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tJY 1 c·. ·t.

1&amp;- '!be nauy Sentlilel, Mlckleport-l'mleroy, o., AprU21, 1m

HOSPITAL NEWS

u:• h.
.

f l.J n

Holzer Medical Center, First
I
w.
Ave. and Cedar · St. General
~'
visiting hours 2'4 and 7-11 p.m.
SAIGON (UPl)-North VietMaternity visiting hotirs 2:30 to · namese forces tOday cut SOuth
4:30 p.m: Parents only on· Vietnam's main nort!Houlb
Pediatrics Ward.
Sitlhs
highway by overrunning an
artillery base on lbe Central
Mr. and Mrs . James Roach, Coast. To the northwest, SOuth
Jackson, a son: Mr . and Mrs. vietnamese troop~ tried to
Michael Chandler, Jackson , a regroup at Vo Dinh, the laat
daughter; Mr. and Mrs. David defensive outpost separatlng
L. Freeze, Ray, Ohio, a the Communists from the
daughter: Mr. and Mrs. Arne! provincial capital of Kon·
Weaver, Vinton, a son, and Mr. wm.
,
and Mrs. Kenneth Cremeans,
UPI reporter Edward
' Gallipolis, a son. •
Baaaettsald the faU of artillery
Discharges
base Salem .30 mUes north of
George Bates, Sr ., Julia lbe port of Qui Nhon had cut off
VanMa tre, French Casey, Highway I.
David Scott Peck, Mrs. Eric
' 'They stood and fought and
Steckel and daughter, Mrs. were overrun," Bassett said,
Emil Earl Har t and son, Mrs. quoting military sources. He
Ralph Camp and daughter, said the defenders of Salem
Mrs. Barry Alford and were 150 South Vietnamese
daughter, Martha Moore, Julia Infantrymen. He said the
Littler, Emma Paulson, Mrs. troops blew up one of their own
IJoyd T. Fry and son, Matthew 105mm howitzers after the
Jackson, M•s . Phillip Lee Conununlsts hit lbe other one.
Mowery and daughter, Paula
It was the 13th base to faD to
Jean Rossiter, Carolyn Lou
Sp url ock, Olive Stapleton,
Trent F'illinger and Lillian
Welch .
·
' Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMISSIONS - William
(Continued from page I)
Burkhart, Athens ; Charles Kremlin and the American
Hyatt, Racine; Dorsel Miller, public lbat .what he really
Tuppers Plains.
wants is less, not more, war.
DISCHARGES - Betty
Tonight's 10 p.m. EST radio
Pe..,ons, Annette Boyd, and TV address was expected
Beatrice Bush, Wilma Riggs, to contain an announcement
Freda Scott, Jerry Warner.
lbat U.S. troop strength In
PLEASANT VALLEY
Vietnam will be down to 69,000
Names of persons admitted by May I, as Ni1on had
have bee n discontinued by promised. It was In excess of
hospital authorities.
500,000 when he took office
DISCHARGES: Janel more than three years ago.
Gordon , Cheshire : Mrs.
The White House said KisainClarence Adkins, Letart : ger's trip to M~w was not
Jenny Ferguson, Gypsy, W.
related to tonight's address to
Va.; Keith French, Belpre ; the
nation. It was known,
Ray Hill, Leon; Mrs. Edwin however, that Vietnam was lbe
McDonald, Mrs. Edward prime topic at the four days of
Hughart, Lincoln Thomas, talks.
Reba Miller, Albert Sisson,
There was speculation that
Mrs. George Rodgers, Mrs. Nixon, concerned about what
James Page, Mrs. l;ucy additional stepa he might have,
Moreland, all of Point to take to preserve the·Saigon
Pleasant.
govenunent, feared that more
bombing of Hanoi and
THREE DAY SALE
Haiphong
might damage or
A rummage sale wlll be held
Thursday,
Friday
and sink his meeting wllb Rti!sia's
Saturday in the basement of leaders scheduled to begin May
th e King Builders Supply , 22.
Kissinger In Wrn was either
Middleport,
by
the
or invited to go to Moscow
sent
Harrisonville Chapter, Order
where
lbe two governments
of tile Eastern Star. Residents
with rummage to contribute tried to work out some way the
are asked to telephone Mrs. summit could be kept aUve
Lois Pauley, 992-7133; Mrs. without embarrassment to the
Linda Sheets, 9~792; or Mrs. Kremlin or the White HOuse.
In agreeing to resume the
Avanell George, 742~2M.
talks, on his conditions, Nixon
retreated slightly from a
!l'evloua U.S. position that
there would be no more
Tonight&amp; Thursday
discussions as long as the
April26·27
Communist offensive conNOT OPEN
tinued. But he may have
demonstrated
to the Russians
Friday &amp; Saturday
Aprll211-29
lbat he does Indeed want next
TWO-LANE
monlb's sununtt Jl!eeting.
BLACK-TOP
Press Secretary Ronald Zi"'
James Taylor
gler
said Tuesday night the
Warren Oates
North Vietnamese, who
( R)
SUDDEN TERROR
launched the offellSWe March
lTechnlcolor)
30, have ex!l'essed willingness
Mark Lester of. "Oliver"
to resume the talks but he did
fame .
GP not say whether they.made any
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
specific overtures leading to
Nixon's decision.

Peace

-·'

MEIGS THEATRE

..

YOU CAN
COUNT

ONUS!
For Prompt

Service,
Delicious Food,
Soft Drinks &amp; Dairy Dessert.

Ad.olph's Dairy Valley
Phone 991-2556
At The End Of Pomeroy Bridge

u.

the North Vietnamese in the
Central Highlanda most of
them since &amp;lnday when the
.rive In the area began.
Eighty miles to the IIOJ1h.
west, South Vielnamese troops
worked to establish a new
defense line at Vo Dinh 11 miles
north of Kontum, which is :10
mUes northeast of Saigon.
UPI Reporter Matt Franjola
.said South Vietnamese fOrces
wilbcrew from artillery base
Bravo, 12 miles north of
Kontum earlier In the day,
The South Vietnamese cOm·
mand announced In Saigon that
Vletname~e Air Force A37 jet
fighter.!Jamberstoday knocked
out lour Communist tanks
spotted just inllde the r.arrot's
Beak · section of Cambodia.
They !'ere part of a group of 10
IIUCh tanksatthe northern edge
of the Plain of Reeds.
In northern South Vietnam,
lbe North Vietnamese turned
guna capmred frqm the South
Vietnamese around to shell the
abandoned district capital of
Hiep Due, 40 mUes soulb of Da
Nang. ·
The U.S. command reported
that a U.S. Army OH58 Kiowa
observation helicopter was
shot down Tuesday near Dak
To, 2&amp; mUes northwest of
Kontum. The conunand said it
had no report on whelber any
of the men aboard were In·
j~red.
West of Pleiku
American hellcopler gunships
fired on a truck and one U.S.
crewman was injured when lbe
Communists returned lbe ftre,
lbe U.S. command said.

E.1 a ht Fm"ed
--e·

Eight defendants were fined
by Middleport Mayor John
Zerkle Tuesday night and two
others forfeited bonds .
Fined were Ralph E. Bush,
44, Cheshire; Harold Little, 35,
Middleport, and Stanley E.
Watson, 30, Middleport, $15 and
costs each, intoxication;
Martha L. Groves, 21, Bidwell,
$5 and costs, attempted
assault; Joyce K. George, 23,
Bidwell; Angelia Butcher,
Middleport ; Jeannie Pal·
terson, 18, Middleport, and
Willie Harris, Middleport, $5
and costs each, disturbing the
peace. ·
Forfeiting bonds were
Carson J . Lingerfelt, 56,
Letart, W. Va., $200, driving
while intoxicated, and Earl
Snyder, Cheshire, $30, in·
loxication.

SUBSIDY PAID
State School Foundation
subsidy payments for April
totaled $205,814.47 to Meigs
County. Payments by schools
e Eastern Local , $43,078.95;
gs Local, $118,701.93, and
hero Local, $44,033.59.

§

PLAYER AIDED
The Middleport E·R squad
was called to Kyger Grade
School Tuesday at5 :38 p.m. for
Marshall French, 16, who was
struck with a bat while playing
baseball. He wa~ transported
to Holzer Medical Center.

KEEP RURAL OHIO
MOVING UPWARD-

with

OAKLEY COLLINS
In The
OHIO LEGISLATURE
" As a legislator. he has delivered the goods" Dayton Dally News
No man , past or present, has directed more millions of dollars Into rural
Ohio from the wealthier. Industrial areas of the state - ' saving local
property owners and taxpayers thousands of dollars in higher taxes while
upgrading schools. highways, and local governments.
Re -elect OAKLEY COLLiNS Committee

·-1
~o"/h:r.....JI);!o:$::.Z.!.:::w.« •• :::oidfddo~

llEGISTRA TION DAY
RACINE
·. Pre·
reglstr•llon for air first
grade stadents and Ida·
clergartu studeats of
· Southern Local School
District wiU be held Friday,
from t to 1% 81111 1 to i at
Syracuse Elemeatary,
Raclae Elemeatary, Letart
Elemeatary and Racine
Kiade1Jirlen room.
All fLireats regtiterlng
eblldreu lor lbe ftrsttlme In
Sonlbern schoola are asked
to briag lbe eblld's blrlb
certificate and record of all
lmmuaJutlo... There wDl
he uo regular classes lor first
grade . or kindergarten
sludenll of the district on
pre-regilltrallon day..
~:=~~zn~:~~

Revenue Sharing Bill
Wo.u1d Help .Counties
WASHINGTON , D. C. Tenth District Congressman
Clarence E. Miller has announced that the long-awaited
revenue sharing bill approved
last week by the House W•vs
and Means ·Committee ·wouid
provide the State of Ohio and
its communities $22'1 m"lllion
this year:·
According to the provisions
of the bill, called the State and
Local Government Fiscal

Principals in

Bids Awarded
School Survey
By Commission Principals Mrs . Freda
The Meigs County Commissioners Tuesday aL'Cepted
bids on aggregate from
Diamond Stone Q~arries ,
Albany ; Tri-State Materials,
Parkersburg, and Richards
and Sons, Pomeroy. Amounts
of the bids awarded were not
made available.
In other business , the
commissioners approved a
request from county engineer
Theodore Beegle to repair a
request from county engineer
Theodore Beegle to repair a
landslide on county road 46 at
an estimated cost of $4,788.80.
The next meeting of the
commissioners will be Monday
due to election day. Attending
were Charles R Karr, Bob
Clark, a nd Warden Ours,
commissioners, and Martha
Chambers, clerk.

Irma D. Keyes, Treuurer

Pd. PoL Adll .

••
.
eslimati):l

·

Sutton , Powell Elementary
School, Powell; Mrs. Jessie
Badgley, Berlin Elementary
School, Delaware, and Mrs.
Gail Oman, Hyatts School,
Powell, visited the Pomeroy
Elementary School recenUy to
survey the school's teaching of
reading.
They conferred with Robert
Morris, principal, and Mrs .
Dan Meadows on the steps
involved in organizing learning
levels. They spoke with Miss
Wendy Schmidtt on par·
ticipation of educatable
mentally retarded children in a
regular reading level program.
The visitors invited members
of the Pomeroy staff to visit in
their respective schools once
programs are · put into
operation .

Fred A. Holt
Dies Wednesday

MEETING CAlLED
RACINE - The Racine
Baseball Assn. .will meet
Monday at 7 p.m. at the Club
Restaurant.

Fred Alpha Holt, 69, died
early today at his residence at
Rt. I, Racine . He was horn
August 14, 1902, at Jackson,
Michigan.
Surviving are his wile, Jessie
Phillips Holt, Gallipolis; four

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature In downtown
Pomeroy Wednesday atll a.m.
was 50 degrees under sunny
skies.

Assistance Act of 1972, Ohio's
state government would
receive $49.5 million while
$177.8million would godirecUy
to local governmental .units
within . Ohio. The Legisl~tlon
was approved Ap~il 17 by the
House Committee on Ways and
Means and it Is expected that
the entire House will vote on
the bill in early May ..
The bill is a compromise
worked out between the Nixon
Administration, which
proposed a $5 billion general
'revenue sharing bill last year,
and Committee Chairman
Wilbur Mills who, until
recently, was cool to the whole
idea of revenue sharing .
Russell Long, Chairman of the
Senate Finance Committee,
announced that the revenue
sharing bill is the next item on
the Committee's agenda
following resolution of the
welfare reform·social security
bill .
The bill, if enacted into law,
would authorize a five-yea r
program which appropriates a
total of $5.3 billion to state and
local governments during its
first full year. During the first
year,
the
Committee's
proposal allocated $1.8 billion
· to state governments for their
unrestricted use on the basis of
tax effort A total of $3.5 billion
is distributed to local government units according to need
as determined by a formula
based on population, urbanized
population, and relative per
capita income.
Virtually every city, county,
village, town, and township in
the country would rece ive
finan cial assistance under the
bill. Although there would be
' '" strings attached to stale
gqverqment spe nding , local
units of governmen t are
required to use th e funds for
maintenance and operating

expenses for public safety
(i ncluding police and fire
protection , building in·
spectlon); environmental
protection (Including sewat~e
disposal, sanitation, pollution
abatement) and public trans·
portation (including transit
systems .. and street construction ).
Rep . Miller said a computer
·

printout of · the
distribution of fullda for Gll£11i
and Meigs counties shows : :::
Gallia Col!lltY '-' Total to All
Gov'ts In County, · $321,67~;
Total to County Gov'\, $218,011(;
· Total to All City Gov't~ ·,
$40,017; Total to All townshiP
Gov'ls, $72,565, and GaWpolilj
City, $31,697.
::
Meigs County -Total to All
Gov'ts in County, $263,4211; ·
Total to County Gov 't, $1&amp;7 ,Bijl;
Total to All City Gov'\J;
$36,&amp;49; Total to All TOwnahjjl
Gov'ts, $81,9110; Mlddlepo(l,
$14,043; Pomeroy' m,955. ::
Figures for towns. smalll!f
than 2,500 population are n~
available, but will be ~
nounced later.

.

(Continued from page I) ·
Policemen had rejected a city offer of a 10 pd. pay ~alae thli
year, followed by 5 pet. bikes lbe next two ~ear&amp;. The minim~
starting salary is f6,400.
·
:

..

Richard Owens Dies WednesdaY:•,.
Richard M. Owens, 49, Main
St., Pomeroy, died early today
at the Holzer Medical Center.
He was horn August 24, 1922, at
Pomeroy, the son of the late
William C. and Luna Hambrick
Owens.
Survivors include his wife,
Maxine ; two daughters, Mrs.
Charles (Patty ) Carson, Hysell
Run , and Mrs. Jack (Linda)
Sigman, C\)Olville; one brolber,
William C. Owens, Jr., Athens;
a grandson, and several nieces
and nephews.
He was an elder of lbe
Middleport Presbyterian
Church, a veteran of the anny
in World War 2, and had
worked for Robinson's Dry

Cleaners over 2&amp; years.
.
Funeral~ervlcts wW be hek(
Friday at 3 p.m. at the:
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home:
with the Rev. Dwight ~bit3 :
officiating. Burial will be In the;
Riverview Cemetery. Friend!f
may call at the funeral home
after 10 a.m. Thursday.

Muskle, considered the

Badly Served,.
Says Gilligan

•

EGYPTIAN PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT VOWEl)
Tuesday to "hUmiliale" Israel and receiver occupied Arab land
within a year. He warned that another Middle East war Is "not·
far off."
Speaking to a crowd gathered at AI Hussein Moaque In eatre:
to celebrate the Prophet MOhanuned's birthday, Sadat said: "t
jrornise you we shall observe the next amtversary (of the
jrophet 's birthday) by celebrating not mly the libefatlm fl. OUf
land but alao lhe conquering of Israel's arrogance and
humiliating them."
•..

AI a · news ·conference, the
Maine senator freed the delegates he has won so far'
saying : "I want them to know
that they should · f~l free to
reassess their cornmlbnent."

WASHINGTON (UPI ) Sen. Edmund S.,Muskie withdrew today from the rernainin~
Democratic presidential
primaries but ~ept hilllself
available as a candidate for the
nomination at the convention in
July.

B
•
~
· ;
1 ,ews •.. lR
ne S:
7\ T

e

us

I

COLUMBUS (UPI)- Gov. JOhn J. Gilligan, one of the early
supporters of Sen. Edmund Muskie In his bid for the Democratic
jresidential nomination, said today Muskie "was badly served
by his own campaign organization."
Muskle earlier today pulled out of all the Democratic primary
elections but said he would remain a candidate for the
nomination.
Muskle had a full slate of 153 delegates conunilted In the May 2
Ohio primary led by Gilligan. ·
The governor refused to describe Muskie's slate of delegates as
.either favorite son for himself or uncommitted until after the
elections. At that point, Gilligan said, the delegates will have to
make up their own minds who to support.
"I am not making any er.dorsements, !l'edictions or anything
else," Gilligan said.
"The Democrats of Ohio will make a decision next Tuesday
and I will be ready to abide by It," said Gilligan. "I am ready in
advance to support the nominee of the convention. I will reassess
our siwation after the dust has settled next Tuesday.''
Gilligan predicted if Muskle had stayed In the Ohio primary "it
would have been a very close three-way contest."

frontrunner before a series cif
disastrous primary contests,
said : "I have made the
decision to withdraw from
active participation in the
remaining presidential primaries.
"l .do so with regret, but I
have no choice. I do not have
the money to continue."
Once an alrnosl prohibitive
favorite to win the nomination, .
Muskie acki!O)Vledged that his
decision reduced his chances of
winning the Democratic pres·
idi!nttal nomination.
"Neverlbeless," he added
"at the urging of friend:! and
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Partly cloudy ,aod mUd
Saturday through Monday
with a chance of showers
Saturday and Suaday ending
ou Momlay. Daytime highs
· In the upper lOs to mid 70s.
Overnight lows In lbe mid to
upper 40s early Saturday and
In lbe lower 50s Soturday
night and Sunday night.

ut

!l'oduces job6; a more equita·
ble distribution of the ''burdens
and benefits of our society";
and what he termed "~ n open
govenunent which confides in
them, responda to their needs
and opinion~ , and which Is free
from the corrupting Influence.
of special Interests."
He acknowledged that his
strategy to run in the first eight
primaries and In as many more
as he could was a political
mistake.
"No other candidate made a
similar commitment," he com·
mented. " It required that I
make ·a major effort and a
expenditur~
of
major
resources in every primary
with a maximum impact in

supporters.around the country,
I do not withdraw my candidacy ."
'
The 1968 vice presidential
nominee said his name would
remain on the ballot In several
of the remaining state prima·
ries e.ven though he would not
campaign.
Of hiS new strategy, he said:
"As for myself, I wlll continue
to speak out on the issues
around the country and from
the Senate floor."
The decision came on the
heels of primary contests in
Pennsylvania and Massa·
chusetts where Muskie fared
badly in competition with Sens.
·Hubert H. Humphrey and
George S. McGovern, now
consider~ the favorites for the
nomination.
Muskie said that In the six
primaries so far, the American
people have indicated their
determination to achieve four
goals~n end to the VIetnam
war ; an anti-ioDation policy
which controls prices and

none ."
"Nowhere were the consequences of such a strategy
more clearly demonstrated
than in Wisconsin, Massachusetts, and PeMsylvania,"
he remarked, " diminishing
results and diminishing

THE 1872 GIRL OF THE YEAR for the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority is
Carolyn Satterfield, right. She Is pictured here as she received the chapter's traveling trophy
from the 1971 honored girl, Coleen Ohlinger, who now resides in Philo. Mrs. Satterfield also
received a ring . More Pictures and story on Page 2.

resources .''

•

a1 y

I

BALL SATURDAY
RACINE - The French
Club of Southern High School
will sponsor the annual
Beaux Arts Ball Saturday
from 9lo 12 p.m. at the blgh
school here.
Dress will he semi·forrnal.
Admission is $1.50 single or
$2 a couple. The event is open
to the public. Music will he
provided by Cuthbertson
from Pt. Pleasant

VOL

~XIV

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT OHIO

NO. 267

•••

••

~j·

I'

/

RUTLAND - "A Beautiful
Happening in Rutland" is the
theme of the annual clean-up
week, May I-Ii, sponsored by
the Rutland Friendly Gar·

I

Womens Sportswear

A gr!!at collection of easy
going travel fashions - When you decide on your
vacation destination. come In
and choose from our won·
derful wardrobe of goeverywhere fashions. An
excellent
seiE!ctlon
of
womens knit tops, blouses,
skirts , slacks, bermuda
shorts. jamaica shorts, pants
dres.s es • jac~ets . vests •
bathing suits · halters, jeans .
scooter skirts · hot pants • all
easy care fabrics .

TO PLAN BANQUET
RACINE - Southern Junior
High School students and
mothers will meet at the school
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. to fur·
ther plans for the alwnni
banquet. All are urged to at··
tend.

Sizes include juniors • missy
and extra sizes. Choose from
the following top name
brands.

VISIT SCHOOL
The Pomeroy Elementary
School was visited by Sam H.
Pinson, sales representative of
the J. B. Lippincott Company,
and Barbara J. Rohrbaugh,
educational consultant, alao of
Lippincott, Tuesday. Mothers
of the PTA provided help In the
rooms In order that lbe staff
might meet with the consultants to see the materials
available and to discuss those
in use In the reading levels
program.

Queen Casua Is
Jane Colby
Dotty Mann
Russ Girl
Wrangler
Devon' (Regular Sizes)
Lady Devon (Extra
sizes)
Lady Queen (Extra
sizes)
Laura Mae
Miss. Fashiona lily

DIVORCE ASKED
Martha Jo Gilkey, Cheshire,
Rt. 2, has filed suit for divorce
In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court aplnst Kermtt E.
Gilkey, charging gross neglect
of duty and extreme cruelty~
RC TO MEET
Middleport Mayor ,John
Zerkle ·said today the' Mid·
dleport recreation commission
will meet Friday at 7 p.m. at
town haiL

•

deners.

Come to Elherfelds
Busy Ready to Wear
Department
See Our Outstanding
Selection Of

ELBERFELD$ IN .POMEROY

Pearch Elected
Lion President
Officers of the Pomeroy·
Middleport Lions Club were
elected following a 'report of
the nominating committee
made by Richard Chambers,
chairman, following the
group's noon luncheon Wed·
nesday.
Officers elected were Don
Pearch, president; Wendall
Hoover, first vice; Bob Hill
second vice ; Bob Miller, lion
tamer ; Carl Krautler, tall
twister ; Clarence Struble,
secretary·treasurer; Tom
Cassell, two year trustee, and
Richard Chambers, Ralph
Graves and Fred Morrow, one
year trustees. They will be
installed at the June 28
meeting.
George Hargraves, guest
speaker, was introduced by
Mr. Pearch.

Hargraves, speaking on
school financing, said Meigs
Local receives about 70 pet. of
its operating dollars from the
slate, while about 30 percent of
these dollars come from local
~B~tes . "Across the state, It's
just the reverse, about 70
percent of the operating dollars
come from local taxes and
about 30 percent come from the
state," Hargraves said.
To obtain full funding under
the new Foundation Program a
district needs 22'.1 mills voted
for operation. Meigs Local
must increase Its operation
millage from 17.5 mills to 22.&amp;.
Following Hargraves'
request to support the
operating levy, members voted
to endorse the passage of the
school levy.

·
SPACE CENTER, HOUS'roN - APOLLO ll'o astronauts
got a ''well done" from their filch! director and raced on target
toward a Pacific splashdown this afternoon, predlctfn8 their :Mii
poundB of lunar rocks will Wliock'mOre of the moon's secreta.
Controllers reported that Jom Young, T)mnas K. Maillngly
and Qlarles M. Duke were acceleralfn8 down the Imaginary
ll(lllce corridor leading to a safe,,:M,612 mile per hour rMntry
tntoEartb'satmospben:w wind up the nation's fifth and next-tolast lunar expedition.
'
' The astronauts approaChed Earth knowing they had rescued
the $445 million mllsion from the brll1k of failure. As It was, the
l[llalhdowll was.a day early: "We all had 1181'ioua doubts abOut
whether we Were goln8 to be able to dolt or not," Young llid.

In Progress

William Steen, President of
the Tri-State Area Council, Boy
Scouts of America, is announcing the selection of
Richard M. Larimer as the new
Council Scout Executive.
Larimer comes from the
National Capital Area Council,
headquartered in Washington,
D. C., where he served ·88
Director of Finance. His
professional career covers
tenure in Pittsburgh , Pa .,
Baltimore, Md ., and Athens,
Pa.
As a hoy he attained the rank
of Eagle Scout and has served

RICHARD LARIMER
In numerous adult volunteer
capacities: lfe Is a graduate of
Geneva College located in
Beaver Falls, Pa. He plans to
. locate soon. In the general
Huntington area with his wife
and two sons.

pARJS - 'I1IE UNll'ED ftATES RETURNED to tha
Vietnam 11881ltialiolll today after live weeki' IIIIJl8llll!lo but llid
that talkl would cort1aM only If tile CllmmtiDiata agfeed to talk
. about the North Vllllnall8e lnvlllon llld other main lauea. U.

r

2r

ALBANY - A project to
place 61,000 feet of aerial cable
In the northwestern section of
the Albany exchange is under
way, General Telephone Co. of
Ohio announced today.
Kenley Krinn, Athens
district conunercial manager,
said the cable project will
supplement existing facilities
along Ohio 681 and County
Road 14. In addition to lUling
existing requests for private
lines, this job also will provide
for future growth.
The new cable will be large
enough to allow reduction of
party-line
·service
for .
customers in the area, Krinn
noted. The Albany exchange
serves 1,113 telephones In a 90.8
square-mile area of Athens,
Meigs and Vinton counties.

RODNEY HO~N
A court • f honor wiU be
conducted Suaday at 2 p.m.
at the Syracuse United
Methodist Church to confer
the Eagle award, the highest
In scouting, to Rodney
Holman, son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Holman, Syracuse.
Holman is presently a Life
Scout in Troop 242 and a
junior at Southern Hlgb
School. Tbe publlc is Invited.

stressed tha t this servic~ is
free. However, the public
should not confuse this trash
pickup with the regular weekly

serv ice.
The schedule for pickup as
announced by Mayor Eugene
ThompsQn and ·Bruce Davis,
town marshall, is Wednesday,
May 3, from all homes and
businesses located below the
Marlin Funeral Home on Milin
St., and on Thursday , May 4
from all homes and businesses
located above the Marlin
Funeral Horne.
Homeowners are being
urged by the garden club to
paint strucmres which need it
and to tear down unsighUy,
unsafe buildings .
To enconrage residents to
plant flowers, the Friendly
Gardeners are providing two
free packets of Dower seeds
to each home and business In
Rutland. Club members
have sold over 100 nowertng
trees to be planted on private
properties.
Tree pian tins are being made
by the club with the assistance
of children in the special
education class at lbe Rutland
Eleme ntary School with whom
VAUGHAN COMING
Robert Vaughan, who-played
a leading role in the television
series "Man from Uncle", wlll
speak on hehal.f of George
McGovern for president at a
meeting to he held from 12:30
p.m. to I: ao p.m. Friday at
Memorial Auditorium in
Athens. Vaughan's appearance
Is sponsored by the Athens
"McGovern for President"
committee, and is open to the
public.
MRS. CROOKS HURT
The Middleport E·R squad
was called Wednesday at ~ : 48
p.m. to 784 Chestnut St. for
Mrs: Walter Crooks who In
falling suffered a possible
compound fracture of her
ankl~. She was taken to Holzer
Medtcal Center..

monthly gardening projects
are carried out and the
members of the Rutland Merry
Gardeners. The children will
be making plantings at the
Forest Acres Park and Fort
Meigs.
In addition the Merry
Gardeners will be doing a civic
planting.Qf flOjVer beds there in
hollowed out tree stumps .
'
An entrance planting at the
park will he made by the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners
who •lso pian to line the
roadway with flowering trees.
The spruce trees to be planted
by the children and the flower ·
seeds were provided by the
Rutland Branch of the
Pomeroy National Bank. The
Leading Creek Conservancy
will assist the club members
with the project a\ the park and
at Fort Meigs. The plantings
will not only be made to
beautify but also to help
prevent erosion.
·
Printed matter advertising
the club's civic project was
prepared by Vernon Weber's
Quality Print Shop.

$262,500 to
Pomeroy's
Water System
WASHINGTON, D. C. - The
Economic Development Ad·
minlstra lion and Cong .
Clarence Miller today an·
nounced the approval of a
$262,500 gran l to .the vlllage of
Pomeroy to help in the ex·
pansion of the town's water
system.
EDA officials pointed out
that enlarging the water
system will have · a positive
impact on the local economy,
allowing additional housing tG
be built and enabling the city to
prepare for additional business
growth.
· Total costs of the project is
$375,000, with $112,500 being
provided by the city.

Open House at Branch Bank Saturday
·

By Ullfted PH•• IDteraatloual

w.

Co-chairmen of the event is
Mrs. Harold Wolfe , club
president, and Mrs . Larry
Edwards, vice president. While
the garden club is stressing
clean-up, paint-up and plant-up
week in Rutland, members
urge county-wide participation
as a way to attract new people
coming into the area for employment at either the Meigs
mine or Gavin plant.
Here, residents are invited to
place trash and debris in
sturdy containers at the curb
for pickup by the village either
Wednesday or Thursday. It Is

Aerial Cable
Installation

ews.• in Briefi

• (Conlllllllllon paae

.•

VETERANS BI'!.'NEFITS - M11111befs of Rutland American Legion Post 467 Wednesday
loaded a truck wilb a new electrically operated hospital bed and mattress they bought with
proceeds derived from a circus held recently in Pomeroy. L-R are, Archie McKinney, Jim
Thomas, Ell Denison, and Eugene Fink, post commander. The hed will be used by disabled
veterans.

Larimer is
Scout -Exec

TEN CENTS

Rutland Planning
Beautiful Events

/

COURT DELAYS
COLUMBUS (UPl) - The:
Ohio Supreme Court today took;
under advisement a request by;
Churchmen Against the Lot.;
tery to remove from the May ~;
primary ballot a question on;
whether Ohio's Constitution:
should be changed to permit a:
state lottery.
·
.'

NEW OFFICERS - Student council officers for lbe 19'1273 school year at Southern High School recently elected are,
front row, Janie Rees, secretary; back row, 1..-, Lee Ann
Nease, treasurer; Greg Donohew, president, and Judi
Roberts, vice president

PHONE 992·2156

THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1972

''

CHARGE FILED
Kevin Kelley, 24, Pittsburgh,
who was a passenger in a car
accident Sunday on U.S. 33, in
which the driver, Robert J.
Rethage, 22, was killed, was
charged with possession of
dangerous drugs Tuesday
according to Bernard Fultz,
Meigs County Prosecutor .
Bond was set at $500.

'

'

en tine

Devoted To The lnterettJ Of The Meigs-Mwon Area

children,
CathyHolt,
Holt,
Holt, and Billy
and Mary
Mrs. , . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - •
George Alpha Moss, all of
Gallipolis .
Funeral services will be
Friday at I p.m. at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with burial in the Middleport
Hill Cemetery. Friends m~y
call at the funeral home after
10 a.m. Thursday.
I

CAST GIVEN PARTY
Doug Rees entertained
Saturday night with a party
following the annual senior
class play of Southern High
SchooL Refreshments were
served. Guests were Ed Cross,
Loretta Middleswart, Melissa
Proffitt, Nancy Ours, Beth
Theiss, Stan Kiser, Bill Cornell, John Eichinger, Candy
Hoback, Pam Hill, Ray Frank,
Ann Lockhart, Kitty Lockhart,
Debra West, Randy Proffitt
and Janie Rees.
'

•

'

••

REMEMBER! Sunday,

April 30, 1 a.m. Turn
· clock• ahead one hour
for DAYLIGHT SAV·
lNG TIME.

.·Weather
Partly cloudy and not as cool
tonight. Low tonight upper 3lls
to IQWer 4011 north and mid to
lower 401110\lth, Friday parUy
clliudy and mUd. High Friday
mid 601· to lower 701.

,

•

•

BY CHARLENE HOEFLICH
RUTLAND - Meigs County's newest banking
facllity - the RuUand Branch of lbe Pomeroy
National Bank - wW ,olieerve open house allt.s new
quarters on Salem St. here Saturday.
Buill in colonial style, the new Rolland Branch Is
26 by a2 feel overall featuring a red brick exterior
accented by white trim, columns and a cupola.
The aU-electric structure, buut by the Karr
Constructlon Co., Pomeroy RO, features drive-up
window facllitlell. Night depository service 18 offered
customen by way of a recesaed envelope depository.
'lbe depository u well as the drtve-up window are
sheltered frOm the weather,
The CUIImler service operations of the tastefully
decorated lntlrlor are faciltb!ted by a functional weD·
planned teller ana, Located in lhla area directly
beliDd four teller slatl&lt;lll Is an Insulated ledger
housing IIIII, two tellers' deskl, the drive-up window
and the nlghfdepoaitory recejvlng locker. "
Adjacent to the teller area Is a securitY vault
which 18 hl&amp;h)lgbted by a door providing maximum
'

securtty !Or the contents. Inside the vault are a
number of safety dePQSit boxes and space has been
JX'Ovlded for tnstallation of more boxes as required.
A spacious parking lot for customers is at the
rear of the building.
The new bank has been In the planning stages for
approximately two years and the growid was broken
at ceremonies held on Nov. II, 1971.
The Rutland Branch of The Pomeroy National
Bank is formerly the Rathburn Bank of Rutland,
which was granted a charter In 1912. The Pomeroy
National Bank purcllased the Rathburn Bank In
September, 1955.
The transaction brought to an ~d one of Ohio's
last two privately owned bam. lt also concluded tho!
banking career of lbe tale Mrs. Mlltoo E. Bean 1\llthburn who was one of only two women bank presidents
In lbe United Stales.
While the Rathburn bank had been operated ui a
portion of lhe Rathburn Department Store building, It
was moved to the Snowden bullding after being
purchased by the Pomeroy National Bank.

Braneb manager of the Rutland opeiation is
WIUiam J. Hobstttter who has served In lhat capacliy
since the purchase in 1955. He Is also a vice
!l'esident.
·
· Other personnel fl. tile Branch are Mn. Edith
WIIllamson, assistant llllllll8er, who has been with
the brlUICh llince Ita establishment; Mrs. Joan May,
teller . and secretary, ·and Mrs. Karen Grate,
bookkeeper and teller.
Houra of the Saturday open houae will be from 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. Regular buainea will be tralllllcted
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. During the oblervance refreflh.
ments will he served, liOUWnlra wW be presorted to
visitors, and a valuable door jrlze wW be awarded,
Money and recorda were moved to the new
l&lt;ication last Saturday lfllmoon.
The Branch Ia located In the wtllem portion of
Meigs County wbere coal miDing operations are
eKJ)ecled to contriiMite alplflcanlly to the county'&amp;
economy. Edlaon Hobltetter · Ia prealdent If Tlo':
Pomeroy Nallalll Bank.

•

�.,.

