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1 'ews ... zn
riefs ISit Wit soli Simp y 1 n t appen.

a-' The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April9, 1973

M~~~!~sM ~p~~:g: ~::.
PleasantVaUeyHospital
..

sley, Henderson .
DISCHARGES : Mildred
Garrett, Point Pleasant ; Mrs.
Kalving Freeman , Gallipolis;
Mrs. David Rolley and son,
Rodne y; Carol Patterson,
Henderson ; Rosa Mae Jeffers,
Southside; Sheri Kayser , Point
Pleasant ; Roxie Holley ,
Glenwood ; Pamela Powell,
Ashton; Mrs. 0 . J. Bishop,
Middle port ; Mrs .James
Randolph, Point Pleasant; Joe
Sparks, Point Pl~asant ; Mrs.
Har old Price, Middleport ;
Vyvanne Crabtree, Point
Pleasant·

•

NAMED ALTERNATE
Karen Hale, daughter of Mr .
and Mrs. John B. Hale, Rt. I,
Dexter, a senior at Meigs High
School, was named an alternate winner in the 1973
Buckeye Rural Electric Coop's
scholarship contest. Winners
this year were Mary Hixon,
Jackson High School , ·and
James Stephen Edwards, Oak
Hill senior. Both received $250
!ICholarsbtps, and will take part
in Buckeye Rural's statewide
contest later this spring.

•

1\T

(Continued fr om page I)
cease.fjre. However,other informed sour~ssaid one of the three
crewmen was possibly Filipino ins).ead Of American .
PINE RIDGE, S. D. -mE CONFRONTATION of Wounded
Knee, th011ght to have been only a telephone c.iu away from
settlement, today remained deadlocked over the disarmament
procedures of the militant Indians occu pying the Pine Ridge
Reservation village . The federal government's chief negotiator
said a final solution of the occupation of Wonnded Knee would not
c.ome unless the Indians laid down their.arms and allowed U. S.
marshals and FBI agents to enter the village.
However, a CBS television crew which sntered the village
Friday as a ' 'pOol'' representative of all the press, said militants
entrenched ~in the village said disarmament still hinged on
"satisfactory negotiations " in Washington between the White
House and American Indian MOvement leader Russell Means. In
an interview with UPI in Wash ington, M-eans said, "The government proposal which is in complete violation of the agreement
. for simultaneous laying down of guns is that they wanted 75
marshals and 200 FBI agents to come into Wounded Knee while
they brought food in . While Indians were eating, they would
sweep the area looking for guns. When they made that proposal
last Saturday night, Dennts Banks - when I finished talkmg with
him was laughing - said be asked that they get down to serious
negotiations. now that the hoke is over with. "
FOUR·niOUSAND TONS OF CRUSHED ROCKS were
dumped onto a weakened dam near Greenville, Miss., and a
spillw"ay diverted floodwaters from New Orleans Sunday as the
rain--'Wollen Mississippi River pushed its overflow toward the
Gulf of Mextco. The National Weather Service said the river
would crest at 50.1 feet at Vicksburg, Miss., today, its highest
level there in more than 30 years.
The level was 18.3 feet at New Orleans Sunday and the
Bonnet Carre Spillway 33 miles north of the city was opened to
divert floodwaters through Lake Pontchartrain and various
canals. The spillway had not been used since the river climbed to
21lfeet in 195{). Engineers rushed 4,000 tons of crushed rocks from
an emergency stockpile at Greenville early Sunday to bolster the
Bayou Dam, which protects the Eagle Lake and some 200
families and fishing camps in the area. They reported the dam
"stabilized" late Sunday.

you suddenly realize that
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wind up 1n the hole" ...

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CHICAGO (UP! ) - A wall
plaque from Cambodia and a
visa-6tamped passport are the
only remnants of Phyllis
Allard's trip to Southeast Asia.
They are not enough to con'

l

vince the U.S. government she
talked to her son and spotted 25
other captives in a Viet Cong
prison camp.
The government .has listed
Spec .4 Richard Allard, 25,

r-------------------------.

SOutheast Asia the end of
January, 1972, carrying piclures of her son made from a
fihn clip the government had.
Paper Leads Her lo Area
Information from Tokyo's
Communist newspaper, Nithon
Dampa, led her to what she
called ~he Kontun area on the ,
Vietnam..Cambodi-a border .
She refused to identify the city.
"I contacted former Camhodian Ambassador Nuy Gan
Van Tbieu," she said. "And I
showed my pictures in hotels,
stores and all around the city. I
said I was interested in talking
with Viet Cong officials about
my son."
Two days later, she said, tile.VietCong sent two men to her.
" I don 't know why they did
it," she said. "I guess they
were impressed with me. They
said bow brave I was for
coming there alone. I guess it
was a lark."
They took her to see a North
Vietnamese official, Nuy Gan
Quai Sing Tung, she said. "A
Japanese reporter, Sagamoto,
was wiih me when Nuy Gan
Quai Sing Tung told me they
had my son."
She said Nuy Gan Quai Sing
TUng led her to the prison
camp, but " the Viet Cong were
furious I was there," she said,
" Oneevenhitmeinlhebackof

missing in action for nearly six
years. "But I saw my son. I
touched him, I talked to him
and I saw at least 25 other men
there," she said.
' Washmgton verified her trip,
she said. "But they couldn't
find the camp, so they called
my story inconclusive. Every
time I talk to them, it's like
talking to a cement wall. They
wouldn't reclasSify him a
POW," she said .
The attractive, 46-year-old
woman said she Iert for

I Area Deaths !·
Henry Mace
RUTLAND - Henry Mace,
74. Salem St., Rutland, died
Sunday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. A retired coal miner,

Mr. Mace was born in West
Virginia, Oct. 17, 1898, the son

of the late Henry and Rose
Mace. He was also preceJied in
death by a daughter.
Surviving are his wife,
Ethel; fi ve daughters, Jenetta
Mean s, Charleston: DOris Ramsburg, Rutland ; Rose
Madden, Columbu s; Pat
Merland, no address, and
Beulah Stewart, Rutland; a
son , Alvin , Charleston; tw o
sisters, Ethel Thompson and

Vena Golden, both in West
VIrginia; two brothers; Jess in
Florida, and Romie, in West
Virginia : 22 grandchildren,
and 23 great-grandchildren.
Funeral services ·will be held
at 2 p.m. Wednesda y at the
Rutland Freewill Sa1)t.ist"
Church wttb the Rev. Noei
Herrmann officiating. Burial

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

SORORITY TO MEET
The Xi Gamma Mu Sorority
will meet at the home of
Roberta O'Brien Thursday at
7:45p.m. wtth Mary Morris as
co-hostess.

" It's that t ime again, when

:Guards battling hijackers f

::::
NICOSIA, Cyprus (UP!) - Arab guerrillas tried to ::::
} hijack an El AI Israeli airliner and threw bombs at the :::;
:::: borne of the Israeli ambassador today, police said. First {
:;:; reports sald security guards and guerrlllas were battling In
·;;: a gun!ight at the lnternallonal alrport outside Nicosia. ;:;;
AUTOS ~AMAGED
Pollee said two explosions caused considerable damage :~
Two cars were damaged and :;:
a dnver was c1ted to court man ,;:; to the home adjacent to that or the Israeli ambassador. No :::;
accident on Locust St., ;:;; one was reported hurt and a pollee patrol reported ;:;;
;:;:
, Pomeroy, at 3:49a.m. Sunday. ;;;; arresting two Arabs fleeing the scene.
Pomeroy police said a ca r =~:~:::::::;:;:;:;:~::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::::·:::~~:!:!:!:!:!•!O:•!•!•:=:·:·:·:=:::::::::::::::;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;.;:;:;::;f:
Veterans Memorial Hospital
driven by Steven Tatterson, 21,
Admitted Saturday
Pomeroy, struck the parked
car of Everett Thomas There Margaret Fields , Hartford and
was heavy damage to the Billy Brewer, Portland.
Discharged Saturday Thorn's car and meduun to
Tatterson's. Tatterson is being Rollie Stewart, Sandra Booth,
charged with leaving the scene Wanda swartz, James Snyder,
Robert Knotts, Ronald Lyons,
of an accident.
~
Will tam Weaver ,
Lelah
Forrest, Myrtle Walker, Mary
COLUMBUS (UP!) - A
Pierce and Stella .Gibbeaut.
Admttted Sunday - •Ada team from Bowling Green High
Bissell, Long , Bottom: Joan School disassembled,
Tonight &amp; Tuesday
then
Aprii9-IO
Johnson, Point Plea sant; examined · and
Lavina Sirnpson, Racine; Tura reassembled a sma1l engine in
WHAT'S UP DOC?
( techn icolor)
Hunter, Nelsonville; Anna 18 minutes Saturday to win the
Barbara Stre•sand
Aeiker, Middleport and Sandra "small engine'' competition of
Ryan O'Neal
the 50th annual Future FarPowell, Reedsville.
•
IGJ
mers of Amerca ( FF A)
Colorcarfoons
Dtscharged Sunday
dults: SL-SO -· Children: 75c
Shawnee Salser, Wanda judging contest.
Show Starts 7 p.m .
The two-man team from
Humphrey, Rita Stump, Nellie
Bow ling ' Green defeated 28
Hanlon and Edith Betzing.
other teams by running the
small engine one minute,
' '
completely disassembling it
and measuring parts for wear,
then reassembling and running
the engine for one mu~ute . The
18-minute winning time was
the best ever for the event.
More than 2,500 students from
260 Ohio high schools competed
in various competitions at Ohio
Slate Umversity.
A team !rom Crestview High
School in Con~oy won the
poultry judging, with Milton
Union High School of West
MiJton second and River View
High School of Chosocton third.
Rutherford B. Hayes High
School of Delaware won the
milk judging, with Mechanicsburg High second and WestLiberty Salem High of West
Liberty third .
In competition conducted
Fdday , a team
!rom
Muskingum Joint Vocational
School in Zanesville won the
agriculture industrial equipment skills contest. Ashtabula
Joint Vocational Schobl or
Jefferson was second and Knox
County Joint Vocattonal School
of Mt. Vernon was thkd.

r

BG High's
FFA team

Ohio's best

MEIGS THEATRE

Our New -

w1ll be in Miles Cemetery.
Friends may cal! at the Martin
Funeral Home in Rut1_and any
time Tuesday .

Alfred Gloeckner
-Alfred A. Gloeckner, 61, 302
29th St., SW Canton, formerly
of Pomeroy, died Sunday at the
Windsor Medical Center in
North Canton.
Mr. Gloeckner was preceded
in death by his father , Jacob,
and his y.rife, Helen Davis
Gloeckner. Surviving are his
daughter, Mrs . E. Gloeckner,
Canton; his mother, Mrs .
Grace Hysell Gloeckner of
Pomeroy ; two sisters, Mrs.
Ruth M. Moore, Pomeroy, and
Mrs. Mary E . Horton , Huntingdon, Pa ., and several
meces and nephews.
Mr .· Gloecker was a core
maker at the Canton Alloys Co.
for 22 years and was a member
of the North Industry
Methodist Church at Canton.
Funeralservices will be held
at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Eewiiig
Funeral Home wttb the Rev. ,
Robert Card officiating. Burial
will be in Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home any time.

EXTENDED OUTLOOK
c hance or light showers -or
snow flurrJes , mainly
northeasj Wednesday ,
becoming fair Thursday and
Friday. Highs upper 30s and
low
40s
Wedn esday,
moderallng to the 50s by
Friday. Lows In upper 20s
and 30s.

TITLE SUIT FILED
A partition to quiet title bas
been filed in Migs County
Common Pleas Court by
Franklin King Jr., and Louella
E. King, Pomeroy, Rt. 4,
against Ida M. King, Myrtle
Kin g Robinson and Fred
Robmson, Pomeroy, Rt. 4. The
property is located in ScipiO
Twp.

•

•

'

Our bank turns your sav ings dollars into a ski ll ed labor for ce Und er our wi de -awak e
supervision, money in our new Va cat1on Club saving s accourit s brings home the
hi ghest earn1ngs any ba nk ca n prov 1de. Th1s is the easy way t o plan the vacat1on
you've alway s wanted Why not stop ln for com plete details? Do it now!

~The wide-awake ba11k

\()JI makes itol/.'ioensy.,
•

~

~

BARTER WITH VOTES
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Black
presidential assistant Stanley
S. Scott said during the
weekend here black people
should not vote as a bloc for
any one party, but instead
should use thelr vo tes as
bartering ~power,____!_ 'How can
you extract promises from a
candidate if he knows he's got
your vote?" Scott said.

Farmer"s Bank &amp; Savings Co.
'

'

POMEROY, OHIO
\

Member of Federal Reserve System
$20,000 Maximum Insurance for Each Depositor

REMEMBER OTHERS
PEPPER PIKE, Ohio (UP! )
- Air Force Maj . Cowan G.
Nix, a former POW, was guest
of honor at a reception at City
Hall here Sunday. He told the
500 persons who attended : ''I
hope you do not forget those
Americans who dted in Vietnam, Americans injured there
and in particular those
Am ericans missing in action."

Over 800 science exhibits
the variety of interests among
prepared
by
Pomeroy
the
puptls
and
their
Elementary School studenis
were judged in the Second capa~ilttles of preparing
exhibits. Most aJl·of the pupils
Annual Science Fair conducted
had at least one, and many two,
Monday under sponsorship or
three or more entries in the
the Pomeroy PTA.
fair . Several worked on group
Mrs. Nonga Roberts and projects.
Mrs. Mary Hysell, teachers,
were chairmen of the fair with
judging completed during the
EXTENDED OUTLOOK
afternoon and ribbons in place
for evening viewing by the PTA
Fair and cold Thursday.
C han ~e of showers and
members. Judges were Bob
slowly moderating temRoberts and Victor Hysell.
peratures F' riday and
The exbibi!O prepared by the
Saturday. Highs Thursday
students were wide- ranged,
upper 30s and lower COs,
mcluding planet studies, health
warming
to 50s and low 60s
charts, bacteria structures,
Saturday. Lows In the 20s
electriclty, ecology and conearly Thursday and 35 to 40
servation, chemicl.\1 testmg,
early Saturday.
energy, hght and sound .
The projecis demonstrated

lllr' ]

ECOLOGY - '"~gly 'fi"ash" is his name and he was created as a group project of Mrs
Roberta. Rtcbardson s spectal education class. The children molded chicken wire to create the
man whtch was filled wtth trash . Sean Will and Debbie Falcon were two of the children who
worked on the project.

•

enttne
VOL. XX~ NO. 251

Sale! Serta Mattresses
Nationally Advertised.

THIS SALE ONLY fOR STOCK ON HAND.
SOLD IN SETS ONLY.

