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:!11Tbe
Dally Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 28, 19'13
&lt;'
....
~

Thompson signed
.

.

•

new Voc-ed unit
Clarence E. Thompson,
Gallia
County
School
Superintendent the past six
years, Tuesday night was
granted a four -year contract as
superintendent of the Joint
Gallia -Jackson County
Vocational School.
A native of Wellston,
Thompson graduated from
Wellston High School and
received his Master's Degree
in Administration from Miami
University. He came to Gallia
County in 1953 as head football
coach at Gallia Academy High
School.
In 19&amp;7, he moved to Kyger
Creek High School where he
was principal,eight years prior
to becoming Superintendent at
Middleport and later of North
Gallia School District.
Thompson was instrumental
in forming the Joint Gallia·

Jackson County Vocational
School District and has served
as acting superintendent since
a tax levy was approved last
June to construct a vocational
school.
He has been uctive in many
civic and community projects
and is currently president of
the Gallipolis Shrine Club. His
appointment wUJ become ef.
fective on June I.
The new superintendent is
expected oo meet with the
Gallia County Board of
Education soon to submit his
resignation.
Two other educaoors considered for the position were
Paul F. Kuhn, Gallpolis City
School Superintendent, und
John Worthington, Jackson
High School principal. Erwin
Smittle of Oak Hill made the
motion oo employ Thompson.

CLARENCE THOMPSON
It was announced that a
dlrecror for the school and
board clerk will be hired April
l4. The director must have
special training and intern
work in vocational education.
The board approved its 1973
budget totaling $&amp;13,&amp;37.43 in

the general fund.
Jack Hill of the Columbus
Heating and Ventilating
Company reviewed a heating
pian for the new school. ·
In final uction, the board
voted oo join the Ohio School
Board Association.

POMEROY POSTMASTER James Soulsby, left,
welcomes officers of the Athens Sectional Center Postmasters and Supervisors organization to Pomeroy. Some 70
supervisors and postmasters attended an aU day and evening
Qllarlerly meeting at the Meigs Inn Tuesday. Postal

procedures and problems were dlsc~~~~ecU'rmt the left are
Soulsby, Bffi Theisen, )l'esldent, NelsonviUe POIIIIII88ter;
Lloyd Ullman, vice (resident, Lower Salem Poetmaater;
Maxine Smith, secretary, Chauncey Postm•ster, and Garnett Barrett, treasurer, OJ tier

I'Oitmlller.

Penh.
(In Honolulu, the U.S. Pacific
Forces Command said B52s and
fighter-bombers hit Communist
positions along Highways 1 and
4, at Neak Luong and elsewhere. The raids, it said, were
carried out at the request of
cambodian authorities, but it
gave no details of them).
Military sources in Phnom
Penh said the raids were the
heaviest of the war in
Cambodia and the closest to the
capital itself.
The United States, the
sources said, were reluctant at
first to bomb along Highway I

because of the heavy popula lion plies of food, war supplies and

there, but relented later and
made the area a priority
target.
During the past two months,
military sources said, Communist strategy has concentrated
on cutting major supply routes
into the capital and lately has
grown to include a possible
attack on Phnom Penh Itself.
The situation, the sources
said, appeared most critical
around Neak Luong, 32 miles
southeast of the capital. Communist units there are now
within one mile of Neak Luong.
River convoys bearing sup-

petroleum up the Mekong to the
Cambodian capital have been
halted just inside the Vietnamese border walling for an
all-clear signal. Communist
gunners have ambushed two
convoys, sinking two U.S.
ammunition barges and badly
damaging several cargo ships
in attacks from the riverbanks.
cambodian authorities also
reported fierce lighting on
Highway 4, where the Communists cut the road Monday at a
point 49 miles southwest of
Phnom Penh.

more than any other picture, Chaplin attended the awards w
upsetting the favored "Godfa- accept a 'special Oscar for his
ther."
. contribution to films during
Best supporting actor was more than a half century.
Joel Grey lor "Cabaret" and No other pictures won more
Tonight &amp; Thursday
·Eileen Heckart was voted best than a single award except for
March 2S-29
supporting actress for her "Cabaret" and "The "GodaNOT OPEN
performance In "Butterflies are ther."
Free."
Voted best song was "The
Friday thru Tuesday
Mar.l9 - April3
But it was Brando, who won Morning After" from "The
Wall Disney's
an Academy Award for "On the Poseidon Adventure" In a field
THE SWORD IN
Waterfront" in 1954, who of undistinguished, unrememTHE STONE
(G)
shocked the audience of 3,000 in bered tunes.
(Technlcolorl
the Los Angeles Music Center Miss Minnelli whose mother
.\I so
by refusing the award.
--Judy Garland'..was nominatWATERBIRDS
When
his
name
was
aned for an Academy Award but
(Techn!colorl
And
nounced as best acoor by Liv never won succeeded with her
MICKEY'S
Ullmann, the cameras focused portrayal ~ a zany American
GRAND OPERA
on a San Francisco Apache girl nightclub singer in prewar Nazi
(Technicolorl
Adults S1.50
Children soc
in full Indian dress.
Germany.
Show starts 7 p.m. ·
She was identified as Sacheen Brando won the oscar for his
:::::::::~w:hi!c~h~w:o:n~n:i:ne~o:sc~a~rs~ln~a~ll~, Littlefeather. Her speech on portrait of an aging Mafia don
Branda's behalf was greeted by whose waning days are marked
mixed catcailsand applause .
by the entrance of his sons inoo
In a statement issued later by New York's gang warfare of a
Miss Littlefeather, Branda said generation ago.
he did not want to "offend or Among the awards captured
diminish this occasion but I do by "cabaret" were best sconot feel that I can, as a citizen ring, best achievement in
of the United States, accept this cinematography, achievement
or any award.
in art direction, set dec«ation,
"You are probably saying: film editing and sound.
'What the hell does this have to In addition wbest acwr and
do with the Academy Awards1" best picture, "The Godfather"
The answer is that tlie m~tion won best screenplay. -Mario
picture community as much as Puzo, who wrote the original
anyone has been responsible for novel, and the picture's dlrecdegrading the Indian."
oor, Franc ill Ford Coppola
Branda's disclaimer was not collaborated on the script.
appreciated by other partici- SILAS OUT
pants in the show. Raquel BOSTON (UP!) _ Veteran
Welch, who presen~ the best forward Paul Silas will sit out
actress . award, satd, "before the last two games of the
announ_cmg the win~er, I hope regular season, the Boston
the wtnner doesn t have a Celtics said Tuesday.
cause .~~
Silas has been bothered by an
What do these birds have in common 1 The owl from
Clint Eastwood, announcing Inflammation of the ligaments
t he wide-awake bank and the eagle
the tiest picture of the year' on the outside of his left knee.
from E Pluribus Unum.
prefaced his remarks with "I The injilry forced him wsit out
There's an eagle ol) every' dollar, isn 't there? And
hope I don't have to present the second half of Sunday's
tht&gt; wide-awake bank is famous for all things having
this award to all the cowboys
to do with money. So there's a natural attraction .
shot In John Ford Westerns." game against the Housto.n
That's why the wide-awake owl and the eagle stick
Rockets.
together so often in savingB, checking, auto
Although Brando and "The "It is Improving every day,"
loans, penonal loana, home loans ...
Godfather" won awards, the Dr. Thomas SUva, the team
picture itself, which had 11 physician, said Tuesday. "But
Come to think of it, how about you1 Wouldn't you
like to keep company with fl.ne feathered friend s
nominations, did. not measure we'll sideline him until
at our wide-awake bank?
up oo "ca~ret."
Friday's practice. He'll be
The ~us1cal, starring Miss ,ready 1o go a full' 48 (minutes)
Mmnelli, won rune Oscars 00 ·tn the first playoff game
Sunday night ,. •
Godfather's three.
Best dlrecoor of the year was ·- - · - ·.. -- · · ~;.
Robert Fosse, for "Cabaret." Velerons Memorial Hospital
Fosse also won a Tony award ADMITTED
Cora
Sunday night for hill Broadway Argabrlte, Reedsville; William
hit, "Pippin."
Baronick, Pomeroy; catherine
Wood, Racine; James Jones,
Charlie Chaplin won an Oscar Gallipolis; Alice Randolph,
for "Limelight", a picture that Pomeroy; Myrtle. Walker,
POMEROY, OHIO
was made more than 20 years Racine, and Darra Yahya,
ago
but not shown In this Long Bottom.
•
country unUI last year, thus
DISCHARGED -- Nora
. ,
Membe; of Federal Reserve System
making it elegible lor a 1972 Curtis, Belly Roach, William
on ·Frldays Our Drive-In Window is Open' a .m. to 1p.m.
IContinuously),
award. Chaplin was awarded a Russell, Charles Seegle, Sr.,
. uo;eooMaximum Insurance for Eac.h Depositor
statuette for his best original Floyd
Rhodes,
Grac·e
dramatic score along with Knighting, Floyd Barringer,
Paul Henderson and Roberta
~':::::~::~---------.J
collaborators
Raymond
Rasch
..... •
and Larry Russell. Last year, Musser.

MEIGS THEATRE

THESE ATHENS SECI'IONAL Center postal officials
were in Pomeroy Tuesday wattend a meeting at the Meigs
Inn hosted by James Soulsby, ·Pomeroy Postmaster. From
the left are Forrest Sees, Superintendent Mails, Athens; L.
M. Carr, assistant superintendent of mails, ZanesvUie;

Marvin Volz, support re(resentative, Akron District; Dick
Peyton, section center facillty manager, postmaster,
Zanesville; Art Cornwell, sectional center facility postmaster, Athens; Jobn Payoon, superintendent, area maintenance office, Zanesville, and R. C. Hooper, foreman of
carriers, Zanesville.

Brando snubs newest Oscar Property Transfers
By VERNON SCOTI
HOLLYWOOD (UP!)- · Marion Brando overshadowed the
45th annual Academy Awards
pre~n)atlons Tuesday night by
refusing the Oscar for best
actor of 1972, while his motion
plcture, "The Godfather," won
the best picture award.
An lndiap maiden made a
speech for Brando, who did not
appear, saying he turned down
the award because of American
treatment of Indians. She said
the acoor was on his way to
Wounded Knee, S.D., to join the
Indians who have taken over
the town there.
Liza Minnelli won the award
for best actress !or her
performance in "cabaret,"

Carl B. Jennings, Rachel E.
Jennings to Village of
Pomeroy,

easement,

Salisbury.
Loren J. Cmleman, Mary
Elizabeth Coleman to Loren J.
Coleman, Mary Elizabeth
Coleman, lot, Pomeroy.
·Robert C. Harten bach, Dana

Hobbs to Donald R. Hobbs, lot, . Reeves, affidavit, Meigs. •
James Slone, Anna Slone w
Salem.
Arlis
B. Thornton, Lillian
Bertine M.ills to H. C.
R. Roush, et al., to Dana R.
McKinney, Edna McKinney, Thornoon, 80 acres, Salem.
Roush, parcels, Salisbury.
Chester Price, Elsie Price oo
Donald Max Geary to Joe parcel, Salem.
John Throckmorton, Betty
Denison, Kathryn Denison,
, . 9~."~orton, . P,arc 0 1,
lots, Middleport.
Milo B. Hutchlaon, Betty 0. 'J.'!\1:
DYeav~:
·
Patricia Ann Groves to Paul Hutchison to' Ohio Power eo:,
Rqbert
M.
Hill, Evelyn L.
Sigman, Janet Sigman, in- easement, Rutland.
terest in lots, Middleport.
,. Janie Elizabeth Snider, Hill ro Archie McKinney, Jobn
·
Harvey Hobbs, Maxine A. Jennie Snider, carolyn Janet Sriu'ih, 'pareel; Rutland.

ELBERFELDS IN POMEROY
OPEN ALL DAY THURSDAY 9:30 TO 5 PM
SHOP FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9 PM

RUG SALE

:

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home from our large and complete
·
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matching colors in all sizes 24x34 through
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BRIAR ROSE oval Axminster Rugs
ORIENTAL Throw Rugs 24x48

I

Farmers Bank &amp;

)

are representing the local
education association:
. "The Meigs Local Teachers
Association and ,the Ohio
Association of Public School
Employes, Local 17, have
made a second ;equest to the
Meigs Local Board of
·Education to meet to . resolve
the issue of recognition that :
would give to the employes the
right to negotiate. The' request
included that the board have its
legal counsel, being the
prosecuting attorney, present
at the meeting. No response
has been received· from the
board to date.
"The issue has been
confused by the board
president in stating that the
two groups are making
demands that would cost the
taxpayers more money. This
statement of Mr. Porter's is

Some 200 ·Striking teaching and non-teaching
employes of the Meigs Local School District have
been warned to return to their jobs Friday morning
or their positions will be terminated.
Letters, signed by Frank W. Porter, president
of the district's board of education, were put into the
mails Wednesday afternoon, the first day of a strike
which closed all nine schools of the district affecting
some 3,000 students.
The board has threatened to invoke the
Ferguson Act in dealing with the strike which was
called Tuesday night by members of the education
association and the Meigs Local Chapter of the Ohio
Association of School Employes, composed of noncertified employes.
The letter placed in the mails
yesterday reads :
"Enclosed is a copy of
Sections 4117.01-4117.05 of the
Ohio Revised Code. Please
read this carefully and com·
pletely .
•'You should also review
. SOcUon f44 of ihe Mejgt .Local
BOard Policies. It states as
follows: 'No public employe
shall strike. An employe who
strikes shall be considered to
have abandoned and terminated his employment'."
"The Meigs Local Board of
Education expects that you will
be back on 'tl)e job on Friday,
March 30, 1973. If you are not,
you will be sent a notice that
you are on strike, as stipulated
In Section 4117.04 ORC, and
that you have abandoned and
terminated your appointment
or employment and shall no
longer hold such position, or be
entitled to any of the rights or

criticized teachers of fhe
district for their "lack of
concern for the children" when
he was informed that the
teachers and non-teachers had
voted to go on strike effective
Wednesday morning. He said
that neither he nor George
Hargraves, district superintendent, had been advised of
the strike.
Porter said he did receive a
telephoned wire at his home an
hour or so after he had gone Ul
work Wednesday. Hargraves
said he received the telegraph
message via phone about 11:30
a. m. Wednesday, several
hours after the strike had
begun. The wires advised of the
strike and carried the
signatures of Ga•y Walker,
president of the Meigs Local
Education Association, and
Mrs. Alice Globokar, president
of the Meigs Local Association
of Public School Employes.
Porter said that he was
emolwnents thereof.''
Porter said some teachers besieged with phone calls on
did report to their jobs Wednesday as the strike got
underway. Among the phone
Wednesday despite the
calls
were a number from
called strike and as a result
students who asked that the
were not sent letlers. , Also
Porter reported that two or strike be settled as soon as
possible so thal they would not
three school buses made
have to mak"'p time in the
· scheduled runs Wednesday
summer , and so that
morning.
Porter Tuesday night graduation could be on
schedule.
..

~flll':ii'MWO&gt;.::&gt;,:;:;:;:;~::::::::::::::::;:::::::::&gt;.~~~::~:~:'&lt;':~::::::::::::::;:?.::::::::.-:::=::~:::::::::::::::::::~.

ews •. in Briefs!)-

SEVERN three-tone striped Throw Rugs

By United Press International

CXJLUMBUS -THE DffiECTOR OF MEAT operations for
Big Bear Supermarkets in Ohio said Wednesday millions of

13irds ofafoather

The wide-awake bank
makes ita0SOPRr1J.. ·.

Spokesmen for the more than
200 Meigs Local School District
striking teachers and nont~aching employes today
denied they are seeking salary
Increases or any fringe
benefits In the current impasse
that produced a dlstrid-wide
strike Wednesday.
They said neither the
education association or the
Meigs Local Chapter of the
Ohio Association of School
Employes, the non-teaching
employes, are striking for
more beneflts..The spokesmen
said they are striking solely for
recognition of their respective
groups !() negotiate with the
Meigs Local Board of
Education.
Following is the statement of
Terry Lee and Wes Simms,
Columbus, of the Ohio
.Education Association, who

Board says
end strike

Commies get nearer to Phnom Penh
PHNOM PENH (UP!) Communist forces pushed to
within 1&amp; miles of Phnom Penh
ln fighting along Highway 1
today despite the 21st consecutive day of bombing raids by
U.S. B52 bombers and other
warplanes.
(In Washlngoon, the White
House said U.S. bombing would
continue as long as Communists
press their offensive in cambodia, the only country in
Southeast Asia with no formal
cease-fire).
cambodlan military spokesman CoL Am Rong said
Communists now occupy a 17mile stretch of Highway 1,
running from the strategic
Mekong River navy base at
Neak Luong to the plywood
facwry U.Wn of . Dei Eth, 1&amp;
miles southeast of Phnom

em an

r1nge

to superintend

pounds of meat will be thrown away next week ''if inconsiderate
people" stage a planned nationwide meat boycott. I'm against a
weeUona boycott ora perishable product," said Dyal Baehr. "If
it has any effect on the market of 25 or 50 per cent, there's going
oo be milllons of pounds of meat wasted, spoiled and discarded."
"Isn't it a shame," he added, "we would have w do
something like that )lecause of inconsiderate people, who,
without thinking, talk about a week's boycott of a perishable
)l'oduct." He suggested shoppers boycott meat one or two days a
week, instead of a full w~k. He admitted such a long boycott
could result in lower meat prices, "but after a short time they
• would be.right back up."

sure to register
at
Elberfelds Mechanic Street
Warehouse.

lSI: Prize 1100.00 Gift Certificate
2nd Prize 150.00 Gift Certificate
No Purchase necessary - you
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DECORATOR. .PillOWS
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Large Selection of
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purpose of entering into a
Wednesday night a letter was
negotiation procedural hand carried to all board of
agreement.
education members' homes,
"This has been the only issue and to the home of Supt.
under dispute since the initial George Hargraves requesting
request for such recognition on a meeting on the issue, the
Oct. 9, 1972. From this date spokesmen for the two employe
until the present time, every groups said.
effort was made by the local
That letter said:
association to attain this
"We are again stating that
recognition. At no time during we are willing to meet with the
this period did the local board of education and its legal
association request any advisor at the earliest possible
monetary items or fringe time.
benefits. The Meigs Local
"The purpose of this meeting
Chapter 17 of OAPSE main- will be to resolve the current
tains the constant posltlon that problem so that schools may
we are willing to participate at resume normal operations at
the bargaining table in the the earliest possible date."
attainment of a procedural
The above ccmmunication
agreement for the pu~pose of carried the signatures of Mrs.
negotiations.''
Globokar and Gary Walker.

•

a1 y

-

· WASHINGTON - '11IE INTERNATIONAL Telephone &amp;
Telegraph Co. (m) lriedw use the CIA as a chaMel oo bankroll
opponenta of 'Salvlldor Allende in the 19'10 Chilean )l'esidentlal
elfJC!IIani, aceonlng mUllpreCedented testimony of a CIA agent
rtlellld by 9enlle inVIIIIpton. Wednellday. WUllam V. Broe,
'

ICI IIIII II 01 Pqe 10)

Meigs Local School
District Supt. George
Hargraves today announced
that the Meigs Local Board
of Education plans to have
schools open on Friday,
March 30.
School employes have
received letlers lrom the
board of education stating
that they are expected to be
on the job at that time.
" If there Is any change In
this situation, the board will
announce It at the earliest
possible time on the area
radio stations and other
media," Hargraves said.

president of the Meigs Local
Education Association.

•

enttne

Devoted To The lnteres~ Of The Meigs-Mason Area

VOL. XX~

NO. 243

POMEROY·M IDOLEPORT, OHIO

THURSDAY,
MARCH 29, 1973.
-

·PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS

Funeral set for
Mayor Baronick
Funeral

services

for

Pomeroy's Mayor William G.
Baronick, who died Wednesday
morning
at
Veteran's
Memorial Hospital, will be held
Saturday at 10 a. m. at the
Sacred
Heart
Church,
Pomeroy, with the Rev.
Father Bernard Kracjovic
officiating.
Mayor Baronick began his
term as mayor of Pomeroy in
January of 1972. He was
also a former Pomeroy
Councilman, having served as
its president. He was also a
former president of the
Pomeroy Board of Public
Affairs.
The mayor was a member of
the Sacred Heart Church,
Drew Webster Post 39,
Pomeroy Fire Department, the
Ohio
Valley
Mayors
Association, Meigs County
Planning Commission and of
the Fraternal Order of Eagles.
He was employed at the Amos

MAYOR BARONICK
Employes ol the village
and members of the
Pomeroy Fire Department
and emergency squads are
requested to meet at 7: IS this

evening at the Pomeroy
Village Hall prior to
proceeding to the Ewing
Funeral Home where ser·

vices will be conducted lor
the late Mayor William
Baronick.

,,,,,,:,::1:,:,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,.
$3,925 RECEIVED
Ohio distributed $8,445,917.17
in general relief susidies oo all
88 county welfare departments
this week according to Stale
Auditor Joseph T. Ferguson .
The amount received by Meigs
County was $3,924.98.

9 Bonds
•
g~ven up
Nine defendants forfeited
bonds and seven others were

fined in Pomeroy Mayor's
Court Wednesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Roger
Rodgers, Columbus, $2&amp;,
-failing to have vehicle under
c·ontrol; Roy Buchanan ,
Minersville, $38.70, speeding;
Ellis Hunt, Gallipolis, $200,
driving while intoxicated;
Hayward Jones, Racine,
$23.70, speeding ; Arnold
Priddy, Rutland, $25, squealing
tires; Stanley Watson, no
address, $25, assault; Donald
Lisle, 20, Sycaruse, $25, assur·
ed clear distance; Kenneth
Wheaton, no address, $50,
(Continued on Page 10)

Power Plant at Winfield, W.
Va .
Mr. Baronick was the son of
the late Stephen and Mary
Ohatnik Baronick. He was also
preceded in death by two
sisters, Marie Novijecky and
Eva N. Baronick in infancy.
Mr. Baronick is survived by
his wife, Betty Jean Allen
Baronick; five brothers,
Stephen of Pittsburgh; John,
Connellsville, Pa.; Joseph, MI.
Pleasant, Pa .; Edward,
Fairmont, W. Va ., .am! An·
thony, of West Mifnin, Pa.;
four sisters, Mildred O'Brien,
Washington, D. C.; Sophie
Baronick, Scotsdale, Pa.;
Margaret Baronick, New York,
N. Y. , and Helen Kukawka,
Garfield Heights, Ohio, and
several nieces and nephews.
The Pomeroy Fire Dept. will
hold memorial services at
Ewing Funeral Home this
evening at 1 and Rosary Services will beconducted Friday
at the funeral home at 7 p. m.
Friends may call at the funeral
home anytime.

THREE HOSPITAUZED - Meigs County Sheriff's Deputy David Sheets, above, investigates a three.citr accident that hospitalized three persons Wednesday at 4:45 p. m. on SR
124 in Syracuse in front of Sadie's Market. Sheets said Sandra Boothe, Racine, driving west,
went off the road on the right into a dllch, came back onro the highway to carom left of center
hitting headon a car driven by Libby Wilford of Racine, traveling east. Mrs. Wilford's vehicle
in turn struck an unoccupied car legally parked owned by Sampson Hall of Syracu~. Mrs.
Booth and a passenger, Debbie Roush, taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital by the Racine E-R
squad, are in satisfactory condition. Mrs. Wilford was taken ro Holzer Medical Center by the
Syracuse squad. The Booth and Wilford vehicles were demolished, and there was light damage
to the Hall car. The accidenl'is still under investigation. Mrs. Wilford was reported today in
satisfactory condition suffering multiple contusions.

Last 67 POWs are free
CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (UP!) - The last 67
American prisoners of war held
by North Vietnam flew to
freedom today, marking the
symbolic end to U.S. military
participation in the Vietnam
War .
Two Air Force hospital jels
left Hanoi today about an hour
apart carrying the 67 POWs to
Clark Air Base in the Philippines for their fjrst stop on the
way home. The first plane was
expected at Clark about 5:30
a.m. EST.
The release means all 594
prisoners- both military and

civilian , American and foreign
- that were named on the
original Communist POW list
were free. An Army captain
remained in Viet Cong hands
but was expected to be released
next week .
Alon g with the withdrawal of
the last U.S. troops in South
Vietnam, the release ended
U.S . military involvement in
Vietnam . The last troops were
to depart shortly after the POW
release.
One Day Late
It came one day later. than
specified under the cease-fire
agreement signed in Paris Jan. ·

27. The delay was caused
mostly by a Communist reluctance to turn over nine
Americans and a Canadian
captured in Laos.
Those 10 men were released
Wednesday and were being
processed at Clark today along
with 72 others freed by the
North Vietnamese and Viet
Cong the past two days. Some
of this group were expected to
be heading back to the United
States by the weekend.
The Viet Cong announced
Wednesday it had one more
prisoner, an Army captain
captured in the Mekong Delta
in 1969. Although the Communists identified him as Robert
Wheme, a name that appeared
on no U.S. military lists, the
Pentagon identified him as
Robert Thomas White, 32, of

Newport News, Va., through his
Social Security number.
White had been listed as
missing in action-One of the
1,334 men listed as such. He
was the first POW the Viet
Cong admitted capturing in the
southern part of South Vietnam
and the announcement raised
hopes that others listed ampng
the missing would turn up.
Oppel in Hospital
Lloyd D. Oppel, the canadian
missionary released Wednesday, decided to stay at the
Clark hospital for a few days
because he developed a case of
malaria and will fly back with
the American POWs this
weekend. He originally was
scheduled to take a commercial
flight from the Philippines but.
apparently will go to California
first before going to canada.

Just like Cannon

cent.

ELBERFELDS
IN POMEROY
....

"

unequivocally untrue. The the superintendent, or other
The following is the
issue is solely one of formal professjonal employes to statement of the OAPSE
recognltlpn that would participate in the development chapter issued by Mrs. Alice
provide to the employes the · of the educational program of Globokar, president:
·
right to meet with the board the boys and girls, then the
"Meigs Local Chapter 17 of
io resolve grievances and school district is in danger of the Ohio Association of Public
other related problems that its very existence. The public School Employes, having taken
plague the educational will not be hoodwinked into action to withdraw services
program of tbe Meigs Local thinking that Mr. Porter alone from the Meigs Local board of
School
District.
The knows what is best for the boys education, took the following
misleading statements used and girls of Meigs Local School position to clarify the issues
by Mr. Porter are a District.
concerning the non-teaching
" The teaching and non- employes:
deliberate attack on the
teaching and non-teaching teaching employes are very
"The disputed issue which
employes to tum the public concerned that one man can led .to the present action of the
against them and could lead dictate the policies for an Meigs Local Chapter of OAPSE
to the destruction of our en lire system. The public must is the refusal by the board of
now demand that all segments . education to recognize the
schools.
" If Mr. Porter continues his have the opportunity to par- Meigs Local Chapter of OAPSE
one-man rule of the Meigs ticipate in the development of as the sole and exclusive
Local Schools by not per- the educational program of this bargaining agent for all nonmitting other board members, district n
teaching employes for the

en1e

WASHINGTON- THE NATION'S CRIME rate dropped 3
per cent in 19'12 - the first decrease in 17 years. But violent
crimes, especially rape, continued !()Increase. This was shown
by preliminary, year-end figures complied by the FBI and
released Tuesday, The ligures were Immediately hailed by
President Nixon as "very heartening." The President said, "We
can turn the tide of crime in America. These statistics demonlllrate that we 11n1 well on our way."
'J'he fi8ure8 allowed that violent c'rime increased by 1 per
cent in 1972, compared with a 8per cent increase the year before.
Robber!• were down 4 per cent in lm; murder. up 4 per eent;
IUf&amp;VIted 8188Uit, up 6 per cent; forcible rape, up 11 per cent.
()lmC!I qainlt property decreased 3per cent, compared with a 6
per cent increase in 1871. Auto theft declined 7 per cent, larceny
of $110 and over declined 3 per cent and burglary declined 2 per

---~·~--~~~·~~~~~-~~-~-~--~----~-.~~~~~~~~

Be

•

"TilEY RUN IN OUR FAMILY", a three-act comedy,
was to. be presented by the Senior ClaS:. at Eastern High
School, first in a matinee today for the student body, and
again Friday at 8 p. m. at the high school for the general
public. The play is under the djreclion of.Joe Bailey . The
cast: Front, 1-r, Debbie Jeffers, Rosemary Reed, Jane Ann

Karr, Beverly Riffe, Debbie Richardson, J ill Swain; second

row, Randy Wolf, Pam Balser, Marcia carr, Elaine Milhoan,
Vicki Spencer, Phyllis Newlun; back, Bob Grossnickle, Steve
Mlllhone, George' Mora, Rusty Walker, Byron McCoy, David
Matheny and Mr. Bailey.

"Cannon couldn't have done
a . better job" Ralph Pratt,
Middleport businessman, said
today after police solved an
apparent breaking and entering of the Hi Ho Bar which
adjoins Pratt's Ohio Hotel.
Pratt said he was notified
about 7:30 a.m. Wednesday
that the bar had been broken
into. A glass had been broken
out of the Walnut St. side of the
building. Some ~ in roiled
change, 10 fifths of whickey,
cigars, beer, loose change and
other articles had been stolcrr.
The breaking and entering was
reported to Pratt by his hotel
night cl~rk, Harold Hodge, 28,
of Marietta. ·
Pratt called po1ice Chief J. J!
Cremeans. Sheriff Robert

-

•

Hartenbach and a fingerprint
expert from London joined the
chief. By mid-afternoon a
confession had been secured
from the night clerk, Hodge,
that he had broken inro the par ..
Items taken !rom the bar had
been carried to the basement,
.most of them being buried by
Hodge under ashes. According
wpolice, Hodge, after enteripg
the bar, allegedly left through
a one-way locked door leading
into the hotel hallway.
All the stolen merchandise
and money was recovered
except the loose change. Hodge
is confined to the village jail
and will face breaking and
entering charges in county
court later this week.

�3-The_DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,March 29,1973

•

Carlton, Seaver in mid-season form

2-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29,1973

WIN AT BRIDGE

Slam Makes, But Carefully
NORTH
Z9
410 532
¥ 102
t K8 3
.AK10 8
WEST
EAST
.K Q96
487
¥QJ 98
¥76 3
• Q54
t 2
.Q7 542
.J 963
SOUTH (D)
• AH
¥AK 54
t AJ 10976
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None vulnerable
West North East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

1.
2NT
3NT.
St

South
It
Pass 2 ¥
Pass 3.
Pass 4.

Pass

6t

Pass
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead-• Q

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Swmgs m the IMP matches
aren't always the result of
luck Sometimes the experts
make mistakes
The bidding m the box
shows how one team arnved
at six diamonds. The b1ddmg
was rather elegant although
we feel that almost any fairly good pair would be able
to bid that contract on some
sequence or other However,
at the second table the expert pa1r JUSt got to f1ve
The play at six diamonds
would also be fa1riy simple
for an average player It

would take some atrOCIO US
breaks to beat 11 and the expert player made qmte a
production out of his play
He won the heart lead and
stud1ed the dummy for several mmutes before leading
to tr1ck two The n~ cashed
a second h1gh hea
After th1s start e. care·
fully ruffed a heart'- w1th
dummy' s eight of trumps ,
cashed the ace and kmg of
clubs to discard two spades,
ruffed a club; ruffed h1s last
heart w1th dummy's kmg of
trumps; led a trump to hls
ace and conceded a tnck to
the queen of trumps.

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Onu.tted from the list of those
attendmg the R1o Grande
Association at the Pomeroy
Baptist Church were Rev. and
Mrs. Edward Fisher and their
friend of Piqua, Mrs. Mary K.
Yost, Mr. and Mrs. Roderick
Gr1nun, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Cleland and Mrs. Nondus
Hendncks.
Mra. Earl Hart has been
returned home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. E. A. Wmgett and Mrs.
Ann Coe viSited the1r brother,
Mr. Bob Spencer, in Hun-

Tuppers Plains
Society News
By Mrs. Evelyu Brlckles
· Mr. and Mrs. Bill Swain of
Parkersburg spent a recent
day with her aWl!, Mrs. Effie
Watson.
Thurston Clark of Columbus
visited his brother, Mr. and
Mrs. Way Clark on Tuesday.
Leone Babcock did not have
surgery on Fridsy due to her
physical condition. The
surgery has been scheduled for
a later date. She spent the
weekend with her sister, Mrs.
Leota Massar.
Mrs . Andrew Buchanan
returned home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy
after being a patient there
several weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brickles visited their Slster-mlaw, Mrs. Homer Brickles of
Pomeroy Wednesday . Mrs.
Brickles has a broken ann and
shoulder, received in a !aU at
ber home a few weeks ago.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Miller
and children of Dayton spent
the weekend here with her
lrother, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Walker and Ruthie.
Rev. and Mrs. Bob Wyatt of
Parkersburg, Rev. Jacob 1£hman,local, and Sammy Rardin
of Long Bottom were callmg on
Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Babcock. Mr. Babcock remains
quite poorly.
Mrs. Esther Riggs and
children of Logan visited her
mother, Mrs. Dorothy Dodderer and grandmother, Effie
Saunders Sunday and also Mr.
and Mrs Lindsey Lyons and
son, Lamar and Eulah Swan.
Mr~. Maud Grey was a
Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Headley.
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
N1ch&lt;jls spent Saturday with
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Hendershot of Lancaster.
Mrs . Mim a Walker and
daughter, Ruth1e spent Sunday
with her niece, Mr. and Mrs.
John Newell and family of
Colwnbus. Mrs. Newell just
returned home from the
hospital after being a surgical
patient there.
Recent vialtors of Mr. and
,Mrs. Blain Taylor was her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Forest
Brock ci New Martinsville, W.
Va . and his brother, Mr. and
Mn. Harry Taylor of Glen
Easton, W. Va., and Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Carpenter of

Coqlville.
Edith Betzlng was taken to
Veterlllll Memorial Hospital
amdly IIIII lllmltted as a
Jllldlcal (llllent.

\.

•

THURSDAY, MARCH29,1973
6 00- News3, 4, S, 15; News6. 8, 10; Truth"orConseq. 6.
6 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News 6; I Dream of Jeannie 13;
Designing Women 33 ; CBS News 8, 10.
7 00 - What's My LineS, Big Red Jubilee 15; News 6, 10; Bl!lll
the Clock 4; Eiec. Co. 20; Course of Our Times 33; Truth or
Conseq. 3; Let' s Make A Deal 13.
7 30-1'11 See You In Court 4; Hollywood Squares 3; To Tell the
Truth 6; Wild Kingdom iO ; Lassie 8; Beat the Clock 13; Zoom
20; Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15; Mod Squad6, i3; Nallonai Geographic
8, 10; Democracy's Trumpet: W. Va. Legislature 33.
s 00 - Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15, Mod Squad6, 13; The Waltons 8, 10;
Advocates20, 33; Forum 6; Spring Is Special16.
9 oo - An American Family 20, 33; Ironside 3, 4, 15; ABC
Theatre 6, 13; Movies "Nothing But the Best" 8; "Tick .
Tick ... lick" 10.
10.00- Dean Martin 3, 4, 15, Streets of San Francisco 6, lJ;
News 20; Talk With the Loud Family" 33.
11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; A Little Bit Like Murder 6, 13;
Movies "The Bad Seed" S; "Nothing Bulfhe Best" 10.
I:00- News 13; Roller Derby 4.
2:00- News 4.
FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1973
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6: 15- Farmtjme 10; English 3.
6:20 - Farm Report 13.
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8, Human Dimension
10; Blue Ridge Quartet 13.
7:00- Today3, 4, 15; CBS NewsS, 10, FllntstoneslJ.
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13; Popere 10.
S:OO- Cap Kangaroo 10; Sesame Sl 33; Lassie 6, New Zoo
Revue 13.
S· 30- Jack La La nne 13; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room S.
9·00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15, Concentration 6; Friendly Junction 10. Mr. Rogers 33, Capt Kangaroo S; Green

By Helen and Sue Bottel
Unanswerable Question No. 583%
Rap:
Pants have two legs. Shirts have two sleeves or annholes. So
why don 't they cal! II a "pall' of shirts," if it's always a "pair of
pants"' - "SLACK" SHOPPER
S.S. :
Mebbe for the same reason the plural of "house" isn't
41
hice." - SUE

+++
... AND "alumni" don't visit several "campi." - HElEN
P.S. Actually, "pants" is an abbreviation of pantaloon,
which was a "short lower torso covermg with attached
stockings." The "s" sigitifted the presence of two stockings.

+++

Rap :
I'm a guy with a "righl-&lt;&gt;n" father and it's darn embarrassing.
He is 54 and getting a pot. He wears low rise jeans and body
The b1ddmg has been
shirts. He even walks barefoot m the summer. The other day he
West
North
East South even asked my older sister to patch his pants.
2NT
When he invited me and one of my friends to go to a rock
Pass
3•
Pass 3 NT
concert,
with him (he'd even pay) that d!d it. What do you do
?
Pass
4•
Pass
when you're the - SON OF AHIP GROOVER?
You South, hold
.KJ3 ¥KJ3 tK1054 .K9G
Dear Son :
Wha t do you do now?
For starters · stop trying to run your father's life'
A-Bid hvc di amonds You
If he's sincere about his preferences and IWI just trying to
have never shown your very
good diamond support.
buy the youth vote, then I say, "Right on, and on, and on, Pop!"
TODAY'S QUESTION
-HELEN
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

U¢8;1 :] l!tki£U!1

1. 1.

Your par tner contmues to f1ve
hearts What do you do now ?

+++

SOHG :
Look now: If you had an older teacher who liked rock and
wasn
't uptight about the way kids dress or act, you'd call him
Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN book
to uw;n ot Bfldge," (c/o this news- "fantastic." So knock off the embarrassed son act and see your
paper), PO. Sox 46'1, RadiO City dad as a PERroN who enjoys life (and probably doesn 't conStation, New York, N.Y 10019.
deDID YOUR actions - even though he mtghl be ent1tled.) SUE

Racine Social Events

Television Log.

&amp; THINGS

Generation Rap

+++
Rap :
You can't help me with my problem, but maybe someone will
he helped by hearing it.
1just turned 19. I have been usmg drugs for four years- four
ugly, miSerable years. ! have done everythmg from sniffing glue
and drmking cough syrup to I.SD and heroin. I started steaUng
from friends to get drugs, and ended up at the above address St. CI81J' CoWlty Jail. I could get a life term m priSon. Maybe I'll
be lucky and get another chance and, if I do, I plan to spend a lot
of time helping others off drugs.
Young people want to be cool or "m." Drugs let me "m" aU
right - and locked the door behind me.
This is to those who think they won'tgel hooked. For a while
you think you're really up there - you can heat the world, you're
smarter, better and more together than those straight dudes. But
before long "far-&lt;&gt;ut" changes to "strung-cut," and that ain't
cool, man.
There'U be the answer, "Not me, I can qu1t whenever I want
to." Yeah, I said that too. But can you? If you can, do 11 nowright now !
It's a homble feelmg to know you may spend the rest of your
life m prison. - ON THE INSIDE

ling ton. He is slowly unprovmg
and was brought home Monday
by Mrs. Spencer.
Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence
McDamei and L1sa of
Guysville, a former pastor of
the Methodist Church, attended Sunday School and
worship serv1ce here and
called on fr1ends.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hall and
children , Jenmfer
and
Christopher of St. Paul, Mmn.,
VISited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Fern Noms after visiting
m Columbus WIth Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Noms and Mr. and
Mrs. Nick Yost.
Rev. and Mrs. Morris Wolfe
visited Mr. and Mrs. Fern
Noms while Mr Norris was
recuperating from the flu
Helen and Sue :
.
Last summer I went to a rock concert in Indiana and whUe
Mr arfd Mrs.' Robert Sw1ft of
Columbus ' spent Sunday with there I met a fellow from 'Ohio (I live in Pennsylvania.) We've
Mrs . Swfft's parents, Mr. and been writing and he said he 'd like to come visit me, but never got
Mrs . Francis Morris.
• here.
Mrs. Lavmia Simpson was
Now he wants to meet me m Colorado for sprmg vacation. He
honored Sunday w1th a bir- has friends there and we could stay with them so it wouldn't cost
thday celebral!on by her much.
daughrer, Marian, and Mr
My mother thinks !don't know him well enough, and this IS a
Rober\ Bell of Reynoldsburg silly thing for a near-111-year-cld girl to do. What are your honest
and Mrs. Ruth Simpson and opinions' - WANTS TO
Steve, local .
Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Weller of W.T
Your mother gets my vote ! - HElEN
Independence, Mo., spent a
week with her parents, Mr. and
+++
Mrs. Clarence Bradford and W.:
Mr. and Mrs. !.£on Jordan of
SoWlds too risky. ThiS guy might be a lot different from what
Columbus spent the weekend. you remember him from last summer. Let him visit YOU first. Mr and Mrs. Clyde Cross SUE
and Ray of Columbus spent a
weekend with Mrs . Cross'
motber, Mrs. Howard Neigler.
Grella and Isabel ·simpson,
Lilhan Hayman and Vera
Beegle were Sunday dinner
The Bashan VoiWlteer_ Fire
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Dept. was called three times
Grimm at Letart Falls.
Mr and Mrs Billy Sm1th of m two days to Bald Knobs to
Mrs. Billy Morartty, Marcy
put out brush fires. AU the
and Terry, of Lancaster spent Chillicothe were visiting Mr. firemen who could answered
the weekend with Mrs. Mason and Mrs. Harold Newlun,
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Snuth the call each time.
Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kerns
Mr. and Mrs. Darcy Potrer of were overmght guests of Mr. of Belpre and Miss Renee
Bryon, Ohio and Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs . Howard Young, Trussell took supper Saturday
Clarence Deiley of Coraopolis, Paden City, W Va.
Mr. and Mrs Charles Cline evening with their grandPa ., spent several days here on
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
and sons of Moundsville, were
business.
Trussell.
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart visiltng Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Mrs. Muri Ours and daughter
and Dale Roush spent Saturday Cline.
Betty were shoppmg in
Ernestme Hayman has
at New Albany.
Parkersburg on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs Bob Roush and returned home after several
Mrs. Mildred Frank of
Nancy of Columbus were weeks in Florida.
Pomeroy R. D. was a dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd McPeek
weekend guests of her parents,
guest of her sister, Mrs. Inez
Mr. and Mrs Owen Watson. of Belleville, W Va., spent a Carson recently .
day recently w1th Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Dill have
Joe Bissell.
sold their farm to Gary Griffith
Tom Drake, Reynoldsburg, and purchased land to build a
was an overnight guest of Mr. new home.
and Mrs David Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hysell of
The Almanac
Mr . and Mrs. Howard St. Petersburg, Fla., and Mrs.
By United Press International Larkins of Portland, Vera and
Mary Cowdery of Long Bottom
_ Today IS Thursday, March 29, Vida Weber, Tuppers Plains,
spent Thursday afternoon with
the 88th day of 1973 with 277 to and Mr. and Mrs. Jr. Hauber, Mr . and Mrs. Stanley Trussell.
follow.
and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Also visiting the Trussells
The moon is between its last Lark1ns and daughter visited during the week were Mrs.
quarter and new phase
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkins.
Mildred Frank, Pomeroy R.
The mormng stars are
Mr. and Mrs. Dorset Larkins D., Mrs. Inez Carson, Mrs.
l\'lercury, Venus, Mars and and family were vis11ing Mr. Murl Ours, Mrs. Dorothy
Jupiter.
and Mrs. Virgil Wamsley, Lawson and Mr. and Mrs.
The evemng star is Saturn.
Cheshire.
Albert Hill of Racine.
Those born on th1s date are
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith
Miss Renee Trussell ,
under the s1gn of Anes
were visi ling Mr. and Mrs. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
President J ohn Tyler was Milton TutUe of Pomeroy R. F. Ralph Trussell is a patient at
born March 29, 1790.
D., Ollie Young, Pomeroy, Mr. Veterans Memorial Hospital .
On lh1s day in history :
and Mrs. Emmett Sehem and
In 1812, the first wedding was Emma and Pearl Powell.
performed. m the White House.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman Hanson Holrer, Forest RWt.
Mrs. Lucy Payne Washington, and family of Westerville were
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curlis
sister-in-law of President visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joe and family were visiting Mary
James Madison, was married Bissell.
Pierce.
to Supreme Court Justice
Mr. and Mrs . Jim Walls and
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Garth
Thomas Dodd.
•
son, Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Smith were Mr. and Mrs.
In 1824, the Society for the Keith Ridenour and son and Claude Smith, Reedsville, Mr.
Reformation of Juvemle Delin- Mr, and Mrs. Tom Hayman and Mrs. Kenny Reynolds and
quents was mcorporated in New and daughters were visiting son, Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
York City.
Ernestine Hayman.
Howard Young, Paden City, W.
In 1967, France launched its
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Holter Va., and l£ona Cline.
first nuclear submarine .
were dinner guests of Mrs.
1 -VIoletSmlth

Long Bottom

Social Notes

Bashan
News

'

BY PAUL CRABTREE

By United Press International
Steve Carlton and Tom
Seaver are ready.
The two Cy Young Award
winners, who are expected to
oppose each, other when the
Phillldelpllla !'hils and New
York Mets open their seasons
April 6, looked in mid....,ason
fonn Wednesday in their nexto
to-l;lst spring training tuneupa.
Carlton, coming off a 27-10
record, lbnited the Atlanta
Braves toone runonslxhlts for
eight innings and gained credit
for the Phils' 2-1 VICtory. The
Braves' only run came in the
third Inning and was unearned.
Philadelphia snapped a 1-1 tie
in the bottom of the eighth
when Bill Robinson singled
home Del Unser. Dick Selma
worked the ninth inning for the
Phils to get the save.
Seaver, looking to make up
the two weeks he mis8e&lt;f
earlier this month bacause d a
sore throat, blimked Cincinnati
on only two hits for six innings
and struck out six as the Mets
routed the Reds, 8-0. PhU
Hennigan completed the
shutout OVOI' the final three
mnings while allowing two hils
and sinking out three.

