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                  <text>10 - The Dally Sentinel. Middleport-Pomeroy. 0 .• Marrh 6, 1973

Library proposed
in town of Mason
MASON - A proposed
library for the town of Mason
depends on acquisition of
suitable land, town council
learned Monday night.
May·or Roy Harless told
Council in its regular meeting
that he had been contacted by
Mrs. Irwin from the CabellHuntington Library concermng
construction of a library to be
paid for with state funds. It is
proposed to be built on Fire
Department land between the
Mason Fire Station and the
City Building. Council agreed
to accept the library if !he land
'
site is approved.
Council discussed a Community Betterment Program
(COMBET) after Gary Gibbs,
Recorder, rea d a letter from
the West Virginia Chamber of
Commerce requesting all civic
organizations to become active
in this program.
Organizations des iring
addi tiona! information are

being as ked to see Jack
H;:1rr1son at West Vtrginia
Chamber of Commerce office

or Mayor Roy Harless' office m
Mason.
. Joe Jones, Water Cjmmissioner, reported th at
several water meters have

been installed at tow n
residences that prevwusly had
been w1thout meters. Junes
explained this 1s 1n compha11ce
with a Public Semce CommissiOn ruling that all
residences or dwellings must
have a water meter if they
obtain water services.
Police Chief Kenneth Siders
reported 18 calls were answe red, two meetings attended, five ball games and
three dances were given police
attention, five accidents were
investiga ted and two warnings
and two citations were issued
in February. Mileage for official pnlice business was 1,120.
The Town and Water

Hair·A-Thon
Mabel Sanborn
coming Friday died on Monday

ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
High School · Cosmotology
classes will sponsor a Hair-AThan Friday from 7 a.m. to 12
midnight. All hair styles will be
performed by the students
under the supervision of their
Financial report was made as instrucwrs Mary Powell anrl
Pauline Hysell.
follows:
The open house Hair-A-Thon
Town of Mason balance as of
will
be in !he cosmotology lab.
January 31, $568.~&gt;; receipts,
Proceeds
(from donations) will
$6,521.84; expenses, $6,081.19;
balance as of February 28, be used for a scholarship wan
advanced hair styling school
$1,008.90.
Water Department balance and will be awarded to a
as of January 31, $4,908.01; graduating cosmotology senior
receipts, $4,002.09; expenxes, in May.
The public is invited to
$:1,822.89; balance as of
participate
in !his adventure .
February 28, $4,728.81.
For
additional
information call
Town and Water Department
bills were paid in the amount of 992-2158 from 8:4&gt; a.m. to 3:15
$1,012.79 for town bills and p.m.
$1,880.12 for the water
department.
BLOOD DAY .
In addition to those named
MASON, W. Va. - The
above, other town officials
Bloodmobile will be in
present were Councilmen Dick
Mason on Thursday, March 8
Fowler, Russell Barton and
at the fire station from noon
Fred Samsel ; Bernard
to 6 p.m. The Mason Mothers
Scarberry, Water Department
Club Is sponsoring the visit.
Superintendent; Police Chief Refreshments will be servKenneth Siders and patrolman ed. Club members will
Richard Carson. II was ancanvass the town to get
nounced a budget meeting will
donors.
be held March 12.

Board hedges on consolidation
Hannan Trace's Local Board
of Education · Monday night
discussed school consolidation
thoroughly but look no action.
The board agreed informally
to support a proposal wherein
!he four county school districts
(excluding Gallipolis City)
would consolidate financially
but .remain -as they are administratively, with an
assistant co unty superintendent, but the local
superintendents having charge
of their own districts.
The board did not approve
!he proposal as a resolution.
Hannan Trace is the second
county school district to take
any action one way or the other
on the consolidation issue.
In December, the Kyger
Creek Board of Education
unanimously adopted . a
resolution against consolidation of the schools in
Gallia County. That motion
followed a meeting last Nov. 21
in which Thomas Quick,
Assistant State Superintendent
of
Public
Instruction,
recommended consolidation of
the county's four school
districts.
In other action, the Hannan

Trace Board awarded Barnett
International of Jackson
contracts for two new bus
chassis. Superior will furnish
the coaches. The bids were
$5,676 for a 66 passe nger
chassis and $5,186 for a 60
passenger. Superior's bids by
Edwin Davis of Langsville
were $3,973.60 and $3,771.84.
There were no other bidders.
Jake Halley's resignation as
a bus driver was accepted.
Four substitute drivers employed were lnaz M. McGuire,
William Edward Lewis,
Margaret Adkins and Rober t
E. Hall.
The board also approved a
resolution granting _military
service credit to veterans.

Tonight

March 6
THE BURGLARS

nechmcolor)
Omar Shari ff.

J ean - Paul

be classified

3-6·6tc

Belmonth , Oyan Cannon

lPG I
Colorcartoons
Show starts al7 p m

Rea l Estate tor sa te

3 BEDROOM home . liv ing room
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
March7 &amp;8
NOT OPEN

Negotiations clicking

WOUNDED KNEE, S. D.
AI Cheshire, the Kyger Creek (UP!) - Justice Department
Board of Educatio n awarded officials said tnday things are
Martin Ford Sales of Gall;polis going, 4'click, click, click"
the bid for a 60-passenger bus. toward a settlement of the
Again, Davis of Langsville week-long Indian occupation of
was the low bidder on the Wounded Knee.
Superior Coach at $3,811.84.
But other government
Marlin's bid was $o,190 for the sources. were guarded in their
bus chassis.
hope for immediate surrender
The board received four of the embattled encampment
recommendations from the of the 200 Indians who last
Kyger Creek Teachers' Tuesday occupied !he site of
the last stand of American
Indians against the U. S.
Cavalry and released eleven
hostages two days later.
" We had at least five
telescopic sights of Indians at
Wounded Knee carrying M60
rifles," a government man
Want~d to do
GAR DENS plowed around sa1d. "They can wipe out a
Racine . John Pape , 949 3025
after 3. 30 p.m.

too late to

MEIGS THEATRE

Assoc iation negotiating install new lighting will be
commi ttee. The proposals acted on later.
involved sa lary Increases,
The board approved a
hospitalization insurance, resolution granting teachers
personal leave and payment of military service credit and
salaries twice a month instead tabled Sprague's request to
of the customary once a month. revamp the football coaching
Deryl Well, Adam Krahel and staff.
Jack Duncan represented the
Board Clerk Doris Roush
teachers.
was aut horized to borrow
The board took their requests money to pay the month's bills
under advisement.
and to make an advance withHead football coach Jim drawal on the 1972 tax monies
Sprague was authorized to when the real estate·tax books
proceed with reseeding the close.
football field . Sprague's plan to

and dining room carpeted .
New forced ai r furnace .

bunch ~ FBI men or U. S.
Marshals outside Wounded
Knee without giving them a
chance."
Despite these misgivings ,
there is concensus among

3·6·12tc

News • •• in B_riefs
KHARTOUM - AUTHORITIES DID not react publicly
eight Black September guerrillas who murdered three
diplomats, two of them American, during a 60-hour weekend
siege at !he Saudi Arabian embassy. But President Jaafar
Numeiry expressed "revulsion" at the deaths of the diplomats in
a message to President Nixon and a government spokesman
promised an early trial of the eight men on murder charges.
"They will he executed," one official told U. S. diplomats
Monday at a tearful farewell to the widows and children of
Ambassador Cleo A. Noel Jr. and George C. Moore, the outgoing
chief U.S. envoy in Khartoum. The two men and Belgian charge
d'affaires, Guy Eid were machinegunned wdeath Friday after
the Black September guerrillas held them hostage for more than
24 hours in a fruitless attempt to gain freedom for dozens of jailed
comrades and for Sirham B. Sirham, the convicted assassin of
Robert F. Kennedy .

This Week's Feature

LADIES ROLL-UP
SLEEVE SHIRTS
DRIVE-IN BANKING
Banking by car is simple, easy and
prompt. Experienced tellers are on
duty during the regular banking hours
to serve you quickly, courteously, and
efficiently.
AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
FRI. EVENINGSS To7 P. M.

1'111Et1 YOU VISIT, PARK FREE

Permanent press,
long pointed collars,
full button front, shirt
tail bottom - 35%,
cotton, 65% Polyester

White, Navy, Lilac, Lt. Blue,
Pink, and Mint
Sizes 32-38
. Made In U.S.A.

•2.99 each

llibens l'aUonal
_...~~lt~Cll~NATI

Extra Sizes 40-42-44

'3.49
each
.
~

"!IDDL!&gt;PORT, OtliO
Member Federal Dep011il Ins~nce Corporation

Allen Brewer

died Tuesday
PORTLAND - Allen C.
Brewer, 74, Portland, died
Tuesday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
Mr. Brewer, clerk of
Lebanon Twp. 23 years, was a
retired employe of the Ohio
Fuel Gas Co., being a member
of !he company's 2:&gt;-year club.
He was a member of the Portland United Me,thodist Church.
Preceding him in death were
his parents, David and Emma
Ervin Brewer, and an infant
son.
Surviving are his wife ,
Audrey Smith Brewer; three
sons, David of Portland;
Harold of Long Bottom, and
Kenneth, of Columbus; four
daughters, Louise Brewer,
Portland ; Myrna Close,
Waterford Route I; Ruby
Donnan, Newburgh, Ind., and
Marilyn Beall, Columbus; four
brothers, A. W. Brewer, White
Cottage; Eber, of East

government officials here that
Uie issues now remaining
chiefly concerned triba l
politics and resentment
against !he operations of the
Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA)
here on the Pine Ridge Oglala Liverpool ; Ernest pf near
Sioux Reservation.
Racine, and Edgar, of Portland; 16 grandchildren; six
great-grandchildren,
and
several
nieces
and
nephews.
CHAPTER TO MEET
Initiation will be held when Funeral services will be at I
Evangeline Chapter, OES, p.m. Friday at !he Ewing
mee ts at 7:30p .m. Thursday at Funeral Home where friends
may call"after 6 this evening.
the hall.
Burial will be in the Sliversville Cemetery.

Li ncoln Hill , Pomeroy, phon e today to a strong U.S. suggestion !hat Sudan convict and execute

992-2071

Mrs. Mabel Berry Sanborn,
87, former Middleport resident,
died Monday at Akron.
·She was born Nov. o,1880, the
daughter of the late Elmer and
Althea Campbell Holmes. She
was also preceded in death by
her husband, Max Reed
Sanborn, in 1958; a daughter, a
brother, and a sister.
Mrs. Sanborn was a member
of Grace Episcopal Church In
Pomeroy, the Evangeline
Chapter 172, OES, Middleport;
the Middleport Business and
Professional Women's Club;
the
Spanish
American
Auxiliary of Akron, and !he
Pythian Sisters Lpdge in
Middleport and at Akron.
She was associated for years
with her husband In business at
the Sanborn Jewelry Store in
Middleport.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Helen Tillett, Fairlawn,
and Mrs. Dorthea Stanford,
Ceres, Calif.; a son, Gerald E.
Berry, Bradenton, Fla., six
grandchildren, and seven
great-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m. Thursday at Grace
Episcopal Church in Pomeroy
with the Rev. MacKenzie officiating. Burial will be in
Riverview Cemetery. Friends
may call at the Rawlings-Coats
Funeral Home from 2 to 4 and
from 71o 9 p.m. on Wednesday.

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Fann loan
(Continued from Page I)
able on a first come, first serve
basis.
The money will be for oper·
ating expenses only, to enable
farmers to buy seed and equipment.
An Ohio Bankers Association
official said he expected 50 to
60 per cent of the banks in the
state to participate in the loan
program.
Abercrombie said the application at local banks would
be in a "very simple form."
"t'armcr.s ought to have !he
dollars in their pockets in three
to four days" after applicawn,
he said, adding that federal
emergency loans issued
through the Farmers Home
Administration took up to six
weeks to process. '
In announcing the program,
Abercrombie again criticized
the Nixon administration's
farm policies.
"The state working with pri·
vale enterprise can do a better
job than the federal govern·

They learn
by sharing

I:"' -

HARRISONVILLE BOBCATS- The ilarrisonville Bobcats had a 7-1 record going into
district tourney action. Making up the squad are front, 1-r, Lanny Chapman, Lewis Harper,
Tony Reeves, Robbie Welsh, Mike Wilson; back row, Coach Greg McCall, David Riggs, Steve
Arnold, Ernie Mitchell, Tim Workman, Ben Cottrill and Nick Joseph. Steve Morris was absent.
This team lost in the semi-finals of the tournament Thursday evening at Meigs Junior High.

at y

Two collisions
reported early

1:30 to 4 p.m. to answer
questions on social security
Veterans Memorial Hospital
PLEASANT
VALLEY
and medicare. Refreshments
DISCHARGED - Archie
DISCHARGES:
Reuben will be served.
McKinney , Henry Klein,
Dean,
Lakin;
Margaret
William Milliron , Kimberly
Follrnd, Richard Ellis, Walter Martin, Buffalo; Mrs. Wayne
Martin, daughter, Gallipolis
Greene.
Ferry ; Robert Supple, Point
Pleasant; Ora Knapp, Leon;
ALERT CANCELE[}
Mrs.
Margaret
Rainey
,
A Lake Erie shore fiood
ASK TOWED
Henderson;
Roger
Davidson,
warning
was canceled by the
John Lee Downs, 19,
New
Haven;
Robert
Harper,
National Weather Service
Glouster, and Elaine Mae
Point
Pleasant;
Charles
Wolfe,
Monday
afternoon, a few hours
Murphy, 21, Pomeroy, RD.
Racine;
Ei- nie
Gibson, after the warning had been
Gallipolis.
issued.

ELBERFELD$ WAREHOUSE
ON MECHANIC STREET
Sale! Turfmaster

LAWN MOWERS
· 20 Inch Cut
3 Horsepower
4 Cycle Briggs and Stratton
Engine
.
3 Height Adjustments
REGULAR fj9.95,

"we would much rather he .of

.SALE

service to our own people."

'6800

Open every Weekday 9:30A.M. to 5P .M. -Fridays and Saturdays 9:31A.M. to 9P.M.

ELBERFELDS WAREHOUSE ON MEOiANIC STREET
Sec the big selection of linoleum·. carpeting -room si1e 1'1111• • wardroiJea ·metal cabloell·
Washers -Dryers· Gas and Electric Rangea • Refrlgel'llton • U&amp;ed TV Sell; Waler Heaten.
Hwnidiflers
and many other Items. Plenty of free parkinl•tmce. I
.
.
.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
...-------~----------••--. .-11!"11-.-witl
~
'

en tine

SOLO!sr FOR THE Meigs Community School's musical
presentation at tbe ·Arts and Crafts Fair is Dayld Might,
seated here on the piano bench with his teacber, Mrs. Mary
Skinner. David's solo is "Jesus Loves Me." Alloflhe children
participate in the motion songs.

Devdled To The lnteres/s Of The Meigs-Mason Area

Fune"al services for Leo
(Bud 1 B. Crew, 48, former
Pomeroy resident who died
Sunday night at MI. Carmel
Hospital in Columous, will be
held at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the Reynoldsburg Uni ted
Methodist Church.
Mr . and Mrs. Crew and their
family had resided in Pomeroy
for a number of years before
moving to 1437 Hentz Drive,
Reynoldsburg , after Mr . Crew
had accepted a position as
dental technician instructor at
the Columbus Technical ·Institute.
Mr . Crew was a member of
the Reynoldsburg United
Methodist
Church,
the
auxiliary police of that community, the Ohio and Central
MIDDLEPORT BUCKS - FlfUt and sixUt graders
Ohio Laboratory Guilds. He
making up !he Middleport Bucks are, front, 1-r, Rick
belonged to Drew Webster Post
Hovatter
and John Stewart; in back, Kenny lmbnden, coach;
39, American Legion and
Mike
Hindy,
Mark Magnotta, and Danny Smith. Their record
operated the Crew Denta l
is 2-5. They competed in tbe tournament at Meigs Junior High
Laboratory in Pomeroy for a
School
in Middleport !his week.
number of years.
Officiating at se rvices
Wednesday wtll be the Rev .
Senior citizens
Floyd W. Powell and !he Rev.
Dale Bumgardner. The church
plan open house
is located at 1636 Graham Road
in Reynoldsburg. Friends may
· An open house will be held
call at the Schoedinger East
Pomeroy Police investigated Wednesday at the new Meigs
Chapel, 5360 E. Livingston, two accidents early today.
County Senior Citizens Center
Columbus, from 7 to 9 tonight.
At 4:10a.m. a car driven by in the former junior high school
St,ven Tatterson, 21, Pomeroy, building in Pomeroy from Ito 6
strucl( the parked car of Dr. p.m.
Keith Riggs on Mulberry Ave.
While the Center will not
There was heavy damage to officially open until April, the
TO CELEBRATE 93rd
both ca rs, and Tatterson was
Charles Nelson will observe taken by the Pomeroy E·R Council on Aging is inviting all
his 93rd birthday anniversary squad to Vererans Memorial senior citizens to stop by some
on Thursday. He resides with a Hospital where he was ad- lime during the open house
son, Carl Ne lson, at 605 ffillted for treatment. In- hours. There will be demon.
strations on the different crafts
Sycamore St., Middleport.
vestigation is continuing.
and activities which will he
Minor damages was reported available when the center
to two cars on East Second St. opens. Painting, woodworking,
GRANGE TO MEET
at 7: lo a.m. when a car driven
LETART FAILS - Ohio by Joanne Williams, Pomeroy, decoupage, quilting, flower
Valley Grange 2612 of Letart pulled from a parking Jot into arranging, and jewelry, will he
Falls wtll meet at the hall at !he path of a car driven by among the crafts demon7:30 p.m. Thursday. Putluck Cyril Coleman, Rutland. There strated during tile day.
A representative from Social
refreshments will be served. were no injuries or arrests.
Security will be present from

program, Abercrombie said

t'rnrl)ent.

•

for Mr. Crew

Althongh a bill has been in·
ti-nduced in the U.S. House of
· Representatives to set up a
new federal crop loan

The Ohio Rural Rehabilitation Fund, supplying the $1.5
million :n "guara nteeing"
money. and similar farm loan
program were set up during
the depression earlier this century. Such agencies were later
phased out with remaining
money turned over to state ag·
riculture directors. However,
usP of the money must be
approved by the federal gov-

are on display today at the Fair. Mrs. Carol Wolfe, teacher,
has re~elved the assistance of interested adults in instructing
the chlldren in handicraft skills.

CRAFT WORK IS popular wiUt older boys and girls of the
Meigs Community School. Some of the items they have made

Senice set

ment, " he said.

BY CHARLENE HOEFUCH
The art of. learning Utrough association-and sharing with
, others is heing experienced today by Ute 20 boys and girls of the
Meigs Community School. They are in Athens taking part in the
Secohd Annual Arts and Crafts Fair.
Classes of retarded children from all of souUteastern Ohio
are there sharing their talents and enjoying others' work.
The fair is staged in Baker Center ballroom and lobby. It
began at 10:30 this morning and was to end late this afternoon. At
noon the children walked to the nearby Methndist Church for a
sack )unch.
The primary and intermediate children of the Meigs Community School were to present songs, several with motions, and
simple dancing and rhythmic movements.
The older group was displaying crafts including ceramic
containers, leather comb holders, crocheted pot holders,
placemats, nylon net scratchers, candleholders, wall plaques,
key boards, and tie racks.
For the teac~rs of retarded children, the fair offers the
(Co~tinued on page 16)

VOL XXV NO. 227

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 7, 1973

Wrecks
hurt 5

PHONE 992-2156

Clamp holds

Judith Ann Hudnell, 19,
Pomeroy, was · admitted to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
for treatment of injuries suffered in an accident at 1:30 p.
m. Tuesday on Rt. 143, one and
six tenths miles west of Rt. 684.
According to the GalliaMeigs Post State Highway
()
Patrol, her car turned over
after it went out of control. The
vehicle was demolished.
Two persons were slighUy
injured in a collision at 3:27 p.
m. on Rt. 124, east of Rutland.
Officers said an auto driv~n by
William C. Dfnguss, 72,
MRS. VIRGINIA KUNKLE, third from left, above, Ohio chairman of Ute Right to Read
Wilkesville, collided with a car
.l?rop:am,
a~ Melp COunty achOOl auper!htendehts and principals Tuesday afteoooon
clliyt')Jiy Eleai!or K .. Hoovll',-at
the
Meigs
Inn. She Is chairman of elementary education in .Ohlo. With Mrs. Kunkle, from
54, Middleport.
left, are Mrs. Nellie Vale, a county school superVisor ; Mrs. Greta Suttle , a county school
Two passengers in the
supervisor
who was chairman of the meeting, and Meigs County Superintendent of Schools
Hoover auto, Marjorie J . WUt,
Robert BOwen who introduced Mrs. Kunkle. Adinner followed !he two hour meeting.
(Continued on page 16)

Autos collide

By United Presslntematlonal
t
·.NEW YORK- MAYOR JOHN UNDSAY announced today
he will not seek re.;,iection for a third term ·in office, saying
"eight yean ... Is long enough for one man."

Rob ert C. Hartenbach's Dept. investigated
three · accidents Tuesday .
There were no personal injuries reported.
At 3:30 p.m. on SR 124 in
Sutton Twp., four tenths of a
mile from Racine, Linda Lou
Patterson, Racine, Rt. I, was
traveling east as was a car
driven by Patsy K. Proffitt,
Racine, Rl. 2. The Palkrson
vehicle went to make a left
hand turn and toe Proffitt
vehicle, passing, collided with
it. There was medium damage
to both. No citation was issued.
At 8:24 p.m. on SR 143 in
Salisbury Twp., a doe deer was
killed when it ran into the path
of an auto driven by Donna Rae
Spencer, Pomeroy . There was
medium damage to the front of
the car.

KHARTOUM -SUDAN'S STATE·RUN press wday named
six Sudanese citizens It said will be tr\ed for plottihg against !he
state in connection with ti)r Black September group which killed
two American and one Belgian diplomat in the Saudi Arabian
Embassy.
The six were among subversives being rounded up on order
of President Jaafar Numeiry who banned all activities in !he
Sudan by Arab guerrilla organizations. 'I!ie alleged plotters are
to be tried by special military courts which have the power to
impose the de~"~ pef!alty.
CAMBODIA SAID TUESDAY IT IS ready to start peace
talks with North Vietnam and the Saigon command today
claimed Communist gunners carried ·out the heaviest shelling
since South Vietnam's cease-fire took effect 39 days ago.
A Saigan command spokesman said eight government
paratroopers were killed and 41 wounded in a 1,900-round artillery, rocket and mortar barrage near Quang Tri City Tuesday.
The spokesman said it was the heaviest Communist shelling
since the Vietnam cease-fire took effect Jan. 28.

Sh~riff

LONDON - A NATION-WIDE SfRIKE by 220,000 nonmedical hospital workers caused hardships and disruptions
today among even emergency-cases and brought warnings that Wastewater study
"real chaos" is likely by the weekend.
More than 750 hospitals and thousands of patients were hit by plan is approved
the walkout, part of a "strike-a-day" series to protest Prime
The Meigs County comMinister Edward HeaUt's pay and price policies. Other strikes
hit rail · transportation, gas supplies and London. teachers._ missioners in regular session
Hospitals throughout the country warned of an infection risk Tuesday approved a feasibility
study to investigate incaused by piles of unwashed linen.
stallation of wastewater
PHOENIX, ARIZ. - BURT REYNOLDS and Sarah Miles treatment facilities :
In other business the commust face cross examination on their stories of what happened
missioners
paid an animal
when her business manager died of a drug overdose in her motel
claim of $181.20 for the loss of a
room while she was spending the nigljt with Reynolds.
A Superior Court judge Tuesday rejected. the film 'stars ' Holstein heifer to Orion and
argument that they should he excused from testifying at an Oris Roush . Attending were
inquest into the deaUt ol David Whiting, 26 .. Attorneys 'for Charles R. Karr , Robert Clark
Reynolds and Miss Miles had obtained·~ order preventing them and Warden Ours, comfrom heing subpoenaed on the grounds their ilppllarance at tl\e miSSIOners, and Martha
Chambers,' clerk.
inquest would "make a spectacle of them."
1

WOUNDED KNEE,S. D. -'nlE ARMED V!dlan occupation
of the settlement of Wounded Knee boiled, down today to a
standoff between militants and the federal goyernment over who
runs the Oglala Sioux Pine Ridge Reservation. The government
and the words of Its chief Ju~tice Department spokesman here
said t! has "come as far as It can come" and It Is now up IJ the
mlllta~ts to decide wheUter "we can reaph a peas;eful conclusion
w!Utout bloodshed."
,' ,
The Indians at Wounded, Kne~ in a counter threat dellv~red
to u..s: command post headquarters Tuesday night said they
might move out of Wounded Knee if Washington ousts the prese~t
tribal government. Delinis Banks, one of the leaders of ilie
American Indian Movement (AIM) .which mastermiitded the .
seizure of WoUnded Knee eight days ago, told UP! by telephone
early today Utat in the final meeting between the two Sides
Tuesday night the government "wan!ec/ to know If we'willleave
if tl)ey fire two Bureau of lndlar. Affairs officials and Oglala
Sioux tribal president Dick Wilson."
·

'i.~

'·

'I
'

oil prices

WASHINGTON (UP!) Pushed by an outcry over home
heating oil prices and doomsday talk of an "energy crisis,"
the administration
has
reimposed price controls over
most of the nation's $80 billion
oil industry .
The action Tuesday by the
Cost of Living Council reversed
the trend toward more relaxed
wage-price standards and
indicated increased worry 'at
the · White H·ouse oveP
possibility of a dew round of
petroleum products inflation.
In a "special rule," the
council ordered the 23 biggest
refineries to hold the average
price increase on most of their
products to 1.5 per cent above
the level of Jan. 10, 1973.
Natural gas is ••eluded from
At 8:33 p.m. in Salisbury the order. Natural gas rates
Twp . on SR 7, Raymond Gooch, already are regulated by the
Gallipolis, traveling suuth, Federal Power Commission.
attempted to slow down for a
curve. Gravel on the highway
caused him to lose control of
his car which went orr !he road
through a closed road, hitting
several marker barrels . There
was medium dama ge . No
citation was issued.

m;;;;;,:,;:, , i';i'~'~B;i;j;~

11' I

TEN CENTS

Sale8 persons
are wanted

by fair board

Organizations in Meigs
County
wishing to earn money
UNANIMOUS NOW
selling advertising on a
WASHINGTON (f,JPI) Postmaster General E. T. commission basis is asked to
Klassen told Congress today contact the Meigs County Fair
he was "far from satisfied" Board.
At a meeting of the board
with the mall service and
that apparently so are Monday night at the
of
other secre tary 's office on the
thousands
fairgrounds, the group decided
Americans.
"1 am shocked by In· to select an organization to sell
dlvidual cases of delays that !he advertising for the county
have eo me to my attention,'' fair program book with the
Klassen said In . testimony organization to receive a
prepared for the first of two commission on the sales. Any
days of hearings by the group interested is asked to
Senate Post Office Com- contact Mrs. Mickey King,
mittee. He cited his own secretary, 992-3762.
The board voted to purchase
figure• showing the postal
three
additional area lights for
service takes longer to
deliver a piece of mall than It the fairgrounds and a
used lo and said, "I am far discussion was held on the
from satisfied with our work that will be required to
performance."
get the race track into good
,:,:,:,.,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::':' condition after the installation
of large tile, now underway, is
compl.eted. The tile is being
Showers and a chance of installed the entire lengUt of
thundershowers today. Cooler the centerfield and track as a
tonight, a chance of showers in part of highway improvements
the west and more likely in the whi.ch ar~ underway In_ the
east. Lows in the upper 30s and · Rock Spnngs area . Presadent•
40s. Mostly cloudy and coooler Wall!lce Bradford presided
Thursday, highs· in the 50s.
over the meetmg.

Weather ·

Products covered in clude
gasoline, home heating oil,
aviation fuel, lubricants and
greases and petrochemicals.
The order also does not cover
asphall, fertilizers and waxes.
Under the order, a company
could ask for price increases
beyond !he l.o per cent, and
these could be allowed so long
as the company did not exceed
a prescribed profit margin
·ceiling.
In a setback for consumer
groups, !he council refused to
cancel hikes of about 8 per cent
in heating oil prices announced
by most refiners in mid
January, just days after the
strict Phase Il wage-price
controls were replaced by
Phase lii voluntary economic
guidelines. These increases
will be included in !he 1.0 per
cent price limit.

ONE, TWO, POINT YOUR TOES, now turn aroiUid· and
bow! Primary and intermediate qhildren of the Meigs
Community School have practiced and practiced in
preparation for their dance at Ute Second Annual Arts and
Ci-aft!J ..Fair at Ohio Un,lverslty today lor the retMdect .
chlidren of southeaster~ Ohio. Their teaCijii's•~-~. llfif)'
Skinner and Mrs. Kate Jarrell.
·
·

ERA attacked

COLUMB[!S (UP!) - A
conservative Illinois author
and a liberal Ohio labor leader
have combined to issue a
double-barreled attack on the
proposed Equal Rights
Amendment (ERA) W the U.S.
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
Constitution in final public
Chance of showers, mainly
hearings held by !he House
Friday and Sunday. Mild
Slate Government Committee.
through the period with
Phyllis Schlafly of Alton, Ill .,
highs In the 50s and lows in
the national chairman of the
the mid 30s to Ute lower 40s.
Stop ERA Committee, told the
committee Tuesday night
proponents " haven't got a
case" for the proposed
amendment.
"They haven't been able to
show how this •amendment will
help," she said.
Frank W. King, president of
the Ohio AFL-CIO, told the
' RACINE - Sixteen teams committee the amendment
are expected in the field for the would "destroy more rights
opening whistle of the in- than it would create," and
dependent basketball tour- would produ ce "equality
nament to begin at Southern through sameness."
High School.here the evening of
Many observers carried red
March 23.
stop signs reading "Stop
Teams desiring to enter
should call Doxie Walters at
992-7353, Dave Fife at 992-2683
••
or Ron Ferguson at 446-4037.
JURY HUNG UP
Deadline for signing up is
McARTHUR,
Ohio (UP! ) March 15. A reasonable entry
The trial of Oliver Mills, 62,
fee is being charged.
currently
serving a prison
Walters
said
area
businessmen and professional- term for the shotgun slaying of
persons have ·provided for Vinton County Sheriff Harold
individual prizes for an all· Steele, charged with wounding
tourney team to he selected at a deputy in the same incident,
the conclusion of play; in- ended in a hung jury Tuesday.
Mills was on trial for shooting
dividual trophies and a team
with in ten t to wound and
trophy to the winning club, and
shooting with intent to kill
team trophies to the second
David Wilbur , who has since
and third place finishers.
Admission will be 00 ·cents resigned from the sheriff's
office.
per person, school age and up .

Sixteen teams
expected in
cage tourney

Marcia Carr heads Junior Fair Board
•

Marcia Carr , a member of
the "Tuppers Plains 4-H
Girls," and the daughter of Mr.
and ;Mrs. &lt;;harles Carr, I,VaS
'
.
~lected presi~ent of the Meigs
County Junior F'~ir Board ,
Saturd~y at !he County Extension Office,
Steven Stanley, out-going
president, presided at this
annu~l election meeting.
Ele~ted vice-P,resjdent was
j&gt;ddie Kennedy of · the

.

Harrisonville 4-H Boys, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Kennedy,
and Joei Maue of the Meigs
Ch3pter o( the Future Farmers
o(, AJnerlca, son of Mr. ;md
Mrs. Harold .Maue, was elected

Advisory officers elected are
advisory president, Patty
Kelly, Meigs County 4-H
Program As~istant; advisory
vice-president, Gay Johnson,
and advisory secretary,
Everett Holcomb, Meigs High
~ecretary.
. Treasurer and publicity School Vo-Ag Instructor .
ch8irman will be named at the Additional advisory officers
next meeting at 4 p.m., will be elected later.
Tuesday, March 27 in room 106
iireg Hayes and Rick Carier
!Vo-Ag room ) of Meigs High
representing
the Vocational
School.

'
Industrial 'clubs of America County Agricultural Society .
(VICA), told th~ board their
group Is interested in becoming
Attending Saturday in ada part of junior fair activities . dillon to th!)Se mentioned included J,ester Jeffers, Ronnie
The Meigs County Junior Wood, Rocky_ Hupp, Aimee
Fair Board is made up of Huston , · Donald Shaffer',
representatives of all in- Mandie Rose, Donna Ohlinger,
terested vo.lunteer. youth Carol Ohlinger, Ingrid Hawley,
organizations in the county. It Grant Johnson, Rndy Johnson,
participates in decisions Bob Spurlock, Richard
related to the 'Junior Fair Macomber, and C. E. ' Blakesactivities made by the Meigs lee .

ERA", and some had signs
bearing the slogan: "The ERA
is Un-Christian,. Un-Amerlcan
and Unnecessary." Counterdemonstrators also were
present.
Rep. Michael Del Bane, 0Hubbard, committee chairman, said he anticipares a
committee vote next Tuesday
on !he amendment, which must
be ratified by 38 states to
become part of the U. S.
Constitution. Twenty-eight •
states have ~ow ratified it.
. The amendment would
forbid states to enact laws
abridging equal rights on the
basis of sex .
Mrs. Schlafiy told tlle committee the amendment would
do nothing for women in the
areas of labor discrimination
and family support.

"We've gone as far as we can
legislatively," she said.
Mrs. Schlafiy also noted that
although Ohio has eliminated
many of Its female protective
(Continued on page 16)

Three fined
by Zerkle
Three defendants were fined
and a fourth forfeited bond In
the court of Middleport Mayor 1
John Zerkle Tuesday night.
Fined were Helen M . Knotts,
30, Nelsonville, $j50 and costs,
and three days in jail for
driving while intoxicated i Carl
R. Hubbard, 30, Syracuse, $10
and costs, failure to transfer
license plates and · Glenn E.
Vance, Middleport RD, $15 and
costs, intoxication. Forfeiting a
$30 bond posted far spinning
wheels was Russell L. Haning,
18, Albany.
Four defendants assessed
costs of $8.70 each and ordered
to pay $1 for each parking
meter violation ticket they i)a!l
not paid were l!etty Reed,
Frank Musser and Kathryn
Richards, all of Pomeroy, ahd
Robert Ashley of Middleport.
Vickie K. Deem of Pomeroy
was assessed costs of $8.70 for
failing to pay !he court coata of
an earlier action.

�'
3- The Datlv Sentinel, M•ddle!lOrt-Pomeroy, 0 , March 7, 1973

2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7, 1973

BRUCE BIOSSAT

EDITORIAL

Moo Sends Us His
Acupu11cture Best

Nixon Pooh-Poohf.
Congress on Cuts
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEAl
The ragmg debate here over money and power has al
ready become so chaotic that there 1s little chance 11 w1ll
be widely understood m 1ts complex1ty and refmed detail
That works to President Nixon's advantage, and he
knows It
The reason for that is, of course, plam enough The b1g
reabty, recogmzed by public officials m both parties, 1s
the widespread anh·tax anh-spend mood m the nahon
It translates mto heavy support for Mr N1xon m h1s
slashing assault on some soc1al programs and h1s proposed 1mpositlon of a federal budget ce1llng
• The h ouble 1s, the President 1s so confident or th1s
suppo1 t that the attack on spendmg, !he reduction or
ebminahon Of programs, IS bemg C&amp;flled forward With
overtones of contempt lor oppoSition
There s noth1ng new m the 1dea of 'A clash between
p1es1dent and Congress Such warla1e IS histone Examples la1 back m the 19th century are easy to lmd One
president was told by a leadmg lawmaker
"Mr President, the leaders m Congress tell me Hell
wlll 11 eeze over before they do what you want about that
bill ..
1 1'he p1es1dent Jesponded
' S1r tell my lnends up the1e that Hell will freeze over

.•

to mot row

n

That sounds leHsonably tough, yet I get the 1mpress10n
thmgs are worse today than ever before, and that un
varmshed contempt has much to do With 11
P1 es1dent N1xon IS known to believe that, whatever he
may say to the present congressiOnal leaders on the•r
VISits to h1m they have become largely mellectual, d1s
01 gamzed outdated m theu workmg methods
One ITJend who thmks he understands well the temper
of the White House establishment, and how the Pres•
dent's aides carry out the1r dut~es , says s1mply
· They take their cue from h1m In this case, that means
'congressiOnal lla1son' ha; dwindled to almost nothmg"
From Dw1ght Eisenhower's days through the Johnson
reg1me, ha1son w1th Capitol H11l had been built to maJor
proportions Lawmakers were courted, placated, some·
limes appeased, always g1ven the feehng that they and
thmr v1ews and the1r problems were taken mto account
Desp1te occasiOnal, well-advertised meetings w1th H1ll
leaders by Henry K1ssmger, top domestic a1de John
Ehrhchman and others, knowledgeable sources ms1st the
Ntxon team as a generahty regards courtship efforts as
unnecessary as a nearly total waste of time
The President's new budget message shows how the
real cue can be g1ven It vo1ces hopes lor cooperatiOn
and accommodatiOn w1th Congress m holdmg down spend
lng But the key att•tude IS expressed b,Y Mr N1xon, w1th
the words deliberately set m italics, m h1s declaration
that there JS · no room lor the postponement of the reductiOns and termmatlons proposed m this budget "
That's th e tone of a man who thinks he not only has
the upper hand but can keep 11, that Congres~ or any
pther adversary can't do anythmg to reverse h•s m
tended course
The nation's govern OJ s, m town at February's close,
felt some or the same The1r sense of powerlessness
agamst Washington 1s not new
Everyone, too, expected them to complam as they d1d
about ab1 upt p1 og ram culs and confusiOn over reven~e
lharmg and 1ts real meamng for theu f1scal future But
What came through from many was the1r nolion that the
Wh1te House IS treatmg them hke dirt, that mter·gov
ernmental relatiOns ' are a farce that co ntempt 101 nval
l11ews IS the 01 de1 of the day
•,
I&gt;
The Almanac
By United Press International
Tnday IS Wednesday, March
'1, the GOth day olt1973 w1th 299
to follow
The moon IS between 1ts new
phase and l1rst quarter
The mornmg stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter
The evemng stars are Mer-

~-

.'

,;o'n::Xl·:·c
·

-~

,. 4

cury and Saturn
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Pisces
Noted American botamst
Luther Burbank was born
March 7, 1849
on this day 111 history
In 1932, In the depths of the
depressiOn, an estimated 3 000
men rioted in demandmg jobs

The recent · discovery" of Chma by Amenca has
progressed rapidly 11om Pmg Pong to a presidential
peek m 1n Pekmg to acupuncture and now, m the latest
d1plomat•c development, the announcement br that pe11
patetlc peace pursuer Dr Henry A K1ssmger , that
ha1son ofl1ces w1ll be estabhshed m the capitals of both
countnes
Such olhces w11l ran JUSt th1s s1de of official 1ecogm
bon of each government by the other
In April, Anchor Press will pubhsh "The People's Com1c
Book," seven stoTJes m com1c book form popular In Chma
With translated caphons, the cartoons Will be exact
reproductions or Chmese comiCS
In the people-to people sphere, Chma 1s now sendmg
over 10,000 acupuncture teachmg kits as contr1but10ns
to the med•cal and health protecllon of the Amencan
people, so as to enhance the lr1endsh1p between the
Chmese and Amencan people "
The k1ts, wh•ch are bemg marketed by Sobm Chern
1cals, Inc , of Boston feature a 22-Jnch h•gh plasllc human
l1gure showmg the 361 acupuncture 'pomts used by Ch1
nese physiCians for anesthesia and therapy and will be
offered lor sale to U S phys1c1ans, dent1sts, hospitals and
accredited researchers mterested m th1s anc1ent Chmese
art
The kit mc1dentally, 1s endorsed by both the Shanghai
Research Institute of TradJ!Jonal Chmese Med1eme and
the Nankmg College of Traditional Chmese Med1cme
The accent on the traditional aspects of one of lhe llrst
Chmese products to be Imported mto lh1s country m the
current era of good leehng suggests that the new Chma
1s not all that different from the old A 4,000-year·old
CIVIhzahon does not change drashcally m one generation
The As1a InformatiOn Oll1ce located m Hong Kong
has m fact made an mteresllng list of compansons be·
tween the 'then ' and the "now" of Chma
Then The government lunchoned by recru1tmg men of
talent and ab1hty
...,
Now A political el1te IS runnmg the modern Chmese
show
Then A strong secular fa1th m Confuc1amsm worked
1ts way mto every corner or Chmese thmkmg and In·
slltut10nal hfe
Now Mao Tse tung's 'thoughts" ar,e the all powerful ,
all pervadmg secular fa1th or modern Chma
Then A frowmng on heterodoxy and Improper conduct
Now A demand lor an orthodox Marx1st hlestyle and
constant guardmg agamst backshdmg and "revJSIODism '
Then Law was the tool to regulate soc1ety and the
state, stress was on soc1al order not md•v•dual nghts
Now D1tto
I hen The ruler was expected to be both hero and
Wiseman

Now Mao the scourge of the lore1gn 1mpenahsts, 1s
'Our Teacher ' H1s Wisdom IS boundless '
1 hen Never any comfortable place !01 a loyal oppos1
t10n
Now Ask Lm P1ao and LIU Shao·chl about th1s one
In some fundamental ways, however the new order m
Chma IS radically different from the old
For mstance, ConfuciUs stressed harmony, between
men and between man and nature Mao's lavonte noun
IS 'struggle "
fortunately 101 the world as Chma begms to eme1 ge
mto 11 struggle does not necessanly 1mply a1 med conflict
at the Detroit plant of the Ford
Motor Company Four men
were killed
In 1936, Adolf H1tler ordered
his Nazi troops mto the
Rhmeland, Vlolatmg the Versallies Treaty
In 1945, the US lsi Army
crossed the Rhme River at
Remagen, Germany as World
War II m Europe moved mto its
closmg weeks Tots! Allied
v1ctory (V-E Day) came May 8

e ,., ,,w~.'$*-'&gt;M@.=:·.·~&gt;h··-~~»;,·,~~ .,~ *'' ·&gt;·:1
along Br'Way
&gt;Y

!::
'

•

•

'

BY JACK O'BRIAN
DISCUSSING TilE MUCK
WITH MEYER
- ~ NEW YORK (KFS) Gangland's
•
Secretary of the Treasury Meyer Lansky once
eame In the old all.n1ght Reuben's Restaurant
lor 6 a .m breakfast and asked If he might join
Walter Winchell and yours nosdy Of course,
\\'alter started dlscussmg the old tale of his
handing over Lows "Lepke' Buchalter, star of
Murder Inc , to John Edgar Hoover, and other
Winchell exploits such as printmg that mad dog
kWer Vincent Coll would be knocked off imlnecllately - and was, half an hour after
Wilter.'s column m the Mirror h1t the newsltands Walter said he was summoned by theN
\' D.A to explain where he's got the Up and
lold him it was just a postcard "over the
transom "He fibbed Texas Guman had lipped
111m off the night before.
You mean you lied, we asked WW' Yep, he
laid over a plate of bacon and eggs I turned to
t.n.ky and asked, "What's the statute of
J!initallanl on perjury'" Meyer dldn 't even look
11p from hie oatmeal "In this state, three

)'ian.,.

He IIMw!
The gangland literary revival (Godfather,
Valachi Papers, etc ) caused a re-Issue of the
late Sid Feder's and ex-Brooklyn ass't D A
Burto11 Turkus' book on "Murder Inc " Which
tomehow managed to skip any mention of one of
lllc absolutely-named to!&gt;'luartet of underworld
~- of the N. Y garment district, one Benny
Levine . Its absence from the book never was
txplained - lor Benny was a specificallY,
llamed culprit in aU front-paged news stories of
tete ldU.for-eash mob.
Steve Allen in his ambitious mnocence once
thought he'd try to all' a "courageous" expose of
theN. Y garment center crune mlestation on
Ills old Tonight Show - but succumbed to all
llllnner or persuasive muscle urg111g him to
lllake no mention of Benny Levine
Allen had a beer sponsor hlsf1rst NBC-TV 15
I!Unutea. Old Prohibition characters then
jillddllng beer pulled strings at NBC. Milton
llrle'a late manager, Irvmg Gray, COIIXed
Allen. Othera Interceded - and Steve managed
toalrthe show he'd planned as a "courageous"
ik[IOse - without once using Beony's totally
li.el-proof Identity We were astounded After
telecast we phoned Allen and asked how
the absence of Benny, yclept for the show
1 myst,riOUS "Mr X." Stc\C
detailed all the pressure on him by
characters etc. and h.ls

eventual bowing to the pressure We called IrvIng Gray to ask how come he'd mterceded lor
Benny Came a long explanation that he'd
known him socially, heard about his long
crmunal history, but "He'd always been a great
host to me"
So we wrote 11 all for the front page of the
late and lamented N Y Journal-American, and
next day Allen and Gray were astounded to
think we'd print anything embarrassmg like
that Small punchlme alter years of praising,
deservedly, Steve Allen's Tonight Show
superiority-he was the best to come along as of
then m the chattercast business -suddenly our
cordial enough acquaintanceship chtlled
Eventually Allen wrote a piece for a minor
publication - sort of an off-journalism weekly
- aCCUSIJI8 US of being "maliCIOUS, VICIOUS and
un-Chnstian ;,
We loved his every VICIOUS line· George Jean
Nathan told us some 30 years ago when wo. fll'St
became aN Y drama cntic that, "Now you're
111 the busmess of throwing bricks Be ready to
get hit by a lew yourself "
• The late Wilson Mizner dramatist, used to
say, "Never get t1ch 111 the limelight " He
meant for his own conman-club or any crurunal
to seek public recogmtlon was the begmmng of
the end We've seen 11 countless times The late
Frank Costello who died in bed or, unexpectedly, natural causes got rich and then
sought the limelight A psycl!latrlst told h1m to
get out and lRlX socially That meant to Costello
to stage a char1ty event at a N Y nightclub,
Invite all hiS pals among gangsters and
pohliclans,lf that'snota redundancy, and there
they all were, pay1ng public obeisance to Uncle
Frank Among those consp~cuously present
were several newsmen who prmted the story
Not long after, Costello left a brown paper
bag lull of $22,000 In a taXI It was turned In,
oddly, and he sought advice from pals who
counseled to forget it -duck the limelight and
JUSt be a b1g tipper Irately, unusual lor Costello
who prl!ached moderation in all things except
discreet bribery and careful murder, he Insisted
on cla1mmg tbe cash. He did - and the Feds
stepped 10 to make him prove where he got It
More llmelit heat.
An ex-newsman on the MafJa gamblingsubsidiary paY,Toll convmced h1m a "friendly"
newspaper mterVIew was being sought and
would help; It didn't More negative hmelight.
Costello got arrogant during the Kefauver TV
uproar He lostagam AU he proved was he had
malllrurffi ne~ls

••

Big Brother Gives Yoa a' Baiz
Dear Helen·
We JUSt got a new car, and I'd like to tell the manufacturer

"Buzz off, Buster'"
Every time I don't fasten my seat belt, the darn car hisses at
me I go to the post office, jump back In lbe front seat to drive
half a block to the supermarket - "Fasten your seat belt," the
buzzer screams - and if I just pull the strap out without hooking
11 I feel guilty.
Then, 1 buy my groceries, load a heavy bag In the passenger
11de of the front seat- and the weight activates the bii;IUI' again.
So!endupseatbeltln8 ten pounds of potatoesandasacll of flour
- and that's ndiculous!
I know the manufacturers do this for our own protection, but
It's too much like "Big Brother" has arrived. Right• - BUZ.
ZING MAD
Dear Mad
!hiss atthatdam seat belt buzzer, too, but there may come a
dsywhen I'll begladitremlndedme. Right' -H.

+++

Dear Helen
My husband and I hadn't been getting along, I lost my bead
and had a very brief affall', Then we setUed our differences and
are now very happy You see, I discovered I was pregnant
But I'm terribly worried because I'd just about given up on
pregnancy - we'd been trying for seven years and no luck. I
don't know whether the baby IS my husband's or the other man's
(he means nothing to me now). What if our child's blood type Is
different, or he lookl! exactly like my former lover' What makes
11 worse IS that my hasband knows th.ls man quite well.
HI tell, our mamage will be in trouble again, and I just can't
stand that You can't believe how proud my man Ia that he's
lmally gomg to be a FATHER' -WORRIED AND CAN'T BEAR
TO HURT lfiM 1
Dear Worried
We1gh the pros and cons of confessiOn and you may discover
the heaviest load IS your own conscience (which someone
described as the still, small vo1ce that says, "You're gonna get
found out'")
On the other s1de of the scales Is your husband's pride, your
newly found happmess, a good life together, all of which could be
crushed (unless you've got an exceptionally understallling
spouse )
Why not at least walt until after the baby Is born' Maybe
your fears will be groundless - H.

DR. LAWRENCE
E. LAMB
Peptic Ulcers

~~:~~~~!~~£~irt~~~~~ Careful Expert Can Make Six
stomach ulcer. really mean
pept1c ulcers and the mo~t
common location for them 1s
JUSt
outstde thereg10n
stomach
m
the duodenal
wh1ch
1s really the lust part of the
small mtestme The ulcer
Jtsell 1s an erosion of the
hmng or the digesllve tract
which penetrates down to
the muscular layer
There are a lot of theones
on what causes ulcers but
the one necessary element
1s the ac1d digestive JUice
formed by the stomach In
general people who form
large amounts of stomach
ac1d are the ones most likely
to develop peptic ulcers
This ac1d digestiVe JUice can
d1sso!ve any of the body tis·
sues but the stomach 1s
covered by a mucus matenal
wh1ch helps protect Itself
from the ac1d d1gesllve JUice
The ac1d stomach contents
are neutralized by d1gestive
JUices formed by the small
mtestme When there Is too
much acid It's not al ys
wa
possible to neutralize II and
where 1t sq1nrts agamst the
duodenal wall during empty
mg Is a common location lor
the ulcer
What causes a person to
secrete more ac1d dtgestlve
JUice than others? One fach
t
t I
or, cer amy,
1s psyc 1c
stress Another IS what we
eat and drink, wh1ch meludes coffee The calfeme
10 coffee sllmulates acid
pepsm ju1ce formatiOn So
does alcohol The higher m
Cldence or ulcers m Cigarette
smokers IS probabl Y re Iat Cd
to 1ts effect m p1even1mg
the duodenum from produc·
mg enough alkaline JUices
to neutralue the ac 1d stomach contents when they first
enter the small mtestlne

WIN AT BRIDGE

. - - - - - -.....--:~
NOR11l
7
By Oswald 1c hmes Jacoby
• A K 82
In a match pomt duplicate
If 7 5
+9 6 4
game the chances are that
• A 8 76
there would be final contracts of six and seven
WEST
EAST
spades and six and seven no• Q 10 9 6
• v..d
trump In spite of the 5-4
1fJl09
•86432
de fit , no-..
•· urn p 1s a bet•
spa
3
1
5
t 82
t J 07
ter contract because with
•Q1053
•J94
any reasonable spade break
soum (D)
the hand wlll make either
• J 754 3
small slam while a grand
If A K Q
slam comes In against a
t AKQ
good spade break
.to K 2
Norlh-South vulnenble
In rubber bridge you would
Wesl North East South probably land at six spades
2 NT. and anyone but a careful exPass 3 •
Piss 3 •
pP.rt would be likely to wmd
Pass s •
Pass Pass
up one trick short.
PaM
A careful expert would see
Openmg lead-If J
that he could guard against
any and all bad trump
breaks by leading a spade
from Ids hand and playing
dummy's eight-spot If West
followed with the SIX.
He wouldn't expect this
The baste element or treatdeep sea finesse to Work In
ment Is to neutraliZe the acid fact he would know that he
d1gestive JUice This IS done would be giving away an unby takmg alkaliZers, many of n e c e 8 sa r y trump trick
which you can buy In the against aU 2·2 breaks or
supermarket or a drug store against a singleton ~ueen
w1thout a pr~scnptlon. Certam drugs help to block the held by East but he wou d be
nerve pathway that stimu- plcklhg up a lot of points
agaiQst the actual bad break
lates the stomach to produce
•
acid digestive JUices and can What If East won the trick
and gave hts partner a ruff?
also be very helpful 11 Is Caution would have turned
often necessary to change out to be most expensive but
the d~et to one lhat IS more the chance of that occur·
bland In nature and to P~ renee Is far far less than that
VIde sufficiently frequent of finding West with all the
leedmgs to neutralize any trumps
'
ac1d digestiVe iul~es formed
tNIWI~Am INTI.,RISI ASSN I
Many people can treat an
ulcer at home But there Is
real dan~er m this because
the md1v1dual may be treat·
mg the wrong thing The The bidding hu been
best approach IS to go to w..t Norlh Eul Soulh
a doctor and find out
Dblo
u
whether or not an ulcer ls P...
11f
Pus 2t
present and to follow the Pou
31f
' Pus
'
1eg1men which he prescribes You, Soulh, hold
for you
.AK54 lfAQ&amp;J +t ..KQI07
INEWSP-\PU: ENTER: Pit lSI ASSN)
What do you do now?
A~ust bid foar ha11tll. Your
St~ ,.., ....,,.., 10 Dr Luo•. Plltlner d-n'l bold 1 rood

L---------'

The primary symptom of
the pept1c ulcer IS pam ln
the upper abdomen most
commonly below the breastbone between the nbs and
the upoer abdomen The
pam can however, be dis
placed a bit to other reg•ons
m the upper abdomen The •••.,. o( ,... _,,..,..,, , 0 ...
pam IS often described as a 1551, •o4io Coty Sfoi&gt;Oo, Ntw Y01i,
burnmg gnawmg sensation 1&gt;1 y 10019 for a co,r o1 D&lt;
and characteJISllcally it ••
50
relieved by eating parllcu· koiltt .. boiiMtH 0'" 1• larh 1f one cats or drmks cHtl lo th J6Mt .u,.u DIU/ aM
lor . , . , _ lliot • '-!lot
alkahn~ frH1lls su~h a&lt; nulk

b.,..,

i

•

partans, upset

"! I'

BY PAUL CRABTREB

By Helen Bottel

Dear Helen :
I've wr1tten to makers of baby clothes to no avail So maybe
1f I get thiS m a nationally syndicated colwnn, someone will pay
attention
What I mean IS whyohwhy&lt;&gt;!'why do they make baby clothes
so blasted small' You buy a three-monthHize sleeper, and even
a premature infant would outgrow 11 In a few weeks. Tbe sixmonths SIZe just barely f1tted my eight-pound baby (alter one
washmg) So now I'm mto the one-year models and little Tad Is
only l1ve months old
Trouble IS people who give gifts don't realize the
discrepancy m markings, so mos~ llf Tad's bl!by presenta are
useless
•
J '
•
Would you please make thfS an open letter to makers of baby
clothes, pomtmg out that children are born bigger and grow
laster these dsys I think they're still "sizing" from
By Lawrence E Lamb MD. measurements they took 111 the 1800s -SIZE SIGHS.
De.-r Dr Lamb _ Could
you tell me the symptoms of DearS S
a stomach ulcer' Also what
Happy to oblige HHU and other newspaper columns helped
could cause one' Can 11 be bsnish the key from coffee cans Maybe we can re-rlgbt the sizes
taken care of at home w1th m baby clothes. - H
a restricted diet' Also what
~~ u 1 ~c~~~e'd•et mclude or

11

&amp; TH/1168

Helen Help

Us.

