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1

..
·1-TheDaiiJit :1 wi,VIII,Irt.."'an

'

vetena~ Memorial u,.j,K,aa··
· VlstUng houn 2-4 .nd . 7~:30;'
' SATUf\I)AY AD~SSIONS
- Edward ·Adams, Racine;
Dru;lel · DaVidson, ·Pomeroy;
&lt;;a. mel Jewett, Rutland.
~ATURDAY DIBCiiARGES
- Richard Stone, Winnie
McKenzie, Lela Shenefield,
Mary Stivers, Leo Clark,
· llarold King, Warren Reeves,
Michael l{arris, Teresa
Whittington, Darrell Nelson,
Homer Hoffman, Freda
Krider, Geraldine Shook.
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Rex Argabrlte, Reedsville ;
Philip Shoemaker, Middleport;
Elizabeth Gilkey, Shade; Mirla
Herdman; Evans, . W. Va.;
Dorea Arnold, Pomeroy;
Daniel Talbott, Long Bottom;
Joann McLain, Racine;
William Collins, Rutland.
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Julia Maynard, Mildred
Powell.
Pleuaat Valley' Hospltal
Names of patients admitted
will not be released for
pubtication, a~ordlng to an
announcement from hospital
authorities. ·
Discharges - Mrs. John

MEIGS tHEATRE
Tonight, &amp; Tu01.
April.3-4
WILD ROVERS
ITochnlcolor&gt;
William Holden
Ryan O'Neal
Colorcartoons:
Gold Dust Bandit
Rocklbyt Slnbad
TINt Enlarger

SHOW·STARTS 7 P.M.

1 .

•

....

~.O.,AprO,II'/2

HOSPITAL NEWS ... :',

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,...

.......

...

HUD Scratches
.

Greenlee,ind daughter, Point
·,.
Pleasant;
Marguerite
O'Connor, St. Albans; LatTy
. - T
.
WiUet, Point Pleasant'; Paul
Thornton, Leon; Clifford
Cornell, Point Pleasant; Oscar
Phillips, Rodney, 0.; Mrs.
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The day to Dun afKI Bradstreet and
Russell
Williams
and
daughter, Long' Bottom; Mrs. Hou~illl( and Urban Develop.. • the Federal Housing AdminisJames. Patterson, Henderson, ment Departme~t (HUD) has !ration's (FHA) 87 regional
and Mrs. Richard Spurlock, suspended contracts with Dun olfices.
and Bradstreet Inc. for credit
FHA, the arm of HUD that
Point Pleasant. ·
ratings on single family home underwrites home mortgages,
mortgages.
· had contracts with oJn and
Dun and Bradstreet, the Bradstreet lor reports on innation's largest credit, rating 1:tividu.alcredit staodings based
(Con!lnued .from Page I)
organization was indicted last on commercial and court
legislation was "religious Wednesday in New York City fecords :
discrimination through the ln connection with an alleged
FHA Commissioner Eugene.
back door."
,
credit scheme that would cost A. Gulledge notified FHA of-After taking his wUe and the federal treasury $23 ficials that ''maximum rethree of his children to Easter million .
liance" would be placed on
Sunday mass, Muskie Issued a
HUD said in a statement complete .checks by FHA of
7, structural steel for the large building is now In place. Some
PROGRESS EXCELLENT - Good progress is being
·staternen~ calling the North revealing the suspension Sun- bank references, retail credit
40 persons are expected to be employed by the business
made at the construction site of the new Jones Boys Discount
VIetnamese lnvasipn of South day that earlier reports of and other credit references on
which
is to be opened this summer. Construction Is by Carter
Store and Supermarket on Pomeroy's West Main St.
VIetnam "alannlng but not losses In the huodreds of applications for FHA home
Although the official groundbreaklng was as recent as March
and Evallll
Co., GalllpoUs.
. Construction
.
unexpected," and warned millions were inaccurate . No- mortgage insurance.
there was a risk of "greater - lice of the suspension was
"Effective immediately you
not Jesser -American military ' made in telegtams last Thurs- are prohibited fro'm relying
Involvement." Muskie salcl It
upon individual credit reports
was a "tragedy" that the Nixon
(factual data reports on indiVi·
Administration has refused to
duals) supplied by Dun and
set a dale for withdrawal of
Bradstreet, Inc., for any single
American forces and has
(Continued from Page I)
family mortgage insurance
broken off the farls negotia- South Vietnamese troops still transaction," Gulledge said.
tions.
The suspension of Dun and
in Quang Tri Province. The
- Although McGovern had to reinforcements included a Bradstreet reports means that'
retract ·one accusation against crack regiment that had been real estate agents writing sales
ITT, he held to his second guarding Hue.
contracts and FHA local ofcharge -that ITT has paid no
The South Vietnamese com- ficials will have to do the credit
federal taxes for three years, mand announced at the daily checking. It ,could not be im·
ending in 1970. He also said that military briefing in Saigon that mediately determined whether
the Nortlt Vietnamese of- its 12 bases in Quang Tri the change would have the
fensive 'reinforced his call for a Province had been abandoned effect of lengthening the time
total withdrawal and added only temporarily in the face of needed to complete a real
that the United States should an unprecedented Communist estate transaction.
stop providing mllltary aid to artillery bombardment of 4,000
Dun and Bradstreet was one
South Vietnam.
of nine corporations, five FHA
shells a day and more.
--Jackson accused The New
"There have been no South employes and 35 other indivi·
York Times of a "New Mc- Vietnamese bases overrun," a duals indicted on 500 counts of
Carthyisrn" for writing a story spokesman said. "In the face of providing alleged false inwhich he said left the im- a massive force of more than formation on credit ratings and
pression that the Boeing three divisions, our troops had property values. The indictHARRISONVILLE NORMAL CLASS OF 1909- Can you
picture. The group apparently Is made up of young people
Company, aircraft maker with to avoid their attack. This was· ments by a New York grand
identify the young people in this class? Submitted by Mrs.
who, having complet!!(l common school, aspired to become
headquarters in Seattle, was phase one. In the next few jury followed an 11-month
Tom
Wells,
Pomeroy,
only
the
late
George
H.
Crow,
is
teacher£ in common school themselves. This normal school
helping finance his Wisconsin daY$, after the reinforcements investigation.
known. Apopular Meigs teacher and later a professor at Ohio
prepared them for county examinations that certified them .
campaign. He called the ar- arrive, we will counterattack
University,
he
is
second
from
right
in
tl]e
third
row
.
Mrs.
There
was a small fee charged each teacher-to-be, payable in
ticle, which ran In ' the state the enemy.''
Wells
would
appreciate
learning
the
identity
of
others
in
the
this case, to Mr. Crow. This system of teacher certification
edition of the Milwaukee
The South Vietnamese arpassed
out of existeqce in the early 1920s.
Journal, "a plain, simple mored brigade at Quang Tri
hatchet job" and demanded an city, 18 miles south of the
apology.
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ),
-Undsay, rated as a big rallied some of the South
MORE TAG DAY
Democrats Will
Patrolman Facing
underdog, told reporters he did Vietnamese soldiers straggling
Due to bad weather connot know how well he would south with civilian refugees
MASON - Daniel Harrison
Meet on Tuesday ditions Saturday, Pomeroy
fare Tuesday. He did say, today, reoccupied the smolder· Varian, 80, Mason, died S'unday
Boys League Tag Day will be Traffic Charge
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
however, that he has detected ing town of Dong Ha which had morning at Holzer Medic~!
A special meeting of the con tinued next Saturdoy. All
Saturday,
Aprl11,1972
State Highway Patrolman
"big momentum" and added been set afire by' Communist Center, Mr. Varian was born County Democrat Committee Pony Leag uers will also
SALES REPORT OF
"the people are switching" to artillery and advanced 20 miles Oct. II, 1891 at Clifton the son will be held Tuesday at 7:30 participate in next Saturday's Dennis M. Hunter, 26,
Ohio
Valley Uvestock Co,
Burkhart Lane, Gallipolis, has
him.
west toward the Communist- of the late Charles and Cora p.m . in the courtroom of the tag day to begin at 9 a.m.
HOGS
- 175 to 220 lbs. 23 to
been cited to Municipal Court
- Wallace was Idle Sunday - held city of Cam Lo.
Ann Smith Varian. He was a co urthouse E. A. Wingett,
on a charge of failure to 28.15; 220to 250 lbs. 23 to 23.25;
excep,l 19, ~~l~n~ ch11tch serviIn
a
harshly-worded retired i:oal miner and a chairman, announced today.
mainstain assured clear Light 19 to 23; Fat Sows 19.50 to
ces -but planned to Peswne his
Purpose of the meeting is to
statement to newsmen in member of the United Mine
distance following a three-car 22; Stags 19Down; Boars 17to
campaign today.
Workers.
organize
a
writewin
campaign
Saigon, a U. S. command
accidenl at 9:16 p. m. Friday 20; Pigs 6 to 14; Shoats 14 IQ 22.
He is survived by. his wife, for county candidat es, en·
CATILE --' Steers 30 to
spokesman
said
on Rt. 7, south of Cheshire.
fttarrlage License
35.50;
Heifers 26.75 to 32.75;
"precautionary actions" were Blara; a son, Richard, of dorsement of ca ndidates
According to the Gallia·
Michael Joseph Hargraves, ordered "in order to protect Mason; one daughter,, Mrs. running in the primary and to
Meigs Post State Highway Baby Beef 35 to 47150; Fat Cows
21, Middleport, and Rebecca American lives" with ad- Arthur (Irene) Roush, Mt. distribute sample ballots. All
Patrol, an auto driven by 18 to 24; Cannm 17 to ·27.10;
Sue Stivers, 21, Pomeroy.
ditional air support and navy Alto; II grandchildren, six interested democrats are
Christine B. King, 17, of 74 Bulls 25.50 to 30.75; Milk Cows
great-grandchildren,
one
urged
to
attend
.
ships called to battle. "About
Spruce St., Gallipolis, was 185 to 315.
LADIES TO MEET
200'' U. S. citizens, mostly sister, Mrs . Dallas (Cora)
VEAL CALVES - Tops
slowing to make a left turn into
BASHAN - The Ladies milill!ry men1 were in Quang Roush, Clifton, and a brother,
52.75;
Seconds 47 to 49.25;
Cllarles, of Clifton.
AIDMEN CALLED
; NEW YORK (UPI) - Dlta the Kyger Creek Employees' Medilllll 43.50 to 45; Com. &amp;
Auxiliary of the Bashan Trl, he said.
l'h p
E
D. Beard, the International Club area when struck in the
Funeral services will be held
Volunteer Fire Dept. wiU meet
U. S. warplanes flew 128
e omerqy ·R squad T 1 1
d T1
h
Hvs. 40 to 46; Culls 40 Do~.
Wednesday at 7:30p.m. at the bombing raids in northern Wednesday at 1:30 p.m. at the answered a call to the
e ep wne an
e egra p · rear by an auto operate&lt;fllY\ BABY CALVES - 30 to 75.
fire house . New members are South Vietnam Sunday, the Foglesong Funeral Home with Shamrock Motel, We~t Main Corp. lobbyist whose heart Janet TiUis, 21, Rutland. The
LAMBS- Tops 31; Seconds
. Tissis car was struck in the
welcome .
highest number of strikes since the Rev . Ira Wellman and the \ ~t. . at 1:14 a.m. Sunday for condition reportedly will rear by Hunter's, patrol 27 to 28.50; Light Wts. 24 to 25;
Common 24 Down.
'
Feb. 18, and the missions as the Rev. Chester Tennant of· 'Rose Dimitri , of Columbus a prevent her from testifying cruiser.
ficiating.
Burial
will
be
in
West
maternity
case
.
Mrs.
Dimltri
before
a
Senate
committee
for.
COUNCIL TO MEET
skies cleared were expected to
. H'll
1 cerne tery . was transferred to a Ewing six months, slipped out of her
CHESTER
Chester increase Immensely. War- CoIurn b1a
Council 323 D of A, wiD meet planes bombing the Hi Chi Friends may call at the funeral ambulance and taken to Holzer hospital room for a 91J.minute
Medical Center.
television interview, it was
Tuesday at 8 p.m. The charter Minh supply trail in I..aos also home after 3 p.m. Tuesday.
disclosed Sunday.
wJU be draped. Members are were to be diverted to northern
Mrs . Beard, against the
asked to wear white.
South Vietnam, he said.
advice of her doctors, signed
To
all
appearances,
herself out of the ·Mountain
however, this first cleara cut
Valley Osteopathic hospital
South Vietnamese counSaturday for the interview with
terattack of lhe offensive was
CBS correspondent Mike
(Continued from Page I)
an isoMed afion, and possibly
ave I
Wallace for the "Sixty
44
a shortlived one.
Handsomely in
"committed now to bringing prices down." But Price Com- Minutes" show aired Sunday.
When she left the hospital,
mission Chairm~n C. Jackson Grayson Jr. sal'il a freeze is
Mrs. Beard wore a sweater and
"something we have to consider."
skirt. She donned a floorWASHINGTON - A PRESIDENTIAL POPULATION length, gray hospital gown with
commission which recently recommeoded legalized abortions a high neck and long sleeves
I WILL BE ABSENT
and eventual zero population growth for the United States has for the interview,
••
" I feel fine," she told
been turned down by the three major television networks in its
FROM MY OFFICE
W
allace.
"That was a pretty
attempts to buy an hour of prime time to present findings and
strong pill the doctor gave me
recommendations.
APRIL lOth TO
before we left ... As soon as I
The Commission on Population Growth and the American get back to bed I'll be all
APRIL 27th
Future has appealed the rejection to the Federal Com right." Mrs. Beard is due to be
munications Commission (FCC ) under the fairness doctrine that released from the hospital
requires broadcasters to treat pubtic issues fairly by allowing Tuesday ,
' - - - - - - - - -... i reasonable opportunity for the presentation of connictin g views.

Dun -Bradstreei

•

"

FASHION AND STYLE REVUE was the topic of Mrs. Betty Clark, Gallia Cottnty Home
Economics Instructor, at Monday nlght's ·Meigs 4-H Club Plan-o-rama held at the Pomeroy
Elementary SchooL Pictured with Mrs. Clark , left, are Mrs. Rose Ginther, center, and Mrs.
Clair Karr, both active involved in 4-H club )l'Ork.

Vietnam .

•

at y
Devoted To The

VOL. XXIV NO. 250

Don' t form an opinion on

you've seen
the paneling specials offered
by the "FR IENOLY ONES"
ot POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK COMPANY. For

paneling until

example, 4'x8' Georgia .

Pacific vinyl shield walnut,
ot~ly $3 .99 . And many
more to choose from . with

moul lngs to match.

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.
The Dept. Store of Building
Sinct lt15.

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

JN'"""'-n
ews•• in Briefs~

1 knew

I'd paid
that bill!"

NOTICE

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.

Local Bowling
/

Tri-Counly

L~ague

Standings

Pomeroy Bowling Lanes
Tearit
Pis.
Larry's Ashland
76

Knowing that you paid is important. Provint
that you paid can be very important. Checks
provide the records and the proof you need.
You can't beat a Checking Account for
efficient money management.

The Farm.ers Bank
and.Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO
Member Federal Reserve System
Fridays Our Drlve-lo Wl.adow ·I•
Open I a.m. to 7 p.m., jCoalla110111ly).
~

So that I may be of better service to my current and future policy holders
I have just recently installed an AUTOMATIC TELEPHONE AN:
SWERING SERVICE . _This service is in force 24 hou rs a day, seven days
a week for your conventence. If by chance-l am out of my office when you
c~ll, i.ust leave your name and telephone number and any message Jhat
you w1sh . I will return your ca ll or comply with your message.

"

. AUTOMATIC TELEPHONE ANSWERING SERVICE

Life- · Hospitalization Ins. - Salary Continuation Ins. Group Coverages (3 or more employes).
Soon to Offer All Lines

$20,011 Mulmum'lnauraoce
Far Eadl llepotltor

1111!"11111!11_1!1111_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _. .

1

\.l

,

150 N. 2nd

PHONE 992-5869

MID~L~PORT,. 0.

Davis Warner

66

Rawlings

60

Pomeroy Block
42
Firestone
36
Hoisum
32
High Indi vidual Game - Bill
Radford 255.
Second High Ind. Game Lou Sauer 216.
High Series - Bill Radford
611 '
Sec.ond High Series -

Sauer 609 .

·

Team High
Rawlings 1051.

Lou

Game

li.s a quick trip to the
fashion scene in "Dune

Buggy" the 100% cotton
brushed sateen slack.
Comfort tailored with
flar e bottoms and slash
. front pocket. Assorted
colors and contrasts.

Sizes 28/38

Team
High Series
Pomeroy Cement Block 2990.

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in down·
town Pomeroy at II a. m.
Monday was 45 degre,es under
sunny skies.

,
BOOSTERS TO MEET
RACINE - The Southern
Athletic Boosters will meet this
evening at the higH school here

a.---------------------------~-' at 7:30· p.m~

Be sure to see all the
other styles. Mens' and
Boy,s Flare Jeans and
Slacks. Mens sizes 28 to
.38. Boys sizes 8 to 18 in
slims · regulars and
husk ies.

Elberfel~

In Pomeroy.

enttne

OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

PHONE 992-2156

TUESDAY, APRIL 4, 19f

TEN CENTS

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With Wallace

For Interview

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

lntere~l3

graders; Mrs. James Smith,
Tuppers Plains; Mrs. William
Thornton, Salem Center Girls;
Mrs . James Butcher, Middleport; Bill Coffman, Middleport; Mrs. Carl Horky, Mrs.
Phyllis Miller, Middleport
Clubs ; Mrs. Pat Holter and
Mrs. Eva Walker, Five Point
Junior Leaders.
Mrs. Leota Young, 4-H
assistant, reported on the
classes being offjlred. They
were new pilot projects by
Duane Plym~le ; area 4-H
agent; soU and water, Dave
Parry, SCS office; engineering
and woodworking, Dave
Boothe, Vinton County extension agent, agriculture and
4-H; Mrs. Betty Clark, Gallia
Co unty Home Economics
Instructor, fashion and style
revue; Mrs . Ada Nease,
Pomeroy
Fabric
Shop,
Fabrics-F.abrics; Mrs, Jennifer Sheets, · nutrition; Mrs:
(Continued on Page 12)

•

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Market Report

Dita Dallies

"Don't fDrrn an opl"lon un•
til ;ou'vt ... ord ilath sldu·
thtn dtbatt rht I uu• with
JO\Irltl f,''

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH noting that three years ago
"Join4-ll-Tryit - You'll Meigs County set a goal of
Like It," was the theme of the $2,000 toward the camp fund .
annual Meigs County 4-H He reported that $400 has
Project Plan.Q-Rama staged already been paid on the
Monday night at the Pomeroy amountandthatanother$400is
Elementary School.
ready to be paid. Flower bulbs
Approximately 300 club will again this year be sold as a
members, advisors and other fuod raising project for the
persons who attended. the camp fund, Blakeslee said that
meeting which featured a ' Canters Cave Camp serves not
general introductjon to 4-H by • only Meigs but Gallia,
the extension agents, classes Lawrence, Jackson and
on the various aspects of club Highland Counties ,.lind is
work, displays, and the in- va luold at $100,000.
traduction of new advisors.
New club advisors were
Dorsey Jordan, chairman recognized by Mrs. Roy Roller,
of the 4-H advisory committee, 4-H assistant, They include
extended her welcome with the George Hart, Burlingham
junior leaders leading in the Boys; Mrs. Maxine Dugan,
pledges to tbe 4·H flag and the Pomeroy Girls ; Mrs. Pat
American flag. Jennifer Thoma, Pomeroy Boys ; Mrs.
Sheets, home economics ex- Addalou Lewis and Mrs. Alice
tension agent, commented on Thompson, Pomeroy Girls ;
the challenge of 4-H work.
Junior Kemiedy and Bill Cole,
C. E. Blakeslee, county ' Saddle Sitters; La'rry and Jan
agriculture agent, talked Jones, Golden Oavaliers; Mae
briefly on the 4-H camp fund Young, Pomeroy Third

McGovern

Died on Sunday

F r lendl~

'

4•HProject·Plan-O-RaTna Plays to 300 Per$ons

Daniel Varian

Mr.

.

l&lt;

~
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~
$:

COLUMBUS (UPI)-Ohlo Attorney General William
J. Brown said today he had.been investigating for several
weeks reports the State Teachers Retirement System
purchased m stock at the same time the stock was helug
sold by "Insiders" of the company who knew of a pending
Justice Department antitrust settlement against ITT that
would drive the stock down.
Scripps-Howard Newspapers reported today a Ralph
Nader associate charged both the STRS and the Central
National Bank of Cleveland bought tens 01 thousands of
t k wee ks before ltdrop ped bY••10 as hare.
shareso 1soc
Ux Rohatyn, ITT director and partner 1n the Lazard
Fr eres In ves1men1 fi rm, 1eame d pr 1va tel y 1rom the
Justice Department last June 17 that Jt was willing to
settle its.anti-trust else against ITT, said Nader lawyer
\leuhen Roberlson in a letter to the Senate Judiciary
C9m1Qlilt;o; He aaid In the six weeb before publlc an·
no uncement of the settlen~ent Lazard was "perhaps the
most active seller In the world oi ITT series In preferred
stock."
Brown said his Investigation would continue In an
attempt to determine whether ·any seeurltles violations
occurred to damage the STRS funds .
"U so, my olllce will take prompt and appropriate
legal action," Brown said.

"WHAT'S NEW FOR '72" in fashion trends, patterns and
fabrics 'Was discussed by Mrs . Ann Lambert In the class
session Fabrics-Fabrics. A wide-ranged display of materials
and accessories arranged by the Pomeroy Fabric Shop was
viewed by the many club members and advisors attending
two sessions offered during the Plan-o-rama Monday night.

:·:·

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Broad out 1·mes of the 1972
Regatta Wee'kend program
were presented by Bill Grueser
to members of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce
Monday follow ing a regular
luncheon at Bowers' Drive-In
Restaurant.
Also announced was the
impending construction of nine
new pre-cUt homes ,on the Witt
property near Meigs High
School.
The Re gatta planning is
taking this direction :
Friday night, the annual
parade, followed by a variety
show_ at the Pomeroy Junior
Hig h School sponsored by the
Tuppers Plains Community

parade from Middleport to
Pomeroy ; possibly a ski show,
the famous Frog Jumps at 4
p.m., and the Frog Ball, and a
flower show.
Sunday, Flea Mart, the
Historical Society 's observance of Heritage Sunday,
· marking the opening of the new
Meigs Museum; boat races
with cash prizes and trophies, .
and continua lion of the flower
show,
Dean Lutz and Jim Mees
were asked to sell exhibitorJs
space which was located
behind the Pomeroy school last
year . Fred Crow suggested
that perhaps the upper
Pomeroy parking Jo t can be

~::::;:;:;:;:~:;;:::t~:;;.&lt;c:::&gt;':':&gt;i::;,."&lt;:~=:::;w*:::&gt;.::""-:::~:&lt;::&lt;:,",::::::::::::::::::::::::::-.;::::::::::~&gt;:::.: Cl~~iurday, small tractor used for this purpose this year.

ews:r;,: ·if~~

.

pulling contest behind the
Pomeroy Junior High School
with C. E. Blakeslee in charge ;
canoe race with local boy
sco uts participatin g; boat

Webster Post 39 of the
American Legion will sponsor
two dances, one on Friday
night and one on Saturday
,night. Legion members will
also assist Pomeroy Firemen
in selling barbecue chicken oh
the parking lot.
Earl Ingels and Jim Mees
will be in charge of the Friday
parade as well as the , bQat
parade.
.
·
A National sanctioned baton
twirling contest under the
direction of Mrs. Judy Riggs
will also be held at Meigs
Junior High in Middleport. The
date and lime to be announced.
Crow warned to look out for
"some. surprises" at the Frog
11
J":.~s~~~n~a J.ack Kerr in-

Carson Crow was appointed troduced Bill Kelton, realtor,
to sell ads lor the Regatta and Charlie Cornell, conProgram in 'the Pomeroy- tractor, both of Athens. They
Middleport area .
said nine new middle-income
GrueseraIso note d tha !Drew homes w1'II be • erec ted

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook .
Thursday through Saturday:
forthwith.
Partly cloudy Thursday,
The first pre-cut home will
cloudy
Friday and Saturday
arrive Thursday. Of brick and
stone , the homes will cost be- with a chance of rain Friday.
tween $20,000 and $30,000 Moderating temperatures
Cornell said, and will be during the period with highs
electrically heated. Cornell in the upper 30s and 40s on
invited members to inspect the Thuraday and in the upper
homes which will be ready for 40s nortti and upper sqs south
display in two to three weeks. on Friday and mostly In the
50s on Saturday.
. Crow noted that a gt;lll!n ,~,~~,V·;·:~;o;o;·~,_-.-;.,....,,.,.,,..
:o»!&gt;:o.-..•.•:lo.o:o:&gt;;&gt;;J;o;?;..~
1 can be pure hased at a '
Pant
reasonable price, that would
beautify the river bank. Crow
observed that the plant is at·
tractive and gives a very green
appearance and will keep the
weeds from coming up .
Attending were Kerr •
Grueser, Crow, Bob Jacobs, C.
Crow, Dale Warner, Ted Reed,
Bids on two new school buses
for
fall delivery were accepted
Donald Deiner, Jim Mees,
Jack Carsey, Jack Kane, Dean by the Eastern Local School
Lutz, Tom Cassell, N. W. District Board.of Etlucation in
Compton, Richard Chambers, a special session recently.
Four of the' five board
Kelton and Cornell ,
members voted to purchase the
·
' two ~hassis from the. R. H.
'Rawlings Motor Co. m Mtddleport whtle the f1fth member
a n c e ab0 tainedfromvotin .Also an
~1 .
g h 'th
1. t
ebar 1erh mo tofn purcthasefi e
.
us c ass1s rom ano er nn
. died without a second,
Rawlings' bid on the two
chassis was $11,008. The Meigs
Equipment Co. submitted a bid
·
of $10,790 on the two chassis
while the Pomeroy Motor eo.
In other business council bid was $11,374.
voted to make Osborn St. a oneAbstaining from voting on
way street following a written the purchase was I. 0. McCoy.
request from residents of the Voting in favor of Rawlings'
area . Entrance to the . street equipment were Howard
will be from Union Ave. at the Caldwell, Jr., Roger Epple,
Chevrolet warehouse.
Clyde Kuhn and Oris Smith.
Paul Gerard of PoinTView The bodies on the two 66Cable TV asked if council passenger buses were pur·
would consent to the company chased from Davis and Son at
(Continued on Page 12)
Langsville with a low bid of
$3,644 compared to the bid of
Lahmann of Cincinnati of
$4,090.

Rawlings' Bid
For Two School .
Buses Accepted

. . , -condemnatIOnOrdin
Approve
, d as Emergency

By United Press lntematlonat
·
. .
WASHINGTON - SENATEINVESTIGATORSprobablywill
havemorequ.esttonsforiTT lobb)'lsiD1taD . Beardsdoctersas
a result of h~eclSion to do a 90-mmute teleVIsion mterv1ew.
Mrs Beard's ysicians had indicated last week it would be six
·
.
.
months before she would be ~bl~ phys1caUy to testify before the
Senate Judiciary Comm1ttee m tts lnvestlgatwn of Internatlonal ,
Teleph?ne &amp;Telegraph and Attorney General-des1gnate Richard
G. Klemd1enst.
On March 26 she met with a delegation of committee
members for questions at her Denver hospital, but suffered a
recurrence of her heart trouble and doctors ended the session.
This Sunday, however, she left her hospital for ·an undisclosed
location at which she taped an interview with CBS correspondent
Mike Wallace.
"Her television interview raises very serious questions about
the consistency of the medical position," a lawyer on the
Judicary Committee staff said Monday.

e

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A
zoning
ordinance
regulating .trailers, trailer
coaches, mobile homes ~nd
trailer parks was given its first
reading and second ordinance
authorizirg condemnation of
certain buildings or·structures
was given three required
.
HARRISBURG, PA. -THE H&lt;U\RISBURG Seven jury, readings - under emergency
stumped by the Jaw on conspiracy, struggled into its sixth day of measures - by Pomeroy
deliberation today. The defense charged that the judge's in- council Monday night.
structions were grossly confusing and did not touch the issues.
The nine women and three men got' the case Thursday and
reported on Sunday that after long and serious deliberations,
they were unable to teach a unanimous verdict on nine of the 10
indictment counts.
Correction of riverbank
erosion in four southern Ohio
STEUBENVILLE, OHIO - THE LEADER OF A group of counties of Washington,
five women walking from Pontiac,Mich., to Washington, D.'C. to Lawrence, \Meigs and Gallia,
protest school busing, said today the worst. thing they had e?- will depend new federal
countered on their trip so far was the atr pollut10n m this legis(ation which Congressman
southeastern Ohio city.
Clarence , Mlller ~ro'sed
"),live in a city where there is a lot offoundry pollution," said Monday .to introduc and
Mrs. Irene McCabe. "But I have never seen anything like this." support in the Cong
.
Mrs. McCabe led her group across the Ohio River and through
rhis was the centr result of
Follansbee, W. Va., late Monday afternoon. They then returned a meeting , of 35 persons
representing soil and water
to their hotel here Monday night. ·
·
conservation
' districts In the
•
four counties', with Mlller and
officials of the U. S. Corps of
Engineers, Huntington, W. Va .
COLUMBUS (UPI) -The Ohio' Senate loday passed a
Several landowners took part
"touKh but fair" strip mine control bill which pro110nents
in the discussion, Representing
believe II amoug the strongest in the nation. The vote wu 30the U. S, Corps of Engineers
were Charles' Mcintyre and
0..
Gol:. John J. GJUJgan In an 11th hour statement Monda~
Sam French . 'Gallipolis City
urged passaKe ol the bill which he Slid was not all he woUld
Manager D, Kenneth Morgan
have liked but would "Insure adequate reclamation" ~nd
and Cheshire Mayor Walter
Lucas alpo participated In 'the
permit mining companies io operate at a. proftt.
discussions, along with Gene
SEN. OAKLEY COLUNS, R-lronton, a strip mine
Derickson, assistant chief,
operator, asi!ed lo be excuaecl from voting after explaining a
Ohio Division;Df s&amp;W Districts.
position of ·uno ·c o"'at" oo the m~ure. "I lim not supThe session was· held in the
potting or oppooiJil IIIIJ bill today because I cannol agree
ASCS office in Gallipolis.
with aU atpecll olll," .W c;alllal, who bas contended the
Cong. Miller asked Jimd·
Iegislalla.
lie .,..... to tile amall operaton.
owners to disclose their
erosion probletrui and asked

The zoning ordinance
requires that all trailers in the
village paying trailer taxes
shall have underpinning of fire
proof material. Also, any fueJ
oil tank must be concealed with
suitable covering.
It sfllll be the duty of the
zoning inspector, who shall be
appointed by the mayor ,
subject to council's approval,

to enforce the ordinance.
The condemnation ordinance
gives the fire chief and his
assistant and members
designated by the fire chief the
right, following examination or
inspection of a building or
other structures, which lor
want of repair is dangerous to
human life, to order the
structure razed.

River Erosion Problems Aired

.

Corps~!-

the
present
jurisdiction tit had to solve
them. Sever causes for the
accellerate erosion were
discussed, two being increased
number of 6arge tows and
increded pleasure craft
causing greater wave action on
the banks.
Several landowners were
distressel) tbatthe barges often
operate close to. the bank and
even break off trees that help
prevent erosion.
Also, dams recently constructed on the Ohio River
have raised writer levels and ·
accelerated erosion hal
resulted In an attempt to create
a stable river bank.
Individual iarmers in Oallla
county have lost several acrea
of v.aluable cropland in recent
years. Ai}nual Iosses of some IJ
mea'~Ured In teet, not inches.
R!VER8ANK EROSION DISCUSSED - Thirty-five
. It was concluded that 011ny
personsl'l!(JI'eSentlng a four-count y area along the Oh io River
ho'meowners
are
also
dis~ussed
erosion problems w(th Cong. Cl~rence E. Miller at
threatened with probable Joss
the Gallia County soil and Water Conservation District office
of their property. Accellerated
in
Gallipolis Monday afternoon . Shown .with Cong. Miller
erosion from various causes
slowly diminishes the distanre · above ~Olarle&amp;.' W. Mcintyre, U. S. Corp of Engineers,
Huntington, W. Va .
(Continued on Page 121

Xnother
Landfill
Site Out

°

,

'

The Meigs County Com·
missioners learned today that
the third sanitary landfill site
chosen by the commissioners.
has failed to win the approval
of the Ohio Department of
Health .
The site is located on the east
side of township road 58, one
mile southeast of the village of
Rutland and lhree miles west
of the former Middleport
dump.
In other business , the
commissioners referred to the
Meigs Regional Planning
Commission a plat of Arbaugh 's Foiitth subdivision
located in Olive Township.
The commissioners also
approved the estimated repair
of an embankment failure at
the intersection of county road
j2 and township road 119 at a
cost of $8,880.
The commissioners remain
interested in purchasing a
sanitary landfill site within
seven miles or Jess of downtown Pomeroy and Middleport.
Anyone having such a site
who is interested in selling is
asked to contact the com· ·
missioners.
The
commissioners also passed a
resolution for the Rural
Development committee
designating the week of April 9
through 15asClean Up Week of
rural Meigs·County.
Attending were Charles R.
Karr , Bob Clark and Warden
Ours, commissioners, and
Martha C.'hamhers, clerk.

Central Soya in
Merger Proposal

FORT WAYNE, Ind. - Dale
W. McMillen, Jr., chairman of
Central Soya Company, Inc.,
(NYSE ) and Alvin B. Filbert,
chairman of J. H. Filbert, Inc.,
of Baltimore, today an•tounced
an agreement to merge the two
No o~e was injured or cited companies . A principal con·
In two minor traffic accidents tingency is the .securing of a
Monday in Meigs County.
favorable decisi~n from the
The Gallia-Meigs Post State International Revenue Service,
Highway Patrol said the first qualifying lhe merger for a
·occurred at 7 a.m. on the Salem tax-free exchange of stock.
Canter-Tina Ridge Rd.·, three
J . H. Filbert, Inc., is a
and eight tenths miles north of privately owned company
Rt. 124 where an auto driven by which celebrated Its fiftieth
Zin Min, 36, Athens, collided on year of corporate existence in
a hillcrest with a pick-up truck 1968. 1n 1971, its sales exceeded
operated by Harry R. Altlmus, $62 million . Its branded
49, Belsano, Pa. There was products are marketed under •
minor damage to both vehicles. the "Mrs. Filbert's" label. It Is
A second accident occurr~ one of the large producers and
at II :30 a.lll: on 1\t. 33, one and marketers &lt;JI margarine in the
eight tenths miles south of the Eastern United States. The
Athens-JIIeigs County line company also markets
where an auto driven by Nancy mayonnaise, salad dressings
Susan McBroom , 24, Amhers t, . and puddings, and plans to
Ohio, attempting to make a left introduce other consumer food
. turn just as a car driven by items. Plant facilities are
.Vincent J. Klsh, 17, Chauncey, loca ed
in
Baltimore,
attempted to pass. There was Maryland and Atlanta,
muderate damage to both cars. Georgia.

Two Accidents

Proved Minor

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"

.J

I

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�if

f

•

•
•

• S- The lllily 8eminel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ,

t-n.DIIIJit ~..I,K"'IpDI"..;&gt;w~.o ,Aprll41 tm

IRU(f IIOSSAJ

lAY CROMLfY

China

-Helen Hlelp

~eversal:

'Out' Officials
Getting Back In
By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON (NEA l
What amount~ to a blgodless ,countert evoluhon appat
ently has taken place m Chtna
Mao Tse-lung and Chou En·lal are not affected
But beneath l~1s topmost level, there has been a come
baqll; of some of the haghest offiCials purged an the Cui
lura! Revolution Thts ts reported an letters Just arrived
from Hong Kong cthng a great deal of evtdence from offa
ctal sources
Moreover, the resurgence of old·hmers extends so lat
down through the ranks and to so many provmces that an
many respects at seems to mean a repudiation of the
tumultuous Cultural Revolution , whtch had aamed at
restructuring Mao's Chana
Whatever the meamng, the current shafts seem to brmg
back 10to promanence the same group of men who ran
the Commumst party m the days of the Yenan caves 'l:l
r..ears ago
Ltu Shao-cht, Mao's disgraced former heir apparent, ts
sltll mtssing So are Peng Te huaa and Lm Paao, Mao's
latest chosen successor Chen Ya IS dead But a heavy
share of others castigated and dts~raced tn the Cultural
RevolutiOn are now being honored 10 public
' In Chana, official public honor and appearance at cer
lain types of gathermg are synonymous wath power
Former Marshal Chu Teh, once head of ail the Chanese
Communist armtes, on Jan 24 of thts year appeared as
head of the Standang Commtttee of the Nahonal Peoples
Congress for the first time since 1966
Former Marshals Nteh Jung-chen and Hsu Hsaang
chaen, vtce-chatrmen of the Chmese Commumst party
Central Mabtary Affairs Committee, are back m s1~ht
with honor So ts former Central Commattee member Ltao
Cheng-chih Mao recently pa1d unusual honor to a former
marshal and foretgn mmister, Chen Yt, who was dts
graced after defending L1u Shao-ch1
(In the system which prevails m China a man may be
disgraced and ousted from his inftuence and power, but
still keep his old titles and posts on paper, while not being
allowed to carry out his dulles Liu Shao-cht, for example,
though purged, has never been relieved or hts title as
presfdent )
As noted, the comeback extends down to the lowest
levels In those regwns for which data ts avatlabie, the
reports indtcate that more than 90 per cent of the old
cadres at county level and below have been restored to
thear old or equal positions of local power and anftuence
•There are also reports that ratlway cadres removed an
the Cultural Revolution for followmg Ltu Shao-cht are
now also bemg restored to their posts
So far has thts reversal progressed that those who
oppose restoration of the veteran cadres are now be10g
condemned as 'ultra leftists , ' a most senous charge 10
Chinese Communist termmoiogy
Many, perhaps most of these men and women now
regalnmg mfluence at the lower and mtddle levels were
followers of Lm Shao-cha who as noted above ts the dts
graced former No 2 man in Ch10a There IS however
no evidence as yet that Lau has made a comeback

The Daily Sentinel
DI!VOTID TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON UEA
CH!STER L TANNEHILL.
Exec. Ed
ROlE liT HOEf'LICH,
Clly Editor
Pub~ l shect
datly except
Stturday by Tt-.e Oh io Valley
Publlii''Hno Company
111
Court

•

St

Pom•roy

OhiO

A5149 Business Offtce Ptlone
"2 2156 Edllor tal Phone 992
2151
Second class postage pa tCI ar
Pomeroy , Oh10
National advtrttstng
rtpruenlatlvt
Bottlne lll
Gallagher Inc 12 Ent "~nd
St Ntw York City Ntw York

Subscription

rates

De

livered bY carrttr where

1\lllllble 50 cents per week
By Motor R:out1 where carr~er
nr'llfce not available one
monrn It 75 By mall In Oh10
and W Va One ye.r $14 00
Six months 17 2.5
Three
months lA 50 Svbscrlpt1on
prlct lnclueles Sunelay Times
Senttnel

GUESTS AT DINNER
Fraday evemng dmner guests
of Mr and Mrs Delmar
Canaday, Lmcoln Dt1ve,
Pomeroy, were Mr and Mrs
Robert Canaday, Mr and Mrs
Allan Gibson , Columbus and
Mrs
Robert Canaday s
mother

MRS SMITIIILL
Mrs Helen Smath, an em·
ploye of the Ohao Bell
Telephone Company, IS a
pataent at St Marys Hospttal
10 Huntington, W Va Anyone
wLsh10g to send her cards may
send them to her at the
hospital, room 5020

::o

Us.