Blondie and Dagwood Bumstead are orphans now.
Murat (Chic) Young, the gentle cartoonist who created and
produced the strip for forty years, died recently after a long and
productive life, at 72.
He leaves behind a series of American traditions, some of
which he created:
The Dagwood sandwich; Dagwood's patented mad rush to
catch his &lt;&gt;qnmuter bus; his clasaic fights with his boss, Mr.
Dithers, and his neighbor, Herb Woodley; Blondle's telephonitls
- all these liave become accepted part of American folklore.
Chic Young's mlddle-mlddl~lass famUy stlll draws
chuckles from anyone of reading age on up to nonagenarians,
because his themes were universally-recognized by his readers
(in 1,500 publications and 16 languages).
But most Americans Wlder 35 cannot remember when
Blondie was an absolute national mania, a craze just as strong as
today's more-phUosophical favorite strip, "Peanuts," with
Carlie Brown, Snoopy, Unus, and the gang. Perhaps even more
so, because with no television in those days, the impact of the
printed comic strip was in its heyday, and Blondie was never
worse than second or third in any poU of comic hits.
It's hard to believe, but the announcement that Blondie was
gomg to have another baby, to give a big sister to the child known
up to then only as "Baby DumpUng," was Page One news in most
Acres 3.
9 30- Ele&lt;. Co. 33; To Tell The Truth 3, Jeopardy 6; HazelS;
of the country's newspapers.
Dr. Kildare 13.
There were Blondie dolls, Blondie coloring books, Blondie 10 00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15; Joker's Wild S, 10, Columbus Six
Callmg 6; Dick Van Dyke 13.
sweatshirts and other apparel, Blondie wristwatches - and,
Inevitably, a series of Blondle movies, which still show np in the 10 30 - Elec. Co. 20, Love American Style 6, Password 13;
Baffle 3, 4, 15; $10,000 Pyramid 8, 10.
"cheapie" spots on TV.
11 ·00 - Sale of Century 3, 15, Love American Style 6; Gambit 6,
10; Password 13, Eleclric Co. 20.
Whatever your age, you sought to see at least one of these
II
30
- Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Love of Life s, Bewitched 6, 13;
films.
Sesame St. 20.
The plots were mspired nothingness, the characterizations 12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 13;
Contact S, Password 6.
hardly anything to brag about, but the amazing thing was the
12
30
- 3 W's Game 3, 15; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Split
character who played Dagwood. They found a chap named Ar·
Second 6.
thur Lake, and his resemblance to the head of the BuliiStead clan
1:00 - News 3; Green Acres 10 , Secret StormS, Walch Your
Child lS.
was uncamy. It was the most marvelous piece of casting in
1:20 - Fashlons1n Sewing 3
movie history - and you ought to see one of these old flicks for
I 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15, As The World Turns 8, 10, Let's
Make A Deal 13.
that reason, if for no other.
2.00
- Days of OUr Lives 3, 4, lS, Newlywed Game 6, 33; Mike
There may he sound sociological explanation for the
Dooglas 6; Guiding Light s, 10.
phenomenal success of the strip in the late Thirties and early
2 30- Doctors 3, 4, IS; General Hasp 6, 13; Love Splendored
Thing S, 10; Bill Moyer's Journal 20.
Forties. War was inuninent, then present, and families were
3
30
- Returnot Peyton Pla&lt;e3, 4, 15, One Life to Llve6 ; Book
being torn apart by its impact, and family homilies and values
Beat33, Secret Storm 10; Mouse Tales33, Merv GriffinS.
Wlder the stresses of combat and a nation fighting for its life. The
4 00 - Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset IS; Sesame St 20. 33; Love
American Style 13, Merv Griffin 4; Huckleberry Hound-Yogi
Wlchangir)g rituals of the Bumsteads were something to
Bear 6; Movie "Frenchie" 10.
welcome, to take comfort in.
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6; Petticoat Jun&lt;llon 3; Daniel Boone 13,
Gilligan's Islands , Dick Van Dyke 15; Merv Gritfln ~
As the years passed, Chic YoWlg kept the strip funny - right
5·00
- Mister Rogers 33; Bonanza 3, ~ ; HazelS ; Andy Griffith
up to his death, but he made no effort to make it relevant, or even
15; Big Valley 6.
current.
5.30- Elec Co. 33; Gomer Pyle 13. Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Death Valley Days 15.
He let Alexander (Baby Dwnpling} grow up, slowly, and only
6.00 - News 3. 4, S, 10, 15, Truth or COI1seq 6; Sesame St 20,
to a point. Where actually he would he nearing forty, he remains
Around the Bend 33.
a teenager, possibly at the college-freshman level. Cookie passed
6. 30 - News6, 13 ; I Dream of Jeannie 13; Let's Travel33.
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3; Beat the Clock 4, News 6, 13; What's
puberty, and was represented as a girl in her middle teens when
My Line 8; Wild Kingdom 13; Saint 15; Elec Co. 20, Folk
Young died.
Guitar 33.
7 30- Young Dr. Kildare 4, Protectors S; College Hockey 20 ,
There were no long hair, love beads, sandals in Blondie's
Parent Game 10, Beat the Clock 13; Porter Wag011er 3; To
little world. Alexander wore a modified crew cut, and Cookie
Tell The Truth 6, Wall Street Week 20, 33.
stayed in bobby-sox, although her bemline crept up a little.
8 00 - Washington Week In Review 20, 33 , Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4,
15, Brady Bunch 6, 13; Mission Impossible s. Spring Is
There was no pollution, urban congestion, inner-city ghetto
Special 10.
problems for the Bumsteads - and no wife-swapping, boozing or
8:30 - Partridge Fam ily 6, 13; Little People 3, 4, 15, MOvie 20;
pot parties for this famUy of confirmed city dwellers. Vietnam
Fest• val Films 33.
never happened and Blondie's complaint about meat prices
9:00 - Masterpiece Theatre 33, Circle of Fear 3, 4, 15; Room
'
.
.
222 ; Movie " Marlowe" 8.
were, hardly C\li'I'~Uy lppicl!) ..~)lw R!'lblenuy~s"' ll(etllne , • 9:30 -oQd~ Gouple.,6, 13•
_,.,...,.. • ~ -$ t , • . ,
one for the Bumsteads, and i111 of ll8.'" · ·
- • • "' • ~ 10:00 - ' L'ilve Amerlc§n Style 6, 13; Paul f.luc~lm~ 3~. Bobby
' y
di-~
k
the tri
Darin 3, 4, 15.
And so, when Chi
C OWlg "" a wee or so ago,
s P 10 30 - What About Tomorrow? 6, 13
may have been out of tlD!e with today's violent, problem-fllled ll 00 - News, Weather, Sports6, 6, 10, 13
world. But it was still fWlny, and for that reason alone Chic II. 30 - Johnn,y Carson 3, IS ; In Concerl6 ; Movies "Assignment
Young and the brood he created deserves a lasting place our
~~~~~•• :·y~yage to a Prehistoric Planet" 10, "The Glass
affections. Goodbye, old friend.
l 00 - Mldn lghl Speclal3, 4, lS , Mov 1e "Bride of the MOI1ster"
10
l 30 - News 13
2 30- News 4.

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walk a batter. Bart Johnson
pitched the last two innings for
Chicago and lim1ted the
Pirates to two hlts.
Elsewhere, Doug Rader col:
lected three hits as the Houston
Astros downed the Detroit
Tigers, 4-2; Marty Pattin
lwrled five-bit shutout ball for
seven Innings as Boston

blanked St. Lows, 3-0 ; Don
Money's three-run triple keyed
a five-rWl Milwaukee third
inning m the Brewers' 9-4
tr1wnph over San Diego; and
outfielder Bill North drove in
four runs w1th two hits and a
sacrifice fly to help oakland
blast tbe Chicago Cubs, 13-3.
Paul Blair's tw(H'UII double

Mason Counties

Somehow the combination of Jack and
Charlie, wh1ch was the original name for the
several premises occupied Wltll the present
handsome, tasteful, wann and colorfully large
combination of three once ... ocially impeccable
Manhattan mansions at 21 W. 52nd St., wus just
what the rich and celebrated appreciated. Jack,
the stiff-backed, courtly martinet who catered
to his customers' whims, Charlie, the ~!fable,
laughing lad whose demeanor was preferred by
the more amiable trade. Between the two they
created the ideal speakeasy. And it became big
and lasting business m an era which spawned
speaks and cabarets whose llfetime,like today's
TV shows, often lasted a year, or a few weeks.
The contrast of Jack &amp; Charlie's today and U1e
Speakeasy Era is fantsstlcaUy ironic : no hint of
its old Illegality exists except in ' a minormusewn tradition which has maintained one
now-tourists' trip into "21" cellars filled with
the best mndern reslaurant equipment - and
the same caverns where the finest wines and
liquors were hidden in the old days. Therein lie
the same shelves loaded with the finest liquid
refreshment as were camouflaged safely
throughout the assaul~ on the secrets of "21"
since its time began: '
The vaults lie behind a huge waU - more
than a foot thick, which kept snooping
Prohibition agents from thinking it was
anything but the walls of the buUding. The big
vault..like door could not be budged by anyone
even suspecting it cloaked rich treasures from
ScoUand and France. But a straigh!ened-out
wire coat hanger lying harmlessly far from the
door was the key: poked through one of dozens
of tiny holes looking like part d the wall's
erosion, II triggered a lock which permitted the
heavy door to be pushed open with a UtUe finger.
Today, it remains an open secret to be toured by
vialtors who never knew the mysteries of "21"
and its success in withstanding the atlacks of
Volstead Act guerrillas.
Even if they managed to get past the front
door, which was seldom, a signal triggered rows
Of shelves behind the "21" bar which
automatically tipped Its shelves to vertical
positions from which the dozens of bOttles of
booze fell straight down to iron bars on which
the whisky and wine bottles smashed, the ·
contents washed into the city's sewers.
·
"21" never underwent a aerloua Bl'l'elt. It
remained popular and prospered through
Prohibition to becmne a '10,011,000 ~.
(M&lt;n about "21" tomcrrow.)
cl.,

Ph. 992·2181
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Open Daily Until
6:00P.M.

Pro Standings

Final ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
Eastern Conference
w. I. pet. g.b.
Atlantic DiVISIOn
ignlted'a three-run first inning
w. I. pel. g.b. Carolina
57 27 .679 Kentucky
56 28 .667 I
68 14 82'1
for the Baltimore Orioles who x Bost011
42 42 500 15
V1rgmta
New
York
57
25
.695
11
beat the New York Yankees, 4- Buffalo
30 54 357 27
New York
21 61 .256 47
3; Ken Berry's muff of a bases- Philadelphia 9 73 .110 59
MemphiS
24 60 286 33
West
Central Division
loaded, two-&lt;&gt;ul fly ball in the
w. I. pet. g.b.
w. I. pel. g.b.
lith inning allowed San Fran- x Balt1more 52 30 634
Ulah
56 28 667 cisco to beat California, 3-2; Atlanla
lnd1ana
51 33 607 5
46 36 561 6
Denver
47 37 560 9
33 49 402 19
Lee Lacy and Manny Mota Houston
San Diego
30 54 357 26
Cleveland
32 50 390 20
combined for six hits as Ul5
Western Conference
Dallas
28 56 .333 2S
Wednesday's Results
M1dwest D1vision
Angeles downed Montreal, 5-3;
w 1. pet. g.b. V•rgm•a 12 1 New York 106
and solo homers by Ed Kirk- Y MIIW
Ken lucky 118 Carolina 97
60 22 732
patrick and Amos Otis carried Ch1cago
51 31 622 9
Memphis 130 Dallas 125
40 42 4SS 20
Utah 138 Indiana 136
Kansas City to an 11-2 triumph Detro1t
(Only games scheduled)
KC
Omaha
36
46 439 24
over Texas.
Pac1hc DIVISion
NHL Standings
w I pet g b.
By United Press International
y Los Angeles 60 22 732
East
Golden Slate 47 35 573 13
w. I I. pis gf ga
Phoen1 x
38 44 463 22
X Mtl
50 10 16 116 319 180
Seattle
26 56 317 34
Bostn 51 20 5 107 324 223
Portland
21 61 .256 39
NYRgs 47 22 7 101 293 200 •
X·Ciinched diVISIOn Iitie
y.Piayoff to determine best Buffalo 36 27 14 86 254 218
Detr01l 36 28 11 S3 254 231
record m Western Conference
Tor onto 25 41 9 59 230 268
Wednesday's Results
Vncuvr 22 46 S 52 227 330
Boslon 120 Baltimore 101
NYIId rs
Delroit 131 Cleve 119, ot
12 59 5 29 164 333
Houslon 138 Buffalo 122
West
Phoen
iX
127
Seattle
125
TAMPA, Fla . (UP!) - Don
w. I. I. pis gf ga
Los Angeles 96 Golden St 89
Gullett, who is expected to
XChiCQ 42 26 8 92 27S 217
I Only games scheduled)
Mm n 37 30 10 84 250 227
Friday's Games
pitch for the Cincinnah Reds on
Phlla 35 2'1 II Sl 27S 247
Angeles at M1lwaukee
the openmg day of the season, Los
St Lous 31 33 12 74 225 246
(Only game schedul ed) ·
yielded eight h1is Wednesday,
Los Ang 30 35 11 71 225 239
Pttsbgh 31 36 9 7l 250 254
WHA
Standmgs
Including a three-run homer,
Atlanla 25 37 14 64 185 231
By United Press International
as the New York Mets pounded
Calif IS 46 16 46 200 322
East
w. I. I. pts gf ga
•·Clinched diVISion l11ie
the Red 8-0 m Grapefruit
Wednesday's Results
x-Nw Eng 44 29 2 90 303 251
!.£ague play.
Cl eve
40 32 3 83 274 234 Boston 6 N Y Rangers 3
Gullett pitched even though Ottawa 34 37 4 72 269 2S9 Plllsburgh 6 Atlanta 3
35 40 0 70 277 301 Bulfa lo 6 Philadelphia 3
he had expenenced an upset PhilO
N
Y
41 2 68 296 324 Montreal 4 Chicago 3
stomach Tuesday night and Quebec 33
31 39 5 67 263 301 St Lou1s 3 Minnesota 3
Wednesdsy mormng.
California 3 l os Angeles 2
West
I Only games scheduled )
w
I.
I
.
pis
gf
ga
He was charged w1lh seven
Thursday' s Games
X· W1mpg 43 29 4 90 281 241
of the Mets' runs , including Los Ang 37 35 6 80 259 250 Toronto at Detro1t
36 35 3 79 244 259 Atlanta al Ph iladelphia
Cieon Jones' clout that brought Minn
(On ly games sc heduled)
Houston
37 34 4 7S 272 25S
m three runs.
Alberta 37 36 3 77 263 25 1
The Reds were held to just C hica~o 26 48 2 54 243 2SS
x-Chnched div1s1on t1tle
four hits by Tom Seaver and
Results
Steve Hennigan. Seaver gave AI bertWednesday's
a 2 Philadelphia I
up two h1ts and struck out SIX m Wmmpeg 4 Ch1cago 3 loll
I Only games scheduled)
the f1rst six mrungs.
Thursday's Games
Henmgan , acquired from Alberta at Philadelphia
Cleveland m the off-season, Quebec at Minnesota
added three more strikeouts New England at Otlawa
New York at Houston
during hiS three-inning stint.
(Only games scheduled)
NBA Standings

By Umted Press International

Gullett is
pounded by
NY squad

Approxunately 150 persons,
mcluding members of the 197273 All-Southeastern Oh1o
Athlel!c League 's Dream
Team, attended the 24th annual
Ali-SEOAL cage banquet at
Lake Wh1te m Waverly Wednesday evening.
William (Bill ) Harrell, head
basketball coach at Morehead
State University, was the main
speaker.
Coach Harrell reviewed four
keys reqmred to he successful
m both hfe and athletics dediCation, discipline, desire
and enthusiasm
The speaker was mtroduced

by Waverly prmcipal John
Marlin, who served as master
of ceremomes. John R
Teichert, Waverly supermtendent, welcomed guests.
William Lockhart, WeUston
h1gh school prmc1pal, and
SEOAL pres1dent, presented
cerhficates and trophies to 15
members of the f1rst, second
and third All-1£ague teams,
and certificates to those who
recetved honorable mention .
AI E1snaugle presented
Jackson's Tom Conroy the Best
Foul Shooting Trophy. Od1e
O'Donnell presented the loop's

Waverly. Left to righi are Coach Jim Osborne, Gallipolis;
Joim Shoemaker, Waverly; Gil Price, Gallipolis; J'unmy
Noe, Gallipolis; Mike Oyer, Waverly and Ed Thompson,
Waverly.

Most Valuable Player award to
Gali1pohs' Gl Pr1ce. B1li Gray
presented GAHS Coach Jim
Osborne the loop's Coach-&lt;&gt;f·
the-Year award.
Mr . Lockhart presented
Waverly team captam M1ke
Oyer the 1972-73 Southeastern
Ohio League championship
trophy.
Players honored were :
FIRST TEAM - Jim Noe ,
and G1l Price, Galhpohs; Mike
Oyer, John Shoemaker and Ed
Thompson, Waverly
SECOND TEAM - Mark
Mace, Athens ; Jeff Hannon,

Ironton ; J1m Pierce , Logan;
J1m Boggs, Meigs; Bill Maloy,
Waverly .
THIRD TEAM Dan
Morrow, Jackson ; Randy
Noms, Logan; B1ll Cbaney,
Me1gs;
Dave
Salyers,
Waverly; Dave Souders,
Wellston.
HONORABLE MENTION Andy Chonko, Athens; Mark
Kiesling, Gallipolis, Kenny
Green, Ironton ; Tom Conroy,
Jackson ; Jeff Campbell,
Logan ; Mike Sayre, Mei~s;
OAKLAND (UP!) - Los
Doug Pfeifer, Waverly ; and Angeles beat Golden State in
Charles Snare, Wellston .
the final NBA game of the
regular season to spark a
player revolt and throw the
Western Conference playoffs
mto a l)luddle.
Behind the shooting of Mel
Counts, Jerry West and Gail
his mmd "about mne o'clock Goodrich, the Lakers overthis mornmg (Wednesday)," came a seven1&gt;omt halftime
called Dye prior to the hasttly- deficit Wednesday mght by
called news conference to "ap. rattling off 12 unanswered
priSe him of the situation."
pomts for a 9S-89 victory.
He seemed surprised when
That left Los Angeles and
he walked into Weaver's office, Milwaukee tied at 6().22 for the
where newsmen had gathered highest percentage in the
to hear the decisiOn, which Western Conference. A new
came m a rather unusual way. rule states the team with the
"I thought you only did this best won-lost record collects an
when you changed jobs," were extra $10,000 and earns the
his first words, immediately right to open the playoffs
ending speculation he might against the No . 4 team (Golden
switch.
State) in the conference.
Weaver, who called the last
So the Bucks and the Lakers
two weeks "trymg days ," were originally scheduled to
opened the news confe rence decide the conference champ
readmg from a prepared in a one-game playoff Fr1day
statement.
mght in Milwaukee. But the
"I am happy to announce Players Association claims
that Fred Taylor IS staying at th1s game is unwarranted and
Oh1o State," Weaver said. "AU not covered by the players'
of us have a deep feeling of contracts.
pleasure in h1s deciSion."
Reps Being Polled
Taylor's ties with Ohio State
Player representatives of all
go hack to the late 1940s when NBA teams are being poUed
he played basebaU and basket- today and their vote is bemg
ball here.
tallied in New York by NBA
Dye was basketball coach at Commissioner Walter Kennedy
Oh1o State during Taylor's and Larry Fleisher, an atplaymg days
torney representing the
Players Assocl8tion. They also
might decide it by a coin fhp
and spht the $10,000 evenly
between the Lakers and Bucks.
"The players say they have a
NAMED CHAIRMAN
contract
that calls for 82
ST. LOUIS (UPI)- August
41
A. Gusste" Busch, Jr. was regular season games plus the
named chall'lllan of the boa.rd regular playoffs," said Lakers
and chief executive officer of General Manager Pete NeweU.
the St. LouiS Cardmals Wed- "They don't feel an additional
nesday. Richard A Meyer game is Within the scope of
became the new president and the!l' contract."
Bing Devme was named
Goodrich topped game scorexecul!ve v1ce pres1dent and
ers
w1th 26 points and backgeneral manager.
court mate West added 25. Ellis

OOLUMBUS (UPI } - W1th
his deciSIOn about switching to
Northwestern out of the way,
Ohio Slate basketball coach
Fred Taylor's next job is to
start recrUiting some of the
"super players" the state has
to offer this year.
Taylor,ata Wednesday news
conference, annoWlced he had,
after nearly two weeks of deliberation, turned down the offer. of Northwestern Athletic
Director Tippy Dye to replace
Brad Snyder as he~d coach of
the Wildcats.
Taylor said the two basic
reasons for his turning down
the Northwestern offer were a
"salary adjustment" by Ohio
State, the amount of which was
IWI disclosed, and the fact he
faces abdominal surgery next
month.

Your ·Best Buy!
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HAHN-ECLIPSE

..econom8 and performa~ce!
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Folding handle, too-lets you store your
steel-deck rust about anywhere.
And they &lt;omply w1th all
exist1ng mdustry safety
standards

'

•

" It is not that I feared the
surgery," he said, "but I am
gomg into the hospital and to
think of recuperatmg in a new
environment where I did not
lmow the recruitmg situatiOn,
the demands on my time and

all...
"ThiS (Ohio State) may be
the only place they'U let me
loaf for awhile, " he JOked.
The decision came after the
Buckeye coach of 15 years
huddled a second time with
OSU Athletic Director Ed
Weaver. The two earher had a
lengthy meeting Tuesday, at
which time Taylor said he still
had not made up his mind.
Taylor said he d1d not think
the two-week decision-making
process would have any ill effects on Oh1o State's
recruiting.
"I don't reaUy think it has
affected us in any way, shape
or form," Taylor said when
asked about the recruiting.

fl

•

•

•

he IS gomg to school this
early."
Taylor saJd there are "some
super players m the state this
year and we've got to get some
of them." He sa1d he had made
two recrmting trips during the
last two weeks, while the job
situation was up in the air, and
"we made the point very clear
we were recruiting for Ohio

State."

The Northwestern offer reportedly Included a long list of
fringe benefits which Taylor
does not enjoy at the statesupported Buckeye school.
Northwestern, a private
institution, reportedly offered
Taylor free .rent, the use of a
car, free tUition for Taylor's
four daughters, and a multiyear contract.
State policy forbids· the issuance of multi-year contracts
at Ohio State, but Weaver sa1d
11
in my judgment, no one can
have a more secure contract
11
1t's a rare instance when a than Fred has here."
Taylor, who said he made up
boy makes a decision on where

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

a 9. H &amp; R Block can show you how 1hat
new IJ)V&lt;rlllllelll Short Form you've heard about
couiCI COlt you lllOileY· For example, if you have
in-t 011 your IIIOIIgage, medical expenoe or child
Clll'e deductiooa, which are up to forty-eight hundred
dollan •bio year, yoo. cannot itemize !hem on the
Short Form.

GENERAL'S
BEST
GENERAL·JET

Economy priced .

Only Duallread'" 1ls price
lield

Association claims

Four fu ll pl1es of ny lon
cord
Tnm , narrow whitellne

highlights ihe sidewall

game unwarranted

Taylor ~:now· ·on. super-player hunt
\o

Sunday evening w1th Mr. and
Mrs. Dana I£wis at Clifton, W.
Jeff Miller of !.£tart and Paul Sharon and Cmdy Roush
Va.
'"'Darnell of Pomeroy called on Sunday afternoon .

BY JACK O'BRIAN
RYE COMMENTS ON
PROHmmON
NEW YORK (KFS) -Once upon a drier
time, dunng Prohibition in fact, a very few
speakeasies developed the class to emerge mto
the legal-drinking era with elegance, style and
institutional imporlance. Moot speaks were
raffish premises, generally the ground floors of
old residences adjusted in primitive discomfort
to the more insistent needs of their patrons-a
drink. A rare few had the foresight to realize
Prohibition was Wlnatural and couldn'tlast, but
the few analyzed the stands of AI Smith, Franklin D. Roosevelt and other political realists who
knew you can't legislate morality, especially
the more traditional minor vices such as an
honest man's urge for a relaxing drink of beer
or better. Thus, such Manhatlan institutions as
"21" came to permanent light.
Some of the better cafes and saloons
prevailed, such as the Stork Club, whose funeral
was hastened by its owner Sherman BlUingsle)'ls exorbitant pride in his Stork Club TV show
to the detriment of his previously inunaculate
concern for his nightclub'S" patrons. !.£on and
Eddie's simply flunked the test of time and like
all durable N. Y. City's Prohibition cabarets
hWlg on for various reasons and then died of the
inexorable one - the aging of owners !.£on
Enken and Eddie Davis and their Inclination
toward warmer, more relaxing clbnes· Eddie
retired entirely to Florida, Leon to Mla~i to try
a nightclub there only to !aU.
They fared well financially - they had
bought the 52nd St. premises on which !.£on and
Eddie's prospered, and by the time they ap- '
proached retirement, they could live handsomely on their foresight: they sold the
property and lived financially healthily the rest
of their adventurous days.
Next door to !.£on &amp; Eddie's was the best
most elegadt, most successful and now mosi
institutionally secure speakeasy of all
Manhattan lime : "21." Jack Kriendler a thin
austere, expensively taUored dictato; of hb
excellent judgments, and Olarlie Burns a
round, jolly, twinkling, genial farsighted fell~
had started ih other business spheres and
almost backed jnto the speakeasy which
became world-renowned; It wasn't easy: they
had gangsters anxious to cut into their business
always at the ready; they had Prohibition
agents variously anxious to raid tbem or collect
bribes; local pollee awash, like Miami Beach,
with open palms; and other 4Jscouracements.

, KnucklebaUer Wilbur Wood,
another likely opening-day
hurler, worked seven innings,
longest of any White Sox p1to ·
cher this spring, and limited
Pittsburgh to three hits as
Chicago went on to a 6-0 win
over the Pirates.
Wood, the White Sox' 24gsme winner last year, did not

1972-73 Dream Team honored

Llmlfed lln'te oNer

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
returned home Thursday from
a vacation in Jacksonville, Fla.
They also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Payne at Pinnellas
Park, Fla. Mr . and Mrs .
James Sayre of Kanauga
accompamed the Sayres to
Flor1da.
Sunday dinner guests of Mrs.
Bertha Robmson were Mr. and
Mrs. BiU Robinson and family
of Racine Route 2. CaUing in
the afternoon were Mr. and
Mrs . Rick Sargent, Miss
Sandra Sayre of Columbus,
Mrs. Ph11ip Radford and
daughter, Stephame of
Pomeroy Rte. and Mrs . Clara
Mae Sargem of Racine.
Mrs. Steve Cleland and sons
of Racme and Karen Wines
called on Ada Rowe Sunday
afternoon.
Mrs. Ronnie Russell and
daughrer, Amanda, Sharon and
Cmdy Roush, Mrs. Iva Orr
spent Friday everung with Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
Sharon, Cindy, David and
Edward, Mrs. Herbert Roush,
Mrs . Ronnie Russell and
daughter, Mandy, Mrs. Iva Orr
and Jimmy O'Brien spent

Cleon Jones' three-run
homer in the hrst inning
highlighted the Mets' IZ.M
attack off Don Gullett, Dan
Osborn and Ed Sprague. The
Mets ·got seven of their runs
and eight hits off Gullett, who
is expected to open the season
for the Reds against San
Francisco AprU 5.

FIRST TEAM ALL-SEOAL - Members of the First
Team, All-Southeastern Ohio Athletic BasketbaU Team and
the 1972-73 Coach-&lt;&gt;f-lhe-Year were among those honored
during Wednesday night's 24th amual All-League banquet at

in

Fairview
News Notes

•

was h1gh for the Warriors with
17.
Rick Barry, who suffered a
back injury, and Nate Thurmond each had 16 points for the
Warriors, who fmished with a
47-35record. Barry.lle&lt;!ame the
fifth player in the NBA 1o hit
more than 90 per cenl of his
free throws when he finished
with 90.2 per cent to top the
league. The Warriors also set
an NBA free-throw mark of
79.6 per cent, breaking the
mark of 79.4 set by the old
Syracuse Nationals m 1956-57.
Other NBA AcUon
In other NBA action Wednesday mght, Boston whipped
Baltimore, 120-101, Detroit
rolled over Cleveland, 131-119,
in overtime, Houston stopped
Buffalo, 133-122, and Phoenix
beat Seattle, 127-125.
Dave Cowens and John
Havltcek combined for 21
pomts m the third perind to lift
the Celllcs over Balllmore.
Havhcek had 34 points for
Boston and Cowens 23 while
Phil Chenier led the Bullets
with 22.

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�3-The_DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o.,March 29,1973

•

Carlton, Seaver in mid-season form

2-The DaUy Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29,1973

WIN AT BRIDGE

Slam Makes, But Carefully
NORTH
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¥ 102
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WEST
EAST
.K Q96
487
¥QJ 98
¥76 3
• Q54
t 2
.Q7 542
.J 963
SOUTH (D)
• AH
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t AJ 10976
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None vulnerable
West North East

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

1.
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South
It
Pass 2 ¥
Pass 3.
Pass 4.

Pass

6t

Pass
Pass
Pass
Opemng lead-• Q

By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
Swmgs m the IMP matches
aren't always the result of
luck Sometimes the experts
make mistakes
The bidding m the box
shows how one team arnved
at six diamonds. The b1ddmg
was rather elegant although
we feel that almost any fairly good pair would be able
to bid that contract on some
sequence or other However,
at the second table the expert pa1r JUSt got to f1ve
The play at six diamonds
would also be fa1riy simple
for an average player It

would take some atrOCIO US
breaks to beat 11 and the expert player made qmte a
production out of his play
He won the heart lead and
stud1ed the dummy for several mmutes before leading
to tr1ck two The n~ cashed
a second h1gh hea
After th1s start e. care·
fully ruffed a heart'- w1th
dummy' s eight of trumps ,
cashed the ace and kmg of
clubs to discard two spades,
ruffed a club; ruffed h1s last
heart w1th dummy's kmg of
trumps; led a trump to hls
ace and conceded a tnck to
the queen of trumps.

By Mrs. Francis Morris
Onu.tted from the list of those
attendmg the R1o Grande
Association at the Pomeroy
Baptist Church were Rev. and
Mrs. Edward Fisher and their
friend of Piqua, Mrs. Mary K.
Yost, Mr. and Mrs. Roderick
Gr1nun, Mr. and Mrs. Frank
Cleland and Mrs. Nondus
Hendncks.
Mra. Earl Hart has been
returned home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs. E. A. Wmgett and Mrs.
Ann Coe viSited the1r brother,
Mr. Bob Spencer, in Hun-

Tuppers Plains
Society News
By Mrs. Evelyu Brlckles
· Mr. and Mrs. Bill Swain of
Parkersburg spent a recent
day with her aWl!, Mrs. Effie
Watson.
Thurston Clark of Columbus
visited his brother, Mr. and
Mrs. Way Clark on Tuesday.
Leone Babcock did not have
surgery on Fridsy due to her
physical condition. The
surgery has been scheduled for
a later date. She spent the
weekend with her sister, Mrs.
Leota Massar.
Mrs . Andrew Buchanan
returned home from Veterans
Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy
after being a patient there
several weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Brickles visited their Slster-mlaw, Mrs. Homer Brickles of
Pomeroy Wednesday . Mrs.
Brickles has a broken ann and
shoulder, received in a !aU at
ber home a few weeks ago.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Miller
and children of Dayton spent
the weekend here with her
lrother, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin
Walker and Ruthie.
Rev. and Mrs. Bob Wyatt of
Parkersburg, Rev. Jacob 1£hman,local, and Sammy Rardin
of Long Bottom were callmg on
Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Babcock. Mr. Babcock remains
quite poorly.
Mrs. Esther Riggs and
children of Logan visited her
mother, Mrs. Dorothy Dodderer and grandmother, Effie
Saunders Sunday and also Mr.
and Mrs Lindsey Lyons and
son, Lamar and Eulah Swan.
Mr~. Maud Grey was a
Sunday dinner guest of Mr. and
Mrs. Clyde Headley.
Mr . and Mrs . Clarence
N1ch&lt;jls spent Saturday with
their daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Harvey Hendershot of Lancaster.
Mrs . Mim a Walker and
daughter, Ruth1e spent Sunday
with her niece, Mr. and Mrs.
John Newell and family of
Colwnbus. Mrs. Newell just
returned home from the
hospital after being a surgical
patient there.
Recent vialtors of Mr. and
,Mrs. Blain Taylor was her
brother, Mr. and Mrs. Forest
Brock ci New Martinsville, W.
Va . and his brother, Mr. and
Mn. Harry Taylor of Glen
Easton, W. Va., and Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Carpenter of

Coqlville.
Edith Betzlng was taken to
Veterlllll Memorial Hospital
amdly IIIII lllmltted as a
Jllldlcal (llllent.

\.

•

THURSDAY, MARCH29,1973
6 00- News3, 4, S, 15; News6. 8, 10; Truth"orConseq. 6.
6 30- NBC News 3, 4, 15, ABC News 6; I Dream of Jeannie 13;
Designing Women 33 ; CBS News 8, 10.
7 00 - What's My LineS, Big Red Jubilee 15; News 6, 10; Bl!lll
the Clock 4; Eiec. Co. 20; Course of Our Times 33; Truth or
Conseq. 3; Let' s Make A Deal 13.
7 30-1'11 See You In Court 4; Hollywood Squares 3; To Tell the
Truth 6; Wild Kingdom iO ; Lassie 8; Beat the Clock 13; Zoom
20; Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15; Mod Squad6, i3; Nallonai Geographic
8, 10; Democracy's Trumpet: W. Va. Legislature 33.
s 00 - Flip Wilson 3, 4, 15, Mod Squad6, 13; The Waltons 8, 10;
Advocates20, 33; Forum 6; Spring Is Special16.
9 oo - An American Family 20, 33; Ironside 3, 4, 15; ABC
Theatre 6, 13; Movies "Nothing But the Best" 8; "Tick .
Tick ... lick" 10.
10.00- Dean Martin 3, 4, 15, Streets of San Francisco 6, lJ;
News 20; Talk With the Loud Family" 33.
11 :30 - Johnny Carson 3, 4, 15; A Little Bit Like Murder 6, 13;
Movies "The Bad Seed" S; "Nothing Bulfhe Best" 10.
I:00- News 13; Roller Derby 4.
2:00- News 4.
FRIDAY, MARCH 23, 1973
6:00 - Sunrise Seminar 4; Sacred Heart 10.
6: 15- Farmtjme 10; English 3.
6:20 - Farm Report 13.
6:25 - Paul Harvey 13.
6:30 - Columbus Today 4; Bible Answers 8, Human Dimension
10; Blue Ridge Quartet 13.
7:00- Today3, 4, 15; CBS NewsS, 10, FllntstoneslJ.
7:30 - Romper Room 6; Sleepy Jeffers 8; Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13; Popere 10.
S:OO- Cap Kangaroo 10; Sesame Sl 33; Lassie 6, New Zoo
Revue 13.
S· 30- Jack La La nne 13; New Zoo Revue 6; Romper Room S.
9·00 - Paul Dixon 4; Phil Donahue 15, Concentration 6; Friendly Junction 10. Mr. Rogers 33, Capt Kangaroo S; Green

By Helen and Sue Bottel
Unanswerable Question No. 583%
Rap:
Pants have two legs. Shirts have two sleeves or annholes. So
why don 't they cal! II a "pall' of shirts," if it's always a "pair of
pants"' - "SLACK" SHOPPER
S.S. :
Mebbe for the same reason the plural of "house" isn't
41
hice." - SUE

+++
... AND "alumni" don't visit several "campi." - HElEN
P.S. Actually, "pants" is an abbreviation of pantaloon,
which was a "short lower torso covermg with attached
stockings." The "s" sigitifted the presence of two stockings.

+++

Rap :
I'm a guy with a "righl-&lt;&gt;n" father and it's darn embarrassing.
He is 54 and getting a pot. He wears low rise jeans and body
The b1ddmg has been
shirts. He even walks barefoot m the summer. The other day he
West
North
East South even asked my older sister to patch his pants.
2NT
When he invited me and one of my friends to go to a rock
Pass
3•
Pass 3 NT
concert,
with him (he'd even pay) that d!d it. What do you do
?
Pass
4•
Pass
when you're the - SON OF AHIP GROOVER?
You South, hold
.KJ3 ¥KJ3 tK1054 .K9G
Dear Son :
Wha t do you do now?
For starters · stop trying to run your father's life'
A-Bid hvc di amonds You
If he's sincere about his preferences and IWI just trying to
have never shown your very
good diamond support.
buy the youth vote, then I say, "Right on, and on, and on, Pop!"
TODAY'S QUESTION
-HELEN
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )

U¢8;1 :] l!tki£U!1

1. 1.

Your par tner contmues to f1ve
hearts What do you do now ?

+++

SOHG :
Look now: If you had an older teacher who liked rock and
wasn
't uptight about the way kids dress or act, you'd call him
Send $1 lor JACOBY MODERN book
to uw;n ot Bfldge," (c/o this news- "fantastic." So knock off the embarrassed son act and see your
paper), PO. Sox 46'1, RadiO City dad as a PERroN who enjoys life (and probably doesn 't conStation, New York, N.Y 10019.
deDID YOUR actions - even though he mtghl be ent1tled.) SUE

Racine Social Events

Television Log.

&amp; THINGS

Generation Rap

+++
Rap :
You can't help me with my problem, but maybe someone will
he helped by hearing it.
1just turned 19. I have been usmg drugs for four years- four
ugly, miSerable years. ! have done everythmg from sniffing glue
and drmking cough syrup to I.SD and heroin. I started steaUng
from friends to get drugs, and ended up at the above address St. CI81J' CoWlty Jail. I could get a life term m priSon. Maybe I'll
be lucky and get another chance and, if I do, I plan to spend a lot
of time helping others off drugs.
Young people want to be cool or "m." Drugs let me "m" aU
right - and locked the door behind me.
This is to those who think they won'tgel hooked. For a while
you think you're really up there - you can heat the world, you're
smarter, better and more together than those straight dudes. But
before long "far-&lt;&gt;ut" changes to "strung-cut," and that ain't
cool, man.
There'U be the answer, "Not me, I can qu1t whenever I want
to." Yeah, I said that too. But can you? If you can, do 11 nowright now !
It's a homble feelmg to know you may spend the rest of your
life m prison. - ON THE INSIDE

ling ton. He is slowly unprovmg
and was brought home Monday
by Mrs. Spencer.
Rev. and Mrs. Lawrence
McDamei and L1sa of
Guysville, a former pastor of
the Methodist Church, attended Sunday School and
worship serv1ce here and
called on fr1ends.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Hall and
children , Jenmfer
and
Christopher of St. Paul, Mmn.,
VISited her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Fern Noms after visiting
m Columbus WIth Mr. and Mrs.
Norman Noms and Mr. and
Mrs. Nick Yost.
Rev. and Mrs. Morris Wolfe
visited Mr. and Mrs. Fern
Noms while Mr Norris was
recuperating from the flu
Helen and Sue :
.
Last summer I went to a rock concert in Indiana and whUe
Mr arfd Mrs.' Robert Sw1ft of
Columbus ' spent Sunday with there I met a fellow from 'Ohio (I live in Pennsylvania.) We've
Mrs . Swfft's parents, Mr. and been writing and he said he 'd like to come visit me, but never got
Mrs . Francis Morris.
• here.
Mrs. Lavmia Simpson was
Now he wants to meet me m Colorado for sprmg vacation. He
honored Sunday w1th a bir- has friends there and we could stay with them so it wouldn't cost
thday celebral!on by her much.
daughrer, Marian, and Mr
My mother thinks !don't know him well enough, and this IS a
Rober\ Bell of Reynoldsburg silly thing for a near-111-year-cld girl to do. What are your honest
and Mrs. Ruth Simpson and opinions' - WANTS TO
Steve, local .
Mr. and Mrs. Kelly Weller of W.T
Your mother gets my vote ! - HElEN
Independence, Mo., spent a
week with her parents, Mr. and
+++
Mrs. Clarence Bradford and W.:
Mr. and Mrs. !.£on Jordan of
SoWlds too risky. ThiS guy might be a lot different from what
Columbus spent the weekend. you remember him from last summer. Let him visit YOU first. Mr and Mrs. Clyde Cross SUE
and Ray of Columbus spent a
weekend with Mrs . Cross'
motber, Mrs. Howard Neigler.
Grella and Isabel ·simpson,
Lilhan Hayman and Vera
Beegle were Sunday dinner
The Bashan VoiWlteer_ Fire
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Bert
Dept. was called three times
Grimm at Letart Falls.
Mr and Mrs Billy Sm1th of m two days to Bald Knobs to
Mrs. Billy Morartty, Marcy
put out brush fires. AU the
and Terry, of Lancaster spent Chillicothe were visiting Mr. firemen who could answered
the weekend with Mrs. Mason and Mrs. Harold Newlun,
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Snuth the call each time.
Spencer.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kerns
Mr. and Mrs. Darcy Potrer of were overmght guests of Mr. of Belpre and Miss Renee
Bryon, Ohio and Mr. and Mrs. and Mrs . Howard Young, Trussell took supper Saturday
Clarence Deiley of Coraopolis, Paden City, W Va.
Mr. and Mrs Charles Cline evening with their grandPa ., spent several days here on
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
and sons of Moundsville, were
business.
Trussell.
Mr. and Mrs. Linley Hart visiltng Mr. and Mrs. Russell
Mrs. Muri Ours and daughter
and Dale Roush spent Saturday Cline.
Betty were shoppmg in
Ernestme Hayman has
at New Albany.
Parkersburg on Friday.
Mr. and Mrs Bob Roush and returned home after several
Mrs. Mildred Frank of
Nancy of Columbus were weeks in Florida.
Pomeroy R. D. was a dinner
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd McPeek
weekend guests of her parents,
guest of her sister, Mrs. Inez
Mr. and Mrs Owen Watson. of Belleville, W Va., spent a Carson recently .
day recently w1th Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Gary Dill have
Joe Bissell.
sold their farm to Gary Griffith
Tom Drake, Reynoldsburg, and purchased land to build a
was an overnight guest of Mr. new home.
and Mrs David Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hysell of
The Almanac
Mr . and Mrs. Howard St. Petersburg, Fla., and Mrs.
By United Press International Larkins of Portland, Vera and
Mary Cowdery of Long Bottom
_ Today IS Thursday, March 29, Vida Weber, Tuppers Plains,
spent Thursday afternoon with
the 88th day of 1973 with 277 to and Mr. and Mrs. Jr. Hauber, Mr . and Mrs. Stanley Trussell.
follow.
and Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Also visiting the Trussells
The moon is between its last Lark1ns and daughter visited during the week were Mrs.
quarter and new phase
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Larkins.
Mildred Frank, Pomeroy R.
The mormng stars are
Mr. and Mrs. Dorset Larkins D., Mrs. Inez Carson, Mrs.
l\'lercury, Venus, Mars and and family were vis11ing Mr. Murl Ours, Mrs. Dorothy
Jupiter.
and Mrs. Virgil Wamsley, Lawson and Mr. and Mrs.
The evemng star is Saturn.
Cheshire.
Albert Hill of Racine.
Those born on th1s date are
Mr. and Mrs. Garth Smith
Miss Renee Trussell ,
under the s1gn of Anes
were visi ling Mr. and Mrs. daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
President J ohn Tyler was Milton TutUe of Pomeroy R. F. Ralph Trussell is a patient at
born March 29, 1790.
D., Ollie Young, Pomeroy, Mr. Veterans Memorial Hospital .
On lh1s day in history :
and Mrs. Emmett Sehem and
In 1812, the first wedding was Emma and Pearl Powell.
performed. m the White House.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Hayman Hanson Holrer, Forest RWt.
Mrs. Lucy Payne Washington, and family of Westerville were
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Curlis
sister-in-law of President visiting Mr. and Mrs. Joe and family were visiting Mary
James Madison, was married Bissell.
Pierce.
to Supreme Court Justice
Mr. and Mrs . Jim Walls and
Visiting Mr. and Mrs. Garth
Thomas Dodd.
•
son, Lancaster, Mr. and Mrs. Smith were Mr. and Mrs.
In 1824, the Society for the Keith Ridenour and son and Claude Smith, Reedsville, Mr.
Reformation of Juvemle Delin- Mr, and Mrs. Tom Hayman and Mrs. Kenny Reynolds and
quents was mcorporated in New and daughters were visiting son, Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs.
York City.
Ernestine Hayman.
Howard Young, Paden City, W.
In 1967, France launched its
Mr. and Mrs. Hank Holter Va., and l£ona Cline.
first nuclear submarine .
were dinner guests of Mrs.
1 -VIoletSmlth

Long Bottom

Social Notes

Bashan
News

'

BY PAUL CRABTREE

By United Press International
Steve Carlton and Tom
Seaver are ready.
The two Cy Young Award
winners, who are expected to
oppose each, other when the
Phillldelpllla !'hils and New
York Mets open their seasons
April 6, looked in mid....,ason
fonn Wednesday in their nexto
to-l;lst spring training tuneupa.
Carlton, coming off a 27-10
record, lbnited the Atlanta
Braves toone runonslxhlts for
eight innings and gained credit
for the Phils' 2-1 VICtory. The
Braves' only run came in the
third Inning and was unearned.
Philadelphia snapped a 1-1 tie
in the bottom of the eighth
when Bill Robinson singled
home Del Unser. Dick Selma
worked the ninth inning for the
Phils to get the save.
Seaver, looking to make up
the two weeks he mis8e&lt;f
earlier this month bacause d a
sore throat, blimked Cincinnati
on only two hits for six innings
and struck out six as the Mets
routed the Reds, 8-0. PhU
Hennigan completed the
shutout OVOI' the final three
mnings while allowing two hils
and sinking out three.

Blondie and Dagwood Bumstead are orphans now.
Murat (Chic) Young, the gentle cartoonist who created and
produced the strip for forty years, died recently after a long and
productive life, at 72.
He leaves behind a series of American traditions, some of
which he created:
The Dagwood sandwich; Dagwood's patented mad rush to
catch his &lt;&gt;qnmuter bus; his clasaic fights with his boss, Mr.
Dithers, and his neighbor, Herb Woodley; Blondle's telephonitls
- all these liave become accepted part of American folklore.
Chic Young's mlddle-mlddl~lass famUy stlll draws
chuckles from anyone of reading age on up to nonagenarians,
because his themes were universally-recognized by his readers
(in 1,500 publications and 16 languages).
But most Americans Wlder 35 cannot remember when
Blondie was an absolute national mania, a craze just as strong as
today's more-phUosophical favorite strip, "Peanuts," with
Carlie Brown, Snoopy, Unus, and the gang. Perhaps even more
so, because with no television in those days, the impact of the
printed comic strip was in its heyday, and Blondie was never
worse than second or third in any poU of comic hits.
It's hard to believe, but the announcement that Blondie was
gomg to have another baby, to give a big sister to the child known
up to then only as "Baby DumpUng," was Page One news in most
Acres 3.
9 30- Ele&lt;. Co. 33; To Tell The Truth 3, Jeopardy 6; HazelS;
of the country's newspapers.
Dr. Kildare 13.
There were Blondie dolls, Blondie coloring books, Blondie 10 00 - Dinah Shore 3, 15; Joker's Wild S, 10, Columbus Six
Callmg 6; Dick Van Dyke 13.
sweatshirts and other apparel, Blondie wristwatches - and,
Inevitably, a series of Blondle movies, which still show np in the 10 30 - Elec. Co. 20, Love American Style 6, Password 13;
Baffle 3, 4, 15; $10,000 Pyramid 8, 10.
"cheapie" spots on TV.
11 ·00 - Sale of Century 3, 15, Love American Style 6; Gambit 6,
10; Password 13, Eleclric Co. 20.
Whatever your age, you sought to see at least one of these
II
30
- Hollywood Squares 3, 15; Love of Life s, Bewitched 6, 13;
films.
Sesame St. 20.
The plots were mspired nothingness, the characterizations 12:00- Jeopardy 3, 15; Bob Braun's 50-50 Club 4; News 13;
Contact S, Password 6.
hardly anything to brag about, but the amazing thing was the
12
30
- 3 W's Game 3, 15; Search for Tomorrow 8, 10; Split
character who played Dagwood. They found a chap named Ar·
Second 6.
thur Lake, and his resemblance to the head of the BuliiStead clan
1:00 - News 3; Green Acres 10 , Secret StormS, Walch Your
Child lS.
was uncamy. It was the most marvelous piece of casting in
1:20 - Fashlons1n Sewing 3
movie history - and you ought to see one of these old flicks for
I 30 - 3 On A Match 3, 4, 15, As The World Turns 8, 10, Let's
Make A Deal 13.
that reason, if for no other.
2.00
- Days of OUr Lives 3, 4, lS, Newlywed Game 6, 33; Mike
There may he sound sociological explanation for the
Dooglas 6; Guiding Light s, 10.
phenomenal success of the strip in the late Thirties and early
2 30- Doctors 3, 4, IS; General Hasp 6, 13; Love Splendored
Thing S, 10; Bill Moyer's Journal 20.
Forties. War was inuninent, then present, and families were
3
30
- Returnot Peyton Pla&lt;e3, 4, 15, One Life to Llve6 ; Book
being torn apart by its impact, and family homilies and values
Beat33, Secret Storm 10; Mouse Tales33, Merv GriffinS.
Wlder the stresses of combat and a nation fighting for its life. The
4 00 - Mr. Cartoon 3; Somerset IS; Sesame St 20. 33; Love
American Style 13, Merv Griffin 4; Huckleberry Hound-Yogi
Wlchangir)g rituals of the Bumsteads were something to
Bear 6; Movie "Frenchie" 10.
welcome, to take comfort in.
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6; Petticoat Jun&lt;llon 3; Daniel Boone 13,
Gilligan's Islands , Dick Van Dyke 15; Merv Gritfln ~
As the years passed, Chic YoWlg kept the strip funny - right
5·00
- Mister Rogers 33; Bonanza 3, ~ ; HazelS ; Andy Griffith
up to his death, but he made no effort to make it relevant, or even
15; Big Valley 6.
current.
5.30- Elec Co. 33; Gomer Pyle 13. Hodgepodge Lodge 20;
Death Valley Days 15.
He let Alexander (Baby Dwnpling} grow up, slowly, and only
6.00 - News 3. 4, S, 10, 15, Truth or COI1seq 6; Sesame St 20,
to a point. Where actually he would he nearing forty, he remains
Around the Bend 33.
a teenager, possibly at the college-freshman level. Cookie passed
6. 30 - News6, 13 ; I Dream of Jeannie 13; Let's Travel33.
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3; Beat the Clock 4, News 6, 13; What's
puberty, and was represented as a girl in her middle teens when
My Line 8; Wild Kingdom 13; Saint 15; Elec Co. 20, Folk
Young died.
Guitar 33.
7 30- Young Dr. Kildare 4, Protectors S; College Hockey 20 ,
There were no long hair, love beads, sandals in Blondie's
Parent Game 10, Beat the Clock 13; Porter Wag011er 3; To
little world. Alexander wore a modified crew cut, and Cookie
Tell The Truth 6, Wall Street Week 20, 33.
stayed in bobby-sox, although her bemline crept up a little.
8 00 - Washington Week In Review 20, 33 , Sanford &amp; Son 3, 4,
15, Brady Bunch 6, 13; Mission Impossible s. Spring Is
There was no pollution, urban congestion, inner-city ghetto
Special 10.
problems for the Bumsteads - and no wife-swapping, boozing or
8:30 - Partridge Fam ily 6, 13; Little People 3, 4, 15, MOvie 20;
pot parties for this famUy of confirmed city dwellers. Vietnam
Fest• val Films 33.
never happened and Blondie's complaint about meat prices
9:00 - Masterpiece Theatre 33, Circle of Fear 3, 4, 15; Room
'
.
.
222 ; Movie " Marlowe" 8.
were, hardly C\li'I'~Uy lppicl!) ..~)lw R!'lblenuy~s"' ll(etllne , • 9:30 -oQd~ Gouple.,6, 13•
_,.,...,.. • ~ -$ t , • . ,
one for the Bumsteads, and i111 of ll8.'" · ·
- • • "' • ~ 10:00 - ' L'ilve Amerlc§n Style 6, 13; Paul f.luc~lm~ 3~. Bobby
' y
di-~
k
the tri
Darin 3, 4, 15.
And so, when Chi
C OWlg "" a wee or so ago,
s P 10 30 - What About Tomorrow? 6, 13
may have been out of tlD!e with today's violent, problem-fllled ll 00 - News, Weather, Sports6, 6, 10, 13
world. But it was still fWlny, and for that reason alone Chic II. 30 - Johnn,y Carson 3, IS ; In Concerl6 ; Movies "Assignment
Young and the brood he created deserves a lasting place our
~~~~~•• :·y~yage to a Prehistoric Planet" 10, "The Glass
affections. Goodbye, old friend.
l 00 - Mldn lghl Speclal3, 4, lS , Mov 1e "Bride of the MOI1ster"
10
l 30 - News 13
2 30- News 4.

