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Med Student Sees
•

'

General Practice
•

SUPT. MARTIN ESSEX

Essex to Speak
To Rotary Chili
·-· ·- .

..

--

.......

___ _

---

By BOB HOEFLICH
Patients of Dr. R. R.
Pickens, Middleport physician
and chief of staff of .veterans
Memorial Hospital for the past
month have been getting "two
for the price of one," so to
speak.
The bonus thrown Into the
services of Dr. Pickens, who is
also Meigs County Coroner,
has been In the person of
James Hamilton, a third year
•tudent at Ohio State
University's College of
Medicine.
Hamilton is a part of a new
program of the university
through which third year
medical students may get
away from the University
Hospital settiilg to observe the
practice of family medicine.
The program, now man·
dstory, is sponsored by the
Department of Community
Health
on
Preventive
Medici.ne, and gives the
student approaching
graduation a chance to "look
over the shoulder" of a general
practitioner. And who knows?
The whole plan may encoiU'age
him to settle for general
. practice o-ver a field of

Dr. Martin W. Essex, state superintendent of lnstrilctio01
whose family origins are In )sOutheastern Ohio, will make an
Informal address Friday evening at Heath United Methodist
ChiU'ch to the Middleport • Pomeroy Rotary Club.
He will be accompanied by his brother-in-law, Montgomery
Will, retired teacher who Is a native of the Texas Community In
Meigs County. They will be presented to the club by Rotary vice
p:-esident John Will, Mont Will's brother.
Dr..Essex and Montgomery
In recent · years he has
Will, who married sisters of directed two studies In the
Coalton in Jackson County Soviet Union and has counl!llled
(Blanche and Grace Davis), the he11ds of U. S. 'Schools In
each had early tours of . West Berlin and behind the
teaching work in Middleport. lron Curtain. He directed a
Dr. Essex was superintendent national assessment of
of Middleport Exempted vocational edu.catlon In
Schools, and Mont Will taught America In 1967o:68 that became
there.
the basis for .the vocational .
Members of the Meigs Local Education Act of 1968.
Board of Educatron have been
Dr. Ji!ssex has been credited
Invited to join Rotarians In with having had an important
hearing Dr. Essex.
Influence In the state funding
Dr. Essex became state and planning for the new Meigs
·superintendent after a notable High School at Rock Springs.
term as superintendent · of
Akron City schools. Today he
administrates the fourth
largest school enrollment In
GUARDS FmED
the nation. While at Akron he
COLUMBUS (UPI)
was. president a term o~ the U. Fourteen Ohio P.enltentlary
S. Association of School Ad- guards who participated In a
ministrators. He was Man of foiU'-day "sick call" strike
the Year In 1968 of the have been fired and state 91·
Ame.-lcan Vocational ficlals warned that more '
Education Assn.
dismissals may follow.

specialization. Participation In
the plan might .even attr11ct
students to return to Meigs
County after they've received
their medical degree.
Perhaps Dr. Pickens has the
same Ides in mind in his
participation in the program
because he has agreed to accept.other medical students In
July and September.
For the last almost 30 days,
· Hamilton lijls been the shadow
of Dr. Pickens- and for about
seven days a week. He has
been with Dr. Pickens dW'ing
the office hours at the Pickens
Clinic in Middleport and has
·made hospital rounds with the
busy Middleport physician at
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
of which the doctor is chief of
staff. He has accompanied Dr.
Pickens on house calls, and to
round out his experience, even
has gone along on coroner
calls. .
A native of Columbus, Jim
has been home only once since
he started his tour of duty here
with Dr. Pickens and that was
on' a combined businessple11sure trip which gave him
only a few brief hoW's with his
family.

VOL XXIV NO: 246

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'

Two persons were treated for .
minor Injuries following a
· three car accident Tuesday at
the Intersection of State Route
7 and cdimty road Gfhe Meigs
County Sheriff's Dept.
reported.
William H. Davis, 51, Mid·
dleport, was traveling north on
SR 7when a car driven by Mrs.
Eleanor R. Boyles, 57, Tuppers
Plains, pulled from county
road 5 Into Davis' path. After
striking the Boyles car, the
Davis vehicle spun around and
struck a vehicle stopped at the
Intersection of county road 5
and SR 7 under the control of
Edward F. Rickard, 29, Letart,
W. Va. The Davis car also
struck a utility pole.
Mrs. Boyles and a passenger,
Densmore Boyles, each suffered a bump on their heads.
They were taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital by the
Middleport E·R squad where
· they were treated and
released.
Mrs. Boyles was cited to
court for failure to yield right
of way.
There was heayy damage to
the Boyles car and medium
damage to the Davis and
Rickard vehicles. ·
Walter Grueser, Cured Cancer representative from the
American Cancer Society's Meigs County Unit, was greeted
Monday at the 14th Ohio CIU'ed Cancer Assembly and the 1972
Ohio Cancer Crusade Kickoff In Columbus by the Master
~owman, ~b Hope, Chairman of the American Cancer
Society Ohio Division Crusade. The event dramatically
highlighted the fact that most cancers, when detected early
and treated promptly, are cqrable. (Account of meeting on
Page 17 today.)

PASSES 80TH
VIENNA (UPI) - Cardinal
Jozsef Mlndszenty . today
celebrated his 80th birthday,
the first one In the last 23 years
that was not spent in Com·
munist captivity.

BANKS CLOSING
The Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. and the Pomeroy
National Bank will close from
12 to 1:30 p.m. Friday as a part
of the Good Friday observance.

..

POW Camp Changed His Life
The personal story of
splrl tual strength gained
diU'ing his two years In Korean
prisoner of war camps was
related by the Rev. Paul
Hawks, pastor of Grace
United Methodist Church,
GalllpoUs, at a meet. lng of the Meigs 4-H
Junior Lead~rs Monday night
at the Ohio Power Co.
The minister said he
dilcovered in that period of
time the really lmportan t
values in life. And he concluded
It Is important to find IIIICh

values early in life. He said
that while in high school his
objective was to become a
great football player which
was followed by a desire to
become a great Marine. He
enlisted In 1950, went to Korea',
and was captured. '
It was in a prison camp that
he learned he wasn't really so
tough and that he lacked th.e
Inner strength :which could
have .· helped him bear, the
tortiU'e to come. He found the
emotional ·and m~l\.tal impact
of separation from one's
country, family and friends

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 29, 1972

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Two Are
Injured

By United Press Iniernatlooal
WASHINGTON - AN AGRICULTURE DEPARTMENT
report set !ar release ThiU'Sday will show beef cattle prices in the
30 days ending March 15 turned downward for the first time since
last September, according to UPI Firm Editor Bernilrd Brenner. The report was expected to ~dd' new fuel to the growing
controversy over rising retail beef prices and the spread between
farm and ret.ail prices.
Exactly how far average catUe prices slid between Feb. 16
and March 15 will not be known until th.e close guarded monthly
farm price report is released from the Agriculture Department's
"lockup" quarters. Experts here are tentatively predicting, on
the basis of weekly reports from major markets, that the March
15 average for all beef cattle will be 50 cents to $1 per hundredweight below the record-hlgh Feb. 15average of $32.60.

SAN JOSE, CALIF. -ANGELA DAVIS ARRIVED Tuesday
at her trial for plotting to break prisoners out of San Quentin only
to find the day's session called off because of an attempted
Jalll:reak. The abortive escape try In which two hostages were
taken and a prisoner shot and killed Tuesday had nothing to do
with the case of the 28-year-old former UCLA philosophy teacher
except that It occurred in the jail where she would have ~ held
had she not been freed on ball. ·
The two hours of suspense were played out 100 yards from
the courtroom and ended with a sudden shot that sent 500 spectam scrambling to the ground outside the Santa Clara County
Jail where a getaway car had been revved up f1,1r three inmates.

DOCTOR'SSHADOW -Dr. R. R. Pickens, right, has been "shadowed" for the past month
while treating his many patients at his offices and at Veterans Memorial Hospital by James
"Jim" Hamilton, a third yesr medical student atohio State University. Hamilton is a part of a
new program which places students into community medical situations so that they may ob- ·
serve the family physician at work.

Devoted To The lnlereall Of The Meigs-Ma10n Area

ews•• in Briefi

JACKSONVILLE, FLA.- NAVY CHAPLAIN Andrew F.
Jensen, denying charges of adultery with two officers~ wives,
said Tuesday that one of the women had revealed "certain
lesbian" tendencies during marriage counseling. "I didn't feel I
was equipped to handle these problems," Jensen testified before
a court-martial board. He said he r!l(erred Mary Ann CUrran to a
p:-ofesslonal marriage counseling·service.
Jensen, 43, is being tried on charges of conduct unbecoming
an officer on the basis of accusations that he had sexual relations
with Mrs. Curran, 24, and Lora Gulbranson, 40. Jensen denied
each of 19 separate Incidents In which Mrs. Curran said she was
Intimate with him In such places as her apartment and various
motels. He was expected to deny similar accusations by Mrs.
Gudbranson when he resumed testifying today.

Hamilton has only the
highest praise for Dr. Pickens
and is enthusiastic over- his
experiences in Meigs County.
"I didn't find the country
doctor that I expected at all",
Hamilton said.
He had a choice of some 30
doctors with whom he could
h11ve worked for the month.
However, he chose Meigs
County because of its being
located in Appalachia and he
wanted to know the feel of
practicing In a rural community. Patients have been
wonderful towards accepting
him, Hamilton ·reported. Only
In rare Instances has he not
seen each patient making up
Dr. Pickens' clientele.
Dr. Pickens is equally enthused over the program.
' "I have enjoyed it thoroughly
and it's really kept me on ~Y
toes. Jim has asked many
questions, all of which have
been quite beneficial".
Through Dr. Pickens,
Hamilton has been able to
observe how the family doctor
can organize his practice so
that he can give proper attention to his patients and still
(Continued on page 10)

tremendous.
·n was the experience of eight
monthS in an eight by four foot
structure In solitary confinement without toilet
facilities, a bed, even a win·
dow, existing on food of one·half bown of mush a day that
turned him to prayer. God
granted him inner strength.
From that time he never again
felt along, the Rev. Hawks
said.

"never turn from them."
The biggest decision of life
involves turning to God,
"which can only bring good,
because God is good," he said.
New officers of the cliili
installed by Alan Holter and
Teresa Chichester were Ed
Cross, president; Steven
Stanley, vice president; Vicky
Carr, secretary; Daniel
Midkiff, treasurer; Marcia
Carr, publicity and Lee Hysell
and
Cindy
Domigan,
He encouraged the 36 junior recreation. Refreshmen~ were
leaders attending the meeting served by Cindy Domigan and
to set their values now 11nd Marcia Carr.

Sheriff AddS·

KAREN SUTHERLAND, right, preferred paints for her part in the egg decorating. Jan
Grate specialized more In animal replicas.

Weather
Occasional rain tonight. Low
from mid 30s to mid 40s. Thursday cloudy and turning colder
with chance of light showers or
snow flurries, mainly north
portion. High In upper 30s and

Good Friday Sale
Is Tour Project

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Decorating eggs for Easter
can be such fun ... and
profitable, too!
The Blakeslee kitchen was
one place that took on the
appearance of 8 beehive over
the weekend as Meigs
Usherette Club members met
The Meigs County Com- to decorate 8 few hundred eggs
missioners agreed Tuesday to
advertise for bids for ail sizes
NUMBERS LISTED
of aggregate for the Meigs
Residents wishing to conCounty Highway Department. tribute to a program by the
Bids must be received at the Meigs Chapter VICA, Meigs
office of the commissioners by High School, to provide food
9:30 a.m. on April 18.
baskets for needy families may
In other business the bid call 742-4745, 992-3292 or 992from Standard Oil Company 5135. Items will be collected
for gas and diesel fuel offering about 2 p.m. Saturday.
regular gas at .1330, premium
LOCAL TEMPS
gas at .1550, and diesel fuel at
The temperature In down·
.1250 was accepted. The bid
town
· Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
from Pennzoil was, regular,
.195; premium .23 and diesel, Wednesday was 46 degrees
under cloudy skies .
.1695.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr, Bob Clark and Warden
Ours, commissioners, and
Martha Chambers, clerk.

4&amp;.

Aggregate
Bids Asked

Second Phone
An additional telephone has
been installed at the office of
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department due to the
tremendous increase in activity.
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach said today duties of the
sheriff's department have
steadily grown since January
of 1971. The new number Is 9923889. The old number can be
found on the first page of the
phone directory.
The sheriff· suggests that
residents make a note of the
new number until it appears in
the next edition of the directory.

FINED $10, COSTS
Don M. Rose, 21, Minersville,
Rt.1 , was fined $10 and costs on
charges of reckless operation
in Racine Mayor Charles
Pyles' court Monday night
Marshall Alfred Lyons
reported .

~mprovement

DWI Brings 3 Days Jail
Three of four defendants
charged with driving while .
Intoxicated pleaded guilty in
hearings Tuesday night conducted by Middleport Mayor
John Zerkle. A fourthls bond
was forfeited.
Fined $100 and costs each
and given three day jail sentences were Thomas 0. Stone,
28, Pomeroy; Edward B.lDad,
24, Columbus, and James H.
Tyree, 49, Syracuse. Forfeiting
his $200 bond was Roy Joe Fox,
33, Clifton, W. Va.
Others fined' Tuesday night

in preparation for their Good
Friday sale.
Fancy brides, elegant ladies,
a variety of animals, Intricate
designs using glitter, artificial
flowers, laces, rickrack, pipe
cleaners, paints, cake frosting,
and other odds and ends, were
created by the girls who have
one objective in mind, to get
together enough money for a
trip to Greenfield Village next
month.
The trip to Dearborn, Mich.
is planned for either the second
(Continued on Page 2)

were Kelly M. McKenzie, 20,
Pomeroy, $5and costs, running
a red light; PaulL. Dawson, 63,
Middleport, $25 and costs, two
counts of intoxication; Donald
R. Lovett, 48, Portlar.d, $25 and
costs, intoxication; William
Reeves, 46, Pomeroy, $15 and
costs, Intoxication, and Mason
Collins, 51, Mason, W. Va., $15
and costs, intoxication. · ·
Assessed costs only for
passing on a double yellow line
was Robert Brown, 60, of
Pomeroy.

CHESTER - Ross Cleland,
chief of the Chester. Fire Dept.
and Its members are working
toward the purchase of a twoway, l()()..watt Motorola mobile
unit for their fire truck.
The radio, which will be on
the
Buckeye
Sheriff's
frequency operated from the
office of Sheriff Robert C.
Hartenbach, will be another
step to greater protection to the
people of Chester and the
communities which the
Chester Fire Dept. serves,
Cleland said.
The unit will put the Chester
Fire Dept. in the same communlcation net as Racine,

Planned

Syracuse, Middleport ,
Pomeroy and Bashan.
Sheriff Hartenbach pointed
out that this will be one of the
most important steps that
could happen to Chester
township and its surrounding
communities.
Donations of $1 or more are
being accepted by members of
the fire department. Those
wishing to help may send a
donation to Ross Cleland, or
the sheriff's department. The
department will award a
itemington pump' gun, 12
• guage, model 870, rifled sights
to one of the donors.

�•
2- The Dlil)' Seatinel, Middleport-Pnmeroy, 0., Mll!'ch 29)972

..

bush License Tag Slogan Bill

GOP Ready to
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Howle members, a week away
lrGm a recess for primary
c:ampaigning, were to wann up
with a vote today on a
Republican bill designed to
blunt the Gilligan admlniBtralion's plan for a slogan
Gil auto. license plates next
;r.ll!'.
The House session was to beldn at 1 p.m.
The Republican controlled
Rules Conuiuttee alated the
four-week-old bill sponsored by
House l\lajtirity Lel!der Robert.
E. Levitt, R-North Canton, deapite Democratic protesll! It
was frivolous and more weighty bUts have been languishing
In committee for months.
Levitt has said a license
plate slogan - such as "seat
Bel15 Fastened?" proposed for
nelt year - is a "poor idea"
because it would ''make the
plate jumbled and more dif..
llcult to read."
He also complained the
110vemor might insist on the
lliogan "Re-Elect Giillgan" in
1974. His bill would give the
~lure control over such
slogans.
House Speaker Charles F.
Kurfess, R-Bowling Green,
WIB asked why' the bill was
given such quick conllideration. "Maybe because
the majority leader is the chief
1p0nsor," he replied.
FW Out Caleader
"It's just a silly bill they put
Cll to fill outthe calendar," said
Rep. Richard M. Christiansen,
0..1\!ansfield, a Democratic
member of the Rules Com·

mlttee.
The GOP leaders used a
small group of maverick
Democrats Tuesday to
narrowly pass legislation
. repealing Ohio's female
protective labor laws, dealing
organized labor a sharp blow in
the process.
The bill passed, 52- 35, with
two more votes than the 50
votes required for House clea-

.

ranee. It now goes to the Senate.
· ~ouse pa..age followed two
hours of tangled debate featuring charges ol "union bosses"
and '1at call!" and the failure
of ~ocrats to insert three
amendments demanded by the
Ohio AFL-CIO.
Eight Democrall! joined the
chief sponsor, Rep. Patrick A.
Sweeney, 1&gt;-Cieveland, in support of the bill. GOP leaders
could muster only 43 votes out
of their own caucus, mainly hecause of absenteeism.
The legislation repeals protective laws for women at

$1.25 per hour in retaU trades.

Rep. Robert A. Manning, R·
Akron, pointed out an adminis!ration bill on minintum wages
is pendlnl! in the Senate. He
said Lancione's amendment
would "take care of the fat cats
but penalize the little
businessmnian."
Levitt said it was "another
part of the union power play.
They're trying to show that
· they control this legislature."
Rut Christiansen said the

minlmwn wage would be only
$3,200 a year under the amendment.
"That's only two-thirdo! of the
amount we put through as a
pay raiSe for ourselves in one
day four years ago,'' he said.
Keep Bill Alive
At this point, the GOP
leadership mftrowiy saved the
bill from being sent bac)&lt; to
cormnittee at Christiansen's
request. · Ilouse Speaker Pro
Tempore Charles E. Fry, R-

Springfield, changed hls vote
11 the last minute ~d Kurfess
voted ''no" to keep the bill
all.ve. ·
·
Lanciooe's amendment on
the minimum wage was then
defeated 42-46, but organized
labor obtained a record of
individual. votes on the controversiai Issue.
An amendment by Rep. Barney Quilter, D-Toledo, the
assistantnnlnorityfioorleader, ,
to limit working men and

.'

w~ to 10 hours a day ~d 50 attach to ~other bill ~e

hours a week ucept with their
&lt;.'llMe!ll a1ao feU,.U-44. .
An amendment offered . by
Rep. Phale D. Hale, 0-Columbus, forbidding employes to Uft
packages heavier than they
were capable of Uftlng failed '
39-47 after Levitt tagged It
"u 11m an age a b 1e and
meaningless."
The ·House voted 53-29 to
knockdownanattemptbyRep.
Robert E. Netzley, Laura, to

exempting federal and private
pensions from the slate incO!Ile
tax.
Netzley and Rep. , James
Thorpe, R-Alliance, complalned it was taking too long to
adopt the pension exemptions,
so they bied to tacit the subject
onto a bill theY knew the GOP
ieadeTJhip was jlulllilng.
In other action Tlielday:
- The Senate Judiciary
Committee reported out a bill

lowering· the age ol majarlty
&amp;om 21 to 11· -.pt far pur.
cbaBingor~~

beverages.
1
.
.. - The SeMte Ullllllmiaily
'll&lt;klpted IIICI aent to tile Bciali . .
bill requlrlnB relunclt of - payments of 'tile Illite lllcGale
tax.
1
,.t \
-Sen. WiUiam F. 8oWeJi, 0..
Cincinnati, In~ I bllJ requiring black history In public
schools.
.'

'

1
R
*
T T.
Wh
•
'
.
111
•
• 5
~r:n~~~t~h~:..~~~~ nsurance · a._es L!P
opplng 1r~argzns ln

Court ruled last week that the

same laws for firms employing
25 or more persons conflicted
with the U.S. Civil Righl5 Act
of 1964 and could not be en·
forced.
The last Hurrah
Action by the Senate and
Gov. John J. Gilligan apparenUy would be the last
hurrah for ·the AFL-CIO and
other unions favoring retention
of the laws which forbid women
to work at men's jobs, lift
weights over 25 pounds, skip
lunch, and work late 'hours or
overtime beyond a certain
amount.
Sweeney said that since the
court decision did not apply to
firms employing less than 25
persons, small businessmen
would be subjected to unfair
competition for employes if
they had to slick to the female
restrictions.
He produced a letter from
warren J. ~lth, secretarytreasurer of the Ohio AFL-CIO,
calling for defeat of the bill if
the amendments were not
included.
The first amendment,
submited by House Minority
Leader A.G. Lanclone, D·
Bellaire, called for a $1.60
hourly minimum wage for men
and women starting next Jan. I
The top nnlnlmum wage is now

Helen
Help
..
.

·u. · • •
"S·~

.

.

"'

. By Helerl..Bottel

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Two of
the main factors regulating in·
surance rate increases in Ohio
- hospital care and auto repair
costs - have soared 73 and 32
per cent, respectively, over the
past five years. Insurance
rates jumped by 40 per cent.
The statistics were contained
in a year-end report made by
the Ohio Insurance Institute
and covering the state's eight
largest cit1es, Akron, Canton,
Cincinnati, Cleveland,
Columbus, Dayton, Toledo and
Youngstown.
The largest jump in daily
hospital rates was in Dayton
with an increase of 85.1 per
cent between 1966 and 1971
while Toledo was a close
second with an increase of 83
per cent.
Cincinnati had a 78.6 per cent
increase in hospital costs

followed by Cleveland at 73.8;
Canron 70.6; Columbus, 68.8;
Youngstown 63.5 and Akron
60.9 per cent.
Cincinnati showed the
largest gain in auto repairs
with an increase of 40 per cent,
followed by Columbus at 36 per
cent.
Cleveland and Akron tied for
third at 33.3 per cent, followed
by Dayton at 30.8; Canton 28.6,
and Toledo and Youngstown
tied at 25 per cent.
High Repair Costs
The survey of insurance premiums covered the five-year
period ending Jan. I, 1972, and
showed Cleveland far out In
front with increases totaUng
53.8 per cent, followed by
Youngstown at 48.2 per cent.
Canton was third at 37.3 per
cent foilowed by Cincinnati
with an increase of 31.8 per

ceni, Dayton 30.2; Columbus
and Toledo tied at 29.2 and
Akron 29 per cent.
The institute said aulD manufacturers haw given "little regard" to the repairability of
the vehicles conning off their
production Jines.
"In some cases the cost of
labor is 10 times the cost of the
item involved,'' said the 011.

a priest.
Should I tell him aboot my feelings so that maybe he could
help me? - PRIESI''S ADMffiER
Dear Admirer:
What you can love is mostly romantic fantasy - like the
dreams of a pregnant woman has aboot her obstetrician. Yours
have lasted longer because they're all milled up with worship
and, too, because you may not have allowed yourself to really
grow up.
fn this case, "confession" wouldn't help. But consultation
with a counselor (perhaps a wise, older priest) miilbt bring you
face to face with reality. - H.

'

COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Ohio Academy of Trail
Lawyers said Tuesday it is
opposed to "no-fault" insurance which allows "no
responsibility drivers and
driving."
in a letter to ail members
of the Ohio General Assembly,
Michael F. CoUey, president ·of
the 1,400- member academy,
said his group was interested
in insurance refonn to reduce
premiums and assure fair and
prompt payment to persons injured in auto accidents," but
does n~t like the lenn "no-

'no-fault' insurance because
that phrase has so many different meanings to different
people," he said.
"We are for mandatory first
party coverage adequate to fuJ..
ly compensate injured persona
for their totally economic loss,
but we are inalterable opposed
to 'no responsibility' drivers
and driving.
"We believe there is a dUference between right and
wrong if the wrongful conduct
of a driver causes injury to
another, the innocent victim
should be compensated for ·aU
fault."
of his lOsses, not just his out-of"It .is difficult to talk about pocket bills or 'iost wages."

WIN AT BRIDGE

o,·scaf d Dooms

+ K Q 10

"'AJ% 5
WES'f "
EAST
• J9G

.1 3

.K 5 .

.AQ J9
+ 9 765 3
oi&gt;BJ

"'10 7 4 .

SOUTtt ( D)

Dear Helen :
Tony's letter could have been written about any of my sons.
He describes the same kind of overly strict and rigid father as is
the man who happens to be my husband.
Our boys are grown now but the results of their father's
attitudes toward them when they were growing up are tragic. He
lost them completely by his bossiness, unreasonable criticism,
· and the·belief that next to God, he was THE authority on every
lin.
My life was full of tunnoil and heartache, trying to be the gobetween. The youngsters were and are terrific. No problems ;
good, active kids, They ail have good careers now, but th~ir
father still sneers and criticizes and complains each time he sees
them.
What is the saddest thing about this? They refuse to have
..ythingtodo with their father . They lry to visit when he'saway.
Ttteyignorehlscutting remarks. He could be a stran~er to them.
He was a good provider, but as you said in your letter to
Tony, this type of "king" can never be human. As a result, he's a
wry lonely man - and he blames everyone but himself.
May I add a plea to your good answer : Please, parenll! (and
mothes-s can be just as guilty as fathers ), treat your children wilh
• much consideration as you would extend to a friend - for
when they become adults, this is what they can be - the ~es t
friends you could ever have !- VOICE OF EXPERIENCE
Dear V of E :
... And not just "when they bej:ome adults": children treated
with coosideration are your FRll:NDS all through rh iltUwod -·
and therefore much easier to raise. -- II .

t Void

Ptlss
Pa ss
Pa!ls

1.
4. -

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

D'Artaguan. th e b es t
swordsman and bridge player in France, decided that
while it was the duty of a
musketeer · to protect the
king, this was one time that
a lead of a king was called
for . He placed the kin g of
hearts on the table.
Porthos, s i t t in g East.
played the nine and D'Art·
agnan continued the suil .
Portho's cashed the jack and
ace.
. The wily De Roc hefort , sit·
tlng South, false-carded wilh
the 10 ·and it was up to
D'Artagnan to discard .
He knew t h a t Porthos
would follow the instructions
conveyed by his discard.
What should he tell Porthos
to do? it all depended on
who held lhe seven of hearts.
Could Porthos h o I d il ?
Very unlikely for lwo reasons. lf Porthos held five
hearts to the ace-queen-jack
he would surely have overcalled and even if he hadn 't
overcalled he would have
overtaken D'Artagnan's ktng
with the ace if he held five
hearts.
After working this all out
carefully it was no trouble
for D'Artagnan to drop the
diamond deuce. Porthos led
his last high hea rt and since
De Rochefort had to r uff wilh
one of dumm y's high lr urnps
Ihe coni ract was doom ed.
"Sa ere Hleu!.. cried !)p
Rochefm·t " From now oi1 I
will !i l i('k to rll! !•l li ng &lt;1.!:(~1i 11 ~ 1
Von

nn·

'

l ~ tr fu u ,lo!•aul

·'· ·····-

....

·"

MEIGS USHERETTE .CLUB.inemb,ers turned. the.:Blakesl~ biJ:Bkf~;~~~.l..toom intp..:BIJ ....
Easter egg decoratinl! nook as they prepared hundreds· oi hard boUed eggs for their Good
· Friday sale at the Davis-Warner Insurance Office. Working in one group were Patti Well,
Karla Beal, Loris Rupe, Denise Hendricks, and Debbie Schuck, seated from the left around the
table, and Sheila McKnight, Nita Hennann, and VlckiGrate, are standing.

(Continued fr0ll1 Page I)

3.2.

I"'
,

Have Your Snow

And Eat It, Too!

Open ing lead- ¥ K

.\ OtL

1•1

DR. LAWRENCE E.LAMB

•
Pass

1•
3.
Pass

"

..

North - Sout h vulne!·able
We~ t
North
East Suuth

Pass
Pass
Pass

- ,,,,

'-..

.A 10 85 4 2
• 10 7 6 4

"'KQ 2

'

or third weeken~ in April and
will cost about $500. Through
selling candy bars, and staging
three bake sales, the girls have
Y&amp;u, South, hold :
raiSed
$320. They're counting
.AK65~ .A2 +J "'AK654
on the egg sale for a major
What do you do now?
of the remainder.
portion
A-Pass, A f Q u r-hea r t ull
would not be too_bad but your Twenty girls will be making
best chance for game ml(.Sl be- the trip with the club advisor,
at nu-trump.
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, and her
Pass
Pass
Pass

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb - How
germ-laden is new fallen
snow? My mother told me
that a doctor told her and
other mothers that new snow
that lies overnight is full of
germs. Are children who eat
this stuff apt to become ill?
For the sake of the kids and
their health, ten us the truth .
I have several grandchildren
who are snow eaters.
Dear Reader-There is
probably not a single answer
to your question. Ther¢ are
a lot of variables. If It is a
nice, good, deep snow you
could brush th~ top back
safely and eat the snow that
is immediately underneath
the crust. The closer the
snow gets to the surface of
the ground the more likely
it is going to be contami·
nated with all the different
germs that cover the earth .
Germs do not propagate in
frozen material. They like
warm , moist climates and
the ground surface comes
closer to meeting these re·
quirements. They are not
likely ID migrate upward
into fairly deep snbw, so
the trick Is In finding a
place where there has been .
a good deep, rapid snow fail
that is fresh. If you have had
several snow fails at different intervals there will be
different layer s of crusts and
this snow could be conlami·
nated.
If one is careful and uses
fre-sh fallen snow and st·nops
a w ny lht1 top , the unrlt~ rlyin g

sm'"'

(' il l!

tw n.•uocl.

Mnn~·

.~. ~rs

The Daily Sentilil

Good Friday
1•
3f
3 N,T

.·

the drunk driver the habitual speeds." '
Driven alJo Cited
offender· and other irrespoJlo
The tesl5 conducted bY the
sible can be considered 'public
Insurance
Institule llhowed last
enemY number one' when it
comes to rising aulD insurance year at a speed ol five mllett
rates," the Oil report said. per hour damage to Ill~ AMC
"But another ·major faCtor is Gremlin when it hits a froot
an extremely fragUe modern- barrier, .will be ~.II&amp;, an in- ·
day automobile--{)ne that crease of $213 In tests done uqsustains serious damage at der the same co'hdltlons last
mere walking or jogging year.
In 1971, a Plymoutli Fury
striking a barrier at fivl! miles
per liour would sUffer an 'average $202.50 ·in damages. In
1972 that total went to'$331.15.
Under the
tests, damage to the Ford Galaxle In
1971 would total $34U) but II
has jumped to$402.10 tills year.
The Ford Pinto, oo the other
hand, has !lropped from $18UO
to $125.20 and Chevrolet Jni..
pala - which recorded' tile
largest drop - went fnm
$387.90 last year to $1.53.75 tills
year.
The on also cootends there
ll!'e too many lkivers sWl on
the highways who haw been
cited nmneroua limes.
It lists a Medina . motorist
with 12 traffic vilations between April 19611 and A~
1971.
The Oil aaid these violations
include two counts of vehiotlar
homicide. The mol«tst also
was arrested twice oo narcotics chll!'ges .

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

Pass
Pass
Pass

NOR Til
.K Q
• 832

+ AJ 8 4 2

at bridge."

The b iddirtg has been :
West
North East
South

Game Bid

V

same

Lawyers Against Plan

+++
Dear Helen : ·
The student voter who said each child costs parents around
$2,000 a year, so their income tax deductions should be for that
amount rather than for $675, is evidently thinking as a
prospective father of many.
As a single person who has had to support schools with my
tax dollars, I would make a counter-suggestion: make parents
pay higher taxes with each added child. After all, public schools
CO.!!, and those who benefit should foot the bill, not.us childless
people!
Even though I marry ,I do not pian to have children, as there
are too many in the world alrea!IY. Meanwhile, I pay lremendous
taxes, because I have no "dependents." - FOR A
"CHILDLESS" DEDUCTION
.
Dear FCD:
Here's MY suggestion : Let's drop economics in favor of good
old family relationships.
Each time I venture out of my field (into religion, politics,
the law) I jump into a hornet's nest of controversy.
So ... back to the man-woman thing! - H.

The 011 again reported on resul15 of tests conducted by the
Insurance · Institute for Highway Safety. ·
"There's little doubt but that

•

THISIS"FAIRYTALE" LOVE
Dear Helen :
I've been secretly in love with a certain man for ten years.
I've even stopped going to church because my heart aches like a
:10UD8 fool's every time I see him.
Yousee,l'm married to another man and have two children.
The person I have always loved -even before my marriage - is

''One of today's bwnpet.grille
combinations is held together
with a total of 57 boats and requires the efforts of three men
to install and align."

pt•n-

pie even use it to make snow
1ce cream. I have .nev~r
known of anyo~e gettmg 111
from th1s practice.
Dear Dr. Lamb _ Four
years ago 1 had a prostate
glan!l operation. Everything
is okay, but when I have
sexual rei~ti~ns, I do not
have an em1ss10n. Th~ doctor
tells me that everythmg goes
back into the bloodstream
and that it is not harmful.
How come? Something must
have ~one wrong with th~
operation. Is there any medi·
cation I could take so I could
get back to normal•
Dear Reader_ 1 fuink you
pro b a b 1 y misunderstood
your doctor. What he meant
was that the secretions
flowed backward . into the
bladder. Th•s entire area of
your body is a very complex
engineering job. The little
valve or sphmcter just . out·
side the bladder usually
mus~ close ~If to prevent the
semmal flmd from flowmg
backward mto the bladder.
This is at the exact location
of the prostate gland. Fre·
quently when this opening to
the large_ gland is reamed
out fo.r the common prostate
gland operation, the valve
doesn't function properly
afterward . The fact that the
semen flows backward into
the bladder does not cause
any harm . There is no way
that it can flow backward
into the bloodstream .
.
.
1'he Ia c k Of e m 1S
s
'on
should in no way detract
lrono rnosl or your nsnal
Sf•n .saliuns. h_uwt-~vt•r.

husband, along With several
othe~ chaperones.
The egg aale will be held at
the Davis-Warner Insurance
Office in Pomeroy !Higinnlng at
9 a.m. and continuing unW all
of the eggs have been sold.
Colored, but undecorated eggs,
will be sold for 75 cenl5 a dozeri,
the fancy onea will be priced

from 15 to 25 cents each. Or·
ders for eggs can be telephoned
to 992-2581 or 742-4611.
The weekend session was not
an work and no play. Club
members roasted wieners over
the wood-burning fireplace In
the BlakeSlee living room tO
add a picnic atmosphere to
their potluck dinner.

DEVOTED TO THI
INTIRISTOP •
MI!IOS·MASON ARIA
CHIUIR'!&lt;. T-ANNIHIL~~"
·~·t' l!d . . ,, - ~
. ROIIRT, .tlOI,LtCH •
.1. ••1' Clty:·l -llor
' \ Publls~ed dally uetp't

.

Sa!urdoy by T~e Ohio V~lity
CompanY. · 111
Court 51~ Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Bustntss Offict Phone
992-2156, Edilortol Phone 9fl·
2151.
Second clan postage paid 11
Publishing

Pomeroy , Ohio .
National advfrtislng
representative Bottlntlll ·

Gallagher, Inc .. 12 Eut •2nd
St., New York City, New York .
Subscription tatn : oe .

llvertd by carrier whtrt
available 50 ttnts ptr wttk ;
By Motor Route whtrt carrier

service not 1\lllllblt: Ont

month $1 .75. By Mell In Ohio
l~d w. Va., Ont yur su.oo.
S1K months $7 . 25. Thrtt

months S4 .50. Subscrlr,tlon

priet _includts Sunday T mtl ·
Sentinel .

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
INTRODUCING JOEY TO WHAT?
NEW YORK (KFS) - Richard Burton's
movie ads for "bluebeard" carry the line, "And
Introducing Joey Heatherton." Wonder why:
Joey was "Introduced" In several !Urns
previoUsly arid maybe 100 1V shows ... Newest
TV star's middle age hasn't kept his head from
expanding. Fellow actors cringe at his star-stuff
... Bdwy. found an angel with a specialty:
whodunits ... Adela Holzer invested heavily in
"Sleuth" (bigprofi\S), "Night Watch" (hardly a
ha
.
t
t) nd ,....._ Oth , . hich
ppy mves men a
...e
ers, m w
she stuffed enough cash to become an
"associate producer."
Feature editors might chase down a human
interest tale in John Tracy, the late Spencer's
45-year-old deaf mute son ... John inherited
,
.
.
.
pops fortune with the sUpuiat10n he use 1t to
finance an institute for deaf mute children ...
John did that In '69, but in '71 had tapped out.
Nothing remained to finance the big home
oul5ide L. A. and it seemed 700 deaf mute
.
children would have to move out ... John then
wrote tO H'wood stars of his dad's era 'nd circle
and told them of the foundation's plight ~ and
every star responded with a check to keep
Spence's dream going -and promised to send
more each year ... Which is\ why the institute·
still is open and has expanded to accommodate
1,000.
British composer Lionel Bart, who recenUy
declared bankruptcy, at one point had earned $5
million from his stage~reen musical "Oliver."
... He has talent will recoup ... "Shaft" star
.
' ,
.
.
Richard. Roundtree s favorite dr~g room
photo is a sexy shot of his best gal, singer Freda
Payne ... Helen Hayes was the unexpected star
of the annual celebrity-packed fashion show at
Ohrbach's: Helen had to cross the runway to get
he
nd
.· .
·
r seat a ' as w•e mannequm,mUSlc started,
she opened her coat and,did a delightful cross
between a cheerfully mincing, mockmannequin, stylish slump - and a strip · now
where would Helen Hayes have researched such
a thing 1
. ·
.
B1g behind-scenes feud is rankbng two
.
''nfi uen t'al
' pu bli ca ti.ons, "Commentsry " and
"N. Y. Review of Books," each vying for deepthink leadership. 11 C0mmentary" editor NorIIIRil 1'1.. !horctz has been reining his mugnzine

•

•.

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport.P~y, 0., March 29,1972

in from the left while Robert Silvers' "ReYiew"
is somewhere be:10nd the portside of Ml!o and
Yevtushenko; the counter-aitlclam bacbtage
would burn the late Lenny Bruce's asbestos
ears.
·
Prince Bernhard sounded off bac:lt home
that the Dutcli. PII!'Jiament should lay off the
cabinet- and the local papers promptly pelted
him to "sfay in hts place," not too impatient a
place at that ... Burgess Meredith at Lea
Pyrenees said he's been so busy fUming Gil the
coast, he hasn't had time to tenant hls own
Pomona, N. Y., estate for more than a year:
Otto Prennlnger rented it last year, Robert Shaw
and wife Mary Ure, this.
Gianis' halfback Bobby Duhon wina the
season's popofl award: defended coach Aiel:' ·
Wehsier, owner WeUington Mara- but riPPed
ex-coach Allie Sherman and the Cowboys',Tom
Landry, and dubbed the sportswriters "dummies" at a New Jersey high school dinner ... : The
London Jewish Chronicle noted it's possible for
a man to take a second Wife uliarael if his first
ia barren, incompetent etc ... AU it takes is.
approval - by more than 100 rabbis 1 .
'
Doug Fairbanks Jr. went unrecognized at.
Duncan's for a whole evening. The :10ung
stewardesses meanwhlle swarmed over
younger, lesser celebs ... Ewryone in Proof of'
the Pudding recognized Ethel Kennedy but
respected her privacy. Stared at, but no
autograph clown bothered her
·
Steve Allen's syndicated ialk-ahow is
teetering. He always seema to bounce to another
... Some 32 miillon dogs In the U. S. canine
population currenUy; there seem that many
just on · our · block ... Rumors the Rocky
Grazianos had a nice big famUy squaw! must 'VI!
been true: the Rock later kept kissing hes- for
ho!fS at the Cope bar. .
.
r
Couple of wise guys picked on the exwrestler bouncer at a 3rd Ave. spot when they
couldn't get ,in, motiooed him oulalde, took
, punches at him, whereupon he Oattened them.
They called the cope and had him luged to the
· police precinct, but when they learned they bad
to sign their namea on the CGIIIJilalnt a1o11c with
the '1adles" theY accompanied, they drGpped
chll'8es and vamooaed: tleelllll they weren't
with'tbeir wivea.

iDe ending Champs 'Ready' For 1972 Campaign
'
II)' Ualted Pnu 'Iuterutlaui
With a 15-8 record, the Pitts-

.

lliaS!I and Robertson played nie stennetl and first baseman homer led the Baltimore the lOth inning.

Alex Johnson and six strong
innings by ~teve Dunning
paced the Cleveland Indians to
a S-~ decision over the San
Francisco Giants ... Pinchhitter Paul Popovich's two-run
triple and Cannen Fanwne's
homer led the Chicago Cubs to
an ~ victory over the San
Diego Padres.
A three-run homer by Dave
May capped a five-run
· seventh-inning rally which
lifted the Milwaukee Brewers
to a 5-3 triumph over a team of
Cleveland reserves ... H8rmon
Killebrew hit his third horner of
the spring as the Minnesota

the starring , roles Tuesday . Jose Pagan executed a triple
play.
..Robertson . supplied the
customary Pittsburgh muscle
with two homers. ·
In othes- campa: Rookie Bob
out when third baseman Rich Grieb's two-nm double and
Hebner; secood ba~n Ren- Andy Etcbebarren's two-run

Twins and Boston Red Sox
played a· 3-3 tie in a game
halted by rain after eight innings. The Twins announced
after the game the reassign-

Orioles to a S-1 victory over the
Doubles by Sandy Alomar,
Texas Rangers. Pat Dobson Ken McMullen and Ken Berry
pitched five shutout innings for were the big blows as the
the Orioles ... .The Detroit California Angels beat the
Tigers shaded the New York Oakland Athletics, S-1 ... Willie
Mets,• S-4, when .rookie Brent Davis' eighth-inning homer
Robertson look reallY to ·open
strom's balk allowed Gates gave the Los AngeJes Dodgers
the &amp;el!aon.
,
Brown to score in the bottom of · 11'6-QviCtoryovertheNew York
Yankees. Fred Beene was the
•
victiin of Da9is' h.omer ...
Denis Menke homered and
George
Foster,
t;esar
·
'
.
Geronimo and Joe Morgan had
• ·
triples In leading the Cincinnati
Reds
to a 7-3 triumph over the
By GARY KALE
John Roche, the Nets' rookie play. Wendell Ladner's jumper
Dallas, third place finisher in
Astros.
. UPI 8J!0!1I Writer
guard who is filling In fur broke the deadlock, Gene the West, tuned up for its Houston
Homers
by Del Unser and
· In the American Bal!kelball Sidelined Bill Melchionni, Littles hit two free throws and playoff. rouild against chamAssoclatioo 'a Eastern Division scored 22 points and recorded George Carter sank a layup al pion Utah by beating the Stars
Tueaday night, . New York four assist&amp; In the Indiana the buzzer. Larry Mlller led for the fourth time in their last
defeated the Indiana Pacers, game. With Melcbionni ben' Carolina with 29 poln15, while five
meetings.
Donnie r:T:d:;~~~~~M~~m~,
112-36, to move within a .half . chad with a broken finger, the rookie Julius Erving of. Freeman, who had a string of
game of second place Virginia, New York rookie will have to V1rgmia tied his career high 20 or more points in 34 airaight
a 127-121 loser to Carolina. carry the role of playmaker with 45 poinll!.
games, scored only 19 for
VIrginia can ctincll·second by into the playoffs.
Warren JabaU drove in for a Dallas. W'tllie Wise led Utah
'.r"
~·
beatbj Memphis tonight. A
Roger Brown, heavily· taped pair of three-,&gt;olnt plays In the .with 28 poinl5.
.
By
MILTON
RICHMAN
····=~
Ioas would drop tbe Squires inlo to protect an Injured hand, led last two minutes that carried
Dan Issei SCilred 29 points
UPI Sports Writer
a tie with New York and Indiana with 32 points. Mel the Floridians past Memphis. and Artis GUmore 23 before
neCessitate a one-game pla:l1)ff Daniels had 22 and.grabbed 29 JabaU hit for 30 points, and sitting out the final period In
NEW YORK (UPI)-"It's like a pcker game. A guy doesn't
for the coveted runnei'up rebounds.
Larry Jooes scored 25 for the the Colonels' triumph over knowwhethertoraise, stand patordropout."
·
position.
Carofina lroke away from a winner~. Randy Denton paced PittsbiD'gh. David Lattin had
Frank Howard, standing pat right now at home in Green Bay,
40 for the Condors.
· 'lbe ~nd-place team playa 121-all tie with p straight Memphis with 24 poln\5.
, Wis., was saying how it feels holding out, how it was negotiating
the Floridians In the opening points In the last 48 seconds of
with Bob Short, the boaaman of the Texas Rangers.
playoff round and the thirdLast week Frank Howard .got on a jet and went down to
place club meets the first-place
Pompano Beach, Fla.., where the Rangers are training to talk
Kentuck~ ColoneiB. The runwith Bob Short. They talked and talked anJ then Howard came
nerup also .bas a home court
home. Short made his 6-foot-7, zaG.pound outfielder-first
advantage.
baseman one of those final take4t-{)r-!eave-it offers. He also
"Anything we ' get is a plus
invited ltllit Iii make a deal for himself if he could. The whole
for ua," aa,ld Neta' Coach Lou
thing 10unded rather ominous, sort of final. But they never really
Carnesecc11, after Rick Bll!'ry
are.
celelrated his 28th birth.iJay
"It's not all that bad," Howard says. "We're only $10,000
with a ~~lnt perfonnanee
apart."
against Indiana. "It's a
No.1Producer
miracle we've been able to
By JOE CARNICELLI
pet., could noLclose the gap. said, "We just kept our
keep In connection for second
At the plate, Howard was Washingron's No. I producer last
UP1 Sport&amp; Writer
The Lakers, despite their patience and finally things
plar:e. Halfway through the
season,
alarted
opening
up
and
we
hitting 28 homers, knocking in 83 runs, and batting .279
~th Los Angeles and overpowering season, ad·
aeaSQn, thete were people who Milwaukee had trouble mittedly were tight before began running and getting the for the Senators beforethey' left for Texas . .Those figures were
didn't even think we'd reach following the script Tuesday :~:uesday night's opening game shots. We thought we could run scmething of a comedown from the year before when Howard hit
the playoffs."
•
night. The Lakers had in the beSt-of-seven . series. on them, what with their 44 homers, drove In 126 runs and batted .283.
Carnesecca would be happy problems in the first twil acts "I've been In a lot of pla:10ffs personnel problems and all,
When they began talking this year, Short tried to cut Howard's
if the Memphis Pros would and-the Golden State Warriors but I was really tight,'' said and it looked like they got a $110,000 salary. Howard countered by asking for a raise. The last
play the role of mifacle worker rewrote "the ending for the All-star guard Jerry West. "So little tired."
time .they spoke Short was offering the same salary as last year
tOOight and give the Nets a !lUcks.
Larry Costello, the Bucks' and Howard was asking for a $10,000 raise.
was the whole team."
chance at Virginia in a ,tleThe script supposedly has
"We're not giving up," said coach was both surprised and · What about Short telling him he could make a deal for himself?
lreaking game.
the Lakers, the Pacific Jerry Sloan, who led the Bulls disappointed with his club's
"I thought for awhile it might be the thing to do,'' says the 35''I think we can take Virginia Division champions, and the · tilth 18 points. "We were down effort. jjl was surprised," he
year-{)ld blockbuster, "but when a baUplayer tries to do thai it's
if we get to play them," the Bucks, the Midwest Division 2-0 last year and came back to said. "I'm glad it takes four
like prostituting himself. So I decided against it. Besides, I think
Nets' eoacll said confidently.
games to be eliminated in the
titll!!ts, roaring through the tie the series up."
it was only a ploy on hls part."
With Kentucky taking' the opening rounds of the National
Jim Barnett, who averaged playoffs."
Howard and Short talked money four differ~ I times during the
Eutem title by more ihan 20 Basketball Association only six pc)ln15 a game against
The key to the game was
four
days Howard was in Pompano Beach. It was aU very
games, it's small wondes- that playoffs and meeting in a Milwaukee during the reguillr ThUrmond's play. The 6-foot-11
nobo\IY wants to risk getting grand clash of the Titans for season, erupted for 30 Tuesday center who spots Jabbar three friendly. No shouting, no names, no hard feeUngs.
knocked off in the first round the western· Conference title. night to highlight Golden Inches, scored 22 poinl5 and
Seasons Cited
I byl PIW. th!' -~·~~ "1. I . But the Lakers, who set a State's upset on the Bucl&lt;s' had 22 rebounds while holding
"He'd ten me his reasons Why he couldn't pay me more and I'd
his rival· to 28 polnll! and 13
. In Othei-&gt; .AB~. g8ll!ett, tne oorde of records In donnlnatlng home court . .
1Flotl~ cil!!i'lwi!' \lie' final
the NBA this season, .had to
"Wheri Barney's quiet he's ' rebounds .. )abbar, who tell him my reasons why he should," sars Howard, who, lucky for
polllseuotrbertb In the East by erupt In the second half to beat either going to play terrible or averaged 34.8 poinis a game• everybo!IY, always is reasonable anyway. "Look, I understand
beating Mempbia, 118-107, DaJ.. the injury riddled Chicago just great," said Nate Thur· during the regular season, hit Short's point of view. You gotta realize he's in business ID make a
las upset Utah, 98-85, and Bulls, 95-80, while Golden mond, the Warriors' center only 13 of 29 shots.
dollar. Aballplayer has ID respect management's position. What
Keittuc:lty nipped Piltsburgh, State, which finished second in who batlled Kareem AbdulBoth cluba meet again on the it boils down ID in the end I suppose is both sides have to give a
Los Angeles In the Pacific Jabbar, the league's Most same courts Thursday night. litUe."
136-134.
Division, upended the league Valuable Player, to a standoff:
The Boston Celtics, who won
Has he given?
champion Bucks, 117-106.
Barnett led a fast.Jreaking the AtlanUc Division tiUe, open
"And how!"
The Lakers opened a 43-40 attack that caught the Bucks their playoff series at home,
Low Cost Mieage
What about Short?
lead at the half over Chicago flalfooted. Jeff Mullins, Golden against the Atlanta Hawks,
"He has given too, but not as much as !have."
the first quarter. But Gall state's othes- guard, took ad- runnersup in the Central
A lot of people have the wrong idea about a baseball holdout,
Goodrich, the Lakers' leading vantage of the Bucks' shortage Division, tonight. Baltimore,
particularly ,one who has gone this far . They picture him sitting
scorer in the game with 32 at guard to score 20 poln15, the Central Champion, takes on
on top of the phone, chewing his fingernails into fine little bits and
points, burst to rally Los Thurmond had 22 a~d Cazzie second-place New York of the
Atlantic in their opener Friday working himself up to a nice case of anxiety neurosis.
Angeles from a 49-43 deficit. Russell 21.
That iso't the picture of Frank Howard though.
O!icago, which shot only 34
Warriors' Coach AI AtUes night at Baltimore.
Plenty to Do
"I'm up at 7 in the mornlnl! and there's always plenty to do,"
says Howard, who aells corilinerctai real estate for supermarkets
throughout Wisconsin with a partner, Don Holznecht .
Howard is aware that he, Vida mue and Richie ADen are the
last three major holdouts but he hasn't kept up with their
negotiations very closely.
MEMPIUS, Tenn. (UPI)- and ) have heard many WOO· this year. "It would have
"I guess they're the same as me,'' he says. "They want 'more
White Wall or
David Brent is 19 years old, the dlirful things about the City helped David to play two more·
money." .
'Black Walland
prolld owner of a new luxury here."
years,'' Waadln aaid. "He is
Not a bad guess, although in ADen's case he seems to be inFor many dUferent reasons, potentially great, and I think
automobile, with a .bonus of
2 Recappable
about $10)io In hls pocket and the Pros are pleased to be with that's why Memphis drafted terested in time more than money.
Tires
Like Howard says, Vida BlUe and Richie ADen are the same as
him ..:.not for the present, but
a contract to make up to about Brent.
he
is. All three will wind up playing this year.
Viewing the
Western for the future."
$1 mliUon over the next five
FREE Installation
"I want to play as long as I Can,'' Howard say• "With the price
years.
Division of the ABA from the
The terms of the contract
Brent's sudden entry Into bottom up, the Pros hope Brent were not revealed, but Pros of poker what it is, a guy is foolish if he doesn't."
FrankHowarddoesn,realizeit, but right there he's teUing :IOU
affiuerJce was announced Tues- will become a donnlnatlng force general manager Bob Vanatta
why
,the ballplayers aren 'I going to strike.
day when the ABA Memphis In the league. As an Indication called the contract "exPros signed the 7-foot-1 sopho- of his ability, the Pros cite 32 cellent." Brent's agent, Cliff
more
at
Jacksonville blocked shota by Brent in Paul of Houston, Indicated the
Bo
' wling"
University to a professional leading Jacksonville IDa third- figiD'e was about $1.1 mlllton.
place finish in the recent The Lincoln Continental and ·
ballt:etbaU contract.
"For many rea~ons I'm National Invitation Tour- the cash were a bonus to sign.
Morning Glories
992-7161
March21,1972
pleased to be with Memphis," nament.
Standings
VETERAN
DIES
.
Middleport,
Hampered by a broken leg
tile young giant said. "I am
Team
Pts.
INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
.__ _ _ _.,._..,. close to my home In St. Louts early In the season, Brent
Newell Sunoco
130
averaged only 11 points a game -Owen J. "Donie" Bush, a Excelsior Oil Co.
123
fonner
major
league
shortstop
G.
&amp;
J.
Auto
Parts
116
-'lit this year. As a sophomore, he
Domigan
Soh
to
100
and
manager
and
a
61).year
averaged just under :16 poinll!
Gibbs Grocery
99
and drew praise from a veteran of organized basebaU, Spencer's Market
80
previous Doiphin -star Artis died Tuesday at the age of 84
High Team 3· Games Domigan
Sohio 2273 ; G. &amp; J.
following
a
brief
illness.
Gilmore of the Kentucky
Auto
Parts
Bush enjoyed a IS,year Grocery 220S. 2223 ; Gibbs
Colonels.
Brent "should become a career as a player, most of
Hi9h Team Game OUR
super star," GUmore said after them spent at Detroit where he Domogan Sohlo 808 ; Domlgan
Sohlo 194; G. &amp; J. Auto Parts
the Pros announced they had was a base.stealing teammate 186.
. ,, '
of Ty Cobb's. He stole 53 bases
drafted Brent.
High Ind. 3-Games Tom Waadln, coach ol the in 1909 and finished with a Margaret Foil rod 411 ; Carolyn
; Carolyn Teaford
Jacksonville club, aaid he was career total of 403. His lifetime McDantel424
418.
a bit suprised that'Brent signed hatting average was .250.
High Ind. Game - Carolyn
4 dr. hardtop, P.S., P.B., ·
McDaniel 177 ; Myrtle Sisson
169; Margaret Follrod 161.
excellent tires. Very clean.

burlih Pirates have tbe lourth When the Pirates downed the
bell mark In llpl'ing training st. LoW. Cardinals, S-2.
pmes and key liars llke Dock
The Cardinals rallied against
Eilla, wwle Slargell, Roberto John Lamb for two runs in the
Qemente, sti'Ye Blass and Bob ninth but the threat was wiped

New York T~ps· In diana 127•121

.
~~

'

.

Snnrt Parade il

Lakers Nudge Bulls;
_B.ucks Upset, 117-106

Pro Standings
AH LStandings
Bv United Piess International
East

Boston

w.