F al~ons . Boot One Away

$·~::~,~~AA·~~~~
- ~~~~*AA::~;~···--MJMJ-S

, .

,. ., ..,.,.

Sem"·o r

Qtmng T.n B0. xed'
e

sc~::.~z.;:~,

Generation Rap

Founders' Day

Ceremony Held

Mr. Milhoan, 74

Dies

,.,rrr:nrrwwow

,.

:

,.

Voice along Br'Way

I

DaiiJ

News .. . in Briefs

II

I

f&gt;

"'-"

Major League Stanain9s
By United Press lnternahonal
Notlono[.League
East
W. l . Pet. GB
New York
6 12 .750
Montreal
53.6251
Philadelphia 5 4 .625 Jl/2
Pittsburgh
5 4 .556 1112
St. Lo~ls
3 7 .300 4
Chicago
2 9 .182 5'1'
West
w. L. Pet. GB
Houston
9 2 .8]8
los Angeles
9 2 .81 8 ...
San Francisco s 6 .455 4,
San Diego
4 7 .364 5
Cincinnati
3 6 .333 5
Atlanta
4 ·a .333 5'11

Kissinger's meetlng in Moscow
last weekend, at which time he
was presumably made aware
of wliat t()e North Vietnamese
were wi1llng to do to get the
talks started again. ·
Nixon said the south Vietna·
mes~ had shown great
progress on the battlefield and
"we can now see the day wben
no more Americans will be
involved at all."
But Nixon made It pliln he
was not going to stop the raids
on the North as a condition for
resuming the peace talks.
Propoul Rejected
"I haye flatly rejected," he
said, "the proposal that we
stop the b&lt;mbing of North
Vie.tnam as a condition for
returning to Ute negoll.atln~
table. They sold that package
to Ute United Slates once
before, in 1988, and we are not
going to buy It again in 1972."

Wednesday's Results
San Fran 8 Phlla 6. 10 inns
Cine! r Pittsburgh 6
St. louis 9 Allan Ia 4
Hous 5 Chicagp 4, 10 inns
New York 5 .san Diego 1
los Angeles 2 Montreat 0
Toctay's Probable Pitchers
National League
IAU Times EST)
Philadelphia (Selma 0-1) at
San Francisco (Cumberland O·

p.m.
Cincinnati (Gullett 0-2) at
Pittsburgh (Briles 1-0l. 8 p.m.
• Montreal (McAnally 0-0) at
Los Angeles (Downing 1-1), 11
p.m .
New 'l'ork (Genlry 0-1) at San
Diego !Norman 0-1) , 10:30 ?.m.
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Alia at Pittsburgh (night)
Cincinnati at Chicago
St. Louis at Houston (night)
2), 4

8 Students
To Attend
Institute

New

. .. .... , .

... ,. . ,

at

Los

America11League

Gallipolis will host lhe 13th
1972 SEOI\L Golf PairinjiS
John Saunde rs, Ga lli polis ;
1. - Roger ScOtt , Well ston;
(Tee 011 Times)
Scott Spri ggs. Ir onton, and
Bi l l Diles, Athens; Don CL•I Iion,
annual
Southeaste
rn
Ohio
W. L. Pet. GB
Eric Col ll'y, Well ston .
Waverly, and Dane Mitchell,
Tee No.1
League golf match on the local
5 3 .625
(9 ,00)
(9,2!)
Jackson.
5 5 .500 1 links Friday.
1 - Mike McPea k, Jackson;
4. -- Ken New, Ga ll ipolis;
(9 : 16)
4 S .4 44
l•n
Chuc k Helber, Loga~ ; Steve Kev in Waldo, fr an ton ; Einon
3. -- Terry Hawk, Athens;
Tee
oil
time
.for
the
IS.ioole
3 5 .375 2
Plummer, Wellston. and Cabot
Tony Swi ndl er, Wa verly ; Dane
Story, Mei gs, . an~ John Cun
event is 9 a. m. All eighl ning
3 5 .375 2
ham, Gall 1pol1s.
Roe,
Jackson, and Jay
Rea. Athens.
2 5 .286 1112 SEOAL squads (32 golfers) are
(9 ,08)
Tee No.4
Beag he r, Logan .
West
(9 :00)
(9 :24)
2. - J eff Cole, logan; Jon
W. l . Pet. GB entered in the 1972 match.
Buck, Meigs ; Dow Sav nd ers,
1. - Rick Ander son. Iron ton ;
4. - John Dutcher. Wa ver ly;
J•&gt;hn Milhoan , tournamen t Ga ll ipol is, an d Mike Hurl ey, Tom Appl edor, Well ston ; Dan Morrow, Jackson; Mik e
5 2 .714
lf2
7 3 .700
director , announced pairings Ironton.
Ri c ha r.: d Wh iteside. Athen s,
Mojzer , Logan, and Jim Stor y,
5 3 .625 1 Wednesday lor Friday's event.
(9 ,16)
and But ch Workm an, Waverl y. Meigs.
5 5 .500 2
3. - Marty Vaughan , Meigs;
(9 ,08)
· COACHES - Athens, Ha-rold
They are :
5 6 .455 2lf2
Kessler ; Ga llip oli S, John
4 6 .400 3
Milhoan ; Ironton, Dick Myer s;
East

Detroit
Baltimore
Cleveland
Boston

New York

Milwaukee
Minnesota

Chicago
Oakland
Texas

Kansas City

California

Wednesday's Results
Minnesota 3 Boston 1

Chicago 7 Cleve 5, 10 inns

The Eastern Eagles, without
their se niors who are on tour,
defeated the Glouster Tomcats
al Glouster Wednesday night
t2·9 in a non·league baseball
game.
The Eagles WI leashed a 13· ·
hit attack with Bt'll Osbourne
getting three singles and 3
RBis' Alan Duvall added a
single and double, Rick Blake
had two singles, Steve Goebel a
double , and Bobby Edwards,
David Baker, Mike Markins,
Rick Blake and Randy Boring
each a single.
Duvall started on the hill for
the Eagles, coached by Larry
Heines , and gave way to

American League

(No games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Cleve at Kan City . (night)
Boston at Texas (night)
Chicago at Detroit (night)
Cal1f al Baltimore (night)
Oakland at Mllw (night)
Minn at New York (n ight)
International League
By United Press International
W L Pet. GB
Richmond
3 3 .727
Charleston
5 2 .714 1
Rochester
7 4 .636 1
Tidewater
6 6 .500 2'h
louisville
5 7 .417 3'h
Toledo
4 6 .400 311,
Peninsula
4 7 .364 4
Syracuse
2 6 .250 41/2
Wednesday's Results
Tidewater 3 Charleston 2 (10

Angeles Inn .)

~

Toledo6loulsvllle 5 (19 inns.)
Richmond 4 Rochester 1

Leogue Leaders
By Uniled PrHS lnternotional
Leodlng &amp;.Hers
Notlonol League
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Carty, All
10 23 s 11 .478
Tolan , Cin
9 37 7 17 .459
Slntt, Pit
8 24 4 11 .458
Sangln , PII
9 36 4 15 .417
Mota, LA
8 24 8 10 .417
Cdeno, Hou
9 39 616 .410
Jeter, SO
10 32 4 12 .375
Smns, St.L
10 41 6 15 ..366
Snglln. Mil
8 25 4 9 .360
Jones, NY
-7 25 3 9 .360
American Leoguo
G. AB R. H. Pel.
Pnson. Cal
9 30 3 13 .433
Derwn, Min
7 16 6 11 .423
Allen, Chi
10 39 10 16 .410
Freehn,Det
1 21 3 11 .407
llv:.Crw. Cle 9 25 5 10 .400
Wilms, Chi
6 15 1 6 .400
Lahud, Mil
7 23 4 9 .391
Green, Oak
7 21 1 8 .381
May. Chi
10 37 6 14 .378
Cash, Del
8 24 5 9 .375
Home Runs
Nlllop•l L~ogue: Aaron, All.-

ca.. •
• •
•

·

the first time this year and
fanned 13, walked eight, hit two
batters, and gave up only a
gr ound single to Starr·
'washington 's Jeff McDaniel
past third base.
Starr·Washington had
Cotlerill startin g with Prim·
mer in tlie first, Cotterill back
again in the second, and Ed·
wards finished up. Together,
they struck out four and
walked U . The Tornadoes
managed nine hits off them .

Pacing the Tornadoes at the
plate were Jim Hubbard, three
singles; Brett Hart, a double,
and Mike Nease, Monty Hart,
Stan Kiser , Rodney Holman ,
and Allan Pugh, each singles.
Southern is 6-1 overall and is
4.0 in Souther~ Valley CQil·
lerence play. The Tornadoes
will play the Southwestern
Highlanders tonight at South·
western .
Southern
541 300 7- 20 9 I
Starr·Wash. 000 100 ~ I I 5
Arnold (WP) and Pugh.
Cotterill (LP), Primmer (1 ),
Cotterill (2). Edwards (2) and
Ellinger.

Hou , Crawford, LA and
Kingman, SF 4; five fled with
13.
American League: Darwin,
Mlnn 4; Allen, Chi 3; Cardenas,
Cal. ~y . Chi, Cash. Del.
Murcer, NY and Duncan, Oak
2.
Runs Balled In
Nationol League: Kingma n,
SF 12; May and Rader, Hou 11 ;
Tolan, Cin and Wynn, Hou 10.
American Le'ague : Darwin,
Minn 11 ; ~y . Chi 9; Allen. Chi
8; Powell. Ball and Michael,
NY 7.
·
Pitching
National league: Nolan, Cin,
Ray, Hou, Sulton. LA, Seaver,
NY and Carlton, Phil 3-0.
Americon Leogue: Wood, Chi
and Coleman, Del 3-0; Siebert,
Bos, Burgmeler, KC, Blyleven,
Mlnn, Keklch, NY,. locker. Oak
and Broberg, lex 2-0; Dobson
and Mcnally. Bsll, Bahnsen,
Chi, Perry, Clev , and Lollch,
Del 2· 1.
..._
~y .

•

.. ,

a. :

Officers and members of
Melga County Drug Abu11 ud
Alcoholllm Committee - t oa
record Jo lllppOI't tbe· Mellt.l
~ Levy and wpd ill
PI
e in tbe Mly 2 primary ,
elec:
at • recent lpadtl
meetlng.

77:1:$513

HOII"' ?o.m. toS:30p.m. Dally
.
MASON, W.VA.
.m.
to
I
p.m.
FrldiY
&amp;
SoturdoY
71

h~l s its own diamond - sized to
accunwdate
the very young number of games can be

Lon don, "so tha t a maximwn

scheduled." London pointed
oul that cer ta in evenings were
reserved for games last season
but no set schedule developed ,
leaving the field unused two
evenin_!ls each week.
'' It is our intention to have
games at th e field every
pussi ble day, "' added London.
"'And il is only lhrough teams
ma king app lication early tha t
we can &lt;:~rrange it."
The mayur said the Meigs
American Legion team's ap·
plication to use the field has
already been approved lor
several Wednesday, Saturday
and Sunday home ga mes.
He furth er sa id teams made
up of home town fol ks -

Misses.

and
Sport Coats

Special
Discount
to Grads

474 Hits

Team High Series Hits &amp; Misses .

1324

Cheers! Here's to you
and to looking hand·
some on that Big Day I
Many suit styles for
all occasions, here.

al lhe park.
Schedules of tea ms approved
for playi ng home games at lhe
Syracuse Mun ici pal Park
should be submi tted to either
London or Winge lt the earliest
possi ble date.

Aprilll, 1972
Standings

Pis.
Team
...
Jr . Bugaloos
52
Headquarter Barma id s
46
Feeney Bennett Flyer s
44
42
Buckeyes
40
Rolling Pins
40
Gobl e Ma rauders
High Indiv idua l Game
Lucy McKinney 160.
Second High Ind . Game

KERM'S KORNER

-

Lucy McKinney 152.
High
Ser i es
Lucy
McKi nney .d56
. Second High Series ~ Becky
Rou sh 414.
Tea m High Game - Feeney

New York Clothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

Bennelt Flyers 491.

Tea m High Ser ies Bennett Flyers 1390.

Feeney

You Should Buy At

Story's 43
Tops Cards

Sears

SEARS.. ROEBU~~ AND ~01 .
.

..

Mei gs· Steve Story too k
medalist honors again, but the
Marauder golfers still lost to
Ihe Alhe ns Bulldogs, 232·246, at
lhe Alhens Co un try Club
Wednesday.
· Besides Story's leading 43,
SIGN UP SATURDAV
Jon Buck had a 46, Marty
RACINE - All boys ages 6 to Vaughan and J . D. Story , each
15 in the Racine area wanting 42's and Randy Chafin a 53.
to play pee wee, little leag ue For lhe Bulldogs, Bill Diles and
and pony league baseball are Kevin Ray stroked a 44 pace ,
asked to sign up Saturday, Ric hard Whiteside 45, Terry
Apnl 29, from I p.m. to 3 p.m. Hawk 48 and Jim France 51.
at the Racine Grade School.
Coach Nolan Swackhamer 's
Bring $2 insurance money and Marauders will compete in the
be accompanied by a parent or league tournament this Friday
guardian.
and Salurday.

.

WHEEL
HORSE
•
•
•

Tractor Power
is on display.
From lhe economical
7 HP Lawn Ranger to
the brawny 14 HP
models.

Calalogue No. 91381 N

CUT '9.99
WAS '97.99

$

Craftsman 20-in. Push
Rotary Mower
with Eager·l Engine

, Thi s push rotary mower has a 9.0 cu. in. Eag~r- 1 engine to
provide plenty of power lor lhe big cutting jobs. Top pull

recoil slarter. Big 7.5 inch wheels. Lightweight for easy
pushing . Folding handle for storing neatly in your garage or

storage shed. Non-adjust luelsystem . Simple choke-run-stop

control. Standard muffler.

Use Sears Easy Payment Plan
\

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20-INCH ROTARY
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Summer

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4799

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BAUM LUMBER
COMPANY

Begins Week
of May 21
Men's,
Women's,
Mixed, Scratch • 3 men
and Junior Leagues.

Companion 7.75 ·C\I. in, engine with
E·Zsta.rt top recoil starter, a nd bu mpon cam com pr ~i on rtlease. Lever on
cirburetor controls engine. Polyethylene

LOW PRICE

CENTER

2995

,

League and the Syracuse Pee Syracuse - will have priority
Wee baseball team.
' over othe rs. But t!icy must
" It is 11ecessary for us to se t apply by the deadline or be left
a deadline for teams to make out.
The Syracuse Pee Wee team
application, " said Mayor

_ LAVER STILL TOPS
DALLAS iUPII - Rod Laver
continues as the top money
winner on the World Champion·
ship Tennis lour with $59,250.
Fellow Australian Ken Rosewall
is second with $112,700 while
Tom Okker of The Netherlands
Is third at $30,100, Marty
Riessen of Evanston, W., Is
fourth with $25,000 and Cllf!
Drysdale of South Africa ·is
fifth at $24,700.

MASON
BOWLING

Slide, Swing, Etc.
Prices Start At •

•
•

Our Suits

Sco r ekeeper s Debbie
Taylor and Jan Elliot.

Team High Game -

Will be Scheduled by May 3

CHILDREN'S GYM SETS

:

Bob Skaggs.

American Legion
Ladies Auxiliary

JfJi LEADING BATTE·RS
~lor

81111

Glousler, tak ing advantage
Gallipolis is defending
of six Eagle errors, collec ted league champion. lt will be the
on ly f&lt;&gt; w· hits, a double by ·fo urth lime the Old French City
Ca mpbell and singles by has hosted the tournament
Gillispie , Lint and Gillolt.
since it was organized in 1960.
The Eagles are 5.:1 overall
and 3·2 in the Southern Valley
Veterans Memorial Hosp·ital
Con ference. Eastern will play
League
lhe ~'edera i·Hocking i,an_ce rs
Aprill8-21, 1972
Standings
al Federal·Hocking this Friday
Team
Pts.
nighl. The Eastern se mors will Hit &amp; Misses
6.d
be back in action nex l week. Gutter Bum s
52
30
Easlern
001 028 1- 12 t3 6 The Opens
Straight
Shooters
30
Glo usler
206 000 1- 9 4 2
High Ind . Game - 161 Becky
Duvall, Cross (WP ), )3), Anderson ; Second High Ind.
Blake (6) i1jld Blake, Edwards Gam e - 154 Celesta Bush .
High Ind. Series - 427 Bess ie
( 6) . Hun1phrey tLP). Milliron
Sylves ter ; Second High Ind.
161, Seevers 16) and Gi llotl .
Se r ies - 404 Beck y Anderson.

Use of Syracuse Diamonds

Tornadoes in 20-l Laugher
The Southern Local Tor·
nadoes won their sixth game in
seven outings Wednesday at
Starr·Washington, a rollicking
20:1 victory behind senior Pat
Arnold's one.Jlitter .
Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tor·
nadoes kept their winning ways
intact with 13 runs in the first
lour innings to roll up a IJ.O
lead. The Tornadoes capped off
the rout with seven runs in the
final frame .
Arnold went the distance for

winning pitcher Richard Cross
i11 the third . Ric k Blake
relieved in th e sixth and hurl ed
the final tw o innings. Together,
they struck oul eight and
walked only four.
Hwnph rey starte-d on the hill
ror 111e Tono cals an d was
pinned with the loss. Millirone
came in in the si xth as did
Seevers. Al l told, the three
Tonocal pitchers walked six
an d fann ed eig ht.
The Eag les, who were
defeated Tuesday by Kyger
Creek. ' wiped oul an 8·3 ·
Glousler lead in the sixth wilh
a11 eighl·run uprisong.

fI
1: 1;1
. ·t l

Jackson, Tom Sla ter ; Logan,
Di ck Tayl or ; Meigs, No lan
Swa ckhamer ;
W ave r ly,
Carr ol l Haw hee, and Well ston.

&amp;

Peninsula 3 Syracuse 2

SYRACUSE - Softball and
hardball teams expecting to
use th e Syracuse Municipal
Park diamond as their home
Stan Perry's towering three·run homer in the diamond
th is summer must
first inning and a fine pitching . performance by apply for the privilege with
freshman righthander Jimmy Niday carried the Mayor Herman Londo nor town
Gallipolis Blue Devils to a 4-2 baseball triumph over cow1cilrnan Bob Wingett by
South Point on Pt. Pleasant's Harmon Field Wed· Ma y 3.
Applicalions to use the
nesday evening.
The victory upped Gallipolis' season record to 6- Syracuse Mun icipal Park as a·
3. The defeat left the Pointers from Lawrence hom e field have been made by
the Meigs·American Legion
County with a 13-3 season mark.
ba se ball team, the Meigs·
Gallia Academy did all its Evans,
- rf ,
3 0 1 Mason Slo-Pitch Softb all
scoring in the first rung off Brown, If,
3 1 1
losing hurler Bill Culver, who Monlgomery. cf. '
3 o 1
suffered his first mound loss of TOTALS
Palrick, "·
2 o
o
21
2 4
DRYER ACQUIRED
the year.
GALLIPOLIS (4)
John Davis led off with a PlAYER- Pos.
AB R H
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - The
Davis, 3b.
3 1 1 Los Angeles Rams acquired
1
1
d
h
singe, sto e secon , and wit Klesllnq, c.
3 o o
one out, scored on a Pointer Sheets, If.
2 1 2 defensive end ~'red Dryer fr om
error.
Slone. lb.
3 1 o li1e New England Patriots
Perry, ss, p,
2
1
1
Wednesday in exchange for a
SOUTH POINT (2)
Boone, cf.
3 0 o
PLAYER- Pos.
AB R H Taylor. 2b.
2 0 0 fi rstround draft choice and
Kouns, 2b,
4 o 0 Berridge , rf,
1 0 0 defensive tackle Rick Cash.
Pemberton, lb,
2 0 o Niday, p.
3 o o Dryer had played three years
Hand shaw , c,
4 0 1 TOTALS
22 4 4
for the New York Giants before
Culver, p,
3 0 0
Scor e by Innings :
Sharp. lb.
2 o 0 S. Point
000 000 2-2 4 3 being traded to New England
BurQe. ph, (7)
0 1 o Gal lipolis
400 ooo ,._.. 4 1 three months ago. ·

Plans were made for the next
meeting of the Meigs County
Committee on Alcohol and
Drug Abuse to be held May 16,
7:30p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church. The public is urged to
attend. Everyone Is needed to
help deal with alcohol and drug
problems In their county, it
_was pointed out.

·'

Glouster Bombed 12-9

Cal ifornia 3 Milwau kee 1
New York 4 Oakland 2
Detroil 8 Texas 1
KanCIIY. 5 Bait 3. 5'1• ins, rain
Today s Prob.able Pitchers

Blue Devils Cop
Sixth Win, 4-2

TV.

WORKER INJURED
Wiley Albritton, · Tampa,
Fla., construction worker for
the Union Boiler Company, fell
approximately 10 feet from
scaffold thla mornln~ at Phlll
Sporn Power Plant, .
injury to his back and a bralll
ankle. The New Haven ~
squad transported him •
Pleasant Valley Hoaptta
where he ·was admitted.

York

(night) Phlla al San Diego
(night)
Montreal a! San Fran (night)

Eight Meigs County High
School students will attend a
Teenage Institute on Drugs and ·
Alcohol on scholarships
provided by the Meigs County
Committee on Alcohol and
Drug Abuse.
Robert Sweet, Educational
Consultant of the Ohio
Department
of
Health
Alcoholism Program of
Columbus, addressed the
committee April :ll at St. Paul
Lutheran Church on Ute 1972
Teenage Institute on Aocohol
and Drugs, which wlll be held
in August at Ohio Dominican
College, Columbus.
It was decided two students
from Southern High School,
two from Eastern High School
and four from Meigs High
School would be awarded the
scholarships. The students are
to be either juniors or seniors
in the, 1972:73 school year. Jim
Roach was appointed com·
~ttee chairm~~~ \0 ~cure . the
scholarships of $35 each. .
Also1 discussed was the
Midwest- Sununer School of
Alcohol Studies. As has been
the practice In the past, one
member &lt;1. Ute committee Is
sent as a representative of
Meigs County. Louis Vaughan,
dispatcher for the Ohio Highway Patrol, and substitute
police officer in Pomeroy, has
been appointed to attend the
week·long institute in Chicago.
Harold Mave and Jim Roach
reported on progress in
acquiring
a
complete
educational unit concerning
drugs, including drug samples,
film strips and records. It Is
felt this would be beneficial to
many dubs, organizations and
schools where members of Ute
committee often speak.
Possibilities of Alcohol and
Drug Information Telephone
Contact were discussed. After
inquiring Utrough the "Athens
Care Une," Rev. Arthur Lund
learned of possibilities of
training by means of lis ser.
vice. Thirty hours of Intensive ,
training would be required of
all who would participate in
such a telephone service.
The Meigs Ministerial
Association may also be of belp
in this community venture.
Jack Kane and Ken Piper,
WMPO personnel, were asked
to assist in producing a panel
discussion program for cable

LEVY~UPPORTED

,.. .

.......

'

Gallipolis To Host Golf Tourney

Pullout ·Continues

OFFICIAL NOW
111e Unlll'CI. Stales 'District
Court lor . the Southern
Dl&amp;lrlct of Ohio bas Issued a
.RAVENSWOOD - The by Jaccar combined with three Jeff Haymaker doubled with linil order dedaring ihe
two out and· scored on Mike Ohio slr·month dunt101181
Waham White Falcon baseball White Falcon bobbles.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) The new troop pullout would Refers lo Negoll.atlODB
team suffered its secood set·
Ravenswood upped its lead .Lewis' pinch single.
residence r~quirement
Referring to the peace
Despite t!le continued Commu- Iring the U.S. force level to
Wahama outhlt Ravenswood" unconslllutlonat.
back of lhe seaSC}n willl an ll.S to 9·1 with a single run in the
negotiations
which resumed In
nisi offeruiive, President Nixon . 49,000 by July 1-a date by
loss Wednesday at the hands of second and lour in the fourth on 1().8 but committed nine costly
Consequenlly, any person
Paris tnday, Nixon said "We
Ravenswood ..The Red Devils one lone hit and five Wabama errors compared to two' forthe who is otherwise qualified, has fl!jcided to pull another which the adminlslration be- are reswnlng· Ute Paris tall&lt;s
Red DevilS. Sam Romeo was and who bas resided thlriy :ll,OOO troops out of Vietnam; Heves the Cmununist invasion
took advantage of eight hits· miscues.
with a firm expectation that
and nine Wahama errors to
Wahama tallied four . the winning pitA:her, striking days In the county and bul. he said the bombing ..Ids of South Vietnani will have run productive talks leading • to
plate 11 runs.
markers in the fifth on four hits out 8 and walking S. For prednc~ Is eligible to vote. on the north would continue as its course, according to pres- rapid progress will follow
long as the attack persists. 1
idential adviser_Henry KissinWahama opened the scoring wi1h the big blow being Rob Wahama, Rob Belcher suf- This directive wa.s fe&lt;elved
Nixon,
in
a
nationally
tela·
ger.
The date alsO coincides through all avallable chan·
in. the first inning when Mike Lambert's three run qouble. fered his first lo~ · of the Wednesday bY lbe Meigs
nels."
White singled, advanced to Chester Roush opened with a season, dropping his record to. Cowity Board of Elections vised speech Wednesday, also with the rainy ~ during
That phrase seemed to · in·
~cated he may have secret which time HanOI wolild have
second on Randy Clark's in· single followed· by walks to Z.t.
from Secretary of State Ted assurances that Hanoi is, now difficulty waging the kind of dicate Nl1on may have
field ground out and scored on White and Clark. This set the
Rob Lambert and Mike W. Brown.
ready to negotiate in good - ground war In which it is now received some behind-the·
a miscue by the left fielder,
stage lor Lambert's two White led Wahama's hitting as
. .
!JCI!Iles ass'1'ance as a result ~~su:u · un ( faith.
involved.
Ravenswood let its presence bagger scoring three runs. Lambert had a single and a
be felt as their leadoff hitter . Curtis Roush promptly lined a · double in' f_our at bats with 3
a~~~ns
rapped a·solo home run to tie single to center, scoring RBI's. White connected for two
.1-.U£
the score. The Red Devils went Lambert.
singles in three at bats and
on to score three more runs in
The White Falcons final run
the first Inning on a two bagger was plated in the seventh when
encounter is ToTheMreeewl
"llt bSeun
.. a dasenioyr .
Thursday at Federal Hocking
for a 4:30 contest. The Falcons' citizens fellowship meeting at
record is now 5-2.
the St. Paul LUtheran Church,
SAIGON (UPI)-.North Viet- vlsers are in Quang Trl city. March 30 had attacked Quang
Pomeroy,
Sunday at 2:30p.m. namese troops attacking in
WAHAMA(6)
An explosion, probably an Trl from norUt, south and west
•·
AB H R · The purpose of the meeting is great force closed in on Quang anununltion dump . going ·up, and Utat tanks and heavy ar·
Ch. Roush. If,
5 J J for persons 55 or older to
Tri from all sides tonight and shook the city where helpless tillery were circling in from lbe
By Helen and Sue Bottel
White, 2b.
3
Clark, c,
3 1 1 become acquainted with other began firing anti-personnel refugeea, their worldly belong- east as well.
Lambert , ss ,
4 1 2 senior citizens of Meigs
North Vietnamese in·
shells that burst in midair and ings tied up in blanlteted
Cu
.
Roush,
cf,
4
X-MOVIES FOR TODDLERS? ·
~
:
County.
rained shrapnel on the defen- bundles, lined the streets, liltratlng intn the area below
Hesson, rf,
4
Dear Helen and Sue:
Officers of the aging unit ders and Utoilsands of refugeea -Kellennan reported. A South Quang Tri cut Highway 1,
Gardner, Jb,
3 o o
3 o 1 are
We got married young. I'm 21, and my wile is 18. Now that Haymaker, lb,
Clarence
Struble, who were not allowed to flee · Vietnamese pollee officer said blocking escape routes. And
Belcher,
p,
0
she can get into X.rated movies, we still can't go because they
~ ~ president, Gertrude Mitchell, Ute city.
the police were ordered 111!1 to just to the norUt, six North
Camp. p.
1
won't let us bring our kid who is nearly three but big for her age, Adkins. p,
1 0 o treasurer, Eleanor Thomas,
Hanoi Radio reported let them leave. ·
Vietnamese tanks crossed the
1 o 1 director, Margaret Amberger American planes bombing
lewis, ph.
and looks about five.
"They want to leave, .go still.jntact railroad bridge at
52 5 lD · and Henry Watson, aide~. and
If we pay for a babysitter, we can't afford the movie. Now TOTAlS
within 35 miles of the North down South, but we have or- Dong Ha, eight miles below the
RAVENSWOOD (lll
Ann Moon and Evelyn ~ight Vietnamese capital and said ders In keep them here;" a DMZ, and were reported
what would athree-year-old get out of a sexy picture? I tell the
AB R H in charge of program.
cashier she'll sleep Utrough most of it, but no, we can't get ln.
six planes were shot down police officer said. "No chasing South Vietnamese
Hendricks, lb,
2
1
A
report
of
the
progress
that
3
Wednesday and tnday. The civilians are allowed to leave." Rangers down "Highway I
Wby don't theater owners use some sense? -GARY
Jaccar, ss,
~ ~ ~ has been made thus far will be U.S. Navy reported the American troops speculated toward Quang Tri, 10 miles to
Dear Gary :
Romeo.p,
3 1 1 given and what is hoped to destroyers Gurke and An· Utey were being forced to stay Ute south.
Wby don't Ute three of you toddle on down the street and see a Cavender, 2b,
Wolte. ll.
2 3 1 accomplished in the future. A derson sank three attacking In the city to keep the North
less raunchy picture? You might even enjoy it. - HELEN AND Foose, c,
3 0 0
3
1 1 film will be shown followed by North Vietnamese PT boats Vietnamese from attacking .;s :··.,.tea •..s .. m ·· u·
Reynolds. ct.
SUE
4 0 1 a question and answer period. and damaged one.
Sayre. 3b,
MEETING PLANNED
Quang Trl.
. P.S. Read on :
Staats, rf,
3 2 1 Refreshments will be served.
Ralph Welker, state
UP! correspondent Stewart
''They're short of hostages,"
Dear Rap:
26 11 8
TOTALS
Kellerman,
reporting
by
tel..
one
GI
said.
"
The
North
said today be
representative,
100
040
16
10
9
Wahama
I have just begun my third season as a cashier for a very
410
402
x--11
8
2
,
R'wood
will
set
up
a
.meeting
wltb
phone
from
the
U.S.
military
Vietnamese
might
not
hit
us
reputable drlve·ln theater. The few times we have shown X.rated
IN HOSPITAL
compound inside Quang Tri- too hard if Utey know a lot of Division 10 oftlclals next
Errors - White , Clark,
fllrnB, you wouldn't believe what took place!
SYRACUSE -Earl Harden, South Vietnam's norUterrunost civilians will also get kllled." week iu regard to the closing
lambert 2, Cu. Roush, Gard·
No one under IBis supposed to be admitted, right? Well, the ner 2, Camp, Adkins, Wolfe, Canton, underwent major
Kellennan said the North of the Pomeroy·Mason
city-said of the nighttime
first night of thls one skin flick, we turned away as many cars as Reynolds.
surgery Monday at Timkin bombardment: "So many fires Vietnamese estimated at two bridge for 10 to H days' for
LOB
Wahama 10. Mercy Hospital there. He is Ute
we admitted. The second night people started complaining to the Ravenswood
6.
are burning on the southern divisiOilS strong in their Initial oeeded repair.
mana~er : "My child is only four, he won't know what's going on
2B - · Haymaker. Lambert. son of Mrs . Florence Harden edge of the city it looks like invasion across the DemilitaWelker said be Is pleased
... " "Susie wt1l sleep tjlrough it. .. " "You can't be serious- why, Jaccar.
Potts, Syracuse. Cards may be daylight."
rlzed Zone (DMZ) at start of that the repair is helng done,
HR - Hendricks, Reynolds. sent to him in care of the
he's only a baby!"
Elgb\)' U.S. military ad: the Communist offensive since It Is very necessary;
WP - Romeo
hospital, room number 355.
Some even tried to get their 12:year.Oid children in, saying
LP - Belcher (2-1)
however, "the closing of tbe
they had no place to leave them. Don't they realize a manager
bridge wlU be very costly to
can have his license taken away if he breaks the code?
Meigs County merchants."
We 'don't book X·fllma often because they cause too much
He said Meigs County civic
conflict- not from shocked people, but from those who want to
leaden wut be notified of the
get in and don't make it. - AL
meellag day, hour, and
Dear Helen and Sue :
place.
I have a girl friend who searches through all our cabinets and
drawers in the kitchens. Wben she finds candy or snacks, etc. even expensive nuts- she helps herself, usually eating Utero all.
We hate to see her coming, and hide things, but she's a super·
Presentation of the "Girl of introduced were Connie Bailey,
11100per. I tl'y to explain that this isn't her house, but her mother the Year" awards highlighted , Elaine Swisher, ~~annie
1¥1dmineare best friends, and we don't want to cause a feud. She the annual Founder's Day Ebersbach, Ruby Gum, .Kathy
Wednesday
figures whatever is ours Is hers.
observance of Beta Siglll• Phi King, Janice Kilker, Sandy
Yet when I go to her house, she doesn't even offer me food, Sorority Wednesday night at Korn, Janet Pickens, Wilma
Lawrence Milhoan, 74,
· but instead just eats in front of me. U I opened her refrigerator, -the Meigs Inn.
Reese, Jennifer Sheets, Unda ·
Middleport,
Rt. I, died Wed·
· her mother would hit the fan. I know - because I did once, just to
·Selected by popular vote to Sauvage and Karen Stanley.
nesday evening at Holzer
show this girl. But she didn't take the hint. Her Mom thinks she's receive the awards were
Xi Gamma Mu members
Medical
Center. Mr. Milhoan
an angel, and I'm the had one.
Carolyn Satterfield of the Ohio· recognized were Eleanor
lived at North Fifth St., Mid·
What can we do? - NEEDING LOCKS OR MOUSETRAPS Eta Phi Chapter and Shirley Thomas, order of Ute rose;
dleport
most or his life until
Custer of the Xi Gamma Mu Lucille Williamson, ritual of
Dear NLOM :
moving
to
his present home six
jewels, and Mary Jeanne
Amousetrap might not be a bad idea - if you didn't forget Chapter.
years ago.
A trav~ling trophy and ring Walker, a charter honorary
and spring It on yourself! Better yet - your mother should take a
He was preceded in death by
were presented to Mrs. Sat· member. Phil Mullen and
tip from her friend and get tough - real tough! - HELEN
two
brothers and two sisters.
terfield by the 1971 Girl of the Norma Amsbary, charter
+++
He is survived by his wife,
Year , Mrs. Coleen Ohlinger, of members of Xi Gamma Mu,
Dear Needing :
Margie;
one daughter, Mrs.
Notes in those hiding places saying, "Sorry, snoopy, we're Philo. Mrs. Nellie Brown, 1971 were in attendance at Ute
Vernon
(Margaret Bell)
fresh out," might help; but, really the best way to deal with honoree of Xi Gamma Mu, dinner. Lois Rosenbaum was
Weber, Middleport, Rl. I; one
someone who takes over your house is with a showdown. It's time made the presentation of a ring recently reinstated into
brother, Tom, Oeveland and
to Mrs. Custer.
membership .
Marna learned her angel - Isn't! - SUE
. five grandchildren.
SELECI'ED BY POPULAR VOTE as the tm Girl of Ute
The program followed a 6:30
Highlights of Ute past year
+++
He was a member of Mid·
Year for the Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
p. m. dinner. Susan Baer led in were presented by Velma Rue
Dear Sue and Helen :
dleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM, the
Soroeity was Shirley Custer. Here Nellie Brown, 1971 Girl of
the National Anthem and a and Mildred Karr for Xi
You said it was okay by you If a man wore his wedding ring welcome was extended by Gamma Mu, and Charlotte
Rutland Methodist Church, and
the Year, pruenlll the cbapter'a ring to Mrs. Custer.
on his little finger . But you should have added - TAKE IT OFF Vikki Gloeckner, president of Hanning and Carol Adams foe
Brotherhood of Railroad
wblle working! My finger was almost pulled off when my ring got the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter. She Ohio Eta Phi Chapter. "This Is
Engineers.
He retired in 19&amp;1
TWO DIVORCED
caught in machinery. Another time I was burned from shorting a also read a message from Bill Your Year, Pearl Welker,"
Two divorces have been as an engineer for the New
1 car battery through my ring. Men have been killed when their
granted
in Meigs County York Central Railroad after 41
Ross, founder of Beta Sigma was the theme of the Xi
rings catch on moving wheels, etc. If a woman loves her husband Phi.
Common Pleas Court, one to years service.
Gamma Mu presentation . A
she'llmake hlmleavethatring at home! - GUY
Ernestine Campbell from
Funeral services will be held
Pledges of Ohio Eta Phi gift was presented to Mrs.
Saturday
at 2 p.m. at the
David
F.
Campbell,
and
one
to
.Welker by Mrs. Karr. Judy
"?' : 21 : " ( PP??U ibbbbd
Marion Marcum from Wlutam Martin Funeral Home with the
Werry presented a gift to Mrs.
J. Marcum, both lor gross Rev. Robert Baumgarner
Gloeckner, outgoing president
neglect of duty. Rolland Smith · officiating. Burial will be in
of Ohio Eta Phi.
111d Ronnie Lee Anderson have Miles Cemetery.
Favors for Ute dinner atFriends may call at the home
been appointed as special
tended by approximately 70
anytime
. Middleport Lodge 363
deputies
of
the
Meigs
County
shooter Roger Mudd's great.grandpappy was members and Mrs. Marcia
BY JACK O'BRIAN
S!eriff's Dept.
will hold masonic services
the doctor who set John Wilkes Booth's busted Hobstelter, sponsor of XI
APART, A PARTRIDGE
Friday
at 7:30 p.m. at Ute
Veterans Memorial Hospital
leg after he shot Lincoln ... N. Y. Public TV Gamma Mu, were arlificial
IS APPROACHED
funeral
home.
yellow rosebuds made by Mrs.
ADMISSION James
NEW YORK (KFS) - Jack Cassidy's ex, station WNET offered a complete program of Satterfield. Name tags in black
Trader, Pomeroy; Steven
Hanoi propaganda films accusing the USA of all and gold carried out the
S!irley Jones, Is being wooed by handsome
FINED THRICE
Pl~kens, Racine; Aaron Lewis,
manner of terrorists and bolstered them with a sorority emblem theme.
H'woodlte_Brad Trumbull ... Jack's TV star son,
One defendant was fined and
Pomeroy; George Taylor,
panel of loud USA critics. Well, it's only our
David, took $160,000 as his share of six concerts
two
others forfeited bonds in
Minersville Ed' Templeton,
taxes financing such disgraceful TV slantlngs.
in a on..week April span ... Biggest record hit in
Pomeroy; Okey Howard, Jr., Pomeroy Mayor William
ROAD CLOSED
David Frost's wealth rwmeth over: he
England is "Amazing Grace," a 2oo.year-old
New
liaven ; Anna Durbin, Baronick's court Wednesday
Ted Beegle, Meigs County
bought control of a mutual lund in London ...
hymn. The warmover happened because it got
IIARY
JEANNE
night. Fined was William Fry,
Walter Cronkite celebrated his loth anniversary Engineer, announced today WALKER of GIIIUpolls wu Mason.
popular as an Instrumental piece wheezed by
DISCHARGES - Gloria Jr., 18, Mason, $S and costs,
the Royal scot Dragoons bagpipe band .., as CBS·TV news anchorman. Congrats. that County Road 19 (Peach
welcomed
durlq
the
amual
Bacus, Joseph Hemsley, passing on a double yellow line,
Walter's the best in the business .•. The whole U. Fork Road ), located between
"Sugar" is the biggest cash.collector on Bdwy.
Founder's
Day
obstrvance
James Trader, Ina Howard, and forfeiting bonds were Ooy
S. has but two vaudeville theaters, both inN. Y. new U.S. Route 33 and old U.S.
Grossed '127,000 last week ... Her Oscar may
of
Beta
Sigma
Pbl
Sorority,
Nitz, Pomeroy , $25 for
Donald Dye.
City (the Apo~o in Harlem .and Radio City Route JJ, (now county road :ll as a charter honorary
carry with It a reunion for Cloeis Leachman
disturbing
the peace, $50 for
Music Hall); ~land has seven, three In known as Peach Fork Road)
with her e:~tranged husband, George Englund.
WDGE TO MEET
me111ber
of
Xl
Gamma
Mu.
reckless
operation,
and $2001or
London ... Oddity : black neW8p8pers, radio and will be closed approximately She received the rihlal of
Brendan Behan's last play, "Richard's
A
special
meeting
of
Shade
.
driving while intoxicated, and
TV stations freely accepted ads for two weeks to repair Utree jewell at a tea ~ld receotly River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM will be1 Jesse Lambert, Pomeroy, $25,
Cork Leg," opened in Dublin. Variety called It
landslides.
"a robust Behanesque entertainment with little · Paramount's "The Legend of Nig110r Olarley"
at tb~ borne of Mary Carolyu held Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at failure to yield right of way .
form but much fun '" that should plliase Behan
about a black cowboy, but white newspapers are
Wiley In New Haven.
the hall in Chester for work in
The
Sentinel
master mason degree . All
resisting. The title does seem offensively shock·
fans everywhere." ... Jane Fonda's plain pain
DEVOTED TO THE
prone . ·
·
•·
master masons are invited.
over juot simply acceptlng her Oscar was her
HIT:SK!J'PER WANTED
INTEREST OF
·
MEETING
CALLED
first sign of public taste we've observed in
Baroness Nina Van Pallandt insisted on an
Mll!!.S · MASON AR.A
The Meigs County Sheriff's
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Meigs County Permit
LOCAL TEMPS
augmented 141&gt;1ece ork for her St. Regis run.
Dept. is investigating a hit-flklp ·
years. Her dad, Henry Fonda, persuaded her to
Euc. Ed .
Holders
wW
meet
this
evening
Temperature
In
downtown
ROIERT HOEFLICH,
S!e won't get Utat slu crew in many spots in the
incident reported at 3::ll a.m.
limply take the doorstop and run ... Times
City l!dltor
at
7:30
in
Ute
Cave
Room
at
Pomeroy
Thursday
at
II
a.
m.
,
today on SR 7. Glassco
U.S. Our finest gal singer, Ella Fltqerald, does
Sqllllfl! cops are cracking doW!! on gay:porno
Publisned dall" uctpt
Five
Points
Grill.
All
penni!
was
5I
degre.es
WJder
sunny
Falrrow, U, 26, Olillicothe,
picture-palaces. 'Bout time. It was
superbly in front of a trio. But then, Ella has Saturday by T"e Ohio V1lley
Publish ing Company. 11l
holders are urged to attend.
skies.
said
he was traveling north
talent
·
...
If
Nina'd
been
really
great
'
i
nstead
of
a
dlacrlminstlng just to slough the hetero:porno
Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio,
AS769.
Buslntu
Ottice
Phont
when a car came out of Ute Hi 7
dens.
beautiful woman with commonplace plpea, her 992-2156, Edllorlol Phone !fl.
parking lot and hlt his car in
ParamOI\Ilt's policing the bljous exhibiting
billing could've been "Van Pallandt- Rhymes 2\51 .
Second
clus
postage
paid
at
the
right rear, then did not
"'lbe Godfather." Too many are stopping the
WlUt Talent."
Pomeroy, Ohio .
slop. There were no injuries.
picture midway for godpopcorni)eddllng in·
McGraw·Hill, which felt the worst of the
Netlonal advertising
rtprutntatlvt
lottlntlll .
tmnluions ... The lofally slanted "Catonsville · Howard Hughes backlash While the Baroness Golloghor. Inc .. 12 Ent .42n&lt;l
(Contlnued from paae I)
Nine" play by draft records' desecratlng Daniel
seems the only one involved to win, and felt the St ., Ntw York City, NrN York . S. negotiator wlllism J. .Porter told the Communista that "only
Subscription r1tt1: Dt ·
pain of two mlsjudgments (the Hughes fiasco livtred
Benilan hu been made into a movie by
LEVY SUPPORTED
by carrier where substance will keep us at this table." Hanoi and the VietCong
IVIillbll
50
ctnfl
ptr
WHk;
Gfelory Peck, who paid the whole $260,000 cost. and the (llief Red Fox "memoirs"), al.!o Bv Motor Route where urrltr condemned President Nixon 'a address In the nation Wednesday
The Eastern Local District
The Cannes Festival rejected It u an entry, but
publishes a business advisory mag titled In· service not avalltblt : One as a bick a~nled norUtem troops had Invaded the 1011tb.
Ohio Assoctatlon of Public
month st .7.S . By mall In Ohio
lt'U be oihown there between starlet-elrlpplngs
ternational Management. That's not even the and
"It wt1l not be practical to hold meetings if you continue 1o School Employees voted to
W. VI ., One Ytlr $14.00.
etc. Anything knocking Ute USA finds a home in
woest of it. Its editor's name is Boner. J. Russell Six months 11. 25 . Thrtt refuse lo deal with the subatance of both Ute present invulon of support ·the 3\l mill levy to be.
months S4 ;50. Subscription
· voted on· May 22 for the
Europe111 film circles. ·
Boner. Really.
prict includes Sundey Tlmts . the !lOUth and general problelll8 fi peace, including prisoners of
Eastern Local School Dlstrlc:t,
Dubious distinction: CBS-TV bulletin
Sentinel.
war and those rnisaing in action," Porter said.
at a recent meeting.

..

.. . . ."' .

Wti!El·HOIIIII IIIIIIODUCTS, INC.

CHESTER, OHIO

61S West Ir eland ~ 010 ,
South Bend , lndian1 466 14

STORE HOURS:
I

1'

AuthoriZed

\

Catalog Merchant

Lou&amp; Thelma
OSBORNE

"GET A HOR~F.-W HEEL HORSE OF COURSE"'

220 E. Main

Pomeroy

•
\

MON ., TUES.
WED. &amp; SAT.
9:00toS:OO
THURSDAY
9:00TO NOON
FRIDAY
9:00To9:00
.t

I

'

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F al~ons . Boot One Away

$·~::~,~~AA·~~~~
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Generation Rap

Founders' Day

Ceremony Held

Mr. Milhoan, 74

Dies

,.,rrr:nrrwwow

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:

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Voice along Br'Way

I

DaiiJ

News .. . in Briefs

II

I

f&gt;

"'-"

Major League Stanain9s
By United Press lnternahonal
Notlono[.League
East
W. l . Pet. GB
New York
6 12 .750
Montreal
53.6251
Philadelphia 5 4 .625 Jl/2
Pittsburgh
5 4 .556 1112
St. Lo~ls
3 7 .300 4
Chicago
2 9 .182 5'1'
West
w. L. Pet. GB
Houston
9 2 .8]8
los Angeles
9 2 .81 8 ...
San Francisco s 6 .455 4,
San Diego
4 7 .364 5
Cincinnati
3 6 .333 5
Atlanta
4 ·a .333 5'11

Kissinger's meetlng in Moscow
last weekend, at which time he
was presumably made aware
of wliat t()e North Vietnamese
were wi1llng to do to get the
talks started again. ·
Nixon said the south Vietna·
mes~ had shown great
progress on the battlefield and
"we can now see the day wben
no more Americans will be
involved at all."
But Nixon made It pliln he
was not going to stop the raids
on the North as a condition for
resuming the peace talks.
Propoul Rejected
"I haye flatly rejected," he
said, "the proposal that we
stop the b&lt;mbing of North
Vie.tnam as a condition for
returning to Ute negoll.atln~
table. They sold that package
to Ute United Slates once
before, in 1988, and we are not
going to buy It again in 1972."

Wednesday's Results
San Fran 8 Phlla 6. 10 inns
Cine! r Pittsburgh 6
St. louis 9 Allan Ia 4
Hous 5 Chicagp 4, 10 inns
New York 5 .san Diego 1
los Angeles 2 Montreat 0
Toctay's Probable Pitchers
National League
IAU Times EST)
Philadelphia (Selma 0-1) at
San Francisco (Cumberland O·

p.m.
Cincinnati (Gullett 0-2) at
Pittsburgh (Briles 1-0l. 8 p.m.
• Montreal (McAnally 0-0) at
Los Angeles (Downing 1-1), 11
p.m .
New 'l'ork (Genlry 0-1) at San
Diego !Norman 0-1) , 10:30 ?.m.
(Only games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Alia at Pittsburgh (night)
Cincinnati at Chicago
St. Louis at Houston (night)
2), 4

8 Students
To Attend
Institute

New

. .. .... , .

... ,. . ,

at

Los

America11League

Gallipolis will host lhe 13th
1972 SEOI\L Golf PairinjiS
John Saunde rs, Ga lli polis ;
1. - Roger ScOtt , Well ston;
(Tee 011 Times)
Scott Spri ggs. Ir onton, and
Bi l l Diles, Athens; Don CL•I Iion,
annual
Southeaste
rn
Ohio
W. L. Pet. GB
Eric Col ll'y, Well ston .
Waverly, and Dane Mitchell,
Tee No.1
League golf match on the local
5 3 .625
(9 ,00)
(9,2!)
Jackson.
5 5 .500 1 links Friday.
1 - Mike McPea k, Jackson;
4. -- Ken New, Ga ll ipolis;
(9 : 16)
4 S .4 44
l•n
Chuc k Helber, Loga~ ; Steve Kev in Waldo, fr an ton ; Einon
3. -- Terry Hawk, Athens;
Tee
oil
time
.for
the
IS.ioole
3 5 .375 2
Plummer, Wellston. and Cabot
Tony Swi ndl er, Wa verly ; Dane
Story, Mei gs, . an~ John Cun
event is 9 a. m. All eighl ning
3 5 .375 2
ham, Gall 1pol1s.
Roe,
Jackson, and Jay
Rea. Athens.
2 5 .286 1112 SEOAL squads (32 golfers) are
(9 ,08)
Tee No.4
Beag he r, Logan .
West
(9 :00)
(9 :24)
2. - J eff Cole, logan; Jon
W. l . Pet. GB entered in the 1972 match.
Buck, Meigs ; Dow Sav nd ers,
1. - Rick Ander son. Iron ton ;
4. - John Dutcher. Wa ver ly;
J•&gt;hn Milhoan , tournamen t Ga ll ipol is, an d Mike Hurl ey, Tom Appl edor, Well ston ; Dan Morrow, Jackson; Mik e
5 2 .714
lf2
7 3 .700
director , announced pairings Ironton.
Ri c ha r.: d Wh iteside. Athen s,
Mojzer , Logan, and Jim Stor y,
5 3 .625 1 Wednesday lor Friday's event.
(9 ,16)
and But ch Workm an, Waverl y. Meigs.
5 5 .500 2
3. - Marty Vaughan , Meigs;
(9 ,08)
· COACHES - Athens, Ha-rold
They are :
5 6 .455 2lf2
Kessler ; Ga llip oli S, John
4 6 .400 3
Milhoan ; Ironton, Dick Myer s;
East