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Salurday by The Ohio Valley
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walk a batter. Bart Johnson
pitched the last two innings for
Chicago and lim1ted the
Pirates to two hlts.
Elsewhere, Doug Rader col:
lected three hits as the Houston
Astros downed the Detroit
Tigers, 4-2; Marty Pattin
lwrled five-bit shutout ball for
seven Innings as Boston

blanked St. Lows, 3-0 ; Don
Money's three-run triple keyed
a five-rWl Milwaukee third
inning m the Brewers' 9-4
tr1wnph over San Diego; and
outfielder Bill North drove in
four runs w1th two hits and a
sacrifice fly to help oakland
blast tbe Chicago Cubs, 13-3.
Paul Blair's tw(H'UII double

Mason Counties

Somehow the combination of Jack and
Charlie, wh1ch was the original name for the
several premises occupied Wltll the present
handsome, tasteful, wann and colorfully large
combination of three once ... ocially impeccable
Manhattan mansions at 21 W. 52nd St., wus just
what the rich and celebrated appreciated. Jack,
the stiff-backed, courtly martinet who catered
to his customers' whims, Charlie, the ~!fable,
laughing lad whose demeanor was preferred by
the more amiable trade. Between the two they
created the ideal speakeasy. And it became big
and lasting business m an era which spawned
speaks and cabarets whose llfetime,like today's
TV shows, often lasted a year, or a few weeks.
The contrast of Jack &amp; Charlie's today and U1e
Speakeasy Era is fantsstlcaUy ironic : no hint of
its old Illegality exists except in ' a minormusewn tradition which has maintained one
now-tourists' trip into "21" cellars filled with
the best mndern reslaurant equipment - and
the same caverns where the finest wines and
liquors were hidden in the old days. Therein lie
the same shelves loaded with the finest liquid
refreshment as were camouflaged safely
throughout the assaul~ on the secrets of "21"
since its time began: '
The vaults lie behind a huge waU - more
than a foot thick, which kept snooping
Prohibition agents from thinking it was
anything but the walls of the buUding. The big
vault..like door could not be budged by anyone
even suspecting it cloaked rich treasures from
ScoUand and France. But a straigh!ened-out
wire coat hanger lying harmlessly far from the
door was the key: poked through one of dozens
of tiny holes looking like part d the wall's
erosion, II triggered a lock which permitted the
heavy door to be pushed open with a UtUe finger.
Today, it remains an open secret to be toured by
vialtors who never knew the mysteries of "21"
and its success in withstanding the atlacks of
Volstead Act guerrillas.
Even if they managed to get past the front
door, which was seldom, a signal triggered rows
Of shelves behind the "21" bar which
automatically tipped Its shelves to vertical
positions from which the dozens of bOttles of
booze fell straight down to iron bars on which
the whisky and wine bottles smashed, the ·
contents washed into the city's sewers.
·
"21" never underwent a aerloua Bl'l'elt. It
remained popular and prospered through
Prohibition to becmne a '10,011,000 ~.
(M&lt;n about "21" tomcrrow.)
cl.,

Ph. 992·2181
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
Open Daily Until
6:00P.M.

Pro Standings

Final ABA Standings
By United Press International
East
Eastern Conference
w. I. pet. g.b.
Atlantic DiVISIOn
ignlted'a three-run first inning
w. I. pel. g.b. Carolina
57 27 .679 Kentucky
56 28 .667 I
68 14 82'1
for the Baltimore Orioles who x Bost011
42 42 500 15
V1rgmta
New
York
57
25
.695
11
beat the New York Yankees, 4- Buffalo
30 54 357 27
New York
21 61 .256 47
3; Ken Berry's muff of a bases- Philadelphia 9 73 .110 59
MemphiS
24 60 286 33
West
Central Division
loaded, two-&lt;&gt;ul fly ball in the
w. I. pet. g.b.
w. I. pel. g.b.
lith inning allowed San Fran- x Balt1more 52 30 634
Ulah
56 28 667 cisco to beat California, 3-2; Atlanla
lnd1ana
51 33 607 5
46 36 561 6
Denver
47 37 560 9
33 49 402 19
Lee Lacy and Manny Mota Houston
San Diego
30 54 357 26
Cleveland
32 50 390 20
combined for six hits as Ul5
Western Conference
Dallas
28 56 .333 2S
Wednesday's Results
M1dwest D1vision
Angeles downed Montreal, 5-3;
w 1. pet. g.b. V•rgm•a 12 1 New York 106
and solo homers by Ed Kirk- Y MIIW
Ken lucky 118 Carolina 97
60 22 732
patrick and Amos Otis carried Ch1cago
51 31 622 9
Memphis 130 Dallas 125
40 42 4SS 20
Utah 138 Indiana 136
Kansas City to an 11-2 triumph Detro1t
(Only games scheduled)
KC
Omaha
36
46 439 24
over Texas.
Pac1hc DIVISion
NHL Standings
w I pet g b.
By United Press International
y Los Angeles 60 22 732
East
Golden Slate 47 35 573 13
w. I I. pis gf ga
Phoen1 x
38 44 463 22
X Mtl
50 10 16 116 319 180
Seattle
26 56 317 34
Bostn 51 20 5 107 324 223
Portland
21 61 .256 39
NYRgs 47 22 7 101 293 200 •
X·Ciinched diVISIOn Iitie
y.Piayoff to determine best Buffalo 36 27 14 86 254 218
Detr01l 36 28 11 S3 254 231
record m Western Conference
Tor onto 25 41 9 59 230 268
Wednesday's Results
Vncuvr 22 46 S 52 227 330
Boslon 120 Baltimore 101
NYIId rs
Delroit 131 Cleve 119, ot
12 59 5 29 164 333
Houslon 138 Buffalo 122
West
Phoen
iX
127
Seattle
125
TAMPA, Fla . (UP!) - Don
w. I. I. pis gf ga
Los Angeles 96 Golden St 89
Gullett, who is expected to
XChiCQ 42 26 8 92 27S 217
I Only games scheduled)
Mm n 37 30 10 84 250 227
Friday's Games
pitch for the Cincinnah Reds on
Phlla 35 2'1 II Sl 27S 247
Angeles at M1lwaukee
the openmg day of the season, Los
St Lous 31 33 12 74 225 246
(Only game schedul ed) ·
yielded eight h1is Wednesday,
Los Ang 30 35 11 71 225 239
Pttsbgh 31 36 9 7l 250 254
WHA
Standmgs
Including a three-run homer,
Atlanla 25 37 14 64 185 231
By United Press International
as the New York Mets pounded
Calif IS 46 16 46 200 322
East
w. I. I. pts gf ga
•·Clinched diVISion l11ie
the Red 8-0 m Grapefruit
Wednesday's Results
x-Nw Eng 44 29 2 90 303 251
!.£ague play.
Cl eve
40 32 3 83 274 234 Boston 6 N Y Rangers 3
Gullett pitched even though Ottawa 34 37 4 72 269 2S9 Plllsburgh 6 Atlanta 3
35 40 0 70 277 301 Bulfa lo 6 Philadelphia 3
he had expenenced an upset PhilO
N
Y
41 2 68 296 324 Montreal 4 Chicago 3
stomach Tuesday night and Quebec 33
31 39 5 67 263 301 St Lou1s 3 Minnesota 3
Wednesdsy mormng.
California 3 l os Angeles 2
West
I Only games scheduled )
w
I.
I
.
pis
gf
ga
He was charged w1lh seven
Thursday' s Games
X· W1mpg 43 29 4 90 281 241
of the Mets' runs , including Los Ang 37 35 6 80 259 250 Toronto at Detro1t
36 35 3 79 244 259 Atlanta al Ph iladelphia
Cieon Jones' clout that brought Minn
(On ly games sc heduled)
Houston
37 34 4 7S 272 25S
m three runs.
Alberta 37 36 3 77 263 25 1
The Reds were held to just C hica~o 26 48 2 54 243 2SS
x-Chnched div1s1on t1tle
four hits by Tom Seaver and
Results
Steve Hennigan. Seaver gave AI bertWednesday's
a 2 Philadelphia I
up two h1ts and struck out SIX m Wmmpeg 4 Ch1cago 3 loll
I Only games scheduled)
the f1rst six mrungs.
Thursday's Games
Henmgan , acquired from Alberta at Philadelphia
Cleveland m the off-season, Quebec at Minnesota
added three more strikeouts New England at Otlawa
New York at Houston
during hiS three-inning stint.
(Only games scheduled)
NBA Standings

By Umted Press International

Gullett is
pounded by
NY squad

Approxunately 150 persons,
mcluding members of the 197273 All-Southeastern Oh1o
Athlel!c League 's Dream
Team, attended the 24th annual
Ali-SEOAL cage banquet at
Lake Wh1te m Waverly Wednesday evening.
William (Bill ) Harrell, head
basketball coach at Morehead
State University, was the main
speaker.
Coach Harrell reviewed four
keys reqmred to he successful
m both hfe and athletics dediCation, discipline, desire
and enthusiasm
The speaker was mtroduced

by Waverly prmcipal John
Marlin, who served as master
of ceremomes. John R
Teichert, Waverly supermtendent, welcomed guests.
William Lockhart, WeUston
h1gh school prmc1pal, and
SEOAL pres1dent, presented
cerhficates and trophies to 15
members of the f1rst, second
and third All-1£ague teams,
and certificates to those who
recetved honorable mention .
AI E1snaugle presented
Jackson's Tom Conroy the Best
Foul Shooting Trophy. Od1e
O'Donnell presented the loop's

Waverly. Left to righi are Coach Jim Osborne, Gallipolis;
Joim Shoemaker, Waverly; Gil Price, Gallipolis; J'unmy
Noe, Gallipolis; Mike Oyer, Waverly and Ed Thompson,
Waverly.

Most Valuable Player award to
Gali1pohs' Gl Pr1ce. B1li Gray
presented GAHS Coach Jim
Osborne the loop's Coach-&lt;&gt;f·
the-Year award.
Mr . Lockhart presented
Waverly team captam M1ke
Oyer the 1972-73 Southeastern
Ohio League championship
trophy.
Players honored were :
FIRST TEAM - Jim Noe ,
and G1l Price, Galhpohs; Mike
Oyer, John Shoemaker and Ed
Thompson, Waverly
SECOND TEAM - Mark
Mace, Athens ; Jeff Hannon,

Ironton ; J1m Pierce , Logan;
J1m Boggs, Meigs; Bill Maloy,
Waverly .
THIRD TEAM Dan
Morrow, Jackson ; Randy
Noms, Logan; B1ll Cbaney,
Me1gs;
Dave
Salyers,
Waverly; Dave Souders,
Wellston.
HONORABLE MENTION Andy Chonko, Athens; Mark
Kiesling, Gallipolis, Kenny
Green, Ironton ; Tom Conroy,
Jackson ; Jeff Campbell,
Logan ; Mike Sayre, Mei~s;
OAKLAND (UP!) - Los
Doug Pfeifer, Waverly ; and Angeles beat Golden State in
Charles Snare, Wellston .
the final NBA game of the
regular season to spark a
player revolt and throw the
Western Conference playoffs
mto a l)luddle.
Behind the shooting of Mel
Counts, Jerry West and Gail
his mmd "about mne o'clock Goodrich, the Lakers overthis mornmg (Wednesday)," came a seven1&gt;omt halftime
called Dye prior to the hasttly- deficit Wednesday mght by
called news conference to "ap. rattling off 12 unanswered
priSe him of the situation."
pomts for a 9S-89 victory.
He seemed surprised when
That left Los Angeles and
he walked into Weaver's office, Milwaukee tied at 6().22 for the
where newsmen had gathered highest percentage in the
to hear the decisiOn, which Western Conference. A new
came m a rather unusual way. rule states the team with the
"I thought you only did this best won-lost record collects an
when you changed jobs," were extra $10,000 and earns the
his first words, immediately right to open the playoffs
ending speculation he might against the No . 4 team (Golden
switch.
State) in the conference.
Weaver, who called the last
So the Bucks and the Lakers
two weeks "trymg days ," were originally scheduled to
opened the news confe rence decide the conference champ
readmg from a prepared in a one-game playoff Fr1day
statement.
mght in Milwaukee. But the
"I am happy to announce Players Association claims
that Fred Taylor IS staying at th1s game is unwarranted and
Oh1o State," Weaver said. "AU not covered by the players'
of us have a deep feeling of contracts.
pleasure in h1s deciSion."
Reps Being Polled
Taylor's ties with Ohio State
Player representatives of all
go hack to the late 1940s when NBA teams are being poUed
he played basebaU and basket- today and their vote is bemg
ball here.
tallied in New York by NBA
Dye was basketball coach at Commissioner Walter Kennedy
Oh1o State during Taylor's and Larry Fleisher, an atplaymg days
torney representing the
Players Assocl8tion. They also
might decide it by a coin fhp
and spht the $10,000 evenly
between the Lakers and Bucks.
"The players say they have a
NAMED CHAIRMAN
contract
that calls for 82
ST. LOUIS (UPI)- August
41
A. Gusste" Busch, Jr. was regular season games plus the
named chall'lllan of the boa.rd regular playoffs," said Lakers
and chief executive officer of General Manager Pete NeweU.
the St. LouiS Cardmals Wed- "They don't feel an additional
nesday. Richard A Meyer game is Within the scope of
became the new president and the!l' contract."
Bing Devme was named
Goodrich topped game scorexecul!ve v1ce pres1dent and
ers
w1th 26 points and backgeneral manager.
court mate West added 25. Ellis

OOLUMBUS (UPI } - W1th
his deciSIOn about switching to
Northwestern out of the way,
Ohio Slate basketball coach
Fred Taylor's next job is to
start recrUiting some of the
"super players" the state has
to offer this year.
Taylor,ata Wednesday news
conference, annoWlced he had,
after nearly two weeks of deliberation, turned down the offer. of Northwestern Athletic
Director Tippy Dye to replace
Brad Snyder as he~d coach of
the Wildcats.
Taylor said the two basic
reasons for his turning down
the Northwestern offer were a
"salary adjustment" by Ohio
State, the amount of which was
IWI disclosed, and the fact he
faces abdominal surgery next
month.

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•

" It is not that I feared the
surgery," he said, "but I am
gomg into the hospital and to
think of recuperatmg in a new
environment where I did not
lmow the recruitmg situatiOn,
the demands on my time and

all...
"ThiS (Ohio State) may be
the only place they'U let me
loaf for awhile, " he JOked.
The decision came after the
Buckeye coach of 15 years
huddled a second time with
OSU Athletic Director Ed
Weaver. The two earher had a
lengthy meeting Tuesday, at
which time Taylor said he still
had not made up his mind.
Taylor said he d1d not think
the two-week decision-making
process would have any ill effects on Oh1o State's
recruiting.
"I don't reaUy think it has
affected us in any way, shape
or form," Taylor said when
asked about the recruiting.

fl

•

•

•

he IS gomg to school this
early."
Taylor saJd there are "some
super players m the state this
year and we've got to get some
of them." He sa1d he had made
two recrmting trips during the
last two weeks, while the job
situation was up in the air, and
"we made the point very clear
we were recruiting for Ohio

State."

The Northwestern offer reportedly Included a long list of
fringe benefits which Taylor
does not enjoy at the statesupported Buckeye school.
Northwestern, a private
institution, reportedly offered
Taylor free .rent, the use of a
car, free tUition for Taylor's
four daughters, and a multiyear contract.
State policy forbids· the issuance of multi-year contracts
at Ohio State, but Weaver sa1d
11
in my judgment, no one can
have a more secure contract
11
1t's a rare instance when a than Fred has here."
Taylor, who said he made up
boy makes a decision on where

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

a 9. H &amp; R Block can show you how 1hat
new IJ)V&lt;rlllllelll Short Form you've heard about
couiCI COlt you lllOileY· For example, if you have
in-t 011 your IIIOIIgage, medical expenoe or child
Clll'e deductiooa, which are up to forty-eight hundred
dollan •bio year, yoo. cannot itemize !hem on the
Short Form.

GENERAL'S
BEST
GENERAL·JET

Economy priced .

Only Duallread'" 1ls price
lield

Association claims

Four fu ll pl1es of ny lon
cord
Tnm , narrow whitellne

highlights ihe sidewall

game unwarranted

Taylor ~:now· ·on. super-player hunt
\o

Sunday evening w1th Mr. and
Mrs. Dana I£wis at Clifton, W.
Jeff Miller of !.£tart and Paul Sharon and Cmdy Roush
Va.
'"'Darnell of Pomeroy called on Sunday afternoon .

BY JACK O'BRIAN
RYE COMMENTS ON
PROHmmON
NEW YORK (KFS) -Once upon a drier
time, dunng Prohibition in fact, a very few
speakeasies developed the class to emerge mto
the legal-drinking era with elegance, style and
institutional imporlance. Moot speaks were
raffish premises, generally the ground floors of
old residences adjusted in primitive discomfort
to the more insistent needs of their patrons-a
drink. A rare few had the foresight to realize
Prohibition was Wlnatural and couldn'tlast, but
the few analyzed the stands of AI Smith, Franklin D. Roosevelt and other political realists who
knew you can't legislate morality, especially
the more traditional minor vices such as an
honest man's urge for a relaxing drink of beer
or better. Thus, such Manhatlan institutions as
"21" came to permanent light.
Some of the better cafes and saloons
prevailed, such as the Stork Club, whose funeral
was hastened by its owner Sherman BlUingsle)'ls exorbitant pride in his Stork Club TV show
to the detriment of his previously inunaculate
concern for his nightclub'S" patrons. !.£on and
Eddie's simply flunked the test of time and like
all durable N. Y. City's Prohibition cabarets
hWlg on for various reasons and then died of the
inexorable one - the aging of owners !.£on
Enken and Eddie Davis and their Inclination
toward warmer, more relaxing clbnes· Eddie
retired entirely to Florida, Leon to Mla~i to try
a nightclub there only to !aU.
They fared well financially - they had
bought the 52nd St. premises on which !.£on and
Eddie's prospered, and by the time they ap- '
proached retirement, they could live handsomely on their foresight: they sold the
property and lived financially healthily the rest
of their adventurous days.
Next door to !.£on &amp; Eddie's was the best
most elegadt, most successful and now mosi
institutionally secure speakeasy of all
Manhattan lime : "21." Jack Kriendler a thin
austere, expensively taUored dictato; of hb
excellent judgments, and Olarlie Burns a
round, jolly, twinkling, genial farsighted fell~
had started ih other business spheres and
almost backed jnto the speakeasy which
became world-renowned; It wasn't easy: they
had gangsters anxious to cut into their business
always at the ready; they had Prohibition
agents variously anxious to raid tbem or collect
bribes; local pollee awash, like Miami Beach,
with open palms; and other 4Jscouracements.

, KnucklebaUer Wilbur Wood,
another likely opening-day
hurler, worked seven innings,
longest of any White Sox p1to ·
cher this spring, and limited
Pittsburgh to three hits as
Chicago went on to a 6-0 win
over the Pirates.
Wood, the White Sox' 24gsme winner last year, did not

1972-73 Dream Team honored

Llmlfed lln'te oNer

By Mrs. Herbert Roush
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Sayre
returned home Thursday from
a vacation in Jacksonville, Fla.
They also visited Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Payne at Pinnellas
Park, Fla. Mr . and Mrs .
James Sayre of Kanauga
accompamed the Sayres to
Flor1da.
Sunday dinner guests of Mrs.
Bertha Robmson were Mr. and
Mrs. BiU Robinson and family
of Racine Route 2. CaUing in
the afternoon were Mr. and
Mrs . Rick Sargent, Miss
Sandra Sayre of Columbus,
Mrs. Ph11ip Radford and
daughter, Stephame of
Pomeroy Rte. and Mrs . Clara
Mae Sargem of Racine.
Mrs. Steve Cleland and sons
of Racme and Karen Wines
called on Ada Rowe Sunday
afternoon.
Mrs. Ronnie Russell and
daughrer, Amanda, Sharon and
Cmdy Roush, Mrs. Iva Orr
spent Friday everung with Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Roush.
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Roush
Sharon, Cindy, David and
Edward, Mrs. Herbert Roush,
Mrs . Ronnie Russell and
daughter, Mandy, Mrs. Iva Orr
and Jimmy O'Brien spent

Cleon Jones' three-run
homer in the hrst inning
highlighted the Mets' IZ.M
attack off Don Gullett, Dan
Osborn and Ed Sprague. The
Mets ·got seven of their runs
and eight hits off Gullett, who
is expected to open the season
for the Reds against San
Francisco AprU 5.

FIRST TEAM ALL-SEOAL - Members of the First
Team, All-Southeastern Ohio Athletic BasketbaU Team and
the 1972-73 Coach-&lt;&gt;f-lhe-Year were among those honored
during Wednesday night's 24th amual All-League banquet at

in

Fairview
News Notes

•

was h1gh for the Warriors with
17.
Rick Barry, who suffered a
back injury, and Nate Thurmond each had 16 points for the
Warriors, who fmished with a
47-35record. Barry.lle&lt;!ame the
fifth player in the NBA 1o hit
more than 90 per cenl of his
free throws when he finished
with 90.2 per cent to top the
league. The Warriors also set
an NBA free-throw mark of
79.6 per cent, breaking the
mark of 79.4 set by the old
Syracuse Nationals m 1956-57.
Other NBA AcUon
In other NBA action Wednesday mght, Boston whipped
Baltimore, 120-101, Detroit
rolled over Cleveland, 131-119,
in overtime, Houston stopped
Buffalo, 133-122, and Phoenix
beat Seattle, 127-125.
Dave Cowens and John
Havltcek combined for 21
pomts m the third perind to lift
the Celllcs over Balllmore.
Havhcek had 34 points for
Boston and Cowens 23 while
Phil Chenier led the Bullets
with 22.

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: ;

I

4- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29,1973

Bologna sticks mail~d
t 0 p res I den' t.'-·govern
_ . · or

Dayton to host East-West game

RIO LOSES OPENER
Coach Norm Perslu's Rio
Grande College Redmen
DAYTON,Ohio (UP!) -The
Heading the list are a pair of the All-American firepower of Oklahoma City, 8-2 Larry dropped their 19'13 baseball
e
East will have the names and first team members, tHi Doug Ute East, with Long Beach Finch of Memph.is State, 6-4 lldlilter 11-0 Ill vlsltlug West
Slate's
Ed
Ratleff,
a
first
team
Richie
Fuqua
of
Oral
Roberts,
Vlrgluia
Slate
University
at
_
the West the size in the lith Collins of Illinois State and 6-1
annual Coaches' East-West Dwight Lamar of Southwestern selection, the West's only 6-2LewisNelsonofWashlngtOn Evans Field Wednesday
selection.
and 6-7 Harry Rogers of St. afternoon. The nightcap was
By UDlted Press lnlernatlonal Boback announced that, as a for Big Bear Supennarkets In
All.Star Game Saturday (I Louisians.
The West, however, has a Louis University.
·called by darkness after
San Francisco demon- concession to consumer Ohio, Dyal Baehr, said a
p.m.) at the University of
The East, which won last eight Innings with the score strators protesting the high groups, the stores will not buy boycott might cause a tempoDayton Arena .
Three more of the East definite height advantage with
The East, with all its big squad were second team selec- the likes of 6-11 Kresimir Cosic year's game 96-91 in overtime, lied, H. Tho/}(edmen were price of meat malled 20-pound food from suppliers one day rary drop In prices, but said they would quickly rise again.
name players, even has one of tions, Ernie DiGregorio of of Birgham Young, Mike Stew- holds a 7-3 edge in the 10 pre- scheduled ;61 play Morrill sticks of bologna to President next week.
In the Midwest, hog markets
Harvey CoDege ID a twinbill Nixon- and California Gov.
the most famous coaches of all Providence, Kevin Joyce of art of Santa Clara and Steve vious games of the series.
Mitchell
of
Kansas
State,
both
at
Evans
Field,
beginning
at
Ro
aid
Re
Th
'd
t
reported
a second straigllt day
time guiding it in Kentucky's South Carolina ani! Jim
AHL Standings
da
n
agan. e pres! en
Adolph Rupp, who was forced Brewer of Minnesota, and two 6-10, and 6-9 James Uster of By United Press International :::!:,f;,;,,:,;,,!~:::::l:~~::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt; of the Cowbelles Auxiliary of of unprecedented price
East
the American National Cat- declines as farmers unloaded
into retirement from coaching others, Allan Hornyak of Ohio Sam Houston State.
1
1
The game also will see lour
w. · · pis gf ga
!Iemen's Association said their hogs. Beef cattle prices
after last season.
State and Bill Schaeffer of St.
N.S. o\1 17 15 97 300 185
Americansaregoingtohaveto alsO dipped, but thel drop wus
At his command, Rupp will John's (N.Y.), were selected to members of the 1972 Olympic Bostn 3i 28 13 7~ 242 247
get used to higher food prices. described as only "moderate."
basketball team taking part Prov 31 30 14 7o 247 247
have seven of the 15 players the third team.
Rchslr 32 30 12 76 234 266
f
Ba
to
Several newspapers across
Mik
e n m o Sprgfld 18 39 16 52 259 330
The consumers' revolt
who made up the first three
The West, coached by former and all four,
teams of the 1973 United Press coach and now athletic director St.Jooeph,Brewer,Collinsand N.H. 16 39 2() 52 244 325
against the soaring price of the country provided recipes
West
food gained momentum for "meatless meals." The
International Ali-American at Brigham Young, Stan Watts Joyce, play for the East.
1
·
I.
·
'"e
tallest
w.
pis
gf
ga
Wednesday as more a nd more New York Times, on today's
squad.
can't come close to matching Ba ntom, at 6-9-• IS "'
Cinci 52 17 5 109 333 202
player, while Brewer and Ker- Hrshy 41 22 11 93 313 , 217
organizations endorsed an food pages, provided recipes it
4
2
mit Washington of American Va.
36 2) 16 88 2 9 2l
"April Fool's Week" boycott of said in a headline were
Rchmd 29 34 10 68 256 262
University each go 6-8.
Jcksnvl 23 44 9 55 252 330
meat, April_ 1-7. Farmers "meatless hot not joyless."
. Mike Boylan of Assumption Ball
16 46 11 43 201 307
threatened to retaliate by They featured eggplant,
Wednesday's Results
hoi
ttl
d ho off •• spaghetti and cheeses.
Coilege and Barry p arkhill of - Hers~ey
2 Baltimore 1
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
ding ca e an
gs
"'e
the University of Virginia Rochester 4 New Haven 2
Michigan psychiatrist has told ~et from April_! to 15 to Horsemeat Market Reopens
In Portland, Ore., a market
round out the 11-man East Ri~~~~~~!:~~~~~~~~!~l 1
Senate investigators there Is a driVe priCes even higher.
selling horsemeat for human
team.
Thursday's Games
national "epidemic" In the use
consumption reopened Wedsecond
in
team
rebounding
The
rest
of
Watts'
squad
conProvidence
at
Cinclnnall
A
crowd
of
200
at
a
"no
more
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande
-of a drug•• !hath is in m~~ baloney" rally outside the San nesday after a one-day closure,
Basketball Captain Ron with 236 and shot 74.8 pet. from sists of Missouri's 6-7 John Springfield at Nova Scotia
zie
Edwards
of
(Onlygamesscheduled)
dangerous ...an ero
.
f d - b 'ld'
6-4
O
the
free
throw
line.
Lambert,
Brown'
Lambert was honorably
:....::______ .
- which some users believe Is an Francisco e era 1 Ul mg with a line of customers a block
,..,,•.,.,,.,.,.,.,.,.,y:,.,..............,._h.,.,........-n.,......:r.......... ~• ......,.~-'».-;-,~-...9.•N,h'Jlf
sianed
the outside of the long.
mentioned on the NAIA All- also a first team choice in the .,,,,.••.,.,.;.,.,_,_,
_,_,,,,,«o:u.·u.•,,v.w.•.:.·.•&lt;&lt;·:-=-h~:-.·:·=···''"""'"'""""""'''•'-';o)_ , aphrodisiac
•
Owner Ed Carroll said trays
American team for 1972-73. NAJA district 22 and Mid-Ohio ·~:::j
x~·~· The culp~it, Dr. Richard bologna before senaing them to
Lambert, a 6'4" junior from Conference, was consistent all
f th u · 'I 0f Nixon and Reagan. "Chops and of ground horsemeat--80 to 90
0
season,
hitting
on
51
pet.
of
his
••·
0
S
·
Kunnes
e mverSl y
robbers," "Steer clear of pounds each-werll being
Alexandria~ Virginia, received
::
~.::. Michigan-Washtenaw County
beef," and "I'm sick of peanut emptied at Ute rate of one
honorable mention as he led field goal attempts, the highest
~~
Community
Mental
Health
on
the
team
.
the Redmen to a 13-13 season.
~nort
Center, said Wednesday is the_ butter" were some of the signs every 25 to 30 minutes.
A lulob toe.
A three year letterman for .i:l.
Lambert was the leading
a
. drug methaqualone, which also carried by marching Meat shoplifting, grocers in Notched sole. And a
scorer for Rio Grande with 568 Rio Coach Art Lanham, $i
~- : goes under the trade names protesters in what was billed as Charlotte, N.C., reported Wedtwo-tone man·made
By MILTON RICHMAN
P.i
a 1 'warmup" for next week's nesday, has been going up as
points and an average of 21.8 Lambert had his best games on ~~
upper that wipes to a
UPI Sports Editor
~l : Quaaludes, Sopors, Parest and national beef boycott.
fast or faster than meat prices.
shine. All yours,
points per game. He was the road in Mid-Ohio Con•·•·
8l, Somnafac ,_
"We used to find empty
for your daughter, at
ference play against Malone
Other witnesses called
our super nice price.
packages
of
cigarettes
on
the
and Cedarville getting 43
NEW YORK (UPI)- Billy Martin Arrested.
before a Senate subcommittee Production Cost Higher
against Malone and a week
That's all the headline said.
In Denver, Mrs. Cyril Wood- shelves," said a manager for a
ROSADO DISMISSED
said the drug Is a big, new
later
31
at
Cedarville
in
leading
The
story
underneath
it
went
on
to
say
the
Detroit
manager
UTICA, N.Y. (UP!)
favorite among pill takers and ward, president of the Cow- group of grocery stores. "Now
Joseph
Rosado,
head Rio Grande to their first Mid- and one of the Tigers' minor leaguers, Ike Blessitt, were arrested argued about whether it belles Auxiliary of the we see empty packages of
Sholl for Girl~
basketball coach at Utica Ohio Conference Cham- the other night outside a Lakeland, Fla., "bistro" after a "loud deserves its street nicknames American National Cat- luncheon meal.
College since 1969, was pionship in two years of argument." The police said both were charged with profanity.
"I guess if you don't have
of "the love drug" and "the Uemen's Association, said, "I
dismissed Wednesday because competition in the MOC.
any
money the only way to get
Most people who read the story had the same reaction.
don't really feel the cost of
heroin for lovers."
of "basic disagreements about
Ob, oh, Billy Martin was in a fight again.
Kunnes said misinformation meat is too high because the meat for your famlly is to steal
athletics." Eric "Tom" HugT)le fact is be wasn't.
about the drug has made it cost of production is so much it," he said.
gins, the athletic director, will
City officials suspect high
Actually, according to witnesses, he prevented one from more dangerous than heroin. higher. We're going t~ have to
serve as basketball coach next NEW COACH
Where Shoes are
DeKALB,
Ill.
(UPI)
Dr.
meat
prices may have been the
breaking
out.
Billy
Martin
was
the
peacemaker,
and
he
wound
up
educate
ourselves
that
we'll
season.
He said the public has been
Emory F. Luck, 45, a former getting it in the end-the same place he usually doef..Isn't that
Sensibly Priced
motive behind the disappearhave to pay more for food."
member of the Harlem Globe- generally the way? Particularly in the perpetually hectic life of fooled into believing it is a safe,
Middleport, 0.
The Maine House of Re- ance of several ducks from a
non-addictive sedativetrotters, was named the Billy Martin.
TAVERAS TO MINO~
presentatives adopted a city pond.
hypnotic.
BRADENTON, Fla. (UP!)- basketball coach Wednesday at
Director of meat operations
resolution
supporting the firstThe Truth of the Malter
Here's what really happened that other night in Lakeland.
Shortstop Frank Taveras, the Northern Illinois University.
"The !ruth of the matter is week-in-April meat boycott. In
It was late, after midnight In fact, but Billy Martin was hungry.
22-year-old native of the He is the first black head coach
the Massachusetts House,
Dominican Republic who is in the history of the school.
So he corralled his pitching coach, Art Fowler, and the two that methaqualone is addicting
considered the Pittsburgh
went into Ibis combination restaurant and cocktail lounge simply and that unlike heroin, acute Democrats rejected a similar
Pirates' shortstop of the future,
because it was one of the only places they could get somethi!lg to withdrawal from resolution proposed by
To
protect
the
purity
of
the
was sent down to the minors
methaqualone can produce Republicans by a ~I margin,
of its famous cows, eat at that hour.
Wednesday. The Pirates want breed
the Channel Island of Jersey
Martin and Fowler finished eating, and on the way out, the convulsions which have the then adopted one of their own
him to play every day to gain allow~ no other cattle on the
producing by a 6-1 margin.
Tigers' manager noticed Blessitt, a 23-year-old outfielder out of potential of
experience.
Ralph Nader endorsed next
island.
fatalities," Kunnes said.
Detroit, having a discussion with another patron.
,..,..,..______________:»«_~ Biessitt played with Toledo last year and appeared in, fou~ _late , TIJe psychiatrist said that week's meat boycott, saying
season ga(lles with the Tigers. He's considered a good prospect "we are in the midst of a ·that ·consumers .organizing to ..
drive down prices is a "very
but, mostly due to his inexperience, he was sent back down to methaqualone epidemic ...
"An informal survey of healthy count.s,tvailing
Toledo by Martin earlier in the week.
University of Michigan development."
"The way he and this other guy were startlllg to go atit," says
Wheeler G. Foshee Jr., a Red
students showed that close to 90
Martin, "it looked as if they were gonna fight.! didn't want that
per cent of the student Level, Ala., cattle and hog
to happen, so I went over to· the kid and took him outside. We
population had at least once farmer, said other local farmwere standing there in the parking lot an4 I said to him, 'You
ingested methaqualone ers agreed "We'd call on
don't wanna get into a fight. You don't need that."'
American cattlemen and hog
Ike Blessitt was still overwrought over having been sent back illegally," Kunnes said.
The Senate juvenile delin- farmers to withhold sales of
down to the minors again.
quency subcommittee planned cows and bogs during the
He listened to what BiUy Martin had to say and suddenly the
to take more testimony today. period of April 1-15."
tears started down his cheeks.
Foshee said the farmers
Subpoenaed to testify were the
He was standing there sobbing In the parking lot, Martin trying
believe they are being "unduly
to comfort him when a police car rolled up and one of the cops got makers of Quaaludes and criticized for meat prices at the
Sopors. Chairman Birch Bayh,
out.
D-lnd., ordered the subpoenas counter when we are not
You' con trust
"He came over to where we were and he said to Ike, 'Okay,
when J.W. Eckman, president receiving what we ought to."
black boy, you're arrested,"' says Martin. "I said, 'He didn't do
your registered
of William H. Rorer, Inc. NFO to Hold Meetlugs
anything wrong,' and Ute cop said 'You're arrested, too."'
Oren
Lee
Staley,
president
of
pharmacist al(Quaaludes) and Robert C.
Martin's reaction was immediate.
the
National
Farmers
Parcell, president of Arnarways to follow
"For what?" he demaoded.
Slone Laboratories, Inc. (So- Organization (NFO) anyour doctor's presc1iption with care and
pars) refused invitations to nounced that the NFO will hold
"For Profanity" He Says
a series of meetings this
accuracy. Your confidence is our proud
testify.
"For profanity,'' said the policeman, according to Martin.
weekend
to
plan
action.
Bayh introduced the sex
boast.
"He never even gave us a chance to explain what we were
"The
sharp
decline
in
liveangle into the bearings Wedtalking about," says the Tigers' manager.
stock prices caused by the
Martin posted bond for Blessltt and himself. The whole thing nesday while questioning, Les
Daroff, a long-llaired, 23-year- chain store boycott is going to
came to $64, or $32 apiece.
The following day Blessitt made it a point to come over to old with tinted glasses, who mean positive NFO action next
Prescriptions Are Our Main Business
Martin and apologize for the trouble be caused. Bllly told him to broke the metbqualone habit week," Staley warned.
Boback, which operates 157
on
his
own.
forget it.
stores in New Yorl&gt;; City, was
"He's a good kid," Billy Martin says about Ike Blessitt. "He's Considered an Aphrodisiac
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Daroff, now working at the the latest group of stores to join
got ability and I can understand the way he felt about being sent
down again. I remember when the Twins released me as a Jefferson Medical College in the boycott. A spokesman for
player. You know what I did. I cried, and I had a lot more years Phllsdelphia, said ''sexually
in than Ike Blessltt. Look, I know the feeling the kid had. I under- speaking, many consider it an
aphrodisiac.
stand completely.
"As for myself, I have not
'"Billy Martin arrested, eh?'" mused the Detroit manager
about that headline. "I guess everybody figures ub oh, there goes noticed and it reduces inhiblUons," be added.
Martin in another fight."