By Helen Bottel

Canvossers Find Firmness for HHH
By BRUCE BIOSSAT

••

FAULTS NEED PROPER BURIAL
Dear Sue and Helen
I hate myself sometimes, but at's hard to change My best
friend got me in trouble just once It was a mastake - she
blabbed a secret and I lost a boy fraend because of at - but I
forgBYe her and S8ld it was ail forgotten
The trouble iJ, every time I get ~rntable 0r lose my temper, I
seem to lrmg up tins lost boy fraend and cut her down for at I
don't like hun anymoi'e, so at must be that I'm plam mean
How can !stop bemg 1mfa1t to her? She felt Just terrible when
the trouble happened -and every time I mentaon 1t I can see 1t
hurts her - HATE MYSELF
Dear Hate
Whach IS why you mention t! ' When you're hurtln' msade,
you feel like hurling others, even your best buddy
A WISe man I know says, "Everyone should have a
graveyard for the faul18 of hiS (her) frtends "Repeat this twace a
day, and maybe you'll start dtggmg
'
Espectaily if you add, about those faults "And don't put
up any tombstones to thelt memory '" -HELEN AND SUE

+++

Dear, Rap
We hked your reader-wratlen column m response to "Irate
Elder" but, dear Rap, you only prmled letters from ADULTS
who were agamst tlus crazy mtxed-up guy We appreciate so
many older people bemg on the teens' stde but how about lettmg a
teenageranswerMr I E too'Likebere'smyblast •
Dear Mr Irate Elder
You probably don't have any children of your own, and so
you judge ail of us kids by a few rowdtes and baddtes
I wish all of you who condemn our young generataon could go
back to school and have as reqUired reading an unexpurgated
history of the world You nughtstart wt!h thiS quote from a 6,000.
year~ld Egyptian tomb
"We hve 10 a decadent age Young people no longer respect
their parents They are rude and unpatlent They mliabit taverns
and have no self-control."
/
Then you could read about the dark ages, fld the Spanish
lnquistllon, and the sex orgaes and crueltie m 16th century
European courts - and even the New World' !em witch hunts
You'd soon realize the world ISN'T go10g the dogs - it's been
there several limes, and IS presenUy ats way to perhaps the
best era ever And Ute young are got to help at gel there sooner'
As for our generation bemg th most over..sexed, etc , how
about Ben Franklm who was chased out of PariS - and NO!' for
his polltacs' He also broke his leg JUmping from a two.,&lt;;tory
aparbnent to escape a lady's husband The Father of our Country
fathered some illegitimate children too, remember?
So, Mr IE, see us honesUy and m perspective You mtght
even learn to ltke us - THINKING TEEN

+++

Dear Helen and Sue
Now that we've got the vote (and m some states almost full
adult status ), don 't you thank we 18 to 21~yearo0ids should be
allowed to buy liquor? After all, wtth so many new respon·
sabiilhes to drive us up a wall, we need a legal drank to calm our
nerves' - DRY "ADULT" FROM CAUFORNIA, AGE 18
Dear Dry
Fave states already allow legal booze to under-21-year~lds
California tsn tone of them, although at has gtven you " Ills" full
adult status m every other area - from s1gmng contracts to
marr1age without parental consent
Whale the law prevents your buymg hquor (legally), 1!
cerlamly doesn't keep you dry (as any student knows) Perhaps
drmkmg laws are set about three notches htgher than where they
can be eas1ly enforced to dtscourage younger teenagers who
could pass for !Bbutnot 21 - HELEN AND SUE
I g n a c c Paderewsk1 fa
mous v1ohm st was once pre
mter of hts nat1ve country
Poland

loday·s FUNNY

novelist Ivan Turgenev sa1d, "I

"

"'JJJJ " 0

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRfAN
ELECTS TO MARRY A NIXON
NEW YORK (KFS) -Old H'wood star he's 71 - Ben Lyon's honeymoon with Mar1on
Nixon will be spent in Pabn Sprmgs, London,
with a surnmeriong extension in the soutlt of
France, they'll live mostly in London wath
commutes to H'wood . Ursula Andrews'
bambino by Jean-Paul BelnJllndo (latest of
showbtz-unwedsto prociaun it) IS on the stork's
schedule
More sagos of sprmg Radao C1ty
Music Hail's grand foyf( Is awash wath Easter
lilies
John Lindsay and Gene McCarthy
plainly aren't running for Presadent , just for
Harold &amp;assen's place _I_n the hastory of em·
barrassing frustration
Johnny Green (Body &amp; Soul, I Cover the
Waterfront etc ) and the late Frank Loesser
(Slow Boat to China, Once in Love with Amy)
wrote the score for an MGM film, ''The Day
Before Sprmg," which never was filmed
Johnny says it's the best score he ever composed, ditto Loesser's - but MGM mslSts on
keeping 1t burted, presumably forever, there's
a punchline to the tale "The Day Before
Spring" was bought by MGM on the basas of ats
musical score before the show reached Bdwy
some 28 years ago, and the Green·Loesser team
didn't provide the show's II&lt;Jwy mustc &amp; ~acs
- which were thrown out by the evef.I'IQ.:eared
MGM song-critics
Wr1ters of the original
Frederick Loewe and Alan Jay Lerner, who
thereafter gave the world "My Fait Lady,"
"Bragadoon," ''G1g1" and sundry sounds for
sore ears . The or1g10al Lerner-Loewe score
mcluded a nifty, "I IA!ve You This Morrung,"
among many soothmg goodie~ /
Walter captam Enrico Caruso Raunondi at
the Pen &amp; Pencil proudly relates his WW 11
hperienee . he was born an Ameracan catizeJ
but was m Italy at the war's outset and Wfs
'forced" he says into the Italian army, was
captured in Germany and somehow made hiS
postwar way back to the U S
Forced, eh'
No doubt never heard of the Geneva Convenlton
SUre he was forced
Highest paid deejay m th~ USA, un·
doubtedly 10 the world, is John A Gambling of
N Y 's WOR $450,000 a year He's wntmg hts
autobiography, "Rambhng with Gambling ,"
due in the fall Why were we so sure animal
magician Gunther Gebel-WilhaniS wos to be 10

the N Y Ringling Bros Circus whach JUSt
opened at Madason Square Garden for moe
weeks? Quale a dasappoinbnent, Ute Baggest
Top needed that blond daredevil's wild ex
Cltement, but G·W as starred 10 the other, the
"Red" Ringbng troupe, tourmg elsewhere
One thing the N Y circus won't do IS frustrate
audiences which can't watch everything razzle·
dazzling ail three rmgs at once - too often it's a
DnH'mg Cll'CUS

Wisconsin Credit
Reform Big Plus

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In one or the last acts before closmg up shop until the
next baennaai sessiOn, the 1971 Wisconsan legislature
presented that state's consumers wath one of the most
progressiVe credat reform laws ever mtroduced 10 the
Unated States
Among numerous provlS!ons to go mto effect 10 March
1973 posteraty w1ll call down most blessmgs upon the law·
makers for two maJOr reforms
One ts a three day cooling off period for sales made m
the home Thts means that a housewtfe, for example, who
1s talked 10to stgn10g a contract by a fast talkmg salesman
for somethmg she really doesn't want or really can't af.
ford wtll be able to cancel the agreement by nollfymg the
merchant wtth10 three workmg days
Not only that, but the ll)erchant must reciatm any of hts
1roperty wathm 20 days or at becomes the property of the
consumer wathout any obligation to pay for 11
Another maJor seclton of the law essentially abolishes
the anctent and notonous doctrme or 'holder m due
course '
Presently m Wtsconsm , and most other states a mer
chant may sell a note stgned by the customer to a lending
agency- the ' holder (of the note 1 m due course " The
customer as legally responsible to the lending agency for
payment of the mstallments on the note, but the lender is
not responsible for any defects m the merchandise-TV
set refragerator or whatever
There have been cases where people-usually the poor
and unsophts!tcated- have been reqmred to pay for mer
chandtse an unscrupulous vendor never even delivered
Under the W1scons10 reform, a consumer must be noll·
fled m wnbng by the credttot (seller) if the credator is
gomg to asstgn the ra~ht of debt collect(on to a lend10g
agency and the lenamg agency wall be hable for all
clatms of defecltve merchandise for up to one year
Legitimate bus10essmen as well as consumers should
champion stmalar reforms m every state

Finesses, Loses---'No Need

Answering letters on what we thmk of Burt
Reynolds' nude Cosmo centerfold at 's only a
taken the nght percentage
NORTH
4
play m clubs, but South
tmy tasteless Jape, showmg nothing, Slgnifymg
.10864
wasn't half as unlucky as has
little, for real1 artastic male nudaty JUSt go to
¥9 5 3 2
'partner,
who watched South
t AQ
Florence and see Machelangelo's David, total
throw
away
a sure game
+K 9 3
nudity with gemus to modify all leers
We
WEST
EAST
If West had opened a dia·
commented on Ute surprasingly packed ftrsl
. 5
• 93
mond South would have had
rught audience at Ute c1tcus, and an usher ex.
¥KQJIO
¥A74
to take the diamond fmesse
.J9853 2
+KI06
plained. 'Invated bigshots and poverty
but the way the defense went
...
Q6
...
87542
South
should make his con·
groups"
soum
(D)
tract
by
the simple expedi·
Darryl Zanock wtth his longplay sweetie
.AKQJ7 2
ent
of
no
finesses at ail
Genevteve Gilles decorated the best-Been table
"86
He should draw trumps .
m '21," where DFZ cefelrated removal of the
ruff
dummv's last heart and
... AJIO
cast on hts leg Susan Hampshire, starred m
p)ay ace and queen or dia
Both vulnerable
Ute upcommg ftlm "Livmg Free," sequel to lbe
monds It wouldn't matter
w
...
North East South
whtch opponent took the
liomzed "Born Free," will auction off her
trtck If he led a club he
leopard coat and donate the proceeds to the
Pass
2•
Pass
would be taking the club fa
World Wildlife Fund, and certainly not for
Pass
Pas:s
Pass
nesse for South 1r he led
publlcaty , we'd never hint that, no str, hardly
Openmg lead- ¥ K
anythmg else it would allow
Janet Leigh was scheduled for another
South to ruff in one hand and
starkers bathroom shower scene m her By Oswald &amp; James•Jaeoby discard a losing club
'Rabbits" flack, but she asked II be swatched to
IH"EWSP'APEII IHTU.PliU: ASSN I
In Utopia finesses always
a tub scene Told producer A C Lyles she stili work In real life there ,J no
hasn 'tgot over bemg murdered mthe 'Psycho" pomt trymg one when you
flack's clunactac showerbath '!:he very hand· have little or nothmg to gain
The b1ddmg has been
some couple 10 "21" was journalist Joseph
West opens the kmg of
West
North
East
South
Kingsbury.,&lt;imath and his sprag, Daane, om the hearts Hts sutl was con
eve of Joe s return to has home-base, Rome tlnued South ruffed the 1 •
Pass
Pass
th1rd , lead and played a
?
Poss
Lucky lad
couple of rounds of trumps Pass 4 •
You, South hold
F Lee Batley's shoppmgfor one chief edator Then he lost the daamond 11
•
AK654. ¥AZ
AK654
of his proposed ''Gallery" mag
Henry nesse
What do you do now ?
Mancam and Tonight's Doc Severmsen will
East retutned a diamond
A-This Is ono of tho5o prob record a duet-lilburn for Victor . vanety • and South proceeded to ptpy
len1s
that depend on your partw
dubbed black beauty Judy Pace , The Most out all but one of h1s ,trumps
Wesl discarded several ner The co\\ard s bid 11 pass
Beautiful Black Actress in Hollywood " She's in dtamonds and South deduced The bulldoaer's bid ls• six
sp11des The expert's hid Is f1ve
the "Cool Breeze" tuzz and 'Tipoff drama
West was s~ an clubs,
Wtlrren Beatty and Julae Chraslie smpe at tn·
Therefo1e South cashed hcart!'i Four no- trump Jlli not
tervaewerl; who askif they 'll wed witlt "That's dummy s king of clubs and n.'i~mhmentled
TODAY S QUESTION
a silly quesllon Forget tt and get on to fmessed loa the q u c en
•
agamst East West's queen
IJlstead of b1ddmg four spades
someth10g Important " But will they ? · No became the settang tnck
yrnu part11 e r has b1d th1 l~
stlly maybe about the Edte Adams-Pete Condoh , South wa s unlu~ k y He had d utl'i What do vou rln now 1
w&lt;'dding; only when
lost twn hm•ssJ•s and he hac!

What else can you do'
• We've offered to send the
dtspu~ arbtlralton and
they've turned us down.' he
saed
Dale saad club owners are
vehemently opposed to ar
ba trahon ' We're not gomg to
turn our busmess over to
anyone else.' he satd
Memtt saad the players of·
fered to take the money they
offered and they (owners)

What they want IS to k ee ~
us nego!iahng,' Memtt sa ad
• They want to take us down the
!me and ge t the pe nsaon the
reser ve clause and th e
schedul e all an)o one
negottataon
Then they ca n pla y one a·
gamst the othe r, • he smd
They want to spht our ranks
and d1scredat Marvm Mtller

,.AJJ we're aski~g for

lS money

to

fund our plan But the owners
are, bullheaded and stubborn "
Mtiler IS exec utive darector
of the MaJOI League Players
Associati on Has proposal,
whach was turned down, was to
accept th e $5 490 ,000 offer
made b) the owners m Phoemx
provad ed the
players
assocta!ton can use the 6 per
cent potential the money
earns' to mc rease the bendftts
of the pensaon pian
The Clnctnnata Reds, wh o
traditionally open the season,
were to play th e Houston
Astros m Riverfront Stadmm
Wednesday

NEW YORK ilJPI )- Base
ba ll's fer~ l generat stnke
seemed a nea r ce rta mty today
after club owners reJected a
Players Assocaa!ion offer Mon
day and massed m Chacago for
a mee hng tomght
Calling the latest Players
Assocaat10n off er 'an 1m
prudent approach to the problem " John Gaherm, ch1ef
negottalor for U1e owners, satd
they had voted unammously
Monday to reJeCt the proposal
The players' offer, made by

trators and school board members make plans for spend
mg thetr local share of America's annual outlay for edu
cation-whach at Its present $70 balhon as the nation's
largest sm~le expenditure, next to defense
Thas sprmg, for the ftrst ttme they wtil have a ceo
traily located national educational supermarket • where
they can sample the latest advances m teachmg equiP.
ment and matenals a recently opened Educahonal Facai
ttaes Center m Chacago
The need for such a center to bndge the gap between
the educational • hardware" busaness and the education
profession has long been recogmzed by key educators
Among those mstrumental m devetoxnng the Educational
Facihhes Center concept were Waibur Cohen, former
secretary of Health Education and Welfare, the late
Dr James E Allen commtsstoner of the U S Office of
Education. and George D Ftsher, past president of the
NatJOnal Education Assoctataon and now EFC chairman
The EFC Is a perpetual exposition where new products
are demonstrated in actual iearmng envtronments by
Chacago area students, who attend half-day sessions m
ftsh bowl type classrooms- m the center In other words
the educators learn by watchmg the students domg. '
Chacago ts famed for tts gtganhc Merchandise Mart
Now at's got one for educatiOn

AUGUSTA Ga (UP! !Ma sters favont e
Ja ck
Nackiaus returns here today
after a two-day v1s1t watlt hts
famaiy m Fionda but for a
\\htie there was some question
\\hether U1e man rated to have
the best chance to beat him,
Lee Trevmo, would be shckm g
around
Nacklaus m a playoff to wm
th e U S Open, hadn't been here
s10ce th e close of th e 1969
Masters when he swore not to
return because he dadn't hk e
the course
And lo and behold, when he
did return, afte r adnutl!ng his
two year boycott of th e
Masters

'Singles Only' Apartments Out
Chalk up the first counterrevolution in resp,onse to the
so-called sex~al revolution The "sm~les only ' apartment
movement whtch boomed m the late t!Os as a bust now
A few years ago apartment developers dtscovered a
lucrative new market m restrictmg buaidings to unmar·
ned a~~its, mamly or the young, fancy free, "swmgm~
smgles kmd Some butldmgs were so popular that apph
cants scrambled to ge't' on year long watting hsts
But now the fancy seems to have passed, reports Bust·
ness Week The wattlng lists have shrunk, the appeal IS
gone and developers are qu~etiy shppmg out of the sm
gles-only busmess and convertmg to 'aduits~nly"­
mamed adults, that ts
Fewer of today's young people are altraeted by man
agement-engmeered boy gltl encounters m laundry rooms
and on_tenms courts, says the magazme Bestdes, the
postwar b11by boom Is over and there are stabstically
fewer young people, sw10gang or otherwtse
It may afso be another case of nolhmg succeedmg like
success Presumably some of those couples now seeking
quaet, famtly-type apartment butldmgs first met 10 the
'swmgmg smgles" environment

so

More Chiefs Than Indians
Somebmes it seems as af nobody has any sense of ctvlc
responsabihty anymore Then along comes an item like
thts
When Camelback Skt Area near Tannersvalle, Pa
announced a swtmsuat on skis beauty contest, tw1ce as
many volunteer Judges signed up ,for the compebbon as
dad contestants

"Heel, Damm•t'"

~~ was

st"p1d of me, '

Trevino unmedaately got mlo a
hassle wtth tournament of·
facaats Qver some tickets he
bought
It seems the ticke ts, which
Trevmo thought were good for
Ute entare week, do not cover
th e Mond a y thr oug h
Wednesday practi ce roun ds
and Lee's fraends found, when
tltey appeared at the gate
Monday that the l!ckets
wouldn 't be good until the
tournamen t actually starts on
Thursday
If they go I go," Trevmo
saad 10 anger ' If these people
had told me I needed to buy
somethmg else for the ftrst
three days, I would have don e

•

!t

Nacklaus, a thrj!e·hme Masters champion (1963, 1965, 1966),
ts heavtiy favored to wm here
thts week and thus take the
farsl leg of the "grand slam "
which he feels he has his best
chance to sweep this year
The 32-year-oid Ntcklallll as
already the only man to wm all
four of the modern "grand
siam' tournameni8- Masters,
US Open, Brahsh Open, and
PGA-at least tw1ce each and
he s made 1! clear that the
major remaamng goal m his
outstanding golf career IS to
w1n ali four 10 the same year,
Bally Ca per, the 1970 Mast·
ers champaon aQd the only
other man besades Nackiaus
and four-tame
Mas ters
champaon Arnold Palmer to
Win more than a mtlhon dollars
playmg golf, sa ad the Augusta
National, stle of the Masters,
"should be Jack's cup of lea
tlus year "
Casper, who discounts his

ABA Playoff Standmgs
By United Press lnternataonal
(All serle&gt; Best Of Seven)
Eastern Otv1slon
Semifinals
New York
Kentucky

2..... .

W L. Pet
1 01000
0 I 000
W L

Pet

Virginia 1
2 0 I 000
Floridians 1
0 2 000
Wostern Dovlslon
Somlflnals
W L Pel

utai.,

Dati as
1
Indiana
Oen~er

2 011100
0 2 1100

W L Pet
1 1 500
1 1 500

Monday's Results
Ulah 113 Dallas 107
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
New York at Kentucky
Virginia at Florld1ans
Indiana at Denver
(Only gomes scheduled)

\

own chances beca use

postponement of Wednesday s
opemng da y ac tio~ and Miller
charged tha t the 011ners • must
bear res ponsabilat y for the
delay of the openmg of the

To Minors

champ Ken

lucky 1 0 V1rgmaa 10 front of

CiNC!NN Ari I UP! I - The
Canc mnali Reds se nt pitcher
Ross Gnmsley tu the mmors
and placed reserve catcher Ball
Plummer 011 the dasa bled hst
Monday, reduci ng thetr roster
to 26
I he roste r must be sheared
to 25 by Wed nesday, whach
would be tile openm g day of the
1972season af the maJor league
players stnk e ends by then
Gnmsley 10 1last year \l as
optwned to U1e Indianapolis
(arm dub on a 24 hour recall
baSIS
Plummer, lllJUred dunng a
spnn g tra1nm g ga me last
month was pu t on a 21-&lt;lay
disabled hst
As a result of the players
stnke, th e Reds iaad off 40 to 50
seasonal .empl oyes Monday
mcludmg the grounds crew,
mamte nance personn el and
Riverfront Stadaum cleanup
crews

Market Report
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
March 31, 1972
Steers - chmce, 33.3310 ,
good ch01ce, 31 10 32 50
standard • good 28 15-30
Hetfers - choace 32-32 60,
good, 29 15 31
Cows - commercial, 25 2526 85 , utth ty, 22 50·23 85
canner and cutter 17 19 50
Bulls 25·26 85
Stockers and feeders - steer
calves, 32-44 50, heafer calves
21 50.37 50 yearlings 30.34 50
VeE~l

calves -

chm ce , 53 ,

good, 45, baby calves B H
17 5().81
Lambs, 30 8().31
Hogs, 23 23 50, sows 20 1().
22 40 1 boars, 21 40 , stock hogs,
19 5().22 10, ptgs B H , 10 5().
14 50
PI AYEI\S CALLED UP

NEW YORK (UPI)-Goalle
Wayne Bell, defenseman Steve
Durbano and fornard s Tom
Williams, Steve Vickers and
Norm Gratton were called up
frol1) Omaha of the Ce ntral
Hockey Leag ue Monday by the
IOJury-plagued New York Ran

Hodges Last Respects
Rube Wal ker-also were on the
flight
Swoboda one of the few
pia) ers who played under
Hodges who was outspokenly
era tical of the manager, sa1d
that even though the two men
had thetr dafferencls Hodges
always commanded respect
• A Slmng IndiVIdual"

'I don't want to make the
man bagger an dea th than he
was tn hfe.' satd Swoboda
• But he was a strbng m
dtvtduai and even though I had
my diffe rences wath him, I
always
respected
hts
vtewpoml He was an absolute
dasc apllnartan He always
stayed wath has decasaon That's
why you had to respect him
Hodges was more than JUst
&lt;especled by the faathful
Brooklyn fans dunng has
aiiustraou~ playing career He
was one of the most popular
Dodgers The fans loved him
and he returned that love by
marrying a Brooklyn gar! and
choosmg the borough as a
place to setUe down and ra1se
his four chaidren
In 1!162, when he returned to
New York from Los Angeles as
a member of the Mets, Hodges
showed has true feelmgs for

ge rs

the Flondtans, 2·0, and In·
d1.1na and Denver lied at H
N e~ York 1s at Kentuqky
tom ght Vlfgmaa at FIOiadlaliS
and Ind1ana at Denver The
Sial s and Chaps dash for thetr
thard ga me m a best-&lt;1! seven
senes Wednesday rught
Dallas outscored the defend·
mg ABA champs from the held
for two sh at ght encounters
but lost both Western D1vts1on
games on the strength of Utah
free thro" shoo tmg Saturday
mgill they lost 106·96
:liiSsalke Grumbles
I JUSt wish the offlciBis weae
dS up for the playoffs as the
pl .1yers grumbl ed Dallas
Clwps Coach Tom Nassa lke If
Z I Zelmo Beaty ) did on the
street what he does on the
court he d be arrested •
Dallas fmtslled the mght wath
31 personal louis c01npa1ed to
26 for Uta h
Nassalke clatmcd pa eferen
11,11 trea tment • b) the offi cials
foa rough and tumble mtddle·
man Beaty, \\ho collected JUSt
tWO SIGN
NEW YORK (U P!) ~o hn
Mend enhall a defenstve'
Iackie and Tommy Moz1sek a
runmng back, s1gned Monday
11 1th the Ne w York Gtants
Mendenhall a standout at
Grambhng, and Moztsek, wh~
gam ed I 672 yards m has !mal
two yea rs a( Houston, both
\\ere thard round choaces of the
r.aanls m the NFL draft

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SAME DAY
Archer's f1rst-pnze Money m
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las t weekend s $200,000
In At 9-0ut At 5
Grea ter Gree nsboro Open
Use Our Free Park1ng Lot
vaulted him mto second place
on the PGA's money·\\lfiOing
hst w1th a total of $96 425 ror
the year, $13 000 less than Jack
216 E 2nd Pomeroy
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'
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Brooklyn wt!h these words
"Of course, I'm sorry to leave

the Dodgers Los Angeles was
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home ' '

Today, all of Brooklyn wall
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•

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\

DIVISIOn

1 - Wahama, Home
pa tc her Rack Walllams, 1n
1t - Southern Away
p1tc her Dennts Et ~hm ge r , fielder patcher JUmors Davtd
13 - Glouster Home
JUnt or outfielder Alan Duvall, Bak er patcher-outheld er
14
- Fort F1ye, Away
pttcher
and se mor second baseman Randy Borm g
11
- Federal Hoc kmg
Rtck Sanders The other let. outhelder and R1 chard Cross
Home
termen are semors Rtck Blake, pitcher-oulfl eider, and fres h·
18 - North Gallla, Home
ca tc her patcher
Randy me n are Greg Bailey, out
19 - Fort Frye, Home
Youn g catcher, and Alan fte lder Randy Blake, ln·
20 - Symmes Val'"y, A\\ ay
Holter outfielder whale a fteider Phil Bowen, outheldet
21
- Wahama Away
JUntor IS outftelder Btl! and M1ke Larkans outfielder
25 - Kyger Creek, Away
1he mam stren gth of the
Osborne and the sophomore
26
- Glouster Away
mfaeider and patcher as Steve Eagles 1s expected to be m
27
- Hannan Trace, Away
thear h1ttmg This as evtdent m
Goebel
28 - Federal-Hoc kang,
Other members of the Eagle E1c h1 nger s 461 ave rage
A
way
squad a1 e semors Jun Ams· Caldwell s 435 and Duva ll 's
May
JJti
bar y, shorts top outfte ider
2 - Southwestern , Home
But the Eagles may be
4 - Southern, Home
hurtmg m experience a lack
1t - North Galha, Away
that can only be cured by hme
16 - Symmes Valley , Home
The Eagles schedule ts as
18 - Ky ger Creek, Home
follows
Home
games slart at 4 30
Apnl
tv. o personals
p m except Apni 11 whtch
4 - Hannan Tra ce, Home
I he Chaps had 43 faeld goals
sta1ls
4 pm
6 - Southwestern, Away
to 39 lor the Sla rs but Utah
sank 34 of 40 chanty shots
compat cd wtth 21 33 for the
Chaps
Sta t s Coach La Deli An·
derson earher had termed the
Chaps the 'rou ghest, grabban 'est •team m the league and
promased to "fight f1re wath
fu e - but without fouhng •
Wase Efforl OUset
Wtille Wase scored 36 pomts
to lead the Stars but the effort
\l as offset by Chap Guard
Donme Freeman who also
potted 36 pomts
Dallas had !ted the score four
tames an the fourth quarter an(t
regmned the lead twtce before
Red Robbins h1t a JUmp shot
wath 4 47 remammg to put
Utah m front for good at 103
102
111e p1 ohh c W1se zapped m
sex of the Stars' last eaght
pothts, whtie Beaty and
cbowa n) held Ute Chaparrals
to a'!'ljlm total of hve
The Wednesday clash prom
ased to be w1de open "! JUSt
PRATT &amp; LAMBERT
hope \\e can keep our players
m the game when we get on our
home court, • the disgusted
Nassaike sa ad

Drops Dallas, 113-107

SALT I AKE CI1 Y I UP! Jfh c Utah Stars thrashed
Dallas, 113 t01, 10 the only
Aro~e racan Basketball Assocta
tum playoff actwn Monday
preparator)" to sluftmg thei r

E.as tern

Flathush Faithful Pay
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
Fla tbush Faathful ,' who
cheered the explmts of Gal
Hodges on the baseball dta·
mood of Ebbets Field and
prayed publicly for ham durmg
has many slumps, wall turn out
by the hundreds today to pa)
the former Brooklyn Dodger
star !hear last res p ec~
Hod ges, who would have
been 48 years old today, died
Easler Sunday m West Palm
Beach, Fia , of a heart attack
and wtii be buned tn his
belo1 ed Brooklyn on Thursday
at Holy Cross Ce me tery
foiiowm g a Mass of th e
ResurrectiOn at Our Lady Help
of Chrtstlans Roman Catholic
Church
The body of the New York
Mets' manager can be vaewed
at the church by the pubhc
toda y from I p m to 10 p m
and agam on Thursday from 8
a m to 10 am
It as expected that hundreds
of old Brooklyn Dodger fans
and many youngsters who
remember Hodges as the man
w~o guaded the Mets to the
'maracle " world cham·
p10nshap m 1969 wtil !ale by the
coffm durmg the next two days
UAL Plane Chartered
Hodges' body was flown to
New York on a chartered
Umted Aar Lines plane Mon·
day , and a group of about 20
sadeyed youngsters watched
through a ware fence at
LaGuardia Atrport as the body
was transferred to a stlver·
gray hearse and takeo to
Brooklyn
,
A small group of players,
mcludmg Met pitcher Jerry
Koosman and former Met
outfleidef. Ron Swoboda (now
wtth the New York Yankees) ,
accompamed the body The
thr&lt;e Met coaches who \\ere
With Hodges when he died- Joe
Pi~nbtnno , Eddir Yost and

Ut~h

Dallas
The rest of the league
sem1fm al conte nders had the
day off wath New York leadm g

Shipped Back

ha vmg the audactty not to
settle a nd for hav mg the
audac ity not to crawl , • saad
Maller "We struck after thre.
mo nths • or
frua lless
negot aatw ns an wha cb all
avenues to an honorable !l!t
tlement have been closed by
the owners

Bob Caldwell , semor J&gt;hor tslop·

the Eagles top two hurlers
Make Bonng and Dave Smtth
Back from that squad are mne
lettermen and four starters
There are 18 on the Eagle
squad
Last yea1 the Eagles won the
class A" sectwnal at Eastern
took the dtstnct c1 own at
Challicothe defeatm g tw o
tough teams and then wete
kn ocked out b) Faarbanks at
the regwnai level at Newark
Star ters 1 etu rmn g from that
squad are se mor f1rs t baseman

•

111eet mgs w1th the Cht.tps to

Grimsley Is

er

EagIes Scheduled Today in Home Opener

ow ners alm ost ce rlamly means

Larry Daca ker the Houston

he

they dou I c.1re about tha t t
don't know what they wall calf
about
Jam Merntt, player rep for
1

Mtller called for acceplance of
BY KEITH WISECUP
the $5,490,000 settlement pro·
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
posed by the owners m Phoemx Eastern Eagle base ball squad
last week • provaded the Play· opens 1ts season tomght at
ers AssoctatJOn ca n use the stx home agamst Southern Valley
per cent potenl!al Ute money Con£erence £oe Hannan T1 ace1
earns • to mcrease the pe nswn provadmg the sun perrorms a
plan beneftls
lot of shmmg today
Gahertn smd tomght s meet
The Eag les, coached by
mg m Clucago of the 24 owners sec ond~year Larry Hemes, are
"ould consast of Ius report and rebmldmg from las t year s !2 1
a re v~ew or the satuataon seclwnal and distri ct cham
Gaherm satd he would not meet pwns
"ath Meller before the owners
Gone from last year's squad
conference
arc seven ve terans, mcludmg
Monday s reJec taon by the

As tros plrlyer tepresentn tlve

docs n I lee! he s played very
well the past seven or eaght
months, pomted out tha t recent
heavy rains has th e lush
fmrways play mg 25 yards
longer' c~ nd thal the gree ns
a1 e the fastest I ve ever see n
here
'Both of Utosc conditions are
rea lly lo Jack s hkmg.' Casper
added
Another long-ball htlter who
m11•t be conSidered he re th1s
week IS 1969 Masters champiO n
George Ar cher who won the
Grea ter Greensboro Open Sun·
day by bea tmg Tomm) Aaron
m a pia yo rf
South Af&amp;~ca n Gary Player
only foretgner ever to wm a
Masters (1961), satd Monday
that he IS playang much better
now than he was 11 years ago
when l1e won here /
And Palmer's s~ow m g at
Greensboro indi cated that eve n
though he IS now 42 years old
the fac t that he 1s now " eann g
contact lenses has made htm a
threat ag am Palmer had a
I\\ Jl.Stroke lead gomg mto the
fmal three holes at Greensboro
but blew at with a tnple bogey

111oncy they offered and they askmg for es money to fund our
smd no • said Merntt 'What plan But the owners are
they \\ant as to keep us bullheaded and stubborn •
ts now even more adamant
Miller, at .a late afternoo n
nego taa tmg They want to take
conce rmng negottatwns
It looks hke tt maght be a the Q n cmnc~tt Reds Houslon s us down the hne and get the news conference 1n New York
while," satd Dterker 10 HoltS opponent m Wednesday's ope pcnswn reserve cla use and the Monday, sa td money no longer
ton After this (the owners' ner accused the owners of bad schedule ail mto one negotla· seemed to be Ute assue The
lio n Then they can play one rea l tssue IS the owners at
reJectaon) I don' t see any way fmth m ba rgammg
we can pla y opemng day If
'We offered to ta ke the ,,ga1nst the other Ail we're te mp( to pumsh the players for

expressr'(! little hope or o pe m~lg
the seaslm on time and saad he

Exec utive Dtrector Marvin

Now as the time of year when ail good school admtms

I.4.

.J . .

'l

Tins 1.s tt ," satd Merntt

sa 1d no '

Nicklaus Again
Masters Favorite

~

~

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Jam
Merritt was dumfounded
Francas Dale was adamant
Both were reactmg Monday
rughl to the reJection by maJor
league baseball club owners of
an offer by players to end the
baseball slrtke
Merntt, a pitcher, IS player
representative of th e em.
c10nah 8 eds Dale 1s prestdent
of the club
Dale satd tbe club owners
turned down the player s offer
1'unarumously and watliout any
doubt whatsoever

A 'Supermarket'
Of School Tools

WIN AT BRIDGE

.74

,.~.

seaso n '

Two MD s at the Umverslty of Loutsvtlle School of
Med1cme have proved that filthy lucre as literally that
Drs Beret Abrams and Morton Waterman cultured
$163 47 worth of coms and currency to see tf th~y could
grow anythmg besades Interest, reporl8 the Health BuJ.
ietm They came up w1th everythmg from posattve and ,
negative staphylococcus to ordmary garden-variety
fungus
In all 13 per cent of the coms and 42 per cent of the
paper money was found to harbor germs that can cause
dtsease- whtch as not surprasmg m vtew of the number of
hands money slips through these days
The butietm suggests that this mformalton be clipped
out and left 10 heu of a ttp the next ltme you eat m a
1 estaurant The waatress will understand

agree wath no m110's op101on I
have some of my own ''

..,
.,.,:~

- Such an interpretation would seem to su~gest gross
"
miSJUdgment of Humphrey, m and beyond thts state, by
MILWAUKEE
!NEAl
The top manager for one of the lesser candtdates m
Muskie's maq~gers
Jlad they read well Humphrey's evident residual
Wtsconsm's yvercrowded presidential primary told me
strength
here, they mtght never have talked so airily of
'The only ftrm commttm~nts we are fandmg 10 our
vtctory
Now
Muskie 1s bav10g to mutter belatedly that
telephone ca11Yass10g arc for Hubert Humphrey'',
he
will
surely
finish beh10d ne1~hbor Humphrey and
That httle message as heard again and agam m !has
mtght
even
land
thtrd beh10d neighbor George McGovern
state, from canvassers from travelers to the north, in
hts hard competitor from South Dakota
edttors' offtces, among key pohltcians
But maybe everybody has.teen misjudging Humphrey's
Many, many Wtscons10 voters vmc~ polite interest 10
drtve for a second presidential nommation He thinks
some other-candidate, but then add 'Of course Hubert
he was cheated of the While House in 1968 by unhaJ!PY
1s a personal fraend "
carcumstance;; (the war and Lyndon Johnson) whach
If thts deep and evidently -qwte broad attachment holds
aren't present today He thinks "Tbas •• my time "
up on votmg day, Aprtl 4, then the man from neaghbormg
Ftrst he felt he m1ght wm by enterml( JUSt the late
Mmnesota may be ijbout to wm the first major pres!·
onmanes hke Calilorma and New York Next he decided
denllai pnmary of h1s lifeltme
Indeed, he conceiVably could capture most of the slate's ' he daren't waat, that Muskie mtght wrap at up quickly
moe congressiOnal dtstracts and by that fact the over
af he dtd So he picked some early spots ~
Has really crtlical decision, the true l!a
n hts ef·
whelmmg maJOrity of Wtscons10's 67 delegates to the
fort
was
the
one
to
lay
tt
on
heavy
10
F
rids
and
Wts·
national convention at Mtamt Beach
cons10
He
thought
he
might
still
lose
out
to
early
Muskie
By now naturally, every pollUcal appraaser descend
momentum unless he scored In these
10g upon thts heralded pramary state as wrabng Hum
He dtd JUSt well enough m Florada to be encouraged
phrey The mterestmg thmg 1s how and why he got there
Musk1e's !top there was a bonus And Wasconsm may
A good many pollltcaans and observers WhO thank they
know Wtsconsm say Humphrey always had the winmng
prove Hubert's real gold mine
Yet there IS some peril 10 Humphrey's course Though
potenbal here Says one
a great personal campaagner he as a shockingly demo
When he campatgns m thts state he Just activates
what as hts •
gogac over·promtser Moreover polls these days Place
htm well behmd Prestdent Ntxon and show ham d1sap·
By thts reasonmg the lead long held by the now
proved by youth and doubted by the broad electorate
strugglmg Sen Edmund Muskae was always allusory con
Thts suggests hts rush may soon encounter heavy
structed m a vacuum whtch would begm to disappear
resastance
But 10 fraendly Wtsconsln' Probably not
the moment Humphrey moved
Sbll,
there
Is
that wtde no-man's·land of undecided voters
If thts vtew as the correct one. then Muskte's faitermg
unconquered by Humphrey and open to the rtVai appeals
strtdes before and after hts Fiorada pramary debacle are
simply an added contrabubon
of Muskae and McGovern

Dirty Money Can Be Sickening

A thought for today Russtan

t::, , ?? ::: woor r

Merritt is jOwners Reject PlaYers 0
In Shock! .

Wlscor,tsln Primary:
\

•

\

\J

•

I

�if

f

•

•
•

• S- The lllily 8eminel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ,

t-n.DIIIJit ~..I,K"'IpDI"..;&gt;w~.o ,Aprll41 tm

IRU(f IIOSSAJ

lAY CROMLfY

China

-Helen Hlelp

~eversal:

'Out' Officials
Getting Back In
By RAY CROMLEY
WASHINGTON (NEA l
What amount~ to a blgodless ,countert evoluhon appat
ently has taken place m Chtna
Mao Tse-lung and Chou En·lal are not affected
But beneath l~1s topmost level, there has been a come
baqll; of some of the haghest offiCials purged an the Cui
lura! Revolution Thts ts reported an letters Just arrived
from Hong Kong cthng a great deal of evtdence from offa
ctal sources
Moreover, the resurgence of old·hmers extends so lat
down through the ranks and to so many provmces that an
many respects at seems to mean a repudiation of the
tumultuous Cultural Revolution , whtch had aamed at
restructuring Mao's Chana
Whatever the meamng, the current shafts seem to brmg
back 10to promanence the same group of men who ran
the Commumst party m the days of the Yenan caves 'l:l
r..ears ago
Ltu Shao-cht, Mao's disgraced former heir apparent, ts
sltll mtssing So are Peng Te huaa and Lm Paao, Mao's
latest chosen successor Chen Ya IS dead But a heavy
share of others castigated and dts~raced tn the Cultural
RevolutiOn are now being honored 10 public
' In Chana, official public honor and appearance at cer
lain types of gathermg are synonymous wath power
Former Marshal Chu Teh, once head of ail the Chanese
Communist armtes, on Jan 24 of thts year appeared as
head of the Standang Commtttee of the Nahonal Peoples
Congress for the first time since 1966
Former Marshals Nteh Jung-chen and Hsu Hsaang
chaen, vtce-chatrmen of the Chmese Commumst party
Central Mabtary Affairs Committee, are back m s1~ht
with honor So ts former Central Commattee member Ltao
Cheng-chih Mao recently pa1d unusual honor to a former
marshal and foretgn mmister, Chen Yt, who was dts
graced after defending L1u Shao-ch1
(In the system which prevails m China a man may be
disgraced and ousted from his inftuence and power, but
still keep his old titles and posts on paper, while not being
allowed to carry out his dulles Liu Shao-cht, for example,
though purged, has never been relieved or hts title as
presfdent )
As noted, the comeback extends down to the lowest
levels In those regwns for which data ts avatlabie, the
reports indtcate that more than 90 per cent of the old
cadres at county level and below have been restored to
thear old or equal positions of local power and anftuence
•There are also reports that ratlway cadres removed an
the Cultural Revolution for followmg Ltu Shao-cht are
now also bemg restored to their posts
So far has thts reversal progressed that those who
oppose restoration of the veteran cadres are now be10g
condemned as 'ultra leftists , ' a most senous charge 10
Chinese Communist termmoiogy
Many, perhaps most of these men and women now
regalnmg mfluence at the lower and mtddle levels were
followers of Lm Shao-cha who as noted above ts the dts
graced former No 2 man in Ch10a There IS however
no evidence as yet that Lau has made a comeback

The Daily Sentinel
DI!VOTID TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON UEA
CH!STER L TANNEHILL.
Exec. Ed
ROlE liT HOEf'LICH,
Clly Editor
Pub~ l shect
datly except
Stturday by Tt-.e Oh io Valley
Publlii''Hno Company
111
Court

•

St

Pom•roy

OhiO

A5149 Business Offtce Ptlone
"2 2156 Edllor tal Phone 992
2151
Second class postage pa tCI ar
Pomeroy , Oh10
National advtrttstng
rtpruenlatlvt
Bottlne lll
Gallagher Inc 12 Ent "~nd
St Ntw York City Ntw York

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rates

De

livered bY carrttr where

1\lllllble 50 cents per week
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and W Va One ye.r $14 00
Six months 17 2.5
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Senttnel

GUESTS AT DINNER
Fraday evemng dmner guests
of Mr and Mrs Delmar
Canaday, Lmcoln Dt1ve,
Pomeroy, were Mr and Mrs
Robert Canaday, Mr and Mrs
Allan Gibson , Columbus and
Mrs
Robert Canaday s
mother

MRS SMITIIILL
Mrs Helen Smath, an em·
ploye of the Ohao Bell
Telephone Company, IS a
pataent at St Marys Hospttal
10 Huntington, W Va Anyone
wLsh10g to send her cards may
send them to her at the
hospital, room 5020

::o

Us.