Detroit
Baltimore
Cleveland
Boston

New York

Milwaukee
Minnesota

Chicago
Oakland
Texas

Kansas City

California

Wednesday's Results
Minnesota 3 Boston 1

Chicago 7 Cleve 5, 10 inns

The Eastern Eagles, without
their se niors who are on tour,
defeated the Glouster Tomcats
al Glouster Wednesday night
t2·9 in a non·league baseball
game.
The Eagles WI leashed a 13· ·
hit attack with Bt'll Osbourne
getting three singles and 3
RBis' Alan Duvall added a
single and double, Rick Blake
had two singles, Steve Goebel a
double , and Bobby Edwards,
David Baker, Mike Markins,
Rick Blake and Randy Boring
each a single.
Duvall started on the hill for
the Eagles, coached by Larry
Heines , and gave way to

American League

(No games scheduled)
Friday's Games
Cleve at Kan City . (night)
Boston at Texas (night)
Chicago at Detroit (night)
Cal1f al Baltimore (night)
Oakland at Mllw (night)
Minn at New York (n ight)
International League
By United Press International
W L Pet. GB
Richmond
3 3 .727
Charleston
5 2 .714 1
Rochester
7 4 .636 1
Tidewater
6 6 .500 2'h
louisville
5 7 .417 3'h
Toledo
4 6 .400 311,
Peninsula
4 7 .364 4
Syracuse
2 6 .250 41/2
Wednesday's Results
Tidewater 3 Charleston 2 (10

Angeles Inn .)

~

Toledo6loulsvllle 5 (19 inns.)
Richmond 4 Rochester 1

Leogue Leaders
By Uniled PrHS lnternotional
Leodlng &amp;.Hers
Notlonol League
G. AB R. H. Pet.
Carty, All
10 23 s 11 .478
Tolan , Cin
9 37 7 17 .459
Slntt, Pit
8 24 4 11 .458
Sangln , PII
9 36 4 15 .417
Mota, LA
8 24 8 10 .417
Cdeno, Hou
9 39 616 .410
Jeter, SO
10 32 4 12 .375
Smns, St.L
10 41 6 15 ..366
Snglln. Mil
8 25 4 9 .360
Jones, NY
-7 25 3 9 .360
American Leoguo
G. AB R. H. Pel.
Pnson. Cal
9 30 3 13 .433
Derwn, Min
7 16 6 11 .423
Allen, Chi
10 39 10 16 .410
Freehn,Det
1 21 3 11 .407
llv:.Crw. Cle 9 25 5 10 .400
Wilms, Chi
6 15 1 6 .400
Lahud, Mil
7 23 4 9 .391
Green, Oak
7 21 1 8 .381
May. Chi
10 37 6 14 .378
Cash, Del
8 24 5 9 .375
Home Runs
Nlllop•l L~ogue: Aaron, All.-

ca.. •
• •
•

·

the first time this year and
fanned 13, walked eight, hit two
batters, and gave up only a
gr ound single to Starr·
'washington 's Jeff McDaniel
past third base.
Starr·Washington had
Cotlerill startin g with Prim·
mer in tlie first, Cotterill back
again in the second, and Ed·
wards finished up. Together,
they struck out four and
walked U . The Tornadoes
managed nine hits off them .

Pacing the Tornadoes at the
plate were Jim Hubbard, three
singles; Brett Hart, a double,
and Mike Nease, Monty Hart,
Stan Kiser , Rodney Holman ,
and Allan Pugh, each singles.
Southern is 6-1 overall and is
4.0 in Souther~ Valley CQil·
lerence play. The Tornadoes
will play the Southwestern
Highlanders tonight at South·
western .
Southern
541 300 7- 20 9 I
Starr·Wash. 000 100 ~ I I 5
Arnold (WP) and Pugh.
Cotterill (LP), Primmer (1 ),
Cotterill (2). Edwards (2) and
Ellinger.

Hou , Crawford, LA and
Kingman, SF 4; five fled with
13.
American League: Darwin,
Mlnn 4; Allen, Chi 3; Cardenas,
Cal. ~y . Chi, Cash. Del.
Murcer, NY and Duncan, Oak
2.
Runs Balled In
Nationol League: Kingma n,
SF 12; May and Rader, Hou 11 ;
Tolan, Cin and Wynn, Hou 10.
American Le'ague : Darwin,
Minn 11 ; ~y . Chi 9; Allen. Chi
8; Powell. Ball and Michael,
NY 7.
·
Pitching
National league: Nolan, Cin,
Ray, Hou, Sulton. LA, Seaver,
NY and Carlton, Phil 3-0.
Americon Leogue: Wood, Chi
and Coleman, Del 3-0; Siebert,
Bos, Burgmeler, KC, Blyleven,
Mlnn, Keklch, NY,. locker. Oak
and Broberg, lex 2-0; Dobson
and Mcnally. Bsll, Bahnsen,
Chi, Perry, Clev , and Lollch,
Del 2· 1.
..._
~y .

•

.. ,

a. :

Officers and members of
Melga County Drug Abu11 ud
Alcoholllm Committee - t oa
record Jo lllppOI't tbe· Mellt.l
~ Levy and wpd ill
PI
e in tbe Mly 2 primary ,
elec:
at • recent lpadtl
meetlng.

77:1:$513

HOII"' ?o.m. toS:30p.m. Dally
.
MASON, W.VA.
.m.
to
I
p.m.
FrldiY
&amp;
SoturdoY
71

h~l s its own diamond - sized to
accunwdate
the very young number of games can be

Lon don, "so tha t a maximwn

scheduled." London pointed
oul that cer ta in evenings were
reserved for games last season
but no set schedule developed ,
leaving the field unused two
evenin_!ls each week.
'' It is our intention to have
games at th e field every
pussi ble day, "' added London.
"'And il is only lhrough teams
ma king app lication early tha t
we can &lt;:~rrange it."
The mayur said the Meigs
American Legion team's ap·
plication to use the field has
already been approved lor
several Wednesday, Saturday
and Sunday home ga mes.
He furth er sa id teams made
up of home town fol ks -

Misses.

and
Sport Coats

Special
Discount
to Grads

474 Hits

Team High Series Hits &amp; Misses .

1324

Cheers! Here's to you
and to looking hand·
some on that Big Day I
Many suit styles for
all occasions, here.

al lhe park.
Schedules of tea ms approved
for playi ng home games at lhe
Syracuse Mun ici pal Park
should be submi tted to either
London or Winge lt the earliest
possi ble date.

Aprilll, 1972
Standings

Pis.
Team
...
Jr . Bugaloos
52
Headquarter Barma id s
46
Feeney Bennett Flyer s
44
42
Buckeyes
40
Rolling Pins
40
Gobl e Ma rauders
High Indiv idua l Game
Lucy McKinney 160.
Second High Ind . Game

KERM'S KORNER

-

Lucy McKinney 152.
High
Ser i es
Lucy
McKi nney .d56
. Second High Series ~ Becky
Rou sh 414.
Tea m High Game - Feeney

New York Clothing House
POMEROY, OHIO

Bennelt Flyers 491.

Tea m High Ser ies Bennett Flyers 1390.

Feeney

You Should Buy At

Story's 43
Tops Cards

Sears

SEARS.. ROEBU~~ AND ~01 .
.

..

Mei gs· Steve Story too k
medalist honors again, but the
Marauder golfers still lost to
Ihe Alhe ns Bulldogs, 232·246, at
lhe Alhens Co un try Club
Wednesday.
· Besides Story's leading 43,
SIGN UP SATURDAV
Jon Buck had a 46, Marty
RACINE - All boys ages 6 to Vaughan and J . D. Story , each
15 in the Racine area wanting 42's and Randy Chafin a 53.
to play pee wee, little leag ue For lhe Bulldogs, Bill Diles and
and pony league baseball are Kevin Ray stroked a 44 pace ,
asked to sign up Saturday, Ric hard Whiteside 45, Terry
Apnl 29, from I p.m. to 3 p.m. Hawk 48 and Jim France 51.
at the Racine Grade School.
Coach Nolan Swackhamer 's
Bring $2 insurance money and Marauders will compete in the
be accompanied by a parent or league tournament this Friday
guardian.
and Salurday.

.

WHEEL
HORSE
•
•
•

Tractor Power
is on display.
From lhe economical
7 HP Lawn Ranger to
the brawny 14 HP
models.

Calalogue No. 91381 N

CUT '9.99
WAS '97.99

$

Craftsman 20-in. Push
Rotary Mower
with Eager·l Engine

, Thi s push rotary mower has a 9.0 cu. in. Eag~r- 1 engine to
provide plenty of power lor lhe big cutting jobs. Top pull

recoil slarter. Big 7.5 inch wheels. Lightweight for easy
pushing . Folding handle for storing neatly in your garage or

storage shed. Non-adjust luelsystem . Simple choke-run-stop

control. Standard muffler.

Use Sears Easy Payment Plan
\

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20-INCH ROTARY
. .

Summer

AT A
STANDOUT

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Leagues
Now Forming ·at

CAl! 773-5791

4799

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and garden traclor features lhal can't be beat.
Visit us now and hear our offer. You'll never get a betlierl
deal on ali lhe new 1972 Wheel Horse models, The "'"''"·I

fuel lank.. Steel housing. 6-inch plastic

wheels. Foldi ng handle. Order catcher
and bhule below. Not Craftsman.
9 Ar IHO lSN- Shpa. wt, S71bs., .$47,99
Catchert for {ol) and (5).
9 AF 8Q.401L .. . . ... . .

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9 Ar 80202 -~hpg . wt. 2 bi. J oz ..SJ.49

most respected lawn and garden tractors made.

BAUM LUMBER
COMPANY

Begins Week
of May 21
Men's,
Women's,
Mixed, Scratch • 3 men
and Junior Leagues.

Companion 7.75 ·C\I. in, engine with
E·Zsta.rt top recoil starter, a nd bu mpon cam com pr ~i on rtlease. Lever on
cirburetor controls engine. Polyethylene

LOW PRICE

CENTER

2995

,

League and the Syracuse Pee Syracuse - will have priority
Wee baseball team.
' over othe rs. But t!icy must
" It is 11ecessary for us to se t apply by the deadline or be left
a deadline for teams to make out.
The Syracuse Pee Wee team
application, " said Mayor

_ LAVER STILL TOPS
DALLAS iUPII - Rod Laver
continues as the top money
winner on the World Champion·
ship Tennis lour with $59,250.
Fellow Australian Ken Rosewall
is second with $112,700 while
Tom Okker of The Netherlands
Is third at $30,100, Marty
Riessen of Evanston, W., Is
fourth with $25,000 and Cllf!
Drysdale of South Africa ·is
fifth at $24,700.

MASON
BOWLING

Slide, Swing, Etc.
Prices Start At •

•
•

Our Suits

Sco r ekeeper s Debbie
Taylor and Jan Elliot.

Team High Game -

Will be Scheduled by May 3

CHILDREN'S GYM SETS

:

Bob Skaggs.

American Legion
Ladies Auxiliary

JfJi LEADING BATTE·RS
~lor

81111

Glousler, tak ing advantage
Gallipolis is defending
of six Eagle errors, collec ted league champion. lt will be the
on ly f&lt;&gt; w· hits, a double by ·fo urth lime the Old French City
Ca mpbell and singles by has hosted the tournament
Gillispie , Lint and Gillolt.
since it was organized in 1960.
The Eagles are 5.:1 overall
and 3·2 in the Southern Valley
Veterans Memorial Hosp·ital
Con ference. Eastern will play
League
lhe ~'edera i·Hocking i,an_ce rs
Aprill8-21, 1972
Standings
al Federal·Hocking this Friday
Team
Pts.
nighl. The Eastern se mors will Hit &amp; Misses
6.d
be back in action nex l week. Gutter Bum s
52
30
Easlern
001 028 1- 12 t3 6 The Opens
Straight
Shooters
30
Glo usler
206 000 1- 9 4 2
High Ind . Game - 161 Becky
Duvall, Cross (WP ), )3), Anderson ; Second High Ind.
Blake (6) i1jld Blake, Edwards Gam e - 154 Celesta Bush .
High Ind. Series - 427 Bess ie
( 6) . Hun1phrey tLP). Milliron
Sylves ter ; Second High Ind.
161, Seevers 16) and Gi llotl .
Se r ies - 404 Beck y Anderson.

Use of Syracuse Diamonds

Tornadoes in 20-l Laugher
The Southern Local Tor·
nadoes won their sixth game in
seven outings Wednesday at
Starr·Washington, a rollicking
20:1 victory behind senior Pat
Arnold's one.Jlitter .
Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tor·
nadoes kept their winning ways
intact with 13 runs in the first
lour innings to roll up a IJ.O
lead. The Tornadoes capped off
the rout with seven runs in the
final frame .
Arnold went the distance for

winning pitcher Richard Cross
i11 the third . Ric k Blake
relieved in th e sixth and hurl ed
the final tw o innings. Together,
they struck oul eight and
walked only four.
Hwnph rey starte-d on the hill
ror 111e Tono cals an d was
pinned with the loss. Millirone
came in in the si xth as did
Seevers. Al l told, the three
Tonocal pitchers walked six
an d fann ed eig ht.
The Eag les, who were
defeated Tuesday by Kyger
Creek. ' wiped oul an 8·3 ·
Glousler lead in the sixth wilh
a11 eighl·run uprisong.

fI
1: 1;1
. ·t l

Jackson, Tom Sla ter ; Logan,
Di ck Tayl or ; Meigs, No lan
Swa ckhamer ;
W ave r ly,
Carr ol l Haw hee, and Well ston.

&amp;

Peninsula 3 Syracuse 2

SYRACUSE - Softball and
hardball teams expecting to
use th e Syracuse Municipal
Park diamond as their home
Stan Perry's towering three·run homer in the diamond
th is summer must
first inning and a fine pitching . performance by apply for the privilege with
freshman righthander Jimmy Niday carried the Mayor Herman Londo nor town
Gallipolis Blue Devils to a 4-2 baseball triumph over cow1cilrnan Bob Wingett by
South Point on Pt. Pleasant's Harmon Field Wed· Ma y 3.
Applicalions to use the
nesday evening.
The victory upped Gallipolis' season record to 6- Syracuse Mun icipal Park as a·
3. The defeat left the Pointers from Lawrence hom e field have been made by
the Meigs·American Legion
County with a 13-3 season mark.
ba se ball team, the Meigs·
Gallia Academy did all its Evans,
- rf ,
3 0 1 Mason Slo-Pitch Softb all
scoring in the first rung off Brown, If,
3 1 1
losing hurler Bill Culver, who Monlgomery. cf. '
3 o 1
suffered his first mound loss of TOTALS
Palrick, "·
2 o
o
21
2 4
DRYER ACQUIRED
the year.
GALLIPOLIS (4)
John Davis led off with a PlAYER- Pos.
AB R H
LOS ANGELES (UPI ) - The
Davis, 3b.
3 1 1 Los Angeles Rams acquired
1
1
d
h
singe, sto e secon , and wit Klesllnq, c.
3 o o
one out, scored on a Pointer Sheets, If.
2 1 2 defensive end ~'red Dryer fr om
error.
Slone. lb.
3 1 o li1e New England Patriots
Perry, ss, p,
2
1
1
Wednesday in exchange for a
SOUTH POINT (2)
Boone, cf.
3 0 o
PLAYER- Pos.
AB R H Taylor. 2b.
2 0 0 fi rstround draft choice and
Kouns, 2b,
4 o 0 Berridge , rf,
1 0 0 defensive tackle Rick Cash.
Pemberton, lb,
2 0 o Niday, p.
3 o o Dryer had played three years
Hand shaw , c,
4 0 1 TOTALS
22 4 4
for the New York Giants before
Culver, p,
3 0 0
Scor e by Innings :
Sharp. lb.
2 o 0 S. Point
000 000 2-2 4 3 being traded to New England
BurQe. ph, (7)
0 1 o Gal lipolis
400 ooo ,._.. 4 1 three months ago. ·

Plans were made for the next
meeting of the Meigs County
Committee on Alcohol and
Drug Abuse to be held May 16,
7:30p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church. The public is urged to
attend. Everyone Is needed to
help deal with alcohol and drug
problems In their county, it
_was pointed out.

·'

Glouster Bombed 12-9

Cal ifornia 3 Milwau kee 1
New York 4 Oakland 2
Detroil 8 Texas 1
KanCIIY. 5 Bait 3. 5'1• ins, rain
Today s Prob.able Pitchers

Blue Devils Cop
Sixth Win, 4-2

TV.

WORKER INJURED
Wiley Albritton, · Tampa,
Fla., construction worker for
the Union Boiler Company, fell
approximately 10 feet from
scaffold thla mornln~ at Phlll
Sporn Power Plant, .
injury to his back and a bralll
ankle. The New Haven ~
squad transported him •
Pleasant Valley Hoaptta
where he ·was admitted.

York

(night) Phlla al San Diego
(night)
Montreal a! San Fran (night)

Eight Meigs County High
School students will attend a
Teenage Institute on Drugs and ·
Alcohol on scholarships
provided by the Meigs County
Committee on Alcohol and
Drug Abuse.
Robert Sweet, Educational
Consultant of the Ohio
Department
of
Health
Alcoholism Program of
Columbus, addressed the
committee April :ll at St. Paul
Lutheran Church on Ute 1972
Teenage Institute on Aocohol
and Drugs, which wlll be held
in August at Ohio Dominican
College, Columbus.
It was decided two students
from Southern High School,
two from Eastern High School
and four from Meigs High
School would be awarded the
scholarships. The students are
to be either juniors or seniors
in the, 1972:73 school year. Jim
Roach was appointed com·
~ttee chairm~~~ \0 ~cure . the
scholarships of $35 each. .
Also1 discussed was the
Midwest- Sununer School of
Alcohol Studies. As has been
the practice In the past, one
member &lt;1. Ute committee Is
sent as a representative of
Meigs County. Louis Vaughan,
dispatcher for the Ohio Highway Patrol, and substitute
police officer in Pomeroy, has
been appointed to attend the
week·long institute in Chicago.
Harold Mave and Jim Roach
reported on progress in
acquiring
a
complete
educational unit concerning
drugs, including drug samples,
film strips and records. It Is
felt this would be beneficial to
many dubs, organizations and
schools where members of Ute
committee often speak.
Possibilities of Alcohol and
Drug Information Telephone
Contact were discussed. After
inquiring Utrough the "Athens
Care Une," Rev. Arthur Lund
learned of possibilities of
training by means of lis ser.
vice. Thirty hours of Intensive ,
training would be required of
all who would participate in
such a telephone service.
The Meigs Ministerial
Association may also be of belp
in this community venture.
Jack Kane and Ken Piper,
WMPO personnel, were asked
to assist in producing a panel
discussion program for cable

LEVY~UPPORTED

,.. .

.......

'

Gallipolis To Host Golf Tourney

Pullout ·Continues

OFFICIAL NOW
111e Unlll'CI. Stales 'District
Court lor . the Southern
Dl&amp;lrlct of Ohio bas Issued a
.RAVENSWOOD - The by Jaccar combined with three Jeff Haymaker doubled with linil order dedaring ihe
two out and· scored on Mike Ohio slr·month dunt101181
Waham White Falcon baseball White Falcon bobbles.
WASHINGTON (UP! ) The new troop pullout would Refers lo Negoll.atlODB
team suffered its secood set·
Ravenswood upped its lead .Lewis' pinch single.
residence r~quirement
Referring to the peace
Despite t!le continued Commu- Iring the U.S. force level to
Wahama outhlt Ravenswood" unconslllutlonat.
back of lhe seaSC}n willl an ll.S to 9·1 with a single run in the
negotiations
which resumed In
nisi offeruiive, President Nixon . 49,000 by July 1-a date by
loss Wednesday at the hands of second and lour in the fourth on 1().8 but committed nine costly
Consequenlly, any person
Paris tnday, Nixon said "We
Ravenswood ..The Red Devils one lone hit and five Wabama errors compared to two' forthe who is otherwise qualified, has fl!jcided to pull another which the adminlslration be- are reswnlng· Ute Paris tall&lt;s
Red DevilS. Sam Romeo was and who bas resided thlriy :ll,OOO troops out of Vietnam; Heves the Cmununist invasion
took advantage of eight hits· miscues.
with a firm expectation that
and nine Wahama errors to
Wahama tallied four . the winning pitA:her, striking days In the county and bul. he said the bombing ..Ids of South Vietnani will have run productive talks leading • to
plate 11 runs.
markers in the fifth on four hits out 8 and walking S. For prednc~ Is eligible to vote. on the north would continue as its course, according to pres- rapid progress will follow
long as the attack persists. 1
idential adviser_Henry KissinWahama opened the scoring wi1h the big blow being Rob Wahama, Rob Belcher suf- This directive wa.s fe&lt;elved
Nixon,
in
a
nationally
tela·
ger.
The date alsO coincides through all avallable chan·
in. the first inning when Mike Lambert's three run qouble. fered his first lo~ · of the Wednesday bY lbe Meigs
nels."
White singled, advanced to Chester Roush opened with a season, dropping his record to. Cowity Board of Elections vised speech Wednesday, also with the rainy ~ during
That phrase seemed to · in·
~cated he may have secret which time HanOI wolild have
second on Randy Clark's in· single followed· by walks to Z.t.
from Secretary of State Ted assurances that Hanoi is, now difficulty waging the kind of dicate Nl1on may have
field ground out and scored on White and Clark. This set the
Rob Lambert and Mike W. Brown.
ready to negotiate in good - ground war In which it is now received some behind-the·
a miscue by the left fielder,
stage lor Lambert's two White led Wahama's hitting as
. .
!JCI!Iles ass'1'ance as a result ~~su:u · un ( faith.
involved.
Ravenswood let its presence bagger scoring three runs. Lambert had a single and a
be felt as their leadoff hitter . Curtis Roush promptly lined a · double in' f_our at bats with 3
a~~~ns
rapped a·solo home run to tie single to center, scoring RBI's. White connected for two
.1-.U£
the score. The Red Devils went Lambert.
singles in three at bats and
on to score three more runs in
The White Falcons final run
the first Inning on a two bagger was plated in the seventh when
encounter is ToTheMreeewl
"llt bSeun
.. a dasenioyr .
Thursday at Federal Hocking
for a 4:30 contest. The Falcons' citizens fellowship meeting at
record is now 5-2.
the St. Paul LUtheran Church,
SAIGON (UPI)-.North Viet- vlsers are in Quang Trl city. March 30 had attacked Quang
Pomeroy,
Sunday at 2:30p.m. namese troops attacking in
WAHAMA(6)
An explosion, probably an Trl from norUt, south and west
•·
AB H R · The purpose of the meeting is great force closed in on Quang anununltion dump . going ·up, and Utat tanks and heavy ar·
Ch. Roush. If,
5 J J for persons 55 or older to
Tri from all sides tonight and shook the city where helpless tillery were circling in from lbe
By Helen and Sue Bottel
White, 2b.
3
Clark, c,
3 1 1 become acquainted with other began firing anti-personnel refugeea, their worldly belong- east as well.
Lambert , ss ,
4 1 2 senior citizens of Meigs
North Vietnamese in·
shells that burst in midair and ings tied up in blanlteted
Cu
.
Roush,
cf,
4
X-MOVIES FOR TODDLERS? ·
~
:
County.
rained shrapnel on the defen- bundles, lined the streets, liltratlng intn the area below
Hesson, rf,
4
Dear Helen and Sue:
Officers of the aging unit ders and Utoilsands of refugeea -Kellennan reported. A South Quang Tri cut Highway 1,
Gardner, Jb,
3 o o
3 o 1 are
We got married young. I'm 21, and my wile is 18. Now that Haymaker, lb,
Clarence
Struble, who were not allowed to flee · Vietnamese pollee officer said blocking escape routes. And
Belcher,
p,
0
she can get into X.rated movies, we still can't go because they
~ ~ president, Gertrude Mitchell, Ute city.
the police were ordered 111!1 to just to the norUt, six North
Camp. p.
1
won't let us bring our kid who is nearly three but big for her age, Adkins. p,
1 0 o treasurer, Eleanor Thomas,
Hanoi Radio reported let them leave. ·
Vietnamese tanks crossed the
1 o 1 director, Margaret Amberger American planes bombing
lewis, ph.
and looks about five.
"They want to leave, .go still.jntact railroad bridge at
52 5 lD · and Henry Watson, aide~. and
If we pay for a babysitter, we can't afford the movie. Now TOTAlS
within 35 miles of the North down South, but we have or- Dong Ha, eight miles below the
RAVENSWOOD (lll
Ann Moon and Evelyn ~ight Vietnamese capital and said ders In keep them here;" a DMZ, and were reported
what would athree-year-old get out of a sexy picture? I tell the
AB R H in charge of program.
cashier she'll sleep Utrough most of it, but no, we can't get ln.
six planes were shot down police officer said. "No chasing South Vietnamese
Hendricks, lb,
2
1
A
report
of
the
progress
that
3
Wednesday and tnday. The civilians are allowed to leave." Rangers down "Highway I
Wby don't theater owners use some sense? -GARY
Jaccar, ss,
~ ~ ~ has been made thus far will be U.S. Navy reported the American troops speculated toward Quang Tri, 10 miles to
Dear Gary :
Romeo.p,
3 1 1 given and what is hoped to destroyers Gurke and An· Utey were being forced to stay Ute south.
Wby don't Ute three of you toddle on down the street and see a Cavender, 2b,
Wolte. ll.
2 3 1 accomplished in the future. A derson sank three attacking In the city to keep the North
less raunchy picture? You might even enjoy it. - HELEN AND Foose, c,
3 0 0
3
1 1 film will be shown followed by North Vietnamese PT boats Vietnamese from attacking .;s :··.,.tea •..s .. m ·· u·
Reynolds. ct.
SUE
4 0 1 a question and answer period. and damaged one.
Sayre. 3b,
MEETING PLANNED
Quang Trl.
. P.S. Read on :
Staats, rf,
3 2 1 Refreshments will be served.
Ralph Welker, state
UP! correspondent Stewart
''They're short of hostages,"
Dear Rap:
26 11 8
TOTALS
Kellerman,
reporting
by
tel..
one
GI
said.
"
The
North
said today be
representative,
100
040
16
10
9
Wahama
I have just begun my third season as a cashier for a very
410
402
x--11
8
2
,
R'wood
will
set
up
a
.meeting
wltb
phone
from
the
U.S.
military
Vietnamese
might
not
hit
us
reputable drlve·ln theater. The few times we have shown X.rated
IN HOSPITAL
compound inside Quang Tri- too hard if Utey know a lot of Division 10 oftlclals next
Errors - White , Clark,
fllrnB, you wouldn't believe what took place!
SYRACUSE -Earl Harden, South Vietnam's norUterrunost civilians will also get kllled." week iu regard to the closing
lambert 2, Cu. Roush, Gard·
No one under IBis supposed to be admitted, right? Well, the ner 2, Camp, Adkins, Wolfe, Canton, underwent major
Kellennan said the North of the Pomeroy·Mason
city-said of the nighttime
first night of thls one skin flick, we turned away as many cars as Reynolds.
surgery Monday at Timkin bombardment: "So many fires Vietnamese estimated at two bridge for 10 to H days' for
LOB
Wahama 10. Mercy Hospital there. He is Ute
we admitted. The second night people started complaining to the Ravenswood
6.
are burning on the southern divisiOilS strong in their Initial oeeded repair.
mana~er : "My child is only four, he won't know what's going on
2B - · Haymaker. Lambert. son of Mrs . Florence Harden edge of the city it looks like invasion across the DemilitaWelker said be Is pleased
... " "Susie wt1l sleep tjlrough it. .. " "You can't be serious- why, Jaccar.
Potts, Syracuse. Cards may be daylight."
rlzed Zone (DMZ) at start of that the repair is helng done,
HR - Hendricks, Reynolds. sent to him in care of the
he's only a baby!"
Elgb\)' U.S. military ad: the Communist offensive since It Is very necessary;
WP - Romeo
hospital, room number 355.
Some even tried to get their 12:year.Oid children in, saying
LP - Belcher (2-1)
however, "the closing of tbe
they had no place to leave them. Don't they realize a manager
bridge wlU be very costly to
can have his license taken away if he breaks the code?
Meigs County merchants."
We 'don't book X·fllma often because they cause too much
He said Meigs County civic
conflict- not from shocked people, but from those who want to
leaden wut be notified of the
get in and don't make it. - AL
meellag day, hour, and
Dear Helen and Sue :
place.
I have a girl friend who searches through all our cabinets and
drawers in the kitchens. Wben she finds candy or snacks, etc. even expensive nuts- she helps herself, usually eating Utero all.
We hate to see her coming, and hide things, but she's a super·
Presentation of the "Girl of introduced were Connie Bailey,
11100per. I tl'y to explain that this isn't her house, but her mother the Year" awards highlighted , Elaine Swisher, ~~annie
1¥1dmineare best friends, and we don't want to cause a feud. She the annual Founder's Day Ebersbach, Ruby Gum, .Kathy
Wednesday
figures whatever is ours Is hers.
observance of Beta Siglll• Phi King, Janice Kilker, Sandy
Yet when I go to her house, she doesn't even offer me food, Sorority Wednesday night at Korn, Janet Pickens, Wilma
Lawrence Milhoan, 74,
· but instead just eats in front of me. U I opened her refrigerator, -the Meigs Inn.
Reese, Jennifer Sheets, Unda ·
Middleport,
Rt. I, died Wed·
· her mother would hit the fan. I know - because I did once, just to
·Selected by popular vote to Sauvage and Karen Stanley.
nesday evening at Holzer
show this girl. But she didn't take the hint. Her Mom thinks she's receive the awards were
Xi Gamma Mu members
Medical
Center. Mr. Milhoan
an angel, and I'm the had one.
Carolyn Satterfield of the Ohio· recognized were Eleanor
lived at North Fifth St., Mid·
What can we do? - NEEDING LOCKS OR MOUSETRAPS Eta Phi Chapter and Shirley Thomas, order of Ute rose;
dleport
most or his life until
Custer of the Xi Gamma Mu Lucille Williamson, ritual of
Dear NLOM :
moving
to
his present home six
jewels, and Mary Jeanne
Amousetrap might not be a bad idea - if you didn't forget Chapter.
years ago.
A trav~ling trophy and ring Walker, a charter honorary
and spring It on yourself! Better yet - your mother should take a
He was preceded in death by
were presented to Mrs. Sat· member. Phil Mullen and
tip from her friend and get tough - real tough! - HELEN
two
brothers and two sisters.
terfield by the 1971 Girl of the Norma Amsbary, charter
+++
He is survived by his wife,
Year , Mrs. Coleen Ohlinger, of members of Xi Gamma Mu,
Dear Needing :
Margie;
one daughter, Mrs.
Notes in those hiding places saying, "Sorry, snoopy, we're Philo. Mrs. Nellie Brown, 1971 were in attendance at Ute
Vernon
(Margaret Bell)
fresh out," might help; but, really the best way to deal with honoree of Xi Gamma Mu, dinner. Lois Rosenbaum was
Weber, Middleport, Rl. I; one
someone who takes over your house is with a showdown. It's time made the presentation of a ring recently reinstated into
brother, Tom, Oeveland and
to Mrs. Custer.
membership .
Marna learned her angel - Isn't! - SUE
. five grandchildren.
SELECI'ED BY POPULAR VOTE as the tm Girl of Ute
The program followed a 6:30
Highlights of Ute past year
+++
He was a member of Mid·
Year for the Xi Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
p. m. dinner. Susan Baer led in were presented by Velma Rue
Dear Sue and Helen :
dleport
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM, the
Soroeity was Shirley Custer. Here Nellie Brown, 1971 Girl of
the National Anthem and a and Mildred Karr for Xi
You said it was okay by you If a man wore his wedding ring welcome was extended by Gamma Mu, and Charlotte
Rutland Methodist Church, and
the Year, pruenlll the cbapter'a ring to Mrs. Custer.
on his little finger . But you should have added - TAKE IT OFF Vikki Gloeckner, president of Hanning and Carol Adams foe
Brotherhood of Railroad
wblle working! My finger was almost pulled off when my ring got the Ohio Eta Phi Chapter. She Ohio Eta Phi Chapter. "This Is
Engineers.
He retired in 19&amp;1
TWO DIVORCED
caught in machinery. Another time I was burned from shorting a also read a message from Bill Your Year, Pearl Welker,"
Two divorces have been as an engineer for the New
1 car battery through my ring. Men have been killed when their
granted
in Meigs County York Central Railroad after 41
Ross, founder of Beta Sigma was the theme of the Xi
rings catch on moving wheels, etc. If a woman loves her husband Phi.
Common Pleas Court, one to years service.
Gamma Mu presentation . A
she'llmake hlmleavethatring at home! - GUY
Ernestine Campbell from
Funeral services will be held
Pledges of Ohio Eta Phi gift was presented to Mrs.
Saturday
at 2 p.m. at the
David
F.
Campbell,
and
one
to
.Welker by Mrs. Karr. Judy
"?' : 21 : " ( PP??U ibbbbd
Marion Marcum from Wlutam Martin Funeral Home with the
Werry presented a gift to Mrs.
J. Marcum, both lor gross Rev. Robert Baumgarner
Gloeckner, outgoing president
neglect of duty. Rolland Smith · officiating. Burial will be in
of Ohio Eta Phi.
111d Ronnie Lee Anderson have Miles Cemetery.
Favors for Ute dinner atFriends may call at the home
been appointed as special
tended by approximately 70
anytime
. Middleport Lodge 363
deputies
of
the
Meigs
County
shooter Roger Mudd's great.grandpappy was members and Mrs. Marcia
BY JACK O'BRIAN
S!eriff's Dept.
will hold masonic services
the doctor who set John Wilkes Booth's busted Hobstelter, sponsor of XI
APART, A PARTRIDGE
Friday
at 7:30 p.m. at Ute
Veterans Memorial Hospital
leg after he shot Lincoln ... N. Y. Public TV Gamma Mu, were arlificial
IS APPROACHED
funeral
home.
yellow rosebuds made by Mrs.
ADMISSION James
NEW YORK (KFS) - Jack Cassidy's ex, station WNET offered a complete program of Satterfield. Name tags in black
Trader, Pomeroy; Steven
Hanoi propaganda films accusing the USA of all and gold carried out the
S!irley Jones, Is being wooed by handsome
FINED THRICE
Pl~kens, Racine; Aaron Lewis,
manner of terrorists and bolstered them with a sorority emblem theme.
H'woodlte_Brad Trumbull ... Jack's TV star son,
One defendant was fined and
Pomeroy; George Taylor,
panel of loud USA critics. Well, it's only our
David, took $160,000 as his share of six concerts
two
others forfeited bonds in
Minersville Ed' Templeton,
taxes financing such disgraceful TV slantlngs.
in a on..week April span ... Biggest record hit in
Pomeroy; Okey Howard, Jr., Pomeroy Mayor William
ROAD CLOSED
David Frost's wealth rwmeth over: he
England is "Amazing Grace," a 2oo.year-old
New
liaven ; Anna Durbin, Baronick's court Wednesday
Ted Beegle, Meigs County
bought control of a mutual lund in London ...
hymn. The warmover happened because it got
IIARY
JEANNE
night. Fined was William Fry,
Walter Cronkite celebrated his loth anniversary Engineer, announced today WALKER of GIIIUpolls wu Mason.
popular as an Instrumental piece wheezed by
DISCHARGES - Gloria Jr., 18, Mason, $S and costs,
the Royal scot Dragoons bagpipe band .., as CBS·TV news anchorman. Congrats. that County Road 19 (Peach
welcomed
durlq
the
amual
Bacus, Joseph Hemsley, passing on a double yellow line,
Walter's the best in the business .•. The whole U. Fork Road ), located between
"Sugar" is the biggest cash.collector on Bdwy.
Founder's
Day
obstrvance
James Trader, Ina Howard, and forfeiting bonds were Ooy
S. has but two vaudeville theaters, both inN. Y. new U.S. Route 33 and old U.S.
Grossed '127,000 last week ... Her Oscar may
of
Beta
Sigma
Pbl
Sorority,
Nitz, Pomeroy , $25 for
Donald Dye.
City (the Apo~o in Harlem .and Radio City Route JJ, (now county road :ll as a charter honorary
carry with It a reunion for Cloeis Leachman
disturbing
the peace, $50 for
Music Hall); ~land has seven, three In known as Peach Fork Road)
with her e:~tranged husband, George Englund.
WDGE TO MEET
me111ber
of
Xl
Gamma
Mu.
reckless
operation,
and $2001or
London ... Oddity : black neW8p8pers, radio and will be closed approximately She received the rihlal of
Brendan Behan's last play, "Richard's
A
special
meeting
of
Shade
.
driving while intoxicated, and
TV stations freely accepted ads for two weeks to repair Utree jewell at a tea ~ld receotly River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM will be1 Jesse Lambert, Pomeroy, $25,
Cork Leg," opened in Dublin. Variety called It
landslides.
"a robust Behanesque entertainment with little · Paramount's "The Legend of Nig110r Olarley"
at tb~ borne of Mary Carolyu held Saturday at 7:30 p.m. at failure to yield right of way .
form but much fun '" that should plliase Behan
about a black cowboy, but white newspapers are
Wiley In New Haven.
the hall in Chester for work in
The
Sentinel
master mason degree . All
resisting. The title does seem offensively shock·
fans everywhere." ... Jane Fonda's plain pain
DEVOTED TO THE
prone . ·
·
•·
master masons are invited.
over juot simply acceptlng her Oscar was her
HIT:SK!J'PER WANTED
INTEREST OF
·
MEETING
CALLED
first sign of public taste we've observed in
Baroness Nina Van Pallandt insisted on an
Mll!!.S · MASON AR.A
The Meigs County Sheriff's
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
Meigs County Permit
LOCAL TEMPS
augmented 141&gt;1ece ork for her St. Regis run.
Dept. is investigating a hit-flklp ·
years. Her dad, Henry Fonda, persuaded her to
Euc. Ed .
Holders
wW
meet
this
evening
Temperature
In
downtown
ROIERT HOEFLICH,
S!e won't get Utat slu crew in many spots in the
incident reported at 3::ll a.m.
limply take the doorstop and run ... Times
City l!dltor
at
7:30
in
Ute
Cave
Room
at
Pomeroy
Thursday
at
II
a.
m.
,
today on SR 7. Glassco
U.S. Our finest gal singer, Ella Fltqerald, does
Sqllllfl! cops are cracking doW!! on gay:porno
Publisned dall" uctpt
Five
Points
Grill.
All
penni!
was
5I
degre.es
WJder
sunny
Falrrow, U, 26, Olillicothe,
picture-palaces. 'Bout time. It was
superbly in front of a trio. But then, Ella has Saturday by T"e Ohio V1lley
Publish ing Company. 11l
holders are urged to attend.
skies.
said
he was traveling north
talent
·
...
If
Nina'd
been
really
great
'
i
nstead
of
a
dlacrlminstlng just to slough the hetero:porno
Court St ., Pomeroy , Ohio,
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Ottice
Phont
when a car came out of Ute Hi 7
dens.
beautiful woman with commonplace plpea, her 992-2156, Edllorlol Phone !fl.
parking lot and hlt his car in
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billing could've been "Van Pallandt- Rhymes 2\51 .
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clus
postage
paid
at
the
right rear, then did not
"'lbe Godfather." Too many are stopping the
WlUt Talent."
Pomeroy, Ohio .
slop. There were no injuries.
picture midway for godpopcorni)eddllng in·
McGraw·Hill, which felt the worst of the
Netlonal advertising
rtprutntatlvt
lottlntlll .
tmnluions ... The lofally slanted "Catonsville · Howard Hughes backlash While the Baroness Golloghor. Inc .. 12 Ent .42n&lt;l
(Contlnued from paae I)
Nine" play by draft records' desecratlng Daniel
seems the only one involved to win, and felt the St ., Ntw York City, NrN York . S. negotiator wlllism J. .Porter told the Communista that "only
Subscription r1tt1: Dt ·
pain of two mlsjudgments (the Hughes fiasco livtred
Benilan hu been made into a movie by
LEVY SUPPORTED
by carrier where substance will keep us at this table." Hanoi and the VietCong
IVIillbll
50
ctnfl
ptr
WHk;
Gfelory Peck, who paid the whole $260,000 cost. and the (llief Red Fox "memoirs"), al.!o Bv Motor Route where urrltr condemned President Nixon 'a address In the nation Wednesday
The Eastern Local District
The Cannes Festival rejected It u an entry, but
publishes a business advisory mag titled In· service not avalltblt : One as a bick a~nled norUtem troops had Invaded the 1011tb.
Ohio Assoctatlon of Public
month st .7.S . By mall In Ohio
lt'U be oihown there between starlet-elrlpplngs
ternational Management. That's not even the and
"It wt1l not be practical to hold meetings if you continue 1o School Employees voted to
W. VI ., One Ytlr $14.00.
etc. Anything knocking Ute USA finds a home in
woest of it. Its editor's name is Boner. J. Russell Six months 11. 25 . Thrtt refuse lo deal with the subatance of both Ute present invulon of support ·the 3\l mill levy to be.
months S4 ;50. Subscription
· voted on· May 22 for the
Europe111 film circles. ·
Boner. Really.
prict includes Sundey Tlmts . the !lOUth and general problelll8 fi peace, including prisoners of
Eastern Local School Dlstrlc:t,
Dubious distinction: CBS-TV bulletin
Sentinel.
war and those rnisaing in action," Porter said.
at a recent meeting.

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�..

4~The !)ally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April '!1, 19'12

$- 'lbe Dally Senllnel,Middleport..PolnerOy, 0., April27, 1972

Cincy Ends, Slump, 7-6
PITTSBURGH (UPI)-Steve
Blass, the. pitchlllg hero of last
yeiii''S World Series, is finding
out that what you do in October
.means not a twit in April. Just
like at the start of every other
Season, Blass is struggling.
The Pittsburgh Pirates'
righthander, who saw. his
recOrd drop to 1·1 Wednesday
night in a 7~ loss to Cincinnati,
hoped thls .'spring might be
different but conceded it has
not been.
''No, I did not have good
stuff, not at all," he said. "It
was a struggle. The game in
Philadelphia last week was a

struggle .for me, and this was
too."
''And," Blass went on can·
didly, "there are many more
struggles ahead."
Blass never has been known
for hls succeSs early ·in the
season .-ln. 1968, when he was
I~ for his best year in the
majors, he was 1·2 in early
June.
·
Not Convinced
This year, Blass started off
by holding the Mets scoreless
in a seven"inning effort his first
time out, but said "I wasn't
convinced by that game. I've
been down the other road too

FORA
SUMMER'S

FUN •••

lOth.

Again Wednesday night Pittsburgh ahnost took Blass off
the hook, rallying !rom a 7-1
deficit with two runs in the
eighth and three in the ninth.
Pedro Borbon, the fourth
Cincinnati pitcher used ill the
ninth inning, fifially ended the
game by getting Bob Robertson to fly out to rightfield with
the bases loaded.

Bobby Tolan, .making a
remarkable comeback frolll a
torn Achilles tendon that
sidelined him an of 1971, drove
iii three runs against Blass
with a single and a home run,
raising his balling average to
.459 and his team-leading RBI
total to 10 in nine games.
"!don't think a lot of people
expect me to be doing whai l'in
doing now," Tolan said. "But I
felt if the leg allowed me to
play, I wouldn't worry about
my hitting."
Pirates Tag Hall
The Pirates seemingly were
dead when Gary Nolan, who
won his third game in a rowall the Cincimati victories to
this point- went out for a
pinchhitter in \he eighth. ·
Nolan had given up only one

Action pac;ked, rea dy for

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Boys &amp;Girls
•Shorts
• Shirts
eSiacks •Swim Wear
Ball Caps •Jackets

Boys and

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
On The T In Middleport, 0.

Coach Roger Birch's Meigs
Reserves capitalized on eight
walks and three errors Wednesday night in downing Kyger
Creek's reserves, 7-2 in a nonleague game at Cheshire.
Junior John Roush, nonnally
a second baseman, started on
the hill for Coach Dick Adams'
club. Roush yielded two 'runs in
the first inning, a single run in
the second and two more in the
fourth .
Meigs plated its first two
runs on Mich Ash's fielder's
choice, a stolen base, Chuck
Faulk's single and a single by
Dave Wolfe. Another run came
across in the third on a single
by Steve Price, a hit bastman
and an error.
The Bobcats cut the lead to
three runs in the fifth inning.
Roush started the rally with a

single. He scored two outs later
on an error on Terry Lucas'
grounder. Lucas dashed home
on Joe Stidham's double to
right centerfield. The Utile
Marauders pushed across two
more runs in the sixth when
stidham lost his control and
walked five hatters.
Nesselroad, Ash, Faulk,
Wolfe and Price bad hits for the

winners.

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (UP!) '
. - Richard Petty, who made
more than a million dollars
driving Plymouths, may be
driving his last Plymouth
Sunday when .he races !n the
VIrginia 500 at the Martinsville

~:·~nolinced earlier he

KC Captures
4-Way Meet

McGee Back
For Second.
Shot At Title

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recorded his best lime of the
season winning the mile in
4:53.5. McCoy of Eastern
finished second at 4:55.5.
North Galli a won the 120
yard high hurdles, 440 yard
dash, two mile run, and the
dis cus competition. Coach
Roger Kirkhart 's Eastern
Eagles won the pole vault and
660-yard run .
Coach Bruce Wallace 's
Southern Tornadoes took first
place in one event, the shot-put.
Kyger Creek finished with 94
points, North Gallia had 74,
Eastern, 40 and Southern, 15.
Here is Wednesday's results :
RUNNING EVENTS
120 Yard High Hurdles ) Dotson , NG ; Smith, KC;
Curry, .KC ; Whittington, NG,
and Ba1nhart. S. : 16.9.

Gordon,
KC; Logan, NG ; Smith, E;
Garnes, NG ; and McCarty,
KC. : 10.8.
Mile Run - Rife, KC ; McDALLAS (UPI)-Jerry Mc- Coy, E; Howard, KC; Bissell,
Gee, the erstwhile golf tour E and Sm ith, S. 4:53.5.
880-Yard Relay - Won by KC
rabbit who now enjoys the in 1.-41. Runners were Curry,
luxury of being on _\he exempt Gordon, McCarty and Tabor.
Eastern, second and North
list for all tournaments, re- Gallia,
'third .
turned today to the course and
440-Yard Dash .Logan,
the tournament where his NG ; Smith, E; Wise, KC;
fortunes took the big tur- Wickline, NG and B. Rife, KC.
:55.8.
nabout.
180 Low Hurdles - Dotson,
The 28-year-old Ohioan NG; Smith, KC ; Garnes, NG;
couldn't be happier now that French, KC; Clark, S. : 22.2.
1180 Yard Run - Atherton, E;
he 's back contesting Preston Smlt"C:.· c .. ~ • ··· •• ~ · o.,.nlcin
Trail Golf Club's 7,086-yard, KC an~ ~~m~':r: ~~: t~~. ,
220 Yard Dash - Gordon,
par 35-35-70 layout in the
KC ; Curry, KC; Smith, E;
Byron Nelson Golf Classic.
Dotson, NG and Logan , NG.
It was in this tournament a : 23 .4.
year ago that McGee made a
Two Mile Run - Gillman ,
big run at eventual winner NG·; Swisher, KC; Rife, KC;
E; and Irvin, S. 11 :37.5.
Jack Nicklaus and forced Reed,
Mile Relay - Won by KC In
Nicklaus to fire a four-illlder- 3:SJ.S. Runners were Donnett,
par 66 on the final day to rack Hudson, Stroud and McCarty.
Gafl la, second and
up his second straight Nelson North
Eastern, third.
title with a 274.
FIELD EVENTS
Long Jump - Tabor, KC;
McGee had to settle for a
French , KC ; Dotson, NG ;
second-place tie at '276 with ·Robinson,
NG and Smith, E.
Frank Beard, but the $11,575 18'3".
check he won served as a
High Jump - Johnson, KC;
Robinson,
NG; Weddington,
mental and physical springNG;
Stidham.
KC. 5'2" .
board which catapulted hlrn to
Shot-Put- Filch, S; Dewitt,
a $52,208 season and the NG; Johnson, kC ; Cremeans,
hlghlyBOught exempt status. KC ; Sexton, NG. 38'5".
- Dewitt, NG ; Ni&gt;ra,
"I love to play here," McGee .E;Discus
Sexton, NG ; Curry, KC.
said, "because the course is 100'9"'
'
Pole Vault - Griffith, E;
tough and it seems like I
KC. 7'6" .
always play well on the tough Stidham,
Final Score- Kyger Creek,
courses."
94; North Gallla, 74 ; Eastern,
40, Southern, 15 . .

TERmiTE

Gas Furnace ·

'

tne

#'ru:.st

I

NBA championship series.
"You have to shoot well and
play good defense to beat Lott
Angeles," said New York
Coach Red Holzman after hll
.club's easy victory over a team
which beat the Knlcks four out
of five times during the regular
season.
The best-&lt;&gt;f-seven game title
series continues here Sunda7
at 1:40p.m. PST before moving
. to New York next for games
No. 3 and 4 Wednesday and
. Friday nights of next week.
Bradley-Lueu Lead
Dollar Bill Bradley and longshooting Jerry Lucas led the
Knlcks' attack with 29 and 31
points, respectively. Bradley
was II of 12 from the floor
while Lucas lobbed In 13 of 21
attempts. Eleven of Lucu'
shots were in the 20-foot range.
"New York just played a

100 Yard Dash -

.

Upsets
Feature

Thursday's Game

