<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="16571" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/16571?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-09T22:52:21+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="49709">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/633ab7376ac7cd86d5858564367fef33.pdf</src>
      <authentication>0526de5ebea1f1e192592a6c9fbc9b57</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="52957">
                  <text>Sea, Air Holding
Off Viet capture

Dinner Given 80. After Open_House
By Ulllied PreuiDiematltJI!I)

~-

A dinner at the Rullahd
E:lemenlary School · for approximately 80 persons
Saturday night climaxed lhe
&lt;&gt;Pen ,house held during the d~y ·
to cominemorale the grand
opening of the Rutland Branch
of the Pomeroy Naljonali,Ban~.
William J .' Hobstetter,
branch manager and a vice
president, gave a welcome
following the 'dinner prepared
by the auxiliary of the Rutland
Fire Dept. Edison Hobstetter,
president of the Pomeroy
National Bank, and chairman
of the bank's board of directors,
introduced
the
distinguished guests, several of
·whom spoke briefly commending th-e bank on Its
foresight and the ''beautifUl"
new banking facilities In
Rutland,
Brochures commemorating
the bank's tOOth anniversary
arrived Saturday and were
presented to guests.
Guests were Dr. and Mrs . R.
E. Boice, Alfred Elberfeld, Mr.
and Mrs. Horace Karr,;Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Morgan, Mr. and
Mrs. Warren Pickens, Mr. and
Mrs. Eldon Weeks and Mr.
Mrs. Edison Bobstetter,
directors; Mr. and Mrs. Dennis

. BY KATIE CROW
A pay increase of seven
percent for all e111ployes of the
pollee, water and street
departments was recommended to Pomeroy Council
Monday 'night by Lucien
Poul!n, chairman of lite Safety
Committee.
'
Poulin in his written
memorandiun made clear that
a request for pay increases for
police department personnel
was requested and forwarded

'

Arthur Swiger

to the federal pay -board the percentage of raise as
Branch of the ·Economic · proposed by council was above
Stabilization Program on that generally allowed by the
March 17,
national board, which meant
Not ha~ing had any response the request would have to be
from the board by April 17, ruled on by the national board
'Robert Knappes of the board in Washington ..
was called by phone, who · .Poulin advised council it
admitted nothing bad been could grant an immedjale
done. The request apparently increase of seven percent
also was delayed primarily to because no raises bad been
teachers' demands for pay 111ade in the last three years.
increases having taken all of He said he has notified the
their time. KnallP"s also said district board to forward the

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

..:..::
VO=L.-=
XX:.:..
V ___,N=O-:...o12 POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

By KATIE CROW
"The closing of the PomeroyMason Bridge in July for
repair is the only alternative
we

T~e

Farmers Bank and Savings Company

Frank Cornell Died on Monday

Missing

MEIGS THEATRE

•

PRlCES ARE RIGHT!

ITALIAN NIGHT
AT
Martin Restaurant
homim~de

em.,,
mt

•

..

•

•

enttne
~~----------~~~~----------------

TUESDAY, MAY 2, 1972

PHONE 992-2156

have, " · Max

Farley,

none available.
Also meeting with the
chamber was Ted Dean of the
Ohio Wildlife Division, Athens,
who explained the recent
casting clinic and fishing derby
at Athens.
Jack Kerr, president ,
suggested the casting clinic as
an added attraction to the Big
Bend Regatta, and it was voted
to include the clinic on
Saturday, June 17.
Kerr also suggested an
exhibition of model airplanes
flown by remote control be

added to the Regatta, which
was approved as part of the
annual Frog jump on the Meigs
High Football Field in
Pomeroy Saturday afternoon.
Henry Cleland , Pomeroy
realtor, said sites are needed
with 60,000 to io,ooo square
feel in lhf immediate vicinity
and six to 10 acres of land,
preferably on U.S. Rl. 33 and
SR 7. He said that buyers would
go as high as $10,000 an acre.
Fred Crow brought up
beautifying the river bank with
a type of plant that would keep

the weeds down and give a
green effect. Crow said employes of the CAP would do the
planting.
Carson Crow ,reported that
ads for · the Regatta Program
are now being sold and Dean
Lutz reported that permission
to use the upper position of the
upper parking l~ l for display
space had been approved by
Pomeroy CounciL
Other guests introduced
were Pat McCleary, Athens
Realtor,
and
Nancy
Farrington, an employe of the

TEN CENTS

firm , and Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Buck. It was announced that
Buck had passed his slate bar
exam for attorney-at-law and
was associated with the 'law
firm of Webster and Fultz.
Others attending were Fred
Morrow, Dale Warner, Willie
Cundiff, Earl Ingels, Bill
Grueser, Dennis Keney, C. E.
Blakeslee, Richard Chambers,
Tom Cassell, Scott Lucas, Bill
Anderson, Bob Jacobs, Norbert
Compton, Jim Mees and
Kermit Walton.

Division 10 Engineer, told the
members of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce
Monday at the noon luncheon
meeting at Meigs Inn .
Farley, who came at the
request of Jack Crisp,
democratic candidate for U.S.
Congressman , explained that
the type of repair to he used on
IN.TEENAGERPAGEANT- Miss Maureen Hennessy,
the bridge deck makes it
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hennessy of Pomeroy,
necessary to close the bridge
wears the official banner and tiara of the Miss Ohio Teenager
for a two week period.
Pageant. Miss Hennessy will take part in the state event on
nn is a new water process
July 14 and 15 at the Sheraton Dayton Hotel in Dayton. She is
using an acid that will make for
being sponsored by the Citizens' National Bank of Mida more lasting job," Farley
dleport, the Racine Horne National Bank, the Fanners Bank
pointed out.
of Pomeroy and the Pomeroy National Bank:
Farley admitted that repairs
in 1970 were made on the
bridges, and the type of repaif
Twenty-two years ago he was
made at that ttme have not
one of the Middleport Righ
lasted, and cost a "conSchool's long string of tough
siderable" amount of money.
running backs.
The coniraclor this time has
Today be is Air Force Lt. Col.
been allowed two weeks to do
James M. Roller, promoted to
the tepair which is supposed to
that grade April! at his station
WASHINGTON •(UPIJ - J. · atmosph~re of the Nixon ad- be finished in a six day period:
on Randolph AFB, Texas.
Edgar Hoover, legendary head ministrati.on. President Nixon, Two weeks are allowed in case
Col. Roller is the son of Mrs.
oi the FBI who served nearly just as President Johnson had of bad weather.
Dorothy
Roller, and the late
hall a century as the nation's when Hoover tw-ned 70, kept
If the contractor runs over
Max Roller, Middleport. His
lop law enforcement official, him on in the job with a special the two week period a $500
wile
is the former Ida Lee
died in his sleep today.
waiver of the mandatory daily penalty will be imposed,
Hartley,
daughter of Mrs. Eva
Official word of the death of retirement age.
Farley noted . " The water
Hartley, and the late Homer
the 77-year-old Hoover came
President Nixon, appearing proofing method is a much
Hartley, Middleport . They
from Acting Attorney General' personally in the White House better method of repair and .
have
three childten, Cathy 17,
Richard G. Kleindienst He press room, said it was with a should last at least 10 years,"
Jimmy 16, and John, 14.
said in a brief statement: profound sense of personal loss Farley explained.
Col. Roller graduated from
" It is with profound personal that !learned of the death of J.
Farley was asked what the
grief that I announce that J. Edgar Hoover ."
acid to be used will do to the
Edgar Hoover passed away
Nixon said he had personally river. Farley allowed this was
HULA DANCERS - Blackllghts will be used to bring out the fluoreocent treatment of the
during the night at his ordered all flags on govern- a "good point," and could not
costuming worn by these hula dancers In the annual musical of the Salisbury school. The
residence. His body was found menl buildings flown at half say what it would do. He said if
dancers, from the left, are Kathleen Ney, Bonnie Morris, Nancy Stanley, Stephanie Radford
by his maid at approximately stall. He described Hoover as two way lralfic were mainand Rhonda Reuter. The girls, dancing to "Sweet Leilani," make up one of the 31 numbers of
8:30 a.m . His personal "one of my closest personal tained, the acid would damage
th.e show to be staged at 7:34p.m. Friday and Saturday In the Salisbury School auditorium.
Teacher and coaching
physician informed me that his friends and advisers" for a autos.
Director and producer is Jolm Usle, principaL
contracts have been awarded
death was due to natural quarter of a century.
Asked if more money were
by the Eastern Local School
causes."
Nixon called .a Hoover "a available could another kind of
~ Dis~ict Board of Education.
There was no immediate truly remarkable man," and repair be used, one that would
I" G1 ven three year contracts
indication of who might sue- praised him for his " un- not require closing for two
Vas
teachers were Norman
ceed Hoover, who joined the paralleled devotion" to the weeks. Farley said, "No."
·
·
Bahr,
Clint Mullens, Garry
Justice Department as a 22- nation .
Asked if a ferry service could
OOLUMBUS (UP!) - Sen. paign felt he had a long-shot couraged over the last couple Parsons, Maxine Whitehead
year.old law school graduate,
Stayed on Job
be used, Farley noted, knew of Hubert Humphrey, his labor bope of upsetting Humphrey. of days."
and Kathryn Baum.
became the head of the FBI's
Despite the criticism and his
support
at
loose
ends,
said
he
"If you get 30 per cent of the
.An aide insisted Humphrey
Charles Wills,
David
predecessor organization and advancing years, Hoover
needs
to
collect
at
least
30
per
vote
you
ought
to
do
well,"
must
win
a
plurality
of
the
Chadwell,
Fred
Kessinger,
served as the director of the stayed on the job. As recently
cent of the vote in the Ohio Humphrey told UP! in an elec- state's 38 at~arge convention Herbert Matheny, Carolyn
FBI until his death.
as his last birthday, he said he
Democratic primary today to tion eve interview. But he ad- delegates and 50 per cent of the Parker, Roger Kirkhart and
The Justice Department said was in "excellent health " and
stop
a late surge by George mitted he already had passed 23 district races to look good. Linda Hutchinson were given
funeral arrangements are not said he would not consider
McGovern and galvanize his his peak In Ohio.
"That will say a lot about two year contracts; Carol
complete. Kleindienst an - stepping down "as long as I
presidential
drive.
"I
felt
a
little
leave
ling
off,"
where Humphrey will go," he Domigan was given a one year
nounced Hoover's death after live."
Sen.
McGovern,
whose
blue
he
said,
"but
over
the
weekend
said,
"but a tight race won't contract, and a continuing
meeting at the Justice
WASHINGTON (UP!) ·'_ collar popularity was building I'd say it started picking up hurl anybody."
contract was awarded to
Department with his top of.
in
the
last
days
of
the
camWage
and
price
controls
on
5
again. I'm much more en(Continued on page 2)
Eleanor Knight.
ficials.
million
small
businesses
and
19
The board took no action on
-~
.
The small, stocky FBI chief
,
million
of
their
workers
have
the
employment of three
had .come under increasing
1
been
lifted
by
the
governteachers who are employed on
criticism in recent years that
ment's
Cost
of
Uvlng
Councll.
temporary
certificates. Any
he was out of step with the
The
council'
took
the
action
times. But he still commanded
Monday in an effort to free
enough resp~ct on Capital Hill
manpower to watch over the
T~pering
to get what he wanted for his
nation's
largest
companies
and
agency and enjoyed general
unions. The new regulation
admiration
from . any
exempts from price and wage
Americans.
controls companies and local
He seemed to be particlliarly
government units with 60 or
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
at borne in the "law and order"
. fewer employes .
,
Ohio campaign manager lor
Not Included under the
Sen . George McGovern today
nemption are health service
called on the U.S. Juatlce
or construction industry firms
Department to investigate "a
with 60 or fewer workers. The
deliberate pattern of tamcouncil. said these types of
perlng" with voting machines
enterprises still presented
in Cuyahoga County.
serious inflationary problems.
Robert McAlister said at .
Also left wider wage controls .
. ROBERT E. BUCK
least
tOO precincts were shut
CHILUCOTHE, Ohio (UPI)
Robert E. Buck, son of Mr. were !inns with 60 or fewer
down
for
two hours. McAlister
- Two Chillicothe teenagers aad Mrs. Fritz Buck, AD- · workers, half of whom are paid
said he also lodged complain~
were killed early today when a llqully; ba• passed the state under "master employment
.
with the Ohio Secretary of
Beltimore and Ohio freight bar examlnalioa for atloi'Jiey contracts" affecting larger
State
and the Cuyahoga County
train hit their car and dragged allaw. Buck graduated from groups of workers. ·
Board of Elections.
It 1,750 feet.
It was the largest exemption
Pomeroy High School iD
"It ls evident that a
, The victims were Mary 198t, from Oblo l!Dlverslty in action since the .Phase U
'
deliberate
patl!rn of lamHydell, 18, daughter of Paul 19111 and from Oblo State economic program began Nov.
pering with the Ohio elections
Hydell, superintendent of Coliege of Law In 1971. He II t4, but the councu said the
has
emerged In Cuyahoga
pliblir schools here; and John IIIOCiated With llle law firm "action Is no~ designed as a
Couhty where . at least 100
Dyer, 18. Dyer's brother, of Webster and Fullz. Buck ,step toward total decontrol."
polling places were kept, l~ked
Stephen, 16, ,was injured in the Is a member of Pomeroy
Council spokearnen said hall
lor
at lwt two hours alter the
crash. ·
Masoalc Lodge Ft.AM, of the ·3,000 Internal Revenue
official opening time at 1!:311,"
The Ross County sheriff's • Alladiu Temple SbriDe of .Service personnel who have
FIRS'I' PLACE WlNNERS- Winning first place in ihe aeveralsress of competition at the said McAlister.
office said the three youngster~ Colbmbus, Trilllly Church, been assigned to enforce Phase
American Legion AW&lt;Uiary junior conference Saturday at the Sacred Heart Cburch were
"The motives of this ·
were trapped in the Wreckage Pomeroy aud Plif Alpba II controls have~ devoting
eeated left to right, Amanda RoUsh, Racine; Beth Mcl'olgbt, Pomeroy; Sheryl Simpson, acoperation
are as yet unclear,
·for hall an hour.before deputiea . Della Fraternity. Buck and their Ume to the smaller
cepting for Della Johnson, Racine, in the doll contest; and elandlng, left 1o right, Lori Am
but what Ia clear iJ that lOme
and·. volunteer llremen could bla ·wife, Debbl, reside on business flrmJ that now are
Wood; Pomeroy, conference cover; Sandy Might, Middleport scrap~ and history; and
group
of pollticalleadere feell
extiicate uiem. .
DebliP. Lehew, Pomeroy, foreign relations scrapbook.
· ·.
Malberry Ave., Pomeroy. exempt.
thalli is beat to prevent_people
~,
.,.

'

SALESLIPS FROM'

ELBERFELDS I~ POMEROY

at the next meeting of counciL
The pay increase would be
retroactive to May 1.
In other business, council
approved a motion by Poulin to
purchase gas and oil for village
equipment from a single
supplier.
William Snouffer suggested
that a complaint sheet be
drawn up for t:esiden ts of the
village to use when they have
complaints or suggestions to
(Conlin/ed on page 2)

Bridge Closure Stands

~

Jackson Jolted

·BAKER
•

which case he shall be enti tled
to one-half times extra pay.
All town holidays will be
observed on the same day as
they are celebrated nationwide.
Recommendations were also
made for vacation entitlement
and s(ck leave. ·
The pay increase, following a
discussion by council, was
referred ' to the ordinance
committee which will draw up
an ordina.nce for consideration

Devoted To The lntere&amp;l&amp; Of The Meigs-Mason Area

SAVE ALL OF YOUR

POMEROY
. BLOCK CO.

paid. When a holiday falls on
his day off, and he wor~s a
relief shift. he will not receive
additional one-half tirml rate ..
only the regular rate.
Holidays which fall on
Saturdays will be observed on
Saturdays. Holidays which fall
on Sundays will be observed on
the following Mondays.
Police on meter duty will
have holidays off wfless on
relief duty which falls during
his regular work week, in

at y

BE THRIFTY!

SHOP I

holidays. Business as usual will
prevail on all days except town
observed holidays and Sundays.
The above stipulation is in
regard to free parking meters.
Holidays will be worked if
they fall on the employee's
regular work week, but •.bey
will be compensated by an
add itional one-half limes
regular rate when worked.
Holidays fa lling on an employee's day off will not be

•

Died on Sunday

W/oman
W

request oi1Jroposed increase to
the national board.
Under the pay increase the
following stipulations were
made :
Holidays to be observed by
the village of Pomeroy are as
follows, New Year 's Day ,
Memorial Day, July Fourth,
Th81lksgiving and Christmas.
No other holiday, be it federal
or state, will be observed.
Elections, primary or
general, are not considered

Died Saturday

W. J. Reynolds

BUDGET

. .

'

son

\

.

.

7%

.
.
.
Rutllnd" Friendly Guo~net!
Club and the Rutllnd ~
Club prepared punch.~
were ulended to the ~eh""" .
dlatrlct for use of the school:
Branch employes wert
asailted by Pomeroy Natl~
Bank employees in conducllni
the ope~~- hOUse at .tile new'~
~~ranch quarters .on Saturday,,
Wly~ of dlrect.Qrs alao ualsled;'
with the event attended bY ov~.;
600 persons. ·
·:

Keney, Mr. and Mrs. Richard guests; Mr. and Mrs. W!Wam
Chambers,
Mr. and Mrs . J. Ho~tetter, Mrs, Edith K.·
PARIS -SOUTH VIETNAM SAID TODAY top Han.oi
'
Charles
Griffith,
Mrs. Hilton · Williamson, Mr. and Mrs ,
negotiator Le Due Tho gave no hopes of a rapid end to the VietWolle, Jr., · M.r . and Mrs. Bruce May and Mr. and Mrs.
. FLORESVILLE, Tex. (UP!) avoid an energy crisis, we have namese conflict when he returned to tbe Vietnam peace ts'Jks:
Richard Poulin, Mr. and. Mrs. DavlQ Gra$e, Rulllnd Branch
-President Nixon aaid Sunday to II'Ovide incentives for people Tho returned to. Paris Sunday after a five-month absence in
Don Nelson, Mr.and Mrs. Cecil employeoand their guests; Mr.
that the Communlate would to go out and explore (for oili . Hanoi and said he was ready to continue negotiating with the
Midkiff, Mrs. Joan Harrison, and Mrs. Robert Snowden, Mr.
take over South Vlelllam if the That'l why YO\I have depletloh, United States.
Thomas Wolle, Mr. and Mrs. · and Mrs. J{arvey Erlewine,
"There is nothing in the declarations of Le Due Tho, which
9United Stateo stoP, using air and the people have got"' to
Robert Sylvester, Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Eads, Mr.
pennlls
hope for a rapid end to the conflict," the South Vietand sea power in [n(Jochina. undentand that."
James . Anderson, Linda and Mrs. Jplui WWlam Brown,
Talking !llllfe like a hawk
-Said If Congres8 does not namese delegation said today.
Weaver, David Spencer, of- Rutland vlllage councilmen
than at any time since he enact his legislation to ban a
fleers, employes and their and"their guests; Mr, and Mrs.
launched his troop pullout new court-ordered busing for
HOLLYWOOD -BRmBH-IIORN ACI'RESS Gia Scala was
Emerson Jones and Mrs. John
program three years .ago, integrating school$ "the only found dead late SUnd!ly night In her Hollywood Hills home.
E. M. Kert, news media, and
'•
CAIJ.ED TWICE
::1
Nixon tol~ a group of .200 rich · recourse we havel left Is. to Detectives said the 36-year.old enterialner apparently died .from
their guests; Mr. and Mrs.
The Middleport Fire Dept;:
and innuential Texans . that pU ~e a constitutional amend- an overdose of drugs.
Andy AndersOn, Mr. and Mrs.
wascalledall:~
p.m. SundaY, ~
Intensified U.S. bombing and
Larry Lan~toli, 21, one of several youths staying in Miss
Richard E: Carter, Columbus,
to extinguish a brush lire neat;
llheUing will continue until
Scala's h001e, told pollee he found bet dead in her bed when he
Le,febure Corp.; .Mr. and Mrs.
North Vietnam. ends ita of.
Edward Baer, Ohio Valley the Gravel Hill Cemetery ar
went to thank her for her hoepltality and say goodbye. Detectives
Arthur
'
R.
Swiger,
72,
Cheshire. AI 7:06 p. m., the ;
il!llllve. •
·
said Langston and others at the home told them they last sa\v the
Coolville, died Saturday Plumbing, Pomeroy; Mr. and department was called to:
"The North Vletnarneae are
actress allve when she walked downstairs during the morning
e~ening in Fairfax Hospital, Mrs. Cassaro Hlndy, electrical Africa 'Road, just off Route 554,;
taking a very grave risk if they
and then returned to her second.floor bedroom. She had been ·
Fairfax, Va., following a brief contractor, Middleport; Mr. also near Cheshire, where ~ ;
continue Ibis Invasion of the
and Mr_s. Joseph Ritchey,
drinking, they said.
illness."
.
·
bam was on fire.
:
South," Nixon said. "I'll j(lsl
(CJ?ntinu
Mr. Swiger was · born at Zanesville; Mr. and Mrs. Jolm
leave It there and let them March '30. ,4 the loss of the
Harrison County, W. Va., the Gianfagna and Mr. and Mrs.
PR~IDENT ANWARSADATOFEGYPTTODAYvowed to
CALLED IN DEATH &gt;
make their choice."
crack troops I I · Qwlng Tri
Charlie Booth, public relations
son
of
the
late
George
and
"smash
Israel's
arrogance"
and
indicated
he
will
receive
The Pomeroy E-R squacj:
Nixon spoke in answer to wollld be the overriment's
Mary Ellen Harvey Swiger: He firm, Marietta, builders and answered a call to the Willlanj :
questions from his fellow WOI\It single dele t of the war. "within a reasonable time" the mllltary aid from Moscow to do
was also preceded In death by their guests; Mr. and Mrs. Reynolds Sr. home on Stele St;:.
guests following a lavish
'lhe .last 7~ Am rlcan advi- it. Sadst, who returned Saturday from Moscow where the Soviets
his wile, Anna Ankrom Swiger Bernard Fultz, Mr. and Mrs. at 2:05 p. ·m. Sunday where :
barbecue In the backyard of sers and the AR N milltan' spoke of "strengthening the mllltary ablllty" of Egypt, told a
in 1964, and one son, Raymond. James W. Ho~teller, Mrs. William Reynolds, Jr., about ·
Trealllll')' Secretary Jolm B. cominanders were flown out ~ay Day rally in the Egyptian summer resort city of Alexandria
Mr. Swiger was an employe Ralph Welker, Mr. and Mrs. 26, was dead on arrival of the ;
Connally's tan fieldstone aboard five "Joll;t; Green he woul&lt;l not be content with merely getting back terrltorv taken
of the B&amp;O Railroad and had Allan Keller, Darien, Conn.; squad. The body was taken to
G
_unt" hellcopter•i under in the Ull!7.war - he wanted to humillate Israel.
.. u......,,
ran ·'-'--···
worked for the American Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Gage, office the Ewing Funeral Home. Mrs.
heavy fire which shot wn five
''Soviet backing means that we shall get within a reasonable
Viscose Corp. 37 years, He manager of Southern Ohio Coal Reynolds, mother of the '
American aircraft I y. In time the necessary strength to liberate our lands," Sadat said in
Laahei Out al Critics
owned and operated a farm in Co.; Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Reece, deceased, becime ill and was i
The President lashed out at 'addtion to the FAC p e, two a 'speech broadcast to the nation.
Ireland Community near public affairs, Ohio Power Co., taken to Veterans Memorial
critics II. his war policy, ln- helicopters were shot d wn In
Gavin Power Plant; Mr. and
Coolville.
cludlrig some _candidates for an abortive rescue a
pt
CLEVELAND - SEN. GEORG~ McGOVERN, camMrS&gt; E. A. Higglnil, division Hospital by the squad, treated '
I
.
Survivors
include
four
· · ·
ke-lilled facto · lode
· d spin If
.
the Democratic presidential earlier today and tw AlE
and released.
Skyrsiders were stiilt"
In palgrung lD a smo
ry'
Y receive a
o
daughters, Mrs. C. Owen manager, Ohio Power Co.,
nomination, bluntly suggesting th ' e(Orid successful ~ort endorsement from several other Muslde supporters of the United
(Virginia) Smith, Tecumseh, Portsmouth; Mr. and Mrs.
LOCAL TEMPS
they should "tell It to Hanoi." Th~ ~Hots were rescued\ . · Auto Workers union in Ohio. McGovern, aho said his campaign
Fred
A.
Morrow,
manager,
The
temperature in down- ,
Mich.; Mrs. John L.
He said Americans should
The situation at Quad~! Trl , has_been "aimed at the working man" In this state was endiirsed
Ohio
Power
Co.,
Pomeroy.
(Margaret) Mills, Delta, Ohio;
to)VII Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
00111lder the full consequences
Table arrangements for the Monday was 68 degrees under .
was
part
o( a gloomy pfl.ture
by
Warren
Davis,
assistant
regional
director
of
the
85,000
Mrs.
Frank
W
.
(Rose)
Mcthat would result "If the North
William Ray Reynolds, jr., Cauley, Marietta, and Mrs. dinner were prepared by the llWlny skies.
Vietnamese were to take over throughout South VietnamT~e member UAW Region No.2, and Frank Obuch, president of UAW
26,
died unexpectedly Sunday Mansfield R. (Marllea ) Steidel
in South Vietnam, as a result of Communists scored m Jor Local 1045at the Alcoa Aluminum plant the candidate visited.
"The working .man can be the balance of power in afte~J~oon at the residence, 106 Falls Church, Va.; four sons,
our Jtopping our support In the gains in the coastal hlghla ds
near
Qui
Nbon,
capturing
e
tomorrow's
election," said Davis, who is running as an alternate State St., ~omeroy .
Arthur R. Jr., and David E.,
air and on the sea."
He is survived by his Adtienne, Mich. ; Roy K.,
district town of Tam Quan altd delegate committed to the defunct campaign of Muskie. "If
Nixon's phrasing appeared winning control of 250,000 McGovern wins a sizeable number of delegates, he can go into · .parents, William Ray and Cleaton, Md., and Donald C.,
• to Indicate that deoplte the persons In Blnh Linh Province. the convention in Miami without having to deal with the party Florence Elizabeth Reynolds; Falls Church, and one sister,
• Vle~tlon effort, South They were nearing Konturn in structure, the wheelers and dealers who want to split up the five brothers, Robert Roy, Mrs . J. D. Palmer , MidNapoleon, Ohio; Kenneth dletown, Ohio.
'
Vietnam would faD to .the the Central ilighlands and convention."
'
Edward, Long Bottom ; Ronald
Funeral services will be held
Communists If it were not for scored major gains 35 miles
Franklin,
Pomeroy;
John
northwest of Saigon.
Wednesday at I p.m. at the
U.S. air and sea support.
Henry
McGinnes,
Gallipolis;
UP!
correopondent
Stewart
While
Funeral Home in
· The guesta on the Connally
Joseph Jeffrey Davis, Pope Air Coolville with the Rev. Harold
ranch,- including many of the Ke.llerman, reporting from
Force Base, N. C.; two sisters, E. Spear officiating. Burial wiD
'conJei'Vallve Texas Democrats Hue, 32·milea south of Quang
Trl,
said
senior
U.S.
m!Utary
Louise
Slayton, be in MI. Olive Cemetery in·
which Nixon needs if he Is to
By United Pres• Inlematioaal McGovern in county conven- Alma
officers
told
him
"there
are
Gallipolis, and Dorothy Viola Vinton ·County. Friends inay
win the state's pivotal 26
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, . tions in Washington.
call at the funeral home from 7
electoral votes · Nov. 7, rose still thousands of ARVNs jolted in his home state of
McGovern, who had enough Reynolds, Pomeroy ; grand(VIetnamese
troops
)
inside
aponlaneously to drink a tosst
Washington over the weekend, county support to claim parents, Minnie May Clark, to 9 Monday, and 2 to 4 and 7 to
with French champagne to ,Qaung Trl, but they have no today- was reassessing his delegations in two of Pomeroy, and Jolm R. Long, 9 Tuesday.
"the courage of the chance of defending the city." candidacy for .the Democratic Washington state's seven Hansley, W. Va ., and several
"They'll either be killed or
Prellidenl."
nieces and nephews.
captured
or somehow manage presldentlsl nomination. Sens. dlalricts, was In a dead heal in
Connally, 'three times goverRlllem Dlltrlc:l Na. t
He was a member of the
Hubert H. Humphrey and a third and made a strong
nor of Texas and the only to ~eak thrOU8h NVA (North George S. McGovern, and showing in a fourth. The Middleport American Legion
SlaleNo.=x
Vietnam-ese)
lines.
CONSOUDATED
REPORT
OF
CONDmON
OF
Democrat In the Cabinet,
,
"But there's really not much Alabama Gov . George . C. counties will elect national Post No. 128.
ll'•laed the Republican Chief
Funeral
Wallace,
campaigned
on
the
services
will
be held
delegatea
at
district
convenExecutive In wPtda usually hope for them to escape. Going eve of key primaries In Ohio tions May 20.
Wednesday
at
1
p.
m.
at
Ewing .
reserved for campaign rallies: down Highway I is going to be a and Indiana.
Despite clearly controlling Chapel. Burial will be In
little like the German retreat
"A Scholar ef Affatn"
of Pomeroy, Oblo. And Forelp aad Dome111f Sablldllrlel, at lhe cloae of
Jackson
met
with
his
finanonly
three of seven dlatricts, Riverview Cemetery. Friends
"The President ill a scholar from Russia in World War II. cial advisers, UP! learned, Jackson said in a statement In may call at the funeral home
bu11Deu April 18, 197Z, a alate baDkloc illltitaiiCD cqanfred ud openlflll
In the affalra of thl8 nation ... They're gonna get slaughtered after suffering a setback to f hio, "This is a real boost to anytime.
uoder llle b&amp;DkiDg laws of IIIII Slate aad a member ~ llle Federal Reterve
and Is u dlacipllned a man as I all the way down," the officers
Sy•tem. PUblilhed iD accordance wllll 1 call made by llle Slate Baa•Jrll
my national campaign."
have ever known, mentally and aald.
Aulborilles and by lhe Federal Relerve Bai!Jt: ~ IIIII Dlllrfcl,
How heavily the highway is
P!yllically."
ASSETS
Nixon responded llY CjiUing defended by the Invading North
Cash
and
due
from
banks
•
•
- - - - - • - - - • • • • • $1,022;000.91
4
Connally "a man ·who has Vietnamese was indicated this
U.S. Treasury securltieo - - - - - •• • - - - - - •• 1,822;702.2;!
PORTLAND
Frank children. He was a member of
demonstrated that he is afternoon when a column of
Obligations.
of
other
U.S.
Government
Cornell, 86, Portland, died the Meigs County Fox Hunters
capable of holding any Job In elite Soulb Vietnamese
agencies and corporations - - • - - - - ·• - • 303,740.88
marines tried unsuccessfully to
today at Veterans Memorial Assn.
the United States."
Obligations
of
States
and
political
subdlvislona
•
•
•
•
• • 1104,849.88
Hospital. Mr. Cornell was
He Is survived by these·
1'hll seemed sure to revive break through to Quang Tri for
Other securities - - • • • - - - - - - - - - - • • • - • • - 21,000.00
preceded in death by his wife, children, Willlam and Leonard,
speculation that Connally will the second day, Kellerman
A
missing
person
report
has
Federal funds sold and secu,rltleo purchased
Nellie Belle Cornell, and three of Portland; Clara Wells, St.
supplant Vice President Spiro reported.
been
filed
with
the
Gallia
wider agreements to resell - - • • - - - 1,300,000.00
T. Agnew as Nixon's running
The Marlnea were ambushea
Mary's, W. Va .; Virgie Allen,
County
Sheriff's
Department
Olherloans
••
mate lhlllaU.
along the road north of Hue and
Wellsville, Ohio; Edna
8,1145,759.56
Bank premises, furniture and fixtures, and
Although his after-dinner shoved back, apparently with for 23-year-old Linda J. Fisher ,
DeLong, New Matamoras;
other assets repreoenting bank premises - remarkll centered oil Vietnam, serious losses, Kellerman said, of 538 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. HOSPITAL NEWS Alfred of Bolivia; Wiley of
- - - - 463,284.80
Deputies
said
the
report
was
and that engagement led
Olherassets • - • • • • - - •• - - Nixon also:
Steubenville; Wilmer, Racine,
- - - - • • - 1113.75
-Said he favors further directly to the decision to filed by her husband, Robert Veterans Memorial Hospital and Norma McClaskey,
TOTAL ASSETS - - • • - • • • • • • - - - - - - - $12,324,142.10
UberalJJing of business tax abandon the Quang Trl Joseph Fisher, who said he last
Newark
;
a
brother,
John,
East
SATURDAY ADMISSIONS
LlABILli'IES
ssw his wife early Saturday - Donald Covert, Pomeroy; Uverpool; 'l/ grandchildren, 40
deducations lor depreciation, garrison to Its fate.
Demand deposits of individuals, partnershlpe,
despite the complainta of some
The U.S. military advisers morning.
Lewis Roush, Minersville; great-grandchildren,
and
and corporations - • - - - - - - •• - - - - - - • n,m,220.03
Mrs. Fisher is f&gt;-4, weighs Jolm Michael Roush, Mid- several nieces and nephews.
·Democrata that depreciation nown to llye said they a~n­
Time and savings deposita ~ individuals,
rules put into effeCt last year doned the city ol Quang Trl about 120 pounds and has dleport;
Paul
Burns,
Funeral services will be held
parfllershipe, and corporations • • - • - - • - - • - •• 7,1167,838.211 '
are a giveaway to business .
"because the command brown hair. She was last seen Pomeroy; Koleen Parsons, Thursday at I p. m. at the
Deposits
of United States Government - • • • - - - • • • • 22,885.1!1 ·
- Endorsed the on depletion structure was disintegrating. wearing a red coal and wire Middleport
Reorganized Church of Latter
Deposits of Siateo and political subdivisions - • - • • • - - - - 430,804.12
l)lowance, a popular stance In · There was nothing left to ad- rim glasses. She left with the
SATURDAY DISCHARGES Day_Saints Church, Old Town.
Deposits of commercial banks - - - - - • - - - , • • • • 2,812.86
Texas, and declared : "To vise. All they could do was couple's four -year.old son , - Howard Largent, Joan Burial wiU be In Mlddleswart
Certified and officers' checks, etc. - • - - - - • - • • • • • 51,585.04
Samuel Joseph Fisher .
defend themselves."
Johnson , Connie Warner , Cemetery. Friends may call at
TOTAL
D~POSITS • - , • • • • • - U1,157,965.71
Military sources in Hue said
Avanell Bass, Christine the funeral home anytime.
(a) Total demand deposita - • - - - - •
$ 3,300,117.46
UNIT TO MEET
the fall of Quang Trl would
Branham, Jean Reynolds,
The
Ladies
Auxiliary
of
the
(b)
Total
time
and
savings
deposits
$
7,167,838.28
open the way for a pincers
Kenneth Lunsford, Jennifer
Middleport
Fire
Dept.
will
Other UabWties • • - - - - - • • - - - - • • • • • 3581078.38
movement against Hue-North
Dye, Paul Miller.
meet
at
7:30
p.m.
Wednesday
TOTAL UABIJ.J'ITEs • • • • - - • - • • • • • • • $11,518,032.08
Vietnamese moving southward
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
SUNDAY ADMISSIONS at
the
home
of
Mrs.
Everett
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECUJm'JES
May 1-2 '
along Highway I and other
Harry Graham, Pomeroy; Ann
Reserve for bad debt !oases on loana
FL.IGHT OF.THE
Colll)llunlst units driving from Baclmer. Awhite elephant sale Etchberger, Worthington;
DOVES
the AShau Valley west of Hue. will be held.
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings) • • • - - .'·•• - • - - ••• $11,111111.54
Cecil King, Letart, W. Va.;
ITochnicolorl
The
Corrununlsts
overran
the
TOTAL
RESERVES ON LOANS AND SECURITIES • • • - $11,980.54
Winebrenner,
Ron Moody
MAN INJURED
" Bobby
defense
bases
of
Bastogne
and
CAPlfAL ACCOUNTS
Jack Wild
The Meigs County Sheriff's P orne roy ; Jerry Jacks , r---....;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;
Equity capital, total
• - • • • •
Checkmate last week, moving
(G)
Rutland;
Reatha
McCoy,
f'I9S,14U7
Dept. Is investigating a
Color.cartoons : ·
to wllhln 12 miles of Hue. report to the office Sunday at R~clne; Lizzie Hanning,
Common stock-total par value •
300,000.00
3 For Breakfast
Today
they
launched
a
heavy
No.
shares
authorized
12,000
Middleport;
Donald
Spires,
Red Tractor
12:30 a.m. in which Harry
allllck against Artillery Base
No. shares outstanding 12,000
Brothers from Outer SPICe
Graham, Pomeroy, Rt. 3, was Cheslre; Jack Sharpnack,
King, north ol Bastogne and
SHOW STARTS 7 P.M.
Surplus---------said to have been beaten and Racine; Evelyn Edwards,
"' • • - - - 400,000.00nine miles southwest of Hue.
Undivided proflta • • • • • . • •
Leona
Hubbard,
Hartford;
left lying on the parking lot at
• - 116,14'-47 .
Syracuse;
Mary
Jane
Armes,
TOTAL
CAPUAL
ACOOUNTS
Whispering Pines Nile Club.
718,148.47
TOTAL UABIUTIES, RESERVES, AND
Graham was taken to Veterans Minersville; Gladys Rife,
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS - - •
Memorial Hospital by the Cheshire.
$12,324,142.10 '
Pomeroy E-R squad and adMEMORANDA
SUNDAY DISCHARGES Average of total depoelts tor the lJ calendar
mitted. Hospital officials Okey Howard, William
reported !hal Graham is in Burkhart, Claude Roy, Ann
dsys ending with call date • • - - - • • • • • •
• $11,037,232.52
satisfactory condition.
Average of totalioane for the 15 calendar
Etc~berger, Georgia Johnson.
days ending with caD date • • • • • • ~ • • • _ • • • 8,511,888.38
,'
• SUPPLEMENTAL MEMORANDA
Pledged
~ts
and
eecurillee loaned (book value):
"I ' •1 eoslar to punnt ,bod
U.S. Government obU,atlona, direct and guaranteed,
blta than It Ia to bttok them."
pledged to II!CUI'8 depoelts and other llablllties •
$810,000.00
You
don't
have
to
break
your
from our ,_
I, Roger W. llylell, Cashier, of the abovHamed baDk do bll'lby declare
Piggy bank to get what you
!hat
Ibis report of cmdltion II true to the bello! my know~ loci helllf. ·
need at Pomeroy Cement
Block Company, the home of
~- w. II7HII
the " FRIENDLY ONES".
Quality products at a price to
We, the underalgned dlrecton, altell the correctn• of lbfa report of
fit your budgel gives you two
In the Heart
condition
and declare lbal.ll has been tQJ!Ilned by 111 loci ID the belt o1 oar
good reiS9'1S for gelling Into
the h~blt of doing business
knowledge and beli8f Is true ll1d comet.
with Pomeroy Cement Block
w·EDNESDAY NIGHT
TllwMIJt111110a
eo·mpllny.
6:30 To 10:30, May 3
Lalli P'. 'Ftahl - Dliectou
Pled R.
Jr.
.........---~
fUIIUl'UIII .
Spaghettl'=l&gt;""i'i . '
Italian sauce.
I~DIJliPOIT, 0.
state ol Ohio County ol Melel, •:
sworn to and 111becribed belwt tile tbla 1'/tbda)' o1 April, tm.
"Featuring Muine A.t The Organ"
The Dip!. Store of Bullcllng
, .
. lluyP. YtllltNituJNUe
Since ttlS.
My 01nnn1n1oo Expbw .ita[J 1,
,·

.

