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---··" .......

. _10- the Daily Se~tinel, Mlddle~rt-PO!lleroy, 0., April ;

Even .lions

I

1973 ·

eat~g

I .

.'
Joseph Caldwell
died on Mond.ay

fish·

I.
A

Students News ••• • in -Briefs
m coyrt

NOGALES, Ariz. (UPit wbo bope
•
(Continued from Page I )
.
.
rventuaJJy to produce a
.
'
•
I
Joseph Thomas Caldwell, 19,
(ii'ucer vaccine reported
N. M., and spent the night in ltigh school gymnasi1111lS and at
By Ualted Prelo IDimwiOIUII eating fish. Around the
In Cleveland, more than 50
Higblands University because aU mbtels and hotela were jamDay three of ' the meat country, however, the stay- area supermarkets were Middleport Route I, . di~d , today they have successfully
Gallipoljs.
·
tra
..
terred
tumor
lmmunlty
Monday
.evening
in
med. Deputy State Police Chief William ·BuUock said about 200
boycott -and even the big cats away.fi'om-meat revolt was picketed
Monday
by
ATHENS,
Ohio
(
UPI
)
Surviving are h!s parents, • • trom healthy persoos to
cars were stranded on Interstate 40 between Santa Rosa and
hoilsewives. ·
at Uon Country Safari were having its ups and. downs.
Three Ohio University students
Everett
Lee
a!l,4c
,Joanne
acute
leukemia
patients.
Clines Corners. He said many of !be stalled cars included popce, .
- More than 100 farmers' ..
Fewer Peopleot Couuters
.
.appeared in Municipal Court
Butcher
CaldweU,
,
Middleport
But,
said
Dr.
Alf!erl
F.
velticles.
.
wives crowded lnlll a butcher
"So far as I can teD, the
Monday on charges stemming
Route
I;
two
brotber•~
Bruce.
LoBugllo
of
Ohio
State
shop in Davenport, Wash., • housewives are staying away
Uoiver~lty College o{ £rom a melee during the
MISSOURI AND IJ~LINOIS NATIONAL GUARDSMEN and
buying 4,500 poUllds of beef In a · from ilie meat coWJter i' Mrs. E., at ho~,. and -~~n N,~
weekend near the campuS.
Gallipolis;
a
SISter,
li;'l!
Gay
Medl•lne,
they
haven't
yet
oilier
volunteers continued sandbagging operations today in an
protest ol the meat hoycott.
C,rol Bertram, an officer of
Four
others
who
were"
arrested
determined If the Increased
effort 111 contai.n the swollen Mississippi and Missouri rivers and
-Pork-on-the·hoof was tlie Housewives lor CoUective Caldwell, Gal11pohs; .•~"
·forfeited bond 'by ·not a))grandfather,
Luther
Ca\dweU;
cellular
lmmunlty
helps
In
their feeder streams, which drove hundreds M I'Orsons from
higher at major Midwest Action, said Monday. "We
, pearing...Middleport;
·
grandmother
•
terms
of
tumor
resistance
or
their homes Monday.
markets but ~f cattle was don't have the means Ill keep ·
The seven were arrested
Mrs
:
Dorothy
Butcher,
cure.
Levees of Old Monroe and West Alton, Mo., broke under
priced lower at leading !ann good checks on the slllres, but
after about 300 persons began pressure of the Mississippi, transforming the l!rea where the
Cheshire, and. several aunts, 1
markets.
•
the mO!Db&lt;:.S that have been uncles and cousins.
:=:=:~::::::=:~::::::::::::-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
breaking window~, blocking Mississippi and Missouri join inlll a huge lake. Many persons
"-Some. of the lions a~d shopping said they !'Qtlced
s treets
and . destroyi.ng were forced Ill evaculate their homes. Hundreds of thousands of
Funeral services wiD be held
cheetahs' at Lion Country fewer people at the meat
property,
police said. The acres of lannland was nooded as the rivers overflowed their
at 2 p.m. Thursday at th_e James Hendricks
Safari in Irvine, Calif., were counters."
~
incident began when a
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
Dannv sayre
banks in ·numerous areas in Ilinois, Missouri, Arkansas .apd
fed fish- and they liked it,
Ben I.oosemore, Jr., owner
policeman arrested a YOWig Tennessee. Illinois Gov. Daniel Walker ordered 25 guardsmen ·
with
the
Rev.
Merlin
Teets
died on Monday
according 111 a spokesman for of Ben's Market in Houston,
The pretzel was invented
man for carrying . an .open
officiating. Burial wiD be in
and 10 trucks into the Grafton, IU., area to aiy in moving n~d­
ilie tnurist attraction.
·· sold :' "Oh, yes, J' can teD the
by Ct'!arlemagne, King of
James E . Hendricks, 00, died container of beer on a street.
Meigs
Memorial
Garden.
threatened families Ill higber ground,
•
the Franks and first
President Features Meat
boycott's on. It sure has afMonday evening at his
Police Chief Charles Cochran .
Friends
may
c~U at the funeral
of tbe · Holy
-President Nixon, who h¥ fected me. I guess about half
Roman Empire. When he
Diamond St. residence in announced that all of the city's
BUENOS AIRES - SEPARATE GANGS kidnaped an
suggested 44 Selective bUying" my customers aren't buying home from 2 to 4 and 7 to~ p.m .
subdued
the
heathen
Middleport.
25 policemen would be American businessm~n and a retired admiral Monday, inWednesday.
Ill housewives had meat on ilie this week ... It don't botber· me
Saxons more than eleven
Mr. Hendricks, a retired assigned to· duty on 12-hour . creasing the number of kidnaping iliis year Ill 20 in the la~est ...
'
•
0
centuries ago, he forced
menu Monday night for his" .thougb. llo, President NIXon
them to bake the sign of a
truck driver, was a member of shifts each weekend, would examples of a new surge of guerrilla and underworld crime • •
dinner with South Vietnamese hadn't set the ceiling, I believe
RECORDS MADE
cross into all their bread
God's Community Church in walk beats in pairs and wear wave.
President Nguyen Van Thieu the !Jeef would have- gone up
and pastries in token of
1\ACINE - Two registered
Colwnbus. He was preceded in helmets.
their
conversion
to
The kidnaped American was Anthony R. DaCruz, 43, a
and their luncheon ioday.
another :ID cents a pound soon." Guernsey cows in the herd., of
death
by his parents, James
three
men
appearing
in
The
Christianlfy . Thus the
Portuguese-born natlll'alized citize n who is c~ef of the Kodak
Reports filtering in of lower·
Sf&gt;9kesmen from the Jewel Edson Roush near here have
Pretzel was born! Down to
and Josephine Manley Hend- court and their charges were Argentina laboratories ·near Buenos Aires. The motive for his
1ng meat prices in some are""' and National food chains in the completed top official DffiR
our own time it had to be
ricks, and two sons.
Joseph Dufley, Cincinnati, kidnaping was not known . The kidnaped admiral was Francisco
twisted by hand. But now a
indicated at least some SIICcess Chicago area said it is difficult aC'tual pr_oduction records,
Surviving are his tWife, ·inciting to ri9t, possession of Agustin Aleman, who retired in December as an intelligence
fantastic new machine
in the April Fools' Week meat Ill judge ;t&gt;e effect . of . ili~ according to The American
fast'!lons pretzels at great
Lucille
Knapp Hendricks; a I..SD and disturbing the peace;
officer. A left:wing guerrilla 'Organization said he was seized lor__
protest.
boycott since Monday IS tradi- Guernsey Cattle Club. All cows
speed. Tireless steel
son,
Larry
C.,
at
home;
a
Charles
Snider,
Reynoldsburg,
political reasons.
"
There were no exact figures tionally !be slowest day of the were milked two times a day.
fingers loop end tie the
Ohio,
disturbing
the
sister,
Mrs.
Robert
(Beulah)
peace
and
dough Into a product of the
on persons participating in week for meat $ales.
'
The testing was supervised )ly
pretzel maker's art.
·
Oklahoma;
two carrying an open container;
IN CONTRAST TO THE MANY TALES of torture being lllld
nationwide boycottI but cold I il' In New t England, Purity Ohio . State University. Tested Dailey;
brotliers,
Paul
Franklin
Hendand
James
Karcher,
by returning prisoners of war, an enlisted man who spent five
gloomy weather held down the SUpreme · withbel&lt;j meat from were Locust· Grove Fern N, a
Sayre Hdwe. has the
ricks,
and
William
Hendricks,
Cleveland,
trespassing
and
years in the hands of the yiet Cong said Monday his guards
'turnout in some cities, includ- · its counters Monday. Shop-Rite
perfect prOduct of years of
three-year old, which produced both of. COlumbus, and four intoxication .
engineering and
treated
him almost as well as they did themselves.
ing Chicago where only about SUpermarkets in western Mas12,680 pounds of milk and 677 grandchildren .
development. Our patented
their
Those
forfeiting
bond,
Army CWO Francis G. Anllln said at Ft. Monmouth, N. J.,
35 persons marched. Tbey sachusetts and Connecticut pounds of fat, in 305 days and
water
refining
un it
Funeral
services
will
be
held
charges
and
the
amount
of
that he was not tortured nor interrogated, although the Com,
carried signs reading "Keep also were refusing Ill sell meat.
polishes, filters and sotte11s
Locust Grove Betty P, a two- at 4 p.m. Thursday at the bond,~ we-rCJames -Davis,
to giv.e you clear, spark ling
munists often tried Ill indoctrinate him. "They virtually tried not
the Boycott" and "Roll Back
Others Join Boycott
year old that produced 12,490 Rawlings-Coats Funeral Athens, disturbing the peace
and refreshing water .
to get information from us," llie former helicopter pilot said of
Prices 20 per cent."
Some food chams and restau" Wouldn ' t It be wise to
pounds of milk and 629 pounds Home. Burial will be in Rock and resisting arrest. $91;
his three years in a jungle camp in South Vietnam and two more
The meat boycott appeared rant owners joined the boycott of fat , in 305 days.
trade tap water for Refined
James
Hunter,
Athens,
Springs
Cemetery
.
Friends
years
in prison near Hanoi.
Water? Call 882-2525.
111 be working in Pittsburgh. wltich was scheduled to last all
may
call
at
the
funerai
home
carrying
an
open
container,
However, a spokesman for week.
on Wednesday from 2 to 4 and $33 ; Donald Morton, PittsVeterans Memorial Hospllal
Thorofare Markets, Inc., with
Frank A. Harris, director of
from
7 to 9 p.m.
burgh, Pa., disturbing the
- ·-ADMIHTED Everett
77 supermarkets in the Pitts- the Norwalk, Conn., public
peace,
$58, and Robert Young,
Ward,
Coolville;
Gladys
burgh area, said !be impact of. schools food service, suggested
Steubenville, disturbing the
TWO APPOINTED
the boycott wiD not be felt until Monday that cooks in all Rumfield , Pomeroy; Charles
New Haven, W. Va .
MASON - Charles Aldridge peace, $58.
Wednesday or Thursday.
schools offer meatless meala Ill Ferguson, West Columbia; .
A suit for partition of real Pomeroy, vs Carl H. WiJson,
Mary
Grady,
Racine;
Duffey pleaded ionocent on estate, one for support, and Pomeroy, and Dorothea L . .
was appointed a new member
'
students aU week as a gesture
of moral s upport for the Lawrence Smith, Pomeroy; of council here Monday night thr'ee counts and was held in three act~ on~ for divorce have Davis, Middleport, vs Harold
Sandra Yates, Middleport; succeeding · Richiu-d Fowler, lieu of $2,058 bond. A trial date been filed in Meigs County
--j&gt;oycott.
,
p.1. Davis, each charging gross •
In Washington, Tony T . Martha Anderson , Rutland ; who had resigned. In another ..Qf April 5 was set. Snider Common Pleas Court .
neglect of duty and extreme
' ' the Rosemary Wall'\sley, Belpre, action, co uncilman Fred pleaded innocent to disturbing
Dechant president of
Filing for property partition cruelty .
Samsel was appointed tnwn the peace and trial was set for were Paul a nd Janet Sigman,
National Farmers Union · said and Otis Core, Pomeroy.
Judy A. Custer was granted a
DISCHARGED - Myrtle treasurer, an office he will hold April 10. He plead.e d gui lty, to 1\liddleport, vs J ohn M. 'divorce from Philip J . Custer
the
meat
price
ceilings
an•
carrying'an open container and Groves, address unknown;
nounced by President Nixon Bentz, Archie McKinney, Leah while also a councilman.
and Gloria Milliron . from
was fined $25 and costs.
lOst week wiD "inevitably put VanMater, Leora Zwj)Jing, ~ ·
Citizen's National Bank, James Milliron.
Karcher · pleaded guilty to · Middleport, an d Howard
IN HOSPITAl:
the livestock producer again •.Renee Stone and Darra Yahya. ~
buth
counts lodged aga inst h'im Frank,
Mary Bawngardner, former
fa ce to face willi bankruptcy." •
Meigs
County
resident of Racine, and and was fined $50 and costs.
A group or' 100 ·fann wives
Treasurer. The property ~ is
daughter of Russell .Cline, ~as
HENDRICKS DIED
from Iowa, Nebraska ~hd
located in Middlep ort.
South Dakota .march'l!d on the
The Middleport emergency . undergone heart snrgery at
Maxine Riffle, New Haven,
(Continued from Page I )
Sioux City, Iowa, stockyard to squad was called to 59 Erie, Pa,. Cards may be sent to
filed for s upport under the
give " the farmers' side of the Diamond St. at 11:15 p .m. her in care o( Ham ot Hospital,
PARENTS VISITED
Reciprocal Agreement Act morning but had not done so at
meat price controversy."
Monday for James Hendricks lnterisive Care Room 296, Erie,
Bill Zerkle, a law 'stud'e nt at from Larry Riffle, Potneroy . 9:30a .m . She Is charged with
Pa.
Great SCQtt Superniarkets, who was dead upon the squad's
Ohio State University, sp,ent a
Filing for divorce were Neva assault and battery, disturbing
wltich has 46 stores operating arrival. The body was taken to
few days with his parents, Mr . Ellen Ebe&lt;Sbach, Middleport, ' llie peace and attempting Ill
in Detroit iu;d two other the 1\;lwlings-Coats Funeral
OES TO MEET
and Mrs. William R. Zerkle, Rt. I, vs Willard August Ebers- assist a prisoner to escape,
Michigan cities, said it woul.d Home when~ arrangements are
A re.g ular me et in g of .~ Syracuse, dnring spring term . bach, Pomeroy ; Betty Wilson, police said,
• • •
roll back prices on· beef, pork being made . F;,vangeline
Chapter Thursday
OES will
be held at 7:30p.m.
and lamb to tqe lowest
everyday price charged durin~
·
See us! In our Loan Department,
M a r c" h .
C o ri s u m e 1o
BANQUET SET
honored. All members are
service is not only friendly and
Cooperatives, ·wruch operate
' The annual Meigs County
asked to attend.
eight supermarkets in the 'San· grange banquet will be held at
courteous, it's speedy. Take ad .
Open Wee~days 9:30 to 5 p.m.
Francisco Bay area, rolled 7:15 p .m . Friday at the
vant?ge of reduced prices on this
Shop -Friday and Saturday 9:30 to 9 p.m.
SALEDAYSSET
hack meat prices 15 per cent .Salisbury Elementary &amp;hool
year s car models. Own a new car for
Evangeline Chapter OES wiU
"in response Ill d~lllands of the · with the Rev . Robert Wells,
less ... and finance it for less. Get the
hold
a rummage sale all day
meat boycotters-wltllwhicbwe chaplain of the Ohio State
cash you nEled to buy yo~ new ' car ...
Friday and Saturday in the
are ·in-oomplete agreement." Gran.ge, as speaker.
basement of the .Middleport
get an Auto -loan here, ·at low bank
Masonic
Temple.
rates. Let us help you cict fast ... to own
FIVE ARE HOME
your car, now.
·
SYRACUSE - Mrs. Rachel
• •
(Sis) Cundiff, Mr . and Mrs,
Tonigbtt ApriiJ ·
DEPOSITS INSURED TO 120,000.00
James Cundiff and Mr. and
John F . Boyd, aka John
Mrs. Sherman Cundiff have
Walt
Disney's
· AUTO TELLER WINDOW OPEN
returned to their homes here Boyd, Rose Marie Boyd to
TH£ SWORD IN
Sybil Ebersbach, .10 Acre, HI
FRI. EVENINGS5To7 P.M.
THE STONE
lollowing__\1 visit to the Holy
Acre ,' Antiquity-Letart.
I G)
(TechnicoiQf')
Land. The group visited Israel,
Sybil Ebersbach to John
Turkey and Cypress Island.
WHEN YOU VISIT. PARK FREE
Also
Boyd, Rose Marie Boyd, .10
WATERBIR"OS
Acre,
Acre,
An, I \1
(Technicolor)
tiquity; Letart.
And
'
ON DEAN'S i.JST '
. MICKE)'.&lt;$,'
Harold Hudnell, Judy Ann
Zerkle
Carol,
. Sandy
-GRANO OPERA ·
The special occasion ~ress of
to Donald R . Berry , .46
Hudnell
Ctechnicolor)
-daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
--"' .£11~C II~NATI
Acre, Scipio.
lino pli-sse cotton w1th lace
. William R,. zerkle' Syracuse'
dults $1.50
Children 75c
James L. Fry, Barbara S.
trim . Juniors 5 to 13 in
has b¢en named to the dean's.
Show starts 7 p.m.
Fry
to
Village
of
Pomeroy,
list at .Wayne Slate University.
Natural. By Paintset.
Ease., Salisbury.
Mrs. Carol is majoring in
Wednesday &amp; Thursday
Blanche M. Haskins, dec. to
MIDDLEPORT,· OHIO
Special Education a nd made
Apri 14-5 :_
Noah
P. Haskins , Charles P.
NOT OPEN
· an average of 4.0 for the
Member Federal De It losuraoce Corporatloo
. ONLY
Haskins, Aff. ~or trans.,
grading period.
Middleport.
•
Philip J . Custer to Judy A.
Custer, Lot, Middleport.
Hilda M. Collins, Kenneth R .
Collins to James H. ·cunShop the Second Floor --.......
.
~
.
ningham,, Imogen ~ Cun·
Ready-to-Wear .
~ingham, Parcels, · Bedford.
Depa r'tment
fQr
a·
Charles E. Price, Grace E.
complete selection of
Price to Chester Mundry, Ethel
Dresses for d.aytime,
Mundry, Lot 7, McDole Ad .,
Reedsville.
after 5; anytime
Bernard Adams, Eva Adams
to Dale Adams, Bonnie Adams,
'
SIXTH and PALMER
41 Acres, Olive.
. ·-"·-··-.
Doyle T. Hudson, Nellie N.'
.Hudson to William A. Clonch,
Martha E. Clonch; Lots, ScipioHarrisonville .
·
C. C. Cuckler to Russell Nitz,
24112 1 M~
. {.
M gnolea Mae Nitz, Lot,, '
Researt~ers

- I

.$eo level at the ·equator is

e

. about 14 rililes farther from the
.center of the earth than sea
' level at the North Pole, _

,.

.

LOAN FAST

~~~~~e. M~~~:~~~t ::~son~~

Transfers

:Q.u tchers, processors
forced off their jobs
.

fN;;;;;:r~

Yesteryear

LACE CHARMER

l:iibens /ialioNll

1498

EVANGELISTIC ·CRUSADE .

.,
~

-

.CJh.l!. '}t&gt;r.~t !Ba.p.ti~t Ch.u&gt;r.ah

e)uniOJS 3 to 15
•Misses 6 to 20

dV{iddfepo~t, cJ~ip

• Half Sizes Wh to

7: 30-NIGHTL
Y~
-

COME AND
Attend the services .

, Sing the old Gospel songs.
Listen to the special music by
youth and' adults.

. Share In the fellowship where
people ace alive ·for Christ.
Listen to Bible centered inspiring messages frorn
God's messenger,
. Charlie Norris. '

Rev .

•Women's .46 to

· Sunday, April 8
Wednesday, April ~ ·Friday, April 6
(Sunday School Night) (Youth .Night) (Church loyalty Sunday)
'

.Thursday, April 5
(Pack•a-Pew Night)

.

Saturday,' April 7
(Far_nily Night)

10: 15 a.~ m .
Rev . Charles Simon

. ( Regu;ar .Offering)
7: 30p.m . . The Agape You1h .
Singers frorn Gallipolis will be
_i n charge of en tire program .

.. 2-HOUR

CLEANING
·
..

210 E .lnd
~one

••

Pomeroy
992-5428 .

first, meaning residences in
outlying areas, and .bring- tbe
power back to llie Cities .and
th~ir big conunercial conswners last, when generators were
rebuilt Ill near full potential.
The Tuesday ·failvre started
with a. malfuqction whicH
caused the state's first nuclear
powered electrical generalllr
to shut down at !be Turkey
Point plant south of Miami.
The nuclear generator
located at Turkey Point south
of
Miami
shut
down ,
automatically, setting .off a
split-second sequence that
turned off other generators
Ui.roughout the utility's sytem,
starting at 9:37a.m. Esr.
Jack Fran'cis, director of
corporate relations for tlle

.

.
Power company. engmcers
were still struggling to determine what caused the Tuesday
blackout when the new fe~ilure
"'uglit iliem by surprise.
"It has nothing to do with the
load factor," we know that
much," ,said a power company
spokesmanA
The same five generating
plants which tripped them.
selves off Tuesdsy were out
today, the company said.
The company said it would
restore power ·to smaU users

w:

power company , ~ id it was not
known what caused llie nuclear
generator Ill shut down . He
said engineers ·we r e .trying to
locate other fa c tors that
contributed Ill the blackout,
since the loss of a single WJit
should not have led Ill the
widespread int erruption of

One death wa s reported
during the blackout when
Mario Bessi, a 70-year-old·
employe at a Fort Lauderdl!le ,
Beach hotel, was foun~ dead at
the foot of a darkened stairwell. Authorities said it was not
known, however, , whether he
had died in the fa ll or had a
fatal heart attac k before
falling .

The Meigs . County Commissioners Tuesday approved
a resolution adopting the
requirement of a building
permit for r&lt;!sidential one, two
and tbrce family dw ellin gS in
lhe unincorporated portions of
Meigs County.
The ·resolution a uth ori zes
and empowers the commission
Ill adopt regulations pertaining
t.o the erectiOn, construction,
repair, alteration and maintenance of all buildings in
unincorporated portions of lhe
" .county .
were Danny Gri_Erith and &lt;\i!&lt;h
&amp; " permit is needed for ·
D. J ohnson, both of Pomeroy.

construction valued over $200 1 No. 1 were also approved.
In otller business the comand each permit costs $5.
Jim Rous h, building in- missioners accepted a bid from
spector, will be in his office Standard Oil Co. for gasoline
located·on llie third floor of llie · and diesel fuel for a 3!klay
cou rthouse on April 16 when period. Attending were Charles
R. Karr and Rob¥rt Clark,
pCrmits go into effect
.
P lans to repair Page St., cOmmissioners. and Martha
Middleport, under bond issue Chambers,. clerk.

Jose ph A. Sulkowski, 58, ,:,:,,,,,,,,:,,,,,:;.:.::::,::'::::::,::::::::::::::::'::,:,:::::,,,,,:,,,:,
Pennsylvania , was ordered to
BANQUET SET
pay costs on an intoxication
Eas
t er n's basketball
c harge. His fine ·was suspen buuquct will be held
ded .
Saturday at 6' 30 p.m. at the
Dwight D. Ca r·tcr , 22, Point
high sehoul. Speaking will be
Pleafiant, forfeited a $200 bond
Coach Carroll Hawhcc of
posted on a chargs of driv ing
while intoxice~ted , and Fannie . Waverly. Members of the
basketball, baseball and
E . Pcny, Point P leasant,
tra ck teams will be honored.
forfeited a $50 bond posted on a
A smorgasbord dinne r will
c har g e of mi sconduct and
be
se rved.
contributing to the delinquency
of a minor-.
..
Th e cases .. of PauJ Runyon,
LOCAL TEMPS .
Cherokee , Ky ., and Cathy
Temperature
in downtown
Me~r C inko, Minersvi1le, both
Pomeroy Wednesday at II a.m.
fac in~ severul charges, were
was 48 d e~ rees, under rainy
transferred to county court for
!:ikics.
hearing on friday .

COLUMBUS (UP!)- Frank- has failed Ill control spiralirig
1in County Co mmon Pleas hospital costs." Deshetler said.
Court Judge Clifford -Rader
"Blue Cross must shed its
Tuesday upheld a decision by traditionally paternalistic attis tate Insurance Director tude toward the hospitals and
Kenneth DeShetler to deny a r assume lhe · position of viror~
$2.2 million rate increase ous ly representing the inrequested by Blue Cross of · terests of its subscribeTS;,' '
Norlliwest Ohio'~
Deshetler said.
Radei''s action, which overRader held that there is
turned a lower court decision, authority for an administrative
upheld Deshetler's contention agency suc h as the Insurance
lliat in denying llie rate hike he Department to make policy by
acted properly and there was adjudication of rate making
·substa ntial evidence to support cases.
him.
"The court's duty in a case
"Blue Cross has failed to ex- such as this is not to su bstitute
ert any effective influence over it's opinion for that of the
its m e mber hospita ls to· superintendent of insurance,"
operate more efficiently and said Rader.

Honors awarded
PORTLAND
Takin g Smith ; pape•· ·mache, Danny
honors in the Cultu~al Ar ts . Talbert.
conipetitio~ judged Tuesday at F·ifth and sixth grades :
Portland Elementary wer e, crclyo?, Jeff Br.own, Cheryl
first and second grades; finger Teaford, . and Lisa Warne~;
painting, Tammy Meadows, pas tel, Kim Ward, ~nd Br.ya~
Bruce Johnson and Dav~ Lawrence; pencil , N1ck1
Talbert · mosaic Cindy Evans, VanMeter, Curtis Price and
Wad e Connall~ and Kitty Daniel· Smith ;.. water colors,
· Sellers; Dinosaurs , crayon, fifth grade ,_ Richard Furbe~,
Brent Larkins; sewing, Pau( :.. Ste ve Fitc_h, and Bry:n
Ours . Hands Danelle Weddle Lawre nce ; s1xth grade, Jamce
and Tammy' Meadows; tear Carnahan, Nicki VanMeter,
pafnting, Diane Rhodes ..
and _Titn Kerns; Diarama~
Third and fourth grades : Brian Johnson, Beverly Memosaic, Sam Person. Bonnie Clain, and Randy Congo.
Bozo, Rhonda Kerns ; painting, •
Diana Ward, Tin·a Cozart, and · i:i:::~:::::~:::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:o:::;;:;:;::~:;:~-­
Alicia Evans; diarama, Paul
~XTENDED OUTLOOK
Evans and Joe Johnson; free
Coo l Friday warming
hand drawing , Paul Evans,
- Saturday and Sunday wlth·a
Sherry. Beegle and Stanley
chance
showers about
Holter; rabbits, Rhonda Kerns ,
Sunday. Highs In the 40s
' Kin&lt;berly McCaig, and Ren ee
friday rising · to t~e middle
50s to mid 60s by Sunday.
Lows -in the upper 20s and i
MEETING CANCELLED
IPwer 30s Friday morniD(Thll_ Middleport 'Chamber of'· rising to the .40s Sunday.
Commerce meeting scheduled ,
for Fr id3Y·:...1 s be~ n can celled. ·=::;:;:::::::::';::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::~~·::: ·

Blue Cross rate
boost is denied
.

DISPLAy WORK - Members of Larty Wolfe's class at Portland Elementary display some
of the work completed by class members as part of their social studies: lrr are, Tammy
Cozart, Kim Ward, Nicki VanMeter·, ·J anis Carnahan, Beverly McLam, Melinda Da!Iey._!lhelia
Brown, Brian Johnson and Randy Congo.
...,.

ELBERFElDS IN POMEROY

BLUE RIBBON WINNERS in the cultural arts display at Portland Elementary are' the
· foUowinll aecond graders. Front row, 1-r, Bruce .Johnson, ~y Evan,s, Tammy Meadows;
· back row, oavid Talbott and Oanette Weddle.
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CULTURAL ARTS WINNERS of the \hird, fourtb, filth and sixth grades at Portland
Elemenlary wer.e, front row , 1... Harold Person, Danny Talbott, Bonnie Boso, Rhonda Kearns,
and piana Ward ; back row, Richard Furbee·, Kim W,~r&lt;land Paul Evans.
I

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service.

Permit system .set

Several fined
Fines ha\'e been levlfd
against several defend~nts by
Middleport Mayor J ohn Zerkle.
Fined $15 and cosl':i each on
intoxication convictions were
Fred Older, 43, Racine ; Paul
E. La udcrmilt, 41, Minersville ,
and Lewis
Smith, 3:1,
Middleport. Donald Lovett, 49,
Portiand, was fined ·$50 and
costs and 'g iven a 30.&lt;Jay jail
sentence for intoxi cation;.
Ever ett Chaffin , 71, Indiana,
wa s fin ed $25 and costs on the
same charge, and William
Mc Haffie, 47, Midd leport,
· forfeited a $45 bond on the
cha r ge and for disorderly
condUct.
Two defendants ordered to
PaY parking meter · violation
ticHts and costs of $8.70 each

out

or .

(Upon Request)·

ROBINSON'S
· CLEANERS.

e

MIAMI (UPI ) - A massive ·furou gh safety valves to avoid
power failure, more extensive a potentially explosive buildup.
than one 24 hours before,
In the Dade County Courtblacked out South Florida house in downtnwn Miami,
today and sirens of rescue three prominent Circuit Court
vehicles wailed 'through judges-Harvie Duval, George
l!llllrled traffic to rescue people E . &amp;hultz and Henry Balaban
from stalled elevators in· - found themselves lllgether in
\ downtown buildings.
an elevator as they headed for
' The lights went out at 9:1! their chambers.
a.m . .Esr today- 23 minutes
" It was like being in a &lt;»al
earlier than Tuesday's 9,37 mine," Schultz said- as he
a.m. blackout--,and affected s tepped out after being
some three mil1ion Floridians rescued .
_
and visiting tourists along a
Sirens of police and fire
12Q.mile stretch of Gold Coast, department rescue vehicles
from Fort Pierce south through sounded through downtown
stuart, West Palm Beach, Fort areas of the ~ig cities affected
L,auderdale, Miami and inlll by the blackoui as iliey rushed
th'~ Florida Keys .
to the tall buildings to get
The blackout was more people out of elevators.
extensive than the Tuesday
At the Fontainebleau Hotel,
failure, which shut of( power people were q~ickly rescued
only from the southern edges of . from elevators caught between
Palm Beach County, some 65 floors by the power failure, but
miles north of Miami. Today, the front desk became crowded
ligbts were off around Fort with people trying Ill check out.
Pierce, 120 miles north .
They were tnld they couldn't
T)le failure caught white get thei r bills be~use the
colfar workers in many of computer wasn't functioning.
greater
Miami's
.3;000 .. By 9:50a.m. lights be~an to
elevatnrs, snarled llie tail end flick back on in some areas.
of rush hour traffic, and caused But spokesmen for Florida
loud whooshes at power Power and Ught Com.pany..:...
generating plants as the already lrying to defend its
generato r s
shut
down image aga inst the ear lier
automatically in domino blackout a nd a $40 miUion rate
fashion. Steam blew off. increase granted Tuesday by

By Unlled Press International :;:;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::~:;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: :::::::::::::::~ :;:;:;:;:;:; :;:;: ;:;:; :;:;: ;:; :;:;:;:;.;.;:;:;:;.;·
More than 1,550 butchers and
·meat processors were off thei~
jobs today as the effects of a
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Several Holiday llms he&lt;e supmeat boycott and a meat
ported the nationwide consumer boycott of meal Tuesday by
withholding action on the part
discouraging diners from ordering meat with their meals . .
of farmer s gained momentum
" Those who did Insist on getting meat wlili their meals
in Ohio.
got It." said Heilry Markwood, restaurant manager at the
Meanwhile, a group of South
Holiday Inn East, but we are trying to encourage customers
Dakota cattlemen planned to
not to eat meat. We just tell ihem we 're not serving meat."
confront
boy co tters
in
. Markwood said only 12 of 55 persons who ordered breakCleveland.· "Gary J. Enright, - fast demanded meal with their meal, Only two hamburgers
administrative director of the
-the only meatotdered-wereservedat luoch and out o145
South · ' Dakota
Farm
dinners only four persons demanded some type of meat.
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Federatio.n , said farmers a nd
ranchers were finally getting
.. fair ,prices for the first time in Cleveland, lOQin Columbus and
"We anticipate additional
20 years.
80 in Youngstown .
layoffs by the end of the week,"
As conSumers refused to buy
''They're putting our people said Thomas Ransljaw, presimea ~ Jor the fourth straight
out of jobs,'' said Ke11 Pfarrer, dent of Local 7 of the Amal·
.,~ay, 35,g workers lost their jobs
secreta ry-treasurer of Meat gamated Meat Cutters and 1
1n Dayton; 5110 were · tern- Cutters Local 430. "But in a Butcher Workmen in Cincinporarily out of work in Cin- way I can't blame them. We nati.
He warned a long boycott
cinnati. another 550 in have to buy meat too." ·
would force small local pac k·
ing houses out of business.
Carron Jamison, president of
Butchers Local 610 in Cincin- ~
nat!, said all part-time butchers had been laid off and
By United Press International
many lull-t.i me workers had
WASHINGTON - SENATE REPUBLICAN Leader High
Scott predicted today Congress wiD continue to back. Presid~nt tbeir regular 40-h our weeks
reduced to 25 or 30 hours.
Nixon's vetoes after giving the administration the hrst maJor
· Robert L. Runtz, Inc. laid off
viclllry in the battle of the budget. But Speaker Carl Albert
77 butchers in two plants in fue
rejected suggestions that a "pattern" was set when the S~nate
Cincinnati area and curtailed
Tuesday voted 60-36 111. uphold Nixon'sc,veto of a $2.6 b1ll10n
operations in three others.
progr~m of grants Ill prepare llie handicapped for jobs .
41
The situation is what I preother Democrats, however, glwnly conceded it would now
be harder to override any bill Nixon vetoes willi threats that it · dicted three weeks ago," Kuntz
would bring higber taxes and greater inflation. Sen. Walter F. said . ''There is a tremendous
shortage of 'stock ·coming ·intn
· Mondale, D-Mirm ., said ''if we can't override ttds veto, I don't see
fue stockyards. This weekend
how we're going to override.any of the.others."
there.will be a similar shortage
SAN CLEMENTE, CALIF. - PRESIDENT Nix'on has of cuts in retail stores ."
Kuntz said a normal kiD for
outlined a postwar role for llie United States in Indochina whieh
his
operation was 175 daily, but
promises more ·money for Saigon and threatens Hano1 w1th
"today we killed 24 1i11imala."
retaliation for truce violations that · could mclude renewed
One large supermarket chain
bombing. In a joint communique issued Tu~ay after two days
of talks, Nixon and South Vietnamese President Nguyen Van in the Cleveland area said
Thleu ·accused North Vietnam of breaking the cease-fwe and Tuesday its meat sales had
dropj&gt;ed-SO..{l&lt;r cent since Sun(Continued on page 20)
day.

. Inns supporting boycott

RUF~LED ·AND

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GIFT MADE ..:. A $750 gift Ill the Middleport Fire Department Ill assist with the financing
needed 111 complete the furnisltings for tbe new headquarte~s building has been presented by
!be Imperial Electric Co. of Middleport. J. E. Jones, nght, plant manager, 1s pictured
presenting the c~ck to Bob Byer, fire chief, left. Looking on is Middleport Mayor John Zerkle,
~ter. Firemen plan an open house, perhaps late this month, Ill give tbe public an opportumty
Ill tnur the new headquarters building.

Shade~ of

MEIGS THEATRE .

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E-LBERF--:ELDS IN. POM ERO.Y

'.

Cloudy aoo cool tonight ana
.Thursday. Rain and possible
. thundershowers south today.
Rai'n likely tnnight with lowest
in the lower 30s. Chance Q!
'snow flurries Thursday. High
·upper 30s to llie lower 40S.

POM EROY·MIDDLE PORT, OH 10.~_ __..::__~~~~-;::ED::.:N::;;ES;:::DA~Y:...:
, A.: ._P.:.:.;RI: _L..:.2.
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out ern

~~--fl!ll••lllli..i'•lllll•••••••••••••••••••••,

Weatha
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WH~N YOU NEED Art AUTO .

·e nt1n·e

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Kentuckian

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Devoted To The lnteresu
OJThe(Meig,·Mtuon
Area
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VOl ~IV'. NO. 247

Court suits filed

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3 - '"he Daily Sentinel llfiddleport-Pomeroy• 0
2-The Dalll Sent nel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Aoril 4 19n

WIN AT BRIDGE

EDITDRIALS

Lead Ke s
NORTII

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10 7

. 82

WEST
.K QJ73

EAST

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. 108652

• 62

.A 754
. QJ93
SOUTII (D)

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t AKJ9854

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No e vulnerab le

J. 4.•

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No.-th

East

Soutl

Pass

5

Pass

Pass

Pass
Ope

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lead- • K

1 tc atto at c scs of the f t te nay be set off bv
em ron ne t I i.'lgg r('SS o
wa ns Mal ce S S o ~
head of t1 e t mted 1\al o s ece lly established Env~ro
n e1 tal P og am
Ra nmak ng by seed g c oud s \Hth s lver od de s "
eady feas b1e e sa~ s nak ng t pos s blc for one col n
11y know ngh o steal a other COlnlt) s a ntilll caus
ng drought
Pr cd ct ng tl at 1n 10 or 5 yea s env o me tal a g
g esswn w II be a ma]o SOUl ce of 1 ol t cal co fl ct
Sllong t;ge s Ihat ternat onal r les
d eg lat on s be
drawn p now to cont o expel nents 1 n od fy ng veatl
cr a d cl ate
No one w t1 any acq a nta ce w th h sto y w bel eve
hat 1 e w111 s hrmk fro 11 s ng tl.e ew scaence of
weathet mod f cat o lo the dt sadvantage of the ne tg h
bo s
B t wl1le you ca t steal ra nfpll ;ou ca I mdl y
s tash t n the at OJ a t eas y lt has to fall somcwhe e
a d cl a ces a e t w ll fall on vou1 own head
amo nt s
g reater than ) o care to hnve
rn othe1 Y.ords the best defense aga st env 10 me t I
aggress o 1 nay be that ke n clet:~r ag.g css on t s
kely to hurt the aggresso as n uch as the agg t ssec

B\ Oswald &amp; James Jacobv

Old Bndges bon't Fade Away

In a fatrly strong 13 table
d uplicate every Soulh player
woun d up n ftve d amonds
Stx went down on~ fa poor
scores s x made an pve1
tr ck for good scores and one
pa r made exactly f ve odd
The pI a y e rs who went
down one lost no t me call ng
fo dummy s ace of spades
at tr ck one Later on East
would get 1 w t1 a heart
and lead the ijt ee of cl bs
lo two clu b tr cks
Tl e other playe s studted
a wh le a d saw t at th ey
could keep East out of the
lead b) means of a loser on
lo1er play Then they would
let Wes t hold that f rst tr ck
S x West p layers d dn t
bother to th nk after hold ng
tl at f rst spade They JUSt
cont nu ed the su l Th s gave
the1r opponents a chance to
set up dummy s hea rt sutt
and even\ijally d sca rd all
tl e rclbs
The one average sco r e
went to the best player n the
ga me He t1 ought a long
t me afte r holdmg that hrst
spade a nd f naHy slapped
down hJS ace of clubs to hold
declare• to II tr cks
He wasn t sa tJSf ed w1th
th s average score As I e
pomted o 1t afterwards f I e
had J usl led a low spade at
tnck one there would have
bee n no " a) fo( So uti to
keep East out of the lead a nd
l e wo ld ~a e scm cd a he
fot top nstcad of a n aver
age

r e c ty of Rocky R e Oh o I as a p oblem It wa ts
lo demol sb and eplace the Rock) R vcr B dge wh ch
spa s appt opt ately enough t1 e Rock y R ver J st west
of Cleve land
t seems the bndge s c u nbl ng and s o s de ed
da ge o s I aff c ha s been red ced I om fou lanes to
I\\ o

Co np teat ng matte s however s the fa ct that th e
d st g shed s t uctu e as been decla ed a
I slot c
o
et t bv the Oh o HtSto cal Soc et) the Nat una
Pa ks Se v ce and tl e Nat onal Cou c I o H sto c
P eservat on
Ever f l s a h star c s te a gues o e R oc: kj R ve
co nc 11 an ch nks of co ne ete co t nue to fall off
The c ty ho[ es the federal gO\ e nment w
we gh he
cost of rna ntam ng the mon m ent aga nst th e cost at
ep ac ng t \\ 1th a ne\1. and sen Ice able bndge
The c t y of London I ad a s mtla 1 roblcm Jts so t o
Vlo as o nload the t otter ng Lor don 81 dge on a teal estJ e
development n A zona v.he e t s now a to s at a
0

Anybody wa t U e Rocky R vet B dge

Cnmmals Hove No Class Now
It s bad c ougl that we ve got
m b t c m al'
st don t have any class a y no e
Th s s th e con pla1 t of Ak u 0 1 o 1 o ce Ca1 t John
I a b a 2 vca &lt;:tW e fa cement vete an
he e s no c aft these day s I e sa)s 1\ hen I "" e
on the fo ce I et 1 e p e wh o wet e a y 1
d of he
c af
P ckpo~ k ets lo exa pie once oo k p de n 0 e sk
Nowadays they cons Je t acceplable s mtl) -tu- k o k
he v ct S. dov. n
Safec1acke s se d to
ow f nesse b
ow they e
bu tsJ!fJ s who wr eck sa fes B gla s have forgot e t1
a 1t of cas g a JO nt Now two g ys J s l&gt; s n a 1 ace
Tl ere s o e a ea l owe e WI e e
e ld p d ol
vo kmansh p st I ftX sts car tl eves \.1, ~ o ca d sn ant e
a veh c e
n n tes
1 s a \A. hole ey, c af
say s 1

BY JACK 0 BRIAN
A J01NT WHERE
NOTED ELBOWS BEND
NEW YORK I KFSJ - The esteemed
restaurant known as 21 The 21 Club or Jack
&amp; Charhe s began back m 1923 n Greenw ch
'Vtllago Founders were "Cbarhe Berns and Jack
Kr1end er now dead TheLr places have been
taken by four relatl\ es and 21 has become a
respectable mstJtutlon beyond the snoopmg of
Jzzy and Moe the most famous of all Proh1b bon
agents
1 he proJect moved several hmes from
Greenw ch V llage to 49th St ult mate!) to tts
present address 2) W 52nd St a qu et oas s
am1d the speaks cabarets Jazz JO nts ~nd
n adcap n gl tl fe a o g the fegendary 52nd St
block bel ween Ftfth and Stxth Avenues Its fronl
today ts handomel~rtch m style and color 1ts
steps 10 front not used by customers are I ned
with cast ron JOckeys whase"'1dmg outf ts are
pam ted n U e colors of the most famous stables
n the world the r owners high m soc1ety
wealth and Q_OS t on who I terally JOCkey for
nclus on G~nd for pas t on along th s ra t or
status
J here ,t~re doormeR to tal&lt;e your cars ris1de
doormen of h gher stature than c:ustomery
doormen - they are arb ters of taste and
decorwn of clothes and posit on 21 IS not
segregated for any of the unpleasant reasons or
purposes merely that ts commod ous
prcm ses however large cannot e~cCept (tOy
more than legally may be handled ns de 21
long ago escaped the dar ng of any lawbreak ng
as of th start of Repeal
There s no color se1C or othe r barr e to
enter but when ts reservat ons are flied ts
tables unable to hold a st anger however well
dressed o espedablc Lhe bars perforce are
up
The four mcumbent owne s are nore than a
gen~rat on from the ovdy pos t o a speakea sy
owner once necessar lv suffe red Todav 21
Pres dent Bob Kr endler ts a trustee of h s alma
ater Rutgers Um.ve s ty trustee of U e
presttg ous Mt S na Hosp lal n New York a
veteran off cer - now a colonel ret1red
of
hree wa s - WWII the Korean and VIetnam
and a top commande m the Ma ne Reserves
J erry Be ns s a trustee of U:c Cui nary
Inst tute and rec p cnt of several honorary
a\\ards f1 on h s alma mate1 the Untvers ty of
C c nnat He s an off ce of he nat onal
A Lot g II til
If t he Wash ngton Mon
ment we e Ia d leng l 'WI Se on
the fl oo of U e grand co n
course n f Ur on Stat on n
Was h ngton DC t! would
ac k 20o feet of spa nn ng th e
g eat ha ll I he mon mcnt s
555 feet tall the conco rse s
60 fe et long

'I

The b dd ng J a
West
Nor h
1+
Pass
2+

been
East

Pass
Pass

1.
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You So utl bold
.K6 5 .QJ 54 .A 2 _,K985
Wha do you do now
A-B1d three no tru J1 T"o
otu pwull otbeafrce
at th s tag
r the b dd ng

Overbreathing

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IS

Bv L mrencc E L..umb 1\1 D bag ove ny lace Aflet I
De 1r Dr Lamb - A few b eathed nto the bag fo
days ago I vas taken t o he aw h e n y blood sta led t o
OSJ ta l h) amb Ia ce l ha I c c la te aga
F ts of a "h v Jh s eth
no c c ulat on n e the1 of mv
TODAY S QUES110N
arms 01 legs ahd I wa s hav od and second ffi) hu sband
Ins ead of b dd ng wo d a
ef se to bel eve t1 cy d d
m g a ha d n e b1 ea
g
monds yo u partne I as b d Afte awh e one ot the do
th s o n e F lease answe
tw o lub ,)Ve your o e hea l
ors told Jwo othe docto s m) quest o so r can p ovc
Whal lo you do"'now
eally happen ed
t u hold a m ed um size d wh te
Dear Reader - I haven t
" the sl g ht esl do bt Jha
t
hap1 ened A tho g h yo u
thought yo
we r e I av ng
troub le b eatl ng the l' ob
a b I t es are that yo were
I av ng an e1 sode o hype
vent lat o w h c h m e an s
overb eat! mg When peo1 e
b eathe too fa st 01 too teep
y they II blow oil a lot mote
B' RAY CROMLEY
ca rbon d ooc de f om the
lun gs tha they should w U
\1 ASHINGTO N NEA
normal res p at o
Ih s c
FOJ a t me Moscow s ga ns n the M ddle East an I
sulls
n
upsettmg
the
body
\fr ca made hea dl nes Local Co mmun st partes we1 e on
chem
stry
or
the
ac
d
ba se
the up sw ng In some nat ons Com mun sts m oved nto
balance
The
rea
son
s
be
ca b net posts
cause th e ca rbo n d ox de
New st d es n I ca te the loca Red boom wa s short 1 ve I
comes
from de gc nerat on of
Where Comml n sts have been appo nt ed to h gh gove rn
ca
rbon
c ac 1d
o water and
ment posts they have had on the who e no a pp ec a ble
ca
r
bon
d
ox
de
and eltm
nft ence n the cab nets
nates a ce ta n a nount of
Even those government s ::;t ll close to tl e Sov1et Un on
th
e body s not mal ac d es
have c lamped down hard on the nat e Comm n st pat t es
se
nt al to b a I an c e d body
and Ihe sy npath ze s So me M dd le East a pd Ail tea
stry
chem
nalton s
fact fo b o close ly est a n all pol t cal
g oups exce pt the one thev favo ) St k ng ly n the lat ds
When th s occ rs Uiere are
whe e tl e Red partes have a good deal of free 1e gn they
changes n the circulation It
have lost abo t as man ) com rad es thro gh dese1hon a s
car cause fa nt ng and there
they ve 1ec u ted
may be d ff c ulty
obtam
What s out! ned abo e see m s to be the thrust ol st ud es
mg the pulse fhei e s otten
at the Hoove1 Jnsl t ton prest g ous 1esea cl gt o p at
numbness ar o nd tl e mo th
Sta ford Cal f Tl e es ts a e to be p bl sl ed tl s J ne
and m advanced stages t n
n st Alfa s M
n the Yea book o I te na t onal Co
glln g m the hands w1th even
M1 cl el Nab! of tl at g oup I as o tJ ed fot NE!\ the e
spasm of the mt scles
t1 e
s Its of the wo k
I a nd s and fo ea r m
ln I a l wl ose gove nment has been on dose tc 1 s wi~
Obvtously f ove1 br eat h rtg
Mosco"" tw o C nm n sts were appo nted to the cab net
s the problem the treatment
The) exet t ed little 01 no nfl ue nce v-. e e nab e to 1 p ove
s to collect the carbon d
the post on of the r pa ty wl cl s ndet hcav Jest c
oxtde and help the body re
tton
adJ ust ts
hemJSity
By
The Comm n st pa I n Sytt a s n equall y bad sl ape
breath ng nto a bag Ihe ca
Headed by a v g01 o s dvnam e c l e{ th e Syr an Co m
bon d ox de ace n ulates
n un sts ga Qed so me ecog n t on bv on ng n the nat ona
the bag and s eb1 ealhed
P og ess ve E on( B t the e I ave s nee bee n seve e gov
nto the lungS' B lpm g up
e1nme t c ackdowns
0 e carbon dwx de level m
l vo men vho had bee
e be s of tJ e Eg) pt a n Co
t1 s case helps to cor ect the
II
ob lem r om ove rb eath) g
st 1 a t v befo e
'I\. as tann ed ve e noved nto the
n
Eg) 1 t a cal net b 1 oved s Rg a v neff t e rt e
II s a stand a• d t eatment
and used freq e tl y n these
we e nable to keep P es ent Sa I l f o II o v ng o t
t1 e Soo,. et m I ta 1) an I I av been nab e o pro ect ext en e
co d tons
left sts f o i1 est Des1 te I e 1 1 esence n fact Sada t
fh e unde ly ng q estlon 1s
has CI eked down heuv
o Con 11 n st lean ng JO na
why does a pe son over
sts poets a d m scellaneo s nt ell e&lt;.: uaJs along w t1
bt eathe m the first place
otl er g o ps cons1de ed da gcro s to the 1egune
P lots trtcJdentally will over
In Leba noD th e Co 1 n n st party s !ega B t t appea ls
breathe when they are ex
to few and 1ts m e mbe[ sh p s stag a nt
po sed to attttude beca use th e
a1r 1s thmnet and they ovet
In Ltbya the prestdent openly opposes Co mm n sts
breathe m trymg to nc rease
1 oht ca I) and deo og1cally a ' be ng opposed to Islam
the oxygen supply In sq do
rhe Comm n sts do not f e art ee ably be tte• 10
ng they may blow off too
Al geJ a whe e th e gave nffien t c acks down on all poten
m
ct carbon d ox de More
tal OJ I OS t o g 0 I s
o tert'-1 no mal I !e c c m
1 he St dan se Conn n st pa l) I a t n
a Ia e ol
sta ce,s 1erso s ca
ove
hsr p o s cr Red pa t c pat on
a
))Q t v
o 1
e t late because t ey &lt;He
\VI all t c stengtl tl e pa 1y has let ends on 1!x les
Oil XlOU's 01 net VOUS abo It
A pobl sled e t o t f om lhe Hoover In t t ton says the
so meth 1 g Once they stat t
part es of e Ma gi nb s 1bs st 111 sen so nno lence
hav ng dtff c1 It e• o{ co se
T e 1s ucl C m
n t mov ment s SJ t nlo tw o
!hey get eve n mo1 e anx o IS
sc Je 1 I es both legal b t ne1the exe1t ng th lea t
and averb eathe mor e and
nfl1cnce on the c.:o h ) s pol tical fortun es
he condtt on gets worse
t l

\

•

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB Nervous H ypervenfl OfiOn

South

~~~:9m'W/hW..V.4&lt;

Voic-e
along
Br'Way
-

Look Out for New
Peril: Rain Theft!

Refusmg
Opening

• Q

»~,,~ili';'«'''·''' '':·'*'''"~'r~·:;»;~~x=x~»==~*v~~=~ ;8&lt;~~v»~~

Problem
e perso n act all y a ts o
so me othe con t on n e
ve es

Suet e1 sode a e ot r~
U ea en g undc s I c
c m sta nces It s mj o ta t
o unde t stand what II cy are
beca se f a pe so s I av g
a n overb eath ng e p so d e
I e s holld make an effo t t
to b1 eat he slow ly an d sl a l
lowly In cidenta ll y t s not a
goo d dea to t y to ho ld ou
breath at th s po nt beca se
th s t ggers off some e
flexes wl cl cat affect the
no ma beat ng mechan sm
of the hea t and c culato y
function and can e en be
dange rous
You problem then \\Ill be
o try to unders ta nd why yo
had o e b ea ll ng n the f r st
place and esolve whateve
anx e t cs u fac tor s co tr b
ted lo t and ecogn ' ng
what tl e ep sode s fh en n
the futu e yo u sta t hav ng
o e ) ou can b eat e slowly
and sha lowl y so that yo
won t get to as m ch d f!
c ulty
NEW SPA PE.JI.

EN ERPR SE

ASS N

Send you que on o D Lomb
a e of th new pope PO Bali
1551 RodoC r Sa on New Yak
NY 0019 Fo o copy o D Lamb
book e on cho e e o end 50 en
to the same odd e
and ask fo
Cho este ol &lt;_oak e
n

DIVORCE ANNOUNCED
ELYRIA Ohto (UP!)
Ma
r ne Lt Col Harlan P Chapman a prtsoner of war for
more tl an seven years an
nounced Monday h s w fe Ehz
abeth was ftlmg for divorce I
thtnk m tltis case t was m
ev table
Chapman satd
I
was gone a long tune

Restaurant ~soctat on the pe~ton trusts of
several un ons m the restaurant-hotel held
where he enJOys the highest respect for m
tegnty Bob Knendler also IS cba tnnan or the
Parents Commtttees at Cornoll and Deerfteld
Academy Pete Krtendler IS a trustee or the
Buffalo B ll Museum of Cody Wyommg (the
"ails of the lobby m 21 are awash w th fme
Rem ngtons) and co-&lt;:ha•rman of the Olymptc
Comm ttee Sheldon 'fannen s a trustee of hts
prep !IChool alma mater Columb a Grammar
School one of New York s fmest and com
m1ttees for char ty balls and movie premieres
I The Godfather prem ere poured $102 000
mto the Boys Club of N Y )
Thts great old Prohtblllon speakeasy has as
success n many f1elds spawned a hierarchy
eil!ler to become as they have p liars or the
n ost respectable New York commumty
It sa remarkable sustam mg msttiuttOn It IS
run w1th (to patrons) tnVlSible rules Yes there
are status areas where Pres NLXon s1ts 1s the
most sought-after But even the President dJd
not spec fy where he would s1t he knew of
course he would be seated at a prop"" spot and
he also respec\ed an old 21 rule that patrons
wtll get the best or food and servtce and the
owners w II seat them where they deem most
proper Thus customers who spend small for
tunes at 21 we re thmk ng of the late Jack
Cohn head of Columbia Pt ~tures who spent
fre ely but whose manners were such that he wa s
seated n the Far Eastern reache,o;:; of upstairs)
do not d ctate the r tables Thelfour owners and
manager ( Bruce Snyder an!ex Manne from
En d Oklah oma who has learned the 21 style
completely) are vtrtually Johnny Umtas-qmck
n nstant ana lys s
Old cus tomers present no problem
prom1smg new ones thus are st ud ed for the
future
Ask Helen Gurley Brown of
Cosmopol tan how she slowly duttfully wended
her \\a) to s4Itus acceptance w th unobtrus ve
b g spend ng and good manners She reco unts tt
he sell
Upsta rs m 21 is the more formal dtmng
room r nged w th 1mpr.ess1ve background n ch
n s lver and napery downsta r s s caiJed The
Ba and ha s a more party atmosphere the
le or 1s "' Idly eclect c emblems of atrl nes
ra !roads football teams (helmets n ostly and
other corporate toys dangle from the ce1hng n a
most unusual ea rn val amb ence

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
M) nostalg a threshold ts extremely low but I m ndt the
least b t tearful or even Wlstful about the near-extmct10n of one
Enda ngered Amencan Spectes
To w t the Broadway Hollywood goss1p columrust
For fo~r decades m Amencan JOurnal .sm these tlt llatmg
tr-ashrnongers w elded enormous power matched usually by
tov-. er ng egos
They could butld and bolster the careers of celebnttes tn the
show-bus ness world w th m mscule talen'ts creatmg arttflct@l
stars
On the other }land famous names would shudder tf they
nclU"red the wrath of the gossip vendor A report of a misstep
here a peccad llo there mtxed wtth a couple of vetled and
usually unproven ) Innuendoes and the famous name might
suddenly r, nd h mself on hard times mdeed
But they are passmg hterally and f gurattvely
The great nval motormouths of Hollywood Hedda Hopper
and Louella Parsons have departed So has Walter Wmchell a
master of compact and frequently tnaccurate ) reportmg whose
style of compressed prose could be copted by many of us who use
a typewr ter m their livelihood
Only a few are left and I suppose the most promment of the
survivors s Colwnbus nattve Earl Wtlson who still enJoys lrur
mculatwn lor his column It Happened Last N ght But his
mLleage IS showmg
Why have these scandal-sellers declmed
I can get a pretty good clue JUSt by readmg a few of Wtlson s
rece nt columns
Nobody really cares about the cellulotd-and-tmsel world of
Broadway and Hollywood any longer
Are you authent cally exctted to learn that the Stage
Delicatessen w II remam open durmg remodehng ' Or that
Mayor Lindsay and the star of a current Broadway play look
al ke Or that George C Scott declmed to portray Gen Douglas
Mac Arthur m a movte' Btg_ deal h\!1)'
Does t! genmnely mterest you that Sarah Vaughan ts appear ng at a New York mght club n a comeback attempt' Or
what Carol Channmg gave Jule Styne for his b rthday ' Or
whether Dean Mart n owns two Stutz Bearcats? Yoq may now
yawn pol t ely
Earl WLlson and h s contemporanes hv ng and dead wrote
about a world that never was Now that the TV cameras have
Shown uSNe-w.. Y.Drk as 1t really 1s - a place where one capnot
walk the streets alone where drug and trafftc problems are
almost overwhelmmg where ghettoes fouler than the Ptt abound
~ who can get excited about such a never..never land?
The same ts true of Hollywood whtch shares eXIstence With
Los Angeles that masstve glut of freeways smog corn
merc1ahsm and plast c hvmg Btg-name stars make unem
ployment lmes not headhnes nowadays
AS de from a perhaps small Improvement m publtc taste I
th nktwoother terns are responstble for the downfall of the patd
gosstp
TeleVIsion with Its cavernous appetlte for talent has
produced ent r ely too many celebr t es (tf that s the word) to
keep track of or even to care about There are hterally hundreda
of recogn zable show-bt'. names who pop up on talk shows and
qu z programs to the mterest of only a select few They are
mpersonal visitors to our hvmg rooms and who gtves a hoot
about the r hobbes pets or martial adventures '
Second the world has become so hardened by the mmd
scathmg real world events of Ute past,jecade that t( s ll&gt;lally
moculated agamst the hanky-panky of some med urn-magrutude
star of stage screen and-or TV' The world that produced the
teleVIsed assassmahon of a Prestdent hts s layer and h1s brother
that showed us unspeakable bloodshed m a pomtless war
that mterrupted the Olympt~s for a news spectal on terrortsm
th s world yawns f someone 1s sleepmg With someone who tsn t
his w fe
Thus passeth the gosstp colummst Goodbye ~ nd good rtd
dance
~

+++
ON THj;; TV DIAL A mght of spectals on WSAZ TV startmg
at 7 3Q wtth Wmme the ~h Elvts Presley and Ann Margaret
m that order
-Thursday Re.ds Braves season opener I 30 on WSAZ-TV

l

'

X

i

&gt;'!;&lt; 0

I

a:a:i':~

Generation Rap
By Helt n and Sue Bottel

Dear Helen and Sue
1 am a 12-)ear-old tomboy w1th two fnends
We want to know if there are any people of any age wbo need
som\l()ne Ill talk Ill or play With - like retarded o~ wtth some kind
of handtcap
We know how tt feelS to be lonely and would Uke Ill help
someone who LS
I would also want to know tf any pounds would accept a few
12 year-old boys and grrls to love the anunals irtalre them happy
clean out thetr cages feed them play wtth them and buy them
some httle ll&gt;ys'
We will work for free - K R V V and S D THE
EVERYTHING TAKE.CARE.OFERS
Dear Everythmg Take-Care.Ofers
Why don t you v1s1t a convalescent or elderly peoples home
"'your town' We U bet several reSidents there would love Ill be
adopted by 12-year-&lt;tld foster grandchildren
Helpmg out at an aruma1shelter' Probably not But perhaps
you could fmd a handicapped chtld m your netghborhood who
needs a btg Sister
(We sent your good letter to the ActiOn Line column of your
local newspaper and by this time you may bave more volunteer
work than you can handle Hope so ) Love ya - SUE AND
HELEN

+++
Rap
Last year my Mom and Dad separated At !trst we hved wtth
Mom but then she dectded she couldn t keep us so Dad ll&gt;ok over
and we now live at hlS house
I am 12 and the oldest My three brothers and sts~rs are
much younger Dad works two jObs one durmg the day the other
m the evenmg As soon as I get home from school I take over as
babys Iter because D;~d cant afford a full tune housekeeper
When he gets home he watches the little k1ds whtle I ftx dmner
then he hes down before gomg to work and I have the k ds all
,
evemng until I put them Ill Bed Weekends to
Maybe I could take this but Dad compla111S constantly about
the house and how bard he works and how my Mom was always
wrong about everything I know he works hard but I can t stand
hearmg about t! all the time
I call my Mom think ng I can talk Ill her and she JUst tells
me I complam too much I guess I really don t want Ill live wtth
her etther because t \vould be the same thtng m a dtfferent
place
!love my parents but I want to be a ktd once m a while I try
not to show my feelings to them much because they have thetr
own problenrs but I keep thmking - if they d only get back
together and try to work things out I wouldn t be a -GIRL WHO
NEEDS HELP

l.._)

GWNH
You deserve to be a ktd once"' a whtle If your parents cant
get back ~ether then they d better at least TALK over Ute best
way to care for thetr children and lettmg a 12-year-old play
full ttme mother tsn t tt - SUE

+++
Dear Gtrl
Are there any relatives who mtght take you ktda m tern
porartly unltl your folks etther settle thetr dtfferences or realize
they can t use you to reheve them of thetr child-care responstbtll!tes' Why not ask them to cons der a foster home for you' It
mtght shake them mto facmg facts - HELEN

Television Log
Wednesday Apr 4 1973
News Weather Sports 3 4 8 0 5 T uth 0 Con seq 6
Sesa me S 20 Around the Bend 33
6 30
NBC News 3 4 News B 0 Sesame Sf 20 Zoom 33
Dream of Jeanne 13
7 00
T uth or Co nseq 3 Beat e C ock 4 News 6 0 What s
My L nea Anyth ng Vou Can Do 13 E ec Co 20 Know Your
Schools 33 Sa nt 5
7 30- Ep sode Act on 33 The J udge 0 Lass e 5 Beat the
Clock 3 Pol ce Su geon 3 ToTe I the Truth 6 Ea thkeep ng
~ Ha f he Geo ge K rby Comedy Hou a
8 00 Sonny &amp; Cbe 8 10 Ame ca 73 20 33 W nne the Pooh &amp;
he Honey T ee 3 4 5 Move The Fa mer s Daugher 6
6 00

13

8
9
9
0

30 - E v s Aloha f om Hawa 3 4 15
00 - Med ca Cente 8 0 l enox Qua tet Haydn Opus 20
JO
Turn ng Po nts 20 33
00 - Cannon 8 10 Soul 33 Owen Marshall 6 News 20 Ann
Ma garet When You re Sm ng 3 4 5
00 News 3 4 6 8 10 13 5
30
Johnny Ca rson 3 4 S Jack Paa 6 13 Moves The
L qu data 8 S x Br dges to Cross 0

t:"OO' -

News 4 13

Thursday Apnl5 1973
00
Sun se Sem nar 4 Sac ed Heart o
5
Fa mt me 0 Fa m Repo t 3
20
Paul Harvey 13
30
Co umbus Today 4 B be Answe s B Amer cas
P oblems 0 Patterns fo L v ng 3
Co ncob Report 3
6 45
Today 3 4 5
7 oo
7 30 Rompe Room 6 S eepy Jette s B Rocky &amp; Bultw r-~k e
3 Popeye 10
8 00 Cap Kanga oo 0 New Zoo Revue 3 Sesame st 33
Lass e 6
8 30 - Jack La La nne 13 Romper Room 8 New zoa Revue 6
9 00 - Pa u D xon 4 Ph I Donahue 15 Ben Casey 3 Romper
Room B Peyton Pace 3 Capt Kangaroo a M Roberts 6
Fr e11d y Junct on 0 AM 3
9 30 To Tel The Truth 3 Haze 8 Jeopardy 6 Hollywood s
Ta k ng 10
o 00 - Hathayoga 33 D ck Van Dyke 3 D nah Shore 3 5
Co umbus S x Ca I ng 6 Joker s W ld a o
0 JO ncent at on 3 5 Ph Donahue .4 Spl 1 Second 3
P c s Right 8 10
00- Sale of Cen.fu y 3 4 5 Love of L fe 8 o Bew t h d 6
3 Sesame St 20
c e
12 00 Jeopa dy 3 5 Bob B aun s 50 .so Club 4 News 10 13
Jac k. e Ob nger 8 Password 6
2 30 3 W s Game 3 Search tor Tomar ow 8 0 Spl t Second 6
CO
News 3 All My Ch ldren l. 3 t s Your Bet B G
Acres 0 Not For Women On y 5 Secret Sto m 8
reen
20 ....... Fash ons n Sew ng 3
30 - LetsMakeADea 6 3 :AstheWordTu ns8 10Th
onA~tch34
5
~
2 00
Glays of Our. L ves 3 .4 5 Newlywed Game 3 M k
Doug ~s 6 Gu d ng L ght a 10
e
2 30 - Doctors3 4 5 DatngGame13 EdgeofNghta 10
3 00
Another Word 3 4 15 Genera Hosp ta 6 13 Love
Splendored Th ng 8 0 Beh nd the L nes 20
3 30- Retu n to Peyton Place 3 4 5 One L fe to L ve 6 13
Sec et Sto m 10
4 00
M Cartoon 3 Love Arne can Sty le 13 Fl ntstones 6
5 G II gan s Is B Sesame St 20 33 Move The Second
G ea test Sex 10
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Dane Boone 3 Pett coat Junct on 3
G gan s Is B D ck Van Dy ke s
5 oa M ster Rogers 20 33 Andy G ff th .5 Bonanza 3 Hazel
8 8 g Va t ey 6
5 30- El~c Co 33 Gomer Py le 3 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Beve ly H b I es 8 Death Va ey Days 5 Oh 0 H gh School
Basketba I Tournament 4
6 00 - News 3 4 a 0 15 T uth or Con seq 13 A ound the Bend
33 Sesame Sf 20
6 3'tl ~ NBC News 4 15 ABC Ne'(r's 8 0 Dream of Jeann e 13
Des gn ng Women 33
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 Beat the Cock 4 Course of Our
T mes 33 D ck Van Dyke 4 What s My L ne a Big Red
Jub ee 5 News6 Elec Co 20 LefsMakeADea 3
7 30
Hollywood Squares 3 To Tell the Truth 6 W td K n dom
10 I I See Vou n Court 4 Lass e B Zoom 20 Newsmak~r 72
13 Democracy s Trumpet W Va Leg slature 33
8 00- Fl p Wilson~ 4 15 Wa tons 8 10 Jacqu~s Cousteau 6
3 Advocates 20 33
9 00 Kung Fu 6 13 An Amer can FaitlJJy 33 Irons de J 4 15
Mov es Strange s When We Meet a Don t Make Waves
0 Sc ence 72 20
0 00 News 20 Streets of San F anc sco 6 3 Dean Mart n 3
4 5 World P ess 33
1 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 13 15
1 JO Johnny Carson 3 4 15 ~ack Paar 6 13 Movies L zz.e __...
8 Tara Tah ta lO
--- ·
1 00 - Roller Derby 4 News 13
200 - News4
6
6
6
6

April 4

1~73

Ironton disaPPoints Meigs 7-0
iiY CONNJESMITH
ffiONTON ~ Nobody likes to
lose a ball game but some
COOSolallon IS found in i&lt;noWUlg
that you lost to the diamond AA
champs of Ohto Tuesday af
temoon the Tigers of Ironton
c urrently retgmng over
Buckeye baseball took the
Metgs Marauders 7~ "' the
season opener ror Metgs
lronwn meanwhile pushed 1ts
record for 1!!73 Ill &amp;-1
Starling pttcher for Me1gs
semor nghthander Chuck

Faulk was wtld at the
begmrung the Tigers scormg
three runs on roue walks and a
wtld pttch Btll Chaney,
lljlother senior nghty had Ill
fmrsn the first mmng
In the second Cbaney gave
up two runs then struck out the
next three batters Ln sue
cessLon He kept Ironton
scoreless until the !mal mnmg
Metgs gave up only four hits Ill
the Tigers
Ironton hurler Jeff Collms
was outstandmg y eldmg only

two htts and s!rtklng out 15
Collins wa~ especJally ef
fecUve n the seventh mnmg
when Metgs threatened the
Marauders loading the bases
with one out but Collins fanned
the next two batters Meigs
htts were by catcher Mtck Ash
and second baseman Btll
Vaughan both smgles
Two redeenllng featwv or
the Me gs team were Bill
Cbaney s pttching and Dave
WoUe centerflelder who made
two long runmng catches wh1ch

R edmen open 1973
track season Thursday
The Rto Grande College
track team begms the 1973
schedule Thursday agamst
Mtd Ohto Conference foe
Malone from Canton Oh o The
dual meet starts at 4 p m at
Evans Fteld at Rto Grande
Ftrst year Redmen Coach
George Wolfe Will field a 21
man squad w th 13 freshmen on
the roster Wolfe has the
largest track team ever
assembled at RID Grande
however Wolfe says Still our
btggest problem IS lack of
depth not havmg enough
personnel you need m dual

d;lsh Brown also runs the 220
Br&lt;&gt;wn a four sports star at
North Gai1Ja has already
recorded a t1me of 10 1 seconds
n practice this sprmg In htgh
school competition the best
time ever (pr Brown was 10 0
seconds Wolfe says of Brown
Harvey can go under 10
seconds what he needs ts
somebody m a lane next to h1m
to really push htm
Jtm Stewart 11 6 7 fresh
man from Rock H II H1gh
School runs the hurdles
Stewart a varstty basketball
player In the wm\er was
clocked at 15 3 seconds In the
120 yard h gh hll"dles recently

of 4 mtnutes and IS seconds
Dean Fausnaugh a 5 8 Juntor
from Stllutsv•lle Ohio handles
the pole vaulttng for the
Redmen Fausnaugh a guard
on Coach Art Lanham s varstly
basketball U!am ts currently
nursmg an tnjured ankle
Fausnau
IS\ a doubtful
atnst Malone but he
to be ready by the
ausnaugh has gone
13 6 m t e pole vault for h s
best rna
Another tn]ury has stdelined
Javelin thrower Ken Sanford
a freshman from Toms River
meets
New Jersey Sanford wtll be
Wtth 13 freshmen on the
lost for a week
rosler
the Redmon wtll
Coach Wolfe a graduate of
cballenge wtth thetr Klddte
Two JWliors are expected to Cen tral Mtchlgan Untvers ty
Korps
Harvey Brown and have good sormgs Cross ts pleased wtth freshman Ed
Jun Stewart are a couple of country standout Jack Fmch of !son of New Boston !son
names !bat brmg smiles to Chesapeake wtll compete m throws the shot and dtscus The
WoUe s face Brown a fresh
three events thLs year Fmch Malone PIOneers R10 Grande s
man from North Gall a Htgh turned m hlS best time ever m opponent Thursday lost a
School excels m the 100 yard the mile last week w th a time triangular meet Saturday. at
Cedarville by a score of 84-l!O
Both teams have strong squads
~~;;:&gt; u~ -;:; S »:~ 0:,.7 X';::&gt;
and Malone should be out
&lt; standmg n the long dtstance
events followmg their cross
country champwnshtp last fall
at the NAJA naltonal f nals
~&lt;'
After Thursday s meet the
Redmen trav~l to Manetta
~ Saturday Apr I 7 for the an
lly MILTON RICHMAN
nual Martella College relays
JPI Sports Editor

ij foday's

Sport Parade

!'l;

AUGUSTA Ga (UP!) - B11ly Casper ts a mtSs u • y m the
Mormon Church
As such he preaches from time to tune frequently to church
groups which mclude young people
Any tune they ask hun questions he answers Utem honestly
He dnesn t try to hide anythmg Sbould any of them ask him how
be feels about that swap mvolvmg Yankee pitchers Fntz
Peterson and Mike Kekich and thetr wtves ,Jte will say he doesn t
condemn them because thijt s the way he honestly feels
Every man has the nght to choose his own way of life says
Billy Casper I don t pom1 my lmger m JUdgment of anybody
We Mormons don t smoke ot drmk We don t even have coffee or
tea but we certa nly don t condemn those who do because we
believe m a man s free agency
Muscle Pull Flares Up
Billy Casper hopmg to wm his second Masters golf cham
ptonship if he can control a pulled muscle m hts back !bat has
suddenly flared up on hun doesn t know either Frtlz Peterson or
Mtke Kekich personally
I m m Ute other league he says meanmg San Dlego near
where he makes hiS home I go out to the ball psrk occasiOnally
btit tt s usually to see the Padres I d say the ballplayer I know
beslts Harmon Killebrew of the Twins and that s because he..,...
the (Mormon) church
Casper of course bad heard of what Peterson and Kekich had
done and he says he neverfeltany negative reaction
I d never do •t myself he says but I certamly do not
condemn e1ther of them I cannot Judge another man The
scr pture tells you that you re not supposed to JUdge
Does Casper s beltef have anythmg to do with hts bemg a
Monnon 1 The Mormons were polygamous at one time weren t
they ?
Yes they were but they aren t any more he says
A Reason for It
The reason they were polygamous m the early 1800&lt;! s
because they were drtven from one state to another and so many
of the Mormon men were killed and persecuted due to the r
religwus beliefs that there weren t enough of them left to look
afU!r the women and children when they finally settled m Salt
Lake Ctly utah
People have a general mtSconcept)on about that anyway
For example m order for a Mormon man to have another wife
be bad to ftrst get the consent from hts ortgrnal wife He had to
devote equal tune to each one and he bad to gtve each equal
matertal things It was not an easy life for a man Certainly not
as easy as some people seem to think

Golfers in
2nd place
at Jackson

JACKSON - The golf team
of Metgs Htgh School braved
ramy sktes of the Jackson Gol(
course and oame n second n a
three school meet here Mon
day afternoon Three players
teed off m each of ftve groups
The ftnal totals of the afternoon
match were tallied w th
Jackson wmmng the match
w1th a score of 230 Metgs was
second at 271 and Vmll&gt;n htgh
at 366
Followmg are the scores of
each golfer m the five groups
Me1gs Story 51 Jackson
Davts 42 and Vmton Litter 58
Meigs
Blackston
51
Jackson Billman 50 and
Vmton Curran 57
Metgs Chaf n 51 Jackson
Morrow 47 and V nton Yater
82
Metgs Warner 51 Jackson
Ander 45 and V nton Barber
72
Metgs
R dg way
63
Jackson Buchanan 47 and
Vmton Reedy 97
Totals Me1gs 271 Ja ckson
230 Vmton 366
ThiS Wednesday Me1gs w1ll
host Waverly and Ch lllcothe at
the Pomeroy Golf course Tee
offtmets4pm

Athens blanks
Blue Devils 3-0
AHS sent etght men to the
):llate In the f1rst mn ng Two
Bulldogs Mark Handley and
Steve Inbody scored Handley
and Steve Deal smgled In
body Mark Mace and Andy
Chonko drew free passes The
upnsmg was a ded by one
GAHS error
Lee blanked the Bulldogs
until the stxth W th one out
Jed Oatley walked stol e
second and scored later on a
balk and stngle by Steve Rose
Inbody led off the f1fth wtth a
tnple but failed to score
Catcher ~rk K eshng and
shortstop Steve Slone each had
twos ngles for the Blue Devtls
Kev Sheets Jtm Perry Ray
Wether and Brett Wtlson each
had smgles for the Gall ans
Lee fanned seven and walked
stx Inbody fanned stx Inbody
walked one and hit one batter
The Blue Devils wtll play
Metgs at home Frtday n a
Southeastern OhiO League
battle GAHS ts at Wheelers
burg Thursday
Score By lnnmgs
Athens
200 00 0---3 4 1
Ga t po s
000 000 f)-{) 8 2
W nn ng p1tct1er - nbody
l:ose - Lee

ON

DISCOUNT TIRE
Spring Sale Continues

USED CARS
WEATIIER

Thru Sat. April 7th

WARMER.

