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                  <text>Now You Know-

8- The Daily Sentmel,Mlddleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 26,1973

Evlyn Jordan died on Sunday
RUTLAND - Mrs. Evlyn
Jordan, 77, Salem St., Rutland,
dted Sunday mormng at the
Holzer Medical
Center
followmg a long tllness.
Mrs Jordan was born Oct 5,
1896 10 Phnty, W. Va., the
daughter of the late Charles
and Emma McComb
SurvtviOg are her husband,
Redd; a daughter, Mrs Freda

Smger, Toledo; two sisters,
Mrs. Ehzabeth Uvezey, East
Ltverpool; Mrs Ruby Wolfe,
Pltn ly ; two brothers, Will18m
McComb, Columbus, and Fred
McComb, PolO! Pleasan I,
three granddaughters, and
three great-grandchtldren.
Funeral servtces wtll be held
at I p. m Tuesday at the
Martm Funeral Home here
wtth the Rev. Robert
Bumgarner offtctalmg. Burtal
will be 10 the Mt Umon
Cemetery at Pliny. Frtends
may call at the funeral home
anyhme

EdWard R0 beJ1S
dies in Tucson

Phase III
(Continued from Page I )
and spend more for social
programs
1

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Dtscharges: Russell Cobb,
Robertsburg; Delores Cooper,
Pomt Pleasant; Mrs. James
Rob10son, Henderson; Mrs
Gtlbert Martin, Buffalo; Mrs
Wtlbert Parker, Mrs Orilla
O'Conner, Pomt Pleasant;
Orville Casto, Leon; Tanya
Robins, Point Pleasant; Ertc
Steckel, Gallipolis Ferry; Mrs
Orville WtUwmson, Southstde;
Mrs.
Charles
Wendell,
Galltpohs Ferry; Mrs. James
Goodyear, Galhpohs; Mrs
Jean Martin, Andrew Byus,
Po10t Pleasant; Mrs Lee
Layne, Rscme; Mrs. Ehas
Hatfield, Galhpohs; Mrs
James Beaver, Gallipolis;
Warren Mtll~r. Don Fowler,
Point Pleasant; Penny Chck,
Cottageville; Norma Holley,
Gallipolis, Bermce Edsall,
Point Pleasant, Elva Haye,
Middleport; Elza Powell,
Ashton; Wallie Allen, Point
Pleasant; Albert Cooper, Point
Pleasant ;
Mrs
John
Bumgarner, West Columbia;
Mrs Clodus Buck, Leon; Mrs
Ray Smtih, Ltsa Casto and
John Caynor, Jr , Pomt
Pleasant, Wtlliam Brunnmg,
Gauley Bridge, Dems Hosier,
New Haven.
Birth March 24, a daughter
to Mr and Mrs Roscoe Myers,
Rscme.

Relaltves here have learned
of tlle death of Edward N
(Ted) Roberts, 68, 10 Tucson,
AriZ
Born m Metgs County, he
was the son of the late Wtlham
and Cora Hannum Roberts A
graduate of Pomeroy Htgh
School and of Ohio Umverst!y,
Mr Roberts was a professor at
the Umverstty of Amana the
past 21 years.
SurviVIng are hts wtfe,
Desste Blake Roberts; a
daughter, Mrs Loy (Joan)
Mulhns, and three grand"Seeking greener fields
chtldren, of San Diego, Cahf.; a
often produces nothing but
stster, Mrs Ruth Hennesy,
wasteland."
Pomeroy, and two brothers,
lt 4 s amBzlng how a home
Grant, of Point Pleasant, and
can be transformed from a
Robert of Pomeroy
"wasteland" lock to a
He was preceded in death by
pleasure to behold, just by
his
parents, a sister, Beatrice
a few small changes In the
overall decor See one of
Parnsh, and three brothers,
our "FRIENDLY ONES"
Bruce, Clinton and John
lor Ideas and the materials
(Continued from Page 1\
Funeral servtces and burial
to do the job
completed.
were In Tucson
Service was restored by tlle
Ohto Power about 8 p m A
RIDERS TO MEET
spokesman for Columbus and
The Metgs County Ridmg Southern Ohio said service to
Club wtll meet at 7 30 p.m. Its customers pttched mto
Tuesday at the Rock Sprmgs darkness by the acctdent was
Grange Hall.
not restored unhl 10:10 p. m
Meanwhile, Crow's Steak
House sent II employes home
and locked tts doors. The Jones
Boys on West Mam St. gave up
at 6 p.m. and closed, two hours
ahead of the normal Sunday
evenmg quttting tune.
A wedding at the Pomeroy
In this complicated world, it's
Church of Chrtst near where
tough enough to cope with today,
the
acctdent took place was
much less think about tomorrow.
disrupted and a station wagon
So one wide-awake part of our
belonging to the parents of the
business is future-watching for
bride, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
our customers. And another part
Eskew, had moderate damage
is providing them with new and
from tlle falling pole.
improved services to meet the
Damage to the Johnson
demands of the time.
vehicle was heavy, and
Johnson IS being ctted to
Bank wide-awake and we'll look
Mayor's Court for reckless
out for you. The same way we're
operation.
looking out for many others.
Today at 7.15 a.m. another
outage occurred m Pomeroy
for Columbus and Southern
Ohto Electrtc Co. customers on
West Mam St. when a truck
drtven by Roger Rodgers, 25,
Columbus, clipped a utility
pole, agam diSruptmg servtce.
Power company workers were
replacmg the pole tlus mornmg.
Rodgers, who suffered a leg
POMEROY, OHIO
Injury, was taken to Veterans
Memortal Hospttal by the
Member of Federal Reserve System
squad.
He was treated and
On Fndays Our Dnve In Wmdow 1s Open 9 a.m to 1 p m
(Contmuously)
released

Blackout

'111/ve got an eye on yourfoture

The wide-awake bonk
makes itollsoen.rv.
~···

Farmers Bank &amp;

Co.

$20,000 Max1mum Insurance for Each Deposttor

Unoccupied house
reported entered
Shertff Robert C Harlenbach's Dept said today a
breakmg and entering of an
unoccupted house during the
last 3D days owned by Ben
Batey located on Bailey Run
Road was reported Sunday
when tl was diScovered.
Entrance apparently was
gamed by breaking out a glass
In a back door 'taken from the
house was a lawn mower,
cethng blocks, electric wtre,
six milk cans, one gas can and
two ml lamps. The mctdent ts
under mvestlgation.

CARPET SPECIAL
2 ROOMS AND HALL
Includes. 12' x15' Living Rm
9' x12' Bedroom
3'x12' Hall

COMPLETELY INSTALLED
WALL rO WALL
IIIIth Hea• y Foam Rubber Pad

ALL

SeCretary flailed
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
head of the state {lemocratic
organizatton accused
Secretary of State Ted W.
Brown, a Republican, Sunday
of callmg a "rigged" meeting
of the Ohto Assoctatton of
Election Officials and SBld he
was "unftt to hold hiS offtce."
Davtd A Meeker, executive
dtrector of
the
Ohio
Democratic party, said in his
statement that Brown had
called tlle meetmg of the
association on only two days
nollce last Frtday "to get a
rubber-stamp approval for
certain Republican bills that
only make tl easter for election
ofhctals to do thetr JObs.''
"Mr Brown's handpicked
puppets have taken a posttion
against wtually alllegtslation
that would make tt easter for
more Ohioans to exercise their
conslltutional right to vote,"
Meeker ctsuned.

ONLY

Quality SOl nylon carpeting with heavy loam rubber pad expert tack les s

Installation Choice ot colors All work guaranteed See Wendell Grate for

this buy, or free estimate on any carpet Installation

RUTLAND FURNITURE
RUTLAND, 0

The Friday meeting, he said,
"IS another in a tradition of
rigged meetings to try to gtve
the appearance of legitimacy
to partisan support of Republican bills."
"A handful of Republicans
continues to pose as representatives of all Ohto election of.
ftcials," Meeker satd. "This
can no longer he allowed."
One Democratic member of
the OAEO, Lee J. Knorek of
Wood County, termed the
meeting "A set-up" and satd
"Republican members had
obVIously been briefed on how
to vote ."
No formal vollng procedure
was followed durmg the meetlOgs, whtch allowed (OAEO
lobbyiSt Jennings B.) Cole and
Brown to tabulate the optmons
of members any way they
wanted," Knorek satd. "this is
ludicrous, constdering tl was a
meeting of people who are sup-

posed to be experts on conductmg proper elections."
Knorek said the only concern
of members was to make sure
"the job of election officials
was not made more difftcult "
Meeker SBld the meeting represented "the grossest form
of callousness and demonstrates again that Ted Brown is
unfit to hold his offtce."
Meeker satd the OAEO voted
to oppose a bill permitting
door-to-door voter regtstration
because it nught be difficult to
regulate, "but no discusswn
was held on whether the btU
would actually allow more people to vote and" voted in favor
of a bill glvmg pay ratses to
precinct workers, but opposed
extending votmg hours.
- "Ted Brown spoke m favor
of some Republlcan..sponsored
btlls, whtle no Democrats were
mvtted to speak," Meeker said

POWs released Sunday
CLARK AIR BASE, Ph1l1p
pmes (UP II - Followmg IS the

Chattanooga , Tenn

100 Cmdr Clarence R
35. 1st Lt Greg 0 Hanson. Polter, 39, Independence, Mo
l1st or 107 American prisoners 25, Thousand Oaks. Calif
101 Lt. Cmdr. Dale V
released Sunday by North 36 Capt Thomas J Hanlon, Raebel. 34, Milbank, S D.
Vietnam When more than one 28 , los Angeles and Sacra men
102 Lt. Robert I Randall, 29,
Neptune, N J
hometown 1s l1sted, the f 1rst 1s to, Calif
37 Capt Jerome D Heeren ,
the off1C1al home of record and
103 Lt Stephen A Rudloff,
the others are where relat1ves 18, Brookmgs, S D
28, Brooklyn, N Y , and San
38 Ma1 L L Hi ldebrand, 34, D1ego, Cal1f
l1ve
AIR FORCE
Butternut, W1s, and Tucson,
104 Lt Cmdr James B
1 lst Lt Hector M Acosta, Anz
Souder, 32, Ft Lauderda le, Fla
14, San Anton1o, Tex
39 lst Lt Robert M Hudson,
105 Ll Cmdr. Theodore W
2 MaJ Fernando Alexander, 25, Shawnee M 1sston. Kan

44. Dallas, Tex
40 MaJ. Carl H Jefcoat, 47.
3 Capt John H Albers. 33, Drew, MISs
Houston, Tex

41 Ma1 R1chard E Johnson,

4 Capt T1mothy R Ayrs, 28, 35,

Houston , Tex

OceanSide,

Calif,

and

Phoemx , Anz

5 Capt Henry C Barrows,
16, South Had ley, Mass
6 1st U R1chard L Bates,
14, Plaza, N D
7 Capt W11 11am R Bean Jr ,
29, Ft. Payne, Ala, and
Littleton, Colo
8 Capt Will D. Beekman , 26.
Toledo, Oh1o
9 Capt Lynn R Beens, 26,
Salt Lake C1ly and Layton,
Utah
10 Lt Col L H Bernascom,
41, Napa , Cal1f
ll
Lt Col
w,n,am J
Breckner, 49, Sebr~ng and
Columbus, Oh1o
12 Capt Charles A Brown,
26, Boston, Mass
13 lsi Lt Cec1l H Brunson,

42 Col J W K1ttmger , 44,
Orlando, Fla
43 Capt James D Ku la, 15,
Manchester. N H
44 Capt M1chael H Labeau,
17. Lincoln Park. M1ch
45 lsi Lt. George F Latella,
25, Brooklyn. N y
46 Caot. James D. Latham,
26. Shawnee MISSIOn, Kan
47 M Sgt LouiSE Leblanc,
37, Prov idence, 1&lt; 1
48 Capt Frank D Lew1s, 28,
Ft Wayne. lnd , and Fa~r
Oaks, Calli
49 Capt Ke1th H LewiS, 33,
Mt Vernon. Oh1o
50 Capt. Donald K Logan.
26. Glendale, Cal1f
51 S Sgt James L Lollar,

25, Memph1s, Tenn

27 , Kllm 1chael, M1ss

14 Capt William G Byrns,

29, St

TWO OMITfED
RACINE - Verne Ord, a
]Untor, a !me prospect for
Southern's baseball team, was
umntenhonally omt!ted from
the published ltst of candtda•·s
"'
for Southern's baseball team,
as was J. F Young, a freshman

51 Capt Manon A Marshall,

Mo
15 Capt Peter A Callaghan
26, Freeport, NY
16 Capt Peter P Camerota,
28, Gibbstown, N J
17 Capt John p Cerak. 28 ,
Clay Ion, N J 'an d Tucson, Arlz
18 Capt. Robert G. Certain,
25 Silver Sprln9. Md
19 Capt Kevm J Cheney, 27.
M1am1, Fla
20 Mat James C Condon, 38,
Dayton , O:Ho
21 Lt Col William W

56
lsi Lt R1chard H
McDow, 16. Columbiona, Ala
57 Capt. Frederick c
McMurray. 28. Coeur d'alene,
Idaho
58 s. Sgt Gar~ L Morgan,
2 h
7, ometown WI hheld at the

Conlee, 37, Lemon Grove, Calif

request of fam•ly

no, 26. Birmingham, Ala

Nagah1ro, 41. Honolulu, Hawa11

22 Capt Samuel B Cusma-

53 lst Lt M1chael R
Marl1m , 26, Los Angeles, Calif
54 Capt Metvm K Matsui,

27, H11o, Hawan

55 lsi Lt William T. Maya ll.
24, Levittown, N.Y.

59

Lt

Col

James

y

23. Capt James D. Cutter, 32. 60 Lt Col James W O'Neil,
42 Los Angeles, Calif
Stillwater, Okla , and Wlch1ta, 61 Mat James p Padgett,
Kan
40, Cedar Key, Fla
24 Mat Gate A DeSplegler, 61 lsi Lt Larry D Price. 25,
34, Browns Valley, Mlnn

Orlando, Fla , and Sacramento,

15 Capt Oavld B Dmgee, 30, CaJ 1t
Old Greenwich, Conn
63 Capt Bnan M Ratzlaff,
26 Capt Dav1d I Drum :ro, Long Beach. Calif
mond, 25, Ft Worth. Tex.
64 lsi Lt Wlll1am J Reich,
27 Mal William J Elender 26 Cl 10 t w15
Jr . 38. Charleston. W. Va
'
on,
28 Capt Richard L FranciS, 65 Mat Paul K Robmson,
34. Gallon, Oh1o
29, BaCrlle sVIKIIe and hTulsa, Okla
66 Capt George A Rose . 30,
29 ap1 enne1 J Fraser, Fayettev ille, Ark , and Mar an
31 , Brooklyn, N Y
town w va
g
30 Capt R1chard J Fulton, 67 'capt w R Schwertleger
16, Chandler and PhoeniX, Am 17, Medford. Okla . and Cald'
31 1st Ll Ralph W Gatat1, well Kan
15, Darby and Folsom. Pa
68, lsi Lt. Brian J Seek, 25,
32 Master Sgt James W. Encino. Calif.
Gough 38. Fresno. Calif
69. Mat Tamotsu Sh 1ngak 1,
33. lsi Ll Paul L Granger, 34, Haiku, Hawaii
25, San Franc1sco, Cal1f
70 lsi u Theodore s
34 Capt David B Grant, 30, Sienlckl, 15, Newark , N J
71 Capt R1chard T S1mpson.
31, Anderson, S C
72 Capt William A Spencer,
29, San Juan, Tex.
73 Capt R D. Sponeybarger,

Fonner barber
in Racine dies

RACINE - E. A Wmgett
recetved word Sunday of the
death of A. J . Schaeffer of
Chillicothe, formerly of
Pomeroy and later of Racine
where he was a barber many
years
Mr. Schaeffer was preceded
in death by hts wtfe, Claudta
Btgley Schaeffer and a son,
Joe.
He ts survtved by two
daughters, Vtrgmta and
Glorta, and several grandchildren
and
greatgrandchtldren . He was a
member of Racme Masonic
Lodge
Funeral servtces for Mr
Schaeffer wtll be held at the
Ware Funeral Home in
Chtlltcothe Wednesday at 10
a.m wtlh gravestde ntes at
Greenwood Cemetery in
Racme helween 12 30 and I
p.m. that day.

~EIGS

THEATRE

Show Starts 7p.m .

Kan
75 lsi Lt Jack R Tnmble,
25, Sumter, S C
76 1st Lt Samuel R
Vaughan, 27. Saini George, S C
77
1st Lt
Duane P

(Continued from Page 1)

'

certain that the Amertcans held prisoner In ~os will be
released.''
KEYBISCAYNE,FLA.- PRESIDENT NIXON has ordered
a residual U. S. force to remain in VIetnam indefinitely untU all
of the American prisoners of war, including nine in Laos, are
released. In passing instructions in Washington and Sslgon,
Nixon repeated his determination to mainfaln an American
military presence in Vietnam until all the POWs held iD Indochina are freed.
A deadlock developed over a final pullout b~ the deadline
Wednesday when Hanoi handed over allst of 1D7 AmericQill! held
m Vtetnam 11 proposed to release on Tuesday and Wednl!llday.
Nixon rejected the offer because it failed to Include altlluranCI!S
that nine prisoners, held by the Patbet Lao, also would be freed
under the 60-day timetable. "Until all U. S. prisoners of war are
released, there will be U.S. forces In Vietnam," Nixon said.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Saturday Admtssions Margaret Batley, Mtddleport,
Edward Ktng, Pomeroy ,
Frank Meyer, Chester, W Va ,
Ava Bnckey, Syracuse, and
Mtttie Nelson, Pomeroy
Saturday Dtscharges - T10a
Btrchfteld, Constance Cratg,
Paul Knapp, Harry Wehrung,
Ernest Molden, Selwyn Evans,
Paulme Deren berger, Roberta
Smtih, Myrna Beaver, Loutse
Cundiff and Mary Jane Smith.
Sunday Admtsstons
Ronald Lyons, Mason; Betty
Carsey, Mtddleport, Edna '
Parsons, Ractne; Wtlma
Anderson, Long Bottom, Ruth
Smtih, Racme, Edtth Be !zing,
Coolvtlle, Floyd Barrmger,
Reedsville and Jacqualyn
McDonald, Middleport.
Sunday Dtscharges - Lillian
Walker, Rosalie Wright, Callie
Matheny, Betsy Fmdley and
Maggte Rosenkranz

WOUNDED KNEE,S. D.- A NEW exchange ol gunfire wus
reported early today on the perimeter of this Indian-occupied
hamlet as Indian leaders prepared a "major and positive" announcement. 'Pte new roWJd of firing wa~ reported by Harllngton
Wood, assistant attorney general and chief negotiator for the
Jusltce Department. Wood told newsmen that the firing started
as early as 8p.m. (MST) from the Indian side.
The extent of tlle flrlJJjl by each side had not been deter·
mmedThe announcement of ''major and positive developmenta"
to be made later today came from Russell Means, one of the
leaders of the Amertcan Indian Movement (AIM) force which
has been holding this hiStoric hamlet for the past 27 days.
POUTICAL SOURCE'S SAID TODAY IN CAIRO THAT the
Egypllsn government will resign to enable President Anwar
Sadat to form and personally lead, a. ,c~biltet empowered to
prepare the country for a mjjitary Cl!llfrqntiJpon with Iarael.
Ssdat, the sources said, will announce the resignation of tlle
14-month old cabinet of Premier Azlz Sldky at an appearance
hefore parliament and the Arab SociaUst Union, the only legal
political party in the country. They said Ssdat also will tell tlle
meetmg of his decision to become hiS own prermer in order to
supervtse the day-to-day Implementation of his new policy.
JEKYLL ISLAND, GA. - ABOIIT 5,010 YOUTHS camped
through the weekend on this rain-soaked ISland only 1o find a rock
concert cut short by thundershowers and dampened by scores of
drug arrests. The festival.goers came by car, motorcycle and
thumb for the Golden Isle's third annual rock concert, orgaruzed
to raise funds for muscular dystrophy research.
While no arresta or lnculents were reported on the Island
itself, many young people never made it past the mainland. The
Glynn County Sheriff's Department set up a roadblock on the
only highway connecting JekyU to the msinland and netted more
than 70 arrests on drug VIolations.
"We had reports of about 20 runaways and flyers on about a
hundred wanted people and we just thought it'd be an excellent
chance to catch a few of 'ern," said Glynn County Pollee Lt.llill
Doggett. Police said no search was made of cars unless drugs
could he seen openly lying in view of an offtcer.

ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY

Sale! Kimball Pianos

78 1st Lt Brian H Ward. 25,
Hunt,ngton Beach, Cal1f
79 Capt Kenneth R Wells,

25, Vancouver, Wash

80 Capt James W Will iams,
28, MemphiS. Tenn
81 Capt. Hal K W1lson Ill ,
34, Hamburg . N. Y
82. lst Lt Will 1am W Wilson ,
26. Conrad, Iowa
83 Capt Myron A Young, 28.
Napa, Calif , and Tucson, Anz
84 Lt Col John H. Yuill, 39,
Boswell, lnd
85 Capt. Rudolph U Zuber
buhler, 32. Lowman, Idaho
NAVY
86 Lt Cmdr Alfred H
Agnew, 33, Mullins, S C.
87 Lt Carroll R Beeler, 29,

(Gi

lPG I

OHIO

00.:"":&gt;.::-:-:·.-· · :·:-::;, .

~

whtch Bartels has had roles are
11
Camelott uSouth Pacific,"
"The King and!," "Ftddler On

the Roof," "Marne/' "Peter
Pan," and the "Sound of
Music." He r•ll'rentiy performs the lead role in "Don't
Drmk the Water," whtch wtll
be played at Lake Shore High
School on Aprtl IJ and 14. He
also has sung 10 various
communtty and ctvtc beneftts
and served on commtttees for
the Community Chest and the
Blossomhme activtltes.
Bartels has won the V.F W.
and Optirrust Club speakmg
contests and has been a varstty
wrestler in Lake Shore Htgh
School. He IS studymg votce
under the dtrecllon of Dr.
Rudolph Strukoff of Andrews
Umversity. BtU Bartels is the
son of Mr and Mrs. Wtlham
Bartels, 5290 Cleveland
Avenue, Stevensvllle

,·: ...~::&gt;.-"*=*:w::t.r~'»)!.:'!$.~:::::-;:s.::~x.~:::·::"«.,

11 ,ews.. in

Briefsf

By United Press lDternational

PHOENIX, ARIZ. -BOYOOITS AND BELT lightening by
angry housewives are taking effect and the prtce of meat may
start falling later this year, according to Secretary of
Agrtculture Earl Butz.
But the "good old days" of 79-cent roasts are gone forever, he
S81d, adding at a news conference, "! think most of this meat
price ~crease is behmd us. By the latter part of thts year, you'll
see prtces commg down again."
PHNOM PENH -U.S. 853 BOMBERS and other warplanes
carried out ralda in Cambodia for the 20th consecutive day today,
hitting Communist targets eight miles from Phnom Penh wtth
such force that it shook residents In their beds.
Mllltary sources called the raids the closest and heavtest of
the war in Cambodia, the only Southeast Asian country wttll no
formal cease-fire. Residents of Phnom Penh bterally were
shaken m their beds .several times as the bombers hit Communtst
positions. In Honolulu, the U. S. Pacific Forces Command gave
no details of the raids. But mllltary sources said warplanes htt
targets around Tuol Leap, etght miles from the capttal, as well as
posltiops along Highways I and 5.

PINE RIDGE, S. D. - INDIANS OPENED fll'e on federal
officers at a roadblock neur Wounded Knee Monday night, mjurlng a U.S marshal. The marshal was in sertous condition
today at a Denver, Colo., bospttal. William Hall, deputy chief of
U. S. marshals, said he and Assistant Attorney General Kent
Frizzell were making an IDspectton trtp to the roadblock with a
"VIP party'' when supporters of the American lndtan Movement
(AIM), who seized Wounded Knee 28daysago,opened ftre.
U.S. Marshal Lloyd Grunm, 50, Omaha, Neb., was shot m
the chest. He feU on his back and was earned to safety by Hall
and Frizzell, Hall said. Meanwhile, rifle-carrying Oglala Stoux,
led by controversial tribal Chainnan Dick Wilson, set up a new
blockade outside Wounded Knee Monday, vowmg to starve out
armed AIM mllltants entrenched in the historic Pme Ridge
reservation hamlet.

The court order prohibits the company from "engaging In
deceptive acts or misrepresentations by advertising products on

'sale,' on 'specwl price; 'reduced,' 'regular,' or 'regular price,'
or otherwise by the use of words Intimating a price reduced from

88 Lt John C Ensch, 35,
Ill .. and San Diego,
Calif
89. Lt (J g) David A
Everett, 16, St Simon's Island,
Ga , and San D1ego, Calif
90 Lt Cmdr Dav1d W
Hoffman, 31, Philadelphia, Pa,
and San Diego. Calif
91 Lt. (j.g.) .Joseph E
Kernan, 27, Wash1ngton, D C.
92 Ll Thomas B Laten-

its normal, customary price of that product, when, In fact, no
reduction has taken place." Judge Paul Martin, who granted the
restralnmg order, also prohibited Sun TeleVISion from "engaging
In deceptive acts by the 'bait and Switch' technlfpte of attempting
to 'Unsell' advertised items with the mtentton of switching the
consumer to a higher priced item."

Another big shipment of fine quality Kimball Pianos now on' sale- Music
Department on the second floor. All are excellently styled lh Modern .
Spanish : ~arly American and French Provincial. Walnut. Cherry and
Pecan Ftntshes. Complete with padded bench to match. Slop ln. See these
fine Kimball Pianos. Buy the one you like and really save during this big
sale.

USEI OUR SENSIBLE CREDIT SERVICE

ELBERFELD$ IN·POMEROY

•

Mostly sunny today, htghs m
the 50s. Increasing cloudiness
tomghl and Wednesday wtth a
chance of rain west Wednesday. Lows fonlght m tlle
upper 30s and low 40s Highs
Wednesday upper 50s to mtd
60s.

enttne

TUESDAY, MARCH 27 . 1973

s

Laos.
All U.S. POWs are scheduled
to be released by Thursday-a
day later than specHied m the
cease-fire agreement.
As soon as word arrived that
the 32 men were freed m Hanoi •
tlle United States resumed
troop withdrawal from South
Vietnam. The troop wtth·
drawal hsd been suspended
while the question of the
prisoners was debated. The
wttlldrawal also was scheduled
for completion Thursday.
Col.
Benjamm
Army
Harnson Purcell, 45, the

WASHINGTON (UP!) President Ntxon was back at
the Whtle House today to
prepare for next week's
summit meetmg wtth SOuth
Vietnamese President Nguyen
Van Thieu.
NixQn flew back to Washmgton late Monday mght after a
four-day stay at his Flortda
vacation retreat.
His return comctded wtth the
arrtval hack at the Whtte
House of Henry A. Kissinger,
his national security affairs
advtser who has been
vacationing for 10 days In
Acapulco, Mextco
Nlllon and Kissmger were to
confer , today on a range of
foreign- pohcy developments
and the wmdop of the U.S.
mvolvement iD the decade~ong
bttter Vtetnam war
There were no announced
appomtments
on
the
Prestdent's schedule today.
The Prestdent appeared m a
good mood on his return. He
remained in total seclusion at
his bayside villa and spent long
bours 10 his study.
Aides descrtbed him as
"particularly gratHied" at the
agreement reached in Satgon
stgnallng the final pullout of
U.S. forces and the release of
the last group of prisoners by
Thursday, one day after the

WASHINGTON- REP. JOHN J. McFALL, D-Calif., said
today President Nixon's Phase m economic policies were a
falliD'e and It was time to return to the wage and price controls
that were lifted early thls year. McFall, assistant House
Democratic leader, said he had Introduced legislation mandating
a return to Phase II economic controls with a price-wage board
that could deviate from basic guidelines only in cases of undue
hardBhlp.
"It Ia already clear that Pbase Ill has failed to control inDation," McFall told the House ~king Committee, which 1s
(Continued on Page 8)

DAVID M BISSELL, rtght, son of Mr. and Mrs Charles Bissen Chester has been selected
"soldier of the month" at Fort Knox, Ky. He is shown receiving a ~edal fro~ Capt Patrick J
Moe, commander He was also promoted to tlle rank of sergeant. Sgt. Btssellattended Eastern
Htgh School

License tag tax dropped

.

Library
has $500

SUIT FILED
A sutt for partilton of real
estate has been filed tn Metgs
County Common Pleas Court
by Royal Jerome and Atlanta
Cook, Hemlock Grove, agatnst
Charles ~ and Peggy Cook et
al, Pelsor, Arkansas. The
property is located m Bedford
Townshtp.

24th annual All-SEOAL
banquet set Wednesday
WAVERLY - Coach Jun
Osborne and Gil Price, both
from GalUpoliS, wlll be the top
honorees
when
the
Southeastern Ohio Athleltc
League holds its 24th annual
cage banquet at Lake Wbtte
here Wednesday.
Blll Harrell, cage e~~ach at
Morehead State tKy.) for the
past four years, wlll be !be
malo speaker at the 6:30
p.m. banquet. Members of
~ all-league team tthree
11~&amp;-man squads) wlll be
hoqored along with eight
other players who gal~
honorable mention status.
Prtce and Noe were named
to the first team of the allleague squad aloq wllh
three Waverly players, Mike

ree om·

orne

P U IIOut resumed
SAIGON (UP!) - The
United States resumed tis
troop witlldrawals from South
Vtelnam today after keepmg a
fleet of transport planes
wathng unit! word reached
Satgon that Arnertcan POWs tn
Hanoi actually were free
The withdrawal of Arnencan
troops stopped 12 days ago
during another wrangle over
tlle release of remaimng U. S.
pnsoners m lndochma.
As soon as word arrived that
Hanot had freed 32 POWs, the
ftrst planes home took off from
Satgon wtth 936 servtcemen
The last U S. servtcemen
leavmg South Vietnam offlctally wtll board a plane
Thursday at 4 a.m. EST, endmg a presence that at one
lime numbered 543,400 men
and women Before hts
departu?e, a ceremony at Ton
Son Nhut alrhase will close the
offtcial American mtlitary

TEN CENTS

I

y

highest rankmg Army prisoner undertake a useful endeaver
taken durmg tlle war, stepped for the happmess of mankmd."
from the ambulance plane
Mter his remarks, the rest of
today and told a welcommg the POWs stepped smartly off
crowd of 300 in a finn voice: tlle plane 10 a hght rain,
' 'Man's most
precious saluted the flag and walked
possesston, second only to life qwckly to a watting ambulance
ttself, IS freedom. Today, 32 of bus.
All the men appeared m
us have regained our freedom
and the chance to start agam excellent phystcal condition,
although slightly pale. A scar
our life."
Purcell, who has a son at on tlle right cheek of Marme
West Point, added, "We rejoice Sgt Jose J Amlaldua Jr., 22, of
at this opportunity to rejom our Refugio, Tex was the only
families, to find our place in .mdtcatwn of any physical
the great American society and unpatrtnent.
once again hopefully fmd and
A blonde teen..age gtrl broke
from the crowd to present Air
Force Capt William J Henderson, 25, of Milwaukee, Wis.,
a small Amertcan flag and a
single long..stemmed rose. The
deadlme written into the Parts gtrl, Anne Rtlzman, 13, whose
cease-fire agreement.
father IS based at Clark, said
"This will end the U.S. she ran to Henderson "cause I
mthtary presence m Vtet- wanted to, cause they deserve
nam," said press secretary tl.'' Henderson hugged the gtrl.
Ronald L Ziegler
The five ctviltans released
But American B-52's eon- today looked as healthy as the
tmue to bomb in Cambodia milttary POWs. All were all
where a ceasefire has not yet
(Continued on Page 8)
been achieved.
Ntxon will meet wtth Thieu
Aprtl 2-3 m San Clemente,
Calif A full ceremonial arrival
ts bemg planned for the Saigon
leader at tlle Western Wbtte
House.
The lhtrd reading of an orThetr ialks are expected to dmance establishing a percenter on postwar atd to South m1ss1ve auto hcense fee 10
failed
Vtetnarn and ways to bolster Mtddleport
to
Thteu's government in the matenahze as antlctpated
commg pobttcal struggle wtth when Mtddleport Village
the communtsts.
Counctl met 10 regular sesswn
In other developments, Zie- Monday mght
gler expressed Nixon's "total
Two prevwus readmgs had
confidence" m Wbtte House been approved by council in the
counsel John W. Dean Ill two meetings precedmg last
desptte reports m the Los mght's sesswn However last
Angeles Times that James mght counctl went mto a brtef
McCord satd Dean had "prtor "executive" sessiOn wtth
knowledge" of the buggmg of Soltctlor Bernard Fultz
tlle Democratic Nattonal Com- Although the press was barred,.
mtttee at the Watergate last agreement apparently was
June. Ziegler satd the charge reached at that lime to delay _
was ''totally false.''
or gtve up- tlle tlltrd required
Ntxon was accompaiued readmg.
•
hack to Washington by his
The lack of act10 n may have
daughter Julie Etsenhower been tnsptred by the presence
who made two public ap- of Mr and Mrs James Brewer
pearances m the Mtamt area who satd they would address
Monday.
counctltf the thtrd readmg of
the auto hcense fee measure
was brought up.
The legtslatwn was not
mentioned The Brewers dtd
not speak, although Mayor
mvolvement
John Zerkle offered them the
The
resumphon
of
•
"Operation Countdown,'' as
Americans call the troop
pullout, began when a
gleaming C141 Starhfter ]et
bound for tlle Umted States
took off at 5 35 p.m. (4.35 a m.
NEW HAVEN - New Haven
EST)
Town Council Monday night
ThiS was more than one hour approved turning over $500 of
after the 32 POWs left Hanm's revenue sharing money to the
Gta Lam Atrport to begm the New Haven Library Board for
long-delayed fourth phase of improvements of the hbrary
the POW release
and diScussed with a consultmg

NIXOD h
e

PHONE 992-2156

"

Act.