Nova Scotia
Springfield
Providence

Roches ter

West
Baltimore
Hershey
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Richmond
Tidewater

L T. Pis

40
40
30
26
21

19
20
29
36
31

14
13
14
11

94
93
14
63
8 62

W.
33
31
28
30
28
21

L T.
29 11
29 12
21 11
J.4 10
32 13
42 9

Pts
11

14.
13
10
6Y
51

Tuesday's Results
Rochester 6 Baltimore 2

Boston 2 Hershey 1

Cincinnati 6 Richmond 6

Nova Scotia 8 Providence 3
(Oniygamesscheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Rochester at Hershey
Nova Scotia at Providence
Cincinnati at Tidewater

I Only games scheduled)

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
x- Kentucky
61 16 .801 Virolnia
44 39 .530 23
New York
44 40 .524 231/,
Floridians
.43.4 31
3365 41
Carolina
~ .417~ ~
25 ss .301 42
Pittsburgh
West
w. L. Pet. GB
x-Uiah
59 24 .Ill Indiana
46 31 554 13
Dallas
42 42 ·.500 17'12
Denver
34 49 .410 25
Memphis
26 57 .313 33
JC- Clinched division
Tuesday's Results
Carolina 121 Virginia 121
New York 92 Indiana· 86
Floridians 118Memphis 101
Dallas 98 Ulah 95
Kentucky 136 Pittsburgh 134 .
Wednesday's Games
Pittsburgh al Indiana
Virginia at Memphis
Kentuckyat Floridians
Utah at Denver
(Onlygames scheduled )

menl5 to their minor league
camp of outfielder Jim Holt
and pitchers Hal Haydel, Jim
Strickland and Dave Goltz.
The Montreal Expoa aslted
waivers on pitcher Ron Taylor,
placed infielder Coco Laboy on
the disabled Jist and returned
outfielder Keith Lampard to
Houstoq ... Jim Fairey singled
home Gary Sutherland in the
lOth inning giving the Expos a
S-4 victory over the AUanta
Braves. Carl Morton, Bator
Moore, Joe Gilbert, Tom
Walker and Mike Marshall
combined to strike out 13
Braves.
RACE DATES SET
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
National Hot Rod Association's
8th annual Spring naUonsls
drag racing championships
will be held at National Trail
Raceway near here June 9-11,
it was announced today .
A field of over 400 entries is
expected for the races and a
cash purse amounting to abOut
$200,000 is anticipated according ID NHRA President
Wally Parks and National Trail
co-&lt;Jwners Ben and Clark
Rader Jr.
LITl'LE SERIES DATES
WllJJAMSPORT P~. (UPI)
,
-Peter
J.
McGovern,
president of Little League
Baseball Inc. announced
Tu
'
esday that the 26th annual
Little League World Series will
be held here next Aug. 22-:16.
McGovern said there will be
a record 8;100 leagues In 31
nations this season, which will
Jim
ith i ht t
c ax w
eg
eams
competing in the World Series.

NHL Stindings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pfs
x-Bos1on
53 11 11117
New York
48 15 12 108
Montreal
4&lt;1 16 15103
NBA Playoff Standings
Toronto
31 30 14 76
By United Press International
Detroit
333497S
(All Seriei Best of 71
· Buftalo
15 42 19 49
Eastern Conference
Vancouver
!Semifinals)
19 49 I 4.5
West
W. L. ~ Pet.
.
W. L. T. Pfs
Boston
0 0 .000
x-Chlcago
4&lt;1 17 14 102
Atlanta
0 0 .000
36 28 12 8.4
W. L. Pet. Minnesota
28 37 11 67
New York
0 0 .000 St. Louts
25 37. 13 63
Baltimore
0 0 .000 Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
24 38 13 61
Western Conference
California
21 36 18 60
(Semlfinatsl
18 49 8 44
W. L. .Pet. Los Angeles
x-Cllnched division title .f&gt;
Los Angeles
1 0 1.000
Chicago
Tuesday's Resvlls
~
o. 1 .000
• Detro! t 6 ~ton 3 .,
,,
W. L. t Pet.
St. Louis 2 Vancouver 1
Golden State
1 0 1.000
Minnesola2 Philadelphia 2
Milwaukee
0 1 .000
ICiniygamesscheduied)
Tuesday•• Results
Wednesdey's Gomes
Golden Slate 111 Milwaukee
Montreal at Chicago
106
Boston at Toronto
Los Angeles 95 Chicago 80
Detroit at New York
(On Iygamesscheduied)
Vancouver at Los Angeles
Wednesday's Games
Callfornlaal Pittsburgh
Atlanta at Boston
(Cinlygamesscheduled)
(Cinlygamescheduled)

.KRAFTREIDS

Dolphin Ace Signs Contract

GENERAL
·TIRE

•
•
•
•
•

Fl ats repaired promptly!
Tube val ves repla ced!
Tractor tires retreaded! ,
Tires liquid-fill ed!
Tire soles &amp; service for
every truck, traclor, and
ituto on your farm!

o.

RIZER OIL CO.
700 E. MAIN

992-2101
POMEROY.O.

To hammer out your
won water problems •. ,

JUST PWN TALk
HOT -IN

LOT

1965 FORD LT.D.

Women's Thursday
Alternoon League
March 22, 1912
Standings
Team
W. L.

'695

Dave's Tire Land

32

46
46

48

54
62

Dave' s Tire Land 1753 ; New

York Clothing 1691 ; Smith's
Body Shop 1643.
High Team game - Dave's
Just wash out your
Tire Land 615 ; Smith's Body
brush with soap
. ~~p 596 ; New York Clothing
High Ind. Series - Loretta
w:•:t:er~-. . . . . .~. .
Brown 415 ; Norma Amsbary·
468 ; Betty Smith 461.
High Ind. game - Betty
MIDDLEPORT, O.
Smtih 191 ; Lor:etta Brown tl9 :
Becky Dunlee 115 .

WHITE
PAl
NT
.................._.....

l

64

Pomeroy Lanes
so
Simon's Mkt.
so
New York Clothing
48
Smith's Body Shop ·
42
Forest Run Block
34
High Team 3 games

GUARANTY PLASTIC
OUTSIDE

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR

~

There's no need
to fight i t any
longer. Mow have
all tbe clear,
filtered water you
want at a turn of
your faucets. for
a free estiaate ...

Pick up your phone and say ...

ring

3rdAve.

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Local

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ONLY

We're As Close As

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1

ad is worth $25.00 toward any Culligan Water
Conditioner. 2 weeks FREE tria I at no expense! This
special ends March 31st.

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16 W. STIMSON AVE.

ATHENS,

0.

'·

�•
2- The Dlil)' Seatinel, Middleport-Pnmeroy, 0., Mll!'ch 29)972

..

bush License Tag Slogan Bill

GOP Ready to
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Ohio
Howle members, a week away
lrGm a recess for primary
c:ampaigning, were to wann up
with a vote today on a
Republican bill designed to
blunt the Gilligan admlniBtralion's plan for a slogan
Gil auto. license plates next
;r.ll!'.
The House session was to beldn at 1 p.m.
The Republican controlled
Rules Conuiuttee alated the
four-week-old bill sponsored by
House l\lajtirity Lel!der Robert.
E. Levitt, R-North Canton, deapite Democratic protesll! It
was frivolous and more weighty bUts have been languishing
In committee for months.
Levitt has said a license
plate slogan - such as "seat
Bel15 Fastened?" proposed for
nelt year - is a "poor idea"
because it would ''make the
plate jumbled and more dif..
llcult to read."
He also complained the
110vemor might insist on the
lliogan "Re-Elect Giillgan" in
1974. His bill would give the
~lure control over such
slogans.
House Speaker Charles F.
Kurfess, R-Bowling Green,
WIB asked why' the bill was
given such quick conllideration. "Maybe because
the majority leader is the chief
1p0nsor," he replied.
FW Out Caleader
"It's just a silly bill they put
Cll to fill outthe calendar," said
Rep. Richard M. Christiansen,
0..1\!ansfield, a Democratic
member of the Rules Com·

mlttee.
The GOP leaders used a
small group of maverick
Democrats Tuesday to
narrowly pass legislation
. repealing Ohio's female
protective labor laws, dealing
organized labor a sharp blow in
the process.
The bill passed, 52- 35, with
two more votes than the 50
votes required for House clea-

.

ranee. It now goes to the Senate.
· ~ouse pa..age followed two
hours of tangled debate featuring charges ol "union bosses"
and '1at call!" and the failure
of ~ocrats to insert three
amendments demanded by the
Ohio AFL-CIO.
Eight Democrall! joined the
chief sponsor, Rep. Patrick A.
Sweeney, 1&gt;-Cieveland, in support of the bill. GOP leaders
could muster only 43 votes out
of their own caucus, mainly hecause of absenteeism.
The legislation repeals protective laws for women at

$1.25 per hour in retaU trades.

Rep. Robert A. Manning, R·
Akron, pointed out an adminis!ration bill on minintum wages
is pendlnl! in the Senate. He
said Lancione's amendment
would "take care of the fat cats
but penalize the little
businessmnian."
Levitt said it was "another
part of the union power play.
They're trying to show that
· they control this legislature."
Rut Christiansen said the

minlmwn wage would be only
$3,200 a year under the amendment.
"That's only two-thirdo! of the
amount we put through as a
pay raiSe for ourselves in one
day four years ago,'' he said.
Keep Bill Alive
At this point, the GOP
leadership mftrowiy saved the
bill from being sent bac)&lt; to
cormnittee at Christiansen's
request. · Ilouse Speaker Pro
Tempore Charles E. Fry, R-

Springfield, changed hls vote
11 the last minute ~d Kurfess
voted ''no" to keep the bill
all.ve. ·
·
Lanciooe's amendment on
the minimum wage was then
defeated 42-46, but organized
labor obtained a record of
individual. votes on the controversiai Issue.
An amendment by Rep. Barney Quilter, D-Toledo, the
assistantnnlnorityfioorleader, ,
to limit working men and

.'

w~ to 10 hours a day ~d 50 attach to ~other bill ~e

hours a week ucept with their
&lt;.'llMe!ll a1ao feU,.U-44. .
An amendment offered . by
Rep. Phale D. Hale, 0-Columbus, forbidding employes to Uft
packages heavier than they
were capable of Uftlng failed '
39-47 after Levitt tagged It
"u 11m an age a b 1e and
meaningless."
The ·House voted 53-29 to
knockdownanattemptbyRep.
Robert E. Netzley, Laura, to

exempting federal and private
pensions from the slate incO!Ile
tax.
Netzley and Rep. , James
Thorpe, R-Alliance, complalned it was taking too long to
adopt the pension exemptions,
so they bied to tacit the subject
onto a bill theY knew the GOP
ieadeTJhip was jlulllilng.
In other action Tlielday:
- The Senate Judiciary
Committee reported out a bill

lowering· the age ol majarlty
&amp;om 21 to 11· -.pt far pur.
cbaBingor~~

beverages.
1
.
.. - The SeMte Ullllllmiaily
'll&lt;klpted IIICI aent to tile Bciali . .
bill requlrlnB relunclt of - payments of 'tile Illite lllcGale
tax.
1
,.t \
-Sen. WiUiam F. 8oWeJi, 0..
Cincinnati, In~ I bllJ requiring black history In public
schools.
.'

'

1
R
*
T T.
Wh
•
'
.
111
•
• 5
~r:n~~~t~h~:..~~~~ nsurance · a._es L!P
opplng 1r~argzns ln

Court ruled last week that the

same laws for firms employing
25 or more persons conflicted
with the U.S. Civil Righl5 Act
of 1964 and could not be en·
forced.
The last Hurrah
Action by the Senate and
Gov. John J. Gilligan apparenUy would be the last
hurrah for ·the AFL-CIO and
other unions favoring retention
of the laws which forbid women
to work at men's jobs, lift
weights over 25 pounds, skip
lunch, and work late 'hours or
overtime beyond a certain
amount.
Sweeney said that since the
court decision did not apply to
firms employing less than 25
persons, small businessmen
would be subjected to unfair
competition for employes if
they had to slick to the female
restrictions.
He produced a letter from
warren J. ~lth, secretarytreasurer of the Ohio AFL-CIO,
calling for defeat of the bill if
the amendments were not
included.
The first amendment,
submited by House Minority
Leader A.G. Lanclone, D·
Bellaire, called for a $1.60
hourly minimum wage for men
and women starting next Jan. I
The top nnlnlmum wage is now

Helen
Help
..
.

·u. · • •
"S·~

.

.

"'

. By Helerl..Bottel

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Two of
the main factors regulating in·
surance rate increases in Ohio
- hospital care and auto repair
costs - have soared 73 and 32
per cent, respectively, over the
past five years. Insurance
rates jumped by 40 per cent.
The statistics were contained
in a year-end report made by
the Ohio Insurance Institute
and covering the state's eight
largest cit1es, Akron, Canton,
Cincinnati, Cleveland,
Columbus, Dayton, Toledo and
Youngstown.
The largest jump in daily
hospital rates was in Dayton
with an increase of 85.1 per
cent between 1966 and 1971
while Toledo was a close
second with an increase of 83
per cent.
Cincinnati had a 78.6 per cent
increase in hospital costs

followed by Cleveland at 73.8;
Canron 70.6; Columbus, 68.8;
Youngstown 63.5 and Akron
60.9 per cent.
Cincinnati showed the
largest gain in auto repairs
with an increase of 40 per cent,
followed by Columbus at 36 per
cent.
Cleveland and Akron tied for
third at 33.3 per cent, followed
by Dayton at 30.8; Canton 28.6,
and Toledo and Youngstown
tied at 25 per cent.
High Repair Costs
The survey of insurance premiums covered the five-year
period ending Jan. I, 1972, and
showed Cleveland far out In
front with increases totaUng
53.8 per cent, followed by
Youngstown at 48.2 per cent.
Canton was third at 37.3 per
cent foilowed by Cincinnati
with an increase of 31.8 per

ceni, Dayton 30.2; Columbus
and Toledo tied at 29.2 and
Akron 29 per cent.
The institute said aulD manufacturers haw given "little regard" to the repairability of
the vehicles conning off their
production Jines.
"In some cases the cost of
labor is 10 times the cost of the
item involved,'' said the 011.

a priest.
Should I tell him aboot my feelings so that maybe he could
help me? - PRIESI''S ADMffiER
Dear Admirer:
What you can love is mostly romantic fantasy - like the
dreams of a pregnant woman has aboot her obstetrician. Yours
have lasted longer because they're all milled up with worship
and, too, because you may not have allowed yourself to really
grow up.
fn this case, "confession" wouldn't help. But consultation
with a counselor (perhaps a wise, older priest) miilbt bring you
face to face with reality. - H.

'

COLUMBUS (UPI)- The
Ohio Academy of Trail
Lawyers said Tuesday it is
opposed to "no-fault" insurance which allows "no
responsibility drivers and
driving."
in a letter to ail members
of the Ohio General Assembly,
Michael F. CoUey, president ·of
the 1,400- member academy,
said his group was interested
in insurance refonn to reduce
premiums and assure fair and
prompt payment to persons injured in auto accidents," but
does n~t like the lenn "no-

'no-fault' insurance because
that phrase has so many different meanings to different
people," he said.
"We are for mandatory first
party coverage adequate to fuJ..
ly compensate injured persona
for their totally economic loss,
but we are inalterable opposed
to 'no responsibility' drivers
and driving.
"We believe there is a dUference between right and
wrong if the wrongful conduct
of a driver causes injury to
another, the innocent victim
should be compensated for ·aU
fault."
of his lOsses, not just his out-of"It .is difficult to talk about pocket bills or 'iost wages."

WIN AT BRIDGE

o,·scaf d Dooms

+ K Q 10

"'AJ% 5
WES'f "
EAST
• J9G

.1 3

.K 5 .

.AQ J9
+ 9 765 3
oi&gt;BJ

"'10 7 4 .

SOUTtt ( D)

Dear Helen :
Tony's letter could have been written about any of my sons.
He describes the same kind of overly strict and rigid father as is
the man who happens to be my husband.
Our boys are grown now but the results of their father's
attitudes toward them when they were growing up are tragic. He
lost them completely by his bossiness, unreasonable criticism,
· and the·belief that next to God, he was THE authority on every
lin.
My life was full of tunnoil and heartache, trying to be the gobetween. The youngsters were and are terrific. No problems ;
good, active kids, They ail have good careers now, but th~ir
father still sneers and criticizes and complains each time he sees
them.
What is the saddest thing about this? They refuse to have
..ythingtodo with their father . They lry to visit when he'saway.
Ttteyignorehlscutting remarks. He could be a stran~er to them.
He was a good provider, but as you said in your letter to
Tony, this type of "king" can never be human. As a result, he's a
wry lonely man - and he blames everyone but himself.
May I add a plea to your good answer : Please, parenll! (and
mothes-s can be just as guilty as fathers ), treat your children wilh
• much consideration as you would extend to a friend - for
when they become adults, this is what they can be - the ~es t
friends you could ever have !- VOICE OF EXPERIENCE
Dear V of E :
... And not just "when they bej:ome adults": children treated
with coosideration are your FRll:NDS all through rh iltUwod -·
and therefore much easier to raise. -- II .

t Void

Ptlss
Pa ss
Pa!ls

1.
4. -

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

D'Artaguan. th e b es t
swordsman and bridge player in France, decided that
while it was the duty of a
musketeer · to protect the
king, this was one time that
a lead of a king was called
for . He placed the kin g of
hearts on the table.
Porthos, s i t t in g East.
played the nine and D'Art·
agnan continued the suil .
Portho's cashed the jack and
ace.
. The wily De Roc hefort , sit·
tlng South, false-carded wilh
the 10 ·and it was up to
D'Artagnan to discard .
He knew t h a t Porthos
would follow the instructions
conveyed by his discard.
What should he tell Porthos
to do? it all depended on
who held lhe seven of hearts.
Could Porthos h o I d il ?
Very unlikely for lwo reasons. lf Porthos held five
hearts to the ace-queen-jack
he would surely have overcalled and even if he hadn 't
overcalled he would have
overtaken D'Artagnan's ktng
with the ace if he held five
hearts.
After working this all out
carefully it was no trouble
for D'Artagnan to drop the
diamond deuce. Porthos led
his last high hea rt and since
De Rochefort had to r uff wilh
one of dumm y's high lr urnps
Ihe coni ract was doom ed.
"Sa ere Hleu!.. cried !)p
Rochefm·t " From now oi1 I
will !i l i('k to rll! !•l li ng &lt;1.!:(~1i 11 ~ 1
Von

nn·

'

l ~ tr fu u ,lo!•aul

·'· ·····-

....

·"

MEIGS USHERETTE .CLUB.inemb,ers turned. the.:Blakesl~ biJ:Bkf~;~~~.l..toom intp..:BIJ ....
Easter egg decoratinl! nook as they prepared hundreds· oi hard boUed eggs for their Good
· Friday sale at the Davis-Warner Insurance Office. Working in one group were Patti Well,
Karla Beal, Loris Rupe, Denise Hendricks, and Debbie Schuck, seated from the left around the
table, and Sheila McKnight, Nita Hennann, and VlckiGrate, are standing.

(Continued fr0ll1 Page I)

3.2.

I"'
,

Have Your Snow

And Eat It, Too!

Open ing lead- ¥ K

.\ OtL

1•1

DR. LAWRENCE E.LAMB

•
Pass

1•
3.
Pass

"

..

North - Sout h vulne!·able
We~ t
North
East Suuth

Pass
Pass
Pass

- ,,,,

'-..

.A 10 85 4 2
• 10 7 6 4

"'KQ 2

'

or third weeken~ in April and
will cost about $500. Through
selling candy bars, and staging
three bake sales, the girls have
Y&amp;u, South, hold :
raiSed
$320. They're counting
.AK65~ .A2 +J "'AK654
on the egg sale for a major
What do you do now?
of the remainder.
portion
A-Pass, A f Q u r-hea r t ull
would not be too_bad but your Twenty girls will be making
best chance for game ml(.Sl be- the trip with the club advisor,
at nu-trump.
Mrs. C. E. Blakeslee, and her
Pass
Pass
Pass

By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb - How
germ-laden is new fallen
snow? My mother told me
that a doctor told her and
other mothers that new snow
that lies overnight is full of
germs. Are children who eat
this stuff apt to become ill?
For the sake of the kids and
their health, ten us the truth .
I have several grandchildren
who are snow eaters.
Dear Reader-There is
probably not a single answer
to your question. Ther¢ are
a lot of variables. If It is a
nice, good, deep snow you
could brush th~ top back
safely and eat the snow that
is immediately underneath
the crust. The closer the
snow gets to the surface of
the ground the more likely
it is going to be contami·
nated with all the different
germs that cover the earth .
Germs do not propagate in
frozen material. They like
warm , moist climates and
the ground surface comes
closer to meeting these re·
quirements. They are not
likely ID migrate upward
into fairly deep snbw, so
the trick Is In finding a
place where there has been .
a good deep, rapid snow fail
that is fresh. If you have had
several snow fails at different intervals there will be
different layer s of crusts and
this snow could be conlami·
nated.
If one is careful and uses
fre-sh fallen snow and st·nops
a w ny lht1 top , the unrlt~ rlyin g

sm'"'

(' il l!

tw n.•uocl.

Mnn~·

.~. ~rs

The Daily Sentilil

Good Friday
1•
3f
3 N,T

.·

the drunk driver the habitual speeds." '
Driven alJo Cited
offender· and other irrespoJlo
The tesl5 conducted bY the
sible can be considered 'public
Insurance
Institule llhowed last
enemY number one' when it
comes to rising aulD insurance year at a speed ol five mllett
rates," the Oil report said. per hour damage to Ill~ AMC
"But another ·major faCtor is Gremlin when it hits a froot
an extremely fragUe modern- barrier, .will be ~.II&amp;, an in- ·
day automobile--{)ne that crease of $213 In tests done uqsustains serious damage at der the same co'hdltlons last
mere walking or jogging year.
In 1971, a Plymoutli Fury
striking a barrier at fivl! miles
per liour would sUffer an 'average $202.50 ·in damages. In
1972 that total went to'$331.15.
Under the
tests, damage to the Ford Galaxle In
1971 would total $34U) but II
has jumped to$402.10 tills year.
The Ford Pinto, oo the other
hand, has !lropped from $18UO
to $125.20 and Chevrolet Jni..
pala - which recorded' tile
largest drop - went fnm
$387.90 last year to $1.53.75 tills
year.
The on also cootends there
ll!'e too many lkivers sWl on
the highways who haw been
cited nmneroua limes.
It lists a Medina . motorist
with 12 traffic vilations between April 19611 and A~
1971.
The Oil aaid these violations
include two counts of vehiotlar
homicide. The mol«tst also
was arrested twice oo narcotics chll!'ges .

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

Pass
Pass
Pass

NOR Til
.K Q
• 832

+ AJ 8 4 2

at bridge."

The b iddirtg has been :
West
North East
South

Game Bid

V

same

Lawyers Against Plan

+++
Dear Helen : ·
The student voter who said each child costs parents around
$2,000 a year, so their income tax deductions should be for that
amount rather than for $675, is evidently thinking as a
prospective father of many.
As a single person who has had to support schools with my
tax dollars, I would make a counter-suggestion: make parents
pay higher taxes with each added child. After all, public schools
CO.!!, and those who benefit should foot the bill, not.us childless
people!
Even though I marry ,I do not pian to have children, as there
are too many in the world alrea!IY. Meanwhile, I pay lremendous
taxes, because I have no "dependents." - FOR A
"CHILDLESS" DEDUCTION
.
Dear FCD:
Here's MY suggestion : Let's drop economics in favor of good
old family relationships.
Each time I venture out of my field (into religion, politics,
the law) I jump into a hornet's nest of controversy.
So ... back to the man-woman thing! - H.

The 011 again reported on resul15 of tests conducted by the
Insurance · Institute for Highway Safety. ·
"There's little doubt but that

•

THISIS"FAIRYTALE" LOVE
Dear Helen :
I've been secretly in love with a certain man for ten years.
I've even stopped going to church because my heart aches like a
:10UD8 fool's every time I see him.
Yousee,l'm married to another man and have two children.
The person I have always loved -even before my marriage - is

''One of today's bwnpet.grille
combinations is held together
with a total of 57 boats and requires the efforts of three men
to install and align."

pt•n-

pie even use it to make snow
1ce cream. I have .nev~r
known of anyo~e gettmg 111
from th1s practice.
Dear Dr. Lamb _ Four
years ago 1 had a prostate
glan!l operation. Everything
is okay, but when I have
sexual rei~ti~ns, I do not
have an em1ss10n. Th~ doctor
tells me that everythmg goes
back into the bloodstream
and that it is not harmful.
How come? Something must
have ~one wrong with th~
operation. Is there any medi·
cation I could take so I could
get back to normal•
Dear Reader_ 1 fuink you
pro b a b 1 y misunderstood
your doctor. What he meant
was that the secretions
flowed backward . into the
bladder. Th•s entire area of
your body is a very complex
engineering job. The little
valve or sphmcter just . out·
side the bladder usually
mus~ close ~If to prevent the
semmal flmd from flowmg
backward mto the bladder.
This is at the exact location
of the prostate gland. Fre·
quently when this opening to
the large_ gland is reamed
out fo.r the common prostate
gland operation, the valve
doesn't function properly
afterward . The fact that the
semen flows backward into
the bladder does not cause
any harm . There is no way
that it can flow backward
into the bloodstream .
.
.
1'he Ia c k Of e m 1S
s
'on
should in no way detract
lrono rnosl or your nsnal
Sf•n .saliuns. h_uwt-~vt•r.

husband, along With several
othe~ chaperones.
The egg aale will be held at
the Davis-Warner Insurance
Office in Pomeroy !Higinnlng at
9 a.m. and continuing unW all
of the eggs have been sold.
Colored, but undecorated eggs,
will be sold for 75 cenl5 a dozeri,
the fancy onea will be priced

from 15 to 25 cents each. Or·
ders for eggs can be telephoned
to 992-2581 or 742-4611.
The weekend session was not
an work and no play. Club
members roasted wieners over
the wood-burning fireplace In
the BlakeSlee living room tO
add a picnic atmosphere to
their potluck dinner.

DEVOTED TO THI
INTIRISTOP •
MI!IOS·MASON ARIA
CHIUIR'!&lt;. T-ANNIHIL~~"
·~·t' l!d . . ,, - ~
. ROIIRT, .tlOI,LtCH •
.1. ••1' Clty:·l -llor
' \ Publls~ed dally uetp't

.

Sa!urdoy by T~e Ohio V~lity
CompanY. · 111
Court 51~ Pomeroy, Ohio,
45769. Bustntss Offict Phone
992-2156, Edilortol Phone 9fl·
2151.
Second clan postage paid 11
Publishing

Pomeroy , Ohio .
National advfrtislng
representative Bottlntlll ·

Gallagher, Inc .. 12 Eut •2nd
St., New York City, New York .
Subscription tatn : oe .

llvertd by carrier whtrt
available 50 ttnts ptr wttk ;
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month $1 .75. By Mell In Ohio
l~d w. Va., Ont yur su.oo.
S1K months $7 . 25. Thrtt

months S4 .50. Subscrlr,tlon

priet _includts Sunday T mtl ·
Sentinel .

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRIAN
INTRODUCING JOEY TO WHAT?
NEW YORK (KFS) - Richard Burton's
movie ads for "bluebeard" carry the line, "And
Introducing Joey Heatherton." Wonder why:
Joey was "Introduced" In several !Urns
previoUsly arid maybe 100 1V shows ... Newest
TV star's middle age hasn't kept his head from
expanding. Fellow actors cringe at his star-stuff
... Bdwy. found an angel with a specialty:
whodunits ... Adela Holzer invested heavily in
"Sleuth" (bigprofi\S), "Night Watch" (hardly a
ha
.
t
t) nd ,....._ Oth , . hich
ppy mves men a
...e
ers, m w
she stuffed enough cash to become an
"associate producer."
Feature editors might chase down a human
interest tale in John Tracy, the late Spencer's
45-year-old deaf mute son ... John inherited
,
.
.
.
pops fortune with the sUpuiat10n he use 1t to
finance an institute for deaf mute children ...
John did that In '69, but in '71 had tapped out.
Nothing remained to finance the big home
oul5ide L. A. and it seemed 700 deaf mute
.
children would have to move out ... John then
wrote tO H'wood stars of his dad's era 'nd circle
and told them of the foundation's plight ~ and
every star responded with a check to keep
Spence's dream going -and promised to send
more each year ... Which is\ why the institute·
still is open and has expanded to accommodate
1,000.
British composer Lionel Bart, who recenUy
declared bankruptcy, at one point had earned $5
million from his stage~reen musical "Oliver."
... He has talent will recoup ... "Shaft" star
.
' ,
.
.
Richard. Roundtree s favorite dr~g room
photo is a sexy shot of his best gal, singer Freda
Payne ... Helen Hayes was the unexpected star
of the annual celebrity-packed fashion show at
Ohrbach's: Helen had to cross the runway to get
he
nd
.· .
·
r seat a ' as w•e mannequm,mUSlc started,
she opened her coat and,did a delightful cross
between a cheerfully mincing, mockmannequin, stylish slump - and a strip · now
where would Helen Hayes have researched such
a thing 1
. ·
.
B1g behind-scenes feud is rankbng two
.
''nfi uen t'al
' pu bli ca ti.ons, "Commentsry " and
"N. Y. Review of Books," each vying for deepthink leadership. 11 C0mmentary" editor NorIIIRil 1'1.. !horctz has been reining his mugnzine

•

•.

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport.P~y, 0., March 29,1972

in from the left while Robert Silvers' "ReYiew"
is somewhere be:10nd the portside of Ml!o and
Yevtushenko; the counter-aitlclam bacbtage
would burn the late Lenny Bruce's asbestos
ears.
·
Prince Bernhard sounded off bac:lt home
that the Dutcli. PII!'Jiament should lay off the
cabinet- and the local papers promptly pelted
him to "sfay in hts place," not too impatient a
place at that ... Burgess Meredith at Lea
Pyrenees said he's been so busy fUming Gil the
coast, he hasn't had time to tenant hls own
Pomona, N. Y., estate for more than a year:
Otto Prennlnger rented it last year, Robert Shaw
and wife Mary Ure, this.
Gianis' halfback Bobby Duhon wina the
season's popofl award: defended coach Aiel:' ·
Wehsier, owner WeUington Mara- but riPPed
ex-coach Allie Sherman and the Cowboys',Tom
Landry, and dubbed the sportswriters "dummies" at a New Jersey high school dinner ... : The
London Jewish Chronicle noted it's possible for
a man to take a second Wife uliarael if his first
ia barren, incompetent etc ... AU it takes is.
approval - by more than 100 rabbis 1 .
'
Doug Fairbanks Jr. went unrecognized at.
Duncan's for a whole evening. The :10ung
stewardesses meanwhlle swarmed over
younger, lesser celebs ... Ewryone in Proof of'
the Pudding recognized Ethel Kennedy but
respected her privacy. Stared at, but no
autograph clown bothered her
·
Steve Allen's syndicated ialk-ahow is
teetering. He always seema to bounce to another
... Some 32 miillon dogs In the U. S. canine
population currenUy; there seem that many
just on · our · block ... Rumors the Rocky
Grazianos had a nice big famUy squaw! must 'VI!
been true: the Rock later kept kissing hes- for
ho!fS at the Cope bar. .
.
r
Couple of wise guys picked on the exwrestler bouncer at a 3rd Ave. spot when they
couldn't get ,in, motiooed him oulalde, took
, punches at him, whereupon he Oattened them.
They called the cope and had him luged to the
· police precinct, but when they learned they bad
to sign their namea on the CGIIIJilalnt a1o11c with
the '1adles" theY accompanied, they drGpped
chll'8es and vamooaed: tleelllll they weren't
with'tbeir wivea.

iDe ending Champs 'Ready' For 1972 Campaign
'
II)' Ualted Pnu 'Iuterutlaui
With a 15-8 record, the Pitts-

.

lliaS!I and Robertson played nie stennetl and first baseman homer led the Baltimore the lOth inning.

Alex Johnson and six strong
innings by ~teve Dunning
paced the Cleveland Indians to
a S-~ decision over the San
Francisco Giants ... Pinchhitter Paul Popovich's two-run
triple and Cannen Fanwne's
homer led the Chicago Cubs to
an ~ victory over the San
Diego Padres.
A three-run homer by Dave
May capped a five-run
· seventh-inning rally which
lifted the Milwaukee Brewers
to a 5-3 triumph over a team of
Cleveland reserves ... H8rmon
Killebrew hit his third horner of
the spring as the Minnesota

the starring , roles Tuesday . Jose Pagan executed a triple
play.
..Robertson . supplied the
customary Pittsburgh muscle
with two homers. ·
In othes- campa: Rookie Bob
out when third baseman Rich Grieb's two-nm double and
Hebner; secood ba~n Ren- Andy Etcbebarren's two-run

Twins and Boston Red Sox
played a· 3-3 tie in a game
halted by rain after eight innings. The Twins announced
after the game the reassign-

Orioles to a S-1 victory over the
Doubles by Sandy Alomar,
Texas Rangers. Pat Dobson Ken McMullen and Ken Berry
pitched five shutout innings for were the big blows as the
the Orioles ... .The Detroit California Angels beat the
Tigers shaded the New York Oakland Athletics, S-1 ... Willie
Mets,• S-4, when .rookie Brent Davis' eighth-inning homer
Robertson look reallY to ·open
strom's balk allowed Gates gave the Los AngeJes Dodgers
the &amp;el!aon.
,
Brown to score in the bottom of · 11'6-QviCtoryovertheNew York
Yankees. Fred Beene was the
•
victiin of Da9is' h.omer ...
Denis Menke homered and
George
Foster,
t;esar
·
'
.
Geronimo and Joe Morgan had
• ·
triples In leading the Cincinnati
Reds
to a 7-3 triumph over the
By GARY KALE
John Roche, the Nets' rookie play. Wendell Ladner's jumper
Dallas, third place finisher in
Astros.
. UPI 8J!0!1I Writer
guard who is filling In fur broke the deadlock, Gene the West, tuned up for its Houston
Homers
by Del Unser and
· In the American Bal!kelball Sidelined Bill Melchionni, Littles hit two free throws and playoff. rouild against chamAssoclatioo 'a Eastern Division scored 22 points and recorded George Carter sank a layup al pion Utah by beating the Stars
Tueaday night, . New York four assist&amp; In the Indiana the buzzer. Larry Mlller led for the fourth time in their last
defeated the Indiana Pacers, game. With Melcbionni ben' Carolina with 29 poln15, while five
meetings.
Donnie r:T:d:;~~~~~M~~m~,
112-36, to move within a .half . chad with a broken finger, the rookie Julius Erving of. Freeman, who had a string of
game of second place Virginia, New York rookie will have to V1rgmia tied his career high 20 or more points in 34 airaight
a 127-121 loser to Carolina. carry the role of playmaker with 45 poinll!.
games, scored only 19 for
VIrginia can ctincll·second by into the playoffs.
Warren JabaU drove in for a Dallas. W'tllie Wise led Utah
'.r"
~·
beatbj Memphis tonight. A
Roger Brown, heavily· taped pair of three-,&gt;olnt plays In the .with 28 poinl5.
.
By
MILTON
RICHMAN
····=~
Ioas would drop tbe Squires inlo to protect an Injured hand, led last two minutes that carried
Dan Issei SCilred 29 points
UPI Sports Writer
a tie with New York and Indiana with 32 points. Mel the Floridians past Memphis. and Artis GUmore 23 before
neCessitate a one-game pla:l1)ff Daniels had 22 and.grabbed 29 JabaU hit for 30 points, and sitting out the final period In
NEW YORK (UPI)-"It's like a pcker game. A guy doesn't
for the coveted runnei'up rebounds.
Larry Jooes scored 25 for the the Colonels' triumph over knowwhethertoraise, stand patordropout."
·
position.
Carofina lroke away from a winner~. Randy Denton paced PittsbiD'gh. David Lattin had
Frank Howard, standing pat right now at home in Green Bay,
40 for the Condors.
· 'lbe ~nd-place team playa 121-all tie with p straight Memphis with 24 poln\5.
, Wis., was saying how it feels holding out, how it was negotiating
the Floridians In the opening points In the last 48 seconds of
with Bob Short, the boaaman of the Texas Rangers.
playoff round and the thirdLast week Frank Howard .got on a jet and went down to
place club meets the first-place
Pompano Beach, Fla.., where the Rangers are training to talk
Kentuck~ ColoneiB. The runwith Bob Short. They talked and talked anJ then Howard came
nerup also .bas a home court
home. Short made his 6-foot-7, zaG.pound outfielder-first
advantage.
baseman one of those final take4t-{)r-!eave-it offers. He also
"Anything we ' get is a plus
invited ltllit Iii make a deal for himself if he could. The whole
for ua," aa,ld Neta' Coach Lou
thing 10unded rather ominous, sort of final. But they never really
Carnesecc11, after Rick Bll!'ry
are.
celelrated his 28th birth.iJay
"It's not all that bad," Howard says. "We're only $10,000
with a ~~lnt perfonnanee
apart."
against Indiana. "It's a
No.1Producer
miracle we've been able to
By JOE CARNICELLI
pet., could noLclose the gap. said, "We just kept our
keep In connection for second
At the plate, Howard was Washingron's No. I producer last
UP1 Sport&amp; Writer
The Lakers, despite their patience and finally things
plar:e. Halfway through the
season,
alarted
opening
up
and
we
hitting 28 homers, knocking in 83 runs, and batting .279
~th Los Angeles and overpowering season, ad·
aeaSQn, thete were people who Milwaukee had trouble mittedly were tight before began running and getting the for the Senators beforethey' left for Texas . .Those figures were
didn't even think we'd reach following the script Tuesday :~:uesday night's opening game shots. We thought we could run scmething of a comedown from the year before when Howard hit
the playoffs."
•
night. The Lakers had in the beSt-of-seven . series. on them, what with their 44 homers, drove In 126 runs and batted .283.
Carnesecca would be happy problems in the first twil acts "I've been In a lot of pla:10ffs personnel problems and all,
When they began talking this year, Short tried to cut Howard's
if the Memphis Pros would and-the Golden State Warriors but I was really tight,'' said and it looked like they got a $110,000 salary. Howard countered by asking for a raise. The last
play the role of mifacle worker rewrote "the ending for the All-star guard Jerry West. "So little tired."
time .they spoke Short was offering the same salary as last year
tOOight and give the Nets a !lUcks.
Larry Costello, the Bucks' and Howard was asking for a $10,000 raise.
was the whole team."
chance at Virginia in a ,tleThe script supposedly has
"We're not giving up," said coach was both surprised and · What about Short telling him he could make a deal for himself?
lreaking game.
the Lakers, the Pacific Jerry Sloan, who led the Bulls disappointed with his club's
"I thought for awhile it might be the thing to do,'' says the 35''I think we can take Virginia Division champions, and the · tilth 18 points. "We were down effort. jjl was surprised," he
year-{)ld blockbuster, "but when a baUplayer tries to do thai it's
if we get to play them," the Bucks, the Midwest Division 2-0 last year and came back to said. "I'm glad it takes four
like prostituting himself. So I decided against it. Besides, I think
Nets' eoacll said confidently.
games to be eliminated in the
titll!!ts, roaring through the tie the series up."
it was only a ploy on hls part."
With Kentucky taking' the opening rounds of the National
Jim Barnett, who averaged playoffs."
Howard and Short talked money four differ~ I times during the
Eutem title by more ihan 20 Basketball Association only six pc)ln15 a game against
The key to the game was
four
days Howard was in Pompano Beach. It was aU very
games, it's small wondes- that playoffs and meeting in a Milwaukee during the reguillr ThUrmond's play. The 6-foot-11
nobo\IY wants to risk getting grand clash of the Titans for season, erupted for 30 Tuesday center who spots Jabbar three friendly. No shouting, no names, no hard feeUngs.
knocked off in the first round the western· Conference title. night to highlight Golden Inches, scored 22 poinl5 and
Seasons Cited
I byl PIW. th!' -~·~~ "1. I . But the Lakers, who set a State's upset on the Bucl&lt;s' had 22 rebounds while holding
"He'd ten me his reasons Why he couldn't pay me more and I'd
his rival· to 28 polnll! and 13
. In Othei-&gt; .AB~. g8ll!ett, tne oorde of records In donnlnatlng home court . .
1Flotl~ cil!!i'lwi!' \lie' final
the NBA this season, .had to
"Wheri Barney's quiet he's ' rebounds .. )abbar, who tell him my reasons why he should," sars Howard, who, lucky for
polllseuotrbertb In the East by erupt In the second half to beat either going to play terrible or averaged 34.8 poinis a game• everybo!IY, always is reasonable anyway. "Look, I understand
beating Mempbia, 118-107, DaJ.. the injury riddled Chicago just great," said Nate Thur· during the regular season, hit Short's point of view. You gotta realize he's in business ID make a
las upset Utah, 98-85, and Bulls, 95-80, while Golden mond, the Warriors' center only 13 of 29 shots.
dollar. Aballplayer has ID respect management's position. What
Keittuc:lty nipped Piltsburgh, State, which finished second in who batlled Kareem AbdulBoth cluba meet again on the it boils down ID in the end I suppose is both sides have to give a
Los Angeles In the Pacific Jabbar, the league's Most same courts Thursday night. litUe."
136-134.
Division, upended the league Valuable Player, to a standoff:
The Boston Celtics, who won
Has he given?
champion Bucks, 117-106.
Barnett led a fast.Jreaking the AtlanUc Division tiUe, open
"And how!"
The Lakers opened a 43-40 attack that caught the Bucks their playoff series at home,
Low Cost Mieage
What about Short?
lead at the half over Chicago flalfooted. Jeff Mullins, Golden against the Atlanta Hawks,
"He has given too, but not as much as !have."
the first quarter. But Gall state's othes- guard, took ad- runnersup in the Central
A lot of people have the wrong idea about a baseball holdout,
Goodrich, the Lakers' leading vantage of the Bucks' shortage Division, tonight. Baltimore,
particularly ,one who has gone this far . They picture him sitting
scorer in the game with 32 at guard to score 20 poln15, the Central Champion, takes on
on top of the phone, chewing his fingernails into fine little bits and
points, burst to rally Los Thurmond had 22 a~d Cazzie second-place New York of the
Atlantic in their opener Friday working himself up to a nice case of anxiety neurosis.
Angeles from a 49-43 deficit. Russell 21.
That iso't the picture of Frank Howard though.
O!icago, which shot only 34
Warriors' Coach AI AtUes night at Baltimore.
Plenty to Do
"I'm up at 7 in the mornlnl! and there's always plenty to do,"
says Howard, who aells corilinerctai real estate for supermarkets
throughout Wisconsin with a partner, Don Holznecht .
Howard is aware that he, Vida mue and Richie ADen are the
last three major holdouts but he hasn't kept up with their
negotiations very closely.
MEMPIUS, Tenn. (UPI)- and ) have heard many WOO· this year. "It would have
"I guess they're the same as me,'' he says. "They want 'more
White Wall or
David Brent is 19 years old, the dlirful things about the City helped David to play two more·
money." .
'Black Walland
prolld owner of a new luxury here."
years,'' Waadln aaid. "He is
Not a bad guess, although in ADen's case he seems to be inFor many dUferent reasons, potentially great, and I think
automobile, with a .bonus of
2 Recappable
about $10)io In hls pocket and the Pros are pleased to be with that's why Memphis drafted terested in time more than money.
Tires
Like Howard says, Vida BlUe and Richie ADen are the same as
him ..:.not for the present, but
a contract to make up to about Brent.
he
is. All three will wind up playing this year.
Viewing the
Western for the future."
$1 mliUon over the next five
FREE Installation
"I want to play as long as I Can,'' Howard say• "With the price
years.
Division of the ABA from the
The terms of the contract
Brent's sudden entry Into bottom up, the Pros hope Brent were not revealed, but Pros of poker what it is, a guy is foolish if he doesn't."
FrankHowarddoesn,realizeit, but right there he's teUing :IOU
affiuerJce was announced Tues- will become a donnlnatlng force general manager Bob Vanatta
why
,the ballplayers aren 'I going to strike.
day when the ABA Memphis In the league. As an Indication called the contract "exPros signed the 7-foot-1 sopho- of his ability, the Pros cite 32 cellent." Brent's agent, Cliff
more
at
Jacksonville blocked shota by Brent in Paul of Houston, Indicated the
Bo
' wling"
University to a professional leading Jacksonville IDa third- figiD'e was about $1.1 mlllton.
place finish in the recent The Lincoln Continental and ·
ballt:etbaU contract.
"For many rea~ons I'm National Invitation Tour- the cash were a bonus to sign.
Morning Glories
992-7161
March21,1972
pleased to be with Memphis," nament.
Standings
VETERAN
DIES
.
Middleport,
Hampered by a broken leg
tile young giant said. "I am
Team
Pts.
INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
.__ _ _ _.,._..,. close to my home In St. Louts early In the season, Brent
Newell Sunoco
130
averaged only 11 points a game -Owen J. "Donie" Bush, a Excelsior Oil Co.
123
fonner
major
league
shortstop
G.
&amp;
J.
Auto
Parts
116
-'lit this year. As a sophomore, he
Domigan
Soh
to
100
and
manager
and
a
61).year
averaged just under :16 poinll!
Gibbs Grocery
99
and drew praise from a veteran of organized basebaU, Spencer's Market
80
previous Doiphin -star Artis died Tuesday at the age of 84
High Team 3· Games Domigan
Sohio 2273 ; G. &amp; J.
following
a
brief
illness.
Gilmore of the Kentucky
Auto
Parts
Bush enjoyed a IS,year Grocery 220S. 2223 ; Gibbs
Colonels.
Brent "should become a career as a player, most of
Hi9h Team Game OUR
super star," GUmore said after them spent at Detroit where he Domogan Sohlo 808 ; Domlgan
Sohlo 194; G. &amp; J. Auto Parts
the Pros announced they had was a base.stealing teammate 186.
. ,, '
of Ty Cobb's. He stole 53 bases
drafted Brent.
High Ind. 3-Games Tom Waadln, coach ol the in 1909 and finished with a Margaret Foil rod 411 ; Carolyn
; Carolyn Teaford
Jacksonville club, aaid he was career total of 403. His lifetime McDantel424
418.
a bit suprised that'Brent signed hatting average was .250.
High Ind. Game - Carolyn
4 dr. hardtop, P.S., P.B., ·
McDaniel 177 ; Myrtle Sisson
169; Margaret Follrod 161.
excellent tires. Very clean.

burlih Pirates have tbe lourth When the Pirates downed the
bell mark In llpl'ing training st. LoW. Cardinals, S-2.
pmes and key liars llke Dock
The Cardinals rallied against
Eilla, wwle Slargell, Roberto John Lamb for two runs in the
Qemente, sti'Ye Blass and Bob ninth but the threat was wiped

New York T~ps· In diana 127•121

.
~~

'

.

Snnrt Parade il

Lakers Nudge Bulls;
_B.ucks Upset, 117-106

Pro Standings
AH LStandings
Bv United Piess International
East

Boston

w.

Nova Scotia
Springfield
Providence

Roches ter

West
Baltimore
Hershey
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Richmond
Tidewater

L T. Pis

40
40
30
26
21

19
20
29
36
31

14
13
14
11

94
93
14
63
8 62

W.
33
31
28
30
28
21

L T.
29 11
29 12
21 11
J.4 10
32 13
42 9

Pts
11

14.
13
10
6Y
51

Tuesday's Results
Rochester 6 Baltimore 2

Boston 2 Hershey 1

Cincinnati 6 Richmond 6

Nova Scotia 8 Providence 3
(Oniygamesscheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Rochester at Hershey
Nova Scotia at Providence
Cincinnati at Tidewater

I Only games scheduled)

ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
W. L. Pet. GB
x- Kentucky
61 16 .801 Virolnia
44 39 .530 23
New York
44 40 .524 231/,
Floridians
.43.4 31
3365 41
Carolina
~ .417~ ~
25 ss .301 42
Pittsburgh
West
w. L. Pet. GB
x-Uiah
59 24 .Ill Indiana
46 31 554 13
Dallas
42 42 ·.500 17'12
Denver
34 49 .410 25
Memphis
26 57 .313 33
JC- Clinched division
Tuesday's Results
Carolina 121 Virginia 121
New York 92 Indiana· 86
Floridians 118Memphis 101
Dallas 98 Ulah 95
Kentucky 136 Pittsburgh 134 .
Wednesday's Games
Pittsburgh al Indiana
Virginia at Memphis
Kentuckyat Floridians
Utah at Denver
(Onlygames scheduled )

menl5 to their minor league
camp of outfielder Jim Holt
and pitchers Hal Haydel, Jim
Strickland and Dave Goltz.
The Montreal Expoa aslted
waivers on pitcher Ron Taylor,
placed infielder Coco Laboy on
the disabled Jist and returned
outfielder Keith Lampard to
Houstoq ... Jim Fairey singled
home Gary Sutherland in the
lOth inning giving the Expos a
S-4 victory over the AUanta
Braves. Carl Morton, Bator
Moore, Joe Gilbert, Tom
Walker and Mike Marshall
combined to strike out 13
Braves.
RACE DATES SET
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
National Hot Rod Association's
8th annual Spring naUonsls
drag racing championships
will be held at National Trail
Raceway near here June 9-11,
it was announced today .
A field of over 400 entries is
expected for the races and a
cash purse amounting to abOut
$200,000 is anticipated according ID NHRA President
Wally Parks and National Trail
co-&lt;Jwners Ben and Clark
Rader Jr.
LITl'LE SERIES DATES
WllJJAMSPORT P~. (UPI)
,
-Peter
J.
McGovern,
president of Little League
Baseball Inc. announced
Tu
'
esday that the 26th annual
Little League World Series will
be held here next Aug. 22-:16.
McGovern said there will be
a record 8;100 leagues In 31
nations this season, which will
Jim
ith i ht t
c ax w
eg
eams
competing in the World Series.

NHL Stindings
By United Press International
East
W. L. T. Pfs
x-Bos1on
53 11 11117
New York
48 15 12 108
Montreal
4&lt;1 16 15103
NBA Playoff Standings
Toronto
31 30 14 76
By United Press International
Detroit
333497S
(All Seriei Best of 71
· Buftalo
15 42 19 49
Eastern Conference
Vancouver
!Semifinals)
19 49 I 4.5
West
W. L. ~ Pet.
.
W. L. T. Pfs
Boston
0 0 .000
x-Chlcago
4&lt;1 17 14 102
Atlanta
0 0 .000
36 28 12 8.4
W. L. Pet. Minnesota
28 37 11 67
New York
0 0 .000 St. Louts
25 37. 13 63
Baltimore
0 0 .000 Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
24 38 13 61
Western Conference
California
21 36 18 60
(Semlfinatsl
18 49 8 44
W. L. .Pet. Los Angeles
x-Cllnched division title .f&gt;
Los Angeles
1 0 1.000
Chicago
Tuesday's Resvlls
~
o. 1 .000
• Detro! t 6 ~ton 3 .,
,,
W. L. t Pet.
St. Louis 2 Vancouver 1
Golden State
1 0 1.000
Minnesola2 Philadelphia 2
Milwaukee
0 1 .000
ICiniygamesscheduied)
Tuesday•• Results
Wednesdey's Gomes
Golden Slate 111 Milwaukee
Montreal at Chicago
106
Boston at Toronto
Los Angeles 95 Chicago 80
Detroit at New York
(On Iygamesscheduied)
Vancouver at Los Angeles
Wednesday's Games
Callfornlaal Pittsburgh
Atlanta at Boston
(Cinlygamesscheduled)
(Cinlygamescheduled)

.KRAFTREIDS

Dolphin Ace Signs Contract

GENERAL
·TIRE

•
•
•
•
•

Fl ats repaired promptly!
Tube val ves repla ced!
Tractor tires retreaded! ,
Tires liquid-fill ed!
Tire soles &amp; service for
every truck, traclor, and
ituto on your farm!

o.

RIZER OIL CO.
700 E. MAIN

992-2101
POMEROY.O.

To hammer out your
won water problems •. ,

JUST PWN TALk
HOT -IN

LOT

1965 FORD LT.D.

Women's Thursday
Alternoon League
March 22, 1912
Standings
Team
W. L.

'695

Dave's Tire Land

32

46
46

48

54
62

Dave' s Tire Land 1753 ; New

York Clothing 1691 ; Smith's
Body Shop 1643.
High Team game - Dave's
Just wash out your
Tire Land 615 ; Smith's Body
brush with soap
. ~~p 596 ; New York Clothing
High Ind. Series - Loretta
w:•:t:er~-. . . . . .~. .
Brown 415 ; Norma Amsbary·
468 ; Betty Smith 461.
High Ind. game - Betty
MIDDLEPORT, O.
Smtih 191 ; Lor:etta Brown tl9 :
Becky Dunlee 115 .

WHITE
PAl
NT
.................._.....

l

64

Pomeroy Lanes
so
Simon's Mkt.
so
New York Clothing
48
Smith's Body Shop ·
42
Forest Run Block
34
High Team 3 games

GUARANTY PLASTIC
OUTSIDE

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR

~

There's no need
to fight i t any
longer. Mow have
all tbe clear,
filtered water you
want at a turn of
your faucets. for
a free estiaate ...

Pick up your phone and say ...

ring

3rdAve.

Your Phone

Local

SALES.

ONLY

We're As Close As

H&amp;R FIRES.TONE

1

ad is worth $25.00 toward any Culligan Water
Conditioner. 2 weeks FREE tria I at no expense! This
special ends March 31st.

CULLIGAN WATER CONDITIONER
Call Collect 593-6366
16 W. STIMSON AVE.

ATHENS,

0.

'·

�a..:. The Dlil18lidoei,MV.cftllputl"'-oy, O.d,March 18, 11172

Will Be Ready For Opener---Tolan

.

'•

TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)Bobby Tolan is laking things
nice and easy these days but he
thinks he can pace himself
baCk Into shape by opening
day.
Tolan is trying to come back
after missing the entire 1971
season with a rom Achilles
tendon and, as far as he's
concerned, he won't have any
!rouble reclaiming his centerGeld job.
"I think I'll be able tD get .
around pretty much like l want
by the time the season starts,"
he said. "! plan on being in the
lineup in the opener if ·
everything goes well."
The return of Tolan Is a
major part of the Cincinnati
Reds' hOpes to bounce back
from a disaslrous 1971 season.
Tolen hit .316, stole ~7 bases

Unser-Gurney

Seroe Notice
On Race Track

arid drove in 80 runs In the
pennant-winning year of
1970.
He was injure&lt;! in January
197lln a basketball game, then
rein jured May 7in Los Angeles
while running In the out6eld
trying tD gel into !hape. As a
result, he missed all of the
season, and this spring Tolan
says he will not rush himself as
he did last year.
"It feels a lot hetter than it
did last year at this time
because last year I was just
coming out of the cast and this
year I'm coming out of an
operation that was eight or
nine months ago," Tolen said.