By Helen Bottel

Canvossers Find Firmness for HHH
By BRUCE BIOSSAT

••

FAULTS NEED PROPER BURIAL
Dear Sue and Helen
I hate myself sometimes, but at's hard to change My best
friend got me in trouble just once It was a mastake - she
blabbed a secret and I lost a boy fraend because of at - but I
forgBYe her and S8ld it was ail forgotten
The trouble iJ, every time I get ~rntable 0r lose my temper, I
seem to lrmg up tins lost boy fraend and cut her down for at I
don't like hun anymoi'e, so at must be that I'm plam mean
How can !stop bemg 1mfa1t to her? She felt Just terrible when
the trouble happened -and every time I mentaon 1t I can see 1t
hurts her - HATE MYSELF
Dear Hate
Whach IS why you mention t! ' When you're hurtln' msade,
you feel like hurling others, even your best buddy
A WISe man I know says, "Everyone should have a
graveyard for the faul18 of hiS (her) frtends "Repeat this twace a
day, and maybe you'll start dtggmg
'
Espectaily if you add, about those faults "And don't put
up any tombstones to thelt memory '" -HELEN AND SUE

+++

Dear, Rap
We hked your reader-wratlen column m response to "Irate
Elder" but, dear Rap, you only prmled letters from ADULTS
who were agamst tlus crazy mtxed-up guy We appreciate so
many older people bemg on the teens' stde but how about lettmg a
teenageranswerMr I E too'Likebere'smyblast •
Dear Mr Irate Elder
You probably don't have any children of your own, and so
you judge ail of us kids by a few rowdtes and baddtes
I wish all of you who condemn our young generataon could go
back to school and have as reqUired reading an unexpurgated
history of the world You nughtstart wt!h thiS quote from a 6,000.
year~ld Egyptian tomb
"We hve 10 a decadent age Young people no longer respect
their parents They are rude and unpatlent They mliabit taverns
and have no self-control."
/
Then you could read about the dark ages, fld the Spanish
lnquistllon, and the sex orgaes and crueltie m 16th century
European courts - and even the New World' !em witch hunts
You'd soon realize the world ISN'T go10g the dogs - it's been
there several limes, and IS presenUy ats way to perhaps the
best era ever And Ute young are got to help at gel there sooner'
As for our generation bemg th most over..sexed, etc , how
about Ben Franklm who was chased out of PariS - and NO!' for
his polltacs' He also broke his leg JUmping from a two.,&lt;;tory
aparbnent to escape a lady's husband The Father of our Country
fathered some illegitimate children too, remember?
So, Mr IE, see us honesUy and m perspective You mtght
even learn to ltke us - THINKING TEEN

+++

Dear Helen and Sue
Now that we've got the vote (and m some states almost full
adult status ), don 't you thank we 18 to 21~yearo0ids should be
allowed to buy liquor? After all, wtth so many new respon·
sabiilhes to drive us up a wall, we need a legal drank to calm our
nerves' - DRY "ADULT" FROM CAUFORNIA, AGE 18
Dear Dry
Fave states already allow legal booze to under-21-year~lds
California tsn tone of them, although at has gtven you " Ills" full
adult status m every other area - from s1gmng contracts to
marr1age without parental consent
Whale the law prevents your buymg hquor (legally), 1!
cerlamly doesn't keep you dry (as any student knows) Perhaps
drmkmg laws are set about three notches htgher than where they
can be eas1ly enforced to dtscourage younger teenagers who
could pass for !Bbutnot 21 - HELEN AND SUE
I g n a c c Paderewsk1 fa
mous v1ohm st was once pre
mter of hts nat1ve country
Poland

loday·s FUNNY

novelist Ivan Turgenev sa1d, "I

"

"'JJJJ " 0

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BRfAN
ELECTS TO MARRY A NIXON
NEW YORK (KFS) -Old H'wood star he's 71 - Ben Lyon's honeymoon with Mar1on
Nixon will be spent in Pabn Sprmgs, London,
with a surnmeriong extension in the soutlt of
France, they'll live mostly in London wath
commutes to H'wood . Ursula Andrews'
bambino by Jean-Paul BelnJllndo (latest of
showbtz-unwedsto prociaun it) IS on the stork's
schedule
More sagos of sprmg Radao C1ty
Music Hail's grand foyf( Is awash wath Easter
lilies
John Lindsay and Gene McCarthy
plainly aren't running for Presadent , just for
Harold &amp;assen's place _I_n the hastory of em·
barrassing frustration
Johnny Green (Body &amp; Soul, I Cover the
Waterfront etc ) and the late Frank Loesser
(Slow Boat to China, Once in Love with Amy)
wrote the score for an MGM film, ''The Day
Before Sprmg," which never was filmed
Johnny says it's the best score he ever composed, ditto Loesser's - but MGM mslSts on
keeping 1t burted, presumably forever, there's
a punchline to the tale "The Day Before
Spring" was bought by MGM on the basas of ats
musical score before the show reached Bdwy
some 28 years ago, and the Green·Loesser team
didn't provide the show's II&lt;Jwy mustc &amp; ~acs
- which were thrown out by the evef.I'IQ.:eared
MGM song-critics
Wr1ters of the original
Frederick Loewe and Alan Jay Lerner, who
thereafter gave the world "My Fait Lady,"
"Bragadoon," ''G1g1" and sundry sounds for
sore ears . The or1g10al Lerner-Loewe score
mcluded a nifty, "I IA!ve You This Morrung,"
among many soothmg goodie~ /
Walter captam Enrico Caruso Raunondi at
the Pen &amp; Pencil proudly relates his WW 11
hperienee . he was born an Ameracan catizeJ
but was m Italy at the war's outset and Wfs
'forced" he says into the Italian army, was
captured in Germany and somehow made hiS
postwar way back to the U S
Forced, eh'
No doubt never heard of the Geneva Convenlton
SUre he was forced
Highest paid deejay m th~ USA, un·
doubtedly 10 the world, is John A Gambling of
N Y 's WOR $450,000 a year He's wntmg hts
autobiography, "Rambhng with Gambling ,"
due in the fall Why were we so sure animal
magician Gunther Gebel-WilhaniS wos to be 10

the N Y Ringling Bros Circus whach JUSt
opened at Madason Square Garden for moe
weeks? Quale a dasappoinbnent, Ute Baggest
Top needed that blond daredevil's wild ex
Cltement, but G·W as starred 10 the other, the
"Red" Ringbng troupe, tourmg elsewhere
One thing the N Y circus won't do IS frustrate
audiences which can't watch everything razzle·
dazzling ail three rmgs at once - too often it's a
DnH'mg Cll'CUS

Wisconsin Credit
Reform Big Plus

I

·'

In one or the last acts before closmg up shop until the
next baennaai sessiOn, the 1971 Wisconsan legislature
presented that state's consumers wath one of the most
progressiVe credat reform laws ever mtroduced 10 the
Unated States
Among numerous provlS!ons to go mto effect 10 March
1973 posteraty w1ll call down most blessmgs upon the law·
makers for two maJOr reforms
One ts a three day cooling off period for sales made m
the home Thts means that a housewtfe, for example, who
1s talked 10to stgn10g a contract by a fast talkmg salesman
for somethmg she really doesn't want or really can't af.
ford wtll be able to cancel the agreement by nollfymg the
merchant wtth10 three workmg days
Not only that, but the ll)erchant must reciatm any of hts
1roperty wathm 20 days or at becomes the property of the
consumer wathout any obligation to pay for 11
Another maJor seclton of the law essentially abolishes
the anctent and notonous doctrme or 'holder m due
course '
Presently m Wtsconsm , and most other states a mer
chant may sell a note stgned by the customer to a lending
agency- the ' holder (of the note 1 m due course " The
customer as legally responsible to the lending agency for
payment of the mstallments on the note, but the lender is
not responsible for any defects m the merchandise-TV
set refragerator or whatever
There have been cases where people-usually the poor
and unsophts!tcated- have been reqmred to pay for mer
chandtse an unscrupulous vendor never even delivered
Under the W1scons10 reform, a consumer must be noll·
fled m wnbng by the credttot (seller) if the credator is
gomg to asstgn the ra~ht of debt collect(on to a lend10g
agency and the lenamg agency wall be hable for all
clatms of defecltve merchandise for up to one year
Legitimate bus10essmen as well as consumers should
champion stmalar reforms m every state

Finesses, Loses---'No Need

Answering letters on what we thmk of Burt
Reynolds' nude Cosmo centerfold at 's only a
taken the nght percentage
NORTH
4
play m clubs, but South
tmy tasteless Jape, showmg nothing, Slgnifymg
.10864
wasn't half as unlucky as has
little, for real1 artastic male nudaty JUSt go to
¥9 5 3 2
'partner,
who watched South
t AQ
Florence and see Machelangelo's David, total
throw
away
a sure game
+K 9 3
nudity with gemus to modify all leers
We
WEST
EAST
If West had opened a dia·
commented on Ute surprasingly packed ftrsl
. 5
• 93
mond South would have had
rught audience at Ute c1tcus, and an usher ex.
¥KQJIO
¥A74
to take the diamond fmesse
.J9853 2
+KI06
plained. 'Invated bigshots and poverty
but the way the defense went
...
Q6
...
87542
South
should make his con·
groups"
soum
(D)
tract
by
the simple expedi·
Darryl Zanock wtth his longplay sweetie
.AKQJ7 2
ent
of
no
finesses at ail
Genevteve Gilles decorated the best-Been table
"86
He should draw trumps .
m '21," where DFZ cefelrated removal of the
ruff
dummv's last heart and
... AJIO
cast on hts leg Susan Hampshire, starred m
p)ay ace and queen or dia
Both vulnerable
Ute upcommg ftlm "Livmg Free," sequel to lbe
monds It wouldn't matter
w
...
North East South
whtch opponent took the
liomzed "Born Free," will auction off her
trtck If he led a club he
leopard coat and donate the proceeds to the
Pass
2•
Pass
would be taking the club fa
World Wildlife Fund, and certainly not for
Pass
Pas:s
Pass
nesse for South 1r he led
publlcaty , we'd never hint that, no str, hardly
Openmg lead- ¥ K
anythmg else it would allow
Janet Leigh was scheduled for another
South to ruff in one hand and
starkers bathroom shower scene m her By Oswald &amp; James•Jaeoby discard a losing club
'Rabbits" flack, but she asked II be swatched to
IH"EWSP'APEII IHTU.PliU: ASSN I
In Utopia finesses always
a tub scene Told producer A C Lyles she stili work In real life there ,J no
hasn 'tgot over bemg murdered mthe 'Psycho" pomt trymg one when you
flack's clunactac showerbath '!:he very hand· have little or nothmg to gain
The b1ddmg has been
some couple 10 "21" was journalist Joseph
West opens the kmg of
West
North
East
South
Kingsbury.,&lt;imath and his sprag, Daane, om the hearts Hts sutl was con
eve of Joe s return to has home-base, Rome tlnued South ruffed the 1 •
Pass
Pass
th1rd , lead and played a
?
Poss
Lucky lad
couple of rounds of trumps Pass 4 •
You, South hold
F Lee Batley's shoppmgfor one chief edator Then he lost the daamond 11
•
AK654. ¥AZ
AK654
of his proposed ''Gallery" mag
Henry nesse
What do you do now ?
Mancam and Tonight's Doc Severmsen will
East retutned a diamond
A-This Is ono of tho5o prob record a duet-lilburn for Victor . vanety • and South proceeded to ptpy
len1s
that depend on your partw
dubbed black beauty Judy Pace , The Most out all but one of h1s ,trumps
Wesl discarded several ner The co\\ard s bid 11 pass
Beautiful Black Actress in Hollywood " She's in dtamonds and South deduced The bulldoaer's bid ls• six
sp11des The expert's hid Is f1ve
the "Cool Breeze" tuzz and 'Tipoff drama
West was s~ an clubs,
Wtlrren Beatty and Julae Chraslie smpe at tn·
Therefo1e South cashed hcart!'i Four no- trump Jlli not
tervaewerl; who askif they 'll wed witlt "That's dummy s king of clubs and n.'i~mhmentled
TODAY S QUESTION
a silly quesllon Forget tt and get on to fmessed loa the q u c en
•
agamst East West's queen
IJlstead of b1ddmg four spades
someth10g Important " But will they ? · No became the settang tnck
yrnu part11 e r has b1d th1 l~
stlly maybe about the Edte Adams-Pete Condoh , South wa s unlu~ k y He had d utl'i What do vou rln now 1
w&lt;'dding; only when
lost twn hm•ssJ•s and he hac!

What else can you do'
• We've offered to send the
dtspu~ arbtlralton and
they've turned us down.' he
saed
Dale saad club owners are
vehemently opposed to ar
ba trahon ' We're not gomg to
turn our busmess over to
anyone else.' he satd
Memtt saad the players of·
fered to take the money they
offered and they (owners)

What they want IS to k ee ~
us nego!iahng,' Memtt sa ad
• They want to take us down the
!me and ge t the pe nsaon the
reser ve clause and th e
schedul e all an)o one
negottataon
Then they ca n pla y one a·
gamst the othe r, • he smd
They want to spht our ranks
and d1scredat Marvm Mtller

,.AJJ we're aski~g for

lS money

to

fund our plan But the owners
are, bullheaded and stubborn "
Mtiler IS exec utive darector
of the MaJOI League Players
Associati on Has proposal,
whach was turned down, was to
accept th e $5 490 ,000 offer
made b) the owners m Phoemx
provad ed the
players
assocta!ton can use the 6 per
cent potential the money
earns' to mc rease the bendftts
of the pensaon pian
The Clnctnnata Reds, wh o
traditionally open the season,
were to play th e Houston
Astros m Riverfront Stadmm
Wednesday

NEW YORK ilJPI )- Base
ba ll's fer~ l generat stnke
seemed a nea r ce rta mty today
after club owners reJected a
Players Assocaa!ion offer Mon
day and massed m Chacago for
a mee hng tomght
Calling the latest Players
Assocaat10n off er 'an 1m
prudent approach to the problem " John Gaherm, ch1ef
negottalor for U1e owners, satd
they had voted unammously
Monday to reJeCt the proposal
The players' offer, made by

trators and school board members make plans for spend
mg thetr local share of America's annual outlay for edu
cation-whach at Its present $70 balhon as the nation's
largest sm~le expenditure, next to defense
Thas sprmg, for the ftrst ttme they wtil have a ceo
traily located national educational supermarket • where
they can sample the latest advances m teachmg equiP.
ment and matenals a recently opened Educahonal Facai
ttaes Center m Chacago
The need for such a center to bndge the gap between
the educational • hardware" busaness and the education
profession has long been recogmzed by key educators
Among those mstrumental m devetoxnng the Educational
Facihhes Center concept were Waibur Cohen, former
secretary of Health Education and Welfare, the late
Dr James E Allen commtsstoner of the U S Office of
Education. and George D Ftsher, past president of the
NatJOnal Education Assoctataon and now EFC chairman
The EFC Is a perpetual exposition where new products
are demonstrated in actual iearmng envtronments by
Chacago area students, who attend half-day sessions m
ftsh bowl type classrooms- m the center In other words
the educators learn by watchmg the students domg. '
Chacago ts famed for tts gtganhc Merchandise Mart
Now at's got one for educatiOn

AUGUSTA Ga (UP! !Ma sters favont e
Ja ck
Nackiaus returns here today
after a two-day v1s1t watlt hts
famaiy m Fionda but for a
\\htie there was some question
\\hether U1e man rated to have
the best chance to beat him,
Lee Trevmo, would be shckm g
around
Nacklaus m a playoff to wm
th e U S Open, hadn't been here
s10ce th e close of th e 1969
Masters when he swore not to
return because he dadn't hk e
the course
And lo and behold, when he
did return, afte r adnutl!ng his
two year boycott of th e
Masters

'Singles Only' Apartments Out
Chalk up the first counterrevolution in resp,onse to the
so-called sex~al revolution The "sm~les only ' apartment
movement whtch boomed m the late t!Os as a bust now
A few years ago apartment developers dtscovered a
lucrative new market m restrictmg buaidings to unmar·
ned a~~its, mamly or the young, fancy free, "swmgm~
smgles kmd Some butldmgs were so popular that apph
cants scrambled to ge't' on year long watting hsts
But now the fancy seems to have passed, reports Bust·
ness Week The wattlng lists have shrunk, the appeal IS
gone and developers are qu~etiy shppmg out of the sm
gles-only busmess and convertmg to 'aduits~nly"­
mamed adults, that ts
Fewer of today's young people are altraeted by man
agement-engmeered boy gltl encounters m laundry rooms
and on_tenms courts, says the magazme Bestdes, the
postwar b11by boom Is over and there are stabstically
fewer young people, sw10gang or otherwtse
It may afso be another case of nolhmg succeedmg like
success Presumably some of those couples now seeking
quaet, famtly-type apartment butldmgs first met 10 the
'swmgmg smgles" environment

so

More Chiefs Than Indians
Somebmes it seems as af nobody has any sense of ctvlc
responsabihty anymore Then along comes an item like
thts
When Camelback Skt Area near Tannersvalle, Pa
announced a swtmsuat on skis beauty contest, tw1ce as
many volunteer Judges signed up ,for the compebbon as
dad contestants

"Heel, Damm•t'"

~~ was

st"p1d of me, '

Trevino unmedaately got mlo a
hassle wtth tournament of·
facaats Qver some tickets he
bought
It seems the ticke ts, which
Trevmo thought were good for
Ute entare week, do not cover
th e Mond a y thr oug h
Wednesday practi ce roun ds
and Lee's fraends found, when
tltey appeared at the gate
Monday that the l!ckets
wouldn 't be good until the
tournamen t actually starts on
Thursday
If they go I go," Trevmo
saad 10 anger ' If these people
had told me I needed to buy
somethmg else for the ftrst
three days, I would have don e

•

!t

Nacklaus, a thrj!e·hme Masters champion (1963, 1965, 1966),
ts heavtiy favored to wm here
thts week and thus take the
farsl leg of the "grand slam "
which he feels he has his best
chance to sweep this year
The 32-year-oid Ntcklallll as
already the only man to wm all
four of the modern "grand
siam' tournameni8- Masters,
US Open, Brahsh Open, and
PGA-at least tw1ce each and
he s made 1! clear that the
major remaamng goal m his
outstanding golf career IS to
w1n ali four 10 the same year,
Bally Ca per, the 1970 Mast·
ers champaon aQd the only
other man besades Nackiaus
and four-tame
Mas ters
champaon Arnold Palmer to
Win more than a mtlhon dollars
playmg golf, sa ad the Augusta
National, stle of the Masters,
"should be Jack's cup of lea
tlus year "
Casper, who discounts his

ABA Playoff Standmgs
By United Press lnternataonal
(All serle&gt; Best Of Seven)
Eastern Otv1slon
Semifinals
New York
Kentucky

2..... .

W L. Pet
1 01000
0 I 000
W L

Pet

Virginia 1
2 0 I 000
Floridians 1
0 2 000
Wostern Dovlslon
Somlflnals
W L Pel

utai.,

Dati as
1
Indiana
Oen~er

2 011100
0 2 1100

W L Pet
1 1 500
1 1 500

Monday's Results
Ulah 113 Dallas 107
(Only game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games
New York at Kentucky
Virginia at Florld1ans
Indiana at Denver
(Only gomes scheduled)

\

own chances beca use

postponement of Wednesday s
opemng da y ac tio~ and Miller
charged tha t the 011ners • must
bear res ponsabilat y for the
delay of the openmg of the

To Minors

champ Ken

lucky 1 0 V1rgmaa 10 front of

CiNC!NN Ari I UP! I - The
Canc mnali Reds se nt pitcher
Ross Gnmsley tu the mmors
and placed reserve catcher Ball
Plummer 011 the dasa bled hst
Monday, reduci ng thetr roster
to 26
I he roste r must be sheared
to 25 by Wed nesday, whach
would be tile openm g day of the
1972season af the maJor league
players stnk e ends by then
Gnmsley 10 1last year \l as
optwned to U1e Indianapolis
(arm dub on a 24 hour recall
baSIS
Plummer, lllJUred dunng a
spnn g tra1nm g ga me last
month was pu t on a 21-&lt;lay
disabled hst
As a result of the players
stnke, th e Reds iaad off 40 to 50
seasonal .empl oyes Monday
mcludmg the grounds crew,
mamte nance personn el and
Riverfront Stadaum cleanup
crews

Market Report
SCIOTO LIVESTOCK
March 31, 1972
Steers - chmce, 33.3310 ,
good ch01ce, 31 10 32 50
standard • good 28 15-30
Hetfers - choace 32-32 60,
good, 29 15 31
Cows - commercial, 25 2526 85 , utth ty, 22 50·23 85
canner and cutter 17 19 50
Bulls 25·26 85
Stockers and feeders - steer
calves, 32-44 50, heafer calves
21 50.37 50 yearlings 30.34 50
VeE~l

calves -

chm ce , 53 ,

good, 45, baby calves B H
17 5().81
Lambs, 30 8().31
Hogs, 23 23 50, sows 20 1().
22 40 1 boars, 21 40 , stock hogs,
19 5().22 10, ptgs B H , 10 5().
14 50
PI AYEI\S CALLED UP

NEW YORK (UPI)-Goalle
Wayne Bell, defenseman Steve
Durbano and fornard s Tom
Williams, Steve Vickers and
Norm Gratton were called up
frol1) Omaha of the Ce ntral
Hockey Leag ue Monday by the
IOJury-plagued New York Ran

Hodges Last Respects
Rube Wal ker-also were on the
flight
Swoboda one of the few
pia) ers who played under
Hodges who was outspokenly
era tical of the manager, sa1d
that even though the two men
had thetr dafferencls Hodges
always commanded respect
• A Slmng IndiVIdual"

'I don't want to make the
man bagger an dea th than he
was tn hfe.' satd Swoboda
• But he was a strbng m
dtvtduai and even though I had
my diffe rences wath him, I
always
respected
hts
vtewpoml He was an absolute
dasc apllnartan He always
stayed wath has decasaon That's
why you had to respect him
Hodges was more than JUst
&lt;especled by the faathful
Brooklyn fans dunng has
aiiustraou~ playing career He
was one of the most popular
Dodgers The fans loved him
and he returned that love by
marrying a Brooklyn gar! and
choosmg the borough as a
place to setUe down and ra1se
his four chaidren
In 1!162, when he returned to
New York from Los Angeles as
a member of the Mets, Hodges
showed has true feelmgs for

ge rs

the Flondtans, 2·0, and In·
d1.1na and Denver lied at H
N e~ York 1s at Kentuqky
tom ght Vlfgmaa at FIOiadlaliS
and Ind1ana at Denver The
Sial s and Chaps dash for thetr
thard ga me m a best-&lt;1! seven
senes Wednesday rught
Dallas outscored the defend·
mg ABA champs from the held
for two sh at ght encounters
but lost both Western D1vts1on
games on the strength of Utah
free thro" shoo tmg Saturday
mgill they lost 106·96
:liiSsalke Grumbles
I JUSt wish the offlciBis weae
dS up for the playoffs as the
pl .1yers grumbl ed Dallas
Clwps Coach Tom Nassa lke If
Z I Zelmo Beaty ) did on the
street what he does on the
court he d be arrested •
Dallas fmtslled the mght wath
31 personal louis c01npa1ed to
26 for Uta h
Nassalke clatmcd pa eferen
11,11 trea tment • b) the offi cials
foa rough and tumble mtddle·
man Beaty, \\ho collected JUSt
tWO SIGN
NEW YORK (U P!) ~o hn
Mend enhall a defenstve'
Iackie and Tommy Moz1sek a
runmng back, s1gned Monday
11 1th the Ne w York Gtants
Mendenhall a standout at
Grambhng, and Moztsek, wh~
gam ed I 672 yards m has !mal
two yea rs a( Houston, both
\\ere thard round choaces of the
r.aanls m the NFL draft

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N E ~ YORK (UP! l -Gem ge
SAME DAY
Archer's f1rst-pnze Money m
SERVltE
las t weekend s $200,000
In At 9-0ut At 5
Grea ter Gree nsboro Open
Use Our Free Park1ng Lot
vaulted him mto second place
on the PGA's money·\\lfiOing
hst w1th a total of $96 425 ror
the year, $13 000 less than Jack
216 E 2nd Pomeroy
Nacklaus
'
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Robinson's Ceaners

The Department Store of Buildmg Smce 1915

Brooklyn wt!h these words
"Of course, I'm sorry to leave

the Dodgers Los Angeles was
all rtght but Brooklyn ts
home ' '

Today, all of Brooklyn wall
mourn one of the1r favorale
sons

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•

POMEROY, 0.

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I

•
\

DIVISIOn

1 - Wahama, Home
pa tc her Rack Walllams, 1n
1t - Southern Away
p1tc her Dennts Et ~hm ge r , fielder patcher JUmors Davtd
13 - Glouster Home
JUnt or outfielder Alan Duvall, Bak er patcher-outheld er
14
- Fort F1ye, Away
pttcher
and se mor second baseman Randy Borm g
11
- Federal Hoc kmg
Rtck Sanders The other let. outhelder and R1 chard Cross
Home
termen are semors Rtck Blake, pitcher-oulfl eider, and fres h·
18 - North Gallla, Home
ca tc her patcher
Randy me n are Greg Bailey, out
19 - Fort Frye, Home
Youn g catcher, and Alan fte lder Randy Blake, ln·
20 - Symmes Val'"y, A\\ ay
Holter outfielder whale a fteider Phil Bowen, outheldet
21
- Wahama Away
JUntor IS outftelder Btl! and M1ke Larkans outfielder
25 - Kyger Creek, Away
1he mam stren gth of the
Osborne and the sophomore
26
- Glouster Away
mfaeider and patcher as Steve Eagles 1s expected to be m
27
- Hannan Trace, Away
thear h1ttmg This as evtdent m
Goebel
28 - Federal-Hoc kang,
Other members of the Eagle E1c h1 nger s 461 ave rage
A
way
squad a1 e semors Jun Ams· Caldwell s 435 and Duva ll 's
May
JJti
bar y, shorts top outfte ider
2 - Southwestern , Home
But the Eagles may be
4 - Southern, Home
hurtmg m experience a lack
1t - North Galha, Away
that can only be cured by hme
16 - Symmes Valley , Home
The Eagles schedule ts as
18 - Ky ger Creek, Home
follows
Home
games slart at 4 30
Apnl
tv. o personals
p m except Apni 11 whtch
4 - Hannan Tra ce, Home
I he Chaps had 43 faeld goals
sta1ls
4 pm
6 - Southwestern, Away
to 39 lor the Sla rs but Utah
sank 34 of 40 chanty shots
compat cd wtth 21 33 for the
Chaps
Sta t s Coach La Deli An·
derson earher had termed the
Chaps the 'rou ghest, grabban 'est •team m the league and
promased to "fight f1re wath
fu e - but without fouhng •
Wase Efforl OUset
Wtille Wase scored 36 pomts
to lead the Stars but the effort
\l as offset by Chap Guard
Donme Freeman who also
potted 36 pomts
Dallas had !ted the score four
tames an the fourth quarter an(t
regmned the lead twtce before
Red Robbins h1t a JUmp shot
wath 4 47 remammg to put
Utah m front for good at 103
102
111e p1 ohh c W1se zapped m
sex of the Stars' last eaght
pothts, whtie Beaty and
cbowa n) held Ute Chaparrals
to a'!'ljlm total of hve
The Wednesday clash prom
ased to be w1de open "! JUSt
PRATT &amp; LAMBERT
hope \\e can keep our players
m the game when we get on our
home court, • the disgusted
Nassaike sa ad

Drops Dallas, 113-107

SALT I AKE CI1 Y I UP! Jfh c Utah Stars thrashed
Dallas, 113 t01, 10 the only
Aro~e racan Basketball Assocta
tum playoff actwn Monday
preparator)" to sluftmg thei r

E.as tern

Flathush Faithful Pay
NEW YORK (UP! ) - The
Fla tbush Faathful ,' who
cheered the explmts of Gal
Hodges on the baseball dta·
mood of Ebbets Field and
prayed publicly for ham durmg
has many slumps, wall turn out
by the hundreds today to pa)
the former Brooklyn Dodger
star !hear last res p ec~
Hod ges, who would have
been 48 years old today, died
Easler Sunday m West Palm
Beach, Fia , of a heart attack
and wtii be buned tn his
belo1 ed Brooklyn on Thursday
at Holy Cross Ce me tery
foiiowm g a Mass of th e
ResurrectiOn at Our Lady Help
of Chrtstlans Roman Catholic
Church
The body of the New York
Mets' manager can be vaewed
at the church by the pubhc
toda y from I p m to 10 p m
and agam on Thursday from 8
a m to 10 am
It as expected that hundreds
of old Brooklyn Dodger fans
and many youngsters who
remember Hodges as the man
w~o guaded the Mets to the
'maracle " world cham·
p10nshap m 1969 wtil !ale by the
coffm durmg the next two days
UAL Plane Chartered
Hodges' body was flown to
New York on a chartered
Umted Aar Lines plane Mon·
day , and a group of about 20
sadeyed youngsters watched
through a ware fence at
LaGuardia Atrport as the body
was transferred to a stlver·
gray hearse and takeo to
Brooklyn
,
A small group of players,
mcludmg Met pitcher Jerry
Koosman and former Met
outfleidef. Ron Swoboda (now
wtth the New York Yankees) ,
accompamed the body The
thr&lt;e Met coaches who \\ere
With Hodges when he died- Joe
Pi~nbtnno , Eddir Yost and

Ut~h

Dallas
The rest of the league
sem1fm al conte nders had the
day off wath New York leadm g

Shipped Back

ha vmg the audactty not to
settle a nd for hav mg the
audac ity not to crawl , • saad
Maller "We struck after thre.
mo nths • or
frua lless
negot aatw ns an wha cb all
avenues to an honorable !l!t
tlement have been closed by
the owners

Bob Caldwell , semor J&gt;hor tslop·

the Eagles top two hurlers
Make Bonng and Dave Smtth
Back from that squad are mne
lettermen and four starters
There are 18 on the Eagle
squad
Last yea1 the Eagles won the
class A" sectwnal at Eastern
took the dtstnct c1 own at
Challicothe defeatm g tw o
tough teams and then wete
kn ocked out b) Faarbanks at
the regwnai level at Newark
Star ters 1 etu rmn g from that
squad are se mor f1rs t baseman

•

111eet mgs w1th the Cht.tps to

Grimsley Is

er

EagIes Scheduled Today in Home Opener

ow ners alm ost ce rlamly means

Larry Daca ker the Houston

he

they dou I c.1re about tha t t
don't know what they wall calf
about
Jam Merntt, player rep for
1

Mtller called for acceplance of
BY KEITH WISECUP
the $5,490,000 settlement pro·
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
posed by the owners m Phoemx Eastern Eagle base ball squad
last week • provaded the Play· opens 1ts season tomght at
ers AssoctatJOn ca n use the stx home agamst Southern Valley
per cent potenl!al Ute money Con£erence £oe Hannan T1 ace1
earns • to mcrease the pe nswn provadmg the sun perrorms a
plan beneftls
lot of shmmg today
Gahertn smd tomght s meet
The Eag les, coached by
mg m Clucago of the 24 owners sec ond~year Larry Hemes, are
"ould consast of Ius report and rebmldmg from las t year s !2 1
a re v~ew or the satuataon seclwnal and distri ct cham
Gaherm satd he would not meet pwns
"ath Meller before the owners
Gone from last year's squad
conference
arc seven ve terans, mcludmg
Monday s reJec taon by the

As tros plrlyer tepresentn tlve

docs n I lee! he s played very
well the past seven or eaght
months, pomted out tha t recent
heavy rains has th e lush
fmrways play mg 25 yards
longer' c~ nd thal the gree ns
a1 e the fastest I ve ever see n
here
'Both of Utosc conditions are
rea lly lo Jack s hkmg.' Casper
added
Another long-ball htlter who
m11•t be conSidered he re th1s
week IS 1969 Masters champiO n
George Ar cher who won the
Grea ter Greensboro Open Sun·
day by bea tmg Tomm) Aaron
m a pia yo rf
South Af&amp;~ca n Gary Player
only foretgner ever to wm a
Masters (1961), satd Monday
that he IS playang much better
now than he was 11 years ago
when l1e won here /
And Palmer's s~ow m g at
Greensboro indi cated that eve n
though he IS now 42 years old
the fac t that he 1s now " eann g
contact lenses has made htm a
threat ag am Palmer had a
I\\ Jl.Stroke lead gomg mto the
fmal three holes at Greensboro
but blew at with a tnple bogey

111oncy they offered and they askmg for es money to fund our
smd no • said Merntt 'What plan But the owners are
they \\ant as to keep us bullheaded and stubborn •
ts now even more adamant
Miller, at .a late afternoo n
nego taa tmg They want to take
conce rmng negottatwns
It looks hke tt maght be a the Q n cmnc~tt Reds Houslon s us down the hne and get the news conference 1n New York
while," satd Dterker 10 HoltS opponent m Wednesday's ope pcnswn reserve cla use and the Monday, sa td money no longer
ton After this (the owners' ner accused the owners of bad schedule ail mto one negotla· seemed to be Ute assue The
lio n Then they can play one rea l tssue IS the owners at
reJectaon) I don' t see any way fmth m ba rgammg
we can pla y opemng day If
'We offered to ta ke the ,,ga1nst the other Ail we're te mp( to pumsh the players for

expressr'(! little hope or o pe m~lg
the seaslm on time and saad he

Exec utive Dtrector Marvin

Now as the time of year when ail good school admtms

I.4.

.J . .

'l

Tins 1.s tt ," satd Merntt

sa 1d no '

Nicklaus Again
Masters Favorite

~

~

CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Jam
Merritt was dumfounded
Francas Dale was adamant
Both were reactmg Monday
rughl to the reJection by maJor
league baseball club owners of
an offer by players to end the
baseball slrtke
Merntt, a pitcher, IS player
representative of th e em.
c10nah 8 eds Dale 1s prestdent
of the club
Dale satd tbe club owners
turned down the player s offer
1'unarumously and watliout any
doubt whatsoever

A 'Supermarket'
Of School Tools

WIN AT BRIDGE

.74

,.~.

seaso n '

Two MD s at the Umverslty of Loutsvtlle School of
Med1cme have proved that filthy lucre as literally that
Drs Beret Abrams and Morton Waterman cultured
$163 47 worth of coms and currency to see tf th~y could
grow anythmg besades Interest, reporl8 the Health BuJ.
ietm They came up w1th everythmg from posattve and ,
negative staphylococcus to ordmary garden-variety
fungus
In all 13 per cent of the coms and 42 per cent of the
paper money was found to harbor germs that can cause
dtsease- whtch as not surprasmg m vtew of the number of
hands money slips through these days
The butietm suggests that this mformalton be clipped
out and left 10 heu of a ttp the next ltme you eat m a
1 estaurant The waatress will understand

agree wath no m110's op101on I
have some of my own ''

..,
.,.,:~

- Such an interpretation would seem to su~gest gross
"
miSJUdgment of Humphrey, m and beyond thts state, by
MILWAUKEE
!NEAl
The top manager for one of the lesser candtdates m
Muskie's maq~gers
Jlad they read well Humphrey's evident residual
Wtsconsm's yvercrowded presidential primary told me
strength
here, they mtght never have talked so airily of
'The only ftrm commttm~nts we are fandmg 10 our
vtctory
Now
Muskie 1s bav10g to mutter belatedly that
telephone ca11Yass10g arc for Hubert Humphrey'',
he
will
surely
finish beh10d ne1~hbor Humphrey and
That httle message as heard again and agam m !has
mtght
even
land
thtrd beh10d neighbor George McGovern
state, from canvassers from travelers to the north, in
hts hard competitor from South Dakota
edttors' offtces, among key pohltcians
But maybe everybody has.teen misjudging Humphrey's
Many, many Wtscons10 voters vmc~ polite interest 10
drtve for a second presidential nommation He thinks
some other-candidate, but then add 'Of course Hubert
he was cheated of the While House in 1968 by unhaJ!PY
1s a personal fraend "
carcumstance;; (the war and Lyndon Johnson) whach
If thts deep and evidently -qwte broad attachment holds
aren't present today He thinks "Tbas •• my time "
up on votmg day, Aprtl 4, then the man from neaghbormg
Ftrst he felt he m1ght wm by enterml( JUSt the late
Mmnesota may be ijbout to wm the first major pres!·
onmanes hke Calilorma and New York Next he decided
denllai pnmary of h1s lifeltme
Indeed, he conceiVably could capture most of the slate's ' he daren't waat, that Muskie mtght wrap at up quickly
moe congressiOnal dtstracts and by that fact the over
af he dtd So he picked some early spots ~
Has really crtlical decision, the true l!a
n hts ef·
whelmmg maJOrity of Wtscons10's 67 delegates to the
fort
was
the
one
to
lay
tt
on
heavy
10
F
rids
and
Wts·
national convention at Mtamt Beach
cons10
He
thought
he
might
still
lose
out
to
early
Muskie
By now naturally, every pollUcal appraaser descend
momentum unless he scored In these
10g upon thts heralded pramary state as wrabng Hum
He dtd JUSt well enough m Florada to be encouraged
phrey The mterestmg thmg 1s how and why he got there
Musk1e's !top there was a bonus And Wasconsm may
A good many pollltcaans and observers WhO thank they
know Wtsconsm say Humphrey always had the winmng
prove Hubert's real gold mine
Yet there IS some peril 10 Humphrey's course Though
potenbal here Says one
a great personal campaagner he as a shockingly demo
When he campatgns m thts state he Just activates
what as hts •
gogac over·promtser Moreover polls these days Place
htm well behmd Prestdent Ntxon and show ham d1sap·
By thts reasonmg the lead long held by the now
proved by youth and doubted by the broad electorate
strugglmg Sen Edmund Muskae was always allusory con
Thts suggests hts rush may soon encounter heavy
structed m a vacuum whtch would begm to disappear
resastance
But 10 fraendly Wtsconsln' Probably not
the moment Humphrey moved
Sbll,
there
Is
that wtde no-man's·land of undecided voters
If thts vtew as the correct one. then Muskte's faitermg
unconquered by Humphrey and open to the rtVai appeals
strtdes before and after hts Fiorada pramary debacle are
simply an added contrabubon
of Muskae and McGovern

Dirty Money Can Be Sickening

A thought for today Russtan

t::, , ?? ::: woor r

Merritt is jOwners Reject PlaYers 0
In Shock! .