''l

..
..,.~.~0~::«;'"~·~·~·'*""0~=
~-~ ••••
""

Last time, we were noting that the National Lei&amp;ue Pined
domination over the American League in baseball bl',~
that hallthy competition mll8! be maintained If allll pop!ble,
and by putting fnncblses In the best TV marketa. TIJe AL let the
Yankees win alpwst every year, and settled for sec:ond-rate
expansion sites.
'
No one in Organized Baseball would ever admit It," but
there's a good chance much of this thinking was pLagiarized
the minds of Pete Rozelle of the Natlooal Football ~·· and
Lamar Hunt, guiding genius of the old American FootbaU
League. They recognized early on that TV markets were '!~

•

WAVERLY TIGERS (57)
PLAYER-Pes.
FG A FT·A PF RB TO TP
Bill Malay f,
3 16 o0 1 3 2 6
Daug Pfeifer, f,
02 0 1 1 2 t 0
MjkeOyer, I,
514 3 4 4 13 4 13
DaveSat~ers c
716 13 I 7 I 15
John Shoemaker, g
4 13 6 6 5 3 2 14
Laurnes Sieger, g
0 2 oo 0 o o 0
Ed Thompson g,
2 9 5 6 5 10 2 9
TOTALS
21 72 15 21 17 38 12 57
ALEXANDER SPARTANS 17?1
P.LAYER-Pos
FG A FT A PF RB TP
Rich White, c,
8 16
3 5 3 21
2 19
Greg Brooks, g,
7 15
2 3 3 7 3 16
Sieve Brown g,
7 12
2 3 5 3 4 16
R•ck
Dillinger,
f
4
8
1
Mark Enlow f.
00
0 04 12 3I o1 o9
Mark Ervin I
57
2 2 4 9 3 12
1
Jim Dlshona. a
04
o
o 2 I 1 0
TOTALS
13 62 10·17 20 45 14 72
Score By Quarlers
Alexander Spartans
14 20 18 20-72
Waverly T1gers
7 16 14 20-52

the moolah is.
,
l
11
Now the National League Is !l4lylng on sleek Alttotwfed new
stadia In a half-dozen cities, while the Alnericans are glad to see
dust blow up across their dirt lnfle)da, since II helps oblcure all

those empty seats
The tiJile has come to do sometbing.l cannot see IllY valoe in
cutting the NL down to size The job Is to build up the American
League again
Some hopeful beginnings have been made. I lblnlt tbey
should be encoUI'IIged
A magnificent new stadium Is operating in Kansaa City.
Major overhauling Is beln8 co,nsldered at Yankee Stadium,
where the downfall began Detroit, Baltimore, I!Geton and
Chicago have the itcl!, if not the scratch, lor relocation or
renovation
This Is good, becauae the simple fact Ia that fans will not
come out In hlgh-&lt;:rlme, ghetto-like SWTOundlngs where their
cars, possessions and persons are In mortal perU, just to see a
baseball game
A new domed stadium IS under way In New Orleans. It II sute
to attract a franchise It ought to be an American League franchise.
The clubs are elperimenting with reduced prices lri many
AL cities, to get the younger fans into the ball parks. The NL has
had various promotions of this sort for years. Imitation, sure, blit
what's wrong with copying success?
One organization, Kansas City, has an entirely different
approach to baseball - recognizing that today's sharper, af.
Ouent, less-llungry kids recognize the value of an education, and
other AL clubs should emulate the Royals' eumple, at least
tboae parts of It that work.
The new agreement between owners and players should belp
to put the two leagues on a more-equal footing - and the AL
would be insane not to admit that profits must be foregooe for the
nell few yem, if they are to attract talent equal to the NL, to
attract crowds equal to the NL, to make money equal to the NL in
the future.
Most of all, the AL Is recognizing that baseball must give up
the status quo In a football.a'llzy COW!try. Starting this season,
they give up the farce of letting the pitcher (who UBUa!JY bats
about 120) take a turn at the plate, and will let anyone who can
club the ball hit In hiS place, on a permanent basis.
,
The old-timers and purists are crying that It "desecrates"
the game and cheapeM It I say bleep Anything that nWtes
baseball more exatmg will draw more fans, and anything that
draws more fans will make baseball better, and anything thai
makes baseball better will help restore a rough equality between
the two leagues.
Which Is the sme quo non lor baseball's future We wish the
American League well, because it needs aU the well-wishers It
can find at this critical p\ili!t lri Its history

Local Bowling
PO~EROY LANES
Early Sunday MIXed
March 4, 1973
Won Lost
Team 3
48 32
Mark V
42
38
Farmers Bank
41
39
Tom's Carry Out
40
40
Eagles Club
36
44
Racine Food Markel 33 47
lnd High Game - Jr Phelps
201 Jr Phelps 193 Betty
Smtih 195 Betty Smith 195
High Series - Jr Phelps 585
Larry Dugan 511 Betty Sm1th
560, Helen Phelps 499
Team H1gh Game - Eagles
Club 692

Team High Senes -

Carry Out 1956

Tom's

Women's Thursday Afternoon

Pro Standings
NBA 5andmgs

By Umted Press lnternaftonal

Eastern Conference
AtlantiC OtVISIOn

W L Pet GB
Boston
56 13 812
New York
52 51 712 6
Buffalo
19 50 275 37
Philadelphia 9 62 127 48
Central DIVISIOn
W L Pet GB
Baltimore
44 24 647
Atlanta
40 30 571 s
Houston
27 42 391 17'1&gt;
Cleveland
24 45 348 20
Western Conference

M•dwest Otvrsron

Milwaukee
Ch•cago
Detr01t
KC Omaha

W L
50 22

Pel
694
45 25 643
32 38 457
33 40 451

GB
31;,
16'h
17

W L Pet GB
Won Lost Los Angeles 52 18 743
New York Clothing
46
18 Golden Stale 41 18 600 10
33 37 471 19
Pullins Excavalmg 42
22 PhoeniX
23 50 315 31'h
Pomeroy Lanes
34
30 Seattle
17 53 243 35
Simon's Markel
26 38 Portland
Tuesday's Results
Pomeroy Molors
24
40
Helen s Beauty Shop 20
44 Boston 127 Buffalo 112
New York 106 Seattle 94
High Team three Games New York Clothing 1772 Milwaukee 96 Ch1cago 102
Pullins Excavalmg 1629 PhoeniX 110 Cleveland 102
Los Angeles 114 Portland 102
Helen's Beauty Shop 1560
High Team Game - New Golden State 108 Detro1t 93
Only games scheduled
York Clothing 634 New York
Wednesday's Games
Clothing 585 Pullins Ex
New York at Philadelphia
cavallng 566
High lnd Senes - Orema Cleveland vs Houston at San
Sml!h 507 Lorraine Greene Antomo
Only games scheduled
.468 , Norma Amsbary and
Rache I Lelebre 446
High lnd Game - Eoleen
ABA Standmgs
Searls 189 Drema Smith 177,
By Un1ted Press International
Rachel Lefebre 175
East
W L Pet GB
Carolina
53 21 716
.... . , , • ':(f!otucky
I~ {'Slf.1
1,47 I ~6
VIrginia
36 35 507 151/,
OHIO COLLEGE
New York
27 45 375 25
BASKETBALL SCORES
Memphis
22 51 301 30'12
By Un1ted Press International
West
NCAA M•d-East Reg1onals
W L Pet GB
( F1rsl Round)
Utah
46 25
648
Steubenville 54 Hiram 51
lnd1ana
.42 JO 583 41!:2
Denver
39 32 549 7
Dallas
24 45 348 21
San Doego
23 49 319 23'h
Tuesday's Resulls
Kentucky 131 MemphiS 107

WEDNESDAY, MARCH7,1fl3
6 00- News, Weather, Sporfs 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq 6,
Sesame St 20. Around the Bend 33
6 30- NBC News 3, 4, News 8, 10. Sesame 51 20, Zoom 33, I
Dream o! Jeannie 13
'
7 00- Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4, News6: 10, Whafs
My Line 8, Anything You tan Do 13, Elec Co 20; Know Your
Schools 33, Saint 15
7 30- Episode Action 33, To Tell the Truth 6, The Judge 10,
Lassie 15, Beat the Clock 13, Pollee Surgeon 3, Hodgepodge
Lodge 20. Halflhe George Kirby Comedy Hour 8
8 00 - Paul Lynde 6, 13, Adam 12 15. Sonny &amp; Cher 8, 10,
America '73 20, 33
a 30- Bob Hope 3, 4, 15. Movie "The Six Million Dollar Man" 6,
13
9 00-Medlcal Center a, tO, Eve to Eye20, 33
9 30- Dr Jekyt t &amp; Mr Hyde 3, 4, 15, Turning Points 20, 33
10 00- Searchl, 4,15, Cannon8,10, Soul 33, Owen Marshall 6,
13. News 20

Vtrgrma 121 Dallas 104

RETREADS

Carolina 130 San Doego 99
Only games scheduled
Wednesday's Games
Kentucky at New York
Carot1na at Utah
Memphis at lnd1ana
Dallas at Denver
Only games scheduled

THURSDAY, MARCHI,lt73
6 oo - Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Hearl 10
6 15 - Farmllme 10, Farm Report 13
6 20 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8. America's
Problems 10, Patterns for Living
6 ol5- Corncob Report 3
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15
7 30- Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jeffers 8. Rocky &amp; Buttwlnkle
13.
10
8 00- Ca Kangaroo 10. New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame 51 l3;
Lassie
a 30- Jack LaLanne 13. Romper Room 8, New Zoo R'vue 6
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15, Ben Casey 13, Romper
Room 8; Peyton Place 13 C..pt Kangaroo 8, Concentration
6. Friendly Junction 10, AM 3
9 30-TaTettTheTrulh3, Hazete, Jeopard~6
10 00 - ~alhayog' 33, Dick Van Dyke 13, Dinah Shore 3, 15,
Columbus Six Catting 61 Joker's Wild e. 10
I
10 30- Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, Split Second 13,
Price Is Right 8, 10
II 00 -· Sale of Century 3, 4, 15, Lave of Life 8, 10. Bewitched a.
13, Sesame Sf 20
12 00- Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's .!0 .!0 Club 4, News 10, 13,
Jackie Oblinger 8. Password 6
12 30-3 W's Gamel, Search far TomorrowS, 10, Split Second6
1 00- ~ws 3, Att My Children 6, 13. trs Your Bets, Green
AcresiO, Not for Women Only 15, Secret Storm a
1 20 - Fashions In Sewing 3
:
1 30- Lets Milke A Deal6, 13, As the World Turnsi,'IO, Three •
on A Match 3, 4, 15
;
2 00- Day• of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13, Mike '
Dau~ttas 6, Guiding Light 8. 10
~
2 30 - Dac!Grs3, 4, 15, Oall~&gt;g Gamel3, Edge of Nlghl8, 10
1
3 00- Another World 3. 4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13, Love
Sptendored Thing 8, 10 Behind tile Lines 20
,
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, One Life Ia Live 6, 13, ~
Secret Storm tO.
,
4 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Love American Style 13, FtlntstontS 6, \
15, Gllltpan's Isle 8, Sesame 51 20, 33. Movia "Kansas :
Rai&lt;Wrs' 10
;
4 30- I Love Lucy 6, Daniel Boone 13, Petticoat Junction 3; •
Gilligan's Island 8, Dick Van Dyke IS
5 00- Daniel Boone 6, Mister Rogers 20, 33; Andy Griffith 15.
Bonanza 3, .tl , Hazel 8
5 30 - Marshall Oilton 15; Elec Co 33. Gamer Pyle 13, •
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Beverly Hlllbllltn 8
6 oo- News 3. 4, e:ro. 15, Trutll or Conseq. 13; Around the Bend •
33; Sesame St 20.
~
6 30- NBC Newu, 15, ABC News 8, 10, t Dream of Jeannie 13;
Designing Women 33
7 00 .- Truth or Conaeq. 3, Beat tho Clock 4, Course of Our ~
Times 33; Dick Vail Dyke 4, What's My1Lint 8, Big Rid
Jubilee 15, Newu, Elec Ca. 20 Ltl'a Make A Deal 13 .
1 30- Hollywo~ Sltl/arn 3; To Tell !lie Tru1h 6, Wild KingdOm
10, I'll See You In CourH; U.s&amp; lei. Zoom 20; Newtmaktr '72 1
13. Democracy's Trumpet: W Va Legislature 3&gt;3.
8 00- Avocates ~o. 33, Flip Wll&amp;on 3, 4, 15. Mod Squad 6, 13, 1•
1 \
Wattons 8, 10
'
'
I•
hair! IIIli ond II oldt .... 10 9,00- Kung Fu 6, 13, An American Femtty 20, 33; tronafdt 3. 41 w
15, Movies "Sab&lt;lna" 11 "The Marcus Netaon Murden" 10~
..ttle lor pmt.
to 00 - News 20, Streets of San Francisco 6, 13; Dean Mart!~ 3
TODAY'S QUISDON
4, 15, World Press 33
'
lnsteod o( bidding one heart 11 OO-Ntws3.4.6o8.13, 15
•·
your porlner hu bid lwo hurts' 11 30 - Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15, Jack Pear 6, 13
. •
an response to your double 12 00 - News 10
,
Whot do you do now'
1 00 - Railer Derby 4, ~ws 13
•'
2 00- News 4 •
.,J

Por

each
and
RETREADABLE
CASING

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
992-7161
Mtddleport, 0.

Champs dominate
All-League Team

The Southern Valley Athlehc
Conference All Sports Banquet
honormg players selected to
the all conference football and
basketball squads will be held
on Wednesday, March 28, at
RIO Grande College Honorees
will mclude 22 football players
and 15 basketball selections
Players receiving honorable
men lion m e1ther or both sports
may attend, but must purchase
their hckets
Each school was permitted
to brmg three coaches, a
pnnc1pal and local supermtendent Parents w1shmg to
attend must pay the lull pnce
lor the meal
H1ghhght of the banquet w1ll
be the presentation of the MVP
Awards sponsored JOIDtly by
Rad10 Station WJEH and the
Tlmes-Sentmel
N1ck I hie of Southern was the
SVAC's Most Valuable Back m
1972 and Orland Cremans of
Kyger Creek was the Most
Valuable Lmeman Robmson
will rece1ve the basketball
trophy
Anyone desmng tickets
should contact thmr local h1gh
school athletic director
The league heard a request
-;from Leo Watson of Hannan
H1gh School m Mason County,

Team

3 Assumpt1on ( 1 21 2}

HT YR
5 10
4
66
4
6 1
4
6 0
3
5 10
4
62

Bob Miller Southern

3
4
3

59

&lt;Third Team)

5 10
61
5 10

1

B

3

5

Norm Curfman Southern
Terry Bush Southwestern

'

6 I

3

B
63
58
5

Ron H1ll, Southern
Dan Miller. North Gall1a
HONORABlE MENTION

W Va who was seekmg entry
Into the league Alter a
d1scuss10n, the league s
athletic dll"ectors turned down
the request for admittance
In new busmess, the league
decided lo sponsor a "coach-ofthe-year" award begmnmg
next fall and an all league
sportsmanship trophy The
latter w111 be based upon team
athtude, coach attitude, school
spll"lt and crowd parhc1pahon
It w1ll be presented followmg
the football and basketball •
seasons The league also voted
to recommend to the seven
boards of educahon a hcket
mcrease from $1 to $1 25 for
adult tiCkets and a 25 cent
mcrease m student hckets
Student hckets are currently
sellmg at 50 cents each
Galha County school
supenntendents dec1ded to
drop the annual county touruamentand Chnstmas Hobday
Tournament
The county tournament was
dropped after 49 years last
wmter m favor of a Christmas
Hobday Tournament It was
the general feelmg that due to
the lack of mterest, loss of
mcome and the antagomsm
bred by the tournament among
the lour schools 1t should be
d1scon tinued
Each county team will now
be able to schedule two other
games

USED CARS
WEATHER

The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTEII L TANNEH'LL,

4
4

19 Lou1s1ana Tech ( 18 8)

20 UC Bakersfield (18 81

Exec Ed

COLDER•••

Publlsht~ ~ail't
ex:cept
SaturtJav by The Oh 1o Valle't
Publishing Company
111

Court St,

VALUES

'

KEITH
GOBLE FORD
'

• I

USED CAR LOT

3rd Ave:

Oh•o

2151

HOOTER!

'I

Pomeroy

.45769 8u1men Ofl•ce Phone
992 2156, Edilor1ail F'hone 992

Middleport

Second class postagt Dl ld al
Pomeroy, Oh10
National adverf1S1ng
rtprnentat1ve Bottlnelli
Geltavher, Inc 12 East 42hd
51 New York C1ty, New Vork
Subscr•pt•on ntes
be
l•vered by carr 1er where
ava1lable 50 cents per week
By Motor Route where carr1er
serv•ce not available On~
month S1 75 By mall 1n Oh10
and W VI One year ,,,. DO
Six months S7 25 Ttlree
months ,,. 50 SubscriptiOn
pnce Include-s Sunday timeS
Senhnel

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Hours;
SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY-S TIL 12
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY-S TIL 1

12

11

Hold a door open for a
woman, and she 'll stand m
11 and yak for 30 mmutes

Rib R/S FRONT
TIRE
$175:~16
• I op Qua in ~ f 1 nl m s
f O\\

Lo\\ Pm'

1

• Nc\\ Ruggr.d Rtm Shuld
prolt ct~ lm\1 r sidE wnll
4 Ply plu!
• !l!•J f1 \1ui~ c•nh r nb
CJ2C Fed
fm 'as ~ !1!11 r1n g
Ex Tu

WITH TIIADl

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

THURSDAY, MAR. 8
FEATURING

3

GOODYEAR

ROBERT HOEFLICH,
..
Clly l!!dttor

FROST FREE 15 CU. FT.
2 DOOR-152 LB. FREEZER
•S59.00

192

4 Ph1la Texlilel l 2321 184
5 Stephen F Austm 125 3) 183
125
6 Eau Cla.re 121 31
7 Roanoke (19 4)
122
B Kentucky St (23 4)
96
9 Bentl ey 123 21
67
10 Akron (10 41
37
11 Cap1lal 10 1120 4)
36
12 St Mary's ITex 1123 5) 28
12 Marymouni(Kao I 122 2127
14 UWGreenB ay( l 2331 24
IS UC Roversode (22 4)
16
16 Fa.rmonl Sl I19 4)
15
17 Alcorn A&amp;M 121 41
14
18 Old Domm1on I18 8)
13

GERONIMO SIGNS
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Pete
Southern , Lloyd Wood. Southwestern Ke1th Weddmgton North
Gall1a Bill Webb and Ri ck Corn Symmes Valley John Sheets Rose was the sole Cmcmnat1
Steve Doll Tim Spencer Ea stern and T J Robinson . Norlh Reds player not under contract
Gallo a
today alter the s1gmng of
outfielder Cesar Gerommo
' Monday
Colle~e Basketball Results
Cheyney 74 Lbnn Valley 56
Gerommo hit 275 and drove
By Un1led Press lnlernal•on•l Bndgeporl77 Stoneh1ll 74
m 29 runs last year, h1s f1rst
NAtA Tournamenl (1st Round! St Michael s 108 H!frd 97
season
w1th the Reds alter
Ouachita 69 Henderson 59
Qun•p•ac 69 Bryant 57
Valdosta St 88 W Ga 73
commg here from a multiLaGrange 87 Armstrng St 83
South
player trade w1th Houston
Grand Canyon 79 Wsfmnslr 64 Va Tech 76 W sf Va 53

.--

ON

The T1gers pulled down 38
rebounds With M1ke Oyer
gettmg 13 to lead h1s team 1n
that department
As the Tigers suddenly reach
the end of the trml w1th a 19-2
record Dave Salyers scored 15
pomts to lead h1s team while
John Shoemaker had 14, and
M1ke Oyer 13
Alexander, also •uth a 19-2
mark, was led by White with
19 points while Greg Br~ok s
and Steve Brown each added
16, and Mark Ervin 12
Tlie Spartans are now the
odds-on lavonte to wm the
dislrlct crown as they wa~t
unhl Saturday mght to meet
the wmner of tomght s contest
between Galhpohs and
Nelsonville-York

Pomts

Mark Swain and Don Wells Hannan Trace Joe St1 dham
Mark Darst and Lawrence Tabor Kyger Cr eek M1ke Nease

All Serv•ce Playoff
Army 91 A.r Force 83
Navy 89 Marines 87
East
L1 U 62 Seton Hall 59
Newark Sf 101 NE Bible 48

Waverly for the campa1gn
This reduced the lead to 61-57
w1th 2 12 remammg and
Alexander then scored the fmal
11 pomts of the contest wh1le
shuttmg out the heavilyfavored T1gers
The victory was no fluke as
the Spartans, well-poised
and well-coached, h1t on 31 of
62 shots for 50 pet and
converted 10 of 17 free
throws
They also worked the boards
well as they pulled down 45
rebounds w1th the 6-4 RICh
Wh1te snaggmg 21
Waverly d1d not have a good
game as the Tigers shot a
miserable 29 pet h1ttmg only 21
of 72 fielders and 15 of 21 free
throws

1 Sam Houston St 131 25 01
328
2 Augustana , Ill 121 11
259

1972-73 All-SVAC Team

Jene Myers, S~mmes Valley
Terry Carter, outhwestern

•

set March 28

College Ratings

( F1rsf Team!
PLAYER- School
Phil Robmson Symmes Valley
M1ke Caldwell Hannan Trace
Alan Duvall. Eastern

Th1s charge was led by guard
John Shoemaker who tallied 10
pomts before loulmg out With
5 22 remammg
Just 30 seconds earlier the
Spartans lost the1r little
quarterback when Steve
Brown ext ted v1a the personal
foul route
Followmg a lime out the
Spartans then choked off the
Waverly rally by hckmg off
five straight pomts for a 61 55
lead w1th 2 22 left
Just 10 seconds later Ed
Thompson's llp-m was the fmal
pomts to be reg1stered by

SVAC banquet

Symmes Valley , Hannan Robmson edged Caldwell three
Trace and Eastern, tr1-champs votes, 77-74 Robmson was the
of the Southern Valley Athletic only f1rst team holdover from
Conference dommated the 1972 while Caldwell moved up
1972-73 Ali.SVAC team selected from the second team The
Tuesday night m Gallipohs
other three were f1rst time
SVAC cage coaches voted honorees.
Phil Robmson, 5-10 semor for
The 15 man squad selected
the Symmes Valley VIkings the by the league's cage coaches,
league's Most Valuable Player mcludes e1ght semors , SIX
Robmson hmshed as the JUDlors and a sophomore
league's leadmg pomt maker
Members w1ll be honored at
w1th an average of 16 8 pomts a the All.SV AC banquet slated
game
l
March 28 at R10 Grande
''IQII\@I'!t"tiin'@J til i'ttle 1fir!it'" cbueg~ ' "
'
'
'
team were Mike Caldwell, 1M&gt;
Coaches casting ballots were
senior (r31\'i ~Hannan Trac~; Paul Dillon, HanDBn Trace ,
Alan Duvall, 6-1 semor from Wayne Wh1te, Symmes Valley ,
Eastern, John Lusher, 6-0 Bill Phillips, Eastern , Bob
NEW YORK IUPII - The
JuniOrlromHannan Trace, and Ord, Southern , J1m Foster,
Un1ted
Pres.s In ternationa l top
Jam1e Lafon, 5-10 semor from North Gallia, J1m Arledge, 20 college
d1v 1S10n basketball
Symmes Valley
Kyger Creek, and Richard teams w1th f1rst pla ce votes
and won lost records as of
IN Wmmng the MVP Award, Hamilton, Southwestern
Sunday 1n pa ~entheses
( Fmal Week)

(Second Team!
Dave Robinette, North Gall!a
Randy Bonng Eastern
Clay Hudson Kyger C•eek

TO HANDLE REDS
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Veteran network sportscaster
Charhe Jones will team up With
former Los Angeles Dodgers
first baseman Wes Parker th1s
season to handle telecasts of
the CmGinnatl Reds baseball
game
Avco Broadcastmg Corp
sa1d 35 regular season Reds'
games would be telecast over a
lf).statlon hookup that mcludes
Clncmnatl, Dayton, Colwnbus,
Lima and Zanesville, Oh10,
Lexington and LOUISVIlle, Ky ,
Indianapolis and Ft Wayne,
Ind ; and Huntmgton, W Va

cumulated personal louis that
now became very Important
The !mal peTJod was a sizzler
lor the l1rst SIX mmutes as the
Tigers fmally came to hie and
played hke the SEOAL fans
had seen them play all season
long
Following a goal by Greg
Brooks that ran the score to
56-43 with 6.22 left, the
Tigers then tallled 12
unanswered points as the
result of a zone press defense
which reduced Alexander's
lead to 56-55 with 3:10
remaining.

PIZZAS &amp; SUBS
•

PIZZAS-11-13-15
GIANT 24 x 27 (Pizzas Prices Start At 1.45)

GRAND OPENING PRIZES

Wns j :1 Salem 86 Catawba 74

l

-

Alexander's biggest f1rst half
lead was 13 pomts, at 34-21,
before Dave Salyers SWished
one at the buzzer to reduce the
hallhme lead to 34-23
The two powerhouses traded
goals throughout most of the
third period but AHS mcreased
the spread to 15 pomts, 42-27,
w1th 4 42 left m that canto
A late surge of long jwnp
shots and fast-break lay ups
mcreased AHS' lead to 16
po1nts 52-37, after three
periods Both teams had ac-

NCAA College D1~n I 1st Round! GA Tech 77 GA 67
M1d-Easf
Slbenvle 54 Hiram 51
West
South
Colo 71 Nebraska 63
Trnslvn1a 72 Albany Sf 71 (of)
West
UC RoverSide 70 Sonoma St 68

1

i

Greg Brooks four as the Athens
county qwntet took a 14-7 l1rst
period lead
In that first period
Alexander connected on
seven of 15 shots from the
floor while Waverly could
get but three of 11.
The second penod was even
hotter for the Spartans as they
sw1shed e1ght of 10 fielders
while the Tigers meshed JUSt
seven of 23
Little Steve Brown, a 5-8
semor guard, canned e1ght
pomls lor the Spartans 10 thiS
stanza wh1le Waverly finally
got some help from Bill Maloy,
Mike Oyer, Ed Thompson, 'and
John Shoemaker. all or whom
had been shut out m the l1rst
penod

John Lusher Hannan Trace
Jamte Lafon Symmes Valley

2 FOR $}990

11 OO-News3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15
1
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Jack Paar 6;13; Movies "Night
Chose" 8, "The Bedford Incident" 10

Before a standmg room only
crowd of over 2,500 fans at R10
Grande's Lyne Center Tuesday
mght the Alexander Spartans
ousted Waverly from the Class
AA Dtstrlct Tournament by a
convmc1ng 72-57 score
Coach Doug Laltimer's
Spartans came out shooting
and tunnlng from the
opening whistle, roared out
to an 8-0 lead, and didn't shut
down untO they had convlnced many mumbling
spectators that they were
some kind of a basketball
team.
Coach Carroll Hawhee's
SEOAL champion T1gers
entered the contest rated the
nwnber one Class AA team In
the state WHS was also the
delendmg distnct champs
None of th1s seemed to Impress the state's fifth ranked
Spartans as they completely
dommated the contest except
lor a br1el span m the fourth
perwd when the Tigers
reduced a 54-37 def1c11 to 56-55
With 3 10 remammg m the
contest
Paced by 6-4 semor R1ch
White, the Spartans r1pped to
an 8-0 lead before Dale Salyers'
goal made 1111-2 w1th 5 00 left m
the l1rst penod
Wh1te tal11ed SIX pmnts and

Pactftc DIVISIOn

March 1, 1973

Television Log

'·

s!Om•'•'•'• •?• ••••,,. ..• ••'•n:W:'"•'o!•:•
..... • • • • •..£..•.-;.o}),.'-.•o
..... '"' v.,...........;.o:AQ;II»;/1 • : ~
?:Z ::w%% V!

•'••'•'•'• •

Waverly-Alexander box

tram

... 1\

• •

avery

Flrst-4' Portable Home Bar See 11m our wmdow.
Second- 10 Large Smgle Item PIZZas .
Thwd- W1ld Man's Dream G1ant Pma \VIth Everything .
Approx IS lbs.
Fourth- S Sub Sandwiches
Reg1ster free when you v•s•t us No purchase necessary.
Wtnners names Will be posted. All pmes wtll be awarded
March 15. ..:...

LOOKI LOOKI MAR. 8-15
Grand Openmg Feature 10 percent of our sales wtll go to
lhe Pomeroy F1re Dept . Emergency Squad

LUIGI'S

$19~0•16

116 E. MAIN
J

POMEROY

4 Ply plu 99¢

red Ex T;n
WIJN TIADE

Just Below
The

Meigs Inn
'

Seating
For 20

Ph. 992-3984

�'
3- The Datlv Sentinel, M•ddle!lOrt-Pomeroy, 0 , March 7, 1973

2- The Dally Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7, 1973

BRUCE BIOSSAT

EDITORIAL

Moo Sends Us His
Acupu11cture Best

Nixon Pooh-Poohf.
Congress on Cuts
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON (NEAl
The ragmg debate here over money and power has al
ready become so chaotic that there 1s little chance 11 w1ll
be widely understood m 1ts complex1ty and refmed detail
That works to President Nixon's advantage, and he
knows It
The reason for that is, of course, plam enough The b1g
reabty, recogmzed by public officials m both parties, 1s
the widespread anh·tax anh-spend mood m the nahon
It translates mto heavy support for Mr N1xon m h1s
slashing assault on some soc1al programs and h1s proposed 1mpositlon of a federal budget ce1llng
• The h ouble 1s, the President 1s so confident or th1s
suppo1 t that the attack on spendmg, !he reduction or
ebminahon Of programs, IS bemg C&amp;flled forward With
overtones of contempt lor oppoSition
There s noth1ng new m the 1dea of 'A clash between
p1es1dent and Congress Such warla1e IS histone Examples la1 back m the 19th century are easy to lmd One
president was told by a leadmg lawmaker
"Mr President, the leaders m Congress tell me Hell
wlll 11 eeze over before they do what you want about that
bill ..
1 1'he p1es1dent Jesponded
' S1r tell my lnends up the1e that Hell will freeze over

.•

to mot row

n

That sounds leHsonably tough, yet I get the 1mpress10n
thmgs are worse today than ever before, and that un
varmshed contempt has much to do With 11
P1 es1dent N1xon IS known to believe that, whatever he
may say to the present congressiOnal leaders on the•r
VISits to h1m they have become largely mellectual, d1s
01 gamzed outdated m theu workmg methods
One ITJend who thmks he understands well the temper
of the White House establishment, and how the Pres•
dent's aides carry out the1r dut~es , says s1mply
· They take their cue from h1m In this case, that means
'congressiOnal lla1son' ha; dwindled to almost nothmg"
From Dw1ght Eisenhower's days through the Johnson
reg1me, ha1son w1th Capitol H11l had been built to maJor
proportions Lawmakers were courted, placated, some·
limes appeased, always g1ven the feehng that they and
thmr v1ews and the1r problems were taken mto account
Desp1te occasiOnal, well-advertised meetings w1th H1ll
leaders by Henry K1ssmger, top domestic a1de John
Ehrhchman and others, knowledgeable sources ms1st the
Ntxon team as a generahty regards courtship efforts as
unnecessary as a nearly total waste of time
The President's new budget message shows how the
real cue can be g1ven It vo1ces hopes lor cooperatiOn
and accommodatiOn w1th Congress m holdmg down spend
lng But the key att•tude IS expressed b,Y Mr N1xon, w1th
the words deliberately set m italics, m h1s declaration
that there JS · no room lor the postponement of the reductiOns and termmatlons proposed m this budget "
That's th e tone of a man who thinks he not only has
the upper hand but can keep 11, that Congres~ or any
pther adversary can't do anythmg to reverse h•s m
tended course
The nation's govern OJ s, m town at February's close,
felt some or the same The1r sense of powerlessness
agamst Washington 1s not new
Everyone, too, expected them to complam as they d1d
about ab1 upt p1 og ram culs and confusiOn over reven~e
lharmg and 1ts real meamng for theu f1scal future But
What came through from many was the1r nolion that the
Wh1te House IS treatmg them hke dirt, that mter·gov
ernmental relatiOns ' are a farce that co ntempt 101 nval
l11ews IS the 01 de1 of the day
•,
I&gt;
The Almanac
By United Press International
Tnday IS Wednesday, March
'1, the GOth day olt1973 w1th 299
to follow
The moon IS between 1ts new
phase and l1rst quarter
The mornmg stars are Venus,
Mars and Jupiter
The evemng stars are Mer-

~-

.'

,;o'n::Xl·:·c
·

-~

,. 4

cury and Saturn
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Pisces
Noted American botamst
Luther Burbank was born
March 7, 1849
on this day 111 history
In 1932, In the depths of the
depressiOn, an estimated 3 000
men rioted in demandmg jobs

The recent · discovery" of Chma by Amenca has
progressed rapidly 11om Pmg Pong to a presidential
peek m 1n Pekmg to acupuncture and now, m the latest
d1plomat•c development, the announcement br that pe11
patetlc peace pursuer Dr Henry A K1ssmger , that
ha1son ofl1ces w1ll be estabhshed m the capitals of both
countnes
Such olhces w11l ran JUSt th1s s1de of official 1ecogm
bon of each government by the other
In April, Anchor Press will pubhsh "The People's Com1c
Book," seven stoTJes m com1c book form popular In Chma
With translated caphons, the cartoons Will be exact
reproductions or Chmese comiCS
In the people-to people sphere, Chma 1s now sendmg
over 10,000 acupuncture teachmg kits as contr1but10ns
to the med•cal and health protecllon of the Amencan
people, so as to enhance the lr1endsh1p between the
Chmese and Amencan people "
The k1ts, wh•ch are bemg marketed by Sobm Chern
1cals, Inc , of Boston feature a 22-Jnch h•gh plasllc human
l1gure showmg the 361 acupuncture 'pomts used by Ch1
nese physiCians for anesthesia and therapy and will be
offered lor sale to U S phys1c1ans, dent1sts, hospitals and
accredited researchers mterested m th1s anc1ent Chmese
art
The kit mc1dentally, 1s endorsed by both the Shanghai
Research Institute of TradJ!Jonal Chmese Med1eme and
the Nankmg College of Traditional Chmese Med1cme
The accent on the traditional aspects of one of lhe llrst
Chmese products to be Imported mto lh1s country m the
current era of good leehng suggests that the new Chma
1s not all that different from the old A 4,000-year·old
CIVIhzahon does not change drashcally m one generation
The As1a InformatiOn Oll1ce located m Hong Kong
has m fact made an mteresllng list of compansons be·
tween the 'then ' and the "now" of Chma
Then The government lunchoned by recru1tmg men of
talent and ab1hty
...,
Now A political el1te IS runnmg the modern Chmese
show
Then A strong secular fa1th m Confuc1amsm worked
1ts way mto every corner or Chmese thmkmg and In·
slltut10nal hfe
Now Mao Tse tung's 'thoughts" ar,e the all powerful ,
all pervadmg secular fa1th or modern Chma
Then A frowmng on heterodoxy and Improper conduct
Now A demand lor an orthodox Marx1st hlestyle and
constant guardmg agamst backshdmg and "revJSIODism '
Then Law was the tool to regulate soc1ety and the
state, stress was on soc1al order not md•v•dual nghts
Now D1tto
I hen The ruler was expected to be both hero and
Wiseman

Now Mao the scourge of the lore1gn 1mpenahsts, 1s
'Our Teacher ' H1s Wisdom IS boundless '
1 hen Never any comfortable place !01 a loyal oppos1
t10n
Now Ask Lm P1ao and LIU Shao·chl about th1s one
In some fundamental ways, however the new order m
Chma IS radically different from the old
For mstance, ConfuciUs stressed harmony, between
men and between man and nature Mao's lavonte noun
IS 'struggle "
fortunately 101 the world as Chma begms to eme1 ge
mto 11 struggle does not necessanly 1mply a1 med conflict
at the Detroit plant of the Ford
Motor Company Four men
were killed
In 1936, Adolf H1tler ordered
his Nazi troops mto the
Rhmeland, Vlolatmg the Versallies Treaty
In 1945, the US lsi Army
crossed the Rhme River at
Remagen, Germany as World
War II m Europe moved mto its
closmg weeks Tots! Allied
v1ctory (V-E Day) came May 8

e ,., ,,w~.'$*-'&gt;M@.=:·.·~&gt;h··-~~»;,·,~~ .,~ *'' ·&gt;·:1
along Br'Way
&gt;Y

!::
'

•

•

'

BY JACK O'BRIAN
DISCUSSING TilE MUCK
WITH MEYER
- ~ NEW YORK (KFS) Gangland's
•
Secretary of the Treasury Meyer Lansky once
eame In the old all.n1ght Reuben's Restaurant
lor 6 a .m breakfast and asked If he might join
Walter Winchell and yours nosdy Of course,
\\'alter started dlscussmg the old tale of his
handing over Lows "Lepke' Buchalter, star of
Murder Inc , to John Edgar Hoover, and other
Winchell exploits such as printmg that mad dog
kWer Vincent Coll would be knocked off imlnecllately - and was, half an hour after
Wilter.'s column m the Mirror h1t the newsltands Walter said he was summoned by theN
\' D.A to explain where he's got the Up and
lold him it was just a postcard "over the
transom "He fibbed Texas Guman had lipped
111m off the night before.
You mean you lied, we asked WW' Yep, he
laid over a plate of bacon and eggs I turned to
t.n.ky and asked, "What's the statute of
J!initallanl on perjury'" Meyer dldn 't even look
11p from hie oatmeal "In this state, three

)'ian.,.

He IIMw!
The gangland literary revival (Godfather,
Valachi Papers, etc ) caused a re-Issue of the
late Sid Feder's and ex-Brooklyn ass't D A
Burto11 Turkus' book on "Murder Inc " Which
tomehow managed to skip any mention of one of
lllc absolutely-named to!&gt;'luartet of underworld
~- of the N. Y garment district, one Benny
Levine . Its absence from the book never was
txplained - lor Benny was a specificallY,
llamed culprit in aU front-paged news stories of
tete ldU.for-eash mob.
Steve Allen in his ambitious mnocence once
thought he'd try to all' a "courageous" expose of
theN. Y garment center crune mlestation on
Ills old Tonight Show - but succumbed to all
llllnner or persuasive muscle urg111g him to
lllake no mention of Benny Levine
Allen had a beer sponsor hlsf1rst NBC-TV 15
I!Unutea. Old Prohibition characters then
jillddllng beer pulled strings at NBC. Milton
llrle'a late manager, Irvmg Gray, COIIXed
Allen. Othera Interceded - and Steve managed
toalrthe show he'd planned as a "courageous"
ik[IOse - without once using Beony's totally
li.el-proof Identity We were astounded After
telecast we phoned Allen and asked how
the absence of Benny, yclept for the show
1 myst,riOUS "Mr X." Stc\C
detailed all the pressure on him by
characters etc. and h.ls

eventual bowing to the pressure We called IrvIng Gray to ask how come he'd mterceded lor
Benny Came a long explanation that he'd
known him socially, heard about his long
crmunal history, but "He'd always been a great
host to me"
So we wrote 11 all for the front page of the
late and lamented N Y Journal-American, and
next day Allen and Gray were astounded to
think we'd print anything embarrassmg like
that Small punchlme alter years of praising,
deservedly, Steve Allen's Tonight Show
superiority-he was the best to come along as of
then m the chattercast business -suddenly our
cordial enough acquaintanceship chtlled
Eventually Allen wrote a piece for a minor
publication - sort of an off-journalism weekly
- aCCUSIJI8 US of being "maliCIOUS, VICIOUS and
un-Chnstian ;,
We loved his every VICIOUS line· George Jean
Nathan told us some 30 years ago when wo. fll'St
became aN Y drama cntic that, "Now you're
111 the busmess of throwing bricks Be ready to
get hit by a lew yourself "
• The late Wilson Mizner dramatist, used to
say, "Never get t1ch 111 the limelight " He
meant for his own conman-club or any crurunal
to seek public recogmtlon was the begmmng of
the end We've seen 11 countless times The late
Frank Costello who died in bed or, unexpectedly, natural causes got rich and then
sought the limelight A psycl!latrlst told h1m to
get out and lRlX socially That meant to Costello
to stage a char1ty event at a N Y nightclub,
Invite all hiS pals among gangsters and
pohliclans,lf that'snota redundancy, and there
they all were, pay1ng public obeisance to Uncle
Frank Among those consp~cuously present
were several newsmen who prmted the story
Not long after, Costello left a brown paper
bag lull of $22,000 In a taXI It was turned In,
oddly, and he sought advice from pals who
counseled to forget it -duck the limelight and
JUSt be a b1g tipper Irately, unusual lor Costello
who prl!ached moderation in all things except
discreet bribery and careful murder, he Insisted
on cla1mmg tbe cash. He did - and the Feds
stepped 10 to make him prove where he got It
More llmelit heat.
An ex-newsman on the MafJa gamblingsubsidiary paY,Toll convmced h1m a "friendly"
newspaper mterVIew was being sought and
would help; It didn't More negative hmelight.
Costello got arrogant during the Kefauver TV
uproar He lostagam AU he proved was he had
malllrurffi ne~ls

••

Big Brother Gives Yoa a' Baiz
Dear Helen·
We JUSt got a new car, and I'd like to tell the manufacturer

"Buzz off, Buster'"
Every time I don't fasten my seat belt, the darn car hisses at
me I go to the post office, jump back In lbe front seat to drive
half a block to the supermarket - "Fasten your seat belt," the
buzzer screams - and if I just pull the strap out without hooking
11 I feel guilty.
Then, 1 buy my groceries, load a heavy bag In the passenger
11de of the front seat- and the weight activates the bii;IUI' again.
So!endupseatbeltln8 ten pounds of potatoesandasacll of flour
- and that's ndiculous!
I know the manufacturers do this for our own protection, but
It's too much like "Big Brother" has arrived. Right• - BUZ.
ZING MAD
Dear Mad
!hiss atthatdam seat belt buzzer, too, but there may come a
dsywhen I'll begladitremlndedme. Right' -H.

+++

Dear Helen
My husband and I hadn't been getting along, I lost my bead
and had a very brief affall', Then we setUed our differences and
are now very happy You see, I discovered I was pregnant
But I'm terribly worried because I'd just about given up on
pregnancy - we'd been trying for seven years and no luck. I
don't know whether the baby IS my husband's or the other man's
(he means nothing to me now). What if our child's blood type Is
different, or he lookl! exactly like my former lover' What makes
11 worse IS that my hasband knows th.ls man quite well.
HI tell, our mamage will be in trouble again, and I just can't
stand that You can't believe how proud my man Ia that he's
lmally gomg to be a FATHER' -WORRIED AND CAN'T BEAR
TO HURT lfiM 1
Dear Worried
We1gh the pros and cons of confessiOn and you may discover
the heaviest load IS your own conscience (which someone
described as the still, small vo1ce that says, "You're gonna get
found out'")
On the other s1de of the scales Is your husband's pride, your
newly found happmess, a good life together, all of which could be
crushed (unless you've got an exceptionally understallling
spouse )
Why not at least walt until after the baby Is born' Maybe
your fears will be groundless - H.

DR. LAWRENCE
E. LAMB
Peptic Ulcers

~~:~~~~!~~£~irt~~~~~ Careful Expert Can Make Six
stomach ulcer. really mean
pept1c ulcers and the mo~t
common location for them 1s
JUSt
outstde thereg10n
stomach
m
the duodenal
wh1ch
1s really the lust part of the
small mtestme The ulcer
Jtsell 1s an erosion of the
hmng or the digesllve tract
which penetrates down to
the muscular layer
There are a lot of theones
on what causes ulcers but
the one necessary element
1s the ac1d digestive JUice
formed by the stomach In
general people who form
large amounts of stomach
ac1d are the ones most likely
to develop peptic ulcers
This ac1d digestiVe JUice can
d1sso!ve any of the body tis·
sues but the stomach 1s
covered by a mucus matenal
wh1ch helps protect Itself
from the ac1d d1gesllve JUice
The ac1d stomach contents
are neutralized by d1gestive
JUices formed by the small
mtestme When there Is too
much acid It's not al ys
wa
possible to neutralize II and
where 1t sq1nrts agamst the
duodenal wall during empty
mg Is a common location lor
the ulcer
What causes a person to
secrete more ac1d dtgestlve
JUice than others? One fach
t
t I
or, cer amy,
1s psyc 1c
stress Another IS what we
eat and drink, wh1ch meludes coffee The calfeme
10 coffee sllmulates acid
pepsm ju1ce formatiOn So
does alcohol The higher m
Cldence or ulcers m Cigarette
smokers IS probabl Y re Iat Cd
to 1ts effect m p1even1mg
the duodenum from produc·
mg enough alkaline JUices
to neutralue the ac 1d stomach contents when they first
enter the small mtestlne

WIN AT BRIDGE

. - - - - - -.....--:~
NOR11l
7
By Oswald 1c hmes Jacoby
• A K 82
In a match pomt duplicate
If 7 5
+9 6 4
game the chances are that
• A 8 76
there would be final contracts of six and seven
WEST
EAST
spades and six and seven no• Q 10 9 6
• v..d
trump In spite of the 5-4
1fJl09
•86432
de fit , no-..
•· urn p 1s a bet•
spa
3
1
5
t 82
t J 07
ter contract because with
•Q1053
•J94
any reasonable spade break
soum (D)
the hand wlll make either
• J 754 3
small slam while a grand
If A K Q
slam comes In against a
t AKQ
good spade break
.to K 2
Norlh-South vulnenble
In rubber bridge you would
Wesl North East South probably land at six spades
2 NT. and anyone but a careful exPass 3 •
Piss 3 •
pP.rt would be likely to wmd
Pass s •
Pass Pass
up one trick short.
PaM
A careful expert would see
Openmg lead-If J
that he could guard against
any and all bad trump
breaks by leading a spade
from Ids hand and playing
dummy's eight-spot If West
followed with the SIX.
He wouldn't expect this
The baste element or treatdeep sea finesse to Work In
ment Is to neutraliZe the acid fact he would know that he
d1gestive JUice This IS done would be giving away an unby takmg alkaliZers, many of n e c e 8 sa r y trump trick
which you can buy In the against aU 2·2 breaks or
supermarket or a drug store against a singleton ~ueen
w1thout a pr~scnptlon. Certam drugs help to block the held by East but he wou d be
nerve pathway that stimu- plcklhg up a lot of points
agaiQst the actual bad break
lates the stomach to produce
•
acid digestive JUices and can What If East won the trick
and gave hts partner a ruff?
also be very helpful 11 Is Caution would have turned
often necessary to change out to be most expensive but
the d~et to one lhat IS more the chance of that occur·
bland In nature and to P~ renee Is far far less than that
VIde sufficiently frequent of finding West with all the
leedmgs to neutralize any trumps
'
ac1d digestiVe iul~es formed
tNIWI~Am INTI.,RISI ASSN I
Many people can treat an
ulcer at home But there Is
real dan~er m this because
the md1v1dual may be treat·
mg the wrong thing The The bidding hu been
best approach IS to go to w..t Norlh Eul Soulh
a doctor and find out
Dblo
u
whether or not an ulcer ls P...
11f
Pus 2t
present and to follow the Pou
31f
' Pus
'
1eg1men which he prescribes You, Soulh, hold
for you
.AK54 lfAQ&amp;J +t ..KQI07
INEWSP-\PU: ENTER: Pit lSI ASSN)
What do you do now?
A~ust bid foar ha11tll. Your
St~ ,.., ....,,.., 10 Dr Luo•. Plltlner d-n'l bold 1 rood

L---------'

The primary symptom of
the pept1c ulcer IS pam ln
the upper abdomen most
commonly below the breastbone between the nbs and
the upoer abdomen The
pam can however, be dis
placed a bit to other reg•ons
m the upper abdomen The •••.,. o( ,... _,,..,..,, , 0 ...
pam IS often described as a 1551, •o4io Coty Sfoi&gt;Oo, Ntw Y01i,
burnmg gnawmg sensation 1&gt;1 y 10019 for a co,r o1 D&lt;
and characteJISllcally it ••
50
relieved by eating parllcu· koiltt .. boiiMtH 0'" 1• larh 1f one cats or drmks cHtl lo th J6Mt .u,.u DIU/ aM
lor . , . , _ lliot • '-!lot
alkahn~ frH1lls su~h a&lt; nulk

b.,..,

i

•

partans, upset

"! I'

BY PAUL CRABTREB

By Helen Bottel

Dear Helen :
I've wr1tten to makers of baby clothes to no avail So maybe
1f I get thiS m a nationally syndicated colwnn, someone will pay
attention
What I mean IS whyohwhy&lt;&gt;!'why do they make baby clothes
so blasted small' You buy a three-monthHize sleeper, and even
a premature infant would outgrow 11 In a few weeks. Tbe sixmonths SIZe just barely f1tted my eight-pound baby (alter one
washmg) So now I'm mto the one-year models and little Tad Is
only l1ve months old
Trouble IS people who give gifts don't realize the
discrepancy m markings, so mos~ llf Tad's bl!by presenta are
useless
•
J '
•
Would you please make thfS an open letter to makers of baby
clothes, pomtmg out that children are born bigger and grow
laster these dsys I think they're still "sizing" from
By Lawrence E Lamb MD. measurements they took 111 the 1800s -SIZE SIGHS.
De.-r Dr Lamb _ Could
you tell me the symptoms of DearS S
a stomach ulcer' Also what
Happy to oblige HHU and other newspaper columns helped
could cause one' Can 11 be bsnish the key from coffee cans Maybe we can re-rlgbt the sizes
taken care of at home w1th m baby clothes. - H
a restricted diet' Also what
~~ u 1 ~c~~~e'd•et mclude or

11

&amp; TH/1168

Helen Help

Us.

