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•

obs~

, 8-The DaUy Sentlnei,Miclclleport.PGmy,O.,ApriiZ4,1972

Episcopal Churchwomen '~'''&lt;~K!~~f;~1~!;:--,,~,
Elect Board President
Mrs . 'James Moorehead,
Middletown, a member of
Ascension Episcopal Church
tbere, was named president of
the Executive Board of
Episcopal Churchwomen of the
Diocese ol Southern Ohio
during the group's annual
conference at the Imperial
House-Arlington in Columbus
Friday and Saturday.
Mrs. Moorebead, whose term
is for three years, succeeds
Mn. Frances Bailie, 64 Forrer
Boulevard, Dayton , as
president of the board.
• Also named during the
conference's business meeting,
were regional chairman for the
diocese's four regions. Mrs.
·Ferrell Beggs, Grace Church,
Cincinnati, was named Clncinna ti regionaJ chairman ;
Mrs . Robert Sravo, Troy,
Dayton chairman; Mrs. Robert
Rabold, Columbus, Columbus
chairman ; and Mrs. Fred
Charles, Marietta, east region
chairman.
Christian
Self·
Understanding was the theme
of the conference's program,
led by Ute Rev. Martin Bell,
president
of
Imaginal
Systematics, Inc., a consulting
agency for
theological
education at Onsted, Mich.
The Rev. Mr. Bell explained
" method of demythologizing"
to deal with the Old Testament
scripture images and with sin
and grace as they are ap·

MAN SHOT
CINCINNATI (UP!)
James Williams, 48, 213
Fosdick St., was fatally shot
Sunday In front of his MI.
Auburn home. Pollee held his
common law wife, EUtel, for
inv~tlgatlon .

ME!GS THEATRE
Tonight" Tuesdly
April 24·25

Walt Disney's
THE LIVING DESERT
IT tchnicolor)

Academy Award Winners.
The
greatest
wildlife
. spectai te of thts Iiiii

.

.

·

"G"

Walt Disney's
VANISHING PRAIRIE
( Tochnlcolor)

" G''

SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

.plica ble today . .
Bishop Krumm, in his ser·
mon, said that noUting less
than a resurrection community
will ·be able to face the
casualties of a revolutionary
age such as ours without losing
hope and confidence and

News.

••

llg Hks frem llt,le acorns
grow, HOwe-oer, fruit tr"l bear

bul when cult I voted Drag•rly. "

BETTE;R BUILDING comesfrom !)ETTER BUILDING
MATERIAL ~ BETTER

BUILDING. MATERIALS
come from THE POMEROY
CEMENT BLOCK COM.
PANY. the home of the
"FR IENDLY ONES" . Give
us a try and you ' ll see for

yourse lf ...

POMEROY CEMENT
BLOCK CO.

The Dept. Store of Building
Since 1915.

in Briefs

(Continued from Page 1)
Republican presidential nomination, said Sunday it would be a
"great mistake" to move Ute Gj)P convention from San Diego.
"In a year when the main issue is broker.ptomlses, I think it
woold be just one more broken promise," Ashbrook said. "I
thinil it would be a great mistake to move tbe convention from
San Diego to eiUter Miami Beach or Chicago."
He said he had heard that GOP national committee members
also were considering Kansas City. Mo. as a pooslble alternative
convention site "and a couple of otber places." Talking of
moving the convention may be linked to the controversy over
alleged offers of up to tiOO,OOO in pledges by a hotel subsidiary of
International Telephone and Telegraph (m) to San Diego's
GOP convention hlnd, be said. Critics have claimed the pledge
may have brought ITT favors in settlement of an antitrust suit.
COLUMBUS - A BENEFTr CONCERT, with well-known
singers and actors serving as Ute entertainment and as ushers
will be held for the Ohio campaign of Sen. George McGovern,
S.D., in Cleveland Friday night. McGovern's headquarters here
announced today the benefit would he held at the Cleveland
Arena at 8:30p.m. Friday wiUt proceeds going to his Ohio and
national presil(enl!al campaign funds .
·
. Singers Jon! Mitchell, Paul Simon and James Taylor will be
featured. Warren Beatty, Jack Nicholson, Julie Christie, Goldie
Hawn and Peggy Lipton will usher. A similar concert in Los
Angeles earlier this month netted $250,000 for the campaign.
McGovern's office also annoonced.Ute senator will he in Ohio
Wednesday and Thursday. His Wednesday itinerary cal~ for
stops in Cleveland, Columbus, Springfield, Dayton and Cin·
cinnati . On Thursday he will appeaf' in Cleveland, Toledo,
Fremont, Sandusky, Elyrls and Lorain.

o:

BELFAST, NORTHERN IRELAND -GUNMEN openly
manned sandbagged .fortifications around Roman Catholic areas
of LOndonderry today In anticipation of a British l!l'liiY attempt to
oust them from the strongholds. In continuing violence Northern
Ireland gunmen wounded a policeman, a civilian and a soldier in
Londonderry, another soldier In Belfast and fought a 31kninute
battle with mUilia forces troops along the Irish Republic border.
In ·Londonderry UP! reporter William Carson said gurunen
wearing stocking masks erected large sandbagged fortifications
at strategic poinl3leading into the Catholic Bogslde and Creggan
dlstrlcl3 during the weekend.
PARIS - THE FRENCH GOVERNMENT TODAY announced what It said· was nationwide support for admitting
Brltaili and three other nations to the Common Market. A record
t8 pet. of lite electorate abstained or cast blank ballots. ·
Interior Mlnl.ster Raymond Marcellln In Ute announcement
after midnight, said that wiUt 67.86 pet. of.the valid votes in favor
of entry of Britain, Ireland, Norway and Denmark and 32.14 pel.
against, It was a clear majority for the government in Sunday's
baUotlng. The six original Conunon Market nations - France
Holland, Belgium, Italy, West Germany and Luxembourg _ had
already approved the entry of Britain, Norway, Denmark and
Ireland ..

Rock Take

11

courage ..
He said,"We must accept the
death of the familiar and
customary without panic and
despair, certain that God has
power over death and ·can raise
up what ·has died and give it
new body as it pleases him ."

(Continued from Page II
samples is 75 pounds heavier
than Apollo IS's, and 50 pounds
more than originally planned
for this mission .
The greatest success of
Young and Duke came Sunday
wben they drove their moon
buggy up the slopes of the
largest crater man has ever
visited on the moon. They
sampled rocks as big as
houses; found soil in a "gopher
hole" Utat had been shielded
from the sun for millions of
years; and measured the
strongest magnet yet found on
the moon.
While Young and Duke were
investigating the surface, Mat·
tingly was mapping the moon
from Casper in orbit and
scientists said the results of the
ship's radiation sensors were
excellent.
The Apollo program will end
in December wiUt the flight of
Apollo 17 to the foot of the
Taurus Mountains on the
eostem . edge of the Sea of
Serenity. Like Apollo 16, Apollo
17 is planned as a 12-day
mission, with three days spent
on the lunar surface.

Words ~r~ inadequate to express our deep
apprectatlon to evt:ryone ... Emergency
squadmen, Doctors, Nurses, Blood Donors
_ and all our friends and relatives ... 'for the
w?nderful expressions of kindness and help
wtth ~e recovery of our son, Stan. We
esp-;ctally want to thank all the churches
m1~1ster:&gt; and individuals who remembered
us m their prayers. We are so grateful to all
of you. Thank You so much.

DON AND EDNA WILSON·

Ferman Moore
Heads Project
In Scouting
Ferman Moore has been
named 1971 chairman of the
Save Our American Resources
project by Middleport Cub
Scout Pack 245. Serving as cochairman of the project will be
last year's chairman , Edison
Baker.
Announcement of the ap·
pointments
was
made
following a committee meeting
held Thursday night at the
home of Mr . and Mrs. Stanley
Doss, cubmaster and den
leader coach, respectively .
Plans were discussed for the
observance of Keep American
Beautiful Day on Saturday and
details or that will be announced later. Arrangements
have been made, however, for
refreshments for the scouts
participating in the Saturday
ecology program. They will be
provided by Royal Crown
Bottling Co., M and R
Foodllner , and Holsum
Bakery.
Elected den leader coach for
the year was Mrs. Doss, with
Mrs. Marion Francis being reelected publicity chairman for
the Pack. Appointed to provide
transportation for summer
activities were Millord Hysell,
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Wbit·
ling ton, Si., Charles Scott, and
Mr . and Mrs. Doss. A
recruitment night will be sel
lor some time in May. ·
Refreshments of cookies and
coffee were served by Mrs.
Doss lo those named and Miss
Linda Lane and Mrs. Charles
K. Byer.'

Hensley
(Continued fr&lt;im Page 1)
Funeral Home is in charge of
arrangements. Masonic
graveside rites will be be
Shade River Lodge 453. D of A
services are Utis evening at 8 al
tbe residence. Friends may
call at Ute residence any time.

Veterans Memorial Hoohltal
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
- Lawrent"e .Klein, Minersv ille; Roger Spaun, Racine;
Elizabeth Durbin, Mason;
William Claude lj.oy, Racirye.
DISCHARGES - Waller
Walker, Robert Wilson, Larry
Roush, Michael Wolfe, Jack

Wednesday through Friday:
Parlly cloudy and cool
Wednesday. Fair . and · cool
Thursday. Chance Ql
showers and warmer
Friday. High Wednesday In
the 40s and SOs. High Sharnat:k, Allis.on Jones,
Thursday In the 5Gs north to Henry Johnson, Frank Cornell,
around 60 south, risllig by : mxie Synder, John Hanning,
Friday to near 60 north and Christopher Smith, Bryan
mid 60s south. Lows In the Finley,
Joseph
White .
early morning In the upper Lawrence
Klein ,
Kent
20s and the 308 Wednesday, Kirkham.
rising by Friday to between
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS Garnet
Bachner, Rutland;
35 and 45.
·
:;~:::::::::=::::-;::::::::~~::W~::-h:"-::::x::::::::::::::::::~ • Paula Derenberger, Pomeroy;
Leola Keck, Pomeroy; Doris
Wolfe, Racine: Fred Roush,
Racine: Ina Howard, Hart·
lord; Kenny Lunsford, Mid·
dleport;
Kevin
Kelley,
.
Wightman, fa.; Sheryl UtUe,
Hartford; Rosemary Hysell,
Middleport; Donita Manuel,
Georgie . Brunty Jones, 77, Racine;
Helen Jeffers,
Guysville, Rt. I, died at her Syracuse .
res idence Sunday mornin g
DISCHARGES - Leonard
followin g an ex tended illness. Cremeans, Deborah Taylor,
Mrs. Jones was born at John Ginther, Raymond
Hamlin , W. Va., the daughter Hartley, Christy Dye, Paul
of the late John and Frances Henderson .
Davis Brunty.
She was a member of the
MAY 5 IS SET
Guysville Community Church
Reg
istra
tion for kin·
and a resident or the Guysville
dcrgarten
students
will be held
area 17 years.
She is survived by her Monday, Mays, all :30 p.m. at
husband, Sam; lour sons, the Pomeroy Elementary
Johnny B., Huntington, W. Va.; Sc hool. All par ents and
Bernard of Ca ldwell : Ray children should be present.
Daniel, ol Wooster; and Ed· Parents must .bring their
di e; one brother, Russe ll child's birth certificate and
Brunty, Coolville; two sisters , immunization record. Shots
Ona Faye Wiley and Lillie requi red are OPT, polio, skin
Tooley, both of Caldwell ; 13 lest, rubella and· rubeola. A
grandchildren and four great- child to enter kindergarten
must be 5 on or before Sept. 30.
grandchildren.
. She was preceded in death by
two sons, Raymond and Paul,
CLUB TO MEET
and severa l brot hers and
The Friendly Neighbors Club
sisters.
will meet Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
Funeral services will be held at the lhome of Mrs. Donald
Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Guys- McKenzie.
ville Community Churc h with
Roy Deeter officiating . Burial
TAKEN TO HOSPITAL
will be in the Bean Cemetery .
The Pomeroy E·R squad was
Friends may call at the Whi te
called
today at 9:24 a.m. to
Funerall!ome, Coolville, after
Meigs
High School for Paul
7 p.m. today.
Miller, 18, who was suffering
chest pains. He was trans·
Bettie Cullums
ported to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

, J
GOOrgte Ones

·

Died on SlUlday

Of Pomeroy Dies

Bettie E. Cullums, 78, of 208
Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy, died
Saturday evening at Holzer
Medical Center.
She was the daughter of the
late John E. and Celinda Elliott
.Bland. She was also preceded
in death by her husband,
Roger; two brothers, three
sisters and a granddaughter,
Bell~ Foreman. Mrs. Collums
was a member ol the Trinity
Church, Pomeroy.
She is survived by one son ,
H&lt;.rold Rawson, Canton; a
g1andson, Paul Rawson
Canton; tw o step·children:
Dwight Collums and Florence
Sidders, both of Pomeroy;
eight grandchildren, and
several nieces and npehews.
Funeral services will be held
Tuesday at I p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Wilbur
Perrin officiating. Burial will
be in Suncrest Cemetery, Pt.
Pleasan t. Friends may call at
Ewing Funeral Home any
time.
.

John D. Johnson
Died on Saturday
John D. (Junior) Johnson, 40,
Long Bottom, Rt. I, died
Saturday evening at Gallipolis
State Institute. He was
pre~eded in death by a sister,
Johan na .
He is survived by his mother,
Mrs. Haze l M. Johnson, Long
Bottom ; two ;br others •
Raymond (Jack) Johnson, and
Glen Johnson, both of
Columbus; one sister, Mrs.
Robert (Geraldine! Barton,
Cincinrmti, and several nieces
and nephews.
He was a member of the MI.
Olive United Brethren Church
at Long Bottom. Graveside
services will be held Wed·
nesday at 11 a.m. at Olive
Cemetery with the Rev' Roy
Bush officiating. Friends may.
call at the White Funeral Home
in Coolville after noon
Tuesday.
CLASSES SET
Mrs. Judy Riggs, baton in·
structor, announced today that
Royal Oak baton classes will be
held Wednesday evening In·
eluding lhe intermedicate class
at 6:30 p.m., corps practice
7: 30, and team practice at·8:30
p.m.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Monday at 11 a.m.
was 54 degrees under cloudy
skies.
.

Alben Barkley was 71
years and 57 days old when
he was inaugurated vicepresident u n de r President
Harry S. Truman.

..

Protests ·to Continue
By United Press International
Antiwar protests against the
U.S. bombing of Hanoi and
Haiphong entered· their second
week today with' protest
leaders vowing to keep up Ute
demonstrations until American
involvement in the Indochina
war is finished.
Protest leaders announced in
New Yotk. ~nday plans for
"Out Now Day" demon&amp;
strations scheduled across ihe
country, a student strike for
May 4 and a possible march on
Washington.
About 637 students from 113
colleges and universities, 32
high schools, one junior high
school and two elementary
schools-representing 28 states
-participated in a student
Mobiliza lion Committee
(SMC) sponsored "Emergenay
U.S. Student AntiwiH'- Conference " at the Loeb Student
Center of New York Univer·
sity.
In Salt Lake City, antiwar

lebders called for a "no work,
no school" strike today with
plans to march to ·the federal
building . Steve Holbrook, one
of the group leader~, said Ute
march would feature a ••cast of
thousands," including middleclass Americans down through
college and high school
students.
·
In AUantic, Iowa, a Vietnam
veteran who won two Purple
Hearts during his tour of duty,
entered a Catholic church
Sundny and fired an Ml rifle at
a crucifix during Mass.
AuUtorities said Robert R.
•

DRIVER CHARGED
The Meigs County .Sheri!('s
Dept. investigated a single car
accident Sa'turday at 6 p.m. on
County Road 30. Harold S.
Braden, Jr., 24, Meadows, Va.,
traveling west met an oncoming car which crowded him
off the highway into a ditch on
the right, continuing on for 130
ft. where the car struck a
Middleport E-R
telephone pole. Braden was
cited to court on charges of
Unit Kept Busy
driving while intoxicated.
There was medium damage to
The Middleport E-R squad the car, and no injuries.
was called Sunday at !2:09 to
New Lima road for Mrs. Dale
Bachner who was taken to
Veterans Memorial .Hospital
SERVICES SET
and admitted. At 8;03 p.m. SYRACUSE - Revival
Sunday the squad went to services will be held at the
Stingy Creek Road for Douglas Syracuse Church of the
Johnson who was also taken to Nazarene beginnipg Tuesday
Veterans Memorial Hospital. through April 30 with the Rev.
M 6:30 a.m. today the unit Lawrence
C.
Walker,
look Herman Ohlinger, 23!i eva ngelist , delivering the
South Sixth Ave., to Veterans sermons. Services will be held
Memorial and at 8:21 a.m. at 7:30p. m. nightly. The Rev.
Harry McGuffin, Railroad St., M. C. Larimore is pastor.
was removed to Holzer
Medical Center suffering a
possible stroke .
IWLA TO MEET
lzaak Walton League will
mee t this evening at 7 at the
club house.
CLUB TO MEET
The Meigs County Junior
ROADS OPEN
Leadership Club will meet at
The
State
Highway
7:30p.m . Tuesday at the Ohio Department reported today ali
Power Co. The topic ·will be roads closed by high water are
"Tee nagers and the Law."
now· open.

BY KATIE CROW
New housing and more job
opportunities are the long
ran ge goals inherent in ·comprehenSive planning for Meigs
Cow1ty to this point, according
to P~t Meeker of Surveys
Unhmlled Inc.
·
Meeker explained what has
been accomplished to date by
the Meigs County Planning
CommiSSion and its executive
c~m nntte e unde.r con tracts
With Surveys Unlimited Inc.,
Monday mght .
. Meehng 1n the Orchid Room
In Pomeroy , Meeker used
maps and shdes to explain the
complete program to a large
crowd. He said the purpose of
the plan IS to bring together the

Pigsley, 24, dressed In full .
Army uniform, was subdued by
an off-duty pollcema.n and
several parishioners and
dragged from the church
yelling, "Make love not w~r :
That's what he died for."
Elgbteen of 80 demonstrators
from Philadelphia who
gathered at the entrance to the
U.S. Navy Pier at Leonardo,
N.J., were arrested SIUlllaY
wben they attempted to scale a
fence and get onto the pier. the
demonstrators said tlley had
planned to block the sailing of a
Navy ammuniti0f1 ship reportedly bound for Vietnam.
Rep. Abner Mlkva, D-ill.,
told 650 protesters Sunday at
Northwestern University in
Evanston, m., that electing
men .and women who oppose
the ·war would be more ef.
fective than demonstrating.
"We are here lo protest...to
tell the l'n!sidenl that he can
no longer . deceive the
American people by talking
'Vielnamizatlon' and 'with·
drawal' whUe the war and the
death go," Mlkva said.
In Washinglon, a group of 81
congressmen Sunday sought a
meeting with President Nixon
soon to discuss ending the
American role in Vietnam. The
12 senators and 69 representatives asked Nixon for a
meeting before his visit to the
Soviet Union.

only difficulty witli mobile
units is finding locations for
them; there is no firSt rate
lucatlon for a trailer par~ in
Meigs County.
Mobile home parks. a
P.rogram for se ni or ~itizen s ,
and federa l financing for low
income buying are beneficial
projects.
Improved transportation in
the plan calls for improved
access roads into Pomeroy and
Middleport, U. S. Rt. 33 north
of Route 681 has top priority,
upgrading 124 and the Rt. 7
bypass. Financing ol these '
projects is the next thing which
will be difficult.
Reta il and whole trade is the
largest ac tivi ty in Meigs

reso urces tlutt . will· most Meigs County ha·s gone· from
benefit the county,
28,620 to 19,799 in 1971, and
The program is financed -·speaking ol the accuracy of the
with 50 pet. federal funds and census, Meeker believed the
50 pet. local funds . The last cenSUS Wl.:IS more accurate
allocation for next year July 1 than the one taken in 1960.
through June ol 1973 is $io,ooo.
THROUGH THE comThe comprehensive plan is
prehensive
plan he ·predicted
projected over a 20-year
by 1990 an increase in
period.
"THE TREND IN Meigs population of 5,000 people and
County in the last 70 years has· 3,400 new or replaced housing
been a decline in population units (homes and mobile
and we are going to reverse units) . Mobile home units have
this trend by coming up with increased while traditional
economic growth," Meeker housin g· units have decreased.
said. "We hope to provide new From 1960 to 1970, Meigs
houses and job opportunities County lost 208 housing uni ts
and ignore the past," he added. while mobile homes soared to
Other points emphasized: 332 units. In 1911 the mobile
Since 1900 the oooulation or. ilnils increased again. The

'

OUTDOOR FURNITURE
AT THE WAREHOUSE ON
MECHANIC ST.

Library Curbside Book Drop Added

save on

folding chairs, rocking chairs, chaise lounges, gin rummy chairs, umbrella tables,
•

umbrellas, redwood

pi~nic

tables, benches, rockers, porch swings and other items.

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... -. .. .. ..

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• • •
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• • •
• • • •

•
•

••• • •
••• ••

..

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..
..

,/
... .
.........
'

-.

· ~

//
• • • • • ...•
•

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.... .....
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• •

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•

Also at the Warehouse, big
carpeting, 6noleum
llflrd , linole urn· rugs, waH
. sale of wall-to-wall
.
· by the ,.
covering, Lawn Boy and Toro lawn mowers, Lawn Boy oil, wheelbarrows, metal bimming, indoor
and outdoor carpeting.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

"The better plan we make
quicker we will be able to
understand our problems ,"
Johnson said.
Joh nson extended !hanks to
C. E. Blakeslee for using the
extension office as a clearing
house for the program and to
Paul Simon and Guido
Girolami for the usc of the
Orchid Room and refreshments provided .

Weather

en tine

Clear and cold tonig ht with
lows in the upper 20s to the
lower 30s north and low to mid
30s south. Wednesday fa ir and
not so cool. Highs Wednesday
in the upper 40s and lower 50s
north and in the 50s south.

'

TEN CENTS

PHONE 992·2156

TUESDAY, APRIL 25, 1972

Third and final readings of
two ordinances, one designed
to add a safely to mobile homes
in the community, and the
other to create a better looking
Middleport, were approved
Monday night by Middleport
Council.
Co un ci l a pprov ed
un anim ously an ordinance
requirin g the inflammable
Wlderpinning must be placed
around the bo ttom of all mobile
homes in the community.
The ordinance provides that
the und erp in nin g must be put
'" place within 30 days after a
new mobile home is set in to
location . Prese nt tmobile
homes must have the required
underpinning within the next
six mon ths. Fines are provided
by the ordinance for those wh o
fail to comply.
The seco nd ord inance
prohibits junk cars, long·lime
open stora ge of building
materials, junk and trash. It
also provides lor fines for those
!ailing lo co mply and is
designed particularly to rid the
community of in operable
motor ve hicles at street curbs
and on private property.
Under emergency ru les,
counc1l suspended the rules
and gave three readings to an
ordinance providing for ad·
vertising a 38 by 124 foot lot
near the corner of Elm and
Broadway St.
Study also was given the
possibility of requirin g
hcensong of businesses with
amusement de\·ices, either
mechanical or electric, which
are coin operated . Clerk Gene
Grate reviewed a copy of an
ordinance which Gallipolis has
in effect regarding this, and Ute

. CURBSIDE BOOK DR~P - This book drop was Installed Monday at the Middleport Public
Libr"'y. It Will be open durmg hours when the library is closed. Pictured at the book drop are
Theodore Reed, Jr., Manning Kloes, and Mrs. Thereon Johnson new members of the PomeroyMiddleport Public Library Board of Trustees.
'

Drive to Elberfelds Warehouse - Plenty of Free Pa.rking - and see the fine selection of furniture
what you need.

1

Junker Vehicles, Open Trash
Banned in Middleport Action

ELBERFELD$ SALE

real~

Plains, a potential develo)l·
ment site; .Forked Run Par k
should continue as a recreation
site with further developmerlt
and
light
residential
development; Chester, small
development pote nti a l ,

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

NO. 265

up to elected officials who are
responsible lor enforcement of
the program .' '
Thereon Johnson , chairman
uf the executive committee
'who pre~ided at the meeting:
emphaSized the importance of
the overall plan .
•

The Meigs Mine site is
clearly indus tria:l.potential,
and Columbia Township is
related to Athens, more than
Meigs.
Meeker emphasized that 89
pel. of existing land in Meigs
especially residential sites; County is undeveloped. He
Portland, excellent residential explained the conditions or
and industrial development; housing in Meig.s County,
however, it lacks a bridge, noting that in rural areas 64
The economic impact of the though one is proposed in that pet. were good, 29.9 pet. lair, 21
Meigs Mine will make it general vicinity; Syracuse and pet. poor and 14.1 pet.
necessary to review and revise Racine
residenti'8l delapidated; in municipalities,
are
the comprehensive plan. He development si tes; Pomeroy 2,700 housing units, 14 pel.
thinks Meigs County will be and Middleport, commercial, good, 52 pet. fair and 34 pel.
more affected by the mine than res identia l and industr ial delapidaled .
uther counties.
development sites, and
Potential growth 'of each Ru tland, some developrhent
l:le concluded :
ar ea in the co unty was potential, but more residential
" To make the coms u g~es t ed to be : Tuppers
prehensive plan work will be
than anything else.

at ·Y

Contact lenses, invented by
A. E. Fick in 1887, cover only
the cornea and float on a layer
of tears.

Pleasant Valley Hospl~l
Names of persons admitted
have been discontinued by
hospital authorities.
DISCHARGES : Carolyn
Schwartz, · Burt Monk, David
Belasco, all of Point Pleasant;
Mrs. Rodney Pierce and son,
Long Bottom; Mrs. C. J . Ingle,
Letart; Doyle Keefer, Florida;
Mrs. David Price, Gallipolis
Ferry ; Virginia Faudree ,
Mason; Ruling Greene, Hart·
ford; Mrs . Elva Powell,
Ashton ; Mrs . Brown Wat·
tenon, Mrs. Roy Smith, boUt of
New Haven ; Pamela Duncan,
New Haven.

for your porch, lawn, patio. You'll find excellent quality, famous makes, and you can

County, with a labor force of
4,700 people; tlwugh a lso in a
decline, contributing to the
(uunty 's high rate of unemployment.
Meigs County has the worst
jail facilities in the Slate of
Ohio. The hospital, though
growing as it has, will need
additiona l rooms.

•

Now You Know

VOL. XXIV

Hold Priorities

•

The Middleport Public
Library has a curbside book
drop installed Monday af·
ternoon prior to a meeting of
th e Porne ro y·Middleport
Public Library Board of
Trustees.
Books may. be returned via
the book drop anytime when

the library Is not open. It will
be locked during the library's
regular hours.
New members of the Board
or Trustees attending were
Theodore Reed, Jr ., Manning
Kl oes, and Mrs . Thereon
Johnson . Ameeting ollhe Ohio
Valley Area Libraries will be

jM;~~;]~ Brief~

held in Jackson Thursday with
Mrs. Roy Holter lo represent
Meigs County .
Librarian reports showe d
total circulation during March
of 3,030 at Pomeroy, 4,975
through the bookmobile, and
894 at Middleport. It was noted
that 327 new books have been
processed and put on the
shelves of the Middleport
Library during the past month.

By Un!led Press International
ATLANTA - UNITED METHODIST CHUJtCH delegates
have refused to erase from the record an attack on evangelist
Billy Graham as "a sort of high priest of a kind of new American
folk religion." The remarks were made Monday by Dr. Richard
D. Tittlnger of Huron, S. D., during a session of the two-weekslong general conference of Ute 11 mUIIon member denomination.
Graham Is a Baptist.
He said lbe evangelist has "on at least two occasions in my
hearing made Otis comment on pending legislation relating to rat
control in Ute ghetto: "We .had rata when I was a boy and we
!Hdn't ask the federal government to get rid of them for us. We
got rld of those rats ourselves.' "I submit Ute United Methodist
Olurch must somehow publicly. .disavow this kind of radical
insensitivity."

matter was then turned over to
the oqiinar1ce committee £or
evaluation .
Con ce~n about the danger to
traffic of Middlepor t Hill were
expressed by Mayo r John
Zerkle and se venil council
members. It was decided thai
an es ti rna te of the cost to erect
about 500 feet of steel fence
along the hill would be secured
from Roger Morgan. The
mayor also indicated that some
blacktopping would be needed
where a slip has occurred.
David Ohlinger reported that
the telephone in the firemen s
quarters is costing about $17 a
month and suggested that
e1 ther the village take over
payments or that an extension
h'o m the village phone be put in
the
upstairs
quarters.
Following a long discussion on
the . problems of having the
fir emen use a phone which is as
Mayor Zerkle pointed out, the
"only line people have for
pol ice emergency service,'' the
matter was referred to the
utilities committee.
Dangers at the intersections
of Mill and South Third Ave.,
and at South Second and Mill
with increased trilffic in town
were discussed . Ohlinger, Mrs:
Roger Morgan and William
Walters of the safety comJllitlee were asked to study the
problem and report at the next
meeting. The elimination of
left turns off North Second St.
was proposed as one way of
improving the flow of traffic
through town, although no
action was taken.
The need for restrooms and
drinking fountains at the
Middleport Park was brought
: (Continued on page 8))•
1

ROCKS CAME DOWN - Boulders fell from the hlllsldll of the former Eastman strip mine
Saturday night making the road to the Dora Holley residence in background Impassable. Water
and rocks poured from the hill after the cave-ln. Reside~ts of Laurel Cliff have had water
spi!Jing into their yards all winter, and when thenilne'sinipounded giit free, the water going
mto the yards stopped.
•

Spacemen
Flying

To Earth

IMPOUNDMENT BREACHED - Water Impounded at
the former Eastman strip mine, Laurel Cliff, lroke loose
Saturday nlgbl, permitting a deluge of water to pour off the
hill behind Ute home of Mrs. Bertha Parker. Residents of the
area h~ve had water spUiing into their yards all winter. When
Ute mme gave way. the water stopped except at the point
pictured.
·

KENT,OHIO -A PULITZER PRIZE w!Ming biographer of .
President Franklin D. Roosevelt said here Monday night Sen.
Edward Kennedy, D-Mass., could win "so big" over President
Nixon In a presidential race that the momentum would enable
him to bring about .reform In areas such as housing, education
and taxes.
·
James McGregor Burns, a pl'()fessor of political science at
Willi81llS College, made the coounent during a panel discussion
on "Picking the Next President" at Kent Slate University. Other .
panelists were Rep. Paul McCloskey, R-Callf., Edwin D.
Canham, editor of the Olristlan Science Monitor, and Allard
Lowenstein, national chairman of Americans for Democratic
Action.

Four Suits Filed

Two suits for divorce and two
for money have been filed In
RUNS INTO ROCKS- A pcrlt!JI1 of the hlllllde llkl onto U. S. Route 33 halfway between
Meigs County Common Pleas
Hartford and New Haven Mondsy evening, causing damages to two vehicles but no personal
Court.
injuries. Blocked by trees, mud and rocks, Uoyd Hoffman, Pomeroy, on his way to work at
Nancy L. Banks filed suit
Foote Mineral, and unaware of t~e slip, drove through the rocks. His car turned half way
against James Banks and
around and was headed toward a h1gh bank and the river. Bobby stewart, Hartford, reportedly
Minnie Wise filed against
had stopped beside the road when he saw Ute obstruction. His car stopped Hoffman's out-ofWesley L. Wise, each charging
vehicle vehicle from going over the bank. The Mason County Sheriff's Dept. investigated th
gross neglect of duty and ex·
accident.
e
treme cruelty.
Robert Barber, Pomeroy,
COLUMBUS - 11IE PRESIDENT OF THE American
Rt. 1, filed suit for Money
CHILD TREATED
Crow to Answer T~nage Queries
Osteopathic AS50Ciation said here Monday ltls ''healthy" to have
against
REA Express, Mid·
two med!cal societies, but that the American Medical
"Teenagers and the Law" codes, laws pertaining to
dleport,
in
the amount of $875
The Middleport E·R squad
Associatiqn refuses to accept it.
will be discussed at a meeting working teens, •' penalties
"It's a heaiUty thing to have two medlcalaocietles," said Dr. of the Meigs County Junior regarding drug and alcohol was called Monday at 12:25
Marion E. Coy, a Jackson, Tenn., osteopath and resident of the Leadership Club at 7:30 p.m. abuse, responsibility at 18 will p.m, to Maple St. for the twoNOT THE SAME
AOA. ''We have two poUtical parties,, don't we?" Coy claims the today at \he Ohio Power be among the topics to be year old daughter of Virginia The Larry Spencer arrested
Thomas who apparently turned on charges of driving while
AMA is out to "destroy" the practice of osteopathy .
Company.
considered at the meeting.
on the kitchen gas range and Intoxicated and who forfeited a
"But the AMA Is not succeeding," he said. The AOA has
Forme.r FBI Agent arid
11,000 members.
·
Pomeroy· attorney Fred Crow, · This will be the last meeting inhaled its ' lumes. She was bond in Syracuse Mayor
who will meet with the young lor acceptance of new mem- taken to Veterans Memorial Herman London's Court, Is not
CHICAGO - A POLICE HUNT COVERED the city's South . people, will answer questions. bers, · Mrs. Jennifer Sheets, Hospital where she was treated the Larry Spencer running for
and released.
clerk of courts. '
(Continued on Page 8)
The cOhstittJtionality .of dress leader, reports.

J

•

plus costs for slleged damage
to glass sculpture.
Jake and Dora Saunders,
Oak Hili, have filed suit against
Edward A. White, Columbus,
for alleged negligence while
driving a truck, causing Jake
Saunders to fall from the
vehicle . The plaintiffs ask
damages in the amount of
$30,000.
BOND FORFEITED

One defendant was fined and
another forfeited a bond in
Syracuse Mayor Herman
London's Court Monday night.
Pollee Chief MUton Varian said
M~ine G. Wingett, Racjne,
was fined ~ and COllis on
charges of speeding and Larry
M. Spencer, 49, Racine, for·
felted a $131) bond on chargl!ll ol
driving while lntoltcated.

SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UP!) - Apollo's IS's grimy,
bearded astronauts showed the
moon receding behind them
cklrlng an Impromptu telecast
today and buoyed scientists'
bopes that their treasure trove
may Include long-~K~ught pieces
of the primitive lunar crust.
John W. Young, Thomas K.
Mattingly and Charles M.
Duke, reporting their morale is
''up a couple of hundred per
cent," rocketed out of moon
orbit Monday nlgbt toward a
Paflflc splashdown Thursday
afternoon.
"I'll tell you we can hardly
walt," said Young, veteran
conunander of the mission thai
went from near·fallure to
• success during the past five'
days.
Command module pilot
Thomas K. Mattingly, who
soloed in moon· orbit while
Young and Duke spent three
dsys exploring the highlands,
was to get his moment late
today with a walk in space to
retrieve 6,500 feet of ftlm from
two mapping cameras In the
spaceship's moon observatory.
CLOTHING OFFERED
Free clothing will be
available at the Salvation
Army HQ at Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy; Thursday . All
persons of the area in need are
welcome.
IT'S ON MAY 1
Registration for kin·
dergarten studenta will bl! held
Monday, May l,llt 1:30 p.m. at
Pomeroy Elementary· School,
not May 5, as was reported.
LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Tuesdlly at 11 a.m.
was SO degrees, under partly
clotidy lkles.
·
'

�2- Tile l)atly Sentinel,Mlddleport.Proteroy, 0 ., April25, 1972

MAJoR ·
LEAGUE

Jackson in Love
With o·u Hissers
•

•

ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - A
!hdomlnantly student crowd
at Ohio University booed and
hissed Sen. Henry Jackson, DWash., Monday as he defended
America's involvement in the
Vietnam war,
After the appearance, Jack;
son said he was happy about
the jeers because "it strengthened my campaign."
• Jackson scheduled vists
today in Youngstown, Warren,
Niles and Cleveland. Tonight
he is to address a fund-raising
dinner for the Cuyahoga
County Democratic party!
The jeering from about 100
persons in the crowd of 300
began as Jackson, seeking his
party 's presidential
nomination, said the people of
South V1etnam need to be
defended from "northern in·
vaders."
"I suggest as many of you as
available march off to Hanoi
and enjoy freedom ," Jackson
told the hecklers.
He was cut off as he said, "I
want to make it clear you may
be for Hanoi, but I want the
people of South Vietnam ... "
Aperson in the crowd yelled,

"I'm for people, and 1 doll'! strip mining, but you can't
want them killed."
abolish It on the federal level
"The people of !Iouth Viet- because the federal level has
nam don 'I want to be killed no jurisdiction on the pollee
either," Jackson replied. "And powers of the states," he said.
they 're fed up with people "The b!U would aid slates in
invading from the north."
the effort to control strip min, Jackson later· said he en· ing."
''Wide Open" "-v-tioo
joyed th e confront allon.
' ''"' ••
' "It's this sort of reaction that
Asked why he was favoring
hel'ps in my campaign," he Ohio over today 's primaries in
said. "I welcome it. It could not Pennsylvania 11nd Massa·
have been staged better to help chusetts, JaCkson said Ohio
my campaign ."
''was more representative of
Jackson's other appearances . industrial, rural and, agriculin Ohio Monday were before tural areas than other slates."
calmer crowds.
·
In Chillicothe, where he adIn Zlinesville, only about 25 dressed about 200 local high
persons showed up at the air· school students and local
port to hear Jackson further Democrats, Jackson predicted
defend his Vietnam stand.
a ''wtdeopen"Democratic NaTalks of Mlnlilg
tiona! Convention.
Some 300 persons turned out
"No one candidate will have
at the Monroe County Airport a majority of the delegate
in Woodsfield where Jackson voles," he said.
discussed stri~ mining .
Jackson also campaigned in
" In some states, strip mining Cincinnati, touring the Greater
should be abolished, but in Cincinnati Recycling Center
other states you can have strip near the University of Cincinmlning and still have good con- nati.
servation," he said.
He called for increased gov·
Jackson did not mention spe- ernmental research to solve
cific states.
the nation's environmental
"I've introduced a bUI on problems.

STANDINGS

Devil GoHers Defeat Logan
. .

Majer (ugue Slondi'!9S
By United Press lnl•rnallo""l
N•tional Ltague
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Montreal
5 1 .833
New York
4 2 .M7 1
Philadelphia 4 3 571 1'12
Pittsburgh
4 3 571 J1i2
St. Louis
2 6 .250 4
Chtcago
2 7 .222 4112
West
,
W. L. Pet. GB
Houston
7 2 .778
Los Angeles
4 5 .444
San Diego
4 S .444 3

American Logue
East
W. L. Pet. G8
Baltimore
5 3 .625 Vr
Cleveland
• 3 .571
1'2
Boston
3 3 .500 1
Detroit
33.5001
2 3 .400 ,...,
Milwaukee
New York
2 4 .333 2
West
W. L. Pet. G8
Oakland
4 2 .M7
Chicago
5 3 .624
Texas
S 3 .625
Minnesota
3 2 .600 Vr
Kansas City
3 6 .333 2lla
San Francisco 4 S .444 3
California
2 6 .250 3
Atlanta
3 7 .300 41'2
s ResuHs
'
Cincinnati
2 S .286 4 DetroitMonday
al
Mllw,
ppd,
cold
Monday's Results
Texas 6 California 4
Hous 3 Chicago 2, 11 Inns
(Only games scheduled)
(Only game scheduled}
TOclay's ProbabJ. Pllchtrs
Todiy's ProbobJ. Pitchers
American League
By United Press lnt•rnallonal
(All Ti.,.s EST!
National Ltaguo
Boston (Pattin 0.2) at Minne·
EVELYN RUSSElL
(All Times EST!
New York (Capra 0.0} at San sola (Perry 0·11, 2· IS p.m.
MASON
- Evelyn Mae
Baltimore (Dobson 2·0) at
Diego (Arlin 0·2}, night, 10&gt;30 Kansas
Russell,
14,
daughter of Mr.
City (Drago 0.11, 8:30
p.m.
•
p.m
.
aud Mrs. Lester ' RuSiel~
Cincinnati (Merritt 0·01 at
Detroit ( Lollch 1·11 at Texas Mason, is a oew carrier for
Pitlsburgh (Johnson 0-0}, 8·05 (Paul
0-0), 8 30 p.m .
p.l)1.
Cleveland
1-11 at the Dally Seullnel in the
St. Louis (Gibson 0·11 al Chicag (Wood(Wilcox
2-0l.
9
p.m.
Atlanta (Niekro 0·21, 8:05p.m. California (Wrighl 0-2) at Masou area·. Evelyn Is an
Chicago (Hooton 1-1) at
Milwaukee (Broil 0·11, 8:30 eighth grade student at
Houston ( Re~~ss 1·0}, 8 30 p.m p.m.
,Wabama Junior Hlgb Scllool.
11\ontreal (Morton 0-0) at Los Oakland (Hunter o.l) at New
Evelyn lived in Illinois the
Angeles (Sulton 2-0), 11 p m.
Philadelphia (Carlton 2-01 al York (Kline 1-0), 7:30p.m.
past six years , haviug
Games
San Francisco (Marlchal 1·11. BostonWednesday's
returned to Mason In June.
at Minnesota
11 p.m.
Ball at Kan City, night
Evelyn is an acllve
Detroit at Texas, night
Mal'or League Results
member of the Girl Scout
By Unl ed Press lntemalional Cleveland at Chicago
Cadettes and enjoys most
California at Milwaukee
Natio""l League
sports including bicycle
Oakland at New York
( 11 innings}
Chi
200 000 000 oo- 27 o
riding. She Is the grand·
Hous
200 000 000 01- 3 40
daughter
of Mr. and Mrs.
Jenkins (0-2} and Hundley .
Clarenct Ihle aud Mr. and
Forsch, Ray (10) and Edwards.
Major League L..ders
WP- Ray (2 0) HR- Santo,
Mrs. Clayton Russell, all of
(2nd}, May (Jrd), Edwards By United Press International
Mason.
Leading Bailors
(2nd} .
National uogue
(Only game scheduled)
H. Pet. .
Tolan, Cln G.7AB
28 6R. 14
.SOD j
eJDO
Carty, All
8 18 4 9 .SOD
Jeter. SO
8 24 4 11 .458
Gardner,3b
3 0 2 4 Sngiln, Pit
7 26 3 11 .423
Lewis, rf
~ ~ ~ ~ ~J~~.~~u ; ;: : l~ :!l~ SYRACUSE - The Rev.
Haymaker, lb
Jones. NY
6 23 3 9 391 WyllssColburnoftheNazarene
Crsby,
St
L
7 18 2 7 .389 First Church, Huntington, and
Totals
24 7 7 5 Doyle, Phil
7 21 3 8 381 th
·
Cnzaro. LA
e Rev. M. c. Lanmore
of the
7 24 5 9 .J 7JJ
Amorican League
Syracuse Church of the
MEIGS (5)
G. ab R H Pet. Nazarene, officiated at
Drwn,Oak
Mtn
Saturday's memorial services
AB R H RBI Grn,
65 18
17 S1 89 .500
.471
8 31 8 14 .452 for Dav1d Lee Watson, son of
a· 1 I 0 Alln, Ch1
Cooke, 2b
Clrke,
NY
s 21 2 9 .429 David and Mar1lyn Grindley
Burney, lf
2 1 0 0
Harrh
.
Tex
8
23 s 9 .391 Watson fonnerly of Mmers·
Dixon,c
4 I I 0 Pmsn, Cal
8 26 2 10 .385 .
'
.
6 19 3 7 .368 v1lle, who was believed to have
Dunfee,ss
2 I 2 2 Cash. Dot
6 19 4 7 .368 drowned in the Guyandotte
McKinney,Jb
4 0 0 0 Kelly, Chi
Alomr,
Cal
8
30 4 11 .367 River March 31
Wigal, rf
2 1 0 0 May, Chi
8 30 4 11 .367
.
Home Runs
A vocal duet was presented
R.Ash, cf
4 0 0 0
Eason,lb
3 0 0 0 National Loaguo: Evans, All , by Mr . and Mrs. Robert
M.Ash,ph
I 0 0 0 Ma~, Hou and Luztnskl, Phil 3, Stewart of Fredericktown ,
16 f1ed with 2.
Oh'
h
"G th ·
Chaney, p
2 0 0 0 American League: Darwin
10, w o sang
a ermg
Phalm,ph
I 0 0 0 Minn 4, Cardenas, Cal , Aile~ Buds" and ''Until Then. "
and May, Chi and Duncan. Oak
Out of town friends and
2·
relatiVes attendmg were Mr.
Total
28 5 4 2
Runs Balled In
Nahonal League: Rader, Hou and Mrs. Richard Detamore,
I 2 3 4 5 6 7 ~ II ; Kmgman, SF 10; May, Hou. Mr. and Mrs. Ed McDowell,
Lefebvre and Mota, LA 8
M
d M 0 kJ Cha
Wahama 0 0 0 4 3 0 7-7-'1
American League : Darwin.
r an rs. a ey
pman
Mlnn 10, May, Chi 8; Powell, and Mr. and Mrs. Les GhiZ, all
Meigs 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 f&gt;-4.1
Bait 7, Allen, Chi and Randle, of Huntington ; Billy Hauch,
Errors-Clark, Lambert, Tex 6
Galhpolls; - Mrs . Stanley
Pitching
Gardner, Haymaker, Dunfee.
WB • Wahama 6 Meigs 8 National League: Nolan, Cln, James, Jr ., and daughter,
Ray, Hou, Singer and Sutlon Nancy, Toledo· Mrs. Wanda
2BH • Gardner, Dunfee
LA. Stoneman. Monl, Seaver. Roush and daugiilers, Angle
WP • Hesson 3-{)
NY.
Carlton, Phil,
Kirby, SO and Patricia and son Ronnie,
and McDowell,
SF 2·0.
LP · Wigal
American L..gue: Dobson Mrs. Robert Roush, and the
and McNally, Bait, Siebert, Rev. and Mrs. Edward
IPRHSOW Bos, Wood, Chi, Coleman Del, G · dl
d d hte Lo ·
rm ey an aug r, r~e,
Hesson
7 5 4 5 7 Burgmeier. KC, B I Y I even,
Cqaney
3 4 3 I 5 Minn. Locker, Oak and all of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Broberg, Tex 2·0; Bahnsen. Chi Roger Grindley, daughters ,
Wigal
3 3 4 4 0 and Perry, Clev 2-1
Lornia and Lesia and son,
~IIIIIIIWIOJIIIAIIIIIIAIII!IItlllililliiQltli8illlllllllllMIIilliiWIOJIIIAIIIIIIAIIIIIIAIIIIIIAIIIIlllltll
Chrislopher of MI. Vernon.
Services were held at the
Syracuse Church.
1

rial Held
On SaturdaY
M

Meigs Edged 7-5
,•

·~·

Danny Gardner drove in
tfuee runs with two clutch
hitS, a bases loaded single and
a run scoring double to lead the
Wahama White Falcons over
the visiting Meigs Mauraders
Monday night by a 7.0 score.
Gardner wasn't the only hero
of the game as Wahama's Rick

...,,.• HOSPITAL NEWS
'

~

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave.
Cedar St. General
'• visitingandhours
2-4 and 7~ p.m.
., Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
~
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
''•. Pediatrics Ward.
'.:•
-Births
,'· Mr. and Mrs. Barry L.
''· Alford, Glenwood, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lee McCoy,
~
Henderson , a son; Mr. and
~
Mrs. Emil Earl Harr, Letart, a
~ son ; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph D.
~ Camp, Clifton, a daughter; Mr.
~ and Mrs. Roy E. Weethee,
, Gallipohs Ferry, W. Va., . a
~ daughter; Mr. and Mrs. John
~ Albert Nance, Galhpohs, a
; daughter; Mr. and Mrs. James
: C. Chapman, Crown C1ty, a
•' son; Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd T.
• Fry, Rio Grande, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Audrey H. Stewart,
.:· Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Kathryn M. Wallace, Jackson,
a son; Mr.. and Mrs. Berl D.
Jackson, a son ; Mr. and
, Kiser,
Mrs. John Damewood, Reeds·
vllie, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
• Jackie L. Wears, Phny, a son;
• • Mr. and Mrs. Jarrell Burchett,
~·
Oak Hill, a daughter, and Mr.
an.d Mrs. Wilham L. Jamison,
Gallipolis, a daughter.
Discharges
..; ·
•.
Mrs. Michael E. Pickens and
•
.,,
son, Ida Milstead, Christine
"
&amp;!eed, Martha Hopkins, Fred
Gill, Jr., Paul E. Robb, Ken"' neth Robinette, Robert Petry,
....
Pamela Evans,
Jess1e
•
McGoon,
Mrs
Vencil
Adkins
'
and son, Mary Handley, Allee
Eberts, Teddy Barker, Carrie
M
••
Blankenship, Mrs. Elmer Bush
•
and daughter, Elizabeth W.
•
Finnicum, Tracy fowler,
Perry Hall, Margaret Justice,
•
••
Janie McPherson, Arthur Lee
•
Miller , Ferrell Niday, Kenneth
W. Parsons, Clarence Proffitt,
Lonnie Shinn, Harold Smith,
... Frances Stewart, Brian Stover,
Bonnie White, Hazel Woods,
"" Mrs.
Helen Westfall, Helen
Johnson, Elva Straight, John
D. Gregory II, Nicholas S.
~·
Nolan, Johp Walter, Lester
Getty, Csrolyn Roush, Ruby
• Woodruff, John Winkler, John
Simonton , Bernadine Wilson,
'
••
.,. Glendon Roy, Samuel Me·
¥
Clure, Albert Kuhn, Margaret
Wilson, Jacob Butcher, Ethel
Black, Elwood Bowers,
William Buckley, Patricia
Joyce Cleland, John David
Fife, Elizabeth Gauze, Mrs.
Roger Jackson and daughtel\
••
Leonard Lunsford, Timothy
••
Mullins,
Max Manuel, Forrest
•
McNeal, Ma:ttie Porter, Esta
,. Reese, Patricia Anne Roush,
Mary Shropshire, Anthony
Oiler, Mary Hauldren, Adda
Irene Kelly, Mrs. Roy E.
Weethee and daughter, Ira
A
Adkins, Mrs. Steve Rhea and
• • daughter,
James Utile, Diana
Bowman, Mrs. James C.
Chapman and son, Mrs. Merle
-: Bush and daughter, Beacher
Davlsl Mrs. Gerlad Roger
Downcu
and daughter, Ed·
•
wlrd Repa1111, Goldie Mitchell,
George Ratcliff, Mary
Rutledge and Maurice Smith.

.

.

.

...•••.
::....

t......
..
...
.,,
~

~

.....

"'

--

...

-·

.

.
....

.
s:
.---.-·...

Hesson won his third game of
the season by pitching a four
hitter to lead Coach Dave
Arrlll's charging Falcons to
their fifth consecutive victory
of the season.
The Mauraders didn't waste
any ltme in getting their initial
run as the first two men walked
and the third legged out an
infield single to load the bases.
Hesson then uncorked a wild
pitch scoring one run .
Steve Dunfee then greeted
Hesson with a double to left
center field plating two more
runs.
Hesson struck out the next
batter but got himself right
hack in trouble by walking
Wigal.
Bolh Dunfee and Wigal
S&amp;Ored when Eason was safe on
an error and the return throw
went wide o( the .mark. Going
into the bottb~ 'llaif of the first
the Mauraders held a huge five
run lead. The White Falcons
managed only one hit in the
fll'sl tnree innings but finally
exploded in the fourth in~ing.
Randy Clark led of[ the
fourth by drawing a walk. Rob
Lambert then singled followed
by walks to Curtis Roush and
Rick Hesson. The Maurader
coach then elected to go with
another pitcher. Wigal was
then brought In and promptly
uncorked two ·wild pitches to
plate' two runs. Gardner tlien
singled to right to score two
more runs to bring the Falcons
to within one at ii-4.
Meigs then mounted a mild
threat when a walk and two
errors loaded the bases with no
one out Hesson then began to
reach back for a little extra
strength and managed to get
Rick Ash ground into a force

out, and then proceeded to
strike out the next two batters
to retire the side.
Wahama then scored the
tying and winning runs in the
fifth inning, when Mike White
led off with a single. Randy
Clark then grounded into a
force out. Lambert singled to
left and Curtis Roush was safe
on an error and Rick Hesson
laid down a perfect squeeze
bunt to score Clark and
Lambert who raced home from
second on the throw to first thst
nailed Hesson. Gardner then
doubled to score Curtis Roush
and give Wahama a 7-S lead.
Hesson then held the
Mauraders at bay in the final
two mnings to gain the victory.
The win upped the Falcons
record to 5-l. Randy Clark
leads the team in hitting so far
as he has hil safely in six of 15
times' for i!".4bo averagt Rick
Hesson and Rob Belcher lead
the mound corps with 3-{) and 2o records.
Belcher, Clark or Lambert
will get the call on Wednesday
when the Falcons travel to
RaveMwoodfor a 4:30 contest.
Thursday night Wahama hits
the road for Stewart, Ohio and
a 4:30 game with Federal
Hocking, and then Friday,
Southern Local comes to
Mason to round out a four
game week for Wahama.

Luck Opening Beats Game
trick and rattled off the next
nine for a score of plus 630
• QJI07
At that one table, South
¥109
was
the v i c t i m of really
• Q74 2
atrocious luck. West decided
&lt;foK 62
that heroic measures were
WEST
EAST
called
for and led the four of
.9843
c
I
u
b
s. South played dum¥A Q 8 52
¥J 63
my's
deuce
and after cont J9
ti0 6
Siderable thought East rose
&lt;!oJ874
.Al05 3
with his ace.
SOUTH (D)
East thought a while more
.AK 2
and slapped down the jack
¥K74
of hearts This gave poor
tAK8 53
South the option of death by
&lt;loQ9
hanging or shooting. If he
East- West vulnerable
played low the Jack would
West Nurlh Eut South
hold
and another heart be
I •
led.
1¥ • l•
Poss 2 NT.
He did play high and was
Pass 3 N.T. Pa.ss Pass
down two before he could
Pass
gain the lead
Openmg lead- " 4
What do you think about
that opemng lead ? It certainBy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby ly worked, but we think it
was sheer lucli, not g o o d
There 1s nothmg rea lly bridge.
wrong With Soulh's three nooN£WSPA.PEII ENTER PRISE ASSN.)
trump contract. Furthermore, 11 is an easy contract
to get to South has 19 highcard pomts and opens one
The bidd1ng has been:
diamond s i n c e he is too
strong for a no-lrump open- Wesl Norlh East South
l&lt;lo
Poss
It
'"~ West may or may not
Poss 2N.T
stick in a one-heart overcall. Poss 2 &lt;fo
Poss 3 &lt;1o
Pass
?
In e1ther c as e. North 's You, South, hold:
four decent spades and eight
high card points warrant a .A654 ¥K63Z •9107 .54
bid . South has a book two What do you do now ?
no-trump call and N o r t h A- Pass. Your lwo no~trump
ra1ses h1m to three.
call was doubtful. Don't try any
When the hand was played more bids. 1
TODAY'S QUESTION
in a 13-table duplicate, every
West btds one heart over your
South player reached three
no-trump. At every table but one diamond. North and East
one, West opened his fourth pass What do you do now?
best heart. South won t~e

.6.

.

25

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

AB R H RBI
HAIR IS A PRIVATE AFFAIR
Ch.Roush,lf
4 0 1 0 Dear Helen :
While, 2b
4 0 I 0
My husband, at 28, is prematurely balding. He bought a hair
Clark, c
3 2 0 0
piece last year a.-twe think illooks great. At over $200, It should!
Lamberl,ss
3 2 2 0
We haven 'I made a big secret of this, but most of our friends
CV .Roush, cf
1 2· 0 0
and relatives don't mention what looks so natural : it's a part of
Hesson,p
I I 0 2

WIN AT BRIDGE

NORTH

·Helen Help

WAHAMA(7 )

Dan.

... All except this one woman who, when recent acquaintances are around, always malllll!es to give Dan a "compliment"
on his new hair. Maybe she's just tactless, but I detect a smug
look on her face when she sees a few people are IIII1'JII'Ised. Could
be she's jealous, as her husband could sta.-1 some improvements, too. And so could she, In spite of a dye job a.-1 false
eyelashes.
Teillng her to coolltmight only inspjre her to more remark&amp;.
She's the type. What's a good, clever comeback? - HAIRASSED
Dear Hairasaed:
Why doe1111't your husband, wblle acknowledging ber
"compliments" look her deep in the eyes and say, '"!banks, luv,
but did you know your false eyelash is flapping?" or perhaps
YOU could DOle her new dye job. 1
A few aUusions to HER ''transformations" should get the
message across. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
Years ago my wife was a sweet, devoted family woman. I
may have taken her for granted, until the ''affair" at her office
cost her job.
Since then I have tried to give her all the things that might
have been lacking ; love, attention, compllmenta, the wlnHnddlne bit. I even do most of the home chores and cooking, aa she
has a new job now.
But she rejects me, says we're too'old to be "lovey-dovey,"
and she doesn't wantaffectlon.Herworkls aD.tmportant to her.
I'm scorned and ridiculed. Yet I slllllove and want her.
' We tried a marriage counselor. He charged ~. and my
wife said he wss crazy.
Since she aU but throws me out of the house, I've been going
to a club where I've meta widow I admire very much. Things are
sllll cool, but momentum could gather very I!IJY. She's weD of!,
and is uaed to the country clooset, while I'm just an average guy.
I'm Oattered - and attracted ~
But my marriage of :IS yean means a lot to me. Why does a
man keep on w~ a 'WOIIIIIl wbo aeemlnsly bales him? I~
never been unfaithful. My wife bu, though I never menqonlt.
Should I keep a perfect track record, or try for the Dell best
thing? - UNDECIDED
Dear tJT:I;
Why not ask yotD' wifs? Perhaps if she realizes she may lose
you, she'll start workq at her llliiiTiage agaln;If she doesn't, then perhlpe you've drifted 10 far apart
there's DO returning. A trial separaUon might give you bath
needed time to Ihint. - H.

•

MEETING CALLED
LETART FAllS - A pubhc
meeting will be held Tuesday
at 1:30 p.m. at the Letart Falls
Community Hall to discuss
plans for ·election and
Decoration Day dinners. All
mterested persons are invited.

Coach John Milhoan's
Gallipolis Blue Devil golfers
defeated VISiting Logan 147-163
on the local links Monday
evening.
Dow Saunders' par-34led the
Blue Devils, now ll·2 on the
year. Logan is ,_. overall.
Kenny New fired a'¥/ for the
• Saunders and '
Gallians. John

Tax Challenged
LIMA, Ohio (UP!) - A suit
against Gov. John J. Gilligan
and oth~r state officials to have
the Ohio property taxes as used
for school sumrt declared
uncons'titullonal will be filed on
behalf of the Ohio Farmers
Union by Lima atlorney Robert
Mihlbaugh.
Mihlbaugh said the suit
would be filed "within the next
few days" in Toledo U. S.
District Court and will pame
Gilligan, state Auditor Joseph
Ferguson and Oh10 Attorney
General William J. Brown.
Mihlbaugh Is currently a

Nazarenes join
Against Lottery
Churches of the Nazarene In
the Central Ohio D1strict have
joined in opposition to the
proposed state lottery for
funding Oh10 government. The
Meigs County churches are a
part of the district.
At a recent meeting of the
District Adv111ory Board of the
Church of tlie Nazarene, action
was taken to voice that opposition . Speaking for the
leadership of the 139 churches
throughout the area, the board
unanimously
passed
a
resolution to express strong
disapproval of the proposed
state lottery and urged the
membership and other voters
to vote against the isaue should
II appear on the ballot.
Dr. Harvey S. Galloway,
superintendent of the district,
and chairman of the District
Advisory Board, sa1d: "It is a
fundamental breakdown and
undermmmg of the moral
precepts of our people."
ATTEND MEETING
Mrs. Wilham Willford, Mrs.
Rlchard Fetty, Jr ., Mrs.
Homer Parker, Mrs. James
Carpenter of the Rutland
Fnendly Gardeners attended
an open meeting of the Winding
Trail Garden Club at the Ohio
Power Co. in Pomeroy on
Wednesday mght. Miss
Edelene Wood of Parkersburg,
an adult education teacher
from Wood County, presented a
slide presentation and a talk on
collecting and preparing wild
foods. Mrs. Willford won a door
prize.
VISITORS COME
Weekend visitors of Mrs.
David Entsminger, Middleport, were her sister, Mrs.
Robert McKnight, Urbana, and
daughter, Mrs. Kim Yost of
Dayton, her granddaughter,
Mts. Roger Lutz and daughter,
Chrislle, Allentown, Pa., and
Mrs. Charles Entsminger,
South Charleston,

3- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., April25, 1972

John Cunningham each had 38,
and Brett Epling finished with
a 47&gt;
For the Chiefs, ChuCk Helber
was low man with '¥/. Jeff Cole
had 41, Mike Mojzer 42, Jay
Boegher i3 and Tom Cole 50.
The Blue Devils will host
WaVerly and l!untington High
th'111 a ftemoon .
_

~~

special counS..I for Brown, but
says he sees no conflict of in·
teres! and does not plan to quit.
Mlhlbaugh conducted an in·
vestigalion into conditions at
Lima State pospital which
resulted in indictments against
3! persons on patient abuse
charges.
He said the Ohio Farmers
Union will charge in the suit
that Ohio property taxes are
unconstitutional because they
deny equal protection of the
laws and -also deny due
process.
uFor example/' he said. "we
have one school district in
Allen County that Is extremely
wealthy because of heavy
mdustry located there and the
children who attend school in
thsl district get a very good
education.
"That compares," he sa1d,
"to another school district
where the children do not get a
good education all because of
the tax base. In oilier words,
the children of the poor are
discriminated against because
they are children of the poor. "
The
Ohio
Education
Association last November
f1led a similar suit In Columbus
U. S. DistriCt Court to lest the
constitutionality of property
taxes as the basis for school
support.

Revival Opens
This Evening
SYRACUSE-The Rev. Lawrence C. Walker, of
New Philadelphia, Oh10,
will
be
the
guest
speaker at revival services to be held at the
Syracuse
Church of the
Nazarene
beginmng this
evening
thrqugh Sunday, nightly at
7:30p.m.
REV.
, Jley. '?(~l~~r ~ an e)der in the
Church of tOO Nazarene, a ·
graduate of Eastern Nazarene
College and began his ministry
as pastor in New York. Later
he entered the work of itinerant
evangelism. In 1948 he
resumed hiS role as pastor in
Ohio, where he organized three
new churches. During this time
he also evangelized in hill area
at revivals and camp
meetings .
In Augusl, 1968, Mr. and Mrs. /
Walker reentered the field of/
evangelism as preacher and
singer. His messages · are
emphatic, Bible ctntered and
Wesleyan in doctrine.
The Rev. M. C. Larimore is
the pastor at the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene .

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BIUAN
AN EIG11'111 OF SILVER
IS S'l'ERLING
NEW YORK
Joe Silver of
"Lenny"
wa•
n&lt;mlnated_
only
once for a Tony Award. But he pla,ys eight roles
... The mad INCCestl of pro basketball Ia rich
reward for Madlaon Square Garden Pres. Ned
Iri.sh, who Invented the college doubleheaders
decades ago and later added pro cage games
(he founded the N. Y. Knlcks) when everyone
promlaed him they would fall. Now Ned'a rich
enough not to tell them where to go ... George
Bums, pushing 75 and we can't remember from
which side, Is courting Uta Baron like an eager
groom. TONed a big party for Uta and her three
young daughters, 11 to,15, on daughter Cindy's
birthday ... We'll do without Melina Mercourl
ahorlly, She1htarln (husband Jules Daaaln will
dlrecl) Teait. Wma.' "Small Craft Warnings"
thla IUIIIIIler In Paria.
No one lalows why which crowd collecta in
what N.Y. saloon, but the British &amp; Australian
press plbera in Muggs on First Ave. In the 611!!
... The old CUban cafes which featured live sex
were driven out by Castro, and the bad newa
now Is- they're attempting to surface again in
San Juan, Puerto Rico ... Goldie Hawn
to
Puerto Rico (DOt to such joints) aoo look along
111 Gold!Nltter actrea Sean Randall, her old
ooddy from their Bdwy. (lo.Go dancing n11es.
·~ 'l'hlnll .•. Fonun," since it first was
proclicedon Bchry ten yean ago (the new Phil
!JIV«Htarred prOduction IIIIa best), hU been
trlllllaled lltoalmctst ewrj ~e Including
swill!: the Gay Uberallon Front did an alJ.
nance production ... Beatie Ringo Starr's
cannibalizing his own career: he's directing a
documentary about a ''top ~llah rock ~p."
Plill!Jlvers ili aU over radio-TV since his
"Forum"llllllsh aoo usually menti0111 be wrote
the words to ''Nancy with the I ,auahlna Fllce," '
which inavlllbly be adds was written for Fnn1t

new

'

Sinatra's daughter. That's a slight evasion : II
started out as "Bessie with the Laughing Face,"
and Phil's words were attached to the Jimmy
Van Heusen melody In honor of JOhnny Burke's
tiny daughter, Bes~le ... Sinatra helrd It,
reallzed its tender polency, and asked If he
might shift thst one name; they were glad to ...
But It was Bessie first.
Johnnie Burke Is one of the mall}' fine
talents who died too 1100n: he won Olcara with
Jimmy Van Heuaen and among Burke nifties
are "II Could Happen to You," ''l{ere'a That
Rainy Day,'' ''Swing on a Star," "Miaty" (lyric
to Errol G!lrner's melody), "Pennies from
Heaven," "Aint It a Shljme About Mame,"
scads more from "Armle Doesn't Uve Here
Anymore" to "What's New.:.;, ... He didn't
Jll'l'lluce ''Nancy with the Laughing Face,"
though; just "Resale."
While Tommy Makem Is a1ng1ng up a Gaelic
.storm In the U.S., his record of "Liaten for the
Rllltent Are Ringing" Is doing the Avis Bit: No 2
In Ireland ... You have to be a big-Nielsen rater
to 1eta TV golf tournament to bear ycu name.
So Alan King's having a tennis tournament
lobbed onto the Cseaars Palace courts In h1a
nominal auspices May 4 through 7 ... N. Y. trlal
lawyer Dave Paulley bought into the Baccara
Restaurant 16 years ago as a sideline. Now the
law is Dave's sideline.
'!be dml may have made F1lp Willon say
it : "128 m!Won in mlsance lues may be ap..
proved by the city COWICll. Now if only 'that
llllaance in aty Hall will pay them."
Mnolcal comedy star Gretchen Wyler's the
flnt woman, in or out of lhawbil, to be ~to
the bolrd of dlrectora of the ASPCA ... N. Y.
recording firm (Lelsura T11p11) is ~clng
"Anbi Tapes" -eight "altuatlona" In eartnc~ge ,
or caasette with which a worried U.: can
telephone his GCUIIe for not getting bCIIIIe on
time, with IJIIIIopriale backgrowd llllllldl to
bolller 1111 allbi; aottded llrport, t,pewtlter
clackql, traiD lermlnll nollel,

*·

1970

Champs To Host

Bandy is Speaker
At M Cage Event
Dale Bandy·, assistant High School basketball
' basketball coach at Oh10 banquet Thursday evening at
Umversity Will be the guest 6 30 p.m.
speaker at the annual MeigJ;
Tum Corde, one of Oh10
Umvei'Sity's stars on the 197172 squad, w11l accompany
Bandy
Bendy has completed h1s
ninth year as an asWAVERLY - The Me1gs sistant coach and four of the
Marauder golf squad defeated mne years he has been at 0 U.
the Waverly Tiger linksters th e team won the Midhere Monday afternoon, 225- Amer~can basketball champwnslnp
232
Bandy, a 1961 graduate of
Sophomore J D. Story and
O.U
. captamed the Bobca ts
semor Marty Vaughan were coMid-American
Conference
medalists, each shootmg a 43
Other Marauder scores were champion cagers of 1959-liO He
semor Steve Story, 45 ; semor jomed In&amp; former coach J1m
Jon Buck, 46, and junior Randy Snyder 111 1963-64 as an
ass•sta nt.
Chafm, 48.
For the Tigers, Butch Work- '
man had a 44 , Don Gullion and Lo~·gn
M1ke Tulloh each 46, John
0
Dutcher 45, and Tony Swu.dler

Tiger Golfers
Fall to Meigs '

51.

Coac h Nolan Swackhamer's
Marauder ilnksters host the
Loga n Ch1eftams a nd the
Soulhern Tornadoes today at
the Pomeroy Golf Course , then
move mto Athens Wednesday
to test the Bulldogs at the
Athens Country Club.

Girls Invited
For Softball
SYRACUSE - A meeting
will be held Thursday, April27,
at 6 p.m., at the Syracuse
MuniCipal Park to orgamze a
Jun1or Girls ' Softball League in
Meigs County.
Ills hoped to have at least a
four team league, or more, If
mterested. Two teams have
already been organized, have
coaches, and are ready to go. It
is hoped to have a team from
Syracuse and one fr om
Pomeroy or Middleport, or
hoth.
All girls in Meigs County ,
ages 11, 12, and 13, and any
adults and parents who would
help with th1s league are in·
v1ted to attend this meeting at
Syracuse . League play would
probably start about June I.

cmt un g to Ohio,

Ba11dy has bee n head
basketball coach at Portsmoullt H1gh School. He also
coached at Columbus Grand. v1ew as a foo tballass1stant and
baseball coach
Bandy handles the Oh10
defense al most excl usive ly,
recrwts, travels With the team
and ass1sts Coach Jun Snyder,
head coach, on the bench As
cl11ef recruiter, he has succeeded m bnngmg first 1ate
basketball talent to 0 U
He and Ius Wife, Don na . have

men Roll
0 ver
Marauders
Coach Ron Logan's Gallia
Academy High School Blue
Dev1is track team rolled over
v1sit1ng Meigs 102'f.!-24'f.! 1n a
dual meet on Memorial Field
Monday eve mng
It was Gallia 's fourth dual
v1ctory in five outmgs lh1s
spnng.
The host Blue Devil captured
first place honors 1n all 15
events. Dave Wh1te led the
Gallians w1th 16 points. Larry
Snowden had 13, Pete Neal II
and one-quarter, and Rod
Ferguson 9'1.
Ke1th Vanlnwagen led the
Marauders w1th seven pmn ts.
The Blue Dev ils are
sc heduled . to
run
at
Chesapeake th1s afternoon .
Earlier th1s sprmg, GAHS
handed the powerful Panthers
a 66-tll se tback on Memonal
Field
Here's Monday's results ,
FIELO EVENTS
SHOT PUT - Neal, G.
Wood, G, Weber, M - 43'· 11 "
DISCUS - Bagshaw. G;
Wood, G; Weber. M -138'·1".
POLE VAULT - Saunders,
G, VanlnwaQen. M: Wh tle. G

-

10' 8"

a fulll-y ear old dau gh ter ,
Stephanie. .
CUI de scored an average of

17 l per gmnc the past season
dlld 111 tlw ga me aga1r1 s t

Buwhng G1 ecn had the h1 ghest
ftel d goal pet cc ntage of 929 un
l:l fo1 14

Sharman
Named Top

NBA Coach

G, Robson , M; Rosenbaum , M

member c1ties

LONG JUMP - Wh tle. G.

