwcn
Ye1terday'•

Jumble, GAUZE

le~HrrowJ

PANDA IAMIOD ENTAIL

WfiA1'5 THAT 7

crowns

37. Operatic
air
38. Intact
39. Diana or
Lanny

DAILY

CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:

AXYDLBA.A.XR
iJr LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two· O's, etc. Single l•tters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of lhe words are all
hinls. Each day lhe code letters are different .

-:-:-:-:-=.....,.----1_1._7...,.1f,c:t.!l. r'DE~L WHEEL ollghment·
MODERN Jor4bodl~ homo:
localtdatCroura.dl, Rl. m. '
Phone 992·3061,
Complttt lrclnt Inti service •
.tune up lfld brjlt(o service: :
Wheels balanced iloc.
All
w.qrk
tro•lcally.
t3 BE
uarantoed.
Re.. onl,lel
'"· Phon• 992-3213.
,.
•.'
7·27·1fc

CRYPTOQUOTES
· KO

CEYAY'M

MYAGJTC

I

.

feet

tlnleramble thOle four Jumblu,
one letter to ...h oquare, to
form four ordinary wordo.

candidate
33.-.Cam·
brian
34. Scottish
explorer
315. Papal

9'12-fa;(:

. 12·30-Hc ~

gibbon
16. Lambkin's
cry
17. Give
(Scot.)
18. Newspaper
employee
ZG. Break
11. Seaman
U. Whet·

DOWN
1. Symbol
of
America
2. Have cold

JJW/Ml]3ltJ];::t::!!:O -t.c

6. Region
7. Slower
(mu'!o)
8. May, 1793
to August,
1794, in
France
9. Where
the
Wabash

3lA. A.

·t

WMP0/1390

~~;iUM,;:";;:Eie:l]i;GL£DJ
U, Happen
~
15.
Malay

40. Become
low·
· pitched
41. Stew

stone

RU TLAdND - 6 drobaomh house,
.:.·
1aun ry room an
1 , paved
drive and carport. city water ~~~~:.~_~•~li~n:gs~l~or:..:_F=or~m~•~•:~Jd 'L .RRISON'S tV 1·nd Antenna:,;
Jl'll'
and gas, garden, large yard,
excellent location . Phone 742·
·
Service. Phone 992-2522. . 1:
S0-45.
60X12, 1-bedrooin, all · electrlc ; ~
(&gt;.11»tfc 1•
air
conditioned,
lx20
ft.
Porch
·
.
•:
21.·3fc and aluminum awning , '.I#.CKHOE AND DOZER work :'"
--:---:---:---- -- 3,·_
HOUSE. 1641 Lincoln Heights.' aluminum skirting, com. teptlc tanks Installed.~ :
Ca ll Danny Thompson, 992. , 1P1el1e11y ~~~p, Beautiful, (BUll Pullins. Phone
1196.
oca on. vm"'r '-"lng state. ' •
. .. ol.2s.tft
• 18 11
Phone 949-•892 ot'lf92·5272. · 1 ·-. r;
-·
:
:;::;
.
:;::::;;·
-;::"~~;,;;;;;;,:::.;
..
, _ · c.
' 1·1D.Ifc, AUTOMOBILE Insurance been'
HOUSE In Lonn B0 It
cancelled?
Lost
your
985·352'1.
•
orn, pnone ~NICE ' 2.'story'-h~
wllh" tufi: operator's llcense'l call.tn., ·
1·28·flc
basement, 2 lot
forced , 29M.
·:
--------air furnace. Nliii-, Pomeroy.j
6·15-tfc &gt;
Elementary Sclllil. Phone
·'
992-7384 10 .,.. .
,,

'j,

bearings
U. Bacterium

DICK TRACY

Zanesville, Olllo

I'll STORY BRICK
2 bedrooms, bath, dining

~
~

mnN

Bl.AMIIJI, 'lOUR

REGISTERED

CLELAND
REALTY

ON YOUR DIAL

'TRANQUILIZERS! / "''"""

Ill IS 1$ GETTING-

ME 'lt;JU HAD A
GORGEOUS
DAUGHTER. I
WAS HOPING
t06ETTO

oround. No inoHtr what
nltd. Complete roof or
ropolr. Interior or
Ctlllnt
Siding,
(amplote Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
D•y Number'992·2550

COLLECTORS : HOLZER MEDICAL
DE.DICATION COINS .. .999+pct. SILVER $1.
992.JJ25 HELEN L TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE

To Yoii

MUST I!IE' TAI&lt;IN'

240 Uncoln St.
Middleport, Oliio
Dlla Anthony Plumbing
hove • complllt Homo

,

good

5~1!

(OULP... HE'
CERTAINLY

WE ARE A LAND AND REAL ESTATE BANK . PUT
YOUR PROPERTIES IN OUR LISTING FILES FOR
BEST RESULTS TRY US, WE MEAN BUSINESS.'

bedrooms ,
borhood.

HELLO"

YOU HAVEN'T SEEN
OSCAR LA'TiiLY !
HASN'T HE GR0Y&lt;N
A LOn r.-:=-('
YES ...

WEATHER ROOFING

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

WATE!roi!ESS!

'TO HER!

For Appoin,tment
Phone 949-2803

110 Mechanic Street

HI, MISS

'---r---r GoNNA SAY
11

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. - Broker

business.

I'M GOING ON
AN UNDERCOVER
ASSI&lt;QNMENT. ..

-GUI\RANTEEI)....;

·Ideal for metll
place - '
with or wllhou kitchen
privileges.
Individual
ring
WHI seat up to :, ,; people. ·

Pho

I WANT 10 E!LENO IN
'---, · WllH lHE OlHER
WOMEN ...

c, 1911 t, HU, lA(

t.~ostAIIJ.!!:!~an

:

--Real Estate For Sale

That Li&amp;tenl
12' • 14' • 2.4' • WiDE

EVE!t'l TIME l SCHEIIIJLE
AN EAAM, TWii CLASS CALLS .
FOR A ~E~ERENDUM

M8inttniRCI".

OOLONIAL
AUTO BODY

The Station

Broughlon's Ice Milk Ice
Cream , Gal. $1.19, while
polaloes so lb. bag $1 .59,

l!UT 1 HAVE lD WEAR
lHE CURLERG,
56f E!J..OTT£R.

·,

light run on gas or electric;

Found

MONEY . Monday , Mar ch 13, 10

..