·"
.'

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Great look.
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Lambert mentioned on

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lllSocond St. POMIJIOY, OHIO Pll. tfl-1610

fNJURES THUMB
POMPANO BEACH, Fla.
(UP!) - Catcher Rich Billings
injured his left thumb Wednesday morning while sharpening
his spikes. It took six stitches to
close the wound which was
located at the top of the thumb.
ON SECOND TEAM
NEW YORK (UP!) - Mike
Stumpf of Capital was named
to the United Press International Small College All- America second team.
Stumpf averaged 16.7 points
per game last season. He
received ten votes for the AllAmerica team.
OU HAS Z5 VETS
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)
Twenty-five lettermen, including 12 starters, will greet
Ohio University football coach
Bill Hess when spring drills
begin Monday,
The Bobcats will play Penn
State, Northwestern, South
Carolina and Cincinnati this
year in one of the school's
toughest schedules ever.
The Bobcats finished 3-8 last
season.

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scralflbled out of their burning
aircraft.
Weyand spoke at a 21kninute
departure ceremony before he
joined 2,501 other uniformed
Americans leaving today
aboard 19 aircraft the Gls
called ''freedom birds."
They were the last of 2'n
million Americans who served
in Vietnam. Of these, 45,943
died In battle-two of them
after the cease-fll'e went Into
effect two months ago.
The Lasl Americans Leave
The last Americans left from
Saigon and from Da Nang, 370
miles to the north. As they
waited to board planes, Gls

Dr. Woods- Set Sunday

DUTTON'S

MARCH EARLY BlRD SPE""...~ . . . . . .

by taws of Ohio

Jaycees join Apple Butter project

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gossiped, joked, played cards
.or_dozed in the sunshine. Some
of them said goodbye to
Vietnamese girlfriends.
While the airlift moved the
Americans out, other U.S. Air
Force planes were landing in
Hanoi to take away_the last 67
American POWs held in North
Vietnam.
The withdrawal today left 209
By Prof. Ed (!Joe) Wallen
tract." A limited contract is issued for
American servicemen in Viet- ·
RIO GRANDE -As we pointed out a specific amount of time (a limit).
nam-159 of them assigned to
last week, the ezcitement In education This time period is us'ually for one or
the Marine guard unit at the
at thls'time of Year centers around the two years, but can be for up to five
U.S. Embassy and 50 assigned
action~ of boardi of edacatlon. This
years. ·
- •
to the embassy's Defense
wa&amp; elllpbaslzed again this week by
Such a contract is usually given to
Attache's office-plus another
the actiCHIS of the Southwestern Board a new teacher in a school system for a
823 men assigned to the Joint
of Education is not. renewing the one year period. If the teacher proves
Military Commission. They
contracts of 11 teachers.
satisfactory, a two or three-year
will leave Saturday.
'Jiraddltlon to that situation, we now
contract usually follows .
Another estimated 75,000
have a teachers' strike In Meigs
At the end of the contract limits, ·
Americans
remain . in
County. Teachers there are striking
the teacher may or may not have the
Thailand,
the
South
.China Sea
for bargnlnlng rights with the board of
contract renewed by the board of
and Guam, manning ships and
educatiorl as well as for salary and
education. The decision is entirely up
.planes
at combat readiness
fringe benefit lncreases.to the board, and no explanation for
there.
Wby does It happen? The reasons
the renewal or nonrenewal is legally
Weyand, the fourth four-star
sucb things ever happen are entwined
required.
general
to run the Vietnam war
with the complexities of human
The second major type of teacher
since the Veitnam military
behavior and the social forces which
contract is the "continuing contract."
conunand's activation Feb. 8,
Influence any social movement.
Such a contract continues in effect
GRASS VALLEY, Calif. statehood.
1962, addressed a crowd of
A much simpler question to
until the ·teacher dies, resigns,
"Some say it will and some fewer than 200 servicemen and
(UPI) - John Rose, 51, says it
handle is, Why do such Incidents
voluntarily retires, is retired by board
is too early to tell if his claim say it won't," Rose said. "It's women and U.S. government
happen NOW? Why March and April?
action, is suspended or terminated for
of discovering one of the too early to tell."
employes.
. This is a matter of legislation per- cause.
He explained that the Sierra
largest gold nuggets in the
Weyand said the U.S .
,,.: talnlng to teacher contracts in the
This concept is often referred to
northern Mother Lode this region where the find was mission was to prevent an allState of Ohio.
as ''tenure." The board of education
century will fan another wave made is now under a blanket of' out attempt by an aggressor
First of all, there are two major
in effeci agreesla·continue to offer the
snow and probably will be until "to impose its will through raw
of ugold fever."
"ALL YOU ADD IS LOVE"®
types of contracts for teachers. One
teacher a contract until one of the
It was that 'rever that sparked next swnmer.
military
force."
contract is called a "limited con- above terminates the contract.
Come in and 188 our
the 1849 Gold Rush, giving Rose, a telephone company
"That mission has been
many &amp;lyles in popular
:;:::::::::~:::::: : : : ; :.;: :;:;:;:;::;:;:;:;::;:;:;:;::..:;:;:::::;::::::::: : ;_:::::;~:::::~:::::::;;;:;:::;;;:::::~~~::::::::::~:::::.J~::::::::;:::::::&gt;.:::::::::::::~~;.:;,:;::::;:;:;:;::::ko::::::&gt;,:;::;::::;:;:;:;:;::m:::::::~::::;:~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~&lt;:::;:~ California so me of its most worker, said he found the accomplished," Weyland said.
price ranges.
colorful history and leading to nugget on a hillside 5,000 feet "You can hold your heads high
up in the rugged mountains at having been part of this
above the community of Sierra selfless effort."
City, northwest of Lake Tahoe.
The Only Ad-Lib Words ·
He told UP! Wednesday that
Then, interjecting the only
he
was
hunting
in
the
area
with
ad-lib words of his prepared
Court St., Pomeroy
A one-hour TV special called telecast concludes with the
a friend a year ago when he text, Weyland said, "and the
" Pass It On" recently taping of a live service in Los
saw what he thought was cow · peace with honor that has been
produced by Revival Fires of Angeles' Channel 11 studios
...'
achieved.''
Joplin, Missouri, is scheduled that features the Good Twins manure.
"I was going to kick it clear
for release nationwide at prime singing "Pass It On" and the
out
of the county but then I ~-----------------·-··~--·---·---·--·--------~--.,
The Southern Area of Ohio visitation. The pastor may be the purpose of serving the local · television time on at least 200 Gospel Lads, "Redemption looked closer and I knew it
stations April t-8.
Lay Institute for Evangelism is quite effective in maintaining a church by sharing:
Draweth Nigh." Also included wasn't manure," he recalled.
1How
to
live
the
victorious
on
the special will be Revival
The
program
features
such
beipg held April4-7 at Ironton's systematic pastoral visitation
Instead, Rose said, it was a
First Baptist Church. The program of his own. He may be Christian life in the power of well-known personalities .as Fires' regulars Russ Marlin six-inch long -chunk of gold
singer Anita Bryant, Governor •and Bob Daniels. Cecil Todd
program Is under the direction able to visit every member of the Holy Spirit.
2- How to communicate the Ronald Reagan, astronaut presents a message on the weighing "28 ounces, 12 pennyof Campus Crusade for Christ his church annually. His
weight and two grains," worth
and it places a strong emphasis hospital and shut-in ministry claims of Christ simply and James Irwin, athlete Mike program theme that relates the
Sensibaugh, and author of the story of Philip sharing his faith $2,800. Its value as a specimen
on the importance of the may be above reproach. But to effectively.
5
3 - How to implement vital "Living Bible" Dr. Kenneth with the Eunuch, as recorded could run as high as $! ,000 he
church. All area churches are institute and keep alive a
in Acts 8:29-39. As the story is speculated.
invited to participate.
dynamic visitation program to· strategies which can be used as Taylor.
Each of the special guests is told, it is beautifully
Rose, who said he has hunted
A program ·spokesman said win the lost and evangelize his a continuing ministry for
in the area for 35 years and
-growth
and interviewed on location by dramatized on the screen,
today, "There is no phase of community through lay par- spiritual
evangelistic
outreach
in, Cecil Todd, Director of the including the moving scene of probably walked over the same
the pastoral ministry that Is ticipation is seemingly beyond
"many times ," guessheds
more discouraging to the his ability. Most pastors would through and for the local Revival Fires ministries. The the . Eunich's baptism into shpot
previOus s1orms a
t
at
th 1 -1
guests te II how they are Chnst.
average pastor and seemingly confess to the reality of this church.
e . ops~:
Trainees are given op- passing -~~ tb~~ faith ,in \!Jeir _, The pro~ran; .'~ dedicated to , washed •,way
more djf(icult to ~c;col!'plish pronOWicement."
1td , ,,lea¥\Dij ,\P@,!IR\ll:.!W1itlrY,~~.9~ ...
respectfve
vocations
The
help
calf!his
'
cHnt\lienV'
1
portunities·
to
apply
their
than a Jliqram of evan'gelistlc - · Tlle Lay Ministry exists for
.
... '
chri~t and offers
Tay!'or"s'' •1 • Rose •said no· one had. of:~~d
training in practical siluations
"Liv-ing New Tiistamenl" to buy the gold, although I ve
th~oughevangelisticvisitation.
(renamed "From God With had a lot of offers for people .~o
Love") to all who request it. dme me back up to the spot.
PT. PLEASANT - The Pt. butler sale are turned over to
This edition has specially
They were all turned do~n,
Pleasant Area Jaycees have the state Jaycee organization
marked scriptures and an he added. The spot IS bel~g
announced their participation for use in mental health and
outlined plan for use by per- kept a secret by Rose, who sa1d
, in the statewide Jaycee project retardation projects. A portion
has never searched for gold
RIO GRANDE- The second son aI workers called "Seven he
. h' l'f
of "Apple Butter Day" when on of the proceeds are earmarked
10
meeting and rehearsal of the Steps to the Foot of the Cross"
IS 1 e.
Thursday and Friday, April 12 for use in building a state camp
Community Choir at Rio that will encourage Christians
"But from now on I'll be
Your father may
and 13, Jaycees wiU go door to for children .
Grande College will be this to pass on their•faith. ·
looking," he vowed .
be a nice guy. but
Lonnie Roach, chairman of
door in tl),e Pt. Pleasant area
Sunday, April!, from 2-4 p.m. The special is also available WEEK PROCLAIMED
you
wouldn't want to be
offering specially prepared the project, asks that everyone
in the Music Hail on campus. on 16 mm. film for showing in
caught
in his shoes. You should
COLUMBUS (UP!) - This
apple butter In exchange for a mark thr dates on their
The choir is being formed - churches and special meetings. week has been proclaimed
be seen in someth ing a lot mo re up to
calendar and be prepared
$1 donation.
CHILLICOTHE
Dr. under the direction of Merlyn All request.&lt;; should be directed
date.
Like Thorn MeAn Saddle Jacks for boys.
All proceeds from the apple when the Jaycees call.
Charles D. Krouse of Defiance, Ross, Associate Director of to Will Lane, Director of the "Highway Safety Week" by
They're
fashion shoes of lhe SO's but updated lor lhe
President of the Ohio Dental Music. Everyone is invited to Television Department of Gov. John J . Gilligan who not70's with thick rugged cork or cushion crepe soles and higher
'T'
Association, will speak at a participate, even if they were Revival Fires. Locally the edmore than 2,000 persons are
heels. And they're made of so me new grainy leathers in
1.
meeting of the Rehwinkel unable to make the first program will appear on killed each year in traffic acciseveral old and new color combinati ons.
dents.
Dental Society to be held
Best or all, Saddle Jacks for boys are made by Thorn MeAn.
meeting last week.
Channel 13, April 5 at 8 p.m.
The governor urged Ohioans
Wednesday, Aprll 4, at 11 a.m.
So you won't need your father to help you foot the bill.
The concert will be presented
to practice safety as motorists,
at the Holiday Inn here.
Only 513.99
Sunday evening May 6 with NO LAWS VIOLATED
passengers and pedestrians.
Dr . Carl S. Woods of
Saddle Jacks for Boys by~"'-~
selections to include "Mpssj_n
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Gallipolis, president of the
lovely
gUts
and
the
family
G" by Schubert; "Seraphic Columbus Police Olief Earl ACTION FAIL'!
MASON - Mrs. Howard
Rehwinkel Dental Society, will
visited
following
the
dinner.
Song" by Rubinstein and Burden has ruled no depart(June) VanMatre and Mrs.
STAPLETON, N.Y. (UPI)preside. Dentists practicing in
Attending
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gaines, and ."Soilg of Man" by mental rules or criminal laws James Guinta, 25, apparently
Donald (Fay) Russell enPickaway, Fayette, Highland,
tertained at a surprise ,birth- VanMatre and Mr. and Mrs. Ross, Vinton, Jackson, Athens, Kountz.
were vlolated last week when tried to commit suicide TuesSoprano, tenor and bass an off-duty officer shot and day by shooting a spike into his
day dlmer Sunday In honor of George VanMatre, Kevin and. Meigs, and Gallla counties are
the 81Bt birthday of their Malinda; Mr. and Mrs. Ross members of the Rehwinkel soloists will be auditioned from killed a teenager he had heart with a gun used for
Your Thorn MeAn Store
the group for the Schubert stopped for a traffic violation. driving nails into concrete.
mother, Mrs. Blanche Tucker, Roush, Mr. and Mrs. George Society.
225
N.
2nd
Ave
.
Middleport
"Mass." Misss Barbara
at the Russell home In Mason. Hoffman, Lisa and Tammy;
Burden
said
the
death
of
Police
said
he
was
taken
by
Dr. Krouse, who has been in
Mr. and Mrs. John Dickson,
Thomas, violinist of the Paul Adams, 19, Colwnbus was ambulance to a hospital where
general
practice at Defiance
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Wellston area, and Miss accidental anJ no action woufd he underwent surgery.
The surprise was complete
Luther Tucker, Terry, Timmy, since 1953, is also widely known Shirley Richardson, alto, who be taken against Patrolman
with the prfS\lnce of ali Mrs.
Todd and Troy; Mr. 'and Mrs. in business and educational has been featured in many Lewis Workman. Adams was
TUcker's children, June,
Ray TUcker, Ray Allen, Jenny circles In northwestern Ohio. dramatic productions on the shot in the back of his head
Wanda Dickson, Nina Stump,
and Crlsty, and Mr. and Mrs. He is a trustee of Defiance Rio Grande Campus, will he while being searched by Work- Columbus, and Luther and Ray
Donald (Jiggy) Russell, Sheila College, a member of the Ohio the featured soloists of the man.
Tucker, and Fay, aU of Mason. and Donald.
School Boards Association, and
Rubinstein selection.
The honoree opened many
a former president of the
Sheet music for the three
Defiance City ·Board of
selections may be purchased at
Educa'tion. He also is a past
Thomas Alva Edison was
president of the Defiance Thorson Music Store in probably the world's most
· Make your own fine furniture
County Unit of the American Jackson and Brunicardi Music prolific inventor, with 1,093
SALE NOW IN PROGRESS
and SAVE with "easy turn" ' "
Cancer Society and ·a former Store in Gallipolis at an ap- patents to his name.
trustee of the Ohio Division of proximate total cost of $2.60.
the American Cancer Society.
Active iri business circles,
AT LOW COSTI
Wrigley ' s Chewing Gun , Reg. Matesty Nylon Rug Yarn. 100
ltc, she 5 stick pkgs.
2lc yd. skeins, Reg.19c
Sic
Dr. Krause is a founder,
Magnetic Photo Albums, Reg.
SPECIALS
president and director of the
$2 .57
II .,
Candy BilrS
NOW AT THE LOW£STPRICES
Homecrest
Latex
Wall
Paint,
lSc Baby Ruth 9c ; Uc Butter
National Bank of Defiance;
EVER ... htrldsome, sturdy,
Reg . 53 .99 gal.
2 gals. ss Fingers 9c; lOc Hershey
to!). q ~a ll ty unfinished hardHomecrest House Paint, Reg . Almond , 7C; sc Hershey
lonner director of the Defiance
wood furniture components,
55 .97 gal.
2 gal. S7 Almond lc; Curtis Candies, 10
smoothly sanded for perfect
Clamber of Commerce, and
9" Paint Rdller &amp; Tray , Reg . in pkg . 37c ; Babv Ruth ,
fln llhlns. Parts lit t•ether to
S1.39
87c Butterflnger, Caramel, Cirmake ROOM DIVIDERS, BOOK
fonner president of the Rotary
CASES, SHELF UNITS, CRE·
Paint Brush, 2" wide, Reg . clets .
Club. He Is an Ohio Delegate to
DENZAS,HI·FI UNITS, DESKS,
7Sc.
57c Reg. 89c Men ' s Socks, high
~:;;;ij;;:: TROPHY RACKS, ETAGERES
Plastic
Drop Cloth , Reg . 29c .
bulk acrylic, and stretch
the
·
American
Dental
. . . all trpes of indl~ldull
llc nylon
2 pr. ate
p lect~ 1 or multiple units.
Association House of Delegates
Tuck Masking Tape, Reg 59c
B~lbs for spring,
Dahliu,
31c Amaryllis, Cannas .
Etsr to assemble - Just tum par1S and lock in plar;t
and former chairman of
Kitchen
Gadge1s,
your
Living Gardenias, tun of buds,
to t n ure rlaldlty 1nd ~renlth . Furniture pieces t i n
BEnER
Councils on Budget and Dental
choice.
44c ea . ready to bloom, ins inch pots.
alwJYs be t.ken 1p1rt, reusembled or re1rranaed 1or
0 ?O . Gal.
Bath Spray, slips on mOst
new arus or dtcor~tlnaldlu.
·
$2.99
Practice of the Ohio Dental
$1.39 .
VALUES
faucets. 4ft . long . Reg . 1.29 17c
LIVE
PARAKEETS
NO TOOLS NElDEOI NO liiLUINQ NECEISAII:YI
Trash Can Liners, Reg . 11.99,
Association.
VIsit our Pet Deoartment
16 dress upacitv Garmet
SAIGON . (UP!) - The
United States ended Its direct
military role In Vietnam today
after 12 years with little
ceremony and a declaration by
Gen. Frederick Weyand,
commander of the last Gls in
Vietnam, that "peace with
honor has been achieved."
An hour after Weyand spoke,
groundfire near Da Nang
brought down a American
helicopter assigned to the justdisbanded Joint Truce Commission that arranged the
prisoner of war exchange.
Field reports said at least
two crewmen suffered minor
cuts, a_p_parently as they

YOUR FATHER'S FOOTSTEPS

On!¥ Ones In AWhile

REDUCED

As for tile timing involved, if the
board of education does not .wish to
renew a teacher's limited contract
which expires In the current year, the
board of education must so Inform the
teacher ,In writing, no later than April
30. If the school board does not notify
the teacher of the decision not to
, ~ploy by the April 30 dat, the
teacher Is automatically reemployed
lor the next_year.
There are, of course, other
nuances Involved, but these are the
basic, legal ingredients which find
their way to the headlines In many
conununities at Ibis time of year.
Applying this to the Southwestern
situation, 11 teachers who were on
limited contracts did not have those
contracts renewed when the limits of
the contract had expired. In this
sense, none of the 11 was "fired".
While we can say the Southwestern Board of Education was
l&lt;igally ·correct In the action they took
one must ask why it became
necessary? A school board which is on
its toes in developing sound personnel
policies with its teachers seldom has
such problems.
It is essential that school board
members, school administrators, and
teachers work together for the
provision of high quality education for
our youngsters. NONE can do it
alone ! ALL are needed!
P. S. Congratulations to Clarence
Thompson upon being selected as the
Superintendent of the Joint Vocational
School.

War ended .on low key

DON'T FOLLOW IN

1st Anniversary

Every Item In Our Store

Nature of teacher
contracts fixed

The harp is one of the oldest musical in s tr u men t s
known to man.

take p~rt in 4-thy event

4~ Bill &amp; Lee's

STARTS
TOMORROW,
FRIDAY, MAR. 30

,1973

· Area churches invited to

ROBIN

Trust Is a Must
When You Need
A Prescripl~f!n{

.·

:;·

,0, -

COMI'LnE ACCEIIORIIS AVAIUILE -

52 in pkg.
,
1_1.47
Tableh, Envelopes., Reg . 69c
l7c

Finials,

Connectors, Spktr1, Htlatrt AdJusters, 811e BlOcks.
kotetwct •rn:l Unnolthed Shelves with prtc!rllled holn

PLEADS FOR CITIES
WASHINGTON (UP!)
James McGee, mayor of Dayton, Ohio, asked the House Judiciary Committee Monday to
·eannark federal crime funds
for cities ''r~U!er than leaving
such matters to the uncel'taln
sympathies of the various state
admlnlltrations."

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
On The T In Middleport
\,

sHoP NOW
,_

BAKER'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Re,. 12 .91

5199

WHILE THEY LAST

FOR THESE AND MANY OTHER SPECIALS ON SALE WHILE QUANTITIU LAST

LARGE

FURNITURE

!J.a~s,

Make Pomeroy Your Shopping Center

lARGE ASSORTMENT

-,NKUDI
OF
ASSORTMENT BEN,FR
PHONE
100.; I Eost Mloin St.
SEWING NOTIONS
Of ITEMS m -l"l
POI\,IIOT, OHIO
OPEN eRIOAY&amp;SATURDAY NIGHTSTlL'

ltc
\,

I

•

'

•I

'

J

'•

:•

I

�.

-

5 Tbe
: ;

I

4- The Deily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29,1973

Bologna sticks mail~d
t 0 p res I den' t.'-·govern
_ . · or

Dayton to host East-West game

RIO LOSES OPENER
Coach Norm Perslu's Rio
Grande College Redmen
DAYTON,Ohio (UP!) -The
Heading the list are a pair of the All-American firepower of Oklahoma City, 8-2 Larry dropped their 19'13 baseball
e
East will have the names and first team members, tHi Doug Ute East, with Long Beach Finch of Memph.is State, 6-4 lldlilter 11-0 Ill vlsltlug West
Slate's
Ed
Ratleff,
a
first
team
Richie
Fuqua
of
Oral
Roberts,
Vlrgluia
Slate
University
at
_
the West the size in the lith Collins of Illinois State and 6-1
annual Coaches' East-West Dwight Lamar of Southwestern selection, the West's only 6-2LewisNelsonofWashlngtOn Evans Field Wednesday
selection.
and 6-7 Harry Rogers of St. afternoon. The nightcap was
By UDlted Press lnlernatlonal Boback announced that, as a for Big Bear Supennarkets In
All.Star Game Saturday (I Louisians.
The West, however, has a Louis University.
·called by darkness after
San Francisco demon- concession to consumer Ohio, Dyal Baehr, said a
p.m.) at the University of
The East, which won last eight Innings with the score strators protesting the high groups, the stores will not buy boycott might cause a tempoDayton Arena .
Three more of the East definite height advantage with
The East, with all its big squad were second team selec- the likes of 6-11 Kresimir Cosic year's game 96-91 in overtime, lied, H. Tho/}(edmen were price of meat malled 20-pound food from suppliers one day rary drop In prices, but said they would quickly rise again.
name players, even has one of tions, Ernie DiGregorio of of Birgham Young, Mike Stew- holds a 7-3 edge in the 10 pre- scheduled ;61 play Morrill sticks of bologna to President next week.
In the Midwest, hog markets
Harvey CoDege ID a twinbill Nixon- and California Gov.
the most famous coaches of all Providence, Kevin Joyce of art of Santa Clara and Steve vious games of the series.
Mitchell
of
Kansas
State,
both
at
Evans
Field,
beginning
at
Ro
aid
Re
Th
'd
t
reported
a second straigllt day
time guiding it in Kentucky's South Carolina ani! Jim
AHL Standings
da
n
agan. e pres! en
Adolph Rupp, who was forced Brewer of Minnesota, and two 6-10, and 6-9 James Uster of By United Press International :::!:,f;,;,,:,;,,!~:::::l:~~::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::&lt; of the Cowbelles Auxiliary of of unprecedented price
East
the American National Cat- declines as farmers unloaded
into retirement from coaching others, Allan Hornyak of Ohio Sam Houston State.
1
1
The game also will see lour
w. · · pis gf ga
!Iemen's Association said their hogs. Beef cattle prices
after last season.
State and Bill Schaeffer of St.
N.S. o\1 17 15 97 300 185
Americansaregoingtohaveto alsO dipped, but thel drop wus
At his command, Rupp will John's (N.Y.), were selected to members of the 1972 Olympic Bostn 3i 28 13 7~ 242 247
get used to higher food prices. described as only "moderate."
basketball team taking part Prov 31 30 14 7o 247 247
have seven of the 15 players the third team.
Rchslr 32 30 12 76 234 266
f
Ba
to
Several newspapers across
Mik
e n m o Sprgfld 18 39 16 52 259 330
The consumers' revolt
who made up the first three
The West, coached by former and all four,
teams of the 1973 United Press coach and now athletic director St.Jooeph,Brewer,Collinsand N.H. 16 39 2() 52 244 325
against the soaring price of the country provided recipes
West
food gained momentum for "meatless meals." The
International Ali-American at Brigham Young, Stan Watts Joyce, play for the East.
1
·
I.
·
'"e
tallest
w.
pis
gf
ga
Wednesday as more a nd more New York Times, on today's
squad.
can't come close to matching Ba ntom, at 6-9-• IS "'
Cinci 52 17 5 109 333 202
player, while Brewer and Ker- Hrshy 41 22 11 93 313 , 217
organizations endorsed an food pages, provided recipes it
4
2
mit Washington of American Va.
36 2) 16 88 2 9 2l
"April Fool's Week" boycott of said in a headline were
Rchmd 29 34 10 68 256 262
University each go 6-8.
Jcksnvl 23 44 9 55 252 330
meat, April_ 1-7. Farmers "meatless hot not joyless."
. Mike Boylan of Assumption Ball
16 46 11 43 201 307
threatened to retaliate by They featured eggplant,
Wednesday's Results
hoi
ttl
d ho off •• spaghetti and cheeses.
Coilege and Barry p arkhill of - Hers~ey
2 Baltimore 1
WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
ding ca e an
gs
"'e
the University of Virginia Rochester 4 New Haven 2
Michigan psychiatrist has told ~et from April_! to 15 to Horsemeat Market Reopens
In Portland, Ore., a market
round out the 11-man East Ri~~~~~~!:~~~~~~~~!~l 1
Senate investigators there Is a driVe priCes even higher.
selling horsemeat for human
team.
Thursday's Games
national "epidemic" In the use
consumption reopened Wedsecond
in
team
rebounding
The
rest
of
Watts'
squad
conProvidence
at
Cinclnnall
A
crowd
of
200
at
a
"no
more
RIO GRANDE- Rio Grande
-of a drug•• !hath is in m~~ baloney" rally outside the San nesday after a one-day closure,
Basketball Captain Ron with 236 and shot 74.8 pet. from sists of Missouri's 6-7 John Springfield at Nova Scotia
zie
Edwards
of
(Onlygamesscheduled)
dangerous ...an ero
.
f d - b 'ld'
6-4
O
the
free
throw
line.
Lambert,
Brown'
Lambert was honorably
:....::______ .
- which some users believe Is an Francisco e era 1 Ul mg with a line of customers a block
,..,,•.,.,,.,.,.,.,.,.,y:,.,..............,._h.,.,........-n.,......:r.......... ~• ......,.~-'».-;-,~-...9.•N,h'Jlf
sianed
the outside of the long.
mentioned on the NAIA All- also a first team choice in the .,,,,.••.,.,.;.,.,_,_,
_,_,,,,,«o:u.·u.•,,v.w.•.:.·.•&lt;&lt;·:-=-h~:-.·:·=···''"""'"'""""""'''•'-';o)_ , aphrodisiac
•
Owner Ed Carroll said trays
American team for 1972-73. NAJA district 22 and Mid-Ohio ·~:::j
x~·~· The culp~it, Dr. Richard bologna before senaing them to
Lambert, a 6'4" junior from Conference, was consistent all
f th u · 'I 0f Nixon and Reagan. "Chops and of ground horsemeat--80 to 90
0
season,
hitting
on
51
pet.
of
his
••·
0
S
·
Kunnes
e mverSl y
robbers," "Steer clear of pounds each-werll being
Alexandria~ Virginia, received
::
~.::. Michigan-Washtenaw County
beef," and "I'm sick of peanut emptied at Ute rate of one
honorable mention as he led field goal attempts, the highest
~~
Community
Mental
Health
on
the
team
.
the Redmen to a 13-13 season.
~nort
Center, said Wednesday is the_ butter" were some of the signs every 25 to 30 minutes.
A lulob toe.
A three year letterman for .i:l.
Lambert was the leading
a
. drug methaqualone, which also carried by marching Meat shoplifting, grocers in Notched sole. And a
scorer for Rio Grande with 568 Rio Coach Art Lanham, $i
~- : goes under the trade names protesters in what was billed as Charlotte, N.C., reported Wedtwo-tone man·made
By MILTON RICHMAN
P.i
a 1 'warmup" for next week's nesday, has been going up as
points and an average of 21.8 Lambert had his best games on ~~
upper that wipes to a
UPI Sports Editor
~l : Quaaludes, Sopors, Parest and national beef boycott.
fast or faster than meat prices.
shine. All yours,
points per game. He was the road in Mid-Ohio Con•·•·
8l, Somnafac ,_
"We used to find empty
for your daughter, at
ference play against Malone
Other witnesses called
our super nice price.
packages
of
cigarettes
on
the
and Cedarville getting 43
NEW YORK (UPI)- Billy Martin Arrested.
before a Senate subcommittee Production Cost Higher
against Malone and a week
That's all the headline said.
In Denver, Mrs. Cyril Wood- shelves," said a manager for a
ROSADO DISMISSED
said the drug Is a big, new
later
31
at
Cedarville
in
leading
The
story
underneath
it
went
on
to
say
the
Detroit
manager
UTICA, N.Y. (UP!)
favorite among pill takers and ward, president of the Cow- group of grocery stores. "Now
Joseph
Rosado,
head Rio Grande to their first Mid- and one of the Tigers' minor leaguers, Ike Blessitt, were arrested argued about whether it belles Auxiliary of the we see empty packages of
Sholl for Girl~
basketball coach at Utica Ohio Conference Cham- the other night outside a Lakeland, Fla., "bistro" after a "loud deserves its street nicknames American National Cat- luncheon meal.
College since 1969, was pionship in two years of argument." The police said both were charged with profanity.
"I guess if you don't have
of "the love drug" and "the Uemen's Association, said, "I
dismissed Wednesday because competition in the MOC.
any
money the only way to get
Most people who read the story had the same reaction.
don't really feel the cost of
heroin for lovers."
of "basic disagreements about
Ob, oh, Billy Martin was in a fight again.
Kunnes said misinformation meat is too high because the meat for your famlly is to steal
athletics." Eric "Tom" HugT)le fact is be wasn't.
about the drug has made it cost of production is so much it," he said.
gins, the athletic director, will
City officials suspect high
Actually, according to witnesses, he prevented one from more dangerous than heroin. higher. We're going t~ have to
serve as basketball coach next NEW COACH
Where Shoes are
DeKALB,
Ill.
(UPI)
Dr.
meat
prices may have been the
breaking
out.
Billy
Martin
was
the
peacemaker,
and
he
wound
up
educate
ourselves
that
we'll
season.
He said the public has been
Emory F. Luck, 45, a former getting it in the end-the same place he usually doef..Isn't that
Sensibly Priced
motive behind the disappearhave to pay more for food."
member of the Harlem Globe- generally the way? Particularly in the perpetually hectic life of fooled into believing it is a safe,
Middleport, 0.
The Maine House of Re- ance of several ducks from a
non-addictive sedativetrotters, was named the Billy Martin.
TAVERAS TO MINO~
presentatives adopted a city pond.
hypnotic.
BRADENTON, Fla. (UP!)- basketball coach Wednesday at
Director of meat operations
resolution
supporting the firstThe Truth of the Malter
Here's what really happened that other night in Lakeland.
Shortstop Frank Taveras, the Northern Illinois University.
"The !ruth of the matter is week-in-April meat boycott. In
It was late, after midnight In fact, but Billy Martin was hungry.
22-year-old native of the He is the first black head coach
the Massachusetts House,
Dominican Republic who is in the history of the school.
So he corralled his pitching coach, Art Fowler, and the two that methaqualone is addicting
considered the Pittsburgh
went into Ibis combination restaurant and cocktail lounge simply and that unlike heroin, acute Democrats rejected a similar
Pirates' shortstop of the future,
because it was one of the only places they could get somethi!lg to withdrawal from resolution proposed by
To
protect
the
purity
of
the
was sent down to the minors
methaqualone can produce Republicans by a ~I margin,
of its famous cows, eat at that hour.
Wednesday. The Pirates want breed
the Channel Island of Jersey
Martin and Fowler finished eating, and on the way out, the convulsions which have the then adopted one of their own
him to play every day to gain allow~ no other cattle on the
producing by a 6-1 margin.
Tigers' manager noticed Blessitt, a 23-year-old outfielder out of potential of
experience.
Ralph Nader endorsed next
island.
fatalities," Kunnes said.
Detroit, having a discussion with another patron.
,..,..,..______________:»«_~ Biessitt played with Toledo last year and appeared in, fou~ _late , TIJe psychiatrist said that week's meat boycott, saying
season ga(lles with the Tigers. He's considered a good prospect "we are in the midst of a ·that ·consumers .organizing to ..
drive down prices is a "very
but, mostly due to his inexperience, he was sent back down to methaqualone epidemic ...
"An informal survey of healthy count.s,tvailing
Toledo by Martin earlier in the week.
University of Michigan development."
"The way he and this other guy were startlllg to go atit," says
Wheeler G. Foshee Jr., a Red
students showed that close to 90
Martin, "it looked as if they were gonna fight.! didn't want that
per cent of the student Level, Ala., cattle and hog
to happen, so I went over to· the kid and took him outside. We
population had at least once farmer, said other local farmwere standing there in the parking lot an4 I said to him, 'You
ingested methaqualone ers agreed "We'd call on
don't wanna get into a fight. You don't need that."'
American cattlemen and hog
Ike Blessitt was still overwrought over having been sent back illegally," Kunnes said.
The Senate juvenile delin- farmers to withhold sales of
down to the minors again.
quency subcommittee planned cows and bogs during the
He listened to what BiUy Martin had to say and suddenly the
to take more testimony today. period of April 1-15."
tears started down his cheeks.
Foshee said the farmers
Subpoenaed to testify were the
He was standing there sobbing In the parking lot, Martin trying
believe they are being "unduly
to comfort him when a police car rolled up and one of the cops got makers of Quaaludes and criticized for meat prices at the
Sopors. Chairman Birch Bayh,
out.
D-lnd., ordered the subpoenas counter when we are not
You' con trust
"He came over to where we were and he said to Ike, 'Okay,
when J.W. Eckman, president receiving what we ought to."
black boy, you're arrested,"' says Martin. "I said, 'He didn't do
your registered
of William H. Rorer, Inc. NFO to Hold Meetlugs
anything wrong,' and Ute cop said 'You're arrested, too."'
Oren
Lee
Staley,
president
of
pharmacist al(Quaaludes) and Robert C.
Martin's reaction was immediate.
the
National
Farmers
Parcell, president of Arnarways to follow
"For what?" he demaoded.
Slone Laboratories, Inc. (So- Organization (NFO) anyour doctor's presc1iption with care and
pars) refused invitations to nounced that the NFO will hold
"For Profanity" He Says
a series of meetings this
accuracy. Your confidence is our proud
testify.
"For profanity,'' said the policeman, according to Martin.
weekend
to
plan
action.
Bayh introduced the sex
boast.
"He never even gave us a chance to explain what we were
"The
sharp
decline
in
liveangle into the bearings Wedtalking about," says the Tigers' manager.
stock prices caused by the
Martin posted bond for Blessltt and himself. The whole thing nesday while questioning, Les
Daroff, a long-llaired, 23-year- chain store boycott is going to
came to $64, or $32 apiece.
The following day Blessitt made it a point to come over to old with tinted glasses, who mean positive NFO action next
Prescriptions Are Our Main Business
Martin and apologize for the trouble be caused. Bllly told him to broke the metbqualone habit week," Staley warned.
Boback, which operates 157
on
his
own.
forget it.
stores in New Yorl&gt;; City, was
"He's a good kid," Billy Martin says about Ike Blessitt. "He's Considered an Aphrodisiac
MIDDLEPORT, 0.
Daroff, now working at the the latest group of stores to join
got ability and I can understand the way he felt about being sent
down again. I remember when the Twins released me as a Jefferson Medical College in the boycott. A spokesman for
player. You know what I did. I cried, and I had a lot more years Phllsdelphia, said ''sexually
in than Ike Blessltt. Look, I know the feeling the kid had. I under- speaking, many consider it an
aphrodisiac.
stand completely.
"As for myself, I have not
'"Billy Martin arrested, eh?'" mused the Detroit manager
about that headline. "I guess everybody figures ub oh, there goes noticed and it reduces inhiblUons," be added.
Martin in another fight."

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fNJURES THUMB
POMPANO BEACH, Fla.
(UP!) - Catcher Rich Billings
injured his left thumb Wednesday morning while sharpening
his spikes. It took six stitches to
close the wound which was
located at the top of the thumb.
ON SECOND TEAM
NEW YORK (UP!) - Mike
Stumpf of Capital was named
to the United Press International Small College All- America second team.
Stumpf averaged 16.7 points
per game last season. He
received ten votes for the AllAmerica team.
OU HAS Z5 VETS
ATHENS, Ohio (UP!)
Twenty-five lettermen, including 12 starters, will greet
Ohio University football coach
Bill Hess when spring drills
begin Monday,
The Bobcats will play Penn
State, Northwestern, South
Carolina and Cincinnati this
year in one of the school's
toughest schedules ever.
The Bobcats finished 3-8 last
season.