But, he admitted, illl'Obably
"If Bobby Is 110 to 85 per cent,
will lake some time to build up he's a · good major league
his slrength again.
player. If he's 80 to 85 per cent,
''The main thing is to lry and he 'a not a superstar; which he
get my legs strong so I can go was, but he's a good, solid
out there and play every day," major league baseball pla)'tr
he said. "I think once I get that, and that's all we ne«&lt; blm IIIII
I'll get all my coordination and year. We don,lleed Tolan as a
timing down as far as hitting superstar. we need him ss a
and playing the outfield.''
major leaguer right now."
Manager Sparky Anderson
Tolan actually started hl8 .
realizes that Tolan possibly conditioning program last !)e.
may never return to his 1970 cember 1'ith daily weight·
form, bot he says he doesn't liiU!IInR and whirlpool sessiolll
at 'Riverfront Stadium In
have to, either.
"By the time we leave here Cincinnati. It remains to be
this sprin!l, I'm hOping that seen, however, how long It will
he '11 get to 80 or 85 per cent," take ·him to regain his batting
eye.
Anderson said .

Authorities Hunting For Two Youths
Area police have been
alerted to be on the lookout for
two stolen vehicles, a car and a
pickup, with one being used in
an escape from a bend area
breaking and entering.
Sheriff Troy Huffman said
· police have been asked to be on
the lookout for a 1963 Buick,
four-door with a blue bottom
and white lop bearing a license
number of Ohio regisp-ation
7668T. The car was used by two
teenage boys to escape from a
breaking and entering of the
Grant Roush camp located
along the Ohio River between
Mason and Hartford, the
officer said.

Sheriff Huffman is asking for by John McNeill bearing a
persons in this area to be on the license number of B 335110.
lookout for this vehicle and to Point Pleasant City police said
report any information the vehicle was stolen from the
concerning ..it to the Sheriff's .Building and Loan parking lot
office at 675-3810 or state pollee Monday
afternoon
at
at 67f&gt;.1101.
approximately 3:30 p.m. '!;'hey
The other is a 1970 Chevrolet ask persons with information
olive green pickup truck owned to notify police immediately.

INDIAN APOUS, Ind. (UP!)
-The racing team of Bobby
UnswerandDanGurney served
notice Tuesday it might be the
. h M
lis
d
ra bbIt w en ay ro &lt;M
aroun
_, 1
for the Indianapolls '"""m e
auto race. •the 1 di
Unser, wuu won
n .anapolis Speedway Classic in !969
and captured the first United
States Auto Club championship
Sheriff Huffman explained
car race at Phoenix on March
to th
19 of this year, turned In four that Mr. Roush came
e
th
.
camp
about
2
p.m.
Monday
and
unofficiallaps at e 2 \&gt;ollll1e found someone there and
brickyard at over 184 miles per . summoned a neighbor to enter
hour.
with him. Two boys ran from
After that run, Gurney- the the premises over a hill and
SantaAnna,Calif.,car-l:luilder,
I . to
h' h
served ·notice that before the go m a car, w 1c was
On the rl·verbank and
week of tire testing Is over he Parked
'
expected the older of the racing left. However, the owner was
Unser brothers to reach 190 bble to get a license number.
This information was passed
m.p.h.
Bobby ,s.....,•Tuesdaywere
"""'~
about two miles
faster than the on to him Sheriff Huffman said
and after checking it out was
unofficial clockings by brother found to belong to Paul Fry of
AJ-the winner of the last two
Indianapolis "500!"- laat week Route 3, Upper Sandusky, Ohio
· a radlca11y des1gned entry Wyandotte
through assistance
the
m
, Countyfrompolice
for Parnelli J_ ones. on th. e sam
. e •authorities. "' •
speedway Cll'CWt dunng tire
Fry to~ ..,..
~u~
• ..., 9Je veh'lcle
te sts for an
. _oth er comptmy.
had been ken by hiS
' stepson,
· Tap speed Tuesday was 184:4 Richard Spath, l4and another
m.p.h. m the Eagle-chassiS 14 yearoldbythelastnameof
racer.
Luikart.
The official record at the
track is held by Pete Revson of
The inlruders had broken a
Califomiawhoclockedal79 .354 latch on the front door fo~
.m.p.h. in trials last year to win enlrance and on the first chec
the pole position in a McLaren only an electric heater was
racer.
found missing.

Davis Graduates At Otanute AFB
LANGSVILLE - Al'rman of Technology. The airman's
First Class Fred E. Davis, son wife, Judy, Is the daughter of
of Mr. and Mrs. Ro.bert E. Mr. and Mrs. William C.
Davis of Rt. 1, Langsville, has Vineyard of Rt. I, Langsville.
graduated al Chanute AFB,
n\., from the u. s. Air Force
instrument systems equipment
specialist course conducted by
the Air Training Command.
The airman, who studied the
operation and maintenance of
flight Instruments, is being
assigned to Grissom AFR Ind.
H g d tedfromMeigsHigh
e ra ua
School in 1969 and received his
A.S. degree from Ohio Institute
The deadline for making
changes of listings in the
Karr Jom" 8 OPHA telephone directory is April 6,
Gener8J Telephone Co. of Ohio
said today.
LONG BOTTOM - Paul R.
K 1
K·
Ath
en ey
rmn,
ens
Karr, Rt. l, Long Bottom, has commercial manager, said
become a Life Member of the customers should report any
American Polled Hereford correc t"1ons ·m th e1r
· phone
Association i~ which 3,500 listings or change of address
cattlemen have joined the past lanned before June to the
year more than reported by P
• p · b ·
•
company s omeroy usmess
any other association.
.office no later than April 6.
There are more than 47,000 Krinn said this would affect
owners and breeders of Polled any person or busl'ness plan•
Herefords in the U. S. The ning to move or install a
naturally hornless Polled telephone before the directory
Herefords are the only major is published. "If we know of
breed of livestock to originate changes in advance, we can
in the United Stales, starting make sure the customer 's
with 11 head in 1901.
name, address and correct

Cage 'M~dgets' Ilono~d
NEW YORK (UPI)--Let's
hear it for the lltUe guys.
They~ becoming less and
lea v181ble on · til• college
bllketball scene 81 the years
roll by, but without them teams
. like Niagara, Florida State,
Hawsll and Kentucky may not
have achieved the goala they
did this past season.
So; once again United Press
International Is proud to h11110r
these "midgets" with the
aelection of its 24th annual
· ·"Small America" basketball
team for players 5-fool·lO and '

· 111der.
Named to the first team.are
AI Williams of Niagara, Otto
Fetty of Florida . State, Ron
L7ona of ·Kentucky, Jerome
Freeman of HaiVllii and James
Tedlsco of Union College
(N.Y.). Only one member of
lbe first . team, Lyons, is as
''lig" as f&gt;-10. Williams and
Freeman are both 5-9 and
Petty and Tedlsco stand f&gt;-1.
STEVE VAN MEIER
Tedisco is the only repeater
Steve Van Meter, sOD of from last year's team.
Mr. and Mn. Leonard Van
The second team consists of
Meter, Pomeroy, and a 1970 5-8 Greg Samuel of Florida
graduate of Meigs High
School, left Monday for
Parris Island, S. C., where
be wiD uudergo bls basic
·training wltb the U. S.
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) -Denis
Marine Corps. Tbe other SOD Menke slamnied his first home
of the Van Meters, Sgt. run of the spring for the Cincin·
Lennie Van Meter, ·who lA nati Reds, who poured out II
with the u. s. Air Force at hits Tuesday en route to a 7-J
Nubrucke, Germany, Is exhibition win over the Houston
home on leave with his Astros.
parents now. He will report
The Reds and the
back to· Germany when his Philadelphia Phlls play today
leave Is completed.
at Clea~ater.
The Aslros also had II hits,
· eight of them off Red Starter
Gary Nolan. Relievers Pedro
Borbon and Ed Sprague team·
ed up tD pitch shutout ball the
last six innings while giving up
just three hits.
George Foster, Cesar Geroni·
mo and Joe Morgan tripled for

State, ~ Art Gaul of War·
cester S~Jte, f&gt;-10 Steve Gaspar
of Boston State, f&gt;-10 Mlll:e
Pagllara of Massachusetts and
f&gt;.IO Billy Johnson of
YoUN~stown.

· WDII•m• Standout Star

Those receiving honorable
mention are ~ BoOtsle Wbite
of Indiana, 5-9 Beto Bautista of
Texas El Paso, ~ Jim Burke
oi Brown, f&gt;-10 Gary Lusl of
Iowa, f&gt;-10 AI Fischer of
Bridgeport, f&gt;-10 Willie Collins
of Blsbop College, ~10 Fred
Riley of Edinboro State, f&gt;-10
John Betancourt of Massa·
chusetts, f&gt;-10 John Garrett of
Southern Illinois, f&gt;-10 Paul
. Collins of Temple and f&gt;.IO
Steve Hirschom of Tennessee.
, Williams was a standout for
Niagara In the National lnvita·
tion Tournament and was
named to the all-toutnament
team after helping the Eagles
finish second. He averaged 14
points. a game during the
regular season, led the Eagles
in asaista and was a standout
defensive player.

Menke Homers In Reds W'm
the Reds and Dave Concepcion
doubled.

Deadline Near For

Clumges in Phone Listings

phone number are listed in the
new directory."
·
The manager "said the 1972
directory is being compiled
and will be delivered in June.
other communities listed in the
book with Pomeroy and
Middleport are Letart Falls,
Portland, Racine and Rutland.

Mu son, if sinners entice

you, do not c o nsent.Prover bs 1:10.
, " ,
It is not alone what we do,
but also what we do not do,
for which we are account·
able . _ Molliere. pen ,name
of the French playwright,
Jean Baptiste Poquelin .

the leadJnc play• .
maker for Florida Stale cmtng
the year IIIli was outo!eqcllrg
In the NCAA toumamelil11 be ·
-helped the SemiDolel to a
. second place flnbll, 1111 CDII;Ch,
Hugh Dw'ham, calli Pllty ~'the
best puaer I've • - llellli In
college ball In the Illite of
Florida."
Tedlsce M01t Esc:ftllll
LyOns was a key. ~ In
Kentucky'ii capturing · the
Soutlieastern Coo!- ,title.
~ was the WUdcall' third
leading scorer with a 14-polnt
average and was. a lllandout
passer and defelisive player.
Freeman, a liei:ond team
small America last year, was
Hawaii's leadiDg playmater
with 133 asaista and the 'fourth
· leading scorer with a 15-point
. average. He also was nlmed,
along with Bob Nash, 81 cowinner of the team's most
valuable player award.
Of the five players on the
first unit, Tedlsco may be the
most · exciting. A tremendous
leaj,er for his size, Ted!Jco
averaged 21 points a game this
season In leading Union to Its
finest season (19-3) In the 73year hlstDry of the sport at the
college.
. Over his lhree..year pareer
· Tedlsco averaged 25 paints a
game and estabUshed every
Union scoring and assist
record. Htii'unlform No. u has
been retired by the scbool.
Patty

W81

NAMED CENTRE AD
DANVIlLE, Ky. (UP!) Tom C. Bryant, a ~alive of
ChiiiJcothe, Ohio, was named
Tuesday as athletic director of
Cen.lre College here, succeeding Steele Harmon,
Bryant has ~n basketball
coach at Centre since August
.. ,SAME DAY..
1968. He also will take over the
, SERVItE
chairmanship of the physical
In At 9:-0ut At 5
education program, as of April
1 ·Bryant, 37, starred In
~sketball . at Miami of Ohio
Use Ou• frH P•rtdng ~ .
and coached at Cincinnati '
CleiiiiS
Colerain High School for five
.
.. - .. . ·
seasons, compiling a record of
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy .
80 wins and 29 losses.
• -·

.. 'SHIRt

'fiNISHING

Robinson'S

Bond Sales Noted
February 1972'sales of Series
E &amp; H United States Savings
Bonds in Ohio were $32.1
million. The state attained 18
per cent of ibi annual sales
quota February .29, with-sales '
.
totaling
· ..,,_3 million for the
...,
!Jrst two Jl!(lhtliii7Theodore 1'~ ·
~eed, Jr., Meigs County
Volunteer Savings Bonds
Chairman, reported February
sales of Savings Bonds in the
county were $62,202. At the end
of February, the county
achieved 25.8 per cent of its
sales goal.

BUY CERTI FlED
SAVE UP.T,(),' 1.00....~~

A TA'N.KFUt!

~

,,,

certified Gas Stations
992 _9981

538 W. Main

~---------------=~----~~----~===

H_ave A Real Easter With Our

WISHING
YOU AND
YOURS,
HAPPY
EASTER DAY!

USDA CHOICE BEEF VALUES'

.,
FOLGER'S COFFEE

All Grinds ..........................~.!b·
HERSHEY'S CHOCOLATE
CHIPS ..... ~.~~-~-~-~.~~...... 12 Ol
5th and PEARL STS.. RACINE
"The Store With A Heart
HIP-0-LITE MARSHMALLOW
PLASTIC
You, WE LIKE"
CREME .......................CONTAINER
Right reserved to limit quantities

$

Monday Thru Friday

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9
CWSED

SUNDAY~

BUY 'EM NOW!

SEED POTATOES
LB

6e
·

Kennebec, Cobblers

a11d Red Pontiacs

ONION SETS
~r~~w

IVORY LIQUID
, GIANT 39~ REG.
- 22 oz.
65'
ONLY AT RACINE FOOD

2 LB. 49$

lb.

89~

69~

lb. ',

59~
~

3 ::•1
1

COFFEE-MATE

CHEESE
PIZZA

•

"

\"'

''l"'

Plenty of Delicious
EASTER HAMS

TOWELS

PKG.
ONLY

' .

r·PARKAY
.
~ OLEO
-..~

'

~

1~b.

,f
'
'l'

stick

"""'
IKralf"M•~ ~~~~·~l~~
. w'
!o

,{t

f'

lARGE
BUNCH

4 THIGHS
4 WINGS
4 BREASTS
4 LEGS

CELERY

\

·HEAD
LETTUCE

IDAHO
POTATOES ·

WEIGHT WATCHER'S SPECIAL

CREME

TURBOT
FISH FILLETS

10 lb.

•'

•

jar

·BRUCE CUT
YAMS

FRESH CORN
ON THE COB
GOLDEN
YAMS .

.

14 oz. pkg.
Ind.
Quick Frozen
' •'

..

BANQUET
'

CREAM PIES

COOL

FRESH CELLO

29~

ALUM. FOIL

quart

·WHIP

size

FRANK'S FOOD
COLORING

pkg.

Stokely Sliced
Piekled
·
Beets
'

GOLD SEAL ·
.SW. PICKLES

10 79· ~

MUSTARD

ICE CREAM

Carton

of4

I,

!DALE'S PURE

lfzGaL

18"
roll

16 oz.
size .

jar

·WAGNER LOW CAL
ORANGE DRINK

·DEL MONTE
PINEAPPLE
SUCED OR CRUSHED

32 oz.
size

Size
11h

can

'

jar

BOSCUL
TEA BAGS

• '•

•

·~

OUNCE

.

,I.'

?il'l.l

Strawberries

5
4 lb.
bag

KALE

, FR9Z~f&lt;i

• Vfl.'

pkg.

(IQF)

.,

. ,, , . . ·M,-.
"ag·(1'1· ·
' '

\;
• '

BAKING
POlATOES

Easter Dellghtl Fairmont Blue Ribbon

I

16 BEST
PIECES

.

•

FRESH
CABBAGE

lb.

I

LARGE SOLID

U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO

lb.lo~

-

ltoneydale
.
lb. 59e
Bologna .~unk
·style ••••••••••••••••••••••••
;...W.·l eners
. ~ . .................................
Cagle Pride
12 oz. 39e
~~.·c·
•· .....
Steak.1.~·.....
'1 1' .
.·.hop ·d s1 r·1o1n

NEW GREEN

GOLDEN CARROTS ................. u.a. aat. 15•

.KRAFT'S DOUBLE
GIANT
SIZE

lb.

~ '

NON.OAIRY 14.8.
CREAMER JAR

TIDE

SLICED LEAN

.

BOUNTY PAPER

Mar. 29-Apr. 5

OHIO VALLEY

Stew.Meat
SLIC. BACON. FRESH SIDE
.

3.99

IGA Heavy Duty

LEAN BEEF

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective

19

.lb.

Bucket 0' Chicken

PKG.

lb.

19

Slic. Bacon

SWIFT'S PREMIUM HAM

.

ROUND STEAK

Ohio Valley

LB.

IGA WHIPPED
41h ·oz.
TOPPING
box

USDA CHOICE

PORK
STEAK

or
WHOLE

Pomeroy, O.

We Honor BankAmericard and Master Charge

-Center Cut

Ham Roast

~

YOU'LL BE SATISFIED

·

SEMI-BONELESS

100 for
ONLY

�a..:. The Dlil18lidoei,MV.cftllputl"'-oy, O.d,March 18, 11172

Will Be Ready For Opener---Tolan

.

'•

TAMPA, Fla. (UPI)Bobby Tolan is laking things
nice and easy these days but he
thinks he can pace himself
baCk Into shape by opening
day.
Tolan is trying to come back
after missing the entire 1971
season with a rom Achilles
tendon and, as far as he's
concerned, he won't have any
!rouble reclaiming his centerGeld job.
"I think I'll be able tD get .
around pretty much like l want
by the time the season starts,"
he said. "! plan on being in the
lineup in the opener if ·
everything goes well."
The return of Tolan Is a
major part of the Cincinnati
Reds' hOpes to bounce back
from a disaslrous 1971 season.
Tolen hit .316, stole ~7 bases

Unser-Gurney

Seroe Notice
On Race Track

arid drove in 80 runs In the
pennant-winning year of
1970.
He was injure&lt;! in January
197lln a basketball game, then
rein jured May 7in Los Angeles
while running In the out6eld
trying tD gel into !hape. As a
result, he missed all of the
season, and this spring Tolan
says he will not rush himself as
he did last year.
"It feels a lot hetter than it
did last year at this time
because last year I was just
coming out of the cast and this
year I'm coming out of an
operation that was eight or
nine months ago," Tolen said.

But, he admitted, illl'Obably
"If Bobby Is 110 to 85 per cent,
will lake some time to build up he's a · good major league
his slrength again.
player. If he's 80 to 85 per cent,
''The main thing is to lry and he 'a not a superstar; which he
get my legs strong so I can go was, but he's a good, solid
out there and play every day," major league baseball pla)'tr
he said. "I think once I get that, and that's all we ne«&lt; blm IIIII
I'll get all my coordination and year. We don,lleed Tolan as a
timing down as far as hitting superstar. we need him ss a
and playing the outfield.''
major leaguer right now."
Manager Sparky Anderson
Tolan actually started hl8 .
realizes that Tolan possibly conditioning program last !)e.
may never return to his 1970 cember 1'ith daily weight·
form, bot he says he doesn't liiU!IInR and whirlpool sessiolll
at 'Riverfront Stadium In
have to, either.
"By the time we leave here Cincinnati. It remains to be
this sprin!l, I'm hOping that seen, however, how long It will
he '11 get to 80 or 85 per cent," take ·him to regain his batting
eye.
Anderson said .

Authorities Hunting For Two Youths
Area police have been
alerted to be on the lookout for
two stolen vehicles, a car and a
pickup, with one being used in
an escape from a bend area
breaking and entering.
Sheriff Troy Huffman said
· police have been asked to be on
the lookout for a 1963 Buick,
four-door with a blue bottom
and white lop bearing a license
number of Ohio regisp-ation
7668T. The car was used by two
teenage boys to escape from a
breaking and entering of the
Grant Roush camp located
along the Ohio River between
Mason and Hartford, the
officer said.

Sheriff Huffman is asking for by John McNeill bearing a
persons in this area to be on the license number of B 335110.
lookout for this vehicle and to Point Pleasant City police said
report any information the vehicle was stolen from the
concerning ..it to the Sheriff's .Building and Loan parking lot
office at 675-3810 or state pollee Monday
afternoon
at
at 67f&gt;.1101.
approximately 3:30 p.m. '!;'hey
The other is a 1970 Chevrolet ask persons with information
olive green pickup truck owned to notify police immediately.

INDIAN APOUS, Ind. (UP!)
-The racing team of Bobby
UnswerandDanGurney served
notice Tuesday it might be the
. h M
lis
d
ra bbIt w en ay ro &lt;M
aroun
_, 1
for the Indianapolls '"""m e
auto race. •the 1 di
Unser, wuu won
n .anapolis Speedway Classic in !969
and captured the first United
States Auto Club championship
Sheriff Huffman explained
car race at Phoenix on March
to th
19 of this year, turned In four that Mr. Roush came
e
th
.
camp
about
2
p.m.
Monday
and
unofficiallaps at e 2 \&gt;ollll1e found someone there and
brickyard at over 184 miles per . summoned a neighbor to enter
hour.
with him. Two boys ran from
After that run, Gurney- the the premises over a hill and
SantaAnna,Calif.,car-l:luilder,
I . to
h' h
served ·notice that before the go m a car, w 1c was
On the rl·verbank and
week of tire testing Is over he Parked
'
expected the older of the racing left. However, the owner was
Unser brothers to reach 190 bble to get a license number.
This information was passed
m.p.h.
Bobby ,s.....,•Tuesdaywere
"""'~
about two miles
faster than the on to him Sheriff Huffman said
and after checking it out was
unofficial clockings by brother found to belong to Paul Fry of
AJ-the winner of the last two
Indianapolis "500!"- laat week Route 3, Upper Sandusky, Ohio
· a radlca11y des1gned entry Wyandotte
through assistance
the
m
, Countyfrompolice
for Parnelli J_ ones. on th. e sam
. e •authorities. "' •
speedway Cll'CWt dunng tire
Fry to~ ..,..
~u~
• ..., 9Je veh'lcle
te sts for an
. _oth er comptmy.
had been ken by hiS
' stepson,
· Tap speed Tuesday was 184:4 Richard Spath, l4and another
m.p.h. m the Eagle-chassiS 14 yearoldbythelastnameof
racer.
Luikart.
The official record at the
track is held by Pete Revson of
The inlruders had broken a
Califomiawhoclockedal79 .354 latch on the front door fo~
.m.p.h. in trials last year to win enlrance and on the first chec
the pole position in a McLaren only an electric heater was
racer.
found missing.

Davis Graduates At Otanute AFB
LANGSVILLE - Al'rman of Technology. The airman's
First Class Fred E. Davis, son wife, Judy, Is the daughter of
of Mr. and Mrs. Ro.bert E. Mr. and Mrs. William C.
Davis of Rt. 1, Langsville, has Vineyard of Rt. I, Langsville.
graduated al Chanute AFB,
n\., from the u. s. Air Force
instrument systems equipment
specialist course conducted by
the Air Training Command.
The airman, who studied the
operation and maintenance of
flight Instruments, is being
assigned to Grissom AFR Ind.
H g d tedfromMeigsHigh
e ra ua
School in 1969 and received his
A.S. degree from Ohio Institute
The deadline for making
changes of listings in the
Karr Jom" 8 OPHA telephone directory is April 6,
Gener8J Telephone Co. of Ohio
said today.
LONG BOTTOM - Paul R.
K 1
K·
Ath
en ey
rmn,
ens
Karr, Rt. l, Long Bottom, has commercial manager, said
become a Life Member of the customers should report any
American Polled Hereford correc t"1ons ·m th e1r
· phone
Association i~ which 3,500 listings or change of address
cattlemen have joined the past lanned before June to the
year more than reported by P
• p · b ·
•
company s omeroy usmess
any other association.
.office no later than April 6.
There are more than 47,000 Krinn said this would affect
owners and breeders of Polled any person or busl'ness plan•
Herefords in the U. S. The ning to move or install a
naturally hornless Polled telephone before the directory
Herefords are the only major is published. "If we know of
breed of livestock to originate changes in advance, we can
in the United Stales, starting make sure the customer 's
with 11 head in 1901.
name, address and correct

Cage 'M~dgets' Ilono~d
NEW YORK (UPI)--Let's
hear it for the lltUe guys.
They~ becoming less and
lea v181ble on · til• college
bllketball scene 81 the years
roll by, but without them teams
. like Niagara, Florida State,
Hawsll and Kentucky may not
have achieved the goala they
did this past season.
So; once again United Press
International Is proud to h11110r
these "midgets" with the
aelection of its 24th annual
· ·"Small America" basketball
team for players 5-fool·lO and '

· 111der.
Named to the first team.are
AI Williams of Niagara, Otto
Fetty of Florida . State, Ron
L7ona of ·Kentucky, Jerome
Freeman of HaiVllii and James
Tedlsco of Union College
(N.Y.). Only one member of
lbe first . team, Lyons, is as
''lig" as f&gt;-10. Williams and
Freeman are both 5-9 and
Petty and Tedlsco stand f&gt;-1.
STEVE VAN MEIER
Tedisco is the only repeater
Steve Van Meter, sOD of from last year's team.
Mr. and Mn. Leonard Van
The second team consists of
Meter, Pomeroy, and a 1970 5-8 Greg Samuel of Florida
graduate of Meigs High
School, left Monday for
Parris Island, S. C., where
be wiD uudergo bls basic
·training wltb the U. S.
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) -Denis
Marine Corps. Tbe other SOD Menke slamnied his first home
of the Van Meters, Sgt. run of the spring for the Cincin·
Lennie Van Meter, ·who lA nati Reds, who poured out II
with the u. s. Air Force at hits Tuesday en route to a 7-J
Nubrucke, Germany, Is exhibition win over the Houston
home on leave with his Astros.
parents now. He will report
The Reds and the
back to· Germany when his Philadelphia Phlls play today
leave Is completed.
at Clea~ater.
The Aslros also had II hits,
· eight of them off Red Starter
Gary Nolan. Relievers Pedro
Borbon and Ed Sprague team·
ed up tD pitch shutout ball the
last six innings while giving up
just three hits.
George Foster, Cesar Geroni·
mo and Joe Morgan tripled for

State, ~ Art Gaul of War·
cester S~Jte, f&gt;-10 Steve Gaspar
of Boston State, f&gt;-10 Mlll:e
Pagllara of Massachusetts and
f&gt;.IO Billy Johnson of
YoUN~stown.

· WDII•m• Standout Star

Those receiving honorable
mention are ~ BoOtsle Wbite
of Indiana, 5-9 Beto Bautista of
Texas El Paso, ~ Jim Burke
oi Brown, f&gt;-10 Gary Lusl of
Iowa, f&gt;-10 AI Fischer of
Bridgeport, f&gt;-10 Willie Collins
of Blsbop College, ~10 Fred
Riley of Edinboro State, f&gt;-10
John Betancourt of Massa·
chusetts, f&gt;-10 John Garrett of
Southern Illinois, f&gt;-10 Paul
. Collins of Temple and f&gt;.IO
Steve Hirschom of Tennessee.
, Williams was a standout for
Niagara In the National lnvita·
tion Tournament and was
named to the all-toutnament
team after helping the Eagles
finish second. He averaged 14
points. a game during the
regular season, led the Eagles
in asaista and was a standout
defensive player.

Menke Homers In Reds W'm
the Reds and Dave Concepcion
doubled.

Deadline Near For

Clumges in Phone Listings

phone number are listed in the
new directory."
·
The manager "said the 1972
directory is being compiled
and will be delivered in June.
other communities listed in the
book with Pomeroy and
Middleport are Letart Falls,
Portland, Racine and Rutland.

Mu son, if sinners entice

you, do not c o nsent.Prover bs 1:10.
, " ,
It is not alone what we do,
but also what we do not do,
for which we are account·
able . _ Molliere. pen ,name
of the French playwright,
Jean Baptiste Poquelin .

the leadJnc play• .
maker for Florida Stale cmtng
the year IIIli was outo!eqcllrg
In the NCAA toumamelil11 be ·
-helped the SemiDolel to a
. second place flnbll, 1111 CDII;Ch,
Hugh Dw'ham, calli Pllty ~'the
best puaer I've • - llellli In
college ball In the Illite of
Florida."
Tedlsce M01t Esc:ftllll
LyOns was a key. ~ In
Kentucky'ii capturing · the
Soutlieastern Coo!- ,title.
~ was the WUdcall' third
leading scorer with a 14-polnt
average and was. a lllandout
passer and defelisive player.
Freeman, a liei:ond team
small America last year, was
Hawaii's leadiDg playmater
with 133 asaista and the 'fourth
· leading scorer with a 15-point
. average. He also was nlmed,
along with Bob Nash, 81 cowinner of the team's most
valuable player award.
Of the five players on the
first unit, Tedlsco may be the
most · exciting. A tremendous
leaj,er for his size, Ted!Jco
averaged 21 points a game this
season In leading Union to Its
finest season (19-3) In the 73year hlstDry of the sport at the
college.
. Over his lhree..year pareer
· Tedlsco averaged 25 paints a
game and estabUshed every
Union scoring and assist
record. Htii'unlform No. u has
been retired by the scbool.
Patty

W81

NAMED CENTRE AD
DANVIlLE, Ky. (UP!) Tom C. Bryant, a ~alive of
ChiiiJcothe, Ohio, was named
Tuesday as athletic director of
Cen.lre College here, succeeding Steele Harmon,
Bryant has ~n basketball
coach at Centre since August
.. ,SAME DAY..
1968. He also will take over the
, SERVItE
chairmanship of the physical
In At 9:-0ut At 5
education program, as of April
1 ·Bryant, 37, starred In
~sketball . at Miami of Ohio
Use Ou• frH P•rtdng ~ .
and coached at Cincinnati '
CleiiiiS
Colerain High School for five
.
.. - .. . ·
seasons, compiling a record of
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy .
80 wins and 29 losses.
• -·

.. 'SHIRt

'fiNISHING

Robinson'S

Bond Sales Noted
February 1972'sales of Series
E &amp; H United States Savings
Bonds in Ohio were $32.1
million. The state attained 18
per cent of ibi annual sales
quota February .29, with-sales '
.
totaling
· ..,,_3 million for the
...,
!Jrst two Jl!(lhtliii7Theodore 1'~ ·
~eed, Jr., Meigs County
Volunteer Savings Bonds
Chairman, reported February
sales of Savings Bonds in the
county were $62,202. At the end
of February, the county
achieved 25.8 per cent of its
sales goal.

BUY CERTI FlED
SAVE UP.T,(),' 1.00....~~

A TA'N.KFUt!

~

,,,

certified Gas Stations
992 _9981

538 W. Main

~---------------=~----~~----~===

H_ave A Real Easter With Our

WISHING
YOU AND
YOURS,
HAPPY
EASTER DAY!

USDA CHOICE BEEF VALUES'

.,
FOLGER'S COFFEE

All Grinds ..........................~.!b·
HERSHEY'S CHOCOLATE
CHIPS ..... ~.~~-~-~-~.~~...... 12 Ol
5th and PEARL STS.. RACINE
"The Store With A Heart
HIP-0-LITE MARSHMALLOW
PLASTIC
You, WE LIKE"
CREME .......................CONTAINER
Right reserved to limit quantities

$

Monday Thru Friday

9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9
CWSED

SUNDAY~

BUY 'EM NOW!

SEED POTATOES
LB

6e
·

Kennebec, Cobblers

a11d Red Pontiacs

ONION SETS
~r~~w

IVORY LIQUID
, GIANT 39~ REG.
- 22 oz.
65'
ONLY AT RACINE FOOD

2 LB. 49$

lb.

89~

69~

lb. ',

59~
~

3 ::•1
1

COFFEE-MATE

CHEESE
PIZZA

•

"

\"'

''l"'

Plenty of Delicious
EASTER HAMS

TOWELS

PKG.
ONLY

' .

r·PARKAY
.
~ OLEO
-..~

'

~

1~b.

,f
'
'l'

stick

"""'
IKralf"M•~ ~~~~·~l~~
. w'
!o

,{t

f'

lARGE
BUNCH

4 THIGHS
4 WINGS
4 BREASTS
4 LEGS

CELERY

\

·HEAD
LETTUCE

IDAHO
POTATOES ·

WEIGHT WATCHER'S SPECIAL

CREME

TURBOT
FISH FILLETS

10 lb.

•'

•

jar

·BRUCE CUT
YAMS

FRESH CORN
ON THE COB
GOLDEN
YAMS .

.

14 oz. pkg.
Ind.
Quick Frozen
' •'

..

BANQUET
'

CREAM PIES

COOL

FRESH CELLO

29~

ALUM. FOIL

quart

·WHIP

size

FRANK'S FOOD
COLORING

pkg.

Stokely Sliced
Piekled
·
Beets
'

GOLD SEAL ·
.SW. PICKLES

10 79· ~

MUSTARD

ICE CREAM

Carton

of4

I,

!DALE'S PURE

lfzGaL

18"
roll

16 oz.
size .

jar

·WAGNER LOW CAL
ORANGE DRINK

·DEL MONTE
PINEAPPLE
SUCED OR CRUSHED

32 oz.
size

Size
11h

can

'

jar

BOSCUL
TEA BAGS

• '•

•

·~

OUNCE

.

,I.'

?il'l.l

Strawberries

5
4 lb.
bag

KALE

, FR9Z~f&lt;i

• Vfl.'

pkg.

(IQF)

.,

. ,, , . . ·M,-.
"ag·(1'1· ·
' '

\;
• '

BAKING
POlATOES

Easter Dellghtl Fairmont Blue Ribbon

I

16 BEST
PIECES

.

•

FRESH
CABBAGE

lb.

I

LARGE SOLID

U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO

lb.lo~

-

ltoneydale
.
lb. 59e
Bologna .~unk
·style ••••••••••••••••••••••••
;...W.·l eners
. ~ . .................................
Cagle Pride
12 oz. 39e
~~.·c·
•· .....
Steak.1.~·.....
'1 1' .
.·.hop ·d s1 r·1o1n

NEW GREEN

GOLDEN CARROTS ................. u.a. aat. 15•

.KRAFT'S DOUBLE
GIANT
SIZE

lb.

~ '

NON.OAIRY 14.8.
CREAMER JAR

TIDE

SLICED LEAN

.

BOUNTY PAPER

Mar. 29-Apr. 5

OHIO VALLEY

Stew.Meat
SLIC. BACON. FRESH SIDE
.

3.99

IGA Heavy Duty

LEAN BEEF

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

Prices Effective

19

.lb.

Bucket 0' Chicken

PKG.

lb.

19

Slic. Bacon

SWIFT'S PREMIUM HAM

.

ROUND STEAK

Ohio Valley

LB.

IGA WHIPPED
41h ·oz.
TOPPING
box

USDA CHOICE

PORK
STEAK

or
WHOLE

Pomeroy, O.

We Honor BankAmericard and Master Charge

-Center Cut

Ham Roast

~

YOU'LL BE SATISFIED

·

SEMI-BONELESS

100 for
ONLY

�'

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29. 1972

Charlene Hoeflich

992-5292

Upcoming Activity
Reviewed by Club

RUTLAND Rutland'
Garden Club members
·:-:-:-:·:·.·.· -:....-.·.·.·=·.·.·... ·•·.•••• -&gt;.::~ . meeting at the home of Mrs.
~~:l:l
James Nicholson Monday night
took a loqk at spring flowers,
'~::"
activities and projects.
::l
They were,.. joined by

Soc,. aI ,..

Lutherans Plan
1·
I
Ca
I
end
a
r
·
.
:::~:: H~~::~a:~:;.:~
Easter Services
"

•

•

'

The Maundy Thursday
Service at 8 p.m. at Saint Paul
Lutheran Church, 231 East
Second St., Pomeroy, will
include a Lenten drama, "The
Man Who Returned ", written
by the Rev. W. A. Poovey,
professor of homolitics at
Wartburg Theological
Seminary, one of the three
seminaries of The American
Lutheran Church.
The roles in the play include
Simon, played by Robert
Elber!led, Sarah, by Jennifer
Anderson ; Elia, by Rachel
Downie ; John Mark, by Bill
Baer, and Tobit, by Frank
Ryther.
The sermonette which
relates to the drama, "He
Taught Us To Love," will be
delivered by the pastor of the
congregation, Rev. Arthur C.
Lund. Holy Communion will
also be included in the service.
The men's choir will sing, "The

Old Rugged Cross."
On Easter Sunday there will
be a sunrise service at 7 a.m.
with a sermonette especially
lor children, and holy communion. An Easter breakfast
prepared by the St. Paul
Lutheran Women's group will
follow the service.
In Sunday School at 9:15a.m.
a special White Gilt o!!ering of
food will be received symbolizing the Christian's
response to God's love in Christ
shown through love to others.
The Senior High Sunday School
class will lead the school in a
new opening service. An
Easter film, "Dawn of Victory," will also be shown.
The 10:30 a.m . Easter
worship servjce will catTy
through the Easter message in
word and song. Pastor Lund
will deliver the sermon and the
senior choir will sing the anthem, "Christ Is Risen."

Victims Remembered
•
~
'

Arrangements to send baby
food and other non-perishable
items to the floOd victims at
Lorado in · memory of Albert
Hedinger, brother of Mrs. John
Sebo, a member, were made at
Thursday night's meeting of
the Middleport Child Conservation League.
Meeting at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church basement,
members were advised of the

Seven Attended

junior Roundup

..•

'

Seven Meigs County girls
and boys attended the 4-H
Junior •Leader Roundup held
over tlte weekend at South
Point.
The Holiday Inn there was
headquarters for the event
which featured the career
team from Ohio State
University
with
their
presentation "You can Make A
World of Difference." Tours on
Saturday included visits to the
glass factory and the airport at
Chesapea ke, Marshall
University at Huntington, and
Armco Steel in Ashland, Ky.
The Meigs 4-H'ers presenred
the meditaUon, "Old Glory"
with taped organ music by
Mrs. Ben Neutzling. Going
from here were Mike
Benedum, Sherrie Young, Ed
Cross, Lee Hysell, Cindy
Domigan, Alan and Jan Holter.

de~very

of several card tables

to the Community Class for
Retarded Children. A thankyou note for gifts was received
from the Class. It was noted
that flowers had been sent to
the late Audrey Frost, an
honorary member.
Mrs. Charlene Arnold
represenred the CCL at a
meeting Friday night at
Trinity Church regarding a
mental health program which
hinges on passage of a levy in
the May primary.
The annual dinner was
discussed and will be held
sometime next month · at the
Meigs Inn . Guests ai the
meeting were Mrs. Charles
Conner, Mrs. Horace Abbott,
and Mrs. Charles Cobb. The
group went bowling at the
Pomeroy Lanes following the
meeting.

LODGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
Knight Templars, will attend
sunrise services at Trinity ·
Church in a group. Members
are asked to meet at the
Masonic Temple at 6 a.m.
Sunday where they will
assemble and then march to
Trinity Church, at 6:30p.m. All
knights are asked to wear their
uniforms, but are urged to
attend whether or not in
uniform .

POLLY'S POINTERS

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m. home
of Mrs. Walter Waddell; Mrs.
Thereon Johnson to review
"Night Comes to the Cumberlands" by Henry Caudill.
Response will be a comment on
the book.
YOUNG WIVES Club,
Wednesday, home of Joan
Smith, Tuppers Plains.
THURSDAY
MAUNDY THURSDAY
Communion at Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Church, 6:30p.m.; at Syracuse
Church, 8 p.m.
REACH OUT lor life service,
7: 30p.m. Thursday, Adventist
Church , Pomeroy. Topic
"Caught by a computer, what
to do when it happens."
EASTERN ATHLETIC
Boosters, Thursday, 8 p.m. at
school to plan for basketball
tia nquet. Parents and interesred residents urged to
attend.
RIVERVIEW GARDEN
Club, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
home of Mrs. Walter Brown,
Mrs . Donald Myers , cohostess.
XI GAMMA MU Thursday
7:45p.m. home of Mrs. Pearl
Welker. Members urged to
attend to help with the
decorating of eggs. Orders are
still being taken for colored
eggs for Easter.
DANCE, 8 to II Thursday,
Wahama High School, Jays
emceeing, school sponsored.
FREE Clothing day, Thursday, 10 a.m. until noon, at the
Salvation Army, . Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy. All in area in
need of clothing invired to
attend.
FRIDAY · ·' ·
CANDLEUGHT Service and
communion, Mt. Union
Church, carpenter, 7:30 p.m.
Friday.
CANDLELIGHT
Communion service, 7:30p.m. Good
Friday, Long Bottom Unired
MethOdist Church, public inviM.
SATURDAY
REACH OUT lor life service,
Adventist Church, Pomeroy,
7:30 p.m. Saturday. Topic,

She also said that a rich aoil top
dressing should be put on roc•,·
gardens during the month.
· Mrs. W'UII1 Will auctioneer
for a · houseplant sale,
Refreshments were aetVed by
the hostesses, Mrs. Nicholson
and Mrs. Chria Diehl. Mrs.
Victor Nelson presented the
traveling prize to Mrs. Diehl.
of Morristown, and Mrs: Jack Mrs. Lawrence Milhoan had
Robson.
A committee to plan for ihe
open meeting in May was
announced by the president.
She also nored that the April
meeting will probably be
changed due to illness in the
family of Mrs. Russell Little,
scheduled to serve as hostess.
It was noted that Mrs.
Nelson, Mrs. Canaday,.Mrs. C.
0 . Chapman and Mrs.
Erlewtne visired the Gallipolis
State Institute and conducted a
therapy session. The patients
made dish gardens with the
club providing the plant
material, potting soil and
containers. Refreshments
were also served.
The program was 'tn charge
of Miss Ruby Diehl. Mrs. Ralph
Turner read "Flowers of
Colonial Days" and a highlight
was the presentation of slides
of Colonial Williamsburg
!lower arrangements by Mrs.
Winn. The atTangements were
designed from antique art
prints, and included creations
appropriate lor many of the
rooms containing dried
!lowers, garlands, fruits and
leaves used in the old fruit
Easter
prints. Decorated vases,
Greetings
candles, cups, and containers
Box ... $1.60
of the era were shown along
with fresh flowers including
the red clover, tulips,
honeysuckle, snapdragons,
Iris, canterbury bells, peonies,
corn !lowers, the purple onion,
and numerous other colonial
flowers.
Tips on gardening for April
were given by Mrs. Kate
JatTell. She suggested planting
dormant roses, getting nursery
stock starred tn containers, a.nd
selecting new perennial plants.

Club of Langsville ; Mrs. Orien
Nelson of Star Garden Club,
and Mrs. Homer Parker of the
Friendly Gardeners who is
Region 11 publicity cochairman.
Mrs .. Harvey Erlewlne, Mrs.
Roy Snowden and Mrs. Robert
canaday reporred on their
recent meeting with Rutland
Village Council regarding
confinement of pets and also
noted that the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners were
given encO\Il'agement tn getting the village, cleanup,
paintup and plantup program
underway.
Mrs. ·. Erlewine read an
acknowledgement
of
correspondence regarding the
club's entry into the Sears
Civic Improvement Project
and also a letter from Mrs. Joe
Bolion, Region II director,
regarding the spring regional
meeting to be held at Logan at
the
Immanuel
United
Methodist' Church. Luncheon
reservations are to be made
with Mrs. L. G. Ellinger, 175
Dennison Ave., Logan, by April
15.

SERVICE FRIDAY
Good Friday services will be
held at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock
Springs United Methodist
Church for the Enterprise,
Flatwoods and Rock Springs
congregations. The Youth
Fellowship of the Enterprise
Church will conduct a Sunrise
service at the church at 6 a.m.
using the theme "God's Love"
with a breakfast following.
Worship service will be held at
9 a.m. with Sunday school
following that.

All clubs are being asked to
conttibute to the plant sales
table. Hostesses for the
.regional meeting will be the .
Fdur Seasons, Rockbridge, and
Hocking Clubs.
Also read by the president
was an invitation from the
Winding Trail Garden Club
inviting members to a meeting
on April 19 at the Ohio Power
Co. Miss Edeline Wood of the
West Virginia Adult Education
Service will give a program on
wild foods. An approximate
number of those plaimtng to
attend is to be provided the
club by April I7.
It was noted that the
watershed program employes
have assisted in the cleanup
and trimming of shrubbery at
the Rutland Methodist Church.
Mrs. Parker gave a resume
and critical points to be nored
in preparing the garden club
publicity books. She poinred
out specific details to be included in addition to the who,
what, where, and when in '
reporting events.
Mrs . Charles Lewis will
prepare the Green Thumb
Notes for April 28. Mrs. Paul
Winn reporred on the visit
by the club members with the
new Homestead Club on March
16. Nine of the Rutland Club
members , six from the
Friendly Gardeners, and two
from the Bend 0' the River
Club attended that Jllceting.
Mrs. Erlewine recognized
Mrs. Lewis, a past regional
director, lor her service to the
club. She gave a brief account
of her year as director,
recalling other members of the
Rutland Club who have served
in that capacity, Mrs. James
Titus, Mrs. Robert Reibel, now

; ! ,.,.,. ...

provided it.
Devotions to open the
meeting were glv!I_J by Mn.
Nicbolson, frool ~tbaiana
16 entitled "The· Olijrch bt the
Risen Lord." Mrs.~(jJehl had a
poem, "Art tn Leslol)" relating
to the picturesque work ol God
In nature. Members ~
roll call by ll8lllln&amp;\ an oldfashioned !lower.

BIG SELECTION ASSORTED .CUDDLY STUFFED
Soft cuddly stuffed plush Easter loy animals every child

'

..

~'\S®rp Oij\!]®~

Fruit &amp; Nut
Egg
$1.65

,.

'•,•

,,

75c

...•
.....
,'•

:·.•

...

...

',''
~- · ·

•,•.•

convenient to use an ice

~a

Prescrl~~ddi~;o~t ~:; Business

You save a wee bit more on
every pair ot Sandy McGee
, Oxto~ds or Loafers. Select

•

cream scooper. Just mea·
sut·e hOW much watet' your
scoop can hold 1mine holds
a scant haif-1:up1 and. knowing the eapaeit~· or your
scoop. measure !he &amp;hot·tenlng as needed. It is sn ''" '~
to eject from Ihe JK:OOp.-&lt;" AROL
.

fl' l .

'

\;::,

$

99 $

Ad111ll-'

)he latest in fashion tops. skirts,
slacks. and hot pants. Wide choice of
fabrics , colors and patterns.

new

Choose

our

from

assorled styles.
.

PAIR

many

..

.

.

•'

GIRLS NEWJPRING &amp; EASTER

BRIEFS - T-SHIRTS

Girls' new spring dresses.
perfect for Easter wear.
. Many· styles to choose from.
Sizes 7 to 14.

Fine combed while cotton knit tee
shirts or briefs In sizes small,
medium, large and extra large.
Fruit ot the Loom brand.

PACKAGE$
OF

SLIPS

It's lime to spruce up ... and

sav'l Ge1 swep1 up In a wave

Philmald and Movie .Star
lace trimmed full slips in
sizes 32 to ~-

of Bendo wigs In beautiful
fashion shades.

$

OONVENIENf..

$ 99$

00

EA.

TO

A great selection of fine new
spring patterns and styles
with long pointed collars.
. Perm. press. Sizes S-M-L·

XL

EACH
BOYS CAMPUS PERM PRESS

MEN'S FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM

DRESSES

LADIES PHILMAID &amp; MOVIE STAR
LACE TRIMMED

WIGS

SPORT SHIRTS

$299 TO $]99
EACH

SPORT
SHIRTS
Famous boys' Campus sport
shirts, perm . press , short .

sleeves. Size 6 lo
plains.

65

18.

Asst. laney,

$199TO. $2~9
EACH

3

IM

MEN'S CAMPUS PERM PRESS

..·.·•·•·.·.

PRICED

NEW ~~~0 f~S~IO~$

lo 17.

$

00

Fine quality leather-like
vinyl handbags In new
spr,lng and Easter shades.
In a variety of styles and
shapes.

TO

.

Low Price: s309.95

Wh

HANDBAGS

99$ 99

.
Tho new look In loolweor far
youths and boys In slraps, lies,
· ~tnd sllp.ons. Black, br.own end
two-tone. Youlhs ~lzes 81fa to 4
~tnd boys sizes 31fa lo 6. •

Model NT1414
Exceptional Valual Full Slzedl Dual
Temperature controlo, twin porcelain criopero, conloured frozen can
ohelt, "bookcooe" freezer door
ohelf are juot ooma of the quality
Admiral featuraalnciuded. Fila any·
where--only 30" wide!

long poinf dress collars.

Tapered. Sizes

LADIES VINYL NEW SPRING

Big seledlon · of fine woven
reed or straw handbags that
are sure IO&lt;match.Your outfit.

Girls and misses new spring
and Easter footwear In straps,
ties and sllpons. Sizes a•;, to~.

'TERMS'

Men's high fashion Fruit of the
Loom while dress shirts.
Perm . perss. Long sleeve with,;

SMART SPRING DRESS
BEGINS 'AT STIFFLERS

AND BAGS

I

MIDDL£PORT, OHIO

DRESS SHIRT

'

LADIES WOVEN REED &amp; STRAW

FOOTWEA

ANOTHER
Adn•l•al.
BEST BUY

';

~CH

o.dlctlfil

TO

PAIR

SP.0.RTSWEAH

PAIR

'

TO

LONG SLEEVE WHITE

PRICED $

GIRLS &amp; MISSES SPRING &amp; EASTER

To Quality. ~.
Backed by

99

MEN'S FRUIT-OF·THE·LOOM

Famous Bobbie Brooks Sportswear
creations for spring. Choose from

99

99$

BOBBIE BROOKS
~

styles.

SIZES 29 TO 42

9~

NEW SPRING &amp; SUMMER

.

FOOTWEAR

BAKER

$14~~$

now from our popular

~On ~~ c:&amp; c::.~a ;}}k ·~
~ oa~ ~ OQ~ (J~"' ~~

Dedicated To Quality

' 1'1

Smooth' ~~~~! May
Queen panty hose In
Blushing. Beige,
Ginger Bread, Brown
Sugar and Chotoiale
Eclair. Stretch nylon
that fits ." ,

YOUTHS &amp; BOYS NEW SPRING &amp; EASTER

FREE
DELIVERY

\ JUNIORS - MISSES
.· \ WOMEN'S SIZES .
. ,..., GREAT SELECTION

PANT¥~~HOSE

NO DEFROSnNG EVER!

DEAR POLLY - When
measuring out shortening
it is much easier and more

\

LADIES MAY QUEEN NYLON
SEAMLESS
'

Put yourself Into the easy life.
Outfit yourself from our great
selection of knit and woven slacks
in straight and flare leg styles.
Sizes 29 to 46 .

color:s.

HALF SIZES
GREAT SELECTION

•""'· j,t-~K

SLACKS

Select your new spring coal
now from our fine collection.
You will find all the newest
styles in lhe finest fabrics
and in all the wanted spring

JUNIORS - MISSES

v....

DRESS

COATS

colors and patterns.

'LOAFERS

DEAR POLLY- I suggest that M.A.S. try rubbing
ca mphoi·ated oil on her maple furniture lo remove the
water spots. Use a small amount on a soft cloth and
rub well . This has covered or polis hed the wood on my
furniture so that what seemed to be hopeless water stains
disappeared and the result is ve ry pleasing.-GLADYS

...

:.~·

MEN'S PERM PRESS

Piease your budget. Fine new

. ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.-...-..·.·•·.. .·...-..·.·.· .·.....·..··-; ·.:· . ··:····· ·.·.·.·.·..--:·-··-::-:-:::::::·-:·:-···.·.·:.·. ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·..··.·.·.·.··.·.·.· ·.··.....·.·.·,•, ..,.... . . ......

-

Fer Tile

=:::

4

clwnge a typewrilet· ribbon r am templed to sar a
naughty word as it is such a mess.v job. Mv grandmother tells me it was just
the same 50 years ago so
this is one lhing that has
not improved with lime.
Where are all those in·
ventors ?- IRENE

•

tabrlc! in a variety of spring

99 $899

·:::
::::
..,...,.
...
.,
··::.
··.•:·
·:,::.
"·

'i ;

Grea11

great In a price range that will

SANOY
McGEE

Home Furnishings Report
Complete Reviews &amp; Evaluations
of 197

DI•; AR POLLY - My Pel Peen' is that whenever I

.

99$

Consumer Guide

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - I stuff the !ancv sola pillows I
make with finely cut up Dac ron and wonder if there
is a way I cou ld fluff them up. Aller using them
awhile. they get sort or flat or the sluffi ng mals
down. Can these be put in lhe dryer or washed and
fluffed'! - ANN
.-

I .

-

Easter dresses. Our selection Is

Great new styles for spring and
Easter. Dress, casual and sport
sty!"' at Budget prices. VIsit
Stiffler's shoe .department today
and step lively· this spring.

Chocolate
Cream Egg

DEAR POLLY- M.A. S. might try my solution lor re.
moving water spots from maple furniture . Rub the blemis h with ciga r or cigarette as hes using a soft cloth
moistened with lard , vegetable shortening or salad oil.
Always rub with lhe grain of the wood . Wipe off im-

·,·

.

RESSES

FOOTWEAR

Best Buy Values Taken From

appeared in the column once or twice through the years
but a good thing is always worth repeating for thosr
readers who may have joined ns slnce.-l'OLL \'

'

· Shop now for your new spring and

TO .

II EAR fOIRLS--This Is ouc of m'· favorites and It has

. .'
...
'••. i. ~

~

,,

~ TO

nll'diately and l'f? wax with yo ur fav oritP pruduei. - MRS.
.J L. MeG

TO

EASTER

GREAT BUDGET VALUES ·- LADIES

l!y POLLY CRAMER

.,

..
: :-:. ·.· .·:•.•:-:·: .·:·:·:-:-. :'.. ;·..

LADIES' NEW SPRING AND

~r~JP UiEIRIDw~

Spots on Furniturt'
'•

1u

.

.'

In the EABTER PARJt.DE

DUnON'S

.

•

·~·~aa
. ·.

Purple Foil
Basket ... $1.50

ADMIRAL -----------------

I? 2 5?'}

MARCH 30-31 AND APRIL 1, HOP TO IT!

000XFORo·s· .~

Phone 992-2556
At The End of Pomeroy Bridge

,.

: '

With
sauce

THE DAIRY VALLEY

,

'-

Foot Long

"The Greatest Question ever
Asked".
DANCE Saturday,, ·8 to II ·
p.m., Wahama High School,
Jays emceeing, school sponsored.
SUNDAY
SUNRISE SERVICE,
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 6:30
a.m. Sunday, youth in charge.
Breakfast immediately
following.
SUNRISE EASTER service,
6 a.m. Sunday at H. E. Starkey
Farm, by Mt. Union ·Baptist
Church.

ADMIRAL N02217 Duplo• unit hos
22 cu. ft. CIP«ity in 33" c•bintt. A
no-defrotting unit, it has bOQkcase
lre•zN doors, StJ~•te temJUr•turtJ control$, end lfftclive 7 -d•y me.t keeper.

..·.··.·•·.· ·,·,·..·.·.·..· .:-:- :·:·:·· :- .·.· :- .·.. : .·.... -:

:·

'1'

HOP ON DOWN - - - FAST

.,

Two Wavs lo Remove

•

.-POMEROY

79~

$29L
..
EACH

TO

I

great selection of fancy cello wrapped baskets and
Easter novelll.. filled with delicious candles.

likes at Easter lime. Choose one or more now from this big
special asSortment.

' II' 'I

, T I ;;;

EASTER
BASKETS
Seied an Eastef gl?' now tor the klddles from our

'

l

.

. ·.·:·! .·:·: ..· ..... ··.·..·.·.·.·I;lii!T\'1'

DECORATED CANDY FillED FANCY

PLUSH
. EASTER TOYS

BIG SALE
Hot Dog

.·. . '..·.·.·.-:·.·:··· ..

b bd.UJJtb

MEN'S WHITE PERM PRESS

DRESS
SHIRTS

BOYS BILLY THE .KID &amp; CAMPUS
NO-IRON
.

SPRING

SLACKS

Men's white perm . press
short sleeve dress shirts in
sizes Ulf2 to 17.