MA~INE

From the 11rgest

lrailer, 1 bedroom, 10
CHICKE N Barbecue Easter SMALL
miles nortlh of Pomeroy - $65 1971 SCOTTY Camper, never
Su nday , April 2, from 11 a.m.
a monlh; phone 992·7479.
used, refrigerator and stove
to 5 p.m . at the Racine Fire
3·22·11c with oven; refrigerator and

Generation Rap

close

,•

,.992-3975
Balance $79.56 . Use our
budget terms. Call 992·7085.
3·12·6fc SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller'
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph .
USED Norge refrigerator, good
662-3035.
condition, Harold Boston, Rt.
2·12-llc
I. Reedsville, Ohio.
3·12-3tc
INTERIOR and exterior
BOAT, motor and trailer . Phone
pain ling. R.I. Dubbeld. phone
667-3031.
741·5825.
3·22·6fc
J.20·51c

also has heal ; phone 742·3005.
3·22·9fc FIRST FLOOR, furnished I
bedroom apartment, phone
households. Write M. 0 .
3·22·3fc
LOSE weight with New Shape
992·3874.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy . Ohio.
3·17-lfc OLD trailer about 8' x 20'.
Tablets. 10 day supply only
Call 992-6271.
THE BRADBURY School PTA
$1.49 at Dutton Drug Co .,
suitable to place on river.
3·16-ttc
will have a Spaghelt i Supper,
Middleport and Nel son Drug TRAILER, Brown's Trail er
$400; phone 991·5786.
Thursday, Ma rch 23. 1971
Store, Pomeroy.
3·21·6tc
from 4:30 lo 7:30p.m. al the
Notice
Court. Min ersvil le , Ohio,
3-20·31
p
Bradbury School. Adulls,
phone 992·3324.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS &amp; Flame
SUO and Children, $1.
3-3-ttc STRAWBERRY Plan is, Charlie
of Hope Perfumes. Human &amp;
Foster near ·Racine · Locks ;
3-11 -3fc FIGHT fa tig ue with Zippies, the
synthetic wigs. No need to
phone
247·2309.
pill
.
Only
$1.98
at
grea
t
iron
::::-:-:-:::-=---:--:--:~
ONE LARGE trailer spa,ce.
leave Meigs or Mason County REDUCE
3·22·6fp
sate &amp; fa st with
Nelson Drugs.
Velma G. · Zuspan , 773-5750,
for lack of money. If in·
GoBese Tablets &amp; E· Vap
3· 17 30fp
Mason, W. Va .
lerested call 992.5113.
8 ROOMS and balh with
"water pills ' at Nelson Drugs .
3·7·18tp basement, double lot, garage
3·7-tlc
3·17·201p PIANO and Organ lessons,
in Pomeroy. Phone 992·5570
- - -- - - Gerald Hoffner. Phone 992·
1h double, fur ·
2
BEDROOM,
after
6 p.m. or anytime
3815.
ni shed on 4th &amp; College in
weekends.
3·9·121c
Syracuse. Phone 992·2749.
3·22·6fp
3·1S.Jfc
CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE.
"STAR" kills rats qui ck ly ,
Racine will have available
Sure. 2'12 lbs. $1.69; Ebers·
April lst, pansies, mums and Auto Sales
By Helen and Sue Bottel
bach Hdwe., Sugar Run Mills,
geraniums.
3·19.tfc 1965 BUICK WILDCAT, 2 door
Pickens Hdwe., Mason .
ACOSTLY CHANGE OF MIND
3·19:30tp
hardtop, 1 local owner, ex .
Dear Helen and Sue :
cellenl
condition,
good
tires,
CHECK with Kuhl 's, firsl for
extra good finish . Phone 992 - ~HOWAL TER'S Wet Pet Shop,
low-priced, guaranteed apI had plans for a large wedding. My five bridesmaids gave
Chesler, Ohio, Phone 985.3356.
2143 or 992·2142. S795.
pliances and used furniture.
me three showers, with many lovely gifts. They also put deposits
Tropical fish and supplies.
3-16·6TC
See listing in Sunday Sentinel.
Stop in and compare.
of $25 each on their gowns, which were specially made and can't
Kuht S. Bargain Cen ter. Rt. 7,
3·1·271p
" at the caution light," Tup·
be· returned.
pers Plains, Oh io. Open to 6 For Sale
Then - I realized I didn't love the guy and broke owp.m ., closed Mondays. Phone 8 X35TRAI LER, converled into DOUBLE KNIT Fabric - S3.50 .
engagement.
camper .t ype home ; plus
$3.75 per yd . Pass school at
667·3858.
allached new bathroom and 2
Tupper s Plains, 5 miles to
3·10·61c
It's three months later and my new guy is from a neighboring
bedroom building; can easily
county road 50 then 2 miles;
city. We've made different friends. We're planning to be
be moved ; ideal for the
1211 to Eden Ridge near
OUTDOORSMAN · WhO wants
church is county road then 111
married. I had a feeling things were going this way, so I didn 't
a good, bul cheap dwelling a!
mile. Phone 378-6276.
FERTILIZER
return the shower gifts and put off a decision on the $25 deposits
le.
Phone
Frank
3·17·6fp
a
campsi
Order now . ge t early
(which I know I should refund to my girl friends). My wedding
Gheen,
949·4651
,
or
Carl
discount. Bag , bulk and
Gheen, 741·5841.
GOT AN EYE FOR A BUY?
dress is still at the shop, waiting.
liquid
fertilizer
Take
3·22-6tc
Zenith Floor Sample Sale .
delivery from our area
Now the bombshell: my fiance doesn't want anything in ow- - - - - -- - Color, Black and White,
warehouse at Pomeroy .
wedding that will remind him of my last engagement. That
BEEGLE pups, 6 months old, Stereo. Brand new 72 Zenith
TV, Stereos and a few 71's ;
$15 male and female, phone
ASK
ABOUT
COMPLETE
means I must choose new bridesmaids, return all the gifts and
All cab inet sty les; some units
CUSTOM SPRAY SERVICE
742·3656.
just start all over!
J.22·101p
are slightly scratched; all are
- - - -----pr iced to sell. See them
Besides being out a lot of money for the gowns, I also ca n't
Order Your
tonight
. Ridenour TV &amp; Ap.
Seed Corn Now
1968 16 FT. SHASTA trailer,
face the hassle of returning all those presents when there's going
p!
iance.
Chester, Ohio, phone
sleeps six, with patio awning,
to be a wedding, after all. What must I do? - UNCERTAIN
985·3307
.
excellent conditio n , S900;
POMEROY
3·17·61c
CINDY
phone 949·2163.
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr.
3·21 ·3fp
Phone 992·2181
Dear Cindy:
2 RIDING horses, I pony, 2
I can understand why a man might feel strange, being the
saddles, Arnold Grate, phone
SPECIAL- Showalter's Wet
Employment Wanted
742·4211 days and 742·5501
only replacement in an already planned, showered, and outfitted
Pet Shop, Chester, Ohio, 10
evenings.
gallon aquarium $5.75.
wedding. But he'd save a tremendous lot of trouble if he'd accept DRY ·wALL Finisher con ·
3·19.6tc
3·21 ·6fc
your arrangements. After all, bridesmaids, gowns, etc . are the
tractor . R. I. Dubbeld, phone
742-5815.
!ride's choice, and I rather imagine the girls who were to serve
puppies, Silver Toy,
3-20-5tc TROPICAL FIS.H, fancy POODLE
Park view Kennels, Phone 992·'
in your first wedding party are old and dear friends.
-------guppies, angels and breeders,
5443. .
Beltas and supplies. Phone
A3 for gifts. Those from your former fiance's friends and PART TIME secretary ; typ ing,
8·15-tk
992·5443.
relatives shOuld be returned - they're long overdue.
shorthand. office machines
11-30.1fc
skills ; in your place of em.
Your own special people will probably want you to keep their
Mobile Homes For Sale
ploymenl or my home. Phone
1966
HARLEY .DAVIDSON CASH paid for all makes and
shower presents for the next try - and let's hope it takes ! After
991·5427.
Sprint, $300, 2 rid ing mowers,
all, this saves planning additional parties .
3·16·61c
models ot mobile homes.
$25 and SIOO, phone 985.3833,
Phone area code 61.4·423·9531.
Anything to add, Sue? - HELEN
Harry Brown, Chester, Ohio.
3·16·6tc
Dear Cindy:
3-19·6fp
Wow! I don't suppose it would help to say you should have
been sure in the first place. What a Iotta hassling when you
OOULD he nothing but happy.
Your new man friend sounds pretty self&lt;entered or insecure
to insist that you get rid of ally our old memories - even your old
friends. H he doesn't cool it - well, maybe this is a preview of
what your married life will be.
Tell him he has YOU, so why not go practical and accept
your former plans? Think of the money you'll save for your
honeymoon , if you don 't have lo buy a new dress or make refund'&gt;
on five others. - SUE
Dear Rap:
I'm almost 18, a girl in my last yea r of high school. Af.
terwards, I plan on working for a while, saving my money to buy
a van. I want lo travel around America. This, because I MUST
learn who I am and how I affect others. It's hard to express the
ldnd of longing inside of me, but I want to be free and live life to
the fullest, know all types of people- LIVE .
My parents think I'm crazy. They're into this old drag of:
education, work, stay
to home , meet a nice boy and marry
him, then produce grandchildren .. . and they think a big wedding
is what·every girl should dream of most. Laler maybe; not now!
llove and respect my folks - they've given me everything to
make me happy. Must I repay them by giving up MY dream ? LONGING
Dear Longing :
Your parents are understandably fri ghtened about a young
girl tootling 'off on a cross-country van trip, because they're
thinking in terms of "right now." It's hard lo Visualize their chick
as anyone other than a 17-year-old schoolgirl, whet eas, at 20
(when you can afford the odyssey), you'll be mature enough to
handle it.
Hyourdream lasts, then I think yoil should go out and pw-sue
it. Everybody needs dreams - to strive for and to realize . Enjoy !
-HELEN
Dear Longing:
Your van trip sounds fun . I might even join you, if you 'll drop
by in a couple of years or so. (And thanks, Mom , lor your okay,
thougb I'll het you and Dad would "be frightened about THEm
chick," too. )
lt'syour life and your dream . Live it' - SUE