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scralflbled out of their burning
aircraft.
Weyand spoke at a 21kninute
departure ceremony before he
joined 2,501 other uniformed
Americans leaving today
aboard 19 aircraft the Gls
called ''freedom birds."
They were the last of 2'n
million Americans who served
in Vietnam. Of these, 45,943
died In battle-two of them
after the cease-fll'e went Into
effect two months ago.
The Lasl Americans Leave
The last Americans left from
Saigon and from Da Nang, 370
miles to the north. As they
waited to board planes, Gls

Dr. Woods- Set Sunday

DUTTON'S

MARCH EARLY BlRD SPE""...~ . . . . . .

by taws of Ohio

Jaycees join Apple Butter project

AM/FSo

To give you a special savings
during our anniversary

gossiped, joked, played cards
.or_dozed in the sunshine. Some
of them said goodbye to
Vietnamese girlfriends.
While the airlift moved the
Americans out, other U.S. Air
Force planes were landing in
Hanoi to take away_the last 67
American POWs held in North
Vietnam.
The withdrawal today left 209
By Prof. Ed (!Joe) Wallen
tract." A limited contract is issued for
American servicemen in Viet- ·
RIO GRANDE -As we pointed out a specific amount of time (a limit).
nam-159 of them assigned to
last week, the ezcitement In education This time period is us'ually for one or
the Marine guard unit at the
at thls'time of Year centers around the two years, but can be for up to five
U.S. Embassy and 50 assigned
action~ of boardi of edacatlon. This
years. ·
- •
to the embassy's Defense
wa&amp; elllpbaslzed again this week by
Such a contract is usually given to
Attache's office-plus another
the actiCHIS of the Southwestern Board a new teacher in a school system for a
823 men assigned to the Joint
of Education is not. renewing the one year period. If the teacher proves
Military Commission. They
contracts of 11 teachers.
satisfactory, a two or three-year
will leave Saturday.
'Jiraddltlon to that situation, we now
contract usually follows .
Another estimated 75,000
have a teachers' strike In Meigs
At the end of the contract limits, ·
Americans
remain . in
County. Teachers there are striking
the teacher may or may not have the
Thailand,
the
South
.China Sea
for bargnlnlng rights with the board of
contract renewed by the board of
and Guam, manning ships and
educatiorl as well as for salary and
education. The decision is entirely up
.planes
at combat readiness
fringe benefit lncreases.to the board, and no explanation for
there.
Wby does It happen? The reasons
the renewal or nonrenewal is legally
Weyand, the fourth four-star
sucb things ever happen are entwined
required.
general
to run the Vietnam war
with the complexities of human
The second major type of teacher
since the Veitnam military
behavior and the social forces which
contract is the "continuing contract."
conunand's activation Feb. 8,
Influence any social movement.
Such a contract continues in effect
GRASS VALLEY, Calif. statehood.
1962, addressed a crowd of
A much simpler question to
until the ·teacher dies, resigns,
"Some say it will and some fewer than 200 servicemen and
(UPI) - John Rose, 51, says it
handle is, Why do such Incidents
voluntarily retires, is retired by board
is too early to tell if his claim say it won't," Rose said. "It's women and U.S. government
happen NOW? Why March and April?
action, is suspended or terminated for
of discovering one of the too early to tell."
employes.
. This is a matter of legislation per- cause.
He explained that the Sierra
largest gold nuggets in the
Weyand said the U.S .
,,.: talnlng to teacher contracts in the
This concept is often referred to
northern Mother Lode this region where the find was mission was to prevent an allState of Ohio.
as ''tenure." The board of education
century will fan another wave made is now under a blanket of' out attempt by an aggressor
First of all, there are two major
in effeci agreesla·continue to offer the
snow and probably will be until "to impose its will through raw
of ugold fever."
"ALL YOU ADD IS LOVE"®
types of contracts for teachers. One
teacher a contract until one of the
It was that 'rever that sparked next swnmer.
military
force."
contract is called a "limited con- above terminates the contract.
Come in and 188 our
the 1849 Gold Rush, giving Rose, a telephone company
"That mission has been
many &amp;lyles in popular
:;:::::::::~:::::: : : : ; :.;: :;:;:;:;::;:;:;:;::;:;:;:;::..:;:;:::::;::::::::: : ;_:::::;~:::::~:::::::;;;:;:::;;;:::::~~~::::::::::~:::::.J~::::::::;:::::::&gt;.:::::::::::::~~;.:;,:;::::;:;:;:;::::ko::::::&gt;,:;::;::::;:;:;:;:;::m:::::::~::::;:~~~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~&lt;:::;:~ California so me of its most worker, said he found the accomplished," Weyland said.
price ranges.
colorful history and leading to nugget on a hillside 5,000 feet "You can hold your heads high
up in the rugged mountains at having been part of this
above the community of Sierra selfless effort."
City, northwest of Lake Tahoe.
The Only Ad-Lib Words ·
He told UP! Wednesday that
Then, interjecting the only
he
was
hunting
in
the
area
with
ad-lib words of his prepared
Court St., Pomeroy
A one-hour TV special called telecast concludes with the
a friend a year ago when he text, Weyland said, "and the
" Pass It On" recently taping of a live service in Los
saw what he thought was cow · peace with honor that has been
produced by Revival Fires of Angeles' Channel 11 studios
...'
achieved.''
Joplin, Missouri, is scheduled that features the Good Twins manure.
"I was going to kick it clear
for release nationwide at prime singing "Pass It On" and the
out
of the county but then I ~-----------------·-··~--·---·---·--·--------~--.,
The Southern Area of Ohio visitation. The pastor may be the purpose of serving the local · television time on at least 200 Gospel Lads, "Redemption looked closer and I knew it
stations April t-8.
Lay Institute for Evangelism is quite effective in maintaining a church by sharing:
Draweth Nigh." Also included wasn't manure," he recalled.
1How
to
live
the
victorious
on
the special will be Revival
The
program
features
such
beipg held April4-7 at Ironton's systematic pastoral visitation
Instead, Rose said, it was a
First Baptist Church. The program of his own. He may be Christian life in the power of well-known personalities .as Fires' regulars Russ Marlin six-inch long -chunk of gold
singer Anita Bryant, Governor •and Bob Daniels. Cecil Todd
program Is under the direction able to visit every member of the Holy Spirit.
2- How to communicate the Ronald Reagan, astronaut presents a message on the weighing "28 ounces, 12 pennyof Campus Crusade for Christ his church annually. His
weight and two grains," worth
and it places a strong emphasis hospital and shut-in ministry claims of Christ simply and James Irwin, athlete Mike program theme that relates the
Sensibaugh, and author of the story of Philip sharing his faith $2,800. Its value as a specimen
on the importance of the may be above reproach. But to effectively.
5
3 - How to implement vital "Living Bible" Dr. Kenneth with the Eunuch, as recorded could run as high as $! ,000 he
church. All area churches are institute and keep alive a
in Acts 8:29-39. As the story is speculated.
invited to participate.
dynamic visitation program to· strategies which can be used as Taylor.
Each of the special guests is told, it is beautifully
Rose, who said he has hunted
A program ·spokesman said win the lost and evangelize his a continuing ministry for
in the area for 35 years and
-growth
and interviewed on location by dramatized on the screen,
today, "There is no phase of community through lay par- spiritual
evangelistic
outreach
in, Cecil Todd, Director of the including the moving scene of probably walked over the same
the pastoral ministry that Is ticipation is seemingly beyond
"many times ," guessheds
more discouraging to the his ability. Most pastors would through and for the local Revival Fires ministries. The the . Eunich's baptism into shpot
previOus s1orms a
t
at
th 1 -1
guests te II how they are Chnst.
average pastor and seemingly confess to the reality of this church.
e . ops~:
Trainees are given op- passing -~~ tb~~ faith ,in \!Jeir _, The pro~ran; .'~ dedicated to , washed •,way
more djf(icult to ~c;col!'plish pronOWicement."
1td , ,,lea¥\Dij ,\P@,!IR\ll:.!W1itlrY,~~.9~ ...
respectfve
vocations
The
help
calf!his
'
cHnt\lienV'
1
portunities·
to
apply
their
than a Jliqram of evan'gelistlc - · Tlle Lay Ministry exists for
.
... '
chri~t and offers
Tay!'or"s'' •1 • Rose •said no· one had. of:~~d
training in practical siluations
"Liv-ing New Tiistamenl" to buy the gold, although I ve
th~oughevangelisticvisitation.
(renamed "From God With had a lot of offers for people .~o
Love") to all who request it. dme me back up to the spot.
PT. PLEASANT - The Pt. butler sale are turned over to
This edition has specially
They were all turned do~n,
Pleasant Area Jaycees have the state Jaycee organization
marked scriptures and an he added. The spot IS bel~g
announced their participation for use in mental health and
outlined plan for use by per- kept a secret by Rose, who sa1d
, in the statewide Jaycee project retardation projects. A portion
has never searched for gold
RIO GRANDE- The second son aI workers called "Seven he
. h' l'f
of "Apple Butter Day" when on of the proceeds are earmarked
10
meeting and rehearsal of the Steps to the Foot of the Cross"
IS 1 e.
Thursday and Friday, April 12 for use in building a state camp
Community Choir at Rio that will encourage Christians
"But from now on I'll be
Your father may
and 13, Jaycees wiU go door to for children .
Grande College will be this to pass on their•faith. ·
looking," he vowed .
be a nice guy. but
Lonnie Roach, chairman of
door in tl),e Pt. Pleasant area
Sunday, April!, from 2-4 p.m. The special is also available WEEK PROCLAIMED
you
wouldn't want to be
offering specially prepared the project, asks that everyone
in the Music Hail on campus. on 16 mm. film for showing in
caught
in his shoes. You should
COLUMBUS (UP!) - This
apple butter In exchange for a mark thr dates on their
The choir is being formed - churches and special meetings. week has been proclaimed
be seen in someth ing a lot mo re up to
calendar and be prepared
$1 donation.
CHILLICOTHE
Dr. under the direction of Merlyn All request.&lt;; should be directed
date.
Like Thorn MeAn Saddle Jacks for boys.
All proceeds from the apple when the Jaycees call.
Charles D. Krouse of Defiance, Ross, Associate Director of to Will Lane, Director of the "Highway Safety Week" by
They're
fashion shoes of lhe SO's but updated lor lhe
President of the Ohio Dental Music. Everyone is invited to Television Department of Gov. John J . Gilligan who not70's with thick rugged cork or cushion crepe soles and higher
'T'
Association, will speak at a participate, even if they were Revival Fires. Locally the edmore than 2,000 persons are
heels. And they're made of so me new grainy leathers in
1.
meeting of the Rehwinkel unable to make the first program will appear on killed each year in traffic acciseveral old and new color combinati ons.
dents.
Dental Society to be held
Best or all, Saddle Jacks for boys are made by Thorn MeAn.
meeting last week.
Channel 13, April 5 at 8 p.m.
The governor urged Ohioans
Wednesday, Aprll 4, at 11 a.m.
So you won't need your father to help you foot the bill.
The concert will be presented
to practice safety as motorists,
at the Holiday Inn here.
Only 513.99
Sunday evening May 6 with NO LAWS VIOLATED
passengers and pedestrians.
Dr . Carl S. Woods of
Saddle Jacks for Boys by~"'-~
selections to include "Mpssj_n
COLUMBUS (UPI)
Gallipolis, president of the
lovely
gUts
and
the
family
G" by Schubert; "Seraphic Columbus Police Olief Earl ACTION FAIL'!
MASON - Mrs. Howard
Rehwinkel Dental Society, will
visited
following
the
dinner.
Song" by Rubinstein and Burden has ruled no depart(June) VanMatre and Mrs.
STAPLETON, N.Y. (UPI)preside. Dentists practicing in
Attending
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gaines, and ."Soilg of Man" by mental rules or criminal laws James Guinta, 25, apparently
Donald (Fay) Russell enPickaway, Fayette, Highland,
tertained at a surprise ,birth- VanMatre and Mr. and Mrs. Ross, Vinton, Jackson, Athens, Kountz.
were vlolated last week when tried to commit suicide TuesSoprano, tenor and bass an off-duty officer shot and day by shooting a spike into his
day dlmer Sunday In honor of George VanMatre, Kevin and. Meigs, and Gallla counties are
the 81Bt birthday of their Malinda; Mr. and Mrs. Ross members of the Rehwinkel soloists will be auditioned from killed a teenager he had heart with a gun used for
Your Thorn MeAn Store
the group for the Schubert stopped for a traffic violation. driving nails into concrete.
mother, Mrs. Blanche Tucker, Roush, Mr. and Mrs. George Society.
225
N.
2nd
Ave
.
Middleport
"Mass." Misss Barbara
at the Russell home In Mason. Hoffman, Lisa and Tammy;
Burden
said
the
death
of
Police
said
he
was
taken
by
Dr. Krouse, who has been in
Mr. and Mrs. John Dickson,
Thomas, violinist of the Paul Adams, 19, Colwnbus was ambulance to a hospital where
general
practice at Defiance
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Wellston area, and Miss accidental anJ no action woufd he underwent surgery.
The surprise was complete
Luther Tucker, Terry, Timmy, since 1953, is also widely known Shirley Richardson, alto, who be taken against Patrolman
with the prfS\lnce of ali Mrs.
Todd and Troy; Mr. 'and Mrs. in business and educational has been featured in many Lewis Workman. Adams was
TUcker's children, June,
Ray TUcker, Ray Allen, Jenny circles In northwestern Ohio. dramatic productions on the shot in the back of his head
Wanda Dickson, Nina Stump,
and Crlsty, and Mr. and Mrs. He is a trustee of Defiance Rio Grande Campus, will he while being searched by Work- Columbus, and Luther and Ray
Donald (Jiggy) Russell, Sheila College, a member of the Ohio the featured soloists of the man.
Tucker, and Fay, aU of Mason. and Donald.
School Boards Association, and
Rubinstein selection.
The honoree opened many
a former president of the
Sheet music for the three
Defiance City ·Board of
selections may be purchased at
Educa'tion. He also is a past
Thomas Alva Edison was
president of the Defiance Thorson Music Store in probably the world's most
· Make your own fine furniture
County Unit of the American Jackson and Brunicardi Music prolific inventor, with 1,093
SALE NOW IN PROGRESS
and SAVE with "easy turn" ' "
Cancer Society and ·a former Store in Gallipolis at an ap- patents to his name.
trustee of the Ohio Division of proximate total cost of $2.60.
the American Cancer Society.
Active iri business circles,
AT LOW COSTI
Wrigley ' s Chewing Gun , Reg. Matesty Nylon Rug Yarn. 100
ltc, she 5 stick pkgs.
2lc yd. skeins, Reg.19c
Sic
Dr. Krause is a founder,
Magnetic Photo Albums, Reg.
SPECIALS
president and director of the
$2 .57
II .,
Candy BilrS
NOW AT THE LOW£STPRICES
Homecrest
Latex
Wall
Paint,
lSc Baby Ruth 9c ; Uc Butter
National Bank of Defiance;
EVER ... htrldsome, sturdy,
Reg . 53 .99 gal.
2 gals. ss Fingers 9c; lOc Hershey
to!). q ~a ll ty unfinished hardHomecrest House Paint, Reg . Almond , 7C; sc Hershey
lonner director of the Defiance
wood furniture components,
55 .97 gal.
2 gal. S7 Almond lc; Curtis Candies, 10
smoothly sanded for perfect
Clamber of Commerce, and
9" Paint Rdller &amp; Tray , Reg . in pkg . 37c ; Babv Ruth ,
fln llhlns. Parts lit t•ether to
S1.39
87c Butterflnger, Caramel, Cirmake ROOM DIVIDERS, BOOK
fonner president of the Rotary
CASES, SHELF UNITS, CRE·
Paint Brush, 2" wide, Reg . clets .
Club. He Is an Ohio Delegate to
DENZAS,HI·FI UNITS, DESKS,
7Sc.
57c Reg. 89c Men ' s Socks, high
~:;;;ij;;:: TROPHY RACKS, ETAGERES
Plastic
Drop Cloth , Reg . 29c .
bulk acrylic, and stretch
the
·
American
Dental
. . . all trpes of indl~ldull
llc nylon
2 pr. ate
p lect~ 1 or multiple units.
Association House of Delegates
Tuck Masking Tape, Reg 59c
B~lbs for spring,
Dahliu,
31c Amaryllis, Cannas .
Etsr to assemble - Just tum par1S and lock in plar;t
and former chairman of
Kitchen
Gadge1s,
your
Living Gardenias, tun of buds,
to t n ure rlaldlty 1nd ~renlth . Furniture pieces t i n
BEnER
Councils on Budget and Dental
choice.
44c ea . ready to bloom, ins inch pots.
alwJYs be t.ken 1p1rt, reusembled or re1rranaed 1or
0 ?O . Gal.
Bath Spray, slips on mOst
new arus or dtcor~tlnaldlu.
·
$2.99
Practice of the Ohio Dental
$1.39 .
VALUES
faucets. 4ft . long . Reg . 1.29 17c
LIVE
PARAKEETS
NO TOOLS NElDEOI NO liiLUINQ NECEISAII:YI
Trash Can Liners, Reg . 11.99,
Association.
VIsit our Pet Deoartment
16 dress upacitv Garmet
SAIGON . (UP!) - The
United States ended Its direct
military role In Vietnam today
after 12 years with little
ceremony and a declaration by
Gen. Frederick Weyand,
commander of the last Gls in
Vietnam, that "peace with
honor has been achieved."
An hour after Weyand spoke,
groundfire near Da Nang
brought down a American
helicopter assigned to the justdisbanded Joint Truce Commission that arranged the
prisoner of war exchange.
Field reports said at least
two crewmen suffered minor
cuts, a_p_parently as they

YOUR FATHER'S FOOTSTEPS

On!¥ Ones In AWhile

REDUCED

As for tile timing involved, if the
board of education does not .wish to
renew a teacher's limited contract
which expires In the current year, the
board of education must so Inform the
teacher ,In writing, no later than April
30. If the school board does not notify
the teacher of the decision not to
, ~ploy by the April 30 dat, the
teacher Is automatically reemployed
lor the next_year.
There are, of course, other
nuances Involved, but these are the
basic, legal ingredients which find
their way to the headlines In many
conununities at Ibis time of year.
Applying this to the Southwestern
situation, 11 teachers who were on
limited contracts did not have those
contracts renewed when the limits of
the contract had expired. In this
sense, none of the 11 was "fired".
While we can say the Southwestern Board of Education was
l&lt;igally ·correct In the action they took
one must ask why it became
necessary? A school board which is on
its toes in developing sound personnel
policies with its teachers seldom has
such problems.
It is essential that school board
members, school administrators, and
teachers work together for the
provision of high quality education for
our youngsters. NONE can do it
alone ! ALL are needed!
P. S. Congratulations to Clarence
Thompson upon being selected as the
Superintendent of the Joint Vocational
School.

War ended .on low key

DON'T FOLLOW IN

1st Anniversary

Every Item In Our Store

Nature of teacher
contracts fixed

The harp is one of the oldest musical in s tr u men t s
known to man.

take p~rt in 4-thy event

4~ Bill &amp; Lee's

STARTS
TOMORROW,
FRIDAY, MAR. 30

,1973

· Area churches invited to

ROBIN

Trust Is a Must
When You Need
A Prescripl~f!n{

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COMI'LnE ACCEIIORIIS AVAIUILE -

52 in pkg.
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Tableh, Envelopes., Reg . 69c
l7c

Finials,

Connectors, Spktr1, Htlatrt AdJusters, 811e BlOcks.
kotetwct •rn:l Unnolthed Shelves with prtc!rllled holn

PLEADS FOR CITIES
WASHINGTON (UP!)
James McGee, mayor of Dayton, Ohio, asked the House Judiciary Committee Monday to
·eannark federal crime funds
for cities ''r~U!er than leaving
such matters to the uncel'taln
sympathies of the various state
admlnlltrations."

THE KIDDIE SHOPPE
On The T In Middleport
\,

sHoP NOW
,_

BAKER'

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

Re,. 12 .91

5199

WHILE THEY LAST

FOR THESE AND MANY OTHER SPECIALS ON SALE WHILE QUANTITIU LAST

LARGE

FURNITURE

!J.a~s,

Make Pomeroy Your Shopping Center

lARGE ASSORTMENT

-,NKUDI
OF
ASSORTMENT BEN,FR
PHONE
100.; I Eost Mloin St.
SEWING NOTIONS
Of ITEMS m -l"l
POI\,IIOT, OHIO
OPEN eRIOAY&amp;SATURDAY NIGHTSTlL'

ltc
\,

I

•

'

•I

'

J

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I

�I s~2I;r~;·-: Auxiliary makes

6-'l'lle Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 21!. 1973

Girl ·Scout

·Diary

i Calendar~ contributions
THURSDAY
WOMEN'S FELLOWSHIP,
Meigs County Churches of
Christ, 7:30 Thursday at the
Hemlock Church. Mr. Melvin
Newland, Cincinnati, to speak.

.

Chairs will be repaired

If it weren't for pollu·
tion, what would the air
filter people do?

the guaranteed
deodorants!

Tur#, r#'Y

Tussy Crea m, Stick,
Roll-On Deodo rants
and Anti-Perspirants. Satis factio n
for less money . . or your money bac k.

-..
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ONLY

2 oz. Cream 59~
take home a
6-pack $3 .54

2-1 /8 OZ STIC K 59(:
1·3/ 4 OZ. ROLL-ON 59(:
7 OZ . SPRAY DEODORAN T 79(:
13 OZ. DRY ANTI-PERSPIRANT
SPRAY $1.59

Prescription S.ervice-4 Regi51ered Pharmaci5ls to Serve
You I (lpt.n Da1ly 8:00a.m. fo 9 p.m.-Sunday 10:10 a.m. to
.12::10 p.m. &amp; 5 to 9 p.m.
1
•

)

Girl delegate named
Roma Lynn Nease, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. David Nease,
has been selected as the
Southern High School delegate
to Buckeye Girls' State by the
Ladies Auxiliary of Racine
Post 602.
Alternate named by the
Auxiliary is Della Cross,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Earl
Cross.
Mrs. Mary Roush presided at
a meeting of the Auxiliary
Tuesday night at the hall. Mrs.
Margaret Yost, Americanism
chairman, presented a flag to
the Portland school, she
reporled. It was noted that a
new Ohio Government Digest
has been placed in the school
library.
Mrs. Roush reported on the

. Breakfast for
nineteen served Nineteen young people of
Southern High School attended
a prayer breakfast at the
, Raci~e Wesleyan United
Methodist Church Wednesday
morning. Devotions were given
by
the
Rev.
Fra~k
Cheese brew. The Rev. Edward
Fisher
presented
the
meditation using as scrip"""e,
Kings I, listing discipline,
courage and consecration as
qualities of a good Christian.
Mrs. Curtis Johnson, Mrs.
Hilton Wolfe, Sr., and Mrs.
Howard Shiveley served
breakfast to Bill Shiveley,
David Theiss, David Shuler,
Paul Cross, Tim Hill, Gene
Shiveley, Judi Roberts, Jay
Hill, Nancy Crow, Valefie
Johnson, Rhonda West. Millie
Fisher, Janie Rees, Jeff Hill,
Mary Walker, Elisa McMillan,
Connie Roush, Pat WoOds, and
Becky Kouns .

Asilent prayer In memory of
L. R. Wiley, teacher of the
Loyal Bereans Class, opened
the Tuesday night meeting of
the claSs at the Middleport
Church of Chrlat.
Mrs. Martha Childs had
ll'ayer, and devotions by Mrs.
Betty Cline included a
'meditation entitled "Heaven's

in six places

Volunteers to operate day camp at Camp Kiashuta near
Chester the third week in June are being soliciled.
Mrs. Noby Sauvage, Athenil, district director for the Four
FREE CLOTHING Day, 10 a.
Contributions were made to
Rivers Girl Scout Council, was in Pomeroy Wednesday to discuss m. to 12 noon Thursday at numerous organizations inplans for day camp with Mrs. William Ohlinger, neighborhood Salvation Army, Butternut cluding the Pomeroy Fire
chairman, and Mrs. Roscoe Wise.
Ave ., Pomeroy. All in need of Department and emergency
Mrs. Sauvage will serve as general director for the camp with clothing invited.
squadmen at a meeting of the
the volunteers to take a unit and assume all phases of the camp
Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
program for that particular unit.
'
FRIDAY
Webster Post 39, American
The annual Leaders Luncheon of the Four Rivers Girl Scout
STUFFING BEE when Legion Tuesday night.
Council is scheduled for April 26 at the Presbyterian Church in Middleport,Pomeroy Rotary
The unit voled to send conParkersburg, and reservations for the lunchcon along with the Club meets at 6p. m. Friday at tributions to the Heart Fund,
money should be sent to Mrs. Ohlinger immediately.
Heath United Methodist ' the March of Dimes, the
Again this year each troop is being encouraged to participate Church in Middlep&lt;Jrt with Cancer Fund, the American
In "Keep America Beautiful Day", April 28. Troop leaders are wives as guests in preparation Red Cross, the Board of Mental
requested to plan some environment improvement program, and for annual Easter Seal Sale. Retardation, and to provide $15
cleanup an area of the community.
. MIDDLEPORT WCTU. 7:30 for the Xenia Children's Home
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
p.m. Friday, home · of Mrs. for Easter treats.
The foundations of girl scouting was discussed at a meeting Betty Cline.
Welcomed into membership
of Middleport Girl Scout Troop 39 Monday night at Heath United
SATURDAY
were Mrs. Ruth Powers and
Methodist Church. They are the promise and the laws, service,
MEIGS
COUNTY
Retired
Mrs. Lena Nesselroad. Mrs.
troop management, International friendship, citizenship, and
Harry
Davis, junior activities
health and safety. The scouts discussed what has been done Teachers, 12:30p. m. luncheon, chairman, reported that a
Saturday, Trinity Church,
throughout the years to fuliill each one of these.
number of hot water bottle
Work on badges was carried out in the patrols and plans to Pomeroy. Robert Fleming,
covers, unframed pictures, and
participate In "Keep Amecica Beautiful Day" on April 28 were Youngstown, Ohio Retired
Teachers Assn., president, key chains have been sent to
discussed.
speaking; luncheon reser- the Brecksville Hospital. A
POMEROY JUNIORS 160
card of thanks was read from
Mrs. Margaret Sheridan, leader of Troop 160, hosted a vations with Anna Hilldore,.
the Pomeroy PTA for the
cookout Wednesday at her Spring Ave. home for the girls of 992-2482 or Lucille Smith,
program
presented last month
Troop 160. Games were played during the afternoon. The Girl Chester, 963-3621.
by the juniors.
Scout cookie sale was discussed and members were reminded to
K OF P Pythian .Sisters
Plans were made during the
get their money in this week.
families ' potluck at 6:30 p. m. meeting conducted by Mrs.
Meat and drink furnished.
Grace Pratt for a rummage
MONDAY
sale to be held April 5-7 in the
MIDDLEPORT Garden Reynolds building in MidClub, Monday, 7:30p.m. in the dleport, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The need for repairing chairs Eblin .
social room of the Columbus Working on Wednesday In
in the nursery was discussed at
A thermos bottle was and Southern Ohio Electric Co. preparation for the sale will be
a recent meeting of the Adult donated to the class by Mr. and Miss Lucille Smith, Mrs. John Mrs. Powers, Mrs. Davis and
Class of the Pomeroy Church of Mrs. Belin. It was noted that T. Davis, Mrs. E. M. Wood, Mrs. Ellen Couch. Mrs. Davis
the Nazarene and Jerry Mrs. Clyde Henderson is ·m hostesses. The program is to he and Mrs. Pap! Casci will he
Colmer and Robert Eblin with flu. The last Saturday of presented by Mrs. M. L. there Thursday; Mrs. Pearl
volunteered to do the work.
each month was set for ~lass French. Mrs. William Hamm Knapp on Friday, and Mrs.
Mrs. Clyde Bing gave the meetings with the next one will display the arrangement of Fay Wildermuth and Mrs. Ida
prayer to open the meeting scheduled for March 31. Grace the month.
, Casci on Saturday.
conducled by Mrs. Mamie was given by the Rev. Clyde
POMEROY Garden Club,
Poppy Days were announced
Stephei!Son in the absence of Henderson before pie and Monday, 7:30 p.m. home of for May 25 and 26, the summer
the president Mrs . Freda coffee were served.
Mrs. Roy Be !zing, Pomeroy . convention was announced for
to
Mossman,
confined
Attending besides those
July in Toledo, and it was noted
Veterans Memorial Hospital. named
were
William
that Middleport will host the
She read scripture from Matt. Stephenson, Mr. and Mrs.
district convention. Mrs. Pratt
7-1 and Psalms 75:1-10. There Harold Whittekind, Carol
VISITED HERE
thanked those who helped with
was group singing and the Lunsford, Betty Brown, Clydia
Mrs. Louise Butcher and son, the birthday party, parminutes of a previous meeting Bing and daughter, Joyce.
Carl Butcher, Cleveland, ticularly the junior members
were read by Eblin, with
visited their san and brother, who made the corsages. A
Colmer giving the treasurer's
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Butcher thank-you note was sent to
REHEARSAL SET
report. Portions of the "Herald
and
daughter,
Stacey, Mrs. Tom Crow, Sr. who
TUPPI::RS
PLAINS - Those recently . . }')le ,Ncll;lrd t;lut.
of Holiness" were read by
provided
the
table
Barbara •· calrtler ··and Mrs. ' takingt!)a~ .iri·,(a country and chers are also fforh Cleveland, arrangement. _., \
Stephenson. A poem, "The Old western .variety show to be having lived at Pomeroy only
An alternate to Buckeye
Altar Bench" was reach by staged on April!4, at 7:30p.m. for the past three weeks.
Girls State was elecled. The
at the Tuppers Plains School
delegate had been named
auditorium are to report to the
earlier. Noted at the meeting
show
location at 2 p:m. Sunday,
LOSE UGLY FAT
was the serious illness of
according to Mrs. Rose D.
PARENTS VISITED
Mayor Bill Baronick, now
Start losing weight today OR
Carr, chairman . The show is to
MONEY BACK. MONA DEX ;,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Terry
Knight
deceased.
a tiny tablet that will help curb
be sponsored by the Tuppers
and son, Stevie, Caledonia,
A note of thanks lor $16.40
your desire for excess food .
Plains School Boosters with
Eat less-weigh less . Contains
spent
from
Saturday·
to
sent
for Freedoms Foundation
no dangerous drugs and will
proceeds to go to the new
not make you nervous. No
Tuesday visi ling his parents, was received by the unit. Cards
ltrenuon exercise . Change library and for blacktopping
your life ... start today.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight, were also received from Mrs.
the playground.
MONAD EX cosh $3.00 for a 20
Pomeroy .
Lenora Adkins for a conday supptv and ss.oo for twice

community service program
noting that money had been
provided for 30 pounds of candy
for the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital, and that a donation
has been made for Easter
candy for the Xenia Home for
the Or~hans.
Twenty-five year honor
guards were ordered for Mrs.
Gretta Simpson, Mrs. Louise
Stewart, Mrs. Mlfrtha Lou
Beegle, and Mrs. Eunie
Brinker. Cards were signed for
Mrs. Beulah Bradford and
Mrs . Myrtle Walker . Mrs.
Simpson served refreshments.
Mrs. Roush won the taveling
prize donated by Mrs. Simpson.

tribution to a party at the
Athens Me_ntal Health Center,
Mrs. ·Isa belle Couch for cards
and flowers during her illness,
Mrs. Robert Waddell of Lancaster and Mrs. Willford Grant
of Wellston for Invitations to
the legion birthday party.
Mrs . Gerald ·Wildermuth,
community service chairman,
reviewed an article from the
Buckeye Messenger relating to
trying new things. She spoke of
the senior citizens program,

church activities, and Sunday
school as outlets but cautioned
against taking on too much and
not doing anything well.
Mrs . Roy Reuter, community service chairman,
commented on the possibility
of setting out a new tree in
memory of a non-returned
veteran at the site 'of the
proposed post home. Mrs. ·
Edith Fox, Americanism
chairman, spoke on the topic
"What is the United States of
America". Mrs. Davis and
Mrs. Pearl Knapp reported on
the recent party at the Southeastern Ohio Mental Health
Center for the veterans. Mrs.
Iva Powell and Mrs. Mary
Martin also attended.
'
Appointed to the committees
for the games parties were
March 30, Mrs . Pratt and Mrs.
Norma Jewell; April 2, Mrs.
Paul Casci; April 9, Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, Mrs. Knapp; April
16, Mrs. Gladys Cummings,
Mrs. Couch; April 23, Mrs.
Davis, Mrs. Reuter ; April 30,
Mrs. Wildermuth, Miss Erma
Smith. Mrs. Jewell and Mrs.
Pratt will handle the party on
April6; Mrs. Couch and Mrs .
Don Hunnel, the one on April
13, and Mrs. Casci, the one on
April 27.
A prayer for peace by Mrs.
Couch closed the meeting. Mrs.
Catherine Welsh and Mrs .
Kenneth Harris served
refreshments.
SHE'S GONE
CAIRO ( UPI) - Under the
headline" A Strange Incident,"
the Middle East News Agency
Tuesday carried the following
story :
"A 26-year-cld bride, Mrs.
Mirfat ·Ahmed Shibata was
walking with her husband,
Anwar Said, in an Alexandria
street around midnight last
night.
"The couple was returning
from a visit to friends when the
land suddenly opened up under
the woman and swallowed her
In an awful moment that sent
the husband into a state of
shock for which he was
hospitalized.
"A rescue squad 1mmediately arrived on the ·
scene. Although they dug to a
depth of 10 yards they failed to
find the woman. She had been
married four months."

Voice" taken from ''Today".

CINDY FARRAR
Cindy Farrar has beenchosen "girl of the month"
by the Eastern High School
Future Homemakers of
America. The daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ivor Farrar
Cindy Is active In lhe art'
club, Is historian of the FHA
Chapter and Is a Candystrlper at Veterans Memorial Hospital.

OESTOMEET
Racine Chapter 134, O.E.S.
will meet in regular session at
the Masonic Temple, Monday
night, 6 p.m. The worthy
matron has. requesied that the
officers be present for a
practice initiation. Further
plans will be made for thz
bazaar and bake sale to he held
on April 7 at the Simpson
building.

Dem_qnstration given.
Mrs. Viima Pikkoja, Meigs
Bookmobile librarian, gave a
demonstration and talk on the
talking book machines at a
recent meeting of Grace
Episcopal Church Women.
She told of Thomas A.
Edison's prediction that one
day his invention, th &amp;
phonograph, would be used to
play books for the blind. This
came true in 1934, Mrs. Pikkoja
said, when the Library of
Congress began distributing
books to the blind.
The machines and books are
now being distributed to the
WOPATRE-ELECTED
MARION - Robert M.
Wopat of Marion was elected
president of General Telephone
Co. of Ohio for the ninth consecutive year at the annual
board and shareowners
meetings held here. Other
officers and board members
also were re-elected. Wopat,
who also was renamed to the
board, has been president since
1964.

hot

Spring Saki
GROUP
SPORTSWEAR

'h price
lOLA'S
Main at Sycamore
POMEROY, OHIO

Before
. .You Buy You Should Try,.

CARPn-LAND, INC.
Wall To Wall Carpet Specialists
116 W. MAIN

.:
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. Earl Morris of Route I,
Racine, is a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center. Her
room number is 326.

blind and those disabled
through the local Bookmobile.
The librarian also displayed
several books in large type
which are available for those
with visual handicaps.
It was decided that the
Church Women will assist in
the distribution of the talking
books and the large print
library books. The group also
agreed
to
write
to
Congressman Clarence Miller,
a member of the ways and
means committee, protesting
the July cut-cff of funds for
library services. The speaker
was introduced by Mrs. Nancy
B. Reed. A luncheon was
served preceding the meeting.

Mrs. Cynthia Gi)hrlng read an
article from Grit and Mrs.
Cline presented "Praying
Hands." Officer$ reports were
given and thank you card ·for a
dinner at the time of the death
of L. R. Wiley was ,read.
Reported ill were Mrs. ~Effie
Montgomery, Mrs, . Floyd
Boyer and Mrs. Bessie ~ey.
Members were provld/,cj!1Wlth
baby food jars to be .f!%!;wlth
change during the ~t' and
turned in at the ·December
meeting. Members were alao
reminded to contact those who
are not In regular attendance.
Two lilies will be pure~ for
the church for ~aster. Marvin
Kelly was retained as lta!\'1-er
of the class.
·
The class voted to giv~ $50 on
the roof repair of the church.. A
silent auction will be held at the
April meeting. The birthday
anniversary of Mrs. Martha
'Iaggerty was observed. Mrs.
Haggerty will serve . as
chairman of the hostess
committee for the ApJII
meeting.
Mrs. Cline and Mrs. Gohrlng
served refreshments. Mrs.
Bessie Ashley was a contributor.

POMEROY

Free
Estimates PH. 992-7590
·Open Mon'day tftru Salur~~y,9, to
" ,
Friday Night Till 8:00
Budget Terms or BankAmericard

t

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faucets

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SHIRT
FINIS~ING

wastewater

iJse OUr Free Parking. Lot

gas

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

HUFFY®

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TILLER
ON"LY

See our selection of HuHy Push Mowers
starting at $63.95.

and money.
The steady bleep-bloop of a leaky water faucat is more than a nuisance
ifs a waste of one of our vital natural resources - water.
·
And if the leak is hot water, it wastes another vital natural resource
- the natural gas used to heat the water.
Not to mention the money used to pay for the gas to heat the water
A leak that fills an ordinary cup in ten minutes wastes 3,280 gallons of wat~r a year
Fix your leaky faucet. With a two ·cent washer.
Natural gas and water .. . and money ... are too valuable to waste.
·
There are other ways you can conserve gas. Keep the thermostat on your water heater
set at the normal temperature. Avoid partial loads in your washing machine and dishwashei
.
Don't use an excessive amount of hot water in your bath or in the shower.
·
Keep your water heater working efficiently by draining about
a. bucketful of water a month from the faucet at the base of the heater.
Th1s prevents mineral deposit build· up that makes the heater work harder.
Use the gas you need in your home. But not a penny·s worth more.
Wnte for our free ~oklel, .. 30 Ways to Save··. for more ideas.

Gas is precious, pure energy . .. use it wisely.
. - . , 71. m. !oi:IIp.m. Doily
.
MAlON. W.VA.

, ..... " ' ,, 1'\, , ,... , &amp; S.twrMy

~WMBIAGAS ·
I

•

'
•.

NEW HAVEN -The Rev.
William DeMO!lB, pastor of the
New Haven United Methodist
Church, will lead a nine-day
escorted all Inclusive t011r to
tbe Middle East, le.aving
Monday, October 22 from .
Colwnbus.
The tour will include visits tO
Cyprus, Israel, Lebanon,
Turkey and Syria. .
After ·jetting to Cyll'US the ·
tour ls continued by boat which
will make port stops at Tarsas,
Antioch, Beirut, Dam8scus,
Sea of Galilee, Capernaurn,
Jordan River, "~Jerusalem,
Bethlehem, Tel Aviv, Jaffa,

..

.

Apple Grove .

WILLIAM DeMOII8

Mrs. Arnold Anderson,
formerly a local resident but
now of Keno Ridge is a surgical
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·
Howard ROush of Mansfield,
is a medical patient at Mansfield General Hospital. Mr.
Roush formerly lived here.

LA-z;,.·aov

and Nazareth.
wife and I are ·very excited Holy Land. In our 13 years In
The Rev. DeMoss Sllld, ''MY · about this upcoming tour to the the ministry this has been
ljOmething we have always
Funeral service 'set on Saturday ·
wanted to do. Our dream
Funeral services for Marvin
Surviving are hill wife, Helen seems to have . become
Don Miller, 70, Salem Center, Steele Miller; a daughter, Mrs. poSSible. Persons who would
who died Wedne~~day morning John Gardner, Wellston; two want to go along may do so,
at the Hoi2er Medical Center sons, Ricljard of · Baltimore,. although reservations are A Break for Full figures
following several months Ohio, and ·Ronald of limited." The cost is $799,
Dresses with elasticized
Ulness will be lit 2 p. m. Reynoldsburg; a sister, Mrs. which includes all traJIS· or drawstring waistlines
Saturday at the Strong and Son Minnie Marsh of Athens and portation, accommodations, and with nea~ box pleats are
Funeral Home In Wilkesvllle: four grandchildren. The Rev, meals and sightseeing. Early good for half shes or women
Mr. Miller was borri Sept. 28, R. H. Woltz will officiate over registration and payment with fuller figures.
1902 in Dexter, the son of the Saturday's service . Burial will permits discounts.
Bold Stripes Are Big
late John and Iva Folden be in the Vinton Memorial
Stripes, the bolder the
Miller. He was employed as a Garden. Friends may call at Hats stay around for better and in contrasting
warmer weather and styles
!ruck driver for ' the Meigs the funeral home anytime range from the fuzzy beret colors like pink and green,
County Highway Department Friday afternoon and evening. to .the floppy brim hat.
are brightening spring lash'
before

CHAIRS
Now you can buy. ihaf_
~omfortable

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You' Ve always
dreamed of a1 our low ·
prices.

· 4uthorized Dealer

MASON

FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate
Mason, W. Ya.

Apple Grove
News, Events
By Mn. ,ilerhert Roudt
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson
and two sons of Sissonville,
Va., spent the !Veekend with
Mrs. Enna Wilson. Mr. and
Mrs. Butch Wilson and
children were Sunday dinner
·gue~~ta of Mrs. Wilson.
Mr. and .Mrs. Roy Pearson,
Mrs. Sally Savage, Junior
Saller, Mrs. Charles Matthew,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Shields,
Mlsa MHlie Ripley, Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner, Early Roush, Mrs.
Maggie Roush attended
funeral services for Jim Roush
in Usbon, Ohio Saturday. Mrs.
Roush remained In Usbon for a
few days.
Art HID returned to his
studies at Morehead College at
Morehead, Ky., Sunday after
spending spring vacation with
hill parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dallas HID.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Balser
and Mrs. Allee Balser of
Mansfield spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables
and Mrs. Baller's father, John
Thllllas.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman and son, Keith, spent
the weekend with their son, Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Hayman and
famlly at Westerville.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van Meter
and daughters of Morning Star
spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Adams.
Jimmy O' Brien spent a
ll;eekend with ~tW~r~, !topsh.
•Mrs. -Edria Rbush laild1'Mrs. ''
tlladys Shields of Racine gpent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Roush and famlly.
Mrs. Herbert Roush and son,
Roger, Sharon and Cindy
Roush, and Mrs. Iva Orr spent
Thursday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Dana U:wis at CWton.
Mrs. Zelpba Boggi!$8 spent
Saturday evening with Mrs.
Marshall Adams.
Rex O'Brien of Stewart spent
Sunday . with Mr. and Mrs.
Larry O'Brien.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Shields, · Millie
Ripley,
Margaret Gloeckner and Early
Roush stopped enroute home
Saturday from Lisbon, Ohio
and vlsiled Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Burri at Bolivar Dam.
Mr. and Mrs. Burri are former
local residents.
Mrs. Jim Knighting of
Racine, a former local
resident, is a medical patient
at Veterans Memorial HOBpital
with pneumonia.

w.

SCOPE
SUPER
SIZE

TEK
ALKASELTZER

$2.05 Value

lOO's
$1.17 Value

25's

79c Value

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

69c Value

MILK OF MAGNESIA

89c Value, 5 oz.

$1.79 Value 200's

Electropb,o~ic
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CAR STEREO
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Meigs

RASH
CUBES

Property

by

Bernard V. Fultz, adm., Ada
eray, dec. to Kenneth D.
Cooke, lot, Middleport.
Freda M. Frecker to Palsy
Virginia Frecker, Roger
Frecker, 80 acres, Chester.
Sam F. Williams, Clara
Williams to William Markham,
Mark Markham, parcels,
Bedford.
Robert N. Clark, Lola E.
Clark IAJ Roger D. Dingess,
Margaret E. Dingess, lots,
Harrisonville.
!\Obert ' B.
Burdette,
Genevl.ve Burdette IAJ General
Telephone Co ., easement,
Sallsbury.
Larry V. Parsons, Sonia E.
PanOIUI to Virgil Parsons,
parcels, Rutland.
Billy Drr, Martha Lou Drr
to Donald Brewer, Pauline
Brewer, parcel, Olive.
William R, Bailey, dec., to
Clarence R. Bailey, Jane
E!llabeth Bailey, cert. for
lrana., Middleport.
Clinton R. Smith, dec., to
Helen Pearl · Smith, affid. of
trana., 'Lebanon.
Donald Glenn Bolln, Treva
Mariene Bolin to Michael
Lonchar, Diane Lonchar,

PHILIPS

TOOTHBRUSHES

BAYER ASPIRIN

ffi~A!

$1.65
Value

sr

-

_ , FILM

$1.40
lue

ULT
.

99'

1

I
·-

$5.69
Value

NO.
108
COLOR
FILM

$388

$8.99

'

Tea Kettle ·

$2.29 Value

F

49

~

STRING

25~

--~-EtfrEi"P-Iiis"E~-

From

19~

WORTH
VAPORIZER

1

Reg . $7.99

$199
SUAVE

HAIR
13 oz.

$1.89 Value

.$5.99

tm~
....•,

98C
Value

KITES
FROM

Reg. $1%.9S .

SPRAY

79c

IMPORTED
-WINDPROOF
'
LIGHTERS

99~

Reg. $16.9S

Transfers

'

5 H.P.

o.; March 2!!. 1973

DeMoss leading tour to Holy
Land this autumn
.
.

)AME DAY
SERVICE
In At ~-Out At 5

BE HAPPY··· GO

'.

7.- Tbe D.lly Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy,

..~

:?

·:::;
~

- Adv .

Loyal Bereans
clas~~
.
met ·Tuesdt;,y night

:~·

By Ch.arlene Hoeflich

the amount. Lose ugly fat or
your money will be relunded
with no questions asked by :
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drug, 112 E .
Main, Pomeroy &amp; Dulfon Drug
Store, Middleport. Mail Orders
Filled .

.'

SSe Value

S],95
~lh .

P,LAYTEX
]:[ l. i DEODORANT
i ~o.. t! TAMPONS
..... ):....

,

B's

53c Value

MY OWN .
HYGIENIC
DEODORANT
.SPRAY
6 oz.

'

TAMPAX

·--=:,
.M!~

REG
or
SUPER
$1.93 Value

40's

$2.19 Value

a:

parcels, ~plo.

II

,,

\

''

�I s~2I;r~;·-: Auxiliary makes

6-'l'lle Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 21!. 1973

Girl ·Scout

·Diary

i Calendar~ contributions
THURSDAY
WOMEN'S FELLOWSHIP,
Meigs County Churches of
Christ, 7:30 Thursday at the
Hemlock Church. Mr. Melvin
Newland, Cincinnati, to speak.

.

Chairs will be repaired

If it weren't for pollu·
tion, what would the air
filter people do?

the guaranteed
deodorants!

Tur#, r#'Y

Tussy Crea m, Stick,
Roll-On Deodo rants
and Anti-Perspirants. Satis factio n
for less money . . or your money bac k.

-..
• '!!• c 10 •

ONLY

2 oz. Cream 59~
take home a
6-pack $3 .54

2-1 /8 OZ STIC K 59(:
1·3/ 4 OZ. ROLL-ON 59(:
7 OZ . SPRAY DEODORAN T 79(:
13 OZ. DRY ANTI-PERSPIRANT
SPRAY $1.59

Prescription S.ervice-4 Regi51ered Pharmaci5ls to Serve
You I (lpt.n Da1ly 8:00a.m. fo 9 p.m.-Sunday 10:10 a.m. to
.12::10 p.m. &amp; 5 to 9 p.m.
1
•

)

Girl delegate named
Roma Lynn Nease, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. David Nease,
has been selected as the
Southern High School delegate
to Buckeye Girls' State by the
Ladies Auxiliary of Racine
Post 602.
Alternate named by the
Auxiliary is Della Cross,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs . Earl
Cross.
Mrs. Mary Roush presided at
a meeting of the Auxiliary
Tuesday night at the hall. Mrs.
Margaret Yost, Americanism
chairman, presented a flag to
the Portland school, she
reporled. It was noted that a
new Ohio Government Digest
has been placed in the school
library.
Mrs. Roush reported on the

. Breakfast for
nineteen served Nineteen young people of
Southern High School attended
a prayer breakfast at the
, Raci~e Wesleyan United
Methodist Church Wednesday
morning. Devotions were given
by
the
Rev.
Fra~k
Cheese brew. The Rev. Edward
Fisher
presented
the
meditation using as scrip"""e,
Kings I, listing discipline,
courage and consecration as
qualities of a good Christian.
Mrs. Curtis Johnson, Mrs.
Hilton Wolfe, Sr., and Mrs.
Howard Shiveley served
breakfast to Bill Shiveley,
David Theiss, David Shuler,
Paul Cross, Tim Hill, Gene
Shiveley, Judi Roberts, Jay
Hill, Nancy Crow, Valefie
Johnson, Rhonda West. Millie
Fisher, Janie Rees, Jeff Hill,
Mary Walker, Elisa McMillan,
Connie Roush, Pat WoOds, and
Becky Kouns .