LT. COL. ROLLER

~

..' '
~·

Roller Promoted
To Colonel Rank

e

Hoover DIes

Middleport High School in 1951,
and from Ohio University in
1955 where he took a degree in
Agri_culture and earned a
commission in the Reserve
Officers' Training Corps. He
went on active duly with \l)e
Air Force the same Yfar and
made it his career.
The colonel is Chief of the
Special Actions Unit, Airman
Management Division , Air
Force Military Personnel
Center, at Randolph .
He has had tours of duty on
th e islands of Guam an~
Okinawa, and in Germany.

Contracts Given

.30
Humphrey Needing

Controls
Removed

.

action on these will be taken
later when it is determined if
there are any vacancies. The

temporary certificates are
held by Carla Salser, Wilma
Robjnson
and
Tila
Strausbaugh.
Coaching contracts awarded
for one year periods went to
Kirkhart, head football and
track coach; William Phillips,
head .basketball and assistant
football coach; Larry Heines,
head baseball and freshman
basi&lt;J!tball, and Michael
Morgan, assistant football
coach. The resignation of
Principal Bob Ord as athletic
director ·and as an assistant
coach was accepte~. Ord will
remain, however, as principal
of the high school.

"Charged

Machines Locked

Otillicothe

Teens Killed

•

from voting in Cleveland, to
hold down the nUJ'lber of voters
casting their ballots in today's
primary election," said
McAlister.
"It was one of those things
that shollidn'lhave happened,"
said Cuyahoga County Board of
Elections Director Joseph
Cippollone . He said the polling
places were padlocked wj!en
workers found they could not
unlock the voting machines.
Early voter turnout ranked
from heavy In South Central
Ohio where local Issues were
dominant to light in the
Youngstown area which won't
get ita biggest influx of voters
until iller the first shift at area
steel plants.
AUXIUARY TO MEET
The Ladles Auxiliary of
Middleport Fire Department
.will meet al 7:30 p.m. Wednesday at home of Mrs. Jack
Bachner. Awhile elephant sale
Ia pllnned .. .

•'

�'

.
\

2- The O.Uy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomaoy, 0., May 2, 1972
six from each party, face
()f opposition in the congressional
/()race. They include Reps.
·
· Wayne L. Hays, D-Fiushlng;
L:Juis Stokes D.cteveland, and
Republican Jusllce Louis J. John M. Ashbrook, RSchneider Jr. alao is unopposed Johnstown.
~ the primar-y. Democratu
In the legislature, 12 incumJohn M. Anderson of Cin- bents senators and 79 incumcinnati, William B. Brown of bent representatives are seekChlllicothe and George W. ing re~lection. A special elecWhite of Orange are competing Twelve of the incumbents, six
for their party's nomination lor from each party, face opposi·
the job.
tion in the c
Neither Republican Justice
Twelve of the incumbents,
Robert E. Leach nor Frank D. six from each party, face
Calebrezze of Parma, his oppo- opposition In the congressional
nent in the fall, is opposed in race. They include Reps.
the primary.
Wayne L. Hays, D-Flushing;
Fourteen Republican Louis Stokes D.cteveland, and
congressmen and !ill seven John M. Ashbrook, R·
Democratic incumbents are Jolmstown.
running for reelection m
In the legislature, 12 incumnewlyreapportloned districts. ben(s senators and 79 incumThe number of districts was bent representatives are seekreduced from 24 to 23 to fit with ing re~lection. A special electhe 1970 census. Retirements tion also will be held to fill the
leave two districts with no \Dlexpired term of Sen. James
incumbents.
K. Leedy, R·Wooster, who
Twelve of the lncumbenls, resigned.

Humphrey Needing 30
(Continued from Pagel)
Faith ill Upset
McGovern admitted ' he was
not expected to win. "My faith
that we may puU an upaet is
based just on what i've seen
here among the rank-and.ftle
people in the mU!sJ on the
streets and in the shops," he
said.
Ohio's long, complicated
pap« ballot was to draw· an
esthnated 2.3 fi\llllon voters,
although the presidential race
generated less excitement than
in previous primary states.
As many as 40 per cflll.!ll the
voters were undecided on1y 24
hours before the polls opened.
Humphrey, who won his first
contested presidential primary
in Pennsylvania last week by
combining the black vote with
a strong labor organization,
admitted his Ohio labor suP'
port is not as reliable .
"I think labor has been work·
ing here," be said, "but it's not
as coordinated. It's our fault,
not their's. We had more time
in Pennsylvania."
Two "fmpoaderableo"
McGovern, who did not decide to emphasize Ohio untlllO
dilys ago, also was late putting
together his voliUlteer brigade
of door.to-door canvasers. •-·
The black vote, an estimated

appeared to be concentrated
aroiUld the steel making city of
Youngstown , where he was
endorsed by a local newspaper.
Eugene McCarthy also entered the Ohio primary but he
did virtually no campaigning.
In the Republican primary,
Preside,nt Nixon had all 10 at
large delegstes. He was vir·
tually unopposed for the 46
delegates elected by district.
The election for "com·
milled" delegates, required \IY
new Democratic party rules,
·smashed a long.time "favorite·
aon" tradition in Ohio.
Altl)ough the ballot is almost
six.feet long, it provides for a
ao.ealled "slate" vote to simplify delegate selection.
Supreme Court nominees
provtded the only other state·
wide vote in the primary.
Three seats are up for election.
Justice Uoyd 0. Brown is
Wlopposed on the Democratic
ballot. On the Republican side,
former Justice Paul W. Brown
battles George C. Farris, assistant secretary of state, for the
right lo challenge Uoyd Brown
in November.

·

'3-Tbe Daily Sentinei,Mlddleport-Pomt:t"oy,O., M.ay 2, 1972

Rodriguez Dl-ea1n Comes Trll:e
DALLAS ! UPI )-Juan
Rodriguez's dream that he was
going to beat Billy Casper in a
playoff for the Byron Nelson
Golf Classic Crown came true
ahnost to the letter, but after it
was all over the little Puerto
Rican said he still couldn't
believe "I won the w-11-o-1~
thing."
Before they teed off on No. I
MondiiJ', Chi Chi told Casper he
had dreamed they would tie for
the regulation lead at sevenunder.par and that he. was
going to beat easper on the
first extra hole by knocking his
ball "stiff to the pin" while
Casper would be nine feet
away.
In Rodriguez' dream they
started the playoff on the par-3
13th hole, but in actuality they

i

phrey. McGovern's attempt to
steal aome of it with endorsements from national
black leaders backfired
alienating the concentrated
black areas in Cleveland's in·
ner city.
Sen. Edmund Muskle, who
ended his campaign before he
got to Ohio, and Alabama Gov.
George Wallace, who was not
entered, were what one observer described as "imponderables."
Many voters were unaware
that Wallace was not on the
ballot. McGovern said he could
get a large hunk of the Wallace
vote as a second choice.
Muskie, who received the endorsement of Gov. John Gllli·
gan earlier in the year, was expected to take a modest portion
of the vote. His committed
delegates, most of them
countylevel party leaders,
continued to campaign for
themselves after the Maine
Democrat defaulted. Gilligan
became "nuetral."
Nlxoo
UooJipoled
Sen. Henry Jackson, also entered In Ohio, waged a bitter
campaign against Me Govern.
He even accused the South Dakota Democrat of supporting
legalized prostitution .
Jackson's strongest support

7% Hike

I

(Continued from Page 1)
make to coWicil in order to
save council's time during a
meeting. Co1,1ncil suggested
Snouffer draw up a proper
form that may be submitted or
mailed to COWICii.
Charles Legar presented
COWICil a bill for $117 to be paid
to Meigs High School for
COWlcil's share of expenses to
pay the instructor of the recent
fire school.
Wilbur Hood, Laurel St., on
behalf of the residents there,
asked council to investigate the
condition of that street, stating
it was badly in need of repair.
Hood also noted that a section

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
CASANOVA AND THE DUMB BUNNIES
- Veteran Jim Malloy of
Dear Helen and Sue:
Denver Monday became the
This guy led two girls on for almost a year before one of them first driver to crack 180 miles
(me!) found out he was engaged to the other, while promising per hour if! Indianapolis "500"
number one (me) his ring.
practice this year, but his
While I was away, he was true blue to "Sally" (let's call her). showing was only a sign of
When Sally left town, he was at my house nearly every night. things to come.
Peter Revson's one and fourWhen we were both available, he juggled us neatly between
lap
qualifying standards of
different nights or dUferent hours of the same dily. Boy, were we
0
179.354 and 178.696 m.p.h. were
dumb!
expected
to be shattered
Weil, I found out something else, too. He's a draft dodger,
several
times
this year as
and says he 'llleave for Canada if things get too bot for him. ·
Should I warm things up a little by informing Uncle Sam that record speeds are posted in
Bob Lawson, semor captain
time trials for the May 27th
of Rio Grande College's 1972 he hasn't signed up? At least he'd be out two trusting girl friends holiday classic.
track and field squad, walked if he had to suddenly leave town. - LAST LAUGH
Chief steward Harland
off with top individual scoring Dear L.L.
Fengier
late Monday afternoon
Revenge gets you nowhere. Tell hlm he can't have his cake
honors in the Mid.()hio Con·
lilted
the
170 m.p,h. safety
ference meet held on the and eat It too, then throw it in his face and wipe off the crumb. speed limit, giving the drivers
Stanley L. Evans track at RIO You'll do better without hlm , and you'll FEEL better in the long and cars a green light for
run, not turning informer. - SUE
·
Grande Monday evening.
speed.
Dear
L.:
The flashy Oak Hill product
Malloy then turned one lap at
Agreed. Uncle Sam is quite capable of dmng his own 181.415m.p h., but said later he
captur~d first place honors in
the IIJO..yard dash, 220, and sleuthing. This shifty Casanova won't go Wldetected long, so stay had a hard time getting up to
triple jump, and was second in out of his life- unless you'd do him one last favor and remind that speed because of windy
the long jump. He tallied 22 him of the penalties awaiting draft dodgers.- HELEN
condil!ons. MaUoy on Saturday
points, and earned six medals
++++
- opening day of practice for his efforts. The MOC will Dear Rap:
was clocked at 174 m.p.h.
present Lawson the top
About the proposed legalization of (lOI: We are at a point although his pit crew caught
scorer 's trophy later this today where thousands of people are dying from alcohol him at 179. Malloy said
spring.
poisoning, many thousands more face lung cancer and heart Saturday's ~~ ride " was much
Malone captured the team disease resulting from the cigarette habit. Our fish are loaded easier.
championship with 115 pmnts . with mercury and our beef, poultry and vegetables are saturated
The next fastest speed
Cedarville was second with 69 with Insecticides.
Monday was 171.168 m.p.h. by
points, Rio third with 54 and
Johnny
Rutherford, Fort
So far, there appears to be no evidence that marijuana is
Ohio Dommican last with 16. addictive and likewise there is no mdication it has any nutritional Worth, Tex., and 171!.875 m.p.h.
Urbana did not take~part in the
by Gordon Johnco'~k, MoiUlt
value or other benefits.
meet.
Pleasant, Mich.
BUT- the intake is through smoking and any form of smoke
Other first place winners for
Eleven cars were on the
the Redmen of. Coach Dean is harmful, from health and pollution standpoints.
track Monday, mciuding four
It should not be a question of law. Instead, people should be
Rinehart were Jack Mitch.
cars
for the first time. They
mile run and Ron Ferguson, made aware that pot is only anollier form of pollutant. If the were driven by Johncock,
high hurdles and high jump. young remain true to their "save the earth" standards they
Rutherford, Lee Kunzman,
The Redmen will take part in won't jump on the legal pot bandwagon. In fact they'D ~olun· Guttenberg, Iowa, and Rick
the Centre Colle~e Invitational tarily stop adding more smoke to the overladen a~ ! - JACK W. Mulher, Laguna Beach, Calif.
at Danville, Ky., in their next Dear Jack: .
Mike Hiss of Tustin, Calif.,
Good point. Sadly enough, however, "polluters" (in this completed his rookie driver's
outing Friday.
instance, smokers) hardly ever think of themselves as the
test and then turned one lap at
culprits. It's always that other belching smokestack over there !
- HELEN AND SUE

p oml maker

++++

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mildred
Frank,
Pomeroy ;
Ida
Shoemaker, Middleport; Lisa
Hawk, Reedsville ; Maude
Young, Mason ; Cheryl Moore,
Syracuse; lola Bartrum ,
Langsville ; Eimer Napper ,
Middleport ; Sheilie Arnold ,
Syracuse .
DISCHARGED - Rosemary
Hysell, Harry Graham, John
Houdashelt, Paula Derenberger, Nora Rairden and
Kevin Kelly.