OF 'IOR'N
GARDEN
LOWEEZ'I?

( IIJW·,~

I JESTSORTA
THAT'S WHAR I ·HID
M'l BUTTER·AN'-AIG
MONEY

'

DID '4E EVER

GIT THAT LA'Z.'I HUSBAND

Business

GALLON water tank, SSO.
WOMAN to do spring cleaning. 1100
CaH Waller Cleland of the
Write C· O The Dally Sentinel,
Racine Fire Department at
Box 72'/.E, Pomeroy, Ohio.
949·3471.
.
3·21·6fc
3-12-41c

green f inish .

Pt~neroy

~ IN 'THUNDER

.

~anted

Enlist now - stay home until
after graduation. Guaranteed
assignments to Europe,

St. Wag on . Loca l ow ner, good tire s. std . trans .. radio.

25 Per Cent Discount on pa ld

ads and ads paid within 10 '
days.
CAIID OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

Help

esultsl

-----~-"'-

1965 CHEV . V.s

RATES
For. Want Ad Servit.e

.

MPHYCEKTD

. (;. BRADFORD, AucllonMr
Complete ·Sorwlce
Ph.,. 9-49·3121 .
Racine, Olllo
Crltt Bradford

JTXCEKTD

EJCYM
OPA

CP

CEY

J
UP

ZVIQKR
KC ' M

ZVIQKR .- NKT

EVIIJAU
Yeslerdty's Cryptoquote: PROSPERITY IS SOMETHING
THE RUSINESSMAN CREATED FOR POLITICIANS TO
TAKE CREDIT FOR-BRUNSWICK (GA.) PILOT

"""'------'-.......:5:...:·Hie :

jf': 1072 KinK fo'\•11tUre11 Syndirnle, Inc . ~

'

I

61\I'E ME ~OUR J.IAND,
AND I'LL SHOW '&lt;'OU ..

THE~'RI? FVN
TO HOLD!

�:10- The D.uy Sllntlnel, MiMepoll.l'\iiiWi Oj.
'

'

o.. ~Weh 22, 1172--

One Missing;in Robbery, Kidnaping

Marijuana Commission Asks
Laws on Use he Lightened
·-

.·

WASHINGTON (UPI)-The
National Commission on Mari·
Juana and Drug Abuse today
recommended removal of
federal and state restrictions
against th~ persooal possession
and private use of marijuana,
but said pot is not harmless and
its use should be discouraged.
"Throughout the commission's deliberations there was a
recurring awareness of the
possibility that marijuana use
may be a fad which, if not
institutionalized, will recede
substantially in time," the 13member panel said in the first
of two scheduled reports to
President Nixon and Congress.
It will report next year on drug
abuse in general.
The report, "Marijuana : A
Signal of Misunderst.anding,"
recommends a policy of confinement of marijuana to the
home and official discouragement of its use.
It also said intennittent or
experimental use of marijuana
carried only a minimal risk to
public health and in general the
whole controversy has •ballooned out of proportion.
Panel Strikes Mlddle Path
The panel, chaired by Raymond P. Shafer, former governor of Pennsylvania, appeared
tD strike a middle path between
those who want complete
legalization of marijuana, and
those, such as the President,
who categorically oppose its
legalization.

Muskie
(Continued from page I)
defeating Dakin Williams,
attDrney brother of playwright
Tennessee .Williams, for the
right to take on GOP Sen.
Charles H. Percy.
The governor and state's
attorney 's races threatened
Daley's usually unbeatable
Chicago
Democratic
organization with its greatest
embarrassment in almost 40
years. However, there were
immediate indications
Hanrahan and Daley could get
together again.
Hanrahan, Daley's protege
until four months ago, said,
"No one should construe this
victDry as any kind of defeat
for any political organization."
Daley said he would support
Hanrahan and Walker, too, il
necessary. ''There is no rna~
chine," he said. "The people
have -spoken. You win them
and you lose them."

3 BR
HOME
ON YOUR LOT
I car garage. brick front
wa ll to wall carpet.

ONLY $13,750
We specialize in

v.lnyl

and

aluminum,

steel

siding ;

f1berg tas. bri ck and stone;

complete line of res identia l

and commercial roofing ;
remodel i ng ,
b u il d ing,

suspended ceilings , interior
and ex ter ior painting; co m .
plete line of Ma sonry work . All

Nixon tDid a news conference
In May that "even if the
commission ,does recommend
that it be legallzed, I will not
follow that recommendation."
Specifically, the panel
recommended what it called
decriminalization ," which
would allow possession of pot
for personal, private use, but
would relaln criminal controls
on its production, distribution
and public use.
At the slate level, where
most criminal prosecution of
marijuana laws takes place,
the panel would impose only
fines for public use, except for
disorderly conduct associated
with marijuana lntoslcation
which would carry a recom·
mended penalty of up to 60
days in jail and-or a $10 fine.
Uniformity Called For
The panel agreed with Nixon,
who called Tuesday for uniformity In slate laws. It said the
cultivation, sale or distribution
for profit and possession of
marijuana with intent to sell
should remain a felony .
Private distribution of small

Five Churches
Cooperating

For Holy ,Week
Five Middleport churches
will hold Community Holy
Week services next week at
7:30 each evening except
Thursday.
The services will be at the
Middleport Church of the
Nazarene. Providing special
music each evening will be the
First Baptist Church on
Monday, Heath . United
Methodist on Tuesday, the MI.
Moriah Baptist on Wednesday,
and the First United
Presbyterian on Friday.
Speaking assignments include the Rev. Robert T.
Bumgarner on Monday, the
Rev. Audry Miller on Tuesday,
the Rev. Dwight Zavitz,
Wednesday, and the Rev.
Henry Key, Friday.
Each of the participating
congregations will observe
Maundy Thursday at their
respective churches.