Snowden, G, Neal , G - 19'
21/a''

RUNNING EVENTS
IOO·YARO
DASH

Snowden,

G. Graham , G ;

Whtfe, G ,

Vanlnwagen, M ;

Whillatch, M - 10.4
120 HIGH HURDLES
Pearch , M - 17 4

120·YARD

Snowden,

OASH

G,

Fishe r ,

G.

Lowery, M - 23 8.
880·YARD RELAY - Won by
880·YARD RUN - Grymes,

- 2•08.5.
440 YARD DASH - Wam ·
sley, G: Lowery, M; Ohlinger,
M - 54 1
TWO MILE RUN - Wahl, G,
Couls, M, Poltng, G - 10 50 9
MILE RUN - Ferguson. G.
Groth, G. Robson. M - 4 57 6
180·LOW HURDLES Wh tie. G. Rtce, G: Van In
wagen, M -

23 1.

MILE RELAY -

Won by

GAHS tn 3: 45 I Runners were

Graham , F tsher, Ferguson and
Wamsley .

FINAL

SCORE -

102112 Me tgS 24 112

GAHS

ankle m the second game
against Virginia but bolUlced
back with 25 pmnts Monday
rught. And Melchionm, New
York's All..Star guard, had
missed all e~ght previous
games in the playoffs but
returned to action after his
broken fmger healed with 20
polnls Mondsy night.
V1rginia led, 117-116, w1th a
minute remamlng when Billy
Paultz tied the score with a
free throw. The Squires blew
four shots before Barry took a
long down court pass and put In
the winning basket. Jim
Eakins then was fouled in·
tentionally since the Nets were
still In a one-shot situation.
Eakins missed the shot
deliberately but Barry took
down the rebound and heaved
the ball high 'into the air as
time elapsed.
'
Rookie Julius Erving had 'n
points in- the first half for
Virginia but was held to only
four In the second half by Ollie
Taylor's tenacioliSdefense. "I
played Er,vlng especially
high," said Taylor. "I picked
him up at midcourt and leaned
on hhn. If he was going to hit, it
would have to be from the
outside."
The teams meet again in the
fourth galtle Wednesday night

Happiness is...
Having the man you love
tell you he lovn you wl1h

an ArtCarved engagement .
ring.

Our el~hl dlollnet

ArtCarved fashion
c:olle&lt;:tlone feature every
type ntttno imaginable,
tiCh IOIOW with a
diamond of the highest
quality.

Tom He1nsohn of Boslon and
AI Attics of the Warriors lied
for second place w1th three
votes followed by Gene Shue of
Baltumore w1th two and Lenny
Wilkens of Seattle with one
The Lakers, who are favored
to bea t the New York Kmck s m
tlie fmal round of the NBA
playoffs, have enJoyed one of
the most sensatiOnal seasons m
basketball history.
They set a 33-game wmning
streak from Oct. 31 to Jan . 9
which stands as the longest in
major pro team sport history.
There was no questwn of the
Laker supenon ty as .they were
behind at ha lftime only four
times durmg that streak and
won by an average margm of
16 pom ts.
When the NBA chose 1ts
Silver Anniversary team 1n
1970, Sharman was one of the 10
players selected. He proved his
concentration on the court by
hecommg the best free throw
shooter m the h1story of the
game, including one streak of
56 stra1ght free throws.
He brought this same dedicatiOn to the coaching ranks and
his secret of success ts very
simple-pla in , old hard
work .
''There are no secrets m this
game," Sharman cla1ms "A
player who IS in the best shape
possible is in a position to
function and reach maximum
efficiency . No other sport can
compare with basketball in the
importance of conditionin g,
outside of hoxmg."
Summing up his philosophy,
S.annan says, "I take the
game seriously, that's why I
demand so· much of my
players. You have to win
everything~llthe time."

with the fifth scheduled for
Hampton, Va., Saturday afternoon. '
Utah hit 73 per cent of its
field goal attempts In the first
quarter to take a 40-33lead and
surged to a 114-$ lead after
,three quarters. Billy Keller led
a last quarter Indiana rally
with five three'{!Oinl baskets
but II feU short.
Wise finished with 34 points
and Jones had 32 for the Stars
while Glen Combs added 20 and
Zelmo Beaty 17. Mel Daniels
led a balanced Indiana attack
with 29 points, Keller finished

I

.

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates ope n a
thr ee game sen es tomght
aga1nst the Cincinnati Reds at
Three Rivers Stadmm .
Bob Johnson will start for the
Pirates aga mst the Reds ' J~rn
Merritt.
W1th Merritt, a lefthander,
gomg to tlie mound for Cmcinnall, P~rate Manager Bill VIrdon sa1d he would bench AI Oh·
ver and R1ch1e Hebner and
start Gene Clines m ce nterfie ld
and Jose Pagan at lh1rd base.

exprtllll your personality,

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216 E. 2nd. Pomeroy

PRICES

Durocher
Sidelined

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Monday 's Res ults

Lou isv ille 1 Penin sula 0
Rochester 5 Tidewater I
Charles ton 12 Syracuse 3
Richmond at Toledo, post

paned, cold.

with 24, Fred Lewis had 22 and
George McGinnis 20. Pacer
star Roger Browo scored only
nine points.
The sixth game Is scheduled
for Bloomington, Ind., Wedoes·
day night.

Do Your

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time. A denture adhesive can he)p.
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'

SHIRT
FINISHING

i$ the all$wer

- Adv.

v

COWMBUS PARCEL SERVI~ INC.
,,

V1rdon sa1d once the season
gets rollmg he would give Oh-

When a vacation is the questiol) •.•

Your Columbus supplier may be using
CPS regularly .
It not - perhaps you should insist they try
CPS on your next shipment (up to 200 lbs.).

GOESSLER'S

motwn ''

"It's souna now I proved that
all sprmg "
Merritt has a ilfettme 7·1 rec·
'
ver and Hebner a chance to ord against the Bucs
play every day agamst all
" I've had good success
aga inst the P~rates because
pllchers.
Oliver is off to a fast start they're a free-swingmg team
this season battmg a hot 34G and anyttme you have a free
Hebner ts havmg a slower start swmger he can be p1tched to,"
Merritt said. "He has some
lultmg .238.
It will be Merritt's hrst start holes When I have my control!
of the season for Cmcmnat1 ca n take advanta ge of his
wh1ch IS 2.0 and m last place m weakness ''
the Natwnal League West.
"I'd hke to be able to do well
and get mto the rolatwn," sa1d
Mern tt. "I would like to reestablish the attitude we had m

-~
remember hitting a homer in
By VITO STELLINO
extra mnlngs to wm a game."
UPI Sports Writer
Ken
Forsch matched
The Houston Astros moved
thm fences in th1s year for Lee Jenkms, allowmg hve hits for
May but the guy who took nine innings includmg Ron
advantage of the shorter target Santo 's two-run homer m the
Mondsy mght was John Ed- 6rst mmng. Santo 's homer to
center also probably wouldn't
wards.
Edwards, who had only one have been a homer last year
Jum Ray p1tched the last two
homer all last season, h1t a
!mer to rightccnter that mnmgs m rehef for the Astros
cleared th e new short right to gam the v1ctory as Chicago
f1eld fence for a homer off suffered 1ts sixth stra1ght loss
Ferguson Jenkins with one out Jenkins, shooting for his sixth
m the lith iruung. It gave tlie straight 20..victory season, 1s
992 -2171
surgmg Astros a 3-2 v1ctory now ()..2
125 E. Main St.
Pomeroy. 0 .
In the only other game
over the saggmg ChiCago Cubs
and a share of first place in tlie Monday rught. Texas outlasted
Cahforma, 6-4. The Detrmt at
NatiOnal League West.
"I co uldn 't tell1t was a home Milwaukee game was postrun when I hlt it," Edwards poned because of cold wea ther .
Texas completed a four said "Th1s just doesn't happen
to me I just wanted to make game sweep of 1ts first home
sure I tagged the bases. I can 't series ever by downing
ARE RIGHT!
California But the Rangers
don't seem to be capturmg the
I
interest of the fans and only
5,561 showed up at Arlington
Stad1um . By contract, 13,905
CHICAGO (UP!) -Chicago ca me to the Astrodome to see
... Witft
Cubs Manager Leo Durocher, the Astros.
FllltiSIIINGS
who has been s1ck since the
Califorma . committed three
baseball season began, ~nter ed errors to help pave the way for
from our
Wesley Memonal Hospital for 1ts fifth straight loss although
tests Monday after the Cubs all of the Texas runs were
team physician said he was officially earned. Toby Harrah
sufferin g from fatigue.
scored the first Texas run in
Durocher, who will be 66 in the fifth inning on a single by
July , checked mto the hospital pitcher Don Stanhouse and
after returmng to Chicago singled in two more m the sixth
,
Saturday and missing a week- after first baseman Jim Spenend senes in New York .
cer booted a potential double
"Manager Leo Durocher was play grounder by Joe LoVJtto.
FIIRNITURE
examined this morning and Larry B1ittner then smgled m
MIDDIErGRT, 0.
because of persistent fat1gue 1t the two decidmg runs m the
was decided to hospitalize seventh. The final run scored
him," Dr. Jacob Suker, tlie on a bases loaded walk by
Cubs' team phys1c1an said
reliever Uoyd Allen.
The club announced that
Coach Pete Re1ser will run tlie
Cubs until Durocher 's return .
Durocher missed the first
two games of the season and
then managed three games in
Thrifti·Cut
Thrifti·Cut
Pittsburgh last week. But he
missed the weekend series in
Rotary Mower 18"
Rotary Mower 20"
New York and d1d not travel to
Houston with the team. The
o3 H.P. l.aUBOO-Tecumseh engine
o3 H.P. Briggs &amp; StrAtton engine,
Cubs return to Chicago for a
recoil starter
olnsiant-action recoil starter
home stand agamst Cincinnati
oEngine throttle control
oCutting height adjustable, 1 to
that starts Friday.
3'14 inches
oSelf-lubricating wheel bearings
International Lea gue
oSelf-lubricating wheel bearings
•14 gsuge steel deck
Standings
By United Pres s International
oChrome-plated handle
• Chrome-plated handle
W L Pet GB
•Cutting height adjustment, 1 to
Char leston
5 1 833
Roches ter
6 3 .667 lh
3'1. inches
Richm ond
5 3 625 1
Tidewater
5 5 SOO 2

FOR NEXT DAY DELIVERY
FROM OOWMBUS

A- BOLDEN DAWN SET
8 - PASTOAALE

Although Ohver batted only
238 agamst left banders last
season, Virdon sa1d he did not
plan to platoon his two starters
against 50utlipaws for the rest
of tlic year
" I thmk both Oliver and Hebner can handle most lefthanders," VU'don sa1d. "There may
be a few that will cause them
trouble . . the kind who come
fr om almost a Sidearm

my arm lS sound/' he sa1d.

Amazing Astros Climb
Into Tie For Top Spot

HAVE YOU TRIED
COLUMBUS PARCEL?

Come in today and H lect
the one tttat beet

c:Gur!SI.

~

119'JU;

GAHS in I : 48 2. Runner s were
Ftsher , Nea l, Rtce and
Ferguson

5' ·6" .

Trip Squires
In ABA Playoffs

By United Press International
An eight-day medical
leave pa1d off for the New
York Nets Monday night.
The Nets dropped the first
two games of their American
Basketball Association
Eastern D1vis1on finals ser1es
to the Virginia Squires in
V1rgima. A conflict with an Ice
show at the Nassau Coliseum
then prevented the Nets from
playing for eight days and it
gave the club's wounded a
chance to heal.
Rick Barry, John Roche and
Bill Melchlonnl, all bothered by
Illness or injury, recovered
during the break and helped
the Nels to a 119-117 victory
over the Squires Monday night
as they renewed their series.
Willie Wise and Jimmy Jones
combined for 66 points to lead
the Utah Stars to a 139-130
victory over the Indiana
Pacers and a 3-2 lead in the
Western best-of~ven finals
Monday night.
Barry, weak from a throat
Infection early in the series,
scored 25 points, including the
deciding basket with eight
seconds left, Monday night to
spark the Nets. Roche, a rookie
whose scoring helped the Nets
upset Kentucky In the Eastern
semifinals, had a sprained

DALE

NE W YORK (U P!) - Bill
Sharman, on the verge of
becoming the first pro basketball coach to wm championshipS m two d1fferent leagues
m successive years, Tuesday
was named the Natio nal
Basketball Associatwn's Coach
of the Year.
The 45-·year-old coach, who
paced the Utah Stars to the
Amencan Basketball Assocwhon title last year and then
moved to the NBA's Los
Angeles Lakers, rece1ved 42
votes from a panel of three
writers in each of the 17

HIGH JUMP - Somerv il le,
G, Neal. G, FtSher . G, and
Whillalch, M. lted for lh trd -

M-M League to
Meet on Sunday Nets
The M·M Men's Slo-P1tch
Softball Leag ue will meet
Sunday, April 30, at 4 p.m. at
the Royal Crown garage m
Middleport when all managers
are asked to be present.
The 10-team league will
begin regular play Tuesday,
May 2. Five teams each from
Mason and Meigs County make
up the league. Mason County
teams are Foote Mineral Co.,
Jim 's Csmper Sales, Fruth
Pharma cy, K&amp;K Mob1le
Homes, and Randolph 's Union
76.
Meigs County teams are
Danville, Reedsville, Fanner's
Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
Meadowgreen Gardens, and
Royal Crown Bottling Co.

Punchless Reds

A na tive of Por tsmouth,
Bandy pla yed both baskethall
and baseball fur Ohw He
lettered three years as a
baseball th1rd baseman
Befure

" It seemed that when I
pitched there was conhdcncc ,"
he sa1d . "The team knew 1t
would get rull.'l and knew it
would win "
" I've proven I ca n win when

08-01 -202-4

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FAIRLAWN®
Rotary Mower 20"
o3 H.P. Bri1gs &amp; Stratton engine with
verti&lt;l81 pull starter--starts 25%
easier than recoilatartin1
o7-inch steel wheels ·
• Reinforoed steel deck
•Underdeck ba!Be
•Safer 5-position, fingertip height
adjustment, 1 to 3"h inches

New
1

�2- Tile l)atly Sentinel,Mlddleport.Proteroy, 0 ., April25, 1972

MAJoR ·
LEAGUE

Jackson in Love
With o·u Hissers
•

•

ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - A
!hdomlnantly student crowd
at Ohio University booed and
hissed Sen. Henry Jackson, DWash., Monday as he defended
America's involvement in the
Vietnam war,
After the appearance, Jack;
son said he was happy about
the jeers because "it strengthened my campaign."
• Jackson scheduled vists
today in Youngstown, Warren,
Niles and Cleveland. Tonight
he is to address a fund-raising
dinner for the Cuyahoga
County Democratic party!
The jeering from about 100
persons in the crowd of 300
began as Jackson, seeking his
party 's presidential
nomination, said the people of
South V1etnam need to be
defended from "northern in·
vaders."
"I suggest as many of you as
available march off to Hanoi
and enjoy freedom ," Jackson
told the hecklers.
He was cut off as he said, "I
want to make it clear you may
be for Hanoi, but I want the
people of South Vietnam ... "
Aperson in the crowd yelled,

"I'm for people, and 1 doll'! strip mining, but you can't
want them killed."
abolish It on the federal level
"The people of !Iouth Viet- because the federal level has
nam don 'I want to be killed no jurisdiction on the pollee
either," Jackson replied. "And powers of the states," he said.
they 're fed up with people "The b!U would aid slates in
invading from the north."
the effort to control strip min, Jackson later· said he en· ing."
''Wide Open" "-v-tioo
joyed th e confront allon.
' ''"' ••
' "It's this sort of reaction that
Asked why he was favoring
hel'ps in my campaign," he Ohio over today 's primaries in
said. "I welcome it. It could not Pennsylvania 11nd Massa·
have been staged better to help chusetts, JaCkson said Ohio
my campaign ."
''was more representative of
Jackson's other appearances . industrial, rural and, agriculin Ohio Monday were before tural areas than other slates."
calmer crowds.
·
In Chillicothe, where he adIn Zlinesville, only about 25 dressed about 200 local high
persons showed up at the air· school students and local
port to hear Jackson further Democrats, Jackson predicted
defend his Vietnam stand.
a ''wtdeopen"Democratic NaTalks of Mlnlilg
tiona! Convention.
Some 300 persons turned out
"No one candidate will have
at the Monroe County Airport a majority of the delegate
in Woodsfield where Jackson voles," he said.
discussed stri~ mining .
Jackson also campaigned in
" In some states, strip mining Cincinnati, touring the Greater
should be abolished, but in Cincinnati Recycling Center
other states you can have strip near the University of Cincinmlning and still have good con- nati.
servation," he said.
He called for increased gov·
Jackson did not mention spe- ernmental research to solve
cific states.
the nation's environmental
"I've introduced a bUI on problems.

STANDINGS

Devil GoHers Defeat Logan
. .

Majer (ugue Slondi'!9S
By United Press lnl•rnallo""l
N•tional Ltague
East
W. L. Pet. GB
Montreal
5 1 .833
New York
4 2 .M7 1
Philadelphia 4 3 571 1'12
Pittsburgh
4 3 571 J1i2
St. Louis
2 6 .250 4
Chtcago
2 7 .222 4112
West
,
W. L. Pet. GB
Houston
7 2 .778
Los Angeles
4 5 .444
San Diego
4 S .444 3

American Logue
East
W. L. Pet. G8
Baltimore
5 3 .625 Vr
Cleveland
• 3 .571
1'2
Boston
3 3 .500 1
Detroit
33.5001
2 3 .400 ,...,
Milwaukee
New York
2 4 .333 2
West
W. L. Pet. G8
Oakland
4 2 .M7
Chicago
5 3 .624
Texas
S 3 .625
Minnesota
3 2 .600 Vr
Kansas City
3 6 .333 2lla
San Francisco 4 S .444 3
California
2 6 .250 3
Atlanta
3 7 .300 41'2
s ResuHs
'
Cincinnati
2 S .286 4 DetroitMonday
al
Mllw,
ppd,
cold
Monday's Results
Texas 6 California 4
Hous 3 Chicago 2, 11 Inns
(Only games scheduled)
(Only game scheduled}
TOclay's ProbabJ. Pllchtrs
Todiy's ProbobJ. Pitchers
American League
By United Press lnt•rnallonal
(All Ti.,.s EST!
National Ltaguo
Boston (Pattin 0.2) at Minne·
EVELYN RUSSElL
(All Times EST!
New York (Capra 0.0} at San sola (Perry 0·11, 2· IS p.m.
MASON
- Evelyn Mae
Baltimore (Dobson 2·0) at
Diego (Arlin 0·2}, night, 10&gt;30 Kansas
Russell,
14,
daughter of Mr.
City (Drago 0.11, 8:30
p.m.
•
p.m
.
aud Mrs. Lester ' RuSiel~
Cincinnati (Merritt 0·01 at
Detroit ( Lollch 1·11 at Texas Mason, is a oew carrier for
Pitlsburgh (Johnson 0-0}, 8·05 (Paul
0-0), 8 30 p.m .
p.l)1.
Cleveland
1-11 at the Dally Seullnel in the
St. Louis (Gibson 0·11 al Chicag (Wood(Wilcox
2-0l.
9
p.m.
Atlanta (Niekro 0·21, 8:05p.m. California (Wrighl 0-2) at Masou area·. Evelyn Is an
Chicago (Hooton 1-1) at
Milwaukee (Broil 0·11, 8:30 eighth grade student at
Houston ( Re~~ss 1·0}, 8 30 p.m p.m.
,Wabama Junior Hlgb Scllool.
11\ontreal (Morton 0-0) at Los Oakland (Hunter o.l) at New
Evelyn lived in Illinois the
Angeles (Sulton 2-0), 11 p m.
Philadelphia (Carlton 2-01 al York (Kline 1-0), 7:30p.m.
past six years , haviug
Games
San Francisco (Marlchal 1·11. BostonWednesday's
returned to Mason In June.
at Minnesota
11 p.m.
Ball at Kan City, night
Evelyn is an acllve
Detroit at Texas, night
Mal'or League Results
member of the Girl Scout
By Unl ed Press lntemalional Cleveland at Chicago
Cadettes and enjoys most
California at Milwaukee
Natio""l League
sports including bicycle
Oakland at New York
( 11 innings}
Chi
200 000 000 oo- 27 o
riding. She Is the grand·
Hous
200 000 000 01- 3 40
daughter
of Mr. and Mrs.
Jenkins (0-2} and Hundley .
Clarenct Ihle aud Mr. and
Forsch, Ray (10) and Edwards.
Major League L..ders
WP- Ray (2 0) HR- Santo,
Mrs. Clayton Russell, all of
(2nd}, May (Jrd), Edwards By United Press International
Mason.
Leading Bailors
(2nd} .
National uogue
(Only game scheduled)
H. Pet. .
Tolan, Cln G.7AB
28 6R. 14
.SOD j
eJDO
Carty, All
8 18 4 9 .SOD
Jeter. SO
8 24 4 11 .458
Gardner,3b
3 0 2 4 Sngiln, Pit
7 26 3 11 .423
Lewis, rf
~ ~ ~ ~ ~J~~.~~u ; ;: : l~ :!l~ SYRACUSE - The Rev.
Haymaker, lb
Jones. NY
6 23 3 9 391 WyllssColburnoftheNazarene
Crsby,
St
L
7 18 2 7 .389 First Church, Huntington, and
Totals
24 7 7 5 Doyle, Phil
7 21 3 8 381 th
·
Cnzaro. LA
e Rev. M. c. Lanmore
of the
7 24 5 9 .J 7JJ
Amorican League
Syracuse Church of the
MEIGS (5)
G. ab R H Pet. Nazarene, officiated at
Drwn,Oak
Mtn
Saturday's memorial services
AB R H RBI Grn,
65 18
17 S1 89 .500
.471
8 31 8 14 .452 for Dav1d Lee Watson, son of
a· 1 I 0 Alln, Ch1
Cooke, 2b
Clrke,
NY
s 21 2 9 .429 David and Mar1lyn Grindley
Burney, lf
2 1 0 0
Harrh
.
Tex
8
23 s 9 .391 Watson fonnerly of Mmers·
Dixon,c
4 I I 0 Pmsn, Cal
8 26 2 10 .385 .
'
.
6 19 3 7 .368 v1lle, who was believed to have
Dunfee,ss
2 I 2 2 Cash. Dot
6 19 4 7 .368 drowned in the Guyandotte
McKinney,Jb
4 0 0 0 Kelly, Chi
Alomr,
Cal
8
30 4 11 .367 River March 31
Wigal, rf
2 1 0 0 May, Chi
8 30 4 11 .367
.
Home Runs
A vocal duet was presented
R.Ash, cf
4 0 0 0
Eason,lb
3 0 0 0 National Loaguo: Evans, All , by Mr . and Mrs. Robert
M.Ash,ph
I 0 0 0 Ma~, Hou and Luztnskl, Phil 3, Stewart of Fredericktown ,
16 f1ed with 2.
Oh'
h
"G th ·
Chaney, p
2 0 0 0 American League: Darwin
10, w o sang
a ermg
Phalm,ph
I 0 0 0 Minn 4, Cardenas, Cal , Aile~ Buds" and ''Until Then. "
and May, Chi and Duncan. Oak
Out of town friends and
2·
relatiVes attendmg were Mr.
Total
28 5 4 2
Runs Balled In
Nahonal League: Rader, Hou and Mrs. Richard Detamore,
I 2 3 4 5 6 7 ~ II ; Kmgman, SF 10; May, Hou. Mr. and Mrs. Ed McDowell,
Lefebvre and Mota, LA 8
M
d M 0 kJ Cha
Wahama 0 0 0 4 3 0 7-7-'1
American League : Darwin.
r an rs. a ey
pman
Mlnn 10, May, Chi 8; Powell, and Mr. and Mrs. Les GhiZ, all
Meigs 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 f&gt;-4.1
Bait 7, Allen, Chi and Randle, of Huntington ; Billy Hauch,
Errors-Clark, Lambert, Tex 6
Galhpolls; - Mrs . Stanley
Pitching
Gardner, Haymaker, Dunfee.
WB • Wahama 6 Meigs 8 National League: Nolan, Cln, James, Jr ., and daughter,
Ray, Hou, Singer and Sutlon Nancy, Toledo· Mrs. Wanda
2BH • Gardner, Dunfee
LA. Stoneman. Monl, Seaver. Roush and daugiilers, Angle
WP • Hesson 3-{)
NY.
Carlton, Phil,
Kirby, SO and Patricia and son Ronnie,
and McDowell,
SF 2·0.
LP · Wigal
American L..gue: Dobson Mrs. Robert Roush, and the
and McNally, Bait, Siebert, Rev. and Mrs. Edward
IPRHSOW Bos, Wood, Chi, Coleman Del, G · dl
d d hte Lo ·
rm ey an aug r, r~e,
Hesson
7 5 4 5 7 Burgmeier. KC, B I Y I even,
Cqaney
3 4 3 I 5 Minn. Locker, Oak and all of Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Broberg, Tex 2·0; Bahnsen. Chi Roger Grindley, daughters ,
Wigal
3 3 4 4 0 and Perry, Clev 2-1
Lornia and Lesia and son,
~IIIIIIIWIOJIIIAIIIIIIAIII!IItlllililliiQltli8illlllllllllMIIilliiWIOJIIIAIIIIIIAIIIIIIAIIIIIIAIIIIlllltll
Chrislopher of MI. Vernon.
Services were held at the
Syracuse Church.
1

rial Held
On SaturdaY
M

Meigs Edged 7-5
,•

·~·

Danny Gardner drove in
tfuee runs with two clutch
hitS, a bases loaded single and
a run scoring double to lead the
Wahama White Falcons over
the visiting Meigs Mauraders
Monday night by a 7.0 score.
Gardner wasn't the only hero
of the game as Wahama's Rick

...,,.• HOSPITAL NEWS
'

~

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave.
Cedar St. General
'• visitingandhours
2-4 and 7~ p.m.
., Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
~
4:30 p.m. Parents only on
''•. Pediatrics Ward.
'.:•
-Births
,'· Mr. and Mrs. Barry L.
''· Alford, Glenwood, a daughter;
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lee McCoy,
~
Henderson , a son; Mr. and
~
Mrs. Emil Earl Harr, Letart, a
~ son ; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph D.
~ Camp, Clifton, a daughter; Mr.
~ and Mrs. Roy E. Weethee,
, Gallipohs Ferry, W. Va., . a
~ daughter; Mr. and Mrs. John
~ Albert Nance, Galhpohs, a
; daughter; Mr. and Mrs. James
: C. Chapman, Crown C1ty, a
•' son; Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd T.
• Fry, Rio Grande, a son; Mr.
and Mrs. Audrey H. Stewart,
.:· Gallipolis, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
Kathryn M. Wallace, Jackson,
a son; Mr.. and Mrs. Berl D.
Jackson, a son ; Mr. and
, Kiser,
Mrs. John Damewood, Reeds·
vllie, a son; Mr. and Mrs.
• Jackie L. Wears, Phny, a son;
• • Mr. and Mrs. Jarrell Burchett,
~·
Oak Hill, a daughter, and Mr.
an.d Mrs. Wilham L. Jamison,
Gallipolis, a daughter.
Discharges
..; ·
•.
Mrs. Michael E. Pickens and
•
.,,
son, Ida Milstead, Christine
"
&amp;!eed, Martha Hopkins, Fred
Gill, Jr., Paul E. Robb, Ken"' neth Robinette, Robert Petry,
....
Pamela Evans,
Jess1e
•
McGoon,
Mrs
Vencil
Adkins
'
and son, Mary Handley, Allee
Eberts, Teddy Barker, Carrie
M
••
Blankenship, Mrs. Elmer Bush
•
and daughter, Elizabeth W.
•
Finnicum, Tracy fowler,
Perry Hall, Margaret Justice,
•
••
Janie McPherson, Arthur Lee
•
Miller , Ferrell Niday, Kenneth
W. Parsons, Clarence Proffitt,
Lonnie Shinn, Harold Smith,
... Frances Stewart, Brian Stover,
Bonnie White, Hazel Woods,
"" Mrs.
Helen Westfall, Helen
Johnson, Elva Straight, John
D. Gregory II, Nicholas S.
~·
Nolan, Johp Walter, Lester
Getty, Csrolyn Roush, Ruby
• Woodruff, John Winkler, John
Simonton , Bernadine Wilson,
'
••
.,. Glendon Roy, Samuel Me·
¥
Clure, Albert Kuhn, Margaret
Wilson, Jacob Butcher, Ethel
Black, Elwood Bowers,
William Buckley, Patricia
Joyce Cleland, John David
Fife, Elizabeth Gauze, Mrs.
Roger Jackson and daughtel\
••
Leonard Lunsford, Timothy
••
Mullins,
Max Manuel, Forrest
•
McNeal, Ma:ttie Porter, Esta
,. Reese, Patricia Anne Roush,
Mary Shropshire, Anthony
Oiler, Mary Hauldren, Adda
Irene Kelly, Mrs. Roy E.
Weethee and daughter, Ira
A
Adkins, Mrs. Steve Rhea and
• • daughter,
James Utile, Diana
Bowman, Mrs. James C.
Chapman and son, Mrs. Merle
-: Bush and daughter, Beacher
Davlsl Mrs. Gerlad Roger
Downcu
and daughter, Ed·
•
wlrd Repa1111, Goldie Mitchell,
George Ratcliff, Mary
Rutledge and Maurice Smith.

.

.

.

...•••.
::....

t......
..
...
.,,
~

~

.....

"'

--

...

-·

.

.
....

.
s:
.---.-·...

Hesson won his third game of
the season by pitching a four
hitter to lead Coach Dave
Arrlll's charging Falcons to
their fifth consecutive victory
of the season.
The Mauraders didn't waste
any ltme in getting their initial
run as the first two men walked
and the third legged out an
infield single to load the bases.
Hesson then uncorked a wild
pitch scoring one run .
Steve Dunfee then greeted
Hesson with a double to left
center field plating two more
runs.
Hesson struck out the next
batter but got himself right
hack in trouble by walking
Wigal.
Bolh Dunfee and Wigal
S&amp;Ored when Eason was safe on
an error and the return throw
went wide o( the .mark. Going
into the bottb~ 'llaif of the first
the Mauraders held a huge five
run lead. The White Falcons
managed only one hit in the
fll'sl tnree innings but finally
exploded in the fourth in~ing.
Randy Clark led of[ the
fourth by drawing a walk. Rob
Lambert then singled followed
by walks to Curtis Roush and
Rick Hesson. The Maurader
coach then elected to go with
another pitcher. Wigal was
then brought In and promptly
uncorked two ·wild pitches to
plate' two runs. Gardner tlien
singled to right to score two
more runs to bring the Falcons
to within one at ii-4.
Meigs then mounted a mild
threat when a walk and two
errors loaded the bases with no
one out Hesson then began to
reach back for a little extra
strength and managed to get
Rick Ash ground into a force

out, and then proceeded to
strike out the next two batters
to retire the side.
Wahama then scored the
tying and winning runs in the
fifth inning, when Mike White
led off with a single. Randy
Clark then grounded into a
force out. Lambert singled to
left and Curtis Roush was safe
on an error and Rick Hesson
laid down a perfect squeeze
bunt to score Clark and
Lambert who raced home from
second on the throw to first thst
nailed Hesson. Gardner then
doubled to score Curtis Roush
and give Wahama a 7-S lead.
Hesson then held the
Mauraders at bay in the final
two mnings to gain the victory.
The win upped the Falcons
record to 5-l. Randy Clark
leads the team in hitting so far
as he has hil safely in six of 15
times' for i!".4bo averagt Rick
Hesson and Rob Belcher lead
the mound corps with 3-{) and 2o records.
Belcher, Clark or Lambert
will get the call on Wednesday
when the Falcons travel to
RaveMwoodfor a 4:30 contest.
Thursday night Wahama hits
the road for Stewart, Ohio and
a 4:30 game with Federal
Hocking, and then Friday,
Southern Local comes to
Mason to round out a four
game week for Wahama.

Luck Opening Beats Game
trick and rattled off the next
nine for a score of plus 630
• QJI07
At that one table, South
¥109
was
the v i c t i m of really
• Q74 2
atrocious luck. West decided
&lt;foK 62
that heroic measures were
WEST
EAST
called
for and led the four of
.9843
c
I
u
b
s. South played dum¥A Q 8 52
¥J 63
my's
deuce
and after cont J9
ti0 6
Siderable thought East rose
&lt;!oJ874
.Al05 3
with his ace.
SOUTH (D)
East thought a while more
.AK 2
and slapped down the jack
¥K74
of hearts This gave poor
tAK8 53
South the option of death by
&lt;loQ9
hanging or shooting. If he
East- West vulnerable
played low the Jack would
West Nurlh Eut South
hold
and another heart be
I •
led.
1¥ • l•
Poss 2 NT.
He did play high and was
Pass 3 N.T. Pa.ss Pass
down two before he could
Pass
gain the lead
Openmg lead- " 4
What do you think about
that opemng lead ? It certainBy Oswald &amp; James Jacoby ly worked, but we think it
was sheer lucli, not g o o d
There 1s nothmg rea lly bridge.
wrong With Soulh's three nooN£WSPA.PEII ENTER PRISE ASSN.)
trump contract. Furthermore, 11 is an easy contract
to get to South has 19 highcard pomts and opens one
The bidd1ng has been:
diamond s i n c e he is too
strong for a no-lrump open- Wesl Norlh East South
l&lt;lo
Poss
It
'"~ West may or may not
Poss 2N.T
stick in a one-heart overcall. Poss 2 &lt;fo
Poss 3 &lt;1o
Pass
?
In e1ther c as e. North 's You, South, hold:
four decent spades and eight
high card points warrant a .A654 ¥K63Z •9107 .54
bid . South has a book two What do you do now ?
no-trump call and N o r t h A- Pass. Your lwo no~trump
ra1ses h1m to three.
call was doubtful. Don't try any
When the hand was played more bids. 1
TODAY'S QUESTION
in a 13-table duplicate, every
West btds one heart over your
South player reached three
no-trump. At every table but one diamond. North and East
one, West opened his fourth pass What do you do now?
best heart. South won t~e

.6.

.

25

Us.