I

Save •40

SALE

$159

LOCAL TEMPS
The temperature in downtown Pomeroy at 11 a.m.
Monday was 60 degrees under
partially sunny skies,

Elberfel.ds In Pom.eroy

.,

FINE FURNITURE BEGINS ON THE INSIDE
PATENTED SPRINGS
The famous Flexsteel springs are made of.arched bands of finest
blue steel and a strapped platform top to form· a single unit that
suports 1n restful ease -like floating on air. FLEXSTEEL SPRINGS ARE
SO DURABLE THEY WILL PROVIDE lASTING COMFORT!
.

Q

CONST~UCTION

--Fiexsteel is easiiy kept factory-fresh and clean. No cambric bottoms
to gather dust and allergens.
•

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

Baker Furniture

By Uoited Pressloternallonal
WASHINGTON - A RANKING HOUSE Republican contends the Nixon administration's proposed strip mining control
law wouldn't work because lt would rely too much on the slates
for enforcement. Rep. Philip E. Ruppe, R-Mich., the senior
Republican on the House Envkonment Subcommittee joined
critics of the measure Monday.
'
"! just don't have the faith in the states doing the job,"
Ruppe sald. The environment subcommittee bas joined a rnines
and mineral subcommittee in holding joint bearings on a series
of proposals to control strip !)lining, ranging from ouUawing
surface mining to various means of control and reclamation.
The administration measure was expected to come under
further criticism today with a number of environmentalists
scheduled to testify.
COLUMBUS -OHIO HOUSE OF Representatives Speaker
A. G. Lancione, D-Bellaire, announced Monday he plans a House
vote April 17 on Gov. John J . Gilligan's proposed $9.9 billion
budget for fiscal 1973-75. Lancione and other House Democratic
leaders met privately Monday to plan tbeii' campaign for advancing the budget through thek chamber. The Democratic
leaders also talked with William Chavanne of the governor's
office to decide bow to handle .an additional $118 million in ap.
propriations announced by Gilligan last week.
Most of the money, including $55 million proposed for aid to
elementary and secondary schools and $34.7 mjjlion for higher
education, would be channeled where the governor recom~
mended, according to Rep. Myrl H. Shoemaker, D-Bourneville,
chairman of the House Finance Committe!!. However,
Shoemaker indicated there might be some problems with some
of the remaining $28.3 million.
Gilligan bas ticketed $7.2 million for mental health
programs, $3.5 million for state employe benefits, $4 million for
community action programs and $13:7 million for increased aid
to families with dependent children.
COLUMBUS - THE OHIO SUPREME COURT will hear
oral arguments April 18 in a case to determine if former Gov.
James A. Rhodes is eligible to run for a thkd term. Chief Justice
C. William O'Neill, who announced the date Monday, said final
briers from Rhodes' attorneys are due next Monday, and the case
will be argued two days later.
The state attorney general's office wiU argue the case on
behalf of 8\!cretary of State Ted W. Brown, who refused to accept
' Rhodes' petitions to run for governor in 1974. BroWn refused the
petitions to get the case into court. The Ohio Constitution forbids
a governor to serve more than two successive terms, but the
language makes it unclear whether he could run for a third term
after four years' absence, as Rhodes is attempting to do.
O'Neill said the case of another candidate for the Republican
gubernatorial nomination - Sen. Donald E. Lukens, R·
Middletown - is not yet ready for oral argument..
•

Frames are of.• fiQest, kiln-dried hardwood, double-dowelled and
comer-blocked for added strength. Upholstering is expert and
ta1lonng carefully detailed.

CLEANLINESS

90

BUY NOW
AT
SPECIAL
SAVINGS.
MIDDLEPORT, 0. ~

BASEL, SWITZERLAND - A BRITISH Vanguard airliner
with 143 persons aboard crashed in a ·heavy snowstorm todaY,
officials at Basel airport said. The Swiss news agency ATS said
the plane was found shortly less than two hours after the crash
and said there appeared to be many survivors among the !39
passengers and crew of nine. Police said they received rewrts of
survivors, many of them injured.
The plane was on a flight from Bristol, England, and crashed
at 10 : 10 a.m., !ive minutes before it was scheduled to land !be
officials said. ATS reported that the plane crashed near' !be
village of Hochwald, which lies between Basel and the town of
Solothurn to the south.
TWICE A WEEK
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Mrs.
Do!lna Goldsberry Of.Hamilton
County says the nationwide
meat boycott will continue on
Tuesdays and Thursdays and

conswners will continue to pro-test bigb prices through chain
letters · and !118SS telephone
calls "until the next week-long
boycott is set."

TUESDAY, APRIL 10,- 1973

Rehiring of James Dieh.,
Meigs High School Principal,
tabling of a- recommendation
on the hiring of other administrative personnel, and
granting of teaching and nonteaching contract_, highlighted
a meeting or !be Meigs Local
School District Board of
EducatiOn Monday night,
The board voted 3-1, Don
Mullen, Frank' Porter and
Virgil King ''for/' and Carol
Pierce "against," to rehlre
Diehl as high school principal.
Board member Joe Sayre was
·
not present.
The board then tabled for
rurther' study a recommended
list of qther administrative
pers onnel including, John
Lisle, princtpal at Salisbury;
James Vennari, principal at
Harrisonville ·
Rutland
Roberta Wilson, pnncipal a!'
Salem Center; Mae Young,
assistant
principal
at
Pomeroy: Phyllis Ha ckett,
assistant principal at Brad-

Firemen busy
during Mareh
Twenty-two flrst aid and
seven fire calls were answered
by the Middleport Fire
Department in March, Bob E.
Byer, f1re chief, reported to
Middleport • Village Council
Monday night.
Of the 22 emergency-rescue
runs, eight were out-.of~town
and 14 in town. One call was to
an accidet'it in which a motor
vehicle was mvolved. Of the
fire calls, six were m town and
one was in Salisbury Township.
On the fire calls an average of
15 firemen answered each call
and 22.7 man hours were ex·
pended. All fire department
vehicles traveled 487.5 in answering March calls.

bury ; Eric Hart, assistant
prmcipal at Rutland : Gregory
McCall, assiStant principal at
Harr iso nv11le; Earl Young,
assistant principal at the high
school, part time, and Gregory
McCall as Title I coordtnator .
A ~co mmendation made by
District
Supt.
George
Hargraves to appoint certified
members m other assignments
for one year was not accepted
including the names or aarold
Sauer and Martha Vennari as
-gutdance. full time. Those two
names were removed from the
recommendation .
The recommendation was
again put to vote following the
removal of the two names but
iw mohon was made to accept
until the name of Fred Ruth as
assistant band director was
also removed, whereupon it
was approved.
Names approved on the
recommendallon were Bermce
Hoffman , yearbook ; Gary
Walker, yearbook; Donald
Wolfe, htgb school newspaper ;
Stephanie Niemies, high school
cheerleader coach; Rebecca
CLUB TO MEET
The lOth Dtstrict Democratic
Action Club wili meet at the
high sc hool cafeteria at
Jackson Wednesday. Dinner
will be served in lbe cafeteria
at6 :30 p.m. All area democrats
and all Meigs County
Democrats are cordially m·
vited to attend .

Weather
Freezing temperature
warning tonight. Cloudy, wtndy
and colder with occasional ·
hght snow today and tonight.
Low in the 20s. Wednesday
partly cloudy and chance of
snow flurries north. High in
upper 30s.

Tate, junior hi gh school assistant wrestling coach ; N.
chee rleader coach ; John P. Swe~ckhamer, golf coach;
Redov ian, guidance full time ; ChHrles Chan cey 1 adult
Cha"rles Corder, drama coac h; physical fltness program and
Helen Smtlb, librarian, and H. at hlettc director ; N. r .
DwightGoms asbanddirector. Swackht:.~mc r . assis tant
H1red in athletics for one . athleti c dire ctor; Do nald
year were Fenton Taylor , Wolfe, e~thl e ti c .!)ecr·eta ry ass lstant vars ity coach ; treasurer; Joy Bentley, girls
Donald Dixon , assistant coach, and Charles Chancey,
varsity coach ; John Bentley, athlelic fa cilities care and
assista nt varsity coac h; preparation.
Charl es Dowme, assist~nt
Teacher appointments for
va rsity coach"; Fenton Taylor one year recommended by
and Charles Downie, reserve Hargra ves were, John Arnott,
coaches; Robert Msier, head Kay Barr, Ed Bartels, Joy
freshman coach; Sam Crow, Bentley, Roger B1rch, Sheila
assis tant fres hman co&lt;tch; • Black, Daisy Blakeslee,
John Arnott, juni or high coach; .Jeanne Bowen, Carl Brannan ,
Fenton Taylor , trainer ; m Jam es Brewing ton, Judith
basketball , John Arnott, fresh· Brostrom, Kim Bruno, Doris
man coach ; Marvin McKelvey, Buckl ey, James Butcher,
eigh th grade coach, and David J enmfer Butcher , Dorothy
Jenkins, seventh grade coach Chan ey, H1 chard Coleman,
Other athletic assiGnments Charles Corder, Joan Corder,
were Donald Dixon, head track Gladys Cox , Sam . Crow, Janel
coach ; Charles Downie, Deetz , Id a Dtehl , Christi
assistant lrack coach, Donald Dievelbiss, Donald Dhr:on,
Wolfe, head paseball boacb; Char les Dow nie, Kenn eth
Dt.II C" Harri son , ass istant Eblm , Kaye FlCk, Emma Lou
baseball coach; John Bentley, Fmch, Bonme Bisher, Mary
wrestlmg coacP; Sam Crow, Fran cis , Charles Frecker,
Judith Ga nnaway , Michael
Gerlach, Marjorie Gibbs,
Willll:trn Gibbs, Dunise Gibson ,
Governor urged
Marjorie · Gaett, Dwight H.
Goms, Karen ' Goins , Cecilia
to share sharing
Golden , Margaret Goodman ,
Hanning,
Dale
Letters have been sent to Donald
Gov. John J. Gilliga n from Harrison, Cecilia Hart (hail
Meigs County urging the time), Delmar Haynes, Ca rol
governor to re~om me nd $4 .4 Heibhng, Annaiu Htll, Bernice
(Contmued on page IOJ
milli on in expenditures for
slate library funds from the
$118 million which the governor
CJnno un ced
r ecentl y
is

Police made
The amoun t requested would
offset the loss or federal fund- 57 arrests
ing for library services in·

ava~ Jable.

~~

Transfers of'funds
made
.

zre
Break in business as usual
The Co!fee House Committee of Meigs County Inc., for
finan cial reasons, will close tbe Coffee House for " business
as usual" wttil June 11
However, three days a week (Sunday, Monday, and
Wednesday 1 the CoHee House will be open from 3 p.m. to 9
p.m. for those who would like to come In and wotk on special
handicraft projects to help get the Coffee House flnanclally
solvent.
The small 'laiidl"craft lteD!H wlll Include leather
specialties, jewelry, and clothing articles. Any donaUons of
scrap me~ls , dry goods, and scrap leather would be appreciated .
·

Nixon asks
more power
By NORMAN KEMPS'I'f:R
WASHINGTON (UP!) President Nixon asked Congress today for sweeping
authortty to negotiate new
foreign trade agreements, l'OU·
pled with standby power to
retaliate for unfair restrictions
on Amencan exports by other
nations.
In a message to Congress
outlining the first major U.S.
trade reform proposal since
1962, Nixon asked that his
negotiators be given a virtual
free hand in trade bargaining
sessions starting next fall.
The proposed lcgtS!alion also
would:
- Permit the President to
extend "most favored nation"
tariff treahnent to the SOviet
Union and other Communist
nations.
- Liberalize unemployment
benefits for domestic workers
displaced by imports.
- Impose new taXes on
overseas subsidiaries of
American companies, particularly \bose wbicb ship
finished products back to the.
United States.
.
-Grant trading concessions
to underdeveloped countries.
- Authorize temporary
import restrictions to help
correct extraordinary defiCits
m the U.S. balance of
payments.
Subject to approval by
Congress, Nixon envisions
using his new authority in the
first comprehensive trade
negotiations since the so--called
Kennedy Round between 1962
and 1967.
,·
The outcome of thosi,- talks
was a reduction of about 35' per
cent in total free world tariffs
on nonfarm products-lifting a
$40 billion burden !rom in·
ternational business.
Despite the late 196()s cuts,
Nixon said, "a wide variety of

'
•

TEN CENTS

•

sta

Fifty-seven arrests were
eluding the contmuance of the
made
. by Middleport Police
operation of "Mr. Eddy ," th e
county ' s bookmobile , the during March according to the
· monthly report of Chief J. J.
letters say.
Cremeans submitted to Mid ~
'
. dleport Village Co un cil
r:=:=:=::.:::=:=======:=::::·:::;:=========:=:====:.:=============·===i:::-===========~===::;::==============-=-=·=·==:=~===·=======·=·=·=·= =·=:.:====================================================================·=======&lt;·=·=·=;~~: Monda y ni ght.
,
The most frequent arrest
!!!! was for intoxication, with 19 of
the total on that charge . Nine
'
can
be
improved
and
main·
persons
were charged · wtlh
Fund transfers and other is to be turned over .to Village
tamed.
faihn g to pay parking meter
routines were processed Solicitor Bernard Fultz.
At the request of Chase , tiCkets and seven fol\ driving
Monday mght when Middleport
Maintenance Supervisor
Village Council met in 'regular Harold Chase reported that his Mayor Zerkle agreed to confer while intoxicated.
Other arrests and ' the
sessiOn .
crew wiH grade the alley near with the planning commission
CoWicil approved the trans- the new fire department on the maintenance of the number charged on each offer of $2,500 from the general headquarters before an open manna . Clerk-Treasurer Gene fen se were assault and
fund to the street maintenance house is held there possibly by Grate reported receipt of $2,148 fightin g, five: failure to tra nsas the community's share of fer license plates, tw o; spm__ fund and $500 from the general the end or April.
Mayor Zerkle asked council revenue sharing funds from the ning tires , two, and one ~ch
lund to the fire equtpment
fund . The March report of to reconsider care£ully be£ore federal government for for: running a slop sign, runnmg
Mayor John Zerkle showing they reject altogether a $5 January, February and March. a red light, assured clear
receipt. of $2,307.25 in flnes and permissive auto license tax in A thank-you note from the distance, reckless operatton,
Meigs C~unty Council on Aging failure to yteld right of way,
fees and $142 in merchant the community . •
Councilman Dick Vaughan for a $100 appropriation from passing a stopped school bus,
police collections for a total or
expressed his opinion that revenue sharing funds to the no opera tor's license, and
$2449.24 was approved .
stealing an auto battery .
A bill for $575 was received Middleport cannoi progress counc\1 on aging was read.
Attending were Mayor
Three cases were dismissed
from a Chillicothe firm for much, and .will not gain much
labor and materials alleged to £rom any area economlc ex- Zerkle, Chase, Grate, Chief of and one cuse transferred to
have gone into the new fire pansion unless people .of the Police Cremeans and coUncil . COWlly cuur t .
station . 1t was reported that town will, support some members Fred · Hoffm an-, - Parkmg meter colfect10ns m
the bill should be referred to measure of providing ad- David Ohlinger, Lawrence March ,tota led $1,017 and the
the X-'L Corp., the contractor dJhonal income so that the Stewart, William Walters and police cruiser was driven (488
miles, the chief reported.
on the pro}ect, and the matter appearanee of the comtnunity Dick vaughan .