$

99
EACH

&amp;EASTER DRESS

Boys' Bllly.lhe Kid and Campus no·

iron s'pring and Easter dress slacks

In sizes 3 to 16. Flare and straight
styles.

BOYS
SIZES ·'·

TO

99$
TO

OPEN FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 P.M.

(&lt;(

••
'

I

'.\1

I

�'

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29. 1972

Charlene Hoeflich

992-5292

Upcoming Activity
Reviewed by Club

RUTLAND Rutland'
Garden Club members
·:-:-:-:·:·.·.· -:....-.·.·.·=·.·.·... ·•·.•••• -&gt;.::~ . meeting at the home of Mrs.
~~:l:l
James Nicholson Monday night
took a loqk at spring flowers,
'~::"
activities and projects.
::l
They were,.. joined by

Soc,. aI ,..

Lutherans Plan
1·
I
Ca
I
end
a
r
·
.
:::~:: H~~::~a:~:;.:~
Easter Services
"

•

•

'

The Maundy Thursday
Service at 8 p.m. at Saint Paul
Lutheran Church, 231 East
Second St., Pomeroy, will
include a Lenten drama, "The
Man Who Returned ", written
by the Rev. W. A. Poovey,
professor of homolitics at
Wartburg Theological
Seminary, one of the three
seminaries of The American
Lutheran Church.
The roles in the play include
Simon, played by Robert
Elber!led, Sarah, by Jennifer
Anderson ; Elia, by Rachel
Downie ; John Mark, by Bill
Baer, and Tobit, by Frank
Ryther.
The sermonette which
relates to the drama, "He
Taught Us To Love," will be
delivered by the pastor of the
congregation, Rev. Arthur C.
Lund. Holy Communion will
also be included in the service.
The men's choir will sing, "The

Old Rugged Cross."
On Easter Sunday there will
be a sunrise service at 7 a.m.
with a sermonette especially
lor children, and holy communion. An Easter breakfast
prepared by the St. Paul
Lutheran Women's group will
follow the service.
In Sunday School at 9:15a.m.
a special White Gilt o!!ering of
food will be received symbolizing the Christian's
response to God's love in Christ
shown through love to others.
The Senior High Sunday School
class will lead the school in a
new opening service. An
Easter film, "Dawn of Victory," will also be shown.
The 10:30 a.m . Easter
worship servjce will catTy
through the Easter message in
word and song. Pastor Lund
will deliver the sermon and the
senior choir will sing the anthem, "Christ Is Risen."

Victims Remembered
•
~
'

Arrangements to send baby
food and other non-perishable
items to the floOd victims at
Lorado in · memory of Albert
Hedinger, brother of Mrs. John
Sebo, a member, were made at
Thursday night's meeting of
the Middleport Child Conservation League.
Meeting at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church basement,
members were advised of the

Seven Attended

junior Roundup

..•

'

Seven Meigs County girls
and boys attended the 4-H
Junior •Leader Roundup held
over tlte weekend at South
Point.
The Holiday Inn there was
headquarters for the event
which featured the career
team from Ohio State
University
with
their
presentation "You can Make A
World of Difference." Tours on
Saturday included visits to the
glass factory and the airport at
Chesapea ke, Marshall
University at Huntington, and
Armco Steel in Ashland, Ky.
The Meigs 4-H'ers presenred
the meditaUon, "Old Glory"
with taped organ music by
Mrs. Ben Neutzling. Going
from here were Mike
Benedum, Sherrie Young, Ed
Cross, Lee Hysell, Cindy
Domigan, Alan and Jan Holter.

de~very

of several card tables

to the Community Class for
Retarded Children. A thankyou note for gifts was received
from the Class. It was noted
that flowers had been sent to
the late Audrey Frost, an
honorary member.
Mrs. Charlene Arnold
represenred the CCL at a
meeting Friday night at
Trinity Church regarding a
mental health program which
hinges on passage of a levy in
the May primary.
The annual dinner was
discussed and will be held
sometime next month · at the
Meigs Inn . Guests ai the
meeting were Mrs. Charles
Conner, Mrs. Horace Abbott,
and Mrs. Charles Cobb. The
group went bowling at the
Pomeroy Lanes following the
meeting.

LODGE TO MEET
Ohio Valley Commandery 24,
Knight Templars, will attend
sunrise services at Trinity ·
Church in a group. Members
are asked to meet at the
Masonic Temple at 6 a.m.
Sunday where they will
assemble and then march to
Trinity Church, at 6:30p.m. All
knights are asked to wear their
uniforms, but are urged to
attend whether or not in
uniform .

POLLY'S POINTERS

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT Literary
Club, Wednesday, 2 p.m. home
of Mrs. Walter Waddell; Mrs.
Thereon Johnson to review
"Night Comes to the Cumberlands" by Henry Caudill.
Response will be a comment on
the book.
YOUNG WIVES Club,
Wednesday, home of Joan
Smith, Tuppers Plains.
THURSDAY
MAUNDY THURSDAY
Communion at Middleport
First United Presbyterian
Church, 6:30p.m.; at Syracuse
Church, 8 p.m.
REACH OUT lor life service,
7: 30p.m. Thursday, Adventist
Church , Pomeroy. Topic
"Caught by a computer, what
to do when it happens."
EASTERN ATHLETIC
Boosters, Thursday, 8 p.m. at
school to plan for basketball
tia nquet. Parents and interesred residents urged to
attend.
RIVERVIEW GARDEN
Club, Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at
home of Mrs. Walter Brown,
Mrs . Donald Myers , cohostess.
XI GAMMA MU Thursday
7:45p.m. home of Mrs. Pearl
Welker. Members urged to
attend to help with the
decorating of eggs. Orders are
still being taken for colored
eggs for Easter.
DANCE, 8 to II Thursday,
Wahama High School, Jays
emceeing, school sponsored.
FREE Clothing day, Thursday, 10 a.m. until noon, at the
Salvation Army, . Butternut
Ave., Pomeroy. All in area in
need of clothing invired to
attend.
FRIDAY · ·' ·
CANDLEUGHT Service and
communion, Mt. Union
Church, carpenter, 7:30 p.m.
Friday.
CANDLELIGHT
Communion service, 7:30p.m. Good
Friday, Long Bottom Unired
MethOdist Church, public inviM.
SATURDAY
REACH OUT lor life service,
Adventist Church, Pomeroy,
7:30 p.m. Saturday. Topic,

She also said that a rich aoil top
dressing should be put on roc•,·
gardens during the month.
· Mrs. W'UII1 Will auctioneer
for a · houseplant sale,
Refreshments were aetVed by
the hostesses, Mrs. Nicholson
and Mrs. Chria Diehl. Mrs.
Victor Nelson presented the
traveling prize to Mrs. Diehl.
of Morristown, and Mrs: Jack Mrs. Lawrence Milhoan had
Robson.
A committee to plan for ihe
open meeting in May was
announced by the president.
She also nored that the April
meeting will probably be
changed due to illness in the
family of Mrs. Russell Little,
scheduled to serve as hostess.
It was noted that Mrs.
Nelson, Mrs. Canaday,.Mrs. C.
0 . Chapman and Mrs.
Erlewtne visired the Gallipolis
State Institute and conducted a
therapy session. The patients
made dish gardens with the
club providing the plant
material, potting soil and
containers. Refreshments
were also served.
The program was 'tn charge
of Miss Ruby Diehl. Mrs. Ralph
Turner read "Flowers of
Colonial Days" and a highlight
was the presentation of slides
of Colonial Williamsburg
!lower arrangements by Mrs.
Winn. The atTangements were
designed from antique art
prints, and included creations
appropriate lor many of the
rooms containing dried
!lowers, garlands, fruits and
leaves used in the old fruit
Easter
prints. Decorated vases,
Greetings
candles, cups, and containers
Box ... $1.60
of the era were shown along
with fresh flowers including
the red clover, tulips,
honeysuckle, snapdragons,
Iris, canterbury bells, peonies,
corn !lowers, the purple onion,
and numerous other colonial
flowers.
Tips on gardening for April
were given by Mrs. Kate
JatTell. She suggested planting
dormant roses, getting nursery
stock starred tn containers, a.nd
selecting new perennial plants.

Club of Langsville ; Mrs. Orien
Nelson of Star Garden Club,
and Mrs. Homer Parker of the
Friendly Gardeners who is
Region 11 publicity cochairman.
Mrs .. Harvey Erlewlne, Mrs.
Roy Snowden and Mrs. Robert
canaday reporred on their
recent meeting with Rutland
Village Council regarding
confinement of pets and also
noted that the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners were
given encO\Il'agement tn getting the village, cleanup,
paintup and plantup program
underway.
Mrs. ·. Erlewine read an
acknowledgement
of
correspondence regarding the
club's entry into the Sears
Civic Improvement Project
and also a letter from Mrs. Joe
Bolion, Region II director,
regarding the spring regional
meeting to be held at Logan at
the
Immanuel
United
Methodist' Church. Luncheon
reservations are to be made
with Mrs. L. G. Ellinger, 175
Dennison Ave., Logan, by April
15.

SERVICE FRIDAY
Good Friday services will be
held at 7:30 p.m. at the Rock
Springs United Methodist
Church for the Enterprise,
Flatwoods and Rock Springs
congregations. The Youth
Fellowship of the Enterprise
Church will conduct a Sunrise
service at the church at 6 a.m.
using the theme "God's Love"
with a breakfast following.
Worship service will be held at
9 a.m. with Sunday school
following that.

All clubs are being asked to
conttibute to the plant sales
table. Hostesses for the
.regional meeting will be the .
Fdur Seasons, Rockbridge, and
Hocking Clubs.
Also read by the president
was an invitation from the
Winding Trail Garden Club
inviting members to a meeting
on April 19 at the Ohio Power
Co. Miss Edeline Wood of the
West Virginia Adult Education
Service will give a program on
wild foods. An approximate
number of those plaimtng to
attend is to be provided the
club by April I7.
It was noted that the
watershed program employes
have assisted in the cleanup
and trimming of shrubbery at
the Rutland Methodist Church.
Mrs. Parker gave a resume
and critical points to be nored
in preparing the garden club
publicity books. She poinred
out specific details to be included in addition to the who,
what, where, and when in '
reporting events.
Mrs . Charles Lewis will
prepare the Green Thumb
Notes for April 28. Mrs. Paul
Winn reporred on the visit
by the club members with the
new Homestead Club on March
16. Nine of the Rutland Club
members , six from the
Friendly Gardeners, and two
from the Bend 0' the River
Club attended that Jllceting.
Mrs. Erlewine recognized
Mrs. Lewis, a past regional
director, lor her service to the
club. She gave a brief account
of her year as director,
recalling other members of the
Rutland Club who have served
in that capacity, Mrs. James
Titus, Mrs. Robert Reibel, now

; ! ,.,.,. ...

provided it.
Devotions to open the
meeting were glv!I_J by Mn.
Nicbolson, frool ~tbaiana
16 entitled "The· Olijrch bt the
Risen Lord." Mrs.~(jJehl had a
poem, "Art tn Leslol)" relating
to the picturesque work ol God
In nature. Members ~
roll call by ll8lllln&amp;\ an oldfashioned !lower.

BIG SELECTION ASSORTED .CUDDLY STUFFED
Soft cuddly stuffed plush Easter loy animals every child

'

..

~'\S®rp Oij\!]®~

Fruit &amp; Nut
Egg
$1.65

,.

'•,•

,,

75c

...•
.....
,'•

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...

...

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•,•.•

convenient to use an ice

~a

Prescrl~~ddi~;o~t ~:; Business

You save a wee bit more on
every pair ot Sandy McGee
, Oxto~ds or Loafers. Select

•

cream scooper. Just mea·
sut·e hOW much watet' your
scoop can hold 1mine holds
a scant haif-1:up1 and. knowing the eapaeit~· or your
scoop. measure !he &amp;hot·tenlng as needed. It is sn ''" '~
to eject from Ihe JK:OOp.-&lt;" AROL
.

fl' l .

'

\;::,

$

99 $

Ad111ll-'

)he latest in fashion tops. skirts,
slacks. and hot pants. Wide choice of
fabrics , colors and patterns.

new

Choose

our

from

assorled styles.
.

PAIR

many

..

.

.

•'

GIRLS NEWJPRING &amp; EASTER

BRIEFS - T-SHIRTS

Girls' new spring dresses.
perfect for Easter wear.
. Many· styles to choose from.
Sizes 7 to 14.

Fine combed while cotton knit tee
shirts or briefs In sizes small,
medium, large and extra large.
Fruit ot the Loom brand.

PACKAGE$
OF

SLIPS

It's lime to spruce up ... and

sav'l Ge1 swep1 up In a wave

Philmald and Movie .Star
lace trimmed full slips in
sizes 32 to ~-

of Bendo wigs In beautiful
fashion shades.

$

OONVENIENf..

$ 99$

00

EA.

TO

A great selection of fine new
spring patterns and styles
with long pointed collars.
. Perm. press. Sizes S-M-L·

XL

EACH
BOYS CAMPUS PERM PRESS

MEN'S FRUIT-OF-THE-LOOM

DRESSES

LADIES PHILMAID &amp; MOVIE STAR
LACE TRIMMED

WIGS

SPORT SHIRTS

$299 TO $]99
EACH

SPORT
SHIRTS
Famous boys' Campus sport
shirts, perm . press , short .

sleeves. Size 6 lo
plains.

65

18.

Asst. laney,

$199TO. $2~9
EACH

3

IM

MEN'S CAMPUS PERM PRESS

..·.·•·•·.·.

PRICED

NEW ~~~0 f~S~IO~$

lo 17.

$

00

Fine quality leather-like
vinyl handbags In new
spr,lng and Easter shades.
In a variety of styles and
shapes.

TO

.

Low Price: s309.95

Wh

HANDBAGS

99$ 99

.
Tho new look In loolweor far
youths and boys In slraps, lies,
· ~tnd sllp.ons. Black, br.own end
two-tone. Youlhs ~lzes 81fa to 4
~tnd boys sizes 31fa lo 6. •

Model NT1414
Exceptional Valual Full Slzedl Dual
Temperature controlo, twin porcelain criopero, conloured frozen can
ohelt, "bookcooe" freezer door
ohelf are juot ooma of the quality
Admiral featuraalnciuded. Fila any·
where--only 30" wide!

long poinf dress collars.

Tapered. Sizes

LADIES VINYL NEW SPRING

Big seledlon · of fine woven
reed or straw handbags that
are sure IO&lt;match.Your outfit.

Girls and misses new spring
and Easter footwear In straps,
ties and sllpons. Sizes a•;, to~.

'TERMS'

Men's high fashion Fruit of the
Loom while dress shirts.
Perm . perss. Long sleeve with,;

SMART SPRING DRESS
BEGINS 'AT STIFFLERS

AND BAGS

I

MIDDL£PORT, OHIO

DRESS SHIRT

'

LADIES WOVEN REED &amp; STRAW

FOOTWEA

ANOTHER
Adn•l•al.
BEST BUY

';

~CH

o.dlctlfil

TO

PAIR

SP.0.RTSWEAH

PAIR

'

TO

LONG SLEEVE WHITE

PRICED $

GIRLS &amp; MISSES SPRING &amp; EASTER

To Quality. ~.
Backed by

99

MEN'S FRUIT-OF·THE·LOOM

Famous Bobbie Brooks Sportswear
creations for spring. Choose from

99

99$

BOBBIE BROOKS
~

styles.

SIZES 29 TO 42

9~

NEW SPRING &amp; SUMMER

.

FOOTWEAR

BAKER

$14~~$

now from our popular

~On ~~ c:&amp; c::.~a ;}}k ·~
~ oa~ ~ OQ~ (J~"' ~~

Dedicated To Quality

' 1'1

Smooth' ~~~~! May
Queen panty hose In
Blushing. Beige,
Ginger Bread, Brown
Sugar and Chotoiale
Eclair. Stretch nylon
that fits ." ,

YOUTHS &amp; BOYS NEW SPRING &amp; EASTER

FREE
DELIVERY

\ JUNIORS - MISSES
.· \ WOMEN'S SIZES .
. ,..., GREAT SELECTION

PANT¥~~HOSE

NO DEFROSnNG EVER!

DEAR POLLY - When
measuring out shortening
it is much easier and more

\

LADIES MAY QUEEN NYLON
SEAMLESS
'

Put yourself Into the easy life.
Outfit yourself from our great
selection of knit and woven slacks
in straight and flare leg styles.
Sizes 29 to 46 .

color:s.

HALF SIZES
GREAT SELECTION

•""'· j,t-~K

SLACKS

Select your new spring coal
now from our fine collection.
You will find all the newest
styles in lhe finest fabrics
and in all the wanted spring

JUNIORS - MISSES

v....

DRESS

COATS

colors and patterns.

'LOAFERS

DEAR POLLY- I suggest that M.A.S. try rubbing
ca mphoi·ated oil on her maple furniture lo remove the
water spots. Use a small amount on a soft cloth and
rub well . This has covered or polis hed the wood on my
furniture so that what seemed to be hopeless water stains
disappeared and the result is ve ry pleasing.-GLADYS

...

:.~·

MEN'S PERM PRESS

Piease your budget. Fine new

. ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.-...-..·.·•·.. .·...-..·.·.· .·.....·..··-; ·.:· . ··:····· ·.·.·.·.·..--:·-··-::-:-:::::::·-:·:-···.·.·:.·. ·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·.·..··.·.·.·.··.·.·.· ·.··.....·.·.·,•, ..,.... . . ......

-

Fer Tile

=:::

4

clwnge a typewrilet· ribbon r am templed to sar a
naughty word as it is such a mess.v job. Mv grandmother tells me it was just
the same 50 years ago so
this is one lhing that has
not improved with lime.
Where are all those in·
ventors ?- IRENE

•

tabrlc! in a variety of spring

99 $899

·:::
::::
..,...,.
...
.,
··::.
··.•:·
·:,::.
"·

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Grea11

great In a price range that will

SANOY
McGEE

Home Furnishings Report
Complete Reviews &amp; Evaluations
of 197

DI•; AR POLLY - My Pel Peen' is that whenever I

.

99$

Consumer Guide

Polly's Problem
DEAR POLLY - I stuff the !ancv sola pillows I
make with finely cut up Dac ron and wonder if there
is a way I cou ld fluff them up. Aller using them
awhile. they get sort or flat or the sluffi ng mals
down. Can these be put in lhe dryer or washed and
fluffed'! - ANN
.-

I .

-

Easter dresses. Our selection Is

Great new styles for spring and
Easter. Dress, casual and sport
sty!"' at Budget prices. VIsit
Stiffler's shoe .department today
and step lively· this spring.

Chocolate
Cream Egg

DEAR POLLY- M.A. S. might try my solution lor re.
moving water spots from maple furniture . Rub the blemis h with ciga r or cigarette as hes using a soft cloth
moistened with lard , vegetable shortening or salad oil.
Always rub with lhe grain of the wood . Wipe off im-

·,·

.

RESSES

FOOTWEAR

Best Buy Values Taken From

appeared in the column once or twice through the years
but a good thing is always worth repeating for thosr
readers who may have joined ns slnce.-l'OLL \'

'

· Shop now for your new spring and

TO .

II EAR fOIRLS--This Is ouc of m'· favorites and It has

. .'
...
'••. i. ~

~

,,

~ TO

nll'diately and l'f? wax with yo ur fav oritP pruduei. - MRS.
.J L. MeG

TO

EASTER

GREAT BUDGET VALUES ·- LADIES

l!y POLLY CRAMER

.,

..
: :-:. ·.· .·:•.•:-:·: .·:·:·:-:-. :'.. ;·..

LADIES' NEW SPRING AND

~r~JP UiEIRIDw~

Spots on Furniturt'
'•

1u

.

.'

In the EABTER PARJt.DE

DUnON'S

.

•

·~·~aa
. ·.

Purple Foil
Basket ... $1.50

ADMIRAL -----------------

I? 2 5?'}

MARCH 30-31 AND APRIL 1, HOP TO IT!

000XFORo·s· .~

Phone 992-2556
At The End of Pomeroy Bridge

,.

: '

With
sauce

THE DAIRY VALLEY

,

'-

Foot Long

"The Greatest Question ever
Asked".
DANCE Saturday,, ·8 to II ·
p.m., Wahama High School,
Jays emceeing, school sponsored.
SUNDAY
SUNRISE SERVICE,
Pomeroy Church of Christ, 6:30
a.m. Sunday, youth in charge.
Breakfast immediately
following.
SUNRISE EASTER service,
6 a.m. Sunday at H. E. Starkey
Farm, by Mt. Union ·Baptist
Church.

ADMIRAL N02217 Duplo• unit hos
22 cu. ft. CIP«ity in 33" c•bintt. A
no-defrotting unit, it has bOQkcase
lre•zN doors, StJ~•te temJUr•turtJ control$, end lfftclive 7 -d•y me.t keeper.

..·.··.·•·.· ·,·,·..·.·.·..· .:-:- :·:·:·· :- .·.· :- .·.. : .·.... -:

:·

'1'

HOP ON DOWN - - - FAST

.,

Two Wavs lo Remove

•

.-POMEROY

79~

$29L
..
EACH

TO

I

great selection of fancy cello wrapped baskets and
Easter novelll.. filled with delicious candles.

likes at Easter lime. Choose one or more now from this big
special asSortment.

' II' 'I

, T I ;;;

EASTER
BASKETS
Seied an Eastef gl?' now tor the klddles from our

'

l

.

. ·.·:·! .·:·: ..· ..... ··.·..·.·.·.·I;lii!T\'1'

DECORATED CANDY FillED FANCY

PLUSH
. EASTER TOYS

BIG SALE
Hot Dog

.·. . '..·.·.·.-:·.·:··· ..

b bd.UJJtb

MEN'S WHITE PERM PRESS

DRESS
SHIRTS

BOYS BILLY THE .KID &amp; CAMPUS
NO-IRON
.

SPRING

SLACKS

Men's white perm . press
short sleeve dress shirts in
sizes Ulf2 to 17.

$

99
EACH

&amp;EASTER DRESS

Boys' Bllly.lhe Kid and Campus no·

iron s'pring and Easter dress slacks

In sizes 3 to 16. Flare and straight
styles.

BOYS
SIZES ·'·

TO

99$
TO

OPEN FRIDAY &amp;SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 P.M.

(&lt;(

••
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News.From West Columbia
.
While touring Mason County
this past weekend Jay
Rockefeller and J . Gory Kapp
made a stop· at my place of
business. Thill is the first·Ume
in my life I know of that a
candidate for Governor of W.
Va . stopped
in
this
community.
Mr. Rockefeller had been
there only a short time before
many of the citizens of :west
Columbia began to gather.
After shaking hands _ and
visiting with many of the

seqior
MR. AND MRS. HARRAH

Golden Wedding Anniversary
ASBURY, W. Va. - Mr. and Mrs. Basil R. Harrah of
Asbury will be honored with an open house celebralion on
April 1 in observance of their 50th wedding anniversary. The
occasion will he hosted by their children in the social room of
the West Point Baptist Church here from 2 to 5 p.m. All
relatives and friends are invited.
Mr. and Mrs. Harrah were married on March 9, 1922 in
Charleston. Mrs. Harrah is the former Josephine Burdette.
They are the parents of 10 children, Mrs. Forrest
(Margaret) Shelton, Alderoon; James Harrah, Silver
Springs, Md.; Rev. Robert Harrah, Warren, Ohio ; John
Harrah, Mason; · WiUiam Harrsh, Vandalill, Ohio; Mrs.
Howard (Ruth) Slsk, Mason; Mrs. James (Frances )
~.Kettering, Ohio; Mrs. Warren (Rose) Weaver, New
Haven; Gloria Harrah (deceased); and Frank Harrah,
Guysville, Ohio. They have 35 grandcltlldren and seven
great-grandchildren.
They are members of the West Point Baptist Church in
Albury. Mr. Harrah is a retired construction worker. The
couple lived formerly In New Haven but moved in 1960 to
their pl'e&amp;ent residence.

Mason Area
News, Notes

Mrs. Marcella Chapman of
New Bremen, Ohlo visited her
mother, Mrs . Jessie Cart.
wright for several days this
past week.
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Moille Fox at Clifton were Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Roush and
daughter, Linda; arid Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Roush, aU of East
Uverpool; and Tommy Roush,
Weirton, W. Vu. They came to
attend the funeral of Unley
Roush.
Mr. arid Mrs. Thomas R.
King of Johnson City, Tenn.
visited recently with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R.
King , PI. PIeasan t , Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Randolph, Letart,
with Mrs. Thomas King's
grandmother and Mrs. Goldye
Johnson, New Haven, and with
several other relatives
,
·

Mr. and Mrs. Eher Roush
vtsitedtwoillreiativesoverthe
weekend . They visited in
Charleston with Mr. Roush's
sister, Mrs. Eva Jividen at
Nitro, with Mrs. Roush's
brother, Evert Dudding at his
home.
, Mrs. Reuben Stewart and
J.,isa Stewart attended the
$aster Story cantata at the
l'resbyterian Church in Pt.
Pleasant on Sunday. Mrs.
Stewart's son, Gary, is the
f hoir director.
. Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell,
P~meroy,
at tended the
clli:lsJ~nlng of Christopher ·
MfChael Noble, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry H. Noble on Sunday
·at Mason United Methodist
EARLY SERVICE
Church.
Sunrise
service at the
Mrs. Ann Hoffman visited
with Mrs. Uoyd Williams at Bradbury Church of Christ wiil
he held at 6:30 a.m. Sunday .
Clifton on Thursday.

citizens,

Mr.

Rockefeller, then chatted with
many of the neighborhood
chlldred an~ passed out
buttons. Today I see many of
the Jr. Citizens are wearing
these buttons but I suspect for
a diffeent reason than what
they were meant.
Right Joyce, John,
Jim etc?
,

__

Ralph
James
Bland
celebrated his third birthday
on the 23rd of this month. He is
the son of Joyce Marie Bland.
Mrs.
Homer
Bland
celebrated her birthday on
March 12th. She was given a
surprise birthday dinner by

Lewis.

Mrs . Goldie VanMatre
recently spent three deys
visiting in Buffalo, with Mr.
arid Mrs. Marv~. Marr.
Guests over the weekend at
the home of Mrs. Virgie
Stewart was Mrs. Debbie
Triplett and .Wendy . of
Syracuse, Ohio. Mrs. Francis
Young, arid Mr. and Mrs. Del
Waiters of Charleston.

'•

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WHEN YOU
SELL YOUR DON'T NEE'DS
WITH A

BARGAIN ~FFER

!

i

FAMILYWA.NT-AD

III 1·.0DAYS 15
· .. WORDS
I
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·

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ICASH WITH ORDER}
TO QUALIFY FOR THIS SPECIAl lOW RATE:

Ad m~nt offer tooch for sale
S.IUng lor S75 Of und.r

• Ad "'vet bt ~ed by an lfldividiHII
• not 0 b.Hin•u.

~::mftellfllolfiChangedfor

ofi....,J ,IYIIISioPPtorinod

·

• Cctneellotlon privlltft' when ,...
'wlh are cAI!aiMicf
• ~=-fllnwlllchO'fl .lotiOtlart

III
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I· Write Your Adl Please Print. Use One Space For Each Word I

I
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I· DON'T WAIT
MAIL ·y·out

·1
1

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Name

Add~..

·l li•d

City

I

AD 'NOW!

I

MAIL TO:

.

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Phone

'THE DAILY SENTINEL
l1l Court St .

Pom110y, Oltio

I

·~

·------------------------~

BEEF STEW
MEAT

lb. 89'

crtn.

SAUSAGE

~-

COFFEE·
10 Ol.
jar
With Coupon

Expires 4-1-72

.....

million. The tax tab (~clu&lt;ling
. federal excise paid by
customers) exceeded $12.3
million, compared 'with $.10.3
million in 1970.
Since 1967 the company has
paid more than $53.4 million in
federal and sUite taxes. Tlii.$
five-year tax'· biD exceeded the
company's total ope~ating
revenues ofl969.
·
General of Ohio gained 20,142
telephones for a yea~end total
of 435,138. .It has added 91,~
phones the last five years.
Customers !!lade an average
of 2,158,787 local calls daily in
1971, up 3.4 per cent ove~ 1970.
This amounted to 7.4 calls a
day per customer. Toll
messages averaged 109,132
deily, an ' incre~se of 6.7 per

cent.
Investment in . telephone
facilities reached $262,772,000,
up almost 13 per cent. As a
result the net plant investment
per phone totaled $508, an
increase of alinost 8 per cent.
In this connection the

company put almost $37.7
miUion t.. to additions to its
facilities, or about $3.1 million
a month. The report noted an
estimated $39.9 million is
planned for construction · in
.1972. Gross additions 1967-1971
totaled $150.6 miUion. General
of Ohio added 226 employees in
1971 for a tqtal of 3,650.
The company's facilities
serve all or parts of 70 counties
in about 30 per cent of Ohio's
land area ..
The report noted the Public
Utilities CommisSion of Ohio
authorized General of Ohio to ,
raise its local rates last Nov.
16. It amounted to about $4.7
million annually, or slightly
more than half of what the
company had sought. An apI
this still is pending
pea on
before the Ohio Supreme
Court.
Some insects can contlnue
to live after having had tlteir
heads cut off. One ant Jived
for more than a month after
b · d
•t t d
emg ecapt a e ·

BY CLARICE ALLEN
Mrs. Cecil Kimes received
word of the death of her sister,
Mrs. Thomas Hearn of near
Charleston, w. Va. Two other
sisll!rs also survive, Mrs. A. R
Johnson and Mrs. Howard
Jarrett of near Charleston.
· Recent dinner guests of Mrs.
Opal Eichinger and family
were Randy Young, Alan
Holll!r and Jim. Amsbary. The
dinner was in honor of Mrs.
Elchinger's son, Dennis, on his
18th birthday.

r--------·
FREE
BAB,Y
. CHICKS

200 Baby Chicks to be given
away by the Middleport
Pentecostal Church, s. Third
Ave., Middleport, this
sunday at our Sunday School
at to a.m.
Special Singing
Pastor, William Kniftel
S. S. Supt., Ronald Dougan
Basket dinner following
Sunday SchooL
Everyone Welcome

Mrs. Letha Wood has ~n
discharged from the Holzer
Medical Center where she was
a medical patient for two
weeks and is staying with her
daughter, Mrs. Roy Christy.
Mrs. Denzil Cleland is a
medical patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Billy Robert Allen, student at
Lehigh University, Bethlehem,
Pa., is spending his spring
vacation with Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen.
Mrs. Opal Eichinger arid
family spent Sunday in
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Eichinger. Charles
and daughter, Suzannah,
~turned home ~th them lor a
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Hartung
and son of Mlsolasljlpl spent a
week with Mr. and Mrs. TGIII
.Nice. The Hartungs were
moving from Miisiuippl to
· Houston, Teus.
Norman Frederick of near
Chester is a medical patient at
Holzer Medical Center.
Tom Gumpf, student at Ohio
University, spent his spring
vacation with his mother, Mrs.
Grace Gumpf.

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE
$J49.95
$35.00 Down
Balance On
Convenient
. Terms .

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason. W.Va .

;:

• •: !

!'

''

•.·

' ..

Beef Roast

$1
•v

19 lb.

IONIWS TOP CUI ,

,

RtuH Stuk .8!s, .

C~IAI'EO

IY THE DOZEN IIJS

Cor11th Hus • •

cOUNTtY TIIAT

Sa•uc• .

IONELESS IEEF

Ru11111 Roast • •

•

Timely Quote
,---------- - - · -- -----

We're trying to drive down
the middle of a broad road.
If labor wants to run into us,
I guess they'll do it.
-Treasury Se~retary John
B,.Connally on Phase 2 de·
velopments.

VACUUM PACK

VALUAILI COIUPCIN
WITH THIS COUPON

I House

d Medal
s~.44c

RIGHT
RESERVED

CARLOAD SHIPMENT!

TO

ATRIIIWID
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QUANTITIES

• • •

Good Tlwu Soturdoy, AprH hi.
AI Your Friendly A&amp;P Store

CELOTEX

VACUUM PACK

DETERGENT

·A&amp;P Coffee

'Ceiling Tile

Palmolive Liquid

6Sc

-o..

22
bottle

l-Ilt.
wiTH THis
•••
COUPON
Good Thru Soturdoy, AprH hi.
At Your
A&amp;P Store

54c

WITH THis
COUPON

Good Thru Soturdoy, April hi.
AI Your Friendly A&amp;P Store
STOKELY IIRAND

49~ BACON ,,b.

20 lb. bag

'

May this Easter Season
bring us.c:~ll ~ reawakening
to the message of hope
and a rededication
to the pursuit of peace.

SLICED

POTATOES
FOLGER$ INSTANT

AT TUPPERS PUIIIS
LYIIIIS IIMKEI'

Better Off Ending -'71.

CheSt er NeWS

care-----...

POPLAR

Special Buys In Produce

000 VALUABLE COUPON 0606

1

Notes

We Accept Federal Food Stamps!

1~~-

.

B'ald Kn0 b.

49'

9or.

PURE PORK

!

Miller

I have my doubts aboul this
proposal mainly because . it
offers no ~asurances that
Preaidential campaignjng
would be any lesa expensive or·
trying on the public patlenee
than it II rigbt now. Instead of
localtzed Campaign · Cllllts In

AT UCIIIE
WAID CROSS DIS

COOL WHIP

RATH

financial picture improved
slightly despite a "soft"
nsUonal economy, the cOm. pany noted today in Ita ll!lDUal
re~l to abarebolders.
Robert M. Wopat of Marion,
preslderit, altrlbuted the upturn to growth, sharply rising
toll revenues and moderate
advances in local service. He
·aald, however, operating ex-

ay Clarence 1

elections.

BIRDSEYE

ROUND. STEAK
09
lb.•l

MARION
General
1 Telepbone
Co. of Obio's 1971

am,ndment wblcb ' would concentn,ling on major
replace atate-.by-slate population centers. 11 Ia
presidential primaries with. a. doubllul that states with few, penaesalso~ontinuedtocllmb.
sincle nationwide primary elec!oral votes would get much
Operating revenues reached
elec:tion. ' '
notice from the prl!8ideittial $84.3 miUion, an increase of
Senallq Gecl'ge Aiken and · candidate.. fAt secoitd thongbt,
more than U per cent.
Mike ManofieJ4 introduced the CGIIIIIdering the quadrennlal slighUy
Of this toll revenues jumped
meuure in the Senate with harangue these states ,encme more than 27 per cent, totaling
Mansfield · denouncing state every four years, they migbt
$28.8 million. Income from
primaries u ''useless and well prefer solitude to the local service was up alinost 7
worthless." I.egiiilation caJJlng solicltuc!e.
per cent, amounting to ~.5
for a pmidantlal primary in .
milllon.
ails.lates 111. tile same dey, has
·Net lncolil~ increased
been llllhmltted In the put, but
$1,854,000 over 1970, totaling
to date, the propoeal has met
$7,413,000. ·
with very little enthuaium.
On the other side of the
Under the current Senate
ledger, operating ~nses and
plan, a nationwide primary
Sunday School atlendance at taxes • 1•• .in.creased slightly
....,..
·would he held in Alll!lJII, every Freedom Gospel Mission more than
15 per cent to $51
presidential election . year. March 19 was 48. Offering was
Each party would Mlect ita .15.34.
nominee for Chief Executive
Mr. and Mn. Michael Evans
from a field of candidates who and fllll1il7 visited hll mother,
would qualify for the ballot by Mrs, Bernice Evans, and hll
filing petitions sign~ by a aef sister, Mr. ·and Mrs. Donald
)14irctntage of voters nation- Hunnel, and sons, all of
Wide. The system would apply Pomerily.
to each perty polling at least 10
Miss Cindy Evans was a
pet. of the vote In the preceCilng guest of her cousin, Davey
preitldential election. ·
Warth, of Pomerw. ·
There wQU!d be a runoff
Mr. Carl Autbersoil · bas
election 23 days . after ·the returned home, from Veterans
primary between the top two Memorial Hospital. He Is
flnsisbers If no candidate won improvlitg.
atleast40pct.ofaparty'svcite.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Allen
VIce prealdenUal candidates and their grandson, James
would be chosen and party Bryson, Mr, and Mrs. Jecry .
platforms presumably would Dailey, all of Newark, 0., Mr.
be' drafted at national party and Mrs. James Pape and
conventlona.
Kristen, Mrs. Elva Dalley of
Supporlei'l ol a natl~e 5yr··acuse, visited Mr . and ..
_
......
primary eleeUOJi Instead ol the · Carl Autherson.
2$ state-by..tate electi!llll as
Mr. · and Mrs. . Donald
the case· Is this year say it Crelll!!8l1S of Tuppers Plains
would save lliOiie)', and cut visited her parents, Mr. and
down on the weeriiome '- and Mrs. lAwrence Jobnstoo and
oftentimes boring - sue- family
ceulon of electiOns. IntraLebt&amp; Birch vlsltec!' Mr. and
perty polltlca1 scrapping by an Mrs. Dllllon Taylor, Mr. and ·
enllre tribe of White · House Mrs. Cerl Aittherson.
hopefuls would ideally be ·Mr. · Clint Birch and
leuened an.d, aillce most daughter, Leota, visited Mr.
candidates for the Prelldency and · Mrs. Thomas Birch and
spring from the Congress, one family of Waterford, 0. and
primary would ser\re to cut Mr. and Mrs. Joe llpps and
down on the chronic House and family of Vincent, o.
Senate absenteeism of thoee
who should be In Wuhington
1
"' '
but ~ forever ·on the camTHIRD CELEBRATED
paigll1 trail wooing voters.
RACINE - Mr. and Mr~.
On t1ie other Bide of the colli, Dale' E. Willis of 'Racine
opponents say that one celebrated their third anprimary would be a · further niversary on March 22.
federalization · of the election
A small dinner party was
procesa. They say that a single given, guests including Mr. and
race would be a contest among Mrs. VirgU Dill, Mr. and Mrs.
the wealthy ·and would turn the Terry Atkins, Tammy, Terry
race into a national TV per· Jr.; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wiles
sonality contest. Others ~ and Sara; Mr. ·and Mrs.
that the mechanics of the whole Chester Sexton, Mr. and Mrs.
plan would only spawn dif- Chester Rose, Mr. and Mrs.
ficult, self-defeating legal and Harold Brinker and Butch, and
admlplatratlve problems. Ronald Ford. Guesta . were
Furthermore, it may en- entertained by the Heavenly
cowage even more politicians Highway Trio.
to aspire to the Presidency and
create two costly national

Frozen Food Buy

CHOICE

'

I

Prices
Effective
Thru April 1

USDA

Was~ington .

~

!Ciean·ing

I
I
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I

Local Bowling

Gen~ral · Tel

I

Memben from both polillcal · certain presidential .primary
parllei in ibe CclcqJreas have states; the candidates would
propoa~d a . coiiiUI,ulloll!ll apread their money nstlonwlde

I

drug-taking friends.
what I've done with my life. I
"Drugs are hell," Eileen fee! like dying. I've had all the
wrote in her spidery scrawl. "I good things. I marred aU the
hate drugs. They all put drugs chances arid betrayed all the
before health, food and money. • trust.
It's a terrible. way to die.
"Why did I ever start? Drugs
"It's not the dying that are evil. They cause mental
worries me. lt's before- when illness, aging skin, baldness
I can't get the money to buy and rotting teeth.
drugs.
"I can no longer behave
"What worries me are the naturally," Eileen wrote,
wrinkles in my face and the
"It's clear," said Evans,
infection in my veins," she "drugs brought her no
wrote.
pleasure, no joy' only
"I'm very sad when I think unhappiness."

1

--------------------•

.

FAST

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Thomas

1

Rep·
ort
I·
.

·YOU'LL
CLEAN UP

Mr. and Mrs.. Raymond
Roush and family, Steve and
Danny GiUispie and Mr. and
Mrs. Harold VanMeter were
visitors at the home of Eunice
and Cecil Martin of Mission
Ridge.

t-'l'bllldyl :1 •'.Mill ;aW'wuwo1,o.,M.m.a,tm

I

IWant
Ad
I
. . . . . ·. .

Mr. and Mrs. Ross Kapp
reciently visited with Mr. l!lld
Mrs. Roy Pierson and family
of LeQn. Mr. Pierson just
returned home after ~ding
twelve days at the Holzer
Medical Center. I understand
by the way of teU ·'a woman
that Mrs. Pierson is a faithful
reader of this column.

Wednesday (ale Mixed League Carsey 4SS.
Hiah Game CWomPnl - tv
March 22, 1972
Carsey 191, S. ONen 18S, M.
Standings:
Team
Points Voss 181.
Early Bird League
~orro~- ~aore
62
March 2l. 1P72
ONen·Holter
58
Team Standings:
Casseii·Carsey
56
Fultz.Bentley
·
48 D. H. Plnneftes
88
60
Rosenbaum-Meadows
42 Evelyn's Grocery
58
Blakeslee·Hoyt
22 King Builders
48
High Team Series - ONen· Larry's Ashland
34
Holter 1939, Casseii ·Carsey Rawlings Dodge
24
1922, Rosenbaum . Meadows Meigs Mobile Homes
Team Higlt Game - D. G.
1831.
High Series (Men). - D. Plnnetles 432. · Evelyn's
Meadows56B. J . Bentley 539, R. Grocery815, King Builders809.
Team High Strin - D. G. .
Holter 535 . .
High Game (Men) - D. Plnnettes 2332, Evelyn's
Meadows220, J . Bentley 291, R. Grocery 2312. King Builders
Holter 197.
·
2256.
Ind. High Game '- Mary
High Team Game - ONen·
Holter 679. Casseii·Carsey 670, Voss 20S, Ann Thomas 196.
Flossie Maxson 184.
Rosenbaum-Meadows 664.
Ind. High Series - Mary
High Series (Women) - M.
Voss 498, S. Owen 469, N. Voss 531 , Maxine Dugan SIS.
Ann Thomas 501.

•

!Start your S

'

Girl Reveals Drug Horrors
LONDON ( UPI) - "If there
was ever a case that illustrates
the horrors of drug taking, this
is it," said Coroner Giyn
E'vans. He picked up one of the
water·stained notebooks In
which Eileen Sullivan, 17, had
scrawled.
"When I wake up in the
morning, ali I can think about
is where to get money for more
drugs," Eileen wroie. "! think
I can last for nine months, but
in 18 I wiD he dead:"
Three months later, on Feb.
17 at 10 p.m. and during a
power blackout caused by a
nations! miners' strike, Eileen
walked out of a party at which
she had been dropping lSD,
smoking marijuana and taking
barbiturates. She wandered to
the top of a . multi.,storled
garage in Newport,.Wales and
fell 30 feet tq her death on a
slab of concrete.
Witnesses told a coroner's
court Thursday Eileen's body
was found the next morning,
barely clad and painted in red
lipstick with arrows and lourletter words. Evans read at
length from the diary he said
Eileen started keeping in
notebooks when she moved
from her home in December w
an apartment she shared with

•

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'

her two daughters. The dinner
was enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Bland; Mr. and Mrs. ·
Roger Hall, Warren and
Candie, Joyce, Ralph and
ShaMilll Bland.
Sorry Jennie I forgot your
birthday in the last week's
column, J.G.K.
JUST AROUND TOWN:
Arnold VanMatre returning to
work atter one week of iUness:
Marvin Bland, Roger and
David Hall going trout fishing
on Cranberry river but didn't
catch anything. Attendance at
the West Columbia United
Methodist Church Sunday was
89 with $96.41 offering.
Spilman U. Methodist had 25
with $22.33 offering. Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Decker is
spending a few clays with their
daughter and son-in-law Mr.
and Mrs. Willie Neal of
Columbus, Ohio; Sue Blaine
and Sherry Bissell has been
accepted at the Huntington
School of Beauty Culture, of
Huntington. They start the
first class April lith. Hank
and Wilma VanMater refusing
to wash their hands after
shaking hands with Jay!

MIN
Debbie
Neal family illo a telrpbune
celebrated her 15th birthday callfrom ·her coushls In
lui Week with ice cream and . AllqWppla, Pa, wisldPg her •
&lt;Ue ~ · aerved to her ·~)'.

Knopp and family of Kenova,
W. Va. visited with his
.
grandmother, Mfs. Eva
·
We have a new School Bus . 'Knopp.
driver which Is Henry Aill!n

69'

FLORIDA

ORANGES
5 lb. bag 49'.
.

BAKERY SPECIAL - BROWN &amp; SERVE ROLLS,
3
Waid Cross Store

White, 12"x24"

AT 3 CONVENIENT LOCATlONS

fLOUR

PEACH

Panama
Washable. Finish, 12"X12"
Mayfair

Gold Medal

2 Zlh~
5
can

Teen Queen

ALUMINUM FOIL
SWEEJ

18~

.Rondelay .

roll

Betty Crocker
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3

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cans

White

Yellow

~

WITH THIS &lt;;OUPON

Jello Puddincj Treats

4::ssc

lineal 7~

Good Thru Soturdoy, Apr\1 ht.
AI Your Friendly AlP Slort

foOt

HOGG &amp;ZUSPAN

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MASON

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YALUAILI COU"ON
CORN FLAKES

Fruit Cocktail .•
Sweet Peas •••.
Whole Beets . . •
Pineapple s~~UP.
Ice Cream .....

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Viva Towels

STOKELY IRAND

A&amp;P SLICED OR

A&amp;P SUCEO, CRUSHED OR CHUNKS

•

JORDEN'S

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1...... $100
rolls

·Good Thru Solurdoy, April ht.
At Your Friendly A&amp;P Store

HEAVY DUTY

Reynold's Wrap

59C

18" I 25'
WITH THIS
roll
COUPON
Good Thru Soturdey, Apra ht.
At Your Friendly AlP Store
ONE PU FAMILY

....... . . . Post Toasties
¥

MATERIALS CO•
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WITH T)iiS
COUPON
Thru Soturdoy, April lsi.
At Your
A&amp;P Store

J.oa.

12"112". 'J2~

·Sonata ·

Furring Strips

Prell Shampoo

18lfz~

Washable,Grease-Resistant Finish'

Krlft

TOMATO JUICE .

ll'h'
161h~

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Dulaney

Hunts

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CONCENTRATE

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19C

WITH .THIS
,kt.
COUPON
Good Tllru Solu&lt;dty, April l1t.
At Ynu• Fri...,,ly MP Sto,.

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59C

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pkq.
COUPON
Good Thru Soturdoy, April lot.
AI Your Friendly A&amp;P Stort

�•
'

News.From West Columbia
.
While touring Mason County
this past weekend Jay
Rockefeller and J . Gory Kapp
made a stop· at my place of
business. Thill is the first·Ume
in my life I know of that a
candidate for Governor of W.
Va . stopped
in
this
community.
Mr. Rockefeller had been
there only a short time before
many of the citizens of :west
Columbia began to gather.
After shaking hands _ and
visiting with many of the

seqior
MR. AND MRS. HARRAH

Golden Wedding Anniversary
ASBURY, W. Va. - Mr. and Mrs. Basil R. Harrah of
Asbury will be honored with an open house celebralion on
April 1 in observance of their 50th wedding anniversary. The
occasion will he hosted by their children in the social room of
the West Point Baptist Church here from 2 to 5 p.m. All
relatives and friends are invited.
Mr. and Mrs. Harrah were married on March 9, 1922 in
Charleston. Mrs. Harrah is the former Josephine Burdette.
They are the parents of 10 children, Mrs. Forrest
(Margaret) Shelton, Alderoon; James Harrah, Silver
Springs, Md.; Rev. Robert Harrah, Warren, Ohio ; John
Harrah, Mason; · WiUiam Harrsh, Vandalill, Ohio; Mrs.
Howard (Ruth) Slsk, Mason; Mrs. James (Frances )
~.Kettering, Ohio; Mrs. Warren (Rose) Weaver, New
Haven; Gloria Harrah (deceased); and Frank Harrah,
Guysville, Ohio. They have 35 grandcltlldren and seven
great-grandchildren.
They are members of the West Point Baptist Church in
Albury. Mr. Harrah is a retired construction worker. The
couple lived formerly In New Haven but moved in 1960 to
their pl'e&amp;ent residence.

Mason Area
News, Notes

Mrs. Marcella Chapman of
New Bremen, Ohlo visited her
mother, Mrs . Jessie Cart.
wright for several days this
past week.
Recent visitors of Mrs.
Moille Fox at Clifton were Mr.
and Mrs. Pearl Roush and
daughter, Linda; arid Mr. and
Mrs. Ronnie Roush, aU of East
Uverpool; and Tommy Roush,
Weirton, W. Vu. They came to
attend the funeral of Unley
Roush.
Mr. arid Mrs. Thomas R.
King of Johnson City, Tenn.
visited recently with their
parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R.
King , PI. PIeasan t , Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Randolph, Letart,
with Mrs. Thomas King's
grandmother and Mrs. Goldye
Johnson, New Haven, and with
several other relatives
,
·

Mr. and Mrs. Eher Roush
vtsitedtwoillreiativesoverthe
weekend . They visited in
Charleston with Mr. Roush's
sister, Mrs. Eva Jividen at
Nitro, with Mrs. Roush's
brother, Evert Dudding at his
home.
, Mrs. Reuben Stewart and
J.,isa Stewart attended the
$aster Story cantata at the
l'resbyterian Church in Pt.
Pleasant on Sunday. Mrs.
Stewart's son, Gary, is the
f hoir director.
. Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell,
P~meroy,
at tended the
clli:lsJ~nlng of Christopher ·
MfChael Noble, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Larry H. Noble on Sunday
·at Mason United Methodist
EARLY SERVICE
Church.
Sunrise
service at the
Mrs. Ann Hoffman visited
with Mrs. Uoyd Williams at Bradbury Church of Christ wiil
he held at 6:30 a.m. Sunday .
Clifton on Thursday.

citizens,

Mr.

Rockefeller, then chatted with
many of the neighborhood
chlldred an~ passed out
buttons. Today I see many of
the Jr. Citizens are wearing
these buttons but I suspect for
a diffeent reason than what
they were meant.
Right Joyce, John,
Jim etc?
,

__

Ralph
James
Bland
celebrated his third birthday
on the 23rd of this month. He is
the son of Joyce Marie Bland.
Mrs.
Homer
Bland
celebrated her birthday on
March 12th. She was given a
surprise birthday dinner by

Lewis.

Mrs . Goldie VanMatre
recently spent three deys
visiting in Buffalo, with Mr.
arid Mrs. Marv~. Marr.
Guests over the weekend at
the home of Mrs. Virgie
Stewart was Mrs. Debbie
Triplett and .Wendy . of
Syracuse, Ohio. Mrs. Francis
Young, arid Mr. and Mrs. Del
Waiters of Charleston.

'•

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•

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WHEN YOU
SELL YOUR DON'T NEE'DS
WITH A

BARGAIN ~FFER

!

i

FAMILYWA.NT-AD

III 1·.0DAYS 15
· .. WORDS
I
I •
I . rnc..
·

s1 °0

ICASH WITH ORDER}
TO QUALIFY FOR THIS SPECIAl lOW RATE:

Ad m~nt offer tooch for sale
S.IUng lor S75 Of und.r

• Ad "'vet bt ~ed by an lfldividiHII
• not 0 b.Hin•u.

~::mftellfllolfiChangedfor

ofi....,J ,IYIIISioPPtorinod

·

• Cctneellotlon privlltft' when ,...
'wlh are cAI!aiMicf
• ~=-fllnwlllchO'fl .lotiOtlart

III
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I· Write Your Adl Please Print. Use One Space For Each Word I

I
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·I

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I· DON'T WAIT
MAIL ·y·out

·1
1

I

Name

Add~..

·l li•d

City

I

AD 'NOW!

I

MAIL TO:

.

'I '""

Phone

'THE DAILY SENTINEL
l1l Court St .

Pom110y, Oltio

I

·~

·------------------------~

BEEF STEW
MEAT

lb. 89'

crtn.

SAUSAGE

~-

COFFEE·
10 Ol.
jar
With Coupon

Expires 4-1-72

.....

million. The tax tab (~clu&lt;ling
. federal excise paid by
customers) exceeded $12.3
million, compared 'with $.10.3
million in 1970.
Since 1967 the company has
paid more than $53.4 million in
federal and sUite taxes. Tlii.$
five-year tax'· biD exceeded the
company's total ope~ating
revenues ofl969.
·
General of Ohio gained 20,142
telephones for a yea~end total
of 435,138. .It has added 91,~
phones the last five years.
Customers !!lade an average
of 2,158,787 local calls daily in
1971, up 3.4 per cent ove~ 1970.
This amounted to 7.4 calls a
day per customer. Toll
messages averaged 109,132
deily, an ' incre~se of 6.7 per

cent.
Investment in . telephone
facilities reached $262,772,000,
up almost 13 per cent. As a
result the net plant investment
per phone totaled $508, an
increase of alinost 8 per cent.
In this connection the

company put almost $37.7
miUion t.. to additions to its
facilities, or about $3.1 million
a month. The report noted an
estimated $39.9 million is
planned for construction · in
.1972. Gross additions 1967-1971
totaled $150.6 miUion. General
of Ohio added 226 employees in
1971 for a tqtal of 3,650.
The company's facilities
serve all or parts of 70 counties
in about 30 per cent of Ohio's
land area ..
The report noted the Public
Utilities CommisSion of Ohio
authorized General of Ohio to ,
raise its local rates last Nov.
16. It amounted to about $4.7
million annually, or slightly
more than half of what the
company had sought. An apI
this still is pending
pea on
before the Ohio Supreme
Court.
Some insects can contlnue
to live after having had tlteir
heads cut off. One ant Jived
for more than a month after
b · d
•t t d
emg ecapt a e ·

BY CLARICE ALLEN
Mrs. Cecil Kimes received
word of the death of her sister,
Mrs. Thomas Hearn of near
Charleston, w. Va. Two other
sisll!rs also survive, Mrs. A. R
Johnson and Mrs. Howard
Jarrett of near Charleston.
· Recent dinner guests of Mrs.
Opal Eichinger and family
were Randy Young, Alan
Holll!r and Jim. Amsbary. The
dinner was in honor of Mrs.
Elchinger's son, Dennis, on his
18th birthday.

r--------·
FREE
BAB,Y
. CHICKS

200 Baby Chicks to be given
away by the Middleport
Pentecostal Church, s. Third
Ave., Middleport, this
sunday at our Sunday School
at to a.m.
Special Singing
Pastor, William Kniftel
S. S. Supt., Ronald Dougan
Basket dinner following
Sunday SchooL
Everyone Welcome

Mrs. Letha Wood has ~n
discharged from the Holzer
Medical Center where she was
a medical patient for two
weeks and is staying with her
daughter, Mrs. Roy Christy.
Mrs. Denzil Cleland is a
medical patient at Holzer
Medical Center.
Billy Robert Allen, student at
Lehigh University, Bethlehem,
Pa., is spending his spring
vacation with Mr. and Mrs.
Clayton Allen.
Mrs. Opal Eichinger arid
family spent Sunday in
Columbus with Mr. and Mrs.

Charles Eichinger. Charles
and daughter, Suzannah,
~turned home ~th them lor a
week.
Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Hartung
and son of Mlsolasljlpl spent a
week with Mr. and Mrs. TGIII
.Nice. The Hartungs were
moving from Miisiuippl to
· Houston, Teus.
Norman Frederick of near
Chester is a medical patient at
Holzer Medical Center.
Tom Gumpf, student at Ohio
University, spent his spring
vacation with his mother, Mrs.
Grace Gumpf.

3 ROOMS

NEW

FURNITURE
$J49.95
$35.00 Down
Balance On
Convenient
. Terms .