Wlscor,tsln Primary:
\

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4 - ~ Dlll78omineJ,\llddlepw W'lmeiO)', 0., Aprilt, lt72

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Change Rocl&lt;s F8m.i liar ~ation's ,High School Athletic. Domain.
'

1Editor'~ note: There is
trnublc at the gra08roots of
American sports-&lt;n the high
~ohools. How much !rouble,
where It's likely to be found
•nd some of the causes are
reported In a survey by United
Press International.)
By STEVE SNIDEJ!
NEW YORK I UP! )- Bailey
Marshall is athletic director of
the University Interscholastic
League in Texas, governing
body for competition among
the state's 996 high school
football teams and 1,123 in
basketball.
Not long ago, Marshall went
to a high school pep rally with
his daughter . Pep rallies
before big games were mspirational cheering sessions in
Marshall's school days and
what he saw on this occasion
upset him.
"This is more like a rock and
roll festival," he complained w
his daughter.
"But, Dad." she replied,
"this is the only way we can get
the kids to come out."
In Arkansas, a state high
school official noted attendance at games "is vir.
tually nil in some places ... It's
changed an awful lot because
or desegregation in the
schools."
Longest-Haired Team
In Seattle, teacher-coach
Reese Lindquist of Queen Anne
High School says he has "the
longest-haired football team in
captivity ... I expect in the late
1960s we've undergone one of

the· most profound clum~cs •Ill
history ."
'!'::ose are excerpts from
special reports wUnited Press
International, which checked
into athletics at the high school
level . and confirmed tha ~
profound changes have OC·
curred in many parts of the
country .
Although some area's Ylr·
tually are untou ched by
change, UPJ found attendance
generally is lagging, athletes
are less dedicated and quicker
w drop out than they used to
be, and many yoong stars are
discovering they are not the
school idols their fathers might
have been in the so-called good
old days.
''Kids today have a lot more
interests than we did," says a
cOach in Michigan. ~~The cars,
tile televtsion and the gtrls are
taking their toll."
Changing attitudes and lifestyles among young people are a
major factor in spreading
problems at the grass roots
that could, in time, affect the
quahty of competition at the
big-tim e colleges and on
professiolllll teams.
'
Another Factor
Another factor is the atlttude
of parents who are concerned
wtth pressing issues m the
educatiOnal system as a whole
soaring costs, increasing burdens on taxpayers, busing and
racial tension. Where any or all
those troubles exist, athletics
become seconda ry. Game
atte ndance decr eases a nd
sports
programs
are

interests in sports but they're population, new schools are athletes in the ghettos. Umbles rassed by gangs. Gangs seem
appearing almost overnight says, "Kids in athletic pr,. to look up to a kid on a team
still btg here."
The ct ties also .have • and new loyalties are sil&gt;w to grams are very much unha· and just don:t bother him."
dedicated youngster s, par- kindle.
ltcularly at ghetto schools in
While changing social patthe inner city where blacks .are terns· and attitudes are signifistru!I,Shng for recognition in ca nt, money is a growing
the hope of winning athleltc concern almost everywhere.
sc holarshi ps to a major · Early this year, in a report
college.
submt tted to the National
Sporting
GO&lt;$ Association,
in
town,
17-year-&lt;lld
Nancy
But
in
ctties
like
New
York
threatened.
Dr
.
Lawrence
L. Steinmetz and
Much of the trouble, but not Huddleston says it's still the and Chicago, programs have
all, is in the.big cities. Many of "tn" thing to date the school been curtailed by antiquated Dr. David H. Bowen of the
the trouble-free spots, but not sports hero. But at Boulder, . facilities, ttght schOQ] budgets University of Colorado conall, are in smaller, older Colo., High, Martha Carlson ' and student tension . In some e! uded: Orgamzed school
communities where local htgh points out, "A lot of girls are cases, to avmd distu~bances, sports are in jeopardy if
school teams still are hot at- even turned off by jocks ...Girls rught events were shtfted Ul current tr.. nds .and lagging
~•,
tractions for townspeople as and boys are learning to accept daylight hours and key games public interest continue.
·:
Surprising Poll
people for what they are· were staged at secret re.ndez.
well as students.
A surprising 66 per cen t of
In the stack of reports ...There doesn't seems to be vous wtth only school offtctals
taxpayers
polled by those
any
type
that
automatically
and
the
press
admttted
.
assembled by UPI, remarks
indicated they faresearchers
hke these kept recurring :
attracts girls."
"Our football players are not
In so'me sections, declming
Philadelphia "Horror Story" vor and recognize the value of
as dedicated as they were 10 attendance is blamed on strong
In Pit tsburgh and, much of athletics but would favor
years ago/' says Herman competition from nearby ool- Pennsylvania, school sports reducing expe nditures for
Graves, coach at Atlanta's lege and professional teams. In are ftouri shmg, but wha t sports if they could obtain a tax
Howard High, alma mater of . areas where desegregation or happened in Philadelphia is cut.
Where school sports have
New York pro basketball star consolidation of school districts held up as a horror story" by
Walt Frazier. "Half of them has led to increased busing, old educators in other states who been self-oupporting, mcreased
are not willing w make the loyalties have been diluted and are battling to keep' public costs of equipment, travel and
sacrifices to exceL They see so atlendance suffers.
money flowmg in to school coaching often make athletics
a marginal proposition.
much football on TV and when
Almost every state however, athletics.
James Wiginton, supervising
they ftnd they can't come up to has hotbeds m wltich school
Phtladelphta, fa c'C d with a
that level they suffer a big sports are booming and atti- $35 mtllion sc hool deficit, principal for the Mendenhall
Ce nter ' in
letdown and lost interest."
tudes remam much the same origmally cancelled tts entire Attendance
Many youn gsters are as adults remember them from 1971-72 pubhc sc hool sports MisSISSippi, says, "I think your
motivated by dreams of their own sc hool days.
program It fina lly opened last coaches are going to have to go
"It's
kind
of
what
we
do
growing up to become rich and
September, two weeks late, • back to coaching basketball,
famous professionals but qmck around here-going to games," after ca nd idates in the football, everything"-instead
"rewards" on the school level says Shelley Thompson, an mayoralty campaign pledged o( having separate coaching
aren't always what they were achve gtrl student at Walsh, support for athletics and prn staffs for each sport.
College atl~etic recruiters
Colo., Htgh, in a town of some football's Philadelphia Eagles
m the old days.
H3030
Sehoul Sports Are Healthy 900 persons in the southeast contrtbuted $79,000 to help out already are noticing changes
at the school level but so far
At Abilene, Tex ., where corn er of the state . "There the school board.
school spor ts arc so healthy isn't much else to do. In other
School busmg, a natmnal there seems to be no shortage
they outdraw the three colle~es places, I think kids are losing tssue, is a httlc-known fa ctor in or top prospects for footb all,
restn ctmg attenda nce as well basketball, tra ck and, in some
as varsity participatiOn by areas, for baseball and hockey
"I thtnk the~ea son for that is
some athletes The effect is the
because
coaching 111 the high
same whether busing is done to
schools
IS better than tt ever
achieve racial balance or ts a
matter of financial expediency was and the dedicated athlete
is qmck to surface," says J oe
in umftcation or consohdation
took the only game played thus conta in John Havlicek, who where several smaller . school Pa tct•no, head football coach at
far at Atlanta. The Hawks, has averaged 35 pomts a game districts have been combmed Penn State. "The hoy may be
chan gin g but ·\h e quality
however, must find a way to for the Celtics in the series.
into a larger one.
When your gsters are bused remains quite high."
In Chicago, Lee Umbles, a
from thetr fam tltar haunts to a
black
L'()ach at predominantly
new schoo l, their loyalties
black
Harlan
High, says, "Lots
often remam at the old schooland so, frequently, do Ute of kids wouldn' t be m school if
it weren't for athletics . We try
loyalties of their parents.
to msttll the idea tha t college
athletic scholarships are a way
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP! ) of Andretlt, Unser and Leonard
Busing Creates Problem
out of the inner city."
- Parnelli Jones, the first man was expected, Jones' comment
Busmg also creates a practt·
There's another bonus for
wofficially crack the 150 mile- was a surprise.
cal problem for the would-be
an-hour barner at the Indiana·
Jones last raced in the 500. athlete.
H1061
polis Motor Speedway, indicat- mile race in 1967 when he
t399.95 up
"Some of the kids don't have
H1055
ed Monday he would be tn· ptloted the Andy Granatellt their own transportation back
terested in returning as an turbine to track records and and forth," says Ray Peters of
active driver this year when was lea ding the race when a $2 the Little Rn&amp;;k school system.
one of hts cars might be the gear gave way on the !96th lap. '"That school bus leaves in the
I WILL BE ABSENT
COME! CHECK OUR PRICE!
Jones has remained ac tive m afternoon and they have to be
first to officially clock 190
racmg as a car~wner , stock on it. "
m p.h.
FROM MY OFFICE
Jones entered four of the car driver and off-road racing.
So students who Wqnt to
radtcally-destgned V-winged · "Right now I don' t want to partt ctpate as athletes or
APRIL lOth TO
racers and listed himself as the say that I defmitely will at- spectators after school hours
driver of one of the creations. tempt to ea rn a starting need private transportationAPRIL 27th
IN POMEROY
All four are powered by the poSition," Jones told S(leellway or get on the bus.
four-&lt;·y h~der turbocharged Of· officials. "But. tf our 'three
992-2848
In some areas witt. exploding
MAIN ST.
regula r drivers all qualify
fenhauser engines.
The other three drivers early without any trouble, I'm
probably represent the finest giving serious consideration to
chauffeurs ever assembled on the possibility of driving the
a raci ng team in USA C. They fourth one myself."
The four Offy cars -of the
are former Indianapolis "500"
wmners Mario Andretti and Al Jones stable pushed the entry
Unswer the champion of the hst to 17 for the May 27 race.
last two Speedway classics But Speedway officials said
along with national drtving that as many as 53 more could
arrive before the April 15
champ Joe Leonard.
~
Although the announcement deadline.

Be ~ Happy,_ Go ,

.Save On
Lawn &amp; Garden
Needs
· AT
MOORE'S

11

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GOOD LOOKING
HARD WORKING!

Local Bowling

enough. I've got no new ideas
on how to stop them. We're
playing a team that is gomg to
go all the way."
In fairness to the Bulls they
have be.en hurt by injuries.
Tom Boerwinkle, a husky 7fool center, has missed the
entire series with a knee injury
and both Bob Love and Chet
Walker, the team's two top
scorers, have been hampered
with leg injuries.
Milwaukee was beaten in tts
first game with Golden State
but bounced back to win the
next two. In tl1e last one, won
by the Bucks, 122-94, The
Warrtors were guilty of throwing the ball away on numerous
occasions. Coach AI Attles has
his team work on passing dnlls
Monday m hopes they can
correct their mistakes tonight.
The Knicks, who drubbed the
Bullets, 110-38, Sunday night in
New York after losing the
opener at Baltimore in overtime, will be out to end a jinx·on
the Bullets' home ~ourt. The
Bullets have scored six consecutive playoff victories . over
New York on their home court,
dating back to March, 1970.
The homecourt edge also has
been prevalent in the BostonAtlanta series .. The Celttcs
have won both games at the
Boston Garden and the Hawks

]ones May Return
As Active '500 Driver

NOTICE

'

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.

-

Muon Bowling Center

Monday Merchanh
Team
w. L.
Hart's Used Cars
14 14

Miller's Insurance

58 30

Keefer's Se~v . Station
Mason Auto Marl

49 39
46 42

W. Va . Nat. Guard...

44 44

Mason Co. Bank
Hoffman 's
Penn Central

31 57
28 60
26 62

Team J Games - Mason Co.

Bank 2890; Hart's Used Ca rs
2837.
Team Game - W. Va .
National 'Guard · lO IS; Hart's
Used Cars 1007 .
Ind. 3 Games - Bodkln.672; ,
Mason 611 .
Ind. Game - Snyder 265 ;
Nelson 258.

,

Tuesday Industrial
W. L.
16 28
72 32

Team
Burton Sunoco
Penn Central
Coca Cola
Mason Agg
Carolina U.mber

70 111

52 52
36 48
10 94

New Haven Furn

Team 3 Games - Coca Cola.
Burton Sunoco. 1
Team

Game

-

Burton

Sunoco ; Coca Cola .
Ind. 3 Games - H. Miller ; D.
Miller.
Ind . Game - W. King , C·
Cline.
Steelworkers

Team
Pis.
Re'lecls
102
Nu s &amp; Bolts
96
Ylonders
84
Foote Heels
69
Stingers ·
50
Skips
48
Ferros
• 45
Team J Games - Foote
Heels 2599, Rejects 2454.
Team Game -

:

Foote Heels

871 ; Foote Heels 867.
Ind. ~ Games - D. Mason
574; N. H6wley 514.
Ind. Game - N. Hawley 212.
B. While 210.

If there'~ I!IOIDt!' "-'llY to save you money
on your inc~rne tax, H &amp; R Block ' wiU
know how to do it.
ltemiz1xl an&amp;! standard deductions ore
nothhll( new, Wt·'ve bt.-en preparing return• for yea~• u•ing both. We'll figure
out your •ituntiun both wayo and then
prepare your return 110ing the method
h~ot fur you.
You oee, for only a few &amp;lollars
DON'T LI!T AN AMATEUR DO
more thun it costs to do it yourself
H•R BLOCK'S JOB.
(with ad,ice mnvbe from oome
.
other umnteur), yO'u can have your

tax "''ll&amp;rn prepared with complete
confidentiality by a spt'Cially trnined
member of the H &amp; R Block team.
H &amp; R Block's fees etart at $5
und the averug~ cost was under
$12.50 for over 7 million families
we served last year.

H&amp;R 81'0ck
The income taJ ~-1.
~·
.I

ONLY 14 DAYS. LEFT
To 5 P.M. MON.'THRU SAT.
pHONE : 992-3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
~A.M.

t

..

304 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.

She's really lost if she doesn't know her
phone number.
•
General Telephone urges you to teach your children
their phone number as soon as possible. r ...

---€m

&amp;EnERALTELEPHOnE
L
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.Charlene Hoeflich

'Twas hardly nice weather, what with the snow and the cold,
but the Rutland Firemen's Auxiliary went ahead with the annual
Easter egg hunt and the 50 or 60 youngsters who braved the
elements and the mud of tbe field had a ball. Usually several
hundred turn out. .,
.
' '
Each egg was marked witb an amount which the youngster
finding it collected from Ute. Auxiliary. Those children not finding
eggs were given consolation prizes of candy ones. Big winner in
the pre-school group was Jay Carpenter. No one seemed to
remember who got the $3egg in the 7 to !2age.
FEW ARE BLESSED WITH the abundance of ambition
possessed by the daughters of Paul and Frances Smart.
To the onlooker, Phyllis Smart Hackett never seems to stop.
After her five chtldren were weD along in school, she returned to
Ohio University to gel her degree in education and is currently in
her secopd year as assistant princtpal at Bradbury .
June Smart Kloes, equally ambitious, directed her energy
mto the Kiddie Shoppe a couple of years ago. And now her twin
sister, Jean, wife of the Rev. George Siddsll of Cincinnati and
mother of three children, has returned to college.
Jean is taking night courses at Ute University of Cincinnah
while workmg as a teaching assistant m an elementary school
there. Jean is a graduate of Denison University and had three
years at seminary where she received a masters in religious
education, but is required to complete education course
requirements before she can take a job as a regular elementary
teacher . .
KEN HARRIS, SON OF JANET AND GENE, is pursuing law
at Capital University where he takes courses three nights a
week. He works daytime at the State Department of Welfare and
his wlfe teaches.
"WHY DO I EVEN BOTHER?"
You're normal if you've ~sked yoorself that questton time
and again as you sig"\'d up for something for nothing .
But Uten you get some encooragement. Someone tells you of
someone they knew who was acquainted with somebody who won
a new car or a trip or even a fancy can opener. Ene011raged a bit
you keep on signing and thinking about how nice it would be to

wm.
Bill Bland, sen of Nina Bland who lives here now with her
sister, Pearl Reynolds, ana her mother, Mrs. Minerva Childers,
found out just recently how nice It is to win. He and his family
won an expense free trip to Disney World .
The famlly had been In Middleport visiting one weekend and
enroute to their home in Akron, stopped at a service station in
Marietta to get gas. Bill registered for the trip to Disney World
and won! They had a balL

SEE GODFAmER
Mr . and Mrs . Delmar
Canaday, Dr. and Mrs .
RaYmond Boice, and Mr. and
Mrs. A. R. Knight, all of

Pomeroy, spent Easter in·
Mariettit . They dined in the
Gun Room at Ute Lofayette
Hotel and then attended "The
Godfather" .

•
POLLY'S POINTERS

Shoe Polish Shines Up
Old Sewing Machine

992-5292

·!Cverythm g happened to
our mdustry," he said " ~'irst
tt was the cha nging mode of
wom en's lives durmg World
War II , then the bouffant
ha11·do. then wtgs and th en
kids 'and then· mothers both
in htppy clothes
"B ut we dtd harm to ourselves, too ," he went on
"We stopped doing co uture
hats and only made junwrs.
Hats should be more ' than
JUSt a block shape w1th a
tnm stuck on

Area ministers participated Overstated but
in community Good Friday
services at the Mount Moriah
fun the
Baptist Church in Middleport
'
on the "Seven Last Words of spectacu Ia r hat
Christ."
"'
. b
The service which began at
IS OC
. . .
11 : 45a.m . andcontinu~duntil3
a f 11-c' ro n
p.m. opene~
wtth
a
U
W
processional by the ministers
. splash of
and the choir . The Rev. Henry
Key' pastor of the host churclt,
f Iowe rs on
presided with Mrs . Campbell
d
b .
Harper at the piano.
eep
rl m
The first word, "Fa th er
h ·
Forgiv~ Them," was by the
W lte StrOW
Rev. J. D. King, pastor of the
f
Triedstone Baptist Church ,
Or, Or
Gallipolis; the second word,
Sheer d ramo
"Today Thou Shall Be With Me
.
'
in Paradise" by the Rev .
Q g1ant
Robert Bumgarner of the •
Hea th United Methodi st
SUmmer StrOW
Church; third word, "Behold
ca rtwhee
My Mother" by the Rev. Mr.
1
Kev: fourth word, "My God,
white StrOW
My God, Why Has Tbou
Forsaken Me?" by the Rev.
OCCented
Nyle Borden; fifth word, "I
.
Thirst," by the Rev. Charles
With On
Simons, First Baptist Church,
d ·
f
Middleport; sixth word, " It is
e g I ng 0
Finished," the Rev. S. J .
three- inch
Jackson, pastor of the Naomt
BaptistChurch,Pomeroy,and
stiff veiling .
the Ftrst Baptist of Rutland;
and the seventh word, "Father

k

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JntoThyHands !CommendMy
Spirit," by the Rev. Henry
Scott, assoctate pastor of the
Twelfth Avenue Baptist
Church, Columbus.
Musical selections included
" Footprints of Jesus" by
James Hughes; "He Touched
Me" by Hughes and Mrs.
Pansy Banks ; and "Does Jesus
Care?" by Mrs . Arnold
Richards . The hymn of
meditation to conclude the
service was Rock of Ages."
The offering was taken by
Carl Williams and Emogene
Borden . · Following
the
benediction women of the
church served a dinner in the
church dining room. The tables
were decorated wiUt spring
nowers.
11

By HELEN IIENNESSY
NEA Women 's Editor
NEW YORK- !NEA l
Jack McConnell was discu s·
sing hats - a natural toptc
for a millinery destgner. And
a far happier subject now
than it .has been for many a
year. For hats are back as
a big Cashton item now that
th e costume look is out and
classic clothes in

" I put tt on the bed at my
fn end's house and a friend
of hers ca me 1n and bought
tl for $3 50. She sttll buys
my h a t s bu t not at tha t
price " On a rece nt v1s1t to
San An ton to, he sold 86 hats
at $79 eac h. He has a couture
line, a boutique line and a
less expenstve line: All have
a dtffe1en t look. He 's also in
the me n's sh irt business

C- T£MP£ SET,

His $39 50 Hers $35.00

a

Jack has been known for
making flamboyant hats but
he does understated des1gns
as well "But I fmd the woman who wears the overstated
hat is reall y fun," he ad mt tl ed "She has the guts to
have a presenc e "

Today McConnell f e c I s
th ere ts eve n a place for new
people in the hat busmess
afid that the re's nothin g like
compettlion to bring out the
best m eve ryone

He was in the Navy when
he made his first hat. " My
girl fnend worked m a New
York store in the hat de·
partment I asked her to
make a hat for my moth er
and she wouldn't So I went
'·B usines s as good now," · down to the millinery diS·
McCo nnell said " ! did a 20 tnct where I k n e w she
per cent in crease thJ s season
over last. And a great many
young people are wearmg
hats-some who had never
worn one before "

birthday
present

McCo nnell says he also in etudes what th e buyers call
"the net vous hat" tn Ius hne.
" It has a feath er or tri m
that moves And it's th e

no o11e

forgets.

surest sale on the floor "

.

lNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .I

Jack travels act oss the
country makm g personal appea rances in the s t o r e s
where hiS hats are sold and
he believes hats are a per·
sonal thin g w i t h women
Sometimes , he says. a sales·
g 1 r l wt ll say accustngly.
"You didn't bring a hat lot
Mrs So-a nd -So "

D ESE~T

He says men like women

.

New Junzor
• Cl:ub Carrier Wing
·Plans Reunion
Junket in '72

E cts Officers
An or anization meeting of
the Sunbonnet Gtrls, a new
junior garden club sponsored
by the Wmding Trail Garden
Cl ub, was held rece ntly at the
home of Mrs. John TerrelL
Other members of the Winding
Trail Club attending were Mrs.
Don Thomas, Mrs. Robert
Thompson, and Mrs. Robert
Lewis.
Officers elected were Shari
Mttch, president; Jamie
Johnso n, ~ice president;
Elaine Barnhart, treasurer;
Maria Lega r, secretary ; and
Linda Rosenbaum, news
reporter.
The club wtll meet on the
fou rth Monday of each month

The Ohio 433rd Troop Carner
Wing Veterans Association
announces a grand reunion and
week long jet-trip and tour to
Frankfurt, Germany in Oc·
Iober, 1972. The tour will include top tourist attracttons in
Western Germany; then a
dinner and dance at the Rine·
Main Atr Base.
In teres ted persons are ad·
vised to get their rese rvations
in early and for further mformation write to Ohio 433rd
Troop Carrier Wing, Veterans
Association, PO Box &gt;426,
Cleveland, ·Ohto 44101.

begmning on April 24. At that
time they wtll view slides 'on
"Gardemng in Fun ." On Apnl
28:the girls will have an Arbor
Day plantmg at the Metgs
County Infirmary of a buckeye
tree . Flower seeds were
started in paper cups for the
flower gardemng project of
each of the girls.
Adopted as the club slogan
was "Make the World Better
by Helping Make . it More
BeautifuL " Selected as the
cl ub song was ~~ America, the
Beauttful" and the emblem is a
mimature sunbonnet . Mrs.
Terrell served cake and K_901·
Atd. Shan Mttch will be hostess
for the April meeting . Other
EASTER GUESTS
members attending were Anna
Easter
guests of Mr .. and
Wtles, Linda Kovalchik, and
Mrs
.
Wilham
Radf ord ,
Kenda Braun
Pomeroy RD, were their
daughter , Mary, and her
roomma te, Marti Merrick; Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Glaze, Sandy,
BASIC COMPLETED
·Mike and Robert; Virgil Glaze,
CHESTER - Army Private Donald Pullins, Jr ., and
David M. Bissell, son of Mr. daughter Kim, and Miss Coleen
and Mrs. Charles L. Bissell, of Spires, all of Col umbus.
Chester, recently completed
eight weeks of basic trainmg at
the U. S. Army Training
Center, Armor, Ft. Knox, Ky
. TRAINING ENDED
PT. PLEASANT - Army
Pri vate Glenn A. Swann, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard E.
Swann , 2610 Mt. Vernon, Point
Pleasant, recently completed
eight weeks of basic training at
th e U. s. Army Training
Center, Armor, Ft. Knox, Ky.
He is a i970 graduate of Pomt
Pleasant High SchooL ·

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The Almanac
TUESDAY
By United Press International
By POLLY CRAMER
REACH OUT for life service,
Today is Tuesday , April 4,
7:30p.m.
Tuesday
at
Pomeroy
the
955th day of 1972.
DEAR POLLY- I recently bought an old sewmg maAdventist
Church
.
Topic,
The
moon is between its full
chine stand. The wood was dried and had knicks and
scratches here and there . I washed and thoroughly dried
" What happens when yo u phase an d last quarter.
it, !hen put on two applications of brown paste sho~ polish,
die•"
The morning sl&lt;trs are
rubbing well afler each one. It looks great and I have
.SALEM CENTER PTA, 7:30 Juptter and Mercury .
since used the same treatment on wood ptcture frames
p.m. Tuesday at scho ol.
The evening stars are Venus,
and sometimes used black polish . People could not be·
Program
by
band
students;
Mars
and Saturn.
lieve the great improvement was made with plain old
guest speaker on cancer.
Those born on this day are
shoe polish.- M. B.
OFFICIAL
VISIT
by
Mrs.
under
the Sign of Aries.
' same treat·
DEAR M. B.-My slsler has long used •this
Inez Lonier, district deputy · Dorothea Lynde Dix, Ameri·
ment on pieces of antique furniture and If I remember
grand chief, for Meigs Tpmple, can pioneer of prison reform ,
correctly an antique dealer first told her about !I.153 Pythian Sisters, 7:30 p.m. was born Aprtl 4, 1802.
POLLY
Tuesday , Middleport
On thts day in history :
,~tlllliilnt
Polly's Problem ~~
American Legion Home.
In IMI President William
EASTERN
HIGH
Alumni
Harrison
died of pneumonia one
; DEAR POLLY- My Problem is with the new life- ~
~ like rubber dolls , such as my daughter received for f
meeting, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at montb after being inaugurated.
~ Christmas last year Her doll has gotte~ very di~ty \
high school. All alumni urged John Tyler becan;te the firs t
·J from playing out·of·doors and I have tned cleamng ,
to attend to make plans for' vice president to be elevated to
;;; it with several of the commercial cleaners but none ~·
alwnni
banquet.
chief executive due to a death.
t of them get it really clean. Can someone tell me
GOLDEN
RULE
Class
of
In 1917 the U.S. Senate, by a
; how to get this doll clean?-NANCY
,
Pomeroy Church of Christ vote of 82-6, approv~ President
'
Tuesday 7:30 p.m., home of Woodrow Wilson's resolution
DEAR POLLY- I am in my. ~id-60s and have been a 1 Mrs. Frances Eskew.
calling for a declaration of war
widow for a year. My Pet Peeve ts wtth those people a9- ·
dressing mail to me with my give n nam e, Even our
muRSDAY
againstGermany .
MEIGS COUNTY Council of
In 1933 the U.S. Navy
pastor does this.-MRS . ·L.
LY-Brenda
want
ed
t&lt;J
know
how
to
prevent
Parents
and
Teach~rs,
.
7
:
30
dirigible
"Akron" foundered in
DEAR POL
and
fell inta the sea off
a
storm
baby's white shoe polish from rubbing off on people's
p.m. Th ursday a t Rtvervtew.
Program to featur e the Barnega t Bay, N.J ., and 73
clothing. After cleaning and buffing the shoes, simply
rub !hem with a piece of waxed paper. The shoes also
culturalartsdisplay. Units are crewmemberswerelost. •
seem to stay clean lo9ger this way .-CAROL N.
to have entries at Ute school
In 1968 Negro Civil Rights
and ready lor judging by 7 p.m. Leader Martin Luther King Jr .
DEAR POLLY-Bi'enda could keep I he white shoe
was assassinated in Memphis.
polish from rubbing off her baby's shoes bY clean Ing
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
and polishing them and let dry . Then spray all over with
Royal · Arch Masons, 7:30 JamesEariRa y pleadedguilty,
Thursday nigh.! at Ute Pomeroy was convicted 11 months later
a light coat of hair spray and let tt dry .- MRS. E. T
and se ntenced to 99 years in
DEAR POLI;Y-1 baby·
MasonicTemple.'Mark master prison .
and past master degrees to be
sit with preschool children
while their moms are at
conferred. All companions
work. One day a mothet
urged to attend.
forgot to bring a blb for
her girl , so I took one of
the plastic-backed diapers
VISIT TURNERS
now on the market, opened
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner,
it out flat, pinned the plasDebbie, Sandy, and Gary of
tic side to the child's dress
tor it could be .put around
Bucyrus, and Aaron and
the neck, depending on the
Jimmy Turner of Racine were
•
size of the child I and quickEaster weekend guesls of Mr.
ly had a waterproof bib . This would be a great idea for a
and Mrs. Joe Turner, Midpicnic or when visiting. The " bib" can be · used again
dleport.
for Its original purpose if necessary or just thrown awa)•
1 have since used this many fimes for my own 8-monthold grandchild:-MRS S D.
SALE PLANNED
I
{NlW.S PAPll !NTlAPRih. .t.SSN)
One·Won-One Class of' the
Pomeroy Baptist Church will
Yoa will melve a dollar If l'olly useA ~·our favnrll~
bomema.mg ldfl, Pet Pe.. e, Polly's l't;~bl~m or Anlutlnn hold a rummage sale at the
church basement, April 6, 7
•
to 1 p~m. Wrllr Poll,· Ia 'rar~ ol thiN n4'liKPHJwr. ··
and Urom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

\t

BACK IN CAMP
RACINE - Marine Sgt .
James E. Spa un , son of Mr.
and Mrs. Junior Spaun of
Route 2, Racine, has returned
to Camp LeJeune, N. C., after
si x months or special
ope rations
in
the
Mediterranean wtth the 34th
bought stu!f. S\tlt m my uni - Marine Amphibious Unit.
lurm. I got th e-material and
made the hat myself

Hats Make the
Classic Look

'

NBA PlayoffspResume Tonight
By U1ti1 ed Press International
The Los Angeles Lokers
would like to wrap up their
opening-round series in the
National Basketball Associ&amp;·
tion 'sJ&gt;layoffs Ulnight so they
ca n take a well-deserved rest
before meeting their next
opponent.
The Lakers hold a J.O edge
over the Chicago Bulls in their
besl-&lt;lf~ven series, with the
two teams meeting in game
No. 4 tonight at Chicago.
All the oUter playoff teams
iare in action tonight, too, but
1none are even close to having
th eir respective matches
decided. New York travels to
Baltimore wtth the two teams
deadlocked at one game
apiece, Atlanta entertains
Boston with the Celtics holding
a 2-1 edge and Milwaukee plays
Golden Stale at Oakland ,
Calif., with the Bucks enjoying
a 2·1 advantage.
The Lakers, who set a
regular season NBA record
with 69 victories this post
campaign, are hoping lo end
their sertes wtb the Bulls
tonight so they can get a few
days rest before meeting the
' "Winner of the MilwaukeeGolden State series.
And, frankly, Coach Dick
Motta of the Bolls illn't optimistic about stripping the
Lakers.tonight.
"We need a miracle," says
Motta. "We've given it everythmg we had and it hasn't been

''

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0;, April4, 1972

COMPLETES TOUR
PT. PLEASANT - Private
Kenneth r:. Mornson, 19, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Warren H.
Mormon, 2200 Washin gton
Ave., Point Pleasant, recently
completed eigh t weeks of basic
traming at the U. S. Army
Training Center, Armor, Ft.
Knox, Ky . He was graduated
from Potnt Pleasant Htgh
School In 1970 and attended
Glenvtlle State College.

. QUALITY

I I

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GOESSLER
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Court 51 .

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Save $00.00on the machine that lets you
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'

,

Change Rocl&lt;s F8m.i liar ~ation's ,High School Athletic. Domain.
'

1Editor'~ note: There is
trnublc at the gra08roots of
American sports-&lt;n the high
~ohools. How much !rouble,
where It's likely to be found
•nd some of the causes are
reported In a survey by United
Press International.)
By STEVE SNIDEJ!
NEW YORK I UP! )- Bailey
Marshall is athletic director of
the University Interscholastic
League in Texas, governing
body for competition among
the state's 996 high school
football teams and 1,123 in
basketball.
Not long ago, Marshall went
to a high school pep rally with
his daughter . Pep rallies
before big games were mspirational cheering sessions in
Marshall's school days and
what he saw on this occasion
upset him.
"This is more like a rock and
roll festival," he complained w
his daughter.
"But, Dad." she replied,
"this is the only way we can get
the kids to come out."
In Arkansas, a state high
school official noted attendance at games "is vir.
tually nil in some places ... It's
changed an awful lot because
or desegregation in the
schools."
Longest-Haired Team
In Seattle, teacher-coach
Reese Lindquist of Queen Anne
High School says he has "the
longest-haired football team in
captivity ... I expect in the late
1960s we've undergone one of

the· most profound clum~cs •Ill
history ."
'!'::ose are excerpts from
special reports wUnited Press
International, which checked
into athletics at the high school
level . and confirmed tha ~
profound changes have OC·
curred in many parts of the
country .
Although some area's Ylr·
tually are untou ched by
change, UPJ found attendance
generally is lagging, athletes
are less dedicated and quicker
w drop out than they used to
be, and many yoong stars are
discovering they are not the
school idols their fathers might
have been in the so-called good
old days.
''Kids today have a lot more
interests than we did," says a
cOach in Michigan. ~~The cars,
tile televtsion and the gtrls are
taking their toll."
Changing attitudes and lifestyles among young people are a
major factor in spreading
problems at the grass roots
that could, in time, affect the
quahty of competition at the
big-tim e colleges and on
professiolllll teams.
'
Another Factor
Another factor is the atlttude
of parents who are concerned
wtth pressing issues m the
educatiOnal system as a whole
soaring costs, increasing burdens on taxpayers, busing and
racial tension. Where any or all
those troubles exist, athletics
become seconda ry. Game
atte ndance decr eases a nd
sports
programs
are

interests in sports but they're population, new schools are athletes in the ghettos. Umbles rassed by gangs. Gangs seem
appearing almost overnight says, "Kids in athletic pr,. to look up to a kid on a team
still btg here."
The ct ties also .have • and new loyalties are sil&gt;w to grams are very much unha· and just don:t bother him."
dedicated youngster s, par- kindle.
ltcularly at ghetto schools in
While changing social patthe inner city where blacks .are terns· and attitudes are signifistru!I,Shng for recognition in ca nt, money is a growing
the hope of winning athleltc concern almost everywhere.
sc holarshi ps to a major · Early this year, in a report
college.
submt tted to the National
Sporting
GO&lt;$ Association,
in
town,
17-year-&lt;lld
Nancy
But
in
ctties
like
New
York
threatened.
Dr
.
Lawrence
L. Steinmetz and
Much of the trouble, but not Huddleston says it's still the and Chicago, programs have
all, is in the.big cities. Many of "tn" thing to date the school been curtailed by antiquated Dr. David H. Bowen of the
the trouble-free spots, but not sports hero. But at Boulder, . facilities, ttght schOQ] budgets University of Colorado conall, are in smaller, older Colo., High, Martha Carlson ' and student tension . In some e! uded: Orgamzed school
communities where local htgh points out, "A lot of girls are cases, to avmd distu~bances, sports are in jeopardy if
school teams still are hot at- even turned off by jocks ...Girls rught events were shtfted Ul current tr.. nds .and lagging
~•,
tractions for townspeople as and boys are learning to accept daylight hours and key games public interest continue.
·:
Surprising Poll
people for what they are· were staged at secret re.ndez.
well as students.
A surprising 66 per cen t of
In the stack of reports ...There doesn't seems to be vous wtth only school offtctals
taxpayers
polled by those
any
type
that
automatically
and
the
press
admttted
.
assembled by UPI, remarks
indicated they faresearchers
hke these kept recurring :
attracts girls."
"Our football players are not
In so'me sections, declming
Philadelphia "Horror Story" vor and recognize the value of
as dedicated as they were 10 attendance is blamed on strong
In Pit tsburgh and, much of athletics but would favor
years ago/' says Herman competition from nearby ool- Pennsylvania, school sports reducing expe nditures for
Graves, coach at Atlanta's lege and professional teams. In are ftouri shmg, but wha t sports if they could obtain a tax
Howard High, alma mater of . areas where desegregation or happened in Philadelphia is cut.
Where school sports have
New York pro basketball star consolidation of school districts held up as a horror story" by
Walt Frazier. "Half of them has led to increased busing, old educators in other states who been self-oupporting, mcreased
are not willing w make the loyalties have been diluted and are battling to keep' public costs of equipment, travel and
sacrifices to exceL They see so atlendance suffers.
money flowmg in to school coaching often make athletics
a marginal proposition.
much football on TV and when
Almost every state however, athletics.
James Wiginton, supervising
they ftnd they can't come up to has hotbeds m wltich school
Phtladelphta, fa c'C d with a
that level they suffer a big sports are booming and atti- $35 mtllion sc hool deficit, principal for the Mendenhall
Ce nter ' in
letdown and lost interest."
tudes remam much the same origmally cancelled tts entire Attendance
Many youn gsters are as adults remember them from 1971-72 pubhc sc hool sports MisSISSippi, says, "I think your
motivated by dreams of their own sc hool days.
program It fina lly opened last coaches are going to have to go
"It's
kind
of
what
we
do
growing up to become rich and
September, two weeks late, • back to coaching basketball,
famous professionals but qmck around here-going to games," after ca nd idates in the football, everything"-instead
"rewards" on the school level says Shelley Thompson, an mayoralty campaign pledged o( having separate coaching
aren't always what they were achve gtrl student at Walsh, support for athletics and prn staffs for each sport.
College atl~etic recruiters
Colo., Htgh, in a town of some football's Philadelphia Eagles
m the old days.
H3030
Sehoul Sports Are Healthy 900 persons in the southeast contrtbuted $79,000 to help out already are noticing changes
at the school level but so far
At Abilene, Tex ., where corn er of the state . "There the school board.
school spor ts arc so healthy isn't much else to do. In other
School busmg, a natmnal there seems to be no shortage
they outdraw the three colle~es places, I think kids are losing tssue, is a httlc-known fa ctor in or top prospects for footb all,
restn ctmg attenda nce as well basketball, tra ck and, in some
as varsity participatiOn by areas, for baseball and hockey
"I thtnk the~ea son for that is
some athletes The effect is the
because
coaching 111 the high
same whether busing is done to
schools
IS better than tt ever
achieve racial balance or ts a
matter of financial expediency was and the dedicated athlete
is qmck to surface," says J oe
in umftcation or consohdation
took the only game played thus conta in John Havlicek, who where several smaller . school Pa tct•no, head football coach at
far at Atlanta. The Hawks, has averaged 35 pomts a game districts have been combmed Penn State. "The hoy may be
chan gin g but ·\h e quality
however, must find a way to for the Celtics in the series.
into a larger one.
When your gsters are bused remains quite high."
In Chicago, Lee Umbles, a
from thetr fam tltar haunts to a
black
L'()ach at predominantly
new schoo l, their loyalties
black
Harlan
High, says, "Lots
often remam at the old schooland so, frequently, do Ute of kids wouldn' t be m school if
it weren't for athletics . We try
loyalties of their parents.
to msttll the idea tha t college
athletic scholarships are a way
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (UP! ) of Andretlt, Unser and Leonard
Busing Creates Problem
out of the inner city."
- Parnelli Jones, the first man was expected, Jones' comment
Busmg also creates a practt·
There's another bonus for
wofficially crack the 150 mile- was a surprise.
cal problem for the would-be
an-hour barner at the Indiana·
Jones last raced in the 500. athlete.
H1061
polis Motor Speedway, indicat- mile race in 1967 when he
t399.95 up
"Some of the kids don't have
H1055
ed Monday he would be tn· ptloted the Andy Granatellt their own transportation back
terested in returning as an turbine to track records and and forth," says Ray Peters of
active driver this year when was lea ding the race when a $2 the Little Rn&amp;;k school system.
one of hts cars might be the gear gave way on the !96th lap. '"That school bus leaves in the
I WILL BE ABSENT
COME! CHECK OUR PRICE!
Jones has remained ac tive m afternoon and they have to be
first to officially clock 190
racmg as a car~wner , stock on it. "
m p.h.
FROM MY OFFICE
Jones entered four of the car driver and off-road racing.
So students who Wqnt to
radtcally-destgned V-winged · "Right now I don' t want to partt ctpate as athletes or
APRIL lOth TO
racers and listed himself as the say that I defmitely will at- spectators after school hours
driver of one of the creations. tempt to ea rn a starting need private transportationAPRIL 27th
IN POMEROY
All four are powered by the poSition," Jones told S(leellway or get on the bus.
four-&lt;·y h~der turbocharged Of· officials. "But. tf our 'three
992-2848
In some areas witt. exploding
MAIN ST.
regula r drivers all qualify
fenhauser engines.
The other three drivers early without any trouble, I'm
probably represent the finest giving serious consideration to
chauffeurs ever assembled on the possibility of driving the
a raci ng team in USA C. They fourth one myself."
The four Offy cars -of the
are former Indianapolis "500"
wmners Mario Andretti and Al Jones stable pushed the entry
Unswer the champion of the hst to 17 for the May 27 race.
last two Speedway classics But Speedway officials said
along with national drtving that as many as 53 more could
arrive before the April 15
champ Joe Leonard.
~
Although the announcement deadline.

Be ~ Happy,_ Go ,

.Save On
Lawn &amp; Garden
Needs
· AT
MOORE'S

11

'

GOOD LOOKING
HARD WORKING!

Local Bowling

enough. I've got no new ideas
on how to stop them. We're
playing a team that is gomg to
go all the way."
In fairness to the Bulls they
have be.en hurt by injuries.
Tom Boerwinkle, a husky 7fool center, has missed the
entire series with a knee injury
and both Bob Love and Chet
Walker, the team's two top
scorers, have been hampered
with leg injuries.
Milwaukee was beaten in tts
first game with Golden State
but bounced back to win the
next two. In tl1e last one, won
by the Bucks, 122-94, The
Warrtors were guilty of throwing the ball away on numerous
occasions. Coach AI Attles has
his team work on passing dnlls
Monday m hopes they can
correct their mistakes tonight.
The Knicks, who drubbed the
Bullets, 110-38, Sunday night in
New York after losing the
opener at Baltimore in overtime, will be out to end a jinx·on
the Bullets' home ~ourt. The
Bullets have scored six consecutive playoff victories . over
New York on their home court,
dating back to March, 1970.
The homecourt edge also has
been prevalent in the BostonAtlanta series .. The Celttcs
have won both games at the
Boston Garden and the Hawks

]ones May Return
As Active '500 Driver

NOTICE

'

J. J. DAVIS, M.D.

-

Muon Bowling Center

Monday Merchanh
Team
w. L.
Hart's Used Cars
14 14

Miller's Insurance

58 30

Keefer's Se~v . Station
Mason Auto Marl

49 39
46 42

W. Va . Nat. Guard...

44 44

Mason Co. Bank
Hoffman 's
Penn Central

31 57
28 60
26 62

Team J Games - Mason Co.

Bank 2890; Hart's Used Ca rs
2837.
Team Game - W. Va .
National 'Guard · lO IS; Hart's
Used Cars 1007 .
Ind. 3 Games - Bodkln.672; ,
Mason 611 .
Ind. Game - Snyder 265 ;
Nelson 258.

,

Tuesday Industrial
W. L.
16 28
72 32

Team
Burton Sunoco
Penn Central
Coca Cola
Mason Agg
Carolina U.mber

70 111

52 52
36 48
10 94

New Haven Furn

Team 3 Games - Coca Cola.
Burton Sunoco. 1
Team

Game

-

Burton

Sunoco ; Coca Cola .
Ind. 3 Games - H. Miller ; D.
Miller.
Ind . Game - W. King , C·
Cline.
Steelworkers

Team
Pis.
Re'lecls
102
Nu s &amp; Bolts
96
Ylonders
84
Foote Heels
69
Stingers ·
50
Skips
48
Ferros
• 45
Team J Games - Foote
Heels 2599, Rejects 2454.
Team Game -

:

Foote Heels

871 ; Foote Heels 867.
Ind. ~ Games - D. Mason
574; N. H6wley 514.
Ind. Game - N. Hawley 212.
B. While 210.

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on your inc~rne tax, H &amp; R Block ' wiU
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ltemiz1xl an&amp;! standard deductions ore
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DON'T LI!T AN AMATEUR DO
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H•R BLOCK'S JOB.
(with ad,ice mnvbe from oome
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tax "''ll&amp;rn prepared with complete
confidentiality by a spt'Cially trnined
member of the H &amp; R Block team.
H &amp; R Block's fees etart at $5
und the averug~ cost was under
$12.50 for over 7 million families
we served last year.

H&amp;R 81'0ck
The income taJ ~-1.
~·
.I

ONLY 14 DAYS. LEFT
To 5 P.M. MON.'THRU SAT.
pHONE : 992-3795
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
~A.M.

t

..

304 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, 0.

She's really lost if she doesn't know her
phone number.
•
General Telephone urges you to teach your children
their phone number as soon as possible. r ...