''l

..
..,.~.~0~::«;'"~·~·~·'*""0~=
~-~ ••••
""

Last time, we were noting that the National Lei&amp;ue Pined
domination over the American League in baseball bl',~
that hallthy competition mll8! be maintained If allll pop!ble,
and by putting fnncblses In the best TV marketa. TIJe AL let the
Yankees win alpwst every year, and settled for sec:ond-rate
expansion sites.
'
No one in Organized Baseball would ever admit It," but
there's a good chance much of this thinking was pLagiarized
the minds of Pete Rozelle of the Natlooal Football ~·· and
Lamar Hunt, guiding genius of the old American FootbaU
League. They recognized early on that TV markets were '!~

•

WAVERLY TIGERS (57)
PLAYER-Pes.
FG A FT·A PF RB TO TP
Bill Malay f,
3 16 o0 1 3 2 6
Daug Pfeifer, f,
02 0 1 1 2 t 0
MjkeOyer, I,
514 3 4 4 13 4 13
DaveSat~ers c
716 13 I 7 I 15
John Shoemaker, g
4 13 6 6 5 3 2 14
Laurnes Sieger, g
0 2 oo 0 o o 0
Ed Thompson g,
2 9 5 6 5 10 2 9
TOTALS
21 72 15 21 17 38 12 57
ALEXANDER SPARTANS 17?1
P.LAYER-Pos
FG A FT A PF RB TP
Rich White, c,
8 16
3 5 3 21
2 19
Greg Brooks, g,
7 15
2 3 3 7 3 16
Sieve Brown g,
7 12
2 3 5 3 4 16
R•ck
Dillinger,
f
4
8
1
Mark Enlow f.
00
0 04 12 3I o1 o9
Mark Ervin I
57
2 2 4 9 3 12
1
Jim Dlshona. a
04
o
o 2 I 1 0
TOTALS
13 62 10·17 20 45 14 72
Score By Quarlers
Alexander Spartans
14 20 18 20-72
Waverly T1gers
7 16 14 20-52

the moolah is.
,
l
11
Now the National League Is !l4lylng on sleek Alttotwfed new
stadia In a half-dozen cities, while the Alnericans are glad to see
dust blow up across their dirt lnfle)da, since II helps oblcure all

those empty seats
The tiJile has come to do sometbing.l cannot see IllY valoe in
cutting the NL down to size The job Is to build up the American
League again
Some hopeful beginnings have been made. I lblnlt tbey
should be encoUI'IIged
A magnificent new stadium Is operating in Kansaa City.
Major overhauling Is beln8 co,nsldered at Yankee Stadium,
where the downfall began Detroit, Baltimore, I!Geton and
Chicago have the itcl!, if not the scratch, lor relocation or
renovation
This Is good, becauae the simple fact Ia that fans will not
come out In hlgh-&lt;:rlme, ghetto-like SWTOundlngs where their
cars, possessions and persons are In mortal perU, just to see a
baseball game
A new domed stadium IS under way In New Orleans. It II sute
to attract a franchise It ought to be an American League franchise.
The clubs are elperimenting with reduced prices lri many
AL cities, to get the younger fans into the ball parks. The NL has
had various promotions of this sort for years. Imitation, sure, blit
what's wrong with copying success?
One organization, Kansas City, has an entirely different
approach to baseball - recognizing that today's sharper, af.
Ouent, less-llungry kids recognize the value of an education, and
other AL clubs should emulate the Royals' eumple, at least
tboae parts of It that work.
The new agreement between owners and players should belp
to put the two leagues on a more-equal footing - and the AL
would be insane not to admit that profits must be foregooe for the
nell few yem, if they are to attract talent equal to the NL, to
attract crowds equal to the NL, to make money equal to the NL in
the future.
Most of all, the AL Is recognizing that baseball must give up
the status quo In a football.a'llzy COW!try. Starting this season,
they give up the farce of letting the pitcher (who UBUa!JY bats
about 120) take a turn at the plate, and will let anyone who can
club the ball hit In hiS place, on a permanent basis.
,
The old-timers and purists are crying that It "desecrates"
the game and cheapeM It I say bleep Anything that nWtes
baseball more exatmg will draw more fans, and anything that
draws more fans will make baseball better, and anything thai
makes baseball better will help restore a rough equality between
the two leagues.
Which Is the sme quo non lor baseball's future We wish the
American League well, because it needs aU the well-wishers It
can find at this critical p\ili!t lri Its history

Local Bowling
PO~EROY LANES
Early Sunday MIXed
March 4, 1973
Won Lost
Team 3
48 32
Mark V
42
38
Farmers Bank
41
39
Tom's Carry Out
40
40
Eagles Club
36
44
Racine Food Markel 33 47
lnd High Game - Jr Phelps
201 Jr Phelps 193 Betty
Smtih 195 Betty Smith 195
High Series - Jr Phelps 585
Larry Dugan 511 Betty Sm1th
560, Helen Phelps 499
Team H1gh Game - Eagles
Club 692

Team High Senes -

Carry Out 1956

Tom's

Women's Thursday Afternoon

Pro Standings
NBA 5andmgs

By Umted Press lnternaftonal

Eastern Conference
AtlantiC OtVISIOn

W L Pet GB
Boston
56 13 812
New York
52 51 712 6
Buffalo
19 50 275 37
Philadelphia 9 62 127 48
Central DIVISIOn
W L Pet GB
Baltimore
44 24 647
Atlanta
40 30 571 s
Houston
27 42 391 17'1&gt;
Cleveland
24 45 348 20
Western Conference

M•dwest Otvrsron

Milwaukee
Ch•cago
Detr01t
KC Omaha

W L
50 22

Pel
694
45 25 643
32 38 457
33 40 451

GB
31;,
16'h
17

W L Pet GB
Won Lost Los Angeles 52 18 743
New York Clothing
46
18 Golden Stale 41 18 600 10
33 37 471 19
Pullins Excavalmg 42
22 PhoeniX
23 50 315 31'h
Pomeroy Lanes
34
30 Seattle
17 53 243 35
Simon's Markel
26 38 Portland
Tuesday's Results
Pomeroy Molors
24
40
Helen s Beauty Shop 20
44 Boston 127 Buffalo 112
New York 106 Seattle 94
High Team three Games New York Clothing 1772 Milwaukee 96 Ch1cago 102
Pullins Excavalmg 1629 PhoeniX 110 Cleveland 102
Los Angeles 114 Portland 102
Helen's Beauty Shop 1560
High Team Game - New Golden State 108 Detro1t 93
Only games scheduled
York Clothing 634 New York
Wednesday's Games
Clothing 585 Pullins Ex
New York at Philadelphia
cavallng 566
High lnd Senes - Orema Cleveland vs Houston at San
Sml!h 507 Lorraine Greene Antomo
Only games scheduled
.468 , Norma Amsbary and
Rache I Lelebre 446
High lnd Game - Eoleen
ABA Standmgs
Searls 189 Drema Smith 177,
By Un1ted Press International
Rachel Lefebre 175
East
W L Pet GB
Carolina
53 21 716
.... . , , • ':(f!otucky
I~ {'Slf.1
1,47 I ~6
VIrginia
36 35 507 151/,
OHIO COLLEGE
New York
27 45 375 25
BASKETBALL SCORES
Memphis
22 51 301 30'12
By Un1ted Press International
West
NCAA M•d-East Reg1onals
W L Pet GB
( F1rsl Round)
Utah
46 25
648
Steubenville 54 Hiram 51
lnd1ana
.42 JO 583 41!:2
Denver
39 32 549 7
Dallas
24 45 348 21
San Doego
23 49 319 23'h
Tuesday's Resulls
Kentucky 131 MemphiS 107

WEDNESDAY, MARCH7,1fl3
6 00- News, Weather, Sporfs 3, 4, 8, 10, 15, Truth or Conseq 6,
Sesame St 20. Around the Bend 33
6 30- NBC News 3, 4, News 8, 10. Sesame 51 20, Zoom 33, I
Dream o! Jeannie 13
'
7 00- Truth or Conseq 3, Beat the Clock 4, News6: 10, Whafs
My Line 8, Anything You tan Do 13, Elec Co 20; Know Your
Schools 33, Saint 15
7 30- Episode Action 33, To Tell the Truth 6, The Judge 10,
Lassie 15, Beat the Clock 13, Pollee Surgeon 3, Hodgepodge
Lodge 20. Halflhe George Kirby Comedy Hour 8
8 00 - Paul Lynde 6, 13, Adam 12 15. Sonny &amp; Cher 8, 10,
America '73 20, 33
a 30- Bob Hope 3, 4, 15. Movie "The Six Million Dollar Man" 6,
13
9 00-Medlcal Center a, tO, Eve to Eye20, 33
9 30- Dr Jekyt t &amp; Mr Hyde 3, 4, 15, Turning Points 20, 33
10 00- Searchl, 4,15, Cannon8,10, Soul 33, Owen Marshall 6,
13. News 20

Vtrgrma 121 Dallas 104

RETREADS

Carolina 130 San Doego 99
Only games scheduled
Wednesday's Games
Kentucky at New York
Carot1na at Utah
Memphis at lnd1ana
Dallas at Denver
Only games scheduled

THURSDAY, MARCHI,lt73
6 oo - Sunrise Seminar 4, Sacred Hearl 10
6 15 - Farmllme 10, Farm Report 13
6 20 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8. America's
Problems 10, Patterns for Living
6 ol5- Corncob Report 3
7 00 - Today 3, 4, 15
7 30- Romper Room 6, Sleepy Jeffers 8. Rocky &amp; Buttwlnkle
13.
10
8 00- Ca Kangaroo 10. New Zoo Revue 13, Sesame 51 l3;
Lassie
a 30- Jack LaLanne 13. Romper Room 8, New Zoo R'vue 6
9 00 - Paul Dixon 4, Phil Donahue 15, Ben Casey 13, Romper
Room 8; Peyton Place 13 C..pt Kangaroo 8, Concentration
6. Friendly Junction 10, AM 3
9 30-TaTettTheTrulh3, Hazete, Jeopard~6
10 00 - ~alhayog' 33, Dick Van Dyke 13, Dinah Shore 3, 15,
Columbus Six Catting 61 Joker's Wild e. 10
I
10 30- Concentration 3, 15, Phil Donahue 4, Split Second 13,
Price Is Right 8, 10
II 00 -· Sale of Century 3, 4, 15, Lave of Life 8, 10. Bewitched a.
13, Sesame Sf 20
12 00- Jeopardy 3, 15, Bob Braun's .!0 .!0 Club 4, News 10, 13,
Jackie Oblinger 8. Password 6
12 30-3 W's Gamel, Search far TomorrowS, 10, Split Second6
1 00- ~ws 3, Att My Children 6, 13. trs Your Bets, Green
AcresiO, Not for Women Only 15, Secret Storm a
1 20 - Fashions In Sewing 3
:
1 30- Lets Milke A Deal6, 13, As the World Turnsi,'IO, Three •
on A Match 3, 4, 15
;
2 00- Day• of Our Lives 3, 4, 15, Newlywed Game 13, Mike '
Dau~ttas 6, Guiding Light 8. 10
~
2 30 - Dac!Grs3, 4, 15, Oall~&gt;g Gamel3, Edge of Nlghl8, 10
1
3 00- Another World 3. 4, 15; General Hospital 6, 13, Love
Sptendored Thing 8, 10 Behind tile Lines 20
,
3 30 - Return to Peyton Place 3, 4, 15, One Life Ia Live 6, 13, ~
Secret Storm tO.
,
4 00- Mr Cartoon 3, Love American Style 13, FtlntstontS 6, \
15, Gllltpan's Isle 8, Sesame 51 20, 33. Movia "Kansas :
Rai&lt;Wrs' 10
;
4 30- I Love Lucy 6, Daniel Boone 13, Petticoat Junction 3; •
Gilligan's Island 8, Dick Van Dyke IS
5 00- Daniel Boone 6, Mister Rogers 20, 33; Andy Griffith 15.
Bonanza 3, .tl , Hazel 8
5 30 - Marshall Oilton 15; Elec Co 33. Gamer Pyle 13, •
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Beverly Hlllbllltn 8
6 oo- News 3. 4, e:ro. 15, Trutll or Conseq. 13; Around the Bend •
33; Sesame St 20.
~
6 30- NBC Newu, 15, ABC News 8, 10, t Dream of Jeannie 13;
Designing Women 33
7 00 .- Truth or Conaeq. 3, Beat tho Clock 4, Course of Our ~
Times 33; Dick Vail Dyke 4, What's My1Lint 8, Big Rid
Jubilee 15, Newu, Elec Ca. 20 Ltl'a Make A Deal 13 .
1 30- Hollywo~ Sltl/arn 3; To Tell !lie Tru1h 6, Wild KingdOm
10, I'll See You In CourH; U.s&amp; lei. Zoom 20; Newtmaktr '72 1
13. Democracy's Trumpet: W Va Legislature 3&gt;3.
8 00- Avocates ~o. 33, Flip Wll&amp;on 3, 4, 15. Mod Squad 6, 13, 1•
1 \
Wattons 8, 10
'
'
I•
hair! IIIli ond II oldt .... 10 9,00- Kung Fu 6, 13, An American Femtty 20, 33; tronafdt 3. 41 w
15, Movies "Sab&lt;lna" 11 "The Marcus Netaon Murden" 10~
..ttle lor pmt.
to 00 - News 20, Streets of San Francisco 6, 13; Dean Mart!~ 3
TODAY'S QUISDON
4, 15, World Press 33
'
lnsteod o( bidding one heart 11 OO-Ntws3.4.6o8.13, 15
•·
your porlner hu bid lwo hurts' 11 30 - Johnny Carson 3. 4, 15, Jack Pear 6, 13
. •
an response to your double 12 00 - News 10
,
Whot do you do now'
1 00 - Railer Derby 4, ~ws 13
•'
2 00- News 4 •
.,J

Por

each
and
RETREADABLE
CASING

GENERAL
TIRE SALES
992-7161
Mtddleport, 0.

Champs dominate
All-League Team

The Southern Valley Athlehc
Conference All Sports Banquet
honormg players selected to
the all conference football and
basketball squads will be held
on Wednesday, March 28, at
RIO Grande College Honorees
will mclude 22 football players
and 15 basketball selections
Players receiving honorable
men lion m e1ther or both sports
may attend, but must purchase
their hckets
Each school was permitted
to brmg three coaches, a
pnnc1pal and local supermtendent Parents w1shmg to
attend must pay the lull pnce
lor the meal
H1ghhght of the banquet w1ll
be the presentation of the MVP
Awards sponsored JOIDtly by
Rad10 Station WJEH and the
Tlmes-Sentmel
N1ck I hie of Southern was the
SVAC's Most Valuable Back m
1972 and Orland Cremans of
Kyger Creek was the Most
Valuable Lmeman Robmson
will rece1ve the basketball
trophy
Anyone desmng tickets
should contact thmr local h1gh
school athletic director
The league heard a request
-;from Leo Watson of Hannan
H1gh School m Mason County,

Team

3 Assumpt1on ( 1 21 2}

HT YR
5 10
4
66
4
6 1
4
6 0
3
5 10
4
62

Bob Miller Southern

3
4
3

59

&lt;Third Team)

5 10
61
5 10

1

B

3

5

Norm Curfman Southern
Terry Bush Southwestern

'

6 I

3

B
63
58
5

Ron H1ll, Southern
Dan Miller. North Gall1a
HONORABlE MENTION

W Va who was seekmg entry
Into the league Alter a
d1scuss10n, the league s
athletic dll"ectors turned down
the request for admittance
In new busmess, the league
decided lo sponsor a "coach-ofthe-year" award begmnmg
next fall and an all league
sportsmanship trophy The
latter w111 be based upon team
athtude, coach attitude, school
spll"lt and crowd parhc1pahon
It w1ll be presented followmg
the football and basketball •
seasons The league also voted
to recommend to the seven
boards of educahon a hcket
mcrease from $1 to $1 25 for
adult tiCkets and a 25 cent
mcrease m student hckets
Student hckets are currently
sellmg at 50 cents each
Galha County school
supenntendents dec1ded to
drop the annual county touruamentand Chnstmas Hobday
Tournament
The county tournament was
dropped after 49 years last
wmter m favor of a Christmas
Hobday Tournament It was
the general feelmg that due to
the lack of mterest, loss of
mcome and the antagomsm
bred by the tournament among
the lour schools 1t should be
d1scon tinued
Each county team will now
be able to schedule two other
games

USED CARS
WEATHER

The Dai~ Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTEII L TANNEH'LL,

4
4

19 Lou1s1ana Tech ( 18 8)

20 UC Bakersfield (18 81

Exec Ed

COLDER•••

Publlsht~ ~ail't
ex:cept
SaturtJav by The Oh 1o Valle't
Publishing Company
111

Court St,

VALUES

'

KEITH
GOBLE FORD
'

• I

USED CAR LOT

3rd Ave:

Oh•o

2151

HOOTER!

'I

Pomeroy

.45769 8u1men Ofl•ce Phone
992 2156, Edilor1ail F'hone 992

Middleport

Second class postagt Dl ld al
Pomeroy, Oh10
National adverf1S1ng
rtprnentat1ve Bottlnelli
Geltavher, Inc 12 East 42hd
51 New York C1ty, New Vork
Subscr•pt•on ntes
be
l•vered by carr 1er where
ava1lable 50 cents per week
By Motor Route where carr1er
serv•ce not available On~
month S1 75 By mall 1n Oh10
and W VI One year ,,,. DO
Six months S7 25 Ttlree
months ,,. 50 SubscriptiOn
pnce Include-s Sunday timeS
Senhnel

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Hours;
SUNDAY THRU THURSDAY-S TIL 12
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY-S TIL 1

12

11

Hold a door open for a
woman, and she 'll stand m
11 and yak for 30 mmutes

Rib R/S FRONT
TIRE
$175:~16
• I op Qua in ~ f 1 nl m s
f O\\

Lo\\ Pm'

1

• Nc\\ Ruggr.d Rtm Shuld
prolt ct~ lm\1 r sidE wnll
4 Ply plu!
• !l!•J f1 \1ui~ c•nh r nb
CJ2C Fed
fm 'as ~ !1!11 r1n g
Ex Tu

WITH TIIADl

H&amp;R FIRESTONE

THURSDAY, MAR. 8
FEATURING

3

GOODYEAR

ROBERT HOEFLICH,
..
Clly l!!dttor

FROST FREE 15 CU. FT.
2 DOOR-152 LB. FREEZER
•S59.00

192

4 Ph1la Texlilel l 2321 184
5 Stephen F Austm 125 3) 183
125
6 Eau Cla.re 121 31
7 Roanoke (19 4)
122
B Kentucky St (23 4)
96
9 Bentl ey 123 21
67
10 Akron (10 41
37
11 Cap1lal 10 1120 4)
36
12 St Mary's ITex 1123 5) 28
12 Marymouni(Kao I 122 2127
14 UWGreenB ay( l 2331 24
IS UC Roversode (22 4)
16
16 Fa.rmonl Sl I19 4)
15
17 Alcorn A&amp;M 121 41
14
18 Old Domm1on I18 8)
13

GERONIMO SIGNS
CINCINNATI (UP! ) - Pete
Southern , Lloyd Wood. Southwestern Ke1th Weddmgton North
Gall1a Bill Webb and Ri ck Corn Symmes Valley John Sheets Rose was the sole Cmcmnat1
Steve Doll Tim Spencer Ea stern and T J Robinson . Norlh Reds player not under contract
Gallo a
today alter the s1gmng of
outfielder Cesar Gerommo
' Monday
Colle~e Basketball Results
Cheyney 74 Lbnn Valley 56
Gerommo hit 275 and drove
By Un1led Press lnlernal•on•l Bndgeporl77 Stoneh1ll 74
m 29 runs last year, h1s f1rst
NAtA Tournamenl (1st Round! St Michael s 108 H!frd 97
season
w1th the Reds alter
Ouachita 69 Henderson 59
Qun•p•ac 69 Bryant 57
Valdosta St 88 W Ga 73
commg here from a multiLaGrange 87 Armstrng St 83
South
player trade w1th Houston
Grand Canyon 79 Wsfmnslr 64 Va Tech 76 W sf Va 53

.--

ON

The T1gers pulled down 38
rebounds With M1ke Oyer
gettmg 13 to lead h1s team 1n
that department
As the Tigers suddenly reach
the end of the trml w1th a 19-2
record Dave Salyers scored 15
pomts to lead h1s team while
John Shoemaker had 14, and
M1ke Oyer 13
Alexander, also •uth a 19-2
mark, was led by White with
19 points while Greg Br~ok s
and Steve Brown each added
16, and Mark Ervin 12
Tlie Spartans are now the
odds-on lavonte to wm the
dislrlct crown as they wa~t
unhl Saturday mght to meet
the wmner of tomght s contest
between Galhpohs and
Nelsonville-York

Pomts

Mark Swain and Don Wells Hannan Trace Joe St1 dham
Mark Darst and Lawrence Tabor Kyger Cr eek M1ke Nease

All Serv•ce Playoff
Army 91 A.r Force 83
Navy 89 Marines 87
East
L1 U 62 Seton Hall 59
Newark Sf 101 NE Bible 48

Waverly for the campa1gn
This reduced the lead to 61-57
w1th 2 12 remammg and
Alexander then scored the fmal
11 pomts of the contest wh1le
shuttmg out the heavilyfavored T1gers
The victory was no fluke as
the Spartans, well-poised
and well-coached, h1t on 31 of
62 shots for 50 pet and
converted 10 of 17 free
throws
They also worked the boards
well as they pulled down 45
rebounds w1th the 6-4 RICh
Wh1te snaggmg 21
Waverly d1d not have a good
game as the Tigers shot a
miserable 29 pet h1ttmg only 21
of 72 fielders and 15 of 21 free
throws

1 Sam Houston St 131 25 01
328
2 Augustana , Ill 121 11
259

1972-73 All-SVAC Team

Jene Myers, S~mmes Valley
Terry Carter, outhwestern

•

set March 28

College Ratings

( F1rsf Team!
PLAYER- School
Phil Robmson Symmes Valley
M1ke Caldwell Hannan Trace
Alan Duvall. Eastern

Th1s charge was led by guard
John Shoemaker who tallied 10
pomts before loulmg out With
5 22 remammg
Just 30 seconds earlier the
Spartans lost the1r little
quarterback when Steve
Brown ext ted v1a the personal
foul route
Followmg a lime out the
Spartans then choked off the
Waverly rally by hckmg off
five straight pomts for a 61 55
lead w1th 2 22 left
Just 10 seconds later Ed
Thompson's llp-m was the fmal
pomts to be reg1stered by

SVAC banquet

Symmes Valley , Hannan Robmson edged Caldwell three
Trace and Eastern, tr1-champs votes, 77-74 Robmson was the
of the Southern Valley Athletic only f1rst team holdover from
Conference dommated the 1972 while Caldwell moved up
1972-73 Ali.SVAC team selected from the second team The
Tuesday night m Gallipohs
other three were f1rst time
SVAC cage coaches voted honorees.
Phil Robmson, 5-10 semor for
The 15 man squad selected
the Symmes Valley VIkings the by the league's cage coaches,
league's Most Valuable Player mcludes e1ght semors , SIX
Robmson hmshed as the JUDlors and a sophomore
league's leadmg pomt maker
Members w1ll be honored at
w1th an average of 16 8 pomts a the All.SV AC banquet slated
game
l
March 28 at R10 Grande
''IQII\@I'!t"tiin'@J til i'ttle 1fir!it'" cbueg~ ' "
'
'
'
team were Mike Caldwell, 1M&gt;
Coaches casting ballots were
senior (r31\'i ~Hannan Trac~; Paul Dillon, HanDBn Trace ,
Alan Duvall, 6-1 semor from Wayne Wh1te, Symmes Valley ,
Eastern, John Lusher, 6-0 Bill Phillips, Eastern , Bob
NEW YORK IUPII - The
JuniOrlromHannan Trace, and Ord, Southern , J1m Foster,
Un1ted
Pres.s In ternationa l top
Jam1e Lafon, 5-10 semor from North Gallia, J1m Arledge, 20 college
d1v 1S10n basketball
Symmes Valley
Kyger Creek, and Richard teams w1th f1rst pla ce votes
and won lost records as of
IN Wmmng the MVP Award, Hamilton, Southwestern
Sunday 1n pa ~entheses
( Fmal Week)

(Second Team!
Dave Robinette, North Gall!a
Randy Bonng Eastern
Clay Hudson Kyger C•eek

TO HANDLE REDS
CINCINNATI (UP!)
Veteran network sportscaster
Charhe Jones will team up With
former Los Angeles Dodgers
first baseman Wes Parker th1s
season to handle telecasts of
the CmGinnatl Reds baseball
game
Avco Broadcastmg Corp
sa1d 35 regular season Reds'
games would be telecast over a
lf).statlon hookup that mcludes
Clncmnatl, Dayton, Colwnbus,
Lima and Zanesville, Oh10,
Lexington and LOUISVIlle, Ky ,
Indianapolis and Ft Wayne,
Ind ; and Huntmgton, W Va

cumulated personal louis that
now became very Important
The !mal peTJod was a sizzler
lor the l1rst SIX mmutes as the
Tigers fmally came to hie and
played hke the SEOAL fans
had seen them play all season
long
Following a goal by Greg
Brooks that ran the score to
56-43 with 6.22 left, the
Tigers then tallled 12
unanswered points as the
result of a zone press defense
which reduced Alexander's
lead to 56-55 with 3:10
remaining.

PIZZAS &amp; SUBS
•

PIZZAS-11-13-15
GIANT 24 x 27 (Pizzas Prices Start At 1.45)

GRAND OPENING PRIZES

Wns j :1 Salem 86 Catawba 74

l

-

Alexander's biggest f1rst half
lead was 13 pomts, at 34-21,
before Dave Salyers SWished
one at the buzzer to reduce the
hallhme lead to 34-23
The two powerhouses traded
goals throughout most of the
third period but AHS mcreased
the spread to 15 pomts, 42-27,
w1th 4 42 left m that canto
A late surge of long jwnp
shots and fast-break lay ups
mcreased AHS' lead to 16
po1nts 52-37, after three
periods Both teams had ac-

NCAA College D1~n I 1st Round! GA Tech 77 GA 67
M1d-Easf
Slbenvle 54 Hiram 51
West
South
Colo 71 Nebraska 63
Trnslvn1a 72 Albany Sf 71 (of)
West
UC RoverSide 70 Sonoma St 68

1

i

Greg Brooks four as the Athens
county qwntet took a 14-7 l1rst
period lead
In that first period
Alexander connected on
seven of 15 shots from the
floor while Waverly could
get but three of 11.
The second penod was even
hotter for the Spartans as they
sw1shed e1ght of 10 fielders
while the Tigers meshed JUSt
seven of 23
Little Steve Brown, a 5-8
semor guard, canned e1ght
pomls lor the Spartans 10 thiS
stanza wh1le Waverly finally
got some help from Bill Maloy,
Mike Oyer, Ed Thompson, 'and
John Shoemaker. all or whom
had been shut out m the l1rst
penod

John Lusher Hannan Trace
Jamte Lafon Symmes Valley

2 FOR $}990

11 OO-News3,4,6,8, 10, 13,15
1
11 30- Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15. Jack Paar 6;13; Movies "Night
Chose" 8, "The Bedford Incident" 10

Before a standmg room only
crowd of over 2,500 fans at R10
Grande's Lyne Center Tuesday
mght the Alexander Spartans
ousted Waverly from the Class
AA Dtstrlct Tournament by a
convmc1ng 72-57 score
Coach Doug Laltimer's
Spartans came out shooting
and tunnlng from the
opening whistle, roared out
to an 8-0 lead, and didn't shut
down untO they had convlnced many mumbling
spectators that they were
some kind of a basketball
team.
Coach Carroll Hawhee's
SEOAL champion T1gers
entered the contest rated the
nwnber one Class AA team In
the state WHS was also the
delendmg distnct champs
None of th1s seemed to Impress the state's fifth ranked
Spartans as they completely
dommated the contest except
lor a br1el span m the fourth
perwd when the Tigers
reduced a 54-37 def1c11 to 56-55
With 3 10 remammg m the
contest
Paced by 6-4 semor R1ch
White, the Spartans r1pped to
an 8-0 lead before Dale Salyers'
goal made 1111-2 w1th 5 00 left m
the l1rst penod
Wh1te tal11ed SIX pmnts and

Pactftc DIVISIOn

March 1, 1973

Television Log

'·

s!Om•'•'•'• •?• ••••,,. ..• ••'•n:W:'"•'o!•:•
..... • • • • •..£..•.-;.o}),.'-.•o
..... '"' v.,...........;.o:AQ;II»;/1 • : ~
?:Z ::w%% V!

•'••'•'•'• •

Waverly-Alexander box

tram

... 1\

• •

avery

Flrst-4' Portable Home Bar See 11m our wmdow.
Second- 10 Large Smgle Item PIZZas .
Thwd- W1ld Man's Dream G1ant Pma \VIth Everything .
Approx IS lbs.
Fourth- S Sub Sandwiches
Reg1ster free when you v•s•t us No purchase necessary.
Wtnners names Will be posted. All pmes wtll be awarded
March 15. ..:...

LOOKI LOOKI MAR. 8-15
Grand Openmg Feature 10 percent of our sales wtll go to
lhe Pomeroy F1re Dept . Emergency Squad

LUIGI'S

$19~0•16

116 E. MAIN
J

POMEROY

4 Ply plu 99¢

red Ex T;n
WIJN TIADE

Just Below
The

Meigs Inn
'

Seating
For 20

Ph. 992-3984

�•

.,

·'

..

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7, l9T.l

Blue Devils meet
Buck~yes tonight·
Coach Jim Osborne's Ohio League rival Logan in
Ga llipolis Blue Devils (17-J) December . In late January, the
· will take on Coach Virgil Buckeyes gave the Chiefs fits
·(Dick) Grandy's Nelsonville- all night at Logan before
York Buckeyes ( 12·7) in losing, 86-82.
Nelsonville-York shared
. semilinal action of the 1973
Class AA District High School the Tr~Valley Conference
Basketball Tournament at Rio championship with Belpre
Grande's Lyne Center tonight. and Federal-Hocking this
Opening tipoff is slated for winter wtth a 6-2 mark.
The Buckeyes split with
7:30. Doors to the Rio Grande
Belpre
and Federal-Hocking in
fieldhouse will open at 6:30 p.
m. Four hundred tickets will be regular season .
Last time GAHS played the
sold at the gate prior to game
Buckeyes in basketball was in
time.
Nelsonville reached the 1969-70. That was Coach Jim
district by eliminating last Osborne's first year at the
year's Stewart Sectional helll) of the Blue Devils. The
winner New Lexington, 69-00, Gallians won both tilts that
and Tri-County League rival year, 56-37 -and 67-52, the last ·
season NY participated in the
Vinton County, 47-43.
Southeastern
Ohio League.
Gallipolis gained a berth in
Gallia's overall mark
the AA district by bouncing
agai
nst Nelsonville (before the
Fairland 73-52 and South Point
67-63 in the Coal Grove Sec- sc hool consolidated with
tionallast week.
Buchtel-York hi 1967) was 36Coach Grandy's Buckeyes 30. Agains t the Buckeyes, the
are young. Only two seniors Devils are 5-I in previous
are lloted on the Nelsonville- outings.
Gallipoli s met the old
York tourney roster. After a
slow start earlier In the Nelsonville Greyhounds three
times in tournament comseason, · the Buckeyes
finished strong by winning petition, losing 15-14 in 1934,
and winning 39-27 in 1941 and
six of their last seven games,
losing only lu powerful 54-40 in 1949.
Coach Osborne's quintet,
Alexander (82-71) during lhe
meeting Us second con·
month of February.
feren
ce champion in tourThe Buckeyes two mai n
scoring threa ts are Dave nament play for the second
consecutive game,
is
Pritchard, 6-2 junior forward,
and Greg Smathers, 6-0 junior a veraglng 6H points per
game. The GAHS defense Is
forward.
permitting 50.4 points per
During regular season play,
game,
best mark In the four·
Pritchard averaged 18-3 points
team field.
a game in all games. Inside the
The Gallians are led by 6-4
Tri-Valley Conference, the NY
ace averaged 20.4 per outing. jun ior center Gil Price and 6-3
Smathers ave raged 17.9 a senior forward Jmmy Noe in
the scoring column.
game in conference play.
Coach Osborne will go with
Ne lsonvill e-Yo rk is
averaging 6&gt;.1 points per Price at center and Noe at one
game. Defensively, the forward post. Topper Orr, 6-1
Buckeyes are permitting 62.4 senior will open al the other
· forward post. Kev Sheets, 5-8
points a game.
Coach Grandy indicated senior, and Mark Kielsing, 6-1
Sunday he will start Smathers senior, will ope n at the guard
and Pritchard at the forward positions. Jim Niday, 6-0
posts. Mike Koker, 6-2 senior, sophomore guard, and Mike
will open at center. Jerry Berridge, 6-0 junior forward,
Wright, 6-0 junior, and Max are front-line replacements.
Winner of tonight's game will
Pitts, 6-0 sophomore, will open
play
Alexander at 7:30 p. m.
at the guard positions. J. R.
" Coe, 5-9 junior forward, is the Saturday lor the pistrict
championship, and a berth in
Buckeyes_' sixth man.
The Buckeyes most Im- the Class AA Regional Tourpressive win or the year was a nament, to be held nex t Friday
65-58 win over Southeastern and Saturday at Dayton .

Division by six games, · is
gun ning for its first NBA
championship since 1969 and
the accompanying riches. At
the moment, the Celtics are
alter the best won-lost
precentage · bonus and they

have an excellent chance to
div,Y that extra dividend.
The Celtics clobbered Buffalo 127-112 Tuesday night to
raise their percentage to .812.
Their closest rival is Los
Angeles, with a .743 mark.

Pete·Rose happy
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - Pete
Rose, twi ce the National
League batting champion, was
in a jovial mood Tuesday after
coming 'to. terms on a new
contract with the Cincinnati
Reds.
"For awhile," he joked, "I
thought I was going to have to
call upon Henry Kissinger to
get me into camp."

Although it was not revealed
exactly how much Rose will be
making this year, the figure
apparently is somewhere between $117,500 and $120,000.
The star outfielder was holding
out for the higher salary and

the club formerly was holding
firm on the lower one.
Rose, who batted .31i? last
year and has topped the .300
mark for eight consecutive
seasons, was the . club's last
holdout.
Joe Morgan and Tony Perez,
who came to terms last week,
reported for their first workout
of the spring Tuesday. Rose
was to start practice today.
Morgan, who signed for a reported $93,000, was delayed by
exams at California State College where he is majoring in
physical education. He balled
.292 last season, hit 16 homers

Prothro sues big
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Tommy Proth ro made no
public statement last January
when Carroll Rosenbloom fir ed
him as head coach of the Los
Angeles Rams.
Prothro, 52, an astute bridge
and chess player, consulted in
private with his attorney,
biding time. He spoke out in a
loud voice Tuesday when he
filed a $1.9 million breach of
contract suit against Rosenbloom, th e Rams and the
Baltimore Football Club, Inc.
The suit accused Rosenbloom of "knowingly and
wilfully" conspiring to induce
breach of contract.
Not money but pride apparently motivated Prothro in
filing the suit since Rosenbloom agreed to pay off the
remaining three years on a
fiv e-year contr act. It was
reported that Prothro got
$00,000 a year but Rosenbloom
denied that this was a true
figure.
Asks Damages
The suit disclosed that
Prothro's actual salary was
$75,000 a year plus use of a new
auto each year. He asked
$400,000 actual damages in-

eluding loss of $35,000 a year in
compensatipn for public appearances he would have made
as head coach.
The suit also asked $1 million
for loss of damage to his
teputation as a football coach
and $500,000 punitive damages.
Prothro also asked the court
to require the Rams to pay him
$40,000 in death benefits.
The late Dan Reeves signed
Prothro, a successful college
coach, in January of 1971.
Pro thro said his contract
stipulated that he could be
fired only on grounds of a
morals offense.
First Losing Season
Rosenbloom fired him for
losing, however. The Rams had
a 6-7-1 record last year, their
first losing season since 1965.
Rosenbloom hired Chuck
Knox, a Detroit Lions
assistant, to replace Prothro.
The Baltimore club was
involved in the suit because it
was formerly owned by Rosenbloom and he swapped the
Colts lor the Rams, who had
been purchased lor $19 million.
Most of the shares belonged to
the estate of Reeves, who died
of cancer in April, 1971.

and was issued 115 walks .
Morgan stole 58 bases last
year but only two were third
base and he said "this year I
intend to steal a lot more."
"That way, a lot of times I
will be able to score on a wild
pitch, infield hit or sacrifice fly
instead of waiting for a base
hit," the second baseman said.
Perez, who was delayed because of the illness of his two
children, visited his parents in
Cuba ~or the first time since the
Castro takeover. The slugging
first baseman hit 22 homers
and drove in 90 runs last year
despite a hand injury most of
the season.

All five s'tarters hit In double
figures for Boston with John
Havlicek and Jq Jo Whi~ each
hitting 25 points as the Celtics
raised their record to 56-13.
Bob Kauffman was Buffalo's
leading scorer with 28 pciints.
In other NBA action, Los
Angeles downed Portland 114102, New York ripped Seattle
106-94, Milwaukee topped
Chicago 96-88, Phoenix beat
Cleveland 110-102, and Golden
State defeated Detroit 108-93.
Los Angeles liuilt a 61-421ead
over Portland and then coasted
past the Trail Blazers to lift its
season record to 52-18 with 12
gamesremaining.Portlandcut
'

5- The Daily &amp;1ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7, 1973

their 19-point halftime lead to
· one point in the third quarter.
G~il Goodri~h led the "?kers
wtth 30 pomts and Stdney
Wicks paced Portland with 26.
.Bill Bradley scored 29 points
and Walt Frazier added 27 for
New York as the Knicks sel a
club record by winning their
33rd home game this season.
Milwaukee opened a 31hgame lead over second place
Chicago in the Midwest as the
Bulls dropped their "must"
game to the Bucks. Eight
straight points by Milwaukee
chilled the Chicago effort after
the Bulls gained an 81-80 lead
with 6:54 left in the game.

Kareem Abdui-Jabbar topped
the Bucks with 31 iiomts and·
Chet waiker was high for
Chicago with 27.
A 23-1 0 Phoenil surge '
starting off the third quarter
carried the Suns past
Cleveland . Neal Walk . of
Phoenix and Lenny Wilk.e11.11 of
Cleveland shared ·scoring
honors with 26 points each.
Jeff M!J]Uns scored. 'six of
Golden State's first 10 points. of
the fourth quarter to boost the
Warriors"past Detroit. Mullens
tallied a game-high 24 points
and John Mengel! hit his
season high with 23 points for
the Pistons.
CHESTER, RIVERVIEW AND TUPPERS PLAINS
seventh and eighth grade basketball squad . Front row, 1r, John Evans, Eugene Johnson, Bruce Myers, Steve
TrullSell, Bryan Gibbs; secOJI• • w, IiiCk Lehman, Joe Kuhn,

Two Gophers on top 5

CHICAGO (UP!) - Minnesota, in the running lor a
second straight Big Ten
basketball championship, won
two positions on the All Conference team picked by United
Press International by the 10
coaches.
Named from the Gophers
were hiLlky center Jim Brewer
and senior forward Ron Behagen. Dlinois' ~ick Weatherspoon, Michigan State's Mike
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Robinson, heading toward a
Basketball Playoff Scores
second straight individual
By United Press International
Class AAA
scoring championship, and
IAI Mentor)
Ohio State's Allan Hornyak
Barberton 90 Conneaut 70
complete
the first learn .
IAtOxlordl
Lakota 64 Fairfield 58
Chosen for the second learn .
Hamilton Taft 70 Cin. Oak Hills were two players from In·
64
IAt Cincinnati)
diana, John Ritter and Steve
Cin. Elder 64 Cin. Woodward 45 Downing, the league-leading
Cin . Purcell 47 Cin . LaSalle 41
rebounder from Iowa, Kevin
Class AA
I At Rio Grande)
Kunnert, Michigan 's Henry
Albany Al exander 72 Waverly Wilmore, and still another
57
(At Urbana)
Gopher, Clyde Turnet. Indiana
Tip p City 64 Spr ingfield was tied for the league lead
Catholic 58
with Minnesota .
(AI Dayton)
Springboro
Middletown
Hornyak was named to the
Madison 56
learn for the third straight year
Dayton Jefferson 81 Preble and Robinson, who averaged
~aw-73
I
IAI Cincinnati)
. 27.2 points per game last year
Cin . McNi cholas 69 Taylor 56 and who has a 27.3 average so
North College Hill 54
far this season, was picked for
Cincinnati Harrison 39
the second straight year.
Class A
Every one of the top five
IAt Columbus)
players
was named by each of
Ridgedale 83 Sparta Highland
the 10 coaches and Hornyak
69
Lancaster Fisher 75 Jonathan received the most points, nine
Alder 70
coaches placing him on their
(At Chillicothe)
Ross
Southeastern
64 first team and the 1Qth giving
Crooksville 57
him a second team berth.
IAI Steubenville)
Brewer and Weatherspoon
Indian Valley South 47
uth 4/
each were placed on the first
Conation Valley 27 learn by seven coaches and on
Garaway 68 Woodsfield 32
th e second by three while six
lA!Canton I
United Loca l 60 Lordstown 44 chose Behagen on the first
Dalton 79 Cleve. Lutheran West
52 ..
team and five picked Robinson .

The team would furnish a
coach all the offensive and
defensive skills he could r~ui­
re. Weatherspoon ranks as the
league's second . best scorer
and Hornyak third, behind
Robinson, and Weatherspoon
also ranks second in reboun-

ding to Kunnert.
Brewer a nd Behagen
together pick off an average of
20 rebounds a game for the
Gophers, the top rebounding
club in the circuit, and together
are averaging about 35 points a
game.

JAMES DAVID COUNCIL pins his mother, Mrs. James
Council, with a miniature Eagle Scout pin during ceremonies
Sunday when he became an Eagle Scout.

Eastern high's

A

Eagle award ·won
by James Council

cheerleaders had

team ·to support

,\'[' !liGHT The
,Eastern
varsity
cheerleaders are front
t·uw. 1-r, Martie Cald·
.well. and .Melinda
'.\m s bary : in back.
':\1ancy Sexson, 'fonya
:Kee baugh and Joyce
·\1.vers, and at top. CrysErwin.
Their
-tal
,"Eag le s" were cochampions or the tough
Oass 1\ Southern Valley
Cu111'er·cnce.

.-

STYLE BOARD

sa

7.95

per sheet

MOULDINGS &amp; ADHESIVES
ARE AVAILABLE

LEADS PACK .
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - Don
McCune, who chalked up his
second straight Professional
Bowlers Association title last
week by taking the Miller High
Life Open at Milwaukee, has
opened a solid lead in the PBA
money winning list.
McCune, of Munster, Ind.,
has poC~eted $22,000 for his two
victories and now has won
$32,000 in nine events so far on
the fall and winter tour .
In the close battle for second
pia~~ Carl'len Salvino's 15th
place finish at Milwaukee and
$1 ,150 in prize money moved
him into the runner up spot with
$22,425, with Barry Asher
taking third wilh $21 ,596 and
Don Johnson, last week 's
leader, dropping all the way to
fourth with $21,428.

Yankees'

MASON, W.VA.

PH. 773-5554

McDaniel
Thanks To All You Nice People Who Attended Our 5th Anniversary Sale/

19¢
WAX PAPER ...............
4
$1
CATSUP.......................
3
$1
TOMATOES .............
3
$1
TOMATO JUICE .....
59¢
SHORTEN lNG ............. ~.~~ ...
3
9¢
CHOC. .CHIPS ............. f.~t
49¢.
GRAPE JELLY..............~!
$1
3
P.INEAPPLE

,,

says swap
Pork Is Your Best

100 ft.
!~! 1.... .

WAXTEX

HUNT'S TOMATO

not good

Buy This Week/

14 oz.
bois.

HUNT'S

5th and PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With A Heart,
You, WE Ll KE"

cans

HUNT'S

Prices Effective Mar. 7-14

SMUCKER'S

'1.29

POPLAR BRAND

SLICED BACON:............. .!~:. 79~

3 lb..

FRENCH CITY
.
lb.
LIVER PUDDING...............

12 oz.

NESTLE'S

Monday Thru Friday
9:00 to 7:00
Saturday 9 to 9

DEL MONTE

Coca-Cola

Sliced
Crushed
Chunk

No.2

cans

KEEBLER COOKIES

QUART BOTTLES

Chocolate Chips
Oatmeal
Raisin Bar

3pk:1
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I

79~

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USDA Choice Beef '

BEEF STEW -·
MEAT lb. 99~

2 Jb.

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New Aorida Crop.

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CLOSED SUNDAYS

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MRS. TUCKER'S

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Right reserved to limit quantities

$

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FAIRMONT

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GREEN ONIONS
beh.

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Buy Of The Week/
'

FORT
LAUDERDALE Mrs . Marilyn Peterson, who be taking a blase atti tude.
(UPI) -For Mike and Susan apparently was planning to fly General Ma nager Lee Mac·and Fritz and Marilyn there to Rockford, IlL to visit her Phail , who has made no move
were laughs, tears, happy parents, wo uld make any to trade either one of them,
times, sad times, highs ·and pu blic comments .
even mana ged to quip, "1guess
lows. Ultimately, though, there
In Rockford , Mari lyn 's I'm going to have to call off
was happiness for only one mother, Mrs. Arthur Monks, family da y."
couple.
said, "as far as my daughter is One Yankee player summed
That was the picture painted concemetl, there is no swap. up the feelings of the majority
by Mrs. Susan Kekich as she She has applied for a divorce of the players by saying, "it's
explained Tuesday how New but does not plan to live with their own damn business and
York Yankee pitchers Fritz Mike Kekich. She is getting a as long as it doesn't affect !heir
Peterson and Mike Kekich divorce only because Fritz pitching, it's their business."
came to agree on the marital wants one ."
But Lindy McDaniel, a
swap they announced Monday.
The Yan kee brass seems to minister of the Chu rch of
Mrs. Kekich, who is now
living with Fritz said, "We
went through an unbelievable
strain. There were all kinds of
VISIT THE HOLIDAY INN ..•
highs and lows. I have never
of Ga IIi polis
been happier in my life or
AN
ELEGA
NT EVENING OF DINING
ENJOY
sadder at the same time. We
IN OUR
·must have gone through every
kind of emotion a human b~ing
"500 ROOM"
ca n experience."
'
Servi ng Niteiy Till10 P.M.
Mrs. Kekich said she wasn't
Now
.,
worried about what people
Appearing PADDLE WHEEL LOUNGE
might think . "It's my life and
In The
you have to do what makes you
Appea ring
happy. There's nothing smutty
Friday
about this and anybody who
Appearing
&amp;
thinks it's smutty ·has to be
Weekly
Saturday
smutty-minded themselves.
8:3 0 P, M.
9: 00P.M.
Don't make this out to be dirty
Til
Til
and ugly. We are not involved
I :30 A. M.
.
2
P.M.
in any lechery . We just fell in

Christ, said, "it's not very
good, is it? It's hard to
separate baseball life from
private life.''

••
I

,.,.

99c:

LANGS VILLE - James pin. He presented his father an
~;. "' lor IJOndll"'
David Council received the Eagle tie bar.
highest rank in scouting - the
Eagle Scouts Tom Crisp and
Eagle Scout Award - at the Robert Council were escorts
Langsville Christian Church for the candidate and hi~
Sunday afternoon.
pa rents . Jane Ann Bobo
The new Eagle Scout, son of presented an organ prelude
• GENUINE NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS
.,
Mr. and Mrs. James Council, is with sevet·al numbers during
Not the old st~le t inted or p ainiP~ Bl ~c k &amp; Wl11!r. 111lo l o~.
e SELECTION OF PROOFS 'H P o1 r ~ tn drom hom.
1\ freshman at Meigs High the ceremonies. The ine FOR All AGES Bahie'i. c h ild r ~ n . adults.
&amp;hooL He is a member of stitutional representative Carl
Grou[l s pNot o;raphtd at ~n additiona l ~m~ ll tl1ar ~e .
Explorer Posl239 sponsored by . Barby gave the cha rge to the
• FREE TO ALL SENIOR CITIZENS
the church ; his fa ther is ad- new Eagle Scout.
rree BxlO liwing col or portra it to all cu stomm om 60 Ytm or age.
e LIMITED OFFER! On&lt;l uer Silllitct , one per family .
visor of the post.
James and his bro th er,
e Admlised Special Head &amp; Should m Only
James began in scouting Robert, are planning to visit
with Pack 240 of Rutland in Camp Philmon t in New Mexico
TELL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT THIS SPECIAL OFFER
November, 1967 at the age of to climax their scout ing
eight and con tinued through careers. Both Council boys will
the Webelo Scouts while in the continue in scouting .
pack. At the age of II he joined
F o II owing Sunda y's
Troop 239 and later joined ceremonies a reception was
Explorer Post 239 . Upon he ld in the church fellowship
MIDDLEPORT
completing the requirements room .
and his service project, a
bulletin board r.or the sponWh e n !he sap begins to
soring church, James has won rise. the re's "IA S1wll y a fight
for It is bus seat.
the top award.
While in the troop and post,
James. ,held offices required·
for adv,aucement. He served as
a den chief at a Cub Scout Pow
Wow and has attended the den
chief's conference in Huntington . H~ received a certificate from Boy Scouts of
America. James David is a ·
member of the Order of the
Arrow and has served on the
It's as simple as !hal! Buy what you wan!, take delivery at once. Pay
staff with the kitchen crew at
the merchandise when your check arrives .
for
Camp Arrowhead.
The new Eagle Scout was one
of a group of scouts making a
canoe trip last summer from
Pittsburgh to Pomeroy.
To arrive at the E2gle Scout
level, young Council earned 21
merit badges, as required ,
some of whi ch are cooking,
camping , hiking, swimming,
conse rvation, first aid , life
handsor:ne oak
s~v in g, personal fitn ess,
finish tables •..
citizenship , and pioneering.
· all with
At Sunday's ceremon ies,
care-free
James David was presented
the Eagle Scout medal by his
mother, whom he pinned, in
turn, with a miniature Eagle

Unfortunately, the swap· which took place Dec. 14
although the couples first tried ,
it last summer - didn't work
out as M!ll lor Mike and
Marilyn as it did for Fritz and
I
Susan. L
Mrs. il\.ekich said, "I wish
they cpwd have a life tugether.
That would make everything
complete."
Neither Mike Kekich . nor

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EVONNE TIES
BOSTON (UPI )'--An . upset
loss, Australian Evonne Goola·
gong moved irito firs! place
Tuesday in the women's division of the $400,000-Commercial
Union Grand Prix ofTennis.
Miss Goolagong was beaten
by Virginia Wade of Grea t
Britain in the semifinals of la•t
week's S&amp;H Classic at Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., but still
picked up 30 points in th e
Grand Prix competition for a
total of 75 in the two events to
dale .
Chris Evert won the $10,000
first prize in the ·Fort Lauderdale tournament and AlOved
into a second place tie

Jim Davis, Ricky Barringer, and Johf"t:MIS.ey; back row,
Gary Nelson, Phil LaComb; Mark
Br
Riffle,
Charles Lantz, Perry Reed, Lamar
n,
Jim Putman and Archie Rose, coac

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TOP SKIERS
WILMINGTON, N.Y. (UP!)
- Robert Cunningham of
Hudson Valley Community Colle ge~ . and Cindy
Frennette of Canton A&amp;T won
the individual performance
Vermont Tech won the nationa l
skiing title in the tournament.
In the 15-team national finals,
Paul Smith finished as runnerup to Vermont Tech, with
279.22 points to 290.40 for the
Vermonters . Third was host
North Country Community College of Saranac Lake with
278.53. .
In the women's event, Canton
A&amp;T edged Champlain Junior
College of Burlington, Vt. ,
)69.55 to 166.08.

•
WID ·

Celtics continue rampage with ..127-l12
By United Press lntemaliooal
The drive '.for fame and
fortune prevents the Boston
Cellics from slacking orr at the
tailend of the National
Baksetball Association season.
Boston, leading 'the Atlantic

.

l

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MIDDLEPORT, 0.

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992-2635

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.,

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4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7, l9T.l

Blue Devils meet
Buck~yes tonight·
Coach Jim Osborne's Ohio League rival Logan in
Ga llipolis Blue Devils (17-J) December . In late January, the
· will take on Coach Virgil Buckeyes gave the Chiefs fits
·(Dick) Grandy's Nelsonville- all night at Logan before
York Buckeyes ( 12·7) in losing, 86-82.
Nelsonville-York shared
. semilinal action of the 1973
Class AA District High School the Tr~Valley Conference
Basketball Tournament at Rio championship with Belpre
Grande's Lyne Center tonight. and Federal-Hocking this
Opening tipoff is slated for winter wtth a 6-2 mark.
The Buckeyes split with
7:30. Doors to the Rio Grande
Belpre
and Federal-Hocking in
fieldhouse will open at 6:30 p.
m. Four hundred tickets will be regular season .
Last time GAHS played the
sold at the gate prior to game
Buckeyes in basketball was in
time.
Nelsonville reached the 1969-70. That was Coach Jim
district by eliminating last Osborne's first year at the
year's Stewart Sectional helll) of the Blue Devils. The
winner New Lexington, 69-00, Gallians won both tilts that
and Tri-County League rival year, 56-37 -and 67-52, the last ·
season NY participated in the
Vinton County, 47-43.
Southeastern
Ohio League.
Gallipolis gained a berth in
Gallia's overall mark
the AA district by bouncing
agai
nst Nelsonville (before the
Fairland 73-52 and South Point
67-63 in the Coal Grove Sec- sc hool consolidated with
tionallast week.
Buchtel-York hi 1967) was 36Coach Grandy's Buckeyes 30. Agains t the Buckeyes, the
are young. Only two seniors Devils are 5-I in previous
are lloted on the Nelsonville- outings.
Gallipoli s met the old
York tourney roster. After a
slow start earlier In the Nelsonville Greyhounds three
times in tournament comseason, · the Buckeyes
finished strong by winning petition, losing 15-14 in 1934,
and winning 39-27 in 1941 and
six of their last seven games,
losing only lu powerful 54-40 in 1949.
Coach Osborne's quintet,
Alexander (82-71) during lhe
meeting Us second con·
month of February.
feren
ce champion in tourThe Buckeyes two mai n
scoring threa ts are Dave nament play for the second
consecutive game,
is
Pritchard, 6-2 junior forward,
and Greg Smathers, 6-0 junior a veraglng 6H points per
game. The GAHS defense Is
forward.
permitting 50.4 points per
During regular season play,
game,
best mark In the four·
Pritchard averaged 18-3 points
team field.
a game in all games. Inside the
The Gallians are led by 6-4
Tri-Valley Conference, the NY
ace averaged 20.4 per outing. jun ior center Gil Price and 6-3
Smathers ave raged 17.9 a senior forward Jmmy Noe in
the scoring column.
game in conference play.
Coach Osborne will go with
Ne lsonvill e-Yo rk is
averaging 6&gt;.1 points per Price at center and Noe at one
game. Defensively, the forward post. Topper Orr, 6-1
Buckeyes are permitting 62.4 senior will open al the other
· forward post. Kev Sheets, 5-8
points a game.
Coach Grandy indicated senior, and Mark Kielsing, 6-1
Sunday he will start Smathers senior, will ope n at the guard
and Pritchard at the forward positions. Jim Niday, 6-0
posts. Mike Koker, 6-2 senior, sophomore guard, and Mike
will open at center. Jerry Berridge, 6-0 junior forward,
Wright, 6-0 junior, and Max are front-line replacements.
Winner of tonight's game will
Pitts, 6-0 sophomore, will open
play
Alexander at 7:30 p. m.
at the guard positions. J. R.
" Coe, 5-9 junior forward, is the Saturday lor the pistrict
championship, and a berth in
Buckeyes_' sixth man.
The Buckeyes most Im- the Class AA Regional Tourpressive win or the year was a nament, to be held nex t Friday
65-58 win over Southeastern and Saturday at Dayton .