I No game scheduled)

ABA Playoff Standings
By United Press International
I All Series Best-Of-Seven)

B.

W. L. Pet.

V1rg 1nia •

2 2 .500
2 2 .500

New York

c. I
'

Thursday's Games

I No games scheduled!

A. · ~~

""'·'
AHL Playoff Standings

1 lb. . . ... . . ... 1...$2.00
B. Little Ambassadors
1
·. $2.65

By United Press lnterna1ional

I All Series Best-of-Seven)
Series E
W. L. gf ga
x-Nov a Scotia
4 0 15 S

Boston

Series F

5 15

0 4

W. L. gf ga

Baltimore

2 2 J4 14

Cincinnati
2 2 14 14
Wednesday's Results
Nova

Scotia S Boston 2

(Only game scheduled)
Thursday's Games
(No games scheduledi

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league championship.
But they were out of the first
game after one half.
Although Bradley was the
Knicks' high scorer, the 6-foot8 Lucas figures tq_ be Lakers'
biggest headache in th~ series
because of his outside shooting.
Lucas Presents Problem
"Lucas definitely presents a
problem for me," admitted I..Ds
Angeles' 7-1 goliath Wilt Cham-

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Kansas City battered Dave
McNally for five runs in the
fifth inning just before the rain
came. The Orioles came back
with three in the top of the sixth
and had a runner on second,
with two out when the rain

(i•

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Clll

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raining an hour. "Most of the lopped Oakland, 4·2, Minnesota Chicago beat Cleveland, 7-5, in
time it was only drizzling but nipped Bos ton, 3-1, California 10 innings.
the game was called after l 59- edged Milwaukee, 3-1 and
minute delay when it started
raining hard.
Detroit gave Coleman all the
SuPport he needed with a fiverun fifth inning that featured
Aurelio Rodriguez' two-run
NE HAVE ALL TYPES OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
single, Gates Brown's run-

'"

lnNI -

POMEROY

,

•ar c n co ... p•n toc
~· ""'• lfilto ll '"'' •·

BOSTON (UPI)-The Boston
Bruins aren't counting on pall
performance in their Stanley
Cup championship serie1
against the New York Rangers.
The two teams, surprisipgly
easy winners in the first two
rounds of National Hockey
Lellgue playoff competition,
open their best-&lt;&gt;f_,..en seriel
at Boston Garden Sunday in a
nationally televised game.
"We had a good year againlt
the Rangers," Boston Coach
Tom Johnson said Wednesday.
"We lost the flrll one and then
we won the next five."
But Johnson was quick to
add: "'111e Rangers have been
going great. They took Montreal and then beat Chicago in
four straight. Only a great club
can do 10111etbing Uke that."
While the disciplined
Rangers were dllpotling of the
Callldlerll and Black Hawlu to
make the final round, the hicbpo...-ed Brulnl . tripped the
Toronlo Maple Leafa in five
pmea and mnped over the st.
1Au11 Blun in four llralgbL
'l1le Bruinl and Rani... will
be meellnc for the ~ timl
111 pllyolf NmJIIIII!tlaa, blat fw
oo17 the flnl time Iince the

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great game," conceded Bill
Sharman of the.Lakers the day
after he was named the NBA's
Coach of the Year. "They had
great movement and always
seemed to hit the open man."
The Lakers, who set an alltime NBA record of 69-13
before eliminating defending
champion Milwaukee from the
playoffs, went into the series as
&gt;-2 favorites to get their f1rst

•I

'15900
SEE US TODAY

8-1 , on Joe Coleman's three- th~ whole thing. We should win
hitter Wednesday night, 10 or 15 more this year and
Martin said, ;:I've said all that 's all we need."
along that I think we can win
Weaver, who ~opes to pilot
the Orioles to 100 victories for
the fourth straight season,
figures his team is only in a
temporary slump. "Hitting is
part of our trouble. Our team
isn't going to hit .201 for the
berlain.
season."
Lucas had 18 points at
Weaver wasn't too thrilled
halftime and Bradley !6 as the
Knlcks, who finished only 14 that the Orioles' 5-3 loss to
games over .500 in the regular KimsasCitywascalled by rain
season, left the rourt with a 67- in the sixth inning. "I'd like to
49 advantage. The Lakers know why the game was
closed to within 13 with a pair called," he said.
Lemon Has the Answer
of baskets at the start of the
Kansas
City Manager Jim
third period but the Knlcks
responded with six unanswered Lemon had the answer .
pomts and that was the game. " What's he mad about7"
Lemon asked. "It's been

Bruins

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By United Preas lnternatloul
Upsets marked !he featun
races at Aqueduct Snd Garden
State Wednesday.
Rule By Reason ($19.00) held
off odds-&lt;&gt;n favorite Hitchcock
by a head to win the 320,000
allowance at Agueduct while
Saturina ($29.60) raWed In the
stretch to score a head victory
over Carolina G. in the $27,3'15
Quaker City Handicap at
Garden State.
Rule By Reason was ridden
by Jorge Velasquez and waa
limed In 1:50 14 for I% miles
while Saturina covered siJ:
furlongs in I:12 !1-6.
Crimson Saint ($9.60) scored
a four-length victory in the
$32,350 Meteor Handicap at
Hollywood Park.
Elsewhere, Gallant DaveUe
($3.40) and Bosum Strike
($13.60) woo the split divisions
of the $30,000 Bewitch Stakes at
Keeneland; Groton Mi11
($34.40) won the $10,000 featun
at Plmlico ; Anatole ($53.110)
took the $7,000 allowance at
Hialeah; Sweet Enough
($13.80) won at Suffolk Downs;
and Brave N Bold ($8.40) won
at Hazel Park.

Western Division Finals •

W. L. Pel.
Utah
3 3 .500
Indiana
3 3 .500
Wednesday's Results
New York 118 Virginia 107
Indiana 105 Utah 99

I

Rac~s

•

l=:ut,.rn Div.i,sion Finals

'

NY Knicks .Shock LA

'
INGLEWOOD , Calif.
(UPI)- The New York Knlcks
a club.which struggled during
the regular season, may be on
the verge of pulling one of the
biggest upsets In National
Ba!iketball Association history.
Pla(lng outstanding team
defense and shooting at a 72 per
cent clip from the floor in the
first half, the underdog Knlcks
knocked off the Los Angeles
Lakers, 114-92, Wednesday
night to take a I~ lead in the

105,000 BTU

N. 2nd AVL

~

!~I- ~~- _

'IJI.tn

•

.

By VITO STELUNO
Robinson was 'traded that the division by a game while
UPI Sports Writer
Tigers
were going to win the Baltimore is rriired in a fourBilly Martin, who announced
last December .. when Frank pennant, is beaming now with game losing streak.
.. the Tigers leading their ... Aft~r the Detroit beat Texas,

8/fr:mcmbm; ~tftet

was abandoning hls blue and
red Plymouth in favor of
Dodges. His maiden race in a
Dodge is set for May 7 at the
huge Talladega Raceway in
Alabama ..
Petty couldn't have picked a
better track for his Plymouth
swan song that the Martinsville
Speedway. He has won here 10
times and is the odds-on
favoi-ite in Sunday's $45,000
event.
Bobby Isaac of Catawba,
N.C., figures to be Petty's top
ch8llenger · on the half-mile
oval. Isaac drives a Dodge. ·
Bobby Allison, Petty's old
nemisis from Hueytown, Ala.,
carries
the hopes of Chewolet
Baylor, Ron Fisher · and
fans
in
his Junior Johnson
French, one · hit each.
gpecial.
Richards, the winning pitcher,
David Pearson pf Spartanwalked two and struck out four.
burg,
S.C., will be on hand for
Meigs' varsity will play
Gallipolis Monday night. his second race in the Wood
Kyger Creek will host North Brothers' Mercury, the car
Gallia tonight and Southern Allison abandoned in favor of
Johnson's hard-running Chevy.
Friday evening.
Pearson won the Rebel 400 at
By Innings:
Meigs Res. 2i0 202 0-7 4 3
KC Res.
000 020 0-2 7 3
Richard (W) and Ash. Roush
(L) , Stidham(4), Baird (6) and
NBA Playoff Standings
Hill.
By United Press International
(Best-Of-Seven Finals!
W. L. Pet.
New York
I 0 1.000
Los Angeles
0 1 .000
Wednesday's Result
New York 114 Los Ang 92

•

Tigers Win, Keep Lead As Oiioles LoSe Again

Pro Standings

Roush led the Bobcat attack
with two singles. Other hitters
were Lucas, Stidham, Wendell

Led by the running of
sophomores John Gordon and
Rick Smith and junior George
Curry, the Kyger Creek track
team won its fourth straight
meet Wednesday night
defea ting North Gallia ,
Eastem and Southe~n in a
meet
at
quadrangular
Cheshire.
Gordon paced Coach Jim
Arledge's thinclads with 131'.
points, Curry scored 101'.
points and Smith added eight
points.
KC 's Mike Rife, a freshman
wh o won the Gil Dodd Mile last
Saturday on Memorial Field,

$

run and six hits and the Reds
had a 7-1lead. with riutners on
first ~nd third and just one out.
"I figured we'd get another
run there and then I've got
(Tom) Han, who's just been
super-duper for me, coming
out of the bullpen," said
Manager Sparky Anderson of
the Reds. "I figured I was just
gonna close out the game with
Hall, and by giving Nolan two
lniiings off I might be able to
use him again Sunday."
But Hall, who had given up
only one run In five previous
appearances, was tagged for
five hits and five runs in an
inning and one-third.
Lefthander Don Gullett
pitches for the Reds tonight
against Nelson Briles, making
his first start of the season.

Petty May .·Switch
After Sunday.Race·

Meigs B Posts 7-2 Win

Infant Thru Size 12

··Just Arrived
Girls Belts.

many times."
"Pitchers tend to overuse the·
expression, being smooth,"
Blass said, " but that's exactly
the ~ase with Die. It's a colislant struggle."
Last Friday · night at
Philadelphia, Blass was tagged
for two home runs but escaped
defeat when the Pirates tied
the game and finally won in the

·Petty has tbree'victories this
season, including a win last
weekend at North Wllkelboro,
N.C. His other victories were
the Riverside 500 an.d a. 250mile race at l!ichmond.
Time trials Friday wlll
determine the pole sitter and
Darlington, S.C., in his first the other 19 best -spots. The
sta'rt in the car and A.J . Foyt fastest' qualifer wins $1,000.
drove it to victories in the Time trials Saturday will
Daytona 500 and the On!ario determine the other 16 star500.
ters.
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4~The !)ally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April '!1, 19'12

$- 'lbe Dally Senllnel,Middleport..PolnerOy, 0., April27, 1972

Cincy Ends, Slump, 7-6
PITTSBURGH (UPI)-Steve
Blass, the. pitchlllg hero of last
yeiii''S World Series, is finding
out that what you do in October
.means not a twit in April. Just
like at the start of every other
Season, Blass is struggling.
The Pittsburgh Pirates'
righthander, who saw. his
recOrd drop to 1·1 Wednesday
night in a 7~ loss to Cincinnati,
hoped thls .'spring might be
different but conceded it has
not been.
''No, I did not have good
stuff, not at all," he said. "It
was a struggle. The game in
Philadelphia last week was a

struggle .for me, and this was
too."
''And," Blass went on can·
didly, "there are many more
struggles ahead."
Blass never has been known
for hls succeSs early ·in the
season .-ln. 1968, when he was
I~ for his best year in the
majors, he was 1·2 in early
June.
·
Not Convinced
This year, Blass started off
by holding the Mets scoreless
in a seven"inning effort his first
time out, but said "I wasn't
convinced by that game. I've
been down the other road too

FORA
SUMMER'S

FUN •••

lOth.

Again Wednesday night Pittsburgh ahnost took Blass off
the hook, rallying !rom a 7-1
deficit with two runs in the
eighth and three in the ninth.
Pedro Borbon, the fourth
Cincinnati pitcher used ill the
ninth inning, fifially ended the
game by getting Bob Robertson to fly out to rightfield with
the bases loaded.

Bobby Tolan, .making a
remarkable comeback frolll a
torn Achilles tendon that
sidelined him an of 1971, drove
iii three runs against Blass
with a single and a home run,
raising his balling average to
.459 and his team-leading RBI
total to 10 in nine games.
"!don't think a lot of people
expect me to be doing whai l'in
doing now," Tolan said. "But I
felt if the leg allowed me to
play, I wouldn't worry about
my hitting."
Pirates Tag Hall
The Pirates seemingly were
dead when Gary Nolan, who
won his third game in a rowall the Cincimati victories to
this point- went out for a
pinchhitter in \he eighth. ·
Nolan had given up only one

Action pac;ked, rea dy for

summer, our sporty fun 'n
sun wear. They are nice to

be in, nice to play in. And
nice on budgets. too.

Boys &amp;Girls
•Shorts
• Shirts
eSiacks •Swim Wear
Ball Caps •Jackets

Boys and

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
On The T In Middleport, 0.

Coach Roger Birch's Meigs
Reserves capitalized on eight
walks and three errors Wednesday night in downing Kyger
Creek's reserves, 7-2 in a nonleague game at Cheshire.
Junior John Roush, nonnally
a second baseman, started on
the hill for Coach Dick Adams'
club. Roush yielded two 'runs in
the first inning, a single run in
the second and two more in the
fourth .
Meigs plated its first two
runs on Mich Ash's fielder's
choice, a stolen base, Chuck
Faulk's single and a single by
Dave Wolfe. Another run came
across in the third on a single
by Steve Price, a hit bastman
and an error.
The Bobcats cut the lead to
three runs in the fifth inning.
Roush started the rally with a

single. He scored two outs later
on an error on Terry Lucas'
grounder. Lucas dashed home
on Joe Stidham's double to
right centerfield. The Utile
Marauders pushed across two
more runs in the sixth when
stidham lost his control and
walked five hatters.
Nesselroad, Ash, Faulk,
Wolfe and Price bad hits for the

winners.

MARTINSVILLE, Va. (UP!) '
. - Richard Petty, who made
more than a million dollars
driving Plymouths, may be
driving his last Plymouth
Sunday when .he races !n the
VIrginia 500 at the Martinsville

~:·~nolinced earlier he

KC Captures
4-Way Meet

McGee Back
For Second.
Shot At Title

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recorded his best lime of the
season winning the mile in
4:53.5. McCoy of Eastern
finished second at 4:55.5.
North Galli a won the 120
yard high hurdles, 440 yard
dash, two mile run, and the
dis cus competition. Coach
Roger Kirkhart 's Eastern
Eagles won the pole vault and
660-yard run .
Coach Bruce Wallace 's
Southern Tornadoes took first
place in one event, the shot-put.
Kyger Creek finished with 94
points, North Gallia had 74,
Eastern, 40 and Southern, 15.
Here is Wednesday's results :
RUNNING EVENTS
120 Yard High Hurdles ) Dotson , NG ; Smith, KC;
Curry, .KC ; Whittington, NG,
and Ba1nhart. S. : 16.9.

Gordon,
KC; Logan, NG ; Smith, E;
Garnes, NG ; and McCarty,
KC. : 10.8.
Mile Run - Rife, KC ; McDALLAS (UPI)-Jerry Mc- Coy, E; Howard, KC; Bissell,
Gee, the erstwhile golf tour E and Sm ith, S. 4:53.5.
880-Yard Relay - Won by KC
rabbit who now enjoys the in 1.-41. Runners were Curry,
luxury of being on _\he exempt Gordon, McCarty and Tabor.
Eastern, second and North
list for all tournaments, re- Gallia,
'third .
turned today to the course and
440-Yard Dash .Logan,
the tournament where his NG ; Smith, E; Wise, KC;
fortunes took the big tur- Wickline, NG and B. Rife, KC.
:55.8.
nabout.
180 Low Hurdles - Dotson,
The 28-year-old Ohioan NG; Smith, KC ; Garnes, NG;
couldn't be happier now that French, KC; Clark, S. : 22.2.
1180 Yard Run - Atherton, E;
he 's back contesting Preston Smlt"C:.· c .. ~ • ··· •• ~ · o.,.nlcin
Trail Golf Club's 7,086-yard, KC an~ ~~m~':r: ~~: t~~. ,
220 Yard Dash - Gordon,
par 35-35-70 layout in the
KC ; Curry, KC; Smith, E;
Byron Nelson Golf Classic.
Dotson, NG and Logan , NG.
It was in this tournament a : 23 .4.
year ago that McGee made a
Two Mile Run - Gillman ,
big run at eventual winner NG·; Swisher, KC; Rife, KC;
E; and Irvin, S. 11 :37.5.
Jack Nicklaus and forced Reed,
Mile Relay - Won by KC In
Nicklaus to fire a four-illlder- 3:SJ.S. Runners were Donnett,
par 66 on the final day to rack Hudson, Stroud and McCarty.
Gafl la, second and
up his second straight Nelson North
Eastern, third.
title with a 274.
FIELD EVENTS
Long Jump - Tabor, KC;
McGee had to settle for a
French , KC ; Dotson, NG ;
second-place tie at '276 with ·Robinson,
NG and Smith, E.
Frank Beard, but the $11,575 18'3".
check he won served as a
High Jump - Johnson, KC;
Robinson,
NG; Weddington,
mental and physical springNG;
Stidham.
KC. 5'2" .
board which catapulted hlrn to
Shot-Put- Filch, S; Dewitt,
a $52,208 season and the NG; Johnson, kC ; Cremeans,
hlghlyBOught exempt status. KC ; Sexton, NG. 38'5".
- Dewitt, NG ; Ni&gt;ra,
"I love to play here," McGee .E;Discus
Sexton, NG ; Curry, KC.
said, "because the course is 100'9"'
'
Pole Vault - Griffith, E;
tough and it seems like I
KC. 7'6" .
always play well on the tough Stidham,
Final Score- Kyger Creek,
courses."
94; North Gallla, 74 ; Eastern,
40, Southern, 15 . .

TERmiTE

Gas Furnace ·

'

tne

#'ru:.st

I

NBA championship series.
"You have to shoot well and
play good defense to beat Lott
Angeles," said New York
Coach Red Holzman after hll
.club's easy victory over a team
which beat the Knlcks four out
of five times during the regular
season.
The best-&lt;&gt;f-seven game title
series continues here Sunda7
at 1:40p.m. PST before moving
. to New York next for games
No. 3 and 4 Wednesday and
. Friday nights of next week.
Bradley-Lueu Lead
Dollar Bill Bradley and longshooting Jerry Lucas led the
Knlcks' attack with 29 and 31
points, respectively. Bradley
was II of 12 from the floor
while Lucas lobbed In 13 of 21
attempts. Eleven of Lucu'
shots were in the 20-foot range.
"New York just played a

100 Yard Dash -

.

Upsets
Feature

Thursday's Game

I No game scheduled)

ABA Playoff Standings
By United Press International
I All Series Best-Of-Seven)

B.

W. L. Pet.

V1rg 1nia •

2 2 .500
2 2 .500

New York

c. I
'

Thursday's Games

I No games scheduled!

A. · ~~

""'·'
AHL Playoff Standings

1 lb. . . ... . . ... 1...$2.00
B. Little Ambassadors
1
·. $2.65

By United Press lnterna1ional

I All Series Best-of-Seven)
Series E
W. L. gf ga
x-Nov a Scotia
4 0 15 S

Boston

Series F

5 15

0 4

W. L. gf ga

Baltimore

2 2 J4 14

Cincinnati
2 2 14 14
Wednesday's Results
Nova

Scotia S Boston 2

(Only game scheduled)
Thursday's Games
(No games scheduledi

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league championship.
But they were out of the first
game after one half.
Although Bradley was the
Knicks' high scorer, the 6-foot8 Lucas figures tq_ be Lakers'
biggest headache in th~ series
because of his outside shooting.
Lucas Presents Problem
"Lucas definitely presents a
problem for me," admitted I..Ds
Angeles' 7-1 goliath Wilt Cham-

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came. The Orioles came back
with three in the top of the sixth
and had a runner on second,
with two out when the rain

(i•

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raining an hour. "Most of the lopped Oakland, 4·2, Minnesota Chicago beat Cleveland, 7-5, in
time it was only drizzling but nipped Bos ton, 3-1, California 10 innings.
the game was called after l 59- edged Milwaukee, 3-1 and
minute delay when it started
raining hard.
Detroit gave Coleman all the
SuPport he needed with a fiverun fifth inning that featured
Aurelio Rodriguez' two-run
NE HAVE ALL TYPES OF MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
single, Gates Brown's run-

'"

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POMEROY

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BOSTON (UPI)-The Boston
Bruins aren't counting on pall
performance in their Stanley
Cup championship serie1
against the New York Rangers.
The two teams, surprisipgly
easy winners in the first two
rounds of National Hockey
Lellgue playoff competition,
open their best-&lt;&gt;f_,..en seriel
at Boston Garden Sunday in a
nationally televised game.
"We had a good year againlt
the Rangers," Boston Coach
Tom Johnson said Wednesday.
"We lost the flrll one and then
we won the next five."
But Johnson was quick to
add: "'111e Rangers have been
going great. They took Montreal and then beat Chicago in
four straight. Only a great club
can do 10111etbing Uke that."
While the disciplined
Rangers were dllpotling of the
Callldlerll and Black Hawlu to
make the final round, the hicbpo...-ed Brulnl . tripped the
Toronlo Maple Leafa in five
pmea and mnped over the st.
1Au11 Blun in four llralgbL
'l1le Bruinl and Rani... will
be meellnc for the ~ timl
111 pllyolf NmJIIIII!tlaa, blat fw
oo17 the flnl time Iince the

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great game," conceded Bill
Sharman of the.Lakers the day
after he was named the NBA's
Coach of the Year. "They had
great movement and always
seemed to hit the open man."
The Lakers, who set an alltime NBA record of 69-13
before eliminating defending
champion Milwaukee from the
playoffs, went into the series as
&gt;-2 favorites to get their f1rst

•I

'15900
SEE US TODAY

8-1 , on Joe Coleman's three- th~ whole thing. We should win
hitter Wednesday night, 10 or 15 more this year and
Martin said, ;:I've said all that 's all we need."
along that I think we can win
Weaver, who ~opes to pilot
the Orioles to 100 victories for
the fourth straight season,
figures his team is only in a
temporary slump. "Hitting is
part of our trouble. Our team
isn't going to hit .201 for the
berlain.
season."
Lucas had 18 points at
Weaver wasn't too thrilled
halftime and Bradley !6 as the
Knlcks, who finished only 14 that the Orioles' 5-3 loss to
games over .500 in the regular KimsasCitywascalled by rain
season, left the rourt with a 67- in the sixth inning. "I'd like to
49 advantage. The Lakers know why the game was
closed to within 13 with a pair called," he said.
Lemon Has the Answer
of baskets at the start of the
Kansas
City Manager Jim
third period but the Knlcks
responded with six unanswered Lemon had the answer .
pomts and that was the game. " What's he mad about7"
Lemon asked. "It's been

Bruins

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Upsets marked !he featun
races at Aqueduct Snd Garden
State Wednesday.
Rule By Reason ($19.00) held
off odds-&lt;&gt;n favorite Hitchcock
by a head to win the 320,000
allowance at Agueduct while
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took the $7,000 allowance at
Hialeah; Sweet Enough
($13.80) won at Suffolk Downs;
and Brave N Bold ($8.40) won
at Hazel Park.

Western Division Finals •

W. L. Pel.
Utah
3 3 .500
Indiana
3 3 .500
Wednesday's Results
New York 118 Virginia 107
Indiana 105 Utah 99

I

Rac~s

•

l=:ut,.rn Div.i,sion Finals

'

NY Knicks .Shock LA

'
INGLEWOOD , Calif.
(UPI)- The New York Knlcks
a club.which struggled during
the regular season, may be on
the verge of pulling one of the
biggest upsets In National
Ba!iketball Association history.
Pla(lng outstanding team
defense and shooting at a 72 per
cent clip from the floor in the
first half, the underdog Knlcks
knocked off the Los Angeles
Lakers, 114-92, Wednesday
night to take a I~ lead in the

105,000 BTU

N. 2nd AVL

~

!~I- ~~- _

'IJI.tn

•

.

By VITO STELUNO
Robinson was 'traded that the division by a game while
UPI Sports Writer
Tigers
were going to win the Baltimore is rriired in a fourBilly Martin, who announced
last December .. when Frank pennant, is beaming now with game losing streak.
.. the Tigers leading their ... Aft~r the Detroit beat Texas,

8/fr:mcmbm; ~tftet

was abandoning hls blue and
red Plymouth in favor of
Dodges. His maiden race in a
Dodge is set for May 7 at the
huge Talladega Raceway in
Alabama ..
Petty couldn't have picked a
better track for his Plymouth
swan song that the Martinsville
Speedway. He has won here 10
times and is the odds-on
favoi-ite in Sunday's $45,000
event.
Bobby Isaac of Catawba,
N.C., figures to be Petty's top
ch8llenger · on the half-mile
oval. Isaac drives a Dodge. ·
Bobby Allison, Petty's old
nemisis from Hueytown, Ala.,
carries
the hopes of Chewolet
Baylor, Ron Fisher · and
fans
in
his Junior Johnson
French, one · hit each.
gpecial.
Richards, the winning pitcher,
David Pearson pf Spartanwalked two and struck out four.
burg,
S.C., will be on hand for
Meigs' varsity will play
Gallipolis Monday night. his second race in the Wood
Kyger Creek will host North Brothers' Mercury, the car
Gallia tonight and Southern Allison abandoned in favor of
Johnson's hard-running Chevy.
Friday evening.
Pearson won the Rebel 400 at
By Innings:
Meigs Res. 2i0 202 0-7 4 3
KC Res.
000 020 0-2 7 3
Richard (W) and Ash. Roush
(L) , Stidham(4), Baird (6) and
NBA Playoff Standings
Hill.
By United Press International
(Best-Of-Seven Finals!
W. L. Pet.
New York
I 0 1.000
Los Angeles
0 1 .000
Wednesday's Result
New York 114 Los Ang 92

•

Tigers Win, Keep Lead As Oiioles LoSe Again

Pro Standings

Roush led the Bobcat attack
with two singles. Other hitters
were Lucas, Stidham, Wendell

Led by the running of
sophomores John Gordon and
Rick Smith and junior George
Curry, the Kyger Creek track
team won its fourth straight
meet Wednesday night
defea ting North Gallia ,
Eastem and Southe~n in a
meet
at
quadrangular
Cheshire.
Gordon paced Coach Jim
Arledge's thinclads with 131'.
points, Curry scored 101'.
points and Smith added eight
points.
KC 's Mike Rife, a freshman
wh o won the Gil Dodd Mile last
Saturday on Memorial Field,

$

run and six hits and the Reds
had a 7-1lead. with riutners on
first ~nd third and just one out.
"I figured we'd get another
run there and then I've got
(Tom) Han, who's just been
super-duper for me, coming
out of the bullpen," said
Manager Sparky Anderson of
the Reds. "I figured I was just
gonna close out the game with
Hall, and by giving Nolan two
lniiings off I might be able to
use him again Sunday."
But Hall, who had given up
only one run In five previous
appearances, was tagged for
five hits and five runs in an
inning and one-third.
Lefthander Don Gullett
pitches for the Reds tonight
against Nelson Briles, making
his first start of the season.

Petty May .·Switch
After Sunday.Race·

Meigs B Posts 7-2 Win

Infant Thru Size 12

··Just Arrived
Girls Belts.

many times."
"Pitchers tend to overuse the·
expression, being smooth,"
Blass said, " but that's exactly
the ~ase with Die. It's a colislant struggle."
Last Friday · night at
Philadelphia, Blass was tagged
for two home runs but escaped
defeat when the Pirates tied
the game and finally won in the

·Petty has tbree'victories this
season, including a win last
weekend at North Wllkelboro,
N.C. His other victories were
the Riverside 500 an.d a. 250mile race at l!ichmond.
Time trials Friday wlll
determine the pole sitter and
Darlington, S.C., in his first the other 19 best -spots. The
sta'rt in the car and A.J . Foyt fastest' qualifer wins $1,000.
drove it to victories in the Time trials Saturday will
Daytona 500 and the On!ario determine the other 16 star500.
ters.
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·

.

J::siJt

Wh itt tnd

IIOIITIIWASM

BATHR"Q()M
TISSUES

I(LEEMEX TISSUES
125-Courll

UON•

500 1hltt1, 2·ply, per roll.
P1l1lty prinu , while$ colnr1.

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t.otte e.,,. Motj&amp;s..t.lllll
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your wcrlr.lhop . rtPIICI worn·cut
1oo111 Levtll . nw ub. httlr. ,...,, ,
htmmers. wrtnchts. pl11r1 . droll sell ,
and many, mtn~ mGrlll
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pol~pi'CP'flt ~l Olefin y11n. !t1in flltl la nl
c11p11 will! WUIIIIr-flli ~llnl bl ~ ~ i l'lg.

Durtble. while plu t lc ltnclng, ~roughl
Iron t!'jlfng, Will not ltde, warp, rutt , rot ,
Ptfl or cttnU Trim tltd prottel wour lawn
or garden.

'BOXED
GREETING"'"''"'" ,.,._,
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tnr'liwerury . muCu ·

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0010000•m

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Wholl CIH

•

SHOP EARLY WHILE ASSORTMENTS ARE COMPLETE.

JUIIMO, 1·111 1~

LAUNDRY
8ASIIET

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
MAKE POMEROY YOUR SHOPPING CENTER
11-01. 1 ...

CIRCUS PEANUtS
Fit eomtortallfy ~
tnty'" 111 eoii'IDtd eonon
wtlt'ltmooth ••tie

and

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Siz•: M, L, lCL.

BEN
PHONE

FRANKLII)J
200-202 Elsl Mlil St
POMIROY, OHIO

992-3498
I

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY NIGHTS 11L 9

H Otlo IUI IOft

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IHiftllh, wrll

drr l uo~ lll0"91

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1

I

7-TheDallySenttnel Mtddleport-Pomeroy 0 Aprll'l/

S- 'l'bl! DaUy Senlinel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 , April 27 1972

LEGft"l NOTICE

(Amended House Joint
RtiiiYtlon No UJ

five days Sundays excluded
hmes at the beglnnlno at the
nor to any oth~r place ttl an that end and n each ntermed1are
In which the two Houses are m place If any of the group '"

session
which such name l)elongs
Srct lon 15 (A) The general Except at a Partv Prlmarv or 1n
assembly shall enact no law a non partisan election the
Proposing .fo amend secflons e)(cept bv bill and no b II shalt name or desl~;~natton of each
of 6 7 9 11 U 16 and 31 of be passed without th e con
candidates party If any :shall
Article II sections 3 and 16 of currence of a majority of u,e be printed under or after each
Art cle Ill section 2a ot Article members elected to each house candidates name In lighter and
V to enact new sect•ons 8 and 15 Bills may or1glnate n e.lfher smaller type face than that in
of Article II to tnact session la house but may be al1fred which the candidates name 1S
ot Article Ill and to repeal amended or r~tected n the prmted A:n elector may vote for
sections S a 15 17 18 J9 and 25 other
candidates (other than can
of Article II and sect on 22 of
IBl The style of the laws of didatesfor etectoraof Prnldent
Article IV of the Canst Iutton of th• s slate shall be
be t and Vice President of the
the State of Ohio relative to the enacted
by
the general United States and other than
administration
organ nt lon assemb ly of the sta te or Oh1o
cand1dates tor governor and
and procedures of the General
(CJ Every btl I shall be con lieutenant oove~nor) only end In
Assembly
Stdered by each house on thr:ee no other way than by Indicating
Be it resolved by the General d fferent days unless two h 5 vote for each cemdldale
Assembly of the State of Ohio th1rds of the members elected to sepa ratelr from the Indication
three fifths of the members the hou se In which It Is pending of h ~ vo e far any other can
elected to each house con suspend th is reQuirement and d date
curr lng therem that there shall every lnd v dual consi der at on
EFFECTIVE DATE
be subm fled to the elector:s of of a bill or action suspend1ng tl1e
AND REPEAL
the state In the menner requ rement shall be recorded
If adopted bv a malontv of
prescribed by law at a special In the tournai of the respect ve the electors votlnv on th s
election to be held on the first house No btll may be pa ssed amendmenT the amendment
Tuesday after the first Monday unt I the b1ll has been and schedule tl1ereto except
n May 1972 a propoul to reproduced and distributed to section 16 ot Article 111 shall
amend sectlorft,. 6 1 9 11 1.c members of the hovse n wh ch take mmedlale effect and
16 and 31 of Article II sections 1t spending
exlsllngsectlons.f 6 1 9 11 l.f
3 and 16 of Article Ill section 2a
(OJ Nob II shalt contain more 16 an"d 31 ol Article I I existing
ot Article V and to repeal than one subject wh ch shall be section 3 of Article Ill ex1st1ng
soollonsl 8 15 11 18 19 an&lt;l 25 clearly expressed In 1ts title No section 2a of Article V and
or Article II and sect on 22 of taw shall be rev ved or sections s 8 15 17 18 19 and 25
Arllcle IV of the Const tut1on of amended unless the new act of Article II and secllon 22 of
Ohio to read as follow s
Article IV shall be repealed
conta ns the entire act revived
ARTICLE II
or the sect on or sect ons from such effective date The
Section A NO member of the amended and the sect on or amendment of section 16 of
general assembly shall during sect ons amended shall be Artltle Ill shall take effect on
the tel"m for wlllch he was repealed
the second Monday of January
elected
unless dur~ng such
(E J Every b II wh ic h has 1975 and existing section 16 of
term he rulgns therefrom hold pused
bott'l t'louses of the Art cle Ill of the Constitution of
anv public office under the general assembly shall be Ohio shall be repealed from
United States or this state or a signed by the presiding off cer such effectlv&amp; date
political subdivision thereof of each hOuse to certify that the
SCHEDULE
but this provision &amp;oes not procedural requtrements for
IAl Notwlthstandmg the
extend to officers of a politico I passage have been met and provision s of section 7 of Article
party notaries publ c or of shall be presented forthwith to 11 and until the second Monday
f cers of the mllllla or of the tt'le governor for his approval
of January 1975 the presld ng
United States armed forces
(F) Every [omt resolution
officer to be &amp;lee ted from the
No member ot the general wh ch hu been adopted n both membership of the Senate shall
assembly shall during the term houses of the general assembly continue to be designated the
for which he was elected or tor st'lall be sig ned by the pres1d ng pres1dent pro tempore of the
one year thereafter be ap off1cer
of each house to certify Senate and the president pro
pointed to any public Oft1ce tt1at
the
pro cedural tempore not the PreSident of
under this state which office requ rements
for adoption have the Senate may partictpate tn
was created or the com been met and shall
forthw th be the clllllng of a special sess on
pensat on of whlcll was In f•leu wllh the secretary
of state
pursuant to section 8 of Art1cle
creased during the term for
Section 16 If the governor 11
which he was elected
an act he shall son 1t
()
Notwlt11standlng the
Section 6 Each House shall be approves
It
becomes
law
and
he
shall
ftle
provlstons
of section 1 of Article
judge of the electton r eturn s
with the secretary of state
11 and until the second Monday
and qualifications of Its own 11
If he does not approve t he
of January 197!i the Lieutenant
members A majority of ell the St"'all
It w th h s ob
Governor shall continue to
members elected to eact'l House lee lionsreturl1
to the t}ouse serve as President of the Senate
shall be a quorum to do In whichIn Itwriting
orig nated which for all purposes except to
business but a less number
enter the ob[ectlons at part r: pate n the calling of a
may adjourn from day to day sl'1all
large upon Its journal and rna
special session by presiding
and compel the attendance of then
reconsider the vote on 1t:. off cers
of
the
General
absent members
n such
passage
If
three
t
fth
s
of
the
Assembly
pursuant
to
sect
on 8
manner
and under such
embers elected to the .house of of Article II
penllltles as shall be prescribed m
origin vote to repass the b1ll It
UNITED STATES
by law
be sent With the ob
OF AMERICA
Each House may punish Its Shall
iecl ons of the governor to the
STATE OF OHIO
members tor disorderly con other
house which may also
OFFICE OF THE
duct and wltt'l the concurrence conslderthevoteon
passage
SECRETARY OF STATE
of two th rds of the members If thr ee f flhs of theItsmembers
1
TEO
w
BROWN
elected thereto expel a num
to the second house vote Secretar y of State of the State of
ber but not the second time for elected
to repass It It becomes law Oh10 do hereby certlfy tt'lat the
the same cause
notw th standlng the objections foregomg 1s a t~ue copy ot
Each House has all powers of
governor and the Amended
House
Jo nt
necessary to prov ide for Its presthe
officer of the second Resolut on No .44 flied 1n lhe
safety and the undisturbed houseding
shall til e It with the off ce of tt'le Secretary of Sta te
transaction of Its bus1ness and secretary
state In no case and propos ing to amend the
to obtain through committees shall a billOf be
repassed by a above sections of the Con
or otherwise Information at smaller
vote than is'requ,red by st t~ on of Oh10
fectl ng legtslat ve action under the constitution
on t s ong nal
........'N TESTIMONY WHEREOF
conslderat ion or In con
passage
In
all
cases
ot.,..A
have hereunto subscr1bed my
temptation or wlth reference to
th e vote of eaCfi name and alf xed my off cat
any alleged breech of Its reconsideration
house shall be determ ned by seal at Columbus th1s 27th day
privileges or m is condu~t of Its yeas and nays and tile names of of March 1972
members and to that end to the member5 voting for and
TED w BROWN
enforce the attendance and against the b II shall be entered (Seal)
Secretary
of State
testlmonv of witnesses a td the upon the lournal
prOduction of books and papers
If a bill s not returned by the (3) 30 (d) 6 13 20 27 5tc
Section 7 The mode of governor wlthtn ten, days
organizing each house of the Sundays excepted al1er bemg
general assembly shall be presented to him t becomes
prescribed by law
NOTICE OF
law In like manner as 1 he had
Each houn shall choose Its signed It unless the general
APPOINTMENT
own off ice rs
ncluding a assembly by adjournment
case No 20t6~
presiding officer to be elected prevents ts return n which
Estate of CLARENCE D
from its membership who shall case It becomes law unless
ADAMS Deceased
be desloneted In the Senate as within ten dmys after suct'l
Notice Is hereby given that
president of the Senate and In adiournemenl It Is fled by h m
Clara Adams of R
0 2
the House of Representatives as with his oblectlons In writ ng In Rae ne Ohio has been duly
speaker of the House of tile off ce ol the secretary ot appointed Executr x of the
R~~reuntatlves
state Th e governor sha ll f le Estete of Clarence 0 Adams
ach house Shall determine w th
e sec "'tar't o state deceased late of Meigs County
Ita wn rules of proceeding
every bill npt r~turned by h m to Oh o
Section 8 E-ach genl!ral the house of origin that becomes
Creditors are requ red to file
assembly shall convene In first aw w thou.t hi s signature
their cia ms w th sa.d 11cud ary
regular session on the first
The governor may disapprove w1th n four months
Monday of January In the odd any tem or Items 1n any bill
Dated th s 8th day ot Apnl
numbered year or on tile making 11
appropr iation of 1972
succeeding day If the first money and the item or Items so
John c Bacon
Monday of January is a legal d sap proved st'lall be vo d
Act ng Judge
t'lollday and In second regul~r unless repassed n !he manner
Cou rt of Common Pleas
session on the same date ol the prescribed by this sect on tor ( ) lJ
Probale D VISIOn
fOIIO)Ving year EIther the the repassage of a bill
4
20 27 3t
govePnor or the presld ng ol
Sect on 31 The members and
fleers at the general assembly
of
the
General
acting lolntly may convene the officers
Assembly shall receive an
general assembly In special annual
and such
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
seulon by a proclamation allowancessalary
for reasonable lind
COURT OF
which mav limit tile purpose of necessary expenses related to
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
the session
tt'le performance of the r dut es RUTH A HENRY
Section 9 Each House shall as are provided by law and no
R D 4
keep a correct lournai of Its chonoe
In o members salary Pomeroy Ohio
proceedings which shall be sha ll take
effect dur ng the term
Pta In lift
published At the desire of any for which he was elected nor
V$
two members the yeas and sha ll any change In a member s
nays shall be entered upon the allowances take effect prior to CARL F HENRY
address unknown
(ournal and on the passaoe of
first of January follow ng
Defendant
every b II in either House the the
the next general election n an
vote sllall be taken by yeas and even
No IS 053
numbered year
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
nays and entered upon the
ARTICLE
Ill
journal
Carl F Henry whose place of
Sec t on Ia In the general res
idence Is unknown will take
section 11 A ncancv In the elect
on
lor
governor
and
Senate or In the House of l1eutenant governor one vote not ce on the 11th day of April
1972 the undersigned f1led 11er
Representatives for any cause
shall be cast lo lnlly tor the Complaint
against him In the
Including the failure or a candidates
nomin~ted by the
member elect to quallfV for same pollflcal party or pet1t1on Court of common Pleas of
e gs County Ohio praying tor
offlct shall be filled by election
general assembly may M
dtvorce restoration to former
by lhe membersofthe Senate or The
provide by law for the 101nt name
and other relief on th e
the members of the House of nom nat on of candidates for
grounds of gross neglect of duty
Representatives as the case governor
and
lieutenant and desertion Said cause w111
may be who ere affiliated with governor
be for hearing on and after the
the same political party as the
Section 3 The returns of 28th day from the date of the
person last elected by the ever
y election for the offteers
erectors to the seat which has named In the foregomg section last pub cation ol this Notice
namely the 23rd day of June
become vacant A vacancy
l be sea led up and trans 1972 or as soon thereafter as the
oc curr ing before or ctur ng th e shal
mltted to the seat of Govern Court me~y hear the same
first twenty months of a ment by the returnm!) Dfflcers
RUTH A HENRY
Senatorial term shall be filled directed to the Pres.dent of the
PLALINTIFF
temporar~tv by elect on as
Senate who durmg the first Crow Crow &amp; Porter
provided in tht s section for only week of the sess10n shall open
for
Plaint ff
tt'lat port1on ot lhe term which and publish them and declare Attorneys
will expire on the thirty first
result in the presence ol a (4 ) 13 20 27 (51 ,. 11 18 25 7t
day of December follow ng the the
majority of tile members of
next general election occurr ng eact'l House of tt'le Genera l
In an even numbered year after Assembly Tile lolnt candida tes
NOTICE OF
the vacancy occurs at which having the h ghest number of
APPOINTMENT
election th e seat shall be filled votes cast for governor and
Case No 20 US
by the electors as provide d by lieutenant
governor and tile Estate of Emma Pullins
law for the remaining vnex
person hav ng the h ghest Deceased
plred portion of the term the number
Notice Is hereby given that
of votes for any other
member elect so chosen to tak e office shall
be declared duly Hubert Pullins of 909 Brownell
office on the first day In elected but If any two or mO'fe Ave
Middleport Ohio has
January next following such
been duly appointed Ad
have
an
eQua
l
and
the
h'
ghest
election No person shall be
of votes for the same minlstrator of tht Estate of
elected to lfll a vacancy m the number
off
ice
or
offices one of them or Emma Pullins decea sed late
Senate or House of Represen
any
two
for whom jo nt votes ot Ml&lt;l&lt;lleport Meigs county
tat ves as the case mlly be
were
cast
for governor and OhiO
unless
he
meers
the
Creditors are r.equtred 10 1 le
lieutenant
governor
shall be
qualifi cations set forth m this
their cla•ms wltll sad fiduciary
chosen
by
the
loint
vote
of
both
Constitution and the taws of th s
within four months
state for the sea t m which the houses
Dated this lOth day of April
Sect
on
16
The
Lieutenant
vacancy occurs An election to
1912
Governor
shall
perform
such
fill a vacancy shall be ac
John C Bacon
n
the
execut ve
compllshtd
notw thstandlng duties
Acting Probllte Judge
department
as
are
assu;med
to
the provisions of section 27 h i m by the Governor and
of sa ld County
Article II of thts Constitution by exercise such powers as are (4 ) lJ 20 27 3t
the adoption of a resolution
while the Senate or the House of prescribed by law
ARTICLE V
l':epresentatlves as the case
Section 2a The names of a 1
In 1965 the U S earner
may be is in sessian witl'l the
for an off ice at any
taking of the yeas and nar • of candidates
Boxer moved mlo an off
the members of the Sena e or general electron shalt b •
arrMged
In
1!1 group under the shore position to prepare lo
the House of R:epresentlltlves
title of that office and sllall be
as the cue may bt affiliated so
alternated that each name evacuate Americans as the
with the same politlca,l party as
shall
appear (In so tar n may Domtmcan Republtc revolutton
the perso"' las.t elect'ed to the be reasoRI!Ibly
pO$Sible) sub
seat In which the vacancy oc
grew mure tense
curs The adortlon of such sta nI ally an eQual number of
resolution shal requlrt the
affirmative vote of a major t)l'
of the memDers elected to the
Senate or the House ot
Representatives as the case
may be entitled to vote tt'lereon
Such vote shall be spread upon
the journal of the Senate or the
House af Representatives as
the case may be and certified
to the Secretary of State by the
clerk thereof The Secreterv ol
State lhlll upon receipt of such
certlflcetlon Issue a certificate
Flame of Hope Perfumes
of election to the person so