Spr~ngf1eld,

Cal1t
97. -' Cmdr Aubrey A
NIChols, 33 , El Paso, Tex
98. Lt Cmdr Gordoo C
Pa1ge, 29, Los Altos, Calli.
99 u · ll.g.) Michael G
Penn, 27, Fl Worth, Tex

Eagle rank to Bartels

COLUMBUS - A TEMPORARY restraiDIDg order was
issued Monday by Franklin County Common Pleas Court
prohibiting San TeleVISion and Appliances, Inc., here from
engaging m activities whtch state Attorney General Wilham J.
Brown allegedly violated the Ohio Consumer Sales Practtces

Frisco, Tex

wa, 37 , "lewcastle and Auburn,

- ~QMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,

CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (UP!) - The last 32
American prisoners of war
held by the Viet Cong flew to
freedom today, the first phase
of a three-day operation to
clear Indochina priSOns of all
U.S. POWs.
The returning men-27 miJi.
tary men and five civiliansappeared healthy, stood
ramrod straight and were led
by an Army colonel who
rejotced at regaining ''man's
most precious possession, next
to life itself... freedom."
Four more Air Force
hospttal jets will fly to Hanoi
Wednesday and Thursday to
pitk up 116 other prisoners to
be freed by North Vietnam and
the Conununist Pathet Lao m

Boy Scout Troop 103 Of tlle
Stevensvtlle ( Michtgan)
Methodtst Church awarded an
Eagle Scout cttalton to BtU
Bartels on Monday. He ts the
grandson of Mr. and Mrs
Emmt! Bartels, Syracuse, and
of Mrs Norma Goodwm of
Pomeroy
Bartels, 15, JOtned scouts m
the cubbing program m 1967
He IS currently a staff member
of Camp Madron and is dtStrtct
chairman for the Order of the
Arrow Lodge
In addtllon to scouting,
Bartels has been acltve in
theatrical productions since
1967 when . he starred m
"Oliver" wtth the Tw10 City
Players, later starr10g m other
productions of the Twm City
Players and the Gateway
Players of New Buffalo, m
addthon to numerous htgh
school productions.
Among .the productions In

W~ther

Devoted To The lnteruu Of'l1wMeig8·Maaon Area

ast

BILL BARTELS

•

at y

VOL XXIV NO. 241 .

n.s

Vavroach, 25, Tama , Iowa

and Lemoore, Cal1f
·
9J
Ll l..mdr Henry D.
Lesesne, 38, Columbia, S.C.
94 Lt Frederick J Masterson. 28, Seattle, Wash
95 Lt Albert R Mol mare. 27.
San D1ego, Calif
96 Cmdr Gordon R. Nakaga

Succession (1778) was referred
to by contemporary htstorlans
as the "potato war" because
there was very little ftghting,
opponents concentrating efforts to cut off each other's food
supply

CAPE KENNEDY -SPACE AGENCY plans to launch the
nation's !trSt manned orbtting laboratory in May appear brighter
today wttll the successful completion of the last end-to~nd test a(
tlle big ~ylab space station Project officials are reviewing test
results and all other preparations for the start of the
bllliort
program. Adecision on a definite launch date is expected withlll
ID days.
Sky lab tentatively is set for launch May 14 wtlh astronautS
Charles "Pete" Conrad, Joseph P. Kerwin and Paul J. Weilz to
take off the next day and spent a record four weeks in the station.
Chances for a mid-May launching improved sil!nlflcantly SUndaY,
wtth the completion of a five-&amp;y flight readiness test that
checked all major systems and experbnents In the house..stZed
spacecraft

dresse, 29, lake Jackson, Tex ,

ELVIS ON TOUR
(Techni&lt;Dior)
NIGHT OF THE
LEPUS
ITechmcolor)
Stuart Whitman
Janet Leigh

32, Emmaus, Pa
74. Lt Col William H Talley,
40, Sayre, Okla , and W1chlla,

News ••• in Briefs
.

NEW YORK- ADRAMA 11IAT began life 10 months ago off
Broadway and then moved uptown to Times Square, and a
musical that was inspu-ed by a Swedish motion picture won the
Broadway theater's top Tony Awards Sunday night as best play
and best mustcal m the April 3, 197Z-March 11, 1973 period. The
play is "That Championship Season" by Jason Miller, and the
musical IS "A Little Ntght Music" with score by Stephen Sond·
hetm
and book by Hugh Wheeler.
Trrebel, 31, V1enna , Va .. and
The major acting Tonys In drama went to Alan Bates for his
San D1ego and San Bernardino,
Cal1f
work in "Sutley," whtch Is now touring after its New York run,
106 Lt Carl T Wieland, 26, and to Julie Harris for "The Last of Mrs. Uncoln," which closed
Orlando. Fla
after a short run. In the musical field, winning stars were Ben
MARINE
107 Capt Wdl1am K Angu ~, Vereen of "Pippin," a hit at the Winter Garden, and Glynis Johns
27, Scottsda le, Am
of "A Little Ntgh!Muslc," a hit at the Shubert Theater. "A Little
Ntghl Mustc," produced and directed by Harold Prince, took six
Tonys m tlle 18 categories, besting "Pippin" by one.

Lou1s and Warrenton, 26, Upper Marlboro, Md

fon1ght &amp; Tuesday
March26-27

FOR

WENDELL GRATE

••

! he War of the Bavarian

Oyer, Ed Thompson and
John Shoemaker. Second·
team picks were Mark Mace
of AlheDB, Jeff Hannon of
Ironton, Jim Plerce of
Logan, Jim Boggs of Meigs
and Blll Maloy of Waverly.
Third-team picks were Dan
Morrow of Jackson, Randy
Norris of Logan, Blll Chaney
of Meigs, Dave Salyers of
Waverly and Dave Souders
of Wellston.
Honorable mention selecttons were Andy Chonko,
Athens ; Mark Kiesling,
ialhpolis; Ken Green, Ironton; Tom Conroy, Jackson;
Jeff Campbell, Logan; Mike
Sayre, Meigs; Doug Pfeifer,
Waverly; and Charhe Snare,
Wellston

floor twtce
Unolhctally, The Daily
Sentmellearned the pro osed
tax 1 d d
P
Tw~c:a prevwusly the $5
permtSstve auto hcense fee has
been voted down b Mtddle ort
restde ts h thy
P
n w en e measure
was taken to the voters through
referendum aclton Verner
See h
th
• w o was ac11ve m e two
ear her referendum achons
has mdtcated pubhcly that h~
would brmg about a tlltrd such
dd
action 11
counct1 procee e
agam to pass legtslatwn for the
tax
Mrs. Edwm Coates agam
met with Mtddleporl Council
and Sohcttor Fultz Monday
mght seekmg a dectsiOn on a
parkmg meter placed midway
m a dnveway to the Side of her
property on Coal and North
Second Ave She satd tllat the

At the request of a busmess
ftrm, apparently planmng to
order fall merchandtse, counctl
dectded that there wtll not be a
trtck or treat mght m Mtd·
dleport m October. The observance gave way last year to a
party staged for . youngsters.
Counctl felt that 11 would be
wtse to follow last year's
pol
tcy.
Counctl discussed what
actt~n~ 11 wtll take on. the
closmg of streets and
establi h
t f
s men o o_ne way
lrafftc near the Mtddleport
Park when the ball season gets
underway, but took no action.
Councilman Rtchard Vaughan
also ~sked counctl to consider
adopting a poltcy of permtltmg
no left turns at traffic lights
because of tlle traffic tie-ups
they cause Mayor Zerkle
asked counctl members to take
meter tmpatred her mgress
"ha d 1
and egress and had asked that a
r ook" at the problem
the meter be removed. Co~nctl and come up wtlh tdeas on
voted unammously to remove what should be done
the meter.
A complamt was relayed by
Counctlman Lawrence Stewart

that trucks move across North
Second Ave , wtthout proper
regard for the safety of oncommg motorists. Chtef J J.
Cremeans was asked to contact
the owner of the ftrm for whom
the drtvers work.
Mayor Zerkle satd pohce will
be more watchful to enforce an
ordtnance whtch prohtbtls
th
t h
d
rowmg ras an garbage
over the nverbank after
Counctlman Vaughan put 10 the
record complamts of 11 hapn
C
I dl
pe t~g. ounct
scussed
prohtbttmg parking on one
stde of Rutland St., he tween
Second and Thtrd Avenues but
tndtcated that 11 does not wish
I? create any hardship for a
ltrm where loading and
unloadmg IS bemg carried out.
Attendmg the meetmg were
Mayor Zerkle, Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate, Counctl members,
Mrs. Jean Morgan, Vaughan,
St~wart, Davtd Ohltnger,
Wtlham Walters, and Fred
Hoffman, Pohce Chtef J J
Cremeans and Sohcttor Fultz.

:::::..~::::::::::;.;:;:;:;:::;.;.:::.:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·•• ,•!•!·.·!·!·.•!•!•!•!•!•!•!·!·:·:·:·:·:·.·:·: :·:·!·!·!· •'•' '•!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·! !·!: !,i·!

:~

Clevelanders asked to bring

Decision
affinned

..

!;'

::'

meat industry to its knees

··
CLEVELAND tUPI) - Cleveland City Councll
::: passed a resolullon Monday night designed to "briDg the
:.· ;.:·:'
:
..
....
:;:;

A decision by Dr John W
Cashman, Oh10 Dtrector of
Health, against the reopenmg
of Metgs General Hospttal has
been alftrmed by the office of
Gov John J Gtlhgan.
D A Canaday, busmess
agent of the hospttal, made
public today lhts letter from
John E Hanson, chtef of staff
for tlle governor:
"Governor Gtlhgan asked
me to acknowledge your letter
of Feb 26, 1973. As you know
the deciSion on Metgs General
Hospital rests enltrely wtth Dr.
Cashman, dtrector of the Ohw
Department of Health We are
satislted Dr Cashman gave the
matter fatr cons1deralton We
support his posttion "
Meanwhtle , tl was announced here that petitions wtll
he passed here askmg the
governor to use hts offtce to
reopen the hospttal Peltttons
have been prmted and are
avatlable at Metgs General
Hospttal where they may be
ptcked up from 8·30 a.m. to
11.30a m and from 1 p m to 4
pm
The petitiOns read
'" we, the undersigned do
hereby petition the governor to
atd and asstst us, residents to
Metgs County, to have a
hospital opened m the Metgs
General Hospttal bulldmg, w.
Second St."
Anyone havmg any questions
about the petiltons may call the
hospttal during the designated
hours, 992-2445.

meat
Industry
Its knees."
At Its ofregular
weekly
meeting,
counciltoproclahned
the month
Aprll "boycott
meat month" here.
Clevelanders were urged not to buy meat to combat
"an Intolerable hardship on the financial resources of :::~
engmeer secondary sewage !:!,!_! American famllles." The resolution's sponsor, Coun· :_;.:;
:
cilman Basil Russo, said he submitted the measure to
treatment
~:~:
"bring the meat IDdustry to Its knees ."
Present were Mayor John
Thorne, Town Recorder Jane ·~=:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!•.·!•! !·!·!·!•!•!·!·!·!·:·:·:::·:O!•!•!•!•!·!•!•!&lt;•!•!•!·!·!·!•!•!•!•!·!·!· •' !•!•!·:···,•!•!•!•!·!•!•!•!•!•!•!0:•!•!•!•!·!·!·!·!·!·£·~
Russell and Counctlmen
Wayne Carter, David Sunonton
and Charles Smtih .
The motion for the hbrary
proposal improvements was
made by Simonton. Water
ERIE, Pa. (UP!) - A jury far for the Dec 31, 1969,
Supt Richard Walker was Monday mght convicted forktlhngs of union reformer
instructed to have the curb in mer unton orgamzer WIUiam J.
Joseph A "Jock" Yablonski,
front of the library psmted Prater of first degree murder
his wtfe and daughter. Wben
yellow to allow visitors parkmg m the Yablonski slaymgs. The
sentenced later, he could
space to the hbrary.
prosecutor clauned the con- recetve three maximum terms
Harold Starcher of a con- spiracy ultimately would lead
of life imprisonment There
sultmg engineermg ftrm of to former Umted Mine Workers
was no sentencmg date set
Ripley discussed sewage (UMW) Prestdent W. A.
Family woks On
treatment. Starcher was the "Tony" Boyle.
With his wife and stx of his
third representative of an
The Jury of seven men and seven chlldreJl lookmg on and
engineermg ftrm to meet with ftve women announced its
crying softly, Prater sat erect
council on that toptc.
verdict m an almost empty and stared wtthout emotton at
courtroom at 11 26 p m. EST, tlle jury when the verdict was
nearly seven hours after it read As he left the courtroom.
CLOTHING DAY SET
recetved the case An appeal
Free clothmg day will be and a request for a new lrtal Prater smiled and waved at his
family.
held at the SalvatiOn Army HQ, wtll be filed later
'"We'll keep ftghtmg from
Butternut Ave ., Pomeroy,
Prater, 53, was the highest here .'
That
was
his
from ID a.m to noon Thursday ranking UMW offictal trted so
statement," smd defense at'•.
... •'. '•'• .•.•.•,•,•, •'•'• ...... ... .. ..... .
•• •••• ,•,•,•. •'•' •••••••• ••• •••••.•!·:·:·:·:·:·:·: ·:~·:O:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:-:-.·:·:·:·!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!•!·!o:;;.:.:;:.:«·:·:o:::·:·!!::! torney H. David Rothman.
The only two survivmg
Persons buying 1973 farm truck licenses must qua!Uy by
members of Yablonski's imsigning an affidavit that their farm vehicle Is used at least 75
mediate family, sons Kenneth
pet. of the lime on farm uses.
and Joseph, both lawyers,
A report published Sunday was in error In using the
walked grimly from the courtphrase, "75 pet. of Income."
room after Prater left.
Ohio law recognizes that farm vehicles will be used for
Erie County Judge Edward
"pleasure" part of the time, that Is, traveling to and from
Carney hnd told the jury tl
farm to town, To qualify lor the farm truck license, bowever,
could return one of four verLOCAL TEMPS
the law is interpreted to mean the baste use of tbe truck must
dicts on each of the three
The temperature m downbe on the farm llseH and represent 75 pet. or more of the total
murder charges.
town Pomeroy at lJ a.m.
usage.
In hts instructions. Car~ Tuesday was 54 degrees, under
sunny skies
( Con~nued 'On P~ge 8)

t

f

Prater guilty

.

....

\ '

'

�2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 'J:i,1973

:;:;.,

Women fighting ERA
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
Columbus-based women's
group has mounted an
eleventh-hour drtve deslgned
to slop passage of the proposed
"equal rtghts" amendment
(ERA) to the US. Constitution,
scheduled for a vote Wednesday m the Ohto House.
Responses have been reported heavy, and were expected to
reach new hetghts today as the
Amertcan Women Already
Richly Endowed (AWARE)
pressed 1ts wrtte-in campatgn
launched
through Ohto
newspapers.
The latest target of the women's group was the Franklin
County delegation . Women
were urged to notify Columbusarea legislators they want a
"no" vote on the ERA.
Chtef sponsor of the resolution gomg before the House
Wednesday lS Rep Mtchael
Stinziano, D-Columbus.
AWARE sponsored a
quarterpage advertisement m
Ute Columbus Qtspatch last
Frtday enhtled "The Fraud
Called the Equal Rtghts
Amendment." It detatled
reasons for opposmg the
amendment.
The ad contamed coupons
reading: "! am opposed to
ERA, please vote no r" They
were to be signed, clipped and
sent to Rep. William Kopp, DColumbus,
and
Senate
President Pro tempore
Theodore M Gray, RColumbus
Gray's offtce Monday reported about 100 responses in the
ftrst mailing received since
publicatton of the adverllsement
Ad Makes Changes
The ad satd tf the ERA is
adopted, women wtll lose draft
exemptton, Soctal Securtty and
support beneftts, separate pubhe restroom facthhes, r1ght to
pr1vacy based on sex and pro-

tecttve labor laws.
Mrs. Glen Payn~. national
president of AWARE, satd
simllar ads were placed m
other newspapers around the
state She was unable to say
bow many, or esitmate the cost
to the orgaruzation, except to
cite $500 as the cost of the ad m
the Columbus paper
Mrs. Payne said that to save
money, members of her
orgamzation made coptes of
the ad and were dtstrtbutmg 1t
by hand 10 hopes of gett10g
more respons~.;S

"Anyone from this area, mcluding young people, may
stgn, as all people will be affected by the ERA," the ad
said "All young gtrls wbo don't
wish to be drafted should be
sure to Slgn the forms also."
The amendment, already
raltfted by 30 states out of the
38 reqmred, would msert m the
U.S Constitution a provision
forbtdding the federal government or states to make or keep
laws whtch discriminate on the
basts of sex.

Knowledge of Watergate
is believed widespre4d
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
Repubhcan member of the
Senate's Watergate mvestlgat10g commtttee says he
IS sure some of Prestdent
N1xon 's adv1sers knew of or
condoned pohtlcal espwnage
agamst the Democrats dunng
last year' s prestdenllal
campatgns.

Sen Lowell P Weicker Jr ,
R-Conn , was asked durmg a
UP! interv1ew Monday: "Do
you thmk there are such
persons, presidenhal advisers,
who kn ew of or condoned the
Watergate or other pohltcal
espwnage?••
1
' Sure, sure," he rephed
"I

..

.::-:-:·: :· ':·:·:·. :·:·:·:·: :::::-::: ::::;.;., .:·:·:

COLUMBUS (UPI) -The
Ohio House of Representatives was urged today to
defeat the proposed "Equal
Rlgltls Amendment" to the
U.S. Constitution by the Ohio
AFL-CIO, which claimed II
"could destroy more rights
than it creates."
"What IS really needed Is
the passage of laws speUing
out the rights of women, " the
labor federation said In the
lates t issues of its newsletter, " News and Views."

"We would not like to see
women lulled into a false
fe eling they would have
certain rights just because of
passage of this ERA.
•!•!•!·

·=·=·:·.·:·:·: .-:::::: :::::·:.:::::·:·: ··:·.·!·. .

.•:··

PRIZES AWARDED
Pmes have been awarded m
conJuncllon with the stxth
anniversary observance of
lola's, East Mam St,
Pomeroy. Wmners were Vwla
Rumfield, near Pomeroy; Mrs
V1lma Ptkkoja, Pomeroy, and
Mrs Esther Fuga te, Pomeroy
ON DEAN'S LIST
Karen Lynn Grifft th,
da ughter of Mr and Mrs
Charles E Gnffith, Pomeroy,
was named to the dean's hst at
Oh10 State Umversity for the
wtnter quar te r Karen, an
ammal science major carrymg
21 hours, recetved a 3.5
average on a 4 0 scale She IS a
)UntOr

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 'J:l, 1973

tAMPA, Fla . (UP!) - Cmcmnati Reds veteran thll'd
baseman Denis Menke
remembers the help he
recetved from ballplayers
when he was a youngster and
bas mentally prepared himself
for the day when he uses his
to
tram
experienc~
newcomers.

Menke, 32, has been asked to
work with rookie Dan Drtessen
at third base thts year by
manager Sparky Anderson and
coach Alex Granunas. Menke
ts happy to oblige.
Menke: remembering his
early years wtth Ute Braves,
SBld shortstop Roy McMillan
helped him learn the ropes.

OS'U's Taylor to
meet with Weaver
COLUMBUS, Ohto (UP! ) Ohto State basketball coach
Fred Taylor lS expected to
meet toda·y wtth OSU Athletic
D1rector J. Ed Weaver to
diSCuss an offer made to Taylor
to accept the basketball
coachmg job at Northwestern .
"I don't really know where
we stand nght now, but we're
gomg to Sit down and talk,"
sa1d Weaver. "I hope we can
get together Certainly we
would hke to keep Fred, but I
don' t know whether we can
meet thelr offer "
Taylor has been m St Louis
for most of the past week
completing his term as
preSident of the National
Assoctation of Basketball
Coaches
Tippy Dye, Northwestern
Athleltc Director, and Taylor's
former basketball coach at
OSU, has been attempting to

lure Taylor to Northwestern
for the past two weeks.
Taylor makes $22,000 a year
at Ohw State and Northwestern, a private school, 1s
believed to have offered
constderably more money plus
frmge beneftls such as a rent
free home.

GROUP I DINES
The annual dinner of Group I
of the Umted Presbytenan
Church of Middleport was held
Monday mght at the Holiday
Inn, Galhpolis. Attending were
Mrs DwtghtZavitz, Mrs Edtth
Ztrkle, Mrs Karen Sprouse,
Mrs Carolyn Satterfteld, Mrs.
Ruby Vaughan, Mrs. Jean
Ellen Kelly, Mrs Judy Crooks,
Mrs Marcella Coleman, Mrs.
Eleanor McKelvey, and Mrs.
Dana Kessmger.

am not referring to th e
President of the Umted States,
~=·:·:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!•!•!•!•!•f.::::~:·:-:=:::::::::::-:·:·:=:--::::::~
but those around htm ... "
~~:
~=:
I
~ Weteker satd he believed
N1xon was gmlty "of acceptmg
wrong advtce" from those
around h1m m trymg to cover
11::
,!I\ up the scandal involvmg the
Mrs Betty Cline spent the bugg mg of DemocratiC
weekend m Canton vtsthng Mr Nattonal Committee
headquarters at the Watergate
and Mrs Glenn Mann.
apartment
complex last June.
Mr and Mrs John Bowman
of Colum bus were weekend
guesls of her parents, Mr and
CLUB PLANNED
Mrs
Karl Owen
The
RUTLAND- There wtll be a For Rent
Bowrnans' daughter, Susan, Is meetmg to orgamze a Senior 5 ROOMS and bath, 120 L1ncoln
H1ll Rd. Phone 992 2433
mFort Lauderdale, Fla. on her C1tlzens' Club m the Rutland
3-27 31c
sprtng break from college.
area, Thursday at 1 p m. at the
Mr and Mrs. Wilham Bland, Method1st Church. The church ONE bedroom trader. adu lt s
BY PAUL CRABTaEE
only, m Middl eport Phone
Carla and Cathy, Akron, spent has donated use of a room m
992 5592
I am aU alone, in a temporaruy..-ented apartment m
Fnday and Saturday here the basement as a Semor
3 27
tic
Charleston,
W Va It's on the third floor of a big, old, rambling
VISitmg Mrs Ntna Bland and C1tlzens' Clubroom Everyone - - - - - -Real Estate tor sa le
frame house. Thetwolower floors are ftlled with antiques, which
M1 s Pearl Reynolds
m the area mterested ts m- AT DARWIN. 5 rooms, city theownerofthehousesellsonthe premises.
vtled Coffee and cook1es wtll
water. approxrmately I acre,
There's qmte an assortment of furmture brtc~-bra c and
on Route JJ lm med1 ate oc
'
be served.
cupancy, rea l buy , $ 4,ooo memorabilia down there, mcluding an autographed photo of
Phone 773 55BO
Prestdent Wtlson and a portratt of Pope Benedict XV, whoever he
ON DEAN'S LIST
. , . - - - - - -- -3_2_7 Sip was
CHESTER- Charles Henry FOR SALE by owner - New
The mght ts cloud-darkened and stormy, with occasional
Etchmger, son of Mrs. Opal
aparlment bu1ldmg, 4 un1ts on distant hghtmng flashing across the western sky. It's pretty
three and th ree t enths acres.
Etchmger, Chester, has been
c1ty or well water. all electn c. gloomy, but not nearly so dreary as the offerings on the Utree TV
named to the dean's hst at Ohto
15 mmute drrve from Oh1o stations 1can recetve this lonely evemng, wtth reruns nuxed wtth
By Helen Hottel
Um versr ty. Apar tments are shows 1 1·ust don't care for
State Umverstty for the wmter
fu rm shed and rented Good
quarter
mcome Pri ced to sell PhoQe
So I haul out a radto, ahnost new and bought at a bargain• •
173 SSBO
basement 2J,ice from mall-order bqutdator. I cut over to the
Whose Mistake Was THIS?
3_ 2_7 51P FM band, knowmg I should be able to get ai least three "easy
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
Dear Helen:
hstenmg" stabons, a gospel stabon and a rock outlet, at the very
My m-laws hate me because l run my husband's hfe mstead
WIN AT BRIDGE
least.
of them. What I say in my house goes because my husband
Then the weird stuff begins.
doesn't knowwhatbfeis all about. I try to tell him what to do and
Down at the bottom of the FM dtal, a preacher is berating
how to do tt, and he thinks he can do 11 better the way hts family
smners and welfare clients with equal zest. The gospel statior.
tells him, which ts dumb because none of them know which end lS
NORTH
27
!messed
aga
mst
East
s
jack
should be at 99 9on thedtal, but thts lS down around 88.
up, mcludmg hun.
"'A 10 7 3
and
made
h1s
spade
game
Cotmng up the dtal, fascinated and a little flaky-feel10g, I
Dtd I make a b1g nustake when l sa1d "I do"? - B.T .0.
¥Q4
If you are confu sed by the fmct a cnsply~ccented British voice dtscussmg the "trouble" in
t 5
btddmg you should bea r m
.A K1654
Dear B.:
mmd that modern expert Ireland. Thts " at 91 on the dial, aod the BBC JUSt doesn't
WEST
EAST (D)
From here, tt looks hke your husband made the miStake. btddmg IS a fearsome thmg broadcast on that spot.
.Q
4
.J6
Another twtst, up to 93, and there is a votce in purest Spamsh
mdeed North's two-heart
H.
¥8 2
¥AK1065
was
an
astro
cue
b1d
to
call
yammermg
away mtelligenUy - if you speak Spanish, which I
+++
tKQ 2
tA1086 3
clubs
and
spades
show
don't. Man, thiS is somethmg else, aod I listed for a couple of
Dear Helen:
... QJ10982 . 3
It
wurked
this
ttme
bemmutes.
There's much controversy today over the non-mamage.
SOUTH
cause
South,
who
could
not
At 95 on the dtal, a Canadian Nmmentator IS talking about
.K98 52
Perhaps my experience wtll help.
be expected to hold much m
•
J
91
3
I was just dtvorced when I met Bill, and didn't want to be
the way of hi gh cards, had Canada's health servtces. I liSten transfixed, wtth the eerie
• J914
caught on the rebound. l was wary and bttter - no more "traps"
the perfect hand and m ad· feeling somethmg very improbable is gomg on around here
• vord
Maybe tt's thts big empty house . Maybe I should have
he played well and
dillon
for me!
Both vulnerable
the
hand
broke
fav
orably
saluted Woodrow Wtlson or genuflected before the likeness of the
Well, after a year, Bill was ready for mamage, but I still
Wcsl North East South
gtve
West
or
East
the
Just
Pope, or somethmg.
wanted my freedom m case 11 dtdn 't work out. So we dectded to
1¥
Pass
queen-Jack-small of spades
!NT
2
¥
Pass
4
"'
I spend most of ball-hour down there on the lower part of the
live together. Everyone we knew was great about it - no static
and South would be down
Pass
Pa ss
Pass
FM
band, hearmg these fa10t-but-unmistakable voices upbraid
from either family.
at least one at hts four-spade
Opemng lead-¥ 8
the
unrepentant,
talk about tbe British Commonwealth, and
contract
Well, we got along wonderfully and, after two years, l was
Furthermore, North was Jabber in SpaniSh.
ready for that license. Surprtse! Bill wasn't. He gave me the
By
Oswald
&amp; James Jacob) really playing w•th dynamtte
Reason says thts house cannot be haunted. But the radio
same hberated hne I handed hun back then.
when
he
stuck
m
hts
astro
doesn't seem to know that. And I have heard no call letters, so I
The luck factor lS always
I took a "Marry me or leave" attitude, but it was still touch
cue btd Suppose East's spin the dial all the way up.
present
m
IMP
matches
At
and go. While Bill was ftghtmg to keep his freedom, I kept saymg,
table m the match West openmg btd had included
I can't fmd the rock station, and by thts time, I would enjoy'
"There's no guarantee it wtll work. All we can do is try." Now l one
played at three clubs and four spades to the king as even hea rmg Little Rtchard's Greatest Hits. But the gospel
realize the same thmg apphed two years befor e, only l wouldn't went down two tncks for the second suit South would
lace tt.
what should have been a have had to try two spades preacher reappears reassuringly, at 99.9 where he belongs, and
w1th a three-card su1t and also at 98, 103 and even 107.
We have been marned two monUts now and I'm so glad we normal losmg result
a double would have left
The British-Canadtan commentary, it turns out, ts a world
At the ot her table the btd- htm somewhere between a
did tl. Of course we forfeited all the fun of newlyweds, for we set
dmg
went
as
shown
m
the
up housekeeping a long time ago.
rock and a very hard place. press roundup on one of the "good music" stations, which I can
find at 102.7, as I should, but also at 97, ID4 and 106 on Ute dial. My
Thts then lS a small remmder Girls, tf you talk your man box The defense dtd •Is
(HEWSPAP ER ENTERPRISE ASSH I
best East cashed two hearts
palms become less clammy
10to a hberated hve-together Situation, don't be surprtsed if he and a •hamond and then led
The preacher wmds down and the gospel station tdentifies
learns to hke it better Ulan you do after while.- HAPPY TO BE a thtr J heart. West ruffed
itself, close to home. The bristles on the back of my neck fall back
wtth the queen but after
A MRS.
The b1ddmg has been
dummy overrulfect. • South
into place.
West
North
East
South
Another round of !me-tuning, and another easy~tstening
O:~.W.GSOl.*=*:·:·:.:::::::.; ··-::::: .;. ··::· •
It
1.
station
can be located, at tis proper place. My eyeballs stop
'
You, Soulh, hold
hulgmg
"'KJ3 ¥KJ3 tK l0;4 .K 96
The reason ts very sunple, I reason to myself, as I switch to
What do you do'1
the AM band and find the local stations all 10 their proper
A-Bid two no- trump The
position : There was no ghost or spirt! present.! just had boUght
spade O\ creal! has not affected
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Ius sense of humor as 1t drowned m ego and your hand one iota ,
myself a crummy radio, one that has a bad FM tuner. Then a
MARLENE- AMANY.SIDED LEGEND
served nollce of smt for some exorbttant
chtlling
Utought strikes me:
TODAY'S QUESTION
NEW YORK (KFS ) - No one argues the collectton of embarrassment, and money That
Where in tbe heck dtd that Spamsh-language broadcast come
Your pa r tner contmues to
legend of Marlene D1etrtch It's all true It's was over her recent TV spectal produced by th ree spades What do you do from• Charleston, W. Va ,ts at least five hundred miles from the
1
arguable that she's a !me actress, some Cohen whtch Marlene sensed m advance, wtth now'
nearest Latin-Amertcan language station!
mysogtmstic cymes inSist she can't act a lick ultimate reason , was somewhat unspec1al One
Okay, Pope Benedict, just to be on the safe slde, here goes:
nor lick a senous actmg problem or even a N. Y cad, Ted Brown, satd the ca mera work
Hail, Mary, lull_of grace ...
The Dai~ Sentinel
mmor one, but that's plainlv not true. She has md tcated "she was shot through a chicken."
DEVOTED TO THE
suffered more than a fe• • ' npls wh1ch ask little That " as a s1mple, harsh exaggeration of the
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
more tnan to be sultr and she dehve1s the fact that all, well, er, mature actresses are
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Eel
lowe•ed-eye b•t 1n he1·. l"ated fashwn !em ned filmed w1th the help of filters, gauze,
ROBERT HOEFLICH .
over the 70 to 74 yea1s Gl her hie accordmg to ca mouflaged d1stracttons from stgns of age ;
C1ty EC11t0r
Adolph TuesdJJy
PubliShed dally except
whtch almanac or enemy you 1ead , we'll take some even have been accused of hav10g been
Saturday by 'T he Oh10 Vallev
the almanac's word m.~ .ce Marlene as a ktd of !timed through concrete, but thts agam ts Pub Hsh 1no Company , 111
and WednesdJJy
72. More than that would be caddiSh.
magmftcation for cruel cntical comedy. But tt Court St , Pomeroy , Ohio ,
•SJ69 Business Off ice Phone
SPECIAL!
We msist she can act funny, a Ia "Destry is true Marlene wtll not take her appearances 99 2 2156, Eclltonal Phone 992 ·
21l1
Rides Again" and a couple of wartime flicks m hghtly.
Sec ond class postage pa id at
Foot Long Hot Dog
which she was cast persuastvely m Germamc
Not too many Amencan producers wtsh to Pomeroy , Oh10
·
Nat i onal advertising
lOc Soft Drink
roles . Mostly, however, her talen ts have not produce a hmtted-to-six-weeks Dtetrtch one-gal representative
Bott lnelll
•
been summoned to thetr ternunal gtfts But one show; Alex Cohen, a press agent turned Gallagher , Inc , 12 East •2nd
IOc Potato Chips
New Yor k City , New York
thmg's ce•·tam, she never takes a role nor even a flamboyant producer whose more successful St.Subscription
rain
De
one-gtrl show lightly No matter the SIZe of the nohons mclude takmg established English htts lt\lered by carr~e r where
Reg . 65c
so~
so cen ts per week ,
aud1ence nor the remoteness o( •Is impact on lo Bdwy. and vice versa (he's in the way of ava•lable
Bv Motor Route where carnH
ce not avallabll One
news servtee r eviews
11 ansfcmng Nell Simon 's "Sunshme Boys" and l urvt
month $1 75 By ma •l In Oh to
She has grown petulant tn her advanced "6 Rms Rtv Vu" to London presently ) has a and w va, One year su DO
S•• months
S7 . 25
T!lree
experience; she took quite a fe•·, whacks at her more dari11g !lent; Marlene does take a great monthS
,_.SO Svbscr•ptlon
erstwhtle one-gal-show prOducer Alex Cohen m shce of the boxofftce ; ergo the reluctance of pnce •nc ludts Sunday Tlmn ·
At the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Senhnel
a Rex Reed-written otdeswipe, and Cohen lost more conservative entrepreneurs

Us.

