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.. '

•

1-'l'he Daily Seltinel;Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., ApriiiO, 1972 ,

Apollo 16 Mission CountdQWn Beginning Today
•
record 73 hours on tbe lunar to rest and catch up on any because thl!)' improve chances
that Apollo 16 will be launched
' surface. They plan three lagging work .
,
The countdown starts today for
seven-hour outings to explore
Launch director -Walter J. 00 lime. The astronauts musl
the launch of Apo0o 16 Sunday
two volcanic rock formations Kapryan said" the countdo:jin gef off by 4:43 p.m. Sunday or
on a keystone mission to land in
which appear representative.of rest periods are Important walt a month.
the Wlexplored lunar highlands
much of the mountainous
and search crater rims and
highlands.
.
, - ·
:
mountain slopes for clues to the
· Young and Duke will range ,
over a slx-inile long stretch_of
.
wrrain to explore the base ,of
.
.
Slone Mountain south of their
·
landing site and a deep, ragged
crater to the north. Tl(ey hope
By DICK WEST
Why does Ms. Brown think we men kept the lid of the forbidden box, so, to speak.
to bring back 195 pounds of ·
WASHINGTON (UP! 1 - For a while our beautiful bodies covered when women Let free into the publlshing world the
rock and soil samples which
there, everything was coming up lady's started dU&gt;roblng in strip jointa, giJol!o halls penilclous· plague of male nudity,
scienmts hope will tell how the
·
slippers for the women's lib movement. and topless shoeshine parlors?
Soon any periodical that bopes to retain.
lunar highlands fit into the
And why does she think male editors its female subsCribers will have to ctu.play
Sexist barriers were falling right and left
moon's early history.
and the longsought equal rights amend- refrained from printing double-page an elq)anse of masculine epidermis In its
The countdown for the start
photographs of naked actors stretched out centerfold.
:=-~::::=--~:::=x:::c::::oomm:::m=::::::::.:::: of the 12-day expedition inCOLUMBUS (UPI) -Gov. John J. Gilligan today signed
the lighter side
in Playboyish poses?
Ub II For Ubldo
clude~ 104 hours and 30 minutes
what
he called one of the strongest strip mine control bills in the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
We did It for a very good reason -the
Male
nudes
in
Reader's
Digest.
Male
of
scheduled
launch
prepara·
ment finally was cleared for ratification.
nation and ~ld It would be used "as a tool to put an end to the
Ohio Extended Outlook nudes in ~Iter Homes &amp; Gardens. Male
lions and 43 hours and 54 senseless apd greedy destruction of ·huge portions of our state."
Then Cosmopolitan magazine had to go protection of womanhood.
Wednesday lbrough Friday. minutes of "hold" time to give
We knew that if the male anatomy were nudes in U.S. News &amp; World Report. The
and spoillt all by doing something stupid,
Gilllgan signed the bill at 9:34a.m. and an emergency clause
Mild Wednesday and engineers and technicians time
put on pubUc display, women would lose mind boggles.
;
like featuring a male nude in the cenmade
II effective iqunedlately, meaning new mining Opel"allons
Thursday, lumlng a little
their heads and go completely gaga.
It may be argued that in 10 years or so
terfold of this month's Issue.
will have to comply with the regulations at once.
cooler with a chance of
women will retain control of their
With that blurider, Helen Gurley Brown, Frees Penilclous Plaque
"The signing today of this truly historic legislation marks a
showers Friday, Highs
The time spent in campaigning for emotions and will be able to view a
the magazine's editor, lost all the ground
·major victory for the people of Ohio," Gilllglll! said.
Wednesday and Thursday In
equality would be squandered In photograph of the male body without
that feminists had gained in her book ''Sex
the upper 5Gs ill the north to
awestruck adoration of the masculine lllpplng.
and the Single Girl."
(Continued from Page 1)
"For 30years, there has been profitably."
lhe lower 70s In the south
physique.
At which point they will be temHistory likely wiD record Ms. Brown as
Natural Resources Depart..
sur!ace-to...bmissiles
~AMs)
talk
of putting an end to the
And so, to avoid undennining the peramentally qualified to resume their
dropping to the 5Gs In the
the Pandora of women's lib -the overly
ment
omclala charged With
liberation movement, we retained at least quest for equal opportunity in business,
north and upper 50s and in North Vietnam. One of the destruction of vast areas of our
curious female who released the forces
some semblance of vesture when in front politics, sports, warfare and other malelower 60s In lbe south planes on a mission over South state by careless strip mining regulating strip mining said
that caused the movement to falter.
of the cameras or frequenting public dominated fields of endeavor.
Friday, Lows Wednesday VIetnam was hit by a SAM Jl'actlces," Gilligan continued. they would need three months
Womanhood Proteeted
places.
·
and Thursday In lbe upper Sunday, but landed safely "Today, finally, we have to hire new inspectors and oth·
Maybe so and maybe no. Meanwhile, the
erwlse gear up for ImplementBut now Ms. Brown has done it. Opened "lib" in women's lib stands for libido.
30s and 40s dropping ~o the without Injury to its six reached that goal."
crewmen.
It
was
the
first
time
The
governor
prud
the
ing
the law.
30s and lower 48s Friday.
a BS2 has been damaged by members of the General Asenemy fire.
sembly for standing up against Wilbert Richmond
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
The U.S. Navy said that , what he called "the strongest
Communist shore batte~ies ll'essure ever exerted in these
GO~~t~if1H
opened up on four Amencan halls or in any other legisla- Died on Saturday
THE WIND
warships shelling the DMZ and lure."
Gaherin told newsmen: "I'm
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - owners, went into closed
RUTLAND - Wilbert C.
(Continued
from
Page
11
Clark Gable
hit two of them. The destroyer
Gilligiln said the legislature Richmond, 59, Rutland, Rt. 1,
With President Nixon keeping se~ion at the Labor Depart- always hopeful for a settleVivien Leigh
tertainment were donated . Jolm R. Craig suffered "hull withstood pressures from the died Saturday at University
close taba, representatives of ment with J. Curtis Co Wits, ment."
Admission : ·
Candystripers
of Veterans and material damage" and the coal induslry to water down the Hospital, Columbus. Mr. RichCounts called both sides
the baseball players and the director of the · Federal
$1.50 Adullt
$1.00 Children
Memorial
Hospital,
the State destroyer Rowan received only JI'Ovislons of the bill.
SHOW STAA'T57 P.M.
club owners met todsy with the Mediation and Conciliation together late Saturday after
"This bUI should serve as a mond was born Jan. 7, 1913, the
government's chief mediator Service.
receiving a call from Nixon, a Highway Auxiliary Patrol; light shrapnel. .The Navy did
son of the late Mr, and Mrs.
With Counts presiding, the longtime sports fan, who was Legionnaires of Pomeroy's not report any injuries, but model for other states," ssld Charles Richmond, He was
amid fresh hope for settlement
Webster Post, ladies said the two destroyers Gilligan. "It 1s a bill that joins .a.lso preceded in death by a
of the 11klay strike that has session got started :ID minutes quoted by Counts as saying "he Dr
two purposes - to protect the
snarled up the opening of the ahead of time as MU!er and was very much interested In uxllia members, school returned the fire.
Last
Thursday
Communist
envirorunent
and to .permit an half-brother and a half-6ister.
ooks
and
m
ny
others
helped.
Gaherin
flew
together
from
1972 season.
getting the season started.''
Surviving are his wife, Ida
Several
urch groups shore fire hlt another U.S. Important Industry to operate May Barnhart Riclunond; five
Marvin Miller, executive New York to Washington. They
director of the ~aseball were in a relaxed mood and
Gaherin Sunday first asked donated the fo for more than destroyer, the Uoyd Thomas,
sons, Robert L., and Ernest R.,
. served. ~a u sing light damage and
Players Association, and John both said they did not an- for a postponement of the talks 100 ' dinners
Middleport; Darrell G., U. S.
Gaherln, representing the ticipate any lengthy bargain- with the mediator because of Preparations had been made wounding three Sailors.
A total of eight destroyers Velerllllll Memorial Hospilal Ariny, Gennany, and Larry,
r,;---~~
ing session.
"momentum" in private talks for 1,100 dinners.
U, S. Air Force, Kansas; one
28
(HW!)
Jim Lohse, son of Mr. and and the cruiser Oklahoma City · SATURDAY ADMISSIONS daughter, Mrs. John (~r~nds) ·
Miller conunented : "Each with Miller, then reversed
lime we meet we move an himself two hours later without Mrs. Harold Lohse , Pomeroy, Sunday blasted Communist - Thomas Fitch, Portland; Morbltzers, Grove City; a half·
a Columbus radio per- beach positions in and to the Lillian Duffy, Syracuse; LaiTy brother, Howard, Middleport,
inch."
explanation.
sonality, had been on the north and south of the DMZ, Jacobs, Pomeroy; Charles
Rt. I; a half-11ister," Mrs. Ora
agenda to emcee Sunday's triggering eight secondary ex- Wildermuth, Pomeroy; Nell
entertainment but became ill plosions, two fires and silen- Klein, Proctorville; Robert Ully, Nltz, W. Va., and &lt;12
cing three North Vietnamese Ohlinger, Rutland; Timothy grandchil!jren.
SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UPI) and was unable to appear.
Funeral services will be
A tall, husky man inadThe lobby and halls near the artillery batteries, spokesmen Ohlinger, Rutland; Charles
'fl!esday
~t ! p.m. at Rawlinga
said.
Ohlinger, Rutland; Catherine
vertently walked Into the arms
COLUM~US (UPI)-The the truslees, and yes eV~&gt;n the entrance of the school were
Coats Funeral Home with the
In the ground lighting, Roach, Middleport.
of FBI agents Sunday night Ohio Slate University stndent AII·American City Itself."
filled with dU.plays. These
Communist
troops
who
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Rev. Dewbell officiating.
after he allegedly attempted to newspaper, The Lantern, today
The Undergraduate Student included a variety of work by
Burial will be In Miles
hijack a Pacutc Southwest editorially endorsed the OSU Government today &amp;rulOWlced art students of Mrs. Margaret overran two artillery bases - Richard Warner, Larry
Airlines Boeing 7'll following a board of tnMees' selection of students would be given a Ella Lewis, a dlsptay -by Jack protecting Da Nang blew up a Jones, Barbara James, Ger- Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home any lime.
formula nearly identical to one Uarold L. Enaraon as the chance to "accept or reject" Slavin, art instructor at !ridge during the night on trude Drake, Sam Eblin, Joan
Enarson in a campus-wide ref- Wahama High School; posters Highway 1, the country's north- McLain, ~ertha Robinson,
used by a hijacker two days school's new Jl'esident.
"The board of trustees has erendwn.
earlier.
made by grade school children si&gt;uth artery, five miles from Eber Pickens, Jr ., Bryan
LOCAL TEMPS
11
Findley.
Mo1l people would gladly P'iY
Jeffrey Yapalater, USG vice which were winners in their the city.
FBI agents subdued the appointed a new university
Temperature
in downtown
The Conununists also maintheir to••• with o •mlle.,.bul'tht would-be hijacker at Lind- ll'esident," the editorial said, president, said although he was respective schools and placed
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS - Pomeroy Mondsy at 11 a.m.
vovernment lnalsh on ccash."
bergh International Airpor.t "and as expected he Is not sure Enarson would be accept- for public inspection Sunday, tained thetr momentum of Theodore Croy, Chester; was M degrees, Wider cloudy
here after he startled black, be Is not a woman, he Is ed, he thought the referendum the stamp collection of Mrs. attacks elsewhere throughout Victor Diehl, Middleport; sides.
Don't tax yourself running
authorities by agreeing to not yoWJg and be Is not the · was "basically an exercise in Norman Wayland of Mid- the COWltry, shelling bases in Harry Brinker, Middleport;
around looking for bargains
Student self-((etermlnatlon and student dleport, and ceramic works the Central Highlands, raiding NondU. Fields, New Haven;
leave the aircralt to pick up Undergraduate
at every store for hours on
end when you can find all of himself maps and and weather Government referendum identity."
from the shops aild students of militia posts throughout the Sussn Tracy, Pomeroy; Edna
LODGE TO MEET
your
BUILDING information he had demanded nominee.
J
Kee and Dee Evans at Brad- Mekong Delta south of Saigon, Stiles, Pomeroy; Wanda
White
Rose Lodge will meet
MATER lAL needs under one for a fllght toward Miami.
"But nevertheless we feel the
Pleasant Valley Hoapital
bury and Mrs . Frances and keeping up pressure on Findling, Reedsville.
Wednesday
at 1:30 p.m. at the
roof at THE POMEROY
SoullvVl'etnamese troops detrustees' appoinlment of
SUNDAY
DISCHARGES
Names
of
patients
admitted
.Hewetson
and
her
daughter,
"He
doesn't
appear
to
be
the
CEMENT BLOCK COMfending tbe provincial capital Archie Donohew, Dixie Clark, Legion HaU in Mld.rt.
PANY, the home of the smartest hijacker l'v~ heard Harold Enarson Is a good one," have been discontinued for Mrs. Marvin Spencer.
the newiJilllper said.
publication by hospital
Soft drinks contributed by of An Loc, only 60 miles north, William Proffltt, Robin
of," one official said.
"FRIENDLY ONES" .
Q-What amendment to
The editorial said Enarson, authorities.
Ohlinger, Charles Ohlinger, the U.S. Constitution is
the R. C. Bottling Co. were of Saigon.
The FBI Identified him as
UPI correspondent Kim Wll- Jr., Timothy Ohlinger, Clara named in honor of a wom.
Stanley Harlan Speck, 31, of while president of Cleveland
Discharges : Eadker Russell, distributed and the Meigs Band
San Francisco. Pollee there State University, exhibited Leon; LU&gt;a Roush, Letart; Boosters operated a popcorn lenson reported from Da Nang Davidson, Helen Marie Mills, an?
A-Amendment 19, giving
Litton,
Point sales booth with all proceeds that Gen. Lam told newsmen Atlanta Cook, Barbara Baer,
said a man by that name was "quallties ,, which should both Jennifer
the ri~ht to vote. The
women
his
troops
had
stopped
the
Edward Adams, Alma Frazier, Amendment
on two years probation for a endear him to the trustees and Pleasant; Linda Hall, Leon; going to the fund drive. On
IS popularly
Tho Dept. Store of Building disorderly conduct conviction make him acceptable to stu- Mrs. Keith Henry, Apple display also were the winners northern invasion with two Maggie G!-lmore, Mary Gilkey,
known
as
the
Susan B. AnSince 1915 .
dents."
in January .
Grove; Earl Conrad, Jam~ of the recent cultural arts major victories Saturday and Marion Michael.
thony Amendment.
While noting "It Is going to Maynard, Trudy Bonecutter, judging at Reedsville which Sund!t '
take a bit of mental adjusting Barbara
Lucas,
Point are moving into dffitrict and
... to get used to a new presi- Pleasant; James Williams, state competition.
dent," the newspaper said, Southside; Robin Daniels,
Grade school children whose
"We are optlmlstlc in the case Vinton; Mrs. Kirby A. Smith, posters were selected as the
'
of Enarson versus tbe students, Point Pleasant; Welby Long, best in their classes were
Apple Grove; Mrs. Raymond awarded certificates. The
Rife, Gallipolis; ' Carol posters carried out the Cancer
&amp;necutter, Henderson; Mrs. Crusade theme. Winners,
George Green, Hartford; Mrs. whose works were displayed
Mose Duncan, Galllpolis Sunday, were:
Ferry; Charles Stsats, Point
Harrisonvilie - Rod Hill,
Pleasant; Violet Holly, Carl Gheen, Jr., Mark Cline,
SAME DAY
Glenwood; Mu. Charles Sheila Bing, Rodney King,
SERVIC:.E
Schultz, Point Pleasant; Mrs. Darrell Young, Donald ArIll At 9- 0ut At 5
Gleen Carter, Winchester, 0.; .mentrout,. Anita Lee, Randy
Use OUr FrH PorklnA Lot
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Keyser, Kennedy, Anita Lewis.
Point Pleasant; Mrs. William .. Bradbury - Ricky Smith,
MUCH MORE THAN A SLOGA~!
· Underwood, Po!nt Pleasant; Roy Bareswilt, Marianne
Mrs. Paul Gl&lt;Wer; MIIton,•and Welsh, Joe Watkins, Kevin
2!6 E. 2nd: Pomoroy
The words mean what they
F;dwards, Trina Gibbs.
,..,.,.,,. Jay Stone, Leon.
. say. ··Ful l" means com plete.
Rutland - Kevin Gibbs,
''Service" means the best in
Tony Kennedy, Ray Mowery,
modern facilit ies and perMark Michael, Larry Tucker,
sonnel to meet you r every
Kevin Ferrell.
banking requirement.
Salisbury - Becky Phlllips,
Mike Slater, Harry Graham,
Kelly Hawk, .Camilla Swindell,
IT'S A WAY OF FINANCIAL LIFE!
Nancy Jean Welsh, Linda
'wnliains, Angela Sinclair,
Carla Whaley, Rhonda Reuter,
Jan Burson, Fred Ney and
NEW SHIPMENT!
Donal Icenhower,
Pomeroy - Raymond Andrews, Doug Cleland, Wesley
; .
Perkins,
Linda
Rosenbaum,
'·
Jamie Sisson, Cindy ThornpSJ!Il, ·Debbie Woodyard, Lori
'Rupe, Kathy Hess, Jayne Lee
Deluxe and Standard Styles - 66 inch with double bowl and double
lHoeflich, Doug · Browning,
d_rain, 54 i.nch single bowl and double drain, 42 Jnch ·sl'ngle bowl.
Cynthia McKinney, Kenny
smgle dram on right or left. ·
,
·
Klein,
Member Federal Reserve System
Salem Center - Paul Rupe,
SHOP WEEKDAYS9:30to5P.M.
011 Friday• Oar Drive-In WIDdow I•
'James ·White, Terry Walker,
OPEN FRIDAY AND SATURDAY9:30to 9 P.M.
()pea t a.m. to 7p.m., (Contlnaoaoly ).
Joe Garnes, Patty Peytori,
July Halllday, Teresa Brogan,
fzo,010 Mulmum !Diul'llnce
- Barbara Peyton, Paul David
Fer l]'.ach Depoollor
Matson, Sharon ShUltz, Shirley
MIDDLEPOfU, 0.
Smith, Mike McGuire, Lanny
Longstreth, Patty Dyer.
..
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI)-

moon 's early hu.tory .
The 10ng series of launch
Jl'eparations was set to begin
at 8:30a.m. EST and lead to a
12:54 p.m. blastoff Sunday for
veteran astronaut Jolm W.
Young, 41, and space newcom-

ers Thomas K. Mattingly and
O!arles M. Duke, both 36.
The three pilots took most of
&amp;mday off and relaxed in their
quarters at the Kennedy Space
Center. All three also reviewed
filghi plans and Duke took up a

sleek while T38 jet trainer with
backup Conunander Fred W,
Halse.
The training I'I!S\lllled today
with the schedule calling for
Young and Duke to rehearse
their moon landing in a lunar

How Women Are to Lose their Heads

module simulator with Mattingly working out alone in a
command ship trainer.
Young and Duke are scheduled to land on a hununocky
mowrtainplateauin _thecentral
lunar highlands at 3:41 p.m.
April 20 while Mattingly maps
the moon for six days in lun'ar
orbit.
"We kind of think of it as sort
of landing in the top of the
Andes mountains," said
Young, who came within 10
milps of the moon during the
Apollo 10 orbital flight three
years ago.
He and Duke will, spend a

Landmark
L aw
. Si~ed

's

ezgs
The vocational agricultural
program at Meigs High School
Will remain for one year at
least, it was determined by the
Meigs Local Board of
Education Monday night.
The Vo-Ag program whiCh
has been under fire and
dU.cussed at several meetings,
·w1ll ' be upgraded, iU; · scope
broadened, and private and
public sources will be sought to
• offer better service guidance.

maintained that the program improve the Vo-Ag progra m,
contributed a significant part Carsey suggested that Agriof the economy of Meigs Business b,e added to the
County.·
present Vo-Ag curriculum.
Carsey and Blakeslee met
" Our organization £r om
with the board to back up their Col umbus south is vitally inletters in person.
terested in the program ,"
Carsey observed that the Vo- ·Carsey said. .
Blakeslee pointed out that
Ag program is vital to Meigs
County. He said he could not since 1940, Agriculture has
help but feel that the type of been becoming more a partprogram offered in the past is time occupation, but actually
"part of the problem. " To agriculture production ha s

President Frank W. Porter
no ted that the board ,
dissatisfied with · the program
in the past, earlier had directed
Superintendent George
Hargraves ·to discontinue.. it.
Howevet, letters from Jack
Carsey of the local Farm .
Bureau ·and C. E. ~lakeslee,
Meigs County Extension
Agent, urging the tloard to
continue the program have
been re ceived . The letters

-

oy

in creased .

Asked how the new Meigs
Mine will affect local farm ing
(because much ofthe land will
be taken for the mine), Blakeslee pointed out the land actually will be used more exte nsiv ely in th e fi eld of
recrea tional development.
Blakeslee detected a sizeable

In other business, the board
appointed Terry Ohlinger as
offered to assist in the program full- time assistant high school
to whatever extend the ex- princi pal for a two-year period .

Also mee ting with the board
were Ed Kennedy, chairman of

the Meigs County Mental
Ret.irdation Board, and the
Rev. Wilbur Perrin.
Kennedy reported that at
present there are . two "classes
at Butland Elementary School.
It is hoped that by '72-'73
another class will be added;
and in '7:!-'14 possibly a presc hool class, or workshop.
Kennedy as~ed the board for

•

at y

The first glass eyes for live
persons were made in Venice
in 1579.

made lo improve conditions.

increase, in agri-business. He

•

Now You Know

tension servict!' will allow.
Everett. Holcomb, Vo-Ag
instructor, said tha t not until
last year did the program have
suitable teaching facilities and
equipment.' Board members'
suggested that closer supervision or the progra m will be

Weather

enttne

Partial clearing tonight,
chance of showers ex treme
south . Lows in the upper 30s to
mid 40s. Wednesday cloudy,
showers likely . Highs in the
mid 60s to the low 70s south.

Devoted To The lnteres~ Of The Meigs-Mas~n Area

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

VOL XXIV NO. 255

TlfESDAY, APRIL 11, 1972

permission to use, the Rutland
High School next sc hool year.
The Mental Retardation Board
wouid bear the e!penses of
renovating the building,
Kennedy said.
Porter pointed out that
board could. not guarantee a
length of stay at the building
since the buildings in the
district may have to he used to
serve the inc rease in
rCon tinued on Page SI

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992-2156

Missiles

MEIGS tHEATRE

Baseball Issue in Doubt

One Not Very
Smart Hijacker

Crusade

Lantern Likes Enarson

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

S.HIRt
FINISHING

t\
..,

Now On Sale In Our Annex
In The Middle Block

RobinSon's aeane.s

HURRY TO BAK·ER'S

The Farmers Bank·
and Savings Co.

YOUNGSTOWN KITCHENS
CABINET SINKS

POMEROY, OHIO

IT'S A BIG ONE

BAKER FURNITURE

ELBERFELDS -IN POMEROY

NUTRITION EXPERIMENT FEATURED - Brett Jones, left, and Bill Kautz, Pomeroy
Elementary School fifth graders, using guinea pigs for their experiment on the balanced diet
vs. the unbalanced diet in animal feeding. Their blue ribbon exhibit was one of several hundred
displayed at the science fair held. Monday night at the Pomeroy PTA meeting. Mrs . Victor
Hysell, fifth grade teacher, was general chairman of the fair .

AN ARCH BRIDGE MADE by Jeff Couch, a ;Qlcano by
Couch, Mark Mitch, and Kevin McLaughlin, sixth graders,
were among the many exhibits at the science fair which
proved popular with the students.

Science Fair Held

A science fair - the first for
th e Pomeroy Elementary
School - culminating weeks of
work on special projects was
staged Monday night at the
Pomeroy PTA meeting.
Mrs. Mary Hysell, fifth
grade teacher, was chairman
~ United Press International
for the fair which included
COLUMBUS - CONTRACTS TOTALING MORE than $1 entries fr om every grade level.
million in state assistsnce to round out instructional television Robert Hamm and Mrs . Rita
coverage for Ohio's elementary and secondary students were
approved Monday by the stste Board of Education .
State Superintendent of Public Instruction Martin W. Essex
said education·television was once considered a novelty, but now
CHILDS ILL
"has truly become a workhorse in the schools." Four new
Bill Childs of the Downingstations, in Cambridge, Lima - &amp;wling Green, Portsmouth and
Childs Insurance Agency,
Salem, are scheduled to begin operation this fall . The state's
Middleport, and manager of
newest station, WOET-TV at Dayton will begin broadcasting
the new Meigs Inn was taken
educational lessons A!l'il ~ .
·
to Holzer Hospital Sunday
eveniug after suffering from
WASHINGTON - THE SENATE INVESTIGATION into
severe chest peins.
Cbllds was placed In the
Richard G. Kleindienst 's fitness to become attorney general
Intensive care unit for obturned away from liT today and focused on charges of possible
servation.
illicit campaign contributions to President Nixon's 1968 election,
The Senate Judiciary Committee called Henry Peterson,
assistant attorney general in charge of the criminal division to
testify.
Ule magazine publls)led claims that Kleindienst Improperly
cleared U.S. Attorney Harry Steward of San Diego, Calif., of any
wrongdoing in ending an investigation of the campaign contributions. Peterson reportedly wrote the report on which
Kleindienst based hU. decision.

_,.,.. '}.
pv;·..-"
.
,
.
· ews:.1~ Briefs
..,..

Pupils Escape
In Collision
Of Bus, Wagon

Noll!' of the 47 passengers
aboard a H&amp;llllan 'l'race School
bus was injured Monday in a
bus...tation wagon accident at
3:30p.m. at the junction of Rts.
553 and 218.
According to the GalliaMeigs Post Slate Highway
Patrol the bus operated by
Howard R. Fulks, 57, Crown
City, collided with the station
wagon driven by. .Robert H.
Terry, 30, Thunnan. Fulks was
COLUMBUS - .\N OHIO PENITENTIARY inmate was cited to Municipal Court for
stabbed to death Monday night in the dining fD!lm area, the Improper turn at an Insecond prisoner killed in a mour period, Warden Harold tersection.
There
was
Cardwell said today.
moderate darnal!e to the car.
A deer was killed in an acCardwell identifil!d the victim as Michael Mc;_Cargo, 26, sent
cident
at 4 p.m. on Rt. 33, one
to the penitentiaey fi·om Cuyahoga County in 1969 after being ·
and
seven
tenths miles north of
convicted o( second degree murder.
. , Rt. 7 in Meigs County. Officers
WASHINGTON -GALOPLAZA, SECRETARY GENERAL said the animal ran into the
of the \)rganization of AmeriCl!n States (OAS), today accused path of a car operated by
President Nixon of disrupting relations among the nations of the Norma J, Baxte.r, 51, Pom"\'OYWelltem HemU&gt;phere by pursuing an ·ill-defined policy toward There was minor damage to
her car.
Lalin America.
'
A minOr mlllbap occurred at
Plaza Is a fonner president of Ecuador. His attack came in 6:30p.m. on Rt, 7, one and two
the opening session of a llklay OAS General ·Assembly which tenths miles lOUth of Galllpolls
drew foreign ministers from throughout the hemlaphere to where an auto driven by David
diBcUSB auch lsaues as dlsarmamerit, inter-Ali!erlcan relations Adkins filRled a stooe into the
and- poasibly- I'IT's alleged involv!lffient in ChUe's politics. windshield on a car operated
by Robert D. Walter, 27,
'Galllpom.
'
PARIS - NORTH VIETNAM SAID today that if American
ground troops were ordered into the South Vietnamese fighting
again the move would :meet with determined resistance by
Hanoi. Nguyen Minh Vy, Hanoi's deputy peace negotiator, told a
news conference, "If U. S. ground troops are again engaged in
fighting it will be a new step in American aggression and we are
,
detennined to crush it."
Vy ·.called on the Nixon administration to reopen the
suspended Paris peace conferenc~ in spite of the fighting and U.
S. bombing. It was, the fifth Communist demand to reopen the
talks.
-

SUPPORTS LEVY
The southern Athletic
Boosters Assn.· has gone on
recOrd In suppoct of the new
nve mill IIC~oollevy to be voted
on in the May 2 primary·

....

IN HOSPITAL AGAIN
Larry Morrison, assistant
superintendiml of Meigs Local
District, is again a patient at
University Hospital, Columbus. His room number U. 1061.

Slavin Monday afternoon
judged all exhibits on their
indivi~ual worth, not on a
competitive basis.
Displays were wide-ranged
in all three categories of the
fair: of the (1) Life, which took
in animals, plants, the human
body, micro organisms, and
conservation; (2) Earth, which
included astronomy,

ASKELETON MADE of dough plaster by the fifth grade students of Mrs. Victor Hysell
was perhaps the most outstanding exhibit of the science fair . DU.playing the skeleton which
they made with the assU.tance of an Ohio University student teacher, are from the left, Mark
Casto, Karen Smith, Brett Jones, Tammy Knittel, Robert Pickett, Tony Van Meter, and Keith
Musser. It received li'blue ribbon from Judges Mrs. Rita Slaven and Robert Hamm.

meteorology, earth history and
oceanography , and (3)
Physical, on energy, matter,
heat, light, sound, mage,lectricity, machines , and
rockets-satellites.
Each student entering a
project was awarded a green

Sisson (two ), John Harper,
Linda Reedy, Kim Seth, Lisa
Thomas, Dari Thomas, Ron
Collums, Peggy. Girolami, Joy
Majors, · Deborah Woodyard,
Becky Long, Lori Rupe, Susan
Wright, Tammy Knittel, Karen
Smith, Brett Jones (two), Tony
''participants' ribbon.''
Van Meter, Pam Stobart, Mark
Receiving blue ribbons for Casto, Robert Pickett, Keith
their ex hibits were Jamie Musse r, Jamie Johnson .

Sherrie Osborne, Cheryl
Mowery, Bill Kautz, Dollie and
Rhonda Rousey.
Blue ribbons for posters went
to Linda Reedy, David Lewis,
and Jamie Sisson . Mrs. Ida
Diehl's second grade received
a blue ribbon award for an
exhibit on wheels, and Mrs.
Dorothy Woodard's first grade
received a blue ribbon for a

dU.play on the solar system.
Red ribbons for exhibits went
to Steve Williams, David Lewis
two), Scott McKinney, Kelly
Thoma, Joe Jeffers, Linda
Reedy, Kim Seth (two), Cindy
Thompson, Chris Fry, Becky
Mitchem, Jenny Wilson, ·Sandi
Miller , Tom Owens, John
Harper, Larry Brown, Susan
(Continued on page 6)

Stewart Accepts Council Seat
B\' BOB HOEFLICH
outdoor storage of building
Lawrence Stewart was materials for long periods of
unanimously appointed to time and will ,provide that
serv e on Middleport Village vehicles no longer usable must
Council to fill a vacancy when be disposed of. One more
the council met in regular reading of each of the orsession Monday night.
dinances must be approved by
Stewart had served a partial council.
term as a councilman, but did
At the request of the Midnot file for election last fall . He dleport Planning Commission,
has agreed to acce pt the council approved a motion
vacancy created by 'the recent · changing
the
.zoning
death of Clifford Stumbo. The designation of a small area
term expires Dec. 31, 1973. near Elm and Broadway St.s.
CouncilQ:lan David Ohlinger from
manu fact uri n g
submitte~
the · recom- classification to a residential
mendation of Stewart.
classification. The village has
Council approved second a lot near the location and it is
readings of two ordinances. planned to advertise it for sale .
One will require underpinning Council members Mrs. Jeane
of housetrailers in the com- Morgan, David Ohlinger, Fred
munity with new ones to be Hoffman and William Walters
underpinned within 30 days voted in favor of the zoning
after they are placed and ones ch.mge with Councilman
which h!We been in . their Richard Vaughan voting
locations for some time will against the change.
have to be underpinned within
Councilman 0hlinger also
six months from the time of the reported on a survey which he
final passage of the brdinance. has taken on vending machines
The second ordinance given a .in various business establishsecond reading prohibits the ments of the community. The

survey was taken to determine
the possibilities of levying a tax
on such machines as well as
pool tables and other games in
business establishmen.ts to
provide an increase in income
for the village.
The matter was referred to
Councilmen
Ohlinger ,
Vaughan and Walters to come
up with a recommendation on
whether the village should
proceed along these lines in
attempting to secure more
income.
Mayor John Zerkle said that
income must be increased
through some means.
.
The report of the fire
departmeni disctosefl six fire
calls answered during March
and 22 emergeocy calls with 12
of the latter out of town and 10
in town . Fourteen burning
permits were issued. Three of
the fire calls were made in the
Middleport HiU Cemetery area
on March 31.
The mayor's report for
March showing receipts of
$1,832.40 in fines and fees and
$159 in merchant police
collections for a total of
$1,991.40 was approved,
Maintenance Supervisor
Harold Chase reported that a
'along Route 62, one and a half State Health Department
miles north of Point Pleasant. Inspector recently vffiited the
New owner of the Pleasant community to inspect the
Point Resort is Henry Whitt of
Richmond, Va., who also
operates five other Red Carpet
Jnns. ,
The ;Red Carpet Inn
CHICAGO
(UPI) .
organization also recently
acquired the Master Host Treasury Secretary John Jl.
Connally Sl!id Monday a spot
Motels and !Ms.
check of Income tax returns
CQnstruction of the Pleasant prepared for taxpayers by tax
Point Resort was started in services showell 97 pet. were
Aprti of 1963.' In addition to Its fraudulently prepared,. .
Connally told the .50th annual
· many other features, the
facility includes a 350 Be!lt Nat10nal Assoc1ahon of
restaurant Rlld cocktail lounge, Broadcasters Convention that
teen courts , and a 6IJO.car a check pi 400 returns in the
Southeast prepared by persons
parking lot.

Resort t.o Open
PT.

QoV,

Arch Moore
the
at
Point
accepted py the
HostsRed Carpet Inn organization of
Daytona, Beach, na ., as a
franchised Red Ca~ Inn, and
will be opened In !he near
future.
The reaort, which Includes
129 rooms, five snites, large
meeting rooms, a restaurant
and IWimlning pool, will be
operated !II a part of the Red
Carpet .Inns of America, Inc,
BOARD TO MEET
has 251 similar facilities
•• Local School which
· The Southern
throughout the nation,
Board wUI' meet Thursday at
The Pleasant Point Resort Is
7: 30 p.m. at the high school.
located on 31 acres of land,

community's water system.
Chase said that the inspector
appeared to be pleased with the
community 's utility, but indicated that the town in the
future will have to maintain
enough water for a 24-hour
period as an emergency
measure in case of a breakdown . The community can
almost provide enough storage
for that now, Chase said.
Chase further reported that
no work has been done on

preparing the community park
in . lower Middleport for the ·
summer activities.
He
suggested a meeting of the
park commission in the near
future . Chase was given permission to purchase one
rainsuit for a grave digger ·a t a
cost of .. about $15 and was
authorized to place no parking
signs on Ash St. near the
community park. The no
parking signs will he located
· (Continued on page 10) ·

De£ense
Shored
·

SAIGON (UPI)-U.S. transports airlifted 400 Gls and four
.artillery pieces to the northernmost American outpost in
South Vietnam today to bolster
its defenses against the 12-&lt;:layold Communist offensive.
The movement, the lurgest
shifting of U.S. troops since the
North Vietnamese invaded
South Vietnam April I, in·
volved men of .the !96th Light
Infantry Brigade and four
105mm howitzers. They were
taken by C130 transports from
Da·Nang to the America base
at Phu ~at, which is only 42
miles
south
of
the
Demilitarized Zone (DMZ)

separating the two Vietnams.
About . 2,000 Americans
already were stationed at Phu
Bal.
Communist sappers slipped·
into a South Vietnamese
ammunition dump seven miles
from Saigon early today and
.set off a blast that desiroyed
one-quarter of the dump and.
rocked the capital. One of the
Communist conunandos was
ldlled at the Cat Lal dump and
two South Vietnamese troops
were wounded, authorities
said, .
.
U.S. _B52s dropped their !!().
ton bomb lo~ on Communist
(Continued on page 10)

Oteaters Nearly Everywhere

I,

•

other than the taxpayers
showed an "Incredible performance ... a rather amazing
. statistic." ·
"We will check hundreds
thousands, perhaps eve~
mlllions of tax returns thst we
had not anticipated ·checking
on the basis of thU. survey "
Connally said.
'
"Is thU; symptomatic ol what
is happening in this country?"

he asked. "Obviously this
requires' action and we are
going to tske it."
Connally said most of the
fraud turned up was on "very
minor" items. For example,
Connally said one woman who
gave birth to a child Jan. 3
moved the dale back to
December to obtain . a
deduction for ~ previ0111
year .