Prem1um 4 p~. POlyester Tires

'

play against Knights

The Rio Grande Redmen
baseball team one week Into
the season played ftve games
m between spring showers and
managed two wms wh1le
dropp ng three games
The Redmen lost thetr
regular season opener at home
agamst West V rgm1a State at
Evans Fteld
The Yel
lowjackels
shutout
the
Redmen 6-0 Steve Slaughter
after a one year layoff sur
fered the loss for Rio Grande
The sec.ond game was
suspended due to darkness
The game stopped w1th the
score hed 4-4 and was con
eluded at West Vtrgmta Slate
Monday Apnl 2 w1th Rto
Seres B
Grande
edg ng
the
w I gf ga Yellow)ackets 5-4 n 11 m
Bos ton
I 0 J 2
Rocheste
0 1 2 3 mngs
Rtck VanMetre worked U e
Se-rees C
flve nmngs and freshman
ftrst
w I gf ga
R chm ond
0 0 0 0 Mike Rose fmtshed wtth s1x
C nc nnaf
o o a o mnmgs of shutout ball to ga m
the wm R10 Grande pushed
Series 0
wlgfga across the w1m mg run m the
Hershey
o .0 o o
Vrgna
0 0 0 0 lith when Coach Norm Persm
walked M ke LewJS bunted
Tuesday s Results
Nova Scot a 7 P ov dence 2
and was safe on an error and
Boston 3 Rochester 2 ot
consecut vc bases~n balls to
(On1y Qames schedu ed)
J1m J ohnston and Cratg Myer s
Wedne!!iday s Games
R chmond at C nc nnat
forced home the dec1dmg run
On y game scheduled)
After the completwn or the

suspended game Rto Grande
downed West Vtrgm a State 9-4
10 the ftrst game or the
doubleheader at Institute West
Vlrgm a Steve SlaughU!r won
hts ftrst game of the spr ng to
even h1s record at 1 1
Slaughter went the dts!ance
and got support from J ohn
Dudek Norm PerSt n ana
Danny Wisecarver each had
two hi ts Pers n also drove m 4
runs
The second game at West
V1rg1ma State was called after
seven mntngs because of
darkness wtth the score bed at
~3 Unless the game has
bear1ng on the
teams
quat1£ym g for post season
tournament competitiOn the
game wtll not be completed
Morr1s Harvey swept a
doubleheader from Rio Grande
Thursday March 29 at Evans
Fteld by scores of 4 2 and 8-5
Jmt Johnston started for the
Redmen and M ke Rose sui
fered the Joss m relief
Sophomore Dave Swann of
Jackson was charged wtth the
defeat n the second game
Swa nn p1tched the entue
game
Weather perm1ttmg the
Redmen wtll open Mtd.Oh o

Conference play Wday w1th two
home games agatnst the Ur
bana Blue Kmghts Rio Grande
w1U vtstt MQC r val Oh o
Domm1can at Columbus
Saturday Alml 7 for a
doubleheader

Pirates make
good showmg
in track meet
Coach Bruce Gab1 el s North
Gall a track lean made a good
show ng Tuesday n ght bafore
bo\\ ng to Barboursvtlle and
Fairland m a tr anguJ a r meet
Barboursvtllc con p led GO
po nts Fa rland ha 1 56 and
North Gal ha 43
The Pirates Cai)tured ftve
f rsts Carl Dew tt won the shot
put wt th a throw of 41 2 feet
Sterl ng Logan took the broad
JUmp w than 18 8 effo t and the
100 yard dash at II 2 seconds
Gene Payne won them le run
wtth the top t me of 5 1 6 and
Gtll an f mshed first n I e two
mtle run at 11 33 8

Bravery like Tracy's needed
HOUSTON (UP!) - A J the 22-degree banked two-mde
Foyt sa d you have to be as track wiiJ be dangerous
brave as Dtck Tracy to drLve
I sure see somebody hurt
champwnsh1p cars on the h1gh there pretty bad
Foyt satd
banked oval at Texas World
The cars aren t des gned to
Speedway (TWS)
run at these speeds or on thts
Foyt considered as fearless ktnd of race track We re
as any driVer who started a assum ng they re s trong
race car e ngme sa1d 11 s enough but the unknown lS
getting to the po nt where you there
JUSt hang on and say Oh my
Gomg th1s fast on those
God
banks t1 e tire can go airborne
Foyt a three bme Ind1anapo and the car goes crazy
I s 500 w nner ts one of the momentarily Foyt satd And
favor tes m the 200-mile race m the race track 1sn t w1de
the twm 200 program at TWS enough to lake tl The sll&gt;ck
Saturday He wJII drtve m both cars do a lot of wrec kmg and
lhe 200-mtle champ10nsh p car crashmg mto the walls but
r.ace and a 200-mlle USAC sll&gt;ck you re pretty safe because
car race m the same afternoon you re stthng m a cage
He predtcts t will take
Foyt satd the alummum walls
average speeds of 215 to 220 of the Indy cars are only 62miles an hqur to wm the pole m IOOOths of an mch thtck about
lhe champiOnship car event He ill tht ck as thts tablecloth and
sa td h s new Indy he wtll drtve th&lt;! eockptl IS surrounded by
s capa ble of those speeds
gas tanks conta mng 75 gallons
Johnny Rutherford who also of fuel Foyt suggests cutbng
1s entered
n both races the fuel capac1ty to 25 30
needled Foyt about the pred1c gallons whtch would I ghten the
ton at a meet ng at the car and lake away a lot of the
Houston Spro tswriters and danger early n the race
Sportsc&lt;.~s1ers Assoc1at on Tues
We can t control the cars at
day
these speeds
Foyt tsa1d
There IS one ndtvtdual tn We ve talked among ourselves
the room who boasts of and we re gomg to have to
averagmg 220
Rutherford make some changes We re
satd speakmg before Foyt was s1ltmg there about like a gumea
mtrodu ~ed
I m gomg to get a ptg
good htgh spot and watch
I don t know what the
Foyt satd he mtght have assoc1atton (US Auto Club ) s
WIShed he had never made that gmng to do about 11 but they re
statement but now that he has gmng to have to do 11 qUick
satd tl he sa td he would back tt because If they don t we re
up Marto Andrettt averaged gomg to lose three or four
more than 211 tn lire testing at pretty good boys
TWS last month and Foyt wlll
I m a damn fool to still be
be out to surpass that n drtvmg he sa td I love the
qualtfymg Thursday
sport Its a challenge Ill me
The 38-year-old Foyt a native And we all love to run fa st
of Houston satd ~e race over
But Foyt said he would not

FREE 5 LB. HAM

race at TWS a t nearby College
loubt r
Statton Saturday f tt weren t
expected of I rn by h s
I ometown fan s He s never
But f A J r s the only way
dnven a cJ ampwnshtp car Jn he knows s t full speed and
front of h s home town fans 1n that s what I e 11 be domg
h s long ca reer
Sa tu day

FOR THE

WESTINGHOUSE 36' ELEC RANGE _ _ '49
GE 40 ' RANGE
'59
FRIGIDAIRE 30 ELEC RANGE
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2 DR NORGE REFRIGERATOR
2 DR GE REFRIGERATOR
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APT SIZE REFRIGERATOR
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GAS RANGE
'25
GE ELEC DRYER
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30' GAS RANGE
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'74 ""

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Meigs Tire Center

FREE 5 LB. HAM

EASTER SPECIAL

• •

HOI'TER!

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

~rd

Ave

Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL

A/13 &amp; B/13 &amp; E-14223.50
F14 &amp; F15----*24.50
G14 &amp; G15 ---·•26.50
H14 &amp; H15
*28.50
900x15 &amp; J-15 L-15-•30.50
OLD TIRES

VALUES

24.00

Including F.E.T.
Mounted &amp; Balance

Redmen open league

"Beat The Meat Prices

NEW HAVEN

ANY SIZE

( 5emtf nilS)
CBest of Seven,

w I pet
C'arolfna
2 1 ~~
shut off more Tiger runs
New York
1 2
333
For lronwn Jeff Collins bad
w I pet
two smgles and a walk Most of
Kentucky
2 1
~~
thear rWls came as a result of V g n a
1 2
333
base on balls
West
ThiS game marked the
w t pel
opening of the 1973 SEOAL Utah
1 0 1 000
season The game scheduled San 0 ego
0 I
000
for tomght wtth Metgs at
w I pet
Vmton has been postponed lnd ana
2 1
~~
1 2 333
llecause of a soggy fteld It will Denver
Tuesday s Resutts
be made up on May I Me1gs Caro na
101 New Vork 91
w II play at "Galhpol s on Ky 1 5 Vlrg n a 113 of
Denver 105 lnd ana 94
Fr day
(Onry games schedu ed)
Metgs
000 000 0--11 2 4
Wednesday s Games
330 001 x-7 4 0 San D ego at Utah
Ironton
(On ly game scheduled I
Faulk (LP) Cbaney (I) and
Ash Colhns and Boll
AHL Playoff Slandtngs
By Umted Press lnternat onal
(Quarter Finals)
( BeS~~:e~e;en)
w 1 gf ga
Nova Scotia
I 0 7 ~
P ov dence
0 1 2

~

Gall polls hit safely m every
mn ng but VISLtmg Athens
walked off the field w th a 3-0
tr umph
1n
th e
1973
Southeastern Oh o League
baseball opener for both
squads at Pt Pleasant Ord
nance Field Tuesday evemng
It was the season opener for
Coach J1m Osborne s squad
Athens upped tts mark to 2~
overall
The Bulldogs plated two runs
n the f~rst mnmg and added
an nsurance run m the sJxth
frame GAHS left the sacks
loaded m the siXth mnmg
Steve Inbody blanked the
Galhans for s tx 1nmngs
allowing seve n h1ts Jon
Kostwal relieved Inbody m the
seventh and preserved the
lead a nd even tual v ctory for
Inbody ~s hts mates f mshed
with a game-endmg double
play second of the night for
AHS
Steve Lee went the distance
for GAHS allowmg only four
safeties
H1s teammates
collected etg~t htts one m
every mmng e.cept the thtrd
when GAHS banged out two
btl&lt;;

ABA Playofl Slandtngs
By Un te(l Press lnternahonal
.east

Middleport

1 5 LB HAM FREE OF EXTRA CHARGE
WHEN YOU BUY DAYTON TIRES TOTALING
149 !1!1 PREMIUM DAYTON RAYON
OR FIBERGLASS DUAL OR
SINGLE WHITE AND FULL 4 PL YS.
FIRST LINE TIRE &amp; TUBELESS

CASK ONLY

SALE ON
BOTH
PREMIUM
78 and
2 PLUS 2
FIBERGLASS

FIRST LINE
TIRES

PLUS EXCISE TAX FROM 11 75 '3 33 PER TIRE
k

Sale Ends Apnl 21 1973 - Noon
700 East Ma 1n Street

POMEROY OHIO

992 2101

�f

3 - '"he Daily Sentinel llfiddleport-Pomeroy• 0
2-The Dalll Sent nel Mtddleport Pomeroy 0 Aoril 4 19n

WIN AT BRIDGE

EDITDRIALS

Lead Ke s
NORTII

• A4
. AJ9765

10 7

. 82

WEST
.K QJ73

EAST

.84

. KQIO
• 3

. 108652

• 62

.A 754
. QJ93
SOUTII (D)

.9
• 32

t AKJ9854

_, Kt06
No e vulnerab le

J. 4.•

\\ est

No.-th

East

Soutl

Pass

5

Pass

Pass

Pass
Ope

ng

.• 2.+

lead- • K

1 tc atto at c scs of the f t te nay be set off bv
em ron ne t I i.'lgg r('SS o
wa ns Mal ce S S o ~
head of t1 e t mted 1\al o s ece lly established Env~ro
n e1 tal P og am
Ra nmak ng by seed g c oud s \Hth s lver od de s "
eady feas b1e e sa~ s nak ng t pos s blc for one col n
11y know ngh o steal a other COlnlt) s a ntilll caus
ng drought
Pr cd ct ng tl at 1n 10 or 5 yea s env o me tal a g
g esswn w II be a ma]o SOUl ce of 1 ol t cal co fl ct
Sllong t;ge s Ihat ternat onal r les
d eg lat on s be
drawn p now to cont o expel nents 1 n od fy ng veatl
cr a d cl ate
No one w t1 any acq a nta ce w th h sto y w bel eve
hat 1 e w111 s hrmk fro 11 s ng tl.e ew scaence of
weathet mod f cat o lo the dt sadvantage of the ne tg h
bo s
B t wl1le you ca t steal ra nfpll ;ou ca I mdl y
s tash t n the at OJ a t eas y lt has to fall somcwhe e
a d cl a ces a e t w ll fall on vou1 own head
amo nt s
g reater than ) o care to hnve
rn othe1 Y.ords the best defense aga st env 10 me t I
aggress o 1 nay be that ke n clet:~r ag.g css on t s
kely to hurt the aggresso as n uch as the agg t ssec

B\ Oswald &amp; James Jacobv

Old Bndges bon't Fade Away

In a fatrly strong 13 table
d uplicate every Soulh player
woun d up n ftve d amonds
Stx went down on~ fa poor
scores s x made an pve1
tr ck for good scores and one
pa r made exactly f ve odd
The pI a y e rs who went
down one lost no t me call ng
fo dummy s ace of spades
at tr ck one Later on East
would get 1 w t1 a heart
and lead the ijt ee of cl bs
lo two clu b tr cks
Tl e other playe s studted
a wh le a d saw t at th ey
could keep East out of the
lead b) means of a loser on
lo1er play Then they would
let Wes t hold that f rst tr ck
S x West p layers d dn t
bother to th nk after hold ng
tl at f rst spade They JUSt
cont nu ed the su l Th s gave
the1r opponents a chance to
set up dummy s hea rt sutt
and even\ijally d sca rd all
tl e rclbs
The one average sco r e
went to the best player n the
ga me He t1 ought a long
t me afte r holdmg that hrst
spade a nd f naHy slapped
down hJS ace of clubs to hold
declare• to II tr cks
He wasn t sa tJSf ed w1th
th s average score As I e
pomted o 1t afterwards f I e
had J usl led a low spade at
tnck one there would have
bee n no " a) fo( So uti to
keep East out of the lead a nd
l e wo ld ~a e scm cd a he
fot top nstcad of a n aver
age

r e c ty of Rocky R e Oh o I as a p oblem It wa ts
lo demol sb and eplace the Rock) R vcr B dge wh ch
spa s appt opt ately enough t1 e Rock y R ver J st west
of Cleve land
t seems the bndge s c u nbl ng and s o s de ed
da ge o s I aff c ha s been red ced I om fou lanes to
I\\ o

Co np teat ng matte s however s the fa ct that th e
d st g shed s t uctu e as been decla ed a
I slot c
o
et t bv the Oh o HtSto cal Soc et) the Nat una
Pa ks Se v ce and tl e Nat onal Cou c I o H sto c
P eservat on
Ever f l s a h star c s te a gues o e R oc: kj R ve
co nc 11 an ch nks of co ne ete co t nue to fall off
The c ty ho[ es the federal gO\ e nment w
we gh he
cost of rna ntam ng the mon m ent aga nst th e cost at
ep ac ng t \\ 1th a ne\1. and sen Ice able bndge
The c t y of London I ad a s mtla 1 roblcm Jts so t o
Vlo as o nload the t otter ng Lor don 81 dge on a teal estJ e
development n A zona v.he e t s now a to s at a
0

Anybody wa t U e Rocky R vet B dge

Cnmmals Hove No Class Now
It s bad c ougl that we ve got
m b t c m al'
st don t have any class a y no e
Th s s th e con pla1 t of Ak u 0 1 o 1 o ce Ca1 t John
I a b a 2 vca &lt;:tW e fa cement vete an
he e s no c aft these day s I e sa)s 1\ hen I "" e
on the fo ce I et 1 e p e wh o wet e a y 1
d of he
c af
P ckpo~ k ets lo exa pie once oo k p de n 0 e sk
Nowadays they cons Je t acceplable s mtl) -tu- k o k
he v ct S. dov. n
Safec1acke s se d to
ow f nesse b
ow they e
bu tsJ!fJ s who wr eck sa fes B gla s have forgot e t1
a 1t of cas g a JO nt Now two g ys J s l&gt; s n a 1 ace
Tl ere s o e a ea l owe e WI e e
e ld p d ol
vo kmansh p st I ftX sts car tl eves \.1, ~ o ca d sn ant e
a veh c e
n n tes
1 s a \A. hole ey, c af
say s 1

BY JACK 0 BRIAN
A J01NT WHERE
NOTED ELBOWS BEND
NEW YORK I KFSJ - The esteemed
restaurant known as 21 The 21 Club or Jack
&amp; Charhe s began back m 1923 n Greenw ch
'Vtllago Founders were "Cbarhe Berns and Jack
Kr1end er now dead TheLr places have been
taken by four relatl\ es and 21 has become a
respectable mstJtutlon beyond the snoopmg of
Jzzy and Moe the most famous of all Proh1b bon
agents
1 he proJect moved several hmes from
Greenw ch V llage to 49th St ult mate!) to tts
present address 2) W 52nd St a qu et oas s
am1d the speaks cabarets Jazz JO nts ~nd
n adcap n gl tl fe a o g the fegendary 52nd St
block bel ween Ftfth and Stxth Avenues Its fronl
today ts handomel~rtch m style and color 1ts
steps 10 front not used by customers are I ned
with cast ron JOckeys whase"'1dmg outf ts are
pam ted n U e colors of the most famous stables
n the world the r owners high m soc1ety
wealth and Q_OS t on who I terally JOCkey for
nclus on G~nd for pas t on along th s ra t or
status
J here ,t~re doormeR to tal&lt;e your cars ris1de
doormen of h gher stature than c:ustomery
doormen - they are arb ters of taste and
decorwn of clothes and posit on 21 IS not
segregated for any of the unpleasant reasons or
purposes merely that ts commod ous
prcm ses however large cannot e~cCept (tOy
more than legally may be handled ns de 21
long ago escaped the dar ng of any lawbreak ng
as of th start of Repeal
There s no color se1C or othe r barr e to
enter but when ts reservat ons are flied ts
tables unable to hold a st anger however well
dressed o espedablc Lhe bars perforce are
up
The four mcumbent owne s are nore than a
gen~rat on from the ovdy pos t o a speakea sy
owner once necessar lv suffe red Todav 21
Pres dent Bob Kr endler ts a trustee of h s alma
ater Rutgers Um.ve s ty trustee of U e
presttg ous Mt S na Hosp lal n New York a
veteran off cer - now a colonel ret1red
of
hree wa s - WWII the Korean and VIetnam
and a top commande m the Ma ne Reserves
J erry Be ns s a trustee of U:c Cui nary
Inst tute and rec p cnt of several honorary
a\\ards f1 on h s alma mate1 the Untvers ty of
C c nnat He s an off ce of he nat onal
A Lot g II til
If t he Wash ngton Mon
ment we e Ia d leng l 'WI Se on
the fl oo of U e grand co n
course n f Ur on Stat on n
Was h ngton DC t! would
ac k 20o feet of spa nn ng th e
g eat ha ll I he mon mcnt s
555 feet tall the conco rse s
60 fe et long

'I

The b dd ng J a
West
Nor h
1+
Pass
2+

been
East

Pass
Pass

1.
?

You So utl bold
.K6 5 .QJ 54 .A 2 _,K985
Wha do you do now
A-B1d three no tru J1 T"o
otu pwull otbeafrce
at th s tag
r the b dd ng

Overbreathing

•

IS

Bv L mrencc E L..umb 1\1 D bag ove ny lace Aflet I
De 1r Dr Lamb - A few b eathed nto the bag fo
days ago I vas taken t o he aw h e n y blood sta led t o
OSJ ta l h) amb Ia ce l ha I c c la te aga
F ts of a "h v Jh s eth
no c c ulat on n e the1 of mv
TODAY S QUES110N
arms 01 legs ahd I wa s hav od and second ffi) hu sband
Ins ead of b dd ng wo d a
ef se to bel eve t1 cy d d
m g a ha d n e b1 ea
g
monds yo u partne I as b d Afte awh e one ot the do
th s o n e F lease answe
tw o lub ,)Ve your o e hea l
ors told Jwo othe docto s m) quest o so r can p ovc
Whal lo you do"'now
eally happen ed
t u hold a m ed um size d wh te
Dear Reader - I haven t
" the sl g ht esl do bt Jha
t
hap1 ened A tho g h yo u
thought yo
we r e I av ng
troub le b eatl ng the l' ob
a b I t es are that yo were
I av ng an e1 sode o hype
vent lat o w h c h m e an s
overb eat! mg When peo1 e
b eathe too fa st 01 too teep
y they II blow oil a lot mote
B' RAY CROMLEY
ca rbon d ooc de f om the
lun gs tha they should w U
\1 ASHINGTO N NEA
normal res p at o
Ih s c
FOJ a t me Moscow s ga ns n the M ddle East an I
sulls
n
upsettmg
the
body
\fr ca made hea dl nes Local Co mmun st partes we1 e on
chem
stry
or
the
ac
d
ba se
the up sw ng In some nat ons Com mun sts m oved nto
balance
The
rea
son
s
be
ca b net posts
cause th e ca rbo n d ox de
New st d es n I ca te the loca Red boom wa s short 1 ve I
comes
from de gc nerat on of
Where Comml n sts have been appo nt ed to h gh gove rn
ca
rbon
c ac 1d
o water and
ment posts they have had on the who e no a pp ec a ble
ca
r
bon
d
ox
de
and eltm
nft ence n the cab nets
nates a ce ta n a nount of
Even those government s ::;t ll close to tl e Sov1et Un on
th
e body s not mal ac d es
have c lamped down hard on the nat e Comm n st pat t es
se
nt al to b a I an c e d body
and Ihe sy npath ze s So me M dd le East a pd Ail tea
stry
chem
nalton s
fact fo b o close ly est a n all pol t cal
g oups exce pt the one thev favo ) St k ng ly n the lat ds
When th s occ rs Uiere are
whe e tl e Red partes have a good deal of free 1e gn they
changes n the circulation It
have lost abo t as man ) com rad es thro gh dese1hon a s
car cause fa nt ng and there
they ve 1ec u ted
may be d ff c ulty
obtam
What s out! ned abo e see m s to be the thrust ol st ud es
mg the pulse fhei e s otten
at the Hoove1 Jnsl t ton prest g ous 1esea cl gt o p at
numbness ar o nd tl e mo th
Sta ford Cal f Tl e es ts a e to be p bl sl ed tl s J ne
and m advanced stages t n
n st Alfa s M
n the Yea book o I te na t onal Co
glln g m the hands w1th even
M1 cl el Nab! of tl at g oup I as o tJ ed fot NE!\ the e
spasm of the mt scles
t1 e
s Its of the wo k
I a nd s and fo ea r m
ln I a l wl ose gove nment has been on dose tc 1 s wi~
Obvtously f ove1 br eat h rtg
Mosco"" tw o C nm n sts were appo nted to the cab net
s the problem the treatment
The) exet t ed little 01 no nfl ue nce v-. e e nab e to 1 p ove
s to collect the carbon d
the post on of the r pa ty wl cl s ndet hcav Jest c
oxtde and help the body re
tton
adJ ust ts
hemJSity
By
The Comm n st pa I n Sytt a s n equall y bad sl ape
breath ng nto a bag Ihe ca
Headed by a v g01 o s dvnam e c l e{ th e Syr an Co m
bon d ox de ace n ulates
n un sts ga Qed so me ecog n t on bv on ng n the nat ona
the bag and s eb1 ealhed
P og ess ve E on( B t the e I ave s nee bee n seve e gov
nto the lungS' B lpm g up
e1nme t c ackdowns
0 e carbon dwx de level m
l vo men vho had bee
e be s of tJ e Eg) pt a n Co
t1 s case helps to cor ect the
II
ob lem r om ove rb eath) g
st 1 a t v befo e
'I\. as tann ed ve e noved nto the
n
Eg) 1 t a cal net b 1 oved s Rg a v neff t e rt e
II s a stand a• d t eatment
and used freq e tl y n these
we e nable to keep P es ent Sa I l f o II o v ng o t
t1 e Soo,. et m I ta 1) an I I av been nab e o pro ect ext en e
co d tons
left sts f o i1 est Des1 te I e 1 1 esence n fact Sada t
fh e unde ly ng q estlon 1s
has CI eked down heuv
o Con 11 n st lean ng JO na
why does a pe son over
sts poets a d m scellaneo s nt ell e&lt;.: uaJs along w t1
bt eathe m the first place
otl er g o ps cons1de ed da gcro s to the 1egune
P lots trtcJdentally will over
In Leba noD th e Co 1 n n st party s !ega B t t appea ls
breathe when they are ex
to few and 1ts m e mbe[ sh p s stag a nt
po sed to attttude beca use th e
a1r 1s thmnet and they ovet
In Ltbya the prestdent openly opposes Co mm n sts
breathe m trymg to nc rease
1 oht ca I) and deo og1cally a ' be ng opposed to Islam
the oxygen supply In sq do
rhe Comm n sts do not f e art ee ably be tte• 10
ng they may blow off too
Al geJ a whe e th e gave nffien t c acks down on all poten
m
ct carbon d ox de More
tal OJ I OS t o g 0 I s
o tert'-1 no mal I !e c c m
1 he St dan se Conn n st pa l) I a t n
a Ia e ol
sta ce,s 1erso s ca
ove
hsr p o s cr Red pa t c pat on
a
))Q t v
o 1
e t late because t ey &lt;He
\VI all t c stengtl tl e pa 1y has let ends on 1!x les
Oil XlOU's 01 net VOUS abo It
A pobl sled e t o t f om lhe Hoover In t t ton says the
so meth 1 g Once they stat t
part es of e Ma gi nb s 1bs st 111 sen so nno lence
hav ng dtff c1 It e• o{ co se
T e 1s ucl C m
n t mov ment s SJ t nlo tw o
!hey get eve n mo1 e anx o IS
sc Je 1 I es both legal b t ne1the exe1t ng th lea t
and averb eathe mor e and
nfl1cnce on the c.:o h ) s pol tical fortun es
he condtt on gets worse
t l