Asilent prayer In memory of
L. R. Wiley, teacher of the
Loyal Bereans Class, opened
the Tuesday night meeting of
the claSs at the Middleport
Church of Chrlat.
Mrs. Martha Childs had
ll'ayer, and devotions by Mrs.
Betty Cline included a
'meditation entitled "Heaven's

in six places

Volunteers to operate day camp at Camp Kiashuta near
Chester the third week in June are being soliciled.
Mrs. Noby Sauvage, Athenil, district director for the Four
FREE CLOTHING Day, 10 a.
Contributions were made to
Rivers Girl Scout Council, was in Pomeroy Wednesday to discuss m. to 12 noon Thursday at numerous organizations inplans for day camp with Mrs. William Ohlinger, neighborhood Salvation Army, Butternut cluding the Pomeroy Fire
chairman, and Mrs. Roscoe Wise.
Ave ., Pomeroy. All in need of Department and emergency
Mrs. Sauvage will serve as general director for the camp with clothing invited.
squadmen at a meeting of the
the volunteers to take a unit and assume all phases of the camp
Ladies Auxiliary of Drew
program for that particular unit.
'
FRIDAY
Webster Post 39, American
The annual Leaders Luncheon of the Four Rivers Girl Scout
STUFFING BEE when Legion Tuesday night.
Council is scheduled for April 26 at the Presbyterian Church in Middleport,Pomeroy Rotary
The unit voled to send conParkersburg, and reservations for the lunchcon along with the Club meets at 6p. m. Friday at tributions to the Heart Fund,
money should be sent to Mrs. Ohlinger immediately.
Heath United Methodist ' the March of Dimes, the
Again this year each troop is being encouraged to participate Church in Middlep&lt;Jrt with Cancer Fund, the American
In "Keep America Beautiful Day", April 28. Troop leaders are wives as guests in preparation Red Cross, the Board of Mental
requested to plan some environment improvement program, and for annual Easter Seal Sale. Retardation, and to provide $15
cleanup an area of the community.
. MIDDLEPORT WCTU. 7:30 for the Xenia Children's Home
MIDDLEPORT TROOP 39
p.m. Friday, home · of Mrs. for Easter treats.
The foundations of girl scouting was discussed at a meeting Betty Cline.
Welcomed into membership
of Middleport Girl Scout Troop 39 Monday night at Heath United
SATURDAY
were Mrs. Ruth Powers and
Methodist Church. They are the promise and the laws, service,
MEIGS
COUNTY
Retired
Mrs. Lena Nesselroad. Mrs.
troop management, International friendship, citizenship, and
Harry
Davis, junior activities
health and safety. The scouts discussed what has been done Teachers, 12:30p. m. luncheon, chairman, reported that a
Saturday, Trinity Church,
throughout the years to fuliill each one of these.
number of hot water bottle
Work on badges was carried out in the patrols and plans to Pomeroy. Robert Fleming,
covers, unframed pictures, and
participate In "Keep Amecica Beautiful Day" on April 28 were Youngstown, Ohio Retired
Teachers Assn., president, key chains have been sent to
discussed.
speaking; luncheon reser- the Brecksville Hospital. A
POMEROY JUNIORS 160
card of thanks was read from
Mrs. Margaret Sheridan, leader of Troop 160, hosted a vations with Anna Hilldore,.
the Pomeroy PTA for the
cookout Wednesday at her Spring Ave. home for the girls of 992-2482 or Lucille Smith,
program
presented last month
Troop 160. Games were played during the afternoon. The Girl Chester, 963-3621.
by the juniors.
Scout cookie sale was discussed and members were reminded to
K OF P Pythian .Sisters
Plans were made during the
get their money in this week.
families ' potluck at 6:30 p. m. meeting conducted by Mrs.
Meat and drink furnished.
Grace Pratt for a rummage
MONDAY
sale to be held April 5-7 in the
MIDDLEPORT Garden Reynolds building in MidClub, Monday, 7:30p.m. in the dleport, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
The need for repairing chairs Eblin .
social room of the Columbus Working on Wednesday In
in the nursery was discussed at
A thermos bottle was and Southern Ohio Electric Co. preparation for the sale will be
a recent meeting of the Adult donated to the class by Mr. and Miss Lucille Smith, Mrs. John Mrs. Powers, Mrs. Davis and
Class of the Pomeroy Church of Mrs. Belin. It was noted that T. Davis, Mrs. E. M. Wood, Mrs. Ellen Couch. Mrs. Davis
the Nazarene and Jerry Mrs. Clyde Henderson is ·m hostesses. The program is to he and Mrs. Pap! Casci will he
Colmer and Robert Eblin with flu. The last Saturday of presented by Mrs. M. L. there Thursday; Mrs. Pearl
volunteered to do the work.
each month was set for ~lass French. Mrs. William Hamm Knapp on Friday, and Mrs.
Mrs. Clyde Bing gave the meetings with the next one will display the arrangement of Fay Wildermuth and Mrs. Ida
prayer to open the meeting scheduled for March 31. Grace the month.
, Casci on Saturday.
conducled by Mrs. Mamie was given by the Rev. Clyde
POMEROY Garden Club,
Poppy Days were announced
Stephei!Son in the absence of Henderson before pie and Monday, 7:30 p.m. home of for May 25 and 26, the summer
the president Mrs . Freda coffee were served.
Mrs. Roy Be !zing, Pomeroy . convention was announced for
to
Mossman,
confined
Attending besides those
July in Toledo, and it was noted
Veterans Memorial Hospital. named
were
William
that Middleport will host the
She read scripture from Matt. Stephenson, Mr. and Mrs.
district convention. Mrs. Pratt
7-1 and Psalms 75:1-10. There Harold Whittekind, Carol
VISITED HERE
thanked those who helped with
was group singing and the Lunsford, Betty Brown, Clydia
Mrs. Louise Butcher and son, the birthday party, parminutes of a previous meeting Bing and daughter, Joyce.
Carl Butcher, Cleveland, ticularly the junior members
were read by Eblin, with
visited their san and brother, who made the corsages. A
Colmer giving the treasurer's
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Butcher thank-you note was sent to
REHEARSAL SET
report. Portions of the "Herald
and
daughter,
Stacey, Mrs. Tom Crow, Sr. who
TUPPI::RS
PLAINS - Those recently . . }')le ,Ncll;lrd t;lut.
of Holiness" were read by
provided
the
table
Barbara •· calrtler ··and Mrs. ' takingt!)a~ .iri·,(a country and chers are also fforh Cleveland, arrangement. _., \
Stephenson. A poem, "The Old western .variety show to be having lived at Pomeroy only
An alternate to Buckeye
Altar Bench" was reach by staged on April!4, at 7:30p.m. for the past three weeks.
Girls State was elecled. The
at the Tuppers Plains School
delegate had been named
auditorium are to report to the
earlier. Noted at the meeting
show
location at 2 p:m. Sunday,
LOSE UGLY FAT
was the serious illness of
according to Mrs. Rose D.
PARENTS VISITED
Mayor Bill Baronick, now
Start losing weight today OR
Carr, chairman . The show is to
MONEY BACK. MONA DEX ;,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Terry
Knight
deceased.
a tiny tablet that will help curb
be sponsored by the Tuppers
and son, Stevie, Caledonia,
A note of thanks lor $16.40
your desire for excess food .
Plains School Boosters with
Eat less-weigh less . Contains
spent
from
Saturday·
to
sent
for Freedoms Foundation
no dangerous drugs and will
proceeds to go to the new
not make you nervous. No
Tuesday visi ling his parents, was received by the unit. Cards
ltrenuon exercise . Change library and for blacktopping
your life ... start today.
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Knight, were also received from Mrs.
the playground.
MONAD EX cosh $3.00 for a 20
Pomeroy .
Lenora Adkins for a conday supptv and ss.oo for twice

community service program
noting that money had been
provided for 30 pounds of candy
for the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital, and that a donation
has been made for Easter
candy for the Xenia Home for
the Or~hans.
Twenty-five year honor
guards were ordered for Mrs.
Gretta Simpson, Mrs. Louise
Stewart, Mrs. Mlfrtha Lou
Beegle, and Mrs. Eunie
Brinker. Cards were signed for
Mrs. Beulah Bradford and
Mrs . Myrtle Walker . Mrs.
Simpson served refreshments.
Mrs. Roush won the taveling
prize donated by Mrs. Simpson.

tribution to a party at the
Athens Me_ntal Health Center,
Mrs. ·Isa belle Couch for cards
and flowers during her illness,
Mrs. Robert Waddell of Lancaster and Mrs. Willford Grant
of Wellston for Invitations to
the legion birthday party.
Mrs . Gerald ·Wildermuth,
community service chairman,
reviewed an article from the
Buckeye Messenger relating to
trying new things. She spoke of
the senior citizens program,

church activities, and Sunday
school as outlets but cautioned
against taking on too much and
not doing anything well.
Mrs . Roy Reuter, community service chairman,
commented on the possibility
of setting out a new tree in
memory of a non-returned
veteran at the site 'of the
proposed post home. Mrs. ·
Edith Fox, Americanism
chairman, spoke on the topic
"What is the United States of
America". Mrs. Davis and
Mrs. Pearl Knapp reported on
the recent party at the Southeastern Ohio Mental Health
Center for the veterans. Mrs.
Iva Powell and Mrs. Mary
Martin also attended.
'
Appointed to the committees
for the games parties were
March 30, Mrs . Pratt and Mrs.
Norma Jewell; April 2, Mrs.
Paul Casci; April 9, Mrs. Ben
Neutzling, Mrs. Knapp; April
16, Mrs. Gladys Cummings,
Mrs. Couch; April 23, Mrs.
Davis, Mrs. Reuter ; April 30,
Mrs. Wildermuth, Miss Erma
Smith. Mrs. Jewell and Mrs.
Pratt will handle the party on
April6; Mrs. Couch and Mrs .
Don Hunnel, the one on April
13, and Mrs. Casci, the one on
April 27.
A prayer for peace by Mrs.
Couch closed the meeting. Mrs.
Catherine Welsh and Mrs .
Kenneth Harris served
refreshments.
SHE'S GONE
CAIRO ( UPI) - Under the
headline" A Strange Incident,"
the Middle East News Agency
Tuesday carried the following
story :
"A 26-year-cld bride, Mrs.
Mirfat ·Ahmed Shibata was
walking with her husband,
Anwar Said, in an Alexandria
street around midnight last
night.
"The couple was returning
from a visit to friends when the
land suddenly opened up under
the woman and swallowed her
In an awful moment that sent
the husband into a state of
shock for which he was
hospitalized.
"A rescue squad 1mmediately arrived on the ·
scene. Although they dug to a
depth of 10 yards they failed to
find the woman. She had been
married four months."

Voice" taken from ''Today".

CINDY FARRAR
Cindy Farrar has beenchosen "girl of the month"
by the Eastern High School
Future Homemakers of
America. The daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Ivor Farrar
Cindy Is active In lhe art'
club, Is historian of the FHA
Chapter and Is a Candystrlper at Veterans Memorial Hospital.

OESTOMEET
Racine Chapter 134, O.E.S.
will meet in regular session at
the Masonic Temple, Monday
night, 6 p.m. The worthy
matron has. requesied that the
officers be present for a
practice initiation. Further
plans will be made for thz
bazaar and bake sale to he held
on April 7 at the Simpson
building.

Dem_qnstration given.
Mrs. Viima Pikkoja, Meigs
Bookmobile librarian, gave a
demonstration and talk on the
talking book machines at a
recent meeting of Grace
Episcopal Church Women.
She told of Thomas A.
Edison's prediction that one
day his invention, th &amp;
phonograph, would be used to
play books for the blind. This
came true in 1934, Mrs. Pikkoja
said, when the Library of
Congress began distributing
books to the blind.
The machines and books are
now being distributed to the
WOPATRE-ELECTED
MARION - Robert M.
Wopat of Marion was elected
president of General Telephone
Co. of Ohio for the ninth consecutive year at the annual
board and shareowners
meetings held here. Other
officers and board members
also were re-elected. Wopat,
who also was renamed to the
board, has been president since
1964.

hot

Spring Saki
GROUP
SPORTSWEAR

'h price
lOLA'S
Main at Sycamore
POMEROY, OHIO

Before
. .You Buy You Should Try,.

CARPn-LAND, INC.
Wall To Wall Carpet Specialists
116 W. MAIN

.:
IN HOSPITAL
Mrs. Earl Morris of Route I,
Racine, is a patient at the
Holzer Medical Center. Her
room number is 326.

blind and those disabled
through the local Bookmobile.
The librarian also displayed
several books in large type
which are available for those
with visual handicaps.
It was decided that the
Church Women will assist in
the distribution of the talking
books and the large print
library books. The group also
agreed
to
write
to
Congressman Clarence Miller,
a member of the ways and
means committee, protesting
the July cut-cff of funds for
library services. The speaker
was introduced by Mrs. Nancy
B. Reed. A luncheon was
served preceding the meeting.

Mrs. Cynthia Gi)hrlng read an
article from Grit and Mrs.
Cline presented "Praying
Hands." Officer$ reports were
given and thank you card ·for a
dinner at the time of the death
of L. R. Wiley was ,read.
Reported ill were Mrs. ~Effie
Montgomery, Mrs, . Floyd
Boyer and Mrs. Bessie ~ey.
Members were provld/,cj!1Wlth
baby food jars to be .f!%!;wlth
change during the ~t' and
turned in at the ·December
meeting. Members were alao
reminded to contact those who
are not In regular attendance.
Two lilies will be pure~ for
the church for ~aster. Marvin
Kelly was retained as lta!\'1-er
of the class.
·
The class voted to giv~ $50 on
the roof repair of the church.. A
silent auction will be held at the
April meeting. The birthday
anniversary of Mrs. Martha
'Iaggerty was observed. Mrs.
Haggerty will serve . as
chairman of the hostess
committee for the ApJII
meeting.
Mrs. Cline and Mrs. Gohrlng
served refreshments. Mrs.
Bessie Ashley was a contributor.

POMEROY

Free
Estimates PH. 992-7590
·Open Mon'day tftru Salur~~y,9, to
" ,
Friday Night Till 8:00
Budget Terms or BankAmericard

t

(

{

faucets

~~--------,

SHIRT
FINIS~ING

wastewater

iJse OUr Free Parking. Lot

gas

Robinson's Cleaners
216 E. 2nd, Pomeroy

HUFFY®

..

TILLER
ON"LY

See our selection of HuHy Push Mowers
starting at $63.95.

and money.
The steady bleep-bloop of a leaky water faucat is more than a nuisance
ifs a waste of one of our vital natural resources - water.
·
And if the leak is hot water, it wastes another vital natural resource
- the natural gas used to heat the water.
Not to mention the money used to pay for the gas to heat the water
A leak that fills an ordinary cup in ten minutes wastes 3,280 gallons of wat~r a year
Fix your leaky faucet. With a two ·cent washer.
Natural gas and water .. . and money ... are too valuable to waste.
·
There are other ways you can conserve gas. Keep the thermostat on your water heater
set at the normal temperature. Avoid partial loads in your washing machine and dishwashei
.
Don't use an excessive amount of hot water in your bath or in the shower.
·
Keep your water heater working efficiently by draining about
a. bucketful of water a month from the faucet at the base of the heater.
Th1s prevents mineral deposit build· up that makes the heater work harder.
Use the gas you need in your home. But not a penny·s worth more.
Wnte for our free ~oklel, .. 30 Ways to Save··. for more ideas.

Gas is precious, pure energy . .. use it wisely.
. - . , 71. m. !oi:IIp.m. Doily
.
MAlON. W.VA.

, ..... " ' ,, 1'\, , ,... , &amp; S.twrMy

~WMBIAGAS ·
I

•

'
•.

NEW HAVEN -The Rev.
William DeMO!lB, pastor of the
New Haven United Methodist
Church, will lead a nine-day
escorted all Inclusive t011r to
tbe Middle East, le.aving
Monday, October 22 from .
Colwnbus.
The tour will include visits tO
Cyprus, Israel, Lebanon,
Turkey and Syria. .
After ·jetting to Cyll'US the ·
tour ls continued by boat which
will make port stops at Tarsas,
Antioch, Beirut, Dam8scus,
Sea of Galilee, Capernaurn,
Jordan River, "~Jerusalem,
Bethlehem, Tel Aviv, Jaffa,

..

.

Apple Grove .

WILLIAM DeMOII8

Mrs. Arnold Anderson,
formerly a local resident but
now of Keno Ridge is a surgical
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·
Howard ROush of Mansfield,
is a medical patient at Mansfield General Hospital. Mr.
Roush formerly lived here.

LA-z;,.·aov

and Nazareth.
wife and I are ·very excited Holy Land. In our 13 years In
The Rev. DeMoss Sllld, ''MY · about this upcoming tour to the the ministry this has been
ljOmething we have always
Funeral service 'set on Saturday ·
wanted to do. Our dream
Funeral services for Marvin
Surviving are hill wife, Helen seems to have . become
Don Miller, 70, Salem Center, Steele Miller; a daughter, Mrs. poSSible. Persons who would
who died Wedne~~day morning John Gardner, Wellston; two want to go along may do so,
at the Hoi2er Medical Center sons, Ricljard of · Baltimore,. although reservations are A Break for Full figures
following several months Ohio, and ·Ronald of limited." The cost is $799,
Dresses with elasticized
Ulness will be lit 2 p. m. Reynoldsburg; a sister, Mrs. which includes all traJIS· or drawstring waistlines
Saturday at the Strong and Son Minnie Marsh of Athens and portation, accommodations, and with nea~ box pleats are
Funeral Home In Wilkesvllle: four grandchildren. The Rev, meals and sightseeing. Early good for half shes or women
Mr. Miller was borri Sept. 28, R. H. Woltz will officiate over registration and payment with fuller figures.
1902 in Dexter, the son of the Saturday's service . Burial will permits discounts.
Bold Stripes Are Big
late John and Iva Folden be in the Vinton Memorial
Stripes, the bolder the
Miller. He was employed as a Garden. Friends may call at Hats stay around for better and in contrasting
warmer weather and styles
!ruck driver for ' the Meigs the funeral home anytime range from the fuzzy beret colors like pink and green,
County Highway Department Friday afternoon and evening. to .the floppy brim hat.
are brightening spring lash'
before

CHAIRS
Now you can buy. ihaf_
~omfortable

l;o-Z-Boy

·chair

You' Ve always
dreamed of a1 our low ·
prices.

· 4uthorized Dealer

MASON

FURNITURE
773-5592

Herman Grate
Mason, W. Ya.

Apple Grove
News, Events
By Mn. ,ilerhert Roudt
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsel Wilson
and two sons of Sissonville,
Va., spent the !Veekend with
Mrs. Enna Wilson. Mr. and
Mrs. Butch Wilson and
children were Sunday dinner
·gue~~ta of Mrs. Wilson.
Mr. and .Mrs. Roy Pearson,
Mrs. Sally Savage, Junior
Saller, Mrs. Charles Matthew,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Shields,
Mlsa MHlie Ripley, Mrs. Erwin
Gloeckner, Early Roush, Mrs.
Maggie Roush attended
funeral services for Jim Roush
in Usbon, Ohio Saturday. Mrs.
Roush remained In Usbon for a
few days.
Art HID returned to his
studies at Morehead College at
Morehead, Ky., Sunday after
spending spring vacation with
hill parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dallas HID.
Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Balser
and Mrs. Allee Balser of
Mansfield spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs. Jack Ables
and Mrs. Baller's father, John
Thllllas.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Hayman and son, Keith, spent
the weekend with their son, Mr.
and Mrs. Ted Hayman and
famlly at Westerville.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Van Meter
and daughters of Morning Star
spent Sunday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Adams.
Jimmy O' Brien spent a
ll;eekend with ~tW~r~, !topsh.
•Mrs. -Edria Rbush laild1'Mrs. ''
tlladys Shields of Racine gpent
Sunday afternoon with Mr. and
Mrs. Lester Roush and famlly.
Mrs. Herbert Roush and son,
Roger, Sharon and Cindy
Roush, and Mrs. Iva Orr spent
Thursday evening with Mr. and
Mrs. Dana U:wis at CWton.
Mrs. Zelpba Boggi!$8 spent
Saturday evening with Mrs.
Marshall Adams.
Rex O'Brien of Stewart spent
Sunday . with Mr. and Mrs.
Larry O'Brien.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert
Shields, · Millie
Ripley,
Margaret Gloeckner and Early
Roush stopped enroute home
Saturday from Lisbon, Ohio
and vlsiled Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Burri at Bolivar Dam.
Mr. and Mrs. Burri are former
local residents.
Mrs. Jim Knighting of
Racine, a former local
resident, is a medical patient
at Veterans Memorial HOBpital
with pneumonia.

w.

SCOPE
SUPER
SIZE

TEK
ALKASELTZER

$2.05 Value

lOO's
$1.17 Value

25's

79c Value

COLGATE
TOOTHPASTE

69c Value

MILK OF MAGNESIA

89c Value, 5 oz.

$1.79 Value 200's

Electropb,o~ic
..

.....
TC-71 .
CAR STEREO
~

. MDA'Y PARTS LABOR
GUARANTEE

Van Wyke

~1~~T
Reg.
$22.95

$1788'

Meigs

RASH
CUBES

Property

by

Bernard V. Fultz, adm., Ada
eray, dec. to Kenneth D.
Cooke, lot, Middleport.
Freda M. Frecker to Palsy
Virginia Frecker, Roger
Frecker, 80 acres, Chester.
Sam F. Williams, Clara
Williams to William Markham,
Mark Markham, parcels,
Bedford.
Robert N. Clark, Lola E.
Clark IAJ Roger D. Dingess,
Margaret E. Dingess, lots,
Harrisonville.
!\Obert ' B.
Burdette,
Genevl.ve Burdette IAJ General
Telephone Co ., easement,
Sallsbury.
Larry V. Parsons, Sonia E.
PanOIUI to Virgil Parsons,
parcels, Rutland.
Billy Drr, Martha Lou Drr
to Donald Brewer, Pauline
Brewer, parcel, Olive.
William R, Bailey, dec., to
Clarence R. Bailey, Jane
E!llabeth Bailey, cert. for
lrana., Middleport.
Clinton R. Smith, dec., to
Helen Pearl · Smith, affid. of
trana., 'Lebanon.
Donald Glenn Bolln, Treva
Mariene Bolin to Michael
Lonchar, Diane Lonchar,

PHILIPS

TOOTHBRUSHES

BAYER ASPIRIN

ffi~A!

$1.65
Value

sr

-

_ , FILM

$1.40
lue

ULT
.

99'

1

I
·-

$5.69
Value

NO.
108
COLOR
FILM

$388

$8.99

'

Tea Kettle ·

$2.29 Value

F

49

~

STRING

25~

--~-EtfrEi"P-Iiis"E~-

From

19~

WORTH
VAPORIZER

1

Reg . $7.99

$199
SUAVE

HAIR
13 oz.

$1.89 Value

.$5.99

tm~
....•,

98C
Value

KITES
FROM

Reg. $1%.9S .

SPRAY

79c

IMPORTED
-WINDPROOF
'
LIGHTERS

99~

Reg. $16.9S

Transfers

'

5 H.P.

o.; March 2!!. 1973

DeMoss leading tour to Holy
Land this autumn
.
.

)AME DAY
SERVICE
In At ~-Out At 5

BE HAPPY··· GO

'.

7.- Tbe D.lly Sentinel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy,

..~

:?

·:::;
~

- Adv .

Loyal Bereans
clas~~
.
met ·Tuesdt;,y night

:~·

By Ch.arlene Hoeflich

the amount. Lose ugly fat or
your money will be relunded
with no questions asked by :
Swisher &amp; Lohse Drug, 112 E .
Main, Pomeroy &amp; Dulfon Drug
Store, Middleport. Mail Orders
Filled .

.'

SSe Value

S],95
~lh .

P,LAYTEX
]:[ l. i DEODORANT
i ~o.. t! TAMPONS
..... ):....

,

B's

53c Value

MY OWN .
HYGIENIC
DEODORANT
.SPRAY
6 oz.

'

TAMPAX

·--=:,
.M!~

REG
or
SUPER
$1.93 Value

40's

$2.19 Value

a:

parcels, ~plo.

II

,,

\

''

�'
,-

0.

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29,1973

Sentinel Cla.ssifieds Get ActiOn! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results/.
•. W~N'J IIQ.t
.

INFORMATION

.DEADL'INES,

.,;: P .M . Dly Before Publication
· M~nd ay Oeadt'ine ·9 a.m .
Cancellation- Corrections

Will be bc~pted until 9'e .m . far,

oa·y of. Publ iCation
REGULATIONS

The Publ isher re serves the

rlghl· to edit or..reiect any ads

deemed . oblif~tional.
Th e
~ubllstler wtll not be respons i ble
~or

m.ore than one incOrrect

msert1on .

··

RATES
··. r'For Waflt Ad S erv i~ e
5 cents per Word on(f insertlof
Min imum Charge 7Sc .
·
12 cents per word ·Thrp• .
consecutive insertions.

18 cents per word six con
secullve Insertions.
25 Per Cen't Discount on pate
ads and ads J)a i d within 10 davs
CA.RD OF THANKS ~
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl .SO fet 50 word rhlnlm11rh
Each addi t ional word 2c ·

®

2 SIGNS
.

OF
QUALITY
..
1970 PONT lAC

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

'

11395
Esprit. ~~cal 1 owner car, 350 V-8 engine, P.
stee nng &amp; automattc trans., AM-FM radio, like new white
le~tered fires, dark brown finish , bucket seat &amp; blk. vinyl
tnm . A sharp one. Really loaded.
·
Fire~ird

1969 CHEVELLE
11795
Malibu Cpe., local 1 owner car, dark grn fin ish, li ke new
~hite lettered tires, 307 v.s power steering &amp; brakes,
radio, clean int.
1969 CHEV!li)LET
$1895
Stat.lon wagun, locally owned &amp; cl ea n inside &amp; out. V-8
E:ng1ne, automatic transmissipn, power steering, power
brakes, luggage ra ck, green vinyl interior with white
fin ish. Radio and all the extras.

Add 1itiOnal 2.Sc Cha r'ge. ·pfl'r
Advertise ment.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

8:30 a .m. to 5:00p.m. Dally ,
~ : 30
a .m. to 12:00 Noor
&gt;a turday .
·

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

BLIND ADS

OFFIC.E

~rd

·

HOUR~

of Thanks

Notice

Notice

OLD FASHIONED revival still
m progress at the Pomeroy
Wes leyan Holiness Church on
Rt. 1 ~3. Special services each
evenmg at 7:30p.m . Speaker
and Pastor Rev . O' Dell
Manley . Everyone welcome.
3-16·1fc

WE WISH TO extend our si n
cere than~ s to relatives
friends and neighbors for'
their kindness and sympathy
shown during the death of our
beloved husband and father,
Walton C. Roush . We also
wish to thank the Middleport
Emergency Squad, doctors,
KOSCOT KDSMET ICS AND
nur ses and nurses aides al
WIGS. SPECIALS MONTHVeterans Memorial Hospita l
Furnace Controls
LY .
BROWN ' S INDE far their wonderful care ; to
PENDENT DIST RIBU HUMIDIFIEPS
Rev. Charles Simons of the
TOR .
MIDDLEPOI!T .
Middl epo rt First Baptis t
PHONE 992-5113.
not
Water
Heaters
Church for his prayer s and
1-23-ltc
Plumbin!l'
consoling words; Rev. T. C.
Partridge of the St. Lutheran
BEGINNING April I, 1973
Electrical Work
Church at Lancaster, Father
Showalter's Wet Pel Shop wilf
Bernard Kracjovic of the
be .open 4 p.m. to 9: 30 p.m.
Sacred Hear t Church at
da1ly, all day Satu rday .
Pomeroy, American Legion
Sun day and Holidays.
Auxiliary Post 116 of Mid3·18-111p
dl eport, DAV Auxiliary Post
53 or Pomeroy, Galli a Cour.~ ly
992 -2448
8 &amp; 40 Salon 611, Busy Bee
Pomeroy,
0.
WHY WAIT
Sunday School Class and all
others who helped In any
BUY YOUR
. wav; the Rawttngs .coa ts GU N SHOOT, also rifle matFunera l Home , Middleport, ches, open sites only and
FERTILIZER
Frank E. Smith Funera l special deer slug match .
Now and Getthe Early
Hom e,
Lan caster, our
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
ever lasting gratitude.
Sunday. April 1st, 11 noon .
DISCOUNT
Wife , chi ldren and grand·
3-29-Jtc
Mrs.
Golda
children :
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fer.
Mourn ing Roush, Mr. and YARD SA LE , Friday and
tilizer, all available now.
Mrs. Edgar Roush, Mr. and
Saturday on Larkin Street,
Take delivery now from our
Mrs. Richard Wolfinger, Miss
area warehouse at Pomeroy.
Rutland.
Genevieve Hamilton, Mr. and
3-19·31c
9'._
POMEROY
Mrs. William Nelson, Mr. and
.
.
.
Jack
W, tarsey, Mgr.
Mrs. George William Pr ice, GUN
Rutland
SHOOT;
Phono m-2tlt
Mr. and Mrs. Car l Mourning
Ameri can Legion. Sunday,
and Mr. and Mrs. James
April lsi, 12 to?.
Mourning .
3·19-Jtp
'HOOD'S AQUARIUMS; fish3-29-ltc
and supplies; new location
NEW 2 PC. Living Room sui te
Ash Street, Middleport nea;
PUBLIC NOTICE
in· 100 pet. nylon with
park
; phone 991-5443.
re ve rsi ble cush ion s . This
week
only
$109.95.
Cash
&amp;
NOTICE
---,-------__.:__:
1-7-lfc
Carry. Pomeroy Recovery,
OF APPOINTMENT
case No . 20.893 612 E. Main St ., Pomeroy,
Wanted
Estat e of La wren ce Ray
Oh io. Phone 991-7554.
Wiley, Deceased .
3-19-61p
DEAD Stock horses, cattle ,
Nolfce is hereby given that
hogs , sheep. Reasonable
Larry Lee Wiley of New Haven , RUMMAGE SALE, Apri l 2nd
charge . Ca ll 245·5514.
West Virg inia , has been duly
thru .51h i!Cfda,· I1J' }o 3:30p.m.
appointed Executor of th~
2·28·30tc
at old ~);)'e . Restaurant in
Estate of Lawren ce Ray Wiie~.
deceased, late of Meigs Coun ty
Mlddi"1'Qrl.
Wanted
Ohio .
'
3 19-1tc
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary Yard and Garage Sale, 789 WOMAN for houseclean ing by
within four months.
the day; phone 992-3686.
Maple St ., Middleport. Gravel
Dated thi s 20th day ' of Ma rc h
3·1Hic
Hill . March 30th and Jist.
1973.
Mann ing 0 . Webster. Judge
3·19·11c CARHOPS ; apply in person ;
CotJrl of Common Pleas,
Probate Division TRIP LE A Driver Education
Craw's Steak House. _ 6fc
{3) 22, 29 {4 ) 5
3 17
Classes wil l begin April 2; for -----------inf orm a tion contact Ben WORK like a horse ; $75 per
Slawter at 992·5618.
week isn 't hay ; for deta ils
3-17·41C write: Mrs. Libman , 34 w.
LEGAl NOTICE
Carpen ter St.. Athens, Ohio.
NO T IC E TO BIDDER S·
Rev iva l and Hymn
Sealed quot ation s wi ll be WEEKEND
_
_ _ _ __ _::__
3·2=5-61c
Sing , Fre edom
Go spel
rec ei ved by Th e Board of
Miss ion, Bald Knob. Aprll4, 5,
Com m iS !!.ion ers
at
Meig s
6, 7:30p.m. Hymn Sing , April
County , Ohio. at the Office of
Auto Sales
The County Co mmiss ioner s, in
7, 7:30p.m., Barnett Family,
the Court House, in the Village
McArthur , on hand. Publ ic 1971 HONDA 500 motorcycle 4
of Pom eroy , Ohio 45?69 , until
invited .
cylinder. many extra s, n'ke
9:30 O'C lock A.M . on t he lOth _ _ _ _ _ __ _3::__·::___
27-41 c
new; phone 985-3828.
day ot ApriL 1973 fo r th e fur 3-9-ltc
nishing of Bituminous Mater ials
tor the Meig s County Hi ghway REDUCE excess flu ids with - -- - - F!uide)(, Lose weight with 1963 DODGE Station Wagon , V·
Department.
E!stimated quantity of liquid
Dex-A-Diet capsules at
8. automatic, good work car.
asphalt
requi red,
ap .
Nelson Drugs. .
$175. Call992-7523 after 5 p. m.
pro xi mately 700.000 gallons.
3·18-3tp
3·19·4fc
QUOTATI ON S TO B E SUB ·

''HEitn

HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Help

MITTED AS FOL LOW S :
. Quolepr; cepergallon, F .O .B.

Wanted

To

Buy

vendors plan t. and the price per
1
ga llon delivered to vendors BAa y
c
. ALVES , Angus ,
portabl e tank to any location in
the Co unty designated by th e . Holslem or Charolais . Larry
County Eng ineer , tor th e
Ea rl Curtis, Phone Q85-3539.
variou s grades of bituminous
3-29-6tp
mater ials which may be ..
'"
required by the Meigs Co unty
Highway Departmen t, wh ic h
shall conform to th e Pertinent
State of Ohio , Departm ent of the
Hig hway Construction and
Mat er ia l Specific at io n, " 702
Brtum incus Materials", dat ed
'
January 1, 1973
Prices quoted on this bid sha ll
be in effec t for the rema inder of
Poles
the yea r 1973
With respect to th e aforesaid
estimated quant iti es , the bidder
Maximum
shall understand that no
guarant ee is given as to th e
Diameter
actua l quantities of ·bituminous
ma terial to be furni shed. but
each success ful bidder sha ll be
10"
reQuired to turnish al l or any
part of the Me igs Coun ty actual
requirement s as ordered du r ing
Largest End
tile bid period .
On th~ env elope containing
each bid. the name and address
of th e bidder must be shown and
plainly marked " Bituminous
DELIVERED
Bid " .
Proposals are ·o be returned
TO
on bid form s supplie d by the
vendor , and wilt b.e opened on
the date and place speci fied
'
above.
The Me igs County Com .
missio ners reserve the right to
re iect any and all quotations or
Open Saturdays
an y part thereof.
fromBa._
m. to3:30p.m .'
Ma rtha Chambers , Clerk
On Old Rt . 33
Meigs Cou nty Board of
Commissioners
Phone
992 -2689
131 n. 79
Pomeroy, Ohio
1

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

or

$7.00 Per Ton
OHIO
PALLET CO.

Silk is the st rongest of all
Andrew J ac kson is crednatural
fib er s. A thread of
ited with naming the early
settlement of Memphi s, si lk is stronger than the
Tenn .. after the Egyptian same·s ized thread of so me
kinds of steel.
city.

Employment Wanted

for 'Sale

EXPERIENCED painter, in· LOTS for sa le; on Chester
water; phone 992·5248 till 3 ·
tenor and exterior. Phone
p.m. or 991-3436 after 3 p.m.
985 -3951.
2S·61c " I
3·10·301p ,___ _ _ __ ___:_3·.::
..
NEW FOAM to fill your old
cushions, standard size suite,
·Wanted' To·Buy
only , $9 .95.
Pomeroy
llecovery, 612 E. Main Sf .
3-.8-30fp
CLEA N copper , 45c . lb ·
Radiators, clean, 28c tb:;
materials,
Brass, 18c lb. ; Batteries. 70c;. UPHOLSTERY
regularly $3.95 only $1.95,
Gtnseng_$60 .1b.; M. A. Hall ,
Also remnants . Pomeroy
Reedsville, 37B·6149.
Recovery , 622 E. Main Sf.
J.9.tfc
__::___
3-8·30fp

·I

_____

·-

.

0

.. ..

,r

ASK USAGOUT
Pll! · FABI!ICATED
-

WOOD TRUSSES
...;,
~_/

.

-,

Builtto Your 'Specs'
Delivered to Job Site

-

- .

'

.. ...

EXPERT ·
(Wheel Alignment

'.
•

•5.55
. .. . Amer.can
.
. .C:.' .. On -MOSI
'

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

·-. ·-·

~- - ·

..

'

.

.

POMEROY
' HOME&amp; AUTO

WUZ. IT A BOY
OR A GAL?

0

OFFICE SUPPLiES -..

'i

anil

I

• .

,

I WANT '.OU .10 GO
10 1HE BANK ANc;o GET
,_.._1HE El(lRA lHEY NEE\7. ..

1HE PAYROLL

0

~"

oc

.

992-2094
. ,606 E. Main Pomero~

•• '

FURNITURE

HOGG

8UTI
JUST CAN'T
HACK tTl

-· , I

DEPARTMENT
roESN'T HAVE
ENOUGH CASH
10 COVER 1HE

MAYBE HE
MEANT AFTER
IT'S OFF T~c

I'RESS1

/r&lt;;l~=t#

PAY

RAISE~ .

For

l=or Rent

SMlTH NELSON
MOTQRS. .INC.

UNFURNI'HED
3 room
o
apartment, 40B Spring Ave..
Pomeroy.
3·1·ffc
-PRIVAT
E meeting room for
any organ ization; phone 9923975.
3-11 -lfc
---------3 AND 4 !lOOM 'furnished end
un fu rni shed apartments .
Phone 992-5434.
4-12·11c
--:::o-~--:..,..-,-::::-,-:--:--:--DUPLEX .
fo ·wall car·
gettng, 2 bedrooms; 2
edroom house; phone 9'12·
2780 or 992·3432.
13'1fc
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_·_

1973 8 TRACK stereo in lovell
hand rubbed Walnut console .
Pay balance of $103.50 or
payments can be arranged .
Call 992-5331.
.28 .6tc
- - - - - - - -3ZIG -ZAG Sewing Machine just
taken in, must sell at once.
p b 1
f
0 $34.10 or $5 a
ay a ance
month.
Call 991-5331.
3_28 _6fc
(J) TWIN Need le Sewing
Machines 1972 Model in
Walnut stand. All feature s
built-intomaketancydeslgns
and do stretch sew ing. Also
buttonholes, blind hems, etc.
$43 .35 cash price or terms
available. Electro Hygiene
Co., phone 992-7755.
~DUSE and 11railer lots. Phone
18 .61 c
991 ·5693.
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_3·:_:_
3·26-Stc (21 VACUUM Cleaners. Electro
Hygiene New Demonstrators
have all the cleaning at ·
7 ROOMS , l'h baths, un furn is hed hou se; 705 S.
tachments plus the new
Second St., phone 991-5113.
Electro Suds for shampooing
·
3·27·31p
carpet. Only $17.50 cash price
or terms available . Electro
Hygiene Co .. phone 992-7755.
3 ROOM &amp; bath furnished
aparlmenl ; co mplet e ly
3·28-61c
private ; utilities paid ; for one
or two men ; call 992-3881 be· FRESH eg_gs: For now and
tween 4 p.m. and 6 p.m . or 992·
.~aster
choice
quality,
3134 after 6 p.m.
small, medium and large
~========3=·=27~·6~tp- sizeS;
priced right; J. T.
Ledlie, Langsville, Ohio.
3·28-31c

wall

==-------

FOR RENT

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS
Middleport,

o.

I Elliciency Apt. with new
furnitu re, all utilities paid.
1 Furnished Apts. with new
fu rniture, with or without
utilities. Both have 1 or 2
bedrooms. No Pets.
Phone: 992-3863
Till P.M.
or 992-5844
After 6.p.m.
I

Sale

1956PLYMOUTHforparls, SSO ;
phone 949-2739.
:J. 16· 31c

----------~

1966 INTERNATIONAL V·8
engine; 266 cu. in.; with
transmission com plete ; for
pickup; phone 992·7384.
3·28·31c
1971 APACHE . Eagle Fofd.up
camper; inc ludes spare tire,
canopy and plast 1c storm
window . Trailer has been
wired for electric, 3 outlets.
Excellent condition, $675; call
992-5815 after 5 p.m.
3·18-Jic

------

WALNUT STEREO. Modern
walnut stereo·radlo com ·
bination . Four speakers. four
speed changer . Separate
controls. Balance $72.40. Use
our time payment plan. Call
991-7085.
3-29-61c

-

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE

-AH e&gt;~ READIN'
MAH 'FEARI-1':55
RJSDICK" COMIC
BOOK. AH RUN
OUTA MATCHES --·

NEW2 PC. Living room suite in
100 pet. nylon with reversibl e
cushion s. This week only
$109 .95 . Cash &amp; Carry .
Pomeroy Recovery, 621 E.
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh io.
Phone 992·/55 4.
_________
3·_
29_·6tp
ONE WALNUT end table,
cofteelable , chestofdrawers.
sewing machine, G. E.
Sweeper, G. E. electric dryer.
Phone 985-4244.
3-29-3tp
CORN · Phone 985-4211.
3-29·24tp
PANSIES and cabbage plants.
Cleland
Farms
&amp;
Greenhouse. E. Main , Racine.
Geraldine Cleland.
3·29·1fc

Real

-50 AH !&gt;URNT THE:M

WORTHI-i':SS Ol-E PAGE.S
-Of.l!O AT A Tl ME -

FO' LIGHT!!

\

Sales &amp; Service, Inc. 3 25 tf
C. BllADFORD, Auctioneer O'DELCWHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Ill. 124,
- - c
Complete Service
complete front end servlce1
_B_E_F_O_Il.,._E_Y_O_U_b__- - Phone 949-3821
tune up and brake service:
· M b' l H
uy anyh nelwd
Racine, Oh;,0
· consider
o 1 e the
ornelarge
you savings
s ou
,
Wheels
balanced elec·
Crill . BradLQrd
All
work '
Ironically.
you can have by purchasing a
S-l-Ife
guaranteed .
Reasonable .
late model used Mobi le Home.. - - - - - - - - _ _ : _
rates. Phone 992·3213 or 1~· ·
Here are some everyday low
Estate
Sale
3231.
prices: 1- 60xl2 Buddy ' s,
2· lB·tfC
$4,195.00, deli"ered
and set 2 H
. 0 USES " NEW ," 3
•
up ; 1- 60xl1, 3 bedroom
bedrooms; walf .fo . wall EXCAVATiNG, aozer, 1uou•'
Elcona, $4,795.00 ; l-50x10 ca rpel ; total
electric;
and backhoe work; septic
Detroiter, extra clean, basements; large wooded tanks Installed; dump trucks
$1.495 .00; This is just a lew of
lot s; 2 car garages; custom
and to-boys for hire; will haul
the bargains available at
kitchen; call 985-3595 or 992fill dirt, top soli, limestone
Berry·Miller Mobile Home 5869.
3-28-11tc alid gravel ; call Bob or Roger
Sales. 705 Farson Street,
Jeffers, day phone 992·7019;
Belpre, Ohio, phone 423-9531 .
night phone 991·3525 or 992·
AT
DARWIN,
5
room
s,
city
Shop here first, you 'll be glad
5231.
water .. approximately 1 acre ,
you did.
3-29-61c
2·ll·lfL
on Route 33. Immediate oc cupancy, real buy 1 $4,000 .
~E E US FOR : Awnmgs, storm .
Phone 773·5580.
·r:. Air Conditioners·
3·17-Sip
doors and windows, carports, :
· • Awnings
marquees, aluminum siding
.-,.U d · ·
FOR SALE by owner - New
and railing, A. Jacob, sales ·
n erptnntnQ
apartment building, 4 units on
representatl ve. For free
· r:.
three and three tenths acres,
estimates, phone Char IN
\ ILomplete mQblle hqme
city orwell water, all electric,
Lisle, Syracuse, V. v..
l'.!rvice ~ plus giganti c
15 minute drive from Ohio
Johnson and Son, Inc.
,
: "!splay of mobile homes
Univ ersity . Apartments are
3·2·1fc
always'.availabte.at ...
furni shed and rented . Good
incom e. Priced to sell. Phone · ELNA ana W~lte- ~ew•n11
;MILLI!R·
773·5580.
~ ~ Mft(hlnes ..•. service on 1 1 f
makes. Reasonable rates~ '
3·27·Sip
HOMES - - - - - - - - The Sewing Center, Mid· '
lftO Washingto~ Blvd. '
3 BEDROOM Hous e in dleport, Ohio.
423·7521
BELPRE
•··
Syracuse. new forced air gas
11· 16-tfc
,
I v . ,;
furnace, low utilities, large "AINTING, Ma sonry w-o- rk- ,:
level lot with storm fe nce. r
Phone 992·5791.
free estimate; call 773·5580.
!:.state
3-1·30fp
J.29.51c
L~J~.on Wright St., phone 741.
EXCAVATING. Lxmrs, 1arg•
3-16-12tc FOR SA LE by owner, modern 3
and small; Backhoes and
Loaders on track and !Ires; .
bedroom house, new buill-In
Dump trucks Lo·boY'
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone kitchen , dining room, living
Service ; Septic tanks In·
room r bath, 1 buill-in paneled
985·3529.
stalled;
George
(Bill)
6·ll ·lfC porches, full basement and
Pull Ins; phone 992·2478.
fuel oil furnace, aluminum
' 2·9·1fct
5 ROOM house and bath ; 2 siding and storm windows,
big
new
garage
18
x
36,
small
porches; full basement; fully
bern and other buildings on I HARRISON'S TV Service and
carpeted and panelled; In
Service Calls; phone 992·2522.
town ; $10,000 ; phone 992· 3·10 acres. Call Eugene Long
2-9·1fC
949-1165.
7109.
3-18-41c ---~---,-,---3·18-61c
_ Au 1UM~biL~ 1~surance ~ri
'Hc5DSE -FbR"si\1.E' 114 B 1 ~ cancelled?
Lost
your
·street, Pomeroy, Ohio; ~l~~ ~zrator's license? Call 992·
house, 3 bedrooms, excellen·
6-15·1fc
I~?Callon, close to school ant
City ; contact Lou Osborne or
&lt;all 991·5898.
11·26·11&lt;

3-29·31c 10'12 FT. TllUCK Camper,
. 3-27·7tp
1968 PLYMOUTH F
bl
HAY
sleeps 4, toilet. jack s, Call882·
wilh bl k
ury, ue
'a lfalfa and mixed ; pony ·
1138.
_ ac v1ny 1 1op : phone . phone 985·3849,
'
3.29. 31 p
742 4771
-====::::::::::::3:-~2S=·6~1p~ :-::-:----=-:~~---___:_.:..._::
1971 FOUR SEASONS Travel
~:-:::==----=-3-.::25-6tc r
Tra iler, 20' selt· contatned ,
1948 CHEVY with newly rebuilt
tandem axle. Phone 985·4t76.
engme ; SSOO firm ; phone 991·
For the Lowest
l ·29-6tp
7897 after 5:30p.m .
Tire Prices
_ _ _ _ _ _ _:_
3·1:.:Htc
BEATEN DOWN Carpet paths
go when Blue Lustre arrives.
'66 FORD Galaxle 500 XL
Rent electric shampooer $1.
in the Area
au t~ matic. cower steerino .
Nelson's
Drug
Store ,
rad•o, good condition . '64
Pomeroy, Ohio.
It's
Chevrolet Bel Air V8 ·stan·
3·29·21&lt;
d~~d , radio, very good con ::3-::
G::OO:::D
:-::
C-:L-::E:A
:N
c
_
a_
m
_p
___:_
lo-ts___:_
, 17
dillon . Call 992-6645 after 4
p.m.
fl . at the railroad , 100ft. at
_ _ _ __ __.:_3·28·31p
nver , 400ft . long ; suitable for
trailers. Marton . Reynolds,
Mason, w. va.. phone 773 _
5147.
882·1817 New Haven, W. Vo .
3·29·61c
_ _ __ _ _ ___:_.:.__::__·
,
1.71 ACI!E tot; phone 741·3656.
SINGER
automatic
sewt'ng_ _ _ __ __:_~_::·27· 41p
machine ; like new In walnut c~blnet . Makes design sflt . .
1964 HONDA 90, good bike for
beginners; ca ll 992·1692.
btl~~ hz~~~~g~~er~~~:~snh~~~s, •
~S. Call · Ravenswood, 273:'
:--------=3·::__2/ .Jtc
9511 or :i73·9893.
FULL electric hospital bed ;
t-l l·lfc
also wheel chair and walker; -------~:__:_·
used only a few months; like NEW 51
be
.
raw rry plants Rt
new ; call 992·3881 between 4
338, near llaclne locks; phone
p.m. and 6 p.m. or 992·31J.4
ON YOUR DIAL
247·2309, Charlie Foster.
after 6 p.m.
·25' 61 c
------~3:._27·6fp _ _ _ _ _ _ __::3:::

WMP0/1390

'Business Services ·

WALDO!!