---€m

&amp;EnERALTELEPHOnE
L
I

.,

;

'

\'
I

I

'

.Charlene Hoeflich

'Twas hardly nice weather, what with the snow and the cold,
but the Rutland Firemen's Auxiliary went ahead with the annual
Easter egg hunt and the 50 or 60 youngsters who braved the
elements and the mud of tbe field had a ball. Usually several
hundred turn out. .,
.
' '
Each egg was marked witb an amount which the youngster
finding it collected from Ute. Auxiliary. Those children not finding
eggs were given consolation prizes of candy ones. Big winner in
the pre-school group was Jay Carpenter. No one seemed to
remember who got the $3egg in the 7 to !2age.
FEW ARE BLESSED WITH the abundance of ambition
possessed by the daughters of Paul and Frances Smart.
To the onlooker, Phyllis Smart Hackett never seems to stop.
After her five chtldren were weD along in school, she returned to
Ohio University to gel her degree in education and is currently in
her secopd year as assistant princtpal at Bradbury .
June Smart Kloes, equally ambitious, directed her energy
mto the Kiddie Shoppe a couple of years ago. And now her twin
sister, Jean, wife of the Rev. George Siddsll of Cincinnati and
mother of three children, has returned to college.
Jean is taking night courses at Ute University of Cincinnah
while workmg as a teaching assistant m an elementary school
there. Jean is a graduate of Denison University and had three
years at seminary where she received a masters in religious
education, but is required to complete education course
requirements before she can take a job as a regular elementary
teacher . .
KEN HARRIS, SON OF JANET AND GENE, is pursuing law
at Capital University where he takes courses three nights a
week. He works daytime at the State Department of Welfare and
his wlfe teaches.
"WHY DO I EVEN BOTHER?"
You're normal if you've ~sked yoorself that questton time
and again as you sig"\'d up for something for nothing .
But Uten you get some encooragement. Someone tells you of
someone they knew who was acquainted with somebody who won
a new car or a trip or even a fancy can opener. Ene011raged a bit
you keep on signing and thinking about how nice it would be to

wm.
Bill Bland, sen of Nina Bland who lives here now with her
sister, Pearl Reynolds, ana her mother, Mrs. Minerva Childers,
found out just recently how nice It is to win. He and his family
won an expense free trip to Disney World .
The famlly had been In Middleport visiting one weekend and
enroute to their home in Akron, stopped at a service station in
Marietta to get gas. Bill registered for the trip to Disney World
and won! They had a balL

SEE GODFAmER
Mr . and Mrs . Delmar
Canaday, Dr. and Mrs .
RaYmond Boice, and Mr. and
Mrs. A. R. Knight, all of

Pomeroy, spent Easter in·
Mariettit . They dined in the
Gun Room at Ute Lofayette
Hotel and then attended "The
Godfather" .

•
POLLY'S POINTERS

Shoe Polish Shines Up
Old Sewing Machine

992-5292

·!Cverythm g happened to
our mdustry," he said " ~'irst
tt was the cha nging mode of
wom en's lives durmg World
War II , then the bouffant
ha11·do. then wtgs and th en
kids 'and then· mothers both
in htppy clothes
"B ut we dtd harm to ourselves, too ," he went on
"We stopped doing co uture
hats and only made junwrs.
Hats should be more ' than
JUSt a block shape w1th a
tnm stuck on

Area ministers participated Overstated but
in community Good Friday
services at the Mount Moriah
fun the
Baptist Church in Middleport
'
on the "Seven Last Words of spectacu Ia r hat
Christ."
"'
. b
The service which began at
IS OC
. . .
11 : 45a.m . andcontinu~duntil3
a f 11-c' ro n
p.m. opene~
wtth
a
U
W
processional by the ministers
. splash of
and the choir . The Rev. Henry
Key' pastor of the host churclt,
f Iowe rs on
presided with Mrs . Campbell
d
b .
Harper at the piano.
eep
rl m
The first word, "Fa th er
h ·
Forgiv~ Them," was by the
W lte StrOW
Rev. J. D. King, pastor of the
f
Triedstone Baptist Church ,
Or, Or
Gallipolis; the second word,
Sheer d ramo
"Today Thou Shall Be With Me
.
'
in Paradise" by the Rev .
Q g1ant
Robert Bumgarner of the •
Hea th United Methodi st
SUmmer StrOW
Church; third word, "Behold
ca rtwhee
My Mother" by the Rev. Mr.
1
Kev: fourth word, "My God,
white StrOW
My God, Why Has Tbou
Forsaken Me?" by the Rev.
OCCented
Nyle Borden; fifth word, "I
.
Thirst," by the Rev. Charles
With On
Simons, First Baptist Church,
d ·
f
Middleport; sixth word, " It is
e g I ng 0
Finished," the Rev. S. J .
three- inch
Jackson, pastor of the Naomt
BaptistChurch,Pomeroy,and
stiff veiling .
the Ftrst Baptist of Rutland;
and the seventh word, "Father

k

I

JntoThyHands !CommendMy
Spirit," by the Rev. Henry
Scott, assoctate pastor of the
Twelfth Avenue Baptist
Church, Columbus.
Musical selections included
" Footprints of Jesus" by
James Hughes; "He Touched
Me" by Hughes and Mrs.
Pansy Banks ; and "Does Jesus
Care?" by Mrs . Arnold
Richards . The hymn of
meditation to conclude the
service was Rock of Ages."
The offering was taken by
Carl Williams and Emogene
Borden . · Following
the
benediction women of the
church served a dinner in the
church dining room. The tables
were decorated wiUt spring
nowers.
11

By HELEN IIENNESSY
NEA Women 's Editor
NEW YORK- !NEA l
Jack McConnell was discu s·
sing hats - a natural toptc
for a millinery destgner. And
a far happier subject now
than it .has been for many a
year. For hats are back as
a big Cashton item now that
th e costume look is out and
classic clothes in

" I put tt on the bed at my
fn end's house and a friend
of hers ca me 1n and bought
tl for $3 50. She sttll buys
my h a t s bu t not at tha t
price " On a rece nt v1s1t to
San An ton to, he sold 86 hats
at $79 eac h. He has a couture
line, a boutique line and a
less expenstve line: All have
a dtffe1en t look. He 's also in
the me n's sh irt business

C- T£MP£ SET,

His $39 50 Hers $35.00

a

Jack has been known for
making flamboyant hats but
he does understated des1gns
as well "But I fmd the woman who wears the overstated
hat is reall y fun," he ad mt tl ed "She has the guts to
have a presenc e "

Today McConnell f e c I s
th ere ts eve n a place for new
people in the hat busmess
afid that the re's nothin g like
compettlion to bring out the
best m eve ryone

He was in the Navy when
he made his first hat. " My
girl fnend worked m a New
York store in the hat de·
partment I asked her to
make a hat for my moth er
and she wouldn't So I went
'·B usines s as good now," · down to the millinery diS·
McCo nnell said " ! did a 20 tnct where I k n e w she
per cent in crease thJ s season
over last. And a great many
young people are wearmg
hats-some who had never
worn one before "

birthday
present

McCo nnell says he also in etudes what th e buyers call
"the net vous hat" tn Ius hne.
" It has a feath er or tri m
that moves And it's th e

no o11e

forgets.

surest sale on the floor "

.

lNEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .I

Jack travels act oss the
country makm g personal appea rances in the s t o r e s
where hiS hats are sold and
he believes hats are a per·
sonal thin g w i t h women
Sometimes , he says. a sales·
g 1 r l wt ll say accustngly.
"You didn't bring a hat lot
Mrs So-a nd -So "

D ESE~T

He says men like women

.

New Junzor
• Cl:ub Carrier Wing
·Plans Reunion
Junket in '72

E cts Officers
An or anization meeting of
the Sunbonnet Gtrls, a new
junior garden club sponsored
by the Wmding Trail Garden
Cl ub, was held rece ntly at the
home of Mrs. John TerrelL
Other members of the Winding
Trail Club attending were Mrs.
Don Thomas, Mrs. Robert
Thompson, and Mrs. Robert
Lewis.
Officers elected were Shari
Mttch, president; Jamie
Johnso n, ~ice president;
Elaine Barnhart, treasurer;
Maria Lega r, secretary ; and
Linda Rosenbaum, news
reporter.
The club wtll meet on the
fou rth Monday of each month

The Ohio 433rd Troop Carner
Wing Veterans Association
announces a grand reunion and
week long jet-trip and tour to
Frankfurt, Germany in Oc·
Iober, 1972. The tour will include top tourist attracttons in
Western Germany; then a
dinner and dance at the Rine·
Main Atr Base.
In teres ted persons are ad·
vised to get their rese rvations
in early and for further mformation write to Ohio 433rd
Troop Carrier Wing, Veterans
Association, PO Box &gt;426,
Cleveland, ·Ohto 44101.

begmning on April 24. At that
time they wtll view slides 'on
"Gardemng in Fun ." On Apnl
28:the girls will have an Arbor
Day plantmg at the Metgs
County Infirmary of a buckeye
tree . Flower seeds were
started in paper cups for the
flower gardemng project of
each of the girls.
Adopted as the club slogan
was "Make the World Better
by Helping Make . it More
BeautifuL " Selected as the
cl ub song was ~~ America, the
Beauttful" and the emblem is a
mimature sunbonnet . Mrs.
Terrell served cake and K_901·
Atd. Shan Mttch will be hostess
for the April meeting . Other
EASTER GUESTS
members attending were Anna
Easter
guests of Mr .. and
Wtles, Linda Kovalchik, and
Mrs
.
Wilham
Radf ord ,
Kenda Braun
Pomeroy RD, were their
daughter , Mary, and her
roomma te, Marti Merrick; Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Glaze, Sandy,
BASIC COMPLETED
·Mike and Robert; Virgil Glaze,
CHESTER - Army Private Donald Pullins, Jr ., and
David M. Bissell, son of Mr. daughter Kim, and Miss Coleen
and Mrs. Charles L. Bissell, of Spires, all of Col umbus.
Chester, recently completed
eight weeks of basic trainmg at
the U. S. Army Training
Center, Armor, Ft. Knox, Ky
. TRAINING ENDED
PT. PLEASANT - Army
Pri vate Glenn A. Swann, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Howard E.
Swann , 2610 Mt. Vernon, Point
Pleasant, recently completed
eight weeks of basic training at
th e U. s. Army Training
Center, Armor, Ft. Knox, Ky.
He is a i970 graduate of Pomt
Pleasant High SchooL ·

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to look dressy and that even
when a man kid s about a
hal , he l 1 k e s tl. Men are
prima donna s. too. he mamtams. and when a husba nd
complams about hts wtfe's
hat , tl's onl y because he 's
atra id she'll stea l lhe show

The Almanac
TUESDAY
By United Press International
By POLLY CRAMER
REACH OUT for life service,
Today is Tuesday , April 4,
7:30p.m.
Tuesday
at
Pomeroy
the
955th day of 1972.
DEAR POLLY- I recently bought an old sewmg maAdventist
Church
.
Topic,
The
moon is between its full
chine stand. The wood was dried and had knicks and
scratches here and there . I washed and thoroughly dried
" What happens when yo u phase an d last quarter.
it, !hen put on two applications of brown paste sho~ polish,
die•"
The morning sl&lt;trs are
rubbing well afler each one. It looks great and I have
.SALEM CENTER PTA, 7:30 Juptter and Mercury .
since used the same treatment on wood ptcture frames
p.m. Tuesday at scho ol.
The evening stars are Venus,
and sometimes used black polish . People could not be·
Program
by
band
students;
Mars
and Saturn.
lieve the great improvement was made with plain old
guest speaker on cancer.
Those born on this day are
shoe polish.- M. B.
OFFICIAL
VISIT
by
Mrs.
under
the Sign of Aries.
' same treat·
DEAR M. B.-My slsler has long used •this
Inez Lonier, district deputy · Dorothea Lynde Dix, Ameri·
ment on pieces of antique furniture and If I remember
grand chief, for Meigs Tpmple, can pioneer of prison reform ,
correctly an antique dealer first told her about !I.153 Pythian Sisters, 7:30 p.m. was born Aprtl 4, 1802.
POLLY
Tuesday , Middleport
On thts day in history :
,~tlllliilnt
Polly's Problem ~~
American Legion Home.
In IMI President William
EASTERN
HIGH
Alumni
Harrison
died of pneumonia one
; DEAR POLLY- My Problem is with the new life- ~
~ like rubber dolls , such as my daughter received for f
meeting, 7:30p.m. Tuesday at montb after being inaugurated.
~ Christmas last year Her doll has gotte~ very di~ty \
high school. All alumni urged John Tyler becan;te the firs t
·J from playing out·of·doors and I have tned cleamng ,
to attend to make plans for' vice president to be elevated to
;;; it with several of the commercial cleaners but none ~·
alwnni
banquet.
chief executive due to a death.
t of them get it really clean. Can someone tell me
GOLDEN
RULE
Class
of
In 1917 the U.S. Senate, by a
; how to get this doll clean?-NANCY
,
Pomeroy Church of Christ vote of 82-6, approv~ President
'
Tuesday 7:30 p.m., home of Woodrow Wilson's resolution
DEAR POLLY- I am in my. ~id-60s and have been a 1 Mrs. Frances Eskew.
calling for a declaration of war
widow for a year. My Pet Peeve ts wtth those people a9- ·
dressing mail to me with my give n nam e, Even our
muRSDAY
againstGermany .
MEIGS COUNTY Council of
In 1933 the U.S. Navy
pastor does this.-MRS . ·L.
LY-Brenda
want
ed
t&lt;J
know
how
to
prevent
Parents
and
Teach~rs,
.
7
:
30
dirigible
"Akron" foundered in
DEAR POL
and
fell inta the sea off
a
storm
baby's white shoe polish from rubbing off on people's
p.m. Th ursday a t Rtvervtew.
Program to featur e the Barnega t Bay, N.J ., and 73
clothing. After cleaning and buffing the shoes, simply
rub !hem with a piece of waxed paper. The shoes also
culturalartsdisplay. Units are crewmemberswerelost. •
seem to stay clean lo9ger this way .-CAROL N.
to have entries at Ute school
In 1968 Negro Civil Rights
and ready lor judging by 7 p.m. Leader Martin Luther King Jr .
DEAR POLLY-Bi'enda could keep I he white shoe
was assassinated in Memphis.
polish from rubbing off her baby's shoes bY clean Ing
POMEROY CHAPTER 80,
and polishing them and let dry . Then spray all over with
Royal · Arch Masons, 7:30 JamesEariRa y pleadedguilty,
Thursday nigh.! at Ute Pomeroy was convicted 11 months later
a light coat of hair spray and let tt dry .- MRS. E. T
and se ntenced to 99 years in
DEAR POLI;Y-1 baby·
MasonicTemple.'Mark master prison .
and past master degrees to be
sit with preschool children
while their moms are at
conferred. All companions
work. One day a mothet
urged to attend.
forgot to bring a blb for
her girl , so I took one of
the plastic-backed diapers
VISIT TURNERS
now on the market, opened
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Turner,
it out flat, pinned the plasDebbie, Sandy, and Gary of
tic side to the child's dress
tor it could be .put around
Bucyrus, and Aaron and
the neck, depending on the
Jimmy Turner of Racine were
•
size of the child I and quickEaster weekend guesls of Mr.
ly had a waterproof bib . This would be a great idea for a
and Mrs. Joe Turner, Midpicnic or when visiting. The " bib" can be · used again
dleport.
for Its original purpose if necessary or just thrown awa)•
1 have since used this many fimes for my own 8-monthold grandchild:-MRS S D.
SALE PLANNED
I
{NlW.S PAPll !NTlAPRih. .t.SSN)
One·Won-One Class of' the
Pomeroy Baptist Church will
Yoa will melve a dollar If l'olly useA ~·our favnrll~
bomema.mg ldfl, Pet Pe.. e, Polly's l't;~bl~m or Anlutlnn hold a rummage sale at the
church basement, April 6, 7
•
to 1 p~m. Wrllr Poll,· Ia 'rar~ ol thiN n4'liKPHJwr. ··
and Urom 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

\t

BACK IN CAMP
RACINE - Marine Sgt .
James E. Spa un , son of Mr.
and Mrs. Junior Spaun of
Route 2, Racine, has returned
to Camp LeJeune, N. C., after
si x months or special
ope rations
in
the
Mediterranean wtth the 34th
bought stu!f. S\tlt m my uni - Marine Amphibious Unit.
lurm. I got th e-material and
made the hat myself

Hats Make the
Classic Look

'

NBA PlayoffspResume Tonight
By U1ti1 ed Press International
The Los Angeles Lokers
would like to wrap up their
opening-round series in the
National Basketball Associ&amp;·
tion 'sJ&gt;layoffs Ulnight so they
ca n take a well-deserved rest
before meeting their next
opponent.
The Lakers hold a J.O edge
over the Chicago Bulls in their
besl-&lt;lf~ven series, with the
two teams meeting in game
No. 4 tonight at Chicago.
All the oUter playoff teams
iare in action tonight, too, but
1none are even close to having
th eir respective matches
decided. New York travels to
Baltimore wtth the two teams
deadlocked at one game
apiece, Atlanta entertains
Boston with the Celtics holding
a 2-1 edge and Milwaukee plays
Golden Stale at Oakland ,
Calif., with the Bucks enjoying
a 2·1 advantage.
The Lakers, who set a
regular season NBA record
with 69 victories this post
campaign, are hoping lo end
their sertes wtb the Bulls
tonight so they can get a few
days rest before meeting the
' "Winner of the MilwaukeeGolden State series.
And, frankly, Coach Dick
Motta of the Bolls illn't optimistic about stripping the
Lakers.tonight.
"We need a miracle," says
Motta. "We've given it everythmg we had and it hasn't been

''

5- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0;, April4, 1972

COMPLETES TOUR
PT. PLEASANT - Private
Kenneth r:. Mornson, 19, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Warren H.
Mormon, 2200 Washin gton
Ave., Point Pleasant, recently
completed eigh t weeks of basic
traming at the U. S. Army
Training Center, Armor, Ft.
Knox, Ky . He was graduated
from Potnt Pleasant Htgh
School In 1970 and attended
Glenvtlle State College.

. QUALITY

I I

~rtCarved.

GOESSLER
JEWEt:RY STORE
Court 51 .

Pomeroy, 0.

0

IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!

BUT •••
YOU'LL NEVER BUY QUALITY

FOR LESS
THAN YOU DO AT

BAKER'S
fine furniture
MIDDLEPORT

·Managers•
Clearance Days
SAVE

$4Q95

REG. tl49.95

s_tylist* zig-zag machine with
drop~in bobbin, blindstitch!
Save $00.00on the machine that lets you
sew straight and fancy stitches.
It mends, darns, sews buttons
and buttonholes. Even inserts
zippers and puts up hems.

Adv

A~jullabhfwidlh

zig•UQ stitches

Make but!onhOies,
sew on bunons

We have a credi! plan
designed to fit' yOur budget.

WITH CARRYING CASE

I
·-~

-SINGER SALES.&amp; SERVICE
McCALL'S&amp; Slf&gt;\PLICITY PATTERNS

·· m w'. Second
'
I

992-l284

.Pomeroy, 0.

.APPROVED
-·SINGER DEALER

�. ·.

"·'

·-·

IWIY ITEMS lOT

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39~

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ALL PURPOSE
White
and
14 Colors
Spray
with

9Z!
Half Pint

Gliddens
Gloss ·

SPACKt.IHG

VARNISH

PASTE

87t

$264

Adds Years And Color to
'Forgotten' Floors!

Beautiful New Multi Color

ALUMINUM

A

94t .S154 .

--------

, Woo(jen

HIGH GLOSS

Gloss White Enamel
1f2 Pint
Pint
Quart

. ~;,~~~:~~~~~D $gsa

3/8 INCH DIAMETER

PLASTIC

39~

2

WE HAVE
PAINT
BRUSH
FOR YOUR
EVERY
NEED
DISCOUNT
ED!

COP.PARE QUALITY! -

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All Purpose - Clear Plastic

PAINT ROLLER

REFILLS

Famous "Gay"- 5 x 3 x 3 Webbing

TROUBL

$13

7 Inch- WOOLY

GLIDDEN
QUALITY

Gal.

fiiNiei·t

47¢

LOVES

54

• For budgot ·m inded
' homeownen .
• Ideal for e•torior wood,
masonry

Sizes 8 to 38. Correct, many pairs lor
the larger lady. Most all are your
favorite fabric, stretch denim in blue
and a few other colors. '!lllghl
irregulars.

GARDEN

Full ~ize- Leather

.

Values to $4.98

3 Ply Vinyl

34¢EA

For The Best Looking
House On The Street!

Pkg.
of

OU .aNT

9" Siie- • 84c

minutes

00

TOTE .
BAG

Heslgn. Weighted bottom
will slay put, ·anywhere.

EA.

c:83
:f

Be Early Wednesday!
Only 150 Pair Ea. Store

CORD

BEAN BAG

.44~ROLL 6.4¢
• Dries to flat fioish in 30

To Help You
Get Your Ya'rd
In Shape!

PAN

White . Black
Navy - Lt. Blue .

........,.~

... while they last!

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

•

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Heavy Duty -

.....

While Quanity Lasts

HEAVY DUTY - Regular $1.49

35 · Ft. Extension
CORD
¢

....

Sweet peas, New Yorker Rose, Daisy, Lilly
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Tulips and Greenry.

..

CERAMIC
liOI POI -

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ONE-TIME SPECIALS

Moss Rose Decoration

SHORT
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~
HOSE itsEasyShape
Care Stretch Nylon, Holds .
and Retains Good
WOMEN'S

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$133

ISPECIAL PUR~HASE I

Girls Two Piece

Perfect Q•alily!

•

7" Aluminun

MASKfNG Paint Pan
TAPE &amp;-Roller

EA

SPRING FLOWI.~S

On Sale Wednesday
· 30 To Sell Each Store

,

Poplin4 Colors

COMPLETE WITH 20 CUPS

sPECIAL p

M·ens Roll Up Hats
Crushable

$1

3/4" Wide -60 yards

HERE'S A BONUS SAVINGS BUY!

Buy One For_!:ar- One For Home

Permanent Press flare legstyles for school, play or dress
up. Newest Spring Shades.
Size 4 to 18. Regular &amp; Sllr.t
Sizes!

The Big 44 Quart Size!

Blue Stripes, Gold Stripes
Pink Stripes; Green Stripes
Save Cash On This Value!

Gal.

WHITE
AND6COLORS

FiftED FULL MD SIZE
STRIPE SHinS

Uc rc i s a prud i l.'u l "u lution fo r adding that cx tru Hgh tin )l, for

for lctNe Boys

"Gun Slinger" Two
Tone, Solid Denims and
other wanted Spring
Styles and Fabrics.

• No unpleasant odor

ALL COTTON- TYPE 141 .

XL-

SPRING
PANTS
The "Vote'' Print, The

"DAPOL" PLASTIC - Regular $1.89

Board

Lg-

For Now Thru Summer!
Teens - Womens

.

Wooden

94

• Economy priced
• Flows on easily
• · Dries in 30 minutes

Md-

Up

37¢·

Two Types . 13 oz . Han1dl e'~
Tankard Mug or 17 oz. Hoffman
Goblet. Available _In gold,
crystal.

Colors of Black, Blue,
Green. ·
to XLg.

UP

Where Staying Power Really
Counts- On The Wall!

.~~~~ $294

.$194

• 11 Qt. Heavy Duty
Pail With Spout

ER GLASS

big a"'orllnent of cards for
your everyda7y
ner

77 c

NOW AVAILABLE AT ALL SHOPPERS MARTS

SHIRTS
Solids, prints, stripes In
sizes 4· lo 18. Warm
weather needs! No Iron.

YOUR
CHOICE!

,BAlliET

·KITCHEN

• Large 'vegetable
or Utility Bin

MADE IN W VA.

I-SHIRTS
Derby Brand. All cotton.

.WOODEN

•11 Qt. Rectangular Dis h

Ribbed Floor Mlat

floral deslgnes. Use lor
Vegetables or utility use.

POCKET

-

*

Ty:es

CARDS
Actually a $1.00 value. A

OF
3

Well Made . Sturdy

*&lt;3'FioraPJinyl

BOXED ·
GliDING

PLAIYIC

..

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LIGHI
FIXIUMS

All Occasion

9ft.x12ft.

lncluojes sleef claw hammers, 40 sheet
pkg. of sandpaper, 8 pe. screw. drlver
set. Nut aDd boll asst., 13 piece driU set,
2 roll pack electrical tape, ladles
hammer, l'I&lt;"Drlve racket and socket
set, hacksaw frame with 10 blades,
power bit extension, 2 pe. file set, 8 X 12
steel square, 18 pe. Hex Key wrench
set, Nail assorlmeot' and many other

You Save 50c on every set.Gradualed sizes, complete
with lids.

$ ~9

PLASTIC WARE
BONANZA

'

ROYAL" HAND .

·- set

The Stack Type. Made In
U.S.A. While, Red, Orange,
Yellow, Green.