··

Middleport · ·
Personal Notes

too late to

be classified

••

•

Menke helping young players

&amp; THINGS

8:

A Big, Brave Astra Cue Bid

I Voice along Br'Way

STOP I

"Day in and day out, McMillan was the best shortstop
I've ever seen smce I've been
in the game," said Menke.
He also credited Eddte Mathews, now manager of the
Braves; with assisting him.
~~Mathews
was
an
established star, one of the
btggest," said Menke. "But
when there was talk of moving

SERVICES TONIGHT
Prayer se rvices for the
Mtddleport F~rst Baptist
Church's evangelistic crusade
to be held next week will be
conducted tonight at the home
of Mrs. Beulah Whtte, 211
NorthFtfthAve ; at the church
Wednesday night; at the home
·of Mrs. Ehzabeth Gardner, 155
Garfteld Ave, Thursday night;
and at the home of Miss Rhoda
Hall, 631 South Second Ave.,
Friday mght

him to Ute outlleld and putting
me at third base, he couldn't
have been more helpful in
offering pointen Ill me on how
to play the position."

•

WISECUP HERE
Former sports writer for The
Daily Sentinel, Airman Keith
Wisecup, spent the weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Wisecup, Union Ave.,
Pomeroy. Wtsecup is stationed
at Lowry Air Force base at
Denver, Colo. Before entenng
the service Wisecup attended
Ohio University lor two years.
THANKS GIVEN
Mrs. Ralph Harvey, matron
of the children's home, extends
her thanks to Arnold Grate of
Rutland Furniture for his
donatton of a refrigerator, and
Don Covert, owner of Court
Street Cab, for a bicycle.

Television Log
TUESDAY, MARCH27, 1973
6 oo - News 3, ~ - B. 10. 13, 15; Truth or Con seq. 6, Sesame St. 20;
Around the Bend 33.
6 30 - News 3, 4, 6, B, 10. 15; Growing Him Up 33, I Dream of
Jeann 1e lJ

7 00 - What's My L1ne B. I've Got A Secret t3, Etec Co 20.

Beat the Clock 4, News 6, 10, Unfamed World 13 , TV Honor

Soc 1ety 15, Tru th or Conseq 3.

30 - This IS Your L1 fe 3, To Tell the Truth 6. Price Is Righi 8,
10; Beallhe Clock 13, Great DeciSions '73 33 , Circus 4; RFD20
20; People &amp; The Press 15
B00 - Temperatures Rrsmg 6, 13, Maude B, 10. Book Beat 33 ,
Ohro ThiS Week 20. Keep U S Beaulllul3, ~. 15

7

8 30- Hawaii F1ve- O 8, 10. 8111 Moyer 's Journal 20, 33, Mov1e

"No Place to Run" 6. 13.
9 oo - Behmd th e L1nes 20 33 . Cavalcade of Champions 3, 4,
15
9 30 - Black Journal 20, 33 , Movie " Footsteps Nice Guys
Fmi sh last " 8, 10

tO 00 - Marcus Welby M D 6, 13, News 20 , Oscar Awards 3. 4.
15
11 ·00 - News 3, ~. B, 13, 15
11 30 - Nightmare Step 6, 13 , Mov1es "Murder Most Foul" B,
"The Cracksman" 10

12 oo 12 30 I 00 1 30 2 00 -

News 3, 4, 15
Star Trek 4
News 13
Your Health 4

ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Unless Bill Walton is
wearing a professional basketball uniform next
season, the UCLA reign as kingpin of the college
game is likely to continue.
'Yalt?n proved why he is the No. 1 gate attraction m college ball by scoring a championship
game record 44 points while leading the Bruins to an
87-66 victory over the Tigers for a seventh straight
NCAA title.
Never in the · history of the
NCAA tournament has a player
been so devastating. He hit on
21-o£.22 shots, collected 13
rebounds and In general made
life miserable for the Memphis
State players, who, though
,beaten badly m the final score,
stayed close to the Bruins for 33
minutes.
"Walton lS about as physical
a big man as I've ever seen,"
said Memphis State Coach
Gene Bartow. "He did so many
thmgs well that we just
couldn't stop him. He's super,
the best coUegtate player I've
ever seen. We wanted to Ioree
him out more, but he was too
physteal. It got to be a shoving
match and he was too good."
Desptte Walton 's efforts,
though, Memphts State stayed
close to the Bruins until the last
seven and a half minutes of
play. Larry Finch, with 29
pomts, and Lar'?' Kenon, with
20, kept the Tigers m contention until the Bruins finally
wore them down.
"We took the fight to 'em and
they were better," smd Bartow "UCLA is a super, super
team with fine talent in additton to Walton. We just ran
out of gas "
Although the Bruins wrapped
up Utell' second consecutive

NCAA Tournament
tChamptonshtpl
UCLA 87 Memphis St 66
(Consolation)

Sunnse Sem 1nar 4, Sacred Heart 10

6 15 - Farml1me 10, EngliSh 3
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today~- Brble Answers 8· Urban League 10.
The Stor y 13 .
7 00 - Today 3, 4. 15 . CBS News B, 10 , News 6, Fllntstones 13
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers B, Romper Room 6, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13, Popeye 10
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13, sesame St. 33 ,
Lass1e 6

8 30 - Jac k LaLanne 13 , New Zoo Revue 6, Romper Room B
B 55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul DIXo n 4, Ph1l Donahue 15; What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3, Concentrat ion 6. Capt Kangaroo B.
Frrendly Junct1on 10 , Dr Kildare 13.
9 30 - Elec Co 33, To Tell the Truth 3, Jeopardy 4
10·00 - Drnah Shore 3.15; Columbus Six Calling 6; Joker's Wild
B. 10; Dick Van Dyke 13.
10 30 - Baffle 3. 4, 15; $10.000 Pyramid B, 10. Split Second 13
11 00 - Sa teofthe Century 3, 15, Love Amerrcan Style 6, Gamb1t
B. 10; Password 13
11 30- Hollywood Squares 4, 13, Love of Life 8, 10 , Bew1lched 6.
13; Sesame St. 20.
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15; Password 16; Bob Braun's 50 SO Club 4,
News 13, Con tact 8, News 10
12 30 - Spl1t Second6. Search for Tomorrow B, 10. 3 W's 3, 15
I 00 - News. Weather, Sports 3, All My Children 6, 13, Secret
Storm B; Not For Women Only 15 , Green Acres 10
1 20 - Fashrons in Sewing 3
1 30 - 3 On a Match 3, 4, 15 , Let's Make A Deal6, 13
2 00 - Days of Our L1ves 3, 4, 15 , New lywed Game 13; Mike
Douglass 6. Gu1drng L1ght B, 10
2 30 - Dating Game 13, Doctors 3, 4, 15 , Edge of NlghiB. 10
3 00 - Another World 3, tS ; General Hospital 6, 13; Love
Splendored Thmg 10 ; Thrs Week 20. Merv Grlff1n B, Phil
Don ahue 4

4 00 - Mr Carfoon 3. Somerset 15. Sesame St. 33, 20, Love
American Style 13. Merv Griffin 4, Huck leberry Hound·Yogi
Bear 6; Movie " A Man Betrayed" 10.

4 30 - Pelf1coat Junct1on 3, Gilligan's Island 8, Danie l Boone
131 D1ck Van Dyke 15, I Love Lucy 6, Merv Griffin 4.
5 00 - Mr Rogers 33 , Bonanza 3, ~ . Hazel 8, Andy Grrffllh 15,
Big Valley 6
5 30 - Elec Co 33, Gomer Pyle 13; Beverly Hlllb1llres B,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Death Valley Days 15
6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6. News 3, 4, B, 10, 15; Sesame 51 20;
Around the Bend 33.
6 30 - News3. ~. 6, B, 10, 15 , I Dream of Jeannie 3; Zoom 33
7 00 - News 6, 10. What's My Line B, Truth or Conseq. 3, Beat
the Clock 4, Anything You Can Do 13, Know Your Schools 33 ;
Elec Co 20. Fabulous Seven 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, The Judge 10. Pollee Surgeon 3,
Beat the Clock 13, Andy Grlfl lfh 15. Earthkeeping 20
Episode· Act1on 33; George Kirby B. The Crime 4
'
B00 - Adam-12 3, 4, t5 . Paul Lynde 6, 13, Dr. Seuss Cartoon a.
tO, Amerrca '73 20. 33.
B· 30 - Mad rgan 3, ~ . 15, Mov1e " Ruby Gentry" 6. 13; Selfish
Gia nt a. 10
9·00.- Mtlzi .. The First Time 8, 10 , Festival Films 20, learntng to Speak 33.
9 30 - Turnmg Pomts 20, 33.
to 00 - Soul 33, News 20, Owen Marshall6. 13. Search 3, 4, IS,
Appointment Wrth Destiny a, 10
11 00 - News3, ~.6,B.10, 13.15.
11 · 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, tl. Night Life 6, 13; Movie "Cannon"
Movie "Soldier In the Rain" 10
t·OO - News 4, 13

JUST ARRIVED!

ln d1ana 91 Prov1dence 79

"''""'l"'~''
Danny Sayre
The lightn rng rod did not
originate with Benja min
Franklin A Hebrew book
wrllfen rn the Blh century. a
thousand
years
before
Frankl in, contains an un
mi sta kab le refer ence to the

Lrghtnrng Conductor. The
reference found tn Cha pter

VII of Tosephta Sabbath
reads as follow s "Those
who erect Iron posts In the1r

gardens on the Sabbath ma y
do so prov1dmg the rods are
put there as a protection

against lrghtnlng"

OFFERED JOB
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Bob Gaillard, head basketball
coach for the Umversity of San
Francisco, has been offered the
same JOb at Long Beach State
Umversity, It was announced
Monday
A USF spokesman said
Gaillard would travel to Long
Beach Tuesday to discuss an
offer to replace the 49ers
departed Coach Jerry Tarkanian, who ts now at the
University of Nevada, Las
Vegas.
Terms of the offer were not
disclosed

Canadian Rtve r rtses in New
M exico, flo ws through Texas
and Oklahoma to Arkansas,
but does nof come near

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runnmg from every faucet tn
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New Haven, W. Va

Eastern Conference

Atlantic DiviSion
w. I. pet.
x- Boston
66 14 .a2s
New York
57 25 .695
Buttalo
21 59 .263
Philadelphia 9 73 110
Central DivisiOn

x Baltimore
Atlanta
Cleveland
Housfon

w. t
52 2B
46 35
32 48
31 49

Courting good looks ... They Are
Really -Nice

pet.
650
568
.400
.JBB

g.b.
10
44
57'h

g.b.
6'12

20

21

Western Conference
Mtdwest Divts1on

x Milwaukee
Chicago
Delroll
KC Omaha

w. I. pet. g.b.
59 22 72B

50 31 617 9
38 42 475 20'12
36 46 439 23'12

PacifiC DIVISIOn
w I. pel.

Los Angeles 59 21
Golden Stale 47 34
Phoenr ~
37 44
Seattle
26 55
Portland
20 62
x

73B
5BO
457
321
244

g.b.
l2'12
23
33'12
39

x Clinched dlviston tlfle

Monday's Results
Milwaukee 118 Portland 99
Phoen1x 120 Golden Sf. 114
(Only games scheduled)

Buffa lo vs Hous ton

at San Antonio
Milwaukee at Los Anqeles

ABA Standrngs
By United Press International
East
w I. pel. g.b.
Carolina
57 26 .687
Kentucky
55 28 663 2
Vrrglnia
41 ~ 2 494 16
New York
30 53 361 27
Memphts
23 60 277 34
West
w. I. pel. g.b.
Utah
54 28 659
lnd1ana
50 32 610 3
61J2

San Drego
30 53 361 23'12
Dalla s
2B 55 637 25'12
Monday's Results
Dallas 112 Carol1na 110
I Only game scheduled)
lnd1ana at San Dl09o
Utah at Denver
I Only games sc heduled )
AHL Standings
By Umted Press International

East
w. I. t.
N S.
40 17 15
Bostn 32 27 13
Rchstr 31 30 12
Prov 30 30 14
Sprglld 18 JB 16
N.H. 16 JB 20
West

CLEARWATER, Fla. (UP! )
- Virtually everyone who has
VlSi ted the Philhes during
sprmg traimng feels they
tmproved themselves via key
winter trades, but nevertheless
Phlladelphla will be fortunate
to finiSh fifth this year.
New Manager Danny Ozark
ts runmng a tight ship, counting
on stern diSCipline plus the
presence of veterans hke Jun
Lonborg and Cesar Tovar, to
gtve the younger players a
"hft. " Steve Carlton was the
best pttcher m baseball last
season but 11 is unrealistic to
expect that he can carry the
team htmself.

The fact that the Phillies
finiShed last in the NL East
despite Carlton's great 1972
season speaks for itself.
Strengths: Carlton, whose 27
victortes represented 45.8 per
cent of the Philhes' wins m
1972, should get help from
Lonborg, 14-12 w1th a 2.83
earned run average for Milwaukee last season Ozark
beheves tnfteld defense will be
much tmproved Addtlton of
Tovar from Mmnesota should
be a big help on offense and
defense. Phtllies probably wlll
be a closer-kmt team this year.
Weaknesses : Heavy offensive

pis gl
95 294
77 241
74 230
74 245
52 256
52 242

ga
1B2
245
264
2.16
324
321

w. I f. pis gf
C1nC1 52 17 5 109 333
Hrshy ~o 22 11 91 311
Va
35 21 16 86 242
Rchmd 28 34 10 66 247
Jcksnv l 23 42 9 55 2&lt;UI
Bait
16 45 11 43 200
Monday 's Results
Crnclnnatl 5 Jacksonvi lle 2
!On ly game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games

ga
202
216
209
261
314
305

Jacksonville at V1rg1n1a
Prov1dence at Boston
Spnng f1eld at Nova Scot1a

WHA Standings
By United Press tnternahonat
East
w. I. I . pis gf ga
New Eng ~4 28 2 90 302 245
40 32 3 83 274 234
Cleve
35 39 0 70 276 299
Phil a
ottawa 33 37 4 70 263 287
33 ~0 2 68 293 320
NY .
Quebec 31 JB 5 67 26t 295
West
wltptsgfga
x Wln1pg ~2 29 4 BB 277 23B
Los Ang 36 35 6 78 255 249
Mrnn
37 35 3 77 240 256
Houston 36 34 ~ 76 266 257
Alberta 36 36 3 75 261 250
Ch1 ca~o 26 45 2 54 239 277
•-Clinched divrsion Iitle
Monday's Results
Cleveland 7 New England 5
(On ly game scheduled)

HOLDS POINT LEAD
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla .
(UP! 1 - James Hylton of
Inman, S.C. bolds the NASCAR
grand national point lead going
mto next Sunday's Atlanta 500.
Tuesday's Games
Hylton leads with 1349.50 points Quebec at Ottawa
while Bobby Alhson of Huey- Houston at New England
New York at M in nesota
town, Ala. is second with Chicago at Los Angeles
1307.25 po10ts.
I Only games scheduled)

ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Mem- the second prize in the NCAA
phts State ended up wtth only tournament, but the Tigers
have placed two players on the
All-Tournament team.
The Tigers named center
Larry Kenon and guard Larry
Finch to the All-Tourney team,
and they are joined by Bill

By IRA MILLER
UP! Sports Writer
Vida Blue's salary squabbles
with Cbarlie Finley are over
for another year . Denny
McLain's squabbles may be
over, period.
The two former American
League Most Valuable Players
and Cy Young Award winners
passed m baseball's revolv10g
door Monday. Blue signed his
1973 contract wtth the world
champton Oakland A's.
McLam was placed on waivers
by the Allanta Braves, who will
give him his unconditional
release.
"Let's JUSt say I hope to live
up to my potential," Blue satd
alter stgnmg wtth Finley at
Mesa, Ariz. "Thts took a load
off my mmd ."
Fmley, who said he had
many offers for Blue, was
asked if he came close to
trading the 23-year-old left-

bander.
"Close'~ "

he repeated. "We
came damn close."
McLam, the only major
league pitcher to w10 30 or
more games in a season m
more than a quarter century,
won his MVP-Cy Young honors
10 1968 when he had a 31-8
record and 1.96 ERA for the
Detroit Tigers. He shared the
Cy Young Award In 1969 when
he won 24 games but 10 1970 he
was suspended for the Ill's! haU
of the season by Comunsstoner
Bowie Kuhn for involvement
with gamblers.
When he !10ally got mto
action that year, he was
suspended for carrymg a gun
and then set down for a Utird
time after doustng two sports
writers wtth buckets of water.
McLain had won only 16
major league games the last
three seasons and was shtpped,
with his $75,000 salary, to Ute

~i~~a32 To 38

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INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI)
- The Los Angeles Lakers
don't dare to look back,
because the red-hot Milwaukee
Bucks are coming on strong in
the final few days of the
Na tional Basketball
Association's regular season.
The Bucks, with Oscar
Robertson back in top form,
blasted Portland, 118-99, Monday mghtfor thi!~r 13th straight
win, pulling them to within
one-half game of the Lakers m
the battle for the Western Conference's best winnmg percentage.
Tonight Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Robertson and the Bucks
!10ish out their season at the
Forum in a game whtch could
re~rrange the match ups in the
post season playoffs .
A Laker victory would

Walton of UCLA, Steve Down·
ing of Iodtana and Ernie
DIGregorio of Providence.
Walton, whose 44 points in
the championship game was a
record, scored 58 points in the
two games to lead all scorers.

assure Los Angeles of the
Western Conference's best
wmmng percentage and the
borne court advantage if the
two teams should meet m the
conference finals.
A Milwaukee VICtory would
put the Bucks a half-game up
and bring it down to the
Lakers' season finale agamst
the Golden State Warriors m
Oakland on Wednesday. The
Lakers would then have to beat
Golden State to he Milwaukee
and Ioree a pre-playoff game to
be played in Milwaukee on
Friday, whtch would decide
once and for all which of the
two teams has the best wmnmg
percentage.
Robertson, who has been
hampered by mJuries most of
the year, scored 24 against the
Blazers Monday night and

v

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appears to be gainmg strength
as the playoffs approach.
In the only other NBA game
Monday night, Connie Hawkins
scored 29 points to lead the
Phoemx Suns to a come-frombehind 120-114 vtctory over the
Golden State Warriors.
Trading by two, 114-112, wtth
2:47 remammg in the fourth
period, the Suns ran off eight
unanswered points to pull out
the victory. Clem Haskins htt
for 24 po10ts and Dick Van
Arsdale tallied 21 for the Suns.
The Warrtors' Rtck Barry led
all scorers with 32 po10ts.
~

AAA has taken these steps m
the
face
of
dollar

had three htts as Texas
whipped Baltimore, 6-4 and a
12-run second inning carried
Houston over Detroit, 15-9.

Bucks win again

MOORE'S

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SIZES B To 18 ............

minors for a time last year. He
had arm problems this spring
and said he had never regained
hts pitching concentration
since the first suspensiOn.
Atlanta's release of McLam
came just three days before his
29th birthday.
The New York Mets got the
best news of the teams that
played in exhtbilton games
Monday. The Mets got a twGrun homer from Wtllie Mays,
his third of the sprmg, and a
strong, seven-inning, four-hit
pitching effort from Jerry
Koosman to defeat the Braves,
i&gt;-2. Koosman retired 16 of the
last 17 men he faced after
giving up two unearned runs in
the second mn10g.
In other games, Roy Whtte's
ninth-inning bomer lifted the
Yankees over Kansas City, 4-3,
four hits by Cesar Gerommo
helped Cmcinnati beat
Philadelphta, 8-4, Rtco Carty

27x45, White &amp; Colors

'

AAA HAS REDUCED
LAND COST OF

p1tchmg staff.
Comment: New pros acqutred
m winter trades should make
the Philhes much more respectable. Ozark concedes that the
Philhes "were a fundamentally
poor team in 1972 " He ts more
or less start10g from scratch,
attempting to msttll a new
spmt, and that's always a bad
place from wh1ch to start.
Other teams m the four-&lt;livlSton
expanston era have made
unexpected moves mto contention but it would take an
optimtst to bet the rent money
that the Phtllies are going to
make one this year

Blue inks contract

Two Memphis cagers are honored

ReiiS(ln 3. We are a year-round
service. We do not disappear or
go back to some other business

JAMAICA SHORTS

load must be carried by Greg
Luzmski, Wilhe Montanez and
Deron Johnson. Club needs
another catcher and pitchmg ts
shallow behind Carlton and
Lonborg. Philhes look like a
num-team without enough
strength in any department to
stay m any kind of contenttons.
New faces: Wmter trades
brought Lonborg, Ken Brett,
Earl Stephenson, Tovar, Jose
Pagan and Del Unser. Ozark
thmks Mike Anderson can sltck
as outfielder and that Mtke
Schmtdl could wm regular job
at third. Dave Downs, 15-7 at
Readmg m 1972, could help

and Will hold the hne on land

Tuesday's Games

47 36 .566

tg~rs,

costs for all 1973 Escorted

Detroit at Battrmore
Boston at Atlanta
Cleveland at Ch1cago

Denver

e

Phlls improved ball club

NBA Standings
By United Press International

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ONLy

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Tuesday's Games

By Umted Press International

News 4

s

Adolph's Dairy Valley

undefeated season, they
showed that without Walton
they are just another good
team, not a great one. When he
went to the sidelines with three
fouls late in the first half the
Tigers immediately caught up
and bed the score at mtermission. Jn~18 na did the
same thing in the semifinals
when Walton was out of the
game brtefly.
There bas been speculation
that Walton wtll pass up his
senior year to sign a lucrative
pro contract with the Philadelphia 76ers of the National
Basketball Assoctation. Coach
John Wooden mslsts that Bill
will be back next year but
Walton has not formally com· mitted himself one way or
another
The Bruins lose only two
players from Utts year's teamLarry Hollyfield and Larry
Farmer-and have enough returning talent to win their
eighth stratght tttle next year,
provtded Walton does return.
"I sure bope be stays and
gets hts degree," says Bartow.
"He's too good a player k,
leave college now."
1n the consolation game
Indiana defeated Providence'
91-79
'
College Basketball Results

WEDNESDAY, MARCH28, 1973
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�2- The Daily Sentmel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 'J:i,1973

:;:;.,

Women fighting ERA
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
Columbus-based women's
group has mounted an
eleventh-hour drtve deslgned
to slop passage of the proposed
"equal rtghts" amendment
(ERA) to the US. Constitution,
scheduled for a vote Wednesday m the Ohto House.
Responses have been reported heavy, and were expected to
reach new hetghts today as the
Amertcan Women Already
Richly Endowed (AWARE)
pressed 1ts wrtte-in campatgn
launched
through Ohto
newspapers.
The latest target of the women's group was the Franklin
County delegation . Women
were urged to notify Columbusarea legislators they want a
"no" vote on the ERA.
Chtef sponsor of the resolution gomg before the House
Wednesday lS Rep Mtchael
Stinziano, D-Columbus.
AWARE sponsored a
quarterpage advertisement m
Ute Columbus Qtspatch last
Frtday enhtled "The Fraud
Called the Equal Rtghts
Amendment." It detatled
reasons for opposmg the
amendment.
The ad contamed coupons
reading: "! am opposed to
ERA, please vote no r" They
were to be signed, clipped and
sent to Rep. William Kopp, DColumbus,
and
Senate
President Pro tempore
Theodore M Gray, RColumbus
Gray's offtce Monday reported about 100 responses in the
ftrst mailing received since
publicatton of the adverllsement
Ad Makes Changes
The ad satd tf the ERA is
adopted, women wtll lose draft
exemptton, Soctal Securtty and
support beneftts, separate pubhe restroom facthhes, r1ght to
pr1vacy based on sex and pro-

tecttve labor laws.
Mrs. Glen Payn~. national
president of AWARE, satd
simllar ads were placed m
other newspapers around the
state She was unable to say
bow many, or esitmate the cost
to the orgaruzation, except to
cite $500 as the cost of the ad m
the Columbus paper
Mrs. Payne said that to save
money, members of her
orgamzation made coptes of
the ad and were dtstrtbutmg 1t
by hand 10 hopes of gett10g
more respons~.;S

"Anyone from this area, mcluding young people, may
stgn, as all people will be affected by the ERA," the ad
said "All young gtrls wbo don't
wish to be drafted should be
sure to Slgn the forms also."
The amendment, already
raltfted by 30 states out of the
38 reqmred, would msert m the
U.S Constitution a provision
forbtdding the federal government or states to make or keep
laws whtch discriminate on the
basts of sex.

Knowledge of Watergate
is believed widespre4d
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
Repubhcan member of the
Senate's Watergate mvestlgat10g commtttee says he
IS sure some of Prestdent
N1xon 's adv1sers knew of or
condoned pohtlcal espwnage
agamst the Democrats dunng
last year' s prestdenllal
campatgns.

Sen Lowell P Weicker Jr ,
R-Conn , was asked durmg a
UP! interv1ew Monday: "Do
you thmk there are such
persons, presidenhal advisers,
who kn ew of or condoned the
Watergate or other pohltcal
espwnage?••
1
' Sure, sure," he rephed
"I

..

.::-:-:·: :· ':·:·:·. :·:·:·:·: :::::-::: ::::;.;., .:·:·:

COLUMBUS (UPI) -The
Ohio House of Representatives was urged today to
defeat the proposed "Equal
Rlgltls Amendment" to the
U.S. Constitution by the Ohio
AFL-CIO, which claimed II
"could destroy more rights
than it creates."
"What IS really needed Is
the passage of laws speUing
out the rights of women, " the
labor federation said In the
lates t issues of its newsletter, " News and Views."

"We would not like to see
women lulled into a false
fe eling they would have
certain rights just because of
passage of this ERA.
•!•!•!·

·=·=·:·.·:·:·: .-:::::: :::::·:.:::::·:·: ··:·.·!·. .

.•:··

PRIZES AWARDED
Pmes have been awarded m
conJuncllon with the stxth
anniversary observance of
lola's, East Mam St,
Pomeroy. Wmners were Vwla
Rumfield, near Pomeroy; Mrs
V1lma Ptkkoja, Pomeroy, and
Mrs Esther Fuga te, Pomeroy
ON DEAN'S LIST
Karen Lynn Grifft th,
da ughter of Mr and Mrs
Charles E Gnffith, Pomeroy,
was named to the dean's hst at
Oh10 State Umversity for the
wtnter quar te r Karen, an
ammal science major carrymg
21 hours, recetved a 3.5
average on a 4 0 scale She IS a
)UntOr

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 'J:l, 1973

tAMPA, Fla . (UP!) - Cmcmnati Reds veteran thll'd
baseman Denis Menke
remembers the help he
recetved from ballplayers
when he was a youngster and
bas mentally prepared himself
for the day when he uses his
to
tram
experienc~
newcomers.

Menke, 32, has been asked to
work with rookie Dan Drtessen
at third base thts year by
manager Sparky Anderson and
coach Alex Granunas. Menke
ts happy to oblige.
Menke: remembering his
early years wtth Ute Braves,
SBld shortstop Roy McMillan
helped him learn the ropes.

OS'U's Taylor to
meet with Weaver
COLUMBUS, Ohto (UP! ) Ohto State basketball coach
Fred Taylor lS expected to
meet toda·y wtth OSU Athletic
D1rector J. Ed Weaver to
diSCuss an offer made to Taylor
to accept the basketball
coachmg job at Northwestern .
"I don't really know where
we stand nght now, but we're
gomg to Sit down and talk,"
sa1d Weaver. "I hope we can
get together Certainly we
would hke to keep Fred, but I
don' t know whether we can
meet thelr offer "
Taylor has been m St Louis
for most of the past week
completing his term as
preSident of the National
Assoctation of Basketball
Coaches
Tippy Dye, Northwestern
Athleltc Director, and Taylor's
former basketball coach at
OSU, has been attempting to

lure Taylor to Northwestern
for the past two weeks.
Taylor makes $22,000 a year
at Ohw State and Northwestern, a private school, 1s
believed to have offered
constderably more money plus
frmge beneftls such as a rent
free home.