�2- Till D1i1r T 'h UCid? ; • W'llu...,y, o , April II, 1972

WIN AT BltiDGI

Bon Appet1t

In tlte Second liossat Poll

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , April II, 1972

Luck ol IMP

'Me Govern: New Man to Watch'
llv IIRUCt IIIOSSAT
WASHINGTON t NEA i
Sen Edmund Musk1e of Mame the Democrats long
lome presidential front runner for 1972 has taken a sleep
downward plunge 10 hiS delegate p1 ospect for the the
nommatmg conventiOn 10 M1am1 m July He has lost
nearly half the potential he had a month ago
The second !972:NEA NatiOnal Observer Democratic
box score gives Muslue 7731'. votes, still enough for first
place 10 the candidate lists but 509 fewe1 than the 1 282"'.
first count gave him 10 mid March
The new survey e levat~ s Sen George McGovern of
South Dakota to second place With 490 ~ delega te votes
a Jump of 203 from his total on the m1hal count This
reflects his clear victory m the 1mportant W1sconsm
pnmary his riSing pos1t1on as a real contender and
Muskle s decline
Sen Hubert Humphrey second the last Lime With 402
votes slips to third now even though he picks up 66 more
votes for 468 total He has not yet won a pnmary and IS
Igmhng no big fire
A continu10g surprise IS Gov George Wallace of Ala
bama First time out he scored an Impressive 220 votes
Now his prospective total IS up by 71 to 291 and he could
very well riSe later to a point above 300 Some of his
gams come out of Musk1e s hide
The rest of Musk1e s dramatic vote loss ~oes mto the
limbo of the temporanly uncom milled This movement

,

I

EDITORIALS

.QIO
WEST
EAST
• K2
• 53
.QJ9T
•t0865
• J943
• A108
.AH
.K862
SOUTH (D)
.AQJ86

.K6
•"'

.J953
Both vulnerable

.Wesl

l
''
''
'

I

!

f 'Beware the Chinese---'
The two giant pandas presented to PreSident Nixon by
the
Chinese KOVernment are now quietly ensconced 10
~ the National
Zoo In Washington

Pandas are also known as bear cats and cat bears
! Maybe
someone should remmd the Presldenl to beware

i

the Chmese gifting bears

I

thet e are good reasons for
BY JACK O'BRIAN
t~e types or symptoms you
'NANETI'E" KNOWS NO LET-UP
are complammg of
NEW YORK (KFS)
Caught 'No No
'
'
Occasionally small stones Nanette" agam this week easily as marvelous
will pass on their own and re as Its opening mght 15 months ago, Bemy
~~t~~ tfhagr~~\e'rhe~~\~~~ae Baker's farfunruer than the Ofllllll&amp;l fabricated
clo,wnmg of Jack Gilford, the rest of the
large number of small stones
and the problem Isn t solved splendid cast- delightful Jack Collins was
that s1mply They are not thes pportlng sen ti at the "F
Thin"
u
- sa on
unny
g
readil y dis~lved and prob 6rst mght - stepped mto surgery.bound Lou
ably the bes course for gall Parker'shok~y shoes and tr1wnphed -on three
stones Is surgical removal
prov1dmg the patient s health days notice You wouldn't believe the n•..,0 htother w' s e will permit Jt beat cops on Times Square happy, soUCltous,
There are some recent stud nice even to the bearded, slovenly hippie~
less u g g e s tI n g that some
Old friend Woolworth Donahue died in Palm
stones can be diSsolved how
Beach Great nocturnal companion His widow
ever this work IS sllll too
early to recommend Its ge n Is Mary Hartline, ex.rmgmistress of TV's early
era! use as yet
Clncago:based ABC TV circus shows Woolie
tlIS a good Idea to have had all the money he wanted - hIS recen Uy
the opmwns or two doctors demiSed mother Jessie mdulged hlB any whim,
before an operation You
dhe lastwill
ttedW lito
de
shou ld have a family phySI an
r
pemu
oo e
mva "
Clan and If you have a prob her huge estate for up to $100,000 a year, but he
!em that reqmres surgery had comparatively little of hlB own , ergo, not
tel him refer yo u to a sur much of an estate
Th
f
geon
e two o them ca n
• '11le Godfather • wW have grossed Its first
decide whether surgery IS ..,. mllli
f this
ding
h d
JUstified 10 a given case
•••
on as 0
rea
Way a ea of
iN!WSPAPER !NTERPRISE ASS N
any picture ever for that quick haul Muchadmired Jun Shanahan becomes veep of tbe
huge $100 million N Y City convention center to
nm some five blocks atop our North River
docks l..oew's ]l'esldent, Bob Tisch, IS chairman of this vast and welcome addition to N. Y
fun and mdustry It shOUld choose a short name,
a Ia Ollcago'shuge McCormack Place, why not
1
Junmy Walker Place, named for tbe N Y
mayor who most exemplified the glamor and
fun of this great burg
Roger Moore's the next James Bond
Every amnesty:~~urvey - there have been
dozens - tums up overwhelmmg majorities
Bv RAY CROMLEY
agamst g1vmg the draft dodgers a tidy b!U of
patriOtic health The N Y Weekly Woman
WASHINGTON INEAJ
mag folded after four Issues The Lambs Club
There IS more to busmg than mtegratwn
Lambasted ' N Y Pollee Comm!Bh Murphy
John, my 7 year old son IS earned three hours each day
Cut
very close to the hamess:bulls' low opinion
for school Not to achieve rac1al balance But because he
of nationally ambitious murph Pulitzer newsIS deal, and for practical reasons the county program for
these youngsters IS at one central school

But that Is not all These children live too far away
from each other to be mv1ted to birthday parties or to
play together 10 the afternoon My son can't walk over to
their yards casually and ask Mary or Georj:e or Jim to
come out and play My son asks to be dnven to their
homes, but the Lime reqmred IS too great except on rare
OCCaSIOnS
Even worse this long range busmg eliminates most of
that time for compamonsh1p, ~ych ng, baseball tree
climbmg and playmg house essen!Ial for children By the
time my son arrives home he IS qUite often so tiied from
the JOUrn ey that on his own accord he drifts oft to his
bedroom and naps-until dmner to be awakened only long
enough to eat and get himself undressed for hiS night's
sleep _
Th1s IS no way for a child to live
The men and women m charge of thiS pro~ram are
aware of these problems They are, m fact makmg every
effort to find a solution-one that WOllld put these children
m schools In their own neighborhoods
They are working for !h1s change, even though they
know that because of the high degree of speciahza!Ion
required for teachmg these boyt and girls the decentrali
za!Ion of this effort for the rela!Ive)y lumted numbers of
students mvolved raises some very difficult management
and finance problems
But these teachers believe that the emotional stram of
long·range busmg IS JUS! too great They also perceive
the very great added benefit fn havmg these boys and
girls attend school m their own neighborhoods- with the
children they play with after school and whose parents m
many cases know each other Tlus giVes the stability and
confidence which young children seem to require ln such
great amounts
As noted above, none of this has anylh10g to do with
race
Because of my son s expenence, this reporter has
talked to a great many parents from varmus parts of this
country numbers of whom have had some experience
with extensive busmg for one reason or another-some to
achieve racial balance, some to escape rac1al balance
some because they live m Isolated areas and some be
cause they have wanted their children to attend a special
private school of quality
It IS this writer s studied belief after these talks that
Cor young children the effects of long range busmg are so
senous that to be justified the ends lo be achieved would
have to be essential certam and unattamable by any
other means
If we as a P•ople are so bankrupt In our Imagma!Ion
and our IngenUity that we can thmk of no better way than
busmg to achieve the educational nghts of all of our c1tl
zens regardless of color then I despair

I

man and ex LBJ White House aide Clark
Mollenhoff just had major surgery
Famed 3rd Ave saloon Tim Coltello's just
had 1ts James Thurber murals refurbished by
SIX cartoonists - wtidy up for a cocktail party
w salute Jack Lemmon's starring.fllck, "The
War Between Man &amp; Woman," loosely based
on the late New Yorker author.artlst's life and
scribbllngs
Thurber's cartoons were un)l'etenious and Jim never took them nor himself
senoUB!y, but when a critic lambasted the
Thurber daubs as "tenth rate," the late New
Yorker editor Harold Ross "defended" them
• They are not tenth rate," Ross grumped
• They're third rate "
lArd !Auls Mounthatten staged a lordly,
genteel rendezvous in Las Vegas with Lena
Home, an old pal, his ludshlp opined, "She
grows more beautiful with age", noble Louis
and Cary Grant dldn 'I Ignore the headier Las
Vegas culture - dug the French:fludes casino
de PariS show at the Dunes and collected
chorines backstage later
Gashing 111 the empties one of Twiggy's
bras snapped up Sll powtds ten shllllngs at a
London charity auction Society maestro Phil
Bennett read that a slx.ounce champ1on truffle
was dug up In Italy, and ]l'edicts Richard
Burton will buy It for Liz And that she'll wear It
Carol (Mnl Walter) Matthau Is the H'wood
hostess partying visiting greasepaint royalty,
the Olarlle Olaplms, Gloria Vanderbilt dittoed
In N Y , tbe bashes brought togetl\er thiS old,
closest glamor pa!Bhlp of the Stork Club era,
]l'ettlest gals of the year - who wed BW
Saroyan, Stokowski and Chaplin Great
retroactive glitter
Concert p1amst Byron Janis can't play
Without pain Bursiiill Oscar director Frank
McCarthy and Jane Wyman have It bad A1
their age they even go danCing Lucile Ball's
Gal Friday, Joan Hurlow, weds TV writer
Stephen Lord April 16 Opera star (early TV
actress) Mary Costa relaxed from her ''The
Great Waltz" emoting with Jun Nabors Forget
about a romance

WORLD ALMANAC

Generation Rap

FACTS

By Helen and Sue Bouel
Dear Helen and Sue
My father won't let me date 1111less he gets wknow the guy
That means the hoy has to come down to my house about ten
times (no less than eight') just totalktomyparenta
Then, If Dad's "requirements" aren't met (Ill everythmg
from length of hair to politics) I've gone through aU that for
nothing, because I can't go out with the guy
Besides, what rena will visit a girl's parents eight tunes just
for a date' I haven't dal,ed yet Guess thls answers the qu~on
I m a !&amp;.year.old girl who tries to see my parents' Side, but
the truth is Father doesn 't always know best (even If Mother says
he's boss) - MIXED UP
Dear M U
You hit II right on the nose parents aren't always right, just
because they re "the bosses," or 'have been through It "
Try for a calm talk With your father Ask him why he thinks
ypur judgment IS so poor and when will he consider you old
enough wknow which boys are right and which aren't' Imply
that he should have more faith in a daughter he's ralaed so well
Slow hun you can discuss without getting mad, but make It
definite you believe len mtervlews are at least nine too many'
Good luck - SUE
Dear Mixed Up
You might also ask your mother about her dating days If
her parents (your grandparents) were as rigid as your Dad, how
did she ever lreak 100!8' Did your father pass the ten:!nspectlon
llst' Or would he have stood for It?
I think he, like a lot of skittery parents, has laid down a law
hefore mvestlgating the {fcts He'll soften - with your Mom's
help - once he starts meeling ~ few boys So don t scare them
off by telling them about "the rule " - HELEN

The earthworm 1s one of
man's most valuable am
mal fnends because of Its
role as a soil creator con
d11Ioner and preserver The
World Almanac notes that
soil digested by mllllons of
earthworms can create as
much as 4() tons of r1ch top
soil per acre annually, while
their tunnels a1d root
growth and Improve dram
age thus preventing ero
SIOH

The Daily Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTERISTOf

+++

Dear Helen and Sue
I was In a car accident two months ago, and was left with a
bad scar on my face It's terribly ugly Now that I am back In
school, I find my friends are my enemies They hate me because
my scar makes me different and not pretty any more
Even my parents treat me like I don 't belong to them Don't
give me that stuff about a cowtselor - he'd hate my looks t,oo
Socially CODSCIOUS people Cl!,ll't stand to be embarrassed by bemg
seen with me Is there any ~' - TilE OUTCAST
Dear Outcalt
I think your scar Ia much bigger to you than to anyone el8e
No one wW desert you because you're been hurt - but they'll
leave you alone If you close them out Are you sure the biggest
scar Isn't Inside' - SUE
Dear Outcast
Leam to talk about your scar, naturally and without shaine
Find make:Up that will minimize II - and look forward wplastic
surgery that, combined with cosmetics, does marvelous lranaformatlons these days - HELEN

MEIGS MASON AREA

CHESTER L TANNIHILL,
l!•tc Ed

ROIIRT HOEFLICH,

City Editor
Pub lls htd dilly tXCtpt
Saturday by Tht Otl io Vellty
FlubiiSI'Hn9 Company 111
Court St
Pomeroy Ohio
,U76f Bus iness Offlct Phone

1'92 2156 Edltorlll Phone 992
21l7

Second clus postage paid at
Pomtrov 01110
National ldlltrttslno

reprtsentttive

Gallagtltr Inc

Bottlntlll

12 Eut •2nd
St Ntw York Clly New YOrk
Subscript ion raftS
Oi

I I'Vtrtd by carrier whtrt

avatleblt JO cents per wttk
By Motor Route whtre urrler
srrv•ee not avalllble One

month

Sl 7l By moll In Ohio
end W Va Ont yeer S14 00
Sl • months S7 2S Thrte
months 14 50 Subsc:rlr,llon
pr•ct Includes Sundl'r' T mH

Sent.nel

I

There IS only one thmg
wrong with South s four
spade bid It happens not to
make
In rubber bridge your op
ponents chalk up 100 pomts
In an IMP match, In the
event that you bid the game
and your opposite numbers
stop at a part score 1t costs
you six IMPs You go mmus
100 They score plus 140 for
a net of 240 which represents
those six IMPs
There IS nothmR to the
play of the hand Game de
pends on the trump fmesse
and the fmesse doesn t work
We have shown the hand
lor two reasons The first IS
to show the Iuck In IMP
matches If both sides bid
the same there IS no swing
When one stops at a part
score and the other b1ds the
game a full 16 IMPs depend
on the locatiOn of the king
of spades
Put 11 over m the East
hand The g a m e bidder
scores plus 620 The part
score bidder plus 170 Then
the difference Is 450 or 10
IMPs
It also shows that the
game bid Is a good one The
game bidder IS $ettln~ odds
of 10 IMPs to SIX IMPs on
the locahon of the king of
spades and that ls exactly
an even money proposition
The hand also shows that
It pays to bid game on a
fmesse m IMP competition
How about South s Jump to
game ' A very very slight
overbid but who doesn t
make slight overbids'
(NIWS,.,VIl ENTIItPIIU ASSN I

Jeeps Run By
Bobcats, 4-2
South Webster erupted for
three runs m the third mmng
Monday mght and held on to
defeat the Kyger Creek Bob
cats 4 2 m a non leag ue game
at Cheshire Coach Dick
Adams' Bobcats took a 1-0 lead
m the second mmng on smgles
by first baseman Mike Beebe
teltfielder Greg McCarty and
shortstop John Baird
The Jeeps lied the score on a
suiCide squeeze bunt off the bat
of third baseman Ron
Hamilton Greg Smith Jeep
shortstop doubled leadmg off
the mmng and moved to third
followmg a walk and error

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Wednesday lale
Mixed League
Apnl5 1912
Standmgs
Team

W~st

North

Pass
Pass

3•
4•

,. 2.

72

Owen Holler
Cassell Carsey
Fultz Bentley

62
52

~osenbaum

50

72

Meadows

Blakeslee Hoyt

28

H1gh Senes - Team Owen

Holter 1905
Rosenba um
"kadows 1826 Morrow Moore

1809
H1gh Game - Team Owen

Holter
649
Meadows 639

Ro senbaum
Owen Holter

635

H1gh Senes -

Men

Roy

Holter 566 J Carsey 538 D
Rosenbaum 530
H1gh Series - Women H
, M&lt;lqr~~ 44 1J,~V l:ioyt .;141 S

'

h1ddmg has been

Pts

Morrow Moore

~ ~
Th~

being heralded as a
poweli10use
The Marauders under their
new but Mseball·wise coach
Don Wolfe starling only two
lettermen held off the Blacks
for seven mnmgs allowmg
only one run on a sacnflce fly
Then they used the longball to
lie II up and some aggressiVe
offense on the basepaths m the
home half of the !mal frame to I
WID 2 1
I he Maruaders havmg yet
to get their first hit going mto

ONen 437
Hlg ~ Gam ~ Men D
Rosenbaum 222 R Holter 204

T Cassell 202
High Game - Women V
Hoyl 167 H Moore 164 S

East

Pass

Owen

Pass
Pess

164

Tr1 County League

You South hold
.AK654 •Az U .AK854
What do you do now'
A-81d IJIX clubs Jl you use
Blackwood and Ond lhat fOIIJ'
partner holds an ace you atill
aren't golnc to lry for seven.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of btddmg ont heart
West btd one d1amond over
your club Your partner b1da
one heart What do you do now ?

The Almuae
By Uolted Preo•IDimlatlollll
Today is Tuesday, April II,
the 1112nd day of 1972
The moon Ill between ita last
quarter and new phase
The morning stars are
Mercury and Jupiter
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Arle~
New York fashion designer
Oleg Cassin! was born April II,
1913
On this day In hlstory
In 1947 Jackie Robinson
became the first Negro In
major league baseball when he
played for the Broolllyn Dodgers against the New York
Yankees In an exhibition game
In 1966 Guam:bued 85211
bombed VIetnam for the first
Ume
In 19118 Prealdent Lyndon
Johnson ordered 24,600 mllltary
reservists caned up, haH of
them for duty for Vlelnam
In 1970 the Apollo 13
spacecraft headed for the tb1r1J
U S landing on the moon The
attempt wat aborted when , ..
faulty oxygen tank nploded
The astronauts returned lllfely

Apnl4 1912
Standings

Team
Larry s Ashland

Pts

Rawlings Dodge

84
68
60

Firestone

42

Hal sum

40

Davis Wart~er s Ins

Pomeroy Cement Block

44

Hl9h Indi vidua l Game
Paul Harris 237
Second H1gh lnd Game Paul Harris 223
High Series - Paul Harris

661

Wmmng pitcher Bnan Ph1pps
smgled to nghl knockmg m the
other runs
Kyger Creek cut the margm
to one run m the fourth frame
on a double by centerf1elder
Lou Loudeq an d Beebf s
second h1 t of the game
The Bobcats threatened
agam m the sixth mmng but
were unable to score Louden
reached on an error and moved
to second as Beebe smgled up
the middle McCarty popped up
and Bms grounded out to end
the mnmg
The SciOto Countians scored
their !mal run m the sixth on a
smgle walk hit batsman and
error Beebe paced the Bobcats
with a perfect 3·3 performance
Louden and pmchhltter Joe
Stidham each cracked doubles
Phipps In gomg the diStance
fanned five and did not ISSue a
walk Losmg hurler Mike
J ohnson walked three and
struckout four• H1s reliever
John Baird fanned SIX and
walked two
Kyger Creek now 0.3 on the
year wi ll travel lo South
Webster this evemng
By Inmngs
South Webster 003 001 ~ 6 2
Ky ger Creek. 0!0 100 ll--2 8 3
Batteries
Phipps (WP ) and Hanes
Johnson (LP) Baird (3) and
Bias

Tractor Power
1s on drsplay.
From the econom1cal
7 HP Lawn Ranger to
the brawny 14 HP
models.

A thought for tGday Gen
Douglas MacArtHur said
''There Ia no IUhetl\ule
victory"

tO:

GOOD FOR KICKS
Tom DempnJ, wbo wu
relealled by the New Orlebi

Salnta btll folllld a bome 1n
Philadelphia, bad the belt
percenllfe amoac Nallollal
F~tbiU Leacue field Coal

kickers la•t ~ea.,., hiW.c
on 1% of 17 &amp;rlea fllr 1 . 'Ill
pereenta&amp;e Garo
of 'the Miami Dol 11 led
the Amerleaa
ereaee
with a 701 mark,
28
of 40 lrle1. Curt Kalp of
Wa•hlacton tried lhe •n&amp;
field IHII Ia 1H NFL, 41
(tylq • leape netrlll alld
al• made the mut, 11

Low prices
long trades
easy credit terms plus
and garden tractor features that can t be beat
VIsit us now and hear our offer You 11 never gel a h.u•• l
deal on all the new 1972 Wheel Horse models The o1oes1.1
mos.t respectad lawn and ga rden tractors made
I

BAUM LUMBER

=mla•

COMPANY

c

lllttlilf

WHIIL HO.. SI!

!tt~ODUCTS

INC

\

•

•

'

;.;:;:;:~~

;::.:: 0

Q.. ;

~-

COLUMBIA Mo (UP!) University of Missouri athletic
director Wilbur ' Sparky"
Stalcup, 62, was removed from
the critical list Monday after
suffering a heart attack Sun
day

Nets Top
Colonels
101 To 96

UNIONDALE, NY (UPI)Anythmg else the New York
Nets can do 10 the Amencan
Basketball Association
playoffs will be pure gravy
The Nets completed one of
the biggest upsets m ABA
history Monday mght when
they whipped Kentucky, 101 96
to clmch their quarter fmal
series, lour games to two The
Colonels had won 68 games and
lost only 14 during the regular
campaign, the best record m
the five-year existence of the
ABA and were favored to wm
the playoffs
But the Nets, after losmg
eight of 11 games to the
Colonels durmg t.1e season
surpnsmgly won the first two
games of the series at Kentucky and then went on to
complete the upset
'It s the greatest upset m the
ABA s history " said rookie
John Roche who did more than
his share to make It possible
and led all scorers m the finale
Ashland 1009
with 32 pomts
Tea m H1gh Series - Larry s
While Roche shone With his
Ashla nd 2915
offense, as much credit must
Beg1nners League
also go to the defensiVe work of
Aprll6 1972
B1Uy Paultz, who held 7 foot-2
Standings
Team
Pfs
Artis Gilmore without a s10gle
Four Aces
66
Lucky Stars
50 shot m the fmal quarter
Red Oev1l s
46 Gilmore wound up with 24
Four Deu ces
34 pomts but was virtually
High Individual Game Charles V 183 D1ane Hawley useless on offense durmg the
decisiVe fourth period
178
Second H1gh lnd Game Even more Incredulous m the
Geo Hoschar 177 Helen V 174
New York triumph was the fact
High Series - Ray R 470
that
Barry, the leading scorer,
Dtane H 451
missed one ga!lle and was
Sec:ond Htgh Senes Charles V 468 Betty W 426
meffective mothers because of
Team High Game - Four a VIrUS
Aces 757
Team High Series - Four
The Nets open tnelr
Aces 2116
semifmal series at VIrgmia
With games on Thursday and
Saturday

CHESTER, OHIO

!115 Wutlr•land Road
South Bend Ind ian• 46814

GET A HORSE- WHEEL HORSE OF COURSE •
1

the bottom of the seventh and nghlhanded pitcher drilled a .md walked five and had a
!mal mmng lied 11 up 1 t on sharp grounder headed fur g1ea t defense behmd him one
JuniOr leftf1elder ' Floyd Bur cent.I The Big Blacks second that played errorle ss bal l
ney s lead.off home run a hne baseman picked tl off the mcludlllg several tough
g1ound but his throw was too chances
shot through nght fie ld
Steve Miller the firebalhng
Roger Dixon semor catcher late to catch the speedy Chaney
followed Burney with a bad husUmg to first base as Dixon B1g Black nghthaAder also
hop smgle to nght Semor crossed the pia te for the p1 tched a fmc game
He had a no-hiller through
shortstop Steve Dunfee laid wmmng run
Chaney was not only a slar at the firs t SIX mnmgs and at that
down a perfect sacn!Ice to
send Dixon to second After the plate but also on the pomt had allowed only one
Dixon stole third, semor mound as he made hiS h1g~ run net , that commg on a
righlhelder Chester Wigal school p1tchmg debut with a dropped third stnke m the
fanned for the second out of the masterful three hitter over Pt fourth Miller makmg his first
mmng but Bill Chaney, JUnior Pleasant Chaney fanned three start of the year fanned mne

. , . , . , . ; . ; . ; . ;• •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

directly mto the mtestme
or the bile which has been
stored m the gallbladder can
be e)ected by the contrac
1100 of the bladder and pass
down 118 fork of the y en
ter mg the common duct and
10to the mtest10 e Thus the
llbl dd
ga a er IS really a stor
age reservoir and that IS all
A s ton e can lodge m the
duct commg directly from
the g a II b l ad d e r and JU&lt;f
block off the ga llbladder 1t
Itsel f or a s t o n e can pass
down to the common due!
and actually block off the
dramage from the l1ver and
the gallbladder both This
can cause severe pam and
even 1aund1ce
The bile enters the Intes
tmel and a ids digestwn par
ticuarlyolfattyfoods When
there IS madequate bile flow
mto the mtestme It IS more
diffi cult to digest fatty foods
hence people with gallblad
der disease often have 1ntol
erance to fatty foods This
forms gas and pam and re
s uIt s m md1gestion Thus

For three hours each day he IS belted m and must sit
qwetly m one seal For him and his compamons on the
bus and for the driver this 1s a severe emotional stra10
though the children on my son s bus are fortunate 10 hav
mg a woman dnver of understandmJ: and great good
humor But she, as a mother herself IS womed at what
these long restramed ndes do to the children

..

,

Easl South

2•
Poss 4 •
Pass
Pus
Openmg leod- • Q

BusinQ S Effect
On Child Himself

One of the great unresolved moral questions m med1
cine Is whether or not a doctor has a duty or even a
right, to employ heroic meas~res to keep the spark of
life flickering In a hopelessly Ill patient
There Is a companion quandary to th1s question While
not so profound as the first It 1s a situation more doctors
are more likely to encounter This IS whether to tell or
not to tell a dying patient that he Is dymg
It would seem that It ought to depend upon the patient
his personality his store of psychologll:al strength or
spiritual resources
But mankind has apparently devised as many styles
of dying as It has of hvmg After surveymg doctors from
four continents, a team of researchers at the Medical
College of Ohio at Toledo report that the decision more
often than not Is based on the physician's own qwrks,
cultural background and religion-not the patient's
The study Included 230 doctors 24 from Argentina 31
lrom India and Ceylon 24 from the Far East, 45 from
Israel, 40 Jewish American doctors and 66 non Jewish
American doctors
Each physician responded to a battery of 12 mterlock
mg questions designed to reveal his attitudes toward
telUng a patl~nt about a fatal disease (m this case, can
cer), about ordermg aggressiVe treatment for the dis
ease and about his views on death and Immortality
The Investigation turned up significant differences m
the handling of termmal Illness The researchers believe
these differences stem from the cultural and religious
background of the physicians themselves
American doctors for mstance strongly believe m
telling the patient he has a fatal Illness Non Americans
just as strongly oppose this
Argentinians believe In aggressiVe treatment- never
say die as It were-even though It subJects the patient to
added pain and expense without much benefit to him
Indians and Ceylonese do not favor aggressive treat
men!, Americans and Far Easterners would use a~gres·
1 slve treatment only for selective cases and Israeli doc
, tors were almost evenly split on the question
Israeli, Far Eastern and Jewish American doctors ~1ve
little credence to Immortality The other groups believe
in some form of afterlife
Alone among all the doctors, the Jewish Amencan doc
ton believe that man can ,be happily reconciled to the
fact of his nonexistence after death
The Israeli and Jewlsh·Amerlcan doctors says the
study "do not believe In preparing spmtually for death
l and therefore see no point m telling the cancer patient
about his !Uness It is more Important to them to prolonR
1 life and cause no aggravation or sadness to the patient
: By contrast, the Indian and Ceylonese doctors believe
' the patient must have time to prepare for death but
t that It IS dtfbcult for the patient to cope with the know!
, edge that his lllness Is fatal
The researchers conclude that 11 IS of the utmost 1m
~ portance • for each doctor to be aware of his own par
' ticular attitudes about death so that he can prevent these
l idiosyncrasies from mterfermg with the quality of med
' leal care he admmisters to the fatally 111 patient
Physician, know thyself

Norlh

PIISS
Pass

RAY CROMLEY

Doctors of World
Vary in Opinions

BY KliliTH WISECUP
ll was a long 1\811 - the
season opener - but 11 was
worth 1l lo the Meigs Marauder
t 972 baseball squad
Held off by the weather
almost as long as dollar d1f
ferences are keepmg maJor
leaguers off their diamonds
the Marauders opened Monday
afternoon at Middleport
agamst the Pomt Pleasant Big
Blacks, a team that had toted
up 17 runs m Its slaughter of
Ripley ( 17 0) and was already

II

.K32
• QT52

C&lt;?mmon Gallbladder Problems I V~i;;"';i~ng n;·~waY.
cholesterol manufactured by
the bile and bile pigment
that gives bile Its color
There are several combma
tlons of these that can make
different kmds of gallstones
Btle IS found 10 the liver
cells and collected 1n thou
sands of tiOy tubules that
actually b eg in w1thm the
cell These connect to form
larger tubes and fmally the
large bile tube (duct ) that
comes out of the liver The
bile duct gives off a side
duct w h I c h leads to the
small, r 0 u n d gallbladder
The mam bile duct from the
liver w1th the s1de duct to
h
llbl d f
t e ga ad er orms a Y
fork Bile manufac tured by
the liver comes down one
fork of the y and goes up
the other fork mto the gall
bl adder Both f or ks of the
Y JOin together 10to a com
mon duct the stem of the
Y which empties directl y
mto the small IO!estme
Bile can flow down one
fork of the Y duct and
through the common duct

NORTH

.109H

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Gallstones Made of Cholesterol

By Lawrence Lamb, M D
Dear Dr Lamb-! would
like your comment on Ihe
gallbladder I am told from
X rays that I have small
stones and gravel What
about the common duct that
doesn t em ply out as 1t
should' I am on a gallblad
der dIe t It seems I have a
full feeling at the base of
my nght nbs most of the
time • especially if I am a
llttle n e r v o u s and some
times I hurt m my back Can
t be s e ever be diSsolved'
Would you advise more than
,
b f
one doc t or s opmiOn e ore
any operation'
'
Deu Reader- Gallbladder
disease is a very common
problem An old medical
a ph 0 r Ism says that 1t 1s
found In p eo pIe who are
fair, fat forty and four •
refer fl n g to middle aged
women With four children
This isn't always true smce
It also occurs m men and
can occur at almost any age
Gallstones are made of

Marauders Upset Big Blacks 2-1

Matches

1011101 s the contusion wh1ch besets m~ny political fig
11res and prospective 01 actual ~elegates In New York
for example Musk1e earlier had 167 10d1coled and the
word was he could have gamed much more or the state s
278 voles had he recovered from his first laltermg pn
mary showmg But his fourth place f1mshes m Flonda
and W1sconsm threw hjs supporters Into bewilderment
Most have retreated behmd the curiam of 10deciSIOD to
await clearer signals from tater pnmanes m Massachu
sells Pennsylvama Ohio Indiana Michigan Oregon and
Cahforma
Muskie actllally Is worse off than the figure s reveal A
good part of his remalmng 773 1), IS soft and loose staying
put only because It doesn I know where to go or doesn t
want lo go to Humphrey or McGovern Musk1e's present
chief nvats
Humphrey s very modest ga ms are a danger Sign lor
him Few party leaders th10k he 1s a good bel to beat
President Nixon They thmk he has the look and sound of
the past about him His lhird·place hmsh m W1sconsm IS
deemed poor McGovern IS acknowledged as chmbmg
fast orgamzmg well and campa1gmng doggedly But
labor and the party regulars shU dislike him see him as
a dubious challenger of Nixon don't thmk one pnmary
victory makes a summer Nevertheless md1cated v1cto
nes lor him m Massachusets and Oregon might alter his
prospects upward very substantially He Is tl\e new man
to watch

Unseld Turned

Falcons Subdue
Tornadoes 2-1
RACINE - The So uth ern errors The wmnmg run came
Local1ornadoes suffered their m the fifth on a sacnf1ce fly
Hubbard drove m Southern s
fu sl selbac1• In two starts with
a 2 l loss to the1r cross nver 1un 111 the bottom of the third on
II va l th e Wahama White ll1e !u st of his two smgles The
Falcons here Monday af other two hit.&lt;; off Hubbard was
ternoon m a non league game another smgle by Roush and a
J1m Hubbard once agam 11 as smgle by Hesson
Coach Hilton Wolfe s Tor
the bright spot 1n Tornadoes
defense
as
the semor nadoes now I 1 overall and I~
IIghthandei pitched a strong m the Southern Valley Con
game giVIng up only three !erence have a key game w1 th
hit.&lt;; He also solved Falcon the undefeated Eastern Eagles
p1lcher R1ck Hesson for h1s at Racine tomght m SVAC
teams only two hits Hubbard act1on
Lme score
struck out seven and walked
Wahama
100 010 ll--2 3 3
four Hesson also fanned seven
Southern
001 000 Il-l 3 3
Bnd walked three
Hesson 1WP) and Clark
The Falcons picked up a run
m the first mnmg on a double Hubbard 1LP) and Pugh
by Chester Roush and three

New Issues Stymies
Baseball Negotiations
NEW YORK (UP!) - Negoll
allons between th e maJor
league clubowners and players
appeared today to be stymied
by a new ISsue which executive
director Marvm Miller of the
Players AssociatiOn called a
(ernble,
ternble
road
block
The Issue was a s!Ipula!Ion
the clubowners that the players
forfeit their pay for the days
they struck while agreemg to
make up the games postponed
durmg the ll~y strike and
play a 1621!ame schedule
Tbe stipulation was con·
tamed m an offer by John
Gaherm chief negotiator for
the clubowners,
to use
$400 00 of the funds now on
depositiOn the rellrement fund
fo1
ad11llwnal
pensiOn
benefits
Tbe offer was flatly rejected
Monday mght by Miller, appearmg on the ABC network
TV program Monday Night
Sports Miller said, the
owners are askmg the players
to work overtime for nothing
I thmk It IS mcredible •
Asked whether the new ISsue
co uld be resolved, Miller

Teams Draft Stars
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Na!Io)lal Basketball Association, taking advantage of one of
the thiJIIIest crops of college
basketbaU talent m recent
years, has set the stage for a
real shootout with the nval
American Basketball Association
The NBA conducted Its
annual draft of college senjors
Monday and shocked every\me
by drafting two established
ABA stars and another player
who has already signed an
ABA contract on 1ts first round
of selections
'11le Buffalo Braves started
the fireworks by choosing &amp;.
foot.e forward Robert McAdoo
of North Carolina as the No 2
cho1ce in the draft This was
done less than five minutes
alter NBA commissioner Wal·
ter Kennedy had notified all
17 teama that McAdoo had'
signed a contract with the
VIrginia Squires of the ABA
'11le Chicago Bulls and the
Milwaukee Bucks, however,
provided real stunners of the
f1rst round when they respectivelY chose Ralph Slmpaon
and Julius Erving, two of the
ABA 's superstars Simpson
plays for the Denver RocketS
and Erving with tjle Virginia
Sq'bires
"Long Raoge Gamble"
While It was generally
assumed that this meant the
NBA had decided on open
warfare with the ABA, a
spokesman for the Bulls said
the draltmg of Simpson should
not be construed as an attempt
to create trouble with the other

league but rather as a long
range gamble '
Kennedy made II clear that
any attempt by an NBA club to
sign a player under contract to
the ABA would be m violatiOn
of NBA rules and would not be
allowed
The owners agreed at a
meetitg last week that we
would honor all signed onetracts m the ABA, ' said
Kennedy ' But draftmg and
s1gn10g are two different
thmgs • If II happens that one
Qf our guys signs them then II s
a different story I would not
allow 1! under league rules '
L:aRue Martin, a 6:10 center
from Loyola of Chicago, turned
loose was taken by the Portland Trail Blazers, who have
problems at center
Tbe other center taken In the
first round was 6-10 'l'om Riker
of South Carolina, who was
selected by the New York
Knlcks
Most of the teams went after
forwards 10 the first ropnd
Cleveland selected 6:7 Dwight
Davis of Houston, PhoeniX
grabbed 6:7 Corky Calhoun of
Pennsylvania, Milwaukee
chose 6-7 Russell Lee of
Marshall, Seattl~ took 6:5 Bud
Stallworth of Kansas, Detroit
went for 6:9 Bob Nash of
Hawaii and Los Angeles
selected 6:8 Travis Grant of
Kentucky State
The other two first-round
chmces were guards Freddie
Boyd of Arizona State by
Philadelphia and Paul Westphal of Southern california by
Boston

replied 'Idon'tseehowitcan
I do not see any early solution
ThiS IrOO:{!]ad prOVISIOn that
the players will work overt1111e
for no pay IS mcred1ble '
Nahonal League President
Charles Feeney, appearmg on
the same program moments
after Miller made his state-

ment, smd, however, we are
very close mthe pensiOn area
I hope this strike can be
resolved tomorrow '
Gaherm made the pensiOn
fund offer late Monday after
meetmg w1th Miller and
federal mediator J Curtis
Counts In Washmgton early m
the mornmg Optun1sm caused
by a telephone call by
President NIXon to Co1111ts
Saturday mght expressmg
hope for an early settlement,
proved unfounded
Gaherm followed up the
announcement of the new offer
With the statement, 'the
condiiion IS that the players
should \tot be paid for the days
they have not played thus far
thiS season
1
' Further, ' Gaherm added,
'that the clubs will try to make
up most of the cancelled games
so as to complete a 162:game
schedule and the players will
be expected to participate In
that schedule within the
framework of the basic
agreement
Miller and Gaherm expressed gratitude for the mtervenhon of Counts, With
whom they met for two hours,
but ageed that little PI ogress In
the talks developed from the
meeting
Miller, the 24 player representatives and their alter
nates, were scheduled to
meet 10 New York today while
Gaherm was scheduled to
report back to the owners

"nd w"lked none
1he B1g Blacks now 1 1 on
the ye"r, scored their run 10 the
lup of the fourth Moore ted off
w1lh a smgle to left Felty fil ed
uut Miller showed Ius ballmg
powe r w1 lh a line double to
center which nearly beheaded
Chaney on the momid
With runners on second and
thud ""d one out Harbrechl
lifted a high lazy fly to left
held that pemutted Moore on
thud to tag up and score
The only other threat the Big
Blacks put up was 10 the sixth
Wath one out and runners on
first and second gettm g there
by ba•es on balls Me1gs D1xon
fir ed to sophomo re lust
baseman Robbie Eason on
first to p1ck off the runne1 The
Big Black runner look off for
second and was cauMht m a

run down

Meanwhile

the

runner on second came around

th1rd and attempted to scme
but a PJ!rfecl peg from seniOr
second baseman Tom Cooke to
Dixon cut him down
Coach
Don
Wolfe s
Maraud ers
who show
ed that they defimtely
could be someth10g to reckon
w1th 10 the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League had a great
defense that made no
mistakes
physically 01
mentally Nearly everyone at
the ball park - perhaps even
Mr Wolfe - was surpnsed at
the pOise of the Marauder
Ma chine
on the fi eld
Collectmg the third hit, a
s10gle for the Big Blacks wa ~
Painter
Meigs will open their league
season with the Athens
Bulldogs lomght m Athens
Pt Pleas
000 100 Il-l 3 I
Meigs
• 000 000 :!---2 3 0
Miller ( LP ) and Fetty
Chaney IWP) and DIXon
Umpire s
George
Nesselroad, plate, and Art
Stobart bases

Dutcher,
Carter Get
UM Posts

Around

~

BALTIMORE (UP!)- When
Wes Unseld JOIDed the Balli
more Bullets In !968, the team
had JUS! completed a mediocre
36-46 season
At the end of the LoUisville
graduate s rookie year Balli
more had won the Eastern
D1 VISion of the NBA With a 57
25 mark Unseld had been
named Most Valuable Player
Rook ie of the Year and
selected lo the AII.Star squad
They haven 't been out of the
playoffs smce
Unse ld IS hesitant to credit
himself for the turnaround m
Baltimore fortunes He prefers
to diScuss the contnbutwns of
his teammates
HIS teammates how eve r
have no hesttancy m usmg
superlatives about their
center They say Unseld has
one of the fmest outlet passes m
the game, an uncanny ability to
poSition hunsel! m the nght
spot to grab the rebound and a
consistently unselfish attitude

Local Bowling
Monday Merchants

Harts Used Cars

76 20

M llers In surance

58 38
55 41

Mason Auto Mart
liN Va Nat1ooa l Guard
Mason Co Bank

52 44

Keelers Serv Station

46 50

37 59
32 64
36 66

Penn Central

Hoffman s
High Team IJ Gamesl
Ma son Co

Bank 2890

Used Cars 2837
Tea m Game -

Harts

W

Va

Harts

Nat ana l Guard 10 15

Used Cars 1007
lnd 3 Games - Bodktn 612
Mason 671
lnd Game - Snyder 265
Nelson 258
Tuesday lndu st nal

Burton Sunoco

Coca Cola
Penn Central
Mason Agg

80 32

76 36
74 38
56 56

Caro lina Lumber
36 76
New Haven Fu r mture
18 94
Team 3 Games - Coca Cola

2538 Mason Agg 2463
Team Game - Coca Cola
899 Burtoo Sunoco
Penn
Cen tr al 858
lnd 3 Games - H SISk 541
D Roush 531
lnd Game - SISk 204 B
ANN ARBOR, M1ch (UPI)- Roush D Miller 195
Former Eastern Michigan
Sunday late Couples
Umvers1ty basketball Coach M1llers
62 34
60 36
Jim Dutcher and onetime Robert s
Duncan
56 40
~verstw of Michigan basket
Capehart
56 40
ball player Richard Carter Youngs
52 44
were named as ass1stant S1nes
50 46
34 62
basketball coaches to Head Killingsworth
Team J Games - K1llmg s
r.oach Johnny Orr, Umvers1ty worth 1002 Dunca ns 990
of Michigan Athletic Director
Team Game - Duncans 374
Don Canham announced Mon· Killingsworth 361
Ind J Gil mes - D Duncan
day mght
541 R Miller 537
Canham also said that Dick
tnd Gilme - R Moiler 219
Homg, Michigan's freshman R Ca pehart 192
coach who led hiS team to a 2-0
record this season was named
assistant varsity coach
The reorganization of the
staff wlis needed due to the
departure of assistant basketball Coach Fred Snowden, who
was appomted head basketball
coach at the Umvers1ty of
Arizona last month, Canham
SBid
' We are extremely pleased
to gain the services of such fine
coaches as Dutcher and carter
and m the process we have
strengthened our counseling
services which we regard as
one of the prune funcllons of an
athletic department,' Canham
SBid

on the court
Even when he was a
youngster m LouisVIlle, fnends
often prodded him to take more
shots durmg a game, but he
would contmue pass10g off to
his fellow players
Today the 6-foot 7, 24S:powtd
center sill! shll'ks opportunities
to garner pomts and explaUIS
simply 'I shoot when 1get the
shot '
Smce Unseld IS the smallest
ce nter m the league his
rebounding statistics are all
the more unpress1ve
In his first four years with
Ba lumore Unseld has finished
second m rebounding three
limes Unseld clauns he has no
style of defendmg against the
towermg likes of Kareem
Jabbar or Wilt Chamberlain
You have to play them any
way you can and hope for the
best he said once 'A lot of
~eboundmg IS pos1tionmg "
The Baltunore offense IS
predicated on the ability of
Unseld to get the ball downcourt fast He accomplishes it
regularly despite a series of
mJuries that would have sent
most players mto the ranks of
the spectawrs Achrome ankle
IDJury and a recent bout With
tonsiliiiS have !ailed w keep
Unseld from hlB average of 42
mmutes play a game
Unseld s attitude on the court
extends mto hiS private life
For the last two summers he
has served as co11ll111SSloner of
Baltunore s mner city amateur
basketball program
A history major at
Louisville, Unseld sa1d he
would like w try teaching or
high school counseling after he
ends hiS pro career
If he were currently a college
undergraduate approached by
a pro team 'there would be no
doubt that I would Sign a
contract if the figures they're
mentionmg now are accurate "
The Bullets have !hell' share
of new faces this year and
Unseld believes that IS one
reason for the club's below 500
season
'We JUSt weren't a good
team this year We didn't know
each other," he said ~ ,three
other diviSion teams ~~p ­
parently
also
lacked
togetherness as the Bullets
were never reaUy pressed In
their race for the division
crown
Unseld, the consummate
team player says It will take
an uncommon team effort w
dispose of the Knicks, with
whom Baltimore cs currently
embroiled m the Eastern
DIVISion playoff series

Always Your Best

TILLER BUY!

HUFF~

~

ThiS Weeks Special

USED CARS

69 VOLKSWAGEN
2 DOOR
Radio and w s w tires

Check th1s one now

FlRST BASE COACH
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
New York Mets annowtced
Monday the signing of Warren
' Sheriff" Robinson as first
bal!e coach for the 1972 season
RoblllSOn replaces Yogi Berra
who was elevated to manager
after the death of Gil Hodgw

Bull~ts

'1395
Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You II Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Bus mess
GMAC FINANCING
?92 5342
Pomeroy
Open Even1ngs 'TIIB 00
Tll5 P M Sat

NEW

1972
MODELS
ARE
HERE!

5 H.P. MODEL

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 99~ 2342

Ml DOLE PORT, 0

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

'
MaiD County's Oldest and Largest

Insurance Agency

W1th Bnggs &amp; Stratton eng me 4 cycle Choke
A Matlc carburetor, rewmd starter, forward
&amp; reverse. 14" to 26" tmes Extra t ines
available

COME! CHECK OVR PRICE!

MOORE'S
IN POMEROY

MAIN ST.