Dear Rap :
One last word about co-Ed dorms. I'm sorry our collegedaughter moved out of one! In her junior year she and three
other girls took an off.eampus apartment. She had a rough time
breaking her part of the lease when boys overran the place and
she was consigned to the sofa when her roommate took in a :O..te
mate. Studying was out - partying (and ciea!Hlp detail later)
was in. So she moved to another co-op arrangement which turned
out just as badly.
Ali of these yoWlg people wer~ basically good and decent but
they were out on their own and, regardless of the whole~me
childhood they had had, some wanted sex and others preferred to
wait. I'm sure it's the same m co~ dorms, but at least there
those who choose ''waiting" can do so undisturbed.
'
Our kid wishes ~he'd stayed put in the fonn. And that's the
truth. - A MOTHER

~~~n~~;~~::~:: ~=J.~~~~

J' 4

'I

0

rtlQuest to issue a 3.2 beer
BY JACK O'BRIAN
permit to be used at 1600 Nye
COPS TO CHECK
Ave., former Cameo Beauty
CHEEK-TO.cHEEKERS
Shop, will be considered by
NEW YORK (KFS) - Big ' crackdown's
council, allowing residents of
coming on the homo set's boys -&lt;lancing with'.
the area to voice any obboys discoteks ... Johnny Carson's ex, Joanne,
jections. Passage of the
got
around to Glenn Ford. This gal must have a
request must be made by May
jet ... The Gulf &amp; Western Bldg. on Columbus
26.
Circle
never was owned by G. &amp; w. (it was the
Six members of the fire
department met with coiUlcil in prime tenant, and therefore got its name In
lights). The deal was finalized a few hours ago
an executive session.
Attending were Poulin, when Karp Realty sold it to billionaire b. K.
Ralph' Werry, Snouffer, Elm a Ludwig .
Sca~s of Palm Beach burglaries aren't
Russell, Jim Mees, Collins,
council members; William making the papers. Bad for its image. And in
Baronick, mayor; Jane nearby even richer Hobe Sound, three
Walton, clerk, and Phyllis characters in dinner jackets ransacked a
Hennessy, treasurer.
mansion for a fortune - while a bash with 1M)
guests chiNalked ... Robbi A. J. Leyveld, pres.
of the American Jewish Congress, lambasted
the Archie Bunker TV bigotry as "a new
COUPLE HONORED
A dozen red roses was freedom to be offensive,".So you couldn't blame
presented to Mr. and Mrs. U.S. Jean Stapletoo (Edith Bunker on the Bigo TV )
Nease at the Forest Run United for refusing to make like Mrs. Bunker's nasal
Methodist Chutch Sunday in idiot-whine when Dick Cavett asked her to. She
observance· of their 55th didn't wish to have her res! personality conwedding anniversary . The fused 1'ith her intellectuallower..tepths-&lt;llving
choir also dedicated a hymn to ... The Tony Awards sometime might just give
the couple. Visiting Mr. and credlt where It's due: the awards weie created
Mrs. Nease over the weekend by the inte Br'ock Pemberton, distinguished
·were Mr. and Mrs. William Bdwy. Producer ("Harvey" etc.) and were
Nease and children, Rick, Jim, Mlljed for ·his longtime director, Antoinette
Cindy, Sandy and Davis, and Perry ... Alex Cohen does a slick Tony
Mlas SheWe Winters, BeDe·
production job, but be didn't invent them.
fontaine. Calling SIDlday af·
Donald O'Connor's heart attack took bin out
ternoon were Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Phlllips, Minersville. of th~ Milwaukee "Little Me" star spot. LaughIn's Arte Johnson subs ... Ralph Nader's

New York
Ace Says
He'll Play
-

NEW YORK (UPI)-Coach
Red Holzman was busy today
devising a new strategy
against the LDs Angeles Lakers
that will take Into accoiUlt
Dave DeBusschere 's hip in·
jury.
,
DeBusschere, rendered useless in the second half of
Sundily's liJ&amp;.!I2 loss to Los
*"*.
••
Angeles, said he would play the
third game here Wednesday
nlght, but "I don't !mow how
effective I'll be "
The New York ~leks hope
probing motor homes. Next he'll write "Unsafe the three-days rest following
in Any Room."
the ace forward's Injury wiU
Ricki Revson, a stunning young beauty, help his recuperation. But
died all too young and suddenly. She was ex-wife Holzman can't take chances
of John Revson aod the Revlon famUy and and must ready Phil Jackson
daughter of Jerry Brody, who runs the Rainbow for a starting assignment.
Room and Grill, L'Erolle, GaUagher's etc.; a
Holzmansaidhlapatternhas
lonely, tortured kid ... Lee Grant's telling her always been to rotate three
"Prisoner of 2nd Ave." cast the comedy's long guards and three forwards,
run makes her feel like a Prisoner of Bdwy. and "but if Dave's out, we obviously can't do it."
ao she won't renew her play pact in July ...
Gianni Russo (Carlo in "The Godfather")
New York was the underdog
prior to the start of the
adores pretty rodeo trick rider Erin O'Brien. N a t 10 n a 1 B 8 s k e t b a 11
Met In Palm Beach. She gives exhibitions at the Association flnal playoff
Sunnycraft Ponderosa In WaUklll, N. Y., and series. TheKnlckswonthe first
that's where Gianni's been riding Into the sunset gsme aohandUy, howewr, that
every weekend.
the odds were beginning to
Richard Harris and Vanessa Redgrave co· slide down to even. An alling
star late this year in "Antony &amp; Cleopatra" in DBusschere now swings the
London. The vola Hie duo agreed to duplicate it pendulum back toward the
in a film ... Actor Joe Sllver of "Lenny" is a Lakers.
King of the Voiceovers -the IUISeen voice of TV
Holzman also muat conalder
commercials,2,000sofar.Joehaselghtnetwork the job WUt Chamberlain did
spiels currenUy sending h1m often to the bank ... on Jerry Lucas in the aecond
Peter Lorre's daughter Kathy, and actor Chris game as he effectively drew
Hayes said at the Unicorn they'll June-wed.
the Knick center Into aorne
Sen. John Tunney's writing a book, quick fouls. Lucas may be
obligatory for all Presidential-ambitious pols, paired with Bill Bradley at
and he's a long-range one. Dictates It daUy 1n his forward some time during the
chauffeur-driven limo ... "Love Story" author game, with Luther Rackley
E,rich Segal (very disllluslon~ at the U. s. given tbe Job of guarding
college pedant · negative - reaction to his Chamberlain.
financial success) will settle in Munich for a
The fourth game of the series
teachiljg job at the University ... Trinl Lopez has will be played in Madison
his first starring role in "Antonio," filming In Square Garden Friday night,
Santiago Chile
" with the fifth game in loll
•
·
Angeles nezt Sundlly.

.

~!~~~::~::d ~::ul:i: · .,-~.~/_~o""'"l'":"•c:wt:.l1l..elll:lltiMIItiMalltiMIM¥J:llll:-,-i"g•· •B~~~
~ ~·M1 1 1f1'1 1 7l l ;w:Jrl l : l l : l l : _.rl l ml l : l l: l l': wu:~: l l b MI MI

r

W

ay

Rodriguez, who said he
"knew all the time I was
walking around looking at the
putt that I was going to make
it," sank his birdie putt that
broke a four-year tournament
drought and earned him
$25,000.
Casper, who shot a final
round 36-35-71 to Rodriguez'
35-36-70 over the 7,0M-yard
Preston Trail Golf Club layout,
picked up a check for $14,300

Malloy First To
Crack 180 At Indy

Lawson Top
IS per cent of the total a!&gt;' MOC Track
belonged to Hum-

parently

d!d deacDoCk at seven-under·
par 273 and started the playoff
on the ~yard, par~ 15th hole.
They both reached the green in
three and Chi Chi's approach
was indeed "atlff to the pin"just four feet from the cup.
Casper, however, was 20 feet
away and missed his putt.

1

166.728 m.p.h.
Dick Simon of Salt Lake City
escaped hann when the left
front wheel on his machine,
locked in the No. 1 turn. The
racer skidded 150 feet but d(d
not make contact with the wan.
He drove the car on into the
pits.
Among cars arriving at the
Speedway Monday were those
assigned to defending "500"
champ
AI
Unser
of
Albuquerque and defending
national driving champion Joe
Leooard of San Jose, Calif.
Eighteen cars have now
passed technical inspection
and can be driven on the 211mile oval.

'

Pirates
Lose 6th
Straight
By

vrro srEUJNo

and said he was "very
Pleased" with his play because
he, too, had snapped out of a
slump which had pll.lgued him
all seaaon.•
Bruce Crampton, Charles
Coody and Canadian Wllf
Homenulk shared third place
~t five-under-par 275 and won
$8,11011 each; Arnold Pahner
found five birdies on his final
round but three bogeys
dropped him to a 68 and a 276
that was worth $4,500. ·
Chuck Thorpe, who barely '
made the cut with his 144 the

lluhhard Gets Anothet!

first two dilys, closed out With a
65 and a 118 to take seventh
place money of $4,000 with a
'ln. Dave Stockton, Mlller
Barber, Lee Trevino, Tom
Weiskopf and John Schlee were
at 278; Fred Marti, John
Mahaffey and Dwight Nevil
shared the 279 spot and Ron
Cerrudo was alone at pat 280.
·o Defending champion Jack
Nicklaus finished far back at
284 with a cl.olllng 71.
"I !mew I had to do it,"
Rodriguez said, "because with
Casper there is no tomorrow."

RACINE - Can you beheve
it!
Jim Hubbard pitched his
fourtb n~hitter of the season
here Monday afternoon agamst
the Glouster Tomcats with the
Southern Tornadoes wmning,
11-0.

Hobbard has started SIX
games this year. HIS record is
~1. He has aliowed a grand
total of five hi Is, ail to the same
team, Wahama. And not only 1s
this senior nghthander
brilliant on the mound, but he
can hit the ball, also. Against
the Tomcats he hit two singles
and walked three times in five
trips to the plate
In his seven 10mng stint.

Today's

Sport Para~

Hubbard fanned 14 and walked
three. He was backed up with a
good infield that 10cluded some
good stops by third baseman
Pat Arnold and second
baseman Brett Hart. -The Tornadoes, wmners of
eignt straight, scored two runs
in the first and added SIX mor~
10 the second. Southern pushed
across insurance runs 10 the
fourth and Sixth (2).
Dana ldiiiiron started on the
hili lor the Tomcats and was
relieved by Gillespie in the
second, who finished the game.
Milliron fanned none and
walked hve while Gillespie
fanned th ree and walked

seven.
The hitters for the Tornadoes
besides Hubbard's two s10gies
was Rodney Holman , two
singles, making his fourth
straight ' game he has hit
safely. Arnold, two singles,
Jeff Hubbard, a s10gle, Mike
Nease, a single, and Mitch
Nease coilected his first hit of
the season, a"single. Everyone
on the Tornado squad has at
least one hit this season.
Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tor·
nadoes are now owners of a 9-1
slate overall and leads the
Southern Valley Conference
with a 5.{) record. Southern will
travel to Logan Wednesday to

battle Starr-Washington in
Class "A" tournament action.
Bruc-e Hart, the Tornadoes'
starting shortstop, is out for the
season with a dislocated
shoulder suffered last week.
Two . corrections for the
Wahama-Sou thern game
played last Fnday night are
Jeff Hubbard hit the sacrifice
fly Instead of Jim Hubbard and
Mitch Nease walked to drive in
the winning run 10stead of Mike
Nease
Glouster
000 000 II- 0 0 0
Southern
260 102 x- 11 9 I
Milliron (LP), Gillespie (2),
and Gillott. Hubbard (WP),
and Pugh, Jenk10s, (7).

I

Out Of Title Picture 6-4
The Gallipolis Blue Devils
took advantage of Meigs'
pitching wildness and faulty
fielding for six runs in the first
two frames, then held on to win
what proved to be an exciting
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League victory, 6-4, over the
Marauders Monday afternoon
at Municipal Park.
The win for the Blue Devils
gave them a 4-2 record Inside
the league and 8-4 overall. The
Marauders had their chance to
tie for first wiped out with the
loss, making them 3-2 in
SEOAL play and 4-4 overall.
The Blue DeVIls, who had
only four hits, all singles,
plated two runs iii the first
Inning and four more in the
second. The Marauders scored
one In the second and three In
the fifth.
Skipper Johnson, talented
junior righthander, went the

SEO Track
Meet Slated
Thursday
The 16th annual South·
eastern Ohio League Track and
Field meet will be held Thurs·
dily on the new track at Athens
High School at The Plains .
The defending champion
Bulldogs and Ironton's Tigers
are heavy favorites in this
year's meet.
The remaining six teams are
expected to fight it out for
various spots in the final
league standings.
GAHS is slated to take part in
a three-way meet at Chlllicothe
this evening against the
Cavaliers and Waverly Tigers .

Weak Rebid Wastes Game

1•

The DaiiJ ·Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS·MASON
AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

East

VANCOUVER, B.C. (UPI)Muhammad Ali says he is right
on schedule for a return
heavyweight title fight with
champion Joe Frazier, and
after the way he battered poor
George Chuvaio into submission, who's to disagree.
The 3()-year-(lld Ali, quite
subdued but once again at his
best, showed Chuvalo ·a dance

"solid" horses in the 98th
running of the first of the Triple
Crown Classic.
No Le Hace, winner of the
Lecomte Handicap, the
Louisiana Derby and the
Arkansas Derby as well as an
overnight allowance race,
loomed as a strong favorite
even though there are aome
tough horses slated to run
against him-the Rokeby
Stable entry of Key To The
Mint and Head Of The River,
New Prospect who set a seven
furlong track record at Hialeah
Park in winning the Bahama's,
and Our Trade Winds, winner
of the Rebel Stakes.
Each ofthese stakes winners
carries 122 pounds In the rnlle
race, four pounds less than
they will carry in the m rnlle
Kentucky Derby on Satur-

dliy.

w. I. pet. g.b.

MOntreal
New York
Ph1 ladelph1a

St Loui s

P1llsburgh
Ch1cago

9 4
9 4
10 5
5 8
5 9
4 10
West

.692
.692

.667

.385
357
.286

• w. I. pel. g.b.

Houston

11

Los Angeles

11

Atlanta

7

.4 733
5 .687
8 .467

1h

4

Clnc.nnat1

5 8 .385
San Franc1sco 6 11 .353
San D•ego
5 11 .313

5
6
61/2

Monday's Results

New York 7 San Fran 4

Houston 9 Pittsburgh 8
Ph1la 2 Los Angeles I
IOnly games scheduled I
Today's Probable Pitchers

error by Young attempting to
pick off a runner at first
allowed the fourth run to cross
the plate.
Meigs came back with a
smgle run in the second. With
two outs, Rick Ash doubled and
Robbie Eason followed with a
smgle to score Ash. Eason was
nailed at second on the cut-off
in the infield to end the Inning.
Johnson and Young took
control of the game in the
fourth and fifth willi no runs
coming in. Meigs, however, did
threaten in the fourth with
runners on second and third
with no outs, but Johnson
masterfully pitched his way
out.
In the bottom of the fifth, the
Marauders made a game of it
with another of their patented
comebacks.
After Young !bed out to start
the frame, Tom Cooke got on
through an error by the
Gallipolis shortstop. After a
strikeout, Roger Dixon singled
to drive in Cooke from second
and went to second on the
throw to the plate . Steve
Dunfee, the Meigs' cleanup
hatter ,lined a sharp hit to right
that took a big bounce in front
of the Devils' rightfielder and
went over his head. Dunfee
rounded the bases for a two-run
homer to make it 6-4.
Although two were out,

Meigs didn't want to roll over
and play dead. Chester Wigal
was safe on an error and Lou
McKmney walked to put
runners on first and second. A
bouncer back to the mound,
however, ended the inning.
Gallipolis threatened m the
sixth when Kiesling singled
DaviS to second and with two
out Chuck
Perroud singled. up ·
.
the middle. Ash, the Meigs'
centerfielder, gobbled up the
baD, fired a strike to Dixon, to
nail Davis by a whisker at the
plate.
Johnson retired the flnBI six
Meigs hatters in order in the
sixth and seventh to p1ck up the
win.
Coach
Don
Wolfe's
Marauders will host the
Ironton Tigers at Middleport
tomght and will play Kyger
Creek at Kyger Creek on
Wednesday.
Hitters for the Marauders
were Dunfee, home run and
double, Cooke, triple, Ash,
double, and Burney, Dixon,
and Eason, each a single.
For Coach Jim Osborne's
Devils, Davis, Slone, Kieslmg,
and Perroud each hit a single.
Gal.
240 000 l)....li 4 3
Meigs
010 030 11--4 7 5
Johnson and Kiesling. Young
and Dixon .
Umpires, Art Stobart, plate;
George Nesselroad, bases.

Hou ston

(Reuss

1 0)

at

Pottsburgh IBnles I 0) , 8 OS
pm
Conconnat1 IGullett 0 2) at St.
LOUIS {W1se 1 2). 9 p.m.

Montreal (McAnally 0 01 at
San Doego (Norman 0-2) , 10 30
p.m.
New York (Gentry 1-11 at San 4r~-.....,....:&gt;...:""'""'""'""'.,q-~----J:&gt;..o..o...,.

step or two for five rounds and
then beat him to a pulp with
stinging rights Monday night
for his fifth straight victory on
the comeback trail leading to
anot!wr fight with Frazier ia'fe
this summer.
'
Ali, scaling a svelte 21711
pounds to Chuvalo's 221, beat

the Canadian champ on a
unanimous decision before
only 8,800 in the Pacific
Coliseum, but upwards of
50,000,000 it was estimated, .
saw the action on closed circuit ·
television in the United States
and Canada and 34 other
countries.

Slo-Play Opens Today
The Meigs-Mason Slo·Pilch
Softball· League season begms
today with a full slate of games
10 the IO.team league.
Ouly new team in the loop is
Fruth Pharmacy of Point
Pleasant with a line-up of
veteran players.
League President Kenny
Wiggins of Pomeroy an·
nounced the following games
this week .
TUESDAY, MAY2
Farmers Bank vs. Danville,
Syracuse field, 6 p.m.; Reeds·
ville vs. Royal Crown,
Syracuse field, 7 p.m.; Fruth
Pharmacy vs. Foote Mineral,
Mason Drive-In field, 6 p.m.;

Meadowgreen Gardens vs.
Randolph's 76, Mason Drive-In
field, 7 p.m. and Jim's Camper
Sales vs. K &amp;K Mobile Homes,
Lakin field, 6:30p.m.
THURSDAY, MAY4
Danville vs. Foote Mineral,
Mason Drive-In, 6 p.m.; K &amp; K
Mobile Homes vs. Randolph's
76, Point Pleasant (Ordnance
Field), time not set;
Meadowgreen Gardens vs .
Royal Crown, Syracuse, 6
p.m.; Farmers Bank vs. Fruth
Pharmacy, Syracuse field, 7
p.m. ; Jim's Camper Sales vs.
K &amp; K Mobile Homes, Lakin
field, time not set.

,
The Southern Tornadoes play
the Starr-Washington Generals
at Logan Wednesday and the
Eastern EagleS' wiil travel to
Alexander Wednesday to battle
the Spartans In class "A"
baseball tournament play.
Both the Eagles and the
Tornadoes are in the top
bracket. In the lower, bracket,
Glouster will host Laurelville
Wednesday whi!e Crooksv ille
drew a bye.

.
The winners of llie Eastern •
Alexander and Southern::StarrWashington 'will play each
other on Friday . Crooksville
will play t!'e winner of the
Glouster • Laurelville game
also on Friday. The finals will
be held on May 9 on the top
bracket winners' home field. ·
The champion will advance to
the Chillicothe District. The
Eastern Eagles · are the
defending district champions.
•

Wednesday's Games
Atlanta at Chicago
Montreal at San D•ego
New York at San Fran
Hou ston at Pitts, n1ght
Cmc1 at Sf Lou 1s, n1ght,\
Phlla at Los Ang, n1ght ,

By Lhet Tannehill

Amencan league
East

Detroot
Ball&gt;more
Clevela nd
Boston
New York
Milwaukee

w

I.

7
7

4
6

pet. g.b.
636
538 1

6 6 .500
4 7 364
4 8 333
3 7 300

111'2

3

31/ 2
31/ 2

West

w. I. pel. g.b.

M1nnesola

8

Oakland
Chicago
Texas

Kansas City

Cal1forn1a

3 .727

7 4 636
8 5 615
7 6 538

2

6 a 429 31,? 3
.; tl 385 4

Monday's Games

INo games scheduled)

Today's Probable Pitchers
Amer1can League

tAll Tomes EDT)
Cleveland (Perry 2 2)

at

Texas feosman 1 2), 8 30 p m
Kansas Cliy ( Dal Canton 1 1)
at Oetro 1t (Timmerman 1 1), 9

pm.
Chocago (Bahnsen 2 2) a!
Ballo more (McNally 2 1), 7. 30
pm
M inneso ta ( 81yleven 3 0) at
Milwaukee (Parsons 1-2), 8. 30

pm
Calofornia IMay 0-01 at New
York (Stotllemyre 0-31. 8 p m.
Oakland (Holtzman 2-1\ at
Boston (Culp 1-21. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday's Games
California at New York
Cleve at Tex:as, night
Kan City at Detroit, n1ght
Chicago at Bait , n1ght
Mmn at Milwaukee, night

Oakland al Boston, night

International League

Standmgs
United Press International
W. L. Pet. Gil

Richmond
Rochester
Toledo
Charleston
T1dewaler
Syracuse

3 .786
9 7 .563
9 7 563
6 6 .500
9 9 .500
6 8 .429

II

3
3
4
4
S

• Louisv11le
6 9 .400 S1J2
Pen 1nsula
5 12 .294 71/ 7
Monday's R;;;iults
Toledo 3 Peninsula 2
Roches ter 7 Charleston 6 ( 14
innings)
Syracuse 10 T1dewater 4

(Only games sched.uled)

April28, 1972
Dear Sir:
The missing name on the
M.H.S. basketball team of 190ll
was me, Roscoe Fowler. The
picture was captiOned wrong.
It should have been : Lee Lane
(Not Lee Land), me and then
Williard Smith
Attached is another picture
taken the same year: Seated,
Reed Stark, Lee Lane, Homer
Headley; slandmg Willard
Smith, Ross Brown, Mr. (Red)
McKinney, Y.M.C.A. director,
and me I am the only one
living.
No doubt the uniforms we
wore at that time look a blUe
odd compared to the fine
uniforms of today. In those
days we were lucky to have two
uniforms that were alike. Our
chief rooters were Fred Shiflet,
Mitt White and C. H. Odenbaugh (The tailor). I am sure
that they paid for two pleces of
the Wliforms - pants and
shirts. Odenbaugh cut the
letters out and sewed them on
for us. We furnished the socks
and shoes. This was a far cry
from the luxury the athletes of
today are showered with .
I was a member of the
Y.M-.C.A. basketball teams
that played Marshall College in
1909 and 1910. The Marshall
coach, Boyd Chamber (later
coach at C10cinnati University
for many years) who knew that
I had dropped out of high
school and was working at the
old Kanawha and Michigan
Shops at Hobson, persuaded
me to start back to school and
go to Marshall. I was on the
1911 Football ·and basketball
squad and a regular on the 1912
football and basketball teams.
I only weighed 148 pounds and
was injured in a game with

Desk

Marietta College, which ended
by football career.
~
RQscoe 0. Fowler.
MEET THURSDAY
Managers and sponsors of
learns in the Meigs-Gaiiia Pony
Baseball Association are asked
lo meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
in the Bradbury bmldmg in
Cheshire (corner of USR 7 and
SR 554) to orgamze the summer program .
Officers will be elected,
entry fees set, and schedules
approved.
Last year, seven teams
performed, one each from
Cheshire, Pomeroy A and
Pomeroy B, Middleport ,
Bidwell, Racme, Southwestern.
It is expected that the teams
of Gaiiia county will include 1314 and 15 year oids. Teams
from at least Pomeroy and
Middleport Will be composed
only of 14-lo year oids. Play is
on a standard diamond .
A 13-year old league, which

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Major league Results

By United Press International
Naloonal League
New York 101 200 3DO- 7 14 0
San Fran 001 002 IDO- 4 6 0
Seaver, McGraw (7) and
Grote , Cumberland, Bryant (4),
Johnson (7), McMahon (7) ,
Moms (81 and Rader WPSeaver (4-0) . LP-Cumberland
(0-3) . HRs- Harrelson (1st),
Rader (1st), Speier (2nd),
Henderson (3rd) . '
Houston
000 043 002-9 13 2
P11tsbrgh 100 204 001- 8 16 2
Roberts, Culver (61. Ray (8)
and Edwards; Blass, Giusti (7],
Hernandez 191 and Sangulllen.
WP- Ray (4·01. LP-Giusll 10·
2) . HRs- Wynn (51hl. Edward•
(3rd), Clemente (lstl .
Phila
000 000 02G- 2 6 0
Los Ang
000 000 01G-1 3 1
Selma 11-11 and Ryan;
Osteen, Brewer (~) and Slm•.
LP-Osteen (2·11 . HR- Monta.
nez list) .
(Only games scheduled)
American L~ague
(No games scheduled)

ITALIAN NIGHT
AT
Martin Restaura
In The Heart of
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
6:30 To 10:30, May 3

Spaghetti' with homemade 11alian sauce.

"Featuring Maxine At The Organ"

Two tough belts hold the tread f~rm for great
mileage Concave design keeps entire tread
on road for excellent ha ndlmg and traction .

lor
E78·14 (7.35.·141

Blacli:wall•
Plus S2 34 p1r tlr11
Fed Ex tax and 2
tires of! your ur,

OriginiJiprite
$33.75 Bllt:b

.,._
,.177•·••1
Blackwalla

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
I.

"iii have in it several teams
from Mason County, W.Va., is
being planned. These boys wiil
play on a "pony" diamond of 75
ft. bases and 54 fl. pitching
distance.
Cheshire IS the defending
champion on the basis of a
league record o! 11-1.

LONG MILEAGE nRES

S2521}f1r1oreFE .T
A.ll pr1ces PlUS tues ~~nd 2

t ~rea

oil yDur c~r, If we should sell oul

of your s1ze we II give you ~ 'r a •nchec~ · for future delivery AI the
Ad~er111ed

pnce S•ngte llreasimtlarly low pr ice d

'

' Drive in TODAY -

Meigs County's Oldest and largest

Insurance Agency
.l

"

the Sports

Philadelphia I Fryman I 01 at
Los Angeles IDown1ng 1-2). 11
pm .

A PIay Opens wednesday

MIDDLEPORT, o.

Roscoe Fowler
Was on the 1908
Middleport Team

Francisco &lt;Carnthers 1·1), 11

P m.

..

. I

II

East

Chuvalo Beaten On Decision

The Otbers entered were Big
Spruce, 116, Billy Rogel, 119,
ROIE=~·~o~dFLICH,
Big Brown Bear, 116,
ctty Editor
&amp;IBpected 118, Dr. Neale, 116,
Publlshrd dally ucept
d
soturdoy by Tht Ohio vetlev Lester's Jester, 116, an
Publishing Company, 111 Embark 112. Embark never
court St , Pomeroy , Ohio,
ha
d if
A5169 eusinen Office Phont
s won a race an he starts
"22156, Edllorlel Phon• 99l in the Trial Instead ola malden
1151
•
Second clan poS!age paid al race in which he also is enPomoroy, Ohio.
tered,hewlllbegroupedin the
Narlonal advtrtl,ing
''rn
reprnenlltlve Bottlntlll
utueI field" with Good Bait
Golllghtr' tnc .. 12 East A7nd 118 and Bold Mualc, 119.
St, New Yor~ City, New York .
Derby jocke"" wiU be up on
Subtcrlpt1on rates
De ,.
1•
llvtrtd by corrtor where thetop'l'rlalstarterawithPaul
N •·• Hace
IVtlltblt 50 cent&amp; ptr wttk, Rlbbl
&amp;y Motor Routt where carrltr ·
CC0 0Jt
~ ..,..
'
sorvlct not ovtlltblt . One Braullo Baeza on Key to the
month sus. Bv mau in Ohio Mint Mike Hole on Hesdofthe
and w. va .. One year $U 00
'
Six months sus. Throe =ohmy Rotz on New
monlhl SA .50 . Subscrif,tlon
·-'Dave Whited on
price lncludtl SunCIIY T mtS ·
4IIN
Stnllnel .
OUr Tra Winds.

t•,

•

distance for the Devils,
allowing seven hits, four runs
(all earned) fanned six and
walked only three. Johnson had
the Marauders off balance with
a low-breaking curve much of
the time.
Eddie YoWlg also went the
distance for the Marauders,
and pitched a much better
game than the score indicates.
The senior righty allowed six
runs, but only two were earned.
The Devils managed but four
hits while Young fanned six
and walked seven, five of
which came in the first two
frames.
In the Gallipolis fll'st, John
Davis led off reaching base on
an error by the Marauder
shortstop. Kevin Sheets, Steve
Slone, and Stan Perry followed
with walks to force in the two
runs. Young finally pitched his
way out off the Inning without
further dilmage. Clearly the
errors had upset him.
After Meigs failed to answer
Gallipolis' two-run first, the
Devils made it ~ in the
second. Howard Taylor led off
with a walk. Johnson then
reached first on an error by the
Meigs' first-baseman. Davis
singled to drive in one run.
Kiesling followed with a walk
to load the bases agairf. After •
Sheets fanned, Slone singled to
Iring home two more runs. An

-Le Hace Derby·
Trial Favorite
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)No Le Hace, one of the top
choices for Saturday's rWlnlng
of the Kentucky Derby, takes
on 13 rivals at Church!U Downs
today in the $20,000 added
Derby Trial Stakes and gives
Kentuckians a first chance to
see him in action .
They already saw Meadow
Stable's Rlva Ridge, the
Kentucky Derby favorite, win
the Blue Grass Stakes at
Keeneland last Thursday and
Hold Your Peace score in the
Step[lng Stone Purse at the
opening of Churchill Downs on
Saturday.
Now Its No Le Hace's turn to
show the form that carried him
to four victories this year and
stamped him as one of the

By Un1fed Press International
Nat1onal League

Nationa I League

Gallipolis Knocks Meigs

MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportl Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)-Happy Hairston was doing the talking. He
was talldng about the man he feels pumps tiie blood into the veins
oftheLosAngelesLakers. WiltChamberillln, who else?
"As I;ve said ao many times before," said Hairston," as Wilt
Chamberlain goes, so go the Los Angeles Lakers.
"Not many people know about this," went on tbe Lakers'
jumper, "but just before our sixth game with MUwaukee he
caUed a meeting of all the players. Strictly on his own. It wasn't
arranged. He thanked us all for !he job we had done an!l_aaid this
was the greatest team he had ever played on. It was just a brief
talk but you have no Idea how it made us feel."
Some Idea may be gleaned from the face the Lakers went out
on the Bucks' home court that particular Saturday afternoon and
blew them out of the NBA pillyoffs. Chamberlain didn't take any
coffee break in that one either. He had himself 24 rebounds and 22
points.
That performance readily can be related to Chamberlain's
showing ao far in tbe finals between the Lakers and the New York
Knlcks.
Hla Mind Ia Made Up
WUt Chamberlain made up his mind some time ago he wants
this one. What good is It if you've got everything, Including a
fancypadforamlllion.flve, and you're only one of the also·rans?
Chamberillin wants this tiUe so mhch, be's hoping this sefles
goes five or six games Instead of seven. He knows tbe Lakers'
record in seven-game series since they moved from Minneapolis
to Los Angeles. ZUch.
The way they started out, it looked Uke the Lakers might go
Wider in four straight.
The Knicks ran away with the opener, during which Je!"''Y""')
Lucas seemed bent on winding up with permanent possession of ·
Wilt Chamberlain. Wllt couldn't do anything at aU with Lucas in
that first one. So UtUe in fact, Bill Sharman aat him down at one
point and tried Leroy Ellis.
SUndily night's second game was an entirely different story.
Chamberlain knew he had to go to work, and did. He drove on
Lucas, got the Knicks' center into foul trouble and was a key
factor under the boards with his 24 rebounds In addition o the 23
points he scored.
Lueas Wun't Shocked
Locas,lirnited 10 only 16 points, wasn't as shocked by Chamberlain's sudden turnaround as you'd think. He eXpected it.
"During a series like this one, your tactics and ideas change as
you go along," says Lucas. "You can't keep playing tbe same
way."
Lucas knew what he was up against even before this series
started. He was up against Chamberillin and that, as he puts it,
"never is any bargain."
"My primary job wiU be to try and draw Charnberillln out of
the mldcDe so that we can work some of our driving gsme,"
Lucas said before the first game with the Lakers. "If I'm hitting
my jump shot, I'm sure It is going to cause hlm aome concern."
Lucas was and did in the opener. He wasn't and didn't in
SUnday's second one in which the Lakers waltzed,I06-92.
.
Ill TroablNOme Stralls
The Knicks are generally thought to be in troublesome straits
now because of Dave DeBusschere's injury and they certainly
are much weaker without hlm.
Los Angeles led SWlday by only one point, 51-50, at halftime,
which was about the time DeBusschere no longer was of any
service to the Knicks, and his man, Hairston, scored 12 of his 15
points in the third quarter.
Hairston, curiously, feels Milwaukee's Curtis Perry is tougher
on hlm than DeBusschere. He says the Knlcks' forward can't
leap as high or 18n't as:m-ong as Perry.
Happy Hairston is on the right wave-length about Wilt
Chamberillin, but he's all by himself in his opinion concerning
DeBusacbere and Perry.
Ask any of the NBA coaches. They all voted for DeBusschere
manimoualy on the league's alldefensive team.
By

STANDINGS

IAll Tomes EDT)
Atlanta I Reed 1-21 at Cho cago
IHands 0-1), 2 30 p m

•..

UPI Sportl Writer
The Pittsburgh Pirates may
be kidding themselves but they
claim they're not worried
about Dave Giusti.
Giusti, who saved 30 games
for the Pirates last year and
added five victories in their
drive to the world championship, was ineffective for the
third time in the last nine days
Monday night as the Pirates
lost their sixth straight by a ~
margin to tbe surging Houston
Astros.
With the score tied 7·7 in the
ninth, Giusti was tagged for
successive singles by Jim
Wynn, Lee' May and Bob
Watson that cracked the tie. A
Giusti wild pitch and a
sacrifice fly bY Tommy Heims
produced what proved to be the
winning run after' the Pirates
scored a run in the last of the
ninth.
Despite the inconsistent
showings lately, new manager
Bill Virdon said be wasn't concerned about GIUsti's pitching
"If his . arm was hurting or WIN AT BRIDGE
something, then you'd be
concerned. be•s just going the
way w.e're going, I gueas. It's
just a matter of time," Virdon
firmed these six or seven
said . .
NORTH (D)
and at the same time showed
"One of Those Slrew"
.AQ98
a maximum of ten and a no.Q85
Giusti said, "I'm just going
trump type hand. Thus,
• J3
through one of those streaks. I
North had no reason to bid
• KQ87
just wasn't making good pit·
over
one no-trump. Ten plus
WEST
EAST
14
equals
just 24.
cbes, that's all, I'm not lo&amp;ng .J83
.10754
my confidence, I've been
South's correct rebid was
• AJ64Z
.97
.95
.A872
two no-trump. This second
aroWld too long."
.A95
round jump to two no·trump
Of course, Giusti waan't the .J82
SOUTH
is
not an absolute force and
only Pirate t culprit. World
.K2
·.
shows
just what South held
Series hero Steve Blass was
.KI03
- 11 or 12 points and a no.
bombed for a grand slam
• KQ1064
ltump hand.
• 1043 '
homer by Jim Wynn in the fifth
It is a strong Invitation to
None vulnerable
and a tJtree.ntn homer by John
a further bid and North
Dedwll!'da in the sixth. And West North Eut South
should accept with his nice
1•
Pass
base-running lapses by both
, 14. That plus 11 only equals
Pus
1•
Pass 1 N.T.
25, but it is silly to stop one
Rennie Stennett and AI OUver
Pa3s . Pass
Pass
trick short or game when
ldlled rallies.
Opening lead-¥ 4
you are that close to it and
Houston is on a hot streak
25 points divided almost
and the Astros poWlded out 13 B Os ld &amp;
hits with Wynn and Cesar . Y wa
James Jacoby evenly between two hands is
very apt to produce at least
Cedeno collecting three hlta.
A letter from Baton Rouge nine tricks.
Jim Ray pitched two Innings of reads in part, "How should
(HlWSPAPll INTIRf'IISI ASSH.)
one-run relief for the Astrol we have, reached the easy
and got the victory to boolt his no-trump game? I think my
record to W
partner should have raised
·
I my no-trump bid. After all
The only other action in the I did make two bids with my
The bidding has been:
majors was on the West Cout hand after he opened He West North Eost South
in the National League as New thinks my second bid oi one
1•
Pass
York topped San Francllco 7· no·trump did not show any- 1•
1•
P...S
4, and Phlladelpbla edged ~ thi~g like my full values.
You, South hold:
Angeles 2-l
Incidentally, I ha~ no trouble .AI54 .K632 .QIOT .54
•, · ,
making ten tricks "
What do you do now?
The New York and PhiladelThe letter brnigs up a
A-Bld lwo spades. \'oa have
~Ia victories moved the M.eta couple of popular miscon·
and Phlls into I tie with ceptions about bidding The a Jood slnrle roloe in opile ol
Mootreal for flnt place in the first is that your second bid tho t..t ~hat your ktq of hearts
Eastern Division while the loll does no.t necessarily show '\PPfllrl to be worth very Uttte.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Angeles loss enabled Houtlon extra values. In this case
Your
partner tontinues to
tornoveintoflntlntheWestby South's one diamond re·
throe
opadeo.
What do you do
half a game Plttaburgli 11 flio sponse showed at least six
'
back in
or seven points. His second now?
111e
·
bid of one no·trUIIlP COD•

~BASEBAll

078-1418 2•-••1

Bl•cllwall•
S2 69 pert•re FE l

......
,60 00
2 for ,53 50
21or
~-·=2 for •59 00 "'" ,.,u•..• 2 for $64 50
G7· -··~a

Bl ackwa lls

J

...... 1 lS.lS.:.

$27BpcrllruFE T.

•

Blackwalta
S2 93 per 11rt F E.T

•

Drlllllllft)I,Zihe•

to CHARGE

J

•

......... '41.11 ...

'

�'

.
\

2- The O.Uy Sentinel, Mlddleport-Pomaoy, 0., May 2, 1972
six from each party, face
()f opposition in the congressional
/()race. They include Reps.
·
· Wayne L. Hays, D-Fiushlng;
L:Juis Stokes D.cteveland, and
Republican Jusllce Louis J. John M. Ashbrook, RSchneider Jr. alao is unopposed Johnstown.
~ the primar-y. Democratu
In the legislature, 12 incumJohn M. Anderson of Cin- bents senators and 79 incumcinnati, William B. Brown of bent representatives are seekChlllicothe and George W. ing re~lection. A special elecWhite of Orange are competing Twelve of the incumbents, six
for their party's nomination lor from each party, face opposi·
the job.
tion in the c
Neither Republican Justice
Twelve of the incumbents,
Robert E. Leach nor Frank D. six from each party, face
Calebrezze of Parma, his oppo- opposition In the congressional
nent in the fall, is opposed in race. They include Reps.
the primary.
Wayne L. Hays, D-Flushing;
Fourteen Republican Louis Stokes D.cteveland, and
congressmen and !ill seven John M. Ashbrook, R·
Democratic incumbents are Jolmstown.
running for reelection m
In the legislature, 12 incumnewlyreapportloned districts. ben(s senators and 79 incumThe number of districts was bent representatives are seekreduced from 24 to 23 to fit with ing re~lection. A special electhe 1970 census. Retirements tion also will be held to fill the
leave two districts with no \Dlexpired term of Sen. James
incumbents.
K. Leedy, R·Wooster, who
Twelve of the lncumbenls, resigned.

Humphrey Needing 30
(Continued from Pagel)
Faith ill Upset
McGovern admitted ' he was
not expected to win. "My faith
that we may puU an upaet is
based just on what i've seen
here among the rank-and.ftle
people in the mU!sJ on the
streets and in the shops," he
said.
Ohio's long, complicated
pap« ballot was to draw· an
esthnated 2.3 fi\llllon voters,
although the presidential race
generated less excitement than
in previous primary states.
As many as 40 per cflll.!ll the
voters were undecided on1y 24
hours before the polls opened.
Humphrey, who won his first
contested presidential primary
in Pennsylvania last week by
combining the black vote with
a strong labor organization,
admitted his Ohio labor suP'
port is not as reliable .
"I think labor has been work·
ing here," be said, "but it's not
as coordinated. It's our fault,
not their's. We had more time
in Pennsylvania."
Two "fmpoaderableo"
McGovern, who did not decide to emphasize Ohio untlllO
dilys ago, also was late putting
together his voliUlteer brigade
of door.to-door canvasers. •-·
The black vote, an estimated

appeared to be concentrated
aroiUld the steel making city of
Youngstown , where he was
endorsed by a local newspaper.
Eugene McCarthy also entered the Ohio primary but he
did virtually no campaigning.
In the Republican primary,
Preside,nt Nixon had all 10 at
large delegstes. He was vir·
tually unopposed for the 46
delegates elected by district.
The election for "com·
milled" delegates, required \IY
new Democratic party rules,
·smashed a long.time "favorite·
aon" tradition in Ohio.
Altl)ough the ballot is almost
six.feet long, it provides for a
ao.ealled "slate" vote to simplify delegate selection.
Supreme Court nominees
provtded the only other state·
wide vote in the primary.
Three seats are up for election.
Justice Uoyd 0. Brown is
Wlopposed on the Democratic
ballot. On the Republican side,
former Justice Paul W. Brown
battles George C. Farris, assistant secretary of state, for the
right lo challenge Uoyd Brown
in November.

·

'3-Tbe Daily Sentinei,Mlddleport-Pomt:t"oy,O., M.ay 2, 1972

Rodriguez Dl-ea1n Comes Trll:e
DALLAS ! UPI )-Juan
Rodriguez's dream that he was
going to beat Billy Casper in a
playoff for the Byron Nelson
Golf Classic Crown came true
ahnost to the letter, but after it
was all over the little Puerto
Rican said he still couldn't
believe "I won the w-11-o-1~
thing."
Before they teed off on No. I
MondiiJ', Chi Chi told Casper he
had dreamed they would tie for
the regulation lead at sevenunder.par and that he. was
going to beat easper on the
first extra hole by knocking his
ball "stiff to the pin" while
Casper would be nine feet
away.
In Rodriguez' dream they
started the playoff on the par-3
13th hole, but in actuality they

i

phrey. McGovern's attempt to
steal aome of it with endorsements from national
black leaders backfired
alienating the concentrated
black areas in Cleveland's in·
ner city.
Sen. Edmund Muskle, who
ended his campaign before he
got to Ohio, and Alabama Gov.
George Wallace, who was not
entered, were what one observer described as "imponderables."
Many voters were unaware
that Wallace was not on the
ballot. McGovern said he could
get a large hunk of the Wallace
vote as a second choice.
Muskie, who received the endorsement of Gov. John Gllli·
gan earlier in the year, was expected to take a modest portion
of the vote. His committed
delegates, most of them
countylevel party leaders,
continued to campaign for
themselves after the Maine
Democrat defaulted. Gilligan
became "nuetral."
Nlxoo
UooJipoled
Sen. Henry Jackson, also entered In Ohio, waged a bitter
campaign against Me Govern.
He even accused the South Dakota Democrat of supporting
legalized prostitution .
Jackson's strongest support

7% Hike

I

(Continued from Page 1)
make to coWicil in order to
save council's time during a
meeting. Co1,1ncil suggested
Snouffer draw up a proper
form that may be submitted or
mailed to COWICii.
Charles Legar presented
COWICil a bill for $117 to be paid
to Meigs High School for
COWlcil's share of expenses to
pay the instructor of the recent
fire school.
Wilbur Hood, Laurel St., on
behalf of the residents there,
asked council to investigate the
condition of that street, stating
it was badly in need of repair.
Hood also noted that a section

Generation Rap
By Helen and Sue Bottel

INDIANAPOUS, Ind. (UP!)
CASANOVA AND THE DUMB BUNNIES
- Veteran Jim Malloy of
Dear Helen and Sue:
Denver Monday became the
This guy led two girls on for almost a year before one of them first driver to crack 180 miles
(me!) found out he was engaged to the other, while promising per hour if! Indianapolis "500"
number one (me) his ring.
practice this year, but his
While I was away, he was true blue to "Sally" (let's call her). showing was only a sign of
When Sally left town, he was at my house nearly every night. things to come.
Peter Revson's one and fourWhen we were both available, he juggled us neatly between
lap
qualifying standards of
different nights or dUferent hours of the same dily. Boy, were we
0
179.354 and 178.696 m.p.h. were
dumb!
expected
to be shattered
Weil, I found out something else, too. He's a draft dodger,
several
times
this year as
and says he 'llleave for Canada if things get too bot for him. ·
Should I warm things up a little by informing Uncle Sam that record speeds are posted in
Bob Lawson, semor captain
time trials for the May 27th
of Rio Grande College's 1972 he hasn't signed up? At least he'd be out two trusting girl friends holiday classic.
track and field squad, walked if he had to suddenly leave town. - LAST LAUGH
Chief steward Harland
off with top individual scoring Dear L.L.
Fengier
late Monday afternoon
Revenge gets you nowhere. Tell hlm he can't have his cake
honors in the Mid.()hio Con·
lilted
the
170 m.p,h. safety
ference meet held on the and eat It too, then throw it in his face and wipe off the crumb. speed limit, giving the drivers
Stanley L. Evans track at RIO You'll do better without hlm , and you'll FEEL better in the long and cars a green light for
run, not turning informer. - SUE
·
Grande Monday evening.
speed.
Dear
L.:
The flashy Oak Hill product
Malloy then turned one lap at
Agreed. Uncle Sam is quite capable of dmng his own 181.415m.p h., but said later he
captur~d first place honors in
the IIJO..yard dash, 220, and sleuthing. This shifty Casanova won't go Wldetected long, so stay had a hard time getting up to
triple jump, and was second in out of his life- unless you'd do him one last favor and remind that speed because of windy
the long jump. He tallied 22 him of the penalties awaiting draft dodgers.- HELEN
condil!ons. MaUoy on Saturday
points, and earned six medals
++++
- opening day of practice for his efforts. The MOC will Dear Rap:
was clocked at 174 m.p.h.
present Lawson the top
About the proposed legalization of (lOI: We are at a point although his pit crew caught
scorer 's trophy later this today where thousands of people are dying from alcohol him at 179. Malloy said
spring.
poisoning, many thousands more face lung cancer and heart Saturday's ~~ ride " was much
Malone captured the team disease resulting from the cigarette habit. Our fish are loaded easier.
championship with 115 pmnts . with mercury and our beef, poultry and vegetables are saturated
The next fastest speed
Cedarville was second with 69 with Insecticides.
Monday was 171.168 m.p.h. by
points, Rio third with 54 and
Johnny
Rutherford, Fort
So far, there appears to be no evidence that marijuana is
Ohio Dommican last with 16. addictive and likewise there is no mdication it has any nutritional Worth, Tex., and 171!.875 m.p.h.
Urbana did not take~part in the
by Gordon Johnco'~k, MoiUlt
value or other benefits.
meet.
Pleasant, Mich.
BUT- the intake is through smoking and any form of smoke
Other first place winners for
Eleven cars were on the
the Redmen of. Coach Dean is harmful, from health and pollution standpoints.
track Monday, mciuding four
It should not be a question of law. Instead, people should be
Rinehart were Jack Mitch.
cars
for the first time. They
mile run and Ron Ferguson, made aware that pot is only anollier form of pollutant. If the were driven by Johncock,
high hurdles and high jump. young remain true to their "save the earth" standards they
Rutherford, Lee Kunzman,
The Redmen will take part in won't jump on the legal pot bandwagon. In fact they'D ~olun· Guttenberg, Iowa, and Rick
the Centre Colle~e Invitational tarily stop adding more smoke to the overladen a~ ! - JACK W. Mulher, Laguna Beach, Calif.
at Danville, Ky., in their next Dear Jack: .
Mike Hiss of Tustin, Calif.,
Good point. Sadly enough, however, "polluters" (in this completed his rookie driver's
outing Friday.
instance, smokers) hardly ever think of themselves as the
test and then turned one lap at
culprits. It's always that other belching smokestack over there !
- HELEN AND SUE

p oml maker

++++

Veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED - Mildred
Frank,
Pomeroy ;
Ida
Shoemaker, Middleport; Lisa
Hawk, Reedsville ; Maude
Young, Mason ; Cheryl Moore,
Syracuse; lola Bartrum ,
Langsville ; Eimer Napper ,
Middleport ; Sheilie Arnold ,
Syracuse .
DISCHARGED - Rosemary
Hysell, Harry Graham, John
Houdashelt, Paula Derenberger, Nora Rairden and
Kevin Kelly.

Dear Rap :
One last word about co-Ed dorms. I'm sorry our collegedaughter moved out of one! In her junior year she and three
other girls took an off.eampus apartment. She had a rough time
breaking her part of the lease when boys overran the place and
she was consigned to the sofa when her roommate took in a :O..te
mate. Studying was out - partying (and ciea!Hlp detail later)
was in. So she moved to another co-op arrangement which turned
out just as badly.
Ali of these yoWlg people wer~ basically good and decent but
they were out on their own and, regardless of the whole~me
childhood they had had, some wanted sex and others preferred to
wait. I'm sure it's the same m co~ dorms, but at least there
those who choose ''waiting" can do so undisturbed.
'
Our kid wishes ~he'd stayed put in the fonn. And that's the
truth. - A MOTHER

~~~n~~;~~::~:: ~=J.~~~~

J' 4

'I

0

rtlQuest to issue a 3.2 beer
BY JACK O'BRIAN
permit to be used at 1600 Nye
COPS TO CHECK
Ave., former Cameo Beauty
CHEEK-TO.cHEEKERS
Shop, will be considered by
NEW YORK (KFS) - Big ' crackdown's
council, allowing residents of
coming on the homo set's boys -&lt;lancing with'.
the area to voice any obboys discoteks ... Johnny Carson's ex, Joanne,
jections. Passage of the
got
around to Glenn Ford. This gal must have a
request must be made by May
jet ... The Gulf &amp; Western Bldg. on Columbus
26.
Circle
never was owned by G. &amp; w. (it was the
Six members of the fire
department met with coiUlcil in prime tenant, and therefore got its name In
lights). The deal was finalized a few hours ago
an executive session.
Attending were Poulin, when Karp Realty sold it to billionaire b. K.
Ralph' Werry, Snouffer, Elm a Ludwig .
Sca~s of Palm Beach burglaries aren't
Russell, Jim Mees, Collins,
council members; William making the papers. Bad for its image. And in
Baronick, mayor; Jane nearby even richer Hobe Sound, three
Walton, clerk, and Phyllis characters in dinner jackets ransacked a
Hennessy, treasurer.
mansion for a fortune - while a bash with 1M)
guests chiNalked ... Robbi A. J. Leyveld, pres.
of the American Jewish Congress, lambasted
the Archie Bunker TV bigotry as "a new
COUPLE HONORED
A dozen red roses was freedom to be offensive,".So you couldn't blame
presented to Mr. and Mrs. U.S. Jean Stapletoo (Edith Bunker on the Bigo TV )
Nease at the Forest Run United for refusing to make like Mrs. Bunker's nasal
Methodist Chutch Sunday in idiot-whine when Dick Cavett asked her to. She
observance· of their 55th didn't wish to have her res! personality conwedding anniversary . The fused 1'ith her intellectuallower..tepths-&lt;llving
choir also dedicated a hymn to ... The Tony Awards sometime might just give
the couple. Visiting Mr. and credlt where It's due: the awards weie created
Mrs. Nease over the weekend by the inte Br'ock Pemberton, distinguished
·were Mr. and Mrs. William Bdwy. Producer ("Harvey" etc.) and were
Nease and children, Rick, Jim, Mlljed for ·his longtime director, Antoinette
Cindy, Sandy and Davis, and Perry ... Alex Cohen does a slick Tony
Mlas SheWe Winters, BeDe·
production job, but be didn't invent them.
fontaine. Calling SIDlday af·
Donald O'Connor's heart attack took bin out
ternoon were Mr. and Mrs.
Clifford Phlllips, Minersville. of th~ Milwaukee "Little Me" star spot. LaughIn's Arte Johnson subs ... Ralph Nader's

New York
Ace Says
He'll Play
-

NEW YORK (UPI)-Coach
Red Holzman was busy today
devising a new strategy
against the LDs Angeles Lakers
that will take Into accoiUlt
Dave DeBusschere 's hip in·
jury.
,
DeBusschere, rendered useless in the second half of
Sundily's liJ&amp;.!I2 loss to Los
*"*.
••
Angeles, said he would play the
third game here Wednesday
nlght, but "I don't !mow how
effective I'll be "
The New York ~leks hope
probing motor homes. Next he'll write "Unsafe the three-days rest following
in Any Room."
the ace forward's Injury wiU
Ricki Revson, a stunning young beauty, help his recuperation. But
died all too young and suddenly. She was ex-wife Holzman can't take chances
of John Revson aod the Revlon famUy and and must ready Phil Jackson
daughter of Jerry Brody, who runs the Rainbow for a starting assignment.
Room and Grill, L'Erolle, GaUagher's etc.; a
Holzmansaidhlapatternhas
lonely, tortured kid ... Lee Grant's telling her always been to rotate three
"Prisoner of 2nd Ave." cast the comedy's long guards and three forwards,
run makes her feel like a Prisoner of Bdwy. and "but if Dave's out, we obviously can't do it."
ao she won't renew her play pact in July ...
Gianni Russo (Carlo in "The Godfather")
New York was the underdog
prior to the start of the
adores pretty rodeo trick rider Erin O'Brien. N a t 10 n a 1 B 8 s k e t b a 11
Met In Palm Beach. She gives exhibitions at the Association flnal playoff
Sunnycraft Ponderosa In WaUklll, N. Y., and series. TheKnlckswonthe first
that's where Gianni's been riding Into the sunset gsme aohandUy, howewr, that
every weekend.
the odds were beginning to
Richard Harris and Vanessa Redgrave co· slide down to even. An alling
star late this year in "Antony &amp; Cleopatra" in DBusschere now swings the
London. The vola Hie duo agreed to duplicate it pendulum back toward the
in a film ... Actor Joe Sllver of "Lenny" is a Lakers.
King of the Voiceovers -the IUISeen voice of TV
Holzman also muat conalder
commercials,2,000sofar.Joehaselghtnetwork the job WUt Chamberlain did
spiels currenUy sending h1m often to the bank ... on Jerry Lucas in the aecond
Peter Lorre's daughter Kathy, and actor Chris game as he effectively drew
Hayes said at the Unicorn they'll June-wed.
the Knick center Into aorne
Sen. John Tunney's writing a book, quick fouls. Lucas may be
obligatory for all Presidential-ambitious pols, paired with Bill Bradley at
and he's a long-range one. Dictates It daUy 1n his forward some time during the
chauffeur-driven limo ... "Love Story" author game, with Luther Rackley
E,rich Segal (very disllluslon~ at the U. s. given tbe Job of guarding
college pedant · negative - reaction to his Chamberlain.
financial success) will settle in Munich for a
The fourth game of the series
teachiljg job at the University ... Trinl Lopez has will be played in Madison
his first starring role in "Antonio," filming In Square Garden Friday night,
Santiago Chile
" with the fifth game in loll
•
·
Angeles nezt Sundlly.

.

~!~~~::~::d ~::ul:i: · .,-~.~/_~o""'"l'":"•c:wt:.l1l..elll:lltiMIItiMalltiMIM¥J:llll:-,-i"g•· •B~~~
~ ~·M1 1 1f1'1 1 7l l ;w:Jrl l : l l : l l : _.rl l ml l : l l: l l': wu:~: l l b MI MI

r

W

ay

Rodriguez, who said he
"knew all the time I was
walking around looking at the
putt that I was going to make
it," sank his birdie putt that
broke a four-year tournament
drought and earned him
$25,000.
Casper, who shot a final
round 36-35-71 to Rodriguez'
35-36-70 over the 7,0M-yard
Preston Trail Golf Club layout,
picked up a check for $14,300

Malloy First To
Crack 180 At Indy

Lawson Top
IS per cent of the total a!&gt;' MOC Track
belonged to Hum-

parently

d!d deacDoCk at seven-under·
par 273 and started the playoff
on the ~yard, par~ 15th hole.
They both reached the green in
three and Chi Chi's approach
was indeed "atlff to the pin"just four feet from the cup.
Casper, however, was 20 feet
away and missed his putt.

1

166.728 m.p.h.
Dick Simon of Salt Lake City
escaped hann when the left
front wheel on his machine,
locked in the No. 1 turn. The
racer skidded 150 feet but d(d
not make contact with the wan.
He drove the car on into the
pits.
Among cars arriving at the
Speedway Monday were those
assigned to defending "500"
champ
AI
Unser
of
Albuquerque and defending
national driving champion Joe
Leooard of San Jose, Calif.
Eighteen cars have now
passed technical inspection
and can be driven on the 211mile oval.

'

Pirates
Lose 6th
Straight
By

vrro srEUJNo

and said he was "very
Pleased" with his play because
he, too, had snapped out of a
slump which had pll.lgued him
all seaaon.•
Bruce Crampton, Charles
Coody and Canadian Wllf
Homenulk shared third place
~t five-under-par 275 and won
$8,11011 each; Arnold Pahner
found five birdies on his final
round but three bogeys
dropped him to a 68 and a 276
that was worth $4,500. ·
Chuck Thorpe, who barely '
made the cut with his 144 the

lluhhard Gets Anothet!

first two dilys, closed out With a
65 and a 118 to take seventh
place money of $4,000 with a
'ln. Dave Stockton, Mlller
Barber, Lee Trevino, Tom
Weiskopf and John Schlee were
at 278; Fred Marti, John
Mahaffey and Dwight Nevil
shared the 279 spot and Ron
Cerrudo was alone at pat 280.
·o Defending champion Jack
Nicklaus finished far back at
284 with a cl.olllng 71.
"I !mew I had to do it,"
Rodriguez said, "because with
Casper there is no tomorrow."

RACINE - Can you beheve
it!
Jim Hubbard pitched his
fourtb n~hitter of the season
here Monday afternoon agamst
the Glouster Tomcats with the
Southern Tornadoes wmning,
11-0.

Hobbard has started SIX
games this year. HIS record is
~1. He has aliowed a grand
total of five hi Is, ail to the same
team, Wahama. And not only 1s
this senior nghthander
brilliant on the mound, but he
can hit the ball, also. Against
the Tomcats he hit two singles
and walked three times in five
trips to the plate
In his seven 10mng stint.