GROUP I DINES
The annual dinner of Group I
of the Umted Presbytenan
Church of Middleport was held
Monday mght at the Holiday
Inn, Galhpolis. Attending were
Mrs DwtghtZavitz, Mrs Edtth
Ztrkle, Mrs Karen Sprouse,
Mrs Carolyn Satterfteld, Mrs.
Ruby Vaughan, Mrs. Jean
Ellen Kelly, Mrs Judy Crooks,
Mrs Marcella Coleman, Mrs.
Eleanor McKelvey, and Mrs.
Dana Kessmger.

am not referring to th e
President of the Umted States,
~=·:·:·:·:·!·!·!·!·!·!·!·!•!•!•!•!•f.::::~:·:-:=:::::::::::-:·:·:=:--::::::~
but those around htm ... "
~~:
~=:
I
~ Weteker satd he believed
N1xon was gmlty "of acceptmg
wrong advtce" from those
around h1m m trymg to cover
11::
,!I\ up the scandal involvmg the
Mrs Betty Cline spent the bugg mg of DemocratiC
weekend m Canton vtsthng Mr Nattonal Committee
headquarters at the Watergate
and Mrs Glenn Mann.
apartment
complex last June.
Mr and Mrs John Bowman
of Colum bus were weekend
guesls of her parents, Mr and
CLUB PLANNED
Mrs
Karl Owen
The
RUTLAND- There wtll be a For Rent
Bowrnans' daughter, Susan, Is meetmg to orgamze a Senior 5 ROOMS and bath, 120 L1ncoln
H1ll Rd. Phone 992 2433
mFort Lauderdale, Fla. on her C1tlzens' Club m the Rutland
3-27 31c
sprtng break from college.
area, Thursday at 1 p m. at the
Mr and Mrs. Wilham Bland, Method1st Church. The church ONE bedroom trader. adu lt s
BY PAUL CRABTaEE
only, m Middl eport Phone
Carla and Cathy, Akron, spent has donated use of a room m
992 5592
I am aU alone, in a temporaruy..-ented apartment m
Fnday and Saturday here the basement as a Semor
3 27
tic
Charleston,
W Va It's on the third floor of a big, old, rambling
VISitmg Mrs Ntna Bland and C1tlzens' Clubroom Everyone - - - - - -Real Estate tor sa le
frame house. Thetwolower floors are ftlled with antiques, which
M1 s Pearl Reynolds
m the area mterested ts m- AT DARWIN. 5 rooms, city theownerofthehousesellsonthe premises.
vtled Coffee and cook1es wtll
water. approxrmately I acre,
There's qmte an assortment of furmture brtc~-bra c and
on Route JJ lm med1 ate oc
'
be served.
cupancy, rea l buy , $ 4,ooo memorabilia down there, mcluding an autographed photo of
Phone 773 55BO
Prestdent Wtlson and a portratt of Pope Benedict XV, whoever he
ON DEAN'S LIST
. , . - - - - - -- -3_2_7 Sip was
CHESTER- Charles Henry FOR SALE by owner - New
The mght ts cloud-darkened and stormy, with occasional
Etchmger, son of Mrs. Opal
aparlment bu1ldmg, 4 un1ts on distant hghtmng flashing across the western sky. It's pretty
three and th ree t enths acres.
Etchmger, Chester, has been
c1ty or well water. all electn c. gloomy, but not nearly so dreary as the offerings on the Utree TV
named to the dean's hst at Ohto
15 mmute drrve from Oh1o stations 1can recetve this lonely evemng, wtth reruns nuxed wtth
By Helen Hottel
Um versr ty. Apar tments are shows 1 1·ust don't care for
State Umverstty for the wmter
fu rm shed and rented Good
quarter
mcome Pri ced to sell PhoQe
So I haul out a radto, ahnost new and bought at a bargain• •
173 SSBO
basement 2J,ice from mall-order bqutdator. I cut over to the
Whose Mistake Was THIS?
3_ 2_7 51P FM band, knowmg I should be able to get ai least three "easy
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
_
Dear Helen:
hstenmg" stabons, a gospel stabon and a rock outlet, at the very
My m-laws hate me because l run my husband's hfe mstead
WIN AT BRIDGE
least.
of them. What I say in my house goes because my husband
Then the weird stuff begins.
doesn't knowwhatbfeis all about. I try to tell him what to do and
Down at the bottom of the FM dtal, a preacher is berating
how to do tt, and he thinks he can do 11 better the way hts family
smners and welfare clients with equal zest. The gospel statior.
tells him, which ts dumb because none of them know which end lS
NORTH
27
!messed
aga
mst
East
s
jack
should be at 99 9on thedtal, but thts lS down around 88.
up, mcludmg hun.
"'A 10 7 3
and
made
h1s
spade
game
Cotmng up the dtal, fascinated and a little flaky-feel10g, I
Dtd I make a b1g nustake when l sa1d "I do"? - B.T .0.
¥Q4
If you are confu sed by the fmct a cnsply~ccented British voice dtscussmg the "trouble" in
t 5
btddmg you should bea r m
.A K1654
Dear B.:
mmd that modern expert Ireland. Thts " at 91 on the dial, aod the BBC JUSt doesn't
WEST
EAST (D)
From here, tt looks hke your husband made the miStake. btddmg IS a fearsome thmg broadcast on that spot.
.Q
4
.J6
Another twtst, up to 93, and there is a votce in purest Spamsh
mdeed North's two-heart
H.
¥8 2
¥AK1065
was
an
astro
cue
b1d
to
call
yammermg
away mtelligenUy - if you speak Spanish, which I
+++
tKQ 2
tA1086 3
clubs
and
spades
show
don't. Man, thiS is somethmg else, aod I listed for a couple of
Dear Helen:
... QJ10982 . 3
It
wurked
this
ttme
bemmutes.
There's much controversy today over the non-mamage.
SOUTH
cause
South,
who
could
not
At 95 on the dtal, a Canadian Nmmentator IS talking about
.K98 52
Perhaps my experience wtll help.
be expected to hold much m
•
J
91
3
I was just dtvorced when I met Bill, and didn't want to be
the way of hi gh cards, had Canada's health servtces. I liSten transfixed, wtth the eerie
• J914
caught on the rebound. l was wary and bttter - no more "traps"
the perfect hand and m ad· feeling somethmg very improbable is gomg on around here
• vord
Maybe tt's thts big empty house . Maybe I should have
he played well and
dillon
for me!
Both vulnerable
the
hand
broke
fav
orably
saluted Woodrow Wtlson or genuflected before the likeness of the
Well, after a year, Bill was ready for mamage, but I still
Wcsl North East South
gtve
West
or
East
the
Just
Pope, or somethmg.
wanted my freedom m case 11 dtdn 't work out. So we dectded to
1¥
Pass
queen-Jack-small of spades
!NT
2
¥
Pass
4
"'
I spend most of ball-hour down there on the lower part of the
live together. Everyone we knew was great about it - no static
and South would be down
Pass
Pa ss
Pass
FM
band, hearmg these fa10t-but-unmistakable voices upbraid
from either family.
at least one at hts four-spade
Opemng lead-¥ 8
the
unrepentant,
talk about tbe British Commonwealth, and
contract
Well, we got along wonderfully and, after two years, l was
Furthermore, North was Jabber in SpaniSh.
ready for that license. Surprtse! Bill wasn't. He gave me the
By
Oswald
&amp; James Jacob) really playing w•th dynamtte
Reason says thts house cannot be haunted. But the radio
same hberated hne I handed hun back then.
when
he
stuck
m
hts
astro
doesn't seem to know that. And I have heard no call letters, so I
The luck factor lS always
I took a "Marry me or leave" attitude, but it was still touch
cue btd Suppose East's spin the dial all the way up.
present
m
IMP
matches
At
and go. While Bill was ftghtmg to keep his freedom, I kept saymg,
table m the match West openmg btd had included
I can't fmd the rock station, and by thts time, I would enjoy'
"There's no guarantee it wtll work. All we can do is try." Now l one
played at three clubs and four spades to the king as even hea rmg Little Rtchard's Greatest Hits. But the gospel
realize the same thmg apphed two years befor e, only l wouldn't went down two tncks for the second suit South would
lace tt.
what should have been a have had to try two spades preacher reappears reassuringly, at 99.9 where he belongs, and
w1th a three-card su1t and also at 98, 103 and even 107.
We have been marned two monUts now and I'm so glad we normal losmg result
a double would have left
The British-Canadtan commentary, it turns out, ts a world
At the ot her table the btd- htm somewhere between a
did tl. Of course we forfeited all the fun of newlyweds, for we set
dmg
went
as
shown
m
the
up housekeeping a long time ago.
rock and a very hard place. press roundup on one of the "good music" stations, which I can
find at 102.7, as I should, but also at 97, ID4 and 106 on Ute dial. My
Thts then lS a small remmder Girls, tf you talk your man box The defense dtd •Is
(HEWSPAP ER ENTERPRISE ASSH I
best East cashed two hearts
palms become less clammy
10to a hberated hve-together Situation, don't be surprtsed if he and a •hamond and then led
The preacher wmds down and the gospel station tdentifies
learns to hke it better Ulan you do after while.- HAPPY TO BE a thtr J heart. West ruffed
itself, close to home. The bristles on the back of my neck fall back
wtth the queen but after
A MRS.
The b1ddmg has been
dummy overrulfect. • South
into place.
West
North
East
South
Another round of !me-tuning, and another easy~tstening
O:~.W.GSOl.*=*:·:·:.:::::::.; ··-::::: .;. ··::· •
It
1.
station
can be located, at tis proper place. My eyeballs stop
'
You, Soulh, hold
hulgmg
"'KJ3 ¥KJ3 tK l0;4 .K 96
The reason ts very sunple, I reason to myself, as I switch to
What do you do'1
the AM band and find the local stations all 10 their proper
A-Bid two no- trump The
position : There was no ghost or spirt! present.! just had boUght
spade O\ creal! has not affected
BY JACK O'BRIAN
Ius sense of humor as 1t drowned m ego and your hand one iota ,
myself a crummy radio, one that has a bad FM tuner. Then a
MARLENE- AMANY.SIDED LEGEND
served nollce of smt for some exorbttant
chtlling
Utought strikes me:
TODAY'S QUESTION
NEW YORK (KFS ) - No one argues the collectton of embarrassment, and money That
Where in tbe heck dtd that Spamsh-language broadcast come
Your pa r tner contmues to
legend of Marlene D1etrtch It's all true It's was over her recent TV spectal produced by th ree spades What do you do from• Charleston, W. Va ,ts at least five hundred miles from the
1
arguable that she's a !me actress, some Cohen whtch Marlene sensed m advance, wtth now'
nearest Latin-Amertcan language station!
mysogtmstic cymes inSist she can't act a lick ultimate reason , was somewhat unspec1al One
Okay, Pope Benedict, just to be on the safe slde, here goes:
nor lick a senous actmg problem or even a N. Y cad, Ted Brown, satd the ca mera work
Hail, Mary, lull_of grace ...
The Dai~ Sentinel
mmor one, but that's plainlv not true. She has md tcated "she was shot through a chicken."
DEVOTED TO THE
suffered more than a fe• • ' npls wh1ch ask little That " as a s1mple, harsh exaggeration of the
INTEREST OF
MEIGS-MASON AREA
more tnan to be sultr and she dehve1s the fact that all, well, er, mature actresses are
CHESTER L TANNEHILL ,
Exec. Eel
lowe•ed-eye b•t 1n he1·. l"ated fashwn !em ned filmed w1th the help of filters, gauze,
ROBERT HOEFLICH .
over the 70 to 74 yea1s Gl her hie accordmg to ca mouflaged d1stracttons from stgns of age ;
C1ty EC11t0r
Adolph TuesdJJy
PubliShed dally except
whtch almanac or enemy you 1ead , we'll take some even have been accused of hav10g been
Saturday by 'T he Oh10 Vallev
the almanac's word m.~ .ce Marlene as a ktd of !timed through concrete, but thts agam ts Pub Hsh 1no Company , 111
and WednesdJJy
72. More than that would be caddiSh.
magmftcation for cruel cntical comedy. But tt Court St , Pomeroy , Ohio ,
•SJ69 Business Off ice Phone
SPECIAL!
We msist she can act funny, a Ia "Destry is true Marlene wtll not take her appearances 99 2 2156, Eclltonal Phone 992 ·
21l1
Rides Again" and a couple of wartime flicks m hghtly.
Sec ond class postage pa id at
Foot Long Hot Dog
which she was cast persuastvely m Germamc
Not too many Amencan producers wtsh to Pomeroy , Oh10
·
Nat i onal advertising
lOc Soft Drink
roles . Mostly, however, her talen ts have not produce a hmtted-to-six-weeks Dtetrtch one-gal representative
Bott lnelll
•
been summoned to thetr ternunal gtfts But one show; Alex Cohen, a press agent turned Gallagher , Inc , 12 East •2nd
IOc Potato Chips
New Yor k City , New York
thmg's ce•·tam, she never takes a role nor even a flamboyant producer whose more successful St.Subscription
rain
De
one-gtrl show lightly No matter the SIZe of the nohons mclude takmg established English htts lt\lered by carr~e r where
Reg . 65c
so~
so cen ts per week ,
aud1ence nor the remoteness o( •Is impact on lo Bdwy. and vice versa (he's in the way of ava•lable
Bv Motor Route where carnH
ce not avallabll One
news servtee r eviews
11 ansfcmng Nell Simon 's "Sunshme Boys" and l urvt
month $1 75 By ma •l In Oh to
She has grown petulant tn her advanced "6 Rms Rtv Vu" to London presently ) has a and w va, One year su DO
S•• months
S7 . 25
T!lree
experience; she took quite a fe•·, whacks at her more dari11g !lent; Marlene does take a great monthS
,_.SO Svbscr•ptlon
erstwhtle one-gal-show prOducer Alex Cohen m shce of the boxofftce ; ergo the reluctance of pnce •nc ludts Sunday Tlmn ·
At the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Senhnel
a Rex Reed-written otdeswipe, and Cohen lost more conservative entrepreneurs

Us.

··

Middleport · ·
Personal Notes

too late to

be classified

••

•

Menke helping young players

&amp; THINGS

8:

A Big, Brave Astra Cue Bid

I Voice along Br'Way

STOP I

"Day in and day out, McMillan was the best shortstop
I've ever seen smce I've been
in the game," said Menke.
He also credited Eddte Mathews, now manager of the
Braves; with assisting him.
~~Mathews
was
an
established star, one of the
btggest," said Menke. "But
when there was talk of moving

SERVICES TONIGHT
Prayer se rvices for the
Mtddleport F~rst Baptist
Church's evangelistic crusade
to be held next week will be
conducted tonight at the home
of Mrs. Beulah Whtte, 211
NorthFtfthAve ; at the church
Wednesday night; at the home
·of Mrs. Ehzabeth Gardner, 155
Garfteld Ave, Thursday night;
and at the home of Miss Rhoda
Hall, 631 South Second Ave.,
Friday mght

him to Ute outlleld and putting
me at third base, he couldn't
have been more helpful in
offering pointen Ill me on how
to play the position."

•

WISECUP HERE
Former sports writer for The
Daily Sentinel, Airman Keith
Wisecup, spent the weekend
with his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
James Wisecup, Union Ave.,
Pomeroy. Wtsecup is stationed
at Lowry Air Force base at
Denver, Colo. Before entenng
the service Wisecup attended
Ohio University lor two years.
THANKS GIVEN
Mrs. Ralph Harvey, matron
of the children's home, extends
her thanks to Arnold Grate of
Rutland Furniture for his
donatton of a refrigerator, and
Don Covert, owner of Court
Street Cab, for a bicycle.

Television Log
TUESDAY, MARCH27, 1973
6 oo - News 3, ~ - B. 10. 13, 15; Truth or Con seq. 6, Sesame St. 20;
Around the Bend 33.
6 30 - News 3, 4, 6, B, 10. 15; Growing Him Up 33, I Dream of
Jeann 1e lJ

7 00 - What's My L1ne B. I've Got A Secret t3, Etec Co 20.

Beat the Clock 4, News 6, 10, Unfamed World 13 , TV Honor

Soc 1ety 15, Tru th or Conseq 3.

30 - This IS Your L1 fe 3, To Tell the Truth 6. Price Is Righi 8,
10; Beallhe Clock 13, Great DeciSions '73 33 , Circus 4; RFD20
20; People &amp; The Press 15
B00 - Temperatures Rrsmg 6, 13, Maude B, 10. Book Beat 33 ,
Ohro ThiS Week 20. Keep U S Beaulllul3, ~. 15

7

8 30- Hawaii F1ve- O 8, 10. 8111 Moyer 's Journal 20, 33, Mov1e

"No Place to Run" 6. 13.
9 oo - Behmd th e L1nes 20 33 . Cavalcade of Champions 3, 4,
15
9 30 - Black Journal 20, 33 , Movie " Footsteps Nice Guys
Fmi sh last " 8, 10

tO 00 - Marcus Welby M D 6, 13, News 20 , Oscar Awards 3. 4.
15
11 ·00 - News 3, ~. B, 13, 15
11 30 - Nightmare Step 6, 13 , Mov1es "Murder Most Foul" B,
"The Cracksman" 10

12 oo 12 30 I 00 1 30 2 00 -

News 3, 4, 15
Star Trek 4
News 13
Your Health 4

ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Unless Bill Walton is
wearing a professional basketball uniform next
season, the UCLA reign as kingpin of the college
game is likely to continue.
'Yalt?n proved why he is the No. 1 gate attraction m college ball by scoring a championship
game record 44 points while leading the Bruins to an
87-66 victory over the Tigers for a seventh straight
NCAA title.
Never in the · history of the
NCAA tournament has a player
been so devastating. He hit on
21-o£.22 shots, collected 13
rebounds and In general made
life miserable for the Memphis
State players, who, though
,beaten badly m the final score,
stayed close to the Bruins for 33
minutes.
"Walton lS about as physical
a big man as I've ever seen,"
said Memphis State Coach
Gene Bartow. "He did so many
thmgs well that we just
couldn't stop him. He's super,
the best coUegtate player I've
ever seen. We wanted to Ioree
him out more, but he was too
physteal. It got to be a shoving
match and he was too good."
Desptte Walton 's efforts,
though, Memphts State stayed
close to the Bruins until the last
seven and a half minutes of
play. Larry Finch, with 29
pomts, and Lar'?' Kenon, with
20, kept the Tigers m contention until the Bruins finally
wore them down.
"We took the fight to 'em and
they were better," smd Bartow "UCLA is a super, super
team with fine talent in additton to Walton. We just ran
out of gas "
Although the Bruins wrapped
up Utell' second consecutive

NCAA Tournament
tChamptonshtpl
UCLA 87 Memphis St 66
(Consolation)

Sunnse Sem 1nar 4, Sacred Heart 10

6 15 - Farml1me 10, EngliSh 3
6 20 - Farm Report 13
6 25 - Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today~- Brble Answers 8· Urban League 10.
The Stor y 13 .
7 00 - Today 3, 4. 15 . CBS News B, 10 , News 6, Fllntstones 13
7 30- Sleepy Jeffers B, Romper Room 6, Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13, Popeye 10
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13, sesame St. 33 ,
Lass1e 6

8 30 - Jac k LaLanne 13 , New Zoo Revue 6, Romper Room B
B 55 - News 13
9 00 - Paul DIXo n 4, Ph1l Donahue 15; What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3, Concentrat ion 6. Capt Kangaroo B.
Frrendly Junct1on 10 , Dr Kildare 13.
9 30 - Elec Co 33, To Tell the Truth 3, Jeopardy 4
10·00 - Drnah Shore 3.15; Columbus Six Calling 6; Joker's Wild
B. 10; Dick Van Dyke 13.
10 30 - Baffle 3. 4, 15; $10.000 Pyramid B, 10. Split Second 13
11 00 - Sa teofthe Century 3, 15, Love Amerrcan Style 6, Gamb1t
B. 10; Password 13
11 30- Hollywood Squares 4, 13, Love of Life 8, 10 , Bew1lched 6.
13; Sesame St. 20.
12 00 - Jeopardy 3, 15; Password 16; Bob Braun's 50 SO Club 4,
News 13, Con tact 8, News 10
12 30 - Spl1t Second6. Search for Tomorrow B, 10. 3 W's 3, 15
I 00 - News. Weather, Sports 3, All My Children 6, 13, Secret
Storm B; Not For Women Only 15 , Green Acres 10
1 20 - Fashrons in Sewing 3
1 30 - 3 On a Match 3, 4, 15 , Let's Make A Deal6, 13
2 00 - Days of Our L1ves 3, 4, 15 , New lywed Game 13; Mike
Douglass 6. Gu1drng L1ght B, 10
2 30 - Dating Game 13, Doctors 3, 4, 15 , Edge of NlghiB. 10
3 00 - Another World 3, tS ; General Hospital 6, 13; Love
Splendored Thmg 10 ; Thrs Week 20. Merv Grlff1n B, Phil
Don ahue 4

4 00 - Mr Carfoon 3. Somerset 15. Sesame St. 33, 20, Love
American Style 13. Merv Griffin 4, Huck leberry Hound·Yogi
Bear 6; Movie " A Man Betrayed" 10.

4 30 - Pelf1coat Junct1on 3, Gilligan's Island 8, Danie l Boone
131 D1ck Van Dyke 15, I Love Lucy 6, Merv Griffin 4.
5 00 - Mr Rogers 33 , Bonanza 3, ~ . Hazel 8, Andy Grrffllh 15,
Big Valley 6
5 30 - Elec Co 33, Gomer Pyle 13; Beverly Hlllb1llres B,
Hodgepodge Lodge 20, Death Valley Days 15
6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6. News 3, 4, B, 10, 15; Sesame 51 20;
Around the Bend 33.
6 30 - News3. ~. 6, B, 10, 15 , I Dream of Jeannie 3; Zoom 33
7 00 - News 6, 10. What's My Line B, Truth or Conseq. 3, Beat
the Clock 4, Anything You Can Do 13, Know Your Schools 33 ;
Elec Co 20. Fabulous Seven 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6, The Judge 10. Pollee Surgeon 3,
Beat the Clock 13, Andy Grlfl lfh 15. Earthkeeping 20
Episode· Act1on 33; George Kirby B. The Crime 4
'
B00 - Adam-12 3, 4, t5 . Paul Lynde 6, 13, Dr. Seuss Cartoon a.
tO, Amerrca '73 20. 33.
B· 30 - Mad rgan 3, ~ . 15, Mov1e " Ruby Gentry" 6. 13; Selfish
Gia nt a. 10
9·00.- Mtlzi .. The First Time 8, 10 , Festival Films 20, learntng to Speak 33.
9 30 - Turnmg Pomts 20, 33.
to 00 - Soul 33, News 20, Owen Marshall6. 13. Search 3, 4, IS,
Appointment Wrth Destiny a, 10
11 00 - News3, ~.6,B.10, 13.15.
11 · 30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, tl. Night Life 6, 13; Movie "Cannon"
Movie "Soldier In the Rain" 10
t·OO - News 4, 13

JUST ARRIVED!

ln d1ana 91 Prov1dence 79

"''""'l"'~''
Danny Sayre
The lightn rng rod did not
originate with Benja min
Franklin A Hebrew book
wrllfen rn the Blh century. a
thousand
years
before
Frankl in, contains an un
mi sta kab le refer ence to the

Lrghtnrng Conductor. The
reference found tn Cha pter

VII of Tosephta Sabbath
reads as follow s "Those
who erect Iron posts In the1r

gardens on the Sabbath ma y
do so prov1dmg the rods are
put there as a protection

against lrghtnlng"

OFFERED JOB
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) Bob Gaillard, head basketball
coach for the Umversity of San
Francisco, has been offered the
same JOb at Long Beach State
Umversity, It was announced
Monday
A USF spokesman said
Gaillard would travel to Long
Beach Tuesday to discuss an
offer to replace the 49ers
departed Coach Jerry Tarkanian, who ts now at the
University of Nevada, Las
Vegas.
Terms of the offer were not
disclosed

Canadian Rtve r rtses in New
M exico, flo ws through Texas
and Oklahoma to Arkansas,
but does nof come near

Canada
l1ghtmng doesn' t have to
str ike for you to see the
benef1ts ol havmg mountam

fresh tasting Relined Water
runnmg from every faucet tn
your home The " proc~s of
tr eat1 ng wa ter" removes
dissolve d solids. f rom your
water savmg needless
expense and 1nconven1ence

Call B82 2525

SAYRE
HARDWARE
New Haven, W. Va

Eastern Conference

Atlantic DiviSion
w. I. pet.
x- Boston
66 14 .a2s
New York
57 25 .695
Buttalo
21 59 .263
Philadelphia 9 73 110
Central DivisiOn

x Baltimore
Atlanta
Cleveland
Housfon

w. t
52 2B
46 35
32 48
31 49

Courting good looks ... They Are
Really -Nice

pet.
650
568
.400
.JBB

g.b.
10
44
57'h

g.b.
6'12

20

21

Western Conference
Mtdwest Divts1on

x Milwaukee
Chicago
Delroll
KC Omaha

w. I. pet. g.b.
59 22 72B

50 31 617 9
38 42 475 20'12
36 46 439 23'12

PacifiC DIVISIOn
w I. pel.

Los Angeles 59 21
Golden Stale 47 34
Phoenr ~
37 44
Seattle
26 55
Portland
20 62
x

73B
5BO
457
321
244

g.b.
l2'12
23
33'12
39

x Clinched dlviston tlfle

Monday's Results
Milwaukee 118 Portland 99
Phoen1x 120 Golden Sf. 114
(Only games scheduled)

Buffa lo vs Hous ton

at San Antonio
Milwaukee at Los Anqeles

ABA Standrngs
By United Press International
East
w I. pel. g.b.
Carolina
57 26 .687
Kentucky
55 28 663 2
Vrrglnia
41 ~ 2 494 16
New York
30 53 361 27
Memphts
23 60 277 34
West
w. I. pel. g.b.
Utah
54 28 659
lnd1ana
50 32 610 3
61J2

San Drego
30 53 361 23'12
Dalla s
2B 55 637 25'12
Monday's Results
Dallas 112 Carol1na 110
I Only game scheduled)
lnd1ana at San Dl09o
Utah at Denver
I Only games sc heduled )
AHL Standings
By Umted Press International

East
w. I. t.
N S.
40 17 15
Bostn 32 27 13
Rchstr 31 30 12
Prov 30 30 14
Sprglld 18 JB 16
N.H. 16 JB 20
West

CLEARWATER, Fla. (UP! )
- Virtually everyone who has
VlSi ted the Philhes during
sprmg traimng feels they
tmproved themselves via key
winter trades, but nevertheless
Phlladelphla will be fortunate
to finiSh fifth this year.
New Manager Danny Ozark
ts runmng a tight ship, counting
on stern diSCipline plus the
presence of veterans hke Jun
Lonborg and Cesar Tovar, to
gtve the younger players a
"hft. " Steve Carlton was the
best pttcher m baseball last
season but 11 is unrealistic to
expect that he can carry the
team htmself.

The fact that the Phillies
finiShed last in the NL East
despite Carlton's great 1972
season speaks for itself.
Strengths: Carlton, whose 27
victortes represented 45.8 per
cent of the Philhes' wins m
1972, should get help from
Lonborg, 14-12 w1th a 2.83
earned run average for Milwaukee last season Ozark
beheves tnfteld defense will be
much tmproved Addtlton of
Tovar from Mmnesota should
be a big help on offense and
defense. Phtllies probably wlll
be a closer-kmt team this year.
Weaknesses : Heavy offensive

pis gl
95 294
77 241
74 230
74 245
52 256
52 242

ga
1B2
245
264
2.16
324
321

w. I f. pis gf
C1nC1 52 17 5 109 333
Hrshy ~o 22 11 91 311
Va
35 21 16 86 242
Rchmd 28 34 10 66 247
Jcksnv l 23 42 9 55 2&lt;UI
Bait
16 45 11 43 200
Monday 's Results
Crnclnnatl 5 Jacksonvi lle 2
!On ly game scheduled)
Tuesday's Games

ga
202
216
209
261
314
305

Jacksonville at V1rg1n1a
Prov1dence at Boston
Spnng f1eld at Nova Scot1a

WHA Standings
By United Press tnternahonat
East
w. I. I . pis gf ga
New Eng ~4 28 2 90 302 245
40 32 3 83 274 234
Cleve
35 39 0 70 276 299
Phil a
ottawa 33 37 4 70 263 287
33 ~0 2 68 293 320
NY .
Quebec 31 JB 5 67 26t 295
West
wltptsgfga
x Wln1pg ~2 29 4 BB 277 23B
Los Ang 36 35 6 78 255 249
Mrnn
37 35 3 77 240 256
Houston 36 34 ~ 76 266 257
Alberta 36 36 3 75 261 250
Ch1 ca~o 26 45 2 54 239 277
•-Clinched divrsion Iitle
Monday's Results
Cleveland 7 New England 5
(On ly game scheduled)

HOLDS POINT LEAD
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla .
(UP! 1 - James Hylton of
Inman, S.C. bolds the NASCAR
grand national point lead going
mto next Sunday's Atlanta 500.
Tuesday's Games
Hylton leads with 1349.50 points Quebec at Ottawa
while Bobby Alhson of Huey- Houston at New England
New York at M in nesota
town, Ala. is second with Chicago at Los Angeles
1307.25 po10ts.
I Only games scheduled)

ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Mem- the second prize in the NCAA
phts State ended up wtth only tournament, but the Tigers
have placed two players on the
All-Tournament team.
The Tigers named center
Larry Kenon and guard Larry
Finch to the All-Tourney team,
and they are joined by Bill

By IRA MILLER
UP! Sports Writer
Vida Blue's salary squabbles
with Cbarlie Finley are over
for another year . Denny
McLain's squabbles may be
over, period.
The two former American
League Most Valuable Players
and Cy Young Award winners
passed m baseball's revolv10g
door Monday. Blue signed his
1973 contract wtth the world
champton Oakland A's.
McLam was placed on waivers
by the Allanta Braves, who will
give him his unconditional
release.
"Let's JUSt say I hope to live
up to my potential," Blue satd
alter stgnmg wtth Finley at
Mesa, Ariz. "Thts took a load
off my mmd ."
Fmley, who said he had
many offers for Blue, was
asked if he came close to
trading the 23-year-old left-

bander.
"Close'~ "

he repeated. "We
came damn close."
McLam, the only major
league pitcher to w10 30 or
more games in a season m
more than a quarter century,
won his MVP-Cy Young honors
10 1968 when he had a 31-8
record and 1.96 ERA for the
Detroit Tigers. He shared the
Cy Young Award In 1969 when
he won 24 games but 10 1970 he
was suspended for the Ill's! haU
of the season by Comunsstoner
Bowie Kuhn for involvement
with gamblers.
When he !10ally got mto
action that year, he was
suspended for carrymg a gun
and then set down for a Utird
time after doustng two sports
writers wtth buckets of water.
McLain had won only 16
major league games the last
three seasons and was shtpped,
with his $75,000 salary, to Ute

~i~~a32 To 38

HEART
OF EUROPE
TOUR
BY $100 ·
Hohdays, guaranteemg the
lowest applicable arr fare at
departure

INGLEWOOD, Calif. (UPI)
- The Los Angeles Lakers
don't dare to look back,
because the red-hot Milwaukee
Bucks are coming on strong in
the final few days of the
Na tional Basketball
Association's regular season.
The Bucks, with Oscar
Robertson back in top form,
blasted Portland, 118-99, Monday mghtfor thi!~r 13th straight
win, pulling them to within
one-half game of the Lakers m
the battle for the Western Conference's best winnmg percentage.
Tonight Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Robertson and the Bucks
!10ish out their season at the
Forum in a game whtch could
re~rrange the match ups in the
post season playoffs .
A Laker victory would

Walton of UCLA, Steve Down·
ing of Iodtana and Ernie
DIGregorio of Providence.
Walton, whose 44 points in
the championship game was a
record, scored 58 points in the
two games to lead all scorers.

assure Los Angeles of the
Western Conference's best
wmmng percentage and the
borne court advantage if the
two teams should meet m the
conference finals.
A Milwaukee VICtory would
put the Bucks a half-game up
and bring it down to the
Lakers' season finale agamst
the Golden State Warriors m
Oakland on Wednesday. The
Lakers would then have to beat
Golden State to he Milwaukee
and Ioree a pre-playoff game to
be played in Milwaukee on
Friday, whtch would decide
once and for all which of the
two teams has the best wmnmg
percentage.
Robertson, who has been
hampered by mJuries most of
the year, scored 24 against the
Blazers Monday night and

v

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The 22-day HEART OF
EUROPE Is an escorted tour
of nme countries including
london, Pan s, Rome At·
comm odaf1ons are always
ready and wading when you
arnve m Evrope Tours are

l1mlled to 30 persons, each.

USED CARS
Ca II, wrtte or VISit your AAA
Travel Counselor to get your

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of
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AAA
DESTINATIONS '73 tour
catalog

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GMAC FINANCING
9'12.5342
Pomeroy
Open Evenmgs 'T1IB:OO
Til S P.M. Sat.

33 Court St
Gallipolis
Phone 446-0699
Pomeroy- Phone 99'2-2590
.

Downing-Childs Agency Inc.
PHONE 992-2342

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

INSURANCE • BONDS
MUTUAl fUNDS
Meigs County's Oldest and Largest

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travelers - 1ts c lients

This Week's Special

appears to be gainmg strength
as the playoffs approach.
In the only other NBA game
Monday night, Connie Hawkins
scored 29 points to lead the
Phoemx Suns to a come-frombehind 120-114 vtctory over the
Golden State Warriors.
Trading by two, 114-112, wtth
2:47 remammg in the fourth
period, the Suns ran off eight
unanswered points to pull out
the victory. Clem Haskins htt
for 24 po10ts and Dick Van
Arsdale tallied 21 for the Suns.
The Warrtors' Rtck Barry led
all scorers with 32 po10ts.
~

AAA has taken these steps m
the
face
of
dollar

had three htts as Texas
whipped Baltimore, 6-4 and a
12-run second inning carried
Houston over Detroit, 15-9.

Bucks win again

MOORE'S

Closeout!

Use OUr Free Parkmg lot

Robinson's Ceaners
·216 E 2nd, Pomeroy,

Our Entire Stock

THROW RUGS

If you are one of the many who

OFF
OR MORE

will buy a CHAIN SAW this year

Folding Web Lawn Chairs

••• you'll want the all new STIHL.