\

•

DR. LAWRENCE E. LAMB Nervous H ypervenfl OfiOn

South

~~~:9m'W/hW..V.4&lt;

Voic-e
along
Br'Way
-

Look Out for New
Peril: Rain Theft!

Refusmg
Opening

• Q

»~,,~ili';'«'''·''' '':·'*'''"~'r~·:;»;~~x=x~»==~*v~~=~ ;8&lt;~~v»~~

Problem
e perso n act all y a ts o
so me othe con t on n e
ve es

Suet e1 sode a e ot r~
U ea en g undc s I c
c m sta nces It s mj o ta t
o unde t stand what II cy are
beca se f a pe so s I av g
a n overb eath ng e p so d e
I e s holld make an effo t t
to b1 eat he slow ly an d sl a l
lowly In cidenta ll y t s not a
goo d dea to t y to ho ld ou
breath at th s po nt beca se
th s t ggers off some e
flexes wl cl cat affect the
no ma beat ng mechan sm
of the hea t and c culato y
function and can e en be
dange rous
You problem then \\Ill be
o try to unders ta nd why yo
had o e b ea ll ng n the f r st
place and esolve whateve
anx e t cs u fac tor s co tr b
ted lo t and ecogn ' ng
what tl e ep sode s fh en n
the futu e yo u sta t hav ng
o e ) ou can b eat e slowly
and sha lowl y so that yo
won t get to as m ch d f!
c ulty
NEW SPA PE.JI.

EN ERPR SE

ASS N

Send you que on o D Lomb
a e of th new pope PO Bali
1551 RodoC r Sa on New Yak
NY 0019 Fo o copy o D Lamb
book e on cho e e o end 50 en
to the same odd e
and ask fo
Cho este ol &lt;_oak e
n

DIVORCE ANNOUNCED
ELYRIA Ohto (UP!)
Ma
r ne Lt Col Harlan P Chapman a prtsoner of war for
more tl an seven years an
nounced Monday h s w fe Ehz
abeth was ftlmg for divorce I
thtnk m tltis case t was m
ev table
Chapman satd
I
was gone a long tune

Restaurant ~soctat on the pe~ton trusts of
several un ons m the restaurant-hotel held
where he enJOys the highest respect for m
tegnty Bob Knendler also IS cba tnnan or the
Parents Commtttees at Cornoll and Deerfteld
Academy Pete Krtendler IS a trustee or the
Buffalo B ll Museum of Cody Wyommg (the
"ails of the lobby m 21 are awash w th fme
Rem ngtons) and co-&lt;:ha•rman of the Olymptc
Comm ttee Sheldon 'fannen s a trustee of hts
prep !IChool alma mater Columb a Grammar
School one of New York s fmest and com
m1ttees for char ty balls and movie premieres
I The Godfather prem ere poured $102 000
mto the Boys Club of N Y )
Thts great old Prohtblllon speakeasy has as
success n many f1elds spawned a hierarchy
eil!ler to become as they have p liars or the
n ost respectable New York commumty
It sa remarkable sustam mg msttiuttOn It IS
run w1th (to patrons) tnVlSible rules Yes there
are status areas where Pres NLXon s1ts 1s the
most sought-after But even the President dJd
not spec fy where he would s1t he knew of
course he would be seated at a prop"" spot and
he also respec\ed an old 21 rule that patrons
wtll get the best or food and servtce and the
owners w II seat them where they deem most
proper Thus customers who spend small for
tunes at 21 we re thmk ng of the late Jack
Cohn head of Columbia Pt ~tures who spent
fre ely but whose manners were such that he wa s
seated n the Far Eastern reache,o;:; of upstairs)
do not d ctate the r tables Thelfour owners and
manager ( Bruce Snyder an!ex Manne from
En d Oklah oma who has learned the 21 style
completely) are vtrtually Johnny Umtas-qmck
n nstant ana lys s
Old cus tomers present no problem
prom1smg new ones thus are st ud ed for the
future
Ask Helen Gurley Brown of
Cosmopol tan how she slowly duttfully wended
her \\a) to s4Itus acceptance w th unobtrus ve
b g spend ng and good manners She reco unts tt
he sell
Upsta rs m 21 is the more formal dtmng
room r nged w th 1mpr.ess1ve background n ch
n s lver and napery downsta r s s caiJed The
Ba and ha s a more party atmosphere the
le or 1s "' Idly eclect c emblems of atrl nes
ra !roads football teams (helmets n ostly and
other corporate toys dangle from the ce1hng n a
most unusual ea rn val amb ence

&amp; THINGS
BY PAUL CRABTREE
M) nostalg a threshold ts extremely low but I m ndt the
least b t tearful or even Wlstful about the near-extmct10n of one
Enda ngered Amencan Spectes
To w t the Broadway Hollywood goss1p columrust
For fo~r decades m Amencan JOurnal .sm these tlt llatmg
tr-ashrnongers w elded enormous power matched usually by
tov-. er ng egos
They could butld and bolster the careers of celebnttes tn the
show-bus ness world w th m mscule talen'ts creatmg arttflct@l
stars
On the other }land famous names would shudder tf they
nclU"red the wrath of the gossip vendor A report of a misstep
here a peccad llo there mtxed wtth a couple of vetled and
usually unproven ) Innuendoes and the famous name might
suddenly r, nd h mself on hard times mdeed
But they are passmg hterally and f gurattvely
The great nval motormouths of Hollywood Hedda Hopper
and Louella Parsons have departed So has Walter Wmchell a
master of compact and frequently tnaccurate ) reportmg whose
style of compressed prose could be copted by many of us who use
a typewr ter m their livelihood
Only a few are left and I suppose the most promment of the
survivors s Colwnbus nattve Earl Wtlson who still enJoys lrur
mculatwn lor his column It Happened Last N ght But his
mLleage IS showmg
Why have these scandal-sellers declmed
I can get a pretty good clue JUSt by readmg a few of Wtlson s
rece nt columns
Nobody really cares about the cellulotd-and-tmsel world of
Broadway and Hollywood any longer
Are you authent cally exctted to learn that the Stage
Delicatessen w II remam open durmg remodehng ' Or that
Mayor Lindsay and the star of a current Broadway play look
al ke Or that George C Scott declmed to portray Gen Douglas
Mac Arthur m a movte' Btg_ deal h\!1)'
Does t! genmnely mterest you that Sarah Vaughan ts appear ng at a New York mght club n a comeback attempt' Or
what Carol Channmg gave Jule Styne for his b rthday ' Or
whether Dean Mart n owns two Stutz Bearcats? Yoq may now
yawn pol t ely
Earl WLlson and h s contemporanes hv ng and dead wrote
about a world that never was Now that the TV cameras have
Shown uSNe-w.. Y.Drk as 1t really 1s - a place where one capnot
walk the streets alone where drug and trafftc problems are
almost overwhelmmg where ghettoes fouler than the Ptt abound
~ who can get excited about such a never..never land?
The same ts true of Hollywood whtch shares eXIstence With
Los Angeles that masstve glut of freeways smog corn
merc1ahsm and plast c hvmg Btg-name stars make unem
ployment lmes not headhnes nowadays
AS de from a perhaps small Improvement m publtc taste I
th nktwoother terns are responstble for the downfall of the patd
gosstp
TeleVIsion with Its cavernous appetlte for talent has
produced ent r ely too many celebr t es (tf that s the word) to
keep track of or even to care about There are hterally hundreda
of recogn zable show-bt'. names who pop up on talk shows and
qu z programs to the mterest of only a select few They are
mpersonal visitors to our hvmg rooms and who gtves a hoot
about the r hobbes pets or martial adventures '
Second the world has become so hardened by the mmd
scathmg real world events of Ute past,jecade that t( s ll&gt;lally
moculated agamst the hanky-panky of some med urn-magrutude
star of stage screen and-or TV' The world that produced the
teleVIsed assassmahon of a Prestdent hts s layer and h1s brother
that showed us unspeakable bloodshed m a pomtless war
that mterrupted the Olympt~s for a news spectal on terrortsm
th s world yawns f someone 1s sleepmg With someone who tsn t
his w fe
Thus passeth the gosstp colummst Goodbye ~ nd good rtd
dance
~

+++
ON THj;; TV DIAL A mght of spectals on WSAZ TV startmg
at 7 3Q wtth Wmme the ~h Elvts Presley and Ann Margaret
m that order
-Thursday Re.ds Braves season opener I 30 on WSAZ-TV

l

'

X

i

&gt;'!;&lt; 0

I

a:a:i':~

Generation Rap
By Helt n and Sue Bottel

Dear Helen and Sue
1 am a 12-)ear-old tomboy w1th two fnends
We want to know if there are any people of any age wbo need
som\l()ne Ill talk Ill or play With - like retarded o~ wtth some kind
of handtcap
We know how tt feelS to be lonely and would Uke Ill help
someone who LS
I would also want to know tf any pounds would accept a few
12 year-old boys and grrls to love the anunals irtalre them happy
clean out thetr cages feed them play wtth them and buy them
some httle ll&gt;ys'
We will work for free - K R V V and S D THE
EVERYTHING TAKE.CARE.OFERS
Dear Everythmg Take-Care.Ofers
Why don t you v1s1t a convalescent or elderly peoples home
"'your town' We U bet several reSidents there would love Ill be
adopted by 12-year-&lt;tld foster grandchildren
Helpmg out at an aruma1shelter' Probably not But perhaps
you could fmd a handicapped chtld m your netghborhood who
needs a btg Sister
(We sent your good letter to the ActiOn Line column of your
local newspaper and by this time you may bave more volunteer
work than you can handle Hope so ) Love ya - SUE AND
HELEN

+++
Rap
Last year my Mom and Dad separated At !trst we hved wtth
Mom but then she dectded she couldn t keep us so Dad ll&gt;ok over
and we now live at hlS house
I am 12 and the oldest My three brothers and sts~rs are
much younger Dad works two jObs one durmg the day the other
m the evenmg As soon as I get home from school I take over as
babys Iter because D;~d cant afford a full tune housekeeper
When he gets home he watches the little k1ds whtle I ftx dmner
then he hes down before gomg to work and I have the k ds all
,
evemng until I put them Ill Bed Weekends to
Maybe I could take this but Dad compla111S constantly about
the house and how bard he works and how my Mom was always
wrong about everything I know he works hard but I can t stand
hearmg about t! all the time
I call my Mom think ng I can talk Ill her and she JUst tells
me I complam too much I guess I really don t want Ill live wtth
her etther because t \vould be the same thtng m a dtfferent
place
!love my parents but I want to be a ktd once m a while I try
not to show my feelings to them much because they have thetr
own problenrs but I keep thmking - if they d only get back
together and try to work things out I wouldn t be a -GIRL WHO
NEEDS HELP

l.._)

GWNH
You deserve to be a ktd once"' a whtle If your parents cant
get back ~ether then they d better at least TALK over Ute best
way to care for thetr children and lettmg a 12-year-old play
full ttme mother tsn t tt - SUE

+++
Dear Gtrl
Are there any relatives who mtght take you ktda m tern
porartly unltl your folks etther settle thetr dtfferences or realize
they can t use you to reheve them of thetr child-care responstbtll!tes' Why not ask them to cons der a foster home for you' It
mtght shake them mto facmg facts - HELEN

Television Log
Wednesday Apr 4 1973
News Weather Sports 3 4 8 0 5 T uth 0 Con seq 6
Sesa me S 20 Around the Bend 33
6 30
NBC News 3 4 News B 0 Sesame Sf 20 Zoom 33
Dream of Jeanne 13
7 00
T uth or Co nseq 3 Beat e C ock 4 News 6 0 What s
My L nea Anyth ng Vou Can Do 13 E ec Co 20 Know Your
Schools 33 Sa nt 5
7 30- Ep sode Act on 33 The J udge 0 Lass e 5 Beat the
Clock 3 Pol ce Su geon 3 ToTe I the Truth 6 Ea thkeep ng
~ Ha f he Geo ge K rby Comedy Hou a
8 00 Sonny &amp; Cbe 8 10 Ame ca 73 20 33 W nne the Pooh &amp;
he Honey T ee 3 4 5 Move The Fa mer s Daugher 6
6 00

13

8
9
9
0

30 - E v s Aloha f om Hawa 3 4 15
00 - Med ca Cente 8 0 l enox Qua tet Haydn Opus 20
JO
Turn ng Po nts 20 33
00 - Cannon 8 10 Soul 33 Owen Marshall 6 News 20 Ann
Ma garet When You re Sm ng 3 4 5
00 News 3 4 6 8 10 13 5
30
Johnny Ca rson 3 4 S Jack Paa 6 13 Moves The
L qu data 8 S x Br dges to Cross 0

t:"OO' -

News 4 13

Thursday Apnl5 1973
00
Sun se Sem nar 4 Sac ed Heart o
5
Fa mt me 0 Fa m Repo t 3
20
Paul Harvey 13
30
Co umbus Today 4 B be Answe s B Amer cas
P oblems 0 Patterns fo L v ng 3
Co ncob Report 3
6 45
Today 3 4 5
7 oo
7 30 Rompe Room 6 S eepy Jette s B Rocky &amp; Bultw r-~k e
3 Popeye 10
8 00 Cap Kanga oo 0 New Zoo Revue 3 Sesame st 33
Lass e 6
8 30 - Jack La La nne 13 Romper Room 8 New zoa Revue 6
9 00 - Pa u D xon 4 Ph I Donahue 15 Ben Casey 3 Romper
Room B Peyton Pace 3 Capt Kangaroo a M Roberts 6
Fr e11d y Junct on 0 AM 3
9 30 To Tel The Truth 3 Haze 8 Jeopardy 6 Hollywood s
Ta k ng 10
o 00 - Hathayoga 33 D ck Van Dyke 3 D nah Shore 3 5
Co umbus S x Ca I ng 6 Joker s W ld a o
0 JO ncent at on 3 5 Ph Donahue .4 Spl 1 Second 3
P c s Right 8 10
00- Sale of Cen.fu y 3 4 5 Love of L fe 8 o Bew t h d 6
3 Sesame St 20
c e
12 00 Jeopa dy 3 5 Bob B aun s 50 .so Club 4 News 10 13
Jac k. e Ob nger 8 Password 6
2 30 3 W s Game 3 Search tor Tomar ow 8 0 Spl t Second 6
CO
News 3 All My Ch ldren l. 3 t s Your Bet B G
Acres 0 Not For Women On y 5 Secret Sto m 8
reen
20 ....... Fash ons n Sew ng 3
30 - LetsMakeADea 6 3 :AstheWordTu ns8 10Th
onA~tch34
5
~
2 00
Glays of Our. L ves 3 .4 5 Newlywed Game 3 M k
Doug ~s 6 Gu d ng L ght a 10
e
2 30 - Doctors3 4 5 DatngGame13 EdgeofNghta 10
3 00
Another Word 3 4 15 Genera Hosp ta 6 13 Love
Splendored Th ng 8 0 Beh nd the L nes 20
3 30- Retu n to Peyton Place 3 4 5 One L fe to L ve 6 13
Sec et Sto m 10
4 00
M Cartoon 3 Love Arne can Sty le 13 Fl ntstones 6
5 G II gan s Is B Sesame St 20 33 Move The Second
G ea test Sex 10
4 30 - I Love Lucy 6 Dane Boone 3 Pett coat Junct on 3
G gan s Is B D ck Van Dy ke s
5 oa M ster Rogers 20 33 Andy G ff th .5 Bonanza 3 Hazel
8 8 g Va t ey 6
5 30- El~c Co 33 Gomer Py le 3 Hodgepodge Lodge 20
Beve ly H b I es 8 Death Va ey Days 5 Oh 0 H gh School
Basketba I Tournament 4
6 00 - News 3 4 a 0 15 T uth or Con seq 13 A ound the Bend
33 Sesame Sf 20
6 3'tl ~ NBC News 4 15 ABC Ne'(r's 8 0 Dream of Jeann e 13
Des gn ng Women 33
7 00 - Truth or Conseq 3 Beat the Cock 4 Course of Our
T mes 33 D ck Van Dyke 4 What s My L ne a Big Red
Jub ee 5 News6 Elec Co 20 LefsMakeADea 3
7 30
Hollywood Squares 3 To Tell the Truth 6 W td K n dom
10 I I See Vou n Court 4 Lass e B Zoom 20 Newsmak~r 72
13 Democracy s Trumpet W Va Leg slature 33
8 00- Fl p Wilson~ 4 15 Wa tons 8 10 Jacqu~s Cousteau 6
3 Advocates 20 33
9 00 Kung Fu 6 13 An Amer can FaitlJJy 33 Irons de J 4 15
Mov es Strange s When We Meet a Don t Make Waves
0 Sc ence 72 20
0 00 News 20 Streets of San F anc sco 6 3 Dean Mart n 3
4 5 World P ess 33
1 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 13 15
1 JO Johnny Carson 3 4 15 ~ack Paar 6 13 Movies L zz.e __...
8 Tara Tah ta lO
--- ·
1 00 - Roller Derby 4 News 13
200 - News4
6
6
6
6

April 4

1~73

Ironton disaPPoints Meigs 7-0
iiY CONNJESMITH
ffiONTON ~ Nobody likes to
lose a ball game but some
COOSolallon IS found in i&lt;noWUlg
that you lost to the diamond AA
champs of Ohto Tuesday af
temoon the Tigers of Ironton
c urrently retgmng over
Buckeye baseball took the
Metgs Marauders 7~ "' the
season opener ror Metgs
lronwn meanwhile pushed 1ts
record for 1!!73 Ill &amp;-1
Starling pttcher for Me1gs
semor nghthander Chuck

Faulk was wtld at the
begmrung the Tigers scormg
three runs on roue walks and a
wtld pttch Btll Chaney,
lljlother senior nghty had Ill
fmrsn the first mmng
In the second Cbaney gave
up two runs then struck out the
next three batters Ln sue
cessLon He kept Ironton
scoreless until the !mal mnmg
Metgs gave up only four hits Ill
the Tigers
Ironton hurler Jeff Collms
was outstandmg y eldmg only

two htts and s!rtklng out 15
Collins wa~ especJally ef
fecUve n the seventh mnmg
when Metgs threatened the
Marauders loading the bases
with one out but Collins fanned
the next two batters Meigs
htts were by catcher Mtck Ash
and second baseman Btll
Vaughan both smgles
Two redeenllng featwv or
the Me gs team were Bill
Cbaney s pttching and Dave
WoUe centerflelder who made
two long runmng catches wh1ch

R edmen open 1973
track season Thursday
The Rto Grande College
track team begms the 1973
schedule Thursday agamst
Mtd Ohto Conference foe
Malone from Canton Oh o The
dual meet starts at 4 p m at
Evans Fteld at Rto Grande
Ftrst year Redmen Coach
George Wolfe Will field a 21
man squad w th 13 freshmen on
the roster Wolfe has the
largest track team ever
assembled at RID Grande
however Wolfe says Still our
btggest problem IS lack of
depth not havmg enough
personnel you need m dual

d;lsh Brown also runs the 220
Br&lt;&gt;wn a four sports star at
North Gai1Ja has already
recorded a t1me of 10 1 seconds
n practice this sprmg In htgh
school competition the best
time ever (pr Brown was 10 0
seconds Wolfe says of Brown
Harvey can go under 10
seconds what he needs ts
somebody m a lane next to h1m
to really push htm
Jtm Stewart 11 6 7 fresh
man from Rock H II H1gh
School runs the hurdles
Stewart a varstty basketball
player In the wm\er was
clocked at 15 3 seconds In the
120 yard h gh hll"dles recently

of 4 mtnutes and IS seconds
Dean Fausnaugh a 5 8 Juntor
from Stllutsv•lle Ohio handles
the pole vaulttng for the
Redmen Fausnaugh a guard
on Coach Art Lanham s varstly
basketball U!am ts currently
nursmg an tnjured ankle
Fausnau
IS\ a doubtful
atnst Malone but he
to be ready by the
ausnaugh has gone
13 6 m t e pole vault for h s
best rna
Another tn]ury has stdelined
Javelin thrower Ken Sanford
a freshman from Toms River
meets
New Jersey Sanford wtll be
Wtth 13 freshmen on the
lost for a week
rosler
the Redmon wtll
Coach Wolfe a graduate of
cballenge wtth thetr Klddte
Two JWliors are expected to Cen tral Mtchlgan Untvers ty
Korps
Harvey Brown and have good sormgs Cross ts pleased wtth freshman Ed
Jun Stewart are a couple of country standout Jack Fmch of !son of New Boston !son
names !bat brmg smiles to Chesapeake wtll compete m throws the shot and dtscus The
WoUe s face Brown a fresh
three events thLs year Fmch Malone PIOneers R10 Grande s
man from North Gall a Htgh turned m hlS best time ever m opponent Thursday lost a
School excels m the 100 yard the mile last week w th a time triangular meet Saturday. at
Cedarville by a score of 84-l!O
Both teams have strong squads
~~;;:&gt; u~ -;:; S »:~ 0:,.7 X';::&gt;
and Malone should be out
&lt; standmg n the long dtstance
events followmg their cross
country champwnshtp last fall
at the NAJA naltonal f nals
~&lt;'
After Thursday s meet the
Redmen trav~l to Manetta
~ Saturday Apr I 7 for the an
lly MILTON RICHMAN
nual Martella College relays
JPI Sports Editor

ij foday's

Sport Parade

!'l;

AUGUSTA Ga (UP!) - B11ly Casper ts a mtSs u • y m the
Mormon Church
As such he preaches from time to tune frequently to church
groups which mclude young people
Any tune they ask hun questions he answers Utem honestly
He dnesn t try to hide anythmg Sbould any of them ask him how
be feels about that swap mvolvmg Yankee pitchers Fntz
Peterson and Mike Kekich and thetr wtves ,Jte will say he doesn t
condemn them because thijt s the way he honestly feels
Every man has the nght to choose his own way of life says
Billy Casper I don t pom1 my lmger m JUdgment of anybody
We Mormons don t smoke ot drmk We don t even have coffee or
tea but we certa nly don t condemn those who do because we
believe m a man s free agency
Muscle Pull Flares Up
Billy Casper hopmg to wm his second Masters golf cham
ptonship if he can control a pulled muscle m hts back !bat has
suddenly flared up on hun doesn t know either Frtlz Peterson or
Mtke Kekich personally
I m m Ute other league he says meanmg San Dlego near
where he makes hiS home I go out to the ball psrk occasiOnally
btit tt s usually to see the Padres I d say the ballplayer I know
beslts Harmon Killebrew of the Twins and that s because he..,...
the (Mormon) church
Casper of course bad heard of what Peterson and Kekich had
done and he says he neverfeltany negative reaction
I d never do •t myself he says but I certamly do not
condemn e1ther of them I cannot Judge another man The
scr pture tells you that you re not supposed to JUdge
Does Casper s beltef have anythmg to do with hts bemg a
Monnon 1 The Mormons were polygamous at one time weren t
they ?
Yes they were but they aren t any more he says
A Reason for It
The reason they were polygamous m the early 1800&lt;! s
because they were drtven from one state to another and so many
of the Mormon men were killed and persecuted due to the r
religwus beliefs that there weren t enough of them left to look
afU!r the women and children when they finally settled m Salt
Lake Ctly utah
People have a general mtSconcept)on about that anyway
For example m order for a Mormon man to have another wife
be bad to ftrst get the consent from hts ortgrnal wife He had to
devote equal tune to each one and he bad to gtve each equal
matertal things It was not an easy life for a man Certainly not
as easy as some people seem to think

Golfers in
2nd place
at Jackson

JACKSON - The golf team
of Metgs Htgh School braved
ramy sktes of the Jackson Gol(
course and oame n second n a
three school meet here Mon
day afternoon Three players
teed off m each of ftve groups
The ftnal totals of the afternoon
match were tallied w th
Jackson wmmng the match
w1th a score of 230 Metgs was
second at 271 and Vmll&gt;n htgh
at 366
Followmg are the scores of
each golfer m the five groups
Me1gs Story 51 Jackson
Davts 42 and Vmton Litter 58
Meigs
Blackston
51
Jackson Billman 50 and
Vmton Curran 57
Metgs Chaf n 51 Jackson
Morrow 47 and V nton Yater
82
Metgs Warner 51 Jackson
Ander 45 and V nton Barber
72
Metgs
R dg way
63
Jackson Buchanan 47 and
Vmton Reedy 97
Totals Me1gs 271 Ja ckson
230 Vmton 366
ThiS Wednesday Me1gs w1ll
host Waverly and Ch lllcothe at
the Pomeroy Golf course Tee
offtmets4pm

Athens blanks
Blue Devils 3-0
AHS sent etght men to the
):llate In the f1rst mn ng Two
Bulldogs Mark Handley and
Steve Inbody scored Handley
and Steve Deal smgled In
body Mark Mace and Andy
Chonko drew free passes The
upnsmg was a ded by one
GAHS error
Lee blanked the Bulldogs
until the stxth W th one out
Jed Oatley walked stol e
second and scored later on a
balk and stngle by Steve Rose
Inbody led off the f1fth wtth a
tnple but failed to score
Catcher ~rk K eshng and
shortstop Steve Slone each had
twos ngles for the Blue Devtls
Kev Sheets Jtm Perry Ray
Wether and Brett Wtlson each
had smgles for the Gall ans
Lee fanned seven and walked
stx Inbody fanned stx Inbody
walked one and hit one batter
The Blue Devils wtll play
Metgs at home Frtday n a
Southeastern OhiO League
battle GAHS ts at Wheelers
burg Thursday
Score By lnnmgs
Athens
200 00 0---3 4 1
Ga t po s
000 000 f)-{) 8 2
W nn ng p1tct1er - nbody
l:ose - Lee

ON

DISCOUNT TIRE
Spring Sale Continues

USED CARS
WEATIIER

Thru Sat. April 7th

WARMER.

Prem1um 4 p~. POlyester Tires

'

play against Knights

The Rio Grande Redmen
baseball team one week Into
the season played ftve games
m between spring showers and
managed two wms wh1le
dropp ng three games
The Redmen lost thetr
regular season opener at home
agamst West V rgm1a State at
Evans Fteld
The Yel
lowjackels
shutout
the
Redmen 6-0 Steve Slaughter
after a one year layoff sur
fered the loss for Rio Grande
The sec.ond game was
suspended due to darkness
The game stopped w1th the
score hed 4-4 and was con
eluded at West Vtrgmta Slate
Monday Apnl 2 w1th Rto
Seres B
Grande
edg ng
the
w I gf ga Yellow)ackets 5-4 n 11 m
Bos ton
I 0 J 2
Rocheste
0 1 2 3 mngs
Rtck VanMetre worked U e
Se-rees C
flve nmngs and freshman
ftrst
w I gf ga
R chm ond
0 0 0 0 Mike Rose fmtshed wtth s1x
C nc nnaf
o o a o mnmgs of shutout ball to ga m
the wm R10 Grande pushed
Series 0
wlgfga across the w1m mg run m the
Hershey
o .0 o o
Vrgna
0 0 0 0 lith when Coach Norm Persm
walked M ke LewJS bunted
Tuesday s Results
Nova Scot a 7 P ov dence 2
and was safe on an error and
Boston 3 Rochester 2 ot
consecut vc bases~n balls to
(On1y Qames schedu ed)
J1m J ohnston and Cratg Myer s
Wedne!!iday s Games
R chmond at C nc nnat
forced home the dec1dmg run
On y game scheduled)
After the completwn or the

suspended game Rto Grande
downed West Vtrgm a State 9-4
10 the ftrst game or the
doubleheader at Institute West
Vlrgm a Steve SlaughU!r won
hts ftrst game of the spr ng to
even h1s record at 1 1
Slaughter went the dts!ance
and got support from J ohn
Dudek Norm PerSt n ana
Danny Wisecarver each had
two hi ts Pers n also drove m 4
runs
The second game at West
V1rg1ma State was called after
seven mntngs because of
darkness wtth the score bed at
~3 Unless the game has
bear1ng on the
teams
quat1£ym g for post season
tournament competitiOn the
game wtll not be completed
Morr1s Harvey swept a
doubleheader from Rio Grande
Thursday March 29 at Evans
Fteld by scores of 4 2 and 8-5
Jmt Johnston started for the
Redmen and M ke Rose sui
fered the Joss m relief
Sophomore Dave Swann of
Jackson was charged wtth the
defeat n the second game
Swa nn p1tched the entue
game
Weather perm1ttmg the
Redmen wtll open Mtd.Oh o

Conference play Wday w1th two
home games agatnst the Ur
bana Blue Kmghts Rio Grande
w1U vtstt MQC r val Oh o
Domm1can at Columbus
Saturday Alml 7 for a
doubleheader

Pirates make
good showmg
in track meet
Coach Bruce Gab1 el s North
Gall a track lean made a good
show ng Tuesday n ght bafore
bo\\ ng to Barboursvtlle and
Fairland m a tr anguJ a r meet
Barboursvtllc con p led GO
po nts Fa rland ha 1 56 and
North Gal ha 43
The Pirates Cai)tured ftve
f rsts Carl Dew tt won the shot
put wt th a throw of 41 2 feet
Sterl ng Logan took the broad
JUmp w than 18 8 effo t and the
100 yard dash at II 2 seconds
Gene Payne won them le run
wtth the top t me of 5 1 6 and
Gtll an f mshed first n I e two
mtle run at 11 33 8

Bravery like Tracy's needed
HOUSTON (UP!) - A J the 22-degree banked two-mde
Foyt sa d you have to be as track wiiJ be dangerous
brave as Dtck Tracy to drLve
I sure see somebody hurt
champwnsh1p cars on the h1gh there pretty bad
Foyt satd
banked oval at Texas World
The cars aren t des gned to
Speedway (TWS)
run at these speeds or on thts
Foyt considered as fearless ktnd of race track We re
as any driVer who started a assum ng they re s trong
race car e ngme sa1d 11 s enough but the unknown lS
getting to the po nt where you there
JUSt hang on and say Oh my
Gomg th1s fast on those
God
banks t1 e tire can go airborne
Foyt a three bme Ind1anapo and the car goes crazy
I s 500 w nner ts one of the momentarily Foyt satd And
favor tes m the 200-mile race m the race track 1sn t w1de
the twm 200 program at TWS enough to lake tl The sll&gt;ck
Saturday He wJII drtve m both cars do a lot of wrec kmg and
lhe 200-mtle champ10nsh p car crashmg mto the walls but
r.ace and a 200-mlle USAC sll&gt;ck you re pretty safe because
car race m the same afternoon you re stthng m a cage
He predtcts t will take
Foyt satd the alummum walls
average speeds of 215 to 220 of the Indy cars are only 62miles an hqur to wm the pole m IOOOths of an mch thtck about
lhe champiOnship car event He ill tht ck as thts tablecloth and
sa td h s new Indy he wtll drtve th&lt;! eockptl IS surrounded by
s capa ble of those speeds
gas tanks conta mng 75 gallons
Johnny Rutherford who also of fuel Foyt suggests cutbng
1s entered
n both races the fuel capac1ty to 25 30
needled Foyt about the pred1c gallons whtch would I ghten the
ton at a meet ng at the car and lake away a lot of the
Houston Spro tswriters and danger early n the race
Sportsc&lt;.~s1ers Assoc1at on Tues
We can t control the cars at
day
these speeds
Foyt tsa1d
There IS one ndtvtdual tn We ve talked among ourselves
the room who boasts of and we re gomg to have to
averagmg 220
Rutherford make some changes We re
satd speakmg before Foyt was s1ltmg there about like a gumea
mtrodu ~ed
I m gomg to get a ptg
good htgh spot and watch
I don t know what the
Foyt satd he mtght have assoc1atton (US Auto Club ) s
WIShed he had never made that gmng to do about 11 but they re
statement but now that he has gmng to have to do 11 qUick
satd tl he sa td he would back tt because If they don t we re
up Marto Andrettt averaged gomg to lose three or four
more than 211 tn lire testing at pretty good boys
TWS last month and Foyt wlll
I m a damn fool to still be
be out to surpass that n drtvmg he sa td I love the
qualtfymg Thursday
sport Its a challenge Ill me
The 38-year-old Foyt a native And we all love to run fa st
of Houston satd ~e race over
But Foyt said he would not

FREE 5 LB. HAM

race at TWS a t nearby College
loubt r
Statton Saturday f tt weren t
expected of I rn by h s
I ometown fan s He s never
But f A J r s the only way
dnven a cJ ampwnshtp car Jn he knows s t full speed and
front of h s home town fans 1n that s what I e 11 be domg
h s long ca reer
Sa tu day

FOR THE

WESTINGHOUSE 36' ELEC RANGE _ _ '49
GE 40 ' RANGE
'59
FRIGIDAIRE 30 ELEC RANGE
'49
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2 DR NORGE REFRIGERATOR
2 DR GE REFRIGERATOR
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APT SIZE REFRIGERATOR
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GE ELEC DRYER
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Whitewall TL
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Whitewall TL

A/13 &amp; B/13 &amp; E-14223.50
F14 &amp; F15----*24.50
G14 &amp; G15 ---·•26.50
H14 &amp; H15
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900x15 &amp; J-15 L-15-•30.50
OLD TIRES

VALUES

24.00

Including F.E.T.
Mounted &amp; Balance

Redmen open league

"Beat The Meat Prices

NEW HAVEN

ANY SIZE

( 5emtf nilS)
CBest of Seven,

w I pet
C'arolfna
2 1 ~~
shut off more Tiger runs
New York
1 2
333
For lronwn Jeff Collins bad
w I pet
two smgles and a walk Most of
Kentucky
2 1
~~
thear rWls came as a result of V g n a
1 2
333
base on balls
West
ThiS game marked the
w t pel
opening of the 1973 SEOAL Utah
1 0 1 000
season The game scheduled San 0 ego
0 I
000
for tomght wtth Metgs at
w I pet
Vmton has been postponed lnd ana
2 1
~~
1 2 333
llecause of a soggy fteld It will Denver
Tuesday s Resutts
be made up on May I Me1gs Caro na
101 New Vork 91
w II play at "Galhpol s on Ky 1 5 Vlrg n a 113 of
Denver 105 lnd ana 94
Fr day
(Onry games schedu ed)
Metgs
000 000 0--11 2 4
Wednesday s Games
330 001 x-7 4 0 San D ego at Utah
Ironton
(On ly game scheduled I
Faulk (LP) Cbaney (I) and
Ash Colhns and Boll
AHL Playoff Slandtngs
By Umted Press lnternat onal
(Quarter Finals)
( BeS~~:e~e;en)
w 1 gf ga
Nova Scotia
I 0 7 ~
P ov dence
0 1 2

~

Gall polls hit safely m every
mn ng but VISLtmg Athens
walked off the field w th a 3-0
tr umph
1n
th e
1973
Southeastern Oh o League
baseball opener for both
squads at Pt Pleasant Ord
nance Field Tuesday evemng
It was the season opener for
Coach J1m Osborne s squad
Athens upped tts mark to 2~
overall
The Bulldogs plated two runs
n the f~rst mnmg and added
an nsurance run m the sJxth
frame GAHS left the sacks
loaded m the siXth mnmg
Steve Inbody blanked the
Galhans for s tx 1nmngs
allowing seve n h1ts Jon
Kostwal relieved Inbody m the
seventh and preserved the
lead a nd even tual v ctory for
Inbody ~s hts mates f mshed
with a game-endmg double
play second of the night for
AHS
Steve Lee went the distance
for GAHS allowmg only four
safeties
H1s teammates
collected etg~t htts one m
every mmng e.cept the thtrd
when GAHS banged out two
btl&lt;;

ABA Playofl Slandtngs
By Un te(l Press lnternahonal
.east

Middleport

1 5 LB HAM FREE OF EXTRA CHARGE
WHEN YOU BUY DAYTON TIRES TOTALING
149 !1!1 PREMIUM DAYTON RAYON
OR FIBERGLASS DUAL OR
SINGLE WHITE AND FULL 4 PL YS.
FIRST LINE TIRE &amp; TUBELESS

CASK ONLY

SALE ON
BOTH
PREMIUM
78 and
2 PLUS 2
FIBERGLASS

FIRST LINE
TIRES

PLUS EXCISE TAX FROM 11 75 '3 33 PER TIRE
k

Sale Ends Apnl 21 1973 - Noon
700 East Ma 1n Street

POMEROY OHIO

992 2101

�I •' ,•

'·

:J

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f -

' ..

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April4,l973

_

·

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'

·.

'·

.

atr .

T.he White House gives the
appearance of a silent,
beleaguered fortress while
President Ni.:~ton steadfastly

ls unprovable and may be
Put asid~ 'everything eise ..,.
simply false . The propOsition of including that persistently
overkillls undeniable .apd the · nagging question .as to why on ·
President's ultimate. earth 'anybody wanted to bug
resP.nsibllity for it exists .ljl the Democn\t.s; anyhow - and
our system even if he never one is still 1eft with the aroma
knew about it.
of too much 'money too ro~J~:hly

seems

w be

aware of anything an!( the evidence
to dictai.e
everything that may happen in such' a change .
or around his administration.
This columnist, for one,
- Ii,as"S&lt;ffife oolieve, Mr.
having taken a
Nixon w.S grossly let down most reserved vie'! last year
here by some of his own people a b 0 u t
' ·, water g .a l e
he will he. doing nothing pretty disclosu~tls . " FiTstly, it was,
simply to tell ihe country as~ after all, an election year.

us!&gt; d.
Certainly in this . contExt
alone," if in no· ~ther, the
President owes il lo ''the
country, to his '.j.dministration
and to his continued ef·
fecliveness to make a full and

-freeiyo;;;,sto

·-

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'•

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~"M.r. Nixon. should
now. speak ·up :~~;r~~£~1~~~~1~
~~!t!~~Lr:r.~:
.
.
By WilliamS. White.
WASHI:-lGTON ·
Washi~gton is a dismal swamp
groping abOutln a mia!lflla of
suspicion and ugly rumor, and
only one man can, now clear the

.

'
bringing . in any personal
verdict of guilty, as I did long
ago when right-wing in~resls
attacking. men and institutions in the Joe McCarthy.
era.
In my view, enough ha~ now
come out t.o suggest that
journa1istic- activiJy here was
basically sound, and especially
in regard to Republican use of
campaign money.

.

Secondly, I have seen many. a
"scandal" quietly die f&lt;&gt;r lack
. of substance. Thirdly, the
·Administration's complaint
that it was being· assaile&lt;\. by
"basically unfriendly journalistic quarters had some
merit in tl].e sense that there ·
was and is a strong a~ti-Nixon
bias 'in party of the media.
Fourthly, I have always
wanted w see solid p'roof before

..

'.

'
d
'
F.. ee gram
, payments unchanged
5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., April4, J973
e

were

No change has been made in
the feed grain program
payments or regulations as 'a
result of the lowering, of feed
grain set-aside from an
acreage equal to 25 pet. of a
farm's base to 10 pet., said
•

·

Orion W. Roush, Meigs County
ASC Committee Chairman.
· '"the set-aside acreage
reduction is automatic," he
said, " and prooucers have no
added paperwork and no
required visits t ~ the Meigs

Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation service (ASCS )
County Office.
''The only change is the setaside
requlrement
-for .
produ~ers who enroUed under
the 25 pet. set-aside plan has

.

•

A DISCO\J NT

qy

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ARKING
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1 Gallon Size!

A $2.69 Value-

CANVAS
OXFORDS

Featuring Top Artlits With Their Hlt...Songsl
Charley Pnde , Johnny Cash, Loretta Lynn, Tammy .
Wynette, Andy Wiffiams, J Dog Night, Glen Camp ~
bell ,. Waylon Jennings, Everly Bros., Steffen Wolf,
Jeannie C. Riley , Eddie Arnold , Roger Miller, KiHy
Wells, Jackson 5. Jimmy Rodgers, Carpenters, Roy
CJark, Buck Owens, SOnny and Cher. James Brown,
Sly and the Family Stone, Chi Lites, Chet Adkins,

While They Last!

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PAIL

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W' WIDE
lull .&amp; year
guarantee .
Brass couplings ·
vinyl. :
A

Every look, ~'tru..la.bric , every co lor is
repr.esented in our new spring stock by
" Mr. Legg s" . Why pay more·?

· It's Time For A change

BOYS .KNIT SHIRTS

PERMANENT PRESS
OF COURSE!

Crew necks, tan_k toPs; button ~ollar
- i n a wi.d e vanety of colors. Sczes 4

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MEN'S
SPORT ·
SHIRTS

BOYS

- ··~ "'To16 . .

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$394

P~lyester , twills- 1 denims, · they all go at
th1s big redUction Thursday thru Sunday .
Get your supply now and save cas h!

·$

vacczne
project

Availabl e in white and 6 co lors.
Covers eas ily , no meSsy c leanup!

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SPRAYS OR WREATHS ·

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Whit'e

371.4x6 FT.

Everyone is boxed. Mast
ease ls o' supports. If you need severa l,
novw is ftle t!me to buy.

have wi'e

5

$}57·.TO $ . 87· ,

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Washable ·
Vinyl-

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qt. Ova I c;asserole
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- 32 oz. Measuring Cup

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CI:IECK OUR EVERY DAY LOW,~ LOW PRICES!

~OUR ·

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BALL GLOVES

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Tan , Red, Blue, Etc. ·

CHOICE! "

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BATS .·
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2
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ON
SALE

For Wornen of
A ny Agt,...
Sandals. dressy styles, casuals,
canvas - · we have ' them au, ·
priced tp save you just a little
big more, come see !

$ 97 TO.·$ 87
GARDEN
HAND
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SEE

33~A.

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50¢

BODY SHIRTS
Short s'teeve and s leeve less styles
in fr esh neW styles and colors.
They fit and stay tuck ed in!
Wam ens Sizes.

Eight' members and two
advisors were present at the
Stiversville Stitchers meeting
of March 26 il the home of Ada
VanMeter . Business discussed
was health and safely rules and
. project books.
•
A special report on health
and safely wa\given by Nicki
. VanMeter and Melinda Daily.
Janet Middleswart led the club
in recre~Uon, and refresh·
ments were served by Ada Van
Meter .
Members were asked to
brihg their patterns to the next
meeting which will be April ll
at the home of Ada Van Meter.
- Elaine Lehew.
THE N8WLY or ganized
Great
Bend
Go-Getters
organized on March 29 at the
home of the advisor, Vicki
Proffitt . The . club elected
Debbie Weddle p,esident ;
Bonnie . ·Boso reporter, and
Vic ki Boso secretary. Other
offi cers will be elected at the
next meeting. Other business
items di scussed were the
selection of .projects and the
club's duties.
The ned meeting will be
April '2 at the Monty Proffitt
home. ·Special plans for this
meeting include learning to fit
and alter blouse patterns and
_how to make tacos. - Bonnie
BosO.
THE EAGER Beavers, a
new ly organized 4-H club,
organized March 24 at thehome of Brenda Donohue with
fpur members ;;~nd two ad·
visors present . Business
deci ded included 50 cents dues
for the year CJI'e to be paid, the
name of the club was
esta blis hed as .the Eager
Beavers, and office rs were
elecwd. The next meeting will
be April 16, when the project
books will be passed out. Brenda Donohue. ·
THE HAROLD SAUER '
home was the meeting place
ror the Moondusters 4-H club
meeting on March 22. Advisors
attending were Mrs . Harold
Sauer , Mrs. W. R. Hayes and
Mrs. Maxine Dyer. There were
1~ members -present.
Business _approved was to
pay dues of 10 cents and
Maxine Dyer was selected as
an assistan lle&lt;lde·r .. Hilly Dyer
presen ted a project lessor1 on
rope, in which he explained thf .
proj ecl and displayed a rope
ex hibit. Nancy Lawrence gave
a demonstration on how to
make popcorn l!!lU.s .
The JWlior ··· Leaders gave
special reports on the J. L"
County mee tings. Billy and
Patty Dyer led the club -in
recreat'ion, and refreshments
were served , afterwards .by
Mrs·. Sauer.
The next meeting will ,be
March 29 at the W. R. Hayes
home . Demonstrati ons will be
given on how to make bread
and ·mixing and · matching
clothes. - .Joy Hayes ..

.,

Mason Area

~.

..GAY" .ALUMINUM
'LAWN OR PATIO
FURNITURE ·

'CHAIR
co lo rs.

We carry oYer' 80 different types af flow ers·
and · greene_ry - priced at _our money
sav.i ng di SCOU!lf price. We ~ca n 't name,
them all - so Come ·shop, you'll like our
se lect ion !

'·

...

· :

New.s., No-tes
Mrs" Dorothy Cartwright is a
pali ent at Holzer Medical
Center. Her room is 213.
Her sisters , Mrs . Grace
Kisamore and Mrs. Mildred
. Castle, .both of Newark Ohio
'
.
came here ·to visit their sister
and mother, Mrs. Elizabeth
Jeffers.
Mrs. Eunice Hart•is a patient
at Holzer Medical Center. Her
room is 436. ·

•

CHAISE
6x4ic4- S COLORS!

Fantastic ~au., Qru1litr
\

$394

6x4 .w;4 webbing . Yellow, lime.
blu e, tang e rine or avot:ado

-

INDOOR .DISPOSAL BAGS
AND TRASH BAGS

.3

$}09

BOXES FOR

PLUS

'1 00 REFUND
THEY

LAST!
•

94¢

reed

WHILE
They Last!

r

$2.64 TO
$294·
$394
_ And
!..:::==:;----:=":""'

'

TO 2.17

KEROSENE
LAMPS

PLASTIC
CLOTHESLINE

Spring means a new bag - and
straw is correc t thi s year. Select
from our wide array af styles and
colors .

REGULAR 77c

100 FEET

STRAW HAND_BAGS .

WJJJ~E
1

88

$2.47 .

en ~prin~

back .

•
'

.

·

1973 fllfM/A1-

u .oo. the n spend ilc and get yo ur $1 .00

,

'

50

¢~-

Regular$

....-!.....

If' ~ Crazy! .You buy any 3-bags - regular
values to 89c- then mail in coupons-and.
get your :»1. 00 back. Y.e p .- 3 boxes for -

. ~497
7,92

·'

$244

.

Who Ha~ A Better Selection??
Every Day L:ow Price!

VALUES TO

.LE~D
SIN.KERS

1

'f.,

,

JEANNETTE
f\'
.
GLAS-BAKE,

''

"

.'

$

29'"
ZIPPER
2 HOOK

--., · "'"*''"· WII

._.....,;;3:;.,;7._.~_.. ~...·..;1.....9.._~...·
0

•

$. 337_

MARBLE
SPINNERS

(

Seiecl Your s Now From Our Selection!

•

6 FT. GLASS SPINNING ROD

·WIN.POW
SHADE

'

I.

STEEL F""'''vt

PA1NT BRUSHES YOU'Ll NEED
OUR SELECTION IS NOW COMPLETE!
.
.
.,, "

TEA
KETTLE

·storage problems.

"'-'·

'

Washable

ALARM
CLOCK

·.'54" LENGTH .. .

Poppers, Jitter Bugs,
"Humpback Minnows ··
ar Others

Open lace , has anti -reverse,
working drag . gear ratio, 3.18 : 1 By "Match"._

A Slyle and
Width For
Every . Job!

GARMENT
BAG ··.

~.-.-$-PI_N_N-IN-. -G-R.,.E~EL-~--~----

•

All purpose, high gloss spray t:! " ~me l ~or
· . your spring · painting needs . Spray w1th
•""con lidehte with Gliddl':n.

HOLDS 16 ITEMS
QUILTED TOP

PLUGS

2 Piece Style Other· Rods ·
. ..""li·t-.77 and $2.87

.

AREA
RUGS

Hold s 16 ladies' garments ·perfect for your Wi'Ater

~~9~CTRIC!
$566
Value·
~~-Jt_

BackBlade!

" Mat c h" quality . Carrying
case , with lin e, hooks ,
spinner etc~
·

2

84~-

'

ROD AND REEL

'

9 INCH PAINT
PAN AND ROLLER

r

SPIN-CAST

133

16¢

' 19~

7 IN. POLY BAG SIZE 14
REGULAR

, 41fz QUART UTILITY f?AIL.,·•.w.
· CLEAR POLY PLASTIC
.

FOR

·COPPERTONE

$3.99 ' '
VALUE

...._\ Rigid Welded Head
Hardwood I .
Handle
·

SWIVEL BARGAINS

'

SPREAD SATIN
-·.
LATEX (Glidden's
Best)

50.

.2 QUART

ELECTRIC

6 Colors!

~GARDEN .

'

VINYLBAGS

Gallon

Large

·For Garden or Lawn

' FISHING HOOKS.c.&lt;m
- .
Travel or Storage

PR.

POLYESTER4 YD. ROll .
ADHESIVE

VISIT US FOR YOUR
FLOWER and 'GARDEN
SEEDS-WE'VE A BIG VARIETY!

171£DSIUN!IsBEDEB .
"Me~ ·
DRIPLESS lATEX

SIZE 27x4S

20 TEETH

TO 14.94

ASST. SIZES
TO BOX .

SAVE $1.00
"LUX''

BLACK STEEL LAWN RAKE

The popular crushab le
styl e in a rainbow . of
solid colors .

Nationally Advertised!

.

EA.

FAN SHAPE
4 FT. HANDLE .

Up

·so¢

WHITE AND COLORS•

OFF
PRICE
OMARKfD

$494

Up

Riot!

OR. '2.77 L...,,---------'-.----'- - · -·- ; - - - -

.•Darks
Regular
and
Extra

OUR ENTIRE STOCK
REDUCEI) FOR 4 DA YSI

MEN'S HATS

MENS

Size 6 To Blh and 9 To 11

•White
•Lights

ROLL UP. POPLINS!

Short Sleeve!

Meigs 4-H
carry· Cfub News

GIRLS ORLON
KNEE HI SOCKS
bulk orion soc ks that she 'll wear
from now thru sum mer. White, so lid
co lors, stripes . A Knee High Sock

.

.,
corn would be planted - and
barely ~nough soybeans - to
provide for anticipated
demand and adequate
over.
·
,
Action was necessary ·· in
order tp prevent or alleviate a
shoriage in the supply of
agricultural commod.ities. Setaside acreage Was the onJy
,land which could he readily
released for crops.

ePalazzos
•Cuffs

50 FT. GARDEN HOSE

$ 99·

,,

REGULAR 97' PAIR

00

~~-------:· ~~~. . . . . . . . . .

........

29¢;

With Spout

to acce pt a reduced payment in
order to have all of their
cropland fr~e for planting·.
They also agreed to limit their
feed grain plantings to n6 more
than their 1972 prod t'
uc wn.
None of this is changed, and
producers cannot switch from

,

·

the set-aside from which they
signed.
.. •..
The.,lowering of required set- aside acreage probaJ&gt;ly was ·
the least disruptive action that
could be made in the 1973 feed
grain program. Action was
requi~ed to free up more ·
~c r ~age for planUng and
livestock use. A study of the
March I ·planting Intentions
report showed that not enough ·

ze~~=~;:;~e::::~;~n~:~d~
. the zero set-aside plan agreed

DUALITY S-TRACK TAPES '·

WHITE or BLACK sa?:~Boys Size 10112 to 6 Thursday. 10 a.m.
,....Me!n 's Size 7 to 12 L.:~:;.:~~::.,:~~--.;..-..;;;;;;;;;....1
'·••,,a de in U.S.A.! ·

•

.

MAIN
STREET
MASON,
W. VA •

SILVER BRIDGE
JACKSON AVE. SHOPPING PLA:ZA
GALLIPOLIS,
PT. PLEASANT,
OHIO
W.VA.

2419

&amp;7 ~

o ·F

DEPARTMENT STORE

Cancer ·

NOGALES, Ariz. fUPI) -An
Ohio State University medical
resea rcher voiced hope
Tuesday that cancer may
someday be wiped out by
, "establishing protective im- ·
ffiWlity early in life as· is
presently done with a nwnber
of. infectious diseases."
Dr. J\]bert F. Lobuglio of the
OSll College of Medicine presented ~is report on. prog ress
' toward development of a cancer vaccine to the American
Cancer Society's 15th science
'
.
.
wnters' seminar.
Lobuglio said researchers
had successfully transferred
. tumor immunity_from healthy
persons to acute leukemia
patiimts, and although they had
not , yet determined if the in- ·
· creased cellular immunity
he1ps in terms of tumor
resistence or cure, it
rep·resents. "3 ne,w and poteiiti~ ~
· ally powerful too l in the im.
mulogic-attack on cancer.''
"Eventually, the occurrence
of cancer- may be prevented ·by
es tablishing protedive immWlitS' early in life as is·
presently done With a number
of infectious diseases, " he sa id.
Lobuglio's researc~ Was based on ,the ability of patients to
develop intrnunity to specific.
portions of tumor cells. His
. team worked with "transfer
fa cto r ,~ ' a Very small molecule
\ or collec tion of molecules
which re side 'in circulating
white blood celle.
This technique h as been used
previously to .t.ransfer im:
munlt~ . from one per son~ to
another in a variety Of
diseases.

,

•
pet. set-iiside plan or under the

PRICE-S
IN
EFFECT
TUESDAY
10 ~M.

•

PLENTY

·

,
been reduced to 10 pet," said
R~~sh.
.
I want to emphasiZe Utat
payments for all partiCipants
In !he feed gram progr"m are
ha ed
h th
.
unc ng . - w e er th~y
Signed unaer what was the 25

the White paper defends prfsent and former
.. asf&gt;ciates from charges of
guilty knowledge of the
bugging last
year of
Dem oc rati c National
Headquarters in the Watergate
building.
T.he President's loyalty is
admirable as a human quality
-or would be in other and less
grave circumstances - and his
refusa l to throw subordinates
to the hounds of the
Democratic Senate is hum3.nly
understandable. All, the same,
he · is increasingly 'risking a·
nasty conclusion by the public
that he is coverin g up
something truly evil.
His unwillingness _to order _
aides to testify in the Senate's
investigatiofl, on the normally
sound ground that Congress
has no right to pry ~to the
imler eorrununications of that
separate branch of goverrl~
ment which is the presidency,
could be seen as a decent
refu§al by a commanding
general to let some second
lieutenant or_ other take the
heat.
Neverllieless, he is putting at
h.aza rd h.ere his own moral
authority both as President of
tl\e United States and as the
he'ad of a national coalition that
chose him for re--election in
justified
fea r
of
the
_irresponsible alterna tive offered in George McGovern.
TI1e Presij:lent, in short, is
running the danger of letting
down too much (the weifare of
·the country) and 'too many, and
especially t hose .traditional
Democrats who went.. .to..,. .the..
fr ont for the n.ational interest.
For though uie ultimate truth
in all this Watergate business
is still far from clear, one thin g
is no long~r in any doubt. This
i.s that at least so me~ody
somewhere in the .political
hierarchy adopted a policy of
reckless overkill in the campaign of las! year - a policy
that was .wholly unnecessary,
anyhow -.and that big money
wa s crudely used ih ,' n."'"•
plementing that policy .
Much that is being whisp~r e d

•

I /,

. candid statement of who did ·much. To 1£_e contrary, he will

.

......

~

SON CHRISTENED
MASON ~ . Christopher
Eugene Thomas, 5 month old
son of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Gene Thomas (formerly
Claudia Zerkle) was ·christened
on Sunday at Mason United
' .
Method1~t Church by the
Reverend Clarence McCloud
and the Reverend Marvin
Frame. The infant's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William
L. 'zerkle attended the
christening../The Rev. Clarence
McCloud is pastor of the Mason
United Methodist Church ~nd
Rev. Frame is Beckley District
Superintendent of \lie United
Methodist Church, and former
.pastor at th~ Mason Chw-ch.

SUPER VALUES
MILK WHITE CERAMIC

Pitcher and Bowr
• OR

Gravy and .Bowl
REGULAR $1.69 VALUES
5lfz" SIZE

.WHILE THEY LAST!

~
SEl '

• PT. Pleasant

•Mason '
• Silver Bridge

'

Plaza
·
. !

GET PLATES NOW
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Motor Vehicles Registrar C.
Donald Curry said today mo- '
wrists should buy their license
plates before April 10 when
"we get hit with an avalanche
of anxious-appilcants" trying .
to gel the tags before the AJril .
\6 deadlin•
.

.

•

�I •' ,•

'·

:J

.

f -

' ..

4- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April4,l973

_

·

.

'

·.

'·

.

atr .

T.he White House gives the
appearance of a silent,
beleaguered fortress while
President Ni.:~ton steadfastly

ls unprovable and may be
Put asid~ 'everything eise ..,.
simply false . The propOsition of including that persistently
overkillls undeniable .apd the · nagging question .as to why on ·
President's ultimate. earth 'anybody wanted to bug
resP.nsibllity for it exists .ljl the Democn\t.s; anyhow - and
our system even if he never one is still 1eft with the aroma
knew about it.
of too much 'money too ro~J~:hly

seems

w be

aware of anything an!( the evidence
to dictai.e
everything that may happen in such' a change .
or around his administration.
This columnist, for one,
- Ii,as"S&lt;ffife oolieve, Mr.
having taken a
Nixon w.S grossly let down most reserved vie'! last year
here by some of his own people a b 0 u t
' ·, water g .a l e
he will he. doing nothing pretty disclosu~tls . " FiTstly, it was,
simply to tell ihe country as~ after all, an election year.

us!&gt; d.
Certainly in this . contExt
alone," if in no· ~ther, the
President owes il lo ''the
country, to his '.j.dministration
and to his continued ef·
fecliveness to make a full and

-freeiyo;;;,sto

·-

.

'•

•

·.

~"M.r. Nixon. should
now. speak ·up :~~;r~~£~1~~~~1~
~~!t!~~Lr:r.~:
.
.
By WilliamS. White.
WASHI:-lGTON ·
Washi~gton is a dismal swamp
groping abOutln a mia!lflla of
suspicion and ugly rumor, and
only one man can, now clear the

.

'
bringing . in any personal
verdict of guilty, as I did long
ago when right-wing in~resls
attacking. men and institutions in the Joe McCarthy.
era.
In my view, enough ha~ now
come out t.o suggest that
journa1istic- activiJy here was
basically sound, and especially
in regard to Republican use of
campaign money.

.

Secondly, I have seen many. a
"scandal" quietly die f&lt;&gt;r lack
. of substance. Thirdly, the
·Administration's complaint
that it was being· assaile&lt;\. by
"basically unfriendly journalistic quarters had some
merit in tl].e sense that there ·
was and is a strong a~ti-Nixon
bias 'in party of the media.
Fourthly, I have always
wanted w see solid p'roof before

..

'.

'
d
'
F.. ee gram
, payments unchanged
5 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o., April4, J973
e

were

No change has been made in
the feed grain program
payments or regulations as 'a
result of the lowering, of feed
grain set-aside from an
acreage equal to 25 pet. of a
farm's base to 10 pet., said
•

·

Orion W. Roush, Meigs County
ASC Committee Chairman.
· '"the set-aside acreage
reduction is automatic," he
said, " and prooucers have no
added paperwork and no
required visits t ~ the Meigs

Agricultural Stabilization and
Conservation service (ASCS )
County Office.
''The only change is the setaside
requlrement
-for .
produ~ers who enroUed under
the 25 pet. set-aside plan has

.

•

A DISCO\J NT

qy

FREE
ARKING
BOYS OR MEN'S

UTILITY JAR

-LOW CUT

1 Gallon Size!

A $2.69 Value-

CANVAS
OXFORDS

Featuring Top Artlits With Their Hlt...Songsl
Charley Pnde , Johnny Cash, Loretta Lynn, Tammy .
Wynette, Andy Wiffiams, J Dog Night, Glen Camp ~
bell ,. Waylon Jennings, Everly Bros., Steffen Wolf,
Jeannie C. Riley , Eddie Arnold , Roger Miller, KiHy
Wells, Jackson 5. Jimmy Rodgers, Carpenters, Roy
CJark, Buck Owens, SOnny and Cher. James Brown,
Sly and the Family Stone, Chi Lites, Chet Adkins,

While They Last!

1·0 QT. PLAS
PAIL

::::::~~::~.J~o~ne:s~a~nd

W' WIDE
lull .&amp; year
guarantee .
Brass couplings ·
vinyl. :
A

Every look, ~'tru..la.bric , every co lor is
repr.esented in our new spring stock by
" Mr. Legg s" . Why pay more·?

· It's Time For A change

BOYS .KNIT SHIRTS

PERMANENT PRESS
OF COURSE!

Crew necks, tan_k toPs; button ~ollar
- i n a wi.d e vanety of colors. Sczes 4

\

MEN'S
SPORT ·
SHIRTS

BOYS

- ··~ "'To16 . .

"·

$394

P~lyester , twills- 1 denims, · they all go at
th1s big redUction Thursday thru Sunday .
Get your supply now and save cas h!

·$

vacczne
project

Availabl e in white and 6 co lors.
Covers eas ily , no meSsy c leanup!

reviewed
/

COM PARE AT 25'

EVER'f!DAY LOW PRICE!
Wooly Roller Cover -

'GLIDDEN SPRAY ENAMEL ,

,\II,.....
·Styles·
//I-~
SUNBURST
WALL
CLOCKS

•

WHI.TE AND 11 COLORS

SEE OUR
ASST.

"•'

'

ARTIFICIAL POLY CEMETERY

SPRAYS OR WREATHS ·

'

Whit'e

371.4x6 FT.

Everyone is boxed. Mast
ease ls o' supports. If you need severa l,
novw is ftle t!me to buy.

have wi'e

5

$}57·.TO $ . 87· ,

'

. ._ .

Washable ·
Vinyl-

_,

a

-

''

•

.

••

$257

-'-Jl/z qt. Round Casserole ·•

•

~1

RIGGED

qt. Ova I c;asserole
,._......._ -·1'/4 qt . Deep Loaf Pan
....;.a inch Square Cake Dish
- 32 oz. Measuring Cup

.

••

V~2~~~~!

BiioiA_G_,A

CI:IECK OUR EVERY DAY LOW,~ LOW PRICES!

~OUR ·

••

R ALL AGES!
"

99¢

BALL GLOVES

-

Tan , Red, Blue, Etc. ·

CHOICE! "

'.

BATS .·
3 STYLES!

...

EA.

2
STYLES
ON
SALE

For Wornen of
A ny Agt,...
Sandals. dressy styles, casuals,
canvas - · we have ' them au, ·
priced tp save you just a little
big more, come see !

$ 97 TO.·$ 87
GARDEN
HAND
TOOLS

SEE

33~A.

OU~

SELECTION!

Wirl!'
Center

50¢

BODY SHIRTS
Short s'teeve and s leeve less styles
in fr esh neW styles and colors.
They fit and stay tuck ed in!
Wam ens Sizes.

Eight' members and two
advisors were present at the
Stiversville Stitchers meeting
of March 26 il the home of Ada
VanMeter . Business discussed
was health and safely rules and
. project books.
•
A special report on health
and safely wa\given by Nicki
. VanMeter and Melinda Daily.
Janet Middleswart led the club
in recre~Uon, and refresh·
ments were served by Ada Van
Meter .
Members were asked to
brihg their patterns to the next
meeting which will be April ll
at the home of Ada Van Meter.
- Elaine Lehew.
THE N8WLY or ganized
Great
Bend
Go-Getters
organized on March 29 at the
home of the advisor, Vicki
Proffitt . The . club elected
Debbie Weddle p,esident ;
Bonnie . ·Boso reporter, and
Vic ki Boso secretary. Other
offi cers will be elected at the
next meeting. Other business
items di scussed were the
selection of .projects and the
club's duties.
The ned meeting will be
April '2 at the Monty Proffitt
home. ·Special plans for this
meeting include learning to fit
and alter blouse patterns and
_how to make tacos. - Bonnie
BosO.
THE EAGER Beavers, a
new ly organized 4-H club,
organized March 24 at thehome of Brenda Donohue with
fpur members ;;~nd two ad·
visors present . Business
deci ded included 50 cents dues
for the year CJI'e to be paid, the
name of the club was
esta blis hed as .the Eager
Beavers, and office rs were
elecwd. The next meeting will
be April 16, when the project
books will be passed out. Brenda Donohue. ·
THE HAROLD SAUER '
home was the meeting place
ror the Moondusters 4-H club
meeting on March 22. Advisors
attending were Mrs . Harold
Sauer , Mrs. W. R. Hayes and
Mrs. Maxine Dyer. There were
1~ members -present.
Business _approved was to
pay dues of 10 cents and
Maxine Dyer was selected as
an assistan lle&lt;lde·r .. Hilly Dyer
presen ted a project lessor1 on
rope, in which he explained thf .
proj ecl and displayed a rope
ex hibit. Nancy Lawrence gave
a demonstration on how to
make popcorn l!!lU.s .
The JWlior ··· Leaders gave
special reports on the J. L"
County mee tings. Billy and
Patty Dyer led the club -in
recreat'ion, and refreshments
were served , afterwards .by
Mrs·. Sauer.
The next meeting will ,be
March 29 at the W. R. Hayes
home . Demonstrati ons will be
given on how to make bread
and ·mixing and · matching
clothes. - .Joy Hayes ..

.,

Mason Area

~.

..GAY" .ALUMINUM
'LAWN OR PATIO
FURNITURE ·

'CHAIR
co lo rs.

We carry oYer' 80 different types af flow ers·
and · greene_ry - priced at _our money
sav.i ng di SCOU!lf price. We ~ca n 't name,
them all - so Come ·shop, you'll like our
se lect ion !

'·

...

· :

New.s., No-tes
Mrs" Dorothy Cartwright is a
pali ent at Holzer Medical
Center. Her room is 213.
Her sisters , Mrs . Grace
Kisamore and Mrs. Mildred
. Castle, .both of Newark Ohio
'
.
came here ·to visit their sister
and mother, Mrs. Elizabeth
Jeffers.
Mrs. Eunice Hart•is a patient
at Holzer Medical Center. Her
room is 436. ·

•

CHAISE
6x4ic4- S COLORS!

Fantastic ~au., Qru1litr
\

$394

6x4 .w;4 webbing . Yellow, lime.
blu e, tang e rine or avot:ado

-

INDOOR .DISPOSAL BAGS
AND TRASH BAGS

.3

$}09

BOXES FOR

PLUS

'1 00 REFUND
THEY

LAST!
•

94¢

reed

WHILE
They Last!

r

$2.64 TO
$294·
$394
_ And
!..:::==:;----:=":""'

'

TO 2.17

KEROSENE
LAMPS

PLASTIC
CLOTHESLINE

Spring means a new bag - and
straw is correc t thi s year. Select
from our wide array af styles and
colors .

REGULAR 77c

100 FEET

STRAW HAND_BAGS .

WJJJ~E
1

88

$2.47 .

en ~prin~

back .

•
'

.

·

1973 fllfM/A1-

u .oo. the n spend ilc and get yo ur $1 .00

,

'

50

¢~-

Regular$

....-!.....

If' ~ Crazy! .You buy any 3-bags - regular
values to 89c- then mail in coupons-and.
get your :»1. 00 back. Y.e p .- 3 boxes for -

. ~497
7,92

·'

$244

.

Who Ha~ A Better Selection??
Every Day L:ow Price!

VALUES TO

.LE~D
SIN.KERS

1

'f.,

,

JEANNETTE
f\'
.
GLAS-BAKE,

''

"

.'

$

29'"
ZIPPER
2 HOOK

--., · "'"*''"· WII

._.....,;;3:;.,;7._.~_.. ~...·..;1.....9.._~...·
0

•

$. 337_

MARBLE
SPINNERS

(

Seiecl Your s Now From Our Selection!

•

6 FT. GLASS SPINNING ROD

·WIN.POW
SHADE

'

I.

STEEL F""'''vt

PA1NT BRUSHES YOU'Ll NEED
OUR SELECTION IS NOW COMPLETE!
.
.
.,, "

TEA
KETTLE

·storage problems.

"'-'·

'

Washable

ALARM
CLOCK

·.'54" LENGTH .. .

Poppers, Jitter Bugs,
"Humpback Minnows ··
ar Others

Open lace , has anti -reverse,
working drag . gear ratio, 3.18 : 1 By "Match"._

A Slyle and
Width For
Every . Job!

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corn would be planted - and
barely ~nough soybeans - to
provide for anticipated
demand and adequate
over.
·
,
Action was necessary ·· in
order tp prevent or alleviate a
shoriage in the supply of
agricultural commod.ities. Setaside acreage Was the onJy
,land which could he readily
released for crops.

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to acce pt a reduced payment in
order to have all of their
cropland fr~e for planting·.
They also agreed to limit their
feed grain plantings to n6 more
than their 1972 prod t'
uc wn.
None of this is changed, and
producers cannot switch from

,

·

the set-aside from which they
signed.
.. •..
The.,lowering of required set- aside acreage probaJ&gt;ly was ·
the least disruptive action that
could be made in the 1973 feed
grain program. Action was
requi~ed to free up more ·
~c r ~age for planUng and
livestock use. A study of the
March I ·planting Intentions
report showed that not enough ·

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Cancer ·

NOGALES, Ariz. fUPI) -An
Ohio State University medical
resea rcher voiced hope
Tuesday that cancer may
someday be wiped out by
, "establishing protective im- ·
ffiWlity early in life as· is
presently done with a nwnber
of. infectious diseases."
Dr. J\]bert F. Lobuglio of the
OSll College of Medicine presented ~is report on. prog ress
' toward development of a cancer vaccine to the American
Cancer Society's 15th science
'
.
.
wnters' seminar.
Lobuglio said researchers
had successfully transferred
. tumor immunity_from healthy
persons to acute leukemia
patiimts, and although they had
not , yet determined if the in- ·
· creased cellular immunity
he1ps in terms of tumor
resistence or cure, it
rep·resents. "3 ne,w and poteiiti~ ~
· ally powerful too l in the im.
mulogic-attack on cancer.''
"Eventually, the occurrence
of cancer- may be prevented ·by
es tablishing protedive immWlitS' early in life as is·
presently done With a number
of infectious diseases, " he sa id.
Lobuglio's researc~ Was based on ,the ability of patients to
develop intrnunity to specific.
portions of tumor cells. His
. team worked with "transfer
fa cto r ,~ ' a Very small molecule
\ or collec tion of molecules
which re side 'in circulating
white blood celle.
This technique h as been used
previously to .t.ransfer im:
munlt~ . from one per son~ to
another in a variety Of
diseases.

,

•
pet. set-iiside plan or under the

PRICE-S
IN
EFFECT
TUESDAY
10 ~M.

•

PLENTY

·

,
been reduced to 10 pet," said
R~~sh.
.
I want to emphasiZe Utat
payments for all partiCipants
In !he feed gram progr"m are
ha ed
h th
.
unc ng . - w e er th~y
Signed unaer what was the 25

the White paper defends prfsent and former
.. asf&gt;ciates from charges of
guilty knowledge of the
bugging last
year of
Dem oc rati c National
Headquarters in the Watergate
building.
T.he President's loyalty is
admirable as a human quality
-or would be in other and less
grave circumstances - and his
refusa l to throw subordinates
to the hounds of the
Democratic Senate is hum3.nly
understandable. All, the same,
he · is increasingly 'risking a·
nasty conclusion by the public
that he is coverin g up
something truly evil.
His unwillingness _to order _
aides to testify in the Senate's
investigatiofl, on the normally
sound ground that Congress
has no right to pry ~to the
imler eorrununications of that
separate branch of goverrl~
ment which is the presidency,
could be seen as a decent
refu§al by a commanding
general to let some second
lieutenant or_ other take the
heat.
Neverllieless, he is putting at
h.aza rd h.ere his own moral
authority both as President of
tl\e United States and as the
he'ad of a national coalition that
chose him for re--election in
justified
fea r
of
the
_irresponsible alterna tive offered in George McGovern.
TI1e Presij:lent, in short, is
running the danger of letting
down too much (the weifare of
·the country) and 'too many, and
especially t hose .traditional
Democrats who went.. .to..,. .the..
fr ont for the n.ational interest.
For though uie ultimate truth
in all this Watergate business
is still far from clear, one thin g
is no long~r in any doubt. This
i.s that at least so me~ody
somewhere in the .political
hierarchy adopted a policy of
reckless overkill in the campaign of las! year - a policy
that was .wholly unnecessary,
anyhow -.and that big money
wa s crudely used ih ,' n."'"•
plementing that policy .
Much that is being whisp~r e d

•

I /,

. candid statement of who did ·much. To 1£_e contrary, he will

.

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~

SON CHRISTENED
MASON ~ . Christopher
Eugene Thomas, 5 month old
son of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson
Gene Thomas (formerly
Claudia Zerkle) was ·christened
on Sunday at Mason United
' .
Method1~t Church by the
Reverend Clarence McCloud
and the Reverend Marvin
Frame. The infant's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William
L. 'zerkle attended the
christening../The Rev. Clarence
McCloud is pastor of the Mason
United Methodist Church ~nd
Rev. Frame is Beckley District
Superintendent of \lie United
Methodist Church, and former
.pastor at th~ Mason Chw-ch.

SUPER VALUES
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GET PLATES NOW
COLUMBUS (UP!) - State
Motor Vehicles Registrar C.
Donald Curry said today mo- '
wrists should buy their license
plates before April 10 when
"we get hit with an avalanche
of anxious-appilcants" trying .
to gel the tags before the AJril .
\6 deadlin•
.

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8- Tt.. Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-POO&gt;erOy, 0 ., Aprilt,1973 -

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7-Tl10 O.Lily Sentinel,

_Showdowp. promised on ethi~s bill .
..
,

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Har DOG COMMERCIAL - l"lll be presented Friday
night at a V~riety Show to be held at Portland Elementary
School at 7:311p.m. Taking part in the number are, front row,
'"'· J111ooda Kearn, Janet Middleswart, Brenda Heck, Danny

•

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COLUMBUS ( UP! ) - The
GOP members also charged
_chairman of the House Slate De!Bane with trying to "slam·
Goveriunent Committee said pede"' the a·d mintstration's
Tuesday night his panel will ver.sion tbrough with a
. have a showdown vote on a wovi.slon requiring all public
proposed code of ethi~s for officials .and employes to
public officials and employes, disclose tile dollar amount of
probably within twd weeks.
their annual income.
Rep .. Michael De!Bane, DA! agreed. to by majority
·Hubbard, revealed his plan fol- Democrats, the subcommittee
lowing a free-6winging public report contains conflict-&lt;&gt;ft..aring during 'fhich political interest prohibitions, tt.. incharges were hurled and de- come disclosure requirement
nied before his committee.
and establishment of a special
"We're going 'to vote on committee to hear complaints
this," De!Bane said. "If not and make recommendatioos on
this week, then next week. I'm ethical conduct. •
Black, Vicky Deem, Kimberly McClain, Annintha Holter,
not going to sit here for two
Tina Cozart; back row, Paul Evans, Sherry Beeglf, Alicia
· "No Pressure"
years and let them (Rapubli·
Evans and Sherry Smith. Asoup supper will be held the same
Republicans have called for
cans ) make a political a more limited bill, without
evening beginning at 5:30 p.m.
thing out of this . The financial disclosure, applying
ethics issue has been only to state officials and emaround for years, and we've ployes, including legislators,
had six weeks of subRep. Frederick N. Young, Rcommittee meetings on it this Dayton, a subcommittee memyear."
. ber who refused to agree to the
The subcorrunittee report, is· report, said the panel had been
sued
earlier
Tuesday, "moving toward a bill that
triggered Republican charges could reasonably be expected
W~kend visitors of Mr. and that the administration of Gov. to be enacted."
Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Mr. John J. Gilligan made. · About two weeks ago, Young
and Mrs. Ray Russell, Tina " blatant, cynical attempt" to said, the administration interRae of Lexington, Ky., Mr. Guy make the ethics bill a political ceded with its dollar disclostire
provision, apparently in
Russell and Terri Lynn, Mr . instrwnent.
and Mrs. N.orris Simms, Mr·.
Elbert Knapp, Mr. and Mrs.
, Clinton Gilkey, Mrs. Walter
Jordan of Gallipolis, Mr. and
jllrs . Franklin Russell of
•
Middleport , Mrs . Helen •

Wolfpen

News, Notes

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Johnson and Mrs. Geneva

Shumate.
•
Sunday dinner guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Charley Sm{th and Jo
were Mr. Danny Worley of

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Daniels, W. Va., and Mr. and

. HEE HAW- One of th_e numbers to be presented at a Variety Show to be staged Friday
rught at Portland Elementary lS "Hee Haw." Making up the number are, front row, 1-r,
Rtchard Furbee, Jllll Meadows, {3rian Johnson, and Jeff Brown, standing is Bryan Lawrence.
The program ts school sponsored, and there is no admission chaq\e. A soup supper will precede
. the show beginning at 5:30 p.m.
.
.

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--- Big men }Jattle to the
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By United Press International
The big men battled point for
point and the crowd roared in
delight as Kentucky's 6-foot-9
Dan Issei shot it out with
Virginia's 6-foot-7 Julius Er- .
ving.
It was to be a duel to the
finish- Erving with 35 points, '
Issei with 31. Well, almost the
finish, anyway.
Ten seconds from the final
buzzer in the overtime period, ~·­
Kentucky backcourtman Mike
Gale, a meager 6-4, r-eached
out his hand and came out with

;,...

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...
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of

his

parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and her parenis, Mr .
and. Mrs. Vernon Bing and
daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayre
and family were Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
were last week visitors of their
sons, Mr . and Mrs. \Carl
McElroy and Mr. and Mrs.·Bill ·
McElroy and Jeff of Columbus .

.· .t
Splrl

.· Q

body."
·- Rep. Pa-trick A.j)weeney, D·Cieve~nd, chief sfjonsor

Ill

~

of the

Ill

administration proposal,
denied any pressurt Wat

:a: -

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· TAMPA, FIJI. (UP!) - Ross
TUCSON, Ariz. (UP!) - · Grimsley and Pedro Borbon
Shortstop Leo Cardenas, ob- held the petroit Tigers to five
tained earlier this week from hits Tuesday as the Cincinnati
the California Angels, said Reds concluded their spring
here he is so ''happy to be an training season with a 1~ win.
Indian" and all he wants to do
Reds Manager Sparky An"is win the pennant for dersqn said he expects the San
Cleveland."
Francisco Giants to give his
Cardenas said he was dissat- team the most trouble in the
isfied with the Angels because · National League West this
they wantM to switch him to year.
third base this season,
"The Giants have only two
"They wanted me to be a question marks, Marichal and
third baseman. I couldn't. It is McCovey," he said. "They
not right for me/' said Car- have everything." , ·
denas. "Then they play Bobby
.Anderson saiq he expects the
Valen\ine at short, so I don't do Reds to win the division again,
nothing."
"and if we win it, it Will ~be
Manager Ken Aspromonte is decide(! in the last week."
expected to start Cardenas at
•
shortstop in place of Frank
Duffy who has . been having ·
problems with his arm.
••
i'J'm a . little rusty," said
To come in and
CarderUlS. ''I didn't get to play
much all spring. And for the
see
- all
first time in 10 years I didn't
that's new
play winter ball.
for Spring .
"Bot I can be ready to play
quick," he said. "My arm is
always in good shape .. So are
my legs. I need to fix up my
Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy
tirniilg at bat."

.

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" The input of the administration
has
been
•
tremendous, btit at no time hiiB
it been pressure," Sweehey
said. "! wj)U}d say they gave
stud1o119 ~uidance and advice.
But the only pressure I
received was from tbe
,chairman of this conunittee
who said, 'Get the damn bill
back t..re.'

•

Oeveland Reds 17-9
•
has new zn spnng
•
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shortstop

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•sn't. f-i ...ed· hi•gh

:

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what I reg;mtas an attempt to
aid the r~Iection of . """""

l

5
"

weekend

70 advantage midway through
the fourth period, mostly on the
strengtH of Dan Issei, who
finished with 31 points and 10
rebounds.
· Erving, the ABA'S leading
scorer, led all players with 35 . Mrs. James Johnson and
points, but was he\&lt;) scoreless family of Pomeroy anct Mrs.
for the entire third period, Lee Roush and family, local,
when Kentucky began to build were Wednesday visitors of
Mrs. Larry Johnson and
its lead.
family
.
The 4th game of the best-of.
Mrs. · Shirley Jeffers and
seven series ·will be played in
mother, Mrs. Jeffers : were
H'"l!pto,!k;; ya. -Friday nighi.
In the two other ABA playoff recent visitors of. Mrs. Harley
Johnsop.
games last · night, Carolina
Mrs . Glenn Thompson and
defeated New York, 101-91, and
Denver surprised Indiana, 105· daughters were Wednesday
visitors of Mrs. Ted Warner
94 .
and Mr. and Mrs. H. E. War·
·MackCalvinscored2Spoints
· .
· ·
·
to lead Carolina to their ner.
Mrs . . Clinton Gilkey of
·
triumph over the New York
Albany is spending Wednesday
Netsandgivethecougarsa2-l
..I.J..
lead in the best of seven semi- · with Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln
Russell. ·
final games in the Eastern
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UP!) Player nii=ned that trick back Division .
Mechanically, he's ready. But in 1961, especially since Player
Billy Cunningham was held
. mentally Jack Nicklaus seen!S . · is qnable to play here this year to 17 points and picked up his WfLL TRY OUT
to be having trouble getting ' because of a recent operation. fourth 1and fifth fouls within 20
SEATTLE (UP!) - Sonny
himself fired up for the
. Mon&lt;\ay's practice rounds ' seconas of .each other with Sixkiller, University of WashMasters c.hampionship which were plagued by a light:drizzle 9:34left toplay in the game. At ington quarterback, said Tuesbegins Thursday.
and Tuesday's were played that point the clubs were tied· day he has accepted an inIt's not· that Nicklaus doesn't under an overcast sky for most 75-75 apiece .. Both clubs played vitation to try out with the Los
want to win. It's just that this is of the afternoon.
"
even for another minute and a Angeles !lams of the Natioiial
half until Cunningham came : Football League.
all old hat for the "Golden
·
Bear." He has come to the eve .
back. Cunningham scored t)le . Although Sixkiller set UW
of the Masters as the favorite
next seven points in three passing and total offense
so many times before , that old
minutes and Calvin picked up records during his three
zing·appears to be missing.
two more and the .Ggjlgars led varsity seasOns, he was not
"Weather may ... be a key to
~·
9(}.87 with 3:25 to play.
chosen in the pro football draft.
how this year's. Masters turns
out," said Lee Trevino, second ·.
choice for the tournament.
11
Right now, the greens are
8oft. Those of us who hit a ·
much lower ball than Jack,
Gallia County sportsmen
who go to the greens with a were reminded today that the
three iron while he's hitting a annual Fish and Game '
' six, are betting a break. .
hearings for District 4, will be
"Sure, Jack is the favorite. held Sunday, April B,.beginning
What else could ·-you expect? at I p.m.
·
After all, !his is his type of golf
The session will be conducted
course. But, yes. if we keep at the Wildlife District Office,
getUng moisture, if the greens 360 East State St., in AUtens.
don't dry out, there are a lot of
All Gallia County sportsmen
guys who have a chance to beat are invited to attend the
Nicklaus here this week."
hearing and ·make Conlments
Chi Chi Rodriguez, himself a on the district's proposed !973
longshot despite having just regulations.
WQn at Gr~nsboro, thinks
Trevino .is tile. man to beat
BELL CHARGED
Nicklaus.
NEW YORK (UP! ),- Eddie.
•'·"
"! think Lee Trevino-is the
Bell, a ·wide receiver (or the ~"' 0 '"
"""'"
M0 ·39
best player out here," he said.
,
M
New .y-ork Jets, was charged · AtN~ sn rtN G
• RING SETTING
"Nicklaus is good, bun -think
t.ee has been the best the past by police Tuesday with harassDo something beautiful for your diamond
five years. Look at his record.'' .ment, disorderly condUct and
failing
to
carry
his
automobile
Billy Casper, who won the
Creat'e a whole nevv look . Have n~ur diamond mounted
registration.
,
in a sensational new setting rraltn our cOllection of
1970 Masters after finishing
· earrings , pinS, pendants and rings . We promise quality
Bell, released in his own
second tile previous year, may
. craftsmMship at a moderate price . ·. .
.'
·
r_ecognizance, will ai&gt;Pear in
have to withdraw from this
court April 18 tO answer the
year's tournament . Casper
charges. Police said the inci- ·
pUlled a muscle In his back
dent started when Bell was one
Monday night and the. pain
of the motorists asked in a
forced him off the course after
random check to verify his
playing six holes Tuesday,
license and registration. Police
Australian Bruce Crampton
said Bell allegedly not only
has been pegged as \he best bet refUsed to surr·ender his license
to become the first foreigner to tO the officer but also became
win the Masiers since Gary loud and abusive.

. klaus '
NIC

'.• '

the game-winning plum as he
snatched the ball from. Erving
at mid-court and dribbled in for
an easy layup
give the
Colonels a 115-113 victory last
.,night and a 2-1lead in the best'
of..:seven Eastern Division
semifinal playoffs.
" He stuck the ball out and I
just grabbed it and took off,"
Gale said after the game. "I
just didn't want "Dr. J"to get
a three-point play."
Colonels Take Advantage
After a deadlocked first half,
the Colonels punched out an 118,

•
Wire

Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail, Kevin
and Charles.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy,
Jeff of Columbus were

response to a Dayton newspaper article which said Gilligan had giwn up on ethics as a.
top priority of his administration.
· ' 'This provision was carried
upstairs by their errand boy in
a bllltant, cynical attempt on
the part of the administration
to achieve a crude political lactic,". Young said. "Jbis will
preclude passage of tt.. bill by
the General Aasembly."
Young said the administration used "brute force" in
"putting the arm on at least
one member of the subcommittee. We do not have to listen
to orders from downstairs in

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8- Tt.. Daily Sentinel, Mlddleport-POO&gt;erOy, 0 ., Aprilt,1973 -

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7-Tl10 O.Lily Sentinel,

_Showdowp. promised on ethi~s bill .
..
,

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Har DOG COMMERCIAL - l"lll be presented Friday
night at a V~riety Show to be held at Portland Elementary
School at 7:311p.m. Taking part in the number are, front row,
'"'· J111ooda Kearn, Janet Middleswart, Brenda Heck, Danny

•

•t

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COLUMBUS ( UP! ) - The
GOP members also charged
_chairman of the House Slate De!Bane with trying to "slam·
Goveriunent Committee said pede"' the a·d mintstration's
Tuesday night his panel will ver.sion tbrough with a
. have a showdown vote on a wovi.slon requiring all public
proposed code of ethi~s for officials .and employes to
public officials and employes, disclose tile dollar amount of
probably within twd weeks.
their annual income.
Rep .. Michael De!Bane, DA! agreed. to by majority
·Hubbard, revealed his plan fol- Democrats, the subcommittee
lowing a free-6winging public report contains conflict-&lt;&gt;ft..aring during 'fhich political interest prohibitions, tt.. incharges were hurled and de- come disclosure requirement
nied before his committee.
and establishment of a special
"We're going 'to vote on committee to hear complaints
this," De!Bane said. "If not and make recommendatioos on
this week, then next week. I'm ethical conduct. •
Black, Vicky Deem, Kimberly McClain, Annintha Holter,
not going to sit here for two
Tina Cozart; back row, Paul Evans, Sherry Beeglf, Alicia
· "No Pressure"
years and let them (Rapubli·
Evans and Sherry Smith. Asoup supper will be held the same
Republicans have called for
cans ) make a political a more limited bill, without
evening beginning at 5:30 p.m.
thing out of this . The financial disclosure, applying
ethics issue has been only to state officials and emaround for years, and we've ployes, including legislators,
had six weeks of subRep. Frederick N. Young, Rcommittee meetings on it this Dayton, a subcommittee memyear."
. ber who refused to agree to the
The subcorrunittee report, is· report, said the panel had been
sued
earlier
Tuesday, "moving toward a bill that
triggered Republican charges could reasonably be expected
W~kend visitors of Mr. and that the administration of Gov. to be enacted."
Mrs. Lincoln Russell were Mr. John J. Gilligan made. · About two weeks ago, Young
and Mrs. Ray Russell, Tina " blatant, cynical attempt" to said, the administration interRae of Lexington, Ky., Mr. Guy make the ethics bill a political ceded with its dollar disclostire
provision, apparently in
Russell and Terri Lynn, Mr . instrwnent.
and Mrs. N.orris Simms, Mr·.
Elbert Knapp, Mr. and Mrs.
, Clinton Gilkey, Mrs. Walter
Jordan of Gallipolis, Mr. and
jllrs . Franklin Russell of
•
Middleport , Mrs . Helen •

Wolfpen

News, Notes

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Johnson and Mrs. Geneva

Shumate.
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Sunday dinner guests of Mr .
and Mrs. Charley Sm{th and Jo
were Mr. Danny Worley of

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Daniels, W. Va., and Mr. and

. HEE HAW- One of th_e numbers to be presented at a Variety Show to be staged Friday
rught at Portland Elementary lS "Hee Haw." Making up the number are, front row, 1-r,
Rtchard Furbee, Jllll Meadows, {3rian Johnson, and Jeff Brown, standing is Bryan Lawrence.
The program ts school sponsored, and there is no admission chaq\e. A soup supper will precede
. the show beginning at 5:30 p.m.
.
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--- Big men }Jattle to the
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By United Press International
The big men battled point for
point and the crowd roared in
delight as Kentucky's 6-foot-9
Dan Issei shot it out with
Virginia's 6-foot-7 Julius Er- .
ving.
It was to be a duel to the
finish- Erving with 35 points, '
Issei with 31. Well, almost the
finish, anyway.
Ten seconds from the final
buzzer in the overtime period, ~·­
Kentucky backcourtman Mike
Gale, a meager 6-4, r-eached
out his hand and came out with

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of

his

parents, Mr. and Mrs. Paul
McElroy and her parenis, Mr .
and. Mrs. Vernon Bing and
daughter.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sayre
and family were Sunday
visitors of Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Sayre.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy
were last week visitors of their
sons, Mr . and Mrs. \Carl
McElroy and Mr. and Mrs.·Bill ·
McElroy and Jeff of Columbus .

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body."
·- Rep. Pa-trick A.j)weeney, D·Cieve~nd, chief sfjonsor

Ill

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of the

Ill

administration proposal,
denied any pressurt Wat

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· TAMPA, FIJI. (UP!) - Ross
TUCSON, Ariz. (UP!) - · Grimsley and Pedro Borbon
Shortstop Leo Cardenas, ob- held the petroit Tigers to five
tained earlier this week from hits Tuesday as the Cincinnati
the California Angels, said Reds concluded their spring
here he is so ''happy to be an training season with a 1~ win.
Indian" and all he wants to do
Reds Manager Sparky An"is win the pennant for dersqn said he expects the San
Cleveland."
Francisco Giants to give his
Cardenas said he was dissat- team the most trouble in the
isfied with the Angels because · National League West this
they wantM to switch him to year.
third base this season,
"The Giants have only two
"They wanted me to be a question marks, Marichal and
third baseman. I couldn't. It is McCovey," he said. "They
not right for me/' said Car- have everything." , ·
denas. "Then they play Bobby
.Anderson saiq he expects the
Valen\ine at short, so I don't do Reds to win the division again,
nothing."
"and if we win it, it Will ~be
Manager Ken Aspromonte is decide(! in the last week."
expected to start Cardenas at
•
shortstop in place of Frank
Duffy who has . been having ·
problems with his arm.
••
i'J'm a . little rusty," said
To come in and
CarderUlS. ''I didn't get to play
much all spring. And for the
see
- all
first time in 10 years I didn't
that's new
play winter ball.
for Spring .
"Bot I can be ready to play
quick," he said. "My arm is
always in good shape .. So are
my legs. I need to fix up my
Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy
tirniilg at bat."

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" The input of the administration
has
been
•
tremendous, btit at no time hiiB
it been pressure," Sweehey
said. "! wj)U}d say they gave
stud1o119 ~uidance and advice.