By Helen Bottel

••

AB R H RBI
HAIR IS A PRIVATE AFFAIR
Ch.Roush,lf
4 0 1 0 Dear Helen :
While, 2b
4 0 I 0
My husband, at 28, is prematurely balding. He bought a hair
Clark, c
3 2 0 0
piece last year a.-twe think illooks great. At over $200, It should!
Lamberl,ss
3 2 2 0
We haven 'I made a big secret of this, but most of our friends
CV .Roush, cf
1 2· 0 0
and relatives don't mention what looks so natural : it's a part of
Hesson,p
I I 0 2

WIN AT BRIDGE

NORTH

·Helen Help

WAHAMA(7 )

Dan.

... All except this one woman who, when recent acquaintances are around, always malllll!es to give Dan a "compliment"
on his new hair. Maybe she's just tactless, but I detect a smug
look on her face when she sees a few people are IIII1'JII'Ised. Could
be she's jealous, as her husband could sta.-1 some improvements, too. And so could she, In spite of a dye job a.-1 false
eyelashes.
Teillng her to coolltmight only inspjre her to more remark&amp;.
She's the type. What's a good, clever comeback? - HAIRASSED
Dear Hairasaed:
Why doe1111't your husband, wblle acknowledging ber
"compliments" look her deep in the eyes and say, '"!banks, luv,
but did you know your false eyelash is flapping?" or perhaps
YOU could DOle her new dye job. 1
A few aUusions to HER ''transformations" should get the
message across. - H.

+++

Dear Helen:
Years ago my wife was a sweet, devoted family woman. I
may have taken her for granted, until the ''affair" at her office
cost her job.
Since then I have tried to give her all the things that might
have been lacking ; love, attention, compllmenta, the wlnHnddlne bit. I even do most of the home chores and cooking, aa she
has a new job now.
But she rejects me, says we're too'old to be "lovey-dovey,"
and she doesn't wantaffectlon.Herworkls aD.tmportant to her.
I'm scorned and ridiculed. Yet I slllllove and want her.
' We tried a marriage counselor. He charged ~. and my
wife said he wss crazy.
Since she aU but throws me out of the house, I've been going
to a club where I've meta widow I admire very much. Things are
sllll cool, but momentum could gather very I!IJY. She's weD of!,
and is uaed to the country clooset, while I'm just an average guy.
I'm Oattered - and attracted ~
But my marriage of :IS yean means a lot to me. Why does a
man keep on w~ a 'WOIIIIIl wbo aeemlnsly bales him? I~
never been unfaithful. My wife bu, though I never menqonlt.
Should I keep a perfect track record, or try for the Dell best
thing? - UNDECIDED
Dear tJT:I;
Why not ask yotD' wifs? Perhaps if she realizes she may lose
you, she'll start workq at her llliiiTiage agaln;If she doesn't, then perhlpe you've drifted 10 far apart
there's DO returning. A trial separaUon might give you bath
needed time to Ihint. - H.

•

MEETING CALLED
LETART FAllS - A pubhc
meeting will be held Tuesday
at 1:30 p.m. at the Letart Falls
Community Hall to discuss
plans for ·election and
Decoration Day dinners. All
mterested persons are invited.

Coach John Milhoan's
Gallipolis Blue Devil golfers
defeated VISiting Logan 147-163
on the local links Monday
evening.
Dow Saunders' par-34led the
Blue Devils, now ll·2 on the
year. Logan is ,_. overall.
Kenny New fired a'¥/ for the
• Saunders and '
Gallians. John

Tax Challenged
LIMA, Ohio (UP!) - A suit
against Gov. John J. Gilligan
and oth~r state officials to have
the Ohio property taxes as used
for school sumrt declared
uncons'titullonal will be filed on
behalf of the Ohio Farmers
Union by Lima atlorney Robert
Mihlbaugh.
Mihlbaugh said the suit
would be filed "within the next
few days" in Toledo U. S.
District Court and will pame
Gilligan, state Auditor Joseph
Ferguson and Oh10 Attorney
General William J. Brown.
Mihlbaugh Is currently a

Nazarenes join
Against Lottery
Churches of the Nazarene In
the Central Ohio D1strict have
joined in opposition to the
proposed state lottery for
funding Oh10 government. The
Meigs County churches are a
part of the district.
At a recent meeting of the
District Adv111ory Board of the
Church of tlie Nazarene, action
was taken to voice that opposition . Speaking for the
leadership of the 139 churches
throughout the area, the board
unanimously
passed
a
resolution to express strong
disapproval of the proposed
state lottery and urged the
membership and other voters
to vote against the isaue should
II appear on the ballot.
Dr. Harvey S. Galloway,
superintendent of the district,
and chairman of the District
Advisory Board, sa1d: "It is a
fundamental breakdown and
undermmmg of the moral
precepts of our people."
ATTEND MEETING
Mrs. Wilham Willford, Mrs.
Rlchard Fetty, Jr ., Mrs.
Homer Parker, Mrs. James
Carpenter of the Rutland
Fnendly Gardeners attended
an open meeting of the Winding
Trail Garden Club at the Ohio
Power Co. in Pomeroy on
Wednesday mght. Miss
Edelene Wood of Parkersburg,
an adult education teacher
from Wood County, presented a
slide presentation and a talk on
collecting and preparing wild
foods. Mrs. Willford won a door
prize.
VISITORS COME
Weekend visitors of Mrs.
David Entsminger, Middleport, were her sister, Mrs.
Robert McKnight, Urbana, and
daughter, Mrs. Kim Yost of
Dayton, her granddaughter,
Mts. Roger Lutz and daughter,
Chrislle, Allentown, Pa., and
Mrs. Charles Entsminger,
South Charleston,

3- The DaUy Sentinel, Mlddleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., April25, 1972

John Cunningham each had 38,
and Brett Epling finished with
a 47&gt;
For the Chiefs, ChuCk Helber
was low man with '¥/. Jeff Cole
had 41, Mike Mojzer 42, Jay
Boegher i3 and Tom Cole 50.
The Blue Devils will host
WaVerly and l!untington High
th'111 a ftemoon .
_

~~

special counS..I for Brown, but
says he sees no conflict of in·
teres! and does not plan to quit.
Mlhlbaugh conducted an in·
vestigalion into conditions at
Lima State pospital which
resulted in indictments against
3! persons on patient abuse
charges.
He said the Ohio Farmers
Union will charge in the suit
that Ohio property taxes are
unconstitutional because they
deny equal protection of the
laws and -also deny due
process.
uFor example/' he said. "we
have one school district in
Allen County that Is extremely
wealthy because of heavy
mdustry located there and the
children who attend school in
thsl district get a very good
education.
"That compares," he sa1d,
"to another school district
where the children do not get a
good education all because of
the tax base. In oilier words,
the children of the poor are
discriminated against because
they are children of the poor. "
The
Ohio
Education
Association last November
f1led a similar suit In Columbus
U. S. DistriCt Court to lest the
constitutionality of property
taxes as the basis for school
support.

Revival Opens
This Evening
SYRACUSE-The Rev. Lawrence C. Walker, of
New Philadelphia, Oh10,
will
be
the
guest
speaker at revival services to be held at the
Syracuse
Church of the
Nazarene
beginmng this
evening
thrqugh Sunday, nightly at
7:30p.m.
REV.
, Jley. '?(~l~~r ~ an e)der in the
Church of tOO Nazarene, a ·
graduate of Eastern Nazarene
College and began his ministry
as pastor in New York. Later
he entered the work of itinerant
evangelism. In 1948 he
resumed hiS role as pastor in
Ohio, where he organized three
new churches. During this time
he also evangelized in hill area
at revivals and camp
meetings .
In Augusl, 1968, Mr. and Mrs. /
Walker reentered the field of/
evangelism as preacher and
singer. His messages · are
emphatic, Bible ctntered and
Wesleyan in doctrine.
The Rev. M. C. Larimore is
the pastor at the Syracuse
Church of the Nazarene .

Voice along Br'Way
BY JACK O'BIUAN
AN EIG11'111 OF SILVER
IS S'l'ERLING
NEW YORK
Joe Silver of
"Lenny"
wa•
n&lt;mlnated_
only
once for a Tony Award. But he pla,ys eight roles
... The mad INCCestl of pro basketball Ia rich
reward for Madlaon Square Garden Pres. Ned
Iri.sh, who Invented the college doubleheaders
decades ago and later added pro cage games
(he founded the N. Y. Knlcks) when everyone
promlaed him they would fall. Now Ned'a rich
enough not to tell them where to go ... George
Bums, pushing 75 and we can't remember from
which side, Is courting Uta Baron like an eager
groom. TONed a big party for Uta and her three
young daughters, 11 to,15, on daughter Cindy's
birthday ... We'll do without Melina Mercourl
ahorlly, She1htarln (husband Jules Daaaln will
dlrecl) Teait. Wma.' "Small Craft Warnings"
thla IUIIIIIler In Paria.
No one lalows why which crowd collecta in
what N.Y. saloon, but the British &amp; Australian
press plbera in Muggs on First Ave. In the 611!!
... The old CUban cafes which featured live sex
were driven out by Castro, and the bad newa
now Is- they're attempting to surface again in
San Juan, Puerto Rico ... Goldie Hawn
to
Puerto Rico (DOt to such joints) aoo look along
111 Gold!Nltter actrea Sean Randall, her old
ooddy from their Bdwy. (lo.Go dancing n11es.
·~ 'l'hlnll .•. Fonun," since it first was
proclicedon Bchry ten yean ago (the new Phil
!JIV«Htarred prOduction IIIIa best), hU been
trlllllaled lltoalmctst ewrj ~e Including
swill!: the Gay Uberallon Front did an alJ.
nance production ... Beatie Ringo Starr's
cannibalizing his own career: he's directing a
documentary about a ''top ~llah rock ~p."
Plill!Jlvers ili aU over radio-TV since his
"Forum"llllllsh aoo usually menti0111 be wrote
the words to ''Nancy with the I ,auahlna Fllce," '
which inavlllbly be adds was written for Fnn1t

new

'

Sinatra's daughter. That's a slight evasion : II
started out as "Bessie with the Laughing Face,"
and Phil's words were attached to the Jimmy
Van Heusen melody In honor of JOhnny Burke's
tiny daughter, Bes~le ... Sinatra helrd It,
reallzed its tender polency, and asked If he
might shift thst one name; they were glad to ...
But It was Bessie first.
Johnnie Burke Is one of the mall}' fine
talents who died too 1100n: he won Olcara with
Jimmy Van Heuaen and among Burke nifties
are "II Could Happen to You," ''l{ere'a That
Rainy Day,'' ''Swing on a Star," "Miaty" (lyric
to Errol G!lrner's melody), "Pennies from
Heaven," "Aint It a Shljme About Mame,"
scads more from "Armle Doesn't Uve Here
Anymore" to "What's New.:.;, ... He didn't
Jll'l'lluce ''Nancy with the Laughing Face,"
though; just "Resale."
While Tommy Makem Is a1ng1ng up a Gaelic
.storm In the U.S., his record of "Liaten for the
Rllltent Are Ringing" Is doing the Avis Bit: No 2
In Ireland ... You have to be a big-Nielsen rater
to 1eta TV golf tournament to bear ycu name.
So Alan King's having a tennis tournament
lobbed onto the Cseaars Palace courts In h1a
nominal auspices May 4 through 7 ... N. Y. trlal
lawyer Dave Paulley bought into the Baccara
Restaurant 16 years ago as a sideline. Now the
law is Dave's sideline.
'!be dml may have made F1lp Willon say
it : "128 m!Won in mlsance lues may be ap..
proved by the city COWICll. Now if only 'that
llllaance in aty Hall will pay them."
Mnolcal comedy star Gretchen Wyler's the
flnt woman, in or out of lhawbil, to be ~to
the bolrd of dlrectora of the ASPCA ... N. Y.
recording firm (Lelsura T11p11) is ~clng
"Anbi Tapes" -eight "altuatlona" In eartnc~ge ,
or caasette with which a worried U.: can
telephone his GCUIIe for not getting bCIIIIe on
time, with IJIIIIopriale backgrowd llllllldl to
bolller 1111 allbi; aottded llrport, t,pewtlter
clackql, traiD lermlnll nollel,

*·

1970

Champs To Host

Bandy is Speaker
At M Cage Event
Dale Bandy·, assistant High School basketball
' basketball coach at Oh10 banquet Thursday evening at
Umversity Will be the guest 6 30 p.m.
speaker at the annual MeigJ;
Tum Corde, one of Oh10
Umvei'Sity's stars on the 197172 squad, w11l accompany
Bandy
Bendy has completed h1s
ninth year as an asWAVERLY - The Me1gs sistant coach and four of the
Marauder golf squad defeated mne years he has been at 0 U.
the Waverly Tiger linksters th e team won the Midhere Monday afternoon, 225- Amer~can basketball champwnslnp
232
Bandy, a 1961 graduate of
Sophomore J D. Story and
O.U
. captamed the Bobca ts
semor Marty Vaughan were coMid-American
Conference
medalists, each shootmg a 43
Other Marauder scores were champion cagers of 1959-liO He
semor Steve Story, 45 ; semor jomed In&amp; former coach J1m
Jon Buck, 46, and junior Randy Snyder 111 1963-64 as an
ass•sta nt.
Chafm, 48.
For the Tigers, Butch Work- '
man had a 44 , Don Gullion and Lo~·gn
M1ke Tulloh each 46, John
0
Dutcher 45, and Tony Swu.dler

Tiger Golfers
Fall to Meigs '

51.

Coac h Nolan Swackhamer's
Marauder ilnksters host the
Loga n Ch1eftams a nd the
Soulhern Tornadoes today at
the Pomeroy Golf Course , then
move mto Athens Wednesday
to test the Bulldogs at the
Athens Country Club.

Girls Invited
For Softball
SYRACUSE - A meeting
will be held Thursday, April27,
at 6 p.m., at the Syracuse
MuniCipal Park to orgamze a
Jun1or Girls ' Softball League in
Meigs County.
Ills hoped to have at least a
four team league, or more, If
mterested. Two teams have
already been organized, have
coaches, and are ready to go. It
is hoped to have a team from
Syracuse and one fr om
Pomeroy or Middleport, or
hoth.
All girls in Meigs County ,
ages 11, 12, and 13, and any
adults and parents who would
help with th1s league are in·
v1ted to attend this meeting at
Syracuse . League play would
probably start about June I.

cmt un g to Ohio,

Ba11dy has bee n head
basketball coach at Portsmoullt H1gh School. He also
coached at Columbus Grand. v1ew as a foo tballass1stant and
baseball coach
Bandy handles the Oh10
defense al most excl usive ly,
recrwts, travels With the team
and ass1sts Coach Jun Snyder,
head coach, on the bench As
cl11ef recruiter, he has succeeded m bnngmg first 1ate
basketball talent to 0 U
He and Ius Wife, Don na . have

men Roll
0 ver
Marauders
Coach Ron Logan's Gallia
Academy High School Blue
Dev1is track team rolled over
v1sit1ng Meigs 102'f.!-24'f.! 1n a
dual meet on Memorial Field
Monday eve mng
It was Gallia 's fourth dual
v1ctory in five outmgs lh1s
spnng.
The host Blue Devil captured
first place honors 1n all 15
events. Dave Wh1te led the
Gallians w1th 16 points. Larry
Snowden had 13, Pete Neal II
and one-quarter, and Rod
Ferguson 9'1.
Ke1th Vanlnwagen led the
Marauders w1th seven pmn ts.
The Blue Dev ils are
sc heduled . to
run
at
Chesapeake th1s afternoon .
Earlier th1s sprmg, GAHS
handed the powerful Panthers
a 66-tll se tback on Memonal
Field
Here's Monday's results ,
FIELO EVENTS
SHOT PUT - Neal, G.
Wood, G, Weber, M - 43'· 11 "
DISCUS - Bagshaw. G;
Wood, G; Weber. M -138'·1".
POLE VAULT - Saunders,
G, VanlnwaQen. M: Wh tle. G

-

10' 8"

a fulll-y ear old dau gh ter ,
Stephanie. .
CUI de scored an average of

17 l per gmnc the past season
dlld 111 tlw ga me aga1r1 s t

Buwhng G1 ecn had the h1 ghest
ftel d goal pet cc ntage of 929 un
l:l fo1 14

Sharman
Named Top

NBA Coach

G, Robson , M; Rosenbaum , M

member c1ties

LONG JUMP - Wh tle. G.

Snowden, G, Neal , G - 19'
21/a''

RUNNING EVENTS
IOO·YARO
DASH

Snowden,

G. Graham , G ;

Whtfe, G ,

Vanlnwagen, M ;

Whillatch, M - 10.4
120 HIGH HURDLES
Pearch , M - 17 4

120·YARD

Snowden,

OASH

G,

Fishe r ,

G.

Lowery, M - 23 8.
880·YARD RELAY - Won by
880·YARD RUN - Grymes,

- 2•08.5.
440 YARD DASH - Wam ·
sley, G: Lowery, M; Ohlinger,
M - 54 1
TWO MILE RUN - Wahl, G,
Couls, M, Poltng, G - 10 50 9
MILE RUN - Ferguson. G.
Groth, G. Robson. M - 4 57 6
180·LOW HURDLES Wh tie. G. Rtce, G: Van In
wagen, M -

23 1.

MILE RELAY -

Won by

GAHS tn 3: 45 I Runners were

Graham , F tsher, Ferguson and
Wamsley .

FINAL

SCORE -

102112 Me tgS 24 112

GAHS

ankle m the second game
against Virginia but bolUlced
back with 25 pmnts Monday
rught. And Melchionm, New
York's All..Star guard, had
missed all e~ght previous
games in the playoffs but
returned to action after his
broken fmger healed with 20
polnls Mondsy night.
V1rginia led, 117-116, w1th a
minute remamlng when Billy
Paultz tied the score with a
free throw. The Squires blew
four shots before Barry took a
long down court pass and put In
the winning basket. Jim
Eakins then was fouled in·
tentionally since the Nets were
still In a one-shot situation.
Eakins missed the shot
deliberately but Barry took
down the rebound and heaved
the ball high 'into the air as
time elapsed.
'
Rookie Julius Erving had 'n
points in- the first half for
Virginia but was held to only
four In the second half by Ollie
Taylor's tenacioliSdefense. "I
played Er,vlng especially
high," said Taylor. "I picked
him up at midcourt and leaned
on hhn. If he was going to hit, it
would have to be from the
outside."
The teams meet again in the
fourth galtle Wednesday night

Happiness is...
Having the man you love
tell you he lovn you wl1h

an ArtCarved engagement .
ring.

Our el~hl dlollnet

ArtCarved fashion
c:olle&lt;:tlone feature every
type ntttno imaginable,
tiCh IOIOW with a
diamond of the highest
quality.

Tom He1nsohn of Boslon and
AI Attics of the Warriors lied
for second place w1th three
votes followed by Gene Shue of
Baltumore w1th two and Lenny
Wilkens of Seattle with one
The Lakers, who are favored
to bea t the New York Kmck s m
tlie fmal round of the NBA
playoffs, have enJoyed one of
the most sensatiOnal seasons m
basketball history.
They set a 33-game wmning
streak from Oct. 31 to Jan . 9
which stands as the longest in
major pro team sport history.
There was no questwn of the
Laker supenon ty as .they were
behind at ha lftime only four
times durmg that streak and
won by an average margm of
16 pom ts.
When the NBA chose 1ts
Silver Anniversary team 1n
1970, Sharman was one of the 10
players selected. He proved his
concentration on the court by
hecommg the best free throw
shooter m the h1story of the
game, including one streak of
56 stra1ght free throws.
He brought this same dedicatiOn to the coaching ranks and
his secret of success ts very
simple-pla in , old hard
work .
''There are no secrets m this
game," Sharman cla1ms "A
player who IS in the best shape
possible is in a position to
function and reach maximum
efficiency . No other sport can
compare with basketball in the
importance of conditionin g,
outside of hoxmg."
Summing up his philosophy,
S.annan says, "I take the
game seriously, that's why I
demand so· much of my
players. You have to win
everything~llthe time."

with the fifth scheduled for
Hampton, Va., Saturday afternoon. '
Utah hit 73 per cent of its
field goal attempts In the first
quarter to take a 40-33lead and
surged to a 114-$ lead after
,three quarters. Billy Keller led
a last quarter Indiana rally
with five three'{!Oinl baskets
but II feU short.
Wise finished with 34 points
and Jones had 32 for the Stars
while Glen Combs added 20 and
Zelmo Beaty 17. Mel Daniels
led a balanced Indiana attack
with 29 points, Keller finished

I

.

PITTSBURGH (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates ope n a
thr ee game sen es tomght
aga1nst the Cincinnati Reds at
Three Rivers Stadmm .
Bob Johnson will start for the
Pirates aga mst the Reds ' J~rn
Merritt.
W1th Merritt, a lefthander,
gomg to tlie mound for Cmcinnall, P~rate Manager Bill VIrdon sa1d he would bench AI Oh·
ver and R1ch1e Hebner and
start Gene Clines m ce nterfie ld
and Jose Pagan at lh1rd base.

exprtllll your personality,

~Carved

JEWELRY

SAME DAY
- SERVICE
In At9- 0ut At5
Use Our Free Parking Lot

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd. Pomeroy

PRICES

Durocher
Sidelined

BUDGET

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.

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WITH TRADE

Monday 's Res ults

Lou isv ille 1 Penin sula 0
Rochester 5 Tidewater I
Charles ton 12 Syracuse 3
Richmond at Toledo, post

paned, cold.

with 24, Fred Lewis had 22 and
George McGinnis 20. Pacer
star Roger Browo scored only
nine points.
The sixth game Is scheduled
for Bloomington, Ind., Wedoes·
day night.

Do Your

FALSE TEETH

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Don't keep worrying about your

false teeth droppffll at the wrone:
time. A denture adhesive can he)p.
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PHONE IAC614) 294-6241

'

SHIRT
FINISHING

i$ the all$wer

- Adv.

v

COWMBUS PARCEL SERVI~ INC.
,,

V1rdon sa1d once the season
gets rollmg he would give Oh-

When a vacation is the questiol) •.•

Your Columbus supplier may be using
CPS regularly .
It not - perhaps you should insist they try
CPS on your next shipment (up to 200 lbs.).

GOESSLER'S

motwn ''

"It's souna now I proved that
all sprmg "
Merritt has a ilfettme 7·1 rec·
'
ver and Hebner a chance to ord against the Bucs
play every day agamst all
" I've had good success
aga inst the P~rates because
pllchers.
Oliver is off to a fast start they're a free-swingmg team
this season battmg a hot 34G and anyttme you have a free
Hebner ts havmg a slower start swmger he can be p1tched to,"
Merritt said. "He has some
lultmg .238.
It will be Merritt's hrst start holes When I have my control!
of the season for Cmcmnat1 ca n take advanta ge of his
wh1ch IS 2.0 and m last place m weakness ''
the Natwnal League West.
"I'd hke to be able to do well
and get mto the rolatwn," sa1d
Mern tt. "I would like to reestablish the attitude we had m

-~
remember hitting a homer in
By VITO STELLINO
extra mnlngs to wm a game."
UPI Sports Writer
Ken
Forsch matched
The Houston Astros moved
thm fences in th1s year for Lee Jenkms, allowmg hve hits for
May but the guy who took nine innings includmg Ron
advantage of the shorter target Santo 's two-run homer m the
Mondsy mght was John Ed- 6rst mmng. Santo 's homer to
center also probably wouldn't
wards.
Edwards, who had only one have been a homer last year
Jum Ray p1tched the last two
homer all last season, h1t a
!mer to rightccnter that mnmgs m rehef for the Astros
cleared th e new short right to gam the v1ctory as Chicago
f1eld fence for a homer off suffered 1ts sixth stra1ght loss
Ferguson Jenkins with one out Jenkins, shooting for his sixth
m the lith iruung. It gave tlie straight 20..victory season, 1s
992 -2171
surgmg Astros a 3-2 v1ctory now ()..2
125 E. Main St.
Pomeroy. 0 .
In the only other game
over the saggmg ChiCago Cubs
and a share of first place in tlie Monday rught. Texas outlasted
Cahforma, 6-4. The Detrmt at
NatiOnal League West.
"I co uldn 't tell1t was a home Milwaukee game was postrun when I hlt it," Edwards poned because of cold wea ther .
Texas completed a four said "Th1s just doesn't happen
to me I just wanted to make game sweep of 1ts first home
sure I tagged the bases. I can 't series ever by downing
ARE RIGHT!
California But the Rangers
don't seem to be capturmg the
I
interest of the fans and only
5,561 showed up at Arlington
Stad1um . By contract, 13,905
CHICAGO (UP!) -Chicago ca me to the Astrodome to see
... Witft
Cubs Manager Leo Durocher, the Astros.
FllltiSIIINGS
who has been s1ck since the
Califorma . committed three
baseball season began, ~nter ed errors to help pave the way for
from our
Wesley Memonal Hospital for 1ts fifth straight loss although
tests Monday after the Cubs all of the Texas runs were
team physician said he was officially earned. Toby Harrah
sufferin g from fatigue.
scored the first Texas run in
Durocher, who will be 66 in the fifth inning on a single by
July , checked mto the hospital pitcher Don Stanhouse and
after returmng to Chicago singled in two more m the sixth
,
Saturday and missing a week- after first baseman Jim Spenend senes in New York .
cer booted a potential double
"Manager Leo Durocher was play grounder by Joe LoVJtto.
FIIRNITURE
examined this morning and Larry B1ittner then smgled m
MIDDIErGRT, 0.
because of persistent fat1gue 1t the two decidmg runs m the
was decided to hospitalize seventh. The final run scored
him," Dr. Jacob Suker, tlie on a bases loaded walk by
Cubs' team phys1c1an said
reliever Uoyd Allen.
The club announced that
Coach Pete Re1ser will run tlie
Cubs until Durocher 's return .
Durocher missed the first
two games of the season and
then managed three games in
Thrifti·Cut
Thrifti·Cut
Pittsburgh last week. But he
missed the weekend series in
Rotary Mower 18"
Rotary Mower 20"
New York and d1d not travel to
Houston with the team. The
o3 H.P. l.aUBOO-Tecumseh engine
o3 H.P. Briggs &amp; StrAtton engine,
Cubs return to Chicago for a
recoil starter
olnsiant-action recoil starter
home stand agamst Cincinnati
oEngine throttle control
oCutting height adjustable, 1 to
that starts Friday.
3'14 inches
oSelf-lubricating wheel bearings
International Lea gue
oSelf-lubricating wheel bearings
•14 gsuge steel deck
Standings
By United Pres s International
oChrome-plated handle
• Chrome-plated handle
W L Pet GB
•Cutting height adjustment, 1 to
Char leston
5 1 833
Roches ter
6 3 .667 lh
3'1. inches
Richm ond
5 3 625 1
Tidewater
5 5 SOO 2

FOR NEXT DAY DELIVERY
FROM OOWMBUS

A- BOLDEN DAWN SET
8 - PASTOAALE

Although Ohver batted only
238 agamst left banders last
season, Virdon sa1d he did not
plan to platoon his two starters
against 50utlipaws for the rest
of tlic year
" I thmk both Oliver and Hebner can handle most lefthanders," VU'don sa1d. "There may
be a few that will cause them
trouble . . the kind who come
fr om almost a Sidearm

my arm lS sound/' he sa1d.

Amazing Astros Climb
Into Tie For Top Spot

HAVE YOU TRIED
COLUMBUS PARCEL?

Come in today and H lect
the one tttat beet

c:Gur!SI.

~

119'JU;

GAHS in I : 48 2. Runner s were
Ftsher , Nea l, Rtce and
Ferguson

5' ·6" .

Trip Squires
In ABA Playoffs

By United Press International
An eight-day medical
leave pa1d off for the New
York Nets Monday night.
The Nets dropped the first
two games of their American
Basketball Association
Eastern D1vis1on finals ser1es
to the Virginia Squires in
V1rgima. A conflict with an Ice
show at the Nassau Coliseum
then prevented the Nets from
playing for eight days and it
gave the club's wounded a
chance to heal.
Rick Barry, John Roche and
Bill Melchlonnl, all bothered by
Illness or injury, recovered
during the break and helped
the Nels to a 119-117 victory
over the Squires Monday night
as they renewed their series.
Willie Wise and Jimmy Jones
combined for 66 points to lead
the Utah Stars to a 139-130
victory over the Indiana
Pacers and a 3-2 lead in the
Western best-of~ven finals
Monday night.
Barry, weak from a throat
Infection early in the series,
scored 25 points, including the
deciding basket with eight
seconds left, Monday night to
spark the Nets. Roche, a rookie
whose scoring helped the Nets
upset Kentucky In the Eastern
semifinals, had a sprained

DALE

NE W YORK (U P!) - Bill
Sharman, on the verge of
becoming the first pro basketball coach to wm championshipS m two d1fferent leagues
m successive years, Tuesday
was named the Natio nal
Basketball Associatwn's Coach
of the Year.
The 45-·year-old coach, who
paced the Utah Stars to the
Amencan Basketball Assocwhon title last year and then
moved to the NBA's Los
Angeles Lakers, rece1ved 42
votes from a panel of three
writers in each of the 17

HIGH JUMP - Somerv il le,
G, Neal. G, FtSher . G, and
Whillalch, M. lted for lh trd -

M-M League to
Meet on Sunday Nets
The M·M Men's Slo-P1tch
Softball Leag ue will meet
Sunday, April 30, at 4 p.m. at
the Royal Crown garage m
Middleport when all managers
are asked to be present.
The 10-team league will
begin regular play Tuesday,
May 2. Five teams each from
Mason and Meigs County make
up the league. Mason County
teams are Foote Mineral Co.,
Jim 's Csmper Sales, Fruth
Pharma cy, K&amp;K Mob1le
Homes, and Randolph 's Union
76.
Meigs County teams are
Danville, Reedsville, Fanner's
Bank &amp; Savings Co.,
Meadowgreen Gardens, and
Royal Crown Bottling Co.

Punchless Reds

A na tive of Por tsmouth,
Bandy pla yed both baskethall
and baseball fur Ohw He
lettered three years as a
baseball th1rd baseman
Befure

" It seemed that when I
pitched there was conhdcncc ,"
he sa1d . "The team knew 1t
would get rull.'l and knew it
would win "
" I've proven I ca n win when

08-01 -202-4

firttfont
FAIRLAWN®
Rotary Mower 20"
o3 H.P. Bri1gs &amp; Stratton engine with
verti&lt;l81 pull starter--starts 25%
easier than recoilatartin1
o7-inch steel wheels ·
• Reinforoed steel deck
•Underdeck ba!Be
•Safer 5-position, fingertip height
adjustment, 1 to 3"h inches

New
1

�..

)

•
4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aprll25, 19'12

~~::;~~=~~~::~;;:WJ
Display
/

joins Arbor .fSsm::o. ~~·aw.l;:;m.C.=i=~=a: :=f(I·~WI'h:e·n»md~
· d .Ban·k Events
.D
. . '0,1/ an
'J
· .
·

ln. endonlog the mental healtll .levy 10 be presented
for approval by the voters on ruesday, May 2nd, the XI
Gamma.Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi has made public
the followlnl! resolution:
·
·
''Meatal Illness Is never easy to accept. AU ~
frequently people feel that there is a dlsgrace attached to ~
mental illness. But II is the most common of all dlseases, ~
with .more people hillpltall2ed because uf menial llllless ~
than all olhet dlsta"""
. combined! Early diagnosis and "~
treatmeotln the commanl!y Is oae of the most lmporlanl ~j
factors In the rehabilitation of the mentall_y Ul. Let's keep !ili
the m,cutal health propam gulng In Meigs County. Vote ::i
YES for mental health on May 2nd." · .
·
•:m:~:=::::::::~::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::-;:::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::X:?~:&gt;;;:;::-~p?t.

l

.Workshop on Corsages

:w
e.

An ed.ucalional display on the
upcoming Arbor Day Cen·
tennial and a novel poster
marking' Arbor Day and the
IOOth anniversary of the
Pomeroy National Bank made
by Mrs. Homer Parker, a
member of the Ru. tland
Friendly Gardeners, w•re on
'
display at the Pomeroy Bank
all of Ills! week.
Mrs. Parker also displayed a
modern interpretl
fl 1
ve
arrangement featuringoraa
.
twisted tree root, artichoke
buds a·nd large dried rubber
leaves in a tall bamboo
cylinder ceramic container .
The display included ari
article on the upcoming Arbor
Day Centennial, a book on Ohio
Tree Beauty, another on Ohio's
Tree Courtry, a color picture of
the Buckeye and information
on it lieing the official tree of
Oh'10, a pamphlet on planting
trees and shrubs, and an ar·

Tile Buckeye State.''
Mrs.' Barnhill appointed the
nominating committee of Mrs.
Clarence Headley, chairman ;
Mrs. Floyd Stout and Mrs. R.
V. Weatherman. Mrs. Harold
Massar ,
chairman
of
graduation decorating committee, reported.
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith was
awarded a blue ribbon for her
ticle, ' 1The Tree. Man's Best
floral arrangement. Roll call Friend."
was answered by naming short
The poster noted that both
cuts to spring housecleaning.
Mrs. Vera Van Meter of the the Pomeroy National Bank
Pomeroy Flower Shop, guest and Arbor Day are "100 years
speaker, conducted a workshop .old and growing."
A sketch of a tree
on tile making of corsages.
representing the Pomeroy
Following her demonstration,
National Bank "Money Tree"
CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs. everyone made one.
Mrs. Clarence Headley read had a long branch leading out
Walter Andrews of Escondido,
to a picture of the new Rutland
Calif. were here visiting the "Hinls for the Month."
"Branch
Bank," noting it was
relatives last weekend. Mrs. · Guests were Mrs. Bill Hit. the place to visit when out on a
Andrews is the former Lelia chie and . Mrs. Larry E. :•financial Hmb." The display
Millhone. The May meeting
Thomas.
1s bemg exh1b1ted th1s week at
They were Saturday over- will be held at the home of Mrs. the Rutland Branch.
·
night guests of Mrs. Georgia Glen Stout. The traveling prize
To further the Arbor Day
Thoma, Chester, who on was won by Mrs. Clarence theme, the Rutland Friendly.
Sunday entertained with a Headley and the door prize by Gardeners will be making
dinner in their honor. Other 'Mrs . Hobert Dorst.
of
flowering
Refreshments were served ' plan lings
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Leo
trees
in
Rutland.
In
crabapple
King of Columbus, and Mr. and by the ltostess to 13 members addition, members sold over
Mrs. Earl Knight, Suzan and and three guests .
100 trees to the public for
Kelly, Pomeroy.
planting on private property.
Calling in the afternoon were
RETURN HOME
The Pomeroy National Bank
Mrs. Guy Thoma, Terri and . Mr. and Mrs . Fielding donated spruce trees to them
Kevin, Gene Smith, Mr. and Hawkins have returned to for their Arbor Day plantings
Mrs. Ro:1 Thomas, Diane, Middleport after spending the to be done with both the garden
Helen, Bill, Danny and CarmAn winter at Inverness, Fla. therapy group of special
of Letart Falls, Mrs. Enroute home they stopped at education students at Rutland
WUhemina Thoma, Mr. and the Orlando Naval Training
Mrs. George Zeigler and Center to visit their grandson,
Roger, Route 31, P~meroy. Mr. Mark Vroman of Belpre, who
and Mrs. Andrews spent recently enlisted. Among those
Sunday night with Mrs . they visited In Florida were
A shower honoring · Miss
Wllhemlna Thoma before Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Zarnes of
Sandra
Trussell, bride-fleet of
leaving Monday for Chicago, Loughman, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ill., enroute to California.
Guy Russell, Leesburg, Fla. Richard Kerns, was held
recently at the Skate-A-Way
Roller Rink on Chester Road.
Gifts were placed on a table
featuring an open umbrella
decorated in white chiffon and
netting . A green and yellow
color scheme was carried out
in the refr.eshment table
decorations. Hostesses for the
shower were Mrs. Roberta
Ridenour, and Mrs . Sadie
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs.
James Stout was hostess for
the April meeting of the Rose
Garden Club of Tuppers Phi ins
highlighted by a workshop on
making corsages.
Mrs. John Arbaugh gave the
opening devotional readings.
The · business meeting was
conducted by the president,
Mrs. Carl Bamhlll, Mrs. Floyd
Stout l'ead Ute verse ol the
month, and Mrs. Charles Carr
presented the program, "Ohio,

Californians in
Chester Visiting

;

a"'r'll.':l .