Green and white plastic webbing

after April 15.

$3.22
REG. 14.55

5' Aluminum Stepladders

Misses' Polyester. machine
washable, elastic pull -on
waist, front stitched crease
in assorted solid colors.

SIZES B To 18 ............

minors for a time last year. He
had arm problems this spring
and said he had never regained
hts pitching concentration
since the first suspensiOn.
Atlanta's release of McLam
came just three days before his
29th birthday.
The New York Mets got the
best news of the teams that
played in exhtbilton games
Monday. The Mets got a twGrun homer from Wtllie Mays,
his third of the sprmg, and a
strong, seven-inning, four-hit
pitching effort from Jerry
Koosman to defeat the Braves,
i&gt;-2. Koosman retired 16 of the
last 17 men he faced after
giving up two unearned runs in
the second mn10g.
In other games, Roy Whtte's
ninth-inning bomer lifted the
Yankees over Kansas City, 4-3,
four hits by Cesar Gerommo
helped Cmcinnati beat
Philadelphta, 8-4, Rtco Carty

27x45, White &amp; Colors

'

AAA HAS REDUCED
LAND COST OF

p1tchmg staff.
Comment: New pros acqutred
m winter trades should make
the Philhes much more respectable. Ozark concedes that the
Philhes "were a fundamentally
poor team in 1972 " He ts more
or less start10g from scratch,
attempting to msttll a new
spmt, and that's always a bad
place from wh1ch to start.
Other teams m the four-&lt;livlSton
expanston era have made
unexpected moves mto contention but it would take an
optimtst to bet the rent money
that the Phtllies are going to
make one this year

Blue inks contract

Two Memphis cagers are honored

ReiiS(ln 3. We are a year-round
service. We do not disappear or
go back to some other business

JAMAICA SHORTS

load must be carried by Greg
Luzmski, Wilhe Montanez and
Deron Johnson. Club needs
another catcher and pitchmg ts
shallow behind Carlton and
Lonborg. Philhes look like a
num-team without enough
strength in any department to
stay m any kind of contenttons.
New faces: Wmter trades
brought Lonborg, Ken Brett,
Earl Stephenson, Tovar, Jose
Pagan and Del Unser. Ozark
thmks Mike Anderson can sltck
as outfielder and that Mtke
Schmtdl could wm regular job
at third. Dave Downs, 15-7 at
Readmg m 1972, could help

and Will hold the hne on land

Tuesday's Games

47 36 .566

tg~rs,

costs for all 1973 Escorted

Detroit at Battrmore
Boston at Atlanta
Cleveland at Ch1cago

Denver

e

Phlls improved ball club

NBA Standings
By United Press International

Henry Block has
17 reasons why you
should ,come to us
for income tax help.

REGULAR '12.88 VALUE

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LL'S BEN FRAN

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Middleport, 0.
Open 9 Til S Weekdays

57 Court St.
592-2851
Athens, o.
Corner Sec. &amp; Sycamore 446-0303 Gallipolis.

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A Lightweight Compact
With llg Saw Power

ONLy

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The

Pro Standings

Tuesday's Games

By Umted Press International

News 4

s

Adolph's Dairy Valley

undefeated season, they
showed that without Walton
they are just another good
team, not a great one. When he
went to the sidelines with three
fouls late in the first half the
Tigers immediately caught up
and bed the score at mtermission. Jn~18 na did the
same thing in the semifinals
when Walton was out of the
game brtefly.
There bas been speculation
that Walton wtll pass up his
senior year to sign a lucrative
pro contract with the Philadelphia 76ers of the National
Basketball Assoctation. Coach
John Wooden mslsts that Bill
will be back next year but
Walton has not formally com· mitted himself one way or
another
The Bruins lose only two
players from Utts year's teamLarry Hollyfield and Larry
Farmer-and have enough returning talent to win their
eighth stratght tttle next year,
provtded Walton does return.
"I sure bope be stays and
gets hts degree," says Bartow.
"He's too good a player k,
leave college now."
1n the consolation game
Indiana defeated Providence'
91-79
'
College Basketball Results

WEDNESDAY, MARCH28, 1973
6 00 -

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Handy?
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POMEROY

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 'l:l. 1973

include 15-100 persons of a!l
·:ages. For further information,
call245-5353.extension 49 or 245RIO GRANDE ...., Private tilack and white boys being 5881.
auditions for the cast lor the needed. The Mal cast will
movie being produced by the
. . . . . . .1111!!'111111....."""'
Rio Grande College Theatre
Department will be held on i
Wednesday, March 28 from 10
a.m. to 10 p.m. in Community
Hall on the campus. All interested persons are urged to
come. There will be approximately 10 major and 10
minor roles, several smaller
speaking parts and many
extras to be selected.
The majority of roles will be
played by blacks. And, there
will be three ;·minor roles
foriboys, age 10 to 12, both

Casting set for WednesdiJy at 10

Banquet is planned
Easter morning breakfast
plans were discussed along
, with the annual motherdaughter banquet to be held in
May during a recent meeting of
the Women's Society of
Christian Service of the Forest
Run United Methodist Church
at the home of Mrs. Edison
Hollon.
Mrs. Henry Salser was cohostess for the meeting which
opened with group singing of
"God Will Take Care of You"
and devotions by Mrs. Olan
Genheimer. She gave a
meditation entitled "A White

Cat and Anxiety."
Mrs. Merriil Floyd had
charge of the program entitled
"Living and Acting in Love."
Scripture, Ephes ians I, 11
through 23 was read by Mrs.
Russ Watson, An "Interview"
with an eady christian, Mrs.
Alfred Yeauger, and one with a
"modern" christian, Mrs. Fred
Nease were conducted . A
discussion was had concerning
·the two interviews. Mrs . Edith ·
Sisson read an artic1e ''You are
needed" in connection with the
program. Mrs. Vernon Nease's
special was entitled "The Little
Red School House" taken from
the Reader's Digest.
Delicious refreshments were
served by the hostesses to Mrs.
QUILTING IS JUST one of many activities toward helping others carried out by the.
Alfred Yeauger, Mrs. Uswi n Helping Haods Missionary Group of the Bradford Church of _Christ. They make holiday tray
Nease, Mrs. Merrill Floyd,
favors for veteran~ Memorial Hospital, assist tbe needy m a var1ety of ways, and take
Mrs. Vernon Nease , Mrs.
remembrances to the sick and shut-in of the community.
Denver Holler, Mrs . Olan
Genheimcr, Mrs. Fred Nease, .t.:::::::=:=:;::::~:=~==w.=:~:::====~=====::::=:=:=:::::::::::=:::=:=:=:::::::=:=:=::::::::~-====:::*=:=:::=:=:::::=:=:::=:w:~m:::::'
Mrs. Lawrence Napper. Mrs.
Edith Sisson and Mrs. Russ
P
tttt
Mrs. G. G. Werner, MidWatson.
.L'
i!~i dleport, was honored with a
::;;
;:;: birthday dinner Sunday at tbe
:~:!
By Charlene Hoeflich
:!:~ home of Mr. and Mrs. George
:;::
.,. Durst of Wellston. Guests were
Rhubarb is best when it's yoWJg and tender, says Agnes her husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Weeks who reports that right now it is coming up good and will Norman Stewart, Barbara and
soon be ready for use.
Steven and Mr. and Mrs. Terry
She has a new recipe for a rhubarb custard pie which she Barcus, Colwnbus, and Mr.
only recently acquired from a relative and passed it along to us. and Mrs. Jack Werner, Belpre.
RhubarbCustardPie
Steven Stewart recently
. 2 pounds of fresh tender rhubarb, 2 eggs, IV• cupssugar, 2 returned from a tour of duty
tablespoons of flour.
with the U.S. Navy at the South
Cut the rhubarb stocks into about 1'.. inch pieces. Beat the Pole. He married a New
egg, sugar and flour WJtil thoroughly mixed together. Stir in the Zealand girl who will join him
rhubarb and fill an unbaked pie shell. Bake at 400 degrees about here on April 5. Missing from
40 minutes.
the family group was William
(Pete) Werner who is stationed
CARRYING APICKET SIGN in front of the supermarket is with the U. S. Air Force in
definitely not my style, but I may give half-hearted support to the Germany. He has been there
nationwide meat boycott scheduled for the first week in April.
for 'almost three years and has
Whether or not you plan to join the thousands of housewives extended for another year.
across the nation who will be firm in their support of the boycott, Werner has been in the Air
if you are money conscious at all- or just plain short in the cash Force for over 12 years.
department - you have to be concerned about the price of food,
ACCUlRDN "425" Wa1erproot ,' sweep
meat particularly.
second hand, appl ied roman numeral
Meanwhile, and until prices come down (surely they will in children invited.
si lver dial ,
$135.00
AMERICAN
Legio n
time), the practical thing to do is to learn new ways to really
- Seersucker
The Accutron tu11ing fo tk replaces
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett
s-t·r -e-t-c-h your food dollar.
- Polyester
the outdated bal ance wheel th at's
Post
128,
6:30
potluck
dinner
Certainly
one
way
is
through
the
use
of
the
varieties
of
found in all watchr!s. Stop by so
- Polyester Crepe
we can tell you mor e. Starting
macaroni which are not only low priced, but adaptable for use Wednesday with juniors and
- Gingham Checks
with the right time of day. Accu·
senior to meet together.
with
the
most
inexpensive
meats
and
!ish,
yet
nutritious,
and
- Dolled Swiss
Iron by Bulova. from $110.00.
tasty. Macaroni also enables you to buy smaller quantities of Legionnaires will be guests for
ACCUTRON • by BULOVA
expensive meats adequate to feed your family. According to the the dinner. Each Auxiliary
Department of Agriculture, meat does account for a third of the member is to take a covered
It goes hm ·m·m ·m.
dish.
average family's food·expenditures.
MENTAL Health services,
"What's for Dinner, Mrs. Skinner'" couldn't have been
Wednesday,
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
published at a better time. It is a collection of recipes that tells
how to turn pasta into guest dinners as well as family-pleasing Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Phone 992-2104, ext. 28.
meals.
Court St., Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT Literary
It not only includes recipes for great dinners, but it gives tips
Club,
2 p.m. Wednesday, at the
on slimming with macaroni, spaghetti and egg noodle dishes.
•w~en cue, crown and
eryst&amp;l are intact .
The paperback book costs a dollar and gives everything from the home of Mrs. M. L. French.
Mrs. Harold Sauer to review
plain and simple use of pasta to gourmet dishes.
"Sam's Hearty Beef Casserole" might appeal to your family, "The Winds of War" by Her·
and it takes only one pound of groWJd beef and will serve six to man Wouk, and Mrs. ROOney
~·
~115 W. Second 992-2284 Pomeroy
Downing
to
review
"The
Adeight.
~~
We
have a credit plan de signed to fit your budget
~"' ""
8 ounc~s shell macaroni, cooked as directed on the package ve ntures of Being a Wife" by
m•o~rn •••o•• or·· ·~
We also have a li beral trade-In policy.
and drained, 1pound ground beef, one 1-pound can tomato sauce, Mrs. Norman Vincent Peale.
•.\ Trademark or THE SINGER CO MPANY
8 ounces cottage cheese, one lkmnce package cream cheese Roll call response will be
comments
on
the
books
.
softened, y, cup sour cream, one-third cup chopped green onions,
and 1 tablespoon chopped green pepper.
Brown the beef in skillet and add tomato sauce. Remove
from heat. Combine cheeses, sour cream, green onions and green
pepper.
pays for all. The bi gge r you r castle
a roun d the house.
It's more co nven ien t to li ve in a
Spread half of the shell macaroni in a two quart casserole.
th e more you 'll s,we.
Ex tensio n phones come in a great
Cover with the cheese mixture. Add remaining macaroni shells ho me with more than one phon e.
varie ty of colors and styles that ra nge
··rile prople you c .tll (,t/k lo O rH'· IO · (Jn•· ..
and pour the beef-tomato mixture over all. Bake in 350 degree Ju st a few cents a day wi ll ge t yo u an
oven for 40 minutes, or. until bubbly.
from las t-cen tury antiques to nex t·
ex tension for a bedroom, or den , or
century
modern .
:;:~9.~~;::&amp;~&amp;:;;;;;;;;;::::::~!!~::::::::::~::::::::::;;: - - - - - - - - - ,1laundry room , or a nursery, or an
Order several at one time and you
east wing, or a gardener's cottage, or
ge t a barga in . One insta llation charge
&amp;EOERALTELEPHDOE
any other place you happen to ha ve

htni~
. rg Foot/
.
Stretch Food Dollars With

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Gallia and
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Ph. 992-2181
Jack
Carsey. Mgr.

w.

Open Daily Until
6: 00P. M.

Whole or Half

SALE!.

MEET THE DUNCAN

TUESDAY
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at post home.

New Spring

Budget Dresses

YO YO CHAM PION
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$10 .00 to $16.00

lOlA'S

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Pomeroy, Ohio

Club, 7:30 tonight at home of
Mrs. George Buchanan.
POMEROY Past Matrons,
O.E.S. Tuesday night, 7:30
p.m., home of Mrs. Thelma
Dill ..
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Middleport
Lions Club, Wednesday noon at
the Meigs Inn. Guest speaker.
OHIO Valley Commandry 24,
Knights Templar, stated
conclave, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. Pomeroy Masonic
Temple . Potluck dinner will
precede at 6:30 p.m. All Sir
Knights, their ladies · and

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cans

3
SPAGHETTI.........................

IDEAL BRAND

IDEAL BRAND

MACARON 1...........................

3-

E.ASY MONDAY

rolls

Hb. ,

bx~

I

-

Fresh!

i
"

'1
00
b~
oz3 9$

. 22

ENGLISH.. WALNUTS
.................~~.~. 5 ·
'
DAIRY BUY! BORDEN'S
·16 oz. '1 0.0
COTTAGE CHEESE............3 c~
LARGE SIZE NUTS

_

Hb.

·

II
.

9~
.

2~oat$1
pkgs.

3
3
BABY ASP IRl N.......................... ~.~~!.
ST. JOSEPH

REG. 43'

.

bot.

·Head Scarfs
22 FL. OZ.
(1 PT. 6 OZ.)

GIANT

KING SIZE

ONLY
5LB.401.

I

'

I

1

Hb.

SPECIAL SALE!

Reg. 49' Each

OO

SPRAY STARCH ..........................~.~.

SIZE .
ONLY

~~

rolls

ladies' Nylon

Red. Ripe!

FURNITURE
:MIDDLEPORT, 0.

EOON BRAND

.

. ~,
•••
'&lt;

1~

.
4
j
u
mbo$1
00
PAPER TOWELS...............

FRENCH
FRIES

lb. bag 69~

SCOT
- LAD SALTINE
-

SCOT LAD

MEADOW RICH

~

I

IN-SEASON SPECIALS

3· ., 100
CRACKERS........................ ... bx~
1·
2
'1
00
TOILET TISSUE.............
ror

69¢

SCOT LAD

.~

.

9~

ICE CREAM

Everymctm castle, big or sn.alt
needs extension phones.

j

lvs.
for

FAIRMONT

'

9

lb.

~ ·,

ICE CREAM

5:30 P.M. WED., MAR. 28th

'I

79 .~69

Borden's Grade A

',.

'·

lb.

THURSDAY ONLY

l

.

16 oz. bottles

The Fabric Shop

BEllER
VALUES
ARE
'FOUND

BAKER

¢

lb.

CHEESE
READ

STOCK-UP PRICED

AT

AS SEEN ON TV

COLA

9~

p1ece

Home Made

USDA Choice

16 oz. bottles

.

ALL MEAT
BOLOGNA

CUBE STEAK
DOUBLE

pak

•

Swift's Premium

POLISH SAUSAGEib.

16 oz. bottles

Dr. Pepper

8

WILL TEACH YOU TRICKS
3:15 PM. WED., MAR. 28th

Diet Rite

8

'

'

POMEROY

Swift's Premium

ALL MEAT 12 oz.
WIENERS pkg. 7 9

pak

•

"IT'S TRUE!".

USDA
CHOICE

16 bottles

JONES BOYS .
I

Hb. pkg.

All Week Long ! !

Root Beer
oz.

Jewelry Store

HEY KIDS!

• •

DAD'S

GOESSLER

Ca Iend a(~ ~~;~;~a~~~;get~~~~:~:::

BACON

pak

i

· !!!!

Elm Hill Sliced

8

~Jaggi~g

1. Socia I I~~::"::::.:

.

lb•

16 oz. bottles

ggw up Spring
with gavingg
on fhggg l!vl!rpopular

AS SEEN ONTV

MIDDL'EPORT, D.

RC

@SEWING

...

1\"l ' .dll\

To Limit Quantities''

HAM S·LICES
lb. •1.39

'

SUPERIORS

TIME FOR

@),

ReserVe The

'

BONELESS·HAMS

®EASTER

HOMELITE®
CHAIN SAW
at the regular price.

0

.We Accept Federal Foo~ Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480

and Second

Honored Sunday

t\[ F un W/."th
,.., l

.

'

I· T·R·E· T·C·N·E·R·I

'·

~

�4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., March 'l:l. 1973

include 15-100 persons of a!l
·:ages. For further information,
call245-5353.extension 49 or 245RIO GRANDE ...., Private tilack and white boys being 5881.
auditions for the cast lor the needed. The Mal cast will
movie being produced by the
. . . . . . .1111!!'111111....."""'
Rio Grande College Theatre
Department will be held on i
Wednesday, March 28 from 10
a.m. to 10 p.m. in Community
Hall on the campus. All interested persons are urged to
come. There will be approximately 10 major and 10
minor roles, several smaller
speaking parts and many
extras to be selected.
The majority of roles will be
played by blacks. And, there
will be three ;·minor roles
foriboys, age 10 to 12, both

Casting set for WednesdiJy at 10

Banquet is planned
Easter morning breakfast
plans were discussed along
, with the annual motherdaughter banquet to be held in
May during a recent meeting of
the Women's Society of
Christian Service of the Forest
Run United Methodist Church
at the home of Mrs. Edison
Hollon.
Mrs. Henry Salser was cohostess for the meeting which
opened with group singing of
"God Will Take Care of You"
and devotions by Mrs. Olan
Genheimer. She gave a
meditation entitled "A White

Cat and Anxiety."
Mrs. Merriil Floyd had
charge of the program entitled
"Living and Acting in Love."
Scripture, Ephes ians I, 11
through 23 was read by Mrs.
Russ Watson, An "Interview"
with an eady christian, Mrs.
Alfred Yeauger, and one with a
"modern" christian, Mrs. Fred
Nease were conducted . A
discussion was had concerning
·the two interviews. Mrs . Edith ·
Sisson read an artic1e ''You are
needed" in connection with the
program. Mrs. Vernon Nease's
special was entitled "The Little
Red School House" taken from
the Reader's Digest.
Delicious refreshments were
served by the hostesses to Mrs.
QUILTING IS JUST one of many activities toward helping others carried out by the.
Alfred Yeauger, Mrs. Uswi n Helping Haods Missionary Group of the Bradford Church of _Christ. They make holiday tray
Nease, Mrs. Merrill Floyd,
favors for veteran~ Memorial Hospital, assist tbe needy m a var1ety of ways, and take
Mrs. Vernon Nease , Mrs.
remembrances to the sick and shut-in of the community.
Denver Holler, Mrs . Olan
Genheimcr, Mrs. Fred Nease, .t.:::::::=:=:;::::~:=~==w.=:~:::====~=====::::=:=:=:::::::::::=:::=:=:=:::::::=:=:=::::::::~-====:::*=:=:::=:=:::::=:=:::=:w:~m:::::'
Mrs. Lawrence Napper. Mrs.
Edith Sisson and Mrs. Russ
P
tttt
Mrs. G. G. Werner, MidWatson.
.L'
i!~i dleport, was honored with a
::;;
;:;: birthday dinner Sunday at tbe
:~:!
By Charlene Hoeflich
:!:~ home of Mr. and Mrs. George
:;::
.,. Durst of Wellston. Guests were
Rhubarb is best when it's yoWJg and tender, says Agnes her husband, Mr. and Mrs.
Weeks who reports that right now it is coming up good and will Norman Stewart, Barbara and
soon be ready for use.
Steven and Mr. and Mrs. Terry
She has a new recipe for a rhubarb custard pie which she Barcus, Colwnbus, and Mr.
only recently acquired from a relative and passed it along to us. and Mrs. Jack Werner, Belpre.
RhubarbCustardPie
Steven Stewart recently
. 2 pounds of fresh tender rhubarb, 2 eggs, IV• cupssugar, 2 returned from a tour of duty
tablespoons of flour.
with the U.S. Navy at the South
Cut the rhubarb stocks into about 1'.. inch pieces. Beat the Pole. He married a New
egg, sugar and flour WJtil thoroughly mixed together. Stir in the Zealand girl who will join him
rhubarb and fill an unbaked pie shell. Bake at 400 degrees about here on April 5. Missing from
40 minutes.
the family group was William
(Pete) Werner who is stationed
CARRYING APICKET SIGN in front of the supermarket is with the U. S. Air Force in
definitely not my style, but I may give half-hearted support to the Germany. He has been there
nationwide meat boycott scheduled for the first week in April.
for 'almost three years and has
Whether or not you plan to join the thousands of housewives extended for another year.
across the nation who will be firm in their support of the boycott, Werner has been in the Air
if you are money conscious at all- or just plain short in the cash Force for over 12 years.
department - you have to be concerned about the price of food,
ACCUlRDN "425" Wa1erproot ,' sweep
meat particularly.
second hand, appl ied roman numeral
Meanwhile, and until prices come down (surely they will in children invited.
si lver dial ,
$135.00
AMERICAN
Legio n
time), the practical thing to do is to learn new ways to really
- Seersucker
The Accutron tu11ing fo tk replaces
Auxiliary , Feeney-Bennett
s-t·r -e-t-c-h your food dollar.
- Polyester
the outdated bal ance wheel th at's
Post
128,
6:30
potluck
dinner
Certainly
one
way
is
through
the
use
of
the
varieties
of
found in all watchr!s. Stop by so
- Polyester Crepe
we can tell you mor e. Starting
macaroni which are not only low priced, but adaptable for use Wednesday with juniors and
- Gingham Checks
with the right time of day. Accu·
senior to meet together.
with
the
most
inexpensive
meats
and
!ish,
yet
nutritious,
and
- Dolled Swiss
Iron by Bulova. from $110.00.
tasty. Macaroni also enables you to buy smaller quantities of Legionnaires will be guests for
ACCUTRON • by BULOVA
expensive meats adequate to feed your family. According to the the dinner. Each Auxiliary
Department of Agriculture, meat does account for a third of the member is to take a covered
It goes hm ·m·m ·m.
dish.
average family's food·expenditures.
MENTAL Health services,
"What's for Dinner, Mrs. Skinner'" couldn't have been
Wednesday,
9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at
published at a better time. It is a collection of recipes that tells
how to turn pasta into guest dinners as well as family-pleasing Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Phone 992-2104, ext. 28.
meals.
Court St., Pomeroy
MIDDLEPORT Literary
It not only includes recipes for great dinners, but it gives tips
Club,
2 p.m. Wednesday, at the
on slimming with macaroni, spaghetti and egg noodle dishes.
•w~en cue, crown and
eryst&amp;l are intact .
The paperback book costs a dollar and gives everything from the home of Mrs. M. L. French.
Mrs. Harold Sauer to review
plain and simple use of pasta to gourmet dishes.
"Sam's Hearty Beef Casserole" might appeal to your family, "The Winds of War" by Her·
and it takes only one pound of groWJd beef and will serve six to man Wouk, and Mrs. ROOney
~·
~115 W. Second 992-2284 Pomeroy
Downing
to
review
"The
Adeight.
~~
We
have a credit plan de signed to fit your budget
~"' ""
8 ounc~s shell macaroni, cooked as directed on the package ve ntures of Being a Wife" by
m•o~rn •••o•• or·· ·~
We also have a li beral trade-In policy.
and drained, 1pound ground beef, one 1-pound can tomato sauce, Mrs. Norman Vincent Peale.
•.\ Trademark or THE SINGER CO MPANY
8 ounces cottage cheese, one lkmnce package cream cheese Roll call response will be
comments
on
the
books
.
softened, y, cup sour cream, one-third cup chopped green onions,
and 1 tablespoon chopped green pepper.
Brown the beef in skillet and add tomato sauce. Remove
from heat. Combine cheeses, sour cream, green onions and green
pepper.
pays for all. The bi gge r you r castle
a roun d the house.
It's more co nven ien t to li ve in a
Spread half of the shell macaroni in a two quart casserole.
th e more you 'll s,we.
Ex tensio n phones come in a great
Cover with the cheese mixture. Add remaining macaroni shells ho me with more than one phon e.
varie ty of colors and styles that ra nge
··rile prople you c .tll (,t/k lo O rH'· IO · (Jn•· ..
and pour the beef-tomato mixture over all. Bake in 350 degree Ju st a few cents a day wi ll ge t yo u an
oven for 40 minutes, or. until bubbly.
from las t-cen tury antiques to nex t·
ex tension for a bedroom, or den , or
century
modern .
:;:~9.~~;::&amp;~&amp;:;;;;;;;;;::::::~!!~::::::::::~::::::::::;;: - - - - - - - - - ,1laundry room , or a nursery, or an
Order several at one time and you
east wing, or a gardener's cottage, or
ge t a barga in . One insta llation charge
&amp;EOERALTELEPHDOE
any other place you happen to ha ve

htni~
. rg Foot/
.
Stretch Food Dollars With

SUPER .MARKET • Open D.aily 9 to 10 ~ Sun. 10 to 10

GET THIS HANDY
CHAIN SAW

ACCESSORY KIT
~~$30.00
NOW ONLY

$9.95
WHEN YOU BUY A NEW

d
00

Limited time offer.

L

POMEROY
Serving Meigs,
Gallia and
Mason Counties

Ph. 992-2181
Jack
Carsey. Mgr.

w.

Open Daily Until
6: 00P. M.

Whole or Half

SALE!.

MEET THE DUNCAN

TUESDAY
RACINE American Legion
Auxiliary Tuesday, 7:30 p.m.
at post home.

New Spring

Budget Dresses

YO YO CHAM PION
I

I

Beautiful Polyesters
$10 .00 to $16.00

lOlA'S

AT THE

Ma in at Sycamore
Pomeroy, Ohio

Club, 7:30 tonight at home of
Mrs. George Buchanan.
POMEROY Past Matrons,
O.E.S. Tuesday night, 7:30
p.m., home of Mrs. Thelma
Dill ..
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Middleport
Lions Club, Wednesday noon at
the Meigs Inn. Guest speaker.
OHIO Valley Commandry 24,
Knights Templar, stated
conclave, Wednesday, 7:30
p.m. Pomeroy Masonic
Temple . Potluck dinner will
precede at 6:30 p.m. All Sir
Knights, their ladies · and

'

'

·BRING YOUR YO,YO .AND HE

.

•. r

•

•

GALLIPOLIS

i

FROZEN FOODS
SCOT LAD

1h gal.

carton

am

1h gal.

crt.

ORANGE
JUICE

FAVORITE BREAD

GRAPEFRUIT

ORE IDA

5

.'
'

--

Florida New Crop

COFFEE
WHITENER

l

RICH'S

TOMATOES

WHITE
BREAD

t\
l

bsk.

•

;· .

r

16oz.59~
cans

3
SPAGHETTI.........................

IDEAL BRAND

IDEAL BRAND

MACARON 1...........................

3-

E.ASY MONDAY

rolls

Hb. ,

bx~

I

-

Fresh!

i
"

'1
00
b~
oz3 9$

. 22

ENGLISH.. WALNUTS
.................~~.~. 5 ·
'
DAIRY BUY! BORDEN'S
·16 oz. '1 0.0
COTTAGE CHEESE............3 c~
LARGE SIZE NUTS

_

Hb.

·

II
.

9~
.

2~oat$1
pkgs.

3
3
BABY ASP IRl N.......................... ~.~~!.
ST. JOSEPH

REG. 43'

.

bot.

·Head Scarfs
22 FL. OZ.
(1 PT. 6 OZ.)

GIANT

KING SIZE

ONLY
5LB.401.

I

'

I

1

Hb.

SPECIAL SALE!

Reg. 49' Each

OO

SPRAY STARCH ..........................~.~.

SIZE .
ONLY

~~

rolls

ladies' Nylon

Red. Ripe!

FURNITURE
:MIDDLEPORT, 0.

EOON BRAND

.

. ~,
•••
'&lt;

1~

.
4
j
u
mbo$1
00
PAPER TOWELS...............

FRENCH
FRIES

lb. bag 69~

SCOT
- LAD SALTINE
-

SCOT LAD

MEADOW RICH

~

I

IN-SEASON SPECIALS

3· ., 100
CRACKERS........................ ... bx~
1·
2
'1
00
TOILET TISSUE.............
ror

69¢

SCOT LAD

.~

.

9~

ICE CREAM

Everymctm castle, big or sn.alt
needs extension phones.

j

lvs.
for

FAIRMONT

'

9

lb.

~ ·,

ICE CREAM

5:30 P.M. WED., MAR. 28th

'I

79 .~69

Borden's Grade A

',.

'·

lb.

THURSDAY ONLY

l

.

16 oz. bottles

The Fabric Shop

BEllER
VALUES
ARE
'FOUND

BAKER

¢

lb.

CHEESE
READ

STOCK-UP PRICED

AT

AS SEEN ON TV

COLA

9~

p1ece

Home Made

USDA Choice

16 oz. bottles

.

ALL MEAT
BOLOGNA

CUBE STEAK
DOUBLE

pak

•

Swift's Premium

POLISH SAUSAGEib.

16 oz. bottles

Dr. Pepper

8

WILL TEACH YOU TRICKS
3:15 PM. WED., MAR. 28th

Diet Rite

8

'

'

POMEROY

Swift's Premium

ALL MEAT 12 oz.
WIENERS pkg. 7 9

pak

•

"IT'S TRUE!".

USDA
CHOICE

16 bottles

JONES BOYS .
I

Hb. pkg.

All Week Long ! !

Root Beer
oz.

Jewelry Store

HEY KIDS!

• •

DAD'S

GOESSLER

Ca Iend a(~ ~~;~;~a~~~;get~~~~:~:::

BACON

pak

i

· !!!!

Elm Hill Sliced

8

~Jaggi~g

1. Socia I I~~::"::::.:

.

lb•

16 oz. bottles

ggw up Spring
with gavingg
on fhggg l!vl!rpopular

AS SEEN ONTV

MIDDL'EPORT, D.

RC

@SEWING

...

1\"l ' .dll\

To Limit Quantities''

HAM S·LICES
lb. •1.39

'

SUPERIORS

TIME FOR

@),

ReserVe The

'

BONELESS·HAMS

®EASTER

HOMELITE®
CHAIN SAW
at the regular price.

0

.We Accept Federal Foo~ Stamps
PHONE: 992-3480

and Second

Honored Sunday

t\[ F un W/."th
,.., l

.

'

I· T·R·E· T·C·N·E·R·I

'·

~

�•
l\.tiAT ACTU'.f.C(
r:o 'tW flOP£
10 GET CUT

ll-\IS IS 1H£ FIRST
TIME: J\.1': evER "1'1'1€ATED
A MLISGER!,

Wjt,NT A~
INFORMATION

2 SIGNS

DEADL11NES,
.S· P.M . Dly Before Publlcatior

1

OF

Monday Oeadtine·9 a.m .
Cancell~tlon .- Corrections '
Will be ecft!'pted until9 'e .m . for
Day of.Publ icatlon

.

QUALITY

REGULATIONS

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Th'e Publisher reserves the

riQ,ht to edit o· ~ eject any ads .
leemed . ob· j~..!tional.
The ·
'vbliSher will not be res.ponslble
lor ~nore than o'* incOrrect

1968 CAMARO CONV.
$1695
V-8 motor, auto . tran s., P.S., and w-w tires, radio. ni ce
yellow finish with vinyl interior.
·

RATES

1967FORDLTD
5695
H. T. Sedan. V-8 eng ine, automati c trans ., P. steering &amp;
brak es, radio. blue fin ish. blk . vinyl top, good tires.

nu·rtlon .

· · .tFOr Waflt Ad Ser'VIC~::
.5 cents per Word one · Jnsertlo~
Minimum Charge 7Sc
r
12 centr per word fhr,il
con5eGuttve

Insertions.

·

..

18 cents per word six con·
'Secutlve insertions.
25 Per Cen't Discount on pald
ads and ads paid within lOdeys .

Special!!!