Today's

Sport Para~

Hubbard fanned 14 and walked
three. He was backed up with a
good infield that 10cluded some
good stops by third baseman
Pat Arnold and second
baseman Brett Hart. -The Tornadoes, wmners of
eignt straight, scored two runs
in the first and added SIX mor~
10 the second. Southern pushed
across insurance runs 10 the
fourth and Sixth (2).
Dana ldiiiiron started on the
hili lor the Tomcats and was
relieved by Gillespie in the
second, who finished the game.
Milliron fanned none and
walked hve while Gillespie
fanned th ree and walked

seven.
The hitters for the Tornadoes
besides Hubbard's two s10gies
was Rodney Holman , two
singles, making his fourth
straight ' game he has hit
safely. Arnold, two singles,
Jeff Hubbard, a s10gle, Mike
Nease, a single, and Mitch
Nease coilected his first hit of
the season, a"single. Everyone
on the Tornado squad has at
least one hit this season.
Coach Hilton Wolfe's Tor·
nadoes are now owners of a 9-1
slate overall and leads the
Southern Valley Conference
with a 5.{) record. Southern will
travel to Logan Wednesday to

battle Starr-Washington in
Class "A" tournament action.
Bruc-e Hart, the Tornadoes'
starting shortstop, is out for the
season with a dislocated
shoulder suffered last week.
Two . corrections for the
Wahama-Sou thern game
played last Fnday night are
Jeff Hubbard hit the sacrifice
fly Instead of Jim Hubbard and
Mitch Nease walked to drive in
the winning run 10stead of Mike
Nease
Glouster
000 000 II- 0 0 0
Southern
260 102 x- 11 9 I
Milliron (LP), Gillespie (2),
and Gillott. Hubbard (WP),
and Pugh, Jenk10s, (7).

I

Out Of Title Picture 6-4
The Gallipolis Blue Devils
took advantage of Meigs'
pitching wildness and faulty
fielding for six runs in the first
two frames, then held on to win
what proved to be an exciting
Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League victory, 6-4, over the
Marauders Monday afternoon
at Municipal Park.
The win for the Blue Devils
gave them a 4-2 record Inside
the league and 8-4 overall. The
Marauders had their chance to
tie for first wiped out with the
loss, making them 3-2 in
SEOAL play and 4-4 overall.
The Blue DeVIls, who had
only four hits, all singles,
plated two runs iii the first
Inning and four more in the
second. The Marauders scored
one In the second and three In
the fifth.
Skipper Johnson, talented
junior righthander, went the

SEO Track
Meet Slated
Thursday
The 16th annual South·
eastern Ohio League Track and
Field meet will be held Thurs·
dily on the new track at Athens
High School at The Plains .
The defending champion
Bulldogs and Ironton's Tigers
are heavy favorites in this
year's meet.
The remaining six teams are
expected to fight it out for
various spots in the final
league standings.
GAHS is slated to take part in
a three-way meet at Chlllicothe
this evening against the
Cavaliers and Waverly Tigers .

Weak Rebid Wastes Game

1•

The DaiiJ ·Sentinel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS·MASON
AREA
CHESTER L. TANNEHILL,

East

VANCOUVER, B.C. (UPI)Muhammad Ali says he is right
on schedule for a return
heavyweight title fight with
champion Joe Frazier, and
after the way he battered poor
George Chuvaio into submission, who's to disagree.
The 3()-year-(lld Ali, quite
subdued but once again at his
best, showed Chuvalo ·a dance

"solid" horses in the 98th
running of the first of the Triple
Crown Classic.
No Le Hace, winner of the
Lecomte Handicap, the
Louisiana Derby and the
Arkansas Derby as well as an
overnight allowance race,
loomed as a strong favorite
even though there are aome
tough horses slated to run
against him-the Rokeby
Stable entry of Key To The
Mint and Head Of The River,
New Prospect who set a seven
furlong track record at Hialeah
Park in winning the Bahama's,
and Our Trade Winds, winner
of the Rebel Stakes.
Each ofthese stakes winners
carries 122 pounds In the rnlle
race, four pounds less than
they will carry in the m rnlle
Kentucky Derby on Satur-

dliy.

w. I. pet. g.b.

MOntreal
New York
Ph1 ladelph1a

St Loui s

P1llsburgh
Ch1cago

9 4
9 4
10 5
5 8
5 9
4 10
West

.692
.692

.667

.385
357
.286

• w. I. pel. g.b.

Houston

11

Los Angeles

11

Atlanta

7

.4 733
5 .687
8 .467

1h

4

Clnc.nnat1

5 8 .385
San Franc1sco 6 11 .353
San D•ego
5 11 .313

5
6
61/2

Monday's Results

New York 7 San Fran 4

Houston 9 Pittsburgh 8
Ph1la 2 Los Angeles I
IOnly games scheduled I
Today's Probable Pitchers

error by Young attempting to
pick off a runner at first
allowed the fourth run to cross
the plate.
Meigs came back with a
smgle run in the second. With
two outs, Rick Ash doubled and
Robbie Eason followed with a
smgle to score Ash. Eason was
nailed at second on the cut-off
in the infield to end the Inning.
Johnson and Young took
control of the game in the
fourth and fifth willi no runs
coming in. Meigs, however, did
threaten in the fourth with
runners on second and third
with no outs, but Johnson
masterfully pitched his way
out.
In the bottom of the fifth, the
Marauders made a game of it
with another of their patented
comebacks.
After Young !bed out to start
the frame, Tom Cooke got on
through an error by the
Gallipolis shortstop. After a
strikeout, Roger Dixon singled
to drive in Cooke from second
and went to second on the
throw to the plate . Steve
Dunfee, the Meigs' cleanup
hatter ,lined a sharp hit to right
that took a big bounce in front
of the Devils' rightfielder and
went over his head. Dunfee
rounded the bases for a two-run
homer to make it 6-4.
Although two were out,

Meigs didn't want to roll over
and play dead. Chester Wigal
was safe on an error and Lou
McKmney walked to put
runners on first and second. A
bouncer back to the mound,
however, ended the inning.
Gallipolis threatened m the
sixth when Kiesling singled
DaviS to second and with two
out Chuck
Perroud singled. up ·
.
the middle. Ash, the Meigs'
centerfielder, gobbled up the
baD, fired a strike to Dixon, to
nail Davis by a whisker at the
plate.
Johnson retired the flnBI six
Meigs hatters in order in the
sixth and seventh to p1ck up the
win.
Coach
Don
Wolfe's
Marauders will host the
Ironton Tigers at Middleport
tomght and will play Kyger
Creek at Kyger Creek on
Wednesday.
Hitters for the Marauders
were Dunfee, home run and
double, Cooke, triple, Ash,
double, and Burney, Dixon,
and Eason, each a single.
For Coach Jim Osborne's
Devils, Davis, Slone, Kieslmg,
and Perroud each hit a single.
Gal.
240 000 l)....li 4 3
Meigs
010 030 11--4 7 5
Johnson and Kiesling. Young
and Dixon .
Umpires, Art Stobart, plate;
George Nesselroad, bases.

Hou ston

(Reuss

1 0)

at

Pottsburgh IBnles I 0) , 8 OS
pm
Conconnat1 IGullett 0 2) at St.
LOUIS {W1se 1 2). 9 p.m.

Montreal (McAnally 0 01 at
San Doego (Norman 0-2) , 10 30
p.m.
New York (Gentry 1-11 at San 4r~-.....,....:&gt;...:""'""'""'""'.,q-~----J:&gt;..o..o...,.

step or two for five rounds and
then beat him to a pulp with
stinging rights Monday night
for his fifth straight victory on
the comeback trail leading to
anot!wr fight with Frazier ia'fe
this summer.
'
Ali, scaling a svelte 21711
pounds to Chuvalo's 221, beat

the Canadian champ on a
unanimous decision before
only 8,800 in the Pacific
Coliseum, but upwards of
50,000,000 it was estimated, .
saw the action on closed circuit ·
television in the United States
and Canada and 34 other
countries.

Slo-Play Opens Today
The Meigs-Mason Slo·Pilch
Softball· League season begms
today with a full slate of games
10 the IO.team league.
Ouly new team in the loop is
Fruth Pharmacy of Point
Pleasant with a line-up of
veteran players.
League President Kenny
Wiggins of Pomeroy an·
nounced the following games
this week .
TUESDAY, MAY2
Farmers Bank vs. Danville,
Syracuse field, 6 p.m.; Reeds·
ville vs. Royal Crown,
Syracuse field, 7 p.m.; Fruth
Pharmacy vs. Foote Mineral,
Mason Drive-In field, 6 p.m.;

Meadowgreen Gardens vs.
Randolph's 76, Mason Drive-In
field, 7 p.m. and Jim's Camper
Sales vs. K &amp;K Mobile Homes,
Lakin field, 6:30p.m.
THURSDAY, MAY4
Danville vs. Foote Mineral,
Mason Drive-In, 6 p.m.; K &amp; K
Mobile Homes vs. Randolph's
76, Point Pleasant (Ordnance
Field), time not set;
Meadowgreen Gardens vs .
Royal Crown, Syracuse, 6
p.m.; Farmers Bank vs. Fruth
Pharmacy, Syracuse field, 7
p.m. ; Jim's Camper Sales vs.
K &amp; K Mobile Homes, Lakin
field, time not set.

,
The Southern Tornadoes play
the Starr-Washington Generals
at Logan Wednesday and the
Eastern EagleS' wiil travel to
Alexander Wednesday to battle
the Spartans In class "A"
baseball tournament play.
Both the Eagles and the
Tornadoes are in the top
bracket. In the lower, bracket,
Glouster will host Laurelville
Wednesday whi!e Crooksv ille
drew a bye.

.
The winners of llie Eastern •
Alexander and Southern::StarrWashington 'will play each
other on Friday . Crooksville
will play t!'e winner of the
Glouster • Laurelville game
also on Friday. The finals will
be held on May 9 on the top
bracket winners' home field. ·
The champion will advance to
the Chillicothe District. The
Eastern Eagles · are the
defending district champions.
•

Wednesday's Games
Atlanta at Chicago
Montreal at San D•ego
New York at San Fran
Hou ston at Pitts, n1ght
Cmc1 at Sf Lou 1s, n1ght,\
Phlla at Los Ang, n1ght ,

By Lhet Tannehill

Amencan league
East

Detroot
Ball&gt;more
Clevela nd
Boston
New York
Milwaukee

w

I.

7
7

4
6

pet. g.b.
636
538 1

6 6 .500
4 7 364
4 8 333
3 7 300

111'2

3

31/ 2
31/ 2

West

w. I. pel. g.b.

M1nnesola

8

Oakland
Chicago
Texas

Kansas City

Cal1forn1a

3 .727

7 4 636
8 5 615
7 6 538

2

6 a 429 31,? 3
.; tl 385 4

Monday's Games

INo games scheduled)

Today's Probable Pitchers
Amer1can League

tAll Tomes EDT)
Cleveland (Perry 2 2)

at

Texas feosman 1 2), 8 30 p m
Kansas Cliy ( Dal Canton 1 1)
at Oetro 1t (Timmerman 1 1), 9

pm.
Chocago (Bahnsen 2 2) a!
Ballo more (McNally 2 1), 7. 30
pm
M inneso ta ( 81yleven 3 0) at
Milwaukee (Parsons 1-2), 8. 30

pm
Calofornia IMay 0-01 at New
York (Stotllemyre 0-31. 8 p m.
Oakland (Holtzman 2-1\ at
Boston (Culp 1-21. 7:30p.m.
Wednesday's Games
California at New York
Cleve at Tex:as, night
Kan City at Detroit, n1ght
Chicago at Bait , n1ght
Mmn at Milwaukee, night

Oakland al Boston, night

International League

Standmgs
United Press International
W. L. Pet. Gil

Richmond
Rochester
Toledo
Charleston
T1dewaler
Syracuse

3 .786
9 7 .563
9 7 563
6 6 .500
9 9 .500
6 8 .429

II

3
3
4
4
S

• Louisv11le
6 9 .400 S1J2
Pen 1nsula
5 12 .294 71/ 7
Monday's R;;;iults
Toledo 3 Peninsula 2
Roches ter 7 Charleston 6 ( 14
innings)
Syracuse 10 T1dewater 4

(Only games sched.uled)

April28, 1972
Dear Sir:
The missing name on the
M.H.S. basketball team of 190ll
was me, Roscoe Fowler. The
picture was captiOned wrong.
It should have been : Lee Lane
(Not Lee Land), me and then
Williard Smith
Attached is another picture
taken the same year: Seated,
Reed Stark, Lee Lane, Homer
Headley; slandmg Willard
Smith, Ross Brown, Mr. (Red)
McKinney, Y.M.C.A. director,
and me I am the only one
living.
No doubt the uniforms we
wore at that time look a blUe
odd compared to the fine
uniforms of today. In those
days we were lucky to have two
uniforms that were alike. Our
chief rooters were Fred Shiflet,
Mitt White and C. H. Odenbaugh (The tailor). I am sure
that they paid for two pleces of
the Wliforms - pants and
shirts. Odenbaugh cut the
letters out and sewed them on
for us. We furnished the socks
and shoes. This was a far cry
from the luxury the athletes of
today are showered with .
I was a member of the
Y.M-.C.A. basketball teams
that played Marshall College in
1909 and 1910. The Marshall
coach, Boyd Chamber (later
coach at C10cinnati University
for many years) who knew that
I had dropped out of high
school and was working at the
old Kanawha and Michigan
Shops at Hobson, persuaded
me to start back to school and
go to Marshall. I was on the
1911 Football ·and basketball
squad and a regular on the 1912
football and basketball teams.
I only weighed 148 pounds and
was injured in a game with

Desk

Marietta College, which ended
by football career.
~
RQscoe 0. Fowler.
MEET THURSDAY
Managers and sponsors of
learns in the Meigs-Gaiiia Pony
Baseball Association are asked
lo meet Thursday at 7:30p.m.
in the Bradbury bmldmg in
Cheshire (corner of USR 7 and
SR 554) to orgamze the summer program .
Officers will be elected,
entry fees set, and schedules
approved.
Last year, seven teams
performed, one each from
Cheshire, Pomeroy A and
Pomeroy B, Middleport ,
Bidwell, Racme, Southwestern.
It is expected that the teams
of Gaiiia county will include 1314 and 15 year oids. Teams
from at least Pomeroy and
Middleport Will be composed
only of 14-lo year oids. Play is
on a standard diamond .
A 13-year old league, which

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAL FUNDS

Major league Results

By United Press International
Naloonal League
New York 101 200 3DO- 7 14 0
San Fran 001 002 IDO- 4 6 0
Seaver, McGraw (7) and
Grote , Cumberland, Bryant (4),
Johnson (7), McMahon (7) ,
Moms (81 and Rader WPSeaver (4-0) . LP-Cumberland
(0-3) . HRs- Harrelson (1st),
Rader (1st), Speier (2nd),
Henderson (3rd) . '
Houston
000 043 002-9 13 2
P11tsbrgh 100 204 001- 8 16 2
Roberts, Culver (61. Ray (8)
and Edwards; Blass, Giusti (7],
Hernandez 191 and Sangulllen.
WP- Ray (4·01. LP-Giusll 10·
2) . HRs- Wynn (51hl. Edward•
(3rd), Clemente (lstl .
Phila
000 000 02G- 2 6 0
Los Ang
000 000 01G-1 3 1
Selma 11-11 and Ryan;
Osteen, Brewer (~) and Slm•.
LP-Osteen (2·11 . HR- Monta.
nez list) .
(Only games scheduled)
American L~ague
(No games scheduled)

ITALIAN NIGHT
AT
Martin Restaura
In The Heart of
WEDNESDAY NIGHT
6:30 To 10:30, May 3

Spaghetti' with homemade 11alian sauce.

"Featuring Maxine At The Organ"

Two tough belts hold the tread f~rm for great
mileage Concave design keeps entire tread
on road for excellent ha ndlmg and traction .

lor
E78·14 (7.35.·141

Blacli:wall•
Plus S2 34 p1r tlr11
Fed Ex tax and 2
tires of! your ur,

OriginiJiprite
$33.75 Bllt:b

.,._
,.177•·••1
Blackwalla

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
I.

"iii have in it several teams
from Mason County, W.Va., is
being planned. These boys wiil
play on a "pony" diamond of 75
ft. bases and 54 fl. pitching
distance.
Cheshire IS the defending
champion on the basis of a
league record o! 11-1.

LONG MILEAGE nRES

S2521}f1r1oreFE .T
A.ll pr1ces PlUS tues ~~nd 2

t ~rea

oil yDur c~r, If we should sell oul

of your s1ze we II give you ~ 'r a •nchec~ · for future delivery AI the
Ad~er111ed

pnce S•ngte llreasimtlarly low pr ice d

'

' Drive in TODAY -

Meigs County's Oldest and largest

Insurance Agency
.l

"

the Sports

Philadelphia I Fryman I 01 at
Los Angeles IDown1ng 1-2). 11
pm .

A PIay Opens wednesday

MIDDLEPORT, o.

Roscoe Fowler
Was on the 1908
Middleport Team

Francisco &lt;Carnthers 1·1), 11

P m.

..

. I

II

East

Chuvalo Beaten On Decision

The Otbers entered were Big
Spruce, 116, Billy Rogel, 119,
ROIE=~·~o~dFLICH,
Big Brown Bear, 116,
ctty Editor
&amp;IBpected 118, Dr. Neale, 116,
Publlshrd dally ucept
d
soturdoy by Tht Ohio vetlev Lester's Jester, 116, an
Publishing Company, 111 Embark 112. Embark never
court St , Pomeroy , Ohio,
ha
d if
A5169 eusinen Office Phont
s won a race an he starts
"22156, Edllorlel Phon• 99l in the Trial Instead ola malden
1151
•
Second clan poS!age paid al race in which he also is enPomoroy, Ohio.
tered,hewlllbegroupedin the
Narlonal advtrtl,ing
''rn
reprnenlltlve Bottlntlll
utueI field" with Good Bait
Golllghtr' tnc .. 12 East A7nd 118 and Bold Mualc, 119.
St, New Yor~ City, New York .
Derby jocke"" wiU be up on
Subtcrlpt1on rates
De ,.
1•
llvtrtd by corrtor where thetop'l'rlalstarterawithPaul
N •·• Hace
IVtlltblt 50 cent&amp; ptr wttk, Rlbbl
&amp;y Motor Routt where carrltr ·
CC0 0Jt
~ ..,..
'
sorvlct not ovtlltblt . One Braullo Baeza on Key to the
month sus. Bv mau in Ohio Mint Mike Hole on Hesdofthe
and w. va .. One year $U 00
'
Six months sus. Throe =ohmy Rotz on New
monlhl SA .50 . Subscrif,tlon
·-'Dave Whited on
price lncludtl SunCIIY T mtS ·
4IIN
Stnllnel .
OUr Tra Winds.

t•,

•

distance for the Devils,
allowing seven hits, four runs
(all earned) fanned six and
walked only three. Johnson had
the Marauders off balance with
a low-breaking curve much of
the time.
Eddie YoWlg also went the
distance for the Marauders,
and pitched a much better
game than the score indicates.
The senior righty allowed six
runs, but only two were earned.
The Devils managed but four
hits while Young fanned six
and walked seven, five of
which came in the first two
frames.
In the Gallipolis fll'st, John
Davis led off reaching base on
an error by the Marauder
shortstop. Kevin Sheets, Steve
Slone, and Stan Perry followed
with walks to force in the two
runs. Young finally pitched his
way out off the Inning without
further dilmage. Clearly the
errors had upset him.
After Meigs failed to answer
Gallipolis' two-run first, the
Devils made it ~ in the
second. Howard Taylor led off
with a walk. Johnson then
reached first on an error by the
Meigs' first-baseman. Davis
singled to drive in one run.
Kiesling followed with a walk
to load the bases agairf. After •
Sheets fanned, Slone singled to
Iring home two more runs. An

-Le Hace Derby·
Trial Favorite
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (UPI)No Le Hace, one of the top
choices for Saturday's rWlnlng
of the Kentucky Derby, takes
on 13 rivals at Church!U Downs
today in the $20,000 added
Derby Trial Stakes and gives
Kentuckians a first chance to
see him in action .
They already saw Meadow
Stable's Rlva Ridge, the
Kentucky Derby favorite, win
the Blue Grass Stakes at
Keeneland last Thursday and
Hold Your Peace score in the
Step[lng Stone Purse at the
opening of Churchill Downs on
Saturday.
Now Its No Le Hace's turn to
show the form that carried him
to four victories this year and
stamped him as one of the

By Un1fed Press International
Nat1onal League

Nationa I League

Gallipolis Knocks Meigs

MILTON RICHMAN
UPI Sportl Writer
NEW YORK (UPI)-Happy Hairston was doing the talking. He
was talldng about the man he feels pumps tiie blood into the veins
oftheLosAngelesLakers. WiltChamberillln, who else?
"As I;ve said ao many times before," said Hairston," as Wilt
Chamberlain goes, so go the Los Angeles Lakers.
"Not many people know about this," went on tbe Lakers'
jumper, "but just before our sixth game with MUwaukee he
caUed a meeting of all the players. Strictly on his own. It wasn't
arranged. He thanked us all for !he job we had done an!l_aaid this
was the greatest team he had ever played on. It was just a brief
talk but you have no Idea how it made us feel."
Some Idea may be gleaned from the face the Lakers went out
on the Bucks' home court that particular Saturday afternoon and
blew them out of the NBA pillyoffs. Chamberlain didn't take any
coffee break in that one either. He had himself 24 rebounds and 22
points.
That performance readily can be related to Chamberlain's
showing ao far in tbe finals between the Lakers and the New York
Knlcks.
Hla Mind Ia Made Up
WUt Chamberlain made up his mind some time ago he wants
this one. What good is It if you've got everything, Including a
fancypadforamlllion.flve, and you're only one of the also·rans?
Chamberillin wants this tiUe so mhch, be's hoping this sefles
goes five or six games Instead of seven. He knows tbe Lakers'
record in seven-game series since they moved from Minneapolis
to Los Angeles. ZUch.
The way they started out, it looked Uke the Lakers might go
Wider in four straight.
The Knicks ran away with the opener, during which Je!"''Y""')
Lucas seemed bent on winding up with permanent possession of ·
Wilt Chamberlain. Wllt couldn't do anything at aU with Lucas in
that first one. So UtUe in fact, Bill Sharman aat him down at one
point and tried Leroy Ellis.
SUndily night's second game was an entirely different story.
Chamberlain knew he had to go to work, and did. He drove on
Lucas, got the Knicks' center into foul trouble and was a key
factor under the boards with his 24 rebounds In addition o the 23
points he scored.
Lueas Wun't Shocked
Locas,lirnited 10 only 16 points, wasn't as shocked by Chamberlain's sudden turnaround as you'd think. He eXpected it.
"During a series like this one, your tactics and ideas change as
you go along," says Lucas. "You can't keep playing tbe same
way."
Lucas knew what he was up against even before this series
started. He was up against Chamberillin and that, as he puts it,
"never is any bargain."
"My primary job wiU be to try and draw Charnberillln out of
the mldcDe so that we can work some of our driving gsme,"
Lucas said before the first game with the Lakers. "If I'm hitting
my jump shot, I'm sure It is going to cause hlm aome concern."
Lucas was and did in the opener. He wasn't and didn't in
SUnday's second one in which the Lakers waltzed,I06-92.
.
Ill TroablNOme Stralls
The Knicks are generally thought to be in troublesome straits
now because of Dave DeBusschere's injury and they certainly
are much weaker without hlm.
Los Angeles led SWlday by only one point, 51-50, at halftime,
which was about the time DeBusschere no longer was of any
service to the Knicks, and his man, Hairston, scored 12 of his 15
points in the third quarter.
Hairston, curiously, feels Milwaukee's Curtis Perry is tougher
on hlm than DeBusschere. He says the Knlcks' forward can't
leap as high or 18n't as:m-ong as Perry.
Happy Hairston is on the right wave-length about Wilt
Chamberillin, but he's all by himself in his opinion concerning
DeBusacbere and Perry.
Ask any of the NBA coaches. They all voted for DeBusschere
manimoualy on the league's alldefensive team.
By

STANDINGS

IAll Tomes EDT)
Atlanta I Reed 1-21 at Cho cago
IHands 0-1), 2 30 p m

•..

UPI Sportl Writer
The Pittsburgh Pirates may
be kidding themselves but they
claim they're not worried
about Dave Giusti.
Giusti, who saved 30 games
for the Pirates last year and
added five victories in their
drive to the world championship, was ineffective for the
third time in the last nine days
Monday night as the Pirates
lost their sixth straight by a ~
margin to tbe surging Houston
Astros.
With the score tied 7·7 in the
ninth, Giusti was tagged for
successive singles by Jim
Wynn, Lee' May and Bob
Watson that cracked the tie. A
Giusti wild pitch and a
sacrifice fly bY Tommy Heims
produced what proved to be the
winning run after' the Pirates
scored a run in the last of the
ninth.
Despite the inconsistent
showings lately, new manager
Bill Virdon said be wasn't concerned about GIUsti's pitching
"If his . arm was hurting or WIN AT BRIDGE
something, then you'd be
concerned. be•s just going the
way w.e're going, I gueas. It's
just a matter of time," Virdon
firmed these six or seven
said . .
NORTH (D)
and at the same time showed
"One of Those Slrew"
.AQ98
a maximum of ten and a no.Q85
Giusti said, "I'm just going
trump type hand. Thus,
• J3
through one of those streaks. I
North had no reason to bid
• KQ87
just wasn't making good pit·
over
one no-trump. Ten plus
WEST
EAST
14
equals
just 24.
cbes, that's all, I'm not lo&amp;ng .J83
.10754
my confidence, I've been
South's correct rebid was
• AJ64Z
.97
.95
.A872
two no-trump. This second
aroWld too long."
.A95
round jump to two no·trump
Of course, Giusti waan't the .J82
SOUTH
is
not an absolute force and
only Pirate t culprit. World
.K2
·.
shows
just what South held
Series hero Steve Blass was
.KI03
- 11 or 12 points and a no.
bombed for a grand slam
• KQ1064
ltump hand.
• 1043 '
homer by Jim Wynn in the fifth
It is a strong Invitation to
None vulnerable
and a tJtree.ntn homer by John
a further bid and North
Dedwll!'da in the sixth. And West North Eut South
should accept with his nice
1•
Pass
base-running lapses by both
, 14. That plus 11 only equals
Pus
1•
Pass 1 N.T.
25, but it is silly to stop one
Rennie Stennett and AI OUver
Pa3s . Pass
Pass
trick short or game when
ldlled rallies.
Opening lead-¥ 4
you are that close to it and
Houston is on a hot streak
25 points divided almost
and the Astros poWlded out 13 B Os ld &amp;
hits with Wynn and Cesar . Y wa
James Jacoby evenly between two hands is
very apt to produce at least
Cedeno collecting three hlta.
A letter from Baton Rouge nine tricks.
Jim Ray pitched two Innings of reads in part, "How should
(HlWSPAPll INTIRf'IISI ASSH.)
one-run relief for the Astrol we have, reached the easy
and got the victory to boolt his no-trump game? I think my
record to W
partner should have raised
·
I my no-trump bid. After all
The only other action in the I did make two bids with my
The bidding has been:
majors was on the West Cout hand after he opened He West North Eost South
in the National League as New thinks my second bid oi one
1•
Pass
York topped San Francllco 7· no·trump did not show any- 1•
1•
P...S
4, and Phlladelpbla edged ~ thi~g like my full values.
You, South hold:
Angeles 2-l
Incidentally, I ha~ no trouble .AI54 .K632 .QIOT .54
•, · ,
making ten tricks "
What do you do now?
The New York and PhiladelThe letter brnigs up a
A-Bld lwo spades. \'oa have
~Ia victories moved the M.eta couple of popular miscon·
and Phlls into I tie with ceptions about bidding The a Jood slnrle roloe in opile ol
Mootreal for flnt place in the first is that your second bid tho t..t ~hat your ktq of hearts
Eastern Division while the loll does no.t necessarily show '\PPfllrl to be worth very Uttte.
TODAY'S QUESTION
Angeles loss enabled Houtlon extra values. In this case
Your
partner tontinues to
tornoveintoflntlntheWestby South's one diamond re·
throe
opadeo.
What do you do
half a game Plttaburgli 11 flio sponse showed at least six
'
back in
or seven points. His second now?
111e
·
bid of one no·trUIIlP COD•

~BASEBAll

078-1418 2•-••1

Bl•cllwall•
S2 69 pert•re FE l

......
,60 00
2 for ,53 50
21or
~-·=2 for •59 00 "'" ,.,u•..• 2 for $64 50
G7· -··~a

Bl ackwa lls

J

...... 1 lS.lS.:.

$27BpcrllruFE T.

•

Blackwalta
S2 93 per 11rt F E.T

•

Drlllllllft)I,Zihe•

to CHARGE

J

•

......... '41.11 ...

'

�..
-·

4-'l'he Dally Sentinel, MIUWe:""""-ruam:.ru)', u., May ~, lf'I'J.

r·fep~~~;~
·
·
~
·
:
w
:wl
Concert
Given
. Personal Notes •
.
.
.

Tour Enjoyed
Members of Ute WildwOOd 1 ~-on May '!/. Mrs. Don Grueser
Garden Club look a nature lour · and Mrs. Fred Nease will give
Wednesday and then returned U1e railio report this month. ·
to the home of Mrs. Alfrtld
Mrs. Clifford Phillips gave a
Yeauger for a cookout and report on Ute program by Miss
program.
Edelene WOOd of Parkersburg
Joining UH! 10 members of on wild Oowers at the open
Ute club for Ute lOur were Cindy meeting of Ute Winding Trail
Hamm, ·Dawn and Shawn GardenClub. Areport was also
Grueser. A blue ribbon was giv~n on the spring regional
awarded to Mrs, May Holler meeting beld at Logan.' Mrs.
for her arrangement of spring Hiram Fisher, Mrs. Edson
flowers . Members were Hollon and Mrs. Denver Holler
'=~!minded to iake packages of attended[
flower seeds to the May
Mrs. Hollon suggested thai a
meeting for the junior nower therapy. program for an ingarden members.
slllution be planned and that
Mrs. Hiram Fisher agreed lo favors be made. Devotions to
make table arrangements for open the meeting were given
the Pomero~ Alumni banquet by Mrs. Shirley Hamm. She

PTA Officers are Installed
Officers were installed at a
recent meeting of the Racine
PTA. Installed were Mrs. Sue
. Follrod , president; Mrs .
Sandra Hill, vice president;
Mrs. Janice Salser, secretary;
Mrs. Sue Beegle, treasurer;
Mrs . Cora Lee Cummins,
devotional leader; and Mrs.
Kay Warden , Mrs. Nancy
Ervin, Mrs. Blondena Hudson,
and Mrs. Betty Kirkland,
delegates to the Meigs County

Three Attend
jackson Event
Three members of the
Pomeroy PTA attended the
Distric116 spring conference of
the Ohio PTA ~lurday at
Jackson.
Going from the Pomeroy unit
were Mrs. Earl Thoma,
president; Mrs. Arthur Arnold,
and Mrs. Gene Milch. Mrs.
Harold Lohse, district director,
presided at the meeting which
featured talks by Mrs. Sherman Dye, Ohio PTA first vice
president; and Dr. Robert
Lucas of Cincinnati, second
vice president of the Ohio PTA.
Workshops were conducted
and a discussion was held in
the afternoon on PTA Ac·
countabillly. Mrs. Lohse
exhibited a Meigs County
cultural arts publicity display
at the conference. On display
at the conference were county
winners In the cultural arts
competition.

Shower Given
In Rall Home
_,... MASON - Mrs. Harry
Chesher and Mrs. E. 0. Rail
en tertained with a bridal
shower at the Rail home in
Mason Friday evening
honoring Miss Frances .Dee
Slaven whose marriage to
Douglas G. Reineke will take
place on June 3 in Colwnbus .
Games were played and
refreshments served.
Presenting gills to Miss Slaven
were Mrs. H. M. Slaven, Mrs.
Jack Slavin, Mrs. Bernard
Fultz, Mrs. Francis Anderson,
Mrs. William Lewis, Mrs .
Michael Zirkle, Mrs. Paul
Haptonstall, Mrs. Bob Ord,
Patty Slaven, Mrs. Howard
Byers, Mrs. Dale Nicholson,
Mrs. George McGhee, Mrs.
Russell Mills, Robbie Ord,
Patty Roush, and Debbie
Malden, all local ; and Mrs.
Ralph Painter, Mrs. Harold
Heighton , Mrs. Norman
Manley, and Pally Slaven.

WORKDAY PLANNED
Awork day at the Middleport
Church of Christ was set for
May 8 when the.Homebuilders
Class mel recently at the home
of Mr. and Mrs . Millon
Houdashell.
Raymond Stewart presided
at the meeting whirh .opened
with prayer by Houdashelt.
Refr~shments were served by
Mr. and Mrs. Houdashelt, Miss
Thelma Boyer, and Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Boyer to Mrs.
Carl Roacll, Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Kincaid, Mr. and Mrs.
Raullin Moyer, Mrs. Bernice
May, Mr. and Mrs.. Chesler

Council of Parents and
Teachers.
Ralph Sayre, .superintendent
of the Southern Local School
District, David Nease and
Dennis f:lill, board members,
were present at the meeting lei
discuss the five mill school
operating levy being voted on
today. The P'I:A ga.ve an endorsement of support.

th:ia~se;~~~ n~t:::r ~~ip !~0

~~!\~~~~~ :p~ointedwincl~:~

..

~

'

'

.

,'

Mrs. Ethel Smilh recently ·Vqcal and instrumental sang Waring's arrangement of
returned from .Toledo where departments of Southern High "Let There Be Peace on
she spent the winter with her School were presented In a Earth" and "Who Am I?"
daughter , Mrs. · Homer spring concert Sunday af.
The .choir sang Feelin' /'
Walters.
ternOQn in the high sctlool ...Glory Land," "lilyes of a
Recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. auditorium.
Child," "A Salute to America n
Alan Gibson of Columbils was
The hapd under the direction with Judi Roberts narrating;
Miss J~ne Wise of Rutland.
of Mrs . Connie Romi!'e "The World Just Is, My Son,"
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ferguson, presented Powers' "Vicei-oy "I Don't Know How to ,Love
Judy and Jack of Gahanna, and Overture, II uso liloquy I " Him" from Jesus Christ,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Sibey of "Gaslight Gaieties," "Scar- Soperstar, and "EveryUtlng's
Kansas, were recent guests of borough Fair" and concl.uded All Right" from the same
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Johnson. with "Get Together."
Broadway production; "The
Mrs. Johnson and daughter,
Vocal students directed by Desiderata" with Rodney
Mona, spent the weekend in Mrs. Lee Lee presided a varied
Neigler as narrator and
Colwnbus going especially for
program. The girls' glee club "Hosanna n from Jesus Quist,
an international scout dinner
there.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush,
Sherrie and David, St. Albans,
W, Va. were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush.
Overseas sewing to be sent to Donald ,'Lowery presenting a
Mrs. Robert Kuhn spent India was presented by Mrs. litany. Mr• . Marcus Chambers
several days last week in Dwight Wallace and dedicated read the 23rd Psalm and had
Dravosburg, Pa. visiting Mr. by Mrs. Dwight Zavitz at a prayer . A film on the theme
and Mrs . William A. Miller. meeting of the Women's which pertained to a family
1 C. L.Jliller of Minersville left Association of the Middleport who tried living on welfare was
Friday for a visit in East First United Presbyterian shown. Refreshments of ice
Liverpool with friends, and in Church Thursday night.
waler an d crackers were
Talmadge with ' his son,
Presented at the meeting se rved by the executive
Eugene, and family.
was a me rit certificate committee to further the theme
Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell has received by the Association of concern for others through
returned from a trip to Florida. from the Meigs County unit of personal sacrifice.
She was accompanied by Mrs. the American Cancer Society
Mrs. Thomas Kelly presided
Ralph Hayman of Dayton. The for participation in the Cancer at the meeting with Mrs.
two visited St . Augustine, Sunday activities.
James Harley, welcomed back
.l'l:-:~lll~·~:o;ll·····illi:T8i.,.a~ ·~::=:~*""w.~~::-,:::o:.:~,,,,,,r.;; Miami, St. Petersburg, Nassau "No Milk Today" was the after a long absence due to a
and Freeport in the Bahamas. theme 'of the program with hip IOJUry , giving the
They look a conducted lour of Mrs. Carl Horky and Mrs . missionary prayer.
Disney World, and the Ken)
:~: nedy Space Center where they
:~(
!~ saw Apollo t6 two days before
j
i,~:·l,'.· it was launched .
used a reading ''Frhinds," a
poem entitled "Thank You
God" and had prayer . Mem·
bers responded to roll call with
the name of their favorite wild
Oower.
A thank you note was read
from the Christy Baer family .
Mrs. Hamm won the door
prize. A talk on the Dul·
chman's brilches was given by
Mrs. Don Grue5er who noted
that they are good for eating
when mixed in with other
lender greens.
A paper prepared by Mrs.
David Nease was on wild
ginger which Is found in rich
soil in shaded woods . . She
described it as a wild flower for
the home garden.
Mrs. Denver Holler gave
timely gardening lips noting
thai now Is the lime to sow
annuals, plant gladioli and set
out ~ardy begonias. She
suggested that pesticides be
applied early as needed to
contro l insects and thai
primroses be divided as soon
as they slop blooming. She also
said thai early rlowerin g
bushes should be cut back as
soon_as they stop blooming .