But the only pressure I
received was from tbe
,chairman of this conunittee
who said, 'Get the damn bill
back t..re.'

•

Oeveland Reds 17-9
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:: :1

•sn't. f-i ...ed· hi•gh

:

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what I reg;mtas an attempt to
aid the r~Iection of . """""

l

5
"

weekend

70 advantage midway through
the fourth period, mostly on the
strengtH of Dan Issei, who
finished with 31 points and 10
rebounds.
· Erving, the ABA'S leading
scorer, led all players with 35 . Mrs. James Johnson and
points, but was he\&lt;) scoreless family of Pomeroy anct Mrs.
for the entire third period, Lee Roush and family, local,
when Kentucky began to build were Wednesday visitors of
Mrs. Larry Johnson and
its lead.
family
.
The 4th game of the best-of.
Mrs. · Shirley Jeffers and
seven series ·will be played in
mother, Mrs. Jeffers : were
H'"l!pto,!k;; ya. -Friday nighi.
In the two other ABA playoff recent visitors of. Mrs. Harley
Johnsop.
games last · night, Carolina
Mrs . Glenn Thompson and
defeated New York, 101-91, and
Denver surprised Indiana, 105· daughters were Wednesday
visitors of Mrs. Ted Warner
94 .
and Mr. and Mrs. H. E. War·
·MackCalvinscored2Spoints
· .
· ·
·
to lead Carolina to their ner.
Mrs . . Clinton Gilkey of
·
triumph over the New York
Albany is spending Wednesday
Netsandgivethecougarsa2-l
..I.J..
lead in the best of seven semi- · with Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln
Russell. ·
final games in the Eastern
AUGUSTA, Ga. (UP!) Player nii=ned that trick back Division .
Mechanically, he's ready. But in 1961, especially since Player
Billy Cunningham was held
. mentally Jack Nicklaus seen!S . · is qnable to play here this year to 17 points and picked up his WfLL TRY OUT
to be having trouble getting ' because of a recent operation. fourth 1and fifth fouls within 20
SEATTLE (UP!) - Sonny
himself fired up for the
. Mon&lt;\ay's practice rounds ' seconas of .each other with Sixkiller, University of WashMasters c.hampionship which were plagued by a light:drizzle 9:34left toplay in the game. At ington quarterback, said Tuesbegins Thursday.
and Tuesday's were played that point the clubs were tied· day he has accepted an inIt's not· that Nicklaus doesn't under an overcast sky for most 75-75 apiece .. Both clubs played vitation to try out with the Los
want to win. It's just that this is of the afternoon.
"
even for another minute and a Angeles !lams of the Natioiial
half until Cunningham came : Football League.
all old hat for the "Golden
·
Bear." He has come to the eve .
back. Cunningham scored t)le . Although Sixkiller set UW
of the Masters as the favorite
next seven points in three passing and total offense
so many times before , that old
minutes and Calvin picked up records during his three
zing·appears to be missing.
two more and the .Ggjlgars led varsity seasOns, he was not
"Weather may ... be a key to
~·
9(}.87 with 3:25 to play.
chosen in the pro football draft.
how this year's. Masters turns
out," said Lee Trevino, second ·.
choice for the tournament.
11
Right now, the greens are
8oft. Those of us who hit a ·
much lower ball than Jack,
Gallia County sportsmen
who go to the greens with a were reminded today that the
three iron while he's hitting a annual Fish and Game '
' six, are betting a break. .
hearings for District 4, will be
"Sure, Jack is the favorite. held Sunday, April B,.beginning
What else could ·-you expect? at I p.m.
·
After all, !his is his type of golf
The session will be conducted
course. But, yes. if we keep at the Wildlife District Office,
getUng moisture, if the greens 360 East State St., in AUtens.
don't dry out, there are a lot of
All Gallia County sportsmen
guys who have a chance to beat are invited to attend the
Nicklaus here this week."
hearing and ·make Conlments
Chi Chi Rodriguez, himself a on the district's proposed !973
longshot despite having just regulations.
WQn at Gr~nsboro, thinks
Trevino .is tile. man to beat
BELL CHARGED
Nicklaus.
NEW YORK (UP! ),- Eddie.
•'·"
"! think Lee Trevino-is the
Bell, a ·wide receiver (or the ~"' 0 '"
"""'"
M0 ·39
best player out here," he said.
,
M
New .y-ork Jets, was charged · AtN~ sn rtN G
• RING SETTING
"Nicklaus is good, bun -think
t.ee has been the best the past by police Tuesday with harassDo something beautiful for your diamond
five years. Look at his record.'' .ment, disorderly condUct and
failing
to
carry
his
automobile
Billy Casper, who won the
Creat'e a whole nevv look . Have n~ur diamond mounted
registration.
,
in a sensational new setting rraltn our cOllection of
1970 Masters after finishing
· earrings , pinS, pendants and rings . We promise quality
Bell, released in his own
second tile previous year, may
. craftsmMship at a moderate price . ·. .
.'
·
r_ecognizance, will ai&gt;Pear in
have to withdraw from this
court April 18 tO answer the
year's tournament . Casper
charges. Police said the inci- ·
pUlled a muscle In his back
dent started when Bell was one
Monday night and the. pain
of the motorists asked in a
forced him off the course after
random check to verify his
playing six holes Tuesday,
license and registration. Police
Australian Bruce Crampton
said Bell allegedly not only
has been pegged as \he best bet refUsed to surr·ender his license
to become the first foreigner to tO the officer but also became
win the Masiers since Gary loud and abusive.

. klaus '
NIC

'.• '

the game-winning plum as he
snatched the ball from. Erving
at mid-court and dribbled in for
an easy layup
give the
Colonels a 115-113 victory last
.,night and a 2-1lead in the best'
of..:seven Eastern Division
semifinal playoffs.
" He stuck the ball out and I
just grabbed it and took off,"
Gale said after the game. "I
just didn't want "Dr. J"to get
a three-point play."
Colonels Take Advantage
After a deadlocked first half,
the Colonels punched out an 118,

•
Wire

Mrs. Doyle Knapp, Kail, Kevin
and Charles.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill McElroy,
Jeff of Columbus were

response to a Dayton newspaper article which said Gilligan had giwn up on ethics as a.
top priority of his administration.
· ' 'This provision was carried
upstairs by their errand boy in
a bllltant, cynical attempt on
the part of the administration
to achieve a crude political lactic,". Young said. "Jbis will
preclude passage of tt.. bill by
the General Aasembly."
Young said the administration used "brute force" in
"putting the arm on at least
one member of the subcommittee. We do not have to listen
to orders from downstairs in

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8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April4,_1973

•

Six junior
leaders at
semtnars

Talk by Fleming
is ·entertaining

recent legtslatwn and other

a m at the Pomeroy J unior

pendmg measures, askmg for

H1 gh Bu1ldmg and lasts
through the four Fndays m
May Two hour meetmgs w1ll
be held on safety, health and
crafts

letters to be wntten to
legiSlators on b1lls peridmg that
retfred teachers are mterested
m He ended w1th a questwn
and answer period

Nan

Moore

cond ucted

Flemmg mtroduced Mr and memonal se rv~ces for Geneva
Mrs 1 Ralph Walker, Logan , Yates and L R W1Iey .
Walker 1s trustee at large.ol the Reported 1ll were TheodoSia
state ass ociatiOn Also at- Frecker wh o ts recoverm g
tendmg were Mr and Mrs from surgery and Eleanor
Lawren ce Htneman , Ga lha Miller \o\h o IS a patient at
CoWJty, who are co-chairman Cleveland Chmc.
Thir ty-s ix members a nd
of leg•slativc contacts m the
southeastern Oh10 dtstr1 ct guests attended th e noon
Lucille Smtth , president, luncheon and meetmg Lunpresented g1lts to the state cheon WaS served by the ladleS
of the Trimty Church
visttors
The next meetmg will be a
The orgamzat10n voted to
p1cmc to be held July 21, at 5 30
WrLte to congresSman Clarence
Mlller , Oakley Collms, state p m at the state park on R 33
representative , and Harry with husbands and wwes as
gues ts

Vicki Clark Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Hanson
.
married in Laurel Cliff church
·is bride of
Dec. 30th

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GirJ Scout
Diary By

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Charlene Hoeflich

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Aprili51S the deadlme for makmg your reservatiOns for the
Leaders' Recogrutwn Luncheon to be held on April 25 at the
Fellowship Hall ol the F~rst Umted Presbytemn Church at 1341
Juliana St , Parkersburg
At th1s April 25 meetmg not only Will leaders be recogruzed
and presented pms for years of serv1ce, but action w•ll be taken
on the proposed merger of the Mountam Laurel G1rl Scout
Council, Inc, the Four R1vers Girl Scout Council, Inc., of which
- the Big Bend Neighborhood of Me1gs County IS a part, the Vandalia G1rl Scout Council, Inc , and the Upper Ohio Valley G1rl
Scout Councll, Inc.
If the merger IS voted mat the Apnl 25 meeting, then steps
Will he taken to establish a central headquarters, probably m
Charleston_. W Va. and service vans wtll come out mto the area
to &amp;SSlst m local scouting activtltes
Representatives oJ the Big Bend Neighborhood w1ll be m
Parkersburg for the Council meeting and recogmtwn luncheon
Reservations can be made With Mrs W1ll1am Ohhnger before
Aprill5. The pnce of the luncheon IS $2

f~rship

THE DEAD!JNE FOR applymg
Is Apnl30,
so il you are interested contact your troop leader for the application form
Each year a percentage of Cookie Sale proceeds are placed
in the campership fund to giVe f1nanc1al assistance to g~rls of the
Four Rivers Girl Scout Council who WISh to attend day, troop or
res1dent camps Up to three-fourths of the total lee may be
granted on the baSis of evaluatiOn of the fmanc1al assiStance
appltcation.
MRS. NOBY SAVAGE, d1strtct advisor, reports that a day
camp Will be held this year for Me1gs g~rl ' scouts While no
director has been named, volunteers to work m small umts are
betng sohClted Each un1t leader, according to plans now will
handle all phases of her particular un1t's activities. The day
camp has tentat•vely been setforthe third week m June at Camp
Kiashuta near Chester
Anyone mterested m asslStmg with day camp IS asked to
contact Mrs Ohlmger.
AT CAMPY SANDY BEND NEAR Elizabeth, W Va a core
1
staff w1ll be on hand from June 17 to August II
The program emphases Will be general campmg, June 17-30
and July 22-Aug. II; the arts, July 1-7 and July l:i-21; Pnnutive
homemaking skills, July 8-14 and Canoemg for qualified cadettes
and semors, July 17 to Aug, II
Fees at Camp Sandy Bend are for general troop campmg 75
cents a g1rl per mght, With troop campmg w1th core staff, $1 25 -per girl per mght A minlmwn of 16 campers IS reqwred to
reserve a urut
Durmg the core staff perJod.s a hrst a1der, waterfront personnel, camp director, and program atdes will be prov1ded to
assist troops m carrymg out the programs they have planned
Consultants w1ll be available also durmg the weeks of spec~al
program emphases.
Information sheets and reservatiOn forms are avatlable
through the ComiCll ofhce m Parkersburg

NIGHT CHANGED
A meeting of the Laurel Chff
Better Health Club has been
changed from Thursdax mght
to Apnl 12 at 7 30 p m at the
home of Mrs. Allen E1chmger

Travelers' appetites for
'
strange places satisfied

•

Subhme and the nd1culous Armstrong, state senator, for
Situations ol hie generally support to secure funds lor the
keyed r emarks' by Robert bookmobile um t
It was brought out that the
Flemmg of Youngstown ,' state
Me1gs
County Pwneer and
president of the Ohi o Ret1red
Teacher s Assoc tatJon, who H1ston cal Society needs the
spoke at the Me1gs County hJStoms and p1ctures of old
Retired Teachers Assoc tat10n, churches and schools for the
meetmg recently at the museum
A ' VIgor and Maturity"
Pomeroy Tnnity Church
prog
ram starts Aprll 27 at 9 30
Flemmg also r ev Je we~

-1U MEET THURSDAY

The Kyger Creek Athletic
Boosters Club w1ll meet at 7 30
p m Thursday at the h1gh
school All mlerested boosters
are urged to attend

The Larue! Chff Free
Methodist Churc h was the
se ttmg lor the weddmg of M1ss
Vick1 Ann Clark , daughter of
Mr and Mrs Harry E Clark ,
Route 2, Pomeroy, to Airman
Harold Wilham Hanson, son of
Mr and Mrs Harold W
Hanson , Middleport
The weddmg was an event of

:~
,.,·:·

Saturday , Dec 30 at 6 p m
With the Rev Robert Buckley
ofl1c1atmg at the double nng
ceremony Nuptlal musJc was
presented by MISs Juha
Hutchmson who played theme
songs from " Romeo and
Jul1et" and " Love Story," and
1
'Bnan 's Song. "

The altar was decorated w1th
arrangements of pmk, white,
purple and blue carnatwns

Gtven m marnage by her
father, the bnde was attired m
a floor length gown of white
velvet fash1oned wtth an

Sociat
Calendar
.

WEDNESDAY
School w1th the Rev Robert
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710, Wells, chaplain of Ohw State
Eight and Forty, annual din- Grange, as guest speaker
ner , hononng Departementaf
SATURDAY
Chapeau to be held at 6 30
RACINE CHAPTER 134 OES
Wednesday mght at the Me1gs bake sale and bazaar SaturInn
day, begmmng at 10 am at
JUNIOR CHOIR pracbce at Isabelle Simpson bUildmg,
Tnmty Church m PomerO) , Racme
6 30 tomght mstead of Thursday
THURSDAY
SECOND BORN
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
Mr. and Mrs Don Mayer of
8 p m Sacred Heart Church
Pomeroy
are announcmg the
followmg mass and rosary at
b1rth of their second chlld, an
'
7 15 p m
MEIGS COUNTY Council of c1ghfpound, e1ght ounce son ,
Parents and
Teachers, MIChael W1Iham, on March 30
Bradbury School , 7 30 p m at Holzer Medical Center
Thursday mght
County Grandparents are Mr and
Judgmg of cultural arts blue Mrs Paul Darnell and Mr and
Mrs Roy Mayer, all of
nbbon umt wmners
Pomeroy. Great-grandparents
MASONS WILL be honored are Mr and Mrs C E Slater of
at 7 30 p m Thursday at JacksonVIlle, Ohio; Mrs Lllhe
meetmg
of
Evangeline Hauck and Mrs. Stella Darnell
Chapter, OES, at Middleport of Pomeroy. Mr and Mrs.
Masomc Temple.
Mayer also have a daughter,
Add Fnday
Bethany Jo, 3
WEEKEND REVIVAL and
Hymn Smg at Freedom Gospel
MISSion Church, Bald Knobs
Apnl4-5-6 at 7 p m Hymn smg
IN TOURNEY
Apnl 7 at 7 30 p m featurmg
the Barnett family Pubhc 15 • The Middleport Ch1ld Conmv1ted
servahon League 1s sponsormg
SOUP SUPPER at Portland two teams, hve boys and liVe
Elementary Fnday begmnmg g~rls, from ~ the Metgs Commumty Class Fnday to a
at530pm
bowlmg tournament at the
FRIDAY
ANNUAL MEIGS County Jolly Lanes m Jackson Th1s 1s
grange banquet to be held at a regular bowlmg tournament
7 15 p m Fnday at Sahsbury for mentally retarded

.

empire watst and an A-hne

SlX Me1gs County 4-H junior
leaders jpined over 100 junior
leaders of the Jackson Area in
the annual Junwr Lea~er
Round·Up held at the Hocking
Valley I Motor Lodge last
weekend, wh1ch IS a part of the
Tr1-County Techmcal College
m Nelsonville
Followmg the keynote
speech by Don Janson of Ohio
Umvers1ty, the group partiCipated m lour leadership
development sessiOns Themes
were, Values m a Changmg
Soc1ety, Look InSide Yourself,
Sensmg Leadership, and A Big
DeCISIOn In Life
Recreation and swmunmg
the Fr~day evemng
, completed
.
r program
Saturday mormng the juniOr
leaders had described for them
22 d1flerent technologies as
possible career programs at
the Hockmg Techmcal College.
All of the participants enjOyed the opportunity to meet
other JUmor leaders from the
mne county Jackson Area and
returned to thetr homes on
Saturday afternoon, March 31
Part1c1patmg from Me1gs
County were Jan Holter, Lester
Jeffers, Marco Jeffers,
V~rgm1a
Jordan, Cheryl
Lawson and Dtana Thornton.
Mrs Pansy Jordan, 4-H
AssiStant, was m charge of the
Me1gs County group

COLUMBUS Spectal
events or celebratwns, as well
as spec~al cralts or actiVIties
indigenOUB to certain sections
or the country or areas of the
world often prov1de InCentive
to !Tavel.
SliD worshippers nalurally,
gravitate to beaches and sun
resorts History bulls vLStt
historical s1teS connec\ed with
their partrcular style in
history. Cultures of various
peoples and their particular
crafts draw mterest from
others In any event, whatever
your l!ktng, your friendly
travel agent can tatlor or
custon)-bwld a complete tour
to suit your taste and purse.
Europe IS the mecca for
persons who hke to study
anc1ent castles and cathedrals.
Folk lore abounds m the
Scandmav1a countnes, As1a
and the South Pacific islands
Ancient cultures and the1r

\

Linda Sprouse betrothed

Balances

· Miss Lmda Sue Sprouse, daughter of Mrs. Mattie
Sprouse of Pomeroy and· the late Charles Sprouse, 18 an..
nounClng her engagement and approachmg marriage to Mr.
Rodney Dav•d Jones, son of Mr and Mrs. William C. Jones of
Pomeroy. The bride-elect IS a juruor at Meigs High Scbool.
Her fiance IS employed at Don Watts Volkswagen m
Gallipolis
,
The open church weddmg w1U be an event of Saturday,
April 7, at 6 p m. at the Trm1ty Church m Pomeroy. A
receptiOn will be held at the church liiiiJledtately following
the wedding.

skirt featurmg an overlay of
lace The br~de 's fmgerllp ve1l
fell from a wh1te velvet bow
She earned a bouquet of multicolored carnations wtth baby's
breath from wh1te fell wh1te
satm streamers bed 10 lovers'
knots Her only jewelry was
wti1 te pearl earrmgs
Matd of" honor for the brlde
was her sister , Miss Shern
Clark She was m a floor-length
gown of purple polyester of Ahne deSign w1th an emp1re
SON IS JWRN
waiSt, puffed sleeves, and a
EN 2 and Mrs Michael Rush
wh 1te lace overlay from the are announcmg the btrth of a
Mrs Cay Cross of_Nelson- speak 1mmed1ately followmg
busthne to the floor Her short seven pound, etght ounce son vtlle, dtrector of public
the dmner The annual meeting
purple veil was attached to a Tuesday, Apnl 3 at the Naval relatwns for-&amp;&gt;ut~st Oh10
w1th the election ol ofllcers and
velvet bow, and she earned a Hosp1tal m Charleston, S C Emergency Medtcal Servtce ,
the fmanc1al report by the
bouquet of mulh-colored Mrs Rush IS the former w1ll be guest speaker at the
executive secretary w1ll follow
carnatiOns
Genevteve Btrd Maternal annual meetmg of the Me1gs
the program.
Mr David Hanson served as grandparents are Mr and Mrs
County Tuberculosis and
best man for hiS brother, and Harold B1rd of Racme, and the Health Ass&lt;Jc1atwn Thursday
the ushers were R1ck Clark and paternal grandparents are Mr
flight at the Meigs Inn
Terry Clark, brothers of the and Mrs Lonme Rush of
ON DEAN'S LIST
Mrs Cross, former newsbr~de
... ...... RaYJle , La The mfant 1s Mr
Aaron
Lee Sayre, son of Mrs.
paper columniSt, w1ll be givmg
For her daughter's weddmg, and Mrs Rush's l1rst first general Information on the Dom Bailey, Portland, has
Mrs Clark wore a navy Imen child
Med1cal Serv1ce and what 1t been named to the dean's list of
costwne with white lace tnm,
Will do lor residents of Ohw state Umvers1ty for the
and had a wh1te carnahon
Southeastern Ohw She has a wmter quarter making a 3.4
PARENTS
VISITED
'
corsage Mrs Hanson was ~a
background m both radiO and average Sayre, an agriculture
Mr and Mrs Denms Carol of televisiOn, IS married to a educatiOn student, 1s carrying
multt-prmt Jersey dress
d
also had a whtte carna 100 Wayne, MICh VISited recenijy school teacher, and ts the 19 hours and' will graduate m
wtth her parents, Mr and Mrs. mother of f1ve chtldren
corsage
June. 'He 15 engaged in student
Zerkle and
A receptwn honormg the Wilham R
The dmner will be served at teachm'g at Johnson-Alder
couple "as held m the church daughter, Jackie, Syracuse 6 30 p m and Mrs Cross Will High School, Plam City.
soctal room A three ttered
cake w1th a cascade of pmk
roses and th..tradillonal bnde
and groom centered the bride's
table wh1ch was covered m
lace Four large wh1te bells
were suspended from the
ce1hng Hostesses for the
receptwn were Mrs Charles
115 W. Main
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
Pomeroy
Spencer, M1ss Joyce Hanson,
and Mrs Ernest Haggy. MISs
Open Mon.- Thurs. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.- Frtdays 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.- SaturLmda Brogan registered the
'
days 9 a.m. to 8:30
. ~·-•••••••I
guests
•
Both the bnde and groom are
CANNED
'
graduates of Me1gs H1gh
School He IS stationed m Texas
w1th the U S Air Force
Among the out of town guests
24
at the weddmg and reception
lw oz. bottle
cans
were Mr and Mrs Larry E
Spencer,
Laura
Clark,
Natalie Clark, Jenmler Clark,
Famous Brand
Colwnbus; Mrs Tom Darst,
W1th
Deanna and L1sa, Colwnbus;
Coupc1n
Mrs Richard Neal, P01nt
1
GOQ!l_l\.t Simon S
Pleasant, W Va , and Mrs
John Card, Gel!'rg1a
lb.

reported
to council
Pomeroy VIllage funds as of
February 28 totaled $101,615.52
accordmg to the report of Clerk
Jane Walton submit~d to
Pomeroy CounCil Monday
' mght Receipts, disbursements
and clerk's balance, respecllvely I" the active fund were·
General, $4,961.96, $6,997 09,
$8,723 67, boat dock, no
receipts, no expenditures,
~$1,032 95; revenue sharmg, no
receipts, $7,000, $3,800; sewer,
$4,785 02, $2,119.40, $11,529 41,
fire department, no rece1pts,
$40.67, $2,446.70; cemetery, no
receipts, $643.03, ($184 03),
street department, $15,
$1,780,43, $5,060.90; state highway, no recetpts, $29.16,
$3,171 63; water operahng,
$8,064 67' $8,653.03, $4,084.66;
guaranty meter, $200, $61,
$4,631. 72; water well lmPr.ovement, $250,000, $16,300,
$8)'00; water IIJlprovement, no
receipts, no expend1t'ilres,
$15 61, parkmg meter fund,
$927,
no
expenditures,
$10,913.60;
uhhhes,
no
receipts, $960 91, $15,636.57;
samtary sewer, no receipts, no
expenditures, $5 58. Total
receipts, diSbursements and

Mrs. Cross to speak here

Standmgs

Team
Dav1s Warner Ins
Rawlings Dodge
Gro Boys
Pomeroy Cement Block Co
H&amp;R F1restone
Mayer &amp; H1ll Barber Shop
High Individual Game

ARTLEY

• • • •

SAVE
WHEN YOU BUY A
10 oz. Jar of
INSTANT RI.GER'S
COFFEE CRYSTALS
SPECIAL P1ttCE
WffH TH~ COUPON

We would like to thank the wonderful people of this
area for their tremendous response to ·our Granr.
Opening.
\

BORDEN'S
ICE CREAM

'

Because of the huge turnout~ if you did not find
what you were looking for, Pl~ase C~me Back. We
have received many new fash1ons th1s week. Once
again, THANKS!

ARTLEY
.LADIE5 AND GIRLS APPAREL
Silver Bridee Plaza - Gallipolis
OPEN DAllY 10-9 SUNDAY 1-5

dlf
18 oz .

WITH
COUPON

Stmon 1S

Market

Standmgs

Team

New York Clothing Pullins Excavating

Pomeroy Lanes

' j

.

MILK

-

Oav1s

-

Dav1s

W.

61

50

35
46

S1mon's Mkl
40 · 56
Pomeroy Motors
38 58
Helen's Beauty Shop
32 64
High Team 3 games Pullins 1740, New York
Clothing 1740, Pomeroy Lanes
1575
Htgh Team game - Pullins
New York Ctolhlng 580
High lnd Senes - Julie
Boyles 487, D1ana Hawley 469 ,
Drema Smtth 461

H1gh lnd game Drana
Hawley 197 , Julie Boyles 176,
t\'\a'rlene Wtlson 172 •

8 X 10
- oNLY

Standtngs

Team

1.00

SEED POTATOES
ONION SOS

SHORTS

100 percent nylon double knrf
shorts and perm press nylon v
neck sleeveless shells Sizes a 19
Assorted sol 1d colors

$ 99

• I

W

L.

Team No 3
71 40
Eagles Club
58 54
Mark V
58 54
Farmers Bank
5~ 59
Rac1ne Food Mkl
51 61
Tom's Carry Out
44 68
Htgh Individual Game Men, Gary Wayland
D•ck
Dugan 221 , women, Julta
Boyles 223
Second High Ind. Game IV!en. Jr. Phelps 217. women,
Patty Young 175
High Senes - Men. Larry
Dugan 623, women, Julia
Boyles 536.
Second Htgh Senes - Men.
Gary Wayland 555, women.
Betty Smoth . Helen Phelps 459
Team High Game- Eagles
Club 703.
Team High Series - Racine
Food Mkt. 1911 .
•

P RIC EO

EACH

FROM

GlRLS'-iiEW

SPR

DRESSES

$1 000.

$ 99

REG.

::·j·,,,,,',2::::·, 9,:,:9,:,:,:V::::A::::L,:U
:::::E:,:,:,:/:l:::::::::;plA,;,:,l::R:::::::::::::::::::::::':
BOYS

-SAVINGS SPREE -

GROUP

.....

BATH

MEN'S GYM OXFORD '199
-SPRING SAVINGS SPREE -

MEN'S-BOY'S·

CHILDREN'S

CANVAS GYM

SPORTSWEAR

Men's, boy's, and
:. youths lace to toe style
gym oxfords Moulded
soles

Mix or match Buster
Brpwn infants, tots and
ctuldrens
sprtng
sportswear

$1~~~

PRICED

FLARE DENIM

Special group of 1~1~!i!·i::G~rls flare style
nylon double kmt:
:·Mavenck brand
leg style sla c ks den1m jeans Solid
Assorted colors
color ~ and fancy

$3 ~:. ~'*"3 ~~.

ER'S SPRING SAVINGS SP EE100 SQ YfoRUS GROMMElED KENDALL

BACOO BED COVERS
too sQ0ards . Keljdall woven
fabr~~: tobacco-aad' plant bed
covers, rem forced With rot
J es1stant thread

SAVING SPREE

SAVINGS SPREE

$1299

FANCY METAL

FOAM BED

WASTE CAN

PILLQWS

...,-

-

..
COMFY SHREDDED

Reg $1 59 value at your
.. fr1endly Stiffler Stores
B1g, plump "Comly"
Asst styles and color s
shredded loam filled
AI I me~r wa ste can
bed pillows Prmted
Stock u now for your
spnng ouse clean•ng
covers c;:Rve now'

.
BROAfJLOOM RUG MATS
59' VALUE 15x27· SIZE

-

$12 5

FROM

.... .•

SAVINGS SPREE

N~W SPRING

BUSTER BROWN

OXFORDS

SLACKS JEANS

~

..

.

Shop early

Qualify 15x27 lOch s.1ze
broadloom rug mats 1n assorted
colors and patJern s

FAMOUS N/a.y QUEEN
100 pet "viO~ami~H.

- SPRING SAVINGS soorr/

60

INCH WIDE

DOUBLEKNITS'.

1 PER

GROUPS TAKEN AT THE

99' ,PER

10xl2 INCH PLASTIC FR'AMEO

S9c Value

PICTURES

ERCOLATO

new group of hne qual1ty
tn
v1brant
colors 10" x12" s 1z e 1n sturdy
A

reproduction s

plastic frames

•'

Reg 79c Value

19 .

Yard

LOW

Reg .

EA.

99

PER FAM ILV

Fam1ly S1ze

Electnc Coffee

HOSE

Good selectiOn of 60-mch w1de
textured plam and ~~~~~~
polyester doublekmt fl
B1g assortment of colors

SUBJECT

.. SAVINGS SPREE

p

100% POL VESTER

NO AGE LIMIT

2 SPECIAL

$2 99 values

r:~ow

,.

Handlmg

LIM IT

Men and boys vinyl sport ox ford s
wh1te w1th black tnm S1zes 21h to
12 Spec 1al purchase, so save

T•me for tun 1n the sun That's
where the act1on will be at Stlf
flers where you will find the
newest sportswear fashtons from
Bobble Brooks and Russ Togs
~drry In You wilt be glad you

\.

sse

Plus 50'

SPORT OXFORDS

SPORTSWEAR

Special assortment of 22
ve our terry bath
"cis Sohd and fancy
'Oiors •

PHOTO SPECIAL

MEN 'S AND BOYS ' APOLLO

FAMOUS BOBBIE BROOKS

BATH TOWELS

2 FOR

SUBJECT

----------------------·--·--·
I

April!, 1973

3 Rolls

IES NEW SPRING

lADIES' QUALITY NYLON
SHELLS &amp; JAMAIGA

DOUJlLEKNIT

Oxfords, loafers and
boots by Sandy
McGee, City CClub
and Dexter All new
spr~ng styles to
chOO.!Ie from

99

- STIFFLER'S MARC!! OF VALUES SALE-

'

PRICE OF

League

FOOTWEA

'1.69
TO '1.99

L.

67 29'

BAGGIE FLARES
Special group ol young men's
• blue ,demm haggle style flares.
Machine washable. Sanfonzed
S1zes 26-36 24" bottoms wtth 2mch cuffs

Cb1ldrens new spring
dresses Pretty sprmg
colors and patterns. Sizes 3
to 6X and 7 to 12

The Umted States uses
more than I 443 tnllwn kilowatt hours of electrtctty annually-more than one-th1rd
of the world's total consumption

NEW SPRING

$ 99

In living Color

Early Sunday M1xed

BREAD

_Footnotes on the Sprmg
theme, newsy casuals that
make a walk m the _]!Brk
like Vt.alkmg on a1r Bfess
styles, too

LADIES' NYLON ::GIRL'S MAVERICK

March 29, 1973

'\

REG 79c

AEDHMABLE
ONLY AT

59~

FOOTWEA

"

BLUE DENIM

&amp; CHARM ~p

HI BROW

-SPRING SAVINGS SPREEMEN'S FAMOUS BRAN

YOUNG MEN'S NEW

36
28

Women's Thursday
Afternoon League

FAVORITE
•

LADIES ' NEW SPRING STYLE

50

Th11"d H1gh Senes-Ed Voss

538
Team H1gh Game
Warner Ins 916
Team H1gh Series

- STIFFlaR'S SPRING SAVINGS SPREE-

SAVINGS. SPREE:..

Dugan 540

'

PAPER
TOWELS

- SPRING SAVINGS SPREE- .

72
60

H1gh Senes - A l Phelps,
Jr 554
Second Htgh Senes - Larry

GALLON

95~

YOUR
FRIENDLY
DEPT. STORES

r

614, New York ClothrnQ 596 ,

2% Broughton

USE
OUR
EASY

WOLFES MOVE
Mr and Mrs Carl Wolfe and
fam1Iy have sold the1r home on
Bulavllle Rd m Galha County
and are now hvmg on South
Th~rd Ave , Middleport, m the
HOMES REINSTATED
property formerly occup1ed by
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The the Robert Schuck family
North Fourth Street Nursmg
Home m Steubenville and St
Marys, have been reinstated to
the state welfare program.
The two facil1t1es had been
IN HOSPITAL
termmated for vtolabons of ~ Mrs Opal MoFrls remams a
Oh1o Samtary Code Offlcl~ahent at the Holzer Med1cal
said the two homes have cor- Center Her room number Is
reeled the def1c1ences
537

Voss 200

¥2 gal '

"Glacier Club'

GALA

VERA WU.L ATTEND
SAN JUAN, P R (UP!) Vera Clemente, the w1dow of
Pirate star outfielder Roberto
Clemente, wul attend the
mauguration of the new season
Friday at Pittsburgh's Three
Rtvers Stadmm, where
Clemen~orm Wl\1' its
number 21, will be , !ormally
ret1red
Clemente was killed m a
plane crash here Nelf1.Year's
Eve,

Third High tnd Game - Ed

Ground Chuck ........... lb. 1.09
Round Steak ............. lb. 1.29
Sirloin Steak ............. lb. 1.49

T·Bone Steak ............ lb. 1.79.

Dtsney "
Their director, Gerald
Stewart, formerly of Mason, IS
takmg the group on a spec1al
tr1p to DISney Land and other
pomts of mterest The group
Will leave on Wednesday af·
ternoon by c~artered bus, be
gone over t1Je Memor1al Day
weekend, and return on
Monday
Spectal recogmtton was
g1ven by the director to hiS
wtfe, for the costumes and the
costume destgns Spectal
recogmtJon was also given to
Brad Pamter, set designer, and
Danny Kmg, announcer, and
Tony Fowler, hghtmg

A

•

2 shows to full houses

Second H1gh lnd Game V1ck W1ppet 202

USDA CHOICE BEEF

3 bxs. 100

YOUR

Black Knight Band has
PT PLEASANT- The Pomt
Pleasant Senior H1gh School
B1g Black Kn•ght band had a
good reason for domg 1ts best
at the Black Kmght Revue on
two mghts at Pomt Pleasant
H1gh School Gym Both mghts
they performed before a full
house on the theme, "Salute to
the Wonderful World ol

WE ARE HERE TO 0~,

Pis
90

Warner Ins 2573

FROM

Other parts ol the globe have
thetr special oflermgs rangmg
!rom the mustic antiqmty of
the Orient and Southern Asia to
the tropic trappmgs of the
South Paciftc Islands and the
steaming jungles of Central
Africa and Amer~ca Australia
and South Ametlca, relallvely
unexplored by the tourists,
each have hundreds of eye-

Jack Peterson 210

29~

Layer Cake Mixes

-

POMEROY'~ MIDDLEPORT

I

Trt-County League
March 27, 1973

OLEO

THANK YOU

traveler

catching activities, tra1ts and
cultures
Anywhere you care to go, by
air, ship or land conveyance,
your travel agent or Newspaper Tours Ltd can give you
helpful suggestwns For details
on the latter, check with this
newspaper or the Richard
Lewts Travel Service, Lazarus,.
Columbus, 0. 43215
Newspaper Tours Ltd has a
number of comprehens ive
package tours scheduled to
reach most any section of the
country or world You m1ght
fmd "Just the right" tr1p you
want to appease your wanderlust II not, you need only to
express your. desires to get
prompt attention,

Pomeroy Bowlmg Lanes

75¢

~4lws.

remnants are in vast supply m
areas of Italy, Greece, Turkey and the Middle East along w1th
North Africa and the lbertan
peninsula A VISit to any of the
Mediterranean countries can
prov1de volumes of mteresting
hdb1 ts for the diScerning

weal Bowling

POP

8
PAK

9- The Dally Sentinel,Middlepo_rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., April!, 1973

DATE~

FRIDAY, APRIL 6

PHOTO HOURS: 11~0 7 P.M.

7 PC.

Place: Shoppers Mart
MASON W.VA.
Photos By

HONEY PORTRAITS

SPRING SAVINGS SPREE-

TWO PIECE SET-DELUXE PLASTIC

COLORED ALUMINUM

COOKWARE SETen•
alum•num

cook

ware s~ts Flame :~~::::::&gt;~~:::

and

avocado

Co,ors Reg $7 99
value a( only your
Fnendly

81_...,1172 ROOM SIZE--RENO

St1ffler

s•ores

~4~~

-SPRING SAVINGS SPREE-

CANDY FILLED NOVELTY

. .,STER BASKETS

...lolod

7 PIECE SET!
I

P,lfFLER

REG. 17.99 VALUE!

~"

$19ug

.INDOOR-OUTDOOR RUGS
1

Just&gt;&lt;rlvl!d'6'&gt;xll -,rooms•ze
Reno ,ndoor-outdoor rugs.
Assor L~
colors to
ChOOS"

;]

an Easter gill
the kiddies
our great
of fancy cello
wrappedbasketsand
novelties

]g¢
TO

$

�'

•

-

8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April4,_1973

•

Six junior
leaders at
semtnars

Talk by Fleming
is ·entertaining

recent legtslatwn and other

a m at the Pomeroy J unior

pendmg measures, askmg for

H1 gh Bu1ldmg and lasts
through the four Fndays m
May Two hour meetmgs w1ll
be held on safety, health and
crafts

letters to be wntten to
legiSlators on b1lls peridmg that
retfred teachers are mterested
m He ended w1th a questwn
and answer period

Nan

Moore

cond ucted

Flemmg mtroduced Mr and memonal se rv~ces for Geneva
Mrs 1 Ralph Walker, Logan , Yates and L R W1Iey .
Walker 1s trustee at large.ol the Reported 1ll were TheodoSia
state ass ociatiOn Also at- Frecker wh o ts recoverm g
tendmg were Mr and Mrs from surgery and Eleanor
Lawren ce Htneman , Ga lha Miller \o\h o IS a patient at
CoWJty, who are co-chairman Cleveland Chmc.
Thir ty-s ix members a nd
of leg•slativc contacts m the
southeastern Oh10 dtstr1 ct guests attended th e noon
Lucille Smtth , president, luncheon and meetmg Lunpresented g1lts to the state cheon WaS served by the ladleS
of the Trimty Church
visttors
The next meetmg will be a
The orgamzat10n voted to
p1cmc to be held July 21, at 5 30
WrLte to congresSman Clarence
Mlller , Oakley Collms, state p m at the state park on R 33
representative , and Harry with husbands and wwes as
gues ts

Vicki Clark Mr. and Mrs. Harold W. Hanson
.
married in Laurel Cliff church
·is bride of
Dec. 30th

.··:·····:·:-.
·' . .... ·:·:·,·:-~.·····:::···
. ... ..•.•'.• .·:·. ••.,.,.,.;.,.,•
. .. .·:·:-:·.· •, :-:~·:·: :-:-:-: : :-:::::::·:·:·:·: :-:·:·:·: :·::.·::::..:-: : :=:=:::::·..:·.t'{
~

Ji

...
'•:0
,•,•

:~

..

'•'•

~

GirJ Scout
Diary By

I
~;.

'~

Charlene Hoeflich

~,

Aprili51S the deadlme for makmg your reservatiOns for the
Leaders' Recogrutwn Luncheon to be held on April 25 at the
Fellowship Hall ol the F~rst Umted Presbytemn Church at 1341
Juliana St , Parkersburg
At th1s April 25 meetmg not only Will leaders be recogruzed
and presented pms for years of serv1ce, but action w•ll be taken
on the proposed merger of the Mountam Laurel G1rl Scout
Council, Inc, the Four R1vers Girl Scout Council, Inc., of which
- the Big Bend Neighborhood of Me1gs County IS a part, the Vandalia G1rl Scout Council, Inc , and the Upper Ohio Valley G1rl
Scout Councll, Inc.
If the merger IS voted mat the Apnl 25 meeting, then steps
Will he taken to establish a central headquarters, probably m
Charleston_. W Va. and service vans wtll come out mto the area
to &amp;SSlst m local scouting activtltes
Representatives oJ the Big Bend Neighborhood w1ll be m
Parkersburg for the Council meeting and recogmtwn luncheon
Reservations can be made With Mrs W1ll1am Ohhnger before
Aprill5. The pnce of the luncheon IS $2

f~rship

THE DEAD!JNE FOR applymg
Is Apnl30,
so il you are interested contact your troop leader for the application form
Each year a percentage of Cookie Sale proceeds are placed
in the campership fund to giVe f1nanc1al assistance to g~rls of the
Four Rivers Girl Scout Council who WISh to attend day, troop or
res1dent camps Up to three-fourths of the total lee may be
granted on the baSis of evaluatiOn of the fmanc1al assiStance
appltcation.
MRS. NOBY SAVAGE, d1strtct advisor, reports that a day
camp Will be held this year for Me1gs g~rl ' scouts While no
director has been named, volunteers to work m small umts are
betng sohClted Each un1t leader, according to plans now will
handle all phases of her particular un1t's activities. The day
camp has tentat•vely been setforthe third week m June at Camp
Kiashuta near Chester
Anyone mterested m asslStmg with day camp IS asked to
contact Mrs Ohlmger.
AT CAMPY SANDY BEND NEAR Elizabeth, W Va a core
1
staff w1ll be on hand from June 17 to August II
The program emphases Will be general campmg, June 17-30
and July 22-Aug. II; the arts, July 1-7 and July l:i-21; Pnnutive
homemaking skills, July 8-14 and Canoemg for qualified cadettes
and semors, July 17 to Aug, II
Fees at Camp Sandy Bend are for general troop campmg 75
cents a g1rl per mght, With troop campmg w1th core staff, $1 25 -per girl per mght A minlmwn of 16 campers IS reqwred to
reserve a urut
Durmg the core staff perJod.s a hrst a1der, waterfront personnel, camp director, and program atdes will be prov1ded to
assist troops m carrymg out the programs they have planned
Consultants w1ll be available also durmg the weeks of spec~al
program emphases.
Information sheets and reservatiOn forms are avatlable
through the ComiCll ofhce m Parkersburg

NIGHT CHANGED
A meeting of the Laurel Chff
Better Health Club has been
changed from Thursdax mght
to Apnl 12 at 7 30 p m at the
home of Mrs. Allen E1chmger

Travelers' appetites for
'
strange places satisfied

•

Subhme and the nd1culous Armstrong, state senator, for
Situations ol hie generally support to secure funds lor the
keyed r emarks' by Robert bookmobile um t
It was brought out that the
Flemmg of Youngstown ,' state
Me1gs
County Pwneer and
president of the Ohi o Ret1red
Teacher s Assoc tatJon, who H1ston cal Society needs the
spoke at the Me1gs County hJStoms and p1ctures of old
Retired Teachers Assoc tat10n, churches and schools for the
meetmg recently at the museum
A ' VIgor and Maturity"
Pomeroy Tnnity Church
prog
ram starts Aprll 27 at 9 30
Flemmg also r ev Je we~

-1U MEET THURSDAY

The Kyger Creek Athletic
Boosters Club w1ll meet at 7 30
p m Thursday at the h1gh
school All mlerested boosters
are urged to attend

The Larue! Chff Free
Methodist Churc h was the
se ttmg lor the weddmg of M1ss
Vick1 Ann Clark , daughter of
Mr and Mrs Harry E Clark ,
Route 2, Pomeroy, to Airman
Harold Wilham Hanson, son of
Mr and Mrs Harold W
Hanson , Middleport
The weddmg was an event of

:~
,.,·:·

Saturday , Dec 30 at 6 p m
With the Rev Robert Buckley
ofl1c1atmg at the double nng
ceremony Nuptlal musJc was
presented by MISs Juha
Hutchmson who played theme
songs from " Romeo and
Jul1et" and " Love Story," and
1
'Bnan 's Song. "

The altar was decorated w1th
arrangements of pmk, white,
purple and blue carnatwns

Gtven m marnage by her
father, the bnde was attired m
a floor length gown of white
velvet fash1oned wtth an

Sociat
Calendar
.

WEDNESDAY
School w1th the Rev Robert
MEIGS COUNTY Salon 710, Wells, chaplain of Ohw State
Eight and Forty, annual din- Grange, as guest speaker
ner , hononng Departementaf
SATURDAY
Chapeau to be held at 6 30
RACINE CHAPTER 134 OES
Wednesday mght at the Me1gs bake sale and bazaar SaturInn
day, begmmng at 10 am at
JUNIOR CHOIR pracbce at Isabelle Simpson bUildmg,
Tnmty Church m PomerO) , Racme
6 30 tomght mstead of Thursday
THURSDAY
SECOND BORN
CATHOLIC WOMEN'S Club,
Mr. and Mrs Don Mayer of
8 p m Sacred Heart Church
Pomeroy
are announcmg the
followmg mass and rosary at
b1rth of their second chlld, an
'
7 15 p m
MEIGS COUNTY Council of c1ghfpound, e1ght ounce son ,
Parents and
Teachers, MIChael W1Iham, on March 30
Bradbury School , 7 30 p m at Holzer Medical Center
Thursday mght
County Grandparents are Mr and
Judgmg of cultural arts blue Mrs Paul Darnell and Mr and
Mrs Roy Mayer, all of
nbbon umt wmners
Pomeroy. Great-grandparents
MASONS WILL be honored are Mr and Mrs C E Slater of
at 7 30 p m Thursday at JacksonVIlle, Ohio; Mrs Lllhe
meetmg
of
Evangeline Hauck and Mrs. Stella Darnell
Chapter, OES, at Middleport of Pomeroy. Mr and Mrs.
Masomc Temple.
Mayer also have a daughter,
Add Fnday
Bethany Jo, 3
WEEKEND REVIVAL and
Hymn Smg at Freedom Gospel
MISSion Church, Bald Knobs
Apnl4-5-6 at 7 p m Hymn smg
IN TOURNEY
Apnl 7 at 7 30 p m featurmg
the Barnett family Pubhc 15 • The Middleport Ch1ld Conmv1ted
servahon League 1s sponsormg
SOUP SUPPER at Portland two teams, hve boys and liVe
Elementary Fnday begmnmg g~rls, from ~ the Metgs Commumty Class Fnday to a
at530pm
bowlmg tournament at the
FRIDAY
ANNUAL MEIGS County Jolly Lanes m Jackson Th1s 1s
grange banquet to be held at a regular bowlmg tournament
7 15 p m Fnday at Sahsbury for mentally retarded

.

empire watst and an A-hne

SlX Me1gs County 4-H junior
leaders jpined over 100 junior
leaders of the Jackson Area in
the annual Junwr Lea~er
Round·Up held at the Hocking
Valley I Motor Lodge last
weekend, wh1ch IS a part of the
Tr1-County Techmcal College
m Nelsonville
Followmg the keynote
speech by Don Janson of Ohio
Umvers1ty, the group partiCipated m lour leadership
development sessiOns Themes
were, Values m a Changmg
Soc1ety, Look InSide Yourself,
Sensmg Leadership, and A Big
DeCISIOn In Life
Recreation and swmunmg
the Fr~day evemng
, completed
.
r program
Saturday mormng the juniOr
leaders had described for them
22 d1flerent technologies as
possible career programs at
the Hockmg Techmcal College.
All of the participants enjOyed the opportunity to meet
other JUmor leaders from the
mne county Jackson Area and
returned to thetr homes on
Saturday afternoon, March 31
Part1c1patmg from Me1gs
County were Jan Holter, Lester
Jeffers, Marco Jeffers,
V~rgm1a
Jordan, Cheryl
Lawson and Dtana Thornton.
Mrs Pansy Jordan, 4-H
AssiStant, was m charge of the
Me1gs County group

COLUMBUS Spectal
events or celebratwns, as well
as spec~al cralts or actiVIties
indigenOUB to certain sections
or the country or areas of the
world often prov1de InCentive
to !Tavel.
SliD worshippers nalurally,
gravitate to beaches and sun
resorts History bulls vLStt
historical s1teS connec\ed with
their partrcular style in
history. Cultures of various
peoples and their particular
crafts draw mterest from
others In any event, whatever
your l!ktng, your friendly
travel agent can tatlor or
custon)-bwld a complete tour
to suit your taste and purse.
Europe IS the mecca for
persons who hke to study
anc1ent castles and cathedrals.
Folk lore abounds m the
Scandmav1a countnes, As1a
and the South Pacific islands
Ancient cultures and the1r

\

Linda Sprouse betrothed

Balances

· Miss Lmda Sue Sprouse, daughter of Mrs. Mattie
Sprouse of Pomeroy and· the late Charles Sprouse, 18 an..
nounClng her engagement and approachmg marriage to Mr.
Rodney Dav•d Jones, son of Mr and Mrs. William C. Jones of
Pomeroy. The bride-elect IS a juruor at Meigs High Scbool.
Her fiance IS employed at Don Watts Volkswagen m
Gallipolis
,
The open church weddmg w1U be an event of Saturday,
April 7, at 6 p m. at the Trm1ty Church m Pomeroy. A
receptiOn will be held at the church liiiiJledtately following
the wedding.

skirt featurmg an overlay of
lace The br~de 's fmgerllp ve1l
fell from a wh1te velvet bow
She earned a bouquet of multicolored carnations wtth baby's
breath from wh1te fell wh1te
satm streamers bed 10 lovers'
knots Her only jewelry was
wti1 te pearl earrmgs
Matd of" honor for the brlde
was her sister , Miss Shern
Clark She was m a floor-length
gown of purple polyester of Ahne deSign w1th an emp1re
SON IS JWRN
waiSt, puffed sleeves, and a
EN 2 and Mrs Michael Rush
wh 1te lace overlay from the are announcmg the btrth of a
Mrs Cay Cross of_Nelson- speak 1mmed1ately followmg
busthne to the floor Her short seven pound, etght ounce son vtlle, dtrector of public
the dmner The annual meeting
purple veil was attached to a Tuesday, Apnl 3 at the Naval relatwns for-&amp;&gt;ut~st Oh10
w1th the election ol ofllcers and
velvet bow, and she earned a Hosp1tal m Charleston, S C Emergency Medtcal Servtce ,
the fmanc1al report by the
bouquet of mulh-colored Mrs Rush IS the former w1ll be guest speaker at the
executive secretary w1ll follow
carnatiOns
Genevteve Btrd Maternal annual meetmg of the Me1gs
the program.
Mr David Hanson served as grandparents are Mr and Mrs
County Tuberculosis and
best man for hiS brother, and Harold B1rd of Racme, and the Health Ass&lt;Jc1atwn Thursday
the ushers were R1ck Clark and paternal grandparents are Mr
flight at the Meigs Inn
Terry Clark, brothers of the and Mrs Lonme Rush of
ON DEAN'S LIST
Mrs Cross, former newsbr~de
... ...... RaYJle , La The mfant 1s Mr
Aaron
Lee Sayre, son of Mrs.
paper columniSt, w1ll be givmg
For her daughter's weddmg, and Mrs Rush's l1rst first general Information on the Dom Bailey, Portland, has
Mrs Clark wore a navy Imen child
Med1cal Serv1ce and what 1t been named to the dean's list of
costwne with white lace tnm,
Will do lor residents of Ohw state Umvers1ty for the
and had a wh1te carnahon
Southeastern Ohw She has a wmter quarter making a 3.4
PARENTS
VISITED
'
corsage Mrs Hanson was ~a
background m both radiO and average Sayre, an agriculture
Mr and Mrs Denms Carol of televisiOn, IS married to a educatiOn student, 1s carrying
multt-prmt Jersey dress
d
also had a whtte carna 100 Wayne, MICh VISited recenijy school teacher, and ts the 19 hours and' will graduate m
wtth her parents, Mr and Mrs. mother of f1ve chtldren
corsage
June. 'He 15 engaged in student
Zerkle and
A receptwn honormg the Wilham R
The dmner will be served at teachm'g at Johnson-Alder
couple "as held m the church daughter, Jackie, Syracuse 6 30 p m and Mrs Cross Will High School, Plam City.
soctal room A three ttered
cake w1th a cascade of pmk
roses and th..tradillonal bnde
and groom centered the bride's
table wh1ch was covered m
lace Four large wh1te bells
were suspended from the
ce1hng Hostesses for the
receptwn were Mrs Charles
115 W. Main
We Accept Federal Food Stamps
Pomeroy
Spencer, M1ss Joyce Hanson,
and Mrs Ernest Haggy. MISs
Open Mon.- Thurs. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.- Frtdays 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.- SaturLmda Brogan registered the
'
days 9 a.m. to 8:30
. ~·-•••••••I
guests
•
Both the bnde and groom are
CANNED
'
graduates of Me1gs H1gh
School He IS stationed m Texas
w1th the U S Air Force
Among the out of town guests
24
at the weddmg and reception
lw oz. bottle
cans
were Mr and Mrs Larry E
Spencer,
Laura
Clark,
Natalie Clark, Jenmler Clark,
Famous Brand
Colwnbus; Mrs Tom Darst,
W1th
Deanna and L1sa, Colwnbus;
Coupc1n
Mrs Richard Neal, P01nt
1
GOQ!l_l\.t Simon S
Pleasant, W Va , and Mrs
John Card, Gel!'rg1a
lb.

reported
to council
Pomeroy VIllage funds as of
February 28 totaled $101,615.52
accordmg to the report of Clerk
Jane Walton submit~d to
Pomeroy CounCil Monday
' mght Receipts, disbursements
and clerk's balance, respecllvely I" the active fund were·
General, $4,961.96, $6,997 09,
$8,723 67, boat dock, no
receipts, no expenditures,
~$1,032 95; revenue sharmg, no
receipts, $7,000, $3,800; sewer,
$4,785 02, $2,119.40, $11,529 41,
fire department, no rece1pts,
$40.67, $2,446.70; cemetery, no
receipts, $643.03, ($184 03),
street department, $15,
$1,780,43, $5,060.90; state highway, no recetpts, $29.16,
$3,171 63; water operahng,
$8,064 67' $8,653.03, $4,084.66;
guaranty meter, $200, $61,
$4,631. 72; water well lmPr.ovement, $250,000, $16,300,
$8)'00; water IIJlprovement, no
receipts, no expend1t'ilres,
$15 61, parkmg meter fund,
$927,
no
expenditures,
$10,913.60;
uhhhes,
no
receipts, $960 91, $15,636.57;
samtary sewer, no receipts, no
expenditures, $5 58. Total
receipts, diSbursements and

Mrs. Cross to speak here

Standmgs

Team
Dav1s Warner Ins
Rawlings Dodge
Gro Boys
Pomeroy Cement Block Co
H&amp;R F1restone
Mayer &amp; H1ll Barber Shop
High Individual Game

ARTLEY

• • • •

SAVE
WHEN YOU BUY A
10 oz. Jar of
INSTANT RI.GER'S
COFFEE CRYSTALS
SPECIAL P1ttCE
WffH TH~ COUPON

We would like to thank the wonderful people of this
area for their tremendous response to ·our Granr.
Opening.
\

BORDEN'S
ICE CREAM

'

Because of the huge turnout~ if you did not find
what you were looking for, Pl~ase C~me Back. We
have received many new fash1ons th1s week. Once
again, THANKS!

ARTLEY
.LADIE5 AND GIRLS APPAREL
Silver Bridee Plaza - Gallipolis
OPEN DAllY 10-9 SUNDAY 1-5

dlf
18 oz .

WITH
COUPON

Stmon 1S

Market

Standmgs

Team

New York Clothing Pullins Excavating

Pomeroy Lanes

' j

.

MILK

-

Oav1s

-

Dav1s

W.

61

50

35
46

S1mon's Mkl
40 · 56
Pomeroy Motors
38 58
Helen's Beauty Shop
32 64
High Team 3 games Pullins 1740, New York
Clothing 1740, Pomeroy Lanes
1575
Htgh Team game - Pullins
New York Ctolhlng 580
High lnd Senes - Julie
Boyles 487, D1ana Hawley 469 ,
Drema Smtth 461

H1gh lnd game Drana
Hawley 197 , Julie Boyles 176,
t\'\a'rlene Wtlson 172 •

8 X 10
- oNLY

Standtngs

Team

1.00

SEED POTATOES
ONION SOS

SHORTS

100 percent nylon double knrf
shorts and perm press nylon v
neck sleeveless shells Sizes a 19
Assorted sol 1d colors

$ 99

• I

W

L.

Team No 3
71 40
Eagles Club
58 54
Mark V
58 54
Farmers Bank
5~ 59
Rac1ne Food Mkl
51 61
Tom's Carry Out
44 68
Htgh Individual Game Men, Gary Wayland
D•ck
Dugan 221 , women, Julta
Boyles 223
Second High Ind. Game IV!en. Jr. Phelps 217. women,
Patty Young 175
High Senes - Men. Larry
Dugan 623, women, Julia
Boyles 536.
Second Htgh Senes - Men.
Gary Wayland 555, women.
Betty Smoth . Helen Phelps 459
Team High Game- Eagles
Club 703.
Team High Series - Racine
Food Mkt. 1911 .
•

P RIC EO

EACH

FROM

GlRLS'-iiEW

SPR

DRESSES

$1 000.

$ 99

REG.

::·j·,,,,,',2::::·, 9,:,:9,:,:,:V::::A::::L,:U
:::::E:,:,:,:/:l:::::::::;plA,;,:,l::R:::::::::::::::::::::::':
BOYS

-SAVINGS SPREE -

GROUP

.....

BATH

MEN'S GYM OXFORD '199
-SPRING SAVINGS SPREE -

MEN'S-BOY'S·

CHILDREN'S

CANVAS GYM

SPORTSWEAR

Men's, boy's, and
:. youths lace to toe style
gym oxfords Moulded
soles

Mix or match Buster
Brpwn infants, tots and
ctuldrens
sprtng
sportswear

$1~~~

PRICED

FLARE DENIM

Special group of 1~1~!i!·i::G~rls flare style
nylon double kmt:
:·Mavenck brand
leg style sla c ks den1m jeans Solid
Assorted colors
color ~ and fancy

$3 ~:. ~'*"3 ~~.

ER'S SPRING SAVINGS SP EE100 SQ YfoRUS GROMMElED KENDALL

BACOO BED COVERS
too sQ0ards . Keljdall woven
fabr~~: tobacco-aad' plant bed
covers, rem forced With rot
J es1stant thread

SAVING SPREE

SAVINGS SPREE

$1299

FANCY METAL

FOAM BED

WASTE CAN

PILLQWS

...,-

-

..
COMFY SHREDDED

Reg $1 59 value at your
.. fr1endly Stiffler Stores
B1g, plump "Comly"
Asst styles and color s
shredded loam filled
AI I me~r wa ste can
bed pillows Prmted
Stock u now for your
spnng ouse clean•ng
covers c;:Rve now'

.
BROAfJLOOM RUG MATS
59' VALUE 15x27· SIZE

-

$12 5

FROM

.... .•

SAVINGS SPREE

N~W SPRING

BUSTER BROWN

OXFORDS

SLACKS JEANS

~

..

.

Shop early

Qualify 15x27 lOch s.1ze
broadloom rug mats 1n assorted
colors and patJern s

FAMOUS N/a.y QUEEN
100 pet "viO~ami~H.

- SPRING SAVINGS soorr/

60

INCH WIDE

DOUBLEKNITS'.

1 PER

GROUPS TAKEN AT THE

99' ,PER

10xl2 INCH PLASTIC FR'AMEO

S9c Value

PICTURES

ERCOLATO

new group of hne qual1ty
tn
v1brant
colors 10" x12" s 1z e 1n sturdy
A

reproduction s

plastic frames

•'

Reg 79c Value

19 .

Yard

LOW

Reg .

EA.

99

PER FAM ILV

Fam1ly S1ze

Electnc Coffee

HOSE

Good selectiOn of 60-mch w1de
textured plam and ~~~~~~
polyester doublekmt fl
B1g assortment of colors

SUBJECT

.. SAVINGS SPREE

p

100% POL VESTER

NO AGE LIMIT

2 SPECIAL

$2 99 values

r:~ow

,.

Handlmg

LIM IT

Men and boys vinyl sport ox ford s
wh1te w1th black tnm S1zes 21h to
12 Spec 1al purchase, so save

T•me for tun 1n the sun That's
where the act1on will be at Stlf
flers where you will find the
newest sportswear fashtons from
Bobble Brooks and Russ Togs
~drry In You wilt be glad you

\.

sse

Plus 50'

SPORT OXFORDS

SPORTSWEAR

Special assortment of 22
ve our terry bath
"cis Sohd and fancy
'Oiors •

PHOTO SPECIAL

MEN 'S AND BOYS ' APOLLO

FAMOUS BOBBIE BROOKS

BATH TOWELS

2 FOR

SUBJECT

----------------------·--·--·
I

April!, 1973

3 Rolls

IES NEW SPRING

lADIES' QUALITY NYLON
SHELLS &amp; JAMAIGA

DOUJlLEKNIT

Oxfords, loafers and
boots by Sandy
McGee, City CClub
and Dexter All new
spr~ng styles to
chOO.!Ie from

99

- STIFFLER'S MARC!! OF VALUES SALE-

'

PRICE OF

League

FOOTWEA

'1.69
TO '1.99

L.

67 29'

BAGGIE FLARES
Special group ol young men's
• blue ,demm haggle style flares.
Machine washable. Sanfonzed
S1zes 26-36 24" bottoms wtth 2mch cuffs

Cb1ldrens new spring
dresses Pretty sprmg
colors and patterns. Sizes 3
to 6X and 7 to 12

The Umted States uses
more than I 443 tnllwn kilowatt hours of electrtctty annually-more than one-th1rd
of the world's total consumption

NEW SPRING

$ 99

In living Color

Early Sunday M1xed

BREAD

_Footnotes on the Sprmg
theme, newsy casuals that
make a walk m the _]!Brk
like Vt.alkmg on a1r Bfess
styles, too

LADIES' NYLON ::GIRL'S MAVERICK

March 29, 1973

'\

REG 79c

AEDHMABLE
ONLY AT

59~

FOOTWEA

"

BLUE DENIM

&amp; CHARM ~p

HI BROW

-SPRING SAVINGS SPREEMEN'S FAMOUS BRAN

YOUNG MEN'S NEW

36
28

Women's Thursday
Afternoon League

FAVORITE
•

LADIES ' NEW SPRING STYLE

50

Th11"d H1gh Senes-Ed Voss

538
Team H1gh Game
Warner Ins 916
Team H1gh Series

- STIFFlaR'S SPRING SAVINGS SPREE-

SAVINGS. SPREE:..

Dugan 540

'

PAPER
TOWELS

- SPRING SAVINGS SPREE- .

72
60

H1gh Senes - A l Phelps,
Jr 554
Second Htgh Senes - Larry

GALLON

95~

YOUR
FRIENDLY
DEPT. STORES

r

614, New York ClothrnQ 596 ,

2% Broughton

USE
OUR
EASY

WOLFES MOVE
Mr and Mrs Carl Wolfe and
fam1Iy have sold the1r home on
Bulavllle Rd m Galha County
and are now hvmg on South
Th~rd Ave , Middleport, m the
HOMES REINSTATED
property formerly occup1ed by
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The the Robert Schuck family
North Fourth Street Nursmg
Home m Steubenville and St
Marys, have been reinstated to
the state welfare program.
The two facil1t1es had been
IN HOSPITAL
termmated for vtolabons of ~ Mrs Opal MoFrls remams a
Oh1o Samtary Code Offlcl~ahent at the Holzer Med1cal
said the two homes have cor- Center Her room number Is
reeled the def1c1ences
537

Voss 200

¥2 gal '

"Glacier Club'

GALA

VERA WU.L ATTEND
SAN JUAN, P R (UP!) Vera Clemente, the w1dow of
Pirate star outfielder Roberto
Clemente, wul attend the
mauguration of the new season
Friday at Pittsburgh's Three
Rtvers Stadmm, where
Clemen~orm Wl\1' its
number 21, will be , !ormally
ret1red
Clemente was killed m a
plane crash here Nelf1.Year's
Eve,

Third High tnd Game - Ed

Ground Chuck ........... lb. 1.09
Round Steak ............. lb. 1.29
Sirloin Steak ............. lb. 1.49

T·Bone Steak ............ lb. 1.79.

Dtsney "
Their director, Gerald
Stewart, formerly of Mason, IS
takmg the group on a spec1al
tr1p to DISney Land and other
pomts of mterest The group
Will leave on Wednesday af·
ternoon by c~artered bus, be
gone over t1Je Memor1al Day
weekend, and return on
Monday
Spectal recogmtton was
g1ven by the director to hiS
wtfe, for the costumes and the
costume destgns Spectal
recogmtJon was also given to
Brad Pamter, set designer, and
Danny Kmg, announcer, and
Tony Fowler, hghtmg

A

•

2 shows to full houses

Second H1gh lnd Game V1ck W1ppet 202

USDA CHOICE BEEF

3 bxs. 100

YOUR

Black Knight Band has
PT PLEASANT- The Pomt
Pleasant Senior H1gh School
B1g Black Kn•ght band had a
good reason for domg 1ts best
at the Black Kmght Revue on
two mghts at Pomt Pleasant
H1gh School Gym Both mghts
they performed before a full
house on the theme, "Salute to
the Wonderful World ol

WE ARE HERE TO 0~,

Pis
90

Warner Ins 2573

FROM

Other parts ol the globe have
thetr special oflermgs rangmg
!rom the mustic antiqmty of
the Orient and Southern Asia to
the tropic trappmgs of the
South Paciftc Islands and the
steaming jungles of Central
Africa and Amer~ca Australia
and South Ametlca, relallvely
unexplored by the tourists,
each have hundreds of eye-

Jack Peterson 210

29~

Layer Cake Mixes

-

POMEROY'~ MIDDLEPORT

I

Trt-County League
March 27, 1973

OLEO

THANK YOU

traveler

catching activities, tra1ts and
cultures
Anywhere you care to go, by
air, ship or land conveyance,
your travel agent or Newspaper Tours Ltd can give you
helpful suggestwns For details
on the latter, check with this
newspaper or the Richard
Lewts Travel Service, Lazarus,.
Columbus, 0. 43215
Newspaper Tours Ltd has a
number of comprehens ive
package tours scheduled to
reach most any section of the
country or world You m1ght
fmd "Just the right" tr1p you
want to appease your wanderlust II not, you need only to
express your. desires to get
prompt attention,

Pomeroy Bowlmg Lanes

75¢

~4lws.

remnants are in vast supply m
areas of Italy, Greece, Turkey and the Middle East along w1th
North Africa and the lbertan
peninsula A VISit to any of the
Mediterranean countries can
prov1de volumes of mteresting
hdb1 ts for the diScerning

weal Bowling

POP

8
PAK

9- The Dally Sentinel,Middlepo_rt-Pomeroy, 0 ., April!, 1973

DATE~

FRIDAY, APRIL 6

PHOTO HOURS: 11~0 7 P.M.

7 PC.

Place: Shoppers Mart
MASON W.VA.
Photos By

HONEY PORTRAITS

SPRING SAVINGS SPREE-

TWO PIECE SET-DELUXE PLASTIC

COLORED ALUMINUM

COOKWARE SETen•
alum•num

cook

ware s~ts Flame :~~::::::&gt;~~:::

and

avocado

Co,ors Reg $7 99
value a( only your
Fnendly

81_...,1172 ROOM SIZE--RENO

St1ffler

s•ores

~4~~

-SPRING SAVINGS SPREE-

CANDY FILLED NOVELTY

. .,STER BASKETS

...lolod

7 PIECE SET!
I

P,lfFLER

REG. 17.99 VALUE!

~"

$19ug

.INDOOR-OUTDOOR RUGS
1

Just&gt;&lt;rlvl!d'6'&gt;xll -,rooms•ze
Reno ,ndoor-outdoor rugs.
Assor L~
colors to
ChOOS"

;]

an Easter gill
the kiddies
our great
of fancy cello
wrappedbasketsand
novelties

]g¢
TO

$

�•

,_

.

I

•
10. ;-"be D8pY Sentinel, ~-Pomeroy,

0., April!, lt73

Therapist. replaced
.

Driv'"er charged
in accident on
State Route 7

•
'.

'

aescue

'76. The record can be checked

(Peggy) Gurtis, Ulanked the
club for sending her to the
State Woman's Club Con·
vention at the Greenbrier;
White Sulphur Springs.
Orders for the Bi-Centennisl
Plate were taken by Mrs.
Gurtis. She informed the group
that a record is available at
New Haven Library which tell!·
the story of the pictures on the
platewhichdeplcts tile spirit of

out for use.
Mrs. William Rardin, Jr. of
Pt. Pleasant, Chairman of
·Mason County Cancer Drive,
would like for the New Haven
Woman's Club to canvass the
town for the cancer drive in
April. The club voted to par.
ticipate.
Mrs. Robert Gurtis and Mrs.
Karl Wiles, both members or

Leo R. Thornton, Jr. 24, Scott
Depot, w. Va ., was charged
will&gt; failure to stop within the
assured
clear distance
Tues&lt;iay following a ll'affic
accidenlall:IOp.m. on Rt. 7 at
the jWlclion to County Road 3.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
.Highway P_a!rol sa1d
. Thorn'
ton's car.;·truck the rear end of
an auto driven by Mark R.
Wendorf, 19, Racine. Wendorf
and a passenger, 17-year old
Jeff Wendorf, suffered minor
'injuries but were not im~
mediately treated.
.
A second ac~ident occurred
Continuance of
No personal injuries were
on Clark Chapel-Rd., two and __ ,_ · ·ula •
reported
in ll'aHic accidents
seven tenths miles north of Rt. reg
l!On
. investigated by Sheriff Robert
: 160 where an auto drivan b'y said necessary
C. Hartenbach's Dept. Tuesday
Phyllis A. RU&amp;Sell, 32, Rt. l, .
William E . Garnes, Ad- and today.
Bidwell, stopped to discharge a
Tuesday at 11: IS p.m. on SR
passenger. The passenger ministrator of the Ohio Bureau
of Employment Services, 7, Charles A. Mulholland,
opened the door just as an auto
Wilkesville, was traveling
driven by Robert Hershman, . today announced he was filing
31, Rt. I, Bidwell, attempled to a continuance of the regulation north when his car skidded into
a guard rail, breaking off two
pass. The door sll'uck the left Wlder which Wlemployment
posts. His vehicle turned
front fender of the Hershman claims are filed every other
around, slopping the other side
week.
auto.
The continuance of the
....,A final accident occurted at
regulation
is necessary, he
EVANGELISTS COMING
8:2U p.m. on Bulaville Rd. two
exp)ained,
because
of
the
"Operation Evangelize" will
and eight tenths miles north of
budgetary
limitations
still
.
appear
in Meigs County this
Rt. 160 where Floyd F. Blazer,
S2, Rt. I, Gallipolis,lostconll'ol being imposed by the Federal weekend under the sponsorship
of his truck which left the high. ~ov 0rnment. On Feb. 13, 1973, of the Meigs CoWlty Youth
Garnes Rally.
.
way and rolled over on its side. Administrator
requested
the
Governor
to,
The
group
feaiures
musical
No charge was filed.
declare an emergency because numbers. David M. Lucas is
of the budgetary resll'ictions, minister. The team will appear
thereby
permitting
the at the Meigs Junior High
ASSIST,\NCE AVAILABLE
ATHENS - John R. Abel, biweekly liling regulation. Mr. School in Middleport at 7: 3ll
·R epresentative of the District Garnes slated that it is ·now p.m. Friday and on the upper
Director for the Athena .. office apparent that the reduction in parking lot in Pomeroy at I
of the Internal Revenue Serv- administrative funds wiU p.m. Saturday, weather per·
ice, today reemphasized that continue, and be even more milling. At 7:30p.m. Saturday
increased taxpayer assistance . severe, in the new fiscal period the group will ~old an evening
wilf be available during the commencing July I, 1973.
prpgram. At 2 p.m. Sunday the
remainder or the 1973 tax filing
The emergency order- was group will be at the junior high
season. Assistance will be granted and w.as effective for · school and again at 7:3ll p.m.
offered on Fridays from 9-12 . 60 days. Thi effect of the conand 1-4, on Saturdays from lo-s ' tinuance
filed
by
AdIN HOLZER
and on Monday, April 16 frotn ministrator Garnes with the
RUTLAND
.· Ernest
9-i2 and 1-7:45 p.m.
'
Secretary of State, is to con- M~lden, Rutland, is a surgiCal
The IRS office is located in tinue
amended
Bureau patient at the Holzer Medical
. the Matters Building at 24 E. Regulation
UC-29-01
in- Center, Room 220• .
State St., Athens. Assistance . defini teiy.
'
may also bo obtained by calli1Ig
592-1188 during the above
times.
SALES SET
"·
The Ohio .Eta Phi Chapter of _,
HOUSE VOTE ~
. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
HARRISBURG, P3. (UPI)hold a rummage sale from 9 ·
The House by vote of 118-$
a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday and
Tuesday approved an amendSaturday, in · the Hughes
ment to outlaw pre-marital and
Building, across from the
exiJ'a-rnarital sex in PennsylMiddleport Library, Third
vania.
Ave.
The amendment was to a bill
. that 'Would make .malicious

the New Haven Woman's Cluj&gt; Mrs. Ronnie Healer.'
attended a coif~ recenlly In
Mrs. Paul Howell; director of
Pt. Pleasant, ·which signified · the Show ' Boat Revue,
the beginning of the Cancer scheduled for April 7 at ,the
Drive. Mrs. Gurtls appointed New Haven Theatr. at 8 p.m.,
Mrs. Karl Wiles, . Mrs. Dan reported on the .progreas of the
Edwards and Mrs. Phil Batey revue.
·
•·
to serve on the nominating Hostesses served refresh- ·
comniJttee.
ments at the conclusion of the
Twci names were submitted meeting. ~y were Mrs. Mark
for membership iothe club and Ward. Mrs. Rl&gt;bert Dye . and
they ate ,Debbie While and Mrs. Elton Clevenger.

'

'RALL'S IN ·MIDDLEPORT

N KLI DJ

Fc:

BEN

Showboat Revue .is Saturday

I'
GIRLS'
IIIIGIIT NEW
SPIIlNG &amp; EASTER

o,

SALE
STARTS
TODAY
.. -•" \
-"

DRESSES.

..

.. -::

luJOIIU(~

~oeQt 1efeo:hon Ia &lt;h&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;IO f1om

·~"'"'

' "'" 1n "'"'

'
of the highway
headed south.
There was heavy damage to
the right side of his car. No
citation was· Issued.
Today at 8:20 a .m. an accident occurred on the parking
·
lot at Meigs High School.
Edward A. Hayes, 18,
Pomeroy, was backing south
and James""'R ~ Morris, 1'1,
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, was driving
east when Hayes' vehicle
struck Morris's. There was
mediwn damage to both cars.
No citations were issued.

man•~• ""d on• Ia

HECK'S REG. TO $5.99

lo.,.lnattd ae•fh( ( &lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&gt; ,.,. ..,,,k
mG!ehi ~ b&lt;JMOI a"'l ""'br o ..»oy
yoke . ·100'!1. ..a,r;ablt pol)'11•'•'
Th• bo ~ o' moclcl o l ... lo01ur.. ht&lt;K~
11yllng 10ilh oho~ lde r l lcl '~'''" OMI
"'" b.l! Ct..W oo lr&lt;&gt;lll a•&gt;&lt;&gt;f!od «&gt;1'" ' on&lt;l , ;,., 11, I 8, and i4 month&gt; .

POWERMASTER '

PRECISION TOOLS .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Carl Pullins,
Pomeroy ; Wanda Hwnphreys, .
Pomeroy; Norma Chapllllill,
Pomeroy;- Phoebe Lee, Middleport; George Smith, Re~
ville; Mary Pierce, Long
Bottom, and•, Charlotte Pal.terson; Middleport.
Discharged - Leora Kennedy, Marvin Darst, Mary
Longenelte, Ava Gilkey and
Fannie Phillips.

I he _ones

you · ~e

always wanted and needed'

A wide selectlori of precision to ols .. wren ch
sets , saws. hammers, screwdriver sets . and
rn'!ny more! At this proce yo~.J can have a co mplete workshop lor less than ever before'

SMOCK TOP
SETS

KITCHEN
T~WELS

2 for

Screen": printed de·
signs on sheared
terrv , I'Sx26-in . Or
choose woven JaC""'"""'' 1 quards . 18x 28- i n.
Great colors 1

$

tf.i-~

BARGAIN

PRICED
AT ONLY

E'IELET BRIEFS

SPRING DRESS EVENT
An air of freshness ......,. pretty
cl assi cs. The lalesl in spr ing fashion
. dresses and two piece sets. Juniors, '
Mi sses. Available in a · whole
;;~ ss orlmen l ol styles an" fabrics .

2to 4TRS.

11!2
LAUMDR'i IASKET
Heavy-dutv poly. 'plastic in round . wic ker design. Do!,lble-strength hand grips lor easy
10arrying. Choice o! colors .

LADIES'

$%l9 .

TODDLER SIZES
SIU&amp;
•

HECK'S REG. TO$

2~PC. SLACK SETS
Jusl hotch•dt a s:eawn of ipr6ru;,time clossiu
lor t+le girls or boys . , . ~u;ock seh in onorted
'tyle' ... 1wo pi«e wa,hoble streJ(h nylon .
Si:re,· 12 to 2.4 months

157

•

·$988 TO .$} 088·

INFANTS AND
TODDLERS

SPOMCE MOP
Women's M, (,XL

faL h,on """''" la p"''' Cutt a. o b~" ""
Wo•o n •&lt;t ·&lt;o eo m ~lood1 "' clol"r,loul
gi~ V~""'' \ODI "'"h 1oli&lt;l aa~h ~ ..., 9 lo
• 8 mo"'~"

HECK'S REG.
$12.99

She•r•d

BUDGET VALUE!

SON OMITTED
Omitted from the survivors
of James E. Hendricks,
Middleport, who died Monday
evening a this home, was a son,
James Lester Hendricks of
Circleville.

GIRLS' FASHION

SCJSB

Now IS the tome to replace old tools an""d buy

Homecrelt'-

'13"

C/.016"" 11111'1.

•3.99
C/.016/N' DIP1.
GIRLS'

SEE OUR LARGE

HECK'S
REG.

FULL SLIPS

To ilo redslyle ... perrnonenl preu .
white~ on ly .. , si rel-41o 12 y1mr1.

$3.48

SELECTION OF
'

er..tlng Cards

SPECIAL I

68!.

get -wel l,
anniver juven lle and
masc u line g reet ·
ingst 10 to 21 """'··

BUDGET
PRICED!
PI&lt;G. OF 50

PANTIES

Gi rl! ' Ederlon Ponly in whites
or pouels. Sins .4 to 1-4 yeor, .

CLOTHING!

par box .

-

GIRLS'

EASTER

A./1-0cc•tlon

Shop Ben .Franklin-SAVE MORE!

LADIES'

POLY PANT·S

.If the cosuai look .is yours, Heck '~ hm
it in these poly pants. Cuffed and
flared with one or t~o inch E!IOStic

LADIES' SLEEVELES!&gt;

PR.

' : f0 -2
• Your~·· Sites
• Boys· Sins: 2'h~ 6 ·
• Men ·S.Sizes: 61h· 12.
Rugged , sharp
Duck upoer .

''

4

EXCEPTIONAL VALUE ... AT ONLY

MEN'S
PIIINT

•

MEIIS'
SHORT SlEEVI ..

FOLDING
CHAIR

lo

FOLOING
CHAISE

t

vmyl trom
arch support.
tongue Rubber soles

$99

FURNI!URE .
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

$299

INDOOR • OUTDOOR

FRANKLIIN

: ·RALL 1S

IN MIDDl.EPORT

or gray . Sizes: S.

lEN'S PUID

M, l, Xi.

BAGGY PANTS
c..

$~""111 ploid• ,. , ,~ 22 '
ll.d
bcno~ . 50 ~ po lyhl • • and
~0 '10 conu . NE VU NEHlS
tRONINCi .
191" ~ .

s,..,

$766
HECK'S REG.

•3.99

HECK'S REG.
$9.99 .
'

In four colon with l ip
front . Siles : S.' M, l, XL

SJ88
HICK'S IIEG.
$4.99

t/.0111/K
/IIII'T.

~~------------------------~--------~ ·

'

KNIT -.
SHIRTS

Print f· shirts with
your favorite express.ion~ . In white

HOURS

Hll5
Woelcdoys
tTil9
· !ioturdor

JR. BOYS
.2 PC. SETS

$144.

100% NYLON

SIZE 4 to 7

'2"

:

.

$49.9
•

.

$6.81

MEN'S

-

TANK TOPS
Skoped lonk top'· with
~qvored u· netlr.: ond
[Onlr01t bonded nt!!dc , ·
and D!mhole~ ." Men si~ ­
es: 5, M, l. Xl.

LADIES'

. MOOIIOOT .
11--0V-

$144_
.HECK'S
IIEG. ~
$1.99

s.· 499·

..;.,~;.!~r!!~~,____.,;~._~H=EC~K~'S~.
R~E~G. TO $7.88
· ' · ti.OTNIN'IIII'r:

I

• 2-Ft. Wide . &amp;-Ft. long!
AICh 2-lone twt'ed -ef!ect on ·your cho1ce of
decorator colorS. 1QQO.o · Joeip pile polyproP'III!Ine oleltn yarn Weather -res•stsl"i t wal,llerubber b.ack1ng

BE.N

HECK'S
. IIEG.

I-SHIRTS

~nyone!

brown. Si:r:t!s 8 to 18.

-Shari 51eeve model' with plack et or zip fronl.
Choos.e lrom l;!tsorted print$, Sint : S, M, L.

.

RUG RUNNER

Admiral Corpor;~li on re5ervt's the ri11ht to change specifications without notice.

BAKER

341

Sturdy. we,ther;re~istafll
furniture . lighlweiQht
alumon·um frames .Snd
tough wo11en plast ic webbing. Strong enough lor

wai!.t . In colors of novy, .green, and

BODY SUIT

. and Patio FURNITURE

The new Admiral Glass·" N"·Giow·Range-updates any kitchen
and gives it the look. of tom orrow. 'Its ceramic top is rugged
and durable, yet wipes· dean with a damp doth or sponge.
Cooking areas are design ·marked, yet inches away there is no
heat. Cook ~none, warm on an!)ther, use the others as suppl),
storage. Both a cooktop and a count,e rtop. Contrnuous Clean
• , ing oven and inner door work for you while you .cook. Feah,Hes automatic Timer and Minute Minder, " Fiex-0-Heat"
Control with infi1tite settings on high wattage "sPeed heat''
su~face units;r In white, avocado, harvest gold and copper
bronze . 45'¥a " H, 29'l'a" W, 25" D. 1-Year MaSiercare Main·
tenance warranty.

j

\8

$477

COATS

Model FES3037

'

9 ta

TO

INFANT
IOYS' &amp; GIRLS'

CON11NUOUS CLEANING
AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC RANGE

.

f*O&lt;I .

HECK'S REG.
TO $5.99

DELUXE 30"

-

1~&lt;00

$477

.

'

&lt;O'''""'I . 1n•~•k~l""' '
Pot ado and out!JI •he g,,f,,n Part, Co on
•• In da&lt;ran, &lt;alton. ond p&lt;&gt;l r•''"" All

AND

SEASON ' S
BIGGEST
BARGAIN!

THREE HOURGLASS FIGURES, two antique lamr•
aad one ap-to-date Peggy Tumbro, Watchung, N. ·•
antique dealer, are part of the New York Flea Martel'
doings . .Tbe lam1. are calletl "~one Wltb tbe . Wl!!d."

PARTY
DRESSES
c............ ...

4 to 14.

SJ77

a

on the bill is expected next
week.
Rep. Martin P. Mullen,
sponsor of the amendment,
said it "is nothing more than to
follow
the
Ten
Commandments, and I think we all
believe in God and the Ten
Commandments.''

GIRLS'
SHEER

01• Ma (h i"'l Wa 1"0

blo , Por ""' P'*" · 100% r)ou
~ . ~ "' '· a..d '" Poly••••• o•
Pal1 a nd Co!! qn blon&lt;io 0,

.$39995

FIRM SUSPENDED
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Hallie Woodworth of Williamsfield, Ohio, has been suspended
as a registered livestock dealer
for
violating
payment
requirements , of the Pack~rs
. and Stockyards ACt, the
Department of Agriculture
said today.

THE REAL
EASTER
LOOK

fho "'oololi Ia·... 1M v •o .. ~·u p
loo k And ,ou"ll lo"" t~ e 1..,

No one hurt in two accidents'

miSchief in caves a mis~
demeanor. A final House vote

'

Mayor J;horne speaks to ~New Haven Womet/'s club

school year, wu Miss Candace
NEW HAVEN - Mr.a. c. T. were the New Haven
Jascott, who graduated .lr.0111 Dodd, chainnan of Cominunity Squad, Fire Department, the
Ohio University In March. She Improvement, New Haven need of a new sewage plant,
is from Middletown, N. J.,
Woman's Club, lntr«&lt;ueed the and the repair of a bridge on
Plans were made for the mayor of New Haven ; John old Rt. 33. A.request and ancounty board to hllL'lt i meeting Thorne, at a recent meeting of swer period followed.
of all local boards Of the · club at New Haven Public
The club members dis(:u.ssed
county,pllL'lSibly set this month. Library 1ocial room. He spoke using Sllllle of the money from
A_ speaker will .be secured·. I, of projects· that could be a chicken barbecue scheduled
County Supt. Robert Bowen "worked out to Improve the for April 28, at the Fire Station
was authorized to attend a community.
in New Haven, to fix up the
county superintendent~! conLand .has already been kitchen at New Haven Public
ference at Salt Fork Lodge In acquired on New Haven ~brary. Assisla))ce from .other
cambridge the middle or May. Heights
for· --a -small organizations will be greatly
'l'he-lloard adopted· a right to recreational area which will appreciated .
read resolution which, in have playground equipment
The president of New Haven
esSence, pledges the board will later. Other subjects discussed Woman's Club, Mrs. Robert
continue to support goals and
objectives of the Ohio Right to
Read Program and will continue to assess and improve
reading prograll)s within
NEW HAVEN- Don't forget the Sbowooat Revue will
budget limitations.
be Ibis Saturday, April 7, at 8 p.m. at tbe New Haven
Bus driver certificates wre
Tb\'&amp;tre.
Mrs . Paul Powell, director;· Mrs. Eugene Hester,
issued to Beverly .Spires and
Assistant Director, and many other people woo have
Edward Lemaster and inworked bard, hope to bave'alarge crowd turn oot.
suring of office equip!Jient was
The show Is spouored by the New Haven Woman's
discussed but no aclil!n was
Club and proceed&amp; wlll be used to beneftt the co'inmunlty. .
taken. The board entered Into
Come and see those glamoro111 Calendar gtrl,s, Ding a
an agreement with the Meigs
Dollg Girls and some attractive beauties In their colorful
County Cooperative E1tension
'
costumes.
Service for copying
service.
Thirty-live acts are scheduled. Come and enjoy lbe
Attending were Supt. Bowen
evening, and at the same Ume, benefit yoor community.
and board .members, Harold
See you at the Showboat Revue!
Lohse, Harold Roush, VIrgil
Atkins, Gordon Collins and
George Perry.

The resignation .of a speech
therapist was.accepted and her
replacement was hired by the
Meigs County Board of
Education Tuesday l)!ght.
Resigning effective at the
end of this school year was
Mrs. Pat Love whose husband
is graduating from· Ohio
--...JJniversity. The coupl~ will be ·
leaving this area. Hired to
replace Mrs. Love as one of two
speech therapists hired by the
coWlty, effeclivetor the 1973-71

'

'.

~

UDIES'IIKIMI
HECK'S REG.
$1.99

PANTIES
I oolo:.rKi • •! ~ IQ(O " ' "' I~ ,..~ 1 !01 or
~0110 1 1.

Si roo

~

HICK'S
IIG.
71' IACH

Ia 7 ..

SLIPPERS
..Molclod """YI oole . Moc"hi"'l

"'&lt;II~

ot&gt;G drr : 1&lt;1119~1 br l&gt;o•~J liltl . '" •
.Oh,to , ~·•• , blwe, .,.,;,. , ofld rod,

UDIES'
GOLF·TENMIS

SOCK
Nylo:.n•co"""· Wt.;to bodr "'"h c&lt;&gt;lcr
etJXMt lf i"' on&lt;f ..,,.. 1. s;.. ,, 9 ..,
lh,

�•

,_

.

I

•
10. ;-"be D8pY Sentinel, ~-Pomeroy,

0., April!, lt73

Therapist. replaced
.

Driv'"er charged
in accident on
State Route 7

•
'.

'

aescue

'76. The record can be checked

(Peggy) Gurtis, Ulanked the
club for sending her to the
State Woman's Club Con·
vention at the Greenbrier;
White Sulphur Springs.
Orders for the Bi-Centennisl
Plate were taken by Mrs.
Gurtis. She informed the group
that a record is available at
New Haven Library which tell!·
the story of the pictures on the
platewhichdeplcts tile spirit of

out for use.
Mrs. William Rardin, Jr. of
Pt. Pleasant, Chairman of
·Mason County Cancer Drive,
would like for the New Haven
Woman's Club to canvass the
town for the cancer drive in
April. The club voted to par.
ticipate.
Mrs. Robert Gurtis and Mrs.
Karl Wiles, both members or

Leo R. Thornton, Jr. 24, Scott
Depot, w. Va ., was charged
will&gt; failure to stop within the
assured
clear distance
Tues&lt;iay following a ll'affic
accidenlall:IOp.m. on Rt. 7 at
the jWlclion to County Road 3.
The Gallia-Meigs Post State
.Highway P_a!rol sa1d
. Thorn'
ton's car.;·truck the rear end of
an auto driven by Mark R.
Wendorf, 19, Racine. Wendorf
and a passenger, 17-year old
Jeff Wendorf, suffered minor
'injuries but were not im~
mediately treated.
.
A second ac~ident occurred
Continuance of
No personal injuries were
on Clark Chapel-Rd., two and __ ,_ · ·ula •
reported
in ll'aHic accidents
seven tenths miles north of Rt. reg
l!On
. investigated by Sheriff Robert
: 160 where an auto drivan b'y said necessary
C. Hartenbach's Dept. Tuesday
Phyllis A. RU&amp;Sell, 32, Rt. l, .
William E . Garnes, Ad- and today.
Bidwell, stopped to discharge a
Tuesday at 11: IS p.m. on SR
passenger. The passenger ministrator of the Ohio Bureau
of Employment Services, 7, Charles A. Mulholland,
opened the door just as an auto
Wilkesville, was traveling
driven by Robert Hershman, . today announced he was filing
31, Rt. I, Bidwell, attempled to a continuance of the regulation north when his car skidded into
a guard rail, breaking off two
pass. The door sll'uck the left Wlder which Wlemployment
posts. His vehicle turned
front fender of the Hershman claims are filed every other
around, slopping the other side
week.
auto.
The continuance of the
....,A final accident occurted at
regulation
is necessary, he
EVANGELISTS COMING
8:2U p.m. on Bulaville Rd. two
exp)ained,
because
of
the
"Operation Evangelize" will
and eight tenths miles north of
budgetary
limitations
still
.
appear
in Meigs County this
Rt. 160 where Floyd F. Blazer,
S2, Rt. I, Gallipolis,lostconll'ol being imposed by the Federal weekend under the sponsorship
of his truck which left the high. ~ov 0rnment. On Feb. 13, 1973, of the Meigs CoWlty Youth
Garnes Rally.
.
way and rolled over on its side. Administrator
requested
the
Governor
to,
The
group
feaiures
musical
No charge was filed.
declare an emergency because numbers. David M. Lucas is
of the budgetary resll'ictions, minister. The team will appear
thereby
permitting
the at the Meigs Junior High
ASSIST,\NCE AVAILABLE
ATHENS - John R. Abel, biweekly liling regulation. Mr. School in Middleport at 7: 3ll
·R epresentative of the District Garnes slated that it is ·now p.m. Friday and on the upper
Director for the Athena .. office apparent that the reduction in parking lot in Pomeroy at I
of the Internal Revenue Serv- administrative funds wiU p.m. Saturday, weather per·
ice, today reemphasized that continue, and be even more milling. At 7:30p.m. Saturday
increased taxpayer assistance . severe, in the new fiscal period the group will ~old an evening
wilf be available during the commencing July I, 1973.
prpgram. At 2 p.m. Sunday the
remainder or the 1973 tax filing
The emergency order- was group will be at the junior high
season. Assistance will be granted and w.as effective for · school and again at 7:3ll p.m.
offered on Fridays from 9-12 . 60 days. Thi effect of the conand 1-4, on Saturdays from lo-s ' tinuance
filed
by
AdIN HOLZER
and on Monday, April 16 frotn ministrator Garnes with the
RUTLAND
.· Ernest
9-i2 and 1-7:45 p.m.
'
Secretary of State, is to con- M~lden, Rutland, is a surgiCal
The IRS office is located in tinue
amended
Bureau patient at the Holzer Medical
. the Matters Building at 24 E. Regulation
UC-29-01
in- Center, Room 220• .
State St., Athens. Assistance . defini teiy.
'
may also bo obtained by calli1Ig
592-1188 during the above
times.
SALES SET
"·
The Ohio .Eta Phi Chapter of _,
HOUSE VOTE ~
. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will
HARRISBURG, P3. (UPI)hold a rummage sale from 9 ·
The House by vote of 118-$
a.m. to 4 p.m. Friday and
Tuesday approved an amendSaturday, in · the Hughes
ment to outlaw pre-marital and
Building, across from the
exiJ'a-rnarital sex in PennsylMiddleport Library, Third
vania.
Ave.
The amendment was to a bill
. that 'Would make .malicious

the New Haven Woman's Cluj&gt; Mrs. Ronnie Healer.'
attended a coif~ recenlly In
Mrs. Paul Howell; director of
Pt. Pleasant, ·which signified · the Show ' Boat Revue,
the beginning of the Cancer scheduled for April 7 at ,the
Drive. Mrs. Gurtls appointed New Haven Theatr. at 8 p.m.,
Mrs. Karl Wiles, . Mrs. Dan reported on the .progreas of the
Edwards and Mrs. Phil Batey revue.
·
•·
to serve on the nominating Hostesses served refresh- ·
comniJttee.
ments at the conclusion of the
Twci names were submitted meeting. ~y were Mrs. Mark
for membership iothe club and Ward. Mrs. Rl&gt;bert Dye . and
they ate ,Debbie While and Mrs. Elton Clevenger.

'

'RALL'S IN ·MIDDLEPORT

N KLI DJ

Fc:

BEN

Showboat Revue .is Saturday

I'
GIRLS'
IIIIGIIT NEW
SPIIlNG &amp; EASTER

o,

SALE
STARTS
TODAY
.. -•" \
-"

DRESSES.

..

.. -::

luJOIIU(~

~oeQt 1efeo:hon Ia &lt;h&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;IO f1om

·~"'"'

' "'" 1n "'"'

'
of the highway
headed south.
There was heavy damage to
the right side of his car. No
citation was· Issued.
Today at 8:20 a .m. an accident occurred on the parking
·
lot at Meigs High School.
Edward A. Hayes, 18,
Pomeroy, was backing south
and James""'R ~ Morris, 1'1,
Pomeroy, Rt. 2, was driving
east when Hayes' vehicle
struck Morris's. There was
mediwn damage to both cars.
No citations were issued.

man•~• ""d on• Ia

HECK'S REG. TO $5.99

lo.,.lnattd ae•fh( ( &lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;&gt; ,.,. ..,,,k
mG!ehi ~ b&lt;JMOI a"'l ""'br o ..»oy
yoke . ·100'!1. ..a,r;ablt pol)'11•'•'
Th• bo ~ o' moclcl o l ... lo01ur.. ht&lt;K~
11yllng 10ilh oho~ lde r l lcl '~'''" OMI
"'" b.l! Ct..W oo lr&lt;&gt;lll a•&gt;&lt;&gt;f!od «&gt;1'" ' on&lt;l , ;,., 11, I 8, and i4 month&gt; .

POWERMASTER '

PRECISION TOOLS .

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Admitted - Carl Pullins,
Pomeroy ; Wanda Hwnphreys, .
Pomeroy; Norma Chapllllill,
Pomeroy;- Phoebe Lee, Middleport; George Smith, Re~
ville; Mary Pierce, Long
Bottom, and•, Charlotte Pal.terson; Middleport.
Discharged - Leora Kennedy, Marvin Darst, Mary
Longenelte, Ava Gilkey and
Fannie Phillips.

I he _ones

you · ~e

always wanted and needed'

A wide selectlori of precision to ols .. wren ch
sets , saws. hammers, screwdriver sets . and
rn'!ny more! At this proce yo~.J can have a co mplete workshop lor less than ever before'

SMOCK TOP
SETS

KITCHEN
T~WELS

2 for

Screen": printed de·
signs on sheared
terrv , I'Sx26-in . Or
choose woven JaC""'"""'' 1 quards . 18x 28- i n.
Great colors 1

$

tf.i-~

BARGAIN

PRICED
AT ONLY

E'IELET BRIEFS

SPRING DRESS EVENT
An air of freshness ......,. pretty
cl assi cs. The lalesl in spr ing fashion
. dresses and two piece sets. Juniors, '
Mi sses. Available in a · whole
;;~ ss orlmen l ol styles an" fabrics .

2to 4TRS.

11!2
LAUMDR'i IASKET
Heavy-dutv poly. 'plastic in round . wic ker design. Do!,lble-strength hand grips lor easy
10arrying. Choice o! colors .

LADIES'

$%l9 .

TODDLER SIZES
SIU&amp;
•

HECK'S REG. TO$

2~PC. SLACK SETS
Jusl hotch•dt a s:eawn of ipr6ru;,time clossiu
lor t+le girls or boys . , . ~u;ock seh in onorted
'tyle' ... 1wo pi«e wa,hoble streJ(h nylon .
Si:re,· 12 to 2.4 months

157

•

·$988 TO .$} 088·

INFANTS AND
TODDLERS

SPOMCE MOP
Women's M, (,XL

faL h,on """''" la p"''' Cutt a. o b~" ""
Wo•o n •&lt;t ·&lt;o eo m ~lood1 "' clol"r,loul
gi~ V~""'' \ODI "'"h 1oli&lt;l aa~h ~ ..., 9 lo
• 8 mo"'~"

HECK'S REG.
$12.99

She•r•d

BUDGET VALUE!

SON OMITTED
Omitted from the survivors
of James E. Hendricks,
Middleport, who died Monday
evening a this home, was a son,
James Lester Hendricks of
Circleville.

GIRLS' FASHION

SCJSB

Now IS the tome to replace old tools an""d buy

Homecrelt'-

'13"

C/.016"" 11111'1.

•3.99
C/.016/N' DIP1.
GIRLS'

SEE OUR LARGE

HECK'S
REG.

FULL SLIPS

To ilo redslyle ... perrnonenl preu .
white~ on ly .. , si rel-41o 12 y1mr1.

$3.48

SELECTION OF
'

er..tlng Cards

SPECIAL I

68!.

get -wel l,
anniver juven lle and
masc u line g reet ·
ingst 10 to 21 """'··

BUDGET
PRICED!
PI&lt;G. OF 50

PANTIES

Gi rl! ' Ederlon Ponly in whites
or pouels. Sins .4 to 1-4 yeor, .

CLOTHING!

par box .

-

GIRLS'

EASTER

A./1-0cc•tlon

Shop Ben .Franklin-SAVE MORE!

LADIES'

POLY PANT·S

.If the cosuai look .is yours, Heck '~ hm
it in these poly pants. Cuffed and
flared with one or t~o inch E!IOStic

LADIES' SLEEVELES!&gt;

PR.

' : f0 -2
• Your~·· Sites
• Boys· Sins: 2'h~ 6 ·
• Men ·S.Sizes: 61h· 12.
Rugged , sharp
Duck upoer .

''

4

EXCEPTIONAL VALUE ... AT ONLY

MEN'S
PIIINT

•

MEIIS'
SHORT SlEEVI ..

FOLDING
CHAIR

lo

FOLOING
CHAISE

t

vmyl trom
arch support.
tongue Rubber soles

$99

FURNI!URE .
MIDDLEPORT, 0.

$299

INDOOR • OUTDOOR

FRANKLIIN

: ·RALL 1S

IN MIDDl.EPORT

or gray . Sizes: S.

lEN'S PUID

M, l, Xi.

BAGGY PANTS
c..

$~""111 ploid• ,. , ,~ 22 '
ll.d
bcno~ . 50 ~ po lyhl • • and
~0 '10 conu . NE VU NEHlS
tRONINCi .
191" ~ .

s,..,

$766
HECK'S REG.

•3.99

HECK'S REG.
$9.99 .
'

In four colon with l ip
front . Siles : S.' M, l, XL

SJ88
HICK'S IIEG.
$4.99

t/.0111/K
/IIII'T.

~~------------------------~--------~ ·

'

KNIT -.
SHIRTS

Print f· shirts with
your favorite express.ion~ . In white

HOURS

Hll5
Woelcdoys
tTil9
· !ioturdor

JR. BOYS
.2 PC. SETS

$144.

100% NYLON

SIZE 4 to 7

'2"

:

.

$49.9
•

.

$6.81

MEN'S

-

TANK TOPS
Skoped lonk top'· with
~qvored u· netlr.: ond
[Onlr01t bonded nt!!dc , ·
and D!mhole~ ." Men si~ ­
es: 5, M, l. Xl.

LADIES'

. MOOIIOOT .
11--0V-

$144_
.HECK'S
IIEG. ~
$1.99

s.· 499·

..;.,~;.!~r!!~~,____.,;~._~H=EC~K~'S~.
R~E~G. TO $7.88
· ' · ti.OTNIN'IIII'r:

I

• 2-Ft. Wide . &amp;-Ft. long!
AICh 2-lone twt'ed -ef!ect on ·your cho1ce of
decorator colorS. 1QQO.o · Joeip pile polyproP'III!Ine oleltn yarn Weather -res•stsl"i t wal,llerubber b.ack1ng

BE.N

HECK'S
. IIEG.

I-SHIRTS

~nyone!

brown. Si:r:t!s 8 to 18.

-Shari 51eeve model' with plack et or zip fronl.
Choos.e lrom l;!tsorted print$, Sint : S, M, L.

.

RUG RUNNER

Admiral Corpor;~li on re5ervt's the ri11ht to change specifications without notice.

BAKER

341

Sturdy. we,ther;re~istafll
furniture . lighlweiQht
alumon·um frames .Snd
tough wo11en plast ic webbing. Strong enough lor

wai!.t . In colors of novy, .green, and

BODY SUIT

. and Patio FURNITURE

The new Admiral Glass·" N"·Giow·Range-updates any kitchen
and gives it the look. of tom orrow. 'Its ceramic top is rugged