1970 DODGE POLARA
11695
4-door, r·.ctory a ir, V-8 engine. automatic transm iss ion,
power steering &amp; brakes, good white-wafl .tires, white
fini sh, vinyl top, radio, clean inside.

.

for Sale
CLEAN copper.· 45c lb . ; LOTS for sale; on Chester
Radiators, clean. 28c lb.; water: phone 992-5248 till 3
Brass, 18c lb.; Batteries. 70c : p.m. or 992-3436 after 3 p.m,

Busmess
• . serv1ces
·•

'

.
·

.-.-

_A
_ _ _ _:_:_

!FURNITURE

Sales ,

.,.17

WOOD TRUSSES

PeOPLE MAKE SO IMN'i
DEMANDS WHE:N 'IOU
OWN A DINI"R !

Co\MPUS CLA'ITER
WHAT ~0 YOU MEAN
'HO"P IT • ~ WE'LL
MISS. C'-ASS

Built to Your 'Specs'
Delivered to Job Site

SMlTILNE.LSON
MOTORSJ_JNC. -

IF WE STAY OUT
THUE WON'T BE
ANY C"ASSJ

ll1EV WANf FOOD 10 BE
CHEAP, WHOLEt;;OME,
WEL.L.-BALA~ED, TAS'I'f.
NOURI5HING, APPETIZING,
ATIRACfiVE'.1 CL-EAN ...

t;LEVEN ...TWELVE .. :T'Hi RTEEN .!.·
CLASS ~ISMiSSEC&gt; 2

I FIGURE ONE
' OUT OF EIGHT

i5N'T 13AD.

For

~-----

Notice

z

~
g

PRE-FABRICATED

·

Card

t

ASK US ASOUT

QUANTITY of used brick, will
. HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
C4RO OF THANKS . '
1972
HONDA
500
motorcycle.
4
give
away
:
used
field
spike
~top
.
In
and
See
Our
&amp; OBITUARY
I
MATERIALS CO.
liarrow
and
used Fl
suo fet so word rh inimpri1 .
991-2174 ·
Pomeroy
cy Iinder, many extra s. like w.heelbarrow for sa le ; coal : oor Display.
773-5554
~ason, W.Va .
Each addition-al word 2c . ·
new: phone 985 -3828.
tipple red dog , free for
BLIND ADS
3·9-lfc taking ; phone 742-4211 ; see
Additional 25c CharQ• · ··p~r
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large : .---,.;..,._,.....,,.,----..,..··
Sale
- - - - - -- -Arnold Grate, Rutland .
Advertisement .
112 ton pickup ;
and small: Backhoes and .
1972
GMC
Spr
inl
3-23-5tc
.
OFFICE HOURS
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
HAY. alfalfa and mixed ; pony ;
Loaders on track and tires ;
8:30a . m . tO 5 :00p .m . OaHy,
350 V-8, automatic, power - - -- - - - -phone 985-3849.
POMEROY, OHIO
8:30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Dump trucks - Lo-boy'
steering and brakes ; low
NEW 2 piece sofa bed suite In
3-25-6lp
Saturday.
·
Service; Septic tanks in - ~Wheel
mileage: phone 742-3171.
George
(Bill)
stalled ;
3-21-61c Herculon cover, this week ::------ only SI09.95 ;
Pomeroy TWO full size trailer beds.
Purtins ; phone 992 -2478.
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.,
phone 992-5947.
2-9-tfc4 '
of Thanks
1967 FORD '12 ton pickup, long , Pomeroy. Phone 992-7554.
3-25-31c
- - -- - WHY WAIT
bed, 4 speed, 2 gas tanks, runs
WE WISH to eKtend our sincere TRIPLE A Driver Education
3-22-61p ~~-...,--,-HAR~ISON'S TV Service and
- On Most
. American- Cars
-and
looks
good,
heavy
tires;
Classes
wi
ll
begin
April
2;
for
thanks to the many friends
BUY YOUR
1 BROWNING High Powered
Service
Cal
ls:
phone
992-2522.
-GUARANTEE~
phone 985 -3554, Harold STEREO
information con tact Ben
and relatives who were so
Automatic Pistol; 14 shof,
2-9-lfc
Brewer, Long Bollom .
• walnut . finished,
Slawler at 992.5628.
kind in the death of our wife
Phone 992-2094
FERTILIZER
9MM,
4"
barrel,
adjustable
_
_tfc
contemp~rary cabtnet, AM:
--,---_::_
25
3
3-2J.41c
and mother, those who sent
sights;
call
992-3889.
FM
rad1o,
4
speaker
sound
Now 1nd Get the Early
flowers and food ; Rev. - - - - - - Pomeroy_Home &amp; Auto'
3-25-3tc
1964 4 WHEEL drive pickup, system. 4 speed changer.
William KnitteL Ew ing WEE KENO Revival and Hymn
Estate
For
Sale
1
bed
od
h 1.
Balance 571.57. Paymerits lo
Open 8Til5
DISCOUNT
Sing , Freedom
Gospe l
Funeral Home and Mrs.
ong
' go
roug :res. fit your budget. Cal l 992-7085.
Monday
thru Saturday
lock-out hubs, runs good;
Mission, Bald Knob, Apr il4, 5, Bag, Bulk and Liquid FerCallen Dugan, singer. Charles
606
E.
Main,
Pomeroy, 0.
phone
985
-3554,
Harold
:::::::-::-::-,----3
-_22_
-6tc
6, 7:30p.m. Hymn Sing, Apri l tilizer, all available now.
LOTS on Wright St.. phone 742
Friley and family .
L~~·~·:··~--~..~-::.~.~~-W..
6630.
7, 7:30p .m., Barnell Family. Take delivery now from our
3-27-llp
Brewer. Long Bottom .
STEREO, Early Amer,·can
3-25-llc cabinet with AM-FM radio, 4
WILL trim or cut trees, clean
McArthur, on hand . Publ ic area warehouse at Pomeroy.
3-16-121c
------_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_::_
out basements, att ics, etc.
invited.
THE FAMILY of James A.
speaker
sound
system
,
4
REALTY
9._
POMEROY
'67 PONTIAC Bonneville, new speed changer . Balance 'HOUSE i=bR ..SALE, 114 Brick •
3-27-4tc
Phone 949-3221.
Roush wishes to ex tend their
601 E. Main
_..
..,.. JackW. carsey,Mgr.
clutch/ brakes and battery ;
3-11 -JOic
sincere thanks to Dr. Telle, - - - - - - - - · Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
$79.34.
Payments
to
Iii
your
~~, • • Po me roy
__.
phone 985-4291.
Pfl_:o_ne;_:_m_:·_:2.:.:11:.:_l__
Dr. Pickens, nurses and staff OLD FASHIONED revival sti ll .__ _ _ _
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
budget. Call 992-7085.
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
_ _ _ _ _ _ _.:_3·.::.:
25-3tp
of Veterdns
Memorial
in progress at the Pomeroy
l~cal ion, close to school and
3·22-6tc
located at Crossroads. Rl. 124.
Hospital: Ewing Funeral
Wesleyan Holiness Church on
City; contact Lou Osborne or
complete
front end service,
1972
CAMARO,
V-8;
power
PRICE REDUCED
Home and to those who visited
Rt. 143. Special services each
call 992-5898.
terrific the way we're
tune up and brake Sei'vlce:
steering; au tomatic; 4 new IT'S
and helped In any way; your
Large
corner
lot
.
3
evening a t 7:30p. m. Speaker DEAD Slack horses, catt le,
11 ·26-ffc I
lling Blue Lustre to clean
Wheels balanced elec tires; pay balance; call 992- se
and Pastor Re\1 . O'De ll
thoughtfulness will always be
bedrooms. Bath, nice kit rugs and upholstery. Rent :2~•hogs , sheep. Reasonable
tronically .
All
work '
;
,'·A
:
-:
C
-:-.
R
-:.
E
::~
:
..
:
-,n-~-~-a-tw_o_o~us·
a
rea;
5552
between
4:30
to
6
p.m.
remembered . Wife, nieces
Manley . Everyone welcome.
chen with large dining area .
shampooer $1. Nelson's Drug
charge . Call 245-5514.
guaranteed.
Reasonable
and nephews.
_
_
_
_
_
__
_
3_
27-3tp
3-26·11C
F.A.
heat,
utility
room,
Gas
phone
7
42-3
I
71.
Store. Pomeroy, Ohio.
2·28-3otc
rates . Phone 992-3213 or 7423-27-llc
lots of paneling and ti le.
3-21 -6tc
3-27-21c
3232.
1964 PONTIAC Tempest, 1967
Garage, 110,000.00.
2-18-tfc
Dodge Station Wagon : phone 1.72 ACRE lot ; phone 742-3656. IN Rutland. 3 bedroom hom e,
MOBILE HOME
MemOIY
992 -5367.
_ _ P
3-27-41p
fully carpeted, . built-in kit- Over 1 acre of ground. All set EXCAVATING, doz&lt;., ·-oer
IN LOVING memory ot our
WOMAN for housecleaning by - -- - -- - --3 27 71
chen
with dishwasher, hot
up ready to move into. 12x60
and backhoe work ; septic
dear father, Charles J . Ebers·
the day : phone 992-3686.
1964 HONDA 90. good bike for
water heat, fenced yard;
with extended living room , 3
tanks installed ; dump trucks
bach. who passed away live
3-27-41c '68 CHEVELLE Malibu; con- beginners; call 992-7692.
phone 742·3171.
B. R. , utility R., balh with
and
lo-boys for hire ; will haul
years ago, March 27, 1968.
::-:-::-=--__::_:_
tact Mayer &amp; Hill Barber
3-27-31c
J.21 -61c
shower, air cond . Close in .
fll,l dlrl , top soli, limestone
We fell and when those we love
CARHOPS; apply in person ;
Shop , Pomeroy .
:::--- - - - - - $6,900.00.
and gravel: ca ll Bob or Roger
Are called to live in the home
Craw's Steak House .
3-25-3tp FULL electric hospital bed ; 'H6llSE in Long Bottom, phoM
Jeffers. day phone 992-7089 :
30
ACRES
FENCED
above.
wheel chair arid walker ;
985-3529.
;
. ---:-:-:-----__::3~27-6tc 1968 PLYMOUTH Fury, blue also
night phone 992.3525 or 992·
But they have gone to prepare
Just
off
Rt.
681.
A
bargain
at
used on ly a few months; like
6-ll·lfd
5232.
the way, And we'll meet them
$12,900.
4
bedrooms.
just
WOMAN
lor
heavy
with black viny l top: phone
new; call 992-3881 between 4 - -:--- ,.,-::'7':.,---.:;.:_
Furnace Controls
2-11-tfc
again some happy day.
balh, deep well and pump.
housecleaning. Write P. 0.
742-4772.
p.m. and 6 p.m. or 992-3134 'I• ACI&lt;t lot _;;ith .1.970 65 K 12 3
~---,:---__:__
For God has told us that nothing
Just
rewired.
Buildings.
Box 729-E, c-o The Daily
HUMIDIFIER~
after 6 p.m.
bedroom Windsor Mobile
3-25-61c
can sever, A life He created to
S'EE US FOR : Awning,, Slonu
CAN'T BEAT THIS
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
-3-27'6tp
Home; air-conditioned ; 13ft.
Hot Water Heater~·
live on forever .
3-22-6tp 1948 CHEVY with newly rebuilt - -- -- - - -7 room home. Close ln. 3 ' doors and windows, carports,,
expando; 1'12 miles North of
So let God's promise soften our
marquees, afuminum ' siding
Plumbing
bedrooms , bath , NEW
engine ; $500 firm ; phone 992- GRAVELY 7.6 H.P. Custom
New Meigs School on Old Rt.
sorrow. And give us new
and
railing . A. Jacob, sales
WORK
like
a
horse
:
$75
per
siding,
rool
&amp;
carport
at
just
7897
after
5:30p
.m.
Convertible
Tractor
New
33;
phone
992-2627.
Electrical Work
strength for a brighter
representative.
For tree)
week isn 't hay ; for details
55,000.00.
3-25-610
July '72 30" Rotary Mower,
3-25-Jtc
tomorrow.
esllmates, phone Chari.,.;
write : Mrs. Libman, 34 W. - -- - - - - - dual
wheels,
Governor,
riding
,
_
:
_
FURNISHED
HOME
Sad ly missed by his sons
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.'1
Carpenter St., Athens, Oh io.
Renovated just 3 years ago.
sulky . Used less than 10 LOVELY new all-electric home
and daughlers and families .
and Son, Inc.
Johnson
3-25-61c For Rent
NEW storm doors &amp; win hours. New 5875. Make offer. on 90' x 140' lol . never lived
3-27-llp
3-2-ffc
~==--=---­
phone
992
-7777,
Larry's
in;
3
bedrooms.
living
room,
dows . Furnace, bath, floor ~~--,--,,---:.
- - - -- WANTED - Dr iver lor garbage NEW furnished trai ler, · 2 Mobile Homes, Pomeroy; all carpeted, buill -in kitchen
covering. Large lot 105x135. - ELNA ... and White ..-oew1ng.
truck to drive and pickup in
bedrooms,
in
good
residential
Larry
Evans,
till
6
p.m.
with
range
;
utility
room;
NEW range , ref. &amp; deep
992-2448
Pomeroy ; must be over 21 ;
Machines ... service on all
3-27-lfc bath : plenty of closet space ;
area in Syracuse ; I child
freeze.
JUST 58.500.00.
call
304-428-5877
or
leave
word
makes . Reasonable rates .
Pomeroy,
no
pels:
phone
992--phone
882
-2989.
accepted;
..
BEAUTIFUL BRICK
at City Hall.
The Sewing Center, Mid 2441 after 5:30p.m. daily: no NEW FOAM to fill your old
3-23-4tc
1 Acre . 3 bedrooms w-walkln
dleport. Ohio.
'
NEW 2 PIECE SOFA BED WANTED - Lady old -age
Sunday calls.
cushions, standard s1ze suite,
closets, 1112 baths, kitchen Is
11
-16-ttc
·
SUITE IN HERCULON
pensioner to share my home;
3·25-tfc only . $9.95.
Pomeroy - - - - - - - - - out of th is world, dining
COVER, THIS WEEK ONLY
phone 992-6766 .
Employment Wanted
area, full basement, utility
12
x
50
TRAILER,
married
Recovery,
62.
2
E.
Main
St.
$109.95; POMEROY _ _ _ __ ___3_25-31p LIGHT dozer work and set-up
3·8· 301P ·
room, carport. Many other
couples only ; no pets; utilities
RECOVERY, 622 E. MAIN
trailers
;
phone
742-5900.
features . $29,500.00. COULD
ST., POMEROY : PHONE ALL CATTLEMEN ARE IN paid ; Bob's Mobile Court, UPHOLSTERY
materials,
NOT BE REPLACED AT
992-7554.
VITED to the Rock Springs ===----__::3~
- 21 -Mc ~:;1acuse, Ohio: phone 992- regularly $3.9 5 only $1.95.
S45,000.00.
6-15-ffc ,
3-22-61p
Fairgrounds, Pomeroy, Oh io, EXPERIENCED painter, in Also remnants. Pomeroy
~-~--LARGE
LEVEL
LOT
Friday, March 30, 7:00 P.M.
_
_
__
_
__
__::3.:_·
25-lfc
Recovery. 622 E. Main St.
terior and exterior . Phone
Located near Mine area , 3 BEAt 1 r1~: rusn! Get your
' BEGINNING Afrll I, 1973 ,
for the Southeastern Ohio
J.8-3otp
985-3951.
lawnmower and tlller tuned bedrooms,
large bath, 3
Showalter's We Pet Shop will
2
BEDROOM
mobile
home.
airPolled Hereford Association 's
3·20-301p
up now : Small Engine Repair
be open 4 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
bedrooms, paneling, tile etc .
conditioned ; in Rac ine area: UPHOLSTERY materials;
Third Annual Graded Sale.
Shop
on Th ird St., Mason, W.
dally , al l day Saturday.
phone 992-6329 .
Grading will be done by a
6 rooms In all . REDUCED
Nylon prints, cotton prints,
110 Mechanic Street
Va.
Sunda.Y and Holidays.
panel of three graders. 28
3·16-lfc -velvets of all kinds. Pomeroy
TO JUST$9,200.00. CALL TO
3-6-3otc
3-18·12tp
Rugged Bulls (1 -5 years), 21
---~--Recovery. 622 E. Ma in St.
SEE.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
==-----__:__
UNFURNISHED 3 room
Bred and Open Females ( 10
3-8-Jotp
FOR A QUICK SALE DOZER and back hoe ·work,
•
apartment , 408 Spr ing Ave .,
mos .-6 yrs .) will be featured
KOSCOT KOSMETICS AND
LIST WITH US .
ponds and septi c lanks, dil·
An
exceptional
opportunity
'HOOD ' S AQUARIUMS ; fi sh· Pomeroy.
UPHOLSTER your own fur NEW LISTING
WIGS . SPECIALS MONTH
HENRY E. CLELAND
ciTing
service; top soil, fill
tor commercial or registered
LV .
BROWN'S
INDE ·
and supplies ; new location, --------~_:_:
3 -2-tfc niture. Foam cushions; any MODE
BROKER
dirt,
limestone
; B&amp;K Ex -i
breeders. For information :
Ash Street, Middleport near
size. Cotton, burlap, swivel
RN - large home sitPENDENT DISTRIBU ·
.992-2259
cavating
.
Phone
992 -5367, '
park ; phone 992-5443.
PRIVATE meeting room for
bases, zipper, webbing, well. ling on lop of a hill in a subTina Jetters. Route I, Athens,
TOR ,
MIDDLEPORT .
If no answer 99'2-2568 or 985Dick
Ka~r . Jr .
1_
7·tfc
any
organization;
phone
992Pomeroy
Recovery,
E.
division
.•
i'
:!.
5
bedrooms,
2
Ohio 45701 Ph . 614 -593-8535.
622
PHONE 992·5113.
4209
9-1-ff&lt;
3975.
Main St.
baths, e.-u..; heat , family
3·25-41p
2-23-tfc
_ __ __ _ __::_3·.:_11 -lfc
3 8 301 room, nice c&lt;'(;)'Jis of large
-PAfN'fi'NG, Masonry work ;
- - - - - - - ----·_f.. closets, beau1 .. ul kitchen ,
free estlmale; call 773-5580.
·3 AND 4 ·ROOM
lurnished
and'
SAVE
20
t
·
fire~lace,
double
carport,
and
,
Homes
For
Sale
1or_y
h
pc
.
tn
ven
_
_ __ _ _ __:3_7-301p
guests recently at the home of A shower was held for Mr. and
un furnts ed apartments . : clearance sa le now rn nearly 2 acres of land .
Phone 992-5434.
progress . 20 pel. discount on 565,000.00. .
..CASH ·paid for all makes and
Mrs . Clark 's grandparents , Mrs . Dan Akers (Connie
·
~-------412-lfc
·
most
ol
your
grocery
needs.
MIDDLEPORT
· models of mobile homes . &gt;&amp; E Applian ce Repair; repair
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey.
Miller). Others attending were Th·
20 5 ROOMS
Thl 1 · t th
Phone area code 614-423-9531 .
on all laundry equipment,
wall
to
.
wall
car"
means
you
can
save
s
s
IUS
e
DUPLEX
Mr. and Mrs. William Miller, Lucy
Thomas ,
Westina
pel. on your ~rocery bill. Gel place for beginners or older
4-13-tfc
refr igerat ion equipment and
pet ing , 2 bedrooms; 2 lhe full dela1is toda y at the folks. Has 2 bedrooms, bath ' - - - - - - - - . ··• house wiring ; welding
Debbie and Lori, spent a Crabtree, Betty Mattox, Hazel
bedroom house : phone 992·
Br ight Star 'Market next to and basement. $5500.00.
1970 GREGORY all electric
eleclrlc· and gas. Call 992 -3802
weekend in Powell, Ohio, Culwell, Goldie Gillogly,
2780 or 992-3432 .
· Drive-In Theatre. Mason , W.
mobile home with furn iture ,
12 9 ACRES
or after 4:30 p.m. call 992where they visited Mrs . Pauline Comer and Murl _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _3--13'1fc
Va.
ON RT. 124 WEST _ Several
air -conditioned ; phone 773 - 6050.
Mrs. Faye Jordan and Mrs. Miller's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gala way.
5135 ·
3·20-16lc buildings, 2 barns. and large
3-21 -30tp
HOUSE
and
2
trailer
lots.
Phone
-3 23 t P
Ida Dennison were Sunday Glen Gassaway and other
-5693.
G
home
.
All
minerals.
Plenty
of
------6
992
ROCE RY business for sale.
.dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. relatives in that area .
3-26-51c
Building for sale or lease. room for hO\Jses or trailers .
OWN YOUR HOME AT LOW SEPT IC TANKS AROi!lc:
Phone 773-5618 from 8:30p.m. 30 ROOMS
NEW- LISTING
COST - see Kl ngs bury Home
Dorsey Jordan and family .
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·'
Steam heating,
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jor7 ROOMS, p;, · baths, un - lo 10 p.m. for appointment. bar with 0 .1.2_3 licenses. All
Sales &amp; Service, Inc., phone
ED, REPAIRED . MILLER
Mr. and Mrs. Wes Mattox dan, Bryan, Keith and Sarah
SANITATION.
STEWART,
furnished
house;
705
S.
3·20-lfc
furniture
.
Corner
lot
Wl
'
lh
992-6256from21o7p.m.
orby
and daughters who have stayed Faye, called on his brother and
Second St., phone 992-5213.
- -- - - -- - appointment. 24' wide OH IO. PHONE 662-3035.
,
PUBLIC NOTICE
3.27 .3tp 1973STERE08track.mustsell parking .
Asking
only
furnished . Made by Skyline
in the home of his uncle and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
10-4-lfc
for balance due of $98.80 or $32.500.00.
Corp ., country's largest . - - - - - - - - - - - -- -I
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walter Jordan in Gallipolis on
NOTICE ON FILING
3 ROOM &amp; bath furnished
take over payments of $7.75
2 YEARS OLD
"Meigs County owned and
Mattox, have gone to Los Sunday evening.
CONCR.ETE
OF INVENTORY
apartment ; comp let ely
per month. Caii992-SJ31.
NEAR RACINE- Nice kitoperated." Financing READY-MIX
delivered right to your
AND APPRAISEMENT
private ; ulilities paid ; for one _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_·
21-6lc chen, utility, 2 bedrooms, and
available. Set up on your lot
Angeles, Calif., area where his
Mrs . Donald Comer, Mrs. The Stole ol Ohio , Meigs
or two men ; call 992-3881 belarge living. Carport. large Jot.
ready for ~our occ"&amp;ancy . 200
pro/eel. Fasl and easy . Free
mother, Mrs. Emma Smith, Ronald Bolen and Lisa, Miss County
Court x olthe
· 1
1973 Zl g- Za g Only$14,000.00.
est mates, Phone 992 -3284.
To th.e Probate
Adminislratri
lween4p.m. and6p.m. or992- LEFT '"ayaway.
yardsoff 1.33on ountyRd
lives.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co ..
3134 after 6 p.m.
Sewing
Machine.
This
LARGE OLDER HOME
·18. Quick delivery. Our lo...;
Susan Perry, Mrs. Murl Galay, estate ; 10 such 01 Ihe following
Middleport, Ohio .
27 ·6tp
machine darns, embroiders, LARGE DEN - 3 nice
o-verhead will saveyouSSS. 12'
House guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Mendal Jordan, and Mrs. as are resid ent s of the State of _ _ __ _____3-~
-JO-Ifc
Ohi o, viz: the s urviving overcasts and monograms . bedrooms, paneled den, family
and 14' Mobile Homes _ _ __ _ _ _.:_6~
Paul Gaston and family for the William Thomas attended a spouse, the nex t of ki n, the
Pay balance of 141.50 or pay
d 2 bath
d
availabl e, Kingsbury Home
S6 per month. Call 992-5331 room, an
s, garagesan
Sales &amp; Service, Inc.
SEPTIC nNKS CL&amp;ANED
w~kend were Linda Corbett, vacation bible school materials benefic iaries under the will ;
and to th e allorney or attorneys
FOR RENT
3-21-6tc ( ~early 2 acreNsE. W
·
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 441
Htggmsport, Kare? Acun.tus, · showing at Clark Bible reprHenting any of the
--------4782, Gallloolls, John Russel
(3) 197 3 Ziy·Zag Sewing ALL ELECTRIC - 3 nice
ONner
&amp; operator.
Stdney and Jante Brutns, Bookstore in Jackson on aforement ioned personS!
,; Air CDndifloiler~ ,
Henry L. Johnson , Deceased ,
Machines le t In layaway. bedrooms• large kit che n, f uII
S-12-1
Marta Stem.. They came MoQday evening. The group Syracuse ,
io,
Sutton
•Awnings·
Township , No . Oh
20846.
Beautiful r.astel color, full ba sement • an d garage. "1.. ear
especially at tlus time to attend attended this session in
C. BRADFORD, Auctlonee,
You ar e hereby notified that
size mode . All built-in lo Rutland . $20,500.00.
•
' •'Underpinnina
Complete Service
Inventory and
Ap .
bullonhole, do stretch sewing
NEW LISTING
the wedding of Lois Gaston and preparation for a vacation the
pra
lsem
enl
of
the
estate
of
I
he
and
fancy
shlchlng
.
Pay
lust
CARRY
OUTOn
Route
143,
Phone 949-3821
Rick McDaniel which was held Bible School to be held at aforementioned , decea sed, late
Middlepor-t, 0 .
$.48.75 cash or terms and over 4 acres with farm
Racine, Ohjo
on Saturday evening at the Temple Church in June.
of said County , was filed in th is
available . Trade -ins ac - 1 pond. Plenty of parking .
. Crill Bradfqrd ·
Court . Said Inven tory and
_ _ _ __ __ _5:_·1·1fc
cepted. Phone 992-7755, Asking just $8500.00.
Albany Baptist'1::hurch . Many
The members of the Temple Apprai sement wi ll be for
!'lea
ring before th is Court on the
1 Efficiency Apt, with new
Electro Hygiene Co.
RENOVATED
relatives and friends from this Church WSCS held their March
llh day ot April , 1913&lt; at 10 :00
lurnilure. all utilities paid.
3-21-6lc 3 aEDROOMS - New kitchen,
SEW IN G MACHINES. Re~lr
community also attended along meeting in the home of Mrs . o'clock A.M.
- - - - - - -- new bath. All utilities on nice
service, all makes. 992-2284.1
person des iring lo file
2 Furnished Apts. with new
(2 ) ELECTROLUX Vacuum street ·
R 11 d 0 1
wilh Susan and Jerry Frazier William Miller. Devotions for excAny
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
eptions thereto m usl f'•l•
Cl eaners complele with at- "'00 00 tn
u an ·
nY
ftOMES\
f"rnt'lure
with or WI·th ou1
'
.
'
o!Galllpoliswhocamefor their Lent were given by Mrs . th em at lea st five days prior to
u
'
~ · ·
·Authorized Singer Sales an«~
Blvd.
th e date set lor hearing .
utilities . Both lia~ 1 or 2
tachments. cordwlnder and INVESTMENTS
MOST
Service. We,Sharpen Sclssorsl
cousin's wedding .
Mendal Jordan and included
Given under my hand and
bedrooms . No Pels.
·paint spray. Used but In like PEOPLE TALK ABOUT, BUT
3-29-llc,
new co~dition . Pay $34.45 ONLY A FEW REALLy INMark and Steven Hamon of scripture verses, meditations seal of said Court , thi s 26th day
of Ma rch 1913.
Ph
cash or budget plan available.
McArlhur were weekend and songs. Plans were made
Mann ing D. Webster
one: 992·3863
Phone 992-7755 , Electro VEST. DON'T MISS YOUR
Judgeandex -olficio
Till P.M.
Hygiene Co.
CHANCE, AND SAY I COULD
guests of their uncle ar·d Junt, for the sociely to assist with
Clerkol said Court
Or 992 _
3 2161 c OF HAD THAT.
5844
. .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Che: ,Jl ' Hnd expenses of the vacation Bible
By
A~~:ul~~l~~k
After
6
p.m.
.
COAL,
Llmestone
,_E_x_c-elslo~
GORDON
B. TEAFORD
family.
School and building a walk
IJ
I
27
14
1
J,
21
Salt
Work.s.
E.
Main
st:,'
ASSOCIATES
Mrs. Larry Stanley a:.c Anna from the road to church steps.
Pometoy. Plione 99 2.389 1.
992-3325or992-3615
spent a week with her parents,
·Or
NOSUNDAYSHOWINGS ·
4-12-tfc
Mr.and Mrs. Lewis Smith. The
' 70 YAMAHA 175 Enduro ; llRA~~ bed, brass kettle,
Stanleys are moving to Marion
phone 742·5980.
yoke, high chair, 12 ton
where he has employment.
J.2 1-61c hydraulic jack, Iron lea
Now you ~an .• ~uy . fhai
The Busy Bee Society of the
- - - . - - - ---=.:
(omfortable
La·Z-Boy'
kettle , 12 ga. double barrel
Carpenter Baptist Church met
ALUMINUM Car top boats, 10;· shotguf'l , muzzle loader ; New
chair you've always
· 12 and 13 ft . Kingsbury Rd .,
Idea side delivery rake. 4 bar;
dreamed of at our low
with Mrs. Anna Uch in her
Co. Rd. 18, Phone 992-6256 John Houdashelt, Minersville,
prices.
home. Freda Smith was
after 5 p. m,
0.
program leader and others
3-8·301c
3-25-31p
present were Emma Whitler
. 4uthorired
·siNGER automatic sewing GOOD Timothy hay; call 843tington, Metta Fisher, fda
machlne: like new in walnut 2350 a'ter 4 p.m.
I
cabinet. Makes design slit·
J.25·31c
Cheadle, VIvian Gaston, Lynn
ches. zig-zags, buttonholes, - McWhorter
and
Bonnie
blind hems , overcasts, etc.,, NEW ·strawberry planfs, Rt.
$l!5. Call Ravenswood, 273· 338, near Racine locks: phone
Cheadle.
ON YOUR DIAL .· I' .
9521 or 27H893. ·
247,2309, Charlie Foster.
Herm1nGnte
Mr. and. Mrs. Larry Clark
1-ll -tfc
3·25-6tc
773.5592
Milson, Va.
and daughters of Ch""Jer were

Pomeroy Motor Co.

i

'

·- ·· •·
'~~=========:;-~~;:;;:::;::;::::=:=:-~=::;:;;~~;~·:::~~

Reed sville,
GinsenJl
S60378-6249.
lb.; M. A. Hall, - - - - - - -- 3-25-61c
3-9-lfc STARCRAFT Spring Sale ~-·~-c-~.----o~-:-....,-,
Check these savings on 24'7"
PO
. MEROY
OL!J furniture, oak tabre~ ; - S1,000off; 22' 7" - $900 off;
organ s, dishes, clocks, brass , 20'7'' - $800 off; 18'7" - $675
HOME &amp; AUTO
beds or complete households. ; off. Fold down Starmasler
Write M. D.. M1ller, Rt . ·4, 1 save S345; Galaxle S&lt;!Ve $.450;
Pomeroy. Oh1o. · Phone 99l· Buy now before factory price
992-2094
6271.
.
increase goes into effect . . .606 E. Main .Pomeroy
1·7-t(c · CAMP CONLEY STAR- -- - . ---• CRAFT SALES. Rt. 62 N. of
OFFICE SUPPLIES
LOCUST posts. 711. long; 4 to 6 Pt. Pleasant, Behind Red
inches: phone 992-5795.
Carpet Inn . Ph. 675-5384.
and
3-27-5tc
3-23-71c

UtO

of 'TltfiWY?

Real Estate For Sale

EXPERT
Alignment
'5.55

EVER'&gt;t:WE!&gt; ASLEEPASCEND TI-l£ STAI"&lt;5

4NP MOVE THE 5~7V£

ASIOE.-

WE!r&gt;.E WAITING
IN A CAR OUTSIDE.
DID'iOU BF&gt;.INGTHE
WORLD'S MOST

PRECIOUS

Real

'10'!3£T.
IT'S NEXT

TOMAH

HEAR ~-

MANUSCRIPT?

rtLELAN~

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

GAME HE'LL. I&lt;NOW MORE

Wanted

"HEll"

OU'T 0' HIM .'_~_,

WORDS 'THAN A

CON~I'!ESSMAN !

I~N ''T 'T~EI'!E AIIIYTHIN&lt;&gt;
HE COUI.D ,JUST HAllE
AIN Wn'H?
~--

WINNIE WINKLE

.