2

Each

- -·

70 DIFFERENT. HELPERS! .

Clipon-

4 Piece
'
Cannlste

MUGS

Eddy Arnold,
Ames, Paul Aoka,
~~~~~ol, Belafoole, Sam

74~

-

Metal over door Ironing Board -holders, magnetic
towel holders, melul serving longs, loolb pick
dispenser, decorator wall double switch, bacon
~* decurler, set ol 6 laundry hooks, egg timer, pizza or
pie cutler, egg qr vegetable slicers, pol dn!loer,
~
portable clothes line, egg wedge, trivet spoon rest,
shrimp knife, wall racks, magnetic key holder, egg
cup set, revolving cup rack, can key, scoop,
magnetic clips, nut cracker, jar opener, soap
holder, set of 4 coasters, steel corer, -peeler, can
Opener, plus many, many more items.

listing hundreds of items. For
the weight watcher, weighs
exact ounces.

Fr"l!e 'standing wrought Iron stand.
,U" tall. Holds I mugs. 3 Colors.

Poly Plastic
-

ST
TAPES
By AI Hlrl, ·Sieve

··

Your
Choice

27¢

.

~-

'

DIET
SCALE
Cli111plele with calorie Chari,

-PAPER ·.CoHee _M..g
: PLATE HOlDER
TREE
: Bamboo for use Indoors or out.
Assorted Bright Colors. holds
: Paper plate.

Gallipolis
Ohio

KITCHEN
• GADGET
··RIOI

SALE STARTS
WEDNESDAY • 9:30 A. M.l

$1194
EA.

$s ·94

I.ong lasliog protection from
moisture; grease and stains.
Resists chipping, cracking or
abrasion. Brushes or rolls on
G I
wllbout marks, luster remains .
a·
alter repeated washings. Grey, Quarts . - • $1.94

Folds For Storage

1 Side Cork - 1 Side Slate

3

FOR SHOPPING,
NOTES, MESSAGES .
Walnut
Finished Wood
(:omes with
Chalk and Eraser ·

¢

FriendIy Stores
YOUR
*MASON·
BANKAMERiCARD -f*GALLIPOLIS
*PT. PLEASANT

-

'

A 01SCOUNT ·

D~PARTMf.NT STORE
.
OPEN 6 NIGHTS TILL 9 P.M.

�•-The O.Uy aentlnel, Mldclepor t..J&gt;GnJeroy, o., April 4, 1m

--

We Gife You AHand With
I

YOU
·WILL
SAVE
&amp;
-

SAVE AND SAVE
..

SUPERIORS FR SH PORK

,;,

NECK ONES

SLAB BACON

!

jV

,. jo

'
READY SOON -This modern banking facility will soon
be rea.dy for operung in RuUand, the westerri part of Meigs
County where coal mine operations are-expected to prnvide
an economic shot in the arm for the county. The 26x52 foot red
brick exterior, accented by white trim, columns and a
cupola, will be the new branch of the Pomerny National

CIRCUS &lt;XJMING - This trick elephant will be among
the animals featured at Hetzer's European Circus when it
presents two shows Saturday in the former Pomeroy Junior

High School. The circus also features ponies, dogs, aerialists,
clowns, acrobats and other acts. Shows will be at 2 and 7:30
p.m. under the sponsorship of the 'Rut!and'Fire Department.

New Symbol Traffic Signs Up
MARIETTA - In compliance with the new Ohio
Manual of Uniform Traffic
Control Devices for Streets and
Highways, Division 10 of the
Ohio Department of Highways
has begun installing new
symbol traffic signs in its ninecounty area, under the
supervtsJon
of
Traffic
./ Englneer, ,,Lowell Russell, it
was announced by . Division
Deputy Director, Max R.
Farl~y.

The first signs to be erected
were near the intersection of
Route 60 ( Muskingum Drive)
and Roble·351 (Colgate Drive)
Marietta (Washington County)
and near the lntersecllon of
Routes 56 and 682 in Athens
County near the Athens city
limits. Additional signs will be
erected during the coming
months until the enllre division
has conformed to the new
standards.

·

The signs erected are
diamond-shaped, as are all
warning signs, and display a
picture of a traffic signal with
thered,amberandgreenlights
on a yellow background. In
addition,aneducational plaque
with the written message
"Signal Ahead': has been attached below the sign to assist
motorists to understand the
meaning of the symbol.
Other signs to be erected .
showing the new symbols are
the ones prohibiting left, right,
Q1' U turns. These will be red
and black, with an arrow inside
a circle indicating the direction
of turn, and a slash through the
arrow showing such a turn is
prohibited.
Yield signs will be the·
familiar inverted triangle, but
will be red and white, instead
of the yellow and black.
'
School signs 'will be
schoolhouse-shaped with a boy

and girl figure. One will have
lines indicating a school
crossing and one without lines
will represent a school zone.
The symbol signs for animal
crossing or slippery when wet
will be orange instead of
yellow.
Prohibitory signs will have
the prohibited movement
symbolized with the red circle
and slash superimposed over
it.
The new red and white Yield
sign will eventually replace the
exjsting black on yeHow Yield
sign. The "Do Not Enter" sign
will be place&lt;\ at freeway exit
ramps and one-way streets to
prevent
wrong-way
movements.
In the future, construction
and maintenance signs will
have an orange background
replacing the yellow ones. Both
colors will be acceptable until
the changeover is complete.

$3.3 .Million in

Property

Funds Released

Transfers

&lt;XJLUMBUS (UP!) - The ceive an additional $437,500.
administration of Gov. John J.
Also approved was the
Gilligan hilS won approval of release of $3.5 million for
$3.3 million in state funds to construction of vocational
expand and embark on en- schools in Ashland County, the
vironme.ntal prote ction city of . Sandusky and
programs during the next three Washington Local school
months.
district in Lucas County.
The administration
In other action the board:
requested release of the money
- Approved purchase of the
- half its biennial ap- final section of land for compropriation from the General pletion of the Columbus OuterAssembly .!.. after waiting in belt - 1-270.
vain for several months for the
- Approved release of $100,·
legislature to act on a proposal 000 for Hocking Technical In·
for
an
environmental stitute to purchase 257 acres in
protection agency to ad- Athens County from Baird
minister the funds.
Bros. Co.
Controlling Board approval
- Postponed for the second
• came Monday on a unanimous time a decision on a $2.5million
vote· despite indications that request frmn the Board of
the four Republican members Regents for police and fire
wou;d rather have waited to assistance , developmental insee if the Senate advances an strur;tion, labor education s~r­
Environmental Protection vices
and
educationa l
Department bill in the next two television operating costs.
weeks.
- Approved release of $964,Alan Farkas, the governor's 629 lor the third pahse of the
coordinator for environmental Reynolds Road In ter ceptor
protection , told the board a Sewer in Toledo.
two:week delay would not
"drastically affect" the
.
programs, but he said the r*'~::~::r.::;~::.~;;:::;:::::;::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:~:::::~:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::i:i:!:~:~:!:i:i:~:!:i:i:~:;;~:::::::::::::::::::::::tr
administration · was "very
· impatient" and had been ready
·to begin for three months .
i!i
!!!
:;~
William B. Nye, director of ;.;.
Holze1· Medical Center, First Julius Swann, Jr .. Edward E.
natural resources, and C. RayAve.
and Cedar St. General Lillico , Verna E. Fisher ,
mond Marvin, deputy attorney
visiting
hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Melissa Hutchison, Samuel
general, said a delay would
hinder hiring new employes to Maternity visiting hours 2: 30 to Miller, Denver A. Akers, John
4:30 p.m . Parents only on Bobo, Naomi Brickles , John J.
get the projects started .
Freeland, Brady F. Gilbert,
The board released $1,684,D72 Pediatrics Ward .
Births
Jr., Eugene Gurtis, Darlene
to 'the Department of Health,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Everett Hatfield, . William Lemfey,
and $2115,800 to the attorney
Williams. . Wellston,
a Eula Matlack, Elizabeth E.
general's office.
The money Is to be used for daughter ; Mr . and Mrs . .Merritt, Pamela Nicely, Ansel
139 new employes in the three Samuel Harold Moxley, New Phillips, Nancy Radford ,
agencies, purchase of water Ha ven, a son; Mr . and Mrs. C11 rlton Str oop, Kimb erly
monitoring equipment , an Deiber t F'. Can ter, Jackson, a Stutes, J11mes T~ ylo r, Gomer
emergency team to meet en· son: Mr. a11d Mrs. Clarence M. Wri ght, Kenneth McFann,
vironmental disasters, ex- Lawrence, Portland, a son; Phyllis VanlnWagen, Ruby
pansion of sediment ~ontrol Mr. and Mrs. Cl:lristopner W. Ayers, Joseph Berry.
Lowell Thomas, Jeffrey A.
and solid waste management Biars, Ga llipolis, a daughter;
programs, comprehensive Mr. and Mrs. Leondus Lee, Joden , Mrs . Howard K.
environmental planning and _ Racine, a daughter; Mr. and Blessing and son, Floyd E.
enforcement of new air pol- Mrs. Larry K. Lee, Clifton, a Callahan, Sr., Alva L. Viers,
lution regulations.
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. An gele D. King, Gladys
The board a\so approved $1.1 Donald E. Perkins , Gallipolis, Salm on, Willard McNerlin ,
·million for the House and Sen- a so11 w1d Mr. and Mrs. Delbert A11na Barry, Ruth Brucker,
ate to meet expend itures. Lee Holl ins, Leon, a son.
Cha rles K. Burr is, II. Albert V.
· Discharges ,
Earl , Mrs. Cla1·e E. Ge ttl es and
necessitated by the , unusual
Elizabeth Mm·gan, Dewey dau ghter , Genevi eve F.
length of the 1971 ·session.
The House wlll receive $676,· Elliott,' Margaret Vester, Fay Graham, Mrs. Eugene Hall
m more tban it~ budgeted RusSell, Edna Deweese, Mrs. ana paughter. Stephanie A.
amount
the Senate will r~ William S. Hughes and son, lsJacs. Richard L: Jeffers,

.

'd

The
deputy
director
cautioned that changes will
take some time before they are
in use on all our highways and
motorists should bear this in
mind and exercise caution by
paying particular attention to
the traffic signs and traffic
signals which indicate the
direction of traffic flow upon
the roadway.

New Vote.rs

Mary M. Lyon, exec., Lindsey L. Lyon, dec .. to Virginia
Mae Lyon Moore, Lots, Middleport.
Anna Welch to Raymond
Francis Vole, Lot, Rutland.
Harriet B. Sterrett, Com.,
Woodrow W. Daugherty to Ella
Mae Oaugherly, Lot, Mid·
dleport.
Edward Chapman, dec' d., to
Alpharetta Chapman , Cert
trans., Rutland.
John T. Williams to John P.
Williams, Lots, Syracuse.
· Orville W. Cunnin gham,
Florence A. Cunningham to
Herman Lawson , 3.35 A. ,
C11ester
Glen E. Vance to Helen L.
Offen berger, 1.72 A., Rutland.
Holland Henry Ward to
Judith K. Webb, Danice L.
Webb, 4 A., Rutland.
Harry U. Brinker to Oliver
Earl McKin ley, Betty L.
McKinley ;- Parcel, Salisbury.
Eugene M. Harris, Janet H.
Harris to John Tr&gt;~cy Blake,
Marjorie H. Blake, Lot,
Middleport.

HOSPITAL NEWS

The new symbol signs will
permit more rapid comprehension and will be readily
understood by people with
different national and cultural
backgrounds. Visitors from
other countries will find it
easier to drive on our highways, and Americans who
travel abroad will- find similar
signs on foreign highways. This
is an attempt to conform to
accepted international signing
practices, said the deputy
directOr.

Out Heavy
On ·Monday
By United Press hllernalional
Hordes of would-be voters,
most of them young, swamped
elections offices in most areas
of Ohio Monday, the final day
for registering for the May 2
primary.
'
A crowd estimated a!'ail'out
2,500 showed up at the
Hamilton County board of
elections in Cincinnati.
"It's by far the biggest number of people ever to sign up on
the last day before a primary;''
said deputy elections director
MAaulroicteaiAolfleanbo
. ut 397,"'" are

uw

registered in Hamilton County,
with the final surge, as well as
another 2,400 17-year-&lt;&gt;lds who
signedupandarenowwaiting
for the results. of~ court case ..
A swt 1s pendmg m U. S. Districl Court on whether to allow
those who wtll be 18 after the

primarybutbefo~etheNov~-

ber general election to vote m
the pr1m~ry.
.
. Fran kim County deputy eleclions director Arthur J · Bush":Ian estimated that 5,200
signed up Monday m Columbus. The unofficial total of
about 355,180 who are
registered there is a .record.
Reasons for the masstve registration has been attributed to
the enfranchtseme~t . of 1!1"
year-olils and the .mterest m
the presidential primary.

&lt;XJLUMBUS (UPI) - Hearings by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio (PUCO)
continued today on a amended
request by Columbia Gas of
Ollio, Inc., to refuse service to
new residences in 62 counties.
The company originally had
requested an immediate ban on
new service, but during
Monday hearing company
officials amended that request
and said the firm would serve

Surprise Given
Mrs. Grimm
B. hda
On 111
uer z"rt '.J'r11

L. Reibel, Roy Russell, Roy C.
Russell, June Smith, Evelyn
Spurlock, Clyde E. Waggoner,
Beulah Weed.
Lisa L. Hudnall, Mrs. James
Fields and 'son; Mrs. James A.
Bird and daughter, Rodger L.
Jackson, Mrs . Clarence E.
Gray and twins, daughter and
son ,' Larry E . Patrick, Jr ..
Glend~n Long, Mrs. Michael
Ea r l Jones and · dau ghter,
Leonard Beverly, Ka thy S.
Bell, Mrs. Sylvia Jean Collins,
Nancy Cox, . Chad J. Nunn,
Michael L, Collins, Janet A.
Holley, C!c~eland C. Howatd.
'

'

11

.

'Jj

·

cAsH?

I

•

lb.

SUPERIORS
SAUSAGE

1o· 15
DAYS

WORDS

mu ~t

good~

. Ad mull bl ploctd by an individual
1

MOt 0 businest
Ad m.ull rema in unchanged lor
dllrotion .

• Conc•llotlon priviiiQII wNn ,,.
\ult1 are obtained
• il minimum tkorge ,for 10 dop
or leu

I • Pricel ol ilero5 mu~l oppeor ir1 ~~~;I
I
I Write Your Ad! Please Print. Use One Space For1Each Word
1
I
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I1 .DON'T', WAIT

I MAIl YO UR

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I AD -NOW!
.·1

1
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1
1
1
I
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Phone

$1 3 .,.
BOXES
FOR

10

LVS. FOR

$

13

LB. FOR

30 CT. REGULAR

$

2

$}59

FRISKIES
DOG FOOD

%Gal. Jug 69~

89~

25 lb. bag

$2.39

I

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YOU WILL SAVE &amp;

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ON THESE FROZEN FOOD BUYS!

I

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SCOT LAD FRENCH FRIED

ICE MILK

POTATOES

12

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5

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r
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MARK V STORE

t

AT_

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10

1.19

OZ. J.AR ONLY

I
I

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WITH COUPON

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~~ $1.00

..

I

L _ _ONE COII!_O'!_PER FAMILY ·~FER EXPIRES_4-15-72 -=-=-:__ _j

8oz.
cups

CAPE ANN ·

iJ~ '

BANQUET

OCEAN .
PERCH

POT
PIES
FOR $.

Hb ..

49t

FAIRMONT
•

I

IVORY

aunERMILK

LIQUID
GIANT SIZE
·.

VEGETABLES
CORN
PEAS
GREEN BEANS

I

Instant
MAXWELL HOUSE®
COFFEE

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SCOT LAD

49e

WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A_lO _OZ. JAR OF

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VALUABLE COUPON

Scot Lad Canned

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1
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1h gal. carton

4

---- --,
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MARGARINE
PLASTIC CUPS

I

Fabric .Softener

MARK .V COUPON

New! ! Nu-Maid
ALL COLORS

12 02.
BJLS.

DEBBIE

SCOT FARM CHEESE

1

COLA, ORANGE, ROOT BEER.
STRAWBERRY, SCREW TOP
THROW-AWAY BOTSL

DAYTIME OR BOX
24 CT. TODDLER SIZE

$1

CANS

12 1 00

DIAPERS

SCOT FARM BISCUITS

BLUE BONNET

doz.

Redeemable
only at. Expires

CANS
FOR

WITH THIS COUPON

MARK V STUHt

4-14-72

''

1I

Shop Our Produce Garden!

THURSDA¥0NLY SALE!

I

1
1
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RC COLA
8 PAK CARTON

I .
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\

Address
City

CANS

EGGS.

·1

Name

oz.

LARGE SIZE UNCLASSIF!ED

I
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rCASH WITH ORDER)
TO QUALIFY FOR THIS SPECIAL LOW RATE:

39 ~ 3

46

TOPPS POP
s

CURITY DISPOSABLE,

CRACKERS

DETERGENT
22 OZ.
FOR
DISHES!
4 BOTTLES

I

.

Tomato Juice

8g¢

lb.

YOUR CHOICE

Scot Lad Pink

I

$1 00

GRAHAM
CRACKERS

Ground
Chuck

SCOT LAD SALTINE OR .
SCOT LAD ROUND

Favorite Bread MARGARINE

I
I
I

FA MI·LY WANT •AD

FOSTER'S

Everyday Low Price!

1

WITH A
BARGAIN OFFER .

Fireside Choc. Covered

5

Chopped Sirloin

1

79e

lb.

lb. 99~

FULL POUND

USDA Choice Beef

FARM
SAUSAGE

LINK

I

SEll Y0uRD0'N'T NEEDs

49¢

.·. SUPERIORS
lb
..
SCHWEIGER ... .'....

BALLARD'S

I
I

'

for 1ole
I • AdSellino;~ foolf•r
r S75 or undtr

The wedding plans of Miss
Sandra Trussell and Mr .
,Ric hard Kerns have been
completed.
The open church ceremony
will be an event of Sunday, 2:30
p.m. at the , Chester United
Methodist Church. Officiating
at the double ring ceremony
will be the Rev. Robert Card. A
half·hour of nuptial music will
precede the ceremony. An open
recep tion will be held in the
church social room immediately following the
ceremony.

NEED EXTRA.

lb.

lb.

r--------------------------------·

I

•

SUPERIORS

BOSTON (UPI)-A sip of
beer may just II" what the
doctor ordered wl\i!n it comes
to treating eld!!l'ly patients,
according to a state health
official.
Dr. Milton Grji!nblatt,
Massachusetts coi]fthissioner
of mental health, said Sunday
that beer In moderate quantities, has a "remarkable effect on many elderly men and
women in. our hospitals.
"It cheers them up, it's
nourishing and it opens up their
blood vessels so the blood
travels through their systems a
bit faster," Greenblatt said.
"That's especially important
for elderly people who often
have circulation problems."
The coml)llssloner commented in response. to reports
thai patients at four state
hospitals are drinking some
2,000 cans of lleer every month
on doctors' orders.
"It's a soclallub;'lcant," the
commissioner said. "It helps
shy or withdrawn people start
a conversation more easily."
No one gets intoxicated,. the
commissioner said.

gas industry showed 1,2'li tril·
lion cubic feet of potentially recoverable gas in the United
States.
No Capital Incentive
"This reserve, if tapped,
would serve the nation well into
the next century," said Sweet.
He said federal gas price
regulations prevented the
reserve from being tapped
because they failed to give gas
industries the capital incentive
to investigate new gas
locations.
Sweet also called for a r~x­
arnination of the possibility of
forming an "engergy coordination agency" in Ohio.
Such an agency," Sweet
said ''would integrate all utility
energy forecasts and expectations with state planning
and regulating agencies, insuring against recurrence of
such energy shortages as now
face Columbia Gas.
·
"This agency would also assure that utility plans are in
harmony with the state."

per cent of the residential units
in Ohio to be constructed
during the next five years.
"Therefore," said Sweet,
"that group which will be least
able to afford more costly
forms of energy will be most
directly affected by the
residential restrictions.
Exhaust Alternatives
"Our estimates show that
ove r a five-year period,
residential customers affected
by these restrictions · would
incur $7.5 million of additional
cost i! they are forced to utilize
alternative sources of energy."
Sweet said he believed it was
the duty of both the PU&lt;XJ and
the utility firms to "exhaust all
possible alternatives" before
allowing the
proposed
restrictions.·
He blamed federal control of
natural gas will head prices as
a major contributor to the problem.
Sweet said he did not believe
a natural gas sh~rtage exists
and said a study by the natural

A surprise party was held 1
Friday at the home of Mr. and 1
Mrs. Frank Grimm, E. Main I
St., Pomeroy in observance of • I
the birthday anniversary of I
Mrs. Neva Grimm.
Gifts were presented to the I
honored guest and ice cream, I
cake, coffee, mints and KoolAid were served by Desiree 1
Pike a~ Butch Taylor.
1
GuestS were Miss Freda 1
Leiving, Mrs . Beulah · Ut- I
terback, Patty Edwards, Mrs.
Icy Miller, Mrs. Norma Baker, 1
Ricky, Angie and Nancy, 1
Desiree Pike and Bulch I
Taylor, Pomeroy; Florence I
Yonker, Cambridge, Mrs. I
Mildred Thompson and son 1
Tony of Letart, w. va.; Mrs: 1
Nettie Moore Mrs. Jeanette
Duffy and so~s. Jackie Davis, I
and Eddie, Syracuse; Mrs. I
Minnie Johnson, Athens.
I
Others presenting gifts to the I '
honored guest were Mr and I
Mrs. Lawrence Rou&amp;.
: of I
Ravenswood W Va . M and I
Mrs. Thorn~ G.;.tt, ·Pome y; I
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin lm- I
boden, SyracUse; Mr. and Mrs. I
Bill Ford Warminister Pa .
and
Thelma
Gr~ese~: I
Pomeroy, unable to attend I
since she is a patient at I
Veterans Memorial Hospital. I

Wedding Plans
Mrs. Robert D. Kittle and
daughter, Earl D. Logan , A
Angela Kay McDaniel, Elber
re Announced

SUPERIORS

Doctors Using
Beer to Perk
Up OldF~lks

Delay Asked of PUCO
COLUMBUS (UPI)- David
Sweet, state director of
development , sa id Monday
allow ing gas companies to
refuse service to new homes
will affect persons in the low
and moderate income group,
those "least able to afford
more costly forms of energy."
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.,
has asked. the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio for permission to restrict new
residential sales. Hearings
began Monday on that proposal
and continued today.
Sweet asked the PUCO to delay action on the request,
which Columbia claims is
ne eded because of a shortage
of natural gas.
Sweet said such a restriction
would, according to • survey
by the former Ohio Department of Urban Affairs, affect
low and moderate income
groups expected to use about 2S

Budget Baeon ................:........... .39~
Lunch Meats.~:~~.~~~~~~. ~~~.~~~~~.1?: 79¢
w·
¢
All Meat 1eners ...........·. 59
~&gt; Polish Sausage~~~-~~.~~~.~. 69¢

the request and said recent I would mean about 13,000 new
deep drilling in Ohio has ~ot connections.
produced new supplies. A naThe company originally had
tionwide natural gas shortage · requested an immediate ban on
is not expected to be alleviated new service, but during
until 1977 or 1978.
Monday hearing company
Gas company officials officials amended that request
declined to specify how long and said the firm would serve
they believed the ban on new new homes under construction.
Ohio residential service should by July I.
remain in effect.
The proposal to serve dwellings under construction by July

new homes under construction
by July I.
The PUCO previously gave
gas companies permission to
refuse new service to business
and ind1'5tries.
PUCO officials quoted gas
company representives as saying homes not started by July I
probably would not be completed this year.
Gas company spokesmen cited a shortage of natural gas for

•

lbs.

Bank. Landscaping, installation of driveways and a large ·
parking lot at the rear, installation of carpeting and.a few
other minor details remain for the compleUon of the new
lranch when a grand .opening jVill be held. Groundbreaking
ceremonies for the structure, being built by the Karr Con·
struction Co., Pomeroy Route 3, were held on Nov. 11,.1971.

ends Request

CGinc.:

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_20 lb. bag

7 c
(UNCLASSIFIED)

-MAIL TO: . THE

DAILYSENTiNELi
111 Court St.
· Pamt~QJ, ohio I

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Corner Mill and Secot\II•Sts.
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PHONE: 992·3480
'"We Beserve

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READY SOON -This modern banking facility will soon
be rea.dy for operung in RuUand, the westerri part of Meigs
County where coal mine operations are-expected to prnvide
an economic shot in the arm for the county. The 26x52 foot red
brick exterior, accented by white trim, columns and a
cupola, will be the new branch of the Pomerny National

CIRCUS &lt;XJMING - This trick elephant will be among
the animals featured at Hetzer's European Circus when it
presents two shows Saturday in the former Pomeroy Junior

High School. The circus also features ponies, dogs, aerialists,
clowns, acrobats and other acts. Shows will be at 2 and 7:30
p.m. under the sponsorship of the 'Rut!and'Fire Department.

New Symbol Traffic Signs Up
MARIETTA - In compliance with the new Ohio
Manual of Uniform Traffic
Control Devices for Streets and
Highways, Division 10 of the
Ohio Department of Highways
has begun installing new
symbol traffic signs in its ninecounty area, under the
supervtsJon
of
Traffic
./ Englneer, ,,Lowell Russell, it
was announced by . Division
Deputy Director, Max R.
Farl~y.

The first signs to be erected
were near the intersection of
Route 60 ( Muskingum Drive)
and Roble·351 (Colgate Drive)
Marietta (Washington County)
and near the lntersecllon of
Routes 56 and 682 in Athens
County near the Athens city
limits. Additional signs will be
erected during the coming
months until the enllre division
has conformed to the new
standards.

·

The signs erected are
diamond-shaped, as are all
warning signs, and display a
picture of a traffic signal with
thered,amberandgreenlights
on a yellow background. In
addition,aneducational plaque
with the written message
"Signal Ahead': has been attached below the sign to assist
motorists to understand the
meaning of the symbol.
Other signs to be erected .
showing the new symbols are
the ones prohibiting left, right,
Q1' U turns. These will be red
and black, with an arrow inside
a circle indicating the direction
of turn, and a slash through the
arrow showing such a turn is
prohibited.
Yield signs will be the·
familiar inverted triangle, but
will be red and white, instead
of the yellow and black.
'
School signs 'will be
schoolhouse-shaped with a boy

and girl figure. One will have
lines indicating a school
crossing and one without lines
will represent a school zone.
The symbol signs for animal
crossing or slippery when wet
will be orange instead of
yellow.
Prohibitory signs will have
the prohibited movement
symbolized with the red circle
and slash superimposed over
it.
The new red and white Yield
sign will eventually replace the
exjsting black on yeHow Yield
sign. The "Do Not Enter" sign
will be place&lt;\ at freeway exit
ramps and one-way streets to
prevent
wrong-way
movements.
In the future, construction
and maintenance signs will
have an orange background
replacing the yellow ones. Both
colors will be acceptable until
the changeover is complete.

$3.3 .Million in

Property

Funds Released

Transfers

&lt;XJLUMBUS (UP!) - The ceive an additional $437,500.
administration of Gov. John J.
Also approved was the
Gilligan hilS won approval of release of $3.5 million for
$3.3 million in state funds to construction of vocational
expand and embark on en- schools in Ashland County, the
vironme.ntal prote ction city of . Sandusky and
programs during the next three Washington Local school
months.
district in Lucas County.
The administration
In other action the board:
requested release of the money
- Approved purchase of the
- half its biennial ap- final section of land for compropriation from the General pletion of the Columbus OuterAssembly .!.. after waiting in belt - 1-270.
vain for several months for the
- Approved release of $100,·
legislature to act on a proposal 000 for Hocking Technical In·
for
an
environmental stitute to purchase 257 acres in
protection agency to ad- Athens County from Baird
minister the funds.
Bros. Co.
Controlling Board approval
- Postponed for the second
• came Monday on a unanimous time a decision on a $2.5million
vote· despite indications that request frmn the Board of
the four Republican members Regents for police and fire
wou;d rather have waited to assistance , developmental insee if the Senate advances an strur;tion, labor education s~r­
Environmental Protection vices
and
educationa l
Department bill in the next two television operating costs.
weeks.
- Approved release of $964,Alan Farkas, the governor's 629 lor the third pahse of the
coordinator for environmental Reynolds Road In ter ceptor
protection , told the board a Sewer in Toledo.
two:week delay would not
"drastically affect" the
.
programs, but he said the r*'~::~::r.::;~::.~;;:::;:::::;::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:~:::::~:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::i:i:!:~:~:!:i:i:~:!:i:i:~:;;~:::::::::::::::::::::::tr
administration · was "very
· impatient" and had been ready
·to begin for three months .
i!i
!!!
:;~
William B. Nye, director of ;.;.
Holze1· Medical Center, First Julius Swann, Jr .. Edward E.
natural resources, and C. RayAve.
and Cedar St. General Lillico , Verna E. Fisher ,
mond Marvin, deputy attorney
visiting
hours 2-4 and 7-8 p.m. Melissa Hutchison, Samuel
general, said a delay would
hinder hiring new employes to Maternity visiting hours 2: 30 to Miller, Denver A. Akers, John
4:30 p.m . Parents only on Bobo, Naomi Brickles , John J.
get the projects started .
Freeland, Brady F. Gilbert,
The board released $1,684,D72 Pediatrics Ward .
Births
Jr., Eugene Gurtis, Darlene
to 'the Department of Health,
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Everett Hatfield, . William Lemfey,
and $2115,800 to the attorney
Williams. . Wellston,
a Eula Matlack, Elizabeth E.
general's office.
The money Is to be used for daughter ; Mr . and Mrs . .Merritt, Pamela Nicely, Ansel
139 new employes in the three Samuel Harold Moxley, New Phillips, Nancy Radford ,
agencies, purchase of water Ha ven, a son; Mr . and Mrs. C11 rlton Str oop, Kimb erly
monitoring equipment , an Deiber t F'. Can ter, Jackson, a Stutes, J11mes T~ ylo r, Gomer
emergency team to meet en· son: Mr. a11d Mrs. Clarence M. Wri ght, Kenneth McFann,
vironmental disasters, ex- Lawrence, Portland, a son; Phyllis VanlnWagen, Ruby
pansion of sediment ~ontrol Mr. and Mrs. Cl:lristopner W. Ayers, Joseph Berry.
Lowell Thomas, Jeffrey A.
and solid waste management Biars, Ga llipolis, a daughter;
programs, comprehensive Mr. and Mrs. Leondus Lee, Joden , Mrs . Howard K.
environmental planning and _ Racine, a daughter; Mr. and Blessing and son, Floyd E.
enforcement of new air pol- Mrs. Larry K. Lee, Clifton, a Callahan, Sr., Alva L. Viers,
lution regulations.
daughter ; Mr. and Mrs. An gele D. King, Gladys
The board a\so approved $1.1 Donald E. Perkins , Gallipolis, Salm on, Willard McNerlin ,
·million for the House and Sen- a so11 w1d Mr. and Mrs. Delbert A11na Barry, Ruth Brucker,
ate to meet expend itures. Lee Holl ins, Leon, a son.
Cha rles K. Burr is, II. Albert V.
· Discharges ,
Earl , Mrs. Cla1·e E. Ge ttl es and
necessitated by the , unusual
Elizabeth Mm·gan, Dewey dau ghter , Genevi eve F.
length of the 1971 ·session.
The House wlll receive $676,· Elliott,' Margaret Vester, Fay Graham, Mrs. Eugene Hall
m more tban it~ budgeted RusSell, Edna Deweese, Mrs. ana paughter. Stephanie A.
amount
the Senate will r~ William S. Hughes and son, lsJacs. Richard L: Jeffers,

.

'd

The
deputy
director
cautioned that changes will
take some time before they are
in use on all our highways and
motorists should bear this in
mind and exercise caution by
paying particular attention to
the traffic signs and traffic
signals which indicate the
direction of traffic flow upon
the roadway.

New Vote.rs

Mary M. Lyon, exec., Lindsey L. Lyon, dec .. to Virginia
Mae Lyon Moore, Lots, Middleport.
Anna Welch to Raymond
Francis Vole, Lot, Rutland.
Harriet B. Sterrett, Com.,
Woodrow W. Daugherty to Ella
Mae Oaugherly, Lot, Mid·
dleport.
Edward Chapman, dec' d., to
Alpharetta Chapman , Cert
trans., Rutland.
John T. Williams to John P.
Williams, Lots, Syracuse.
· Orville W. Cunnin gham,
Florence A. Cunningham to
Herman Lawson , 3.35 A. ,
C11ester
Glen E. Vance to Helen L.
Offen berger, 1.72 A., Rutland.
Holland Henry Ward to
Judith K. Webb, Danice L.
Webb, 4 A., Rutland.
Harry U. Brinker to Oliver
Earl McKin ley, Betty L.
McKinley ;- Parcel, Salisbury.
Eugene M. Harris, Janet H.
Harris to John Tr&gt;~cy Blake,
Marjorie H. Blake, Lot,
Middleport.

HOSPITAL NEWS

The new symbol signs will
permit more rapid comprehension and will be readily
understood by people with
different national and cultural
backgrounds. Visitors from
other countries will find it
easier to drive on our highways, and Americans who
travel abroad will- find similar
signs on foreign highways. This
is an attempt to conform to
accepted international signing
practices, said the deputy
directOr.

Out Heavy
On ·Monday
By United Press hllernalional
Hordes of would-be voters,
most of them young, swamped
elections offices in most areas
of Ohio Monday, the final day
for registering for the May 2
primary.
'
A crowd estimated a!'ail'out
2,500 showed up at the
Hamilton County board of
elections in Cincinnati.
"It's by far the biggest number of people ever to sign up on
the last day before a primary;''
said deputy elections director
MAaulroicteaiAolfleanbo
. ut 397,"'" are

uw

registered in Hamilton County,
with the final surge, as well as
another 2,400 17-year-&lt;&gt;lds who
signedupandarenowwaiting
for the results. of~ court case ..
A swt 1s pendmg m U. S. Districl Court on whether to allow
those who wtll be 18 after the

primarybutbefo~etheNov~-

ber general election to vote m
the pr1m~ry.
.
. Fran kim County deputy eleclions director Arthur J · Bush":Ian estimated that 5,200
signed up Monday m Columbus. The unofficial total of
about 355,180 who are
registered there is a .record.
Reasons for the masstve registration has been attributed to
the enfranchtseme~t . of 1!1"
year-olils and the .mterest m
the presidential primary.

&lt;XJLUMBUS (UPI) - Hearings by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio (PUCO)
continued today on a amended
request by Columbia Gas of
Ollio, Inc., to refuse service to
new residences in 62 counties.
The company originally had
requested an immediate ban on
new service, but during
Monday hearing company
officials amended that request
and said the firm would serve

Surprise Given
Mrs. Grimm
B. hda
On 111
uer z"rt '.J'r11

L. Reibel, Roy Russell, Roy C.
Russell, June Smith, Evelyn
Spurlock, Clyde E. Waggoner,
Beulah Weed.
Lisa L. Hudnall, Mrs. James
Fields and 'son; Mrs. James A.
Bird and daughter, Rodger L.
Jackson, Mrs . Clarence E.
Gray and twins, daughter and
son ,' Larry E . Patrick, Jr ..
Glend~n Long, Mrs. Michael
Ea r l Jones and · dau ghter,
Leonard Beverly, Ka thy S.
Bell, Mrs. Sylvia Jean Collins,
Nancy Cox, . Chad J. Nunn,
Michael L, Collins, Janet A.
Holley, C!c~eland C. Howatd.
'

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SAUSAGE

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• Conc•llotlon priviiiQII wNn ,,.
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• il minimum tkorge ,for 10 dop
or leu

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The wedding plans of Miss
Sandra Trussell and Mr .
,Ric hard Kerns have been
completed.
The open church ceremony
will be an event of Sunday, 2:30
p.m. at the , Chester United
Methodist Church. Officiating
at the double ring ceremony
will be the Rev. Robert Card. A
half·hour of nuptial music will
precede the ceremony. An open
recep tion will be held in the
church social room immediately following the
ceremony.

NEED EXTRA.

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BOSTON (UPI)-A sip of
beer may just II" what the
doctor ordered wl\i!n it comes
to treating eld!!l'ly patients,
according to a state health
official.
Dr. Milton Grji!nblatt,
Massachusetts coi]fthissioner
of mental health, said Sunday
that beer In moderate quantities, has a "remarkable effect on many elderly men and
women in. our hospitals.
"It cheers them up, it's
nourishing and it opens up their
blood vessels so the blood
travels through their systems a
bit faster," Greenblatt said.
"That's especially important
for elderly people who often
have circulation problems."
The coml)llssloner commented in response. to reports
thai patients at four state
hospitals are drinking some
2,000 cans of lleer every month
on doctors' orders.
"It's a soclallub;'lcant," the
commissioner said. "It helps
shy or withdrawn people start
a conversation more easily."
No one gets intoxicated,. the
commissioner said.

gas industry showed 1,2'li tril·
lion cubic feet of potentially recoverable gas in the United
States.
No Capital Incentive
"This reserve, if tapped,
would serve the nation well into
the next century," said Sweet.
He said federal gas price
regulations prevented the
reserve from being tapped
because they failed to give gas
industries the capital incentive
to investigate new gas
locations.
Sweet also called for a r~x­
arnination of the possibility of
forming an "engergy coordination agency" in Ohio.
Such an agency," Sweet
said ''would integrate all utility
energy forecasts and expectations with state planning
and regulating agencies, insuring against recurrence of
such energy shortages as now
face Columbia Gas.
·
"This agency would also assure that utility plans are in
harmony with the state."

per cent of the residential units
in Ohio to be constructed
during the next five years.
"Therefore," said Sweet,
"that group which will be least
able to afford more costly
forms of energy will be most
directly affected by the
residential restrictions.
Exhaust Alternatives
"Our estimates show that
ove r a five-year period,
residential customers affected
by these restrictions · would
incur $7.5 million of additional
cost i! they are forced to utilize
alternative sources of energy."
Sweet said he believed it was
the duty of both the PU&lt;XJ and
the utility firms to "exhaust all
possible alternatives" before
allowing the
proposed
restrictions.·
He blamed federal control of
natural gas will head prices as
a major contributor to the problem.
Sweet said he did not believe
a natural gas sh~rtage exists
and said a study by the natural

A surprise party was held 1
Friday at the home of Mr. and 1
Mrs. Frank Grimm, E. Main I
St., Pomeroy in observance of • I
the birthday anniversary of I
Mrs. Neva Grimm.
Gifts were presented to the I
honored guest and ice cream, I
cake, coffee, mints and KoolAid were served by Desiree 1
Pike a~ Butch Taylor.
1
GuestS were Miss Freda 1
Leiving, Mrs . Beulah · Ut- I
terback, Patty Edwards, Mrs.
Icy Miller, Mrs. Norma Baker, 1
Ricky, Angie and Nancy, 1
Desiree Pike and Bulch I
Taylor, Pomeroy; Florence I
Yonker, Cambridge, Mrs. I
Mildred Thompson and son 1
Tony of Letart, w. va.; Mrs: 1
Nettie Moore Mrs. Jeanette
Duffy and so~s. Jackie Davis, I
and Eddie, Syracuse; Mrs. I
Minnie Johnson, Athens.
I
Others presenting gifts to the I '
honored guest were Mr and I
Mrs. Lawrence Rou&amp;.
: of I
Ravenswood W Va . M and I
Mrs. Thorn~ G.;.tt, ·Pome y; I
Mr. and Mrs. Franklin lm- I
boden, SyracUse; Mr. and Mrs. I
Bill Ford Warminister Pa .
and
Thelma
Gr~ese~: I
Pomeroy, unable to attend I
since she is a patient at I
Veterans Memorial Hospital. I

Wedding Plans
Mrs. Robert D. Kittle and
daughter, Earl D. Logan , A
Angela Kay McDaniel, Elber
re Announced

SUPERIORS

Doctors Using
Beer to Perk
Up OldF~lks

Delay Asked of PUCO
COLUMBUS (UPI)- David
Sweet, state director of
development , sa id Monday
allow ing gas companies to
refuse service to new homes
will affect persons in the low
and moderate income group,
those "least able to afford
more costly forms of energy."
Columbia Gas of Ohio, Inc.,
has asked. the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio for permission to restrict new
residential sales. Hearings
began Monday on that proposal
and continued today.
Sweet asked the PUCO to delay action on the request,
which Columbia claims is
ne eded because of a shortage
of natural gas.
Sweet said such a restriction
would, according to • survey
by the former Ohio Department of Urban Affairs, affect
low and moderate income
groups expected to use about 2S

Budget Baeon ................:........... .39~
Lunch Meats.~:~~.~~~~~~. ~~~.~~~~~.1?: 79¢
w·
¢
All Meat 1eners ...........·. 59
~&gt; Polish Sausage~~~-~~.~~~.~. 69¢

the request and said recent I would mean about 13,000 new
deep drilling in Ohio has ~ot connections.
produced new supplies. A naThe company originally had
tionwide natural gas shortage · requested an immediate ban on
is not expected to be alleviated new service, but during
until 1977 or 1978.
Monday hearing company
Gas company officials officials amended that request
declined to specify how long and said the firm would serve
they believed the ban on new new homes under construction.
Ohio residential service should by July I.
remain in effect.
The proposal to serve dwellings under construction by July

new homes under construction
by July I.
The PUCO previously gave
gas companies permission to
refuse new service to business
and ind1'5tries.
PUCO officials quoted gas
company representives as saying homes not started by July I
probably would not be completed this year.
Gas company spokesmen cited a shortage of natural gas for

•

lbs.

Bank. Landscaping, installation of driveways and a large ·
parking lot at the rear, installation of carpeting and.a few
other minor details remain for the compleUon of the new
lranch when a grand .opening jVill be held. Groundbreaking
ceremonies for the structure, being built by the Karr Con·
struction Co., Pomeroy Route 3, were held on Nov. 11,.1971.

ends Request

CGinc.:

:

•

16 OL

'

bois.

_20 lb. bag

7 c
(UNCLASSIFIED)

-MAIL TO: . THE

DAILYSENTiNELi
111 Court St.
· Pamt~QJ, ohio I

·-----~-~-~--------~-------------~

POTATOES
SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun. 10 to 10

.
'

.

We Accepl l"edeml Food

Corner Mill and Secot\II•Sts.
.

PHONE: 992·3480
'"We Beserve

S tttlllfJS,

•

The Right To Lim it Ouanlit ie•".

,

·MIDDLEPORT,

o::

I .

-,
\

"""

'

•

•

�f l l f ·ff l
-,

·

tt-ThiDIIIIYaMinel,lllddlopxt·Pumavy,O.,Apri14,tm .

.

.

.

, .

. .

s · P.M. '

Carriers For
MASON

·and

Dai~

Sentinel

Ph. 614-992·2156
LE~AL

NOTICE

' NOTICE ON FILING
· OF INVENTORY

••• 'to

,

RATES '•
For Want Ad Service
S cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge75c
·
12 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions.
, . 18 cents per word• six COn·
. • 'Secutlve inser_tlons .

To the Adm inistrator of the
estate ; to such of the following

as are residents of the State of
-

the

surviving

.

For Sale

QUALITY

aotor

Co~

1970 DODGE POLARA
S239l