Two Draw Fines
Two defendants were fined
and three others forfeited
bonds in the court of Middleport Mayor John Zerkle
Tuesday night. Fined were
Harry D. Smith, 65, Mlddleport, $10 and costs, intoxication, and Keith Woods,
Middleport, $5 and costs, line
suspended, pennitting a dog to

~atistaction .

We 11re fu l ly
IOS ured tor your protection . J2
N. 2nd . 992 .3918 .

ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

Forfeiting bonds of $30 each
were Leo Young, 43, West
Columbia, and William Black,
25, both posted lor lntosication,
and Michael P. Gravely, 21,
Columbus, for
expired
oper~tor's license.
JOB RATES DOWN
COLUMBUS (UP!) - All
eight major Ohio cities reported a decline in employment
levels between January 1971
and January i972, the Ohio
State University Center for
Business and Economic Research reports.
The center, in its Tuesday report, said the largest drop, 13
per cent, reported by the
state's construction industry.
City-by-city decreases included: Cincinnati, lOper cent;
Akroo, 2 per cent; Canton, 8
per cent; Cleveland, 3 per
cent ; and Columbus and
Youngstown each I per cent.
Man·-hours worked In
January decllned 5 per cent
from the corresponding month
last yea,r.

RABIF.S SHOTS NEEDED
C"~LUMBUS (UPI) - Ohio
pet ··.•ners have been urged to
M&lt;.
I
have their dogs 'and cats imI" Tho way the dollar h today,
munized immediately since the
t'• ju1t a1 well maney dDun't
state appears Ill be heading
on treu. '( It would chtootnf
into a second year of a longntl9t-.borhood)''
term upswing In animal rabies.
money doesn't

grow on trees- but, money
home
im spent on
provements w ill increase
the va lue (and comfort) of

MEIGS lHEATRE ,
Tonight &amp; Thursday
March22-23

your home. See the "THE
FRIENDLY ONES" at

NOT OPEN

THE
POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK COM·

PANY for all your home

Friday &amp; Saturday
March 24·25
NtG.HT OF

improvement needs.

OARK SHADOWS

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO. ~
The Dept. Store of Building
Since 1915.

amounts of Pc&gt;t, and private
possession for personal use, no
longer should be offenses, It
said.
Public possession of one
ounce or less would not be an
offense but the marijuana
would be subject to seizure.
Public possession of more than
ooe ounce would be a criminal
offense punishable by a fine of
$100.
Public distribution of small
amounts of pot not Involving a
profit, and Its public use, each
would be punishable by fines of
$100.

The first American chess
champion was :ID·year-old
Paul Morphy, who captured
!irst place in a tournament
held in New York City in
1857, the World Almanac
recalls. Morphy also won
the Grand Tournament of
the First National Chess
Association in.England and
France in 1858.

News . . • in Briefs

(Continued from page I)
ground along Highway 7. The drive includes a pair of task forces
launched tDward the highway from opposite sides of the Dog's
Head region northwest Ot Saigon.

WASHINGTON - COLUMNIST JACK ANDERSON today
released a stack of confidential documents allegedly chronicling
efforts by International Telephone &amp; Telegraph (ITT) Ill keep
Marxtat Salvadore Allende from becoming president of Chile.
The photocopies docwnents Included accounts of meetings hetweeq officials of ITT and contacts at the Central Intelligence.
Agency, the White House, the State Department and the Chilean
military establishment.
They included several det.atled reports recommending a
widespread ITT effort to enlist other U. S. industries in Chile In a
campaign to bring about the country's economic collapse. The
documents - 82 pages in aU - spanned a period between Sep.
!ember and November of 1970 when Allende became the first
avowed Communist elected to lead a nation in the Western
Hemisphere. ITI has a $95 million Investment In Chile.

FIREMEN CALLED
Pomeroy firemen were
called to Burllngham at 12:52
Tuesday to extinguish a brush
fire near the residence of
Leonard · Hoffman. At 10:17
p.m. Tuesday, the Pomeroy E·
R unit answered a call to the
Leonard Lunsford home on old
Route 33. Lunsford who was ill,
was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital . and admitted.

-l
.

1

Till·:
F.\ \111 .Y~ .
!..\\\ 'll.h ..

I

Y
C.

Poisoning Child's Mind
..Your father is a mean, na!ty
man. Stay away from · him or
he will whip you with a great
big strap."

Laura, recently divorced, kepl
drumming this warning into ber
five·year-old son. She had been

sivon custody of the child at the

CHILD HELPED
The Middleport E-R squad
&amp;nswered a call to the Eugene
Morrison home on Beech
Grove Road, near Rutland, at
11:53 p.m. Tuesday where
three-year old Ronnie McCoy
was
having
difficulty
breathing. He was t.aken Ill
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Oxygen was administered
enroute.
Pleasant Valley Hospllal
Admissions: Vinton Cossin,
·Leon ; Mrs. William Filson,
Russell Wears, Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Eugene Oonch, Henderson; Tane Perry, Buffalo;
Mrs. William Morgan, Apple
Grove; Doris McCune, lm'rY
Angel, New Haven.