In

THI$ ON!O'L.I.. MAKE
A HUMAN COMPIJ'TeR

AFTER HE PLAYS 'THIS

MYINCIGC&gt;:lfr3Y '10
HAL '!HI~ MORNING
I~ HARDLY MY IDEA
STARTING '!HE
tillY OFF RIGHT.

Help Wanted

HEAnNG &amp;
COOLINb :

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Notice

o.

3 ·:l7

Virgil B.
Teaford, St.
Broker

LITI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

Notice

~~-~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

--SO '1tJU CAN IMAGINE
HOI&lt;/ LOHG IT TAKES
10 EXECUTE 'T~E
TAKING, OVER OF
'!.@CONTINENT"''

ACROSS
1. Boarding
house
occupant
7. Absent
11. Make'
the
scene
12. Substruc-

"""'""""'=----·-

------

Mobile

Carpenter

News, Event

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS

AMANDA PANDA

IH£RE ARE ONL'I

FOUR t7oU6HNUT5
ON THE PLATE. 1

c·

JUI?T' A FEW
WI!!U.. • CHO!!OSN
IYORP5 ~HOULD
PUT THEM IN THE
Pi&lt;'ROPI!!R F~AMlf
0' MIND TO
i&lt;'ECI!!IVI!:
eA5v!

We tllk to you
:like a P81S011.

- ----=-- ==-=--- - -

WMP0/1390 .

-

ADD E.IGHT!

36. "-

OCH,NOO! FIONA 17 IH
THe SONNIE!&gt;1' F~OWER
0' CLAN MoNMH ... EV!!!'-1
IF YURR.MITHIR DID
MARRY A DUNCAN!

Yesterday's Cryploquole: DOINGl:ASILY WHAT OTHERS
FIND DIFFICULT IS TALENT; DOING WHAT IS IMPQS.
SIBLE FOR TALENT IS GENIUS.-HENRI AMIEL

DOWN
1. College
cheer
2. Gold
(Sp.)
3. Table

(@ 1973 King Feature• Syndicate, lne. )

scrap

4. Hand (sl.)
5.Turned
inside
out
G. Convene
again
7. Presidential nick-

name

8. In
the
bullpen
(2 wds.)
9. Cruising
10. Tokyo's
old name
14. English
Roundhead

statesman

Yesterday's Anttwer ·
Unscramble th... fwr Jumbleo.
one
letter to each oquare, to
17. Hay30. Roman
form four ordinary words.
wire
Stoic
18. Live ·
pbllosoliness
pher
19. Like
32. Burmese
some
knife
engines
34. - test
(hyph.
35. Photo. wd.)
gravure
umiY
21. Skin
process
23. Swerve
37. Region
23. Military
39. Philippine
r-;_---,
org.
tree
26. Freshly
40. Term
tSESAVll
28. Renowned
41. Summer - 'I
·
surgeon ,
(Fr.)
..A 1
f.._ A
1
Chris·
42. ':~::==~~ a__J
Moines
r
tiaan -

I I

I
...
I [J I t IJ ••r•••ted
p "'l

IWYSAfl

1

o::

1 THE

WHE~E

TO L.OOI&lt; FOI't

A HELPIN&amp; HANI7.

Now arranre the cln:leol letten
to form the ourprloellllwer, u
br the above eartoon.

t xx)oF ( xrx J rxxJ
(AMwen ta1110rraw)

!

Jumbl•" CYNIC VINOM

Yulerd•r'•

AITIRT

MYOPIC

.
Antw~tf: Whe11 the bartender'• mt~ay there •ho11ld
be tUIOtlter. .. ON TAP

.

Lucasta"

AND PINNA
FORJ&lt;'GIT YUFIR

COU~I N HAMI~H!

GIE'? A LOOK AT
Ye,~A~~IE!

38. Unfeeling
(hyph.
wd.)
43. Virginia
willow
genus
U . Bring
into
being
IS. Extinct
bird
?.·17

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Js
used for the three L's, X for fhe tWQ&gt;O's, etc . .Single !etten
apostfitphes, the length and formation o[ the words are
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

all

oea

MASON

'(ou'Lt... HAVE To

CAPI'AIN EASY

CHArRs:·

·

·

lo flAVE AOol~N

4+8=12

LA-z;..aov

F Sale

ture
13. Irascible
(hyph.
wd.)
15. Card
player's
three
16. Chou's
associate
17. Grassland
2o. Musical
paces
· 22. Mic~iga~
college
24. Siclllan
city
27. Was solicitous
28. Initiated
29. Formerly
30. Military
greeting
31. Command
sa: General
Wain·
wright ·
was one
(abbr.)
34. Nigerian
tribesman

_46. Sayings

CRYPToQUOTES
0 RL

\

E LSL Z I 0 T US

VTKKLZLSNL

FU..NITU·· ·

ISV IS
EICSUZ

- -- - -- -

I

I

YLOBLLS

LFLNOZTN

"

E I G

T D

0 R L L------"'-~-.J L---~-----.J
1

I · HVILFLF L

EHTOIZ . - ATOXT

\

-

�•
l\.tiAT ACTU'.f.C(
r:o 'tW flOP£
10 GET CUT

ll-\IS IS 1H£ FIRST
TIME: J\.1': evER "1'1'1€ATED
A MLISGER!,

Wjt,NT A~
INFORMATION

2 SIGNS

DEADL11NES,
.S· P.M . Dly Before Publlcatior

1

OF

Monday Oeadtine·9 a.m .
Cancell~tlon .- Corrections '
Will be ecft!'pted until9 'e .m . for
Day of.Publ icatlon

.

QUALITY

REGULATIONS

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

Th'e Publisher reserves the

riQ,ht to edit o· ~ eject any ads .
leemed . ob· j~..!tional.
The ·
'vbliSher will not be res.ponslble
lor ~nore than o'* incOrrect

1968 CAMARO CONV.
$1695
V-8 motor, auto . tran s., P.S., and w-w tires, radio. ni ce
yellow finish with vinyl interior.
·

RATES

1967FORDLTD
5695
H. T. Sedan. V-8 eng ine, automati c trans ., P. steering &amp;
brak es, radio. blue fin ish. blk . vinyl top, good tires.

nu·rtlon .

· · .tFOr Waflt Ad Ser'VIC~::
.5 cents per Word one · Jnsertlo~
Minimum Charge 7Sc
r
12 centr per word fhr,il
con5eGuttve

Insertions.

·

..

18 cents per word six con·
'Secutlve insertions.
25 Per Cen't Discount on pald
ads and ads paid within lOdeys .

Special!!!

1970 DODGE POLARA
11695
4-door, r·.ctory a ir, V-8 engine. automatic transm iss ion,
power steering &amp; brakes, good white-wafl .tires, white
fini sh, vinyl top, radio, clean inside.

.

for Sale
CLEAN copper.· 45c lb . ; LOTS for sale; on Chester
Radiators, clean. 28c lb.; water: phone 992-5248 till 3
Brass, 18c lb.; Batteries. 70c : p.m. or 992-3436 after 3 p.m,

Busmess
• . serv1ces
·•

'

.
·

.-.-

_A
_ _ _ _:_:_

!FURNITURE

Sales ,

.,.17

WOOD TRUSSES

PeOPLE MAKE SO IMN'i
DEMANDS WHE:N 'IOU
OWN A DINI"R !

Co\MPUS CLA'ITER
WHAT ~0 YOU MEAN
'HO"P IT • ~ WE'LL
MISS. C'-ASS

Built to Your 'Specs'
Delivered to Job Site

SMlTILNE.LSON
MOTORSJ_JNC. -

IF WE STAY OUT
THUE WON'T BE
ANY C"ASSJ

ll1EV WANf FOOD 10 BE
CHEAP, WHOLEt;;OME,
WEL.L.-BALA~ED, TAS'I'f.
NOURI5HING, APPETIZING,
ATIRACfiVE'.1 CL-EAN ...

t;LEVEN ...TWELVE .. :T'Hi RTEEN .!.·
CLASS ~ISMiSSEC&gt; 2

I FIGURE ONE
' OUT OF EIGHT

i5N'T 13AD.

For

~-----

Notice

z

~
g

PRE-FABRICATED

·

Card

t

ASK US ASOUT

QUANTITY of used brick, will
. HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
C4RO OF THANKS . '
1972
HONDA
500
motorcycle.
4
give
away
:
used
field
spike
~top
.
In
and
See
Our
&amp; OBITUARY
I
MATERIALS CO.
liarrow
and
used Fl
suo fet so word rh inimpri1 .
991-2174 ·
Pomeroy
cy Iinder, many extra s. like w.heelbarrow for sa le ; coal : oor Display.
773-5554
~ason, W.Va .
Each addition-al word 2c . ·
new: phone 985 -3828.
tipple red dog , free for
BLIND ADS
3·9-lfc taking ; phone 742-4211 ; see
Additional 25c CharQ• · ··p~r
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large : .---,.;..,._,.....,,.,----..,..··
Sale
- - - - - -- -Arnold Grate, Rutland .
Advertisement .
112 ton pickup ;
and small: Backhoes and .
1972
GMC
Spr
inl
3-23-5tc
.
OFFICE HOURS
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
HAY. alfalfa and mixed ; pony ;
Loaders on track and tires ;
8:30a . m . tO 5 :00p .m . OaHy,
350 V-8, automatic, power - - -- - - - -phone 985-3849.
POMEROY, OHIO
8:30 a .m . to 12 : 00 Noon
Dump trucks - Lo-boy'
steering and brakes ; low
NEW 2 piece sofa bed suite In
3-25-6lp
Saturday.
·
Service; Septic tanks in - ~Wheel
mileage: phone 742-3171.
George
(Bill)
stalled ;
3-21-61c Herculon cover, this week ::------ only SI09.95 ;
Pomeroy TWO full size trailer beds.
Purtins ; phone 992 -2478.
Recovery, 622 E. Main St.,
phone 992-5947.
2-9-tfc4 '
of Thanks
1967 FORD '12 ton pickup, long , Pomeroy. Phone 992-7554.
3-25-31c
- - -- - WHY WAIT
bed, 4 speed, 2 gas tanks, runs
WE WISH to eKtend our sincere TRIPLE A Driver Education
3-22-61p ~~-...,--,-HAR~ISON'S TV Service and
- On Most
. American- Cars
-and
looks
good,
heavy
tires;
Classes
wi
ll
begin
April
2;
for
thanks to the many friends
BUY YOUR
1 BROWNING High Powered
Service
Cal
ls:
phone
992-2522.
-GUARANTEE~
phone 985 -3554, Harold STEREO
information con tact Ben
and relatives who were so
Automatic Pistol; 14 shof,
2-9-lfc
Brewer, Long Bollom .
• walnut . finished,
Slawler at 992.5628.
kind in the death of our wife
Phone 992-2094
FERTILIZER
9MM,
4"
barrel,
adjustable
_
_tfc
contemp~rary cabtnet, AM:
--,---_::_
25
3
3-2J.41c
and mother, those who sent
sights;
call
992-3889.
FM
rad1o,
4
speaker
sound
Now 1nd Get the Early
flowers and food ; Rev. - - - - - - Pomeroy_Home &amp; Auto'
3-25-3tc
1964 4 WHEEL drive pickup, system. 4 speed changer.
William KnitteL Ew ing WEE KENO Revival and Hymn
Estate
For
Sale
1
bed
od
h 1.
Balance 571.57. Paymerits lo
Open 8Til5
DISCOUNT
Sing , Freedom
Gospe l
Funeral Home and Mrs.
ong
' go
roug :res. fit your budget. Cal l 992-7085.
Monday
thru Saturday
lock-out hubs, runs good;
Mission, Bald Knob, Apr il4, 5, Bag, Bulk and Liquid FerCallen Dugan, singer. Charles
606
E.
Main,
Pomeroy, 0.
phone
985
-3554,
Harold
:::::::-::-::-,----3
-_22_
-6tc
6, 7:30p.m. Hymn Sing, Apri l tilizer, all available now.
LOTS on Wright St.. phone 742
Friley and family .
L~~·~·:··~--~..~-::.~.~~-W..
6630.
7, 7:30p .m., Barnell Family. Take delivery now from our
3-27-llp
Brewer. Long Bottom .
STEREO, Early Amer,·can
3-25-llc cabinet with AM-FM radio, 4
WILL trim or cut trees, clean
McArthur, on hand . Publ ic area warehouse at Pomeroy.
3-16-121c
------_ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:_::_
out basements, att ics, etc.
invited.
THE FAMILY of James A.
speaker
sound
system
,
4
REALTY
9._
POMEROY
'67 PONTIAC Bonneville, new speed changer . Balance 'HOUSE i=bR ..SALE, 114 Brick •
3-27-4tc
Phone 949-3221.
Roush wishes to ex tend their
601 E. Main
_..
..,.. JackW. carsey,Mgr.
clutch/ brakes and battery ;
3-11 -JOic
sincere thanks to Dr. Telle, - - - - - - - - · Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
$79.34.
Payments
to
Iii
your
~~, • • Po me roy
__.
phone 985-4291.
Pfl_:o_ne;_:_m_:·_:2.:.:11:.:_l__
Dr. Pickens, nurses and staff OLD FASHIONED revival sti ll .__ _ _ _
house, 3 bedrooms, excellent
budget. Call 992-7085.
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
_ _ _ _ _ _ _.:_3·.::.:
25-3tp
of Veterdns
Memorial
in progress at the Pomeroy
l~cal ion, close to school and
3·22-6tc
located at Crossroads. Rl. 124.
Hospital: Ewing Funeral
Wesleyan Holiness Church on
City; contact Lou Osborne or
complete
front end service,
1972
CAMARO,
V-8;
power
PRICE REDUCED
Home and to those who visited
Rt. 143. Special services each
call 992-5898.
terrific the way we're
tune up and brake Sei'vlce:
steering; au tomatic; 4 new IT'S
and helped In any way; your
Large
corner
lot
.
3
evening a t 7:30p. m. Speaker DEAD Slack horses, catt le,
11 ·26-ffc I
lling Blue Lustre to clean
Wheels balanced elec tires; pay balance; call 992- se
and Pastor Re\1 . O'De ll
thoughtfulness will always be
bedrooms. Bath, nice kit rugs and upholstery. Rent :2~•hogs , sheep. Reasonable
tronically .
All
work '
;
,'·A
:
-:
C
-:-.
R
-:.
E
::~
:
..
:
-,n-~-~-a-tw_o_o~us·
a
rea;
5552
between
4:30
to
6
p.m.
remembered . Wife, nieces
Manley . Everyone welcome.
chen with large dining area .
shampooer $1. Nelson's Drug
charge . Call 245-5514.
guaranteed.
Reasonable
and nephews.
_
_
_
_
_
__
_
3_
27-3tp
3-26·11C
F.A.
heat,
utility
room,
Gas
phone
7
42-3
I
71.
Store. Pomeroy, Ohio.
2·28-3otc
rates . Phone 992-3213 or 7423-27-llc
lots of paneling and ti le.
3-21 -6tc
3-27-21c
3232.
1964 PONTIAC Tempest, 1967
Garage, 110,000.00.
2-18-tfc
Dodge Station Wagon : phone 1.72 ACRE lot ; phone 742-3656. IN Rutland. 3 bedroom hom e,
MOBILE HOME
MemOIY
992 -5367.
_ _ P
3-27-41p
fully carpeted, . built-in kit- Over 1 acre of ground. All set EXCAVATING, doz&lt;., ·-oer
IN LOVING memory ot our
WOMAN for housecleaning by - -- - -- - --3 27 71
chen
with dishwasher, hot
up ready to move into. 12x60
and backhoe work ; septic
dear father, Charles J . Ebers·
the day : phone 992-3686.
1964 HONDA 90. good bike for
water heat, fenced yard;
with extended living room , 3
tanks installed ; dump trucks
bach. who passed away live
3-27-41c '68 CHEVELLE Malibu; con- beginners; call 992-7692.
phone 742·3171.
B. R. , utility R., balh with
and
lo-boys for hire ; will haul
years ago, March 27, 1968.
::-:-::-=--__::_:_
tact Mayer &amp; Hill Barber
3-27-31c
J.21 -61c
shower, air cond . Close in .
fll,l dlrl , top soli, limestone
We fell and when those we love
CARHOPS; apply in person ;
Shop , Pomeroy .
:::--- - - - - - $6,900.00.
and gravel: ca ll Bob or Roger
Are called to live in the home
Craw's Steak House .
3-25-3tp FULL electric hospital bed ; 'H6llSE in Long Bottom, phoM
Jeffers. day phone 992-7089 :
30
ACRES
FENCED
above.
wheel chair arid walker ;
985-3529.
;
. ---:-:-:-----__::3~27-6tc 1968 PLYMOUTH Fury, blue also
night phone 992.3525 or 992·
But they have gone to prepare
Just
off
Rt.
681.
A
bargain
at
used on ly a few months; like
6-ll·lfd
5232.
the way, And we'll meet them
$12,900.
4
bedrooms.
just
WOMAN
lor
heavy
with black viny l top: phone
new; call 992-3881 between 4 - -:--- ,.,-::'7':.,---.:;.:_
Furnace Controls
2-11-tfc
again some happy day.
balh, deep well and pump.
housecleaning. Write P. 0.
742-4772.
p.m. and 6 p.m. or 992-3134 'I• ACI&lt;t lot _;;ith .1.970 65 K 12 3
~---,:---__:__
For God has told us that nothing
Just
rewired.
Buildings.
Box 729-E, c-o The Daily
HUMIDIFIER~
after 6 p.m.
bedroom Windsor Mobile
3-25-61c
can sever, A life He created to
S'EE US FOR : Awning,, Slonu
CAN'T BEAT THIS
Sentinel, Pomeroy, Ohio.
-3-27'6tp
Home; air-conditioned ; 13ft.
Hot Water Heater~·
live on forever .
3-22-6tp 1948 CHEVY with newly rebuilt - -- -- - - -7 room home. Close ln. 3 ' doors and windows, carports,,
expando; 1'12 miles North of
So let God's promise soften our
marquees, afuminum ' siding
Plumbing
bedrooms , bath , NEW
engine ; $500 firm ; phone 992- GRAVELY 7.6 H.P. Custom
New Meigs School on Old Rt.
sorrow. And give us new
and
railing . A. Jacob, sales
WORK
like
a
horse
:
$75
per
siding,
rool
&amp;
carport
at
just
7897
after
5:30p
.m.
Convertible
Tractor
New
33;
phone
992-2627.
Electrical Work
strength for a brighter
representative.
For tree)
week isn 't hay ; for details
55,000.00.
3-25-610
July '72 30" Rotary Mower,
3-25-Jtc
tomorrow.
esllmates, phone Chari.,.;
write : Mrs. Libman, 34 W. - -- - - - - - dual
wheels,
Governor,
riding
,
_
:
_
FURNISHED
HOME
Sad ly missed by his sons
Lisle, Syracuse. V. V.'1
Carpenter St., Athens, Oh io.
Renovated just 3 years ago.
sulky . Used less than 10 LOVELY new all-electric home
and daughlers and families .
and Son, Inc.
Johnson
3-25-61c For Rent
NEW storm doors &amp; win hours. New 5875. Make offer. on 90' x 140' lol . never lived
3-27-llp
3-2-ffc
~==--=---­
phone
992
-7777,
Larry's
in;
3
bedrooms.
living
room,
dows . Furnace, bath, floor ~~--,--,,---:.
- - - -- WANTED - Dr iver lor garbage NEW furnished trai ler, · 2 Mobile Homes, Pomeroy; all carpeted, buill -in kitchen
covering. Large lot 105x135. - ELNA ... and White ..-oew1ng.
truck to drive and pickup in
bedrooms,
in
good
residential
Larry
Evans,
till
6
p.m.
with
range
;
utility
room;
NEW range , ref. &amp; deep
992-2448
Pomeroy ; must be over 21 ;
Machines ... service on all
3-27-lfc bath : plenty of closet space ;
area in Syracuse ; I child
freeze.
JUST 58.500.00.
call
304-428-5877
or
leave
word
makes . Reasonable rates .
Pomeroy,
no
pels:
phone
992--phone
882
-2989.
accepted;
..
BEAUTIFUL BRICK
at City Hall.
The Sewing Center, Mid 2441 after 5:30p.m. daily: no NEW FOAM to fill your old
3-23-4tc
1 Acre . 3 bedrooms w-walkln
dleport. Ohio.
'
NEW 2 PIECE SOFA BED WANTED - Lady old -age
Sunday calls.
cushions, standard s1ze suite,
closets, 1112 baths, kitchen Is
11
-16-ttc
·
SUITE IN HERCULON
pensioner to share my home;
3·25-tfc only . $9.95.
Pomeroy - - - - - - - - - out of th is world, dining
COVER, THIS WEEK ONLY
phone 992-6766 .
Employment Wanted
area, full basement, utility
12
x
50
TRAILER,
married
Recovery,
62.
2
E.
Main
St.
$109.95; POMEROY _ _ _ __ ___3_25-31p LIGHT dozer work and set-up
3·8· 301P ·
room, carport. Many other
couples only ; no pets; utilities
RECOVERY, 622 E. MAIN
trailers
;
phone
742-5900.
features . $29,500.00. COULD
ST., POMEROY : PHONE ALL CATTLEMEN ARE IN paid ; Bob's Mobile Court, UPHOLSTERY
materials,
NOT BE REPLACED AT
992-7554.
VITED to the Rock Springs ===----__::3~
- 21 -Mc ~:;1acuse, Ohio: phone 992- regularly $3.9 5 only $1.95.
S45,000.00.
6-15-ffc ,
3-22-61p
Fairgrounds, Pomeroy, Oh io, EXPERIENCED painter, in Also remnants. Pomeroy
~-~--LARGE
LEVEL
LOT
Friday, March 30, 7:00 P.M.
_
_
__
_
__
__::3.:_·
25-lfc
Recovery. 622 E. Main St.
terior and exterior . Phone
Located near Mine area , 3 BEAt 1 r1~: rusn! Get your
' BEGINNING Afrll I, 1973 ,
for the Southeastern Ohio
J.8-3otp
985-3951.
lawnmower and tlller tuned bedrooms,
large bath, 3
Showalter's We Pet Shop will
2
BEDROOM
mobile
home.
airPolled Hereford Association 's
3·20-301p
up now : Small Engine Repair
be open 4 p.m. to 9:30 p.m.
bedrooms, paneling, tile etc .
conditioned ; in Rac ine area: UPHOLSTERY materials;
Third Annual Graded Sale.
Shop
on Th ird St., Mason, W.
dally , al l day Saturday.
phone 992-6329 .
Grading will be done by a
6 rooms In all . REDUCED
Nylon prints, cotton prints,
110 Mechanic Street
Va.
Sunda.Y and Holidays.
panel of three graders. 28
3·16-lfc -velvets of all kinds. Pomeroy
TO JUST$9,200.00. CALL TO
3-6-3otc
3-18·12tp
Rugged Bulls (1 -5 years), 21
---~--Recovery. 622 E. Ma in St.
SEE.
Pomeroy,
Ohio
==-----__:__
UNFURNISHED 3 room
Bred and Open Females ( 10
3-8-Jotp
FOR A QUICK SALE DOZER and back hoe ·work,
•
apartment , 408 Spr ing Ave .,
mos .-6 yrs .) will be featured
KOSCOT KOSMETICS AND
LIST WITH US .
ponds and septi c lanks, dil·
An
exceptional
opportunity
'HOOD ' S AQUARIUMS ; fi sh· Pomeroy.
UPHOLSTER your own fur NEW LISTING
WIGS . SPECIALS MONTH
HENRY E. CLELAND
ciTing
service; top soil, fill
tor commercial or registered
LV .
BROWN'S
INDE ·
and supplies ; new location, --------~_:_:
3 -2-tfc niture. Foam cushions; any MODE
BROKER
dirt,
limestone
; B&amp;K Ex -i
breeders. For information :
Ash Street, Middleport near
size. Cotton, burlap, swivel
RN - large home sitPENDENT DISTRIBU ·
.992-2259
cavating
.
Phone
992 -5367, '
park ; phone 992-5443.
PRIVATE meeting room for
bases, zipper, webbing, well. ling on lop of a hill in a subTina Jetters. Route I, Athens,
TOR ,
MIDDLEPORT .
If no answer 99'2-2568 or 985Dick
Ka~r . Jr .
1_
7·tfc
any
organization;
phone
992Pomeroy
Recovery,
E.
division
.•
i'
:!.
5
bedrooms,
2
Ohio 45701 Ph . 614 -593-8535.
622
PHONE 992·5113.
4209
9-1-ff&lt;
3975.
Main St.
baths, e.-u..; heat , family
3·25-41p
2-23-tfc
_ __ __ _ __::_3·.:_11 -lfc
3 8 301 room, nice c&lt;'(;)'Jis of large
-PAfN'fi'NG, Masonry work ;
- - - - - - - ----·_f.. closets, beau1 .. ul kitchen ,
free estlmale; call 773-5580.
·3 AND 4 ·ROOM
lurnished
and'
SAVE
20
t
·
fire~lace,
double
carport,
and
,
Homes
For
Sale
1or_y
h
pc
.
tn
ven
_
_ __ _ _ __:3_7-301p
guests recently at the home of A shower was held for Mr. and
un furnts ed apartments . : clearance sa le now rn nearly 2 acres of land .
Phone 992-5434.
progress . 20 pel. discount on 565,000.00. .
..CASH ·paid for all makes and
Mrs . Clark 's grandparents , Mrs . Dan Akers (Connie
·
~-------412-lfc
·
most
ol
your
grocery
needs.
MIDDLEPORT
· models of mobile homes . &gt;&amp; E Applian ce Repair; repair
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Starkey.
Miller). Others attending were Th·
20 5 ROOMS
Thl 1 · t th
Phone area code 614-423-9531 .
on all laundry equipment,
wall
to
.
wall
car"
means
you
can
save
s
s
IUS
e
DUPLEX
Mr. and Mrs. William Miller, Lucy
Thomas ,
Westina
pel. on your ~rocery bill. Gel place for beginners or older
4-13-tfc
refr igerat ion equipment and
pet ing , 2 bedrooms; 2 lhe full dela1is toda y at the folks. Has 2 bedrooms, bath ' - - - - - - - - . ··• house wiring ; welding
Debbie and Lori, spent a Crabtree, Betty Mattox, Hazel
bedroom house : phone 992·
Br ight Star 'Market next to and basement. $5500.00.
1970 GREGORY all electric
eleclrlc· and gas. Call 992 -3802
weekend in Powell, Ohio, Culwell, Goldie Gillogly,
2780 or 992-3432 .
· Drive-In Theatre. Mason , W.
mobile home with furn iture ,
12 9 ACRES
or after 4:30 p.m. call 992where they visited Mrs . Pauline Comer and Murl _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _3--13'1fc
Va.
ON RT. 124 WEST _ Several
air -conditioned ; phone 773 - 6050.
Mrs. Faye Jordan and Mrs. Miller's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Gala way.
5135 ·
3·20-16lc buildings, 2 barns. and large
3-21 -30tp
HOUSE
and
2
trailer
lots.
Phone
-3 23 t P
Ida Dennison were Sunday Glen Gassaway and other
-5693.
G
home
.
All
minerals.
Plenty
of
------6
992
ROCE RY business for sale.
.dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs. relatives in that area .
3-26-51c
Building for sale or lease. room for hO\Jses or trailers .
OWN YOUR HOME AT LOW SEPT IC TANKS AROi!lc:
Phone 773-5618 from 8:30p.m. 30 ROOMS
NEW- LISTING
COST - see Kl ngs bury Home
Dorsey Jordan and family .
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN·'
Steam heating,
Mr. and Mrs. Dwaine Jor7 ROOMS, p;, · baths, un - lo 10 p.m. for appointment. bar with 0 .1.2_3 licenses. All
Sales &amp; Service, Inc., phone
ED, REPAIRED . MILLER
Mr. and Mrs. Wes Mattox dan, Bryan, Keith and Sarah
SANITATION.
STEWART,
furnished
house;
705
S.
3·20-lfc
furniture
.
Corner
lot
Wl
'
lh
992-6256from21o7p.m.
orby
and daughters who have stayed Faye, called on his brother and
Second St., phone 992-5213.
- -- - - -- - appointment. 24' wide OH IO. PHONE 662-3035.
,
PUBLIC NOTICE
3.27 .3tp 1973STERE08track.mustsell parking .
Asking
only
furnished . Made by Skyline
in the home of his uncle and sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
10-4-lfc
for balance due of $98.80 or $32.500.00.
Corp ., country's largest . - - - - - - - - - - - -- -I
aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Walter Jordan in Gallipolis on
NOTICE ON FILING
3 ROOM &amp; bath furnished
take over payments of $7.75
2 YEARS OLD
"Meigs County owned and
Mattox, have gone to Los Sunday evening.
CONCR.ETE
OF INVENTORY
apartment ; comp let ely
per month. Caii992-SJ31.
NEAR RACINE- Nice kitoperated." Financing READY-MIX
delivered right to your
AND APPRAISEMENT
private ; ulilities paid ; for one _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_·
21-6lc chen, utility, 2 bedrooms, and
available. Set up on your lot
Angeles, Calif., area where his
Mrs . Donald Comer, Mrs. The Stole ol Ohio , Meigs
or two men ; call 992-3881 belarge living. Carport. large Jot.
ready for ~our occ"&amp;ancy . 200
pro/eel. Fasl and easy . Free
mother, Mrs. Emma Smith, Ronald Bolen and Lisa, Miss County
Court x olthe
· 1
1973 Zl g- Za g Only$14,000.00.
est mates, Phone 992 -3284.
To th.e Probate
Adminislratri
lween4p.m. and6p.m. or992- LEFT '"ayaway.
yardsoff 1.33on ountyRd
lives.
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co ..
3134 after 6 p.m.
Sewing
Machine.
This
LARGE OLDER HOME
·18. Quick delivery. Our lo...;
Susan Perry, Mrs. Murl Galay, estate ; 10 such 01 Ihe following
Middleport, Ohio .
27 ·6tp
machine darns, embroiders, LARGE DEN - 3 nice
o-verhead will saveyouSSS. 12'
House guests of Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Mendal Jordan, and Mrs. as are resid ent s of the State of _ _ __ _____3-~
-JO-Ifc
Ohi o, viz: the s urviving overcasts and monograms . bedrooms, paneled den, family
and 14' Mobile Homes _ _ __ _ _ _.:_6~
Paul Gaston and family for the William Thomas attended a spouse, the nex t of ki n, the
Pay balance of 141.50 or pay
d 2 bath
d
availabl e, Kingsbury Home
S6 per month. Call 992-5331 room, an
s, garagesan
Sales &amp; Service, Inc.
SEPTIC nNKS CL&amp;ANED
w~kend were Linda Corbett, vacation bible school materials benefic iaries under the will ;
and to th e allorney or attorneys
FOR RENT
3-21-6tc ( ~early 2 acreNsE. W
·
REASONABLE rates. Ph. 441
Htggmsport, Kare? Acun.tus, · showing at Clark Bible reprHenting any of the
--------4782, Gallloolls, John Russel
(3) 197 3 Ziy·Zag Sewing ALL ELECTRIC - 3 nice
ONner
&amp; operator.
Stdney and Jante Brutns, Bookstore in Jackson on aforement ioned personS!
,; Air CDndifloiler~ ,
Henry L. Johnson , Deceased ,
Machines le t In layaway. bedrooms• large kit che n, f uII
S-12-1
Marta Stem.. They came MoQday evening. The group Syracuse ,
io,
Sutton
•Awnings·
Township , No . Oh
20846.
Beautiful r.astel color, full ba sement • an d garage. "1.. ear
especially at tlus time to attend attended this session in
C. BRADFORD, Auctlonee,
You ar e hereby notified that
size mode . All built-in lo Rutland . $20,500.00.
•
' •'Underpinnina
Complete Service
Inventory and
Ap .
bullonhole, do stretch sewing
NEW LISTING
the wedding of Lois Gaston and preparation for a vacation the
pra
lsem
enl
of
the
estate
of
I
he
and
fancy
shlchlng
.
Pay
lust
CARRY
OUTOn
Route
143,
Phone 949-3821
Rick McDaniel which was held Bible School to be held at aforementioned , decea sed, late
Middlepor-t, 0 .
$.48.75 cash or terms and over 4 acres with farm
Racine, Ohjo
on Saturday evening at the Temple Church in June.
of said County , was filed in th is
available . Trade -ins ac - 1 pond. Plenty of parking .
. Crill Bradfqrd ·
Court . Said Inven tory and
_ _ _ __ __ _5:_·1·1fc
cepted. Phone 992-7755, Asking just $8500.00.
Albany Baptist'1::hurch . Many
The members of the Temple Apprai sement wi ll be for
!'lea
ring before th is Court on the
1 Efficiency Apt, with new
Electro Hygiene Co.
RENOVATED
relatives and friends from this Church WSCS held their March
llh day ot April , 1913&lt; at 10 :00
lurnilure. all utilities paid.
3-21-6lc 3 aEDROOMS - New kitchen,
SEW IN G MACHINES. Re~lr
community also attended along meeting in the home of Mrs . o'clock A.M.
- - - - - - -- new bath. All utilities on nice
service, all makes. 992-2284.1
person des iring lo file
2 Furnished Apts. with new
(2 ) ELECTROLUX Vacuum street ·
R 11 d 0 1
wilh Susan and Jerry Frazier William Miller. Devotions for excAny
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
eptions thereto m usl f'•l•
Cl eaners complele with at- "'00 00 tn
u an ·
nY
ftOMES\
f"rnt'lure
with or WI·th ou1
'
.
'
o!Galllpoliswhocamefor their Lent were given by Mrs . th em at lea st five days prior to
u
'
~ · ·
·Authorized Singer Sales an«~
Blvd.
th e date set lor hearing .
utilities . Both lia~ 1 or 2
tachments. cordwlnder and INVESTMENTS
MOST
Service. We,Sharpen Sclssorsl
cousin's wedding .
Mendal Jordan and included
Given under my hand and
bedrooms . No Pels.
·paint spray. Used but In like PEOPLE TALK ABOUT, BUT
3-29-llc,
new co~dition . Pay $34.45 ONLY A FEW REALLy INMark and Steven Hamon of scripture verses, meditations seal of said Court , thi s 26th day
of Ma rch 1913.
Ph
cash or budget plan available.
McArlhur were weekend and songs. Plans were made
Mann ing D. Webster
one: 992·3863
Phone 992-7755 , Electro VEST. DON'T MISS YOUR
Judgeandex -olficio
Till P.M.
Hygiene Co.
CHANCE, AND SAY I COULD
guests of their uncle ar·d Junt, for the sociely to assist with
Clerkol said Court
Or 992 _
3 2161 c OF HAD THAT.
5844
. .
HELEN L. TEAFORD
Mr. and Mrs. Rex Che: ,Jl ' Hnd expenses of the vacation Bible
By
A~~:ul~~l~~k
After
6
p.m.
.
COAL,
Llmestone
,_E_x_c-elslo~
GORDON
B. TEAFORD
family.
School and building a walk
IJ
I
27
14
1
J,
21
Salt
Work.s.
E.
Main
st:,'
ASSOCIATES
Mrs. Larry Stanley a:.c Anna from the road to church steps.
Pometoy. Plione 99 2.389 1.
992-3325or992-3615
spent a week with her parents,
·Or
NOSUNDAYSHOWINGS ·
4-12-tfc
Mr.and Mrs. Lewis Smith. The
' 70 YAMAHA 175 Enduro ; llRA~~ bed, brass kettle,
Stanleys are moving to Marion
phone 742·5980.
yoke, high chair, 12 ton
where he has employment.
J.2 1-61c hydraulic jack, Iron lea
Now you ~an .• ~uy . fhai
The Busy Bee Society of the
- - - . - - - ---=.:
(omfortable
La·Z-Boy'
kettle , 12 ga. double barrel
Carpenter Baptist Church met
ALUMINUM Car top boats, 10;· shotguf'l , muzzle loader ; New
chair you've always
· 12 and 13 ft . Kingsbury Rd .,
Idea side delivery rake. 4 bar;
dreamed of at our low
with Mrs. Anna Uch in her
Co. Rd. 18, Phone 992-6256 John Houdashelt, Minersville,
prices.
home. Freda Smith was
after 5 p. m,
0.
program leader and others
3-8·301c
3-25-31p
present were Emma Whitler
. 4uthorired
·siNGER automatic sewing GOOD Timothy hay; call 843tington, Metta Fisher, fda
machlne: like new in walnut 2350 a'ter 4 p.m.
I
cabinet. Makes design slit·
J.25·31c
Cheadle, VIvian Gaston, Lynn
ches. zig-zags, buttonholes, - McWhorter
and
Bonnie
blind hems , overcasts, etc.,, NEW ·strawberry planfs, Rt.
$l!5. Call Ravenswood, 273· 338, near Racine locks: phone
Cheadle.
ON YOUR DIAL .· I' .
9521 or 27H893. ·
247,2309, Charlie Foster.
Herm1nGnte
Mr. and. Mrs. Larry Clark
1-ll -tfc
3·25-6tc
773.5592
Milson, Va.
and daughters of Ch""Jer were