11

Overseas Sewing Dedicated

ca1en dar

HOSPITAL NEWS

To Graduate

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m.
MASON, W. Va. - Joyce Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
Marie Manuel, Wahama High 4:30 Parenls only on Pediatrics
School teacher, daughter of Ward.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R.
Births
Manuel., Racine RD 2, will
Mr. and Mrs. David E.
graduate from Rio Grande Sneed, Letart, a daughter ; Mr.
'College May 14.
and Mrs. Vernon Pratt,
Miss Manuel is a 1968 Gallipolis, a daughter; Mr. and
graduate of Southern High Mrs. Larry E. Lee, Gallipolis,
School, a recipient of the Paul a son; Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Carnahan Scholarship, and of Howell, Bidwell, a son; Mr.
the Meigs County Dollars for and Mrs. John McCormick,
Scholars . She is presently Kenova, W. Va., a daughter ;
employed as a French teacher Mr. and Mrs. Richard E.
at Waharna .
Cremeans, Gallipolis, a
As a student al Rio Grande daughter and Mr. and Mrs .
College' Joyce served as dorm Robert M. Davis, Gallipolis, a
counselor, vice president of the son .
Student Education Association,
Discharges ·
and is a member of Zeta Theta
Abby Woodruff, Rob ert
Chi Sorority.
Warth, Juanita Lieving,
Miss Manuel will obtain her Nimrod Pauley, Jean Fowler,
BA degree from Rio Grande Willard Coale, Mrs. David
College. She plans to allend Freeze and daughter, Brian
Ohio University this swnmer to Baxter, Luther Leslie, Noreena
work toward her master L. Maynard, Mrs. Michael
degree.
Chandler and daughter, Mrs.
Fairley Causey and son, Jennie
Cottrill, George Corbin, Mrs.
Kenneth E. Cremeans and son,
GRAVES CEREMONY
Return Jonathan Meigs Freda Johnson, Bert Romine,
Chapter of the Daughters of the Mary Snyder, Dell VanSickle,
American . Revolution will Cheryl Warner, Mrs. Arne!
mark the graves of three Weaver and son, Susan Zirkle,
deceased members at 3 p.m. Melanie Weese, Scott Sayre,
Sunday . Scheduled lo be Linda Sue Crump, Daniel
marked are the grades of Mrs. Workman, Evelyn Proffitt,
Helen Bradford and Miss Bess Mrs. Donald Bailes and son,
Sanborn at the Middleport Hill Larry Smllh, Mrs. James
Cemetery, and Miss Mary Roach and son, Raymond
Laughead at Beec h Grove Casey, Mrs. James T. Greene
and soq, Judy Cavey, Milton
. Cemetery,

'

Only Special!
SCOT LAD

'

Superstar, with John Eichinger Nea;H!, Barbara Nease, Patsy
as \enor soloist.
Proffitt, Melissa PToffltt,
Mrs. Jacelyn Baer was Connie Roush, Tammy Roush,
accompanist for the vocal Becky Sams, Connie Warner;
students.
Jane Allen, Hope Bird, Nancy
Band personnel includes Crow, Della Cross, Barbara
Diana Norris, Susie Gooch, Fisher, Terri Findley, 1Susan
0\llla Cross, Connie Smith, Gooch, Beverly Hart, Candy
Candy Hoback, Beth Theiss, IHoback, Elisa McMillan, Patsy
Barbara Fisher, Nancy Ours, , Sayre, Jeannie Sellers, Jlll
Mary Biggs, Cindy Lawson, ,'Warner, Debra West, Sandy
Denise Cross, Bev Hari, · Wlnebreruier,--Cookie Weddle,
0\lbbie West, Paul Simpson, Renee Burke; Denise Cross,
Nancy Crow, Connie Warner, Cindy Gooch, Cheryl Moore,
Bob Commins, Sl!aron Drllke, Roma Nease, Diana Norris,
Steve Yonker, Roma Nease, Stephanie Ord, Judi Roberis,
Hope Bird, Stephanie Ord, Ed Karen Rhodes, Rhoda South,
Cross, Ethan Stearns, Roger Connie Smith, Vickie Wolfe,
Willford, Vicki Wolfe, Bill Helen
Wilcoxen,
John
Wheeler, John Eichinger, Eichinger, Jimmy Evans, Ray
Jeannie Sellers, Renee Burke, Frank, Dave Huddleston, Bob
Valerie Johnson, Dave Smith Johnson, Mitch Nease, Vem
and Megan Brown.
Ord, Vern Pyles, Raymond
Choir personnel are:
Robinson, Bob Sayre, Glenn
Debbie Arnott, Terri Ash, · Simpson, Jeff Circle, !lob
Rhonda Ash, Megan Brown, Cummins, Greg Donabew, Jay
Beverly Ervin, Brenda Hayes, Hill, Jeff Hill, Ronnie Hill, ·
Valerie Johnson, Pam Larkins, Rodney Holman., Nick Ihle,
Cindy Lawson, Elaine Lehew, Mike Nease, Doug Rees, Larry
Loretta Middleswart, Lee Ann Wilcoxen, and Rodney Neigler.

SHERBET
liz

Book Reviewed
"ATumultuous Life- Victor
Hugo," by Samuel Edwards
was reviewed by Mrs: James
Titus at a recent meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club held
at the Racine home of Mrs.
Thereon Johnson :
Mrs. Titus described Hugo as
the greatest lyric poet that
ever lived. She told of his exile
during the time of Napoleon
and the tremendous welcome
when he returned to France.
Mrs. James Euler, program
chairman , introduced the
reviewer.
Guests ai the meeting were
Miss Edith Hayman, Mrs.
Scott Wheeler and daughter.
Mrs. Johnson served sandwiches, cookies, coffee and
punch.

•
COE ANNIVERSARY
·The children of Mr. and Mrs.
Millard R. Coe of Coolville will
honor their parents on their
25th wedding anniversary with
an open house from 2 to 4 p.m.
on Sunday, May 7. Mr. and
Mrs. Coe were married on May
3, 1947 in Parkersburg, W. Va .

Davis, Louise Bayer, Nora
Cambron , Sabra Clark, John
Covert, Alma Fowler, Harold
Fowler, Robert Fulton,
William Holt, Cat~erine Long,
Connie Sue McNeely, lthmer
Neal, Clara Skidmore, Clyde
Stephens, Erce ll VanHorm,
Mrs. Gerald Keith Warren and
son, Phyllis Wells, Charlene
White, Georgia Wyant, Carla
Jean Swain, Gregory McCarty,
Stephen Patrick, Melissa Kay
Smith, Imogene Morgan,
Gaynelle Hutchinson, Kathleen
Barnes, Debbie Sue Besco,
Mrs. Cecil L. Creel and son,
Mrs. Nora M. Jordan, Freda
Smith, William M. Ward.

':&gt;

, ·I

RC COLA

. LARGE ·EGGS

Double Cola ~-: ,
-8 PAK
59~

8

39~

16 Ol
BTLS.

69~

.

1

1

u.:.. 26(

16 OZ. BTLS.

'

.

FEEL FIT ALL THE TIME, UP AND AT IT . .. FULL OF
VIM AND VITALITY, ALWAYS SET TO GO. A FAIRMONT
DAIRY DIET DOES IT FOR YOU . .. KEEPS YOUR
ENERGY UP ALL DAY.

With ·our Good

Fairmont Nice 'N Lite Products
NICE 'N LITr

'

HAMS

r"s 1on rneAI' ~v

HALF OR WHOLE

REG. 5.98 - 60" POLYESTER KNITS
1

COOKOUT BUYS!
USDA cHOICE BEEF

NEW SHIPMENT

60" POLYESTER KNITS
Wide range of patterns
including
Menswear
pa tferns.

60

Inch

Yd.$3.98

60 inch

Cotton Knits

CHOPPED SIRLOIN ·

Acrylic Knits

EXTRA

LEAN

54 inch
Upholstery

GROUND CHUCK
PURE ·
89~\b,
BEEF

Fabrics
Ne!V

'

Selection

89t lb.

$449

1,d.

'

NICE 'N LITE

c

NICE 'N UTE

1
SI NGER SALES &amp; SERVICE
McCALL' S &amp; SlMPLlCt•y PATTERNS

992-2284

SUPERIOR ALL MEAT

SUPERIORS ASSORTED

WIENERS

Lunch Meats

59~

~~79~

.''

Pomeroy,O.

lb.

Give mom a

•

•

NICE 'N LITE

1fz

ICE MILK

GAL

CRT. 69~
•

NICE 'N LITE·

YOGURT
..

~-

g

&amp;

,?,_

r&amp;... &amp; %i

~R~49~

2

&amp; &amp;

8: t1

FAIRMONT

2
69e
FREEZE POP. ... ~....
EACH1

sensation.

Cracker Sale!

BANQUET FROZEN

SCOT LAD HASH BROWN

DINNERS

3 $,l fROZE
FAVORITES
SHERBET

:RIE!IIl

FOK

SCOT LAD

A DIAMOND

LIME
RAINBOW
ORANGE

fOR HERI

~~~49~

POTATOES

5~59(
MEADOW RIClt

Coffee Whitener

39~

QT.

SCOT LAD SALTINES
BXS
FIRESIDE GRAi-IAMS
SCOT 'LAD
FOR
ROUND SNACK
SOLO COZY CUPS
2 LIFETIME HOL-DERS

WITH 10 - 7 Ol PLASTIC
CUPS SPECIAL OFFER
REG. 39'

ONLY

DOl.

OCEAN BREEZE

ORE IDA

BREADED
SHRIMP

A- SU~BURY, $150.
01~ rs from $135.

PIECES
B - DEGAS,

16 Ol

Enprtmenl rlnc $275.
Othtr• from $225.
MIIC~ In l clrthlt $11$,

$

ORANGE

PIE

POTATOES

DRINK

SHELLS

~

.CANS

I

Mother's O..y, ~Y 14

. SIZ£

GOESSLER

WITH

JfWELRJ SJORE

alU~ .

I

I
. I'
I
I

I
I

---..=::.:::..:.;.:..=__·.- ---1

$

. 16 OZ:
CAN

TO CHOOSE

QTS

$

FOA

Toilet Tissue
.

'

EDON
BRAND

~IZE
I

'

Faygo Diet Cola

8 :-•1

Sugar
Free

90l

OlfA'NGE
GRAPE
GRAPEFRUIT

Alpha Dog Food Cheer Detergent
~
KING '$ 19
.

2LB.

r_______. . ._. . .;. . __\._ _,
GIANT

PET RITZ.

FRENCH
FRY

I

BOX
I
I

AWAKE

.19¢

Wagner Drinks

'

6 VARIETIES

~me~y

15 Ol 29~
CRT.

·coTTAGE ·CHEESE

FALSE TEETH

MEETING OFF
Mrs. Robert Kuhn ; contact
Worries and Problems
chainnan of the Meigs County Consider a dE!nt urc adhCRive. FASPowder does all ol' thia:
Garden Club Association, TEETH~
11 Helps hold uppera and lowe"
advises that no coun ty meeting lona: er, fi rmer, 11teadicr. 2 ) Hold!
them more eomrortably. SJ Helpa
has been scheduled May 15 as you
eat more naturally. Why worry?
was previously announced. A Use FASTEETH Den ture AdhePowder. Dentures that flt are
meeting will be .held in early !!ive
esse ntial to health. See your den, ist
June.
reaularly.
ADV.

am
GEnERAL TELEPHOnE .

..-.......................i,...........a;::~·

lJZbAL 59~
CRT.

CHOC. MILr

lb.

NECK BON ES............ ~.~~~~................5 LB. '1
POLISH SAUSAGE ....................... :~~:. 69~
·
SUPERIORS
lB
~
SLICED BACON ........~·~.~~!::; .................:.89
SLICED BOLOGNA......~~.~~.~~~.~~
.......
~~: 59~ .
FARM
.
BALLARD'S SAUSAGE . ~~.~~~......... ~~- 79~
STEW MEAT. ..... ~~.~~.~~~~.~.~~~..............~:99~
SALT FISH .........................................~·. 69~

20% OFF

2 1fz GAL89~
CRTS.

MILK

SUPERIORS SMOKED

Now is the lime to give mom a little of what she's always given yo u. An easier life.
For years she's been ru nning the house. Literally, that is. Running to toddling toddlers and to ringing phones .
For Moth er's Day you can sol ve one of her mo ving problems wilh a gift extension .
She can have it located conveniently so that when it rings,
il'll be a pleasure to her ears and a relief to her feet.

C - DEL RIO, $225.
otfltrs rrom $150.

Fight The Good Fight and Win! .

BUDGET

~

••

·SEW &amp; SAVE SPECIALS!

ways and means committee.
It was noted during the
meeting that $63.00 was made
on the rwnmage sale. Easter
flowers were sent to Mrs.
James Stephenson, Mrs. Julia
Davis and Mrs. Oliver Michael,
who at the time was a patient
at
Veterans
Memorial
HospitaL
Mrs . Audrey Young gave
devotions using "Shopping List
of Needs" as her meditation
topic. She read scripture froin
Matthew 6, and the Rev-.
Robert Kuhn had prayer . "God
Who Touches Earth wi th
Beauty" was the Iitle of a
medita tion read by Mrs .
Shelton. A dessert course was
served by Mrs. Lillian Pierce
and Mrs. Harry Bailey. May
hostesses will be Mrs. Ellen
Couch and Mrs. Burton Smith.

Helps Solve 3 Biggest

SatwY:lay Only Special!

*

Sweeper to be Purcha~ed

A new sweeper will be
purchased for the church from
proceeds of a recent rwnmage
sale, il \vas decided at a
meeting of the One-Won-One
Class of the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church Thursday
night.
Mrs. T. T. Shelton presided
at the meeting. Appointed to
shop for the sweeper were Mrs.
George Skinner, Mrs: William
Watson, and Mrs. Joseph Cook,

Friday Only Specml!

lJ •
1\.-.• 'l'A...A
11ap~1ness iS FAIRMONT wlr11VU'I5

Erwin,
Mr. Mr.
and and
Mrs.Mrs.
Stewart,
and
guests,
Paul • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Lewis.

CLUB ORGANIZED
The Nayl!lr's Run 4-H Jet
Club mel Friday evening at the
home of Mrs. Earl ThOfl\&amp;,
. advlaor, for an organizational·
meeting. Elected were Mark
Norton, president ; David
Lewis, vice praldent; Todd
Norton, secretary; Kelly
Thoola, lreuurer; and Tom
Hlwley, news reporter. "Lei's
Explore lbe Outdoors" was the
!heme of lbe meeting.
·

GAL
CRT.

Thursday Orily Special!

BRAND

I Social I

Mrs. Hudson, program; Mrs.
Karen Werry, ways and
means; Mrs. Erma Norris and
Mrs.
Margaret
West, i
welcoming committee; and ··
TUESDAY
Mrs. Delores Wolfe, membership.
ELECTION DAY Dinner ,
A film entitled, "To Touch a Forest Run Methodist Church
Child," was shown and Tuesday. Menu includes soup,
'refreshments were served by sandwiches, pie, cake and
the second grade room homemade ice cream.
mothers.
POMEROY CHAPTER OES
186, Tuesday, 7: 45 p. m., at
Masonic Temple. Bring articles for silent auclioq.
ELECTION DAY dinner at
Letart Falls Community Hall,
11:30 a.m .• 5 p.m . Tuesday.
Menu includes ham, chicken,
soup, sandwiches, pie, coffee,
iced tea. Proceeds for building
fund .
ELECTION DAY dinner at
Masonic Lodge Rail, Chester,
Tuesday sponsored by WSCS of
Chesler United Methodis t
Church.
THURSDAY
RE GULAR mee t ing,
Evangeline Chapter 172, OES,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Mid·
dleport Masonic Temple.
Members take items for
rummage saie to be held May
;:u or call 992-3335 for pickup.
JOYCE MANUEL

Joyce Manuel

~

at Southern

Pink Detergent'

$

DEBBIE AND

BTlS.c

SCOT lAD

.FOR

PKG.

2
CRUSTS

U, S. NO. 1 MAINE

Potatoes
·.

20LB.
BAG

. ~ Open ~ 9 to·10 • .Sun~

We Acoopl Federal FOOd Stnmps
•
PHONE: !192·3480

Cqmw Mill anG Secoilci'Sts.
'·

·-

"We Q•••••• The Right To Limit OUIIntitits"

JIQDLEPORT, 0.

�..
-·

4-'l'he Dally Sentinel, MIUWe:""""-ruam:.ru)', u., May ~, lf'I'J.

r·fep~~~;~
·
·
~
·
:
w
:wl
Concert
Given
. Personal Notes •
.
.
.

Tour Enjoyed
Members of Ute WildwOOd 1 ~-on May '!/. Mrs. Don Grueser
Garden Club look a nature lour · and Mrs. Fred Nease will give
Wednesday and then returned U1e railio report this month. ·
to the home of Mrs. Alfrtld
Mrs. Clifford Phillips gave a
Yeauger for a cookout and report on Ute program by Miss
program.
Edelene WOOd of Parkersburg
Joining UH! 10 members of on wild Oowers at the open
Ute club for Ute lOur were Cindy meeting of Ute Winding Trail
Hamm, ·Dawn and Shawn GardenClub. Areport was also
Grueser. A blue ribbon was giv~n on the spring regional
awarded to Mrs, May Holler meeting beld at Logan.' Mrs.
for her arrangement of spring Hiram Fisher, Mrs. Edson
flowers . Members were Hollon and Mrs. Denver Holler
'=~!minded to iake packages of attended[
flower seeds to the May
Mrs. Hollon suggested thai a
meeting for the junior nower therapy. program for an ingarden members.
slllution be planned and that
Mrs. Hiram Fisher agreed lo favors be made. Devotions to
make table arrangements for open the meeting were given
the Pomero~ Alumni banquet by Mrs. Shirley Hamm. She

PTA Officers are Installed
Officers were installed at a
recent meeting of the Racine
PTA. Installed were Mrs. Sue
. Follrod , president; Mrs .
Sandra Hill, vice president;
Mrs. Janice Salser, secretary;
Mrs. Sue Beegle, treasurer;
Mrs . Cora Lee Cummins,
devotional leader; and Mrs.
Kay Warden , Mrs. Nancy
Ervin, Mrs. Blondena Hudson,
and Mrs. Betty Kirkland,
delegates to the Meigs County

Three Attend
jackson Event
Three members of the
Pomeroy PTA attended the
Distric116 spring conference of
the Ohio PTA ~lurday at
Jackson.
Going from the Pomeroy unit
were Mrs. Earl Thoma,
president; Mrs. Arthur Arnold,
and Mrs. Gene Milch. Mrs.
Harold Lohse, district director,
presided at the meeting which
featured talks by Mrs. Sherman Dye, Ohio PTA first vice
president; and Dr. Robert
Lucas of Cincinnati, second
vice president of the Ohio PTA.
Workshops were conducted
and a discussion was held in
the afternoon on PTA Ac·
countabillly. Mrs. Lohse
exhibited a Meigs County
cultural arts publicity display
at the conference. On display
at the conference were county
winners In the cultural arts
competition.

Shower Given
In Rall Home
_,... MASON - Mrs. Harry
Chesher and Mrs. E. 0. Rail
en tertained with a bridal
shower at the Rail home in
Mason Friday evening
honoring Miss Frances .Dee
Slaven whose marriage to
Douglas G. Reineke will take
place on June 3 in Colwnbus .
Games were played and
refreshments served.
Presenting gills to Miss Slaven
were Mrs. H. M. Slaven, Mrs.
Jack Slavin, Mrs. Bernard
Fultz, Mrs. Francis Anderson,
Mrs. William Lewis, Mrs .
Michael Zirkle, Mrs. Paul
Haptonstall, Mrs. Bob Ord,
Patty Slaven, Mrs. Howard
Byers, Mrs. Dale Nicholson,
Mrs. George McGhee, Mrs.
Russell Mills, Robbie Ord,
Patty Roush, and Debbie
Malden, all local ; and Mrs.
Ralph Painter, Mrs. Harold
Heighton , Mrs. Norman
Manley, and Pally Slaven.

WORKDAY PLANNED
Awork day at the Middleport
Church of Christ was set for
May 8 when the.Homebuilders
Class mel recently at the home
of Mr. and Mrs . Millon
Houdashell.
Raymond Stewart presided
at the meeting whirh .opened
with prayer by Houdashelt.
Refr~shments were served by
Mr. and Mrs. Houdashelt, Miss
Thelma Boyer, and Mr. and
Mrs. Willard Boyer to Mrs.
Carl Roacll, Mr. and Mrs.
Herman Kincaid, Mr. and Mrs.
Raullin Moyer, Mrs. Bernice
May, Mr. and Mrs.. Chesler

Council of Parents and
Teachers.
Ralph Sayre, .superintendent
of the Southern Local School
District, David Nease and
Dennis f:lill, board members,
were present at the meeting lei
discuss the five mill school
operating levy being voted on
today. The P'I:A ga.ve an endorsement of support.

th:ia~se;~~~ n~t:::r ~~ip !~0

~~!\~~~~~ :p~ointedwincl~:~

..

~

'

'

.

,'

Mrs. Ethel Smilh recently ·Vqcal and instrumental sang Waring's arrangement of
returned from .Toledo where departments of Southern High "Let There Be Peace on
she spent the winter with her School were presented In a Earth" and "Who Am I?"
daughter , Mrs. · Homer spring concert Sunday af.
The .choir sang Feelin' /'
Walters.
ternOQn in the high sctlool ...Glory Land," "lilyes of a
Recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. auditorium.
Child," "A Salute to America n
Alan Gibson of Columbils was
The hapd under the direction with Judi Roberts narrating;
Miss J~ne Wise of Rutland.
of Mrs . Connie Romi!'e "The World Just Is, My Son,"
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Ferguson, presented Powers' "Vicei-oy "I Don't Know How to ,Love
Judy and Jack of Gahanna, and Overture, II uso liloquy I " Him" from Jesus Christ,
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Sibey of "Gaslight Gaieties," "Scar- Soperstar, and "EveryUtlng's
Kansas, were recent guests of borough Fair" and concl.uded All Right" from the same
Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Johnson. with "Get Together."
Broadway production; "The
Mrs. Johnson and daughter,
Vocal students directed by Desiderata" with Rodney
Mona, spent the weekend in Mrs. Lee Lee presided a varied
Neigler as narrator and
Colwnbus going especially for
program. The girls' glee club "Hosanna n from Jesus Quist,
an international scout dinner
there.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Roush,
Sherrie and David, St. Albans,
W, Va. were weekend guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Roush.
Overseas sewing to be sent to Donald ,'Lowery presenting a
Mrs. Robert Kuhn spent India was presented by Mrs. litany. Mr• . Marcus Chambers
several days last week in Dwight Wallace and dedicated read the 23rd Psalm and had
Dravosburg, Pa. visiting Mr. by Mrs. Dwight Zavitz at a prayer . A film on the theme
and Mrs . William A. Miller. meeting of the Women's which pertained to a family
1 C. L.Jliller of Minersville left Association of the Middleport who tried living on welfare was
Friday for a visit in East First United Presbyterian shown. Refreshments of ice
Liverpool with friends, and in Church Thursday night.
waler an d crackers were
Talmadge with ' his son,
Presented at the meeting se rved by the executive
Eugene, and family.
was a me rit certificate committee to further the theme
Mrs. Gertrude Mitchell has received by the Association of concern for others through
returned from a trip to Florida. from the Meigs County unit of personal sacrifice.
She was accompanied by Mrs. the American Cancer Society
Mrs. Thomas Kelly presided
Ralph Hayman of Dayton. The for participation in the Cancer at the meeting with Mrs.
two visited St . Augustine, Sunday activities.
James Harley, welcomed back
.l'l:-:~lll~·~:o;ll·····illi:T8i.,.a~ ·~::=:~*""w.~~::-,:::o:.:~,,,,,,r.;; Miami, St. Petersburg, Nassau "No Milk Today" was the after a long absence due to a
and Freeport in the Bahamas. theme 'of the program with hip IOJUry , giving the
They look a conducted lour of Mrs. Carl Horky and Mrs . missionary prayer.
Disney World, and the Ken)
:~: nedy Space Center where they
:~(
!~ saw Apollo t6 two days before
j
i,~:·l,'.· it was launched .
used a reading ''Frhinds," a
poem entitled "Thank You
God" and had prayer . Mem·
bers responded to roll call with
the name of their favorite wild
Oower.
A thank you note was read
from the Christy Baer family .
Mrs. Hamm won the door
prize. A talk on the Dul·
chman's brilches was given by
Mrs. Don Grue5er who noted
that they are good for eating
when mixed in with other
lender greens.
A paper prepared by Mrs.
David Nease was on wild
ginger which Is found in rich
soil in shaded woods . . She
described it as a wild flower for
the home garden.
Mrs. Denver Holler gave
timely gardening lips noting
thai now Is the lime to sow
annuals, plant gladioli and set
out ~ardy begonias. She
suggested that pesticides be
applied early as needed to
contro l insects and thai
primroses be divided as soon
as they slop blooming. She also
said thai early rlowerin g
bushes should be cut back as
soon_as they stop blooming .

11

Overseas Sewing Dedicated

ca1en dar

HOSPITAL NEWS

To Graduate

Holzer Medical Center, First
Ave. and Cedar St. General
visiting hours 2-4 and 7-ll p.m.
MASON, W. Va. - Joyce Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
Marie Manuel, Wahama High 4:30 Parenls only on Pediatrics
School teacher, daughter of Ward.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles R.
Births
Manuel., Racine RD 2, will
Mr. and Mrs. David E.
graduate from Rio Grande Sneed, Letart, a daughter ; Mr.
'College May 14.
and Mrs. Vernon Pratt,
Miss Manuel is a 1968 Gallipolis, a daughter; Mr. and
graduate of Southern High Mrs. Larry E. Lee, Gallipolis,
School, a recipient of the Paul a son; Mr. and Mrs. Earl
Carnahan Scholarship, and of Howell, Bidwell, a son; Mr.
the Meigs County Dollars for and Mrs. John McCormick,
Scholars . She is presently Kenova, W. Va., a daughter ;
employed as a French teacher Mr. and Mrs. Richard E.
at Waharna .
Cremeans, Gallipolis, a
As a student al Rio Grande daughter and Mr. and Mrs .
College' Joyce served as dorm Robert M. Davis, Gallipolis, a
counselor, vice president of the son .
Student Education Association,
Discharges ·
and is a member of Zeta Theta
Abby Woodruff, Rob ert
Chi Sorority.
Warth, Juanita Lieving,
Miss Manuel will obtain her Nimrod Pauley, Jean Fowler,
BA degree from Rio Grande Willard Coale, Mrs. David
College. She plans to allend Freeze and daughter, Brian
Ohio University this swnmer to Baxter, Luther Leslie, Noreena
work toward her master L. Maynard, Mrs. Michael
degree.
Chandler and daughter, Mrs.
Fairley Causey and son, Jennie
Cottrill, George Corbin, Mrs.
Kenneth E. Cremeans and son,
GRAVES CEREMONY
Return Jonathan Meigs Freda Johnson, Bert Romine,
Chapter of the Daughters of the Mary Snyder, Dell VanSickle,
American . Revolution will Cheryl Warner, Mrs. Arne!
mark the graves of three Weaver and son, Susan Zirkle,
deceased members at 3 p.m. Melanie Weese, Scott Sayre,
Sunday . Scheduled lo be Linda Sue Crump, Daniel
marked are the grades of Mrs. Workman, Evelyn Proffitt,
Helen Bradford and Miss Bess Mrs. Donald Bailes and son,
Sanborn at the Middleport Hill Larry Smllh, Mrs. James
Cemetery, and Miss Mary Roach and son, Raymond
Laughead at Beec h Grove Casey, Mrs. James T. Greene
and soq, Judy Cavey, Milton
. Cemetery,

'

Only Special!
SCOT LAD

'

Superstar, with John Eichinger Nea;H!, Barbara Nease, Patsy
as \enor soloist.
Proffitt, Melissa PToffltt,
Mrs. Jacelyn Baer was Connie Roush, Tammy Roush,
accompanist for the vocal Becky Sams, Connie Warner;
students.
Jane Allen, Hope Bird, Nancy
Band personnel includes Crow, Della Cross, Barbara
Diana Norris, Susie Gooch, Fisher, Terri Findley, 1Susan
0\llla Cross, Connie Smith, Gooch, Beverly Hart, Candy
Candy Hoback, Beth Theiss, IHoback, Elisa McMillan, Patsy
Barbara Fisher, Nancy Ours, , Sayre, Jeannie Sellers, Jlll
Mary Biggs, Cindy Lawson, ,'Warner, Debra West, Sandy
Denise Cross, Bev Hari, · Wlnebreruier,--Cookie Weddle,
0\lbbie West, Paul Simpson, Renee Burke; Denise Cross,
Nancy Crow, Connie Warner, Cindy Gooch, Cheryl Moore,
Bob Commins, Sl!aron Drllke, Roma Nease, Diana Norris,
Steve Yonker, Roma Nease, Stephanie Ord, Judi Roberis,
Hope Bird, Stephanie Ord, Ed Karen Rhodes, Rhoda South,
Cross, Ethan Stearns, Roger Connie Smith, Vickie Wolfe,
Willford, Vicki Wolfe, Bill Helen
Wilcoxen,
John
Wheeler, John Eichinger, Eichinger, Jimmy Evans, Ray
Jeannie Sellers, Renee Burke, Frank, Dave Huddleston, Bob
Valerie Johnson, Dave Smith Johnson, Mitch Nease, Vem
and Megan Brown.
Ord, Vern Pyles, Raymond
Choir personnel are:
Robinson, Bob Sayre, Glenn
Debbie Arnott, Terri Ash, · Simpson, Jeff Circle, !lob
Rhonda Ash, Megan Brown, Cummins, Greg Donabew, Jay
Beverly Ervin, Brenda Hayes, Hill, Jeff Hill, Ronnie Hill, ·
Valerie Johnson, Pam Larkins, Rodney Holman., Nick Ihle,
Cindy Lawson, Elaine Lehew, Mike Nease, Doug Rees, Larry
Loretta Middleswart, Lee Ann Wilcoxen, and Rodney Neigler.

SHERBET
liz

Book Reviewed
"ATumultuous Life- Victor
Hugo," by Samuel Edwards
was reviewed by Mrs: James
Titus at a recent meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club held
at the Racine home of Mrs.
Thereon Johnson :
Mrs. Titus described Hugo as
the greatest lyric poet that
ever lived. She told of his exile
during the time of Napoleon
and the tremendous welcome
when he returned to France.
Mrs. James Euler, program
chairman , introduced the
reviewer.
Guests ai the meeting were
Miss Edith Hayman, Mrs.
Scott Wheeler and daughter.
Mrs. Johnson served sandwiches, cookies, coffee and
punch.

•
COE ANNIVERSARY
·The children of Mr. and Mrs.
Millard R. Coe of Coolville will
honor their parents on their
25th wedding anniversary with
an open house from 2 to 4 p.m.
on Sunday, May 7. Mr. and
Mrs. Coe were married on May
3, 1947 in Parkersburg, W. Va .

Davis, Louise Bayer, Nora
Cambron , Sabra Clark, John
Covert, Alma Fowler, Harold
Fowler, Robert Fulton,
William Holt, Cat~erine Long,
Connie Sue McNeely, lthmer
Neal, Clara Skidmore, Clyde
Stephens, Erce ll VanHorm,
Mrs. Gerald Keith Warren and
son, Phyllis Wells, Charlene
White, Georgia Wyant, Carla
Jean Swain, Gregory McCarty,
Stephen Patrick, Melissa Kay
Smith, Imogene Morgan,
Gaynelle Hutchinson, Kathleen
Barnes, Debbie Sue Besco,
Mrs. Cecil L. Creel and son,
Mrs. Nora M. Jordan, Freda
Smith, William M. Ward.

':&gt;

, ·I

RC COLA

. LARGE ·EGGS

Double Cola ~-: ,
-8 PAK
59~

8

39~

16 Ol
BTLS.

69~

.

1

1

u.:.. 26(

16 OZ. BTLS.

'

.

FEEL FIT ALL THE TIME, UP AND AT IT . .. FULL OF
VIM AND VITALITY, ALWAYS SET TO GO. A FAIRMONT
DAIRY DIET DOES IT FOR YOU . .. KEEPS YOUR
ENERGY UP ALL DAY.

With ·our Good

Fairmont Nice 'N Lite Products
NICE 'N LITr

'

HAMS

r"s 1on rneAI' ~v

HALF OR WHOLE

REG. 5.98 - 60" POLYESTER KNITS
1

COOKOUT BUYS!
USDA cHOICE BEEF

NEW SHIPMENT

60" POLYESTER KNITS
Wide range of patterns
including
Menswear
pa tferns.

60

Inch

Yd.$3.98

60 inch

Cotton Knits

CHOPPED SIRLOIN ·

Acrylic Knits

EXTRA

LEAN

54 inch
Upholstery

GROUND CHUCK
PURE ·
89~\b,
BEEF

Fabrics
Ne!V

'

Selection

89t lb.

$449

1,d.

'

NICE 'N LITE

c

NICE 'N UTE

1
SI NGER SALES &amp; SERVICE
McCALL' S &amp; SlMPLlCt•y PATTERNS

992-2284

SUPERIOR ALL MEAT

SUPERIORS ASSORTED

WIENERS

Lunch Meats

59~

~~79~

.''

Pomeroy,O.

lb.

Give mom a

•

•

NICE 'N LITE

1fz

ICE MILK

GAL

CRT. 69~
•

NICE 'N LITE·

YOGURT
..

~-

g

&amp;

,?,_

r&amp;... &amp; %i

~R~49~

2

&amp; &amp;

8: t1

FAIRMONT

2
69e
FREEZE POP. ... ~....
EACH1

sensation.

Cracker Sale!

BANQUET FROZEN

SCOT LAD HASH BROWN

DINNERS

3 $,l fROZE
FAVORITES
SHERBET

:RIE!IIl

FOK

SCOT LAD

A DIAMOND

LIME
RAINBOW
ORANGE

fOR HERI

~~~49~

POTATOES

5~59(
MEADOW RIClt

Coffee Whitener

39~

QT.

SCOT LAD SALTINES
BXS
FIRESIDE GRAi-IAMS
SCOT 'LAD
FOR
ROUND SNACK
SOLO COZY CUPS
2 LIFETIME HOL-DERS

WITH 10 - 7 Ol PLASTIC
CUPS SPECIAL OFFER
REG. 39'

ONLY

DOl.

OCEAN BREEZE

ORE IDA

BREADED
SHRIMP

A- SU~BURY, $150.
01~ rs from $135.

PIECES
B - DEGAS,

16 Ol

Enprtmenl rlnc $275.
Othtr• from $225.
MIIC~ In l clrthlt $11$,

$

ORANGE

PIE

POTATOES

DRINK

SHELLS

~

.CANS

I

Mother's O..y, ~Y 14

. SIZ£

GOESSLER

WITH

JfWELRJ SJORE

alU~ .

I

I
. I'
I
I

I
I

---..=::.:::..:.;.:..=__·.- ---1

$

. 16 OZ:
CAN

TO CHOOSE

QTS

$

FOA

Toilet Tissue
.

'

EDON
BRAND

~IZE
I

'

Faygo Diet Cola

8 :-•1

Sugar
Free

90l

OlfA'NGE
GRAPE
GRAPEFRUIT

Alpha Dog Food Cheer Detergent
~
KING '$ 19
.

2LB.

r_______. . ._. . .;. . __\._ _,
GIANT

PET RITZ.

FRENCH
FRY

I

BOX
I
I

AWAKE

.19¢

Wagner Drinks

'

6 VARIETIES

~me~y

15 Ol 29~
CRT.

·coTTAGE ·CHEESE

FALSE TEETH

MEETING OFF
Mrs. Robert Kuhn ; contact
Worries and Problems
chainnan of the Meigs County Consider a dE!nt urc adhCRive. FASPowder does all ol' thia:
Garden Club Association, TEETH~
11 Helps hold uppera and lowe"
advises that no coun ty meeting lona: er, fi rmer, 11teadicr. 2 ) Hold!
them more eomrortably. SJ Helpa
has been scheduled May 15 as you
eat more naturally. Why worry?
was previously announced. A Use FASTEETH Den ture AdhePowder. Dentures that flt are
meeting will be .held in early !!ive
esse ntial to health. See your den, ist
June.
reaularly.
ADV.

am
GEnERAL TELEPHOnE .

..-.......................i,...........a;::~·

lJZbAL 59~
CRT.

CHOC. MILr

lb.

NECK BON ES............ ~.~~~~................5 LB. '1
POLISH SAUSAGE ....................... :~~:. 69~
·
SUPERIORS
lB
~
SLICED BACON ........~·~.~~!::; .................:.89
SLICED BOLOGNA......~~.~~.~~~.~~
.......
~~: 59~ .
FARM
.
BALLARD'S SAUSAGE . ~~.~~~......... ~~- 79~
STEW MEAT. ..... ~~.~~.~~~~.~.~~~..............~:99~
SALT FISH .........................................~·. 69~

20% OFF

2 1fz GAL89~
CRTS.

MILK

SUPERIORS SMOKED

Now is the lime to give mom a little of what she's always given yo u. An easier life.
For years she's been ru nning the house. Literally, that is. Running to toddling toddlers and to ringing phones .
For Moth er's Day you can sol ve one of her mo ving problems wilh a gift extension .
She can have it located conveniently so that when it rings,
il'll be a pleasure to her ears and a relief to her feet.

C - DEL RIO, $225.
otfltrs rrom $150.

Fight The Good Fight and Win! .

BUDGET

~

••

·SEW &amp; SAVE SPECIALS!

ways and means committee.
It was noted during the
meeting that $63.00 was made
on the rwnmage sale. Easter
flowers were sent to Mrs.
James Stephenson, Mrs. Julia
Davis and Mrs. Oliver Michael,
who at the time was a patient
at
Veterans
Memorial
HospitaL
Mrs . Audrey Young gave
devotions using "Shopping List
of Needs" as her meditation
topic. She read scripture froin
Matthew 6, and the Rev-.
Robert Kuhn had prayer . "God
Who Touches Earth wi th
Beauty" was the Iitle of a
medita tion read by Mrs .
Shelton. A dessert course was
served by Mrs. Lillian Pierce
and Mrs. Harry Bailey. May
hostesses will be Mrs. Ellen
Couch and Mrs. Burton Smith.