Division by six games, · is
gun ning for its first NBA
championship since 1969 and
the accompanying riches. At
the moment, the Celtics are
alter the best won-lost
precentage · bonus and they

have an excellent chance to
div,Y that extra dividend.
The Celtics clobbered Buffalo 127-112 Tuesday night to
raise their percentage to .812.
Their closest rival is Los
Angeles, with a .743 mark.

Pete·Rose happy
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - Pete
Rose, twi ce the National
League batting champion, was
in a jovial mood Tuesday after
coming 'to. terms on a new
contract with the Cincinnati
Reds.
"For awhile," he joked, "I
thought I was going to have to
call upon Henry Kissinger to
get me into camp."

Although it was not revealed
exactly how much Rose will be
making this year, the figure
apparently is somewhere between $117,500 and $120,000.
The star outfielder was holding
out for the higher salary and

the club formerly was holding
firm on the lower one.
Rose, who batted .31i? last
year and has topped the .300
mark for eight consecutive
seasons, was the . club's last
holdout.
Joe Morgan and Tony Perez,
who came to terms last week,
reported for their first workout
of the spring Tuesday. Rose
was to start practice today.
Morgan, who signed for a reported $93,000, was delayed by
exams at California State College where he is majoring in
physical education. He balled
.292 last season, hit 16 homers

Prothro sues big
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Tommy Proth ro made no
public statement last January
when Carroll Rosenbloom fir ed
him as head coach of the Los
Angeles Rams.
Prothro, 52, an astute bridge
and chess player, consulted in
private with his attorney,
biding time. He spoke out in a
loud voice Tuesday when he
filed a $1.9 million breach of
contract suit against Rosenbloom, th e Rams and the
Baltimore Football Club, Inc.
The suit accused Rosenbloom of "knowingly and
wilfully" conspiring to induce
breach of contract.
Not money but pride apparently motivated Prothro in
filing the suit since Rosenbloom agreed to pay off the
remaining three years on a
fiv e-year contr act. It was
reported that Prothro got
$00,000 a year but Rosenbloom
denied that this was a true
figure.
Asks Damages
The suit disclosed that
Prothro's actual salary was
$75,000 a year plus use of a new
auto each year. He asked
$400,000 actual damages in-

eluding loss of $35,000 a year in
compensatipn for public appearances he would have made
as head coach.
The suit also asked $1 million
for loss of damage to his
teputation as a football coach
and $500,000 punitive damages.
Prothro also asked the court
to require the Rams to pay him
$40,000 in death benefits.
The late Dan Reeves signed
Prothro, a successful college
coach, in January of 1971.
Pro thro said his contract
stipulated that he could be
fired only on grounds of a
morals offense.
First Losing Season
Rosenbloom fired him for
losing, however. The Rams had
a 6-7-1 record last year, their
first losing season since 1965.
Rosenbloom hired Chuck
Knox, a Detroit Lions
assistant, to replace Prothro.
The Baltimore club was
involved in the suit because it
was formerly owned by Rosenbloom and he swapped the
Colts lor the Rams, who had
been purchased lor $19 million.
Most of the shares belonged to
the estate of Reeves, who died
of cancer in April, 1971.

and was issued 115 walks .
Morgan stole 58 bases last
year but only two were third
base and he said "this year I
intend to steal a lot more."
"That way, a lot of times I
will be able to score on a wild
pitch, infield hit or sacrifice fly
instead of waiting for a base
hit," the second baseman said.
Perez, who was delayed because of the illness of his two
children, visited his parents in
Cuba ~or the first time since the
Castro takeover. The slugging
first baseman hit 22 homers
and drove in 90 runs last year
despite a hand injury most of
the season.

All five s'tarters hit In double
figures for Boston with John
Havlicek and Jq Jo Whi~ each
hitting 25 points as the Celtics
raised their record to 56-13.
Bob Kauffman was Buffalo's
leading scorer with 28 pciints.
In other NBA action, Los
Angeles downed Portland 114102, New York ripped Seattle
106-94, Milwaukee topped
Chicago 96-88, Phoenix beat
Cleveland 110-102, and Golden
State defeated Detroit 108-93.
Los Angeles liuilt a 61-421ead
over Portland and then coasted
past the Trail Blazers to lift its
season record to 52-18 with 12
gamesremaining.Portlandcut
'

5- The Daily &amp;1ntinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7, 1973

their 19-point halftime lead to
· one point in the third quarter.
G~il Goodri~h led the "?kers
wtth 30 pomts and Stdney
Wicks paced Portland with 26.
.Bill Bradley scored 29 points
and Walt Frazier added 27 for
New York as the Knicks sel a
club record by winning their
33rd home game this season.
Milwaukee opened a 31hgame lead over second place
Chicago in the Midwest as the
Bulls dropped their "must"
game to the Bucks. Eight
straight points by Milwaukee
chilled the Chicago effort after
the Bulls gained an 81-80 lead
with 6:54 left in the game.

Kareem Abdui-Jabbar topped
the Bucks with 31 iiomts and·
Chet waiker was high for
Chicago with 27.
A 23-1 0 Phoenil surge '
starting off the third quarter
carried the Suns past
Cleveland . Neal Walk . of
Phoenix and Lenny Wilk.e11.11 of
Cleveland shared ·scoring
honors with 26 points each.
Jeff M!J]Uns scored. 'six of
Golden State's first 10 points. of
the fourth quarter to boost the
Warriors"past Detroit. Mullens
tallied a game-high 24 points
and John Mengel! hit his
season high with 23 points for
the Pistons.
CHESTER, RIVERVIEW AND TUPPERS PLAINS
seventh and eighth grade basketball squad . Front row, 1r, John Evans, Eugene Johnson, Bruce Myers, Steve
TrullSell, Bryan Gibbs; secOJI• • w, IiiCk Lehman, Joe Kuhn,

Two Gophers on top 5

CHICAGO (UP!) - Minnesota, in the running lor a
second straight Big Ten
basketball championship, won
two positions on the All Conference team picked by United
Press International by the 10
coaches.
Named from the Gophers
were hiLlky center Jim Brewer
and senior forward Ron Behagen. Dlinois' ~ick Weatherspoon, Michigan State's Mike
OHIO HIGH SCHOOL
Robinson, heading toward a
Basketball Playoff Scores
second straight individual
By United Press International
Class AAA
scoring championship, and
IAI Mentor)
Ohio State's Allan Hornyak
Barberton 90 Conneaut 70
complete
the first learn .
IAtOxlordl
Lakota 64 Fairfield 58
Chosen for the second learn .
Hamilton Taft 70 Cin. Oak Hills were two players from In·
64
IAt Cincinnati)
diana, John Ritter and Steve
Cin. Elder 64 Cin. Woodward 45 Downing, the league-leading
Cin . Purcell 47 Cin . LaSalle 41
rebounder from Iowa, Kevin
Class AA
I At Rio Grande)
Kunnert, Michigan 's Henry
Albany Al exander 72 Waverly Wilmore, and still another
57
(At Urbana)
Gopher, Clyde Turnet. Indiana
Tip p City 64 Spr ingfield was tied for the league lead
Catholic 58
with Minnesota .
(AI Dayton)
Springboro
Middletown
Hornyak was named to the
Madison 56
learn for the third straight year
Dayton Jefferson 81 Preble and Robinson, who averaged
~aw-73
I
IAI Cincinnati)
. 27.2 points per game last year
Cin . McNi cholas 69 Taylor 56 and who has a 27.3 average so
North College Hill 54
far this season, was picked for
Cincinnati Harrison 39
the second straight year.
Class A
Every one of the top five
IAt Columbus)
players
was named by each of
Ridgedale 83 Sparta Highland
the 10 coaches and Hornyak
69
Lancaster Fisher 75 Jonathan received the most points, nine
Alder 70
coaches placing him on their
(At Chillicothe)
Ross
Southeastern
64 first team and the 1Qth giving
Crooksville 57
him a second team berth.
IAI Steubenville)
Brewer and Weatherspoon
Indian Valley South 47
uth 4/
each were placed on the first
Conation Valley 27 learn by seven coaches and on
Garaway 68 Woodsfield 32
th e second by three while six
lA!Canton I
United Loca l 60 Lordstown 44 chose Behagen on the first
Dalton 79 Cleve. Lutheran West
52 ..
team and five picked Robinson .

The team would furnish a
coach all the offensive and
defensive skills he could r~ui­
re. Weatherspoon ranks as the
league's second . best scorer
and Hornyak third, behind
Robinson, and Weatherspoon
also ranks second in reboun-

ding to Kunnert.
Brewer a nd Behagen
together pick off an average of
20 rebounds a game for the
Gophers, the top rebounding
club in the circuit, and together
are averaging about 35 points a
game.

JAMES DAVID COUNCIL pins his mother, Mrs. James
Council, with a miniature Eagle Scout pin during ceremonies
Sunday when he became an Eagle Scout.

Eastern high's

A

Eagle award ·won
by James Council

cheerleaders had

team ·to support

,\'[' !liGHT The
,Eastern
varsity
cheerleaders are front
t·uw. 1-r, Martie Cald·
.well. and .Melinda
'.\m s bary : in back.
':\1ancy Sexson, 'fonya
:Kee baugh and Joyce
·\1.vers, and at top. CrysErwin.
Their
-tal
,"Eag le s" were cochampions or the tough
Oass 1\ Southern Valley
Cu111'er·cnce.

.-

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LEADS PACK .
AKRON, Ohio (UP!) - Don
McCune, who chalked up his
second straight Professional
Bowlers Association title last
week by taking the Miller High
Life Open at Milwaukee, has
opened a solid lead in the PBA
money winning list.
McCune, of Munster, Ind.,
has poC~eted $22,000 for his two
victories and now has won
$32,000 in nine events so far on
the fall and winter tour .
In the close battle for second
pia~~ Carl'len Salvino's 15th
place finish at Milwaukee and
$1 ,150 in prize money moved
him into the runner up spot with
$22,425, with Barry Asher
taking third wilh $21 ,596 and
Don Johnson, last week 's
leader, dropping all the way to
fourth with $21,428.

Yankees'

MASON, W.VA.

PH. 773-5554

McDaniel
Thanks To All You Nice People Who Attended Our 5th Anniversary Sale/

19¢
WAX PAPER ...............
4
$1
CATSUP.......................
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TOMATOES .............
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TOMATO JUICE .....
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SHORTEN lNG ............. ~.~~ ...
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CHOC. .CHIPS ............. f.~t
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GRAPE JELLY..............~!
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Prices Effective Mar. 7-14

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Saturday 9 to 9

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FORT
LAUDERDALE Mrs . Marilyn Peterson, who be taking a blase atti tude.
(UPI) -For Mike and Susan apparently was planning to fly General Ma nager Lee Mac·and Fritz and Marilyn there to Rockford, IlL to visit her Phail , who has made no move
were laughs, tears, happy parents, wo uld make any to trade either one of them,
times, sad times, highs ·and pu blic comments .
even mana ged to quip, "1guess
lows. Ultimately, though, there
In Rockford , Mari lyn 's I'm going to have to call off
was happiness for only one mother, Mrs. Arthur Monks, family da y."
couple.
said, "as far as my daughter is One Yankee player summed
That was the picture painted concemetl, there is no swap. up the feelings of the majority
by Mrs. Susan Kekich as she She has applied for a divorce of the players by saying, "it's
explained Tuesday how New but does not plan to live with their own damn business and
York Yankee pitchers Fritz Mike Kekich. She is getting a as long as it doesn't affect !heir
Peterson and Mike Kekich divorce only because Fritz pitching, it's their business."
came to agree on the marital wants one ."
But Lindy McDaniel, a
swap they announced Monday.
The Yan kee brass seems to minister of the Chu rch of
Mrs. Kekich, who is now
living with Fritz said, "We
went through an unbelievable
strain. There were all kinds of
VISIT THE HOLIDAY INN ..•
highs and lows. I have never
of Ga IIi polis
been happier in my life or
AN
ELEGA
NT EVENING OF DINING
ENJOY
sadder at the same time. We
IN OUR
·must have gone through every
kind of emotion a human b~ing
"500 ROOM"
ca n experience."
'
Servi ng Niteiy Till10 P.M.
Mrs. Kekich said she wasn't
Now
.,
worried about what people
Appearing PADDLE WHEEL LOUNGE
might think . "It's my life and
In The
you have to do what makes you
Appea ring
happy. There's nothing smutty
Friday
about this and anybody who
Appearing
&amp;
thinks it's smutty ·has to be
Weekly
Saturday
smutty-minded themselves.
8:3 0 P, M.
9: 00P.M.
Don't make this out to be dirty
Til
Til
and ugly. We are not involved
I :30 A. M.
.
2
P.M.
in any lechery . We just fell in

Christ, said, "it's not very
good, is it? It's hard to
separate baseball life from
private life.''

••
I

,.,.

99c:

LANGS VILLE - James pin. He presented his father an
~;. "' lor IJOndll"'
David Council received the Eagle tie bar.
highest rank in scouting - the
Eagle Scouts Tom Crisp and
Eagle Scout Award - at the Robert Council were escorts
Langsville Christian Church for the candidate and hi~
Sunday afternoon.
pa rents . Jane Ann Bobo
The new Eagle Scout, son of presented an organ prelude
• GENUINE NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS
.,
Mr. and Mrs. James Council, is with sevet·al numbers during
Not the old st~le t inted or p ainiP~ Bl ~c k &amp; Wl11!r. 111lo l o~.
e SELECTION OF PROOFS 'H P o1 r ~ tn drom hom.
1\ freshman at Meigs High the ceremonies. The ine FOR All AGES Bahie'i. c h ild r ~ n . adults.
&amp;hooL He is a member of stitutional representative Carl
Grou[l s pNot o;raphtd at ~n additiona l ~m~ ll tl1ar ~e .
Explorer Posl239 sponsored by . Barby gave the cha rge to the
• FREE TO ALL SENIOR CITIZENS
the church ; his fa ther is ad- new Eagle Scout.
rree BxlO liwing col or portra it to all cu stomm om 60 Ytm or age.
e LIMITED OFFER! On&lt;l uer Silllitct , one per family .
visor of the post.
James and his bro th er,
e Admlised Special Head &amp; Should m Only
James began in scouting Robert, are planning to visit
with Pack 240 of Rutland in Camp Philmon t in New Mexico
TELL YOUR FRIENDS ABOUT THIS SPECIAL OFFER
November, 1967 at the age of to climax their scout ing
eight and con tinued through careers. Both Council boys will
the Webelo Scouts while in the continue in scouting .
pack. At the age of II he joined
F o II owing Sunda y's
Troop 239 and later joined ceremonies a reception was
Explorer Post 239 . Upon he ld in the church fellowship
MIDDLEPORT
completing the requirements room .
and his service project, a
bulletin board r.or the sponWh e n !he sap begins to
soring church, James has won rise. the re's "IA S1wll y a fight
for It is bus seat.
the top award.
While in the troop and post,
James. ,held offices required·
for adv,aucement. He served as
a den chief at a Cub Scout Pow
Wow and has attended the den
chief's conference in Huntington . H~ received a certificate from Boy Scouts of
America. James David is a ·
member of the Order of the
Arrow and has served on the
It's as simple as !hal! Buy what you wan!, take delivery at once. Pay
staff with the kitchen crew at
the merchandise when your check arrives .
for
Camp Arrowhead.
The new Eagle Scout was one
of a group of scouts making a
canoe trip last summer from
Pittsburgh to Pomeroy.
To arrive at the E2gle Scout
level, young Council earned 21
merit badges, as required ,
some of whi ch are cooking,
camping , hiking, swimming,
conse rvation, first aid , life
handsor:ne oak
s~v in g, personal fitn ess,
finish tables •..
citizenship , and pioneering.
· all with
At Sunday's ceremon ies,
care-free
James David was presented
the Eagle Scout medal by his
mother, whom he pinned, in
turn, with a miniature Eagle

Unfortunately, the swap· which took place Dec. 14
although the couples first tried ,
it last summer - didn't work
out as M!ll lor Mike and
Marilyn as it did for Fritz and
I
Susan. L
Mrs. il\.ekich said, "I wish
they cpwd have a life tugether.
That would make everything
complete."
Neither Mike Kekich . nor

When You Get Your Income Tax Refund

RartSpanish Trtasum
... at unbelievably low prices!

PANTY HOSE

60 INCH COCKTAIL TABLE
SQUARE COMMO OE

take

NO SEAMS ANYWHERE IN
PANTY , LEG or TOE!

twot

95

149,95

HEXAGONAL COMMODE
An elegant touch for

New Seamfree con struction

. elim inates ALL seams ·· no
seam s anywher e t o bind, cut

your room- pe rfect fo r
a lamp or objet d'art.
S!drage space &lt;1 side .
So ·much beauty lor

so l1tl le!

49.95

1

or pu ll! Yo u'll agree they 're
the finest t: :ting Panty Hose

BEN ~ FRANKLIN

'

A tabl e yo u'l l treasure forever.
Rich, orna te ca rvin gs, wlth storage
space and convenient.shelf bottom .
Fantas tic at this pric e!

A handsome, romantic
design witll lol s ol
room inside tile
convenien t, and
beaut ifull y carvvd
doors. At this price-

you have ever worn ,

'·

lto 5

Buy Now! Pay Later!

~e

Patty Malone

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO .

9 to 12

NEW!

love."

Large Golden Ripe

AT

FRI. MAR. 9

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.

SPECIAL
FOR EVERYONE

WESTERN AUTO STORE

,\T IU GIIT below the
Eastern re serve
cheerleaders are front,
Becky Ebersbach. and
i n back, Hetsy Arils·
1iat·y, Vicki Gaul and Liz
Edwards.

Choose from gold flake, gold lace, gold
lace blue , blue lace avocado.

EVONNE TIES
BOSTON (UPI )'--An . upset
loss, Australian Evonne Goola·
gong moved irito firs! place
Tuesday in the women's division of the $400,000-Commercial
Union Grand Prix ofTennis.
Miss Goolagong was beaten
by Virginia Wade of Grea t
Britain in the semifinals of la•t
week's S&amp;H Classic at Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., but still
picked up 30 points in th e
Grand Prix competition for a
total of 75 in the two events to
dale .
Chris Evert won the $10,000
first prize in the ·Fort Lauderdale tournament and AlOved
into a second place tie

Jim Davis, Ricky Barringer, and Johf"t:MIS.ey; back row,
Gary Nelson, Phil LaComb; Mark
Br
Riffle,
Charles Lantz, Perry Reed, Lamar
n,
Jim Putman and Archie Rose, coac

a championship

Every Week At Hogg &amp; Zuspan

Scores

TOP SKIERS
WILMINGTON, N.Y. (UP!)
- Robert Cunningham of
Hudson Valley Community Colle ge~ . and Cindy
Frennette of Canton A&amp;T won
the individual performance
Vermont Tech won the nationa l
skiing title in the tournament.
In the 15-team national finals,
Paul Smith finished as runnerup to Vermont Tech, with
279.22 points to 290.40 for the
Vermonters . Third was host
North Country Community College of Saranac Lake with
278.53. .
In the women's event, Canton
A&amp;T edged Champlain Junior
College of Burlington, Vt. ,
)69.55 to 166.08.

•
WID ·

Celtics continue rampage with ..127-l12
By United Press lntemaliooal
The drive '.for fame and
fortune prevents the Boston
Cellics from slacking orr at the
tailend of the National
Baksetball Association season.
Boston, leading 'the Atlantic

.

l

RALL'S
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Ingels Furniture
992-2635

OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. NIGHTS

MIDDLEPORT

�.
....
....,

..·:·

.';·:

--·---

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7,1973

&lt;•

'f' ·.

Mason·County

~

•,•
....

....
:;:;
·~:
....

if

'

..,..

News

-·--·
--·
.~..:.

--

•.......

.

-....
~­

~

p,~

•••

w,'"

"'
•••

....

.,.~ · .

..

WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

CAP'N JOHN

Fried Clams • • • 7-o•·79c
CAP'N JOHN ...
hrimp Cocktail 3
PEELED DEVEINED
99
$3
hrimp ~~~~ . • •
DRESSED
$229
Whiting • . • • ' 5
FRIED
Fish Cakes .. •

A&amp;P POLICY:
r ~ h n r11

Alway &gt; do whnt

1 rr.r(l

pk~.

~•

j, ,. r !. .,

v

4-oz.

RAINCHECK :
If

(In o d vP r lt \r•d ~ fl O.:CI( I i &lt;

( •

1ng

1&lt; ' 111 o r rhr·

wl•ek

O r rf

~(llllL ~ purer I

)'\JV m~l, " 1'

II

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(J•

M or 1r1ge r fo r o Rn mcl w. k 11 " ' 11!1•
~ ome

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ynu to lh•

pr c rl .. !.,II, "

r" "

II'

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o ile r\

qucrr{ rll i l'('

on

unr •IH ih

N c1 mo ll tr

''''' ' Y l•o•~

''

~.h11 1 or

no rn 'l ll c r

1

pkg.

lb.
box

GUARANTEE:

.•••. .

DRESSES

••

Va lues to $8.99 in these
better late wmter ladies'
dres ses
Broken sizes .
Hurry , these will go early .

Middleport
Daily 9 to 9

I UNDERSTAND THAT ONE bus has already been filled for
the Nashville Tour scheduled May 25th, 26th, 27th. This is the
Mason County Homemakers Educational Tour. According to
Vicki Keefer, Mason County Extension Agent, they plan to use
two buses. They plan to visit The Hermitage (Andrew Jackson's
House), Counlry Music ·Hall of Fame and Museum, The Parthenon, Upper Room Chapel, Civil War Presbyterian Church, _
Grand Ole Opry, the downtown shopping area, and other points of
interest.
They plan to stay at the Ramada Inn two nights (for two
A thought for the day:
persons per room, $50, and 4 per room $44). The cost includes American author Ambrose
bus fare, insurance, two nights lodging, admission to the Grand J;herce said "marriage" IS a
Old Opry, the Hennitage, and the Country Music Hall of Fame. commumty consisting of a
Reservations are due by May 1.
master, a mistress and two
slaves, making it two m all "
ON MARCH TI'H at 1 p.m. a Yeast Bread workshop will be
held at the Appalachian Power Company auditorium.
Citizens of Lemngrad still
1 efer to th eir home as " Hero
ANOTHER ITEM IN the Mason County Homemakers City, " an accolade earned
leaflet, "Turning the Pages," is the notice of a leadership for their fortitude during the
German siege of World War
training seminar with Miss Shirley Campbell, State Extension II.
Program Leader for Women of Morgantown, in charge on March
15 from 9:30 to 2 p.m., with a potluck diMer at noon at the Appalachian Power Company auditorium.

'tHE COMPLETE FAMILY

SEWING
BOOK
This Week Get Chapter 7 and 8
"NECKLINES, SLEEVES, POCKETS"
and

·

"AN OPEN AND SHUT STORY"
only

33(

At A&amp;P WEO

I

I

l-Ib.
, 1&gt;kr.

lc

•

•

'

.

'

l-Ib.

'

CHEF BOYAR DEE

Cheese Pizza

pkg.

51

t

q4

61 -oa. • ,
box

INSTANT COFFEE

C:

Taster's Choice
Starkist Tuna

0

I

CHUNK LIGHT

• • •

CHEF BOYAR DEE

Pepperoni Pizza
CHEF BOYAR DEE

Sausage Pizza

' '

•

·~-. .46~

•

can

Green Giant Frozen Rice Products .. •:.;;~· 43c
Birdseye Frozen Baby Limasso~m!•H .. ~;: 43c
Birdseye Frozen Peas and Cauliflower':.0~·43c
Ty-0-Bol Cleaner . . . . . . . . . ... .. · :.~· 87c
.
Dommo
ugar . . . . . . .
5 ,,;, 69c .
Easy Off Ovtn Cleaner . . ... , ..... ~:.: · 79c
Green Giant Frozen Corn
· ... ',?;;~· 49c
Adolph's Salt Su!Jstitute ......... ··~.t 65c
Pillsbury Crescent Rolls ... .•. . .. ;.::: 35c

!8!1·•··83

•

•

";~ $219

I

pk(.

s

' ' '

Saluto Frozen Party Pizza ........ '~-~~· $2.37
Nabisco Chips Ahoy . . . . . . ... . . ";~;~· 56c
Herb Ox Bouillon Cubes . . . . . . .
. 'kl, ' ' 39c

"

•
'

..

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,';,"
-;:'

•

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With
This

Coupon

Coupon

ANTI-PERSPIRANT

. ~ Sh.a.tapootA

With
This

•

.,. Coupon

16·01.
btl.

8 99

c:

jumbo

•

•

56 size

or GOLDEN DELICIOUS

Ies

WASH . STATE
EXTRA
FANCY
•

3lhs. $100
•

HAWAIIAN

Pineapples . .
A;p~;~;~~FO:NI-~

NEW!

Todllor
of 12
"

'"'I

~~ WEO COUPON ;- - n l '! r,nrnm- WEO COUPON ;; -

save

C·uoon \:

A• All A&amp;P WEO's-C is. Di&lt;.

tA

.,.

With
Thi&amp;
Coupon

can

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~

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"'r :'

Good Thru Sot., M"ch lOth

59

SUJ~AP£

c

S·oz.

Thru Sot. March IOth At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cols. Div.
·LIMIT ON .. ~!!!.!:~~

WEO COUPO~ if"

jumbo
• 5 size

...'

~~

\:~ I ~~)~~

1

BETTY CROCKER

iO:

Blueberry
Ph•

Couoon

Good Thru Sol .. M"eh lOth

At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cis o;,,

i&lt;l" - •
/I 2c OFF LABEL •

,'

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\;,

~~

m~ LIMIT ONE~~-~ ..~"'T"'(@ LIMIT ON_E\fiqlli'll~~ ;

1

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Couoon {.

Good Thru Sot., Mmh IO!h
At

r;j

Sllve
25c .

Ajn
cans

}

-,l 1 ~ WEO

All A&amp;P WEO's-Cis O;,,

\-

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10c OFF LABEL

Ajax

Sllve
27c

'

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'f:

ASSORTED

Aurara

.I

With ThIs Coupon On
box

Coupon {-

Gocd Thru Sot. Morch lOth

)·

)~ 51 At All A&amp;P WEO's-Cio. Di&lt;. 1~~

I!]'UliJ!IJ Llh41T ONE~J

''
"

COUPON®
: - r , ,

~

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~

pkgs.

Co~';;;,

Good Thru Sot., Moreh IDih

At All A&amp;P WEO's-,Cis. Di&lt;.

(!]~ LIMIT ONE ~J, I!J~,;r LIM.T I'IWII..o;.

pkg. Beef or All

Swift's Premium

· Franks ; :
.Gocd Thru Sot, loloreh ,IOlh

AI Ail AlP WEO's-Cio. Dr..

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,
'•

~

Winners of the annual
American Government Test
sponsored at the Meigs High
School by Feeney-Bennett Post
128,Middleport; Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, and Rutland
Post 467, American Legion
Posts, were announced today.
The top boy and girl in the
senior class were John David
Gerard and Edith Ann Mees;
the jWiior class, Paul E. Voss
and Ingrid ·Hawley, and the
sophomore class' boy winner
was Rick Couch. No girl winner
was named for the latter class.
I
I

I

,

~

The planet J UP.lter is a
'j· quarter-million miles around
;, ~nd larger than all the other
planets together.

t·

.

\

announced

'

HI

Sll 99 1n this
close out lot of late wmter
dresses Broken sizes . Out

to $16 99. Close out lot .

they go now at Stiffler's.
These won't
last long.

Famous labels from our

Shop early

stock. Broken sizes. Out
they go now! Be here early.

$ 00

EACH

·.

EACH

- March In and SaveMEN'S-BOYS'-YOUTHS'

EACH

March In and Save
. 54 &amp; 60 Inch Wide
ASSORTED FANCY

Lade-to- Toe Gym

March In and Save
New Spring · Men's
FAMOUS LABELS

BONDED KNITS

OXFORDS

DRESS SLACKS

Reg. $1.99 value. 541o 60 inch

American made men's youths - boys lace to the toe
gym oxfords. Reg . $2 .99
val ue You save at Stlf.
fler's

wide.

and

Wid e select1on of famous

laney bonded kn1ts. Stock up
now at your Friendly Stiffler

Assorted plain

and asst new spring fabrics.

Stores
money

Reg.
. $1.99
Value!

PAIR
.·.·,
New Spring Styles

We

can sa\l e

Campus men's double knits
Sizes 29 to 42. Asst. plain and

you

fancy colors. Asst . sty les.
Budget pri ced to meet your

$ 00

budget.

YARD
::
..

,"

MENS SANDY McGEE

.

NEW SMART GIRLS'

OXFORDS
lOAFERS

""

3 To 6X-7 To 14

SPRING DRESSES
dresses for g1rls .

$goo

FROM

99$

UP
'•

;.;

. a brilliant perfect Keepsake

diamond enuaemenl rlna with

¢

mdchlnt weddlnc rings . Master·

crafled and fully guuanteed.

REG.
$1.19
VALUE

~OYAOE

loVED

fl i NG

:·

"'AW S

..

W~EL.AN

WED

RINO
PING

·=

REG. $2.00 VALUE
Men's Zip Star Vinyl

MANS

PERMANENT PRESS

SPORT SHI
popular

Oxford s. Whste with red and
blue trim Sizes 7 to 12.

long

Per .

FOR THE

FAMILY
Off on the righl feet 1
Famll 1es who shbe -up
f or
comfort, style, value . We

her e are ask 1ng

don't thsnk that's asking
for too I'Y"uch Come see 1

PAIR

Ma·i~ Street
POMEROY, OHIO

::·

,•,•,

LARGE SELECTION
VALUES T0$2.59

LADIES KNIT ·TOPS
Special group of ladies' plain and fancy
knit tops . S-M-L. Values to $2.79 in this
group. Bright new spring colors . Buy
several now at thi s low-low price.

COATS
New for Sprong ; .. Lad les'
Dress and Casual .:oats.
Smar t styles, · asst. new
fabncs . Bvy yours now on

EACH

-New For Spring-

Ladies' New Spring
DRESS &amp; CASUAL

Lay- Away at your Friendly
Sliffler stores.
Manf New ~lyles Now-More To Come ·

•,

EACH

$ 00

- New For Spring!.\• "-..)

::::

A real buy, men's vmyl Sport

SIZES S - M~ L-XL

SPRING SHOE FASHIONS

·::

SPORT OXFORDS

A great se lect ion of fine
new spring patterns and
styles m sport sh1rts

poin ted co lla rs.
manent Press.

'•

¢

REG.
25c
VALUE

EACH

..

MENS NEW SPRING

AlTEC
WED

VALUE

EACH

·:·:
Reg. 25c value . Asst. colors. Big siz~
·:.,:·:,__,_
: face cloths. Stock up now at lhis low,
low price at Stiffler's large sa le group.
Yes, you save money at Stiffler's.

¢

REG .
29C

..

.

WASH CLOTHS

Reg . 29c Value. First quality asst.
colors and patterns Pot Holders.
Special new low, low price at Stiffler's . Stock up now.

Reg . $1.29 value, 16 inch by 20 inch size
Art Board Pictures . Asst . group. Stock
up now for spring at Stiffler's.

Beautiful Mr and Mrs. bridal sets

.

Asst. Colors -. Large Size

POT HOLDERS

:·.:

TO
EACH
:;.;..

REG. 25c VALUE, SAVE

Asst. Colors and Patterns

ART BOARD
PICTURES
Think Three

·.

·.
Reg. 29c Value First Quality

REG. $1.29 Value Asst.
16" X20" SIZE

EACH

SHOES

Final Clearance on these
late wmter Dresses. Values

Their new smart Girls' Spnng
Dress Asst . new spring colors.
wide selection of slyles J to 6x . 7
to l4sJzes We also ha ve the Jcng

Wakulla Springs, m a wildlife preserve about 14 miles
south of Tallahassee , Flonda, is the deepest spring in
the United States .

Chapman's

DRESSES

Values to

SPO

I'LL CLOSE THIS SECI'ION with an economical, nutritious
recipe called baked cabbage.
Cut cabbage coarse. Salt and cook the cabbage with very
little water until tender. Drain. Grease a baking dish. Alternate a
layer of cabbage, then a layer of grated cheese (a mixture of
Longhorn and American), then a layer of medium white sauce.
Top with a layer of cheese and sprinkle with cornflake crumbs.
Bake at 350 degrees until the ingredients are heated through and
the cheese is golden brown.
Try It - you'll like it.

Test wiruters

Values To $16.99
LADIES' WINTER

DRESSES

$ 00

wit h

LIQUID

FINAL CLEARANCE

.., Values To $11.99
:;: LADIES' WINTER

BOBBIE ·BROOKS
RUSS TOGS

ON MARCH 28TH, BONNIE LACEY will conduct an ail-day
workshop "Sewing with Knits" from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the
Courthouse Annex Auditorium. Send U to the Mason County
Extension Office to register for the course which will feature
making slacks, ribbed neck bands, lingerie, measuring to get a
good fit, and alterations. Tbe seamstress will display a complete
wardrobe.

LETART - Membei's of the Oak Grove Sunday School
honored !'l. •. Stella Krebs and new daughter, Stacie, recently at
the home of Mrs. Krebs' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Randolph
here. The Infant received many gifts. A color scheme of yellow
pink and green was used in the decorations.
'
Hostesses were Mrs. Sue Icenhower, Louise and Ercell
Adkim. The Adkins ladies baked the cakes. Hollice Thomp50n
won the door prize.
Attending were the honorees, Mrs. James (Stella) Krebs and
Stacie, Mrs. Ethel Rayburn, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Yeager,
Nellie Adkins, Hollice Thompson, F1orence Love, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Roach and Roger and hostesses, Mrs. Icenhower and
Allen, Ercell Adkins and Louise Adkim, Mr. James Krebs, and
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs. lves King, Ada Thompson,
Martha Friend, Hariette Thompsori, Jenny Hayman Gibbs.
Prior to the shower gifts were presented by the following to
the new infant, Mrs. Goldie Johnson, Rebecca Roush, Barbara
and Larry Hall, Paolella and Tom King, Harold Parsons, Larry
Roach, Jane and Edwin Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wolfe
and family, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. King, Benny Krebs, Bobby and
Kay Barnette, Mrs. Robert Roush, Suzanne Davidson, Bobbie
Lou Randolph, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Scott and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Adkins, Mr. and Mrs. George Randolph, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry G. Love, Murl Bogler and Mrs. Lori Parsons.

LIQUID DETERGENT

With
This

SAVINGS GROUP No.2
FINAL CLEARANCE

Values To $8.99
LADIES' WINTER

114-lb.

•

pcu (l ble 11cm cnt hl ~(11 11 • ' ~l ''' orol P ' '''

A&amp;P

SAVINGS GROUP No. 1
FINAL CLEARANCE

Jars

\ ()l d

I

'

Ladies' New Spring
BETTER QUALITY
:::

DRESSES
New for Sprong, ladies' spring
better quality dresses. Pri ced
lo meet your budget Jun ior,
Mi sses and Half Si zes Yes, at

vour Friendly Stlfflers Stores .

$899 $2 3°0 /
To

- New For SpringLADIES' NEW SPRING
CHARM STEP

FOOTWEAR
New for Spring, ladies ' new

Charm Step footwear. All new
spring styles and colors, sfo 10
sizes. See these- now at your

Froendly Stiffler
Budget priced

Stores .

'

�.
....
....,

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--·---

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7,1973

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Mason·County

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WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES

CAP'N JOHN

Fried Clams • • • 7-o•·79c
CAP'N JOHN ...
hrimp Cocktail 3
PEELED DEVEINED
99
$3
hrimp ~~~~ . • •
DRESSED
$229
Whiting • . • • ' 5
FRIED
Fish Cakes .. •

A&amp;P POLICY:
r ~ h n r11

Alway &gt; do whnt

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GUARANTEE:

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DRESSES

••

Va lues to $8.99 in these
better late wmter ladies'
dres ses
Broken sizes .
Hurry , these will go early .

Middleport
Daily 9 to 9

I UNDERSTAND THAT ONE bus has already been filled for
the Nashville Tour scheduled May 25th, 26th, 27th. This is the
Mason County Homemakers Educational Tour. According to
Vicki Keefer, Mason County Extension Agent, they plan to use
two buses. They plan to visit The Hermitage (Andrew Jackson's
House), Counlry Music ·Hall of Fame and Museum, The Parthenon, Upper Room Chapel, Civil War Presbyterian Church, _
Grand Ole Opry, the downtown shopping area, and other points of
interest.
They plan to stay at the Ramada Inn two nights (for two
A thought for the day:
persons per room, $50, and 4 per room $44). The cost includes American author Ambrose
bus fare, insurance, two nights lodging, admission to the Grand J;herce said "marriage" IS a
Old Opry, the Hennitage, and the Country Music Hall of Fame. commumty consisting of a
Reservations are due by May 1.
master, a mistress and two
slaves, making it two m all "
ON MARCH TI'H at 1 p.m. a Yeast Bread workshop will be
held at the Appalachian Power Company auditorium.
Citizens of Lemngrad still
1 efer to th eir home as " Hero
ANOTHER ITEM IN the Mason County Homemakers City, " an accolade earned
leaflet, "Turning the Pages," is the notice of a leadership for their fortitude during the
German siege of World War
training seminar with Miss Shirley Campbell, State Extension II.
Program Leader for Women of Morgantown, in charge on March
15 from 9:30 to 2 p.m., with a potluck diMer at noon at the Appalachian Power Company auditorium.

'tHE COMPLETE FAMILY

SEWING
BOOK
This Week Get Chapter 7 and 8
"NECKLINES, SLEEVES, POCKETS"
and

·

"AN OPEN AND SHUT STORY"
only

33(

At A&amp;P WEO

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Cheese Pizza

pkg.

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INSTANT COFFEE

C:

Taster's Choice
Starkist Tuna

0

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CHUNK LIGHT

• • •

CHEF BOYAR DEE

Pepperoni Pizza
CHEF BOYAR DEE

Sausage Pizza

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can

Green Giant Frozen Rice Products .. •:.;;~· 43c
Birdseye Frozen Baby Limasso~m!•H .. ~;: 43c
Birdseye Frozen Peas and Cauliflower':.0~·43c
Ty-0-Bol Cleaner . . . . . . . . . ... .. · :.~· 87c
.
Dommo
ugar . . . . . . .
5 ,,;, 69c .
Easy Off Ovtn Cleaner . . ... , ..... ~:.: · 79c
Green Giant Frozen Corn
· ... ',?;;~· 49c
Adolph's Salt Su!Jstitute ......... ··~.t 65c
Pillsbury Crescent Rolls ... .•. . .. ;.::: 35c

!8!1·•··83

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Saluto Frozen Party Pizza ........ '~-~~· $2.37
Nabisco Chips Ahoy . . . . . . ... . . ";~;~· 56c
Herb Ox Bouillon Cubes . . . . . . .
. 'kl, ' ' 39c

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jumbo

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or GOLDEN DELICIOUS

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Pineapples . .
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Winners of the annual
American Government Test
sponsored at the Meigs High
School by Feeney-Bennett Post
128,Middleport; Drew Webster
Post 39, Pomeroy, and Rutland
Post 467, American Legion
Posts, were announced today.
The top boy and girl in the
senior class were John David
Gerard and Edith Ann Mees;
the jWiior class, Paul E. Voss
and Ingrid ·Hawley, and the
sophomore class' boy winner
was Rick Couch. No girl winner
was named for the latter class.
I
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The planet J UP.lter is a
'j· quarter-million miles around
;, ~nd larger than all the other
planets together.

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announced

'

HI

Sll 99 1n this
close out lot of late wmter
dresses Broken sizes . Out

to $16 99. Close out lot .

they go now at Stiffler's.
These won't
last long.

Famous labels from our

Shop early

stock. Broken sizes. Out
they go now! Be here early.

$ 00

EACH

·.

EACH

- March In and SaveMEN'S-BOYS'-YOUTHS'

EACH

March In and Save
. 54 &amp; 60 Inch Wide
ASSORTED FANCY

Lade-to- Toe Gym

March In and Save
New Spring · Men's
FAMOUS LABELS

BONDED KNITS

OXFORDS

DRESS SLACKS

Reg. $1.99 value. 541o 60 inch

American made men's youths - boys lace to the toe
gym oxfords. Reg . $2 .99
val ue You save at Stlf.
fler's

wide.

and

Wid e select1on of famous

laney bonded kn1ts. Stock up
now at your Friendly Stiffler

Assorted plain

and asst new spring fabrics.

Stores
money

Reg.
. $1.99
Value!

PAIR
.·.·,
New Spring Styles

We

can sa\l e

Campus men's double knits
Sizes 29 to 42. Asst. plain and

you

fancy colors. Asst . sty les.
Budget pri ced to meet your

$ 00

budget.

YARD
::
..

,"

MENS SANDY McGEE

.

NEW SMART GIRLS'

OXFORDS
lOAFERS

""

3 To 6X-7 To 14

SPRING DRESSES
dresses for g1rls .

$goo

FROM

99$

UP
'•

;.;

. a brilliant perfect Keepsake

diamond enuaemenl rlna with

¢

mdchlnt weddlnc rings . Master·

crafled and fully guuanteed.

REG.
$1.19
VALUE

~OYAOE

loVED

fl i NG

:·

"'AW S

..

W~EL.AN

WED

RINO
PING

·=

REG. $2.00 VALUE
Men's Zip Star Vinyl

MANS

PERMANENT PRESS

SPORT SHI
popular

Oxford s. Whste with red and
blue trim Sizes 7 to 12.

long

Per .

FOR THE

FAMILY
Off on the righl feet 1
Famll 1es who shbe -up
f or
comfort, style, value . We

her e are ask 1ng

don't thsnk that's asking
for too I'Y"uch Come see 1

PAIR

Ma·i~ Street
POMEROY, OHIO

::·

,•,•,

LARGE SELECTION
VALUES T0$2.59

LADIES KNIT ·TOPS
Special group of ladies' plain and fancy
knit tops . S-M-L. Values to $2.79 in this
group. Bright new spring colors . Buy
several now at thi s low-low price.

COATS
New for Sprong ; .. Lad les'
Dress and Casual .:oats.
Smar t styles, · asst. new
fabncs . Bvy yours now on

EACH

-New For Spring-

Ladies' New Spring
DRESS &amp; CASUAL

Lay- Away at your Friendly
Sliffler stores.
Manf New ~lyles Now-More To Come ·

•,

EACH

$ 00

- New For Spring!.\• "-..)

::::

A real buy, men's vmyl Sport

SIZES S - M~ L-XL

SPRING SHOE FASHIONS

·::

SPORT OXFORDS

A great se lect ion of fine
new spring patterns and
styles m sport sh1rts

poin ted co lla rs.
manent Press.

'•

¢

REG.
25c
VALUE

EACH

..

MENS NEW SPRING

AlTEC
WED

VALUE

EACH

·:·:
Reg. 25c value . Asst. colors. Big siz~
·:.,:·:,__,_
: face cloths. Stock up now at lhis low,
low price at Stiffler's large sa le group.
Yes, you save money at Stiffler's.

¢

REG .
29C

..

.

WASH CLOTHS

Reg . 29c Value. First quality asst.
colors and patterns Pot Holders.
Special new low, low price at Stiffler's . Stock up now.

Reg . $1.29 value, 16 inch by 20 inch size
Art Board Pictures . Asst . group. Stock
up now for spring at Stiffler's.

Beautiful Mr and Mrs. bridal sets

.

Asst. Colors -. Large Size

POT HOLDERS

:·.:

TO
EACH
:;.;..

REG. 25c VALUE, SAVE

Asst. Colors and Patterns

ART BOARD
PICTURES
Think Three

·.

·.
Reg. 29c Value First Quality

REG. $1.29 Value Asst.
16" X20" SIZE

EACH

SHOES

Final Clearance on these
late wmter Dresses. Values

Their new smart Girls' Spnng
Dress Asst . new spring colors.
wide selection of slyles J to 6x . 7
to l4sJzes We also ha ve the Jcng

Wakulla Springs, m a wildlife preserve about 14 miles
south of Tallahassee , Flonda, is the deepest spring in
the United States .

Chapman's

DRESSES

Values to

SPO

I'LL CLOSE THIS SECI'ION with an economical, nutritious
recipe called baked cabbage.
Cut cabbage coarse. Salt and cook the cabbage with very
little water until tender. Drain. Grease a baking dish. Alternate a
layer of cabbage, then a layer of grated cheese (a mixture of
Longhorn and American), then a layer of medium white sauce.
Top with a layer of cheese and sprinkle with cornflake crumbs.
Bake at 350 degrees until the ingredients are heated through and
the cheese is golden brown.
Try It - you'll like it.

Test wiruters

Values To $16.99
LADIES' WINTER

DRESSES

$ 00

wit h

LIQUID

FINAL CLEARANCE

.., Values To $11.99
:;: LADIES' WINTER

BOBBIE ·BROOKS
RUSS TOGS

ON MARCH 28TH, BONNIE LACEY will conduct an ail-day
workshop "Sewing with Knits" from 9 a.m. until 3 p.m. at the
Courthouse Annex Auditorium. Send U to the Mason County
Extension Office to register for the course which will feature
making slacks, ribbed neck bands, lingerie, measuring to get a
good fit, and alterations. Tbe seamstress will display a complete
wardrobe.

LETART - Membei's of the Oak Grove Sunday School
honored !'l. •. Stella Krebs and new daughter, Stacie, recently at
the home of Mrs. Krebs' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Randolph
here. The Infant received many gifts. A color scheme of yellow
pink and green was used in the decorations.
'
Hostesses were Mrs. Sue Icenhower, Louise and Ercell
Adkim. The Adkins ladies baked the cakes. Hollice Thomp50n
won the door prize.
Attending were the honorees, Mrs. James (Stella) Krebs and
Stacie, Mrs. Ethel Rayburn, Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Yeager,
Nellie Adkins, Hollice Thompson, F1orence Love, Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Roach and Roger and hostesses, Mrs. Icenhower and
Allen, Ercell Adkins and Louise Adkim, Mr. James Krebs, and
Mr. and Mrs. Randolph.
Sending gifts were Mr. and Mrs. lves King, Ada Thompson,
Martha Friend, Hariette Thompsori, Jenny Hayman Gibbs.
Prior to the shower gifts were presented by the following to
the new infant, Mrs. Goldie Johnson, Rebecca Roush, Barbara
and Larry Hall, Paolella and Tom King, Harold Parsons, Larry
Roach, Jane and Edwin Roush, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Wolfe
and family, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. King, Benny Krebs, Bobby and
Kay Barnette, Mrs. Robert Roush, Suzanne Davidson, Bobbie
Lou Randolph, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Scott and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Adkins, Mr. and Mrs. George Randolph, Mr. and
Mrs. Harry G. Love, Murl Bogler and Mrs. Lori Parsons.

LIQUID DETERGENT

With
This

SAVINGS GROUP No.2
FINAL CLEARANCE

Values To $8.99
LADIES' WINTER

114-lb.

•

pcu (l ble 11cm cnt hl ~(11 11 • ' ~l ''' orol P ' '''

A&amp;P

SAVINGS GROUP No. 1
FINAL CLEARANCE

Jars

\ ()l d

I

'

Ladies' New Spring
BETTER QUALITY
:::

DRESSES
New for Sprong, ladies' spring
better quality dresses. Pri ced
lo meet your budget Jun ior,
Mi sses and Half Si zes Yes, at

vour Friendly Stlfflers Stores .

$899 $2 3°0 /
To

- New For SpringLADIES' NEW SPRING
CHARM STEP

FOOTWEAR
New for Spring, ladies ' new

Charm Step footwear. All new
spring styles and colors, sfo 10
sizes. See these- now at your

Froendly Stiffler
Budget priced

Stores .

'

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7, 1973

--t

.

.

Easter program 1Social Mtss Margaret Davzs
presented club I Calendar~ celebrates 99th year
($1{ .........