I

5- Tile ll8lly Sentinel, Middle pol'\-Pomeroy, 0., April25, 19'12

....f',..·

Young Adults.Meet Rec~ntly
SYRACUSE ..., The Yourg
Adults Class of the Syracuse
Nazarene Church metrecently
in the parsonage basement.
Class president Janet
Jenk•'ns ca lled the m 1· g to
. ee m
order with the opening prayer
being 9ffered by Mrs. Bill
Rusche! Devot1'ons by M d
· Imbod
r.· an
Mrs Frank
ted
·
en conslS
of read1'ng severa I msp1rmg
· ··
verses from II Corinth'•ns,
Chapter 4 A
t ded - d
-,
.· n ex en
an
h hi
l
·
•g Y '" erestmg group
discussion followed. The
devotional
·00
·1 d
pen
was
c
w1'lh pra Yer bYBub Davlsose
..
After tab!
· e grace by Jurior

•

t

.ti

White, refreshments were
· served by Mrs. Ronnie Hubbard and Mrs. Bub Davis to·the
Rev. and Mrs. Larimore, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Moore, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Imboden, Mr. and
Mrs. Butch Armes, Mr. and '
Mrs. Bub Davis, Mrs. Ronnie
Hubbard, Mrs. Biz Rusche!,
Mrs . Keith Woods, 'Janel
Jenkins, Donna Koehler, and
Junior White.
The next meeting will be on
May 2 at 7:30p.m. All classes
mernber.s and guests are urged
to attend.

TUESDAY
THURSDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
WOMEN'S ASSN ., 7:30
El
AliXUiary Drew Webster Post Thursd_ay night, Middleport
ementary School and the 39 Tu-•·y· 7. 30 p.m. at post F'
· d
Merry Gardeners Junior
.,......
1rsl Umte Presbyterian
Garden Club.
home. Program, · Foreign Churd1. Film , "Any Milk
thuf h
relations with Dr. and Mrs. R. Today". Sewing to be
8o
t esegroupswillvisit R. Pickens showing slides of ded ' ed
F ores1 Acres p ar k an d For t Afr1'ca and program on
•cat . Devotions by Mrs .
M · 1· 1 t th tr
Marcus €hambers. Executive
e ees. Both ch1'ldren and youth. ·Hostesses committee· to serve.
felgs
th 0 1Pan
tt
0 ·
e ~ er groups are are Mrs. Olan Knapp and Mrs .
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
sponsore d bY th e Rutl an d Uoyd Wright.
·
Frl'endl G d
M'
.
l-ack 245, Thursday night, 7 ·
Y ar eners .
rs . RACINE Arnerl'can Lemon
William Willfor.d . is garden A . "'·~· Tuesd
..
p.n1. American Legion Hall
ux ...... ,
ay, 7:30 p.m. Parents o( cub scout asked t~
1
lterapy
chairman and Mrs. at post home. .
Larry Edwar""
~- ,.5 the JUmor
. .
EASTERN Atblet1'c Boosters attend.
·
1
MEET
THE Candidate Night
cub
advisor.
Tuesday
8
p.m.
at
high
sc
.
hooL
Ashipment uf dog ood t
. Thursday, 8 p.m. at Meigs Inn
·
w
rees Plans for basketball banquet
· expec ted 'bY the c1ub ·1or 011 April 29 will be completed. sponsored by Meigs County
•
1s
del'
t
'd
•·
h
h
Republican
Women's
Club.
The
, 1very o res• en .. w o ave Tickets to basketball d1'nner
or dere d them. Mrs. p arker may be purchased at Nelson's public is invited to attend.
1 b a1so was Drug Store.
COVERED DISH dinner musical numbers.
stated that th e cu
furms
· hed 1,000 pac kets of
Thursday
6 p.m. Loyal
FRIDAY
CHURCH WOMEN United of
BOSWORTH
Council 46
flower seeds b~·- the bank to Meigs County, planning session Women's Class Middleport
· con- for May Fellowship Day, 1:30 Church of Christ. Bring own Royal and Select Masters'
g·1ve away an d ·pan
1 1m
special meeting Friday, 7:30
·June tion Wl'lh
lh
·
·
elf c1eanup,· Tuesday, at the Enterprise table service.
pia nt-up• pam
· t-up program m
· United Methodist Church. Kay
T
MEIGS COUNTY Women's p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Rutland.
Women to attend.
Fe llowship Thursday, 7:30 Temple . Royal and select
The Rutland Frl'endly
p.m. at Dexter Church of master degrees to be conGardeners make and display
.
Gran•e
2609
Ch nst.
·
TuCHESTER
sda 8
All b
b
Dicky Wiley , Mid· ferred .
floral arrangements daily at , urgeed Y, attepn.md.·
mem ers dleport, will present several
ON
10
th e Rut1 an d 8 ra.nc h ba nk, as a
PAST
MATRONS
of
yeararourdproJecl.Mrs. Fred Pomeroy Eastern Stars
W1lhamson 1s lhls year's T d
1 the h
chairman of this project.
A~es a~ ate t ~m30e of Mrs.
The club will be sponsoring
onzo us r a : p.m.
clean-up week in cooperation JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
with the Rutland mayor and Aux1hary, Feeney · Bennett
courcil the week of May l-6, Post 128, 7p.~. Tuesday at the
with free trash pickups on May hall .. Plans wlil be made for
2-3. Mrs. Harold Wolfe and dlstncl meelmg.
Mrs. Larry Edwards are coWEDNESDAY
chairmen of this year's SCIP · ROYAL OAK Balon Classes
project.
Wednesday evening . InThey urge Rutland residents lermediate class 6:30 p.m.,
to be cleaning up trash and Corps practice 7:30p.m., team
putting it in sturdy receptacles practice 8:30p.m. Judy Riggs,
ready for pickup on these mstructor.
dates. They stress that this MIDDLEPORT Literary
service will be free and ask Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, at the
that residents do their part in home of Mrs. Thereon Johnson,
making Rutland a more at· Racme. Book ·on Victor Hugo
tractive place to live. They also by Mrs . James Titus .
request that aU buoiuess places Response, a Hugo character.
clean the store fronts and AMERICAN LEGION
windows. Homeowners are Auxiliary, Feeney • Bennett
asked to clean up all debris Post 128, 7:30 Wednesday, at
Just Stop In The Bank and Inform
from lawns and if any old. the hall.
buildings are unsightly they
WILDWOOD Garden Club
ask that these be painted or Wednesday, !0:30a.m. home of
Us of Your Age and Your
torn down.
Hilda Yeauger. Cook-out and ·I
nature tour.
WOMEN 'S Christian
Temperance
Union
of
Checking Account Will Be
Pomeroy, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the United Methodist Church.
Murphy, Mrs. Mildred Cald·
Service Charge Free.
POMEROY
·
Middleport
well, Mrs. Mary Grace
Cowdery, Mrs . Pauline Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy United Methbdisl
WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
Ridenour, Mrs. Jean Sum·
Church; Election of officers.
merfield, Mrs. Peg Kalbaugh,
OHIO VALLEY Commandry
Mrs. Kathryn Mora, Mrs. 24, Knight Templars, stated
Barbara Sargent, Mrs. Esther
concla ve, 7:30 p.m. Wed·
Ridenour and John, Mrs. Jean
nesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Trussell, Miss Peggy Trussell,
Temple. Potluck dinner at 6:30
-C.:~IHCINNATI
.
Miss Renee Trussell, Mrs. for Sir Knights, Ladies and
Ruth Frank, Mrs . Eloise
Connolly, Mrs. Sarah Caldwell , families .
THURSDAY
and Mrs. Marilynn Trussell .
TWIN-CITY Shrinettes, 7:30
Others presenting gifts to
MIDDLEPORT; OHIO
Thursday, Col. and Southern
Miss Trussell were Mrs . Ohio Electric Co. Plans will be
Member Federal Dfpcl!llllll4vrr:nce Corporatloo
Audrey McCoy, Mrs . .Betty made for attending spring
Gaul, Mrs. Stella Frank, Mrs.
ceremonial in Columbus May
Alice Nease, Dorothy Lim·
burger, Mrs. Sue Caldwell, 6.
Mrs. Doris Ewing, Mrs. Inez
Carson, Mrs. Mildred Frank,
and Mrs. Mary Carson.

lit

'P
r•
:·f.
'
t. '

~it

,

I'

'

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun.

--

Trussell. Cake, ice cream,

punch, nuts and mints were
served.
Guests were Mrs . Mary

VALUES

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDOI.EPOIIT, 0.

Rose, Miss Julie Rose, Mrs.

We Accept Federal Food Stumps
PHONE: 992·3480

WELKER'$ GRADE A

We talk to you
like a. penon.

•Corner Mill an!l Second Sts.

7

WMP0/1390
YOUR DIAL

r------------------~:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

" We fJeserve The Right To Limit Ouc nti lie s"

Frozen Food Buys!.

ICE MILK

LB.

BY SCOT PRIDE

USDA Choice
GAL

MEATS

Beginning April 21 There

Will Be No Service Charge
On Checking Accounts For
All Customers Age 65 Or Over

BIRDSEYE

79e

... ,. LUNCH LB
MEAl.........:

SUPERIORS
,•
'

.

.'

·-

QUEEN OF SCOT

BREADED SHRIMP
.~

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT .

IENERS.......~~·.5 9

.,1

' '

~~ . $2.99

69 ~

:.·: -:~ POLISH
LB.
.SAUSAGE ........... .

e
.•• , 0.'1

HOFFMAN HOUSE

C

_SLICED

LOGNA .................~~:. 59
$ OO
NECK BONES 5 1

DILL PICKLES

SUP.ERIORS PORK

Point Pleasant, W. VA.

·: BALLARDS

-

!~OZ.

l8

ANNOUNCES:

ARMOUR-SMOKED

12¢

from

@nation

No Artificial Sweeteners

9

$1

CANS

•APPLE SAOCE
eKIDNEY BEANS

BAG

The w~~':~~~~~~~'em

59~

5

PAPER TOWELS
JUMBO

SCOT LAD BACON ...... :::..........~:. 79~

Master Portrait

CANDY SPECIAL

Choc. Malted Milk Balls

ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN OUR STORE

APRIL 26th, 27th, 28th &amp; 29th

201

WED., THURS., ·FRI. &amp;SAT.

. COI.ON fJt'JIITIWf
·11-llfiWIJ/IMM:K/'11 (l(l1tJJI

--'"':'.-ACTUAL SIZE---...,.

Artrlllt Size A~ilable from Wallets to 30r40
MJNIIJIID J41MIIII/6AY/. J(~fllYIIi.l tJ/fld ~S66Z

~~~fotrl~'

oiNIIIJMIIIIW!lPt/fIf'lflJ/11/KT
•/lflMl j/lllf!
•ttiiiT I lfl..f/IIJ/(! ·Jill.FA/IfflY

COUNT

The ideal one-phone home.

gpSQI !liN CHANGE

IJ 01 &amp;01/R.!l

GIIAIIANTfiP

~

W

It's g~t just one room. So, naturally it needs just one
phone.
Is that how you live? The ·answer is probably no and
yes.
No. You don't live in one room.
Yes. You probably live with one phone .'
That m.eans you're rt!nning to answeJ a lot of calls.
And m1ss1ng many. And also missing the privacy a
bedroom or den extension gives (there's little private
conversation possible in the one-phone home).
Why put up with these inconveniences any lon ger?

am
&amp;LIERAL TE1.E11H011E

KING SIZE

CHEER
Willi
COUPON
•

'"'

,,

•

'i

'

CONTAINER

·-----·-----------,

'

99
•

QT.69.
. e

SPRAY
22 oz.
STARCH ........... ~.~. . .

'

\I

$1.10

I
I
I
I
I

I

r

TOMATOES
2 LB.
ET

HI-HO

49e

CR .
REG.
ACKERS ...... }~'.......
CIRCUS
.

MR. BEE

POTATO CHIPS
Reg. 59'
ONLY

·4

'100

EASY MONDAY

WHO.PPERS

IA't'.

$100

·-----------------------·
SCOT LAD

ROLLS

P---------------

CANS

.

.

C

LB.

REG.

LARGE UNCLASSIFIED

PEANUTS..........~! ...
EDON

TOI.LET
. 12 . $
TISSUES •••••••••••••••••••••••
ROW ·

00

3

..

r-· ....

,

ePEAS
•GREEN BEANS

DOG CHOW
25 LB.
$· 69

Slender Sp7e~dahles

1

•

FRISK IE

REG. 5 for 11.00

ONLY

.

~p..

.a

·~-: -·.~-···-

• YELLOW CORN

CAT FOOD

LB

...

1·,!

SPECIALS

29C

FRISK IE

49C
PICNIC HAMS ..........:.
. . CHOPPED
SIRLOIN ........................~·.. 89C
C
FARM SAUSAGE .............. :..79
·
·PORK CHOPS .. ~~~..~~.~·...........~~:.~ 1°
SUPERIORS
· ·

18 oz.
CAN

'

SCOT LAD

ALPO
DOG FOOD

MARK V SPECIAL

ROUND CHUCK}~:.89C
'

49e

QT.

LB.

Dorothy Kerns, Mrs. Gaynell
Davis, Mrs. Carolyn Markley,
Mrs . Bonnie Brooks, Miss
Rosetta Hess, Mrs. Rosemary
Keller, Mrs. Marcia Keller,
CIRCLE TO MEET
Mrs. Margaret Tuttle, Mrs.
The
Middleport Community
Mary Holter, Mrs . Murl Ours,
Prayer
Circle will meet
Mrs. Ora Hill, Mrs. Etta Mae
Hill, Mrs. Janice Ritchie, Mrs. Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m.
Wanda Wolfe, Mrs. Esther 1\t the home of Mrs. L. W.
Mays, Mrs. Kathryn Windon , McComas, 341 Main St.,
Mrs. Rubal Caldwell, Mrs . Ann Middleport. All interested
Summerfield, Mrs. Sina Mae persons are invited to attend.

9 oz.$
CANS

AWAKE t

SUPERIORS ASSORTED

lllbens l'alional

TO INTIOPVCE THEIH COLOR ARTI!TAY
WE Oil/A /-1/r/tf LIVING

!I

FOOD

•

A MESSAGE TO ALL
SEN lOR CITIZENS

11 A.M. TO 7 P.M.

'MIQ.,DLEPO RT, 0.

GET TOP VA LUES

hickens

Bride-Elect Honored

"IT'S TRUE"-

(give us ·tf1e value fest)

EGGS
OOL$100

1\
I'

�..

)

•
4- The Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Aprll25, 19'12

~~::;~~=~~~::~;;:WJ
Display
/

joins Arbor .fSsm::o. ~~·aw.l;:;m.C.=i=~=a: :=f(I·~WI'h:e·n»md~
· d .Ban·k Events
.D
. . '0,1/ an
'J
· .
·

ln. endonlog the mental healtll .levy 10 be presented
for approval by the voters on ruesday, May 2nd, the XI
Gamma.Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi has made public
the followlnl! resolution:
·
·
''Meatal Illness Is never easy to accept. AU ~
frequently people feel that there is a dlsgrace attached to ~
mental illness. But II is the most common of all dlseases, ~
with .more people hillpltall2ed because uf menial llllless ~
than all olhet dlsta"""
. combined! Early diagnosis and "~
treatmeotln the commanl!y Is oae of the most lmporlanl ~j
factors In the rehabilitation of the mentall_y Ul. Let's keep !ili
the m,cutal health propam gulng In Meigs County. Vote ::i
YES for mental health on May 2nd." · .
·
•:m:~:=::::::::~::::::::::::::~:::::~:::::-;:::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::X:?~:&gt;;;:;::-~p?t.

l

.Workshop on Corsages

:w
e.

An ed.ucalional display on the
upcoming Arbor Day Cen·
tennial and a novel poster
marking' Arbor Day and the
IOOth anniversary of the
Pomeroy National Bank made
by Mrs. Homer Parker, a
member of the Ru. tland
Friendly Gardeners, w•re on
'
display at the Pomeroy Bank
all of Ills! week.
Mrs. Parker also displayed a
modern interpretl
fl 1
ve
arrangement featuringoraa
.
twisted tree root, artichoke
buds a·nd large dried rubber
leaves in a tall bamboo
cylinder ceramic container .
The display included ari
article on the upcoming Arbor
Day Centennial, a book on Ohio
Tree Beauty, another on Ohio's
Tree Courtry, a color picture of
the Buckeye and information
on it lieing the official tree of
Oh'10, a pamphlet on planting
trees and shrubs, and an ar·

Tile Buckeye State.''
Mrs.' Barnhill appointed the
nominating committee of Mrs.
Clarence Headley, chairman ;
Mrs. Floyd Stout and Mrs. R.
V. Weatherman. Mrs. Harold
Massar ,
chairman
of
graduation decorating committee, reported.
Mrs. Kenneth Griffith was
awarded a blue ribbon for her
ticle, ' 1The Tree. Man's Best
floral arrangement. Roll call Friend."
was answered by naming short
The poster noted that both
cuts to spring housecleaning.
Mrs. Vera Van Meter of the the Pomeroy National Bank
Pomeroy Flower Shop, guest and Arbor Day are "100 years
speaker, conducted a workshop .old and growing."
A sketch of a tree
on tile making of corsages.
representing the Pomeroy
Following her demonstration,
National Bank "Money Tree"
CHESTER - Mr. and Mrs. everyone made one.
Mrs. Clarence Headley read had a long branch leading out
Walter Andrews of Escondido,
to a picture of the new Rutland
Calif. were here visiting the "Hinls for the Month."
"Branch
Bank," noting it was
relatives last weekend. Mrs. · Guests were Mrs. Bill Hit. the place to visit when out on a
Andrews is the former Lelia chie and . Mrs. Larry E. :•financial Hmb." The display
Millhone. The May meeting
Thomas.
1s bemg exh1b1ted th1s week at
They were Saturday over- will be held at the home of Mrs. the Rutland Branch.
·
night guests of Mrs. Georgia Glen Stout. The traveling prize
To further the Arbor Day
Thoma, Chester, who on was won by Mrs. Clarence theme, the Rutland Friendly.
Sunday entertained with a Headley and the door prize by Gardeners will be making
dinner in their honor. Other 'Mrs . Hobert Dorst.
of
flowering
Refreshments were served ' plan lings
guests were Mr. and Mrs. Leo
trees
in
Rutland.
In
crabapple
King of Columbus, and Mr. and by the ltostess to 13 members addition, members sold over
Mrs. Earl Knight, Suzan and and three guests .
100 trees to the public for
Kelly, Pomeroy.
planting on private property.
Calling in the afternoon were
RETURN HOME
The Pomeroy National Bank
Mrs. Guy Thoma, Terri and . Mr. and Mrs . Fielding donated spruce trees to them
Kevin, Gene Smith, Mr. and Hawkins have returned to for their Arbor Day plantings
Mrs. Ro:1 Thomas, Diane, Middleport after spending the to be done with both the garden
Helen, Bill, Danny and CarmAn winter at Inverness, Fla. therapy group of special
of Letart Falls, Mrs. Enroute home they stopped at education students at Rutland
WUhemina Thoma, Mr. and the Orlando Naval Training
Mrs. George Zeigler and Center to visit their grandson,
Roger, Route 31, P~meroy. Mr. Mark Vroman of Belpre, who
and Mrs. Andrews spent recently enlisted. Among those
Sunday night with Mrs . they visited In Florida were
A shower honoring · Miss
Wllhemlna Thoma before Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Zarnes of
Sandra
Trussell, bride-fleet of
leaving Monday for Chicago, Loughman, and Mr. and Mrs.
Ill., enroute to California.
Guy Russell, Leesburg, Fla. Richard Kerns, was held
recently at the Skate-A-Way
Roller Rink on Chester Road.
Gifts were placed on a table
featuring an open umbrella
decorated in white chiffon and
netting . A green and yellow
color scheme was carried out
in the refr.eshment table
decorations. Hostesses for the
shower were Mrs. Roberta
Ridenour, and Mrs . Sadie
TUPPERS PLAINS - Mrs.
James Stout was hostess for
the April meeting of the Rose
Garden Club of Tuppers Phi ins
highlighted by a workshop on
making corsages.
Mrs. John Arbaugh gave the
opening devotional readings.
The · business meeting was
conducted by the president,
Mrs. Carl Bamhlll, Mrs. Floyd
Stout l'ead Ute verse ol the
month, and Mrs. Charles Carr
presented the program, "Ohio,

Californians in
Chester Visiting

;

a"'r'll.':l .

I

5- Tile ll8lly Sentinel, Middle pol'\-Pomeroy, 0., April25, 19'12

....f',..·

Young Adults.Meet Rec~ntly
SYRACUSE ..., The Yourg
Adults Class of the Syracuse
Nazarene Church metrecently
in the parsonage basement.
Class president Janet
Jenk•'ns ca lled the m 1· g to
. ee m
order with the opening prayer
being 9ffered by Mrs. Bill
Rusche! Devot1'ons by M d
· Imbod
r.· an
Mrs Frank
ted
·
en conslS
of read1'ng severa I msp1rmg
· ··
verses from II Corinth'•ns,
Chapter 4 A
t ded - d
-,
.· n ex en
an
h hi
l
·
•g Y '" erestmg group
discussion followed. The
devotional
·00
·1 d
pen
was
c
w1'lh pra Yer bYBub Davlsose
..
After tab!
· e grace by Jurior

•

t

.ti

White, refreshments were
· served by Mrs. Ronnie Hubbard and Mrs. Bub Davis to·the
Rev. and Mrs. Larimore, Mr.
and Mrs. Bob Moore, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Imboden, Mr. and
Mrs. Butch Armes, Mr. and '
Mrs. Bub Davis, Mrs. Ronnie
Hubbard, Mrs. Biz Rusche!,
Mrs . Keith Woods, 'Janel
Jenkins, Donna Koehler, and
Junior White.
The next meeting will be on
May 2 at 7:30p.m. All classes
mernber.s and guests are urged
to attend.

TUESDAY
THURSDAY
AMERICAN LEGION
WOMEN'S ASSN ., 7:30
El
AliXUiary Drew Webster Post Thursd_ay night, Middleport
ementary School and the 39 Tu-•·y· 7. 30 p.m. at post F'
· d
Merry Gardeners Junior
.,......
1rsl Umte Presbyterian
Garden Club.
home. Program, · Foreign Churd1. Film , "Any Milk
thuf h
relations with Dr. and Mrs. R. Today". Sewing to be
8o
t esegroupswillvisit R. Pickens showing slides of ded ' ed
F ores1 Acres p ar k an d For t Afr1'ca and program on
•cat . Devotions by Mrs .
M · 1· 1 t th tr
Marcus €hambers. Executive
e ees. Both ch1'ldren and youth. ·Hostesses committee· to serve.
felgs
th 0 1Pan
tt
0 ·
e ~ er groups are are Mrs. Olan Knapp and Mrs .
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
sponsore d bY th e Rutl an d Uoyd Wright.
·
Frl'endl G d
M'
.
l-ack 245, Thursday night, 7 ·
Y ar eners .
rs . RACINE Arnerl'can Lemon
William Willfor.d . is garden A . "'·~· Tuesd
..
p.n1. American Legion Hall
ux ...... ,
ay, 7:30 p.m. Parents o( cub scout asked t~
1
lterapy
chairman and Mrs. at post home. .
Larry Edwar""
~- ,.5 the JUmor
. .
EASTERN Atblet1'c Boosters attend.
·
1
MEET
THE Candidate Night
cub
advisor.
Tuesday
8
p.m.
at
high
sc
.
hooL
Ashipment uf dog ood t
. Thursday, 8 p.m. at Meigs Inn
·
w
rees Plans for basketball banquet
· expec ted 'bY the c1ub ·1or 011 April 29 will be completed. sponsored by Meigs County
•
1s
del'
t
'd
•·
h
h
Republican
Women's
Club.
The
, 1very o res• en .. w o ave Tickets to basketball d1'nner
or dere d them. Mrs. p arker may be purchased at Nelson's public is invited to attend.
1 b a1so was Drug Store.
COVERED DISH dinner musical numbers.
stated that th e cu
furms
· hed 1,000 pac kets of
Thursday
6 p.m. Loyal
FRIDAY
CHURCH WOMEN United of
BOSWORTH
Council 46
flower seeds b~·- the bank to Meigs County, planning session Women's Class Middleport
· con- for May Fellowship Day, 1:30 Church of Christ. Bring own Royal and Select Masters'
g·1ve away an d ·pan
1 1m
special meeting Friday, 7:30
·June tion Wl'lh
lh
·
·
elf c1eanup,· Tuesday, at the Enterprise table service.
pia nt-up• pam
· t-up program m
· United Methodist Church. Kay
T
MEIGS COUNTY Women's p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Rutland.
Women to attend.
Fe llowship Thursday, 7:30 Temple . Royal and select
The Rutland Frl'endly
p.m. at Dexter Church of master degrees to be conGardeners make and display
.
Gran•e
2609
Ch nst.
·
TuCHESTER
sda 8
All b
b
Dicky Wiley , Mid· ferred .
floral arrangements daily at , urgeed Y, attepn.md.·
mem ers dleport, will present several
ON
10
th e Rut1 an d 8 ra.nc h ba nk, as a
PAST
MATRONS
of
yeararourdproJecl.Mrs. Fred Pomeroy Eastern Stars
W1lhamson 1s lhls year's T d
1 the h
chairman of this project.
A~es a~ ate t ~m30e of Mrs.
The club will be sponsoring
onzo us r a : p.m.
clean-up week in cooperation JUNIOR AMERICAN Legion
with the Rutland mayor and Aux1hary, Feeney · Bennett
courcil the week of May l-6, Post 128, 7p.~. Tuesday at the
with free trash pickups on May hall .. Plans wlil be made for
2-3. Mrs. Harold Wolfe and dlstncl meelmg.
Mrs. Larry Edwards are coWEDNESDAY
chairmen of this year's SCIP · ROYAL OAK Balon Classes
project.
Wednesday evening . InThey urge Rutland residents lermediate class 6:30 p.m.,
to be cleaning up trash and Corps practice 7:30p.m., team
putting it in sturdy receptacles practice 8:30p.m. Judy Riggs,
ready for pickup on these mstructor.
dates. They stress that this MIDDLEPORT Literary
service will be free and ask Club, 2 p.m. Wednesday, at the
that residents do their part in home of Mrs. Thereon Johnson,
making Rutland a more at· Racme. Book ·on Victor Hugo
tractive place to live. They also by Mrs . James Titus .
request that aU buoiuess places Response, a Hugo character.
clean the store fronts and AMERICAN LEGION
windows. Homeowners are Auxiliary, Feeney • Bennett
asked to clean up all debris Post 128, 7:30 Wednesday, at
Just Stop In The Bank and Inform
from lawns and if any old. the hall.
buildings are unsightly they
WILDWOOD Garden Club
ask that these be painted or Wednesday, !0:30a.m. home of
Us of Your Age and Your
torn down.
Hilda Yeauger. Cook-out and ·I
nature tour.
WOMEN 'S Christian
Temperance
Union
of
Checking Account Will Be
Pomeroy, 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the United Methodist Church.
Murphy, Mrs. Mildred Cald·
Service Charge Free.
POMEROY
·
Middleport
well, Mrs. Mary Grace
Cowdery, Mrs . Pauline Lions Club, Wednesday noon,
Pomeroy United Methbdisl
WHEN YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
Ridenour, Mrs. Jean Sum·
Church; Election of officers.
merfield, Mrs. Peg Kalbaugh,
OHIO VALLEY Commandry
Mrs. Kathryn Mora, Mrs. 24, Knight Templars, stated
Barbara Sargent, Mrs. Esther
concla ve, 7:30 p.m. Wed·
Ridenour and John, Mrs. Jean
nesday, Pomeroy Masonic
Trussell, Miss Peggy Trussell,
Temple. Potluck dinner at 6:30
-C.:~IHCINNATI
.
Miss Renee Trussell, Mrs. for Sir Knights, Ladies and
Ruth Frank, Mrs . Eloise
Connolly, Mrs. Sarah Caldwell , families .
THURSDAY
and Mrs. Marilynn Trussell .
TWIN-CITY Shrinettes, 7:30
Others presenting gifts to
MIDDLEPORT; OHIO
Thursday, Col. and Southern
Miss Trussell were Mrs . Ohio Electric Co. Plans will be
Member Federal Dfpcl!llllll4vrr:nce Corporatloo
Audrey McCoy, Mrs . .Betty made for attending spring
Gaul, Mrs. Stella Frank, Mrs.
ceremonial in Columbus May
Alice Nease, Dorothy Lim·
burger, Mrs. Sue Caldwell, 6.
Mrs. Doris Ewing, Mrs. Inez
Carson, Mrs. Mildred Frank,
and Mrs. Mary Carson.

lit

'P
r•
:·f.
'
t. '

~it

,

I'

'

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 • Sun.

--

Trussell. Cake, ice cream,

punch, nuts and mints were
served.
Guests were Mrs . Mary

VALUES

BAKER

FURNITURE
MIDOI.EPOIIT, 0.

Rose, Miss Julie Rose, Mrs.

We Accept Federal Food Stumps
PHONE: 992·3480

WELKER'$ GRADE A

We talk to you
like a. penon.

•Corner Mill an!l Second Sts.

7

WMP0/1390
YOUR DIAL

r------------------~:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.

" We fJeserve The Right To Limit Ouc nti lie s"

Frozen Food Buys!.

ICE MILK

LB.

BY SCOT PRIDE

USDA Choice
GAL

MEATS

Beginning April 21 There

Will Be No Service Charge
On Checking Accounts For
All Customers Age 65 Or Over

BIRDSEYE

79e

... ,. LUNCH LB
MEAl.........:

SUPERIORS
,•
'

.

.'

·-

QUEEN OF SCOT

BREADED SHRIMP
.~

SUPERIORS ALL MEAT .

IENERS.......~~·.5 9

.,1

' '

~~ . $2.99

69 ~

:.·: -:~ POLISH
LB.
.SAUSAGE ........... .

e
.•• , 0.'1

HOFFMAN HOUSE

C

_SLICED

LOGNA .................~~:. 59
$ OO
NECK BONES 5 1

DILL PICKLES

SUP.ERIORS PORK

Point Pleasant, W. VA.

·: BALLARDS

-

!~OZ.

l8

ANNOUNCES:

ARMOUR-SMOKED

12¢

from

@nation

No Artificial Sweeteners

9

$1

CANS

•APPLE SAOCE
eKIDNEY BEANS

BAG

The w~~':~~~~~~~'em

59~

5

PAPER TOWELS
JUMBO

SCOT LAD BACON ...... :::..........~:. 79~

Master Portrait

CANDY SPECIAL

Choc. Malted Milk Balls

ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN OUR STORE

APRIL 26th, 27th, 28th &amp; 29th

201

WED., THURS., ·FRI. &amp;SAT.

. COI.ON fJt'JIITIWf
·11-llfiWIJ/IMM:K/'11 (l(l1tJJI

--'"':'.-ACTUAL SIZE---...,.

Artrlllt Size A~ilable from Wallets to 30r40
MJNIIJIID J41MIIII/6AY/. J(~fllYIIi.l tJ/fld ~S66Z

~~~fotrl~'

oiNIIIJMIIIIW!lPt/fIf'lflJ/11/KT
•/lflMl j/lllf!
•ttiiiT I lfl..f/IIJ/(! ·Jill.FA/IfflY

COUNT

The ideal one-phone home.

gpSQI !liN CHANGE

IJ 01 &amp;01/R.!l

GIIAIIANTfiP

~

W

It's g~t just one room. So, naturally it needs just one
phone.
Is that how you live? The ·answer is probably no and
yes.
No. You don't live in one room.
Yes. You probably live with one phone .'
That m.eans you're rt!nning to answeJ a lot of calls.
And m1ss1ng many. And also missing the privacy a
bedroom or den extension gives (there's little private
conversation possible in the one-phone home).
Why put up with these inconveniences any lon ger?

am
&amp;LIERAL TE1.E11H011E

KING SIZE

CHEER
Willi
COUPON
•

'"'

,,

•

'i

'

CONTAINER

·-----·-----------,

'

99
•

QT.69.
. e

SPRAY
22 oz.
STARCH ........... ~.~. . .

'

\I

$1.10

I
I
I
I
I

I

r

TOMATOES
2 LB.
ET

HI-HO

49e

CR .
REG.
ACKERS ...... }~'.......
CIRCUS
.

MR. BEE

POTATO CHIPS
Reg. 59'
ONLY

·4

'100

EASY MONDAY

WHO.PPERS

IA't'.

$100

·-----------------------·
SCOT LAD

ROLLS

P---------------

CANS

.

.

C

LB.

REG.

LARGE UNCLASSIFIED

PEANUTS..........~! ...
EDON

TOI.LET
. 12 . $
TISSUES •••••••••••••••••••••••
ROW ·

00

3

..

r-· ....

,

ePEAS
•GREEN BEANS

DOG CHOW
25 LB.
$· 69

Slender Sp7e~dahles

1

•

FRISK IE

REG. 5 for 11.00

ONLY

.

~p..

.a

·~-: -·.~-···-

• YELLOW CORN

CAT FOOD

LB

...

1·,!

SPECIALS

29C

FRISK IE

49C
PICNIC HAMS ..........:.
. . CHOPPED
SIRLOIN ........................~·.. 89C
C
FARM SAUSAGE .............. :..79
·
·PORK CHOPS .. ~~~..~~.~·...........~~:.~ 1°
SUPERIORS
· ·

18 oz.
CAN

'

SCOT LAD

ALPO
DOG FOOD

MARK V SPECIAL

ROUND CHUCK}~:.89C
'

49e

QT.

LB.

Dorothy Kerns, Mrs. Gaynell
Davis, Mrs. Carolyn Markley,
Mrs . Bonnie Brooks, Miss
Rosetta Hess, Mrs. Rosemary
Keller, Mrs. Marcia Keller,
CIRCLE TO MEET
Mrs. Margaret Tuttle, Mrs.
The
Middleport Community
Mary Holter, Mrs . Murl Ours,
Prayer
Circle will meet
Mrs. Ora Hill, Mrs. Etta Mae
Hill, Mrs. Janice Ritchie, Mrs. Tuesday evening at 7:30 p.m.
Wanda Wolfe, Mrs. Esther 1\t the home of Mrs. L. W.
Mays, Mrs. Kathryn Windon , McComas, 341 Main St.,
Mrs. Rubal Caldwell, Mrs . Ann Middleport. All interested
Summerfield, Mrs. Sina Mae persons are invited to attend.