992-2848

�2- Till D1i1r T 'h UCid? ; • W'llu...,y, o , April II, 1972

WIN AT BltiDGI

Bon Appet1t

In tlte Second liossat Poll

3- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , April II, 1972

Luck ol IMP

'Me Govern: New Man to Watch'
llv IIRUCt IIIOSSAT
WASHINGTON t NEA i
Sen Edmund Musk1e of Mame the Democrats long
lome presidential front runner for 1972 has taken a sleep
downward plunge 10 hiS delegate p1 ospect for the the
nommatmg conventiOn 10 M1am1 m July He has lost
nearly half the potential he had a month ago
The second !972:NEA NatiOnal Observer Democratic
box score gives Muslue 7731'. votes, still enough for first
place 10 the candidate lists but 509 fewe1 than the 1 282"'.
first count gave him 10 mid March
The new survey e levat~ s Sen George McGovern of
South Dakota to second place With 490 ~ delega te votes
a Jump of 203 from his total on the m1hal count This
reflects his clear victory m the 1mportant W1sconsm
pnmary his riSing pos1t1on as a real contender and
Muskle s decline
Sen Hubert Humphrey second the last Lime With 402
votes slips to third now even though he picks up 66 more
votes for 468 total He has not yet won a pnmary and IS
Igmhng no big fire
A continu10g surprise IS Gov George Wallace of Ala
bama First time out he scored an Impressive 220 votes
Now his prospective total IS up by 71 to 291 and he could
very well riSe later to a point above 300 Some of his
gams come out of Musk1e s hide
The rest of Musk1e s dramatic vote loss ~oes mto the
limbo of the temporanly uncom milled This movement

,

I

EDITORIALS

.QIO
WEST
EAST
• K2
• 53
.QJ9T
•t0865
• J943
• A108
.AH
.K862
SOUTH (D)
.AQJ86

.K6
•"'

.J953
Both vulnerable

.Wesl

l
''
''
'

I

!

f 'Beware the Chinese---'
The two giant pandas presented to PreSident Nixon by
the
Chinese KOVernment are now quietly ensconced 10
~ the National
Zoo In Washington

Pandas are also known as bear cats and cat bears
! Maybe
someone should remmd the Presldenl to beware

i

the Chmese gifting bears

I

thet e are good reasons for
BY JACK O'BRIAN
t~e types or symptoms you
'NANETI'E" KNOWS NO LET-UP
are complammg of
NEW YORK (KFS)
Caught 'No No
'
'
Occasionally small stones Nanette" agam this week easily as marvelous
will pass on their own and re as Its opening mght 15 months ago, Bemy
~~t~~ tfhagr~~\e'rhe~~\~~~ae Baker's farfunruer than the Ofllllll&amp;l fabricated
clo,wnmg of Jack Gilford, the rest of the
large number of small stones
and the problem Isn t solved splendid cast- delightful Jack Collins was
that s1mply They are not thes pportlng sen ti at the "F
Thin"
u
- sa on
unny
g
readil y dis~lved and prob 6rst mght - stepped mto surgery.bound Lou
ably the bes course for gall Parker'shok~y shoes and tr1wnphed -on three
stones Is surgical removal
prov1dmg the patient s health days notice You wouldn't believe the n•..,0 htother w' s e will permit Jt beat cops on Times Square happy, soUCltous,
There are some recent stud nice even to the bearded, slovenly hippie~
less u g g e s tI n g that some
Old friend Woolworth Donahue died in Palm
stones can be diSsolved how
Beach Great nocturnal companion His widow
ever this work IS sllll too
early to recommend Its ge n Is Mary Hartline, ex.rmgmistress of TV's early
era! use as yet
Clncago:based ABC TV circus shows Woolie
tlIS a good Idea to have had all the money he wanted - hIS recen Uy
the opmwns or two doctors demiSed mother Jessie mdulged hlB any whim,
before an operation You
dhe lastwill
ttedW lito
de
shou ld have a family phySI an
r
pemu
oo e
mva "
Clan and If you have a prob her huge estate for up to $100,000 a year, but he
!em that reqmres surgery had comparatively little of hlB own , ergo, not
tel him refer yo u to a sur much of an estate
Th
f
geon
e two o them ca n
• '11le Godfather • wW have grossed Its first
decide whether surgery IS ..,. mllli
f this
ding
h d
JUstified 10 a given case
•••
on as 0
rea
Way a ea of
iN!WSPAPER !NTERPRISE ASS N
any picture ever for that quick haul Muchadmired Jun Shanahan becomes veep of tbe
huge $100 million N Y City convention center to
nm some five blocks atop our North River
docks l..oew's ]l'esldent, Bob Tisch, IS chairman of this vast and welcome addition to N. Y
fun and mdustry It shOUld choose a short name,
a Ia Ollcago'shuge McCormack Place, why not
1
Junmy Walker Place, named for tbe N Y
mayor who most exemplified the glamor and
fun of this great burg
Roger Moore's the next James Bond
Every amnesty:~~urvey - there have been
dozens - tums up overwhelmmg majorities
Bv RAY CROMLEY
agamst g1vmg the draft dodgers a tidy b!U of
patriOtic health The N Y Weekly Woman
WASHINGTON INEAJ
mag folded after four Issues The Lambs Club
There IS more to busmg than mtegratwn
Lambasted ' N Y Pollee Comm!Bh Murphy
John, my 7 year old son IS earned three hours each day
Cut
very close to the hamess:bulls' low opinion
for school Not to achieve rac1al balance But because he
of nationally ambitious murph Pulitzer newsIS deal, and for practical reasons the county program for
these youngsters IS at one central school

But that Is not all These children live too far away
from each other to be mv1ted to birthday parties or to
play together 10 the afternoon My son can't walk over to
their yards casually and ask Mary or Georj:e or Jim to
come out and play My son asks to be dnven to their
homes, but the Lime reqmred IS too great except on rare
OCCaSIOnS
Even worse this long range busmg eliminates most of
that time for compamonsh1p, ~ych ng, baseball tree
climbmg and playmg house essen!Ial for children By the
time my son arrives home he IS qUite often so tiied from
the JOUrn ey that on his own accord he drifts oft to his
bedroom and naps-until dmner to be awakened only long
enough to eat and get himself undressed for hiS night's
sleep _
Th1s IS no way for a child to live
The men and women m charge of thiS pro~ram are
aware of these problems They are, m fact makmg every
effort to find a solution-one that WOllld put these children
m schools In their own neighborhoods
They are working for !h1s change, even though they
know that because of the high degree of speciahza!Ion
required for teachmg these boyt and girls the decentrali
za!Ion of this effort for the rela!Ive)y lumted numbers of
students mvolved raises some very difficult management
and finance problems
But these teachers believe that the emotional stram of
long·range busmg IS JUS! too great They also perceive
the very great added benefit fn havmg these boys and
girls attend school m their own neighborhoods- with the
children they play with after school and whose parents m
many cases know each other Tlus giVes the stability and
confidence which young children seem to require ln such
great amounts
As noted above, none of this has anylh10g to do with
race
Because of my son s expenence, this reporter has
talked to a great many parents from varmus parts of this
country numbers of whom have had some experience
with extensive busmg for one reason or another-some to
achieve racial balance, some to escape rac1al balance
some because they live m Isolated areas and some be
cause they have wanted their children to attend a special
private school of quality
It IS this writer s studied belief after these talks that
Cor young children the effects of long range busmg are so
senous that to be justified the ends lo be achieved would
have to be essential certam and unattamable by any
other means
If we as a P•ople are so bankrupt In our Imagma!Ion
and our IngenUity that we can thmk of no better way than
busmg to achieve the educational nghts of all of our c1tl
zens regardless of color then I despair

I

man and ex LBJ White House aide Clark
Mollenhoff just had major surgery
Famed 3rd Ave saloon Tim Coltello's just
had 1ts James Thurber murals refurbished by
SIX cartoonists - wtidy up for a cocktail party
w salute Jack Lemmon's starring.fllck, "The
War Between Man &amp; Woman," loosely based
on the late New Yorker author.artlst's life and
scribbllngs
Thurber's cartoons were un)l'etenious and Jim never took them nor himself
senoUB!y, but when a critic lambasted the
Thurber daubs as "tenth rate," the late New
Yorker editor Harold Ross "defended" them
• They are not tenth rate," Ross grumped
• They're third rate "
lArd !Auls Mounthatten staged a lordly,
genteel rendezvous in Las Vegas with Lena
Home, an old pal, his ludshlp opined, "She
grows more beautiful with age", noble Louis
and Cary Grant dldn 'I Ignore the headier Las
Vegas culture - dug the French:fludes casino
de PariS show at the Dunes and collected
chorines backstage later
Gashing 111 the empties one of Twiggy's
bras snapped up Sll powtds ten shllllngs at a
London charity auction Society maestro Phil
Bennett read that a slx.ounce champ1on truffle
was dug up In Italy, and ]l'edicts Richard
Burton will buy It for Liz And that she'll wear It
Carol (Mnl Walter) Matthau Is the H'wood
hostess partying visiting greasepaint royalty,
the Olarlle Olaplms, Gloria Vanderbilt dittoed
In N Y , tbe bashes brought togetl\er thiS old,
closest glamor pa!Bhlp of the Stork Club era,
]l'ettlest gals of the year - who wed BW
Saroyan, Stokowski and Chaplin Great
retroactive glitter
Concert p1amst Byron Janis can't play
Without pain Bursiiill Oscar director Frank
McCarthy and Jane Wyman have It bad A1
their age they even go danCing Lucile Ball's
Gal Friday, Joan Hurlow, weds TV writer
Stephen Lord April 16 Opera star (early TV
actress) Mary Costa relaxed from her ''The
Great Waltz" emoting with Jun Nabors Forget
about a romance

WORLD ALMANAC

Generation Rap

FACTS

By Helen and Sue Bouel
Dear Helen and Sue
My father won't let me date 1111less he gets wknow the guy
That means the hoy has to come down to my house about ten
times (no less than eight') just totalktomyparenta
Then, If Dad's "requirements" aren't met (Ill everythmg
from length of hair to politics) I've gone through aU that for
nothing, because I can't go out with the guy
Besides, what rena will visit a girl's parents eight tunes just
for a date' I haven't dal,ed yet Guess thls answers the qu~on
I m a !&amp;.year.old girl who tries to see my parents' Side, but
the truth is Father doesn 't always know best (even If Mother says
he's boss) - MIXED UP
Dear M U
You hit II right on the nose parents aren't always right, just
because they re "the bosses," or 'have been through It "
Try for a calm talk With your father Ask him why he thinks
ypur judgment IS so poor and when will he consider you old
enough wknow which boys are right and which aren't' Imply
that he should have more faith in a daughter he's ralaed so well
Slow hun you can discuss without getting mad, but make It
definite you believe len mtervlews are at least nine too many'
Good luck - SUE
Dear Mixed Up
You might also ask your mother about her dating days If
her parents (your grandparents) were as rigid as your Dad, how
did she ever lreak 100!8' Did your father pass the ten:!nspectlon
llst' Or would he have stood for It?
I think he, like a lot of skittery parents, has laid down a law
hefore mvestlgating the {fcts He'll soften - with your Mom's
help - once he starts meeling ~ few boys So don t scare them
off by telling them about "the rule " - HELEN

The earthworm 1s one of
man's most valuable am
mal fnends because of Its
role as a soil creator con
d11Ioner and preserver The
World Almanac notes that
soil digested by mllllons of
earthworms can create as
much as 4() tons of r1ch top
soil per acre annually, while
their tunnels a1d root
growth and Improve dram
age thus preventing ero
SIOH

The Daily Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTERISTOf

+++

Dear Helen and Sue
I was In a car accident two months ago, and was left with a
bad scar on my face It's terribly ugly Now that I am back In
school, I find my friends are my enemies They hate me because
my scar makes me different and not pretty any more
Even my parents treat me like I don 't belong to them Don't
give me that stuff about a cowtselor - he'd hate my looks t,oo
Socially CODSCIOUS people Cl!,ll't stand to be embarrassed by bemg
seen with me Is there any ~' - TilE OUTCAST
Dear Outcalt
I think your scar Ia much bigger to you than to anyone el8e
No one wW desert you because you're been hurt - but they'll
leave you alone If you close them out Are you sure the biggest
scar Isn't Inside' - SUE
Dear Outcast
Leam to talk about your scar, naturally and without shaine
Find make:Up that will minimize II - and look forward wplastic
surgery that, combined with cosmetics, does marvelous lranaformatlons these days - HELEN

MEIGS MASON AREA

CHESTER L TANNIHILL,
l!•tc Ed

ROIIRT HOEFLICH,

City Editor
Pub lls htd dilly tXCtpt
Saturday by Tht Otl io Vellty
FlubiiSI'Hn9 Company 111
Court St
Pomeroy Ohio
,U76f Bus iness Offlct Phone

1'92 2156 Edltorlll Phone 992
21l7

Second clus postage paid at
Pomtrov 01110
National ldlltrttslno

reprtsentttive

Gallagtltr Inc

Bottlntlll

12 Eut •2nd
St Ntw York Clly New YOrk
Subscript ion raftS
Oi

I I'Vtrtd by carrier whtrt

avatleblt JO cents per wttk
By Motor Route whtre urrler
srrv•ee not avalllble One

month

Sl 7l By moll In Ohio
end W Va Ont yeer S14 00
Sl • months S7 2S Thrte
months 14 50 Subsc:rlr,llon
pr•ct Includes Sundl'r' T mH

Sent.nel

I

There IS only one thmg
wrong with South s four
spade bid It happens not to
make
In rubber bridge your op
ponents chalk up 100 pomts
In an IMP match, In the
event that you bid the game
and your opposite numbers
stop at a part score 1t costs
you six IMPs You go mmus
100 They score plus 140 for
a net of 240 which represents
those six IMPs
There IS nothmR to the
play of the hand Game de
pends on the trump fmesse
and the fmesse doesn t work
We have shown the hand
lor two reasons The first IS
to show the Iuck In IMP
matches If both sides bid
the same there IS no swing
When one stops at a part
score and the other b1ds the
game a full 16 IMPs depend
on the locatiOn of the king
of spades
Put 11 over m the East
hand The g a m e bidder
scores plus 620 The part
score bidder plus 170 Then
the difference Is 450 or 10
IMPs
It also shows that the
game bid Is a good one The
game bidder IS $ettln~ odds
of 10 IMPs to SIX IMPs on
the locahon of the king of
spades and that ls exactly
an even money proposition
The hand also shows that
It pays to bid game on a
fmesse m IMP competition
How about South s Jump to
game ' A very very slight
overbid but who doesn t
make slight overbids'
(NIWS,.,VIl ENTIItPIIU ASSN I

Jeeps Run By
Bobcats, 4-2
South Webster erupted for
three runs m the third mmng
Monday mght and held on to
defeat the Kyger Creek Bob
cats 4 2 m a non leag ue game
at Cheshire Coach Dick
Adams' Bobcats took a 1-0 lead
m the second mmng on smgles
by first baseman Mike Beebe
teltfielder Greg McCarty and
shortstop John Baird
The Jeeps lied the score on a
suiCide squeeze bunt off the bat
of third baseman Ron
Hamilton Greg Smith Jeep
shortstop doubled leadmg off
the mmng and moved to third
followmg a walk and error

Local Bowling
POMEROY LANES
Wednesday lale
Mixed League
Apnl5 1912
Standmgs
Team

W~st

North

Pass
Pass

3•
4•

,. 2.

72

Owen Holler
Cassell Carsey
Fultz Bentley

62
52

~osenbaum

50

72

Meadows

Blakeslee Hoyt

28

H1gh Senes - Team Owen

Holter 1905
Rosenba um
"kadows 1826 Morrow Moore

1809
H1gh Game - Team Owen

Holter
649
Meadows 639

Ro senbaum
Owen Holter

635

H1gh Senes -

Men

Roy

Holter 566 J Carsey 538 D
Rosenbaum 530
H1gh Series - Women H
, M&lt;lqr~~ 44 1J,~V l:ioyt .;141 S

'

h1ddmg has been

Pts

Morrow Moore

~ ~
Th~

being heralded as a
poweli10use
The Marauders under their
new but Mseball·wise coach
Don Wolfe starling only two
lettermen held off the Blacks
for seven mnmgs allowmg
only one run on a sacnflce fly
Then they used the longball to
lie II up and some aggressiVe
offense on the basepaths m the
home half of the !mal frame to I
WID 2 1
I he Maruaders havmg yet
to get their first hit going mto

ONen 437
Hlg ~ Gam ~ Men D
Rosenbaum 222 R Holter 204

T Cassell 202
High Game - Women V
Hoyl 167 H Moore 164 S

East

Pass

Owen

Pass
Pess

164

Tr1 County League

You South hold
.AK654 •Az U .AK854
What do you do now'
A-81d IJIX clubs Jl you use
Blackwood and Ond lhat fOIIJ'
partner holds an ace you atill
aren't golnc to lry for seven.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Instead of btddmg ont heart
West btd one d1amond over
your club Your partner b1da
one heart What do you do now ?

The Almuae
By Uolted Preo•IDimlatlollll
Today is Tuesday, April II,
the 1112nd day of 1972
The moon Ill between ita last
quarter and new phase
The morning stars are
Mercury and Jupiter
The evening stars are Venus,
Mars and Saturn
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Arle~
New York fashion designer
Oleg Cassin! was born April II,
1913
On this day In hlstory
In 1947 Jackie Robinson
became the first Negro In
major league baseball when he
played for the Broolllyn Dodgers against the New York
Yankees In an exhibition game
In 1966 Guam:bued 85211
bombed VIetnam for the first
Ume
In 19118 Prealdent Lyndon
Johnson ordered 24,600 mllltary
reservists caned up, haH of
them for duty for Vlelnam
In 1970 the Apollo 13
spacecraft headed for the tb1r1J
U S landing on the moon The
attempt wat aborted when , ..
faulty oxygen tank nploded
The astronauts returned lllfely

Apnl4 1912
Standings

Team
Larry s Ashland

Pts

Rawlings Dodge

84
68
60

Firestone

42

Hal sum

40

Davis Wart~er s Ins

Pomeroy Cement Block

44

Hl9h Indi vidua l Game
Paul Harris 237
Second H1gh lnd Game Paul Harris 223
High Series - Paul Harris

661

Wmmng pitcher Bnan Ph1pps
smgled to nghl knockmg m the
other runs
Kyger Creek cut the margm
to one run m the fourth frame
on a double by centerf1elder
Lou Loudeq an d Beebf s
second h1 t of the game
The Bobcats threatened
agam m the sixth mmng but
were unable to score Louden
reached on an error and moved
to second as Beebe smgled up
the middle McCarty popped up
and Bms grounded out to end
the mnmg
The SciOto Countians scored
their !mal run m the sixth on a
smgle walk hit batsman and
error Beebe paced the Bobcats
with a perfect 3·3 performance
Louden and pmchhltter Joe
Stidham each cracked doubles
Phipps In gomg the diStance
fanned five and did not ISSue a
walk Losmg hurler Mike
J ohnson walked three and
struckout four• H1s reliever
John Baird fanned SIX and
walked two
Kyger Creek now 0.3 on the
year wi ll travel lo South
Webster this evemng
By Inmngs
South Webster 003 001 ~ 6 2
Ky ger Creek. 0!0 100 ll--2 8 3
Batteries
Phipps (WP ) and Hanes
Johnson (LP) Baird (3) and
Bias

Tractor Power
1s on drsplay.
From the econom1cal
7 HP Lawn Ranger to
the brawny 14 HP
models.

A thought for tGday Gen
Douglas MacArtHur said
''There Ia no IUhetl\ule
victory"

tO:

GOOD FOR KICKS
Tom DempnJ, wbo wu
relealled by the New Orlebi

Salnta btll folllld a bome 1n
Philadelphia, bad the belt
percenllfe amoac Nallollal
F~tbiU Leacue field Coal

kickers la•t ~ea.,., hiW.c
on 1% of 17 &amp;rlea fllr 1 . 'Ill
pereenta&amp;e Garo
of 'the Miami Dol 11 led
the Amerleaa
ereaee
with a 701 mark,
28
of 40 lrle1. Curt Kalp of
Wa•hlacton tried lhe •n&amp;
field IHII Ia 1H NFL, 41
(tylq • leape netrlll alld
al• made the mut, 11

Low prices
long trades
easy credit terms plus
and garden tractor features that can t be beat
VIsit us now and hear our offer You 11 never gel a h.u•• l
deal on all the new 1972 Wheel Horse models The o1oes1.1
mos.t respectad lawn and ga rden tractors made
I

BAUM LUMBER

=mla•

COMPANY

c

lllttlilf

WHIIL HO.. SI!

!tt~ODUCTS

INC

\

•

•

'

;.;:;:;:~~

;::.:: 0

Q.. ;

~-

COLUMBIA Mo (UP!) University of Missouri athletic
director Wilbur ' Sparky"
Stalcup, 62, was removed from
the critical list Monday after
suffering a heart attack Sun
day

Nets Top
Colonels
101 To 96

UNIONDALE, NY (UPI)Anythmg else the New York
Nets can do 10 the Amencan
Basketball Association
playoffs will be pure gravy
The Nets completed one of
the biggest upsets m ABA
history Monday mght when
they whipped Kentucky, 101 96
to clmch their quarter fmal
series, lour games to two The
Colonels had won 68 games and
lost only 14 during the regular
campaign, the best record m
the five-year existence of the
ABA and were favored to wm
the playoffs
But the Nets, after losmg
eight of 11 games to the
Colonels durmg t.1e season
surpnsmgly won the first two
games of the series at Kentucky and then went on to
complete the upset
'It s the greatest upset m the
ABA s history " said rookie
John Roche who did more than
his share to make It possible
and led all scorers m the finale
Ashland 1009
with 32 pomts
Tea m H1gh Series - Larry s
While Roche shone With his
Ashla nd 2915
offense, as much credit must
Beg1nners League
also go to the defensiVe work of
Aprll6 1972
B1Uy Paultz, who held 7 foot-2
Standings
Team
Pfs
Artis Gilmore without a s10gle
Four Aces
66
Lucky Stars
50 shot m the fmal quarter
Red Oev1l s
46 Gilmore wound up with 24
Four Deu ces
34 pomts but was virtually
High Individual Game Charles V 183 D1ane Hawley useless on offense durmg the
decisiVe fourth period
178
Second H1gh lnd Game Even more Incredulous m the
Geo Hoschar 177 Helen V 174
New York triumph was the fact
High Series - Ray R 470
that
Barry, the leading scorer,
Dtane H 451
missed one ga!lle and was
Sec:ond Htgh Senes Charles V 468 Betty W 426
meffective mothers because of
Team High Game - Four a VIrUS
Aces 757
Team High Series - Four
The Nets open tnelr
Aces 2116
semifmal series at VIrgmia
With games on Thursday and
Saturday

CHESTER, OHIO

!115 Wutlr•land Road
South Bend Ind ian• 46814

GET A HORSE- WHEEL HORSE OF COURSE •
1

the bottom of the seventh and nghlhanded pitcher drilled a .md walked five and had a
!mal mmng lied 11 up 1 t on sharp grounder headed fur g1ea t defense behmd him one
JuniOr leftf1elder ' Floyd Bur cent.I The Big Blacks second that played errorle ss bal l
ney s lead.off home run a hne baseman picked tl off the mcludlllg several tough
g1ound but his throw was too chances
shot through nght fie ld
Steve Miller the firebalhng
Roger Dixon semor catcher late to catch the speedy Chaney
followed Burney with a bad husUmg to first base as Dixon B1g Black nghthaAder also
hop smgle to nght Semor crossed the pia te for the p1 tched a fmc game
He had a no-hiller through
shortstop Steve Dunfee laid wmmng run
Chaney was not only a slar at the firs t SIX mnmgs and at that
down a perfect sacn!Ice to
send Dixon to second After the plate but also on the pomt had allowed only one
Dixon stole third, semor mound as he made hiS h1g~ run net , that commg on a
righlhelder Chester Wigal school p1tchmg debut with a dropped third stnke m the
fanned for the second out of the masterful three hitter over Pt fourth Miller makmg his first
mmng but Bill Chaney, JUnior Pleasant Chaney fanned three start of the year fanned mne

. , . , . , . ; . ; . ; . ;• •

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby

directly mto the mtestme
or the bile which has been
stored m the gallbladder can
be e)ected by the contrac
1100 of the bladder and pass
down 118 fork of the y en
ter mg the common duct and
10to the mtest10 e Thus the
llbl dd
ga a er IS really a stor
age reservoir and that IS all
A s ton e can lodge m the
duct commg directly from
the g a II b l ad d e r and JU&lt;f
block off the ga llbladder 1t
Itsel f or a s t o n e can pass
down to the common due!
and actually block off the
dramage from the l1ver and
the gallbladder both This
can cause severe pam and
even 1aund1ce
The bile enters the Intes
tmel and a ids digestwn par
ticuarlyolfattyfoods When
there IS madequate bile flow
mto the mtestme It IS more
diffi cult to digest fatty foods
hence people with gallblad
der disease often have 1ntol
erance to fatty foods This
forms gas and pam and re
s uIt s m md1gestion Thus

For three hours each day he IS belted m and must sit
qwetly m one seal For him and his compamons on the
bus and for the driver this 1s a severe emotional stra10
though the children on my son s bus are fortunate 10 hav
mg a woman dnver of understandmJ: and great good
humor But she, as a mother herself IS womed at what
these long restramed ndes do to the children

..

,

Easl South

2•
Poss 4 •
Pass
Pus
Openmg leod- • Q

BusinQ S Effect
On Child Himself

One of the great unresolved moral questions m med1
cine Is whether or not a doctor has a duty or even a
right, to employ heroic meas~res to keep the spark of
life flickering In a hopelessly Ill patient
There Is a companion quandary to th1s question While
not so profound as the first It 1s a situation more doctors
are more likely to encounter This IS whether to tell or
not to tell a dying patient that he Is dymg
It would seem that It ought to depend upon the patient
his personality his store of psychologll:al strength or
spiritual resources
But mankind has apparently devised as many styles
of dying as It has of hvmg After surveymg doctors from
four continents, a team of researchers at the Medical
College of Ohio at Toledo report that the decision more
often than not Is based on the physician's own qwrks,
cultural background and religion-not the patient's
The study Included 230 doctors 24 from Argentina 31
lrom India and Ceylon 24 from the Far East, 45 from
Israel, 40 Jewish American doctors and 66 non Jewish
American doctors
Each physician responded to a battery of 12 mterlock
mg questions designed to reveal his attitudes toward
telUng a patl~nt about a fatal disease (m this case, can
cer), about ordermg aggressiVe treatment for the dis
ease and about his views on death and Immortality
The Investigation turned up significant differences m
the handling of termmal Illness The researchers believe
these differences stem from the cultural and religious
background of the physicians themselves
American doctors for mstance strongly believe m
telling the patient he has a fatal Illness Non Americans
just as strongly oppose this
Argentinians believe In aggressiVe treatment- never
say die as It were-even though It subJects the patient to
added pain and expense without much benefit to him
Indians and Ceylonese do not favor aggressive treat
men!, Americans and Far Easterners would use a~gres·
1 slve treatment only for selective cases and Israeli doc
, tors were almost evenly split on the question
Israeli, Far Eastern and Jewish American doctors ~1ve
little credence to Immortality The other groups believe
in some form of afterlife
Alone among all the doctors, the Jewish Amencan doc
ton believe that man can ,be happily reconciled to the
fact of his nonexistence after death
The Israeli and Jewlsh·Amerlcan doctors says the
study "do not believe In preparing spmtually for death
l and therefore see no point m telling the cancer patient
about his !Uness It is more Important to them to prolonR
1 life and cause no aggravation or sadness to the patient
: By contrast, the Indian and Ceylonese doctors believe
' the patient must have time to prepare for death but
t that It IS dtfbcult for the patient to cope with the know!
, edge that his lllness Is fatal
The researchers conclude that 11 IS of the utmost 1m
~ portance • for each doctor to be aware of his own par
' ticular attitudes about death so that he can prevent these
l idiosyncrasies from mterfermg with the quality of med
' leal care he admmisters to the fatally 111 patient
Physician, know thyself

Norlh

PIISS
Pass

RAY CROMLEY

Doctors of World
Vary in Opinions

BY KliliTH WISECUP
ll was a long 1\811 - the
season opener - but 11 was
worth 1l lo the Meigs Marauder
t 972 baseball squad
Held off by the weather
almost as long as dollar d1f
ferences are keepmg maJor
leaguers off their diamonds
the Marauders opened Monday
afternoon at Middleport
agamst the Pomt Pleasant Big
Blacks, a team that had toted
up 17 runs m Its slaughter of
Ripley ( 17 0) and was already

II

.K32
• QT52

C&lt;?mmon Gallbladder Problems I V~i;;"';i~ng n;·~waY.
cholesterol manufactured by
the bile and bile pigment
that gives bile Its color
There are several combma
tlons of these that can make
different kmds of gallstones
Btle IS found 10 the liver
cells and collected 1n thou
sands of tiOy tubules that
actually b eg in w1thm the
cell These connect to form
larger tubes and fmally the
large bile tube (duct ) that
comes out of the liver The
bile duct gives off a side
duct w h I c h leads to the
small, r 0 u n d gallbladder
The mam bile duct from the
liver w1th the s1de duct to
h
llbl d f
t e ga ad er orms a Y
fork Bile manufac tured by
the liver comes down one
fork of the y and goes up
the other fork mto the gall
bl adder Both f or ks of the
Y JOin together 10to a com
mon duct the stem of the
Y which empties directl y
mto the small IO!estme
Bile can flow down one
fork of the Y duct and
through the common duct

NORTH

.109H

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB
Gallstones Made of Cholesterol

By Lawrence Lamb, M D
Dear Dr Lamb-! would
like your comment on Ihe
gallbladder I am told from
X rays that I have small
stones and gravel What
about the common duct that
doesn t em ply out as 1t
should' I am on a gallblad
der dIe t It seems I have a
full feeling at the base of
my nght nbs most of the
time • especially if I am a
llttle n e r v o u s and some
times I hurt m my back Can
t be s e ever be diSsolved'
Would you advise more than
,
b f
one doc t or s opmiOn e ore
any operation'
'
Deu Reader- Gallbladder
disease is a very common
problem An old medical
a ph 0 r Ism says that 1t 1s
found In p eo pIe who are
fair, fat forty and four •
refer fl n g to middle aged
women With four children
This isn't always true smce
It also occurs m men and
can occur at almost any age
Gallstones are made of

Marauders Upset Big Blacks 2-1

Matches

1011101 s the contusion wh1ch besets m~ny political fig
11res and prospective 01 actual ~elegates In New York
for example Musk1e earlier had 167 10d1coled and the
word was he could have gamed much more or the state s
278 voles had he recovered from his first laltermg pn
mary showmg But his fourth place f1mshes m Flonda
and W1sconsm threw hjs supporters Into bewilderment
Most have retreated behmd the curiam of 10deciSIOD to
await clearer signals from tater pnmanes m Massachu
sells Pennsylvama Ohio Indiana Michigan Oregon and
Cahforma
Muskie actllally Is worse off than the figure s reveal A
good part of his remalmng 773 1), IS soft and loose staying
put only because It doesn I know where to go or doesn t
want lo go to Humphrey or McGovern Musk1e's present
chief nvats
Humphrey s very modest ga ms are a danger Sign lor
him Few party leaders th10k he 1s a good bel to beat
President Nixon They thmk he has the look and sound of
the past about him His lhird·place hmsh m W1sconsm IS
deemed poor McGovern IS acknowledged as chmbmg
fast orgamzmg well and campa1gmng doggedly But
labor and the party regulars shU dislike him see him as
a dubious challenger of Nixon don't thmk one pnmary
victory makes a summer Nevertheless md1cated v1cto
nes lor him m Massachusets and Oregon might alter his
prospects upward very substantially He Is tl\e new man
to watch

Unseld Turned

Falcons Subdue
Tornadoes 2-1
RACINE - The So uth ern errors The wmnmg run came
Local1ornadoes suffered their m the fifth on a sacnf1ce fly
Hubbard drove m Southern s
fu sl selbac1• In two starts with
a 2 l loss to the1r cross nver 1un 111 the bottom of the third on
II va l th e Wahama White ll1e !u st of his two smgles The
Falcons here Monday af other two hit.&lt;; off Hubbard was
ternoon m a non league game another smgle by Roush and a
J1m Hubbard once agam 11 as smgle by Hesson
Coach Hilton Wolfe s Tor
the bright spot 1n Tornadoes
defense
as
the semor nadoes now I 1 overall and I~
IIghthandei pitched a strong m the Southern Valley Con
game giVIng up only three !erence have a key game w1 th
hit.&lt;; He also solved Falcon the undefeated Eastern Eagles
p1lcher R1ck Hesson for h1s at Racine tomght m SVAC
teams only two hits Hubbard act1on
Lme score
struck out seven and walked
Wahama
100 010 ll--2 3 3
four Hesson also fanned seven
Southern
001 000 Il-l 3 3
Bnd walked three
Hesson 1WP) and Clark
The Falcons picked up a run
m the first mnmg on a double Hubbard 1LP) and Pugh
by Chester Roush and three

New Issues Stymies
Baseball Negotiations
NEW YORK (UP!) - Negoll
allons between th e maJor
league clubowners and players
appeared today to be stymied
by a new ISsue which executive
director Marvm Miller of the
Players AssociatiOn called a
(ernble,
ternble
road
block
The Issue was a s!Ipula!Ion
the clubowners that the players
forfeit their pay for the days
they struck while agreemg to
make up the games postponed
durmg the ll~y strike and
play a 1621!ame schedule
Tbe stipulation was con·
tamed m an offer by John
Gaherm chief negotiator for
the clubowners,
to use
$400 00 of the funds now on
depositiOn the rellrement fund
fo1
ad11llwnal
pensiOn
benefits
Tbe offer was flatly rejected
Monday mght by Miller, appearmg on the ABC network
TV program Monday Night
Sports Miller said, the
owners are askmg the players
to work overtime for nothing
I thmk It IS mcredible •
Asked whether the new ISsue
co uld be resolved, Miller

Teams Draft Stars
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
Na!Io)lal Basketball Association, taking advantage of one of
the thiJIIIest crops of college
basketbaU talent m recent
years, has set the stage for a
real shootout with the nval
American Basketball Association
The NBA conducted Its
annual draft of college senjors
Monday and shocked every\me
by drafting two established
ABA stars and another player
who has already signed an
ABA contract on 1ts first round
of selections
'11le Buffalo Braves started
the fireworks by choosing &amp;.
foot.e forward Robert McAdoo
of North Carolina as the No 2
cho1ce in the draft This was
done less than five minutes
alter NBA commissioner Wal·
ter Kennedy had notified all
17 teama that McAdoo had'
signed a contract with the
VIrginia Squires of the ABA
'11le Chicago Bulls and the
Milwaukee Bucks, however,
provided real stunners of the
f1rst round when they respectivelY chose Ralph Slmpaon
and Julius Erving, two of the
ABA 's superstars Simpson
plays for the Denver RocketS
and Erving with tjle Virginia
Sq'bires
"Long Raoge Gamble"
While It was generally
assumed that this meant the
NBA had decided on open
warfare with the ABA, a
spokesman for the Bulls said
the draltmg of Simpson should
not be construed as an attempt
to create trouble with the other

league but rather as a long
range gamble '
Kennedy made II clear that
any attempt by an NBA club to
sign a player under contract to
the ABA would be m violatiOn
of NBA rules and would not be
allowed
The owners agreed at a
meetitg last week that we
would honor all signed onetracts m the ABA, ' said
Kennedy ' But draftmg and
s1gn10g are two different
thmgs • If II happens that one
Qf our guys signs them then II s
a different story I would not
allow 1! under league rules '
L:aRue Martin, a 6:10 center
from Loyola of Chicago, turned
loose was taken by the Portland Trail Blazers, who have
problems at center
Tbe other center taken In the
first round was 6-10 'l'om Riker
of South Carolina, who was
selected by the New York
Knlcks
Most of the teams went after
forwards 10 the first ropnd
Cleveland selected 6:7 Dwight
Davis of Houston, PhoeniX
grabbed 6:7 Corky Calhoun of
Pennsylvania, Milwaukee
chose 6-7 Russell Lee of
Marshall, Seattl~ took 6:5 Bud
Stallworth of Kansas, Detroit
went for 6:9 Bob Nash of
Hawaii and Los Angeles
selected 6:8 Travis Grant of
Kentucky State
The other two first-round
chmces were guards Freddie
Boyd of Arizona State by
Philadelphia and Paul Westphal of Southern california by
Boston

replied 'Idon'tseehowitcan
I do not see any early solution
ThiS IrOO:{!]ad prOVISIOn that
the players will work overt1111e
for no pay IS mcred1ble '
Nahonal League President
Charles Feeney, appearmg on
the same program moments
after Miller made his state-

ment, smd, however, we are
very close mthe pensiOn area
I hope this strike can be
resolved tomorrow '
Gaherm made the pensiOn
fund offer late Monday after
meetmg w1th Miller and
federal mediator J Curtis
Counts In Washmgton early m
the mornmg Optun1sm caused
by a telephone call by
President NIXon to Co1111ts
Saturday mght expressmg
hope for an early settlement,
proved unfounded
Gaherm followed up the
announcement of the new offer
With the statement, 'the
condiiion IS that the players
should \tot be paid for the days
they have not played thus far
thiS season
1
' Further, ' Gaherm added,
'that the clubs will try to make
up most of the cancelled games
so as to complete a 162:game
schedule and the players will
be expected to participate In
that schedule within the
framework of the basic
agreement
Miller and Gaherm expressed gratitude for the mtervenhon of Counts, With
whom they met for two hours,
but ageed that little PI ogress In
the talks developed from the
meeting
Miller, the 24 player representatives and their alter
nates, were scheduled to
meet 10 New York today while
Gaherm was scheduled to
report back to the owners

"nd w"lked none
1he B1g Blacks now 1 1 on
the ye"r, scored their run 10 the
lup of the fourth Moore ted off
w1lh a smgle to left Felty fil ed
uut Miller showed Ius ballmg
powe r w1 lh a line double to
center which nearly beheaded
Chaney on the momid
With runners on second and
thud ""d one out Harbrechl
lifted a high lazy fly to left
held that pemutted Moore on
thud to tag up and score
The only other threat the Big
Blacks put up was 10 the sixth
Wath one out and runners on
first and second gettm g there
by ba•es on balls Me1gs D1xon
fir ed to sophomo re lust
baseman Robbie Eason on
first to p1ck off the runne1 The
Big Black runner look off for
second and was cauMht m a

run down

Meanwhile

the

runner on second came around

th1rd and attempted to scme
but a PJ!rfecl peg from seniOr
second baseman Tom Cooke to
Dixon cut him down
Coach
Don
Wolfe s
Maraud ers
who show
ed that they defimtely
could be someth10g to reckon
w1th 10 the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League had a great
defense that made no
mistakes
physically 01
mentally Nearly everyone at
the ball park - perhaps even
Mr Wolfe - was surpnsed at
the pOise of the Marauder
Ma chine
on the fi eld
Collectmg the third hit, a
s10gle for the Big Blacks wa ~
Painter
Meigs will open their league
season with the Athens
Bulldogs lomght m Athens
Pt Pleas
000 100 Il-l 3 I
Meigs
• 000 000 :!---2 3 0
Miller ( LP ) and Fetty
Chaney IWP) and DIXon
Umpire s
George
Nesselroad, plate, and Art
Stobart bases

Dutcher,
Carter Get
UM Posts

Around

~

BALTIMORE (UP!)- When
Wes Unseld JOIDed the Balli
more Bullets In !968, the team
had JUS! completed a mediocre
36-46 season
At the end of the LoUisville
graduate s rookie year Balli
more had won the Eastern
D1 VISion of the NBA With a 57
25 mark Unseld had been
named Most Valuable Player
Rook ie of the Year and
selected lo the AII.Star squad
They haven 't been out of the
playoffs smce
Unse ld IS hesitant to credit
himself for the turnaround m
Baltimore fortunes He prefers
to diScuss the contnbutwns of
his teammates
HIS teammates how eve r
have no hesttancy m usmg
superlatives about their
center They say Unseld has
one of the fmest outlet passes m
the game, an uncanny ability to
poSition hunsel! m the nght
spot to grab the rebound and a
consistently unselfish attitude

Local Bowling
Monday Merchants

Harts Used Cars

76 20

M llers In surance

58 38
55 41

Mason Auto Mart
liN Va Nat1ooa l Guard
Mason Co Bank

52 44

Keelers Serv Station

46 50

37 59
32 64
36 66

Penn Central

Hoffman s
High Team IJ Gamesl
Ma son Co

Bank 2890

Used Cars 2837
Tea m Game -

Harts

W

Va

Harts

Nat ana l Guard 10 15

Used Cars 1007
lnd 3 Games - Bodktn 612
Mason 671
lnd Game - Snyder 265
Nelson 258
Tuesday lndu st nal

Burton Sunoco

Coca Cola
Penn Central
Mason Agg

80 32

76 36
74 38
56 56

Caro lina Lumber
36 76
New Haven Fu r mture
18 94
Team 3 Games - Coca Cola

2538 Mason Agg 2463
Team Game - Coca Cola
899 Burtoo Sunoco
Penn
Cen tr al 858
lnd 3 Games - H SISk 541
D Roush 531
lnd Game - SISk 204 B
ANN ARBOR, M1ch (UPI)- Roush D Miller 195
Former Eastern Michigan
Sunday late Couples
Umvers1ty basketball Coach M1llers
62 34
60 36
Jim Dutcher and onetime Robert s
Duncan
56 40
~verstw of Michigan basket
Capehart
56 40
ball player Richard Carter Youngs
52 44
were named as ass1stant S1nes
50 46
34 62
basketball coaches to Head Killingsworth
Team J Games - K1llmg s
r.oach Johnny Orr, Umvers1ty worth 1002 Dunca ns 990
of Michigan Athletic Director
Team Game - Duncans 374
Don Canham announced Mon· Killingsworth 361
Ind J Gil mes - D Duncan
day mght
541 R Miller 537
Canham also said that Dick
tnd Gilme - R Moiler 219
Homg, Michigan's freshman R Ca pehart 192
coach who led hiS team to a 2-0
record this season was named
assistant varsity coach
The reorganization of the
staff wlis needed due to the
departure of assistant basketball Coach Fred Snowden, who
was appomted head basketball
coach at the Umvers1ty of
Arizona last month, Canham
SBid
' We are extremely pleased
to gain the services of such fine
coaches as Dutcher and carter
and m the process we have
strengthened our counseling
services which we regard as
one of the prune funcllons of an
athletic department,' Canham
SBid

on the court
Even when he was a
youngster m LouisVIlle, fnends
often prodded him to take more
shots durmg a game, but he
would contmue pass10g off to
his fellow players
Today the 6-foot 7, 24S:powtd
center sill! shll'ks opportunities
to garner pomts and explaUIS
simply 'I shoot when 1get the
shot '
Smce Unseld IS the smallest
ce nter m the league his
rebounding statistics are all
the more unpress1ve
In his first four years with
Ba lumore Unseld has finished
second m rebounding three
limes Unseld clauns he has no
style of defendmg against the
towermg likes of Kareem
Jabbar or Wilt Chamberlain
You have to play them any
way you can and hope for the
best he said once 'A lot of
~eboundmg IS pos1tionmg "
The Baltunore offense IS
predicated on the ability of
Unseld to get the ball downcourt fast He accomplishes it
regularly despite a series of
mJuries that would have sent
most players mto the ranks of
the spectawrs Achrome ankle
IDJury and a recent bout With
tonsiliiiS have !ailed w keep
Unseld from hlB average of 42
mmutes play a game
Unseld s attitude on the court
extends mto hiS private life
For the last two summers he
has served as co11ll111SSloner of
Baltunore s mner city amateur
basketball program
A history major at
Louisville, Unseld sa1d he
would like w try teaching or
high school counseling after he
ends hiS pro career
If he were currently a college
undergraduate approached by
a pro team 'there would be no
doubt that I would Sign a
contract if the figures they're
mentionmg now are accurate "
The Bullets have !hell' share
of new faces this year and
Unseld believes that IS one
reason for the club's below 500
season
'We JUSt weren't a good
team this year We didn't know
each other," he said ~ ,three
other diviSion teams ~~p ­
parently
also
lacked
togetherness as the Bullets
were never reaUy pressed In
their race for the division
crown
Unseld, the consummate
team player says It will take
an uncommon team effort w
dispose of the Knicks, with
whom Baltimore cs currently
embroiled m the Eastern
DIVISion playoff series

Always Your Best

TILLER BUY!