Human &amp; Synthettc Wigs
elected end upon presentation
of such certificate to th' Senete
or the House of R:epresen
tatlves IS the case may be the
person to electett shall take the
oath of office and become a
member of fht Senate or the
Houst ot Representatives as
the cue m1y be for the term
for which ht was so elected
Section 14 Neither House
111111 without the consent of the
other adjourn for m"'re than

JOINT UIOLUTION

Astros Run String To 9
By JOE CARNICEILI
UPI Sports Writer
A controversial intentional
walk was Pete ReiSer s unwmg Wednesday mghl as the
Chtcago Cubs' intertm
manager walched hls club drop
a :&gt;-4 deCision to the Hotlston
Aslros, the Cubs' etght slratghl
loss
The score was lied at 4-4 10
the bottom of the loth iming
when Lee May was walked
mtenlionally With two out and
no one on Bob Watson, httless
In 11 previous at bats in the
series, then wubled to score
May wtth the wmnuog run and
extend the Astros wtMmg
streak to nine games 1
May's three homers m the
last three games prompted
Reiser's actions 'He d hit
three mtslakes and he wasn 'I
gomg to htt a fourth one,
Retser explained ' I thought tl
was gotng lo he caught If the
relay throw dilln I hil the
mound, he'd be out at the plate
I d do tl over again I m not

afraid to gamble II s a shame
more people don't w tl '
Wywt Ties Game
Jun Wynn drove m three
runs wtth a homer and triple
and lied tlle game tn tlle etghth
Billy Williams had a putr of
RBis for the Cubs
In other National League
action St Louis downed
Atlanta 9-4 New York beal
San Otego, 5 I C10c1nnatt
edged Pittsburgh 7-6 San
Franctsco outlasted
Phtladelphta, 8 6, and Los
Angeles shut out Montreal, 2-0
MtMesota stopped Boston 31 Chtcago defeated Cleveland
7~ m 10 tMings Callforma
beal Mtlwaukee, 3-1, New York
downed Oakland, 4-2, Detroit
bombed Texas Il-l and Kansas
City topped BaiUmore 5-3 tn a
game called because of ram
after 51'.. lWitngS m Amencan
League play
Pitcher Rick Wtse's lw&lt;H"Un
single 1gruted a five-run out
burst tn th ~ secontl mnmg that
helped St Louts beat Ule

Braves Hank Aaron htl his
fourtll homer m four games
and 643rd of hts career for tile
Braves movmg hun jusl three
short of Willie Mays for second
place on the all-tune list behmd
Babe Ruth
Three-Run Homer
Jim Fregost slammed a
three-run homer and Tomnue
Agee added one wtUo a man on
as the Mets lifted Uoetr WlWimg
streak to ftve games wtlh a
vtclory over San Otego
Bobby Tolan drove m three
runs with a single and a homer
as the Reds beat Ptltsburgh
Chros Speter tripled m Uoe
tying run and Bobby Bonds
won Uie game wtth a lwo-run
homer as the Gwnts exploded
for four runs m the loth lWimg
to beat Pluladelphta
Willte Crawford s two-run
homer wtUo two oul m the ninth
lnnmg eoded a scoreless duel
between Montreal s Btlly
Stoneman and Los Angeles'
Claude Osteen and lifted the
Dodgers over the Expos

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
relatl cost of a typtcal market
basket of food dropped 0 4 per
cent last rnontll, endong a four
month surge that boosled
pnces 4 3 per cent from last
October through February the
Agriculture Department said
today
Even wtlh the decline the
market basket cost was sltll
second htghest on record - 5 4
per cent above March or 1971
Average beef prtces for March
were unchanged al tlle record
February level but pork went
down
The February to March

I

B~
..t..¥=.. _
••• ~~ UUW"C,:
Recommends Change
To Mr Editor
It my firm belief lhal we need change m10 Dtstnct Congress
Someone Interest 10 keep pnces down so old people on small s s
checks other small tncomes can buy at least coal clothes reniUomgs needed thai Includes Doctors and med1cme
I know we get much help from Mr Jack Crosp he hear all
people espectally mteresled 10 needy
I know that take smcere parents ratse son honest and wants
belp needy as his son Glenn - who I know to be
I think we be dotng ourself better tf put Mr Cnsp m
Washmglon
Mrs Wm H Byers

One of every five Amert
cans
changes hts r&lt;ostdence
costs came largely because of
annually
a 2 5 per cent drop tn farm
prtces whtch was partly offset
by an on crease tn tlle fat m loIf the earth were perfectly
retatl prtce spread the round and smooth the oceans
department satd m tis monthly would cover tt to a depth of
report on Prtce Spreads for 12 000 feet
dechne m average retatl food

Stiversville: Store, Church and

Two hundred and twenty
• seven students of Me1gs H gh
School have been named to the

By Nicki VanMeter
President Sllversvillc
4-H Club
STIVERSVILLE -1 he best
way we could descrtbe our
Sttversvtlle Sttehers 4 H Club
was through the commumty we
hve m by namtng our 4 H club
after ot
The ftrsl ltme there ever was
a 4 H club m Sltversvtlle was
1911 The house my stepfather
and mother Rev and Mrs L
Gluesencamp owned and we
hve m now was owned by the
late Mr Stivers who owned
most of the ground tn Stlv

Our club advtsor Mrs Ada
VanMeter tsan tmporlantpart
of our commumty too Her
home ts the meeting place for
our Sllversvtlle Shltchers 4 H
Club II gwes us all. a warm
rtch feehng that we can be
proud of to have her for an
advtsor Mrs Van Meter ts also
our Sunday School leacher
There are mne members tn our
club Now hestdes our advtsor
there ts her asststant Mrs L
Gluesencamp
All young gtrls who hke to
learn by domg ought to be m a
4-H club II s someth1ng to
be proud or

stydent must mamta n a grade
of B or better to be named to

the roll

SENIORS - Joyce Arney
Susan Andrews Rrck Ash Tom
Ball

Barnett

NOTICE OF
AP P0 IN TCase
MENNo
T

•
20 659

Artllur C Dodge made the
pres~ntaltons of the Stiver
Beaver Awards to Btll Dawson
of Barboursvtlle, Robert Dtls of
Ashland Charles Rt chard
Dorsey of Kenova and Cectl H
Underwood of Hunlmgton The
Stiver Fawn Award was
presented lo Mrs Ramona
Woodard or Huntington
Nu"l"rous other awards
were presented lo veteran
msltlutwns and veteran
Scouters and m the areas of
adult trammg untt camptng
recrwtmg, awards and Project
SOAR
Cerltftcates were presented
to the news media or lhe trt
state along wttll recogmllon of
tlle Scout dtstrtbutors and the
Untied Fund agenctes of
Cabell Wayne and Boyd
Counties

Executr x oi lhe Esla1e of
V
Edmundson
deceased late of Salem
Townsh ip Meigs County Ohio
Credllors are required to lrle

SAME DAY
SERVItE
1 A
n t 9-0ut At s

1912
141

13

John C Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
of said County
2D 27 31

Living Room Suite
Is Faded and
Tom- The
Lamps Are Dingy
And the Stove

Diehl

Roger D xon Harvey

Erlew ne Howard Erlewme
James Estep Debbte Ga rn es

Denn s G lmore Sandra Gtoy&lt;l
Sherrie Gloyd V ckr Grate
Nancy
Grueser

Cathy

Greenlee
Conn1e
Melante Hackett

Halt

Jill

Deborah
Barnhart
Cindy

Johnson
Jordan

SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDLEPORT
FOR THAT BRAND NEW LOOK!

Little Pamela Mantey Debra
May Larry Mees Gary
Michael Randy Mrchael Mary
Mldktll James MIter Leanne
Sebo Alvin Sm lh Susan
Soutsby Steven Crag Stanley
Janet Slivers M1chael Struble
John Swartz Ruth Ann Terrel!
Patrieta Thoma Caralynn

Specials In Our Cosmetic Dept.

r

I (( ))l if\JR}[US
SPRAY COLOGNE

Ohtrnger

Deborah

Scaggs Brenda Staats Ken
Rebecca Wtii

T ny WIIrams Be&lt;:ky Wr ght
JUNIORS - Drana Ateshrre

Sh rley Alk~re Barbara Ar
cher .Roger Alkms Ltnda
Atkmson Lynne Baker Debra
Barnhart Karla Beal Janet

Brggs Etrzabeth Batettnar

James Boggs Terry Bolinger
Franc1s Broder c:k Jon Bunce
Fiaranell Burney Jan Burns
Terry Cadle Suzan ne Car.d
Debb1e Carson R1ta Case

V ck Clark Jodr Ct ckenger
Helen Cotterill Jell Darst
Pamela Dodson Robm Duck
worth
Bonn1e Ebersbach
/okrr Ebersbach Lo1 s F fe
Leta Floyd Donna Francts

Beth Futlz Steven Cotfentt
Debr Ga llagher Dave Gerar&lt;l
Debbre Gilliam Kay Gtlmore

Patty Glaze Karen Hale Ken

Harns She Ia Hawk Randy
Haynes Conn ie Herdman
Jeanne Hooper Mona Johnson

Brit Kennedy Jan Kennedy
Jane te
Kuhn
She Ia
Me KnrgM Lisa McKenzre
Edolh Mees Richard Men
denhalt Terry Methany
Darlene
M1chael

Mtchael
Sherry
He1d
Milhoan

Debb e Mrtler

John MIt er

K1m Mowery Des ree P ke
Chr sf ne Robmson
Br dget
Ross M1chael Sayre James
Schmol l Conn e Sm lth Penny

Tracy Maratynn Tracy Darla

Sm th Chr str Stanley Debb e

Neutzllng

Tr piett

Marla

Neutz lmg

Scott Walton

Steve

aharmony of subtl
mak:d fresh flor:I~Pices
You unforgettable!
};

,.

CHARLESTON W Va - more largeo than average
Kroger Food Stores loday stores of today Complete
ann9unced a maJor expanston remodehng and enlarging of an
- mcludmg new stores m addtltonal 21 stores a colorful
Pomeroy and Galhpolts - for new look tn supermarkets
the Charleston Dovlston area departing completely from the
planned through 1975 at an to adthonal approach to decor
Leases have been signed for
estimated co!; I of $11 400 000
new
stores m Fatrlea Rtpley
ftemodehng and expanston wtll
cost $3 370 OIJIJ and new stores Clarksburg Parkersburg &amp;
$8 OIJIJ,OIJIJ B B Beaty dtvtSIOII Teays Valley W Va and
vtce prestdent satd thai plans Pomeroy and Gaihpohs tn
Ohto Negoltattons are un
call for
derway
for mne addtltonal new
Twenty seven new
superstores
whtch wtll supermarkels
Beaty pomted out that many
range up to &gt;O per cent and
of the remodels and e&lt;panStons

'

MIST
r / (!

..I

,Y f'Mfy'goo
l

1

Local Bowling
Mod Ohoo Valley League
Aprr I16 1972
Standtngs
Team
W L
Pink Panthers
50 22
Alley Ca Is
38 34
Spares &amp; Strrkes
36 36
49 ers
34 38
All In the Fam ty
30 42
Tacks
28 44
High Individual Game - S
Greuser 158

I

l

DANA

SOLID COLOGNES

Wednesday Afternoon League
Aprrl 19 1972
Slandongs

ANNUAL TUSSY
DEODORANT SALE
Cream

Rol I on

or Sitek

Only

7 oz Spray Only

Miles Chtlders

193
Second High lnd Game - M
J Scaggs 157 G Woods 181
High Series - G Woods 509
M J Scaggs m
Second High Ser es - M
Childers 501 S Greuser 41 5
Team High Game
Pink
Panthers 70'1
Pink
Team High Seres
Panthers 2002

I

Team

Welker s Ashland
Baum sLumber

59~

\47

~.

33

Team No 4 \
46
R denour s TV
44
Gaul s Shake H~ven
18
Team No I
19
High tnd vrdua t Game

cerhfwa le and recm d of 1m

mwuzatwn

Warner Patt Well
W1ison Kevm Wolfe

Sharon

SOPHOMORES Amey John Ash

Peggy
Dav d

Barnhart
Jane
Barrett
Brenda Barton
K1m Beck
R1ch e Biumenauer
R ck
Balm Donna Boyd Bru ce
Caldwell
D1ana
Carsey
Thomas
Cl elan d
V1ek

Clelland

Ronald

Couch

Melvm
Cremeans
L nda
Cunn ngham Joy ce Dav s
Dav d Grant An ta Hermann
lngr d Hawley Mary Janey

Randy Hill

Dana Johnson

Ezra K1ser Mary Krawsczyn

Kerth Lrttte
Michael May Mark Morrrs

WI !lam

Myer s T na Nten
Oberholzer
Gary
0 Dell Rozanne Patterson
Debra P1erce Joe Rosenbaum
Sandy
Rusche!
Jean 1e

V ck e

Schnerder Debbie Schuck
Gall S zemore Albert Sm rth
Jrtt Smr lh Mary Sm rth
Randall
Snyder
Davrd
Sw sher Oav d Wolfe

FRESHMEN -

Conger
Counci l

Rtck Couch
Carla Crisp

Charles
Robert
Sandra

Curt s Cynthra Demoskey

Edward D ddle Bonn e Dillon
Bryan Frank Larry Fr diey
:Joy Hayes Maureen Hen
n~sy San ta Justice Deborah
Kennedy An ta K ng Nancy
Lawrence
Diana
Lewts

Vrrg nla McCune Debb e
McLaughlrn Kenneth Mrlchett

Kenny Rife V1ck1e Russell
John Thomas Karen Til l s
Steven Walburn Joy Wh te

Brenda Writ

Secon&lt;l High ln&lt;l Game
Patty Thomas 155
High Series - Barbara
Mur ray 409

Second High Serres - Patty

Thoms 40A
Team H1gh Game No 4 299

Team

Delicatessens

I reahze thos demonstration
ts peaceful, Oids had satd
when he emerged from the
meetmg wtth the students
But whal I'm concerned
about ts If tt s possible to
protest m a !ashton so we car&gt;
get the ROTC people out of this
butldmg
All those arrested were re
leased on a personal recogru
zance bond after bemg taken to
Mumctpal Court on buses
They were told to return lo
court at I p m Frtday or face a
one-year Jail sentence and
$1 000 ftne
Rennoe Davts one of tlle
Chtcago 7 defendants spoke at
tlle rally on the commons and
had asked Olds what be 10tend
ed to do about an undercover
campus securtty agent who aJ.
ledgedly attempted lo gtve two
Communost-made weapons to a
campus anti-war group
Remhold Mohr 25, was ar
rested but later released after
11 was doscovered tlle machine
gnn and grenade lawtcher
were moperable The Kent
Slate Veterans Agatnst the
War had clauned Mohr lned to
gtve the weapons to tllem
1m tend to get tlle facts be-

for

e&lt;ample wtll be topped wtlh a
wood-shtngle roo[ accented
wtth go ld and bttlersweet
colored hghled panels
Beaty observed Kroger
has been servmg Charleston
area shoppers smce the 192&amp;.&gt;
Wtth Improvement and ex
panston of our factliltes here
we wtll be prepared not only to
better serve shoppers today
but also to anticipate and be
prepared for the growmg needs
of customers throughout thos
area tomorrow
The Charleston Kroger
Dtvtston currently operates 49
supermarkets
m West
Vtrgmta Kentucky and Ohto

~

fore makmg a deciSion Olds
rephed 'If lbe charges are
true I have no patieoce wtlh
Gestapo tactics nor wtJl 111volvemenllft Uoos type of prac
lice
He satd he had asked for a
complete report of the mctdent
The KSU News Servtce satd
Mohr had been gtven a SOX·
months leave of absence ef
fecltve Tuesday rught but add·
ed ol probably would last only
two weeks to a month
Kent Stale became the sym
hol of student protests against
tlle war two years ago when County supervisors
Beauty Spot
National Guard troops called to
the campus to put down rtoting
LODGE TO MEET
' mrleon Rt 143 off Rt
shol and killed four students
114
Racme Chapter 134 Order o[
May 4 1970
the Eastern Star wtll meet ~ We mv1te you to drop m
for refreshments and
Monday at 8 p m at tlle
get
acquamted We feel
Temple A pracltce sesston woll
we have the talent to
he held tn preparation for m
satisfy vou
spechon to be held on May 19
Thank ~You
Otller plans for mspeclton wtll
he made and the chapter wtll
Operators
hold a short memortal servtce
Erma Jean Yoho
for Charles Hensley a past
palron and offtcer of the
Phone 992 2840
chapter All offtcers are urged
to attend the meelmg

Festival in

Logan Bigger,
Beuer in '72

••'"'

In time for
Mother's Day.

Bulova.
lell her of your love and
gratrllrde wnh the g1fl she 11
tree~ s ure always A beautaful new
Bulma warch Our se lect 1on of
g1h watches IS so d1verse you re
sure to find the watch she really
really wants Bulova From $411

4.

DANCE TO LIVE ENTERTAINME~T
SATURDAY NIGHT, APRIL 29

9 TIL 12
Martin Restaurant

A LADY DF FASHION IQ 17 jtwe s Automatic $70
I DUUT P 17 )~ wets Silver dial $15
C GOU£H 'ODDUS Lll 17 jewe 1 l~K solid &amp;old cast $10
D U rnm LC 2J awels 4 d amends $15

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY
POMEROY, 0.

COURT ST

'

new
•
1n

see

In The Heart of Mtddleport

John Kalleel Combo
RobertOClendennen vocal st
John Kallel on sax

John Lynch drums
Sk p S1ewart bass

Early Bird League
Arpll 19 1972
Standrngs

Team
Pts
0 G Plnneltes
114
King Builders
n
Evelyn s Grocery
70
Larry s Ashtond
l6
Rawlings Dodge
54
Meigs Mobile Homes
42
Team High Game - D G
Plnnettes 837
Evelyn s
Grocery 8M Rawlings Dodge

To---

McClure's For A Dairy TreJJt

'

TluJt Cant Be Beat.

Jill

992 5248

"The Creator of
Reasonable Drug PriCes"

271 North Second Avenue
,
Phone 992-5759
Middleport, Ohio

Not that ktnd We mean our new home
Metgs County s hundred year old bank
has moved tis seventeen year old branch
mto a brand new bUIIdong on Salem Street
You ve probably seen tt on the outs1de Gtve the onstde a try
Were havmg an open house thos Saturday Apnl 29
Not fancy JUSt fnendiy Partly to show off
the new butldtng but matnly to say Ihanks
for makmg tt a pleasure to be tn Rutland
The hours are 9 Ia 4 we II have refreshments
souventrs and a door pnze Please come
It wouidn t be the same without you

pomeroy pomeroy
rutland nati9~JGI

bank
the bonkol

McCLURE'S
4th &amp; Locust

Mrs Mary B Roberts slate
dtrector of the nght to read
program 111 Ohto vtstled the
tndtvtdualtzed readtng
REIGSTRATJON SET
program at the Bradbury
Ftrsl grade regtstratton al
School Tuesday
On Wednesday, Mrs Mar the Salisbury Elementary
JOrte Evans supervtsor of School wtll he held Monday
Ptckaway County
Mtss from I to 3 p m Parents are to
Kathryn Mende and Mrs lake lhetr chtld s tmmuntzatton
Mtrtam Elder supervtsor of record and btrtll cerltftcale al
Fatrfteld County Schools Mrs the tune of regtstration
Dons Well and Mtss Dtane
McClure of the Chesler
Elementary School were
LADIES
guests Present wtlh both
Welcome to the
groups were Mrs Grella Suttle
Open1ng of Our
and Mrs Nellie Vale Metgs

Hockmg Valley Cr aflsmen
wtll welcome sprmg wtth lhetr
Second Annual
Sprmg
Festival
lhts
weekend
WIN AT BRIDGE
fealurmg a craft show and sale
at the Hockmg County
Fatrgrounds m Logan
Hours wtll be from 6-10 p m
ll
e
dtscar
ded
a
cl
ub
on
Fnday
and from 10 a m llll
N011111
d t mmy s ace ol s p a d e s
dark on Saturday and Sunday
.AQ f&gt;
1uffed a spade led a club
¥ K"
ft om h1s hand noted that AdmiSSIOn IS rree for children
t AQ7&gt;2
Donalbane pla yed the 10 so and 25c for adults
"'AJ6
Tlus year m addtllon to the
he finessed dummy s Jack
\\EST
EAST
Thmgs
were
lookmg
up
regular
craftsmen and new
. J82
.K10 97o4~
li e led dummy s last spade members
¥J 9874
¥Vod
a number of
and ruffed
tJI 09
t 84
unaftltaled arllsans wtll exhtbtt
"'K 10
"'7&gt; 12
Thts 1 e f I htm wtth one wt th the group The appeal or
It ump less than West He
SOUTH (D)
c a s h c d dummy s ace of the wtde range of crafts wlll be
• Vod
¥AQIOI 1
clubs led a dtamond to hts enrtched by contmuous
t K6 3
kmg and another dtamond demonstrattons Browsers and
quesltoners are welcome
"'Q984
to dumm) s queen
Bot I v line lie
Donalbane was down to Nothmg pleases a true
\\est
ltumps and had to 1uff tn on craflsman more than ex
N 11h
f. l SI S uth
the next lead Then he had plamtng the lechmcal pomts of
1¥
Pass
pISS
!•
to lead away from hts Jac k what he ts domg
P il.SS
Pa.ss ~ ·
and the gteat MacDuff had
The Old Timers' Band from
p
Pass P &lt;l~S
It umphed agam
'
the
McDowell Street Semor
Pass
or cout se tt wasn t too C1t1zens
Center tn Columbus
Open 1 g lead- + J
gt eat a It urn ph The wav
wtll
provtde
mustc Saturday
1he c&lt;H ds lay s c v e n no
Festival goers are encouraged
Bv Oswald &amp; J,unes J 1cobv trump would make
to brtng lhetr own mstruments
NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
MacD uff the bes t pla;er
and play along r
1 Scotland wa s m 1g h t y
I appv "rth the dumm y Fot
once MacBeth I ad bid hts T l c l1dd ng has been
I and so that MacD tff could
N ,. th
East
Sc1uth
]lay tt and the slam lonked \\est
Pass
1•
lrke a n rghtv good one
SHOW CANCElLED
Pn,.,;
1¥
Pass
IN f
A flower show planned for
He won the diamond lead Pass 2NT .,.. P&lt;J ss
?
\~ t h dummy s m;c and
thts weekend al the Royal Oak
You South ho ld
played th e kmg of hea1 Is • Afo54 ¥ K63 2 t Q 107
Park
by the Chesler Garden
"'14
Banquo sttltng E:ast dts
Club has been cancelled
card ed a spad e an&lt;i all of a What dr&gt; you do nov.
A-Pass l\ e hate lu slop at
Sl dden 11 e slam looked as rf
IW ) no t Ump buj thiS IS Ollt!
t wetc doomed to defeat
Could 11 be made Mac I nne "hen no futthcr btd IS de
Remembf!r your pa tnc1
rltff sa" that thc1 e was a suable
dul not hut O\cr one heart
Lhanc e 1f Donalbane s1ttmg
TODAY S QUESTION
\I est ltei&lt;J exactl y the 1 ght
ca td s A sl tm chance rs fa1
Instead of pass mg one heart
beltet than none and Mac you partnc has b d two d1a
DuJf proceeded to gtve the monds What do you do no v"
ca rds theu chance to wot k
l\nswc1 tomorrow

Gets Maximum from Cards

HOM .. FROM SOUTH
Mrs Fred Rosenbaum has
returned to her home on
Peoples Terrace after spen
dtng the wtnter tn Danta Fla

Team High Serres - 'ream
No 4797

•
'
~

Open Da1~ 8 A.M. to 10 P.M: Sunday 10:30, A.M. to 12:30 P.M. &amp; 5 to 9 P.M.

store

KENT Ohio (UPI) - Ken I
Stale Uruverstly pohce moved
tnlo a campus bwldmg housmg
tlle ROTC offtces Wednesday
rught aild arrested more tllan
125 students who refused to end
tlletr stt-m
The arrests freed 20 ROTC
mslructors and seven cadets
who had been mstde lbe third
Door offtces sonce early after
noon when tlle anlt war proles
tors showed up and began
sprawlmg 111 tlle hallways
None had tried to get out
durmg that tune
The stt m followed an anlt
war rally attended by I OOOstu
dents on tlle campus commons
wbere an efftgy of Prestdent
NIXon was burned Observers
satd tt was one of tlle largest
ralites on lhe commons smce
May 1970 when four students
were shot to deatll by National
Guard troops
KSU Prestdent Glenn Olds
talked to tlle demonslralmg
students for half an hour, and
apparently unable to talk tllem
mto endmg the sthn gave lhem
until 9 'P m to leave the
butldmg None left when tlle
deadhne came and an hour
later 30 policemen moved 10

!"'

\\Ill tn effect create an enltrely
new store whtch uses the shell
of the old store as a base
Spec tal servtce depat lments
wtll be emphastzed tn both tlle
ne" and the remodeled
supetstores Mr Beaty satd
notm g that they wtll look
almost as through they are
mdtvtdual shops wtlhm the

Vtstts Bradbury

Kent U Sit-ins Arrested

Hurry

,,

ONLY' 15''

34
36
52
61

Dorthy Karr i5B

79~

4 REGISTERED PHARMACISTS TO SERVE YOU

Formerly K1ps Shoe Store
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

REGISTER MAY I
RUTLAND - Kmdergarten
students hvmg tn Rulland wtll
regtsler May !from I 30 to 2 30
p 111 tn Ute gym at Rulland
Elementary School Parents
are to bnng the cluld s bu lh

Superstores in This Area

PRESCRIPTION SERVICE

heritage house

.

MAX FACTOR

Reg $2 so Value
SPECIAL

AA BC

I"

Kroger Will Build 27 New

Tabu Ambush 20 Carats
2 ounce

Cnnkle Patent

Kern

Krawsczyn Charles lane
Connie Lanning
Dougla s

216 E 2nd Pomeroy

Cnnkle Patent
Bone Man-Made

Tom

Dor s

Drana King Sherry K ng Kent
Ktoes John G tttam David

Robinson's Ceaners

Block Man Mode

Harr s

Patric1a
Harr s
Ronald
Harrison Bruce Hawley Ted
Hayes Roger Hendr x Perry
Ho fman
John
Hunnel

Use Our Free Parktng Lol

FOR THE lADIES

Resa

Andreas Dewhurst Jo Ellen

Won't Cook.

J::::=~:::::=::-c&gt;&lt;~~derful
PUFFO

Berry

Wayne

Boothe Pamela Burson Karen

"!"'
--·
t
SHIR

FINISHING

their claims Wtth sa id fiducia ry
w ith in four l'flOnths
Dated this lOth day of Apnl

1 Opat

liiiiiiiiiiilllll....

Estate Of Mllrgaret V Ed
mundson Deceased
Notice Is hereby given that
EileenM Gortonof4141 E 29th
Street Apt 65 Tucson Arizona
85711 has been duly appomted
Margaret

Barnes

Cadle Debra Carder Jenette
Cumings DeLene DeLegat

Five Honored
RUSSELL Ky - Ftve
volunteer leaders m Boy
Scouhng were honored
Tuesday mght al the annual
recogmtton meeting and dmner
of the Trt.Slate Area Counctl m
tlle new offtce butldmg of tlle
Ashland Otl Company here
Over 240 people dmed and
applauded awards presen
!allons Principal speaker was
Richard M Lartme, new Scout
Execullve of the Trt.Slate Area
Counctl
The htghllghl was the
presenlalton of tlle four Silver
Beaver
Awards
for
dtstingutshed servtce to
boyhood and one Silver Fawn
Award the htghest award to a
lady scouterJ tlle ftrst awardl&gt;l
by tlle local councli

Irene

Ann

Ohltnger Karen Pr ce Debra
Rosemary R1ce
Rawson
Margaret R1ggs M I sa R zer
Susan
Ruschel
Rebecca
neth Wheeler

Named fo the roll were

Worn -Your

Ed Note The unsohcttad ersvtlle 1hat ts how tt was
camposlllon below suggests named Sltversvtlle afler lhe
that there are young
Americans still so fortunate as late Mr Silvers
Our commum ty ts a qmet
to hve and grow 1n rural
surroundrngs rich an trad1llon place There ts a commumly
1n a close kntt commumtv
gurded by drsctphne tempered church grocery store owned
by ktndnen love and and operated by Robert and
generostly It ts a kind of hfe Ma&lt;tne Durst and a com
that crowded mrlllons rn urban
centers and thetr satellite mumly butldtng whtch used to
suburbs may have forgolten be an old grade school years

and can be proud of II

fifth six weeks honor roll A

Is LumpyYour Rugs Are

Community Hall, and 4-H Club, too

ago

t•H.uGH.i\1\1 HI i\011 I&gt;

( HESJI H - Ar rrrscr vrcc
I rrred11rg was held al the
I Cheslct F.lcmenlat y Sehoul
I Tuesday rr pr e~arolton [or an
dtvtduallzed readtrrg
I pt ugram Corrducltng lhe
I r\reclt rr~ was Mrs Mary
1 Roberts stale du ector of the
1 slate rrghl to read program
1 wttlr Mrs Grella Suttle and
1 Mts Nelbc Vale parltctpaltng
1 Allendmg tn addtlton to tlle
I teachers were John Retbel
supe nntend enl of lhe Eastern
Local School Dtslncl and
Herbert Matheny pnnctpal of
the Chesler Elementary
Scl ool

227 Earn Honors at Meigs High
Your MaHress

ex1sts Mergs County has 1f

~I

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

Letters of opinion are welromc'li They should be less
than 310 wpnl• long (or •e •ubtetl to reductoon by the editor)
and mUJt be signed wllh I he stgnee s address Names IIU!Y be
withheld upon publlcatbn, however on request Letters
lhould he In good taste, addressing Issues not personalities

Farm Foods '
Spokesmen satd the report
dtlfered from the recent Labor
Department Cost of Livmg
Index ftgures for March whtch
showed grocery pnces up
shghlly over February
Spectahsls sa td thts was
because the Cosl of Livong
Index survey was made In
early March II dtd not calch
downturns tn beef and pork
pnces whtch came later on the
month and were recorded on
the Agnculture Deparlmen t
SUIVey

Koscot Kosmetics
BROWN'S
992·5113

------------

Foods Cost Down Some

lm

the century

eslobh~hed 1812

Middleport, 0

I

�.'

r

I
1

I

7-TheDallySenttnel Mtddleport-Pomeroy 0 Aprll'l/

S- 'l'bl! DaUy Senlinel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 , April 27 1972

LEGft"l NOTICE

(Amended House Joint
RtiiiYtlon No UJ

five days Sundays excluded
hmes at the beglnnlno at the
nor to any oth~r place ttl an that end and n each ntermed1are
In which the two Houses are m place If any of the group '"

session
which such name l)elongs
Srct lon 15 (A) The general Except at a Partv Prlmarv or 1n
assembly shall enact no law a non partisan election the
Proposing .fo amend secflons e)(cept bv bill and no b II shalt name or desl~;~natton of each
of 6 7 9 11 U 16 and 31 of be passed without th e con
candidates party If any :shall
Article II sections 3 and 16 of currence of a majority of u,e be printed under or after each
Art cle Ill section 2a ot Article members elected to each house candidates name In lighter and
V to enact new sect•ons 8 and 15 Bills may or1glnate n e.lfher smaller type face than that in
of Article II to tnact session la house but may be al1fred which the candidates name 1S
ot Article Ill and to repeal amended or r~tected n the prmted A:n elector may vote for
sections S a 15 17 18 J9 and 25 other
candidates (other than can
of Article II and sect on 22 of
IBl The style of the laws of didatesfor etectoraof Prnldent
Article IV of the Canst Iutton of th• s slate shall be
be t and Vice President of the
the State of Ohio relative to the enacted
by
the general United States and other than
administration
organ nt lon assemb ly of the sta te or Oh1o
cand1dates tor governor and
and procedures of the General
(CJ Every btl I shall be con lieutenant oove~nor) only end In
Assembly
Stdered by each house on thr:ee no other way than by Indicating
Be it resolved by the General d fferent days unless two h 5 vote for each cemdldale
Assembly of the State of Ohio th1rds of the members elected to sepa ratelr from the Indication
three fifths of the members the hou se In which It Is pending of h ~ vo e far any other can
elected to each house con suspend th is reQuirement and d date
curr lng therem that there shall every lnd v dual consi der at on
EFFECTIVE DATE
be subm fled to the elector:s of of a bill or action suspend1ng tl1e
AND REPEAL
the state In the menner requ rement shall be recorded
If adopted bv a malontv of
prescribed by law at a special In the tournai of the respect ve the electors votlnv on th s
election to be held on the first house No btll may be pa ssed amendmenT the amendment
Tuesday after the first Monday unt I the b1ll has been and schedule tl1ereto except
n May 1972 a propoul to reproduced and distributed to section 16 ot Article 111 shall
amend sectlorft,. 6 1 9 11 1.c members of the hovse n wh ch take mmedlale effect and
16 and 31 of Article II sections 1t spending
exlsllngsectlons.f 6 1 9 11 l.f
3 and 16 of Article Ill section 2a
(OJ Nob II shalt contain more 16 an"d 31 ol Article I I existing
ot Article V and to repeal than one subject wh ch shall be section 3 of Article Ill ex1st1ng
soollonsl 8 15 11 18 19 an&lt;l 25 clearly expressed In 1ts title No section 2a of Article V and
or Article II and sect on 22 of taw shall be rev ved or sections s 8 15 17 18 19 and 25
Arllcle IV of the Const tut1on of amended unless the new act of Article II and secllon 22 of
Ohio to read as follow s
Article IV shall be repealed
conta ns the entire act revived
ARTICLE II
or the sect on or sect ons from such effective date The
Section A NO member of the amended and the sect on or amendment of section 16 of
general assembly shall during sect ons amended shall be Artltle Ill shall take effect on
the tel"m for wlllch he was repealed
the second Monday of January
elected
unless dur~ng such
(E J Every b II wh ic h has 1975 and existing section 16 of
term he rulgns therefrom hold pused
bott'l t'louses of the Art cle Ill of the Constitution of
anv public office under the general assembly shall be Ohio shall be repealed from
United States or this state or a signed by the presiding off cer such effectlv&amp; date
political subdivision thereof of each hOuse to certify that the
SCHEDULE
but this provision &amp;oes not procedural requtrements for
IAl Notwlthstandmg the
extend to officers of a politico I passage have been met and provision s of section 7 of Article
party notaries publ c or of shall be presented forthwith to 11 and until the second Monday
f cers of the mllllla or of the tt'le governor for his approval
of January 1975 the presld ng
United States armed forces
(F) Every [omt resolution
officer to be &amp;lee ted from the
No member ot the general wh ch hu been adopted n both membership of the Senate shall
assembly shall during the term houses of the general assembly continue to be designated the
for which he was elected or tor st'lall be sig ned by the pres1d ng pres1dent pro tempore of the
one year thereafter be ap off1cer
of each house to certify Senate and the president pro
pointed to any public Oft1ce tt1at
the
pro cedural tempore not the PreSident of
under this state which office requ rements
for adoption have the Senate may partictpate tn
was created or the com been met and shall
forthw th be the clllllng of a special sess on
pensat on of whlcll was In f•leu wllh the secretary
of state
pursuant to section 8 of Art1cle
creased during the term for
Section 16 If the governor 11
which he was elected
an act he shall son 1t
()
Notwlt11standlng the
Section 6 Each House shall be approves
It
becomes
law
and
he
shall
ftle
provlstons
of section 1 of Article
judge of the electton r eturn s
with the secretary of state
11 and until the second Monday
and qualifications of Its own 11
If he does not approve t he
of January 197!i the Lieutenant
members A majority of ell the St"'all
It w th h s ob
Governor shall continue to
members elected to eact'l House lee lionsreturl1
to the t}ouse serve as President of the Senate
shall be a quorum to do In whichIn Itwriting
orig nated which for all purposes except to
business but a less number
enter the ob[ectlons at part r: pate n the calling of a
may adjourn from day to day sl'1all
large upon Its journal and rna
special session by presiding
and compel the attendance of then
reconsider the vote on 1t:. off cers
of
the
General
absent members
n such
passage
If
three
t
fth
s
of
the
Assembly
pursuant
to
sect
on 8
manner
and under such
embers elected to the .house of of Article II
penllltles as shall be prescribed m
origin vote to repass the b1ll It
UNITED STATES
by law
be sent With the ob
OF AMERICA
Each House may punish Its Shall
iecl ons of the governor to the
STATE OF OHIO
members tor disorderly con other
house which may also
OFFICE OF THE
duct and wltt'l the concurrence conslderthevoteon
passage
SECRETARY OF STATE
of two th rds of the members If thr ee f flhs of theItsmembers
1
TEO
w
BROWN
elected thereto expel a num
to the second house vote Secretar y of State of the State of
ber but not the second time for elected
to repass It It becomes law Oh10 do hereby certlfy tt'lat the
the same cause
notw th standlng the objections foregomg 1s a t~ue copy ot
Each House has all powers of
governor and the Amended
House
Jo nt
necessary to prov ide for Its presthe
officer of the second Resolut on No .44 flied 1n lhe
safety and the undisturbed houseding
shall til e It with the off ce of tt'le Secretary of Sta te
transaction of Its bus1ness and secretary
state In no case and propos ing to amend the
to obtain through committees shall a billOf be
repassed by a above sections of the Con
or otherwise Information at smaller
vote than is'requ,red by st t~ on of Oh10
fectl ng legtslat ve action under the constitution
on t s ong nal
........'N TESTIMONY WHEREOF
conslderat ion or In con
passage
In
all
cases
ot.,..A
have hereunto subscr1bed my
temptation or wlth reference to
th e vote of eaCfi name and alf xed my off cat
any alleged breech of Its reconsideration
house shall be determ ned by seal at Columbus th1s 27th day
privileges or m is condu~t of Its yeas and nays and tile names of of March 1972
members and to that end to the member5 voting for and
TED w BROWN
enforce the attendance and against the b II shall be entered (Seal)
Secretary
of State
testlmonv of witnesses a td the upon the lournal
prOduction of books and papers
If a bill s not returned by the (3) 30 (d) 6 13 20 27 5tc
Section 7 The mode of governor wlthtn ten, days
organizing each house of the Sundays excepted al1er bemg
general assembly shall be presented to him t becomes
prescribed by law
NOTICE OF
law In like manner as 1 he had
Each houn shall choose Its signed It unless the general
APPOINTMENT
own off ice rs
ncluding a assembly by adjournment
case No 20t6~
presiding officer to be elected prevents ts return n which
Estate of CLARENCE D
from its membership who shall case It becomes law unless
ADAMS Deceased
be desloneted In the Senate as within ten dmys after suct'l
Notice Is hereby given that
president of the Senate and In adiournemenl It Is fled by h m
Clara Adams of R
0 2
the House of Representatives as with his oblectlons In writ ng In Rae ne Ohio has been duly
speaker of the House of tile off ce ol the secretary ot appointed Executr x of the
R~~reuntatlves
state Th e governor sha ll f le Estete of Clarence 0 Adams
ach house Shall determine w th
e sec "'tar't o state deceased late of Meigs County
Ita wn rules of proceeding
every bill npt r~turned by h m to Oh o
Section 8 E-ach genl!ral the house of origin that becomes
Creditors are requ red to file
assembly shall convene In first aw w thou.t hi s signature
their cia ms w th sa.d 11cud ary
regular session on the first
The governor may disapprove w1th n four months
Monday of January In the odd any tem or Items 1n any bill
Dated th s 8th day ot Apnl
numbered year or on tile making 11
appropr iation of 1972
succeeding day If the first money and the item or Items so
John c Bacon
Monday of January is a legal d sap proved st'lall be vo d
Act ng Judge
t'lollday and In second regul~r unless repassed n !he manner
Cou rt of Common Pleas
session on the same date ol the prescribed by this sect on tor ( ) lJ
Probale D VISIOn
fOIIO)Ving year EIther the the repassage of a bill
4
20 27 3t
govePnor or the presld ng ol
Sect on 31 The members and
fleers at the general assembly
of
the
General
acting lolntly may convene the officers
Assembly shall receive an
general assembly In special annual
and such
IN THE COMMON PLEAS
seulon by a proclamation allowancessalary
for reasonable lind
COURT OF
which mav limit tile purpose of necessary expenses related to
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
the session
tt'le performance of the r dut es RUTH A HENRY
Section 9 Each House shall as are provided by law and no
R D 4
keep a correct lournai of Its chonoe
In o members salary Pomeroy Ohio
proceedings which shall be sha ll take
effect dur ng the term
Pta In lift
published At the desire of any for which he was elected nor
V$
two members the yeas and sha ll any change In a member s
nays shall be entered upon the allowances take effect prior to CARL F HENRY
address unknown
(ournal and on the passaoe of
first of January follow ng
Defendant
every b II in either House the the
the next general election n an
vote sllall be taken by yeas and even
No IS 053
numbered year
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
nays and entered upon the
ARTICLE
Ill
journal
Carl F Henry whose place of
Sec t on Ia In the general res
idence Is unknown will take
section 11 A ncancv In the elect
on
lor
governor
and
Senate or In the House of l1eutenant governor one vote not ce on the 11th day of April
1972 the undersigned f1led 11er
Representatives for any cause
shall be cast lo lnlly tor the Complaint
against him In the
Including the failure or a candidates
nomin~ted by the
member elect to quallfV for same pollflcal party or pet1t1on Court of common Pleas of
e gs County Ohio praying tor
offlct shall be filled by election
general assembly may M
dtvorce restoration to former
by lhe membersofthe Senate or The
provide by law for the 101nt name
and other relief on th e
the members of the House of nom nat on of candidates for
grounds of gross neglect of duty
Representatives as the case governor
and
lieutenant and desertion Said cause w111
may be who ere affiliated with governor
be for hearing on and after the
the same political party as the
Section 3 The returns of 28th day from the date of the
person last elected by the ever
y election for the offteers
erectors to the seat which has named In the foregomg section last pub cation ol this Notice
namely the 23rd day of June
become vacant A vacancy
l be sea led up and trans 1972 or as soon thereafter as the
oc curr ing before or ctur ng th e shal
mltted to the seat of Govern Court me~y hear the same
first twenty months of a ment by the returnm!) Dfflcers
RUTH A HENRY
Senatorial term shall be filled directed to the Pres.dent of the
PLALINTIFF
temporar~tv by elect on as
Senate who durmg the first Crow Crow &amp; Porter
provided in tht s section for only week of the sess10n shall open
for
Plaint ff
tt'lat port1on ot lhe term which and publish them and declare Attorneys
will expire on the thirty first
result in the presence ol a (4 ) 13 20 27 (51 ,. 11 18 25 7t
day of December follow ng the the
majority of tile members of
next general election occurr ng eact'l House of tt'le Genera l
In an even numbered year after Assembly Tile lolnt candida tes
NOTICE OF
the vacancy occurs at which having the h ghest number of
APPOINTMENT
election th e seat shall be filled votes cast for governor and
Case No 20 US
by the electors as provide d by lieutenant
governor and tile Estate of Emma Pullins
law for the remaining vnex
person hav ng the h ghest Deceased
plred portion of the term the number
Notice Is hereby given that
of votes for any other
member elect so chosen to tak e office shall
be declared duly Hubert Pullins of 909 Brownell
office on the first day In elected but If any two or mO'fe Ave
Middleport Ohio has
January next following such
been duly appointed Ad
have
an
eQua
l
and
the
h'
ghest
election No person shall be
of votes for the same minlstrator of tht Estate of
elected to lfll a vacancy m the number
off
ice
or
offices one of them or Emma Pullins decea sed late
Senate or House of Represen
any
two
for whom jo nt votes ot Ml&lt;l&lt;lleport Meigs county
tat ves as the case mlly be
were
cast
for governor and OhiO
unless
he
meers
the
Creditors are r.equtred 10 1 le
lieutenant
governor
shall be
qualifi cations set forth m this
their cla•ms wltll sad fiduciary
chosen
by
the
loint
vote
of
both
Constitution and the taws of th s
within four months
state for the sea t m which the houses
Dated this lOth day of April
Sect
on
16
The
Lieutenant
vacancy occurs An election to
1912
Governor
shall
perform
such
fill a vacancy shall be ac
John C Bacon
n
the
execut ve
compllshtd
notw thstandlng duties
Acting Probllte Judge
department
as
are
assu;med
to
the provisions of section 27 h i m by the Governor and
of sa ld County
Article II of thts Constitution by exercise such powers as are (4 ) lJ 20 27 3t
the adoption of a resolution
while the Senate or the House of prescribed by law
ARTICLE V
l':epresentatlves as the case
Section 2a The names of a 1
In 1965 the U S earner
may be is in sessian witl'l the
for an off ice at any
taking of the yeas and nar • of candidates
Boxer moved mlo an off
the members of the Sena e or general electron shalt b •
arrMged
In
1!1 group under the shore position to prepare lo
the House of R:epresentlltlves
title of that office and sllall be
as the cue may bt affiliated so
alternated that each name evacuate Americans as the
with the same politlca,l party as
shall
appear (In so tar n may Domtmcan Republtc revolutton
the perso"' las.t elect'ed to the be reasoRI!Ibly
pO$Sible) sub
seat In which the vacancy oc
grew mure tense
curs The adortlon of such sta nI ally an eQual number of
resolution shal requlrt the
affirmative vote of a major t)l'
of the memDers elected to the
Senate or the House ot
Representatives as the case
may be entitled to vote tt'lereon
Such vote shall be spread upon
the journal of the Senate or the
House af Representatives as
the case may be and certified
to the Secretary of State by the
clerk thereof The Secreterv ol
State lhlll upon receipt of such
certlflcetlon Issue a certificate
Flame of Hope Perfumes
of election to the person so
Human &amp; Synthettc Wigs
elected end upon presentation
of such certificate to th' Senete
or the House of R:epresen
tatlves IS the case may be the
person to electett shall take the
oath of office and become a
member of fht Senate or the
Houst ot Representatives as
the cue m1y be for the term
for which ht was so elected
Section 14 Neither House
111111 without the consent of the
other adjourn for m"'re than

JOINT UIOLUTION

Astros Run String To 9
By JOE CARNICEILI
UPI Sports Writer
A controversial intentional
walk was Pete ReiSer s unwmg Wednesday mghl as the
Chtcago Cubs' intertm
manager walched hls club drop
a :&gt;-4 deCision to the Hotlston
Aslros, the Cubs' etght slratghl
loss
The score was lied at 4-4 10
the bottom of the loth iming
when Lee May was walked
mtenlionally With two out and
no one on Bob Watson, httless
In 11 previous at bats in the
series, then wubled to score
May wtth the wmnuog run and
extend the Astros wtMmg
streak to nine games 1
May's three homers m the
last three games prompted
Reiser's actions 'He d hit
three mtslakes and he wasn 'I
gomg to htt a fourth one,
Retser explained ' I thought tl
was gotng lo he caught If the
relay throw dilln I hil the
mound, he'd be out at the plate
I d do tl over again I m not

afraid to gamble II s a shame
more people don't w tl '
Wywt Ties Game
Jun Wynn drove m three
runs wtth a homer and triple
and lied tlle game tn tlle etghth
Billy Williams had a putr of
RBis for the Cubs
In other National League
action St Louis downed
Atlanta 9-4 New York beal
San Otego, 5 I C10c1nnatt
edged Pittsburgh 7-6 San
Franctsco outlasted
Phtladelphta, 8 6, and Los
Angeles shut out Montreal, 2-0
MtMesota stopped Boston 31 Chtcago defeated Cleveland
7~ m 10 tMings Callforma
beal Mtlwaukee, 3-1, New York
downed Oakland, 4-2, Detroit
bombed Texas Il-l and Kansas
City topped BaiUmore 5-3 tn a
game called because of ram
after 51'.. lWitngS m Amencan
League play
Pitcher Rick Wtse's lw&lt;H"Un
single 1gruted a five-run out
burst tn th ~ secontl mnmg that
helped St Louts beat Ule

Braves Hank Aaron htl his
fourtll homer m four games
and 643rd of hts career for tile
Braves movmg hun jusl three
short of Willie Mays for second
place on the all-tune list behmd
Babe Ruth
Three-Run Homer
Jim Fregost slammed a
three-run homer and Tomnue
Agee added one wtUo a man on
as the Mets lifted Uoetr WlWimg
streak to ftve games wtlh a
vtclory over San Otego
Bobby Tolan drove m three
runs with a single and a homer
as the Reds beat Ptltsburgh
Chros Speter tripled m Uoe
tying run and Bobby Bonds
won Uie game wtth a lwo-run
homer as the Gwnts exploded
for four runs m the loth lWimg
to beat Pluladelphta
Willte Crawford s two-run
homer wtUo two oul m the ninth
lnnmg eoded a scoreless duel
between Montreal s Btlly
Stoneman and Los Angeles'
Claude Osteen and lifted the
Dodgers over the Expos

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
relatl cost of a typtcal market
basket of food dropped 0 4 per