Helps Solve 3 Biggest

SatwY:lay Only Special!

*

Sweeper to be Purcha~ed

A new sweeper will be
purchased for the church from
proceeds of a recent rwnmage
sale, il \vas decided at a
meeting of the One-Won-One
Class of the Pomeroy First
Baptist Church Thursday
night.
Mrs. T. T. Shelton presided
at the meeting. Appointed to
shop for the sweeper were Mrs.
George Skinner, Mrs: William
Watson, and Mrs. Joseph Cook,

Friday Only Specml!

lJ •
1\.-.• 'l'A...A
11ap~1ness iS FAIRMONT wlr11VU'I5

Erwin,
Mr. Mr.
and and
Mrs.Mrs.
Stewart,
and
guests,
Paul • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Lewis.

CLUB ORGANIZED
The Nayl!lr's Run 4-H Jet
Club mel Friday evening at the
home of Mrs. Earl ThOfl\&amp;,
. advlaor, for an organizational·
meeting. Elected were Mark
Norton, president ; David
Lewis, vice praldent; Todd
Norton, secretary; Kelly
Thoola, lreuurer; and Tom
Hlwley, news reporter. "Lei's
Explore lbe Outdoors" was the
!heme of lbe meeting.
·

GAL
CRT.

Thursday Orily Special!

BRAND

I Social I

Mrs. Hudson, program; Mrs.
Karen Werry, ways and
means; Mrs. Erma Norris and
Mrs.
Margaret
West, i
welcoming committee; and ··
TUESDAY
Mrs. Delores Wolfe, membership.
ELECTION DAY Dinner ,
A film entitled, "To Touch a Forest Run Methodist Church
Child," was shown and Tuesday. Menu includes soup,
'refreshments were served by sandwiches, pie, cake and
the second grade room homemade ice cream.
mothers.
POMEROY CHAPTER OES
186, Tuesday, 7: 45 p. m., at
Masonic Temple. Bring articles for silent auclioq.
ELECTION DAY dinner at
Letart Falls Community Hall,
11:30 a.m .• 5 p.m . Tuesday.
Menu includes ham, chicken,
soup, sandwiches, pie, coffee,
iced tea. Proceeds for building
fund .
ELECTION DAY dinner at
Masonic Lodge Rail, Chester,
Tuesday sponsored by WSCS of
Chesler United Methodis t
Church.
THURSDAY
RE GULAR mee t ing,
Evangeline Chapter 172, OES,
Thursday, 7:30 p.m. at Mid·
dleport Masonic Temple.
Members take items for
rummage saie to be held May
;:u or call 992-3335 for pickup.
JOYCE MANUEL

Joyce Manuel

~

at Southern

Pink Detergent'

$

DEBBIE AND

BTlS.c

SCOT lAD

.FOR

PKG.

2
CRUSTS

U, S. NO. 1 MAINE

Potatoes
·.

20LB.
BAG

. ~ Open ~ 9 to·10 • .Sun~

We Acoopl Federal FOOd Stnmps
•
PHONE: !192·3480

Cqmw Mill anG Secoilci'Sts.
'·

·-

"We Q•••••• The Right To Limit OUIIntitits"

JIQDLEPORT, 0.

�z.

e- n.e Dally Seatlnel, Miclllepoi'I-Pameroy._o.•Ma1 tm ·

I . .

.

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel ClRssifieds Get Results! 1
I

WANT .lDA
INFORMATION
OEAOLINES
5 P.M . Day Before Publica lion . ·

Monday Deadlllle 9 a.m.
Cancellation- Correc;tlons
Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for , .
Da _y of Publication

@)
~

.

Pets For Sale

Po11e~oy

. Of

Employment Wanted

1970 FORD
Slt9f
Custom St. Wagon, 351 eng ., automatic trans ., Power
brakes, good tir,.., clean Interior, beige finish. radio.

RATES

For Want Ad Service
S. cenrs per won;:l one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
- consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word ·six con - :
secutlve Insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 19 days ,

WILL DO daytime babysitting
In Racine area. call 949·4422.
.
4-19-JOip

1969 CHEVROLET
stff
Blscayne4 dr. V-8, automatic trans .• p. steering &amp; brakes.
white finish, blk. vinyl Interior.

WILL PAINT roots or houses,
' trim and cut . trees ; cl~an

1969FORD114TON .
S214t
Plck·up. 8' wide body, heavy duty springs. 4 speed trans ..
360 V-8 engine, Deluxe·cab with body mldg. 750x16 heavy
duty tires. step bumpers, maroon finish. Extra cle~n &amp;

CARl) OF THANKS
.&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.50 for .50 word minimum .

nice .

. Each additional word 2c .

BLINO ADS

Additional 2Sc
Advertisement.

,

Charge 'per

Po111eroy Motor Co.

OFFICE HOURS

8:30a.m. to 5 :00p .m . Dally',
8 : 30 a .m . to . 12:00 Noon

OPEN EVES. I:ClO P.M.
f'J)MI!ROY, OHIO

Saturday .

.'

Card c' Thanks
I WISH to express my deepest

Auto Sales

Lost

sincere thanks to all con - IN SYRACUSE area, beegle 1961 FORD 700, 195" wheel
base. used on paved highway.
cerned In my recent illness;
named Snoopy: reward; If

Veterans Memorial Hospital.
my do&lt;fors and ministers, all
of the sweet smiling nurses
and employees: all of my
dear friends and neighbors
who visited me and sent such
beautiful cards and flowers;

found phone Sam Arnold, 9922360.
5·2-tfc

Wanted To Buy

and to those who gave their
•
services to my alarmed OLD FURNITURE. dishes.
clocks. brass beds, silver
children, lhelr understanding
dollars
or
complete
and love ; also to many sweet
households . Write M. D.
new friends and patients who
Miller, Rt. _., Pomeroy , Ohio.
•hared my offllcllon and mo•t
Call 992-6271.
of all I g1v&lt;&gt; all the praise to
3-16-tfc
my dear and precious
Saviour. the Lily of the
Valley, my sweet Jesus.
Help Wanted
Thelma Berry, Middleport,
Ohio.
5-2-lfc

"NOTICE"

Notice

SAVE up to one half. Bring your
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
4-4-tfc
7A-=Bo:::u
:::T=Yo-=u
:-:-R::-:-:
W:::E::-1G:::H:::T=-...-The
· exciting New Weight Watchers (R) Program can help
you. For local clan Information call TOLL-FREE
BOO-582-7026.
4-17-Wc

Pomeroy

WHEN YOU JOIN THE AIR
FORCE, YOU'RE ALREAD.Y
STARTING A BETTER
LIFE .

You get : S2B8 a month to start,
room and board, guaranteed
promotion , wolctwide tra vel
opportunities , your choice of
lob ... ,guaranteed, training In
skills lhat you can use

anvwhere.

For more Information on all
you can get lrom the Air

------

PIANO tuning, Lane Daniel$,
May lOth thru June 25th.
Phone 992-2082. Reference,
Elberfelds.
5-1-12tc

~EGA~

NOTICE

NOTICE OF
. APPOINTMENT

71 CHEV. CAPRICE

"You' ll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342 .
Pomeroy
Open Evtnings 'TiiB:OO
Til5 P.M. Sat.

KOSCOT KOSMETICS and Force, call
TSgt. Ronald Rift
wlgs. Need extra money? Just
5t2·4S92 In Athens
sell these products. No
restricted territories. Phone
99'--5113.
FUEl truck driver and station
attendant.
References
4·2·tfC
neeessary. Send resume to
CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE:
The Dally Sentinel. c-o Box
Mums, Geraniums. Pansies.
729-A. Pomeroy. Ohio.
and Petunias. Geraldine
5-2· 3tc
Cleland, E. Main Sf., Racine.
4:2.ttc

~=-----,-­

USED CARS

'3495
Karr &amp;Van Zandt

992-2156

Court.St.

This Wel&gt;k's Special

2 door H. T., V-8 motor,
auto. trans., P.S., P.B.,
vinyl roof. air, 14.000 miles.

CARRIER
WANTED IN
POMEROY
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

CARL
Chevalier's
Used
Clothing Store Is now at
Carpenter's Penhzoll, 1 mile
down Rt. 124.
4-l0-6tc
RUMMAGE Sale, May 5 and 6,
Reynolds Building, Mid dleport, formerly Russ' s
Barber Shop, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Sponsored by Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority.

exceptionally good, 5 speed
transmission. 2 speed axle.
good fires. Phone 985-3554.
Harold Brewer. Long Bottom.
4-23·tfC

TAKING APPLICATIONS
FOR

1969 OLDS Cutlass, excellent

Case No. 20597
Estate· of
Lawrence
M.
Strausbaugh Deceased .
Notice Is hertby given that
Mtrlyn Arnold of R:eybohh ·
burg, Ohio, has been auly ap .
pointed IS ExecutriK or the
Estate of
Lawrence M.
Strausbaugh, deceased, late of ME.N 18-24 :

CROW'S

MILLER

- --

·

.Sheets

·oNE

B·EDROOM

trailer

aparJments, Ideal for couples.

Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992-5248 or 992-3436.
4-20-12tc

uSEQ OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

2fr

.

PROBATE JUDGE .
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

3 AND 4 R.OOM furnished and
unfurnished apartments .
Phone 992-5434.
4-12-tfc

Aluminum

doy to day until finally diSposed
•

sewing machines. Stifl in
original carlons . No at tachments needed as our
controls are built in. Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes , sew on buttons.
monograms, and blind hem

stitch. Full cash price, $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 388-8673.
VACUUM Cleaner new 1971
Model. Complete with all
clean ing tools. Small paint
damage in shipping. Will take
$27 cash or budget plan
available. Phone 388-8673. ·
4-26·61c
BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
Stereo, AM· FM radio. 4 speed

'

8 for $1.00

The
Da ily Sentinel
111 Court St,
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

'

MEIGS INN

ItOOMS
br

Day, WHk, Month
liberal Rolts

PH. 992-3629

'

_,

done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. VIle also

electric

CHILDREN - even if you
have a large family. there
will be room In this 5
bedroom home we have. Gas
heat , l'/2 baths, carpeted,
garage,
carport.
EXCELLENT CONDITION.
NEWLYWEDS A 2
bedroom cottage is not too
long

-

central

STEREO, Modern Walnut
Stereo-radio combination, 4
speaker sound system, .4
speed changer, separate
controls. Balance $62.39. Use
our budget terms. Call 9927085.
4-26-6tc

SET OF air shocks, plus extensions to fit med .-slze GM

12-30.tfc
HOUSE . Phone 992-6103.
4-19-12fc

give

yourself room . You get gas
heating, bath, nice kitchen,
low ta xes, basement, MANY
OTHER FEATURES.
MIDDLE A~l'- Now Is the
lime to '¥Ork off that middle
age spread on a 10 acre·
piece. ABOUT 8 years old, 3
bedrooms, bath , dining
room. full basement. ON
GOOD BLACKTOP ROAD.
OLDER FOLKS - Sup ·
plement your pension with a
rental In your home : 3

bedrooms. bath, nice porch,
basem·ent apartment. GOOD
CONDITION .
POOR FOLKS - We aim to

please you for $4,000. We
Mvea nice 2 bedroom home,

Contad Associate
VERA EBLEN
992·3020
192 N. 2nd
Middleport
MIDDLEPORT
7 rms .. bath , partial
basement, 2 nice porches, 2
car garage, on Vine St. On lot
100x190, high above street
level. $8,000.
POMEROY
2 b.r., bath, full basement,
with one room paneled, new

new bath. Iorge yard or
garden, IN EXCELLENT
CONDITION.
l NAIL~ I( )PACE ,

gas furnace. L.R. Is paneled,
side porch with nice view of
valley . Under $10.000.

acres, new septic tank ,

New Lima Road - lovely
· country setting. 7 rm . home
with large bath. garage, has
gas
furnace
In nice
basement, on 1'/,. acre or
ground. $10,000.

drilled well, basement with
concrete floor l4x36, barn,
storage building. good road.
ALL FOR $1,900.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Pomer~y, Ohio
Office 992-2259 ' Res. 992-2568

Some farms and lots.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
GEORGES. HOBSTETTER, JR. BROKER
Phone 985-4186

' Box 101. Pomeroy, Ohio

Two story- l bedroom home, frame, bath, barn 20x30.
chicken house, storage building, cellar house . fenced. aU

utilities, 1 acre ground located in the heart of Chester.
Ohio, corner lot. Very good condition. Priced right to sell
at 110,000.
.

cars for $.40 ; phone. larry
Hollon 949-~989 .
4-25-10tp

MOWERS &amp;
TIUERS

Econom~ Tiller, 3'h hp B&amp;S
engone. Reg . 159.95
144,9$

Turt Trim Mower, B&amp;S 3'12
hp ellgine. In carton
70.2$
Fertilizer. Garden Seeds and
Onion Sets.
POMEAOY
Jack w. Cusey, Mli' .
Phontlf2.2111

SMAL LEV 'S
Gilt
Shop.
Chester, Ohio. Have large
assortment of flowers for ali
occasions. Arrangemenh for
Mother's Day ; pots and
baskets for Memorial Day.
99c and up. Phone 915·3537.
4-28·12fc

air

Financing available .

HOMES
FOR EVERYBODY

for

and

conditioning, bath and 14 fully
carpeted, iull basement,
gara9e In basement. See by
appointment, phone 992-2196
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.

CLELAND
REALTY

Balance $79.35. Use our
budget terms . Call 992-7085.
·
4·26-61c

8 VOLUME Chambers En cyclopedia of Universal
Knowledge : maps, wood
engravings. copyrighted, 1884
P. F. Coll ier - S25; phone 9925655.
4-2B-10tp

THE

scaping. We have· 2 size
size loaders. Work

dozers, 2

changer, 4 speaker sound
system , dual volume control .

business district In Mid·
dleport. phone 992-3393.
4-26 -6tc

36" X 23" X .009

which time said accounts w ill be
considered and continued from

phone 949-4195.

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

.-------..,-.

-~----

For Sale

CASE NO . 20.S70 First and

Any persons Interested mar
file written exceptions to said
accounts or to mailers per · ·
talnlrig to the execution of the
trust, not less than flvt daya
prior to tht dlte set for hterln·g .
John C..Bacon

have hired our graduates.

utility room, garage, $10,000;

large

6 ROOM house, 1'12 bath, near

Final Account of Lena Heilman,
EKecutrhc of tht Estate of Carl
Hellman, Deceased .

of.

5-2-10tp

DAY special 5-1-21c
Serup gravel free with any
ELECTRIC range, $75 ; riding
aquarium purchased through
For
lawn mower, $75 ; phone 985·
Rent
May 14th. Showalter's Wet
3929.
TRAILER lots In Mason, phone
Pet Shop, Chesler, Ohio.
4·30·31p
992·3393 or 773·5934.
5-1-13tc
4-26-6tc

watts, oectned.
CASE NO . 20,497 First and

the 3111 dey ot Moy . 1972. at

Ohio.

4- 26-~.tc

MOBILE tllMES

Fultz, Trustee of the Trust
Under the will of Edna 1&lt; .
MOTHER'S
Stewart, Deceased.

Final Account of Frank Cleland,
Administrator of the Estate of
BobbY Ray Mallery, Deceased .
Unleu exclptlons are flied
thereto, said accounts will be
for htarlng before said Court on

dozen ; in Jilfypots $1 dozen ;
B. Quisenberry, Syracuse,

FISH. fancy
'68 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner , TROPICAL
383; 4 speed. power steering. guppies, angels and breeders,
Bellas and supplies . Phone
excellent condition : phone
992-544].
949·3~2 after 5 p.m. or see
12-30-tfc
Dave Hensler.
4·30-6tc
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy.
Parkvlew Kennels. Phone 992·
5443.
Mob~e Homes For Sale
8·15·11&lt;

LEARN CON STRUCTION SKILLS FOR
Meigs County, Ohio.
1120 Washington Blvd.
COMBAT ENGINEERING
Creditors, are required to file
Belpre, Ohio
JOB IN EUROPE. Today's
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months .
Army will train competent
Dated th is 29th day of April
young men In the combat CASH paid for all makes and
1972.
engineering · field . And
models of mobile homes.
John C. Bacon
Phone area code 614·42].9531.
guarantee
5 job In Europe.
Judge
4-13-tfc
You'll
assist
or
engage
in
the
Court of Common Pleas,
construction and
main·
Probate Division
(5), 2, 9, t6, 3t
tenance of roads. bridging,
Instruction
shelters, and struc·tures .
TRACTOR
TRAILER
There are lots of benefits. too.
TRAINEES
NEEDED!
You
Ll~e 30 days paid vacation a
LEGAL NOTICE
can now train to become an
year . If you'd like to learn
IN THE MATTER OF SET over the road dr:-rver or city
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS ,
lifetime skills while you live
driver
. EKcellent earnings
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
and work In Europe, Today's
after
short
training on our
COUNTY. OHIO
Army wants to join you . Call
Accounts and vouchers of the
trucks with our driver in593-3022.
lollowinv named fiduciaries
structors to help you . For
5-t-3tc
have been flied in the Probate
application and Interview,
Court , Malgl County, Ohio, for
call 304·344·8843, or write
approval and settlement :
School Safely Division,
CASE NO .
15,8l8 Tenth For Sale
United Systems, Inc., c-o
Account ol the Huntlngtor'l
Terminal Bldg ., 5517 Midland
National Bank or Columbus BEAUTIFUL selection flowers ,
Drive, Charleston, West
Truslee of the Trust under the
baskets and wreaths for
Last Will and Testament of
VIrginia,
25306. Approved for
Memorial Day. Cliff's Shoe
Velml W. Felger, Deceased .
V.A.
Benefits
. Placement
Repair, MldJieport, Ohio.
CASE NO. 20,242 First
assistance available . Over 700
Current Account of Bernard V.
S-2·2ltc
transportation companies

Final Account of Jessie M .
Weber, Executrix of the Estate
of Thomas L . Weber, Deceased .
CASE NO . 2Q,.f2S First and
Final Account of Donaldson e .
Flory. Executor of the Estate of
Ruth Louella Ftory, Deceased.
CASE NO . 20,i71 First An nual Account of Wendell C.
Gerlach, Trustee under the Last
Will and Testament of Bertie N.

4-27-10tp

'67 FORD Galaxie. 4 door. V-B phone 992-5468.
4-23-IOtp
engine - $700 : '64 Chevrolet
Impala, power steering, 4
door. V-8 - $450; phone '192· TOMATO PLANTS : Seven
3213.
varieties, organically gfown,
4-26-6fp strong transplants - SOc

STEAK HOUSE

CASE NO . 20,396 FlrSI and

coated c~iling tile - S26 ; six
4'x8' panels , pecan paneling,
$36 : Phone 949-4605.

woods, covers, bag , balls, $65 ;

12' · 14' • 24' • WiDE

RACINE - 6 room house. bath,

PHONE 675-3628

------PAINT DAMAGE . 1971 Zfg.zag

GRIU. COOKS·
WAITRESSES
CAR HOPS

4-5-3otp

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

JOhnson MasoniJ
&amp;Remodeling

~·

FOR THE BEST IN
CERAMIC TILE

lliRU. ~AY 15
1000 SQ. fT. OF

Let us show our samples.

Let·US· Do-Over· Your
Bathroom or Kitchen
Insured-But best of all
''WE ' RE HONEST
Ph. 992·7608 Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
POMEROY
LARGE LOT - 2 car garage, 3 bedroom home. Modern
kitchen with stove and refrigerator. Gas fireplace.
Basement, large porch. WILLING TO TALK .
NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms, bath, nice kitchen with
breakfast nook. 7 rooms In all. Concrete front porch
Utility building. Level lot. NEGOTIABLE.
.
INVESTMENT
BUSINESS BUI LDING-24x8Q.In the heart of Pomeroy. 2
rooms under lease. 5 room apartment, and 2 large rooms
on lsi floor. A lot of building for $25,000.00, or offer money
~k

WHERE'S SIMO 1 HE
SAl~ ~E' O, BE BACK FOR
O~R EIGHT O'CLOCK

~E'LL ~EVER MAKE

IT) WHAT CAMPUS WAS
HE RESEARCHING

'IESTERDA'I 1

Alii: FORCE
ACADEM'I

$69900

Free Estimate
Call992·3523
From the largest
Bulldozer Radiaior to the
Smallest Heater Core.

~

For Appointment
·Fully insured for your
protection.

~,&amp;,RGE, \VHATTA~A MEAN, WKATo; NE.W ?...

..

U'L ABNER

Nathan Biggs

ALL

J\bT LOOK AT TH!:'
1?C7AV. T~~~5

WEATHE~

ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION ·

Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2174

240 Lincoln 51.
Middleport. Ohio
Obo Anthony Plumbing

KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

~

-GUARANTEE0.:.Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8 Til5
.Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main , Po1!141roy, o.

742 -3947
742-4761

1

TOG&lt;T~E'R ,

kiM OF' CALLING ME'

EXCE'PT FOR ONE

PSY~~~~~RI5T

N FArso~ ~

THINGi

MY GOO'NE'sS, EVEN
HANDSOMEST MAN

I EVER SAW!

An~

deeper

ancl 1'1 1~trike
oi l '

·KITCHEN
and

Lookinq for

Mom'G

car

Ke~G?

SON

TICK

CON ST.

TOCK

\'J~AT

AAE ~OU

~otJ'Re

11'10
I'OJRS SLOW!

SVPP055D

](.K]Ci&lt;Tk:KTICK
T\GKTi(.Kl'CKnc.K
TiGKTIGi&lt;Tk:Kl'a&lt;
· TIGi&lt;llCKW::KTI&lt;:K

lDBE?

"Everything In Home

R. I. DUBBELD

/

Maintenance''

General Contractor
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service . Phone 992-2522.
6-10-tfc
O'DELL WHEEL a lignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .
Wheel s balanced
elec tronically.
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-lfc

TERMITES.• TERMITES,
Gel Rid of Them
We will protect any single
dwelling residence for

~~
38. "The
5. Scent

'149.50
WRITTEN WARRANTY
tall Collocl614-452-3158 .

~-----

. Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main St.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call m .
2966.
6-15-tfc

linesville, Ohio

Service, .' - - - - - - - - - - : . 1
-

Richard Hayman. phone 667- HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
3041.
GUY NEIGLER , RACINE.
4-23-JOtp OHIO.
3-5-JOic
SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
662-3035.
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 4462·12·1fc
4782, Gallipolis , John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
SEE US FOR : Awn ings, storm
5-12-tfc
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
and railing. A. Jacob. sales
Complete Service
representative. For free
Phone 949-3821
estimates, phone Charles
Racine, Ohio
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Crill Bradlord
Johnson and Son. Inc.
5-1-tfc
3·2-lfc
==-=-~-'-­

SEWING MACHINES. ~epalr
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
. 3·29·11C
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est mates . Phone 992 -3284.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co .•
Middleport, Ohio.
6·30·1fc

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks Installed. George
!BIIIl Pullins. Phone 992·2878.
4-25-tfc

,.-"'
0

MEIGS, W. VA. 25260
MEIGs-992-7151
MASON 77J.l634

•

DICK TRACY

OJ.D POU«

TRAININGLETS USE T14E
CANE,

5U88ASEMENT
DLf(j f.IUR Rl EDLV
DURING WORLD WAR TWO
TO STORE STEEL.

19. Rival
%0. Knightly
title
21, Fanioua
Quaker
22. On the
briny
Zf. Ice mass
25.-ofthe
Clough
(archer
outlaw)
28. Table

.

--L

.We talk to JOU
.like a_

TERRY
Jeml51T T16HT FOR
WillE . GIVE MA6GIE
A~~A

-~-.,..---

~speed

Au

.wat .~r

M1yt11
Holo of Hoot
Dryers 4

om

form

2&amp;. ~~~~peon
28. Imitators

I RALAV ~
P' X
I I I
k

i~ i"::t

4. Pane·

23 • Hyp.o-

37. Caddoan

~~ds.)

~~:~·

hrvlco

j

Rutland, 0.

t

I.

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

·~M0.4WED •~

rJ

WHAT 'YOU. S~T
WHEN YOUR' HIDE
1€&gt; TANNED.