HUFF~

~

ThiS Weeks Special

USED CARS

69 VOLKSWAGEN
2 DOOR
Radio and w s w tires

Check th1s one now

FlRST BASE COACH
NEW YORK (UPI)-The
New York Mets annowtced
Monday the signing of Warren
' Sheriff" Robinson as first
bal!e coach for the 1972 season
RoblllSOn replaces Yogi Berra
who was elevated to manager
after the death of Gil Hodgw

Bull~ts

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' Midcleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• April II, 1972
4-' The Datl~ Sentinl!l,

Family Night. in
_May is Planned

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992-5292

Charlene Hoeflich

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Plans for a' -family night
observance at 6 p.rir on May 9
at the home of Mrs. Delores
· Will was planned during a
recent me~ting of the Women's
Society of Christian Service of
the
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church.
Meeting at the home of Mills
Elizabeth Davis, the members
were reminded of the Society's
special project for this year.
Officers were urged to attend
the "Celebration of Giving and
Sharing" to be held at
Nelsonville on April 26, or at
Middleport on April 27. Mrs.
Frances Hunnel presided at the
business meeting.
uvarieties or Service" was
the topic of the program
presentro by Mrs. Theodosia
Frecker. Scripture was taken

Pupils in Recital

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Piano pupils of Mrs. Chester
Erwin presented a recital
Saturday afternoon at the
Middleport Church of Christ
Selections included:
" Vacation Time, " 'The
Juggler ," and " From a
Wigwam" by Betsy Herrald;
"Dirigibfe " and "Tulip Time,"
Thompson arrangements, by
Lori Kloes; "Stalactices and

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"Gypsy Earrings" by Ciody ·
Triplett; "Dangerous Journey," by Schaum, and Bentley's "Drifting Moon" by
Cathy Meadqws ; Godard's

Stalagmites," and "The
Country Fiddler," by Schaum
presented by Rhonda Reuter ;
Thompson's "Country Gar·
dens," and " Hop 0 ' My
Thumb," by Julie Byer, and
"Andantino" and "Through the
Woods," by Debbie Mulford.
· A duel, "The Fascination
Waltz," by Glover played by
Teresa Ellis and Mary Boggs;

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By Alma Marshall

Berceuse "

and "At the

Movies" by Becky Fultz;
"Dorothy" and "The Angels
Chorus" by Mary Boggs;
"Spring" by Sindig, and
"There ill No Greater Love,"
by Peterson presented by
Teresa Ellis.
"Finale " from Hayden's
Sonata in E Flat measure, and
a theme from "Piano Concerto," by Rachmaninoff by
Barbara Fultz, and "Sonatino
Op. :;s, No. 3," by Kuhlau
presented by Sonya Ohlinger
concluded the program.

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MR. AND MRS. ROUSH
ANNIVERSARY NEAR - Mr. and Mrs. Hosmer L. Roush will celebrate their 50th wedding alll)iversary Saturday . The couple was married on April IS, 1922 by the Rev. Howard
Pilchard at Syracuse. They have one aon, James, a daughter-in-law, Jean, and two grandchildren, Linda and Jeff, of New Haven, W. Va. Both Mr. and Mrs. Roush are members of the
Minersville Methodist church. Cards may be sent to the couple at their Minersville home.
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Ohioana Awards
A 1i'/J A nnounced

MASON -Have you noticed the cemetery between Mason
SUPPER GUESTS
and Hartford with the high wall of hand dressed stones which
Sp. 4 and Mrs. Richard
outlines the graveyard?
&gt;':'l?li!HW'lX&amp;:':\01-::::;.;:;s*::::&lt;~
Warden, home from El Paso,
RUMMAGE SALE
It was named Adamsville Cemetery alter the Adams family :;:;:
'?.
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Texas, were guests at a potluck
A rummage sale will be held
and its builders, John 'QU;ncy Adams, Frank Adams and others. ::;::
supper held Sunday night at the Thursday .and Friday, 10 a.m. .
One only needs a quick look to realize the back-breaking work
@ THe -1972" winn~rs of the New Knoxville es tablished
home of Mr. and Mrs. Arland to 3 p.m., at the Reynolds
involved in placing the huge stones in place.
:;:;
!;:: LuciJle Loy Kuck Ohioana these awards · with coKing, Middleport. Sp. 4 and building, Mill St., Middleport,
The_late John Quincy Adams was the grandfather of Mrs. !!!!
$j Awards for excellence in sponsorship by The Martha
Mrs. Warden following hill by the. Middleport J'entecostal
Bertha Wllaon, formerly of Maaon and now of Montreal, Quebec. ~
r:l literary expression, presented Kinney Cooper Ohioana
leave will go to Colorado church.
.Mrs. Wilaon, who will be 90on June 21, makes her home with her ~i
;::; to the amateur writers of Ohio, Library Association, 1109 Ohio
Springs , Colo. Others at the
daughter, Mrs. Joan (Wilson) Bogdanski. Mrs. Wilson
lor the essay " The Now Departm e nt s Building,
supper were Mr. and Mrs.
remembers when her grandfather made the fir~1 dirt road with a
TUESDAY
Generation - Mr. Respon- Columbus, Ohio.
Clarence King and Kathy,
y,
team of borses going past this cemetery toward Maaon. The
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363, sibility" are as follows :
The aim of this contest is to
p
Michl and Marsha King,
s·.EGivy•
Adams family lived in a red brick house (white color now) two F&amp;AM, will confer the EA
First Prize $250, Janet encourage excellence in
au a
oo spa ugh, children of the hosts, Mid· .-,
houses from the cemetery on the left hand side 0 ( the road Degree on one candidate at a Fields, Fleming, Ohio, student writing among amateurs. Mrs.
above, daughter of Elizabeth dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Gene
MoM Biting Power
le@tng toward Mason.
meeting to be held at 7, 30 p.m. al Warren High School; second Kuck specified that these
Moodlspaugh, formerly of King, Randy and Lisa, New A denture adh•l•• ••• help.
. e $150 J d' C
I
conte t e sa s
re
th
Middleport, Is a patient at Haven · Mr and Mrs J1'mK1'ng F~STEETH• Powder d- •11 of
, 0 l oppo a ,
s s Y exp ss
e
• ·
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· thll: ll Helpo hold uppen and lowMrs. Bogda ns ki reca lls tha t when she was 12 or 13, a lady Tuesday at the temple. All Prl z
from New York came to their house to get information about the Master Masons are invited.
Wooster, student at Wooster ideals of the writer. The E. R.
Children's Hos pita I, and
daughter ,
Missy, '" ton1er, nrmer1otoadler. 2) Holda
Adams family. She was trying to establish whether or not Mrs.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, High School; third prize $50, Kuck Foundation is the donor
Columbus, where she has Waterford; Mr. and Mrs .
Wllaon's family dated hack to the John Quuicy Adams that was Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:lo Scott Brian Smith, Zanesville, of the cash awards .
undergone kidney surgery. Edwin Neutzling, Cindy, u.. FASTEETH Denture Adhealve
President. She recalls going with the lady to the cemetery Tuesday at the home of Mrs. student at Hancock Jr. High
The six winners are invited
Her room number Is 329.
Syracuse ; and John Elias,
searching among the overturned tombstones and getting names Iris Payne . . Program on School.
to appear in person to receive
Mason .
rll(Uiarly.
" - adv.
and dates of the Adams family. The writer stayed in Mason a few modeling by Carolyn SatCertificates of
Merit their honors at a reception
0
N~'W8,..-:&gt;&lt;&gt;-c.-::&gt;&lt;:::.&lt;;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::o&lt;::o"=::...c::.&lt;:&gt;-c.-&lt;:&gt;o&lt;::&gt;&lt;:::.&lt;:&gt;&lt;::.-&lt;:&gt;~~
weeks, then returned to New York, which washer home.
terfieid and Sarah Bechtle, presented lo Brenda J . given by Governor and Mrs:
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Gerl
ch
h
te
Rakestraw,
Ontario,
Ohio,
John
J
.
Gilligan
at
th
e
Debb e
Later, Mrs. Wilaon and her family tried to contact the writer
a ' co- os ss. student at Ontario Jr . High Gov er n or ' s Man s io n,
Mr . and Mrs. F'ranklt' n
but the letters always came back marked "deceased" and that
HARRISONVILI •E OES ' 8 School ; Joyce Eady, Colum· Columbus, on Saturday , April Russell of M1ddl epor t, Mr. an d
was tlle last the family heard about the book and family tree.
p.m. Tuesday with initiatory bus, ~tudent at South High 29, at 2 p.m. This is the annual Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of Albany,
work and a visit from the Schoo 1;
Phil Gilliland, tea given by Governor and Mr. Guy Russell , Terry Lynn,
MASON COUNTY Homemakers have planned many ac- deputy grand matron. Practice Westerville,sludentatBiendon Mrs. Gilligan for the County and Mr. and Mrs. Waller
at 8 p.m. Monday night.
Jr. High SchooL .
Chairmen of th e Ohioan a Jordan of Cincinnati were
tivlties.for the coming months under the direction of Mrs. Vicki
SYRACUSE PTA. 7:30
Mrs . Lucile
I Loy Kuck of Li' brary.
Easter Sunday visitors of Mr.
L. Keefer, county extension agent, home demonstration. •
Toesday at the school. Ralph
and Mrs. Lincoln Russ~ll.
The Charleston area meeting will be in Point Pleasant on
Sayre , superintendent, and
?{'':::::::::::::;:;:::;::::;;:;:;:;:'=~~:::::.&lt;:~~
Miss Peggy Murphy was a
May 2 _wltQ. Mrs. Dave O'Neal the chairm~, assisted by Mrs.
school board members will
r.~.
recent' visitor of her grand·
Ray Fox, Charleston Area representative. Coffee hour will be
attend.
» parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
held from 91o 10 at Trinity United Methodist Church and dinner
EASTERN BAND Boosters,
FEATURE COMING
!!l
~ Johnson.
will be served later at the Moose aub House.
Tuesday, 8 p.m. at high school.
The Gospel Rock group, ~\j
~ Mr. and Mrs. Jack Eiam, Bill
Mrs. Vernon L1ifton of uie Spring Luncheon Committee has
WEDNESDAY
"The Truth" will be featured ;:;:
:;:, and Carolyn, were Easter
announced that tllis event will be held on June 13 at Point
MEIGS SALON 710, Eight Sunday at the Pomeroy Church
Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Welsh Sunday visitors of Mr . and
Pleasant Junior High School.
an d Forty, Wed.lne sd ay, 7:30 of Christ. Services are at 7:30 and children, Jeannie and Mrs. W. A. Elam, Mrs. Elam
horne of Mrs. E1een Sear1es. p.m.
I attended a class on sewing witll knits, learning thai it is well
Denny , have returned from a and Mrs. Donahue.
Take boItIe caps and pecans.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knapp,
worth one's time. Mrs. Adrian Lathey will be conducting a class
va cation in Florida with• Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT
Literary
Mike,
Timmy of Columbus
sewlng,lmltfabrics every Wednesday in May fro in 1:30 to 9:30.
Welsh's brother·in·iaw and
The cost is only $1 per member for each class. The place will be
Club, 2 p.rri. Wednesday at the
NIGHTLY SERVICES
sister-, Mr.' and Mrs. Paul were Easter holiday visitors of
home of Mrs . James Titus,
Revival services are being Parsons , Cape Coral, Fla . Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
announced later, but reservations must be in the extension office
skill
Point Pleasant by April 20.
' Rutland. Mrs.h Char·Ies Ga
·So ·h held nightly at 7:30p.m. at the While there they visited Disney Kail, Kevin and Charles. Mrs.
will talk on er trtp to ut . Great Bend Bethlehem Baptist World at Orlando, the Aqua Lena Knapp of Langsville also
Mrs. Ruth Bumgaroer taught a class at Wahama Junior
Amenca.
Church. The Rev . Charles Water Follies and the Waltzing visited.
High School which I attended. After sewing with knits one has a
POMEROY·Middlepcrt
Norris is the minister . Water Follies.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy
tenaency to care less about other fabrics. One can easily make a
Whether 1t's the f1rst or the l1ftieth. the radiant
Lions
Club,
Wednesday,
noon,
Everyone
is
cordially
invited
to
·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marion
Francis
and
Jeff of Columbus spent
child's knit shirt In a hall an hour. In fact , I got In the rag bag and
romance
of a star sapphire says love elocuently.
United Methodist Church . attend.
~
and grandson, Keith Black, are Easter holidays with his
pulled out scraps that I thought would be worthless and made
Next
to
her
wedding ring she'll treasure her Linde
in Columbus where Keith was parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
four shirts and shorts, size four. Our teacher attends classes in . Lions urged to attend.
Star most. Made only by Union Carbide CorporaPOMEROY Chapter 80,
admitted 10 Children's Hospital McElroy and her parents, Mr .
Parkersburg and gives us all the latest tips on sewing with knits.
tion. Linde Stars are ava ilable here in a wide
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
PATIENT IN LOGAN
today. He expects to be con· and Mrs . Vernon Bing and
range of colors in lone Jewelry senings.
In fact, at the last class we saw a bathing suit which she had
Wednesday, stated. meeting.
Arthur L. Miller, Rutland, fined there several days.
Sharon .
made. Someofthe ladles are making suits for their husbands.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Rt. I , is a heart patient at
David Vance, who injured his
Mr . and Mrs . Howard
From
Miss Rosanne Moore, educational representative for the
Most
excellent
masters
degree
Hocking
Valley
Community
leg
in
a
fall
at
the
Rutland
Thomas
and
Patricia
were
Unique Zipper Company, will teach basic sewing techniques,
to be conferred on a number of Hospital, Logan, Ohio. Miller is Elementary School about two Easter Sunday dmner guests of
hpw to choose the tight pattern and equipment, machine ad·
candidates.
Refreshments wiil not permitted to ha"-visitors, weeks ago remains confined to . Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
justment, and construction hints, at a workshop on April 20th at 2
be served.
however, cards may be sent to the Holzer' Medical Center Hill
Mr. and Mrs . Harley Smith
p. m. tn the Courthouse Annex, Point Pleasant.
THURSDAY
him. His room number ill 120 A. room number is 279 for those of Kanaug~ and Mr. and Mrs.
PHILATHEA Society, 6 p.m.
who would like to send cards. Earl McLam of. Roanoke, Va.,
MRS. HAROW (BARBARA) ZE!tKLE, New Haven, in
Thursday, covered dish dinner.
Roger Luckeydoo h
were Fnday v1s1tors of Mr. and
Court St.
Pomeroy
charge of the nursery at New Haven United Methodist Church
New officers to be installed.
SALE PLANNED
receive&lt;!· his discharge . fro~ Mrs. Charley Srmth .
saw that her classroom was too small . With the permisSion oi
ELEANOR CIRCLE, 7:30
Ladies of lhe Forest Run the U.S. Army and is now at
Pastor William ~oss and the Board, she and her husband,
p.m. ThurSday at Heath United Methodist Church will sponsor home in Middleport with his
Pack, moved the furniture to a larger room, put in an air con·
MellJodillt Church, Middleport, a rummage sale Thursday and wife, the former Sandra
ditloner, painted the room, chairs, table.; bought carpeting,
Rev. W. H. Perrin, guest Friday in the church basement Brewington, and daughter. He
hWig new curtains and, as you might guess, the room became
speaker. Hostesses, Mrs. from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
has spent the past five months
just like thill ambitious lady wanted it. Also assisting with this
Roscoe Wise , Mrs . Ernie
in Vieinam. Prior to that the
Jli'Oject was her motller, Mrs. Bernard Lieving, and sister, Mrs.
Fraser and Mrs. Eddie Blake,
family had spent a year in
Paul Hesson.
Jr.
.
VISITING SISTERS
Germany. Mr . Luckeydoo
Besides being a housewife and a church worker, she is also
ROCK SPRINGS Grange 6
Mrs. J. B. Marshall, Louis· anticipates returning to em·
employed at the Maaon County Bank.
p.m. Thursday with Hemlock ville , Ky ., is visiting her ployment with the f\griculture
G e
e ts 8 k'
d sisters, Mrs. Russ Watson, De t
t· w h
rov as gu s . a mg an Mrs. Olan Genhel'mera··nd Mrs.
par men m as ington, D..
UEUT. ROGER L. LUCKEYOOO returned from DaNang,
REG. 1149.95
sewing contests to be held.
C.
AFTERNOON Circle, Heath John Scott of Minersville.
Vietnam on March 25 and was officially dillcharged at Seattle
Wash., March 28.
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Methodist Church, 2 p.m .
Mter being in the service 21! years he is once more home
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
·IN CLEVELAND
with wife, Sandra, and daughter, Amy, at their borne in Mid·
David Entsminger. Mrs. M. L.
Mrs . Vilma
Pikkoja,
S~list*
dieport. He ill the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo , Letart, W.
French to present the Pomeroy, is in Cleveland at·
Va.
·
program .
tending a meeting of the
FRIDAY
National Council on Aging. She
Save $00.00 on the machine that lets you
RETURN Jonathan Meigs will return Wednesday.
sew straight and fancy stitches.
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution , lun- WOMEN'S PERFECTION
jt mends, darns, sews buttons
cheon, I p.m. Friday at the
Mrs. Charles Fahnlng of
and buttonh_ojes. Even inserts
home of Mrs. 0 . P. Klein. Buffalo, N.Y., during the
zippers and puts up hems.
Assisting hostesses will be . 1929·30 season rolled the first
Mrs . .l'!an Moore, Mrs. J. E. 300 game sanctioned by the
Harley and Mrs . Charles Women's. International BowlLewis. The hostesses ask that lng Congress.
regrets be. telephoned to 99231~ by Thursday.

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soc I,aI :-:

caIen dar

~D ~RGdEIRY

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from · Corinthians
In
dialogue form, the
am
depicted membe
the
nne! ComMissio
mittee.in terviewlng candidates
for the US-2 service progriiJII.
This program pertains to hllll)e
mission work for periods of two
years.
Purpose of the progr~. it
was noted, was to show how
home missionaries are
selected, to pr~sent the
changing concept of a mission
project, and to outline
qualifications needed to per·
form In the changing mission
project.
.
.
Refreshments were .served
by the hostess to those named
and Mrs. Agnes Weeks, Mrs.
Bernice Evans, Mrs. Dorothy
Smith, Mrs. Agnes Dixon, Mrs.
Nancy Smith, Mrs. Jennifer
Warth, Mrs. Karyn Davis, Mrs.
Jeane Blazewicz, Mrs; Martha
Husted, Mrs. Cordelia Bentz,
Miss Janie Smith, Artie
Hunnel, David Warth, Darrin
Warth, and·Brian Will.

~o'AwL.

EoETur H

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Personal Notes

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Say
Happy Anniversary
· With a Unde Star

$4()00

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE
'

Managers•
Clearan~ Days
$4Q95

·SAVE

zig-zag machine with
drop-in bobbin, blindstitch!

_..,......:::::.:::::::#;;::::_

.CABLE '
TV
SERVICE

I .

Adjua1eblt widlh

Make buttonholes,

zig.zao stllchet

sew on bullona

We have a credit plan
designed to fit your buj~ae,t .

ANNOUN!lMENT

' CASE
WITH CAAAYjNG

AAROM BOONSuE,

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/ M.O. . .

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GENERAL ·PRACTIC
Office Temporarily
Located In
Veterans Memorlol Hospital
Pom.roy, Ohio . .
Telephone.992·2104
Ext. 28

. Af!PROVED
SIHGI DEALER
·
SINGER SALES&amp;SERVICE
McCALL'S&amp; SIMPLICITY P.ATl'ERNS

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115 W, Second

992-2284

•A TrademafkotTHESINGE~COt/P~V

Pomeroy, 0.

~-The O&amp;Uy Sentinel, ~-Pomeroy, 0., Aprilll, 1972

:Meigs High

Awards
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(Continued from Page I)
Princi pal Salem Center ,
population thet is expected .
Roberta Wilson ; Assistant
Ha
Principal. Pomeroy, Mae
rgraves ill to meet with Young ; Assistant Principal ,
Kennedy t'o ·· review the Bradbury, Phyllis Hack~&gt;tt ;
situation and see what work is· Assistant PrincipaL Rutland.
needed at the former Rutland Eric Hart ; Assistant Principal,
Harrisonville. Gregory Me·
High School building.
Call ; Assistant Principal High
The Harrisonville PTO asked School. Part Time. Title 1
the board to assist It in pouring Coordinator, Earl Young.
ATHLETIC - Football
a concrete slab on the school Assistant Varsity Coach:
ground. Hargraves is to meet Fenton. Taylor ; Assistant
with mell!bers of the PTO and Varsity Coach, D!mald Dixon;
Assistant Varsity Coach, John
report his findings at the next Bentley ; Assistant Varsity
meeting.
.
Coach, Ben Slawter; Reserve
OTHER BUSINESS
Coach,
Fenton Taylor.;
Don Mullen and Porter are to Reserve Coach. Ben Slawter;
. H~ad
Freshman Coach,
meet with the teachers on Charles Downie ; Assistant
Tuesday, Aprill6, at 7:30p.m. Freshman Coach, Ed Bartels;
lor High School Coach,
Kenneth Eblin was named as Jun
Robert Meier ; Junior High
an additional teacher of the School Coach, John Arnott;
welding portion of the car- !fainer • .Fenton Taylor ..
,
Basketball - ' Assistant
pen te rs apprenticeship class. Varsity Coach, Jim Butcher;
Approved were:
Reserve Coach, Roger Birch,
Installation of a 12 x 12 foot Freshman Coach, John Arnott';
overhead door at the . Rutland Grace 8 &amp; 7 Coach. Marvin
· McKelvey; Elementary In·
gym by Karr Construction Co. tram urals, Carl Wolfe.
for $960, The Rutland gym is
Other Athletic Assignments
being converted for the mine - Head Track Coach, Donald
classes.
Dixon ; Asslstont Track Coach.'
Charles
Downie; . Head
Leasing of a 20x20 foot lot to Baseball Coach, Donald Wolfe ;
thega!icompanytoconstructa Assistant Baseball Coach,
Roger Birch ; Wrestling Coach,
regulator station. The gas Fenton Taylor ; . Assistant
company will pay $100 a year Wrestling Coach, John Ben·
for the lot. The new building !ley: Goll Coach, N. P.
replaces an exiS
· ling buildm
' g Swackhamer;
Adult. Physical
Fitness Program
Charles
on the junior high school Chancey; Athletic Director,
property at Middleport.
Charles Chancey; Assistant
Use of the new high school Athletic Director, N. P.
Swackhamer ; Athletic
gym as the site of this year's Secretary-Treasurer, Donald
Junior-senior prom. Mullen, in Wolfe; Girls Ctach, Joy
making the motion to use the Bentley ; Athletic Facilities
Care &amp; Preparation, Charles
new high school gym, said thiB Chancey:
·
ill the first time the gym will
Other Auignmento - High
ha bee used 1 th'18
School Newspaper, Donald
ve, n
or
pur- Wolfe ; Cheerleader Coach .
pose, observing that the gym Junior High School, Dana
was not sacred ground and the Kessinger; Guidance . full
school building was built for time, Harold Sauer ; Guidance .
full time, Martha Vennarl ;
the students.
Drama Coach, Charles Corder ;
James Diehl, principal, Librarian , Helen Smith .
admitted that it ill
tuall · Certificated stall members
w even
Y who have continuing teaching
have to be used, and he felt it contracts as ol the 1971-72
would ' make for a better school year:
relationship to have the prom
Mildred Bailey , David
held at the school.
Bowen, Bernice Carpenter,
Helen
Carper,
Charles
The board also agreed to Chance~, Mary Chapman,
advertise lor mine instruction Helen Dais, James Diehl,
materials and advertise for Wheeler Drake,. Muriel Foley'
Margaret Goodwin, Christine ·
bids on lour school buses with Guthrie , Phyllis Hackett,
specifications for standard George Hargraves, Eric Hart,
transmission and automatic Martha Husted. Thoma• Kelly,
Leda Kraeuter, Margaret
transmission.
Lewis. Helen Maaa. Gladys
Named to the substitute Major, Julia McComas. Ina
teachers list were Mrs. Gay Meadows, Russell Moore, John
Mora, Robert Morris, Larry
Perrin, English, and Miss Morrison, Olive Page, Max ine
Nancy L. Kirby, elementary . Philson , John Redovlan , Mary
It was also reported that the V. Reibel, Frances Roberts,
Nonga Roberts, Sara Rupe,
deed for the new high school Harold Sauer. Helen Smith,
property hed been received Emily Sprague, Rosalie Story,
and the new five mill levy • Lucille Swackhamer. Nolan
coming up for vote has wo'n the Swackhamer, .fenton Taylor.
James Vennari, Martha
1 support of several P.T.A . Vennarl , Mary C. Wiley ,
groups. It was also noted that Norma Wilson , Roberta
the mine foreman classes at Wilson , Donald Wolfe, Dorothy
Woodard, Earl YoUng, Mae
Ohio University is giving ex· · Young .
cellent instruction.
Cerllticated staff members
The resignation of Kenneth with contracts extending
beyond the school year :
Wood was accepted and Mrs.
George
Hargraves.
Kathleen Scott was granted a Superintendent, Aug. 1. 1971 .
leave of absence for the . July
31, 1975.
.
larry Morrison , Assistant
balance of the school year.
Superintendent, Aug . 1, 1971 _
Hargraves reported that the July 31, 1975.
trophies housed in the
James Diehl, Hi~h School
Pomeroy Junior High School i9;3.clpal, Sept .. 19 0 . Aug .,
and Rutland High School have
Ch$'1es Chancey, Head
been removed and that the Football Coach, Aug. 1, 1969 .
July 31, 1974.
trophy caae at Pomeroy will
Carl Wolfe, Head Basketball
also be removed. It was also Coach, Sept. 1970 . June, 1973. ·
suggested by Mullen that 1»Russell Moore, Junior High
allon
trash
cans
be
placed
in
School
Principal, Aug. 1, 1971 .
g
July 31. 1974.
the front of the Meigs High
Robert Morris, Elementary
School.
Principal, Aug .1, 1971 . July 31.
1974.
Atte ndi ng. were . Porter,
Re c 0 m men d e d ap il
Mull en, Joe Sayre, Vll'g King, pointments of non-cerlilicated
and Carroll Pierce, board staff. members :
members Hargraves and Lee
One Year Contracts '
•·
Custodian , Kenneth Jacks;
McComas, clerk.
Secretory, Joyce Vance. Rita
A recommended Teacher Hamm; Bus Driver, Leo
•·
""'polntments
for 1972-73 ((Me Morris
Two . Year Contracts _
Year
Contr.actsi : _ Linda Custodian , Dan Cotterill,
Reoppolntmonts
Aikman, John Arnott, Kay David Jacks, Paul McDaniel ;
Ba E "·
Cook, Grace Abbott.
.
"' d .,.,riels, Joy Bentley,
Continuing Contracts - Bus
Roger Blrch, ·Oalsy BlakHiee, Driver, VIrgil Carl, Hlel
Jeanne Bowen, Carl Brannan,
James Brewington, Doris French, Faye Manley, Linda
Buckley, James Butcher, Morris, Rosalie Sayre; Cook,
Phillips.
J enn If er BuIcher, Dorothy Ma•lne
Contract status of non Choney, William Collman,
Richard Colemanr .•Charles certificated stotf , members :
Corder, Joan Corder, Gladys
Employees who will be on the
CoK, Janel Deetz, Ida Diehl, second year of a IW&lt;I year
Donald Dixon, Charles Downie, contract during ·the 1972-73
Kenneth Eblin, Kaye Flck, school year: Custodian, John
Bonnie Fisher, Marr Fron·cls, Bailey; Bus Prlvers, Allee
Linda Jet!, · June
BeltY Fu11 z, Mlc hae Gerlach, Globokar,
Yost ; Cooks,' Louise Radford,
Marjorie Gibbs, · William Mary Hysell, Sadie Carl.
Gibbs, Marjorie Goett,
employees who have conElizabeth Goodlnf,, Donald
H
S
tlnulng
contracts
Hannlng, "·I
""'• arr son, usan Secretaries, Donna Carr, Lela
Helnn, Annolu Hill, Bernice
Hoffman, Everett Holcomb, Curtis, Grace Drake, Marilyn
Mary Hysell, Paulino Hysell, Meier, Rebecca Stivers;
Katherine Jacobs, leo Ken- Cusladlons, Harold Hubbilrd,
nedy, Jr., Janice Kilker, Jean lloyd Moore, Carol Pierce, Bill
Kuhn, Linda Lear, JOhn Lisle, Grueser, Wilkie Holman, Elbilr
Barbara Log·an Gregory Johnson, Austin Phillips, Joe
McCall, Marvin 'McKelvey, Shavorlnsky, , Dwight Pa~ker, .
Linda McManus, Robert Clair Swan .
.
Moler, Maurita Miller, Ph Ills
Bus Drivers, . John T.
Miller, $,\bra Morrllonl ~lm . Fischer, Dwight Carl, Letha
Neal, Mary Powell, Emalano.• Cotterill, Junior Darst. pauline
Pratt, Carla . Saelens, Wendy·· Darst, Nick Grues.,, Worley
Schmidt Kathleen .SCott Ben Haley, Denver. Hysell, Mary
King, Annette Knight, Ralpn
51 awter, '·0or se1Sml th • eon' aid Macomber
Austin Phllll s
Silvera, JHnnle Taylor, Anna Bill ·Ratliff' Bill Smllti ~~
Turne , Gary Walker, Carol v
v ' w... '
Weltz, Marlonno Watson, Ann
ance. ernon .....ber •.Marvln
Wtbsttro Anna Welllh, . Lucy Wllaan, Beatrice Wood, Ernest
Willie Nancy Willie Holen Wood, Norman Wood.
Wlllla;,,, Carl Wolfe, 'suzanne • Cookl, Mlldrtd Arnold,
Wolfe William Reed
Avice Bailey, Nellie Boraan,
Nt,;, Appointment• _ Margaret Butcher, Velma
Stephanie flltmlec, EMR; Douglas, Bernlci · Garnes,
Denise WI and, EMR; Thefma Grueser, Mildred
Cherlu F·rt~tr, Industrial Humphreys, Mildred Hysell,
· Arts;
Sharon
Koorlm, Mildred Jeffers, Ethel Lowery,
Eltmtnlary; Wykle Whitley, Holan Qulvty, May Romine,
Eltmtnlary
.
Cod4l Slawltr, Alma Smith,
lhcomminded
Tushtr .Zelma Stewart, Frances
Allpolntments !Continuing Triplett, Melva Turner, Joyce
. C4inlr1Cbl _ John Bentlly, Vance, Margaret Werner .
Merlhl Hoover, &amp;.t1y Horky,'
Den1 Killinger, Rile Slavin.
Rtcommtndtd
•P·
AT MEETING ·
polntmtnll lor extra antan.·
David Parry, Meigs COil•
monls ·for ltn-73 !Ont YNr
Contacbl: Admlnlllrallvt aervaUoniat, Ia attending a
Principal Stlltbury, John
meeting
at
Llsltl P(lnclpel Rullend, watershed
Reyrc.k!•burg,
twrtiOIIVnlt, ..IMIII Vlllnlrll

Made

..

.'

.••

N:EW SALE ITEMSI CONTINUING OUR ANNUAL SPRING EYENTI
MENS OR LADIES

I
3¢ •;.~ PLAIIIC . ' .
~~""'·
r:Jr:t::. ~fc~~(~~ ~
~wt~~t.\~· ,:,-\.~~

COMBS

WERE OPEN
EVERY
NIGHT
Tl LL 9 P.M.

S" Pocket or

purse

combs; 7" all Purpose

~:.~~~PMany
NEW SPRING TYPES

Colors.

ACTUAL VALUES TO 29C , ..

"'

EACH

•

j~OUSEWARES'

1101

JUST ARRIVED! TUF.TED

1 DOZEN FLOWERS

FULL BED SIZE

Already packaged in one

~

White and 5 colors. Pre-

dozen of a kind. Includes long

stem roses in several~olors .
Assorted others too. Artificial

. shrunk. Just wash and dry,
needs no ironing .

with cover, av, Salad Bowt.fl
Ice Cube trays, Oval divided TV ~
Piate. Poly Plastic. Un-breakab.le. ~

dis~

s

$ 94

Jane' Fonda
" Klute "

YOUR
CHOICE!

12¢ .
EACH

~~~-~~~$~
~~~ :P b't~,~~ ~ 4~~~

;

EA.

~(i

Bowl, dust pan, 6" all purpose
'bowl, 1 qt. food saver bowl, Butter j,

poly plastic.

YOU ACTUALLY SAVE 65c!

..ANTIQUE CLASSICS"
COLORED GLASS PIECES

TEFLON· FRY PAN
Teflon Coated For No Stick Or
No Scour Cooking!
10 Inch Size

THE "BELLEAIR" GROUP

FOLDING CHAIR

16 Envelopes-24 Sheets

BOXED

6x4K4 Web .. Non

Stationery

Tilt. Colors of

utmeg, Blue, Tangerine, ·
and Avocado.

"'"'""-

Plain ahd Decorated

$ 94 CARNIY AL GLASS
3

·

"

FOLDING
. CHAISE

x 17 Web. 7 Position
Adjust mont. Non. Tilt. 4

7

Colors.

lridesc~nl blue or new iridescent gold in
c~ndy 1ars, hen on nest, tumbler sets,
~1lchers, salad trays and several other

ttems.

.

94
$
._

$844

TO

$484

HAVE YOU TRIED OUR NEW TREATED DRIPLESS
7 INCHES TALL

Gene Hackman

1

HOLLYWOOD (UPI)- Winners of the·44th annual awards
of the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences :
Best picture-"The French
Connection," produced by Philip D' Antoni.
Best actress-Jane Fonda,
"Klute."
Best actor -{;ene Hackman,
The French Connection."
Best ~upporting actressL19ris Leachman, "The Last
Picture Show."
Best supporting actor-Ben
Johnaon, "The Last Picture
S}.ow."
Special award-Charles
Chaplin.
Best song- "Theme from
Shaft," Isaac Hayes.
Best foreign language film"The Garden o! the Finzi
Contlnls," Italy .
·
Best achievement in
directing - William Friedkin,
"The French Connection."
Best achievement in cinematography-Oswald Morris,
"Fiddler on the Roof."
. Best achievement in special
visual effects-Danny Lee, Eustace Lycett and Alan Maley,
"Bedknobs and Broomsticks."
Best achievement in live
action short subjects-"Sentinels of Silence," produced by
Manuel Arango and
Amram.
Best achievement In animated short subjects-"The
Crunch Bird," produced by
Ted Petok.
Best achievement in soundGordon K. McCallum and
David Hildyard, "Fiddler on
the Roof."
Best achievement In do·
cumentary· short subjects..!.
"Sentinels of Silence,"
p-odueed by Manuel Arango
and Robert Amram.
Beat achievement tn documentary · features-"The
Helh.t r'om Chronicle,"
!l'odueed by Walon Green.
Best aChievement In c081ume
design-Yvonne Blake and Antonio Castillo, "Nichoi8s and
Alexandra."

"GLIDDEN" LATEX WALL PAINT

HURRICANE
LAMPS
a.

"T ile Fr enclt Connect io tl''

Has glass 'globe and a
viick l.ype wick for the best
in giving light. 10" tall with
handle up. Painted finish.
Red, Yellow, etc.
FOR CAMPERS
OR
LAMP COLLECTORS

Flows on easily and dries in JO minu_tes . No

un.pleasant odor. Available in white and
colors. NATIONALLY ADVERTISED!

Best original dramatic score
-MiChel Lecrand; "&amp;unmer
of 'U.'.'
Best scoring adaption"Fidtller.on the Roof," adapted
by John Wllllama.
Best achievement in Jllm
editing-Jerry Greenberg,
:·111e French Conneclllln."
Belt acreatplly (balied on
material -(ram IIIOtber tn.'
dium)-Emest Tldyman, "The
French ConnectiGn."
Best lflory and screenplay
(bued Cll faclull 01' original
material )-Paddy &lt;llayeiaky',
.''11111' lfalpltal\"

1,.

6

$ 94
GAL.

WE CAR _RY GLIDDENS FULL LINE
TREATED FOR MAGNETIC PICKUP

DUST

MOP ·

11

/

\'

.........

$}6?.

. Lawn Chair ~
WEBBING
.REPAIR YOURS, NOW!
Poly Webbing in3

2% "

While,

WOMENS MOULDED SOLE

DROP CLOTHS

CANVAS
. OXFORDS

PKG
OF

WHITE-BLACK
NAVY
LT. BLUE
SIZES TO 10

Blue or Avocado. 18 fl. .
Pkg. Buy 2 packs for

EACH CLOTH 9FT x 12FT

$}77

'

Tangerine,

3

~~cllair

' Pk

155FT. ROLL

WEBBING

3

FOR

¢

PAIR

ALL ADVERTISED ITEMS
ALL DARK COLORS!

ON SALE TUESDAY 4 P.M.!

WOMENS

WE'RE OPEN 6 NIGHTS TILL 9 P.M.
9VOLT

.
.
12" DIAMETER

AN DBA

Transistor
Batteries

FOOTED
BOWL

Black, Red, Navy ... Early
Spring Bags... save Big on
these.

Compare At 25c
3 day sale

High Impact Sl1rene
Plastic in striking
clear cry• tal cut

10~.,.

'TOASTER
COYER
A 79cVALUE

~44 ¢"

OWTHRU FRIDAY

21!

WAS77c

OUR SELECTION IS READYTO HELP YOU BUY EARLY
FOR MEMORIAL DAY

FLORAL SPRAYS

9V21NCH 01Af1,\ETER- BAMBOO

AND

PAPER PLATE HOLDER

WREATHS

2Z¢

FINAL SELLING ON THESE!

_N~~~~~AL
COLORS!

DON'T
WAIT

TOO

·

LONG!

EACH

$}5710 $577

MENS
-··
SUN
Women• Summer
..
GLASSES
lANDALl
IWRtAPAROUND
IT'S TIME .FOR A CHANGE!!

i.!::~~~~ii::.in~~r$·

· styles. Give your IHI
some breathing space.

1

.94
UP

A OISC:OUNY .
OtPAATMtNT ST~I

STYLE

47p!,·

Glllllpolis ·
Ohio

Point PIHunt

w. vi. .

MIIOII
W.Va .

�·

' Midcleport-Pomeroy, 0 .• April II, 1972
4-' The Datl~ Sentinl!l,

Family Night. in
_May is Planned

,•:·

...•'.
·:

...'·

992-5292

Charlene Hoeflich

'·

''·

-~__/\_~~··

'

'''

Plans for a' -family night
observance at 6 p.rir on May 9
at the home of Mrs. Delores
· Will was planned during a
recent me~ting of the Women's
Society of Christian Service of
the
Enterprise
United
Methodist Church.
Meeting at the home of Mills
Elizabeth Davis, the members
were reminded of the Society's
special project for this year.
Officers were urged to attend
the "Celebration of Giving and
Sharing" to be held at
Nelsonville on April 26, or at
Middleport on April 27. Mrs.
Frances Hunnel presided at the
business meeting.
uvarieties or Service" was
the topic of the program
presentro by Mrs. Theodosia
Frecker. Scripture was taken

Pupils in Recital

'
'.,
~

'

'..•
''

Piano pupils of Mrs. Chester
Erwin presented a recital
Saturday afternoon at the
Middleport Church of Christ
Selections included:
" Vacation Time, " 'The
Juggler ," and " From a
Wigwam" by Betsy Herrald;
"Dirigibfe " and "Tulip Time,"
Thompson arrangements, by
Lori Kloes; "Stalactices and

'

·'••..
'

1

'

,.·'••

.

"Gypsy Earrings" by Ciody ·
Triplett; "Dangerous Journey," by Schaum, and Bentley's "Drifting Moon" by
Cathy Meadqws ; Godard's

Stalagmites," and "The
Country Fiddler," by Schaum
presented by Rhonda Reuter ;
Thompson's "Country Gar·
dens," and " Hop 0 ' My
Thumb," by Julie Byer, and
"Andantino" and "Through the
Woods," by Debbie Mulford.
· A duel, "The Fascination
Waltz," by Glover played by
Teresa Ellis and Mary Boggs;

'

~

''•..

,.,.

...'...

~

·'

.,'.
.,.''

••

By Alma Marshall

Berceuse "

and "At the

Movies" by Becky Fultz;
"Dorothy" and "The Angels
Chorus" by Mary Boggs;
"Spring" by Sindig, and
"There ill No Greater Love,"
by Peterson presented by
Teresa Ellis.
"Finale " from Hayden's
Sonata in E Flat measure, and
a theme from "Piano Concerto," by Rachmaninoff by
Barbara Fultz, and "Sonatino
Op. :;s, No. 3," by Kuhlau
presented by Sonya Ohlinger
concluded the program.