Pollee' said Joseph Sacher,
slatlons and kidnaped four
attendants. Three were 21, whO had been m the job 1esa .
released unharmed and the than a week, II atilllllllllna.
Authorities also aald Earl
other is still missing.
IAidlow, 64, In nearby rem.
perance, Mich., an operalor'•of
'
a store, had also apparenpy
been robbed and kidnaped and
was later found dead early
today,
One of the three attendants
released wu Craig Butler, :M,
NEW YORK (UPI)-Rep. August and has since cam- who said the man's sho!glm
Ogden R. Reid, a life~ong . paigned as a candidate for the "looked llke a cannon."
Republican whose family has Democratic nomination for
"He told me Ill get In the
been closely connected with the President.
car' " ' said Butler.
. "I was
party since its pre-civil War
founding, announced IDday he
is becoming a Democrat
because he opposes 'the
direction ' the GOP has taken
under President Nixon.
Pomeroy municipal funds s:s penditures, $11,471.40; sanitary
The former president of the
of
Feb. 29 showed a balance of sewer construction, no
defunct New York Herald
Tribune, who has served five $92,262.86, according to the receipts, no expenditures,
report of aerk Jane Walton $S.r.B. Total receipts, disburterm~ in Congress as a
submitted
to Pomeroy Council sements and the balance In
Republican, ssid he will seek
Monday night. Receipts, active funds respectively, were
rHiection as a Democrat.
$18,949.01,
disbursements
and clerk's $21,125.42,
Reid, 47, a vocai critic of the
Nixon administration, recently balance, respectively in active $77,130.49.
There were no receipts or ,
att.acked the President for his funds were :
General, $7,630.7f, $4,$81.29, expenditures In Inactive funds.
veto of the day care bill In an
$10,32U5;
sewer, $4,566.81, Totals In these funds were,
article for Redbook magazine.
In a statement prepared for a $2,332.33, $22,768.53; boat dock,
news conference, Reid said he no receipts, no expenditures, Driver Escapes
would not support Nixon's re- $702.95; lire department, no
election and that he felt the receipts, $188.66, $1,425.39;
Republican leadership "is no cemetery fund, no ~celpts, Serious Injury
longer In the mainstream of $371.47, $236.29; street fund, no
Stephen Robert Stumbo, 21,
receipts, $2,367.18, $6,647.23;
American llfe . '
Gallipolis, escaped injury
"! believe that I cannot, in state highway, no receipts, Tuesday morning In a single
good conscience, remain $500, $2,022,01; utility, no car aceldent at 8:30 on Bob
within the party," he said. receipts, $858.54, $13,662.73; McCormick Rd.
"The Democratic majority has water operating, $7,483.90" The Gallla-Melga Post State
shown greater responsiveness $7,636.46; water improve- Highway. Patrol said Stumbo
no
receipts,
to the needs of all the people. ment ,
lost control of hls car which
"It has displayed the ability no expenditures, $3,896.96; went left of the center and
to tolerate dissent, the strength $15.61; guaranty meter, $'300; turned over on Its top, The
to undertske reform, concern $113.08, $3,950.66; parking vehicle was demolished. No
with justice and equality and meter, $1,144 .00, no ex- charges were fOe&lt;!.
the courage to hammer out its
A second accident occurred
positions on the issues in open
at 4:35p.m. on Rl. 7, two and
debate, responsiveness to the
YOUTH KILLED
nine tenths miles south of
people, not ideology."
DAYTON (UP!) - William Raccoon Creek, where an auto
Reid said he and his wife Spurgeon, 16, Xenia, was driven by Kyle Fuller, Jr., 29,
would formally change their etectrocuted late Tuesday Columbus, swerved to miss an
registrations later today.
when he touched a 7,200-volt auto whose driver was
The party change makes power line about 30 feet up a unidenUfled and struck a mall
Reid the second liberal tower at the Greene County box owned by Kenneth Taylor
Republican officeholder In the Park near here.
of Eureka Star Rt.
New York area to defect from
the GOP. Mayor John V.
Lindsay left the GOP last

Reid Family .to
Leave GOP .Fold

MEETING CALLED
The Ladies Auxiliary of
Racine American Legion Post
602 will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday at the post home.
PoUuck refreshments will be
served.

More values from Wrangler

... unconditionally guaranteed, too.

THE HORSEMEN

ELBERFELD$
NEW ANNEX
..
-.
114 East Main St. In The Middle Block

Actually, her ex·huaband wu
devoted to the boy. When be
found out about Laura's tactics,
be haled her into court. The
judge took the matter so seri-

. HOMOGENIZED SPRED SATIN
Gallons ................ Sale r
275 Quarts................. Sale 2"

Sportswear

condemns 01implanting in his
tender mind the seeds of hate
and the cankerous beginnings of
malice toward those whom bD
should cherish."
Likewise the law frowns on
the use of ihe child as a. pnwn in
financial bargaining. For ex-

ample:

Second Floor

.

tled her ex-husband to their
small daughter. But she also let
him know that she would stop
as soon as he agreed to a larac
cash settlement.
.
Again, a court denounced ber
tactics and switched custody
from mother to father. The court
said she had no right to use the
child as a kind of blackmail
weapon for her own benefit.
Of course, in these highly
emotional situations, it may be
difficult for a court to separate
£act from fiction . As a result,
judges sometimes fall back on
solutions that are admittedly less

than perfect.
ln another case, at the time
of the divorce, custody of a
child had been divided between
husband and wife. later, in a
court hearing, each accused the
other of "poisoning the child'11
mind against me."
After due deliberation, the
court decided to le ave custody
just as it was-divided. Even
though this meant exposing the

hil character.

1972 Amc.ri..:&lt;m Uar Association

SPRED LUSTRE SEM"LOSS ENAMEL

gm Gallons
. ................ Sale r
---

;, Quarts ............. .... Sale 'P

325 Quarts .... "' ......... Sille 'P
111 Pints .................. Sale t•
1m '1z Pints .............. Sile 89'
Glidden
--

·.

9.20 Gallons

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

· An estimated one-third of the
customers of the Tuppers
Plalils-Chester Water District
- perhaps 500 homes In Melga
and Athens counties.- were
without water service COO.y as
breaks In lines continued to
plague the. aystem..
.
The first break In a 14-lnch ·
main line was discovered about
5:30 a. m. Wednesday by
Albert Martin, the system's
treatment plant operator, field
englner and supervisor, near
the Lady of LoretfD Catholic
Church between Long Bottom
and Keno. It was believed to
hsve occurred about two hours
esrlier. Water loss was heavy

as between 2,000 and 3,000
gaUons of water a minute
flowed from and emptied four
of the district's seven storage
tanks. These lanks hold from
50,000 . to 200,000 gallons of
water.
:'
A clamp needed for the
repair of the line took hours to
secure but the time was
reduced considerably through ·
the assistance of Joe Nardei,
owner of the Nardel Con·
struction Co. which built the
aystem. Nardei chanced to be
at a supply house In Greensburg, Pa., at the lime of the
break. He oblalned the clamp
and took it to Cambridge, Ohio,

By United Press lnternalioaal
WHEELING, W.VA.- BALTIMORE &amp; OHIO Railroad has
flied legal action stenunlng from Jan. 7 river barge explosion
In Parkersburg that killed two men. The railroad, through its
counsel, Fred L. DaviS Jr., named Melljoy Transportation Co. In
a $S mill!on suit, (lied Wednesday here In U. S. District Court.
Melljoy owned two barges that exploded In lbe OhiQ River,
killing two deckhands aboard the tugboat, "Martin," sending
sllock waves through Parkersburg and cross-r.lver Belpre, Ohio,
andheavUydamaginga B&amp;Obridge. More than 180windows and
storefronts were shattered by the powerful blast that alSo Injured
1i other persons, either by flying glass or In resulting traffic
accidents.
WNOON- THE SOVIET UNION HAS OFFERED China a
nmaggression pledge In a hasty effort to Improve their relations
and undercut Sino-American reconciliation, diplomatic sources
said today. China did not react, the sources aald..
.
They said the Soviets have come forward with a number of
hinls that they are willing to let bygones be bygones and resume
cooperation backed ·by sizable economic assiatance and expert
help. To top It off, Deputy Foreign Minister Leonid Dyichov has
been sent to Palqng, aa head of the Soviet delegation to the
stalemated Ialka with China on their border dispute, With in·
structions Ill offer minor fronUer changes as a starting point for
improved relations. He l!l'rived In Peking Monday.

Endurance House Paint...... Sale J'B

stem
where he was met by Martin
who brought it to the site.
As a result of the first break,
RiverView Elementary School
and Eastern High School were
closed Wednesday . .Schools at
Chester, Tupper!!· ~lains,
Meigs High Scbool and Federal
Hocking, all served by the
district, continued classes.
However, activities requiring
much water were restricted.
Repair of the break, believed
to have been caused by the slip
of a hill where the line was laid,
was completed at II p. m.
Wednesday. The system was
returned to operation and
attempts were ljllllde to refill

Spred Royale Gei·Ao House Paint

Sale 81'

Spred Royale Gel-Flo House Paint

Sale2Glidden Paint Sale . ·A nMx

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
·.,

'

1

PHON£ 992·2156

Wemher
Lows lo!light In the »1 .
Partly cloudy and continued '
cold Friday except cloudy with
a chance of snow flurries In the
estreme northeast secMon.
Highs In the 308 except low 4011
south.