and durable, yet wipes· dean with a damp doth or sponge.
Cooking areas are design ·marked, yet inches away there is no
heat. Cook ~none, warm on an!)ther, use the others as suppl),
storage. Both a cooktop and a count,e rtop. Contrnuous Clean
• , ing oven and inner door work for you while you .cook. Feah,Hes automatic Timer and Minute Minder, " Fiex-0-Heat"
Control with infi1tite settings on high wattage "sPeed heat''
su~face units;r In white, avocado, harvest gold and copper
bronze . 45'¥a " H, 29'l'a" W, 25" D. 1-Year MaSiercare Main·
tenance warranty.

j

\8

$477

COATS

Model FES3037

'

9 ta

TO

INFANT
IOYS' &amp; GIRLS'

CON11NUOUS CLEANING
AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC RANGE

.

f*O&lt;I .

HECK'S REG.
TO $5.99

DELUXE 30"

-

1~&lt;00

$477

.

'

&lt;O'''""'I . 1n•~•k~l""' '
Pot ado and out!JI •he g,,f,,n Part, Co on
•• In da&lt;ran, &lt;alton. ond p&lt;&gt;l r•''"" All

AND

SEASON ' S
BIGGEST
BARGAIN!

THREE HOURGLASS FIGURES, two antique lamr•
aad one ap-to-date Peggy Tumbro, Watchung, N. ·•
antique dealer, are part of the New York Flea Martel'
doings . .Tbe lam1. are calletl "~one Wltb tbe . Wl!!d."

PARTY
DRESSES
c............ ...

4 to 14.

SJ77

a

on the bill is expected next
week.
Rep. Martin P. Mullen,
sponsor of the amendment,
said it "is nothing more than to
follow
the
Ten
Commandments, and I think we all
believe in God and the Ten
Commandments.''

GIRLS'
SHEER

01• Ma (h i"'l Wa 1"0

blo , Por ""' P'*" · 100% r)ou
~ . ~ "' '· a..d '" Poly••••• o•
Pal1 a nd Co!! qn blon&lt;io 0,

.$39995

FIRM SUSPENDED
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Hallie Woodworth of Williamsfield, Ohio, has been suspended
as a registered livestock dealer
for
violating
payment
requirements , of the Pack~rs
. and Stockyards ACt, the
Department of Agriculture
said today.

THE REAL
EASTER
LOOK

fho "'oololi Ia·... 1M v •o .. ~·u p
loo k And ,ou"ll lo"" t~ e 1..,

No one hurt in two accidents'

miSchief in caves a mis~
demeanor. A final House vote

'

Mayor J;horne speaks to ~New Haven Womet/'s club

school year, wu Miss Candace
NEW HAVEN - Mr.a. c. T. were the New Haven
Jascott, who graduated .lr.0111 Dodd, chainnan of Cominunity Squad, Fire Department, the
Ohio University In March. She Improvement, New Haven need of a new sewage plant,
is from Middletown, N. J.,
Woman's Club, lntr«&lt;ueed the and the repair of a bridge on
Plans were made for the mayor of New Haven ; John old Rt. 33. A.request and ancounty board to hllL'lt i meeting Thorne, at a recent meeting of swer period followed.
of all local boards Of the · club at New Haven Public
The club members dis(:u.ssed
county,pllL'lSibly set this month. Library 1ocial room. He spoke using Sllllle of the money from
A_ speaker will .be secured·. I, of projects· that could be a chicken barbecue scheduled
County Supt. Robert Bowen "worked out to Improve the for April 28, at the Fire Station
was authorized to attend a community.
in New Haven, to fix up the
county superintendent~! conLand .has already been kitchen at New Haven Public
ference at Salt Fork Lodge In acquired on New Haven ~brary. Assisla))ce from .other
cambridge the middle or May. Heights
for· --a -small organizations will be greatly
'l'he-lloard adopted· a right to recreational area which will appreciated .
read resolution which, in have playground equipment
The president of New Haven
esSence, pledges the board will later. Other subjects discussed Woman's Club, Mrs. Robert
continue to support goals and
objectives of the Ohio Right to
Read Program and will continue to assess and improve
reading prograll)s within
NEW HAVEN- Don't forget the Sbowooat Revue will
budget limitations.
be Ibis Saturday, April 7, at 8 p.m. at tbe New Haven
Bus driver certificates wre
Tb\'&amp;tre.
Mrs . Paul Powell, director;· Mrs. Eugene Hester,
issued to Beverly .Spires and
Assistant Director, and many other people woo have
Edward Lemaster and inworked bard, hope to bave'alarge crowd turn oot.
suring of office equip!Jient was
The show Is spouored by the New Haven Woman's
discussed but no aclil!n was
Club and proceed&amp; wlll be used to beneftt the co'inmunlty. .
taken. The board entered Into
Come and see those glamoro111 Calendar gtrl,s, Ding a
an agreement with the Meigs
Dollg Girls and some attractive beauties In their colorful
County Cooperative E1tension
'
costumes.
Service for copying
service.
Thirty-live acts are scheduled. Come and enjoy lbe
Attending were Supt. Bowen
evening, and at the same Ume, benefit yoor community.
and board .members, Harold
See you at the Showboat Revue!
Lohse, Harold Roush, VIrgil
Atkins, Gordon Collins and
George Perry.

The resignation .of a speech
therapist was.accepted and her
replacement was hired by the
Meigs County Board of
Education Tuesday l)!ght.
Resigning effective at the
end of this school year was
Mrs. Pat Love whose husband
is graduating from· Ohio
--...JJniversity. The coupl~ will be ·
leaving this area. Hired to
replace Mrs. Love as one of two
speech therapists hired by the
coWlty, effeclivetor the 1973-71

'

'.

~

UDIES'IIKIMI
HECK'S REG.
$1.99

PANTIES
I oolo:.rKi • •! ~ IQ(O " ' "' I~ ,..~ 1 !01 or
~0110 1 1.

Si roo

~

HICK'S
IIG.
71' IACH

Ia 7 ..

SLIPPERS
..Molclod """YI oole . Moc"hi"'l

"'&lt;II~

ot&gt;G drr : 1&lt;1119~1 br l&gt;o•~J liltl . '" •
.Oh,to , ~·•• , blwe, .,.,;,. , ofld rod,

UDIES'
GOLF·TENMIS

SOCK
Nylo:.n•co"""· Wt.;to bodr "'"h c&lt;&gt;lcr
etJXMt lf i"' on&lt;f ..,,.. 1. s;.. ,, 9 ..,
lh,

�•

•

.

•

•

t

I
•
•

•

•

.

.'

'•

•

'

.

12- The Daily sentinel;
Middleport-Pomeroy, u.,
.

•
O"UAILY
10 TO 9

OPEIIIAILY.
10 TO 9

. O"IDAILY
10 TO 9

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9
SUIDAy-,
1T07

RODS
ANGLER
5' SPIN CAST ROD

'

$1

It !050

DURA PAK
ULTRA LIGHT

··SPIN REEL

SPIN·REEL
Pu1h -buHon inter,hangeable spool has
precision drog _adjullmenl. o4 YJ to I
retrieV* on smoo th · nmning bQII bearings, fingertip onli·reYers., frict io nlen
spiral geon. Alum inum dit co51 hou1·
in'g, sp(lol oM spool cup for perfec1

UlrFIA UGHT....;.dovbJe ball bearing ,
Choice ol right or left hond retrieYe .
Sn~.f-4p0ol

l -1&gt;~ #"*
-

...

'DIAWA ULTRA-LITE ·
OR FRESH WATER

-:"

88

anod iud, I'IOn -carra ·
non -clip , Slow a~cillotion keep~
perfect r;,..., ~pool i ng . Gea r ratio 3.5 to
I

~ i ve ,

88

$

HECK'S REG. '2A9

•

SI'D.TS DEI'T.

HECK'S REG. 110.98

TRUE TEMPER ·
SPIN CAST RODS

$688

• TemperCote on all wi'nds • Anodized alum inum
sea ts on spinni ng. and fly e Improve~. app_eoronc:;e
with color change on unde rpaint for brightness ~
Offset lightn ing plunger handle on spi-n costing •
Keavy chromed guides qnd tip t op

FISH HOOKS
100 II PAC:K

HECK'S REG. $9.99 .

.

PRIMUS
PROPANE

BERKLEY
FISH LINE .
!4 lb . spool . . .
monofilament line.

\

SPIN CAST ROD
Cork handle. 3
guides . Medium
weight.

20" DELUXE METAL BASE CABINET

EAGLE CLAW

rJ£:IiJIP -.4 ° : ;.· ~:tj

ANGLER.

$19CJ

Colo" 0$~;;·Xl

* Floo1ing type .

HECK'S REG.

~2.99

CHEMOLD
VICTOR .·

TENNIS'

ST U ni.del plol ·

RACKET

_ __...!:!!tK'S R.EG.
$23.99 .

HECK'S
REG. •6.99 ·

5'x7' NYLON$

3 BURNER

·

.STOVE · ·· . ·
HECK'S REG. 131_.99
EVEREADY

"D" SIZE BATTERIES

2-BURNER STOVE
Two Bu rne rs. II " be·

$17""

!vel copocity .

SPQRTS DEPT.

6 VOLT

HECK'S
REG.
$22.99

~VEREADY

LANTERN BAITE~Y

99

2-PACK

e

Steel plated ·recessed
handles.
• Bottle openers:
·• Safety latch .

TENNIS BALLS

3

e Throws. o bu lle tlike beam
!It mile Unbreok~ble lens
e Pu sh- b utto n switch e

e

HECK'S
REG.
$24.99

battery .

FOR

$}29
··--

•

11,44

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99
.•••• 1 41

TIRE
GAUGE

ROLL-ON

· DEODORANT

89&lt;

EYE DROPS

~. 87~l"u&lt;.STIC

HECK'S
REG.
$1.24

HECK'S
REG.
$1.24

$699

Da iSy qual ity . Gravity:

'"~o . :I~;O/~~~ repeating

Co

HECK'S
REG.
99' .

1

speed to half or double . e M~u nh in.
chuck .or drill spindle. • One year
guoro'ntee .

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

action .

velocity. Ste el sight ing
~cope ho~ peep apertu re . Hand ·
~ome wood gro tned super -strength
mold ed sto ck and forearm. Leng th ,
30 11?"

Quality built for . longer _,
life . .. " Galvonized" Muffler
Shells .for Maximum Rv'st Protec tion . , . Inner shell Weided To In ternal Baffles For Max imum
$trength . .. lee Mufflers look
And Perfor:m l ike Your Origin al ... All Ne cessa ry Parts T9
Complete Ysv'r lee lmtalloti~.n
Contained In One Package.

HECK'S
REG.
... $1.77

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

DAISY GOLD EAGLE
B.B. GUN

. DRIVEWAY

REBUILT

MARKERS

SPARK PLUGS

•

- 039(
.

$997

•
.

'-

J .

HECK'S
REG.

SET OF 8 .

Ml 1l

' .

.

99 1

'

'HECK'S REG .
$1.48

DEPT.
HECK'S
REG.
$12.99

AUTOMOTIVE .
DEPT.
I PINT

$1 o~K'SREG.

RETRACTABLE

.
'13.99
SPOITS DEPT.

BATTERY POST AND
TERMINAL BRUSH
CLEANER

KEY CHAIN
Not "affected by heat, rocks,
tor, oil, gas, and rock salt. It
stays white and never turns yel-

oz~

low.

. AUTOMQTIVE
D,T.

SNAP

'

RED I-KEY

NO MORE TANGLES

J.CHES AND

.

• For any eledric drill. ·• Change~

HECK'S REG.
. $8.99

·. LEE MUFFLERS

JOHNSON'S

Be.n:·
-

ATTACHMENT

HECK'S
. REG.
$1.99

OIIIGINAL TYPE

AUTQMOTIVE
DEPT.

vo lu e·pOcked gun With e•lro

12

VI

.ANGLE DRIVE

FOR MOST CARS

HECK'S REG. •1.99

oz.

BAN

Adjustable handle .·• Light we.i ght compact unit . • Hardened
tool· steel blades. For any electric ·
drill.

BIG
BOY
TIRE
PUMP ·

CARBURETOR .
CLEANER

~­

~1'

,.P'i. ·

75e

STATION WAGON FLAP
2.5

2-SPEED

TRIMMER ATTACHMENT

e

HARDWARE
DEPT. .

HECK'S REG •.$16.99

'""'"'"'

SPORTS DEPT.

.

.

Quickly sharpens rotary
· ·mower blades. For any electric drill .
·

•

HECK'S REG. 3 FOR i·1.99

$1888

6 VOLT
LANTERN

HECK'S ·
REG.

SPORrS
DEPT. ·

22 lh ~' X14lh "X1514"

e

.Uses 6 volt lan t ern

ATTACHMENT

•"-- _I

$1288

COOLER

..,..,

.

-

These practical, long wearing1
bags are comfortably insula!·
. . j
and padded. The ,cover
.· .···. '
i poplin and the linir1a
·' . ·:· · made of warm, soft Ill•lnn••l.
The zipper is \\jam~proof."

COLEMAN .
56 QUART .

.

HECK'S REG.
$33.88

-·

COLEMAN DELUXE

twee n cente rs . 3 ~ pint

.

HARDWARE DEPT.

BLADE SHARPENER

Zips thru plywood, plastic,
and metals. For any electric
drill.

AS.SORTED JIG SAW BLADES
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $28.99

2688

s2688

LAWNMOWER

drill.

• Jointed three piece aluminum
poles, e Zipper down center anr,l.
across bottom of door . e Complete
. with nylon ter&gt;t bag and nylon stoke
bog. • Window in rear with flop. •
lnternotion1al orange coated nylon·.

DELUXE

. HECK'S REG.
$33.88

JIGSAW
ATTACHMENT

For fast , powerful. automati c
screw ~riving . Full orie year facto ·
.· ry guorQntee . For' any electric

GREEN
ACE

es Sahara Walnut Smooth
Finish . • No center bor :
36"Wx 19"Dx63" H
.

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $33.88

.DRIVER

SI'HTS IIEI'T.

•4••

$

'

Hot shelf- Mag netic catch -

\

"'!"

ATTACHMENT

od ' '"'"•" Eo&lt;h o...Ji., duolly regulated
bt, rn o&lt;9"" ' 6 IQ 7 ~Our! o•ero9e toe long

COLEMAN

$2688

~iiiiiiii---SCREW &amp; NUT

HECK'S REG. $4.29

SPORTS DEPT.

SI'O.TS DEI'T.

f th t+andord d»!'I'&gt;Dble ' &lt;ylon.J~ " Poh
&lt;onnct lop on ~on g od noo ko l· ploted hoo.,
&lt;lo9lo, ~OO

.
e Po c k~h in fron1 • SMepP:in
potch • Zipper , front closure •

MINNOW BUCKET

2-BURNER STOVE
Ant;

FISHING
.• VESt ·

10 QT; METAL

HECK'S REG. 99'

4 shelves~Deep bin~
Door cotches-Arctic
White Finish. 30"W x
12"0 x 63'' H
HARDWARE DEPT.

63" METAL WARDROBE

Utility drawer- 2. shelves-;-Spring lock
hinges- Gold flecked heat&amp;. stain resistant
plastic top with stainless steel trim- Double
panel doors -- Arctic White ~inish.
24"Wx20" Dx36" H

63" METAL UTILITY CABINET

HECK'S REG.
99'

HECK'S R.EG. $3.48

&lt;l u i ~ ~,J

--l

HECK'S REG. $10.99

sa••

ALSO AVAILABLE IN ,FLY ROD
AND SPIN CAST
-

..

boloncifl.

~

SOUTH BEND
CASTING ROD

1-1--

$477

HECK'S REG.
$1.48

HECK'S REG.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

(

HECK'S REG.
77'

HECK'S REG.
$1.21 "

_. AUTOMOnVE DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

FASTfl(tr£f FROM

1.25

oz.

BEN-GAY
• Regular
• Greaseless

59&lt;

'

WILKINSON .

FISHER PRICE
POP GOES THE
WEASEL OR
RAIN OIIOPS

•

.BONDED BLADES
5's

AI.KA-SELTZD
HECK'S
l'tEG.
$1.49 .

HECK'S REG • .

88l

PLUS 36's ·

sac

POCKET RADIOS
CHOICE--

..

$188

EACH
HECK'S REG. $;1.52

. KECK'SREG. $1.31

COSMETIC
COS/1!11/C DEPT.

COSMETIC IIEPT.

TOY DEPT.

.

.. .

•

'

Heck's Reg. _
$1.33

9" "·

'PATCHES
. DOLL
OR

61/3'' BABY DOLL

IN CARRY ALL

CHOKE78C .
lACII
.

TOY DEPT.

lUNNY ON liKE
OR MECHANICAL
FUR RAIIIT •
CHOICE

6l~(ll

"BIG,,.,.,.
'DRAGSTER, DUNE BUGGY OR TRUCK

.'

FILLED ·

EASTER B'ASKETS
ASSO.TlD STYLIS

CHOICE

$124

NECK'S ·"-St. I• ·

·

TOY iiii'T.

23

TV RABB

$%l9
HECK'S REG.
$:4.44_

48"DANCING

RABBIT
$2'4
HECK'S REG. $3.44

�•

•

.

•

•

t

I
•
•

•

•

.

.'

'•

•

'

.

12- The Daily sentinel;
Middleport-Pomeroy, u.,
.

•
O"UAILY
10 TO 9

OPEIIIAILY.
10 TO 9

. O"IDAILY
10 TO 9

OPEl DAILY
10 TO 9
SUIDAy-,
1T07

RODS
ANGLER
5' SPIN CAST ROD

'

$1

It !050

DURA PAK
ULTRA LIGHT

··SPIN REEL

SPIN·REEL
Pu1h -buHon inter,hangeable spool has
precision drog _adjullmenl. o4 YJ to I
retrieV* on smoo th · nmning bQII bearings, fingertip onli·reYers., frict io nlen
spiral geon. Alum inum dit co51 hou1·
in'g, sp(lol oM spool cup for perfec1

UlrFIA UGHT....;.dovbJe ball bearing ,
Choice ol right or left hond retrieYe .
Sn~.f-4p0ol

l -1&gt;~ #"*
-

...

'DIAWA ULTRA-LITE ·
OR FRESH WATER

-:"

88

anod iud, I'IOn -carra ·
non -clip , Slow a~cillotion keep~
perfect r;,..., ~pool i ng . Gea r ratio 3.5 to
I

~ i ve ,

88

$

HECK'S REG. '2A9

•

SI'D.TS DEI'T.

HECK'S REG. 110.98

TRUE TEMPER ·
SPIN CAST RODS

$688

• TemperCote on all wi'nds • Anodized alum inum
sea ts on spinni ng. and fly e Improve~. app_eoronc:;e
with color change on unde rpaint for brightness ~
Offset lightn ing plunger handle on spi-n costing •
Keavy chromed guides qnd tip t op

FISH HOOKS
100 II PAC:K

HECK'S REG. $9.99 .

.

PRIMUS
PROPANE

BERKLEY
FISH LINE .
!4 lb . spool . . .
monofilament line.

\

SPIN CAST ROD
Cork handle. 3
guides . Medium
weight.

20" DELUXE METAL BASE CABINET

EAGLE CLAW

rJ£:IiJIP -.4 ° : ;.· ~:tj

ANGLER.

$19CJ

Colo" 0$~;;·Xl

* Floo1ing type .

HECK'S REG.

~2.99

CHEMOLD
VICTOR .·

TENNIS'

ST U ni.del plol ·

RACKET

_ __...!:!!tK'S R.EG.
$23.99 .

HECK'S
REG. •6.99 ·

5'x7' NYLON$

3 BURNER

·

.STOVE · ·· . ·
HECK'S REG. 131_.99
EVEREADY

"D" SIZE BATTERIES

2-BURNER STOVE
Two Bu rne rs. II " be·

$17""

!vel copocity .

SPQRTS DEPT.

6 VOLT

HECK'S
REG.
$22.99

~VEREADY

LANTERN BAITE~Y

99

2-PACK

e

Steel plated ·recessed
handles.
• Bottle openers:
·• Safety latch .

TENNIS BALLS

3

e Throws. o bu lle tlike beam
!It mile Unbreok~ble lens
e Pu sh- b utto n switch e

e

HECK'S
REG.
$24.99

battery .

FOR

$}29
··--

•

11,44

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99
.•••• 1 41

TIRE
GAUGE

ROLL-ON

· DEODORANT

89&lt;

EYE DROPS

~. 87~l"u&lt;.STIC

HECK'S
REG.
$1.24

HECK'S
REG.
$1.24

$699

Da iSy qual ity . Gravity:

'"~o . :I~;O/~~~ repeating

Co

HECK'S
REG.
99' .

1

speed to half or double . e M~u nh in.
chuck .or drill spindle. • One year
guoro'ntee .

HECK'S
REG.
$4.99

HARDWARE
DEPT.

HARDWARE
DEPT.

action .

velocity. Ste el sight ing
~cope ho~ peep apertu re . Hand ·
~ome wood gro tned super -strength
mold ed sto ck and forearm. Leng th ,
30 11?"

Quality built for . longer _,
life . .. " Galvonized" Muffler
Shells .for Maximum Rv'st Protec tion . , . Inner shell Weided To In ternal Baffles For Max imum
$trength . .. lee Mufflers look
And Perfor:m l ike Your Origin al ... All Ne cessa ry Parts T9
Complete Ysv'r lee lmtalloti~.n
Contained In One Package.

HECK'S
REG.
... $1.77

AUTOMOTIVE
DEPT.

DAISY GOLD EAGLE
B.B. GUN

. DRIVEWAY

REBUILT

MARKERS

SPARK PLUGS

•

- 039(
.

$997

•
.

'-

J .

HECK'S
REG.

SET OF 8 .

Ml 1l

' .

.

99 1

'

'HECK'S REG .
$1.48

DEPT.
HECK'S
REG.
$12.99

AUTOMOTIVE .
DEPT.
I PINT

$1 o~K'SREG.

RETRACTABLE

.
'13.99
SPOITS DEPT.

BATTERY POST AND
TERMINAL BRUSH
CLEANER

KEY CHAIN
Not "affected by heat, rocks,
tor, oil, gas, and rock salt. It
stays white and never turns yel-

oz~

low.

. AUTOMQTIVE
D,T.

SNAP

'

RED I-KEY

NO MORE TANGLES

J.CHES AND

.

• For any eledric drill. ·• Change~

HECK'S REG.
. $8.99

·. LEE MUFFLERS

JOHNSON'S

Be.n:·
-

ATTACHMENT

HECK'S
. REG.
$1.99

OIIIGINAL TYPE

AUTQMOTIVE
DEPT.

vo lu e·pOcked gun With e•lro

12

VI

.ANGLE DRIVE

FOR MOST CARS

HECK'S REG. •1.99

oz.

BAN

Adjustable handle .·• Light we.i ght compact unit . • Hardened
tool· steel blades. For any electric ·
drill.

BIG
BOY
TIRE
PUMP ·

CARBURETOR .
CLEANER

~­

~1'

,.P'i. ·

75e

STATION WAGON FLAP
2.5

2-SPEED

TRIMMER ATTACHMENT

e

HARDWARE
DEPT. .

HECK'S REG •.$16.99

'""'"'"'

SPORTS DEPT.

.

.

Quickly sharpens rotary
· ·mower blades. For any electric drill .
·

•

HECK'S REG. 3 FOR i·1.99

$1888

6 VOLT
LANTERN

HECK'S ·
REG.

SPORrS
DEPT. ·

22 lh ~' X14lh "X1514"

e

.Uses 6 volt lan t ern

ATTACHMENT

•"-- _I

$1288

COOLER

..,..,

.

-

These practical, long wearing1
bags are comfortably insula!·
. . j
and padded. The ,cover
.· .···. '
i poplin and the linir1a
·' . ·:· · made of warm, soft Ill•lnn••l.
The zipper is \\jam~proof."

COLEMAN .
56 QUART .

.

HECK'S REG.
$33.88

-·

COLEMAN DELUXE

twee n cente rs . 3 ~ pint

.

HARDWARE DEPT.

BLADE SHARPENER

Zips thru plywood, plastic,
and metals. For any electric
drill.

AS.SORTED JIG SAW BLADES
DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $28.99

2688

s2688

LAWNMOWER

drill.

• Jointed three piece aluminum
poles, e Zipper down center anr,l.
across bottom of door . e Complete
. with nylon ter&gt;t bag and nylon stoke
bog. • Window in rear with flop. •
lnternotion1al orange coated nylon·.

DELUXE

. HECK'S REG.
$33.88

JIGSAW
ATTACHMENT

For fast , powerful. automati c
screw ~riving . Full orie year facto ·
.· ry guorQntee . For' any electric

GREEN
ACE

es Sahara Walnut Smooth
Finish . • No center bor :
36"Wx 19"Dx63" H
.

HARDWARE DEPT.

HECK'S REG. $33.88

.DRIVER

SI'HTS IIEI'T.

•4••

$

'

Hot shelf- Mag netic catch -

\

"'!"

ATTACHMENT

od ' '"'"•" Eo&lt;h o...Ji., duolly regulated
bt, rn o&lt;9"" ' 6 IQ 7 ~Our! o•ero9e toe long

COLEMAN

$2688

~iiiiiiii---SCREW &amp; NUT

HECK'S REG. $4.29

SPORTS DEPT.

SI'O.TS DEI'T.

f th t+andord d»!'I'&gt;Dble ' &lt;ylon.J~ " Poh
&lt;onnct lop on ~on g od noo ko l· ploted hoo.,
&lt;lo9lo, ~OO

.
e Po c k~h in fron1 • SMepP:in
potch • Zipper , front closure •

MINNOW BUCKET

2-BURNER STOVE
Ant;

FISHING
.• VESt ·

10 QT; METAL

HECK'S REG. 99'

4 shelves~Deep bin~
Door cotches-Arctic
White Finish. 30"W x
12"0 x 63'' H
HARDWARE DEPT.

63" METAL WARDROBE

Utility drawer- 2. shelves-;-Spring lock
hinges- Gold flecked heat&amp;. stain resistant
plastic top with stainless steel trim- Double
panel doors -- Arctic White ~inish.
24"Wx20" Dx36" H

63" METAL UTILITY CABINET

HECK'S REG.
99'

HECK'S R.EG. $3.48

&lt;l u i ~ ~,J

--l

HECK'S REG. $10.99

sa••

ALSO AVAILABLE IN ,FLY ROD
AND SPIN CAST
-

..

boloncifl.

~

SOUTH BEND
CASTING ROD

1-1--

$477

HECK'S REG.
$1.48

HECK'S REG.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

(

HECK'S REG.
77'

HECK'S REG.
$1.21 "

_. AUTOMOnVE DEPT.

AUTOMOTIVE DEPT.

FASTfl(tr£f FROM

1.25

oz.

BEN-GAY
• Regular
• Greaseless

59&lt;

'

WILKINSON .

FISHER PRICE
POP GOES THE
WEASEL OR
RAIN OIIOPS

•

.BONDED BLADES
5's

AI.KA-SELTZD
HECK'S
l'tEG.
$1.49 .

HECK'S REG • .

88l

PLUS 36's ·

sac

POCKET RADIOS
CHOICE--

..

$188

EACH
HECK'S REG. $;1.52

. KECK'SREG. $1.31

COSMETIC
COS/1!11/C DEPT.

COSMETIC IIEPT.

TOY DEPT.

.

.. .

•

'

Heck's Reg. _
$1.33

9" "·

'PATCHES
. DOLL
OR

61/3'' BABY DOLL

IN CARRY ALL

CHOKE78C .
lACII
.

TOY DEPT.

lUNNY ON liKE
OR MECHANICAL
FUR RAIIIT •
CHOICE

6l~(ll

"BIG,,.,.,.
'DRAGSTER, DUNE BUGGY OR TRUCK

.'

FILLED ·

EASTER B'ASKETS
ASSO.TlD STYLIS

CHOICE

$124

NECK'S ·"-St. I• ·

·

TOY iiii'T.

23

TV RABB

$%l9
HECK'S REG.
$:4.44_

48"DANCING

RABBIT
$2'4
HECK'S REG. $3.44

�•

t

I

.

15 -1'\&gt;e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pume~, 0., April 4, 1973

Meigs' Museum could be-

·OPEl DAILY

OPEIDAILY

10 TO' 9

.

10 TO 9

.
There's a popular image of musewns. A museum is full of old
objects people of past generations used and cared about · relics of
~ind's greatest sins, its wars; and a great variety of leftover
artifacts of a way of life no longer relevant to the 1971b,
Not necessarify .
The Meigs County Pioneer and , Historical Society 'has ·
engaged to create a Meigs Counl)'_ Museum that would be more
thBJ_&gt; a respository of dUStY remalns of many yesterdays. The ·
Society expects to launch this sununer what probably will be a
(our-year (or more ) project tor funds to create the Meigs County

Museum.

.----:- ~·

To this end, Design-Architect Gerard Hilferty, whose ad·
dress ill "The Log Cabin," Route 2, Pbmeroy, Ohi&lt;&gt;-Peach Fork
Road - prepared a prospectus last autumn•which was approved
by the Society as a guide to the development of the Meigo

M-8415

museum.

So thal'ti!e general public may share Mr, Hilferty's and the
Society's vision, The Sentinel herewith poblishes parts of the
Musewn Study-Proposal prepared by Mr, Hilferty. That vision,
we submit, is worthy of sympathetic cohsideration by every
citizen prideful of his past, sensitive to his todays, or concerned
about his future .
•
What follows is from the Hilferty study:
A WORD ABOUT MUSEUMS
Until quite recently, the word museum conjured up images
of tall raws of dusty glass cases filled with ahelter-okelter array
of strange objects. Visitors, especially young ones, soon became
bored or confused by thousan&lt;l's of items, seemingly unrelated,
ide~tified only occasionally by hard to ·read tags, or "explained"
bY bewildering pages of copy. CUrators, perhaps feeling a bit
guilty at their storerooms prinuning full with dubious "donated"
treasures, tried to display everything, even if an object's
variation -historicalworth was minimaL And glass was always
that gardol shield betwee~ you and history. Perhaps ihose heavy
cases were meant to symbolize the impossibility· of ever again
returning to those hallowed days ... but isn't history the ledger of
time, and isn't time an ongo;l,g flowing thing, and isn't this very
paragraph already history? And what of our grandparent's
hopes and aspirations for us, their future generations? Are they
not also a chapter of history? And where shall we go with our
dreams, will they not be history too ?
History as a continuum, a"S an interwoven fabric of places,
ideas, technology, generations, and purposes; is a concept which
contemporary mus.eum thinking has been grappling with. It is a
challenging and exciting problem, How do we tell the whole
story? How do we communicate with our young? How do we
make a dusty museum come alive to speak to u8 :
In the past, historical societies have been content to "freeze"
a period of time, to decorate a series of rooms in _a particular
style and to fill them wilh furniture, bric.a-brac, and household
paraphernalia vaguely relating to that era. ilut these objects do
not tell even a remotely complete story, just as isolating and
displaying a ranch house on Bradbury Hill would hot tell us what
"life" was Ilk~ in October of 1972 in the county of Meigs; state of
Ohio. Meigs County did not appear easily overnight. It is the
resultant of a series of ongoing forces (economic, political,
.geographic, etc,) exerting themselves over a long period of time,
Display of a spinning wheel and a flintlock rifle cannot hope to
communicate the dynamic interplay of people, place, and .
destiny that occurred in the birthing of our Meigs County.
'
Meigs County occupies a uniqua historic and geographic
position as it lies bordering the most scenic twists and benda of
the beautiful Ohio River, thai water road west. Halfway between
Pittsburgh's storehouses and Cincinnati's gateway, Pomeroy,
the county seat,was a welcome stop. Its coal, salt, and industry
once made it the seventh largest city on the Ohio. Its beautiful
convoluted hills and hollows have been home and shelter to many
and varied peoples, from its original Indian caretakers to,the
wav.es of Scotch, Welsh, and Gennan immigrants.
Meigs County was carved from the Ohio Land Company, 'the
first land available in the Northwest Territory. We can boast the
oldest standing courthouse in Ohio; and we can Claim being the
builders of some qf.'the first steamboats on the Ohio, and having
the only effective militia to blunt John Morgan's raid during the
Civil War. This encounter with Morgan in Meigs County was the
only Civil War fighting to occur on Ohio soil.
Paddlewheel excursion boats, ferries, bridges, railroad
stations on wharves, clanging trollies, salt wells, organ factories,
priZe:winning dairy farms, Indian mounds, the longest conveyor
belt in the world ... as we continue to look into our county's past,
we are sure to find that we certainly have a rich and varied story
which must be passed on to our fellow Meigs Countians of the
present and future. How shall we tell the story? What ar~ the
facts and details which should he included?
CONCEPT
A good local history museum sliOuld have something in it for .
everybody since it is the most public of institutions. It should be a
community cultural center, knowledge exchange, .heritage
repository, and educational tooL It shouldbe a bridge s~aruiing
the gehe~ation~. between our senior citizens of vanished or
vanishing historic eras and our youth, so that they may have a
sense of place' and time through local pride,

'

G. E. CASSETIE

RECORDER

GENERAL ELEC!~IC

SUNBEAM

FRY PAN

STEAM IRON
Iii'''""'

• . Solid - stat~t

• Co mpatible monaura l cry1tal ca"ridge
with dvol lynfhetlc Klpphire stylus won 't
damage stereo records. High-i mpact polyrene case. four -speed chang er ... RPM
spindle induded .. •·. Powerful 6' : avo I
dyl'!ami&lt; 1.peaker.

• Sl&lt;l•nlt,. s ..t1 &lt;ook•"'.l , .,, •.,,. " du•ablo. o{nt '"
c'-on. .,.,0 K•ol&lt;k ,..,,r .,nt, pi "' ""'P·G..CIV ~ and
!oQ"'f le
.t. .. n.ng • " 1 •11 ·~ .l•ll• •

Salol}' 11.-.1 hO!
a ga i•ut Qc&lt;n;lorotal hpiJo" ll JO
• •~ •• for tc,.nttf&gt;c dlmib..110n &lt;&gt;I , ,..,,. ., .., " "' " • &gt;&lt;&gt;lo~~ tt . S,..hct..• ~ Grr in01antl• . p. ,,.., .,. nt
1 ,.~;.&lt; ..,
~ VOO. W(l'" 11 .. 1(I &lt;J I&gt;Q t . S~n!.11 •tH Itank. Cont o~ ••G
wMt 11&lt;!.-.cllt . ln .. rc~blt &lt;&lt;&gt;r ol l&lt;&gt;r ortl&gt;. r ltond l ut ·
cord.

- '"""' lor •.,,,.,.

p,_.,

witk loll l.•v la o

'""-' at ...

"'"'"'"II &lt;oolun g ool and v ••ow

crophone and line co rd storage • Sli de-a •
motic T-bor function conlrol .

•

HECK'S REG. $37.96

JEWII.RY DEPT.

JEWElRY

•

A 1pecia ! gro up of ~ - trac k tope ~ortridge~ .
Feol v ri'r!'Q grea1 g rou ps pl o y1n g g reat
tunes fro m the pelf an d pren! nl. A truly
great bargain, good onl y while qua ntities
loti.

fALC) • O~p tedured ca binet • Double
action couette eject- first position opens
door , Hcond position-e jech conette e Mi-

HECK'S REG. $31.96

HECK'S REG. $2S.96

STEREO TAPES

design • Built -in f wo·woy

Power • Bwih·in Auto matic level Co ntro l

S2J99

S2f'9

8-TRACK

JEWElRY /JEPT.

or

PANASONIC
•

436

TOOT-A-LOOP

HD-5

f'

G., •.WAFFLESAKER

.,

SANDWICH GRIL·L
Makes 6 c!el icia us waffhH- Gri lh wndwichcu,
hamburgers, ch ee~bu rg e n -lr i e~ bocan a nd
egg s an d olher types of foods- G!!I'Ieral Eleclric
Double Non·Stid Cooling on grids keeps food-/
from slicking - a llows 1t0sy cleaning- Automatic
signal lighT indicotn when waflles ore ready to
ser,..e . fronl control is e-asy Ia use lor baking waffles, fry ing or_gr itling. ·

S pceciol screen ve nt to keep even the longeSt hair
from get1in9 ton9led . Works on ,long or short
ha ir- lighl-weighl - smoll sit.e - two sPeed blow•
ing .500 bi9 wotls of power.

$1599

RADIO

•
DUALS

VW-S7

'

EDITOR VIEWER

10 SPEED
VANWYCK

.PORTABLE MIXER

R-72
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AulomCiic b110ter relea~. Fingertip control. Twin
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1101/SEWAIIf
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4'

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By T. Allim Wolter

II

,~ ___Mason ·Coun. ty
:::

Ne
· w·s Notes

:r/l

~

r

··-·

•

~

~

By Alma Marshall .
'

proceed at the same time. More than
National Forests a source.of healthful
200 square miles of land ·are
. leisure, the timber industry considers
photographed from the air in a day to
many of these woodlanda a vital
aid in resoufce mariagement. They
workshop.- Between breakfast and
improve timber stands and fish-and
suppertime,. on our typical day, mnre
game habitat ; construct family
than 50 million board feet of National
camping and picnic uni~ ; plant over
Forest timber is harvested in accord..
400 acres of deteriorated hillsides and
a nee with sound forestry practices. ·
several miles nf eroding stream
For lbe. right to remove t.Qjs timber,
channels - all their work is directly
enough to build 5,000 homes, some
related to conserving , restoring and
25,000 operators, large and small, will
enhancing, the land for usefulness and - pay about $800,000 into the Federal
beauty.
Treasury on that typical day.
During the hunting season many
All these activities are conducted
thousands or sportsmen arc iri the
under the principle of multiple use, a
National Forests on any given day. By
concept that is adopted to the im·
the end of season, 111ore than 600,000
mediate needs of the public and lhe
are likely to hang trophy animals by
long-range !leeds of reSources and the
their camps.
rtation.
The warming r·ays of the sun drive
Thus the National Forests reflect
trput, bass and other fish into the
the best qualilies of people them·
depths and shadows along many of the
~elves. The people are a part of the
Bl,OOO miles of streams and rivers and
National Forest. We administer the
thousands of lakes in ·the National
lands "in the people 's behalf, in
Forests . And while the fish seek cool ,
cooperation and collaboration with
quiet, refuge, they in turn arc sought
the people every day of the year.'
for the evening's dinner by as many as
Every working day provides new
half a millipn men, women and
illuStrations of the close ties between
children, armed With fishing rods and
the American people and their ·
high hopes.
National Forest.
.On-a summer day more than two
Although sometimes longed ior million Americans engage in camp·
gone are the-days when Forest Seriug, pi ¢ture-la kin g, hiking , .. pic·
vice people sat in their lookout towers
nicking or other· vacation pursuits.
searching. for the inevitable forest
While the public fi nds the
fire.

District Ranger
JRONTON - I have often heard
the question, "What does the Forest
Service do? I" or, " What kind of a c~
Livities does the Forest Service
become involved in ?~'
Traditionally a Forest .Service
employee has been pictured ~s a
person sitting in a fire tower scanning
the hori!On for forest fires. During the
early years or the Forest Service this
may have been t~ue but through the
years this picture has changed considerably.
Let's take a look at a typical day (if
indeed there is such a day) in the
Nati" ·. ' 1 Forest SYstem. The ac.
tiviti~s span a wide variety of activities and .intereStS- in a wide range
of places extending virtually the
length and breadth of the land.
The sun rises on milHons of big
game and SIIJ.~!)..game animals at
home iri their National Fore~t habitat.
CoWJtless birds sttetch their wings,
feed their young and bathe them.
selves in the morning sun.
If our typical day occurs in. April,
50 or 60 wildfires are ,likely to break
out and char about 700 acres be£ore
they are detected and extinguished.
Thousands of men and women of
the Forest Service are involved in
many kinds 91 programs which must

:~:;:::~=;;;;;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:.-;;::~~:::::::::;:;:;::-~:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::..'::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;~::::::::::::{:::::::::::~:

}

'·

Here is another of Millard Gress' stories from the past
Millard plainly is a vfry observing person as shown in his stories,
and therefore are passed on to readers of the bend,
Many of lis remember the late Charlie Schwarz and the late
Ed Bletner and his store. We also remember the old iron fence
that once surrounded the Meier (or Myer) property which was
next to the Mason Depot
Gress said that back in 1908 the railroada were running at full
speed. Mason, then a railroad town, Was a connecting link to the
Hocking Valley Railroad. At Pomeroy the Hocking Valley had a
roundhouse at Coalport. There, according to Gress. a number of
steam engines were kept. Several passenger trains l~ft Pomeroy.
The morning passenger train of the Hocking Valley would come
to Pomeroy at 9:30aJn, and leave in the afternoon at I :30.
·The first pa~~senger train that came through Mason was at 9
a.m. and the up train for Pittsburgh was at 10 a.m. This train
stopped at all the small towns. The afternoon trains ran fast
limited trips which also stopi&gt;ed at Mason. ·
At the time of which Gress writes, the Baltimore and Ohio
used the small4-4.0 60.inch driver OOo class engines ; later, they
acquired the 8j)O class 4-1.0 larger drivers.
There were eight passenger trains going through Mason in
1908, and the trams were uslllllly crowded when they pulled into
the Mason Depot. Many of the passengers got off here, and
crossed over to Pomeroy to board the Hocking Valley for
Columbus and points west.
,
A TEENAGER AT THE TIME, Cress remembers carrying
baggage to the ferryboat. Some of the young women of the town
came to the station to see if any good looking fellows got off.
Some of· the town loafers, ·according to Gress, spent their
tiine at the depot whittling.on Ed Myers picket fence. lie got
angry one day, tore the fence down and put up an iron fence.
After that they started whittling on the big maple tiee nearby.
Mason had along side track by Ed Bletner's store where the
trains passed each ·other. The saltfurnace nearby shipped coal as
well as salt. An old 1372, a steam engine, a U.O with no nang on
her middle drive wheel went in on the old salt works track one . day to get a box car of salt. The car had left its train on the main
line, expecting to be hack in a few minutes.
When the old 1372 got &lt;)n that turn by the former I)&lt;e Smith
place, the blind wheel jumped the track, pulling all of the wheels
off, and buried itself in the rotten tieS. It was tipped, according to
Gress, at a 45-&lt;legree angle.
The fireman jumped off while another. man kept spinning the
wheels, making the sparks fly, This was excitement in this small
town and soon a large crowd had gathered. Gress and his late
brother, Bub, took off to see Old 1372de.railed.
AS SOON AS THE BOYS got to the salt works, they heard old
888, the fast train, blowing f~r Clifton, The boys knew instantly by
the whistle which train was coming; it was the fast train and they
were curious to see what Charlie Schwarz would do. And they_
were curious as to how he would get past Old 1273.
The boys were close by as Schwarz stopped 888 and said:
"What's wrong, boys?" They replied, "Old 1372 iS off the

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three basic directions a musewn can move in:

warehouse. The educational approach ill based on interpretation
and interaclion. The musewn attempts to stimulate the visitor
with the reality and meaning of historr by showing as many
aspects- relations of part to whole as possible. The goal is the
overview, the "whole story," background as well as details.
Interest is maintained by a varied P&lt;"esenta"tion . (Change of
mediwn, slides, film, modeli, audio, graphics, illustration, etc.)
Of course, if the educational approach moves . only in this
direction, it can get costly and gimmicky. If the museum chooseS
a community-oriented direction, it uses a personal, very active
approach, It fuvolves generating programs of historic and
cultural worth . The museum provides a center for the transmission of heritage and knowled ge by word of mouth, actual
demonstration, and comrimniiy exhibitions: It becomes a
meeting place for craft and music groups, senior citizens; story
hours, display o\ school history projects, local collections, industrial, trade, and art shows are held. Overemphasis can lead to
a commWtitY center with no overvi~.lt... logic, or basic
- ,.
·
background story.
It is the recommendation of this study that a balance between these three possible directions be found, with a ne!dble
emphasis to be determined by actual cornmWJity-needs and
capabilities. There appears to he no musewn within forty miles
which comes close to this concept; and though much material
has been lost, much more is waiting. We are still rich with folk
who remember and are eager to shru;e .
Meigs County is still virgin territory for a museum with
program'and purpose, a~d this unique opportunity should not be
wasted.
1

track at Ike Smith's"
munication), and community (people),
The boys liked Big Charlie; he would throw the bpys off some
AS mentioned above, most history museums tend to be apples from his engine. (The Schwarzes had a large orchard in
simply repositories, as it is perhaps the .easiest and least ex- · the area of Second street and Foglesong road in Mason. The old
pensive. The museum becomes a stofage-&lt;!ataloging specialist, a Schwarz home place was torn down recently and a new chW'ch
now stands on the fonner Schwarz property. )
.When Big Charlie got .to the scene of the accident, he said to
Bill Cassidy, "Gel down off there, you ain't doing nothing but
digging a hole in the mud, You can't get an engine back on the
track that way. Help me get that frog off the back of the tender."
The boys were curious as to how they could get the engine on ·
with a frog . The frog was placed where the drive wheels would
climb over it. Charlie got up in the engine and slowly pulled back
·on the steam throttle. Old 1372 climbed lhe iron and dropped back
'
.. .
\
on the rails. The men got on and Charlie took the old engine out on
· th~main line, leaving the box car ·ot salt behind . ·
Big Charli~ looked at his watch and headed for Parkersburg!

·PATTERN

FILE

are

~epository (catalog of things), educat(on (concepts and com·

$222
-

There

Your Wayne National Forest

Col. Breckner .welcome_d home
. WRIGHT PATTERSON AIR
FoRCE BASE, Ohio (UPI) Returning prisoner of war Air
Force Lt. Col. William J .
Breckner told a welcoming
crowd of 300 pe?sons here Sun•
day the relationship between
released POWs and the _Ameri·
can-public would be a "great
love affair . "
The Almanac
By United press lnternatlonnl
Today is Wednesday, April 4,
the 94th day ol1973 with, 271 to
follow .
.
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Jupiter.
The evening st&lt;ir is &amp;!turn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
Dorothea Lynde Dix, Ameri·
ca n pioneer of prison ·reform,
was
Aprilin4,history
1802. :
Onborn
this day
In 1841, President William
Harrison diec:I of pneumo(!ia one
month after being inaugurated .
J ohn Tyler became the first
vice-president to become chief
executive due to a death .
In 1917, the U.S. Senate, by a
vote of 82 to six , approved
Pr e~ idcnt Woodrow Wilsl)n's
resolution calling'for a declaration of war against Germany :
In 1933, n crew members
were lost when the U.S. Navy
dirigible " Akron " foundered in
a storm and fell into the ocean
off Barnegat ~ay, N.J ..
In 1968, Nesr~ civil rights
leader Martin Luther King was
assassinated in Memphis, ·Tenn.
James Earl Ray pleaded guilty
and was convicted 11 months
later and sentenced to 99 yea rs
in jail..
·.

Breckner was one or three
Air Force PoWs who arrived
at this 'Operation Homecoming" center SWlday. The two
other Air Force officers were
Capt Michael H. LaBeau, 24,
lincoln ~ark, Mich.; and 1st
Lt. Robert M. Hudson, 25,
Dallas, Tex .
The last Qf 31 ex·POWs to
arrive here for medical examinations and intellig.ence debriefings, the three limded in a
heavy downpour aboard a C.
141 Starlifter from Hawaii. As;,
the three men caine out of, the
plane, the rain stopped.
&lt; Breckner, 39, Colum1:1bs,
Ohio, whose F4C Phantom jet
was shot down June 30, 1972,
told the .crowd, "We always
knew you cared and we feel the
affection you have for us. I
think it's going to be a great
love affair."
,
He was greeted by his wife,
I

Cheryl ; son William, 5; daugh- I..inda; son ; Sean, 2; and par~
ter Kristen , 3; and his father ents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold G.
and stepmother.
Hudson, said, "This ~s a great
" It's great to be home," said crowd ·and this is a great
Breckner . "America is the country. You're aJJ great
greate~t place on Earth and Americans. What can I say?
home is the greatest place in Thank you very much."
America.' '
The three will be allowed to
LaBeau and Hudaon were visit with friends and family
aboard tl1e same 8-02 bomber · WJtil Wednesday, when they
that was downed by enemy are scheduled to begin medical
· gunfire on Dec. 26, 1972.
testing and intelligence de' 'lt's sure great -to be back, 11 briefing::;.
said LaBeau ., "The receptions
The other 13 returning POWs
we've received every place aboard the plane continued on
have just been overwhelming. to other air bases in the north·
I'm very proud of the fact that . eastern United States after the
Americans are the greatest aircraft refueled.
people in the world and· 1 Of those 13 men , Air ·
certainly am proud to be a part Force Capt. ·Keith H. l.ewL&gt;,
or it. "
·
enroute to Andrews AFB, Md.,
LaBeau was greeted by his told ' officials the crutches he
wife, Ann, and his parents, was issued in Nor'th Vietnam
Mrs. and Mrs. Harold J. La· because of a leg· injury would
Beau.
be donated to the Air Force
Hudson, greeted by his wife, Musewn h_~re.

r--------------------·------···-Thru Apr. 7

(Sliced 85')

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Robinson's Cleaners
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Breaded..
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�•

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15 -1'\&gt;e Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pume~, 0., April 4, 1973

Meigs' Museum could be-

·OPEl DAILY

OPEIDAILY

10 TO' 9

.

10 TO 9

.
There's a popular image of musewns. A museum is full of old
objects people of past generations used and cared about · relics of
~ind's greatest sins, its wars; and a great variety of leftover
artifacts of a way of life no longer relevant to the 1971b,
Not necessarify .
The Meigs County Pioneer and , Historical Society 'has ·
engaged to create a Meigs Counl)'_ Museum that would be more
thBJ_&gt; a respository of dUStY remalns of many yesterdays. The ·
Society expects to launch this sununer what probably will be a
(our-year (or more ) project tor funds to create the Meigs County

Museum.

.----:- ~·

To this end, Design-Architect Gerard Hilferty, whose ad·
dress ill "The Log Cabin," Route 2, Pbmeroy, Ohi&lt;&gt;-Peach Fork
Road - prepared a prospectus last autumn•which was approved
by the Society as a guide to the development of the Meigo

M-8415

museum.

So thal'ti!e general public may share Mr, Hilferty's and the
Society's vision, The Sentinel herewith poblishes parts of the
Musewn Study-Proposal prepared by Mr, Hilferty. That vision,
we submit, is worthy of sympathetic cohsideration by every
citizen prideful of his past, sensitive to his todays, or concerned
about his future .
•
What follows is from the Hilferty study:
A WORD ABOUT MUSEUMS
Until quite recently, the word museum conjured up images
of tall raws of dusty glass cases filled with ahelter-okelter array
of strange objects. Visitors, especially young ones, soon became
bored or confused by thousan&lt;l's of items, seemingly unrelated,
ide~tified only occasionally by hard to ·read tags, or "explained"
bY bewildering pages of copy. CUrators, perhaps feeling a bit
guilty at their storerooms prinuning full with dubious "donated"
treasures, tried to display everything, even if an object's
variation -historicalworth was minimaL And glass was always
that gardol shield betwee~ you and history. Perhaps ihose heavy
cases were meant to symbolize the impossibility· of ever again
returning to those hallowed days ... but isn't history the ledger of
time, and isn't time an ongo;l,g flowing thing, and isn't this very
paragraph already history? And what of our grandparent's
hopes and aspirations for us, their future generations? Are they
not also a chapter of history? And where shall we go with our
dreams, will they not be history too ?
History as a continuum, a"S an interwoven fabric of places,
ideas, technology, generations, and purposes; is a concept which
contemporary mus.eum thinking has been grappling with. It is a
challenging and exciting problem, How do we tell the whole
story? How do we communicate with our young? How do we
make a dusty museum come alive to speak to u8 :
In the past, historical societies have been content to "freeze"
a period of time, to decorate a series of rooms in _a particular
style and to fill them wilh furniture, bric.a-brac, and household
paraphernalia vaguely relating to that era. ilut these objects do
not tell even a remotely complete story, just as isolating and
displaying a ranch house on Bradbury Hill would hot tell us what
"life" was Ilk~ in October of 1972 in the county of Meigs; state of
Ohio. Meigs County did not appear easily overnight. It is the
resultant of a series of ongoing forces (economic, political,
.geographic, etc,) exerting themselves over a long period of time,
Display of a spinning wheel and a flintlock rifle cannot hope to
communicate the dynamic interplay of people, place, and .
destiny that occurred in the birthing of our Meigs County.
'
Meigs County occupies a uniqua historic and geographic
position as it lies bordering the most scenic twists and benda of
the beautiful Ohio River, thai water road west. Halfway between
Pittsburgh's storehouses and Cincinnati's gateway, Pomeroy,
the county seat,was a welcome stop. Its coal, salt, and industry
once made it the seventh largest city on the Ohio. Its beautiful
convoluted hills and hollows have been home and shelter to many
and varied peoples, from its original Indian caretakers to,the
wav.es of Scotch, Welsh, and Gennan immigrants.
Meigs County was carved from the Ohio Land Company, 'the
first land available in the Northwest Territory. We can boast the
oldest standing courthouse in Ohio; and we can Claim being the
builders of some qf.'the first steamboats on the Ohio, and having
the only effective militia to blunt John Morgan's raid during the
Civil War. This encounter with Morgan in Meigs County was the
only Civil War fighting to occur on Ohio soil.
Paddlewheel excursion boats, ferries, bridges, railroad
stations on wharves, clanging trollies, salt wells, organ factories,
priZe:winning dairy farms, Indian mounds, the longest conveyor
belt in the world ... as we continue to look into our county's past,
we are sure to find that we certainly have a rich and varied story
which must be passed on to our fellow Meigs Countians of the
present and future. How shall we tell the story? What ar~ the
facts and details which should he included?
CONCEPT
A good local history museum sliOuld have something in it for .
everybody since it is the most public of institutions. It should be a
community cultural center, knowledge exchange, .heritage
repository, and educational tooL It shouldbe a bridge s~aruiing
the gehe~ation~. between our senior citizens of vanished or
vanishing historic eras and our youth, so that they may have a
sense of place' and time through local pride,

'

G. E. CASSETIE

RECORDER

GENERAL ELEC!~IC

SUNBEAM

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a ga i•ut Qc&lt;n;lorotal hpiJo" ll JO
• •~ •• for tc,.nttf&gt;c dlmib..110n &lt;&gt;I , ,..,,. ., .., " "' " • &gt;&lt;&gt;lo~~ tt . S,..hct..• ~ Grr in01antl• . p. ,,.., .,. nt
1 ,.~;.&lt; ..,
~ VOO. W(l'" 11 .. 1(I &lt;J I&gt;Q t . S~n!.11 •tH Itank. Cont o~ ••G
wMt 11&lt;!.-.cllt . ln .. rc~blt &lt;&lt;&gt;r ol l&lt;&gt;r ortl&gt;. r ltond l ut ·
cord.

- '"""' lor •.,,,.,.

p,_.,

witk loll l.•v la o

'""-' at ...

"'"'"'"II &lt;oolun g ool and v ••ow

crophone and line co rd storage • Sli de-a •
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•

HECK'S REG. $37.96

JEWII.RY DEPT.

JEWElRY

•

A 1pecia ! gro up of ~ - trac k tope ~ortridge~ .
Feol v ri'r!'Q grea1 g rou ps pl o y1n g g reat
tunes fro m the pelf an d pren! nl. A truly
great bargain, good onl y while qua ntities
loti.

fALC) • O~p tedured ca binet • Double
action couette eject- first position opens
door , Hcond position-e jech conette e Mi-

HECK'S REG. $31.96

HECK'S REG. $2S.96

STEREO TAPES

design • Built -in f wo·woy

Power • Bwih·in Auto matic level Co ntro l

S2J99

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or

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•

436

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HD-5

f'

G., •.WAFFLESAKER

.,

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Makes 6 c!el icia us waffhH- Gri lh wndwichcu,
hamburgers, ch ee~bu rg e n -lr i e~ bocan a nd
egg s an d olher types of foods- G!!I'Ieral Eleclric
Double Non·Stid Cooling on grids keeps food-/
from slicking - a llows 1t0sy cleaning- Automatic
signal lighT indicotn when waflles ore ready to
ser,..e . fronl control is e-asy Ia use lor baking waffles, fry ing or_gr itling. ·

S pceciol screen ve nt to keep even the longeSt hair
from get1in9 ton9led . Works on ,long or short
ha ir- lighl-weighl - smoll sit.e - two sPeed blow•
ing .500 bi9 wotls of power.

$1599

RADIO

•
DUALS

VW-S7

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EDITOR VIEWER

10 SPEED
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R-72
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large screen, built-in film marker, focusing, and line cord storage post. For regular eig~.t or sUper eight film .

10 Speeds, Icing, beah eggs . des~rts , wh ips,
blending , coke mixes, creams premixes, folds, stirs.
AulomCiic b110ter relea~. Fingertip control. Twin
powerful chrome beaters.

Sfl9

.
HECK'S REG. $14,96

HECK'S REG. $11.96

JEWElRY DEPT.

CAMERA
CASE
FOR POLAROID COLOR PACK

DUALS

MOVIE FILM

JEWElRY DEPT.

AIRQUiPT DELUXE

G.E.

SLIDE VIEWER

2-SLICE

TOASTER

SPLICER

CASSETTE

Handsome styling on th i~ toatter will com plime nt a ny
kitchen de cor. Temperature dial allows you to select
the darilness of your toas t.

HECK'S REG.
NO. 145

HECK'S
REG.
$8.76

HECK'S REG.
$4.99
JEWELRY

3.96

1

DEPT.

'

•

HEAD CLEANER

9tr

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$12;96

HECK'S REG. $1.19

/IWEZRY DEPT.

•
JEWElRY DEPT.

JEWElRY DEPT.

0-CEDAR

SQUEEZE MOP
.

REGAL
WARE
7-PIECE

""'""

STAINLESS STEfL

COOKWARE SET

HECK'S
REG.
$2.97
llti//SEWA/11
DEPT.

t

TERRI-TOWELS

3

ROLLs99¢

DUST MOP OR
BROOM
CHOICE

$18!.

HECK'S REG.
$4.66

IIOIISIWARI DEPT.

Consisb of,e I qt . Co,..ered Sa uce Po l'l
• 2 qt. Co .-ered Sa uc e P.an • 6 qt .
Dutch o ...en e 10 )1: · i1;1 . Q,..en fry fa li e
&lt;;ook Book, GuOronlel!l

~2''

· $1288 ·
HECK'SREG. $17.88

IIOIISIWA/11 DEPT.

lEGAL WARE
211&gt; QT. WHISlLIIIG
•

HECK'S REG. 47'

.

·I

TEAICETTU
AVOCADO e FLAME
eCOLD

'

THREAD CADDY

NION CARBIDE

TRASH BAGS
20 ct.

20 GAL

Holds 48 spools, 12 bob&lt;~{
Foam needl~.s~ion il)du
.,

94~
REG.

.... ~ilablo in r!.o"' otylt" h"' mug iup01 r CCin.
Manolor '"P"'
E,o bonlo '"""'' un .
K•J•ID"" f:ap tupo• can . f iro ~i)-Grant \ufMr
&lt;a n.

,.,,._w

$119

$177
HECK'S REG. $2.69

~

NOIISIWARI DEI'T.

' Choose from a stunning ,
assortment,of. styles ond
colors.

DIXIE BATHROOM

66~ACH

HOUSEWARE
DEPT.
'"'-- ...

GLASS.CLEANER

4tr

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HECK'S REG. 67'

HOfiSIWARI DEPT.

llflfiSEWARI DEPT.

64

2FOR

'

'

31'
14" X 24" COCOA

BATH SOAP
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REG,

21• .

EACH

6FOR

$l00 .

MAT
HECK'S
REG.
$1.15

HOI/SEWARE
DEPT.
'

CELOTEX'

KING

EN DUST

DISPENSER

oz.

. ..

$155 .
I

HECK'S REG. $2.66 ·

SIZE

.1f2"

DOWNEY
FABRIC SOFTEIIER

99(

HECK'S REG.
$1.67

1101/SEWAIIf
DEPT.

,.

X

4'

X

By T. Allim Wolter

II

,~ ___Mason ·Coun. ty
:::

Ne
· w·s Notes

:r/l

~

r

··-·

•

~

~

By Alma Marshall .
'

proceed at the same time. More than
National Forests a source.of healthful
200 square miles of land ·are
. leisure, the timber industry considers
photographed from the air in a day to
many of these woodlanda a vital
aid in resoufce mariagement. They
workshop.- Between breakfast and
improve timber stands and fish-and
suppertime,. on our typical day, mnre
game habitat ; construct family
than 50 million board feet of National
camping and picnic uni~ ; plant over
Forest timber is harvested in accord..
400 acres of deteriorated hillsides and
a nee with sound forestry practices. ·
several miles nf eroding stream
For lbe. right to remove t.Qjs timber,
channels - all their work is directly
enough to build 5,000 homes, some
related to conserving , restoring and
25,000 operators, large and small, will
enhancing, the land for usefulness and - pay about $800,000 into the Federal
beauty.
Treasury on that typical day.
During the hunting season many
All these activities are conducted
thousands or sportsmen arc iri the
under the principle of multiple use, a
National Forests on any given day. By
concept that is adopted to the im·
the end of season, 111ore than 600,000
mediate needs of the public and lhe
are likely to hang trophy animals by
long-range !leeds of reSources and the
their camps.
rtation.
The warming r·ays of the sun drive
Thus the National Forests reflect
trput, bass and other fish into the
the best qualilies of people them·
depths and shadows along many of the
~elves. The people are a part of the
Bl,OOO miles of streams and rivers and
National Forest. We administer the
thousands of lakes in ·the National
lands "in the people 's behalf, in
Forests . And while the fish seek cool ,
cooperation and collaboration with
quiet, refuge, they in turn arc sought
the people every day of the year.'
for the evening's dinner by as many as
Every working day provides new
half a millipn men, women and
illuStrations of the close ties between
children, armed With fishing rods and
the American people and their ·
high hopes.
National Forest.
.On-a summer day more than two
Although sometimes longed ior million Americans engage in camp·
gone are the-days when Forest Seriug, pi ¢ture-la kin g, hiking , .. pic·
vice people sat in their lookout towers
nicking or other· vacation pursuits.
searching. for the inevitable forest
While the public fi nds the
fire.

District Ranger
JRONTON - I have often heard
the question, "What does the Forest
Service do? I" or, " What kind of a c~
Livities does the Forest Service
become involved in ?~'
Traditionally a Forest .Service
employee has been pictured ~s a
person sitting in a fire tower scanning
the hori!On for forest fires. During the
early years or the Forest Service this
may have been t~ue but through the
years this picture has changed considerably.
Let's take a look at a typical day (if
indeed there is such a day) in the
Nati" ·. ' 1 Forest SYstem. The ac.
tiviti~s span a wide variety of activities and .intereStS- in a wide range
of places extending virtually the
length and breadth of the land.
The sun rises on milHons of big
game and SIIJ.~!)..game animals at
home iri their National Fore~t habitat.
CoWJtless birds sttetch their wings,
feed their young and bathe them.
selves in the morning sun.
If our typical day occurs in. April,
50 or 60 wildfires are ,likely to break
out and char about 700 acres be£ore
they are detected and extinguished.
Thousands of men and women of
the Forest Service are involved in
many kinds 91 programs which must

:~:;:::~=;;;;;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:.-;;::~~:::::::::;:;:;::-~:::::::::;:;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::..'::::::;:;:;:::::::;:;:;:;:;~::::::::::::{:::::::::::~:

}

'·

Here is another of Millard Gress' stories from the past
Millard plainly is a vfry observing person as shown in his stories,
and therefore are passed on to readers of the bend,
Many of lis remember the late Charlie Schwarz and the late
Ed Bletner and his store. We also remember the old iron fence
that once surrounded the Meier (or Myer) property which was
next to the Mason Depot
Gress said that back in 1908 the railroada were running at full
speed. Mason, then a railroad town, Was a connecting link to the
Hocking Valley Railroad. At Pomeroy the Hocking Valley had a
roundhouse at Coalport. There, according to Gress. a number of
steam engines were kept. Several passenger trains l~ft Pomeroy.
The morning passenger train of the Hocking Valley would come
to Pomeroy at 9:30aJn, and leave in the afternoon at I :30.
·The first pa~~senger train that came through Mason was at 9
a.m. and the up train for Pittsburgh was at 10 a.m. This train
stopped at all the small towns. The afternoon trains ran fast
limited trips which also stopi&gt;ed at Mason. ·
At the time of which Gress writes, the Baltimore and Ohio
used the small4-4.0 60.inch driver OOo class engines ; later, they
acquired the 8j)O class 4-1.0 larger drivers.
There were eight passenger trains going through Mason in
1908, and the trams were uslllllly crowded when they pulled into
the Mason Depot. Many of the passengers got off here, and
crossed over to Pomeroy to board the Hocking Valley for
Columbus and points west.
,
A TEENAGER AT THE TIME, Cress remembers carrying
baggage to the ferryboat. Some of the young women of the town
came to the station to see if any good looking fellows got off.
Some of· the town loafers, ·according to Gress, spent their
tiine at the depot whittling.on Ed Myers picket fence. lie got
angry one day, tore the fence down and put up an iron fence.
After that they started whittling on the big maple tiee nearby.
Mason had along side track by Ed Bletner's store where the
trains passed each ·other. The saltfurnace nearby shipped coal as
well as salt. An old 1372, a steam engine, a U.O with no nang on
her middle drive wheel went in on the old salt works track one . day to get a box car of salt. The car had left its train on the main
line, expecting to be hack in a few minutes.
When the old 1372 got &lt;)n that turn by the former I)&lt;e Smith
place, the blind wheel jumped the track, pulling all of the wheels
off, and buried itself in the rotten tieS. It was tipped, according to
Gress, at a 45-&lt;legree angle.
The fireman jumped off while another. man kept spinning the
wheels, making the sparks fly, This was excitement in this small
town and soon a large crowd had gathered. Gress and his late
brother, Bub, took off to see Old 1372de.railed.
AS SOON AS THE BOYS got to the salt works, they heard old
888, the fast train, blowing f~r Clifton, The boys knew instantly by
the whistle which train was coming; it was the fast train and they
were curious to see what Charlie Schwarz would do. And they_
were curious as to how he would get past Old 1273.
The boys were close by as Schwarz stopped 888 and said:
"What's wrong, boys?" They replied, "Old 1372 iS off the

THIS WEEK'S "BUY"

IIOIISEWA/11 f!IPT.

100Z.
.

ZEST

HECK'S REG. ,
TO $16.99

WINDEX
AEROSOL

CHOICE

. HECK'S REG. $1.77

POLE
LAMP

200Z.

Holds up t.o 30 patt,rns. '

three basic directions a musewn can move in:

warehouse. The educational approach ill based on interpretation
and interaclion. The musewn attempts to stimulate the visitor
with the reality and meaning of historr by showing as many
aspects- relations of part to whole as possible. The goal is the
overview, the "whole story," background as well as details.
Interest is maintained by a varied P&lt;"esenta"tion . (Change of
mediwn, slides, film, modeli, audio, graphics, illustration, etc.)
Of course, if the educational approach moves . only in this
direction, it can get costly and gimmicky. If the museum chooseS
a community-oriented direction, it uses a personal, very active
approach, It fuvolves generating programs of historic and
cultural worth . The museum provides a center for the transmission of heritage and knowled ge by word of mouth, actual
demonstration, and comrimniiy exhibitions: It becomes a
meeting place for craft and music groups, senior citizens; story
hours, display o\ school history projects, local collections, industrial, trade, and art shows are held. Overemphasis can lead to
a commWtitY center with no overvi~.lt... logic, or basic
- ,.
·
background story.
It is the recommendation of this study that a balance between these three possible directions be found, with a ne!dble
emphasis to be determined by actual cornmWJity-needs and
capabilities. There appears to he no musewn within forty miles
which comes close to this concept; and though much material
has been lost, much more is waiting. We are still rich with folk
who remember and are eager to shru;e .
Meigs County is still virgin territory for a museum with
program'and purpose, a~d this unique opportunity should not be
wasted.
1

track at Ike Smith's"
munication), and community (people),
The boys liked Big Charlie; he would throw the bpys off some
AS mentioned above, most history museums tend to be apples from his engine. (The Schwarzes had a large orchard in
simply repositories, as it is perhaps the .easiest and least ex- · the area of Second street and Foglesong road in Mason. The old
pensive. The museum becomes a stofage-&lt;!ataloging specialist, a Schwarz home place was torn down recently and a new chW'ch
now stands on the fonner Schwarz property. )
.When Big Charlie got .to the scene of the accident, he said to
Bill Cassidy, "Gel down off there, you ain't doing nothing but
digging a hole in the mud, You can't get an engine back on the
track that way. Help me get that frog off the back of the tender."
The boys were curious as to how they could get the engine on ·
with a frog . The frog was placed where the drive wheels would
climb over it. Charlie got up in the engine and slowly pulled back
·on the steam throttle. Old 1372 climbed lhe iron and dropped back
'
.. .
\
on the rails. The men got on and Charlie took the old engine out on
· th~main line, leaving the box car ·ot salt behind . ·
Big Charli~ looked at his watch and headed for Parkersburg!

·PATTERN

FILE

are

~epository (catalog of things), educat(on (concepts and com·

$222
-

There

Your Wayne National Forest

Col. Breckner .welcome_d home
. WRIGHT PATTERSON AIR
FoRCE BASE, Ohio (UPI) Returning prisoner of war Air
Force Lt. Col. William J .
Breckner told a welcoming
crowd of 300 pe?sons here Sun•
day the relationship between
released POWs and the _Ameri·
can-public would be a "great
love affair . "
The Almanac
By United press lnternatlonnl
Today is Wednesday, April 4,
the 94th day ol1973 with, 271 to
follow .
.
The moon is between its new
phase and first quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Venus, Mars and
Jupiter.
The evening st&lt;ir is &amp;!turn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Aries.
Dorothea Lynde Dix, Ameri·
ca n pioneer of prison ·reform,
was
Aprilin4,history
1802. :
Onborn
this day
In 1841, President William
Harrison diec:I of pneumo(!ia one
month after being inaugurated .
J ohn Tyler became the first
vice-president to become chief
executive due to a death .
In 1917, the U.S. Senate, by a
vote of 82 to six , approved
Pr e~ idcnt Woodrow Wilsl)n's
resolution calling'for a declaration of war against Germany :
In 1933, n crew members
were lost when the U.S. Navy
dirigible " Akron " foundered in
a storm and fell into the ocean
off Barnegat ~ay, N.J ..
In 1968, Nesr~ civil rights
leader Martin Luther King was
assassinated in Memphis, ·Tenn.
James Earl Ray pleaded guilty
and was convicted 11 months
later and sentenced to 99 yea rs
in jail..
·.

Breckner was one or three
Air Force PoWs who arrived
at this 'Operation Homecoming" center SWlday. The two
other Air Force officers were
Capt Michael H. LaBeau, 24,
lincoln ~ark, Mich.; and 1st
Lt. Robert M. Hudson, 25,
Dallas, Tex .
The last Qf 31 ex·POWs to
arrive here for medical examinations and intellig.ence debriefings, the three limded in a
heavy downpour aboard a C.
141 Starlifter from Hawaii. As;,
the three men caine out of, the
plane, the rain stopped.
&lt; Breckner, 39, Colum1:1bs,
Ohio, whose F4C Phantom jet
was shot down June 30, 1972,
told the .crowd, "We always
knew you cared and we feel the
affection you have for us. I
think it's going to be a great
love affair."
,
He was greeted by his wife,
I

Cheryl ; son William, 5; daugh- I..inda; son ; Sean, 2; and par~
ter Kristen , 3; and his father ents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold G.
and stepmother.
Hudson, said, "This ~s a great
" It's great to be home," said crowd ·and this is a great
Breckner . "America is the country. You're aJJ great
greate~t place on Earth and Americans. What can I say?
home is the greatest place in Thank you very much."
America.' '
The three will be allowed to
LaBeau and Hudaon were visit with friends and family
aboard tl1e same 8-02 bomber · WJtil Wednesday, when they
that was downed by enemy are scheduled to begin medical
· gunfire on Dec. 26, 1972.
testing and intelligence de' 'lt's sure great -to be back, 11 briefing::;.
said LaBeau ., "The receptions
The other 13 returning POWs
we've received every place aboard the plane continued on
have just been overwhelming. to other air bases in the north·
I'm very proud of the fact that . eastern United States after the
Americans are the greatest aircraft refueled.
people in the world and· 1 Of those 13 men , Air ·
certainly am proud to be a part Force Capt. ·Keith H. l.ewL&gt;,
or it. "
·
enroute to Andrews AFB, Md.,
LaBeau was greeted by his told ' officials the crutches he
wife, Ann, and his parents, was issued in Nor'th Vietnam
Mrs. and Mrs. Harold J. La· because of a leg· injury would
Beau.
be donated to the Air Force
Hudson, greeted by his wife, Musewn h_~re.

r--------------------·------···-Thru Apr. 7

(Sliced 85')

rb.

SUPERIORS

VIETTI

SLAB
BACON

BEEF OR PORK

BAR·B·QUE ~~~- OZ-6 g~

79e

KRAFT

RATH ·

.24 oz.

'

WIENERS

!&lt;If

,.

FROZEN FOOD SPECIAL

· 6 STICK MIRAC;:L.E

BOOSTER BONNIE

SHIRl
FINISHING
SAME DAY
SERVICE

In At9- 0ut AIS
\Js.e Our F'ree Parking lot

Robinson's Cleaners
-. 216 E. 2nd. Pomeroy

•

Breaded..
2 lb. .
Cod
Fish
1 - - -- - - - - ,

$1

Florida

Oran·ges
5 lb. bag

8'

MARGARINE
3 LB .

19

PKG

"' 99e

KRAFT HALFMOON

Colby .i
Cheese.

99~ .

lb.

F!_EANUT
BUUER

1a oz.
jar

.

5v_

With Coupon

GOod at Rutland
Dept. Store
Expires: 4-7·73

I·N'SULA TING
BOARD
sheet

1.95

CASH &amp; CARRY
'
April 4 to 11 Only

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
'
MATERIALS CO.
PH. 773-5554

MASON, W. VA.

.CARPET. SPECIAL
2 -ROOMS AND HALL
Includes: 12'x15' Living Rm
9'x l2' Bedroom
3'xl2' Hail

COMPLETELY INSTALLED
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ALL
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ONLY

QualitY 501, nY-lon carpeting with heavy foam rubber pad , p

perl tack less
instaiJation. Choice of colors. All work guarant.eed. See Wendell Grate for
th is buy , or free estimate on any ca rpet installation .

RUTlAND FURNITURE
WEND.ELL GRATE

TISSUES

3

4 Roil
Pkgs.

991

With Coup~n

LESTOIL
28 oz.

Bottle

39t

\:\'if~ Coupon

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Expires: 4-7-73 _ ,

·LUX ·
LIQUID
32 ·oz ,
BottiP

59~
With
Coupon

Good at Rutland

Dept. Store
Expires; 4-7·73

�J

•

•

•

•

.

,__ _ _ _ _ _ _.:. ----

re-demption

PUBliC ffOTICES

...

and

aft~r

the date fixed for redemption .
The bonds ar~&amp; payable at the
Office of the, Farmers Home
Administration , 71 East State
Street. Athens , Ohio, without

Your Right to Know

, !...
~
•

on

January I, 1984, at thllr , par
valut. plu.s accrvll!'d intereit to

deduction tor Us ser11ices as the

and be In formed of the ft..rnt

D istrict 's pay ing agent, and are

tions. of your 90v.ernm~nt ar

inued under the autnority of the
Conservan&lt;:v D istrict . Laws of

-.mbodled in public nottces. 11
that self-government charge ~

•

'

16- Tile Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Apru t, ·1913

ORDINANCE NO. 4~'"
TO VACATE FIFTH STREET
IN
THE
VILLAGE
OF
POMEROY , WHfC,H FIFTH
S'rREET E~TENDS FROM
BUTTERNUT AVENUE TO
MECHANIC STREET

in observance

ol F •.H. A. Week
.
.

'·

Ho·m emakerprogram·
·
.
explained
.

WHEREAS , this 5th day ot
.
Feb . 197), there has been
presented to Council a Petit ion
By Cathy Davis
to vacate Fifth Stree-t from
Eastern Hlgh School
Butternut Avenue to Mechanic
Street ·in
th-e village of
TUPPERS PLAINS - What is F .H.A.? Future Homemakers
Pomeroy , by ell the owners ot
the propeHy abutting on Fifth or America is the national organization or girls and boys study!lrg
Street i n Sa i d Village of homemaking in higllschools of the U.S., Puerto Rico, and the
Pomerov . and
WHEREAS .
all
of
the Virgin Islands. As an integral part of the homemaking program,
property owners having an
interest in land abuttin9 said F.H.A. provides an opportunity for students to have additional
Street reQ\.IeSt said vacation of experiences in planning and carrying out activities related to
sa i d street , and
WHEREAS , It appears that homemaking. The national organization is composed of charsaid vacat ion will not / be tered state associations which are made up of local chapters.
detrimental tQ the general i n .
Following are a few things ch~pters have in coiiU1)on :
!~rest
of
the
V i llage of
Pomeroy ..
THE CREED
NOW , THEREFORE be It
ordained by - the Council of the We are the Future Homemakers . •
Y i llage ot Pomeroy , Oh io,
._,
We face the future with warm courage and high hope
sec . I : That F iflh Street
extending
from
Butternut
Avenue to Mechan ic St reet ir,
said Village be and the same is For we have the clear consciousness of seeking old and precious
values
h!reby vacated .
Sec . 2 : That said vacat ion is
for the best interest of sa id For we are the builders of homes, homes for America's futureVillage of Pomeroy and i s not Homes where livlng will be the expression of everything good'
detr i mental to the general in ·
~
•
terest of
the
Village of and fair;
Pomeroy.
Sec . J : That there is good Homes where truth, arid love, and security, and faith will be
cau'se for vacating sa!d Street . realities~ not dreams.
Sec . 4 : That lh is Ordinance be
/
and remain in force from and
,after the earliest perfod .allowed We are the Future Homemakers of America.
by law .
We face the future witll warm courage and high hope.
Passed March. 5, 1973 .
Donald Collfns
Mayor

'

reminds members that their cootributiOil!lto borne life today will
Ohio (Revised Cod~ Sections
6101.01 ef seq .)
influence the ,kinds of borneo they have tomorrow; that the
5aid bids w i ll be promptly
. family life of members will influence the community and the
cltiten io reiu1 and study these
considered. and said bonds w JII
notices . We strongly advise
be sold at not less than par and
world.
.;:. those citizens , seeking. tu;th~r accrued
in terest
to
the
informat ion, to exercise the !r hi 9 hest b idde r offering the
..._
rl9ht of access to pub liC t~est
Interest
ratP· ~ as
THE F JI.A. FLOWER
.r.,
records and public rneetings . ·hereinafter def ined . The lowesJ
The rose is the F.H.A.flower. Tbe red rose, due to its beauty,
interest rate wlll be determined
-....
by cafcuta1ing the total interest
has always been a favorite flower. It represents the search of the
~
• Jo the stated maturity at the .
~
NOTICE OF SALE
-rate · b i d
and
deducting
~ture Homemakers for beauty in everyday living.
~
OF LEADING CREEK
therefrom the premium bid . If
CONSERVANCY
each of two or mor'e b ids is !he
~
DISTRICT BONDS
h ighest bij:l otiering the lo west
'OlE EMBLEM
•
.
.
inte rest rate, the bonds w i ll be
The eight-o;ided F.H.A. emblem symbolizes the significant
Sealed btds will be rec~tved awarded on such one of said
by the undersign:d, Presrdent h ighest bids as is chosen by lol.
purposes of the organization. The name of the organization and
_,... of
the
Lead tnQ
Creek · All bids must be accompanied
the motto appear around the border. In the center is a home
""" Conservancy Distric! , ~ere in by a bond or check. drawn on
~ referred to· as the Dtslrrct . at and certified by a solvent bank
which represents a home where there is truth, love, security, and
the office of the Leading Creek { which bank musl be one other
faith.
This home is supported by two hands, suggesting that the
~ Conservancy ~lslrict , Slate than the bidder . if the b idder i s
PULLING HIS LIP, Wil., Route 124 (Marn Sl. , Rutland , a ban-k ) payable to the D istrict
fulu,re
homes
are
in
the
hands
of
its
youth.
The
hand
on
the
right
liam
R. Merriam, former
~ Ohio 4571S , until ten. o,' clo~k. tn the amount of one per cent of
head
or the International
..-· a . _n:~. , Easter;n Standard T rme .rn the par amoUnt of the bonds
represents the husband, father or brother in the family . The hand
:- OhrO , on t~e 12.'h d~y of. Apr~ !, herein offered , upon condition
Telephone
and Telegraph's
on the left represents the wife, mother, or sister.
hands
_. 1973, at .wh~eh frme the brds w ri t lhat. if the bid iS accepted, the
office
in
Washington,
pre..._~ be publ tc ly opened and read , for b id der .w ill receive and pay for ·
work together to foster and support strong homes today and
pares
to
field-another
questhe purchase Of bonds of the such bonds in accordance with
. provide a farm foundation for homes tomorrow. The rays ex- tion before the S~nate ForDistrict in the aggre~ate the terms and provis ions of this
amount of $2 , 121.000 authorued notice or forfe i t the same as
.tending to and from the home suggest the influence the home has eign Relatlons subcommllby resoll.,rJjQn, adopted Ma;ch 13 , liquidated damages in the event
tee on multinational corpoon the community, and the community has on the home.
1973, and amended March. 16, said condition is not fulfilled .
ration activities. The sub·
1973 .
_
.
Bids shalt be sealed and
~
The bonds are issued for the endorsed "Bid tor Leading
commlttee
is lnvestigaUng
.- purpose of' pay ing costs of Creek conservanCy D is trict
THE GOAlS AND PURPOSES
efforts
to
wrest
power rrom
......- construct ing a water supply, Waterworks System Revenue
The over-aU goal of F.H.A. is to help individuals to improve Chile's President Salvador
...._, distribulion and treatment Bonds."
THE MOTTO
personal, family, and community living, now and in the future . AUende.
~ system .
The -proceedings for this issue
-~·
The bonds are not general have been taken under the.
To emphasize specific parts of this over--all goal, Future
Obligations of the District but supervision ot SQuire Sanders
..._ Will _~e pa'{abt.e , together w.i th .&amp; Dempsey , Bond Attorneys,
Clerk
Homemakers of America have seven purposes . They are:
-. addrtronal pantY bonds. whrch Cleveland , Ohio, whose ap ·
NEW HEAD COACH
(41 ' · 11. 21
-------------------------1 - To promote the joys and 8aiisfactions of homemaking.
..iii~ may her~atter b~ 1ssu~d, proving opinion will be fur ·
' - pursu~n.t to the - resolu!Jon nished · by the District to the
RICHMOND, Ky. (UP!)
2- To strengthen the function of the family as a basic unit of•
authorrzmg the bonds , solely succesSfu l bidder without ex .
Boh Mulcahy was named
too.- \ from revenues derived from pense and will be printed on the
.. ~ 'fees, rates and charges for th e bonds at the e&gt;C.oense of the
To
llirough
cooperative
actions
in
Monday to succeed Guy Strong
PUBLIC NOTICE
::' use of th~ w.aterworks syslem District. Complete transcript of
AVERY
SUE
ROMINE ,
as head basketball coach at
- the home and community.
... after provrsion tor the paymenr proceedings and the printed
r~ of co~ts and exp.enses of bonds will be furnished by the whose laSt known place of
Eastern Kentucky University.
I·
4- To become aware of ·the !"Ultiple roles of men and
operatron and marntenance Distr ic t , .together w i th cer - residence is Rt . I, Rutland, I
Ohio
,
and
whose
last
known
1
Mulcahy, a · graduate of
thereof .
tifi c ate5- show ing no litigation
1 worrien in today s society.
address is c -o Frances Nelson ,
":;
The bon~s sh~ll be dated the pend in§' or . threatened at the
Eas,t ern, coached South
Dexter , Ohio, is hereby notif ied I
.
I
5 - To improve national and international relations.
"" dateofth.er_r .d e_lrvery,shall be In t im~ of the del ivery , to enjoin
that dln the 12th day of March.
,,. the denomrnatron of $1,poo each del iv ery or: to con test the
Dakota for the past six
I
I
6 - To provide opportunity for decision making and
Mol or .may be
lssue:d rn . fully val idity of the . bonds or the , 1973, Kehneth H . Romine, being
plaintiff,
filed
h
i
s
comp
la
i
nt
seasons.
Strong moves on to
I
' assuming responsibilities.
:;' regr~ter~d form rn the de. power to issue them or the levy
aga
inst
her
as
defendant
in
the
- · nom matron of $100 or any or collec t ion of the assessments Common Pleas Court. Me igs
7 -To involve youth with adults in home economics, home . become . head , coach at
multiple thereof , as requested for their payment .
,. by
I have joined a group of privilege .
County,
Ohio,
Case
No
.
15,
247,
Oklahoma State · University.
economies careers and related occupations.
the purchaser , shall draw
THE
FARMEtRS
HOME
praying for divorce from said House Members introducing
:: Interest payable sem f-apnual - ADMINISTRATION (FHA) OF
Only
an
authorized
claim
of
Avery Sue Romine on the
....._ ly
on
t he
first
day THE
UNITED
STATES
legislation to define and limit e~ecutive privilei!e would
of
January
and
the o E pAR T M E N. T
0 F grollnds -of· ~·ross negle,c t of duty
and
extreme
c
ruel-ty
,
care,
.....-.. first day o1 July Of each A G R I C U l T U R E
H AS
the use of executive privi.lege. exCuse an· officer or employee
.,.
year" co mmertclng on the firsf AGREED TO ENTER INTO A c ustody and control of min or
~
Chil
dren
,
and
other
relief
;
said
A.~ I noted in a previous of any Federal agency, ind ay of January next succeeding LOAN AGREEMENT WITH.
cause
will
be
for
he,ar(ng
on
or
:. 1hedateofthebondsattherate THE ISSUER, _PUR SUA NT TO
colwnn , executive privilege cluding the White Hou,se staff,
Off ive per cen.tum (5 pet.) per WHICH FHA W I LL PUR - affer the 9th day of June, 1973
has become one of the most from honoring an invitation to
·""' annum. Anyone desiring lo do CHASE SAID $2,121.000 OF
Kenneth H . Romine,
'::. so may present a bid for said BOND S AT PAR AT AN IN significan
t points of conflict present testimony before
Plaintiff.
n bonds based upowtheir bearing TER EST RATE OF FIVE PER
J . B . O'Brien, between the White House and Congress or any of its com,~ a d iffer ent rate of in t erest, bul CENTUM (5 PCT . I PER AN ·
his o!lorney
.... not in excess of eig_ht per cen N UM .
the . Congress, as it has been mittees. Those who declined
(4) 4, ll, 18.25 (5) ·2, 9, 6)
2 lb . GROUND BEEF
~ tum
(8 pet .) rper
annum ,
Thebondswillbedeliveredon
used to keep Admiitistration could be subpoenaed and
prov ided that where a frac - Or about May 1, 1973 . 11 t he
2 lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER
• · I lona I interest rate is bid such success ful . bidder
desires
2 lb. ROUNO STEAK
•
officials f.rom giving inaH Citizens to be in formed .
thls newspaper urges every

t; .

!; -'-----,------__:_

.

~

:t"

'&gt;llotp

~~ei\Vallon

!:

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

::Z

I.

•

I

was hingt
' .. 0 n
R ep·0 rt B Clarenee
Miller

I

II soci~t::: encour~~~;emocracy

y

•

-

~r11a;ti~~/chea~ ~ b6ron:·Q~a~ 1' i;'p f! ~~!~~e~r ~~ i~.P:~~e b?J~~ird;ht~ 1j

::
,.. ... thereof . Split rate b ids will not pay expense of delivery at such
'"'• be considlilred. Each bid shall be other place .
....., for the purchase of said bonds at
The right is rese·rved to reject
not less than the par value b ids .
thereof .
LEAD I NG CREEK
CONSERVANCY
u r eyear
0 ns
1 in d·s-1'1'1
each ofa Ithe
DIStRICT

.

.c---~:tn::~r~Zr"on
,
Yr .
1977
1978
.... 1979
~ 1980
~ 1981
1982
1983
... 1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

..
$21,000
22,000
23,000
24,000
25,000
27,000
28,000
29,000
31,000
32,000
34,000
36,00 0

Yr.
--~

Amt .

w. Crisp ,
Pr '£!Si dent
39.000
Tel. No . 614 -742 -5922
41,000 {)) 21, 2:8 (4 ·) "'· Jt .
43,000
46,000
48,000
By : iack

l9..B'L .$3.7.&lt;,000

1990
1991
.1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000

so.ooo

53,000
55,000
58,000
61 ,000
64,000

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
·
Case No . 20896
Estate of Eva 1. Pos.ta l Mott
Deceased .
Yr .
Amt . 1
Ncitice is hereby given l hat
20 01 . $67,000Anna M. R'ffher ot P. 0 . Box
2002
71,000
130, Pomeroy,. Ohio, has. been
2003
74,000
duly appointed Adminis tratrix
. 2004
78,000
of the Estaffl of Eva I . Pos ta l
2005
82, 000
Mott, deceased, la l e · oJ Meigs
2 0 0_6_ ~ 6 , 0 00
County, Ohio .
2007
90,000
Creditors are required to f ile
2008
95,000
the i r cl aim s with said fid uciary
2009
99,000
within four months. •
.
2010 104,000
Daled this 24 t h day of Ma r c h
20 11 110,000
1973 .
2012 115,000
Manning D. W~bster
2013 123,'00(1
·
Judge
Cour t of Common Pleas,
Bonds maturing on and after ·
Probate Divi sio n
Januar y 1, 1985, are sub(ect to (31 2.8 (4) 4, 11, 31

.' .

17 ~~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April4, 1913

formation to committees of
Congress.
NOTICE OF
A.PPO INTMENT
Under . my
proposal
No . 20,72J (scheduled for hearings next
Estate of Samue l Q . Barnhart
Deceas ed .
week before the House
Nolic e is hereby given that
Government
Operations
Emma Hayman whose Post
Off_i Ge Address i s Syracuse. Committee), e-xecu tfVe
Ohro' has been duty appointed as
Adm inistratr ix- with t.tre Will privilege could be invoked only
annexed ott he Estate of Samue l by the President who _ co~ld
Q. Barnha.rt , Iitle of Meigs
Coun t y, Ohio. deceased . ·
claim it on behalf of departDated til i s 17tll day Qf March
mental heads and his own
1973
cowtselors an~ st.a:f.f. However,
Mann in g D. Webs t er
Common Pleas Court, he would be permitted to do so
Pro bate Division, only when policy re comMeigs County. Ohio
(J) ~~. 28 (41 5, Jt c
mendations are involved and
·when
dlsclosure · would
·e riously jeopardize the
nciTionarinterest. .
The bill would require that
NOTICE OF SALE
All of th e personal property in when Congress requests inthe hom e of Alma Ohl inger , formation from the Executive
Lynn Pla ce off Vine Street
Middleport, wil l be off er ed · fo~ Branch, the Presiden{;;,o,jd
sa le to the highest bidder at 3: oo
p_.m. Friday, Apr il6, 1973, a t the either provide the information
srte of t he real estate.
·
or submi t a signed statement to
lionel Boggs, Congress within 30 days after
Guardian the request involving execUtive
(4) 3, 4. · 5, 3f

subject to citation for contempt
of Congress.
·
.
Although I believe certain
communications between the
President, his · ·staff and
membersOf his adminfstration
are constitutionally privileged
from Congressional scrutiny.
Congress, by not clearly and
con.cisely defining the use of
the privilege, has allowed the
Executive Branch to set the
boundaries and interpret the
doctrine beyond what may be
constitutionally permissible.
Executive privilege has been
implied under the separation of
powers doctrine of the Constitution although there has
been no ·c lear definition of how,
when, or by whom it can be
claimed·since ii was first' ~sed
by President Washington in
1796. Between 1961 and 1972 it
.was invoked twenty-four times
by Presidents Kennedy ,
JohnsOn, and Nixon.
... ·

-

2 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
1 lb. All MEAT WIENERS

Here A1•e lust A Few 01 These Items

Muellers Egg Noodles • ~a:; 44c
·
Downy F~BRIC·SO~ENER.
·:..~~· 72c:
Ivory Liquid D~ER~NT -~ · :·;~~L 5&amp;c.
S.O.S. Scouring Pads • pkf•"'32c
Clorox Bleach LI~UID.
~~~·L 35t
37c Nestles Morsels • • :.;;: 2SC Carnation Spreadables U·••· 67c
Libbys Tomato Juice
53i:
Mothers
Oats
Q~ICK
~k':.·
&amp;lc:
·Armour.
Vienna
Sausage
Hunts Tomato Sauce •
!0-qt.$215
u)..,•. 42c A&amp;P Dry Milk
Jif Peanut Butter • • 1~;·· &amp;9c cheer iOS QE:ERA~
•
49c
Quaker
Life
Cereal
Smuckers Goober ·Jelly ~~·· &amp;4c
• •
13t
A&amp;P
Cream
Cheese
.
•
Purina Cat Foods • •
.
23t
Phase
Ill'
Soap
•
Alpo Beef Dog Food
• •
49t•
Hunts
Tomaio
Catsup
•
Wesson Oil • ••
•
33c
Glad
Wrap
•••••
Crisco Oil • •• • •
•