cent last rnontll, endong a four
month surge that boosled
pnces 4 3 per cent from last
October through February the
Agriculture Department said
today
Even wtlh the decline the
market basket cost was sltll
second htghest on record - 5 4
per cent above March or 1971
Average beef prtces for March
were unchanged al tlle record
February level but pork went
down
The February to March

I

B~
..t..¥=.. _
••• ~~ UUW"C,:
Recommends Change
To Mr Editor
It my firm belief lhal we need change m10 Dtstnct Congress
Someone Interest 10 keep pnces down so old people on small s s
checks other small tncomes can buy at least coal clothes reniUomgs needed thai Includes Doctors and med1cme
I know we get much help from Mr Jack Crosp he hear all
people espectally mteresled 10 needy
I know that take smcere parents ratse son honest and wants
belp needy as his son Glenn - who I know to be
I think we be dotng ourself better tf put Mr Cnsp m
Washmglon
Mrs Wm H Byers

One of every five Amert
cans
changes hts r&lt;ostdence
costs came largely because of
annually
a 2 5 per cent drop tn farm
prtces whtch was partly offset
by an on crease tn tlle fat m loIf the earth were perfectly
retatl prtce spread the round and smooth the oceans
department satd m tis monthly would cover tt to a depth of
report on Prtce Spreads for 12 000 feet
dechne m average retatl food

Stiversville: Store, Church and

Two hundred and twenty
• seven students of Me1gs H gh
School have been named to the

By Nicki VanMeter
President Sllversvillc
4-H Club
STIVERSVILLE -1 he best
way we could descrtbe our
Sttversvtlle Sttehers 4 H Club
was through the commumty we
hve m by namtng our 4 H club
after ot
The ftrsl ltme there ever was
a 4 H club m Sltversvtlle was
1911 The house my stepfather
and mother Rev and Mrs L
Gluesencamp owned and we
hve m now was owned by the
late Mr Stivers who owned
most of the ground tn Stlv

Our club advtsor Mrs Ada
VanMeter tsan tmporlantpart
of our commumty too Her
home ts the meeting place for
our Sllversvtlle Shltchers 4 H
Club II gwes us all. a warm
rtch feehng that we can be
proud of to have her for an
advtsor Mrs Van Meter ts also
our Sunday School leacher
There are mne members tn our
club Now hestdes our advtsor
there ts her asststant Mrs L
Gluesencamp
All young gtrls who hke to
learn by domg ought to be m a
4-H club II s someth1ng to
be proud or

stydent must mamta n a grade
of B or better to be named to

the roll

SENIORS - Joyce Arney
Susan Andrews Rrck Ash Tom
Ball

Barnett

NOTICE OF
AP P0 IN TCase
MENNo
T

•
20 659

Artllur C Dodge made the
pres~ntaltons of the Stiver
Beaver Awards to Btll Dawson
of Barboursvtlle, Robert Dtls of
Ashland Charles Rt chard
Dorsey of Kenova and Cectl H
Underwood of Hunlmgton The
Stiver Fawn Award was
presented lo Mrs Ramona
Woodard or Huntington
Nu"l"rous other awards
were presented lo veteran
msltlutwns and veteran
Scouters and m the areas of
adult trammg untt camptng
recrwtmg, awards and Project
SOAR
Cerltftcates were presented
to the news media or lhe trt
state along wttll recogmllon of
tlle Scout dtstrtbutors and the
Untied Fund agenctes of
Cabell Wayne and Boyd
Counties

Executr x oi lhe Esla1e of
V
Edmundson
deceased late of Salem
Townsh ip Meigs County Ohio
Credllors are required to lrle

SAME DAY
SERVItE
1 A
n t 9-0ut At s

1912
141

13

John C Bacon
Acting Probate Judge
of said County
2D 27 31

Living Room Suite
Is Faded and
Tom- The
Lamps Are Dingy
And the Stove

Diehl

Roger D xon Harvey

Erlew ne Howard Erlewme
James Estep Debbte Ga rn es

Denn s G lmore Sandra Gtoy&lt;l
Sherrie Gloyd V ckr Grate
Nancy
Grueser

Cathy

Greenlee
Conn1e
Melante Hackett

Halt

Jill

Deborah
Barnhart
Cindy

Johnson
Jordan

SEE BAKER'S IN MIDDLEPORT
FOR THAT BRAND NEW LOOK!

Little Pamela Mantey Debra
May Larry Mees Gary
Michael Randy Mrchael Mary
Mldktll James MIter Leanne
Sebo Alvin Sm lh Susan
Soutsby Steven Crag Stanley
Janet Slivers M1chael Struble
John Swartz Ruth Ann Terrel!
Patrieta Thoma Caralynn

Specials In Our Cosmetic Dept.

r

I (( ))l if\JR}[US
SPRAY COLOGNE

Ohtrnger

Deborah

Scaggs Brenda Staats Ken
Rebecca Wtii

T ny WIIrams Be&lt;:ky Wr ght
JUNIORS - Drana Ateshrre

Sh rley Alk~re Barbara Ar
cher .Roger Alkms Ltnda
Atkmson Lynne Baker Debra
Barnhart Karla Beal Janet

Brggs Etrzabeth Batettnar

James Boggs Terry Bolinger
Franc1s Broder c:k Jon Bunce
Fiaranell Burney Jan Burns
Terry Cadle Suzan ne Car.d
Debb1e Carson R1ta Case

V ck Clark Jodr Ct ckenger
Helen Cotterill Jell Darst
Pamela Dodson Robm Duck
worth
Bonn1e Ebersbach
/okrr Ebersbach Lo1 s F fe
Leta Floyd Donna Francts

Beth Futlz Steven Cotfentt
Debr Ga llagher Dave Gerar&lt;l
Debbre Gilliam Kay Gtlmore

Patty Glaze Karen Hale Ken

Harns She Ia Hawk Randy
Haynes Conn ie Herdman
Jeanne Hooper Mona Johnson

Brit Kennedy Jan Kennedy
Jane te
Kuhn
She Ia
Me KnrgM Lisa McKenzre
Edolh Mees Richard Men
denhalt Terry Methany
Darlene
M1chael

Mtchael
Sherry
He1d
Milhoan

Debb e Mrtler

John MIt er

K1m Mowery Des ree P ke
Chr sf ne Robmson
Br dget
Ross M1chael Sayre James
Schmol l Conn e Sm lth Penny

Tracy Maratynn Tracy Darla

Sm th Chr str Stanley Debb e

Neutzllng

Tr piett

Marla

Neutz lmg

Scott Walton

Steve

aharmony of subtl
mak:d fresh flor:I~Pices
You unforgettable!
};

,.

CHARLESTON W Va - more largeo than average
Kroger Food Stores loday stores of today Complete
ann9unced a maJor expanston remodehng and enlarging of an
- mcludmg new stores m addtltonal 21 stores a colorful
Pomeroy and Galhpolts - for new look tn supermarkets
the Charleston Dovlston area departing completely from the
planned through 1975 at an to adthonal approach to decor
Leases have been signed for
estimated co!; I of $11 400 000
new
stores m Fatrlea Rtpley
ftemodehng and expanston wtll
cost $3 370 OIJIJ and new stores Clarksburg Parkersburg &amp;
$8 OIJIJ,OIJIJ B B Beaty dtvtSIOII Teays Valley W Va and
vtce prestdent satd thai plans Pomeroy and Gaihpohs tn
Ohto Negoltattons are un
call for
derway
for mne addtltonal new
Twenty seven new
superstores
whtch wtll supermarkels
Beaty pomted out that many
range up to &gt;O per cent and
of the remodels and e&lt;panStons

'

MIST
r / (!

..I

,Y f'Mfy'goo
l

1

Local Bowling
Mod Ohoo Valley League
Aprr I16 1972
Standtngs
Team
W L
Pink Panthers
50 22
Alley Ca Is
38 34
Spares &amp; Strrkes
36 36
49 ers
34 38
All In the Fam ty
30 42
Tacks
28 44
High Individual Game - S
Greuser 158

I

l

DANA

SOLID COLOGNES

Wednesday Afternoon League
Aprrl 19 1972
Slandongs

ANNUAL TUSSY
DEODORANT SALE
Cream

Rol I on

or Sitek

Only

7 oz Spray Only

Miles Chtlders

193
Second High lnd Game - M
J Scaggs 157 G Woods 181
High Series - G Woods 509
M J Scaggs m
Second High Ser es - M
Childers 501 S Greuser 41 5
Team High Game
Pink
Panthers 70'1
Pink
Team High Seres
Panthers 2002

I

Team

Welker s Ashland
Baum sLumber

59~

\47

~.

33

Team No 4 \
46
R denour s TV
44
Gaul s Shake H~ven
18
Team No I
19
High tnd vrdua t Game

cerhfwa le and recm d of 1m

mwuzatwn

Warner Patt Well
W1ison Kevm Wolfe

Sharon

SOPHOMORES Amey John Ash

Peggy
Dav d

Barnhart
Jane
Barrett
Brenda Barton
K1m Beck
R1ch e Biumenauer
R ck
Balm Donna Boyd Bru ce
Caldwell
D1ana
Carsey
Thomas
Cl elan d
V1ek

Clelland

Ronald

Couch

Melvm
Cremeans
L nda
Cunn ngham Joy ce Dav s
Dav d Grant An ta Hermann
lngr d Hawley Mary Janey

Randy Hill

Dana Johnson

Ezra K1ser Mary Krawsczyn

Kerth Lrttte
Michael May Mark Morrrs

WI !lam

Myer s T na Nten
Oberholzer
Gary
0 Dell Rozanne Patterson
Debra P1erce Joe Rosenbaum
Sandy
Rusche!
Jean 1e

V ck e

Schnerder Debbie Schuck
Gall S zemore Albert Sm rth
Jrtt Smr lh Mary Sm rth
Randall
Snyder
Davrd
Sw sher Oav d Wolfe

FRESHMEN -

Conger
Counci l

Rtck Couch
Carla Crisp

Charles
Robert
Sandra

Curt s Cynthra Demoskey

Edward D ddle Bonn e Dillon
Bryan Frank Larry Fr diey
:Joy Hayes Maureen Hen
n~sy San ta Justice Deborah
Kennedy An ta K ng Nancy
Lawrence
Diana
Lewts

Vrrg nla McCune Debb e
McLaughlrn Kenneth Mrlchett

Kenny Rife V1ck1e Russell
John Thomas Karen Til l s
Steven Walburn Joy Wh te

Brenda Writ

Secon&lt;l High ln&lt;l Game
Patty Thomas 155
High Series - Barbara
Mur ray 409

Second High Serres - Patty

Thoms 40A
Team H1gh Game No 4 299

Team

Delicatessens

I reahze thos demonstration
ts peaceful, Oids had satd
when he emerged from the
meetmg wtth the students
But whal I'm concerned
about ts If tt s possible to
protest m a !ashton so we car&gt;
get the ROTC people out of this
butldmg
All those arrested were re
leased on a personal recogru
zance bond after bemg taken to
Mumctpal Court on buses
They were told to return lo
court at I p m Frtday or face a
one-year Jail sentence and
$1 000 ftne
Rennoe Davts one of tlle
Chtcago 7 defendants spoke at
tlle rally on the commons and
had asked Olds what be 10tend
ed to do about an undercover
campus securtty agent who aJ.
ledgedly attempted lo gtve two
Communost-made weapons to a
campus anti-war group
Remhold Mohr 25, was ar
rested but later released after
11 was doscovered tlle machine
gnn and grenade lawtcher
were moperable The Kent
Slate Veterans Agatnst the
War had clauned Mohr lned to
gtve the weapons to tllem
1m tend to get tlle facts be-

for

e&lt;ample wtll be topped wtlh a
wood-shtngle roo[ accented
wtth go ld and bttlersweet
colored hghled panels
Beaty observed Kroger
has been servmg Charleston
area shoppers smce the 192&amp;.&gt;
Wtth Improvement and ex
panston of our factliltes here
we wtll be prepared not only to
better serve shoppers today
but also to anticipate and be
prepared for the growmg needs
of customers throughout thos
area tomorrow
The Charleston Kroger
Dtvtston currently operates 49
supermarkets
m West
Vtrgmta Kentucky and Ohto

~

fore makmg a deciSion Olds
rephed 'If lbe charges are
true I have no patieoce wtlh
Gestapo tactics nor wtJl 111volvemenllft Uoos type of prac
lice
He satd he had asked for a
complete report of the mctdent
The KSU News Servtce satd
Mohr had been gtven a SOX·
months leave of absence ef
fecltve Tuesday rught but add·
ed ol probably would last only
two weeks to a month
Kent Stale became the sym
hol of student protests against
tlle war two years ago when County supervisors
Beauty Spot
National Guard troops called to
the campus to put down rtoting
LODGE TO MEET
' mrleon Rt 143 off Rt
shol and killed four students
114
Racme Chapter 134 Order o[
May 4 1970
the Eastern Star wtll meet ~ We mv1te you to drop m
for refreshments and
Monday at 8 p m at tlle
get
acquamted We feel
Temple A pracltce sesston woll
we have the talent to
he held tn preparation for m
satisfy vou
spechon to be held on May 19
Thank ~You
Otller plans for mspeclton wtll
he made and the chapter wtll
Operators
hold a short memortal servtce
Erma Jean Yoho
for Charles Hensley a past
palron and offtcer of the
Phone 992 2840
chapter All offtcers are urged
to attend the meelmg

Festival in

Logan Bigger,
Beuer in '72

••'"'

In time for
Mother's Day.

Bulova.
lell her of your love and
gratrllrde wnh the g1fl she 11
tree~ s ure always A beautaful new
Bulma warch Our se lect 1on of
g1h watches IS so d1verse you re
sure to find the watch she really
really wants Bulova From $411

4.

DANCE TO LIVE ENTERTAINME~T
SATURDAY NIGHT, APRIL 29

9 TIL 12
Martin Restaurant

A LADY DF FASHION IQ 17 jtwe s Automatic $70
I DUUT P 17 )~ wets Silver dial $15
C GOU£H 'ODDUS Lll 17 jewe 1 l~K solid &amp;old cast $10
D U rnm LC 2J awels 4 d amends $15

GOESSLER'S JEWELRY
POMEROY, 0.

COURT ST

'

new
•
1n

see

In The Heart of Mtddleport

John Kalleel Combo
RobertOClendennen vocal st
John Kallel on sax

John Lynch drums
Sk p S1ewart bass

Early Bird League
Arpll 19 1972
Standrngs

Team
Pts
0 G Plnneltes
114
King Builders
n
Evelyn s Grocery
70
Larry s Ashtond
l6
Rawlings Dodge
54
Meigs Mobile Homes
42
Team High Game - D G
Plnnettes 837
Evelyn s
Grocery 8M Rawlings Dodge

To---

McClure's For A Dairy TreJJt

'

TluJt Cant Be Beat.

Jill

992 5248

"The Creator of
Reasonable Drug PriCes"

271 North Second Avenue
,
Phone 992-5759
Middleport, Ohio

Not that ktnd We mean our new home
Metgs County s hundred year old bank
has moved tis seventeen year old branch
mto a brand new bUIIdong on Salem Street
You ve probably seen tt on the outs1de Gtve the onstde a try
Were havmg an open house thos Saturday Apnl 29
Not fancy JUSt fnendiy Partly to show off
the new butldtng but matnly to say Ihanks
for makmg tt a pleasure to be tn Rutland
The hours are 9 Ia 4 we II have refreshments
souventrs and a door pnze Please come
It wouidn t be the same without you

pomeroy pomeroy
rutland nati9~JGI

bank
the bonkol

McCLURE'S
4th &amp; Locust

Mrs Mary B Roberts slate
dtrector of the nght to read
program 111 Ohto vtstled the
tndtvtdualtzed readtng
REIGSTRATJON SET
program at the Bradbury
Ftrsl grade regtstratton al
School Tuesday
On Wednesday, Mrs Mar the Salisbury Elementary
JOrte Evans supervtsor of School wtll he held Monday
Ptckaway County
Mtss from I to 3 p m Parents are to
Kathryn Mende and Mrs lake lhetr chtld s tmmuntzatton
Mtrtam Elder supervtsor of record and btrtll cerltftcale al
Fatrfteld County Schools Mrs the tune of regtstration
Dons Well and Mtss Dtane
McClure of the Chesler
Elementary School were
LADIES
guests Present wtlh both
Welcome to the
groups were Mrs Grella Suttle
Open1ng of Our
and Mrs Nellie Vale Metgs

Hockmg Valley Cr aflsmen
wtll welcome sprmg wtth lhetr
Second Annual
Sprmg
Festival
lhts
weekend
WIN AT BRIDGE
fealurmg a craft show and sale
at the Hockmg County
Fatrgrounds m Logan
Hours wtll be from 6-10 p m
ll
e
dtscar
ded
a
cl
ub
on
Fnday
and from 10 a m llll
N011111
d t mmy s ace ol s p a d e s
dark on Saturday and Sunday
.AQ f&gt;
1uffed a spade led a club
¥ K"
ft om h1s hand noted that AdmiSSIOn IS rree for children
t AQ7&gt;2
Donalbane pla yed the 10 so and 25c for adults
"'AJ6
Tlus year m addtllon to the
he finessed dummy s Jack
\\EST
EAST
Thmgs
were
lookmg
up
regular
craftsmen and new
. J82
.K10 97o4~
li e led dummy s last spade members
¥J 9874
¥Vod
a number of
and ruffed
tJI 09
t 84
unaftltaled arllsans wtll exhtbtt
"'K 10
"'7&gt; 12
Thts 1 e f I htm wtth one wt th the group The appeal or
It ump less than West He
SOUTH (D)
c a s h c d dummy s ace of the wtde range of crafts wlll be
• Vod
¥AQIOI 1
clubs led a dtamond to hts enrtched by contmuous
t K6 3
kmg and another dtamond demonstrattons Browsers and
quesltoners are welcome
"'Q984
to dumm) s queen
Bot I v line lie
Donalbane was down to Nothmg pleases a true
\\est
ltumps and had to 1uff tn on craflsman more than ex
N 11h
f. l SI S uth
the next lead Then he had plamtng the lechmcal pomts of
1¥
Pass
pISS
!•
to lead away from hts Jac k what he ts domg
P il.SS
Pa.ss ~ ·
and the gteat MacDuff had
The Old Timers' Band from
p
Pass P &lt;l~S
It umphed agam
'
the
McDowell Street Semor
Pass
or cout se tt wasn t too C1t1zens
Center tn Columbus
Open 1 g lead- + J
gt eat a It urn ph The wav
wtll
provtde
mustc Saturday
1he c&lt;H ds lay s c v e n no
Festival goers are encouraged
Bv Oswald &amp; J,unes J 1cobv trump would make
to brtng lhetr own mstruments
NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
MacD uff the bes t pla;er
and play along r
1 Scotland wa s m 1g h t y
I appv "rth the dumm y Fot
once MacBeth I ad bid hts T l c l1dd ng has been
I and so that MacD tff could
N ,. th
East
Sc1uth
]lay tt and the slam lonked \\est
Pass
1•
lrke a n rghtv good one
SHOW CANCElLED
Pn,.,;
1¥
Pass
IN f
A flower show planned for
He won the diamond lead Pass 2NT .,.. P&lt;J ss
?
\~ t h dummy s m;c and
thts weekend al the Royal Oak
You South ho ld
played th e kmg of hea1 Is • Afo54 ¥ K63 2 t Q 107
Park
by the Chesler Garden
"'14
Banquo sttltng E:ast dts
Club has been cancelled
card ed a spad e an&lt;i all of a What dr&gt; you do nov.
A-Pass l\ e hate lu slop at
Sl dden 11 e slam looked as rf
IW ) no t Ump buj thiS IS Ollt!
t wetc doomed to defeat
Could 11 be made Mac I nne "hen no futthcr btd IS de
Remembf!r your pa tnc1
rltff sa" that thc1 e was a suable
dul not hut O\cr one heart
Lhanc e 1f Donalbane s1ttmg
TODAY S QUESTION
\I est ltei&lt;J exactl y the 1 ght
ca td s A sl tm chance rs fa1
Instead of pass mg one heart
beltet than none and Mac you partnc has b d two d1a
DuJf proceeded to gtve the monds What do you do no v"
ca rds theu chance to wot k
l\nswc1 tomorrow

Gets Maximum from Cards

HOM .. FROM SOUTH
Mrs Fred Rosenbaum has
returned to her home on
Peoples Terrace after spen
dtng the wtnter tn Danta Fla

Team High Serres - 'ream
No 4797

•
'
~

Open Da1~ 8 A.M. to 10 P.M: Sunday 10:30, A.M. to 12:30 P.M. &amp; 5 to 9 P.M.

store

KENT Ohio (UPI) - Ken I
Stale Uruverstly pohce moved
tnlo a campus bwldmg housmg
tlle ROTC offtces Wednesday
rught aild arrested more tllan
125 students who refused to end
tlletr stt-m
The arrests freed 20 ROTC
mslructors and seven cadets
who had been mstde lbe third
Door offtces sonce early after
noon when tlle anlt war proles
tors showed up and began
sprawlmg 111 tlle hallways
None had tried to get out
durmg that tune
The stt m followed an anlt
war rally attended by I OOOstu
dents on tlle campus commons
wbere an efftgy of Prestdent
NIXon was burned Observers
satd tt was one of tlle largest
ralites on lhe commons smce
May 1970 when four students
were shot to deatll by National
Guard troops
KSU Prestdent Glenn Olds
talked to tlle demonslralmg
students for half an hour, and
apparently unable to talk tllem
mto endmg the sthn gave lhem
until 9 'P m to leave the
butldmg None left when tlle
deadhne came and an hour
later 30 policemen moved 10

!"'

\\Ill tn effect create an enltrely
new store whtch uses the shell
of the old store as a base
Spec tal servtce depat lments
wtll be emphastzed tn both tlle
ne" and the remodeled
supetstores Mr Beaty satd
notm g that they wtll look
almost as through they are
mdtvtdual shops wtlhm the

Vtstts Bradbury

Kent U Sit-ins Arrested

Hurry

,,

ONLY' 15''

34
36
52
61

Dorthy Karr i5B

79~

4 REGISTERED PHARMACISTS TO SERVE YOU

Formerly K1ps Shoe Store
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

REGISTER MAY I
RUTLAND - Kmdergarten
students hvmg tn Rulland wtll
regtsler May !from I 30 to 2 30
p 111 tn Ute gym at Rulland
Elementary School Parents
are to bnng the cluld s bu lh

Superstores in This Area

PRESCRIPTION SERVICE

heritage house

.

MAX FACTOR

Reg $2 so Value
SPECIAL

AA BC

I"

Kroger Will Build 27 New

Tabu Ambush 20 Carats
2 ounce

Cnnkle Patent

Kern

Krawsczyn Charles lane
Connie Lanning
Dougla s

216 E 2nd Pomeroy

Cnnkle Patent
Bone Man-Made

Tom

Dor s

Drana King Sherry K ng Kent
Ktoes John G tttam David

Robinson's Ceaners

Block Man Mode

Harr s

Patric1a
Harr s
Ronald
Harrison Bruce Hawley Ted
Hayes Roger Hendr x Perry
Ho fman
John
Hunnel

Use Our Free Parktng Lol

FOR THE lADIES

Resa

Andreas Dewhurst Jo Ellen

Won't Cook.

J::::=~:::::=::-c&gt;&lt;~~derful
PUFFO

Berry

Wayne

Boothe Pamela Burson Karen

"!"'
--·
t
SHIR

FINISHING

their claims Wtth sa id fiducia ry
w ith in four l'flOnths
Dated this lOth day of Apnl

1 Opat

liiiiiiiiiiilllll....

Estate Of Mllrgaret V Ed
mundson Deceased
Notice Is hereby given that
EileenM Gortonof4141 E 29th
Street Apt 65 Tucson Arizona
85711 has been duly appomted
Margaret

Barnes

Cadle Debra Carder Jenette
Cumings DeLene DeLegat

Five Honored
RUSSELL Ky - Ftve
volunteer leaders m Boy
Scouhng were honored
Tuesday mght al the annual
recogmtton meeting and dmner
of the Trt.Slate Area Counctl m
tlle new offtce butldmg of tlle
Ashland Otl Company here
Over 240 people dmed and
applauded awards presen
!allons Principal speaker was
Richard M Lartme, new Scout
Execullve of the Trt.Slate Area
Counctl
The htghllghl was the
presenlalton of tlle four Silver
Beaver
Awards
for
dtstingutshed servtce to
boyhood and one Silver Fawn
Award the htghest award to a
lady scouterJ tlle ftrst awardl&gt;l
by tlle local councli

Irene

Ann

Ohltnger Karen Pr ce Debra
Rosemary R1ce
Rawson
Margaret R1ggs M I sa R zer
Susan
Ruschel
Rebecca
neth Wheeler

Named fo the roll were

Worn -Your

Ed Note The unsohcttad ersvtlle 1hat ts how tt was
camposlllon below suggests named Sltversvtlle afler lhe
that there are young
Americans still so fortunate as late Mr Silvers
Our commum ty ts a qmet
to hve and grow 1n rural
surroundrngs rich an trad1llon place There ts a commumly
1n a close kntt commumtv
gurded by drsctphne tempered church grocery store owned
by ktndnen love and and operated by Robert and
generostly It ts a kind of hfe Ma&lt;tne Durst and a com
that crowded mrlllons rn urban
centers and thetr satellite mumly butldtng whtch used to
suburbs may have forgolten be an old grade school years

and can be proud of II

fifth six weeks honor roll A

Is LumpyYour Rugs Are

Community Hall, and 4-H Club, too

ago

t•H.uGH.i\1\1 HI i\011 I&gt;

( HESJI H - Ar rrrscr vrcc
I rrred11rg was held al the
I Cheslct F.lcmenlat y Sehoul
I Tuesday rr pr e~arolton [or an
dtvtduallzed readtrrg
I pt ugram Corrducltng lhe
I r\reclt rr~ was Mrs Mary
1 Roberts stale du ector of the
1 slate rrghl to read program
1 wttlr Mrs Grella Suttle and
1 Mts Nelbc Vale parltctpaltng
1 Allendmg tn addtlton to tlle
I teachers were John Retbel
supe nntend enl of lhe Eastern
Local School Dtslncl and
Herbert Matheny pnnctpal of
the Chesler Elementary
Scl ool

227 Earn Honors at Meigs High
Your MaHress

ex1sts Mergs County has 1f

~I

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

Letters of opinion are welromc'li They should be less
than 310 wpnl• long (or •e •ubtetl to reductoon by the editor)
and mUJt be signed wllh I he stgnee s address Names IIU!Y be
withheld upon publlcatbn, however on request Letters
lhould he In good taste, addressing Issues not personalities

Farm Foods '
Spokesmen satd the report
dtlfered from the recent Labor
Department Cost of Livmg
Index ftgures for March whtch
showed grocery pnces up
shghlly over February
Spectahsls sa td thts was
because the Cosl of Livong
Index survey was made In
early March II dtd not calch
downturns tn beef and pork
pnces whtch came later on the
month and were recorded on
the Agnculture Deparlmen t
SUIVey

Koscot Kosmetics
BROWN'S
992·5113

------------

Foods Cost Down Some

lm

the century

eslobh~hed 1812

Middleport, 0

I

�;•

•

•

&amp;own; ~ · ·&lt;'&amp;M.~·"·T·;~~ ·

.

I
Social
·;
Project
Decided
Drugs Problem in . CalendarJ.·
~

@
~

I

.·

~

.

·

~

Schools Explained
disappearance of money or
anything of value around the
house, a major personality
change, and bloodshot eyes,
could .mean drugs, Roach
commenU!d. '
He advised parents to get rid
of old pills they have around
the house, to take more of an
interest in their children's
activities, and to encourage
schools and churches to
become involved. Roach spoke
of the alcohol and drug abuse
seminar which several young
people from Meigs County will
be attending this summer.
Roach named presidential
aspirants who have publicly
declared that they favor
legalizing marijuana and he
urged that now is the time for
people to write their legislators
expressing opposition to this.
In conclusion, the speaker
asked that boys and girls who
become involved in drugs be
giving a helping hand and that
they not be condemned
forever. The unit made a $5
contribution to the local drug
abuse program.
Mrs. Harry Davis presided
at the business meeting during
which time the District 8 junior
conference was announced for
Saturday at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. She presenU!d
a check for $34.75 from the Post
for conference expenses and
noted that Don Hunnel had
made the programs.
Mrs . Kenneth Harris,
Americanism chairman, an~
·'

Dz·ve at S~jJ~,n:g Event

£j

I

RUTLAND- Five members
of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners were in Logan
Saturday for lhe Region 11,
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, spring meeting at the
Immanuel Methodist Church.
Mrs. Joe Bolin of Rutland,
regional director, presided at
the business meeting and inu·odvced Mrs. Quentin Elder,
guest demonstrator on the
topic "A Splash of Spring."
Reports were given by Mrs.
William Willford, Region 11
secretary, and Mrs. Homer
Parker, regional publicity book

Attend Dinner
Mrs. Mary Martin and Mrs.
Myrtle Walker were at
Bradford Monday night to
attend a buffet dinner of the
Darke County Salon, Eight and
Forty.
Mr. Philo Westfall, chapeau,
conducted the meeting with the
·assistance of Jo Ann King, le
secretaire-cassiere. Annual
reports were discussed and
Mrs. Martin sp~ke to the group
on the various projects of Eight
and Forty and reported that 57
are now needed for goal in
Ohio. Donations were made by
the Salon to the various
p•ojects of the Salon.

contest chairman. Mrs.
Howard Birchfield handled the
OAGC publication sales.
Mrs. James Carpenter,
Meigs County garden therapy
chairman, assisted Mrs.
Willford,
club
therapy
chairman. in arranging a
garden therapy display of
items made by the special
education children at the
Rutland Elementary School.
Program books from 25 of
the 41 clubs in the region were
on display. A variety of plant
items for the sale table with
proceeds to go toward printing
the wildflower book were
contributed by the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners.

ATTEND RECEPTION
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kesterson
and Mrs. Ben Buck were in
New Lexington SWJday and
Monday for the 50th wedding
anniversary of Mr .• and Mrs.
Perry Smith, attended by over
200 people. They thank the
people who sent them .cards
from Pomeroy. Mr. Kesterson 's birthday was also
celebrated Sunday with a big
dinner and birthday cake in his
honor . Mrs. Kesterson and
Mrs. Buck are sisU!rs of Mrs.
Smith.

MEN'S

SLACKS
In I 00% Dacron Polyester and
Cotton I Polyester

WRANGLERS AND
LEE TREVINO
Comes In Solids or Pal·
terns,
mature
cut
traditional and flare leg.
Perm . Press - machine
washable .

.,

.

..

'

..

.'

••

. 1 '

. B- The Daily Sentinel, MldcDeport-l'llnlerOy, 0 .. April 27, 1m

The physical and psy·
chological effects of drugs,
and how parents can best
recogni~ the symptoms of use
and cope with the problem,
were the topics discussed by
James Roach in a talk Tuesday
uight to the American . Legion
Auxiliary ·of Drew WebsU!r
Post 39.
Introduced by Mrs. Jean
Wright, youth and children
chairman, Roach spoke
specifically of the problems in
Meigs County and urged
parents to educate their
children to the ill effect of
drugs and to be alert to any
symptoms which might in·
dicate drug use.'
He commenU!d on the college
drug problem but advised the
auxiliary to look at the local
scene - in not only the high
schools, but the junior high .
Local law enforcemtn of.
fleers a're taking special
training thst will equip them to
deal with the drug problem in
Meigs County. They are
. learning how· to identify drug
users, how pushers operate,
and how to offer help to youths
already hooked. These officers,
when trained, will be on constant alert for drug use signs in
"' their association with young
people of school age.
Skipping school for no apparent reason, a drop in
grades, a lack of interest or
enthusiasm for school events, a
request for money, the

~

~

Arran~ements to upholster

!'!

theSundaySchoolchairswere
made during :ruesday night's
,meeting of the Loyal Bereans
Class at the Middleport Church
·~ Christ.
Mrs. Betty Cline will purchase the necessary supplies
fur the upholstering work.
Clarence McNeal was app&lt;onU!d chairman df bottle
caps for a fund raising projt'rt.
ReporU!d ill were Hermari
Ohlinger, M(~. Mabel Walbl\l'n,
Mrs. Ullian Triplett, Mrs.
Bessie · Ashley,
Harry
McGuffin, Mrs. Minerva

THURSDAY
TWiN-CITY Shrlnettes, 7:30
Thursday. Col. and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. Plans will be
made for attending spring
noWJced the Buckeye Girl State
ceremonial in Columbus May
tea to be held on June 4 at 2
p.m. at the Trinity Church. She 6.
urged that members get out
MEET THE Candidate Night
and vote next week, and Thursday, 8 p.m. at Meigs Inn
following comments by Mrs. sponsored by Meigs County
Wright on the mental health Republican Women's Club. The
levy, the unit gave en- public is inviU!d to attend.
dorsement lo it.
COVERED DISH dinner
Named to the nominating Thursday · 6 p.m. Loy a I
commitU!e which will report at Women's Class Middleport
tile May meeting were Mrs. Church of Christ. Bring own
Pearl Knapp, Mrs. Catherine table service.
Welsh, and Mrs. Harris. Mrs.
MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Gerald Wildermuth and Mrs. Fellowship Thursday, 7:30
Gladys Cummings were ap- p.m. at Dexter Church of
pointed to the auditing com- Christ. Dicky 'Wiley, Midmittee.
dleport, will present several
ElecU!d as delegates to the musical numhers.
Department convention to be
REVIVAL AT Syracuse
held in Cincinnati in July were
Nazarene
Church nighUy, 7:30
Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Welsh, Mrs.
p.
m.
through
SWJday. Rev.
Ben Neutzling, and Mrs. Osby
Martin. The alternates are Lawrence Walker, Evangelist.
Mrs. Knapp, Mrs. Russell Rev. M. C. Larimore, pastor.
WOMEN'S ASSN., 7:30
Moore, Mrs. Grace Pratt, and
Thursday night, Middleport
Mrs. Paul Casci.
Poppy days were announced First United Presbyterian
by Mrs. Moore for Friday, May Church. Film, "Any Milk
19 and Saturday, May 20. The Today". Sewing to be
Friday workers will be Mrs. dedicated. Devotions by Mrs.
Neutzling, Mrs. Knapp, · Mrs. Marcus Cham1lers. Executive
Roy Reuter, and Mrs. Robert committee to serve.
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Couch. Saturda)' workers will
Pack
245, Thursday night, 7
be Mrs. Moore. Mrs. Wildermuth, Mrs. Casci, and mem- p.m. American Legion Hall.
Parents of cub scout asked to
bers of the junior Auxiliary.
atU!nd.
The unit voted to purchase a
RIVERVIEW GARDEN
pair of shoes for a Vietnam
veU!ran at the Athens Mental Club, at the Whitehead home,
Health Center. At the request 4:15p.m. Thursday, April 27.
of Paul Casci, the unit will Members will drive to Belpre
serve chili Saturday to boy to tour Collett's Greenhouse
scouts working in a community and dine out in Belpre.
cleanup project.
POMEROY CUB Scout Pack
Mrs. Pratt reporU!d on the 249 Thursday 7:30 p.m. at the
s~aghettidinnerheldSaturday IOOF Hall.
'rtrght and announced a rummage sale scheduled for May
FRIDAY
11-13 in the Reynolds building,
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Middleport.
Royal and Select Masters,
Dates announced in a special meeting Friday, 7:30
bulletin from Mrs . Charles p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Kessinger, District 8 president, Temple. Royal and select
included April 30, poppy shop master degrees to be conopen house at Sandusky; May ferred .
7, national hospital day at
PAST
MATRONS
of
Chillicothe; May 10, deadline
Evangeline Chapter. Mid·
for district and department
dleport, Friday 7:30 p.m. in
reports; June 1, district
basement dining room of
swnmer convention at LanMasonic Temple, Middleport.
caster; June 3, department
. DANCE, Pt. Pleasant High
junior conference at Ashland;
and June 4 Buckeye girls state School , Friday. Jays will
emcee. Admission 75 cents.
tea in Pomeroy.
School
sponsored.
Mrs. J. M. Thornton in a
legislative report noted that a
SATURDAY
bill is being considered which
CHICKEN
Barbecue
would give each wife, child or
paren I of a prisoner of war Saturday 11 a. m. till supply
certain educational benefits. It runs oul, rain or shine, Legion
provides for $200 a month for Park behind Post Office in
Middleport. Sponsored by
tuition.
Mrs. Welsh reported on Middleport firemen.
cards and flowers sent during
SUNDAY
the past month mentioning the
HYMN SING Sunday 1:30 to
fall of Mrs. Amanda Cook. A 4:30Wesleyan Unied Methodist
card will be sent to Mrs. Edna Church, Racine, Everyone
Williams, past district welcome,
president and department
HYMN SING Sunday
chaplain.
Stiversville
Community
Material on Kenya was
Church
Youth
Fellowship,
1:30
presenU!d by Mrs. Knapp. She
described the African coWJtry p. m. Everyone welcome.
as being smaller than the state
MONDAY
of Texas, with 17,000 students
MEIGS
CHAPTER,.Order
of
in college there. She said 93
percent of the population lives DeMo lay. regular meeting,
in rural areas where they are 7:30 Monday at the Masonic
divided into cultivators and Temple. Election of officers.
THEODORUS
COUNC~.
catUe ranchers. Mrs. George
Daughgers
of
America,
7:30
Hackett, Sr., displayed
Monday
night
at
the
IOOF
hall.
numerous pictures taken by
Dr. R. R. Pickens on his trip to First nomination of officers.
Africa. It was noU!d that there Games. Members to take
are about 150 deaths a year to cookies or sandwiches for
every .1.000 births. Life ex- social hour. Attendance urged.
POMEROY GARPEN Club
pendency is 46 years, with
Monday,
7:30 p. m., home of
malnutrition as Ihe main cause
Mrs. Edward Baer. Mrs. Roy
of death.
Betzing,
co-hostess. Guest
Mrs. Hackett displayed a
monkey skin rug which Dr. night. Mrs. Pauline Hester,
Pickens secured while he was speaker.
REVIVAL, Stiversville
there and showed a club which
was used to fight off wild Community Church Youth
Fellowship,. beginning Monanimals when on a safari.
day,
7:30 p. m. Rev. George
Mrs. Knapp and Mrs. Couch
were color bearers and Mrs. Hoschar, speaker.
RACINE BASEBALL assn.
Harris the sergeant at arms for
Monday
7 p. m. Club
the ritualistic opening:·~ •·
Refreshments were served Restaurant, Racine.
by Mrs. Knapp and Mrs.
Wright from a table carrying
TUESDAY
out the Kenya theme whith an
ELECTION
DAY Dinner
arrangement of animal
Forest Run United Methodist
replicas and a mask.

Charter
Draped For
2 Members
The charter was d·raped ami
memorial services conducU!d
for Mrs. Besse Weed and Mrs.
Kate Chase, both 50 year
members and past matrons,
when Pomeroy Chapter 186,

Order of the Easoorn Star, met
recently at the Masonic
Temple.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Woodard, worthy matron and
worthy patron of the chapter,
presided during which time
announcement was made of
Grand Chapter to be held Oct.
24-26 at Cleveland. Housing and
pre-registration information
was given. Several invitations
to atU!nd inspections and grand
visitations were exwnded.
A silent auction will be held
at the May meeting with the
instruction and examing
commitU!es to function and the
youth committee to report.
Mrs. Jane Brown, Mrs. Agnes
Brown, Mrs. Beulah Ewing and
Mrs. Mary Kautz were
hostesses.
STRAUSS MENDING
Otto
L. Strauss
is
recuperating at home following
three weeks at the Holzer
Medical Center. He spent the
first week in intensive care unit
for treatment of heart blockage
and subsequent insertion of a
pacemaker. Visiting here with
Mr. Strauss during his
hospitalization were his
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Levo of
Milwaukee. Wise.

The mountain laurel is the
'tate fl'ower of Pennsylvania .
according to Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

Church Tuesday. Menu includes soup, sandwiches, pie,
cake and homemade ice
cream.
POMEROY CHAI'TER OES
1116, Tuesday, 7:45 p. m.• at
Masonic Temple. Bring articles lor silent auction.
ELECTION DAY dinner at
Letart Falls Community Hall,
Tuesday. Menu includes ham,
chicken, soup, sandwiches, pie,
coffee, iced tea. Proceeds for
building fund.

.

'

.

Childers, Homer Jones and
Mrs. Alma .F.raser. RoWJd·
rubin cards were prepared for
Ohl.i!J.ger and Mrs. Walburn.
A goal of 29 was set by the
class fur \he SWJday School
attendance contest. Named as
hosU!sses for the May meeting
were Mrs. Eula Rice, Mrs:
Cathryn Ervin, and Mrs.
,.
Martha Childs.
Group singing of "Tis So
Sweet to Trust in Jesus" nnd
prayer by Mrs. Lena McKinler
opened the meeting. Scripture
by Mrs. Grace Hawley,
president, . was taken from
Ephesians 6:1-11. Mrs. Martha
Childs read "Prayer . of
Serenity," and Mrs. Hawley
gave "Education in 1872, Now
and Then," with Mrs. Edith
Spencer giving a closing
prayer.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Bernadine Kelly, Mrs.
Martha · Haggerty and Mrs.
Spencer to }8 members and a
guest, Martha McNeal.

Reg . G.ls

32.9

100 Octane

\

JJ.t

• •

Reg.
1.59

1

ss~

8 oz.

SPECIAL!

DIAL DEODORANT

WITH FREE 59'
With El Marko by Aair

AND BRIDES

7 oz.

ASPIRitt
300's $1.66

Reg..

sz.&amp;l

• • •

RIGHT GUARD
DEODORANT
Reg. 11.09
4

Ahay and June are a
time
for
congratulations and
remembrances. It's
time when almost
every family is in·
volved In someway
with Moms, Grads, or
Brides. At times like
this you'll be happy fo
have a full service
bank behind you. Use
your Checking Ac count from Farmers
Bank . You always
have a receipt with a
checking account.

ERGIRL

..........~~ Super
Sheer

oz.

•

........... ..............

Reg. 1.50

99~
•

• 89&lt;

No. 735

3 oz.

Reg.
1.89

1

GILLETTE
BLADES

Gillette

Open A
Otecking Account
Today At •••

• lull day's
feeding

1

14

ca.. ol6-

1

relieves cold dis·lre~;sl

The Farmers Bank &amp;-Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO

CONTAC
CAPSULES

BORN BLOND

Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9
a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum Insurance
For Each Depositor

LIGHTENER KIT

Reg. 11.69

Reg. 2.50

POWDER
BQ~N

IILOND
TONER $ lt

W.VA.
LOnQNTONER

ANNOUNCES:

"""'""'_
._,.,..........

ON£ !PPUCAIION

~

baby

won't IRRITATE eyes
3¥z oz.
ONLY
19~

shampoo

74~

Reg. - s1~a9

first creme rinse for children!

~oftmtm~

Reg. 79c

•llflflllMIIWITII.U/fl lfi.JW/Kf

---ACTUAL SIZE _ _ _;_,__

Arirait Size Available from Wallets to 30~40

•I/IJMW'IIT
~1.11117 I NI.IIIIJI(f·J Nl.fAKti.Y

*

7 01·

79~

save time this - summer

SOFTIQUE

ONLY

ONLY

foot
odor

HONE ()ff/C! J(J}I/AJPIIIGAYE. JCitJ/PYiii! 0111(1 _,S66Z

Nl{~~jrnef~K

,.

99

protein

I.

'2

Sl.Q9 .
Sl,59

2.25 OZ.
TUBE
.4.25 oz.
lUBE

INFANT FORMULA

.,
..
--------;-----Reg.

•

BABY

Reg.
$1.59

PLAIN
Reg .
$2.29

~POO

WITH IRON

Reg. 99'

16 oz.

Reg.

$2.59

59~

$139

-ANIMAL .

SHAPED SOAP
Reg. 79c

49$

Johnson . Baby Needs

.,..

STARTER SET
Reg.

$3:25

1.,

.,29

· NEWBORN

VITAMINS

SUAVE

99~

32· 11. oz . ca n

$1.87

100's

$ ,,.

69'

TO-USE
30's

Reg. 13.99

69

By the Case .

DAYTIME

6 essential vitamins
Plain o.r With Iron

FOR DIAPER RASH

Reg.

77¢

vitamins

DESITIN OINTMENT

Reg.

4

1'/z OZ.

$]49

POLY.
VI·
SUr
chewable

OIH1KBNT

2000
with

I

Reg. 11.29

LADIES' ·

BONNE BELL .
SHAMPOO

' helps
stop
wetness
and

53~

SELF OPENING
MEN'S

'

ENFAMI£
READY-

. . . smells as pretty
as your baby

.UMBRELLAS

~~ 17 Ol 55~

99
•

FAMILY SIZE
FRESHMINT AND
SPEARMINT FLAVOR
Reg.
1 09

59*

Trav 400's

no more tangles

88
FROST &amp; TIP ~-----..J-~~· ~- - - l ,_ _ _. . -.o~

BATH OIL BEADS

TO INTIOPVCE THE/II COLOR AIITIJTIW
•-,u·vi-fi'WitrdcM»/1

oz.

~

$339

APRIL 28th AND 29th
11 A.M.. TO 7 P.M.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
COLO/I PtMTIWT

4¥z

1

By Clairol
Reg. 15.95

ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN OUR STORE

/-1/z/1- tlf/Nt;

Reg. 12.00

..... 1...... ~ &lt;1111'

Master Portrait

W£011/A

Reg. 1.39
1

$1.29

SWABS

~Macleans$

POINT PLEASANT,

oz.

Reg.

Enter rhe SWABBIT CONTEST

T"""IIIIA!tK

""'-...l;..... ~ ...., .......

~·· ' '

~~

87~

1

,.._..
,....._

59*

WITH or WITHOUT IRON

11

t.b;
lotion

$1.29

Just open
and pour

8 oz.

9

oz.

Reg.

• no mixing

Reg. 2.19
30cc

O.J I '

ready to feed 32 oz cans

2.25

1

! ~•

SIN\ILAC®

V05 CREME
RINSE

Reg.

2.95

to MAY 6

for

Save!
Reg.

APRIL2f~-­

Reg. 69'
lO's

Reg. 89'
5's

2

GET ON THE SAVINGS BANDWAGON
DURING

IN EV£RY
eRlBf

Reg. 11.98

ASSORTED
SHADES

•

A~OTTLE

Super Gloss
for Lips

a

10 VACATION TRIPS
Pomeroy,O.

RIGHT GUARD
ANTI-PERSPIRANt

FOR MOTHERS, GRADS,

COME IN FOR OUR
FREE FOLDER FOR CHOICE OF ·

538 W. Main

AT NELSO.N'S

It's A Busy Time.

DISNEY WORLD

992-9981

~tV. ••+.I .
..0·1~ ,
~&amp;UWlAMA ••• p~U.ae4{4SU ~.

Reg. sl.69

LET'S GO TO

Certified Gas Stations

9- Tbe Daily.Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April27, t972

I

�;•

•

•

&amp;own; ~ · ·&lt;'&amp;M.~·"·T·;~~ ·

.

I
Social
·;
Project
Decided
Drugs Problem in . CalendarJ.·
~

@
~

I

.·

~

.

·

~

Schools Explained
disappearance of money or
anything of value around the
house, a major personality
change, and bloodshot eyes,
could .mean drugs, Roach
commenU!d. '
He advised parents to get rid
of old pills they have around
the house, to take more of an
interest in their children's
activities, and to encourage
schools and churches to
become involved. Roach spoke
of the alcohol and drug abuse
seminar which several young
people from Meigs County will
be attending this summer.
Roach named presidential
aspirants who have publicly
declared that they favor
legalizing marijuana and he
urged that now is the time for
people to write their legislators
expressing opposition to this.
In conclusion, the speaker
asked that boys and girls who
become involved in drugs be
giving a helping hand and that
they not be condemned
forever. The unit made a $5
contribution to the local drug
abuse program.
Mrs. Harry Davis presided
at the business meeting during
which time the District 8 junior
conference was announced for
Saturday at the Sacred Heart
Catholic Church. She presenU!d
a check for $34.75 from the Post
for conference expenses and
noted that Don Hunnel had
made the programs.
Mrs . Kenneth Harris,
Americanism chairman, an~
·'

Dz·ve at S~jJ~,n:g Event

£j

I

RUTLAND- Five members
of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners were in Logan
Saturday for lhe Region 11,
Ohio Association of Garden
Clubs, spring meeting at the
Immanuel Methodist Church.
Mrs. Joe Bolin of Rutland,
regional director, presided at
the business meeting and inu·odvced Mrs. Quentin Elder,
guest demonstrator on the
topic "A Splash of Spring."
Reports were given by Mrs.
William Willford, Region 11
secretary, and Mrs. Homer
Parker, regional publicity book

Attend Dinner
Mrs. Mary Martin and Mrs.
Myrtle Walker were at
Bradford Monday night to
attend a buffet dinner of the
Darke County Salon, Eight and
Forty.
Mr. Philo Westfall, chapeau,
conducted the meeting with the
·assistance of Jo Ann King, le
secretaire-cassiere. Annual
reports were discussed and
Mrs. Martin sp~ke to the group
on the various projects of Eight
and Forty and reported that 57
are now needed for goal in
Ohio. Donations were made by
the Salon to the various
p•ojects of the Salon.

contest chairman. Mrs.
Howard Birchfield handled the
OAGC publication sales.
Mrs. James Carpenter,
Meigs County garden therapy
chairman, assisted Mrs.
Willford,
club
therapy
chairman. in arranging a
garden therapy display of
items made by the special
education children at the
Rutland Elementary School.
Program books from 25 of
the 41 clubs in the region were
on display. A variety of plant
items for the sale table with
proceeds to go toward printing
the wildflower book were
contributed by the Rutland
Friendly Gardeners.

ATTEND RECEPTION
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Kesterson
and Mrs. Ben Buck were in
New Lexington SWJday and
Monday for the 50th wedding
anniversary of Mr .• and Mrs.
Perry Smith, attended by over
200 people. They thank the
people who sent them .cards
from Pomeroy. Mr. Kesterson 's birthday was also
celebrated Sunday with a big
dinner and birthday cake in his
honor . Mrs. Kesterson and
Mrs. Buck are sisU!rs of Mrs.
Smith.

MEN'S

SLACKS
In I 00% Dacron Polyester and
Cotton I Polyester

WRANGLERS AND
LEE TREVINO
Comes In Solids or Pal·
terns,
mature
cut
traditional and flare leg.
Perm . Press - machine
washable .

.,

.

..

'

..

.'

••

. 1 '

. B- The Daily Sentinel, MldcDeport-l'llnlerOy, 0 .. April 27, 1m

The physical and psy·
chological effects of drugs,
and how parents can best
recogni~ the symptoms of use
and cope with the problem,
were the topics discussed by
James Roach in a talk Tuesday
uight to the American . Legion
Auxiliary ·of Drew WebsU!r
Post 39.
Introduced by Mrs. Jean
Wright, youth and children
chairman, Roach spoke
specifically of the problems in
Meigs County and urged
parents to educate their
children to the ill effect of
drugs and to be alert to any
symptoms which might in·
dicate drug use.'
He commenU!d on the college
drug problem but advised the
auxiliary to look at the local
scene - in not only the high
schools, but the junior high .
Local law enforcemtn of.
fleers a're taking special
training thst will equip them to
deal with the drug problem in
Meigs County. They are
. learning how· to identify drug
users, how pushers operate,
and how to offer help to youths
already hooked. These officers,
when trained, will be on constant alert for drug use signs in
"' their association with young
people of school age.