·

I I I

~~~~;:~__J'-...J..---'

gy,."·_cs. ,. . ,. . ., . . del'l )ic:=: ~ =~n~d:ia=n:=~·i~t: :Y: :J=:RRA=I=r: : :~ : : : ~[: ;:~j=' ::l...::;r~f::'£hf;r~~E:;:~;:. ·
-+-+-t-+-i '--'Pritt='1-=IM=SUilPR=ISI=ANSW
= IR-=here:....__jl

[

XI I I X I ]
(An1wen tomol'1'o")

r.r-1-+-i Ye~terd•y'•

Jumble" PURGE GOING HICCUP FEWEST .
An•wer: Wlwl tlaut&gt;

1n1.1

nt th~&gt; lwkt•ry- AN UPRISING

I LEARNED THAT IF '(Qll
DON'T WATCH IJIIERE .I(OU'RE

601N6, I{OV CAN 6ET KNOCKEO
lXlWN IN THE HALL ",

AND I AlSO LEARNfO 'THAT

IT'5 "OT OFTEN 1\.IAT 'rW

TPWTFP.-Z.PUMVI

(C) 19'12 Kinr J'eaturts Syn(licate, Inc.)

.
.,

'
I

l

'

Jt

XMP · JZP KAZWWFYXKJPMK

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: REFORM MUST COME FROM
WITHIN NOT FROM WITHOUT. YOU CANNOT LEGISLATE
VIJ,\'fUE ....JAIIES CARDINAL GIBBONS
1

I•

CRYPTOQUOTES

GXMQ RPPAZPM

RUTLAND ·fURNITURE .

square, to

f~ur ordinary words.

Expand

24.
25. Clutched·

29. Habituate
30.lnflexible
31. Otherwise
36. Beaver's .

Jzp; AWYYWU

WN

RI&lt;IC:ar"t

Arnold Grate

where
(2 wds. l
8. Becoming
insipid
9. Tomboy
10. Final
word
13. Patho·
logical

one letter to 'e ach

20. Religious
school
(abbr.)

UPG~TXTPMK

·

Wt IDIICiilft11t1 ,
llifAYl'AG · ·
.

Nf.l 1\IINCJL () ' ""' f!IIIJ II f

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

7. Every·

path for
aircrafl
2. Brought
into the
open
3. After·

~:1:1

~i(

!.

s.u rrqund ·C:lotll\t

•

hy

is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
THE 0RtNKIN6 FOUNTAIN
CAN LEA~N 1\10 NElJ 'rnt~6$
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is IS OVT Of ~DER !
ON€ PA'f!
UJed for the three L's, X for the two · O's, etc. Sin1le letters, ,..._-;~~~\? 1----1 1-~.:.:,-;:_;._., r--;;=-1
apostrophes, the' length and formation of the words are all 1
'•
hints. Each day the code letters ·~ ditrerl!nt.
·

· fl"fl'lfti: Pr'tis....,.

,f 'ftt.e r,

off

...u,_,,_

~&amp;MffiM ;Ikat4o

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X Y 0 L 11 A A X R

leve
.control. .. . tTn1 1
:Filter o~ Power ' '
' ~In Agitator'. •

Willi gt~tlt,
ht•t: No hot spott, ,
no ~ordrYing.l
f'lno MJsh Lint ·

1~~for

,

6. Cut

Z7, Malay
gibbon
Z8. Hurly·
burly
Z9. Fury
32. French
friend
33, Edible
seed
34. 1:'othing
35. Anti·
' blotics,
for example
(2 wds.)

10 GET OIJT

ON YOUR DIAL .

Cholco

Sleeping
Prophet.''
- Cayce
39. Spooky
40. Holds as
an
opinion
41. Deficiency

scrap

·wMP0/1390.

• temps .

eneed
n.Ed·

18.-de
mer

-----.

ACROSS
1, Receipts
5. Price cut
.11. Unnatu·
ralized
ll.Much
(mus.)
lZ. Sacred
medieval
drama
(2 wds.)
14, Nigerian
city
15.-slick
16. Experi·

wardlan
nickname

'··-

•

SESSION

I WISH TI&lt;ERE WAS
$Q446 WA'I 1'0 CURE

ASLEEP HEJ5 THE

For Appointment ·
Phone 949-2803

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

142-4211

R!ML E5TATf.. .. AIJP
Trli: ifiXE~ ... WO'VI!

· B&amp;W HEATING CO.

Spring
Painting?

removal

PLEASE?

IIELLO\II

.

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
,
OR
AIR CONDITION lNG

On Most American Cars

Tree

COST
OF' UV!N6 ••• ~KT..•

Free Estimate

ss.ss

trimming and

~U1i ON ••TH!&gt;

euT I WANT YOU 70
LON6, eE:
HEA/.17-IY J.OOK
GOOD. THAT~
WHY I 'D LIKE
TO HELP YOU.
WILL YOU LET
ME: TRYr

EXPERT

EXPERT

r 1..

i.IV.E

We are fully ln,.ured

' Wh~ Alignment

...

, .., ,,.......
. ..,,,, .,
......

·' ,,,

We have 24 hr. emergency
service.

992 -5103

~.. .

.. Al5o vJATr:.RAHCI M?

CICeRO AND 1 HAD A
VER'I SUCCESSFUL.

COME IN,

Go. HOWLAND

tile and Paneling and Siding.
Complete PlumbiBg &amp;
Heating.
'
O.y Number 992-2550

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-3795
or Mason 773-5535

AfiV Rlo'B .

WOULD 'IOU

exterior carpentry. Ceiling

304 E. Main St .

Of Tl-/itlb5

1971 . , Hr ...

,•

We have 1 complete Home
Maintenance Service ·the
year around. No matter what
your netd. Complete roof or
spoullng repair. Interior or

Specialil:ing In
Small Businesses

f'R;Cf;

OOIJ'T HAVE A CARE' IN
TH E V.ORL.D, FOL.K5.'!
THE GOVERNMENT WI LL
PM ALL THE DAMAGES!!

&amp; PLUMBING CO.

142 ACRES
ON ROUTE 325 - Clean nice laying land, 2 barns, several
out buildings. Has cattle on I! now. Pienty of spring water.
7 roon; hoUlO. An attractive piece of prope•ly. Now Is the
time to b:yy thlsone,lt's dirt cheap In Salem Township.
NEW HOME
·
ON OLD 33 OUT - 3 spacious bedrooms, 1'12 baths,
several large closets. Large utility. Beautiful kitchen with
dining area. Goragefor2112 cars. Acre lot. Will you see the
Inside and talk turkey ,

\

7

CAMPUS CLATI'ER

On Your Home·

'

DON'T BE DISAPPOINTEDASMANY HAVE. COME IN
TODAY, SEE, AND BUY THE HOME BUSINESS
FARM O.R LOCATION THAT YOU NEED AND WILL
ENJOY. WE HAVS A NICE SELECTION FOR YOU TO
CHOOSE FROM, PICTURES AT THE OFFICE
HELEN L. TEAFO.RD, ASSOCIATE .
. "2·3325
992·2371

c.

r~.·

ll/1/Aflll//!f!SIIJ!!IG
Only

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

WILSON -Sam Snead Golf
4·26·61c Clubs. 4 Irons, putter, 2

1972 FORDPinto,lessthan 2,000
miles. Cali Hershel McClure
at 992-3436 or 992-5248.
4·30.6tc

lots. Phone 949 4313.

attics: basements, etc. Phone
3-31-tlc
haul fill. dirt, lop soil. Dump
949-3221.
trucks and low-boy far hire.
5·2·30tc 2 LARGE iots, 6 rooms, bath,
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
garage, cellar $8,500; Maggie
Pomer.oy . Phone 992-3525
For Sale
Whittington , Depot St.,
,
after
7 p.m.
,
Rutland, Ohio .
WE HAVE a nice se lecllon of
4-7-JOtp
flowers for Decoration - 97c
to $5.50 for baskets; reefs.
crosses, sprays-. hearts. COME and see us . Two·
beautiful new homes, V2 mile
Bibles. We have a lot of high
North of Eastern High School
class flowers for all of our old
on St. Rt. 7. Both homes have
customers at a reasonable
4 bedrooms. bath and a half,
price. Reynolds Flower Shop,
built In kitchens end utility
Mason, W. Va., up ne~r Driverooms; wall to wall carpet
In Theatre.
5-2-6fc will be Installed soon. One
Complete line of office
house has a large family room
equipment,
furniture &amp;
and a den . Both have a
supplies. Typewriter &amp;
BEAUTIFUL Western horse garage . Get um while they
saddle,looks like new; double
last. Call Sherman Sum - o Adding Machine Repair.
pickup electric guitar with merfield 985-3598.
amplifier aod case, excellent
Pick-up &amp; Delivery
4-14-lfc
condition. Phone 992-2941..
4-30-3tc
BUILDING • LOTS "Branch,------1,344' of 20 and 30 lb. mine rail , wood Subdivision at Rock
424 Main St.
Rizer Oil Co .• Phone 992-2101 . Springs. Tuppers Pl·ains
Pl. Pleasant
4-30-3tc water. Phone 992-2789.
4·27 -12tc
DOZER AND back hoe work.
HOME grown tomato plants.
ponds and septic tanks: B&amp;K
improved Mexican . Heinz SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
Excavating . Phone 992-5367.
1350, large Supersonic and
Ave . Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Di ck Karr , Jr .
Yellow
Jubilee;
also Wadsworth Drive. Columbus.
Mangoes, Hot Peppers and
4·27·6tc
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
Early Cabbage Plants. 500ft.
11 ·21 -tfc TREE trimming or removal.
above the Syracuse State
Years' experience. Charles
Park on Rt. 124, Thomas NICE 3-story home with full
Baker, phone 9~9- 2723.
Hayman, Syracuse, Ohio.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
·
4-25-7tc
4-30-JOtc
air furnace. Near Pomeroy .
Elementary School. Phone
PIANO tuning , Karl Kebler.
GERT'S A gay girl - ready for
992-7384 to see.
phone Mason 773-5535.
a whirl after cleaning carpets
11 -7-lfc
4·30-3tp
with Blue Lustre. Rent :-=--::-:==::----:-...,.-::.,-,-electric shampooer $1. Ben 1.07 ACRES, newly drilled well ,
Franklin Store, 200 Main St., over 275' of frontage on GOOD'S PENNZOIL LAWN
Pomeroy, Ohio.
blacktop road. Access to city
CARE. We furnish the men+
4-30-61c water . Good location for ·home
mowers . Free estimate. Low
or trailer. Phone 985-4176.
charge, lor in formation phone
4-28-6tp
992-9975.
MEIGS BOAT SHOP, Pearl
4-26-121c
Street, Middleport: pontoon STORE, garage &amp; recreation
boats, pickup covers; one
room on State Route close to
used 19 It I. 0 ., Phone 992Meigs Mine: well -stocked and Real Estate For Sale
5367, Oick Karr , Jr.
doing good business. All for 3 BEDROOM ranch type homo,
4-27 -6tc
$12,500. Phone 992.6048.
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
a-30-Jtc
Plains. All new with total
128 - 12"x12" white plastic

condi t ion, power steering , , - - - - - - - - - . factory air and stereo, phone

992-2580.

EARTH MOVING

10 room hous.,,

bath, basement , garage, two

IF 'IE SEE ENNV
SUSPICIOUS·LOOKIN '
VARMINTS IN THIS
NECK OF TH ' WOODS .
LET ME KNOW
.

Business Servjces

Real Estate For Sale

RACINE -

TH' HOOT IN' HOLLER
PICKPOCKET IS
ON TH' LOOSE
. AG.II\I ,SNUFFY

W"'O '-IE LOOK IN '
FER THIS TIME ;
SHERIFF?

For Sale

AKC puppies - Schnauzers. ONE love seal - $40; antique
Poodles , · Cairn Terriers ,
baby cradle - $25 : call 992 healthy home raised, per· , 3966.
manent Injections, wormed 4-26-10tp
$75 - $8,5; Coolville 667-6214.
4-26-12fp

Motor Co.

IUALITY

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any adl
deemed
oblecllonat .
Ttte
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one Incorrect
Insertion.

z

.

BARNEY:

::J~~~i2~--~llij'

l!'·

'

.

'--"=

�z.

e- n.e Dally Seatlnel, Miclllepoi'I-Pameroy._o.•Ma1 tm ·

I . .

.

.

Sentinel Classifieds Get Action! Sentinel ClRssifieds Get Results! 1
I

WANT .lDA
INFORMATION
OEAOLINES
5 P.M . Day Before Publica lion . ·

Monday Deadlllle 9 a.m.
Cancellation- Correc;tlons
Will be accepted until 9 a.m . for , .
Da _y of Publication

@)
~

.

Pets For Sale

Po11e~oy

. Of

Employment Wanted

1970 FORD
Slt9f
Custom St. Wagon, 351 eng ., automatic trans ., Power
brakes, good tir,.., clean Interior, beige finish. radio.

RATES

For Want Ad Service
S. cenrs per won;:l one Insertion
Minimum Charge 75c
12 cents per word three
- consecutive insertions.
18 cents per word ·six con - :
secutlve Insertions.
25 Per Cent Discount on paid
ads and ads paid within 19 days ,

WILL DO daytime babysitting
In Racine area. call 949·4422.
.
4-19-JOip

1969 CHEVROLET
stff
Blscayne4 dr. V-8, automatic trans .• p. steering &amp; brakes.
white finish, blk. vinyl Interior.

WILL PAINT roots or houses,
' trim and cut . trees ; cl~an

1969FORD114TON .
S214t
Plck·up. 8' wide body, heavy duty springs. 4 speed trans ..
360 V-8 engine, Deluxe·cab with body mldg. 750x16 heavy
duty tires. step bumpers, maroon finish. Extra cle~n &amp;

CARl) OF THANKS
.&amp; OBITUARY
Sl.50 for .50 word minimum .

nice .

. Each additional word 2c .

BLINO ADS

Additional 2Sc
Advertisement.

,

Charge 'per

Po111eroy Motor Co.

OFFICE HOURS

8:30a.m. to 5 :00p .m . Dally',
8 : 30 a .m . to . 12:00 Noon

OPEN EVES. I:ClO P.M.
f'J)MI!ROY, OHIO

Saturday .

.'

Card c' Thanks
I WISH to express my deepest

Auto Sales

Lost

sincere thanks to all con - IN SYRACUSE area, beegle 1961 FORD 700, 195" wheel
base. used on paved highway.
cerned In my recent illness;
named Snoopy: reward; If

Veterans Memorial Hospital.
my do&lt;fors and ministers, all
of the sweet smiling nurses
and employees: all of my
dear friends and neighbors
who visited me and sent such
beautiful cards and flowers;

found phone Sam Arnold, 9922360.
5·2-tfc

Wanted To Buy

and to those who gave their
•
services to my alarmed OLD FURNITURE. dishes.
clocks. brass beds, silver
children, lhelr understanding
dollars
or
complete
and love ; also to many sweet
households . Write M. D.
new friends and patients who
Miller, Rt. _., Pomeroy , Ohio.
•hared my offllcllon and mo•t
Call 992-6271.
of all I g1v&lt;&gt; all the praise to
3-16-tfc
my dear and precious
Saviour. the Lily of the
Valley, my sweet Jesus.
Help Wanted
Thelma Berry, Middleport,
Ohio.
5-2-lfc

"NOTICE"

Notice

SAVE up to one half. Bring your
sick TV to Chuck's TV Shop,
151 Butternut Ave., Pomeroy.
4-4-tfc
7A-=Bo:::u
:::T=Yo-=u
:-:-R::-:-:
W:::E::-1G:::H:::T=-...-The
· exciting New Weight Watchers (R) Program can help
you. For local clan Information call TOLL-FREE
BOO-582-7026.
4-17-Wc

Pomeroy

WHEN YOU JOIN THE AIR
FORCE, YOU'RE ALREAD.Y
STARTING A BETTER
LIFE .

You get : S2B8 a month to start,
room and board, guaranteed
promotion , wolctwide tra vel
opportunities , your choice of
lob ... ,guaranteed, training In
skills lhat you can use

anvwhere.

For more Information on all
you can get lrom the Air

------

PIANO tuning, Lane Daniel$,
May lOth thru June 25th.
Phone 992-2082. Reference,
Elberfelds.
5-1-12tc

~EGA~

NOTICE

NOTICE OF
. APPOINTMENT

71 CHEV. CAPRICE

"You' ll Like Our Quality
Way of Doing Business."
GMAC FINANCING
992-5342 .
Pomeroy
Open Evtnings 'TiiB:OO
Til5 P.M. Sat.

KOSCOT KOSMETICS and Force, call
TSgt. Ronald Rift
wlgs. Need extra money? Just
5t2·4S92 In Athens
sell these products. No
restricted territories. Phone
99'--5113.
FUEl truck driver and station
attendant.
References
4·2·tfC
neeessary. Send resume to
CLELAND'S GREENHOUSE:
The Dally Sentinel. c-o Box
Mums, Geraniums. Pansies.
729-A. Pomeroy. Ohio.
and Petunias. Geraldine
5-2· 3tc
Cleland, E. Main Sf., Racine.
4:2.ttc

~=-----,-­

USED CARS

'3495
Karr &amp;Van Zandt

992-2156

Court.St.

This Wel&gt;k's Special

2 door H. T., V-8 motor,
auto. trans., P.S., P.B.,
vinyl roof. air, 14.000 miles.

CARRIER
WANTED IN
POMEROY
THE DAILY
SENTINEL

CARL
Chevalier's
Used
Clothing Store Is now at
Carpenter's Penhzoll, 1 mile
down Rt. 124.
4-l0-6tc
RUMMAGE Sale, May 5 and 6,
Reynolds Building, Mid dleport, formerly Russ' s
Barber Shop, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Sponsored by Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority.

exceptionally good, 5 speed
transmission. 2 speed axle.
good fires. Phone 985-3554.
Harold Brewer. Long Bottom.
4-23·tfC

TAKING APPLICATIONS
FOR

1969 OLDS Cutlass, excellent

Case No. 20597
Estate· of
Lawrence
M.
Strausbaugh Deceased .
Notice Is hertby given that
Mtrlyn Arnold of R:eybohh ·
burg, Ohio, has been auly ap .
pointed IS ExecutriK or the
Estate of
Lawrence M.
Strausbaugh, deceased, late of ME.N 18-24 :

CROW'S

MILLER

- --

·

.Sheets

·oNE

B·EDROOM

trailer

aparJments, Ideal for couples.

Contact McClure's Dairy Isle,
992-5248 or 992-3436.
4-20-12tc

uSEQ OFFSET PLATES
HAVE
MANY USES

2fr

.

PROBATE JUDGE .
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

3 AND 4 R.OOM furnished and
unfurnished apartments .
Phone 992-5434.
4-12-tfc

Aluminum

doy to day until finally diSposed
•

sewing machines. Stifl in
original carlons . No at tachments needed as our
controls are built in. Sews
with 1 or 2 needles, makes
buttonholes , sew on buttons.
monograms, and blind hem

stitch. Full cash price, $38.50
or budget plan available.
Phone 388-8673.
VACUUM Cleaner new 1971
Model. Complete with all
clean ing tools. Small paint
damage in shipping. Will take
$27 cash or budget plan
available. Phone 388-8673. ·
4-26·61c
BEAUTIFUL Colonial Maple
Stereo, AM· FM radio. 4 speed

'

8 for $1.00

The
Da ily Sentinel
111 Court St,
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

'

MEIGS INN

ItOOMS
br

Day, WHk, Month
liberal Rolts

PH. 992-3629

'

_,

done by hour or contract.
Free Estimates. VIle also

electric

CHILDREN - even if you
have a large family. there
will be room In this 5
bedroom home we have. Gas
heat , l'/2 baths, carpeted,
garage,
carport.
EXCELLENT CONDITION.
NEWLYWEDS A 2
bedroom cottage is not too
long

-

central

STEREO, Modern Walnut
Stereo-radio combination, 4
speaker sound system, .4
speed changer, separate
controls. Balance $62.39. Use
our budget terms. Call 9927085.
4-26-6tc

SET OF air shocks, plus extensions to fit med .-slze GM

12-30.tfc
HOUSE . Phone 992-6103.
4-19-12fc

give

yourself room . You get gas
heating, bath, nice kitchen,
low ta xes, basement, MANY
OTHER FEATURES.
MIDDLE A~l'- Now Is the
lime to '¥Ork off that middle
age spread on a 10 acre·
piece. ABOUT 8 years old, 3
bedrooms, bath , dining
room. full basement. ON
GOOD BLACKTOP ROAD.
OLDER FOLKS - Sup ·
plement your pension with a
rental In your home : 3

bedrooms. bath, nice porch,
basem·ent apartment. GOOD
CONDITION .
POOR FOLKS - We aim to

please you for $4,000. We
Mvea nice 2 bedroom home,

Contad Associate
VERA EBLEN
992·3020
192 N. 2nd
Middleport
MIDDLEPORT
7 rms .. bath , partial
basement, 2 nice porches, 2
car garage, on Vine St. On lot
100x190, high above street
level. $8,000.
POMEROY
2 b.r., bath, full basement,
with one room paneled, new

new bath. Iorge yard or
garden, IN EXCELLENT
CONDITION.
l NAIL~ I( )PACE ,

gas furnace. L.R. Is paneled,
side porch with nice view of
valley . Under $10.000.

acres, new septic tank ,

New Lima Road - lovely
· country setting. 7 rm . home
with large bath. garage, has
gas
furnace
In nice
basement, on 1'/,. acre or
ground. $10,000.

drilled well, basement with
concrete floor l4x36, barn,
storage building. good road.
ALL FOR $1,900.
HENRY E. CLELAND
REALTOR
Pomer~y, Ohio
Office 992-2259 ' Res. 992-2568

Some farms and lots.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
GEORGES. HOBSTETTER, JR. BROKER
Phone 985-4186

' Box 101. Pomeroy, Ohio

Two story- l bedroom home, frame, bath, barn 20x30.
chicken house, storage building, cellar house . fenced. aU

utilities, 1 acre ground located in the heart of Chester.
Ohio, corner lot. Very good condition. Priced right to sell
at 110,000.
.

cars for $.40 ; phone. larry
Hollon 949-~989 .
4-25-10tp

MOWERS &amp;
TIUERS

Econom~ Tiller, 3'h hp B&amp;S
engone. Reg . 159.95
144,9$

Turt Trim Mower, B&amp;S 3'12
hp ellgine. In carton
70.2$
Fertilizer. Garden Seeds and
Onion Sets.
POMEAOY
Jack w. Cusey, Mli' .
Phontlf2.2111

SMAL LEV 'S
Gilt
Shop.
Chester, Ohio. Have large
assortment of flowers for ali
occasions. Arrangemenh for
Mother's Day ; pots and
baskets for Memorial Day.
99c and up. Phone 915·3537.
4-28·12fc

air

Financing available .

HOMES
FOR EVERYBODY

for

and

conditioning, bath and 14 fully
carpeted, iull basement,
gara9e In basement. See by
appointment, phone 992-2196
or 992-3585. Danny Thompson.

CLELAND
REALTY

Balance $79.35. Use our
budget terms . Call 992-7085.
·
4·26-61c

8 VOLUME Chambers En cyclopedia of Universal
Knowledge : maps, wood
engravings. copyrighted, 1884
P. F. Coll ier - S25; phone 9925655.
4-2B-10tp

THE

scaping. We have· 2 size
size loaders. Work

dozers, 2

changer, 4 speaker sound
system , dual volume control .

business district In Mid·
dleport. phone 992-3393.
4-26 -6tc

36" X 23" X .009

which time said accounts w ill be
considered and continued from

phone 949-4195.

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

.-------..,-.

-~----

For Sale

CASE NO . 20.S70 First and

Any persons Interested mar
file written exceptions to said
accounts or to mailers per · ·
talnlrig to the execution of the
trust, not less than flvt daya
prior to tht dlte set for hterln·g .
John C..Bacon

have hired our graduates.

utility room, garage, $10,000;

large

6 ROOM house, 1'12 bath, near

Final Account of Lena Heilman,
EKecutrhc of tht Estate of Carl
Hellman, Deceased .

of.

5-2-10tp

DAY special 5-1-21c
Serup gravel free with any
ELECTRIC range, $75 ; riding
aquarium purchased through
For
lawn mower, $75 ; phone 985·
Rent
May 14th. Showalter's Wet
3929.
TRAILER lots In Mason, phone
Pet Shop, Chesler, Ohio.
4·30·31p
992·3393 or 773·5934.
5-1-13tc
4-26-6tc

watts, oectned.
CASE NO . 20,497 First and

the 3111 dey ot Moy . 1972. at

Ohio.

4- 26-~.tc

MOBILE tllMES

Fultz, Trustee of the Trust
Under the will of Edna 1&lt; .
MOTHER'S
Stewart, Deceased.

Final Account of Frank Cleland,
Administrator of the Estate of
BobbY Ray Mallery, Deceased .
Unleu exclptlons are flied
thereto, said accounts will be
for htarlng before said Court on

dozen ; in Jilfypots $1 dozen ;
B. Quisenberry, Syracuse,

FISH. fancy
'68 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner , TROPICAL
383; 4 speed. power steering. guppies, angels and breeders,
Bellas and supplies . Phone
excellent condition : phone
992-544].
949·3~2 after 5 p.m. or see
12-30-tfc
Dave Hensler.
4·30-6tc
POODLE puppies. Silver Toy.
Parkvlew Kennels. Phone 992·
5443.
Mob~e Homes For Sale
8·15·11&lt;

LEARN CON STRUCTION SKILLS FOR
Meigs County, Ohio.
1120 Washington Blvd.
COMBAT ENGINEERING
Creditors, are required to file
Belpre, Ohio
JOB IN EUROPE. Today's
their claims with said fiduciary
within four months .
Army will train competent
Dated th is 29th day of April
young men In the combat CASH paid for all makes and
1972.
engineering · field . And
models of mobile homes.
John C. Bacon
Phone area code 614·42].9531.
guarantee
5 job In Europe.
Judge
4-13-tfc
You'll
assist
or
engage
in
the
Court of Common Pleas,
construction and
main·
Probate Division
(5), 2, 9, t6, 3t
tenance of roads. bridging,
Instruction
shelters, and struc·tures .
TRACTOR
TRAILER
There are lots of benefits. too.
TRAINEES
NEEDED!
You
Ll~e 30 days paid vacation a
LEGAL NOTICE
can now train to become an
year . If you'd like to learn
IN THE MATTER OF SET over the road dr:-rver or city
TLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS ,
lifetime skills while you live
driver
. EKcellent earnings
PROBATE COURT, MEIGS
and work In Europe, Today's
after
short
training on our
COUNTY. OHIO
Army wants to join you . Call
Accounts and vouchers of the
trucks with our driver in593-3022.
lollowinv named fiduciaries
structors to help you . For
5-t-3tc
have been flied in the Probate
application and Interview,
Court , Malgl County, Ohio, for
call 304·344·8843, or write
approval and settlement :
School Safely Division,
CASE NO .
15,8l8 Tenth For Sale
United Systems, Inc., c-o
Account ol the Huntlngtor'l
Terminal Bldg ., 5517 Midland
National Bank or Columbus BEAUTIFUL selection flowers ,
Drive, Charleston, West
Truslee of the Trust under the
baskets and wreaths for
Last Will and Testament of
VIrginia,
25306. Approved for
Memorial Day. Cliff's Shoe
Velml W. Felger, Deceased .
V.A.
Benefits
. Placement
Repair, MldJieport, Ohio.
CASE NO. 20,242 First
assistance available . Over 700
Current Account of Bernard V.
S-2·2ltc
transportation companies

Final Account of Jessie M .
Weber, Executrix of the Estate
of Thomas L . Weber, Deceased .
CASE NO . 2Q,.f2S First and
Final Account of Donaldson e .
Flory. Executor of the Estate of
Ruth Louella Ftory, Deceased.
CASE NO . 20,i71 First An nual Account of Wendell C.
Gerlach, Trustee under the Last
Will and Testament of Bertie N.

4-27-10tp

'67 FORD Galaxie. 4 door. V-B phone 992-5468.
4-23-IOtp
engine - $700 : '64 Chevrolet
Impala, power steering, 4
door. V-8 - $450; phone '192· TOMATO PLANTS : Seven
3213.
varieties, organically gfown,
4-26-6fp strong transplants - SOc

STEAK HOUSE

CASE NO . 20,396 FlrSI and

coated c~iling tile - S26 ; six
4'x8' panels , pecan paneling,
$36 : Phone 949-4605.

woods, covers, bag , balls, $65 ;

12' · 14' • 24' • WiDE

RACINE - 6 room house. bath,

PHONE 675-3628

------PAINT DAMAGE . 1971 Zfg.zag

GRIU. COOKS·
WAITRESSES
CAR HOPS

4-5-3otp

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

JOhnson MasoniJ
&amp;Remodeling

~·

FOR THE BEST IN
CERAMIC TILE

lliRU. ~AY 15
1000 SQ. fT. OF

Let us show our samples.

Let·US· Do-Over· Your
Bathroom or Kitchen
Insured-But best of all
''WE ' RE HONEST
Ph. 992·7608 Pomeroy, Ohio

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769
POMEROY
LARGE LOT - 2 car garage, 3 bedroom home. Modern
kitchen with stove and refrigerator. Gas fireplace.
Basement, large porch. WILLING TO TALK .
NEW LISTING
MIDDLEPORT - 3 bedrooms, bath, nice kitchen with
breakfast nook. 7 rooms In all. Concrete front porch
Utility building. Level lot. NEGOTIABLE.
.
INVESTMENT
BUSINESS BUI LDING-24x8Q.In the heart of Pomeroy. 2
rooms under lease. 5 room apartment, and 2 large rooms
on lsi floor. A lot of building for $25,000.00, or offer money
~k

WHERE'S SIMO 1 HE
SAl~ ~E' O, BE BACK FOR
O~R EIGHT O'CLOCK

~E'LL ~EVER MAKE

IT) WHAT CAMPUS WAS
HE RESEARCHING

'IESTERDA'I 1

Alii: FORCE
ACADEM'I

$69900

Free Estimate
Call992·3523
From the largest
Bulldozer Radiaior to the
Smallest Heater Core.

~

For Appointment
·Fully insured for your
protection.

~,&amp;,RGE, \VHATTA~A MEAN, WKATo; NE.W ?...

..

U'L ABNER

Nathan Biggs

ALL

J\bT LOOK AT TH!:'
1?C7AV. T~~~5

WEATHE~

ROOFING
&amp; CONSTRUCTION ·

Radiator Specialist

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
Ph. 992-2174

240 Lincoln 51.
Middleport. Ohio
Obo Anthony Plumbing

KEBLER'S
BOOKKEEPING
SERVICE

~

-GUARANTEE0.:.Phone 992-2094

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
Open8 Til5
.Monday thru Saturday
606 E. Main , Po1!141roy, o.

742 -3947
742-4761

1

TOG&lt;T~E'R ,

kiM OF' CALLING ME'

EXCE'PT FOR ONE

PSY~~~~~RI5T

N FArso~ ~

THINGi

MY GOO'NE'sS, EVEN
HANDSOMEST MAN

I EVER SAW!

An~

deeper

ancl 1'1 1~trike
oi l '

·KITCHEN
and

Lookinq for

Mom'G

car

Ke~G?

SON

TICK

CON ST.

TOCK

\'J~AT

AAE ~OU

~otJ'Re

11'10
I'OJRS SLOW!

SVPP055D

](.K]Ci&lt;Tk:KTICK
T\GKTi(.Kl'CKnc.K
TiGKTIGi&lt;Tk:Kl'a&lt;
· TIGi&lt;llCKW::KTI&lt;:K

lDBE?

"Everything In Home

R. I. DUBBELD

/

Maintenance''

General Contractor
HARRISON'S TV and Antenna
Service . Phone 992-2522.
6-10-tfc
O'DELL WHEEL a lignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
Complete front end service,
tune up and brake service .
Wheel s balanced
elec tronically.
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable
rates. Phone 992-3213.
7-27-lfc

TERMITES.• TERMITES,
Gel Rid of Them
We will protect any single
dwelling residence for

~~
38. "The
5. Scent

'149.50
WRITTEN WARRANTY
tall Collocl614-452-3158 .

~-----

. Y.CITY
EXTERMINATION
633 Main St.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been
cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call m .
2966.
6-15-tfc

linesville, Ohio

Service, .' - - - - - - - - - - : . 1
-

Richard Hayman. phone 667- HOUSE BUILDERS, CALL
3041.
GUY NEIGLER , RACINE.
4-23-JOtp OHIO.
3-5-JOic
SEPTIC tanks cleaned . Miller
Sanitation, Stewart, Ohio. Ph. SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
662-3035.
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 4462·12·1fc
4782, Gallipolis , John Russell,
Owner &amp; Operator.
SEE US FOR : Awn ings, storm
5-12-tfc
doors and windows, carports,
marquees, aluminum siding
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
and railing. A. Jacob. sales
Complete Service
representative. For free
Phone 949-3821
estimates, phone Charles
Racine, Ohio
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.
Crill Bradlord
Johnson and Son. Inc.
5-1-tfc
3·2-lfc
==-=-~-'-­

SEWING MACHINES. ~epalr
service, all makes. 992·2284.
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
Authorized Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
. 3·29·11C
READY -MIX
CONCRETE
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est mates . Phone 992 -3284.
Goegleln Ready-Mix Co .•
Middleport, Ohio.
6·30·1fc

BACKHOE AND DOZER work .
Septic tanks Installed. George
!BIIIl Pullins. Phone 992·2878.
4-25-tfc

,.-"'
0

MEIGS, W. VA. 25260
MEIGs-992-7151
MASON 77J.l634

•

DICK TRACY

OJ.D POU«

TRAININGLETS USE T14E
CANE,

5U88ASEMENT
DLf(j f.IUR Rl EDLV
DURING WORLD WAR TWO
TO STORE STEEL.

19. Rival
%0. Knightly
title
21, Fanioua
Quaker
22. On the
briny
Zf. Ice mass
25.-ofthe
Clough
(archer
outlaw)
28. Table

.

--L

.We talk to JOU
.like a_

TERRY
Jeml51T T16HT FOR
WillE . GIVE MA6GIE
A~~A

-~-.,..---

~speed

Au

.wat .~r

M1yt11
Holo of Hoot
Dryers 4

om

form

2&amp;. ~~~~peon
28. Imitators

I RALAV ~
P' X
I I I
k

i~ i"::t

4. Pane·

23 • Hyp.o-

37. Caddoan

~~ds.)

~~:~·

hrvlco

j

Rutland, 0.

t

I.

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

·~M0.4WED •~

rJ

WHAT 'YOU. S~T
WHEN YOUR' HIDE
1€&gt; TANNED.

·

I I I

~~~~;:~__J'-...J..---'

gy,."·_cs. ,. . ,. . ., . . del'l )ic:=: ~ =~n~d:ia=n:=~·i~t: :Y: :J=:RRA=I=r: : :~ : : : ~[: ;:~j=' ::l...::;r~f::'£hf;r~~E:;:~;:. ·
-+-+-t-+-i '--'Pritt='1-=IM=SUilPR=ISI=ANSW
= IR-=here:....__jl

[

XI I I X I ]
(An1wen tomol'1'o")

r.r-1-+-i Ye~terd•y'•

Jumble" PURGE GOING HICCUP FEWEST .
An•wer: Wlwl tlaut&gt;

1n1.1

nt th~&gt; lwkt•ry- AN UPRISING

I LEARNED THAT IF '(Qll
DON'T WATCH IJIIERE .I(OU'RE

601N6, I{OV CAN 6ET KNOCKEO
lXlWN IN THE HALL ",

AND I AlSO LEARNfO 'THAT

IT'5 "OT OFTEN 1\.IAT 'rW

TPWTFP.-Z.PUMVI

(C) 19'12 Kinr J'eaturts Syn(licate, Inc.)

.
.,

'
I

l

'

Jt

XMP · JZP KAZWWFYXKJPMK

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: REFORM MUST COME FROM
WITHIN NOT FROM WITHOUT. YOU CANNOT LEGISLATE
VIJ,\'fUE ....JAIIES CARDINAL GIBBONS
1

I•

CRYPTOQUOTES

GXMQ RPPAZPM

RUTLAND ·fURNITURE .

square, to

f~ur ordinary words.

Expand

24.
25. Clutched·

29. Habituate
30.lnflexible
31. Otherwise
36. Beaver's .

Jzp; AWYYWU

WN

RI&lt;IC:ar"t

Arnold Grate

where
(2 wds. l
8. Becoming
insipid
9. Tomboy
10. Final
word
13. Patho·
logical

one letter to 'e ach

20. Religious
school
(abbr.)

UPG~TXTPMK

·

Wt IDIICiilft11t1 ,
llifAYl'AG · ·
.

Nf.l 1\IINCJL () ' ""' f!IIIJ II f

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

7. Every·

path for
aircrafl
2. Brought
into the
open
3. After·

~:1:1

~i(

!.

s.u rrqund ·C:lotll\t

•

hy

is L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
THE 0RtNKIN6 FOUNTAIN
CAN LEA~N 1\10 NElJ 'rnt~6$
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A is IS OVT Of ~DER !
ON€ PA'f!
UJed for the three L's, X for the two · O's, etc. Sin1le letters, ,..._-;~~~\? 1----1 1-~.:.:,-;:_;._., r--;;=-1
apostrophes, the' length and formation of the words are all 1
'•
hints. Each day the code letters ·~ ditrerl!nt.
·

· fl"fl'lfti: Pr'tis....,.

,f 'ftt.e r,

off

...u,_,,_

~&amp;MffiM ;Ikat4o

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work It:
A X Y 0 L 11 A A X R

leve
.control. .. . tTn1 1
:Filter o~ Power ' '
' ~In Agitator'. •

Willi gt~tlt,
ht•t: No hot spott, ,
no ~ordrYing.l
f'lno MJsh Lint ·

1~~for

,

6. Cut

Z7, Malay
gibbon
Z8. Hurly·
burly
Z9. Fury
32. French
friend
33, Edible
seed
34. 1:'othing
35. Anti·
' blotics,
for example
(2 wds.)

10 GET OIJT

ON YOUR DIAL .

Cholco

Sleeping
Prophet.''
- Cayce
39. Spooky
40. Holds as
an
opinion
41. Deficiency

scrap

·wMP0/1390.

• temps .

eneed
n.Ed·

18.-de
mer

-----.

ACROSS
1, Receipts
5. Price cut
.11. Unnatu·
ralized
ll.Much
(mus.)
lZ. Sacred
medieval
drama
(2 wds.)
14, Nigerian
city
15.-slick
16. Experi·

wardlan
nickname

'··-

•

SESSION

I WISH TI&lt;ERE WAS
$Q446 WA'I 1'0 CURE

ASLEEP HEJ5 THE

For Appointment ·
Phone 949-2803

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

142-4211

R!ML E5TATf.. .. AIJP
Trli: ifiXE~ ... WO'VI!

· B&amp;W HEATING CO.

Spring
Painting?

removal

PLEASE?

IIELLO\II

.

ON
CENTRAL HEATING
,
OR
AIR CONDITION lNG

On Most American Cars

Tree

COST
OF' UV!N6 ••• ~KT..•

Free Estimate

ss.ss

trimming and

~U1i ON ••TH!&gt;

euT I WANT YOU 70
LON6, eE:
HEA/.17-IY J.OOK
GOOD. THAT~
WHY I 'D LIKE
TO HELP YOU.
WILL YOU LET
ME: TRYr

EXPERT

EXPERT

r 1..

i.IV.E

We are fully ln,.ured

' Wh~ Alignment

...

, .., ,,.......
. ..,,,, .,
......

·' ,,,

We have 24 hr. emergency
service.

992 -5103

~.. .

.. Al5o vJATr:.RAHCI M?

CICeRO AND 1 HAD A
VER'I SUCCESSFUL.

COME IN,

Go. HOWLAND

tile and Paneling and Siding.
Complete PlumbiBg &amp;
Heating.
'
O.y Number 992-2550

Pomeroy, Ohio
Phone 992-3795
or Mason 773-5535

AfiV Rlo'B .

WOULD 'IOU

exterior carpentry. Ceiling

304 E. Main St .

Of Tl-/itlb5

1971 . , Hr ...

,•

We have 1 complete Home
Maintenance Service ·the
year around. No matter what
your netd. Complete roof or
spoullng repair. Interior or

Specialil:ing In
Small Businesses

f'R;Cf;

OOIJ'T HAVE A CARE' IN
TH E V.ORL.D, FOL.K5.'!
THE GOVERNMENT WI LL
PM ALL THE DAMAGES!!

&amp; PLUMBING CO.

142 ACRES
ON ROUTE 325 - Clean nice laying land, 2 barns, several
out buildings. Has cattle on I! now. Pienty of spring water.
7 roon; hoUlO. An attractive piece of prope•ly. Now Is the
time to b:yy thlsone,lt's dirt cheap In Salem Township.
NEW HOME
·
ON OLD 33 OUT - 3 spacious bedrooms, 1'12 baths,
several large closets. Large utility. Beautiful kitchen with
dining area. Goragefor2112 cars. Acre lot. Will you see the
Inside and talk turkey ,

\

7

CAMPUS CLATI'ER

On Your Home·

'

DON'T BE DISAPPOINTEDASMANY HAVE. COME IN
TODAY, SEE, AND BUY THE HOME BUSINESS
FARM O.R LOCATION THAT YOU NEED AND WILL
ENJOY. WE HAVS A NICE SELECTION FOR YOU TO
CHOOSE FROM, PICTURES AT THE OFFICE
HELEN L. TEAFO.RD, ASSOCIATE .
. "2·3325
992·2371

c.

r~.·

ll/1/Aflll//!f!SIIJ!!IG
Only

POINT OFFICE
SUPPLY

WILSON -Sam Snead Golf
4·26·61c Clubs. 4 Irons, putter, 2

1972 FORDPinto,lessthan 2,000
miles. Cali Hershel McClure
at 992-3436 or 992-5248.
4·30.6tc

lots. Phone 949 4313.

attics: basements, etc. Phone
3-31-tlc
haul fill. dirt, lop soil. Dump
949-3221.
trucks and low-boy far hire.
5·2·30tc 2 LARGE iots, 6 rooms, bath,
See Bob or Roger Jeffers,
garage, cellar $8,500; Maggie
Pomer.oy . Phone 992-3525
For Sale
Whittington , Depot St.,
,
after
7 p.m.
,
Rutland, Ohio .
WE HAVE a nice se lecllon of
4-7-JOtp
flowers for Decoration - 97c
to $5.50 for baskets; reefs.
crosses, sprays-. hearts. COME and see us . Two·
beautiful new homes, V2 mile
Bibles. We have a lot of high
North of Eastern High School
class flowers for all of our old
on St. Rt. 7. Both homes have
customers at a reasonable
4 bedrooms. bath and a half,
price. Reynolds Flower Shop,
built In kitchens end utility
Mason, W. Va., up ne~r Driverooms; wall to wall carpet
In Theatre.
5-2-6fc will be Installed soon. One
Complete line of office
house has a large family room
equipment,
furniture &amp;
and a den . Both have a
supplies. Typewriter &amp;
BEAUTIFUL Western horse garage . Get um while they
saddle,looks like new; double
last. Call Sherman Sum - o Adding Machine Repair.
pickup electric guitar with merfield 985-3598.
amplifier aod case, excellent
Pick-up &amp; Delivery
4-14-lfc
condition. Phone 992-2941..
4-30-3tc
BUILDING • LOTS "Branch,------1,344' of 20 and 30 lb. mine rail , wood Subdivision at Rock
424 Main St.
Rizer Oil Co .• Phone 992-2101 . Springs. Tuppers Pl·ains
Pl. Pleasant
4-30-3tc water. Phone 992-2789.
4·27 -12tc
DOZER AND back hoe work.
HOME grown tomato plants.
ponds and septic tanks: B&amp;K
improved Mexican . Heinz SIX ROOM house, 133 Butternut
Excavating . Phone 992-5367.
1350, large Supersonic and
Ave . Contact Ed Hedrick, 2137
Di ck Karr , Jr .
Yellow
Jubilee;
also Wadsworth Drive. Columbus.
Mangoes, Hot Peppers and
4·27·6tc
Ohio, phone 237-4334.
Early Cabbage Plants. 500ft.
11 ·21 -tfc TREE trimming or removal.
above the Syracuse State
Years' experience. Charles
Park on Rt. 124, Thomas NICE 3-story home with full
Baker, phone 9~9- 2723.
Hayman, Syracuse, Ohio.
basement, 2 lots, new forced
·
4-25-7tc
4-30-JOtc
air furnace. Near Pomeroy .
Elementary School. Phone
PIANO tuning , Karl Kebler.
GERT'S A gay girl - ready for
992-7384 to see.
phone Mason 773-5535.
a whirl after cleaning carpets
11 -7-lfc
4·30-3tp
with Blue Lustre. Rent :-=--::-:==::----:-...,.-::.,-,-electric shampooer $1. Ben 1.07 ACRES, newly drilled well ,
Franklin Store, 200 Main St., over 275' of frontage on GOOD'S PENNZOIL LAWN
Pomeroy, Ohio.
blacktop road. Access to city
CARE. We furnish the men+
4-30-61c water . Good location for ·home
mowers . Free estimate. Low
or trailer. Phone 985-4176.
charge, lor in formation phone
4-28-6tp
992-9975.
MEIGS BOAT SHOP, Pearl
4-26-121c
Street, Middleport: pontoon STORE, garage &amp; recreation
boats, pickup covers; one
room on State Route close to
used 19 It I. 0 ., Phone 992Meigs Mine: well -stocked and Real Estate For Sale
5367, Oick Karr , Jr.
doing good business. All for 3 BEDROOM ranch type homo,
4-27 -6tc
$12,500. Phone 992.6048.
Arbaugh Addition, Tuppers
a-30-Jtc
Plains. All new with total
128 - 12"x12" white plastic

condi t ion, power steering , , - - - - - - - - - . factory air and stereo, phone

992-2580.

EARTH MOVING

10 room hous.,,

bath, basement , garage, two

IF 'IE SEE ENNV
SUSPICIOUS·LOOKIN '
VARMINTS IN THIS
NECK OF TH ' WOODS .
LET ME KNOW
.

Business Servjces

Real Estate For Sale

RACINE -

TH' HOOT IN' HOLLER
PICKPOCKET IS
ON TH' LOOSE
. AG.II\I ,SNUFFY

W"'O '-IE LOOK IN '
FER THIS TIME ;
SHERIFF?

For Sale

AKC puppies - Schnauzers. ONE love seal - $40; antique
Poodles , · Cairn Terriers ,
baby cradle - $25 : call 992 healthy home raised, per· , 3966.
manent Injections, wormed 4-26-10tp
$75 - $8,5; Coolville 667-6214.
4-26-12fp

Motor Co.

IUALITY

REGULATIONS

The Publisher reserves the
right to edit or reject any adl
deemed
oblecllonat .
Ttte
publisher will not be responsible
for more than one Incorrect
Insertion.

z

.

BARNEY:

::J~~~i2~--~llij'

l!'·

'

.

'--"=

�VolU.nteers H~l~
In Cancer Drive
The Meigs CoWJty Qlapler ol Bachner, • Patty Groves,
the American Cancer Society is Kalherine Werner , Frances
announcing the following Beachs, Bernice May, Marilyn
•olunteers ol Sutton Township, Fultt, Jean Kelly, Ann Bailey,
Middleport residential, and Clara Criswell, Carolyn
Pomeroy residential helping Demosky, Lillian Smith,
with
the upcoming residential Flossie Allensworth, Betty
1
· cancer drive being held from Sayre, Billy Jo Krawsczyn,
May 6 through the 13th.
Golda Mourning , Clarice
Sutton Township - Chair- Erwin, Alwilda Werner, Helen
man, Mrs. Janice Salser, with , Shuler, Iris Payne, Edwina
Workers, Libby Wilford, Cora Scott, Oma Nelson, Sibley
Lee Cummins, Erma Norris, Slack and Elizabeth Oiler.
Carolyn Adams, Jane Beegle,
Pomeroy Residential - CoMartha Lou Beegle, Sue Chairmen , Mrs . Jennifer
Follrnd, Elsie CirCle, Mary Anderson and Mrs . Ca rol
Russell, Ruby Grueser, Opal McCullough , with Workers,
Kloes, Do roth)' Amberger, Helen Hicks, Dorinda Nardei,
Mary Chancey, Joyce SiSson, Debbie Finlaw, Erna Jesse,
Mildred Pierce, Dorothy Judy Werry, Linda Hudson,
Smith, Pauline Collins, Mrs. Jean, Warner, Barbara Fields,
Delbert Smith, Susie Grueser, Carolyn McDaniel, Lorena
Libby Fisher and Jean Wells. Arnold, Catherine Welsh, Lois
Middleport Resid~nlial ­ Clelland, Roberta O'Brien,
Chairman, Mrs. Nan Moore, Csrol Adams, June Eichinger,
with
Workers, Donna Boyd, Vikki Gloeckner, Pearl
OFFICERS AIL -The family of Mrs. Albert Roush, ·
Lena
McKinley,
Lillian Moore, Welker, Ann Rupp, Betty' Reed,
center, Is eztremely active in the American Legion
Sara Dawn Owen, · Ruth Sue Zirkle, Jackie Zirkle,
Auxiliary. All of her daughters and her granddaughters are
Powers, Grace Hawley, Jean Margaret Follrod, Doris
members of either junior or senior units. Mrs. RoWih, Eighth
Ann Bradbury, Frances Ewing, Judy' Newell, Sharon
OIJtrlct junior activities chainnan, Is pictured here with her
Brewington, Kathryn Ervin, Manley, George Morris, Mary
daughter, Becky, left, newly .elected District 8 Junior
Melanie Hackett, Faye Elizabeth Morris and Donna
Auxiliary president, and Mrs. Charles Kessinger, District 8
Wallace , Mildred Hawley, Ohlinger .
Senior AUJillary president.
Margaret Lallance, Carolyn

Orion Brinker Died Tuesday
MASON - Orion Edwin
Brinker, 85, Mason, !lied early
today at Pleasant Valley
Hoapllal, Pt. Pleasant. He was
born Aug. 2, 11186 at Graham
Station, jhe son of the late
Andrew Jackson and Rebecca
Ann Roush Brinker.
Mr. Brinker was a member
of the First Church of God at
New Haven.
He • was also preceded In
.!death by his wife, Sarah Jane
(Sally) Roberts Brinker last
June: two brothers, Orth and
Homer, and a grandson,.Dallas
Blaine Gibbs.
Surviving
are
three
daughters, Mrs. Virginia
Roush, Kirkland, nt.; Mrs.
Frances Gibbs Roman, Hart-

ford, and Mrs. Anna Faye
Roush, Mason; five sons,
Elmer. of Kirkland; Homer, of
Las Vegas; Ferrell, of East St.
·Louis ; Roy of Mason, and
Jesse of Racine; 21 grandchildren; several greatgrandchildren, and one greatgreat-granddaughter.
Funeral services will be held
Thursdby at 10 a.m. at Ewing
Funeral Home with the Rev.
George Oiler officiating. Burial
will be In Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime.