WEDNESDAY
nual Christmas decorating and
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
RIO GRANDE _ Miss Also attending were Doris
lighting contest with the Auxiliary,8p.m. Wednesday at Margaret pavis of Oak Hill, Ross, head resident of Davis
consensus being that the club the new firehouse. Mrs. celebrated her 99th birthday Hall, the dormitory built by the
will probably continue co- Roberta Dailey, and Mrs. Alice Thursday, March 1. Members pavis family, the Grande
sponsorship of the project this Mills, hostesses.
of the Rio Grande College staff, Chorale, and five Davis Hall
year.
POMEROY Lodge. 164 faculty and student body coeds who served cake and ·
Mrs. Charles McDaniel was Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Eight visited ller in Oak Hill Wed· punch prepared by the College
elected to active membership members w1'll be presented ""
•&lt; nesday to help with the Dining Hall.
in the club . The .flower year pins by James Harvage, celebration.
The
Grande
Chorale
arrangement for the month
. ·grand secretary of Masons of
presented
a
musical
program
Representing President
was made by Mrs.. James Ohio and past grand master. Alphus ... R. Chri.stensen, who consisting of "Morning Has
Tl' tus, Sr., and was iii a modern Refreshme.nts· w1'll be served
·
· was o\11.o£.1DWn on business, Broken", "Joyful We Adore
black
container .
The
RT
.
Cath
I'
Thee", and other hymns.
SACRED HEA
0 IC, was Dr..-Hennan Koby, vice
arrangement contained Churc h Ash wednesday se.•· president of Academic
·
Affairs.
Corkscrew willow vines, ar- v1ce
· , 7 a.m. an d 7:30 p.m.
_
tic hoke seed pods and boxwood followed by distribution of
foliage.
h
a-~n~
An arrangement of jonquils . asG~ACE Episcopal Church,
6 It 6
and green carnations flanked · Ash Wednesday service, 7:30
by yellow tapers in silver p.m. The Rev. Roma King will
candle holders carrying out the be the speaker.
St. Patric.k's Day theme
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
decorated the refreshment Wednesday night following the
table. Assorted sandwiches, Ash Wednesday service at 7:30
fanay decorated cakes, mints p.m.
A two-day conference on
This meeting is preliminary
and nuts were served. Mrs.
THURSDAy
aging will be held at Rio to the Governor's Conference
Cassell presided at the coffee
AFTERNOON Circle, 2 p.m. Grande College Tuesday and on Aging which will be on June
service. Assisting hostesses
Thursday,
Heath United Wednesday, March 13-14, on 8, but only for one day this
were Mrs. Crary Davis, Mrs.
B. B. Zeigler, Mrs. McDaniel, · Methodist Church. "Beyond the . theme, "Local Resources year.
The Rio conference Is free
and Mrs. Malcolm Roller. Religions" program topic by and Responsibilities." The key
Nineteen members attended Mrs. Emerson Jones. Mrs. speaker will be from the except for lunch each day
Lorena Davis, Mrs. Grace Department of Health, which will be served in the
the meeting.
French, and Mrs. Garnet Ents- Educa lion and Welfare, College cafeteria for $1.50 per
day. For the benefit of those
minger, hostesses.
Washington, D. C.
ELEANOR Circle, Heath
The conference wiU have .J6 desiring to attend and needing
United Methodist Church, 7:30 sessions covering Social tra nsportation, the Grace
Thursday.
Security changes, Conswner United Methodist Church bus
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, , Education and Prote_ction, will leave the church in
A sheltered workshop with a major in physical Thursday night, 6, 30 p.m. Home H:~lth Care, Nutritional Gallipolis both mornings at
program in conjunction with education and a .minor in Potluck dinner. Members to Education, Housing for 8 : 4~ a. m. and relurn from Rio
take own table service.
Elderly, Arts ami Crafts, at 4:15 p. m. This service is
the Meigs Community School special education .
LAUREL Cliff ·setter Health General H~alth P~oblems, also free.
· was virtually assured Monday
Also hired by the board as
All senior citizens are urged
night when the Meigs County
part-time instructor for the Club 7. 30 Thursday home of Legal Serv1ces (W1lls and
to
attend this interesting and
Estates), Retirement Planning
Board of Mental Retardation remainder of the school year Mrs.' B~rtha Parker.'
and
Mental
Health,
Welfare
informative conference. In
hired. John Krawsczyn II of was Mrs . Mary Skinner,
BOARD
OF
directors
of
Benefits,
Legislative
Outlook,
Meigs County, watch for anMiddleport as the workshop Middleport. Mrs. Marjorie
Meigs
American
Cancer
Adult
.
Education,
Homestead
nouncements about transsupervisor for the 1973-74 Swope was employed as a
Society
7:30p.m.
Thursday
at
Act
and
Revenue
Sharing,
and
portation to and from the
school year.
substitute aide for the
Meeting at the Meigs County remainder of this year and the offlce on Coal St., Middleport. Problems Associated with college.
Janice Kunkle, division Death in the Family.
Court House, plans for the next school term.
sheltered workshop program
Accompanying Mrs. representative will hostess the
along with other phases of the Plummer to the meeting was meeting. All board members
FATHER HONORED
Community School operation Pam Rimtala, a social worker: are asked to be present.
EVANGELINE
CHAPTER,
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Carwere discussed with Mrs. Attending the meeting were
penter entertained Sunday
Maxine Plummer of the Mrs. Grace Weber, chairman, OES, 7:30 Thursday at the
with a dinner honoring her
Department of
Mental Mrs. Wilma Parker, a new Middleport Masonic Temple.
Special
meeting
for
initiation.
father, W. 0. Barnitz, on his
Hygiene. Krawsczyn was hired board member, Edward
OHIO
VALLEY
Grange
2612
82nd birthday anniversary.
on the recommendation of Mrs. Kennedy, Iris Carr, Mrs. Nora
APPLE GROVE, Ohio - Other guests were Mrs. W. Q.
Letart
Falls
7:30
p.m.
ThursJeanette Thomas, school ad· Rice and Mrs. Dorothy
day at the hall; potluck There will be evangelistic Barnitz, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
mlnistrator. He will graduate Yeauger.
services at the Apple Grove Barnitz, Bobby, Ricky, Scott,
refreshments.
from Ohio University in June
ORGANIZATIONAL meet- United Methodist Church at ,Jeff and Johnnie, Mason, W.
ing for Middleport High 7:30 each evening from March Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John Young,
School Alumni Association at 8 11 through March: iB.
Philip, Robin, and Lisa,
Tbe Rev. Howard Shiveley, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs.
p.m. Thursday at cafeteria of
pastor, will speak on the James Carpenter and Jay,
The organizational meeting Crickets met at the home of Meigs High School in Mid·
opening evening with the Rev.
of the Meigs County Shepherds Cathy Harrison on March 2 dleport. All graduates urged to
Coolville. Unable to attend due
Roy
Rose,
United.
Methodist
attend.
4-H Club was held February with 20 members attending.
to illness were Mr. and Mrs.
PAST COUNCILORS, pastor of the Coolville United Hayman Barnitz.
28th at the M~igs County Ex- Members were Jay and Kim
tension Office. New officers Dewhurst, Lisa Herald, Jeff Theodorus Council, D. of A., Methodist Church, speaking
are, president, Denise Dean ;· and Steve Peckham, Lisa 7:30p.m. Thursday at home of the remaining sev~n evenings.
There will be special music
vice president, Grant Johnson; Gardner, Tammy and Pammy Erna Jesse, Pomeroy.
each night, including the
FRIDAY
secretary, Brian Windon; Offenberger, Mark Michaels,
WEEKEND revival at Faith Dennis Manuel quartet, Earl
treasurer Debbie Bmatright; Denise Gadis, Tod Kennedy,
YOUTHS PRACTICE
recreation leaders, Blair Kevin Kitchen, Roger Wam- Tabernacle Church 7:30 each Shuler, the Bissell Brothers,
Members of the Junior
Windon and Randy Johnson sley, Angela Kennedy, Kim- evening, Friday through Florence Adams and grand- American Legion Auxiliary ¢
and news reporter, Pam Kautz. berly Birchfield, Patty Wyatt, Sunday. Daymond Adams of daughters, Freeland Norris Drew Webster Post 39 met
quartet, Dan Hayman, the
The next meeting was set for Lvrri Snowden, David Vance, Marietta will be speaker.
Tuesday night at the home of
McDaniel trlo, ·Dallas and Mrs. Harry Davis, advisor, to
March 10 at the Gay Johnson Danny Edwards and Troy
MARY SHRINE 37, White Donna Hill and Betty 'Shiveley.
farm when a demonstration on Durham. Advisors present Shrine of Jersualem, annual
rehearse for ~ program to be
The public is invited. ·
care of young lambs wit! be were Rose Carson, Cathy meeting, Friday, 8 p. m, at the
presented Monday night at the
presented.
Pomeroy Elementary PTA.
Harrison, Margie and John IOOF hall. Silent auction and
Refreshments were served to Hunnell, and Dixie Sayre. Lynn potluck supper to follow
The youth will lead the pledge
to the flag, present a skit,
14 members by Mrs. Clay~n Sayre was a visitor.
meeting.
VISIT CONCLUDED
"Vacation·
to the Moon," and a
Coffey, advisor. Pam Kautz,
The clul! agreea· to give an
JONATHAN
Airman 1-c Kenneth Wood
RETURN
news reporter.
Easter party at the Children's Meigs Chapter, D.A.R., I p, m. has relurned to Ellsworth Air play, "I Am Old Glory."
The organizational meeting Home. Games were played and Charter Day luncheon, Friday Force Base, S. D. after visiting
of the Pink Panthers 4-H Club. refreshments were served by at the Meigs Inn . Good here with his parents, Mr. and
was held March 3 at the Forest Cathy Harrison. The next Citizenship winners to be Mrs. Norman Wood, Ronnie
Run Church. Tbere were four meeting is March 23, 1973at the honored. Guest speaker, Mrs. and Sue. On Sunda)!· Mr. and
VISIT IN COLUMBUS
advisors and sixteen members home of Mrs , Harold Robert Hagen, Southeast Mrs. wood entertained with a
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
present. Advisors for the club Dewhurst at 6. - Lisa Gard- District Director. Hostesses, birthday dinner mobservance
have returned after spending
are Susie Grueser, Mary ner, news reporter.
Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs. C. M. of Airman Wood's . birthday. the weekend visiting with Mr.
Guinther, Karen Werry and
A NEW 4-H club is Hennesy, and Mrs. Harold Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Robert Lehew in
Virginia Davis.
organizing in the Chester area, Sargent.
Weber Wood, Mrs. Goldie Columbus. Sunday they were
The business meeting con- on March 8 for boys 9, 10, 11
Wyant, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas joined there by Mrs. Alma
sisted of the election of officers who are interested in livestock
SATURDAY
Debord, Tammy and Vickie, Johnson, and Mr. and Mrs .
and choosing projects for the projects. The meeting will be
REV. JERRY MASSIE will Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wyant,
Richard Leifheit and children
new year. The next meeting held at the home of Nicklois preach at the Ash St. Freewill Ken and Tim, Mrs. James
of Springfield. They visited
will be held April 7 at the Leonard. For further in· Baptist Church in Middleport Haning, Jim, Jeff, Mike and
Miss Dorothy Leifheit at Orient
Forest Run Church -Jaye formation contact Mr. Leonard at 7:30p.m. The pastor, Rev. Chris, Debbie and John ·
State Hospital.
Ord, News Reporter.
or the County Extension Office, Noel Herman, invites 'the Gilliam, Steve Brlckles, Terry
public.
THE · LEADING Creek Pomeroy, Ohio.
Cadle, Ronnie an~ Sue Wood.
An Easter theme with appropriate organ music and
program was carried out at the
Monday night meeting of the
Middleport Garden Club held
at the home of Mrs. C. M.
Hennesy.
In the absence of Miss
Lucille &amp;Jnith, Mrs. James
Harl~y and Mrs. Sibley Slack
presented the program. Mrs.
Harley read the Legend of the
Dogwood Tree and Mrs. Slack
read a poem entitled "The
Dogwood Tree" rei aling to
Easter symbols.
Mrs . Hennesy, a talented
organist, presented several
musical selections including
both religious numbers and
modern music appropriate for
the Eastef season.
Mrs. Etoille Cassell presided
at the meeting with members
answering roll call with "my
favorite Easter bonnet."
Reports of committees were
given and a money making
project was referred to the
ways and means committee. A
yard was tentatively set for
early spring. Further comments were heard on the an-

A "";-·,-a,
conference is

scheduled at College

Supervisor employed
a

Evangelistic

series is set

Meigs 4-H Club News

Statewide Girl Scout Council
is proposed for parts of 4 states
MASON - A recommended
plan for a statewide West
Virginia Girl Scout Council was
discussed recently by Mrs.
Richard Woelfel, with the Area
II (Mason County) Association
at Mason.
Mrs'. Woelfel, first vicepresident of Mountain Laurel
Girl Scout Council, said the
council would include 48 of the
55 West Virginia counties,
possibly 10 in Ohio, four In
Virginia and three in Kentucky. She said.it will become a
reality at the delegate council
meetings of councils involved
and effectiv~ in 1974.
Casting votes for Mason
County will be Delegates Hazel
Ewing and 'Hilda Riddle.
Alternates are Juanita Miller
and Nancy Ball.'

It was pointed out that fringe
areas, counties in other states,
are free to make their own
decision. One unusual feature
of the plan is the use of Mobile
service centers on wheels
(Daisy Vans ) with materials,
badges·, record players ,
projectors, film, pins, etc.)
that will give supportive help to
leaders in outlying areas.
It was announced that the
benefit luncheon at the
Greenbrier with Jean Dixon
netted $4,500. All proceeds go
toward established camps .
County Cookies Sales were
reported to be $3,530 with $353
going directly into troops to
promote troop camping.
· Crafts were 'on display by
various troops. Cadette Troop

487 of Mason hosted the event
and Mrs. Regina Johnson, area
chairman, introduced the guest
speaker. The meeting was In
the social rooms of the United
Methodist Church.
Registering were Cheryl
Blankenship, Mrs. Joe Jones,
Mrs. John Towner, Mrs. John
C. Ewing, Mrs. Winfield
VanMeter, Mrs. Billie Irene
Smith, Mrs . George Van
Matre, Mrs. William Van Horn,
Linda Cordray, Mary Artis,
Carol Proffitt, Janell Call,
Linda McKinney, Regina
Johnson, Mary Woelfel, Evelyn
Russell, Terry Proffitt,
. Jacqualine Van Meter, Robin
Stewart, Mary McFarland,
Kathy Test, Linda Test and
Clara Kelly, professional field
advisor.

Market Rt•put1

PT. PLEASANT LIVESTOCK
EBLIN IMPROVING
SALES CO.
Steve ·Eblin has been
released from Veterans
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
March 3, 1973
Memorial HosP,Ital after being
HOGS_ Receipts: 175 to 220,
confmed there II days by 38 901 39 20 , H 1 29 to 38 ,
'11
H . I I 1m
.
. o . ' eaves
,
1 ness. e 18 9 ow Y
provmg · Lights 29 to 33 · Fat Sows 32 to
at home, ?ni'on Ave., Pomeroy. ·34· Board 24 to' 26· Pi s 10.50 to
Sunday Vl8itors were Mr. and 24 •
' g ·
50
Mrs. Artie Eblin ~d son,
CAITLE - Steers 35 to 38;
Roger •Columbus; Ml's ..Robert Heifers 34 to 35.90; Fat Cows 30
Brush, Bangs, Ohio; Mr. and to37.50; Canners 28 to 30; Bulls
Mrs. Henry Eblin, Sr., Mr. and 37to38; Stock Cows and'Calves
Mn. Donald Jeffers and son, . 3ti2 to 437.50; Stock Steers 45 to
Rtcky, Ben Eblln, Mr. and Mrs. 58.75; Stock Heifers 37.to 46.75;
Ardith Barton and Mr. and Stock Steer Calves ~2 to 60·
Mrs. Clarence Spurrier, Sr • Stock Heifer Calves 44 to 53.25'.
Mrs. Barton and Mrs. Spurrier
VEAL CALVES _ T 75 :
'have been assisting In the care Se d 69 27 . M d' 68
ops '
fh ' fth
cons., eiUm. 50 1o
0 1 eJr a er ·
69; Common &amp; Heavies 66 to
68; Culls ~2.fo 55.
HECK GRADUATES
Remarks: Market Higher.
. Michael A. Heck, son of Mr.
and Mrs.. Sccilt Shank,
Pomeroy, liaa gradua!ed from
U. S. Navy Corn• School at the
Th~ agrlculturDI value u.
""'
the 4,638,000 bee colonies in
San Diego, Call!., naval the United States - aside
' Is married to the · hom honey and wax prO'IliC·
hospital. He
'former Susah Card . of lion - is estimated at more
tllan $500 million a year.
Pomeroy.

Soloists for the occasion were
Kathy Gledhill, who sang "I
Believe"; Sandy Hunter, who
sang "Day by Day"; Iesa
Wagner, "Tbe Sound of MI,ISic"
and Alvis Moore who did
"You've Got A Friend."
In addition to his musical
selection, Mr. Moore also gave
his "Adam and Eve" reading
from "God's Trombones."
Also
attending'
the .
cele~ration from Rio Grande
College were Mrs. Jean Cooper
of the Jeanette Albeiz Davis
Library staff and Mrs. Mary
Lewis, the first head resident
of Davis Hall.
The 99th birthday j)arty was .
held at the Davis Home for the
Aged in Oak Hill where Miss
Davis lives. Thirty-one
residents of the home also
enjoyed the festivities.

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SHOWN HERE IS DR. HERMAN KOBY, vice-president ·
of Academic Affairs of Rio Grande College and Miss
Margaret Davis with her ~h birthday celebration cake.

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blue, yellow , beige, &amp;
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and prints with button
down collar.

$1 00 Going to Denver hospi~al
Area D chairman of children
and youth, were made at a
meeting of the Salon Monday
night at the home of Mrs. Edith
Fox. The Salon also voted to
contribute $25 for local
tuberculosis work, and to set
aside $30 for Sherrie Marshall,
a cystic fibrosis child.
Mrs. Marie Boyd, children
and youth chairman of the
salon, read a letter from Miss
Betty Washington of the
Denver hospital thankin~ the
The Meigs F.H.A. (Future
Salon partners for 142 birthday
Homemakers of America )
cards and dimes and for $221
gave a party at th~ county
sent as a donation toward
infirmary on Feb. 12 for the
treatment and activities for ~e
people there. White Valentines
cystic fibrosis children.
decorated in red were made for
The scholarship chairman
each person. There were in· reported that to date $213 has
dividual heart cakes for each
been cotlected for scholarone, with red roses bordered
ships. Mrs. Martin reported on
with red and their names on
her work in preparing
each. Songs were sung and
scrapbooks and the history.
"grandparents" or "buddies"
It was noted that several
were adopted by the girls.
partners will attend the Gallia
From Feb. 19 to 24, during
County Salon's 18th annual
lunch periods, the FHA placed
dinner to be held at Trinity
a wishing well in the school
Church in Pomeroy on April 5.
cafeteria. The money from the
Pl8J1s were discussed for the
wishing well will be sent to
April 4 dinner of the Meigs
Columbus to the Children's
Salon to be held at the Meigs
Hospital.
Inn. Loot bags will be prepared
At the last meeting on
by Mrs . Pearl Knapp and Mrs.
February 21, sli~es on "FHA
Myrtle Walker. A letter was
Is" were shown.

A check for $100 will be sent
to the National Jewish Hospital
in Denver, Colo., for research
in cystic fibrosis a•d tuber·
culosis by the Meigs County
Salon 710, Eight and Forty.
Arrangements for the contribution to be made in the
name of Mrs. Mary Martin,'

Party given at
Meigs infirmary

read from Salon 336 asking for
endorsement of Irene Mier for
departemental chapeau, 197374.
Mrs . Catherine Welsh
reported on the pouvior held
recently in Columbus. Mrs.
Fox explained the parody
which would be presented at
the July convention in Toledo.
The next pouvior will be on
April 8 in Columbus.
Mrs. Myrtle Walker spoke on
chapeau passes, noting that 314
have paid their dues. It was
announced by Mrs . Martin that
Mrs. Betty Mattox and Mrs.
Bette Terrill will be chairmen
for the chapeaus passe lun·
cheon at the convention. Mrs.
Harry Davis was reported ill.
Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
chapeau presided at the
meeting with prayer by Mrs.
Lula Hampton, l'aumonier,
and the advancement of the
flay by Ia concierge, Mrs. Iva
Powell. Mrs. Eileen Searles
noted two changes in the
constitution and by-laws.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs . Eunie
Brinker, Mrs. Julia HySell,
Mrs. Ferne Cheesebrew, and
Mrs . Zuelelia Smith . Mrs.
Welsh was co-hostess.

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\

�8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7, 1973

--t

.

.

Easter program 1Social Mtss Margaret Davzs
presented club I Calendar~ celebrates 99th year
($1{ .........

WEDNESDAY
nual Christmas decorating and
MIDDLEPORT Firemen's
RIO GRANDE _ Miss Also attending were Doris
lighting contest with the Auxiliary,8p.m. Wednesday at Margaret pavis of Oak Hill, Ross, head resident of Davis
consensus being that the club the new firehouse. Mrs. celebrated her 99th birthday Hall, the dormitory built by the
will probably continue co- Roberta Dailey, and Mrs. Alice Thursday, March 1. Members pavis family, the Grande
sponsorship of the project this Mills, hostesses.
of the Rio Grande College staff, Chorale, and five Davis Hall
year.
POMEROY Lodge. 164 faculty and student body coeds who served cake and ·
Mrs. Charles McDaniel was Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. Eight visited ller in Oak Hill Wed· punch prepared by the College
elected to active membership members w1'll be presented ""
•&lt; nesday to help with the Dining Hall.
in the club . The .flower year pins by James Harvage, celebration.
The
Grande
Chorale
arrangement for the month
. ·grand secretary of Masons of
presented
a
musical
program
Representing President
was made by Mrs.. James Ohio and past grand master. Alphus ... R. Chri.stensen, who consisting of "Morning Has
Tl' tus, Sr., and was iii a modern Refreshme.nts· w1'll be served
·
· was o\11.o£.1DWn on business, Broken", "Joyful We Adore
black
container .
The
RT
.
Cath
I'
Thee", and other hymns.
SACRED HEA
0 IC, was Dr..-Hennan Koby, vice
arrangement contained Churc h Ash wednesday se.•· president of Academic
·
Affairs.
Corkscrew willow vines, ar- v1ce
· , 7 a.m. an d 7:30 p.m.
_
tic hoke seed pods and boxwood followed by distribution of
foliage.
h
a-~n~
An arrangement of jonquils . asG~ACE Episcopal Church,
6 It 6
and green carnations flanked · Ash Wednesday service, 7:30
by yellow tapers in silver p.m. The Rev. Roma King will
candle holders carrying out the be the speaker.
St. Patric.k's Day theme
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
decorated the refreshment Wednesday night following the
table. Assorted sandwiches, Ash Wednesday service at 7:30
fanay decorated cakes, mints p.m.
A two-day conference on
This meeting is preliminary
and nuts were served. Mrs.
THURSDAy
aging will be held at Rio to the Governor's Conference
Cassell presided at the coffee
AFTERNOON Circle, 2 p.m. Grande College Tuesday and on Aging which will be on June
service. Assisting hostesses
Thursday,
Heath United Wednesday, March 13-14, on 8, but only for one day this
were Mrs. Crary Davis, Mrs.
B. B. Zeigler, Mrs. McDaniel, · Methodist Church. "Beyond the . theme, "Local Resources year.
The Rio conference Is free
and Mrs. Malcolm Roller. Religions" program topic by and Responsibilities." The key
Nineteen members attended Mrs. Emerson Jones. Mrs. speaker will be from the except for lunch each day
Lorena Davis, Mrs. Grace Department of Health, which will be served in the
the meeting.
French, and Mrs. Garnet Ents- Educa lion and Welfare, College cafeteria for $1.50 per
day. For the benefit of those
minger, hostesses.
Washington, D. C.
ELEANOR Circle, Heath
The conference wiU have .J6 desiring to attend and needing
United Methodist Church, 7:30 sessions covering Social tra nsportation, the Grace
Thursday.
Security changes, Conswner United Methodist Church bus
ROCK SPRINGS Grange, , Education and Prote_ction, will leave the church in
A sheltered workshop with a major in physical Thursday night, 6, 30 p.m. Home H:~lth Care, Nutritional Gallipolis both mornings at
program in conjunction with education and a .minor in Potluck dinner. Members to Education, Housing for 8 : 4~ a. m. and relurn from Rio
take own table service.
Elderly, Arts ami Crafts, at 4:15 p. m. This service is
the Meigs Community School special education .
LAUREL Cliff ·setter Health General H~alth P~oblems, also free.
· was virtually assured Monday
Also hired by the board as
All senior citizens are urged
night when the Meigs County
part-time instructor for the Club 7. 30 Thursday home of Legal Serv1ces (W1lls and
to
attend this interesting and
Estates), Retirement Planning
Board of Mental Retardation remainder of the school year Mrs.' B~rtha Parker.'
and
Mental
Health,
Welfare
informative conference. In
hired. John Krawsczyn II of was Mrs . Mary Skinner,
BOARD
OF
directors
of
Benefits,
Legislative
Outlook,
Meigs County, watch for anMiddleport as the workshop Middleport. Mrs. Marjorie
Meigs
American
Cancer
Adult
.
Education,
Homestead
nouncements about transsupervisor for the 1973-74 Swope was employed as a
Society
7:30p.m.
Thursday
at
Act
and
Revenue
Sharing,
and
portation to and from the
school year.
substitute aide for the
Meeting at the Meigs County remainder of this year and the offlce on Coal St., Middleport. Problems Associated with college.
Janice Kunkle, division Death in the Family.
Court House, plans for the next school term.
sheltered workshop program
Accompanying Mrs. representative will hostess the
along with other phases of the Plummer to the meeting was meeting. All board members
FATHER HONORED
Community School operation Pam Rimtala, a social worker: are asked to be present.
EVANGELINE
CHAPTER,
Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Carwere discussed with Mrs. Attending the meeting were
penter entertained Sunday
Maxine Plummer of the Mrs. Grace Weber, chairman, OES, 7:30 Thursday at the
with a dinner honoring her
Department of
Mental Mrs. Wilma Parker, a new Middleport Masonic Temple.
Special
meeting
for
initiation.
father, W. 0. Barnitz, on his
Hygiene. Krawsczyn was hired board member, Edward
OHIO
VALLEY
Grange
2612
82nd birthday anniversary.
on the recommendation of Mrs. Kennedy, Iris Carr, Mrs. Nora
APPLE GROVE, Ohio - Other guests were Mrs. W. Q.
Letart
Falls
7:30
p.m.
ThursJeanette Thomas, school ad· Rice and Mrs. Dorothy
day at the hall; potluck There will be evangelistic Barnitz, Mr. and Mrs. Robert
mlnistrator. He will graduate Yeauger.
services at the Apple Grove Barnitz, Bobby, Ricky, Scott,
refreshments.
from Ohio University in June
ORGANIZATIONAL meet- United Methodist Church at ,Jeff and Johnnie, Mason, W.
ing for Middleport High 7:30 each evening from March Va.; Mr. and Mrs. John Young,
School Alumni Association at 8 11 through March: iB.
Philip, Robin, and Lisa,
Tbe Rev. Howard Shiveley, Lancaster; Mr. and Mrs.
p.m. Thursday at cafeteria of
pastor, will speak on the James Carpenter and Jay,
The organizational meeting Crickets met at the home of Meigs High School in Mid·
opening evening with the Rev.
of the Meigs County Shepherds Cathy Harrison on March 2 dleport. All graduates urged to
Coolville. Unable to attend due
Roy
Rose,
United.
Methodist
attend.
4-H Club was held February with 20 members attending.
to illness were Mr. and Mrs.
PAST COUNCILORS, pastor of the Coolville United Hayman Barnitz.
28th at the M~igs County Ex- Members were Jay and Kim
tension Office. New officers Dewhurst, Lisa Herald, Jeff Theodorus Council, D. of A., Methodist Church, speaking
are, president, Denise Dean ;· and Steve Peckham, Lisa 7:30p.m. Thursday at home of the remaining sev~n evenings.
There will be special music
vice president, Grant Johnson; Gardner, Tammy and Pammy Erna Jesse, Pomeroy.
each night, including the
FRIDAY
secretary, Brian Windon; Offenberger, Mark Michaels,
WEEKEND revival at Faith Dennis Manuel quartet, Earl
treasurer Debbie Bmatright; Denise Gadis, Tod Kennedy,
YOUTHS PRACTICE
recreation leaders, Blair Kevin Kitchen, Roger Wam- Tabernacle Church 7:30 each Shuler, the Bissell Brothers,
Members of the Junior
Windon and Randy Johnson sley, Angela Kennedy, Kim- evening, Friday through Florence Adams and grand- American Legion Auxiliary ¢
and news reporter, Pam Kautz. berly Birchfield, Patty Wyatt, Sunday. Daymond Adams of daughters, Freeland Norris Drew Webster Post 39 met
quartet, Dan Hayman, the
The next meeting was set for Lvrri Snowden, David Vance, Marietta will be speaker.
Tuesday night at the home of
McDaniel trlo, ·Dallas and Mrs. Harry Davis, advisor, to
March 10 at the Gay Johnson Danny Edwards and Troy
MARY SHRINE 37, White Donna Hill and Betty 'Shiveley.
farm when a demonstration on Durham. Advisors present Shrine of Jersualem, annual
rehearse for ~ program to be
The public is invited. ·
care of young lambs wit! be were Rose Carson, Cathy meeting, Friday, 8 p. m, at the
presented Monday night at the
presented.
Pomeroy Elementary PTA.
Harrison, Margie and John IOOF hall. Silent auction and
Refreshments were served to Hunnell, and Dixie Sayre. Lynn potluck supper to follow
The youth will lead the pledge
to the flag, present a skit,
14 members by Mrs. Clay~n Sayre was a visitor.
meeting.
VISIT CONCLUDED
"Vacation·
to the Moon," and a
Coffey, advisor. Pam Kautz,
The clul! agreea· to give an
JONATHAN
Airman 1-c Kenneth Wood
RETURN
news reporter.
Easter party at the Children's Meigs Chapter, D.A.R., I p, m. has relurned to Ellsworth Air play, "I Am Old Glory."
The organizational meeting Home. Games were played and Charter Day luncheon, Friday Force Base, S. D. after visiting
of the Pink Panthers 4-H Club. refreshments were served by at the Meigs Inn . Good here with his parents, Mr. and
was held March 3 at the Forest Cathy Harrison. The next Citizenship winners to be Mrs. Norman Wood, Ronnie
Run Church. Tbere were four meeting is March 23, 1973at the honored. Guest speaker, Mrs. and Sue. On Sunda)!· Mr. and
VISIT IN COLUMBUS
advisors and sixteen members home of Mrs , Harold Robert Hagen, Southeast Mrs. wood entertained with a
Mr. and Mrs. Harry Davis
present. Advisors for the club Dewhurst at 6. - Lisa Gard- District Director. Hostesses, birthday dinner mobservance
have returned after spending
are Susie Grueser, Mary ner, news reporter.
Mrs. Dale Dutton, Mrs. C. M. of Airman Wood's . birthday. the weekend visiting with Mr.
Guinther, Karen Werry and
A NEW 4-H club is Hennesy, and Mrs. Harold Guests were Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Robert Lehew in
Virginia Davis.
organizing in the Chester area, Sargent.
Weber Wood, Mrs. Goldie Columbus. Sunday they were
The business meeting con- on March 8 for boys 9, 10, 11
Wyant, Mr. and Mrs. Dallas joined there by Mrs. Alma
sisted of the election of officers who are interested in livestock
SATURDAY
Debord, Tammy and Vickie, Johnson, and Mr. and Mrs .
and choosing projects for the projects. The meeting will be
REV. JERRY MASSIE will Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Wyant,
Richard Leifheit and children
new year. The next meeting held at the home of Nicklois preach at the Ash St. Freewill Ken and Tim, Mrs. James
of Springfield. They visited
will be held April 7 at the Leonard. For further in· Baptist Church in Middleport Haning, Jim, Jeff, Mike and
Miss Dorothy Leifheit at Orient
Forest Run Church -Jaye formation contact Mr. Leonard at 7:30p.m. The pastor, Rev. Chris, Debbie and John ·
State Hospital.
Ord, News Reporter.
or the County Extension Office, Noel Herman, invites 'the Gilliam, Steve Brlckles, Terry
public.
THE · LEADING Creek Pomeroy, Ohio.
Cadle, Ronnie an~ Sue Wood.
An Easter theme with appropriate organ music and
program was carried out at the
Monday night meeting of the
Middleport Garden Club held
at the home of Mrs. C. M.
Hennesy.
In the absence of Miss
Lucille &amp;Jnith, Mrs. James
Harl~y and Mrs. Sibley Slack
presented the program. Mrs.
Harley read the Legend of the
Dogwood Tree and Mrs. Slack
read a poem entitled "The
Dogwood Tree" rei aling to
Easter symbols.
Mrs . Hennesy, a talented
organist, presented several
musical selections including
both religious numbers and
modern music appropriate for
the Eastef season.
Mrs. Etoille Cassell presided
at the meeting with members
answering roll call with "my
favorite Easter bonnet."
Reports of committees were
given and a money making
project was referred to the
ways and means committee. A
yard was tentatively set for
early spring. Further comments were heard on the an-

A "";-·,-a,
conference is

scheduled at College

Supervisor employed
a

Evangelistic

series is set

Meigs 4-H Club News

Statewide Girl Scout Council
is proposed for parts of 4 states
MASON - A recommended
plan for a statewide West
Virginia Girl Scout Council was
discussed recently by Mrs.
Richard Woelfel, with the Area
II (Mason County) Association
at Mason.
Mrs'. Woelfel, first vicepresident of Mountain Laurel
Girl Scout Council, said the
council would include 48 of the
55 West Virginia counties,
possibly 10 in Ohio, four In
Virginia and three in Kentucky. She said.it will become a
reality at the delegate council
meetings of councils involved
and effectiv~ in 1974.
Casting votes for Mason
County will be Delegates Hazel
Ewing and 'Hilda Riddle.
Alternates are Juanita Miller
and Nancy Ball.'

It was pointed out that fringe
areas, counties in other states,
are free to make their own
decision. One unusual feature
of the plan is the use of Mobile
service centers on wheels
(Daisy Vans ) with materials,
badges·, record players ,
projectors, film, pins, etc.)
that will give supportive help to
leaders in outlying areas.
It was announced that the
benefit luncheon at the
Greenbrier with Jean Dixon
netted $4,500. All proceeds go
toward established camps .
County Cookies Sales were
reported to be $3,530 with $353
going directly into troops to
promote troop camping.
· Crafts were 'on display by
various troops. Cadette Troop

487 of Mason hosted the event
and Mrs. Regina Johnson, area
chairman, introduced the guest
speaker. The meeting was In
the social rooms of the United
Methodist Church.
Registering were Cheryl
Blankenship, Mrs. Joe Jones,
Mrs. John Towner, Mrs. John
C. Ewing, Mrs. Winfield
VanMeter, Mrs. Billie Irene
Smith, Mrs . George Van
Matre, Mrs. William Van Horn,
Linda Cordray, Mary Artis,
Carol Proffitt, Janell Call,
Linda McKinney, Regina
Johnson, Mary Woelfel, Evelyn
Russell, Terry Proffitt,
. Jacqualine Van Meter, Robin
Stewart, Mary McFarland,
Kathy Test, Linda Test and
Clara Kelly, professional field
advisor.

Market Rt•put1

PT. PLEASANT LIVESTOCK
EBLIN IMPROVING
SALES CO.
Steve ·Eblin has been
released from Veterans
Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
March 3, 1973
Memorial HosP,Ital after being
HOGS_ Receipts: 175 to 220,
confmed there II days by 38 901 39 20 , H 1 29 to 38 ,
'11
H . I I 1m
.
. o . ' eaves
,
1 ness. e 18 9 ow Y
provmg · Lights 29 to 33 · Fat Sows 32 to
at home, ?ni'on Ave., Pomeroy. ·34· Board 24 to' 26· Pi s 10.50 to
Sunday Vl8itors were Mr. and 24 •
' g ·
50
Mrs. Artie Eblin ~d son,
CAITLE - Steers 35 to 38;
Roger •Columbus; Ml's ..Robert Heifers 34 to 35.90; Fat Cows 30
Brush, Bangs, Ohio; Mr. and to37.50; Canners 28 to 30; Bulls
Mrs. Henry Eblin, Sr., Mr. and 37to38; Stock Cows and'Calves
Mn. Donald Jeffers and son, . 3ti2 to 437.50; Stock Steers 45 to
Rtcky, Ben Eblln, Mr. and Mrs. 58.75; Stock Heifers 37.to 46.75;
Ardith Barton and Mr. and Stock Steer Calves ~2 to 60·
Mrs. Clarence Spurrier, Sr • Stock Heifer Calves 44 to 53.25'.
Mrs. Barton and Mrs. Spurrier
VEAL CALVES _ T 75 :
'have been assisting In the care Se d 69 27 . M d' 68
ops '
fh ' fth
cons., eiUm. 50 1o
0 1 eJr a er ·
69; Common &amp; Heavies 66 to
68; Culls ~2.fo 55.
HECK GRADUATES
Remarks: Market Higher.
. Michael A. Heck, son of Mr.
and Mrs.. Sccilt Shank,
Pomeroy, liaa gradua!ed from
U. S. Navy Corn• School at the
Th~ agrlculturDI value u.
""'
the 4,638,000 bee colonies in
San Diego, Call!., naval the United States - aside
' Is married to the · hom honey and wax prO'IliC·
hospital. He
'former Susah Card . of lion - is estimated at more
tllan $500 million a year.
Pomeroy.

Soloists for the occasion were
Kathy Gledhill, who sang "I
Believe"; Sandy Hunter, who
sang "Day by Day"; Iesa
Wagner, "Tbe Sound of MI,ISic"
and Alvis Moore who did
"You've Got A Friend."
In addition to his musical
selection, Mr. Moore also gave
his "Adam and Eve" reading
from "God's Trombones."
Also
attending'
the .
cele~ration from Rio Grande
College were Mrs. Jean Cooper
of the Jeanette Albeiz Davis
Library staff and Mrs. Mary
Lewis, the first head resident
of Davis Hall.
The 99th birthday j)arty was .
held at the Davis Home for the
Aged in Oak Hill where Miss
Davis lives. Thirty-one
residents of the home also
enjoyed the festivities.

MEN'S PERMANENT PRESS

LADIES
NYLON

SPORT SHIRTS

KNIT TOPS

PANTY
HOSE

C ool', comfortable . ·

Th Ct's what you'll be in
one of these sMart sleeve

shirts mode of oxford -

SHOWN HERE IS DR. HERMAN KOBY, vice-president ·
of Academic Affairs of Rio Grande College and Miss
Margaret Davis with her ~h birthday celebration cake.

LADIES NYLON

Stylish shqrt sleeve dou ble knit top s in white ,
blue, yellow , beige, &amp;
pink. Sizes S-M-L with a
variety of necklines.

broadc loth. C o mes in
sizes S-M-L-Xl in solid s
and prints with button
down collar.

$1 00 Going to Denver hospi~al
Area D chairman of children
and youth, were made at a
meeting of the Salon Monday
night at the home of Mrs. Edith
Fox. The Salon also voted to
contribute $25 for local
tuberculosis work, and to set
aside $30 for Sherrie Marshall,
a cystic fibrosis child.
Mrs. Marie Boyd, children
and youth chairman of the
salon, read a letter from Miss
Betty Washington of the
Denver hospital thankin~ the
The Meigs F.H.A. (Future
Salon partners for 142 birthday
Homemakers of America )
cards and dimes and for $221
gave a party at th~ county
sent as a donation toward
infirmary on Feb. 12 for the
treatment and activities for ~e
people there. White Valentines
cystic fibrosis children.
decorated in red were made for
The scholarship chairman
each person. There were in· reported that to date $213 has
dividual heart cakes for each
been cotlected for scholarone, with red roses bordered
ships. Mrs. Martin reported on
with red and their names on
her work in preparing
each. Songs were sung and
scrapbooks and the history.
"grandparents" or "buddies"
It was noted that several
were adopted by the girls.
partners will attend the Gallia
From Feb. 19 to 24, during
County Salon's 18th annual
lunch periods, the FHA placed
dinner to be held at Trinity
a wishing well in the school
Church in Pomeroy on April 5.
cafeteria. The money from the
Pl8J1s were discussed for the
wishing well will be sent to
April 4 dinner of the Meigs
Columbus to the Children's
Salon to be held at the Meigs
Hospital.
Inn. Loot bags will be prepared
At the last meeting on
by Mrs . Pearl Knapp and Mrs.
February 21, sli~es on "FHA
Myrtle Walker. A letter was
Is" were shown.

A check for $100 will be sent
to the National Jewish Hospital
in Denver, Colo., for research
in cystic fibrosis a•d tuber·
culosis by the Meigs County
Salon 710, Eight and Forty.
Arrangements for the contribution to be made in the
name of Mrs. Mary Martin,'

Party given at
Meigs infirmary

read from Salon 336 asking for
endorsement of Irene Mier for
departemental chapeau, 197374.
Mrs . Catherine Welsh
reported on the pouvior held
recently in Columbus. Mrs.
Fox explained the parody
which would be presented at
the July convention in Toledo.
The next pouvior will be on
April 8 in Columbus.
Mrs. Myrtle Walker spoke on
chapeau passes, noting that 314
have paid their dues. It was
announced by Mrs . Martin that
Mrs. Betty Mattox and Mrs.
Bette Terrill will be chairmen
for the chapeaus passe lun·
cheon at the convention. Mrs.
Harry Davis was reported ill.
Mrs. Rhoda Hackett,
chapeau presided at the
meeting with prayer by Mrs.
Lula Hampton, l'aumonier,
and the advancement of the
flay by Ia concierge, Mrs. Iva
Powell. Mrs. Eileen Searles
noted two changes in the
constitution and by-laws.
Attending besides those
named were Mrs . Eunie
Brinker, Mrs. Julia HySell,
Mrs. Ferne Cheesebrew, and
Mrs . Zuelelia Smith . Mrs.
Welsh was co-hostess.

HECK'S REG.
1 3.66

HECK'S REG. 99' PR.

MEN'S ORLON
METAL FOOTLOCKER
Thi s footlocker is
TUBE SOCKS ...,.&lt; _-,,,·"~·
31)( 15 lf.t x.12 14"

KNIT PANTS

Ea1 y h l , o n tJ
~il ll lih all in 12
dd le re n! co l

Swing into spring with a pair
of these poly knit pants .
Choose from a wide selection
of flares in solids and checks in
sizes 8 to 18.

Blue Ribbon

JIF

Peanut B~tter

1- Lb.

12 rn. Jar ·49~

Pkg.

TEEN QUEEN

303 cans

TOMATOES

2

49~

lor

Kraft

CHEESE
Aonerican or

12 Oz.
Pkg.

Pimento

s lb.

FLA.

ORANGES

Bag

59~

TUNA . 49~
6'12

HUCK ROAST CHUCK ROAST
99~

lb.

Mrs. Paul's .

ONION RINGS
(frozen l

89C lb.'
Rayex Sun Glasses

$466

$11.88

HECK'S REG. 5.99

HECK'S REG. $5.88

CLOTHING DEPT.
MEN'S SCREEN PRINT

INFANTS

"T" SHIRTS

CARPET PIECES
FRUI -OF-THE-LOOM

Oval carpet pieces. in a wide
~e l ec ti on of co lors wi th double
jute ba ck.

PATCHWORK QUILT

24"x36"

looe ly !owe l5 ore fir ~ ! quo li!y .
Co me\ in en!embles , p rinh , m lid &gt;. on d

.$ J88

jacquard\.

27"x48" ...... ; .. $2.66
36"x60" ...... $4.66

HAND TOWEL •.•••• 74'
WASH (LOTH ...... 44'

$2.28

ClOTHINC DEPT.

CLOTHING DEPT.

INFANTS AND
TODDLERS

BOLSTER
PILLOWS

like \i~'\, in auor!e d

$244

Nylon rib knit body suit in a s-,
so rted style s and pastel colors.
Infant sizes 6 to I B month s.

BATH TOWELS

Th e~e

month s.

HECK'S REG.

plaid' CJ nd color\. Sizes 7
!ol 4 , ond4 1o6• .

INFANTS' BODY
SUIT

CANNON

$100

GIRLS' BACGIE PANTS
TO

Co mf y str e tc h terry
ma kes up this cute 2 pc.
outfit in a sso rted colors
in siz es 6 to 18

$122

ble .

$188

2-PC.SETS

OVAL FRINGED

'Be a utifully ma de , old fa shion
quilt 72)(90 in many colors.
Ma chine wa shable and drya·

2-PIECE HEAVY PLUSH

BATH SET
Give your bo!fl·
r oo m ~omc
fl ai r, w1lh thi \
p l u~h

$266

2 pt . \el

HECK'S
REG.

Heck's

Reg.
$1.99

BAGGY PANTS
Cartoon Style
look just like your bi g brot~. ~r
• in th e~e smooth looking ba~
gies in size s 12 . to 24 months,
a nd 2 to 4 years .

$ 00

$188

BEAUn·SETS

WATERWORKS
CARD GAMES

sac

CODDLER KITS

71h." BO BO

THE CLOWN

HECK'S
REG.

78'

2.87

TOY DEPT.

C•tout, stitch and stuff.' Cuddlers
are fun to make! Lovable Little Gold ·
en Book characters become soft,
sale, snuggle-up cuddlemates lor
naps, playtime, room cjecarations,
and mobiles.

HECK'S REG.

$r4

ClOTHING DEPT.

AS SEEN ON TV

MAKEUP OR

TO

HECK'S REG.
TO $2.99

$3.99

oz. Can

Superior Rib

Blue chambray &amp; embossed in whites and paste l colors. Comes in sizes 8 t'o 16.

HECK'S REG.

CHOICE

Superior Round Bone

COTTON PANTS

$799

69~

STAR-KIST

LADIES

black , blue , gold ,

wit h non ~ k i d

(Singles)

with 3" tray. In

$]99

Ju~t

MARGARINE
3 . 59~

Creamy or Crunchy

. ,

and is we a ther
proof.

PRINGLES
29~

.

and green . It ha s
heavy stay hing es .

Comes in a variety of yourfovorite ,ayings. In men 's and
bo ys' sizes S·M-l-Xl. Don't be the lost to get one in your
neighb orhood .

41!2 oz. Pkg.

ClOTHING
DEPT.

ClOTHING DEPT.

Boy's
Polyester

YOU'LL BECOME OUR STEADY CUS10MER!

Golden Isle
SHORTENING

HECK'S
REG.
2.66

Thi s fine ho siery comes in
beige, cinnamon , taupe , and
brown . One size fits all. ·

88'

HECK'S
REG.

TOY DEPT.

TOY DEPT.

HECK'S REG.

TOYDIPT. ·

$ 88
$2.77

ladies or Men's
Reg. $2.00, Now

'
•

\

�U - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7, 1973

OPEIIIAILY
10 TO 9

OPEII DAILY
10 TO 9

.

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

tiAMPER, WASTER IASKET , - - - - - - - ' - AND BATH SC:ALE
.

VANWYC:k ,

ENSEMBLE

WALNUT

SUNBEAM

. s~le ct fr om 2 Slyle\. Onto wulh $U·
per squares in white and blod,
a nd orMge or~d yell ow . The other
in rich ly e m b os~e d qui lted pa tterns
in colors of woln ut . white, black,

CONTEMPORARY

BOOKCASE

·..· CAN OPENER-KNIFE
SHARPENER·

blll e, bronte gold and mos s grl!!en.

Contemporary styling with top to fl oor
si d e pa nels . Dou ble sl id ing gl ah doors.

11 oz. ROCKS Reg. '1.26
12 oz. BEVERAGE Rei '1.26
15 oz. COOLER Reg. '1.49

"Quick·leltalt ''

of

IYIIin&lt;;~

HECK'S REG , $17.SS

WALNUT

RECORD CABINET .
Mu lti·vse cabi net with slid ing doors, bra ss plated
kn obs .. 23 1 i ·· wide , 27" high in durab le but very
ottract•ve Wa lnut Permonee r fini sh.

26 QT.

ROUND TAPERID WASTE BASKETS
Choose from assorted de- HECK'S
$155
REG.
signs to suit your need s.

•7••
Heck's Reg. '9.96

Big 3 quart capacit y. Hea t ,
re,islont glau cover . fasy
clean in g a nd ser ~ing, Na n
~;(.;;,io'"!"'!l!~~· skid tab le leg~ . Co rd in·
eluded.

AM-FM RADIO

• s .;ll · ~ COlO , """·WO) po .. ~· • Sol.tl llnlo d""9" •
llnllery '"'"' """'' • J" d,~""'" IIJ" nh • e 5hollltlo 1
\Hap o~tlvd c&lt;l e Sw&gt; lril o t.lo .-,H or fM 1-o on lon n,;,
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HECK'S REG .

$ 1 2 .99

·12 QUART
WASTE ~
· BASKETS

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

Heck's Reg. $3.99

Decorator

LAMP
SHADES
CHOICE .

88(

Styli sh assortment to match
any d e cor .

Heck's Reg. 17.99

HECK'S

_:-. ~- COOKWARE
1

REG. '1.69

l - H' c

HECK 'S REG .

NO!{SEWARE DEPT.

YOUR
CHOICE

30"x30"
CARD
TABLE

sse
sse
sse
sse
sse

A. SEE N TAKE CAKE PAN ...............

1.29

Durrable con struction . Folding
legs. Vinyl top.

B. 5 CUP PERK ............... -...........

TOP POP BRAND

· CANISTER SET

C. 1 &amp; 2 PC. SAUCE PAN ...............

No . 1817 4"·piece canister set (with knob s ossem·
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E. 3 QT. COLANDER ................. -.•.

MtRAO ALUMINUM

- ~

TUBULAR CAKE

'

•

B~H-1

'44

$12 .88

~

SHAMPOO &amp; BATH SPRAY

5

$1

$1388
$'1188 HECK'S

$100

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

l

HECK'S

HD-51

REG. $lS.96

REG. '23.96

F-78 WH

l1l

:/;!&lt;.}
,,

'

'

1/o&lt;oublo IPUd tOn lr ol woth 1? md• ·
; al!d •po•dt 1&gt;.\o•nloonl CQ~\Iun l

'"

I PffD lwc morl!d o d 1uuoble

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DRYER
drJ lu• tho1 lull boolrtd No lur&lt;lllooO l~ti
~ov l optr" •"""~!! '" h..,r "ri•" ll
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NORELCO
SUN &amp; HEAT

STYLIIIIC

bowl

OO&gt;•ho•11 , f rcr&gt; t ~ o l'' ~~~tlor 1 n
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1 too o l~ "
&gt;1oel "'"ing bo .. l\

G.E.

HP-3108

SCHICK

llo"' '

I

1,0

• Sto i11fess Sree f cooking ~url o c e is duro ·
ble, too~y to clean, ond sc ralch resittanl
pfu~ ~nap ·o wa y feg ond han dle 1ection;
lor ea!ier cleanin g. • " Tip·toe" skillei with
Til t Leg lor droming cook •ng oil and

LAMP

lho ~~ · I bo \ llhonq ro •~ 1ummr• '"" Ourn1 r &gt;unl oml' 1...,.
wfo , lo" oon"'"9 ''''~'' ~v· l~ "" V''""''" D too l~ fr o••d
k~o• lnmp •on rh., •nu-.;uln, ~' "" oll&lt;'i ro •~ • S &lt;te~•· local
ly "" " !l"~&lt;l t ~ll ~ri(H on''-""' &lt;•&lt; n •uJ,ui•O", f ,.,,~, t on
"'"Q -dt u•lub l• ••ond Vo11g l~ • tn&lt;lvd•O

g rease .

HECK'S
REG .
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HECK' S REG. $13.96

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JEWEl/IY DEPT.

IEWELIIY DEPT.

JEWELIIY
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$2 5 .96

Poloroid 's t-le w Square S hooter 2 land Camera is the
lowest priced a ll purpose instant color ca mera eve r
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prices a s picture s you wai t days to get from the film

••

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factory .

.If·

DUALS

SPLICER

EDITOR
VIEWER
large st::retn, buiff·in fi lm mo ke•, focv~i n g.
ond fine &lt;ord slo roge po~l . For regufor
·eight or ~uper eigh tl ilm .

HECK'S
REG .
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~

HECK'S REG.
$3.96

HOUSIWARE
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$1.66

DUALS

lo rg e ween , built·i n film marke r, focvo ·
ing, o nd line co rd ;loro ge p o~ t . For regvlor
eight or sup er eigh t film.

5'1AR

HECK'S R'EG.

FOR

HAIR
DRYER
$
88

SET

88

LIMIT I 0 BARS

22

'

CAMERA

JERGEN:S.

\N~~~:;) WOODBURY

FURNITURE POLISH
Heck's Reg. 701

MANICURE;

SQUARE SHOOTER 2

LOTION · MILD SOAP

KLEEN
GUARD

G. E.

POLAROID

SIZE

~eA'\._5

16 oz.

JEWElRY DEPT.

$33 .96

~--,
'

HOUSEWAPE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$12.96

436

PAN

88(

HECK' S
REG.

NDUSEWARE DEPT.

D. 1'/z QT. WHISTLING TEA KETILE......

Colorfu l a nd faitllfu l reproduction of popular
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HECK 'S
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G. E.

REG. '14.96

HECK'S REG . $29 .96

INSTAMATIC CAMERA
KIT
Heck's
Reg.
549.96

A.

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ALUMINUM

.....

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G. E.

JEWEl/IY DEPT-

B.

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HECK'S

HOUSEWARE
DEPT_

14" . 15" . 16"

Handsome styli ng on thi s toaster will co mpli ment any kitchen decor. Temperature dial allows you to se lec t the da rk ·
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ELECTRIC
SCISSORS

IRON ·

G.E.

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HECK'S
REG. $37.SS

STEAM
&amp; DRY

POPCORN POPPER

JET SET
2 SPEED

HECK'S
REG. $4.99

Munsey 3 Quart

Heck's Reg. '4.19

$2. 18

.

$2988

JEWElRY

1 Gallon
KLEER
FLOOR
WAX

.

RAZOR

HECK'S REG.
$.12.96

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

NORELCO
RECHARGEABLE
MENS

ane1¥1blf lor•mme•IO -

blo ~l..aoi"V Ho•d~neJ •feel w iling blooh de·
oigflfillor longlde. H•'dden &lt;Ord •loroge . Mao•
••tl i( li d hal dor, Sln&gt;&lt;P~"e' wi!i1 ""'' " "'~lulloc
.,.,,do lgr (gn!rol~d o.:•io~ Sui! u-.o&lt;odu l ini1 h
wilh lu lured frgnl. Noth oid lu i

$1~8

aae

Choice

~t

you

. swl'tth . Se para!e ice t onta infir lor
eo sy

:imool h dui9 " · IM Oo 1 ~. qu; ~l op~ ro t i on
Op.en1 otan.dard t ill &lt;on&gt; '!oid&lt;ly o ~d eo.. lv.

Wa lnut permaneer fin ish. 32" high, JO"
wide, l Y1" deep .

SET

ICE CRUSHER
All the itt
ueed
the tlip: a

'

50 VIP

JEWElRY DEPT.

$1188

MUNSEY

DEEP DRYER

HEATING
MASSAGE

Wilh IfleW! ouhtondu'9l901"'e" big 6.,., qll(lr l copaci!)o ,
••mo•ablo olumonvm fry ..~1 woth hoot ' • "''""' ko ndle~
ond pwrin9 1pout iC1o ecny tie a&lt;~

i olo• acl!;nll muuln ... 1h o r .. ,rhoul ~at ot. oen•le
IO&lt;&gt;Iho"'J "'"" "9" &lt;&gt;&lt; han fflo•et rh .g h1, log•. top•. ud••·
bod \hould~" · ..,.d , "' fnt CO "'P~'" "'''h "nip ol
to chfl\t rtl, ln•g• llf\d 1mnll la&lt;o&lt;tl uflu&lt;hmrnt, body Ol
' "'""'• " ' · nnri heot uppl&gt;&lt;o lo• '

$899

HECK'S REG. $14.96

JEWElRY DEPT. .

Heck's
Reg. 511.96

$988

HECK'S REG . $11.96

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
BT- 32

G.E. MIST

70Z.

SKINNY DIP
# 928-

VITAL IS

a n~

2 oz . spray mist cologne
free lemon cologne.

14 oz.

111/J oz.

CEPACOL

DIAL .
SHAMPOO

HAIR DRESSING

c

l

69C
HECK 'S
REG .

99'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK' S
REG.

*1.69
COSMETIC

DEPT.

HECK 'S
REG.

99'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

c
HECK'S REG.
~

•-~

$1.29

COSMETIC
DEPT.

21/z OZ.
OLD SPICE
STICK
DEODORANT
'

HAIRSEnEI

.

'·

~

"
1
I

ALKA-SELTZER
PLUS

36'S

89&lt;

•

~~

DEPT.

FORTUNE

G.E.

76/ 477

PHONOGRAPH AND
,RADIO COMBINATION
• Solid Slate Performance •
Opera tes on 4 'D' Botte ries or
Plug5 into Standard AC Outlet
• Co nve nie nt Power Cord
Storage in Case • Plays 33 Y1,

$2499

45, 18 RPM Records • Pop·Up

HECK'S REG.

Adopter for 45's. ·

DEPT.

29.66

Super 8

MOVIE
FILM
Heck's Reg. '2.44

$222

32- MINUJE
BLANK 8 - TRACK
TAPE

99&lt;

,I

HEATING PAD
'

$

9

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

HECK'S REG.
$3 .99

JIWElRY DEPT.

JEWElR'I DEPT.

HECK'S
REG .
$21

JEWElRY
DEPT.

�U - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 7, 1973

OPEIIIAILY
10 TO 9

OPEII DAILY
10 TO 9

.

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9

tiAMPER, WASTER IASKET , - - - - - - - ' - AND BATH SC:ALE
.

VANWYC:k ,

ENSEMBLE

WALNUT

SUNBEAM

. s~le ct fr om 2 Slyle\. Onto wulh $U·
per squares in white and blod,
a nd orMge or~d yell ow . The other
in rich ly e m b os~e d qui lted pa tterns
in colors of woln ut . white, black,

CONTEMPORARY

BOOKCASE

·..· CAN OPENER-KNIFE
SHARPENER·

blll e, bronte gold and mos s grl!!en.