MASON
FURNITURE
Mason. W.Va .

;:

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Beef Roast

$1
•v

19 lb.

IONIWS TOP CUI ,

,

RtuH Stuk .8!s, .

C~IAI'EO

IY THE DOZEN IIJS

Cor11th Hus • •

cOUNTtY TIIAT

Sa•uc• .

IONELESS IEEF

Ru11111 Roast • •

•

Timely Quote
,---------- - - · -- -----

We're trying to drive down
the middle of a broad road.
If labor wants to run into us,
I guess they'll do it.
-Treasury Se~retary John
B,.Connally on Phase 2 de·
velopments.

VACUUM PACK

VALUAILI COIUPCIN
WITH THIS COUPON

I House

d Medal
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RIGHT
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CARLOAD SHIPMENT!

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CELOTEX

VACUUM PACK

DETERGENT

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Good Thru Soturdoy, April hi.
AI Your Friendly A&amp;P Store
STOKELY IIRAND

49~ BACON ,,b.

20 lb. bag

'

May this Easter Season
bring us.c:~ll ~ reawakening
to the message of hope
and a rededication
to the pursuit of peace.

SLICED

POTATOES
FOLGER$ INSTANT

AT TUPPERS PUIIIS
LYIIIIS IIMKEI'

Better Off Ending -'71.

CheSt er NeWS

care-----...

POPLAR

Special Buys In Produce

000 VALUABLE COUPON 0606

1

Notes

We Accept Federal Food Stamps!

1~~-

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B'ald Kn0 b.

49'

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PURE PORK

!

Miller

I have my doubts aboul this
proposal mainly because . it
offers no ~asurances that
Preaidential campaignjng
would be any lesa expensive or·
trying on the public patlenee
than it II rigbt now. Instead of
localtzed Campaign · Cllllts In

AT UCIIIE
WAID CROSS DIS

COOL WHIP

RATH

financial picture improved
slightly despite a "soft"
nsUonal economy, the cOm. pany noted today in Ita ll!lDUal
re~l to abarebolders.
Robert M. Wopat of Marion,
preslderit, altrlbuted the upturn to growth, sharply rising
toll revenues and moderate
advances in local service. He
·aald, however, operating ex-

ay Clarence 1

elections.

BIRDSEYE

ROUND. STEAK
09
lb.•l

MARION
General
1 Telepbone
Co. of Obio's 1971

am,ndment wblcb ' would concentn,ling on major
replace atate-.by-slate population centers. 11 Ia
presidential primaries with. a. doubllul that states with few, penaesalso~ontinuedtocllmb.
sincle nationwide primary elec!oral votes would get much
Operating revenues reached
elec:tion. ' '
notice from the prl!8ideittial $84.3 miUion, an increase of
Senallq Gecl'ge Aiken and · candidate.. fAt secoitd thongbt,
more than U per cent.
Mike ManofieJ4 introduced the CGIIIIIdering the quadrennlal slighUy
Of this toll revenues jumped
meuure in the Senate with harangue these states ,encme more than 27 per cent, totaling
Mansfield · denouncing state every four years, they migbt
$28.8 million. Income from
primaries u ''useless and well prefer solitude to the local service was up alinost 7
worthless." I.egiiilation caJJlng solicltuc!e.
per cent, amounting to ~.5
for a pmidantlal primary in .
milllon.
ails.lates 111. tile same dey, has
·Net lncolil~ increased
been llllhmltted In the put, but
$1,854,000 over 1970, totaling
to date, the propoeal has met
$7,413,000. ·
with very little enthuaium.
On the other side of the
Under the current Senate
ledger, operating ~nses and
plan, a nationwide primary
Sunday School atlendance at taxes • 1•• .in.creased slightly
....,..
·would he held in Alll!lJII, every Freedom Gospel Mission more than
15 per cent to $51
presidential election . year. March 19 was 48. Offering was
Each party would Mlect ita .15.34.
nominee for Chief Executive
Mr. and Mn. Michael Evans
from a field of candidates who and fllll1il7 visited hll mother,
would qualify for the ballot by Mrs, Bernice Evans, and hll
filing petitions sign~ by a aef sister, Mr. ·and Mrs. Donald
)14irctntage of voters nation- Hunnel, and sons, all of
Wide. The system would apply Pomerily.
to each perty polling at least 10
Miss Cindy Evans was a
pet. of the vote In the preceCilng guest of her cousin, Davey
preitldential election. ·
Warth, of Pomerw. ·
There wQU!d be a runoff
Mr. Carl Autbersoil · bas
election 23 days . after ·the returned home, from Veterans
primary between the top two Memorial Hospital. He Is
flnsisbers If no candidate won improvlitg.
atleast40pct.ofaparty'svcite.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Allen
VIce prealdenUal candidates and their grandson, James
would be chosen and party Bryson, Mr, and Mrs. Jecry .
platforms presumably would Dailey, all of Newark, 0., Mr.
be' drafted at national party and Mrs. James Pape and
conventlona.
Kristen, Mrs. Elva Dalley of
Supporlei'l ol a natl~e 5yr··acuse, visited Mr . and ..
_
......
primary eleeUOJi Instead ol the · Carl Autherson.
2$ state-by..tate electi!llll as
Mr. · and Mrs. . Donald
the case· Is this year say it Crelll!!8l1S of Tuppers Plains
would save lliOiie)', and cut visited her parents, Mr. and
down on the weeriiome '- and Mrs. lAwrence Jobnstoo and
oftentimes boring - sue- family
ceulon of electiOns. IntraLebt&amp; Birch vlsltec!' Mr. and
perty polltlca1 scrapping by an Mrs. Dllllon Taylor, Mr. and ·
enllre tribe of White · House Mrs. Cerl Aittherson.
hopefuls would ideally be ·Mr. · Clint Birch and
leuened an.d, aillce most daughter, Leota, visited Mr.
candidates for the Prelldency and · Mrs. Thomas Birch and
spring from the Congress, one family of Waterford, 0. and
primary would ser\re to cut Mr. and Mrs. Joe llpps and
down on the chronic House and family of Vincent, o.
Senate absenteeism of thoee
who should be In Wuhington
1
"' '
but ~ forever ·on the camTHIRD CELEBRATED
paigll1 trail wooing voters.
RACINE - Mr. and Mr~.
On t1ie other Bide of the colli, Dale' E. Willis of 'Racine
opponents say that one celebrated their third anprimary would be a · further niversary on March 22.
federalization · of the election
A small dinner party was
procesa. They say that a single given, guests including Mr. and
race would be a contest among Mrs. VirgU Dill, Mr. and Mrs.
the wealthy ·and would turn the Terry Atkins, Tammy, Terry
race into a national TV per· Jr.; Mr. and Mrs. Larry Wiles
sonality contest. Others ~ and Sara; Mr. ·and Mrs.
that the mechanics of the whole Chester Sexton, Mr. and Mrs.
plan would only spawn dif- Chester Rose, Mr. and Mrs.
ficult, self-defeating legal and Harold Brinker and Butch, and
admlplatratlve problems. Ronald Ford. Guesta . were
Furthermore, it may en- entertained by the Heavenly
cowage even more politicians Highway Trio.
to aspire to the Presidency and
create two costly national

Frozen Food Buy

CHOICE

'

I

Prices
Effective
Thru April 1

USDA

Was~ington .

~

!Ciean·ing

I
I
I
I

Local Bowling

Gen~ral · Tel

I

Memben from both polillcal · certain presidential .primary
parllei in ibe CclcqJreas have states; the candidates would
propoa~d a . coiiiUI,ulloll!ll apread their money nstlonwlde

I

drug-taking friends.
what I've done with my life. I
"Drugs are hell," Eileen fee! like dying. I've had all the
wrote in her spidery scrawl. "I good things. I marred aU the
hate drugs. They all put drugs chances arid betrayed all the
before health, food and money. • trust.
It's a terrible. way to die.
"Why did I ever start? Drugs
"It's not the dying that are evil. They cause mental
worries me. lt's before- when illness, aging skin, baldness
I can't get the money to buy and rotting teeth.
drugs.
"I can no longer behave
"What worries me are the naturally," Eileen wrote,
wrinkles in my face and the
"It's clear," said Evans,
infection in my veins," she "drugs brought her no
wrote.
pleasure, no joy' only
"I'm very sad when I think unhappiness."

1

--------------------•

.

FAST

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Thomas

1

Rep·
ort
I·
.

·YOU'LL
CLEAN UP

Mr. and Mrs.. Raymond
Roush and family, Steve and
Danny GiUispie and Mr. and
Mrs. Harold VanMeter were
visitors at the home of Eunice
and Cecil Martin of Mission
Ridge.

t-'l'bllldyl :1 •'.Mill ;aW'wuwo1,o.,M.m.a,tm

I

IWant
Ad
I
. . . . . ·. .

Mr. and Mrs. Ross Kapp
reciently visited with Mr. l!lld
Mrs. Roy Pierson and family
of LeQn. Mr. Pierson just
returned home after ~ding
twelve days at the Holzer
Medical Center. I understand
by the way of teU ·'a woman
that Mrs. Pierson is a faithful
reader of this column.

Wednesday (ale Mixed League Carsey 4SS.
Hiah Game CWomPnl - tv
March 22, 1972
Carsey 191, S. ONen 18S, M.
Standings:
Team
Points Voss 181.
Early Bird League
~orro~- ~aore
62
March 2l. 1P72
ONen·Holter
58
Team Standings:
Casseii·Carsey
56
Fultz.Bentley
·
48 D. H. Plnneftes
88
60
Rosenbaum-Meadows
42 Evelyn's Grocery
58
Blakeslee·Hoyt
22 King Builders
48
High Team Series - ONen· Larry's Ashland
34
Holter 1939, Casseii ·Carsey Rawlings Dodge
24
1922, Rosenbaum . Meadows Meigs Mobile Homes
Team Higlt Game - D. G.
1831.
High Series (Men). - D. Plnnetles 432. · Evelyn's
Meadows56B. J . Bentley 539, R. Grocery815, King Builders809.
Team High Strin - D. G. .
Holter 535 . .
High Game (Men) - D. Plnnettes 2332, Evelyn's
Meadows220, J . Bentley 291, R. Grocery 2312. King Builders
Holter 197.
·
2256.
Ind. High Game '- Mary
High Team Game - ONen·
Holter 679. Casseii·Carsey 670, Voss 20S, Ann Thomas 196.
Flossie Maxson 184.
Rosenbaum-Meadows 664.
Ind. High Series - Mary
High Series (Women) - M.
Voss 498, S. Owen 469, N. Voss 531 , Maxine Dugan SIS.
Ann Thomas 501.

•

!Start your S

'

Girl Reveals Drug Horrors
LONDON ( UPI) - "If there
was ever a case that illustrates
the horrors of drug taking, this
is it," said Coroner Giyn
E'vans. He picked up one of the
water·stained notebooks In
which Eileen Sullivan, 17, had
scrawled.
"When I wake up in the
morning, ali I can think about
is where to get money for more
drugs," Eileen wroie. "! think
I can last for nine months, but
in 18 I wiD he dead:"
Three months later, on Feb.
17 at 10 p.m. and during a
power blackout caused by a
nations! miners' strike, Eileen
walked out of a party at which
she had been dropping lSD,
smoking marijuana and taking
barbiturates. She wandered to
the top of a . multi.,storled
garage in Newport,.Wales and
fell 30 feet tq her death on a
slab of concrete.
Witnesses told a coroner's
court Thursday Eileen's body
was found the next morning,
barely clad and painted in red
lipstick with arrows and lourletter words. Evans read at
length from the diary he said
Eileen started keeping in
notebooks when she moved
from her home in December w
an apartment she shared with

•

..--------·-·----

'

her two daughters. The dinner
was enjoyed by Mr. and Mrs.
Homer Bland; Mr. and Mrs. ·
Roger Hall, Warren and
Candie, Joyce, Ralph and
ShaMilll Bland.
Sorry Jennie I forgot your
birthday in the last week's
column, J.G.K.
JUST AROUND TOWN:
Arnold VanMatre returning to
work atter one week of iUness:
Marvin Bland, Roger and
David Hall going trout fishing
on Cranberry river but didn't
catch anything. Attendance at
the West Columbia United
Methodist Church Sunday was
89 with $96.41 offering.
Spilman U. Methodist had 25
with $22.33 offering. Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Decker is
spending a few clays with their
daughter and son-in-law Mr.
and Mrs. Willie Neal of
Columbus, Ohio; Sue Blaine
and Sherry Bissell has been
accepted at the Huntington
School of Beauty Culture, of
Huntington. They start the
first class April lith. Hank
and Wilma VanMater refusing
to wash their hands after
shaking hands with Jay!

MIN
Debbie
Neal family illo a telrpbune
celebrated her 15th birthday callfrom ·her coushls In
lui Week with ice cream and . AllqWppla, Pa, wisldPg her •
&lt;Ue ~ · aerved to her ·~)'.

Knopp and family of Kenova,
W. Va. visited with his
.
grandmother, Mfs. Eva
·
We have a new School Bus . 'Knopp.
driver which Is Henry Aill!n

69'

FLORIDA

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..

10 ~ ,.. l'laily Sentinel, Mldcleport-l'viileiVY; 0., Mareh Zll,lt7%

Historic Medical Paper M~ller Op~sition
Reviewed
at
.
S
m
.
.
JJ CluJllenges Stand
.
. Y pOSJL:Il

Meigs County received
world-wide recognition at the
1872-1972 Centennial Symposium on Huntington's Chorea
concluded Tuesday at the
Center For Tomorrow in
Columbus sponsored by the
World
Federation
of
Neurology .
This reCOgnition was because
of a paper, ·~on Chorea" by
George Huntington, M.D. of
Pomeroy, read before the
Meigs.and Mason Academy of
Med1cme at Middleport Feb.
15, 1872, and published the
same year in the Medical and
Surgical
Reporter,
at·
Philadelphia, April 13 that
same year.
Dr . Huntington 's paper ,
according to the medical
profession, is one of the
clearest and most concise ever ·
written on Huntington 's
Disease which is an inherited
neurological disease appearing
only in certain families .
Apparently two brothers
from England, Dr . Hun· tington's ancestors, were born
within a 50 square mile area In
England, later migrating to the
United States.
One of 11\e tragedies of the
disease is that very litUe more
is known concerning the·
disease than Dr. Huntington

Porter Gives
Support to
Jack Crisp
J. Sherman Porter, former
Ohio State Senator from Gallia
County, endors~d Meigs
County Democrat Jack Crisp
for candidate in the loth
Congressional District May
primary election during a
"meet the candidates" night
Tuesday at the VFW HaD In
New Marshfield In Athens
County.
Porter, In backing the Meigs
CounUan, said he felt "Crisp Is
a man more likely to represent
the opinion 9f the people In the
10th Coogressional District."
Among 25 persons attending
the session was Ocle Thompson, Columbus, a Rio Grande
College · political science
student assistant, and Mr.
Jewett, Crisp's campaign
manager.

VeteraDS Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - carol Drake,
New Haven ; LuciUe Yeauger,
Cheshire ; Dorelia Vech,
Parkersburg; Nancy Ours,
Racine ; Clara Shuster,
Pomeroy ; Richard Warner,
Pomeroy; Richard Riffle ,
Racine.
DISCHARGED - Raymond
Hartley, Scott Williams,
Jeffrey Peckham, William
Michael Long, Virginia Rood,
William ·Dye,' Edlth Watkins.

presented In his paper of 1872.
Meigs
County
was
represented at the Sunday
evening session on history by
c. E. Blakeslee, President of
the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society. He was
accompanied by Mrs. Blakeslee. Information .col)cernlng
Dr. Huntington was secured
through the cooperation of
Mrs . Jean Hart, Pomeroy
Ubrarlan, who submitted the
rderencequesUonstotheState
Ubrary.
Research here has not
revealed the exact location of
Dr . Huntington 's office or
where his famous paper was
read. Some local residents
have wondered If the house
occupied years ago by Dr.
Sisson could have been it. Addltional information Is
welcome from anyone.
Dr. Huntington was born
April 9, 1851, at Easthampton,
where he was a student of the
old Clinton Academy . He
studied medicine first with his
father, later obtained his
degree from the College of
Physicians and Surgeons of
New York In 1871 with a thesis
on opium. Af~r graduation, he
went to practice at Pomeroy,
Ohio, at the suggestion of a
cousin living there, where he
met Mary Elizabeth Hackard,
the daughter of a judge, whom
he married in 1874. They. had
five children. Since the
medical profession was
overcrowded In Pomeroy, he
returned to New York aild
setUed in La Grangeville.
Dr. Huntington was ·an artist
and musician of ability and a
lover of the out-of-doors.
' Before leaVing to practice In
Po me roy, he assisted his
father in attending the
Easthampton famtlies who
were of old New England stock
and much intermarried.
Among them there prevailed a

peculiar nervous affection,
long since recognized by his
grandfather
Abel,
the
descriptloo of which gave Dr.
Huntington his place in the
annals of scientific medicine.
The cases he describes were
classified by his father who
also carefully revised the
manuscript of the original
article.
The Sunday evening symposium on Huntington's Chorea
was chaired byllr. S. Refsum,
President of the World
Federation of Neurology.
Other speakers in addition to
Blakeslee were . Dr. M. Crlt.
chley, Honorary President of
the World Federation of
: Neurology, London, England;
Dr . R.N. De JClJlg, University
of Michigan; Dr. G. W. Bruyn,
Bilthoven, The Netherlands;
and Dr. G. W. Paulson, local
secretary of the sympostum,
M.D., Neurological Associates,
Columbus.

DAMAGE MEDIUM
Two cars had medium
damage and a driver was cited
to mayor's court as the result
of an accident on East Main
St., Pomeroy, at 4:19 p.m.
Tuesday. Pollee said a car
driven by Jean Clayton, 39,
Marietta, stopped lo make a
left turn and was sii'Uck In the
rear by a car driven by Robert c
Jon es , ~· ShaJde. Theretedwere
no 1n1ur1es. ones was ct on
an assured clear distance
charge.
MRS. McKAY DIES
Pomeroy firemen were
called to Beech Grove
Cemetery at 7:05 P.M.
Tuesday to extinguish a brush
fire. At 8:34 a.m. Wednesday,
the Pomeroy E-R unit was
called to 148\2 Mulberry Ave.,
for Gamet McKay who was
dead on the squad's arrival.
The body was taken to the
Ewing Funeral Home.

R · Slashed b
aise

Y

Council of Akron
AKRON (UP!) - City employes were scheduled to
receive an 8.4 pet. raise
Saturday but the raise was
Slashed to 5.5 pet. with a celllng
of $416 by city councU Tuesday.
Republican . Mayor John
Ballard had ·asked for the
reduced raise to preven't a
$752,000 delldt, but did not
request· the $4J6 ceiUng. The
celllng means, in effect, 70 pet.
of the city's 2,300 employes will
not receive the full 5.5 pet.
raise since they make more
than $7,550 a year.

RUTLAND - JackW.Crisjl,
Democrat Candidate for
Coogress of the Tenth District,
charged
today
that
Congressman ciarence E.
Miller has not only milde
carefully worded untrue press
releases using trickery to innuence the voters' of the
district but now he has stooped
to the l~el of ustng a part of his
platform, which evidently
musthavebeen very attractive
to the voters of the district.
Crisp said one of his first
promises when elected to
Congress is "I will establish
several offices for the convenience of the people."
ThiswasevidenUyattractive
to the voters because the inCIDnbent announced from his
Washington office March 21,
and he quoted, "he is reviewing
the feasibility of opening addltional offices In the Tenth
Congressional District. The
present Congressman has had
six years in which to do this,
but yet he has never offered a
progressive move such as this
before.
Crisp said:
"I can at least say that my
candidacy has already acco"'pllshed some good for the
people by forcing Miller to
agree to at least consider
establi.shing two more offices
throughout the district, even
though they will probably be
additional campaign offices. 1
·

Three deer were killed in
separate traffic accidents
Investigated Tuesday by the
DIVORCE ASKED
Gallia-Melgs Post State HighOne suit for divorce was filed way Patrol.
and another waa granted In
The first mishap oc~urred. at
Meigs County Common Pleas 8:30 a.m. on Rt. 7 m Meigs
Court. Beulah Gertrude Casto County, where a deer was
Pomeroy, filed agalnsi . struck by an auto operated by
Franklin H. Cilsto, Pomeroy, Kathryn M. Sanders, 17, Rt.l,
and Evelyn C. Young was Reedsville. There was minor
granted a divorce from damage to her car.
Richard l!. Young, eacb on
The first of tw9 Gallia deer
charges of gross neglect of mishaps occurred.at 9:40a.m.
duty and extreme cruelty In on Rt. 7 in Clay Twp. Officers
other court action ·the said a deer ran into the path of
Household Finance Corp Is to - a car driven by Nancy K.
recover from Micha~l W James, 26, Eureka Star Rt.,
Lance, eta!, the sum oi Gallipolis.
There
was
$l,092.03 plus costs.
moderate damage to her car.
The final deer accident occurred at 6:00p.m. on Rt. 218,
two miles south of Rt. 7where a
deer ran into the path of a car
operated by Kenneth E.
AUCTION PLANNED
Saunders, 48, Eureka Star Rt.
RUTLAND - The RuUand
No one was Injured or cited
Volunteers Fire Dept. will in a single car accident at 11 :~
stage an auction to raise funds p.m. on the Rodney.COra Rd.,
for purchase of a new fire five tenths of a mUe south of
truck. AU articles wiU be ac- Rt. 588. Officers said Tommy
cepted for the auction, Dale Abbott, 17, Pl. Pleasant,
the time and place of lost control of his car while
which have not been traveling at a high "rate of
set. Those wishing to speed. The auto left the high·
contribute may phone 742-5724 way and turned over on its top.
or notify any fireman.
There was moderate damage.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
HUNT PLANNED
The Middleport E-R squad
An Easter Egg Hunt will be
answered a call to the Robert
held
at I p.m. Friday at the
Vance home on Leading Creek
Road at 8:20 p.m. Tuesday for courthouse in Chester. Each
six-year old David Vance, child attending Is to bring a
believed to have suffered a colored egg. Prizes will be
fra ctured knee ina fall. He was awarded. The hunt is spontaken to Veterans Memorial sored by the Chester Junior
Hospital by the squad and then Girl Scouts with . Mrs. Mary
transferred to Holzer Medical Hunter as leader and the
Middleport Modern Woodmen
Center.
with Mrs. Helen Hart as junior
director. The public Is InVited.
EARLY SERVICE
Asunrise service will be held
at 7 a.m. Sunday at the Sutton
Methodist Church with the
youth group in charge. An
Easter breakfast will be served
following the service. Sunday
School will be at 9:15a.m. with
an Easter egg hunt to follow.
SERVICE SET
Asunrise service wiU be held
at 6:30 a.m. Sunday at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church.

.FRIDAy

.

MARCH.31•t

DJoPper Basket .

King Size

DAIRY H
' AVEN

Med Student
(Co tin ed f
Pa l)
n u rom ge
have his own personal life
intact. Hamilton, who has been
provided living quarters at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
during his stay, has even been
included Into the social affairs
of Dr. and Mrs. Pickens so that
he might better undersla1ld the
community and county and see
that despite a busy schedule
the f8lllilY doctor does have a
circle of friends and social
activity.
Hamilton has been able to
see the personal touch of the
family doctor which might just
be the lasting ingredient which
wiU balance the scales in favor
of the general practitioner - so
badly needed everywhere- as
opposed to the career of the
specialist categories where
patients may be just cases or
referrals.
Hamilton, 23, who readily
admils that Meigs County is
more progressive than )le
expected, will graduate in
June, 1973. Who knows?
Perhaps, this month in Meigs
County wtll really be a
determining factor with him
when he finally turns to his
career of practicing medicine.
He will return to the university
Thursday.

Pleasant Vailey Hospital
Names of persons admitted
have been · temporarily
discontinued from publication.
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Bernard
Smith, daughter; Point
Plo!asant; · James · Casto,
Ewington, 0.; Freda Matheny;
Gallipolis Ferry; James
Daugberty, Point Pleasant;
Anna Klelnlngamith, Letart;
Mrs. Curtis Wallace, Galllpolls
Ferry; Eugene Duncan,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Edward
Thomas, Point Pleasant;
William Miller, Henderson ,
and Gregory Adkins, Pojnt
Pleasant.

LADIES'

"The

Judge"

Is

an

EASTER

NOW YOU KNOW
The practice of voodoo was
developed by slaves brought to
Haiti by the French, starting
in the late 17th Century.

+++

What the world needs now
is love, sweet love - not a lot
of insults, no matter how

well·intenlloned. And Insults

are the name of the game in
the Friars' Club ''roasts,"

wjth Sammy Davis Jr .
tonlghl's target. I like this
sorl ol lhing less and le$$.
8:30p.m., Ch. 12.

.

'

++ +

+ ++

THURSDAY:

One 'of

America's angriest young
men, and most outspoken, I-

FCC · Commissioner Nick
Johnson. He's a guest today
on "What Every Woman

MOVIES : Tonlghl's Wants to Know.'' and what
he lhlnks ol TV Is X·rated
Is "In Search of America," slufl. 10 a.m., Ch. 6.

prime-time feature on Ch. 6

'-'111.1

HICK'S

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&lt;hoo ... s; , •• , 32 to. 31.

,,.,..,,
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A wonderf,.,l auortmenl of girls Easter DretM'S
in o Perrna\,enl Preu, Kodet and Cotton mot•
rial. It stiWion of embroidery, trims, prints.
and .olid1 from whkh to choost. 'Sizes 7-l.tt ·

SHIFT
GOWN

SIMON'S. MARKET

Dudley's Aorist

. ......

$277

LAOIIS'

$499
HECK'S REG. 15.99

llSW.MAIN

POMEROY
Open Evenings Til 7, Friday Til 8, Saturday
Til 9.

Serving: Middleport,
Pomer.oy, Gallipolis,O.
&amp; Mason Co., W.Va.

"'""'"''·

Mens
Double

'

.

.lirt~RiiniU'RS:- " FRIDAY.,.. 9-9 .~it.

.OPEN "

,LADIES'

POLY KNIT TOPS
Available in short sl1ev1
aod •tdpe a• .. ud "yl;og
ond 1izes S-M·l. ldeol for
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'P·

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· 'ClOTII/IIf
,,,

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU

.

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LADIES
· IUDE

Pe'"'a Prest, waltz length gowns with
.lac• and embroidery trim. Four 1tyle1
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$266 ·

Kn~

$177

PANTYHOSE·
One size fill all. Complete

HECK'S REG. $2,88

with sa ndal foot . Choose
from Beige , Cinnamon,

.

HECK'S lEG.

Brow n, Navy, and Smoke.

$3.48

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!
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EAS~R

FILLED

EASTER BASKETS

PANTYHOSE
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PANTIES

HICK'S
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Brief •tr,l• with double bad. panel .
Availab • in white ond po1ttl colors
ond 1i:zes S thru I0.

· ladies' nylon mesh ponty hose. One
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SHIRTS

These double
knits

Slft,..lell, p~~lynt.r oft(! IOfl~ 1hir h i~
tolid&lt; ond P"iroh. F;... diff•&lt;t nt ll)ltl to
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per

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aOTIIINf

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88

KNIT PANTS

HECK'S
REG.

$399

99 ~

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LADIES'

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Available In

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SATURDAY, APRIL lit

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LADIES

INFANT

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LADIII' 1111AW

HANDBAGS .
.REG.

/tt,.oiloble in Oatron Or ·
gonta, Polytsttr ond Cot·
ton, or Embroider.d,

I

FITS AU

00

44

11.95

EASTER DRESSES

$,288

· P,ANTIES
Nylon Non·Run panty in white
ond auorttd prints. Sins 4 to

'

GIRLS EASTER

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

DRESSES

SPORT
SHIRTS

eNO IRON

BOYS SHORT SLEEVE

SPORT
SHIRTS

eSIZES s.M-l-XL
. . '

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•SIZES &amp;TO I&amp;
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•NO IRON ,

s 77

s

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GIRLS &amp; LADIES)

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SHOES
99 &amp;

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PR.

PR.

DRESS
LENGTHS

A wonderful selection of
otyl01 in Krinkio Potent,
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and

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•4 YDS

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CUPS

TODDLER IOYS'

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Smooth nylon and Oct•
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and )a'ce pbttor,ns. Sizes
2, 3, and .t. .

70UNCE .·
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TO $3.99

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A wonderful ltltction from
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Available in organza

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99

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HICK'S lEG. $3.48

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• Sunohl.,.. Color
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asiorted stripes and sizes S·M·l. .

STORES WILL OPEN
MONDAY APRIL 3AS USUAL

Eggs, Jelly Beans,
Hollow Choc. Rabbits.
All the goodies, here.

992-2505

with Vera Miles and C.rt
Betz at 9: 30 p.m. Also: A
sardonic tllle, " Forever,
Darling" wllh Lucille Ball
and Desl Arnaz In a 19~ film
about a marriage which 11
breaking up (wouldn't
happen with them In real
life, of course), 4 p.m., and
"Smiley," II : 30 p.m., both
Ch. 10.

c~ew

Fuliy Cooked Ham

LADIES
DRESSES

qlllity

ALL HECK'S STORES

Sleovelels, nylon knit tunic tops in

APRIL 2nd

'1':

Zelilll

·JUIICJOPS

to

00
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Possibly the besl homegrown producl on cable TV .
7:30p.m., Ch . 10.

es with lace trim and tailored. Avail·
a'ble in d!=icrcin, cotton, and crepe
material with short sleeve. Sizes 32

TO

IN HOSPITAL
. RACINE -Miss Nancy Ours
is a medical patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Her room number Is 150.

LADIES' NYLON. KNIT

DRESSY
BLOUSES
A bebutiful selection of drssiy blous-

Old Fashioned
Fully Cooked

EGGS, ETC.

EARNS 4.0 AVERAGE
RACINE - Leo C. H11l of
near here, a sophomore at.Olllo
University, recenUy completed
the winter quarter with a 4.0
average. Hill is maj ring In
photography.

CALL POINTVIEW:

,. .,

believe, however, that the·
. .- - - - - - . - .
voters of the Tenth District can
Kyger Creek's Board of
.,.lor to the discussion, John
··
easily see by th!s that the · Education, i,n special session Reece, public relations
GratJd Opening
present cong~ssman Is in- Tuesday night, discussed the cooi'dlna~ at the James M.
terested only' in being elected state's minimum salary Gavin Plant, met with the .
and not In effectively . schedule of $6,400 wllicb must board concerning the an.
representing the people of his ' be paid beginning July 1. No · ·.tlclpated enrolbnent projected
district." Issuing a chaUenge, action was taken. The board, at by the coostructi!lll at the
.
.
,.
Crisp said:
Its January meeting, approVed plant. Reece also explalned
"1 would also like, at this · a pay increase.for its teaching what the plant will mean
Our ""' Sandwiclles:
time, to take the opportunity to and non-teaching personnel, financially. to the dlatri~t. ·
issue a challenge to the present but did not approve the $6,400
Inrecentmonths, the dls1rlct
Congressman to come to the minimum PBY. scale.
~ has lost several students at
district and Jet's have a public
Kyger Creek's starting · Cheshire-Kyger ElementarY
discussion about the prob- salary is currenUy $6,0Q0 per School.
!ems of the Tenth District year, $200 over the state
Superintendent Comer . ·
Qa~ie .
and what he proposes as a minimum and just $liD over the Bradbury announced ' that
,.
solution for them. I thlJ]!t It is. district's starting salary of a registration for first grade and .
time he begins to do something year ago. The board wiU meet kindergarten students will be
positive, rather than make again in a recessed session at heldalldayFrl.day,APrll7, at
·
' '
fancy promises that he never 7:30 p.m. Friday night to act 'Addavllle and Cheshire-Kyger
.Racine, Ohio · ~&lt;•
follows through on.
upon a salary measure.
Elementary School.

Deer KillS
Hil Three On
High
•
ways

Minimum salary Sch~ule
KC Board Topic ·r~day.

'

..

TOIDUIS'IIOYS'

SLACK ANb·

SHIRT SETS
Solid slocks with cotton
ltripe shirts. Sizes : 4 to 8

$}99
HICK'S lEG.

$1.18 '
ao,.

.

�•

..

10 ~ ,.. l'laily Sentinel, Mldcleport-l'viileiVY; 0., Mareh Zll,lt7%

Historic Medical Paper M~ller Op~sition
Reviewed
at
.
S
m
.
.
JJ CluJllenges Stand
.
. Y pOSJL:Il

Meigs County received
world-wide recognition at the
1872-1972 Centennial Symposium on Huntington's Chorea
concluded Tuesday at the
Center For Tomorrow in
Columbus sponsored by the
World
Federation
of
Neurology .
This reCOgnition was because
of a paper, ·~on Chorea" by
George Huntington, M.D. of
Pomeroy, read before the
Meigs.and Mason Academy of
Med1cme at Middleport Feb.
15, 1872, and published the
same year in the Medical and
Surgical
Reporter,
at·
Philadelphia, April 13 that
same year.
Dr . Huntington 's paper ,
according to the medical
profession, is one of the
clearest and most concise ever ·
written on Huntington 's
Disease which is an inherited
neurological disease appearing
only in certain families .
Apparently two brothers
from England, Dr . Hun· tington's ancestors, were born
within a 50 square mile area In
England, later migrating to the
United States.
One of 11\e tragedies of the
disease is that very litUe more
is known concerning the·
disease than Dr. Huntington

Porter Gives
Support to
Jack Crisp
J. Sherman Porter, former
Ohio State Senator from Gallia
County, endors~d Meigs
County Democrat Jack Crisp
for candidate in the loth
Congressional District May
primary election during a
"meet the candidates" night
Tuesday at the VFW HaD In
New Marshfield In Athens
County.
Porter, In backing the Meigs
CounUan, said he felt "Crisp Is
a man more likely to represent
the opinion 9f the people In the
10th Coogressional District."
Among 25 persons attending
the session was Ocle Thompson, Columbus, a Rio Grande
College · political science
student assistant, and Mr.
Jewett, Crisp's campaign
manager.

VeteraDS Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - carol Drake,
New Haven ; LuciUe Yeauger,
Cheshire ; Dorelia Vech,
Parkersburg; Nancy Ours,
Racine ; Clara Shuster,
Pomeroy ; Richard Warner,
Pomeroy; Richard Riffle ,
Racine.
DISCHARGED - Raymond
Hartley, Scott Williams,
Jeffrey Peckham, William
Michael Long, Virginia Rood,
William ·Dye,' Edlth Watkins.

presented In his paper of 1872.
Meigs
County
was
represented at the Sunday
evening session on history by
c. E. Blakeslee, President of
the Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society. He was
accompanied by Mrs. Blakeslee. Information .col)cernlng
Dr. Huntington was secured
through the cooperation of
Mrs . Jean Hart, Pomeroy
Ubrarlan, who submitted the
rderencequesUonstotheState
Ubrary.
Research here has not
revealed the exact location of
Dr . Huntington 's office or
where his famous paper was
read. Some local residents
have wondered If the house
occupied years ago by Dr.
Sisson could have been it. Addltional information Is
welcome from anyone.
Dr. Huntington was born
April 9, 1851, at Easthampton,
where he was a student of the
old Clinton Academy . He
studied medicine first with his
father, later obtained his
degree from the College of
Physicians and Surgeons of
New York In 1871 with a thesis
on opium. Af~r graduation, he
went to practice at Pomeroy,
Ohio, at the suggestion of a
cousin living there, where he
met Mary Elizabeth Hackard,
the daughter of a judge, whom
he married in 1874. They. had
five children. Since the
medical profession was
overcrowded In Pomeroy, he
returned to New York aild
setUed in La Grangeville.
Dr. Huntington was ·an artist
and musician of ability and a
lover of the out-of-doors.
' Before leaVing to practice In
Po me roy, he assisted his
father in attending the
Easthampton famtlies who
were of old New England stock
and much intermarried.
Among them there prevailed a

peculiar nervous affection,
long since recognized by his
grandfather
Abel,
the
descriptloo of which gave Dr.
Huntington his place in the
annals of scientific medicine.
The cases he describes were
classified by his father who
also carefully revised the
manuscript of the original
article.
The Sunday evening symposium on Huntington's Chorea
was chaired byllr. S. Refsum,
President of the World
Federation of Neurology.
Other speakers in addition to
Blakeslee were . Dr. M. Crlt.
chley, Honorary President of
the World Federation of
: Neurology, London, England;
Dr . R.N. De JClJlg, University
of Michigan; Dr. G. W. Bruyn,
Bilthoven, The Netherlands;
and Dr. G. W. Paulson, local
secretary of the sympostum,
M.D., Neurological Associates,
Columbus.

DAMAGE MEDIUM
Two cars had medium
damage and a driver was cited
to mayor's court as the result
of an accident on East Main
St., Pomeroy, at 4:19 p.m.
Tuesday. Pollee said a car
driven by Jean Clayton, 39,
Marietta, stopped lo make a
left turn and was sii'Uck In the
rear by a car driven by Robert c
Jon es , ~· ShaJde. Theretedwere
no 1n1ur1es. ones was ct on
an assured clear distance
charge.
MRS. McKAY DIES
Pomeroy firemen were
called to Beech Grove
Cemetery at 7:05 P.M.
Tuesday to extinguish a brush
fire. At 8:34 a.m. Wednesday,
the Pomeroy E-R unit was
called to 148\2 Mulberry Ave.,
for Gamet McKay who was
dead on the squad's arrival.
The body was taken to the
Ewing Funeral Home.

R · Slashed b
aise

Y

Council of Akron
AKRON (UP!) - City employes were scheduled to
receive an 8.4 pet. raise
Saturday but the raise was
Slashed to 5.5 pet. with a celllng
of $416 by city councU Tuesday.
Republican . Mayor John
Ballard had ·asked for the
reduced raise to preven't a
$752,000 delldt, but did not
request· the $4J6 ceiUng. The
celllng means, in effect, 70 pet.
of the city's 2,300 employes will
not receive the full 5.5 pet.
raise since they make more
than $7,550 a year.

RUTLAND - JackW.Crisjl,
Democrat Candidate for
Coogress of the Tenth District,
charged
today
that
Congressman ciarence E.
Miller has not only milde
carefully worded untrue press
releases using trickery to innuence the voters' of the
district but now he has stooped
to the l~el of ustng a part of his
platform, which evidently
musthavebeen very attractive
to the voters of the district.
Crisp said one of his first
promises when elected to
Congress is "I will establish
several offices for the convenience of the people."
ThiswasevidenUyattractive
to the voters because the inCIDnbent announced from his
Washington office March 21,
and he quoted, "he is reviewing
the feasibility of opening addltional offices In the Tenth
Congressional District. The
present Congressman has had
six years in which to do this,
but yet he has never offered a
progressive move such as this
before.
Crisp said:
"I can at least say that my
candidacy has already acco"'pllshed some good for the
people by forcing Miller to
agree to at least consider
establi.shing two more offices
throughout the district, even
though they will probably be
additional campaign offices. 1
·

Three deer were killed in
separate traffic accidents
Investigated Tuesday by the
DIVORCE ASKED
Gallia-Melgs Post State HighOne suit for divorce was filed way Patrol.
and another waa granted In
The first mishap oc~urred. at
Meigs County Common Pleas 8:30 a.m. on Rt. 7 m Meigs
Court. Beulah Gertrude Casto County, where a deer was
Pomeroy, filed agalnsi . struck by an auto operated by
Franklin H. Cilsto, Pomeroy, Kathryn M. Sanders, 17, Rt.l,
and Evelyn C. Young was Reedsville. There was minor
granted a divorce from damage to her car.
Richard l!. Young, eacb on
The first of tw9 Gallia deer
charges of gross neglect of mishaps occurred.at 9:40a.m.
duty and extreme cruelty In on Rt. 7 in Clay Twp. Officers
other court action ·the said a deer ran into the path of
Household Finance Corp Is to - a car driven by Nancy K.
recover from Micha~l W James, 26, Eureka Star Rt.,
Lance, eta!, the sum oi Gallipolis.
There
was
$l,092.03 plus costs.
moderate damage to her car.
The final deer accident occurred at 6:00p.m. on Rt. 218,
two miles south of Rt. 7where a
deer ran into the path of a car
operated by Kenneth E.
AUCTION PLANNED
Saunders, 48, Eureka Star Rt.
RUTLAND - The RuUand
No one was Injured or cited
Volunteers Fire Dept. will in a single car accident at 11 :~
stage an auction to raise funds p.m. on the Rodney.COra Rd.,
for purchase of a new fire five tenths of a mUe south of
truck. AU articles wiU be ac- Rt. 588. Officers said Tommy
cepted for the auction, Dale Abbott, 17, Pl. Pleasant,
the time and place of lost control of his car while
which have not been traveling at a high "rate of
set. Those wishing to speed. The auto left the high·
contribute may phone 742-5724 way and turned over on its top.
or notify any fireman.
There was moderate damage.

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
HUNT PLANNED
The Middleport E-R squad
An Easter Egg Hunt will be
answered a call to the Robert
held
at I p.m. Friday at the
Vance home on Leading Creek
Road at 8:20 p.m. Tuesday for courthouse in Chester. Each
six-year old David Vance, child attending Is to bring a
believed to have suffered a colored egg. Prizes will be
fra ctured knee ina fall. He was awarded. The hunt is spontaken to Veterans Memorial sored by the Chester Junior
Hospital by the squad and then Girl Scouts with . Mrs. Mary
transferred to Holzer Medical Hunter as leader and the
Middleport Modern Woodmen
Center.
with Mrs. Helen Hart as junior
director. The public Is InVited.
EARLY SERVICE
Asunrise service will be held
at 7 a.m. Sunday at the Sutton
Methodist Church with the
youth group in charge. An
Easter breakfast will be served
following the service. Sunday
School will be at 9:15a.m. with
an Easter egg hunt to follow.
SERVICE SET
Asunrise service wiU be held
at 6:30 a.m. Sunday at the
Laurel Cliff Free Methodist
Church.

.FRIDAy

.

MARCH.31•t

DJoPper Basket .

King Size

DAIRY H
' AVEN

Med Student
(Co tin ed f
Pa l)
n u rom ge
have his own personal life
intact. Hamilton, who has been
provided living quarters at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
during his stay, has even been
included Into the social affairs
of Dr. and Mrs. Pickens so that
he might better undersla1ld the
community and county and see
that despite a busy schedule
the f8lllilY doctor does have a
circle of friends and social
activity.
Hamilton has been able to
see the personal touch of the
family doctor which might just
be the lasting ingredient which
wiU balance the scales in favor
of the general practitioner - so
badly needed everywhere- as
opposed to the career of the
specialist categories where
patients may be just cases or
referrals.
Hamilton, 23, who readily
admils that Meigs County is
more progressive than )le
expected, will graduate in
June, 1973. Who knows?
Perhaps, this month in Meigs
County wtll really be a
determining factor with him
when he finally turns to his
career of practicing medicine.
He will return to the university
Thursday.

Pleasant Vailey Hospital
Names of persons admitted
have been · temporarily
discontinued from publication.
ADMISSIONS: Mrs. Bernard
Smith, daughter; Point
Plo!asant; · James · Casto,
Ewington, 0.; Freda Matheny;
Gallipolis Ferry; James
Daugberty, Point Pleasant;
Anna Klelnlngamith, Letart;
Mrs. Curtis Wallace, Galllpolls
Ferry; Eugene Duncan,
Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs. Edward
Thomas, Point Pleasant;
William Miller, Henderson ,
and Gregory Adkins, Pojnt
Pleasant.

LADIES'

"The

Judge"

Is

an

EASTER

NOW YOU KNOW
The practice of voodoo was
developed by slaves brought to
Haiti by the French, starting
in the late 17th Century.

+++

What the world needs now
is love, sweet love - not a lot
of insults, no matter how

well·intenlloned. And Insults

are the name of the game in
the Friars' Club ''roasts,"

wjth Sammy Davis Jr .
tonlghl's target. I like this
sorl ol lhing less and le$$.
8:30p.m., Ch. 12.

.

'

++ +

+ ++

THURSDAY:

One 'of

America's angriest young
men, and most outspoken, I-

FCC · Commissioner Nick
Johnson. He's a guest today
on "What Every Woman

MOVIES : Tonlghl's Wants to Know.'' and what
he lhlnks ol TV Is X·rated
Is "In Search of America," slufl. 10 a.m., Ch. 6.

prime-time feature on Ch. 6

'-'111.1

HICK'S

RIG.
$4.66

pr in!1 ud 1olid1 fro111 whlc~ lo

&lt;hoo ... s; , •• , 32 to. 31.

,,.,..,,
.,.

GIRLS'

EASTER DRESSES
A wonderf,.,l auortmenl of girls Easter DretM'S
in o Perrna\,enl Preu, Kodet and Cotton mot•
rial. It stiWion of embroidery, trims, prints.
and .olid1 from whkh to choost. 'Sizes 7-l.tt ·

SHIFT
GOWN

SIMON'S. MARKET

Dudley's Aorist

. ......

$277

LAOIIS'

$499
HECK'S REG. 15.99

llSW.MAIN

POMEROY
Open Evenings Til 7, Friday Til 8, Saturday
Til 9.

Serving: Middleport,
Pomer.oy, Gallipolis,O.
&amp; Mason Co., W.Va.

"'""'"''·

Mens
Double

'

.

.lirt~RiiniU'RS:- " FRIDAY.,.. 9-9 .~it.

.OPEN "

,LADIES'

POLY KNIT TOPS
Available in short sl1ev1
aod •tdpe a• .. ud "yl;og
ond 1izes S-M·l. ldeol for
the warm weather coming
'P·

129 MILL ST.
.MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

· 'ClOTII/IIf
,,,

PRICES GOOD TODAY THRU

.

.

LADIES
· IUDE

Pe'"'a Prest, waltz length gowns with
.lac• and embroidery trim. Four 1tyle1
I~? chooM from. Sizes. S·M·L
. ,

$266 ·

Kn~

$177

PANTYHOSE·
One size fill all. Complete

HECK'S REG. $2,88

with sa ndal foot . Choose
from Beige , Cinnamon,

.

HECK'S lEG.

Brow n, Navy, and Smoke.

$3.48

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST!
EASTE.R
PLUSH
CANDY
EAS~R

FILLED

EASTER BASKETS

PANTYHOSE
.

PANTIES

HICK'S
lEG.
94 1

Brief •tr,l• with double bad. panel .
Availab • in white ond po1ttl colors
ond 1i:zes S thru I0.

· ladies' nylon mesh ponty hose. One
size fits all. Colors: Beige, Cinna-

SHIRTS

These double
knits

Slft,..lell, p~~lynt.r oft(! IOfl~ 1hir h i~
tolid&lt; ond P"iroh. F;... diff•&lt;t nt ll)ltl to
,~,.froiii . Si n&lt;J2~a

you can really

get Into. 100
per

$2.48
aOTIIINf

_,,,

four

88

KNIT PANTS

HECK'S
REG.

$399

99 ~

HECK'S

"'""'

61 lA.

•13 99
Pl Pleasant

HICK'SIIG. $4.88

II G.

colors .

Sizes: 30 to 40.
LADIES'

liG.

cent

polyester with
belted waist
bond styling.
Available In

HECK'S IIG.

~.1~ (

are

something fhat

38.

mon, Taupe, and Brown . All first
quolity.

.TOYS

oMIUliHliDIAIE BUIINIS,

LADIIS' OlE-SIZE

LADIES'
NYI.ON

PANTS

LADIIS'

$177

SATURDAY, APRIL lit

..

1

LADIES

INFANT

PANTY HOSE
•ONE SIZE

LADIII' 1111AW

HANDBAGS .
.REG.

/tt,.oiloble in Oatron Or ·
gonta, Polytsttr ond Cot·
ton, or Embroider.d,

I

FITS AU

00

44

11.95

EASTER DRESSES

$,288

· P,ANTIES
Nylon Non·Run panty in white
ond auorttd prints. Sins 4 to

'

GIRLS EASTER

MEN'S SHORT SLEEVE

DRESSES

SPORT
SHIRTS

eNO IRON

BOYS SHORT SLEEVE

SPORT
SHIRTS

eSIZES s.M-l-XL
. . '

•SIZES Ux &amp; 7-14

•SIZES &amp;TO I&amp;
•110 IRON ...

•NO IRON ,

s 77

s

,..

•

SlllfS

WJTH FREE STAND

GIRLS &amp; LADIES)

Ingels Furniture

SHOES
99 &amp;

99

PR.

PR.

DRESS
LENGTHS

A wonderful selection of
otyl01 in Krinkio Potent,
Pouches,

and

Straws.

•4 YDS

FOAM
- ·~
CUPS

TODDLER IOYS'

'

.

Smooth nylon and Oct•
tate panties in fa.ncy

and )a'ce pbttor,ns. Sizes
2, 3, and .t. .

70UNCE .·
REG~

'3A9
",,..,,

HANDBAGS·

99(

your choice of colore.

SPRING MD EASlEI

HICK'IIIG.
TO $3.99

ao,.

1

GIRLS'
SLIPS '.

ltltf111an•nl

,,.II

!MI(y llipo In

FLARE LEG SLACKS
Popular flort Ia; ilock1 for your
.little one: thoo~e from solids,
stripes, or dtnirns. Sittl: 2 to 4,

GIRLS'

EASTER
HATS&amp;
BAG SETS
A wonderful ltltction from
which to choose. Sirn 3 to 6X
and7tol4.

wrth la&lt;elrirrl .

ggc

INFANTS'
AND GilLS'

EASTER
HEAD WEAR
Available in organza

bows and bows on clips.

$199
HICK'S RIG.

$2.38

a,,.,.,,

HICK'S UG. Sde

"'"""'

41•

•50 cr. PIIG.

22 .
I

HICK'S RIG.

LADIIS'

Two-tone cabinet In

Middleport

$2.81

'

•

at a

Ph. 992·2635

&lt;Dn lro•.0~111tl1c~ potttrftl, T~1 i1

P.r11111 ~reu PIIOI'trial wiTh point or
lon; ullon. An ouorlmtnl of

..~11)

,.

Bank·Rate Financing

SHIRTS
iro

HECK'S REG.

SELECTION

Rose, Cymbidium
Orchid or Carnation

99

''

LADIES'
lOLL SLEEVE
A. wide "le(lio~ ol roll tiM,.. 1hitt1

LAR~E

Corsage

MD IXllDRS

.

CLOSED EASTER SUNDAY

HICK'S lEG. $3.48

Accent Your
Easter Outfit
With A
Lov&amp;ly

oASPIED STYIIS

Handcrafted Chassis •
• Sunohl.,.. Color
Picture Tube

or v·ntck styling. Choose from
asiorted stripes and sizes S·M·l. .

STORES WILL OPEN
MONDAY APRIL 3AS USUAL

Eggs, Jelly Beans,
Hollow Choc. Rabbits.
All the goodies, here.

992-2505

with Vera Miles and C.rt
Betz at 9: 30 p.m. Also: A
sardonic tllle, " Forever,
Darling" wllh Lucille Ball
and Desl Arnaz In a 19~ film
about a marriage which 11
breaking up (wouldn't
happen with them In real
life, of course), 4 p.m., and
"Smiley," II : 30 p.m., both
Ch. 10.

c~ew

Fuliy Cooked Ham

LADIES
DRESSES

qlllity

ALL HECK'S STORES

Sleovelels, nylon knit tunic tops in

APRIL 2nd

'1':

Zelilll

·JUIICJOPS

to

00
. unalloyed delight, with real
people and real problems.
Possibly the besl homegrown producl on cable TV .
7:30p.m., Ch . 10.

es with lace trim and tailored. Avail·
a'ble in d!=icrcin, cotton, and crepe
material with short sleeve. Sizes 32

TO

IN HOSPITAL
. RACINE -Miss Nancy Ours
is a medical patient at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Her room number Is 150.

LADIES' NYLON. KNIT

DRESSY
BLOUSES
A bebutiful selection of drssiy blous-

Old Fashioned
Fully Cooked

EGGS, ETC.

EARNS 4.0 AVERAGE
RACINE - Leo C. H11l of
near here, a sophomore at.Olllo
University, recenUy completed
the winter quarter with a 4.0
average. Hill is maj ring In
photography.

CALL POINTVIEW:

,. .,

believe, however, that the·
. .- - - - - - . - .
voters of the Tenth District can
Kyger Creek's Board of
.,.lor to the discussion, John
··
easily see by th!s that the · Education, i,n special session Reece, public relations
GratJd Opening
present cong~ssman Is in- Tuesday night, discussed the cooi'dlna~ at the James M.
terested only' in being elected state's minimum salary Gavin Plant, met with the .
and not In effectively . schedule of $6,400 wllicb must board concerning the an.
representing the people of his ' be paid beginning July 1. No · ·.tlclpated enrolbnent projected
district." Issuing a chaUenge, action was taken. The board, at by the coostructi!lll at the
.
.
,.
Crisp said:
Its January meeting, approVed plant. Reece also explalned
"1 would also like, at this · a pay increase.for its teaching what the plant will mean
Our ""' Sandwiclles:
time, to take the opportunity to and non-teaching personnel, financially. to the dlatri~t. ·
issue a challenge to the present but did not approve the $6,400
Inrecentmonths, the dls1rlct
Congressman to come to the minimum PBY. scale.
~ has lost several students at
district and Jet's have a public
Kyger Creek's starting · Cheshire-Kyger ElementarY
discussion about the prob- salary is currenUy $6,0Q0 per School.
!ems of the Tenth District year, $200 over the state
Superintendent Comer . ·
Qa~ie .
and what he proposes as a minimum and just $liD over the Bradbury announced ' that
,.
solution for them. I thlJ]!t It is. district's starting salary of a registration for first grade and .
time he begins to do something year ago. The board wiU meet kindergarten students will be
positive, rather than make again in a recessed session at heldalldayFrl.day,APrll7, at
·
' '
fancy promises that he never 7:30 p.m. Friday night to act 'Addavllle and Cheshire-Kyger
.Racine, Ohio · ~&lt;•
follows through on.
upon a salary measure.
Elementary School.

Deer KillS
Hil Three On
High
•
ways

Minimum salary Sch~ule
KC Board Topic ·r~day.

'

..

TOIDUIS'IIOYS'

SLACK ANb·

SHIRT SETS
Solid slocks with cotton
ltripe shirts. Sizes : 4 to 8

$}99
HICK'S lEG.

$1.18 '
ao,.

.

�!

I

•

'

'
j

'

'

·

'

•

.......,

INIIAILY
10TO 9

•

OIIIDAILY

. 1010 9

10 TO 9

scon

TOWELs ·

12 $1 OO

REGULARSIZE .. . .... • • .. •
LIMIT U

fOR

LIMIT4

REGAL WAR~

BATH SIZE

7-PIECE

8FO.s1oo

4 FOR

.

STAINLESS STEEL

LIMIT 8

SJOO

COOKWARE SET

IIHSIWIII ""·
REGALWARE

KODAK
INSTAMATIC

CAMERA KIT
The AX · 15, smo rt light , compact .
easy to carry. Takes beautiful color
snap shots , col or slides , and black
and white snaps. No settings- .drop
in film, aim and shoot .. Gets sharp

'•

2'12 QT TEA KEnLE

Consists of: • 1 qt. Covered
Sauce Pan • 2 qt . Covered
Sauce Pan • 6 qt. Du~~h Oven
e 10 1h in . Oven Fry Pane
Cook Book, Guarantee

Available in flame, aVoca·
do, and harvest gold .

. $244

160COUNT
LIMIT· :J PIGS.
HICK'S

HECK'S
REG.
$3.39

$

IIOISIWIII DEPT.