.

PHONE 992·2156

I

eac zn

ELECTRICAL PROJECTS - Electricity was popular
among boys who prepared entries for the Science Fair . J{elly
Thoma, left, a fifth grader, turned out a project showing bow
a battery can he used to power a motor. Mark Norton's entry
was an electrical "guessing game." Que5iiofisw
3nd answers
had to be correcUy matched when touched by the electrical
wires before the center light would flash . Mark is also fifth
grader.

a

REGUlAR 199.95
FULL OR TWIN SIZE MATTRESS
REGULAR 199.95
FULL OR TWIN SIZE BOX SPRING

eoMEROY·MIDOLEPORT, OHIO

•

•

Marriage License
Glenn Ivan Cundiff, Jr., 36,
Syracuse and Jane Ann Shuler,
20, Syracuse.

I

PLANT GROWTH
Kenneth Callahan, third
grader at the Pomeroy
Elementary School, showed
stages of the growth of beans
in a long glass ctJntaloer as
hls exhibit In tbe Second
Annual Science Fair Mon·
day.

OPEN WEEKOAYS9:30To5:00 P.M.
SHOP BOTH FRtOAYANOSATUROAY 9:30 T09 P.M.

Mrs. Floral Etta Kinch, 70,
died Monday morning at
Veterans Memonal Hosp1tal.
Mrs. Kinch )!ad lived with
her daughter, Mrs. Eugene
(Marguerite ) Eskew, Uncoln
Hill Road, Pomeroy, the past
six years. She was born June 6,
1902, in· Ohio, the daughter of
the late Clarence ~n&lt;!
Marguerite Porter. She was
also preceded in death by a
granddaughter and a grandson.
Surviving are her husband,
Fred; another daughter, Mrs.
William (Hazen Barnes,
Phoenlx, Ariz.; 11 grand·
children, and two greatgrandchildren.
Funeral services wll! be at
1:30 p.m. Thursday at the
Porter Funeral Home in Mt.
Sterling. Fnends may call at
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home in Middleport from 2 to 4
and from 7 to 9 p.m. Tuesday,
and ' at the Porter Funeral
Home Wednesday afternoon
and evening. ·

SATISFACTION

•

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

CLUB

BEGINNING TUESDAY, MAY 1

demonstrated

l.kvoted To The lnteresl., Of The Meigs-Ma.mn Area

Floral Kinch

Savings Plan

in-Science is

the bead," and they · sent her
away.
Finds Her Way Back
· " But I foond my way back
there," ·she said. -"And I told
them three or four times, so
they would understand, Uta\ I
bad Nuy Gan Quai Sing TUng's
permission. And I had a right
to see my son.u
The hastily placed blindfold
fell off her eyes as the guards
took her down a passageway
deeper into the encampment.
She sat in a small barren room,
she said, and they brought in
her,son."
"He looked so weak," she
said. "I thought he was going to
fall. "
She said she turned to scold
the guards for Allard's treatment. "And when I turned
back,'' she said. "they were
leading him away. Then they
took me by the arm and led me
out, too ."
She said she saw 25 other
prisoners, all bound, in another
room.
But there's no proof Of the
visit. And the government
maintains. that all American
prisoners are 011t of Southeast
Asia . "I know it sounds like a
laky tale," she said. "But why
would I make up a story like
that? Notoriety? I think I'd be
made a fool of."

.VACATION
.

Pupil interest

•

barriers to trade still distort
the world's economic relations,
harm!ng our own interests and
those of other countries. "
He said preferential trading
arrangements- most of which
he said discriminate against
the United States-have spread
across Europe and Africa.
"These barriers to trade, in
other countries and in our~ ,
pre sently cost the United
States several billion doUars a
year in the form of higher
consumer prices and in the
inefficient use of our resources," Nixon said. 11 Even . an
economy as strong as ours can
ill afford such losses."

Only 4 bridges
~re

less safe
than Belpre's
PARKERSBURG, W. Va
(UPI)- The Ohio Riven Brtdge
he tween here and Belpre, Ohio ,
has IJ&lt;:en called the fifth least
safe span in the nation .
The label on the 5,5()()..pound
weight limit span was pinned
by Rep. John Blatnik, D-Minn.,
chairman of the House Public
Works Committee.
Writing in a national ne\\s~
paper supplement, Blatnik
urged local and state grou ps to
derriand quick action to 'repair
or renov:ate unsafe bridges be·
fore another disaster strikes,
such as the Silver Bridge collapse at Point Pleasant, W.
Va., Dec. 15, 1967.
,Blatnik listed 15 bridges
BrOWld the nation he considers
unsafe, and the span here was
listed No. 5.
The-bl'idge bas heen closed to
traffic in the past, and 23 years
ago commuters between
Belpre and Parkersburg used a
•
shuttle train service
on an up.
stream railroad brtdge.

�2 The Daily Senhnel /dlddleport Pomeroy 0 April 10 1973

EDITORIAl.$

To Win, lnd1ans
Need a Statesman
M or e Am en ca ns S} m1at haze w th the Indaans than
w1th the federal go\ el nm ent n Jl e 1\ ound ed Knee m
brogho by some 51 pe cent to 2L per ce t accot d ng_ to a

ecent Harns poll
Beh nd thi S

1 ea ct

on IS the 75

15

c:onv c t on tl a t

t eatment of the I nd ans through l1stor 1 has been 1rett y
lousy

Responded a store clerk n Waco T ex

1 he) wer e

here before we w e e bt t we took awa y tl eu tand took
away the buffalo and have been terr ble n tl e way we

t eated them
We can guess pretty acc urately howev e1 what the f nd

1gs would have been had a s 1 1Iar poll been taken a
hundred years ago sa) when m ll ons of buffalo sllll
roamed the nch untilled plams and c1t es I ke Waco d1d
not ex st- or 1! s uch a poll had been take n at any t me
before the settlement of the continent wa s c amp ete
In other word s now that the Ind an no longer ha s any
th ng 01 hardly anyth ng the wh te man can covet
Amencans can afford the luxury of consc ence

As one wr te1 has suggested Today s wh1te A.mer can
n ust ask h mself as he eflects on the I arsh fate of the
Ind an whether or not he s 1 repa ed to wish the lnd ans
had won and the wh te mvader been dr ven back wtlence
I e had come The quest on 1s a cha ~ tener to easy retro
spect ve moral complacency
At the same hme he adds our current reappraisal of
II e past reflected n the spate of books by lnd ans and
Ind a SJ mpathizers can be worthwh le f t serves to
ach eve J st ce and equ ty for ll\ ng lnd ans If 11 doesn t
t1 er t s so much se lf se1 v ng hypoc sy
Pub! c opmwn IS a lot hke the proverb a! mule that the
farmer fl st had to h t ove the ead " th a two by fo to
get ts attent on
lnd an 1 I tants wl o occup ed A cat az Island then the
B ea of lnd an Affa 1s bu ld ng n Wash ngton and now
'hounded Knee have pet formed a useful se1 vice bJ get
t ng our attent on Unfm lunate!) when tl ey go to the ex
erne o( proclaun ng tl emseJves an ndependent nat on at
\Ia \1 th the Un ted States they defeat themselves
Jndeed t begms to appear that the g eatest obstacle
to t1 e JUSllce they seek lS not the wl te establ shmenl but
wny leaders - the so called Uncle Tomahawks an ong the own people whom they have al enated
In the fmal analys s the success of t1 e h d an cause de
1 ends upon the goodw II of the vastly g1 eate non Ind an
p b c As the Half s poll shows tl at goodw ll s there
What s needed now are not Ind an war ch efs but ln
d an states n en

Classified White,
A Black Is Loser
Afte1 all tl e nat 01 has been through 1t s hard to be
heve tha t a guy could be turned down- legally-for the
JOb of pol cema n s mply on the baSIS of h s race
But 1t happened n Cleveland where a U S d str ct
JUdge had ordered that at least 35 of 194 recently ap
po nted rook es be black 01 represent Span sh spea k ng
m no t es
Thus bee a se the C v I Se v ce Comm sston had c lass

!ted h1m as wh te IV nf01 d L Ter ent ne was passed ove
wh1le 10 mmonty appl cants who scored lowe• than he
d d on the exammat on were appo nted
Only •l happened that Terrenhne wa s not wh1le but
black The racial 1dent f cat on was n en or
Th s IS one of the few t mes bemg class fled black was
an advantage and I lost out sa1d Terrentme
Oh what a tangled web we weave when we labor to
undo the preJUdice of general ons

Old TV Shows Never D1e--Old TV shows never d•e they JUSt fade n and out
Network s tuatiOn comedtes and dramas of course are
synd cated to local stat ons where they are rerun and
rerun and r~run
But ever wonder what happens to those one shot deals
such as the cntJcally acclaimed documentaries The
Kremlm
A Nat on of Immigrants others on black
h story and Chma"
A lot of them are d stnbuted free to schools colleges
churches and CIVlC orgamzabons Teachers consider them
valuable educatwnal tools Club leaders somet•mes use
them as a lure to draw more members to meetings
Accordmg to Xerox Corp wh1ch has sponsored 1ts
share of documentar es m the past two and a half years
more than four m!lhon people have seen f1Ims hke The
Kremhn wh ch are available through ts PR Film L
brary on sho rt term loan (Borrowers pay only for post
age
Eacl ttme a film s loaned Jt IS screened an average
of 4 72 limes About 178 people see every film each time
t s loaned
And no com met c1als

Fold Up Your Tent and--fl e well known mob1hty of Amencans would seem to
have reached new he ghts w1th the development of a
movable off ce bu ld ng
A new approach to buillli!!g constr uctwn has been de
veloped and tested by Rensselaer Poljlechmc Institute
s m lar to the tdea of lhe erector set In this concept a
bu ld ng would be assembled from the foundatwn up
used and then when ts/enod of use was over be d s
asse nbled and re erecte somewhere else
Sounds I ke a handy opt on to have n case the netgh
borhood goes to heck

Just1ce Tempered w1th Mercy
A new law n Libya prov1des for cuttmg of the nght
hand of felons conv cted of steal ng and of the left foot
fo armed robbery
But JUSt ce Will be tempe ed w th me1cy says the
Hast ngs Cente1 Report
The law a so pe m ts the amp tatwn to be don e by a
s m geon s ng :.masthet c.s

WIN AT BRIDGE

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lly Oswald &amp; Jame.LkCJlbY

South s cho ce of a three
club rather than a two spade
esponse may look a tnfle
nsane Actuall) South was
crazy hke a fox and hts b d
led to a hemendous IMP
swmg m a team game
He wound up In s x no
t ump and West opened the
e ght of I earls Jl looked I ke
a sho su1t lead so South
dec1ded that he could only
count on four heart tr cks
Addmg that to f1ve clubs and
two aces came to JUSt 11
South thought awh le and
ed h s Jack of d1amonds
West played low as d1d dum
my and East was n w th h s
km g East wa~ted no t n e
retu n ng a SJ ade and So th
ref sed t at f esse
Tl en I e entc ed dun ny
w th t1 e kmg of clubs d s
cat ded three spades on good
hearts and ran off his clubs
The last club squeezed West

Lesson for Today:
The Harding Era

1

1

The Almanac

BY PAUL CRABTREE .

Helen Hottel

II\ kRUCF RIOSSAT

WASHINGTON tNEA)
Prestdenl N xon key present and former members of
h s adm•mstratwn polit1 c ans of both parhes n and out
of Congress and a whole host of Amencan newsmenbusy though they na y all be--&lt;:ould do nothmg better nght
now than read the deCISIVe final 120 pages of a scrupulous
biography called The Hard n~ E a
Wntten by hlS!or an Robert K Murray and pubhshed n
late 1969 1t may very well be the only exJShng reasonably
balancetl account ever penned about the scandal rtdden
882 days of War en G Ha rd og s pres1dentJal reg1me n
the years 1921 23
To suggest thls re admg exerc•se lS not to suggest a
parallel m the magn tude of wrongdo ng between the pres
ent Watergate and other cases nvolv ng the Nixon admm
1stratwn on the one hand and the Hardmg era s three
maJOr sea• dais- the Teapot Dome o I lease affa r graft
and corn ptJOn m the then entitled Veterans Bureau and
the bold crookedness of a I ttle band of men known as the
Ohto Gang
In the first place no one except those mvolved knows
the full d mens ons today of the successful favor seek ng
that has occurred n the Nrxon years Nor IS the story of
Watergate and related esp onage sabetage act v1hes by
NIXon men agamst the Democrats n 1972 more than
roughed out
But b ographer Murray s careful researches mto the
full Hard ng record contam messages useful for both the
players and the watchers and probers n today s drama
For Pres dent Nixon tl e message s one he IS gett ng
from not only a Aock of edllOfla l wr ters but from lead ng
members of h s own party nclud ng promment conserva
t ves Speak out no matter ~&lt;hat the apparent mmed1ate
poht cal cost agamst any and all men m the admm1stra
ton he knows to be gUilty e1ther of llegal or unethiCal
pract ces
Author Mu 1 ay find s m exhaustive explorat on no proof
that Hard ng ever knew or even suspected that hiS secre
tary of Inter 01 Albert Fall had personally profited- to
the tune of some $400 000-by the secret Ieasmg to two
pr vale fi ms of valuable naval 011 reserves m Elk Hills
Cahf and Salt C eek Teapot Dome) Wyo H s error
appea1 s to have been n piac ng tr st m a faceless fnend
But Hard ng d1d know of the senous graft and corrup
twn comm •tted n the Veterans Bureau by now forgotten
men Charles Forbes Cha r es Cramer and others
Cramer lac ng nqu 1y comm tted su c de Hardmg pr
vately cast1gated f orbes ordered h1m to run off to
E lfOJ e but n Murray s words d d not pubhcly d sas
soc iate h m elf f on Fot bes or expose his crunes
Moreove1 the eco d pers ades Murray that Hard ng
defin tcly knew of the !legal domgs of one Jess Sm t1
ostens ble leader of the Oh o Gang s w de rang ng thievery
and corrupt on Yet aga n he d d not speak out and mstead
tned to sca re Sm th out of Wa shmb'lon to fore stall h1s
arrest and poss ble 1mpnsonment Sm th I ke Cramer
k lied lumself later
And smce Sm th was a close crony of the often publicly
mal gned attorney general Harry Daugherty Murray
thmks t kely tho gh unp ovable that Hardmg suspected
Daughe ly of bemg cnm nally nvolved
For pol t c ans newsmen and others whether probers
or watche s the message from the Murray book IS thiS
Move and speak w th great ca1e deal only m provable
documents and utte ances avo d sensat onahsm
M lfrav demon stra tes that the truth of the Hardmg era
was b zarre enough But he r nds that what accompan ed
the disclosures was an ncr ed ble orgy of dlStortwn gross
lymg by many people 11 respons ble rei ance upon shallow
01 wa ped ev1dence by allegedly careful newsmen money
hungry book wr te s and even respected htstonans
The need to avo d such an orgy n 1973 should be pian
to us all