Judge Files His
Trial Decision

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, Mlly2
FLIGHT OF THE
DOVES

(Tochnlcolorl
Ron Moody
Jack Wild

(Gl

Color;c1rtoons:
3 For Brtokfast

Rod Tractor

Brothon from Outer Space
SHOW STARTS7 P.M.

Wodlltldoy and Thursdly
•
Mlly 3-4
NOT

OPEN

Meigs County Common Pleas
Judge John C. Bacon filed a
series of decisions in the
Cuyahoga County Probate,
Common Pleas and Juvenile
Courts upon his return from a
live day jury trtalln Cleveland.
He sat on the bench there In a
trial in which $76,000 was
awarded when the jury found
defendant operating an air
compressor lnlerferred . with
the plaintiff's operation of a
1001 and die company.
Judge Bacon left Monday on
a new assignment in Cuyahoga
County, He has set several
matters for trial in Meigs
County beginning May 15.

Meigs
Property

Transfers
Oren Wears, JoAnn Wears to
Jack Ward, Parcel, Salisbury.
Edythe F. Ford, Wallace B.
Ford, Helen M. Rea, Florence
M. Mickey, Robert E. Peoples,
Anne Peoples to Ralph S.
Graves, Nell V. Graves,.259
Acre, Pomeroy .
Jemo Assoc . Inc . to Village
of Middleport, Ease., Mid·
dleport.
Harold · Smith, Barbara
Smith to Charles L. Fryling,
Saundra J. Fryling, .42 Acre,
Olive.
J. E. Gluesencamp, Alberta
Gluesencamp to Freda Price,
Ada Pratt, Linda Oiler, Donna
Wills, Parcels, Lebanon.
Bernice M. Randolph to
Monongahela Power Co.,
Ease., Olive.
Bernice M. Randolph, Roxie
E. Ford, Carl Ford, Russell
Randolph, Janet P. Randolph
to to Monongahela Power Co.,
Ease ., Olive.
Thelma F. Eagle to
Monongahela Power Co.,
Ease ., Olive.
Clyde C. Carter, Vera B.
Csrter to Duane R. Longenetle,
Elizabeth A. Longenelle, 1.44
Acres; 90 Acre Lot No. 117;
Olive.
Nellie Pierce, Admrx .,
Harold Ward, dec. to Donald L.
Sheets, Delores J . Sheets,
Parcels, Rutland.
Donald L. Sheets, Delores J .
Sheets to John Sheets, Parcels,
Rutlana.

NAME OMITI'ED
The name of Bob Caldwell, a
senior, was unintentionally
omitted from the fifth six
weeks honor roll at Eastern
High School recently.

2-HOUR
CLEANING
.(Upon Request)

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
210 E. 2nd
Pomeroy
Phone 992·5428 ·

FINED BY COURT
SYRACUSE - Mark B.
Williams, 18, Pomeroy. was
lined $15 and costs in Mayor
Herman London 's court
•Monday night on conviction ·of
unsafe operation ol a motor
vehicle. He was charged by
Police Chief Millon Varian.

Kyger Creek's Board of
Education Monday night
awarded A. J. Stockmeister of
Jackson a contract to complete
the heating system at the high
school at a cost of $7,555 .
Johnson
Services
of
Charleston was the low bidder
for heat controls at $4,287. The
board took under advisement
bids for the renovation of the
district's swimming pool. Two
companies, King Construction
of Jackson and Arthur Mllem
ol SOuth Point submitted bids.

PRICES ARE RIGHT! .

BUDGET

SHOP I

L:itbens ,a~iot\al

;'

Tf

B.AKER

OHIO
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
II •hor •'ede{lll .~l.t Iaiuruee CGr)J(Jtllloa , ·

,
\

•

NEW YORK - THE NEW YORK TIMES and columnist
Jack Anderson won two of the 1972 Pulitzer Prizes Monday for
distingUished journalism for publishing secret government
documents on foreign policy. The awards reportedly were
disputed strongly by some Columbus University trustees. The
New York Times won the gold medal for public service for
publishing lhe Pentagon Papers, a series of art!cies which
spelled out American involvement in Vietnam. Anderson won the
prize for national reporting for publishing accounts of secret
meetings at which the Nixon administration made it clear it
. "tilted" in favor of Pakistan in the Indo-Paklstsni War.
WHITE SULPHUR SPRINGS, W.VA . -TWO OF the ad-

minstration's most controversial issues- bombing and busing
- were left out of a resolution before lhe Republican Governors
Conference today expressing support for President Nixon's
programs and policies.
The resolution, drafted by Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New
York, was expected to be unanimously approved by the 17 GOP
governors attending the lw&lt;Hiay affair. "Dellberstely left out,"
according to one staff member of the conference, was any
specific mention of support for the President's bombing policies
in Vietnam and his announeed opposition to the forced busing of
school children solely to bring about racial balance.

Contract To Firm

WilEN YOU VISIT. PARK FREE

' MIDDLEPORT

WASHINGTON -A RALPH NADER associate said Monday
Continental Oil Co., which owns tbe second largest coal company
in the nation, "has failed to take the simplest steps" to assure
safety for workers in the mines.
The charge was included In a ~age report drawn up by
Washington attorney J . Davitt McAterr to "counter" the aMual
report of Continental Oil. Continental owns Consolidation Coal
Co. Several coal miners and widows of the 1968 Farmingtnn,
Farminton, W. Va ., mine disaster which claimed 78 lives were
expected to attend the Continental stockholders meeting tnday in
Wilmington, Del. ·

Two ·More Tunes·

BY BOB HOEFLICH
Ralph Warden ·Ours and
Larry Eugene Spencer we.:O ~
the winners of the only two
local races lor posts in Meigs
C~unty on the Republican.
primary elec»on Tuesday.
Ours, tHe incumbent
narrowly edged Richard E:
Jones of Pomeroy to win the
nomina lion to run for the Meigs
County Commissioner seat
Jan . 2 term, in the fall. Our~
received 1,741 voles and Jones

. Uroad ·
were told lhe B&amp;O Ra
.
does not have k nght of w:
· from Anderson St. north to
town limits, but has pernnsslon
to use the land by a ordinance
dated 111114. Attorney Shaw• the
·
has
town's' legal a d v1sor.
requested information from
the railroad and It was noted
sources are. checking other
Items concernlAg the streets;
Vandalism m the restroom
at city park has prompted town
officials to take immediate
action. Law enforcement ofricers will observe lh~s area
closely and persons f~und ·
gullly of such offenses will be
prosecuted to the fullest extent
of the law.
Water commission•~· Fred
Samsel reports ~pproxunately
85 pet. of the delinquent water
bills have been paid in full. Of
the remaining 15 pel: all but
lour water customers have
made arrangements to pay
their bills. The~ four water
customers will be allowed until
Wednesday and 1f bills are not
paid by that time, water service will be discontinued,
cowicll agreed.
Problems at the property ·
owned by Walter Werry came
up for dlscliSSion with Councilman Joe Jones and Recorder
Gibbs reporting that paving on
OR
00
First Street would noi cause
any additional problems. It ,
Ada Kate Rowe, 89, Racine,
was noted that the main
Rt. 2, died Monday at Veterans problem Is that Mr. Werry's
Memorial Hospital. Born Jan.
property is lower than the
26, 1883, she was preceded In
street and a ditch for drainage
death by her husband, Charles
could help alleviate the ·
M. Rowe in 1946 and by six
children. ~was a member of troubled area.
COuncil is expecting to hear
the Plants Methodist Church.
from
a tree trimming expert
Surviving are five sons,
concerning the safety of a tree
Gllb~rt, in Pennsylvania;
Richard and John, both of near the Roger Hysell property
Racine; Harry, of 'n'enton, who will given an estimate for
Mich., and Vernon, of New removing this.
Brighton,
Pa.;
three · Street Commissioner Joe
dRughters,. Ada Rowe and Jones said the Brown St, ditch
Anna Wines, both of Racine, project Is approximately half
and Jessie P81'80lls, Aahland; complete at this time. Bernard
41 grandchildren,
and Scarberry; water supervisor.
numerous great and great - reported oo draining ditches.
He said the sewage disposal
great • grandchlldren,
Funeral services wW be held plant Is "working well."
Bobby Dewhurst gave the
Thursday at 3 p.m . at Ewilig
town's
police report of 24 inChapel with the Rev. Charles
Norris and tbe Rev. Morris vestigations, one theft, four
Wolfe officiating, Burial wW be traffic warning citations, 11
in Letart Cemetery. Friend&amp; conferences, three accidents
may call at the funeral home and three arrests.
Council has repeatedly
any time.
warned dog owners of a dog
ordinance regarding confinement of theae animals and
said It expected the mayor to
line owners In accordance with
REVIVAL SET
the town ordinance.
The Rev. 0. H. Cart will
Councllman Richard Fowler
serve as evangelist for revival advised council the water
services to be conducted at 7:30 lllwer and water line are in
each evening from May 22 "dire need of repair."
thr 0,ugh May 28 at the Danville
Wesleyan Church. The Rev.
NOTICE OF
Lawrence Sullivan, pastor,
APPOINTMENT
extends an invitation to the
Clst No . 20,674
public.
Estate of Bettie Cu llum a,

MASON - Mason Town
ollicials...,have- set ~wo more
meetings this week, one to deal
with garbage disposal and ·the
other street paving during a
long meetin• Monday ru·aht
• Harless read
" ·
Mayor Roy
correspondence from the sdlid
Waste Disposal Planning
·
Department resulting
In
council's se\ting up tonight's
meeting at 7:30p.m. in Mason
city hall for MaSon New Haven
and Hartford to
garbage disposal.
A meeting has been
sc hedulea for Wednesday
evening between town official~t
engineers and Attorne;
Michael Shaw In order to
prepare bid for 111 s and
specifications · for street
paving. Gary Gibbs recorder
read a letter fr~m Com:
monwealth Engineering flml
. concerning prqposed
engineering fees. It was agreed
by council that Mason would
use the engineering services of
Dave Simington and Robert
Eason at a lesser cost.
Se•eral citizens discussed
the railroad right of way. They

FUIIIITVII
MIGDUPOIT, 0.

Bids were opened at noon
Monday and tabulated by
George Walter, the district's
architect. ·
In other matters, the 1972
graduating list submitted by
John C. Wickline, high school
jrlncipal, 'was approved. The
board voted to meet in special
session on Tuesday, May 9 to
interview band director applicants. ·
Local Superintendent Comer
Bradbury reviewed a recent
meeting attended by him and
board president Dale Rothgeb,
Jr., concerning the "search for
-concensus," a new evaluation
program adopted by the state
department of educatloo. Each
district In the state must hold a
special accountabiUty m\!Oting
for Ita residents the week of
May 22.
. The employment of nonteaching persoMel highlighted
Monday 's regular monthly
meeting of the Hannan Trace
Board of Education.
James Slone, Herman
Parcell and Melvin Church
were all awarded continuing
contracts as bus drivers. Cooks
gi•en continUing pscts were
Eudora Moot&amp;omery and Viola
Slone. Fred Fellure was given
a one year contract as ~.
custodian and Frank Brumfield received a one year
contract u a bus driver.
F1oyd Stapleton wu also
employed u a bus mechanic.
The board dlacussed several
olher matters but took no
ac"tioil.

.

.

'.'

in hi~ first try at a county post,
recetved 1,603 votes. Thlr\1 In
the race was Daniel E.
Thompson who received 868
voles.
Ours will be opposed tn' the
fall by Democrat, Willi8rn E.
Snouffer, Pomeroy, who was
unopposed for his nomination
In T~esday's Democrat
primary.
,Spencer, running for the
Republican nomination for

•

'

Devoted To

1

·•

v'

MISS .CAROL O'CONNElL, reading consultant and
coordinator of Ohio's Vohmteers In Education program,
holding placard, w11s guest speaker at·an area nine meeting,
· composed of 10 couittie• held Tuesday at the Meigs Inn. With
Miss 0 'Connell are Robert Bowen, Meigs County Superln-

r---------------~

filed.
Crisp n~ patterns' that

)'1111'11 like and want to

COLUMBUS (UP! ) - Ohio's
Democratic presidential pri·
mary , from all appearances a
standoff between Sen . Hubert
H. Humphrey of Minnesota and
Sen. George S. McGovern of
So~h Dakota showed no signs
of ending today because of a
slow vote count although Hum·
plJrey held a slim lead for 80
delegates to 50 for McGovern.
The primary, which was to to
have produced a clearcut
leader in the Democratic presidential sweepstakes, was
fraught with foulups from start
to finish, whenever that might
be.

'

Volunteers·Offered Tips as Aides
Tips on helping PTA
members and parents as
volunteers to assist students In
the schools were given by Miss
Carol O'Connell , coordinator of
the Volunteers in Education
program in Ohio Tuesday at
the Meigs Inn .
Miss O'Connell conducted
the session for representatives
. of 10 Southeastern Ohio
Counties who are lnvolYed In
Area
9.
Yesterday's
tepresentatlves are In the
professional field or education

and they will take information
Ill the local level in providing
information for parents who
wish to assist in various subjects in the school system as
volunteers.
Mrs. Nellie Vale, a Meigs
County school supervisor,
pointed out that Meigs County
has three such volunteer
programs being developed' at
the present lime. These are at
the Pomeroy Elementary
School, the elementsry schools
of the Southern Local School

District, and the Salisbury
Elementary School where in
the fall high school students
from the nearby Meigs High
School are expected Ill assist
with the elementary pupils.
While reading was stressed
by Miss O'Connell, who is a
reading consultant also with
the Ohio Department ol
Education, Miss O'Connellsaid
that other subjects and how
volun leer workers may assist
students with them were
discussed.

..

By United Preu ID!ern•toali
CLEVELAND- moUSANDS OF VOTERS never got to
cast ballots in Cuyahoga County Tuesday during the Ohio
primar.y anoting machinea were delivered locked and keyless,
misprogranimed, or not delivered at all In 127 of the county's
1,788 votlna
u.., places.
Thefoulupprompted U.S. District Judge Frank J. Battisti to
extend the voting deadline to 11:511 p.m., five and on·.,.,,•alf ,.,
'-urs
beyond the regular deadline. It also precipitated a lawsuit
challenging the vaUdlty of the election by a candidate for
Congress in the 2l8t District and a caU for an investigation by the
U.S. Justice Department. There was the case of one woman who
told booth worken she wanted to vote independent, was told site"
bad to vote either Republlcan or Democrat and finally ~nded up
voting under the American lildependent Party.

Vetei'IIDI Memorial H11pltal
ADMISSIONS - Clyde
Sayre, SyraCUJe; Edna Hart,
Pomeroy; Susie Holley,
Middleport; Mabe} .Cleland,
Cbelter; John NewlWJ, Lons
Botlam; Lewis Brady, MalOn;
Qllrles Clark, Letart, W. Va.:
&amp;,atrice Nice, Racine i P!ler
Wolfe, Pomeroy; Stanley
· Kaldor, Shada; Julia Capehart,
Paneroy; Iris Morris, New

to

piVtlcrt Jllllf outdoor

fumiture.

ELBERFELDS IN ·POMEROY;

.'

i

{

Collins will now......fa.ce
GaUipolis Democrat Atty . John
E. Halliday in the general
ejection nel\l..November.
Here's Tue'Sday's results:
. 92nd District
Representative
(GOP)
County
C F W
Athens
148 68 311
Lawrence
5976 1900 1422
Gallia
2159 1001 1785
Meigs
852 404 2792
Totals
9135 3373 6310
C- Collins; F- Fulks; WWalker.

Further indications of a pat·
tern for an eventual winner
were to come from Cuyahoga
County, where a narrow margin would doubtless prnduce a
court challenge by the loser because voting was extended for
5-I&gt; hours to accommodate
those locked out of 127 polling
places early Tuesday.
Vote counting machinery
virtually grouiilt to a halt after
6 a.m. today as poll workers
Incumbent lOth District TOTALS
9843 50,599
were allowed to go home and
Republican
Congressman
B-Brown ; M·Miller .
sleep.
Clarence
E.
Miller,
Lancaster,
McGovern Dents Lead
lOth Congressional
Fragmentary returns from picking up 86.5 pet. of the total
vole
in
his
13-&lt;:ounty
area,
Democrat District
(Continued on page 10)
swamped Paul M. Brown 50,599 COUNTY
C
W
to 9,943 in Tuesday's GOP Athens
355 498
primary election.
Fairfield
2639 5213
Cong . Miller will face Gallia
1346 465 ·
Democrat Robert H. Whealey, Hocking
592 1243
nomination to his 92nd House Athens, In the November Jackson
494 762
district seat, and won a close general election as Whealey Lawrence
1939 2029
race. With 122 of 158 precincts defeated Jack W. Crisp of Meigs
1107 311
reporting today, Collina had Meigs County by an unofficial Morgl!n
2ll 362
tally of 1'8,345 io 13,291.
the victory, 6,006 to ·5,296.
Musklngum
2:188 3744
Here's a , blow-by-blow ac- Noble
Collins, who is chairman of
(Not Available )
the powerful Senate Education count of both races:
566 1136
Perry
lOth Congressional
Committee, will be opposed in
Vinton
355 498
November by John E. Halliday
GOP District
Washington .
1297 1584
of Gallipolis, who was un- COUNTY
B M TOTALS
13,29118,345
contested in the Democratic Athens
560 3806
C-Crisp; W-Wh~a ley .
primary.
Fairfield
518 6854
Victory Margin Wide
Gallia
584 4286
Kilpalrick, D-Warren, who Hocking
141 1944
served 24 years in the House Jackson
476 3926
Variable cloudiness and
before moving to the Senate in Lawrence
2106 6595 cooler today with a chance of
1967, was beaten ,by a tather Meigs
480 3566 showers southeast with higha
wide margin by Thomas E, Morgan
308 2480 in the upper 50s north to the 60s
Csrney, council president of Muskingurn
1627 8668 south. Partly cloudy and cooler
Girard, in the 32nd Senate dis- Noble
46 284 tonight with low in \he 40s and
trict Democratic contest.
Perry
246 2303 low 50s. Partly cloud)' ThursKilpatrick narrowly out- Vinton
138 12:12 day with high in the 50s north
(Continued on page 10)
Washington
2613- 4855 . 60s south.

IS

Back

Weather

0

KE"
'"".', Idaho (UP!) _
""""""

freezing tempera 1ures dur1ng
the night. A blaze erupted
among timber supports
Tuesday in the " older
workings" of a tunnel at the
mine's 3,71J().foot level.
There were 190 men working
in the shafts of the Northern
Idaho mine at the lime and 108
scrsmbled to safety, bringing

•

~y.yr

•

rn •

•

Haven; Clara Radford,
Racine; Lewis Laudermllt,
Harrisonville.
DISCHARGES
Koleen
Parsons, Edward Templeton,
Pauline Jones, Helen Jeffen,
Sheryl Little, Lydia Ebn·
bach, ilabllle Powell, Harry'
Brlnkit, Mark l'ltlonl, Stan·
ley KaldGr, Evelyn Edwards,

Leona Hubbard.

''We llave aalliD repeated the res,ults of MaasachUJettl
Mid " " - • with both blue e111lar and white collar
aro••" MeGovern said.
''What I Pee eiDeraiDJ," McGovena said, "IJ a coalition
of wtbJI people, enrwbelmlDIIUpport IDIODI tbe young,
tile 1ulqbqlt• ~tile lumen. ADd that 'ra comblnllllon ·
I thlllk IU&amp;'I Pille II Clrt'J' Ul to !be aomJullon.
''1\e N11y 11101&amp; baPnlalve tlliDC II the way these
faetocy ~ C8llll! llmtulh lor u1."
Jl!t( .

Soil Stewardship Week

mark."

~ Com~g

_._, people."

,.,.,.,

....,.,,,,

..

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Seo. George McGovern, D8.0., today predicted the momentum be picked up Ia the
ObJo primary tbi!re wW carry him to the Democratic
• pnllldel1llal IIODIIDatlon. In m latervtew wltb UPI,
MeGoYen laid be waa "dell&amp;htrd with the Ohio re1ull11D
tb• IIIey ladlcate sucb lirODI support from rank ud fOe

'IWliHiiilil'

up with them the bodies of five
victims of carbon monoxide
poisoning.
Company officials wouid not
comment on the death toll, but
earlier confirmed that five
men had died. They set a news
conference today for 10 a.m.
PDT (1 p.m. EDT ).
Twenty' rescue crews of five
men each Inched toward the
area where the miners were
bel1' ev ed trapped · Th e rescuers
had reached the 3,JIJ().footlevel
after 12 hours, but had stiU not
located the fire , which was still
burning.

In his report to lhe
GRAHAM STATION, W, Va.
JUST SOME
- A $6.5 million expansion shareholders, Dr. Barrett said
The salary in- ' program at the Foote Mineral the improvement experienced
creases tentatively
Corp. ferroally plant near here in the first quarter of the year
agreed
upon
by
was announced
by w
Foote ' over the two preceding
M'
1 Pr ld t D
quarters Is expected· to conPorn eroy
Coun ell
mera
es en r. ayne
Mon d ay mg
. ht was for
T.
Barrett
to shareholders this tinue. He warned, however,
week
in Philadelphia.
that he expected the balance of
police
department
Details of the program were 1972 to be " trying."
employes only, with
withhe ld pending firm com.
Dr. Barrell also announced
fringe benefits going to
mitments as to phasing of the the company is studying the
all employes. Due to a
development, according to· desirability ol establishing
misunderstanding, the
John w. Donahey, public additional of f s hor e
report Tuesday said all
relations director, In 8 · manufacturing facilities to
be telephone interview Tuesday serve foreign markets.
e~p 1ayes were to
with the Ohio Valley
Barrett emphasized the
~::.~~;-..•.w.w
~ Publishing Co.
·
company will continue . to
~''~"'"'""'m
·
LOCAL
TEMPS ·"""'.."· · He said, however, that when support an active development
Temperature In downtown completed, the development program aimed at the mud,..
Pomeroy Wednesday at 11 a.m. will make the plant here "one pugliclzed lithium ball~ry
was 58 degrees under cloudy of the most efficient in the market. The company is a
major lithium producer.
skies.
country ."
Barrett said that 'the lithium
battery has a det.nite market
for military applications, but
that the larger consumer
market "Is sllll a question

Soil Stewardship Week, a
nationwide observance which
places emphasis on man's
obligation to God as stewards
of the soil,. water and other
resources, will be observed,
May 7·H, according to Thereon
Johnson, chairman, ~elgs Soli
and Water Conservation
District.
'

Creativ.e

1

Conservation,''

the theine ·of this year's observance, underscores the
responsibility which each
citizen has In fulfilling his or
her role as caretaker of theo
realm. The Meigs Conservation District and so;ne

Here May 7 ·14
3,000 companion Districts
throughout the nation along
with their State and National
Associations are sponsoring
the event for the 18th consecutive year.
Among the loca) events
acheduled for Soil St.!wardship
Week are dlsplliys of conservation .posters from the
schools In the county, a radio.
program to be given by the
supervisors, and newspaper
articles. '
The Meigs Conservation
District also will distribute,
upon request to churches of all
faiths, attractive program.

'

•

Veteran Stale Representative Ralph Welker (MeigsRepublican ) was unseated in
his quest for reelection as 92nd
Di stri ct Representative
Tuesday by veteran State Sen.
Oakley C, Collins.
Final unofficial tally early
this morning showed Collins
with 9135 votes in the fourcounty area of Athens,
Lawrence, Gallia and Meigs,
while Welker finished with
6:no.
Mack Fuiks ran third with
3373.

;,:,:,~@'».'&gt;m*'&lt;=:::::'.@!.:~

Rescue teams worked in
smoke.filled aha!ts today to
reach at least 58 miners
trapped by a fire beiow the
·surface of the nation's largest
allver mine. A Red Cross offlcials said he saw 24 bodies
recovered.
Newsmen were barred from
the immediate area of the
SAIGON .:_ NORm VIETNAMESE FORCES overran the SWJshlne Mine, where relatives
Iut clefense line In Quang Trl province today al)d President and friends huddled in sub·
TICKETS ON SALE
Nguyen Van Thleu fired the two South Vietnamese commanding
Tickets for the ~~nual
gernals In charge. The Communiltll!.lo captured Landing Zone
NOW YOU KNOW
banquet and dance 'of the
English on the central coalt after 2,500 troops, miUtiamen and
The FBI began Its finger- Pomeroy High School Alw;mi
village offldals fled In lllllallboata In an operallon reminiscent of printflle on July 1, 1924 when il Association are now on sale at
Dunkirk In World War 11.
was given custody of 810,188 Chapman 's Shoe Store;
The South Vietnameae Defenae Ministry telephoned a · flngerprlnh cards previously Swishe~ and Lohse Drug ·Store
communlquefromThleu'aofficell!nounctnglhatU.Gen. Hoang maintained by the federal and the New York Clolhi.ng
Xuan Lam, commander of the nortllernmost five province 1 penitentiary at Leavenworth, House. Tickets for this year's
Corps area, and Brig. Gen. Vu Van·Gial, commander of the 3rd Kan.
reunion are $4 each.
Tj
07,..
. 77 .' ...J· ·X.JX.~.-.
·
»'-" ... • .... • • • • •
··
._.N.;.,
Infantry Division, which was decimated at Quang Trl, had been --!
i " Pl?r?lP
~
41.7»»:0»--.wx: ..X· · $m
Z«v.~
ftred by Thleu. AmiUtary ~- also said Glal bad been put
111der investigation. His whereabouts were unknpwn.
CHICAGO - AT .Sl JOE PEPITONE HAS ASUD to be
retired from baseball. "I've loll my lo•e for bueball," Pepitone
lllid Tuesday aft~ he ubd the' Qllcago Cuba, for whom he
played first baae, to put him Qll tbe voluntary retirement lilt. The
Cute a~ed to requeat vvluntacy retirement for P!iptone.

• Also a bt ielectkln

Welker Unseated

ro~,;,~·::wri; jj~iet? Foote Mineral Plans $6.5 Million Expansion
Jl l ~
Sl - - - - - -- F-r----- - -- -- - -- - - - - - -------,....,.
58 'r.
d zn
• sl"lver M zne
.J ranne
'1;'.£'

Finds Morrrentum, He Thinks

Seiect what JOU need
now on the 2nd floor,

of Storm Couats

Attending the meeting were
Miss O'Connell, Robert Bowen,
Meigs County Superintendent
of Schools ; Mrs. Grella Suttle
and Mrs. Va!e, Meigs school
supervisors; " Mrs. Ruth
Mangus, Chillicothe; Mary E.
Caudill, Waverly; William F.
Platzer, Portsmouth ; Ronald
Motter, McArthur ; Roger
Biggs, Jackson; Ana R. Smith,
Jackson; Lillian Locke,
Chesapeake, and Pauline Rife,
Gallipolis. A luncheon was
served at noon.

I '·

Miller Wins Big

•

. COLUMBUS (UP!)
Twenty -year legislative
veteran Oak)ey Collins, pushed
out of the state Senate by
reapportio11menl, opened the
door to the House Tuesday. But
the lawmaker with the longest
'service,
Sen.
Bishop
Kilpatrick, had the renomination door slammed in
his face .
Primary election races
Tuesday also provided impressive wins for the most
powerful Republican in the
House, Speaker 'Charles F.
Kurfess, R·Perrysburg, and
for Sam Speck, R-New Concord, the prime mover of the
controversial strip mine
control law.
Collins challenged Rep .
Ralph Welker, R-Pomeroy, for

yesterday al•o narrowly
passed. Voters of the district
approved the new live mills
tax , 751 to 726.
Given a wider margin of
support was a new mental
health lax levy, two-tenths of
one mill for establishment ol a
mental health program in the
county in cooperation with
Jackson arid Gallia Countians.
The measure passed 3,234 to
2,470.
Meigs Local Supt. · George
Hargraves , invited this
morning to discuss what the
district can do in light of the
levy's defeat, said, 11 lt will be
up to the board of education,
which meets Monday nig ht. "

·.

h

buy.

Collins

tendent of Schools, and Mrs. Nellie Vale, a· Meigs County
school supervisor, who was in charge of the meeting. Purpose of the meeting was to pass information to professional
level people on the training of volunteer workers in the
schools.

'

'

Vin~ • 100% soft foam

I
~-~
___;
IL------~'
·=~.--~·~~"'"'
~~"~~~·
··~----:rlr_j

"'"' ""''&lt;'&gt;&lt;·•

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY

'

.

Challenged

.-,! '~~· · .tol

SALE PLANNED
Estate of Bett ie Cullums,
Arummage sale wW be held deceased , tete ot Village ot
, Meigs County , Ohio .
· Thursday at the St. Paul Pomeroy
Creditors are required to file
Lutheran Church fellowahlp their claims with said fiduciary
LOCAL TEMPS
wllhln tour months .
•
Temperature in downtown hall from 9a.m. to 4 p.m. under
Doled thll 26th day of April
Pomeroy Tuesday at 11 a.m. the sponsorship of the ' 1971.
Jol'1n C. Bacon
was 68 degrees, under cloudy American Lutheran Church
Probate Judge
oftald Count'll
Women.
skies.

Cushions of

.

Humphrey

Not i ce Is hereby given that
Harold F . Rawson of 3327
Millvale Road , N. E .• Canton,
Oh lo 4&lt;705 hos been duly ap.
pointed Administrator of the

Rep~ment

Voters Refuse
School Support

------------------------------------VOL XXV NO. 13
POMEROY·MIDDLEPORT OHIO .

Oecened .

For D1ails • Gliders • Olaise LoUnges To Pretty Up
Your Porch or Patio

3,309; Howard E. Frank, incunlbent, for county treasurer,
3,293; Thendore Beegle, incumbent, for county engineer,
3,017,and Rankin Rlty Pickens,
incumbent, who received 2,821
votes.
.The only other Democrat
nominee not named above is
Joe Denison of Middlepprt who
received 894 votes yesterday
and will oppose Robert Clark in
the fall for the commissioner's
post now held by Clark.

en tine

at y

Ada Kate Rowe
Died M daY

Sale of Repiacement Cushions

were Roben Clark, incumbent,
for the· county commissioner
terni beginning Jan. 3, 1973,
2,501; Bernard V. Fultz, in·
cumbenl, for prosecuting at·
torney, 3,049; Robert C.
Hartenbach, incumbent, for
sheriff who received the top
vote of 3,397 among the
un&lt;&gt;ppo~ed . ca ndidates ;
Manning D. Webster, Probate
court of common pleas judge,
3,213; · Eleanor Robson, incumbent, for county recorder,

Here's how Meigs Coun ty
Republicans voted on other
candidates:
For Representati•e to
Congress :· Paul M. Brown, 480 ;
Clarence E. Miller, 3,566.
For Justice of the Supreme
Court (fullterm beginning Jan.
I, 1973: Louis J. Schneider, Jr.,
1,985.
Three out of four new tax
For Justice of the Supreme
Court (full term beginning Jan. measures passed in Meigs
County Tuesday.
(Continued on page 2)
Failing was a live mill new
tax in the Meigs Local School
District where 1,685 voters
•
turned down the measure with
1,388 'voting in support of the
new tax · which wo'!ld have
brought the operating millage
of the district to 221,1 mills.
In the Eastern Local School
District, a new three and a half
mill tax levy designed also to
bring that district's operating
The lntereau Of The Meig1·M~n Area
millage up to 221&gt; mills passed
----------------------~~-----------22 votes, 535 to 513. TEN CENTS byInonly
WEDNESDAY, MAY 3,197.2
PHONE 992·2156
the Southern Local School
District, the third new school
tax voted upon in the coWJty

clerk of courts, received 2,225
votes to defeat Mrs. Evelyn
Lucke, incumbent, with 1,.68:
·Third In that race was Charles
Richard Karr, Jr., Middleport,
with 556 votes. Spencer will be
opposed In the ran by Marx
Marlin, unopposed in her bid
·for the Democrat nomination.
Mrs. Martin of Pomeroy
received 881 voles yesterday.
Other Republican candidates
and the voles they received
·yesterday for county posts

discuss

(5) 2, '· 16, 31

from our

.

NEW YORK - JAMF.'i \ffliGIIT, PROFESSOR of English
at Hunter Cbllege, part of the City University of New Yor.k, won
the 1972 Pulitzer Prize In poetry Monday for bls "collected
poems."
.
Born in Martins Ferry, Ohio, in 1927, Wright received his
bachelor of arts degree at Kenyon College in Ohio and went on to
get his master's and Ph.D. at the University of WasbingtAln.
Wright's background in Ohio, as the son of a factory worker, Is
reflected in his poetry in wbich he identifies with the poor and
ll'lderprlvileged. He also Is noted for his translations of the works
of foreign poets.

KC Board Awards

I'VE GOT BIG PLANS! .
That's why Mommy and Daddy have opened a ·
savings account for me. I'll be ready for
schoot In .a few years and later on. I'm plan ·
nlng to go to college. Sure, it takes money but
by the lime I'm big enough for college. that
savings account will 'be pretty big, too. The
lolks'll be adding regularly to it, according to
this savings plan. They got it all figured out
with the help of some people down at

By un!re"d Pre•• latematlollli
CHAlLENGED FROM hhe right and the left, Hubert H.
Humphrey today went after an unprecedented double victory In
the presidential primaries against George s. McGovern in Ohio
and George C. Wallace in Indiana.
Going ooe-on-one again$ .two major opponents In the
bellweth..- Midwest primaries, Humphrey was given an even
shot at beating Wallace in Indiana and was rated the favorite to
beat McGovern in Ohio, despite a late surge by the surprising
South Dakota senator,

WASJ;IINGTON - CITING A ''TIDE OF EVIDENCE too
strong to resist," a federal judge ~s nullified the 1969 reelection
of W. A. "Tony" Boyle as United Mine Workers president. U.S.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Ohio Extended Outlook , District Judge Wllllam B. Bryant made the ruling Monday. He
Thursday through Saturday:
said the union showed "little regard" for a requirement that the
MUd temperatures and a voting be held by secret ballot.
chance of showers wtlb highs
Bryant also found that Boyle forces conducted campaigning
In the 60s north to the low 70s in polling areas, interfered with observers for defeated candidate
south and lows In the 40s.
Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski, and used the union's newspaper to
push the Boyle candidacy. To·accept the union's defense against
charges brought by the U. S. Labor Department, Bryant said,
"the court would be forced to swim upstream against the tide of
TWO ANSWERED
evidence
100 strong to resist."
·
Two callS answered Monday
by the Middleport E-R unit
DETROIT -A FEDERAL GRAND JURY indicted General
were at 6:10 p.m. to the
Motors
and Ford Monday on charges of conspiring to fix prices in
residence of Mrs. Amanda
Murray on North Third St., the automobile fleet sales market in an attempt to eliminate
who was taken to Pleasant Chrysler Corp, as a major competitor. The two&lt;ount indictment
Valley Hospital, and at 8:00 was returned in U.S. District Court. The government also filed a
pm. to Cook's Gap Hill lor civil suit against GM and Ford, the nation's two largest auto
Elmer Napper, who was iU and manufacturers.
was taken to Veterans I Both companies denied the charges and said they would seek
Memorial Hospital where he swift •indication in the courts. "The accusations In the indictment are not true and we shall defend ourselves vigorously,"
was admitted.
said Wright Tisdale, vice president and general c011nsel for Ford.
. TWO FINED
Two defendants were fined
and another forfeited bond in
Racine Mayor Charles Pyles'
Court Monday night.
Marshall Lyons had filed
charges against Gary Johnson,
i9, Racine I $13.20, reckless
operation) and Neal Baker • 18,
Racine, ($13.20, speeding). Joe
Proffitt, 24, Portland, forfeited
$25 on charges ol no license
plates .

ones or Commissioner

(New~~:· in Bri;f~ Council to M~t .

He reported record high
production levels during 1971 at
the company's Silver Peak
(Nev . ) lithium processing
plant and predicted further
production Increases in the
future.

blanks and a special soil
conservation litany . The
materials were ·prepared by
the National Association ol
SROW DATES SET
Conservation Districts, In
The Big Bend Regatta flower
consultation with a Soil
"Twin-City
ApStewardship Advisory Com- show,
preciation,"
will
be
staged
mittee composed of leading
church men In the nation.
June 17 and 18 under auspices
In a related S&amp;WCD fwic· of the Meigs County Garden
tion, Paul Evans of Oak Hill, Club Association. Mrs. Reid
who works In Meigs County as Young Is chairman, and Mrs.
a part-lime soil conservation Tom Stewart Is C&lt;H:hairman of
technician, was presented by the show which will feature six
the Soil Conservation Service, classes In the artistic
Departinent of Agriculture, a arrangements dlvlalon. Detaila
3fl.year pin at a meeting In of the show wjll be announced
Columbu laat week.
by Mn. Young.

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="725">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="11125">
                <text>05. May</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="52959">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="52958">
              <text>May 2, 1972</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2852">
      <name>brinker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1708">
      <name>rowe</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