~

•''

1

:~

t

MR. AND MRS. ROUSH
ANNIVERSARY NEAR - Mr. and Mrs. Hosmer L. Roush will celebrate their 50th wedding alll)iversary Saturday . The couple was married on April IS, 1922 by the Rev. Howard
Pilchard at Syracuse. They have one aon, James, a daughter-in-law, Jean, and two grandchildren, Linda and Jeff, of New Haven, W. Va. Both Mr. and Mrs. Roush are members of the
Minersville Methodist church. Cards may be sent to the couple at their Minersville home.
~

Ohioana Awards
A 1i'/J A nnounced

MASON -Have you noticed the cemetery between Mason
SUPPER GUESTS
and Hartford with the high wall of hand dressed stones which
Sp. 4 and Mrs. Richard
outlines the graveyard?
&gt;':'l?li!HW'lX&amp;:':\01-::::;.;:;s*::::&lt;~
Warden, home from El Paso,
RUMMAGE SALE
It was named Adamsville Cemetery alter the Adams family :;:;:
'?.
~
Texas, were guests at a potluck
A rummage sale will be held
and its builders, John 'QU;ncy Adams, Frank Adams and others. ::;::
supper held Sunday night at the Thursday .and Friday, 10 a.m. .
One only needs a quick look to realize the back-breaking work
@ THe -1972" winn~rs of the New Knoxville es tablished
home of Mr. and Mrs. Arland to 3 p.m., at the Reynolds
involved in placing the huge stones in place.
:;:;
!;:: LuciJle Loy Kuck Ohioana these awards · with coKing, Middleport. Sp. 4 and building, Mill St., Middleport,
The_late John Quincy Adams was the grandfather of Mrs. !!!!
$j Awards for excellence in sponsorship by The Martha
Mrs. Warden following hill by the. Middleport J'entecostal
Bertha Wllaon, formerly of Maaon and now of Montreal, Quebec. ~
r:l literary expression, presented Kinney Cooper Ohioana
leave will go to Colorado church.
.Mrs. Wilaon, who will be 90on June 21, makes her home with her ~i
;::; to the amateur writers of Ohio, Library Association, 1109 Ohio
Springs , Colo. Others at the
daughter, Mrs. Joan (Wilson) Bogdanski. Mrs. Wilson
lor the essay " The Now Departm e nt s Building,
supper were Mr. and Mrs.
remembers when her grandfather made the fir~1 dirt road with a
TUESDAY
Generation - Mr. Respon- Columbus, Ohio.
Clarence King and Kathy,
y,
team of borses going past this cemetery toward Maaon. The
MIDDLEPORT Lodge 363, sibility" are as follows :
The aim of this contest is to
p
Michl and Marsha King,
s·.EGivy•
Adams family lived in a red brick house (white color now) two F&amp;AM, will confer the EA
First Prize $250, Janet encourage excellence in
au a
oo spa ugh, children of the hosts, Mid· .-,
houses from the cemetery on the left hand side 0 ( the road Degree on one candidate at a Fields, Fleming, Ohio, student writing among amateurs. Mrs.
above, daughter of Elizabeth dleport; Mr. and Mrs. Gene
MoM Biting Power
le@tng toward Mason.
meeting to be held at 7, 30 p.m. al Warren High School; second Kuck specified that these
Moodlspaugh, formerly of King, Randy and Lisa, New A denture adh•l•• ••• help.
. e $150 J d' C
I
conte t e sa s
re
th
Middleport, Is a patient at Haven · Mr and Mrs J1'mK1'ng F~STEETH• Powder d- •11 of
, 0 l oppo a ,
s s Y exp ss
e
• ·
·
· thll: ll Helpo hold uppen and lowMrs. Bogda ns ki reca lls tha t when she was 12 or 13, a lady Tuesday at the temple. All Prl z
from New York came to their house to get information about the Master Masons are invited.
Wooster, student at Wooster ideals of the writer. The E. R.
Children's Hos pita I, and
daughter ,
Missy, '" ton1er, nrmer1otoadler. 2) Holda
Adams family. She was trying to establish whether or not Mrs.
OHIO ETA PHI Chapter, High School; third prize $50, Kuck Foundation is the donor
Columbus, where she has Waterford; Mr. and Mrs .
Wllaon's family dated hack to the John Quuicy Adams that was Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, 6:lo Scott Brian Smith, Zanesville, of the cash awards .
undergone kidney surgery. Edwin Neutzling, Cindy, u.. FASTEETH Denture Adhealve
President. She recalls going with the lady to the cemetery Tuesday at the home of Mrs. student at Hancock Jr. High
The six winners are invited
Her room number Is 329.
Syracuse ; and John Elias,
searching among the overturned tombstones and getting names Iris Payne . . Program on School.
to appear in person to receive
Mason .
rll(Uiarly.
" - adv.
and dates of the Adams family. The writer stayed in Mason a few modeling by Carolyn SatCertificates of
Merit their honors at a reception
0
N~'W8,..-:&gt;&lt;&gt;-c.-::&gt;&lt;:::.&lt;;:&gt;&lt;:&gt;&lt;::o&lt;::o"=::...c::.&lt;:&gt;-c.-&lt;:&gt;o&lt;::&gt;&lt;:::.&lt;:&gt;&lt;::.-&lt;:&gt;~~
weeks, then returned to New York, which washer home.
terfieid and Sarah Bechtle, presented lo Brenda J . given by Governor and Mrs:
'
i
Gerl
ch
h
te
Rakestraw,
Ontario,
Ohio,
John
J
.
Gilligan
at
th
e
Debb e
Later, Mrs. Wilaon and her family tried to contact the writer
a ' co- os ss. student at Ontario Jr . High Gov er n or ' s Man s io n,
Mr . and Mrs. F'ranklt' n
but the letters always came back marked "deceased" and that
HARRISONVILI •E OES ' 8 School ; Joyce Eady, Colum· Columbus, on Saturday , April Russell of M1ddl epor t, Mr. an d
was tlle last the family heard about the book and family tree.
p.m. Tuesday with initiatory bus, ~tudent at South High 29, at 2 p.m. This is the annual Mrs. Clinton Gilkey of Albany,
work and a visit from the Schoo 1;
Phil Gilliland, tea given by Governor and Mr. Guy Russell , Terry Lynn,
MASON COUNTY Homemakers have planned many ac- deputy grand matron. Practice Westerville,sludentatBiendon Mrs. Gilligan for the County and Mr. and Mrs. Waller
at 8 p.m. Monday night.
Jr. High SchooL .
Chairmen of th e Ohioan a Jordan of Cincinnati were
tivlties.for the coming months under the direction of Mrs. Vicki
SYRACUSE PTA. 7:30
Mrs . Lucile
I Loy Kuck of Li' brary.
Easter Sunday visitors of Mr.
L. Keefer, county extension agent, home demonstration. •
Toesday at the school. Ralph
and Mrs. Lincoln Russ~ll.
The Charleston area meeting will be in Point Pleasant on
Sayre , superintendent, and
?{'':::::::::::::;:;:::;::::;;:;:;:;:'=~~:::::.&lt;:~~
Miss Peggy Murphy was a
May 2 _wltQ. Mrs. Dave O'Neal the chairm~, assisted by Mrs.
school board members will
r.~.
recent' visitor of her grand·
Ray Fox, Charleston Area representative. Coffee hour will be
attend.
» parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harley
held from 91o 10 at Trinity United Methodist Church and dinner
EASTERN BAND Boosters,
FEATURE COMING
!!l
~ Johnson.
will be served later at the Moose aub House.
Tuesday, 8 p.m. at high school.
The Gospel Rock group, ~\j
~ Mr. and Mrs. Jack Eiam, Bill
Mrs. Vernon L1ifton of uie Spring Luncheon Committee has
WEDNESDAY
"The Truth" will be featured ;:;:
:;:, and Carolyn, were Easter
announced that tllis event will be held on June 13 at Point
MEIGS SALON 710, Eight Sunday at the Pomeroy Church
Mr. and Mrs. Denzil Welsh Sunday visitors of Mr . and
Pleasant Junior High School.
an d Forty, Wed.lne sd ay, 7:30 of Christ. Services are at 7:30 and children, Jeannie and Mrs. W. A. Elam, Mrs. Elam
horne of Mrs. E1een Sear1es. p.m.
I attended a class on sewing witll knits, learning thai it is well
Denny , have returned from a and Mrs. Donahue.
Take boItIe caps and pecans.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Knapp,
worth one's time. Mrs. Adrian Lathey will be conducting a class
va cation in Florida with• Mrs.
MIDDLEPORT
Literary
Mike,
Timmy of Columbus
sewlng,lmltfabrics every Wednesday in May fro in 1:30 to 9:30.
Welsh's brother·in·iaw and
The cost is only $1 per member for each class. The place will be
Club, 2 p.rri. Wednesday at the
NIGHTLY SERVICES
sister-, Mr.' and Mrs. Paul were Easter holiday visitors of
home of Mrs . James Titus,
Revival services are being Parsons , Cape Coral, Fla . Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
announced later, but reservations must be in the extension office
skill
Point Pleasant by April 20.
' Rutland. Mrs.h Char·Ies Ga
·So ·h held nightly at 7:30p.m. at the While there they visited Disney Kail, Kevin and Charles. Mrs.
will talk on er trtp to ut . Great Bend Bethlehem Baptist World at Orlando, the Aqua Lena Knapp of Langsville also
Mrs. Ruth Bumgaroer taught a class at Wahama Junior
Amenca.
Church. The Rev . Charles Water Follies and the Waltzing visited.
High School which I attended. After sewing with knits one has a
POMEROY·Middlepcrt
Norris is the minister . Water Follies.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy
tenaency to care less about other fabrics. One can easily make a
Whether 1t's the f1rst or the l1ftieth. the radiant
Lions
Club,
Wednesday,
noon,
Everyone
is
cordially
invited
to
·
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Marion
Francis
and
Jeff of Columbus spent
child's knit shirt In a hall an hour. In fact , I got In the rag bag and
romance
of a star sapphire says love elocuently.
United Methodist Church . attend.
~
and grandson, Keith Black, are Easter holidays with his
pulled out scraps that I thought would be worthless and made
Next
to
her
wedding ring she'll treasure her Linde
in Columbus where Keith was parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
four shirts and shorts, size four. Our teacher attends classes in . Lions urged to attend.
Star most. Made only by Union Carbide CorporaPOMEROY Chapter 80,
admitted 10 Children's Hospital McElroy and her parents, Mr .
Parkersburg and gives us all the latest tips on sewing with knits.
tion. Linde Stars are ava ilable here in a wide
Royal Arch Masons, 7:30p.m.
PATIENT IN LOGAN
today. He expects to be con· and Mrs . Vernon Bing and
range of colors in lone Jewelry senings.
In fact, at the last class we saw a bathing suit which she had
Wednesday, stated. meeting.
Arthur L. Miller, Rutland, fined there several days.
Sharon .
made. Someofthe ladles are making suits for their husbands.
Pomeroy Masonic Temple. Rt. I , is a heart patient at
David Vance, who injured his
Mr . and Mrs . Howard
From
Miss Rosanne Moore, educational representative for the
Most
excellent
masters
degree
Hocking
Valley
Community
leg
in
a
fall
at
the
Rutland
Thomas
and
Patricia
were
Unique Zipper Company, will teach basic sewing techniques,
to be conferred on a number of Hospital, Logan, Ohio. Miller is Elementary School about two Easter Sunday dmner guests of
hpw to choose the tight pattern and equipment, machine ad·
candidates.
Refreshments wiil not permitted to ha"-visitors, weeks ago remains confined to . Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
justment, and construction hints, at a workshop on April 20th at 2
be served.
however, cards may be sent to the Holzer' Medical Center Hill
Mr. and Mrs . Harley Smith
p. m. tn the Courthouse Annex, Point Pleasant.
THURSDAY
him. His room number ill 120 A. room number is 279 for those of Kanaug~ and Mr. and Mrs.
PHILATHEA Society, 6 p.m.
who would like to send cards. Earl McLam of. Roanoke, Va.,
MRS. HAROW (BARBARA) ZE!tKLE, New Haven, in
Thursday, covered dish dinner.
Roger Luckeydoo h
were Fnday v1s1tors of Mr. and
Court St.
Pomeroy
charge of the nursery at New Haven United Methodist Church
New officers to be installed.
SALE PLANNED
receive&lt;!· his discharge . fro~ Mrs. Charley Srmth .
saw that her classroom was too small . With the permisSion oi
ELEANOR CIRCLE, 7:30
Ladies of lhe Forest Run the U.S. Army and is now at
Pastor William ~oss and the Board, she and her husband,
p.m. ThurSday at Heath United Methodist Church will sponsor home in Middleport with his
Pack, moved the furniture to a larger room, put in an air con·
MellJodillt Church, Middleport, a rummage sale Thursday and wife, the former Sandra
ditloner, painted the room, chairs, table.; bought carpeting,
Rev. W. H. Perrin, guest Friday in the church basement Brewington, and daughter. He
hWig new curtains and, as you might guess, the room became
speaker. Hostesses, Mrs. from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
has spent the past five months
just like thill ambitious lady wanted it. Also assisting with this
Roscoe Wise , Mrs . Ernie
in Vieinam. Prior to that the
Jli'Oject was her motller, Mrs. Bernard Lieving, and sister, Mrs.
Fraser and Mrs. Eddie Blake,
family had spent a year in
Paul Hesson.
Jr.
.
VISITING SISTERS
Germany. Mr . Luckeydoo
Besides being a housewife and a church worker, she is also
ROCK SPRINGS Grange 6
Mrs. J. B. Marshall, Louis· anticipates returning to em·
employed at the Maaon County Bank.
p.m. Thursday with Hemlock ville , Ky ., is visiting her ployment with the f\griculture
G e
e ts 8 k'
d sisters, Mrs. Russ Watson, De t
t· w h
rov as gu s . a mg an Mrs. Olan Genhel'mera··nd Mrs.
par men m as ington, D..
UEUT. ROGER L. LUCKEYOOO returned from DaNang,
REG. 1149.95
sewing contests to be held.
C.
AFTERNOON Circle, Heath John Scott of Minersville.
Vietnam on March 25 and was officially dillcharged at Seattle
Wash., March 28.
•
'
Methodist Church, 2 p.m .
Mter being in the service 21! years he is once more home
Thursday at the home of Mrs.
·IN CLEVELAND
with wife, Sandra, and daughter, Amy, at their borne in Mid·
David Entsminger. Mrs. M. L.
Mrs . Vilma
Pikkoja,
S~list*
dieport. He ill the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alva Luckeydoo , Letart, W.
French to present the Pomeroy, is in Cleveland at·
Va.
·
program .
tending a meeting of the
FRIDAY
National Council on Aging. She
Save $00.00 on the machine that lets you
RETURN Jonathan Meigs will return Wednesday.
sew straight and fancy stitches.
Chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution , lun- WOMEN'S PERFECTION
jt mends, darns, sews buttons
cheon, I p.m. Friday at the
Mrs. Charles Fahnlng of
and buttonh_ojes. Even inserts
home of Mrs. 0 . P. Klein. Buffalo, N.Y., during the
zippers and puts up hems.
Assisting hostesses will be . 1929·30 season rolled the first
Mrs . .l'!an Moore, Mrs. J. E. 300 game sanctioned by the
Harley and Mrs . Charles Women's. International BowlLewis. The hostesses ask that lng Congress.
regrets be. telephoned to 99231~ by Thursday.

l

soc I,aI :-:

caIen dar

~D ~RGdEIRY

'
••

'

from · Corinthians
In
dialogue form, the
am
depicted membe
the
nne! ComMissio
mittee.in terviewlng candidates
for the US-2 service progriiJII.
This program pertains to hllll)e
mission work for periods of two
years.
Purpose of the progr~. it
was noted, was to show how
home missionaries are
selected, to pr~sent the
changing concept of a mission
project, and to outline
qualifications needed to per·
form In the changing mission
project.
.
.
Refreshments were .served
by the hostess to those named
and Mrs. Agnes Weeks, Mrs.
Bernice Evans, Mrs. Dorothy
Smith, Mrs. Agnes Dixon, Mrs.
Nancy Smith, Mrs. Jennifer
Warth, Mrs. Karyn Davis, Mrs.
Jeane Blazewicz, Mrs; Martha
Husted, Mrs. Cordelia Bentz,
Miss Janie Smith, Artie
Hunnel, David Warth, Darrin
Warth, and·Brian Will.

~o'AwL.

EoETur H

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Personal Notes

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'

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Say
Happy Anniversary
· With a Unde Star

$4()00

GOESSLER JEWELRY STORE
'

Managers•
Clearan~ Days
$4Q95

·SAVE

zig-zag machine with
drop-in bobbin, blindstitch!

_..,......:::::.:::::::#;;::::_

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Make buttonholes,

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sew on bullona

We have a credit plan
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ANNOUN!lMENT

' CASE
WITH CAAAYjNG

AAROM BOONSuE,

.

/ M.O. . .

l

GENERAL ·PRACTIC
Office Temporarily
Located In
Veterans Memorlol Hospital
Pom.roy, Ohio . .
Telephone.992·2104
Ext. 28

. Af!PROVED
SIHGI DEALER
·
SINGER SALES&amp;SERVICE
McCALL'S&amp; SIMPLICITY P.ATl'ERNS

'

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115 W, Second

992-2284

•A TrademafkotTHESINGE~COt/P~V

Pomeroy, 0.

~-The O&amp;Uy Sentinel, ~-Pomeroy, 0., Aprilll, 1972

:Meigs High

Awards
..

(Continued from Page I)
Princi pal Salem Center ,
population thet is expected .
Roberta Wilson ; Assistant
Ha
Principal. Pomeroy, Mae
rgraves ill to meet with Young ; Assistant Principal ,
Kennedy t'o ·· review the Bradbury, Phyllis Hack~&gt;tt ;
situation and see what work is· Assistant PrincipaL Rutland.
needed at the former Rutland Eric Hart ; Assistant Principal,
Harrisonville. Gregory Me·
High School building.
Call ; Assistant Principal High
The Harrisonville PTO asked School. Part Time. Title 1
the board to assist It in pouring Coordinator, Earl Young.
ATHLETIC - Football
a concrete slab on the school Assistant Varsity Coach:
ground. Hargraves is to meet Fenton. Taylor ; Assistant
with mell!bers of the PTO and Varsity Coach, D!mald Dixon;
Assistant Varsity Coach, John
report his findings at the next Bentley ; Assistant Varsity
meeting.
.
Coach, Ben Slawter; Reserve
OTHER BUSINESS
Coach,
Fenton Taylor.;
Don Mullen and Porter are to Reserve Coach. Ben Slawter;
. H~ad
Freshman Coach,
meet with the teachers on Charles Downie ; Assistant
Tuesday, Aprill6, at 7:30p.m. Freshman Coach, Ed Bartels;
lor High School Coach,
Kenneth Eblin was named as Jun
Robert Meier ; Junior High
an additional teacher of the School Coach, John Arnott;
welding portion of the car- !fainer • .Fenton Taylor ..
,
Basketball - ' Assistant
pen te rs apprenticeship class. Varsity Coach, Jim Butcher;
Approved were:
Reserve Coach, Roger Birch,
Installation of a 12 x 12 foot Freshman Coach, John Arnott';
overhead door at the . Rutland Grace 8 &amp; 7 Coach. Marvin
· McKelvey; Elementary In·
gym by Karr Construction Co. tram urals, Carl Wolfe.
for $960, The Rutland gym is
Other Athletic Assignments
being converted for the mine - Head Track Coach, Donald
classes.
Dixon ; Asslstont Track Coach.'
Charles
Downie; . Head
Leasing of a 20x20 foot lot to Baseball Coach, Donald Wolfe ;
thega!icompanytoconstructa Assistant Baseball Coach,
Roger Birch ; Wrestling Coach,
regulator station. The gas Fenton Taylor ; . Assistant
company will pay $100 a year Wrestling Coach, John Ben·
for the lot. The new building !ley: Goll Coach, N. P.
replaces an exiS
· ling buildm
' g Swackhamer;
Adult. Physical
Fitness Program
Charles
on the junior high school Chancey; Athletic Director,
property at Middleport.
Charles Chancey; Assistant
Use of the new high school Athletic Director, N. P.
Swackhamer ; Athletic
gym as the site of this year's Secretary-Treasurer, Donald
Junior-senior prom. Mullen, in Wolfe; Girls Ctach, Joy
making the motion to use the Bentley ; Athletic Facilities
Care &amp; Preparation, Charles
new high school gym, said thiB Chancey:
·
ill the first time the gym will
Other Auignmento - High
ha bee used 1 th'18
School Newspaper, Donald
ve, n
or
pur- Wolfe ; Cheerleader Coach .
pose, observing that the gym Junior High School, Dana
was not sacred ground and the Kessinger; Guidance . full
school building was built for time, Harold Sauer ; Guidance .
full time, Martha Vennarl ;
the students.
Drama Coach, Charles Corder ;
James Diehl, principal, Librarian , Helen Smith .
admitted that it ill
tuall · Certificated stall members
w even
Y who have continuing teaching
have to be used, and he felt it contracts as ol the 1971-72
would ' make for a better school year:
relationship to have the prom
Mildred Bailey , David
held at the school.
Bowen, Bernice Carpenter,
Helen
Carper,
Charles
The board also agreed to Chance~, Mary Chapman,
advertise lor mine instruction Helen Dais, James Diehl,
materials and advertise for Wheeler Drake,. Muriel Foley'
Margaret Goodwin, Christine ·
bids on lour school buses with Guthrie , Phyllis Hackett,
specifications for standard George Hargraves, Eric Hart,
transmission and automatic Martha Husted. Thoma• Kelly,
Leda Kraeuter, Margaret
transmission.
Lewis. Helen Maaa. Gladys
Named to the substitute Major, Julia McComas. Ina
teachers list were Mrs. Gay Meadows, Russell Moore, John
Mora, Robert Morris, Larry
Perrin, English, and Miss Morrison, Olive Page, Max ine
Nancy L. Kirby, elementary . Philson , John Redovlan , Mary
It was also reported that the V. Reibel, Frances Roberts,
Nonga Roberts, Sara Rupe,
deed for the new high school Harold Sauer. Helen Smith,
property hed been received Emily Sprague, Rosalie Story,
and the new five mill levy • Lucille Swackhamer. Nolan
coming up for vote has wo'n the Swackhamer, .fenton Taylor.
James Vennari, Martha
1 support of several P.T.A . Vennarl , Mary C. Wiley ,
groups. It was also noted that Norma Wilson , Roberta
the mine foreman classes at Wilson , Donald Wolfe, Dorothy
Woodard, Earl YoUng, Mae
Ohio University is giving ex· · Young .
cellent instruction.
Cerllticated staff members
The resignation of Kenneth with contracts extending
beyond the school year :
Wood was accepted and Mrs.
George
Hargraves.
Kathleen Scott was granted a Superintendent, Aug. 1. 1971 .
leave of absence for the . July
31, 1975.
.
larry Morrison , Assistant
balance of the school year.
Superintendent, Aug . 1, 1971 _
Hargraves reported that the July 31, 1975.
trophies housed in the
James Diehl, Hi~h School
Pomeroy Junior High School i9;3.clpal, Sept .. 19 0 . Aug .,
and Rutland High School have
Ch$'1es Chancey, Head
been removed and that the Football Coach, Aug. 1, 1969 .
July 31, 1974.
trophy caae at Pomeroy will
Carl Wolfe, Head Basketball
also be removed. It was also Coach, Sept. 1970 . June, 1973. ·
suggested by Mullen that 1»Russell Moore, Junior High
allon
trash
cans
be
placed
in
School
Principal, Aug. 1, 1971 .
g
July 31. 1974.
the front of the Meigs High
Robert Morris, Elementary
School.
Principal, Aug .1, 1971 . July 31.
1974.
Atte ndi ng. were . Porter,
Re c 0 m men d e d ap il
Mull en, Joe Sayre, Vll'g King, pointments of non-cerlilicated
and Carroll Pierce, board staff. members :
members Hargraves and Lee
One Year Contracts '
•·
Custodian , Kenneth Jacks;
McComas, clerk.
Secretory, Joyce Vance. Rita
A recommended Teacher Hamm; Bus Driver, Leo
•·
""'polntments
for 1972-73 ((Me Morris
Two . Year Contracts _
Year
Contr.actsi : _ Linda Custodian , Dan Cotterill,
Reoppolntmonts
Aikman, John Arnott, Kay David Jacks, Paul McDaniel ;
Ba E "·
Cook, Grace Abbott.
.
"' d .,.,riels, Joy Bentley,
Continuing Contracts - Bus
Roger Blrch, ·Oalsy BlakHiee, Driver, VIrgil Carl, Hlel
Jeanne Bowen, Carl Brannan,
James Brewington, Doris French, Faye Manley, Linda
Buckley, James Butcher, Morris, Rosalie Sayre; Cook,
Phillips.
J enn If er BuIcher, Dorothy Ma•lne
Contract status of non Choney, William Collman,
Richard Colemanr .•Charles certificated stotf , members :
Corder, Joan Corder, Gladys
Employees who will be on the
CoK, Janel Deetz, Ida Diehl, second year of a IW&lt;I year
Donald Dixon, Charles Downie, contract during ·the 1972-73
Kenneth Eblin, Kaye Flck, school year: Custodian, John
Bonnie Fisher, Marr Fron·cls, Bailey; Bus Prlvers, Allee
Linda Jet!, · June
BeltY Fu11 z, Mlc hae Gerlach, Globokar,
Yost ; Cooks,' Louise Radford,
Marjorie Gibbs, · William Mary Hysell, Sadie Carl.
Gibbs, Marjorie Goett,
employees who have conElizabeth Goodlnf,, Donald
H
S
tlnulng
contracts
Hannlng, "·I
""'• arr son, usan Secretaries, Donna Carr, Lela
Helnn, Annolu Hill, Bernice
Hoffman, Everett Holcomb, Curtis, Grace Drake, Marilyn
Mary Hysell, Paulino Hysell, Meier, Rebecca Stivers;
Katherine Jacobs, leo Ken- Cusladlons, Harold Hubbilrd,
nedy, Jr., Janice Kilker, Jean lloyd Moore, Carol Pierce, Bill
Kuhn, Linda Lear, JOhn Lisle, Grueser, Wilkie Holman, Elbilr
Barbara Log·an Gregory Johnson, Austin Phillips, Joe
McCall, Marvin 'McKelvey, Shavorlnsky, , Dwight Pa~ker, .
Linda McManus, Robert Clair Swan .
.
Moler, Maurita Miller, Ph Ills
Bus Drivers, . John T.
Miller, $,\bra Morrllonl ~lm . Fischer, Dwight Carl, Letha
Neal, Mary Powell, Emalano.• Cotterill, Junior Darst. pauline
Pratt, Carla . Saelens, Wendy·· Darst, Nick Grues.,, Worley
Schmidt Kathleen .SCott Ben Haley, Denver. Hysell, Mary
King, Annette Knight, Ralpn
51 awter, '·0or se1Sml th • eon' aid Macomber
Austin Phllll s
Silvera, JHnnle Taylor, Anna Bill ·Ratliff' Bill Smllti ~~
Turne , Gary Walker, Carol v
v ' w... '
Weltz, Marlonno Watson, Ann
ance. ernon .....ber •.Marvln
Wtbsttro Anna Welllh, . Lucy Wllaan, Beatrice Wood, Ernest
Willie Nancy Willie Holen Wood, Norman Wood.
Wlllla;,,, Carl Wolfe, 'suzanne • Cookl, Mlldrtd Arnold,
Wolfe William Reed
Avice Bailey, Nellie Boraan,
Nt,;, Appointment• _ Margaret Butcher, Velma
Stephanie flltmlec, EMR; Douglas, Bernlci · Garnes,
Denise WI and, EMR; Thefma Grueser, Mildred
Cherlu F·rt~tr, Industrial Humphreys, Mildred Hysell,
· Arts;
Sharon
Koorlm, Mildred Jeffers, Ethel Lowery,
Eltmtnlary; Wykle Whitley, Holan Qulvty, May Romine,
Eltmtnlary
.
Cod4l Slawltr, Alma Smith,
lhcomminded
Tushtr .Zelma Stewart, Frances
Allpolntments !Continuing Triplett, Melva Turner, Joyce
. C4inlr1Cbl _ John Bentlly, Vance, Margaret Werner .
Merlhl Hoover, &amp;.t1y Horky,'
Den1 Killinger, Rile Slavin.
Rtcommtndtd
•P·
AT MEETING ·
polntmtnll lor extra antan.·
David Parry, Meigs COil•
monls ·for ltn-73 !Ont YNr
Contacbl: Admlnlllrallvt aervaUoniat, Ia attending a
Principal Stlltbury, John
meeting
at
Llsltl P(lnclpel Rullend, watershed
Reyrc.k!•burg,
twrtiOIIVnlt, ..IMIII Vlllnlrll

Made

..

.'

.••

N:EW SALE ITEMSI CONTINUING OUR ANNUAL SPRING EYENTI
MENS OR LADIES

I
3¢ •;.~ PLAIIIC . ' .
~~""'·
r:Jr:t::. ~fc~~(~~ ~
~wt~~t.\~· ,:,-\.~~

COMBS

WERE OPEN
EVERY
NIGHT
Tl LL 9 P.M.

S" Pocket or

purse

combs; 7" all Purpose

~:.~~~PMany
NEW SPRING TYPES

Colors.

ACTUAL VALUES TO 29C , ..

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EACH

•

j~OUSEWARES'

1101

JUST ARRIVED! TUF.TED

1 DOZEN FLOWERS

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Piate. Poly Plastic. Un-breakab.le. ~

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Jane' Fonda
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12¢ .
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Gene Hackman

1

HOLLYWOOD (UPI)- Winners of the·44th annual awards
of the Academy of Motion
Picture Arts and Sciences :
Best picture-"The French
Connection," produced by Philip D' Antoni.
Best actress-Jane Fonda,
"Klute."
Best actor -{;ene Hackman,
The French Connection."
Best ~upporting actressL19ris Leachman, "The Last
Picture Show."
Best supporting actor-Ben
Johnaon, "The Last Picture
S}.ow."
Special award-Charles
Chaplin.
Best song- "Theme from
Shaft," Isaac Hayes.
Best foreign language film"The Garden o! the Finzi
Contlnls," Italy .
·
Best achievement in
directing - William Friedkin,
"The French Connection."
Best achievement in cinematography-Oswald Morris,
"Fiddler on the Roof."
. Best achievement in special
visual effects-Danny Lee, Eustace Lycett and Alan Maley,
"Bedknobs and Broomsticks."
Best achievement in live
action short subjects-"Sentinels of Silence," produced by
Manuel Arango and
Amram.
Best achievement In animated short subjects-"The
Crunch Bird," produced by
Ted Petok.
Best achievement in soundGordon K. McCallum and
David Hildyard, "Fiddler on
the Roof."
Best achievement In do·
cumentary· short subjects..!.
"Sentinels of Silence,"
p-odueed by Manuel Arango
and Robert Amram.
Beat achievement tn documentary · features-"The
Helh.t r'om Chronicle,"
!l'odueed by Walon Green.
Best aChievement In c081ume
design-Yvonne Blake and Antonio Castillo, "Nichoi8s and
Alexandra."

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Best original dramatic score
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Best scoring adaption"Fidtller.on the Roof," adapted
by John Wllllama.
Best achievement in Jllm
editing-Jerry Greenberg,
:·111e French Conneclllln."
Belt acreatplly (balied on
material -(ram IIIOtber tn.'
dium)-Emest Tldyman, "The
French ConnectiGn."
Best lflory and screenplay
(bued Cll faclull 01' original
material )-Paddy &lt;llayeiaky',
.''11111' lfalpltal\"

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9VOLT

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Batteries

FOOTED
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High Impact Sl1rene
Plastic in striking
clear cry• tal cut

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'TOASTER
COYER
A 79cVALUE

~44 ¢"

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21!

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OUR SELECTION IS READYTO HELP YOU BUY EARLY
FOR MEMORIAL DAY

FLORAL SPRAYS

9V21NCH 01Af1,\ETER- BAMBOO

AND

PAPER PLATE HOLDER

WREATHS

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FINAL SELLING ON THESE!

_N~~~~~AL
COLORS!

DON'T
WAIT

TOO

·

LONG!

EACH

$}5710 $577

MENS
-··
SUN
Women• Summer
..
GLASSES
lANDALl
IWRtAPAROUND
IT'S TIME .FOR A CHANGE!!

i.!::~~~~ii::.in~~r$·

· styles. Give your IHI
some breathing space.

1

.94
UP

A OISC:OUNY .
OtPAATMtNT ST~I

STYLE

47p!,·

Glllllpolis ·
Ohio

Point PIHunt

w. vi. .

MIIOII
W.Va .

�•

\

Scienc~ Fair Qeld

.

.

..

·Ueland is Funds St~ding at $163,265
Awarde·d
~
Cle~k-Treasurer
E·m blem.

'
·
dl' sbursemerlts , $~6,002.78 ;
(Continuejl from Page I)
.EarI Thoma, pres lden t ; ·Mrs.
All Middleport VIllage funds $22.50, $6116.20; street m~n-. "eneral bond retiremeot, no
Zirkle, Cathy Blaettnar, Linda Arthur Arnold, first vice
as of March 31 totaled tenance, $2,100.119, $2,503.22, &amp;
Kovalchik, Jayne Hoeflich, president; Mrs. Ray Jewell,
·
$163,265.19,
· $7,908.12; · saniiary sewer, receipts, n·o di~bursements,
Beth Perrtn·, Mark Searles, second vice president; Mrs. •
Gene Grate reported Monday $3,968.76, $3,289.10, $20,697.16; $1R1,e26:~~pis f~r th'e, / month
Todd Johnson, Kevin Smith, William McDaniel, secretary;
night when Middleport Council water, $6)~3.49 , . $6,667 .9~,
hll
McKnight,
Chris Mrs. Mitch, treasurer; Mrs.
fl\el. .
.
.
"'1,815.78 ; watermeterdeposlt totaled $19 ,616.17 w e~
Jell
.
ore pondi g
••
d1' sbu rs ements totaled
. McKinney, Ricky Baker , R0 ber l Lewl
. s, c r s
n
·
Rece1pll&gt; and d1sbursemenll&gt;, trusll&gt;, $290, $200, $5,805.31 ;
Jimmy Ash, Jerry Fields , secretary ; and Mrs. Pearl
&gt;
respectively, and the balance sanitary ·escrow, $619.66, no $l?,069·90·
Robert Laooers, Kelli Clelland. Williams, parliamentarian.
LJ).NGSVILLE
Tom . in each fund as of March 31,
· Other red ribbon winners
Elected as delegates to the Gleland, 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld son of include:
were Jeff Couch, Mark Mitch, Meigs County Council of Wayne and Anna Cleland of
(;eneral, $4,876.05, $3,483.68,
Kevin McLaughlin Keith Parenll&gt; and Teachers were Langsville·, received the $33,462.40; cemetery, $6S5.30,
Krautier, Lori Wood~ (two ), ) Mrs. James Wamsley, Mrs. coveted God and Country $837.18, $360.97; 'fire equipShari Mitch (two), Barbara Charlesh Gloe~~nerh Mrs . Scouting Emblem in a brief ment, $50, $39.59, $693.61 ;
Murphy Timmy Knittel Cindy Kennel McCu oug • Mrs . service at the Langsville swimming poool, no receipts,
Faulk,' Beverly Fa~lkner, William Anderson, and Mrs. Christian Church Sunday af- $26.50, $1,962.&gt;7 ; planning
Mark Casto (two ), Doug Diane Hawley· The alternates ternoon. Explorer Post 239 commission, no receipts,
Clelland, John Snyder, Paige are Mrs. Rlc~rd Rosenbaum, Advisor James Council
Smith, Anoa McKinney, Judy Mrs.. Jerry Fields, and Mrs. presented to Mrs. Cleland the
Hall and Sherrie Colmer.
LewiS Osborne.
red cross embedded on a white
In the Heart of Middleport
A plant project by Mrs.
Mrs. Thoma presented Mrs. shield emblem. Mrs. Cleland,
.Hysell's rtflh grade won a red Mitch with .a past presiden.t's in turn, pinned the award on
ribbon. Two reds also went to pm. Mrs. Mitch responded With her son . Young Cleland pinned
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
girls in Mrs. Kuhn's first grade words of appreciation to those his mother signifying the honor received correspondence and a
6:30 To 10:30 April 12
U. S. flag from Congressman
class. Receiving red ribbons who have worked durmg the bestowed upon the parents.
~
for posters were Kelly Thoma, past two_ years in the various
Present for the ceremonies Clarence Miller. The accompanying
certificate
inSpaghetti
with homemade Italian sauce.
Susan Zirkle Sandra Miller PTA protects.
was MGM District Chairman
dicates
that
the
flag
had
flown
Kathy Cun~ingham, Joh~
Principal Robert Morris Bill Knight of Point Pleasant, a
over tile Capital buildlng in
Harper Herbie Noel and Kim presented informatwn on the former Eagle Scout.
"Featuring Maxine At The Organ"
Krautu;r.
'
five mill schoollevy to be voted Tom is a junior at Meigs Washington, D. C.
During the business meeting lln in the May primary and High School where he is an
conducted by Mrs. Gene Mitch, asked f~r su~por.t of the honor student. He has been a
oew officers were elected and parents 10 getting 11 passed . scout for four years and
installed by Mrs. Harold The PTA gave a resolution of presently holds the position of
Lohse, District 16 director, and support.
.
.
president of the Explorer Post.
a past president of the
The District 16 sprmg con- He also holds the rank of "life ·
Pomeroy PTA.
·
ference to be held at Jackson scout" and needs only thr~e
The 1972-73 officers are Mrs. on April 29 was announced and more merit badges to receive
it was noted the dinner the Eagle award.
reservations must be in by The entire post membership
April 26. Read at the meeting attended the ceremonies
was a letter from Congressman conducted by Advisor Council.
Clarence Mill~ regarding his Several friends also attended.
action toward getting the Th e Lan gs ville Post has
Federal Pay Board to sanction
the release of funds for increasing teachers' slj)aries.
Mrs. Richard Rosenbawn of
the safety committee anpounced a meeting to he held ,
tonight for the patrol girls and
boys and their parenll&gt;. lm·
provement. to the playground
were noted and a vote of thanks
was extended to the Meigs
High School welding teacher
and students , and to John
Manley who built the teeter
totters. The PTA scrapbook Forty-seven arrests were
was presented by Mrs. Me· made by the Middleport Police ·
Departmenll&gt; during the month
Daniels.
of
March, Chief of Police J. J.
Members of the junior girl
Cremeans
reported to Midscout troop of Mrs. Bruce
Zirkle and Mrs. James Sisson dleport Council Monday night.
led in the pledge to the flag to Of the total almost half - 20
DON'T LIT AN AMATEUR DO
lt'o not too late to eave yourself
open the meeting. Mr. Roy - were for intoxication. Other
H•R BLOCK' S JOB.
income tax aggravation that comes
Carter of the Bradbury Church arrests included five for
with preparing your own return.
of Christ had devotions for the permitting dogs to run loose;
four
for
driving
while
inmeeting.
H &amp; R Bloek'o charges start at $5
SISTER JAMES
Repairable televisions are toxicated; three for possession
and the average cool wao under
still needed, Mrs. Mitch an· of marijuana ; two each . on
112.50
for over 7 million returns
and the Diocese of Glasgow in nounced. Morris spoke briefly assault and battery charge and
we
prepared
laet year.
Scotland.
on the reading program and speeding; one each for failing
Aggravation ion't tax deductible.
The Order of Carmelite the progress . of students and to yield the right of way ;
Sisters was founded in 1929 by . suggested that parenll&gt; not reckless operation: running a
Mother Teresa to render compare their children in stop sign ; running red light;
modern concepts of care to the reading ability. He also noted passing on yellow line; expired
elderly. At present this care is that signup day for kin- operator's license. Four
given in more than 30 homes dergarten and first grade is juveniles were among the
~--- ONLY
for the aged.
May 1 and that birth cer- arrests and charges were
9 a.m. to s p .m.
Sister Eulaliae is a graduate tificates and immunization dropped in one instance.
304 E. MAIN ST.
of Eastern High School and a records are to be preaen ted at Parking meter collections
Phone: 992-3795
member of Our Lady of Loretto the time .
No Appointment Necessary
for the month totaled $1,086 and
Parish, Long Bottom. Before
OPEN TODAY
A meeting of the executive eight accidents were inentering the congregation she hoard was set lor Monday all vestigated. Cruiser mileage lor
attended Ohio J!niversily. p.m. at the school. Attendance the month totaled 4,240 miles.
Following a short visit with her banner was won by the filth
family, she has joined the staff grade. Student teachers were
of Carmelite Sisters at Garvey introduced . Refreshments
Manor in 'Hollidaysburg, Pa., were served by the second
to care for ~e elderly.
grade mothers with Mrs. Jack
Braley as chairman.

USDA Choice

MEATS
Superiors All Beef

. ITALIAN NIGHT
A.T

WIENERS
12
59e

TI:IE EFFEcrSOF UGHT, water, nutrients of ooll, and
temperature were shown: in plant life displays at the ,
Pl&gt;meroy science fair Monday. Here Mrs. Earl Thoma, new
}l'esldent of the PTA which sponsored the fair, examines one
of the exhibits .

Vows Professed
LONG BO'ITOM - Sister M.
ulaliae James, Order of
elite Nuns, the former
Vir inia Coleman, daughter of
Mr. d Mrs. Richard Coleman
of ng Bottom, was one of 18
Sist rs pronouncing vows
re Uy in Germantown, N. Y.
The Motherhouse and
Novitiate of the Carmelite
Sisters for the Aged and I!Jiinn
in Germantown was the setting
for the ceremonies for the
profession of the 16 novices.
After the completion of two

years of Novitiate training, the
sisters made firs t temporary
vows in the presence of his
excellency, the Most Rev.
Edwin Broderick, Bishop of the
Diocese of Albany, who
presided.
Th e Rev. Mother M.
An geline Teresa, president
Mother General and foundress
of the congregation, received
the vows in the name of the
congregation . The newly
professed Sisters represent 14
dioceses in the United States

Beat •..

·o

Of the Bend#_·f~
By
Bob Hoeflich

•

~~ •

The Hetzer European Circus visited Pomeroy Saturday and
everyone seemed to enjoy the one ring presentation. The crowd,
of course, w&amp;~ marked with children who just don't get the opportunity to aee a circus often.
Saturday was such a cold day and there was no heat in the
former Pomeroy Junior High School during the afternoon performance and a portable heater located for the evening just
didn't do the job. No one seemed to mind the cold, however.
Guess most of the crowd attending are football fans.
The circus gave local residents a chance to hear George Hall
at the organ. George is formerly from the Reedsville - Long
Bottom area and certainly provided excellent background music
for the nwnerous acts making up the circus. George has come a
long way from a numberofyearsback when he aweared in a Big
Bend Mlnstrel }l'eaentation with his guitar doing "Chew
Tobacco Rag". Small wonder that George packs in crowds for his
club appearance both here and in other areas. He's sharp.
The circus was sponsored by the Rutland American Legion
Pl&gt;st which today extended sperlal thanks to the Falls City Beer
OJ. for ll(lOnsoring the attendance of infirmary r~e~~ts to the
circwJ and the Royal Crown Bottling Co. which sponoored
residents of the Children 's Home so they could attend free of
charge.
INCIDENT ALLY, residents were given a second chance to
hear Hall Sunday when he appeared for a benefit at the Cancer
Sunday·Crusade at Meigs High School.
·The day certainly meant a lot of work for a lot of people. The
Jl'eparation of all that food was a major chore and the art
dlsplaysdldn'tjust appear. It took hours to get the many articles
into place for publlc viewing. Nice that there are so many around
ready to pitch in for a good cause. I know the co-chairmen, Paul
Caacl and John Reese, are not only pleased with the financial
success but with the fact that so many helped - even lots of
entertainers donating their services.
EXPLORER POST 239, Boy Scouts of America, at Langs·
ville may be making quite a trip this summer. Advloor James
CGuncll reports the group plans to travel in four canoes from
Pittsburgh downriver to at least Pomeroy, a distance of about 250
miles.
GOV. JOHN J . GILUGAN has proclaimed April 1&amp;-22 as
Ohio Library Week, personnel of the Pomeroy Public Library
report. Special observances undoubtedly will he held not only by
the Pomeroy Library but also at Middleport and by "Mr. Eddy."
BY THE WAY, LAWRENCE (PETE ) MORARITY, Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy, is confined ·to Veterans Memorial Hospital
following knee surgery. Anumber of residents learning of Pete's
hoapltallzation belleved that he had probably suffered another
heirt attack. ,;:ortunately, it wasn't that.