&amp; THINGS

Helen Help
By
Us. • •
'1111s Whitewash Dotsa I Wa1h

Dear Helen
What s the most outlandish letter you ve received recently'
- CURIOUS
Dear Curious
The followmg struck me as pretty - shall we say- diBI&lt;&gt;rted
but remember outlandish is m the eye of the reader There
w1ll be some who agree With thiS correspondent (On the other
hand he may be a satirist m disguise )
Dear Helen
Several of your correspondent.. have blamed our coontry and
1Ls people for tht plight of the Negro This has oo basiS m fact
Thetruthts
Fonner slaves were sel~cted from strong Afr1can tr1bes by
their chief as he knew they would have better lives m the New
World than be had m the JUngle The fortunate ones selecU!d were
glVen free food transportation and medical care They were
valuable cargo and the British sea captains kept them m the
holda of thelf sailing ships so they would not jump overboard and
drown
Actually the f1rst slaves 1n the U S were white Europeans
They wanted to get here so hadly they sold themselves miD the
years of mdenture so they could have !herr way pard They
cleared the land built the houses planted crops built !Dwns and
roada and had thmgs runmng smoothly when the Negroes
arrtved

When the fortunate black slaves amved they had quarters
ready for them They were classified as livestock and had the
best of treatment bemg cleaned and fed before gomg ID market
While wh1te proneers were f1ghtmg IndJalls clearing the
wilderness and suffermg hardships on their westward march
and the lrJSh and Chinese died bu1ldmg railroads Negro slaves
were en1oymg the securrty ol the large southern landowners
happy life
After tbe slaves were freed all who wanted to returned ID
Afr1ca and were g1ven thelf own country Uberla Those who
chose ID rema n n the U S have prospered unmensely growmg
m population from less than 300 ID over 26n\ilhon
Until a few years ago they were happy laughing together or
s1ngmg m groups They were admired by white people for !herr
carefree arr and liberties that whites didn t have
But after they took on the troubles and responsibilities of
!herr superiOrs they became uptight just like us They have no
onetoblamebutourselves - ldr N M
Dear Helen
I have an X-rated gentleman friend
He s X-asperatmg X-plostve X.penslve (spenda !I!Y money
on hllllSe!f) X travagant X-hausting X-ploltatlve X-cludmg
(where I m concerned) X-pansrve (to other females) and also
X tra dull
Rut every lime I think of dumping him someone tells me
how lucky I am to get such a gorgeous lookmg man
I m trymg for a light way "' say he sa dog but such an attractive one What do you thrnk' - PHYSICALLY DRAWN
MENTALLY REPELLED
Dear PDMR
I thmk your gentleman fnend IS about to X &gt;t from your life
now that you ve fmally seen hrm as a beautiful hunk of
nothmg - H
Dear Helen
U people JUS! pa1d attention "' the little ordinary con
s•derations life would be pleasanter I m thinlung of the young
man at the lunch counter today who chose the time while walling
forhislunchtocombhishair - E B

A thought for the day
By Umted Press Internallonal
French wr ter Francms Rabe Dear E
Today lS Tuesday Apnl 10
lats sa d So much s a man
Let s hope he found a harr 111 his own soup -H
the IOOth day of 1973 w th 265 to
worth as he esteems hltnSelf
follow
The moon s between ts f rst
"''"''~m~@=M~w~~@::&lt;m~~=«·==~~'x&lt;H · ' &lt;««&lt;8~»~
quarter and full phase
The morn ng stars are
Mercury Mars and Jup ter
The evemng stars are Saturn
and Venus
BY JACK 0 BRIAN
that the Jewelry was if not hot then vaguely
Those born on this date are
PET OSCAR AND HE d BITE
teprd never qwte cold and honest It never was
under the s1gn of Anes
NEW YORK (KFS) - Oscar Levant hasn t
hot merchandise Chuck dealt drrectly wrth the
famed US Navy Com been dead long but suddenly he s adding a cult
goldSimtha and diamond merchant.. of W 47th
modore Matthew Perr-y was worship to hiS already considerable renown
St between 5th and 6th Avenues and the old
born Apr1H0 1794
l\lagaz ne stones are bemg wr1tten about hun
jewelers on the Bowery rt often was mdeed jllSI
On th1s day m h1story
an~ hiS flamboyant career of cheerless un
as gOod as Tiffany s and m many cases the
In 1849 Walter Hunt of New pudence some of the stor es even bv oersons
same
York rece ved a patent for his who actually had known Ol'" spoken w1th the
Chuck sa1d U&gt; Fay one m1dmght when the
mvent on of the safety pm
melancholy clown H1s musiCal career m these
latter was starred m Harvey
m coldly
In 1945 the Naz concentra p1eces s a 11omt of passmg mattenl!on hiS
authontat1ve tones Frank rt s Dec 1st Don t
t10n camp Buchenwald was public and prrvate unpertmences now are
brmg me your Chnstmas list a week before
liberated tiy the U S 80th reprmted m volume often by persons claurung
Chnstmas "'be engraved Chuck once went to
D VLSlDn
he said 11 to them lvhen we knew f rst-lland he
have a p1cture framed for the friend of a
In 1971 the U S table tenn s s3ld them to Leonard Lyons or your unhumble
gangster wlth orders not U&gt; share expense
team arrived m Red Chma the reporter Many ongmated on the Jack Paar
Chuckfmally 'putanseonthetab byhavmga
ftrst Amer can group to pene Show (such as his descnpt1on of Edd1e Frsher s
gold plate attached wrth the name of the
Irate the Bamboo Curtam affa1r w1th Liz Taylor whrle still wed w Debb.,te;. .....cr.e,_,c lplent and the anmversary occasiOn
smce the 1950s
Reynolds How high can you sklop' And
engraved Chuck has a small problem pUtting
In 1972 between 2 000 and about Zsa Zsa She s solved the mystery of
the nse on the tab at the prcture framer a mce
4 000 were estimated dead m an permanent m ddle age and She does soc~al
nuld old craftsman at the famed OstrelCher s
earthquake m southern Iran
work ~mong the •rch )
frammg emporium who listened to Chuck urge
Oscar was a most diff•cult problem to most
him on to the most expens1ve woods m the
Almost II 4 mt!hon acres of h1s fnends oddly never to us We helped get
place When the gentle old man fmished
of forest cover three fourths
TV
show
years
ago
when
the
TV
measurmg the wood and f1gurmg the profit be
him
a
of West V rgm1a B total land
establishment was as normal fnghtened w advised Chuck the cost would be 118 What'
area
reSistance at h s provem nonconformity And
Chuck thundered My toilet seat cost more
than that
m diamonds and spades and several times before hiS TV career we helped
m
small
ways
he
never
forgot
for
there
So the nudnight confrontation m Lindy s bf
Oscar
the slam wheeled m
Chuck Green and Oscar Levant was a meeting
It would also have been was a llme between his Informal!on Please
made rf East held the dla celebnty hiS casual concert stardom and his
of two framed over-age Bdwy Dead End Kida
rnond queen smce he would teleVISion and wntmg careers when he was
Oscar made the miStake of uttermg what he
have been squeezed n d1a constdered a future as well as a past failure and
considered a s1mple mgenuous and harmless
monds and hearts
remark Chuck I never see you With your
Why d1d th1s turn out to be Broadway characters who once toadied "' hrm
and
lived
m
the
shadow
of
his
brtter
con
wife I"Ud Oscar 01Uck leaned back and
a tremendous s w 1 n g? It
auned hiS heaVIes abus1ve artrllery at Oscar
seems that at the other table tentedness walked across the street"' get away
South responded w1th two from any possible relatiOnship
notably a slo~y dresser an untidy type always
spades South s next bid was
We had a fondness for Oscar s very
I never see you wrth a bath Chuck struck
four clubs so North d1d not problems which sent his fwr weather uaers
wrth pleased cymcJSm I don t see you wrth
get a chance to show club
elsewhere
when
he
came
mkl
Lindy
s
But
your wife because JlUie can t stand the scent
support and the fmal con
Your bathtub IS full of coal and you haven t used
Oscar at his deepest ebb was a constant del ght
tract became SIX hearts
11 m years etc Oscar fled mto the mght
It was tough luck to have as a table conversat10nalrst full of anecdotes
to go down at SIX hearts but btatantlytellmgyouhlsmostpersonal tragedies
Hardly Wit but notable as the only trme m
It was even tougher luck to as well as the tnumphantly deflatmg ripostes he
Oscar s life he was totally unable to compete
fmd that stx no trump had Ia d on some of the world s most famous
verhally
made at the other table
Only once m our decades of dtverting
characters
NEW .. APER ENTERPR SE ASSN
Oscar s llllpudence wasn talways searmgly
compamonsh1p w1th Oscar drd we have words
bnlhant w1t One mHinight m L1ndy s Oscar
We were Stttlng having brunch one afternoon
With Eddie Ouchm when Oscar dropped by for a
dropped by our table occupied also by one
The b dd ng has been
Chuck Green a Broadway character who
sand\\lchanda horrowed c1garet We talked for
West
N rth
East
South turned up m many of Damon Runyon s stor1es
an hour and Eddre perfornung then with hiS
1+
Pass
Chuck was a seller of Jewelry wJthout shop or
orchestra In the Waldorf Astorla s Empll"e
Pass
1 It
Pass
off1ce Runyon called h1m The Doorway
Room
(Morton Downey was the star of the
You South h old
Carl!er and the late gangster Abe Zwillrnan
show there)
.K65 ¥QJ14 +A2
once told us You m1ght as well buy all your
Edd1e got up to leave He was a !me per
Wh01t do you do no w
l"" elry from Chuck It s JUSt as good as Til
sonable mterestmg genUeman not long out of
\ - 81d th ce n t 01 p T\\
Navy uniform m which costwne he had been a
t u p
uld n t I c a
cc fany sand he doe•r t charge you much more
Cl
uck
was
not
a
crook
although
h1s
busmess
war
hero wmner of a silver star and considered
10DAYS QUESHOI'O
a real expert of the submarme serv1ce where hiS
Ins ad of b dd ~ on pade p ospe !d for reasons apart from the fact that
musrcal "ar had helped hrm emerge as a real
you pa n ha!';
~ed vou o hr dealt only n the fmest baubles But h s sales
to
Bdwy
stars
such
as
Frank
Fay
W'ilter
geruus
at sonar discovery of enemy subs and
wo hca
Wha do yo d
no
IV nchell and others alway, let waft a susp1c1on
sh1ps

Voit·e along Br'Way

•

~

I drew some sharp crltiClSIIl a couple of months back when 1
made the srmple prediction that marrjua~U&gt; legalizabon IS just
over the horizon and that soctety should prepare for the day
when pot JS legal
I dldn t say 11 was good for you I didn t say rt had any social
or medicinal benefits whatever I dtdn t say that I favored
legalizmg 11
What I d1d say was that study upon study IS provmg that
m&amp;rlJuana IS growmgly accepted by younger Americans as a
preferable alternative "' alcohol our real Number One drug
problem and that adjustment 10' thiS fact was mevtlable especllllly smce we had U&gt; repeal prohibition agamst booze
because 1t srmply dldn t work
Action m this part of the world happened even sooner than I
really expected 11 "'
Late last month the Republican leader and the Democratic
leader of the West Vlfglrua House of Delegates co-sponsored a
perfectly-&lt;~errous resolutron proVIdmg for a one-year study of
the feaSibility of legalizing the sale and use of marrjuana
The findmgs of thiS study will be reported back to tne 1~14
'"'"'"on of the Legislature next January for poSSible action Of
course the findings may be negative and the Legislature may be
urged to reject any steps toward legalizallon or grass But the
fact that the study if a~roved by the LegiSlature will be con
dueled IS a good mdicallon of the way the wind 1s blowmg m
other States as well as West Vll"ldma
I talked \Q Tommy Myles the Democratic.poor-leader and a
hard-nosed outspoken veteran lawmaker from the rural
coalfield areas W1th characterlStrc bluntness he !Did me all the
credit belonged to h1s co-sponsor Del George H Seibert Jr
Republican from Wheeling
Bud Serber! rs a man of 60 the oldest House member from a
semor~ty standpomt He IS a phllosophtcal conservative cour
t.eous to the ultimate and well-respected by lawmakers m both
parties There IS nothing hip or radical or wrth rt about Bud
Setbert A gentleman of the old school he recogmzes a code of
conduct and preserves values that some young people never even
heard about let alone attack
When I l!Sked Bud about the resoll111on he was open and
frank
I m glad to sponsor 11 because I m afraid I can t be a
bypocr1te any longer he sa1d The young people at my house
know I m a boozer (Note He lSil t at all but he enjoys an oc
caslonaldrink) and lbeYJustdon t believe you can have a double
standard
Seibert went on to say that he wasn t sure legaliza!Jon IS a
goud idea for West VrrgmJa or any other State But he does thmk
there lS a grand deception among the over-30 crowd when they
denoWJce the pot-smokmg yoWJger generatiOn all the way to the
liquor store or corner pnvate club known as a bar m the
more-honest nomenclature m Ohro
Serber! pQmtedly commented that the material he has read
about grass mdicate 1\ lS ne1ther addictive nor •nduetve U&gt; the
use of harder drugs nor physrcally or psychologrcally damagmg
m general He thmks 11 s tune we took a long look at the substance and make a WISe JUdgment about the whole ticklish mess
I have no 1dea of the fate of the study at thiS lime but I can
say one thmg positively If tbe State of West V1rgrma should
regulate the sale and use of mariJuana m the same manner 1t
sells liquor on a state-atore on a monopoly basiS there s no way
kids can get LSD heroin or speed from the source And that s
more than you can say about the drug scene today

Television Log
Tuesday March27 1973
6 00 News 3 4 8 10 13 15 Truth or Conseq 6 Sesame St 20
Around the Bend JJ
6 30
News 3 4 6 8 0 5 Grow ng H m Up 33 I Dream of
Jeanne 3
7 00
What s My L ne a I ve Got A Secret 3 E ec Co 20
Beat the Clock 4 News 6 10 Untamed World 13 TV Honor