•

•

•

•

a

ill-oz.
ca n

•

I

9·0Z.

REG.ULAR. or

l.tll;s

•

can

I

•

IN:TAN!

l'q.

•

HOMEMADE

(236)

J lb.
3 lb.
J lb.
4 lb.
1 lb.
1 lb.

PORK CHOPS
GROUND BEEF
BULK SAUSAGE
CHUCK ROAST
ALL MEAT BOLOGNA
HAM SALAD

(237)

J lb.
3 lb.
S lb.
J lb.
2 lb.
2 lb.

GROUND BEEF
SIRLOIN STEAK
CHUCK ROAST
SPARE RIBS
STEW MEAT
SLICED BACON

S lb.
S lb.
3 lb.
.. 4 lb.
Jib.
J lb.

CHUCK ROAST
GROUND BEEF
STEW MEAT
ROUND STEAK
PORK CHOPS
BULK SAUSAGE

HAM SALAD
AND
CHEESE~

SPREAD
Phone Us (238)
Your Orderl:

992-3502

Round Steak 11.09 lb.

$

pkc.

1

10

2

1.511\-oz.
btl.

I

1
: : :·

can

pkg.

3-oz.

pkc.

1

I

bath
bar

26-oz.
btl.

I

•

100-tt.
pk(.

Tr

. "1

'
Frozen

CufTo YourOrder •••.

' Cut-to in or
- Confer

-

Pork Chops
Porktoin
s·pareribs
•
•
LOin End
SifiOin Pork

Rolled Rump Roast 11.19 lb.

ACCEPT FEDE

Loin ·End

FOOD STAMPS

.

Country Style

..

Phebe

-

.....•...•
•

'
·-

. •.,
•
•

•

---•

.

.-.
~

--.-·-..
-·--

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

'

9:00 to 7:00

-

saturday 9 to 9
---·-- -·" --

•
••
••

CLOSED SUNDAYS .

---

----

DAIRY FEATUR'ES

Fairmont

NICE lN LITE

·ICE MILK
'n gal.
crt.

- MILK

•

'

Monday Thru Friday

.--.. .
...

s-

Center
Cuts

Pork Loin

ROAST
¢

LB.

69t

Fairmont Nice 'N Lite

2

'

'

SAUSAGE
' lb.

89C

BEEF STEW
ME.AT .
lb.

.

.

LOW PRICE

.

.

.cans

'

lu,:'J!

0

$100
This

' •

Coupon

&amp;ood Th'" Sot., Apr;! 7tlo At All
A&amp;P WE0'1- Cols. Div.

I (I.lb.
11-o:r..

pkc.

$239
·

White3

' With
Thi•
Coupon ·

·

COFFEE .

· . ·. .·

king

SIZe

.

bOx

'

·

~-----~~-~-·-----~-J

79c

WEQ·,·...::coli:·ol&lt;.
MIT ONE
COUPON
.
. ,,
A&amp;P

L.;J~. LIMJ.T ON _
E COUPO~

A&amp;P WEO COIJPOINN£;;;5Jii1

Gelatin
.All
Varieties

Dream

'

Th;,

w·so·,- Cols. Oiv.

$

.t.:.~ I;,IMIJ,. ~NE .CC::~,YJ!.ON

~;;;' ··iii,ifi.;;.!P ONE C9UPC?N '

p]!g.
·of 9

Liquid

With ·
This
Coupon

32-oz.

pkg•

79t·

This

Pkl.

&lt;;:oup.~n

~~"A&amp;P

~I

ft! ~\~

Coupon

Sood Thiu Sat. April 7th At AH ""' WEO'o- Cols. Oi•.

LIMIT ONE ~OUPON '

COUPON m~

:·Save 50c ·c7~~~..

Llljulcl. D•i~•r~renit)
__
.

Coupon

WEO

On Your Purchase of

ill

5·lb•. Ca n

On Your

1

lrand

1 ·:..

6ood Thru S1t., Aprll1th At All
A&amp;P WEO't - Col,. Oiv,

LIMIT ONE COUPON '
•

11

&gt;·

... n

,

or a 2-lb. Pk~. ·

Wieners s..:,:~~r

Ham Supor·Riilht I
.

~urchase

7-oz.

can

Good Thru Sat., April 7th At "All
A&amp;P weo·s- Colo. Dl•.

IDZ UNIT OJ\IE ('0UPON _
'•

I

99e

STICK WHIPPED MARGARINE

Blue Bonnet. • .
·gac. 3-Bean Salad. • •

1

I

·1-lb.3 7~
pkg.

HANOVER

COFFEE CREAMER

L.:..l"~ LIMIT ONE COUPON

LIMIT. ~N.E COUPON! ~~

,.
1

Lipton Tea Bags • •
Borden's Cremora •

Good Thru Sat., Apri17fh At All
A&amp;P WE0'1-Coh. Div.

Good Thru Sat., April 7th At All
A&amp;P WEO'• ~ Col•. Oiv .

33

WHY PAY MORE?

Lestoil
28-oz, 47~ . 'f.,',:h.

With

Right Guard

Trac II Blades

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Good Thru Sat., April 7tn At AU
A&amp;P WEO'• - Coh. Div.

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G"ood Thru So+., April 7th At All 1
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Good Thru Sat,1 Aeril 7th ~tAll

.bxs.
for

·

or

Yellow

·~~

'
~------------------~--,
1 PRODUCE FEATURES · .1
· 1 California Red Ripe
I

cans

.

4
.

Cak.e

Tide

Towels ·

99e

LIBBY'S BEAN 5_.....~~~~--~~~~~ ......,..... ~ .............. 7 14 ~~ . ,
'
.A
46 oz. .,
H WA II AN ·PUNCH ........................................ 3
! TOMATOES
I
.CAKE MIX.....n~t~~~~Gt.~~~~·~~c: .......;...............~ ...... ~. 3 ., ! ~ lb. 29e
i
I
Aorida
Golden
I
TOMATO
10~
.
I
ORANGES
CARROTS.
!
ALUMINUM WRAP: . -~~~.~~~~~~~~~.~ ....:.............. ~~~~~s·
3 lb.
15 ~ 59~ 2 :: 29~ 1
MAXWELL
.
HOUSE ..... ~~:~:.~.~~~.~L .....................;.
1
Aorida New CrOp .
1
. .• ,19
!
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GRAPEFRUIT :1• ,...
KING SIZE TIDE ...~~~~.~~. ~·.~~...........................
.
.
r
IDAHO SUPREME INSTANT ·
-1
5
:;
59~
I
.................
~
....
~~!¥
..
3;9C
BAKED BAKED POTATO (IT'S NEW)
.
I .

Defergent

Northern

lean and Tender- '

Pt')LISH

'

I

lb.

Superio~

We Gladly Accept Fed. F~d Stamps

·--....-

•

the
Price
•'· {I
of
Pork
This -Week!

Right reserved to limit quantities

Prices Effective April 4-11

·'

USDA CHOICE

'· }'

'

i&gt;.-

0

.

.....-.

pkc.

SLICED OR WHOLE

.~ ~

LOW.f[S____

2-tb.

•

l6tfolll
Round

'

•

Pkl'.

15-oz.

I

4 lb. ' CHUCK ROAST
Jib, GROUND BE!tf .
2 lb. ROUND STEAK
2 lb. SLICED BACON
J lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER

can·

trisco Shortening • •
Campbells Tomato Soup :;:··J3c
Log-·cnrn Syrup • • !:· 69t
47c:
Ragu ·spagheHi Sauce
Kellogg's Corn ·flakes 18-••·36t
A&amp;P Rice Lo:c G~IN ·-· . 39t
A&amp;P White Potatoes 6 $1°0 .
Hershey Instant Cocoa 16-o•·43t

22-o..
•

ja~;

,.;,... 41'
. h s. . ' BAR-B-9 •
Hunt' s Manwtc
auce "G"'". . . . . '"" ·
Wesson Cooking Oil ... : . : . ... . •::::" $2.79
·- ....... .... ......
Hunt's Tomat o JUlCe
"" · 39C'
Hunt's Tomato Ketchup .. ... : . . . . ~'.;,:~.: 26'
Hunt's Tomato Sauce . .
. '~;~· · 24'
Puss 'n Boots Tuna Cat Food
";:':;:"·18c
Puss 'n Boots Shrimp Cat Food
., "~~"· 18c
Puss 'n Boots Salmon Cat Food . ";:~"'· 18r. .

Woolite Liquid .
. .. ·-·-··'·-'-'\' ~~· sug
Woodbury Bar Soap
......... 3 ':!' 41c
j)illsbury Regular Flour ...... ... 5 ~ 13'
Pillsbury Cinnamon Raisin Danish .. •:;::·45c
Nab.1sco Ch'sps Ah oy . ·............,.,..,
""•·.... 61c
Anacin Tablets .... : ...... 100 ::~.r, 11.24
Contadina Tomato Paste ......... ';:· 17'
Corttacllimi· Tomato Sauce ......... ";:· 13'

�J

•

•

•

•

.

,__ _ _ _ _ _ _.:. ----

re-demption

PUBliC ffOTICES

...

and

aft~r

the date fixed for redemption .
The bonds ar~&amp; payable at the
Office of the, Farmers Home
Administration , 71 East State
Street. Athens , Ohio, without

Your Right to Know

, !...
~
•

on

January I, 1984, at thllr , par
valut. plu.s accrvll!'d intereit to

deduction tor Us ser11ices as the

and be In formed of the ft..rnt

D istrict 's pay ing agent, and are

tions. of your 90v.ernm~nt ar

inued under the autnority of the
Conservan&lt;:v D istrict . Laws of

-.mbodled in public nottces. 11
that self-government charge ~

•

'

16- Tile Dailv Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., Apru t, ·1913

ORDINANCE NO. 4~'"
TO VACATE FIFTH STREET
IN
THE
VILLAGE
OF
POMEROY , WHfC,H FIFTH
S'rREET E~TENDS FROM
BUTTERNUT AVENUE TO
MECHANIC STREET

in observance

ol F •.H. A. Week
.
.

'·

Ho·m emakerprogram·
·
.
explained
.

WHEREAS , this 5th day ot
.
Feb . 197), there has been
presented to Council a Petit ion
By Cathy Davis
to vacate Fifth Stree-t from
Eastern Hlgh School
Butternut Avenue to Mechanic
Street ·in
th-e village of
TUPPERS PLAINS - What is F .H.A.? Future Homemakers
Pomeroy , by ell the owners ot
the propeHy abutting on Fifth or America is the national organization or girls and boys study!lrg
Street i n Sa i d Village of homemaking in higllschools of the U.S., Puerto Rico, and the
Pomerov . and
WHEREAS .
all
of
the Virgin Islands. As an integral part of the homemaking program,
property owners having an
interest in land abuttin9 said F.H.A. provides an opportunity for students to have additional
Street reQ\.IeSt said vacation of experiences in planning and carrying out activities related to
sa i d street , and
WHEREAS , It appears that homemaking. The national organization is composed of charsaid vacat ion will not / be tered state associations which are made up of local chapters.
detrimental tQ the general i n .
Following are a few things ch~pters have in coiiU1)on :
!~rest
of
the
V i llage of
Pomeroy ..
THE CREED
NOW , THEREFORE be It
ordained by - the Council of the We are the Future Homemakers . •
Y i llage ot Pomeroy , Oh io,
._,
We face the future with warm courage and high hope
sec . I : That F iflh Street
extending
from
Butternut
Avenue to Mechan ic St reet ir,
said Village be and the same is For we have the clear consciousness of seeking old and precious
values
h!reby vacated .
Sec . 2 : That said vacat ion is
for the best interest of sa id For we are the builders of homes, homes for America's futureVillage of Pomeroy and i s not Homes where livlng will be the expression of everything good'
detr i mental to the general in ·
~
•
terest of
the
Village of and fair;
Pomeroy.
Sec . J : That there is good Homes where truth, arid love, and security, and faith will be
cau'se for vacating sa!d Street . realities~ not dreams.
Sec . 4 : That lh is Ordinance be
/
and remain in force from and
,after the earliest perfod .allowed We are the Future Homemakers of America.
by law .
We face the future witll warm courage and high hope.
Passed March. 5, 1973 .
Donald Collfns
Mayor

'

reminds members that their cootributiOil!lto borne life today will
Ohio (Revised Cod~ Sections
6101.01 ef seq .)
influence the ,kinds of borneo they have tomorrow; that the
5aid bids w i ll be promptly
. family life of members will influence the community and the
cltiten io reiu1 and study these
considered. and said bonds w JII
notices . We strongly advise
be sold at not less than par and
world.
.;:. those citizens , seeking. tu;th~r accrued
in terest
to
the
informat ion, to exercise the !r hi 9 hest b idde r offering the
..._
rl9ht of access to pub liC t~est
Interest
ratP· ~ as
THE F JI.A. FLOWER
.r.,
records and public rneetings . ·hereinafter def ined . The lowesJ
The rose is the F.H.A.flower. Tbe red rose, due to its beauty,
interest rate wlll be determined
-....
by cafcuta1ing the total interest
has always been a favorite flower. It represents the search of the
~
• Jo the stated maturity at the .
~
NOTICE OF SALE
-rate · b i d
and
deducting
~ture Homemakers for beauty in everyday living.
~
OF LEADING CREEK
therefrom the premium bid . If
CONSERVANCY
each of two or mor'e b ids is !he
~
DISTRICT BONDS
h ighest bij:l otiering the lo west
'OlE EMBLEM
•
.
.
inte rest rate, the bonds w i ll be
The eight-o;ided F.H.A. emblem symbolizes the significant
Sealed btds will be rec~tved awarded on such one of said
by the undersign:d, Presrdent h ighest bids as is chosen by lol.
purposes of the organization. The name of the organization and
_,... of
the
Lead tnQ
Creek · All bids must be accompanied
the motto appear around the border. In the center is a home
""" Conservancy Distric! , ~ere in by a bond or check. drawn on
~ referred to· as the Dtslrrct . at and certified by a solvent bank
which represents a home where there is truth, love, security, and
the office of the Leading Creek { which bank musl be one other
faith.
This home is supported by two hands, suggesting that the
~ Conservancy ~lslrict , Slate than the bidder . if the b idder i s
PULLING HIS LIP, Wil., Route 124 (Marn Sl. , Rutland , a ban-k ) payable to the D istrict
fulu,re
homes
are
in
the
hands
of
its
youth.
The
hand
on
the
right
liam
R. Merriam, former
~ Ohio 4571S , until ten. o,' clo~k. tn the amount of one per cent of
head
or the International
..-· a . _n:~. , Easter;n Standard T rme .rn the par amoUnt of the bonds
represents the husband, father or brother in the family . The hand
:- OhrO , on t~e 12.'h d~y of. Apr~ !, herein offered , upon condition
Telephone
and Telegraph's
on the left represents the wife, mother, or sister.
hands
_. 1973, at .wh~eh frme the brds w ri t lhat. if the bid iS accepted, the
office
in
Washington,
pre..._~ be publ tc ly opened and read , for b id der .w ill receive and pay for ·
work together to foster and support strong homes today and
pares
to
field-another
questhe purchase Of bonds of the such bonds in accordance with
. provide a farm foundation for homes tomorrow. The rays ex- tion before the S~nate ForDistrict in the aggre~ate the terms and provis ions of this
amount of $2 , 121.000 authorued notice or forfe i t the same as
.tending to and from the home suggest the influence the home has eign Relatlons subcommllby resoll.,rJjQn, adopted Ma;ch 13 , liquidated damages in the event
tee on multinational corpoon the community, and the community has on the home.
1973, and amended March. 16, said condition is not fulfilled .
ration activities. The sub·
1973 .
_
.
Bids shalt be sealed and
~
The bonds are issued for the endorsed "Bid tor Leading
commlttee
is lnvestigaUng
.- purpose of' pay ing costs of Creek conservanCy D is trict
THE GOAlS AND PURPOSES
efforts
to
wrest
power rrom
......- construct ing a water supply, Waterworks System Revenue
The over-aU goal of F.H.A. is to help individuals to improve Chile's President Salvador
...._, distribulion and treatment Bonds."
THE MOTTO
personal, family, and community living, now and in the future . AUende.
~ system .
The -proceedings for this issue
-~·
The bonds are not general have been taken under the.
To emphasize specific parts of this over--all goal, Future
Obligations of the District but supervision ot SQuire Sanders
..._ Will _~e pa'{abt.e , together w.i th .&amp; Dempsey , Bond Attorneys,
Clerk
Homemakers of America have seven purposes . They are:
-. addrtronal pantY bonds. whrch Cleveland , Ohio, whose ap ·
NEW HEAD COACH
(41 ' · 11. 21
-------------------------1 - To promote the joys and 8aiisfactions of homemaking.
..iii~ may her~atter b~ 1ssu~d, proving opinion will be fur ·
' - pursu~n.t to the - resolu!Jon nished · by the District to the
RICHMOND, Ky. (UP!)
2- To strengthen the function of the family as a basic unit of•
authorrzmg the bonds , solely succesSfu l bidder without ex .
Boh Mulcahy was named
too.- \ from revenues derived from pense and will be printed on the
.. ~ 'fees, rates and charges for th e bonds at the e&gt;C.oense of the
To
llirough
cooperative
actions
in
Monday to succeed Guy Strong
PUBLIC NOTICE
::' use of th~ w.aterworks syslem District. Complete transcript of
AVERY
SUE
ROMINE ,
as head basketball coach at
- the home and community.
... after provrsion tor the paymenr proceedings and the printed
r~ of co~ts and exp.enses of bonds will be furnished by the whose laSt known place of
Eastern Kentucky University.
I·
4- To become aware of ·the !"Ultiple roles of men and
operatron and marntenance Distr ic t , .together w i th cer - residence is Rt . I, Rutland, I
Ohio
,
and
whose
last
known
1
Mulcahy, a · graduate of
thereof .
tifi c ate5- show ing no litigation
1 worrien in today s society.
address is c -o Frances Nelson ,
":;
The bon~s sh~ll be dated the pend in§' or . threatened at the
Eas,t ern, coached South
Dexter , Ohio, is hereby notif ied I
.
I
5 - To improve national and international relations.
"" dateofth.er_r .d e_lrvery,shall be In t im~ of the del ivery , to enjoin
that dln the 12th day of March.
,,. the denomrnatron of $1,poo each del iv ery or: to con test the
Dakota for the past six
I
I
6 - To provide opportunity for decision making and
Mol or .may be
lssue:d rn . fully val idity of the . bonds or the , 1973, Kehneth H . Romine, being
plaintiff,
filed
h
i
s
comp
la
i
nt
seasons.
Strong moves on to
I
' assuming responsibilities.
:;' regr~ter~d form rn the de. power to issue them or the levy
aga
inst
her
as
defendant
in
the
- · nom matron of $100 or any or collec t ion of the assessments Common Pleas Court. Me igs
7 -To involve youth with adults in home economics, home . become . head , coach at
multiple thereof , as requested for their payment .
,. by
I have joined a group of privilege .
County,
Ohio,
Case
No
.
15,
247,
Oklahoma State · University.
economies careers and related occupations.
the purchaser , shall draw
THE
FARMEtRS
HOME
praying for divorce from said House Members introducing
:: Interest payable sem f-apnual - ADMINISTRATION (FHA) OF
Only
an
authorized
claim
of
Avery Sue Romine on the
....._ ly
on
t he
first
day THE
UNITED
STATES
legislation to define and limit e~ecutive privilei!e would
of
January
and
the o E pAR T M E N. T
0 F grollnds -of· ~·ross negle,c t of duty
and
extreme
c
ruel-ty
,
care,
.....-.. first day o1 July Of each A G R I C U l T U R E
H AS
the use of executive privi.lege. exCuse an· officer or employee
.,.
year" co mmertclng on the firsf AGREED TO ENTER INTO A c ustody and control of min or
~
Chil
dren
,
and
other
relief
;
said
A.~ I noted in a previous of any Federal agency, ind ay of January next succeeding LOAN AGREEMENT WITH.
cause
will
be
for
he,ar(ng
on
or
:. 1hedateofthebondsattherate THE ISSUER, _PUR SUA NT TO
colwnn , executive privilege cluding the White Hou,se staff,
Off ive per cen.tum (5 pet.) per WHICH FHA W I LL PUR - affer the 9th day of June, 1973
has become one of the most from honoring an invitation to
·""' annum. Anyone desiring lo do CHASE SAID $2,121.000 OF
Kenneth H . Romine,
'::. so may present a bid for said BOND S AT PAR AT AN IN significan
t points of conflict present testimony before
Plaintiff.
n bonds based upowtheir bearing TER EST RATE OF FIVE PER
J . B . O'Brien, between the White House and Congress or any of its com,~ a d iffer ent rate of in t erest, bul CENTUM (5 PCT . I PER AN ·
his o!lorney
.... not in excess of eig_ht per cen N UM .
the . Congress, as it has been mittees. Those who declined
(4) 4, ll, 18.25 (5) ·2, 9, 6)
2 lb . GROUND BEEF
~ tum
(8 pet .) rper
annum ,
Thebondswillbedeliveredon
used to keep Admiitistration could be subpoenaed and
prov ided that where a frac - Or about May 1, 1973 . 11 t he
2 lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER
• · I lona I interest rate is bid such success ful . bidder
desires
2 lb. ROUNO STEAK
•
officials f.rom giving inaH Citizens to be in formed .
thls newspaper urges every

t; .