.TEN CENTS

own

the water tanks and lines.
However, at I a. m. today a
12-inch line near Forked Run
Lake broke. Workers were still
on that job late this morning
making repairs.
Martin said that needed
parts were on hand and that
service would be restDred by
late this afternoon, "providing
there are no more problems."
This break was also believed
Ill have been caused by slippage. Change of pressure
resulting from the first break
was believed to have had a
besring.
Martin said it is the first time
In two and a half years that

such major problems have
developed In the system.
Mrs. Edna Wood, employed
In the offices of this system,
said this morning that
residents served by the district
had
been
extremely
cooperative In using only what
water they had too. The water
they are getting now is that
backed up In the lines and what
went Into the storage tanks
during the brief period between
breaks.
All schools served by the
district were operating today
on a limited activity basis, u
far as the use of water is
concerned.
·

~=o~Hrf!.w:::m~~··r,; · ~:s

lntimatwn Hantkd Enemy

I Foreman

PARIS (UPI) - Tbe United Slates told lbe Viet· ~
IUIIIIese Communists today II will not return to tbe ~
negoUatlq !able anless tbey show wlillnglless In ad·
vance to eagase In "meaningfal"lalks on war and peace »

lasu~.'
S. AmbaiSidor WUllam J. Porter told North
VIetnam
tile VIet Coq be wW boycott next week's

Co
i
urse
~ 'Of'£tered

and
!.~
meet1q and agree to meeltllem only when they indl&lt;ate 2

lllro"-~ various cbannell, Including llalson officers, ~1

lbeir~eadlness

to bold "serious discussloDB." The

~.

Americail move, promptly backed by tbe Soutll Viet- ~
IUIIIIese delegation, appeared to be a threat to suspeod ~
llldeflnltely tile • deadlocked three-year-old Vlelnilm ~
peace conference.
,.,

~m~~--~~-!111811811-~0SiHJ&lt;W.~::::j

Mayor Fines 8

ON DISPLAY - These attractive Easter eggs made by Mrs. Howard Nolan are on display
at the Meigs Boodmoblle headquarters on East Main St. Pictured here admiring the decorated
eggs, made entirely of things most families discard, is Sharon Buffington, Bookmobile employee.

Experienced coal miners in
the Meigs-Gallia area may
prepare for mine foreman's
certification in a course to be
held at Meigs High School
beginning April 3.
The two-month course will
conclude just prior to the Ohio
mine foreman's examination
scheduled at the same location
By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
on June~.
Eating decorated Easter eggs can cause such mental
The course will be conducted anguish!
by the American Electric
Hours and hours of creativity crushed with a single blow on
Power System In cooperation the !able edge.lt's enough to make a strong woman weep.
with Ohio University, and all
But, says Mrs. Howard Nolan, "You can eat your eggs and
experienced coal miners are have them too! "
urged to enroll.
· No, she doesn't use the tedious process of "blowing out" !be
Two classes a day are egg, then decorating the shell. She has a quicker and easier
scheduled. Participants may method, which is quite as effective.
sel~t a class fr!lm 12 noon to 3
· Decorated hard bqi)ed,,egp have a tendency to make folks
11:m. ot from 6 to 9 p.m. Both ·wasteful.
They just ~~ around and sppil, said Mrs. Nolan, long
will run four days a week,
time home economics agent at Meigs County, who wen!. on Ill
Monday through Thursday .
The course wiD conclude on explain:
Save the shells as the eggs before laying the sheD down,
June 2.
are
used for breakfast or rub some of the egg white
Subjects to be covered are :
mining methods, instruments baking until several are ac- which has remained In the shell
and apparatus, electricity, cumulated and then "go on the broken edges. Put the
mine gases, ventilation, ex- creative." It's an ideal family shell together carefully and
stand it on end In the egg
plosives, safety, and first aid . project.
When
using
the
egg,
crack
carton until it dries.
A course fee of $20, payable at
the
shell
carefully,
pull
it
Once the shell is dry, you are
registration, will cover
apart,
and
empty
it.
Now,
ready
to begin decorating,
training materials and
equipment.

Egg Problem
at Easter Solved

Mrs. Nolan says. Here per·
sonal creative laste comes ln.
She suggests that the cracked
part of the sllall be covered
first with whatever decorative
materials are selected. White
glue . is recommended as
adhestve.
The sheD can be dec«ated
by covering it with colorful
fabric , paper or plastic,
clipping and overlapping for
neatness over the curve of the
egg. Decorative trims, such as
scraps of lace, rickrack, or
braid, can be added for extra
sparkle. Beads and jeweia can
be glued. oo, deatgna f1'llln
magazines can be applied, and
the eggs can be llllbellllbecl
with wise ~~~~~.,.....,. ...,..:.- .
Once the egg ,' Ia decarated,
then Mrs. Nolan IUQetlts tbat
it be covered witll clel!l' acrylic
or hair spray.· She uaea the
parts of an egg carton to create
little display shelves for the
attractive eggs.
Little expense is Involved,
the season is right, and the
satisfaction of
making
something besuUful can be
yours.

Food
Stamps
Expanded
Cost of
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Welfare Director John E.
Hansan said !&lt;)day 80,000 more
Ohioans will be able to buy food
stamps staring April!; most of
whom are not receiving
welfare payments.
About 60,000 non-welfare
recipients are made eligible for
the st.amps by new Agriculture
WASHINGTON (UPI) Deparlment regulations and
Because of soaring food prices, 20,000 more welfare recipients
the cost of living rose one·half can lake advanlage of the
of I per cent in February program because a family no
sharpest one-month rise since longer will be required to
last summer, the Labor - •.purchase the full amount of the
Department said today.
st.amps at the first of the
The 0.5 per cent Increase In mooth.
the Consumer Price Index,
Several changes have been
which measures retail prices made in the federally funded
across the nation, was the slamp program. Hansan said.
same when baaed on actual
prices and after adjustment for
seasonal variations.
Food prices registered the
s~nm
greatest one-month jump In 14
u eo
years, I. 7 per cent when
seaaonally adusted, with meat
prices accounting for nearly
three-fourths of it. But fresh
fruit and vegetable prices also
were up sharply,
Fifteen hundred rainbow
Not since March, 1958, had
there been a larger one-month trout were placed in Forked
jump. Food prices that month Run Lake Wednesday by the
Department of Natural
soared 1.9 per cent.
Resources, Division of
Wildlife.
Of Ute tot.al - measuring
from eight to 14 inches - 1,000
of the trout were placed in the
lake proper and 500 into the
being borne by Agri-Business stream which feeds the lake.
organizations Interested in
Representing the wildlife
serving the farmers of Ohio. division when the fish were put
Talks are going on now with lnfD the lake was Gary Swope,
several companies Interested Meigs County Game ProtectDr.
In sponsoring lhe service in The fish were from the Kincaid
areas not now receiving the Fish Farm near Waverly.
new market reports.
Swope also announced today
that the fishing and game
The nearest telephone hearing for Wildlife District 4
providing this service to Meigs has been set lor 1 p.m. on
and GaUia Counties is at March 26 at the district. office,
Chillicothe, 614-772-1431. 360 East State St. in Athens.
Similar service may also be Proposed regulations for
obtained from Washington fishing and hunling seasons
Court House, phone 614-335- will be aired. The public is
SIOO.
welcome to attend the hearing .