·-

:/ I

I
' .
OUJ furn~lure, 'oak table~ UPHOLSTERY materials;
i
organs, dishes, docks, brasS
Nylon prints, cottbn prints,
Pomeroy_ Home &amp; Auto
beds or complete households.
velvets of all kinds. Pomeroy
&amp; ZUSPAN
Open HilS
;stop In and See Our:
:Write M. D. Miller, Rt. -4,
Recovery, 612 E. Main St.
I
Monday
lhru
Saturday
MATEI!IALS CO.
Pomeroy, Ohio.· Pllone : 'I'll '
- 3-8-30tp
' 6~ __ E ,_Io!'a~~omeroy, 0 . i . :Floor Display.
Mason, W. Va .
173·5554
6171.
~--:-------~
..
1--l·tl• ' UPHOLSTER your own fur G &amp; E Appliance llepair ; repair
-----~--ni ture. Foam cushions ; any
size. Cotton, burlap, swivel
on all laundry equipment,
Sale
bases, zipper, webbing, welt. Mobile Homes
refrigeration equipment and,
·-OCUST posts, 7 11. long ; 410 6
Pomeroy Recovery, 622 E. 1970 GREGORY all electric
house wiring; welding ,
mches; phone 992·5795.
Main St.
mobile home with furniture,
electric and gas. Call 992-3802
_ _ _ _ _ _ __:3-_::27-5tc
3-8·301~
air-conditioned; phone 773- or after 4: 30 p.m. call 992L"'·om the largest
5135.
6050.
SAVE 20 pet. inventory
3·13·6fp .
3·21 -30fp
Radiator
clearance sale now In :=-----:-=-c==---~
p~rnall~st Heater Core . .
progress . 20 pel. discount on "CASH ·paid for all makes ant
Nathan Biggs
FIRST FLOOR, 1 room ap~rl ·
most
of your grocery needs . · models of mobile homes . SEPTIC TANKS AROB!C
ment in Pomeroy . Phone 992·
R
.adlator
Specialist
Phone area code 614·413-9531.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN
This means you can sav£! 20
3028.
4-13-tfc
ED,
REPAIRED.
MILLER
pet. on your grocery bill . Get
3·19·31c
SANITATION, STEWART,
th e full details today at the
'OWN
'vOUR
-tfOM.E
-AT
LvV\
OHIO.
PHONE 662-3035.
Bright Star Markel next to
11 x SO TRAILER, married
COSTsee
King
sbury
Home
10-4·1fc
Drive. fn Theatre, Mason, W.
couples only ; no pets; util ities
t'Omeroy ·
Sales
&amp; Service, Inc., phone
-Va.
·
~1·'2114
pa id; Bob's Mobile Court,
3-20-161c
992 -6256from 1to7p.m. or by _- READY·NIIX
CUNCRETE
Syracuse, Ohio; phone 991appointment. 2.4' wide _
delivered right to your
2951.
CLEANING
3-15·1fc GROCERY business for sale.
furnished . Made by Skyline
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free SPRING
Beautify
your home with
Build ing for sa le or lease.
Corp ., country's largest. est mates. Phone 992·3284.
installation
of wall paneling
S ROOMS and bath , 110 Lincoln
Phone 773-5618 from 8:30p.m.
" Meigs County owned and
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co ..
and ceiling tile. For estimate
Hill Rd. Phone 991·2433.
lo 10 p.m . tor appointment.
operated.' ' Financing
Mlddl~port, Ohio.
·
ca ll 992·5471.
3·11·31c
3-20-lfc
available. Set up on your tot
6·30·11&lt;
3·29·61p
_________
- - - - - - -- - ready for your occupancy. 100
ROOMS near Gavin Plant, call COAL, Limeston_e, Excelsto}
yards off Rt. 33 on County Rd . . SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
trim or cut trees, c\e&lt;Sn
belweenB:JOa . m.and6:30p.
Sail Works, E. Main st,
18. Quick delivery. Our tow REASONABLE rates. Ph. ~46· WILL
6ut
basements, attics, etc.
m. Phone 368-7120.
· Pomeroy . Phone 991-3891. ·
overheadwillsaveyou$$$, 11' · 4782, Gallipolis, John Russell.
949·3221 .
·
Phone
3·29-3tc
·
4-11·1fc
and 14' Mobile Homes
Owner &amp; Operator.
3·11·30fC
S·f2·1fc
available, Kingsbury Home

1967 FORD •;, ton pickup, long
bed, 4 speed, 2 gas tanks, runs
and looks good, heavy fires ;
phone 985·3554, Ha rold
For
Brewer, Long Bottom.
ALUMINUM
Car t_op boats, 10,
:-:---:-_ _ _ _::__
3·1::S· tfc
· 12 and 13 fl . Kingsbury Rd ..
1964 4 WHEEL dri ve pickup.
Co. Rd. 18, Phone 992·6256
long bed, good rough tires.
after 5 p. m.
loc k-out hubs, runs good ; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3::_·8::_·3=0f.c
phone 985 -3554, Harold Brewer, Long Bottom .
STARCRAFT Spring Sale _ _ _ __ _ _.:_3-=:25-tlc
Check these savings on 24'7"
-10'7''
$1,000
off; 22'7"18'7"- $900 S67S
off ·
- 1800off;
1966 BELAIR Chevrolet ; 327
off. Fold down Slarmaster
motor ; automatic; power
save
S345; Galaxle save s450;
stee ring ; phone 667-3511 or
Buy now before factor y price
667 -3400.
increase goes into effect.
3·18-5tc
CAMP CONLEY STAR·
CRAFT SALES, Rt. 62 N. of
1971 CAMARO, V-8; power
Pt. Pleasant, Behind Red
s.teenng ; automatic; 4 new
Carpel Inn , Ph . 675-5384.
fires ; pay balan ce,· ca ll 992·
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___:3::_·2::J.7tc
5552 between A: 30 to 6 p.m.
3-17-Jip 100 CC Kawasaki motorbike,
only 4.200 miles. Also good
1964 PONTIAC Tempest: 1967
Conn trumpet, sso. Phone 247Dodge Station Wagon . phone
2401.
991-5367.
'

We tllk to you
:like a person.

.II/HAT'S THt
· Sf'e:IAt.lY Cf
TilE ~S£:1

THe.~E'S ALWAYS A CRIS IS
THAT PREVE:NT5 YOU FROM
1HINKING- 1'00 MUCH
AllOLlT YOUR PERSONAL
PROBLEM51

For

RIP WINKLE: ! DO MY
EARS DECEIVE ME:
OR DID YOU JUST
A5KME10GO
OUT WITH YOU?

MQ.BILE

Real

()l ,CCi\11' CtJ, .. 1\liiJK

fi:PITNe! AIJD

For sale

REMe;M&amp;r&lt; I ~ll.l~l~b

IQ.I'T l've~l~'

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1. Spenser
heroine
'-Cameroons
tribe
7. Definite
article
10. Ottawa
Indian
chief
12. ~~one" in
Berlin
13. Mother of
8Down .
Give the

Virgil B.

Teaford, St.
Broker-

110 Mechanic Street

CLELAND
REALTY

Pomeroy, Ohio
NEW LISTING
MODERN - large home sit·
ting on top of a hill In a sub
(Hvision . ~
·,s s bedrooms, 2
baths, e •. oJ heat, family
room , nice •(-Q'&gt;Is of large
closets~ beau1 •. ul kitchen,
llre~lace. double carport, and
nearly 1 acres of land
$65,000.00. ·..
.
MIDDLEPOI!T
5 ROOMS - This Is just the
place for beginners or older
folks . Has 2 bedrooms, bath
and basement. $5500.00.
129 ACRES
ON RT . 124 WEST- Several
build' ngs 1 barns, a nd 1arge
home.' All' minerals
. Plenty of
room for houses or trailers.
NEW LISTING
.
30 ROOMS- Steam heating,
bar with D·1·2·3 licenses. All
fu rn flu re . Corner tot wIth
parking .
Asking
only
532,500.00.
2 YEAI!S OLD
NEAR RACINE - Nice kft.
chen. utility, 2 bedrooms, and
large living. Carport, large tot.
Only $14,000,00.
LARGE OLDER HOME
LARGE DEN - 3 nice
bedrooms, paneled den, family
room, and 2 baths, garages and
nearly 1 acres.
ALL ELEC~:~~- _ 3 nice
bedrooms, large kitchen. full
~semen! , and garage. Near
~utland. $20,500.00.
.
NEW LISTING
CARRY OUT- On !louie 143,
and over 4 acres with farm
,pond . Plenty of parking
Asking just $850000
·
INVESTMENTS. MOST
PEOPLE TALK ABOUT, BUT
ONLY A FEW llEALLY IN·
VEST. DON'T MISS V.OUR
CHANCE, AND SAY I COULD
OF HAD THAT.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
G
OllDON B. TEAFORD
ASSOCIATES
992-3325 or992-Ut5
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS '

PRICE REDUCED
Large corner
lot. 3
bedrooms. Bath, nice kit·
chen with large dining area .
Gas F.A. heat, utility room,
lots of paneling and tile.
Garage, $10,000.00.
MOBILE HOME
Over I acre of ground. All set
up ready to move into. 11x60
with extended living room, 3
B. R., utility ll ., bath with
shower. air cond. Close ln .
$6,900.00.
3DACI!ES FENCED
Just off Rt. 681. A bargain at
·just 511,900. 4 bedrooms,
bath, deep well and pump.
Just rewired. Buildings.
CAN'T BEAT THIS
7 room home. Close ln. 3
bedrooms , bath , NEW
siding, raot &amp; carport at just
$5,000.00.
FURNISHED HOME
Renovated just 3 years ago .
NEW storm do~rs &amp; win ·
dows . Furnace, bath, floor
covering. Large lot 10Sx1JS.
NEW range, ref. &amp;. deep
freeze. JUST $8,500.00.
BEAUTIFUL BRICK
1 Acre. 3 bedrooms w-walkln
closets, 1'12 baths, kitchen is
out of this world, dining
area, lull basement, utility
room, carport. Many other
features. $29,500.00. COULD
NOT BE REPLACED AT
$45,000.00.
LAI!GE LEVEL LOT
Located ne&lt;Sr Mine area , 3
bedrooms, large bath. 3
bedrooms, paneling, tile etc.
6 rooms In all. REDUCED
TOJUST$9,100.00. CALL TO
SEE.
.
FOR A QUICK SALE LIST WITH US .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992·2259
If no onswtr 992-2561 or 915·
420,

.

· LJULE R ana Dack noe wciri&lt; '
ponds and septic tanks, dll:
ct.lng service; top soli, 1111 1
dirt , limestone; B&amp;K Ex·t
cavallng. Phone 992·5367 '
Dick Katr, Jr .
, '.'
9·1·1fc

vivacity
Ethiopian
town
Understood
"-Little

--

Teapot"

SELECTION

* MOBILE HOMES

.

.
AMANDA PANDA

-

PERCY MAD£.
. A - Liffi~

; WISH ...
'·

lARRrs..••
MOBIL£ HOMES

CAPl'AIN EASY

600 W. Mllln "noxt to .._ __
Boys".
-'Vf . . s

Larry Evant, ..
Frank Gheen

•

OPEN

e e

Open 5 Days"'" p.m.
CIOMd All Dly Thurs
"Service After the Sa~"
SM Ua Before Yoy Buy
Frank Gillon, Salts Mgr,

WERE

I

fellow 's

11
TheSong
of-"
9. Sicilian
•city'
11, Chinese
fraternal
organlza·
tion

Yeoierday's Answer
17. Expire
38. Yearn
19. Muscat is
painfully
its capital.. 37. Importune
20. Of sound's 38. Angloquality
Saxonpoet
22. Old·tlme
40, Emblem of
note
Great
23. Oglala
.Britalri
Sioux leader 41, Cay
(2wds.)
42, Turf
24. Apache
45. Like ;
chief
resembllng
28, Valley
(suffix)
27. Kiln
48. Counter32. Greek
clockwise
letter
(ubbr.)

'

ot I&gt;

, ,,, 1 '1 Ill 1 1 f

I 01

I SOYUM

0

I
I

lREH4WL

)

....

II

I (J

THEY ~OUND CATTY.
Now......,. the elrele&lt;lletll..
ourprloo anower, u

lo

b)'

"(

IIIIt
(_

I

J•....... MINUS fiWIR HAWKIR IMIIII

Ye .. erda)'"•

AMwen A conet.loft oae .....,.. . . ..,
ot "&lt;'IINI't'. -"AMIN"
,

C~ARUE

8/1.0WN

TH15t!i M~ 6110-rnER

'Ri:RiJN': .. cAN f.IE '
6E ON OUR TEAM?

MCDLNGRCS

ERCCRJW

fltl~.r

Unacramble t11e1e four Jumbl..,
one letter to each oquare, to
form four ordinary warda.

'-1----=..:.PIIII=.:II=.:a==:!:•~•~•!!!.__jl

CRYPTOQUOTIS
ELWTRWF

''" Il l N i l I

,_the
I
I
:=~~=~::;::=~:::::~·-~te4 theoboYe&lt;""-

.

Dl

~&amp;MID~;~"-~,=!:!....,=

11'URTEG

AXYDLBAAXR
.. L 0 N G FELL O.W
One letter simply stands for another. In thill sample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sincle !elton,
opoatrophM, the length and formation of the words ore all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
.

LGDB.MGF

•

Magnani
4.French
river
5, Lamb·
kin's cry
6. Turkish
weight
7, Shawnee
chief
8. Long-

iNo1FE

A·tEST MISTAKE YOU .
ONE. "'LB CONTINUALLY FEAJI,'
""""""
-.. ERT HUBBAliD
·
v • vm

(~ 1871 Klar Poata- SJlldieato, lac.)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE,... Here's how to work it:

E 992-1777

e e

.. :!HAT SIX FAT FISH

(2 wds.)
Unit of
work
25. California
city
28.C.S.A.
hero
28. Anec·
1
dotal
collection
30. Conversa·
tionllllnterrogatives
31.Near
the
kidneys
33. Head
covering
34, Camping
item
35. Grassland
37. Forearm
bones
39. Cutoff
43, King
(Fr.)
44.Apache
chief
41, Chicle
f8. Seminole
leader

ckeo=·~c.f/i~~
lNG YOU WILL

3.-

ax
Dash;

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·22&amp;4
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy:
Authorized Singer Sales anc
Service. We -Sharpen Scluora .,
__...._...,_..,_-;::_.......o_ __:~:..:.:
-29-tlc

LARGE

49.Taro root
50. Church
bench
51. Snare
DOWN
1.-go
(2 wds.)
2. Th~atrlcal
Coward

RC
IW

GRNMVDP
DSM

AIV

SRBSMCD _

MLVDS.-YISW

K.

A

. _,
·

LITTLE KID LIKE THAT?

�'
,-

0.

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., March 29,1973

Sentinel Cla.ssifieds Get ActiOn! Sentinel Classifieds Get Results/.
•. W~N'J IIQ.t
.

INFORMATION

.DEADL'INES,

.,;: P .M . Dly Before Publication
· M~nd ay Oeadt'ine ·9 a.m .
Cancellation- Corrections

Will be bc~pted until 9'e .m . far,

oa·y of. Publ iCation
REGULATIONS

The Publ isher re serves the

rlghl· to edit or..reiect any ads

deemed . oblif~tional.
Th e
~ubllstler wtll not be respons i ble
~or

m.ore than one incOrrect

msert1on .

··

RATES
··. r'For Waflt Ad S erv i~ e
5 cents per Word on(f insertlof
Min imum Charge 7Sc .
·
12 cents per word ·Thrp• .
consecutive insertions.

18 cents per word six con
secullve Insertions.
25 Per Cen't Discount on pate
ads and ads J)a i d within 10 davs
CA.RD OF THANKS ~
&amp; OBITUARY
Sl .SO fet 50 word rhlnlm11rh
Each addi t ional word 2c ·

®

2 SIGNS
.

OF
QUALITY
..
1970 PONT lAC

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

'

11395
Esprit. ~~cal 1 owner car, 350 V-8 engine, P.
stee nng &amp; automattc trans., AM-FM radio, like new white
le~tered fires, dark brown finish , bucket seat &amp; blk. vinyl
tnm . A sharp one. Really loaded.
·
Fire~ird

1969 CHEVELLE
11795
Malibu Cpe., local 1 owner car, dark grn fin ish, li ke new
~hite lettered tires, 307 v.s power steering &amp; brakes,
radio, clean int.
1969 CHEV!li)LET
$1895
Stat.lon wagun, locally owned &amp; cl ea n inside &amp; out. V-8
E:ng1ne, automatic transmissipn, power steering, power
brakes, luggage ra ck, green vinyl interior with white
fin ish. Radio and all the extras.

Add 1itiOnal 2.Sc Cha r'ge. ·pfl'r
Advertise ment.

Pomeroy Motor Co.

8:30 a .m. to 5:00p.m. Dally ,
~ : 30
a .m. to 12:00 Noor
&gt;a turday .
·

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

BLIND ADS

OFFIC.E

~rd

·

HOUR~

of Thanks

Notice

Notice

OLD FASHIONED revival still
m progress at the Pomeroy
Wes leyan Holiness Church on
Rt. 1 ~3. Special services each
evenmg at 7:30p.m . Speaker
and Pastor Rev . O' Dell
Manley . Everyone welcome.
3-16·1fc

WE WISH TO extend our si n
cere than~ s to relatives
friends and neighbors for'
their kindness and sympathy
shown during the death of our
beloved husband and father,
Walton C. Roush . We also
wish to thank the Middleport
Emergency Squad, doctors,
KOSCOT KDSMET ICS AND
nur ses and nurses aides al
WIGS. SPECIALS MONTHVeterans Memorial Hospita l
Furnace Controls
LY .
BROWN ' S INDE far their wonderful care ; to
PENDENT DIST RIBU HUMIDIFIEPS
Rev. Charles Simons of the
TOR .
MIDDLEPOI!T .
Middl epo rt First Baptis t
PHONE 992-5113.
not
Water
Heaters
Church for his prayer s and
1-23-ltc
Plumbin!l'
consoling words; Rev. T. C.
Partridge of the St. Lutheran
BEGINNING April I, 1973
Electrical Work
Church at Lancaster, Father
Showalter's Wet Pel Shop wilf
Bernard Kracjovic of the
be .open 4 p.m. to 9: 30 p.m.
Sacred Hear t Church at
da1ly, all day Satu rday .
Pomeroy, American Legion
Sun day and Holidays.
Auxiliary Post 116 of Mid3·18-111p
dl eport, DAV Auxiliary Post
53 or Pomeroy, Galli a Cour.~ ly
992 -2448
8 &amp; 40 Salon 611, Busy Bee
Pomeroy,
0.
WHY WAIT
Sunday School Class and all
others who helped In any
BUY YOUR
. wav; the Rawttngs .coa ts GU N SHOOT, also rifle matFunera l Home , Middleport, ches, open sites only and
FERTILIZER
Frank E. Smith Funera l special deer slug match .
Now and Getthe Early
Hom e,
Lan caster, our
Forked Run Sportsman Club,
ever lasting gratitude.
Sunday. April 1st, 11 noon .
DISCOUNT
Wife , chi ldren and grand·
3-29-Jtc
Mrs.
Golda
children :
Bag, Bulk and Liquid Fer.
Mourn ing Roush, Mr. and YARD SA LE , Friday and
tilizer, all available now.
Mrs. Edgar Roush, Mr. and
Saturday on Larkin Street,
Take delivery now from our
Mrs. Richard Wolfinger, Miss
area warehouse at Pomeroy.
Rutland.
Genevieve Hamilton, Mr. and
3-19·31c
9'._
POMEROY
Mrs. William Nelson, Mr. and
.
.
.
Jack
W, tarsey, Mgr.
Mrs. George William Pr ice, GUN
Rutland
SHOOT;
Phono m-2tlt
Mr. and Mrs. Car l Mourning
Ameri can Legion. Sunday,
and Mr. and Mrs. James
April lsi, 12 to?.
Mourning .
3·19-Jtp
'HOOD'S AQUARIUMS; fish3-29-ltc
and supplies; new location
NEW 2 PC. Living Room sui te
Ash Street, Middleport nea;
PUBLIC NOTICE
in· 100 pet. nylon with
park
; phone 991-5443.
re ve rsi ble cush ion s . This
week
only
$109.95.
Cash
&amp;
NOTICE
---,-------__.:__:
1-7-lfc
Carry. Pomeroy Recovery,
OF APPOINTMENT
case No . 20.893 612 E. Main St ., Pomeroy,
Wanted
Estat e of La wren ce Ray
Oh io. Phone 991-7554.
Wiley, Deceased .
3-19-61p
DEAD Stock horses, cattle ,
Nolfce is hereby given that
hogs , sheep. Reasonable
Larry Lee Wiley of New Haven , RUMMAGE SALE, Apri l 2nd
charge . Ca ll 245·5514.
West Virg inia , has been duly
thru .51h i!Cfda,· I1J' }o 3:30p.m.
appointed Executor of th~
2·28·30tc
at old ~);)'e . Restaurant in
Estate of Lawren ce Ray Wiie~.
deceased, late of Meigs Coun ty
Mlddi"1'Qrl.
Wanted
Ohio .
'
3 19-1tc
Creditors are required to file
their claims with said fiduciary Yard and Garage Sale, 789 WOMAN for houseclean ing by
within four months.
the day; phone 992-3686.
Maple St ., Middleport. Gravel
Dated thi s 20th day ' of Ma rc h
3·1Hic
Hill . March 30th and Jist.
1973.
Mann ing 0 . Webster. Judge
3·19·11c CARHOPS ; apply in person ;
CotJrl of Common Pleas,
Probate Division TRIP LE A Driver Education
Craw's Steak House. _ 6fc
{3) 22, 29 {4 ) 5
3 17
Classes wil l begin April 2; for -----------inf orm a tion contact Ben WORK like a horse ; $75 per
Slawter at 992·5618.
week isn 't hay ; for deta ils
3-17·41C write: Mrs. Libman , 34 w.
LEGAl NOTICE
Carpen ter St.. Athens, Ohio.
NO T IC E TO BIDDER S·
Rev iva l and Hymn
Sealed quot ation s wi ll be WEEKEND
_
_ _ _ __ _::__
3·2=5-61c
Sing , Fre edom
Go spel
rec ei ved by Th e Board of
Miss ion, Bald Knob. Aprll4, 5,
Com m iS !!.ion ers
at
Meig s
6, 7:30p.m. Hymn Sing , April
County , Ohio. at the Office of
Auto Sales
The County Co mmiss ioner s, in
7, 7:30p.m., Barnett Family,
the Court House, in the Village
McArthur , on hand. Publ ic 1971 HONDA 500 motorcycle 4
of Pom eroy , Ohio 45?69 , until
invited .
cylinder. many extra s, n'ke
9:30 O'C lock A.M . on t he lOth _ _ _ _ _ __ _3::__·::___
27-41 c
new; phone 985-3828.
day ot ApriL 1973 fo r th e fur 3-9-ltc
nishing of Bituminous Mater ials
tor the Meig s County Hi ghway REDUCE excess flu ids with - -- - - F!uide)(, Lose weight with 1963 DODGE Station Wagon , V·
Department.
E!stimated quantity of liquid
Dex-A-Diet capsules at
8. automatic, good work car.
asphalt
requi red,
ap .
Nelson Drugs. .
$175. Call992-7523 after 5 p. m.
pro xi mately 700.000 gallons.
3·18-3tp
3·19·4fc
QUOTATI ON S TO B E SUB ·

''HEitn

HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

Help

MITTED AS FOL LOW S :
. Quolepr; cepergallon, F .O .B.

Wanted

To

Buy

vendors plan t. and the price per
1
ga llon delivered to vendors BAa y
c
. ALVES , Angus ,
portabl e tank to any location in
the Co unty designated by th e . Holslem or Charolais . Larry
County Eng ineer , tor th e
Ea rl Curtis, Phone Q85-3539.
variou s grades of bituminous
3-29-6tp
mater ials which may be ..
'"
required by the Meigs Co unty
Highway Departmen t, wh ic h
shall conform to th e Pertinent
State of Ohio , Departm ent of the
Hig hway Construction and
Mat er ia l Specific at io n, " 702
Brtum incus Materials", dat ed
'
January 1, 1973
Prices quoted on this bid sha ll
be in effec t for the rema inder of
Poles
the yea r 1973
With respect to th e aforesaid
estimated quant iti es , the bidder
Maximum
shall understand that no
guarant ee is given as to th e
Diameter
actua l quantities of ·bituminous
ma terial to be furni shed. but
each success ful bidder sha ll be
10"
reQuired to turnish al l or any
part of the Me igs Coun ty actual
requirement s as ordered du r ing
Largest End
tile bid period .
On th~ env elope containing
each bid. the name and address
of th e bidder must be shown and
plainly marked " Bituminous
DELIVERED
Bid " .
Proposals are ·o be returned
TO
on bid form s supplie d by the
vendor , and wilt b.e opened on
the date and place speci fied
'
above.
The Me igs County Com .
missio ners reserve the right to
re iect any and all quotations or
Open Saturdays
an y part thereof.
fromBa._
m. to3:30p.m .'
Ma rtha Chambers , Clerk
On Old Rt . 33
Meigs Cou nty Board of
Commissioners
Phone
992 -2689
131 n. 79
Pomeroy, Ohio
1

WANTED
CHIPWOOD

or

$7.00 Per Ton
OHIO
PALLET CO.

Silk is the st rongest of all
Andrew J ac kson is crednatural
fib er s. A thread of
ited with naming the early
settlement of Memphi s, si lk is stronger than the
Tenn .. after the Egyptian same·s ized thread of so me
kinds of steel.
city.

Employment Wanted

for 'Sale

EXPERIENCED painter, in· LOTS for sa le; on Chester
water; phone 992·5248 till 3 ·
tenor and exterior. Phone
p.m. or 991-3436 after 3 p.m.
985 -3951.
2S·61c " I
3·10·301p ,___ _ _ __ ___:_3·.::
..
NEW FOAM to fill your old
cushions, standard size suite,
·Wanted' To·Buy
only , $9 .95.
Pomeroy
llecovery, 612 E. Main Sf .
3-.8-30fp
CLEA N copper , 45c . lb ·
Radiators, clean, 28c tb:;
materials,
Brass, 18c lb. ; Batteries. 70c;. UPHOLSTERY
regularly $3.95 only $1.95,
Gtnseng_$60 .1b.; M. A. Hall ,
Also remnants . Pomeroy
Reedsville, 37B·6149.
Recovery , 622 E. Main Sf.
J.9.tfc
__::___
3-8·30fp

·I

_____

·-

.

0

.. ..

,r

ASK USAGOUT
Pll! · FABI!ICATED
-

WOOD TRUSSES
...;,
~_/

.

-,

Builtto Your 'Specs'
Delivered to Job Site

-

- .

'

.. ...

EXPERT ·
(Wheel Alignment

'.
•

•5.55
. .. . Amer.can
.
. .C:.' .. On -MOSI
'

-GUARANTEEDPhone 992-2094

·-. ·-·

~- - ·

..

'

.

.

POMEROY
' HOME&amp; AUTO

WUZ. IT A BOY
OR A GAL?

0

OFFICE SUPPLiES -..

'i

anil

I

• .

,

I WANT '.OU .10 GO
10 1HE BANK ANc;o GET
,_.._1HE El(lRA lHEY NEE\7. ..

1HE PAYROLL

0

~"

oc

.

992-2094
. ,606 E. Main Pomero~

•• '

FURNITURE

HOGG

8UTI
JUST CAN'T
HACK tTl

-· , I

DEPARTMENT
roESN'T HAVE
ENOUGH CASH
10 COVER 1HE

MAYBE HE
MEANT AFTER
IT'S OFF T~c

I'RESS1

/r&lt;;l~=t#

PAY

RAISE~ .

For

l=or Rent

SMlTH NELSON
MOTQRS. .INC.

UNFURNI'HED
3 room
o
apartment, 40B Spring Ave..
Pomeroy.
3·1·ffc
-PRIVAT
E meeting room for
any organ ization; phone 9923975.
3-11 -lfc
---------3 AND 4 !lOOM 'furnished end
un fu rni shed apartments .
Phone 992-5434.
4-12·11c
--:::o-~--:..,..-,-::::-,-:--:--:--DUPLEX .
fo ·wall car·
gettng, 2 bedrooms; 2
edroom house; phone 9'12·
2780 or 992·3432.
13'1fc
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3_·_

1973 8 TRACK stereo in lovell
hand rubbed Walnut console .
Pay balance of $103.50 or
payments can be arranged .
Call 992-5331.
.28 .6tc
- - - - - - - -3ZIG -ZAG Sewing Machine just
taken in, must sell at once.
p b 1
f
0 $34.10 or $5 a
ay a ance
month.
Call 991-5331.
3_28 _6fc
(J) TWIN Need le Sewing
Machines 1972 Model in
Walnut stand. All feature s
built-intomaketancydeslgns
and do stretch sew ing. Also
buttonholes, blind hems, etc.
$43 .35 cash price or terms
available. Electro Hygiene
Co., phone 992-7755.
~DUSE and 11railer lots. Phone
18 .61 c
991 ·5693.
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___:_3·:_:_
3·26-Stc (21 VACUUM Cleaners. Electro
Hygiene New Demonstrators
have all the cleaning at ·
7 ROOMS , l'h baths, un furn is hed hou se; 705 S.
tachments plus the new
Second St., phone 991-5113.
Electro Suds for shampooing
·
3·27·31p
carpet. Only $17.50 cash price
or terms available . Electro
Hygiene Co .. phone 992-7755.
3 ROOM &amp; bath furnished
aparlmenl ; co mplet e ly
3·28-61c
private ; utilities paid ; for one
or two men ; call 992-3881 be· FRESH eg_gs: For now and
tween 4 p.m. and 6 p.m . or 992·
.~aster
choice
quality,
3134 after 6 p.m.
small, medium and large
~========3=·=27~·6~tp- sizeS;
priced right; J. T.
Ledlie, Langsville, Ohio.
3·28-31c

wall

==-------

FOR RENT

GRAY MANOR
APARTMENTS
Middleport,

o.

I Elliciency Apt. with new
furnitu re, all utilities paid.
1 Furnished Apts. with new
fu rniture, with or without
utilities. Both have 1 or 2
bedrooms. No Pets.
Phone: 992-3863
Till P.M.
or 992-5844
After 6.p.m.
I

Sale

1956PLYMOUTHforparls, SSO ;
phone 949-2739.
:J. 16· 31c

----------~

1966 INTERNATIONAL V·8
engine; 266 cu. in.; with
transmission com plete ; for
pickup; phone 992·7384.
3·28·31c
1971 APACHE . Eagle Fofd.up
camper; inc ludes spare tire,
canopy and plast 1c storm
window . Trailer has been
wired for electric, 3 outlets.
Excellent condition, $675; call
992-5815 after 5 p.m.
3·18-Jic

------

WALNUT STEREO. Modern
walnut stereo·radlo com ·
bination . Four speakers. four
speed changer . Separate
controls. Balance $72.40. Use
our time payment plan. Call
991-7085.
3-29-61c

-

NEW HAVEN
DISCOUNT TIRE

-AH e&gt;~ READIN'
MAH 'FEARI-1':55
RJSDICK" COMIC
BOOK. AH RUN
OUTA MATCHES --·

NEW2 PC. Living room suite in
100 pet. nylon with reversibl e
cushion s. This week only
$109 .95 . Cash &amp; Carry .
Pomeroy Recovery, 621 E.
Main St., Pomeroy, Oh io.
Phone 992·/55 4.
_________
3·_
29_·6tp
ONE WALNUT end table,
cofteelable , chestofdrawers.
sewing machine, G. E.
Sweeper, G. E. electric dryer.
Phone 985-4244.
3-29-3tp
CORN · Phone 985-4211.
3-29·24tp
PANSIES and cabbage plants.
Cleland
Farms
&amp;
Greenhouse. E. Main , Racine.
Geraldine Cleland.
3·29·1fc

Real

-50 AH !&gt;URNT THE:M

WORTHI-i':SS Ol-E PAGE.S
-Of.l!O AT A Tl ME -

FO' LIGHT!!

\

Sales &amp; Service, Inc. 3 25 tf
C. BllADFORD, Auctioneer O'DELCWHEEL alignment
located at Crossroads, Ill. 124,
- - c
Complete Service
complete front end servlce1
_B_E_F_O_Il.,._E_Y_O_U_b__- - Phone 949-3821
tune up and brake service:
· M b' l H
uy anyh nelwd
Racine, Oh;,0
· consider
o 1 e the
ornelarge
you savings
s ou
,
Wheels
balanced elec·
Crill . BradLQrd
All
work '
Ironically.
you can have by purchasing a
S-l-Ife
guaranteed .
Reasonable .
late model used Mobi le Home.. - - - - - - - - _ _ : _
rates. Phone 992·3213 or 1~· ·
Here are some everyday low
Estate
Sale
3231.
prices: 1- 60xl2 Buddy ' s,
2· lB·tfC
$4,195.00, deli"ered
and set 2 H
. 0 USES " NEW ," 3
•
up ; 1- 60xl1, 3 bedroom
bedrooms; walf .fo . wall EXCAVATiNG, aozer, 1uou•'
Elcona, $4,795.00 ; l-50x10 ca rpel ; total
electric;
and backhoe work; septic
Detroiter, extra clean, basements; large wooded tanks Installed; dump trucks
$1.495 .00; This is just a lew of
lot s; 2 car garages; custom
and to-boys for hire; will haul
the bargains available at
kitchen; call 985-3595 or 992fill dirt, top soli, limestone
Berry·Miller Mobile Home 5869.
3-28-11tc alid gravel ; call Bob or Roger
Sales. 705 Farson Street,
Jeffers, day phone 992·7019;
Belpre, Ohio, phone 423-9531 .
night phone 991·3525 or 992·
AT
DARWIN,
5
room
s,
city
Shop here first, you 'll be glad
5231.
water .. approximately 1 acre ,
you did.
3-29-61c
2·ll·lfL
on Route 33. Immediate oc cupancy, real buy 1 $4,000 .
~E E US FOR : Awnmgs, storm .
Phone 773·5580.
·r:. Air Conditioners·
3·17-Sip
doors and windows, carports, :
· • Awnings
marquees, aluminum siding
.-,.U d · ·
FOR SALE by owner - New
and railing, A. Jacob, sales ·
n erptnntnQ
apartment building, 4 units on
representatl ve. For free
· r:.
three and three tenths acres,
estimates, phone Char IN
\ ILomplete mQblle hqme
city orwell water, all electric,
Lisle, Syracuse, V. v..
l'.!rvice ~ plus giganti c
15 minute drive from Ohio
Johnson and Son, Inc.
,
: "!splay of mobile homes
Univ ersity . Apartments are
3·2·1fc
always'.availabte.at ...
furni shed and rented . Good
incom e. Priced to sell. Phone · ELNA ana W~lte- ~ew•n11
;MILLI!R·
773·5580.
~ ~ Mft(hlnes ..•. service on 1 1 f
makes. Reasonable rates~ '
3·27·Sip
HOMES - - - - - - - - The Sewing Center, Mid· '
lftO Washingto~ Blvd. '
3 BEDROOM Hous e in dleport, Ohio.
423·7521
BELPRE
•··
Syracuse. new forced air gas
11· 16-tfc
,
I v . ,;
furnace, low utilities, large "AINTING, Ma sonry w-o- rk- ,:
level lot with storm fe nce. r
Phone 992·5791.
free estimate; call 773·5580.
!:.state
3-1·30fp
J.29.51c
L~J~.on Wright St., phone 741.
EXCAVATING. Lxmrs, 1arg•
3-16-12tc FOR SA LE by owner, modern 3
and small; Backhoes and
Loaders on track and !Ires; .
bedroom house, new buill-In
Dump trucks Lo·boY'
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone kitchen , dining room, living
Service ; Septic tanks In·
room r bath, 1 buill-in paneled
985·3529.
stalled;
George
(Bill)
6·ll ·lfC porches, full basement and
Pull Ins; phone 992·2478.
fuel oil furnace, aluminum
' 2·9·1fct
5 ROOM house and bath ; 2 siding and storm windows,
big
new
garage
18
x
36,
small
porches; full basement; fully
bern and other buildings on I HARRISON'S TV Service and
carpeted and panelled; In
Service Calls; phone 992·2522.
town ; $10,000 ; phone 992· 3·10 acres. Call Eugene Long
2-9·1fC
949-1165.
7109.
3-18-41c ---~---,-,---3·18-61c
_ Au 1UM~biL~ 1~surance ~ri
'Hc5DSE -FbR"si\1.E' 114 B 1 ~ cancelled?
Lost
your
·street, Pomeroy, Ohio; ~l~~ ~zrator's license? Call 992·
house, 3 bedrooms, excellen·
6-15·1fc
I~?Callon, close to school ant
City ; contact Lou Osborne or
&lt;all 991·5898.
11·26·11&lt;

3-29·31c 10'12 FT. TllUCK Camper,
. 3-27·7tp
1968 PLYMOUTH F
bl
HAY
sleeps 4, toilet. jack s, Call882·
wilh bl k
ury, ue
'a lfalfa and mixed ; pony ·
1138.
_ ac v1ny 1 1op : phone . phone 985·3849,
'
3.29. 31 p
742 4771
-====::::::::::::3:-~2S=·6~1p~ :-::-:----=-:~~---___:_.:..._::
1971 FOUR SEASONS Travel
~:-:::==----=-3-.::25-6tc r
Tra iler, 20' selt· contatned ,
1948 CHEVY with newly rebuilt
tandem axle. Phone 985·4t76.
engme ; SSOO firm ; phone 991·
For the Lowest
l ·29-6tp
7897 after 5:30p.m .
Tire Prices
_ _ _ _ _ _ _:_
3·1:.:Htc
BEATEN DOWN Carpet paths
go when Blue Lustre arrives.
'66 FORD Galaxle 500 XL
Rent electric shampooer $1.
in the Area
au t~ matic. cower steerino .
Nelson's
Drug
Store ,
rad•o, good condition . '64
Pomeroy, Ohio.
It's
Chevrolet Bel Air V8 ·stan·
3·29·21&lt;
d~~d , radio, very good con ::3-::
G::OO:::D
:-::
C-:L-::E:A
:N
c
_
a_
m
_p
___:_
lo-ts___:_
, 17
dillon . Call 992-6645 after 4
p.m.
fl . at the railroad , 100ft. at
_ _ _ __ __.:_3·28·31p
nver , 400ft . long ; suitable for
trailers. Marton . Reynolds,
Mason, w. va.. phone 773 _
5147.
882·1817 New Haven, W. Vo .
3·29·61c
_ _ __ _ _ ___:_.:.__::__·
,
1.71 ACI!E tot; phone 741·3656.
SINGER
automatic
sewt'ng_ _ _ __ __:_~_::·27· 41p
machine ; like new In walnut c~blnet . Makes design sflt . .
1964 HONDA 90, good bike for
beginners; ca ll 992·1692.
btl~~ hz~~~~g~~er~~~:~snh~~~s, •
~S. Call · Ravenswood, 273:'
:--------=3·::__2/ .Jtc
9511 or :i73·9893.
FULL electric hospital bed ;
t-l l·lfc
also wheel chair and walker; -------~:__:_·
used only a few months; like NEW 51
be
.
raw rry plants Rt
new ; call 992·3881 between 4
338, near llaclne locks; phone
p.m. and 6 p.m. or 992·31J.4
ON YOUR DIAL
247·2309, Charlie Foster.
after 6 p.m.
·25' 61 c
------~3:._27·6fp _ _ _ _ _ _ __::3:::

WMP0/1390

'Business Services ·

WALDO!!

·-

:/ I

I
' .
OUJ furn~lure, 'oak table~ UPHOLSTERY materials;
i
organs, dishes, docks, brasS
Nylon prints, cottbn prints,
Pomeroy_ Home &amp; Auto
beds or complete households.
velvets of all kinds. Pomeroy
&amp; ZUSPAN
Open HilS
;stop In and See Our:
:Write M. D. Miller, Rt. -4,
Recovery, 612 E. Main St.
I
Monday
lhru
Saturday
MATEI!IALS CO.
Pomeroy, Ohio.· Pllone : 'I'll '
- 3-8-30tp
' 6~ __ E ,_Io!'a~~omeroy, 0 . i . :Floor Display.
Mason, W. Va .
173·5554
6171.
~--:-------~
..
1--l·tl• ' UPHOLSTER your own fur G &amp; E Appliance llepair ; repair
-----~--ni ture. Foam cushions ; any
size. Cotton, burlap, swivel
on all laundry equipment,
Sale
bases, zipper, webbing, welt. Mobile Homes
refrigeration equipment and,
·-OCUST posts, 7 11. long ; 410 6
Pomeroy Recovery, 622 E. 1970 GREGORY all electric
house wiring; welding ,
mches; phone 992·5795.
Main St.
mobile home with furniture,
electric and gas. Call 992-3802
_ _ _ _ _ _ __:3-_::27-5tc
3-8·301~
air-conditioned; phone 773- or after 4: 30 p.m. call 992L"'·om the largest
5135.
6050.
SAVE 20 pet. inventory
3·13·6fp .
3·21 -30fp
Radiator
clearance sale now In :=-----:-=-c==---~
p~rnall~st Heater Core . .
progress . 20 pel. discount on "CASH ·paid for all makes ant
Nathan Biggs
FIRST FLOOR, 1 room ap~rl ·
most
of your grocery needs . · models of mobile homes . SEPTIC TANKS AROB!C
ment in Pomeroy . Phone 992·
R
.adlator
Specialist
Phone area code 614·413-9531.
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN
This means you can sav£! 20
3028.
4-13-tfc
ED,
REPAIRED.
MILLER
pet. on your grocery bill . Get
3·19·31c
SANITATION, STEWART,
th e full details today at the
'OWN
'vOUR
-tfOM.E
-AT
LvV\
OHIO.
PHONE 662-3035.
Bright Star Markel next to
11 x SO TRAILER, married
COSTsee
King
sbury
Home
10-4·1fc
Drive. fn Theatre, Mason, W.
couples only ; no pets; util ities
t'Omeroy ·
Sales
&amp; Service, Inc., phone
-Va.
·
~1·'2114
pa id; Bob's Mobile Court,
3-20-161c
992 -6256from 1to7p.m. or by _- READY·NIIX
CUNCRETE
Syracuse, Ohio; phone 991appointment. 2.4' wide _
delivered right to your
2951.
CLEANING
3-15·1fc GROCERY business for sale.
furnished . Made by Skyline
pro/eel. Fast and easy. Free SPRING
Beautify
your home with
Build ing for sa le or lease.
Corp ., country's largest. est mates. Phone 992·3284.
installation
of wall paneling
S ROOMS and bath , 110 Lincoln
Phone 773-5618 from 8:30p.m.
" Meigs County owned and
Goegleln Ready·Mix Co ..
and ceiling tile. For estimate
Hill Rd. Phone 991·2433.
lo 10 p.m . tor appointment.
operated.' ' Financing
Mlddl~port, Ohio.
·
ca ll 992·5471.
3·11·31c
3-20-lfc
available. Set up on your tot
6·30·11&lt;
3·29·61p
_________
- - - - - - -- - ready for your occupancy. 100
ROOMS near Gavin Plant, call COAL, Limeston_e, Excelsto}
yards off Rt. 33 on County Rd . . SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED
trim or cut trees, c\e&lt;Sn
belweenB:JOa . m.and6:30p.
Sail Works, E. Main st,
18. Quick delivery. Our tow REASONABLE rates. Ph. ~46· WILL
6ut
basements, attics, etc.
m. Phone 368-7120.
· Pomeroy . Phone 991-3891. ·
overheadwillsaveyou$$$, 11' · 4782, Gallipolis, John Russell.
949·3221 .
·
Phone
3·29-3tc
·
4-11·1fc
and 14' Mobile Homes
Owner &amp; Operator.
3·11·30fC
S·f2·1fc
available, Kingsbury Home

1967 FORD •;, ton pickup, long
bed, 4 speed, 2 gas tanks, runs
and looks good, heavy fires ;
phone 985·3554, Ha rold
For
Brewer, Long Bottom.
ALUMINUM
Car t_op boats, 10,
:-:---:-_ _ _ _::__
3·1::S· tfc
· 12 and 13 fl . Kingsbury Rd ..
1964 4 WHEEL dri ve pickup.
Co. Rd. 18, Phone 992·6256
long bed, good rough tires.
after 5 p. m.
loc k-out hubs, runs good ; _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _3::_·8::_·3=0f.c
phone 985 -3554, Harold Brewer, Long Bottom .
STARCRAFT Spring Sale _ _ _ __ _ _.:_3-=:25-tlc
Check these savings on 24'7"
-10'7''
$1,000
off; 22'7"18'7"- $900 S67S
off ·
- 1800off;
1966 BELAIR Chevrolet ; 327
off. Fold down Slarmaster
motor ; automatic; power
save
S345; Galaxle save s450;
stee ring ; phone 667-3511 or
Buy now before factor y price
667 -3400.
increase goes into effect.
3·18-5tc
CAMP CONLEY STAR·
CRAFT SALES, Rt. 62 N. of
1971 CAMARO, V-8; power
Pt. Pleasant, Behind Red
s.teenng ; automatic; 4 new
Carpel Inn , Ph . 675-5384.
fires ; pay balan ce,· ca ll 992·
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___:3::_·2::J.7tc
5552 between A: 30 to 6 p.m.
3-17-Jip 100 CC Kawasaki motorbike,
only 4.200 miles. Also good
1964 PONTIAC Tempest: 1967
Conn trumpet, sso. Phone 247Dodge Station Wagon . phone
2401.
991-5367.
'

We tllk to you
:like a person.