Skipping school for no apparent reason, a drop in
grades, a lack of interest or
enthusiasm for school events, a
request for money, the

~

~

Arran~ements to upholster

!'!

theSundaySchoolchairswere
made during :ruesday night's
,meeting of the Loyal Bereans
Class at the Middleport Church
·~ Christ.
Mrs. Betty Cline will purchase the necessary supplies
fur the upholstering work.
Clarence McNeal was app&lt;onU!d chairman df bottle
caps for a fund raising projt'rt.
ReporU!d ill were Hermari
Ohlinger, M(~. Mabel Walbl\l'n,
Mrs. Ullian Triplett, Mrs.
Bessie · Ashley,
Harry
McGuffin, Mrs. Minerva

THURSDAY
TWiN-CITY Shrlnettes, 7:30
Thursday. Col. and Southern
Ohio Electric Co. Plans will be
made for attending spring
noWJced the Buckeye Girl State
ceremonial in Columbus May
tea to be held on June 4 at 2
p.m. at the Trinity Church. She 6.
urged that members get out
MEET THE Candidate Night
and vote next week, and Thursday, 8 p.m. at Meigs Inn
following comments by Mrs. sponsored by Meigs County
Wright on the mental health Republican Women's Club. The
levy, the unit gave en- public is inviU!d to attend.
dorsement lo it.
COVERED DISH dinner
Named to the nominating Thursday · 6 p.m. Loy a I
commitU!e which will report at Women's Class Middleport
tile May meeting were Mrs. Church of Christ. Bring own
Pearl Knapp, Mrs. Catherine table service.
Welsh, and Mrs. Harris. Mrs.
MEIGS COUNTY Women's
Gerald Wildermuth and Mrs. Fellowship Thursday, 7:30
Gladys Cummings were ap- p.m. at Dexter Church of
pointed to the auditing com- Christ. Dicky 'Wiley, Midmittee.
dleport, will present several
ElecU!d as delegates to the musical numhers.
Department convention to be
REVIVAL AT Syracuse
held in Cincinnati in July were
Nazarene
Church nighUy, 7:30
Mrs. Davis, Mrs. Welsh, Mrs.
p.
m.
through
SWJday. Rev.
Ben Neutzling, and Mrs. Osby
Martin. The alternates are Lawrence Walker, Evangelist.
Mrs. Knapp, Mrs. Russell Rev. M. C. Larimore, pastor.
WOMEN'S ASSN., 7:30
Moore, Mrs. Grace Pratt, and
Thursday night, Middleport
Mrs. Paul Casci.
Poppy days were announced First United Presbyterian
by Mrs. Moore for Friday, May Church. Film, "Any Milk
19 and Saturday, May 20. The Today". Sewing to be
Friday workers will be Mrs. dedicated. Devotions by Mrs.
Neutzling, Mrs. Knapp, · Mrs. Marcus Cham1lers. Executive
Roy Reuter, and Mrs. Robert committee to serve.
MIDDLEPORT Cub Scout
Couch. Saturda)' workers will
Pack
245, Thursday night, 7
be Mrs. Moore. Mrs. Wildermuth, Mrs. Casci, and mem- p.m. American Legion Hall.
Parents of cub scout asked to
bers of the junior Auxiliary.
atU!nd.
The unit voted to purchase a
RIVERVIEW GARDEN
pair of shoes for a Vietnam
veU!ran at the Athens Mental Club, at the Whitehead home,
Health Center. At the request 4:15p.m. Thursday, April 27.
of Paul Casci, the unit will Members will drive to Belpre
serve chili Saturday to boy to tour Collett's Greenhouse
scouts working in a community and dine out in Belpre.
cleanup project.
POMEROY CUB Scout Pack
Mrs. Pratt reporU!d on the 249 Thursday 7:30 p.m. at the
s~aghettidinnerheldSaturday IOOF Hall.
'rtrght and announced a rummage sale scheduled for May
FRIDAY
11-13 in the Reynolds building,
BOSWORTH Council 46,
Middleport.
Royal and Select Masters,
Dates announced in a special meeting Friday, 7:30
bulletin from Mrs . Charles p.m. at the Pomeroy Masonic
Kessinger, District 8 president, Temple. Royal and select
included April 30, poppy shop master degrees to be conopen house at Sandusky; May ferred .
7, national hospital day at
PAST
MATRONS
of
Chillicothe; May 10, deadline
Evangeline Chapter. Mid·
for district and department
dleport, Friday 7:30 p.m. in
reports; June 1, district
basement dining room of
swnmer convention at LanMasonic Temple, Middleport.
caster; June 3, department
. DANCE, Pt. Pleasant High
junior conference at Ashland;
and June 4 Buckeye girls state School , Friday. Jays will
emcee. Admission 75 cents.
tea in Pomeroy.
School
sponsored.
Mrs. J. M. Thornton in a
legislative report noted that a
SATURDAY
bill is being considered which
CHICKEN
Barbecue
would give each wife, child or
paren I of a prisoner of war Saturday 11 a. m. till supply
certain educational benefits. It runs oul, rain or shine, Legion
provides for $200 a month for Park behind Post Office in
Middleport. Sponsored by
tuition.
Mrs. Welsh reported on Middleport firemen.
cards and flowers sent during
SUNDAY
the past month mentioning the
HYMN SING Sunday 1:30 to
fall of Mrs. Amanda Cook. A 4:30Wesleyan Unied Methodist
card will be sent to Mrs. Edna Church, Racine, Everyone
Williams, past district welcome,
president and department
HYMN SING Sunday
chaplain.
Stiversville
Community
Material on Kenya was
Church
Youth
Fellowship,
1:30
presenU!d by Mrs. Knapp. She
described the African coWJtry p. m. Everyone welcome.
as being smaller than the state
MONDAY
of Texas, with 17,000 students
MEIGS
CHAPTER,.Order
of
in college there. She said 93
percent of the population lives DeMo lay. regular meeting,
in rural areas where they are 7:30 Monday at the Masonic
divided into cultivators and Temple. Election of officers.
THEODORUS
COUNC~.
catUe ranchers. Mrs. George
Daughgers
of
America,
7:30
Hackett, Sr., displayed
Monday
night
at
the
IOOF
hall.
numerous pictures taken by
Dr. R. R. Pickens on his trip to First nomination of officers.
Africa. It was noU!d that there Games. Members to take
are about 150 deaths a year to cookies or sandwiches for
every .1.000 births. Life ex- social hour. Attendance urged.
POMEROY GARPEN Club
pendency is 46 years, with
Monday,
7:30 p. m., home of
malnutrition as Ihe main cause
Mrs. Edward Baer. Mrs. Roy
of death.
Betzing,
co-hostess. Guest
Mrs. Hackett displayed a
monkey skin rug which Dr. night. Mrs. Pauline Hester,
Pickens secured while he was speaker.
REVIVAL, Stiversville
there and showed a club which
was used to fight off wild Community Church Youth
Fellowship,. beginning Monanimals when on a safari.
day,
7:30 p. m. Rev. George
Mrs. Knapp and Mrs. Couch
were color bearers and Mrs. Hoschar, speaker.
RACINE BASEBALL assn.
Harris the sergeant at arms for
Monday
7 p. m. Club
the ritualistic opening:·~ •·
Refreshments were served Restaurant, Racine.
by Mrs. Knapp and Mrs.
Wright from a table carrying
TUESDAY
out the Kenya theme whith an
ELECTION
DAY Dinner
arrangement of animal
Forest Run United Methodist
replicas and a mask.

Charter
Draped For
2 Members
The charter was d·raped ami
memorial services conducU!d
for Mrs. Besse Weed and Mrs.
Kate Chase, both 50 year
members and past matrons,
when Pomeroy Chapter 186,

Order of the Easoorn Star, met
recently at the Masonic
Temple.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Woodard, worthy matron and
worthy patron of the chapter,
presided during which time
announcement was made of
Grand Chapter to be held Oct.
24-26 at Cleveland. Housing and
pre-registration information
was given. Several invitations
to atU!nd inspections and grand
visitations were exwnded.
A silent auction will be held
at the May meeting with the
instruction and examing
commitU!es to function and the
youth committee to report.
Mrs. Jane Brown, Mrs. Agnes
Brown, Mrs. Beulah Ewing and
Mrs. Mary Kautz were
hostesses.
STRAUSS MENDING
Otto
L. Strauss
is
recuperating at home following
three weeks at the Holzer
Medical Center. He spent the
first week in intensive care unit
for treatment of heart blockage
and subsequent insertion of a
pacemaker. Visiting here with
Mr. Strauss during his
hospitalization were his
daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Levo of
Milwaukee. Wise.

The mountain laurel is the
'tate fl'ower of Pennsylvania .
according to Encyclopaedia
Britannica.

Church Tuesday. Menu includes soup, sandwiches, pie,
cake and homemade ice
cream.
POMEROY CHAI'TER OES
1116, Tuesday, 7:45 p. m.• at
Masonic Temple. Bring articles lor silent auction.
ELECTION DAY dinner at
Letart Falls Community Hall,
Tuesday. Menu includes ham,
chicken, soup, sandwiches, pie,
coffee, iced tea. Proceeds for
building fund.

.

'

.

Childers, Homer Jones and
Mrs. Alma .F.raser. RoWJd·
rubin cards were prepared for
Ohl.i!J.ger and Mrs. Walburn.
A goal of 29 was set by the
class fur \he SWJday School
attendance contest. Named as
hosU!sses for the May meeting
were Mrs. Eula Rice, Mrs:
Cathryn Ervin, and Mrs.
,.
Martha Childs.
Group singing of "Tis So
Sweet to Trust in Jesus" nnd
prayer by Mrs. Lena McKinler
opened the meeting. Scripture
by Mrs. Grace Hawley,
president, . was taken from
Ephesians 6:1-11. Mrs. Martha
Childs read "Prayer . of
Serenity," and Mrs. Hawley
gave "Education in 1872, Now
and Then," with Mrs. Edith
Spencer giving a closing
prayer.
Refreshments were served
by Mrs. Bernadine Kelly, Mrs.
Martha · Haggerty and Mrs.
Spencer to }8 members and a
guest, Martha McNeal.

Reg . G.ls

32.9

100 Octane

\

JJ.t

• •

Reg.
1.59

1

ss~

8 oz.

SPECIAL!

DIAL DEODORANT

WITH FREE 59'
With El Marko by Aair

AND BRIDES

7 oz.

ASPIRitt
300's $1.66

Reg..

sz.&amp;l

• • •

RIGHT GUARD
DEODORANT
Reg. 11.09
4

Ahay and June are a
time
for
congratulations and
remembrances. It's
time when almost
every family is in·
volved In someway
with Moms, Grads, or
Brides. At times like
this you'll be happy fo
have a full service
bank behind you. Use
your Checking Ac count from Farmers
Bank . You always
have a receipt with a
checking account.

ERGIRL

..........~~ Super
Sheer

oz.

•

........... ..............

Reg. 1.50

99~
•

• 89&lt;

No. 735

3 oz.

Reg.
1.89

1

GILLETTE
BLADES

Gillette

Open A
Otecking Account
Today At •••

• lull day's
feeding

1

14

ca.. ol6-

1

relieves cold dis·lre~;sl

The Farmers Bank &amp;-Savings Co.
POMEROY, OHIO

CONTAC
CAPSULES

BORN BLOND

Member Federal Reserve System
On Fridays Our Drive-In Window is Open 9
a.m. to 7 p.m., (Continuously).
$20,000 Maximum Insurance
For Each Depositor

LIGHTENER KIT

Reg. 11.69

Reg. 2.50

POWDER
BQ~N

IILOND
TONER $ lt

W.VA.
LOnQNTONER

ANNOUNCES:

"""'""'_
._,.,..........

ON£ !PPUCAIION

~

baby

won't IRRITATE eyes
3¥z oz.
ONLY
19~

shampoo

74~

Reg. - s1~a9

first creme rinse for children!

~oftmtm~

Reg. 79c

•llflflllMIIWITII.U/fl lfi.JW/Kf

---ACTUAL SIZE _ _ _;_,__

Arirait Size Available from Wallets to 30~40

•I/IJMW'IIT
~1.11117 I NI.IIIIJI(f·J Nl.fAKti.Y

*

7 01·

79~

save time this - summer

SOFTIQUE

ONLY

ONLY

foot
odor

HONE ()ff/C! J(J}I/AJPIIIGAYE. JCitJ/PYiii! 0111(1 _,S66Z

Nl{~~jrnef~K

,.

99

protein

I.

'2

Sl.Q9 .
Sl,59

2.25 OZ.
TUBE
.4.25 oz.
lUBE

INFANT FORMULA

.,
..
--------;-----Reg.

•

BABY

Reg.
$1.59

PLAIN
Reg .
$2.29

~POO

WITH IRON

Reg. 99'

16 oz.

Reg.

$2.59

59~

$139

-ANIMAL .

SHAPED SOAP
Reg. 79c

49$

Johnson . Baby Needs

.,..

STARTER SET
Reg.

$3:25

1.,

.,29

· NEWBORN

VITAMINS

SUAVE

99~

32· 11. oz . ca n

$1.87

100's

$ ,,.

69'

TO-USE
30's

Reg. 13.99

69

By the Case .

DAYTIME

6 essential vitamins
Plain o.r With Iron

FOR DIAPER RASH

Reg.

77¢

vitamins

DESITIN OINTMENT

Reg.

4

1'/z OZ.

$]49

POLY.
VI·
SUr
chewable

OIH1KBNT

2000
with

I

Reg. 11.29

LADIES' ·

BONNE BELL .
SHAMPOO

' helps
stop
wetness
and

53~

SELF OPENING
MEN'S

'

ENFAMI£
READY-

. . . smells as pretty
as your baby

.UMBRELLAS

~~ 17 Ol 55~

99
•

FAMILY SIZE
FRESHMINT AND
SPEARMINT FLAVOR
Reg.
1 09

59*

Trav 400's

no more tangles

88
FROST &amp; TIP ~-----..J-~~· ~- - - l ,_ _ _. . -.o~

BATH OIL BEADS

TO INTIOPVCE THE/II COLOR AIITIJTIW
•-,u·vi-fi'WitrdcM»/1

oz.

~

$339

APRIL 28th AND 29th
11 A.M.. TO 7 P.M.
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY
COLO/I PtMTIWT

4¥z

1

By Clairol
Reg. 15.95

ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN OUR STORE

/-1/z/1- tlf/Nt;

Reg. 12.00

..... 1...... ~ &lt;1111'

Master Portrait

W£011/A

Reg. 1.39
1

$1.29

SWABS

~Macleans$

POINT PLEASANT,

oz.

Reg.

Enter rhe SWABBIT CONTEST

T"""IIIIA!tK

""'-...l;..... ~ ...., .......

~·· ' '

~~

87~

1

,.._..
,....._

59*

WITH or WITHOUT IRON

11

t.b;
lotion

$1.29

Just open
and pour

8 oz.

9

oz.

Reg.

• no mixing

Reg. 2.19
30cc

O.J I '

ready to feed 32 oz cans

2.25

1

! ~•

SIN\ILAC®

V05 CREME
RINSE

Reg.

2.95

to MAY 6

for

Save!
Reg.

APRIL2f~-­

Reg. 69'
lO's

Reg. 89'
5's

2

GET ON THE SAVINGS BANDWAGON
DURING

IN EV£RY
eRlBf

Reg. 11.98

ASSORTED
SHADES

•

A~OTTLE

Super Gloss
for Lips

a

10 VACATION TRIPS
Pomeroy,O.

RIGHT GUARD
ANTI-PERSPIRANt

FOR MOTHERS, GRADS,

COME IN FOR OUR
FREE FOLDER FOR CHOICE OF ·

538 W. Main

AT NELSO.N'S

It's A Busy Time.

DISNEY WORLD

992-9981

~tV. ••+.I .
..0·1~ ,
~&amp;UWlAMA ••• p~U.ae4{4SU ~.

Reg. sl.69

LET'S GO TO

Certified Gas Stations

9- Tbe Daily.Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April27, t972

I

�.• 'f ,. , r ,. r ,.. •

.
1

10-:rhellailySentinel,Middleport·Porm;roy,O.,April27.1972

.

.

,

WANT ADA
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M . Day Before Publication .
Will

Of r
IUAlln

untll9a .m . tor
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The PubiiJher reserves the
right to edit or rtiect any ads
beacc_ ept~

1970 FORD
5i999
Custom St. Wagon, 351 eng ., automatic trans ., power
t:irakes, good tires , clean interior, beige fini sh , radio.

for more than one Incorrect
Insertion .

RATES

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid 'withln 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum .

l

v.a

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EYE'- 8:00P.M.
.Pj)MEROY, OHIO '

In Memory

away.

Sadly missed by
Ooroth.y
and
Yeauger .

wile and
Norman
• ·27-lfc

Notice
THE

WOMEN (18 to 351 . Are you
tired of your present routine?
Do you dream about world
travel. meeting new people,
exciting work? The Women's
Army Corps has niany

openings · available

by
O..y, Week, Month
Liberal Rates

.

PH. 992·3629
I WILL NOT be responsible tor
any debts contracted b{
anyone other than mysel .
Signed: Richard C. Eblin , 652
OSborne St., Pomeroy.
4·26·3tp
GUN SHOOT, also rlfte matches
.j..· -open sites only. Forked
I!JJn.Sportsman Club, Sunday,
April 30, 12 noon.
4-26·3tc
GUN Shoot, Saturday, April
29th. 6 p.m . at Racine Fire
Dept. Bldg . Bacon. hams and
If• hog.
4·26-3tc
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, April 30,
1 p . m . Factory choked buns
only. Second place shooters
get free shot In ne.t malch .
Assorted meats. Racine Gun
Club .
4-21 ·3tc

for

qual ified young women. For
com plete Information call 593.
3022 .
• ·27·3tc

f971 OPAL Rally, 4 speed, call
992-5848 after 4 p.m.
4-26·3fc

1964 OLDS 4 dr , hardtop. See
Roger Gaul. Rl , 3. Pomeroy
or call 985-3374.
4-26-31p
1969 OLDS Culiass, -excellent
condition , power steer i ng ,
factory air and stereo. phone
992·2580.
.
4-26-&amp;tc

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

"NOTICE"

CARRIER
WANTED IN
POMEROY
THE DAILY
SENTINEL
99l·2156

Pomeroy

WAITRESS, Apply in person,

Craw 's Steak House.
4·25-6tc

WANTED!
Carriers For
MASON
and
HARTFORD

Used Cars In Town
At Dependable City

- - - - - --

'67 FORD Gaiaxle, 4 door, V·8
engine - S700i '64 Chevrolet
Impala, power steering , 4
door, V·6 - $450; phone 992·
3213.
4·26·6tp

------:--

1966 PLYMOUTH Barra cuda.
V-8, 4 speed. Phone 742-4851 if
interested .
4·23-6tp
1957 FORD, • dr. Fair lane , fa ir
condition, phone 949.3050 or
see Ralph Rose .
4-25-3tp
t961 ·FOR 0 700, 195" wheel
base, used on paved highway,
exceptionally good , 5 speed
transmission, 2 speed axle.
good tires. Phone 985·3554,
Harold Brewer , Long Bottom .
4·23-ttc

WOULD you like a better iob
than you now have? Can you
meet people? Any sales ex·
per ience. Local Company
needs 2 permanen t men . Good
Wages , Man y benef its. All
local work. Phone 949·3811.
4-26-4tc

.

1968 Valiant
2

•

Door, slant six, T·Fiite, 31,000 miles.

1969 Volkswagen $1695
2 Door , 4 speed, 22.000 miles, sharp.

The Daily Sentinel
Ph. 614-992-2156

1968 Rambler
American Wagon , six cy l. , automatic , ready
to go .

1969 Rambler $1595

Female Help Wanted
TEACHER OR SUBSTITUTE
TEACHER . A Marshall Field
. family -owned enterprise has
Interesting summer vacation
poslllon fn lhis vicinily In
school related sales work . An
opportunlly to earn up to
Sl ,SOO for summer depending
on ability, effort, and length
of vacation. For Immediate
local i nterview ca ll William
Logan at 16141 594-3161, exl. 22
on Thursday, April 27 from 9
a.m . to 9 p.m.
4-26-2tp

milk house equipped, 2 si los;
all outside buildings; 2 ponds:
hard surface r oa d ; see
any t ime, 2 miles N. of Rt. 7 on
Sumner Rd ., Co . Rd . 36, II
miles NE of Pomeroy , M. V.
Fryar .
4·25·31p

------

CO ME an d see us . Two
beautiful new homes, 1/ 2 mile
Norlh of Eastern High School
on St . Rt . 7, Both homes have
4 bedrooms . bath and a half,
built In kll chens and uliiity
rooms; wa ll to wall carpet
will be installed soon. One
house has a large family room
and a den . Both have a
garage . Get um while they
lasl. Ca ll Sherman Sum .
merf leid 985·3598.
4-14·1fc

------

Male Help Wanted

- - -- - -

CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE :
OR SUBSTITUTE
Mums, Geraniums, Pansies, TEACHER
TEACHER
, A Marshall Field
and Petunias . Geraldine
family
-owned
enterprise has
Cleland, E. Main St., Racine .
ln leresting summer vacation
0 -tfc
position In this vicinity In
school relaled sales work . An
YARD Sale, Friday and
opportunity to earn up · to
Saturday , some ant iques; on
$1,500 for summer depending
Larkin St., Rutland.
on abi lity, effort and length of
4·26·3fc
vacation . 'For immediate
loca l In ter view call William
Logan al (614) 594·3161 Ext . 22
on
Thursday, April 27, from 9
o ·EAL
DIRECT
WITH
a.m.
lo 9 p .m.
COSMETIC MANUrAc .
4-26-21p
TURER .
BE
IN ·
DEPENDENT!
Merle
Norman Cosmetics Is offering
a rewarding opportunlly In
Mason, West VIrgin ia. Open
your own c::osmetlc store or AKC puppies - Schnauzers,
PoOdle s. Cairn Ter ri ers ,
combine with your business.
healthy home ra ised. per·
no franchise fee .•. no house to
manent injecti ons, wormed house selling ... no mid·
175 - $85 ; Coolville 661 ·6214.
dleman . Call us toll free 18001
4·26-12tp
421 ·2060, or write Merle
Norman Cosmetics , LN26 ,
9130 Bellanca Avenue, L.A.,
C.litornla 90045 . .
4·21· 11P

1970 Plymouth
Duster 2 door, six cyl. , 3 speed. one owner .

RAWLINGS
DEPENDABLE CITY
992·2151 OR 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT
OPEN UNTIL 8:00P.M. each evening except
Saturday &amp; Sunday.
I

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
RUTLAND
3 BEDROOMS - bath , gas hea l , ci l y water , Front porch:
some paneling . Large lot near school and stores. Only
16.000 .00 .
HARRISONVILLE
1
7 ROOMS - Carpeted - 3 bedrooms , l'll belhs. Modern
kitchen, nice front porch. Ph acres . Uti lity building 40x70
with additi onal room.
CHESHIRE
COMMERCIAL LOT - Has old block build ing, suitable
for service station , garage, antique shop, etc.
SYRACUSE
4 rooms - Ful,l basement, nice kitchen. All utilities. Level
lot . Asking only $2500.00.
NEAR RACINE
2 ACRES PLU S- Level iol on Rt. 124. N ice tor new home
or mobile home . All utilities available. $500 .00 down $31 .18
a month.
NEW LISTING
NEW - 3 bedrooms with larg e closels . Bath. with shower.
Kitchen has stove and refr igerator . living and dining
carpeted . Util ity room . Sidewalks, storm doors and
wi ndows. Nice level lol with metal utility building.

Pets For Sale

More Classifieds

On Page, 12

OLD FURNITU~E 1 dishes.
clocks, bra.. 'oeas, sliver
dollars
or
' complete RACINE - 6 room house, bath,
households . Write M . D.
uti lily room, garage, $10,000 :
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, onto.
phone 949·4195.
Call 992-6271 . .
.
3·31-tfc
3·16·tfC
A-::
R-::
G-::
E,...,.Io"'"
ts-,_6_r_oo_m
- s,b ath ,
2:-cLcHALL ICRAf!TE RS
radio
garage, cellar $8,500; Magg ie
r,eceiver, model SX·43 or
Whllllnglon,
Depot
St ..
42. Phone 992·2118.
Rutland, Ollie.
•
4-7·30tp
4-2Htp

Real Estate For Sale

sx.

I .

General Contractor

POINT OmCE
SUPPLY

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core .
·Nathan Biggs
Radiator Speclollst

Complete

line of office
furniture &amp;
supplies. Typewriter &amp;
Adding Machine Repair.

equipment,

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

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

P1 . Pleasant

~~:l

:::te

992·3020
160 Coal St.
Middleport
POMEROY
Lovely home - 3 b.r .. full bath
and porch up. living room ,
and din ing room both 21 ft.,
large buflt.fn kitchen. v,
beth, full basement, garage .
Bonus with th is house is deep
freeze, two refrigerators, air
cond .. all carpet and drapes.
511,000.
MIDDLEPORT ,
• B. R.. l wo full baths, a ll
brick home, Lovely bul'lt· ln
ki t chen, fami ly room , on
large corner lot. lhat is
com pletely fenced in . Owner
will help finance .
Hysell Run - All electric
hom e with 3 b.r .. family
room, l iving room. is car.
peted and paneled , kitchen
has wall oven and range top,
lots of cabi nets, bar, on 3
acres .
Also
has
full
besement . Very secluded.
Some Farms and Lots.

'.

BUILDING LOTS " Branchwood Subdivision at Rock
Springs , Tuppers Plains
water . Phone 992·2789.
4·27-12tc

'5.55

-GUARANTE~ED­

Phone 992-209,4

HOUSE , Phone 992-6103.
4·19-12tc

Pomeroy Home &amp;
'

KITCHEN
ancl
SON
CONST.

Office 992 .2259 Till4:00
Sundays &amp; Evenings 992.-2568
WE WOULD Ll KETO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY FOR
YOU .

"Everything In Homo

Mllntenance"
MEIGS, W.VA. 25260
ME tGS 992-7151
MASON 713-5634

TERMITES. •TERMITES,
CHI Rid of Thorn
We will protect any single
dwelling resldonco for

'149.50
WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect 614-452-3158

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main St.
Z.nosville, Ohio

DOZER MiD back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks: B&amp;K
Excavallng. Phone 992.5367,
Dick Karr, Jr.
4·27-6tc
GOOD' S PENNZOIL LAWN
CARE. We furnish the men+
mowers. Free estimate . Low
charge, for Information phone
992.9975.
4· 211- 12tc

CASH paid for all makes and SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
models of mobile homes .
doors and windows, carports 1
Phone area code 614-423·9531 .
marquees, aluminum siding
4·13·tfC
and railing. A . Jacob, sales
representative. For free
1965 SO X 10 MOBILE home,
estimates, phone Charles
phone 241 ·2161.
Lisle, ' Syracuse, V . V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
4-25-61c
3·2-ttc

-----The Station

' That~ Listei(s ·

MILLER

MOBILE num

M b'l H F Sale
(Unlicensed?
we
give
.
::l:e~:om:;es~=o~r=~!!!~;;;;;;;;;;
exam guidance . ) All ad ·
·

ver tising , all signs. forms,
supp lies furnished . Skilled
Training and Inst r uction
given for rapid development
from Starl to SuceSS.
Nationwide advertising
brings
Buyers
from
Everywhere ,
Can
you
qualify? You mu st have
lni tialive, excellen t characler
lbondabl el, sales abllllr· be
financia ll y r espons bl&amp; .
Commisslon . volu me op .
portunity lor man, woman ,
couple or team That Can Sell.
Informati on
without
obl igation , I M . Diggs.
Manager, Strout Realty, Inc ..
311 · P
Spring field
Ave . ,
Summit. N. J, 07901.
4·27·11(

30 ACRES . 3 bedroom home,
vinyl siding, eleclrlc heat.
Tuppers Plains water tap. 3
miles south of Tuppers Plains
jusl off Rl . 7 on County Road
28 - ,$16.500 reduced price ,
phone 667·3336 ,
4·26·41p

I,

:1o l'ou

LhllaES •

1220Washinglon Blvd.
Belpre,Ohio

Travel Trailer Closeout

•, ; ,

;1'-.~t"'

'

t.l

;~ '~~R~·E:J
~ .~
·--

y.

]1

I

·Y

·~·

• ..J ··--.

Ifll ~, NIA. I• , 11" • • , U ~ rol Olt

We'ltE VEitV MUCH

On Your

INTO

DRAMA

AT

.WEST VIRGINIA
l/NIVER$1T'rf

Home

81MO

.SS9fl

;..--- J...

AND, YOU'VE ~ROBABLY HEARD OF

BUT•• •!

T~IS NEW H · MILLION- DOLLAR

DONT SEE

WtN AN'&gt;Ot&gt;JE

WE HAVE AN

IIAYE

HEARl&gt;

0~ YOUR FAMOUS

CRFATIVS AR13" CliNTER

WEST VIRGINIA
HAMS!

OUTSTANDING
TI-/EATER ARTS

EFt .•

~ACU LTV

NO...
A61Y.-~­

Free Estimate

. DOLLAR· A·VEAR
C~ERK EMB&amp;ZZ~E

Coii992-3S23
For Appointment
·Fully lnsurod for your
protection .

FRQY. lHE CJJMPAIIN '?

8RINGMEA

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp;· PLUMBING CO.

®

COLD DRINK
·•.II

- EXJT iT HAIN'T GI TTIN' WHAT
iT WANTS- IT'S G ITTIN ' WHUT'S
GOOD FO' IT.~" r------

ytlr •round. No rrittttr wtt1t
your nood. Complole roof or
spouting ropalr. lntwrlor or
exterior corpantry . Coiling
ttleand Panellngand Siding .
Complelo
Plumbil&gt;lt &amp;
Hooting.
'
Day Number 992·2550 1
Wt have 14 hr. emorgoncy

YOU CAME TO ASK
FOR A RAISII ... AN

.

'

ol,-7."'--..,- --.,.-=....lJ

service. ~

992·5803

742-)947
RI&amp;E AND &amp;&gt;HINE,
&amp;IRDIE: .11MEFOR WORK.

wE'D BEHER YOU OWN THE:
RUSH OR
WE'LL BE
LATE!

Johnson MasoniY
&amp; Remodeling ..·
'

FOR THE BEST IN
CERAMIC TILE

,,'

Lei utshow our samples ,
Lei· Us -Oo·Over· Your
Bathroom or Kitchen
Insured-But best of all
" WE'RE HONEST
Ph . 992 ·7608

Pomeroy, Ohio

HARRISON ' S TV and Antonno
Service . Phone 992·2S22 .
11-10-tfc

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

L.;mG
lD\IJ~ IN llle
I.\ID\'J6ST

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator 's license? Cali 992·
2966.
6·15·tfc

'OJ FmWll-~
WI~R~.MP

Cf C,&amp;.i.LED
DJLLSVIU..!i'.

EXPERT
Tree
Service,
trlmm lng and removal - :
Richard Hayman, phone 667· ·
3041 ,
.j.2!).30tp :

-=-=-----SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller

·
Sanitation, Stewart, Otllo. Ph . •
662-3035 .
2·12·ftC

UPH
-O-l:7
'~T-E_R_i_N_G_S_E_R_VICE,
complete selection of fabrics
and vinyl to choose from .
Pick.up and delivery. Slater
Upholstering, Rt . 3, Pomeroy,
phone 992·31117.
3·28·30tp

ACROSS

I. Rich
soli
Senseless
1alk
(slang)
9. Pyle
11. Mature
~.

HOUSE BUILDERS. CALL
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
OHIO.
3·5·301C

----------

FOUND

~~F'9
"::

'IM!

-c. ---BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Complete ServIce
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

•

5·1·tfc
SEWING MACHINES. Repair

service, all makes . 992·22~.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
J.29· ttc

beloved

10. Sword·

43. Whirlpool
DOWN

I. Outcast
2. Spellbind
in a way
3. Heavenly

Love
Song "
14. Mexican
porridge
15. Seine
season
16. Egyptian
cotton
Piglet's
mom
Acquittal
One
·of
the
Cratchits
22. F;ortune

dessert
4. Mrs.
Andre
Previn
5. Car part
6. Bright·
ened

shaped

12. Nee
Wood·
ward
17.Peer
Gynt's .
. mother
20. Merit
:13. 1rlsh·
Gaelic
·24. PIUage
'25. Infest;
Invade
26. Most
pallid

Yellenby'• A.n•'f. r

28. Gen.

'I

Wain·
wright

was one
(abbr.)

'

delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est motes . Phone 992·3214 .
Goegleln Ready .M ix Co.,
Middleport, onto.
6·JO.tfc

MY HAVE ANTI·
'5EARCHL16HT5 5eT UP. WHOlE

A1 A GUE55, 1'17 SAY

A~RAFl'

IIORI7t:~'5 l~ IJ' LIKE
A SIJ~RMAI!I(ET

OPeNING!

,

Due to Shake Haven Business we will deal only
in Trailer Rentals and Svpplles.
Al.l '72 Models. Fully ~lf·Contained.
14'. 18'. 20' Units.

31. Venti·

Iated

3Z. Actress

Jessica

31. 100
stotinki
39.Jtallan
three

bride

river

28. Brenner
or
Donner
29. Florid
3D. Skunk
33. Parabola
at. Wonder·
ment
35. Inlet
36. Soviet
moun-

.''

AriiOici
. . .. Grete

·r.·

Rutliftd, 0.' . 1

I

YnleN•r'•

'

RIJliAND ·fURNituRE·

VOU J'U&amp;I CAN'"T
~Ui 'I'OUIII: EVES
"10 THIS!

l

(Aal:••n 1

Ja..w.lo DAISY CRilL AIIOUII ITUIDT _

carefully
21.·Engllsh

AN

I

New•-lhe
. ctrcWiel&amp;en
v "~
1 1 1· tota·ie~ ••••
~~h~A~~~~-~~·!!~·~·~~==·~=•==.,~u.~~··~
[,
Ptill . . . . . . ,..
l.t I I I l

U. Poet
Marianne
26. Array

ETIN

TINCLE

tJ I

TOBENNI

'

I Also Have 1-1971 Model To Go./

II

30. Outmodedj

23. Loben·
grin's

=R~E7A~D~Y.7M~I~X--CO_N_C_R~ETE

Georae

snow

Unoenmbletheltf111rJumbles,
' ono letter to each ~~quare, to
form !our ordinary wordo.

prayer
8. Abelard's

of

=--.13. "-

WIVE

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. ~·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-12-ttc

BACKHOE AND DOZER work
Septic tanks Installed:
, (Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·28fa.
HS.tfc

38. Unyielding
40. Mitts
41. Cornered
42. Field

~rg~lb'];!'-'.::::ei...J=

7. Christian

tains

' ~42-4211

.....

DEGRADING,
SliLITTLING

.•WMP.0/1390 . : - : - - - - - ON YOUR DIAL

l .M.
liCllNCOOLE.

EMI!ARAA61ii1NC&gt;,

"To Be Sold Slightly Above Cost"

SR 7, Chester. 0.

'

'Mlt.ILD SU6PECT Mf!..

FRIDAY • SATURDAY •
SUNDAY
APRIL 28 • 29 • 30

Phone 985-3832

..

I

I •

GAUL'S TRAILER SALES

'

••

r '( r (r~· · r rt"'

::.::

.,

11/UIJ!II//AfSIIJ/1/C

_Au~

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main , Pomeroy , 0.

Cleland
Realty

••

,.

·,..

GO

HOME NOW,
JUGHAID

'lOONG· UNS ARE ENUFF TO
DRIVE ME OUT OF MY
MORTAL MIND

742-4761
We 1re fully in~urtd

On Most American C11rs

·ll' ; 141 • 24' • WiDE
Real Eslate Ooportunity . CAN
YOU SEL L??? Your own full ·
lime business. Real Estate.
right In th is area. National
company, est•blished In 1900,
larges l
in
its
f ield .

'IE

THIS DA'I 'S OV.:R AN' DONE
WITH --· THEM DADBURN

Wh,el Alignment

Real Estate For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

.,.

iltRU MAY 15
1000 SQ. Fr. OF

EXPERT

TREE trimm ing or removal.
Years' experience. Charles
Baker. phone 949·2723.
4·25·7fc

RENOVATED BRICK
MIDDLE PORT - 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms , bath , paneled,
t iled, carpeted, storage
building,
level
lot .
6.950.00 .
MAKE US AN OFFER
POMEROY- 2 story frame,
3 bedrooms, kitchen, living
room, cellar , In fairly good
condition. WOULD MAKE A
NICE HOME .
WASHINGTON COUNTY
VINCENT - large 2 story
frame. renovated Inside.
bath ,
basement ,
some
carpeting , 1 acre ground,
large barn , 2 chicken houses.
PONY GOES WITH HOME.
$15,900 00.
TO SELL LIST
WITH CLELAND'S
POMEROY In good
ondition, 2 bedrooms, bath,
sement, kitchen has nice
cabi nets, A GOOD PLACE
TO LIVE $7,000.00.
A
REALTOR
IS
IN ·
TERESTEO in serving you,
his client, to the best possible
ends and abides by such a
comm llment.
Henry E. Cleland Sr .
Realtor

,..

240 Linttln St .
Mldcfloport, Ohio
Dill Anthony Plumbing
We hova • comploto Homo
·M aintonaiico Sorvlco tho

WE HAVE MANY r;EW HOMES, SOME LIKE NEW,
AND SOME OLDER ONES IN GOOD CONDITION.
PI CTURES OF THE ABOVE ARE AT THE OFFICE .
DROP IN AND SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER .
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992·3325
'92·2378

- - - - --

Business Opportunities

For .1\ppointment
Phone 949-2803

American 2 door, six cyl., 3 speed, extra nice.

FAR M. 160 acres, dairy or beef:

large bank barn , 27 stan chion ,

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

R. I. DIJBBELD

424 Main St.

See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

Real Estate For Sale

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR'
AIR CONDITIONING

PHONE 675·3628

Not A Motor Route.

TEACH your Dollars to have ATTRACTIVE POSITION . Full
or part.lfme sales openings
more Cents, by shopping at
with
Field
Enlerprlses
Hayman's Auction eoch
Educational Corf. explaining
Friday night. This Friday,
to parents lates educational
April 28th, one lot of nice '
materials to help youngsters
clean furniture and many
make the most of schooling . RAC INE other Items too numerous to
10 room house .
No
sales
experience
balh , bBsement, garag e, two
mention. Sale starts at 7 p.m .
necessary . Free tra i ning .
4·21 -1tp
lots. Phone 949-4313.
Exceptional income op·
4-5-Jotp
portun i t y . For Interv iew
SAVE up to one half. Bring your
appolnlment call Will i am
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
Logan at (614) 590161 ext. 22 3 BEDROOM ranch lype home ,
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
on Thursday, April 27 , from 9
.j.A.ttc
Plains. All new with total
a.m. to 9 p.m .
electric and central air
4·26·21p
•
REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
condll lonlng , bath and 'I• fully
Service, $50 Reg. Mares, $40
car peted. full basement,
Grade ; Francis Benedum,
garage in basement. See by
Phone 667·3856.
appointment, phone 992-2196
3·30-30tc ATTRACtiVE POSITION , Ful l
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson .
or
parf.f
lme
sales
openings
Financ ing ava ilable.
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ... The
wllh
Field
Enterprises
12·30. ttc
exeltlng New Weight Waf.
Educational
Corf
.
explaining
chen (RI Program can help
to parents lates educationa l SiX ROOM house , 133 Butternut
you . For local class In·
materials
lo he lp youngsters
Ave , Contact Ed Hedrick , 2137
formation call TOLL -FREE
make the most of schooling .
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
8()0.582·7026.
Ohio, phone 237-4334,
No
sa l es
experience
4-17-24tc
necessary . Free t raining .
11 ·2 1-ttc
E)(Ceptional income op ·
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
portunity , For Interview NICE J.story home with lull
wigs. Need extra money? Just
appo i ntment call WiJiiam
basement , 2 lots , new forced
sell these products . No
Logan at (614) 594·31 61 ext . 22 , air furna ce , ~ ear Pomeroy.
restricted territories . Phone
on Thursday, April 21 , fr om 9
Elementary Schoo l. Phon e
992· 5113.
a.m
.
to
9
p
.m
.
992·7384
lo see.
4.z.ttc
11-1·1fc
4·26·2tp

Wanted To Buy

$1395

.•·

. ..

Free Estimate

Spring .
Painting?

THE NEWEST - - -

Auto Sales

Help Wanted

Court St.

MEIGS INN
ROOMS

304 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-3795
or Mason 773-5535

SEE US
EXPERIENCED IN
INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR
PAINTING
Phone 742-5825
or 992-6576

•

'

Only

@

1

Jtre ~ICDI · .. ~

Specializing In
Sr11a11 Businesses

.

BLIND ADS

IN LOVING memory of Frank
Beach who passed away one
year ago, April 26, 1971.
A heart of gold stopped beating,
Two shining eyes at rest ;
•God broke our hearts to prove to
us, He only takes the best .
God knows you had to leave us,
But you didn 't go alone ;
For part of us went with you,
The day he took you home .
To some you are forgotten, To
others lust part ol the rast ;
But to us who loved and los you ,
Your memory will always
lost.
It's a lonesome house without
you, And sad has been the
way ;
For life and home are not the
same, Since you were called

dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by flout or contract .
Free Estirilat01. We IISO
haul fill dirt, top soit Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992· 3525
after 1 p.m.

1969 FORD ~·, TON - l
_.
52149
Pick. up, 8' wide body, heiavy duty spring s, 4 speed trans.;
360
engine, Delu xe cab with body ml.dg. 750x16 heavy
duty l lres, step bumpers, maroon f inish . Extra clean &amp;
nice.

EJCI"I additional ward 2c .
Additional 25c Ctlarge per
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOURS
8: 30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Da lly,
8 : 30 a,. m. to U : OO Noon
Saturday.

Dozer &amp; · End loader work,
ponds, basement, land·

1969CHEVROLET
$899
Biscayne4 dr·. v.a, automatic tr ans., p. steering &amp; brakes,
white finish, blk . vinyl int erior.

- •

1-f\f' ]j

KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

scaping. We have 2 siJe

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per word one insert ion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions.
11 cents Per word SIK con secutive InSertions.

BALLS 0' FIRE
I SHORE AM TICK LED

(

Business Services
. EARTH MOVING

deemed
obtectional .
Tt11t
publlst'lerwill not be responsible '

~·

\

'

-Po11eroy
Motor Co.

ZSIGNS

MOnday Deadline 9 a.m .
Cancellation - Corrections

r ,

.

.

'

,

'

.Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get R:es;ults!:'
'

~

TL ,LGEETKN

T'cEB

PTTS

IT

IUACF
WTHHTK

M UTV G
VTCGB

Aaowm

n.,.w.,. 1M • ..,..,......,. •I
IJift&lt;llea--11111
·

coal

�.• 'f ,. , r ,. r ,.. •

.
1

10-:rhellailySentinel,Middleport·Porm;roy,O.,April27.1972

.

.

,

WANT ADA
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P.M . Day Before Publication .
Will

Of r
IUAlln

untll9a .m . tor
Day of Publication
REGULATIONS
The PubiiJher reserves the
right to edit or rtiect any ads
beacc_ ept~

1970 FORD
5i999
Custom St. Wagon, 351 eng ., automatic trans ., power
t:irakes, good tires , clean interior, beige fini sh , radio.

for more than one Incorrect
Insertion .

RATES

25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid 'withln 10 days.

CARD OF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 for 50 word minimum .

l

v.a

Pomeroy Motor Co.
OPEN EYE'- 8:00P.M.
.Pj)MEROY, OHIO '

In Memory

away.

Sadly missed by
Ooroth.y
and
Yeauger .

wile and
Norman
• ·27-lfc

Notice
THE

WOMEN (18 to 351 . Are you
tired of your present routine?
Do you dream about world
travel. meeting new people,
exciting work? The Women's
Army Corps has niany

openings · available

by
O..y, Week, Month
Liberal Rates

.

PH. 992·3629
I WILL NOT be responsible tor
any debts contracted b{
anyone other than mysel .
Signed: Richard C. Eblin , 652
OSborne St., Pomeroy.
4·26·3tp
GUN SHOOT, also rlfte matches
.j..· -open sites only. Forked
I!JJn.Sportsman Club, Sunday,
April 30, 12 noon.
4-26·3tc
GUN Shoot, Saturday, April
29th. 6 p.m . at Racine Fire
Dept. Bldg . Bacon. hams and
If• hog.
4·26-3tc
GUN SHOOT, Sunday, April 30,
1 p . m . Factory choked buns
only. Second place shooters
get free shot In ne.t malch .
Assorted meats. Racine Gun
Club .
4-21 ·3tc

for

qual ified young women. For
com plete Information call 593.
3022 .
• ·27·3tc

f971 OPAL Rally, 4 speed, call
992-5848 after 4 p.m.
4-26·3fc

1964 OLDS 4 dr , hardtop. See
Roger Gaul. Rl , 3. Pomeroy
or call 985-3374.
4-26-31p
1969 OLDS Culiass, -excellent
condition , power steer i ng ,
factory air and stereo. phone
992·2580.
.
4-26-&amp;tc

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

"NOTICE"

CARRIER
WANTED IN
POMEROY
THE DAILY
SENTINEL
99l·2156

Pomeroy

WAITRESS, Apply in person,

Craw 's Steak House.
4·25-6tc

WANTED!
Carriers For
MASON
and
HARTFORD

Used Cars In Town
At Dependable City

- - - - - --

'67 FORD Gaiaxle, 4 door, V·8
engine - S700i '64 Chevrolet
Impala, power steering , 4
door, V·6 - $450; phone 992·
3213.
4·26·6tp

------:--

1966 PLYMOUTH Barra cuda.
V-8, 4 speed. Phone 742-4851 if
interested .
4·23-6tp
1957 FORD, • dr. Fair lane , fa ir
condition, phone 949.3050 or
see Ralph Rose .
4-25-3tp
t961 ·FOR 0 700, 195" wheel
base, used on paved highway,
exceptionally good , 5 speed
transmission, 2 speed axle.
good tires. Phone 985·3554,
Harold Brewer , Long Bottom .
4·23-ttc

WOULD you like a better iob
than you now have? Can you
meet people? Any sales ex·
per ience. Local Company
needs 2 permanen t men . Good
Wages , Man y benef its. All
local work. Phone 949·3811.
4-26-4tc

.

1968 Valiant
2

•

Door, slant six, T·Fiite, 31,000 miles.

1969 Volkswagen $1695
2 Door , 4 speed, 22.000 miles, sharp.

The Daily Sentinel
Ph. 614-992-2156

1968 Rambler
American Wagon , six cy l. , automatic , ready
to go .

1969 Rambler $1595

Female Help Wanted
TEACHER OR SUBSTITUTE
TEACHER . A Marshall Field
. family -owned enterprise has
Interesting summer vacation
poslllon fn lhis vicinily In
school related sales work . An
opportunlly to earn up to
Sl ,SOO for summer depending
on ability, effort, and length
of vacation. For Immediate
local i nterview ca ll William
Logan at 16141 594-3161, exl. 22
on Thursday, April 27 from 9
a.m . to 9 p.m.
4-26-2tp

milk house equipped, 2 si los;
all outside buildings; 2 ponds:
hard surface r oa d ; see
any t ime, 2 miles N. of Rt. 7 on
Sumner Rd ., Co . Rd . 36, II
miles NE of Pomeroy , M. V.
Fryar .
4·25·31p

------

CO ME an d see us . Two
beautiful new homes, 1/ 2 mile
Norlh of Eastern High School
on St . Rt . 7, Both homes have
4 bedrooms . bath and a half,
built In kll chens and uliiity
rooms; wa ll to wall carpet
will be installed soon. One
house has a large family room
and a den . Both have a
garage . Get um while they
lasl. Ca ll Sherman Sum .
merf leid 985·3598.
4-14·1fc

------

Male Help Wanted

- - -- - -

CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE :
OR SUBSTITUTE
Mums, Geraniums, Pansies, TEACHER
TEACHER
, A Marshall Field
and Petunias . Geraldine
family
-owned
enterprise has
Cleland, E. Main St., Racine .
ln leresting summer vacation
0 -tfc
position In this vicinity In
school relaled sales work . An
YARD Sale, Friday and
opportunity to earn up · to
Saturday , some ant iques; on
$1,500 for summer depending
Larkin St., Rutland.
on abi lity, effort and length of
4·26·3fc
vacation . 'For immediate
loca l In ter view call William
Logan al (614) 594·3161 Ext . 22
on
Thursday, April 27, from 9
o ·EAL
DIRECT
WITH
a.m.
lo 9 p .m.
COSMETIC MANUrAc .
4-26-21p
TURER .
BE
IN ·
DEPENDENT!
Merle
Norman Cosmetics Is offering
a rewarding opportunlly In
Mason, West VIrgin ia. Open
your own c::osmetlc store or AKC puppies - Schnauzers,
PoOdle s. Cairn Ter ri ers ,
combine with your business.
healthy home ra ised. per·
no franchise fee .•. no house to
manent injecti ons, wormed house selling ... no mid·
175 - $85 ; Coolville 661 ·6214.
dleman . Call us toll free 18001
4·26-12tp
421 ·2060, or write Merle
Norman Cosmetics , LN26 ,
9130 Bellanca Avenue, L.A.,
C.litornla 90045 . .
4·21· 11P

1970 Plymouth
Duster 2 door, six cyl. , 3 speed. one owner .

RAWLINGS
DEPENDABLE CITY
992·2151 OR 992-2152 MIDDLEPORT
OPEN UNTIL 8:00P.M. each evening except
Saturday &amp; Sunday.
I

Real Estate For Sale

Virgil B. Teaford, Sr.- Broker
110 Mechanic Street

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
RUTLAND
3 BEDROOMS - bath , gas hea l , ci l y water , Front porch:
some paneling . Large lot near school and stores. Only
16.000 .00 .
HARRISONVILLE
1
7 ROOMS - Carpeted - 3 bedrooms , l'll belhs. Modern
kitchen, nice front porch. Ph acres . Uti lity building 40x70
with additi onal room.
CHESHIRE
COMMERCIAL LOT - Has old block build ing, suitable
for service station , garage, antique shop, etc.
SYRACUSE
4 rooms - Ful,l basement, nice kitchen. All utilities. Level
lot . Asking only $2500.00.
NEAR RACINE
2 ACRES PLU S- Level iol on Rt. 124. N ice tor new home
or mobile home . All utilities available. $500 .00 down $31 .18
a month.
NEW LISTING
NEW - 3 bedrooms with larg e closels . Bath. with shower.
Kitchen has stove and refr igerator . living and dining
carpeted . Util ity room . Sidewalks, storm doors and
wi ndows. Nice level lol with metal utility building.

Pets For Sale

More Classifieds

On Page, 12

OLD FURNITU~E 1 dishes.
clocks, bra.. 'oeas, sliver
dollars
or
' complete RACINE - 6 room house, bath,
households . Write M . D.
uti lily room, garage, $10,000 :
Miller, Rt. 4, Pomeroy, onto.
phone 949·4195.
Call 992-6271 . .
.
3·31-tfc
3·16·tfC
A-::
R-::
G-::
E,...,.Io"'"
ts-,_6_r_oo_m
- s,b ath ,
2:-cLcHALL ICRAf!TE RS
radio
garage, cellar $8,500; Magg ie
r,eceiver, model SX·43 or
Whllllnglon,
Depot
St ..
42. Phone 992·2118.
Rutland, Ollie.
•
4-7·30tp
4-2Htp

Real Estate For Sale

sx.

I .

General Contractor

POINT OmCE
SUPPLY

From the largest
Bulldozer Radiator to
Smallest Heater Core .
·Nathan Biggs
Radiator Speclollst

Complete

line of office
furniture &amp;
supplies. Typewriter &amp;
Adding Machine Repair.

equipment,

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

Pick-up &amp; Delivery

P1 . Pleasant

~~:l

:::te

992·3020
160 Coal St.
Middleport
POMEROY
Lovely home - 3 b.r .. full bath
and porch up. living room ,
and din ing room both 21 ft.,
large buflt.fn kitchen. v,
beth, full basement, garage .
Bonus with th is house is deep
freeze, two refrigerators, air
cond .. all carpet and drapes.
511,000.
MIDDLEPORT ,
• B. R.. l wo full baths, a ll
brick home, Lovely bul'lt· ln
ki t chen, fami ly room , on
large corner lot. lhat is
com pletely fenced in . Owner
will help finance .
Hysell Run - All electric
hom e with 3 b.r .. family
room, l iving room. is car.
peted and paneled , kitchen
has wall oven and range top,
lots of cabi nets, bar, on 3
acres .
Also
has
full
besement . Very secluded.
Some Farms and Lots.

'.

BUILDING LOTS " Branchwood Subdivision at Rock
Springs , Tuppers Plains
water . Phone 992·2789.
4·27-12tc

'5.55

-GUARANTE~ED­

Phone 992-209,4

HOUSE , Phone 992-6103.
4·19-12tc

Pomeroy Home &amp;
'

KITCHEN
ancl
SON
CONST.

Office 992 .2259 Till4:00
Sundays &amp; Evenings 992.-2568
WE WOULD Ll KETO SELL
YOUR PROPERTY FOR
YOU .

"Everything In Homo

Mllntenance"
MEIGS, W.VA. 25260
ME tGS 992-7151
MASON 713-5634

TERMITES. •TERMITES,
CHI Rid of Thorn
We will protect any single
dwelling resldonco for

'149.50
WRITTEN WARRANTY
Call Collect 614-452-3158

Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main St.
Z.nosville, Ohio

DOZER MiD back hoe work,