Living

Soaring

Lake,

Seeded with
1500 Trout

Dial-a-Market Plan Underway

9.95 Gallons

3.15 Quarts

THURSDAY, MARCH 23. 1972

Eight defendants were fmed a motor vehicl~, and Brenda
by Pomeroy Mayor William Hood, Pomeroy, $15 and costs,
Baronick Wednesday night.
speeding,
They were Clinton Payne,
Two defendants who forVIntDn, $10 and costs, failure to feited boods were William
have vehicle under conlrol; Dlnguss, Pcxrulroy RD, $200,
William Huffman, Pomeroy driving while intosicated, and
- -- ·~-:-.:_'lj.;,.!.""o·,·r ·•') -~_: .,..• . · ,~.··· ·."j.;, .. ~
.· .'.t:~'i" " ...... ·
'lto, $'t'o , ina cosi.s; In· $25, permi-111 unlke• .
PAIUII- THE CO~~TIONS tO th~ Paris fDxicat!on; Frank Kraetter, , driver ' to operalt" it' motor
peace talb rejected a new U, S. proposal for.impartial inspection
PornerOj, $5 and costs, passing vehicle, and Betty Glenn,
of prtaoner of war camps today, aaying It was a maneuver In
on a double yellow line; James Oeveland, $25, running a red
Presiden~ Nixon's bid for .!'Hiectton.
. A. Will, Syracuse, $Sand costs, light.
"Presklent Nixon Ia raising Ute so-called prtSoner of war stop sign violation; Mildred
Issue while day and night U.S. bombers are raining thousandS of lhle, Racine, $S and costs,
tons of bomba on the Vietnamese population,includlng old men, failure to yield right of way;
women and children," said deputy Viet Cong negotiator Dlnh Ba Ma,kA. Haley, Middleport, $10
Thlin a prepared speech.
and costs, reckless operation;
Kenneth Dlnguss, Pomeroy
COLUMBUS- THE OHIO GENERAL ASSEMBLY kept up RD, $25 and costs, pennittlng
to operate
a frenetic pace Wednesday by pasaing a revised criminal code, an unllcensed driver
' .
Fenton Taylor, wrestling
creating separate slate departments of mental health and
coach
at the Meigs High
correclloos and eslablishing a legislative welfare auditor.
to
School, spoke on the school's
But legislatDrs stopped sllort of agreeing on a package of
wresUing program when lhe
constitutional changes, which reportedly must be approved
Pomeroy-Middleport ·Lions
today or It will be too late for It to go on the May 2 baUot. A vote of
Oub met lor lunch at the
the public Is needed for It to go Into law. Its provisions Include a
Pomeroy United Methodist
requirement that the governor and lieutenant governor be
Church Wednesday.
elected aa a team, which would prevent a situation such as there
Taylor, who said wresWng
is now with the governor being a Democrat and the lieutenant
A Community Plan to serve has been a part of the athletic
governor, a Republican.
the mentally relarded In three program three years, pointed
counties was unveiled when the out thst Interest Is growing In
Community Mental Health and the program. He described the
Relardation 648 Board met 13 weight classes in which boys
March 16 with Malcolm participate, and using Jim
Under sponsorship of the Kunselman, Lena McKinley, OrebaugH, Chairman, Danner, Daily Sentinel adMiddleport Business and Grace Hawley, Mildred presiding.
.
vertising manager, demonProfessional Women's Oub, Hawley, Nan Moore, Jean
The plan will be submitted to strated illegal holds. Taylor
Mrs. Wilma Sargent as Kelly, Cathryn Ervin, Beulah the Department of Mental pointed out that running and
1 chairman, Heart Sunday
Strauss, Doris Bailey, Bernice Health for funding If the weight lifting are a part of a
collections in Middleport May, Edna Evans, Venetia proposed May 2nd levy conditioning program contotaled $632.72.
Gibba, Debbie Rawson, Chris produces the necessary local ducted in conjunction with
The club today extended Miller, Bronwyn Oatley, Donna funds. The plan Includes wresUing. ·The Meigs High
tb4n~ not only to dooors but to Demosky,
Becky Roush, ouWnes for menial health and squad competed In 14 meets
residents who joined with Sherry Barnhart, Beth menial retardation clinics in with tDurnament participation
members to conduct the lund Vaughan, Laura Hoover, each of the three counties of counting as two meets. The
drive activity, The workers Charlotte HanlnR, Betty Fife, Gallia, Jackson and Meigs.
best record so far lor Meigs
Included: Bell)' Cline, Alwtlda Emma Kay Clatworthy,
The board heard committee was atlained by Roger Pearch
Werner, Pearl Reynolds, Linda· Frances Triplett, Dorothy reports concerning the and Jell Musser who won
Slobart, Kathy King, Loretta Davis, WUma Sargent, Nellie Citizens' Committee lor the second place honors In their
Ours, Farie Kennedy, Freddie Vale, and Edith Jividen.
Mental Health Levy. All weight division In the district
Houdashelt, Grace Pratt, Mary
committees will be organized ~ompeUUon at Ironton.
to begin their respective · Don Pearch, first vice
campaigns by April 1.
president, was In charge of the
The Ohio Valley Health meeting. A board of directors
Services Foundation at Athens meeting of the club was an·
The GalltpoUa Area Jaycees provided adequate jusUficatlon (Jack Farington, Executive nQUilCed for 7 p. m. Mondl!y at
Director) presented the bo8rd The Farmers Bank and
have noted an apparent iB presented,
a check for $500. The money,
misunderstanding between
Gallia Countiails are urged Ill which can be matched with Savings Co. Willoughby Hill
was a guest for the session. He
their organization and what write to "lntereat," P. 0. Box
slate
funds,
is
to
be
uaed
to
accompanied Clarence
appears
to
be
two 60, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 for
develop
the
communi!)'
plan.
Struble.
organizations In Meigs Count)', information ori your Interest.
all sliivlng for a Community
!
Center.
:
In discussion with the groups
it has been detennlned that
Gallla County will function
independently of Meigs
press.
Gene R. Abercrombie, covered slate in the nation.
County. Originally, plans were Director of the Department of
Each report carries a variety
The reports, three minutes In
lor the construction of one Agriculture, today announced length, are updated three times of information: Price and
center In Melp County and one the first phase of a new Ohio a day. In the past a market movement on direct hogs in
center In Gallla County,
market reporting service Is report was·printed and mailed Ohio and other marketing
Marshall Kimmel, district underway in which by simply dally by the Department. In areas having a bearing on the
dlrecfDr, and chairman of the dialing a telephone number a most lnatances the reported Ohio market; Chicago carlot
Gallla County Recreation fanner may oblaln an up-to- prices were at least one day old meat prices; Omaha live
Board, slated that It wollld the-minute price report and before the farmer received cattle; National livestock
appear
further
mlsun- decide on the .apot whether to thern In the mail or read them slaughter figures ; Ohio dally
derslandlngs emt concerning sell or not,
In a newspaper.
grain prices; Umlted feeder
federal funding. He .indica¥
Abercrombie said there are
pig. and cattle Information
.three possible fundmg sources 44 slinllar services being ofRadio and television stations when Umely. Not all reports
were available. All have In· fered In 19 different states. - anyone - can call day· or wiD contain all of this In·
dlcated that consideration Ohio's plans caD for a total of night to get the livestock quotes formation and some will ex·
would be given any county :II state·wlde outlets which will ·ll!ld newspapers can gel the pand to areas not listed.
c~mplell~g applications, make~othe most thoroughly latest report before they go to
The cost of this service is