.II/HAT'S THt
· Sf'e:IAt.lY Cf
TilE ~S£:1

THe.~E'S ALWAYS A CRIS IS
THAT PREVE:NT5 YOU FROM
1HINKING- 1'00 MUCH
AllOLlT YOUR PERSONAL
PROBLEM51

For

RIP WINKLE: ! DO MY
EARS DECEIVE ME:
OR DID YOU JUST
A5KME10GO
OUT WITH YOU?

MQ.BILE

Real

()l ,CCi\11' CtJ, .. 1\liiJK

fi:PITNe! AIJD

For sale

REMe;M&amp;r&lt; I ~ll.l~l~b

IQ.I'T l've~l~'

~
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
1. Spenser
heroine
'-Cameroons
tribe
7. Definite
article
10. Ottawa
Indian
chief
12. ~~one" in
Berlin
13. Mother of
8Down .
Give the

Virgil B.

Teaford, St.
Broker-

110 Mechanic Street

CLELAND
REALTY

Pomeroy, Ohio
NEW LISTING
MODERN - large home sit·
ting on top of a hill In a sub
(Hvision . ~
·,s s bedrooms, 2
baths, e •. oJ heat, family
room , nice •(-Q'&gt;Is of large
closets~ beau1 •. ul kitchen,
llre~lace. double carport, and
nearly 1 acres of land
$65,000.00. ·..
.
MIDDLEPOI!T
5 ROOMS - This Is just the
place for beginners or older
folks . Has 2 bedrooms, bath
and basement. $5500.00.
129 ACRES
ON RT . 124 WEST- Several
build' ngs 1 barns, a nd 1arge
home.' All' minerals
. Plenty of
room for houses or trailers.
NEW LISTING
.
30 ROOMS- Steam heating,
bar with D·1·2·3 licenses. All
fu rn flu re . Corner tot wIth
parking .
Asking
only
532,500.00.
2 YEAI!S OLD
NEAR RACINE - Nice kft.
chen. utility, 2 bedrooms, and
large living. Carport, large tot.
Only $14,000,00.
LARGE OLDER HOME
LARGE DEN - 3 nice
bedrooms, paneled den, family
room, and 2 baths, garages and
nearly 1 acres.
ALL ELEC~:~~- _ 3 nice
bedrooms, large kitchen. full
~semen! , and garage. Near
~utland. $20,500.00.
.
NEW LISTING
CARRY OUT- On !louie 143,
and over 4 acres with farm
,pond . Plenty of parking
Asking just $850000
·
INVESTMENTS. MOST
PEOPLE TALK ABOUT, BUT
ONLY A FEW llEALLY IN·
VEST. DON'T MISS V.OUR
CHANCE, AND SAY I COULD
OF HAD THAT.
HELEN L. TEAFORD
G
OllDON B. TEAFORD
ASSOCIATES
992-3325 or992-Ut5
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS '

PRICE REDUCED
Large corner
lot. 3
bedrooms. Bath, nice kit·
chen with large dining area .
Gas F.A. heat, utility room,
lots of paneling and tile.
Garage, $10,000.00.
MOBILE HOME
Over I acre of ground. All set
up ready to move into. 11x60
with extended living room, 3
B. R., utility ll ., bath with
shower. air cond. Close ln .
$6,900.00.
3DACI!ES FENCED
Just off Rt. 681. A bargain at
·just 511,900. 4 bedrooms,
bath, deep well and pump.
Just rewired. Buildings.
CAN'T BEAT THIS
7 room home. Close ln. 3
bedrooms , bath , NEW
siding, raot &amp; carport at just
$5,000.00.
FURNISHED HOME
Renovated just 3 years ago .
NEW storm do~rs &amp; win ·
dows . Furnace, bath, floor
covering. Large lot 10Sx1JS.
NEW range, ref. &amp;. deep
freeze. JUST $8,500.00.
BEAUTIFUL BRICK
1 Acre. 3 bedrooms w-walkln
closets, 1'12 baths, kitchen is
out of this world, dining
area, lull basement, utility
room, carport. Many other
features. $29,500.00. COULD
NOT BE REPLACED AT
$45,000.00.
LAI!GE LEVEL LOT
Located ne&lt;Sr Mine area , 3
bedrooms, large bath. 3
bedrooms, paneling, tile etc.
6 rooms In all. REDUCED
TOJUST$9,100.00. CALL TO
SEE.
.
FOR A QUICK SALE LIST WITH US .
HENRY E. CLELAND
BROKER
992·2259
If no onswtr 992-2561 or 915·
420,

.

· LJULE R ana Dack noe wciri&lt; '
ponds and septic tanks, dll:
ct.lng service; top soli, 1111 1
dirt , limestone; B&amp;K Ex·t
cavallng. Phone 992·5367 '
Dick Katr, Jr .
, '.'
9·1·1fc

vivacity
Ethiopian
town
Understood
"-Little

--

Teapot"

SELECTION

* MOBILE HOMES

.

.
AMANDA PANDA

-

PERCY MAD£.
. A - Liffi~

; WISH ...
'·

lARRrs..••
MOBIL£ HOMES

CAPl'AIN EASY

600 W. Mllln "noxt to .._ __
Boys".
-'Vf . . s

Larry Evant, ..
Frank Gheen

•

OPEN

e e

Open 5 Days"'" p.m.
CIOMd All Dly Thurs
"Service After the Sa~"
SM Ua Before Yoy Buy
Frank Gillon, Salts Mgr,

WERE

I

fellow 's

11
TheSong
of-"
9. Sicilian
•city'
11, Chinese
fraternal
organlza·
tion

Yeoierday's Answer
17. Expire
38. Yearn
19. Muscat is
painfully
its capital.. 37. Importune
20. Of sound's 38. Angloquality
Saxonpoet
22. Old·tlme
40, Emblem of
note
Great
23. Oglala
.Britalri
Sioux leader 41, Cay
(2wds.)
42, Turf
24. Apache
45. Like ;
chief
resembllng
28, Valley
(suffix)
27. Kiln
48. Counter32. Greek
clockwise
letter
(ubbr.)

'

ot I&gt;

, ,,, 1 '1 Ill 1 1 f

I 01

I SOYUM

0

I
I

lREH4WL

)

....

II

I (J

THEY ~OUND CATTY.
Now......,. the elrele&lt;lletll..
ourprloo anower, u

lo

b)'

"(

IIIIt
(_

I

J•....... MINUS fiWIR HAWKIR IMIIII

Ye .. erda)'"•

AMwen A conet.loft oae .....,.. . . ..,
ot "&lt;'IINI't'. -"AMIN"
,

C~ARUE

8/1.0WN

TH15t!i M~ 6110-rnER

'Ri:RiJN': .. cAN f.IE '
6E ON OUR TEAM?

MCDLNGRCS

ERCCRJW

fltl~.r

Unacramble t11e1e four Jumbl..,
one letter to each oquare, to
form four ordinary warda.

'-1----=..:.PIIII=.:II=.:a==:!:•~•~•!!!.__jl

CRYPTOQUOTIS
ELWTRWF

''" Il l N i l I

,_the
I
I
:=~~=~::;::=~:::::~·-~te4 theoboYe&lt;""-

.

Dl

~&amp;MID~;~"-~,=!:!....,=

11'URTEG

AXYDLBAAXR
.. L 0 N G FELL O.W
One letter simply stands for another. In thill sample A 11
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Sincle !elton,
opoatrophM, the length and formation of the words ore all
hints. Each day the code letters are different
.

LGDB.MGF

•

Magnani
4.French
river
5, Lamb·
kin's cry
6. Turkish
weight
7, Shawnee
chief
8. Long-

iNo1FE

A·tEST MISTAKE YOU .
ONE. "'LB CONTINUALLY FEAJI,'
""""""
-.. ERT HUBBAliD
·
v • vm

(~ 1871 Klar Poata- SJlldieato, lac.)

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE,... Here's how to work it:

E 992-1777

e e

.. :!HAT SIX FAT FISH

(2 wds.)
Unit of
work
25. California
city
28.C.S.A.
hero
28. Anec·
1
dotal
collection
30. Conversa·
tionllllnterrogatives
31.Near
the
kidneys
33. Head
covering
34, Camping
item
35. Grassland
37. Forearm
bones
39. Cutoff
43, King
(Fr.)
44.Apache
chief
41, Chicle
f8. Seminole
leader

ckeo=·~c.f/i~~
lNG YOU WILL

3.-

ax
Dash;

SEWING MACHINES. Repair
service, all makes. 992·22&amp;4
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy:
Authorized Singer Sales anc
Service. We -Sharpen Scluora .,
__...._...,_..,_-;::_.......o_ __:~:..:.:
-29-tlc

LARGE

49.Taro root
50. Church
bench
51. Snare
DOWN
1.-go
(2 wds.)
2. Th~atrlcal
Coward

RC
IW

GRNMVDP
DSM

AIV

SRBSMCD _

MLVDS.-YISW

K.

A

. _,
·

LITTLE KID LIKE THAT?

�·'\

Meigs· Local schools -strike is ended
BY BOB HOEFLICH

Famous_ Maker

_ . .

Coordinate Sportswear
Shirts . Vests . Pants · Skirts - Sweaters ·
Blazers. Jac Shirts. Sizes· 8 to 18 and 38 to
44.

Sale 1h Price

Bra and
Girdles.

End ofthe MQnlll Sole

Womens
Panties

-;

Assorted Discontinued
Styles.
Values to $4.89.

White or pastel colors:
Reg. 69c pair.

While they last.

Sale

Junior Sportswear
Famous Brand
Pants · Tops · Shorts- .~ Halters
Dresses.
..

2 pair '1111
.

Knit
End of The Month Sale I

Sale ¥2 Price

End of the Month Sale
FIRST TRIP - Members of the Racine Scbool Safety
Patrol will leave Friday with the Pomeroy Safety Patrol for
Washington, D. C. This is the first time the Racine group hss
made the trip. They were invited to go by members of the

Bessie Fife of Cheshire dies :
Mrs. Bessie Garnett Fife, 81,
Cheshire, Rt. I, died Wednesday morning. Mrs. Fife was
horn Aug. 9, 1891 in Cheshire
Township, the daughter of the
late Asbury and Elizabeth
Winegar Hood. She was also
preceded in death by her
husband, Albert Ross Fife, in
1963; one bro.ther, and four
sisters.
Mrs. Fife was a member of
the Silver Run Freewill Baptist
Church.
She is survived by seven
daughters,
Mrs.
Guy
(Margaret) Priddy, Rutland ;
Mrs. Kenneth (Marie) Ralph,
Cheshire ; Mrs. John (Dorothy)
Veith, Cheshire ; Mrs. Carrol
(Evelyn ) Matthews, Cheshire;
Mrs. Deibert (Kathryn)
Russell, Mason; Mrs. Grant
(Emagine) Russell, Williamsburg, Pa., and Mrs. Franklin
(Doris) Cook, Pt. PleaiiJnt;

MkSllN uRIVE-IN

·.

''

FRI.·SAT.-SUN.
Mar. 30·31-Apr. 1
Double Feature
THE BIG
BIRD CAGE
(Color)
IRl
Plus
MADE FOR
EACH OTHER
Renee Taylor

Joseph Bologna
I Color)
iGPl
"The best comedy ot the
year and the best love
story."

MEIGS. THEATRE
'

Tonight, March 29

NOT OPeN
Friday thru Tuesday
Mar. 29 . April3
Wall Disney's
THE SWORD IN
THE STONE

(Gl
(Technlcolorl
Also
WATERBIRDS
(Technicolorl
And
MICKEY'S
GRAND OPERA
(Technicolor)
Adults$1.50
Childrensoc
Showstarls7p.m.

five sons, Albert fulymond
Fife, Cheshire; Roscoe Fife,
Middleport, and Clarence Fife,
Pomeroy; a sister, Mrs. Mina
Amos, Rodney; ·52 grandchildren,
92
greatgrandchildren, and eight greatgreat-grandchildren.
Funeral services will be
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the Silver
Run Freewill Baptist Church
with the Revs. Andrew Parsons
and Noe Herrman officiating.
Burial will be in Gravel Hill
Cemetery at Cheshire.
Friends may call at
Rawlings Funeral Home
Friday from 10 a.m. until 9
p.m. and Saturday until 12:30
p.m.

Alta Mae Rickard
died. Wednesday
LETART, W. VA. - Miss
Alta Mae Rickard, 80, Letart,
W. Va., Rt. I, died at her
residence Wednesday afternoon. She was the last of her
immediate family.
She was preceded in death by
her parents, Franklin J . and
SiviUa Pickens Rickard, three
brothers, and five sisters. A
member of Graham Baptist
.Church, she is survived by
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be
Saturday at 2 p. m. at Graham
Baptist Church with the Rev.
William Hatfield officiating.
Burial will be in Graham
Baptist Cemetery. Friends
may call at Ewing Funeral
Home anytime.
PRISONER RETURNED
The Meigs County Sheriff's
Dept. went to the correctional
institution at Chillicothe today
to return Pearl Searles here
where he will be held pending a
hearing in Meigs County
Common Pleas Court. Searles
was sentenced to the Ohio
Penitentiary in 1970 from
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court for setting fire to a
dwelling.
LOCAL TEMPS
The te1nperature in down·
town Pomeroy at II :30 a. m.
Thursday was 68 degrees under
partially sunny skies.

"1111 CIIATOII Of

Pomeroy Patrol, The four boys eacl! needillg ~.50 for the
trip, canvassed their hometown for dO!JatiO!Js. L-r are Robert
Beegle, school principal, and patrol boys George Knighting,
Kelly Taylor, Tim Brinager and John West.

News . . • in Briefs
t Continued from Page 1)
head of CIA clandestine services for the Western Hemisphere,
said he rejected the offer made by ITT President Harold S.
Geneen during ameeting In the Sheraton Carlton Hotel here July
16, 1970.
Broe admitted, however, that at a later meeting- Sept. 2!!,
1970 in New York- he urged IT!' officials to consider ways to
disrupt the Chilean economy and prevent Allende from taking
office.
A partial transcript of Broe's testimony, given privately
Tuesday, was released Wednesday. by Sen. Frank Church, JJ..
Idaho, chairman of the foreign relations subcommittee on
multinational corporations investigating allegations that IT!'
worked closely with the CIA in an unsuccessful attempt to
prevent Allende from becoming president. Allende hsd promised
during his campaign to nationalize the Chilean Telephone
Company, an IT!' subsidiary. He carried out that promise after
becoming president.

Vehicles wrecked
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept: was busy
Wednesday night and this
morning investigating three
accidents.
David Huddleston, fulcine,
was admitted to Veterans
Memorial Hospital where he
was taken by the Syracuse E-R
squad following an accident on
SR 124 in Syracuse at 7:30p.m.
Wednesday.
Huddleston, driving a truck
east, went off the highway and
sheared off a power pole. The
accident is under investigation.
The truck was demolished.
At 7:15p.m. Wednesday on
County Rd. 17 a doe deer was

Forfeits
{Continued from Page I)
reckless -operation and Douglas
Burns, Pomeroy, $25, intoxication.
Fined were Claude Reitmire,
Pomeroy, $5 and costs, assured
clear distance; George W.
Young, Pomeroy, $5 and costs,
assured clear distance; Lee
Kenneth Paul, Mason, $5 and
costs, running red light; Steven
Tallerson, Pomeroy, $10 and
costs, reckless operation; Paul
Forbes, Jr., Minersville, $5 and
costs, running a red light,
Douglas Phalin, Pomeroy, $5
and costs, reckless operation;
Gary Johnson, fulcine, $10 and
costs, reckless operation, and
Paul Reeves, Albany, $5 and
cOst!;, intoxication.

·veterans Memorial Hospital
ADMITTED Esther
Kissell, Middleport; Paul
Burns, Pomeroy; Armantine
Ramey, Pomeroy; Rachel
Cundiff, Syracuse; Debora
Roush, Syracuse; Sandra
Boothe, Racine ;1 Kathryn
Metzger, Cheshire; Rosalie
Wright, Langsville; Jeffrey'
Hawley, · Middleport; Ancil
Burbridge, Albany, and David
Huddleston, Racine.
DISCHARGED .
Ora '
Waddell, Mary Lawhorn,
Frank Meyer, Samuel Ebllm,
Sarah Boyles and Judy
Musser .

IUSONAIII DtUO PltiCU'

PHONE 992-5759
271 N. Sm Ml Aw..
'
M'df,p H\ Ofllo

·1tu Jflur Omg NM11

Village Pharmacy continues to provide
complete and accurate records of your ex.pense on prescr.iption medicine as we have the
past five y&lt;1ars.
.

,.

' .~ l

ALL WU..L SURVIVE
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Miami
University President Phillip R.
Shriver said Wednesday state
universities will not go out of
business despite low state subsidies, "but a budget which
fails even to keep up with inflation is surely a trend toward
mediocrity."
MEET CANCELLED
Monday night's monthly
meeting of the Blue Devil Band
Boosters has been cancelled, a
club spokesman said today.
· Director Charles Rowe will he
out of town that day. ·

killed when it ran into the path
of truck driven by Leonard
Lentz, Dexter, Rt. l. There was
light damage to the truck.
At1:45 a.m. today on SR 124
one mile east of Minersville
George Michael Jenkins,
Syracuse, went left of center
and struck a car traveling in
the opposite direction driven
by Joseph J. Brockmlller of
Cleveland on a straight section
of highway. II was established
that Jenkins went to sleep at
his wheel. There were no
personal lDJUrles. Both
vehicles were demolished. The
accident is still under in·
vestigation.

Woman's body
found in river
The body of a woman was
found in the Ohio River near
the Philip Sporn Plant Thursday morning, officials said. No
definite· identification on the
body had )leen made, officials ·
said.

Preteen (Young Jr.) SpoltsWear
Our entire stock of Preteen 6 to 16 Sportswear is included In this sale.
Jeans · Tops· Shirts
Skirts· Pants· Jackets
A big selection of super flares and cuffed
pants.

Eastern High School opened
its 1973 baseball season
Wednesday at home with a 6-5
victory over the Wahama
Falcons, breaking a 5·5
deadlock in the sixth inning.
With Devol and Cross
sharing the mound, Eastern
gave up 7 hits to the Falcons,
three of them a double and two
triples by M. Lewis in 4 tries.
D. Gardner had a double and
single for Wahama.
For Eastern Edwards and
Devol each were two for four.
Wahama pitchers fanned
one, walked 3, Eastern's
fanned 10, walked 6 and hit l.
K. Camp and R. Belcher
worked the mound for
Wahama.
100 022 lh5 7 3
Wahama
221 001 x-6 7 2
Eastern
UNIT CALLED
The Pomeroy emergency
squad was called to the
Harrisonville area at 8:23p.m.
Wednesday for Ancil Burbridge who was injured in a fall i
from a cliff. He was taken to
Veterans MemoMal Hospital
where he was admitted for
treatment of injuries.

End oflhe Monlll Sale

14 oz. blue denim • wide belt loops · san·
forlzed shrunk • true western style.
5.50 Slim Sizes a to 18 - • - · • Sale 4.98
5.~0 Regular Sizes a to 18 • • · · Sale Ua
5. 98 Husky Si~es 8 to 20 - • • • Sale 5.48

DAYTIME
DRESSES

Happies
Panty Hose

Cottons · Blends
Polyesters .
Big
selection, sizes 10 to 20.
W /2 • 24 112 and « to 52.

Sale

Sale Prices

4

Pair

Now You Know

slrlke settlement:
"All parties hereby agree that they will not take part in or
permit any reprisals againat any employe or student of the Meigs
Local School District as a result of hs vtng participated or having
failed to participate in the events or activities related to the
strike in any way."
The third phase of the settlement on reestablished days says:
"No child should he deprived of any educational opportunity
due to a dispute between the Meigs Local Teachers Assn.,
Chapter 17, OAPSE and the Meigs Local Board of Education.
Therefore, the two days - March 23 and 29 - will be
reestablished in an amended school calendar which shall be
Saturday, April 7, and Saturday, April14, 1973."
Signing the three phsse agreement on behslf o( the Meigs
Local Board was Frank W. Porter, board president; Gary R.
Walker on behslf of the Meigs Local Education Association, and
Mrs. Alice Globokar on behalf of the non-certified employes.
It was about 12:30 a.m. today before the final agreements
were signed. After that, teachers and non-teachers, who had
assembled in Pomeroy, had to be advised and accept the terms of
the agreement.
Before the signing, Porter advised representatives of the
Education Assn. and the public employes group thst representatives from the board of education attending collective

•

The only trilly wllll horses · those whose ancestors were
never domesticated and which
themselves roam wild - are
the Przewalskl horses in the
Gobi Desert.

at y

bargaining meetings with representatives of either of the employe group will not be autborlzed to make any binding
agreement on behalf of the board.
"The board of education is to milke all final decisions,"
Porter stressed.
,
Represents lives of the employe groupS said that any tentative agreement reached during bargaining processes would
also have to go back to their respective organizations for approval and so agreed with Porter's stipulation.
Among the representatives of the education association
present for a session of the board which started at 9 p.m., were
Walker, Mrs. Rita Slavin, John.Mora, all local, and We's Simms,
Terry Lee, and Bill Stultzofthe Ohio Education Association.
Representing the public employes gtoup besides Mrs.
Giohokar were Fred Haynes and Kenneth Murch of the Ohlo
Association of Public School Employes. Joining the meeting at 9
p.m. as requested was Prosecutor BerrJi1rd Fultz, the legal advisor of the board of education.
Simms presented the proposed agreement on behalf of the
Education Association and Murch presented the public employes' proposal, all of which was similar in nature in its original
form but was changed in minor ways as negotiations proceeded.
Simms and Murch conunented at the conclusion of their
(Con tinned on Page 21

Weather

•

Mostly cloudy touay and
tonight with a chance of
showers, but more likely in the
south tonight. Highs in the
upper 50s to the mid 60s. Lows
tonight in the upper 40s and the
lower 50s. Showers likely
Saturday with highs in the 60s.

enttne

Devoted To The lntere&amp;t&amp; Of The, Veig.•- Mason Area

Green or blue . short sleeves. Made like a coverall ·
permanent press . 65 perc.enl polyester · J5 percent
collor.
Broken size scale U to 50. Regulars and lorgs.

VOl . XXIV NO. 244

POME~OY-MIDDLEPORT,

OHIO

~--

.

FRIDAY, MARCH 30, 1973

TE~

PHONE 992-2156

C.ENTS .

•

End of The Month Sale I

eat przces rozen

End of The Month Sale

Tablecovers
Our entire stock of cloth or vinyl
tablecovers is reduced for this sale.
Complete selection of sizes. Squares
Oblongs · Ovals · Rounds.

"Name" Short Sleeve Shirts
Grey with school name and Insignia printed on front .
short sleeves. Not every size In every school but good
overall selecllon ol "Meigs". "Eastern" . "Southern"
- "Wahama" - "Kyger" Schools.

.1.95 Mens &amp; Womens Size.s. - . - · Sale 1.35
1.69 Boys &amp; Girls Sizes • • - - • Sale 1.00

End of the Month Sale

Cannon Royal

Fami~

Feather.lite No-Iron Sheets
Bleached 50% Polyester · 50% Cotton
3.39 Twin Size Sheets . . . . .
3.19 Full Size Sheets . . . .
4.99 Quoen Size 'Shoots . . . .
1.49 King Siza Sheets ..
1.89 pr. Pillowcases . . . . . . .

End of The Month Salel

Young Mens Athletic Socks
Stretch socks fits sizes 10 to 13- 60 percent
Lambs wool· 15 percent Acrylic · 15 percent
strelch ,ny)on. 10 peraen·f.- nylan.. JNhlte with
color· tops · of ,·red,- . bf·oe / ·."Oranger green,
maroon or purple.

79c
Sale! Room Size Rup
At Elberfelds Warehouse
on Mechanic Street
Sizes from 12xl5 to 12x21.
Colors: Autumn Tone . Gold . Green . Red . Candy
Stripe . Copper · Celery.

00

Sale '88
End of The Month Sale

Young Mens Rare Leg Jeans
Selected from regular stock - Corduroys · Brushed
denims . discontinued styles · Famous brands. Buy
what you need Friday and Saturday and really save.

~

,.

'JOO

End of the Month Sale

Reg .
Rfl! .
Reg.
Reg.
Reg.

Lee sn 98 Jump Suits

Regular Sl.OO polr

.

-- ~

~

" •

End of The Month Sale!

BOYS ~SLACKS

Sale! Mens and Young Mens

Wrangler $7.98

FLARE LEG JEANS
Extra durable M oz. Plus blue denim . wide belt loops .
santorlzed shrunk. Sizes 29 to 42 waist. Select your
correct length.
End of The Month· Sale

'6"
Mens and Boys '1 Tube Socks
111

Mens sizes fits 10 to 15. Boys sizes fits 9 to
11. White with contrast trim.

79~

Excellent quality· American made bicycles and all al
sale prices. Including 10 speed bikes . 5 speed · 3 speed .
Standard 261nch bicycles and 20 Inch Convertible bikes
for the beginner.
Stop In - select the bikes you want from this tine new
selection and save right now.

'
Sale! RCA Black and White
18 inch Diagonal Measure Screen size

Super ppwer grid VHF tuner, all solid slate UHF tuner,
built· In antennas _for Vf1Fand · UHF Channels . tone
· balanced sound system.
·
Walnut grain acrylic finish wllh black trim.

'13995
Sal~!

Glidden Paints

Spred Satin durable homogenized matte flat
for Interior walls, ceilings and woodwork.
Spred Lustre Semi Gloss Enamel
Spred Latex Semi Gloss Enamel
Spred Gloss All Purpose Enamel
Spred Urethane Florenamel
One Coat Spred Gel Flo House Paint
Endurance House Paint
· Housewares Dept. 1st floor.

Mens
75*
Work
Socks
Cushion sole· long tops · solid colors. Grey

3 pair '100

"KEY 73 PROGRAM" -Heading the committee of ihe countywide "Key 73 Program" of
the Meigs County Minlsterl81 Association, are 1-r, the Rev. Robert E. Buckley, pastor of Laurel
Cliff Free Methodist Church and the Rev. Frank Cheesebrew, pastor of the United Methodist
Ministry, Southern Cluster. Absent was the Rev. Charles Simons, pastor of the Middleport
Baptist Church. The worldwide "Key 73 Program" is to induce all ages into spiritual work in
the church. The "Key 73 Program" will get underway here Sunday with a hymn sing from 2:30
to 4:30p.m. at Meigs Junior High in Middleport with all churches of the county participating .
On April 15a youth meeting at the Laurel Cliff Church from 2:30 to 4:30p.m. will orient Key 73
for youth of the county and a youth rally planned for June 3. On Aug. 5a hymn sing Is planned
as is a Christian Film Crusade on Sept. 4, 5, 6, 7. At the hymn sing Sunday the Rev. Morris
Wolfe will be music director and Mrs. Robert Kuhn the pianist.
m:::=;:;::;:::::::::;:;::::=:--::;:;::::~::=:-~~~:::::o

Cookie Sheets - •
Cookie Sheets · - Tube Cake Pans . Loaf Pans - Cake Pans · ·
Cake Roll Pans
Roast Pans

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale
, Sale
Sale

2.49
3.49
3.49
2.49
1.75
3.49
3.49

Warehou..

for the Gift tertlflccite.:.
1st Prize • - - • S10o.oo· Gift Certificate
2nd Prize • · • • • · 50.00 Gift Certificate
No purchase necessary. You need not be
present to win. '
·

ELBERFELD$ -IN POMEROY

:;.~*.

AFLCJO President George
Meany and many Democratic
congressmen have urged
Nixon to freeze food prices
from the farm level orl down.
The President's action went
part way, imposing ceilings on
slaughtered animals but
·leaving the price of five
animals to fluctuate with
supply and demand.
But with the ceilings in place,
the administration hopes thst
farmers will not keep their
animals from market in hopes
of higher prices to come.
In another price-dampening
move, Treasury Secretary
George P. Shultz said at a
briefing for reporters prior to
Nixon's speech, Nixon would
ask Congress to give him
authority to suspend tariffs and
quotas on imported beef, lamb,
plywood and other commodities, where price in -=creases are outstripping
demand.

WASHINGTON (UP!) McCord testified Wednesday
·Sentencing of James W. Mc- before the Senate panel and is
Cord Jr. was postponed today scheduled to go before the
until J1me 15 while the con- committee again next Wed·
vicled Watergate conspirator nesday.
testifies before Senate inSTUFFING CANCELLED
vestigators and a federal grand
jury.
Middleport
Pomero y
Sources dose to a special Rotary Club ladies night and
Senate committee said McCord stuffing bee scheduled this
indicated he would be willing to evening has . been cancelled
tell the panel about other acts because material for the
of political espionage and stuffing failed to arrive.
sabotage during the 1972 :::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::;:;:;:;:;::~:~:~~=~=~:::::~
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
presidential campaign, besides
Chane~ of showers Sunday
the break-in of the Democrat's
ending
Monday. Highs in the
Watergate headquarters, if he
were granted immunity from upper 50s and 60s, and lows
in the 40s.
furlher prosecution.
;:::::::;:;:;:::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;~:::::::~::::::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:

,j ~j~....... "-··(;:/, 1

·u ~

.:-t&lt; .

..
PROTESTED TEACHERS' SfRIKE -Picketing in fronl of Meigs Junior High Thursday
were 1-r, Tammy and Sally Mash, daughters of Mr. and Mrs. James Leroy Mash, Middleport.
Tammy is a student at Rutland Elementary and Sally attends junior high. The girls each wore
signs stating "PleaS!' end this strike, we want our education." The two girts were among
several students who picked up banners and marched Thursday.

Autopsy ordered
The body of a woman found
floating in the Ohio River near
the Philip Sporn Plant has been
identified as that of Mrs.
Karolina E. Thoma, 36, Rt. 2,
Racine, who disappeared Jan.
II. An autopsy is being made of
the remains.
At the time of her disappearance, her car was found
parked on the Ohio side of the
river at the Racine Locks and
dam. Dragging operations
were conducted at that lime.
Meigs County Sheriff Robert
C. Hartenbach's Dept. was
notified by Mason County
authorities Thursday at 9:37
a.m. of the sighting by Sporn
employes of the body. !I was
recovered by Mason County
authoriti"" and taken to the
Wilcoxen Funeral Home in Pt.
Pleasant.
Sheriff Hartcnbach, Bernard
F4itz,
Meigs
Cou nty
prosecuting attorney, and Dr.
R. R. Pickens, county coroner,
went to th e funeral home.

Positive identification was
made by Mrs. Thoma's
husband, William Thoma, who
was notified by authorities at
his employment.
By order of Fultz the body
was removed to University·
Hospital, Columbus , for
autopsy .
In addition to her husband
Mrs. Thoma is survived by five
children who reside with their
father at Racine, Rt. 2, Beatrix
Helen, William Richard,
Carmen G., Diane L., and
Daniel R.; her parents,
Leonard and Genevieve Wieser
of Taxerbach, Austria; three
brothers, and two. sisters, also
of Austria.
Graveside services will be
held today at 3 p.m: at Letart
Fails Cemetery with the Rev.

Freeland Norris officiating.
Ewing Funeral Home is in
charge of arrangements.

Hiland Road
improvement

COLUMBUS - State Transportation Director J. Phillip
Richley said today the highway
division
has
requested '
program approval for proposed
Improvement
of
a
portion
of
Hiland
Road, County Road 75,
in Pomeroy and Salisbury
Township, Meigs County, from
the Federal Highway .Administration .
The 1.6 mile improvement
would extend from relocated
Ohio 7 southeasterly to the
Hiland Road-Mulberry Ave.
intersection in Pomeroy. Plans
LOCAL TEMPS
call for new :!().foot pavement
Temperature in downtown with six foot shoulders and a
Pomeroy Friday at II a.m. was new concrete slab structure
60 degrees under cloudy skies . over Thomas Fork.

· :oo~::::::=:::::.

By United Preaslnlemallooal

Be lUre to register at
Elberfeld• Mechanic Street·

Free Customer Parking on Second Street ·and at Elllllfelds Mechanic Street Warehause.

other industry firms to make
sure the rules are being enforced .
The inflation.prone food industry was kept under mandatory wage.price controls when
most of the rest of the economy
shifted to voluntary guidelines
in January under the Phsse
1111 stabilization program.

ll'ews .. in Briefsl POWs tortured and killed in Hanoi prisons

Housewares Department 1st floor.
End of The Month Sale

3.49
3.99
4.29
2.79
1.99
3.89
4.19

cutbacks.
ThePresident's speech coincided with the final withdrawal
of American troops from South
Vietnam, ending the 12-year
U.S. military Involvement
there. "We have achieved ...
peace with honor," Nixon said,
adding a warning that North
Vieinamese leaders "should
hsve no doubt as to the conseq uences if they fail to comply
with the peace" agreement."
But the meat price ceiling,
which represented a partial
turnaround
in
Nixon's
economic thinking, grabbed
most of the attention.
The order:
- Plates price ceilings on all
purchases of beef, veal, pork,
sheep and lamb products after
slaughter by or from processors, wholesalers or retailers.
- Establishes a ceiling at the
highest level at which to per
cent of a meat item has been
sold in the past 30 days .
Prices Must he Usted
- Requires all retail mea(
sellers to place big signs listing
ceiling prices on "prominent
display" no later than April 9
so that shoppers can compare
ceiling prices with current
selling prices.
- Commissions Internal
Revenue Service agents to
check up on meat markets and

Sentencing is delayed

TeJevisi9n Sets
.
Has excellent brightness, coritrasl and plclure detail .

...

End of The Month Sale

w.

the program would reduce the
supply of meat and "likely"
lead to a "black market."
Banking Committee Chairman Wright Patman, D-Tex.,
said the imposition of the
ceilin'g was "a di_stinct reliefn
but added it was inadequate
because the entire economy
needs stabilizing and this
cannot be done with controls
"on a few items."
Three paragraphs describing
the new price control measure
were sandwiched into Nixon's
20-minute speech, in which he
praised the conduct of returning prisoners of war, thsnked
.'~II!~ 8[~1. Ill!!iOctty.of AnJetl·
cans" · who supported his
Vietnam War policies and
asked support for his budget

Boys and Girls Bicycles

Mino Tefloo Coated Bakeware

End of The Month Sale

WASHINGTON (UPl) - throughout
the
adPresident Nixon has modified ministration's economic
his Phase III economic pro- stabilization program, but the
gram in the face of a consumer rest of the food induslry -lrom
revolt againat rapidly rising slaughterhouse to superfood prices and decreed a rigid market-was covered.
ceiling on beef, pork and lamb
Nixon's action. was the
prices.
toughest he has taken yet to
Nixonannouncedhlsmovein combat soaring food prices. It
a televised address to the came just three days before the
nation Thursday night, saying formal start of.a "April Fool's
the ceiling-effective lnunedl- Week" nationwide meat boyately-would be retained "as colt, whose initial effects
long as it is necessary to do the already have caused sharp
job."
changes in livestock prices.
"Meat prices must not go Program is Denounced
higher," he said.
The President's program
The order placed a lid on was immediately denounced
mostmeatprlcesat the highest by some influential members
lever iiP~r · :ro · dliya." iii' Congress. Chairman
~.
Fariners were exempted from Poage, JJ..Tex., of the HOII!O
the rule, as they have been Agriculture Committee said

Another Big Shipment!
End of the Month Sale!

Flare leg styles in corduroy · Brushed denfms · collon
twills.
Sizes 8 to 18 In slims and regulars. WraJ19Ier, Mr .
Leggs and Lee brands selecled from regular stock.

or white. Sizes 10 to 13.
While They Last
LODGE TO MEET
RACINE - Racine Lodge
461, F&amp;AM, will meet in special
session at 7:30 p. m. Friday to
confer the EA Degree.
Refreshments will be ser\red.
Ail master masons are Invited.

Flare Leg Jeans ,

Sale! Just 31 Pair

..

Eastern wins

•

.•· ·8oys Wrangler

'

Three thousand students of the Meigs Local
School District returned to their classrooms this
morning as a twG-day strike of over 200 teaching
and 11on-certified employes ended.
.
The dispute was settled in a long meeting
Thursday night between the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education and representatives of
the two striking groups. The special meeting of the
board got underway at 7:30p.m. and it was about
12:30 a.m. before the final three part agreement
was signed at the office in Middleport of George
Hargraves, district superintendent.
Although students may have enjoyed the twGday spring break brought about by the strike, they
may be disappointed in the terms of the settlement
which provide that the two days must be made up on.
the Saturdays of April 7 and April 14.
Basic agreements in the settlement are a "No
Reprisal Clause," and "recognition and bargaining
rights."

The agreement of the milkeup days and the reprisal clause
betweerrthe board and the education association and the ~ubllc
school employes group is identical. There is a slight variation in
the third phase of the agreement on recognition and bargaining
rights.
Following is the text of the recognition and bargaining rights
part of the setthnent between the board and the Education Assn.
"The Meigs Local Board of Education hete and after
referred to as the board recognizes the Meigs Local Teachers
Association here and after referred to ils the association as the
sole and exclusiverepresentativeofthe instructional staff for the
purpos.. of collective bargaining. The board agrees not to
bargain with anyQ~Je or group of the inatlilctional staff other than
the Meigs Local Teachers Assn.
"The board agrees that every employe of the board shall have
the right freely to organize, Join and support the association for
the purpose of engaging in collective bargaining.
"The board or its representatives agrees to set a dale and
meet no later than"April12, 1973, for the purpose of establishing a
·
bargaining procedural agreement."
THE AGREEMENT covering the same collective
bargaining phase between the board and the public employes
group is near identical in text.
Following is the "No reprisal clause" which is a part of the

CLARK AIR BASE, PHILIPPINFil - THE United States
airlifted two planeloads of flag-waving American prisoners of
war home tOO.y, men·who were among the last to leave their
prison camps in North Vietnam.
''Thank God for people like you and that wonderful
American spirit that has never died," said Navy Lt. Cmdr.
PhUIIp A. Klentzler, 32, Poway, CaUl., the last pilot shot down
p-lor to the cease-fire agreement. "Even in our darkest hours we
linew you would never forget us."
WASHINGTON - PRFiiiDENT NIXON leaves today for
81llllllllt talks In California with South Vietnamese President
Nguyen Van Thleu after warning Hanoi again It faces reprisals
unll!lll It ~ompllea with the cease.flre agreement. NIIon will
confer Monday and Tuesday with Thleu at the Western White
. House at San Clemente. The Saigon leader was expected to seek
818Ul't111Cea !rom Nixon on future alr support, If the war flares up
again, and the scope of United States &amp;Miatance that will be
p-ovlded to bolster his regime.
,
'
The President, in a nation-wide television address Tliursday
appeared to be offering those assurances. While balling
the end of the lmgesl war in the nation's hiat.ory, NIIon said
"there are still 10111e problem areas."
''The p!'Ovisfona of the agreement requiring an accounting
(ConUnued on Page 10)

milit,

By United Press International
American prisoners of war
were permitted for the first
time Thursday to tell of the
gruesome' aspects of their
confinement. With the silence
broken, the men poured out
detalls of beatings, starvation,
solitary. confinement, psychQIogical harassment and torture.
Many of the men said they
gave In to their captors after
extreme physical abuse.
"None of us signed these
statements voluntaMiy ," said
Army Maj. Floyd J. Tbompson, New Milford, N.J., the
longestheld POW of the war.
"Most of us did 'it with death
staring us in ·.the fl!_ce. It was
either die or sign It and my
attitude was I wasn't going to
die for a propaganda
statement."
Air Force Lt. Col. John A.

Dramesi, Blackwood, N.J. ;
said he believed his friend in
prison, Edwin Atterberry of
Dallas, was tortured to death.
Atterberry was listed by North
Vietnam as having died in
prison, but Hanoi did not give
the cause.
Refused to Talk Earlier
Since the U.S. prisoners
began being released Feb. 12,
they steadfastly refused to
discuss torture and abuse in
Communist prison camps for
fear others still held captive
would suffer for their remarks.
But with the release Thursday of the last POWs in North
Vietnam, the Pentagon said
they could answer any questions that C81)le up. At news
conferences across the
counlry, the POWs told their
stories.
·
Some of the physical punishment they endured Included:

-Air Force Capt. Norman
McDaniel, Greensboro, N.C.,
said he was hanged from a
ceiling so that his feet barely
touched the floor. He said he
passed out.
-Navy Cmdr. Richsrd A.
Stratton, Palo Alto, Calif., was
burned with cigarettes and had
his fingernails bent back.
'-M.Sgt. Harvey G. ·Brande,
Long Beach, Calif., had dirty .
bamboo stuck into his wounds.
- Air Force Maj. Robert
Jeffrey, Dallas, said he was
forced to wear long, heavY
clothing during stifling sum.
mer heal while isolated in a
seven-foot-square cell.
-Sgt. Don A. MacPhail,
Lowell, Mass., said he was
hung over a tree limb and
beaten for four hours. "There
were three graves beneath me
and I was told that I would be in
the fourth."

- Marine Lt . Col. John
Howard Dunn, Neptune Beach,
Fla ., said he was tied in a tigbt
hall with straps and ropes and
his captors manipulated his
limbs into grotesque positions.
He said his arm was useless for
six months following one such
encounter.
- Navy Capt. Jeremiah Denton, Virginia Beach, Va., said
he uconfessed" after hiS'
captors "put a 10-footlong iron
bar on top of my shins and two
men walked it· up and down."
-Air Force Lt. Cmdr. Rodney A. Knutson, Billings,
Mont., said he was beaten on
the buttocks. so badly blood
splattered the wall and was
then forced to sit.on his wounds
for six days. After that, he
could only stand bent at a 90
degree apgle'be,cause the scabs
hsd healed.
The POWs were denied food

and water for periods of lime ; hsrassment. Air Force Col.
many reported being tied up in Fred V. Cherry, a Negro from
odd positions; those injured Soffolk, Va., said the Commu·
said they weren't treated, and nists kept telling him tales of
there were multiple beatings- atrocities committed against
Navy Cmdr. Eugene B. McDa· blacks in the United States.
niel, Kinaton, N.C., estimated
he was beaten 600 to 700 times
"ln the dead of winter when
in one week with an automobile the temperature was in the 3Qs
fan belt.
or 40s," said Navy Lt. Cmd:'.
Solitary confinement was a Joseph C. Plumb Jr., Overland
conunon torture: Lt. Cmdr. Park, Kan., "they would put a
Everett Alvarez, Santa Clara, bowl of hot soup outside and
Calif., the longest-lleld POW in then wait 45 minutes unW it got
North .Vietnam, said he spent cold before I could go out and
his first 13 months of captivity aet it."
in solitary; Air Force COl.
Norman C. Gaddis, Knoxville, . "The psychological torture
Tenn., estimated he spent i,ooo W&lt;IS the worst," said Air Force
days in solitary, and Air Force Capt . Ronald .L. Mastin, MerCol. Samuel R. Johnson, Plano, riam, Kan. "There was always
Tex., said - uved 42 months the fear you might be tortured
alone, including three years in again.''
a row.:
Psychological Harassment
Eventually many did what
There was also psychological their captors wanted.

,.

'

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