,

-::.·
. IACH

88

I
'

dear pictures

3 FOR
SJ
. 00

HECK'S REG.

49&lt;

HECK'S REG.

71'

4 PACKS (&amp;lOLLS)

Available

FEDERAL GLASS

· ICE TRAYS

ASHTRAYS

·27&lt;

4" : • • 17&lt;
,8" .• • • 66&lt;

HECK'S RIG. 39'

be~od model, lo llo"
or regular 1tyle1. AI·
$Orttd colon. Never

HECK'S REG. TO .
99'

, , CIIOOSI
,
I'IOIU

PATTIIIIS

12 FOR

.,,

HECK'S
RIG.
.
EACH

' ~ ~ 99~.

vo•

HECK'S RI.G. $1.44

SPLAnER GUARD

COVERED

UTILITY PANS

HECK'S
REG.

99(

$1.60

IIIHISIWIII ""·

Heck's Reg. '1.08
Pt Pleasant Store On~

30COUNT

32

oz.

PEACH

SOAP PADS

LL

44c

sse

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S
REG.

66'

1/0ISIWIIE
DEPT.

lilT.

HICK'S
RIG.
$1.58

,,

IIHSIWAII

lilT.
TY·D-BOL

TOILET BOWL CLEANER
WITII
lUIOII

ZAZOOM

TOY

PLASTIC

LAWN MOWER

IW•••w

$1.01

.,,

IIO.SIWAIII

HECK'S
REG.
$1.14

94 1

HECK'S
REG.
49•

33c

jointed. Packed 2 per
package.

•

HECK'S REG.
$1.44

99~KG.

17

1

SYLVANIA
REGULAR

FLASH CUBES

TALC

SYLVANIA

HECK'S
REG.
99'

160%.
LYSOL

FLASHBULBS

3 cube•

(12 lllslrtsI

CfJSMEnC IIPT.

TOILET BOWL

.

19T. .

HICK'S
RIG.

13 oz.

-

MOVIE FILM
$222

44c

,,

SJ47

HECk'S
REG.

KODAKSUPD8

SYLVANIA

STYLE
HAIR SPRAY

FOR POLAROID CAilRA
$ t .6a JIWiliY IIPT.

IIWII.RY DI,T.

3 cubeo

(12 fllsHs)

...
FIICTIOI EASRI

AIIMALS
· 2 Styles

MEN'S

p!aao/Q
DRESS SHIRTS
"""'""""'"'"'"" $399
SMn ...... ~lltflf "'"' dffi! tllifn

EACH

tho!! M.,., fiMd kOI'IIolt . ""'lloblt III ..Ol·

.CHOICE

29C

HICK'S
RIG.
• 44 1

CUDDLE EASTER

FELT COVERED
ttDTfii5..,T.

EASTER RABBITS
31N PKG.

HECK'S REG.

54'

38&lt;

I'llC.

'

IIPT.

NIJI,SIWAII

12c
Rooted hair and fully

TOY DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

COLORING BOOKS

PUNCH-0-BALLS

On~

eiECIUI
eiAID TO IIOI.D
eiiSCEITED

ror

TODDLER DOLLS ·

$3 ~!IllY

HECK'S
REG.
• $4.19

CASHMERE BOUQUET

HECK'S REG. $2.44

'2.18
.
Pt Pleasant Stcn On~

COLOR PAl FILM

10,0Z.

49

IIPT.

JEWElRY
DEPT.
POLAROID

1o••

Pt Pleasant Store

1

GARDEN
. TOOLSET

HECK'S
RIG.

296,\

CLEAIER
HECK'S
REG.
49•

Tor

,.

shapes.

HECK'S REG. •
$13.96

$188

:s $144

SAND PAIL .

ASSORTED

14"

$U.ila ·

'

$2188

·99*·

!" ass~rt·.
·,Avoil~ble
ed styles
and

ELECTRIC KIIFE

EASTER ·
BASKETS

.BROOM

Ull

HECK'S
REG.

HECK'S REG.

FILLED

PLASTIC

3-PIECE
PLASTIC

&amp;sc

Ml11 •1 Poloroid INl ~ •"·

HAMILTON BEACH

BROILING PANS

NIJISIWIII

77'

IIOUSIWIII

lo"'-·

2·'11CI

HECK'S
REG.
99'

' POlAIOtO'S tojfW $QUAM $ttOOTU. Haw ~ co~~ 60 ~ot&lt;:ond colar pirtur•• far obollt .... 1oOmt ,,., 01 colot pictu&lt;n rou \11011 4oyt fer. ,.,..w .....
.WUred .... colt ~ lfllpplfll oil 11M ovhlr "et• 11! thtir lilm to gi,. ,....., W,
oquort color J'd-~ pid11f11 iMI...,.. • f Wt
EIKI• ic 1y9 , '"-clrMk olou!·
"'' · 3 •"'""' ltM, bvllf·i~ fiiC~&gt;H flouh Iii• · ~ llfttl rv1Mrt1 oM IIIOftY 1UIItr

'

14" Patio &amp;Garaae
HECK'S
REG.
$1.77

CAMERA

IIWilRY DEPT.

Bucket of Sponges

c

·POLAROID SQUARE SHOOTER

, yellow gold .

'

'

BATHTUB MAT

$700 .

JEWEl BOXES

• I

RUBBERMAID

JEWElRY
DEPT.

Available in
white go ld or

4

Heavy duty bright plated stool.
They measure t I "x16"x1 'h u

'

Sizes, 3 tQ 7

IIOISIWAIE
11 1h AlUMIIUM MISN

HECK'S
REG.
$5.00 EACH

WRIST
WATCHES

liMIT )

$. 1• ~

'

$1.09

2 FOR

7 JEWEL

'ssoo

FACIAL
TISSUE

HECK'S REG.

WALTHAM

2 FOR

.

I

· ing .

LADIES'

JR. BOY'S

striped jeano.

$1 oo. 0 QT. DISH PAN

$866

HECK'S REG. to $10.99

Permanent Preu, multi colored denim

ENTERPRISE ALUIIIUI

HECK'S
REG.
$1.18

ironing . Sires:
29fo42 ,
•

CARTOON
JEANS

BEVERAGE GLASSES

Available in cartoon model and
sizes 8 to 18. Never needs iron ·

r~ . . d,

ClfJTN/1/G IIPT.

99(

JEANS

Ban-A:ol waist bond

'

in three colon.

MEN'S

or ICIIid,.

HECK'S REG. $2.44

FEDERAL GLASS II OZ.

ALUMINUM

1

$188

1/IJUSIWAII IIPT.

•

KNIT SHIRTS
Styli1h Permonent Pr•u kn it
shirts tho! neVIr need ironin9.
Short deeYe ttyling in stripes

ClOTNIIIGDEPT.

STORAGE CONTAINER

KODACOLOR FILM

BOY'S

Never needs ironing . Altarted 'prints, solids, and
stripes. Size: .( tO 7 and 8

io 18.

$17.88

NIJUSIWAII
DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

KODAK CX 126-12

DRESS SHIRTS

I

ALUMINUM FOIL

fe. 77
19.88

lOY'S
PERMANENT 'RE55 .

11"x2S'

f~

HECK'S REG.

.LADY
SCOTT

HEAVY DUTY

hs

ANIMALS

s188

Three style dreued cuddle easter animals or lying down plush rabbit in assorted colors.

HECK'S REG. $2.44

TOYII#T.

20" PLUSH

BOY OR GIRL RABBIT
HECK'S
REG.

,.,.,.,,
$3.44

CHOICE

$258

EACH

�'

.

14 - The DeuY Sentinel, MiddleP.,..t-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 29, 1972

.

J:
•

OPBIAILY

OPIIIAILY

10 TO 9 .

10 TO 9

PRICES IN EFFECT THROUGH SATURDAY APRIL 1

PRICES II EFFECT THROUGH SAT.'APRIL 1, ·WHILE QUAITITIES LAST ·

10W40

HAVOLINE
MOTOR OIL

\
I&gt;

LIMIT 5 QUARTS

Rockel

.

COMPRESSION TES.TER
QUART
HECK'S
REG.
59'

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

BICYCLE TIRES
Sizes indude:
26x 1.75, 24xl .75,
ond 20x1.75.

MOTOR OIL
2GAL

:fi'$138
Pl Pleasant Store On~

Pln-polntt trouble in Valws, ·.Pistons, Ring!., C)'linders. The higher the reading , the greater the ga1 mi·
leage. The lint step lor any engine tune-up or repair
work .

VACUUM
GAUGE
food

An eueritt.l f•

•"'lM tuae.,..

Lo·

cote such troubiH asstldy yg/v.s, ltoky intake mani·
fold, Ieite timing, choktd muffler, wort\ rings or cyli!'·
d•r wall. Check fuel pump preuure, test all YOCI,Ium
operated d.vices.

lfi.INCH
GARDEN
HOSE
.
.
'

NYLON REINFORCED

HECK'S REG. $3.99

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

AIITOMOnVED9T.

0 IL CAN SPOUT

METAL FUNNEL

LEAK PROOF WITH RUBBER
GASKET

WITH FLEXIBLE HOSE

PLIERS

G. E. STEREO
PHONOGRAPH

HECK'S REG. $5.77

NAIDWAM DEPT.

HECK'S REG.
99'

NAIDWAIE DEPT.

Pictured

HIGH RISE
•

HANDLEBARS

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

• Solid State Performance • 4-Spoed Automatic Re·
cord Changer e Holds Up T9 Sjx Records • Po•itive
· ·Size
Seledion- 12", 10", . 7';
-Dis!=S e Repeat Play &lt;;')p-·
,
'
I
tion

CAP OIL FILTER

·POntNG

and 20xl.75.

HECK's REG.
$1.99

HECK'SIEG. $1.88

NAIDWAIE DEPT.
II OZ.

JOHNSON

WEATH.ER
WAX

$1~0
HECK'S REG.
$1.58

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

POWER
LAWN
RAKE
FITS MOST
POWUMOWEIS

NAIDWAIIJ DEPT.

77(

HECK'S REG. $2.99

NAIDWAM DEPT.

COSMETIC DEPI.

BRIGHT SIDE
SHAMPOO

J

ORA FIX

HECK'S REG.
$1.06

.

70Z.

·HOUR AFTER HOUR
DEODORANT

94l
COSMETK DEPT.

COSMETIC
DEPT.

NAIDWAM DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.
~...•

Excedrin
IIH tJIIlf! \II-1 1N r, 1 H PAIN R/llri'!R

•

EXCEDRIN I00's

HO.STYti .MIST

HICK'S
IIIG.
$1.09

. IIAIIWABI9T.

=&gt;eo
HOSE CLAMP
PLIERS

e For faller , more eotftfortoble hdir 1tyl•t al home e Com pact and
eo1y to ust e Dial Mot comfort control features 3 heat stle&lt;ti onl plu s
"cool" e ProfeuionaKy 1tyled hood roi~t and lo~ert quickly and
., easily • Filtered air flows nenly
~~
througkaut the kood • Color·
.l"i
styled in Dleasing tawny bei ge
and off white with silver color trim .
Ideal for any gift occasion .

HECK'S REG. $1.99

COSMETIC DPEI.

~ ':l RtMINGTO.~ .. , , ·

LADIES' SHAVER
Close, considerate shaving. Adjustable guard
cornbs. Easy to handle. Modern styling .

'

..

AUTOMOTIVE1111.

12 oz.

LYSOL
·LIQUID

BLAD·ES

JEWEI.Ir D,T,

JEWEliY DEPT.

• · Animoted . El~ric . doc' •' Swinging ·toil and
bHnking eyese Easy
. to ...,d cio&lt;k. fqce

INTENSIVE CARE

CREAM

CLOCK RADIO
e liand._. Pplillf with ..... p.~rtr.- (.W... e
Horitot1!el ilf~"** c.,.,.. coiM-conlral ,.._. e $olld·
. .,. ........... "-••t.fl..d dr-lllic ...... e lith ....
Oock Oiol• boa ·.+Jar~a(\o( k •5lfttl•wilch..,., Ml
flld iDOUIOIIIOI!CCI IIy. Ad iut!Cible
to 60 "' l ~wt11e
Wok.-to·Moitic 01 Mwtic/~ffll. e ........... ~
( t il
I fll lft h'lllitt (1\0ftiJIIft ¥01 ~ 1011 CIIIICIIICI"' " '"

HECK'S REG.

'

'29.96
JEWElRY 11111.
~,

,.G.l.;a-SLICE,. ..'l&gt; ,!

eiiCULAI

•IITIA lOLl

HECK'S
REG. 58.49

HECK'S
REG.
$14.97

HECK'S REG.
$47.96

JEWElRY DEIT.

JEWEI.RY DEPT.

Buy o G. E. Spray, Steam, and Dry Iran betwNn March 6 and April
15, 1972, a l!d upon proof of purchase rtceh.. 30 spools of Clark's .
Sewing Thrtad in 2~ ono rted colors. Get complete details in our
store!

,,

MAN'S CORDLESS

SHAVER
Use with or without cord . Power pack in case permits
shaving 'without .recharge . Racer fCnt " QUICKCHARGE ." Sebring Green .

SCHICK

POLY

MIST HAIR SETTER

PERCOLATOR

e.1olllilrl"'l ml or breotfoet moill~r• into ho.ir, e),., o thtnlnt , nolurol MI. 20 rolltll• ~ lwmbo ,

..n

10 lo•te. • loi!IDM- Ior
..f '* r '• hoir •lr*· Nwlgit i~dico tor dot &lt;~ D n i" ec~ lo r wht ~
rolt.r~ ort t111dr far w11. A..tom o:or ic 101ttt lto!~ rt t.' U l. e~p~o,M . lho u ~l ul , co...,pocr
(-with tort botfor ... ..!ing •.lnd w•• .....,.,, c~pl o ftd ....,..," "' cup.

· •

'

HECK'S
REG.
$21.96

.JEWElRY IIPT.

HECK'S REG.
$16.96

HECK'S REG.
$32.88

suu ·

IEWEliY DEPT. '

JEWEJ.IIY DEIT.

G.E.

HOT LEATHER

Mod• ol d,~~ rable p o l y pro p~t' "'
{to~~tllto rhtl" metol), Rtlitll --=rotckn,
wilt !IOI defll or lk..... Co "'Pt.ttly odor·
IIW II ptolect ftll&lt;ot. coHM tol't 111'1d
arom11 . ....,. dtiarCIICit e~pprl&gt;'ttd cnldrt
llfl plfiiiOIIUt 1111d wiH~111lod- 01' oil1·
&lt;DiCit. 5o P~i llltcii1 ICI UM .

DISPENSER

• U11 an, lndi"IJ ltan..,d 11.....,. .t.o .. crn f!l , ll 111. • r 6
111. c11n. eHeCII9d t~o~~ .. ,....,,. lor _,.. co ,.,lorto:~ ~lo w.v-.
• PfiiiiJ'IIo'" tho'fifiiJ t t40irl fllllptiOiufl . Cf ( CIIIIpllltly
""'"'P&lt;ool dt ~9'1 · e er.dtilor ~I I II\OIIftliftl piln Clfllpll

$5''

cor dMOfll~ .

$1177

.•,,,,

HICK'SIIG. $14.96

JEWElRY D9T.

C.OSMITK

SUNBEAM

IRON
WITH Flff THREAD! .

.

HECK'S REG.
$1.99
HICK'S REG.
$1.19

Govtrnor controlled rnotor for full
po--.r at all lf)HI:h;. Rtmovob!. cord
for .Oiy lkM'oge. 121pHdl far ewry· r
lhing from cake mixes to m&lt;nhed po·' ·

G.E. STEAM SPRAY

Controlled mixing power in a high·styled lighlweight •
3-speed 'fingertip control .ela19e non-splash chromeplated beoten e Fingertip beater ejector • Available
in decorator colors e Oetac~able Cord.

Pt Pleatt Store On~

DRY LOOK

TER

$41 88

HECK'S REG •
$12.96

3-SPEED MIXER

HECK'S REG,
$19.96

loiCMtl.

s1.oaa

HAMILTON BEACH

IEWlliY
D9T.

$1577

., SUNBEAM. - .- :
DELUXE

..

Handsome styling on this toaster will compliment any
kitchen decor. Temperature dial allows you to select
the darkness of your toast .

w,

S1]88

ggc
GILLETTE.

If.
"""'.

TOASTER
.

lO's

,,

VASELINE

. G. E. AM

WITH 2 FREE BLADES

CDSIIETK

60Z.

$ 77

HECK'S REG. $33.96

WALL CLOCK

JIWlliiY IIIIT.

14-s,...l ....... has more finesse than an
ellpirt whipping egg whites. Unique lowhigh setector switch doubles blending speed
inttantly. This givtt you all the speeds you
need plus sam• in be~ween . Eosr ·acce u • .
positive push -button &lt;Ontrol: Iorge .W·ot. ·
glau container; dttacl:lable cutting unit.
Cord storage. Solid stole engineering; 720watt motor,

j

HECK'S REG.
$9.88

PUSSY CAT OR .TIGER ·

. 89'

HECK'S REG.
99•
.

P2750t90

JEWElRY
DEPT.

HD·63

68&lt;
HECK'S REC.
' $1.58

88

$

HICK~SREG.

COSMETIC DEPT.

~

HAIR DRYER

SCHICK ·
Pi,_US PLATINUM

HECK'S REG. $1.36

BRECK
CREME RINSE

. l2~ .

'GENERAL ELECTRIC

58&lt;

97(
15 oz.

HECK'S REG.
$16.96

HECK'S REG. $34.96

HAMILTON BEACH

HECK'S REG.
$4.96

I

HECK'S REG.
$1.39

•WITIIODY

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG. $4.77

HECK'S REG.
79'

e IE'Illl

HECK'S REG.
$1.09

$299

88&lt;

AUTOMQnVE DE'T.

$199

oz.

FILLER

HECK'S REG.
88'

~ ORAFix
2l/• oz ..

The tool that maltes riveting uuyl fen tens metal,
leather, con¥a5, wood and other material• from one
~ de ofthe work in a minult ,

Stereo 8 fape plus a bonus of AM-FM radio. Play it an ordinay llash- .
light batteries or plug it into 0"Y convenient llO'voll AC outlet . Automatic tope program chon9ing and lighted program indicator. AC
power cord i1. cOntained in c:anvtnitnlstora~ c:ampartme"t ol bock
ol unit .

JEWElRY DEPT.

$3.77

4 QIS.•

Record and li•ltn onywhtre. Bvilt-in Two•way Power allow$ operation from houM &lt;lment or bottt ry. This Aecordtr is built lo trowel and
dtsigrted for easy operation with itl Slide-o·matic: T-bar function con·
trr •, ond Automatic end-of-tope ahutaff , Corn.s complet. with. micro·
ph... ne, mike stand, Hnt &lt;ord, pouch fOr mikt and liM! cord, and
blank c:aut ttt.

WITH AM·FM RADIO

JEWElRY DEPT.

JIWlliY D9T.

s

BATTERY POST&amp;
TERMINAL CLEANER

BATTERY

.49(

• loosens &amp; Rremo.,..s deod g rou
I Allow1 moi1ture &amp; fertilizer to
penetra te I Mul chu lea ves I
Springs bolted on- con not come
off I Ribbed blade for mo ximllm
streng th

6

NAIDWAIE DEPT.

BATTERY
CARRIER
STRAP

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

TAPE PLAYER

HECK'S REG. $98.88

Solid-state. Big 2 '4" dynarnic speaker. Direct
tuning with easy·to·read dial. Rugged hi'gh·
irnpact polystyrene case. Convenient carry
thong. Automatic volurne cont.rol.

DOOR GRILL
Sizes include: 26al.75,

s-., .0.. 0 ; .

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

TAPE ·RECORDER

S-TRACK PORTABLE

HECK'S REG. $26;96

PORTABLE RADIO
HECK'S REG. 99'

·G. E. CASSEnE

$7888

.G. E. POCKET

FERTILMIX

$ 39

records or plays AM radio on battery or house power.
Slim lined styling, Solid-state audio circuits fa~ instant
sound plus 4-speed player With built-in 45 adaptor.

WRENCH

HECK'S REG. $1.99

.. ...

LEAl JET

A rugged take-along compact iun maker that spins.

HECK'S REG. $44.96

'ALUMINUM

BICYCLE TUBES

For bicycles only

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

G.·E. PORTABLE
RADIO-PHONO

'

.

$133
HECK'S REG.
$2.77

&gt;.•.n

R-476

$39 8 ~

BATTERY NUT

'.-.z.

(

· S]66
HECK'S REG. $3.99

:

SHAG RUG
VACUUM
ATTACHMENT

CASSEnE HEAD
HECK'S REG.
$1.19

JEWlliiY 11111.

Pt Plelsant Store Only

.

�.

.. .

.. .. .

Social Note.'l
ONIIIAI.Y
10TO 9

•

'

'

PRICES II EFFECT THROUGH SATURDAY APRIL 1, WHILE Q~~ln'JIES iAST

46 QT. COLEMAN COOLER
world's finest insulation, unbreakable liners, reinforced rust-proof bose, 2 bottle openers, chromed
hardware, lost action drain .

Rally
Baseball
Shoes

SPINCAST REEL

HUTCH
Choose from first basemen's mit!
catcher's mitt or fielder' s glove.

CHOICE
•

•

0

I

I

M&amp;H.SLEEPING BAG

SPORTS DEPT.

99

Sturdy chrome bails

·v·0 Iunteers
'.
M
H
.
. eet ope

hardened line roller~. • S~~;~~
steady disc drag systems. •
precision coined metal
Selective onti·revene e Ruljgtd .
metal case, corrosion resistant

'·• !.

; , _
-·,' .?JLUM~US-:- ~e thol!SBnd
~rlcan .. ·Can'cer ·Society
~olunteers frilm all o\oer Ohio
~\ll'e at ·the Ohio
·l'Unllin Monday on the campus
• of Ohio State University to
.. meet Bob Hope, this year's
o\CS Ohio Dlvlalori -Crusade
C!:hainnan, and to kickoff the
'1972 state drive.
1 The 14th Annual Cured
_eancer . As&amp;embly and 1972
ohio Crusade Kickoff launched
'iqnonth4ong April Crusade in
~otocollectover ta'ril million
Jor 1 -J'Qeiii'Cb, educa~on, and
iler'rice to cancer patients.
Eighty men and women, cured
of ·cancer for flve ot more
yea'ra, participated in the even_
!
·as liVIng testimony that cancer
can· lle cured.''
~\ H~ ad~ . the
audience on a rare serious note
sa~, "IImow~cer~ be
curep now. In Ohio alone there
are :over 77,000 men, women.

throughout ..

Heek's Reg. '3.88

HECK'S REG.

$16.97 .

Pt Pleasant Store On~

JOHNSON

SPORTS DEPT.

1ooa

HECK'S REG.
BERKLEY

$7.99

4201

SPORTS DEPT.

SPIN REEL
A hloh

ZE8C0202
SPINCAST REEL

qoHI~ "f

rHI ,.ith o pow11iul

- ot ~Orl - lqoG r t

CU I

lor

~

fl•t .,.,;,..

...- -

11!u 11nl boil ~ 01 o harli ch ro..,td hft• rolle r tw llle
Spool hood ood rHI body ore di1 coli olu"'i"""'

~-

.

~-

- ----· ·-

I
'

SPIICAST REEL

I
&lt;!~

$3.99

HECK'SREG. $11.88

SPORTS DEPT.

SPORTS DEPT.

•

1545- For heavy fi shing when extra
power is o must , this is a perfect
motdl . Zebco 404 spin -cast reel.
5 ' 6", medium -action Zebco 40AO

rod .

' '

·~

boil rtltose, adjustable smooth disc drag,
sloinltu 1tHI bail, hard chrome line roll·
er, and positiYI anti·rt¥ent. Coir~siow

SCJ"

HECK'S REG. $12.97

HECK'S REG. $13.99

SPOITSDEPT.

S/IOITS /JEPT.

SON BoRN ON !7TH
Mr.and Mrs. David YolBig of
142 West End Ave., New York
City, N.Y., are announcing the
birth of a son, Dalton Patrick,
011 st. Patrick's Day,March 17 ,
at Beth Israel Medical Center
In New York City. The lnfimt
weighed seven po1B1ds, five
ounces. Mrs. Young, the former Letta Jeannette BIBS, Is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Bass of Pomeroy and Is
a graduate of Pomeroy High
School. Mr. Younglsaleadlng
musician and bandleader in the
. NYC area.

·•h• young praler
.,.

-~~-

..

.
.
and children alive and well
loday who guarded their life
through early diagnosis and
prompt treatment. we can't
ignore our h~lth and expect to
s~y well. It's what you don't
know that can hurt you."
Dr, Irving Sellkoll, noted

&gt;

I'.,

..

'•

C,hildren's Oxford
, Size 4.8

$477

CROSSMAN

B. B. SHOT

GOLF PUTTERS
HECK'S REG.

Choose from o wide assortment
of styles.

HECK'S
REG.

$5.99

$777

99•

SPOITS
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $9.99

SPORTS DEPT.

COLEMAN

9ftc
7'

. $1.39

SPORTS DEPT.

H:~::s

SI'OITSDEPT.

player~ .

3
SPORTS
DEPT.

lilT

SHRTS •r.

GOLF GLOVE

~eother front with a nylon back.

HECK'S REG. 44 4
SPORTS DEPT.

No. 700

9t

Angler 511 ft. cork handle, 3

HECK 'SRE~. $1.39

SPORTS DEPT.

BOAT CUSHION
A durable, Cu$hion mode with

rugged, long-lolling marino drill
cloth. Assorted colors.
HECK'S
lEG.
$4.99

HECK'S REG. $2.47

S/IOITS/191.

SINKERS

Kerosene

22 LONG RIFLE

Lantern

SHELLS

DIP

NET

HICK'S

R.G.

"'

s"'1n
lllt&gt;T.

Heck's
Reg.

$2.88
Store On~

IOIOXISII
CARTON

Pt Pleasant Store On~

$599

77e
HECK'S REG. 99'
SPORTS DEPT.
Pl Pleasant Store On~

.!:lLONG
RIRIIIATCII

$8.80

SIORTSDEPT.

WU

A $5 contribution was made
lo the Meigs CoWity Satiety for

!it•

Crippled Children and Adults
at Tuesday night's meeting of
the Homebuilders Class at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
· .RaY!llOnd Stewart P.resided
'* "lhe meeting daring which-. - '
time lt was decided lo pur~hase ·
two IUies for Easter services.
By TOM TIEDE
Mrs. Carl Roadh had the
opening pa·ayer. A Bible study
R l V E-R D A L E, Md.was held. Attending besides 1NEAl- The church is filled
those named were Miss · almost to capacity. S o m e
Thelma Boyer, Mrs. KeMeth bald heads. Many in the 311
McElhinny, l&gt;frs. Russell to 40 age group. And l(unWilson, Mrs. William Grueser, dreds and hundreds of kids .
Shhhhhhhh.
Mr . and Mrs, Milton
Let us pray. ·
Houdashelt and Mrs, Stewart.
", . . And, Lord, we know
that the young people here
have money. too, and they
RETURNS HOME
can give. We pray that we
Mrs, Garen Stansbury has may all give liberally . ln
returned to her Grant St. home Jesus n3me, Amen."
in Middleport alter spending
Pass the plate.
the winter in Hernando, F1a.
Clink, clink.
with her son and daughter-in·
Quiet.
law, Mr. and Mrs. William
There he is! White boots.
Stansbury. Among the visitors Double breasted, d o u b l e
at the Stansbury home dlirlng knit, double look suit. Reverher visit there were Mr. and end Freddie Gage! The UnMrs. Hannon O'Brien and Mr, derworld Preacher. Red
and Mrs. James O'Brien. Mrs. Bible in hand. Finger popStansbury spent Chrlslrnas In ping at the audience. "Hey,
man, ain't this something?
Wallingford, Pa. with her All you p eo pIe out there.
""'f ,daughter, Jane.
Hey, man, this is really right
on. Right? You k_ids, right?
Right on. Man. Right on.
Praise God. Hey! How many
THANKS GIVEN
out there have bought my
A vote of thanks has been re.cord? It's in the lobby.
extended to the Rutland Five bucks. What are you , a
American Legion Post for bunch of cheapskates?"
There are, at conservative
baseball equipment donated to
more than 200 travelcount,
the Pomeroy Boys League,
Ing Baptist preachers In the
United States. But t h e r e

Pa st 0 r

To Stop In Or

#90

To Be Sure To

BA

M"N ' t 50

Have For Easter.

IIRKLIY
100YARDSPOOL

HECK'S REG.

$1.28

A PERFECT MATCH , , , Eye-catching beauties in
14K white or yellow gold. Keepsake's interlocki11g
diamond engagement and wedding rings, with matching
ring for .him. The tenter engagement diamond is perfect! .

JUST- ARRIVED

'-I·IO.IZ·15-2tll~ TEST

-New Shipment of Young
' Par1keets • H1msters and

(

S/IOITS .,,,,

j, ' .,

Gulnel Pigs.
o

· 399 W. Mlln St.

FWWERS, FLOWERS, FLOWERS - On sale on the
upper Pomeroy·parking lot are flowers from Don Hubbard's
greenhouse. Hubbard, who for the past three years has
raised flowers in his greenhouse in Syracuse, is selling
flowers wlth a portion of the profit going to the Meigs Athletic
Bo011ters. Mrs. Hubbard, assisting in the operation, displays
many attractive mums. Colored mums sell lor $2.50 each and
white mums $2. The sale of the·flowers, which also includes
pansies and coleus, will be conducted two months. The
Boosters' proceeds will be used to purchase new lights lor the
football field at Pomeroy. Hubbard, In addition to his flower
project, also raises tomatoes, cucumbers and peppers.
Hubbard wholesales and retails the flowers .

with Helen Woode, program
leader.
The commlBiity was saddened by the untimely death of
Archie Wells of Sumner, 0,, on
Saturday.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Vere Swartz were : Mr.
and Mrs. Wald Swartz and
Carrie Burson, all of Athens;
Rev. Jacob Lelunan of Tuppers
Plains, and Mr., and Mrs.
Charles D. Woode, local.
Mr. andMrs.PeteParsonsol
Huntington, W. Va., spent the
weekend with their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr, and Mrs.
Terry Swartz,
· Mrs, Mary Amos, local, and
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Dotson of

Parkersburg were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell
·Findling.
· Mr. and Mrs. Harold Swartz
and family of Williamstown,
W.Va., visited his parents, Mr.
and Mrs, Hobart Swartz, last
Sunday.
Mr.andMrs. BiiiFollrodand
Sue Ann of Athens spent
Sunday wlth Clara Follrod and
Nina Robinson.
Guests of the William Carr
family and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles D. Woode Saturday
evening were Mr. and Mrs.
Clair Woode and Conni Sue of
Circleville, 0., and David
Arnold of Somerset, Ohio,

PROGRAM NOTED
The annual 4·H Plan-a-rama
will he staged at 7:30 Monday
night at the Pomeroy
Elementary School. Projects
will be presented, there will be
door prizes, and refreshments.

The most difficult of all
virtues is the for g i v i n g
spirit. Revenge seems to be
natural with man ; it is human to wanl tQ get even with
an enemy . - William J ennings Bryan, statesman.

•••••••
•••
•

••

•

992; 2164

Pomtrpy,

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School att~dan::e
at the Free Methodist Church,
March 26 was 130, offering lor
the day was $180.64,
Mr . Charles Diehl spent
several days at his home. He
returned to University
Hospital, Columbus, Monday
lor medical treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell,
Indiana, were called here by
the illness of their son, Jeff,
who was taken by Ewing
ambulance to Holzer Hospital
Thursday evening suffering
from an ,ulcer. He returned
Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs.
Howell returned to Indiana
Sonday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Stahl,
New Marshfield; Mr. and Mrs .
William Perry, Athens, and
Mrs . Verm Story and John,
Columbus, visited recently
with Mr , and Mrs. Norman
Schaefer.
Mrs. Norman Schaefer
received word that her brother,
Mark Stahl and wife, Stockdale, were in a wreck of which
each were taken to a hospital.
Mr. Stahl is seriously ill in a
U!illicothe hospital in intensive
care. Mrs. Stahl remains in a
Portsmouth hospital im·
proving.

• ••••••••••

I '

. , I, , ,

o.

l'i

••

Miss

•••
•

Ame~ica.

••
•
••
••

Shoes

• ee

I

e

I I

••
•

Come out of hiding and
slip into som elhing breezy.
Opening up a new loo k
fo r hours of frolic
..un.der the su n.
•·

..
seems to be only one Freddie Gage , Some people would
say Amen to that and thank
heaven. But others, many
others, are more than happy
that Rev. Freddie G a g e,
white boots and all, is on
the religious stump. His fol lowers. mostly young, believe Reverend Gage is the
damndest sin killer of them
all.
Gage is billed as the friend
o! the freak. He claims he
was once a drug abuser on
the seamy side of Houston,
Tex. He says he spent his
youth runnmg with crumbums, shilling lor pushers
and badgering cops. But he
was lucky. Says he : "I found
Jesus when l was 19 and I
been shilling for Him ever

since.',

ought to talk to God five
times a day ... "l.
Still, his following grows .
The kids love him . He has
participated in more than
700 evangelistic crusades,
addressed assemblies in an
equal number of s~hools,

and saved, he says, "something over a quarter of a
milhon souls."

He does all this pleasanlly ,
as itinerant Baptist preachers go. He doesn't shout a
crack in the cross . He isn't
hooked on orthodox I "My
only hangup is John, 3rd
chapter") . And he's e v en
witty : "Sometimes you get
tired preaching. I remember
one night I got on a plane
and l was so tired l promised myself l wouldn't try
to convert the pilot, or the
stewardess ., I'd just go to
sleep and not e v e n think
about Jesus . Then up comes
this little old lady and she
says to me : 'Is this seal
saved•' I said l don't know
lady, but l sure am ."
He goes or. like that until
the service is over. Praise
God.
Organ music.
People get up to go.
"Now I'm gonna ask you
one more thing," Reverend
Freddie says, unfortunalety ,

White Leather
Lilac Leather
Yellow Leather
Blue Leather

Reverend Freddie is 37
now . His hairline is · receding. And his attempts at
dropout dialect 1"I go t t a
split, man ") are a bit much.
Black Patent
But in a time of -~ee n -age
White
Patent
Jesus lads, the hipster pasWinter Whit~ Shag
tor is enjoying unprecedented popularity. He spends
20 days a month on the road
crusading for the souls of
•·motorcycle riders, drug addicts , hippies" and the rest
of the k i d s he says the
church has given up for lost.
"You ain't 1 o s t with " I'm go n n a ask you to
SHOE FASHIONS
Jesus," he assures the young please buy my record when
104 E. MAIN
faces in the mahogany pews. you leave the church."
POMEROY, OHIO
And the remark is usually
greeted with a mumbled, appreciative "amen to that. "
Gage believes that delinquent kids can find themselves by finding God. It's as
simple as that. And to prove
it, he relates endless success
stories about his own "Pulpit in the Shadows." The pul·
pit, located on Houston's
north side, is a drug rehabil...
itation c e n t e r. Reverend
For
Freddie says 3,000 kids have
(27) 10 lb. GROUND BEEF
The
found Jesus and new life in
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST
Freezer
the place : " I started it in
5 lb. ROUND StEAK
1963 and it's still go in g
strong. We gel all k in d s
3 lb. STEW MEAT
!here. You name it. I've seen
many ~ sad case. But Jesus
greets them all · the same.
Sib. GROUND BEEF
He's ready to help. Man .
S lb. CHUCK ROAST
I've seen thousands of kids
5 lb. PORK CHOPS
kick the drug habit just by
5 lb. SLICED or SLAB
being there with Jesus ."
BACON
There are, of course, many
people who wonder a b o u t
what Reverend Freddie has
really seen. Skeptics famil(29) 10 lb. CHUCK ROAST
..
Iar with narcotics addiction
10 lb. GROUND BEEF
•
are not quick to accept the
'12 SEMI BONELESS HAM
possibility that the Bible is
16-7 tb. J
of any physiologica l benefil
to a junkie on smack. The
reverend's motives are I)Jlt
questioned. But hi s intelli 1 lb. or 100 lb.
gence is. His knowledge of
drugs ~ is superficial. · and
dated. And his moral sluffiness is of his own rather
than tht• p•·esent generation . .
1 "1 ~on'l nllow smoking in
on~ lb.
'" ~ pdlpit .
l lhink WI'

Chapman's
SHOES

USDA

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Your Order!
992-3502-

THE . STORE WITH "AlL KINDS 01'
'- STUFF"-FOR PET$! STABLES, LARGE &amp;
SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS AND GARDENS.

!1.

ANNUAL SALE SET
The annual spring rwnmage
sale of Heath United Methodist
Church, corner o( Third and
Main, Middleport, will he held
April 4-6 in the basement of the
church, Rummage is to he
brought to the church on
Monday morning. The sale will
open at 9 a.m. each day.

CHOICE

I

MODERN ·SUPPLY
'·

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WED . IIINO 3.4 .'7!5
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HUTCH

URTON

HECK'S
REG.

$5 Contn'bu•-.J

· and ~ned with pr?y~r by
~elen Wood~ and .~• smgmg of
·What A Frten~.
.
_ A total of 18 siCk and shut-m
calls were reported for the past
mon~, Th~ usual-pledge was
set nt to Fatr Chance, Inc.
wo subscriptions to the
"World
Outlook"
and
"Response" magazines were
voted to be renewed. The group
also voted to furnish the ham
lor the Easter breakfast.
Osie Mae Follrod led the
program, "A Celebration of
Lilieratioli at Easter Time,"
with readings by all, and
responsive readings by the
leader and the people, .~ken
. from the ~rogram book~ Leap
In Fatth.
Songs used were: "Freedom
Song" (tune of "Michael Row
the Boat ~ore"), "He Lives"
and "Praise Him, Praise
Him,"
The hostess served delicious
refreshmen~ to her guests
during the social hour. The
next meeting will be held on
Tuesday evening, April 18, at
. the home of Osie Mae Follrod

FOR
EASTER

SPORTS 111'1.

WINCHESTER

SPLIT·SHOT

,
cancer researcher, was the
meeting's medical speaker. He
is Professor of Medicine and
Director of the Environmental
Sciences Laboratory at Mt.
Sinal Hospital in New York
City. Dr. Sellkoff spoke on
industrial causes of cancer He
noted that, · "In our -mdusinat
'society; vast numbers of people
are slightly exposed to in·
numerable chemical and
physical ~gents, and a small
number have extremely heavy
occupational exposure," He
talked of a study that he is
conducting that will determine
death rates · from cancer- of
vario~ sites among those who
have had prolong~· exposure
to various . chemical and
physical substances.

El~~!t~eetingwasinchargeol
June Steams, Vice-President,

.,;._.-.i,...._.._!'""___________

guides, medium weight.

SOOCOUNT

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Open: Friday, Mar. 31st, 9Til8:30
Sal., April I, 9 Ti19

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ANGLER

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66(

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rtsi51ont throughot.lf.

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HECK'S REG. $9.99

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lll"~o lf, ac rio ~ .

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"lbered

When a camper is a lang way from home and all
that's between him and a good night's sleep is a sle~p­
ing ~ag, he knows he can __ count on an M&amp;H . It's the
sleeping bog
trust.

HECK'S REG. $11.99

SPOITS DEPT.

•

SPORTS 111'1.

115254

100111 RUN-11tetMuan Reacue Squad, under the direCtion of Chief James Lavender,
bas completed Ita tooth run and bas traveled a total distance of 4,065 miles since It began
operatiGn January 1, thl8 yeat, The· tooth nm was made by Captain 'George VanMatre,
asllstant chief John Harrah, Dick Carson and DaYton Raynes.

SPIN REEL

Sizes

HECK'S REG. $20.99

$899

HECK'S REG. $12.97

300

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MITCHELL

Sunday School attendance on
March 26 was 55, the offering
$19.48. Worship services were
held at 11 with the Rev. Ullman speaking on "Riding with
Jesus VIctorious," from Mark
2:1•11. "The Lord must have
first place."
Good Friday services with .·
conimunion will be held at the
church here Friday evening,
March 31 at 7:30.
Easter Sunr~ services will
be held here on SWiday at 6:30,
With breakfast to follow in the
church basemen~
Regular services will follow
wlth ~ay School at 9:45, an
EasteregghlBit at 10:451or the
children and worship services
at II, with the Rev. Lelunan
speaking .
AHred Satiety
The AHred Women's Society
held its regular meeting on
Tuesday evening, March' 21, at
the home of Genevieve Guthrie
with an attendance of 10
members and two visitors
(Evelyn Lehman and Martha

Laurel Cliff

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Donohue of Huntington, former
residents of Harrisonville, ai:e
announ~ing . the birth of a
daughter, Angela Maria, born
on March 20. The infant
weighed eight pounds, six
OWices. Mr .and Mrs. Earl Arix
of Harrisonville and Mr. and
Mrs. Haymond Donohue of
Pomeroy, Route 4 are the
grandparents.

Alfred

GROUND

�.

.. .

.. .. .

Social Note.'l
ONIIIAI.Y
10TO 9

•

'

'

PRICES II EFFECT THROUGH SATURDAY APRIL 1, WHILE Q~~ln'JIES iAST

46 QT. COLEMAN COOLER
world's finest insulation, unbreakable liners, reinforced rust-proof bose, 2 bottle openers, chromed
hardware, lost action drain .

Rally
Baseball
Shoes

SPINCAST REEL

HUTCH
Choose from first basemen's mit!
catcher's mitt or fielder' s glove.

CHOICE
•

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SPORTS DEPT.

99

Sturdy chrome bails

·v·0 Iunteers
'.
M
H
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. eet ope

hardened line roller~. • S~~;~~
steady disc drag systems. •
precision coined metal
Selective onti·revene e Ruljgtd .
metal case, corrosion resistant

'·• !.

; , _
-·,' .?JLUM~US-:- ~e thol!SBnd
~rlcan .. ·Can'cer ·Society
~olunteers frilm all o\oer Ohio
~\ll'e at ·the Ohio
·l'Unllin Monday on the campus
• of Ohio State University to
.. meet Bob Hope, this year's
o\CS Ohio Dlvlalori -Crusade
C!:hainnan, and to kickoff the
'1972 state drive.
1 The 14th Annual Cured
_eancer . As&amp;embly and 1972
ohio Crusade Kickoff launched
'iqnonth4ong April Crusade in
~otocollectover ta'ril million
Jor 1 -J'Qeiii'Cb, educa~on, and
iler'rice to cancer patients.
Eighty men and women, cured
of ·cancer for flve ot more
yea'ra, participated in the even_
!
·as liVIng testimony that cancer
can· lle cured.''
~\ H~ ad~ . the
audience on a rare serious note
sa~, "IImow~cer~ be
curep now. In Ohio alone there
are :over 77,000 men, women.

throughout ..

Heek's Reg. '3.88

HECK'S REG.

$16.97 .

Pt Pleasant Store On~

JOHNSON

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BERKLEY

$7.99

4201

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•

1545- For heavy fi shing when extra
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SPOITSDEPT.

S/IOITS /JEPT.

SON BoRN ON !7TH
Mr.and Mrs. David YolBig of
142 West End Ave., New York
City, N.Y., are announcing the
birth of a son, Dalton Patrick,
011 st. Patrick's Day,March 17 ,
at Beth Israel Medical Center
In New York City. The lnfimt
weighed seven po1B1ds, five
ounces. Mrs. Young, the former Letta Jeannette BIBS, Is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Bass of Pomeroy and Is
a graduate of Pomeroy High
School. Mr. Younglsaleadlng
musician and bandleader in the
. NYC area.

·•h• young praler
.,.

-~~-

..

.
.
and children alive and well
loday who guarded their life
through early diagnosis and
prompt treatment. we can't
ignore our h~lth and expect to
s~y well. It's what you don't
know that can hurt you."
Dr, Irving Sellkoll, noted

&gt;

I'.,

..

'•

C,hildren's Oxford
, Size 4.8

$477

CROSSMAN

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HECK'S
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99•

SPOITS
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SIORTSDEPT.

WU

A $5 contribution was made
lo the Meigs CoWity Satiety for

!it•

Crippled Children and Adults
at Tuesday night's meeting of
the Homebuilders Class at the
Middleport Church of Christ.
· .RaY!llOnd Stewart P.resided
'* "lhe meeting daring which-. - '
time lt was decided lo pur~hase ·
two IUies for Easter services.
By TOM TIEDE
Mrs. Carl Roadh had the
opening pa·ayer. A Bible study
R l V E-R D A L E, Md.was held. Attending besides 1NEAl- The church is filled
those named were Miss · almost to capacity. S o m e
Thelma Boyer, Mrs. KeMeth bald heads. Many in the 311
McElhinny, l&gt;frs. Russell to 40 age group. And l(unWilson, Mrs. William Grueser, dreds and hundreds of kids .
Shhhhhhhh.
Mr . and Mrs, Milton
Let us pray. ·
Houdashelt and Mrs, Stewart.
", . . And, Lord, we know
that the young people here
have money. too, and they
RETURNS HOME
can give. We pray that we
Mrs, Garen Stansbury has may all give liberally . ln
returned to her Grant St. home Jesus n3me, Amen."
in Middleport alter spending
Pass the plate.
the winter in Hernando, F1a.
Clink, clink.
with her son and daughter-in·
Quiet.
law, Mr. and Mrs. William
There he is! White boots.
Stansbury. Among the visitors Double breasted, d o u b l e
at the Stansbury home dlirlng knit, double look suit. Reverher visit there were Mr. and end Freddie Gage! The UnMrs. Hannon O'Brien and Mr, derworld Preacher. Red
and Mrs. James O'Brien. Mrs. Bible in hand. Finger popStansbury spent Chrlslrnas In ping at the audience. "Hey,
man, ain't this something?
Wallingford, Pa. with her All you p eo pIe out there.
""'f ,daughter, Jane.
Hey, man, this is really right
on. Right? You k_ids, right?
Right on. Man. Right on.
Praise God. Hey! How many
THANKS GIVEN
out there have bought my
A vote of thanks has been re.cord? It's in the lobby.
extended to the Rutland Five bucks. What are you , a
American Legion Post for bunch of cheapskates?"
There are, at conservative
baseball equipment donated to
more than 200 travelcount,
the Pomeroy Boys League,
Ing Baptist preachers In the
United States. But t h e r e

Pa st 0 r

To Stop In Or

#90

To Be Sure To

BA

M"N ' t 50

Have For Easter.

IIRKLIY
100YARDSPOOL

HECK'S REG.

$1.28

A PERFECT MATCH , , , Eye-catching beauties in
14K white or yellow gold. Keepsake's interlocki11g
diamond engagement and wedding rings, with matching
ring for .him. The tenter engagement diamond is perfect! .

JUST- ARRIVED

'-I·IO.IZ·15-2tll~ TEST

-New Shipment of Young
' Par1keets • H1msters and

(

S/IOITS .,,,,

j, ' .,

Gulnel Pigs.
o

· 399 W. Mlln St.

FWWERS, FLOWERS, FLOWERS - On sale on the
upper Pomeroy·parking lot are flowers from Don Hubbard's
greenhouse. Hubbard, who for the past three years has
raised flowers in his greenhouse in Syracuse, is selling
flowers wlth a portion of the profit going to the Meigs Athletic
Bo011ters. Mrs. Hubbard, assisting in the operation, displays
many attractive mums. Colored mums sell lor $2.50 each and
white mums $2. The sale of the·flowers, which also includes
pansies and coleus, will be conducted two months. The
Boosters' proceeds will be used to purchase new lights lor the
football field at Pomeroy. Hubbard, In addition to his flower
project, also raises tomatoes, cucumbers and peppers.
Hubbard wholesales and retails the flowers .

with Helen Woode, program
leader.
The commlBiity was saddened by the untimely death of
Archie Wells of Sumner, 0,, on
Saturday.
Recent guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Vere Swartz were : Mr.
and Mrs. Wald Swartz and
Carrie Burson, all of Athens;
Rev. Jacob Lelunan of Tuppers
Plains, and Mr., and Mrs.
Charles D. Woode, local.
Mr. andMrs.PeteParsonsol
Huntington, W. Va., spent the
weekend with their son-in-law
and daughter, Mr, and Mrs.
Terry Swartz,
· Mrs, Mary Amos, local, and
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Dotson of

Parkersburg were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Russell
·Findling.
· Mr. and Mrs. Harold Swartz
and family of Williamstown,
W.Va., visited his parents, Mr.
and Mrs, Hobart Swartz, last
Sunday.
Mr.andMrs. BiiiFollrodand
Sue Ann of Athens spent
Sunday wlth Clara Follrod and
Nina Robinson.
Guests of the William Carr
family and Mr. and Mrs.
Charles D. Woode Saturday
evening were Mr. and Mrs.
Clair Woode and Conni Sue of
Circleville, 0., and David
Arnold of Somerset, Ohio,

PROGRAM NOTED
The annual 4·H Plan-a-rama
will he staged at 7:30 Monday
night at the Pomeroy
Elementary School. Projects
will be presented, there will be
door prizes, and refreshments.

The most difficult of all
virtues is the for g i v i n g
spirit. Revenge seems to be
natural with man ; it is human to wanl tQ get even with
an enemy . - William J ennings Bryan, statesman.

•••••••
•••
•

••

•

992; 2164

Pomtrpy,

By Bertha Parker
Sabbath School att~dan::e
at the Free Methodist Church,
March 26 was 130, offering lor
the day was $180.64,
Mr . Charles Diehl spent
several days at his home. He
returned to University
Hospital, Columbus, Monday
lor medical treatment.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Howell,
Indiana, were called here by
the illness of their son, Jeff,
who was taken by Ewing
ambulance to Holzer Hospital
Thursday evening suffering
from an ,ulcer. He returned
Friday evening. Mr. and Mrs.
Howell returned to Indiana
Sonday.
Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Stahl,
New Marshfield; Mr. and Mrs .
William Perry, Athens, and
Mrs . Verm Story and John,
Columbus, visited recently
with Mr , and Mrs. Norman
Schaefer.
Mrs. Norman Schaefer
received word that her brother,
Mark Stahl and wife, Stockdale, were in a wreck of which
each were taken to a hospital.
Mr. Stahl is seriously ill in a
U!illicothe hospital in intensive
care. Mrs. Stahl remains in a
Portsmouth hospital im·
proving.

• ••••••••••

I '

. , I, , ,

o.

l'i

••

Miss

•••
•

Ame~ica.

••
•
••
••

Shoes

• ee

I

e

I I

••
•

Come out of hiding and
slip into som elhing breezy.
Opening up a new loo k
fo r hours of frolic
..un.der the su n.
•·

..
seems to be only one Freddie Gage , Some people would
say Amen to that and thank
heaven. But others, many
others, are more than happy
that Rev. Freddie G a g e,
white boots and all, is on
the religious stump. His fol lowers. mostly young, believe Reverend Gage is the
damndest sin killer of them
all.
Gage is billed as the friend
o! the freak. He claims he
was once a drug abuser on
the seamy side of Houston,
Tex. He says he spent his
youth runnmg with crumbums, shilling lor pushers
and badgering cops. But he
was lucky. Says he : "I found
Jesus when l was 19 and I
been shilling for Him ever

since.',

ought to talk to God five
times a day ... "l.
Still, his following grows .
The kids love him . He has
participated in more than
700 evangelistic crusades,
addressed assemblies in an
equal number of s~hools,

and saved, he says, "something over a quarter of a
milhon souls."

He does all this pleasanlly ,
as itinerant Baptist preachers go. He doesn't shout a
crack in the cross . He isn't
hooked on orthodox I "My
only hangup is John, 3rd
chapter") . And he's e v en
witty : "Sometimes you get
tired preaching. I remember
one night I got on a plane
and l was so tired l promised myself l wouldn't try
to convert the pilot, or the
stewardess ., I'd just go to
sleep and not e v e n think
about Jesus . Then up comes
this little old lady and she
says to me : 'Is this seal
saved•' I said l don't know
lady, but l sure am ."
He goes or. like that until
the service is over. Praise
God.
Organ music.
People get up to go.
"Now I'm gonna ask you
one more thing," Reverend
Freddie says, unfortunalety ,

White Leather
Lilac Leather
Yellow Leather
Blue Leather

Reverend Freddie is 37
now . His hairline is · receding. And his attempts at
dropout dialect 1"I go t t a
split, man ") are a bit much.
Black Patent
But in a time of -~ee n -age
White
Patent
Jesus lads, the hipster pasWinter Whit~ Shag
tor is enjoying unprecedented popularity. He spends
20 days a month on the road
crusading for the souls of
•·motorcycle riders, drug addicts , hippies" and the rest
of the k i d s he says the
church has given up for lost.
"You ain't 1 o s t with " I'm go n n a ask you to
SHOE FASHIONS
Jesus," he assures the young please buy my record when
104 E. MAIN
faces in the mahogany pews. you leave the church."
POMEROY, OHIO
And the remark is usually
greeted with a mumbled, appreciative "amen to that. "
Gage believes that delinquent kids can find themselves by finding God. It's as
simple as that. And to prove
it, he relates endless success
stories about his own "Pulpit in the Shadows." The pul·
pit, located on Houston's
north side, is a drug rehabil...
itation c e n t e r. Reverend
For
Freddie says 3,000 kids have
(27) 10 lb. GROUND BEEF
The
found Jesus and new life in
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST
Freezer
the place : " I started it in
5 lb. ROUND StEAK
1963 and it's still go in g
strong. We gel all k in d s
3 lb. STEW MEAT
!here. You name it. I've seen
many ~ sad case. But Jesus
greets them all · the same.
Sib. GROUND BEEF
He's ready to help. Man .
S lb. CHUCK ROAST
I've seen thousands of kids
5 lb. PORK CHOPS
kick the drug habit just by
5 lb. SLICED or SLAB
being there with Jesus ."
BACON
There are, of course, many
people who wonder a b o u t
what Reverend Freddie has
really seen. Skeptics famil(29) 10 lb. CHUCK ROAST
..
Iar with narcotics addiction
10 lb. GROUND BEEF
•
are not quick to accept the
'12 SEMI BONELESS HAM
possibility that the Bible is
16-7 tb. J
of any physiologica l benefil
to a junkie on smack. The
reverend's motives are I)Jlt
questioned. But hi s intelli 1 lb. or 100 lb.
gence is. His knowledge of
drugs ~ is superficial. · and
dated. And his moral sluffiness is of his own rather
than tht• p•·esent generation . .
1 "1 ~on'l nllow smoking in
on~ lb.
'" ~ pdlpit .
l lhink WI'

Chapman's
SHOES

USDA

Phone Us
Your Order!
992-3502-

THE . STORE WITH "AlL KINDS 01'
'- STUFF"-FOR PET$! STABLES, LARGE &amp;
SMALL ANIMALS, LAWNS AND GARDENS.

!1.

ANNUAL SALE SET
The annual spring rwnmage
sale of Heath United Methodist
Church, corner o( Third and
Main, Middleport, will he held
April 4-6 in the basement of the
church, Rummage is to he
brought to the church on
Monday morning. The sale will
open at 9 a.m. each day.

CHOICE

I

MODERN ·SUPPLY
'·

z.-.HE U50
WED . IIINO 3.4 .'7!5
MAN ' &amp; 11 .50

h ..

I

MONO FISHING
LIIE

News Notes ·

$

Phone Your Order Now

HUTCH

URTON

HECK'S
REG.