.'

PLANS ARE PROGRESSING for the reunion of Pomeroy
· High School's class of 1917, observing its 5Sth year this spring.
Mn. Carrie Neutzling of Pomeroy and G. H. Martin of Fort
Lallderdale are heading the reunion and really bave a schedule
ouUined lor the class members.
On Friday night, Mrs. Neutzling will be hostess for some type
ol outdoor event and at noon on Saturday, Martin will host a
hmcheon at Trinity Church. Saturday night will be the alumni
banquet at the scllool and on SW!day morning members of the
class and their husbands or wives will attend Trinity Church
where Marlin will speak. There'll be another luncheon at noon
and class members will go their mercy ways.
There were 35 members of the class of W17 originally. Fifteen 11re still living and five, including Vernon Nease, Mrs.
Neullllnl, Alfred Elberfeld, Allen Hartley and Ada Zahi
&lt;JIIIn&amp;er, still reside In Meigs County.
· 1be clal8 bu a yell which it Is claimed has never been
dupllcated and they are.IJ9ping they'll be invited to present the
c:lleer at the alumni. banquet which; of course, is open to·
srad1111te1 only.

47 ArrestS

Rec. orded ·m·
Mid'dleporl

H&amp;RBiock.

ed Sirloi IJ~

Meat

Marti'n ·Restaurant

t. -

Beef Buys!
OR

WIENERS

. LOIN

LUNCH 'MEAT
lb. 79e

(Family Pack)

POLISH SAUSAGE

lb.

FRESH PORK ·

N£CK BONES

BOILED

Ground Chuck

SLICED BOLOGNA

lb.

5 lb. 100

HAM
~

lb.

ICE
CREAM
8-Track Tapes
1/2

Charley Pride, Johnny Cash, Beatles, Etc.

SAUSAGE

lb.39~

lb.

FAYGO POP
REGULAR PRICE
7-% QUART BOTS., 1.00

SPECIAL .•

¢

16 oz.

!1

6

bots.

..

79~

Friday Unly Special!

8 PAK CARTON

gallon

'

each
only

SLIC. BACON

RC COLA

By Scot Lad

Popular, Country &amp; Western

Ballard's Farm

THURSDA ¥ ONLY SALE!

Wednesday Only Special

Big Special Sale!

Superiors ''Budget"

Ravors

"

The income tu people.

6 DAYS LEn - - --

POMEROY, 0.

NEW HAIR
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Sen. William Proxmire, DWis., appeared at a news
conference Monday minus the
bandages that had been hiding
his hair transplant operation.
His scalp sht1Ws ilcores of tiny
scabs where the "plugs" of
new hair were Implanted.
"It's costing $7.50 a plug 1,500 bucks," he said, smiling.
"I could have gotten a helluva
beautiful wig for $500."

HI-HO CRACKERS
· l~b. $

FIRESIDE

MARK VLOW PRICES ON FROZEN FOODS

GRAHAM
CRACKERS

ICE CREAM.~~~. ~~ .............. ~-~:; 59~
CREAM PIES.~~~.~~~!............4 s1
ON..ION Rl NGS.~~~. ~.~~.......... ~p~ 29~
.

3:$1

bxs
SCOT lAD ROUND

PAT PLANTS TREE
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Mrs. 1,\ichard Nixon observed
the tOOth anniversary of Arbor
Day by planting a 12-foot fern
leaf beech tree from Nebraska
City, Neb., on the While House
lawn. Nebraska City is the
home of J . Sterling Morton,
who is credited with founding
Arbor Day in 1872. Mrs. Nixon
planted the tree Monday in
front of the North Portico of the
While House.

ALL PURPOSE

CRACKERS

SCOT LAD
..
SALTINES
l~b.

llOl..$

Nice 'n Ute

MILK

ICE MILK

R
I

c
5

Milk BotHe

SCOT LAD BUDGET BUY!

MIX OR MATCH

Was U.79 . . NOW

\Yt!OLE KERNEL CORN,
· SPINACH, PEAS AND
GREEN BEANS ............. ..

COTTON KNIT
lb.

FAYGO
DIET POP

LOW AS 01\$
~u yd.
OPEN
Mon .. Tues.. Wed., Thurs., Sat.

.

SUGAR

9:30106
Fri.: 9:30to9
Sun.: 11o5

FREE

fur

.'

·DURKEE O&amp;C
~POTATO STICKS

$1
$110:8
cans

REESE
CUPS.......

cans

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

BONDED ACRYLIC ..
FOR SPRING

ADDISON, OHIO

$1
5

Ca~

•

J3l'

39

25 lb.
bag

SAVE

MALTED MILK BALLS
201 COUNT, 69c

Scot Lad Canned Goods

Was 12.79 . . NOW

THE COITON GIN
RT. 7

•

MARK V CANDY SPECIALS!

POLYESTER

STRIPES 11.00

bots.

EASY MONDAY
.
22 oz.
SPRAY STARCH can

bxs.

bxs.

22 oz.$

FRISKIES .
DOG FOOD

2 89~ ~gal 69~
~ gals.
crt
·

$-

fur

HOFFMAN
DILL PICKlES

FAIRMONT
Nice 'n Ute

cans$

SCOT LAD
DETERGENT

.

DISCOUNT
F
A
8

SCOT LAD
BISCUITS

Cracker Sale!

lARGE

31npak1
00
. Pkss. •
'

--

.

. Produce Buys!

U. S. No. 1 Idaho

BAKING

POTATOES
boa

69~

for

·LARGE CELERY
beh.

29c

SUPER MARKET • Open ~ ' to. 10 • Sun.
We Accept Federal FOOd Stamps

•

;Corner Mill and Secoilcfi'Sts.
\.

PHONE:

" Wb

~eserve Th~

~92·3480
Rigltt--1' Limit

..

Quantities'~ 'IIQDLEPORT,

. .

0...

�•

\

Scienc~ Fair Qeld

.

.

..

·Ueland is Funds St~ding at $163,265
Awarde·d
~
Cle~k-Treasurer
E·m blem.

'
·
dl' sbursemerlts , $~6,002.78 ;
(Continuejl from Page I)
.EarI Thoma, pres lden t ; ·Mrs.
All Middleport VIllage funds $22.50, $6116.20; street m~n-. "eneral bond retiremeot, no
Zirkle, Cathy Blaettnar, Linda Arthur Arnold, first vice
as of March 31 totaled tenance, $2,100.119, $2,503.22, &amp;
Kovalchik, Jayne Hoeflich, president; Mrs. Ray Jewell,
·
$163,265.19,
· $7,908.12; · saniiary sewer, receipts, n·o di~bursements,
Beth Perrtn·, Mark Searles, second vice president; Mrs. •
Gene Grate reported Monday $3,968.76, $3,289.10, $20,697.16; $1R1,e26:~~pis f~r th'e, / month
Todd Johnson, Kevin Smith, William McDaniel, secretary;
night when Middleport Council water, $6)~3.49 , . $6,667 .9~,
hll
McKnight,
Chris Mrs. Mitch, treasurer; Mrs.
fl\el. .
.
.
"'1,815.78 ; watermeterdeposlt totaled $19 ,616.17 w e~
Jell
.
ore pondi g
••
d1' sbu rs ements totaled
. McKinney, Ricky Baker , R0 ber l Lewl
. s, c r s
n
·
Rece1pll&gt; and d1sbursemenll&gt;, trusll&gt;, $290, $200, $5,805.31 ;
Jimmy Ash, Jerry Fields , secretary ; and Mrs. Pearl
&gt;
respectively, and the balance sanitary ·escrow, $619.66, no $l?,069·90·
Robert Laooers, Kelli Clelland. Williams, parliamentarian.
LJ).NGSVILLE
Tom . in each fund as of March 31,
· Other red ribbon winners
Elected as delegates to the Gleland, 17-year-&lt;&gt;ld son of include:
were Jeff Couch, Mark Mitch, Meigs County Council of Wayne and Anna Cleland of
(;eneral, $4,876.05, $3,483.68,
Kevin McLaughlin Keith Parenll&gt; and Teachers were Langsville·, received the $33,462.40; cemetery, $6S5.30,
Krautier, Lori Wood~ (two ), ) Mrs. James Wamsley, Mrs. coveted God and Country $837.18, $360.97; 'fire equipShari Mitch (two), Barbara Charlesh Gloe~~nerh Mrs . Scouting Emblem in a brief ment, $50, $39.59, $693.61 ;
Murphy Timmy Knittel Cindy Kennel McCu oug • Mrs . service at the Langsville swimming poool, no receipts,
Faulk,' Beverly Fa~lkner, William Anderson, and Mrs. Christian Church Sunday af- $26.50, $1,962.&gt;7 ; planning
Mark Casto (two ), Doug Diane Hawley· The alternates ternoon. Explorer Post 239 commission, no receipts,
Clelland, John Snyder, Paige are Mrs. Rlc~rd Rosenbaum, Advisor James Council
Smith, Anoa McKinney, Judy Mrs.. Jerry Fields, and Mrs. presented to Mrs. Cleland the
Hall and Sherrie Colmer.
LewiS Osborne.
red cross embedded on a white
In the Heart of Middleport
A plant project by Mrs.
Mrs. Thoma presented Mrs. shield emblem. Mrs. Cleland,
.Hysell's rtflh grade won a red Mitch with .a past presiden.t's in turn, pinned the award on
ribbon. Two reds also went to pm. Mrs. Mitch responded With her son . Young Cleland pinned
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
girls in Mrs. Kuhn's first grade words of appreciation to those his mother signifying the honor received correspondence and a
6:30 To 10:30 April 12
U. S. flag from Congressman
class. Receiving red ribbons who have worked durmg the bestowed upon the parents.
~
for posters were Kelly Thoma, past two_ years in the various
Present for the ceremonies Clarence Miller. The accompanying
certificate
inSpaghetti
with homemade Italian sauce.
Susan Zirkle Sandra Miller PTA protects.
was MGM District Chairman
dicates
that
the
flag
had
flown
Kathy Cun~ingham, Joh~
Principal Robert Morris Bill Knight of Point Pleasant, a
over tile Capital buildlng in
Harper Herbie Noel and Kim presented informatwn on the former Eagle Scout.
"Featuring Maxine At The Organ"
Krautu;r.
'
five mill schoollevy to be voted Tom is a junior at Meigs Washington, D. C.
During the business meeting lln in the May primary and High School where he is an
conducted by Mrs. Gene Mitch, asked f~r su~por.t of the honor student. He has been a
oew officers were elected and parents 10 getting 11 passed . scout for four years and
installed by Mrs. Harold The PTA gave a resolution of presently holds the position of
Lohse, District 16 director, and support.
.
.
president of the Explorer Post.
a past president of the
The District 16 sprmg con- He also holds the rank of "life ·
Pomeroy PTA.
·
ference to be held at Jackson scout" and needs only thr~e
The 1972-73 officers are Mrs. on April 29 was announced and more merit badges to receive
it was noted the dinner the Eagle award.
reservations must be in by The entire post membership
April 26. Read at the meeting attended the ceremonies
was a letter from Congressman conducted by Advisor Council.
Clarence Mill~ regarding his Several friends also attended.
action toward getting the Th e Lan gs ville Post has
Federal Pay Board to sanction
the release of funds for increasing teachers' slj)aries.
Mrs. Richard Rosenbawn of
the safety committee anpounced a meeting to he held ,
tonight for the patrol girls and
boys and their parenll&gt;. lm·
provement. to the playground
were noted and a vote of thanks
was extended to the Meigs
High School welding teacher
and students , and to John
Manley who built the teeter
totters. The PTA scrapbook Forty-seven arrests were
was presented by Mrs. Me· made by the Middleport Police ·
Departmenll&gt; during the month
Daniels.
of
March, Chief of Police J. J.
Members of the junior girl
Cremeans
reported to Midscout troop of Mrs. Bruce
Zirkle and Mrs. James Sisson dleport Council Monday night.
led in the pledge to the flag to Of the total almost half - 20
DON'T LIT AN AMATEUR DO
lt'o not too late to eave yourself
open the meeting. Mr. Roy - were for intoxication. Other
H•R BLOCK' S JOB.
income tax aggravation that comes
Carter of the Bradbury Church arrests included five for
with preparing your own return.
of Christ had devotions for the permitting dogs to run loose;
four
for
driving
while
inmeeting.
H &amp; R Bloek'o charges start at $5
SISTER JAMES
Repairable televisions are toxicated; three for possession
and the average cool wao under
still needed, Mrs. Mitch an· of marijuana ; two each . on
112.50
for over 7 million returns
and the Diocese of Glasgow in nounced. Morris spoke briefly assault and battery charge and
we
prepared
laet year.
Scotland.
on the reading program and speeding; one each for failing
Aggravation ion't tax deductible.
The Order of Carmelite the progress . of students and to yield the right of way ;
Sisters was founded in 1929 by . suggested that parenll&gt; not reckless operation: running a
Mother Teresa to render compare their children in stop sign ; running red light;
modern concepts of care to the reading ability. He also noted passing on yellow line; expired
elderly. At present this care is that signup day for kin- operator's license. Four
given in more than 30 homes dergarten and first grade is juveniles were among the
~--- ONLY
for the aged.
May 1 and that birth cer- arrests and charges were
9 a.m. to s p .m.
Sister Eulaliae is a graduate tificates and immunization dropped in one instance.
304 E. MAIN ST.
of Eastern High School and a records are to be preaen ted at Parking meter collections
Phone: 992-3795
member of Our Lady of Loretto the time .
No Appointment Necessary
for the month totaled $1,086 and
Parish, Long Bottom. Before
OPEN TODAY
A meeting of the executive eight accidents were inentering the congregation she hoard was set lor Monday all vestigated. Cruiser mileage lor
attended Ohio J!niversily. p.m. at the school. Attendance the month totaled 4,240 miles.
Following a short visit with her banner was won by the filth
family, she has joined the staff grade. Student teachers were
of Carmelite Sisters at Garvey introduced . Refreshments
Manor in 'Hollidaysburg, Pa., were served by the second
to care for ~e elderly.
grade mothers with Mrs. Jack
Braley as chairman.

USDA Choice

MEATS
Superiors All Beef

. ITALIAN NIGHT
A.T

WIENERS
12
59e

TI:IE EFFEcrSOF UGHT, water, nutrients of ooll, and
temperature were shown: in plant life displays at the ,
Pl&gt;meroy science fair Monday. Here Mrs. Earl Thoma, new
}l'esldent of the PTA which sponsored the fair, examines one
of the exhibits .

Vows Professed
LONG BO'ITOM - Sister M.
ulaliae James, Order of
elite Nuns, the former
Vir inia Coleman, daughter of
Mr. d Mrs. Richard Coleman
of ng Bottom, was one of 18
Sist rs pronouncing vows
re Uy in Germantown, N. Y.
The Motherhouse and
Novitiate of the Carmelite
Sisters for the Aged and I!Jiinn
in Germantown was the setting
for the ceremonies for the
profession of the 16 novices.
After the completion of two

years of Novitiate training, the
sisters made firs t temporary
vows in the presence of his
excellency, the Most Rev.
Edwin Broderick, Bishop of the
Diocese of Albany, who
presided.
Th e Rev. Mother M.
An geline Teresa, president
Mother General and foundress
of the congregation, received
the vows in the name of the
congregation . The newly
professed Sisters represent 14
dioceses in the United States

Beat •..

·o

Of the Bend#_·f~
By
Bob Hoeflich

•

~~ •

The Hetzer European Circus visited Pomeroy Saturday and
everyone seemed to enjoy the one ring presentation. The crowd,
of course, w&amp;~ marked with children who just don't get the opportunity to aee a circus often.
Saturday was such a cold day and there was no heat in the
former Pomeroy Junior High School during the afternoon performance and a portable heater located for the evening just
didn't do the job. No one seemed to mind the cold, however.
Guess most of the crowd attending are football fans.
The circus gave local residents a chance to hear George Hall
at the organ. George is formerly from the Reedsville - Long
Bottom area and certainly provided excellent background music
for the nwnerous acts making up the circus. George has come a
long way from a numberofyearsback when he aweared in a Big
Bend Mlnstrel }l'eaentation with his guitar doing "Chew
Tobacco Rag". Small wonder that George packs in crowds for his
club appearance both here and in other areas. He's sharp.
The circus was sponsored by the Rutland American Legion
Pl&gt;st which today extended sperlal thanks to the Falls City Beer
OJ. for ll(lOnsoring the attendance of infirmary r~e~~ts to the
circwJ and the Royal Crown Bottling Co. which sponoored
residents of the Children 's Home so they could attend free of
charge.
INCIDENT ALLY, residents were given a second chance to
hear Hall Sunday when he appeared for a benefit at the Cancer
Sunday·Crusade at Meigs High School.
·The day certainly meant a lot of work for a lot of people. The
Jl'eparation of all that food was a major chore and the art
dlsplaysdldn'tjust appear. It took hours to get the many articles
into place for publlc viewing. Nice that there are so many around
ready to pitch in for a good cause. I know the co-chairmen, Paul
Caacl and John Reese, are not only pleased with the financial
success but with the fact that so many helped - even lots of
entertainers donating their services.
EXPLORER POST 239, Boy Scouts of America, at Langs·
ville may be making quite a trip this summer. Advloor James
CGuncll reports the group plans to travel in four canoes from
Pittsburgh downriver to at least Pomeroy, a distance of about 250
miles.
GOV. JOHN J . GILUGAN has proclaimed April 1&amp;-22 as
Ohio Library Week, personnel of the Pomeroy Public Library
report. Special observances undoubtedly will he held not only by
the Pomeroy Library but also at Middleport and by "Mr. Eddy."
BY THE WAY, LAWRENCE (PETE ) MORARITY, Lincoln
Heights, Pomeroy, is confined ·to Veterans Memorial Hospital
following knee surgery. Anumber of residents learning of Pete's
hoapltallzation belleved that he had probably suffered another
heirt attack. ,;:ortunately, it wasn't that.

.'

PLANS ARE PROGRESSING for the reunion of Pomeroy
· High School's class of 1917, observing its 5Sth year this spring.
Mn. Carrie Neutzling of Pomeroy and G. H. Martin of Fort
Lallderdale are heading the reunion and really bave a schedule
ouUined lor the class members.
On Friday night, Mrs. Neutzling will be hostess for some type
ol outdoor event and at noon on Saturday, Martin will host a
hmcheon at Trinity Church. Saturday night will be the alumni
banquet at the scllool and on SW!day morning members of the
class and their husbands or wives will attend Trinity Church
where Marlin will speak. There'll be another luncheon at noon
and class members will go their mercy ways.
There were 35 members of the class of W17 originally. Fifteen 11re still living and five, including Vernon Nease, Mrs.
Neullllnl, Alfred Elberfeld, Allen Hartley and Ada Zahi
&lt;JIIIn&amp;er, still reside In Meigs County.
· 1be clal8 bu a yell which it Is claimed has never been
dupllcated and they are.IJ9ping they'll be invited to present the
c:lleer at the alumni. banquet which; of course, is open to·
srad1111te1 only.

47 ArrestS

Rec. orded ·m·
Mid'dleporl

H&amp;RBiock.

ed Sirloi IJ~

Meat

Marti'n ·Restaurant

t. -

Beef Buys!
OR

WIENERS

. LOIN

LUNCH 'MEAT
lb. 79e

(Family Pack)

POLISH SAUSAGE

lb.

FRESH PORK ·

N£CK BONES

BOILED

Ground Chuck

SLICED BOLOGNA

lb.

5 lb. 100

HAM
~

lb.

ICE
CREAM
8-Track Tapes
1/2

Charley Pride, Johnny Cash, Beatles, Etc.

SAUSAGE

lb.39~

lb.

FAYGO POP
REGULAR PRICE
7-% QUART BOTS., 1.00

SPECIAL .•

¢

16 oz.

!1

6

bots.

..

79~

Friday Unly Special!

8 PAK CARTON

gallon

'

each
only

SLIC. BACON

RC COLA

By Scot Lad

Popular, Country &amp; Western

Ballard's Farm

THURSDA ¥ ONLY SALE!

Wednesday Only Special

Big Special Sale!

Superiors ''Budget"

Ravors

"

The income tu people.

6 DAYS LEn - - --

POMEROY, 0.

NEW HAIR
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Sen. William Proxmire, DWis., appeared at a news
conference Monday minus the
bandages that had been hiding
his hair transplant operation.
His scalp sht1Ws ilcores of tiny
scabs where the "plugs" of
new hair were Implanted.
"It's costing $7.50 a plug 1,500 bucks," he said, smiling.
"I could have gotten a helluva
beautiful wig for $500."

HI-HO CRACKERS
· l~b. $

FIRESIDE

MARK VLOW PRICES ON FROZEN FOODS

GRAHAM
CRACKERS

ICE CREAM.~~~. ~~ .............. ~-~:; 59~
CREAM PIES.~~~.~~~!............4 s1
ON..ION Rl NGS.~~~. ~.~~.......... ~p~ 29~
.

3:$1

bxs
SCOT lAD ROUND

PAT PLANTS TREE
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Mrs. 1,\ichard Nixon observed
the tOOth anniversary of Arbor
Day by planting a 12-foot fern
leaf beech tree from Nebraska
City, Neb., on the While House
lawn. Nebraska City is the
home of J . Sterling Morton,
who is credited with founding
Arbor Day in 1872. Mrs. Nixon
planted the tree Monday in
front of the North Portico of the
While House.

ALL PURPOSE

CRACKERS

SCOT LAD
..
SALTINES
l~b.

llOl..$

Nice 'n Ute

MILK

ICE MILK

R
I

c
5

Milk BotHe

SCOT LAD BUDGET BUY!

MIX OR MATCH

Was U.79 . . NOW

\Yt!OLE KERNEL CORN,
· SPINACH, PEAS AND
GREEN BEANS ............. ..

COTTON KNIT
lb.

FAYGO
DIET POP

LOW AS 01\$
~u yd.
OPEN
Mon .. Tues.. Wed., Thurs., Sat.

.

SUGAR

9:30106
Fri.: 9:30to9
Sun.: 11o5

FREE

fur

.'

·DURKEE O&amp;C
~POTATO STICKS

$1
$110:8
cans

REESE
CUPS.......

cans

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

BONDED ACRYLIC ..
FOR SPRING

ADDISON, OHIO

$1
5

Ca~

•

J3l'

39

25 lb.
bag

SAVE

MALTED MILK BALLS
201 COUNT, 69c

Scot Lad Canned Goods

Was 12.79 . . NOW

THE COITON GIN
RT. 7

•

MARK V CANDY SPECIALS!

POLYESTER

STRIPES 11.00

bots.

EASY MONDAY
.
22 oz.
SPRAY STARCH can

bxs.

bxs.

22 oz.$

FRISKIES .
DOG FOOD

2 89~ ~gal 69~
~ gals.
crt
·

$-

fur

HOFFMAN
DILL PICKlES

FAIRMONT
Nice 'n Ute

cans$

SCOT LAD
DETERGENT

.

DISCOUNT
F
A
8

SCOT LAD
BISCUITS

Cracker Sale!

lARGE

31npak1
00
. Pkss. •
'

--

.

. Produce Buys!

U. S. No. 1 Idaho

BAKING

POTATOES
boa

69~

for

·LARGE CELERY
beh.

29c

SUPER MARKET • Open ~ ' to. 10 • Sun.
We Accept Federal FOOd Stamps

•

;Corner Mill and Secoilcfi'Sts.
\.

PHONE:

" Wb

~eserve Th~

~92·3480
Rigltt--1' Limit

..

Quantities'~ 'IIQDLEPORT,

. .

0...

�•• , _ , . . _ 1
....,

,,•

WHAT I.N THUNDER ·
DOES THAT MEAN,
LUKE¥·· "KEEP OUT
OR ELSIE

IM 00"-JG.
lo, C'RIJI5£,
EEl:. I

WANt ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P. M. · Day
Before
Publlca110!1
.
t.\ilndily Deadlln, 9 a.m,
Cancellation· &amp; Corrections
,Will be acceRfed unl/19 a.m . for,
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
Tha Publisher reserves the
right to edit or re/ect any ads'
• deemed · object onal. The
publisher will not be
responsib-le lor more than one
lncdrrect Insertion.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
.
· 12 cents per &gt;oyord three
consecuflve Insertions.
• .!8 cents per word· six c""Mcullve Insertions.
·
25 Per Cent DlseD&lt;Jnl on paid,
eds and eds paid within 10
days . .._
CAKD OF THANKS
, &amp; OBITUARY
suo lor so-word minimum.·
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25e Charge per
,. •
Advertisement. .
· OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
8: 30 a.m. to 12 : DO Noon
Saturday.

.

~ lttl .,N[.t., -.. . TIIIIot-~. 1.

..... 1111'1

....

·' '

60 FAR 11-1~ NDRNING
I'vE
TICKETS 10...

'I:I&lt;QHT COUNCILMEN,
i\'10 COMMI&amp;610NERS

AND 'THE MA'IOR'S

I!ROiHER-IN·L,AWI

- AND ONE
UGLY

DOG!

In · Memory
-"'IcJJII. MI ND

-'IOU'VI":

-SO WIO'R.IO

MOST
RESEMBLES
SEWEF!_-

UP ACTS THAT
'NCX.JlDTURN
THE STOMACH
OF A HYENA--

SENDING

'""'·-~

®

IN LOVING memory of Robert
M. Cowdery, who passed
away eight years ago today ,
April 11, 1964.

vou

TO GET--

.

.

·&gt;

.

w- ::!!!. .. • 't••a.
•rn $Wi*'l,&amp;.h4

Sentinel Classifieds Get A~fi.on! Sentinel -Clll.ssifieds Get Results!

00

MEET
ELSIE;!!

,

KOStOT KOSMETICS and
wigs. Need edra money? Just
sell these products . No
restrlclec territories. Phone
'1'12-5113.
4-2-tlc
--------PIANO and organ lessons,
Gerald Hoffner ; phone '1'123825.

Mo&gt;morles hold you ever near ,
Though you left eight years
ago today.
Sadly missed by his family .
4-11 -llp

J

"THAT!;
PAW/I I
~IM

A

MYSELF '

LIVING? 15

Wanted To Buy
OLD FURNITURE , dishes,
clocks, brass beds, sliver
dollars
or
complete

households . Wrlle M. D.
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271 .

Auto Sales ·

ON YOU ....... ON

FINANCIALLY?

WELFARE!

before 5 p.m. or '1'12-5275 after
5 p.m.
4· 1D-6tc
- -- - - - -- -

CARRIER
WANTm IN
POMEROY
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

3-17-JOip
REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
Ser•lce, SSO Reg . Mares, S-40
Grade ; Francis Benedum ,
Phone 667 -3856.
3-30-JOic

Mums, Geraniums , Pansies,

and Petunias. Geraldine
. Cleland, E. Main St., Racine.
4-2-flc

sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
. 151 Butternut Avo ., Pomeroy .
4-4-llc

f.J.L 'PU !ii/&lt;R 1&gt;61&lt;

~ILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

County . Probllt Court

ASP!! I HAOOA

FEELIN' THAT IT WAS

C.ONHA 6E 'fQh) WHO'D
F~URf

OOT SOMETHIN I

WAS WRONc&lt;!

CRYPTOQUOTES

ZA~~

ACROSS
I. Line
of
sighting
4. Parenthe·
sis, for
example
7. Jokester
10. 1967 Oscar
winner in
"In the
Heat of
theNight"
12. Pay dirt
13. 1967 OS&lt;ar
winner in
"Cool
Hand
Luke"
14. Cereal
plant
15. Dirt; dust
16. Superannuated
18. Calendar
abbrevialion
21. Had debts
24. Sprite i
27. 19580scar
winner in
"!Want to

Live"
29.IndoChlnese
language
30. Devoured
3l.lnlet
32. 1953 Oscar
winner in

49. Pallid
7. 1957
50. ThreeOsear
time
winner in
Osear
"Three
winner
Faces of
51. Caustic
Eve" .
substance 8. Altar
52. Jehosha·
constellaphat's
lion
predeces- 9. Undersor
stand
53. Brewery 11. Preposicreation
lion
17. Base
DOWN
19, Gabfest
1. Sounds
20. Czech
out
moun2. Columntains
ist's
22. Pennsyltidbit
vanla city
:13. June 6,
3. Bill
of
19&gt;14
fare
24. Opera
4. Ending
heroine
lor patron 25. Hideaway
or person 26. 1941
5. Kind
Oscar
of
winner in
tape
"Su•pi6. Cold
cion"
(comb.
28. Cycle of
form)
seasons

GN KSG ZSU S OEFZV VN._ BN HZSV
ZX

WJXSUXU ,

WJXSUXU
l.JEKKNGU

TIM~

TO

BN

HZXG

ZX

OEFZV .- QZSOJXU

Yeoterday's Cryptoquote: PAIN AND PLEASURE, LJj{E
LIGHT AND DARKNESS, SUCCEED EACH OTHER-LAU·
RENCE STERNE
'

-

. Features Syndicate, Inc.)
._ CO 1972 Klni

Y1111terd•T'• A111wer

33. Yes for

yeomen

37. ~:~:~il.
39. Syrian
bishop's
title
U. Actress
Magnaril
42. 1963
OS&lt;ar
winner In

cU&amp;dM•"-~::' =~!....JC:
UuaamhletheMCourJumbln,

ene letter to eaeh oquue, to

form four ordlnarr worda.

I PODEK ·===-·=. . .

"Hud"

n . British

,.....,..-;,,....,
h--+-+--1

roRu.vE-

) I

'~G.4YNIP]
'J V
V)

Here to
Eternity"
34. Ottoman
ruler
35, Too fancy
36. Fldo's cry
38. Candlenut
tree fiber
40. Anecdotal
items
(suiT.)
U.-Baba
46. 1958
Oscar
winner
in j'The
King
and I"

I
I

"

n

MEIGS INN

·dOOMS
bv .

Day, WHk, ·Month
Llbtrol ~1105

. . 8 for Sl.OO ·

DaUf .Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy.- 0111~
.. ~----:--;
.~-~---~~
---~

r .

The ·Station
Tht Lilten•

·iTo You

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - .Here's how to work It:

WMPD/1390

A X Y D L B A A :1. R
Ia LONGFELLOW
I
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is ·:
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
~ints. Each day the code letters are dlf!erent.
·

.j

il i

. I

'·

Ull YOUR DIAL

I

I•

Pll .

new tires, $250; 1962 Falcon
engine. $25; Ray Young .
success Road . Coolville.
phone 667-3462.
4· 11 · 31c
- - --.,.-,-,---.,.1960 F-500 FARM truck, green
bee-cattle racks , good tires ,

Johnson Masonry

OFFICE
MACHINE
REPAIR

&amp;Remodeling
fOR THE BEST· IN
CERAMIC TILE
Let us show our samples.
LIU
e · s-DoOv
· er-Your
Bathroom or Kitchen
lnsured-Bul best of all
"WE 'R E HONEST
Ph. 992-7608

on ionsets , 98cgaL ; Jdoz . ctn .
eggs 79c ; Helner's- Bonus or
Favorite Bread 1 - 16 oz.

wagon, sell for parts; new
1orque converter SSO. Caii9922718 after 6 p. m.

Plains . All new with total
electric and centra~ air
conditioning, bath and 3.t~ fullv

loavessl with SlO purchase, 5
3-30-tOip
carpeted, full basemen! ;
- Sl without purchase; Lean
gara9e In basement. See by
Fresh Pork Steak 69c lb.; Van 2 RIDING horses, phone 949- a~po&gt;nlmenl, phone '1'12 -2196 ·
Camp Pork &amp; Beans large 29
3196.
or 992 -3585. Danny Thompson.
oz. cans, 4 - Sl; Trail Blazer
4·5·7tp
Financing available.
·
Dog Food, 15 oz. can. 7 - St ;
12-30-lfc
Broughton's Sweet Milk 2 pet.
3 I:IEDROOM home on two 'l'lc gallon ; All grinds Ma x- r
th irds acr e lot; all con MOWERS &amp;
well House Coffee, 3 lb. c;an
ven ie nces ; at Gallipolis
$2.29 with SlO purchase . We
Ferry, W. Va. only $10,000 :
have hundreds more discount
TILLERS
come see ; Call 675-3666 or 675price. Check them soon . We
3886 Pt . Pleasant , W. Va .
accept
Federal
Food
Economy Tiller. 3'12 hp B&amp; S
4-4-lSip
Coupons. Bright Star Market. eng ine . Reg . 159.95
144.95
Next to Drive-Inn Theater.
Mason, W. Va.
Turf Tr im Mower, B&amp; S 31; 2 NICE 2-slory home with lull
. basement. 2 lot s, new torcec
hp engine. In ca rton
70.25

Re.al Estate For Sale

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker ·
110 Mechanic Str t

992-2936.

Pomeroy. Ohio '45769

GOOD MIXED second culling
clover, timothy, alfalfa, hay,
·, 6SC per bale, phone 985-380\1.
·
.
H -101c
ONE TRAIN ease, jr. pullman,
$15 : one wardrobe case, S5;
u • Electric range SIO; phone
992-3818.
4-7-IOip

4-7-IOip

Wanted To Rent

ALLIS CHALMERS WC tractor
and equipment, $550. Allis
HOUSE on small farm, phone
Chilmers Comb ine. S350 .
985-3805.
Phone 7•2-3456.

WHITE electric range In 'ex For Sale
cellent condition, $.!0; Forest
M. Guthrie, ·Athens, Ohio,
TIMOTHY hay, 60c bale ; call
mornings, L. E. Amos 985· . phone 592-2158.
3-31 -lotp
•127.
· •-11 -lte
WALNUT Stereo, 4 speaker
sound system, • apeec dual
' · CUB tractor plus equipment,
McCullough power MAC 6 volume control, separate
controls. Balance $63.56. Use
uw, oil furnace and tank,
milker lor 1 cow: phone ,.,_ our budget terms. Call 992-.
1015.
2726.

,.

P.O. BoxiOl , Pomeroy

NEW ISTING
POMEROY - 8 r ms carpeted, 3 bedrooms,
modern kitchen ath, gas forced air furnace.
Front and back porches. Lots of shrubbery .
Full basement. 2 car garage. A real nice piece
of property . $21,000.00.
4 BEDROOMS
'10 ACRES - Ranch style home, 1'12 baths, hot
water heat. 2 drilled wells, and foundation for
another home. Salem Township on 124. OliY
$20,000.00.
.
DOUBLE APARTMENT
11 ROOMS - 5 with bath, up, 6 with bath
down. Large living-dining. Ideal for a rooming
house. Uptown location, on 2 lots with large
porch and room for several cars to park .
$23,500.00.
NEW LISTING
POME RO'(, - 3 bedrooms, living paneled.
carpet In 2 rooms, bath, ,new gas furnace:
Storm· doors ,and windows . Side porch, full
basement. $10,000 .00.
ACREAGE '
7 ACRES - Ol Route 7 cleared. ready for ·
housing. Water tap.' Olly $10,000.00.
/

YOU HAVE THE PROPERTY, THE BANK
HAS THE MONEY, AND WE HAVE THE
IDEAS. PROPERTY IS GETTING BETTER
AND HIGHER, THINK' OF IT, THEN USE
YOUR RENT M6NEY TO BUY. SEE US FOR
DETAILS;
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992-3325
992-2378 .

Phone
992-3975

992-5786

Complete line of office

423-6551

TERMITES•. TERMITES,

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates . We also

We will protect any single

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

PHONE 675-3628
424 Main St.

Pl. Pleasant

3 BR

Gel Rid of Them

HOME

dwelling residence for

'149,50

ON YOUR LOT

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collecl614-452-3ll8
.

haulliti dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.

'

Y:CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main 51.

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3525
after 7 p.m .

Zanesville, Ohio

EXPERT
Wht!el Alignment
$5.55

Free Estimate

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

&amp;

Adding Machine Repair.

616 Main st.
Belpre, 0 .

&amp;

equipment, furniture
·Supplies. Typewriter

EARTH MOVING

On Mo.st American Callifl

- GUARANTEEDPh one 992 ·2094

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

For Appointment
Phone 949-2803

0pen8TiiS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main , Pomeroy. 0 .
HARRI SON'S TV and Anten~a ·
Service. Phone 992-2522.

6-10-llc

-------

INTERIOR and exterior
painting. R. I. Dubbeld, phone
742-5825.
4-l0-5tc
HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
GUY NEIGLER. RACINE .
OHIO.
l -5-301c

-----::---

1 car garage, brick front ,
wall to wall carpet

ONLY $13,750
We specialize in aluminum,
vinyl and steel Siding;
fiberglas , brick . and stone ;
com plel e line of resldtnt lal
and commer cial rooflr:~g ;
re model i ng ,
bu il d i ng,
suspended ceilings, interior
and ex.terlor paint ing ; com .
ptete I ine of Masonrv wor k . All
work guaranteed to cusf'lmer
sa tisfacti on . We are fully
insured for your protect ion . J2

N.

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

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

&amp;-- PLUMBING 00.
240 Lincoln 51.
Middleport, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have • complete Home
Mainten~nce Servict the
. year around . No matter wh1t

your need. Compltle roof or
spoutinv rtPiir. lnttriar or
exterior .urllt.f\try., Clillnt
tile and PontliniJ ond Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.

Day Number 992-lllO
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.

·SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED .
REASONABLE rale&gt;1!'Ph. 446:, 992-5103
742-3P47
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell, 992-l898 742-·761
ONner &amp; Operator .
We are fully in•ured
5-12-lfe ,
~---=

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

UPHOLSTERING SERVICE, ','sEPTIC tanks cleanec. Milier
complete seleellon of fabri cs
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohlo..Ph.
and vinyl to choose from.
662,3035.
Pi ck-up and delivery . Slaler
Uphol stering, Rt . 3, Pomeroy,

phone '1'12-3617.

'
.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
,

cancelled?
Lost . your
operator's license? Call J192.

2966.

.

6-15-lfc

---,-,----,-

READY-MIX CONCRETE dellverec right to your prolect:
Fast

and

easy .

Free ,

O' DELL WHEEL ailghment
located at Crossroads. Rl. 12•.
Complete front e~d service,
tune up and brakit ·ser•lce ..
Wheels balanced electro~lcally .
All
w~rk
guaranteed .
ReasohaiJ!Ie ,
rales. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-lfc

---- - - -

Mobile Homes For Sale

es II mates . Phone 992-3284.·
' Goegleln Rea~y - Mi x Co.,
Middleport. Ohio.
·
.
·
6-30-lfc
'

HENRY E. Cl-ELAND,
REALTOR

~-

BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Rac ine. Ohio
Crill
Bradford
'
lie
51
· ·

2 LAR GE lois. 6·rooms, bath,
garage, cellar $8,500: Maggie
Whllllnglon, Depot St ., .
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
Rutland, Ohio.
4-7-JOip doors and windows. carports,
(
marquees. aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob. sales
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut~
Ave. Contact Ed Hecrlck, 2137 1
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus, •
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
.
11 -21 -lfe ·

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

Indi vidual Catering
Will seat up to 150 people.

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

MARimA
. TYPEWRITER

Pomeroy, Ohio

-

Ideal lor meeting place -

'

.

16 FT. TRAVEL trailer , selfeonfalned, ready to go, hitch
·
Included. Phone 773-5651,
. 2 BEDROOM mobile home wlfh'
Mason, W. Yo.
·
air conditioning In Racine
4-5-fle
area; phone '1'12-6329.
3-23-tfe ,~%~.9~V-:.w
~.=-=-cam
~
- pm~ob-:ll-e-.~
wffh
raised lbp ~nd tent, mlleege
ROOM &amp; BOARD. Chester,
21.000 - S2.495; phone 992Phone 985-3371.
3076.

The ·

.. I

Ford 4 dr .1 6 cylinder ;
automatic, power steering, 4

EARLY AMERICAN Stereo- Real Estate For Sale
SPRING GARDEN SAVINGS radio combination, 4 speaker RACINE - 6 room house, bath,
SALE - See our complete sound system, 4 speed
utility room, garage , $10.000;
asso~tment of garden seeds,
changer, separate controls .
phone 949-4195.
also Frost Proof Cabbage
Balance $71.59. Use our
3-ll-tlc
plants, 49 c doz. ; Ma ine budget Jerms. Call 9'1 2-7085.
Kennebec Seed Potatoes,
4-5-6tc
. ·$4.'1'1 100 lbs.: Garden Fer· :-:-:-::-:-:-:-::-:-::-::--:--:--:-::
3 BEDROOM ranch type home ,
llllzer S1.99 - SO lbs.; Yellow 1962 RAMBLER Ambassador
Arbaugh Add It ion, Tuppers

1&gt;42-3656.

'

new snow tires. $125; 1963

1

- - - - --

REMINGTON Model 700 ADL,
22-250 with scope, cost over
$200, special new. S125; phone

Now unnp 1M elrcled lettara
1 to fana dM MJIIw ...... 11

.....,., .,..,. de. U11fl•l

. l963 FORD VAN,, good engine,

For Sale

electric lawn mower. Phone

USED OFFSET PLATES
. HAVE
MAN": USES

,, '

., cyli,der,$600; phone94~:r.~i~

4-5-u c

Sheets

... ,.•••
DIIUION

MEIGS, W.VA. 25260
MEIG$992-7151
MASON 773-5634

CLELAND
REALTY

Aluminum

~'-·=·

S,_,ITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
992-2174
Pomeroy

Sentinel

THE

with or without kitchen
privileges.·

Coupe, 2 door, automatic , 6 ,------~------.