9 oz.$
CANS

AWAKE t

SUPERIORS ASSORTED

lllbens l'alional

TO INTIOPVCE THEIH COLOR ARTI!TAY
WE Oil/A /-1/r/tf LIVING

!I

FOOD

•

A MESSAGE TO ALL
SEN lOR CITIZENS

11 A.M. TO 7 P.M.

'MIQ.,DLEPO RT, 0.

GET TOP VA LUES

hickens

Bride-Elect Honored

"IT'S TRUE"-

(give us ·tf1e value fest)

EGGS
OOL$100

1\
I'

�" ' ( ' 1 11

/J

. " ..

t

•

' 11 ( / / J

•
· -Tbe DlllJ 81Mi11ei,Mllldleport-l'mleloy,

o.. .April ri,lf'/2

HOW'S 'i9RE
MAW GITTIN'
ALONG THESE
DA'IS. MIZ
LEDBETTER?

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
••

WANT /IDA

Auto Sales

INFORMATION

For Sale
For Sale
1966 HONDA 150, very good 2 STEREO car fape players
with speakers and wiring.
condition . Just overhauled.
Phone 992·3992.
Phone 985·3926.
4-2C·61C

DIADLINIS

5 P.M. Ooy Before Publication.

Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
Canc•ll•tlon - .Corrections
Will be ecctPted untll9 1.m . tor
Dey of PUblication
RIGULI.TIONS

The Publisher reserves the ·

right to edit or reject any ads

deemed

objectional.

The

PUblisher will not be responsible

tor more than . one Incorrect
Insertion .

RATES

@)
.

.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Z SIGIIS
OF

IUALin

1970CHEYROLET IMPALA
· 52495
One local owner, black finish. red vinyl Inferior, like new
"w ·w tires, turbo hydramatlc, power steering, radio &amp; all

For Want Ad Service

5 cents per Wor'd onf Insertion

the e~tras . A beauty to ~e.

cents per word
consecutive lnurllons.

1970 FORD GALAX IE 500
S20f5
H.T. Coupe, local owned, beautiful while fjnlsh with black

Mlnlm~o~m

CharQe 75c

12

ttlree

18 ctnts per wOrd six con secutive Insertions.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Ids and ads paid wllhln 10 days .

CARD OF THANKS

I OBITUARY
$1.50 for SO word m inimum ,
Each addlllon•l word 2c .
·

BLIND ADS

Addit ional

25c

Advertisement .

C~arge

per

OFFICE HOURS
8:30 e.m. to 5:00 p.m. Oelly,

1: 30 a.m .
S.turdav.

lo

12 :00

WILSON -Sam Snead Golf
Clubs, 4 Iron•. putter, 2
woods, covers, bag, balls. S65;
phone 992·54611.
4·23·)01p

Noon

-

vinyl top, V·8 engine, power steering &amp; brakes, radio, new
w-w tires.
.

1969CHEYROLET
$2495
Kingwood Estate Station Wagon, trade-In by one of our
most careful owners. Green finish. green vinyl interior,

luggage rack a. air deflector, factory air conditioning, V·8
engine, power steering &amp; brakM. radio, good -w-w
tires. Looking tor something nice for a fam! l_y1

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 I'.M.
1'P'!I!ROY, OHIO

c'

'

COLONIAL Maple Stereo-radio
combination, AM. FM radio,
four' speakers. 4 speed In·

.&amp;Remodeling

Real EState For Sa I~

Lei·US·Oo·Over·Your
BathrOQm or Kitchen
Insured-Bu.! best of all
"WE'RE HONEST
PI\. 992·7601 '· Pomeroy, Ohio

.

'

' CAMPUS CLATI'ER
M~

Specializing In
Small Businesses

FII.IENt&gt; SHARKEY

RI!ALLY DIGS

'IOU~

W~'l

NOT '
TAKE HIM

FAMOUS GEOR$1A

SOME

PEAC~ES

l

304 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992.3795
or Mason 773.5535

combination, dual volume

control, 4 speaker, 4 speed
changer, separate controls.
Balance $63 .59. Use our
budge! terms. Call 992·7085.
4·19·6tc
gu~ranteed appliances. used

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; OONSTRUCTION

teiate
VERA EBLEN

Con~l ,,

ff2·3020
160 CoalS!.
Middleport
MIDDLEPORT
7 rooms. bath, P-artial
basement. 2 nice porches, 2
car garage, located on VIne
Street. On lot 100x190 &amp; high
above streel level. $6,000.

On Your Home
. 0n1v

Call 992·3523
For Appointment
· Fully insured far your
protection.

KITCHEN
and

.---------------

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.· Broker

------

trucks with our driver In-

SHOWALTER'S Wet Pel Shop,
Chester, Ohio, Phone985·3356. COME and see us .
Tropical fish and supplies.
beautiful new homes, 1!2 mile
3·26.Jiltp
North of Eastern High School
on
St. Rt. 7. Both homes have
HOME LITE C·51 Chain Saw S100; good condition; phone · 4 bedrooms, bath and a half,
. built In kllchens and utility
247·2547 after 6 p.m.
rooms ; wall to wall carpet
4-25·31c
will be Installed soon. One
- ' - - - -- - - - - house has a large family room
WHITE'S Metal Detectors at
and a den. Both have a
the Gold Nugget Shop ,
garage. Gel um while !hey
Albany , Ohio, cadillac of
las!. Call Sherman Sum.
locators .
merlield
965·3596.
4·25·3fp
4·14-tfc
METAL porc!&gt;. gllder, excellenl -=-:-::------FARM. 160acres, dairy or beef;
condition, p~one 992·3442.
large bllnk barn , 27 stanchion,
4·25-4tc
milk house equipped, 2 silos:
all outside buildings; 2 ponds;
NEW and used shoes, men's
hard surface road; see
used work &lt;lathes, n~w
anytime. 2 miles N. of Rf . 7 on
miner's boot• - $12.95 o pr .,
Sumner Rd .. Co. Rd. 36, 11
Bailey's Bargain Store,
miles
NE of Pomeroy, M. v.
Upper Bu.s lness ~lock,
Fryar.
Mlddleporl.
4·25·31p
- - . , . - - - - - -•·..::25-6tp
..:.... 6 room house, bath;
SET ·oF air shocks, plus .ex· -RACINE
utility
room, garage, $10,000;
tensions to fll med .·slze GM
phone
949·4195.
cars for ~; phone Larry
·
3·31·tfc
· Lost
Hollon 949-4989.
4·25, IOip 2 LARGE lots, 6 rooms, bath,
A lhoueht lor today: Amerl· KEY RING with keys,
garage, cellar $11,500; Maggie
can poet Ralpll Waido Emerson someflme Friday. if found FRESHeggs,25(adozen. Bring
Whittington, Depot St.•
~"!'f'lners. Phone 992·7476.
Rufland, Ohio.
llld, "E.., -~ hu ita call 992·5919,
. 4-23·3tc
4-23•JIC
...., no.,. evil ita good... .

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

SON

Complete line of office
equipment, furniture &amp;
supplies. Typewriter a.
Adding Machine Repair .

CONST.
"Everything In Home
Malntenance 1'

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

MEIGS, W.VA. 25260
MEIGS 992.7151
MASON 173-5634

'I•

·---------.1

·

3. BR
HOME

ON YOUR LOT
I car garage, brick · front,

PHONE 675-3628
424 Main Sl.

Pl. Pleasant

From the largest
Bulldozer ·Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Speciolisf

Real Estate For Sale
RACINE - 10 room hous. ,
bath, basement, garage, two
lois. Phone 949·4313.
4·5-Jiltp

Free Estimate

ON
CENTRAL HEATING

HOUSE . Phone 9'12-6103.
4·19·12tc

OR
AIR

OONDITIONING

. B&amp;W HEATiNG 00.
For Appointment ·
Phone 9_49-2803

HIS-&amp;uSH!·

..JOKES!!

remodeling,

building ,
suspended celllngJ, interior

and e•terior painting; com-

plete line of Masonry work . All
work guaranteeO to customer
ntistactlon . We are tully
Insured for y'our protection. 32
N. 2nd . 992.J918.

ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

.•.

WlNNIE WINKLE

EXPERT

JANICt , OF
Pt:&lt;..IIN6 MOMENTARILY, COURSE, BIRD IE
WOULD BE
AND I WAO! WONDER·
{lfl/6HTEO m
lNG IF YOU COULD
FICL IN WH ILE.
oPARE ME: SOMe
YOU'RE AWAY !
TIME OFF...
W~~"IY SJSTER 1&amp; E:X-

Wh,el AIJ&amp;I!rilent

&lt;!&gt;M.IIci~ WINKLE HOW 101\G WILL

JOHNOON...ER ...e&gt;IRDif: ...
BE 5TAYIN&lt;5 WITH '&gt;OU?

$5.55

.:ln "1os! Am.eritaJL ~,!lrs_

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094
Pomeroy

llo!ne &amp; Au~

Open HilS
Monday thru Soturdly
606 E. Mltn, Pomoroy, 0.

I

----------

'

.

.,.---_) You're
~ou oidn't
pneumonia!

.,•

An4thinq

riqht over'

I'

'
A MATCif? ~ , 1 c;o.l'T Sli()t&lt;.e;!

---EXPERT
Tree Service,

TIH"I1J A

trimming and removal ' Richard Hayman, phone 667·
3041.
4-23·31ltP

I •

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
~~nllallon, Slewort, Ohio. Ph.
002·3035.
2·12·tfC
THFI''~ HfADirtG

UPHOLSTERING SERVICE,
complete selection of fabrics
and vinyl to choose from .
Pick-up and delivery. Slater
Uphol5terlng, Rl. 3, Pomeroy,
phone 992·3617.
3·21·31ltP

'&gt;l~~IGHT

YOU ~nT I SHOUlD
DROP A SM~lL

BOMB ON 'EM?

DICK TRACY

r---

•.7.30fp

. )

l'
\
•
I'

DtdiCIIttd to provide homes for the bet·
terment of Meigs

eo.

._.-----~~~----~-.....J

GJK
UN A P,

'(
,,I

21. Chemical
ending
22. Vandal

Unscramlile thoR four Jumbl..,
one letter to e..h oquare, to
rarm four ordinary warda.

1. Yesterday . Z3. 4'-man
(Fr. )
answen,
8. "Ring of
hang up"
the NiiJe. 24. Rodent
lung:'
25. English
goddess
river
9. Por:ly's
21. Get the
home
better of
11. Actor,
30. Part
Danof
Jr.
an oar
18. Suburb of 31. Being
Detroit
(Sp.)
18. Road
3Z. Jewish
· month
curve

...
..

Yeeterd•y'•~

33. Peal of
bells
3t. Belgian
river
35. Zola povel
36.Famed ·
political
cartoonist

31. Dlstlnc·
live
theory
39. Written
letter

I
I I [IJ

IKN.4WE

rERTHSl
IWMRLY~

III

I K KJ

....
THI&amp; VIEW MJlff HEIJ"

YOU 6ETA.Xl5.

the-··-.......

Now . . . _ the clrcW 1ll&amp;ln
to fonlt.. IIJ .............. ,
.......

I ......- -.. I AN (I I I I I I I

~

,;

( ....... liTE leWJ

J•mble" flATI YALUI IKIWII ILIACM
l' r:11erdar'•

\ Anowert Ill ~PI be IIJ'oirlllllf •• do 1 Jo•-A liM

Thi.s is

Se4re!aries
W??k

T?is i5

$~r'4er;s
Wr.~k '

Atnok' Orete

Rutland,

o:,

M N G J J\f A

KWKZVNIK
PH H Z I ,

HC v. GJK

DAP

U HI G

Yeiterday'o Cryptoquote: IT USUALLY TAKES. MORE
THAN THREE WEEKS TO PREPARE A GOOD IMPROMPTU
SPEECH.-MARK TWAJN
(0 1972 Klnr Featum Syndieate, Ine.)

'

~.~2-42.11

AHOSKIG

'

!'

.· RUlUND JURftltuRE .·

•

OKCNGGNAB ll LKZIHA HC TEDSNGF
.
'
NI IGEPF .- MN SSNDU ZDUKIF

l

4

Pomeroy 1 Ohio

5. Resource
6. Persian
tiger

~1l}J-~;-II.l :••I' I ...J C

antelope

CRYPTOQUOTES

'I

You too can own a home like this or choose your O..Vri
design . Three bedroom home finished and ready to move
Into. Prices range from 513,750 and up. Walch for Open .
House announcement showing one of these homt$ at a
later dale.

Box 101

t. uSqueal"

river
20. African

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slncle !etten,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are ditl'erent.

'

985-4186

19.

compel!·
lion

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:

l

.

3.

DOWN
1. Former
\ Mrs.
Sinatra
Z. Piela ·
figure

'

Ca II .or see George S. Hobstetter Day or Night
for more Information.

baseball's
!rant
into
Hall Of
Fame
11. Give the
O.K.
18. More
ZZ. Take on
help
26. See 15
Across
!8. Veer
zt. Crescent-·
shaped
3D. Lay odds
31. See 15
Across
31. "Passage
to - "
38. Only son
ol Abra·
ham
40. Tolerate
41. Nervous
U. Coalesce
U : GetV.I.P.
treatment

SEE US FOR: . Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
representative. For free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, v. v.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3·2·tiC

•ncl

HARTFORD
lbe Daily Sentinel·

~~
Butter's
Swedish

nervous

MASON

'

HEARTS '

. COtHErH!!

~~~~~~~j~

...

Carrlen For

SI!OOP TO THEIR

ACROSS
!.-Alonzo
Stagg
5. Symbol
of
grief
10. Sound
12. Poker
loss?
13. Conflict
setting
,.,........- . - - - - - -...... U. Shabby
15. 1972en·

.MOBILE fi)MES

WAITED!

HEGAmE! lET
THEM GO IN AND

FOR lHE

MUBEUM,,MR . ~NVIL!!

MIUER

--~--

HEAD, I'LL. SHOwY 'YOU!

we cando,
just call!
We'll bun

1!' · 14' · 24 WiDE

and
bath, city water and gas,
excellent condition . For
appointment call 742·504.5.
4·23·31C

.., STUBBORt-.1, EH ? ALL
RIGHT, '1'0\.J HAMMER-

. GASOUNE AlLEY

____

1

BEfO'{j;=, '!.

GO ON, BEAT IT!

HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE ,
fREE
!rimming
or
removal.
OHice 992·2259 Till4:00
OHIO.
Years' eKperlence. Charles
3·5·31ltc
Sundavs &amp; Evening! 992·2568
Boker, phone 949·2723.
4·2Htc
WE WOULD LIKE TO SELL
SEPTIC TANI&lt;S CLEANED
YOUR PROPERTY FOR
REASONABLE
rates. Ph. &gt;146YOU.
4762,
Gallipolis,
John Russell ,
Mobile Homes For Sale
Owner a. Opera lor.
RENOVATED BRICK
CASH paid for all makes and
5·12·tfC
MIDDLEPORT - 5rooms, 2. . models of mobile hemet .
bedrooms, bath , paneled,
Phone aree code 614-423-9531.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
tiled. carpeted. storage
,
4·13·tfC
.::___
Complete Service
building,
level
lot.
Phone 949·3821
6,950.00.
1970 SCHULT, 12 x 65 with
Racine, Ohio
MAKE US AN OFFER
Central Air, ~ miles from
Crill Bradford
POMEROY - 2 story frame,
Gavin Plant, phone 367·7530.
5-1·tiC
3 bedrooms, kitchen, living
4·18·6fc
room, cellar. In fairly good
•sE;;;W=IN;;::G-MA~C""H"'t""NE=:S,-."'R;_epalr
condition. WOULD MAKE A
service, all makes. 992·2264.
NICE HOME.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
WASHINGTON COUNTY
Authorized Singer Sales and
VINCENT- large 2 story
Service. We Sharpen Sclsson.
frame, renovated Inside,
J.29.tfc
bath. basement. some
carpeting, 1 acre ground,
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
large barn, 2 chicken houses.
right
to your
delivered
PONY GOES WITH HOME.
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
$15,900.00.
1
est mates . Phone 992·3284.
•
TO SELL LIST
Goegleln Ready.Mix Co.,
WITH CLELAND'S
Middleport, Ohio.
POMEROY In good .
condition, 2 bedrooms, bath,
:-:-:::--:-::--.....:........::'-.::30·tfc
basement, kitchen has nice
' ' BACKHOE AND DO.ZER work .
cabinets, A GOOD PLACE
Septic tanks Installed. George
TO LIVE $7,000.00.
. ' imo Washington Blvd.
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2678.
A REAL TOR IS IN·.
·
Belpre, Olllo
4-2S.tfc
TERESTED In serving you,
his client, to the best possible
1965 50 X 10 -MOBIL-E home, INTERIOR &amp;. exterior pain·
ends and abides by 5uch a
phone 247·2161.
ling, R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742·
commltmenl.
.
4-25-6tc
5625.
Henry E. Clellnd Sr.
4·24-Src
Roo liar

Twor-------------------~~================~ 'Real Estate For Sale
.REAL ESTATE FOR SMf
RUTLAND - Six rooms

TOI.O~I UH

WAS HIERE FIRST! NOV/

HARRISON'S TV ond Anfiiiiii
Service. Phone 992·2522.
6-10-tlc

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? &lt;:all 992·
2966.
6·15·tfC

Z.nesvllle, Ollio

M,t\H TURN!!

??-H E'S
BEG INN IN' TO
TI':LL ONE 0'

We specialize In aluminum,
vinyl and Stee l Siding;
flberg14S, br ick and stone ;
complete line of residential
and c:ommerclal roofing ;

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Mlln St.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph . '192-2174

Cleland
Realty

TIME-

ONLY $13,750

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collecf614·452·31SI .

'149.50

TH'AUDIENC E ISAPPLAUDIN 'AI-1 PRE ZOO MS TH'-uGM rUOKE
15 OVt=:R. NOW IT'S

DEMAND EQUAL

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheel• balanced elec ·
Ironically.
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonoble
rates. Phone 992·3213.
7·27·tfC

TERMITES. •TERMITES,
Gel Rid o!Tbem
We will protect ony single
dwelling residence for

-AJ.\ 15 GCJNNA

wall to wall carpet.

We ere fully in~ured

ROOMS

'2695
Karr &amp;Van landt

s&amp;ggoo

Free Estimate

'MEIGS INN

PICKUP

240 Uncoln 51.
Middleport, Ohio
Obi Anlllony Plumbing
Wo hue i eampftte Home
Maintenance Service . the
year 1raund. No m1tter what
your need. ~mpftte roof or
spouting re111lr. Interior or
exterior CJrptntry. Ceiling
tile and Paneling end Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
He1ting.
~
O.y Number '192-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
742·3947
992·5803
992-3898 742·4161

ll/1/AI/111/AfSI/JIIIC

- -- - --

71 FORD

&amp;·PWMBING 00.

THRU MAY 15
1000 SQ. FT. OF

_____

structors to help you. For
application Md lnlervlew.
ffl-2156
call 304·344·8843, or write
Covrt,Sf.
. Pomeroy
School Safety Divis ion,
United Systems, Inc., c-o
WAITRESS, Apply In persuo&gt;,
Terminal Bldg .. 5517 Midland
. Crow's Steak House.
Drive, Charleston, West
4-2Hic
VIrginia, 25306. Approved lor
V.A. Benellls . Placemenl
assistance available. Over 700
lran•portatlon companies
have hired our graduates.
4·24·21c
' --------Wanted To Buy
OLD FU-RNITURE , dishes,
clocks, brass beds, 5llver
dollars
or
complete
households . Write M. D.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
"
..
Not A Motor ~_oute.
&lt;:all 992-6271.
3·16·tlc
~H::A-;-L-;-L-;-1C;:R:-A:-~=T::-E::-R:-S-r-adIo
receiver, model SX·43 or sx.
Ph. 614-992·2156
42.
Phone 992·2718.
..
4-25-6tp

basement, ·land-

seeping. We hove 2 sire
dozers, 2 silt lOaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free· Esllmates. We elsa
haul fill ~lrl. top soil. Dump
trucks ond jow.boy for hire .
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992· 3525
after 7 p.m.

let uS' show Qunam pies.

MODERN Walnut slereo·radlo

BOOKKEEPING ' :
SERVICE

Dorer &amp;. End loader work ,
ponds,

FOR THE BEST IN
CERAMIC TILE

controls. Balance $77.79. Use
our budget terms. Call 992·
7085.
4·19·6tC

--------------------.ll

CARRIER
WANTED IN
POMEROY
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

~~

Business Services

everything lor complete hook· ~
up . Gary Smith, Chesler,
Ohio.
4-23·31P

Card
Thanks
, furniture. Special on ,lectrlc
I WOULD like to express my!.
dryers, SJO; Kuhl's Bargain
thank• to Dr. Telle. Dr.
Center, Rt . 7, Tuppers Plains,
Kemp, Or. Ridgway, the •taff 1969 V.W. squareback, good 1961 FORD 700, 195" wheel. Ohio. Phone 661·3858; closed
tires, runs good. New palnf base. used on paved highway,
and nurses, Mrs. Marcinko,
Monday.
exceptionally good, 5 speed
iob. Phone 742·5815.
special LPN's Margaret
4·23-6tc
4·23.Jtc
transmission, 2 speed ' a:~ele,
Holter and Rulh Stalnaker ;
good llres. Phone 985·3554, WHIRL POOL
also Rev. Charles Norris and
COUNTRY LIVING
automatic
Harold Brewer, Long Boltom.
Rev. Larimore for their 1966 PLYMOUTH Barracuda,
washer ; G. E. Automatic 30 Acres, modern 3 b.r. home
prayers; all who visited, sent V·8, 4speed. Phone 742·4851 il
4·23·tlc
___::
washer and dryer combined. jus! off Rt. 7.
cards and well wlshe5, while 1 interested.
Call 992-2885 after 5 p.m.
4·2J.61p 1961 FORD truck tractor, 22C
was a pallenl al Veterans
4·23-Jtp· 104 Acres. modern 3 b.r.
Cummins diesel, sleeper cab, - - - - - Memorlol Hospital . Samuel - - . , -- -- - - Barnhart.
1957 FORO, 4 dr. Fa lrlane. lair
air lag axle. Will trade, 1970 MUSTANG, take over home close to Eastern
School.
condition,
phone
9.49
-3050
or
Harold Brewer, Long Boltom.
4·25·lfC
payments ; one· Homelite
MIDDLEPORT
see Ralph Rose.
phone 965·3554.
Super XL Chain Saw . Phone 3 b.r .• l1f2 baths, car..... ', one
4-25-3tp
4·9·tfC
992·3703 evenings.
Notice
-------4·23·6tc closet is cedar ~~ ·~1rble
1962
CHEVY
Impala.
V·8,
1960 F·SOO FARM truck, grain
window c-~~ · "• ~ullt­
WILL do sewing ol all kind• In
automatic, power steering,
bed·caltle racks, good tires.
ln k:·,......~· to pool and
my home. Phone 992-6679.
power brakes, air · con good condlllon, Harold 15 HEAD Polled Hereford
park ' oi~lddleporl. S25,000.
3·26.JOip
cattle, phone 742·3985.
dlllonlng, 4 barrel carburetor,
Brewer, Long Bottom, phQne
Good financing on this one.
4·19·61c
327 engine, £ixtra clean car.
985-3554.
POMEROY
must be seen to appreciate H ·tlc
Yery nice - very modern $600; contact : Rev. C. J. - -- - - THE
3 PC. BEDROOM suite, $45; very reasonable, 3 B.R., l'h
Wise , phone 992-7331.
wringer washer, S20; Electric bath home, basement,
4·25·1tp
dryer. S15. need• some garage, extra lot for garden.
This Week's Special
repair ; Misses shoe skates, $18,000 or owner will listen to
1972 FORO PINTO, less than
offer.
size
7, $6. Phone 742·3164.
2.000 miles . Call Hershel
4·23·31C
McClure at 992·3436 or 992.
Stveral Farms and Building
5248. .
.
NEW 1.211 ·Zig · Zag sewing Lois.
4-20-61c
machine In original factory
by
carton.
Zlg .Zag to make
'71
Vofkswagen.
18
month
O.y, WHk, Month .
buttonholes , sew on buttons, 3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
warronty
left.
Excellent
USED
CARS
Liberal Roteo
monograms and make fancy
condition. Phone 992·5411.
-.
.
Arbacgh Addition, Tuppers
designs wllh lust lhe lwlst of a
4·20-6tp
Plains. All new with total
single dial. Left In lay.away electric and central air
PH. 992-3629
and never been used. Will sell
conditioning, bath and fully
for only $47 cash or credit
For Rent
carpeted, full basement,
terms available. Phone 992·
gara~e In basement. See by
SAllE up to one half. Bring your 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished ond
5641.
appo~ntmenl, phone 992·2196
sick TV to Chuck's TV S~op.
unfurnished
apartments. 'h Ton . V·B, auto .
4·19·6tc
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson.
151 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.
Phone 992·~.
power steering.
Financing available.
4·12·tfC
4·4·tfC
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
12-30-tlc
Cleaner complete with at2~b-e~dr-oom
REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud =FU~R~N~IS~H~E~D--tachments , cordwinder and SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
apartment, ground floor ,
Service, SSO Reg. Mores, ~
pain! •pray. Used but In like
close to schools. Rober! Hill.
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Grade; Francis Benedum.
new
condition. Pay $34.45
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Roclne, 949·3811 .
Phone 667 .J656,
ca•h or budge! plan available.
3.JO.Jiltc
4·21·6tp
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
Phone 992·5641.
" You ' ll Like Our Qualify
11 ·21 -tfc
4·19·61c
Way of Doing Business."
PIANO and organ le5sons, 2 BEDROOM mobile home
GMAC FINANCING
located In Salem Center,
NICE 3·slory home wllh full .
G.rald Hoffner; phone 992·
STRAWBERRY·ptanls, Charles
992·5342
Pomeroy
phone 742·3722.
basement. 2 lots, new forced
3825.
Foster , Rt. 338, near Racine
4·21·6tp
Open Evenings 'Ti I8:00
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
4·11·121c
Locks, phone 247-2309.
Elementary School. Phone
Til5 P.M. Sat.
4·12·121c
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT·... The SL EEPI NG rooms and cooking
'192·7364 lo see.
Privileges. ned to Tom's
11·7-tfc
e.clllnll New Weigh! Waf.
ORDER
your
Southern
Carry.Qul. phone 992·3254.
For ~ale
chers (R) Progrem can help
Vegetable Plants: delivery v, ACRE, level, corner lot, with
4·25·61'c
you. For locel cion In ·
date May 81h; Charles R.
some shade tree•. located on
formation call TOLL·FREE
Harris, phone 843·2693.
R. 7-$1,000; White Really
ONE
BEDROOM trailer
MOWERS &amp;
800·582-7026.
4·19·6tc
aparlm~nts,ldeallor couples.
Co., phone 992·302C.
4·17·24fC
4·19·61c
TILLERS
Confacl ~ Io.:_;re's Dairy Isle.
AKC puppies
Schnauzers,
992·5248 or , . &lt;-3436.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS end
Poodles. Cairn Terr iers ,
4·2C·12tc
wigs . Need extra money? Ju&amp;t
healthy home raised, per- 3 BEDROOM home on fwo11:2 hp B&amp;S
Economy
Tiller,
3
sell lhtse products . No
thirds acre lot ; all con manent lnlectlons. wormed engine . Reg . 159.95
144.95
restricted territories. Phone 3 ROOM furnished aparlment,
veniences; at Gallipolis
575·$65
;
Coolville
667·6214.
private entrance, bath . No
992-5113.
4·12·12tp Ferry, W. Va .. only SIO,OOO;
pels. One child accepted. 356 Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S J1; 2
4·2·t1C
come see. Call 675·3666 or 375.
North Fourth 51., Middleport. hp engine. In carton . 70.25
3886 Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
-::C-LE:-L-A-N-:0-:,S---::-G-R-:-EE-:-N-H-0-US E:
William Smith. 4·4·16tp
Real
Estate
For
Sale
4·23·6tp Fertilizer, Garden Seeds and
Mums, Geraniums, Pansies,
end Petunles. Geraldine I
.
Onion Sets.
Cleland, E. Main Sl., Racine . COMMERCIAL Building, 32 x
75 and.or lots; 100 x 60 and 33
POMEROY
.
4·2-llc
x 90 ; al610 E. Main St ., Phone
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr .
Phone 992 · 2111
992·7178.
HYMN SING &amp;. Revival.
4·19·61c
Freedom Gospel Ml55lon ,
110 Mechanic Street
TAKE SOIL away !he Blue .
Bold Knobs, Rev . L. R.
Lustre way from carpets and
Gluesencamp, Pastor. Hymn .:mployment Wanted
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
upholstery . Rent electric
Sing Is Selurdoy, April 22,
DRY
WALL
Finisher
con·
shampooer
Sl.
Ben
Franklin
7:30 p.m. with The Bissell
lractor. R. I. Dubbeld, phone Store, 200 Main St., Pomeroy,
Brothers and others; Revival
RUTLAND
742·5825.
Ohio.
starts Sunday, A~rll 23, 7:30
3
BEDROOMS
bafh
.
gas
heat. city water. Front porch.
4-24·51c
4·23·61c
p.m. with Rev . 0 . H. cart,
some panel ing . Large lot near school and slores . Only
Evangellsf. Public Is lnvlled .
$6.000.00.
4·19·61c WILL pain I houses, roofs, barns '66 FORD truck with camper;
HARRISONVILLE
and repair work, etc. Phone Metro Van camper; price not
7 ROOMS - Carpeted . 3 bedrooms, 1'12 baths. Modern
REVIVAL services continuing
992·70115.
quoted unlll seen; may be
kllchen , nice front porth. 1'12 acres . Utility building 40x70
through April 29th, 7; 30
- - - - - - - -4·2f·6tc
seen a It er 5 p.m.. J . E.
Thoren, Jr., phone 949·2162.
p.m.,
al
the
Guys · wllh additional room.
work of any
ville Conimunlfy Church . CARPENTER
CHESHIRE
kind . Phone Dexter, Ohio 742· 7'-::-_ _ _ _ _ __ 4_·2_J.61p
God Is marvelously sav ·
COMMERCIAL LOT - Has old block building, suitable
lng soul•. Come expecting
4979.
car .fop boets,
for servlce station, garage, antique shop, etc.
3.28 .30tp ALUMINUM
won 't rust or rot, safe and
God to bless . Everyone
SYRACUSE
lightweight, 10, 12, 13 and 14
welcome. Rev. George Gill,
•
rooms
Full
basement,
nice kitchen. All utilities. Level
WILL
DO
"'rt
lime
work
on
ff. In stock now. Phone 992·
Pastor; Rev . John Elswick,
. Monday and Thursday al·
lot. Asking only $2500.00.
6256 after 5 p.m.
Evangell51.
ternoons ot any ev@nlng In
NEAR RACINE
3.JO.JOtc
4·24·21C
Middleport area . Clean yards.
2 ACRES PLUS - Levellot on Rt. 124. Nice for new home
paint. etc. Wrlle C·OP. 0 . Box f6 FT. TRAVEL frailer , selfor mobile home. All utililles available. ssoo.oo down $31 .16
Help Wanted
57, Middleport. Ohio.
contained, ready lo go, hitch
a
month .
4·20·10tc
Included. Phone 77].5651.
NEW LISTING
Mason , W. Va .
NEW - 3 bedrooms wfth large closets. Bath, wllh shower.
WILL 00 daytime babysitting
4-S·tfc
"NOTICE"
In Racine area, call 949·4422.
Kitchen has stove and refrigerator. Living and dining
4·19·30tp TROPICAL FISH, fancy
carpeted. Ufillty rOQm . Sidewalks, storm doors and
windows . Nice level lol with molal utility building.
guppies, angels and breeders.
Bellas and supplies. Phone
Instruction
992-5443.
WE HAVE MANY NEW HOMES, SOME LIKE NEW,
TRAC~OR
TRAILER
12.30·1fc
ANO SOME OLDER ONES IN GOOD CONDITION.
TRAINEES NEEDED: You
PICTURES OF THE ABOVE ARE AT THE OFFICE .
can now train to become an POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
DROP
IN AND SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER.
over the road driver or city
Park view Kennels . Phone 992·
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
driver . Excellent earnings
5443.
992·2378
'192-3325
after short !raining on our
8·15.tfc

I

NOW I CAN DO IT
BLINDFOLDED WITH
ONE HAND.TIEO
.AHINT 111'1 BACK •

--------------4-·2_3-Jtc;::=:=:===~====~~:::::::::=::::::~~::::::::~:::_~
TOOL BOX tor pickup with
EARTH MOVING
KEHLER'S
bullt· in gas tank and
Johna~ Masoory

termixed changer. separate

KUHL'S HAS IT! Low-priced,

-"------

SHE'S NIMB LE AS
ITACK BE OUICK,LOWEEZ'I··
. WE WUZ .JEST LAFFIN'
· 'IESTIDD'I ABOUT HOW
SHE L'ARNT ME TO CHANGE
DIAP,ERS WHEN M'l
F\JST 'IOUNG ·LJN,.
GOT HERE

!'
'.

'

\

r,

I
I

'

�" ' ( ' 1 11

/J

. " ..

t

•

' 11 ( / / J

•
· -Tbe DlllJ 81Mi11ei,Mllldleport-l'mleloy,

o.. .April ri,lf'/2

HOW'S 'i9RE
MAW GITTIN'
ALONG THESE
DA'IS. MIZ
LEDBETTER?

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results!
••

WANT /IDA

Auto Sales

INFORMATION

For Sale
For Sale
1966 HONDA 150, very good 2 STEREO car fape players
with speakers and wiring.
condition . Just overhauled.
Phone 992·3992.
Phone 985·3926.
4-2C·61C

DIADLINIS

5 P.M. Ooy Before Publication.

Monday Deadline 9 a .m.
Canc•ll•tlon - .Corrections
Will be ecctPted untll9 1.m . tor
Dey of PUblication
RIGULI.TIONS

The Publisher reserves the ·

right to edit or reject any ads

deemed

objectional.

The

PUblisher will not be responsible

tor more than . one Incorrect
Insertion .

RATES

@)
.

.

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Z SIGIIS
OF

IUALin

1970CHEYROLET IMPALA
· 52495
One local owner, black finish. red vinyl Inferior, like new
"w ·w tires, turbo hydramatlc, power steering, radio &amp; all

For Want Ad Service

5 cents per Wor'd onf Insertion

the e~tras . A beauty to ~e.

cents per word
consecutive lnurllons.

1970 FORD GALAX IE 500
S20f5
H.T. Coupe, local owned, beautiful while fjnlsh with black

Mlnlm~o~m

CharQe 75c

12

ttlree

18 ctnts per wOrd six con secutive Insertions.

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
Ids and ads paid wllhln 10 days .

CARD OF THANKS

I OBITUARY
$1.50 for SO word m inimum ,
Each addlllon•l word 2c .
·

BLIND ADS

Addit ional

25c

Advertisement .

C~arge

per

OFFICE HOURS
8:30 e.m. to 5:00 p.m. Oelly,

1: 30 a.m .
S.turdav.

lo

12 :00

WILSON -Sam Snead Golf
Clubs, 4 Iron•. putter, 2
woods, covers, bag, balls. S65;
phone 992·54611.
4·23·)01p

Noon

-

vinyl top, V·8 engine, power steering &amp; brakes, radio, new
w-w tires.
.

1969CHEYROLET
$2495
Kingwood Estate Station Wagon, trade-In by one of our
most careful owners. Green finish. green vinyl interior,

luggage rack a. air deflector, factory air conditioning, V·8
engine, power steering &amp; brakM. radio, good -w-w
tires. Looking tor something nice for a fam! l_y1

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EVES. 1:00 I'.M.
1'P'!I!ROY, OHIO

c'

'

COLONIAL Maple Stereo-radio
combination, AM. FM radio,
four' speakers. 4 speed In·

.&amp;Remodeling

Real EState For Sa I~

Lei·US·Oo·Over·Your
BathrOQm or Kitchen
Insured-Bu.! best of all
"WE'RE HONEST
PI\. 992·7601 '· Pomeroy, Ohio

.

'

' CAMPUS CLATI'ER
M~

Specializing In
Small Businesses

FII.IENt&gt; SHARKEY

RI!ALLY DIGS

'IOU~

W~'l

NOT '
TAKE HIM

FAMOUS GEOR$1A

SOME

PEAC~ES

l

304 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992.3795
or Mason 773.5535

combination, dual volume

control, 4 speaker, 4 speed
changer, separate controls.
Balance $63 .59. Use our
budge! terms. Call 992·7085.
4·19·6tc
gu~ranteed appliances. used

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; OONSTRUCTION

teiate
VERA EBLEN

Con~l ,,

ff2·3020
160 CoalS!.
Middleport
MIDDLEPORT
7 rooms. bath, P-artial
basement. 2 nice porches, 2
car garage, located on VIne
Street. On lot 100x190 &amp; high
above streel level. $6,000.

On Your Home
. 0n1v

Call 992·3523
For Appointment
· Fully insured far your
protection.

KITCHEN
and

.---------------

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.· Broker

------

trucks with our driver In-

SHOWALTER'S Wet Pel Shop,
Chester, Ohio, Phone985·3356. COME and see us .
Tropical fish and supplies.
beautiful new homes, 1!2 mile
3·26.Jiltp
North of Eastern High School
on
St. Rt. 7. Both homes have
HOME LITE C·51 Chain Saw S100; good condition; phone · 4 bedrooms, bath and a half,
. built In kllchens and utility
247·2547 after 6 p.m.
rooms ; wall to wall carpet
4-25·31c
will be Installed soon. One
- ' - - - -- - - - - house has a large family room
WHITE'S Metal Detectors at
and a den. Both have a
the Gold Nugget Shop ,
garage. Gel um while !hey
Albany , Ohio, cadillac of
las!. Call Sherman Sum.
locators .
merlield
965·3596.
4·25·3fp
4·14-tfc
METAL porc!&gt;. gllder, excellenl -=-:-::------FARM. 160acres, dairy or beef;
condition, p~one 992·3442.
large bllnk barn , 27 stanchion,
4·25-4tc
milk house equipped, 2 silos:
all outside buildings; 2 ponds;
NEW and used shoes, men's
hard surface road; see
used work &lt;lathes, n~w
anytime. 2 miles N. of Rf . 7 on
miner's boot• - $12.95 o pr .,
Sumner Rd .. Co. Rd. 36, 11
Bailey's Bargain Store,
miles
NE of Pomeroy, M. v.
Upper Bu.s lness ~lock,
Fryar.
Mlddleporl.
4·25·31p
- - . , . - - - - - -•·..::25-6tp
..:.... 6 room house, bath;
SET ·oF air shocks, plus .ex· -RACINE
utility
room, garage, $10,000;
tensions to fll med .·slze GM
phone
949·4195.
cars for ~; phone Larry
·
3·31·tfc
· Lost
Hollon 949-4989.
4·25, IOip 2 LARGE lots, 6 rooms, bath,
A lhoueht lor today: Amerl· KEY RING with keys,
garage, cellar $11,500; Maggie
can poet Ralpll Waido Emerson someflme Friday. if found FRESHeggs,25(adozen. Bring
Whittington, Depot St.•
~"!'f'lners. Phone 992·7476.
Rufland, Ohio.
llld, "E.., -~ hu ita call 992·5919,
. 4-23·3tc
4-23•JIC
...., no.,. evil ita good... .

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

SON

Complete line of office
equipment, furniture &amp;
supplies. Typewriter a.
Adding Machine Repair .

CONST.
"Everything In Home
Malntenance 1'

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

MEIGS, W.VA. 25260
MEIGS 992.7151
MASON 173-5634

'I•

·---------.1

·

3. BR
HOME

ON YOUR LOT
I car garage, brick · front,

PHONE 675-3628
424 Main Sl.

Pl. Pleasant

From the largest
Bulldozer ·Radiator to the
Smallest Heater Core.

Nathan Biggs
Radiator Speciolisf

Real Estate For Sale
RACINE - 10 room hous. ,
bath, basement, garage, two
lois. Phone 949·4313.
4·5-Jiltp

Free Estimate

ON
CENTRAL HEATING

HOUSE . Phone 9'12-6103.
4·19·12tc

OR
AIR

OONDITIONING

. B&amp;W HEATiNG 00.
For Appointment ·
Phone 9_49-2803

HIS-&amp;uSH!·

..JOKES!!

remodeling,

building ,
suspended celllngJ, interior

and e•terior painting; com-

plete line of Masonry work . All
work guaranteeO to customer
ntistactlon . We are tully
Insured for y'our protection. 32
N. 2nd . 992.J918.

ALLSIDE BUILDERS &amp;
CONSTR. CO.

.•.

WlNNIE WINKLE

EXPERT

JANICt , OF
Pt:&lt;..IIN6 MOMENTARILY, COURSE, BIRD IE
WOULD BE
AND I WAO! WONDER·
{lfl/6HTEO m
lNG IF YOU COULD
FICL IN WH ILE.
oPARE ME: SOMe
YOU'RE AWAY !
TIME OFF...
W~~"IY SJSTER 1&amp; E:X-

Wh,el AIJ&amp;I!rilent

&lt;!&gt;M.IIci~ WINKLE HOW 101\G WILL

JOHNOON...ER ...e&gt;IRDif: ...
BE 5TAYIN&lt;5 WITH '&gt;OU?

$5.55

.:ln "1os! Am.eritaJL ~,!lrs_

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094
Pomeroy

llo!ne &amp; Au~

Open HilS
Monday thru Soturdly
606 E. Mltn, Pomoroy, 0.

I

----------

'

.

.,.---_) You're
~ou oidn't
pneumonia!

.,•

An4thinq

riqht over'

I'

'
A MATCif? ~ , 1 c;o.l'T Sli()t&lt;.e;!

---EXPERT
Tree Service,

TIH"I1J A

trimming and removal ' Richard Hayman, phone 667·
3041.
4-23·31ltP

I •

SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller
~~nllallon, Slewort, Ohio. Ph.
002·3035.
2·12·tfC
THFI''~ HfADirtG

UPHOLSTERING SERVICE,
complete selection of fabrics
and vinyl to choose from .
Pick-up and delivery. Slater
Uphol5terlng, Rl. 3, Pomeroy,
phone 992·3617.
3·21·31ltP

'&gt;l~~IGHT

YOU ~nT I SHOUlD
DROP A SM~lL

BOMB ON 'EM?

DICK TRACY

r---

•.7.30fp

. )

l'
\
•
I'

DtdiCIIttd to provide homes for the bet·
terment of Meigs

eo.

._.-----~~~----~-.....J

GJK
UN A P,

'(
,,I

21. Chemical
ending
22. Vandal

Unscramlile thoR four Jumbl..,
one letter to e..h oquare, to
rarm four ordinary warda.

1. Yesterday . Z3. 4'-man
(Fr. )
answen,
8. "Ring of
hang up"
the NiiJe. 24. Rodent
lung:'
25. English
goddess
river
9. Por:ly's
21. Get the
home
better of
11. Actor,
30. Part
Danof
Jr.
an oar
18. Suburb of 31. Being
Detroit
(Sp.)
18. Road
3Z. Jewish
· month
curve

...
..

Yeeterd•y'•~

33. Peal of
bells
3t. Belgian
river
35. Zola povel
36.Famed ·
political
cartoonist

31. Dlstlnc·
live
theory
39. Written
letter

I
I I [IJ

IKN.4WE

rERTHSl
IWMRLY~

III

I K KJ

....
THI&amp; VIEW MJlff HEIJ"

YOU 6ETA.Xl5.

the-··-.......

Now . . . _ the clrcW 1ll&amp;ln
to fonlt.. IIJ .............. ,
.......

I ......- -.. I AN (I I I I I I I

~

,;

( ....... liTE leWJ

J•mble" flATI YALUI IKIWII ILIACM
l' r:11erdar'•

\ Anowert Ill ~PI be IIJ'oirlllllf •• do 1 Jo•-A liM

Thi.s is

Se4re!aries
W??k

T?is i5

$~r'4er;s
Wr.~k '

Atnok' Orete

Rutland,

o:,

M N G J J\f A

KWKZVNIK
PH H Z I ,

HC v. GJK

DAP

U HI G

Yeiterday'o Cryptoquote: IT USUALLY TAKES. MORE
THAN THREE WEEKS TO PREPARE A GOOD IMPROMPTU
SPEECH.-MARK TWAJN
(0 1972 Klnr Featum Syndieate, Ine.)

'

~.~2-42.11

AHOSKIG

'

!'

.· RUlUND JURftltuRE .·

•

OKCNGGNAB ll LKZIHA HC TEDSNGF
.
'
NI IGEPF .- MN SSNDU ZDUKIF

l

4

Pomeroy 1 Ohio

5. Resource
6. Persian
tiger

~1l}J-~;-II.l :••I' I ...J C

antelope

CRYPTOQUOTES

'I

You too can own a home like this or choose your O..Vri
design . Three bedroom home finished and ready to move
Into. Prices range from 513,750 and up. Walch for Open .
House announcement showing one of these homt$ at a
later dale.

Box 101

t. uSqueal"

river
20. African

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Slncle !etten,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are ditl'erent.

'

985-4186

19.

compel!·
lion

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work It:

l

.

3.

DOWN
1. Former
\ Mrs.
Sinatra
Z. Piela ·
figure

'

Ca II .or see George S. Hobstetter Day or Night
for more Information.

baseball's
!rant
into
Hall Of
Fame
11. Give the
O.K.
18. More
ZZ. Take on
help
26. See 15
Across
!8. Veer
zt. Crescent-·
shaped
3D. Lay odds
31. See 15
Across
31. "Passage
to - "
38. Only son
ol Abra·
ham
40. Tolerate
41. Nervous
U. Coalesce
U : GetV.I.P.
treatment

SEE US FOR: . Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
and railing . A. Jacob, sales
representative. For free
estimates, phone Charles
Lisle, Syracuse, v. v.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
3·2·tiC

•ncl

HARTFORD
lbe Daily Sentinel·

~~
Butter's
Swedish

nervous

MASON

'

HEARTS '

. COtHErH!!