$5 Contn'bu•-.J

· and ~ned with pr?y~r by
~elen Wood~ and .~• smgmg of
·What A Frten~.
.
_ A total of 18 siCk and shut-m
calls were reported for the past
mon~, Th~ usual-pledge was
set nt to Fatr Chance, Inc.
wo subscriptions to the
"World
Outlook"
and
"Response" magazines were
voted to be renewed. The group
also voted to furnish the ham
lor the Easter breakfast.
Osie Mae Follrod led the
program, "A Celebration of
Lilieratioli at Easter Time,"
with readings by all, and
responsive readings by the
leader and the people, .~ken
. from the ~rogram book~ Leap
In Fatth.
Songs used were: "Freedom
Song" (tune of "Michael Row
the Boat ~ore"), "He Lives"
and "Praise Him, Praise
Him,"
The hostess served delicious
refreshmen~ to her guests
during the social hour. The
next meeting will be held on
Tuesday evening, April 18, at
. the home of Osie Mae Follrod

FOR
EASTER

SPORTS 111'1.

WINCHESTER

SPLIT·SHOT

,
cancer researcher, was the
meeting's medical speaker. He
is Professor of Medicine and
Director of the Environmental
Sciences Laboratory at Mt.
Sinal Hospital in New York
City. Dr. Sellkoff spoke on
industrial causes of cancer He
noted that, · "In our -mdusinat
'society; vast numbers of people
are slightly exposed to in·
numerable chemical and
physical ~gents, and a small
number have extremely heavy
occupational exposure," He
talked of a study that he is
conducting that will determine
death rates · from cancer- of
vario~ sites among those who
have had prolong~· exposure
to various . chemical and
physical substances.

El~~!t~eetingwasinchargeol
June Steams, Vice-President,

.,;._.-.i,...._.._!'""___________

guides, medium weight.

SOOCOUNT

SPORTS DEPT.

Open: Friday, Mar. 31st, 9Til8:30
Sal., April I, 9 Ti19

2-PC. ROD

PELLETS

HECK'S REG. 97'

.$599

ANGLER

FISH STRINGER

66(

Women's Brown Strop an~ Beige
Sling Shoes. Broken sl•es.
On I

.Where Shoes are Sensibly Priced
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

9HOOK

TElliS
BAlLS
Ideal for a.-eroge

$8.99

. '"EASTER SURPRISE"

· THE SHOE BOX

~
177 CAL.

JUG
Unbeatable for keeping drinks
cold I Big 2-gollon size for big
families, long trips. FAST-FlO
FAUCET fills glon in 41t&lt;ondo.

FUEL GALLON

HECK'5
REG.

COLEMAN 2 GAL.

=:

c

P~t

A. li~iJhl ·w•itiilhl •pinning rMI with inttrnol

LANTERN
BAnERY

TENNIS
RACKET

Pt

SPIN REEL
rtsi51ont throughot.lf.

saaa

$799
HECK'S REG. $9.99

SPORTS DEPT.

HECK'S·6VOLT

• SIK!ro·Oial, """"pink,. dn•e• liglll -~~~ haod
rltriol,. • Duol on~.,.,.,
flart.....,dt...d '--1·
loy '"'n e l""gllen-corltidoo pKbrp pine Cia..CiwroiiK • Stoinltuot..lcrank •nd drM okalto.

.. •

ZEBCO 1545 ROP &amp; REEL COMBO

HECK'S
REG.

SPALDING

IERKLEY440

--- -·

l to I ,,,. .... _All -

lll"~o lf, ac rio ~ .

.

"lbered

When a camper is a lang way from home and all
that's between him and a good night's sleep is a sle~p­
ing ~ag, he knows he can __ count on an M&amp;H . It's the
sleeping bog
trust.

HECK'S REG. $11.99

SPOITS DEPT.

•

SPORTS 111'1.

115254

100111 RUN-11tetMuan Reacue Squad, under the direCtion of Chief James Lavender,
bas completed Ita tooth run and bas traveled a total distance of 4,065 miles since It began
operatiGn January 1, thl8 yeat, The· tooth nm was made by Captain 'George VanMatre,
asllstant chief John Harrah, Dick Carson and DaYton Raynes.

SPIN REEL

Sizes

HECK'S REG. $20.99

$899

HECK'S REG. $12.97

300

2to9

BALL GLOVES

America's most popular fishing
reel. Known the world over as the
finest reel of ih type . With line .
0

88

$

ZEBC033

.,.

MITCHELL

Sunday School attendance on
March 26 was 55, the offering
$19.48. Worship services were
held at 11 with the Rev. Ullman speaking on "Riding with
Jesus VIctorious," from Mark
2:1•11. "The Lord must have
first place."
Good Friday services with .·
conimunion will be held at the
church here Friday evening,
March 31 at 7:30.
Easter Sunr~ services will
be held here on SWiday at 6:30,
With breakfast to follow in the
church basemen~
Regular services will follow
wlth ~ay School at 9:45, an
EasteregghlBit at 10:451or the
children and worship services
at II, with the Rev. Lelunan
speaking .
AHred Satiety
The AHred Women's Society
held its regular meeting on
Tuesday evening, March' 21, at
the home of Genevieve Guthrie
with an attendance of 10
members and two visitors
(Evelyn Lehman and Martha

Laurel Cliff

DAUGHTER BORN
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen
Donohue of Huntington, former
residents of Harrisonville, ai:e
announ~ing . the birth of a
daughter, Angela Maria, born
on March 20. The infant
weighed eight pounds, six
OWices. Mr .and Mrs. Earl Arix
of Harrisonville and Mr. and
Mrs. Haymond Donohue of
Pomeroy, Route 4 are the
grandparents.

Alfred

GROUND

�:·.

,. ~ ,; '

•.

•

•
I

I~

I

•

,.

II- 'lbe lllli!Y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifie~ Get Reslulr~r
@) 2 SIGNS Po••nf I Busm··ess se..-,rr:ces
.a
5

WANT ADs
Wanted To Buy
Help ~anted
INFORMATION
OLD FURNITUR E. dishes, HIG H · scHOO L SE NIO RS.
DEADLIN.ES
clocks, brass beds, sil ver
Enlist now - stay home until .
P.M.
Oay . Before
dolla rs
or
comp le te
aft er graduation. Guaran teed .

Publication
Monday Deadlhi' 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be ac::cepted un111 9 a.m. 'tor

househo ld s. Wr ite M . o .
Mill er , R l. 4, Pomeroy , Oh io.

assi gnm en ts to Eur o p e ~
Korea, Hawaii, or selected

3-16 -tfc

local Army r epresentalive for

Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the

Nf

r ight to edit or reject an y ads

REDUC E sale &amp;

deemed objecti onal.

0

last .with

GoBese Tab le ts &amp; E-Va p

publl sher
w ill not be
responsible for mor e than one
incorrect Insertion .

" water pill s' at Nelson Drugs.

For Wan t Ad Ser vice
5 cents per Word on e insert ion '
M inimum Charge75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertion s.
18 cents per word six cOn secutl ve Insertions.

25 Per Cent Di scount on paid
ads and ads pa id within 10

day s.
CAIID OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

J. J1.20tp
- - - - - - -·

~

-

~----

SHOOT ING Ma tc h. Saturday,
April l , al the Raci ne Planing
Mill at 6 p .m . Fac tory choke
guns onl y . Assorted meat .
Spon sor ed by the Svracuse
Fire Dept.
3·29-Jtc

REDUCE e&gt;eess flu ids with
FLUIDEX. $1.69 - LOSE
WEIGHT safety with Dex·A·
Diet , 98c a t Nelson Dr ugs.

J-29-ltp

$1.50 for 50 word min imum .

Each additional word 2c.
GUN SHOOT. also rifle matches
BLIND ADS
- open sites only, Forked
Add itional 25c Charge per
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
April 2, 12 noon .

Ad vertisement.

fac ts abou t th e 180-Day
Delayed Entry Program and
the Army 's new pay raise.

tee

The

RATES

locati ons In the US. See your

Call 992-627 1.

For more Information call

coll ec t 593-3022.
-

_ _____
J-_20_-l_t,tc
-

WANTED!

Carrlen For
MASON
and

HARTFORD
Not A Motor Route.

·The Dai~ Sentinel
Ph. 614-992·2156

..

· ·

.

lofOr (o.

clean interior, beige finish , radio .

1969 FORD FAIRLANE HT CPE.

5159S

with less than 23,000 miles, spotless Interior, good w-w
tires, "'hlle finish , blue Interior, radio.
1967 FORD MUSTANG HTCPE.
51395
V-8 engine. automatic trans ., p. steering, factory air
conditioned, wide oval fires; radio &amp; many other extras.

Gold finish, blk. interior.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. StOO P.M.
fJ)MEROY, OHIO

3 BR
HOME

We spec ialize In alum:lnum ,
vinyl and steel siding;
fiberglas, brick and stone ;
complete line of residentia l
l · and com mercia! roofing ;
i
remo1deling , butldln~.
suspended ceilings, · Interior
and exterior painting; com.
ptete line of Masonry work. All
work guaranteed to customer
satisfaction. We are tully
Insured for your protection . 32

N. 2nd. 992-3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp; ·
CONSTR. CO.

c'

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
KITCHEN
and

SON
CONST.

MILLER

- - - -- - -

..

WHITE

REALTY~
lad. ,.
VERA EBLEN

_____

-------

· $50 Reg. Mares
540 Grade

FRANCIS BENEDUM
Phone 667-3856

.

ON YOUR DIAL

··· · - ·.

--

('

• 'C,

'

Hl6 WIFE 5f.I01" HIM IIECAU6E
HE HAD A SECRETAR'i.

VOU SAV we
WEllE HAVti&lt;IG ·SOUL
f)t ~N'T

FOOD -TOI&gt;AV

f MI"f U\. , 01 011

BUT, I MEANT

BLI\CK SOUL!

~

YOU WANT

BURN

wa ~OUO.~

~e FtSH

"

::t

c"'*

"!osl AmeJieitl!.
-GUARANTEE~)-:
Phone 992-2094

OpeniTif 5
Monday thru S.turdlly
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

APPRENTICE

COMMUNI(:ATIONS
GAP ·STRIKES
AGAIN

CARPENTER.

1HAT POE5/Ilt 6EEM
ENOUGH REASON.

MARimA
TYPEWRmR

Pomeroy lto111e &amp;Auto

HE WMO AN

T~E

OFFICE
MACHIN£
REPAIR

.

On

r.r !"J"r HI A, Io.

· ··
Phone
.992-3975
992:5786
•

. '

'5.55

&lt;.

Make reservat.lon• for your ·
P,tvate parties, banquets.
.special occasions. .
•Ideal for meeting place . with or wl.thout kitchen
privileges.:
· ·
·
llldiv!dual Catering
. Will seat up lo 150 people.

EXPERT
Wheel Al_
ipment

Don&lt;&gt;t.e 'em to ®
th' Betsy Ross

-but

t.'ooseum -an·

~'f~

•'

•hook··

Th'socks
hain'tyor'n.
· The
handshake
willbea

HOPE 'rbU'RE NOT IN
A HURRY, LANCE. l'LL BE
HEI(!: FOIZ A~OTHEfZ.

TW&lt;fJT\'·TWO MINUTE G.

5u.Jindle !!
5hmindle!!

swindle!!

EnJOY!!

I

All WEATHER ROOFING
. &amp; CONSTRUCTION

&amp;·PLUMBING CO.
240 Lincoln St.
Middlef'Orl, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete Home
Maintenance SerVIce the

Frornjhe largi!•l
Bulldozer Radiator to · the
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathon Biggs
Radiator SpeclaNst

SMITH NELSON

v••r around: NO m1tter whit

your need. Complete roof or
spouting repelr. Interior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiling
Hie and 'Panellng and Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Hutlng.
Doy Numbor 992-2550
service.
t92-5iOJ
992·3191

MOlORS.· INC.
Pomeroy

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

742-3947

We are fully Insured

HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
OHIO. ·
3-5-JOic
------.,.._.,-.~
. ····· ·
SEWING MACHINt:S. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2284.
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.

Ft.OM!RS
ARRIVeDI.

Free Estimate

742-4761

INTER lOR &amp; exterior painting.
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 7n-5825.
·
~ · 27- 5tc

AH,I$1!E MY

Pit. 992-2174

We haYti 24 hr. emervency

B&amp;W HEATING CO.
For Appointtri~mt
Phone 949-2803
UPHOLSTERING SERVICE,
complete selection of fabrics
and vinyl to 'choo~e from.
Plck·UP and delivery. Slater
Upholstering. Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
phon' 992- 361~ . .
.
.~~:. ~••

Come in, but hurr4!

Nina Wallet,
Joel! I want
to talk
tQ ljOU!

1
·•
·. · ·.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rate~ · Ph. 446 .
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
Sanitation; Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Owner &amp; Operator.
662-3035.
· ' S-12-tfc
,
2-12-tfc
and aluminum siding;
BACKHOE. AND DOZtt&lt; work. VINYL
free estimates; references;
Septic tanks Installed. George call collect 446·3608, , Byerly
{Bill) Pullins. Phone 992''~78.
Construction Co .• .Gallipolis .
. 4.25-tfc
. • 3-74-30tp
PAINTING, Interior and exterior;
call
992-2368, O'DELL WHEEL allghment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Complete fronf end aervlce, ·
fune up and brake aotvlce;
Wheels balanced elecAll
work
troolcally .
Real Estate For Sale
guaranteed.
Reasonli~le
NICE 2-story home with tull
rate•. Phone 992-3213.
basemen!, 2 lofs, new forced
7·27-lft
alr furnace. Near Pomeroy.
Elementary School. Phone AUTOMOBILE lnsurar:e Deen
992-7384 to SJ"e.
cancelled?
Lost
yout
1P·tfc
operator's license? Call .fH.
2966 .
3BEDROOM ranch type tiome,
. 6·15-tfc
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Plains. All . new with total
c. BRADFORD, Au&lt;lloneer
electric and centra~ air
Complete Service ·•
conditioning, bath and '\4 fully
Phone 94'1·3821
carpeted, full basement;
Racine, Ohio
garage In basement. See by
Crill
Bradford
appointment, phone 992-2196
5·1-tfc
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson. .
.
.
Financing available.
READY-MIX CONCRETE dt·
12·30-tfc
livered right to your ~~rolect.
Fast and
easy, l" FrN
60X12. 2-bedroom, all -electilc,
estimates.
Phone
m-3284.
air conditioned, 8x20 ft . Porch , Goegleln Rea~y - Mix
Co.,
and aluminum awning,
Middleport,
Ohio.
aluminum skirting, com.
6-JO.tfc
pletely setup . Beautiful,
location. OWner leaving state.
Phone 949-4892 or 992·5272.
LEGAL NOTICE
1-10.tfc
LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
PROlATE COURT, MJIIGS
Authorlzed, Singer ~Sales and , .. \. .- J, \!J

Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
. 3-29-tfc

:..· ~·»-:IOtp

fierce how 6he ,...;-;;:--"
clo6~ back up!

___ ____

~1'.~'1'-E f..LL 8EitJio .:;6 ~\Cei,!

JtJSr c,A.t.tr BR1~il
M'ISE!.F 10 Tl;~t.. THeM~ COIJTf..CT u;~s WAS
I~ M~ P/&gt;.t-1\S cU~t= ALl. T~~ T\MG!

•!

•

,
.'
1

I

I

r

l

•

J

•

- - - - --

CLELAND
REALTY

608 East Main Street
POMEROY, OHIO
992-12591il4:00
Sunday &amp; Evenings
992-2568

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.· Broker ·

WMP0/1390
I

STUD SERVICE

-==========---===========:::

To You

.• . 1 .

APPOLOOSA
.
.

ONLY 513.750

·'

The
Orthid Room

REGISTERED

I car garage, brick front,
wall 1o· wall Cilrpej.

TERMITES. •TERMITES,

Langsville

·\f:!A

·

ON YOUR LOT

V-Bengine, automatic trans .• p. sieerlng, IOcall owner car

i(

.L Y

1970 FORD CUSTOM ST. WAG.
$19ff
351 V-8 eng., automatic trans .. power brakes, good tires,

Employment Wanted

MOBILE HOMES

A HOLE I'N
ONE!!

.

1

OFFICE HOURS
J-29-Jtc CARPENTER work ot any
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally.
kind. Phone De xter , Ohlo 742·
8: 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon WANTED - Anyone interested
4979. .
Auto Sales
For Sale
Saturday .
in cu! ling abou t . 100 acres of
3-28-JOtp
limber . Pay as you go. Phone
Get Rid of Them
992-5786.
1971 DODGE VAN, 6 cylinder. 3 BEEGLE pups, 6 months old,
WORK
in
Racine
area
such
as
We
wilt
protect any single
$15
male
and
female,
phone
Card
Thanks
speed, insulated &amp; paneled,
inside and outside painting ;
dwelling residence for
742-3656.
OUR HEARTFELT thanks to
27,000
miles.
$2,300
or
best
r oof jobs ; shingles ; spouting .
3·22·101p
our friends and neighbors of FI GHT fatig ue wi th Zi ppies, the
off er . Phone 698-3293.
Phone 949-2215.
'149.50
Syracuse and the Rutland .
3-23-61c
grea t iron pill. Only $1.98 at
3-28-31c
WRinEN
WARRANTY
Harrisonville area for the
Nelson Dr ugs.
FREE lickelsarenowavallable
"65
FORD
Falcon,
3
speed
Call
Collecl614-452-3158
many kindnesses and ex 3-17-JOtp DRY WALL Finisher con- lransmission, si x ti res, tw o on a free giant $20 Easter
pressions of sympathy ex tractor . R. I. Dubbeld, phone snow, all mounted ; bucket Basket large chocolate
tended at the lime of the toss READY NOW FOR Easter,
Easier bunny and large fruit
742-5825.
seats, good condition ; sell
of our dear husband and
and
nut Easter egg. See them
Mums
,
geraniums
and
reasonable ; call after 5 p.m.
father. Mr . Lyle Chapman . pan sie s , CLELAND ' S
today
and gel your free
992-5421.
Special !.hanks to Dr . Davis
ti
ckets,
purchase required,
Racine.
GREENHOUSE.
· 633 Mlln St.
3-28-6tp at the no
and staff; Holzer Medical
Bright
Star Market
J-nttc
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
Ohio
Zanesville,
Center and staff; Dr. Clark ;
next lo lhe Drive-In Theatre,
1965
INTERNATIONAL
1800
Mar t in Funeral Home ; Rev .
W. Va . where low
FT. WIDE frailer, with
series, long wheel base, good . Mason,
Ray Rouse . Rev. Dwigh t LOSE weight with New Shape 12aulomalic
prices and convenient service
washer &amp; dryer ;
Tablets,
10
day
supply
only
cab, good mechanical con Zavitz , Syracuse Ladies
featured every day, check
air -c ondit ioning ; TV; see
$1.49 at Dutton Drug Co.,
dition , Henry Bahr, 985-3988. are
Auxiliary and all ' who sent
the
following
and stock
Har
old
Johnson
,
Chester
,
Middleport, Nelson Drug
J-29-3tc your larder.prices
food , flowers and cards .
Favorite or
Ohio.
Store
,
Pomeroy.
Words cannot eKpress our
3-26-71p 1965 CHEVELLE 300, 6 cylin- Bonu• brand while bread 7
3-27-Jip
grateful feelings to everyone
der , 4 door, $475 ; phone 992· loaves $1 with $10 additional
who helped in so many ways.
purch;ose... Broughton's 2 pet.
1969
HOLLY
PARK,
12
x
60,
7126 .
Mrs. Lyle Chapman and ALL CATTLEMEN ARE IN sweet
milk gal. 99c, Bologna
early
American.
carpeted
3-28-Jip
VITED to the Rock Springs
children, Mrs. Bebea O'Dell,
in
piece
lb. 59c, grade A small
living
room,
front
dining
Fairgrounds, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Mrs. Jean Cremeans. Bob, Ed
eggs
3
doz.
$1, smoked slab
room.
two
bedrooms ,
1966 PLYMOUTH Barracuda,
Friday, March 31st, 7 p.m. for
and Bill Chapman .
bacon
whole
or half lb. 49c,
awnings,
underpinning.
the Southeastern Ohio Polled
V-8, 4-sr.eed . Phone 742-48511i Van Camp 29 oz.
3-29-ltc
can pork and
Phone
1-985-4210.
"Everything In Home
Heref ord
Association's
interes ed.
beans
2
cans
59c,
whole ··
Second Annual Graded Sale.
Maintenance"
THE FAMILY of Edward
3-26-61c kernel corn SHart's
cans Sl.
Grading will be done by a
Chapman wishes to thank the
Broughton's Ice Milk Ice
panel of three grades. 22
following : Dr. MarkleY• Dr.
MEIGS, W.VA. 25260
Found
Cream,
Gal. $1.19, while
Rugged
Bulls
{1
-5
yrs.
),
28
Davis, Martin Funeral Home,
MEIGS 992-7151
potatoes 50 lb. bag $1.59,
MONEY, Monday, March U, 10
Bred and Open Females 110
nurses at Holzer Medical
MASON 773-563~
a.m. in front of Liquor Store.
Gomplete assortment of fancy
mths.-6 yrs.) will be featured
Center,
Rev .
Rouse,
Owner may have by idenEaster goodies Including
an
exceptional
opportunity
pallbearers. also for the
tifying amounl and paying for
Easter Bilskels from $1.49 to
for commercial or registered
beautiful
floral
ad.
$20.
We accept Federal Food SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm
breeders. For Information :
arrangements, food and for
Coupon.
Slrelch your money, doors and windows, carports,
J-14-14tc
Sharon Sturbols, Rt. 4,
the many prayers. May Goo
•
food
coupons
and time, see us
Athens, Ohio 45701. Ph . 614·
bless each and everyone.
marquees, aluminum siding
f
or
seed
potatoes,
onion sets
For
Sale
593-8274.
Your kindness will never be
and
railing. A. Jacob, sales
and
garden
plants
as
needed.
12' • 14' · 24' • WiDE 2 TWIN bed, $25 : 1 Kenmore
forgotten by wife Alpharetta
3·26-41p
representative
. For free
Save in many. ways at Bright
estimates,
phone
Charles
I Eddie), brothers and sisters.
Electric dryer, $40 ; 1955 AMC
Star Market, next to Drive-In
Lisle,
Syracuse,
V. V.
3-29-ltp
truck, $50 ; phone 992-5654.
Theatre, Mason, W. Va .
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
3-24-101p
J.).ff
3-2-tfc:- - - -- - FERTILIZER
AKC REGISTERED Australian
Order now , gel earl y
1220 Washington Blvd.
terrier dogs, nice Easter giff. JUST a.rrlved , from factory,; a HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
discount . Bag , bulk and
Belpre,
Ohio
Service. Phone 992-2522.
reduced price SSO each ; phone new ~tne of itvlng room spt!es
liquid
f~rtll l zer .
Take
6-10.Ifc
delivery
from
our
area
Albany
698-3202.
·
starttng
as
low
as
$129.95
wtlh
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr
warehouse ~tt Pomeroy .
3-24-lOtp
Herculon
Covers;
new
1968, 60x12 two bedroom mobile
'
a)KI son, Shawn, of oak Hill,
home, fully carpeted except - - - - - - - - bedrq_9m .su jles as low as,
~ ' It
ASK ABOUT COMPLETE
bathroom and kitchen: 8x16 DROP leaf fable - $15 ; baby $109.95: Al"oiJr U~.KI Store on
Ohio were Sunday dinner
CUSTOM SPRAY SERVICE
porch , aluminum awning ,
bed _ SIO; high chair _ SJ; 1415 Eastern Ave., GaiiiPi&gt;lls, Real Estate For Sale
guests of his parents, Mr. and
al uminum skirting . Phone
Columbia Grafonola _ $15 , lots of good used furniture.
Mrs. Alpha Barr.
985-3309 or write Terry
gui tar·amp. oulti t _ SSO; old
Save yourself some money ; · .-~~
Order Your
Shop Parson's New &amp; Used
Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson
Swartz. Rl. 2, Coolvi lle, Ohio.
Seed Corn Now
JOHN
oil lamps - $10; phone 949- Fu rniture. Terms available at
.
3-23-61p
and children, Bruce, and Doug
3 194 ·
a low -low interest rate , Store
POMEROY
Presinger of East Bank, W. Va .
3-29-!0tp No. 1. Kanauga on Stale
CASH PA ID For all makes and
9 .. ~ JackW . CarseV,Mgr.
rns_e_
y-cow, Route 7, Store No. 2, 1415
_
P
_
U
_
R
_
E_
B
_
R
_
E
_
D
_
G
_
u
_
e
_
visited their sister, Mr. and
m
odel
s
of
mobile
homes.
....
Phone 992-2111
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
gooo family cow. Will fre shen
Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis.
Mrs. Delbert Mitchell. Other
.
bo
k
p
3-28-41c
3-2J.61c
'"a ut 4 wee s. au I Karr , 1
guests at the Mitchell horne MEIGS County Fish &amp; Game
mile N. of Chester, Ohi o 985Associati on will meet Wedwere her aunt and uncle, Mr.
LIKE new, Lady's Chicago
3538.
nesday, March 29, 7:30 p.m.
SAVE
$2,000
lo
$3,000
on
a
and Mrs. F. Hudnell of
Con
mtiate
at the Syracuse Club Rooms.
J-29-Jtc roller sk ates, size 8, wllh
modular
home.
Due
to
a
local
carrying
case
for
$15
;
call
Charleston, W. Va.
3·26-4tc
dealer closing his sales lot, TAKING order s for Decoration
af ter 5 p.m. 992-5421.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fetty
two
24x50
Kit
Modular
homes
3-28·61p
992-3020
Day fl owers ; also antiques,
SMALLEY ' S Gill
Shop ,
and
one
24x44
Tek
Modular
and family of Bucyrus, Ohio
dishes
and
used
clothing
to
Chester, Ohio have flower
Middleport
N.
2nd
home will be sold at absolute
sell ; Colored , decorated SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Shop,
spent the weekend with his
arrangements f or Ea ster.
dealers cos t. Shown by apChes ter, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
Easter Eggs will be sold
Many other flowers for all
psrents, Mr. and . Mrs. Lee
pointment
only.
Call
Belpre.
ACREAGE
Tropica l fish and supplies . .
Saturday . Decor Craft &amp;
occasions ; polted fl owers. 99c
Fetty. Other guests were Mr.
Ohio. area code 614-423-9531
3-28-JOip Just off Rt . 7 close to Eutern
Hobby Shop, 620 Locus t
up ; baskets, loose flowers.
School. 30 Acres , 3 bedroom
for appointment.
and Mrs. Dick Felty and
Street, Middleport , Ohio.
Avon bottles and many gift
modern
home, electr ic heat,
3-2J.6tc
i terns. Open 12 till 6 p.m., 7
3-29-Jtc Real Estate For Sale
Tupper Pla ins water tap .
children of Rutland.
days a week . Phone 985-3537.
There will be Sunrise Service
J-26-61c READ THIS! You can save MODERN Walnut Stereo-radio MODERN HOME ON 1;, ACRE, Farm near Eastern School ,
literally hundreds (even
FULL BASEMENT, 4 MILES l OA Acres . 3 bedroom modern
at the Langsville Church on
combination, 4 speaker sound
dollars
on
a
late
lhousands)
of
FROM
KAISER thome . Lots of timber .
system , 4 speed changer,
Sunday, April 2, at 6:30a.m. WILL do sewing of all kinds In
model used or re-possessed
ALUM INUM. EXCELLENT
separate controls . Ba lance
my
home
.
Phone
992-6879.
Mrs. Richard Ritter and
mobile home. Before you buy
NEIGHBORHOOD, PHONE LovelyMIDDLEPORT
$68.41. Use our lime payment
3-26-JOip
ranch type brick - 3
any mobile home stop and see
Julia of Fayetteville, N. C. are
{304) 372-9657or WRITE J . 0. bedrooms,
plan . Call 992-7085.
llh bath , built-In
the
huge
se
lection
of
8,
10
and
ELLIS, ROUTE 1, BOX 49B, kitchen . Choice location on
3-29-61c
Us.ed
spending a vacation with her CARL Chevalier's
12 wide mobile homes that we
COTTAGEVILLE, W. VA . Broadway .
Clothing Store, Long Bottom,
mother, Mrs. Emma Ledlie.
have
on display. We arrange MAPLE Stereo-radio com 25239.
Is now at Carpenter ' s Pennfinancing
for
you
.
Low
down
Mr. and Mrs. John Merrill of
3-29-61c North Second ;twe . - In·
bination
,
AM-FM
radio;
tour
zoll Station at Duitts Run.
vestment property easily
payments. Easy credit terms.
speakers, 4 speed automatic - - - - - - Columbus spent the weekend
3·24-61p
converted Into A Apts .
Don' t forget we are the area
changer, dual val ume control.
with her mother, Mrs. Emma
2 Homes for One 3
dealer for "Detroller" mobile
Use our budge t term s. HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone bedroom &amp; bath, mostly all
ABOUT
YOUR
WEIGHT
...
homes.
One
of
the
oldest
and
Ledlie and her sister , Carol
985-3529.
Balance $80.25. Call 992-7085.
paneled , attached garage.
overweight ladies, teens and
best names in the Industry.
Ritter and Julia .
Small home, 3 room &amp; ba~h
3·29-6tc
men interested In a Weight
Don't waif . Stop now at Berry.
on same lot. Both homes for
Paul Council, small son of
Watchers !RI Class in
Miller Mobile Homes Sates,
on Broadway ,
3 BEDROOM House on Lincoln one pr icePOMEROY
Pomeroy write : Weight
705 Farson Street. Belpre. CLOSE OUT on 1971 full size
Mr. and Mrs. James Council, is
H
eights,
phone
992-5737.
Watchers {R) , 1863 Section
zig-zag sewing machine . For
Locust Street - 3 bedroom ,
Ohio , across the railroad
sick.
3-23-6tc 11!2 bath . Includes all carpet
fabrics ,
sewing
stretch
Rd .. Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 .
tracks
fr om
Ka iser
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
S. drapes. AHached garage ,
buttonholes, fancy designs.
10·3-tfc
Aluminum . Phone area code
etc
.
Paint
slightly
blemished.
called on Mrs. Lulu Mae Lynch - - - - - - SIX ROOM house. 133 Butternut $18,000.
614-423-9531 . Open 7 days a
Choice
of
carrying
case
or
CHICKEN Barbecue Easter
week .
Ave. Contacf Ed Hedrick, 2137 • Brick
st.
tnv .. tment
of Middleport Sunday.
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
Sunday, April 2, from 11 a.m.
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Property. 2 Apt. 's extra tot
3·23-6tc
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
terms available. Phone 992·
to 5 p.m. at the Racine Fire
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
tor trailer, $8.500.
5641
.
visited her sister, Mr. and Mrs .
Stati on. Complete chicke n
11·21 -lfc
3-29-6tc
Carry Out &amp; Drive -In, close
dinner Sl.SO, chicken only Sl.
Ronald Bail of Hamden SunFor Rent
6 ROOM house &amp; barn, on &gt;tale to New Shopping Ce~ter.
3-22-9tc
day.
Route 124. with an acre of Showing excellent returns ,
TRAILER space, contact Roger ELECTROLUX sweeper deluxe
Epple, 985-4106.
mooel . Complete wllh all
property, $7,500 ; phone 992· S17.5° 0·
Mrs. Emma Ledlie spent KOSCu 1 KOSMETICS &amp; Flame
3-26-6tc
cleaning att achments ·and
2217.
of Hope Perfumes. Human &amp;
1 have many nice building
Friday afternoon with her
uses paper bags . Slightly used
3-26-51c tots . ·
syn
thetic
wigs.
No
need
to
sister, Mrs. Mary Brown of
leave Meigs or Mason County FIRST FLOOR, furn ished 1
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Will cleans
se ll foand
r $37.25
cashnew.
or ,..
but
looks like
bedroom apartment, phone
for la ck of money,. II in.
term s available. Phone 992992-3874.
terest ed call 992-5113.
The Joint Aires will sing at
5641.
3-17-tfc
3-7-tfc
__.:,_
the preaching service at the
Langsville church on Easler
TRAILER space availab le.
Phone 992-5786.
Sunday. Sunday School al9:30, Business (Jpportunities
110 Mechanic Street
30 FT. 1967 Chris Croft ConJ-29-6tc
stellation, A-1 shape, compreaching al10:30. Everyone is
plete carpeting, will sleep six.
DO NOT READ
Pomeroy,OhiQ 45769
welcome .
I BEDROOM trailer apart·
Has twin engines. 210 h.p.
men
Is,
Ideal
for
couples
.
UNLESS YOU WANT A
100 gallon gas lank, full
NEW LI$TING
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle, each,
QUARTET SANG
NEW HOME
capacity with 6 wheel trailer.
NEW
3
bedroom,
all electric home, 1'12 baths, large
992-5248
or
992-3436.
A
NEW
CAR
Can be seen by appointment
MASON - "Pilgrims of
living.
nice
kHchen
with
double sink. .Utility room. Plenty
only. Phone 992·5786.
OR A BANK ACCOUNT
Promise," a gospel quartet
of
closet
space,
2
garage$.
1.15 acres. Out on old Route 33.
3-29-61c
NICE OLDER HOME
from Parkersburg, sang at Potenti aI olll S,OOO.OO per year APARTMENT; 217 N. Jrd -SI..
No Se llin g
MODERN - 3 bedrooms, 1'12 baths, birch kitchen, double
Middleport , 3 room s and bath, ONE
GARDEN
plow .
Mason Christian Brethren Pr ocess Rll Per wo rk
sink, stove and refrigerator . Gas fireplace, sliding glass
pr ivate entrance . ni ce yard,·
Springfield make rot a, price
Church on Sunday evening at
doors from dining lo back and side porch. 2 lots, double
phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
$60. Phone 949-3331.
-~
Want ONE Exc lusive Master
garage.
3-23-tfc
the church revival. Marilyn Distr ibu tor in area.
.
3-23-!0ip
4 BEDROOMS
Schwarz Hetzer, a · former
----NIFTY
Birch
kitchen.
natural ges furnace. bath, full
2 BEDROOM mobile home wit h Investm ent
of
$2, 000 .00
'"STAR "" kill s rat s qui ckly ,
-resident of Mason, is a member required . Guaranteed retu rn
basement.
Large
lot.
Garage.
'10,000.00.
air condition ing in Racine
Sure. 2112 lbs. $1 .69 : EbersNEW liSTING
area ; phone 992-6329.
of the quartet which was well of your Invest ment .
bach Hdwe., Sugar Run Mills,
Teen and Twentv Cosmetic
HARRISONVILLE - 7 •oom home, nearly all carpeted,
3-23-lfc
received.
Pickens Hdwe ., Mason.
Corporation
1'12 baths, gas heating . 3 bodr.oom•, modern kitchen with
27o40 s. Gltnstone, Suite lOS
3·19-JOip
double sink and bor. 6 lots or 1'!. acres. Garage 40x70.
TRAILER , Brown 's Trailer
Sprin~fleld, Missouri U804
Corner location for service station.
Court.
M
lnersv.ille,
Oh
io,
Phone : 417- 811-7111
__
-,-J
TROPICAL . FISH, laney
MEW LISTING ·
•
.
phone 992-3324.
The Station
guppies, angels and breeders,
142 ACRES- Of nice cl"n laying land. 2 barns- with
3·3-lfc
Bellas and supplies. Phone
sheds. 4 good springs, farm pond and watering !rough. 2
----~-992-5443.
.
.·..·.··.· · ·.······ ·.·.- ·.· ··...............• ... HOUSE.
car garage, 2 hen houses. Minerals except coal. Located
6
rooms
and
bath
.
That Listens
on hard road. Salem Township.
Phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
. •
~ ACRES
,
.
3-29-tfc
NEAR
TUPPERS
PLAINS
2
bedrooms,
bath, T,P.
OAK
Slor
r"n
!Jour
6'
8"
X
32"
~----SMALL trail er, 2 bedroom , 10
water. Nice birch kitchen, double sink and stove. 2 living
- $15; regular screen door 6'
miles north of Pomeroy - S65
rooms . Only 510,500.00.
8" x 32 " - $3 ; electr.ic hedge
11,500.00 DOWN
,
a month ; phone 992-7479.
clippers - $8 ;. phone 992-5233.
3 ACRES - 6 room house, well. sprfng, garden . Ofher
3-22-tfc
3-26-tOtp
b" ifd;ngs. $53.42 ·a Month .
'
- - - - - ·--·
FuRNI SHED and unft.-nished POODL E puppies, Sll iier Toy.
DON'T WAIT UNTIL IT IS SOLD, BUY ·TODAY.
apartments . Clost&gt; to scnoot :
Park view Kennels, Phone 992TOMORROW
MAY BE TOO LATE.
i 1hone 992-5434.
5443 .
992-3325 HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE m lma
l

-----

BEl'

,

Of
QUALITY

N. L liE." S l::o "-)::; IS

BRtkJGI&gt;JG AlTENTtON
ro HtM S€tF" I

LOT 50X100
MIDDLEPORT- 2

story

frame, 5 bedrooms, - 1'12

5 room, 1 story frame, 2

baths, full basement, nice
kitchen, large lot with frailer
space, ga• forced air fur.
nac~ . good neighborhood.
$7,900.00.
•
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
REALTOR

••

is divided
"
6, Sticking Ye.terd•r•• Amwer
to the
23. Indian soname
rules
cia I cate38. Gide
7. Beseech
gories
39, District or 8. Exuded
24. Fine wool
10. Cling
Z5. Sculpt
England
II, Game akin 27. "Remem·
DOWN
to bingo
ber the
I. On the
18. Farmer's
''
watch
hangout
28. Wild
2. Compan - 21. Near or
party
ion or
Far
Z9. Squalid
"Wilco"
ZZ. Boss; task· 34. Title for
3. Teasing
master
Gielgud

one letter to each square, to
Corm four ordinary wordt.

r
u
II

Ul'YPI'

IEX1'0RV

III I

[]