Soc ety 15 Truth or Conseq 3
730-ThslsYourLfeJ ToTeiThP.T
10

th6 PrcelsRqht8

Beat the Cock 13 Great Dec sons 73 33

Press 15 C reus 4
B 00
Temperatures
Oh o Th s Week 20
B 30 - Haw a F ve 0

People

&amp; The

RFO 20 20
R s ng 6 3 Maude 8 10 Book Beat 33

Baseball 3 Move Coo M on 4 15
B 0 Bll Moyers Journa 20 33 Move
When M chae Ca s 6 3
9 00
Beh nd the L nes 20 33
9 30
Black Journa 20 33
10 DO
Ma cus Welby M 0 6 3 News ~0 Amer ca 4 5

B ography 33

11 DO - News 3 4 8 3 15
11 30
Johnny Carson 3 4 5
Moves Cry of the Banshee
12 00
News 3 4 15
12 30 - Star Trek 4
1 00
News 3
1 30- News 4

Haunt ng of Rosal ne 6 13
8
Playg rl 10

WEDNESDAY APRIL 11 1973
6 00 - Sunr se Sem nar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 5 - Farmt me 10 Eng Ish 3
6 20

Farm Report 3

6 25- Paul Harvey 13
6 30- Columbus Today 4 B be Answers-8r-l::.lrbart-league 10
The Story 3
7 00
Today 3 4 15 C BS News 8 10 News 6 Fl ntstones 13
7 3o--Sieepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bu lw nk e
13 Popeye 10
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33

3- The Daily Sentlllel Middleport Pomeroy 0 April 10 1973
·:::::::::::::·::&lt;;:o:;;;:;:;;t~::::::::C,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,,::::;:;:;:

Aaron elaints Masters crown
AUGUST A Ga (UP! ) Tommy Aaron can count after
all If he couldn t he wouldn l
be the new Masters champ
Aaron the man who penciled
Roberto de V1cenzo out of the
19611 Masters title almost had
the same thing happen to hun
Monday
Aaron m the !mal accoun
ling had a IHmder-par 283 to
beat J C Snead by one stroke
and Jack Ntcldaus Peter
Oosterhws and Jun Jam1eson
by two But he found when he
checked his card that play ng
partner Johnny Miller had
charged him w1th 69 strokes for
the f1nal roWJd~ne more than
he actually took
M iier had mistakenly credited Aaron Wlth a par 5 on the

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
Johnny Rench lS 3-for 3 for
the season and the Cincmnab
Reds f1gure that stahstlc should
end all speculatiOn about the
cond1t1on of !herr all slar
catchers throw ng arm
Regch s ab1hty "'throw came
close to bemg the No 1
mystery of spnng trammg The
NatiOnal Leagues two time
Most Valuable Player Wider
went surgery late last season
and 1t was poss1ble that some.
of the muscles cut would
adversely affect what some
consider the strongest and most
accurate throw ng arm any
catcher has been blessed w1th
In the game s hiStory
Well three rWJners have
tr ed to steal on Bench so far
this season and all three made
r ght turns at second base and
headed for the dugout after

be ng gunned down Rench
made 11 3-for 3 when he gunned
down Rod Gllbreath and Dave
Johnson Monday mght durmg
the Reds 8--7 victory over the
Atlanta Braves
Just so nobody w1ll worry
whether Bench s hlttrng prow
ess has been affected by the
surgery he also contr buted a
homer to the Reds 10-hlt
attack
The G1ant.. tr1ed once and
he nailed the guy
sa1d
JUb !ant Red Manager Sparky
Anderson Monday mght The
Braves tned tw1ce tomght and
got nowhere I don t thmk
they II try any more
The Houston Astros defeated
the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-1
and the San Francisco Gtants
beat the San D ego Padres 2-1
m the other Natwnal League
games wh1le the Cleveland
Ind1ans topped the New York

By Unlled Press International
The Montreal Canad1ens and
Ch1cago Black Hawks therr tee
express halted at least tern
porartly rate as solid chmces
to d1spose of Buffalo and St
Loms respectwely tomght and
advance to the semtfmal round
of th&lt; Stanley Cup playoffs
The two dlV swn champiOns
m1ssed a chance of eompletin~
four game sweepS by losmg
away from home SWJday mght
but the shock of those losses
combmed wtth the home tee
advantage for tomght should
prove too much for. thetr
outclassed opponent.. to handle
The New York Rangers also
have a chance to complete a 4 I
success over the defendmg
champwn Brums tomght but
thelf road will be a lot tougher
smce they must do 11 at Boston
In the Dther quarterfmal
senes the Phlladelphra Flyers
w11l host the ldmnesota North
Stars w th the two teams
deadlocked at two games
ap1ece
Both Buffalo and St Loms
although tra1ling 3 I m !herr
respective sertes registered
noteworthy victones Sunday
For the Sabres thetr 5-1
dec s1on over Montreal was
Th s Week s Special

Baffle 3 4 15 $10 ooo Pyram d s 10 Spl I Second 13

1967 OLDS
98 TOWN SEDAN

13 Sesame St 20

30-30nAMalch3 &lt; 5 LetsMakeAIJeal6 13

Splendored Thing 8 0 RFD 20

3 30 - Return to PeytOn Place 3 4 5 One L fe to l: ve 6 3
Secret Storm 10 Th s Week 20 Merv Gr ff n 8 Ph I Donahue

'

4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 20 Love
Amer can Style 13 Merv Gr ff n 4 Huckleberry Hound Yog
Bear 6 Move Stranger ~t MY Door 10
4 30- Pett coat Junct on 3 G I gan s sland 8 Dane Boone
3 0 ck Van Dyke 5 I Love Lucy 6 Me v Gr ff n 4
5 00- Mr Rogers 33 Bonanza 3 4 Hazel 8 Andy Gr ff th s
B g Val ey 6
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 3 Beverly H I b 1 es 8

Full power and arr
condrtron ng

'995
Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You II L ke Ou Qual

Way of Do r'lg Bus ness

Around The Bend 33

o

13 sonny &amp; Cher 8 o
8 30
Ha I of Fame 3 &lt; 5

9 00 - Med cal Center 8 Love &amp; Hate 10 Lenox Quartet Hllydn

By GARY KALE
UP! SpQrts Writer
Bob Love and R1ck Barry
could be preparmg another
fus1llade of 38 s tonight that
would further upset the odd
smakers who tabbed Los
Angeles and Milwaukee as
Nat onal Basketbell Assoc1atwn
Western DIVISIOn playoff f na
bst..
Love scored 38 pomts SWJday
as the Ch1cago Bulls defeated
Los Angeles 9S.94 U&gt; even that
senes at 2-2 Barry back m the
NBA after leadmg the New
York Nets to the ABA playoff
fmals last year also talhed 38
pomt.. m Golden State s 102 97
upset wtn over Milwaukee
Saturday that deadlocked that
senes at 2-· •2 ~.. ..
Not to be demed the Atlanta
Hawks scrambled past Boston
97 94 to knot their set at two
games ap1ece Only the New
York Kmcks emerged a com
fortable wmner beatmg Bal
hmore 109 99 for a 4 I ser es
tnwnph
You ve got to attaok them U&gt;
wm and that s the way we
played the last two games
sa•d Ch1cago s Norm Van L1er
The brg thmg 1s cuttmg off
their guards added Love m
praise of the Bulls defense that
hm1ted Jerry West "' 16 I&gt;Qmts
and Gail Goodflch to 15 m the
fourth game J1m McMillian
was the only Laker to h1t w th
cons stency as he made 9 of 19
floor shots and hmshed w1th 25
pomts
Chicago however must do
somethmg ahout W1lt Chamber
lam s reboundmg The 1 2

(IJ/i/1"//\i"/11

I
;

,The Electric Climate,
'

lt '-

/ .1r ',i/f/).11 ·r

.1;1

i

1 COLUMOlJS l\I"J[)

\

'-

SOUTHfr~N

lJHIO UICTUIC COM~O.N'(

w1th two out m the e1ghth
nnmg and Jrm Wynn followed
with a two-run homer to salt
away the game Steve Garvey
smgled home the Dodgers rWl
off Reuss m the seventh mmng
Chns Speter s fifth mmng
homer snapped a 1 1 tre and
gave the Giants their wmn ng
margm over the Padres Ron
Bryant a 14 game wmner for
the G1ants last season p tched
a four h tter struck out six
walked three and d1dn t g1ve up
a h1t after Dave Roberts
opened the fourth wtth a smglc
Nate Colbert smgled home the
Padres run n the first mmng
Former Yankees Rusty
Torres and Johnny E1hs drove
n Cleveland s runs and Brent
Strom p1tched an e1ght h1tter to
hand wmless New York 1ts
fourth stra1ght loss Back to
back doubles by Leo Cardenas
and Torres produced an ns r
ance run for the Indians m the
n nth Ffltz Peterson y elded
two runs and s1x h ts in 5 I 3
mmngs to absorb the loss

lowed n mediately by a double
bogey and a water-soaked
triple bogey on Sunday had
forced h m to start the fmal
round e.ght strokes off the
pace
Enghsh golf star Peter
Oosterhuas took a three-stroke
lead mto the f na1 round and
saw 11 slo• ly dissipate
When I came here last
week I s;nd I would be happy
tu f msh as h1gh as lOth
Oosterhms sa1d I had every
th ng to wm and noth ng to
lose F mshmg th1rd 1s st II
very good but shootmg 74 the
last day that s bad
Aaron who has f1mshed
secon l 14 t mes but whose only
other pro vrclory was the 1969
Canad1an Open earned $30 000
for h s Masters v ctory the
n ost l e ever won Snead got a
$22 500 consola liOn pnze and
the three nen who tied for
th rd earned $12 500 each
Jn N cklaus case that was
enough to vault h1m past Lee
rrev no and Bruce Crampton
nto f rst place on this years
PGA n oney Its! at $106 061
frev no who was over the
$100 000 mark com mg mkl the
Masters and Crampton both
got $1 675 as both shot 14-&lt;&gt;ver
par 299s
Trev no who has won two
U S Opens and two Bflllsh
Opens was furious at himself
for h1s showmg here He
nd caled he m1ght boycott the
Masters next year as he d d n
t970 and 1971 because he s
conv need he can not play well
on the Augusta NatiOnal course
Four Lime champ on Arnold
Palmer was never a fa cto n
th s year s Masters afte
shoot ng a 77 m the open ng
rolUid and helm shed at 7-&lt;&gt;ver
par 295 Three tame champ Sam
Snead who w11l be 61 years old
next month was another stroke
back 12 strokes h gher than
his nephew

By United Press International

Thus far only two of the
scheduled nine league games
have beea played It was
learned today that South
western High School has
dropP!'d It.. spring baseball
program
Tbe league
coaches will now dec de
whether the Highlanders
must forfeit all their games
or If the league wlll be played
ml us the SW s schedule

NBA Playoft Stand ngs

By Un ted Press InternatiOnal
East
f nals- Best of Seven)
w I pet
Bos on
2 2 500
Atlan a
2 2 500
CSem

wl pet
4 1 800

N y
Bait mo e

X

' 200

West
( Sem f nals- Bes t of Seven)
w I pet
M wke
2 2 500
Gidn S
22 500
wl pet
Los Ang
2 2 500
Ch cago
2 2 500
x d nched se es
Mondays Re sults
( No games schedu led )
Tuesday s Gam es
Go den Sta te vs M waukee a
Mad son W s
Ch cago a Los Ange es
(on l y games sc hedu led

( DIV S on

F nals Seven)

Best of I n f

w I

S Lou s

0

3

000

Utah
ana

0 0

lnd

0 0
Mondays Results
N o games schedu ed
Tuesdays Games
No games schedu ed
Wednesdays Games
Ken ucky vs Ca o na at Cha
lotte N C
(On ly game schedu ed

2 333

2

0 I 000 2
0 3 000 3

San Fran
Hou ston

3
J

C nc n

2

SanDego
Atlanta

2 2 500
2

500

3 250

1
1

2

Los Ang
3 250 2
Mondays Results
San Franc sco 2 San 0 ego 1
C ncinnat 8 Atlanta 7
Houston 4 Los Ange es 1
(on y games schedu ed)
Tuesday s Games
(All Tu"es EST)
Montrea (Stoneman 2 14} a
Ph lade ph a (Lersch 4 6 7 30

pm

Ch cago
Reu sc hel
P ttsburgh (Moose

0 8)
3 0)

New York ( Koosman 1 2
S Lou s (Cleveland 4 5)

I
1

Oak and a Ch cago postponed

an

1
I
1
I
I

I
I
1
I

1

:

~P~e
Parts 0~e~
113 W Second

' ·.

Yesl Yesl
1 Brand New
U S E•senhower
Dollar
FREE w th 1he purchase of
each pa
of Shock Ab
sorbe sa ou regular low
p cc

'

.

.

•~.1·
. .~ ~tlr·'
. {)~
·•

&lt;"

. •

,,, -~

E senhowe U S Do Ia
MUST

HAVE COUPON
Coupon Exp1res May 5 1973

wl pet gb

Boson
Ba moe
Cleve

3
2
2

0
0

M waukee
New York

0

2
4

De o I

0

000

All sizes
low priced

000
667
500
000
000

·BELTED

West

M nnesota
Ch cago
Kan C ty

wl pel gb

3

2

0 000
0 000
1 667

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..·---

Amencan League Stand1ngs

8

a

1
I
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New Haven W Va

By Un ted P ess Inter-nat onal

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pm

pos t

Wednesdays Games
M nnesota at Ca forn a n gh
Texas at Kansa s C fy n ght
C eve and at New Yo k
Oak and at Ch cago
Boston at M waukee
tonly games sc heduled)

pet g b
7.50
750

SAYRE
HARDWARE

s

r--·--·~~'!.'!'