~~~~~~~j~

...

Carrlen For

SI!OOP TO THEIR

ACROSS
!.-Alonzo
Stagg
5. Symbol
of
grief
10. Sound
12. Poker
loss?
13. Conflict
setting
,.,........- . - - - - - -...... U. Shabby
15. 1972en·

.MOBILE fi)MES

WAITED!

HEGAmE! lET
THEM GO IN AND

FOR lHE

MUBEUM,,MR . ~NVIL!!

MIUER

--~--

HEAD, I'LL. SHOwY 'YOU!

we cando,
just call!
We'll bun

1!' · 14' · 24 WiDE

and
bath, city water and gas,
excellent condition . For
appointment call 742·504.5.
4·23·31C

.., STUBBORt-.1, EH ? ALL
RIGHT, '1'0\.J HAMMER-

. GASOUNE AlLEY

____

1

BEfO'{j;=, '!.

GO ON, BEAT IT!

HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE ,
fREE
!rimming
or
removal.
OHice 992·2259 Till4:00
OHIO.
Years' eKperlence. Charles
3·5·31ltc
Sundavs &amp; Evening! 992·2568
Boker, phone 949·2723.
4·2Htc
WE WOULD LIKE TO SELL
SEPTIC TANI&lt;S CLEANED
YOUR PROPERTY FOR
REASONABLE
rates. Ph. &gt;146YOU.
4762,
Gallipolis,
John Russell ,
Mobile Homes For Sale
Owner a. Opera lor.
RENOVATED BRICK
CASH paid for all makes and
5·12·tfC
MIDDLEPORT - 5rooms, 2. . models of mobile hemet .
bedrooms, bath , paneled,
Phone aree code 614-423-9531.
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
tiled. carpeted. storage
,
4·13·tfC
.::___
Complete Service
building,
level
lot.
Phone 949·3821
6,950.00.
1970 SCHULT, 12 x 65 with
Racine, Ohio
MAKE US AN OFFER
Central Air, ~ miles from
Crill Bradford
POMEROY - 2 story frame,
Gavin Plant, phone 367·7530.
5-1·tiC
3 bedrooms, kitchen, living
4·18·6fc
room, cellar. In fairly good
•sE;;;W=IN;;::G-MA~C""H"'t""NE=:S,-."'R;_epalr
condition. WOULD MAKE A
service, all makes. 992·2264.
NICE HOME.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
WASHINGTON COUNTY
Authorized Singer Sales and
VINCENT- large 2 story
Service. We Sharpen Sclsson.
frame, renovated Inside,
J.29.tfc
bath. basement. some
carpeting, 1 acre ground,
READY·MIX
CONCRETE
large barn, 2 chicken houses.
right
to your
delivered
PONY GOES WITH HOME.
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
$15,900.00.
1
est mates . Phone 992·3284.
•
TO SELL LIST
Goegleln Ready.Mix Co.,
WITH CLELAND'S
Middleport, Ohio.
POMEROY In good .
condition, 2 bedrooms, bath,
:-:-:::--:-::--.....:........::'-.::30·tfc
basement, kitchen has nice
' ' BACKHOE AND DO.ZER work .
cabinets, A GOOD PLACE
Septic tanks Installed. George
TO LIVE $7,000.00.
. ' imo Washington Blvd.
(Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·2678.
A REAL TOR IS IN·.
·
Belpre, Olllo
4-2S.tfc
TERESTED In serving you,
his client, to the best possible
1965 50 X 10 -MOBIL-E home, INTERIOR &amp;. exterior pain·
ends and abides by 5uch a
phone 247·2161.
ling, R. I. Dubbeld, phone 742·
commltmenl.
.
4-25-6tc
5625.
Henry E. Clellnd Sr.
4·24-Src
Roo liar

Twor-------------------~~================~ 'Real Estate For Sale
.REAL ESTATE FOR SMf
RUTLAND - Six rooms

TOI.O~I UH

WAS HIERE FIRST! NOV/

HARRISON'S TV ond Anfiiiiii
Service. Phone 992·2522.
6-10-tlc

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? &lt;:all 992·
2966.
6·15·tfC

Z.nesvllle, Ollio

M,t\H TURN!!

??-H E'S
BEG INN IN' TO
TI':LL ONE 0'

We specialize In aluminum,
vinyl and Stee l Siding;
flberg14S, br ick and stone ;
complete line of residential
and c:ommerclal roofing ;

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Mlln St.

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph . '192-2174

Cleland
Realty

TIME-

ONLY $13,750

WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collecf614·452·31SI .

'149.50

TH'AUDIENC E ISAPPLAUDIN 'AI-1 PRE ZOO MS TH'-uGM rUOKE
15 OVt=:R. NOW IT'S

DEMAND EQUAL

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service.
Wheel• balanced elec ·
Ironically.
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonoble
rates. Phone 992·3213.
7·27·tfC

TERMITES. •TERMITES,
Gel Rid o!Tbem
We will protect ony single
dwelling residence for

-AJ.\ 15 GCJNNA

wall to wall carpet.

We ere fully in~ured

ROOMS

'2695
Karr &amp;Van landt

s&amp;ggoo

Free Estimate

'MEIGS INN

PICKUP

240 Uncoln 51.
Middleport, Ohio
Obi Anlllony Plumbing
Wo hue i eampftte Home
Maintenance Service . the
year 1raund. No m1tter what
your need. ~mpftte roof or
spouting re111lr. Interior or
exterior CJrptntry. Ceiling
tile and Paneling end Siding.
Complete Plumbing &amp;
He1ting.
~
O.y Number '192-2550
We have 24 hr. emergency
service.
742·3947
992·5803
992-3898 742·4161

ll/1/AI/111/AfSI/JIIIC

- -- - --

71 FORD

&amp;·PWMBING 00.

THRU MAY 15
1000 SQ. FT. OF

_____

structors to help you. For
application Md lnlervlew.
ffl-2156
call 304·344·8843, or write
Covrt,Sf.
. Pomeroy
School Safety Divis ion,
United Systems, Inc., c-o
WAITRESS, Apply In persuo&gt;,
Terminal Bldg .. 5517 Midland
. Crow's Steak House.
Drive, Charleston, West
4-2Hic
VIrginia, 25306. Approved lor
V.A. Benellls . Placemenl
assistance available. Over 700
lran•portatlon companies
have hired our graduates.
4·24·21c
' --------Wanted To Buy
OLD FU-RNITURE , dishes,
clocks, brass beds, 5llver
dollars
or
complete
households . Write M. D.
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, Ohio.
"
..
Not A Motor ~_oute.
&lt;:all 992-6271.
3·16·tlc
~H::A-;-L-;-L-;-1C;:R:-A:-~=T::-E::-R:-S-r-adIo
receiver, model SX·43 or sx.
Ph. 614-992·2156
42.
Phone 992·2718.
..
4-25-6tp

basement, ·land-

seeping. We hove 2 sire
dozers, 2 silt lOaders. Work
done by hour or contract.
Free· Esllmates. We elsa
haul fill ~lrl. top soil. Dump
trucks ond jow.boy for hire .
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992· 3525
after 7 p.m.

let uS' show Qunam pies.

MODERN Walnut slereo·radlo

BOOKKEEPING ' :
SERVICE

Dorer &amp;. End loader work ,
ponds,

FOR THE BEST IN
CERAMIC TILE

controls. Balance $77.79. Use
our budget terms. Call 992·
7085.
4·19·6tC

--------------------.ll

CARRIER
WANTED IN
POMEROY
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

~~

Business Services

everything lor complete hook· ~
up . Gary Smith, Chesler,
Ohio.
4-23·31P

Card
Thanks
, furniture. Special on ,lectrlc
I WOULD like to express my!.
dryers, SJO; Kuhl's Bargain
thank• to Dr. Telle. Dr.
Center, Rt . 7, Tuppers Plains,
Kemp, Or. Ridgway, the •taff 1969 V.W. squareback, good 1961 FORD 700, 195" wheel. Ohio. Phone 661·3858; closed
tires, runs good. New palnf base. used on paved highway,
and nurses, Mrs. Marcinko,
Monday.
exceptionally good, 5 speed
iob. Phone 742·5815.
special LPN's Margaret
4·23-6tc
4·23.Jtc
transmission, 2 speed ' a:~ele,
Holter and Rulh Stalnaker ;
good llres. Phone 985·3554, WHIRL POOL
also Rev. Charles Norris and
COUNTRY LIVING
automatic
Harold Brewer, Long Boltom.
Rev. Larimore for their 1966 PLYMOUTH Barracuda,
washer ; G. E. Automatic 30 Acres, modern 3 b.r. home
prayers; all who visited, sent V·8, 4speed. Phone 742·4851 il
4·23·tlc
___::
washer and dryer combined. jus! off Rt. 7.
cards and well wlshe5, while 1 interested.
Call 992-2885 after 5 p.m.
4·2J.61p 1961 FORD truck tractor, 22C
was a pallenl al Veterans
4·23-Jtp· 104 Acres. modern 3 b.r.
Cummins diesel, sleeper cab, - - - - - Memorlol Hospital . Samuel - - . , -- -- - - Barnhart.
1957 FORO, 4 dr. Fa lrlane. lair
air lag axle. Will trade, 1970 MUSTANG, take over home close to Eastern
School.
condition,
phone
9.49
-3050
or
Harold Brewer, Long Boltom.
4·25·lfC
payments ; one· Homelite
MIDDLEPORT
see Ralph Rose.
phone 965·3554.
Super XL Chain Saw . Phone 3 b.r .• l1f2 baths, car..... ', one
4-25-3tp
4·9·tfC
992·3703 evenings.
Notice
-------4·23·6tc closet is cedar ~~ ·~1rble
1962
CHEVY
Impala.
V·8,
1960 F·SOO FARM truck, grain
window c-~~ · "• ~ullt­
WILL do sewing ol all kind• In
automatic, power steering,
bed·caltle racks, good tires.
ln k:·,......~· to pool and
my home. Phone 992-6679.
power brakes, air · con good condlllon, Harold 15 HEAD Polled Hereford
park ' oi~lddleporl. S25,000.
3·26.JOip
cattle, phone 742·3985.
dlllonlng, 4 barrel carburetor,
Brewer, Long Bottom, phQne
Good financing on this one.
4·19·61c
327 engine, £ixtra clean car.
985-3554.
POMEROY
must be seen to appreciate H ·tlc
Yery nice - very modern $600; contact : Rev. C. J. - -- - - THE
3 PC. BEDROOM suite, $45; very reasonable, 3 B.R., l'h
Wise , phone 992-7331.
wringer washer, S20; Electric bath home, basement,
4·25·1tp
dryer. S15. need• some garage, extra lot for garden.
This Week's Special
repair ; Misses shoe skates, $18,000 or owner will listen to
1972 FORO PINTO, less than
offer.
size
7, $6. Phone 742·3164.
2.000 miles . Call Hershel
4·23·31C
McClure at 992·3436 or 992.
Stveral Farms and Building
5248. .
.
NEW 1.211 ·Zig · Zag sewing Lois.
4-20-61c
machine In original factory
by
carton.
Zlg .Zag to make
'71
Vofkswagen.
18
month
O.y, WHk, Month .
buttonholes , sew on buttons, 3 BEDROOM ranch type home,
warronty
left.
Excellent
USED
CARS
Liberal Roteo
monograms and make fancy
condition. Phone 992·5411.
-.
.
Arbacgh Addition, Tuppers
designs wllh lust lhe lwlst of a
4·20-6tp
Plains. All new with total
single dial. Left In lay.away electric and central air
PH. 992-3629
and never been used. Will sell
conditioning, bath and fully
for only $47 cash or credit
For Rent
carpeted, full basement,
terms available. Phone 992·
gara~e In basement. See by
SAllE up to one half. Bring your 3 AND 4 ROOM furnished ond
5641.
appo~ntmenl, phone 992·2196
sick TV to Chuck's TV S~op.
unfurnished
apartments. 'h Ton . V·B, auto .
4·19·6tc
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson.
151 Butternut Ave .. Pomeroy.
Phone 992·~.
power steering.
Financing available.
4·12·tfC
4·4·tfC
ELECTROLUX Vacuum
12-30-tlc
Cleaner complete with at2~b-e~dr-oom
REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud =FU~R~N~IS~H~E~D--tachments , cordwinder and SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
apartment, ground floor ,
Service, SSO Reg. Mores, ~
pain! •pray. Used but In like
close to schools. Rober! Hill.
Ave. Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Grade; Francis Benedum.
new
condition. Pay $34.45
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
Roclne, 949·3811 .
Phone 667 .J656,
ca•h or budge! plan available.
3.JO.Jiltc
4·21·6tp
Ohio, phone 237·4334.
Phone 992·5641.
" You ' ll Like Our Qualify
11 ·21 -tfc
4·19·61c
Way of Doing Business."
PIANO and organ le5sons, 2 BEDROOM mobile home
GMAC FINANCING
located In Salem Center,
NICE 3·slory home wllh full .
G.rald Hoffner; phone 992·
STRAWBERRY·ptanls, Charles
992·5342
Pomeroy
phone 742·3722.
basement. 2 lots, new forced
3825.
Foster , Rt. 338, near Racine
4·21·6tp
Open Evenings 'Ti I8:00
air furnace. Near Pomeroy.
4·11·121c
Locks, phone 247-2309.
Elementary School. Phone
Til5 P.M. Sat.
4·12·121c
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT·... The SL EEPI NG rooms and cooking
'192·7364 lo see.
Privileges. ned to Tom's
11·7-tfc
e.clllnll New Weigh! Waf.
ORDER
your
Southern
Carry.Qul. phone 992·3254.
For ~ale
chers (R) Progrem can help
Vegetable Plants: delivery v, ACRE, level, corner lot, with
4·25·61'c
you. For locel cion In ·
date May 81h; Charles R.
some shade tree•. located on
formation call TOLL·FREE
Harris, phone 843·2693.
R. 7-$1,000; White Really
ONE
BEDROOM trailer
MOWERS &amp;
800·582-7026.
4·19·6tc
aparlm~nts,ldeallor couples.
Co., phone 992·302C.
4·17·24fC
4·19·61c
TILLERS
Confacl ~ Io.:_;re's Dairy Isle.
AKC puppies
Schnauzers,
992·5248 or , . &lt;-3436.
KOSCOT KOSMETICS end
Poodles. Cairn Terr iers ,
4·2C·12tc
wigs . Need extra money? Ju&amp;t
healthy home raised, per- 3 BEDROOM home on fwo11:2 hp B&amp;S
Economy
Tiller,
3
sell lhtse products . No
thirds acre lot ; all con manent lnlectlons. wormed engine . Reg . 159.95
144.95
restricted territories. Phone 3 ROOM furnished aparlment,
veniences; at Gallipolis
575·$65
;
Coolville
667·6214.
private entrance, bath . No
992-5113.
4·12·12tp Ferry, W. Va .. only SIO,OOO;
pels. One child accepted. 356 Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S J1; 2
4·2·t1C
come see. Call 675·3666 or 375.
North Fourth 51., Middleport. hp engine. In carton . 70.25
3886 Pt. Pleasant, W. Va.
-::C-LE:-L-A-N-:0-:,S---::-G-R-:-EE-:-N-H-0-US E:
William Smith. 4·4·16tp
Real
Estate
For
Sale
4·23·6tp Fertilizer, Garden Seeds and
Mums, Geraniums, Pansies,
end Petunles. Geraldine I
.
Onion Sets.
Cleland, E. Main Sl., Racine . COMMERCIAL Building, 32 x
75 and.or lots; 100 x 60 and 33
POMEROY
.
4·2-llc
x 90 ; al610 E. Main St ., Phone
Jack w. Carsey, Mgr .
Phone 992 · 2111
992·7178.
HYMN SING &amp;. Revival.
4·19·61c
Freedom Gospel Ml55lon ,
110 Mechanic Street
TAKE SOIL away !he Blue .
Bold Knobs, Rev . L. R.
Lustre way from carpets and
Gluesencamp, Pastor. Hymn .:mployment Wanted
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
upholstery . Rent electric
Sing Is Selurdoy, April 22,
DRY
WALL
Finisher
con·
shampooer
Sl.
Ben
Franklin
7:30 p.m. with The Bissell
lractor. R. I. Dubbeld, phone Store, 200 Main St., Pomeroy,
Brothers and others; Revival
RUTLAND
742·5825.
Ohio.
starts Sunday, A~rll 23, 7:30
3
BEDROOMS
bafh
.
gas
heat. city water. Front porch.
4-24·51c
4·23·61c
p.m. with Rev . 0 . H. cart,
some panel ing . Large lot near school and slores . Only
Evangellsf. Public Is lnvlled .
$6.000.00.
4·19·61c WILL pain I houses, roofs, barns '66 FORD truck with camper;
HARRISONVILLE
and repair work, etc. Phone Metro Van camper; price not
7 ROOMS - Carpeted . 3 bedrooms, 1'12 baths. Modern
REVIVAL services continuing
992·70115.
quoted unlll seen; may be
kllchen , nice front porth. 1'12 acres . Utility building 40x70
through April 29th, 7; 30
- - - - - - - -4·2f·6tc
seen a It er 5 p.m.. J . E.
Thoren, Jr., phone 949·2162.
p.m.,
al
the
Guys · wllh additional room.
work of any
ville Conimunlfy Church . CARPENTER
CHESHIRE
kind . Phone Dexter, Ohio 742· 7'-::-_ _ _ _ _ __ 4_·2_J.61p
God Is marvelously sav ·
COMMERCIAL LOT - Has old block building, suitable
lng soul•. Come expecting
4979.
car .fop boets,
for servlce station, garage, antique shop, etc.
3.28 .30tp ALUMINUM
won 't rust or rot, safe and
God to bless . Everyone
SYRACUSE
lightweight, 10, 12, 13 and 14
welcome. Rev. George Gill,
•
rooms
Full
basement,
nice kitchen. All utilities. Level
WILL
DO
"'rt
lime
work
on
ff. In stock now. Phone 992·
Pastor; Rev . John Elswick,
. Monday and Thursday al·
lot. Asking only $2500.00.
6256 after 5 p.m.
Evangell51.
ternoons ot any ev@nlng In
NEAR RACINE
3.JO.JOtc
4·24·21C
Middleport area . Clean yards.
2 ACRES PLUS - Levellot on Rt. 124. Nice for new home
paint. etc. Wrlle C·OP. 0 . Box f6 FT. TRAVEL frailer , selfor mobile home. All utililles available. ssoo.oo down $31 .16
Help Wanted
57, Middleport. Ohio.
contained, ready lo go, hitch
a
month .
4·20·10tc
Included. Phone 77].5651.
NEW LISTING
Mason , W. Va .
NEW - 3 bedrooms wfth large closets. Bath, wllh shower.
WILL 00 daytime babysitting
4-S·tfc
"NOTICE"
In Racine area, call 949·4422.
Kitchen has stove and refrigerator. Living and dining
4·19·30tp TROPICAL FISH, fancy
carpeted. Ufillty rOQm . Sidewalks, storm doors and
windows . Nice level lol with molal utility building.
guppies, angels and breeders.
Bellas and supplies. Phone
Instruction
992-5443.
WE HAVE MANY NEW HOMES, SOME LIKE NEW,
TRAC~OR
TRAILER
12.30·1fc
ANO SOME OLDER ONES IN GOOD CONDITION.
TRAINEES NEEDED: You
PICTURES OF THE ABOVE ARE AT THE OFFICE .
can now train to become an POODLE puppies, Silver Toy,
DROP
IN AND SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER.
over the road driver or city
Park view Kennels . Phone 992·
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
driver . Excellent earnings
5443.
992·2378
'192-3325
after short !raining on our
8·15.tfc

I

NOW I CAN DO IT
BLINDFOLDED WITH
ONE HAND.TIEO
.AHINT 111'1 BACK •

--------------4-·2_3-Jtc;::=:=:===~====~~:::::::::=::::::~~::::::::~:::_~
TOOL BOX tor pickup with
EARTH MOVING
KEHLER'S
bullt· in gas tank and
Johna~ Masoory

termixed changer. separate

KUHL'S HAS IT! Low-priced,

-"------

SHE'S NIMB LE AS
ITACK BE OUICK,LOWEEZ'I··
. WE WUZ .JEST LAFFIN'
· 'IESTIDD'I ABOUT HOW
SHE L'ARNT ME TO CHANGE
DIAP,ERS WHEN M'l
F\JST 'IOUNG ·LJN,.
GOT HERE

!'
'.

'

\

r,

I
I

'

�1-111e DaUySimllrlei,Middleport-Pomeroy,O., AprU25, 1972

'

Junkers News •·. • in Briefs

(Continued from page I )
tn council's attention by Fred
Hoffman . Both matters will be
discussed with the Middleport
Recreation Commission at a
meeting of the Recreation
Commission and the council
recreallon committee to be
arranged by Mayor Zerkle.
Low water pressure on Vine
St., and nee&lt;,! for a fire hydrant,
there was brought up
by Hoffnlan who relerred to the balance of
$20,000 in the Water Department fund. Harold Chase ,
.. maintenance supervisor, sa id
that the cost of putting in a six
Inch line, which, he pointed out,
would increase volume of
water, but not pressure, would
cost between $5,000 and $8,000.
A two-inch line now serves the
street, but a six inch lme is
required for a hydrant.
Pointing out that there
many
bad
lines
are
au over lown, Mayor
kle and Chase both emphasized the importance of
maintaining the 'water
Department fund at its present
figure for emergencies .
Ohlinger said the board of
public affairs is working on a
way to come up with more
money and that there is some
possibility of securing federal
funds.
Mayor Zerkle recalled tha l
since the town acquired the
water works, approximately
$75,000 has been spent on
improvements.
· Council agreed to proceed
with having windows in town
'hall replaced at a cost of approximately $800. Mrs. Morgan
said cost estimates she .had
secured includes not only
replacement, but screens for
all of the windows. The need for
updating.lnsw-ance on village
property was discussed by
Mrs. Morgan and Ohlinger,
with a full evaluation to be
made belore December when
the present coverage expires.
Chief of Police J . J.
Cremeans proposed to council
that the three meters on Mill
St. from the alley next to the
Columbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. to the Mark V
corner be changed to 15 minute
parking .
Chase asked for cooperation
of residents in clearing North
Second St. from Mill to Dock
Sts. on Friday mornings for the
street sweeper. Third St. will
be cleaned on Thursday
morning, he indicated.
A communication was read
by Clerk Grate from the Walter
H. Dr ave Co., a professional
cndification service, Asking to
meet with council on May 8 to
dis c uss
proposed
recodification of ordinances fo&lt;
the village.
Clerk Grate also read a
thank you note from the family
of Clifford Stumbo. Lawrence
Stewart, appointed to !ill the
vacancy on council, was
present and appointed to the
committees of finance, street,
utlllUes and ordinances.

Zer-

·.

MEN BURNED
1be Pomeroy E·R Unit went
al 5:42 a JR. today to the
WWlamaon Shaft and Slope Co.
operatloo on County RoadiAie
for two men who were burned
about the faee, hands and neck
when a conduit box exploded.
Wllllam Burkhart, 37, Atbens,
was admitted at Veterans
Memorial Hospital and Harry
Hudnall, Leon; W. Va., was
admitted at Pleasant Valley.
Harry Altimus, superintendent
of Wllliam Shaft and Slope
Company, which is on Southern
Ohio Coal Company properly,
said both men are in
aatisfactory oondition.

MEIGS lHEATRE
Tonight. April25
Walt Disney ' s

THE LIVING OESERT
ITechnicotor l
Academy Award Winners.

The

gre•test

wildl ife

spectade of them all! " G"

Watt Disney's
VANISHING PRAIR!E
(Technicolor)
"G"
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.
Wodnesdoy &amp; Thursday
Aprll26·27
NOT OPEN

(Continued from Page I )
Side today for a wealthy businessman who was a bojlucted for
$100,000 ransom. Poll~ feared Alan J. Bernstein was senously
injured or dead. l.orenze Turner, 40, a business associate of
Bernstein, was charged Mooday with kidnaping, two counts of
intimidation and unlawful use of a weapon. Two other suspects
were seught, police said.
Bernstein, of subUrban Flossmoor, was reported missing
late Friday by his wife, Kathy. Mrs. Bernstein told police that
she received four telephone calls demanding '100,000 during a 12hour period on Saturday. She received no telephone calls Sunday
and Monday, police said.