ponds and septic tanks: B&amp;K
Excavallng. Phone 992.5367,
Dick Karr, Jr.
4·27-6tc
GOOD' S PENNZOIL LAWN
CARE. We furnish the men+
mowers. Free estimate . Low
charge, for Information phone
992.9975.
4· 211- 12tc

CASH paid for all makes and SEE US FOR : Awnings, storm
models of mobile homes .
doors and windows, carports 1
Phone area code 614-423·9531 .
marquees, aluminum siding
4·13·tfC
and railing. A . Jacob, sales
representative. For free
1965 SO X 10 MOBILE home,
estimates, phone Charles
phone 241 ·2161.
Lisle, ' Syracuse, V . V.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
4-25-61c
3·2-ttc

-----The Station

' That~ Listei(s ·

MILLER

MOBILE num

M b'l H F Sale
(Unlicensed?
we
give
.
::l:e~:om:;es~=o~r=~!!!~;;;;;;;;;;
exam guidance . ) All ad ·
·

ver tising , all signs. forms,
supp lies furnished . Skilled
Training and Inst r uction
given for rapid development
from Starl to SuceSS.
Nationwide advertising
brings
Buyers
from
Everywhere ,
Can
you
qualify? You mu st have
lni tialive, excellen t characler
lbondabl el, sales abllllr· be
financia ll y r espons bl&amp; .
Commisslon . volu me op .
portunity lor man, woman ,
couple or team That Can Sell.
Informati on
without
obl igation , I M . Diggs.
Manager, Strout Realty, Inc ..
311 · P
Spring field
Ave . ,
Summit. N. J, 07901.
4·27·11(

30 ACRES . 3 bedroom home,
vinyl siding, eleclrlc heat.
Tuppers Plains water tap. 3
miles south of Tuppers Plains
jusl off Rl . 7 on County Road
28 - ,$16.500 reduced price ,
phone 667·3336 ,
4·26·41p

I,

:1o l'ou

LhllaES •

1220Washinglon Blvd.
Belpre,Ohio

Travel Trailer Closeout

•, ; ,

;1'-.~t"'

'

t.l

;~ '~~R~·E:J
~ .~
·--

y.

]1

I

·Y

·~·

• ..J ··--.

Ifll ~, NIA. I• , 11" • • , U ~ rol Olt

We'ltE VEitV MUCH

On Your

INTO

DRAMA

AT

.WEST VIRGINIA
l/NIVER$1T'rf

Home

81MO

.SS9fl

;..--- J...

AND, YOU'VE ~ROBABLY HEARD OF

BUT•• •!

T~IS NEW H · MILLION- DOLLAR

DONT SEE

WtN AN'&gt;Ot&gt;JE

WE HAVE AN

IIAYE

HEARl&gt;

0~ YOUR FAMOUS

CRFATIVS AR13" CliNTER

WEST VIRGINIA
HAMS!

OUTSTANDING
TI-/EATER ARTS

EFt .•

~ACU LTV

NO...
A61Y.-~­

Free Estimate

. DOLLAR· A·VEAR
C~ERK EMB&amp;ZZ~E

Coii992-3S23
For Appointment
·Fully lnsurod for your
protection .

FRQY. lHE CJJMPAIIN '?

8RINGMEA

ALL WEATHER ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION
&amp;· PLUMBING CO.

®

COLD DRINK
·•.II

- EXJT iT HAIN'T GI TTIN' WHAT
iT WANTS- IT'S G ITTIN ' WHUT'S
GOOD FO' IT.~" r------

ytlr •round. No rrittttr wtt1t
your nood. Complole roof or
spouting ropalr. lntwrlor or
exterior corpantry . Coiling
ttleand Panellngand Siding .
Complelo
Plumbil&gt;lt &amp;
Hooting.
'
Day Number 992·2550 1
Wt have 14 hr. emorgoncy

YOU CAME TO ASK
FOR A RAISII ... AN

.

'

ol,-7."'--..,- --.,.-=....lJ

service. ~

992·5803

742-)947
RI&amp;E AND &amp;&gt;HINE,
&amp;IRDIE: .11MEFOR WORK.

wE'D BEHER YOU OWN THE:
RUSH OR
WE'LL BE
LATE!

Johnson MasoniY
&amp; Remodeling ..·
'

FOR THE BEST IN
CERAMIC TILE

,,'

Lei utshow our samples ,
Lei· Us -Oo·Over· Your
Bathroom or Kitchen
Insured-But best of all
" WE'RE HONEST
Ph . 992 ·7608

Pomeroy, Ohio

HARRISON ' S TV and Antonno
Service . Phone 992·2S22 .
11-10-tfc

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

L.;mG
lD\IJ~ IN llle
I.\ID\'J6ST

AUTOMOBILE insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator 's license? Cali 992·
2966.
6·15·tfc

'OJ FmWll-~
WI~R~.MP

Cf C,&amp;.i.LED
DJLLSVIU..!i'.

EXPERT
Tree
Service,
trlmm lng and removal - :
Richard Hayman, phone 667· ·
3041 ,
.j.2!).30tp :

-=-=-----SEPTIC tanks cleaned. Miller

·
Sanitation, Stewart, Otllo. Ph . •
662-3035 .
2·12·ftC

UPH
-O-l:7
'~T-E_R_i_N_G_S_E_R_VICE,
complete selection of fabrics
and vinyl to choose from .
Pick.up and delivery. Slater
Upholstering, Rt . 3, Pomeroy,
phone 992·31117.
3·28·30tp

ACROSS

I. Rich
soli
Senseless
1alk
(slang)
9. Pyle
11. Mature
~.

HOUSE BUILDERS. CALL
GUY NEIGLER, RACINE,
OHIO.
3·5·301C

----------

FOUND

~~F'9
"::

'IM!

-c. ---BRADFORD. Auctioneer
Complete ServIce
Phone 949·3821
Racine, Ohio
Crill Bradford

•

5·1·tfc
SEWING MACHINES. Repair

service, all makes . 992·22~.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
J.29· ttc

beloved

10. Sword·

43. Whirlpool
DOWN

I. Outcast
2. Spellbind
in a way
3. Heavenly

Love
Song "
14. Mexican
porridge
15. Seine
season
16. Egyptian
cotton
Piglet's
mom
Acquittal
One
·of
the
Cratchits
22. F;ortune

dessert
4. Mrs.
Andre
Previn
5. Car part
6. Bright·
ened

shaped

12. Nee
Wood·
ward
17.Peer
Gynt's .
. mother
20. Merit
:13. 1rlsh·
Gaelic
·24. PIUage
'25. Infest;
Invade
26. Most
pallid

Yellenby'• A.n•'f. r

28. Gen.

'I

Wain·
wright

was one
(abbr.)

'

delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est motes . Phone 992·3214 .
Goegleln Ready .M ix Co.,
Middleport, onto.
6·JO.tfc

MY HAVE ANTI·
'5EARCHL16HT5 5eT UP. WHOlE

A1 A GUE55, 1'17 SAY

A~RAFl'

IIORI7t:~'5 l~ IJ' LIKE
A SIJ~RMAI!I(ET

OPeNING!

,

Due to Shake Haven Business we will deal only
in Trailer Rentals and Svpplles.
Al.l '72 Models. Fully ~lf·Contained.
14'. 18'. 20' Units.

31. Venti·

Iated

3Z. Actress

Jessica

31. 100
stotinki
39.Jtallan
three

bride

river

28. Brenner
or
Donner
29. Florid
3D. Skunk
33. Parabola
at. Wonder·
ment
35. Inlet
36. Soviet
moun-

.''

AriiOici
. . .. Grete

·r.·

Rutliftd, 0.' . 1

I

YnleN•r'•

'

RIJliAND ·fURNituRE·

VOU J'U&amp;I CAN'"T
~Ui 'I'OUIII: EVES
"10 THIS!

l

(Aal:••n 1

Ja..w.lo DAISY CRilL AIIOUII ITUIDT _

carefully
21.·Engllsh

AN

I

New•-lhe
. ctrcWiel&amp;en
v "~
1 1 1· tota·ie~ ••••
~~h~A~~~~-~~·!!~·~·~~==·~=•==.,~u.~~··~
[,
Ptill . . . . . . ,..
l.t I I I l

U. Poet
Marianne
26. Array

ETIN

TINCLE

tJ I

TOBENNI

'

I Also Have 1-1971 Model To Go./

II

30. Outmodedj

23. Loben·
grin's

=R~E7A~D~Y.7M~I~X--CO_N_C_R~ETE

Georae

snow

Unoenmbletheltf111rJumbles,
' ono letter to each ~~quare, to
form !our ordinary wordo.

prayer
8. Abelard's

of

=--.13. "-

WIVE

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. ~·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
5-12-ttc

BACKHOE AND DOZER work
Septic tanks Installed:
, (Bill) Pullins. Phone 992·28fa.
HS.tfc

38. Unyielding
40. Mitts
41. Cornered
42. Field

~rg~lb'];!'-'.::::ei...J=

7. Christian

tains

' ~42-4211

.....

DEGRADING,
SliLITTLING

.•WMP.0/1390 . : - : - - - - - ON YOUR DIAL

l .M.
liCllNCOOLE.

EMI!ARAA61ii1NC&gt;,

"To Be Sold Slightly Above Cost"

SR 7, Chester. 0.

'

'Mlt.ILD SU6PECT Mf!..

FRIDAY • SATURDAY •
SUNDAY
APRIL 28 • 29 • 30

Phone 985-3832

..

I

I •

GAUL'S TRAILER SALES

'

••

r '( r (r~· · r rt"'

::.::

.,

11/UIJ!II//AfSIIJ/1/C

_Au~

Open8Til5
Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main , Pomeroy , 0.

Cleland
Realty

••

,.

·,..

GO

HOME NOW,
JUGHAID

'lOONG· UNS ARE ENUFF TO
DRIVE ME OUT OF MY
MORTAL MIND

742-4761
We 1re fully in~urtd

On Most American C11rs

·ll' ; 141 • 24' • WiDE
Real Eslate Ooportunity . CAN
YOU SEL L??? Your own full ·
lime business. Real Estate.
right In th is area. National
company, est•blished In 1900,
larges l
in
its
f ield .

'IE

THIS DA'I 'S OV.:R AN' DONE
WITH --· THEM DADBURN

Wh,el Alignment

Real Estate For Sale

Mobile Homes For Sale

.,.

iltRU MAY 15
1000 SQ. Fr. OF

EXPERT

TREE trimm ing or removal.
Years' experience. Charles
Baker. phone 949·2723.
4·25·7fc

RENOVATED BRICK
MIDDLE PORT - 5 rooms, 2
bedrooms , bath , paneled,
t iled, carpeted, storage
building,
level
lot .
6.950.00 .
MAKE US AN OFFER
POMEROY- 2 story frame,
3 bedrooms, kitchen, living
room, cellar , In fairly good
condition. WOULD MAKE A
NICE HOME .
WASHINGTON COUNTY
VINCENT - large 2 story
frame. renovated Inside.
bath ,
basement ,
some
carpeting , 1 acre ground,
large barn , 2 chicken houses.
PONY GOES WITH HOME.
$15,900 00.
TO SELL LIST
WITH CLELAND'S
POMEROY In good
ondition, 2 bedrooms, bath,
sement, kitchen has nice
cabi nets, A GOOD PLACE
TO LIVE $7,000.00.
A
REALTOR
IS
IN ·
TERESTEO in serving you,
his client, to the best possible
ends and abides by such a
comm llment.
Henry E. Cleland Sr .
Realtor

,..

240 Linttln St .
Mldcfloport, Ohio
Dill Anthony Plumbing
We hova • comploto Homo
·M aintonaiico Sorvlco tho

WE HAVE MANY r;EW HOMES, SOME LIKE NEW,
AND SOME OLDER ONES IN GOOD CONDITION.
PI CTURES OF THE ABOVE ARE AT THE OFFICE .
DROP IN AND SEE WHAT WE HAVE TO OFFER .
HELEN L. TEAFORD, ASSOCIATE
992·3325
'92·2378

- - - - --

Business Opportunities

For .1\ppointment
Phone 949-2803

American 2 door, six cyl., 3 speed, extra nice.

FAR M. 160 acres, dairy or beef:

large bank barn , 27 stan chion ,

B&amp;W HEATING CO.

R. I. DIJBBELD

424 Main St.

See Emerson Jones, Pearl Ash, Hilton Wolfe,
Wallace Amberger, Dick Rawlings.

Real Estate For Sale

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
OR'
AIR CONDITIONING

PHONE 675·3628

Not A Motor Route.

TEACH your Dollars to have ATTRACTIVE POSITION . Full
or part.lfme sales openings
more Cents, by shopping at
with
Field
Enlerprlses
Hayman's Auction eoch
Educational Corf. explaining
Friday night. This Friday,
to parents lates educational
April 28th, one lot of nice '
materials to help youngsters
clean furniture and many
make the most of schooling . RAC INE other Items too numerous to
10 room house .
No
sales
experience
balh , bBsement, garag e, two
mention. Sale starts at 7 p.m .
necessary . Free tra i ning .
4·21 -1tp
lots. Phone 949-4313.
Exceptional income op·
4-5-Jotp
portun i t y . For Interv iew
SAVE up to one half. Bring your
appolnlment call Will i am
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
Logan at (614) 590161 ext. 22 3 BEDROOM ranch lype home ,
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
on Thursday, April 27 , from 9
.j.A.ttc
Plains. All new with total
a.m. to 9 p.m .
electric and central air
4·26·21p
•
REGISTERED Appaloosa Stud
condll lonlng , bath and 'I• fully
Service, $50 Reg. Mares, $40
car peted. full basement,
Grade ; Francis Benedum,
garage in basement. See by
Phone 667·3856.
appointment, phone 992-2196
3·30-30tc ATTRACtiVE POSITION , Ful l
or 992·3585. Danny Thompson .
or
parf.f
lme
sales
openings
Financ ing ava ilable.
ABOUT YOUR WEIGHT ... The
wllh
Field
Enterprises
12·30. ttc
exeltlng New Weight Waf.
Educational
Corf
.
explaining
chen (RI Program can help
to parents lates educationa l SiX ROOM house , 133 Butternut
you . For local class In·
materials
lo he lp youngsters
Ave , Contact Ed Hedrick , 2137
formation call TOLL -FREE
make the most of schooling .
Wadsworth Drive, Columbus,
8()0.582·7026.
Ohio, phone 237-4334,
No
sa l es
experience
4-17-24tc
necessary . Free t raining .
11 ·2 1-ttc
E)(Ceptional income op ·
KOSCOT KOSMETICS and
portunity , For Interview NICE J.story home with lull
wigs. Need extra money? Just
appo i ntment call WiJiiam
basement , 2 lots , new forced
sell these products . No
Logan at (614) 594·31 61 ext . 22 , air furna ce , ~ ear Pomeroy.
restricted territories . Phone
on Thursday, April 21 , fr om 9
Elementary Schoo l. Phon e
992· 5113.
a.m
.
to
9
p
.m
.
992·7384
lo see.
4.z.ttc
11-1·1fc
4·26·2tp

Wanted To Buy

$1395

.•·

. ..

Free Estimate

Spring .
Painting?

THE NEWEST - - -

Auto Sales

Help Wanted

Court St.

MEIGS INN
ROOMS

304 E. Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-3795
or Mason 773-5535

SEE US
EXPERIENCED IN
INTERIOR AND
EXTERIOR
PAINTING
Phone 742-5825
or 992-6576

•

'

Only

@

1

Jtre ~ICDI · .. ~

Specializing In
Sr11a11 Businesses

.

BLIND ADS

IN LOVING memory of Frank
Beach who passed away one
year ago, April 26, 1971.
A heart of gold stopped beating,
Two shining eyes at rest ;
•God broke our hearts to prove to
us, He only takes the best .
God knows you had to leave us,
But you didn 't go alone ;
For part of us went with you,
The day he took you home .
To some you are forgotten, To
others lust part ol the rast ;
But to us who loved and los you ,
Your memory will always
lost.
It's a lonesome house without
you, And sad has been the
way ;
For life and home are not the
same, Since you were called

dozers, 2 size loaders. Work
done by flout or contract .
Free Estirilat01. We IISO
haul fill dirt, top soit Dump
trucks and low-boy for hire.
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
Pomeroy. Phone 992· 3525
after 1 p.m.

1969 FORD ~·, TON - l
_.
52149
Pick. up, 8' wide body, heiavy duty spring s, 4 speed trans.;
360
engine, Delu xe cab with body ml.dg. 750x16 heavy
duty l lres, step bumpers, maroon f inish . Extra clean &amp;
nice.

EJCI"I additional ward 2c .
Additional 25c Ctlarge per
Advertisement .
OFFICE HOURS
8: 30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Da lly,
8 : 30 a,. m. to U : OO Noon
Saturday.

Dozer &amp; · End loader work,
ponds, basement, land·

1969CHEVROLET
$899
Biscayne4 dr·. v.a, automatic tr ans., p. steering &amp; brakes,
white finish, blk . vinyl int erior.

- •

1-f\f' ]j

KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

scaping. We have 2 siJe

For Want Ad Service
5 cents per word one insert ion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
consecutive Insertions.
11 cents Per word SIK con secutive InSertions.

BALLS 0' FIRE
I SHORE AM TICK LED

(

Business Services
. EARTH MOVING

deemed
obtectional .
Tt11t
publlst'lerwill not be responsible '

~·

\

'

-Po11eroy
Motor Co.

ZSIGNS

MOnday Deadline 9 a.m .
Cancellation - Corrections

r ,

.

.

'

,

'

.Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get R:es;ults!:'
'

~

TL ,LGEETKN

T'cEB

PTTS

IT

IUACF
WTHHTK

M UTV G
VTCGB

Aaowm

n.,.w.,. 1M • ..,..,......,. •I
IJift&lt;llea--11111
·

coal

�.

-

--

-

. -.

. .

'I

•
12- Tilt Dlll711eM1Del, M~Pomeroy, 0., Aprtl 'll, 11'12

Healthy U. S. "Coal Industry Needed
Pl'ITSBURGH (UP!) - The coal industry is a high-cost,
prized fluid fuels," Bagge said. "A constricted or semi-retired
oomplex, skilled-laMOr industry that cannot be placed in moth- coal industry can't be expected to find the productive or
balls and then reactivated "on the. demands of emergency or •ecQnomic vigor to support a big new synthetic gas and oil inexpediency," the president of the National Coal Association said dustry.
Thursday.
"The coal industry has been toughened by adversity and in
recent
years has managed once or twice to lift itself by its own
I
.
"Those who are for whatever reasons, chipping coal out of the bootsiraps to meet fuel-ahortage crises of somebody else's
national fuel base... must realize there won 't be much of a hase making, but it would be plain foolliillness for the nation to think It
left. when they are fmished," Carl E. Bagge said in an address can mothball a high-cost, complex, skilled-labor industry and
prepared for a symposiwn on coal mine drainage research at then reactivate it on the demands of expedience or emergency."
Mellon Institute.
The coal industry is subject to criticism, Bagge said, for strip
"What they don't realize or won't heed is that wholesa.le re- mining, for producing coal with a high sulfur content, for acid
strictions on coal represent the rejection not only of a problem- mine drainage and other reasons.
ridden solid fuel but of the most promising future source of their
"The sober question, of course, is whether an energy-hungry

Recognition to .OSPBF

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

For ~ale

Employment Wanted

C-51 Chain Saw WILLtialnt houses. roofs, barns HOMELITE
1100;
-good
ion; phone
and repair work. etc. Phone 247-2547 altercondll
6
p.m.
'1'12·7085.
·
4-2S-31c
4-21 -6tc
Metal Detectors at
CARPENTER work of any WHITE'S
Gold Nug9et Shop,
kind. Phone Dexter, Ohio 742- the
Albany, Ohio, l=adillac of
olt79.

locaters .

3-28-JOtp

Attorney Fred W. Crow of Pomerity is convinced today
the Ohio Society for tbe Promotion of Bull Frogs IDe, is
spreading far, possibly too far, alii In too IIIJDY diverse
waya.li derived from a letter received In his law office this
morning.
Tile original Grand Croaker (synonym for presldeut,
chairman, chief promoter, Of chief honcho), Crow hJu
gotten his laughs the (181t five years from watch~ the
OSPBF grow Jrom a Oedgllnll tadpole, so to speak, Into a
dignified (?) orgllllhation of far·flung membership
wielding real clout.
The OSPBF aDIDially opoum a frog Jumping eveut
during the Big Bend Rtgatta In late June. II bas attracted
frogs alii Jockeys from the midwest states wherever there
is rare enough sporting blood.
Postmaster Jlln Soulaby'a legman delivered a letter to
'· · the offices of Crow, Crow alii Porter (Frank W., Jr.) today
ij addressed :
.
"Croak, Crow &amp; Porter, Pomeroy, Ohio:"
·
Tl!at's one of the slde benefits of doing hualness In a
1mall toWD. Letters even so mlsaddressed as this one to
Crow gets delivered. No problem.
·

. -STOREWIDE .END-OF-THE-MONTH SALE

4-25-3fp

WILL DO part time work on METAL porch glider, excellent
Monday and Thursday af- condition , phone 992-3442.
ternoons or any evening In
.
4-25·41c
Middleport area. Clean ~ards.
palnf, etc. Wrlfe c-oP. 0. Box NEW and used shoes, men 's
57, Middleport, Ohio.
used work clothes. new
4-20-lOtc
miner's boots - S12.9S a pr ..
Ba iley's Bargain ·· Store.
WILL 00 daytime babysitting
Upper Business Block,
In Racine area. call 949-4422.
4-19-JOtp Middleport.
4-25-6fp

I

I

c:-::-::-~~----:----:­

SET OF air shocks, plus extensions to fit med.-size GM
cars for $40; phone' Larry

For Rent

:«&lt;",:~.:§.:w.:w:.~ =:?.®; •s :e::::: oe~::::~:::::::::S!~:?.?.~~.s::::::::::::::·.

Hollon 949-4989.

1 ROOM house, 1'12 bath, near
4-25-10tp
business dlsfrlcl In Middleport, phone 992-3393.
ANTIQUE AUCTION: A Iorge
4-26-61c collection of parts of fhree
estates from the mountllns
will be sold at my proper! at
Hartford, W. Va. (On Sate
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and
Rt. 33, 3.5 miles above
unfurnished aparfmenfs . Pomeroy
-Mason Bridge .)
Phone '1'12-5434.
April
29,
1972;
10 a. m. Roll top
4-12-lfc desk , wash stand
with pitcher
and bowl ; COINS: Indian
SLEEPING rooms and cooking Cents, Booker T. Wa~hlngton
privileges, next to Tom's Half dollars; se~eral oval top
Carry-Out. phone '1'12·3254.
trunks, oak half tree, organ,
4-25-61c rockers, small , Burnside
stove, Iron tea keftle. kraut
FURNISHED 2 bedroom
cutter. wood baby cradle, old

2 BEDROOM mobile home
- located In Salem Center ,
phone 742-3722.
4-21 -6fp

Irons, old swing, china cupboard, brass bed , w icker

settee, hall mirror wlfh seat,
organ · stool ,

old

wall

ATLANTIC CITY, N.J . changing his status in Ohio and
(UPI) -United Auto Workers even less of one in Michigan"
President l.Aionard Woodcock and that Muskle could not
has revealed he told Sen. expect to do better iii those
Edmund S. Muskle that he primaries than in the others.
could do no better in Ohio and
Ten officials of the UAW's
Michigan than in the previous Coll1ll)unity Action Program in
primaries, and advised him to Ohio, $25,000 in contributions
abandon the primary trail in and hundreds of UAW memhis quest for the Democratic bers listed as precinct
presidential nomination .
delegates had been commited
The Maine senator's decision to Muskie.
.
to withdraw from the
"They're free to do as tbey
primaries but remain a can- please, now," said Woodcock,
didate in the hope of securing "I'm getting a little shy of
the nomination at a deadlocked personal preferences."
convention now means that
"We will now be able to carry
Alabama Gov. George C. out a fullscale effort against
Wallace standa a better chance Wallace !n . Michigan,"
of winning Michigan's May 16 • Woodcock said. But he added
primary, Woodcock told a news that " Muskie's withdrawal
conference Thursday on the would be conducive to a
final day of the UAW's 23rd Wallace victory in Michigan."
constitutional convention.
Woodcock also defended
"I'm now a man without a himself against criticism lor
candidate," said Woodcock, not backing the rMiection
whose 1.3 million member attempt of the UAW's Western
union Is a major force in Region Director Paul Shrade, a
Democratic politics: Only the aoclal activist unseated by
day before, Woodcock had said Jerry Whipple, president of
the UAW was prepared to Local 509.
mount an extensive campaign
"I was riot the one who said I
for Muskie in Ohio's primary opposed Paul Shrade," Wood• Tuesday. Although Woodcock cock said. "It was somebody
personally had endorsed else's political tactic and I
Muskle, the union's ruling resent being dr~ged through
body, the International the capitalist press on Internal
Executive Board (!EB) has not union
affairs."
Shrade
taken a stand on who it wants charged his defeat showed the
as the Democratic nominee. union was paying less attention
Woodcock said he had told to to social causes and turning
Muskie Wednesday night "that more to the political center.
there was
'
,- no chance of

telephone, three brass kettles,
Ice box, wood barrel, picture
frames, medicine cabinet

ONE BEDROOM trailer
apartments, Ideal for couples .
Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
'1'12-5248 or '1'12-3436.
4-20-121c

(glass), old clocks, old

spooner, five good oil lamps ,
two anvils, carniva l glass;
several
boxes
of
miscellaneous
items .

TRAILER lots In Mason, phooe
'1'12·33'13 or 773-5934:·
4-26-6tc

Bradford Auction Company,
C. C. Bradford, Auct., phone

949-3821 or 949-3161, Racine,

Onlo. Signed : James Fields.
Lunch served.

MOWERS &amp;
T1Ll£RS

Not respon·

slble for accidents.

4-27-ttc

SHAMPOO AREA with bowl.
excellent condition, $120; like

~conomy Tiller, 3'12 hp B&amp;S
engine. Reg. 159.95
144.95

new hydraulic shampoo or

comb out chair.
dryers. S100 : or all
Can be seen af
Furniture or call
Will deliver .

Turf Trim Mower, B&amp;S 3'1,
hp enqlne. In carton
70.25
Fertlllror. Garden Seeds and
Onion Sets.
POMEROY

$140 ; 2
lor 1300;
Rutland
742-3386.
4-27-3tc

16' FIBERGLAS boat equipped,
35 h.p. electric start Johnson
motor,
trailer.
Larry
Lavender . Phone 992-2659.
4-27-31c

.... - J1ck W. Caruv, Mgr.
Phont 992·2111

TAKE SOIL away the Blue
Lustre way from carpets and
upholstery . Rent electric
shampooer St. Ben Franklin
Store, 200 Main St., Pomeroy.
Ohio.
4-23-6tc

MEIGS BOAT SHOP, Pearl
Street, Middleport : pontoon
boats, pickup covers;

one

used 19 fl . 1.0., Phone '1'125367, Dick Karr, Jr .
4-27-61c

FORO truck with camper;
- 12"x12" white plastic
Metro Van camper; price not 128coated
ceiling tile - 126; six
quoted until seen ; may be
4' x8' pan!!IS, pecan paneling ,
seen after 5 p.m ., J. E.
S36 ; Phone 949-4605 .
Thoren, Jr ., phone 949-2182 .
4-27-10tp
4-23-61p
-.,.------,-ALUMINUM car-top · boats . -30" ELECTRIC range, SSO.
won~t ruit or rot, safe and
Phone 992-3020.
4-26-3tc
lightweight, 10, 12, 13 and 14
ft . In stock now. Phone 992TV CO~ SOLE, beautiful maple
6256 after 5 p.m.
finish, just overhauled . Coil
3-30-30fc
992-6813 or 992-3635.
4-26-3tp
16 FT. TRAVEL trailer. self·
contained, ~ eady to go, hitch
Included . Phone 773-5651, WILSON -Sam Snead Golf
Mason, W. Va .
Clubs, 4 irons, putter, 2
4-5-lfc
woods, covers, bag , balls , $65;
phone 992-5468.
TROPICAL FISH, fancy
4-23-10tp
gupplttS, angels and breeders.
Bellas and supplies. Phone KUHL'S HAS IT! Low-priced.
'1'12-S&lt;UJ.
guaranteed appliances , used
12-30-lfc
furniture. Special on electric
dryers.
S30 : Kuhl 's Barga in
POODLE puppies, Silver Toy.
Center.
Rt.
7. Tuppers Plains,
Parkvlew Kennels. Phone 992·
Onlo.
Phone
667-3858 ; closed
5&lt;UJ.
Monday.
8-15-lfc
4-23-6tc
SHOWALTER'S Wet Pet Shop, 1970 MUSTANG , take ove r
Chester, Ohio. Phone 985-3356.
payments ; one Homelite
Tropical fish and supplies.
Super XL Chain Saw . Phone
3-28-JOfp 992-3703
evenings.
4-23-6tc

'66

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY

-----

· LADY Kenmore dishwasher,
sso. boy's 26" bicycle, s10,
baby stroller, $3.50. Phone
992-l815.after 4 p.m.
4-26-10tp
Fri., S.t. &amp; Sun.
Aprillf-29-30
Doublo Feature Program
"THE HONKERS"

Our entire stock of Women's Jeans Is reduced for our End-Of-The-Month Sale.
Juniors - Misses - Women's Boy Cuts - Patch Pockets - Button Fronts Denim - Sailcloth
- Seersucker . Light weight cord.
End of the Monfh Sale

as our

with 1 or 2 needles , makes
buttonholes, sew on buttons,
monograms, and blind hem

"MRS. POLIFAX-

Styl es selected from stock in
Girl s .4-14, 2-Jx and Toddl er.
Gowns . Pa jamas . Robes.
Reg. 5.18
Sleepwear ·
Sale 2.39
Sleepwear -

Reg. 3.98
Sleepwear Reg . 3.49
Sleepwear Reg. 2.98
Sleepwear -

or

I Color)
Rosalind Russell

budget

plan

Phone 388-8673.

4-26-6tc
:-:
V-:AC::U
-:-U
-:-:M
-::.-C
: :I-:-:
ea-n-er- n-ew- 1971
Model. Complete with al l
cleaning tools. Small paint
damage In sh ipping. Will take
127 cash or budget plan
ava ilable. Phone 388-8673.
4-26-61c

Darren McGavin
( G)

MEIGS THEATRE

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

BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
Stereo. AM-FM radio, 4 speed

Tonight, April27
NOT OPEN .

changer,

4· speaker

sound

system. dual volume control.
Balance S79 .35. Use our
budget terms. Call 992-7085.
.
4-26-6tc

Frfd.ly &amp; Slturday
Aprll21-29

STEREO. Modern Walnut
Stereo-radio -combination. 4
speaker sound system, 4

TWO-LAN I:;

speed

IR)

SUDD.EN TERROR
(Tocflnlcolorl
Luter of "Oliver"
famo.
GP
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.

'

changer ,

separate

controls. Balonce $62.39. Use
our budget terms. Call 'I'll·
7085.
4-26-6tc
ONE love seat - S40; antiqu~ •
baby cradle - 125: call 9923966.4-26-lotp

Sale 1.99

Slippers ·
Reg . 3.50

Sale 1.59

Slippers .
Reg. 3.00

Sale 2.79

Sale 1.39

Slippers ·
Reg. 2.so

Sale 1.19

Slippers ·

Sale 1.99

Sale 3.19

Sale 2.39

Mens 3.95 Short Sleeve

WRANGLER
3.98 JEANS
Regul ar and Slim sizes
super lean cut or regular cu t .
14 ounce plus blue den im .
Tr ue western styling .

Save - End ofThe
Month Sale

Special Values! Brand new
seleCtion of

SUMMER
PIECE GOODS

45" OacrOO and COtton , Avril
and Cotto n·, Cotton and
Bl ends, Acet&amp;te Surrah

Prints, Fortrel and Cotton ,
Flocked Dots. All washable most

perm a nent pre ss.
Whlte and color grounds in
an ou ts tanding grolJp.

Yard

DRESS SHIRTS
Neck sizes 14 to 17. Big
se lection of fan cy patterns stri pes · white and solid
colors. All permanent press.

End ol the Month Sale

2

3.45

99 ~

Reg. s.oo

Sale 3.99

Boys Sizes 6 lo 18

available.

WOMEN'S
SLIPPERS

Slippers ·
Reg. 4.00

Reg. s.oo

stitch. Full cash price, 138.50

SPY"

End of the Month Sale

GIRL'S SLEEPWEAR

i

controls ore buill ln. Sews

~ Plus--

)'

I
No

sewing machines.
original cartons .
tachments needed

Lois Nettleton

-k

WOMEN'S JEANS SALE

PAINT DAMAGE . 1971

James Coburn

BLACK-TOP
Jamu Taylor
WarrenOafes

A tractor-trailer was
demolished Thursday about 11
a.m. when struck by a PennCentral railroad train at the
C&amp;O tracks on the MeigsGallia line at Jaymar Coal
Company crossing.
Lewis G. Taylor, 47,

Pulled Out

with 4 chairs ; hundreds of old

bottles and dated jars, gold
railroad Elgin watch, sad

For

7.00

5.95 "Compose"

BED PIUOWS
Fil ling 100 percent Dacron
Polyester F iberflll II.
Permanent press floral
covering . Alle rgy free .

Lightweight . Washable .
Odorless · Lint and Oust
Free.
~pecial

Fridoy and Saturdoy

. 4.49

Special

Purchase

HANES
BODYSHIRTS
Wear

with Jeans, Scooters,

Pants. Skirts. Shorts. Choose
Navy, Gingham Black. New
Grass, Buttercup, Ebony . .
Wild Strawberry Red.
Regularly 12.00 and 10.00

End of the Month Sale
Mens Short Sleeve
Sizes are small 114-14'1&gt;1.
medium (15-15'1•), large 116·
161/, ). Excellent selection of
solid colors, smart stripes,

plaids. All are permanent
press. Taper and non-taper
models.
Choose your favorite collar
style.

Sale 4~99
Mens 69c

BAN LON
DRESS SOCKS
Flfs sizes tO thru 13. Solid
colors. Black - Hunter Green

- Navy Blue.
End of lhe Month Sale

2 Pairs 1.00
Special

Po!Jester Double Knit
New Spring Colors

BOYS'

SPORT SHIRTS

Mons and Young Mens

2

·Solid colors . Black . Kelly .'
Navy . Bone· Hunter Green.
One size fits ali sizes 10 thru
13.
End of tiM Month Sale
Pairs

1.00

SERTA AND SIMMONS
MISMATCH MATTRESSES
AND BOX SPRINGS

ond PaHerns
100 percent Polyester Double
Knit Solids and 100 percent
Polyester Double Knit Multi' Smooth
Yarn Dyed. ~-60" wide - ' Full and Twin sizes.
and quilt fops.
machin• washable.
49.DO and59.00Voluos·

Regular 5.49 Yard S.le 3.99
Regular 5.99 Yard S.le 4.49

Sale 39.95

3.00

Two O.y Site

RECORD AlBUMS

"BMONEl''

SALE

ELECI'RIC BlANKETS

I -

A nice selection of record
albums In popular, rock,
country w'estern
end
religious.

Lighted Olat - Fully
Automatic · Good Colors.
Waohable.
16,,5 Double Btd Size .
Dull Control - . . - 14.00
14.95 Double Btd Silt'
Single Control - - . 13.00
13.95 Twin Btd Slzo
Single Control
12.00

4.79 Albums Sale 3.80
5.79 Albums Sale 4.60
6.79· Albums

S.tel

Regular 3.99 Yard Sale 2.99

For

33 one-third RPM

ORLON
SPORT SOCKS

2

Choose the super lean cut or
regular cut Wranglers
during lhls sale and save .
.Sizes 28 to« waist. Seled
your correct length. M&lt;!de of
14 ounce plus denim. Sanforized shrunk. Authentic
western styling.
End of the Monltl Sale

Short sleeve styles . permanent press. Sizes 8 to \6.
Solid colors and neal stripe
patterns.
End ollhe Month Sate

For

'000"'0

WRANGLER JEANS

SPORT SHIRTS

2 5.00

JN:
,
-e~~·e. in Briefi

Mons ond Young Mens
UB

Special Group

Sale 5.40

MEN'S 4.00

Just RKolvtd
Anolhor Big Shipment

UMBRELlAS
100 percent nylon umbrellas snap Of*' style. large size.
St'urdy construction.
Comploto with matching
(llrrylng sleeve.
End of iiM Mo1nlh S.te

'

2.88

MJMEN'S
'DAmME DRESSES
1

Euy-to-wer styles-In· sizes
10 fo 52. Choose 1'00 percent
cotton or Poly•stw-cotton
blend;
·
0n1y

4.98 And 5.98

.
MAIN STORE AND WAREHOUSE O~EN FRIDAY .AND SATURDAY UNTIL 9 P.M. FREE CUS'IOMER PMIIiG AT BOlH l.OCATIONS

ELBERFELD$ IN 'POMEROY

/

~

By United Preu lalernational
COLUMBUS - DISCOURAGED CAMPAIGNERS of Sen.
EdmundS. Muskie began dismantling the organization they had
set up for the Ohio primary Thursday, ordering a halt to radio
advertising, newspaper ada and mallings. "We can't maintain a
campaign because of the cost involved," said Ted Maeder,
national representative to Muskies Ohio headquarters.
Although some individual delegate candidates for the Maine
Democrat say they want to keep local offices open and continue
working on hia behalf, the three other candidates quickly marched into the breach. "We are making friendly gestures to the
Musltle delegates, statewide and district, and asking their
support," said Jesse T. George, coordinator of Sen. Hubert
Humphrey's Ohio campaign.
However, George aald he does not e:tpeet too many delegate
defections. "I don't think too many of them are going to be
an~tlous to jump into another frying pan after they've already
been scorched hy one endonement," he said,

\

reported that a dog was killed Fetty, Langsville, had
Thursday at 6:30 p.m. on SR moderate damage Thursday
143 when it ran into the path of when it drifted from a parked
a car driven hy 'Kenneth H. position through a. yard bePayne, 30, Harrisonville. There tween two trees, over an
was light damage to the car. embankmen~ across the highA car belonging to Robert way and into a tree.

Pomeroy, driving a Mack

tractor trailer belonging to
Jaymar Coal Company, had
pulled onto the tracks when the
train, traveling south, struck
the trailer which was dragged
approximately 150 feet and
finally into a power pole.
Taylor had gotten the tractor
clear, but not the trailer. He
was not injured as tire trailer
was torn free.
The conductor was R. A.
Nelson, 43, of Albany. The train
whistle was blown approximately 700 feet north of
crossing, it. was reported.
The trailer was demolished
and the truck and train were
heavily damaged, the Meigs
County Sheriff's
Dept.
reported.
The department also

"KEEP AMERICA BEAliTIFUL DAY" - These girl scouts, Terri Zirkle, seated, Joni
Murray andllellbie Zirkle of Middleport Junior Troop 39, ,will be joined by girls of other troops
across the county Saturday in a litter cleanup project. Posters and bumper stickers are being
used to promote the observance.

Girl Scouts
Mobilize to
Get Litter
Meigs County girl scouts will
do their bit to improve the
environment Saturday as they
join other youth groups in the
observance of "Keep America
Beautiful Day."
Ell[uipped with litter bags,
the girls will work in many
sections of the county. Posters
announcing the event have
been placed in several
locations, and village workers

of Pomeroy and Middleport
will dispose of the debris once
it has been collected by the
scouts.
Girls are to wear trefoils for
identification since they will
not be wearing scout uniforms.
Appropriate attire is old
clothes and gloves. All work
will be done under adult
supervision.
Several troops have an·
nounced the areas in which
they will work. The cadettes of
Salisbury 208 with their leader,
Mrs. William Ohlinger, will
concentrate on clearing the

Registratio~

14 in· GOP Show
Fourteen candidates attended the Meigs County
Republican Women's meeting
Thursday night at the Meigs
Inn.
Nellie Brown, president,
introduced the candidates to a
large crowd in attendance.
Bernard Fultz, who was to
introduce the candidates and
speak in behalf of Cong.
Clarence Miller, but was
wtavoidably detained, today
urged the support of Cong.
Miller In the May primary.
Candidates who attended and
spoke were Otis Mack Fulks,

'·

Oakley ·c. Collins and Ralph
Welker, running for state
representative ; Danny
Thompson, Richard Jones,
Warden Ours and Robert
Clark, commissioner candidates; Larry Spencer,
Charles R. Karr, Jr., and
Evelyn Lucke, candidates for
clerk of courts; . Eleanor
Robson, Meigs County
Recorder, and Howard Frank,
Meigs County Treasurer.
Speaking for Paul Brown ,
candidate for congress, was
Jim Bush. Eleanor Robson
offered a closing prayer.

Raccoon Creek Acid Culprit

CINCINNATI (UPI)- State
Natural Resources Director
• William B. Nye has urged the
Ohio River Basin Coriunlssion
to establish a task force to form
an acid mine drainage
reduction plan for the basin.
Nye said 2.5 million tons of
area surrounding the Main St.
acid drain into the Ohio River
Bookmobile headquarters .
Working downtown in Basin, representing more than
Pomeroy along the railroad 70 per cent of the nation's total
tracks will be girls of Pomeroy
Junior Troop 247 with their
CONCERT SUNDAY
leader, Mrs. Bruce Zirkle. The
The Music Dept. of Southern
Chester troop of Mrs. Henry High School will presen~ its
Hunter will work in Chester spring concert Sunday at the
village.
Southern
High
School
Mrs. Roscoe Wise's troop 39 auditoriwn at 2 p.m. featuring
of Middleport will be joined by the high school mixed choir
Middleport cadettes of Mrs. and band. Vocal director is
Fred Gibbs, Jr. for residential Mrs. John R. Lee and band
cleanup. Middleport trash will director is Mrs. Connie
be transported to village hall Romine. The public is cordially
and placed in a village truck . invited.

acid load. Studies indicate that
Ohio's share IS' about 236,000
tons annually, of which 6,000
tons come from Raccoon Creek
in Gallia County.
Nye said Pennsylvania and
West VIrginia contained more
than two-thirds of the mlles of
streama affected by acid mine
drainage. He also said more
than half the acid load originates in the Monagahela and
Allegheny River subbasina.
''There is a significant acid
mine drainage problem In nine
of the 11 Ohio River Basin
slates," Nye told the commission at Its Thursday meeting
here. "The problem will only
worsen untO such a time as an
Interstate plan can be
developed to conquer the acid
that Is degrading our streama.
"Acld·mine drainage has a
harmful effect on water

quality, because it causes the
reduction of natural alkalinity
of streams, increases water
hardness and the addition of
underslrable amounts of Iron,
managanese, aluminum
sulfates and other suspended
materials to streams.
'"'bis lower water quality
may result in the destruction of
all bottom life and organisms
necessary for a healthy
stream. It will increaSe the
001t of production to industries,
which must treat the acidic
water before It Is adequate for
Industrial use.
"High acidity will also cause
rapid deterioration of concrete
structures or corrosion of Iron
and steel structw-es, such as
ll'!dges, culverts, lock or boat
hulls. And finally, it decreases
the value of the stream for lr. rigation, swimming and as a
source of drinking water for
domestic
animals and
wildlife. "
'fhe state official said Unless
an acid drainage abatement
program was started, the Ohio
Athens High Scbool for the Initial meeting in what is River Basin w1111ld have an
called "A Search for Consensus." The key objective acid load of more than seven
of this program is that of redefining the goals for mllllon tons amually by 2020.
schools in Ohio for the 1'9701l.11lls redefinition of goals
will result from serious consideration and discussion
involving lay citizens, board members, and
professional ediiCators.
Theflrststeplstheeatabllslunentofgoals. That's
what the Search for Conaei]IIIIS haa as its goal. Then
we will seek to develop methoda of measuring how
effectively our schools are reaching those goals. This
MASON - Firemen In the
bend
area had their work cut
Is accountability. This Is what the legislature man·
dated In H. B. 475. If you bive the opportunity to out Tl!ursday afternoon bat·
partielpate In this effort, please try to do 110. It can be_ Ulng two windswept brush fires
which broke out minutes apart
a very W9rlhwhlle elperience.
and
threatened several houses.
, Wewlllbestartingourflrstevenlngadultgeneral
Mason's
volunteer firemen .
mining class next week. We plan to keep the c1au size
to about 20. We have far more than 20 registered for took the alprms but summoned '
the claaa. We hope to have letterisent or telephone help from New Hayen, Midcootacta made with the periona wbom we will ac- dleport, Pomeroy, Syracuse
and Racine for a major fire
commodate In lhll f1rlt claa.
If you.re not in the lint clau, we plan to start a which broke out at 3:55 p.m.
covering the hillside behind
second ~e in about 11m weeki and will try to Include
Wahama High School.
you then,. We will cantlnue acceptlnal'egi.llratioM for
A spokesman said an
these adult evenln&amp; clr=er GJr1n8 the montba llhead, esUmated 25 acres of ground
· NEWS &amp; NOTES :.. It. hu belli a very happy burned after a grass fire got
thq tO have Mr. Morrtlon In the oftlce every day this out of co~trol. Firemen got It
week - The S)'lll[lllonlc Band Concert will be under control about' 6 p.m.
presented at the high school at 811111 evening -The
A few minutes earlier,
Junior-&amp;Iller Prom will be oa Saturday, May I -The Mason firemen were called to
spring choir collCfl!.'l will be aU p.m. 011 ~,May an area back of West Columbia
7- The Salilbur)' Vlrlety Show will be ne:&amp;t Friday when five burned over one
'
and saturday, May $ and 8.
acre .

in Middlepori
·
C
han
ged
.

By George Hargraves, SUpt.
ArlingtOn Cemetery, and qther historic sites. On
Melga Local School Dl8trlct
Saturday llfternoon they will visit capitol Hill. In tbe
For quite some time we have been drawing ·your
evening they will tour the Wax Museum. On &amp;inday
attention to May I as the registration day for kin;
they will visit smithsonian Institute and the National ·
dergarten and new first grade stUdents for the
cathedral among other places. They will be back In
coming year. This registration will take place on
Pomeroy shortly before II on Sunday evening.
Monday except at Middleport. There our registration
Many congratulations to the parenla, teachen,
ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA - THREE APOlLO ad- lor both kindergarten and grade I will be WED.and students who have raised money, made plans,
venturers and a spacecraft jammed with treasuree steamed at NESDAY, MI!Y 3, from 1;3().2:30 p.m.
and done so many things to bflng this trip to a reality.
flank speM toward Hawaii- today, their lunar mission perhaps
The registration at Salem Center, Salisbury,
We certainly hope thatallgoesweU for this fine group
tdgnallng the start of a new era of moon acience. Apollo 16 Pomeroy, Rutland, and Harrisonville will be from
of young people.
astronauts Johp W. Young, Thomas K. Mattingly and Charles M: approximately I p.m. l;lllttl 2:30 or 3p.m. It will vary
OVER A PERIOD OF SEVERAL WEEKS I have
Duke In e:&amp;cellent shape after'll dayaln ll[llice are due·to reach · slightly from building to bullding. The rea110n for the
had the opportunity of talking to many groupe about
Honolulu Saturday · afternoon and ' fly on to the Manned difference at Middleport Is due to the -fact !hat the
the levy that will be on the ballot next Tuesday.
·- ·- '
Spacecraft Cente~. ln HoWtton late that day.
.
Where I couldn't attend, due to Board meetings or
Speaking of Schools-No. 234 other prllSSing business, principals have effectively
Their record 245-pound haul of moon samples lnd mapping
will be divided and flown to Howtlon on two planes
Slime kindergarten teacher works at both Middleport
told the story. I want to extend my gratitUde for
Saturday, Impatient sdettlsta at the Lunar Receiving spd Rutiand.Shewill be at Rutland on Monday and at
resolutions of support from the following •
Labroatory expect to op111 the firat rock boz Monday In a sterile,
Middleport on Wednesday: The kindergarten room in
organizations: Pomeroy PrA, MldcBeport PrA,
nltrogen-l1lled cabinet. The utronauta Thuraday niade.one the Middleport will be used as a polling' place on Tueaday,
Bradbury PTA, Salisbury PrA, Rutland PTA, Salem
smoothell and most accurate 1andinp of the Apollo series, and May 2.
Center PTA, Harrisonville PTO, Middleport
cleared the way for llle lllght of Apollo 17 Dec••&amp;, the final . , Parents who are registering tbelr children for
Olamber of Commeree, Pomeroy Chamber of
apedlticm of the,2U bllllon. u.s. lunar ezploraUon prog~am. kind~~raarten or first grade mUll . . . two tblnga Commerce, and the Pomeroy • Middleport Lions
birth certificate and immunl•af!e ~- We look
Oub.
.
WASHJNGTON -THE PRICE COMMI88ION 1111 ordel'ed forward to yow- cooperation in pllill in accurate
I iould like to again call to yow- atteutlon that aU
four more companlea -Ill in the liii*IU.rilet and drulllore picture of what the enrollment wiD be in our kinthree ICOOol districis in the county are raqueatlng
fleldl - to cut l)ac:t prlcea becatlle their profit margins have dergarten classes and first grades for the coming · their voters to inCMaSe 'the operating mlllage to
rllen put go981111Deallllandlrdl.
.year.
22~ in order Jo insure full f1Dldin8 under the new
The four involved In 'l'liurlday'a action Included ScrlvnerMEMBERS OF THE POMEROY School Patrol
State Foundation Program. This II Vital to all three
llootllll'l Inc., an OklalmYI City wholeule srocery firm; depart this evening op' a weekend trip to Wubington. districts and your support ill needed and will be apllruno'l Food' Storti, , Blrmlnpem, Ala.; Godfrey Co,. They will board a bus at Parkersburg about 9:30 and
preclat.ed.
·
Wault:eaha, Wla., a wbal.... and retaU food company; and arrive in Waahlngton at five tomorrow monrlng.
On last Tuesday evening "teams" from many
'
(C.tm.ed 011 J1111112)
.
At~ breakfast they w.ll1 visit the Uncoln Memorial,
school districts in Southef!lem Ohio met at the
'
.

Plcturel

m

oo

'

•

;,

"

enttne

Rig's Trailer Hit
At Rail Crossing

Union Side;

round table (tiger claw legs)

•

Devoted To The Interest. Of The Meig1-Mason A,:ea
------~~---=~~~~·~-------=~~·~~-----------~~~~~----~~~
POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
FRIDAY, APRIL 28. 1972
PHONE 992-2156
TEN CENTS
.. . VOL XXIV NO. 268

mustache cup, wagon wheels ,

close to schools, Rober! Hill.
Racine, 949-3811 .
4-21 -6fp

Ail

at y

Muskie Got

- -----

apartm,nt, ground ,t floor ,

·

•

nation can live on imported pep pills and nuclear promiseS fo~ an
indetennlnate future," Bagge said. "The natural gas and oil
industries, which have been living high on the fuel market for
years, are now telling us they need a better set of incentives to
explore and develop new reserves."
Bagge, referring to President Nixon's energy message to Congress last JIDle, said the nation cannot declare coal gassification.
is a top priority need ''without giving a collary priority to healthy
development of the coal source."
"In the age of space technology, we caMot believe that coal's
earthbound problems are insurmountable, given a reasonable
time and more'realistic financial emphasis," he said. "What has
been lacking oo far Is a national will to solve energy problems at
home."

25 Acres
Burned

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