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ton y games schedu eoj;)

West

w

IA11Tmes EST!
mo e a De o
poned a n
Ba

demands

year s NCAA f nal was
000 watcl cd by 29 n II on fans
000 wl en UCI A beat f'lotlda Stote

Texas I 8 abe g 5 12 a l Kansas
C y Sp tfo tt 12 12 8 30 p m
Mnnesoa (Byeven 7 7 a
Ca fo n a S nger 6 6 1 p m

3

compa c t
dependab e
wa e e n ng un c an be
qu ck l y se
o mee your
am y s exac
needs
The e s even a
guest
pu shbu on
ja supply
ex ra Re ned Wa e for
gues s and o he unl!sua

[K.~st

pet

Mondays Results
Cleve and J New York
on y game sc hedu ed
Tuesdays Games
C nc nnat
Gu ett 9 0) at
A anta (Gen t y 7 0) B p m
Los Ange es t Downing 9 9 at
Houston Robe ts 2 7
8 30

r pped Denver 4'1 m tbe
B lly Cunnmgham establ shed Western semis
tv. o goals sm ce enter ng the
Am r can Basketball Assoc a
t on this sea son-a diVISion hUe
for Carol na and the ABA s
MVP award Now he s search
ng for an 1tem that has eluded
h1m for year s-c~ league htle
Cunn ngham was a member
of the NBA champ on Ph1la
dclp~1a 76ers m 1967 but that
team s pl3) off fortun es v.ent
downgrade after the t t e year
Carol na s gned Cunn ngham
and the Cougars mmed ately
beca ne a contender They
Psy k h e
fa led to w n a game 1n two
nh a b t ab e d u ng on y
n ne m on th s o each yea
prev ous playoff seasons but
In the spr ng su mm e and
thts t me the wheel of fortune
fa t s a p easan g ~n
spun then way HS Carol na took
se tl emen T he a pp oach
the d v s on htle and beat New
o w n e s a ve y se ous
ma te
The vl tl agers
York I I 1n the Eastern
empty
he
houses o a I
sem1fmals
,.
con en s and dese
th e
Carohna takes on Kentucky
ham e for hr ee mon hs
a 4 1 w nner over V rg n a m
AI e
he
depa ure
the d1v SIOn s best-of seven f
m
on s of ga on s ot wa er
ush n w h a t emend ous
na s opener at Charl6tte N C
oa
and conve I the
Wednesday mght The Colonels
lage n a he bo om of a
one two scormg punch of Art s
dee p
ak e
Psykh e
G In ore and Dan Issei could
e ma n s comple e y
subme ged fa a qua e of
nake his an explos ve ser es
a
yea
Wh en sp ng
In the Western Conference
el u ns he wa ers ecede
Utah swept San D ego r four
and
he
seH ement
sLra ght and now hosts In 1 ana
esu m es
Is no ma
chee tu app ea ranc e
the r sectional f nals ot l.!ner
Fo
ou
r.easons of
rt ursday n ght The Pacers
c ys a
ea wa e ca 882
lefend ng league champ ons
7525
Ou
automa c

IIECORD HOME CROWD
NEW YORK (UP!)
I he
ABA Playoff Stand ngs
Nat
onal
Broadcast
ng
Con
pa
6y Un ted Press International
East
ny announced Monday that the
( D v s on F nals Best of
UCI \ Mcmphts Stole NCAA
Seven)
w 1 pet f mt was walcl ed by the
Ca ol na
0 0 000 htrg :S t TV aud e e eve for a
Ken ucky
0 0 000
s hgle basketball game 38 I
West

Ca I
Texas
Oak and

Nahonal League Standmgs
By Un ted Press Internal onal
East
wl pet g b
P ltsbgh
3 0 000
New Yo k
2 0 000
2 I 667
Ch cago
Montrea
2 333 2
Ph Ia
0 2 000 2

Laker center collected 30
rebolUids m eontrolhng the
boards
Clyde ,Lee outrebounded Ka
reem Abdul-Jabbar 21 14 and
that helped Golden States fast
break that usually ended w1th
Barry gorng up for a twopomter
Roston Coach Tom Hernsohn
feels the Celtics have the edge
over Atlanta nee they have
the home court advantage n
two of the three remain ng
games Also he m1ght have a
physiCally flt Don Chaney for
Wednesday mght s f fth game
Chaney hampered by a pulled
gro n muscle played only e1ght
mmutes SWlday and scored two
pomts nme below hls 13 1
season s average
The Kmcks meanwhile
relaxed and wa1U!d for the
other teams U&gt; deterrmne their
fate
We II work out today and
maybe I U go up to Boskln on
Wednesday to look over the
Celt1cs and Hawks sa1d New
York Coach Red ljolzman

cunmng·ham namedMVP

Athlellc Conference \ames

man who saw hlS team lose
only 10 limes durmg the
regular season said he wasn t
down on the club because of the
setback

NBA playoffs
•
resume tonlte

!

Opus 20 20 33

30 - Turn ng Po nts 20 33
Cl 00 - Sou 33 News 20 Owen Marshall 6 13 Search 4 15
Love &amp; Hate 3 Cannon 8 10
1 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Madhouse 6 13 Moves Around
the Wor d Under the Sea 8 Conquered C ty 10
1 00 - News 4 13

the r f rst ever m Stanley Cup
competitiOn wh1le St Lows 53 wm over Ch1cago marked the
Hawks fJrst loss m theJr last 20
quarter11flal round games
Montreal Coach Scotty Bow

-

15 Sesame St 20

6 30-News3 4 6 81015 IDreamofJeannel3 Zoom33
7 00- News 6 10 What s My L ne 8 Truth or Conseq 3' Beat
The Clock 4 Anyth ng You Can Do 13 Know Your Schoo s 33
Elec Co 20 Sa nt 15
7 30- To Tell The Truth 6 The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon J
Beat The C ock 13 Andy Gr ff th S Ep sode Act on 33
George K rby 8 Econom c Educat on 20
8 00 - Adam 12 3 4 5 Amer ca 73 20 33 Mov e Notorious

ty

GMACj FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evemngs Tll8 00
TIIS PM Sal

Hodgepodge 20 Death Valley Days 5

6 00- Truth or Conseq 6 News 3 4 8

Yankees 3-1 m Mondays only
Amertcan League game
Bobby Tolan s t1e breakmg
smgle and a two-run smgle by
Tony Perez sparked the Reda to
four mnUt mnmg runs and
offset a three run nmth mmng
rally by the Braves Pedro
Horban came on wtth two on
and one out in the Braves
n nth but got out of the light
Sltuatwn by str kmg out pmch
h tter Oscar Brown and rehrmg
Ralph Garron an mf1eld out
Rench and Perez homered
durmg the Reds four run f fth
mn ng wh1ch gave them a 4-3
lead Tomm1e Hall was the
wmner while Joe Hoerner
suffered the loss
Jerry Reuss pitched a fivehitter and struck out e1ght for
the Astros who won !herr th1rd
game m four starts Reuss also
dehvered a be breakmg smgle

Stanley Cup play resumes

1 00 - SaeoftheCentu yJ 5 LoveAme ca nStyle6 Gambt
8 10 Password 3
11 30 - Ho lywood Squa es 4 3 Love of L fe 8 0 Bew tched 6

2 00 - Days of Ou L ves 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 3 M ke
Douglass 6 Gu d ng L ght 8 10
2 30 - DatngGame 3 Doctors3 4 15 EdgeofNight8 10
3 00
Another World 3 15 General Hasp ta 6 13 Love

C sa1d he let hiS cadd~e
talk him mto usmg a seven ron
when he had planned to use a
SIX tron and he was short with
his shot off the tee
I m stop1d I guess Snead
sa1d sadly Wilen you make up
your m1nd to do somethmg and
then change 11 that s when you
get hurt
N1cklaus blddmg to become
the ftrst fave t me Masters
champ and the f rst man ever
to wm 14 maJOr hUes made a
bnlllan t last moment b1d to pull
It out
Nicklaus had e1ght b1rd1es
Monday whJle shootmg a Gunder par 66 the best round of
the entire tournament But a
Fnday 77 that ncluded three
stra1ght three putt greens Iol
J

Reds make it two ln row, 8-7

8 30 - Jack La La nne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
8 55 - News 3
9 00
Paul D xon 4 Ph Donahue 5 What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3 Concentrat on 6 Capt Kangaroo a
Fr end y Junct on 10 Dr K ldare 13
9 30 - Eec Co 33 ToTel iheTruth3 Jeopardy6
10 00
0 nah Shore 3 S Columbus S x Call ng 6 Jokers W d
8 0 0 ck Van Dyke 3

2 00 - Jeopardy 3 S Passwo d 16 Bob Brauns SO 50 Club 4
News 13 Contact 8 News 0
2 30- Spl t Second 6 Search For Tomorrow 8 10 3 W s 3 s
00 - News Weather Sports 3 All My Ch dren 6 3 Secret
Storm 8 Not Fo Women Only 15 Green Acres 10
20 - Fash ons n Sewing 3

wm
Aaron whose only previous
U S victory m 13 years as a
tourmg pro was the 1970
Atlanta Class1c d1dn t have any
strokes to spare
In fact his VJCU&gt;ry was not
assured Wllil Snead was w1de
:.on an 11Hool brrd1e try on the
frnal hole of the tournament
Aaron watched that putt on a
teleVISIOn momklr and sa d the
only thought that went through
h1s mmd at that moment was
I d1dn t reliSh an 1tl-hole
playorr
Snead Sam Snead s nephew
held a two-stroke lead seven
holes from the end Monday but
went '""' the water at the par
three 12th hole and that was
1!

•

Lass e 6

10 30

13th hole where Aaron made a
b1rd1e 4
That s the reason you check
those things Aaron sa1d I
know exactly what I shot It
happens qwte often I foWJd the
miStake changed rt and SJgned
It
That s why they have the
rule
Aaron continued
I
don I th1nk a lot of people
really understood what haP'
pened the last t me
The last titne five years ago
Aaron wrote down a four for de
Vrcenzo at the 17th hole of the
!mal round Instead of the three
the Argentiman scored De
Vreenzo s•gned hiS card Without
changmg 1t and the extra
stroke was the margm by
wh ch Bob Goalby ljeat him to

1\ lorre•ll•' downpour
Monday afternoon wastled
out three Southern Valley

=---~=u

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�2 The Daily Senhnel /dlddleport Pomeroy 0 April 10 1973

EDITORIAl.$

To Win, lnd1ans
Need a Statesman
M or e Am en ca ns S} m1at haze w th the Indaans than
w1th the federal go\ el nm ent n Jl e 1\ ound ed Knee m
brogho by some 51 pe cent to 2L per ce t accot d ng_ to a

ecent Harns poll
Beh nd thi S

1 ea ct

on IS the 75

15

c:onv c t on tl a t

t eatment of the I nd ans through l1stor 1 has been 1rett y
lousy

Responded a store clerk n Waco T ex

1 he) wer e

here before we w e e bt t we took awa y tl eu tand took
away the buffalo and have been terr ble n tl e way we

t eated them
We can guess pretty acc urately howev e1 what the f nd

1gs would have been had a s 1 1Iar poll been taken a
hundred years ago sa) when m ll ons of buffalo sllll
roamed the nch untilled plams and c1t es I ke Waco d1d
not ex st- or 1! s uch a poll had been take n at any t me
before the settlement of the continent wa s c amp ete
In other word s now that the Ind an no longer ha s any
th ng 01 hardly anyth ng the wh te man can covet
Amencans can afford the luxury of consc ence

As one wr te1 has suggested Today s wh1te A.mer can
n ust ask h mself as he eflects on the I arsh fate of the
Ind an whether or not he s 1 repa ed to wish the lnd ans
had won and the wh te mvader been dr ven back wtlence
I e had come The quest on 1s a cha ~ tener to easy retro
spect ve moral complacency
At the same hme he adds our current reappraisal of
II e past reflected n the spate of books by lnd ans and
Ind a SJ mpathizers can be worthwh le f t serves to
ach eve J st ce and equ ty for ll\ ng lnd ans If 11 doesn t
t1 er t s so much se lf se1 v ng hypoc sy
Pub! c opmwn IS a lot hke the proverb a! mule that the
farmer fl st had to h t ove the ead " th a two by fo to
get ts attent on
lnd an 1 I tants wl o occup ed A cat az Island then the
B ea of lnd an Affa 1s bu ld ng n Wash ngton and now
'hounded Knee have pet formed a useful se1 vice bJ get
t ng our attent on Unfm lunate!) when tl ey go to the ex
erne o( proclaun ng tl emseJves an ndependent nat on at
\Ia \1 th the Un ted States they defeat themselves
Jndeed t begms to appear that the g eatest obstacle
to t1 e JUSllce they seek lS not the wl te establ shmenl but
wny leaders - the so called Uncle Tomahawks an ong the own people whom they have al enated
In the fmal analys s the success of t1 e h d an cause de
1 ends upon the goodw II of the vastly g1 eate non Ind an
p b c As the Half s poll shows tl at goodw ll s there
What s needed now are not Ind an war ch efs but ln
d an states n en

Classified White,
A Black Is Loser
Afte1 all tl e nat 01 has been through 1t s hard to be
heve tha t a guy could be turned down- legally-for the
JOb of pol cema n s mply on the baSIS of h s race
But 1t happened n Cleveland where a U S d str ct
JUdge had ordered that at least 35 of 194 recently ap
po nted rook es be black 01 represent Span sh spea k ng
m no t es
Thus bee a se the C v I Se v ce Comm sston had c lass

!ted h1m as wh te IV nf01 d L Ter ent ne was passed ove
wh1le 10 mmonty appl cants who scored lowe• than he
d d on the exammat on were appo nted
Only •l happened that Terrenhne wa s not wh1le but
black The racial 1dent f cat on was n en or
Th s IS one of the few t mes bemg class fled black was
an advantage and I lost out sa1d Terrentme
Oh what a tangled web we weave when we labor to
undo the preJUdice of general ons

Old TV Shows Never D1e--Old TV shows never d•e they JUSt fade n and out
Network s tuatiOn comedtes and dramas of course are
synd cated to local stat ons where they are rerun and
rerun and r~run
But ever wonder what happens to those one shot deals
such as the cntJcally acclaimed documentaries The
Kremlm
A Nat on of Immigrants others on black
h story and Chma"
A lot of them are d stnbuted free to schools colleges
churches and CIVlC orgamzabons Teachers consider them
valuable educatwnal tools Club leaders somet•mes use
them as a lure to draw more members to meetings
Accordmg to Xerox Corp wh1ch has sponsored 1ts
share of documentar es m the past two and a half years
more than four m!lhon people have seen f1Ims hke The
Kremhn wh ch are available through ts PR Film L
brary on sho rt term loan (Borrowers pay only for post
age
Eacl ttme a film s loaned Jt IS screened an average
of 4 72 limes About 178 people see every film each time
t s loaned
And no com met c1als

Fold Up Your Tent and--fl e well known mob1hty of Amencans would seem to
have reached new he ghts w1th the development of a
movable off ce bu ld ng
A new approach to buillli!!g constr uctwn has been de
veloped and tested by Rensselaer Poljlechmc Institute
s m lar to the tdea of lhe erector set In this concept a
bu ld ng would be assembled from the foundatwn up
used and then when ts/enod of use was over be d s
asse nbled and re erecte somewhere else
Sounds I ke a handy opt on to have n case the netgh
borhood goes to heck

Just1ce Tempered w1th Mercy
A new law n Libya prov1des for cuttmg of the nght
hand of felons conv cted of steal ng and of the left foot
fo armed robbery
But JUSt ce Will be tempe ed w th me1cy says the
Hast ngs Cente1 Report
The law a so pe m ts the amp tatwn to be don e by a
s m geon s ng :.masthet c.s

WIN AT BRIDGE

Response Clues a Key Slam
10

NORTH (D)

• 94
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+AI098
... KlO
WEST
EAST
.KJ75
•6 3
¥10 9 o2

¥84

+Q7 3
... 7542

+K 652
... 83

SOUTH

.AQ1082

¥K

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West
:Pass
Pass
Pass

... AQJ96
Both vu ncrablc
North East
1•
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4 ,_
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Open ng ead ¥ 8

lly Oswald &amp; Jame.LkCJlbY

South s cho ce of a three
club rather than a two spade
esponse may look a tnfle
nsane Actuall) South was
crazy hke a fox and hts b d
led to a hemendous IMP
swmg m a team game
He wound up In s x no
t ump and West opened the
e ght of I earls Jl looked I ke
a sho su1t lead so South
dec1ded that he could only
count on four heart tr cks
Addmg that to f1ve clubs and
two aces came to JUSt 11
South thought awh le and
ed h s Jack of d1amonds
West played low as d1d dum
my and East was n w th h s
km g East wa~ted no t n e
retu n ng a SJ ade and So th
ref sed t at f esse
Tl en I e entc ed dun ny
w th t1 e kmg of clubs d s
cat ded three spades on good
hearts and ran off his clubs
The last club squeezed West

Lesson for Today:
The Harding Era

1

1

The Almanac

BY PAUL CRABTREE .