Pomeroy Motor Co.

i

'

·- ·· •·
'~~=========:;-~~;:;;:::;::;::::=:=:-~=::;:;;~~;~·:::~~

Reed sville,
GinsenJl
S60378-6249.
lb.; M. A. Hall, - - - - - - -- 3-25-61c
3-9-lfc STARCRAFT Spring Sale ~-·~-c-~.----o~-:-....,-,
Check these savings on 24'7"
PO
. MEROY
OL!J furniture, oak tabre~ ; - S1,000off; 22' 7" - $900 off;
organ s, dishes, clocks, brass , 20'7'' - $800 off; 18'7" - $675
HOME &amp; AUTO
beds or complete households. ; off. Fold down Starmasler
Write M. D.. M1ller, Rt . ·4, 1 save S345; Galaxle S&lt;!Ve $.450;
Pomeroy. Oh1o. · Phone 99l· Buy now before factory price
992-2094
6271.
.
increase goes into effect . . .606 E. Main .Pomeroy
1·7-t(c · CAMP CONLEY STAR- -- - . ---• CRAFT SALES. Rt. 62 N. of
OFFICE SUPPLIES
LOCUST posts. 711. long; 4 to 6 Pt. Pleasant, Behind Red
inches: phone 992-5795.
Carpet Inn . Ph. 675-5384.
and
3-27-5tc
3-23-71c

UtO

of 'TltfiWY?

Real Estate For Sale

EXPERT
Alignment
'5.55

EVER'&gt;t:WE!&gt; ASLEEPASCEND TI-l£ STAI"&lt;5

4NP MOVE THE 5~7V£

ASIOE.-

WE!r&gt;.E WAITING
IN A CAR OUTSIDE.
DID'iOU BF&gt;.INGTHE
WORLD'S MOST

PRECIOUS

Real

'10'!3£T.
IT'S NEXT

TOMAH

HEAR ~-

MANUSCRIPT?

rtLELAN~

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

GAME HE'LL. I&lt;NOW MORE

Wanted

"HEll"

OU'T 0' HIM .'_~_,

WORDS 'THAN A

CON~I'!ESSMAN !

I~N ''T 'T~EI'!E AIIIYTHIN&lt;&gt;
HE COUI.D ,JUST HAllE
AIN Wn'H?
~--

WINNIE WINKLE

.

In

THI$ ON!O'L.I.. MAKE
A HUMAN COMPIJ'TeR

AFTER HE PLAYS 'THIS

MYINCIGC&gt;:lfr3Y '10
HAL '!HI~ MORNING
I~ HARDLY MY IDEA
STARTING '!HE
tillY OFF RIGHT.

Help Wanted

HEAnNG &amp;
COOLINb :

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Notice

o.

3 ·:l7

Virgil B.
Teaford, St.
Broker

LITI'LE ORPHAN ANNIE

Notice

~~-~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

--SO '1tJU CAN IMAGINE
HOI&lt;/ LOHG IT TAKES
10 EXECUTE 'T~E
TAKING, OVER OF
'!.@CONTINENT"''

ACROSS
1. Boarding
house
occupant
7. Absent
11. Make'
the
scene
12. Substruc-

"""'""""'=----·-

------

Mobile

Carpenter

News, Event

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS

AMANDA PANDA

IH£RE ARE ONL'I

FOUR t7oU6HNUT5
ON THE PLATE. 1

c·

JUI?T' A FEW
WI!!U.. • CHO!!OSN
IYORP5 ~HOULD
PUT THEM IN THE
Pi&lt;'ROPI!!R F~AMlf
0' MIND TO
i&lt;'ECI!!IVI!:
eA5v!

We tllk to you
:like a P81S011.

- ----=-- ==-=--- - -

WMP0/1390 .

-

ADD E.IGHT!

36. "-

OCH,NOO! FIONA 17 IH
THe SONNIE!&gt;1' F~OWER
0' CLAN MoNMH ... EV!!!'-1
IF YURR.MITHIR DID
MARRY A DUNCAN!

Yesterday's Cryploquole: DOINGl:ASILY WHAT OTHERS
FIND DIFFICULT IS TALENT; DOING WHAT IS IMPQS.
SIBLE FOR TALENT IS GENIUS.-HENRI AMIEL

DOWN
1. College
cheer
2. Gold
(Sp.)
3. Table

(@ 1973 King Feature• Syndicate, lne. )

scrap

4. Hand (sl.)
5.Turned
inside
out
G. Convene
again
7. Presidential nick-

name

8. In
the
bullpen
(2 wds.)
9. Cruising
10. Tokyo's
old name
14. English
Roundhead

statesman

Yesterday's Anttwer ·
Unscramble th... fwr Jumbleo.
one
letter to each oquare, to
17. Hay30. Roman
form four ordinary words.
wire
Stoic
18. Live ·
pbllosoliness
pher
19. Like
32. Burmese
some
knife
engines
34. - test
(hyph.
35. Photo. wd.)
gravure
umiY
21. Skin
process
23. Swerve
37. Region
23. Military
39. Philippine
r-;_---,
org.
tree
26. Freshly
40. Term
tSESAVll
28. Renowned
41. Summer - 'I
·
surgeon ,
(Fr.)
..A 1
f.._ A
1
Chris·
42. ':~::==~~ a__J
Moines
r
tiaan -

I I

I
...
I [J I t IJ ••r•••ted
p "'l

IWYSAfl

1

o::

1 THE

WHE~E

TO L.OOI&lt; FOI't

A HELPIN&amp; HANI7.

Now arranre the cln:leol letten
to form the ourprloellllwer, u
br the above eartoon.

t xx)oF ( xrx J rxxJ
(AMwen ta1110rraw)

!

Jumbl•" CYNIC VINOM

Yulerd•r'•

AITIRT

MYOPIC

.
Antw~tf: Whe11 the bartender'• mt~ay there •ho11ld
be tUIOtlter. .. ON TAP

.

Lucasta"

AND PINNA
FORJ&lt;'GIT YUFIR

COU~I N HAMI~H!

GIE'? A LOOK AT
Ye,~A~~IE!

38. Unfeeling
(hyph.
wd.)
43. Virginia
willow
genus
U . Bring
into
being
IS. Extinct
bird
?.·17

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE-Here's how to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter simply stands for another. In this sample A Js
used for the three L's, X for fhe tWQ&gt;O's, etc . .Single !etten
apostfitphes, the length and formation o[ the words are
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

all

oea

MASON

'(ou'Lt... HAVE To

CAPI'AIN EASY

CHArRs:·

·

·

lo flAVE AOol~N

4+8=12

LA-z;..aov

F Sale

ture
13. Irascible
(hyph.
wd.)
15. Card
player's
three
16. Chou's
associate
17. Grassland
2o. Musical
paces
· 22. Mic~iga~
college
24. Siclllan
city
27. Was solicitous
28. Initiated
29. Formerly
30. Military
greeting
31. Command
sa: General
Wain·
wright ·
was one
(abbr.)
34. Nigerian
tribesman

_46. Sayings

CRYPToQUOTES
0 RL

\

E LSL Z I 0 T US

VTKKLZLSNL

FU..NITU·· ·

ISV IS
EICSUZ

- -- - -- -

I

I

YLOBLLS

LFLNOZTN

"

E I G

T D

0 R L L------"'-~-.J L---~-----.J
1

I · HVILFLF L

EHTOIZ . - ATOXT

\

-

�a- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 'll, 1973

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AMERICAN LEGION BIRTHDAY - Sinith Cepehart
i'Qst 140 of the American Legion held its 54th birthday dinner
at the New Haven Grade School Cafeteria Monday night with
State Conunander Charles Forsythe and Fourth District
Conunander Denver Gandee among the special guests. At
left, Forsythe and Gandee are shown with two World War I
veterans and Smith Capehart Post Commander Harold

Clarence Douglas
died on Monday

Prater

Clarence E. Douglas, 72,
Pomeroy, Rt. 3, died at his
home Monday. Mr. Douglas
was preceded in death by his
parents, Harry and Ella
Cuckler Douglas, and a
brother, Ralph.
He Is survived by his wife,
Della White Douglas; a
daughter, Gladys Faye
Chaney , Pomeroy, Rt. 3; one
granddaughter, Kathryn Jane
Chaney; two sisters, Hazel
Hoffman, Chesler, and Elsie
Barnhart, Middleport, Rt. I;
two brothers, Murl (B ud)
Douglas , Harrisonville, and
Lawrence Douglas, Syracuse,
and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held
Thursday at I p.m. at Ewing
Chapel with the Rev. Stanten
Smith officiating. Burial will
be in Rock Springs Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight, Mar. 27
ELVIS ON TOUR

I Technicolorl

IGJ
NIGHT OF THE

LEPUS
(Te&lt;:hnicolor)

Stuart Whitman
Janet Leigh

lPG I

W'IIUiings. L tor, are Forsythe, World War I veteran J . C.
Roush, Mr. Gandee, World War I veteran Edgar Layne, and
Commander Gandee. At right are officers of the post
auxiliary, I to r, Mrs. Bill Roush, president; Mrs. Bob
Roush, vice president; Thelma Capehart, secretarytreasurer, and Ella Roush, chaplain .

Last POWs

(Continued ·from Page I)
told the jurors they might find
Prater guilty of first or second
degree murder, guilty of
voluntary manslaughter, or
innocent.
Within three hours after
receiving the case, jurors
returned to the courtroom to
ask Carney to redefine Pennsylvania laws concerning
conspiracy and complicity.
His Closing Argument
In his closing argument,
special Prosecutor Richard
Sprague for the first time
implied that Boyle orig_inated
the murder conspiracy.
"He had nothing on Boyle,"
said Rothman after the verdict
was announced. "Whatever he
has on Boyle, you saw in that

(Continued from Page I )
captured In Hue during the 1968
Tet offensive.
A group of about 35 spectators, who came from Hawali,
chanted "Aloha" as three
POWs from Hawaii disembarked. The trio, civilian Charles
Edward Willis, Army Spec.5
Tom Y. Kabashigawa and
Army Spec.5Thomas T. Horio,
smiled broadly at the
"Alohas."
·"Through the years our faith
In our country, in our way of
life and in our president has
been unwavering. At this time
we wish to express our thanks
to President Nixon and to the
American people for keeping
faith in us," Purcell said.
Then he addressed a
courtroom."
message to the families of the
Prater, from LaFollette, Viet Cong captives.
Tenn ., had been charged with
"We are all well. We will be
channeling $20,000 in borrowed borne soon. We owe you more
UMW money to the Yablonski than we can ever repay for the
murderers . Another former faith that you have had In us.
official from the union's Ken- But we shall try. And we ask
tucky-Tennessee District 19, but one thing and that is to keep
Albert Pass, will stand trial in the fort for just a few more
July on similar charges.
days."
Five others have either been
Operation Homecoming had
convicted or admitted varying been stalled because of a
roles In th~ murder conspiracy. weeklong controversy over the
"This case is not over by a release.of nine men held by the
long shot today," Sprague said Laos Conununists. The imMonday. "You saw where passe was broken when the
we've been. You saw where we Communists agreed to release
have to go- Tony Boyle, Albert the nine in Laos Wednesday.

Coward will be
buried on
home island
KINGSTON, Jama ica (UP!)
- The body of Sir Noel
Coward, who delighted three
generations with his repertoire
of theatri ca l talents on and off
the stage, will return to
England, the home he forsook
to escape !axes.
Coward died of a heart attack Monday at his winter
retreat at Port Maria on . the
northern coast of Jamaica. He
was 73.
Coward's secre tary , Cole
Leslie, and another friend,
Graham Payne, arranged to
move his body to Kingston for
transportation to London .
Officials said the body may
leave for London later today.
Meanwhile, entertainers and

PLEASANTV ALLEY
Services set for
Discharges: Chester Leport,
Point Pleasant; Mrs. Charles Robert Lambert
Weidlich, West Columbia;
RUTLAND
Funeral
Sandra Campbell, Gallipolis,. services for Robert B. Lamand Mrs. Roy McDade, Point bert, 88, formerly of
Pleasant.
Harrisonville, who died Sunday
afternoon at the Carroll
Nursing Home in Sunbury, will
be held all p.m. Wednesday at
NAMED TIGER AD
the Martin Funeral Home.
MARIETTA, Ohio (UP!) A re tired blacksmith, Mr.
Bill Bonar, who was head Lambert is survived by his
football coach at Marietta High wife, Lois ; these daughters ,
School for II years, will Mrs. Granville (Alice) Reeves,
become the school's athletic Albany; Mrs. Earl (Elizabeth)
director.
Wandie, Cleveland; Mrs .
Bonar compiled a 58-48 Donald
(Lois)
Wells ,
record during his coaching Reynoldsburg, and Mrs.
stint. He will replace Scotty William (Fay ) Gordon, in
Ham ilton, who retired.
Pennsylvania; two sons,
Leroy, Delaware, Ohio, and
Clyde, Toledo ; a stepson,
Howard Hoops, Dayton; a
- - - - -- - - - - sister, Ada Brown, in West
admirers poured out tributes to Virginia; a brother, Edward,
Coward and his work, among in Virginia; 23 grandchildren,
them Sir Laurence Olivier, who and 12 great-gra11dchildren.
sa id "Any comprehensive Mr . Lambert was a member of
appreciation of his life and the Zion Church of Christ.
time is a prodigious task fur the
The Rev. Ken Eberts will
heartiest spirits and the officiate. Burial will be in' the
moment finds me bereft of any Wells Cemetery. Friends may
other expression excep t that of call at the fun eral hom e
grief. "
any time.

Children's
Department

News • . . in Briefs

Wedne•day &amp; Thursday
March 28-29

UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy E-R squad was
called at 6:36 p.m. Monday to
the Mary Parker residence
near Chesler for Robert Will
who was believed to have
drunk liquid Drano, according
to the log report. He was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital
and later was transferred to
the Veterans Hospital in
Huntington.

Veterans Memorial Hoapllal
ADMITTED - Sarah Wise,
Middleport; Diana Nease,
Syracuse; Leona Karr,
Pomeroy; Luther Caldwell,
Middleport; Nancy Cole,
Tuppers
Plains;
Mary
Longenette, Tuppers Plains;
John Dolen, Addison and Nettie
Moore, Syracuse.
DISCHARGED - John
Brogan, Mary Alice Samuels,
Clinton Faulk, Carolyn
Thompson, Laura Hill, Ava
Brickey, Charles Carroll', .
Edward
King,
Sharon
Cremeans and Hurdle Sampson.

DINNER GIVEN
Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bailey
entertained recently with a
dinner
honoring
their
daughter, Mrs. Sandi Sargent,
and niece , Mrs. Charlotte
Wamsley, on their birthday
anniversaries. Other guests
present were Guy Sargent, · Logan, Miss Bernice King.
Dick Wamsley, Mr. and Mrs. Unable to attend were Mr. and
Wayne Milhoan, George Mrs. Dwight Logan.

MEIGS LOCAL SCHOOL teachers went on strike Wednesday morning along with noncertified employes. The teachers, with members of OAPSE took their places at the picket line
at the entrances of Meigs Hi.gh School.

NOT OPEN

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.V.Q_
L,_XX~ . NO. 242

POMEROY-M IDOLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 28, 1973

COLUMBUSiUPI)-Ohio
State basketball coach Fred
Taylor announced today he
rejected an offer to become
head coach at Northwestern
University.
Taylor first talked to
Northwestern ,Athletic
Director Tippy Dye about
two weeks ago on the
possibility ol filling the
vacancy left by th e
resignation of Wildcat coach
Brad Snyder. Dye was
Taylor's basketball coach at
Ohio State in the 1950s and
made what Taylor called an
"unreal" offer.

Second

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your Frlenshlp and Best
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MIDDLEI'ORT, Oli!O
Member Federal Dep..it Insurance Corporation

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·'

'
I

Dudley's Aorist
46 Court St.

1tN CENJS

_____~

M

ayor

B

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al'OniC

of Pomeroy dies
Pomeroy's Mayor William
Barontck died this morning
at Veterans , M.eJQorlal
Hospital.
The Pomeroy mayor had
been Ill several weeks.
Among the survivors Is his
wife, Betty.
The body was taken to the
Ewing Funeral Home where
arrangements are being
made.

POMEROY ELEMENTARY School teachers stood for
the Sentinel camera this morning as they picketed their
school one of nine In the Meigs Local District closed today .

f'i'T:WoWN'' ''''''''''
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SHOW PLANNED
A country and western
variety show will be held at
7:30 p.m. on April 14 at the
Tuppers Plains School under
the sponsorship of the School
Boosters Club. Proceeds will
go towards the new library and
blacktopping of the playground
at the school.
VISIT HERE
Mr. and Mrs. David Eskew
and children, Kandy, Amy and
Beth of Newark spent the
weekend here with Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey Erlewine, Rutland, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Eskew, Pomeroy.

PHONE 992-2l~b

'-"==-'-'-----~----------'-----'------~-----------------------...:.....:..:._

OPEN BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

DEAN'S LIST
Named to the Dean's List at
Hocking Technical College
(Tri-County Technical Institute) , Nelsonville, for the
winter term were Dennis J.
Gilmore , Larry R. Mees,
Charle" J. Stearns and Roy R.
Vaughan, Pomeroy.

Do you seem to meet yourself coming and
going? You may get that feeling if you've been
running all over, paying bills the old-fashioned
way ... in cash, in person. With a Checking
Account at this bank , you can pay the fast,
safe, convenient way ... by check, by mail. ·
Open your checking account today.

LUKEWITI'E
Luke Witte, who has just finished_ an outstanding three-year
varsity career at Ohio State University, will be speaker at the
annual basketball banquet of Meigs High School to be held at 7p.
m. on April lOin the high school cafeteria.
During his three years with the Ohio State varsity, Witte
played 73 out of a possible 74 games and scored 1,211 points,
which is the 11th highest In Ohio State's history. A journalism
major, Witte is from Alliance and atteOded Marlington High
School. He was an all-Ohio center in high scbool. He was named
to the second All-Big Ten squad as a sophomore In 1971 and was a
first team selectiQn in 1972. He grabbed 819 rebowtds over a three
year period to rank second in Ohio State history. Witte is In·
terested in a career in journalism or public relatiQns.
Tickets for the Meigs banquet, at $3 each may be purchased
at the New York Clothing House, Pomeroy; Western Auto,
Middleport ; the Rutland Dt!partment Store, or at the Meigs High
School or Meigs Junior High School.

Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

Elberfelds
In
Pomeroy
SHOP WEEKDAYS .9:30 TO 5 PM

committee to develop a
Democratic s.tate-wide slate
for the 1974 election campaign.
"We are fortunate because a
number of the statewide offices
are already filled by
Democrats," Lavelle told a
news conference. "But we will
be selecting candidates for the
U. S. Senate , lieutenant
governor, secretary of state
and Supreme Court."
Lavelle said the selection
committee would include
representatives of organized
labor, minorities, youth and
the legislature .

•

enttne

will prepare slate

HAVEN1 I SEEN YOU BEFORE?

designated period. Such letters have been prepared and will be
mailed to the teaching and non-teaching employes, Porter said, if
the board carries through on its present intention.
Teachers and non-teachers losing positions through that
procedure, lose tenure and seniority. They can he rehired but
only on probationary terms, Porter said.
Porter disclosed the board will meet In special session to
make its final decision on whether to Invoke the Ferguson act.
Meantime, Porter Indicated that he would see that proper
precautions will be taken today to protect the children who might
be unaware of the strike and report for classes.
Rumors of a strike in the district had prevailed since March
12 when, at a meeting of the hoard of education, Porter advised
education association representatives that fringe benefits for
leaching and non-teaching employes through life and health
insurance would not be provided at this time .
Porter said then that such an insurance program would
amount for both groups of employes to a total cost of $108,000 and
that a new tax levy amounting to over 4.5 mills would have to be
approved by the voters to provide it. No mention of a salary Increase request from teachers in addition to the insurance
program was made at that meeting.
Porter said at the March 12 meeting that 78 pet. of the
total Income of the district now goes for salaries of
teaching and non-teaching personnel, not counting administrators. He said In his opinion teachers aad non·
teachers dissatisfied with their pay or fringe benefits
"should look for employment elsewhere."
i'Qrter earlier had emphasized that the board of education
will not enter into any "binding negotiations agreement" with
either teaching or non-teaching employes. However, he has Indicated that board representatives will meet with represen-tatives of either group to discuss mutual problems Informally.
Teachers of the district last year were awarded salary increases. It has been reported that the minimum salary increase
received by any teacher was $1,200. Following is the schedule for
teachers In the district for the current school year:
Years
NonBA
Five
MA or
Of
Degree Degree
Year
Higher
Service
Amount Amount Amount Amount
0
$5,536.00 $6,400.00 $6,643.20 $7,008.00
I
5,760.00 6,643.20 6,918.40 7,315.20
2
5,984.00 . 6,886.40 7,193.60 7,622.40
3•
6,208.00 7,129.60 7,468.80
7,929.60
4
6,432.00 7,372.80 7,744.00 8,236.80
5
6,656.00 7,616.00 8,019.20 8,544.00
6
6,656.00 7,859.20 8,294.40 8,851.20
7
6,~.00
8,102.40 8,569.60 9,168.40
8
6,656.00 8,:U5.60 8,844.80 9,465.60
9
6,656.00 8,588.80 9,120.00 9,m.80
10
6,656.00 8,832.00 9,395.20 10,080.00
11
6,656.00 9,075.20 9,670.40 10,387.20
The salary schedule although paid over a 12 month period is
for 180 work day year. Additional payments are made to
athletic coaches, assistant principals, and for other teachers
Involved In extra curricular activities such as the high school
newspaper, the yearbook, junior and senior high school
cheerleading and similar activities.
Non-teaching employes last year were also given salary
increases.
Porter pointed out last night that non-teaching employes
(Co~tlnued on Puge 101

THREE MIDDLEPORT YOUTHS who were taken to classes by their parents Wednesday
morning sat on a picnic table and waited. Left to right are David Wolfe, Marc Fultz and David
Swisher.

Pass ..."

COLUMBUS (UPI)
Democratic State Chairman
William A. Lavelle said today
he will soon appoint an ad hoc

::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::i:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::

(ContinUed from Page 1)
holding a week.of hearings on Nixon's request for a one-year
extension of his econoinic control powers. McFall's call for
congressional intervention echoes that of other top Democratic
leaders including Democratic Leader Thomas P. O'Neill, DMass., and Banking Conunittee Chairman Wright Patman, DTex., who has proposed a price-interest freeze and tight rent
controls.

Show Starlli 7 p.m.

Democ~ts

Dissatisfied with their salaries and the recent failure of the
Board of Education to provide life and health Insurance benefits,
150 teachers of the Meigs Local School District went on strike
today.
Joining thepJ were 70 non-teaching employes, members of
the Meigs Chapter of the Ohio Association of School Employes.
Approximately 3,000 pupils are affected.
In a statement issued Tuesday night on behalf of Wes Simms,
Ohio Education Association field representative, it was
revealed that the Meigs Local School District Teachers
Association and the local chapter of OAPSE representing 150
teachers and 70 non-teaching employes voted Tuesday night to
strike against the Meigs Local Board of Education. It is the first
teacher strike in the county's history.
The strike will continue until the board agrees to negotiate in
good faith with the two organizations, the statement said.
"The dispute revolves around the board's refusal to bargain
with the two employe groups. Picket lines will be placed at all
nine school buildings in the district and parents are urged to keep
their children home . There will be no school Wednesday In the
Meigs Local School District."
Issuing the statement for Simms was Eugene Brundage, an
Athens teacher.
Frank W. Porter, Pomeroy attorney and president of the
Meigs Local School District Board of Education, said Tuesday
night neither he nor George Hargraves, superintendent of the
district, had been notified that the strike had been ordered.
Porter said that if the teachers and non-teachers were going
on strike, be was "very upset" that they (he or Hargraves) had
not been notified so that someone could show concern for the
children who would be reporting for classes.
"Teachers who have had tbe responsibility of our
children are now showing no concern for these children,"
Porter states. "! can't understand the altitude about
that," be added.
Porter revealed there have been several recent meetings between representatives of the board of education and the teachers
.association. At one session, he said a respresentative of the
teachers group ·staled that the teachers want a 5.5 pet. salary
increase plus insurance benefits . No mention was made at that
session of the non-teaching employes or. any benefits for them,
Porter said.
Porter said that the "package" of the 5.5 pet. salary increase
and the insurance program for teachers only would cost the
district well over $100,000.
The strike has been the subject of "rumors" at least two
weeks, thus apparently anticip~ led. Porter said that the board of
education, so far, is In agreement to invoke the Ferguson Act
which provides that it is against the law for public employes to
strike.
Under the provisions of that law, the public employer notifies
the employe that he is on an unlawful strike and the position is
terminated if. the employe does not return to his job within a

Shop our Second Floor Children's Department for a
complete selection of clothing and accessories for
BE SURE TO REGISTER AT

Elberfelds Mechanic
Street Warehouse
FOR THE $100.00 AND
$50.00 GIFT CERTIFICATES
No Purchase Necessa!J ·
You Need Not Be Present To Win

infants, toddlers and girls 3 to 6X, 7 to 14 and Preteen;

DRESSES ·COATS • PANTS • BLOUSES.
TOPS • JEANS • SHORTS • SHIRTS • SKIRTS •
LINGERIE • HOSIERY
AND A COMPLETE SELECTION OF

BUSTER BROWN Pl.AYWEAR

ELBERFE-LDS IN POME.ROY

v•

PINE RIDGE, S. D. -THE GOVERNMENT says the "fun
and games are over" at Wounded Knee aild promised to end the
four-week armed occupation of this historic Oglala Sioux settlement "one way or the other." Assistant Attorney General Kent
Frlizell Tuesday annoWJCed the government's attitude hours
after aU. S. mar~al was seriously wounded during the heaviest
outburst of gunfire between federal marshals and militants since
the Indians stormed the Wounded Knee Trading Post Feb. 27,
taldlig anna, ammunition and 11 hostages. The hostages were
released two days later.
,"This is senseless," Frizzell said of the shooting. "It has got
to stop - and it is going to stop one way or the other - by
negotiation or otherwise ... The fun and games are over."
The govenunent 's get'iough policy came on the heels of a
report by Dick Wilson, Oglala Sioux tribal chairman and target
of the occupation by members of the American Indian Movement
(AIM), that AIM leaders Russell Means and Dennis Banks had
slipped out of Wounded Knee and taken refuge on the neighboring
Sioux Rosebud Reservation.

CLARK AIR BASE, PHILIP~INES - TEN Prisoners of war
captured In Laos, whose captivity threatened the Vietnam peace
agreement, were freed today In a low-key ceremony at HanoL
Another 40 U. S. POWs were released by the North VIetnamese.
The last American POWs-87 held by the North Vietnamese'were scheduled to be released Thursday. Their release was to
'
.
coincide with the last withdrawal of American troops from
VIetnam - a day later than specified by the cease-fire
agreement.
·
The Viet Cong released its ·last 32 American prisoners
Tuefday at Hanoi'. The men - 27 military men and five civitians
- irere undergoing processing at Clark Air Base and some were
eqected back In the United States by the weekend, The release
of the seven military m!lll, two U. S. civilians and a Canadian
!rom La011 today, ciune afl!!r a tense week of diplomatic sparring
durtDg which President Nixon warned North Vietnam U. s.
1roop11 woulll re~JU!ln in South Vietnam as long as the 10 men
llayed In their pl'floh camp&amp;.
·
l!:(jYPf'IAN PRESIDENT ANWAR SADAT and a cabinet
IConilnlled on Page 10) ·
·

I

,

JUNIOR ffiGH SCHOOL students on the Meigs Local
School District wailed for the bus that didn't come Tuesday
morning at the Gibbs .Grocery corner in Pomeroy.

Fire hydrant is hit, and missing
PT. PLEASANT - Missing
- one fire hydrant, value $250
- and wanted, the driver of a
. while vehicle known to have,
strqck the hydranl Tuesday
evening located oil 6th St. near
the Carolina Lumber and
"Supply Company, who then

apparently loaded the hydrant
in their vehicle and drove
away.
Anyone having any information concerning this
matter is asked to contact the
City Police Department.

a

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