!; -'-----,------__:_

.

~

:t"

'&gt;llotp

~~ei\Vallon

!:

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

::Z

I.

•

I

was hingt
' .. 0 n
R ep·0 rt B Clarenee
Miller

I

II soci~t::: encour~~~;emocracy

y

•

-

~r11a;ti~~/chea~ ~ b6ron:·Q~a~ 1' i;'p f! ~~!~~e~r ~~ i~.P:~~e b?J~~ird;ht~ 1j

::
,.. ... thereof . Split rate b ids will not pay expense of delivery at such
'"'• be considlilred. Each bid shall be other place .
....., for the purchase of said bonds at
The right is rese·rved to reject
not less than the par value b ids .
thereof .
LEAD I NG CREEK
CONSERVANCY
u r eyear
0 ns
1 in d·s-1'1'1
each ofa Ithe
DIStRICT

.

.c---~:tn::~r~Zr"on
,
Yr .
1977
1978
.... 1979
~ 1980
~ 1981
1982
1983
... 1984
1985
1986
1987
1988

..
$21,000
22,000
23,000
24,000
25,000
27,000
28,000
29,000
31,000
32,000
34,000
36,00 0

Yr.
--~

Amt .

w. Crisp ,
Pr '£!Si dent
39.000
Tel. No . 614 -742 -5922
41,000 {)) 21, 2:8 (4 ·) "'· Jt .
43,000
46,000
48,000
By : iack

l9..B'L .$3.7.&lt;,000

1990
1991
.1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000

so.ooo

53,000
55,000
58,000
61 ,000
64,000

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
·
Case No . 20896
Estate of Eva 1. Pos.ta l Mott
Deceased .
Yr .
Amt . 1
Ncitice is hereby given l hat
20 01 . $67,000Anna M. R'ffher ot P. 0 . Box
2002
71,000
130, Pomeroy,. Ohio, has. been
2003
74,000
duly appointed Adminis tratrix
. 2004
78,000
of the Estaffl of Eva I . Pos ta l
2005
82, 000
Mott, deceased, la l e · oJ Meigs
2 0 0_6_ ~ 6 , 0 00
County, Ohio .
2007
90,000
Creditors are required to f ile
2008
95,000
the i r cl aim s with said fid uciary
2009
99,000
within four months. •
.
2010 104,000
Daled this 24 t h day of Ma r c h
20 11 110,000
1973 .
2012 115,000
Manning D. W~bster
2013 123,'00(1
·
Judge
Cour t of Common Pleas,
Bonds maturing on and after ·
Probate Divi sio n
Januar y 1, 1985, are sub(ect to (31 2.8 (4) 4, 11, 31

.' .

17 ~~Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April4, 1913

formation to committees of
Congress.
NOTICE OF
A.PPO INTMENT
Under . my
proposal
No . 20,72J (scheduled for hearings next
Estate of Samue l Q . Barnhart
Deceas ed .
week before the House
Nolic e is hereby given that
Government
Operations
Emma Hayman whose Post
Off_i Ge Address i s Syracuse. Committee), e-xecu tfVe
Ohro' has been duty appointed as
Adm inistratr ix- with t.tre Will privilege could be invoked only
annexed ott he Estate of Samue l by the President who _ co~ld
Q. Barnha.rt , Iitle of Meigs
Coun t y, Ohio. deceased . ·
claim it on behalf of departDated til i s 17tll day Qf March
mental heads and his own
1973
cowtselors an~ st.a:f.f. However,
Mann in g D. Webs t er
Common Pleas Court, he would be permitted to do so
Pro bate Division, only when policy re comMeigs County. Ohio
(J) ~~. 28 (41 5, Jt c
mendations are involved and
·when
dlsclosure · would
·e riously jeopardize the
nciTionarinterest. .
The bill would require that
NOTICE OF SALE
All of th e personal property in when Congress requests inthe hom e of Alma Ohl inger , formation from the Executive
Lynn Pla ce off Vine Street
Middleport, wil l be off er ed · fo~ Branch, the Presiden{;;,o,jd
sa le to the highest bidder at 3: oo
p_.m. Friday, Apr il6, 1973, a t the either provide the information
srte of t he real estate.
·
or submi t a signed statement to
lionel Boggs, Congress within 30 days after
Guardian the request involving execUtive
(4) 3, 4. · 5, 3f

subject to citation for contempt
of Congress.
·
.
Although I believe certain
communications between the
President, his · ·staff and
membersOf his adminfstration
are constitutionally privileged
from Congressional scrutiny.
Congress, by not clearly and
con.cisely defining the use of
the privilege, has allowed the
Executive Branch to set the
boundaries and interpret the
doctrine beyond what may be
constitutionally permissible.
Executive privilege has been
implied under the separation of
powers doctrine of the Constitution although there has
been no ·c lear definition of how,
when, or by whom it can be
claimed·since ii was first' ~sed
by President Washington in
1796. Between 1961 and 1972 it
.was invoked twenty-four times
by Presidents Kennedy ,
JohnsOn, and Nixon.
... ·