-=========-.

Pomeroy

Nathan Biggs

1966 FALCON Futuro Sport

REAL ESTATE

For Sale.

INYLY ' QIIIIN AMOUNl
'
.

For Sale

Judge end ox -officio Clork - , - - - : - : - - - - GOOD refrigerator, SSO; go 4
of said Court 2 BEDROOM trailer, with air
miles east Tuppers Plains,
conditioning, washer, dryer
Rt . 681, turn right, Jrd house.
By Ann B. watson
and carpellng. Phone n3H -IO!p
Deputy Clerk
5751.
W • · 11 . 2tc
4-6-Sie CHERRY bed and night stand;
cherry gun cabinet. All Early
American style: one good
--. ~
. ------------~ : r---------------,

~=:A:=:=~=::!::=~~;::~~..;IIIII:;•lod ~ IMallcmctrta1...___ I[ I I I ) IT ( I I I I I 1
y .......,...

Court 51.

The

20th day of April , 1912 at 10:00

I [J

1

®

Make reservations for your
private parties. banquets.
specia l occasions.

. Radiator Specialist

HARTFORD

o'clock A.M .
Any ptrsons desiring to file
txceptlons thereto must file
them at least five days prior to
the date set tor l'learlng .
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court , th is 1st dav of
April 1972.
John c. Bacon

rJ ·n

composer

44. Carpentry

tool
U . Secular
0 . Transportation
systems
(abbr.)
48. Verily

To the Administrator of the
estate ; to such of the following
as are residents of the State of
Oh io, v is : the surviving
spouse , the next of kin , the
beneficiaries undtr the will ;
and to the attorney or attorneys
representing any of
the
aforementioned persons :
Roy van Cooney, Deceased ,
Middleport OhiO , Sal isbury
Township, No. 20~52.
You are hereby notlfled that
the
Inventory
and
Ap .
pra lsement of the estate Of the
aforementioned, dece1sed, late
of sa id County , was flied In th is
Court . Said Inventory and
AP"Prlhtment will be for
hearing before ttl II court on the

()

~~ From

IT'? HIGH

VN

XPQXWV

OP-EN EVI!S. 1:00 I'.M.
_,.,..I!IOY, OHIO

~

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to 'the
Smalles t Heater Core .

" EVerything hi Home
Maintenance"

Carrlen For
MASON
·and

Tht Slolt of Ohio, Meigs

I HAVE NOT SEEN SANDY TO~'(,
ANNIE! l&gt;;i OUR FRlEND Ill?

W651NTERNATIONAL Scout, 4
wheel drive; JS,OOO miles, t
owner, good condition ; many
extras: phone '192-7271.
H -6tc

WANTED!

NOTICE. ON

1HAT~V

Pomeroy Mot... Co.

CONST.

3-31 -tfc

1969 CHEV. JMPALA CPE.
. S209S
V-8 engine, automatic trans .• p. steering, lactory air
vcndllloned, ,good w-w fires. radio, dark green finish with
spolless Interior.

.

SON

LISTINGS

LEGAL NOTICE

WH,._T 00\QJ
DO YJI1\1 f.J.L

S2395

~·

Orchid Room

WE NEED

- - - - -SAVE up to one hall. Bring your
NO,'iOV CWT AA'It' t251
IJW6Y , fJDIJI;Y ,MCU'#! TAAT5

automatic, . factory ste r eo
t~pe ; lots of extras ; really
ni ce ; priced ri ght ; phone 992·
2441 after 5 p.m .·

'

The

and

1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,

color, blk. vinyl Interior.

.

KITCHEN

NEED lady lor spring cleaning,
Real Estate For S~le
phone '1'12-7226.
air furna ce. Near Pom·eroy . · r------------;
4-ll -3fc TWO 20 lb. bottle gas tanks with
Elementary School. Phone
Fertilizer, Garden Seeds and
'1'12 -7384 to ~e .
table, S20. Phone 9'12-3914 On
ion Sets.
n .7.tfc .
RE 'SPONSIBLE person lor
alter 6 p.m.
establ is hed dry cleaning
H -31p
POMEROY
8 ACRES of land on ~t . Rt . 143,
route . A. B.C. Cleaners, -:-:~~:-:-=--­
-.• • - Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
approximately 1 mile SE of
MO!Ion. W.·Va .
MOBILE HOME, porch 16' x
Ail
Phone 9t2-2111
A-5-lfc
Harrlson•llle , water tap paid ;
5W ; wood floor, II berg lass
roof bolted togelher; easily FORMAL, size 10, lace over phone 742-4095.
,....·
4-6-121p
movec ; phone 304-882-2736.
lavender satin, see at Fabric
4-9-llp
Just sold 1.0 properties
Shop or call 985-4117, $15.
_W
_A_N
_T_E_D
__H_o_m_e_s_$_10 .-:
000
~
and
~:-=-~---,­
3·3I-IO!p under : any condition; buyers in 7days - oneofthese
MUST sacrifice due to divorce:
have
been
will repair ; Wh ite Really miqht
197012x60mobllehome; lake TROPICAL FIS.H1 fancy
Office 992-3020.
over remainder of payments ;
guppies, angels and breeders,
~ours.
1961 Comet, $100. Call 667- , Bellas and supplies. Phone
3031 , Tuppers Plains.
992. 5• 43.
TODAY WE NEED
12-30-ffc · HOUSE In Long Bottom, p~oi&gt;e
•-Hlp
==::----:::-~-:-:-:--:___·,.··.--..,-,---- 98.l-JS29.
CHECK with Kuhl's first lor
·•
J Bedroom Homes - All
low-prlcec, guaranteed ap- POODLE pupPies. Silver Toy,
Prices . Homes with Some
pllances and used furniture .
Park view Kennels . flhone 992- RACINE - 10 room house, 'Acreage . Farms - I a ll types)
' Not A Motor Route~_
5443.
Chesl-lype freezer S85; Kuhl's
bath, basement, garage, two
. Lois.
Bargain Center, Rl . 7, "at the
lots. Phone 949-4313.
8-15-'""
caution
light,"
Tuppers
Dai~
Plains, Ohio. Open to 6 p.m. , ALUMINUM car -lop boats ,
These properties are
closed Mondays, phone 667- won't rust or ro t, safe and
Ph. 614-992·2156
needed
by prospects
lighlweighl.lO, t213and 1411 .
3858.
In
slock
now.
Phone
'
1
'
1
2-6256
4·9-6tc
who are waiting to buy.
after 5 p. m .
For Rent
:-1966
- -3-S2- :F:-0::-R
::-::D-m_o_t_or_,-:H-:o-ward
3-30-JOtc
ONE
BEDROOM frailer
Blrchtield, Rutland, phone - -- - - - - - - ' GeorgeS. Hobstelter Jr. ,
CALL US AT ONCE.
apartments Ideal for couples.
742-449•.
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Snop, Broker
.
Chester.
Ohio.
Phone
985-3356.
Contact McClure's Da iry Isle,
H -31c
Phone
985-4186
Tropical llsh and supplies.
'1'12-5248 or 992- 3~.
Hilton Wolfe Sr., Salesman
3-28-301p
4-9-61e
Phon~ 949-3211
----,----MEIGS Boat Shop, Pearl Street,
SLEEPING rooms In mobile · Middleport ; pontoon boats, "STAR" kills rat s quickly ,
Sure. 21;, lbs. S1.69; Ebershome lor men ortly, 818 E.
pickup covers; one used 1911.
baeh Hdwe .. Sugar Run Mills, For , all your Real
Main Sf ., Pomeroy, nf"l to
1-0 .
Pickens Hdwe ., Mason .
Tom's Carry Out, phone 992·
Estate· needs see or
3-19-JOip call us.
3254.
'I

CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE:

5omebod4 we ~­
don't know!

S24PS

4-9-tf c

,
200 BALES mixed hay ; phone 1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing mac hine
Employment Wanted
left In layaway . Beautiful
9'12-6214.
pastel
color. lull size model.
CARPENTER work of any
4-ll -3tc
All buill-In to buttonhole, do
kind . Phone Dexter , Ohio 742stretch sewing and fancy
good
condition,
Harold
4979. '
CLEMATIS ROOTS. Ready to stitching•
Pay
jus
I
$48.75
cash
Brewer,
Long
Bottom,
phone
.
3-28-JOtp
be lransp,lanlec; purple, rec,
985 · 3554 ·
or
terms
available
..
Trade-Ins
pink and white : cabbage,
4-9-tlc
DRY WALL Finisher con acceplec . Phone '1'12-5641.
tomato, broccoli, lettuce,
tractor, R. I. Dubbeld, phone
A-5-61c
cauliflower, brussel sprouts,
742-5825.
1960 DODGE for parts. Phone
pansy , petunia , snap dragons,
9'12-2307.
VACUUM
Cleaner
new
1971
4-10-51c
marigolds and nemesla
·
model.
Complete
with
all
4-9-3tp
plants ; also everbearing and
LOCAL welder, has portable
cleaning lools. Small paint - - -- - - - - other variet ies of strawberry
welder wants welding jobs,
plants: Midway Market, W. damage in shipping. Will take 1967 VOLKSWAGEN. good
any lime. 7 days a week .
$27 cash or budget plan condition, phone 882-2762.
Main
Slreef, Pomeroy ; phone
Phone 992-5271 .
available. Phone '1'12-5641.
4-9-3te
992-2582.
0 -61 e-::.__ __ _ _ _ __
4-7-6tp

Nelson Drugs .

us .

phone 985-3554.

locall owner, new car trade-in, 13,000 miles, automatic
trans ,, luggage rack, radio, chrome wheel covers, blu.e

1970 DODGE POLAR A

Business Services··

air tag a)( le. Will trade.
Harold BreWer , L'ong Bottom ,

engine, automatic, radio, L--------~.-,~--..,--------"'
good tires . Phone 992 -24~

FIGHT latigue with Zlppies.lhe
great Iron pill. OJ1 1Y $1.98 at

it won't

Motor Co.

1971 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN

1964 PONTIAC Lemans, 326

p.m. Proceeds for Cancer: cleaning, baby sitting, kitchen
live music by Cogwell Con help for one week. Send card
vention .
C·O Mrs. J . Grueser, Rt. 1,
4-11-41c
Minersville, Ohio.
3'30-lOip
GUN SHOOT, Saturday, April
15th, 6 p.m. and Sunday, April
16th. 1 p.m. Mo-ats, groceries Help Wanted
and 20 lb. steak each shoot :
second place shooter gets free
shot; all sleeve's and r ing
"NOTICE"
guns will be handicapped :
Mile Hill Rd.; Racine Fire
Dept. Building .
4-11 -5tc

WE HAD m DEPEND

HE WELL5ET1

OF
QUAlifY

1961 FORD _lruck tractor. 220
Cummins diese l, sleeper eab.

Factory air Conditioning/ v.a engine. auto. trans., P.S.I
P.B., good W·S·w tires, many more extr{I S. A iow price
now!

TEEN AGE Hop, Meigs Junior = - - - - - - High, Aprl/15, 9 p.m. lill11 :30 AVAILAB~E
lor
house-

1141\T!'\ EXACTLY
I W IEI?E WE'D ~E IF

2SICIU

-

- - -- - Notice

HE MAKE A

Auto Sales

- -- - - --

Days of sadness, still come to
us, Secret tears do often flow ;

ROTTEJ.J A':&gt; n111oJ6S ARE.
1 DOUBT IF n1E WORLD
15 READ'/ f'OR HIM.'.'

Notice
WILL do sewing of all kinds In
my hom~. Ph&lt;&gt;:Je 992-6879.
.
3·26-301p

'

.

.

representative .

For

·I!' , 14' • 24' • WIDE

.MILLER

MOBILE tmMES .
mo Wuhlngtan Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

free

estimates, phone Charles
Li sle, Syracuse . V. V.
John son and Son. Inc.
3-2- lfc

1970MONTEREY, 12x 60, fully
carpeted, 2 bedroom, full size
utility room, underpinning
lncludec. Phone 992-UO:Z.
4-5-61c
,
1970 12 X 60, 3 BEDROOM
mobile home, $4,000: or S800
and lake over poyments of
$70.11. Phone '192-2292.

COntact ~·s -..;.,. ·

SEWING MACHINES. Repai r
service, all makes. '1'12 -2284.
Tbe Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.!
Authorized Singer Sales and j
~rylce. We Sharpen Scissors. :
3-29-lfc '
-.,-----;- .. · '
e:..cKHoE ANo oozER"wOr-"k::
•-9-~tp
Septic tanks I nstalled. ~ ~. ..
.
•
(Bill I Pullins. Phono 992.fi. . 60X12. 2- ~droom. all-eleelt'le,
•
,
'
.. 4.25-ttt ~ air conditioned, 8x20 If. Perch

.. VERA E~LEN

VI NYL and aluminum siding ;

JOHN

WHITE

REAlTY~

992-302G
1160 Coal St.
Middleport
MIDDLEPORT '
S Third - 3 BR, bath, house
is all carpelec and paneled,
earpelec ufll. rm., suitable
lor lamnr, room, . two-ear I
garage, n ee lawn, walking
distance lo shopping,
Stl, 130.00. Must be seen lo l)e
appreciated .

and
free estimates; references ;

call collect 446-3608, Byerly
' Construction Co., Gallipolis .
3-24-JOip
'

aluminum

skirting, completely setup, Beaullfur1
location. owner leaving stahl.
Phone 9•9-4892 or 992-5272: ,
'-10-lle;
••• Cop,clly · ,,
Moyllt
Automatics
2 spttd operation. '

Choice of wat1r
tern ps .
Auto .
Wlttr
ltv•t .
confo'o1 .~ - l:Tiil

Filler oil Power
FIn Ag Itotor , .

3 b.r .. 1 '1~ baths, carpel, one
closet is cedar lined, matble
window sills, beautiful buillIn kitchen, ~lose lo pciol and
park In Middleport. $25,000.
Good financing on th is one.
•
LOTS
21ofs, In Pomeroy's business
.
district.
'~'• acreloc•lec at Rts. 33 &amp; 7.
2 lcils, on Broadway
large home, with extra river
front lots. at ~elart .
I have two nice homes, ur1der
SIO,OOO, one In Rutland , one
· IQ Pomeroy.

awning,

al~mlnum

·

--· -n-rllii: Pron~

MIYIII
HIIOOIHNI .
Dry••

1

Surr_ound ·ctol)l\!
Nlth gonllt, ft1i
hR1-, No hot spoil,
, .~o ' ~~_r_drylng ,
?tno. ~h Llnl
1Fitt*.

',

WI',M:!:IIIIIIII
A. JAG · .
ltld tor,.t
«•rvlct

RUTLAND ·fURNITURE·
142-4211

Arnold Gr_
ate
,~------------~--------

I

Rutl1nd, 0.,

.

.

�•• , _ , . . _ 1
....,

,,•

WHAT I.N THUNDER ·
DOES THAT MEAN,
LUKE¥·· "KEEP OUT
OR ELSIE

IM 00"-JG.
lo, C'RIJI5£,
EEl:. I

WANt ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5
P. M. · Day
Before
Publlca110!1
.
t.\ilndily Deadlln, 9 a.m,
Cancellation· &amp; Corrections
,Will be acceRfed unl/19 a.m . for,
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
Tha Publisher reserves the
right to edit or re/ect any ads'
• deemed · object onal. The
publisher will not be
responsib-le lor more than one
lncdrrect Insertion.
RATES
For Want Ad Service
5 cents per Word one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
.
· 12 cents per &gt;oyord three
consecuflve Insertions.
• .!8 cents per word· six c""Mcullve Insertions.
·
25 Per Cent DlseD&lt;Jnl on paid,
eds and eds paid within 10
days . .._
CAKD OF THANKS
, &amp; OBITUARY
suo lor so-word minimum.·
Each additional word 2c.
BLIND ADS
Additional 25e Charge per
,. •
Advertisement. .
· OFFICE HOURS
8:30a.m. to 5:00p.m. Dally,
8: 30 a.m. to 12 : DO Noon
Saturday.

.

~ lttl .,N[.t., -.. . TIIIIot-~. 1.

..... 1111'1

....

·' '

60 FAR 11-1~ NDRNING
I'vE
TICKETS 10...

'I:I&lt;QHT COUNCILMEN,
i\'10 COMMI&amp;610NERS

AND 'THE MA'IOR'S

I!ROiHER-IN·L,AWI

- AND ONE
UGLY

DOG!

In · Memory
-"'IcJJII. MI ND

-'IOU'VI":

-SO WIO'R.IO

MOST
RESEMBLES
SEWEF!_-

UP ACTS THAT
'NCX.JlDTURN
THE STOMACH
OF A HYENA--

SENDING

'""'·-~

®

IN LOVING memory of Robert
M. Cowdery, who passed
away eight years ago today ,
April 11, 1964.

vou

TO GET--

.

.

·&gt;

.

w- ::!!!. .. • 't••a.
•rn $Wi*'l,&amp;.h4

Sentinel Classifieds Get A~fi.on! Sentinel -Clll.ssifieds Get Results!

00

MEET
ELSIE;!!

,

KOStOT KOSMETICS and
wigs. Need edra money? Just
sell these products . No
restrlclec territories. Phone
'1'12-5113.
4-2-tlc
--------PIANO and organ lessons,
Gerald Hoffner ; phone '1'123825.

Mo&gt;morles hold you ever near ,
Though you left eight years
ago today.
Sadly missed by his family .
4-11 -llp

J

"THAT!;
PAW/I I
~IM

A

MYSELF '

LIVING? 15

Wanted To Buy
OLD FURNITURE , dishes,
clocks, brass beds, sliver
dollars
or
complete

households . Wrlle M. D.
Miller, Rt . 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
Call 992-6271 .

Auto Sales ·

ON YOU ....... ON

FINANCIALLY?

WELFARE!

before 5 p.m. or '1'12-5275 after
5 p.m.
4· 1D-6tc
- -- - - - -- -

CARRIER
WANTm IN
POMEROY
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

3-17-JOip
REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
Ser•lce, SSO Reg . Mares, S-40
Grade ; Francis Benedum ,
Phone 667 -3856.
3-30-JOic

Mums, Geraniums , Pansies,

and Petunias. Geraldine
. Cleland, E. Main St., Racine.
4-2-flc

sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
. 151 Butternut Avo ., Pomeroy .
4-4-llc

f.J.L 'PU !ii/&lt;R 1&gt;61&lt;

~ILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT

County . Probllt Court

ASP!! I HAOOA

FEELIN' THAT IT WAS

C.ONHA 6E 'fQh) WHO'D
F~URf

OOT SOMETHIN I

WAS WRONc&lt;!

CRYPTOQUOTES

ZA~~

ACROSS
I. Line
of
sighting
4. Parenthe·
sis, for
example
7. Jokester
10. 1967 Oscar
winner in
"In the
Heat of
theNight"
12. Pay dirt
13. 1967 OS&lt;ar
winner in
"Cool
Hand
Luke"
14. Cereal
plant
15. Dirt; dust
16. Superannuated
18. Calendar
abbrevialion
21. Had debts
24. Sprite i
27. 19580scar
winner in
"!Want to

Live"
29.IndoChlnese
language
30. Devoured
3l.lnlet
32. 1953 Oscar
winner in

49. Pallid
7. 1957
50. ThreeOsear
time
winner in
Osear
"Three
winner
Faces of
51. Caustic
Eve" .
substance 8. Altar
52. Jehosha·
constellaphat's
lion
predeces- 9. Undersor
stand
53. Brewery 11. Preposicreation
lion
17. Base
DOWN
19, Gabfest
1. Sounds
20. Czech
out
moun2. Columntains
ist's
22. Pennsyltidbit
vanla city
:13. June 6,
3. Bill
of
19&gt;14
fare
24. Opera
4. Ending
heroine
lor patron 25. Hideaway
or person 26. 1941
5. Kind
Oscar
of
winner in
tape
"Su•pi6. Cold
cion"
(comb.
28. Cycle of
form)
seasons

GN KSG ZSU S OEFZV VN._ BN HZSV
ZX

WJXSUXU ,

WJXSUXU
l.JEKKNGU

TIM~

TO

BN

HZXG

ZX

OEFZV .- QZSOJXU

Yeoterday's Cryptoquote: PAIN AND PLEASURE, LJj{E
LIGHT AND DARKNESS, SUCCEED EACH OTHER-LAU·
RENCE STERNE
'

-

. Features Syndicate, Inc.)
._ CO 1972 Klni

Y1111terd•T'• A111wer

33. Yes for

yeomen

37. ~:~:~il.
39. Syrian
bishop's
title
U. Actress
Magnaril
42. 1963
OS&lt;ar
winner In

cU&amp;dM•"-~::' =~!....JC:
UuaamhletheMCourJumbln,

ene letter to eaeh oquue, to

form four ordlnarr worda.

I PODEK ·===-·=. . .

"Hud"

n . British

,.....,..-;,,....,
h--+-+--1

roRu.vE-

) I

'~G.4YNIP]
'J V
V)

Here to
Eternity"
34. Ottoman
ruler
35, Too fancy
36. Fldo's cry
38. Candlenut
tree fiber
40. Anecdotal
items
(suiT.)
U.-Baba
46. 1958
Oscar
winner
in j'The
King
and I"

I
I

"

n

MEIGS INN

·dOOMS
bv .

Day, WHk, ·Month
Llbtrol ~1105

. . 8 for Sl.OO ·

DaUf .Sentinel
111 Court St.
Pomeroy.- 0111~
.. ~----:--;
.~-~---~~
---~

r .

The ·Station
Tht Lilten•

·iTo You

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE - .Here's how to work It:

WMPD/1390

A X Y D L B A A :1. R
Ia LONGFELLOW
I
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is ·:
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
~ints. Each day the code letters are dlf!erent.
·

.j

il i

. I

'·

Ull YOUR DIAL

I

I•

Pll .

new tires, $250; 1962 Falcon
engine. $25; Ray Young .
success Road . Coolville.
phone 667-3462.
4· 11 · 31c
- - --.,.-,-,---.,.1960 F-500 FARM truck, green
bee-cattle racks , good tires ,

Johnson Masonry

OFFICE
MACHINE
REPAIR

&amp;Remodeling
fOR THE BEST· IN
CERAMIC TILE
Let us show our samples.
LIU
e · s-DoOv
· er-Your
Bathroom or Kitchen
lnsured-Bul best of all
"WE 'R E HONEST
Ph. 992-7608

on ionsets , 98cgaL ; Jdoz . ctn .
eggs 79c ; Helner's- Bonus or
Favorite Bread 1 - 16 oz.

wagon, sell for parts; new
1orque converter SSO. Caii9922718 after 6 p. m.

Plains . All new with total
electric and centra~ air
conditioning, bath and 3.t~ fullv

loavessl with SlO purchase, 5
3-30-tOip
carpeted, full basemen! ;
- Sl without purchase; Lean
gara9e In basement. See by
Fresh Pork Steak 69c lb.; Van 2 RIDING horses, phone 949- a~po&gt;nlmenl, phone '1'12 -2196 ·
Camp Pork &amp; Beans large 29
3196.
or 992 -3585. Danny Thompson.
oz. cans, 4 - Sl; Trail Blazer
4·5·7tp
Financing available.
·
Dog Food, 15 oz. can. 7 - St ;
12-30-lfc
Broughton's Sweet Milk 2 pet.
3 I:IEDROOM home on two 'l'lc gallon ; All grinds Ma x- r
th irds acr e lot; all con MOWERS &amp;
well House Coffee, 3 lb. c;an
ven ie nces ; at Gallipolis
$2.29 with SlO purchase . We
Ferry, W. Va. only $10,000 :
have hundreds more discount
TILLERS
come see ; Call 675-3666 or 675price. Check them soon . We
3886 Pt . Pleasant , W. Va .
accept
Federal
Food
Economy Tiller. 3'12 hp B&amp; S
4-4-lSip
Coupons. Bright Star Market. eng ine . Reg . 159.95
144.95
Next to Drive-Inn Theater.
Mason, W. Va.
Turf Tr im Mower, B&amp; S 31; 2 NICE 2-slory home with lull
. basement. 2 lot s, new torcec
hp engine. In ca rton
70.25

Re.al Estate For Sale

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr. -Broker ·
110 Mechanic Str t

992-2936.

Pomeroy. Ohio '45769

GOOD MIXED second culling
clover, timothy, alfalfa, hay,
·, 6SC per bale, phone 985-380\1.
·
.
H -101c
ONE TRAIN ease, jr. pullman,
$15 : one wardrobe case, S5;
u • Electric range SIO; phone
992-3818.
4-7-IOip

4-7-IOip

Wanted To Rent

ALLIS CHALMERS WC tractor
and equipment, $550. Allis
HOUSE on small farm, phone
Chilmers Comb ine. S350 .
985-3805.
Phone 7•2-3456.

WHITE electric range In 'ex For Sale
cellent condition, $.!0; Forest
M. Guthrie, ·Athens, Ohio,
TIMOTHY hay, 60c bale ; call
mornings, L. E. Amos 985· . phone 592-2158.
3-31 -lotp
•127.
· •-11 -lte
WALNUT Stereo, 4 speaker
sound system, • apeec dual
' · CUB tractor plus equipment,
McCullough power MAC 6 volume control, separate
controls. Balance $63.56. Use
uw, oil furnace and tank,
milker lor 1 cow: phone ,.,_ our budget terms. Call 992-.
1015.
2726.

,.

P.O. BoxiOl , Pomeroy

NEW ISTING
POMEROY - 8 r ms carpeted, 3 bedrooms,
modern kitchen ath, gas forced air furnace.
Front and back porches. Lots of shrubbery .
Full basement. 2 car garage. A real nice piece
of property . $21,000.00.
4 BEDROOMS
'10 ACRES - Ranch style home, 1'12 baths, hot
water heat. 2 drilled wells, and foundation for
another home. Salem Township on 124. OliY
$20,000.00.
.
DOUBLE APARTMENT
11 ROOMS - 5 with bath, up, 6 with bath
down. Large living-dining. Ideal for a rooming
house. Uptown location, on 2 lots with large
porch and room for several cars to park .
$23,500.00.
NEW LISTING
POME RO'(, - 3 bedrooms, living paneled.
carpet In 2 rooms, bath, ,new gas furnace:
Storm· doors ,and windows . Side porch, full
basement. $10,000 .00.
ACREAGE '
7 ACRES - Ol Route 7 cleared. ready for ·
housing. Water tap.' Olly $10,000.00.
/

YOU HAVE THE PROPERTY, THE BANK
HAS THE MONEY, AND WE HAVE THE
IDEAS. PROPERTY IS GETTING BETTER
AND HIGHER, THINK' OF IT, THEN USE
YOUR RENT M6NEY TO BUY. SEE US FOR
DETAILS;
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992-3325
992-2378 .

Phone
992-3975

992-5786

Complete line of office

423-6551

TERMITES•. TERMITES,

Dozer &amp; End loader work,
ponds , basement, landscaping. We have 2 size
dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates . We also

We will protect any single

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

PHONE 675-3628
424 Main St.

Pl. Pleasant

3 BR

Gel Rid of Them

HOME

dwelling residence for

'149,50

ON YOUR LOT

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collecl614-452-3ll8
.

haulliti dirt, top soil. Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.

'

Y:CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main 51.

See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy . Phone 992 -3525
after 7 p.m .

Zanesville, Ohio

EXPERT
Wht!el Alignment
$5.55

Free Estimate

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR
AIR CONDITIONING

&amp;

Adding Machine Repair.

616 Main st.
Belpre, 0 .

&amp;

equipment, furniture
·Supplies. Typewriter

EARTH MOVING

On Mo.st American Callifl

- GUARANTEEDPh one 992 ·2094

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

For Appointment
Phone 949-2803

0pen8TiiS
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main , Pomeroy. 0 .
HARRI SON'S TV and Anten~a ·
Service. Phone 992-2522.

6-10-llc

-------

INTERIOR and exterior
painting. R. I. Dubbeld, phone
742-5825.
4-l0-5tc
HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
GUY NEIGLER. RACINE .
OHIO.
l -5-301c

-----::---

1 car garage, brick front ,
wall to wall carpet

ONLY $13,750
We specialize in aluminum,
vinyl and steel Siding;
fiberglas , brick . and stone ;
com plel e line of resldtnt lal
and commer cial rooflr:~g ;
re model i ng ,
bu il d i ng,
suspended ceilings, interior
and ex.terlor paint ing ; com .
ptete I ine of Masonrv wor k . All
work guaranteed to cusf'lmer
sa tisfacti on . We are fully
insured for your protect ion . J2

N.

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

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION

&amp;-- PLUMBING 00.
240 Lincoln 51.
Middleport, Ohio
Dba Anthony Plumbing
We have • complete Home
Mainten~nce Servict the
. year around . No matter wh1t

your need. Compltle roof or
spoutinv rtPiir. lnttriar or
exterior .urllt.f\try., Clillnt
tile and PontliniJ ond Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
Heating.

Day Number 992-lllO
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.

·SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED .
REASONABLE rale&gt;1!'Ph. 446:, 992-5103
742-3P47
4782, Gallipolis. John Russell, 992-l898 742-·761
ONner &amp; Operator .
We are fully in•ured
5-12-lfe ,
~---=

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

UPHOLSTERING SERVICE, ','sEPTIC tanks cleanec. Milier
complete seleellon of fabri cs
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohlo..Ph.
and vinyl to choose from.
662,3035.
Pi ck-up and delivery . Slaler
Uphol stering, Rt . 3, Pomeroy,

phone '1'12-3617.

'
.
AUTOMOBILE insurance been
,

cancelled?
Lost . your
operator's license? Call J192.

2966.

.

6-15-lfc

---,-,----,-

READY-MIX CONCRETE dellverec right to your prolect:
Fast

and

easy .

Free ,

O' DELL WHEEL ailghment
located at Crossroads. Rl. 12•.
Complete front e~d service,
tune up and brakit ·ser•lce ..
Wheels balanced electro~lcally .
All
w~rk
guaranteed .
ReasohaiJ!Ie ,
rales. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-lfc

---- - - -

Mobile Homes For Sale

es II mates . Phone 992-3284.·
' Goegleln Rea~y - Mi x Co.,
Middleport. Ohio.
·
.
·
6-30-lfc
'

HENRY E. Cl-ELAND,
REALTOR

~-

BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone 949-3821
Rac ine. Ohio
Crill
Bradford
'
lie
51
· ·

2 LAR GE lois. 6·rooms, bath,
garage, cellar $8,500: Maggie
Whllllnglon, Depot St ., .
SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
Rutland, Ohio.
4-7-JOip doors and windows. carports,
(
marquees. aluminum siding
and railing. A. Jacob. sales
SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut~
Ave. Contact Ed Hecrlck, 2137 1
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus, •
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
.
11 -21 -lfe ·

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

Indi vidual Catering
Will seat up to 150 people.

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

MARimA
. TYPEWRITER

Pomeroy, Ohio

-

Ideal lor meeting place -

'

.

16 FT. TRAVEL trailer , selfeonfalned, ready to go, hitch
·
Included. Phone 773-5651,
. 2 BEDROOM mobile home wlfh'
Mason, W. Yo.
·
air conditioning In Racine
4-5-fle
area; phone '1'12-6329.
3-23-tfe ,~%~.9~V-:.w
~.=-=-cam
~
- pm~ob-:ll-e-.~
wffh
raised lbp ~nd tent, mlleege
ROOM &amp; BOARD. Chester,
21.000 - S2.495; phone 992Phone 985-3371.
3076.

The ·

.. I

Ford 4 dr .1 6 cylinder ;
automatic, power steering, 4

EARLY AMERICAN Stereo- Real Estate For Sale
SPRING GARDEN SAVINGS radio combination, 4 speaker RACINE - 6 room house, bath,
SALE - See our complete sound system, 4 speed
utility room, garage , $10.000;
asso~tment of garden seeds,
changer, separate controls .
phone 949-4195.
also Frost Proof Cabbage
Balance $71.59. Use our
3-ll-tlc
plants, 49 c doz. ; Ma ine budget Jerms. Call 9'1 2-7085.
Kennebec Seed Potatoes,
4-5-6tc
. ·$4.'1'1 100 lbs.: Garden Fer· :-:-:-::-:-:-:-::-:-::-::--:--:--:-::
3 BEDROOM ranch type home ,
llllzer S1.99 - SO lbs.; Yellow 1962 RAMBLER Ambassador
Arbaugh Add It ion, Tuppers

1&gt;42-3656.

'

new snow tires. $125; 1963

1

- - - - --

REMINGTON Model 700 ADL,
22-250 with scope, cost over
$200, special new. S125; phone

Now unnp 1M elrcled lettara
1 to fana dM MJIIw ...... 11

.....,., .,..,. de. U11fl•l

. l963 FORD VAN,, good engine,

For Sale

electric lawn mower. Phone

USED OFFSET PLATES
. HAVE
MAN": USES

,, '

., cyli,der,$600; phone94~:r.~i~

4-5-u c

Sheets

... ,.•••
DIIUION

MEIGS, W.VA. 25260
MEIG$992-7151
MASON 773-5634

CLELAND
REALTY

Aluminum

~'-·=·

S,_,ITH NELSON
MOTORS, INC.
992-2174
Pomeroy

Sentinel

THE

with or without kitchen
privileges.·

Coupe, 2 door, automatic , 6 ,------~------.

-=========-.

Pomeroy

Nathan Biggs

1966 FALCON Futuro Sport

REAL ESTATE

For Sale.

INYLY ' QIIIIN AMOUNl
'
.

For Sale

Judge end ox -officio Clork - , - - - : - : - - - - GOOD refrigerator, SSO; go 4
of said Court 2 BEDROOM trailer, with air
miles east Tuppers Plains,
conditioning, washer, dryer
Rt . 681, turn right, Jrd house.
By Ann B. watson
and carpellng. Phone n3H -IO!p
Deputy Clerk
5751.
W • · 11 . 2tc
4-6-Sie CHERRY bed and night stand;
cherry gun cabinet. All Early
American style: one good
--. ~
. ------------~ : r---------------,

~=:A:=:=~=::!::=~~;::~~..;IIIII:;•lod ~ IMallcmctrta1...___ I[ I I I ) IT ( I I I I I 1
y .......,...

Court 51.

The

20th day of April , 1912 at 10:00

I [J

1

®

Make reservations for your
private parties. banquets.
specia l occasions.

. Radiator Specialist

HARTFORD

o'clock A.M .
Any ptrsons desiring to file
txceptlons thereto must file
them at least five days prior to
the date set tor l'learlng .
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court , th is 1st dav of
April 1972.
John c. Bacon

rJ ·n

composer

44. Carpentry

tool
U . Secular
0 . Transportation
systems
(abbr.)
48. Verily

To the Administrator of the
estate ; to such of the following
as are residents of the State of
Oh io, v is : the surviving
spouse , the next of kin , the
beneficiaries undtr the will ;
and to the attorney or attorneys
representing any of
the
aforementioned persons :
Roy van Cooney, Deceased ,
Middleport OhiO , Sal isbury
Township, No. 20~52.
You are hereby notlfled that
the
Inventory
and
Ap .
pra lsement of the estate Of the
aforementioned, dece1sed, late
of sa id County , was flied In th is
Court . Said Inventory and
AP"Prlhtment will be for
hearing before ttl II court on the

()

~~ From

IT'? HIGH

VN

XPQXWV

OP-EN EVI!S. 1:00 I'.M.
_,.,..I!IOY, OHIO

~

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to 'the
Smalles t Heater Core .

" EVerything hi Home
Maintenance"

Carrlen For
MASON
·and

Tht Slolt of Ohio, Meigs

I HAVE NOT SEEN SANDY TO~'(,
ANNIE! l&gt;;i OUR FRlEND Ill?

W651NTERNATIONAL Scout, 4
wheel drive; JS,OOO miles, t
owner, good condition ; many
extras: phone '192-7271.
H -6tc

WANTED!

NOTICE. ON

1HAT~V

Pomeroy Mot... Co.

CONST.

3-31 -tfc

1969 CHEV. JMPALA CPE.
. S209S
V-8 engine, automatic trans .• p. steering, lactory air
vcndllloned, ,good w-w fires. radio, dark green finish with
spolless Interior.

.

SON

LISTINGS

LEGAL NOTICE

WH,._T 00\QJ
DO YJI1\1 f.J.L

S2395

~·

Orchid Room

WE NEED

- - - - -SAVE up to one hall. Bring your
NO,'iOV CWT AA'It' t251
IJW6Y , fJDIJI;Y ,MCU'#! TAAT5

automatic, . factory ste r eo
t~pe ; lots of extras ; really
ni ce ; priced ri ght ; phone 992·
2441 after 5 p.m .·

'

The

and

1970 W-30 OLDSMOBILE 442,

color, blk. vinyl Interior.

.

KITCHEN

NEED lady lor spring cleaning,
Real Estate For S~le
phone '1'12-7226.
air furna ce. Near Pom·eroy . · r------------;
4-ll -3fc TWO 20 lb. bottle gas tanks with
Elementary School. Phone
Fertilizer, Garden Seeds and
'1'12 -7384 to ~e .
table, S20. Phone 9'12-3914 On
ion Sets.
n .7.tfc .
RE 'SPONSIBLE person lor
alter 6 p.m.
establ is hed dry cleaning
H -31p
POMEROY
8 ACRES of land on ~t . Rt . 143,
route . A. B.C. Cleaners, -:-:~~:-:-=--­
-.• • - Jack W. Carsey , Mgr.
approximately 1 mile SE of
MO!Ion. W.·Va .
MOBILE HOME, porch 16' x
Ail
Phone 9t2-2111
A-5-lfc
Harrlson•llle , water tap paid ;
5W ; wood floor, II berg lass
roof bolted togelher; easily FORMAL, size 10, lace over phone 742-4095.
,....·
4-6-121p
movec ; phone 304-882-2736.
lavender satin, see at Fabric
4-9-llp
Just sold 1.0 properties
Shop or call 985-4117, $15.
_W
_A_N
_T_E_D
__H_o_m_e_s_$_10 .-:
000
~
and
~:-=-~---,­
3·3I-IO!p under : any condition; buyers in 7days - oneofthese
MUST sacrifice due to divorce:
have
been
will repair ; Wh ite Really miqht
197012x60mobllehome; lake TROPICAL FIS.H1 fancy
Office 992-3020.
over remainder of payments ;
guppies, angels and breeders,
~ours.
1961 Comet, $100. Call 667- , Bellas and supplies. Phone
3031 , Tuppers Plains.
992. 5• 43.
TODAY WE NEED
12-30-ffc · HOUSE In Long Bottom, p~oi&gt;e
•-Hlp
==::----:::-~-:-:-:--:___·,.··.--..,-,---- 98.l-JS29.
CHECK with Kuhl's first lor
·•
J Bedroom Homes - All
low-prlcec, guaranteed ap- POODLE pupPies. Silver Toy,
Prices . Homes with Some
pllances and used furniture .
Park view Kennels . flhone 992- RACINE - 10 room house, 'Acreage . Farms - I a ll types)
' Not A Motor Route~_
5443.
Chesl-lype freezer S85; Kuhl's
bath, basement, garage, two
. Lois.
Bargain Center, Rl . 7, "at the
lots. Phone 949-4313.
8-15-'""
caution
light,"
Tuppers
Dai~
Plains, Ohio. Open to 6 p.m. , ALUMINUM car -lop boats ,
These properties are
closed Mondays, phone 667- won't rust or ro t, safe and
Ph. 614-992·2156
needed
by prospects
lighlweighl.lO, t213and 1411 .
3858.
In
slock
now.
Phone
'
1
'
1
2-6256
4·9-6tc
who are waiting to buy.
after 5 p. m .
For Rent
:-1966
- -3-S2- :F:-0::-R
::-::D-m_o_t_or_,-:H-:o-ward
3-30-JOtc
ONE
BEDROOM frailer
Blrchtield, Rutland, phone - -- - - - - - - ' GeorgeS. Hobstelter Jr. ,
CALL US AT ONCE.
apartments Ideal for couples.
742-449•.
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Snop, Broker
.
Chester.
Ohio.
Phone
985-3356.
Contact McClure's Da iry Isle,
H -31c
Phone
985-4186
Tropical llsh and supplies.
'1'12-5248 or 992- 3~.
Hilton Wolfe Sr., Salesman
3-28-301p
4-9-61e
Phon~ 949-3211
----,----MEIGS Boat Shop, Pearl Street,
SLEEPING rooms In mobile · Middleport ; pontoon boats, "STAR" kills rat s quickly ,
Sure. 21;, lbs. S1.69; Ebershome lor men ortly, 818 E.
pickup covers; one used 1911.
baeh Hdwe .. Sugar Run Mills, For , all your Real
Main Sf ., Pomeroy, nf"l to
1-0 .
Pickens Hdwe ., Mason .
Tom's Carry Out, phone 992·
Estate· needs see or
3-19-JOip call us.
3254.
'I

CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE:

5omebod4 we ~­
don't know!

S24PS

4-9-tf c

,
200 BALES mixed hay ; phone 1971 ZIG-ZAG sewing mac hine
Employment Wanted
left In layaway . Beautiful
9'12-6214.
pastel
color. lull size model.
CARPENTER work of any
4-ll -3tc
All buill-In to buttonhole, do
kind . Phone Dexter , Ohio 742stretch sewing and fancy
good
condition,
Harold
4979. '
CLEMATIS ROOTS. Ready to stitching•
Pay
jus
I
$48.75
cash
Brewer,
Long
Bottom,
phone
.
3-28-JOtp
be lransp,lanlec; purple, rec,
985 · 3554 ·
or
terms
available
..
Trade-Ins
pink and white : cabbage,
4-9-tlc
DRY WALL Finisher con acceplec . Phone '1'12-5641.
tomato, broccoli, lettuce,
tractor, R. I. Dubbeld, phone
A-5-61c
cauliflower, brussel sprouts,
742-5825.
1960 DODGE for parts. Phone
pansy , petunia , snap dragons,
9'12-2307.
VACUUM
Cleaner
new
1971
4-10-51c
marigolds and nemesla
·
model.
Complete
with
all
4-9-3tp
plants ; also everbearing and
LOCAL welder, has portable
cleaning lools. Small paint - - -- - - - - other variet ies of strawberry
welder wants welding jobs,
plants: Midway Market, W. damage in shipping. Will take 1967 VOLKSWAGEN. good
any lime. 7 days a week .
$27 cash or budget plan condition, phone 882-2762.
Main
Slreef, Pomeroy ; phone
Phone 992-5271 .
available. Phone '1'12-5641.
4-9-3te
992-2582.
0 -61 e-::.__ __ _ _ _ __
4-7-6tp

Nelson Drugs .

us .

phone 985-3554.

locall owner, new car trade-in, 13,000 miles, automatic
trans ,, luggage rack, radio, chrome wheel covers, blu.e

1970 DODGE POLAR A

Business Services··

air tag a)( le. Will trade.
Harold BreWer , L'ong Bottom ,

engine, automatic, radio, L--------~.-,~--..,--------"'
good tires . Phone 992 -24~

FIGHT latigue with Zlppies.lhe
great Iron pill. OJ1 1Y $1.98 at

it won't

Motor Co.