Contemporary styling with top to fl oor
si d e pa nels . Dou ble sl id ing gl ah doors.

11 oz. ROCKS Reg. '1.26
12 oz. BEVERAGE Rei '1.26
15 oz. COOLER Reg. '1.49

"Quick·leltalt ''

of

IYIIin&lt;;~

HECK'S REG , $17.SS

WALNUT

RECORD CABINET .
Mu lti·vse cabi net with slid ing doors, bra ss plated
kn obs .. 23 1 i ·· wide , 27" high in durab le but very
ottract•ve Wa lnut Permonee r fini sh.

26 QT.

ROUND TAPERID WASTE BASKETS
Choose from assorted de- HECK'S
$155
REG.
signs to suit your need s.

•7••
Heck's Reg. '9.96

Big 3 quart capacit y. Hea t ,
re,islont glau cover . fasy
clean in g a nd ser ~ing, Na n
~;(.;;,io'"!"'!l!~~· skid tab le leg~ . Co rd in·
eluded.

AM-FM RADIO

• s .;ll · ~ COlO , """·WO) po .. ~· • Sol.tl llnlo d""9" •
llnllery '"'"' """'' • J" d,~""'" IIJ" nh • e 5hollltlo 1
\Hap o~tlvd c&lt;l e Sw&gt; lril o t.lo .-,H or fM 1-o on lon n,;,
~8 .,.r,.p lo• f M ltffllt roa to• AM e Pln1, "f I&lt;&gt; I ll ;
h~u" on-'" • AA ' l'onl,.. bu tlor•e•.

HECK'S REG .

$ 1 2 .99

·12 QUART
WASTE ~
· BASKETS

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.

Heck's Reg. $3.99

Decorator

LAMP
SHADES
CHOICE .

88(

Styli sh assortment to match
any d e cor .

Heck's Reg. 17.99

HECK'S

_:-. ~- COOKWARE
1

REG. '1.69

l - H' c

HECK 'S REG .

NO!{SEWARE DEPT.

YOUR
CHOICE

30"x30"
CARD
TABLE

sse
sse
sse
sse
sse

A. SEE N TAKE CAKE PAN ...............

1.29

Durrable con struction . Folding
legs. Vinyl top.

B. 5 CUP PERK ............... -...........

TOP POP BRAND

· CANISTER SET

C. 1 &amp; 2 PC. SAUCE PAN ...............

No . 1817 4"·piece canister set (with knob s ossem·
bled ) Contemporary and mod kit chen acce nt s.

E. 3 QT. COLANDER ................. -.•.

MtRAO ALUMINUM

- ~

TUBULAR CAKE

'

•

B~H-1

'44

$12 .88

~

SHAMPOO &amp; BATH SPRAY

5

$1

$1388
$'1188 HECK'S

$100

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

l

HECK'S

HD-51

REG. $lS.96

REG. '23.96

F-78 WH

l1l

:/;!&lt;.}
,,

'

'

1/o&lt;oublo IPUd tOn lr ol woth 1? md• ·
; al!d •po•dt 1&gt;.\o•nloonl CQ~\Iun l

'"

I PffD lwc morl!d o d 1uuoble

':\
DRYER
drJ lu• tho1 lull boolrtd No lur&lt;lllooO l~ti
~ov l optr" •"""~!! '" h..,r "ri•" ll
. O.y , 1
'' ·· brvll'&gt;ol
blo ,.,r
'"" " . lo•t•l &lt;orn;ooct
an d '"""""'""' loo ... ~ op le 0., rh~ I,IQ

r...,.,

"Y'•

•r••d

FRY PAN

NORELCO
SUN &amp; HEAT

STYLIIIIC

bowl

OO&gt;•ho•11 , f rcr&gt; t ~ o l'' ~~~tlor 1 n
~· · • •P
coe,or ol
1 too o l~ "
&gt;1oel "'"ing bo .. l\

G.E.

HP-3108

SCHICK

llo"' '

I

1,0

• Sto i11fess Sree f cooking ~url o c e is duro ·
ble, too~y to clean, ond sc ralch resittanl
pfu~ ~nap ·o wa y feg ond han dle 1ection;
lor ea!ier cleanin g. • " Tip·toe" skillei with
Til t Leg lor droming cook •ng oil and

LAMP

lho ~~ · I bo \ llhonq ro •~ 1ummr• '"" Ourn1 r &gt;unl oml' 1...,.
wfo , lo" oon"'"9 ''''~'' ~v· l~ "" V''""''" D too l~ fr o••d
k~o• lnmp •on rh., •nu-.;uln, ~' "" oll&lt;'i ro •~ • S &lt;te~•· local
ly "" " !l"~&lt;l t ~ll ~ri(H on''-""' &lt;•&lt; n •uJ,ui•O", f ,.,,~, t on
"'"Q -dt u•lub l• ••ond Vo11g l~ • tn&lt;lvd•O

g rease .

HECK'S
REG .
HECK 'S REG .

HECK' S REG. $13.96

HECK'S REG . $19.96

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

IEWELIIY DEPT.

JEWELIIY
DEPT.

$2 5 .96

Poloroid 's t-le w Square S hooter 2 land Camera is the
lowest priced a ll purpose instant color ca mera eve r
offered . Yo.u get 60-~ econd pictures for about the same
prices a s picture s you wai t days to get from the film

••

BATH
SOAP

factory .

.If·

DUALS

SPLICER

EDITOR
VIEWER
large st::retn, buiff·in fi lm mo ke•, focv~i n g.
ond fine &lt;ord slo roge po~l . For regufor
·eight or ~uper eigh tl ilm .

HECK'S
REG .
$22.SS

~

HECK'S REG.
$3.96

HOUSIWARE
DEPT.

$1.66

DUALS

lo rg e ween , built·i n film marke r, focvo ·
ing, o nd line co rd ;loro ge p o~ t . For regvlor
eight or sup er eigh t film.

5'1AR

HECK'S R'EG.

FOR

HAIR
DRYER
$
88

SET

88

LIMIT I 0 BARS

22

'

CAMERA

JERGEN:S.

\N~~~:;) WOODBURY

FURNITURE POLISH
Heck's Reg. 701

MANICURE;

SQUARE SHOOTER 2

LOTION · MILD SOAP

KLEEN
GUARD

G. E.

POLAROID

SIZE

~eA'\._5

16 oz.

JEWElRY DEPT.

$33 .96

~--,
'

HOUSEWAPE DEPT.

HECK'S
REG.
$12.96

436

PAN

88(

HECK' S
REG.

NDUSEWARE DEPT.

D. 1'/z QT. WHISTLING TEA KETILE......

Colorfu l a nd faitllfu l reproduction of popular
bra nd n ame~.

HECK 'S
REG .
$4 .44

G. E.

REG. '14.96

HECK'S REG . $29 .96

INSTAMATIC CAMERA
KIT
Heck's
Reg.
549.96

A.

MIRRO
ALUMINUM

.....

.~.

G. E.

JEWEl/IY DEPT-

B.

·3··

HECK'S

HOUSEWARE
DEPT_

14" . 15" . 16"

Handsome styli ng on thi s toaster will co mpli ment any kitchen decor. Temperature dial allows you to se lec t the da rk ·
ness of you r toast.

ELECTRIC
SCISSORS

IRON ·

G.E.

G.E. 2-SLICE TOASTER

HECK'S
REG. $37.SS

STEAM
&amp; DRY

POPCORN POPPER

JET SET
2 SPEED

HECK'S
REG. $4.99

Munsey 3 Quart

Heck's Reg. '4.19

$2. 18

.

$2988

JEWElRY

1 Gallon
KLEER
FLOOR
WAX

.

RAZOR

HECK'S REG.
$.12.96

HOUSEWARE DEPT.

NORELCO
RECHARGEABLE
MENS

ane1¥1blf lor•mme•IO -

blo ~l..aoi"V Ho•d~neJ •feel w iling blooh de·
oigflfillor longlde. H•'dden &lt;Ord •loroge . Mao•
••tl i( li d hal dor, Sln&gt;&lt;P~"e' wi!i1 ""'' " "'~lulloc
.,.,,do lgr (gn!rol~d o.:•io~ Sui! u-.o&lt;odu l ini1 h
wilh lu lured frgnl. Noth oid lu i

$1~8

aae

Choice

~t

you

. swl'tth . Se para!e ice t onta infir lor
eo sy

:imool h dui9 " · IM Oo 1 ~. qu; ~l op~ ro t i on
Op.en1 otan.dard t ill &lt;on&gt; '!oid&lt;ly o ~d eo.. lv.

Wa lnut permaneer fin ish. 32" high, JO"
wide, l Y1" deep .

SET

ICE CRUSHER
All the itt
ueed
the tlip: a

'

50 VIP

JEWElRY DEPT.

$1188

MUNSEY

DEEP DRYER

HEATING
MASSAGE

Wilh IfleW! ouhtondu'9l901"'e" big 6.,., qll(lr l copaci!)o ,
••mo•ablo olumonvm fry ..~1 woth hoot ' • "''""' ko ndle~
ond pwrin9 1pout iC1o ecny tie a&lt;~

i olo• acl!;nll muuln ... 1h o r .. ,rhoul ~at ot. oen•le
IO&lt;&gt;Iho"'J "'"" "9" &lt;&gt;&lt; han fflo•et rh .g h1, log•. top•. ud••·
bod \hould~" · ..,.d , "' fnt CO "'P~'" "'''h "nip ol
to chfl\t rtl, ln•g• llf\d 1mnll la&lt;o&lt;tl uflu&lt;hmrnt, body Ol
' "'""'• " ' · nnri heot uppl&gt;&lt;o lo• '

$899

HECK'S REG. $14.96

JEWElRY DEPT. .

Heck's
Reg. 511.96

$988

HECK'S REG . $11.96

JEWEl/IY DEPT.

HOUSEWARE DEPT.
BT- 32

G.E. MIST

70Z.

SKINNY DIP
# 928-

VITAL IS

a n~

2 oz . spray mist cologne
free lemon cologne.

14 oz.

111/J oz.

CEPACOL

DIAL .
SHAMPOO

HAIR DRESSING

c

l

69C
HECK 'S
REG .

99'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

HECK' S
REG.

*1.69
COSMETIC

DEPT.

HECK 'S
REG.

99'

COSMETIC
DEPT.

c
HECK'S REG.
~

•-~

$1.29

COSMETIC
DEPT.

21/z OZ.
OLD SPICE
STICK
DEODORANT
'

HAIRSEnEI

.

'·

~

"
1
I

ALKA-SELTZER
PLUS

36'S

89&lt;

•

~~

DEPT.

FORTUNE

G.E.

76/ 477

PHONOGRAPH AND
,RADIO COMBINATION
• Solid Slate Performance •
Opera tes on 4 'D' Botte ries or
Plug5 into Standard AC Outlet
• Co nve nie nt Power Cord
Storage in Case • Plays 33 Y1,

$2499

45, 18 RPM Records • Pop·Up

HECK'S REG.

Adopter for 45's. ·

DEPT.

29.66

Super 8

MOVIE
FILM
Heck's Reg. '2.44

$222

32- MINUJE
BLANK 8 - TRACK
TAPE

99&lt;

,I

HEATING PAD
'

$

9

HECK'S REG.
$1.99

HECK'S REG.
$3 .99

JIWElRY DEPT.

JEWElR'I DEPT.

HECK'S
REG .
$21

JEWElRY
DEPT.

�~

.. ., . ......

.'!

13- The Daily Sentinel M!rldl•nort-Pomeroy, 0., March 7. 1!1'1'1

•
"

I

OPEII DAU.Y
10 TO 9

OPEIIDAILY
10 TO 9

STAY WrniiN UNES .
MONEY RELEAstD
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The ·' COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
state Controlling Board ap- state Controlling Board has
· proved the purchaSe of 600,1100 authorized release of $2'7 ·
- coloring books Monday tO be million worth of general an4
funds for meeting the
distributed to first and second special
.
'
'
., graders around Ohio. The mcreased cost of a state em•
pictures depict good "highway ployes' pay raise approved iJ
:
safety practices and the board January, 1972.
was told "the theory behind the .
coloring book is when you color
Seventy per cent of th l
you stay within the lines and
people
in the United Statet
we would like to transfer that
live in two per cent of th'
to having children stay within total land area of the coun,
lines at crosswalks."
·
try.

r-

.

.

'

MOBILE
'HOMES
.

COPPER
PIPE&amp;
FITTINGS
I

COUPLIIC &amp;e

1hM

ADAPTER J8t

110. 14-2 ............... .
HECK'$ REG. TO $22.50

48e

'/,'' ClC WROUGHT

F.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

s

10. 12-2 ................ .

TEE 1Jt

sse

PLUMBING HANDBOOK
D.

HANDY HOUSEHOLD

WASHER lilT

E.

HECK'S REG. $1.02

HECK'S REG. 59'

..

OUTLET

OUTLET

BASKET INSERT

48(

NA/IDWAII DEPT.

DUPLEX

STA11LISS STEEL

AUGER

66(

79(
HECK'S REG. $1.20

NAIDWAIE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

"'~,.

I

BROWN '

BROWN

BROWN

39&lt;

24&lt;

IVORY 44'

28 '
HECK'S REG.
TO 35'

·IVORY

HECN'S REG.

· T0 50'

TOGGLE
PLATE

SINGLE
TOGGLE SWITCH

DUPLEX
PLATE

BROWN

29&lt;

9&lt;

IVORY 33'

IVORY 11 '

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
TO 15'

T040'

POICELIIN PUll

BROWN

RECEPTAClE

9&lt; .

59&lt;
HECK'SREG.

IVORY 11 '

HECK'S REG.
TO 15'

90'

=r---- "'t""

=r

____ -- ----

An 'Economical Rod, perfect lor any youngster.

SP-10

-

$199

PFLUEGER SPIN CAST ROD
BERKLEY

·~

-ad

.... * t

• ···

•

r , ., ..

e· F

---

26&lt;

29&lt;

37&lt;
NECK'SREC.

HECK'SREG.
40'

70'

U-GROUIID

liGHT liGHT

14(

59&lt;
HECK'SIEC.

HECK'S
REG. IS'

Z~BCO XRL37

SPIN REEL
Con ~errs ro righ t or le ft hand r~trie,.e in ~econ d s.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

Med rum lre ~ hwater reel . Oil-retaining meral bearings,
~moolh and du rabl e. He n•y di~ast zinc main and
pinio n gcon . D i eco~t ~i nc body and cowl , phospho·

SPORTS DEPT.

l•zed, wr th epoxy l ini~h . Sro inless ba il arm , wilh hard ·
chromed line guide . Sell·{o nto ined di sc dreg ~y~tem .

-. - -

Se lective on ti · r e ~e rse . Hi gh-stre ng th a luminum 'lllov

Heck's Reg.

ha nd le fo lds lor compact storl:'ge . The " Snap Oft"
~poo l is rugged ABS . Gear ra ria : 3.4: 1. Hold s up Ia
280 yds . '8-4 0 11 .1al 8 -l b. resr monalila men l line.

17.99

1

12 FT. X 12 FT. DINING CANOPY
(o rople te wi lh ny lon ropes, !feel
~ t oke~ .

$1499

WEAVER SCOPE
10.99

Heck's Reg.

'I"

Heck's Reg. .39'

29¢

ElmeJS

CRAPPIE DOLL
FLYS
Black Furry Spinner
or 2 Plain
1.33

1

FLOATING lANTERN

liS W. Main

Minnow
Bucket

99¢ .

HECK'SREG.

Uncle1

Heck's Reg.

%99

:

i:;

40¢

Mc~ J OI Elhyl

CERTIFIED GAS STATION

As far ·as I am concerned,
this is the last ·devaluation.
-Dr. Art hur F. Burns, 538 W. Mam St
chairman of the Federal
ijeserve Board.

OhiO

POITit'IO'I,

992 998 1

I
i
~
~
~

1

i••

BRITISHER VISITS BEST AT COOLVILLE - Karl
Summers, center. president of Best Photo of Coolville, Ohio
and Richard Breugger, right, marketing director, discuss the
company's marketing plans with Sean Hickey, marketing
director of Gain-a-Film in England. Gain-a-Film, a division
of Best Photo, is the company's entry in the fast-growing
European market. Best Photo also has processing plants in
Atlanta, Pittsburgh, San Diego, Syracuse, N.Y., and Worcestel' , Mass.

3 lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER
4 lb. GROUND BEEF
2 lb. SLICED BACON
3 lb. ·SIRLOIN STEAK
1 lb. HAM SALAD

--:::-::--::-:::--;;::--

HOMEM~DE

By PHIL PASTORET

HAM SAlAD
AND
CHEESE
SPREAD

-~B:::::A:::-..:R~::B=::;:S::-If you w a n t

to take
chances, the lad across from
us has a pocketful of !hell)
all the time.
Your mooch in' friend prob ·
ably lws all !he money you
11eed.

See your dentist at lea st
twice a year. He welcomes

'••
••
•

i
••

2 lb. PORK CHOPS
2 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
2 lb. ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
1 lb. FRESH CHICKEN

••
•

{

3 lb. ROUND STEAK
4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
5 lb. GROUND BEEF
' 3 lb. RIB STEAKS
3 lb. stEW MEAT

19)

•

'•'

t•

3 lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb. PORK CHOPS
3 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
3 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb. LARGE FRANKS

•

t

Fresh &amp; Lean

Your Orderl
992-3502

,---, 5 lb. GROUND BEEF
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
3 lb. RIB STEAKS
lf2 SEMI-BONELESS HAM
16.7 lb. avg.)

$25

09
lb.

Fresh &amp;

.

DURA PAK
TROUT LINE
Heck's Reg.

12J9

$}99

'

3·TIAY PLASTIC

Dart Brand

t

:•
~
~

s

BACON

'

'

•
'

. Fawrite
'
,•

'

'

ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN

oun STORE

jJ\i l'\
I., r

3 doz.

. COL Oil POillllAIT

"

·. '

"

ICE ,

•

)

5 loaves for

•ltOAGfliNI!

''""' " P/1 1&amp;61lCf -J PU ! ANilY .

Portrdit. Size Available from Wallets to 30r40

»:;ff;IA/#irJt
'/.f ~.C C~l//lj)
f):A.f:A,.JO::;;.; · ..... 'CIIARANTEE{)

'

W A POtAR bear bears a

"

.·CREAM

•li/Jt!!J AillkYIIIPAI/''I'EP JVI/fC!

.09

.'

'I

,'gal.

CII(J()JI

bare polar bea r. is the polar
beu,· bare that bears the
bare r tto.tr t."nr '! Cun'l unswt" lhat lrum lnokin~ ut
Sail)' and uffsprin~ l'mlil i
wuck at lhe Loudon Znu.

HOM! 011/Cf 1Pli(ARPIN6AVE f(l(/fiJWiLI (JI!J(J ~5662

"f!lddp ~ ja1Jl~

II
.

. .,

-----

'

'

.

""

I

•

~

•
'

:••

••

I

•'•

••
•

12 NOON 'TIL 8 P.M.
TO INTQOP/JCE THEIR COL Oil MT!JtRY
WE Ofi!ll 1-//k/1- LIP'IN6-

it

I

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

$

'•

i

MARCH 9 &amp; 10

• ~llrilfl/11 II~ ilrJJIJ lii!N WH/CK /0

BREAD
1J

Master Portrait

Pure

E'GGS

TACIIi.E 101

•

!

SHADLE BRIDGE .

lb.

Pee Wee Size

•

•

!••

IN
POINT PLEASANT,
.W. VA.

"

Sliced

••

~

~ 'P.ORK
lb. . SAUSAGE.

PORK
CHOPS

t•
:

19.

ROUND
·STEAK

•••

~

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAM

the offiCe fee .

Pomeroy

USDA Choice

i•
•

Phone Us
Nothing ventured, nothing
lost.

$
$
'

3 lb. GROUND BEEF
2 lb. BULK SAUSAGE

reaflirming the President's '
commitment to dealing with .
the energy situation. He indicated that he will soon
submit to the Congress a
co mprehen s ive energy
message containing wideran ging initiatives to ensure
necessary supplies of energy.
The desire to protect the
environment and clean up our
surrour.dings must be kept in
proper balance with the
equally importa nt need to
continue industrial productivity and maintain jobs. All it
becomes more apparent that
the goals of con tinued industri al growth and environmental quality could be
on a collision course, it
becomes all the more important that
the environmentalist and the industrialist work together to
prevent a crisis which could
damage both their objectives.

\•'

Open Mon.- Thurs. 9 a .m. to 7 p.m. - . Fridays 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.- Saturdays 9 a.m. to 8::10 p.m.

First Cut

Primus Propane

LANTERN

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

.GROUND
CHUCK

16'

WIBattery
Heck's Reg.
'4.69

1!32 oz. or 1!16 oz.

Mepps

EVEREADY

i
i..

CIGARETIES i

SAVE UP
TO 4 A GAL

More than 27,000 gallons
of water are needed to irri·
gate an acre of land to the
depth of one inch.

1

No. 108 B

HORSE SHOES

rc~~~uY-1
I.. Corner By Charlene Hoeflich

Phone 992-5428

NEAR END OF

FUSHLIGHT BATTERIES

TARGET ARROWS

•._~

7.99

HECK'S "D" SIZE

Ben PeaJSOn

12'

.,.,·~·~··o;··,•,•,·,·._--.:o:,•,·,·,·,·,·,·,·,·,•,• ,•

2io E. 2nd

GASOLINE

of
of

We wore more in our
dressing room than actresses
wear on the stage and in
the movies today.
-Eloise Martin. ' onetime
Ziegfe!d Follies beauty.

.I

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
Pomeroy

IN TOWN ON

to
of

718 TIPOFF MOUNT
Heck's Reg.

HECK'S REG.
$19.99

Diamond Pro

There are many ways
be tough, and the least
these is to talk tough .
- Mayor John Lindsay
· . New York, on the art
negotiating.

(Upon Request)

LoWEST PRICE

Timely Quotes

!

HECK'S
REG.

6' eve!, od1u sloble &lt;ell ler

po le to 8 fee t. Woh:r a nd rot
proof

EAGLE

ADAPTER

SPORTS
DEPT•

,._=-

....

ROD

. WITH FlANGE

WAX SEAl

$ 99

BLACK 2-PIECE ROD
Heck's Reg. '3.99

OlD
WORK BOX

HECK'S REC.
34'

ANGLER IIJ33

•

DEEP
HANDY BOX

'Message on Natural Resources
and the Environment. He
clearly put in perspective the
challenges we face and the
I
I care with which we must move
I
I to improve the environment.
There was a lime when this ·
By Clarence
co untry took its natural
II
Miller
I, resources for granted. In 1862,
President Lincoln slated in his
All of us realize that there is environment be made steadily Slate of the Union message, "A
a critical time element in- and effectively . For this reason nation may be said to consist of
volved in making progress with I introduced in this Session of its territory, its people, and its
the environment - that to do a the Congress a resolution to laws. The territory is the only .
good job and to make sub- establish in the House a new part which is cf certain
stantial and lasting im- Committee on the En- durability." The passage of
vironment.
provement lakes time.
time has proven that our
In this same vein , the "territory" - our land, air,
It is in the interest of every
American
that furth er President has again submitted water and minerals- is not of
'progress In protecting the to the Congress a · Special such "certain durability " after
·
all.
·••N.Y.I'A•,•,•,•,•,•,•,-.!o'_,•o"o'o"•' • •,•
'o'.lo"•";!'.l;.•' • • • • .........,
In his message, President
Nixon recommended four basic
principles for the preservation
of the . environment and our
natural resources:
~
.
;:;:
First, we must strike a
balance so that the protection
fi: of our irreplaceable heritage
~.
~=-~
»••. becomes as important as its
use.
The Rev. Henry L. Key, who has faithfully driven to MidSecond, because there are no
dleport from Columbus Sunday after Sundar to pastor the Mount
• local or'state boundaries to the
Moilah Baptist t'lnlr~'h. suffered a hear\ attack Monday.
, proLiem of environment, the
. He Is in the coronary unit at Grant Hospital in Colwnbus and
federal government must plan
his room number Is 286. His wife reports thaI he is resting
an
active positive role, but
comfortably now lind in fair condition. OW" very best wishes to
Washington must not displace
him for a speedy recovery.
state, local and private sector
CARY MORRIS MADE one of her infrequent visits home . initiatives in · making the
over the weekend to see her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Morris decisions ahead.
Third, u,e cosis of pollution
and grandmother, Mrs. C. S. Morris. A sophomore at Ohio State
control
should be more fully
University, Cary keeps busy and on the go. As a member of the
University Chorus she will·be going to Cincinnati next month to me t in the free market place ;
not in the federal budget.
participate in the Fe,stival of the Arts.
Fourth, we must remain
MIDDLEPORT'S ASA BRADBURY is ever so proud of the con fid ent that America's
reserve team which he coaches at Logan Elm High School, technological and econom ic
Circleville. His team took the championship in the Scioto Valley ingenuity will meet environmental challenges.
Conference with a 7 to 0 record.
' In the conversion of the
environmental crisis into an
INTERESTED IN learning how to crochet?
Mrs. Louise Heines will be conducting an eight week course opportunity for progress, the
at the Meigs Museum on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. An President asked Congress tp
organizational meeting has been set for 7 p.m. Tuesday and at pass 19 bills aimed at reducing
·that lime the classes, one to be held on Tuesdays and the other on pollution, managing our land,
and preserving our natural
Wednesda~• will be planned. The $10 fee will be payable at the
initial meeting. Eight sessions will be held in addition to the heritage from e~ploitation.
With the.. envir onmenlal
organizational meeting, with each one to be about three hours, 7
message
came a statement
to 10 p.m. at the musewn.

IWashington
1 Report

'h"VAlVE

~-

PRESENTED 60 YEAR PIN-Harry Swan, PorUand, center, was presented a OO.year pin
from Pomeroy Lodge 164 F&amp;AM Monday night at his home. Making the presentation on behalf
of the Lodge were left, Ben Philson, Racine, District Deputy Grand Master of the 12th Masonic
District and Larry Ebersbach, Syracuse, Master of Pomer~y Lodge. Also attending was Tom
Edwards, Minersville.

--------------------------I

1

HARDWAIEDEPT.

FIX ALL

DUPLEX
FLUSH

99

HECK'S REG. 4.17

HARDWARE DEPT.

'

NEW SALES OUTt.ET - Larry Evans, Gallipolis, has opened a new sales for mobile
homes called "Larry's Mobile Homes" next to the Jones Boys on West Main St., Pomeroy. A
num~r of sizes and prices are offered in the mobile homes which are approved by Underwriters Laboratories, have hw-ricane anchors and emergency "kick out" windows. A
variety of heating_~its are offered and local financing with terms to 10 years is available.
Sales people wW be at the sales office from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and
from I to 6 p. m. on Sunday . The salesmen are Evans, the owner, and Frank Gheen, Racine,
who has been associated with Keith Goble Ford.
,

sealed float ball.

y, '"C I CWROUGHT

UNION

HECK'S REG. 2 .60

G.

·,

'

ter waste, easy to in5lall, and elimi ·
nate~ old ~ fashioned rod and air

'h" WROUGHT

E.

SJ67EACH

principles, co rro5ion·proof, has instant positive shutoff, eliminates wa·

250 feet of wire per box. Perfect lor any
home wiring job.

ELBows8e

D.

X 10FT.

_·less steel , uses new hydraulic pressure

WITH GROUND WIRE

· - !L

•;,'" CZC WROUGHT

c.

COPPER ·

..... .

, ..... .Tt

I

A.

l

BALLCOCK

ROME
X
CABLE

~~·r""

h" CI CWlotiCIIT

1

j·

HARD .

FLUIDMASTER
Plumbing's new silhoue1te, it's stain-

2-HOUR
CLEANING

SOLITARY ORDERED
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
Itinerant rock musician Larry
Via, convicted of killing Ohio
University coed Jane McGuire
last Sept. 20, was sentenced to
life in prison Monday by
Swninit County Common Pleas
' who
Judge James Barbuto,
also decreed that Via will
spend each anniversary of
Miss McGuire 's. death in
solitary co~fi~emenl.

'

.

t'
I

0'0 -

•
{

'

�~

.. ., . ......

.'!

13- The Daily Sentinel M!rldl•nort-Pomeroy, 0., March 7. 1!1'1'1

•
"

I

OPEII DAU.Y
10 TO 9

OPEIIDAILY
10 TO 9

STAY WrniiN UNES .
MONEY RELEAstD
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The ·' COLUMBUS (UPI ) - The
state Controlling Board ap- state Controlling Board has
· proved the purchaSe of 600,1100 authorized release of $2'7 ·
- coloring books Monday tO be million worth of general an4
funds for meeting the
distributed to first and second special
.
'
'
., graders around Ohio. The mcreased cost of a state em•
pictures depict good "highway ployes' pay raise approved iJ
:
safety practices and the board January, 1972.
was told "the theory behind the .
coloring book is when you color
Seventy per cent of th l
you stay within the lines and
people
in the United Statet
we would like to transfer that
live in two per cent of th'
to having children stay within total land area of the coun,
lines at crosswalks."
·
try.

r-

.

.

'

MOBILE
'HOMES
.

COPPER
PIPE&amp;
FITTINGS
I

COUPLIIC &amp;e

1hM

ADAPTER J8t

110. 14-2 ............... .
HECK'$ REG. TO $22.50

48e

'/,'' ClC WROUGHT

F.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

s

10. 12-2 ................ .

TEE 1Jt

sse

PLUMBING HANDBOOK
D.

HANDY HOUSEHOLD

WASHER lilT

E.

HECK'S REG. $1.02

HECK'S REG. 59'

..

OUTLET

OUTLET

BASKET INSERT

48(

NA/IDWAII DEPT.

DUPLEX

STA11LISS STEEL

AUGER

66(

79(
HECK'S REG. $1.20

NAIDWAIE DEPT.

HARDWARE DEPT.

"'~,.

I

BROWN '

BROWN

BROWN

39&lt;

24&lt;

IVORY 44'

28 '
HECK'S REG.
TO 35'

·IVORY

HECN'S REG.

· T0 50'

TOGGLE
PLATE

SINGLE
TOGGLE SWITCH

DUPLEX
PLATE

BROWN

29&lt;

9&lt;

IVORY 33'

IVORY 11 '

HECK'S REG.

HECK'S REG.
TO 15'

T040'

POICELIIN PUll

BROWN

RECEPTAClE

9&lt; .

59&lt;
HECK'SREG.

IVORY 11 '

HECK'S REG.
TO 15'

90'

=r---- "'t""

=r

____ -- ----

An 'Economical Rod, perfect lor any youngster.

SP-10

-

$199

PFLUEGER SPIN CAST ROD
BERKLEY

·~

-ad

.... * t

• ···

•

r , ., ..

e· F

---

26&lt;

29&lt;

37&lt;
NECK'SREC.

HECK'SREG.
40'

70'

U-GROUIID

liGHT liGHT

14(

59&lt;
HECK'SIEC.

HECK'S
REG. IS'

Z~BCO XRL37

SPIN REEL
Con ~errs ro righ t or le ft hand r~trie,.e in ~econ d s.

HECK'S REG. $3.99

Med rum lre ~ hwater reel . Oil-retaining meral bearings,
~moolh and du rabl e. He n•y di~ast zinc main and
pinio n gcon . D i eco~t ~i nc body and cowl , phospho·

SPORTS DEPT.

l•zed, wr th epoxy l ini~h . Sro inless ba il arm , wilh hard ·
chromed line guide . Sell·{o nto ined di sc dreg ~y~tem .

-. - -

Se lective on ti · r e ~e rse . Hi gh-stre ng th a luminum 'lllov

Heck's Reg.

ha nd le fo lds lor compact storl:'ge . The " Snap Oft"
~poo l is rugged ABS . Gear ra ria : 3.4: 1. Hold s up Ia
280 yds . '8-4 0 11 .1al 8 -l b. resr monalila men l line.

17.99

1

12 FT. X 12 FT. DINING CANOPY
(o rople te wi lh ny lon ropes, !feel
~ t oke~ .

$1499

WEAVER SCOPE
10.99

Heck's Reg.

'I"

Heck's Reg. .39'

29¢

ElmeJS

CRAPPIE DOLL
FLYS
Black Furry Spinner
or 2 Plain
1.33

1

FLOATING lANTERN

liS W. Main

Minnow
Bucket

99¢ .

HECK'SREG.

Uncle1

Heck's Reg.

%99

:

i:;

40¢

Mc~ J OI Elhyl

CERTIFIED GAS STATION

As far ·as I am concerned,
this is the last ·devaluation.
-Dr. Art hur F. Burns, 538 W. Mam St
chairman of the Federal
ijeserve Board.

OhiO

POITit'IO'I,

992 998 1

I
i
~
~
~

1

i••

BRITISHER VISITS BEST AT COOLVILLE - Karl
Summers, center. president of Best Photo of Coolville, Ohio
and Richard Breugger, right, marketing director, discuss the
company's marketing plans with Sean Hickey, marketing
director of Gain-a-Film in England. Gain-a-Film, a division
of Best Photo, is the company's entry in the fast-growing
European market. Best Photo also has processing plants in
Atlanta, Pittsburgh, San Diego, Syracuse, N.Y., and Worcestel' , Mass.

3 lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER
4 lb. GROUND BEEF
2 lb. SLICED BACON
3 lb. ·SIRLOIN STEAK
1 lb. HAM SALAD

--:::-::--::-:::--;;::--

HOMEM~DE

By PHIL PASTORET

HAM SAlAD
AND
CHEESE
SPREAD

-~B:::::A:::-..:R~::B=::;:S::-If you w a n t

to take
chances, the lad across from
us has a pocketful of !hell)
all the time.
Your mooch in' friend prob ·
ably lws all !he money you
11eed.

See your dentist at lea st
twice a year. He welcomes

'••
••
•

i
••

2 lb. PORK CHOPS
2 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
2 lb. ASSORTED LUNCH MEAT
1 lb. FRESH CHICKEN

••
•

{

3 lb. ROUND STEAK
4 lb. CHUCK ROAST
5 lb. GROUND BEEF
' 3 lb. RIB STEAKS
3 lb. stEW MEAT

19)

•

'•'

t•

3 lb. GROUND BEEF
3 lb. PORK CHOPS
3 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
3 lb. ROUND STEAK
3 lb. LARGE FRANKS

•

t

Fresh &amp; Lean

Your Orderl
992-3502

,---, 5 lb. GROUND BEEF
5 lb. CHUCK ROAST
3 lb. SIRLOIN STEAK
3 lb. RIB STEAKS
lf2 SEMI-BONELESS HAM
16.7 lb. avg.)

$25

09
lb.

Fresh &amp;

.

DURA PAK
TROUT LINE
Heck's Reg.

12J9

$}99

'

3·TIAY PLASTIC

Dart Brand

t

:•
~
~

s

BACON

'

'

•
'

. Fawrite
'
,•

'

'

ARE TO HOLD STUDIO HOURS IN

oun STORE

jJ\i l'\
I., r

3 doz.

. COL Oil POillllAIT

"

·. '

"

ICE ,

•

)

5 loaves for

•ltOAGfliNI!

''""' " P/1 1&amp;61lCf -J PU ! ANilY .

Portrdit. Size Available from Wallets to 30r40

»:;ff;IA/#irJt
'/.f ~.C C~l//lj)
f):A.f:A,.JO::;;.; · ..... 'CIIARANTEE{)

'

W A POtAR bear bears a

"

.·CREAM

•li/Jt!!J AillkYIIIPAI/''I'EP JVI/fC!

.09

.'

'I

,'gal.

CII(J()JI

bare polar bea r. is the polar
beu,· bare that bears the
bare r tto.tr t."nr '! Cun'l unswt" lhat lrum lnokin~ ut
Sail)' and uffsprin~ l'mlil i
wuck at lhe Loudon Znu.

HOM! 011/Cf 1Pli(ARPIN6AVE f(l(/fiJWiLI (JI!J(J ~5662

"f!lddp ~ ja1Jl~

II
.

. .,

-----

'

'

.

""

I

•

~

•
'

:••

••

I

•'•

••
•

12 NOON 'TIL 8 P.M.
TO INTQOP/JCE THEIR COL Oil MT!JtRY
WE Ofi!ll 1-//k/1- LIP'IN6-

it

I

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

$

'•

i

MARCH 9 &amp; 10

• ~llrilfl/11 II~ ilrJJIJ lii!N WH/CK /0

BREAD
1J

Master Portrait

Pure

E'GGS

TACIIi.E 101

•

!

SHADLE BRIDGE .

lb.

Pee Wee Size

•

•

!••

IN
POINT PLEASANT,
.W. VA.

"

Sliced

••

~

~ 'P.ORK
lb. . SAUSAGE.

PORK
CHOPS

t•
:

19.

ROUND
·STEAK

•••

~

WE ACCEPT FEDERAL FOOD STAM

the offiCe fee .

Pomeroy

USDA Choice

i•
•

Phone Us
Nothing ventured, nothing
lost.

$
$
'

3 lb. GROUND BEEF
2 lb. BULK SAUSAGE

reaflirming the President's '
commitment to dealing with .
the energy situation. He indicated that he will soon
submit to the Congress a
co mprehen s ive energy
message containing wideran ging initiatives to ensure
necessary supplies of energy.
The desire to protect the
environment and clean up our
surrour.dings must be kept in
proper balance with the
equally importa nt need to
continue industrial productivity and maintain jobs. All it
becomes more apparent that
the goals of con tinued industri al growth and environmental quality could be
on a collision course, it
becomes all the more important that
the environmentalist and the industrialist work together to
prevent a crisis which could
damage both their objectives.

\•'

Open Mon.- Thurs. 9 a .m. to 7 p.m. - . Fridays 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.- Saturdays 9 a.m. to 8::10 p.m.

First Cut

Primus Propane

LANTERN

We Accept Federal Food Stamps

.GROUND
CHUCK

16'

WIBattery
Heck's Reg.
'4.69

1!32 oz. or 1!16 oz.

Mepps

EVEREADY

i
i..

CIGARETIES i

SAVE UP
TO 4 A GAL

More than 27,000 gallons
of water are needed to irri·
gate an acre of land to the
depth of one inch.

1

No. 108 B

HORSE SHOES

rc~~~uY-1
I.. Corner By Charlene Hoeflich

Phone 992-5428

NEAR END OF

FUSHLIGHT BATTERIES

TARGET ARROWS

•._~

7.99

HECK'S "D" SIZE

Ben PeaJSOn

12'

.,.,·~·~··o;··,•,•,·,·._--.:o:,•,·,·,·,·,·,·,·,·,•,• ,•

2io E. 2nd

GASOLINE

of
of

We wore more in our
dressing room than actresses
wear on the stage and in
the movies today.
-Eloise Martin. ' onetime
Ziegfe!d Follies beauty.

.I

ROBINSON'S
CLEANERS
Pomeroy

IN TOWN ON

to
of

718 TIPOFF MOUNT
Heck's Reg.

HECK'S REG.
$19.99

Diamond Pro

There are many ways
be tough, and the least
these is to talk tough .
- Mayor John Lindsay
· . New York, on the art
negotiating.

(Upon Request)

LoWEST PRICE

Timely Quotes

!

HECK'S
REG.

6' eve!, od1u sloble &lt;ell ler

po le to 8 fee t. Woh:r a nd rot
proof

EAGLE

ADAPTER

SPORTS
DEPT•

,._=-

....

ROD

. WITH FlANGE

WAX SEAl

$ 99

BLACK 2-PIECE ROD
Heck's Reg. '3.99

OlD
WORK BOX

HECK'S REC.
34'

ANGLER IIJ33

•

DEEP
HANDY BOX

'Message on Natural Resources
and the Environment. He
clearly put in perspective the
challenges we face and the
I
I care with which we must move
I
I to improve the environment.
There was a lime when this ·
By Clarence
co untry took its natural
II
Miller
I, resources for granted. In 1862,
President Lincoln slated in his
All of us realize that there is environment be made steadily Slate of the Union message, "A
a critical time element in- and effectively . For this reason nation may be said to consist of
volved in making progress with I introduced in this Session of its territory, its people, and its
the environment - that to do a the Congress a resolution to laws. The territory is the only .
good job and to make sub- establish in the House a new part which is cf certain
stantial and lasting im- Committee on the En- durability." The passage of
vironment.
provement lakes time.
time has proven that our
In this same vein , the "territory" - our land, air,
It is in the interest of every
American
that furth er President has again submitted water and minerals- is not of
'progress In protecting the to the Congress a · Special such "certain durability " after
·
all.
·••N.Y.I'A•,•,•,•,•,•,•,-.!o'_,•o"o'o"•' • •,•
'o'.lo"•";!'.l;.•' • • • • .........,
In his message, President
Nixon recommended four basic
principles for the preservation
of the . environment and our
natural resources:
~
.
;:;:
First, we must strike a
balance so that the protection
fi: of our irreplaceable heritage
~.
~=-~
»••. becomes as important as its
use.
The Rev. Henry L. Key, who has faithfully driven to MidSecond, because there are no
dleport from Columbus Sunday after Sundar to pastor the Mount
• local or'state boundaries to the
Moilah Baptist t'lnlr~'h. suffered a hear\ attack Monday.
, proLiem of environment, the
. He Is in the coronary unit at Grant Hospital in Colwnbus and
federal government must plan
his room number Is 286. His wife reports thaI he is resting
an
active positive role, but
comfortably now lind in fair condition. OW" very best wishes to
Washington must not displace
him for a speedy recovery.
state, local and private sector
CARY MORRIS MADE one of her infrequent visits home . initiatives in · making the
over the weekend to see her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Morris decisions ahead.
Third, u,e cosis of pollution
and grandmother, Mrs. C. S. Morris. A sophomore at Ohio State
control
should be more fully
University, Cary keeps busy and on the go. As a member of the
University Chorus she will·be going to Cincinnati next month to me t in the free market place ;
not in the federal budget.
participate in the Fe,stival of the Arts.
Fourth, we must remain
MIDDLEPORT'S ASA BRADBURY is ever so proud of the con fid ent that America's
reserve team which he coaches at Logan Elm High School, technological and econom ic
Circleville. His team took the championship in the Scioto Valley ingenuity will meet environmental challenges.
Conference with a 7 to 0 record.
' In the conversion of the
environmental crisis into an
INTERESTED IN learning how to crochet?
Mrs. Louise Heines will be conducting an eight week course opportunity for progress, the
at the Meigs Museum on Butternut Ave., Pomeroy. An President asked Congress tp
organizational meeting has been set for 7 p.m. Tuesday and at pass 19 bills aimed at reducing
·that lime the classes, one to be held on Tuesdays and the other on pollution, managing our land,
and preserving our natural
Wednesda~• will be planned. The $10 fee will be payable at the
initial meeting. Eight sessions will be held in addition to the heritage from e~ploitation.
With the.. envir onmenlal
organizational meeting, with each one to be about three hours, 7
message
came a statement
to 10 p.m. at the musewn.

IWashington
1 Report

'h"VAlVE

~-

PRESENTED 60 YEAR PIN-Harry Swan, PorUand, center, was presented a OO.year pin
from Pomeroy Lodge 164 F&amp;AM Monday night at his home. Making the presentation on behalf
of the Lodge were left, Ben Philson, Racine, District Deputy Grand Master of the 12th Masonic
District and Larry Ebersbach, Syracuse, Master of Pomer~y Lodge. Also attending was Tom
Edwards, Minersville.

--------------------------I

1

HARDWAIEDEPT.

FIX ALL

DUPLEX
FLUSH

99

HECK'S REG. 4.17

HARDWARE DEPT.

'

NEW SALES OUTt.ET - Larry Evans, Gallipolis, has opened a new sales for mobile
homes called "Larry's Mobile Homes" next to the Jones Boys on West Main St., Pomeroy. A
num~r of sizes and prices are offered in the mobile homes which are approved by Underwriters Laboratories, have hw-ricane anchors and emergency "kick out" windows. A
variety of heating_~its are offered and local financing with terms to 10 years is available.
Sales people wW be at the sales office from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and
from I to 6 p. m. on Sunday . The salesmen are Evans, the owner, and Frank Gheen, Racine,
who has been associated with Keith Goble Ford.
,

sealed float ball.

y, '"C I CWROUGHT

UNION

HECK'S REG. 2 .60

G.

·,

'

ter waste, easy to in5lall, and elimi ·
nate~ old ~ fashioned rod and air

'h" WROUGHT

E.

SJ67EACH

principles, co rro5ion·proof, has instant positive shutoff, eliminates wa·

250 feet of wire per box. Perfect lor any
home wiring job.

ELBows8e

D.

X 10FT.

_·less steel , uses new hydraulic pressure

WITH GROUND WIRE

· - !L

•;,'" CZC WROUGHT

c.

COPPER ·

..... .

, ..... .Tt

I

A.

l

BALLCOCK

ROME
X
CABLE

~~·r""

h" CI CWlotiCIIT

1

j·

HARD .

FLUIDMASTER
Plumbing's new silhoue1te, it's stain-

2-HOUR
CLEANING

SOLITARY ORDERED
AKRON, Ohio (UPI)
Itinerant rock musician Larry
Via, convicted of killing Ohio
University coed Jane McGuire
last Sept. 20, was sentenced to
life in prison Monday by
Swninit County Common Pleas
' who
Judge James Barbuto,
also decreed that Via will
spend each anniversary of
Miss McGuire 's. death in
solitary co~fi~emenl.

'

.

t'
I

0'0 -

•
{

'

�'

"
14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., M"rl'l• 7,1973

'•

Sentin,e l Cla$sifieds Get
Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Result~!
.

ME AN' MY 'IOUN6·(JN5
\NUZ STANDIN' ON Tl'l ' .

.

WANT AQ.S

Notice

INFORMATION
DEAD~'INES,

·

For Rent

Pomeroy .
Motor Co.

2 SIGIJS

5 P.M. Dly Belore Publication. 't-!000'5 AQUARIUMS: fish
M()ndav Deadtlne ·9 a .m .
, and supplies ; new location,
Can.c ellatlon- CorreCtions ..
Ash Street, Mlddh~port near
Will be acc'epted unt/19 e .m . tor
park ; phone 992-5443.
oa·y oi.Publication
1-7-tfc
REGULATIONS
Th"e Publisher reserves the
righl IO edil O~oeiecl ony OdS
dee'!led
oblt1'tional .
The .
..,.,
.
publ !stler will not be_responslblt; IN LOVING memory of Mrs.
'for - ·more than one incorrect
Walter (Beatrice) Frost who

Of'
QUALITY

UNFURNISHED

Insertion .

,

RATES
_. For want Ad service
5 cents ~er Word one insertion
M i nl'l"um Charge 7Sc
.

12 centS' per word thr't

Insertion&amp;.
)8 c:ents per word siK con
'Secutlve Insertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid '
'C CinJIIecutl~e

· ~
S
llle, March 6, 1972. adly
mis~ed b.y her husband and
fam•ly .

2 BEDROOM mobile home;
completely furnished; call
992·2441 att~r 5:30p.m.
2-7-tfc

J.7 ·lip

Lost

&amp; OBITUARY
$1 SO tor 50 word rhinlmJim .

" Mick 1 ' ; reward; phone 3786300 after 6:30 p.m.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Charge per LADY'S Bulova wrist watch.

Saluroay .

Recent visitors at the HetzerBise home were Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Hetzer, Belle, W.
Va. and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
· Beers and Jane of Akron. Tom
, Dye returned to Akron with the
i Beers for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs.J. D. Kibble of
Parkersburg, W. Va. visited
with Mrs. Hazel Barton.
Mr. and Mcs. Donald Put·
man and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Putman spent the weekend at
Easton, Md. They also.were at
Rahovah Beach, Del.
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs .
Chester Mun&lt;h·y and Lori was
Mrs. Grace Price of Long
Bottom.
-Mrs. L. Balderson

Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
of Columbus were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
Howard Russell and Mr. Earl
Russell.
Mrs .•Ste~e Haggy of
1
Akron were weekend visitors of
Mr. a~d Mrs. Rober! Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
were Sunday evening visitors
of Mr. and Mrs . Harley
Johnson.
Mrs. Paul Pierce and family
of Mason were Tuesday
visitors of Mrs. Geneva
Shumate and Mrs. Larry
Johnson and family.
Mrs. Helen Johnson was a
Tuesday evening visitor of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Johnson , Gina,
Tahnee and Brady.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Russell of
ColUmbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin Russell and Lincol~
Russell were Sunday visitors of
Mrs. Lincoln Russell, a patient
of Holzer Hospital.

'*''11114

BUSINESS SPACE
Located in
Middleport's
;,r~~

Remodel to Suit
Tenant

992-5320
·992-7819

Wilkesville .

3-6-31p

Kingsbury
News, Notes

·News, :Notes

News, Notes

~old, nurse ' s watch ; In
omeroy ; phone 669 -365.4,

The Carleton SWlday School
had an attendance of 74 and
offering of $53.12.
Mrs. Jesse Carr o( Portsmouth, who has been spending
some time with her sister, Mrs.
Neva King, returned home
wilh her daughter, Mrs.
Courtney Willlams Sunday.
AMN Riehard Dean visited
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Dean enroute from Brooks Air
Force Base, Texas, to K. I.
Sayer AFB in Michigan. He
also visited his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Markins, Racine and Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Dean, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul, Paynter of Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Waggoner and Joy of
Harrisonville, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill SpaWl, Pomeroy, Mr. and
Mrs. Garold Gilkey and family
at Athens and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Rled and family and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Terrell
and Billy at Pataskala.
Mr. Kenneth Hartley who
has been a patient at Veterans
Memorial
Hospital has
returned home and if improved.
.
Miss Mary Lou King who
atlends college at MI. Vernon
spent the w~kenct with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
King and family.
Mrs. Hazel Arnold, who has
been ill with pnewnonla, is a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Recent visitors were
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Arnold
and ·silly of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Basil Sheets
spent a recent weekend with
Mr. and Mrs . Dana Murray
and family and Mrs. Elizabeth
Murray.
Miss Cindy Louch of Ossow,
Mich ., was a weekend guest of
Mr. and Mrs. John Walter
Dean.
· AMN Kenneth Wood has
been home on leave visiting his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Wood and family.
Mrs. Helen Dais, who has
been iU for several fays, has
returned to her teaching duties
at Salisbury school.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Smith and Steve
were Mr: and Mrs. Wallace
Hatfield and daughters.

-------For Sale

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

406 E. Main . Pomeroy

Phone

3·7·31p

and
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

Notice

V.W. Deluxe AM radio, $25; 4
V.W. whitewall tires, $40;
phone
742·3334.
at the Pomeroy Wesleyan
PAINTING, Masonry work;
J.6·61c
Holiness
Church.
on
Rt.
143,
free estimate; call 773·5580.
7:30 each evening; Pastor
3·7 · ~01p
O'Dell Manley Is speaker: 18 K 8 HOUSETRAILER con·
verted into camper; rru11ke me
every welcome.
J.6·41c an offer: phone 1192-7024.
J.6·51c
I WILL NOT be responsible for -, - Y
-E
_A
_ R_O_L_D_m_u-le-,-,,-1-50-lbs.;
any debts contracted by any

HOME BUILDING
&amp;

Your Right to Know

other

than

myself.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
HJ-5554
Maso.n, W. Va.

992-5653

will work single or double;

------GUN SHOOT, also rifle matches

sound system. Balance $79 .56 .

NOTICE
Use our budget terms. call
Bids will be received at the .- open sites only and special 992·7085 .
·• Air Conditioners
Law Offi ce of Bernard V. Fultz,
3·1·61c
·deer Slug match : Forked Run
•Awnings
Pomercy
National
Bank
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
Building, Pomeroy , Oh io, until
·· ·Underpinni~g
March 11, 12 noon.
Saturday, March 10, 1973, at ten
STEREO 8 track. Must sell at
o'clock A . M ., tor lhe se le of the
3·7'31c once. 1973 8 track stereo In
Complete mobile hQme
Genevieve Stobart residence on
lovely walnut console. Take ~service - plus glganlfc
U . S . Route 33, approximate ly Kll~COT KOSMETICS ANn
over payments of $7.55 per
one .fourth mile north of the
WIGS. SPECIALS MONTH. month or pay $101.50. Call992· display of mobile homes
Pomeroy corporation l ine. The
LY.
BROWN'S
INDE · 5331 .
always avaltable .at ...
house may be seen In edvance
PENDENT DISTRIBU·
tf
by contacting Eldon weeks,
TOR.
MIDDLEPORT. - - - - - - - - 2·_23· C
Executor Df the Estate ol the
decedent. Telephone : 992-2784 .
PHONE 1192-5113.
1972 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine.
ELDON WEEKS
2·23-lfc This machine is a dressmaker
Executor of the Estate of
1220 W•shington Blvd,
Gene\lieve Stobart, deceased. -=========~
model.
balance
or
pay Pay
balance
of ofS6$38.50
per 423.7521
1311.2, • . $, 6. 1, 8, 9, 81C rBELPRE, 0.

e&gt;UT Of.IL'I THE

Phone 1192·2360.

·

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
Tht Stitt of Ohia, Meigs
County. Prabltr _C.ourt.
To the Adm inlstratrht of the
estate i to such of the following
as are rtSidents of the State of
the surviving
Ohio , \liZ : spouse, the next of kin, the
beneficiaries under Hie will;
and to the...attorney or anorntys
representing
any of the
aforementioned persons :
Harry A. Hayman. Oecused ,
Long Bortom , Ohio, Lebanon
Township, No. 20837.
You are hereby notlrled that
the
Inventory
and
Ap .
praisement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased. lale
of Sd id County, was flied in this
Court. Said Inventory and
Appraisement wlll be for
hear ing before this Court on the
9th day of March , 1973, at lO :DO
o'clock A.M.
Any person desiring to file
e ~c ept i ons thereto must
file
them at least five days prior to
the do!lle set for hearing .
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court , this 24th day

of February

1973 .