Helen Hottel

II\ kRUCF RIOSSAT

WASHINGTON tNEA)
Prestdenl N xon key present and former members of
h s adm•mstratwn polit1 c ans of both parhes n and out
of Congress and a whole host of Amencan newsmenbusy though they na y all be--&lt;:ould do nothmg better nght
now than read the deCISIVe final 120 pages of a scrupulous
biography called The Hard n~ E a
Wntten by hlS!or an Robert K Murray and pubhshed n
late 1969 1t may very well be the only exJShng reasonably
balancetl account ever penned about the scandal rtdden
882 days of War en G Ha rd og s pres1dentJal reg1me n
the years 1921 23
To suggest thls re admg exerc•se lS not to suggest a
parallel m the magn tude of wrongdo ng between the pres
ent Watergate and other cases nvolv ng the Nixon admm
1stratwn on the one hand and the Hardmg era s three
maJOr sea• dais- the Teapot Dome o I lease affa r graft
and corn ptJOn m the then entitled Veterans Bureau and
the bold crookedness of a I ttle band of men known as the
Ohto Gang
In the first place no one except those mvolved knows
the full d mens ons today of the successful favor seek ng
that has occurred n the Nrxon years Nor IS the story of
Watergate and related esp onage sabetage act v1hes by
NIXon men agamst the Democrats n 1972 more than
roughed out
But b ographer Murray s careful researches mto the
full Hard ng record contam messages useful for both the
players and the watchers and probers n today s drama
For Pres dent Nixon tl e message s one he IS gett ng
from not only a Aock of edllOfla l wr ters but from lead ng
members of h s own party nclud ng promment conserva
t ves Speak out no matter ~&lt;hat the apparent mmed1ate
poht cal cost agamst any and all men m the admm1stra
ton he knows to be gUilty e1ther of llegal or unethiCal
pract ces
Author Mu 1 ay find s m exhaustive explorat on no proof
that Hard ng ever knew or even suspected that hiS secre
tary of Inter 01 Albert Fall had personally profited- to
the tune of some $400 000-by the secret Ieasmg to two
pr vale fi ms of valuable naval 011 reserves m Elk Hills
Cahf and Salt C eek Teapot Dome) Wyo H s error
appea1 s to have been n piac ng tr st m a faceless fnend
But Hard ng d1d know of the senous graft and corrup
twn comm •tted n the Veterans Bureau by now forgotten
men Charles Forbes Cha r es Cramer and others
Cramer lac ng nqu 1y comm tted su c de Hardmg pr
vately cast1gated f orbes ordered h1m to run off to
E lfOJ e but n Murray s words d d not pubhcly d sas
soc iate h m elf f on Fot bes or expose his crunes
Moreove1 the eco d pers ades Murray that Hard ng
defin tcly knew of the !legal domgs of one Jess Sm t1
ostens ble leader of the Oh o Gang s w de rang ng thievery
and corrupt on Yet aga n he d d not speak out and mstead
tned to sca re Sm th out of Wa shmb'lon to fore stall h1s
arrest and poss ble 1mpnsonment Sm th I ke Cramer
k lied lumself later
And smce Sm th was a close crony of the often publicly
mal gned attorney general Harry Daugherty Murray
thmks t kely tho gh unp ovable that Hardmg suspected
Daughe ly of bemg cnm nally nvolved
For pol t c ans newsmen and others whether probers
or watche s the message from the Murray book IS thiS
Move and speak w th great ca1e deal only m provable
documents and utte ances avo d sensat onahsm
M lfrav demon stra tes that the truth of the Hardmg era
was b zarre enough But he r nds that what accompan ed
the disclosures was an ncr ed ble orgy of dlStortwn gross
lymg by many people 11 respons ble rei ance upon shallow
01 wa ped ev1dence by allegedly careful newsmen money
hungry book wr te s and even respected htstonans
The need to avo d such an orgy n 1973 should be pian
to us all

&amp; THINGS

Helen Help
By
Us. • •
'1111s Whitewash Dotsa I Wa1h

Dear Helen
What s the most outlandish letter you ve received recently'
- CURIOUS
Dear Curious
The followmg struck me as pretty - shall we say- diBI&lt;&gt;rted
but remember outlandish is m the eye of the reader There
w1ll be some who agree With thiS correspondent (On the other
hand he may be a satirist m disguise )
Dear Helen
Several of your correspondent.. have blamed our coontry and
1Ls people for tht plight of the Negro This has oo basiS m fact
Thetruthts
Fonner slaves were sel~cted from strong Afr1can tr1bes by
their chief as he knew they would have better lives m the New
World than be had m the JUngle The fortunate ones selecU!d were
glVen free food transportation and medical care They were
valuable cargo and the British sea captains kept them m the
holda of thelf sailing ships so they would not jump overboard and
drown
Actually the f1rst slaves 1n the U S were white Europeans
They wanted to get here so hadly they sold themselves miD the
years of mdenture so they could have !herr way pard They
cleared the land built the houses planted crops built !Dwns and
roada and had thmgs runmng smoothly when the Negroes
arrtved

When the fortunate black slaves amved they had quarters
ready for them They were classified as livestock and had the
best of treatment bemg cleaned and fed before gomg ID market
While wh1te proneers were f1ghtmg IndJalls clearing the
wilderness and suffermg hardships on their westward march
and the lrJSh and Chinese died bu1ldmg railroads Negro slaves
were en1oymg the securrty ol the large southern landowners
happy life
After tbe slaves were freed all who wanted to returned ID
Afr1ca and were g1ven thelf own country Uberla Those who
chose ID rema n n the U S have prospered unmensely growmg
m population from less than 300 ID over 26n\ilhon
Until a few years ago they were happy laughing together or
s1ngmg m groups They were admired by white people for !herr
carefree arr and liberties that whites didn t have
But after they took on the troubles and responsibilities of
!herr superiOrs they became uptight just like us They have no
onetoblamebutourselves - ldr N M
Dear Helen
I have an X-rated gentleman friend
He s X-asperatmg X-plostve X.penslve (spenda !I!Y money
on hllllSe!f) X travagant X-hausting X-ploltatlve X-cludmg
(where I m concerned) X-pansrve (to other females) and also
X tra dull
Rut every lime I think of dumping him someone tells me
how lucky I am to get such a gorgeous lookmg man
I m trymg for a light way "' say he sa dog but such an attractive one What do you thrnk' - PHYSICALLY DRAWN
MENTALLY REPELLED
Dear PDMR
I thmk your gentleman fnend IS about to X &gt;t from your life
now that you ve fmally seen hrm as a beautiful hunk of
nothmg - H
Dear Helen
U people JUS! pa1d attention "' the little ordinary con
s•derations life would be pleasanter I m thinlung of the young
man at the lunch counter today who chose the time while walling
forhislunchtocombhishair - E B

A thought for the day
By Umted Press Internallonal
French wr ter Francms Rabe Dear E
Today lS Tuesday Apnl 10
lats sa d So much s a man
Let s hope he found a harr 111 his own soup -H
the IOOth day of 1973 w th 265 to
worth as he esteems hltnSelf
follow
The moon s between ts f rst
"''"''~m~@=M~w~~@::&lt;m~~=«·==~~'x&lt;H · ' &lt;««&lt;8~»~
quarter and full phase
The morn ng stars are
Mercury Mars and Jup ter
The evemng stars are Saturn
and Venus
BY JACK 0 BRIAN
that the Jewelry was if not hot then vaguely
Those born on this date are
PET OSCAR AND HE d BITE
teprd never qwte cold and honest It never was
under the s1gn of Anes
NEW YORK (KFS) - Oscar Levant hasn t
hot merchandise Chuck dealt drrectly wrth the
famed US Navy Com been dead long but suddenly he s adding a cult
goldSimtha and diamond merchant.. of W 47th
modore Matthew Perr-y was worship to hiS already considerable renown
St between 5th and 6th Avenues and the old
born Apr1H0 1794
l\lagaz ne stones are bemg wr1tten about hun
jewelers on the Bowery rt often was mdeed jllSI
On th1s day m h1story
an~ hiS flamboyant career of cheerless un
as gOod as Tiffany s and m many cases the
In 1849 Walter Hunt of New pudence some of the stor es even bv oersons
same
York rece ved a patent for his who actually had known Ol'" spoken w1th the
Chuck sa1d U&gt; Fay one m1dmght when the
mvent on of the safety pm
melancholy clown H1s musiCal career m these
latter was starred m Harvey
m coldly
In 1945 the Naz concentra p1eces s a 11omt of passmg mattenl!on hiS
authontat1ve tones Frank rt s Dec 1st Don t
t10n camp Buchenwald was public and prrvate unpertmences now are
brmg me your Chnstmas list a week before
liberated tiy the U S 80th reprmted m volume often by persons claurung
Chnstmas "'be engraved Chuck once went to
D VLSlDn
he said 11 to them lvhen we knew f rst-lland he
have a p1cture framed for the friend of a
In 1971 the U S table tenn s s3ld them to Leonard Lyons or your unhumble
gangster wlth orders not U&gt; share expense
team arrived m Red Chma the reporter Many ongmated on the Jack Paar
Chuckfmally 'putanseonthetab byhavmga
ftrst Amer can group to pene Show (such as his descnpt1on of Edd1e Frsher s
gold plate attached wrth the name of the
Irate the Bamboo Curtam affa1r w1th Liz Taylor whrle still wed w Debb.,te;. .....cr.e,_,c lplent and the anmversary occasiOn
smce the 1950s
Reynolds How high can you sklop' And
engraved Chuck has a small problem pUtting
In 1972 between 2 000 and about Zsa Zsa She s solved the mystery of
the nse on the tab at the prcture framer a mce
4 000 were estimated dead m an permanent m ddle age and She does soc~al
nuld old craftsman at the famed OstrelCher s
earthquake m southern Iran
work ~mong the •rch )
frammg emporium who listened to Chuck urge
Oscar was a most diff•cult problem to most
him on to the most expens1ve woods m the
Almost II 4 mt!hon acres of h1s fnends oddly never to us We helped get
place When the gentle old man fmished
of forest cover three fourths
TV
show
years
ago
when
the
TV
measurmg the wood and f1gurmg the profit be
him
a
of West V rgm1a B total land
establishment was as normal fnghtened w advised Chuck the cost would be 118 What'
area
reSistance at h s provem nonconformity And
Chuck thundered My toilet seat cost more
than that
m diamonds and spades and several times before hiS TV career we helped
m
small
ways
he
never
forgot
for
there
So the nudnight confrontation m Lindy s bf
Oscar
the slam wheeled m
Chuck Green and Oscar Levant was a meeting
It would also have been was a llme between his Informal!on Please
made rf East held the dla celebnty hiS casual concert stardom and his
of two framed over-age Bdwy Dead End Kida
rnond queen smce he would teleVISion and wntmg careers when he was
Oscar made the miStake of uttermg what he
have been squeezed n d1a constdered a future as well as a past failure and
considered a s1mple mgenuous and harmless
monds and hearts
remark Chuck I never see you With your
Why d1d th1s turn out to be Broadway characters who once toadied "' hrm
and
lived
m
the
shadow
of
his
brtter
con
wife I"Ud Oscar 01Uck leaned back and
a tremendous s w 1 n g? It
auned hiS heaVIes abus1ve artrllery at Oscar
seems that at the other table tentedness walked across the street"' get away
South responded w1th two from any possible relatiOnship
notably a slo~y dresser an untidy type always
spades South s next bid was
We had a fondness for Oscar s very
I never see you wrth a bath Chuck struck
four clubs so North d1d not problems which sent his fwr weather uaers
wrth pleased cymcJSm I don t see you wrth
get a chance to show club
elsewhere
when
he
came
mkl
Lindy
s
But
your wife because JlUie can t stand the scent
support and the fmal con
Your bathtub IS full of coal and you haven t used
Oscar at his deepest ebb was a constant del ght
tract became SIX hearts
11 m years etc Oscar fled mto the mght
It was tough luck to have as a table conversat10nalrst full of anecdotes
to go down at SIX hearts but btatantlytellmgyouhlsmostpersonal tragedies
Hardly Wit but notable as the only trme m
It was even tougher luck to as well as the tnumphantly deflatmg ripostes he
Oscar s life he was totally unable to compete
fmd that stx no trump had Ia d on some of the world s most famous
verhally
made at the other table
Only once m our decades of dtverting
characters
NEW .. APER ENTERPR SE ASSN
Oscar s llllpudence wasn talways searmgly
compamonsh1p w1th Oscar drd we have words
bnlhant w1t One mHinight m L1ndy s Oscar
We were Stttlng having brunch one afternoon
With Eddie Ouchm when Oscar dropped by for a
dropped by our table occupied also by one
The b dd ng has been
Chuck Green a Broadway character who
sand\\lchanda horrowed c1garet We talked for
West
N rth
East
South turned up m many of Damon Runyon s stor1es
an hour and Eddre perfornung then with hiS
1+
Pass
Chuck was a seller of Jewelry wJthout shop or
orchestra In the Waldorf Astorla s Empll"e
Pass
1 It
Pass
off1ce Runyon called h1m The Doorway
Room
(Morton Downey was the star of the
You South h old
Carl!er and the late gangster Abe Zwillrnan
show there)
.K65 ¥QJ14 +A2
once told us You m1ght as well buy all your
Edd1e got up to leave He was a !me per
Wh01t do you do no w
l"" elry from Chuck It s JUSt as good as Til
sonable mterestmg genUeman not long out of
\ - 81d th ce n t 01 p T\\
Navy uniform m which costwne he had been a
t u p
uld n t I c a
cc fany sand he doe•r t charge you much more
Cl
uck
was
not
a
crook
although
h1s
busmess
war
hero wmner of a silver star and considered
10DAYS QUESHOI'O
a real expert of the submarme serv1ce where hiS
Ins ad of b dd ~ on pade p ospe !d for reasons apart from the fact that
musrcal "ar had helped hrm emerge as a real
you pa n ha!';
~ed vou o hr dealt only n the fmest baubles But h s sales
to
Bdwy
stars
such
as
Frank
Fay
W'ilter
geruus
at sonar discovery of enemy subs and
wo hca
Wha do yo d
no
IV nchell and others alway, let waft a susp1c1on
sh1ps