1971 VOLKSWAGEN SQ. BACK SEDAN

1964 PONTIAC Lemans, 326

p.m. Proceeds for Cancer: cleaning, baby sitting, kitchen
live music by Cogwell Con help for one week. Send card
vention .
C·O Mrs. J . Grueser, Rt. 1,
4-11-41c
Minersville, Ohio.
3'30-lOip
GUN SHOOT, Saturday, April
15th, 6 p.m. and Sunday, April
16th. 1 p.m. Mo-ats, groceries Help Wanted
and 20 lb. steak each shoot :
second place shooter gets free
shot; all sleeve's and r ing
"NOTICE"
guns will be handicapped :
Mile Hill Rd.; Racine Fire
Dept. Building .
4-11 -5tc

WE HAD m DEPEND

HE WELL5ET1

OF
QUAlifY

1961 FORD _lruck tractor. 220
Cummins diese l, sleeper eab.

Factory air Conditioning/ v.a engine. auto. trans., P.S.I
P.B., good W·S·w tires, many more extr{I S. A iow price
now!

TEEN AGE Hop, Meigs Junior = - - - - - - High, Aprl/15, 9 p.m. lill11 :30 AVAILAB~E
lor
house-

1141\T!'\ EXACTLY
I W IEI?E WE'D ~E IF

2SICIU

-

- - -- - Notice

HE MAKE A

Auto Sales

- -- - - --

Days of sadness, still come to
us, Secret tears do often flow ;

ROTTEJ.J A':&gt; n111oJ6S ARE.
1 DOUBT IF n1E WORLD
15 READ'/ f'OR HIM.'.'

Notice
WILL do sewing of all kinds In
my hom~. Ph&lt;&gt;:Je 992-6879.
.
3·26-301p

'

.

.

representative .

For

·I!' , 14' • 24' • WIDE

.MILLER

MOBILE tmMES .
mo Wuhlngtan Blvd.
Belpre, Ohio

free

estimates, phone Charles
Li sle, Syracuse . V. V.
John son and Son. Inc.
3-2- lfc

1970MONTEREY, 12x 60, fully
carpeted, 2 bedroom, full size
utility room, underpinning
lncludec. Phone 992-UO:Z.
4-5-61c
,
1970 12 X 60, 3 BEDROOM
mobile home, $4,000: or S800
and lake over poyments of
$70.11. Phone '192-2292.

COntact ~·s -..;.,. ·

SEWING MACHINES. Repai r
service, all makes. '1'12 -2284.
Tbe Fabric Shop. Pomeroy.!
Authorized Singer Sales and j
~rylce. We Sharpen Scissors. :
3-29-lfc '
-.,-----;- .. · '
e:..cKHoE ANo oozER"wOr-"k::
•-9-~tp
Septic tanks I nstalled. ~ ~. ..
.
•
(Bill I Pullins. Phono 992.fi. . 60X12. 2- ~droom. all-eleelt'le,
•
,
'
.. 4.25-ttt ~ air conditioned, 8x20 If. Perch

.. VERA E~LEN

VI NYL and aluminum siding ;

JOHN

WHITE

REAlTY~

992-302G
1160 Coal St.
Middleport
MIDDLEPORT '
S Third - 3 BR, bath, house
is all carpelec and paneled,
earpelec ufll. rm., suitable
lor lamnr, room, . two-ear I
garage, n ee lawn, walking
distance lo shopping,
Stl, 130.00. Must be seen lo l)e
appreciated .

and
free estimates; references ;

call collect 446-3608, Byerly
' Construction Co., Gallipolis .
3-24-JOip
'

aluminum

skirting, completely setup, Beaullfur1
location. owner leaving stahl.
Phone 9•9-4892 or 992-5272: ,
'-10-lle;
••• Cop,clly · ,,
Moyllt
Automatics
2 spttd operation. '

Choice of wat1r
tern ps .
Auto .
Wlttr
ltv•t .
confo'o1 .~ - l:Tiil

Filler oil Power
FIn Ag Itotor , .

3 b.r .. 1 '1~ baths, carpel, one
closet is cedar lined, matble
window sills, beautiful buillIn kitchen, ~lose lo pciol and
park In Middleport. $25,000.
Good financing on th is one.
•
LOTS
21ofs, In Pomeroy's business
.
district.
'~'• acreloc•lec at Rts. 33 &amp; 7.
2 lcils, on Broadway
large home, with extra river
front lots. at ~elart .
I have two nice homes, ur1der
SIO,OOO, one In Rutland , one
· IQ Pomeroy.

awning,

al~mlnum

·

--· -n-rllii: Pron~

MIYIII
HIIOOIHNI .
Dry••

1

Surr_ound ·ctol)l\!
Nlth gonllt, ft1i
hR1-, No hot spoil,
, .~o ' ~~_r_drylng ,
?tno. ~h Llnl
1Fitt*.

',

WI',M:!:IIIIIIII
A. JAG · .
ltld tor,.t
«•rvlct

RUTLAND ·fURNITURE·
142-4211

Arnold Gr_
ate
,~------------~--------

I

Rutl1nd, 0.,

.

.

�.••

j:·'

.
Dlib'
Cleland is Awarded Entblem
'

'

.

'

10- Tile

W!nel, Mlckleport.Pomeroy, 0., April II, 1912

LANGSVILLE
Tom
Cleland, 17-year-old son of
Wayne and Anna Cleland of
Langsville, rece ived the
coveted God and j;_ountry
Scouting Emblem in a brief
se rvice at the Langsville
Christian Church Sun·day afternoon . Explorer Post 239
Adv isor James Council
presen~ to Mrs. Cleland the
red cross embedded on a white
shield emblem. Mrs. Cleland,
in turn, pinned the award on
her son. Young Cleland pinned
his mother signilying the honor
bestowed upon the parenl.s.
Prese ~t for the ceremonies .
was MGM District Chairman
· Bill Knight of Point Pleasant, a
former Eagle Seoul.
Torn is a junior at Meigs
High School where he is an
honor student. He has been a
scout fur four years and
presen tly holds the position of
president of the Explorer Post.
He also holds the nink uf "life
scout" alld needs only three
more merit badges to receive
the Eagle award .
The entire post membership
attended the ce remoni es
Tom Cleland, Langsville, pinned his motber, Mrs. Anna
conducted by Advisor Council.
Cleland, SIUiday at ceremonies held at the Langsville
Several friends also attended.
Christian
Church during which Cleland was pre sen~ with a
The Langsville Post ha'
received correspondence and a Scouting God and Country Emblem. He is a member of
Langsville Explorer Post 239.
U. S. fla g from Congressman
Clarence Miller . The accompanying certificate indicates that the flag had flown
over the Capil.al building in
Washington, D, C.

•

Veteran• Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Jack Sharpnack, Racine ; Glen Rice, Point
Pleasant ; Mark Hudson ,
Pomeroy ; Iva Singer, Chester;
Cloyd Brookover, Pomeroy;
Sharon Cunningham , Middleport; Joyce Ann Knapp,
Middleport; Kimberly Sayre,
·Syracuse ; Clyde Sayre II ,
Syracuse; Alice Randolph ,
Pomeroy; Hattie Radcliff,
Leoo, W. Va.; James Hamm,
Racine; Eric Diddle, Middleport; Hattie Armes,
Syracuse; Lizzie Hanning,
Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Leola
Keck, Thelma Grueser,
Margaret Allen , Beatrice
Juhllng, Waid Spencer, Joan
Conkle.

,.

AUTO RECOVERED
'The Meigs County Sheriff's
rDept. reported a 1971 Cllll)aro,
apparently a stolen vehicle,
was recovered Monday in the
Bear Wallow Ridge area .
Ownership of the vehicle has
not been determined.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, April II

WITH ,
THE WIND

GONE

"G P"
Clark Gable
Viv ien Leigh

Admission :
11 .50Aduib
11.00 Children
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Apriii2-IJ
NOT OPEN

Women's Lib in Middleport
made one giant step forward
Monday night.
The Middleport Boys'
League Baseball Assn. vo~ to
allow women, if qualified, to
mana ge or coach in the
summer program . Amon g
th ose voting nay was Charles
Smith. The women who applied
for the privilege of managing
- assheputit, "if I'm needed"
- was Mrs. Charles (Betty
Lou ) Smith'
Richard Hovatter presided

Wesley Deem
Dies in Marion
Wesley Deem, 71, formerly
of the Morning Star area of
Meigs County, died un expectedly Sunday at his home in
Marlon.
Mr. Deem was preceded in
death by his _parents, George
and Lydia Deem; his wife, Iva
Marks, and seven brothers and
sisters.
Surviving are two children ,

Charles and Jlah Mae Jones, of
Mari on; two brothers, George
and Pearl, both of Racine, and
two siSters, Mrs , Lester Hill,
Chillicothe, and Mrs . Iva
Singer , Chester.
He is also survived by a
number of grandchildren,
great-grandchildren, nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 10 a.m. Wednesday at the
Gunder Funeral Home, in
Marion . Graveside services
will be held at approximately 3
p.m. Wednesday at the Chester
Cemetery.

JUST TWO OF OUR MANY
SERVICES · · · ·
We can point out our
bank i ng services with
pride. They' r e des igned to

LOANS

mak e life nice r for folks.
Loa ns? They mak e i t
possib l e to obta in that
dr eam
house.
new
automobile, long awaited
vaca ti on . Chec k ing ac count ? - They help keep
family finances in order .
We've got lots of other

se rvices to offer , too.
That's what's great about a
I Service Bank!

.CHECKING
ACCOUNTS
WftE~

YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGH

when May 6 was set as Tag Day
in Middleport to raise funds for
the program. Business places
will be asked earlier for contributions by a committee of
women.
Proposals to participate in
an expec~ 13-year old league
were accepted, with reserva tions.
The motion was eventually
approved called for participation in both the 13-year
old league and the traditional
H-15 year old league, provided
there are enough boys. The 1415 year old league team roster
will be filled first, however, If
only one roster is completed, it
will be the older one .
Managers of fliOSl of the
teams were selected by
nomination and voting.
However, managers of the two
peewee squads will be made
later.
Two Boys teams (9-12)
getting new managers this
yea r are the Reds to be guided
by Joe Magnotl.a, and the Indian s, with Hovatter in charge .
Tony May was elected to
manage the 13-year old team, il
one competes, and Chet
Tannehill the Pony (14-15)
squad. Another meeting will be
held on a date to be announced
before Tag Day.

Defense

ATHF;NS - Se~en persons
associated . with Ohio · hjgh
schools, two Alhens residents
and a Dayton sports editor
have been selected to .be
honorfl!l at the lith Anilual
Green . .and White Club
Recognition Banquet later this
month.
Virgil Carter, quarterback of
the Cincinnati BengalS, will be
the main speaker at the
banquet, set for a:ao p.m.

Council
-'

•

~

.···

-

•..1

PLAYGROUND IMPROVEMENT - Meigs High School welding students installed a
"monkey bar" Monday on the Pomeroy Elementary School playground. The bar is one of
several pieces of equipment made by the welding students for the playground. Teeter totters
were put In place last month, six new swings were hung last week, six more will go up later this
month, and a "giant stride," also built by the welding students, is ready for installation. The
playgroiUid improvement project is sponsored by the Pomeroy PTA .

Is County.Development
The Meigs County Teachers
Assn. spring meeting will be
held Tuesday evening, April25,
at 6 p.m. at the southern High
School in Racine, Mrs. Daisy
Blake s lee , association
president, said teday.
A special program is being
arranged on the theme, "Meigs
County 's Present and Future,"
she said.
A panel will present various
aspecl.s of development. John
Reece, coordinator of public
relations for the Ohio Power.
Co., will present the Gavin
Power Project including the
Meigs Mine, the belt line and
the General James M. Gavin
Plant story. .
Pat Meeker of Surveys
Unlimi~ , the consult.ant of
the Meigs County Regional
Planning Commission, will
present the proposals in the
Meigs County comprehensive
plan in connection with
housing , transportation,
edueation, recreation

development, industrial
development and land use.
Charles Knotts, district
supervisor, cooperative extension service, will review
agricultural development in
Meigs CoiUily.
Moderator for the panel will
he c. E. Blakeslee, county
'

extension agent.
Teachers' reservations for
the evening session must be in
by Friday, April 14, to the
building representatives of the
association . Retired teachers
in teres~ in attending may
call 992-2304 after 4 p.m. by
Friday of this week.

ildli.£.te p ack ets H ere

w··

Wildlife packets have been
distributed through the Meigs
Soil.and Water Conservation
office to the following persons :
Harold Abbott, Robert Bailey,
Dale Barr, Ronald Beegle,
Michael Burke , James
Criswell, Mrs. Hartwell Curd,
Mrs . Asa Custer , Lorenzo
Davis, Ben Feallock, Homer
Goodwin, James A. Heaton,
Abe Grueser, Frank Herald,
Fred Hill, Asa Hoskins, Ralph
Johnson; Brady Knolls, Dale
McGraw, Meigs Senior High
School, Mrs. Roger Morgan,

Bruce Morris, Carl Nottingha111,, David Barry, Albert
Peterson, S. G. Pickens,
Walden Roberts, ., Glenna
Sanders, William D. Scott,
Earl Schultz, Elmo Smith,
Steve Sl.afford, James Suttle,
William Thomas, Joseph
Thoren, Jr., Martha Vennari,
John Wells and Robert Young.
This seedling program is
designe&lt;l to meet a specific
need for · small quantities of
trees and shruba in developing
land to attract wildlife and for
erosion control.

(Continued from page I)
next to the park so that
children playing In the · park
won't dash from behind psrked
cars Into the paths of oncoming
vehicles, officials said. Chase
Vias authorized to place a
parking meter near the Erwin
Gulf St.ation on North Second
Ave .
Councilman Vaughan
suggested thai regulations be
put into . effect prohibiting
lefthand turns at the traffic
lighl.s on North Second Ave.
The lefthand turns are creating
bottlenecks in the flow of
traffic,
Vaughan
said.
However, no aclion was l.aken.
Mr. and Mrs. James Brewer
complained to council about
water service on Vine St. They
indicated that they would like
to place two trailer homes near
their property but cannot do so
with the present service.
Mayor Zerkle called a
meeting between the planning
commission and the board of
public affairs for 1:30 p.m.
Wednesday to discuss a
possible solution with the
Brewers.
Charles Williams asked that
no parking be permit~ near
the Ash St. side of his property
since the baseball season is
st.arting at the nearby community park. Parking near his
home by parenl.s and fans
handicaps access to his
property in a business enterprise and also closes off
access to a nearby trailer.
Mayor Zerkle referred the
matter to the safety committee, Ohlinger, Walters and
Mrs. Morgan .
Clerk-Treasurer Gene Grate
reported that public employes
retirement regulations as of
January, 1973 provide that the
village must pay 9.8 pet. and
the employes must pay 8.5 pet.
of their salaries into the fund .
The present rate for employes
is now 7.7 pet.
'
It was repor~ that land

The Ironton Tigers held their
Annual Invitational Track
Meet Saturday night with nine
teams enteriDg in competition.
Ironton's Fighting Tigers held
off ·Adena aad Ashland to
capture Hnl place In the Invitational. Ilonton scored 58%
points to second place Adena's
54%. The Asblmd · Tomcats
claimed lbird place with S3
points.
Other scoring In the IavitaUonal meet were as
llnlahlng, Jackson and Russell
Ued for fourth place with 19
points each; Portsmouth East ·
15%; Gallipolis 9; Poi-tamoutb
West 7%; aud Meigs with 4.
Keith Vanlnwageo of Meigs

SHIRt
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVItE

Robinson's Qeaneis
· 216

·e. 2nd, Pomero~

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downlawn Pomeroy at . 11 a.m,
Tuesday was~ degrees, under
cloudy sk;.es.

protection .
- Establishment of mandatQrY pre-service training at the
department' training academy
for all new probation ana correction officers.
- Implementation of educa- Development of guide,lines lion and work furloughs as apaimed specifically at easing proved by the legislature .
ra cial tensions among staff anJ
inmates.
- Establishment of uniform
--Stepped-up efforl.s'to identi- 'rules and regulations and penfy sex ually vulnerable inmates allies for infractions at all inand provide them with greater stitutions.

•

POMEROY·MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

Interest~

Meig~·Mason

Weather

,

Chance of
thiUidershowers over the ••
tonight and Thursday. ~
tonight in the 40s north ~
central and In the SIB soUit
High Thursday in lhe lower 111
north to the lower IIIli soutb.

Area

.WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1972

}.showers ·)·-·
I

TEN

PHONE 992·2156

WASHINGTON (UPI)Richard G. Kleindienst's attorney general nomination ran
into serious new trouble today
that threatened to spark a
constitutional fight between
the White HOUBe and Congress.
Sen. Sam J . Ervin, 0-N.C.,
revealed that he would fight
the nomination both In the
Judiciary Committee and on

the Senate floor IUIW key aides procured the services of an u t I e r a n c e s
dur i ng
of President Nixon are per- outside financial consultant, congressional debat.S did not
milled to appear before the Richard Ramsden, who wrote extend to conversations becommittee.
a report that led the Justice tween a senator and his aides.
White House spokesman Ro- Department to drop a billion The Department of Justice
IIBld Ziegler announced that dollar antitrust suit against made that claim in prosecuUng
Nixon had invoked executive International Telephone &amp; a case against an aide to Sen.
privilege to prevent his aides Telegraph (ITT).
• Mike Gravel, D-Aiaska, who
Peter Flanigan and Willlam E.
. ..
released the secret Pentagon
Timmons ~oin testifying. - Thrunons has been Identified Papers.
It was Flanigan who as the White House aide who
Ervin said the admade inquiries about how ministration was showing
much money m would con- "poor grace" now in Invoking
X.± .!_Ulbtbb.O.U:.J.h:U:M
~
p
;;(;.;, , ""'~.
tribute to the Republican executive privilege lor While
National Convention and House aides . "It's a double
whether any of that money standard--&lt;Jne
for
the
would go to Nixon's reelection executive branch and another
By United Press Iotemallonal
campaign.
for Congress .
COLUMBUS- STATE HIGHWAY DIRECI'OR J. Philllp
"I'm going to recommend
Tuesday, Henry Petersen,
Richley said Tuesday some Interstate highways in Ohio have
that the committee take · no assistant attorney general in
become a ''freight corridor" and may result in separate high- action on the Kleindienst charge of the criminal division,
ways being designed for trucks and cars.
nomlnlltion until White House testified that a West Coast U.S.
Richley ordered special studies on how to deal with in- aides, who have had contact · district atlorney's conduct was
creased truck traffic "which has overflowed the Interstate with ITT and who have com- "highly improper" during insystem beyond the wildest expectations of designers." Separate municaled with McLaren, vestigation of possible illegal
highways will be studied. "Some of our Interstate highways have appear to testify," Ervin said. campaign contributions to
become freight corridor which require serious thinking about He referred· to Richard W. President Nixon's 1968 election
wbere we wW be In a few years," he said.
McLaren, fonner head of the campaign.
About a year ago, he said, studies showed about a third of the antitrust division in the Justice
But he said the decision by
vehiclee on 1-71 were truCks and traffic Is even heavier on I~ he- Department, who changed his Kleindienst to clear him of any
tween Akron and YoiUigstown where 13 pet. of the vehicles are mind about suing ITT and ''wrongdoing" was justified in
settled out' of court after order to maintain public
trucka.
confidence in law enforcement.
Rlchll)' Mid Olto II COI!Iiderinc ~•I.Jlui the coal of feee for Ranl&amp;lien's report.
Ervin
il1so·
sild
the
adminisCharges that lhe attorney,
cmrslze llhd ova 'weisht trucka. 'lbt slate curm~Uy charges a $2
fee, compared with SIO in Pennlylvanla and S15 In lndlana. "I !ration was claiming in a Harry Steward, ordered
think Ohio should have a fee that would compensate the stale for Supreme: Court lrief that the federal investigators to lay off
constitutional right of a senator the contributors first were pubthe uoe of'its roads," Richley said.
not to have lo answer for his lished by Lile magazine .
ST. LOUIS, MO. -A TORNADO RAGED 111ROUGH the St.
Louil Brell Tuesday afternoon, causing one death, several injuries and considerable property damage. Cheril Van Meb!r, 17,
d. subUrban Florissant, was killed by fiylng glass. Christian
Northwest Hospital said 17 persons were treated for Injuries.
No property damage estimate was available. The tornado
hopped across Florissant and the FlaminA•J Park and Paddock
Meadows subdivisions. Roofing was di.:"1a~··,d and trees and rows
The
Meigs
County through the commissioners.
of uWlty poles were toppled.
Ministerial Assn. has endorsed Passage of the two-tenths of
the community ment.al health one mill levy would qualify
COLUMBUS - U. S. ATTORNEY WILUAM MILIJGAN
and ment.al retardation levy Meigs County, not only for
said Tuesday Colwnbus has been included in the list of cities
which will be voted upon in the slate flUids, but also federal
compiled by the federal government that wW be targets for an all May 2 primaries. ·
funds to carry out the mental
out war on drug pushers.
The two tenths of one mill health program.
Millgan said CleVeland and ClnclnnaU were named earlier levy will make available to the
The ·- Meigs
County
but Colwnbus was added ''within the last two weeks" by Miles citizens of Meigs CoiUity lull Ministerial Assn. today issued
Ambrose, director of the federal office d. Drug Abuse Law En- time mental health services. a statement urging all persolUI
forcement.
At present, a one-day-a-week lo vote for passage In the levy
mental health clinic is staffed on May 2in view of the benefits
PARIB - TilE FRENCH GOVERNMENT ASKED the by a clinical psychologist at to be derived from the levy.
United Slates and South VIetnam today to return to the Veterans Memorial Hospital in m::::~'"i'm.'Sx~w;-;::-:..~f«:*::::~
suspended Paris talks Clll Vietnam. The French appeal came Pomeroy. H the levy should
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
shorUy after lhe North Vietnamese and Viet Cong delegatlom, fail, this service could not
Ohio Extended Oullook for the second. consecutive week, isked that the talks be continue after JIUie 30.
Friday through Sunday:
The community mental
resumed.
A chance of showers
The United States suspended the talks indefinitely on March health and mental retardation Friday, partly cloudy
board which services Ga!!la,
23 on grounds the Communisis were ualng them solely for
Saturday and fair Suaday.
propaganda purpoees and refused to negotiate any of the l!sues Jackson and Meigs CoiUIUes Is Warm
Friday,
then
Involved. Since then the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong presently financed by the becoming colder. Daytime
delegauoris have lsaued almost daily stalementa condemning the county commissioners of the highs In the 60s to mid 70s on
·
Nixon admlniatration for refulll) to negollate an4·demanding an three coiUities.
Friday, dropping to mid 40s
The state is matching $3 to to mid 50s on Sunday.
end to the U. S. )lomb attacks on North Vietnam.
every Sl raised in local funds
Overnight lows In the 40s to
COLUMBUS- PENN CENTRAL RAILROAD was ordered which are now available lower 58s early Friday, fo the
to appear I:!efore an Informal hearing of the Public UWlties
mid 30s to lower 40s Friday
night and by Saturday night
Col11111iasion of Ohio today to explain an oil apill here that city
coo11D1 to the mid 20s to
officials say may ''cause a horrible taste and odor In the water
lower
30s, except for the mid
IIUPPly."
3011
ellreme
south.
Oil slicks were reported Tuesday on a rainoSWollen stream
, e uu
~om.,e"~
that flows through Raymond Memorial Golf Course. Melvin B.
Eight defendants were fined
Dodge, city recreation director, said an estima~ Sf,OOO dll~e
and two others forfel~ bonds
was caused to the loth fairway by the oil.
In the court of Middleport
•
Mayor John Zerkle Tuesday
COLUMBUS - THE FIRST STEP IN Ptm'ING the new nlght.
penitentiary at Lucasville Into operation will COOle Monday when
Fined were George H.
· 35 Jllllrds report lo work. Prisonen will not be tr~erred fu.- Young, 46, Gallipolis, and
over two IIICllltha. Bemett J. Cooper, chief of' the Dlvlaion of Richard T. Van Meter, 51,
Thl[ty-elght positioos are to
Correction; said the 35 guardi were currently wu.-klng at _the Ohio Belleville, w. Va., $100 and be fiiiOj! in this swnmer's Head
costs .and three days In jail, St.art program.
Penitentiary.
Fenlon Taylor, who has been
Lu~ Warden Wilfred WbeaiCIII said he wanted an each on conviction of. driving
while
intoxlca~;
Billy
Joe
named
director of the annual
estimated 110 guards on the job at lhe new prillon'before the first
McDaniel, 33, Middleport, SIO program, has IUIW May 19 to
d. the convicts start moving ln.
and coets; Oley Price, 54, complete the staff for the eight
PHU BAI, VIETNAM - ABOUT 50 American soldiers · Middleport, $5 and costs; ·Jan week program which starts
alrUfted 1o a major U. S. bue refilled for an hour and a half Durst, 36, Middiep!Jrt, SIO and June 5 and lasl.s lUI Iii July 281n
costs and Paul L. Dawson, 83, · the. Meigs Local School
today to move out d.lbe bueCIII patrol.
·
The men were members d. !Nth Ught Infantry Brigade and Middleport, S15 and costs, all District.
for lntoxicatioo; Homer Smith,
Needed for the staff are 10
were part of a 40Gmen contingent floWII Tueactay to Pill Bli, lbe 25,
Mld4Jeport, PI and costs, teachers, 10 teacher aides, a
ool'tlllrnmo8t
but In Vlelnam. Tlie baae II 42 milellsouth of ·
lnloxlcation and disturbing the social worker, a social worker
lbe Demilitarlaetl ZGne (DMZ) and ill near the area where major
•peace, and Paul Miller; 18, . aide, one nurae, a speech
llchtq hal been underway since the North Vlelliamele invaalon Middleport, J5 and 'costs, therapist, a secretary, a
licrols lbe DMZ April!,
,
·
·
squeallng Urea.
· bookkeeper, six ·cooks and six

ATTEND SERVICE
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Milner,
Columbus, were in Pomeroy
Saturday to attend the
graveside services at Beech
Grove Cemetery for Carrie
Nye.

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11

;;;

ews•• in Briefi .

TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
The Middleport E-R squad
was called lo Rutland at 11:39
p.m. Monday for Mrs. Esther
Hogue who was ill. She was
l.aken to Holler Medical Center
by Marlirl ambulance.
near the lagoon is apparently
being farmed this spring but
that no payment has been
made. The officials agreed that
payment must be made In the
future.
Mrs. Morgan repor~ on a
study made on insurance
coverage on structures owned
by the community. Another
study on Insurance coverage on
equipment will be made when
the building coverage survey Is
comple~, she said.

,il'

"ACT YOUR AGE," a three-act comedy, will be
presen~ by the junior class at Eastern High School, the first
showing being a matinee Friday afternoon for the student
body followed by the public presentation Saturday at 8:08
p.m. Taking part are, front row, 1-r, Vicki Spencer, Sandy
Wood, Debbie Jeffers, and Robin Humphrey; second row,

automatic washer and dryer
• Perfect lor apartments, homes, mobile homes
• 2 speed, 4 cycle washer ~onnects to
most any slnkt faucet
o 3 cycle dryer plugs Into any adequately wired
120-V. household outlett
• Special cool-down care for no-Iron Permanent Presslabrlcs
(!subject to local codes)

Court Takes

Both models feature
easy·roll casters. Dryer
also includes
.. leveling legs lor
use when unit Is
on stack rack.

Eight

Fine~

38 Jobs m·'
Head start

Hang this
versatile dryer
on a wall.
Stack units to conserve floor space I Dryer
fits on sturdy rack while washer can stand on
floor beneath. Merely pull washer forward
tq lilt lid and load. Convenient rack height
allows easy access Into dryer drum.

See The Urge Selection of Washers • Dlyers -. Refrigerators • Ranges •
I

Trashmashers · Dishwashers .· Dehumidifiers.

u.s.

3rd FLOOR, FURNITURE
DEPT.
.
.

.

·ME ROY

'

COWIIBUS -THE CXIIO WATER POI,.LtJTJON Cmtrol .
Board tadiY certlf1ed propolld water pqllutloo CCIIItrol meuuri!s
rw a DDCielr power llation planned· lor. the Oblo River near
Moaeo1r, Cleunllat C.ty,.

'lbevolebylbeltft ........ baudWM~tll.

Feirfelting bonds well Paul
B. Mulford, 53, Hilliard; $3)0
pc~~ted on a driving while lri- ·
tolicated, and Charles MeCloud, 46, Middleport, P,, for
lntoxlcati!JII charge.

custodians..
a.
ThOle wishing to apply may
write to Fentqn . Taylor,
Porperoy Route 4, or to Taylor
in care of Meigs High SchoOl,
Pomeroy Route 3.

,,

· :~

.
. ....

Perrin Is On

,··•,~

County Board
The Rev . Wilbur (Bill)
Perrin was named to the Meigs
County Mental Retardation
Board by the Meigs County
Commissioners Tuesday to fill
a vacancy created by the
resigns lion of the Rev. Stanley
Platten burg, who has moved ·
away.
, In other business, the
commissioners approved a

·

ONE OF mE ~ IN THE THREE-ACT comedy
1'Act Your Age" lo be presen~ by the junior class at
Eastern High School shows Vicki Sjiencer as a corpse.
Looking on are S~ve Miilhone, Randy Rolf and Robin
Humphrey. Curtains are a Friday afternoon matinee for
students and at 8:08p.m. Saturday for the public.

AT POMEROY
Meigs will pla)"a match .with
Jackson this afternoon at the
Pomeroy Golf Course and
Thursday they will go to New
Lexington for a match with
New I..exinglon and Zanesville.

.

DETROIT (UPI)-Detroit
put out th'e welcome mat today
for a group of Chinese table
tennis players who are
returning a visit by Americans
to the mainland a year ago
which started the thaw in U.S.Chinese relations.
Security was tightened at
Melropolilan Airport prior to
the scheduled 11 :45 anun. EST
arrival of the 28-member
delegation, but the atmosphere
was one .of cordiallty . .
"We welcome you 1o America," read the display on a
billboard on Inierslate M-the
freeway leading from the
airport to the downtown area.
The slogan, written once in
dlinei!O and once In English,
was posted by the National
AdvertiSing Co. · 1o promote
"the lriendUness of the Detroit
area people arid
the
Chinese."
The ·chinese delegation,
which includes 14 of the world's
best table tennis playefl!, Is
· returning a visit by a U.S. team
a year ago which set the stage
for President Nixon's historic
trip to Peking In Felruary. The
Chineae will spend two wee!ls
louring !he United Slatea.
The visitors, who just
linlshed a tour of canada, w!ll
spendthreediysslghtleeing In
Detroit, catching gllmpaea of
everything from auto auembly
lines to. imer city alums,.prl«

'

j

Jo their match with American
players Friday night before a
sellout crowd at Cobo Hall.
A formal dinner was slated
for tonight at· the Manoogian
Mansion, the official residence
of Mayor Roman S. Gribbs.

'

..:·

•!:.J:i

Marie"-,

:·~"!·'

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·~

The Chinese were heavily
favored to dispose of their
American counterparts in the,
same fashion in which they
dealt with them a year ago on
their home court.

'·
''I don't tlm!k they 'II deltl'!t
til," aaid Graham ~
preaident ol the U.S. Tlti!Ji ·
Teools A.88odaUGI and ~ •
man who led the til$. ,
delegation last April, ''but ~
should win...

Western Hijack Foiled
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI)- A
psychiatric examination. was
ordered for a mild-maooered
56-year-()ldaccountant accused
of threatening lo blow up a
jetliner Tuesday IUIIess lhe
U.S. Treasury paid him half a
million dollars.
Major Burton Davenport,
Vancouver, Wash., was held on
$50,000 bell today for allegedly
boarding a Continental Airliner
bound for Seattle and Hawaii
with a botUe he said contained
nitroglycerin.
The IJUIIPI!!:t .was talked lnlo
surrendering to FBI agents
after he re~ ~~e plane's
crew and 83 p8881!111!er&amp;, thus
ending the West Coait's third
extortion-by-airliner attempt
In five days.
,.
U.S. Magistrate George Juba
Tuesday outlined the charge
·against Davenport, a retired
Air Force teclmical sergeant,
as "Interference with commerce by threat or violence."

'.

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project submitted ·by countY
engineer Theodore Beegle lo
repair a landslide on coun~
road 19 a1 a total cost of S3,~.
The commi88ioners
proved a plot lor .the p
Arbaugh Subdivision In OUYII
Township.
Bids for bitumlno118 material
which were ~ will .b!t
studied and awarded at a liter
dale. SubmitUng blda were
Ashland Petroiewn CornpaJIJ,
Ashland, Ky.; D. E. Materilll
Company, Cambridg~;
Byerllte Company,
and Asphalts Materia),;
Marietta.
~
Attending were Cl!arlea i! l
Karr, Bob Clark and Wanlji.
Ours, commissioners, a!i!!
Martha Chambers, clerk. ..•.

Orlnese TT Squad Seeing Detroit .

•,

IJ

Danny Schultz. (in charge of lighting), Debbie Heallln,'i::
prompter; Randy WoHe, Steve :r,lillhone, and Joyce Myen't:.:
(prompter). The play iiiUider the direction d. Mn. Allee (~
Phillips. Absent were Bob Grassnlckle, Melinda Amlbary,';:&gt; ·
Bob Edwards, David Baker, JW Swain, Byron McCoy and -! ·
Rusty Walker.
·.;;.
·~

Ministers Ask
Levy Approval

.aaarlpool

I

I

Kleindienst in Trouble

2"

''

ttii

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.I

·.

IUiion-managementdifficul~

at the penal instituUons,
department's chief of lallilf
relationshasbeenprovidedQI!il
full time assistant and an~
is to be hired May 1.
.'!: ·
- Inmate nurses in hospi~
~The hiring of more female anddispensarieswill bepha~
employes at male institutions out and replaced with ~
and male employes at female tered nurses as quickly ij
institutions "to improve the possible.
~;"
•.

enttne

Of The

general social atmosphere .".~
,.C·
- To deal with conUn~

- Formation of inmate counells al all insUtutions.
- Expansion of the institutiona! ombudsman program to
include hiring former offenders
as ombudsmen.
- Implementation of a
minor i I y r ecru i t men t
program .

•

at y

VOL XXIV NO. 256

...

ELBERFELDS I

parlment of Corrections into divisions of program services,
organization development,
planning and research and
administrative and fi scal
operations.

1

Devoted To The

'

'-

inals," he said. "Most of them
wind up right back in prison
- with even less chance of ever
breaking the cycle .
"The members of this Task
Force worked IUiselfishly and
produced ,what 1 believe to be
"We have seen the cost of an historic document," Gilligan
the old way of doing things," said. "We are working as hard
Gilligan said. "Our prisons now. as we can to implemen t the
are little better than academies recommendations of the Taks
Force."
of crime.
The changes include :
iWe take men in as crimin- Reorganization of the Deals and turn them out as crim-

The office of poet laureate, a
salaried position in the British
royal household, began In 1616
with ·the appointment of Ben
Johnson by James I.

1

.

ing today - and those we have
annoiUiced previously - are all
desjgnE!d to help us rehabilitate
inmiltes and thus return them
to society as produciive citizens," said Gilligan.

Now You Know

FEATURING WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES

-

"essential If we are to make
any significant reduc~ons ~
the h1gh cost . of crune m
Ohio."
Gilllgan said the reforms
were his administration's re- .
sponse I~ the recommendations
of the Citizens Task Force on
Corrections which was headed
by Cuyahoga CoiUity Common
PleasJudgeBernardFriedman
who was also acheduled to attend the news conference.
"The s~ps we are annOWIC-

'

'

23Ys"

'

COLUMBUS (UP!) ~ Gov.
John J. Gilligan, who called
Ohio penal institutions "little
·-· better than academies of ·
crime," today annoWJCed a series of reforms which included
reorganization of the ·Departmen t of Correction and plans
lo reduce racial tension and
homosexuality.
In remarks prepared for a
news conference in the yard of
the 138-year-old Ohio Penitent!ary, Gilligan calle~ the reforms

ELBE.RFELDS IN POMEROY

'

Member Federal ,bepqtll .IJQIIIIT.IICI! COrpol'ltloo

.

'

In At 9- 0ut At 5

.MIOD_LEPORT. OHIO

Wednesday, April 26, at . Baker:
Center here.
Tickets for the banquet,'
priced at t6 per person, are
available from members of the
board of directors of the Green
and White Club, Ohio
University booster group
which sponsors the event. They
are also available at
Swearingen's SporUng Goods
In Athens.
The group of recipients In·
eludes ihe three coaches who
led their teams to slate high
school basketball championships recenUy - John
Chavers of Cleveland East
Tech (Class AA/t.), Pat Penn of
Colwnbus Bishop Ready (Class
AA) and Charles Huggins of
Indian Valley South at
Gnadenhutten (~lass A). .
Also included will be Dr.
Phillip J. Woodworth, 'Athens
physician and team physician
for Ohio University; Brandon
T. (Tad) Grover Jr., president
of the Athens National Bank;
and Ritter Collett, sports editor
of the Dayton Journal Herald .
Other recipients of honors
will be Bill Barton, head
football coach at Elyria · High
School; Dave Hurst, football
coach at Cincinnati Sycamore
High School; Dick Fryman,
athletic director at Upper
Arlington High School; and
Howard Converse, baseball
coach at Cincinnati Princeton
High School.

:::::;:;:;:;:~~~~~:i~!:::!$~:::~. ,._.;._ _..;;_ _.;;.~--------------..;.---------------.,

(Continued from page I)
targets in South Vietnam but
there was no report they
followed up Monday's strike
into North Vietniun.
Jieavy cloud and rain
blanke~ the northerrunost
Quang
Trl
Province,
preventing allied strafing and . placed third in the pole vault.
bombing strikes. The Saigon ~«':w.'m».::a.%·,,;;-~:um·;.l:l!l:l$
command claimed more
victories In the area, reporting
321 Communists killed Monday
VIOLIN STOLEN
in three battles. It listed South
REDWOOD CITY, Calif.
Vietnamese losses as six dead (UP!) - A 50-year-old carand 71 wounded.
penter says a Stradivarius
Eight u.s. Navy destroyers violin he once traded a shotgun
and- the guided missile cruiser for was stolen from his car
Oklahoma City, nagship of the while he was shopping. Pal
7th Fleet, pounded suspected
Cole told police he obtained the
North Vietnamese troop, tank, instrument from a traveling
artillery and mort.ar positions musician when he was a
Monday In the Southern sector youngster and once had II
of the DMZ and to the south in appraised at $75,000.
Quang Tri province.
The U.S . command said
three of the destroyers were
fired on .by Communist shore
REAGON COMING
batteries but were not hit. The
CLEVELAND (UP! )
six-Inch guns of the Oklahoma
r.a!ifoJnia
Gov. Ronald Reagan
City were credited with
will
be
the
main speaker at a
destroying two tanks in the
DMZ and setting off secondary $150 a plate Republican fund
explosions and fires, lndicaUng , raising dinner here June 14.
The dinner is sponsored by the
fuel or ammunition was hit.
The attack carriers Midway Cuyahoga-Lake Division of the
and eight other Ships were en' O~io Republican Finance
route from the United States to Committee .
an undisclosed destlnaUon today, the
Navy said,
presumal)ly Southeast Asian
SALES UP
waters. Four . U.S. carriers
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) already are .In the war zone.
Libbey-Owens-Ford Co .
repor~ Monday consolida~
sales of $147,160,000 for the
first quarter of 1912, compared
with $140,240,000 during the
same .period a year ago.

.use OUr Free Parking Lot

Prison Reforms Lauttched by Go Verno~

--,-

'

'

..,

'
'
·?:

10 to ~ he . Honored

·w0 men 's Lib Goes Program for Teachers
Forward Monday.

. ~­
·~"(..

.

d'"'

·-.

.~'f-

.'\

or

Lalit 'l'lw*lclvlng Eve, ~
the same airport, a man +,
became lntenlatlolllll ~
as "D. B. Cooper" ~ ;·
Norlbweat Airline• trlj~,
lrandlshed what appeared : ~
be a bomb In a ~.
collected .-o,ooa and
parachutes In Seattle, tlWI
jumped to obllviCIII 8iilibtflbtie ·
~tween there and Rellif, ·
Nevada.
· '•
It was lbe lblr!l
hljacldng since Friday
skyjacker collected
and fll!ll' paracblttea
Francisco and belled aut
the money over I'I'CI¥0.
The ·FBI arreltld
McCoy .t·hla ~
charlad blm with air
BONDT~
On
' ·
Rodney Ray Sayre,, 22; Speck, • llln
Evallllvllle, Ind., feirfeited a $50 mivtl' lllld .,...,.,.
bond Saturday night when he · ..... 1118418 . .
failed to appear on a reslating
arrest charge In the court of allecediJ
bllbe •'*'""'*d
Racine Mayor Charlea Pyles. 'Padflc
Sllaltw.t

He set bail, named a courtappointed attorney and a
psychiatrist for the case.
Continental's regional direclor Barrie Duggan and FBI
agent VIAcent Reahl ·nnany
persll8ded the suspect to allow
the 83 olher Jl!lssellgers to
. deplane, then the crew, They
they persuaded IUm to give up
the botUe.
"He didn't want -anything
from Continental,' ' Duggan
said. "His demand was more
against the U.S. TreaSW')'. He
felt he had a grievance against
the government, but. never
explained what II wu."

"*'

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