Manning o . Webs.ter
Judge and ex -olficio
Clerk of said Court
By Ann B . Wats.on

12 1 28

Deputy Clerk

13) 1. 21

month. Call 992-5331.

"HElL"

IF YOU'RE interested in
quality and service plus the
highest discount in Tri·Siate,
it will pay you to check with
us, on .18 II. thru 27 ft. Star.

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING .

craft Trailers new and
used ; we carry a complete

Furnace Controls

5 ROOMS and bath house :
located on Brick St. In
Rutland , $7,000; phone 7423334.
J.4·61c

- - - - -- -

5 ROOM house: one third acre
ground: gas heat, basement:
good location for trailers; S.
D. Buskirk, 341 Page St.,
Middleport, Ohio.
,
3·4-Jip

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

--------

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448

Pomeroy, o.
THURS.. MAR. 8
8:00PM
At Landmark Town
&amp; Country Store

Hygiene· New Demonstrators
has all cleaning attachments

acre of ground: phone Mason,
1·304-773-5615.
x 101973 HILLCREST Mobile
3·4·61p
Home, 55,800; phone 1-304·882·
--------2241.
J./ ·51c 3 BEDROOM home, living room
and dining room carpeted :
REDUCED pr ices on 1972
new forced air furnace,
Lincoln Hill. Pomeroy : phone
mobile homes in stock; check
with us before you buy; West
992-2071 .
Breeze Mobile Home Sales,
J.6·121c
Athens, phone 593·6736.
. l-il·121c
14

Pomeroy, Ohio
BABY FARM
3 ACRES - Good old house
wllh 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
and 3 porches. Medium size
barn. Wanl$10,500.00. WHAT
WILL YOU GIVE?
BUSINESS
I
OPPORTUNITY
HERE IT IS - A place to

Pels For Sale

REGISTERED toy foK terrier
puppies, 6 weeks old, $35.
Phone 742·5625.
$27 .50 cash . price or terms
3·Hic
available . Phone 992·7755 .
' Electro Hygiene Co.
3-7·61c

Pomeroy

TWO 10 fl. a•les and tires lor 10
ft. house trailer ; one boat ;

Is Welcome!

phone 949·4863.

1:,

Wanted To Buy

--------

. Real Estate For Stile

live and run your very own
business .
3
bedrooms

2NEW3bedroomhomes ; I with
basement. 1 without : 2 car
garages, 1 acre lots : located
at Rock Springs behind Meigs
Co. Fairground. Will trade or
help finance : also 5 good
building lots, water and
disposal installed: Charles H.
Cornell. Athens. 59J.7034 or
593.5667 or m-7613.
2·ll ·IIC

- - - - .::::::=::====='--T

l:'or Sale

He!c wanted

r

Vllloge of Mlddltporl

121 28. IJ l 1, 21

Gene Grate.
Clerk ·Treasurer

Aluminum
Sheets

charge. Call 245·5514.
2·28·JOIC

1:-1\•.s. opcr ;•lth&lt;J

CISt No. 10110

Estate of Hilda Marie Koblentz
Deceased .
Notice- IS hereby given that
David J . Koblentz cf Route J,
Pomeroy, Ohio, has been duly
appointed as Administrator of
the Estate of Hilda Marie
Koblentz, deceased . late of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Credilors ere required to file
their c;laims with said fiduciary
wlthirl IQur months .
Dated this 24trl day of
February \973.
Mann in" O: Webtter,

Judge

Ccurt of Common Plus ,
Probate Division

121 28, IJ) 1, U, Jl

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

CutNo. IOUl

Estate 'Of • Eddlt L.ou ·Howery,
Deceased .
Notice It hereby giVen that
Clara E . Howery ,· of Route 3.
.A.Iba.,y, hal been duly ap -

pol7ted

~xecutrlx

of tht Lost

Wll end Testameni of · Edt:lle
Lou Howery, deceued ~ late af
Route 3. Albany. MtlgS County,
OhiO . ·
Creditors are required to file
their claims

with Uld fiduciary

within four months .

Doled lh ls 161h , day of
Ftbruary \973 .
Manning 0 . Webster
.
Prob,ate Judoe
ol Slid County
171 21 , 28 [Jj 1, 31

'\•, ,1i 1-t1Jit•

f,,,

: ''' rlll{lrrp I•,

· • ·I

( otlh

,. rpd., l. tf &lt;.

til IV ' t )t.l fJ(Y,(:,

dtly , ,,, ,, .o~,nl

REALTY
ooaE. Moln
Pomeroy

2QC

- - - - - - - - - - Busmess Opportunities
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

1

HAVE
MANY USES

( 1tll

~'11 /JJ/r iJl

u:

· 8 for $1 .00

MIODLEPORT RT. 1
t slory. 3 bedrooms. New
bath. New F .A. lurnace,

·The ·
Daily Sentinel

large

recreation

room,

utility R. Storage building
1/l !Ole
and cellar. Asking $9,800.00.
RUTLAND
L Story trame. 6 rooms, 3
bed R., bath, dining R. Nice
1968 GMC 1ft ton pickup !ruck. ·coAL · L'
· kitchen, porches, storage.
Series 1500, v.a, standard
• 1mestone, Excelsior Interior paneling and
transmlsslon,·wlde bed, new Sail Works. E. Main St.., plaster. Asking $9,200.00.
tires , .. cellenl condition with Pomeroy . Phone 1192·3891 .
HARRISONVILLE
4·12·1fc
no rust: phone 985·3509, Tom
This is a lovely home lor just
Hayman Long Boltom 0
·
·-'
l·6·6tp LOCUST!ence posts ; phone 985· si 4,900.00 . • bedrooms, balh.
4265.
dining R., TV room . Fuel oil
'63 DODGE Station Wagon, v.
2-1 1.JO!c heat. Approx. 1!2 acre.
8, automallc ; runs good ; body
SYRACUSE
fair, $190 ; phone 992·7523 after f!U ll 01 N&lt;1 lois l nr 5(1 tt.• .,I h'ock
7 room BRICK. A bedrooms,
5 p.m.
'ipr~nq!' , Ot•i ~~ Clo&lt;&gt;c to Meigs
3-6-ltc HijJI: Scl•··•·l wtlh Tupper!; .New bath and utility, new
FA gas furnace, porches,
- -- - - - - Pl.uro\ w.ll••r . ~in• · · tl rrc o)I1C1
bldg., fruit trees. 2
storage
1972 HONDA 500, 4 cylinder,' '·"o''r •01 '1189
lots
,on
Ohio
Power. Asking
115 :l(Jip
many extras, like new ; p/lone
.
.......
..
S17,90P.OO.
I
985-3828.
1970 FORD van, 6 cylinder, A·1
HARRISONVILLE
-c------3:.:·2·1fc condlllon,low mlle~ge: phone P :, A., · 4 bedrooms. .1'12
698·8722, Albany.
baths, garage. uti lity room, 2
3·4·61c bull·.flngs, one 40K70 ; In
For
.
condition .
'fRAILER, Brown's Tr~ller 1969 FORD .Ranger I ton F.JSO ; excellent
Park: phone 1192·3324.
390 engine, long wheel base, m,500.oo.
l·IJ.Ifc power
brakes,
power • · WE HAVE OTHERS
sleerlng, rough tires. air·
PLEASE CALL
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and conditioned. 47.300 miles ;
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
11nfurnlshed apartments . Harold Brewer. Long Bottom,
BROKER
Phono 1192·.143.1.
phone 985·3554.
992 -22$9
3 4.1fc
4·12-tfc
If "O arlswer 992-2561
. , . lli,or'r I

(rt. Ch.Hl tll' ( • (I

Auto Sales

Rent

Court Sl

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street

plus lhe new Electro Suds for
shampooing carpet . Only

REFRESHMENTS
DOOR PRIZES
INFORMATION

E~trvont

5 ROOMS and bath. with one

-------- 2

-....,..,------121 VACUUM Cleaners. Electro

Major Chemical Meeting

E. Main

-------

line of Starcralt Fotd.down
campers: Camp Conley
Starcrafl Sales: Rl. 62 N. of
Point Pleasant, behind Red .:ASH paid for all makes and
Carpet Inn ; phone 675-5384.
models of mobile homes .
3·5-Sic
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
4·13.1fc
(3) TWIN needle Sewing
Mach i nes 1972 model In 1968 WINDSOR, l2K60,
walnut stand. All features
bedroom, wllh or without
built-in to m~ke fancy designs
furniture : phone 1192-3511 .
and do stretch sewing . Also
2-11-lfc
bullonholes, blind hems, elc. -::-:::::-::c:-:---.,.--$43.35 cash price or terms 3 BEDROOM trailer, partially
furnished . Pr iced to sell.
available. Phone 992·7755 .
Phone 742·4833.
Electro Hyg iene Co.
3·1-6tc
3·7·61c

HUMII,)!FJ.Ii~S

'

2·23·11C

1-25-lfc

Pomeroy

paneled home with large
modern firep lace . And a -4

WOULD FALL

FOR IT.~'

I

-AND ON!-'I ONE
WITJ.\ THE. STRENGTH
OF AN'OX COULD
CARR'/ tTbUT -: .. .

SCRIPT e&gt;'l SHAKESPEARE
I CAN GET EVEN OMAR.
SHARIF FOR Tf-\E. MALE
LEAD.r.r

n
.,
,,

,--1P......,~

):

li•

0

&amp;HOULD I OFFER
~IM A JOB AT
BOIIINAZ OR NOT'1
... : O"AT'S THE
que&amp;TION.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been'
·cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call· 992·
2966.
6·15-l!c
.:R-EA_D_y
""
· ~M-1-X~-CO_N_C_R.,-ET E
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est mates, Phone 992·3284.
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.''
6-30-l!c

REMIND ME TO DO IT

LATER . I'VE GOTA

NUMBER OF OTHER
CALLS 10 MAKE

FiRST!

WfU, A lONG TIME

SEPTIC TANKS CLIANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. «6·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell, ·
Owner &amp; Operator.
··
5-12,1fc
--------C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone949-382t
Rlcin.e. OhlO
Crill Braalord
5·1-l!c
- --::-:::-- - - - SEWING MACHINES. Repair
..r.vlce, all fMkes. 9'n-22P',
The Fabric Shop, · Pomeroy.
Authorl1ed Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
. 3·29·11C

-

.

take over!

'100 Sf£, M"' f!OI, IF I l-ET
'00 Tm TH; Df..'/ O:F ...

--

. : •..-"
';.;-::

;·... : ...·,-;.:._ : !:~

EXCAVATING. Oo.ers, large
and small ; Backhoes and
Loaders on track and tires :
Dump trucks - Lo·boy
Service : Septic lanks In ·
stalled:
George I Bit II
Pullins: phone 1192-2418.
2-9-lfc'

----------

HARRISON'S TV Service and
Service Calls: phone1192-2522.
2·9-lfc

ACROSS
I. Swiss city
6. Luke·

-~-----

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124,
complete front ond service,
lune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced elec·
All
work
Ironically.
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rafes . Phone 1192·3213 or 742-

.. 111 Co pacify

warm

11. Degrade ,
12. Gnaw
13. Words

describing
Sept. 24 ,
1869
15. South
American
wildcat
16. Employ
17. Alleyway
19. Sailor
22. Become

aware of
24. Large
bundle
2!1, Hefty
SO&lt;k
12 wds.l
27. French
river

AMANDA PANDA

cider"

Yesterday's Answer
22. Entice
33. Quadra23. Sicilian
gesima
city
lt. Heavy
24. Glove
whack
material
(st.)
iTfGOB
25. Drunk35. Whirl/:.ol .
'

19. Panzer
vehicle
20. Tropical
dog
21. Alkali

masia
30. "-,
pardner"
31.. Freberg

CAPTAIN EASY
MI!ANWHIL~ •. ~ T~~

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atr~~~~• the circleclletten

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Ant~rl

D~ILY

'

xr r 1 xr 1
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rr•" t

TANGY IUTLil WMINCI
·

They help •o 1:eep lhe leJU: 11p- YHI "GUYI"

----·-- ·- - ---h
~AVE ONE Fro\\ THAT , .
ROiJND·~EADED KID ANP
l

I

ONE FROM TAAT STUPID KID i '
WITH iHE 6tANI(ET... I
l
'NEED THREE MORE ..
l

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CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work !t:

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F0~6ET IT!

CRYPTOQUOTES
NWYA

MAYTAG

Arno lei Grete

[.,._I=.)='"""').__._I__.I

--+-~-4--~~ ~·==I===[~J[~~j~=='~~~~·~:q:r~~~~leci;UM~b~::~:~:~r:'::-~~;"'~·;·~u

AXYDf.BAAXR
lo LONGFELLOW
One le•ter simply stands for anothe.r. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
opostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ·all
hints. Each day the code iellcrs are different.

RUTLAND FURNITURE·~~~~~:" ..
741 -4211

~~~F~n':!

lion
38. Do needlework
39. Dutch
commune

-r--T:-"''ll"-.,.....,

Wt Spoclollloln

•

:;:

WHOLe HOUSfHDLP

T!NS&amp;LV Wllil:H~ fHf. WOOP~ AT TilE MAR

no overliryl~g .' .
, Fino , Muh' Lfnl

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;~ono-

r

3. European
Basin

'

. Surround' clOthes
Wllh gentle, even
htot. NOhOIIpOII, ·

.

Unacromblt these fiMir Jumblu,
one letter to each aquue, to
form four ordinary worda.

girl
10. Ottoman
official
U.Humerus
nei!lhbor
(2 wds.)
18.Coach
Parsegh·

26.

'' ol '11 11 I I I I

, f expertis~

Moylog
Holo ot Hut
orvera
'

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1

cry

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Ptrma-Prt~•

I 'V I II Nl!l 0\llf&lt;ol I! I I

31. One oflhc
Trinity
32. -gin
36. "The-."
1945
Miliand
film
(2 wds. l
to. Leading
U. Banquelled
42. Soft;
quiet
43. Vestibule
DOWN
1. Bunyan 's
Blue Ox
2. With

Autom1tlcs

Fin Agllllor.

~W/MID~;-1.4.1==~.-Jc

river
6. Concise
7. Great
Lake
8. Legume
9. "Apple

bully
29. Oolong
or Isla .
30. Goose's

·

w1ter
Auto .
level
Lint
Powar

(Cl 1973 Kint Featurt'!f Syndicate, Ine.)

gerer;

2 speed operation .
Choice ot
temps ,
Water
control.
Filter or

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: THOUGHT IS THE BLOSSOM·
LANGUAGE THE BUD; ACTION THE FRUIT BEHIND IT_:
RALPH WALPP EMERSON
.

4. Mount a
rampart
by ladder
5. Nether·
lands ·

ian

28. Swag-

,•

'

Moytog ·

.,

TH' JUNGLE WHEN Hfi
W'6 REAL SJotALL !

to lunch.~ir!
'---....,,:...., You 'II have to

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEANED. REPAIRED . MILLER
SANITATION, STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
10.4-l!c

room business building on
Rl . .7 loop. ASKING
$25.000.00. MAKE US iiiN
3232.
OFFER.
2-18·11C
10 ACRES
ON LEADING CREEK Bargain day. · Old house, SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
cistern, and barn. On hard
marquees,. aluminum siding
road too. Wanl $5,000.00 but
and
railing. A. Jacob, sales
ask to see then we will talk
representative
. . For · free,
turkey .
estimate~ , phone Charles
BUILDING ,LOT
Lisle, Syracuse, V1 V,
POMEROY - On Rt. 7
Johnson and Son, Inc. 1
business loop. Seldom do we
3-2-ttc
get anything like this. Be :------'-.----first . and see II for only · BEAT the rush! Get' your
lawnmower and tiller luned·
51500.00 NOW.
up now; Small Engine Repair
125 ACRES
Shop on Third St., Mason, W.
OF NICE WOODS - Nearly
Va .
all in timber. Large old home
J.6·301C
of 9 rooms, 2 baths, drilled
well with good water. A real EXCAVATING, do1er, loaijer
setting In the country for the
and backhoe work: "Pile
children. Want $26,000.00 but
tanks Installed; dump trucks
see us.
and lo-boys for hire; will ~aul
fill dirt, top soil, limestone
NO TIME LIKE NOW TO
and gravel: call Bob or Roger
BUY. PROPERTY IS LIKE
Jeffers, day phone 1192·7089:
EVERYTHING ELSE,
night
phone 1192-3525 or 992·
GOING UP EVERY I&gt;AY.
5232.
DON'T WAIT SEE US NOW.
2-11·11C
•
I
-;00::;;-:Z;;E:;R~a-nd-:-:ba-ck_h_oe-:. work:
GORDON B. TEAFORD,.
ASSOCI-!'TE . ·
ponds and septic tanks, dit·
chlng service; top soil, fill
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K E•ASSOCIATE
cavatlng. Phone 992,5367 ,
NO SUNOAY SHOWINGS
Dick Kerr, Jr.
·
992-JJ.2S
'
- - - - - - - . c . . :·.l-11c

.

\"EAH, BUT l-IE

WANDEREO OFF' INTO

AGO WE DID 1-(A.V' A
LrTTLf BROTHER••.

----------:

.

------

WITH AN ORIGINAL.

DUM&amp;ESTO)(

frontage, Syracuse, Ohio,

•
MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

Wanted

NBC and
WTAPgive
you back-to
back news
of local thru
world-wide .
events.

mpy

Mobile Homes For

Wanted To Do

GET INTO:

TICKET&gt;

Signed: Anna Lance, Rt. 1, phone 1192·5795 .
Porlland. 0.
l·6·31c For Stile
and be informed of the func Real Estate For Sale
J.6-31p
51 NGE R automatic sewing
tions of your government are
MODERN Walnut style stereo·
machine; like new in walnut
embodied in public nofices. In - - - - - -- - PLUMBING work done; phone
cabinet. Makes design slit. 3 BEDROOM home, living room 985-4265.
that self-government charges
REDUCE excess fluids with radio, AM. FM radio, •
all citizens to be informed;
and dining room carpeted.
FluldeK, Lose weight with speaker sound system, 4 ches, zig.zags, buttonholes,
2-11 -JOtc
this newspaper urges every
&amp;peed automatic changer.
bllnd hems, overcasts, etc.,
New forced air furnace.
DeK·A· Diet capsules al
citizen to read and study these
Balance $68.33 . Use our S85. Call . Ravenswood, '273Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, phon~
Nelson Drugs.
notices. We strongly ad\llse
ELNA and While Sewing
budget terms. Call 1192-7085. 9S21 or 273-9893.
1192·2071.
3·7·3tp.
those cr1izens. seek. Ino further
Machines ... service on all
3·1·6tc
I·
11-lfc
3-6-121c
information , to uercise their - - - - - - - makes. Reasonable rates .
right of access to pUblic SKIN disorders? Try Toco.
The
Sewing Center. MidEARLY
American
stereo-radio,
Derm
Vitamin
E.
Cream,
1260
records and public meetings .
dleport, Ohio.
4 BE DROM home, 2 baths, gas
IU per tube at Nelson Drugs. AM· FM radio, 4 speed
Sale
furnace, full basement, river
1l·16·11C
3·7·11P automatic changer, 4 speaker

...

PUBLIC NOTICE
3.1.31c
Sealed bids. will be received
POMEROY
by the Village of Middleport ,
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr. HURKEY hens, ready to lay : 3
Ohio, Meigs County, at the
PllonettH181
toms ; also good miM:ed hay ;
Village Hall in M ddleport.
Ohio, until 4:00 P.M . March 15,
phone 843·2963 alter 6 p.m.
1973 for the following equip .
J.7·21c
men I :
One used Three Wheel Street
carpet
cleaning
Sweeper, 4 Cu . Yd ., 1964 or OLD lurniture, oak tables, KEEP
organs, dishes, clocks, brass problems small - use Blue
newer,
beds or complete households. Lustre wall to wall . Rent
GM -3.53 Olese l Engine
Double Gutter Brooms, 45" Write M. 0. Miller, Rl . 4, electric shampooer Sl. HOUSE In Long Bollom, phone
Dia .
Store,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 1192· Nelson ' s · Drug
985-3529.
Cab with Cab Guards .
Pomeroy, Ohio.
6271.
6-11 ·1fC
Heater. Defroster , W ind 3·7·21c
H-tfc
shield Wipers.
Hopper Flusher .
HOUSE FOR. SAlE , 114 Brick
Dual Operating Controls,
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
10: 00 K 15, 20 Pl y Tires .
house , 3 bedrooms, excellent
Power Steer ing .
TWO Citizen Journal carriers;
location, close to school and
Power Brakes.
one
Mlddleporl ,
one
GARDENS plowed around
36"x2l"x.009
Flesher Lights .
city; contact Lou Osborne or •
Pomeroy. Phone 1192·3278.
Racine . John !&gt;ape, 949-3025
Gutter Broom Lights.
call 1192·5898.
3·t·llc
after 3:30 p.m.
Leaf Rake.
11·26·1fc ·
Two White Head Lights and
3·6·61c
Two Red Tail -Stop Liohi'S .
Pick Up Broom. 3'" x 58" .
Steam Cleaned and Painted .
The Village reserves the right DEAD Stock horses. callle,
to relect any and all bids.
hogs , sheep. Reasonable USED OFFSET PLATES
CLELAND

A&amp;DDD
IIAHf'tTD

HAVE

10~~

All WEATHER
ROOFING AND
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE~ 992-2550

Built to Your 'Spe·cs'
Delivered to Job S)le

C. L. KITCHEN

PUBLIC NOTICES

'OLS MS ".f

Have your home built by
Custom Builders. Our
carpenters have 20 years
experience In
building
home• i~ Molgs County.

V«JJD TRUSSES

&amp;

TO

..

PRE-FABRICATED

BOB SLOAN

LOOK LIKe 1

Ope~aTIIS ·
Monday thru Satul'llay
606 E.J,1aln •.Pomeroy, 0.

ASK US ABOUT

REMODELING

'IHISHI~

8SCAUSE THEY WOU,PN'T
CHANGE THE IR NICKNAME

PllllletOJ. Home &amp; Auto'

• Wf A HIJACKeR' .
!lEG
lfES 1HE PILOf!

. WHAT DOE5

'Ill!~

.-GUARANTEEI),Phone 992-2094

.

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCfiON

. '
liES I!P T1IERE
.IIOI.OIN6 AGUN ON

. On' Most American !=an .

SMlTH: NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
·
Ph. ff1·2174
Pomeroy

FURNITURE

A REVIVAL Is still In progress

one

From the largesl
Bulldozer Radiator ·lo the
Smallest Heater .Core.
' Nathan Biggs •
Radiator Speclolist

OFFICE SUPPLIES

1970 YAMAHA 175. $250 ; phone
742·6834.
J.2·11C
~------------------------~

Employment Wanted

:' Reeds ville

·

7/3.5580.

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

Advertisement.
·
OFFIC.E HOURS
8 :30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Deily ,
8 : 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon

Wolfpen

·Darwin, all-electric.

3-6-Jtp

IlL IN D ADS
25c

-----FURNISHED apartment at

·'Wheel Alignment
'5.55

992-2094

a week; call1192-7105 between ,
4:30 p.m·. and 7 p.m. e•cept
Wednesday.
J.6-31c

1966 CHEVROLET 1ft TON
$550
Fleelside pickup. SIK cyl. engine. st.andard transmission.
Runs gooo. Special price!!

white beagle ; answers to

Each i!iddll1onal word 2c .

Addftlonal

Station wagon, V-8 engine, standard fransmission, radio;
good tires. clean ylnylinterior, green finish, 1-owner. new
ca r trade-ln .

---------

IN REEDSVILLE area, red and

CARD OF THANKS .

sleeping room , connecting
center of town; use of large
patio and river front Yard; $20

EXPERT

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

BY THE week, large private

$1095

--

RAilROAD CARS, ·
LOWEEZV

.

..

-· -··- -- - -

bath and private entrance I~
12 • 60 trailer: .1 bloo~ from

r H' W1RM1Nl ON

CA.BOOSl 1.\jUZ CUUN I
M'l ~OUNG ·UN5

Business SerVices

3-2·11C

$1895
clean Inside &amp; oul. Y·8

1968 CHEVROLET Bel AIR

room
Ave.,

. ·---+----------

engine. automatic transmission, power steering, power
brakes, luggage rack, green vinyl interior with white
fin ish. Radio and all the e.x tras.

den•rled lhis life to a better

ads end ads pa id w ithin 10 days .

&amp;

3

apartment, -&lt;108 ~pring
Pomeroy .

In MemiVV

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA
Station wagon, locally owned

RIDGE 'IESTIDD'f·· COUNTIN.

' M'r' li~
AIJ£&gt; lEITER"

EZNR

j.

1 ••

WM

V E US K

WY

VA

.II I, T M A L A Z S M EY
NRZO

~utlend

~~

'

'

NW C W ZF ,
HCEWO

P T· S
S· KA

FUEVZ·TIM .- UEPAUS

l,

..•.•

�'

"
14 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., M"rl'l• 7,1973

'•

Sentin,e l Cla$sifieds Get
Action! Sentinel Classifieds Get Result~!
.

ME AN' MY 'IOUN6·(JN5
\NUZ STANDIN' ON Tl'l ' .

.

WANT AQ.S

Notice

INFORMATION
DEAD~'INES,

·

For Rent

Pomeroy .
Motor Co.

2 SIGIJS

5 P.M. Dly Belore Publication. 't-!000'5 AQUARIUMS: fish
M()ndav Deadtlne ·9 a .m .
, and supplies ; new location,
Can.c ellatlon- CorreCtions ..
Ash Street, Mlddh~port near
Will be acc'epted unt/19 e .m . tor
park ; phone 992-5443.
oa·y oi.Publication
1-7-tfc
REGULATIONS
Th"e Publisher reserves the
righl IO edil O~oeiecl ony OdS
dee'!led
oblt1'tional .
The .
..,.,
.
publ !stler will not be_responslblt; IN LOVING memory of Mrs.
'for - ·more than one incorrect
Walter (Beatrice) Frost who

Of'
QUALITY

UNFURNISHED

Insertion .

,

RATES
_. For want Ad service
5 cents ~er Word one insertion
M i nl'l"um Charge 7Sc
.

12 centS' per word thr't

Insertion&amp;.
)8 c:ents per word siK con
'Secutlve Insertions .
25 Per Cent Discount on paid '
'C CinJIIecutl~e

· ~
S
llle, March 6, 1972. adly
mis~ed b.y her husband and
fam•ly .

2 BEDROOM mobile home;
completely furnished; call
992·2441 att~r 5:30p.m.
2-7-tfc

J.7 ·lip

Lost

&amp; OBITUARY
$1 SO tor 50 word rhinlmJim .

" Mick 1 ' ; reward; phone 3786300 after 6:30 p.m.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

Charge per LADY'S Bulova wrist watch.

Saluroay .

Recent visitors at the HetzerBise home were Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur Hetzer, Belle, W.
Va. and Mr. and Mrs. Carl
· Beers and Jane of Akron. Tom
, Dye returned to Akron with the
i Beers for a visit.
Mr. and Mrs.J. D. Kibble of
Parkersburg, W. Va. visited
with Mrs. Hazel Barton.
Mr. and Mcs. Donald Put·
man and Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Putman spent the weekend at
Easton, Md. They also.were at
Rahovah Beach, Del.
Visiting with Mr. and Mrs .
Chester Mun&lt;h·y and Lori was
Mrs. Grace Price of Long
Bottom.
-Mrs. L. Balderson

Mr. and Mrs. William Boyce
of Columbus were weekend
visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
Howard Russell and Mr. Earl
Russell.
Mrs .•Ste~e Haggy of
1
Akron were weekend visitors of
Mr. a~d Mrs. Rober! Russell.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
were Sunday evening visitors
of Mr. and Mrs . Harley
Johnson.
Mrs. Paul Pierce and family
of Mason were Tuesday
visitors of Mrs. Geneva
Shumate and Mrs. Larry
Johnson and family.
Mrs. Helen Johnson was a
Tuesday evening visitor of Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Johnson , Gina,
Tahnee and Brady.
Mr. and Mrs. Dale Russell of
ColUmbus and Mr. and Mrs.
Franklin Russell and Lincol~
Russell were Sunday visitors of
Mrs. Lincoln Russell, a patient
of Holzer Hospital.

'*''11114

BUSINESS SPACE
Located in
Middleport's
;,r~~

Remodel to Suit
Tenant

992-5320
·992-7819

Wilkesville .

3-6-31p

Kingsbury
News, Notes

·News, :Notes

News, Notes

~old, nurse ' s watch ; In
omeroy ; phone 669 -365.4,

The Carleton SWlday School
had an attendance of 74 and
offering of $53.12.
Mrs. Jesse Carr o( Portsmouth, who has been spending
some time with her sister, Mrs.
Neva King, returned home
wilh her daughter, Mrs.
Courtney Willlams Sunday.
AMN Riehard Dean visited
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
Dean enroute from Brooks Air
Force Base, Texas, to K. I.
Sayer AFB in Michigan. He
also visited his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Markins, Racine and Mr. and
Mrs. John W. Dean, Mr. and
Mrs. Paul, Paynter of Carpenter, Mr. and Mrs. Clair
Waggoner and Joy of
Harrisonville, Mr. and Mrs.
Bill SpaWl, Pomeroy, Mr. and
Mrs. Garold Gilkey and family
at Athens and Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Rled and family and
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Terrell
and Billy at Pataskala.
Mr. Kenneth Hartley who
has been a patient at Veterans
Memorial
Hospital has
returned home and if improved.
.
Miss Mary Lou King who
atlends college at MI. Vernon
spent the w~kenct with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
King and family.
Mrs. Hazel Arnold, who has
been ill with pnewnonla, is a
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Recent visitors were
Mr. and Mrs. Lester Arnold
and ·silly of Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Basil Sheets
spent a recent weekend with
Mr. and Mrs . Dana Murray
and family and Mrs. Elizabeth
Murray.
Miss Cindy Louch of Ossow,
Mich ., was a weekend guest of
Mr. and Mrs. John Walter
Dean.
· AMN Kenneth Wood has
been home on leave visiting his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Norman
Wood and family.
Mrs. Helen Dais, who has
been iU for several fays, has
returned to her teaching duties
at Salisbury school.
Recent visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Smith and Steve
were Mr: and Mrs. Wallace
Hatfield and daughters.

-------For Sale

OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
POMEROY, OHIO

406 E. Main . Pomeroy

Phone

3·7·31p

and
Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

Notice

V.W. Deluxe AM radio, $25; 4
V.W. whitewall tires, $40;
phone
742·3334.
at the Pomeroy Wesleyan
PAINTING, Masonry work;
J.6·61c
Holiness
Church.
on
Rt.
143,
free estimate; call 773·5580.
7:30 each evening; Pastor
3·7 · ~01p
O'Dell Manley Is speaker: 18 K 8 HOUSETRAILER con·
verted into camper; rru11ke me
every welcome.
J.6·41c an offer: phone 1192-7024.
J.6·51c
I WILL NOT be responsible for -, - Y
-E
_A
_ R_O_L_D_m_u-le-,-,,-1-50-lbs.;
any debts contracted by any

HOME BUILDING
&amp;

Your Right to Know

other

than

myself.

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO.
HJ-5554
Maso.n, W. Va.

992-5653

will work single or double;

------GUN SHOOT, also rifle matches

sound system. Balance $79 .56 .

NOTICE
Use our budget terms. call
Bids will be received at the .- open sites only and special 992·7085 .
·• Air Conditioners
Law Offi ce of Bernard V. Fultz,
3·1·61c
·deer Slug match : Forked Run
•Awnings
Pomercy
National
Bank
Sportsman Club, Sunday,
Building, Pomeroy , Oh io, until
·· ·Underpinni~g
March 11, 12 noon.
Saturday, March 10, 1973, at ten
STEREO 8 track. Must sell at
o'clock A . M ., tor lhe se le of the
3·7'31c once. 1973 8 track stereo In
Complete mobile hQme
Genevieve Stobart residence on
lovely walnut console. Take ~service - plus glganlfc
U . S . Route 33, approximate ly Kll~COT KOSMETICS ANn
over payments of $7.55 per
one .fourth mile north of the
WIGS. SPECIALS MONTH. month or pay $101.50. Call992· display of mobile homes
Pomeroy corporation l ine. The
LY.
BROWN'S
INDE · 5331 .
always avaltable .at ...
house may be seen In edvance
PENDENT DISTRIBU·
tf
by contacting Eldon weeks,
TOR.
MIDDLEPORT. - - - - - - - - 2·_23· C
Executor Df the Estate ol the
decedent. Telephone : 992-2784 .
PHONE 1192-5113.
1972 ZIG-ZAG Sewing Machine.
ELDON WEEKS
2·23-lfc This machine is a dressmaker
Executor of the Estate of
1220 W•shington Blvd,
Gene\lieve Stobart, deceased. -=========~
model.
balance
or
pay Pay
balance
of ofS6$38.50
per 423.7521
1311.2, • . $, 6. 1, 8, 9, 81C rBELPRE, 0.

e&gt;UT Of.IL'I THE

Phone 1192·2360.

·

NOTICE ON FILING
OF INVENTORY
AND APPRAISEMENT
Tht Stitt of Ohia, Meigs
County. Prabltr _C.ourt.
To the Adm inlstratrht of the
estate i to such of the following
as are rtSidents of the State of
the surviving
Ohio , \liZ : spouse, the next of kin, the
beneficiaries under Hie will;
and to the...attorney or anorntys
representing
any of the
aforementioned persons :
Harry A. Hayman. Oecused ,
Long Bortom , Ohio, Lebanon
Township, No. 20837.
You are hereby notlrled that
the
Inventory
and
Ap .
praisement of the estate of the
aforementioned, deceased. lale
of Sd id County, was flied in this
Court. Said Inventory and
Appraisement wlll be for
hear ing before this Court on the
9th day of March , 1973, at lO :DO
o'clock A.M.
Any person desiring to file
e ~c ept i ons thereto must
file
them at least five days prior to
the do!lle set for hearing .
Given under my hand and
seal of said Court , this 24th day

of February

1973 .

Manning o . Webs.ter
Judge and ex -olficio
Clerk of said Court
By Ann B . Wats.on

12 1 28

Deputy Clerk

13) 1. 21

month. Call 992-5331.

"HElL"

IF YOU'RE interested in
quality and service plus the
highest discount in Tri·Siate,
it will pay you to check with
us, on .18 II. thru 27 ft. Star.

HEATING &amp;
OOOLING .

craft Trailers new and
used ; we carry a complete

Furnace Controls

5 ROOMS and bath house :
located on Brick St. In
Rutland , $7,000; phone 7423334.
J.4·61c

- - - - -- -

5 ROOM house: one third acre
ground: gas heat, basement:
good location for trailers; S.
D. Buskirk, 341 Page St.,
Middleport, Ohio.
,
3·4-Jip

Hot Water Heaters
Plumbing
Electrical Work

--------

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
992-2448

Pomeroy, o.
THURS.. MAR. 8
8:00PM
At Landmark Town
&amp; Country Store

Hygiene· New Demonstrators
has all cleaning attachments

acre of ground: phone Mason,
1·304-773-5615.
x 101973 HILLCREST Mobile
3·4·61p
Home, 55,800; phone 1-304·882·
--------2241.
J./ ·51c 3 BEDROOM home, living room
and dining room carpeted :
REDUCED pr ices on 1972
new forced air furnace,
Lincoln Hill. Pomeroy : phone
mobile homes in stock; check
with us before you buy; West
992-2071 .
Breeze Mobile Home Sales,
J.6·121c
Athens, phone 593·6736.
. l-il·121c
14

Pomeroy, Ohio
BABY FARM
3 ACRES - Good old house
wllh 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
and 3 porches. Medium size
barn. Wanl$10,500.00. WHAT
WILL YOU GIVE?
BUSINESS
I
OPPORTUNITY
HERE IT IS - A place to

Pels For Sale

REGISTERED toy foK terrier
puppies, 6 weeks old, $35.
Phone 742·5625.
$27 .50 cash . price or terms
3·Hic
available . Phone 992·7755 .
' Electro Hygiene Co.
3-7·61c

Pomeroy

TWO 10 fl. a•les and tires lor 10
ft. house trailer ; one boat ;

Is Welcome!

phone 949·4863.

1:,

Wanted To Buy

--------

. Real Estate For Stile

live and run your very own
business .
3
bedrooms

2NEW3bedroomhomes ; I with
basement. 1 without : 2 car
garages, 1 acre lots : located
at Rock Springs behind Meigs
Co. Fairground. Will trade or
help finance : also 5 good
building lots, water and
disposal installed: Charles H.
Cornell. Athens. 59J.7034 or
593.5667 or m-7613.
2·ll ·IIC

- - - - .::::::=::====='--T

l:'or Sale

He!c wanted

r

Vllloge of Mlddltporl

121 28. IJ l 1, 21

Gene Grate.
Clerk ·Treasurer

Aluminum
Sheets

charge. Call 245·5514.
2·28·JOIC

1:-1\•.s. opcr ;•lth&lt;J

CISt No. 10110

Estate of Hilda Marie Koblentz
Deceased .
Notice- IS hereby given that
David J . Koblentz cf Route J,
Pomeroy, Ohio, has been duly
appointed as Administrator of
the Estate of Hilda Marie
Koblentz, deceased . late of
Meigs County, Ohio.
Credilors ere required to file
their c;laims with said fiduciary
wlthirl IQur months .
Dated this 24trl day of
February \973.
Mann in" O: Webtter,

Judge

Ccurt of Common Plus ,
Probate Division

121 28, IJ) 1, U, Jl

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

CutNo. IOUl

Estate 'Of • Eddlt L.ou ·Howery,
Deceased .
Notice It hereby giVen that
Clara E . Howery ,· of Route 3.
.A.Iba.,y, hal been duly ap -

pol7ted

~xecutrlx

of tht Lost

Wll end Testameni of · Edt:lle
Lou Howery, deceued ~ late af
Route 3. Albany. MtlgS County,
OhiO . ·
Creditors are required to file
their claims

with Uld fiduciary

within four months .

Doled lh ls 161h , day of
Ftbruary \973 .
Manning 0 . Webster
.
Prob,ate Judoe
ol Slid County
171 21 , 28 [Jj 1, 31

'\•, ,1i 1-t1Jit•

f,,,

: ''' rlll{lrrp I•,

· • ·I

( otlh

,. rpd., l. tf &lt;.

til IV ' t )t.l fJ(Y,(:,

dtly , ,,, ,, .o~,nl

REALTY
ooaE. Moln
Pomeroy

2QC

- - - - - - - - - - Busmess Opportunities
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT

1

HAVE
MANY USES

( 1tll

~'11 /JJ/r iJl

u:

· 8 for $1 .00

MIODLEPORT RT. 1
t slory. 3 bedrooms. New
bath. New F .A. lurnace,

·The ·
Daily Sentinel

large

recreation

room,

utility R. Storage building
1/l !Ole
and cellar. Asking $9,800.00.
RUTLAND
L Story trame. 6 rooms, 3
bed R., bath, dining R. Nice
1968 GMC 1ft ton pickup !ruck. ·coAL · L'
· kitchen, porches, storage.
Series 1500, v.a, standard
• 1mestone, Excelsior Interior paneling and
transmlsslon,·wlde bed, new Sail Works. E. Main St.., plaster. Asking $9,200.00.
tires , .. cellenl condition with Pomeroy . Phone 1192·3891 .
HARRISONVILLE
4·12·1fc
no rust: phone 985·3509, Tom
This is a lovely home lor just
Hayman Long Boltom 0
·
·-'
l·6·6tp LOCUST!ence posts ; phone 985· si 4,900.00 . • bedrooms, balh.
4265.
dining R., TV room . Fuel oil
'63 DODGE Station Wagon, v.
2-1 1.JO!c heat. Approx. 1!2 acre.
8, automallc ; runs good ; body
SYRACUSE
fair, $190 ; phone 992·7523 after f!U ll 01 N&lt;1 lois l nr 5(1 tt.• .,I h'ock
7 room BRICK. A bedrooms,
5 p.m.
'ipr~nq!' , Ot•i ~~ Clo&lt;&gt;c to Meigs
3-6-ltc HijJI: Scl•··•·l wtlh Tupper!; .New bath and utility, new
FA gas furnace, porches,
- -- - - - - Pl.uro\ w.ll••r . ~in• · · tl rrc o)I1C1
bldg., fruit trees. 2
storage
1972 HONDA 500, 4 cylinder,' '·"o''r •01 '1189
lots
,on
Ohio
Power. Asking
115 :l(Jip
many extras, like new ; p/lone
.
.......
..
S17,90P.OO.
I
985-3828.
1970 FORD van, 6 cylinder, A·1
HARRISONVILLE
-c------3:.:·2·1fc condlllon,low mlle~ge: phone P :, A., · 4 bedrooms. .1'12
698·8722, Albany.
baths, garage. uti lity room, 2
3·4·61c bull·.flngs, one 40K70 ; In
For
.
condition .
'fRAILER, Brown's Tr~ller 1969 FORD .Ranger I ton F.JSO ; excellent
Park: phone 1192·3324.
390 engine, long wheel base, m,500.oo.
l·IJ.Ifc power
brakes,
power • · WE HAVE OTHERS
sleerlng, rough tires. air·
PLEASE CALL
3 AND 4 ROOM furnished and conditioned. 47.300 miles ;
HENRY E. CLELAND SR.
11nfurnlshed apartments . Harold Brewer. Long Bottom,
BROKER
Phono 1192·.143.1.
phone 985·3554.
992 -22$9
3 4.1fc
4·12-tfc
If "O arlswer 992-2561
. , . lli,or'r I

(rt. Ch.Hl tll' ( • (I

Auto Sales

Rent

Court Sl

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker
110 Mechanic Street

plus lhe new Electro Suds for
shampooing carpet . Only

REFRESHMENTS
DOOR PRIZES
INFORMATION

E~trvont

5 ROOMS and bath. with one

-------- 2

-....,..,------121 VACUUM Cleaners. Electro

Major Chemical Meeting

E. Main

-------

line of Starcralt Fotd.down
campers: Camp Conley
Starcrafl Sales: Rl. 62 N. of
Point Pleasant, behind Red .:ASH paid for all makes and
Carpet Inn ; phone 675-5384.
models of mobile homes .
3·5-Sic
Phone area code 614-423-9531.
4·13.1fc
(3) TWIN needle Sewing
Mach i nes 1972 model In 1968 WINDSOR, l2K60,
walnut stand. All features
bedroom, wllh or without
built-in to m~ke fancy designs
furniture : phone 1192-3511 .
and do stretch sewing . Also
2-11-lfc
bullonholes, blind hems, elc. -::-:::::-::c:-:---.,.--$43.35 cash price or terms 3 BEDROOM trailer, partially
furnished . Pr iced to sell.
available. Phone 992·7755 .
Phone 742·4833.
Electro Hyg iene Co.
3·1-6tc
3·7·61c

HUMII,)!FJ.Ii~S

'

2·23·11C

1-25-lfc

Pomeroy

paneled home with large
modern firep lace . And a -4

WOULD FALL

FOR IT.~'

I

-AND ON!-'I ONE
WITJ.\ THE. STRENGTH
OF AN'OX COULD
CARR'/ tTbUT -: .. .

SCRIPT e&gt;'l SHAKESPEARE
I CAN GET EVEN OMAR.
SHARIF FOR Tf-\E. MALE
LEAD.r.r

n
.,
,,

,--1P......,~

):

li•

0

&amp;HOULD I OFFER
~IM A JOB AT
BOIIINAZ OR NOT'1
... : O"AT'S THE
que&amp;TION.

AUTOMOBILE Insurance been'
·cancelled?
Lost
your
operator's license? Call· 992·
2966.
6·15-l!c
.:R-EA_D_y
""
· ~M-1-X~-CO_N_C_R.,-ET E
delivered right to your
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free
est mates, Phone 992·3284.
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co.,
Middleport, Ohio.''
6-30-l!c

REMIND ME TO DO IT

LATER . I'VE GOTA

NUMBER OF OTHER
CALLS 10 MAKE

FiRST!

WfU, A lONG TIME

SEPTIC TANKS CLIANED
REASONABLE rates. Ph. «6·
4782, Gallipolis, John Russell, ·
Owner &amp; Operator.
··
5-12,1fc
--------C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
Complete Service
Phone949-382t
Rlcin.e. OhlO
Crill Braalord
5·1-l!c
- --::-:::-- - - - SEWING MACHINES. Repair
..r.vlce, all fMkes. 9'n-22P',
The Fabric Shop, · Pomeroy.
Authorl1ed Singer Sales and
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
. 3·29·11C

-

.

take over!

'100 Sf£, M"' f!OI, IF I l-ET
'00 Tm TH; Df..'/ O:F ...

--

. : •..-"
';.;-::

;·... : ...·,-;.:._ : !:~

EXCAVATING. Oo.ers, large
and small ; Backhoes and
Loaders on track and tires :
Dump trucks - Lo·boy
Service : Septic lanks In ·
stalled:
George I Bit II
Pullins: phone 1192-2418.
2-9-lfc'

----------

HARRISON'S TV Service and
Service Calls: phone1192-2522.
2·9-lfc

ACROSS
I. Swiss city
6. Luke·

-~-----

O'DELL WHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Rt. 124,
complete front ond service,
lune up and brake service.
Wheels balanced elec·
All
work
Ironically.
guaranteed .
Reasonable
rafes . Phone 1192·3213 or 742-

.. 111 Co pacify

warm

11. Degrade ,
12. Gnaw
13. Words

describing
Sept. 24 ,
1869
15. South
American
wildcat
16. Employ
17. Alleyway
19. Sailor
22. Become

aware of
24. Large
bundle
2!1, Hefty
SO&lt;k
12 wds.l
27. French
river

AMANDA PANDA

cider"

Yesterday's Answer
22. Entice
33. Quadra23. Sicilian
gesima
city
lt. Heavy
24. Glove
whack
material
(st.)
iTfGOB
25. Drunk35. Whirl/:.ol .
'

19. Panzer
vehicle
20. Tropical
dog
21. Alkali

masia
30. "-,
pardner"
31.. Freberg

CAPTAIN EASY
MI!ANWHIL~ •. ~ T~~

...

I·:.-;r,.:.;,
[.JI70Nl
j:.

~

':,:.:.--l-r~-r-"1

('\j.A

&lt;:J

.A

r·SA:rY.:.::
:.:. .~:.;IUj7L:.,ld?-"V"I'I

1

Now

atr~~~~• the circleclletten

1r I I

MO .. _ _ _

YetkrUJ'•

I

Ant~rl

D~ILY

'

xr r 1 xr 1
~"--" 11 ••

Juonbleoo JOUST

rr•" t

TANGY IUTLil WMINCI
·

They help •o 1:eep lhe leJU: 11p- YHI "GUYI"

----·-- ·- - ---h
~AVE ONE Fro\\ THAT , .
ROiJND·~EADED KID ANP
l

I

ONE FROM TAAT STUPID KID i '
WITH iHE 6tANI(ET... I
l
'NEED THREE MORE ..
l

l'

i·
·-

CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to work !t:

:I

•

F0~6ET IT!

CRYPTOQUOTES
NWYA

MAYTAG

Arno lei Grete

[.,._I=.)='"""').__._I__.I

--+-~-4--~~ ~·==I===[~J[~~j~=='~~~~·~:q:r~~~~leci;UM~b~::~:~:~r:'::-~~;"'~·;·~u

AXYDf.BAAXR
lo LONGFELLOW
One le•ter simply stands for anothe.r. In this sample A Is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters.
opostrophes, the length and formation of the words are ·all
hints. Each day the code iellcrs are different.

RUTLAND FURNITURE·~~~~~:" ..
741 -4211

~~~F~n':!

lion
38. Do needlework
39. Dutch
commune

-r--T:-"''ll"-.,.....,

Wt Spoclollloln

•

:;:

WHOLe HOUSfHDLP

T!NS&amp;LV Wllil:H~ fHf. WOOP~ AT TilE MAR

no overliryl~g .' .
, Fino , Muh' Lfnl

'

;~ono-

r

3. European
Basin

'

. Surround' clOthes
Wllh gentle, even
htot. NOhOIIpOII, ·

.

Unacromblt these fiMir Jumblu,
one letter to each aquue, to
form four ordinary worda.

girl
10. Ottoman
official
U.Humerus
nei!lhbor
(2 wds.)
18.Coach
Parsegh·

26.

'' ol '11 11 I I I I

, f expertis~

Moylog
Holo ot Hut
orvera
'

Fllttll, ·

1

cry

O~ " THe MAN~rON •• ,

Ptrma-Prt~•

I 'V I II Nl!l 0\llf&lt;ol I! I I

31. One oflhc
Trinity
32. -gin
36. "The-."
1945
Miliand
film
(2 wds. l
to. Leading
U. Banquelled
42. Soft;
quiet
43. Vestibule
DOWN
1. Bunyan 's
Blue Ox
2. With

Autom1tlcs

Fin Agllllor.

~W/MID~;-1.4.1==~.-Jc

river
6. Concise
7. Great
Lake
8. Legume
9. "Apple

bully
29. Oolong
or Isla .
30. Goose's

·

w1ter
Auto .
level
Lint
Powar

(Cl 1973 Kint Featurt'!f Syndicate, Ine.)

gerer;

2 speed operation .
Choice ot
temps ,
Water
control.
Filter or

Yesterday's Cryptoquole: THOUGHT IS THE BLOSSOM·
LANGUAGE THE BUD; ACTION THE FRUIT BEHIND IT_:
RALPH WALPP EMERSON
.

4. Mount a
rampart
by ladder
5. Nether·
lands ·

ian

28. Swag-

,•

'

Moytog ·

.,

TH' JUNGLE WHEN Hfi
W'6 REAL SJotALL !

to lunch.~ir!
'---....,,:...., You 'II have to

SEPTIC TANKS AROBIC
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEANED. REPAIRED . MILLER
SANITATION, STEWART,
OHIO. PHONE 662-3035.
10.4-l!c

room business building on
Rl . .7 loop. ASKING
$25.000.00. MAKE US iiiN
3232.
OFFER.
2-18·11C
10 ACRES
ON LEADING CREEK Bargain day. · Old house, SEE US FOR: Awnings, storm
doors and windows, carports,
cistern, and barn. On hard
marquees,. aluminum siding
road too. Wanl $5,000.00 but
and
railing. A. Jacob, sales
ask to see then we will talk
representative
. . For · free,
turkey .
estimate~ , phone Charles
BUILDING ,LOT
Lisle, Syracuse, V1 V,
POMEROY - On Rt. 7
Johnson and Son, Inc. 1
business loop. Seldom do we
3-2-ttc
get anything like this. Be :------'-.----first . and see II for only · BEAT the rush! Get' your
lawnmower and tiller luned·
51500.00 NOW.
up now; Small Engine Repair
125 ACRES
Shop on Third St., Mason, W.
OF NICE WOODS - Nearly
Va .
all in timber. Large old home
J.6·301C
of 9 rooms, 2 baths, drilled
well with good water. A real EXCAVATING, do1er, loaijer
setting In the country for the
and backhoe work: "Pile
children. Want $26,000.00 but
tanks Installed; dump trucks
see us.
and lo-boys for hire; will ~aul
fill dirt, top soil, limestone
NO TIME LIKE NOW TO
and gravel: call Bob or Roger
BUY. PROPERTY IS LIKE
Jeffers, day phone 1192·7089:
EVERYTHING ELSE,
night
phone 1192-3525 or 992·
GOING UP EVERY I&gt;AY.
5232.
DON'T WAIT SEE US NOW.
2-11·11C
•
I
-;00::;;-:Z;;E:;R~a-nd-:-:ba-ck_h_oe-:. work:
GORDON B. TEAFORD,.
ASSOCI-!'TE . ·
ponds and septic tanks, dit·
chlng service; top soil, fill
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K E•ASSOCIATE
cavatlng. Phone 992,5367 ,
NO SUNOAY SHOWINGS
Dick Kerr, Jr.
·
992-JJ.2S
'
- - - - - - - . c . . :·.l-11c

.

\"EAH, BUT l-IE

WANDEREO OFF' INTO

AGO WE DID 1-(A.V' A
LrTTLf BROTHER••.

----------:

.

------

WITH AN ORIGINAL.

DUM&amp;ESTO)(

frontage, Syracuse, Ohio,

•
MILLER
MOBILE HOMES

Wanted

NBC and
WTAPgive
you back-to
back news
of local thru
world-wide .
events.

mpy

Mobile Homes For

Wanted To Do

GET INTO:

TICKET&gt;

Signed: Anna Lance, Rt. 1, phone 1192·5795 .
Porlland. 0.
l·6·31c For Stile
and be informed of the func Real Estate For Sale
J.6-31p
51 NGE R automatic sewing
tions of your government are
MODERN Walnut style stereo·
machine; like new in walnut
embodied in public nofices. In - - - - - -- - PLUMBING work done; phone
cabinet. Makes design slit. 3 BEDROOM home, living room 985-4265.
that self-government charges
REDUCE excess fluids with radio, AM. FM radio, •
all citizens to be informed;
and dining room carpeted.
FluldeK, Lose weight with speaker sound system, 4 ches, zig.zags, buttonholes,
2-11 -JOtc
this newspaper urges every
&amp;peed automatic changer.
bllnd hems, overcasts, etc.,
New forced air furnace.
DeK·A· Diet capsules al
citizen to read and study these
Balance $68.33 . Use our S85. Call . Ravenswood, '273Lincoln Hill, Pomeroy, phon~
Nelson Drugs.
notices. We strongly ad\llse
ELNA and While Sewing
budget terms. Call 1192-7085. 9S21 or 273-9893.
1192·2071.
3·7·3tp.
those cr1izens. seek. Ino further
Machines ... service on all
3·1·6tc
I·
11-lfc
3-6-121c
information , to uercise their - - - - - - - makes. Reasonable rates .
right of access to pUblic SKIN disorders? Try Toco.
The
Sewing Center. MidEARLY
American
stereo-radio,
Derm
Vitamin
E.
Cream,
1260
records and public meetings .
dleport, Ohio.
4 BE DROM home, 2 baths, gas
IU per tube at Nelson Drugs. AM· FM radio, 4 speed
Sale
furnace, full basement, river
1l·16·11C
3·7·11P automatic changer, 4 speaker

...