-

2 lb. BULK SAUSAGE
1 lb. All MEAT WIENERS

Here A1•e lust A Few 01 These Items

Muellers Egg Noodles • ~a:; 44c
·
Downy F~BRIC·SO~ENER.
·:..~~· 72c:
Ivory Liquid D~ER~NT -~ · :·;~~L 5&amp;c.
S.O.S. Scouring Pads • pkf•"'32c
Clorox Bleach LI~UID.
~~~·L 35t
37c Nestles Morsels • • :.;;: 2SC Carnation Spreadables U·••· 67c
Libbys Tomato Juice
53i:
Mothers
Oats
Q~ICK
~k':.·
&amp;lc:
·Armour.
Vienna
Sausage
Hunts Tomato Sauce •
!0-qt.$215
u)..,•. 42c A&amp;P Dry Milk
Jif Peanut Butter • • 1~;·· &amp;9c cheer iOS QE:ERA~
•
49c
Quaker
Life
Cereal
Smuckers Goober ·Jelly ~~·· &amp;4c
• •
13t
A&amp;P
Cream
Cheese
.
•
Purina Cat Foods • •
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23t
Phase
Ill'
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•
Alpo Beef Dog Food
• •
49t•
Hunts
Tomaio
Catsup
•
Wesson Oil • ••
•
33c
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•••••
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PORK CHOPS
GROUND BEEF
BULK SAUSAGE
CHUCK ROAST
ALL MEAT BOLOGNA
HAM SALAD

(237)

J lb.
3 lb.
S lb.
J lb.
2 lb.
2 lb.

GROUND BEEF
SIRLOIN STEAK
CHUCK ROAST
SPARE RIBS
STEW MEAT
SLICED BACON

S lb.
S lb.
3 lb.
.. 4 lb.
Jib.
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CHUCK ROAST
GROUND BEEF
STEW MEAT
ROUND STEAK
PORK CHOPS
BULK SAUSAGE

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"The Store With A Heart,
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DAIRY FEATUR'ES

Fairmont

NICE lN LITE

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'n gal.
crt.

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•

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COUPON m~

:·Save 50c ·c7~~~..

Llljulcl. D•i~•r~renit)
__
.

Coupon

WEO

On Your Purchase of

ill

5·lb•. Ca n

On Your

1

lrand

1 ·:..

6ood Thru S1t., Aprll1th At All
A&amp;P WEO't - Col,. Oiv,

LIMIT ONE COUPON '
•

11

&gt;·

... n

,

or a 2-lb. Pk~. ·

Wieners s..:,:~~r

Ham Supor·Riilht I
.

~urchase

7-oz.

can

Good Thru Sat., April 7th At "All
A&amp;P weo·s- Colo. Dl•.

IDZ UNIT OJ\IE ('0UPON _
'•

I

99e

STICK WHIPPED MARGARINE

Blue Bonnet. • .
·gac. 3-Bean Salad. • •

1

I

·1-lb.3 7~
pkg.

HANOVER

COFFEE CREAMER

L.:..l"~ LIMIT ONE COUPON

LIMIT. ~N.E COUPON! ~~

,.
1

Lipton Tea Bags • •
Borden's Cremora •

Good Thru Sat., Apri17fh At All
A&amp;P WE0'1-Coh. Div.

Good Thru Sat., April 7th At All
A&amp;P WEO'• ~ Col•. Oiv .

33

WHY PAY MORE?

Lestoil
28-oz, 47~ . 'f.,',:h.

With

Right Guard

Trac II Blades

Coupon

Good Thru Sat., April 7tn At AU
A&amp;P WEO'• - Coh. Div.

Good Thru $at., iApril7th At Alf
A&amp;P

Jello

3:::~ -29i:

ML·
pkr. 39t·

'

can

pkgs~

Coupon

.

.

IR.l)..oz.

G"ood Thru So+., April 7th At All 1
A&amp;P WEO's- Cols. Oiv .

Good Thru Sat,1 Aeril 7th ~tAll

.bxs.
for

·

or

Yellow

·~~

'
~------------------~--,
1 PRODUCE FEATURES · .1
· 1 California Red Ripe
I

cans

.

4
.

Cak.e

Tide

Towels ·

99e

LIBBY'S BEAN 5_.....~~~~--~~~~~ ......,..... ~ .............. 7 14 ~~ . ,
'
.A
46 oz. .,
H WA II AN ·PUNCH ........................................ 3
! TOMATOES
I
.CAKE MIX.....n~t~~~~Gt.~~~~·~~c: .......;...............~ ...... ~. 3 ., ! ~ lb. 29e
i
I
Aorida
Golden
I
TOMATO
10~
.
I
ORANGES
CARROTS.
!
ALUMINUM WRAP: . -~~~.~~~~~~~~~.~ ....:.............. ~~~~~s·
3 lb.
15 ~ 59~ 2 :: 29~ 1
MAXWELL
.
HOUSE ..... ~~:~:.~.~~~.~L .....................;.
1
Aorida New CrOp .
1
. .• ,19
!
,
GRAPEFRUIT :1• ,...
KING SIZE TIDE ...~~~~.~~. ~·.~~...........................
.
.
r
IDAHO SUPREME INSTANT ·
-1
5
:;
59~
I
.................
~
....
~~!¥
..
3;9C
BAKED BAKED POTATO (IT'S NEW)
.
I .

Defergent

Northern

lean and Tender- '

Pt')LISH

'

I

lb.

Superio~

We Gladly Accept Fed. F~d Stamps

·--....-

•

the
Price
•'· {I
of
Pork
This -Week!

Right reserved to limit quantities

Prices Effective April 4-11

·'

USDA CHOICE

'· }'

'

i&gt;.-

0

.

.....-.

pkc.

SLICED OR WHOLE

.~ ~

LOW.f[S____

2-tb.

•

l6tfolll
Round

'

•

Pkl'.

15-oz.

I

4 lb. ' CHUCK ROAST
Jib, GROUND BE!tf .
2 lb. ROUND STEAK
2 lb. SLICED BACON
J lb. SLICED PORK SHOULDER

can·

trisco Shortening • •
Campbells Tomato Soup :;:··J3c
Log-·cnrn Syrup • • !:· 69t
47c:
Ragu ·spagheHi Sauce
Kellogg's Corn ·flakes 18-••·36t
A&amp;P Rice Lo:c G~IN ·-· . 39t
A&amp;P White Potatoes 6 $1°0 .
Hershey Instant Cocoa 16-o•·43t

22-o..
•

ja~;

,.;,... 41'
. h s. . ' BAR-B-9 •
Hunt' s Manwtc
auce "G"'". . . . . '"" ·
Wesson Cooking Oil ... : . : . ... . •::::" $2.79
·- ....... .... ......
Hunt's Tomat o JUlCe
"" · 39C'
Hunt's Tomato Ketchup .. ... : . . . . ~'.;,:~.: 26'
Hunt's Tomato Sauce . .
. '~;~· · 24'
Puss 'n Boots Tuna Cat Food
";:':;:"·18c
Puss 'n Boots Shrimp Cat Food
., "~~"· 18c
Puss 'n Boots Salmon Cat Food . ";:~"'· 18r. .

Woolite Liquid .
. .. ·-·-··'·-'-'\' ~~· sug
Woodbury Bar Soap
......... 3 ':!' 41c
j)illsbury Regular Flour ...... ... 5 ~ 13'
Pillsbury Cinnamon Raisin Danish .. •:;::·45c
Nab.1sco Ch'sps Ah oy . ·............,.,..,
""•·.... 61c
Anacin Tablets .... : ...... 100 ::~.r, 11.24
Contadina Tomato Paste ......... ';:· 17'
Corttacllimi· Tomato Sauce ......... ";:· 13'

�•

''

'

r

18 ...,. 111e

Dally

'

Sentinel, Middl"""~ -P,~&gt;mero:\',0 ., April 4, 1973

•

.Sentinel ·class~fieds Get Actton! Sentinel Classifie(ls Get Results!
For
s
.
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
'Busm·es-s . erv
· tee·s .
OF
• _w_~NJ J'~

INFORMATION

: --.

DEADL.. NES

I

S.:P .M. Dl.r ' Btfore PubiJca·t lo"
Monday DeedJ'Int •t

11 .m.

Motor Co.

C•nc.ella_t lon - Corrections , 1

Wilt be ac~p1ed until t ·• .m. tOr
oay ot:.Publ iC:at ion

QUALITY

STAR KILLS rats quickly, sure . FOR LONGER wear keep
2&gt;1, lbs ., $1.69.
Ebersbach
carpets
Slue
Hardware,
Sugar Run
MiiJs,
Lustre . clean
Rent wllh
electric
Pickens Hardware, Mason.
shampooer $1. Nelson' s Drug

~=-::;;;=::;=:-------•--1--30tp

1

J

'

REGULATIONS

reser~es

th.E

EXPr:RT

Porn eroy Home

NOW!!
'

HOW CAN '/01.-l 1!-IINI( Of
I CA.N'T WAIT

-------

_

~==::====;;:=--·_·J,tc

'H.EI:l.fJ

A LITTLE ~AitM

QSC.Aiil.

suSSIDIES

- --

SMlTH NELSON
MOTORS. .IN''-

- - -- =--

COf'J'ORAL CROCK,
l-OW THAT WE'VE
LICKED KAISER
B ILL-TURN IN
'/OUP. RIFLE -

Mobile Homes tor

HEATING a.
COOLING

.

Furnace Lontrol

-----

-

3¥2 HP

3 HP

wanted

_____

! 1M WILLING ID.
DO

AN~ IN(') .I
CAN , RIP, YOU

KNOW'IHAT.
WHERE DO
WE START?

YfiOS. 8UT l
O()N'T QlJtTE
YET"' I 51&lt;E WHERE

ONLY

$129.95

TURF TRIM MOWERS

o.

CEILIN~!

RETREADS

SABRE TILLER

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

l'M QVIr£ IMPWESSEP
WITH "THE PLAST!!WING
uOB YOIJ DID ON MV

GENERAL'S
-BEST

.

.

FRI. &amp; SAT. 10 11l 2

LEt ME' 1ELL. 'IOU ...

I ONLV INTEN~
TO GROW

I. GRA~UATE AN~

SE

WHISPERING PINES
NilE CLUB

UNT"IL

For Rent

Notice

DANCE

GUIL'!'II l5llT WE'IiiE
liiECOMMENt&gt;ING 1!-IE
A1TO~NE'/ FQj;? AN

~ENDING M~ C~IEN110 JAIL 1

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For 5ale

49.95

~

W(. FLT IN!

GASOLINE AILEY

A most
distasteful
,;ituation'

.

Wanted To'Buy

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker
Pomeroy, Ohio

\

RIGHT

Auto·

oPen

ME

..

OFFICE SUPPLIES
..

/.)0 _,_ THE SAL'T ~5 ·
A LITTLE fvta;!E MEI'Io !

~LT?

LATEX PAINT

3.99 gallon

Notice

'IE-OWE

..

)Wheel Alianment
'5.55

Pomeroy Motor Co.

SNUFFY!!

'

"THE ME/\T IJEE!:&gt;S , \
1\ liiT~ MDI'£

HONEV- POT-'IE G OT A
COL LECT CALL
FROM LUKEV

I WANT THAT
TWO DOLLERS

-~·~t==:::=::~====:;:; ;===========:;-r:=~:;=;::::=;;;::~.

j

•

OPEN UP.

1

.;
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio. 4T3·2t c '-•
'1-iOOD ' S- AQUARIUMS·· flsoi' ---~-,----.,
197DCHEVROLET
$209S
riQht to edit o,..rteject any ads
and supplies; new loCation 3 CAMPS lots for sale, run from
PAINT SPECIAL!
deemed
objitttional. 1 The
Capnce, H.T. Cpe., local I owner car, spotless interior,
Ash Street, M iddleport nea; · railroad track to low water
a
publiSher W111 not be responsible·
•
luxury car. feature i nclud ing V-8 eng ine, automatic trans .•
. park ; phone 992-54-43
; j mark, 86ft. wide at railroad
Blue Ridge
!or more than on.e inccSr.recl
PDV.:~r steer ing &amp;_brakes, dark green fin ish, viny l roof,
· 1. 7.tfc : track, 400ft. long' and 100ft.
, ,.
HOME &amp; 4UT0 .
.Insertion.
0
Interior· E.xterior
radto, new .w -w ttres.
..
'
j
w
ide
a1
low
water
mark
;
RATES
992-2t94
these lots are good and clean ,
3 GOOD CLEAN cam p lots ··17
·.. ·,For want Ad Serv t""
1
197,0 DODGE POLAR A •
$169S
5 cents per Word one lnserrlo'
ft . at the railrOad, 100 ft ~ at
no brush ; level ; on Ohio River
· ,606 E. Main Pomeroy;
4-door, factory a ir , V-8 engi ne, automatic transmission
Min imum Charge 7Sc
r i ver, 400 ft. long ; suita ble for
across
from
Pomeroy ;
E,n-=
!1&gt;
-=-...
~
tA
~merlca~·Car!.
For wood and masonry
12 tents per word ..fhr)il 1
power steering &amp; brakes, good. wh ite-wall tires · whit~
trallers. Marion Rfynolds ,
Marion Reynolds, Mason. W.
finishes .
_
:on:sec!Jtive ff')sertions . · . . ·
f ini-sh, vinyl top, radio, clean inside.
'
Mason
.
W
.
Va
.,
phone
773Va
.•
phone
773-51.47.
.
-G
UARAN.TEE[)18 cents per word _six coo",
5147.
4-3-6tc
and
ecuHve insertions.
'
Phone 992-2094
197p PONTIAC
S239S
3-29-6tc
25 Per Cerit Oiscount or\ . ..,ord
I '
Firebird Esprit. L~cal 1 owner car, 350 V-8 engine, P.
6FT. TOPPER for short bedded
!Ids and ads Jl&amp; id with in 10 da.vS\
&amp;
HOGG
&amp;
ZUSPAN
s
teering~
automatte
trans.,
AM-FM
radio,
like
new
white
·
l/2 ton pickup truck , sell
CARD OF THANKS ' '·
BUNDY Alto Saxophone; ·phone
8TII5
. .,
lettered ttres , dark brown fin ish , bucket seat&amp;. blk. vi nyl
&amp; OBITUAR Y
.
reasonable; fhone 992 -2244 or
MATERIALS CO.
992·3062.
Our·
trim . A sharp one. Really loaded.
SUO fet 50 word rl'tinlm.,rh
Monday thru Saturda'Y
3·30-6tc
can . see a
1679 .. Liocoln
I
773
-SSS4
Mason, W. \Ia .
Each add it i onal word 2c . •_.
606 E. Main, Pomero , 0 .
Heigh ts, Pomeroy.
BLIND ADS
·
SAVE 20 pet.
i n ven to ~y ·
4-3·3tp
Addft loilel 25c Char'g.e - 4
cleara nce sa le now m - - - - - - - -- WILL trim or cut trees, c lean
\dvert rsernent .
progress. 20 pet . discoun t on NOW READY Blooming
OFFICE HOURS
out basements. attics, etc.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
most of your. groce ry needs.
potted flowers, starting at
8 :30a .m . tO 5;00 p.m . Daily
Phone 949-3221.
1 ~ 30
a. m . to 12 : 00 Noor
Thi s means you can save 20· SOc; hanging baskets ; pansies
-f'OMEROY, OHIO ·.
3-11 -30tc
Sa1urdav .
pet. on your 9.rocery bill. Get
and ca bbage ; Ready soon - 'KOUSE . _FbR-sAtE~ 1" Brick
Petun ias, marigolds, Coleus, -t- r Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; bflck Q 1 DELL WHEEL alignment'
the ful l deta 1ls today at the
hOuse. 3 bedrooms, excellenl
Bright
Star
Market
next
to
tomatoes
, peppers, etc.; v. . off
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12.4,
YARD Sa le,
Fr iday and
Fr.Jm the l""gest
location
,
clos_
e
to
school
and
,
Drive·
In
Theatre,
Mason,
w.
by
thef!.at;
Hubbard's
Green
complete
front en~ service,
Saturday, 10 till 6; 33
Radiator to
Va .
house, St. Rt. 124. above park. · ci ty ; contact Lou Osborne 01
tune up and brake service:
Smithers St ., Gallipolis ; w ill NEw· 2 PC. Living Room su ite HOUSE and 2 trailer lots ; phone
llfst
Heater
Core.
call 992-5698.
Syracuse, Oh io.
in 100 .. pet . nylon w itli
Wheels
balan ce d
elec
3"20-16tc
992-5693.
be postponed if ra in.
Nathan
Biggs
'
4-3-llc
11-26-tf&lt;
rever sibl e cush ions. Th is
tronically .
All
wor•
4-4-3tc
4-2-5tc
Radiatpr
Specialist
week only $10'il.95. Cash &amp;
I guaranteed . Rea sonablf
GROCE RY busines_s for sale.
- - -----,-,-----,-,
'
Carry . P6merov Recovery , SLEEPI NG Room over the
Building for sa le or lease.
rates . Phone 992·3213 or 742 ·
ALL EYE Make -Up products H1
5 ROOM house, Ph bath, 1112 cat
622 E. Maln St ., Pomeroy,
Ph one 773 -5618 from 8:30 p.m .
3232.
.
Koscot line on special th is
Wine
Store,
Pomeroy ;
ga'rage , garbage disposal,
Ohio . Phone 992 -7554.
2-18-tfc
to 10 p.m . for appoin tment. MODERN four room and bt;tth
month . I would like to serve or;
references . required ; phone
water softener, aluminum
3-29-61p
home located 1776 Lin col n
3-20-tfc
visit you . Pl ease phone Helen
992-5293.
si ding, on Gravel Hill , 5.49 READY :MIX
COt.fC( ETE
Heights,
Pomeroy
·.
Alum
inum
'
'Jane Brown, M iddleport. Ohio
. 997'-2174 . · t'omeruy
4-3-tfc
Headley Sl. Phone-992-2859 for
delivered r ight t ., your
s·iding, storm doors and
WALNUT STEREO, Modern
992-5113 .
appointment only .
project. Fast and ea.sy. Fre·'
.
walnut ste reo -rad iO ·com - 1 windows , hardwood floors ,
4-4-tfC ATTENTION HouseWives and TRAILER , Brown ' s Trailer
4"3-3tc
mothers, turn your spare time
_:___-----,---,-,newly
fini
shed,
Basement
Four
speakers,
fovr
binat,ion.
p{IC TANKS
AROBl~
es t• mates . Phone ,992-3284. ·
Park .' phone 992 -3324.
into extra income show ing
equipped for washer and
spee d changer . Separate
Friday and
YARD Sale,
Goe3'ein Ready -M '·&lt; Co. , ,
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAt{. '
4-3-tfc
beautiful new line of fam i ly
M id l~por t, Ohio ..
dryer. Folding sta i rway to
controls . Balan ce $72 .40. Use
Saturday · on Larkin Street,
-- - -=- ED, REPhiRED. MILLER
cloth
in g by Fashion Wagon , ~.':i-30-tfc
our time paymen t plan . Call
storage area in attic . Pr iced
3 AND 4 ROOM""'"furni shed anc'
Rutland.
George
Hobstetter
.
SANITATION,
STEWART.'
'
Minnesota Woolen Co. High
for i mmediate sa le . Tracy
992-7085.
4-4-3tc
11n furn is hed
apartments
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035. .
1
commission , monthly cash
SEPTIC
TANKS
CL6i&lt;
3-29-6tc , Whaley , Pomeroy, Ohio.- cal l
"' ED
Phone 992-5434.
Real
Estate
Broker
.
·
10-4-Hcl
bonus plus $400 free ward ' REASONABLE rates . PI), 4.46- '.
992-3054 .
HUGE Garage Sale, 6 miles
4-12-tf•
POMEROY -6 rm . house on
robe
.
Call
446·3613.
. 4782, Gallipol)s, John RusseJI ,:
NEW
2
PC.
Living
room
suite
in
4-1-6tc
East of Chester on Rt. 248,
Flatwoods Rd .. 40 112 acres,
SPRING
CLEANING
Owner &amp; Operator.
100 ~ct . nylon with reversible
44
(
know·n
as
the
Or
.
Gribble
Ronald
Osborne
residence;
8
:lille
Beautify
your hor11e with
owner
;
or
4
5-12-tf&lt;
c us ior\s. T h is week only HOUSE by
3
a.m. to 8 p.m ., Thur sday and
prop. ) on T ..P. wafer liOE ,
instal
lation
of wall paneling
$109
.95
:
Cash
&amp;
Car
r~
.
.
bedrooms,
large
rec
.
room,
Friday ; depre sS i on ware,
. ·
"
REDUCE D prices on 1972
very good lo cation for
and c~iling tile . For estimate
c. BRADFORD, Auctl oneer
.
large patio, modern kitchen.
Pomeroy Re~overy, 622
furniture . cloth i ng
and
.'
M Obile Homes in stock ; check
ca ll 992-5471.
housing, prolect . Price
Comp lete Service
Main St... Pomeroy, Ohio.
fully carpeted ; cal! 992-5248
m iscellaneou s.
with us before you buy ; West
$30,000.
3-29-6lp
~hone 949 -3821
Phone
992-7554.
until3
p.m
.
or
992
-3.436
after
3
4-4-2tp
Breeze Mobile Home Sales,
p.m. ; No Sunday c"lls.
RACINE - 6 rm. house •. 3
~ acine, Ohio .
3-29-6tp
Athens, p hone 593·6736.
..
· · 'It . Brad[qrd ·
4-4-6tc
bdrm., gas floor furnace ,
SALE at Riggs Store Build ing at
.
3
'
-J0-6tc
· intersection of 124 &amp; 248, Long
5-• · ffC
vinyl si ding, tin r oof. very
CORN : Phone 985-4211 .
5 ROOM house, bath, front
Bottom ; April 6, 7 and 8;
nice
lot,
1 out -bldg., price
•
.:: ASH -paid for all makes and~
3·29-24tP
porch, full basement, two
PAINTING, Masonry work : .
starting at 10 a .m. ·Friday ;
$4,000.
mode l s of mob'ile homes .
lots ; S. D. Buskirk, Sr .• 341
free es timate; cal l 773 -5580.
furniture , washer , collectors
Hilton Wolfe
·
.
.·
Phone area code 614-423 -9531. ' PANSIES and ca bbage plants.
Page
St .. Middleport, Ohio.
items and
miscellaneous,
3-7-:l:l tp
:
Real
Estate
Salesman
Cleland
Farms
&amp;
4-13-tfc
4-4-2tp
appliances and clothes .
Ph.
949-3211
Greenhouse,
E.
Main
,
Racine
.
.'
4-4-3tc
I:::LNA ana Wnlte :::.ewtny
Ger ald ine Cleland .
'
HUMIDIFIER~
vW N YOUR HOME AT LOW
..
Machines ... service on all
3-29-tfc
o=.,.L-=D~
F .,A"SH
c-:-:
10:-:N
c-E=D-r_e_v:i v-a- 1 sti II
COST - see Kingsbury Home
make s-. Reasonable rates.
REAL
ESTATE
FOR
SALE
Hot Water l:leaters·
Sales &amp; Ser vice, Inc ., phone
in progress at th e Pomeroy
The
Sewing Center , M i d -j
New, all electric, 3 bedroom home with full basement,
992-6256 frOm 2 to 7 p.m. or by
PlumbingWesleyan Holiness Church on
dleport,
Ohio.
'
central a ir con ditioning, Ph baths, storm dOors and
appointment. 24' wide SPRING SPECIALS
Rt. 143. Special services . each
_Electrical Wor~
'
11 - 16 -tfc ~
windows, lully carpeted &amp; paneled, dishwasher,
furniShed. Made by Skyline
evening at 7: 30 p. m. Speaker
'
Corp. , coun try 's large st. .
r efrigera tor , lot 100'x 360', Tuppers Pla ins water, lo ca ted
and Pastor Rev . O' Dell
G &amp; E Appli ance Repair ; repa ir
" M eigs County owned and
next to playground. ldE!a l fOr chi ldren. Pri ced to sell f.1st
Manley . Everyone welcome .
on al l laundry equi pment.
operated . "
Finan cing
3-26- tfc
at 518,000.00. Fi nancing ava ilabl e.
refrigerati on equipme nt and
In Carton ·
avai lable. Set up on your lot
wiring;
house
w el ding,
I . ready for your Occupan cy. 200
Set Up, 134.95
electric and gas. Call 992-3802
Fram e, 5 room &amp; bath, front por ch, large lot, 3 bedrOoms,
yards off Rt : 33 on Coun ty Rd .
or after 4: 30p.m . call 992 -,
good cond ition , out bldg. for storage, the former
992-2448
18. QUick delivery . Our low
6050.
Genevieve Stoba rt property locat ed just over the
overhead will save ybu SS$ .. 12'
Pomeroy,
3-21 -30tp
1
Pomeroy corporation line on St . Route 33, priced only for
... 'a nd 14" Mobile _ Home~
In Carton
S5500. 00. A ve ry good bu y.
available, Kingsbury Home
-EX~AVATING , dozer, loader
Sa les &amp; Service, Inc.
Set up, $54,95
GEORGES. HOBSTETTERJR.
· and backhoe work ; · septic
3·25-tfc
REAL ESTATE BROKER
DEAD Stock horses, · catt le,
POMEROY
_:___
tanks installed; dum p trucks
hogs , sheep. Reason-able
BOX 101, Pomeroy,Ohio
Jack W. .Carsey, Mgr.
and ·lo-boys for hire ; will haul
B~FORE YOU buy any, new
charge. Cal l 245-55 14.
fill di r t , top soi l, li me~ ton~
Phone 9'12 -'2 181
Phone : 985-4186 af1er '1: 00 P .M. .
M obile Home you shou l d
affd gravel ; ca ll Bob or Roget
2-28"30tc
.
consi der the large sav ing s
-=~~-;cc --· -J~ff ers, day phone 992-7089 ; '
2
HOU SES
" N Ei W.''
3
you can have by purcha si ng a SIN,GER. automatic sewing
ntght
phone 992-3525 or _. 992bedrooms
;
wall
to
wqll
machine ; like new in walnut
'
late mod el used Mobile Home.
5232.
Music By ; Bill McKnight
car·pet;
total
electric
;
cabi net . Makes dE:!sfgn stitHer e are ·So me every da y low ·
2-ll -tfc
STAKE be&lt;( for Ford pi ckup
basements; large wooded
and the Nite Hawks from
ches, zig-zags, buttonholes,
:
2 ~60x12 Buddy 's,
p·rices
truck
;
_
phone
843,2778.
lots; 2 car garages; custom
blind hems, Overcasts, etc., 4
Nelsonville.
$4,295. 00, delivered and set
4- 1·6k
k'j
fchen ; cal l 985-3595 or 992- SEE us t-U:t&lt; : Awnings, stor·m~.
$85
.
Call
Ravenswood,
273up; 1 ~60x12, 3 bedriMl m
5869.
doors and windows, carports,
or
273-9893.
9521
"SLEEPING
Problem?
Elcona, $4,795.00; 1- 50x10
WANTED
3,000
new
or
used
·
marquees, Bfurr,inum siding
·
3-26'
12tc
-ffc
1-11
Restless? . Get
Snoozer
Detr,oi t er,
extra
clean,
to·mat o stak es; ca i i : John
railing . A. Jacob, sales
and
Tablets . for a safe night' s
s2,495.00; Thi s is luSt a few of
McCoy, New Matamoras1 0 ..
representative
. For ·free,\'
.
sleep. Only 98c. Nelson Drugs.
the bargai n s available at NEW FOAM to lill. your old
·. 865-2280.
.
es
timates
,
phone
Charleii
4-3-2tp
Ber rY -Miller Mobile Home
cushions, standard size suite,
110 Mechanic
Street ~
~ - l -8tp
Lisle,
Syracuse,
.
V. V .J
- - - - -- --Sa l es, 705 Farson Street.
$9 .95 .
Pomeroy
on l y
CLELAND
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc
.
·
JITNEY Supper at Sacred - - -- - ---,Belpre,'
OhiO,
phone
423-9531.
Recovery , 622 E. M ain St.
WANTED
OLD
UPRIGHT
REALTY
3-2-Hc
.
Heart · Church, Saturday ,
Shop here f ir st, you'll be glad
3-8-301 p
992-7161
PIANOS. Anv condition .
--'----=
--=
~
--=......_.
.
;
608
E.
Main
April 7, 4: 30 p .m . lo 7 p.m .:
NEW LISTING
y~u
did .
3-29-6tc
Pay
ing
,
$10
each.
First
EXLA"'"" t '"" "' · """'Lers, large
public is invited.
UPHOLSTERY
materials .· 100 ACRES ~ OF nice laying
.
.\ .
~loor . onlr .
Wr ite _ giv and small ; Ba ckhoes '· and .
4-3-4tc
regularly
~$l
.
95
only
$1
.95.
ian~ . Large barn and several
tng ~• .recttons. Pianos, P.
Loaders on track and t ires; .
-=-----_;__~
Also remnants . Pomerdy buildingswit~RlD
.. for horses,
0. Box 188, Sardis, Ohio 43946.
7
ROOMS
Dump
trucks ~ Lo -boi
RUMMAGE Sale, ·Apr i l 6th and
Recovery, 622 E. Main s·t.
3 farm pot~
up for. 2
4- 1-6tp
Service; Septic tanks in -'
bedrooms,
bath.
A
large
TV
4
,
r.
Air Conditioners '
7th, . Hughes
E lec tric
·J-8,30tp
mobile ho ... e::.. · ·Larg e 5
---,-s tall ed ;
George
( B i ll )
room; .Oice din ing area, large
Building, Third "' St., Mid - - - : - - -·Awnings·
bedroom home, with larg e
CALVES ,
Angus,
PuA
ins;
phone
992-2478.
dleport, across from Mid - BABY
living
room
,
Carport.
About
UPHOL STERY
mat erial s; closets, ·and 2 baths. All
' ··UnriProinning
Holste in or Charola is. La rry
__
· 2-9:tfc 1
dleport Library, doors open at
,
Nylon prints, cotton prints. miner als. Only $40,000.00.
'h acre level ground. Ex Earl
Curtis,
Phone
985-3539.
9 a .m., Beta Sigma Ph i.
· r:..
·
ve lvets of all kinds . Pomeroy
NEW LISTING
cel lent condition . $14,900.00 .
HARRISON'S TV Service and
3"29-6tp \ l...omplete mQbile .hQme · ;
4-3-4tc
Recovery, 622 E. Main St .
NEW HOME - 3 bedroom s,
1'/4 ACRE
Service Calls ; phone 992·2522.
·serv i ce -- plus gigantid~ :
·
3-8-30tp Ph baths, range in the kitchen.
Large older
home,
4
ARE YOU OVERWEIGHT? CLEA N . co pper , 45c lb .; . isplay, of mobile homes. ; ·
2-9-tfc
double sink, Family room and 2 · _bedrooms, 1'1:2 baths , lovely
1
Would you like a new look to
-----::
_
e7
_
.
Radiators, clean, 28c lb.; la.Jways av-"ilahte.at ...
~ ' UPHOLSTER your own fur - car garage in basement. One
go with the beauty of
'ki tchen, utility room , lsf
Brass, 18c lb.; Batteries, 70c;
,AU TVMUIJJ Lt: msurance beeroj '
niture .. Foam cushions ; any acre of land , Room for gar~en
Springtime? Our sl im and
Ginsen_g $60 lb.; M . A. Hall.
floOr ~a rpeted . Glassed
ca ncelle d?
Lost
your'
size. Cotton , burlap, swivel or Pasture for pony . Asking
trim program can· help you to
Reedsvifle, 378-6249.
operator's license? Call 992"
porth ,
garage ,
larg e
bases, zipper , webbing, welt . $29, 500.00. WILL ACCEPT
10x40 2 BR
lose weight , easily and en$2995
3-9-tfc
2966.
'
building 40x70 in excellent .
Pomeroy Recovery , 622 E. YOUR HOUSE IN TRADE.
joyably you cjln have
6, 15-tk '
10x51 2 BR
Main St.
BUSINESS LOOP
$3595
co ndition . $21 ,500.00 .
sna cks and many foods
3-8-30tfo BUSINESS BUILDING - Of 4
COLONIAL
10x563 BR
$3995 .
· unlimited . Bes t . of all ·there
BEAT the~-- rU sh! Get yoUr
rOom s, 2 nice· rest rooms, and
4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
are no fish , liver or dried mi"lk
lawnmoWer and ti ll er tuned 12X4l2 BR
$3595
NEW Strawberry· plants, ..Rt. modern 3 bedroom _ paneled
beautlfu I
kitchen
requirements . $5 to register
up now ; Small Engine Repair
12x51
2
BR
$3995
338, near Racine loc ks; phone home. Large wood burning
every th ing built in. Carand $2 per seminar - Conway ,
Shop on Third St ., MasOn, W.
247-2309,, Charlie Foster .
fireplace, nice kitchen. View of
Va
.
,.
12x563
BR
Diet Institute meets ever y · ·
$4295
peted . Gas F .A. heat, por '
3t the Ohio River . Asking ju st
Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
1-7-tfc 1969 BUICK Skylark, 2 door _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _4._4• p $25,000 .00 Will take lot in trade .
3-6-30k
ches , basement. Also has
12x61 3 BR
$4995
. hardtop, low mileage, 4 new
Orchfd Room . above lola's.
r en tal. $17,500.00.
20x4J
J
BR
For information ca ll 992-2926. 10 FT. pickup truck
t ir es; $1,500 ; phone 992 -~983 LOTS for sa le ; on Chester
t DOZER "and ba-ck hoe wOrk ;
9 ROOMS
camper;
aiter
5
p
.m.
water
;
phone
992-52
48
till
3
BEDR6t,.:.~~~S
baths,
3
' ponds and septic tanks, dit~ 1 Double wide
4·1-6tc
$6500
phone 698-8722.
3
5 bedroOms. ll/2 bath, dining
4-4-4t c
p
.m
.
or
992-3436
after
3
p.m
.
porches.
Sn.r.·"\J,I
vitt,
shed.
ching
service
;
top
soil,
fill
,
4--4-3tc;
r oo m , 'a ll new kitchen ,
REVIVAL at Rulland Com 4· 4·6tc Drilled ·well ~•Y $8,SOO.OO.
dirt, limestOne ; B&amp;K Ex -1
All homes .are total electric,
hardwood floor s. Porches,
munity Church starting April
1972 DODGE Demon 340, blue - - - - " - - -----'-vava tlng . Phone 992 -5367
·
BUSINESS BUILDING
compl
etely furnished, set of
2nd thru April 6th , 7:30p.m.
with white stripes, blue in- 19 70 NOMAD trailer , self · NEWBRICK - Has2900 sq. ft ./ buildings, garage . .85 acre of
Dick Katr , Jr .
1;,. "
birch paneling,
steps
,
with Rev . J . T. 'Carroll,
terior,. automatic, po~er
coh tained ,22 ft ., goodasnew; Concrete f.loors, 2 nice large
ground.. Basement , gas
9-1 -tfc
BARTENDER
needed
:
write
P.
door s, storm
house-t
ype
Beavertown, Pa., everyone
steering, 456 gears, '" cyc lone
.
rest rooms . Ample parking on . furnace . $17,000.00 . \
phone 698·8722.
0 . Box 365,, Pom eroy, salary · h ea der s, Engle_.. 304 cam,
~
Si=EW~I
N::":G
;:=~
MC:A"'
C
':'
H~
I
"
N
"'
E
"'
S
.~
R=
epali
4·.4·Jtc Route 7. ·A sking $50,000.00 .windows
.
From
$250. 00
welcome .
lSTOl!Y
.$90 p·e r week.
·
completely worked heads, air
4-1-61c
service.
111
makes
.
992-228.4
.
down
,
Deli
ver
ed
Free.
5 bedrooms, llil baths, dining
4 BEDROOMS
4-Htc
shocks; "best running 340 10 GA. FISH aquarium with 9
._ The F: : ic Shop. Pomeroy .
fi
sh
,
stand,
scenery,
pum'p
BRICK
--..
In
Rutland.
Large
room,
2 glassed porches,
EVANGELISTIC Services at cM_A
around," ca ll "9:85-3582 after s
·Author ized Si nger Sales and
. _l_e_
m_a-le
_d_e_s_
k~
cl erk.
_L
_ E-or:Many more to choose .from.
an d heater ; reasonable ; basement, all utilities on high
i=l'r st Baptis't 'Church , Si.xth &amp;
carport . &amp; garagfi!. Close ~o .
p.m . or see at Charles
Service. We Sharpen S.cissors .
h
land
.
A
beauty
if
you
can
see
middle -aged; must be able to
Palmer, M iddleport ; Apr il
Bissell's In Cheste·r .
P one· 992 -5496 ·
tfc ·value. Has large rooms, large , playground . Storm ·doorS &amp;
·
3-29&lt;\lc
4.44th thru April 8th ; 7: 30 p.m .
live In ; apply _in per son ; Ohio
windows , - JUST $12,800.00 . ·
4-4-3tp ---------~. garden and pasture for tt'le
.
Hotel, Middleport.
nightly with Rev . Charles
6 LOTS
BOAT, motor and trailer with pony. Askii'\.Q ju st $18,000.00.
·
4-3-6fc
Norris, guest evangel ist. and
large
storage
build lnQ in
1972 HONDA 500 m Otorcycle, 4
'
NEW LISTING
·
some accessor ieSi 40 h.p.
4-2-5tc
cy l inder, r:n ~ ny ext.ras, like
town
.
5
rentals.
Priced
for,
MOBILE
HOME
With
two
motor :. aski .ng $300; phone
:-:-:-=-=-:=-,.,...,-,..,-::-:--:-new ; pho':le 985 -3828. ,
ex tra ni ce larg e bedrooms.
quick sale. $8:200.00.
'
MISCELLANEOUS rummage .
992"9981.
' H6USE in ._ong Bottom, phOne~
J.9.tfc
Living
17xl7.
Goo(:!
large
lot
on
1
CONTINUE
TOGO
PRICES
sale, Van Cooney house ,
4-4-3tc
Eastern Ave·. · Gallipolis,
965-3529.
J
---'--- -- old Rt. 33. Has the J bedroom.
--'------~ ,
UP - BUY NOW.
~orner Ash · and Plum . Sts.,
PH. 446-017S
.
. 6-11 -lf'l
Middleport; Star ting AP~il
'68 CHEVELLE Malibu ; new NEW Improved " XIpples ," the OUR LISTINGS ARE GETHENRY E. CLELAND
51 h .
t ir es, $1.000 ; contact Mayer &amp; . great lroh pill now with TING BETTER ALL THE
BROKER
TIME
.
CHECK
WITH
US
FOR
,_ · -·Hill Barber Shop. Pomeroy.
Vitamin C. Nelson Drugs.
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND
A GOOD BUY.
.
--~-----H51c
4·• -2tp
4-3-Jtc
HENRY E. CLELANDJR .·
HELEN L. TEAFORO
-,---,----~-EFFECTIVE Monday, April 9,
LEONA V. CLELAND
GORDON
B.
TEAFORD
'57 CHEVY 2 doOr hardtop ; '55 REDUCE excess fluids wi·t h
1913, Logan Fire and Safety
ASSOCIATES
.
_ASSOCIATES .
Equipment Sales and Ser vice.
F;luidex . .Lose wei ght wi~h
Oldsmobi le; con tact Larry
·992-3325
o'992-361S
.
992-2'259,
if no answer 992· Dex -A -Diet _ c apsules
at
R D 3, Pomeroy, Ohio, will se ll'
Hubbard, Syracuse; phdne
BILL'S ARMY • N .AVY . SURPLUS AND
IIIQ SUNDAY SHOWINGS
2568
or
985
-4'209. ·
992-3364.
Nelsqn
Drugs.
entire bus_
iness to Brown 's
CALL .
DEPARTMENT
STORE
FOR
NEW '
4-4·3tp
-"'-Fire arid Safety Equipment
_ _ _ __ __ _ _
4-_3-12tp
&lt;;LOTHES Ati!D WORK· SHOES. 85 N. COURT
Sales and · Servtce, Rutl~nd ,
Ohio, Will ia m (B ill ) Brown
e G
en ne
CLOSE OUI on (4)1973 full Size
Big Capacity
STREET, · ATHENS, OHIO IN OLD RAY .
zig-zag sew ing machines. For 1
Maytag
~~
owner, phone 74~- 4673 . I would
PH •. 992 •2156
RIGGS&amp; _LINCOLN MERCURY,_BUILDING.
like to thank all my customers
·
Au tom atil'S
~ ewing
stretch
fabrics , 1.
fot their supp9rt in .the past . L~..;..;:.:c.-'-~------' . ·coAL, Lim estone, ·- EXce lsiot'l
2 speed operatio
buttonholes. fancy designs,
'
Choice ·of water
' II ·
M
" BOYS -GIRLS" make money
Sail Works, E . Ma in St. ,
h
th
et~ . Paint slightly blemished.
Large quantity of overal ls like Oshkosh B' Gosh,
an d ope
ey Wt gJve r.
· . Pomer oy. Phone ?92-38"1.
I,
temps .
Auto .
Brown a chance to serve them
selling . can dy. Call 992-7784.
~
Choice of carr:ying case or
Wranglers, Ole Kentucky, etc. All sty les of main bfand
water
level t
in the future. Dwight Logan .
3-3o.9tp
·
4-12-tfc\ .sew ing stand. $49.80 cash or
work shoes at big di scou nt. Several thoUsand prs
control .
Lint
4-4-ltc
terms available. Electro
Wrangler
jean and corduroys . regular $8.95 onty $4.95:
~ i lter or Power
ALU MINUM car top b'oats, 10,
Hyg iene Co. , phone 992-7755.
Agitator
.
equipm~nt
- Co leman heaters; lanterns, e,c. A.
Fin
Camping
12 and 13 ft . Kingsbur y Rd .,
;-"
4·4-6tc r
Perm
a-Press
la_rg~
asst.
of
~aleman
tents - both large cind small.
Co . .Rd . 18, Phone 992-6256
EXPERIENCED paintert · in Maytag
Ftshtng
and
hiktng
equipment
. Boy Sc;out equi pme~t . A
af1er
5
P:
m
.
·
121 ·ELECTROLUX Sweeper
teri.or and exterior. Phone
Halo of Heat
very
large
supply
Army
·
Navy
clothing an·d accessories.
3-6-JOtc
delu
xe
model.
Complete
with
'
985 --3951.
.
Dryers
Radios,
watches,
jewelry,
compasses,
kn.lves, etc. 8 track
all
cleaning
attachments
and
3-20 -30tp --::-:-:-=-::'--~-~-'
Surround clothes
175 BALES Of good mixed hay .
uses paper bags, Slightly used
with gentle, even
tapes - o_n ly 52.98. Ralnware , gloves, underware, etc.
Phone 992-6214.
but cleans and looks like new.
heat. No hot spots,
~ress sh~rt s, knit. pants, coats, jac;kets . all . at a big
'
-4-l -6tc
no over.drying .
Wi ll sell for $37.25 cash or
dtsco.unt . . l,og chams , ·tarpaulins •. motor oil, elec. drills,
Fi ne M'es h Lint
terms a·vallabte . Electro
----~saws, etc. Wright tools , sOc ket sets, end w r enches at low
Filter .
1971 FOUR SEASONS Traver
Hygiene Co ., phone 992-7755.
pri
ces. 225 LinColn welders - comple te onl Y·$92 .50. Just
Wt Specialize in
Tra il er , 20 ' se lf "con ta in ed ,
4-.4-6tc
.
,
MAYTAG.
received
large shipment merchandise from _R. R. Co. and
tan dem axle. Phone 985-4176. 1 - - - - -- - - -- Underwrite_rs
Ins. Co., Chicago, Ill. This is a very large
.
3-29-6tp
.
UNCLAIMED
lreig~t
1973
6
'
.
discount
store
with the main ~rands and lines of mer-·
track
stereo,
4
speaker·
audio
\
352 FORD motor ; spotted riding·
system ,· will seJI 'for small
chandise. Thousands of other Items to choose from
horse; 2 bull calves, 4 mqnths
balance'S82.50or pay $6.10 per ·
•
\
·.. Open Sunday from 12: 00 to 5:30 fCN" your convenfeftce. ·
old : phone 843-2(l8. ~
month , Call 992 -53ll.-.
74.l--4211
'' Arnold Grate .
Rutland
OWNER -lULL JAN -ES
.
'
3-2-tfc
•
4-1-6tc·
4·4-6tc ~....:.-:-~---:--~-=-:::.=-:.:...=..:.:c:...---.;..;.;==;::..:.=..:.....:-1"
--~-.,----___,~-~-.,
--.,..-----:-!-~
.

Th• "ublisher

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

(or'sale

Sale

•

r===::::~~l

FIR&gt;T, I'M altJ:;I[:tR\~0

I'VeWT&amp;.D

Rtsllo!JI ~10

NEWS AND ii:C\?D
NPJ.IS FOR

,

AIL fWtl/lT, ~T 01.1 I'Jf!H
IT! WHAT~ lHG

TO TAKG ,

AIJ0Tl\6R
FOSITION ...

40U!

tJ;;VJ'&gt;?

SALES '

· IJTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Midd leporf, 0.

SO FAR, SO OOOQ SANOY! I FIGURE \ OI"'Cf
WE' RE R COOPLA MILES FROM THAT

PUBLIC
WHOLESALE

Ol' WITtH'6'( NOW!

NEW
MOBILE HOMES .

· oVer lunar ·

Real Estate For Sale.

WANTED I

~ ~XX:I,_ .

..

SAVE MONEY AT

tl

-------

1

-·

For Rent

WMPU/139C

rRUTLAND FURNITURE Rs~~v~~:"

ON YOUR QIAL

.

"

\

\

'

•

"

'

20. Lummox

genus
U . Elevator
operator's
ca ll
(2 wds.)

17. Oriental

county

Yesterday
(Fr.)
- King
Cole

34. Dutch

M.lm ·posing
26. Nothing
27. Coiffure
gadget
28. Peruvian

cheese
36. Nebulou s
38. Sevareid
41.1 (Ger. )·
42. Drinkin g
vessel
_13. Sqflix ·
· denOting
~.
origin
· 44.-Man's

city
29. Summit
32. Malayan

tea
18. That

chap's
19. It's a

ungulate

33. Unaccom-

mouse!

nickname

panied

Ar;IIWJ)

D

dty

MAX, MAY

1 WOI\IOE.R. IF MA)(.

game
35. Caress

Ul£

WILL SHARE.

&lt;;?OM £

OF 'lOUR
CLAY·?

&lt;SOME OF HIS

CLAY?

OF COURSE

YoU MAV .'

I I I JJ
U ,OU!VK

•'

-~

.

V" ~

-

~E SLIPPED
IN 'THE EIACI&lt; .

" COULP

•'

Noor arranre the cir&lt;led lotte"

to form the 1urprlae anawer, U

(Aftaw,n• tomorrow)

(2 wds.)

·;

I

L

32. Children's
\

I

~=J~U~~~~~~f&gt;.~..A~~·=•=r=r•J•ted by the abo,ve Cartoon. "·
PtiUeSMIS! ANSWIR 11111
I 0 rI I I ]

31. Texas

AMANDA PANDA

~

S'I'IWG).
I V~

30. Succor

37. Bitter

1'ee~erd•r'•

h'erb
39. Take up

·- - -

Jumble11 YOKEL CLEFT ASTRAY BELIEF
·
·
.
·
Aa.wer; JJIIu'i llo 1erve ttl tt h~tn l'f'rly -"LAYIR" CAKE

. arms
40. Working
hard
·
( 3 wds.) ·
(sl. )

VNFORTVNATEL~.

'lOUR REFUSAL

.

OOE5 NOT ALTE~
THE FACT

45. or c~ rtai'n
lan-

I REFUSE

TO ACGEPT
THAT

guages
46. Couple
47. Overtake
48. - on
Ci ncited )

I

We talk to vou
;like a person.

9. Offensive
10, Goose

In viti ng

-.

'

Yesterday's Anawer

trouble
(3 wds)

For Sale

Employment Wanted ·

form four ordinary worda.

mu~al

Brit~

&amp;IJ _ , ,_. ·

unscramble these four Jumbltll,
one letter to each square, to

-society
in lpwa

ishe_f' s

.....

Ill NIH AHNIJLO .on/1 BOrl L£t

7. - fiend
8. Com-

farewell
Scottish

1

D II Y.5

17.

MOBILE HOMES

o.

CARRIERS
FOR
POMEROY

Th

TOWE/&gt;R
A.LL I I-lAVE.

Sy ndicate, Inc. )

Jrl!UWIDM;-~
~
''V

6. MacaW

Aclef

STICKING AROUND
C3wds. )
~ERE A FEW DAYS,
(sl. )
50 GET USED TO ME:•J5. Likewi se
~
16. Bemg
(Sp.) ·

TRI.OOUNTY

- - -.- - - --

"r efuge

,..,..---------~-13. Ogling
-TilE SIIIRT
WAS TORN
TO SIIREDS
AND 'IOU AAD
ONLY ~ALF
A COAT.

(0 1973 Kin g Feature~

4. Standards
5. Domingo
or Gedda

year
&amp;, T urkish ·
city L Mr. Mota
portr'a yer

- - -- - -

- -.,.---- - Help Wanted

· 2. Blue
grass·
3. Biblical

ACI\OSS
l. Excess ·
of solar

12. -

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I NEVER KNEW AN ENEMY TO
PUNS WHO WAS NOT AN ILL-NATURED MAN. - CHARLES '
LA (liB

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1\ND P~AV ~HI&lt;!'
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YOU'P N~Vcl&lt; ,
HAVe COMe
AE~I! TO
He~P Me!

Here'~ how to
. AXYDLBAAXR

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE II

work it:
.

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One letter simply sta.nd s roi- an·other. In this sample A is
used for the three L's X far the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrOphes, the Ieng{h and formati on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

·e

UNFO~NATi:W, '(OUR REFUSAL
AL5d' TO AC CEPT THE FACT THAT ·
'I()VR REFUSAL OOE7 i'l!T ALTER1!\E

I \L ACCi:PTTI\AT!

!,

D,
ts
•g

~ACT ALSO DOES NOT ALTER lHE
FACT OF OU~ BEII'IS THE L0Sit-ISE5T .

y,
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CRYPTOQUOTES
S J V

K C f, A · S J 0 C H

J F GXVG

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J V .;

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Dally

'

Sentinel, Middl"""~ -P,~&gt;mero:\',0 ., April 4, 1973

•

.Sentinel ·class~fieds Get Actton! Sentinel Classifie(ls Get Results!
For
s
.
2 SIGNS
Pomeroy
'Busm·es-s . erv
· tee·s .
OF
• _w_~NJ J'~

INFORMATION

: --.

DEADL.. NES

I

S.:P .M. Dl.r ' Btfore PubiJca·t lo"
Monday DeedJ'Int •t

11 .m.

Motor Co.

C•nc.ella_t lon - Corrections , 1

Wilt be ac~p1ed until t ·• .m. tOr
oay ot:.Publ iC:at ion

QUALITY

STAR KILLS rats quickly, sure . FOR LONGER wear keep
2&gt;1, lbs ., $1.69.
Ebersbach
carpets
Slue
Hardware,
Sugar Run
MiiJs,
Lustre . clean
Rent wllh
electric
Pickens Hardware, Mason.
shampooer $1. Nelson' s Drug

~=-::;;;=::;=:-------•--1--30tp

1

J

'

REGULATIONS

reser~es

th.E

EXPr:RT

Porn eroy Home

NOW!!
'

HOW CAN '/01.-l 1!-IINI( Of
I CA.N'T WAIT

-------

_

~==::====;;:=--·_·J,tc

'H.EI:l.fJ

A LITTLE ~AitM

QSC.Aiil.

suSSIDIES

- --

SMlTH NELSON
MOTORS. .IN''-

- - -- =--

COf'J'ORAL CROCK,
l-OW THAT WE'VE
LICKED KAISER
B ILL-TURN IN
'/OUP. RIFLE -

Mobile Homes tor

HEATING a.
COOLING

.

Furnace Lontrol

-----

-

3¥2 HP

3 HP

wanted

_____

! 1M WILLING ID.
DO

AN~ IN(') .I
CAN , RIP, YOU

KNOW'IHAT.
WHERE DO
WE START?

YfiOS. 8UT l
O()N'T QlJtTE
YET"' I 51&lt;E WHERE

ONLY

$129.95

TURF TRIM MOWERS

o.

CEILIN~!

RETREADS

SABRE TILLER

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

l'M QVIr£ IMPWESSEP
WITH "THE PLAST!!WING
uOB YOIJ DID ON MV

GENERAL'S
-BEST

.

.

FRI. &amp; SAT. 10 11l 2

LEt ME' 1ELL. 'IOU ...

I ONLV INTEN~
TO GROW

I. GRA~UATE AN~

SE

WHISPERING PINES
NilE CLUB

UNT"IL

For Rent

Notice

DANCE

GUIL'!'II l5llT WE'IiiE
liiECOMMENt&gt;ING 1!-IE
A1TO~NE'/ FQj;? AN

~ENDING M~ C~IEN110 JAIL 1

Real Estate For Sale

Real Estate For 5ale

49.95

~

W(. FLT IN!

GASOLINE AILEY

A most
distasteful
,;ituation'

.

Wanted To'Buy

Virgil B.
Teaford, Sr.
Broker
Pomeroy, Ohio

\

RIGHT

Auto·

oPen

ME

..

OFFICE SUPPLIES
..

/.)0 _,_ THE SAL'T ~5 ·
A LITTLE fvta;!E MEI'Io !

~LT?

LATEX PAINT

3.99 gallon

Notice

'IE-OWE

..

)Wheel Alianment
'5.55

Pomeroy Motor Co.

SNUFFY!!

'

"THE ME/\T IJEE!:&gt;S , \
1\ liiT~ MDI'£

HONEV- POT-'IE G OT A
COL LECT CALL
FROM LUKEV

I WANT THAT
TWO DOLLERS

-~·~t==:::=::~====:;:; ;===========:;-r:=~:;=;::::=;;;::~.

j

•

OPEN UP.

1

.;
Store, Pomeroy, Ohio. 4T3·2t c '-•
'1-iOOD ' S- AQUARIUMS·· flsoi' ---~-,----.,
197DCHEVROLET
$209S
riQht to edit o,..rteject any ads
and supplies; new loCation 3 CAMPS lots for sale, run from
PAINT SPECIAL!
deemed
objitttional. 1 The
Capnce, H.T. Cpe., local I owner car, spotless interior,
Ash Street, M iddleport nea; · railroad track to low water
a
publiSher W111 not be responsible·
•
luxury car. feature i nclud ing V-8 eng ine, automatic trans .•
. park ; phone 992-54-43
; j mark, 86ft. wide at railroad
Blue Ridge
!or more than on.e inccSr.recl
PDV.:~r steer ing &amp;_brakes, dark green fin ish, viny l roof,
· 1. 7.tfc : track, 400ft. long' and 100ft.
, ,.
HOME &amp; 4UT0 .
.Insertion.
0
Interior· E.xterior
radto, new .w -w ttres.
..
'
j
w
ide
a1
low
water
mark
;
RATES
992-2t94
these lots are good and clean ,
3 GOOD CLEAN cam p lots ··17
·.. ·,For want Ad Serv t""
1
197,0 DODGE POLAR A •
$169S
5 cents per Word one lnserrlo'
ft . at the railrOad, 100 ft ~ at
no brush ; level ; on Ohio River
· ,606 E. Main Pomeroy;
4-door, factory a ir , V-8 engi ne, automatic transmission
Min imum Charge 7Sc
r i ver, 400 ft. long ; suita ble for
across
from
Pomeroy ;
E,n-=
!1&gt;
-=-...
~
tA
~merlca~·Car!.
For wood and masonry
12 tents per word ..fhr)il 1
power steering &amp; brakes, good. wh ite-wall tires · whit~
trallers. Marion Rfynolds ,
Marion Reynolds, Mason. W.
finishes .
_
:on:sec!Jtive ff')sertions . · . . ·
f ini-sh, vinyl top, radio, clean inside.
'
Mason
.
W
.
Va
.,
phone
773Va
.•
phone
773-51.47.
.
-G
UARAN.TEE[)18 cents per word _six coo",
5147.
4-3-6tc
and
ecuHve insertions.
'
Phone 992-2094
197p PONTIAC
S239S
3-29-6tc
25 Per Cerit Oiscount or\ . ..,ord
I '
Firebird Esprit. L~cal 1 owner car, 350 V-8 engine, P.
6FT. TOPPER for short bedded
!Ids and ads Jl&amp; id with in 10 da.vS\
&amp;
HOGG
&amp;
ZUSPAN
s
teering~
automatte
trans.,
AM-FM
radio,
like
new
white
·
l/2 ton pickup truck , sell
CARD OF THANKS ' '·
BUNDY Alto Saxophone; ·phone
8TII5
. .,
lettered ttres , dark brown fin ish , bucket seat&amp;. blk. vi nyl
&amp; OBITUAR Y
.
reasonable; fhone 992 -2244 or
MATERIALS CO.
992·3062.
Our·
trim . A sharp one. Really loaded.
SUO fet 50 word rl'tinlm.,rh
Monday thru Saturda'Y
3·30-6tc
can . see a
1679 .. Liocoln
I
773
-SSS4
Mason, W. \Ia .
Each add it i onal word 2c . •_.
606 E. Main, Pomero , 0 .
Heigh ts, Pomeroy.
BLIND ADS
·
SAVE 20 pet.
i n ven to ~y ·
4-3·3tp
Addft loilel 25c Char'g.e - 4
cleara nce sa le now m - - - - - - - -- WILL trim or cut trees, c lean
\dvert rsernent .
progress. 20 pet . discoun t on NOW READY Blooming
OFFICE HOURS
out basements. attics, etc.
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
most of your. groce ry needs.
potted flowers, starting at
8 :30a .m . tO 5;00 p.m . Daily
Phone 949-3221.
1 ~ 30
a. m . to 12 : 00 Noor
Thi s means you can save 20· SOc; hanging baskets ; pansies
-f'OMEROY, OHIO ·.
3-11 -30tc
Sa1urdav .
pet. on your 9.rocery bill. Get
and ca bbage ; Ready soon - 'KOUSE . _FbR-sAtE~ 1" Brick
Petun ias, marigolds, Coleus, -t- r Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; bflck Q 1 DELL WHEEL alignment'
the ful l deta 1ls today at the
hOuse. 3 bedrooms, excellenl
Bright
Star
Market
next
to
tomatoes
, peppers, etc.; v. . off
located at Crossroads, Rt. 12.4,
YARD Sa le,
Fr iday and
Fr.Jm the l""gest
location
,
clos_
e
to
school
and
,
Drive·
In
Theatre,
Mason,
w.
by
thef!.at;
Hubbard's
Green
complete
front en~ service,
Saturday, 10 till 6; 33
Radiator to
Va .
house, St. Rt. 124. above park. · ci ty ; contact Lou Osborne 01
tune up and brake service:
Smithers St ., Gallipolis ; w ill NEw· 2 PC. Living Room su ite HOUSE and 2 trailer lots ; phone
llfst
Heater
Core.
call 992-5698.
Syracuse, Oh io.
in 100 .. pet . nylon w itli
Wheels
balan ce d
elec
3"20-16tc
992-5693.
be postponed if ra in.
Nathan
Biggs
'
4-3-llc
11-26-tf&lt;
rever sibl e cush ions. Th is
tronically .
All
wor•
4-4-3tc
4-2-5tc
Radiatpr
Specialist
week only $10'il.95. Cash &amp;
I guaranteed . Rea sonablf
GROCE RY busines_s for sale.
- - -----,-,-----,-,
'
Carry . P6merov Recovery , SLEEPI NG Room over the
Building for sa le or lease.
rates . Phone 992·3213 or 742 ·
ALL EYE Make -Up products H1
5 ROOM house, Ph bath, 1112 cat
622 E. Maln St ., Pomeroy,
Ph one 773 -5618 from 8:30 p.m .
3232.
.
Koscot line on special th is
Wine
Store,
Pomeroy ;
ga'rage , garbage disposal,
Ohio . Phone 992 -7554.
2-18-tfc
to 10 p.m . for appoin tment. MODERN four room and bt;tth
month . I would like to serve or;
references . required ; phone
water softener, aluminum
3-29-61p
home located 1776 Lin col n
3-20-tfc
visit you . Pl ease phone Helen
992-5293.
si ding, on Gravel Hill , 5.49 READY :MIX
COt.fC( ETE
Heights,
Pomeroy
·.
Alum
inum
'
'Jane Brown, M iddleport. Ohio
. 997'-2174 . · t'omeruy
4-3-tfc
Headley Sl. Phone-992-2859 for
delivered r ight t ., your
s·iding, storm doors and
WALNUT STEREO, Modern
992-5113 .
appointment only .
project. Fast and ea.sy. Fre·'
.
walnut ste reo -rad iO ·com - 1 windows , hardwood floors ,
4-4-tfC ATTENTION HouseWives and TRAILER , Brown ' s Trailer
4"3-3tc
mothers, turn your spare time
_:___-----,---,-,newly
fini
shed,
Basement
Four
speakers,
fovr
binat,ion.
p{IC TANKS
AROBl~
es t• mates . Phone ,992-3284. ·
Park .' phone 992 -3324.
into extra income show ing
equipped for washer and
spee d changer . Separate
Friday and
YARD Sale,
Goe3'ein Ready -M '·&lt; Co. , ,
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAt{. '
4-3-tfc
beautiful new line of fam i ly
M id l~por t, Ohio ..
dryer. Folding sta i rway to
controls . Balan ce $72 .40. Use
Saturday · on Larkin Street,
-- - -=- ED, REPhiRED. MILLER
cloth
in g by Fashion Wagon , ~.':i-30-tfc
our time paymen t plan . Call
storage area in attic . Pr iced
3 AND 4 ROOM""'"furni shed anc'
Rutland.
George
Hobstetter
.
SANITATION,
STEWART.'
'
Minnesota Woolen Co. High
for i mmediate sa le . Tracy
992-7085.
4-4-3tc
11n furn is hed
apartments
OHIO. PHONE 662·3035. .
1
commission , monthly cash
SEPTIC
TANKS
CL6i&lt;
3-29-6tc , Whaley , Pomeroy, Ohio.- cal l
"' ED
Phone 992-5434.
Real
Estate
Broker
.
·
10-4-Hcl
bonus plus $400 free ward ' REASONABLE rates . PI), 4.46- '.
992-3054 .
HUGE Garage Sale, 6 miles
4-12-tf•
POMEROY -6 rm . house on
robe
.
Call
446·3613.
. 4782, Gallipol)s, John RusseJI ,:
NEW
2
PC.
Living
room
suite
in
4-1-6tc
East of Chester on Rt. 248,
Flatwoods Rd .. 40 112 acres,
SPRING
CLEANING
Owner &amp; Operator.
100 ~ct . nylon with reversible
44
(
know·n
as
the
Or
.
Gribble
Ronald
Osborne
residence;
8
:lille
Beautify
your hor11e with
owner
;
or
4
5-12-tf&lt;
c us ior\s. T h is week only HOUSE by
3
a.m. to 8 p.m ., Thur sday and
prop. ) on T ..P. wafer liOE ,
instal
lation
of wall paneling
$109
.95
:
Cash
&amp;
Car
r~
.
.
bedrooms,
large
rec
.
room,
Friday ; depre sS i on ware,
. ·
"
REDUCE D prices on 1972
very good lo cation for
and c~iling tile . For estimate
c. BRADFORD, Auctl oneer
.
large patio, modern kitchen.
Pomeroy Re~overy, 622
furniture . cloth i ng
and
.'
M Obile Homes in stock ; check
ca ll 992-5471.
housing, prolect . Price
Comp lete Service
Main St... Pomeroy, Ohio.
fully carpeted ; cal! 992-5248
m iscellaneou s.
with us before you buy ; West
$30,000.
3-29-6lp
~hone 949 -3821
Phone
992-7554.
until3
p.m
.
or
992
-3.436
after
3
4-4-2tp
Breeze Mobile Home Sales,
p.m. ; No Sunday c"lls.
RACINE - 6 rm. house •. 3
~ acine, Ohio .
3-29-6tp
Athens, p hone 593·6736.
..
· · 'It . Brad[qrd ·
4-4-6tc
bdrm., gas floor furnace ,
SALE at Riggs Store Build ing at
.
3
'
-J0-6tc
· intersection of 124 &amp; 248, Long
5-• · ffC
vinyl si ding, tin r oof. very
CORN : Phone 985-4211 .
5 ROOM house, bath, front
Bottom ; April 6, 7 and 8;
nice
lot,
1 out -bldg., price
•
.:: ASH -paid for all makes and~
3·29-24tP
porch, full basement, two
PAINTING, Masonry work : .
starting at 10 a .m. ·Friday ;
$4,000.
mode l s of mob'ile homes .
lots ; S. D. Buskirk, Sr .• 341
free es timate; cal l 773 -5580.
furniture , washer , collectors
Hilton Wolfe
·
.
.·
Phone area code 614-423 -9531. ' PANSIES and ca bbage plants.
Page
St .. Middleport, Ohio.
items and
miscellaneous,
3-7-:l:l tp
:
Real
Estate
Salesman
Cleland
Farms
&amp;
4-13-tfc
4-4-2tp
appliances and clothes .
Ph.
949-3211
Greenhouse,
E.
Main
,
Racine
.
.'
4-4-3tc
I:::LNA ana Wnlte :::.ewtny
Ger ald ine Cleland .
'
HUMIDIFIER~
vW N YOUR HOME AT LOW
..
Machines ... service on all
3-29-tfc
o=.,.L-=D~
F .,A"SH
c-:-:
10:-:N
c-E=D-r_e_v:i v-a- 1 sti II
COST - see Kingsbury Home
make s-. Reasonable rates.
REAL
ESTATE
FOR
SALE
Hot Water l:leaters·
Sales &amp; Ser vice, Inc ., phone
in progress at th e Pomeroy
The
Sewing Center , M i d -j
New, all electric, 3 bedroom home with full basement,
992-6256 frOm 2 to 7 p.m. or by
PlumbingWesleyan Holiness Church on
dleport,
Ohio.
'
central a ir con ditioning, Ph baths, storm dOors and
appointment. 24' wide SPRING SPECIALS
Rt. 143. Special services . each
_Electrical Wor~
'
11 - 16 -tfc ~
windows, lully carpeted &amp; paneled, dishwasher,
furniShed. Made by Skyline
evening at 7: 30 p. m. Speaker
'
Corp. , coun try 's large st. .
r efrigera tor , lot 100'x 360', Tuppers Pla ins water, lo ca ted
and Pastor Rev . O' Dell
G &amp; E Appli ance Repair ; repa ir
" M eigs County owned and
next to playground. ldE!a l fOr chi ldren. Pri ced to sell f.1st
Manley . Everyone welcome .
on al l laundry equi pment.
operated . "
Finan cing
3-26- tfc
at 518,000.00. Fi nancing ava ilabl e.
refrigerati on equipme nt and
In Carton ·
avai lable. Set up on your lot
wiring;
house
w el ding,
I . ready for your Occupan cy. 200
Set Up, 134.95
electric and gas. Call 992-3802
Fram e, 5 room &amp; bath, front por ch, large lot, 3 bedrOoms,
yards off Rt : 33 on Coun ty Rd .
or after 4: 30p.m . call 992 -,
good cond ition , out bldg. for storage, the former
992-2448
18. QUick delivery . Our low
6050.
Genevieve Stoba rt property locat ed just over the
overhead will save ybu SS$ .. 12'
Pomeroy,
3-21 -30tp
1
Pomeroy corporation line on St . Route 33, priced only for
... 'a nd 14" Mobile _ Home~
In Carton
S5500. 00. A ve ry good bu y.
available, Kingsbury Home
-EX~AVATING , dozer, loader
Sa les &amp; Service, Inc.
Set up, $54,95
GEORGES. HOBSTETTERJR.
· and backhoe work ; · septic
3·25-tfc
REAL ESTATE BROKER
DEAD Stock horses, · catt le,
POMEROY
_:___
tanks installed; dum p trucks
hogs , sheep. Reason-able
BOX 101, Pomeroy,Ohio
Jack W. .Carsey, Mgr.
and ·lo-boys for hire ; will haul
B~FORE YOU buy any, new
charge. Cal l 245-55 14.
fill di r t , top soi l, li me~ ton~
Phone 9'12 -'2 181
Phone : 985-4186 af1er '1: 00 P .M. .
M obile Home you shou l d
affd gravel ; ca ll Bob or Roget
2-28"30tc
.
consi der the large sav ing s
-=~~-;cc --· -J~ff ers, day phone 992-7089 ; '
2
HOU SES
" N Ei W.''
3
you can have by purcha si ng a SIN,GER. automatic sewing
ntght
phone 992-3525 or _. 992bedrooms
;
wall
to
wqll
machine ; like new in walnut
'
late mod el used Mobile Home.
5232.
Music By ; Bill McKnight
car·pet;
total
electric
;
cabi net . Makes dE:!sfgn stitHer e are ·So me every da y low ·
2-ll -tfc
STAKE be&lt;( for Ford pi ckup
basements; large wooded
and the Nite Hawks from
ches, zig-zags, buttonholes,
:
2 ~60x12 Buddy 's,
p·rices
truck
;
_
phone
843,2778.
lots; 2 car garages; custom
blind hems, Overcasts, etc., 4
Nelsonville.
$4,295. 00, delivered and set
4- 1·6k
k'j
fchen ; cal l 985-3595 or 992- SEE us t-U:t&lt; : Awnings, stor·m~.
$85
.
Call
Ravenswood,
273up; 1 ~60x12, 3 bedriMl m
5869.
doors and windows, carports,
or
273-9893.
9521
"SLEEPING
Problem?
Elcona, $4,795.00; 1- 50x10
WANTED
3,000
new
or
used
·
marquees, Bfurr,inum siding
·
3-26'
12tc
-ffc
1-11
Restless? . Get
Snoozer
Detr,oi t er,
extra
clean,
to·mat o stak es; ca i i : John
railing . A. Jacob, sales
and
Tablets . for a safe night' s
s2,495.00; Thi s is luSt a few of
McCoy, New Matamoras1 0 ..
representative
. For ·free,\'
.
sleep. Only 98c. Nelson Drugs.
the bargai n s available at NEW FOAM to lill. your old
·. 865-2280.
.
es
timates
,
phone
Charleii
4-3-2tp
Ber rY -Miller Mobile Home
cushions, standard size suite,
110 Mechanic
Street ~
~ - l -8tp
Lisle,
Syracuse,
.
V. V .J
- - - - -- --Sa l es, 705 Farson Street.
$9 .95 .
Pomeroy
on l y
CLELAND
Johnson
and
Son,
Inc
.
·
JITNEY Supper at Sacred - - -- - ---,Belpre,'
OhiO,
phone
423-9531.
Recovery , 622 E. M ain St.
WANTED
OLD
UPRIGHT
REALTY
3-2-Hc
.
Heart · Church, Saturday ,
Shop here f ir st, you'll be glad
3-8-301 p
992-7161
PIANOS. Anv condition .
--'----=
--=
~
--=......_.
.
;
608
E.
Main
April 7, 4: 30 p .m . lo 7 p.m .:
NEW LISTING
y~u
did .
3-29-6tc
Pay
ing
,
$10
each.
First
EXLA"'"" t '"" "' · """'Lers, large
public is invited.
UPHOLSTERY
materials .· 100 ACRES ~ OF nice laying
.
.\ .
~loor . onlr .
Wr ite _ giv and small ; Ba ckhoes '· and .
4-3-4tc
regularly
~$l
.
95
only
$1
.95.
ian~ . Large barn and several
tng ~• .recttons. Pianos, P.
Loaders on track and t ires; .
-=-----_;__~
Also remnants . Pomerdy buildingswit~RlD
.. for horses,
0. Box 188, Sardis, Ohio 43946.
7
ROOMS
Dump
trucks ~ Lo -boi
RUMMAGE Sale, ·Apr i l 6th and
Recovery, 622 E. Main s·t.
3 farm pot~
up for. 2
4- 1-6tp
Service; Septic tanks in -'
bedrooms,
bath.
A
large
TV
4
,
r.
Air Conditioners '
7th, . Hughes
E lec tric
·J-8,30tp
mobile ho ... e::.. · ·Larg e 5
---,-s tall ed ;
George
( B i ll )
room; .Oice din ing area, large
Building, Third "' St., Mid - - - : - - -·Awnings·
bedroom home, with larg e
CALVES ,
Angus,
PuA
ins;
phone
992-2478.
dleport, across from Mid - BABY
living
room
,
Carport.
About
UPHOL STERY
mat erial s; closets, ·and 2 baths. All
' ··UnriProinning
Holste in or Charola is. La rry
__
· 2-9:tfc 1
dleport Library, doors open at
,
Nylon prints, cotton prints. miner als. Only $40,000.00.
'h acre level ground. Ex Earl
Curtis,
Phone
985-3539.
9 a .m., Beta Sigma Ph i.
· r:..
·
ve lvets of all kinds . Pomeroy
NEW LISTING
cel lent condition . $14,900.00 .
HARRISON'S TV Service and
3"29-6tp \ l...omplete mQbile .hQme · ;
4-3-4tc
Recovery, 622 E. Main St .
NEW HOME - 3 bedroom s,
1'/4 ACRE
Service Calls ; phone 992·2522.
·serv i ce -- plus gigantid~ :
·
3-8-30tp Ph baths, range in the kitchen.
Large older
home,
4
ARE YOU OVERWEIGHT? CLEA N . co pper , 45c lb .; . isplay, of mobile homes. ; ·
2-9-tfc
double sink, Family room and 2 · _bedrooms, 1'1:2 baths , lovely
1
Would you like a new look to
-----::
_
e7
_
.
Radiators, clean, 28c lb.; la.Jways av-"ilahte.at ...
~ ' UPHOLSTER your own fur - car garage in basement. One
go with the beauty of
'ki tchen, utility room , lsf
Brass, 18c lb.; Batteries, 70c;
,AU TVMUIJJ Lt: msurance beeroj '
niture .. Foam cushions ; any acre of land , Room for gar~en
Springtime? Our sl im and
Ginsen_g $60 lb.; M . A. Hall.
floOr ~a rpeted . Glassed
ca ncelle d?
Lost
your'
size. Cotton , burlap, swivel or Pasture for pony . Asking
trim program can· help you to
Reedsvifle, 378-6249.
operator's license? Call 992"
porth ,
garage ,
larg e
bases, zipper , webbing, welt . $29, 500.00. WILL ACCEPT
10x40 2 BR
lose weight , easily and en$2995
3-9-tfc
2966.
'
building 40x70 in excellent .
Pomeroy Recovery , 622 E. YOUR HOUSE IN TRADE.
joyably you cjln have
6, 15-tk '
10x51 2 BR
Main St.
BUSINESS LOOP
$3595
co ndition . $21 ,500.00 .
sna cks and many foods
3-8-30tfo BUSINESS BUILDING - Of 4
COLONIAL
10x563 BR
$3995 .
· unlimited . Bes t . of all ·there
BEAT the~-- rU sh! Get yoUr
rOom s, 2 nice· rest rooms, and
4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
are no fish , liver or dried mi"lk
lawnmoWer and ti ll er tuned 12X4l2 BR
$3595
NEW Strawberry· plants, ..Rt. modern 3 bedroom _ paneled
beautlfu I
kitchen
requirements . $5 to register
up now ; Small Engine Repair
12x51
2
BR
$3995
338, near Racine loc ks; phone home. Large wood burning
every th ing built in. Carand $2 per seminar - Conway ,
Shop on Third St ., MasOn, W.
247-2309,, Charlie Foster .
fireplace, nice kitchen. View of
Va
.
,.
12x563
BR
Diet Institute meets ever y · ·
$4295
peted . Gas F .A. heat, por '
3t the Ohio River . Asking ju st
Monday at 7: 30 p.m. at the
1-7-tfc 1969 BUICK Skylark, 2 door _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _4._4• p $25,000 .00 Will take lot in trade .
3-6-30k
ches , basement. Also has
12x61 3 BR
$4995
. hardtop, low mileage, 4 new
Orchfd Room . above lola's.
r en tal. $17,500.00.
20x4J
J
BR
For information ca ll 992-2926. 10 FT. pickup truck
t ir es; $1,500 ; phone 992 -~983 LOTS for sa le ; on Chester
t DOZER "and ba-ck hoe wOrk ;
9 ROOMS
camper;
aiter
5
p
.m.
water
;
phone
992-52
48
till
3
BEDR6t,.:.~~~S
baths,
3
' ponds and septic tanks, dit~ 1 Double wide
4·1-6tc
$6500
phone 698-8722.
3
5 bedroOms. ll/2 bath, dining
4-4-4t c
p
.m
.
or
992-3436
after
3
p.m
.
porches.
Sn.r.·"\J,I
vitt,
shed.
ching
service
;
top
soil,
fill
,
4--4-3tc;
r oo m , 'a ll new kitchen ,
REVIVAL at Rulland Com 4· 4·6tc Drilled ·well ~•Y $8,SOO.OO.
dirt, limestOne ; B&amp;K Ex -1
All homes .are total electric,
hardwood floor s. Porches,
munity Church starting April
1972 DODGE Demon 340, blue - - - - " - - -----'-vava tlng . Phone 992 -5367
·
BUSINESS BUILDING
compl
etely furnished, set of
2nd thru April 6th , 7:30p.m.
with white stripes, blue in- 19 70 NOMAD trailer , self · NEWBRICK - Has2900 sq. ft ./ buildings, garage . .85 acre of
Dick Katr , Jr .
1;,. "
birch paneling,
steps
,
with Rev . J . T. 'Carroll,
terior,. automatic, po~er
coh tained ,22 ft ., goodasnew; Concrete f.loors, 2 nice large
ground.. Basement , gas
9-1 -tfc
BARTENDER
needed
:
write
P.
door s, storm
house-t
ype
Beavertown, Pa., everyone
steering, 456 gears, '" cyc lone
.
rest rooms . Ample parking on . furnace . $17,000.00 . \
phone 698·8722.
0 . Box 365,, Pom eroy, salary · h ea der s, Engle_.. 304 cam,
~
Si=EW~I
N::":G
;:=~
MC:A"'
C
':'
H~
I
"
N
"'
E
"'
S
.~
R=
epali
4·.4·Jtc Route 7. ·A sking $50,000.00 .windows
.
From
$250. 00
welcome .
lSTOl!Y
.$90 p·e r week.
·
completely worked heads, air
4-1-61c
service.
111
makes
.
992-228.4
.
down
,
Deli
ver
ed
Free.
5 bedrooms, llil baths, dining
4 BEDROOMS
4-Htc
shocks; "best running 340 10 GA. FISH aquarium with 9
._ The F: : ic Shop. Pomeroy .
fi
sh
,
stand,
scenery,
pum'p
BRICK
--..
In
Rutland.
Large
room,
2 glassed porches,
EVANGELISTIC Services at cM_A
around," ca ll "9:85-3582 after s
·Author ized Si nger Sales and
. _l_e_
m_a-le
_d_e_s_
k~
cl erk.
_L
_ E-or:Many more to choose .from.
an d heater ; reasonable ; basement, all utilities on high
i=l'r st Baptis't 'Church , Si.xth &amp;
carport . &amp; garagfi!. Close ~o .
p.m . or see at Charles
Service. We Sharpen S.cissors .
h
land
.
A
beauty
if
you
can
see
middle -aged; must be able to
Palmer, M iddleport ; Apr il
Bissell's In Cheste·r .
P one· 992 -5496 ·
tfc ·value. Has large rooms, large , playground . Storm ·doorS &amp;
·
3-29&lt;\lc
4.44th thru April 8th ; 7: 30 p.m .
live In ; apply _in per son ; Ohio
windows , - JUST $12,800.00 . ·
4-4-3tp ---------~. garden and pasture for tt'le
.
Hotel, Middleport.
nightly with Rev . Charles
6 LOTS
BOAT, motor and trailer with pony. Askii'\.Q ju st $18,000.00.
·
4-3-6fc
Norris, guest evangel ist. and
large
storage
build lnQ in
1972 HONDA 500 m Otorcycle, 4
'
NEW LISTING
·
some accessor ieSi 40 h.p.
4-2-5tc
cy l inder, r:n ~ ny ext.ras, like
town
.
5
rentals.
Priced
for,
MOBILE
HOME
With
two
motor :. aski .ng $300; phone
:-:-:-=-=-:=-,.,...,-,..,-::-:--:-new ; pho':le 985 -3828. ,
ex tra ni ce larg e bedrooms.
quick sale. $8:200.00.
'
MISCELLANEOUS rummage .
992"9981.
' H6USE in ._ong Bottom, phOne~
J.9.tfc
Living
17xl7.
Goo(:!
large
lot
on
1
CONTINUE
TOGO
PRICES
sale, Van Cooney house ,
4-4-3tc
Eastern Ave·. · Gallipolis,
965-3529.
J
---'--- -- old Rt. 33. Has the J bedroom.
--'------~ ,
UP - BUY NOW.
~orner Ash · and Plum . Sts.,
PH. 446-017S
.
. 6-11 -lf'l
Middleport; Star ting AP~il
'68 CHEVELLE Malibu ; new NEW Improved " XIpples ," the OUR LISTINGS ARE GETHENRY E. CLELAND
51 h .
t ir es, $1.000 ; contact Mayer &amp; . great lroh pill now with TING BETTER ALL THE
BROKER
TIME
.
CHECK
WITH
US
FOR
,_ · -·Hill Barber Shop. Pomeroy.
Vitamin C. Nelson Drugs.
KATHLEEN M. CLELAND
A GOOD BUY.
.
--~-----H51c
4·• -2tp
4-3-Jtc
HENRY E. CLELANDJR .·
HELEN L. TEAFORO
-,---,----~-EFFECTIVE Monday, April 9,
LEONA V. CLELAND
GORDON
B.
TEAFORD
'57 CHEVY 2 doOr hardtop ; '55 REDUCE excess fluids wi·t h
1913, Logan Fire and Safety
ASSOCIATES
.
_ASSOCIATES .
Equipment Sales and Ser vice.
F;luidex . .Lose wei ght wi~h
Oldsmobi le; con tact Larry
·992-3325
o'992-361S
.
992-2'259,
if no answer 992· Dex -A -Diet _ c apsules
at
R D 3, Pomeroy, Ohio, will se ll'
Hubbard, Syracuse; phdne
BILL'S ARMY • N .AVY . SURPLUS AND
IIIQ SUNDAY SHOWINGS
2568
or
985
-4'209. ·
992-3364.
Nelsqn
Drugs.
entire bus_
iness to Brown 's
CALL .
DEPARTMENT
STORE
FOR
NEW '
4-4·3tp
-"'-Fire arid Safety Equipment
_ _ _ __ __ _ _
4-_3-12tp
&lt;;LOTHES Ati!D WORK· SHOES. 85 N. COURT
Sales and · Servtce, Rutl~nd ,
Ohio, Will ia m (B ill ) Brown
e G
en ne
CLOSE OUI on (4)1973 full Size
Big Capacity
STREET, · ATHENS, OHIO IN OLD RAY .
zig-zag sew ing machines. For 1
Maytag
~~
owner, phone 74~- 4673 . I would
PH •. 992 •2156
RIGGS&amp; _LINCOLN MERCURY,_BUILDING.
like to thank all my customers
·
Au tom atil'S
~ ewing
stretch
fabrics , 1.
fot their supp9rt in .the past . L~..;..;:.:c.-'-~------' . ·coAL, Lim estone, ·- EXce lsiot'l
2 speed operatio
buttonholes. fancy designs,
'
Choice ·of water
' II ·
M
" BOYS -GIRLS" make money
Sail Works, E . Ma in St. ,
h
th
et~ . Paint slightly blemished.
Large quantity of overal ls like Oshkosh B' Gosh,
an d ope
ey Wt gJve r.
· . Pomer oy. Phone ?92-38"1.
I,
temps .
Auto .
Brown a chance to serve them
selling . can dy. Call 992-7784.
~
Choice of carr:ying case or
Wranglers, Ole Kentucky, etc. All sty les of main bfand
water
level t
in the future. Dwight Logan .
3-3o.9tp
·
4-12-tfc\ .sew ing stand. $49.80 cash or
work shoes at big di scou nt. Several thoUsand prs
control .
Lint
4-4-ltc
terms available. Electro
Wrangler
jean and corduroys . regular $8.95 onty $4.95:
~ i lter or Power
ALU MINUM car top b'oats, 10,
Hyg iene Co. , phone 992-7755.
Agitator
.
equipm~nt
- Co leman heaters; lanterns, e,c. A.
Fin
Camping
12 and 13 ft . Kingsbur y Rd .,
;-"
4·4-6tc r
Perm
a-Press
la_rg~
asst.
of
~aleman
tents - both large cind small.
Co . .Rd . 18, Phone 992-6256
EXPERIENCED paintert · in Maytag
Ftshtng
and
hiktng
equipment
. Boy Sc;out equi pme~t . A
af1er
5
P:
m
.
·
121 ·ELECTROLUX Sweeper
teri.or and exterior. Phone
Halo of Heat
very
large
supply
Army
·
Navy
clothing an·d accessories.
3-6-JOtc
delu
xe
model.
Complete
with
'
985 --3951.
.
Dryers
Radios,
watches,
jewelry,
compasses,
kn.lves, etc. 8 track
all
cleaning
attachments
and
3-20 -30tp --::-:-:-=-::'--~-~-'
Surround clothes
175 BALES Of good mixed hay .
uses paper bags, Slightly used
with gentle, even
tapes - o_n ly 52.98. Ralnware , gloves, underware, etc.
Phone 992-6214.
but cleans and looks like new.
heat. No hot spots,
~ress sh~rt s, knit. pants, coats, jac;kets . all . at a big
'
-4-l -6tc
no over.drying .
Wi ll sell for $37.25 cash or
dtsco.unt . . l,og chams , ·tarpaulins •. motor oil, elec. drills,
Fi ne M'es h Lint
terms a·vallabte . Electro
----~saws, etc. Wright tools , sOc ket sets, end w r enches at low
Filter .
1971 FOUR SEASONS Traver
Hygiene Co ., phone 992-7755.
pri
ces. 225 LinColn welders - comple te onl Y·$92 .50. Just
Wt Specialize in
Tra il er , 20 ' se lf "con ta in ed ,
4-.4-6tc
.
,
MAYTAG.
received
large shipment merchandise from _R. R. Co. and
tan dem axle. Phone 985-4176. 1 - - - - -- - - -- Underwrite_rs
Ins. Co., Chicago, Ill. This is a very large
.
3-29-6tp
.
UNCLAIMED
lreig~t
1973
6
'
.
discount
store
with the main ~rands and lines of mer-·
track
stereo,
4
speaker·
audio
\
352 FORD motor ; spotted riding·
system ,· will seJI 'for small
chandise. Thousands of other Items to choose from
horse; 2 bull calves, 4 mqnths
balance'S82.50or pay $6.10 per ·
•
\
·.. Open Sunday from 12: 00 to 5:30 fCN" your convenfeftce. ·
old : phone 843-2(l8. ~
month , Call 992 -53ll.-.
74.l--4211
'' Arnold Grate .
Rutland
OWNER -lULL JAN -ES
.
'
3-2-tfc
•
4-1-6tc·
4·4-6tc ~....:.-:-~---:--~-=-:::.=-:.:...=..:.:c:...---.;..;.;==;::..:.=..:.....:-1"
--~-.,----___,~-~-.,
--.,..-----:-!-~
.

Th• "ublisher

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

(or'sale

Sale

•

r===::::~~l

FIR&gt;T, I'M altJ:;I[:tR\~0

I'VeWT&amp;.D

Rtsllo!JI ~10

NEWS AND ii:C\?D
NPJ.IS FOR

,

AIL fWtl/lT, ~T 01.1 I'Jf!H
IT! WHAT~ lHG

TO TAKG ,

AIJ0Tl\6R
FOSITION ...

40U!

tJ;;VJ'&gt;?

SALES '

· IJTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

Midd leporf, 0.

SO FAR, SO OOOQ SANOY! I FIGURE \ OI"'Cf
WE' RE R COOPLA MILES FROM THAT

PUBLIC
WHOLESALE

Ol' WITtH'6'( NOW!

NEW
MOBILE HOMES .

· oVer lunar ·

Real Estate For Sale.

WANTED I

~ ~XX:I,_ .

..

SAVE MONEY AT

tl

-------

1

-·

For Rent

WMPU/139C

rRUTLAND FURNITURE Rs~~v~~:"

ON YOUR QIAL

.

"

\

\

'

•

"

'

20. Lummox

genus
U . Elevator
operator's
ca ll
(2 wds.)

17. Oriental

county

Yesterday
(Fr.)
- King
Cole

34. Dutch

M.lm ·posing
26. Nothing
27. Coiffure
gadget
28. Peruvian

cheese
36. Nebulou s
38. Sevareid
41.1 (Ger. )·
42. Drinkin g
vessel
_13. Sqflix ·
· denOting
~.
origin
· 44.-Man's

city
29. Summit
32. Malayan

tea
18. That

chap's
19. It's a

ungulate

33. Unaccom-

mouse!

nickname

panied

Ar;IIWJ)

D

dty

MAX, MAY

1 WOI\IOE.R. IF MA)(.

game
35. Caress

Ul£

WILL SHARE.

&lt;;?OM £

OF 'lOUR
CLAY·?

&lt;SOME OF HIS

CLAY?

OF COURSE

YoU MAV .'

I I I JJ
U ,OU!VK

•'

-~

.

V" ~

-

~E SLIPPED
IN 'THE EIACI&lt; .

" COULP

•'

Noor arranre the cir&lt;led lotte"

to form the 1urprlae anawer, U

(Aftaw,n• tomorrow)

(2 wds.)

·;

I

L

32. Children's
\

I

~=J~U~~~~~~f&gt;.~..A~~·=•=r=r•J•ted by the abo,ve Cartoon. "·
PtiUeSMIS! ANSWIR 11111
I 0 rI I I ]

31. Texas

AMANDA PANDA

~

S'I'IWG).
I V~

30. Succor

37. Bitter

1'ee~erd•r'•

h'erb
39. Take up

·- - -

Jumble11 YOKEL CLEFT ASTRAY BELIEF
·
·
.
·
Aa.wer; JJIIu'i llo 1erve ttl tt h~tn l'f'rly -"LAYIR" CAKE

. arms
40. Working
hard
·
( 3 wds.) ·
(sl. )

VNFORTVNATEL~.

'lOUR REFUSAL

.

OOE5 NOT ALTE~
THE FACT

45. or c~ rtai'n
lan-

I REFUSE

TO ACGEPT
THAT

guages
46. Couple
47. Overtake
48. - on
Ci ncited )

I

We talk to vou
;like a person.

9. Offensive
10, Goose

In viti ng

-.

'

Yesterday's Anawer

trouble
(3 wds)

For Sale

Employment Wanted ·

form four ordinary worda.

mu~al

Brit~

&amp;IJ _ , ,_. ·

unscramble these four Jumbltll,
one letter to each square, to

-society
in lpwa

ishe_f' s

.....

Ill NIH AHNIJLO .on/1 BOrl L£t

7. - fiend
8. Com-

farewell
Scottish

1

D II Y.5

17.

MOBILE HOMES

o.

CARRIERS
FOR
POMEROY

Th

TOWE/&gt;R
A.LL I I-lAVE.

Sy ndicate, Inc. )

Jrl!UWIDM;-~
~
''V

6. MacaW

Aclef

STICKING AROUND
C3wds. )
~ERE A FEW DAYS,
(sl. )
50 GET USED TO ME:•J5. Likewi se
~
16. Bemg
(Sp.) ·

TRI.OOUNTY

- - -.- - - --

"r efuge

,..,..---------~-13. Ogling
-TilE SIIIRT
WAS TORN
TO SIIREDS
AND 'IOU AAD
ONLY ~ALF
A COAT.

(0 1973 Kin g Feature~

4. Standards
5. Domingo
or Gedda

year
&amp;, T urkish ·
city L Mr. Mota
portr'a yer

- - -- - -

- -.,.---- - Help Wanted

· 2. Blue
grass·
3. Biblical

ACI\OSS
l. Excess ·
of solar

12. -

Yesterday's Cryptoquote: I NEVER KNEW AN ENEMY TO
PUNS WHO WAS NOT AN ILL-NATURED MAN. - CHARLES '
LA (liB

d

s
r

DOWN

t.
.s

1. Shade
tree

IS

. 51'\!!'Y, I

HlfP TO Flfl.

1\ND P~AV ~HI&lt;!'
TI&lt;ICI&lt; ON VOU! .•
OTHE11&lt;WI'!'e
YOU'P N~Vcl&lt; ,
HAVe COMe
AE~I! TO
He~P Me!

Here'~ how to
. AXYDLBAAXR

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE II

work it:
.

L 0 N G F E--L- 1, 0 W

One letter simply sta.nd s roi- an·other. In this sample A is
used for the three L's X far the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrOphes, the Ieng{h and formati on of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

·e

UNFO~NATi:W, '(OUR REFUSAL
AL5d' TO AC CEPT THE FACT THAT ·
'I()VR REFUSAL OOE7 i'l!T ALTER1!\E

I \L ACCi:PTTI\AT!

!,

D,
ts
•g

~ACT ALSO DOES NOT ALTER lHE
FACT OF OU~ BEII'IS THE L0Sit-ISE5T .

y,
!d
n,

CRYPTOQUOTES
S J V

K C f, A · S J 0 C H

J F GXVG

f J;

T 0 N V R

F G \'

QVA

·F

L F C

t. V R 0 R S S J F C F
J V .;

TF 0 N R.

~-

n.

Q0 CX R

T K LF C' R

•

0 LKHVCV

'

'

'

.

'·'

�..

•

•

'

•

' ·-

.

•.

•

-1

•

•

• -. 1"- "oUy Sentinel. Mid&lt;ileport.f'l)mer.,Y, 0 ., April4
. ' 1973

.Conspirator's
sentence harsh ·
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A
~ contempt sentence to
Watergate conspirator G.
Gordon Liddy for refusing to
talk and a demand lhst White
House aides resign if U!ey k~p
alieni brought new . pressure
today for . full discl&amp;iure of
facts in U1e political espionage
case.
~
The message, particularly
from U1e federal courU!ouse,
was clear - that the price for
silence will be high.
In qui ck succession Tuesday,
there were these developments
in the case which surfaced in
the pr$wn hours June 17
when burglars and wiretappers
were caught in U!e Washington.
, W a t erg a t e
com pIer
headquarters
of
the
Democratic National Committee :
- Chief U.S. Dislrict Judge
John J . Sirica cited Uddy, a
former White House aide, for
contempt when he refused to
testify before a grand jury and
ordered him held in the grim
District of Columbia jail for up

eat prices falter

to 18 months unless he talksbefore his mlnimwn six-year,
eight-monU! sentence for ~
Watergate conspiracy starts.
- Sen. Lowell P . Weicker
Jr., R-Conn ,, said. that White
House chief of staff H. R.
" Bob" llaldeman and oU!er tap
aides to President -Nixon
should quit if U!ey refuse to
testify before a Senate committee lhst is investigating the
Watergate affair.
- That committee, on which
Weicker serves, called off a
second secret Interrogation of
another Watergate conspirator, James W. ~ McCord
Jr., shceduled for today .in
favor of a public hearing in
abOut 10 days.
Meanwhile, the grand jury
that originally indicted Liddy,
McCord and five other men for
the
Watergate
breakln
resumed quizzing the conspirators. ·

FIRST .PLACE WINNERS ,.. Mrs. Margaret Ella Lewis, high school art instructor aL. ..
Meigs High School, judged the many enlrles of Sjllisbury Elementary School students in U!e
ctlltural arts contest Tuesday, Blue ribbon winners will go to Bradbury for judging on a county ·
lev~! Thursday. Pictured are the first place winners in drawings and water color competition
from the six grade's of U!e school. Front row, from the. left, Martha Phillips, Craig Sincl;tir,
Ryan Cole, two first place awards; Fred Young, Jack Gould; back row, from the left, Debbie
Doeder, ~ck Icenhower, Stephanie Radford, Tom Hooper, and Nancy Smith, Judy Wells,
another blue ribbon winner in U!e categories, was absent.

News.

new, modern home oyer village
slreets. Neal recently pur·
chased the former Gillespie
Howard house from the Ohio
Power Company. The house is
located west of Cheshire.
In new ordinances submitted
by Village Solicitor Hamlin C.
King, council set April 7 as

"clean.upn w.eek . Persons
having items needing removed
should place them at the curb
or call Charles Scott, village

maintenance man.

on street parking. Persons

'lliE NEW'HOME of the Westslde Church of Christ at 21lO W, Main St., Pomeroy.

Church

ATTRACTIVE TARGET
ORVIETO, Italy (UP!)
The price of meat made it an
attractive target Tuesday for
thieves.
Police said a truckdriver in
Orvieto was shot dead. and his
load of 18'h tons of veal and
pork stolen.
)n Milan, police said, another
truckdriver reported the theft
· of his vehicle, which earned 28
head of cattle.

.

For the fir~t time since its
organization on Oct. 29, 1972,
the Wes«!ide Church ·of Christ
of Pomeroy, has areal home,
The church is now located in
the Brown· building at the
corner of Butternut Ave., and
West Main St.
The congregation has · been
meeting in the basement of one
member's home until the
present rented quarters at 200
W. Main St. were secured.
The . group began. with 12
members and membership

home occupied
now totals 19 with average
attendance at each service
running about 33. The Westside
Cfiurch of Christ maintains U1e
BibIe
a u t h or i z e d
'c ongregational' autonomy in
organization and practices
only congregational singing
without the use of instnunents
of music.
Loren T. Stephens, formerly
evangelist at the Mason
Church of Christ, was invited
and accepted work as
evangelist for the Westside
Church of Christ in December

· of last year and now resides at.
212 Rock St., Pomeroy.
The congregation has
scheduled Mr. Everette G.
Shoaf, evangelist · for · tfie
Marrtown Road Church of
Chri~t, tl! ..hegin a series of
gospel meetings on Monday
evening, April 9, running
. through the foilowing Sunday.
Mettings will he held at 7:30
each evening with services on
Sunday being teld at the
regular hours. The public is
invited to attend any or all of
the services.

Phnom Penh cut off by reds

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MEIGS THEATRE

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Briefsil:

By United Press International ·
PJ'ITSBURGH - UNITED. MINE WORKERS President
Arnold Miller says the era of the "80 and 90 percent" pr,ofit
margin in the coal industry is over. " Those who operate coal
mines must realize the men who mine coal are more than
soin.ethlng to be stepped on," Miller said Wedne5day at a coal
conference here called by Pennsylvania Gov. Milton J. Shapp.
"Restoration of land is the principal issue," Miller said, "nol
how many dollars and cents can be made on a ton of coal." Miller

also blamed "bad management'' for the 'nation's energy crisis.
"You can't tell me that industry's leaders and investors did
not know what was coming," he said. " They spent too little on
research while worrying abOut today's profits."

Shop All Day Thursday From 9:30 am to 5 pm .·
Open Friday and Saturday 9:30 am to 9 pm ..

VOL XX~ NO. 248

luxury rib . ·
dress slacks

curtain · band top - flare legs - slash front a·nd
Reese Inset back.pockf:!ts, Black - Rust - Green -

Red · Khaki . Navy Blue'. Sizes 29 to 42.
I

Take time to look around in the busy Mens and Boys department on the
lr.t floor - See the fine line of Mens and Boys sport and dress shirts including plenty of knit shirts - short sleeve blue Chambray shirts that are
so popular now. The new Lee. Boot cut trousers for tnen and boys- mens
lightweight ~aps and hats for ·spring and summer wear ' new _color
selection young mens and boys TV orion socks- lightweight i.ackets pl1,1s a
big selection of wo_r~ clothes including overalls - pants and shirts to match
. work caps . work socks. You'll enjoy a visit to the ·mens and boys
department on the lst floor.

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Drive To Elberfelds Warehouse
On Mechanic Street

John G. Mohay, executive
vice president of the National
cost money."
Independent Meat Packers As·
C. William &amp;wank, executive sociationt said in Chicago that
vice president of the Ohio packers are not to blame for
Farm Bureau FederaUon, said the higher prices. He said
any rollback in food prices farmers' production-costs have
would make food rationing increased because last year's
necessary in the United States. corn crop was light due to
Rep , John Melcher, D-Mont., blight damage, causing higher
said President's Nixon's action · feed-grain prices.
of freezing meat prices will not
Some boycott leaders tslked
he successful "uoless he, in of extending the weeklong
turn, has a plan to stablize protest through April. Others
production ·costs."
called for a cooling-off period.

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WASHINGTON ( UP!) - The more expensive loans in its
House has voted 317 to 92 to latest budget.
require the adrninistr,ation to
The House bill .. ould restore
restore low-interest. loans "to $90 million in 2 per cent loans to
rural electric and telephone 140 cooperatives. There was
cooperatives to help them $456 million in the REA fund
provide service - to rural when the admi nistra t ion
America .
decided to halt the program
The vote )Wednesday was and make REA cooperatives
another step in Cong r ess' seek 5 per cent loans from the
confr onta ti on with the ad· Rural Development Act.
ininistration
which
had
The House rejected a later
decided to repla ce the low -cost admi ni stration
compromise
RuraL Electri fi.ca li on proposal which would have
Association (REA ) loans wi th provided $31 million in loans to
50 or 60 cooperatives .
The Senate recently voted io
EXTEN DED OUTLOOK
restore
the full program. A
Chance of rain ·about
Monday. Highs ln th ~ upper House -Senate con feren ce
40s north and middle 50s cOmmittee will iron out the
south, Overnight lows in the difference. Some Republicans
upper 20s north and the 30s have said· the President will
veto a bill which restores a
south.
large amount of the loans.

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THURSDAY. APRIL 5. 1973

'PHONE 992-2156

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per cent, largest since July of
1950.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the· over-all March
increase, largest for any month
since January, 19:n; meant
that the Wholesale Price Index
(WPI) rose at a seasonally
adjusted annual rate of 21.5 per
cent, also the largest In 22
years.
Tlii,-ro'iisiimer finished foods
ca~gory includes all foods that
would be ready for sale in food
stores, ranging from Cjlnned
goods to meat that requires no
· further processing . ·
The March st-atistics on

•

wholesale prices re'fle cted
sha'rp rece nt increases in
livestock and other meats, but
were
compiled
before
President Nixon ordered retail
price ceilings ori beef, pork and
lamb a week ago tonight.
The BLS said the index for
wholesale prices of all consumer flni.shed goods - including
food - went up 2.2 per cent in
March after seasonal adjustment, matching the all time ·
high recorded in January, 1948.
Bef9re adjustment, the increase "(as 2.1 per cent, ]]ighest
since July, 1950.
Wholesale prices of lumber
. and wood products went up 7.6
EASTER EGGS - In observance of National F .H.A. week the members of Southern's FHA
per cent before seasonal adclass, Home EconomicS Department, have made attractive chocoJate covered (three dip)
justment and 6.6 per cent after
decorated
Easter eggs. The eggs sell for 50 cents each with an additional charge of 25 cents if
adjustment, both record highs
they are inscribed . Displaying the eggs are, 1..-, Pat Woods, Melissa Imboden, Amanda Roush .
· since the Bis began keepin~
and Mrs. Erma McClurg, instructor. Orders may be placed by calling the high school.
statistics in 1947.
The rise in wholesale prices
indicated that cQnsumer prices
PHNOM PENH -GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS said today
would likely continue .registerthat President Lon No! has officially declared the nation in a
ing
an increase when Mar:ch
. "state or'danger." All supply routes into Phnoml'enh ha~e been
By Untied Pre~s International in only three catt!e, 25 hogs and
cut by Communist troops. The action came after the' Communists
Sales fell by SO per eent at the . 23 lambs, about half the usual sla'tistics ani made public in
about two weeks.
tightened their grip on the capital Wednesday by severing the
Cleveland livestock Market's load.
Wholesale . prices of farm
last remaining supply· line feeding the city despite th~ 28th
weekly auction Wednesday,
" The farmers are nervous
consecutive day of heavy U.S. air raids on Communist targets.
more hOgs were held off the and are staying home," he products and processed foods
Defense officials in Washington said they saw no imminent
market in Cincinnati and a said. "Everything is shaky and feeds took ~nother big
jump upward in ·March, inspokesman for farmers says a right now."
threat of a collapse of Cambodia but shortly after Communist
soldiers cut the capital's vital Highway 5 rice road,' the National
price rollback would result in
In Cincinnati, the Cincinnati creasing 4.6 per cent . This was
Assembly authorized Lon No! to issue the "state of danger"
food rationing as the nation's Union Stockyards said only 500 more than the 3.9 per cent
COl.UMBUS
( UPI ) " We have become very con- system "\· heroes of faith and
11
in
February
and
'!he
increase
decree "should the situation warrant.
meat boycott entered its fifth hogs were brought in Wednes·
Sponsors of legislation to make ce rned
about
the
un- champions of love:"
day,
day-compared··to the Wednes- ~ .3 per cent -advance in the !Qird Monday in January a derstanding of one another,"
The test~ony was received
January , but not as great as holiday In memory of the Rev. said John H. Hall of the OEA. on the fifth anniversary of
SAJGON-IN'I'ENSIFIEDFIGHTING between government
The Cle~el"'!d auction was day average of 864.
and Communist troops moved closer to Saigon Wednesday and a
cut to only an hour .because of . C. William Swank, eJ&lt;ecutive the 5.8 per cent jump last Martin Luthe~ King have ' 'We .think Martin Luther King · King's assassination.
South. Vietnam military spokeSJ1lan warned that Communist
the short supply of animals.
vice president of ·the Ohio December.
assembJed an impressive Day would he a fo~al point and
Sen, William ·H. Mussey, R- .
The index for industrial array o(supporters in the halls a symbol that will become part Batavia, ·said he objected to ·
truce viola.tiOns ai-e thre3tening to scUttle the ce3s.e.fire.
.
''BecaUse of the consumer Farm Bureau Federation, said
The Saigon command said 16 government troops were killed,· · · meat boycott and the un- a rollback in food prices as commddities - regarded by of the General Assembly ,
· of the school program in Ohio." another Monday holiday. ·
56 wounded and 23 CommuiiiSI soidiers died in a U!ree-ltour battle
certainty of the market, far- urged by meat boycotters many economists as 3 more · The 80,000-member Ohio
"I have ~ feeling that many
"We of the organized labor
near Cai Lay, a market town 46 miles aouthwest of Saigon. He
mers just aren 't bringihg their could result in food rationing. accurate barometer of in- Education Association (OEA), movement have a very sincere of our national holidays have
Bald the lighting began when Communist gunners shelled an
products in," said Donald F.
"Price rollbacks appear to flation than the more volatile representin g public school and cJose admiration for. 'Or. lost Uteir me31ning," he said,
Enderlein,
president of he the aim of those who partici· lood prices - went up 1.2 per teachers, and the inillion· Martin LuUler King, " said "and I see no reason that Marinfantry position five miles _southeast of the town ,
DAYTON, omo _AN AUt FORCE doctor whO said his
Cuyahoga Meat Co.
pate in and support food bOy- cent in MarChn largest in· member Ohio AFL-CIO, both Warren Pate of the AFL-CIO. tin Luther King Day would not
heavywei~ht lobby groupe in
" lt's the packers who are colts," Swank said in a letter to crease since January, 1951. ·
described
his do the same
. People
do not
Bowen
Quaker beliefs prevented him from performing cer[4in duties
.
'
The BLS said the wholesale the StatCiiOusc, · came out in proposal a~ a "simple but need
squeezed
by
the
hoyPresident
Nixon.
getting
another
three-day
Was sente. need Wednesday to 18 months
pr·JSO
· n, ft'ned $"',000
""
cott," he said. "They can keep
"Rolling back food prices index for farm products and favor of th e bill Wednesday important and meaningful weekend that they can go out
and ordered dishonorably discharged.
the animals at home and feed will only, create . greater processed foods and leeds went night.
,
bill."
and have a big time. I think it ·
Jst Lt. B1;11ce Ashley, Zl, of Louisville, Ky ., was ioood gtiilty
·
The measure, sponsored by,
'
it, but we either sell i~_or smell shortages and make foo.d up at an annual rate of 53.1 per
"No man other than Abra- would he better if parent;; kept
by a military judge at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base near
it.''
. rationing necessary," Swank cent in the first three months of . Sen. WiUiam F . Bowen, D-Cin- ham Uncoln has so affected their 'children in school, and
·
here of willfully failing to obey orders. Ashley allegedly had ·
refused to give urine tests for drug detection or review medical
Leo D. Smith, '37, Norwalk, said. "We urge you to .stand this year. This was slightly less cinnati, received its first heat- the values and lives of so many maybe· gave them a balf-day
Ohio, a full-time truck driver firm against .the demands of than the 56 per cent annual rate ing before the Senate Com· Americans," Bo:wen &amp;aid. " I off to honor great men, such as .
records. Ashley has filed for discharge as a conscientious ob.
during the last·quarter of 1972. merce and Labor Committee.- don't think there was any man Dr. King."
·-···
and Jlllrl time farmer, brought
(Continued on page 10)
jector.
.of our time so deserving of the · Hall pointed out the bill
'wASHINGTON- PRESIDENT NGUYEN Van Thieu tries
recognition we seek to give this would not close Ohio schools,
today to convince congressional leaders it is iinportant to conbut would give local boards ·or
man."
tinue economic and military assistance to South Vietnam . Thieu,
Under questioning 'from education the option of closing
who came to Washington late Wednesday after holding talks with
'
committee members, Bowen schools.
·
WASHINGTON ( UP! ) Anderson revealed _a copy of Commission a year' later that 1 Watergate case, all wer e given said the extra holi(!ay would
President Nixon at San Clemente, Calif., Monday and Tuesday,
Columnist , Jack Anderson a Civil , Service form dated bis com·ment about Dean may immunity by Chief U. S .
also scheduled a meeting today with Vice President Spiro T.
cost the state $300,000 to
reported
today
that
White
Sept.
"8,
1967,
and
signed
by
have
been
an
"over·
District
Court'
Judge
John
J.
Agnew an~ a speech to the National Press Club~
"'00,000 a year in holiday pay
House counsel John W . Dean Vincent B . Wflch, senior statement:" He said that it Sirica from further prosecution
Thieu received a warm welcome when he arrived with his
fot employes .
Ill , who investigated the partner of the Washington law would have been more apt to Wednesday &gt;n exchange for
wife at Andrews Air Force Base. Several hundred Vietnamese,
· ''Thei-e'
are
' 10,000
TWO
Watergate bugging case lor firm of Welch ahd Morgan, say
Dean
had
" basic their testimony about the case . monum~Cnts to war, " .said the
waving the yeilow and red South Vietnamese flag and friendly
Two defendants were fined
President Nixon, was fired where Dean was ·a junior disagreement'' with the firm Barker and Martinez testi[ied
placards, shouted "bravo" as Thieu stepped out of the
Rev . Otis l,loss Jr. of Cinfrom his first iaw job in 1966 for assO&lt;:iate from August, 1965, over an associate's activities. · Wednesday and their lawyer, cinnati, a· form'er colleague of and two others forfeited bonds
presidential jet which flew him across the continent.
~ · un et hicaJ conduct." The
until Feb. 4, 1966. ·
There were these other Daniel Schultz, said they an- King 's. " Why shouldn't there in the court or Pomeroy Mayor
Don Collins Wednesday night.
WASHINGTON ..:. THE SENATE VOTED Wednesday to ' ~ harg e later w~s softened .
Under a section asking dFelopments in the Watergate swered all questions.
be one monument to peace'?
The report wps the latest in a " reason for discharge or case:
restrict the power of the President to refuse to spend all Congress
.
-Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr. , )). There are 10,000 ffiomiments Eli White, 53, Minersville, was
stririg or-contrOversies to swirl resignati.on ," Welc h wrote :
appropriates. In return, it also voted to restrict its own
- Vir gilio Gonzaies and N.C., chairman of the Senate's totherlch. Why shouldn't there fined $100 and costs. and was
Jropensity for spending - at least in fiscal 1974, which starts
around Dean, who acting FBI '.'unethical conduct." Asked Frank A. Sturgis, both of · Select
Co mmittee
on . he one monument to U!e poor?· given a three day jail sentence
·.July 1--to $268 billion, which is $700 million below the amount of
Oirector L. Patrick &lt;'lray Ill later to explain, ·Welch wrote · Miami and who pleaded guilty Presidential Campaign Ac·
" Causes cannot be murdered for driving while intoxicated,
spending Nixon' has recommended .
has testified "probably" lied to that "while employed by this in the conspiracy trial, were tivities, said he did not think it. and dreams cannot he assassi- and ·Charles Pyles, Jr .. 20.
· · 'In an unusual display of party unity, Democrats pushed their
an FBI agent about the case, firm, appllcant undertook work scheduled to testify., before a would be possible to begin open nated," Moss told Ute commit.. Racine, was fined $10 and cost.; ·
. anti-impoundment proposal through the Senate Wednesday by a
Dean also has refused I&lt;&gt; testify · unbeknown~! to us at the time, fe,deral grand jury about the hearings
before ·
the . tee . "The boliday we seek for squealing tir~s . Forfeiting .·
:.70-24 vote / Only two Democrats, Harry F. Byrd Jr., Va,, and
before CongreSs on the matter in direct conflict with the in- case , Gonzalez, Sturgi s, congress ional April 18-25 would fulfill this pllJposition. $25 bonds were Robert Bailey,
James V, Allen, Ala ., deserted party loyalty, 'But whetller the
on grounds of executiv£! terests of the firm and a .client· Benar&lt;l L. Barker and ·Eurenio Easter recess , but hoped to Our children do not need milte 20, Long Bottom, running 2 red
House w"'!ld·accept the Senate approach - and whether Nixon
privilege and a lawyer-client · thereof;''
Martinez, all . of Miami and begfn " as soon thereafter as heroes with guns. They need light, and Randall Nicholson,
IIJl&gt;llld veto the bill - refill!!~ unanswer&lt;ld questions.
relationship with Nixon.
· Welch wrote the Civil Service con~essed conspirators in the possible." '
. heroes with a creative value no address, $25. intoxication.
,
c

Heavyweights go
for, K~g holiday

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See the new :LaWn Boy Power Mowers - 19 Inch and 21 Inch cut
siZe. . Summer · Porch and Lawn Furn1ture - Big selection of
Linoleum - Carpet by the yard, at special sale 'prices ·. Steei Wardrobes an,d Cabinets . Water heaters · Whirlpool Washers ~ Dryers Refrigerators - Freezers - Trashmashers - Hoover Washers and
Dryers and Used TV Sets.

There's plenty o.~ free parking and the warehouse is open every
week day 9:30 A.M.to 5 P.M. and on Friday and Saturday from 9:30
A.M. to 9 P.M .

White House's Dean fired once

Sale! Boys and Girls
·,

.BICYCLES
Save now on bicycles for the boys and girls in your
family or for yourself. There's a big new selection
Including 10 speed bikes · 5 speed and 3 speed ·
regular 26 · inch Standard .bicycles . 20 inch bikes
with banana seat and high riser ,handle ~rs. Well
known makes such as Roadmaster • ·Murray· Blue
Grass.
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POMEROY

FINED ~

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TEN CENTS

Things wholesale
•
in record raises.

Livestock sales
off up to 50% .

Sale! Mens Mr. Wrangler

Will Close to Protest
In Eutaw,. Ala., Bob White,
·m anage r of the West Alabama
Stockyards, said he will close
his facility 'Friday~the weekly
!J'ade day - to protest the price
·cemng,
"We urge all farmers not to
market their livestock this
week jn support of the protest,"
he said. " We feel that the
farmers have been ·pushed
around and stepped on long
enough ."

Devoted To The Interests OJ The Meigs-Mason Area

WASHINGTON ( UP!) - .
WASHINGTON - THE HOUSE BANKING Committee · Wholesale prices for food,
lwnber ahd other consumer
approved the strongest economic controls since World War II
goods
increased . ·by record
Wednesday night, with all prices, interest rates and rents rolled
proportions in March, 1the '
back to their Jan. 10 levels, Congress likely will tone down the bill
goverrunent reported today. As
wnsiderably before final passage, although there is growing
a
result, over-all wholesale
sentim~~mt for an ec()llomic freeze in some form. President NixoJ!
prices made their biggest onealmost certainly would veto the bill in its present form ,
month jwnp in 22 years, with a
The rollback amendments were attached to a bill extending
2.2 per cent increase.
tb April 30, 1974, the Economic Stabilization Act, which gives
The Labor Departme111 said
Nixon disci'etionary power to control wages and prices.
consumer finished foods rose
4.6 per cent in March after
THE FLOW OF THE TRWUT ARY Ohio River decreased
seaSQilal adjustment, the highWednesday and eased the flood threat to delta cities on the
est increase since the governMississippi Rivet, whose overflow already has caused $45 million
. ment began keeping . the
damag~ in Misaouri and Illinois,
·
statistics in 1947, Before adThe Army Corps of Engineers said truit although the Ohio's
justmfnt ~e increase was 4.5
flow was 400 billion gallons a day, the rate was dropping and
would lessen the push at such downriver points as Memphis,
Tenn., Vicksburg, Miss., and New Odeans. Sandbagging was
going on along the lower MissisSippi as a precautionary
measure. The engineers said the Missi\15ippi would crest at 40.4
feet at Memphis today but only lowlan~ flooding was expected
since. the city is located on a bluff.

ELBERFELD_$ IN POMEROY

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Twelve South Dakota ranchers and farmers held a news
conference in Cleveland "to
inform" urban residents U!e
· American farmer is being
blamed for inflation. CatUe
ran cher Sheldon Cotton of
. Brookings, S.D., said ranchers
for-the first time in 20 years ar~
getting an.equiUJ,ble return· on
their livestock.
" The farmers are tired of
subsidizing the Ameri ca n
housewife, " he said. " The
housewives will have to learn
that if'they want to feed their
families properly. it's going to

en tine

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WASHINGTON -SEN. PHILIP A. HART, J&gt;.Mich,, has
suggested that Congress look into the possibility of \mpeachment
proceedings against President Nixon because of continued U. S.
bombing in Cambodia.
COLUMBUS - UNITED TELEPHONE CO. filed an
"We ought to get the books out and find the chapter on imemergency $9.4 million rate increase request Tuesday wiU! the
peaclunent," Hart told UPI Tuesday as U. S. B52s continued to
· Public lltillties Commission of Ohio. The hearing room was
pound Cambodia and the administration continued to assert it
packed and United witnesses were jeered several limes. United
needed no congressional authority for the action. Hart said he
President Robert H. "Snedaker. Jr. testified that the money is
realized his suggestion was harsh and the chance of imneeded
to protect the utility's "A" bond rating. .
peaclunent was ' 1zero." But he said, "the violation of the Con, Residential rates would rise an average 32 pet. af1!11&gt;usiness
atitution is clear."
rat~ about 44 pet. The crowd jeered and hissed until quieted by
hearing erarnlner James Berendsen.
NEWPORT, KY. - ARMY SPEC. 4 MichBel Branch admitted Tuesday he signed statements prepared by the VietCong
. COLUMBUS - THE OHIO INSU!tANCE Department
during his 41'. years as a POW, qut he Bald If every prisoner had
Tuesday ordered Equity Funding Life Insurance Co., to SIISpelld
followed the military code of conduct . "there would be no
Sales in Ohio, but said it did not believe the company's 3,128 .
prisoners alive today."
• ~ --.....,..
policybOiders are In,danger of loss.
"The reason I signed a statement was that I was forced and
E. E. Eckert, state deputy insurance director, said more
beaten," Branch, 26, of Highland Heights, toldTeporters ho!re. "i
than 30 of the conipany•sstate agents have been ordered to cease
definitely did not collaborate, I signed a statement that I was a
Sales. The action came after the parent firm, Equity Funding
deserter. I was definitely tortured, gagged, tied up and beaten."
Corp. of America, was accused of swindling pther insurance
companies U!rough the sale of false policies to reirulurance finns.
OAKLAND, CAUF: .,.- A RETURNED civilian POW said

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T\lesday President Nixon will be severely judged for his handling
of the Vietnam war. Gary L.Daves, 30, Mescalero, N. M., said at
· Oakland Naval Hospital that Nixon did not shOw integrity in
handling the war and "history will pin him to the wall" for his
actions in 1972. Daves, speaking at U!e hospital where he is undergoing treatment, was a volunteer teacher captured in Hue
five years ago by the Viet Cong,
· A former Peace Corps worker, he Bald his Views are in the
minority among released POWs. He also said other prisoners
received harsher .treatment than he did. His views on the peace
movement are not shared by many fonner POWs, either. Daves
· Bald the movement "represented America and Its ideals far
better than out government and its policy makers have."
He U!anked the American people for "lhe wonderful
reception" given him and all other POWs on their r&lt;!turn,

Dacron Polyester - woven stretch rib with

·
PHNOM PENH (UPI) supplies of food, anununition in bOth areas.
Communist forces attacked and petrolewn,
According to field reports the
Phnom Penh's last remaining
Strict gaaollne rationing has heaviest combat of the day
supply route today . as already gone into effect in the raged along aouthern Highway
American B52 Slratofortresses .capital and the city lies in 2 as government. forces aban- ·
and Flll fighter jets pounded almost total blacko11t due to doned the town of Sainrong
suspected
Communist efforts at-conseving mel.
Yong and retreated to new
positions within a 15-mlle
Military spokesmen said positions only 16 miles south of
radius of the capital.
Tuesday the situation was Phnom Penh, It was the second
The ·Cambodian high com- "critical" in at least six battle full-ocale government retreat .
mand said Communist units zones.
on Highway 2 In two days
stormed government outposts
U.S. B52 bombers blasted despite continuous air support
around the town of Tuk Laak, su.Si&gt;ected Communist artillery by bOth American Flll fighter
·r - • = = - - - - · - n 34 miles northwest of Phnom sites along the banks of the jets and CambOdian air force ·
Penh on cambodia's vital rice Mekong River today in an T28s.
.
road,Higbway 5.
attempt to relieve the critical
Reports from tbe field were t situation along that important
NEW HOTLINE
sketchy, but military sources shipping ',route. '
WASHINGTON (UP!) Bald the highway had been
According to sou•ces within
There
now is
government
closed 'to all traffic due to · the high command, the priority
~
1 heavy combat in the area,
target in the bombing was the hotline for airline passerij!ers
.1
V
·I With Highways I, 2, 3' and 4 tiny village of Krakor, 13 miles dissatisfied with the ser\rice ·
1
all occupied for long stretches aoutheast of Plmom Penh on they receive.
by Communist troops and the east bank. of the Mekong . Chairman Robert D. Timm
Cambodia's' wnbillcal supply River. Today's bombing raids of the Civil Aeronautics Board
cord, the Mekong River, were the 28\h consecutive day (CAB) announced the start of
6 percent per year on 2
rendered totally insecure by
intensified American born- ' the service Tuesday..
year Certificates of
Communist glinners, Highway bing.
. He said It would be operated
IOeposrt.
·$10,ooo.ool 5wasthecapital'slasthopeof Sources said an artillery around-the-clock by the
Minimum.
Interest
receiving desperately needed position hidden behind a · hoard's Office of Consumer· ·
I paya!11e Quarterly. I
pagoda in the village had kept Affairs for "anyone with a
goverrunent lroops attempting question or complaint."
The nwnber is 202 38:1,.7135.
to clear near~y Highway 1
under cover for the past U!ree
Tonight &amp; Thursday
days.
Apri14-5
Krakor was reported totally STATE ANIMAL
NOT OPEN
deslroyed. It is not knOwn if
CARSON CITY, Nev, (UPI)
·TM Athens County
any civilians were -tfapped in - Nevada's legialators have
Sovlnp &amp; ~oon Co.
• .
Friday thru Tuesday
the ·raids,
named 'the desert bighorn
~::,.SK•ro""y,dOhiSt.o
Aprii6-ID
The
Americans
had sheep as their state animal.
WHAT'S UP DOC?
After some . light-hearted
•
All Accounts Insured To
!lechnicolorl
originally refused to conduct
S20,ooo.oo by FSLIC.
Barbara Slreisand
bombing missions along the sneering at the wild mustangRyan O'Neal ·
Mekong or Highway 1 because · the other nominee-the state
!GI
of the high population demity, Senate "sent a bill designating
,
.
·
I
Colorcartoons
!Jut
fm' ally relented
. to· go.ve~- the official animal tO Gov.
I
dulls: suo Children: 7lc
"~
-~
S,how Starts 1 p.m.
ment requests when .- the Mike O'Callaghlm, who IS
_
situation became · ~~untenable'' expected to Sign it.

Our IntereSt Is
Greater For You·

GOES TO COUNTY LEVEL -The work of these blue ribbon winners. of the Salisbury
Elementary School will be entered in the cultural arts competition pn the county level at
Bradbury ThW'Sday. Mrs. Richard Friend was chairman of the cultural arts program of the
Salisbury School. Winners shown are, front row, from the left, Tresa White, Terry Hysell,
David Doerfer,,~ collages, Lori Pullins, oil; back row, from the left, Fonda Rapp, Brenda
Ross, BeckY Phillips, all collages, and Laurel Cole, sculpture.
.

EXcellently styled- of wriRkle free 100 percent

CAT REVIVED
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) _
Firemen clapped an oxygen
. mask on a neady dead cat and
revived the animal while
fighting a four-alarm blaze at a
· local mortuary.
The firefighters also rescued
a dozen Caskets and a single
body (rom the mortuary before
flames reached them. They set
U!e caskets in the street while
dousing the blilze:

I
1
1
1

• •

By United Press International cities across the nation.
The national meat boycott
A survey condij~ ted by
has cut into Sales as much as 70 Batten, Barton, Durstine &amp;
per ce~t. resulted in the layoff Osbom, Inc., a New Yorkaf thousands of workers in the based
inlernalional admeat-related industry and for vertlsing ~gency, reported'that
the first tiine in the weeklong 81 percent of housewives in the
effort resulted in Jo~er retail country plan to continue the
meat prices in three states.
meat boycott this week.
The announcement of the
Women Will Buy L&lt;.ss
first discount in retail prices
Dr. RobertA. Wa chsler, who
came Wednesday from Big G conducted the· survey, said
Discount Food Stores in Rhode near!)' half of the women inIsland, Connecticut, and tervlewed plan to buy less
Massachusetts. The stores meat in the future if present
annoimced a price rollback on prices continue.
An estimated 5,000 packing.
more than lOOmeat items by as
much as 40 cents a poW1d.
house workers have been laid
William Wilkinson, assistant off since the boycott started
to the presideri! of the finn five days ago. In Ohio alone,
reported
which has 25 stores in the three union officials
states, said the prices were Wednesday that more than
rolled back effective Wednes- · 1,550 butcher and meat
day and would be held at the · processors were off the job.
new levels " as long as Other • spokesme n
for ·
packinghouses and unions
possible.''
Meat sales were reported off across the company said the
as much as 70per cent in some layoffs would increase rapidly
West C'.qast stores Wednesday, if the boycott of meat conand 211 to 30 per cent in many tinued.

UP, UP AND AWAY, IN MY BEAUTIFUL BALLOON Five year old Keith Allen, son of Mr. and Mrs. DOn Allen, .
Antiquity, holds a deflated ball09n and a message cOntained
in the balloon that floated onto the driveway of the Allen
home Tuesday. The message contained in the balloon said :
"Camp Wapsle-Y Balloon Uft, the boy 7-15 years of age
bringing this sheet and balloon back from the furtherest point
away from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, will win a free week at Camp
Wapsie-Y this summer, Bring the sheet and U!e balloon to the
Cedar Rapids Central Y.M.C.A., 500-1st Ave., N. E . by
Monday, April D. The winner will be announced on April9."
Mrs. Allen made a telephone contact with the camp
Wednesday; sure enough, balloons were released Sunday
and Monday and the one found in Antiquity is. the only one
reported to. have traveled such a tremendous distance.
Mrs. Allen will give the message and balloon to any
youngster who is interested in taking advantage of the offer.

·-"

(Continued
from Page 1)
'
.
'
warned of "appropriately vigorous reactions',' if the violations
oontinue.
White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler refused to
spell out the "reactions" that were envisioned by the intentionally vague conununique. But other officials, including
Defense Secretary Elliot Richardson, have said U!e United Slates
retains U!e option of bOmbing if North Vietnam commits flagrant
truce violations.

Cheshire's Village Council
Monday night granted James
Neal permission to move a

must park their cars off the
· pavemen~ Residents are also
asked to .r emove junk cars or
unlicensed . vehicles from .\
streets. Unhcensed persons
. were also asked to refram from
operating mini bikes on the
village slreets and playgrot\nd.

'

'

House movt
authorized

Mayor Scott Lucas aniibunced that . the dog confinement
ordinance will rUn from April I
through Oct. I. All dogs must
be confined until October,
Another topic discussed was

'

•

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