HOW 50ME SOFT
D~INKS SOUND.
Now orraqe tho circled )etten

I
I
I
~~~~~~~=i:~ aunated

Court, Meigs County, ,Ohl(), tor
approval and utttemtnt :

CASE· NO . 19.148 Fourth and

I

Final Account of Richerd J,
Chambers, Guardian of Ronald
Le-e Robinson .

to form the ourprlee aNwer, u

Prit lilt SIIIUISWIIIln

Int"EY rn "t I I )"

CASE NO . 20,3S7 Firat ond

by the obot-eeutoon.

(.t.lwert •••Dr•owJ

Flnel Account of Homer' M .
Circle, Executor. of the Ea~•te of
James Ctcll Circle, Decfased.

Ye•teNI•y'•

l•ut.o. CYCLE

LIGHT WHINNY TIIOUGH

Aatwer, Caruet tc10rla: dopp,P• - LUNCH

CASE NO. 20~70 Flrol and
Account of Bonnie
Lawre,.ce, Adrtltnlttratrl* with
Final

Final Account of GladyS E.
Blackwood, ExecufriK of t~e
Estate of Robert S. Blackwood,
Deceased .

"I BEDROOMS.

Unacramblelhe.. four)umbleo,

5. ~ ~~ Gaul

. have been flied In tho Probate

1 FLOOR PLAN
7 rooms, ~ bedrooms, bath,

80 ACRES
Nice !ayl~g ground, borders
on 2 roads, some tlmbir,
large born, rnllk House, crib
and olhar buildings, 1112 story
Ire me home, 7 rooms. both, 4
bl!dr00ins, fine for a family .
JI,IST st7,600.00.

.JI&amp;WIDM;-!::.~'!:~~=

or

tht Will ~nnexed of tf'le Estatt
of Ellzabtth Marie Lawrence,

of ground. $19,900.00.

4. Win all
tricks
in
piquet

COUNTY, OHIO
J•
Accoun1s end voucher1
the
following named flduclarlu

baths. dining room, cellar.
garage, In excellent COil·
dltlon, out of all floods, good
Io c a 11 on . carpeted .
$12,800.00.

dining room, recreation
room, garage, about 1 acre

33. Having
power to
delight
35. "-Got a
Secret"
36. Cuspids ot·
collies
37. Edward·
ian nick -

Decea~d .

•

·CASE NO . 20,503 First and

Pt\,(1'

Fln1i Ac:count of Nora Jordan
Admlnlttr~ttht of tht Estate oi
Katie Wilson, D•ceased.

'IOO'RE READING "WAR AND
PEACE " AND 1/ilv'RE RtAl71N6
ONL~ ONE WORO A PAY ? I

CASE NO . 20,533 First ond

ALWA~S"

CASE NO . 20,558 Fl(at and

Final Account of G~rge H.
Wtrner, Guardian of th• Person
and Estate of Rlafhard A.
Wtrner, a Minor.

CASE NO . 20,573 First ond

·DAILY CRYPTOQl.JOTE - Here's how to work It:

•

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
Uled for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali
hlnll. Each day the code letters are different.

Final Account of f:rancH M.
Yost, Administratrix of the
Estate of Charles E , Stobert,
Deceued .
Unless tXC!tptlons an tlltd
thereto, said accounts will be
for haarlng btfott llld Court on

CRYPTOQUOTES

the 27th day of April, 1972, at

which tlmt nld accounts witt be
considered and continued from

JVYKK

doy to day until finally dlaposiCf

JVWBXO

OJYKBXJV :

01 .

Any person 1nterfsted May
tile wr i tten exceptions to llid
accounts or to matters per'.
talnlng to tht execution of the
trust, not IHI than five deys
prior to tht date set for hearlrtg

XWH.K

OAKKNWBX

QUJJYKOOKO,

JOHN BACON
PROBATE JUDGE
MEIGS COUIIITY, OHIO
29.
Itt

GO

VUY C D

PB

V UWYD

TYK U JVWBX

UWY , UB.C KUJWBX
MKAOV NYPHKYT

c.

IJ )

KNEW litJO WERE

OUT Of 'IOI.IR MIND!

C YD

LPA C

E PP C .-

Yeaterday'a · Cryptoquote: KINDNESS IS A LA NGUAGE
THE DUMB CAN SPEAK ANO TilE OEA~' CAN !lEAR AND
UNDERSTANrt.-CIIRI STIA N NF:STO:f.l . IIOVEF:

'

'' In~, .; ~ ' • n lilt..

_ _ ,I

•

'I"' .. .tiUI'l~:. ·'~I
' ll I I"It.l •• .

I n1• . ,

iT'S GOIN6

FA5TERTHAN
I THOUGHT

�:·.

,. ~ ,; '

•.

•

•
I

I~

I

•

,.

II- 'lbe lllli!Y Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29, 1972

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifie~ Get Reslulr~r
@) 2 SIGNS Po••nf I Busm··ess se..-,rr:ces
.a
5

WANT ADs
Wanted To Buy
Help ~anted
INFORMATION
OLD FURNITUR E. dishes, HIG H · scHOO L SE NIO RS.
DEADLIN.ES
clocks, brass beds, sil ver
Enlist now - stay home until .
P.M.
Oay . Before
dolla rs
or
comp le te
aft er graduation. Guaran teed .

Publication
Monday Deadlhi' 9 a.m.
Cancellation &amp; Corrections
Will be ac::cepted un111 9 a.m. 'tor

househo ld s. Wr ite M . o .
Mill er , R l. 4, Pomeroy , Oh io.

assi gnm en ts to Eur o p e ~
Korea, Hawaii, or selected

3-16 -tfc

local Army r epresentalive for

Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The Publisher reserves the

Nf

r ight to edit or reject an y ads

REDUC E sale &amp;

deemed objecti onal.

0

last .with

GoBese Tab le ts &amp; E-Va p

publl sher
w ill not be
responsible for mor e than one
incorrect Insertion .

" water pill s' at Nelson Drugs.

For Wan t Ad Ser vice
5 cents per Word on e insert ion '
M inimum Charge75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive insertion s.
18 cents per word six cOn secutl ve Insertions.

25 Per Cent Di scount on paid
ads and ads pa id within 10

day s.
CAIID OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY

J. J1.20tp
- - - - - - -·

~

-

~----

SHOOT ING Ma tc h. Saturday,
April l , al the Raci ne Planing
Mill at 6 p .m . Fac tory choke
guns onl y . Assorted meat .
Spon sor ed by the Svracuse
Fire Dept.
3·29-Jtc

REDUCE e&gt;eess flu ids with
FLUIDEX. $1.69 - LOSE
WEIGHT safety with Dex·A·
Diet , 98c a t Nelson Dr ugs.

J-29-ltp

$1.50 for 50 word min imum .

Each additional word 2c.
GUN SHOOT. also rifle matches
BLIND ADS
- open sites only, Forked
Add itional 25c Charge per
Run Sportsman Club, Sunday,
April 2, 12 noon .

Ad vertisement.

fac ts abou t th e 180-Day
Delayed Entry Program and
the Army 's new pay raise.

tee

The

RATES

locati ons In the US. See your

Call 992-627 1.

For more Information call

coll ec t 593-3022.
-

_ _____
J-_20_-l_t,tc
-

WANTED!

Carrlen For
MASON
and

HARTFORD
Not A Motor Route.

·The Dai~ Sentinel
Ph. 614-992·2156

..

· ·

.

lofOr (o.

clean interior, beige finish , radio .

1969 FORD FAIRLANE HT CPE.

5159S

with less than 23,000 miles, spotless Interior, good w-w
tires, "'hlle finish , blue Interior, radio.
1967 FORD MUSTANG HTCPE.
51395
V-8 engine. automatic trans ., p. steering, factory air
conditioned, wide oval fires; radio &amp; many other extras.

Gold finish, blk. interior.

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. StOO P.M.
fJ)MEROY, OHIO

3 BR
HOME

We spec ialize In alum:lnum ,
vinyl and steel siding;
fiberglas, brick and stone ;
complete line of residentia l
l · and com mercia! roofing ;
i
remo1deling , butldln~.
suspended ceilings, · Interior
and exterior painting; com.
ptete line of Masonry work. All
work guaranteed to customer
satisfaction. We are tully
Insured for your protection . 32

N. 2nd. 992-3918.
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp; ·
CONSTR. CO.

c'

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
KITCHEN
and

SON
CONST.

MILLER

- - - -- - -

..

WHITE

REALTY~
lad. ,.
VERA EBLEN

_____

-------

· $50 Reg. Mares
540 Grade

FRANCIS BENEDUM
Phone 667-3856

.

ON YOUR DIAL

··· · - ·.

--

('

• 'C,

'

Hl6 WIFE 5f.I01" HIM IIECAU6E
HE HAD A SECRETAR'i.

VOU SAV we
WEllE HAVti&lt;IG ·SOUL
f)t ~N'T

FOOD -TOI&gt;AV

f MI"f U\. , 01 011

BUT, I MEANT

BLI\CK SOUL!

~

YOU WANT

BURN

wa ~OUO.~

~e FtSH

"

::t

c"'*

"!osl AmeJieitl!.
-GUARANTEE~)-:
Phone 992-2094

OpeniTif 5
Monday thru S.turdlly
606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

APPRENTICE

COMMUNI(:ATIONS
GAP ·STRIKES
AGAIN

CARPENTER.

1HAT POE5/Ilt 6EEM
ENOUGH REASON.

MARimA
TYPEWRmR

Pomeroy lto111e &amp;Auto

HE WMO AN

T~E

OFFICE
MACHIN£
REPAIR

.

On

r.r !"J"r HI A, Io.

· ··
Phone
.992-3975
992:5786
•

. '

'5.55

&lt;.

Make reservat.lon• for your ·
P,tvate parties, banquets.
.special occasions. .
•Ideal for meeting place . with or wl.thout kitchen
privileges.:
· ·
·
llldiv!dual Catering
. Will seat up lo 150 people.

EXPERT
Wheel Al_
ipment

Don&lt;&gt;t.e 'em to ®
th' Betsy Ross

-but

t.'ooseum -an·

~'f~

•'

•hook··

Th'socks
hain'tyor'n.
· The
handshake
willbea

HOPE 'rbU'RE NOT IN
A HURRY, LANCE. l'LL BE
HEI(!: FOIZ A~OTHEfZ.

TW&lt;fJT\'·TWO MINUTE G.

5u.Jindle !!
5hmindle!!

swindle!!

EnJOY!!

I

All WEATHER ROOFING
. &amp; CONSTRUCTION

&amp;·PLUMBING CO.
240 Lincoln St.
Middlef'Orl, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete Home
Maintenance SerVIce the

Frornjhe largi!•l
Bulldozer Radiator to · the
Smallest Heater Core.
Nathon Biggs
Radiator SpeclaNst

SMITH NELSON

v••r around: NO m1tter whit

your need. Complete roof or
spouting repelr. Interior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiling
Hie and 'Panellng and Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Hutlng.
Doy Numbor 992-2550
service.
t92-5iOJ
992·3191

MOlORS.· INC.
Pomeroy

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

742-3947

We are fully Insured

HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
OHIO. ·
3-5-JOic
------.,.._.,-.~
. ····· ·
SEWING MACHINt:S. Repair
service, all makes. 992·2284.
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.

Ft.OM!RS
ARRIVeDI.

Free Estimate

742-4761

INTER lOR &amp; exterior painting.
R. I. Dubbeld, phone 7n-5825.
·
~ · 27- 5tc

AH,I$1!E MY

Pit. 992-2174

We haYti 24 hr. emervency

B&amp;W HEATING CO.
For Appointtri~mt
Phone 949-2803
UPHOLSTERING SERVICE,
complete selection of fabrics
and vinyl to 'choo~e from.
Plck·UP and delivery. Slater
Upholstering. Rt. 3, Pomeroy,
phon' 992- 361~ . .
.
.~~:. ~••

Come in, but hurr4!

Nina Wallet,
Joel! I want
to talk
tQ ljOU!

1
·•
·. · ·.
SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rate~ · Ph. 446 .
SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
Sanitation; Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
Owner &amp; Operator.
662-3035.
· ' S-12-tfc
,
2-12-tfc
and aluminum siding;
BACKHOE. AND DOZtt&lt; work. VINYL
free estimates; references;
Septic tanks Installed. George call collect 446·3608, , Byerly
{Bill) Pullins. Phone 992''~78.
Construction Co .• .Gallipolis .
. 4.25-tfc
. • 3-74-30tp
PAINTING, Interior and exterior;
call
992-2368, O'DELL WHEEL allghment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
Complete fronf end aervlce, ·
fune up and brake aotvlce;
Wheels balanced elecAll
work
troolcally .
Real Estate For Sale
guaranteed.
Reasonli~le
NICE 2-story home with tull
rate•. Phone 992-3213.
basemen!, 2 lofs, new forced
7·27-lft
alr furnace. Near Pomeroy.
Elementary School. Phone AUTOMOBILE lnsurar:e Deen
992-7384 to SJ"e.
cancelled?
Lost
yout
1P·tfc
operator's license? Call .fH.
2966 .
3BEDROOM ranch type tiome,
. 6·15-tfc
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
Plains. All . new with total
c. BRADFORD, Au&lt;lloneer
electric and centra~ air
Complete Service ·•
conditioning, bath and '\4 fully
Phone 94'1·3821
carpeted, full basement;
Racine, Ohio
garage In basement. See by
Crill
Bradford
appointment, phone 992-2196
5·1-tfc
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson. .
.
.
Financing available.
READY-MIX CONCRETE dt·
12·30-tfc
livered right to your ~~rolect.
Fast and
easy, l" FrN
60X12. 2-bedroom, all -electilc,
estimates.
Phone
m-3284.
air conditioned, 8x20 ft . Porch , Goegleln Rea~y - Mix
Co.,
and aluminum awning,
Middleport,
Ohio.
aluminum skirting, com.
6-JO.tfc
pletely setup . Beautiful,
location. OWner leaving state.
Phone 949-4892 or 992·5272.
LEGAL NOTICE
1-10.tfc
LEGAL NOTICE
IN THE MATTER OF SET·
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS,
PROlATE COURT, MJIIGS
Authorlzed, Singer ~Sales and , .. \. .- J, \!J

Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
. 3-29-tfc

:..· ~·»-:IOtp

fierce how 6he ,...;-;;:--"
clo6~ back up!

___ ____

~1'.~'1'-E f..LL 8EitJio .:;6 ~\Cei,!

JtJSr c,A.t.tr BR1~il
M'ISE!.F 10 Tl;~t.. THeM~ COIJTf..CT u;~s WAS
I~ M~ P/&gt;.t-1\S cU~t= ALl. T~~ T\MG!

•!

•

,
.'
1

I

I

r

l

•

J

•

- - - - --

CLELAND
REALTY

608 East Main Street
POMEROY, OHIO
992-12591il4:00
Sunday &amp; Evenings
992-2568

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.· Broker ·

WMP0/1390
I

STUD SERVICE

-==========---===========:::

To You

.• . 1 .

APPOLOOSA
.
.

ONLY 513.750

·'

The
Orthid Room

REGISTERED

I car garage, brick front,
wall 1o· wall Cilrpej.

TERMITES. •TERMITES,

Langsville

·\f:!A

·

ON YOUR LOT

V-Bengine, automatic trans .• p. sieerlng, IOcall owner car

i(

.L Y

1970 FORD CUSTOM ST. WAG.
$19ff
351 V-8 eng., automatic trans .. power brakes, good tires,

Employment Wanted

MOBILE HOMES

A HOLE I'N
ONE!!

.

1

OFFICE HOURS
J-29-Jtc CARPENTER work ot any
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally.
kind. Phone De xter , Ohlo 742·
8: 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon WANTED - Anyone interested
4979. .
Auto Sales
For Sale
Saturday .
in cu! ling abou t . 100 acres of
3-28-JOtp
limber . Pay as you go. Phone
Get Rid of Them
992-5786.
1971 DODGE VAN, 6 cylinder. 3 BEEGLE pups, 6 months old,
WORK
in
Racine
area
such
as
We
wilt
protect any single
$15
male
and
female,
phone
Card
Thanks
speed, insulated &amp; paneled,
inside and outside painting ;
dwelling residence for
742-3656.
OUR HEARTFELT thanks to
27,000
miles.
$2,300
or
best
r oof jobs ; shingles ; spouting .
3·22·101p
our friends and neighbors of FI GHT fatig ue wi th Zi ppies, the
off er . Phone 698-3293.
Phone 949-2215.
'149.50
Syracuse and the Rutland .
3-23-61c
grea t iron pill. Only $1.98 at
3-28-31c
WRinEN
WARRANTY
Harrisonville area for the
Nelson Dr ugs.
FREE lickelsarenowavallable
"65
FORD
Falcon,
3
speed
Call
Collecl614-452-3158
many kindnesses and ex 3-17-JOtp DRY WALL Finisher con- lransmission, si x ti res, tw o on a free giant $20 Easter
pressions of sympathy ex tractor . R. I. Dubbeld, phone snow, all mounted ; bucket Basket large chocolate
tended at the lime of the toss READY NOW FOR Easter,
Easier bunny and large fruit
742-5825.
seats, good condition ; sell
of our dear husband and
and
nut Easter egg. See them
Mums
,
geraniums
and
reasonable ; call after 5 p.m.
father. Mr . Lyle Chapman . pan sie s , CLELAND ' S
today
and gel your free
992-5421.
Special !.hanks to Dr . Davis
ti
ckets,
purchase required,
Racine.
GREENHOUSE.
· 633 Mlln St.
3-28-6tp at the no
and staff; Holzer Medical
Bright
Star Market
J-nttc
Mobile
Homes
For
Sale
Ohio
Zanesville,
Center and staff; Dr. Clark ;
next lo lhe Drive-In Theatre,
1965
INTERNATIONAL
1800
Mar t in Funeral Home ; Rev .
W. Va . where low
FT. WIDE frailer, with
series, long wheel base, good . Mason,
Ray Rouse . Rev. Dwigh t LOSE weight with New Shape 12aulomalic
prices and convenient service
washer &amp; dryer ;
Tablets,
10
day
supply
only
cab, good mechanical con Zavitz , Syracuse Ladies
featured every day, check
air -c ondit ioning ; TV; see
$1.49 at Dutton Drug Co.,
dition , Henry Bahr, 985-3988. are
Auxiliary and all ' who sent
the
following
and stock
Har
old
Johnson
,
Chester
,
Middleport, Nelson Drug
J-29-3tc your larder.prices
food , flowers and cards .
Favorite or
Ohio.
Store
,
Pomeroy.
Words cannot eKpress our
3-26-71p 1965 CHEVELLE 300, 6 cylin- Bonu• brand while bread 7
3-27-Jip
grateful feelings to everyone
der , 4 door, $475 ; phone 992· loaves $1 with $10 additional
who helped in so many ways.
purch;ose... Broughton's 2 pet.
1969
HOLLY
PARK,
12
x
60,
7126 .
Mrs. Lyle Chapman and ALL CATTLEMEN ARE IN sweet
milk gal. 99c, Bologna
early
American.
carpeted
3-28-Jip
VITED to the Rock Springs
children, Mrs. Bebea O'Dell,
in
piece
lb. 59c, grade A small
living
room,
front
dining
Fairgrounds, Pomeroy, Ohio,
Mrs. Jean Cremeans. Bob, Ed
eggs
3
doz.
$1, smoked slab
room.
two
bedrooms ,
1966 PLYMOUTH Barracuda,
Friday, March 31st, 7 p.m. for
and Bill Chapman .
bacon
whole
or half lb. 49c,
awnings,
underpinning.
the Southeastern Ohio Polled
V-8, 4-sr.eed . Phone 742-48511i Van Camp 29 oz.
3-29-ltc
can pork and
Phone
1-985-4210.
"Everything In Home
Heref ord
Association's
interes ed.
beans
2
cans
59c,
whole ··
Second Annual Graded Sale.
Maintenance"
THE FAMILY of Edward
3-26-61c kernel corn SHart's
cans Sl.
Grading will be done by a
Chapman wishes to thank the
Broughton's Ice Milk Ice
panel of three grades. 22
following : Dr. MarkleY• Dr.
MEIGS, W.VA. 25260
Found
Cream,
Gal. $1.19, while
Rugged
Bulls
{1
-5
yrs.
),
28
Davis, Martin Funeral Home,
MEIGS 992-7151
potatoes 50 lb. bag $1.59,
MONEY, Monday, March U, 10
Bred and Open Females 110
nurses at Holzer Medical
MASON 773-563~
a.m. in front of Liquor Store.
Gomplete assortment of fancy
mths.-6 yrs.) will be featured
Center,
Rev .
Rouse,
Owner may have by idenEaster goodies Including
an
exceptional
opportunity
pallbearers. also for the
tifying amounl and paying for
Easter Bilskels from $1.49 to
for commercial or registered
beautiful
floral
ad.
$20.
We accept Federal Food SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm
breeders. For Information :
arrangements, food and for
Coupon.
Slrelch your money, doors and windows, carports,
J-14-14tc
Sharon Sturbols, Rt. 4,
the many prayers. May Goo
•
food
coupons
and time, see us
Athens, Ohio 45701. Ph . 614·
bless each and everyone.
marquees, aluminum siding
f
or
seed
potatoes,
onion sets
For
Sale
593-8274.
Your kindness will never be
and
railing. A. Jacob, sales
and
garden
plants
as
needed.
12' • 14' · 24' • WiDE 2 TWIN bed, $25 : 1 Kenmore
forgotten by wife Alpharetta
3·26-41p
representative
. For free
Save in many. ways at Bright
estimates,
phone
Charles
I Eddie), brothers and sisters.
Electric dryer, $40 ; 1955 AMC
Star Market, next to Drive-In
Lisle,
Syracuse,
V. V.
3-29-ltp
truck, $50 ; phone 992-5654.
Theatre, Mason, W. Va .
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc.
3-24-101p
J.).ff
3-2-tfc:- - - -- - FERTILIZER
AKC REGISTERED Australian
Order now , gel earl y
1220 Washington Blvd.
terrier dogs, nice Easter giff. JUST a.rrlved , from factory,; a HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
discount . Bag , bulk and
Belpre,
Ohio
Service. Phone 992-2522.
reduced price SSO each ; phone new ~tne of itvlng room spt!es
liquid
f~rtll l zer .
Take
6-10.Ifc
delivery
from
our
area
Albany
698-3202.
·
starttng
as
low
as
$129.95
wtlh
Mr. and Mrs. Duane Barr
warehouse ~tt Pomeroy .
3-24-lOtp
Herculon
Covers;
new
1968, 60x12 two bedroom mobile
'
a)KI son, Shawn, of oak Hill,
home, fully carpeted except - - - - - - - - bedrq_9m .su jles as low as,
~ ' It
ASK ABOUT COMPLETE
bathroom and kitchen: 8x16 DROP leaf fable - $15 ; baby $109.95: Al"oiJr U~.KI Store on
Ohio were Sunday dinner
CUSTOM SPRAY SERVICE
porch , aluminum awning ,
bed _ SIO; high chair _ SJ; 1415 Eastern Ave., GaiiiPi&gt;lls, Real Estate For Sale
guests of his parents, Mr. and
al uminum skirting . Phone
Columbia Grafonola _ $15 , lots of good used furniture.
Mrs. Alpha Barr.
985-3309 or write Terry
gui tar·amp. oulti t _ SSO; old
Save yourself some money ; · .-~~
Order Your
Shop Parson's New &amp; Used
Mr. and Mrs. Don Johnson
Swartz. Rl. 2, Coolvi lle, Ohio.
Seed Corn Now
JOHN
oil lamps - $10; phone 949- Fu rniture. Terms available at
.
3-23-61p
and children, Bruce, and Doug
3 194 ·
a low -low interest rate , Store
POMEROY
Presinger of East Bank, W. Va .
3-29-!0tp No. 1. Kanauga on Stale
CASH PA ID For all makes and
9 .. ~ JackW . CarseV,Mgr.
rns_e_
y-cow, Route 7, Store No. 2, 1415
_
P
_
U
_
R
_
E_
B
_
R
_
E
_
D
_
G
_
u
_
e
_
visited their sister, Mr. and
m
odel
s
of
mobile
homes.
....
Phone 992-2111
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
gooo family cow. Will fre shen
Eastern Avenue, Gallipolis.
Mrs. Delbert Mitchell. Other
.
bo
k
p
3-28-41c
3-2J.61c
'"a ut 4 wee s. au I Karr , 1
guests at the Mitchell horne MEIGS County Fish &amp; Game
mile N. of Chester, Ohi o 985Associati on will meet Wedwere her aunt and uncle, Mr.
LIKE new, Lady's Chicago
3538.
nesday, March 29, 7:30 p.m.
SAVE
$2,000
lo
$3,000
on
a
and Mrs. F. Hudnell of
Con
mtiate
at the Syracuse Club Rooms.
J-29-Jtc roller sk ates, size 8, wllh
modular
home.
Due
to
a
local
carrying
case
for
$15
;
call
Charleston, W. Va.
3·26-4tc
dealer closing his sales lot, TAKING order s for Decoration
af ter 5 p.m. 992-5421.
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fetty
two
24x50
Kit
Modular
homes
3-28·61p
992-3020
Day fl owers ; also antiques,
SMALLEY ' S Gill
Shop ,
and
one
24x44
Tek
Modular
and family of Bucyrus, Ohio
dishes
and
used
clothing
to
Chester, Ohio have flower
Middleport
N.
2nd
home will be sold at absolute
sell ; Colored , decorated SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Shop,
spent the weekend with his
arrangements f or Ea ster.
dealers cos t. Shown by apChes ter, Ohio, Phone 985-3356.
Easter Eggs will be sold
Many other flowers for all
psrents, Mr. and . Mrs. Lee
pointment
only.
Call
Belpre.
ACREAGE
Tropica l fish and supplies . .
Saturday . Decor Craft &amp;
occasions ; polted fl owers. 99c
Fetty. Other guests were Mr.
Ohio. area code 614-423-9531
3-28-JOip Just off Rt . 7 close to Eutern
Hobby Shop, 620 Locus t
up ; baskets, loose flowers.
School. 30 Acres , 3 bedroom
for appointment.
and Mrs. Dick Felty and
Street, Middleport , Ohio.
Avon bottles and many gift
modern
home, electr ic heat,
3-2J.6tc
i terns. Open 12 till 6 p.m., 7
3-29-Jtc Real Estate For Sale
Tupper Pla ins water tap .
children of Rutland.
days a week . Phone 985-3537.
There will be Sunrise Service
J-26-61c READ THIS! You can save MODERN Walnut Stereo-radio MODERN HOME ON 1;, ACRE, Farm near Eastern School ,
literally hundreds (even
FULL BASEMENT, 4 MILES l OA Acres . 3 bedroom modern
at the Langsville Church on
combination, 4 speaker sound
dollars
on
a
late
lhousands)
of
FROM
KAISER thome . Lots of timber .
system , 4 speed changer,
Sunday, April 2, at 6:30a.m. WILL do sewing of all kinds In
model used or re-possessed
ALUM INUM. EXCELLENT
separate controls . Ba lance
my
home
.
Phone
992-6879.
Mrs. Richard Ritter and
mobile home. Before you buy
NEIGHBORHOOD, PHONE LovelyMIDDLEPORT
$68.41. Use our lime payment
3-26-JOip
ranch type brick - 3
any mobile home stop and see
Julia of Fayetteville, N. C. are
{304) 372-9657or WRITE J . 0. bedrooms,
plan . Call 992-7085.
llh bath , built-In
the
huge
se
lection
of
8,
10
and
ELLIS, ROUTE 1, BOX 49B, kitchen . Choice location on
3-29-61c
Us.ed
spending a vacation with her CARL Chevalier's
12 wide mobile homes that we
COTTAGEVILLE, W. VA . Broadway .
Clothing Store, Long Bottom,
mother, Mrs. Emma Ledlie.
have
on display. We arrange MAPLE Stereo-radio com 25239.
Is now at Carpenter ' s Pennfinancing
for
you
.
Low
down
Mr. and Mrs. John Merrill of
3-29-61c North Second ;twe . - In·
bination
,
AM-FM
radio;
tour
zoll Station at Duitts Run.
vestment property easily
payments. Easy credit terms.
speakers, 4 speed automatic - - - - - - Columbus spent the weekend
3·24-61p
converted Into A Apts .
Don' t forget we are the area
changer, dual val ume control.
with her mother, Mrs. Emma
2 Homes for One 3
dealer for "Detroller" mobile
Use our budge t term s. HOUSE in Long Bottom , phone bedroom &amp; bath, mostly all
ABOUT
YOUR
WEIGHT
...
homes.
One
of
the
oldest
and
Ledlie and her sister , Carol
985-3529.
Balance $80.25. Call 992-7085.
paneled , attached garage.
overweight ladies, teens and
best names in the Industry.
Ritter and Julia .
Small home, 3 room &amp; ba~h
3·29-6tc
men interested In a Weight
Don't waif . Stop now at Berry.
on same lot. Both homes for
Paul Council, small son of
Watchers !RI Class in
Miller Mobile Homes Sates,
on Broadway ,
3 BEDROOM House on Lincoln one pr icePOMEROY
Pomeroy write : Weight
705 Farson Street. Belpre. CLOSE OUT on 1971 full size
Mr. and Mrs. James Council, is
H
eights,
phone
992-5737.
Watchers {R) , 1863 Section
zig-zag sewing machine . For
Locust Street - 3 bedroom ,
Ohio , across the railroad
sick.
3-23-6tc 11!2 bath . Includes all carpet
fabrics ,
sewing
stretch
Rd .. Cincinnati, Ohio 45237 .
tracks
fr om
Ka iser
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
S. drapes. AHached garage ,
buttonholes, fancy designs.
10·3-tfc
Aluminum . Phone area code
etc
.
Paint
slightly
blemished.
called on Mrs. Lulu Mae Lynch - - - - - - SIX ROOM house. 133 Butternut $18,000.
614-423-9531 . Open 7 days a
Choice
of
carrying
case
or
CHICKEN Barbecue Easter
week .
Ave. Contacf Ed Hedrick, 2137 • Brick
st.
tnv .. tment
of Middleport Sunday.
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
Sunday, April 2, from 11 a.m.
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Property. 2 Apt. 's extra tot
3·23-6tc
Mr. and Mrs. Alpha Barr
terms available. Phone 992·
to 5 p.m. at the Racine Fire
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
tor trailer, $8.500.
5641
.
visited her sister, Mr. and Mrs .
Stati on. Complete chicke n
11·21 -lfc
3-29-6tc
Carry Out &amp; Drive -In, close
dinner Sl.SO, chicken only Sl.
Ronald Bail of Hamden SunFor Rent
6 ROOM house &amp; barn, on &gt;tale to New Shopping Ce~ter.
3-22-9tc
day.
Route 124. with an acre of Showing excellent returns ,
TRAILER space, contact Roger ELECTROLUX sweeper deluxe
Epple, 985-4106.
mooel . Complete wllh all
property, $7,500 ; phone 992· S17.5° 0·
Mrs. Emma Ledlie spent KOSCu 1 KOSMETICS &amp; Flame
3-26-6tc
cleaning att achments ·and
2217.
of Hope Perfumes. Human &amp;
1 have many nice building
Friday afternoon with her
uses paper bags . Slightly used
3-26-51c tots . ·
syn
thetic
wigs.
No
need
to
sister, Mrs. Mary Brown of
leave Meigs or Mason County FIRST FLOOR, furn ished 1
Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Will cleans
se ll foand
r $37.25
cashnew.
or ,..
but
looks like
bedroom apartment, phone
for la ck of money,. II in.
term s available. Phone 992992-3874.
terest ed call 992-5113.
The Joint Aires will sing at
5641.
3-17-tfc
3-7-tfc
__.:,_
the preaching service at the
Langsville church on Easler
TRAILER space availab le.
Phone 992-5786.
Sunday. Sunday School al9:30, Business (Jpportunities
110 Mechanic Street
30 FT. 1967 Chris Croft ConJ-29-6tc
stellation, A-1 shape, compreaching al10:30. Everyone is
plete carpeting, will sleep six.
DO NOT READ
Pomeroy,OhiQ 45769
welcome .
I BEDROOM trailer apart·
Has twin engines. 210 h.p.
men
Is,
Ideal
for
couples
.
UNLESS YOU WANT A
100 gallon gas lank, full
NEW LI$TING
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle, each,
QUARTET SANG
NEW HOME
capacity with 6 wheel trailer.
NEW
3
bedroom,
all electric home, 1'12 baths, large
992-5248
or
992-3436.
A
NEW
CAR
Can be seen by appointment
MASON - "Pilgrims of
living.
nice
kHchen
with
double sink. .Utility room. Plenty
only. Phone 992·5786.
OR A BANK ACCOUNT
Promise," a gospel quartet
of
closet
space,
2
garage$.
1.15 acres. Out on old Route 33.
3-29-61c
NICE OLDER HOME
from Parkersburg, sang at Potenti aI olll S,OOO.OO per year APARTMENT; 217 N. Jrd -SI..
No Se llin g
MODERN - 3 bedrooms, 1'12 baths, birch kitchen, double
Middleport , 3 room s and bath, ONE
GARDEN
plow .
Mason Christian Brethren Pr ocess Rll Per wo rk
sink, stove and refrigerator . Gas fireplace, sliding glass
pr ivate entrance . ni ce yard,·
Springfield make rot a, price
Church on Sunday evening at
doors from dining lo back and side porch. 2 lots, double
phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
$60. Phone 949-3331.
-~
Want ONE Exc lusive Master
garage.
3-23-tfc
the church revival. Marilyn Distr ibu tor in area.
.
3-23-!0ip
4 BEDROOMS
Schwarz Hetzer, a · former
----NIFTY
Birch
kitchen.
natural ges furnace. bath, full
2 BEDROOM mobile home wit h Investm ent
of
$2, 000 .00
'"STAR "" kill s rat s qui ckly ,
-resident of Mason, is a member required . Guaranteed retu rn
basement.
Large
lot.
Garage.
'10,000.00.
air condition ing in Racine
Sure. 2112 lbs. $1 .69 : EbersNEW liSTING
area ; phone 992-6329.
of the quartet which was well of your Invest ment .
bach Hdwe., Sugar Run Mills,
Teen and Twentv Cosmetic
HARRISONVILLE - 7 •oom home, nearly all carpeted,
3-23-lfc
received.
Pickens Hdwe ., Mason.
Corporation
1'12 baths, gas heating . 3 bodr.oom•, modern kitchen with
27o40 s. Gltnstone, Suite lOS
3·19-JOip
double sink and bor. 6 lots or 1'!. acres. Garage 40x70.
TRAILER , Brown 's Trailer
Sprin~fleld, Missouri U804
Corner location for service station.
Court.
M
lnersv.ille,
Oh
io,
Phone : 417- 811-7111
__
-,-J
TROPICAL . FISH, laney
MEW LISTING ·
•
.
phone 992-3324.
The Station
guppies, angels and breeders,
142 ACRES- Of nice cl"n laying land. 2 barns- with
3·3-lfc
Bellas and supplies. Phone
sheds. 4 good springs, farm pond and watering !rough. 2
----~-992-5443.
.
.·..·.··.· · ·.······ ·.·.- ·.· ··...............• ... HOUSE.
car garage, 2 hen houses. Minerals except coal. Located
6
rooms
and
bath
.
That Listens
on hard road. Salem Township.
Phone 992-2780 or 992-3432.
. •
~ ACRES
,
.
3-29-tfc
NEAR
TUPPERS
PLAINS
2
bedrooms,
bath, T,P.
OAK
Slor
r"n
!Jour
6'
8"
X
32"
~----SMALL trail er, 2 bedroom , 10
water. Nice birch kitchen, double sink and stove. 2 living
- $15; regular screen door 6'
miles north of Pomeroy - S65
rooms . Only 510,500.00.
8" x 32 " - $3 ; electr.ic hedge
11,500.00 DOWN
,
a month ; phone 992-7479.
clippers - $8 ;. phone 992-5233.
3 ACRES - 6 room house, well. sprfng, garden . Ofher
3-22-tfc
3-26-tOtp
b" ifd;ngs. $53.42 ·a Month .
'
- - - - - ·--·
FuRNI SHED and unft.-nished POODL E puppies, Sll iier Toy.
DON'T WAIT UNTIL IT IS SOLD, BUY ·TODAY.
apartments . Clost&gt; to scnoot :
Park view Kennels, Phone 992TOMORROW
MAY BE TOO LATE.
i 1hone 992-5434.
5443 .
992-3325 HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE m lma
l

-----

BEl'

,

Of
QUALITY

N. L liE." S l::o "-)::; IS

BRtkJGI&gt;JG AlTENTtON
ro HtM S€tF" I

LOT 50X100
MIDDLEPORT- 2

story

frame, 5 bedrooms, - 1'12

5 room, 1 story frame, 2

baths, full basement, nice
kitchen, large lot with frailer
space, ga• forced air fur.
nac~ . good neighborhood.
$7,900.00.
•
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
REALTOR

••

is divided
"
6, Sticking Ye.terd•r•• Amwer
to the
23. Indian soname
rules
cia I cate38. Gide
7. Beseech
gories
39, District or 8. Exuded
24. Fine wool
10. Cling
Z5. Sculpt
England
II, Game akin 27. "Remem·
DOWN
to bingo
ber the
I. On the
18. Farmer's
''
watch
hangout
28. Wild
2. Compan - 21. Near or
party
ion or
Far
Z9. Squalid
"Wilco"
ZZ. Boss; task· 34. Title for
3. Teasing
master
Gielgud

one letter to each square, to
Corm four ordinary wordt.

r
u
II

Ul'YPI'

IEX1'0RV

III I

[]

HOW 50ME SOFT
D~INKS SOUND.
Now orraqe tho circled )etten

I
I
I
~~~~~~~=i:~ aunated

Court, Meigs County, ,Ohl(), tor
approval and utttemtnt :

CASE· NO . 19.148 Fourth and

I

Final Account of Richerd J,
Chambers, Guardian of Ronald
Le-e Robinson .

to form the ourprlee aNwer, u

Prit lilt SIIIUISWIIIln

Int"EY rn "t I I )"

CASE NO . 20,3S7 Firat ond

by the obot-eeutoon.

(.t.lwert •••Dr•owJ

Flnel Account of Homer' M .
Circle, Executor. of the Ea~•te of
James Ctcll Circle, Decfased.

Ye•teNI•y'•

l•ut.o. CYCLE

LIGHT WHINNY TIIOUGH

Aatwer, Caruet tc10rla: dopp,P• - LUNCH

CASE NO. 20~70 Flrol and
Account of Bonnie
Lawre,.ce, Adrtltnlttratrl* with
Final

Final Account of GladyS E.
Blackwood, ExecufriK of t~e
Estate of Robert S. Blackwood,
Deceased .

"I BEDROOMS.

Unacramblelhe.. four)umbleo,

5. ~ ~~ Gaul

. have been flied In tho Probate

1 FLOOR PLAN
7 rooms, ~ bedrooms, bath,

80 ACRES
Nice !ayl~g ground, borders
on 2 roads, some tlmbir,
large born, rnllk House, crib
and olhar buildings, 1112 story
Ire me home, 7 rooms. both, 4
bl!dr00ins, fine for a family .
JI,IST st7,600.00.

.JI&amp;WIDM;-!::.~'!:~~=

or

tht Will ~nnexed of tf'le Estatt
of Ellzabtth Marie Lawrence,

of ground. $19,900.00.

4. Win all
tricks
in
piquet

COUNTY, OHIO
J•
Accoun1s end voucher1
the
following named flduclarlu

baths. dining room, cellar.
garage, In excellent COil·
dltlon, out of all floods, good
Io c a 11 on . carpeted .
$12,800.00.

dining room, recreation
room, garage, about 1 acre

33. Having
power to
delight
35. "-Got a
Secret"
36. Cuspids ot·
collies
37. Edward·
ian nick -

Decea~d .

•

·CASE NO . 20,503 First and

Pt\,(1'

Fln1i Ac:count of Nora Jordan
Admlnlttr~ttht of tht Estate oi
Katie Wilson, D•ceased.

'IOO'RE READING "WAR AND
PEACE " AND 1/ilv'RE RtAl71N6
ONL~ ONE WORO A PAY ? I

CASE NO . 20,533 First ond

ALWA~S"

CASE NO . 20,558 Fl(at and

Final Account of G~rge H.
Wtrner, Guardian of th• Person
and Estate of Rlafhard A.
Wtrner, a Minor.

CASE NO . 20,573 First ond

·DAILY CRYPTOQl.JOTE - Here's how to work It:

•

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
Uled for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ali
hlnll. Each day the code letters are different.

Final Account of f:rancH M.
Yost, Administratrix of the
Estate of Charles E , Stobert,
Deceued .
Unless tXC!tptlons an tlltd
thereto, said accounts will be
for haarlng btfott llld Court on

CRYPTOQUOTES

the 27th day of April, 1972, at

which tlmt nld accounts witt be
considered and continued from

JVYKK

doy to day until finally dlaposiCf

JVWBXO

OJYKBXJV :

01 .

Any person 1nterfsted May
tile wr i tten exceptions to llid
accounts or to matters per'.
talnlng to tht execution of the
trust, not IHI than five deys
prior to tht date set for hearlrtg

XWH.K

OAKKNWBX

QUJJYKOOKO,

JOHN BACON
PROBATE JUDGE
MEIGS COUIIITY, OHIO
29.
Itt

GO

VUY C D

PB

V UWYD

TYK U JVWBX

UWY , UB.C KUJWBX
MKAOV NYPHKYT

c.

IJ )

KNEW litJO WERE

OUT Of 'IOI.IR MIND!

C YD

LPA C

E PP C .-

Yeaterday'a · Cryptoquote: KINDNESS IS A LA NGUAGE
THE DUMB CAN SPEAK ANO TilE OEA~' CAN !lEAR AND
UNDERSTANrt.-CIIRI STIA N NF:STO:f.l . IIOVEF:

'

'' In~, .; ~ ' • n lilt..

_ _ ,I

•

'I"' .. .tiUI'l~:. ·'~I
' ll I I"It.l •• .

I n1• . ,

iT'S GOIN6

FA5TERTHAN
I THOUGHT

�..

'

,

I•

,

' .... .. '

:1!- the Daily Sentinel, Middleport-P001eroy, 0., March$, 1972
r"t~::::~:::::.:::::::::~:::::~'!:-~-:::~&amp;:::::·.... , ... ··~~~ .......... W. ~"!N.~3Y:""i(f""

:[ ){~ ..Xu , , •, -~~:;:::r,.;:;::,:~;::::::&gt;.::.:::::::::~::::-.:::::%~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::~:;::::::::::::;:::;.~~~l«,!lilTl'o'&lt;::s&lt;:;.:~:~:,~;s:&gt;;;,.:;,~~~-:~·~.. 01 Ci ;'; ::C

:0.:, .. "W W!l'S

0.W. l I t

r ....

.., ... ,. ..... !Jf

,;;; ; :)

'1

I

~,; W : f

.

Local Taxpayers TO Fo~k Up $7,253,000 '
~ reasonillgls that, despite tbe unusually high unemployment rate, the
great II18JS of the working population was fully employed ifl1971 and, for the most
part, bad bigger earnings than In 1970.

How much will Uncle Sam be collectlng fr«n Mason Cowlty residents In
·mcome lllxes on or before Aprll 17tb.• which Is the day of ""laming Ibis.year?
_.., be ....~
than
According to the government's calculations, It ww _., 11Ymore
was
received from the local area a year ago, when it amOWited to fl ,23l,OOO.
That is the estimate of what was turned In locally, as detennlned by a
breakdown of the overall returns received thronghnut the Slate of West Virginia.
The statewide total was $418,000,000, the Treaaury Department reports.
Included in the amount is the portion of the tu collected via the witholdlng
process.
Despite the sluggWmess of the econOOJy during the put year, the budget make:-s
in washin~tton expect the receipts thJs year to be slightly higher than last years.

=t::

~

t~
~

~::
~~
(~!
:~:

indicated lnthe budget submitted to Congress In January. Nalionllly, .It apecta
the$86.pa5bstillliBcalion
In sucbyearreve.nues, or only .about $300 mllllon more than was collected In
Taxpayers In the local area will be bearinll their porttnn of tbls lncrea8e. Their
payme'nts next month will be cJoee 19 ,253,000,1tla estimated.
·
The new budget presented. by the Adrolnlatratlon, projeCJina Income and
expenseflguresforlheflacalyearendlnsJune30,1973, ~lorlndlvl~lncome
tueaof-.9bllll01i,whlcblat'l.4bUHonmorethantblsyear. ·
·
'
...,
·If Mason County taxpayers are to produce their share of tbls rise and maliltaln
their present standard of living, total tnrome In the area will have to go up by about
8.6 percent during thls fiscal year.

rr

Consequently, they will bave larger tuea to pay, For the others who did not
have. steady employment, the taxes will. be lower.
· ·
'

On the basis of the flgures, it ill calculated that residents of MBS&lt;ln County bave
been contributing approxlmately I. 73 percent of the personal Income taxes
collected In the state.
Jtist how much more the Administration counts on receiving this year is
0

.

'

Have you toured the Adult Learning Center? II not, Rev. C.
L. Frum. Adult Basic Education Recruiter, invites you to visit
the Center this week.
The Center is open Mon$y through Thursday, 8:30 a.m.
through 3:30 p.m., and Monday and Wednesday evenings, 6
through 9:30 p.m. If you hsve unanswered questions about the
Center and the courses that offered there, you are invited ID call
the Center, 67~9. if you cannot come in for a visit.
New
materials
are
conslllntly being added to the with it, are glad to be a part of
courses available at the it," states Rev. Frurn.
Again, we urge you to come
"center. Recent additions are:
"Preparations for Civil in and look over the laclllUes of
Service11 ; "Preparation for the Center. Come alone, come
College Entrance Tests"; as a group or organlzaUon. We
"Trigonometry- An Analytic welcome you and urge you to
Approach "; " Pre-Calculus see the Center, because once
Mathematics--Fields and seen, it 11&amp;ells itself".
Functions"; 11 Analytic
Geometry and Calculus";
"Conswner Education- Course
of Study".
Additional materials will be
added at the Center as an
interest is shown in a
particular course of study.
Members of the Mason
We must make an effort to County Court at a .regullir
use the Learning Center to its meeting Monday evening
fullest extent. If it is not used, finalized a budget In excess of
·there Is the danger of losing It, $400,000 for the next fiscal
·and Mason County cannot year.
afford to lose this Center.
In addition to this, routine
A number of distinguished matters were bandied. No
gue!ls have made a tour of the official action was taken
Center and they have been full concerning Good Friday
of enthusiasm with what we closing, however, it was
have to offer. We have been indicated that the Court would
told that it is the finest facillty pattern its decision from that
of its kind anywhere In the of Governor Arch A. Moore's.
State. "We, who are working
Coiu-t officials present were
Lawrence Gerlach Jr.,
Clarence Adkins, Elvin E.
Wedge and L. W. Gettv.

County Court
Sets Budget

Wise Owls

PARTY WAS GIVEN
CUFTON - Neighbors and
friends of Mrs. Helen Barker
surprised her Wednesday with
a birthday party at her home.
She received several gifts. Ice
cream and cake were enjoyed
by Mrs. Barker, Mrs. Wilma
Blake ,'M~s. Jessie Cartwright,
Mrs. Edith Foz, Mrs. Luarene
Lewis, Lucie Harrison, Mable
Johnson, Frances Oliver, Mary
Pickens and Clara Williams.

Beat. ..

Ofthe Bend
By Bob Hoeflich
Have problems of today really changed so much from thoSe
encountered In the yesteryear?
SUrprising as it may seem, Pomeroy Village fathers of 1909
were also worried about ecology, nudity and immoderate
ck'iving. Not o~ that, but they were combating the problems
with legislation!
According to an ordinance in Pomeroy in 1909 if any person
or persons o( 12 years of age and upward, were found bathing in
the river unclothed between the hours of 4 a.m. and 8 p.m., they
were subject to a fine ranging from 50 cents to five dollars.
The ordinance explained that parents and guardians were
liable and subject to payment of the fines involved. Apparently, it
was an anything goes situation after ap.m. until4 a.m.
\liUage Ia then, concerned about profanity, passed an ordinance pnivldlng that any person 14 or over who would
''profanely swear by tbe name of God, or Jesus &lt;llrist, or by the
Holy Gholll," should lie fined not less than one dollar nor more
than live dollars.
The comcil of the time was concerned also about immoderate driving. However, the drivuig violations pertained not
to aulomobUea but to. horses.
VIllage ,Wl!datlon providing that any person riding, driving
or leading~ borie or other animal at an Immoderate rate of
speed'In any lllreet,lane, alley or commons at a rate of more than
six miles an hour should be fined not excessive of $50. Racing
ho!'lellln tbe conununlty was also forbidden and offenders were
Subject to fines.
WhUe processes are row underway for the establishment of a
humane society to protect animals, the council way back in 1909
bad passed legislation malting it unlawful for any person to beat
or otherwise Injury any horse, mare, mule or other animal in an
Immoderate, cruel or unnecessary maMer with fines again
provided for th01e offending.
And the VIllage Council of that day believed and was aware
of ecology.
For example, one ordinance In effect In 1909 provided that

Save Here!

any person who might erect, contrive, or use or maintain any
building, structuie or other place for exercise of any trad~ or
business which would put off noxious exhalations, noisome or
offensive smells,lnfurious or dangerous to the health, romfort or
property would be subject to fines.
The ordinance alsO provided penalties for those who would
render unwholesome or impure any waler courseo stream, well
or water within the community.
Council also deemed it unlawful for anyone to vend or sell
any spirituous liquors, vinous or malt _liquors or elder In any

Mil's Randolph

quantity less than a gallon. Seems like a good home supply but,
perhaps, there were more snlike bites then. WOO knows?
Mayor in 1909 was E. Long and council president was C. W.
Jones with Theodore Bengel serving as clerk. O!uncllmen were
William Andrews, M,' Blaettnar, Jr.; .Edward ·Hennesy, John
Roedel, George Scblaegel and Jones. Charles Foss was the
marshal and Lewis Horwitz, the treasurer.
·
E. W. Peoples, who eompilad tbe ordinance book, was serving as sOlicitor and street coinmlssloner was George Flck. Ed
H. Scharf was fire department chief with Dr. L. G. Gribble
serving as the community's health officer.

TONI
TODD
A Cool Collectable
in super knit

.'

the carved belt buckle. Beautifully machine-washable/
dryable, loa. Beige or blue. 10·20.

... ,

1

:~NlF~o!~~~~~·
992-3498

F

POMEROY, OHIO

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; " .l TURDAY NJ.GHTS TIL 9

(

I · ,4

,,.

" GP"

SHOOT OUT

(Ttchnlcolorl
Gregory Pack
Pat Quinn

" GP"
SHOW STARTS'7 P.M.

Pinneltes 24301 Larry Ashland

.

·so much
· going for it

~

....

If •

•. • ••,,...
Cl"

~.

¢&gt;. ~

" " v &lt;':...
&lt;I!
.. I&gt; ~
.......fl'. • " .. It

viely vaughn

I

A sheer r.tandout

You 'll lo11e it wherever you roam. This Co~l Collectable

by Toni Todd plats pure figure flattery- the uncluttered
bad ice, the big beoutiful golden buckle, the fling of ·
permanent

accordion pleats. In wonderful machine -

woshoble /dryable polye1ter doubleknlt.

·'

The pretty·girl look inaking it with bands ol wide lace
on the wing-spread collar and long . puffy sleeve!· A
trea•ure oil summer In a comblnotion of flock-dot and
plain voile, Oacran'!l polye1ter and cotton. By Vicky
Vaughn in blue ar pink. 5-15.
'

Ready to Wear
Second Floor

l ·1 ~i SP. Gi~m n r (l .486.

Free Custvmer Parking At Main Store ~nd Warehouse

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
--

~

Begun by Council

.

PHONE 992-2156

"'""·,

Two ordinances, one aimed
at reducing the hszard of fire,
the other at making the
coinmUI)Ity more attracUve,
were given the first of three
required readings for Mid-

TEN CENTS

than $20and $1 for each day the
violation conUnues.
The second ordinance, also
unanimously approved In Ita
first reading, deala with Junk
vehicles and accumulation of
trash on lots within the village.
Such vehicles and tr88h will not
be permitted to accumulate on
lots in town. Offimders will be
warned and given a 1o.day
period ill · which to comply.
Each day of violation alter the
10 day warning period will
mean a separate offe~ and
fines for violations will range
from $10 to $50. Vehicles
which are no longer In working
order may be housed inllde I
(Continued on pase 10')

0

purpose of organizing a
Banking Association, and
transacting the business of
banking under the Act of
Congress entitled 'An act to
provide a National Currency
secured by a pledge of United
States Bonds, and to provide
for the circulation and
redemption thereof' approved
June 3rd, '11164, and of subsequent acts in ndditlon to or
amendatory thereof, do make
and execute the following
Organization Certificate.
"First: The name of the
(Continued on page 10)

CHARLES R. KARR, JR., MIDDLEPORT, will hold
open house at his new Meigs Boat'Shop on Pearl St., Middleport, this weekend. Karr is pictured with an 8 by 2• foot
pontoon boat which Is among the new and used pleasure craft
to be handled by the new shop.

In New.Holzer Medical Center
GALLIPOUS - The t6,000
ICUiptured glass window for
the chapel at the new $21
million Holzer Medical Center
near here Is being installed
today.
Donated to the center by the
Registered Nurses
Association, tbe window was
created by Gabriel Loire of
EDISON HOBSTETI'ER, PRESIDENT of the Pomeroy
France. Gabriel Loire Imports
· National Bank holds the Institution's first minute book which
is the company Installing the
gives an accounting of the bank's official organizing 100
window today.
years ago today, on March 30, 1872.
Another example of free
form art, the window was
.designed to depict earth,
prayers, heaven, and answer to
prayers returning to earth
according to the artist. The
browns and greens at the base
By Unl~ l'relaiDiernatiOIIII
reflect earth, tbe straw cement
LANCABl'ER, OHIO - F1VE PRISONERS at the Fairfield shafts are the prayers, the
County JaU here refused to eat b:eakfast today In a protest ap- blues and lighter colors are
parenUy related to an Incident at the faclllty Wednesday night. heaven, and the yellow streaks
Sheriff Dan Berry said the trouble began when a deputy are the answers to the prayers
entered the cellblock which houaes felons to remove a prisoner returning to earth.
who was creating a disturbance. The prisoner struck a deputy
The window will be comand offlcers bad to forcibly remove him from the block and in pleted In Ume for dedication of
turn the five other prisoners refusad to enter their cells lor the the new building at 2 p.m.
night and force bad to be used to place them In their cells. Berry Monday, Aprlll7, and In Ume
said a shakedown In tbe cellblock early today produced some lor the open house on Tuesday
razorblades and a club.
and Wednesday Aprill8 and 19.
The Public Is Invited to these
BELFAST -BRITAIN FORMALLY TOOK OVER rule of events at the new center 011
Northern Ireland today In a day marked by a major gunbattle U.S. Route 3$, three miles west
across the bclrder with the Irish Republic, an assassination at- of Gallipolis.
The Reglster.ed Nuran
tempt In Londonderry and bomb explosloas Ill Belfast.
The British Parliament completed 1~1slatlon ending 51 Association bas donated $1Q,OOO
to the medical center lor use In
years of Protestant rule by the Northern Ireland Parliament,
(Continued on page 10)
Queen EUzabeth II gave her royal assent and Northern Ireland
Prelllier Brian Faulkner resigned.

dleport Village Council
Wednesday night.
Winning unanimous approval by .council was an ordinance
requiring
underpinning of trailers from the
bottom to the ground with
fireproof materials. New
trailers are to · have the underpinning completed within 30
days after they are placed.
Trailers now In use must be
underpinned within six months
after the effective ·date of the
ordinance.
Only trailers subject to
trailer tax payments to the
county will be affected by the
legislation. Failure to comply
will entail a fine of not more

- -' .

$6,006 Window Being Inst-alled

'

•

Beauti catzon
•

·Open House Set
An ·open house will be held
Satw:day and Sunday to tnark
the grand opening of the Meigs
Boat Shlip In Middleport.
l'he new shop, located In
wbat is ·formerly lm!)W!I as the
Coca Cola building on Middleport's Pearl St., will feature
the sale of not only new and
used pleasure craft of all types,
Including the popul~r pontoon
boats, but wiU repair boats and
all types of small motors.
Camper tops for pickup trucks
will also be available.

Charles R. (Rich) Karr, Jr.,
Is openillg the shop which he
says will provide whatever
services the public ·di!liWidl.
..., Besides the boala and boat.
related mercbancll8e, the sllilp
will offer a wide •Ill« of
carpeting for sale.
The open hnUie will be held
from 9a.m. t!$ p.m. Saturday
and from I to 4 p.m. Sunday.
The new shop will be open only
on weekends until Aprll15 after
which It will be open on a dally
basis.

Nixon Will Win
Second Term Say;s
..· ' .
Student Majority
.

'

conducted a survey on several
timely questions among the 300
students. Atotal of 52.3 percent
believed that Nixon wt11 be
reelected while 47.7 percent
felt that be would not be.
Other questions asked by
young Voss and the results
were :
Do you think President Nixon
Is doing a good job? Yea, 50.9
pet. No, 49.1 pet.
The Meigs Chapter of the
What political party do you
American Red Cross Is favor, Democrat . Republican?
asking local business Dem .• 50 pet., Rep., 50 pet.
establishments that have not
Should Marijuana
be
mailed their contribution to legalized? Yes, 23.4 pet; No,
do so as soon as posalble.
76.6 pet.
The chapter, shy of Its
Do you believe In capital
goal, urges residents lo send punishment? Yes, 44.8pct; No,
contributions to the Meiss 55.2 pet.
Chapter at 549 Beech Street,
Should U.S. have a volunteer
Middleport.
army? Yes, 79.1 pet; No, 20.9
· t«::."Xm*::.m!$-;$::-,:-.;:.""A::;s..·~:*w ···;;;8 pet.
President Richard Nixon will
be reelected II the opinion of
nearly 300 Meigs High School
students is a measure.
Paul Voss, a student at the
high school and son of Mr. and
Mrs. Ed Voss of Pomeroy,

Plea is Made

CHAPEL WINDOW INSTALLED - The t6,000 sculptured glass window lor the Holzer
Medical Center chapel arrived today and was immediately installed by the Gabriel Loire
bnports Co. View above was taken this morning from Inside the new $21 million medical
facility . On left In background is John Smith, project superintendent, Turner Construction Co.,
general contractors on the new hospital.

Student Injured In School Tumble

David Lee Vance, 9-year-old . Holzer Medical Center for
son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert trealment of a knee and ankle
Vance, was Injured in a fall injury. His room number is 279.
Tuesday at the Rutland
Elementary School.
Three · accidents were In- 'cracked Ute . basement wall, other than the highway.
across the highway in front of a
The youngster was taken to
vestigated by the Meigs County and caused damage to paneling
There was medium damage car driven by Pat Harmon, the office of a local physician
Sheriff's Dept. Wednes&lt;!ay . . inside.
CIRCULATION NOTED
to Kiser's car.
Rutland, Rt. I. One of the deer lor treatment by Mrs. JeanKiser was charged with
A total of 28,039 books were
At 6:07 p. m. on the New ran into the rear of the car, b~t nette Thomas and Eric Hart.
SAIGON - A BLACK-PAINTED AIR FORCE Cl30 gunship There were no personal injuries.
•
reckless
operation
on
property
Uma Road, three doe deer ran was not killed.
on a strafing mission over the Ho Chi Minh Trail In Laoa was sbot
Tuesday evening the Mid- circulated In January and
At
1:50
a.
m.
on
State
Route
down with a surface-to-air missile (SAM) Wednesday, apdleport emergency squad February by the Pomeroy and
·124,
one
mile
east
of
Racine,
parenUy ldlllng all 14 Americans aboard.
transported him to Veterans Middleport Public Ubrarles
Leanna Sue Beegle, 26, Racine,
One American lJOidler alae wasldlled In a guerrilla attack on
Memorial Hospital and from and by "Mr. Eddy," the bookRt. I, pulled from a private
thenlghtdefenslveposltiooofa u.S. unit 30 miles east of Saigon.
there he was transferred to the mobile. Of the total, · 17,921
driveway into the path of a car
JACKSONVILLE,
Fla.
prosecuti9n
objections,
but
h'e
were circulated In January and
Gudbranson today for rebuttal
bo other liOldlers were killed In the same area earlier In the da)' traveling east driven '· by
(UP!) -Navy chaplain An- allowed it to be submitted as a testimony, along with several
10,118 in February. Magazine
In a boobytrap explcelon. All the men were members of the 3rd Rodney E. Gibeau!, 21, Racine,
drew F. Jensen said in a letter letter of appeal record.
donors were Mrs. tom Rue,
other witnesses, possibly inBrigade, '1st Cavalry Division AlnDoblle.
Rt. 2. There were no Injuries or of record Wednesday that his
The defense then rested its cluding Lt Joseph L. Curran,
Clearing and colder tonight. Mrs. John Scott, Mrs. Orin
arrests, and only medium marriage counseling had case in the court-martial of the . husband of Mrs. CUI'I'an.
Low in 208 and "low 30s: Friday Smith, Mrs. Dan White and
HARRISBURG,PA. -'OIE FATE OF THE Rev. Philip F. damage to both cars.
uncovered a wife-swapping Navy commander on charges
The letter said Jensen in- increasing cloudin-ess with Mrs. Marguerite Duerr.
Berrigan ilnd six other antiwar activists - Judases of violence of
At 6 p. m. at Mt. Moriah club at the naval base where he of cffi)duct unbecoming an tended to testily that "in· chsnce of rain or snow south
apostles of peace, depending upon which liet of attorneys is Church of God near Racine, is accused of committing officer. Jensen, 43, Is· acc~ed
taildng ...: will rest In the hands of nine women and three men ,Okey E. Kiser, 41, Racine, Rt: adultery with two officers' of having sexual relations with confidential counseling portion by night. High Friday
sessions with various in- mostly in the 40s.
PTA TO MEET
today.
2, drove into the church wives.
Lora Gudbranson, 40, wife of a dividuals he received inThe Salem Center PTA will
One day shy of the end of ti..lOth week, the trial of six pre:lent parking lot, \\'liS unable to slop, · Military Judge Ben Cole Navy supply officer, and Mary formation to the effect that
r
LOCAL TEMPS
meetattheschooht7:30p.m.
or former priests and nuns of the Roman Catholic left and a and smashlng Into the would not permit the 'chaplnin Ann Curran, 24, wife of a Navy Lora Gudbranson and others at
lfhe temperature in down- Tuesday. Band atudenll ..W
Moslem irom Pakistan was to go to a federal court Nry southeast corner of the church, to give verbal testimony nyer.
Cecil Field were involved in a I lown Pomeroy at 11 a.m. present a program and then
sometime after noOn, after a lengthy charge by Judge R. Dixon partially knocked out three regarding the information of a
Prosecutor' Ralph B. Levy
'wif~-,wapplng' or 'swihger' Thursday was 44 degrees unde••r-"wi::n:~be~~~~~.-~~t.~IIP"'
~~k•
~,!ctlt~--'Jl
'blocks, damaged the siding, "s!artling naturr" bct·ause of sn i~ lie wuul~ r""all Mr. . group.' ' ---~. ___,_ _ cloud~ skiea......;'_ _ _ Hermap. l . I ·
·

WAS"INGTON - MAJOI\ AIRPLANE MANUFACTURERS In the United States - including two in Ohio - )"ere
charged In a Justice ~partment suit WedneB!Iay with Illegally
eliminating competition In research and development.
The Ohio firms are Aeronca Inc., of Middletown and
Goodyear .Aerospace Industries of Akron.

Three Accidents Investigated

Wife Swapping Club Bared

Weather

2188, King Builders 2152.

Ind. High Game -- M&lt;Jry
Voss 223, Martha Nash 200,
M&lt;Jxi ne Dugan and Louise
Gilmore 181.
Ind . High Series - M&lt;Jry
Vo!S 550, Maxine Dugan 4S8.

Trailer Sa ety,

0

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~~

...

One hundred years ago
today, March 30, 1872, the
Pomeroy Natlolial Bank was
organized.
Fourteen men met and
conducted the business
necessary for the eStablishment of the Pomeroy inatltution. Following . are the
minutes of that organizational
session as recorded In the
bank's original book of
minutes:
"We, the undersigned whose
names are .specified in Article
Four of the Certificate, haying
assodated ourselves for the

THURSDAY 9;30 To·5:00
FRIDAY
.. --- 9:30 TO 9:00
.
.
SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9:00

from ·lnfantto 14.

THURSDAY, MARCH 30, 1972

Pomeroy National B
Organized Century

"

TONI
TODD

Meigs
Property
Transfers

MEIGS THEATRE .

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Junior, Missy sizes, Half sizes and for Girls

For Her Wedding

Local Bowling

VOL XXIV NO. 247

of Dresses, Coats, Accessories for Wom~n in

So feminine, SUch flare. Toni Todd takes rose-patterned
jacquard polyester doubleknit, gives · it a swing of a
skirt, a ring of a collar and repeats the rose motif in

COLUMBUS (UP I) - SU.tr .Auditor J01epb T.
FefiUBOD said today at least three welfare cbedt theft·
rings are.open.ung In Columbus and OayiiOJ.
Fergus011 said bls ln..,stlptors reported 1% cheeks
averaging
eacb were stolen. The auditor said two
rings 01 cbeci stealen were working In CoiiiD!buS In the
north, east and southeast sectloas and that Columbus
wllce bave artested two suspects and Daytoo pollee
have picked up one.
Fergusoesald that alter the thieves sle!ll the checks,
they use false Identification to cash them at baui
branches, food stamp offices ·and furniture stores.
He urged welfare recipients to wakb for their
mailman and Immediately pick up their cheeks l~m the
mall boxes.
Ferguson also urged merchants and bani employes
to require at least two pieces of Identification from
persons seeking to cash welfare checks during the next
two weeks.

•m

Force Dec. 2111 and Corrections Coliunluloner
Bennett Cooper said moll of the recommerulaUons lboWd be adopted lmmedlately• . ·
"Bot eft!l'yDne elae below the office of · :
!l'laOII wardell In tbe lnstltutlml stated. a
atiiiJilracy of foot-dragging," said~''lbele lower achelons ba1e beccme 10 aet
ln.~Qyund with tbelr Utile, cheap, corner
cutUng pnC:ticeB to llll)le things easier f9r
them, ; that they rea1st , all change," said
Friedman. '"lbeyhaveputforthevery obstacle
agalnlt ~ _changes that are vitally
necessary.''

Elberfelds has a large and complete selection

I

Welfare CJaecks to Thieves

Deooled To '1Jae lntere~~" Of 1Jae Meigs· Mason Area

For Your
EASTER OUTFIT
i

·...-.·...-.·-·.-.· ....·.·.·..·...·..

at

Shop Our Second .floor
Womens and Childrens
Apparel Departments
-

. .·.·-·

•

'

Compktes Plans

BLOOMING
GARDENIAS
ro $24

0

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

Participants in Service listed

MASON - An Easter at 5:30a.m. on Easter Sunday
program will be presented at ChrisUan Brethren Church.
Eastern morning at Mason
Christian Brethren Church
with the following to participate : George Zuspan, Jr.,
Pebbles Hubbard, Roger
Roa.ch, Patty Ohlinger, Sarah
ZUipan, Susie Burna, Greg
Winston, Chris Jolinson, Lisa
Reynolds, Mary Johnson,
Frankie Roush, Joey Roush,
Reta Elias, Chrl.sty Johnson,
Larry Roach, Brenda HubINFANT CHRISTENED
bard, Jill Roberts, Connie
LETART, W. Va. - The
MASON - Christopher Lewis, Jack Rottgen, Sherry wedding plans of Miss Stella
Michael Noble, &amp;-month old son Young, Pauletta Winston and Randolph and James Krebs
They know that their
hsve been completed. The open
of Mr. and Mrs. Larry H. Bridget Johnsoo.
dollars earn higher ear Sunrise
services
will
be
held
church
ceremony will be an
Noble, was christened on Palm
nings here with complete
safety! We invite yo u to
event of Saturday, April I, at
· Sunday at Mason · United
" get wise " to our sav ings
7:30
p.m. at the Oak Grove
Methodist Church by the Rev.
programs . plus the many
other banking services
United Methodist Church on
Parker Hinzman, pastor. The
offered at
the saixlhill Road near here.
infant's grandparents are Mr.
Officiating the double ring
and Mrs. Joseph Llsh and Mr.
ceremon~ will be the Rev .
. and Mrs. liomer Noble, all of
George
Hoschar, with Mr. and
Mason,
and
greatMrs. Thomas R. King the only
grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
attendants.
Mrs. King will be
L. E. Piersall, Pt. Pleasant,
her sister's matron of honor
and Gory Noble, Mason.
and Mr. King best man. Miss
The Athen s County
BASIC COMPLETED
Jacqueline Needs will present
Savings &amp; loan Co.
William B. Witte, Sarah S. nuptial music and guests will
RACINE
ArmyJ&gt;rlvate
296 Second St.
Michsel A. Robinson, 17, son of Witte to Charles Cornell, be registered by Miss Rebecca
Pomeroy , Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. William A. Agnes Cornell, 11.16 Acres, Roush.
All Accoun ts Insured To
Robinson, Route 2, recently &lt;llester.
The la.dies of the church wiD
S10.000.00 by FSL\C.
JeanS.
Seidenabel,
Albert
R.
completed eight weeks of basic
be in chsrge of a reception in
training at the U. S. Army Seidenabel to Letta A. Spencer, the church social rooms
Training Center, Armor, Ft. Parcels, Pomeroy.
following the ceremony.
(-~
..
Letta A. Spencer to Albert R.
Knox,
Ky
.
He
attended
.,.,"·,.....·
Southern Local High School. Seidenabel, Jean S. Seldenabel, Parceis 1 Pomeroy. Russell L. Wood, Rhonda R.
Charles A. Anderson, Wood, Lot, Pomeroy . .
Dorothy F. Anderson to
Richard R. Yowtg to Evelyn
Samuel C. Lewis, Fay Lewis, C. Young, Parcel, Sutton.
Parcel, Scipio.
Felicia V. Grueser, Evelyn
Paul C. Taylor to Neva P. E. Hollon, Edison Hollon,
Taylor, Parcels, Rutland.
Freda M. Grueser, Helen J.
Rose Marcinko to Otto A. Oberholzer,
Edwin
0.
Marcinko, 190 Acres, Olive.
Oberholzer, Edna A. Herber.
Albert Hill, Jr., Ora E. Hill to
Ken Herber to Glenn E.
Franklin ·D. Gheen, Donna L.
Thompson, Lois Thompson ,
Gheen, Lots, Racine.
1.78 Acres, Pomeroy.
Allen E. Ball, Freda Ball to
FROM
TO
Mary L. Nardo, Wilbur C.
Wilma M. Tillis, Parcel, Conkey to Monroe Allen Sher,
9
Chester.
89~
76.25 Acres, Salisbury.
Helen Lellheit to Jack W.
Carsey, Neacil E. Carsey,
Romanl&gt;c . appeal ing " Dew ·
Beautiful
For
kisl" gardenias.
t.arly Bird League
Blooms
Easter Loaded wi lh
Feb. 23, 1972
Slandlnas
buds'
Tonlghl &amp; Tllursd.ly
Teem
Pts.
M.orch 2f-30
D
..
G.
Pinnettes
60
Shop Pomeroy Ben Franklin Store early tor all
NOT OPEN
King Builders
·
44
your Easter needs while selections are
Evelyn's Grocery
42
Larry's Ashland
2S
Friday &amp; Saturday
c_omplele. Cards , party items, empty and
Rawlings Dodge
26
M.orch l1·Aprll1
ftlled _baskets, toys, flowers, gifts and large
Meigs Mobile Homes
16
ONE MORE TRAIN
seleclton of candy and candy novelties .
Team· High Game - D. j&gt;.
TO ROB
Pinnettes 857 ; Larry's Ashland
(Tocllnlcolorl
MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING C:FNTER
818;
D. G. Pinneltes 792.
George Peppard
Team
High Series - D. G.
~--.
,.~
f
Diane Mu\deur

CLEVELAND (UPI) -: Tbe chairman of
the Governor's Tut Fm:e on CorreclloiB said
today the "entire state penal ll)'lllm Is like a
powder keg" and accused Penal ofllclala of a
''conspiracy of fooldracglng" for faillilg to
Implement the recommendations of the Task
Force.
· ''This Clll'l'eSlt trouble at the penitentiary
and other lesiei lnstltuuoiis wt11 be nOthing to
wbat may happen If :10111ethlng iln't done," said
Cuyahnfla County Common Ple!!8 Court Judge
Bernard Friedman.
·
Friedman submitted the report of bls Task

~',hh,!~,..v»»:.o&gt;:o~~i$f)$-~)ii:.'t..::.~''XOX;m!~

::::
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• • ·

Learn What's New
In Adult Education

Penal SyStem is
About to ·Explode

·-·-· ..... -·-·-·.·.·.--·..,...... ·.·.·.·.

'

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