PUBLIC NOTICE
3.1.31c
Sealed bids. will be received
POMEROY
by the Village of Middleport ,
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr. HURKEY hens, ready to lay : 3
Ohio, Meigs County, at the
PllonettH181
toms ; also good miM:ed hay ;
Village Hall in M ddleport.
Ohio, until 4:00 P.M . March 15,
phone 843·2963 alter 6 p.m.
1973 for the following equip .
J.7·21c
men I :
One used Three Wheel Street
carpet
cleaning
Sweeper, 4 Cu . Yd ., 1964 or OLD lurniture, oak tables, KEEP
organs, dishes, clocks, brass problems small - use Blue
newer,
beds or complete households. Lustre wall to wall . Rent
GM -3.53 Olese l Engine
Double Gutter Brooms, 45" Write M. 0. Miller, Rl . 4, electric shampooer Sl. HOUSE In Long Bollom, phone
Dia .
Store,
Pomeroy, Ohio. Phone 1192· Nelson ' s · Drug
985-3529.
Cab with Cab Guards .
Pomeroy, Ohio.
6271.
6-11 ·1fC
Heater. Defroster , W ind 3·7·21c
H-tfc
shield Wipers.
Hopper Flusher .
HOUSE FOR. SAlE , 114 Brick
Dual Operating Controls,
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
10: 00 K 15, 20 Pl y Tires .
house , 3 bedrooms, excellent
Power Steer ing .
TWO Citizen Journal carriers;
location, close to school and
Power Brakes.
one
Mlddleporl ,
one
GARDENS plowed around
36"x2l"x.009
Flesher Lights .
city; contact Lou Osborne or •
Pomeroy. Phone 1192·3278.
Racine . John !&gt;ape, 949-3025
Gutter Broom Lights.
call 1192·5898.
3·t·llc
after 3:30 p.m.
Leaf Rake.
11·26·1fc ·
Two White Head Lights and
3·6·61c
Two Red Tail -Stop Liohi'S .
Pick Up Broom. 3'" x 58" .
Steam Cleaned and Painted .
The Village reserves the right DEAD Stock horses. callle,
to relect any and all bids.
hogs , sheep. Reasonable USED OFFSET PLATES
CLELAND

A&amp;DDD
IIAHf'tTD

HAVE

10~~

All WEATHER
ROOFING AND
CONSTRUCTION
PHONE~ 992-2550

Built to Your 'Spe·cs'
Delivered to Job S)le

C. L. KITCHEN

PUBLIC NOTICES

'OLS MS ".f

Have your home built by
Custom Builders. Our
carpenters have 20 years
experience In
building
home• i~ Molgs County.

V«JJD TRUSSES

&amp;

TO

..

PRE-FABRICATED

BOB SLOAN

LOOK LIKe 1

Ope~aTIIS ·
Monday thru Satul'llay
606 E.J,1aln •.Pomeroy, 0.

ASK US ABOUT

REMODELING

'IHISHI~

8SCAUSE THEY WOU,PN'T
CHANGE THE IR NICKNAME

PllllletOJ. Home &amp; Auto'

• Wf A HIJACKeR' .
!lEG
lfES 1HE PILOf!

. WHAT DOE5

'Ill!~

.-GUARANTEEI),Phone 992-2094

.

KITCHEN &amp; SON
CONSTRUCfiON

. '
liES I!P T1IERE
.IIOI.OIN6 AGUN ON

. On' Most American !=an .

SMlTH: NELSON
MOTORS. INC.
·
Ph. ff1·2174
Pomeroy

FURNITURE

A REVIVAL Is still In progress

one

From the largesl
Bulldozer Radiator ·lo the
Smallest Heater .Core.
' Nathan Biggs •
Radiator Speclolist

OFFICE SUPPLIES

1970 YAMAHA 175. $250 ; phone
742·6834.
J.2·11C
~------------------------~

Employment Wanted

:' Reeds ville

·

7/3.5580.

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

Advertisement.
·
OFFIC.E HOURS
8 :30a .m. to 5:00p.m. Deily ,
8 : 30 a .m. to 12 : 00 Noon

Wolfpen

·Darwin, all-electric.

3-6-Jtp

IlL IN D ADS
25c

-----FURNISHED apartment at

·'Wheel Alignment
'5.55

992-2094

a week; call1192-7105 between ,
4:30 p.m·. and 7 p.m. e•cept
Wednesday.
J.6-31c

1966 CHEVROLET 1ft TON
$550
Fleelside pickup. SIK cyl. engine. st.andard transmission.
Runs gooo. Special price!!

white beagle ; answers to

Each i!iddll1onal word 2c .

Addftlonal

Station wagon, V-8 engine, standard fransmission, radio;
good tires. clean ylnylinterior, green finish, 1-owner. new
ca r trade-ln .

---------

IN REEDSVILLE area, red and

CARD OF THANKS .

sleeping room , connecting
center of town; use of large
patio and river front Yard; $20

EXPERT

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

BY THE week, large private

$1095

--

RAilROAD CARS, ·
LOWEEZV

.

..

-· -··- -- - -

bath and private entrance I~
12 • 60 trailer: .1 bloo~ from

r H' W1RM1Nl ON

CA.BOOSl 1.\jUZ CUUN I
M'l ~OUNG ·UN5

Business SerVices

3-2·11C

$1895
clean Inside &amp; oul. Y·8

1968 CHEVROLET Bel AIR

room
Ave.,

. ·---+----------

engine. automatic transmission, power steering, power
brakes, luggage rack, green vinyl interior with white
fin ish. Radio and all the e.x tras.

den•rled lhis life to a better

ads end ads pa id w ithin 10 days .

&amp;

3

apartment, -&lt;108 ~pring
Pomeroy .

In MemiVV

1969 CHEVROLET IMPALA
Station wagon, locally owned

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16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Mat·ch 7, 197:1

·so Po
CLARK
AIR
BASE ,
Philippines (UP! )- Eighty U.
S. prisoners of war, leaving
tearful admirers and an
unopened botUe of champagne
behind, flew home today for
reunions with the families and
friends they haven't seen for at
least five years.
"We'll drink it m your
honor," Jean Vahue, wife of an

.·

'

s flying hame

Philippines, told the departing
POWs when officials would not
allow her to give the men a
bottle of champagne she
brought as a going away gift.
A squadron of four C141
Starlifter ambulanc~ planes,
each carrying 20 former
POWs, departed Clark Air
Base in the Philippines at two
hour i.ntervals today for

military bases in Maryland,
Illinois, Texas and California.
All were scheduled to be back
in the United States by tonight.
Their departure left 56 of the
136 Americans freed Sunday
and Monday still undergoing
final processing at this
Operation Homecoming base.
All but two of the 56 were
expected to be aboard three

American pilot based in the

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged)
Jennifer.Dickson, Charles S.
Driver III, Donald Robinson,
Bryon Bailes, Melinda Buck,
Roscoe Walker, Kate Fisher,
Mrs. Gerald Riley and son,
Gerald Ross, Erba Radcliff,
Mrs. Samuel Osborne and son, ·
Heidi Campbell, Caroline
Webster, Anderson Robinson,
Carolyn Richards, Samuel
Pickens, Kelly Parsons, infant
daughter of Mr and Mrs. Larry
Curry, Ricky Blanton, Rob~rt
Spencer, Llllian Spriggs, Sally
Smith, Shane Wiggins, Xylpha
Saunders, Terena Russell,
Sandra Patterson, Norma
Johnson ; John Ingram,
Thomas Byers and Rilla
Burris.
(Births)
Mrs. Merrell Lanning ,
Jackson, a son.

MEIGS THEATRE

is they who have erred and not
the country, we must 1 be
unyielding in how we treat
them," Agnew said of men who
fled the country rather than
serve in Vietnam.
''H we simply accepted all of ·
these people back and said
'you're forgiven, you were
right, it was an Immoral war,'
what would happen if trouble
broke out 10 or 20 years from
now ? We would have
established a precedent that
would enoourage those who
chose to evade their responsibilities to do so."
. Agnew also took a crack at

Most selective
service rmits
ordered closed
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Director of Selective
Service today announced 71
Selective Service offices in
Ohio will be closed and personnel reduced from 311 to 190.
The 19 offices that will
remain open are at Toledo,
Sandusky, Elyria, Cleveland,
Painesvllle, Warren, Akron,
Lima, Mansfield, Columbus,
St. Clairsville, Hamilton,
Dayton , Marietta, Cincinnati,
Portsmouth, Canton, Youngstown and Springfield.
Col. Thomas Farrell said
one of the reasons for the
closings was a " lesser
requirement for personnel and
offices" and the stopping of the
draft.

Tonight &amp; Thursday

Mar&lt;h7 &amp;8
NOT OPEN

Friday &amp; Saturday
Mar&lt;h 9 &amp; to
THE LOSERS

(Te&lt;hni&lt;olorl
Adam Roarke, Bernie
Hamilton
(RJ
THE OTHER
(Technicolor)
Uta Hagen, Dlana Muldaur,
Chri s and Martin Ud ·
varnoky .
( PGI

Show Starts at 7 p.m.

Sticks and Bones
cut h·y CBS-TV

COOLVILLE - Funeral
services are announced for
Mrs. Ethel Kincade, 85, who
died Tuesday afternoon at
Camden Clark Memorial
Hospital ,
Parkersburg,
following a brief illness.
She was born itt Ravenswood, W. Va., a daughter o'
the late George and Addie
Davis. She was a member of
the Coolville United Methodist
Church, its wscs, and was
chaplain of Fidelity Rebeccah
Lodge 886 in Coolville.
:sne was a resident of the
Coolville area the greater part
of her life.
Surviving are a son, CMSSgt. Ronnald L. Kincade,
Langley Field, Va . ; three
daughters, Mrs. A. E. (Gladys)
Russell, Coolville; Mrs . Frank
I Myrtle ) Jones, Akron, and
Mrs. Forrest (Jean) Linton,
Coolville; 10 grandchildren and
six step-grandchildren, 24
great-grandchildren and two
great-great-grandchildren.
Her husband, Ira, died in
1959. Also preceding her in

FERGUSON CHECKS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Auditor Joseph Ferguson is
checking into 15 counties and
eight cities to see if elected
officials have handled money
properly, collected from the
I
sale of advertising in drug
abuse booklets . The areas
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in. down- being investigated are
town Pomeroy at U a.m. Ashtabula, Butler, Crawford,
Wednesday was 67 degrees, Clarke , Fairfield, Greene,
Columbiana, Guernsey, Jefunder cloudy skies .
ferson , Knox, Lorain, Montgomery , Pickaway, Richland,
and Seneca counties and in the
cities of Heath, Marblehead,
Sebring and Vermillion.

What do these birds have in co mmon ? The owl from .
the wide-awake bank and the eagle
from E Pluri bus Unum.

There s an ea gle on every dollar, isn't lhere? And
t he widc·nwukc bunk is famous fo r nil things having
to do wi th rnoncy. So there's n naturul attraction.
That's why the wid e·nwak(! owl 'nnd the c n ~l c stick
together so ofte n in savin gs, checkinR", s.Uto
loans, personal loans, home loans .. .
1

Come to think of it, how about ypu ? Wouldn't you
like to keep company with fi ne fe nthered friend s ,
at our wide~aw a k e bank?

The wide-nwake bank
11111kes ite;:&gt;--2i·
aliso ens'~~:

Farmers Bank &amp;
POMEROY, ·OHIO
Mem be r of Federa l Reser ve System
On Fridays Our Drive. In WmdOw is 0pen9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
(CorltinuouslyL
'·
$20,000 Maxim urn In surance for Each Depositor

.-....

HOLLYWOOD
(UPI)- A
television drama about the
callous reception given a blind
Vietnam veteran returning to
his fll!llilY has been withdrawn
by CBS.TV from its Friday
schedule after a rePQrted 69
affiliate stations refused to run
it.
,t
The network said it would be
"unnecessarily abrasive to th~
feelings of mllllons of
Americans whose lives or
attention are at the moment
Veterans Memorial Hospital
emotionally dominated by ·the
ADMITTED - Steve Tat- returning. POWs and oUter
terson, Pomeroy ; Michael veterans who have suffered the
Bable,
Mitchell Babie and ravages of war."
papers essays calling for
Richard· Bable, all of Mason;
·The producer·of the telecast,
amnesty."
Irene
Russell,
Middleport;
Joseph Papp, whose New York
Agpew said ~ l!elieved
Alva
Reed,
Pomeroy;
Judy
Shakespeare
Festival
people who make mi8!'8kes and
Hudnall,
Pomeroy;
Elmer
organization did the drama,
"accept the natural con1
Norvell,
Portland;
William
'
called CBS-TV's action "prior
sequence of those mistakes"
McKnight,
Middleport;
censorship."
should be given a second
William
Hatfield,
Addison;
The play, "Sticks and
chance.
"But those draft dodgers and Henry M. Mace, Rutland; Bones," adapted from a prizedeserters· have not admitted Mary Louise Connors, Reeds· &gt;Vinning stage drama, depicts
that they are•wrong," he said. ville; Marjorie Witt, Mid- the relationship between the
"On the contrary, they say that dleport; ·Robert E. Bishop, blinded veteran and hiB father,
the country is wrong and they Rutland; Paul Kent III, mother and younger brother in
Cheshire; Diana Willbarger, angry, satirical terms. CBS.TV
are right."
(Continued from Page I)
Long Bottom; Helena Brickles, said it was postponing "Sticks
Pomeroy, and Guy Rouse, and Bones," not canceling it. opportunity for an exchange of ideas, while for the pupils it ·
Rutland.
Papp said, "I don't accept means being Involved in an outside activity, having fun, and .
·
DISCHARGED - Wilma that. As far as I'm concerned, learning through associating and sharing with others.
death were two daughters and Riggs, Josephine Browning,
Flora Kinsch, Marvin Moore,
a son.
Services will be conducted Barbara Clark, Fred Birtcher,
Friday at 2 p. m. from the Lori Faulk, Robin Dugan, and
White Funeral Home in Terrance Gillian.
Coolville in charge of the Rev.
Roy W. Rose. Burial will follow
ART ON DISPLAY
in Coolville Cemetery. Friends RACINE -An art display by
may call at the funeral home Portland elementary school
after noon on Thursday.
students is featured at the
The Rebeccah lodge will Racine Home National Bank
conduct special memorial from today through March 14.
services at 8 p.m. Thursday at
the funeral home.
more hospital planes bound for
the United States Thursday .
The two, suspected to be suffering from malaria, have good
chances of making the Thursday flighls if their conditions
permit, sources said.
According to the timetable
given by U. S. officials just
before the Jan. 27 cease-fire
the third big installment of

approximately 150 Is due next
week. But the North Vietnamese delayed the last
repatriation by five days and
there was no firm word when
they will turn over the next
group. , There are 282
Americans still held that are
supposed to be.released by the
end of the month.

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Bus drivers
are approved
Bus driver certificates were
issued to Harry Graham and
Richard Swanson Tuesday
night when the Meigs County
Board of Education met in
regular session.
The board approved !liability
insurance for Itself and attendance of a meeting in
Columbus on April 5 dealing
with improving the special
education program of Greta
Suttle and Mary Bacon.
County Superintendent
Robert Bowen reported on a
Right to Read meeting
Tuesday with Mrs. Virginia
Kunkle, Ohio Right to Read
Program Chairman, as
speaker. Bills were approved
for payment.
Attending were Bowen and
board members Harold Lohse,
Gordon Collins, George Perry,
Virgil Atkins and Harold
Roush.

SORORITY TO MEET
The Xi Gamma Mu Sorority
will meet Thursday at 7:45
p.m. at the home of Margaret
Follrod with Lois Rosenbaum
co-hostess. The program,
"Examples of Friendship" will
be presented by Clarice
Krautter. Members are asked
to bring five recipes for a
recipe sale.

Ou.r Interest Is
Greater For You

5¥2%
On 90.Day
Certificates
of Deposit

N ~--

Ma in At Sycamore, Pomeroy

1:11:

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Sale I
POCKET KNIVES

$20,000 by FSLIC.

Wrecks

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(Continued from Page I)
57, Middleport, and Verna C.
Hysell, 81, Middleport, complained of minor injuries. Both
cars were demolished. Dinguss
was charged with DWI and no
operator's license.
A Gallia County accident
Famous brand Scissors Sale lncl uding
occurred at 12:10 p.m. on Rt.
Wiss
and Kleencut Sewing Scissors 35, four tenths of a mile east of
Dressmaker Shears - Pinking Shears Rt. 160 where cars driven by
Embroidery scissors and many many
Ronald K. White, 'll, Thurman,
others. Buy what you need now during
and Juanita M. Matheney, 35,
this sale and save.
Gallipolis Ferry, sideswiped.
Mrs. Matheney was charged
t!ousewares Department On The lsi Floor
with changing lanes without
caution. There was moderate
damage to both cars .
.___ _ _ _ ____ _ _ _ _ _"""'!"_ _ __,

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FINE FURNITURE BEGINS ON THE INSIDE

A.

SP~INGS
The famous Flexsteel springs are made of arched bands of finest
blue steel and a strapped platform top to form a single unit that
suports in restful ease:._ like.floating on air. FI.EXSTEB. SPRINGS ARE
SO DURABLE THEY WIU PROVIDE LASTING COMFORT!

PATENTED

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Frames a·re of finest, kiln-dried hardwood, double-dowelled and '
corner-blocked for added strength. Upholstering is expert and
tailoring carefully· detailed. ·

Flexsteel furniture is not only a smart addition to your home but
also a wise investment that will
- give years of faultless. service.

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BUY NOW
AT
SPECIAL
SAVINGS

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All . Accounts Insured

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This is a good time for you to buy for
yourself or friends an excellent quality
pocket knife and really save. Big
selection of sizes - 2 and 3 bladed
knives . Bone handles · Pearl handles
· Barlow knive's. All are well known
brands. Stop in- see these fin.e knives
and pick out one or two.

Meigs Co. Branch
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

.......&gt;: . .,D: · a1.1.1

CONSTRUCTION

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Flexsteel is easily kept factory-fresh and clean . .No cambric bottoms
to gat~er dust and,allergens.

Your Purse

fOLA'S

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(Continued from Pagel)
labor laws, "they have not
been knocked out in many
other states."
"There are all kinds of tasks
in industry that women don't
want to do," she said. "They
don't have a career. They have
a job."
King said the ERA would be
uan unnecessary amendment
to the Constitution. It would
ultimately be more harmful
than helpful to equal rights for
women." The labor leader said
Congress already has the
authority to adopt protective
laws for women.

CLEANLINESS

WILL SUIT,

Come in and we'll
prove it.

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Dr:

S1n per cent per year
paid on 90 day Certi,ficates of Deposit.
$1.000.00 Minimum.
Interest
Payable
Quarterly.

Our Prices

•

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ERA hit

1,325 persons.

NO .DICE
CARSON CITY, Nev. I UP! )
- A "flat disc" alert has been
issued by state officials to
Nevada's gambling casinos.
Philip Hannlfan, chairman of
the Nevada Gaming Control
Board, warned casinos that the
seizure of 500 pair of crooked
dice in Minneapolis indicates a
possible influx of cheaters Into
this state . The cheating dice,
· taken in a raid two weeks ago,
carried tbe insignias of 25
Nevada casinos.

.,

ALL THIS WEEK

LOAN MADE
WASHINGTON (UP! I - The
Economic Development Administration has approved a
$5.5 million loan to AU-Pro
Development Inc., Pitlsburgh,
to open fast-food franchise
outlets io Inner-city locations in
several cities including
Cleveland. The franchise
Marriage License
.
outlels, operated under the
Clarence Erma! Randolph,
names of Brady Keys' Ken- Jr., 25, Pomeroy, Rt. 3 and
tucky Fried Chicken, All-Pro Brenda Lee Sayre, 20, Racine.
Fried Chicken and Bar-B-Que
and Burger King, are to
provide employment for about
~

.....

Ethel Kincade died Tuesday

DIVORCE ASKED
· A suit for divorce has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Char lotte L.
Wolfe, Pomeroy, against Gale
E. Wolfe, same address,
charging gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty .

13irds rfa
jather
.

I

the press for space given to the
views of antiwar protestors.
"And of course, just as their
views on the war were
magnified out of all reasonable
proportion by their sympathizers in the media, so now
are their views on amnesty
being given unjustifiably
solicitous attention," Agnew
said . "Scarcely a day passes
when we don't find on the
editorial pages of some of our
prestigious national news-

:·=L.: :::·\:.:

PLEASANT VAWY ::
DISCHARGES : Scott:
Fielder, James Hammack;;
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Archie:
Staunton, Galllpolis; ,James w::
Young, West Columbta; Mrs.;
Lewis Martin, Robertsburg; :
postponement is a word for Russell Nott, Point PleaSant; :
backing down." He added that Ernest Grimm, Letart, Ohio;
he doesn't think the network Mrs. ·Frederick Scarberry,
will put the drama on, even Point Pleasant; Sylvia St.
though it has the rights to it for Clair, Henderson; Richard
two years.
. Nibert, Gallipolis, Ferry; Mrs.
Said Papp: "Wood (network Paul Bush, Point Pleasant; :
President Robert Wood) told Mrs. Lawrence Klein, Millers-;
me the affiliates in great ville; Mrs. Howard Kiser,:
n'umbers don't want .it. I told Mason; Mary Btanche Me-:
him, 'Y011 have the. respon- Clair, Henderson; Barbara :
sibility to put it on. · If you McFarland, Point Pleasant, .
knuckle down to this, you are a and Franklin Stewart, 'Glen·
party to the whittling away of wood.
the First Amendplent.'
"He said the mood of the
country is such, with the
LE:G INJURED
.
returning prisoners, that
The
Pomeroy·
E-R
squad
pecple are not ready for this ,
thing, that they are hostile to it Tuesday answered a call to the
... I said I don't ·think anyone Guy Rouse residence on Route
has the right to deny anyone 143 where Rouse had fallen,
the right to watch TV. I oon- ' suffering a possible leg !rae-·
sider this prior censorship. ture. He was removed to and
at ' Veterans ·
People can tum the dial. They admitted
Memorial
Hospital.
don't have to watch the show."

Agnew unyielding on amnesty
WASHINGTON (UP!) Spiro T. Agnew said Tuesday
night the United states must be
"unyielding" in refusing
amnesty to men w~o would not
serve in the Vietnam war. His
audience
of
veterans
responded with cheers,
whistles and a standing
ovation.
Three returned -prisoners of
war sat at the head table at a
Veterans of Foreign Wars
(VFW) dinner · as the vice
president delivered his
assessment.
"Until they recognize that it

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16 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 .. Mat·ch 7, 197:1

·so Po
CLARK
AIR
BASE ,
Philippines (UP! )- Eighty U.
S. prisoners of war, leaving
tearful admirers and an
unopened botUe of champagne
behind, flew home today for
reunions with the families and
friends they haven't seen for at
least five years.
"We'll drink it m your
honor," Jean Vahue, wife of an

.·

'

s flying hame

Philippines, told the departing
POWs when officials would not
allow her to give the men a
bottle of champagne she
brought as a going away gift.
A squadron of four C141
Starlifter ambulanc~ planes,
each carrying 20 former
POWs, departed Clark Air
Base in the Philippines at two
hour i.ntervals today for

military bases in Maryland,
Illinois, Texas and California.
All were scheduled to be back
in the United States by tonight.
Their departure left 56 of the
136 Americans freed Sunday
and Monday still undergoing
final processing at this
Operation Homecoming base.
All but two of the 56 were
expected to be aboard three

American pilot based in the

Holzer Medical Center
(Discharged)
Jennifer.Dickson, Charles S.
Driver III, Donald Robinson,
Bryon Bailes, Melinda Buck,
Roscoe Walker, Kate Fisher,
Mrs. Gerald Riley and son,
Gerald Ross, Erba Radcliff,
Mrs. Samuel Osborne and son, ·
Heidi Campbell, Caroline
Webster, Anderson Robinson,
Carolyn Richards, Samuel
Pickens, Kelly Parsons, infant
daughter of Mr and Mrs. Larry
Curry, Ricky Blanton, Rob~rt
Spencer, Llllian Spriggs, Sally
Smith, Shane Wiggins, Xylpha
Saunders, Terena Russell,
Sandra Patterson, Norma
Johnson ; John Ingram,
Thomas Byers and Rilla
Burris.
(Births)
Mrs. Merrell Lanning ,
Jackson, a son.

MEIGS THEATRE

is they who have erred and not
the country, we must 1 be
unyielding in how we treat
them," Agnew said of men who
fled the country rather than
serve in Vietnam.
''H we simply accepted all of ·
these people back and said
'you're forgiven, you were
right, it was an Immoral war,'
what would happen if trouble
broke out 10 or 20 years from
now ? We would have
established a precedent that
would enoourage those who
chose to evade their responsibilities to do so."
. Agnew also took a crack at

Most selective
service rmits
ordered closed
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Director of Selective
Service today announced 71
Selective Service offices in
Ohio will be closed and personnel reduced from 311 to 190.
The 19 offices that will
remain open are at Toledo,
Sandusky, Elyria, Cleveland,
Painesvllle, Warren, Akron,
Lima, Mansfield, Columbus,
St. Clairsville, Hamilton,
Dayton , Marietta, Cincinnati,
Portsmouth, Canton, Youngstown and Springfield.
Col. Thomas Farrell said
one of the reasons for the
closings was a " lesser
requirement for personnel and
offices" and the stopping of the
draft.

Tonight &amp; Thursday

Mar&lt;h7 &amp;8
NOT OPEN

Friday &amp; Saturday
Mar&lt;h 9 &amp; to
THE LOSERS

(Te&lt;hni&lt;olorl
Adam Roarke, Bernie
Hamilton
(RJ
THE OTHER
(Technicolor)
Uta Hagen, Dlana Muldaur,
Chri s and Martin Ud ·
varnoky .
( PGI

Show Starts at 7 p.m.

Sticks and Bones
cut h·y CBS-TV

COOLVILLE - Funeral
services are announced for
Mrs. Ethel Kincade, 85, who
died Tuesday afternoon at
Camden Clark Memorial
Hospital ,
Parkersburg,
following a brief illness.
She was born itt Ravenswood, W. Va., a daughter o'
the late George and Addie
Davis. She was a member of
the Coolville United Methodist
Church, its wscs, and was
chaplain of Fidelity Rebeccah
Lodge 886 in Coolville.
:sne was a resident of the
Coolville area the greater part
of her life.
Surviving are a son, CMSSgt. Ronnald L. Kincade,
Langley Field, Va . ; three
daughters, Mrs. A. E. (Gladys)
Russell, Coolville; Mrs . Frank
I Myrtle ) Jones, Akron, and
Mrs. Forrest (Jean) Linton,
Coolville; 10 grandchildren and
six step-grandchildren, 24
great-grandchildren and two
great-great-grandchildren.
Her husband, Ira, died in
1959. Also preceding her in

FERGUSON CHECKS
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Auditor Joseph Ferguson is
checking into 15 counties and
eight cities to see if elected
officials have handled money
properly, collected from the
I
sale of advertising in drug
abuse booklets . The areas
LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in. down- being investigated are
town Pomeroy at U a.m. Ashtabula, Butler, Crawford,
Wednesday was 67 degrees, Clarke , Fairfield, Greene,
Columbiana, Guernsey, Jefunder cloudy skies .
ferson , Knox, Lorain, Montgomery , Pickaway, Richland,
and Seneca counties and in the
cities of Heath, Marblehead,
Sebring and Vermillion.

What do these birds have in co mmon ? The owl from .
the wide-awake bank and the eagle
from E Pluri bus Unum.

There s an ea gle on every dollar, isn't lhere? And
t he widc·nwukc bunk is famous fo r nil things having
to do wi th rnoncy. So there's n naturul attraction.
That's why the wid e·nwak(! owl 'nnd the c n ~l c stick
together so ofte n in savin gs, checkinR", s.Uto
loans, personal loans, home loans .. .
1

Come to think of it, how about ypu ? Wouldn't you
like to keep company with fi ne fe nthered friend s ,
at our wide~aw a k e bank?

The wide-nwake bank
11111kes ite;:&gt;--2i·
aliso ens'~~:

Farmers Bank &amp;
POMEROY, ·OHIO
Mem be r of Federa l Reser ve System
On Fridays Our Drive. In WmdOw is 0pen9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
(CorltinuouslyL
'·
$20,000 Maxim urn In surance for Each Depositor

.-....

HOLLYWOOD
(UPI)- A
television drama about the
callous reception given a blind
Vietnam veteran returning to
his fll!llilY has been withdrawn
by CBS.TV from its Friday
schedule after a rePQrted 69
affiliate stations refused to run
it.
,t
The network said it would be
"unnecessarily abrasive to th~
feelings of mllllons of
Americans whose lives or
attention are at the moment
Veterans Memorial Hospital
emotionally dominated by ·the
ADMITTED - Steve Tat- returning. POWs and oUter
terson, Pomeroy ; Michael veterans who have suffered the
Bable,
Mitchell Babie and ravages of war."
papers essays calling for
Richard· Bable, all of Mason;
·The producer·of the telecast,
amnesty."
Irene
Russell,
Middleport;
Joseph Papp, whose New York
Agpew said ~ l!elieved
Alva
Reed,
Pomeroy;
Judy
Shakespeare
Festival
people who make mi8!'8kes and
Hudnall,
Pomeroy;
Elmer
organization did the drama,
"accept the natural con1
Norvell,
Portland;
William
'
called CBS-TV's action "prior
sequence of those mistakes"
McKnight,
Middleport;
censorship."
should be given a second
William
Hatfield,
Addison;
The play, "Sticks and
chance.
"But those draft dodgers and Henry M. Mace, Rutland; Bones," adapted from a prizedeserters· have not admitted Mary Louise Connors, Reeds· &gt;Vinning stage drama, depicts
that they are•wrong," he said. ville; Marjorie Witt, Mid- the relationship between the
"On the contrary, they say that dleport; ·Robert E. Bishop, blinded veteran and hiB father,
the country is wrong and they Rutland; Paul Kent III, mother and younger brother in
Cheshire; Diana Willbarger, angry, satirical terms. CBS.TV
are right."
(Continued from Page I)
Long Bottom; Helena Brickles, said it was postponing "Sticks
Pomeroy, and Guy Rouse, and Bones," not canceling it. opportunity for an exchange of ideas, while for the pupils it ·
Rutland.
Papp said, "I don't accept means being Involved in an outside activity, having fun, and .
·
DISCHARGED - Wilma that. As far as I'm concerned, learning through associating and sharing with others.
death were two daughters and Riggs, Josephine Browning,
Flora Kinsch, Marvin Moore,
a son.
Services will be conducted Barbara Clark, Fred Birtcher,
Friday at 2 p. m. from the Lori Faulk, Robin Dugan, and
White Funeral Home in Terrance Gillian.
Coolville in charge of the Rev.
Roy W. Rose. Burial will follow
ART ON DISPLAY
in Coolville Cemetery. Friends RACINE -An art display by
may call at the funeral home Portland elementary school
after noon on Thursday.
students is featured at the
The Rebeccah lodge will Racine Home National Bank
conduct special memorial from today through March 14.
services at 8 p.m. Thursday at
the funeral home.
more hospital planes bound for
the United States Thursday .
The two, suspected to be suffering from malaria, have good
chances of making the Thursday flighls if their conditions
permit, sources said.
According to the timetable
given by U. S. officials just
before the Jan. 27 cease-fire
the third big installment of

approximately 150 Is due next
week. But the North Vietnamese delayed the last
repatriation by five days and
there was no firm word when
they will turn over the next
group. , There are 282
Americans still held that are
supposed to be.released by the
end of the month.

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Elberfelds In Pomeroy

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Bus drivers
are approved
Bus driver certificates were
issued to Harry Graham and
Richard Swanson Tuesday
night when the Meigs County
Board of Education met in
regular session.
The board approved !liability
insurance for Itself and attendance of a meeting in
Columbus on April 5 dealing
with improving the special
education program of Greta
Suttle and Mary Bacon.
County Superintendent
Robert Bowen reported on a
Right to Read meeting
Tuesday with Mrs. Virginia
Kunkle, Ohio Right to Read
Program Chairman, as
speaker. Bills were approved
for payment.
Attending were Bowen and
board members Harold Lohse,
Gordon Collins, George Perry,
Virgil Atkins and Harold
Roush.

SORORITY TO MEET
The Xi Gamma Mu Sorority
will meet Thursday at 7:45
p.m. at the home of Margaret
Follrod with Lois Rosenbaum
co-hostess. The program,
"Examples of Friendship" will
be presented by Clarice
Krautter. Members are asked
to bring five recipes for a
recipe sale.

Ou.r Interest Is
Greater For You

5¥2%
On 90.Day
Certificates
of Deposit

N ~--

Ma in At Sycamore, Pomeroy

1:11:

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Sale I
POCKET KNIVES

$20,000 by FSLIC.

Wrecks

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(Continued from Page I)
57, Middleport, and Verna C.
Hysell, 81, Middleport, complained of minor injuries. Both
cars were demolished. Dinguss
was charged with DWI and no
operator's license.
A Gallia County accident
Famous brand Scissors Sale lncl uding
occurred at 12:10 p.m. on Rt.
Wiss
and Kleencut Sewing Scissors 35, four tenths of a mile east of
Dressmaker Shears - Pinking Shears Rt. 160 where cars driven by
Embroidery scissors and many many
Ronald K. White, 'll, Thurman,
others. Buy what you need now during
and Juanita M. Matheney, 35,
this sale and save.
Gallipolis Ferry, sideswiped.
Mrs. Matheney was charged
t!ousewares Department On The lsi Floor
with changing lanes without
caution. There was moderate
damage to both cars .
.___ _ _ _ ____ _ _ _ _ _"""'!"_ _ __,

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FINE FURNITURE BEGINS ON THE INSIDE

A.

SP~INGS
The famous Flexsteel springs are made of arched bands of finest
blue steel and a strapped platform top to form a single unit that
suports in restful ease:._ like.floating on air. FI.EXSTEB. SPRINGS ARE
SO DURABLE THEY WIU PROVIDE LASTING COMFORT!

PATENTED

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Frames a·re of finest, kiln-dried hardwood, double-dowelled and '
corner-blocked for added strength. Upholstering is expert and
tailoring carefully· detailed. ·

Flexsteel furniture is not only a smart addition to your home but
also a wise investment that will
- give years of faultless. service.

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BUY NOW
AT
SPECIAL
SAVINGS

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All . Accounts Insured

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This is a good time for you to buy for
yourself or friends an excellent quality
pocket knife and really save. Big
selection of sizes - 2 and 3 bladed
knives . Bone handles · Pearl handles
· Barlow knive's. All are well known
brands. Stop in- see these fin.e knives
and pick out one or two.

Meigs Co. Branch
The Athens County
Savings &amp; Loan Co.
296 Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

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CONSTRUCTION

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Flexsteel is easily kept factory-fresh and clean . .No cambric bottoms
to gat~er dust and,allergens.

Your Purse

fOLA'S

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(Continued from Pagel)
labor laws, "they have not
been knocked out in many
other states."
"There are all kinds of tasks
in industry that women don't
want to do," she said. "They
don't have a career. They have
a job."
King said the ERA would be
uan unnecessary amendment
to the Constitution. It would
ultimately be more harmful
than helpful to equal rights for
women." The labor leader said
Congress already has the
authority to adopt protective
laws for women.

CLEANLINESS

WILL SUIT,

Come in and we'll
prove it.

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S1n per cent per year
paid on 90 day Certi,ficates of Deposit.
$1.000.00 Minimum.
Interest
Payable
Quarterly.

Our Prices

•

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ERA hit

1,325 persons.

NO .DICE
CARSON CITY, Nev. I UP! )
- A "flat disc" alert has been
issued by state officials to
Nevada's gambling casinos.
Philip Hannlfan, chairman of
the Nevada Gaming Control
Board, warned casinos that the
seizure of 500 pair of crooked
dice in Minneapolis indicates a
possible influx of cheaters Into
this state . The cheating dice,
· taken in a raid two weeks ago,
carried tbe insignias of 25
Nevada casinos.

.,

ALL THIS WEEK

LOAN MADE
WASHINGTON (UP! I - The
Economic Development Administration has approved a
$5.5 million loan to AU-Pro
Development Inc., Pitlsburgh,
to open fast-food franchise
outlets io Inner-city locations in
several cities including
Cleveland. The franchise
Marriage License
.
outlels, operated under the
Clarence Erma! Randolph,
names of Brady Keys' Ken- Jr., 25, Pomeroy, Rt. 3 and
tucky Fried Chicken, All-Pro Brenda Lee Sayre, 20, Racine.
Fried Chicken and Bar-B-Que
and Burger King, are to
provide employment for about
~

.....

Ethel Kincade died Tuesday

DIVORCE ASKED
· A suit for divorce has been
filed in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Char lotte L.
Wolfe, Pomeroy, against Gale
E. Wolfe, same address,
charging gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty .

13irds rfa
jather
.

I

the press for space given to the
views of antiwar protestors.
"And of course, just as their
views on the war were
magnified out of all reasonable
proportion by their sympathizers in the media, so now
are their views on amnesty
being given unjustifiably
solicitous attention," Agnew
said . "Scarcely a day passes
when we don't find on the
editorial pages of some of our
prestigious national news-

:·=L.: :::·\:.:

PLEASANT VAWY ::
DISCHARGES : Scott:
Fielder, James Hammack;;
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Archie:
Staunton, Galllpolis; ,James w::
Young, West Columbta; Mrs.;
Lewis Martin, Robertsburg; :
postponement is a word for Russell Nott, Point PleaSant; :
backing down." He added that Ernest Grimm, Letart, Ohio;
he doesn't think the network Mrs. ·Frederick Scarberry,
will put the drama on, even Point Pleasant; Sylvia St.
though it has the rights to it for Clair, Henderson; Richard
two years.
. Nibert, Gallipolis, Ferry; Mrs.
Said Papp: "Wood (network Paul Bush, Point Pleasant; :
President Robert Wood) told Mrs. Lawrence Klein, Millers-;
me the affiliates in great ville; Mrs. Howard Kiser,:
n'umbers don't want .it. I told Mason; Mary Btanche Me-:
him, 'Y011 have the. respon- Clair, Henderson; Barbara :
sibility to put it on. · If you McFarland, Point Pleasant, .
knuckle down to this, you are a and Franklin Stewart, 'Glen·
party to the whittling away of wood.
the First Amendplent.'
"He said the mood of the
country is such, with the
LE:G INJURED
.
returning prisoners, that
The
Pomeroy·
E-R
squad
pecple are not ready for this ,
thing, that they are hostile to it Tuesday answered a call to the
... I said I don't ·think anyone Guy Rouse residence on Route
has the right to deny anyone 143 where Rouse had fallen,
the right to watch TV. I oon- ' suffering a possible leg !rae-·
sider this prior censorship. ture. He was removed to and
at ' Veterans ·
People can tum the dial. They admitted
Memorial
Hospital.
don't have to watch the show."

Agnew unyielding on amnesty
WASHINGTON (UP!) Spiro T. Agnew said Tuesday
night the United states must be
"unyielding" in refusing
amnesty to men w~o would not
serve in the Vietnam war. His
audience
of
veterans
responded with cheers,
whistles and a standing
ovation.
Three returned -prisoners of
war sat at the head table at a
Veterans of Foreign Wars
(VFW) dinner · as the vice
president delivered his
assessment.
"Until they recognize that it

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JEAN MORGAN of Middleport, ~t left, demonstrate~ mod110'1ge, and at right, Geneva H.
Nolan of SyraCUse demons.trated lapidary techniques.

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MRS. VILMA PIKKOJA, librarian, found much interest
in her display of reading materials available at the bookmobile.

MRS. WI!JIELMINA THOMA, left, Chester, was a center ofattraclion with her exhibit of
quilting.

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en tine

Devdted To The Interests Of The Meigs~ Mason Area

VOL. XXV

NO. 228

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY, MARCH 8, 1973

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MRS. PEARL CANADAY, Rutland, created roses of red
velvet ribbon to demonstrate a creative activity.

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Preview given
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While some organizations in
Meigs County may falter now
and again, not so with the
Meigs County Council on Aging
which has been active the past
months working with senior
citizens.
When the council announces
an activity, the senior &lt;!ilizens
turn out in full force. Wednesday afternoon and evening
were no exception when the
council staged a preview of its
planned senior citizens center
which will be located in the
Pomeroy Junior High School
building.

At Wednesday's open house
there were demonstrations of
some of the cla;;ses.which wiJ!
hopefully be a part of the
center activities. According to
present plans, the center will
open about April I.
Senior citizens apparently
loved the preview. They took in
the demonstrations, enjoyed
the refreshments and besides,
it was a wonderful occasion
just to chat.
The accompanying pictures
show demonstrations underway during the event.

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Briefsf

By United Press International
COLUMBUS -AN INVFSTIGATION INTO the layoff of 250
workers by the Ohio Bureau of Employment Services has been
initialed by the U. S. Labor Department and the U. S. Civil
Service Commission. The cutback, state officials said, was
needed because of a reduction in federal funds which supply most
of the budget used by the bureau.
The government, however, contends OBES actually received
a $2.5 million increase in federal funding. Some of the laid off
workers claim they lost their jobs because they are Republicans.
The Ohio Civil service Employes Association also has filed a
similar suit, saying seniority was not observed in Ute layoffs. The
association noted several of the laid-off workers had over 30
years of service and were close to retirement age.
State officials said they are not bound by law to observe
seniority.

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RONALD OSBORNE, second left, is flanked by sheriff's deputy Jim Craddock, left, and
Sheriff Pete Wedge, and State Police Cpl. R. L. Perry outside the Mason County jail. Osborne,
according to Mason County Prosecuting Attorney Don Kingery, was to be charged today with
kidnaping. Osborne, on parole from the West Virginia penitentiary, has been a farm worker
near New Haven.
_:_PHOTO BY sAM NICHOlS

m.

2,000 Welcome POW s

HONOLULU (UPI) - More
than 2,000 persons to(!ay gave a
tumultuous welcome to the last
of the freed POWs completing
Phase II of Operation
Homecoming when their
WASHINGTON- ALTHOUGH NO more men are being ambulance planes landed for
drafted, the Selective Service System lives on and will prove it refueling stopovers.
today by holding a draft lottery - just in case another war should
One unidentified woman
bring back conscription.
greeted every returnee she
The drawing, begiMing at 10 a.m. EST at the Commerce could reach with a long kiss as
Department, assigns numbers to men born in 1954 to determine they stepped off the planes.
the order in which they would be called should there be a draft in
"Oo~. that feels really
1974.
goo(!," one former POW said.
The first welcome on
FIGHTING FLARED TO A 13-DAY high in South Vietnam American soil for the 56 former
today and U.S. officials disclosed for the first time in more than . prisoners was marred by the
a week that U. S. B52 bombers flew raids over Cambodia, the removal of one officer in an
only Southeast Asian country with no formal truce. · ambulance · a~d a staff
The Saigon command said Communist troops committed 141 sergeant who ·deplaned on
cease-fire violations in the 24 hours ending at dawn today.It was crutches .
Ute most reported in 13 days, although the command said most of
Lt. Col. Leo .K. ' l'hornsneff
Ute incidents were minor.
was taken from the second
Mllltary sources in Phnom Penh said fierce fighting between planeload of 16, after doctors
govei'Mlent and Communist troops raged today on embattled said he had developed·a slight
Highway 2, only 12 miles south of the Cambodian capital. The
sources said casualties on both sides have reached the 1,000 mark
in the past iwo days and said Ute Communists have taken a bad
beating from U. S. jet fighter-bombers.
,
."They (Ute Communists) keep attacking fixed government
positions where U. S. jets can just mow them doiVn,' • one s~urce
said . "The air support there has heeri effective but they just keep
coming back for more."
Picket lines were set up
Wednesday
afternoon .at the
I
TilE LAST OF THE FREE U.S. PRISONERS of war were en James M. Gavin . Plant near
route home today, completing the se·cond phase of Opera\ion Cheshire by 200 members of
Homecoming. There was no word when the next POWs would be Local S77, Pipefitters and
coming
of Co(Jllllunist prison camps.
.
Plumbers at the. construction
, Eighty POWs landed at air. bases .In Texas, California, site.
Maryland and D:Iinois Wednesday.and three planes carrying 56 · Union· members have been
more men were to land at Ute same bases today. All were working without a contract
released Sunday and Monday. Their arrival will leave 282 since Jan. I while new contract
. Americans still in prison camps.. All were to be out by ihe end of negotiations have ·been unthe month under the terms of the cease-fire agreement, but there derway . All workin'g crafts at
'
I
(Continued on page 10)
l~,pl~nt were Idle today.

Crafts idle

at Oteshire

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out

TEN CENTS

capture

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'PHONE 992·2156

fever. They ~id his condition
"as good , but would not
speculate on when he could
continue on to the mainland.
Staff Sgt. William Baird, who
came off the plane on crutches
with his legs bandaged, was
hugged and kissed and
showered 'with leis 8$ he went
over to greet the crowd.
Navy Capt. Robert B. Fuller
told the roaring crowd that "we
would like to offer our humble
thanks to you and all the
American people who have

PI'. PLEASANT -A farm- armed.
The woman said Mrs. Linden
hand who just wanted "a car,
money and a break in life " was had told her that Osborne did
apprehended by state police at not wish to harm anyone, but
West Columbia Wednesday only wanted a car, money and
night after apparently entering a break in life. She said she
,three homes and forcing a believed Mrs. Linden was not
woman at gunpoint on an eight- bitter about the incident, and
mile trek through woo(ied and there was an indication that
she had felt sorry for her
hilly countryside.
After an abnost five-hour captor.
manhunt, police arrested
Police said Mrs. Unden was
Ronald Osborne, 28, of New forced to tie up Mrs. Sayre and
Haven, after pinning him down then Osborne and Mrs. Linden
with a helicopter near a church left in the hostage's car.
During the three-mile ride,
on Leiving Road at West
Columbia, about nine miles authorities said Osborne fired
south of New Haven. The· a blast at a moving car in
hostage, Mrs. Sonya Linden, Sayre's used car lot at New
24, of New Haven, was unhurt Haven. Ironically; the owner of
Osborne was lodged In · the ihe lot and the person believed
Mason County jail. Deputy to be in the car was Dwight
sheriffs said he would offer no Sayre, husband of the second
comment for his actions other captive woman . He was
than to say he was "tired of reported only injured by flying
glass.
working for $25 a week."
Other reports indicated shots
The search for Osborne and
his hostage began about I p. m. were also fired at homes in the
when authOJiities said Osborne, . area.
armed with a shotgun, entered
Osborne abandoned the
the home of Mrs. James Hart, Linden vehicle a short distance
loca led a s~ort distance from away on a rural road near
where he works at New Haven. Hartford, police said. It was
Police said he tried to get Mrs. there that police said Osborne
Hart to drive him to an un- led Mrs. Linden on a long walk
disclosed destinallon.
through wooded terrain.
Since Mrs. Hart doesn't It was thought Mrs. Linden
drive, Osborne and the woman may have been barefooted
assertedly walked about three during the hike. Sources said
miles to New Haven Heights, she sustained some injuries to
where the man reportedly her feel.
forced his way into the home of
state police notified their
Mrs. Dwight Sayre.
hehcopter section based _at ,
Osborne apparently was South Charleslon and an a1runable to get a ride there, craft was immediately
either. Officers reported he dispatched to the area with
had Mrs. Sayre tie up Mrs. Trooper First Class Rudy
Hart with nylon stockings and O'Dell on board.
then accompany him to Mrs.
O'Dell and Jon Leonard, the
pilot, spotted Osborne and his
Linden's home nearby.
"She (Mrs. Linden ) was in hoslajle coming out of a hollow
the basement folding some onto Old Mining Road,
things from the dryer," a authorities said. O'Dell made
friend of Mrs. Linden ex- the arrest with the help of
plained. She said Osborne pursuit forces on the ground.
entered the home with " a Osborne offered no resistance,
neighbor lady" and was the trooper said.

made this great day in our lives
possible."
Air Force Col. Norman
Gaddis of Knoxville, Tenn. ,
said "we return without any
bitterness or delusion because
we have been allowed to return
with dignity and honor."
After refueling, the planes ·
took off for air bases in Texas,
California, Maryland and
Illinois. Eighty POWs landed
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) at the same bases Wednesday.
A
KC 135 tanker was destroyed
All were released Sunday and
by flames and. another
Monday.
damaged when they collided
while taxiing to a runway today
at Lockbourne Air Force Base.
Twocrewmembe~swerekilled
and one injured in the fire fed
WASHINGTON (UPI) - retail level in the months ahead by 31,000 gallons of jet engine
Wholesale prices in February and give a push to the cost o! fuel.
The names of Ute victims
rose ' at the fastest rate in 22 living at a time when the adwithheld pending
years, the Labor Department ministration is worried ubout a were
notification
of next of kin.
said today, offering consumers new round of inflation.
Col. Hunter F. Hackney,
little hope that food prices will
assistant
deputy commander
level off any time soon.
of operations of the 30lst Air
The wholesale index Refu~ling Wing, Strategic Air
covering prices of farm
Command, said the two dead
products and Industrial goods
THREE
FINED
men and the one injured were
- soared 1.9 per cent in
Three
defendants
.were
fined
in
the plane that was
February, biggest one-month
rise since January, 19s1, when and a fourth forfeited a bond in destroyed. Hackney said the
the economy was suffering Pomeroy Mayor's Court pilot of that aircraft was found
from tnf·lation due to the Wednesd•y night. Fined $5 and on the ramp o~tside the plane.
Korean war.
costs each were George Luster,
"I don't know how he got
' With seasonal factors taken Jr ., Middleport, crossing a there," said Hackney: "I don't
into account, the February yellow line; James . Counts, know definitely whether he was
Syracuse, · assured clear blown out or jwnped out or how
increase wns 1.6 Pf!r cent, up
from January's 1.1 per cent distance, and Alfred Roush, he got there ."
Hackney said the planes
rise but the same as Decem· Letart, W. Va. , running a red
were
going out onlo the runway
ber's adjusted increase.
light. Fm·feiting a $25 bond
'l'he rapid rise in wholesale posted on .an · intoxication as part of a SAC alert ~nd, they
pricP.s for the past three charge was William Huffman were moving slowly off their
par~inA pads, which were side
month.' will filter down to the · of Hemlock Grove.

Tankers collide

Prices shot up

'

.

by side, when the collision
occurred .
"They were very near or still
in their parking areas," when
the accident
happened ,
Hackney said.
Hackney explained that
during such SAC alerts the
planes taxi to the runway ,and
hold there wi!h their engines
running. The second plane
sustained only minor damage
to its left wing Hackney id
No newsme~ were all:ed
near the collision site until the
Air Force could "account for
classified materials on the
planes," Hackney said. Each
. plane was carrying a crew of
five.
·
.The
Columbus
Fire
Department aided Air Force
fire fighting units in battling
the blaze at t~ base·, located
abouteightmilesoutoftheclty
limits.
..

JOSMITH

Jo Smith is
case worker
Jo Smith is the · new child
welfare case worker for the
Meigs
County
Welfare
Department.
Miss Smith, a graduate of
Pomeroy High School and
Concord College, Athens, w.
Va., is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Charley D. Smith 'of Wolf
Pen. Her duties are to provide
social services to children and
their parents to help relieve
conditions of physical, mental,
emotional, economic and social
maladjustments thr.ough
casework skills and community resources ; maintains
current case records in accordance with agency policy;
deliver protective services ,
services to neglected and
dependent children services to
unwed mothers a~d fathers
adoptive services and service~
to the children residing in the
children's home .
In essence, she performs all
duties of children's services as
defined in the Ohio Revised
Code and by the Ohio Department of Public Welfare. The
duties that Miss Smith
assumed Feb. 4 were formerly
performed by l!arbara Shuler,
now director of the Meigs
County Welfare Department.
Miss Smith's office is located
at the Children's Home where
there are 11 boys and three
girls.

p al roI wiJl
h 0 ld 't ag· d ay

Tag Day .will be observed
Saturday m Pomeroy by
Pomeroy Elementary School
Safety Pair~!.
The '32 s1xth grade boys
and girls of the safety patrol
will be on the streets of the
vi llage giving lags for
donations. The money will be
used for the annual trip to ·
Washington, D. C. which this
year'is scheduled for March 31.
Eugene Brundage, an Athens
school teacher, is planning the
tour and will be accompanying
the students along with two
teachers from the , Pomeroy
school. He will be at the school
on March 22 to discu;;s the trip
and outline the itinerary for the
LOCAL TEMPS
students and their parcnil;.
Temperature in downtown
To date appr~ximale ly $900
Pomer9y Thursday was ~ has been raised towards the
degrees at 11 a . m. under nearly $1,400 ,needed . On
partly sunny skies. ·
1 (Continued Qn P\'8e 101 .
\

....

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