Factory air conditioning, V-8 engl_ne, aufo. trans., P.S.,
P. B. , good w-s-w tires. many more extras. A low price
now!
·

.

.

1969CHEV.IMPALA CPE.
S2095
v.a engine, automatic tra ns., p. s1eering, factory air
conditioned, good w-w tires, radio. dark green finish with
spo11ess interior.
·
·
•·

days .

CAkD OF THANKS

I

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Business Services

ALUMINUM car -top boats,
won 't rus t or rot. safe and
lighlweighl. 10, 12 13 and 14 fl.
in s tock nO\\'. Phone 992·6256
afler 5 p. m. ·
3·30-301c

19711/0LKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN
$_2495
Locai..1 owner, new car trade -in, .13,000 miles, automatic
trans, luggage rack, radio, chrome wheel covers, blue
color, blk . vinyl interior.

25 Per Cent Discount ?" . paid 1
ads and ads paid w1thm 10
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.

·.

Of"

~

IOAK Storm Door - 6' 8" x 32"
- $15; regular screen•door 6'
B" x 32 " - $3 ; eleCtric hedge
clippers - $8; phone 992.5233./
·
'
3-26·101p
:cLOSE OUT on 1971 full size
zig-zag sewing macJllne. For
sewing s lrel ~h fabrics.
bullonholes, fancy designs.
elc. Pa in I slightly blemished.
Choice of carrying case or
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
term s available. Phone 9925641.
3-29.6tc
-----~r-

ELECTROLUX sweeper deluxe
model. Complete with all
cleaning attachments and
uses paper bags. Slightly used
bul cleans and looks like new.
Will se ll lor $37.25 cash or
terms available. Phone 992·
5641.
3·29·61c
------SHOWALTER 'S Wei Pel Shop,
Chesler, Ohio, Phone 985·3356.
Tropi cal fish and supplies .
3-28·30\P

3 BR
HOME
F~om

the ''largest
Bulldozer Radiator to '·the
Sma llest .htea·ter Core.
Natllan Biggs
Radiator Specialist '

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

ON YOI,IR LOT
cu g'lra'ge, brick front,
wa II to wa II ca r.pef.

ONLY $13,750
We specialize In aluminum,
vinyl and st&amp;el siding ;
fiberglas, br ic k and stone;
comp lete line of residential
and comm,erclat roofing ;
remodel ing , building
suspended ceilings interior
and exterior painting ; com ·
plete line of Masonry work . All
work guaranteed to customer
sati.sf.actlon . We are fully
insured for your protection . 32
N . 2nd . 992.3918 .
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

OPEN EVE$. S.00 I'.M.
spouse •. the next ot km, !he
Each additional word 2c.
beneflc•arles under ttle will;
i'j)MUDY, OHIO
and to ttle attorney or attorneys
BLIND ADS
representing any of the
Additional 2Sc Charge per ~-----.--o;--:------::----------4
atorem entloned persons :
Advertisement. ·
..
Roy Van Cooney, Deceased ,
OFFICE HOURS
Middleport Ohio, Se~lisbury
B: JO a.m . to S: OO p.m. Dally,
Wanted To Buy
Township , No . 20452 . . .
9:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon NQtice
"Everything In Home
You are hereby no.flfted that
Saturday
, Maintenance"
the Inventory and Ap .
·
SAVE up to one half. Bring your S HP SIMPLiCITY garden
praisement of the estate of the
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
tractor with cultivator, no
lforementloned , deceased , late Found
~ 151 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.
MEIGS, W. VA. 25260
rototiller. Phone 247-2308
of said coun ty, was filed in this RADIO at 191 N. Third Avenue ,
4.4.tfc
MEIGS 992-7151
evenings.
Court. Said Inventory and
Apprehement will be for
Middleport. Owner may
4·3-31c
MASON 773-5634
hea ring before this Court on the
c lai m by identifying and WILL do sewing of all kinds in
WINTER clo lh es · marked
20th day of April , 1972 at 10 : 00
paying for ad.
down; New, used Spring
my
home
.
Phone
992-6879
.
OLD
FURNITURE
,
d
is
hes,
o'clock A.M .
4-4-3tc
J.2~ ·301p
Clothes coming in daily ;
clocks, . brass beds, silver
Any persons desi ring to file
dollars
or
comple te antiq ues and more dishes ; 620
exceptions thereto must file
APPALACHIAN farm puppies
households . Write M. 0.
locust Street, Middleport.
lhem •t te•SI five d•ys prior to Notice
the date set for hearing .
.
- FREE . Phone 1-696-1101.
4·0tc
Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Given under my hand and ABOUT YOUR WS IGHT
3-JJ.61c
Cal l 992-6271.
seal of said Court, this lsi dlly of
overweight ladles, ·teens and
r
.
3-16·1fc
April 1972.
men Interested In a Weight , RUMMAGE Sa le, April 6th and
Mobile Homes For Sale
John c. Bacon
·
616 Main St.
Complete line of office
Watchers I RJ Class . In
7th, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Ktng
Judge end ex .offlcio Clerk
&amp;
Belpre.,O.
423-6551
equipment,
furniture
Pomeroy
write:
Weight
Builder
Supply
Building,
of uid Court
Auto
Sales
supplies.
Type.w,riter
&amp;
Watchers IRJ. 1863 Section · North Second Ave ., Mid·
Adding Machine Repair .
By Ann B. W•tson
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
die port.
Sponsored
by 1970 W.3o OLDSMOBILE 442,
automatic, fa ctory stereo
Deputy Clerk.
10-3-tfc
Syracuse PTA .
tape ; lots of extras; really
W 4, 11. lie
Pick-up &amp; Delivery
- - - - = - : - -:--:-0 -41C
nice; priced right; phone 992REGISTERED Appaloosa Slud - - - - -- - - Get Rid of Them
2441 after 5 p.m.
Service, S50 Reg . Mares, S40 CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE :
We
will
protect any single
3·31.tlc
Grade; Francis Benedum.
Mutns, Geraniums. Pansies,
dwelling
resi
dence for
LEGAL NOTICE
and Petunias. Geraldine 1965 'h TON GMC truck,' 8 fl.
Phore 667-3856.
24'
·
Sealed bids will be recel"/ed
424lflain
St.
Pl.
Pleasant
'149.50
3-30·30ic
Cleland, E. Main St .. Racine .
by the Olive Township Board ol
bed with. racks,·· S47S i phorie
o .lfc
WRITTEN
WARRANTY
Trustees at the office of the
992.7175.
Township Clerk tor the pur · LOSE WEIGHT with New
Call
Collecl614-452-3158
4·2·3tc
Shape Tablets, 19 day supply _K_O_S_C_O_T_K~
O-S_
M_E_T_I_
C_
S -and
ctlase of a new Trllctor .
--~~"---c"Bids to be opened at !he office . only $1 .49 at Dutton Drug Co.,
wigs. Need extra money? Just 1968 1/.W. d~lu &gt;ie sedan, Di t k
Real Estate For Sale
or ttle Trustees at Reedsville ,
Middleport
and
Nelson
Drug
se
ll th ese products . No
Ohio 1 o'clock p.m. April 14,
Sargent,
phone
99H252.
1220
Washington
Blvd.
Store, Pomeroy .
restricted territories.· Phone
1972.
MODERN HOME ON 112 ACRE,
4·2·31c
Belpre, Ohio
0 "31 P 992-5113.
Specillct~tions fo r th~ Tr&amp;ctor
FULL BASEMENT, 4 MILES.
633 Main St.
can be obtained at the residen Ce - - - - - 4-2·tfC
FROM
KA ISER
,60X1'1,
2-bedroom,
all-electric,
of ttle Clerk at Long Bottom , F IGHT faligue with Zipples, the
Zanes11ille,
Ohio
ALUMINUM,
EXCELLENT
For Sale
great iron pili. Only $1.98 at
Ohio . The ·Board of Trustees
air condi tioned~ Bx20 ft. Porch
NEIGHBORHOOD,
PHONE
RUMMAGE
Sale,
230
S.
Fifth
reserve ttle right to reject any
Nelson Drugs .
·
and aluminum awning.
17'12 -FT . SELF ·contained
1304) 372.9657 or WRITE J . 0 .
Ave ., Middleport, April 3, 4
or a ll bids.
3·11-301p
alumi
num skir ting , com ·
Continental
Camper
.
Cal
l
ELLIS, ROUTE 1, BOX 498,
Olive Townsh lp Trustees
and sth, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
, pletely se1up. Beautiful
after 5 p.m. 992-5982.
Adll Bisse ll , Clerk
COTTAGEV
ILLE , W. VA.
3·31 -41c
Free Estimate
.
4-2-31c
bcation. Owner leaving sta1e.
Ill 21, 28 141 4, Jlc
2sm.
Phone
949-4892
or
992-5272
.
.
"Spring Up Smiling"
3-29·61c
WANTED - Anyone inleresled ELECTRIC 9uilar with case -----~---1-·1_0-_lf_c
and amplifier . Excellent
-=-=-=-------:-~
in cutting about 100 acres of
1.07 ACRES, newly drilled well.
&amp;
cond ition, phoiie 992-2941.
timber . Pay as you go. Phone
over 275 ft . of frontage on
Real
Estate
For
Si!le
4·2-31c
992·5786.
blacktop road, access to city
3-29-61c
- 6 room house, bath,
water, good location for home
-54-.:-:
P-:-A:-:SS::E::N-:-G::-E::-R~bus-.-;S:;-:1g:-:n~at ure RACINE
utility room, garage, $10.000 ;
or trailer. Phone 985-4176.
Early Sunday
electric stove. Bob Trussell.
REDUCE
sa
te
&amp; la st with
phone
949.4195 .
J.3J.61p
Mixed Leaoue
Chester, Ohio, phone 985·3929.
GoBese Ta~lefs &amp; E-1/ap
3·31 -ltc
March26, 1972
4·2-llc
" wa ter pills' at Nelson Drugs
SPECIAL VALUES!
Standings
NICE 2-slory home with full
J.17 ·201p
DOOR
PRIZESI
Team
Pis.
3
BEDROOM
ran
ch
type
home,
basement, 2 lots, new forced
FORMAL, size 10, lace over
FAVORS
Racine Food Market
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
air furnace . Near Pomeroy .·
lavender
satin,
see
at
Fabric
For Appointment
REFRESHMENTS!
. Lost
Tqm's Carry Out
~
Elementary SchooL Phone
Plains. All new with total
Shop or cal l 985-4117, $15.
Phone 949-2803
Eagle's Club
57
992·7384 to s~e .
,
. 3·31 ·101p electric and centra~ air
ONE Ewe sheep, ready to lamb.
POMEROY
7 -tfc , 1---------~
Forest Run Block
50
condifjon
ing,
bath
and
3;.4
fully
11
·
9 .. _ JackW . tusey,Mgr.
If found please call Kenneth
Farmers Bank
44
~
Phone 992-2181
r
WHITE electric range in ex · carpeted. full basement ; - - - - - - - - - - - INTERIOR &amp; t
Barnett, 742·4459.
Roseberry 's Pennzoil
34
ex er ior pain tng,
cellen t condi tion, $50; Forest gara~e in basement. See by SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut '
4-2-3tc
High Indi vidual Game - A.
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137 : R. I. Dubbeld, phone 74g~;:~
M. Gu1hrie, Athen s, Ohio, oppotnlment, phone 992-2196
Gene Davis 192.
L. Phelps 233.
·
phone
592.2158.
or
99n585.
Danny
Thompson.
WadsWorth
Dr ive , Columbus,· -----,-=---Second High Ind. Game High Ind. Game - Betty
Help Wanted
3·31
-10tp
Financing
available
.
·
Ohio,
phone
237-4334.
'sePTic" tank s cleaned. Miller
Debl Gal lagher 179.
Smith 201.
- - - -- - -~========
'
=2·=30:·t:':'
fc~
·.
11 ·21·1fc
Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
High Series - Gene Davis wANtED handy man tor High Series - A. L. Phelps
- - - - - -, - --:-,-roofing, shingles. duct work, CORNER cupboard , $35 ;
499.
576 .
66
Double bed , complete, $25 ;
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
n° 35 ·
elc. Phone 675-1270 ; afler 6
2. 1).tfc
Second High Series - Rich
High Series - Helen \/an
call
675-4582.
p.m.
Platform
rock~r.
slook,
$10
;
m
.3529.
·
f
--='=-"'~~=~~
- .. '
Bai ley 456.
Meter 512.
4.4.6\p
sma
ll
rocker,
$5;
phone
992·
1·28-t
c
.
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
deTeam
High
Game
Royal
Team High Game - Racine
Crowns 803.
38 18.
.
_
p
livered
t'lghl
to
your
project
.
_
Food Markel 166.
'
3 31 101
Team High Series - Gu11er Employment Wanted
Fast and easy . Free
Team High Series - Tom's
Ousters 2285.
es timates . Phone 992 -3284.
Carry Out 2062.
608 East Main Street
DRY WALL finisher conlra clor,, 30 FT. 1967 Chris Cra ll Con ·
Goeg lei n Rea4y ·Mix Co ..
POMEROY, OHIO
stellat ion, A-1 shape, comR. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-5825.
Middl eport, Ohio.
'
plete carpeting , wil l sleep six.
4-3-Sic
992·22591114 :00
American Legion
6·30·11&lt; '
Bantam Laague
Has twin eng ines, 210 h.p .
-------:ladies Auxiliary league
Sunday &amp; Evenings
March 25, 1972
---------~·
each, 100 gallon gas lank, full
CARPENTER work ol any
· Marth 31,1971
Standings
992-2568
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
kind. Phone Dexter , Ohio 742capacity with 6 wheel trailer .
Standings
Team
Pis.
Complete Service
Can be seen by appoin tment
4979.
Pis.
Red Barons
19 Team
LOT 100K150
Phone 949·3821
J.28·301p
on ly. Phone 992-5786.
42
Large 2 story frame , 4
Pin Busters
15 .Jr . Bugaloos
Racine, Ohio
3-29-61c bedrooms , bath , fuel oil
34
- Mustangs
14 Goble Marauders
Crill Bradtord
30 LOT S and yards cleaned, Box
forced air furnace, 8 rooms,
~iate
Zodiacs
10 Feeney Bennett Flyers
5· 1·1f&lt;
321. Rutland, Ohio.
1962 RAMBLER Amba ssa dor gla ssed side porch, front
30
Ball Breakers
8 Bu ckeyes
-3-3J.61p
wagon, se ll for par ts; new porch ,
30
barn,
stora ge.
Sneaky Snakes
6 Headquarters Barmaids
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
tor que converter $50. Cal l 992- build in g. In good cond ition .
26
High Ind ividual Game - Jell Rolling Pins
door6 and windows, carports,
992-3020
2718 after 6 p. m.
High Ind ividua l Game
Wayland 138.
AVA IL ABLE
for
house ·
58,900.00.
marquees, aluminum siding
;192 N. 2nd
Middleport
3-30-101p BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Mary Hoover 190.
Second High Ind. Game cleaning, baby sitting, kitchen
and rai ling. A. Jacob, sales
Second High .Ind. Game help lor one week . Send card
Serv ice Station with modern
Ronnie easel 131.
representative . For free
c-o Mrs. J . Grueser, Rt . 1, 2 TWIN bed, $25; 1 Kenmore apartment, same · location
High Series - Ronn ie Casci Mary Hoover 171 .
FARM
es timates, phone Charles
High Series - Mary Hoover
235.
.
Minersville, Ohio.
Eleclric dryer . $40 ; 1955 AMC for several years, both for '
104 Acres , excellent water
Lisle , Sy racuse , V. V.
3-30-101p
truck. SSO ; phone· 992-5654.
Second High Series - Greg 504.
the price of one. Reason for
supply , good boitom land for
Johnson and Son , Inc.
Second High Series - Trudy
3·24-IOip se lling is health . $17,900.00.
Smith 234.
•
3-2-tlc:- - - -- - ' - - crops, fenced pasture with
Ohlinger m.
'
Team High Game
NICE
WILL PAINT roofs or houses,
lot
of
timber
.
spr
ings.
Team High Game - Goble
Mustangs 769.
2 BEDROOM HOME
trim trees, clean out attics, DROP leaf table_= .. sis: baby
SE WING MACHINES. Repair
Modern 3 bedroom home on
Marauders 561.
Team High Series
1 story frame, bath,
basements, etc. 949·3221.
bed
$10
;
high
chair
$3;
service, all makes. 992-2284.
good
road
11!2
mi
.
from
Tea m High Ser ies - Jr.
Mustangs 1495 .
ca binets , basement, large
4-2-61c
Columbia
Grafonola
$15;
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. '
School
on
S.R.
7.
Eastern
Bugaloos 1379.
gujlar -amp . oulfil - $50; old lot. In excellent condition .
Authorized Singer Sales and .
oi l lamps - $10 ; phone 949· $7,900.00.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
SUBURBAN HOME
Early Wednesday
DREAM HOME
For
Rent
3194.
3-29-tfc
Tuesday
Women
30
Acres,
modern
3
bedroom,
Mixed League
3-29-101p 1 story· brick, 3 large
Team
W. L. TRAILER space available.
all
elec.
home.
Hill
top
Standings
bedrooms with doubl e
70 26
Phone 992.5786.
location , 'J~ mi. off S.R. 7 H'ARRISON'S TV and An.ter!iia'
Team
Pis. Hair Harbour
closets
. wonderful kitchen,
MODERN
Wa
lnu
l
Slereo-radio
Service. Phone 992-2522.
Roush
Construction
66
30
near Eastern Sch. T. P.
3·29-61c
Oi ler's Sohio
61
1'12 baths. full basement with
-combina tion, .4 speaker sound very
6-10.IIc
62 34
Zide's Sport Shop
60 Hart's Used Cars
water
tap
.
r:ice
recreation
room
,
-'t··
system,
4
speed
changer.
'
'
Mason
Furniture
60
36
Smi1h·Nelson Motors
S8
separate control s. Balance large carport, 1 acre ground,
)4 42· 6· ROOM' brick house, wall to
Young~ s Marke t
54 M&amp;R Foodl lnor
MIDDLEPORT
wall carpeting, paneled walls,
$68.41. Use our time payment cen tral air conditioning.
52 44
Nelson 's Drug
· 40 Tom Rue Motors
$28,500.00.
3
Bedroom
brick ran ch type,
dishwasher
and
disposal,
wil
l
plan
.
Cal
l
992-7085.
Real Estate For Sale
20 76
Tenth Framers
J9 Ingels Furniture
HENRY E. CLELAND
1•12
bath,
all
built -in features .
rent
furnished
or
unfurnished
.
3-29-6tc
Team
3
Games
Hair
High Ind ividual Game - Bill
REALTOR
Immed iate possession .
If Interested writ&amp; Box '779- ~ · -=-:-:-::--::-::-- - - Harbour 1821 ; Mason FurPorter 223.
TO
SELL
YOUR
In
C
·O
The
Dally
SentineL
MAPL'E
Slereo
-radio
com
.
3 BEDROOM home on two niture
1768.
High Ind. Game - Maxine
I have many ni ce building
thirds acre lot; all con ·
Pomeroy .
binat ion, AM·FM rad io, four PROPERTY LIST ,WITH
Team Game - Mason
Dugan 197 . ·
us.
veniences ; at Galtipolis
4-3·6tc
speakers.
4
speed
aJJfoma
tic
lots.
Furniture
637;
Hair
Harbour
High Series - A. L. Phelps
Ferry, W. Va. only $10,000 ;
---------,-changer, dual volum e control.
615.
605.
come
see; Call 675·3666 or 675·
Ind. 3 Games - Betty Baley . FURNISHED and unh~ni~h~
Use our budge t terms .
High Series - Maxine Dugan
3886
Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va .
apar1ments.
516;
Belly
Robinson
514.
Close
to'
schoo•.
Balance
$80.25.
Call
992-7085.
517.
4-4-181p
Ind. Game - Judy Young
Phone 992.5434.
3·29-61c
Team High Game - Oiler's
211;
Carolyn
Roush
183.
Sohlo 725.
10·18-tfc
)ROOMS aod bath, new carpel,
TROPICAL FIS.H, i;,n'c y'
Team High Series - Oiler 's
basement; Tuppers Plains,
guppies, angels and breeders,
Sunday Late Couples
Sohlo 2069.
llO Mechanic Street
FIRST FLOOR, furnished 1
Ohio. Laurence Balser,
Team
W. L
Beltas
and
supplies
.
Phone
bedroom apartment. phone
$9,000; phone 667 ·3693.
992 -5443.
58 30
Roberts
992-3874.
'
Pom,eroy, Ohio 45769
. 4·4·61P
12.10-tfc
Millers
56 32
Pomeroy National Bank
3-17-tf c
Duncans
5-4 34
Junior League
HOUSE and lots or Wrlghl
Standings
Capeharls
52 36 · ~·=========-..., AKC REGI STERED Auslralian
Street, Pomeroy, phone 742·
48 40
Pis. Youngs
Team
terrier dog $. nice Easter gjft,
5937
.
42 46
Chiefs
25 Sines
THE
reduced pri ce $50 each; phone
4-Htc
28 60
25 Klllingsworlhs
Ram s
Albany 698·3202.18
Team
3
Games
Duncans
Zodiacs
3-24 -101p
1038 ; Roberls 1026.
17
Thundering Herd
12
Team Game - Duncans 391 ;
Bengals
10 X 50 TEMPO Mobile Home.
II Roberts 377.
Strike Outs
Phone 247 -2161.
Ind.
3
Games
Ri
chard
High Individual Game.
0 -61(
'Si nes 560; Russ Capehart 545.
Steve Bachner 215.
Second High Ind. Game Ind. Game' - Ri chard Sines
216 ; Del Roberts 212.
POODLE puppies, Si lve r Toy,
Doug Rosebaum 186..
by
High Series - Steve Bachner
Park view Kennels, Phone 992··
Day, Week, Month
537,
.
5443.
Liberal Ratos
Second High Series 8-15-tk
George Gum 393.
Team High 'Game - Chiels
GOT AN EYE FOR A BUY?
'917 .
Motorola .Floor Samples Sale .
Team High Series - Chiels
Color only. Brand new 72 and
2609 .
a lew 71 , all cabine ts. Some
un its are slighlly scra tched,
2 BEDROOM mobile home wilh
all are priced lo see; see lhem
air col'\ditionlng .In Racine
Senior league
area ; ph one 992-6329.
...- 1onigh1 , Ridenour Til &amp; Ap ·
March 25, 1972
pl iance, Chester, Ohio. Phone
3-23 -lfc
Standings
985-3307.
.
Team·
Pis.
,3-30-61 c
'
Pin Bus1ers
22
-'JI •n
Gutter Dusters
"S TAR " kills rat s quickly ,
19
Born Losers
Sure. 21· ' lbs. $1.69 ,· Ebers·
)]1, ,
Royal Crowns
ba ch Hdwe ., Sugar Run Mills,
The Pros
17
Pickens Hdwe .. Mason.
Strikers
11
3-19·30ip
1
4-A -~tc
H)gh Individual Game
- - - - - - · - -·- ·

SON

CONST.

·oFFICE
MACHINE

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

MARimA
TYPEWRITER

. PHONE 675-3628

12' · 14' ·

WiDE

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES

Y-CITY
EXTERMINATION

"

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

OPEN HOUSE
SPRING SALE!
APRIL 5-6-7-8

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

CLELAND
REALTY

- -------

CQntact
VER&amp; EBLEN

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

. MEIGS INN
ROOMS
PH. 992·3629

We talk to you
like a. person.

WMP0/1390
OH YOUR DIAL .

'.

CHECKERS
WJF SNUfFV
TILL SUN·UP

Johnson Masonry
. &amp;RemOdeling
FOR THE BEST IN

CERAMIC TILE

11VE BEEN ON 1HI6
CLDVERL€AF FOUR DA'&gt;"'

Lei us show our satl)ples.
Let-Us•Do-Over-YOU(
Bathroom or Kllthen
Insured-But best of all
" WE'RE HONfST
Ph. 992-7607 Pomeroy, Ohio

WING 10 FIND 1HE EJ(IT',

DON 'T WOR.R'I, .
!'"~ WRESTLE
WITH IT J

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, .basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers; 2 sill loaders. Work
done by hour 01: contract.
Free Estimates. We also
haul 'fill dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy tor hire.
See Bob or Roger JeHers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
alter 7 p.m.

.....
MISTAH PRESIDENT,'
SUfirTHEM SOCKS

IS Ha&gt;.E: UNDER
FALSE: PRETENSES.

REPAIR

TERMITES. .TERMITES,

Local Bowling

· THAI'S FER
PL~1'f ir.i

'

1

responsible for more than one
lncorred Insertion. .
·

County . Probate court

vis :

Before

right to edit or re/ectany ads
· deemed object onal. The
publisher will nol . be ·..

AND APPRAISEMENT
The state of Ohio, Meigs

Ohio,

..

The Publisher reserves the ,

Not A Motor Route.

The

Day

".

Publication
Monday Oeaditn, 9 a.m. ·
Cancellation &amp; Corrections ·
Will be accepted unlll9a.m. lor,
'
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

HARTFORD

.-

. .

Sentinel Classifieds G~tAction! ~ntinel Cla~sifieds Get Results.
'
. WARTED!
2 SIGNS
.Po•eny ·
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADL!NES

..

.

THE'f W~'T MiNE
TO GIVE. THE.V'S

-MI'ffiiS HANDSHAKf. IS RIGHTFUU.'f
MIIS'N. MUCH /16 AH '&gt;'EARNS FO' n; AH
J.---.. CAIN'T NOT-cAJ&gt;r·'MKE.tT!.' .r-::.:=--'1

MAH PAl P ~·s-

All WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp;· PLUMBING CO.
24D Llacoln St.
Middleport, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete Home
Mifinte-nance Sarvice the
year around. No mafler what
your need . Complete roof or
spouting rel)ilir. Inferior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiline
tile a net' Paneling and Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
Day Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
742-3947
992-5803
m -3898 7&lt;2 -4761
We arefu!ly insured

l

·------l GUE55 WE
ALL HAVE A LDT '10
LEARN lleouT
HUMAN NlmJRE/
HALl

WONDE'~ W~AT

i

WAS S'POSED
' MEET ME HEI:zE!

Tr

SAY,

GUV1 NO.il,
OVE~ 1-&lt;E~E~

'lOUR INNOCENT, GENEROUS;
ROIMNTIC IIC're CliME AT

A TIME WHEN EVERYONE AT BONNAZ
WA.S UPTIGHT
AND IN~ECURE.

,.

The
Orchid Room
Make reservations for your ·
private parties, banquets,
specia l occasions.
Ideal for meeting place with or without kitchen
privlteges.
Ind ividual Calerlng
Will seal up to 150 people .

It appear~ that
ecoloqica\ benefit cleri,ved
from Gendinq the bott le~ .A
off for reci.jcl inq ...

;)f._
. I

Phone
.992 -3975

992-5786

EXPERT
Wheel ~~~ment
$5.55

.:

.~

..•.

On Most American Ca..

-G UARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE
O~E MILl 10M IWCK'i!&gt; PER. YFAR FOR
EVER.Y ,YfAR, HE SPENDS 9ft11~D 81\RS!

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

HE DRAIN5 A FIVE '(EI'R SEMTfMCE, l;ETS

Open 8 Till
Monday thru Saturday
'06 E. Main, PotMroy, 0.

0\IT"' .e!!!'

Hb'f gi%MW!~P ~

~T

.

ACROSS
1. William
P. Rogers'
prede-

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator 's license? Call .992·
2966.
6·15·11.

cessor
5. Cowboy's
saddle
attach·
ment

1/INYL and aluminum siding ;
free estimates: references ;
call collecl 446-3608, Byerly
Conslrucllon Co., Gallipolis.
3-2001p

Price

DICK TRACY

HOUS-E BUILDERS , CALL
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
OHIO.
3-5-301c

IF T~E
I
ARE
~~.
IM SURE 'TliESE
UNITS ARE

BACKHOE ANO DOZER wor·k.
Sepllt tanks Installed. G-Q&lt;I,
IBIII J Pullins. Phone 992..fl78.

·

paid
Companion of
Melchior
and
Balthazar
12. Coustn

4.25-rlc ·

SEPTIC TANKS ClliANED
REASONABLE rale,.Ph. 446;o
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
Owner !f. Operator.
· 5- 12-lfc 1

LIST.

'

O'DELL WHEEi: allgiunenl
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service ·
tune up and brake service: .
Wheels bal~nced eleclroolcally .
All
work
guaranteed .
Reas~na.le .
rates. Phone 992-3213.
·
7·27-lfc

-----c---

UL-----~

TERRY
TJIRe/lOU llllt l!f COIIFO!rr~lf
111:111'! lEE, AHPA 50li&gt;IER t\IAKING
A ROUTINE SfAACH WOtllP NEVER
SUSPECT l'OOR m5fNCE .

l'OOR cAMERA CREIY5

ARE AlREAI7Y IYlTH
THf HELICOPTEii':'.

theme
song

41. Vogues
4%. Actress
Martinelli
43, Farm em-

ployees
44. Gull
of
the
Mideast

hippie .
14. Bolivian
export
15.Edg8r Masters
16. Lan·
guish
17.-out
(make
dol
18. Gormandize
19. Spanish

UPHOLSTERING SERV ICE ,
complete selection of fabrics
and viny l to choose from .
Pick -up and delivery . Slater
Upholslerlng, Rl . 3, Pomeroy ,
phone 992 -3617.
l ·28·30tp

of
the
Royal
Botanic
Gardens Yeelerday'• Aruwer
5. Shoelace
· .
6. Powdered 24. ~utclike
lava
mstru7. Arachnid
men t
of Asia
8. City .
in
25. W~tlbemg
Ka~sas
26. Cat or
9· ~rymg
goat
27. Yeast,
hme
II. Region of
e.g.
the U.S.A. 29. Still
and
on the
Canada
shell
13. Actress
30. Rest
31. Mariner
Verdugo
21. Take
33. Gratings
39. Purpose
steps
22. Purpose
40. Grassland

Benny's

ofa

NEJ\T· ON
T~EIR

t. Site

36. Inlet
37. Belgian
town
38.Jack

DOWN
1. Roof
beam
2. Different
3. Soused

tllWJWOOM; IIMi ~...,v_.,~,....
Unscramblelhele lour Jumble~
one letter lA&gt; each square, lA&gt;
form four ordinary words.

0

I ll

RHARII

KJ

~

·-·

PEOPLE SAY "--iCe
'TH INI!i&amp; WHEN 'IOU
~ECE I I/E IT.

tj I

LA/SOC

Now .....,.. the dreW Milan
to form the IUrprill lllliWOT, u
IUJrOited by the above eartaol\.

~~.Prill~·~~~~--~.~AIISWIII~~tre~~l t l I I I I J

qu~n

,

20.1nsect
22. U.S.S.R.
lake
23. Island of
the Blue
Grotto
25. Stop
28. Madagas·

I

(AMwen ••••rrew)

Ju.,bt.o, TAPIR SOGGY

Yetlerday'•

RAIIIT

NIIDU

btwer: lYo one'.t tf'fln o pt&gt;r/f'd onr- bt'/ore- SYUNGII

can·

mammals .
32. Chemistry
suffix
33. Chew
,the
. fat
34. Born
(Fr.)
35. Moslem
VIP

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
wed --for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo•trophes, the length and formation of the word s are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

il

CI P

P •V V P RAP

l~FYRS

YC

IKFYRS

YC ,

BD

CB
CB

L R B J U PH S P

KTTUN

TOO IIAO 'lOUR I'RIEHD 15Ni HERE:
TO Ef'Ul~ IT Wlnl '(()~ .. I T~ A
PIT~ T!1AT 'IOV AND HE. flAD
A fALLIN6 OUT,.,I WONDER

WHERE ~E 1~ ...

CRYPTOQUOTES
YC;

ABRDPVV

.

YV,
RBC

OON'T LOOK ON A~ T~
WIRES.• IF HE FUES HIGHER
THAN TEN FEET IN THE AIR,
HE GETS A BEAK-BLEED!
'

NBQZ

YSRPZKRAP
.- ABRDQAYQV
.
.

Yesterday'&amp; Cryptoquole: HAVE CONFIDENCE THAT IF
YOU HAVE DONE A LIITJ.E TiliNG WELL YOU CAN DO
A lliGGEli THING WELL TOO.-STOREY
'
(f)

l

HAPPENED T'

SY~VES'TE~? ~E

1972 Klur )'Natu l'f!K S)' tnli•·•lt•, lnc . 1
I

.

�f l l f ·ff l
-,

·

tt-ThiDIIIIYaMinel,lllddlopxt·Pumavy,O.,Apri14,tm .

.

.

.

, .

. .

s · P.M. '

Carriers For
MASON

·and

Dai~

Sentinel

Ph. 614-992·2156
LE~AL

NOTICE

' NOTICE ON FILING
· OF INVENTORY

••• 'to

,

RATES '•
For Want Ad Service
S cents per Word one insertion
Minimum Charge75c
·
12 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions.
, . 18 cents per word• six COn·
. • 'Secutlve inser_tlons .

To the Adm inistrator of the
estate ; to such of the following

as are residents of the State of
-

the

surviving

.

For Sale

QUALITY

aotor

Co~

1970 DODGE POLARA
S239l
Factory air conditioning, V-8 engl_ne, aufo. trans., P.S.,
P. B. , good w-s-w tires. many more extras. A low price
now!
·

.

.

1969CHEV.IMPALA CPE.
S2095
v.a engine, automatic tra ns., p. s1eering, factory air
conditioned, good w-w tires, radio. dark green finish with
spo11ess interior.
·
·
•·

days .

CAkD OF THANKS

I

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Business Services

ALUMINUM car -top boats,
won 't rus t or rot. safe and
lighlweighl. 10, 12 13 and 14 fl.
in s tock nO\\'. Phone 992·6256
afler 5 p. m. ·
3·30-301c

19711/0LKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN
$_2495
Locai..1 owner, new car trade -in, .13,000 miles, automatic
trans, luggage rack, radio, chrome wheel covers, blue
color, blk . vinyl interior.

25 Per Cent Discount ?" . paid 1
ads and ads paid w1thm 10
&amp; OBITUARY
$1.50 for 50 word minimum.

·.

Of"

~

IOAK Storm Door - 6' 8" x 32"
- $15; regular screen•door 6'
B" x 32 " - $3 ; eleCtric hedge
clippers - $8; phone 992.5233./
·
'
3-26·101p
:cLOSE OUT on 1971 full size
zig-zag sewing macJllne. For
sewing s lrel ~h fabrics.
bullonholes, fancy designs.
elc. Pa in I slightly blemished.
Choice of carrying case or
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or
term s available. Phone 9925641.
3-29.6tc
-----~r-

ELECTROLUX sweeper deluxe
model. Complete with all
cleaning attachments and
uses paper bags. Slightly used
bul cleans and looks like new.
Will se ll lor $37.25 cash or
terms available. Phone 992·
5641.
3·29·61c
------SHOWALTER 'S Wei Pel Shop,
Chesler, Ohio, Phone 985·3356.
Tropi cal fish and supplies .
3-28·30\P

3 BR
HOME
F~om

the ''largest
Bulldozer Radiator to '·the
Sma llest .htea·ter Core.
Natllan Biggs
Radiator Specialist '

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

ON YOI,IR LOT
cu g'lra'ge, brick front,
wa II to wa II ca r.pef.

ONLY $13,750
We specialize In aluminum,
vinyl and st&amp;el siding ;
fiberglas, br ic k and stone;
comp lete line of residential
and comm,erclat roofing ;
remodel ing , building
suspended ceilings interior
and exterior painting ; com ·
plete line of Masonry work . All
work guaranteed to customer
sati.sf.actlon . We are fully
insured for your protection . 32
N . 2nd . 992.3918 .
ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

OPEN EVE$. S.00 I'.M.
spouse •. the next ot km, !he
Each additional word 2c.
beneflc•arles under ttle will;
i'j)MUDY, OHIO
and to ttle attorney or attorneys
BLIND ADS
representing any of the
Additional 2Sc Charge per ~-----.--o;--:------::----------4
atorem entloned persons :
Advertisement. ·
..
Roy Van Cooney, Deceased ,
OFFICE HOURS
Middleport Ohio, Se~lisbury
B: JO a.m . to S: OO p.m. Dally,
Wanted To Buy
Township , No . 20452 . . .
9:30 a.m. to 12:00 Noon NQtice
"Everything In Home
You are hereby no.flfted that
Saturday
, Maintenance"
the Inventory and Ap .
·
SAVE up to one half. Bring your S HP SIMPLiCITY garden
praisement of the estate of the
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
tractor with cultivator, no
lforementloned , deceased , late Found
~ 151 Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy.
MEIGS, W. VA. 25260
rototiller. Phone 247-2308
of said coun ty, was filed in this RADIO at 191 N. Third Avenue ,
4.4.tfc
MEIGS 992-7151
evenings.
Court. Said Inventory and
Apprehement will be for
Middleport. Owner may
4·3-31c
MASON 773-5634
hea ring before this Court on the
c lai m by identifying and WILL do sewing of all kinds in
WINTER clo lh es · marked
20th day of April , 1972 at 10 : 00
paying for ad.
down; New, used Spring
my
home
.
Phone
992-6879
.
OLD
FURNITURE
,
d
is
hes,
o'clock A.M .
4-4-3tc
J.2~ ·301p
Clothes coming in daily ;
clocks, . brass beds, silver
Any persons desi ring to file
dollars
or
comple te antiq ues and more dishes ; 620
exceptions thereto must file
APPALACHIAN farm puppies
households . Write M. 0.
locust Street, Middleport.
lhem •t te•SI five d•ys prior to Notice
the date set for hearing .
.
- FREE . Phone 1-696-1101.
4·0tc
Miller, Rl. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Given under my hand and ABOUT YOUR WS IGHT
3-JJ.61c
Cal l 992-6271.
seal of said Court, this lsi dlly of
overweight ladles, ·teens and
r
.
3-16·1fc
April 1972.
men Interested In a Weight , RUMMAGE Sa le, April 6th and
Mobile Homes For Sale
John c. Bacon
·
616 Main St.
Complete line of office
Watchers I RJ Class . In
7th, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Ktng
Judge end ex .offlcio Clerk
&amp;
Belpre.,O.
423-6551
equipment,
furniture
Pomeroy
write:
Weight
Builder
Supply
Building,
of uid Court
Auto
Sales
supplies.
Type.w,riter
&amp;
Watchers IRJ. 1863 Section · North Second Ave ., Mid·
Adding Machine Repair .
By Ann B. W•tson
Rd., Cincinnati, Ohio 45237.
die port.
Sponsored
by 1970 W.3o OLDSMOBILE 442,
automatic, fa ctory stereo
Deputy Clerk.
10-3-tfc
Syracuse PTA .
tape ; lots of extras; really
W 4, 11. lie
Pick-up &amp; Delivery
- - - - = - : - -:--:-0 -41C
nice; priced right; phone 992REGISTERED Appaloosa Slud - - - - -- - - Get Rid of Them
2441 after 5 p.m.
Service, S50 Reg . Mares, S40 CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE :
We
will
protect any single
3·31.tlc
Grade; Francis Benedum.
Mutns, Geraniums. Pansies,
dwelling
resi
dence for
LEGAL NOTICE
and Petunias. Geraldine 1965 'h TON GMC truck,' 8 fl.
Phore 667-3856.
24'
·
Sealed bids will be recel"/ed
424lflain
St.
Pl.
Pleasant
'149.50
3-30·30ic
Cleland, E. Main St .. Racine .
by the Olive Township Board ol
bed with. racks,·· S47S i phorie
o .lfc
WRITTEN
WARRANTY
Trustees at the office of the
992.7175.
Township Clerk tor the pur · LOSE WEIGHT with New
Call
Collecl614-452-3158
4·2·3tc
Shape Tablets, 19 day supply _K_O_S_C_O_T_K~
O-S_
M_E_T_I_
C_
S -and
ctlase of a new Trllctor .
--~~"---c"Bids to be opened at !he office . only $1 .49 at Dutton Drug Co.,
wigs. Need extra money? Just 1968 1/.W. d~lu &gt;ie sedan, Di t k
Real Estate For Sale
or ttle Trustees at Reedsville ,
Middleport
and
Nelson
Drug
se
ll th ese products . No
Ohio 1 o'clock p.m. April 14,
Sargent,
phone
99H252.
1220
Washington
Blvd.
Store, Pomeroy .
restricted territories.· Phone
1972.
MODERN HOME ON 112 ACRE,
4·2·31c
Belpre, Ohio
0 "31 P 992-5113.
Specillct~tions fo r th~ Tr&amp;ctor
FULL BASEMENT, 4 MILES.
633 Main St.
can be obtained at the residen Ce - - - - - 4-2·tfC
FROM
KA ISER
,60X1'1,
2-bedroom,
all-electric,
of ttle Clerk at Long Bottom , F IGHT faligue with Zipples, the
Zanes11ille,
Ohio
ALUMINUM,
EXCELLENT
For Sale
great iron pili. Only $1.98 at
Ohio . The ·Board of Trustees
air condi tioned~ Bx20 ft. Porch
NEIGHBORHOOD,
PHONE
RUMMAGE
Sale,
230
S.
Fifth
reserve ttle right to reject any
Nelson Drugs .
·
and aluminum awning.
17'12 -FT . SELF ·contained
1304) 372.9657 or WRITE J . 0 .
Ave ., Middleport, April 3, 4
or a ll bids.
3·11-301p
alumi
num skir ting , com ·
Continental
Camper
.
Cal
l
ELLIS, ROUTE 1, BOX 498,
Olive Townsh lp Trustees
and sth, from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
, pletely se1up. Beautiful
after 5 p.m. 992-5982.
Adll Bisse ll , Clerk
COTTAGEV
ILLE , W. VA.
3·31 -41c
Free Estimate
.
4-2-31c
bcation. Owner leaving sta1e.
Ill 21, 28 141 4, Jlc
2sm.
Phone
949-4892
or
992-5272
.
.
"Spring Up Smiling"
3-29·61c
WANTED - Anyone inleresled ELECTRIC 9uilar with case -----~---1-·1_0-_lf_c
and amplifier . Excellent
-=-=-=-------:-~
in cutting about 100 acres of
1.07 ACRES, newly drilled well.
&amp;
cond ition, phoiie 992-2941.
timber . Pay as you go. Phone
over 275 ft . of frontage on
Real
Estate
For
Si!le
4·2-31c
992·5786.
blacktop road, access to city
3-29-61c
- 6 room house, bath,
water, good location for home
-54-.:-:
P-:-A:-:SS::E::N-:-G::-E::-R~bus-.-;S:;-:1g:-:n~at ure RACINE
utility room, garage, $10.000 ;
or trailer. Phone 985-4176.
Early Sunday
electric stove. Bob Trussell.
REDUCE
sa
te
&amp; la st with
phone
949.4195 .
J.3J.61p
Mixed Leaoue
Chester, Ohio, phone 985·3929.
GoBese Ta~lefs &amp; E-1/ap
3·31 -ltc
March26, 1972
4·2-llc
" wa ter pills' at Nelson Drugs
SPECIAL VALUES!
Standings
NICE 2-slory home with full
J.17 ·201p
DOOR
PRIZESI
Team
Pis.
3
BEDROOM
ran
ch
type
home,
basement, 2 lots, new forced
FORMAL, size 10, lace over
FAVORS
Racine Food Market
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
air furnace . Near Pomeroy .·
lavender
satin,
see
at
Fabric
For Appointment
REFRESHMENTS!
. Lost
Tqm's Carry Out
~
Elementary SchooL Phone
Plains. All new with total
Shop or cal l 985-4117, $15.
Phone 949-2803
Eagle's Club
57
992·7384 to s~e .
,
. 3·31 ·101p electric and centra~ air
ONE Ewe sheep, ready to lamb.
POMEROY
7 -tfc , 1---------~
Forest Run Block
50
condifjon
ing,
bath
and
3;.4
fully
11
·
9 .. _ JackW . tusey,Mgr.
If found please call Kenneth
Farmers Bank
44
~
Phone 992-2181
r
WHITE electric range in ex · carpeted. full basement ; - - - - - - - - - - - INTERIOR &amp; t
Barnett, 742·4459.
Roseberry 's Pennzoil
34
ex er ior pain tng,
cellen t condi tion, $50; Forest gara~e in basement. See by SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut '
4-2-3tc
High Indi vidual Game - A.
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137 : R. I. Dubbeld, phone 74g~;:~
M. Gu1hrie, Athen s, Ohio, oppotnlment, phone 992-2196
Gene Davis 192.
L. Phelps 233.
·
phone
592.2158.
or
99n585.
Danny
Thompson.
WadsWorth
Dr ive , Columbus,· -----,-=---Second High Ind. Game High Ind. Game - Betty
Help Wanted
3·31
-10tp
Financing
available
.
·
Ohio,
phone
237-4334.
'sePTic" tank s cleaned. Miller
Debl Gal lagher 179.
Smith 201.
- - - -- - -~========
'
=2·=30:·t:':'
fc~
·.
11 ·21·1fc
Sanitation , Stewart, Ohio. Ph.
High Series - Gene Davis wANtED handy man tor High Series - A. L. Phelps
- - - - - -, - --:-,-roofing, shingles. duct work, CORNER cupboard , $35 ;
499.
576 .
66
Double bed , complete, $25 ;
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
n° 35 ·
elc. Phone 675-1270 ; afler 6
2. 1).tfc
Second High Series - Rich
High Series - Helen \/an
call
675-4582.
p.m.
Platform
rock~r.
slook,
$10
;
m
.3529.
·
f
--='=-"'~~=~~
- .. '
Bai ley 456.
Meter 512.
4.4.6\p
sma
ll
rocker,
$5;
phone
992·
1·28-t
c
.
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
deTeam
High
Game
Royal
Team High Game - Racine
Crowns 803.
38 18.
.
_
p
livered
t'lghl
to
your
project
.
_
Food Markel 166.
'
3 31 101
Team High Series - Gu11er Employment Wanted
Fast and easy . Free
Team High Series - Tom's
Ousters 2285.
es timates . Phone 992 -3284.
Carry Out 2062.
608 East Main Street
DRY WALL finisher conlra clor,, 30 FT. 1967 Chris Cra ll Con ·
Goeg lei n Rea4y ·Mix Co ..
POMEROY, OHIO
stellat ion, A-1 shape, comR. I. Dubbeld, phone 742-5825.
Middl eport, Ohio.
'
plete carpeting , wil l sleep six.
4-3-Sic
992·22591114 :00
American Legion
6·30·11&lt; '
Bantam Laague
Has twin eng ines, 210 h.p .
-------:ladies Auxiliary league
Sunday &amp; Evenings
March 25, 1972
---------~·
each, 100 gallon gas lank, full
CARPENTER work ol any
· Marth 31,1971
Standings
992-2568
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
kind. Phone Dexter , Ohio 742capacity with 6 wheel trailer .
Standings
Team
Pis.
Complete Service
Can be seen by appoin tment
4979.
Pis.
Red Barons
19 Team
LOT 100K150
Phone 949·3821
J.28·301p
on ly. Phone 992-5786.
42
Large 2 story frame , 4
Pin Busters
15 .Jr . Bugaloos
Racine, Ohio
3-29-61c bedrooms , bath , fuel oil
34
- Mustangs
14 Goble Marauders
Crill Bradtord
30 LOT S and yards cleaned, Box
forced air furnace, 8 rooms,
~iate
Zodiacs
10 Feeney Bennett Flyers
5· 1·1f&lt;
321. Rutland, Ohio.
1962 RAMBLER Amba ssa dor gla ssed side porch, front
30
Ball Breakers
8 Bu ckeyes
-3-3J.61p
wagon, se ll for par ts; new porch ,
30
barn,
stora ge.
Sneaky Snakes
6 Headquarters Barmaids
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
tor que converter $50. Cal l 992- build in g. In good cond ition .
26
High Ind ividual Game - Jell Rolling Pins
door6 and windows, carports,
992-3020
2718 after 6 p. m.
High Ind ividua l Game
Wayland 138.
AVA IL ABLE
for
house ·
58,900.00.
marquees, aluminum siding
;192 N. 2nd
Middleport
3-30-101p BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
Mary Hoover 190.
Second High Ind. Game cleaning, baby sitting, kitchen
and rai ling. A. Jacob, sales
Second High .Ind. Game help lor one week . Send card
Serv ice Station with modern
Ronnie easel 131.
representative . For free
c-o Mrs. J . Grueser, Rt . 1, 2 TWIN bed, $25; 1 Kenmore apartment, same · location
High Series - Ronn ie Casci Mary Hoover 171 .
FARM
es timates, phone Charles
High Series - Mary Hoover
235.
.
Minersville, Ohio.
Eleclric dryer . $40 ; 1955 AMC for several years, both for '
104 Acres , excellent water
Lisle , Sy racuse , V. V.
3-30-101p
truck. SSO ; phone· 992-5654.
Second High Series - Greg 504.
the price of one. Reason for
supply , good boitom land for
Johnson and Son , Inc.
Second High Series - Trudy
3·24-IOip se lling is health . $17,900.00.
Smith 234.
•
3-2-tlc:- - - -- - ' - - crops, fenced pasture with
Ohlinger m.
'
Team High Game
NICE
WILL PAINT roofs or houses,
lot
of
timber
.
spr
ings.
Team High Game - Goble
Mustangs 769.
2 BEDROOM HOME
trim trees, clean out attics, DROP leaf table_= .. sis: baby
SE WING MACHINES. Repair
Modern 3 bedroom home on
Marauders 561.
Team High Series
1 story frame, bath,
basements, etc. 949·3221.
bed
$10
;
high
chair
$3;
service, all makes. 992-2284.
good
road
11!2
mi
.
from
Tea m High Ser ies - Jr.
Mustangs 1495 .
ca binets , basement, large
4-2-61c
Columbia
Grafonola
$15;
T~e Fabric Shop, Pomeroy. '
School
on
S.R.
7.
Eastern
Bugaloos 1379.
gujlar -amp . oulfil - $50; old lot. In excellent condition .
Authorized Singer Sales and .
oi l lamps - $10 ; phone 949· $7,900.00.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
SUBURBAN HOME
Early Wednesday
DREAM HOME
For
Rent
3194.
3-29-tfc
Tuesday
Women
30
Acres,
modern
3
bedroom,
Mixed League
3-29-101p 1 story· brick, 3 large
Team
W. L. TRAILER space available.
all
elec.
home.
Hill
top
Standings
bedrooms with doubl e
70 26
Phone 992.5786.
location , 'J~ mi. off S.R. 7 H'ARRISON'S TV and An.ter!iia'
Team
Pis. Hair Harbour
closets
. wonderful kitchen,
MODERN
Wa
lnu
l
Slereo-radio
Service. Phone 992-2522.
Roush
Construction
66
30
near Eastern Sch. T. P.
3·29-61c
Oi ler's Sohio
61
1'12 baths. full basement with
-combina tion, .4 speaker sound very
6-10.IIc
62 34
Zide's Sport Shop
60 Hart's Used Cars
water
tap
.
r:ice
recreation
room
,
-'t··
system,
4
speed
changer.
'
'
Mason
Furniture
60
36
Smi1h·Nelson Motors
S8
separate control s. Balance large carport, 1 acre ground,
)4 42· 6· ROOM' brick house, wall to
Young~ s Marke t
54 M&amp;R Foodl lnor
MIDDLEPORT
wall carpeting, paneled walls,
$68.41. Use our time payment cen tral air conditioning.
52 44
Nelson 's Drug
· 40 Tom Rue Motors
$28,500.00.
3
Bedroom
brick ran ch type,
dishwasher
and
disposal,
wil
l
plan
.
Cal
l
992-7085.
Real Estate For Sale
20 76
Tenth Framers
J9 Ingels Furniture
HENRY E. CLELAND
1•12
bath,
all
built -in features .
rent
furnished
or
unfurnished
.
3-29-6tc
Team
3
Games
Hair
High Ind ividual Game - Bill
REALTOR
Immed iate possession .
If Interested writ&amp; Box '779- ~ · -=-:-:-::--::-::-- - - Harbour 1821 ; Mason FurPorter 223.
TO
SELL
YOUR
In
C
·O
The
Dally
SentineL
MAPL'E
Slereo
-radio
com
.
3 BEDROOM home on two niture
1768.
High Ind. Game - Maxine
I have many ni ce building
thirds acre lot; all con ·
Pomeroy .
binat ion, AM·FM rad io, four PROPERTY LIST ,WITH
Team Game - Mason
Dugan 197 . ·
us.
veniences ; at Galtipolis
4-3·6tc
speakers.
4
speed
aJJfoma
tic
lots.
Furniture
637;
Hair
Harbour
High Series - A. L. Phelps
Ferry, W. Va. only $10,000 ;
---------,-changer, dual volum e control.
615.
605.
come
see; Call 675·3666 or 675·
Ind. 3 Games - Betty Baley . FURNISHED and unh~ni~h~
Use our budge t terms .
High Series - Maxine Dugan
3886
Pt.
Pleasant, W. Va .
apar1ments.
516;
Belly
Robinson
514.
Close
to'
schoo•.
Balance
$80.25.
Call
992-7085.
517.
4-4-181p
Ind. Game - Judy Young
Phone 992.5434.