Joint A.ction Given Up

Spred House Paint ............ Sale J'B

Try on one and see
how it does the right
thing to yqur curves.
No1e the fashion details·
patch pocket1, button front
and flare legs. And it's made
of easy-care rigid denim in II "'
fashion colors. Black, bright
red, brown, camel , fine weave
denim, grape, white, natural, blue
denim, yellow, new blue . Waist
sizes 26%, 27%, 28Y,, 30, 31 Y,, 33
... $6
The perfect topping·our short sleeve,
U·neck pullover in machine washable
100%cotton Swiss rib knit with multi·
color contrasting binding. Navy; red.
purple. S/M/L .. . $5

ater

Collections Were $633

Glidden

9.20 Gallons

An American Bar A11odatlon

public oervlee feolul'tl by Will
Bernard.

and

SPRED URETHANE FLORENAMEL
955 Gallons ................Sale .,.
;, r)Jarts ................ Sale ra

A divorcee constantly belit-

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

Laimch Drive
For Tax Levy

r

of the child against the other, II

VOL XXIV NO. 242

648 Board

SPRED GLOSS ALL PURPOSE ENAMEL
1(F Gallons .............. Sale

tody order, transferrin~ the boy
from hi s mother to h1s father.
As a general rule, the law
condemns effort! by one divorced parent to poison the mind

enttne

.

Story Told

r

ously thal he changed the cus-

'

Wrestling

Glidden

SPRED lATEX SEMI,LOSS ENAMEL

and Ohio S1a1e Bar Atoociallon

GP

PROGRESS NOTED
RACINE - Racine firemen
reported that their fund drive
for the purchase of a new radio
iB progrelllng very well. AI of ·
Monday a total pf "12 had been ·
donated toward the $1,500 goal.

.e

•

Devoted To The lrate~t.l Of 7Jae Meiga-Mason Area

ews•• zn

FIREMEN SUMMONED
Gallipolis volunteer firemen
were called at 3:05 p.m.
Tuesday at the Harry Fellure
fann on Rt. 218. According to
Fire Chief James. A. Nll'lhup,
FeUure was burning a tobacco
bed when a pasaing motori.st
saw the smoke,- became
alarmed and notlOed the fire
department. Four men answered the 30th alarm of the
year.

Matte Flat Latex Wall Paint

button
front
flare
•

The first fedenlly lnipOBed .
income lax wu enacted In 18112 J
, Ill ·help meet the cost of the ·
Civil War and wu pennltleoj Ill .
· expke 10 years later.

•

Glidden

court said at least it gave each

. nochnicolor)
Omar Sharif
Leigh Taylor Young

special street bmd retirement, •.
$1,879.63; bond retlrem~~
$12,918.48, and sewer
repair and Improvement,_.
'$334.28.
.
Receipts, disburaements and
balances In aU funds reapec- ·
lively tolaled $21,125.42,
$18,949.01, $92,262.86.
Parking meter recelpls in
February were $2,199, street
meter receipts, $1,0G6, and
parking lot meters, $1,144. ·

Glidden Paint Sale at

Just Arrived At Elberfelds

BUTION ONE ON ••.

parent "equal time" lo defend

GP

"We' got to ... a park and be.
said •get out on "" lide'•"
Butler related. "He told me be
had· two other IIUYI In lhe ·
trunk, but I tbougbt be popped
hls c:«k.
.
'"lb!!n be popped apen lhe
trunk and tbere nre.lbole two •
other guys," said SUO..
"He kept aaytnc be cool and .
nobody gei.s hurt." SUO. said.:·
"He had the abo!glm laylnc:
right' in my lap."

TEnJRSDAY,FRUOAY,SA~AY

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

meant to tighten her grip on him
by any and all meant.

child to parental crossfire, the

(Tochnlcolorl
David Selby
Lara Parker

pretty~ up and I got IIi 1111:
car.
'

February Balance Reported

time of the divorce, and abe

&gt;j;•

{

TOLEDO (UPI) - .A gunman wearing a ski-mask. an~
waving a sawed-off shotgun
early today robbed four service

run loose.

work guaranteed to cus tomer

TRUE ,

Now You Koow

'

No longer will persons living
Heads of households, either
tDgether be required to be women or men, will not be
related to one another to be required to register and report
eligible. Hansan said that for work regardless of whether
change was largely prompted they are on strike, a
by the use of stamps by requirement llansan said had
communes.
,been virtually meaningless
since practice had shown that
few employers would hire
persons on strike.

Delinquents

. · MeJ.gS
.
Up m
The tot.al tax and special
assessment delinquency in
Ohio, after final tax settlements in 1971, amounted to
$115.6 million, according to a
new study released by the Ohio
Public Expenditure Council.
It should be noted that a
portion of the total tax
delinquency in Ohio can be
attributed to financial dif·
ficulties encountered by the
Penn Central Transportation
Company . Total delinquencies
increased by $20.2 million or
21.1 percent over 1970.
Delinquent !.axes on real
eslate and public utility
property accounted for $16.1
million or 80.0 percent of the
tot.al st.atewlde increase in
1971.
The tDt.al tax delinquency In
22 counties exceeded $1 million
in 1971. It should be noted that
10 counties showed a reduction
in the total lax delinquency
during this period of time.
In Meigs County the lola! lax
and special assessment
delinquency, after final lax
settlements in 1971, amounted
to $259,658. This was an Increase of $34,769 or 15.5 percent
from the total delinquency In
1970. Meigs County'ranked 16th
In the slate when considering
total t.ax delinquencies on a per
capita basis. The . ·total
delinquency In Meigs County
amounted to 13.11 per capita in
1971.

UTJDTading
of
re·· ..

Cables Begun

By Phone Firm
ALBANY - A project to
replace telephone cable
facilities between Albany In
Athens County and Carpenter
in Meigs County is under way,
General Telephone Co. announced today.
Kenley Krinn, Athens
district commercial manager,
said this $67,300 job will
replace some deteriorated
facilities and furnisll ltnes for
growth and upgrading partyline service.
"The
company
Is
engineering each new cable job
to prepare lor the eventual
elimination of eight.party rural
lines," Krinn said. "In the near
future, there wUI be only oneand two-party service In town
and no more than five-party In
the rural area."
.Albany is one ol21 exchanges
in the Athens district. It serves
1,101 telephones In a 90.1
square mile area of Athens,
Vinton and Meigs counties.
AG DIRECTOR KILLED
SACRAMENTO , Calif.
(UP!) - St.ate Agriculture
Director Jerry W. Fielder wu
killed Wednesday when hls
light airplane was hit by
lightning.

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