Radio Equipped School Buses
Ease Vinton County Problems

SENS. HUBERT H. HUMPHREY AND GEORGE S.
McGOVERN today were favored, respectively, to win the
Pennsylvania and Massac~usetts primaries with sen. Edmund
S. Muskie hoping for a sizable share of delegates to keep his
badly floundering campaign alive until the Democratic National
Convention.
The same-day presidential primaries in the two large
eastern states hold a treasure of 239 delegate votes and the
potential to ignite or cripple the campaigns of the three leading
contenders for the Democratic presidential nomination. But the
outcome could also break so many ways that lhe three candidates mlght go into next week's Ohio and Indiana primaries,
each claiming a share of the spoils and leaving the prasidential
sweepstakes every bit as confused as before the voting began.

Boosters Endorse Levy
TUPPERS PLAINS - The
Tuppers Plains
Schoo'!
Boosters, meeting April 10 at
the school gym, endorsed the
proposed sc hool levy to be
voted on May ;.
The meeting was called to
order by the president, Mr.
James Stout. Mrs . Lavina
Brannon led the group in the
pledge to the flag . John Reibel,
executive head of the Eastern
Local School District, expiawed
and
answered
ques tions concerning the
school operating levy. The
Booster Club passed a
resolution to support the levy.

Counselors
Elect Minton
For President
Gary Minton, Kyger Creek,
was elected president of the
Meigs • Jackson • Jackson
Guidance Counselors
Association during
the
organization ' s monthly
meeting held receoUy at Rio
Grande College.
Other officers elected for the
1972-73 school term according
to Mrs . June Eubanks,
chairman of the nominating
committee, were Willard
Cop\ey,
Jackson,
vice
president; Dean Brown, Rio
Grande,
treasurer
and
correspcin&lt;jing secretary and
Mrs. Alma Lemon, Oak Hill,
recording secretary.
The association approved a
motion to conduct a District 13
Guidance Counselors meeting
in 1972-73. Too, the association
favored bi-monthly meetings
during the coming year.
Tbe new officers will be
installed during the May
meeting.
Harry
Meek,
supervisor of the Ohio State
Department of Education, will
be the guest speaker. Date and
location of the dinner meeting
will be announced.
25TH HOSPITAL DAY
Mark your engage"'ent
calendar for Sunday, May 7,
from I to 4 p.m. On that· day,
Lakin State Hospital will hold
its 25th annual Hospital Day,
and you will find it an event full
of special interest for the alert
citizen. You will hear music.
You will be able to tour the
hospital's various wards and
departments . And you can
enjoy
refreshmen ts.
Remember the date, Sunday
afternoon, May 7. You have a
personal Invitation to visit
Lakin State Hospital.

Mr. Wells, band director,
presented a program of instrumental music b~ his sixth,
se ven th, and eighth grade
mstrwnental students.
The nominahng committee
reported after which officers
elected for the coming year
were
Edgar
Pullens,
president; Phillip Boyles, vice.
president; Mrs . Darlene
Guthrie, secretary; Mrs.
Mildred Brooks, treasurer, and
Mrs. Janie Headley, reporter.
The group discussed the
feasibility of purchasing a
water foun tain, tape recorder,
and playground equipment,
which w1ll be investigated and
reported on at the next
mee ting.
The room banner and $3 cash
prize was won by Mr. Roger
Kirkhart 's Sixth grade class.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Helen Caldwell's
second gra de' class. Room
mothers assisting were Mrs.
Janel Connolly, Mrs. Janice
Young, and Mrs . Sandra
Massar.
The next meeting will be
May 8 at the school gym at 7· 30
p.m.

Blue Devils Now

4·3 on Season
The Gallipolis Blue Devils
rallied in the fifth inning with
three runs to edge Chesapeake
11-6 Monday on the Cheshire
High School diamond in a nonleague baseball game. The
victory made the Blue Devils 43 overall,
Skipper Johns o n,
righthander , who allowed five
hits, was the winning pitcher.
Chesapeake's Runion , who
came on in the third, took the
loss. The game was called after
five because of darkness.
Chesapeake
010 50--6 ii :i
·Gallipolis
012· 23-11 6 I
Holbrook, Runion (3) and R.
Smith. Johnson and Kiesling.

McAR'TIIUR, Ohio (UPI ) More than 2,000 youngsters are
bused to school in Vinton
County and for most it is a long
ride.
Some spend more than two ·
andahlMhow-sadayonabus.
The average is 90minutes. And
until NJcently, these restless
bundlen of energy .had nothing
to fill the time , except maybe
unnerve the driver or deface
the bu!,,
Now, because of sympathetic
school officials, the buses carrying students to the county's
consolidated schools are filled
with new sounds.
lnsl&lt;!ad of talking about hating s&lt;:hool, the southeastern
Ohio students listen to anfl!luncements about an upooming meeting of the Home Ec
Club or a report on last night's
basketball game.
Inst,ead of slitting seat
covers, students snap their fingers to tbe songs of Donny Osmond.
It's the students ' friend - the
11

bus radio."

Trip Hurl Morale
• All 40 buses are. equipped
with lcmd'speakers that pick up
a sign.al from the school radio
station, packed with elaborate
equipment thanks to a twoyear federal grant of $146,-000.
It 's believed to be the first
program of its type.
"Consolidation had really
been .9 problem here," said
Linda Mitchell, a speech teacher who uses tne student-run
radio station as class project
work.
"Some of the smaller communities were resentful that
they had tO send their kids to
the county seat to go to
school," she said. "Besides
vandalism, lhe long trip also
hurt morale at school.
"Our radio project is concerned with giving the students
something to think about while
on the bus. Our primary purpose 1" not to instruct, but to
say, 'There's a baseball game
tonight.. Why don't you plan to
be there?'
"And we play a lot of music
the kids like," she said. ~&lt; r&gt;on­
riy Osmond, the Jackson Five
- the top 40."
Programming from 7 a.m. to
8:15 is aimed at high school
students and directed to elementary children between 8:15
and 9:30.
Programs For All
"We have brief, informational segments called 'Know Your
World' for the'yoWig children,"
Miss Mitchell said. "We try to
explain places and events in
the news to them."
The elementary students attend five schools, but their
radio programs include a pitch
for smooth consolidation in
jurllor high and high school.

"QUALITY •••
BUT •••

YOU'Ll NEVER BUY QUALITY
PHONE 992-2342

MIDDLEPORT, O.

this will help the studen\S know local funds to keep the "buS~
each other when they attend radio" operating after federal
the same school."
money runs out this year.
School officials plan to use
The bus drivers also like the

FOR LESS

program. They receive adult
programming as they drive o~t
in the early morning to begm
picking up st~dents .

65 Pints of Blood· are Taken
Seventy-seven persons
visited the Bloodmobile
Monday at the Pomeroy
Elementary School. Sixty-five
pints of blqod were received , 48
in replacelnent.
There were 15 first time
donors. David Koblentz was a
five gallon donor and Kathleen
Wells a 'four gallon dooor.
Other donors were, from
Pomeroy, Arthur Reedy,
Robert Barton, Uoyd Blackwood, James Gilmore, Norbert

Neutzling, Jr ., William Rad·
ford, Kathleen Wells, Howard
P. Logan, Stanton Smith, Patty
Barton, Janet Duffy, Phyllis
Hennesy , Fred Thompson,
Gene Houdashelt, William
Snouffer, Gay Perrin, James
Anderson, Edward Ball, Jerry
W. Harper, Robert Couch,
Gary Smith, Wallace Hatfield,
John M. Stivers, Ruby Burnside, Genevieve Houdashelt,
Richard Houdashelt, Maxine
Moore, Howard Kitchen,

Kenneth Harris, DeMaree
Sexson, and Gladys Wolle.
From Racine,
~!ph
Badgley, Floyd Hendricks ,
Charles s. Norris, Erme J.
Norris, Martha Lou Beegle,
Jeanette Lawrence, Nelson
Porterfield and Ronald Salser.
SYRACUSE, Karen Clark,
Mary Morrow, Nathan Roush,
Opal Lipscomb, Larraine
Cundiff.
MIDDLEPORT, Clarence
Buskirk, Rose Mary Lyons,

' EdWard
.
Durst, Sandra K.

Taylor, Landa Haley, R£v.
Raulin Moyer, Albert Roush,
Sarah Fowler', Oliver E.
McKinley, Wilmer Halfhill ,
Olester Erwin and Don Erwin.
CUFTON, Olarles L. Miller
and Charles H. Mi)ler; Long
Bottom, Richard Fick;
Minersville, Stacie Arnold,
Phyllis Mcintyre, Clara
Mcintyre and
Herbert
Mcintyre; Reedsville, Grant
Smith; Tuppe~s Plains, Joan
Smith; West Columbus, Dave
Mattox; Rutland, · Rosella
Birchfield, Donna Davidson,
Adell Davidson, Ronald
Jacobs, Alice Jaoobs, Linda
Harper and LeWis Harper;
miles north of Kontum crum- Gallipolis, Thomas Scott:
bled Monday . They were HMaso,n, k HGenry ASrhnold ,
.
em oc
rove
aron
remforced by paratroopers
lk
'
who ev~uated Rocket Ridge, WeDocer10·rs assisting were
an ar t111 ery ba se west of Th
M Go , Do . L p
K t
h'1 h
to h
ornas c \\an, · ., · ·
on urn, w ~ w~s , ave Telle, M.D.; Roger Daniels,
defended an mvas1on valley. MD
d Selim Blazewicz
There were !3 U.S. advisers M.D. aNn
Naomi!
· th T ea h
~t th
· · urses were
~~ e an
n area a e London, LPN; Margaretta
t~metheattacks began Monday R sh LPN· T
Collins
andeight·wereunaccounted for RoNu ' d 'K eresa Cia k'
tonight.
• . ~n
aren
r •
Capt. Raymond H. Dobbins, teclm!Cian.
In charge of the canteen
35 , of Marietta, Ga., one of
those who made it to allied were th~ Catholic Church
lines today after hiding out all Women With Phyllis. Hennessy
nigh! inside the captured base chairman . . Assisting were
said six Americans and four Angela Eblil!, Janet Duffy •
helicopter crewmen were Vicki Gloeckner, Emma
killed when their rescue Brodwlck, Mary Morrow,
chopper was shot down over Helena Brickles, ~at~Knight
Dak To.
- and Phyll GoodWm. .
Only Dobbins and four others
Loadmg and Wiloadmg was
were known to be still alive . done by students of Pomeroy
A critical situation also was Elementary, and Boy Scout
reported in Cambodia where Troop 249, Tom Cassell,
the High Command said 12 scoutmaster. Clerical workers
Communist tanks were were Mary Nease, Jean Nease,
reported moving in on the Joyce Hoback, Grace Drake,
besiegedcapitalofSvayRieng, Jean Sayre, Lulabelle Hamp78 miles southeast of Phnom ton , Juanita Sayre, Eloise
Penh on Highway 1 leading to White, Dorothy Smith, Elva
Saigon.
Dalley, Jeannette Lawrence,
Fall of Svay Rieng would Martha Lou Beegle, Beulah
give the Communists control of Strauss, Becky Anderson,
anotber 25-mile stretch of the Pauline Collins, Edith Sisson,
highway in the Parrots Beak Donna Nehon and Vernon
sector which juts into South , Nease. .
.
Vietnam only 35 miles from
~at1ons were by Quality
Saigon. They have already Prmt Shop, Meigs Local
seized control of 60mlles of the Schools, Dalley Sentinel,
road, and a command spokes- Athens Messenger, WMPO
man said the situation was Radio, Veterans Memorial
"critical."
Hospital and Ewing Funeral
Home.

K ont urn 0 en t 0 ' Enemy
P
~

SAIGON (UPf )-North Viet·
namese infantrymen supported by artillery and tanks
outflanked the remaining
South Vietnamese forward
defenses in the Central
Highlands Wday and poured
down Highway 14 toward the
provincial capital of Kontum,
the main objective of their new
drive.
Miles-long streams of refugees moved ahead of them
toward Konturn, normally a
town of 27,000 persons but now
swollen with
countless
refugEes hoping to fl y to
Pleiku, 25 miles to the so uth, or
to Saigon, 230 miles farther
south. Mortar rounds hit the
Kontum airfie ld today,
wounding three children and
damaging an Air Vietnam
airliner and a U.S. Cl30 supply
plane.
Field dispatches said the
Communist drive so far had
overrun at least nine government support bases in the
highlands region and bypassed
at least five despite hundreds
of tons of bombs dropped there
by Bo'/s and strikes by fighterhomoers and heliCopter gunships.
Field dispatches earlier reported the fall of Dak To,
another major town 25 miles
north of Kontum , but later
dispatches today said a "Black
Thai," Lt . Col Lo Van Bao,
commander of a 650·man
regional battalion there,
refused orders to abandon Dak
To

fight to the death though
hopelessly surrounded and
ouIn umbered.
Bao , whose troops are
large1y local militiamen, is
called a "Black Thai" because
that ethnic group has dark
complexions and wears black
pal·amas favored by the North
Vietnamese.
U.S. fighter-bombers today
knocked out a bridge on Highway 14 five miles south of Dak
To, but military sow-ces expressed doubt one blown bndge
would halt the North Vietnamese drive that a Pentagon
spokesman described Monday
as the opening of a . longexpected general offensive in
the lrighlands. ·
UP! reporter Matt Franjola
flew today over the area by
helicopter and reported the
South Vietnamese troops appeared to be regrouping at
Artillery Base Bravo, which
blocks the highway just north
of the village of Vo Dinh, 12
miles north of Kontum.
Franjoia said a Communist
force of 4,000 ·men , including
artillery and tanks, was about
six miles north of Bravo at
sundown today. There were
unconfirmed reports that four
tanks had advanced to within
two miles to the east of Bravo
in an apparent flanking movemen!.
'
Defending Bravo were infantr0nen of the 22nd South
Vietnamese Division who were
able to make their way south
'
defenses 25

ERFELDS WAREHOUSE ON MECHANIC ST.
SALE! NYLON CARPET
Buy what you need for room size rugs or for wall to
wa II carpetjng.
,
This Nylon Carpeting comes in 12 and 15 foot widths.
Two tone patterns and solid colors , too. Famous
Mohawk Quality.
Bring in your measurement. Buy what you need and
really save during the Carpet Sale at the Warehouse.

Vete·rans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - Isabelle
Powell, Middleport ; Herman
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
' Ohlinger, Middleport; Anette
Ohio Extended Outlook Thursday through Saturday: · Boyd, Pomeroy; Jennie
A warming trend Thurs· Newmyer, Wilkesville; Joe
day through Saturday. Fair Hemsley, Pomeroy; Lora
Thursday. A chance of Circle, Racine; Mark Parsons,
showers
Friday
and Racine ; Ora Clark, Syracuse;
Saturday. Highs In the 50s to Ullian Clark, Syracuse; Paul
the )ower 60s Thursday Miller, Middleport; Alma
rising to the mid 60s north Frazier, Middleport; Frank
and upper 60s lo lower 70s Cornell, Portland.
DISCHARGES - Daniel
south on Saturday. Overnight lows mostly In the 30s Davidson, Deborah Gillilan,
early Thursday warming Agnes Oldaker, Etta Custer,
Hattie Radcliff, Roland
Into lhe 40s Friday night.
r
Morris, Roger Spaun.

Mondl1y to remove a "cartilage
CYST REMOVED
BUFFALO, N.Y. (UP! ) - cyst" from his left knee.
A Braves spokesman said
Rookie center Elmore Smith of
CHANCE TO LEARN
What do you know of your the Buffalo Braves, runner-up surgery on the 6-foot-11 Smith
nearest
public
mental in the recent balloting for the was successful and added that
hospital? Have you ever visited NBA Rookie of the Year the knee "should be good in the
it? Here is y~ur chance. On Award, underwent surgery future.."
Sunday, May 7, from I to 4
p.m. , Lakin State Hospital will
hold its 25th annual
Day . It is an event to which ·
every West Virginian is cor- . :
dially invited. There will be :
guided tours of the hospital, .. '
IS NOT OUR PROPERTY ALONE!
muSic, and refreshments. Plan · ·
to visit Lakin on Sunday, May
7. You will learn much - and . '
enjoy 11.

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.

"We hav!' 'School Salute,'
which tells tbe students what is
going on at the other ~chools, "
Miss Mitchell said. "We think

BIG SELECTION LINOLEUM
New selecti'on in 6, 9, and 12 foot widths.
Armstrong and Gold Seal quality. It'll pay
you to drive to El~erfelds Warehouse-see
the excellent array of patterns and select
what's best for you.

SALE!
SUMMER
FURNITURE
Select you~ patio, lawn or
porch furniture now at
Elberfelds
WarehouseYou'll find excellent quality ·
a
big
selection
and
you can save now during this sale. Redwood
furniture • aluminum furniture and steel
including gliders.· picnic tables . benches . chairs
· umbrella tables · gin rummy ets • chaise
lounges • spring steel Lloyd chairs.

THAN YOU DO AT

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest
'

.

BAKER'S
Fine Furniture
MIDDLEPORT

PLENTY .OF FREE PARKING

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
WAREHOUSE ON. MECHANIC .ST.

Insurance Agency
)

Speel?h, Hearing
Therapy Program
Is Demonstrated
The Importance of speec,h and hearing in.relation to reading
was eJiljitaslzed at a conference Tueaday at the Salisbury
Elementary School under the direction of John lisle, federal
coordinator lor Title 1 programs in the Meigs Local School
District.
Present were members of .the Parent AdVisory Committee
cmnpoaed of a representative from each school in the Meiga
Local District; Mrs. Susie Heines, speech and hearing therapist;
remedial reading elementary teachers, and jurllor bigh enrichment teachers.
Afilm, "Teach Your Child to
Talk," was shown by Lisle. An
extensive display of materials
used in the speech and bearing
programs was explained by
Mrs. Heines. She discussed
techniques used to reach
children with impairments and
demonotrated procedure using
Michael Dill, a second grade
student at the Salisbury school.
Plans were completed at the
conference for open classroom
visitation on Thursday and

Friday. Parents are invited to
attend either the remedial
read.ing sessions at the
elementary schools or the
enrichment classes at the
junior high school any lime
during either day.
The Parent Advisory
Committee is composed of
Mrs. Charles Barrett, Rutland;
Mrs. Paul Pauley, Pomeroy;
Mrs. Lester Lathey, Salem
Center; Mrs. Allen Bishop,
Harrisonville; Mrs. Dallas
Blevins, Bradbury; Mrs .

REMEDIAL TECHNIQUES used with children having
speech or hearing impairments were demonstrated by Mrs.
Susie Heines, therapist in the federal I Title I program, at a

Shirley Sisson, Salisbury; Mrs.
James Smith, Me1gs Jumor
High School, and Mrs. David
Long, Middleport, who serves
as chairman of the board .

parent-teacher conference held Tuesday al the Salisbury
Elementary School. Mrs. Heines, above, is assisted by
second grader Michael Dill, one of the Salisbury children
receiving therapy under the federal program.
Mrs. Evelyn Sweet. Those
involved in the remedial
reading and enr ichment
program on the elementary
le ve l are Mrs. Catherin e

Teachers of the enrichment
cl:~sses at the Mei gs Junior
High School are Mrs. Joan
Corder, Mrs. Eleanor Blaett·
nar, Mrs. Linda Aikman, and

Jacobs, Mrs. Nellie Hughes,
Mrs. Marjorie Goett, Mrs.
Thelma 0 . Campbell, Mrs.
Annalee Hill, Kim Neal, and
Mrs. Mw-iel Foley.

at y

By absorbing ultraviolet
energy in the upper atmosphere, ozone protects life
on earth from a lethal excess of
sh!'l'twave radiation.

en tine

Devoted To The lnleresu OJ The

VOL. 'XXIV NO. 266

POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Meig.~·Mason

Area

WEDNESDAY, APRIL 26, 1972

PHONE 992·2156

••

•

eac ers

e1gs
RACINE - Mrs. Chlorus futur e.
Grimm was elected president
Other officers elected were
of the Meigs County Teachers Mrs . Dorothy Woodard,
Assn. at a ' spring dinner presidenH!lect; Nellie Vale,
meeting Tuesday at Southern secretary, and Unda McManus
High School preceding a treasurer. Presiding during the
program that looked toward business session was Mrs . C. E.
industrial development In the Blakeslee, outgoing president.

The asso datwn wenl on

" Met gs Coun ty 's Present and

record in support of the school
levies to be voted on in th e
three distri cts.
In the abse nce of th e
program cha irman, E1Ieen

Fulure."
Serving on a panel were
Charles Kn olls, distri ct
supervisor; Coo pe r a live
ExtensiOn Se rvice; John

Buck, Mrs . Janice

Rttchte

Heece, coordinator of public

program.

relations for the Ohio Power

presented

the

Southern Board Hires Staffs·
..

Teachers of Southern Local Bailey, two years, and Usa three years; Robert Beegle,
continuous.
Dlltrlct were hlf~ , Tuesday Hobbs, conUnuous.
Syracuse Elementary, Elma
night lor lhe 1972-73 school year
Junior high, Jennings
during a special meeting of the Beegle," continuous ; Delores Louks and Ruth Stearns,
Southern Local School Board. Wolfe , one year; William continuous; Charles Baer. one
Ralph Sayre, superln· Jewell, two year; Herbert year; Larry Wolfe , five years.
tendent, recommended and the Parker, five year; Hilton
Principals hired for one year
board approved the following Wolfe, Jr.. continuous, and were James Adams. high
school; Jennings Beegle,
teacbers, at the high school, Jean Alkire, one year .
junior hi gh; James Wickline,
James Adams, continuing
Letart
Elementary
,
Betty
Letart Elementary ; Robert
contract; Leah Ord, one year;
Connie Andrews, three years; Wilson, one year; Kathryn Hill, Beegle, Ra cine Elementary,
Sandra Boothe, three years ; one year; Eileen Buck , con- and Larry Wolfe, Syracuse
Barbara Baer, one year ; Asa linuous; Roger Roush, one · Eementary.
In other business, the board
Bradbw-y, one year; Vinas year; Chlorus Grimm, conLee, coniinuous; Erma Mc- tinuous; James Wickline, one approved a tri p taken to
Clurg, three year; Howard year.
Ashland College by students of
Nolan , Gale Price and Carl · Racine Elementary, Mary Miss Boothe and Elizabeth
Weese, continuous; Lee Lee, Hill, Florence Circle, and Edna Hobbs . Linley Hart wa s
five year; Robert Spurlock and 1 Priee, all continuous; Sandra awarded a contract to make
Tom Phillips, one year; John Hill, one year; Duane Wolfe, improvements to the back
portio n of the Letart
Elementary building .
Sayre rep orted that he had
received applications from the
followmg as potential teachers,
Daniel L. Withers, Mrs. Linda
Lewison, Mrs. Carla Salser,
By Ualled Prell IDieruatlooal
Archie Rose , David Earl
SPACE CENTER, HOUSTON- HALFWAY home from
Jenkins, Flrn B. Gaul, and
men's first trip to the moon's hlghlahds, Apollo 16's astronauts James W. Circle.
wind up their scientific studies today with a closecH!ye look at
Sayre said recommendations
mysleri01111ighl nasbes and an X-ray search for puzzling black made by the Division of Safety
holes in apace.
and Hygiene had been
Jolm W. Young, Thomas K. Mattingly and Charles M. Duke corrected. He also reported he
were on target for a parachute landlng at 2:~ p.m. EST,
Thunday tn the Pacific Ocean, 1,~ miles south of Hawaii.
Excellent splashdown weather was forecast.

INews•• i~ Bri~j~

had receiVed applications from
Debra M. Wolfe as a custodian
and Mrs. Pauline Brewer as
head cook and teachers aide .
He rea d a letter from Martin
W. Esse x, State Superintendent of Schools, in regard to
the pay board decision and
order.
The boa rd approved a
request from Herbert Wh1 te to
furnish material to erect a
fence betwee n the junwr h1gh
school and the Tyree P1ckens
property.
Sayre reported on the seniors
schedule from May I&gt; to 21 in
rega rd to the end of the year
activities Seniors will leave on
their annual tnp May 8 when
they will lour Kentucky and
Tennessee.
Afact sheet pertainmg to the
tax levy w!li be gi ven to
studen ts Friday, Sayre said.
Hubert Price, Por tland, was
granted a tw o year leave of
absence beginning Sept. I,
1972.
Possibilities pertaining to
non·certified perso nnel was
discussed by Beroard Fultz
and Fred Haynes of the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employees.

Company's Gavm Plant, and
Pat Meeker, consultant for the
Me1gs County Regional
Planning Commission, of
Surveys Unlimited, and White
Bourland, superintendent of
the Meigs Mine. C. E. Blakes-

FORD MotOR CO. ANNOI:JNCED today it
plans to replace the rear axles and bearings on 436,000 1972 model
Mercury Montegoe and Ford Torlnos to ease the minds of their
owners ..Ford had announced the recall of 396,000 of these
vehicles AprU 17 to lnltall bearing retainer plates as a safety
feablre for the present alles and bearings. The new figure
representa all the 1972 models 10ld thuJ far both In the United
States and abroad.
It is the second biggest recall in Ford hlltory - a campaign
which some oblervera ellimated wlll COBt the company nearly
$30 miWon. Ford's biggest recall was In 1967 when 447,000 new
Mustangs were brought In for replacement of steering wheela.
DETRO~-

Shadle to Have
New Loo'L. in '72
CHARLESTON - A con tract
for cleaning and painting of the
Shadle Bridge in Mason County
has been advertised for the
Department of Highways' May
16 bid opening.
Governor Arch Moore said
the work will be finan ced entire ly with state money under
the special maintenance
program . The bridge carries
W. Va . 2 across the Kanawha
River between Point Pleasant
and Henderson.
Last year the bridge underwent repairs under another
contract. The work included
installation of reinforcing steel
and a new floor.

..•

,,,

NEW YORI - JAMES MICHENER, 'I1IE Pulitzer Prize
wlmlng novelllt who earner conclu~ that the Kent Stale
llhootlnp of lt'IO were an "acclden~" now .beUeves "It seema
Ukely" there was some kind of COJliPiracy involved, it was
reported Tuesday. 'lbe weekly newspaper .American Repot1 said•
In Ill Aprll21 isllle tblt MIChener rewrled hlmlelf In a letter lo
the Rev. John P. Adami, director !I the department of law,
ju1tke and COIIIIIIunily re!AU0111 of the United Methodist Oltu'ch,
lui Dec. 13.
'!be Methodist jp'1)Up,published a report by New York insuranc:t aecutive Peter Davt• lila! charced "eight lo 10"
pallllmen "decided" in advanct lo lhoot at studenta on May 4,
1t'IO, 1o pw~lab them for harauing gum'dsmen during anti-war
deJIIOIIIlratiOIIJ. Four llbtdenll were ldUed. ·

POilTSMOU'IU, ORIO -A ''SICit CALL" amonc poHcemen
1n this St:lolo COtully aty ll(ll'tld today ~th 13 o1 the u.man
tareel'ifuiiiW loWGl'll. 'l1lt ''lick call" bellll Tuelday afternoon
when fila Pllrolmen calltd ln tdck 111111 aJIPirent Wlge dillpule
with lila cl17. nve Plfro!IMI and two tudformed !lftcers stayed
bDml frGIII tile JDidnl~ llllft.
•
•
All1ce aMf Harold Otloper, a cllptaln, a detective eergeant
111d two lleuMna!U ,.......,.., Cll duty lll'oug!l the night.
~~)

areas, according to Meeker,

are Columbia, Sutton, Chester

Out in Front.

'

., ........

million.
Meeker pointed out housing,
land l1Sl' and impact areas in
Meigs County as a result of the
new Meigs Mine. Impact

McGovern Gets

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook Friday through Sunday:
Little temperature
changes Friday through
Sunday. A chance of dally
showers but most likely
Saturday. Daytime highs in
the upper 60s, entire state
Friday and Saturday and
upper 60s north and lower 70s
south Sunday. Overnight
lows mid to lower 40s early
Friday and upper 4lls to
lower 50s Saturday night.

Ul OR!VER UGl!f$1 APPttCUHS

ice was moderator. .
Knolls pointed out AgriBusmess potential in Meigs
County as related to sllil and
products of soil and its use.
Present agri-business in Meigs
Coun ty is approximately $5

BOSTON (UP!) - Sen. GeorgeS. McGovern, trampling Sen.
Edmund Muskie in his own New England, became the fronlru!Uler for the Democratic presidential nomination today.
Pulling an actual majority of the vote in the crowded
Massachusetts Democratic primary Tuesday, the "peace and
love" prairie senator bw-ied the remains of the Maine senator's
status as top contender and put himself into the lead in the
number of committed delegates for the nomination.
The South Dakotan was
expected to win in Massa- per cent of the tOtal. Muskie
chusetts, but his margin of was second with 77,401, or 22
victory exceeded all predic- per cent; George C. Wallace,
tions. Also as expected, Pres- of Alabama with 27,347, or 8 per
ident Nixon walked away with cent; and Rep. Shirley Chishthe ,Repliblican primary in the olm, D-N.Y., with 14,0t8, or 4
Bay State.
per cent. Eight otber DemoMcGovern's apparent sweep crats trailed, including Sen.
of the 102.roember Massa- Edward M. Kemedy, 0-Mass.,
chusetts delegation was credit- who pulled himself off the
ed to antiwar sentiment ballot but got 1,362 wrile-ln
brought to a peak by Nixon's votes anyway.
decision to resume bombing of
Niixon got 53,654 votes, 82 per
North Vietnam . There was cent of the total. Rep. Paul N.
even some sign of doves oo the McCloskey, R-Calif., whose
wing in the Republican antiwar candidacy foundered
primary, where Nixon won J4 in New Hampshire and
more delegates.
F1orida, got a surprising 8,691,
With 65per cent of the state's or 13 per cent, and Rep. John
precinct ' s reporting , Ashbrook, R.Qhio, was Iaiit
McGovern had 176,284 votes, &gt;I with 2,882, or 5 per cent.

Werry Honored
Ralph Werry, president of
the Meigs County Jaycees and
an employee of A. D. Weed and
Son Wholesale Grocery •eo.,
Pomeroy, was elected "Jaycee
of the Year " at the
organization's election
Tuesday evening at Pomeroy
town hall.
Vince Knight, employee of
Po"!eroy Motor Company, w'as
named " Chairman of the
Year" and George Cundiff, an
· . employee of Elberfelds, was

named "Committeeman of the
Year."
Officers elected for the 197273 year were Vincent Knight,
president; Carson Crow, in·
ternal vice president; Dean
Lutz, external vice president;
Ralph Werry, treasurer;
Richard Poulin, secretary, and
Jim Mees, local director.
Oaths of officll will be administered to the new officers
at the May 19 annual Installation banquet at Meigs
Inn.

Require Closing

"KEEP AMERICA BEAUTIFUL DAY" 011 Saturday Ia In conjWiction with lhe SOAR
(Save Our American ReiOurce~~) project of the Boy Scouts of America when Middleport Cub
Scout Pack 245 will carry out a cooununity cleanup project. Ferman Moore, seated, SOAR
chairman for 1972', acct~PIB a proclamation banner of red velvet with lettering in black from
Middleport Mayor Jom Zerkle. Mrs. France~~ Whittlngtoo, a den motber, and Leslie Whittington, Dan Smith, and Ricky Hall, left to right, represent the Pack. Middleport businessman
Edlaor 'Baker, not pictw-ed, is c;tK:hairman of SOAR .

Pomeroy council Monday
night in a special session
authorized the Ohio Dept. of
Highways to advertise for bids
lor the complete resurfacing of
the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge.
The work will involve water
proofing the existing deck of
the bridge with a spere·
cial
sealer
that
quires a curing time
while traffic is eliminated from ·
traveling over it.
James Bailey, State Highway Director in Meigs County,
told council members that the
project would begin after July

.

.

PARIS (UPI) - North
Vietnam and the VIet Cong
said today they bad accepted
the United States' oiler to
resume the Vietnam peaee
talks and would show up for
Thursday's !48th session of
lhe conference.
"After having Interrupted
the Paris conference
unilaterally
aad
unreasonably for more than
a month, the Americaa
administration bas had to
say that It accepts the
resumption of the !48th
session of the conferenee
Aprll27, 1972," the VietCong
sal d.

Weather
Clear and rather cool
tonight. Low tonight in the low
to m1d 30s north and mid to
upper 30s south. Fair and
warmer Thursday with highs
in the upper 50s to mid 60s.

TEN CENTS

orwar

00

I&gt; .,. •••

......

WASHINGTON (UP! ) President Nixon's offer to
resume the Paris peace talks,
coming barely 24 hours belore
tonight's address to the nation
on more troop withdrawals
from Vietnam, provided more
evidence today that Nixon has
decided not to let escalation of
the war torpedo his trip to
Moscow next month.
The offer, made simultaneously in Washington and
Saigon Tuesday night, followed
presidential adviser Henry A.
Kissinger's secret weekend
trip to Moscow. And in say,ing
be was willing to resume peace
talks-provided the Communists made their current offensive and how to end it the
No. I topic- Nixon appeared to
be trying to reassure both the
(Continued on page 16)

"I

Now You Know

(~

I

Peace Talks·
To Continue

&gt;.

and Olive Townships. He noted
that the four townships showed
a slight increase in population
in the last 10 years, and are
probably the major impact
areas now. Meeker said five of
the 18 schools in the county are
in excess of capacity and eight
are at 90 pet. of capacity. ·
Reece said the Gavin Plant
investment will be three
quarll!rs of a billion dollars.
Bourland l!pOke briefly oo the
development of the coal .mint
and showed pictures oo coal
production.
In a questioo and answer
period, Bourland noted that
2,600 men will be hired at peak
of employment and the depth nf
the shafts will range from 250
to 600 feet.
Mrs. Blakeslee extended her
appreciation to members of the
association for the cooperation
extended to her the past year.
The invocation was given by ,
the Rev. Charles Nor\'is and
dinner was served by members :.
of the Home E~onomics
Department. A welcome address was given by Ralph •
Sayre, superintendent of
Southern District.

.....

Cable Project
Completed Here
RUTLAND
General
Telephone Co. of Ohio today
announced the completion of a
$72,300 aerial and burled cable
project in the western rural
secUon of the Rutland exchange. Kenley KriM, Athena
district commercial manager,
said the job will augment
existing facilities and provide
for future · growth requ!rements.
This cable addition also
expanded facilities west along
Ohio 124 toward Langsville and
Salem Center. Where possible,
the facilities were buried, he
noted .
"The company has instituted
a program to put enough cable
wherever possible to offer
customers a private Une or at
least a line with fewer parties
on it," Krinn explained. The
Rutland exchange serves 779
telephones in an 86.6 square.'
mile are~ of Meigs county :

SOLD
FIRST DAY ntiS AD
1
RAN.

He added that once the
project is started, the bridge
Auto Sales
will be closed to all traffic for a
period of1().H days.
1964 . PONTIAC Lemans, 326
All persona usually using the engine, automatic, radio.
Pomeroy-Mason bridge will good tir 0s. Phone
•·10-61c
have to travel the Silver
Memorial Bridge between
Kanauga and Henderson while
YOU CAN
the work is being done.
About one week's notice will
be giVen before the official
project starts, men from the
State Highway Dept. will be
doing work on the bridge In tne
near future preparing for the
PH,, H2-2156
mafor project.

GET RESULTS.
TOOl ·

'.

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