3·29-61c
Team High Game - Oiler's
211;
Carolyn
Roush
183.
Sohlo 725.
10·18-tfc
)ROOMS aod bath, new carpel,
TROPICAL FIS.H, i;,n'c y'
Team High Series - Oiler 's
basement; Tuppers Plains,
guppies, angels and breeders,
Sunday Late Couples
Sohlo 2069.
llO Mechanic Street
FIRST FLOOR, furnished 1
Ohio. Laurence Balser,
Team
W. L
Beltas
and
supplies
.
Phone
bedroom apartment. phone
$9,000; phone 667 ·3693.
992 -5443.
58 30
Roberts
992-3874.
'
Pom,eroy, Ohio 45769
. 4·4·61P
12.10-tfc
Millers
56 32
Pomeroy National Bank
3-17-tf c
Duncans
5-4 34
Junior League
HOUSE and lots or Wrlghl
Standings
Capeharls
52 36 · ~·=========-..., AKC REGI STERED Auslralian
Street, Pomeroy, phone 742·
48 40
Pis. Youngs
Team
terrier dog $. nice Easter gjft,
5937
.
42 46
Chiefs
25 Sines
THE
reduced pri ce $50 each; phone
4-Htc
28 60
25 Klllingsworlhs
Ram s
Albany 698·3202.18
Team
3
Games
Duncans
Zodiacs
3-24 -101p
1038 ; Roberls 1026.
17
Thundering Herd
12
Team Game - Duncans 391 ;
Bengals
10 X 50 TEMPO Mobile Home.
II Roberts 377.
Strike Outs
Phone 247 -2161.
Ind.
3
Games
Ri
chard
High Individual Game.
0 -61(
'Si nes 560; Russ Capehart 545.
Steve Bachner 215.
Second High Ind. Game Ind. Game' - Ri chard Sines
216 ; Del Roberts 212.
POODLE puppies, Si lve r Toy,
Doug Rosebaum 186..
by
High Series - Steve Bachner
Park view Kennels, Phone 992··
Day, Week, Month
537,
.
5443.
Liberal Ratos
Second High Series 8-15-tk
George Gum 393.
Team High 'Game - Chiels
GOT AN EYE FOR A BUY?
'917 .
Motorola .Floor Samples Sale .
Team High Series - Chiels
Color only. Brand new 72 and
2609 .
a lew 71 , all cabine ts. Some
un its are slighlly scra tched,
2 BEDROOM mobile home wilh
all are priced lo see; see lhem
air col'\ditionlng .In Racine
Senior league
area ; ph one 992-6329.
...- 1onigh1 , Ridenour Til &amp; Ap ·
March 25, 1972
pl iance, Chester, Ohio. Phone
3-23 -lfc
Standings
985-3307.
.
Team·
Pis.
,3-30-61 c
'
Pin Bus1ers
22
-'JI •n
Gutter Dusters
"S TAR " kills rat s quickly ,
19
Born Losers
Sure. 21· ' lbs. $1.69 ,· Ebers·
)]1, ,
Royal Crowns
ba ch Hdwe ., Sugar Run Mills,
The Pros
17
Pickens Hdwe .. Mason.
Strikers
11
3-19·30ip
1
4-A -~tc
H)gh Individual Game
- - - - - - · - -·- ·

SON

CONST.

·oFFICE
MACHINE

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

MARimA
TYPEWRITER

. PHONE 675-3628

12' · 14' ·

WiDE

MILLER

MOBILE HOMES

Y-CITY
EXTERMINATION

"

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

OPEN HOUSE
SPRING SALE!
APRIL 5-6-7-8

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

CLELAND
REALTY

- -------

CQntact
VER&amp; EBLEN

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker

. MEIGS INN
ROOMS
PH. 992·3629

We talk to you
like a. person.

WMP0/1390
OH YOUR DIAL .

'.

CHECKERS
WJF SNUfFV
TILL SUN·UP

Johnson Masonry
. &amp;RemOdeling
FOR THE BEST IN

CERAMIC TILE

11VE BEEN ON 1HI6
CLDVERL€AF FOUR DA'&gt;"'

Lei us show our satl)ples.
Let-Us•Do-Over-YOU(
Bathroom or Kllthen
Insured-But best of all
" WE'RE HONfST
Ph. 992-7607 Pomeroy, Ohio

WING 10 FIND 1HE EJ(IT',

DON 'T WOR.R'I, .
!'"~ WRESTLE
WITH IT J

EARTH MOVING
Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds, .basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers; 2 sill loaders. Work
done by hour 01: contract.
Free Estimates. We also
haul 'fill dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy tor hire.
See Bob or Roger JeHers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3525
alter 7 p.m.

.....
MISTAH PRESIDENT,'
SUfirTHEM SOCKS

IS Ha&gt;.E: UNDER
FALSE: PRETENSES.

REPAIR

TERMITES. .TERMITES,

Local Bowling

· THAI'S FER
PL~1'f ir.i

'

1

responsible for more than one
lncorred Insertion. .
·

County . Probate court

vis :

Before

right to edit or re/ectany ads
· deemed object onal. The
publisher will nol . be ·..

AND APPRAISEMENT
The state of Ohio, Meigs

Ohio,

..

The Publisher reserves the ,

Not A Motor Route.

The

Day

".

Publication
Monday Oeaditn, 9 a.m. ·
Cancellation &amp; Corrections ·
Will be accepted unlll9a.m. lor,
'
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS

HARTFORD

.-

. .

Sentinel Classifieds G~tAction! ~ntinel Cla~sifieds Get Results.
'
. WARTED!
2 SIGNS
.Po•eny ·
WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADL!NES

..

.

THE'f W~'T MiNE
TO GIVE. THE.V'S

-MI'ffiiS HANDSHAKf. IS RIGHTFUU.'f
MIIS'N. MUCH /16 AH '&gt;'EARNS FO' n; AH
J.---.. CAIN'T NOT-cAJ&gt;r·'MKE.tT!.' .r-::.:=--'1

MAH PAl P ~·s-

All WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp;· PLUMBING CO.
24D Llacoln St.
Middleport, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have a complete Home
Mifinte-nance Sarvice the
year around. No mafler what
your need . Complete roof or
spouting rel)ilir. Inferior or
exterior carpentry. Ceiline
tile a net' Paneling and Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Healing.
Day Number 992-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
742-3947
992-5803
m -3898 7&lt;2 -4761
We arefu!ly insured

l

·------l GUE55 WE
ALL HAVE A LDT '10
LEARN lleouT
HUMAN NlmJRE/
HALl

WONDE'~ W~AT

i

WAS S'POSED
' MEET ME HEI:zE!

Tr

SAY,

GUV1 NO.il,
OVE~ 1-&lt;E~E~

'lOUR INNOCENT, GENEROUS;
ROIMNTIC IIC're CliME AT

A TIME WHEN EVERYONE AT BONNAZ
WA.S UPTIGHT
AND IN~ECURE.

,.

The
Orchid Room
Make reservations for your ·
private parties, banquets,
specia l occasions.
Ideal for meeting place with or without kitchen
privlteges.
Ind ividual Calerlng
Will seal up to 150 people .

It appear~ that
ecoloqica\ benefit cleri,ved
from Gendinq the bott le~ .A
off for reci.jcl inq ...

;)f._
. I

Phone
.992 -3975

992-5786

EXPERT
Wheel ~~~ment
$5.55

.:

.~

..•.

On Most American Ca..

-G UARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE
O~E MILl 10M IWCK'i!&gt; PER. YFAR FOR
EVER.Y ,YfAR, HE SPENDS 9ft11~D 81\RS!

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

HE DRAIN5 A FIVE '(EI'R SEMTfMCE, l;ETS

Open 8 Till
Monday thru Saturday
'06 E. Main, PotMroy, 0.

0\IT"' .e!!!'

Hb'f gi%MW!~P ~

~T

.

ACROSS
1. William
P. Rogers'
prede-

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator 's license? Call .992·
2966.
6·15·11.

cessor
5. Cowboy's
saddle
attach·
ment

1/INYL and aluminum siding ;
free estimates: references ;
call collecl 446-3608, Byerly
Conslrucllon Co., Gallipolis.
3-2001p

Price

DICK TRACY

HOUS-E BUILDERS , CALL
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
OHIO.
3-5-301c

IF T~E
I
ARE
~~.
IM SURE 'TliESE
UNITS ARE

BACKHOE ANO DOZER wor·k.
Sepllt tanks Installed. G-Q&lt;I,
IBIII J Pullins. Phone 992..fl78.

·

paid
Companion of
Melchior
and
Balthazar
12. Coustn

4.25-rlc ·

SEPTIC TANKS ClliANED
REASONABLE rale,.Ph. 446;o
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell,
Owner !f. Operator.
· 5- 12-lfc 1

LIST.

'

O'DELL WHEEi: allgiunenl
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service ·
tune up and brake service: .
Wheels bal~nced eleclroolcally .
All
work
guaranteed .
Reas~na.le .
rates. Phone 992-3213.
·
7·27-lfc

-----c---

UL-----~

TERRY
TJIRe/lOU llllt l!f COIIFO!rr~lf
111:111'! lEE, AHPA 50li&gt;IER t\IAKING
A ROUTINE SfAACH WOtllP NEVER
SUSPECT l'OOR m5fNCE .

l'OOR cAMERA CREIY5

ARE AlREAI7Y IYlTH
THf HELICOPTEii':'.

theme
song

41. Vogues
4%. Actress
Martinelli
43, Farm em-

ployees
44. Gull
of
the
Mideast

hippie .
14. Bolivian
export
15.Edg8r Masters
16. Lan·
guish
17.-out
(make
dol
18. Gormandize
19. Spanish

UPHOLSTERING SERV ICE ,
complete selection of fabrics
and viny l to choose from .
Pick -up and delivery . Slater
Upholslerlng, Rl . 3, Pomeroy ,
phone 992 -3617.
l ·28·30tp

of
the
Royal
Botanic
Gardens Yeelerday'• Aruwer
5. Shoelace
· .
6. Powdered 24. ~utclike
lava
mstru7. Arachnid
men t
of Asia
8. City .
in
25. W~tlbemg
Ka~sas
26. Cat or
9· ~rymg
goat
27. Yeast,
hme
II. Region of
e.g.
the U.S.A. 29. Still
and
on the
Canada
shell
13. Actress
30. Rest
31. Mariner
Verdugo
21. Take
33. Gratings
39. Purpose
steps
22. Purpose
40. Grassland

Benny's

ofa

NEJ\T· ON
T~EIR

t. Site

36. Inlet
37. Belgian
town
38.Jack

DOWN
1. Roof
beam
2. Different
3. Soused

tllWJWOOM; IIMi ~...,v_.,~,....
Unscramblelhele lour Jumble~
one letter lA&gt; each square, lA&gt;
form four ordinary words.

0

I ll

RHARII

KJ

~

·-·

PEOPLE SAY "--iCe
'TH INI!i&amp; WHEN 'IOU
~ECE I I/E IT.

tj I

LA/SOC

Now .....,.. the dreW Milan
to form the IUrprill lllliWOT, u
IUJrOited by the above eartaol\.

~~.Prill~·~~~~--~.~AIISWIII~~tre~~l t l I I I I J

qu~n

,

20.1nsect
22. U.S.S.R.
lake
23. Island of
the Blue
Grotto
25. Stop
28. Madagas·

I

(AMwen ••••rrew)

Ju.,bt.o, TAPIR SOGGY

Yetlerday'•

RAIIIT

NIIDU

btwer: lYo one'.t tf'fln o pt&gt;r/f'd onr- bt'/ore- SYUNGII

can·

mammals .
32. Chemistry
suffix
33. Chew
,the
. fat
34. Born
(Fr.)
35. Moslem
VIP

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
wed --for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apo•trophes, the length and formation of the word s are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

il

CI P

P •V V P RAP

l~FYRS

YC

IKFYRS

YC ,

BD

CB
CB

L R B J U PH S P

KTTUN

TOO IIAO 'lOUR I'RIEHD 15Ni HERE:
TO Ef'Ul~ IT Wlnl '(()~ .. I T~ A
PIT~ T!1AT 'IOV AND HE. flAD
A fALLIN6 OUT,.,I WONDER

WHERE ~E 1~ ...

CRYPTOQUOTES
YC;

ABRDPVV

.

YV,
RBC

OON'T LOOK ON A~ T~
WIRES.• IF HE FUES HIGHER
THAN TEN FEET IN THE AIR,
HE GETS A BEAK-BLEED!
'

NBQZ

YSRPZKRAP
.- ABRDQAYQV
.
.

Yesterday'&amp; Cryptoquole: HAVE CONFIDENCE THAT IF
YOU HAVE DONE A LIITJ.E TiliNG WELL YOU CAN DO
A lliGGEli THING WELL TOO.-STOREY
'
(f)

l

HAPPENED T'

SY~VES'TE~? ~E

1972 Klur )'Natu l'f!K S)' tnli•·•lt•, lnc . 1
I

.

�••

Senator Collins, in tl},e
Middle, Out ·of Business

IZ- The o.lly anlael, Midllef art.fllmaoy, 0., Aprll4, lt'/2

•
aiD

•
IDe

"AA!GON (UP!)- North Viet- lost in the 1 five-day&lt;Jld inllllmese troops using amphi- vasion.
bious tanks breached the main
Capture of Fire · Base Anne
South Vietnamese' defense line brought an immediate threat w
eight miles below the Demilita- the c.ilY of Hue and to north·
rized Zone (DMZ) wday and south Highway 1, the main
crossed '• the Cua Via River government supply line !'!&gt;
despite heavy U.S. air strikes
lind naval gunfire.
The South Vietnamese defenders of the naval base at the
mouth of the river abandoned
.
their fleet of junks to the
Communist hordes and fled
RIO GRANDE - The Alpha .
southward. Another force of Omicron Chapter of Delta
Communists swept out of the Kappa Gamma held a joint
Annamlte foothills and cap- meeting with the Beta Alpha
lured Fire Base Anne, 18 miles and Delta Epsilon Chapters in
west of the old imperial capital the college dining room here
of Hue- the 13th and 14th bases . March 25.
The speakers' table was
decorated with a centerpiece of
red carnations and red can·
dies. Anna Maude Fehrman
gave the invocation. The group
then enjoyed a chicken dinner.
(Continued !rom Page I)
Program Chairman Roberta
from their home to the water
Norman Frederick
level" of the Ohio River.
Mcintyre stated the Corps
bas no legal jurisdiction to Died on Monday
work on private property.
WNG BOTIOM - Norman
However, the Corps has ad· E. Frederick, 56, Long Bottom,
vised numerous landowners on died Monday at the Holzer
their erosion problems . Medical Center. Mr. Frederick
Mcintyre also stated there is had been employed by the
no allocation of federal funds to Betsy Ross Bakery 20 years.
pay landowners losing land due
He is survived by hls wife,
Ill increased water levels from Goldie Biggs Frederick; two
dams constructed on the Ohio sons, Jerry, of Middleport, and
River. Mcintyre stated the Jack ol Long Botl&lt;lm; his
Corps advises the boats not to mother, Mrs. Hattie Frederick,
ride the shoreline.
and two grandchildren,
Asaln, the CorpS' has no legal Jacqueline Lynn Frederick
jurisdiction to enforce this and Cylinda Lovla Frederick,
proceedure!
all of Long Bottom. Mr .
Cong. Miller asked for some Frederick was preceded in
"solid information" on bank death by his father, Ernest
erosion to present hls case to Frederick, and a grandson,
Congress. Mcintyre wlll. fur. Brent Allen Frederick.
nish the congressman with the
Funeral services will be held
legal jurisdiction needed by the at 1 p.m. Thursday at the
Corps to work on this problem. Ewing Funeral Home with the
Also, the local Soil and Water Rev. Robert Card officiating.
Conservation District will Burial will be in the Chester
survey their respective Cemetery. Friends may call at
counties and consolidate the the .funeral home any time.
facta needed by Miller to
support legislation.
UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E·R squad
answered a call to the James
Garnes residence on the
Chester Road at 9:04 p.m.
Monday for Ernestine Fauber
who was suffering with an
Tonight, April4
ankle Injury. She was taken to
WILD ROVERS
Veterans Memorial Hospital
!Technicotor)
where she was treated and
William Holden
released.
Ryan O'Neal

Quang Tri 30miles wthe north.
The fiv~y-old North Viet·
namese invasion had been
thouglit halted at the Dong Ha
River but front dispatches said
the troops, after receiving new
supplies, pushed across the

ac e
~

Cua Viet River five miles east
of the town of Dong Ha and five ·
miles inland from the coast.
The Cua Viet is .piu-t of the
Dong Ha River.
The river crossing and the
capture of Fire Base Anne

A l h Omicron in]ointMeeting
'P 'a

Erosion

MEI(iS TiiEATRE

" GP"

PACKETS HERE
Meigs County residents who
have ordered wildlife packets
through the Meigs Soil Con·
servation Service in the
Masonic Temple Building at
P,omeroy may pick up the
packets from 9 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. Monday at the office of
the service .

Colorcartoons :
Gold Dust Bandit
Rockabye ' Slnbad
Tho Entorger
SHOW STAATS 7 P.M.

Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Aprils.~

NOT OPEN

.....
I

'

Wilson introduced the speaker,
state first vice-president and
program chairman, Mrs,
Helen p. Stephenson, of
Columbus. Commenting and
showing samples of several
DKG ' publications, she also
pointed to the influence
teachers have on the values of .
young people and asked, (1)
what actions are teachers ·
taking, and (2) what are
teachers' own values in
religion, patriotism, and

meant that the main government bastion of Quang Tri was.
now being menaced from aU
sides-from the north and east
where the Conununists c;rossed
the river, from the west where
Quang Tri gets its supplies, and
from the south.
Quang Tri and Hue appeared
w he major objectives of the
Conununist invasion Hue was
devastated in the 1968 Conununist Tel offensive when North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong
forces captured large areas of
the city, third largest in
Vietnam.
,:;:::::&lt;:!XX~&lt;:~::;,:,:::~::.-::=::::x::::~

morals.
She said there were three
kinds of people : red, who
believe Iii the status quo,
yellow, who ·are wllling to talk
about change, and green, who
CINCINNATI (UPII believe change is the ooly
constant of life. " Which are The Cincinnati Reds today
officially cancelled the ~
you?" she asked.
Youth needs a sense of National League opening
purpose. Its aggressive day game Wednesday
behavior is a desire lor love.
against the Houston Astros
; '• '
U&gt;ve is not permissiveness but at Riverfront Stadium.
rather, best shown in lirmness
A spokesman for the Reds
·~
and discipline. "Modem man is front office said "no opening
Judgment Sought rediscovering the truths of the day date wUI be set unlil the
Sermon on the Mount and the players strike Is seltled."
A judgment for money has Gclden Rule," she said.
The Reds also announced
been filed in Meigs County
Merlyn Ross, accompanied
today they have reached the
KIMBERLY AND DIANA WARD, Mindy Dailey, and Alicia Evans of Portland, left to
Common Pleas Court, three by Mrs. Ross, sang "When 25-player limit on their
right, enjoyed the b9ok display of 4-H related project material prepared by Mrs. Jean Hart,
divorces were granted, and one Irish Eyes are Smiling,"
roster by optioning pllcher
11
Pomeroy
librarian. The girls are members of the Stiversville Stitchers whose advisors are
14
case dismissed.
Danny Boy," and Mother
Wayne Simpson to the In·
Mrs. Ada Van Meter and U&gt;uise Gluesencarnp.
E . . I. Evans and Co., Macree," and then led the
dianapolis !arm club on 24·
Columbus, filed a judgment for group in singing, •-tfy Wild
hour recall. The Red~
money against the Ohio Valley Irish Rose" and ~'Iris h
Monday optioned pitcher
Mfg., Co., Tuppers Plains, in Lullaby."
Ross Grimsley to In·
the amount of $1,126.20 plus
Rosalie Story received the dianapolis 'and placed 'cat·
interest and costs.
carnation centerpeice because cher BIU Plummer on the 21·
Granted divorces were Gary her birthday was on that day. day Injured list. ~
"
Ann Lambert, an employe of members should select their
(Continued from Pag~ I)
Jenkins from Deborah Jenkins,
The chapters went into
the Fabric · Shop spoke on pattern before selecting their
Mary Alice Samuels from separate business meetings, &lt;:':;:;:~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,::::::::~:::::::;:=::::::::::::;:::::::::::::&lt;
fabric for projects. She showed
·
Holter,
club
programs,
and
"What's New for '72".
Nathaniel Samuels and Sandra Al~ha Omicro~ electing thi'J!e •
She told ol the popularity of various patterns by the three
Lynn Lavender from Larry offocers, presodent, Roberta
· Mrs. Young, health films.
Second session classes of- · the blazer, trends toward the major'Companies, Simplicity,
Wayne Lavender. The case or Wilson; first vice president,
fered
were first year junior nautical look, and the return of McCalls and Butterick-Vogue.
Olen Doerfer versus Rosalie Rachel Warner ; secretary,
SYRACUSE-Funeral
Doerfer was dismissed.
Maxme Phtlson, and treasurer, services for William Henry leaders by Plymale; con- ginghams to the fashion scene. Interfacing and fabric conservation by Ted Dean, from Bathing suit materials were on struction were discussed.
Esther Maerker.
Thuener, 63, mayor of the Ohio Department of display along with knits and
Mrs. Clark in her sess~n on
The next meeting will be Syracuse 10 yiJHrs who died
Auto in Creek
fashion
and style revue emApril 24 at the Addaville Monday at Doctor's Memorial Natural Resources; horses by polyester fabrics.
A single ~r accident was · Elementary School.
Boothe; and awards and
"Sewing has been elevated tv phasized harmonizing trim to
Hospital in Huntington, W.Va., honors by Blakeslee.
investigated at 5:10a.m. Wday
an art" commented Mrs. the garment an'!-the proper
Attending from Meigs
on SR 7, one mile south of County were Ruth Euler, will be held at I p.m. Wed·
Popular with the club Lambert who is a former 4-H selection of accessories. She
nesday
at
the
Ewing
Funeral
County Road 26. Sheriff Robert Martha Husted, Nan Moore,
members and advisors was the advisor. She said people· used conunented on the country girl
u
C. Hartenbach said !lilly Joe Ethel Chapman, Lucile Smith, Home.
class en.ti!led " Fabrics- to sew by necessity, but now look with ruffles and frills and
Mr. Thuener in recent years Fabrics". A large display of they sew because they want tv. occasion suitability, the
Humphrey, 34, Marietta, was Roberta Wilson, Theodosia
backing out of the Lewis Frecker, Ann Webster, Rosalie had been an employe of Land- materials, patterns, and ac- be crea live. She discussed layered look, and the Chinese
Williams driveway onto Rt. 7, Story, Virginia Covert, Geneva mark in Pomeroy. He was a cessories was on display and patterns emphasizing that club trend. The importance of good
when his car rolled over a 10 Nolan, Mildred Hawley, member of the Syracuse
grooming in creating the apfoot embankment into a creek Dorothy Woodard; Maxine United Methodist Church and
pearance of being well dressed
of Guiding Star Chapter 124, D.
and caught fire.
was
emphasized by Mrs. Clark.
OAPSE
TO
MEET
MRS.
COLEMAN
ILL
Phflson, Carolyn Smith, and
of A. Lodge.
The fire was out when the Nellie Parker.
Project books and other
A meeting of the Eastern
The Middleport E·R squad
Surviving are his wife, Local School District Ohio answered a call tv Route ;54 materials available from the
sheriff arrived. Humphrey had
Sadie; a daughter, Mrs . Assn. of Public School Em- near Cheshire at 8:53 p.m. Meigs County Extension Office
an injury to his right shoulder
Margaret Lehew of Pomeroy ; ployes chapter will be held at Monday for Mrs. Luther were on display. Mrs. Jean
but was not immediately
three sisters, Mrs. Hilda Arm· 7:30 tonight at the high school. Coleman who was ill. She was Hart, librarian, arranged a
treated. There was no arrest.
strong, Mrs . Ella Bruestle and All members are urged to taken to the Holzer Medical display of books on 4-H project
/
Mrs. Mildred Jutzi, all of attend.
(Continued from Page I )
work, and there was a home
Center by the squad .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Cincinnati,
and four grandfilming council meetings and
furnishings
exhibit.
Visiting hours 2-4 and 7-8
showing them over Cable TV. children . Preceding Mr.
Refreshments
were served
p.m.
VICA
DANCE
SET
Thuener
in
death
i
was
a
Council asked that Gerard
by the Five PointS tar Stilchers
ADMITTED
Eber
The Meigs High School VI CA
brother, Harry.
check
with
other
villages
and
and
a committee of Roy Miller,
Pickens, Jr., Syracuse; Mabel
report his findings at the next Officiating the services will chapter will sponsor a dance
Maxine Whitehead, Cathie
Roush;Racine; Carrie Whaley,
Marriage Ucense
be the Rev. Forrest Donley. from 8:30 to 11 p.m. Saturday
meeting.
Shade; Richard Halfhill ,
Richard Allen Kerns, 20, Pickens anti Ed ·Parker had
Mrs.
Helen
~ons also. !)'let Burial will be in Greenwood •t rtoyal Oak Park with music
charge of the distribution of
Dexter; Jessie White, Rutland;
with council inTegard to water Cemetery. Friends may call at provided by "F oxx ." Ad· Belpre, and Sandra Kay door prizes.
Marvin Thomas, Cheshire;
. Trussell, 22, Reedsville.
mission is $1 per person.
running off of Wyliss Hill in the funeral home any time.
Ada Rowe, Racine; Ray
front of her property. She also
Proffitt, Mason; Raymond
uoted that cars coming off
File, Cheshire; JoAnn Conkle,
Wyliss Hill onto Spring Ave.
Cheshire; Marion Michael, are driving over her property
Pomeroy; Dixie Clark,
as they make the turn. Council
Racine; Barbara James,
agreed to investigate and
Pomeroy.
correct the situation.
DISCHARGED - Ruth
Council also agreed to have
Lutheran, William Buckley,
the Superior Window Cleaning
Mary Brickles.
Building Maintenance Company of Gallipolis clean all the
BESS WEED DIES
.Mrs . Bess Weed, widely windows in the city hall
known
Pomeroy building inside and out at a cost
businesswoman, died Tuesday of $35.
A npte was read from Stella
morning at the Holzer Medical
Kloes
thanking council for
Center. Mrs. Weed for many
erecting
a new railing on
years operated the Weed
Wholesale Co. in Pomeroy. Lincoln Hill.
Mayor WilHam Baronick
Arrangements will be annoted
that due to bad weather
nounced from Ewings.
the promise to clean and wash
SHOW IS TONIGHT
village stree!J! had not been
The Chester Elementary kept. The mayo"r will meet with
School cultural arts show will the safety committee w set up
be held at 7:30p.m. tonight at a schedule for street cleaning,
'I.
•.
&lt;
the school with Mrs. Donna weather permitting.
•' .
Chadwell the judge. All parents
An agreement with ihe
i'
are invited. Adult reading Koontz 'Equipment Co. to
classes will follow the show. purchase parking meters was
read. The company requires
I
D • G Ca h that Pomeroy pay freight on
on t et ug t the new meters arriving and
freight ~n the old meters being
i
With An Expired returned. Council asked the
I
•
mayor to call the company and
Drivers License
inform them that they would
The AAA reminds you to not pay both the freight
• &lt;.
check your drivers license if charges, only one. If the
you have a birthday this company does not agree, the
month. Many llcenses expire contract will be dropped.
this year imd you only have 30
Aletter from Burgess, Niple,
days before your birthday to consulting
engineers,
renew it and keep driving Columbus was read informing
legally ,
council how to correct a
Tall, short, stout or somewhere in between.
cln't ride 'up on your neck when you stoop or
Your neighbor's an AAA sewage problem on Lincoln
Whatever
your
build,
Lee
has
a
"tailored"
size
b nd, a U-shaped crotch that can't bind or pull
memher ... and if he's like the Heights . Council agreed to
that will fit you neatly and comfortably. These
most ·of them, he's trying to have Carson Crow continue his
a d heavy duty slides
®
talk everybody else into joining -work on reviewing all old orcraftsmen's . garments are Sanforized for last·
tHat can't slip or bend.
AAA too. You know, telling dinances in the village.
ing fit and have rustproof hardwate and tripleDesigned by craftsmen for
them all
about AAA · A letter was also read from
stitched seams. And a form-fitting bib that
cr~ftsmen. That's Lee!
Emergency Road Service, Cong. Clarence E. Miller of.
'
AAA travel guidance services, fering a,ssistance in securing
travel accident in~urance , hail city water for residents on
and arrest prot~tion, and the Union Terrace. Miller also
5eethe complete line of Lee ·work and Wester'n wear In •
all 1s1Ies plus !he Carhart! Brown Duck Work Ciothtoother AAA membership offered w help secure federal
the Mens Department lsi floor - Carpenters Ollerails
We\ders Olleralls with bib front - Carpenter brclwn
in White and Hickory Stripe - Painters Overalls In
benefits. Probably the only aid.
•
Dul k Overalls - and btoY,on Duck work Dungarees.
White,
all
sizes
34 to SO - Lee Tech Twill work
way you can shut him up is lo
Attending were , Mayor
uniforms - Lee Western Jftckets'in denim - Overall
We11igladiy help you find the Styleond Size,you wont in
join AAA yourself, which isn't B-ick, Lucien Poulin,
Blue den im Ja cket s - Work Dungarees - Coveralls in
!he~e Nationally Known Brand of Work Clothes.
a bad idea, you know.
·
R
Werry,
William
Phone us at 992-2590 and Snouffer, Eima Russell, Jim
learn the other reasons you Mees and Don Collins, council
should join AAA tuday .
· members; Jane Walton, clerk,
_ _ _"""_ _ _oitAiidliov. and
Phyliss
Hennessy,
•
trealiUI'er.

INDIAN FORD - Tlds scene taken of the mouth of the
Shade River by Sentinel Publisher Richard Owen is one of
Meigs County's historic spots. Formerly known as Devils
Hole, the site historitally is where Indians returning from ·
murderous excursions into western Virginia forded the Ohio
River with prisoners and loot from the ir plundering. The
tribes then, ·according to legend and accounts in letters
written by early settlers proceeded up the valley of Shade
River enroute to their villages on the Scioto River in the
Chillicothe area. A bridge now crosses Shade River at this
point and a new scenic route passes "Devil's Hole," a short

' ...

•

Now
You Know
In the early 1900s, Wiscon-

300 Attended Plan-0-Rama

at y

sin's progressive politicians
led by Republi ca n Gov . Robert
M. La Follette pioneered
equitable taxation, direct
priffiary, civil service, c~rrupt
practices act, workmen 's
compensation and state in~come tax.
·

Thuener Rites
On Wednesday

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

e s at

SAIGON (UP!) - A force of
5,000 Conununist troops have
attacked the town ol An Loc 60
miles north of Saigon in what
military sources said tonight
could be the second phase of a

general offensive against South
Vietnam .
An invasion of North Viet·
namese· troops across the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ )
already has captured the

northern half of Quang Tri
Province and threatened the
coties ol Quang Tri and Hue.
President Nguyen Van Thieu
said the ,fate of South Vietnam
was at stake.

Sewer Funding Wanted
RUTLAND - Town Council
discussed the availability of
lederal funds for a sanitary
sewerage system Tuesday
night with a representative or
the Commo nwealth
Engineering Co. of Indiana ,
and John Beasley of the Ohio
Valley Development Assn .
present to discuss with council
the possibilities of securing
federal grants for the sewage
system.
The visitors were 'lllthorized
to proceed in learning the
quickest and most efficient

way to proceed on such a
project and to investigate what
federal fundin g may be
available .
Also mee ting with council
were Kenneth Light and
Roman Warmke , of the
Department of Economics at

Ohio University who disclosed
they have purchased the 160.
acre Stevens Farm just outside
of Rutland for the development
of a 5().unit trailer court. They
are at · a standstill now until
they carfascertain where high·

way improvements are to be
made there . They expressed an
interest in a development
program of the Rutland
Community and of the
possibilitY of using the
propos?d sewage system .
Bills were approved for
payment. Mayor Eugene
Thompson presided . Others
attending were Councilmen
Ernest Nicholson, Harvey
Erlewine, Bill Brown, Jim Fry
and Robert Snowden, and
Vernon Weber, clerk.

When Shopping Jus! Take Your Pen and
Check Book.
When il's all over, your cancelled checks and
stubs will give you a record ... and prolecHon .
'

Let Us Open A
Checking Account For You.

WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

litbens ,ational
_,_,INCIH,IATl

perfectly!

Member Fede!:8f DepOJII! IQUIT.Dee Corporalloa

.

,•

.

.

legislation ."
· Sen. Clara E. Weisenborn. RDayton, who introduced the
original strong bill in the.
Ser.ate 14 months ago, said she
was eleated by the unanimous
passage.
"This is a day I've looked
forward to for 20 years," she
said. "This bill not only applies
to us today, but will preserve
the land lor the generations of
tomorrow. n
Great Step Ahead ·'
Natural Resources Director
William B. Nye said Senate ap(Continued on Page 17)

B&amp;E Pr!&gt;bed By Sheriff
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. is investigating a
breaking and entering of the
Charles Reitmire property on
Willow Creek Road, Pomeroy,
RD 2. It is not possible,

Henry Well, Ballrun Road,
Pomeroy , Rt. 2. Well said his
wife heard a noise in the house
and when he went through the
house in the living room he

however, to determine what

wrapped in a blanket.
When the sheriff arrived. the
man had left the house, but was
found sitting along the road. He
has been identified as Thomas
Gregory Wright, 29, of Cincinnati. He is presently lodged
in Meigs County Jail.

has been taken since the
Reiimires are in Florida .
Claude Reitmire reporteJt,
the B&amp;E which apparently
occurred over the weekend .
The depariment received a
call Tuesday at ·6:50 p.m . from

found a man sitting on a couch

Weather

enttne

•

Generally clear and cold
tonight. Lows in the mid 20s
north to the upper 20s and
lower 30s in south. Mostly
sunny Thursday and warmer ..
High in the 40s north to around
60 extreme. south.

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

! 1972 Fair to Hum with Saws I
[:)

lill
..,

!~
;~

;:&lt;

!
'.•:1,;1,:.:.

~.l

A new feature - a chain saw

the parking areas. The lights will be in

A letter from Mrs .. Margaret Ella

~~rr;~:~!; ~~J~F~~~: b~g~~:~a~: ::J~~~Z~!:e!~:::::~iE? a~~ ~~~~~n;:;;5;~}i~~~1e ~~t;:~~~~
The contest will allow participants pony conformation judging. The
to be judged on their skill and quickness number of the classes to be included in
in cutting various sized logs with cash the 1972 conformation judging was
awards made . The event is not part of a reduced from 18 to 13 and it was decided
state or nationally sanctioned event, so to increase from 10 to 16 the number of

this year.
The board decided to incr~ase
premium cash awards in open class
judging of dairy Pnd beef cattle, sheep
and swine.

ov

'

LLS

ELBERFELD$ IN :POMEROY·
. 'I

...

•

:::;

.'@
.

was felt that these merchants may be
·:·:· interest.r:.d in sponsoring contestants.

state regulations prohibit cash
premiums to 4-H Club members in

hilltop.
Mrs. Marvin King , secretary,

[[[:
:·:·

fair, the class was eliminated from the
Open Show.

dbootrkbwtill gbo tvd the printers for
lS 1 u ton y mt .June.

,,

~~[ ~:::n~::~n~i~r ~:~~~~ ~0n a~:~d2~~ g~~rm~~ ~~n~~~K:~~!~Ys~~~~dS~~ ~~a~~~~·~ed~in;li~n~~rnf~;~h~~ l!l
j[~

0
·.r:l~. ,· ' fair
~a:e!~e~~~~~'so:;~;!nna~e~g
asa~~ ~~:;v~e! s~~:c~:~t~~:s~ :h~:cf~:h:~~ ~~~:: b:~t fo~~~e ~~~;::~a!~ to~ . !,. : ' ,~.;:!
boanj committee to head the event. members only on the final day of the made bX May 1 after which time the

c

The board also planned to improve
.., the parking areas on the fairgrounds. It
;;;; will lease five dusk to dawn lamps for

· &gt;.:,[_:,

[_[_l.:.

....
:;;;

·:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::!8%:!:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::;:;~:;::-~:::;:;:;:;;::;;;:;:;::=&amp;:::::i8~::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::~:::::-;~:&amp;:::::::::::~:;:

Opinion Wanted on Boundaries
The Ohio Attorney General
will be asked for an opinion to
. help determine the boundary .
lines between Meigs Local and
Eastern Local School Districts.
The Meigs County Board of
Education meeting · with
several parents interested in
the proble'Jb has been ~able
to reach "'i' decision in the
matter.
Last autumn it was found
that students, living in the
Eastern District actually,
through error, were attending
classes in the Meigs District.
The county board and the
Meigs and Eastern Local

Bosrds reviewed the matter at
length, finally deciding that the
children of families living in
the Eastern area but going to
Meigs Local Schools could
continue to' attend Meigs Local
Schools for the duration of their
school careers .
However, the agreement
specified that children of new
families
moving
into
properties in question were to
attend Eastern Local Schools
in Ill~ future.
The Meigs Local District
Board of Education notified
parents of' the students that,
under the law, they would have

to pay tuition if their children
wished to continue attending
classes in the Meigs District,
effective next fall when the
new school year begins.
It was brought last night that
children in the area in question
have been attending schools in
the Meigs District lor approximately 25 years without
paying tuition .
William Wiite,' one of the
parents present, asked the
board if it had made a decision
Ill transfer the territvry in
question to th'e Meigs Local
District. Virgil Atkins,
president, said that the matter

had been discussed. ·
Witte said he did not believe
anyone can prove where the
boundaries are. The problem
arose last October and, "We've
failed to get any action, and we
need a decision on the matter,"
Witte said .
,
Ernest Cullums said there is
no proof where the boundaries
lie. Robert Bowen, county
superintendent, disclosed the
boundaries were set in 1936 but
that no records have been
found beyond 1942.
Witte submitted
map
showing boundaries that in·
(Contin ued on page 10)

a

'

EXHIBITS JUDGED- Lovely Mrs. Donna Chadwell, a teacher at Eastern High School.
judged the cultural arts display Tuesday night at the Chester Elementao·y SchooL Ab~ve, Mrs .
Chadwell selectS tli"ewinning entries in charcoal drawings by seventh aQd eightll graders. MoS1
of the entries were done by students of Mrs. Chadwell who attended weekly art classes al tile
school during early evenings. There are 41 Chester area children enrolled in the classes wh ir·J,
started five weeks agoalidso far have included drawing, shading, charcoal and pastels. W"i''"
colors will he studied in the final section this year. The Chest.er PTA sponsm·ed the cultural a1·1.'
display'. Wiming entries will be ·Sent· tv Riverview Elementary' Sehoul' for a higio&lt;•r IPvl'i or
judging Thlll'lday nl&amp;hl.

.

enable the board to carry out the
financial responsibility involved, it will

'

...

·~'~\

judging. It was also decided to
eliminate the 4-H Horsemanship Class

&lt;

•

~

adopted.
Area merchants who distribute

·

-

\

I.
_,t,I_,i.,

'• .

PAINTERS' AND
CARPENTERS' BIB

~

:~~~~:
~ ;~~;~!r~er~:~~~~~~n~~~t~~~ cla~:i;ny~~~ y::r;n~r~s~~h~il be $1~~~::e~i:!7~~ ;;e~~::~~% :t
"Paul Bunyon" contest have been required to participate in conformation · cents. It also was decided that to better ,

~. ,;

..

MIDD_LEPORT, OHIO

Thieu, in a nationwide radio
and television speech that
emphasized the gravity of the
situation, wa"ed that North
Vietnamese might send in its
air force for the first time and
appealed to the United States
for massive firepower to -stem
the threat.
A third major offensive by
the Communists was expected
at any time in the Central
Highlands 200 miles north of
Saigon, and intelligence
reports earlier this week said
the North Vietnamese were
bringing in tanks and armored
vehicles from Laos an'd
Cambodia .
The area around An Loc, the
capital of Binh Long Province,
has long been a Viet Cong
strongho ld . But Thieu had
expected the new o!!l:psive
!Continued on page '10) .

McCOY VOTED NO
In a report on the acceptance
ol bus bids by the E'astern
Local School District recently,
published in Tuesday's Daily
Sentinel. John Riebel, district
superintendent, said today he
reported erroneously that
board member I. 0. McCoy had
abstained from voting. Ac·
tually, Riebel said, McCoy
voted against awarding the
contract for the chassis on the
two buses to the R. H. Rawlings
and Sons Co. The other four
members voted in favor of the
Rawlings Company:

Now in tailored sizes
t~. fit any height,
any build .• ~

PAY BY CHECK

is more important than
prolinging the deba te," 5Peck
said. "It's still a very good bill .
Sen. R2lph S. Regula, R-!'lava rre, chairman of the Senate
Environmental Affairs
Committee and an original
proponent of the stronger
House version, termed the
Senate measure · " mofe
rational" than(the House bill.
"This is going to result in
high quality reclamation in
Ohio he said. "It's going to
make a giant stride in
reclaiming the land for a useful
purpose. It will become model

•

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 5 1972

oc

D

TOUGH BUT TRIM!

IT'S EASIER ..• SAFER ... TO .

..•

.:~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:.~:;:~~~::--:~:::~:~~=~~::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;::::::::~:!:!:!:!:~:!:!:!;!:!:!:!::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~::!:::::::;:-~~
~~
\,,.. .. .
.
::)

CONDEM

}-

,

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XXIV NO. 251

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

DON'T CARRY LARGE
SUMS OF MONEY

distance below Long Bottom.
Daniel Boone, who one winter was captured by the
Shawnees outside his Kentucky fort, and held captive near
Chillicothe, may have been taken north by this route
·although it is believed to tave been farther east. Boone,
because ~e was so respected by the Shawnees as a hunter and
fighter was permitted some freedom' in captivity. He succeeded in convincing his captors he intended to "turn Jn.
dian," thus lulled them into carelessness, and one night
escaped. He walked, by night, all the way back to his settlement in Kentucky, again perhaps by this route.

COJ,UMBUS (UP! )
some large ones- will have to
Oakley Collins, a state senator shut down because of this
and a strip mine operator, was legislation," he said.
the man caught in the middle of
Ni colozakes described Iris
Senate debate over -a ::.tr0ne firm as a "mediwn-sized _com~
slrip mine control bill .
pany," but said the bill would
And Tuesday , after the not put him out of business.
Senate passed the measure 30.
"However it's going to cost
o, the man in the middle sai~me S0'1)e good money," he
already had felt the pinch . · said. "!paid a l~t of money for
"There's no way we can a coal reserve in Belmont
comply with this bill," said County I was going to mine, but
Collins; R-lronton, referring to I'm going to have to abandon it
his Collins Mining Co. "We're now ."
not going w renew our license
Nicolozakes said provisions
when it expires.
ol the legislation calling for re"l was going to get out two claiming highwalls would force
years ago, and I guess I should his company to give up those
have," said Collins , who did not plans.
vote on the proposal that imRep. Sam Speck, R-New
poses stiff reclamation re- Concord, sponsor of the
quirements on miners.
stronger House measure, .led
Colli ns said he did not know the praise for the Senate achow many mines would close .lion.
because of the legislation, but
"This means Ohio probably
predicted "it will be lots of will have the best reclamation
them ."
law in the country/' Speck
Marietta Coal Co. President said.
George Nicolozakes of CamHe predicted qui ck and unabridge watched the Senate nimous approval of Senate
proceedings and echoed amendments in the House and
Collins' complaints.
said he would not fight to
, All Sizes Affected
restore Senate changes that
" I would say some mines in "slightly weakened" the bill.
OhiO - small ones and even
"At this point, quick passage

~

,.

l:lyde Hysell, deceased; Thelma Grueser; second row, from ,the left,
GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY - TI1e Class of 1922 will be observing its
Christine Johnson Guthrie, Allen Chase, Elmora Stark Boice, Rollin Price,
golden annivers;ory when the annual Pomeroy High School Alumni
Alice Scott Phillips, Thomas Young, Elizabeth Clifton Rossiter, Edison
Association reunion is held May 27. Six of the class of 36 mernhers are ·
Hobstetter, Edna Russ Crumbley, Earl Clark; Edith Edwards, deceased;
deceased. l.jany of the class se ttled In th e Big B'end area and today arc
Harold Brya,n; back row, from the left, Ruth Williams Ebersliach, Ger~·ude
prominent. Speci 1events, besides the traditional alumni dinner, are being
Smith Mitchell, Maria Skinner Foster, Winsor Stivers, deceased; Clyda Fish
tentatively conside
io
· tur
·their caps and gow~s 50
•
Manley, Horton Brown, Ruth Slagel Walton, Ferris Smith, deceased;
years ago are : front, 1tor, Mary Bartels H s, B rnice Arnold Evans, Ada
Millicent Roush Hayn1an, Howard Ebersbach, Helen Bletner, Irving Karr,
Ki m.! Smith, Virdnia Rohinsun Roush .
· I.en nra Garnpbell, In•ne
Agnes Harris.
ti4.:11WI:U'l.Z'I\oi.lh.1t:r Dululi, AQrou Zahl,
Lcllel', ~crcust.:d ;

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