Voit·e along Br'Way

•

~

I drew some sharp crltiClSIIl a couple of months back when 1
made the srmple prediction that marrjua~U&gt; legalizabon IS just
over the horizon and that soctety should prepare for the day
when pot JS legal
I dldn t say 11 was good for you I didn t say rt had any social
or medicinal benefits whatever I dtdn t say that I favored
legalizmg 11
What I d1d say was that study upon study IS provmg that
m&amp;rlJuana IS growmgly accepted by younger Americans as a
preferable alternative "' alcohol our real Number One drug
problem and that adjustment 10' thiS fact was mevtlable especllllly smce we had U&gt; repeal prohibition agamst booze
because 1t srmply dldn t work
Action m this part of the world happened even sooner than I
really expected 11 "'
Late last month the Republican leader and the Democratic
leader of the West Vlfglrua House of Delegates co-sponsored a
perfectly-&lt;~errous resolutron proVIdmg for a one-year study of
the feaSibility of legalizing the sale and use of marrjuana
The findmgs of thiS study will be reported back to tne 1~14
'"'"'"on of the Legislature next January for poSSible action Of
course the findings may be negative and the Legislature may be
urged to reject any steps toward legalizallon or grass But the
fact that the study if a~roved by the LegiSlature will be con
dueled IS a good mdicallon of the way the wind 1s blowmg m
other States as well as West Vll"ldma
I talked \Q Tommy Myles the Democratic.poor-leader and a
hard-nosed outspoken veteran lawmaker from the rural
coalfield areas W1th characterlStrc bluntness he !Did me all the
credit belonged to h1s co-sponsor Del George H Seibert Jr
Republican from Wheeling
Bud Serber! rs a man of 60 the oldest House member from a
semor~ty standpomt He IS a phllosophtcal conservative cour
t.eous to the ultimate and well-respected by lawmakers m both
parties There IS nothing hip or radical or wrth rt about Bud
Setbert A gentleman of the old school he recogmzes a code of
conduct and preserves values that some young people never even
heard about let alone attack
When I l!Sked Bud about the resoll111on he was open and
frank
I m glad to sponsor 11 because I m afraid I can t be a
bypocr1te any longer he sa1d The young people at my house
know I m a boozer (Note He lSil t at all but he enjoys an oc
caslonaldrink) and lbeYJustdon t believe you can have a double
standard
Seibert went on to say that he wasn t sure legaliza!Jon IS a
goud idea for West VrrgmJa or any other State But he does thmk
there lS a grand deception among the over-30 crowd when they
denoWJce the pot-smokmg yoWJger generatiOn all the way to the
liquor store or corner pnvate club known as a bar m the
more-honest nomenclature m Ohro
Serber! pQmtedly commented that the material he has read
about grass mdicate 1\ lS ne1ther addictive nor •nduetve U&gt; the
use of harder drugs nor physrcally or psychologrcally damagmg
m general He thmks 11 s tune we took a long look at the substance and make a WISe JUdgment about the whole ticklish mess
I have no 1dea of the fate of the study at thiS lime but I can
say one thmg positively If tbe State of West V1rgrma should
regulate the sale and use of mariJuana m the same manner 1t
sells liquor on a state-atore on a monopoly basiS there s no way
kids can get LSD heroin or speed from the source And that s
more than you can say about the drug scene today

Television Log
Tuesday March27 1973
6 00 News 3 4 8 10 13 15 Truth or Conseq 6 Sesame St 20
Around the Bend JJ
6 30
News 3 4 6 8 0 5 Grow ng H m Up 33 I Dream of
Jeanne 3
7 00
What s My L ne a I ve Got A Secret 3 E ec Co 20
Beat the Clock 4 News 6 10 Untamed World 13 TV Honor

Soc ety 15 Truth or Conseq 3
730-ThslsYourLfeJ ToTeiThP.T
10

th6 PrcelsRqht8

Beat the Cock 13 Great Dec sons 73 33

Press 15 C reus 4
B 00
Temperatures
Oh o Th s Week 20
B 30 - Haw a F ve 0

People

&amp; The

RFO 20 20
R s ng 6 3 Maude 8 10 Book Beat 33

Baseball 3 Move Coo M on 4 15
B 0 Bll Moyers Journa 20 33 Move
When M chae Ca s 6 3
9 00
Beh nd the L nes 20 33
9 30
Black Journa 20 33
10 DO
Ma cus Welby M 0 6 3 News ~0 Amer ca 4 5

B ography 33

11 DO - News 3 4 8 3 15
11 30
Johnny Carson 3 4 5
Moves Cry of the Banshee
12 00
News 3 4 15
12 30 - Star Trek 4
1 00
News 3
1 30- News 4

Haunt ng of Rosal ne 6 13
8
Playg rl 10

WEDNESDAY APRIL 11 1973
6 00 - Sunr se Sem nar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 5 - Farmt me 10 Eng Ish 3
6 20

Farm Report 3

6 25- Paul Harvey 13
6 30- Columbus Today 4 B be Answers-8r-l::.lrbart-league 10
The Story 3
7 00
Today 3 4 15 C BS News 8 10 News 6 Fl ntstones 13
7 3o--Sieepy Jeffers 8 Romper Room 6 Rocky &amp; Bu lw nk e
13 Popeye 10
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo 10 New Zoo Revue 13 Sesame St 33

3- The Daily Sentlllel Middleport Pomeroy 0 April 10 1973
·:::::::::::::·::&lt;;:o:;;;:;:;;t~::::::::C,:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:,,::::;:;:;:

Aaron elaints Masters crown
AUGUST A Ga (UP! ) Tommy Aaron can count after
all If he couldn t he wouldn l
be the new Masters champ
Aaron the man who penciled
Roberto de V1cenzo out of the
19611 Masters title almost had
the same thing happen to hun
Monday
Aaron m the !mal accoun
ling had a IHmder-par 283 to
beat J C Snead by one stroke
and Jack Ntcldaus Peter
Oosterhws and Jun Jam1eson
by two But he found when he
checked his card that play ng
partner Johnny Miller had
charged him w1th 69 strokes for
the f1nal roWJd~ne more than
he actually took
M iier had mistakenly credited Aaron Wlth a par 5 on the

By FRED DOWN
UP! Sports Writer
Johnny Rench lS 3-for 3 for
the season and the Cincmnab
Reds f1gure that stahstlc should
end all speculatiOn about the
cond1t1on of !herr all slar
catchers throw ng arm
Regch s ab1hty "'throw came
close to bemg the No 1
mystery of spnng trammg The
NatiOnal Leagues two time
Most Valuable Player Wider
went surgery late last season
and 1t was poss1ble that some.
of the muscles cut would
adversely affect what some
consider the strongest and most
accurate throw ng arm any
catcher has been blessed w1th
In the game s hiStory
Well three rWJners have
tr ed to steal on Bench so far
this season and all three made
r ght turns at second base and
headed for the dugout after

be ng gunned down Rench
made 11 3-for 3 when he gunned
down Rod Gllbreath and Dave
Johnson Monday mght durmg
the Reds 8--7 victory over the
Atlanta Braves
Just so nobody w1ll worry
whether Bench s hlttrng prow
ess has been affected by the
surgery he also contr buted a
homer to the Reds 10-hlt
attack
The G1ant.. tr1ed once and
he nailed the guy
sa1d
JUb !ant Red Manager Sparky
Anderson Monday mght The
Braves tned tw1ce tomght and
got nowhere I don t thmk
they II try any more
The Houston Astros defeated
the Los Angeles Dodgers 4-1
and the San Francisco Gtants
beat the San D ego Padres 2-1
m the other Natwnal League
games wh1le the Cleveland
Ind1ans topped the New York

By Unlled Press International
The Montreal Canad1ens and
Ch1cago Black Hawks therr tee
express halted at least tern
porartly rate as solid chmces
to d1spose of Buffalo and St
Loms respectwely tomght and
advance to the semtfmal round
of th&lt; Stanley Cup playoffs
The two dlV swn champiOns
m1ssed a chance of eompletin~
four game sweepS by losmg
away from home SWJday mght
but the shock of those losses
combmed wtth the home tee
advantage for tomght should
prove too much for. thetr
outclassed opponent.. to handle
The New York Rangers also
have a chance to complete a 4 I
success over the defendmg
champwn Brums tomght but
thelf road will be a lot tougher
smce they must do 11 at Boston
In the Dther quarterfmal
senes the Phlladelphra Flyers
w11l host the ldmnesota North
Stars w th the two teams
deadlocked at two games
ap1ece
Both Buffalo and St Loms
although tra1ling 3 I m !herr
respective sertes registered
noteworthy victones Sunday
For the Sabres thetr 5-1
dec s1on over Montreal was
Th s Week s Special

Baffle 3 4 15 $10 ooo Pyram d s 10 Spl I Second 13

1967 OLDS
98 TOWN SEDAN

13 Sesame St 20

30-30nAMalch3 &lt; 5 LetsMakeAIJeal6 13

Splendored Thing 8 0 RFD 20

3 30 - Return to PeytOn Place 3 4 5 One L fe to l: ve 6 3
Secret Storm 10 Th s Week 20 Merv Gr ff n 8 Ph I Donahue

'

4 00 - Mr Cartoon 3 Somerset 15 Sesame St 33 20 Love
Amer can Style 13 Merv Gr ff n 4 Huckleberry Hound Yog
Bear 6 Move Stranger ~t MY Door 10
4 30- Pett coat Junct on 3 G I gan s sland 8 Dane Boone
3 0 ck Van Dyke 5 I Love Lucy 6 Me v Gr ff n 4
5 00- Mr Rogers 33 Bonanza 3 4 Hazel 8 Andy Gr ff th s
B g Val ey 6
5 30 - Elec Co 33 Gomer Pyle 3 Beverly H I b 1 es 8

Full power and arr
condrtron ng

'995
Karr &amp; Van Zandt
You II L ke Ou Qual

Way of Do r'lg Bus ness

Around The Bend 33

o

13 sonny &amp; Cher 8 o
8 30
Ha I of Fame 3 &lt; 5

9 00 - Med cal Center 8 Love &amp; Hate 10 Lenox Quartet Hllydn

By GARY KALE
UP! SpQrts Writer
Bob Love and R1ck Barry
could be preparmg another
fus1llade of 38 s tonight that
would further upset the odd
smakers who tabbed Los
Angeles and Milwaukee as
Nat onal Basketbell Assoc1atwn
Western DIVISIOn playoff f na
bst..
Love scored 38 pomts SWJday
as the Ch1cago Bulls defeated
Los Angeles 9S.94 U&gt; even that
senes at 2-2 Barry back m the
NBA after leadmg the New
York Nets to the ABA playoff
fmals last year also talhed 38
pomt.. m Golden State s 102 97
upset wtn over Milwaukee
Saturday that deadlocked that
senes at 2-· •2 ~.. ..
Not to be demed the Atlanta
Hawks scrambled past Boston
97 94 to knot their set at two
games ap1ece Only the New
York Kmcks emerged a com
fortable wmner beatmg Bal
hmore 109 99 for a 4 I ser es
tnwnph
You ve got to attaok them U&gt;
wm and that s the way we
played the last two games
sa•d Ch1cago s Norm Van L1er
The brg thmg 1s cuttmg off
their guards added Love m
praise of the Bulls defense that
hm1ted Jerry West "' 16 I&gt;Qmts
and Gail Goodflch to 15 m the
fourth game J1m McMillian
was the only Laker to h1t w th
cons stency as he made 9 of 19
floor shots and hmshed w1th 25
pomts
Chicago however must do
somethmg ahout W1lt Chamber
lam s reboundmg The 1 2

(IJ/i/1"//\i"/11

I
;

,The Electric Climate,
'

lt '-

/ .1r ',i/f/).11 ·r

.1;1

i

1 COLUMOlJS l\I"J[)

\

'-

SOUTHfr~N

lJHIO UICTUIC COM~O.N'(

w1th two out m the e1ghth
nnmg and Jrm Wynn followed
with a two-run homer to salt
away the game Steve Garvey
smgled home the Dodgers rWl
off Reuss m the seventh mmng
Chns Speter s fifth mmng
homer snapped a 1 1 tre and
gave the Giants their wmn ng
margm over the Padres Ron
Bryant a 14 game wmner for
the G1ants last season p tched
a four h tter struck out six
walked three and d1dn t g1ve up
a h1t after Dave Roberts
opened the fourth wtth a smglc
Nate Colbert smgled home the
Padres run n the first mmng
Former Yankees Rusty
Torres and Johnny E1hs drove
n Cleveland s runs and Brent
Strom p1tched an e1ght h1tter to
hand wmless New York 1ts
fourth stra1ght loss Back to
back doubles by Leo Cardenas
and Torres produced an ns r
ance run for the Indians m the
n nth Ffltz Peterson y elded
two runs and s1x h ts in 5 I 3
mmngs to absorb the loss

lowed n mediately by a double
bogey and a water-soaked
triple bogey on Sunday had
forced h m to start the fmal
round e.ght strokes off the
pace
Enghsh golf star Peter
Oosterhuas took a three-stroke
lead mto the f na1 round and
saw 11 slo• ly dissipate
When I came here last
week I s;nd I would be happy
tu f msh as h1gh as lOth
Oosterhms sa1d I had every
th ng to wm and noth ng to
lose F mshmg th1rd 1s st II
very good but shootmg 74 the
last day that s bad
Aaron who has f1mshed
secon l 14 t mes but whose only
other pro vrclory was the 1969
Canad1an Open earned $30 000
for h s Masters v ctory the
n ost l e ever won Snead got a
$22 500 consola liOn pnze and
the three nen who tied for
th rd earned $12 500 each
Jn N cklaus case that was
enough to vault h1m past Lee
rrev no and Bruce Crampton
nto f rst place on this years
PGA n oney Its! at $106 061
frev no who was over the
$100 000 mark com mg mkl the
Masters and Crampton both
got $1 675 as both shot 14-&lt;&gt;ver
par 299s
Trev no who has won two
U S Opens and two Bflllsh
Opens was furious at himself
for h1s showmg here He
nd caled he m1ght boycott the
Masters next year as he d d n
t970 and 1971 because he s
conv need he can not play well
on the Augusta NatiOnal course
Four Lime champ on Arnold
Palmer was never a fa cto n
th s year s Masters afte
shoot ng a 77 m the open ng
rolUid and helm shed at 7-&lt;&gt;ver
par 295 Three tame champ Sam
Snead who w11l be 61 years old
next month was another stroke
back 12 strokes h gher than
his nephew

By United Press International

Thus far only two of the
scheduled nine league games
have beea played It was
learned today that South
western High School has
dropP!'d It.. spring baseball
program
Tbe league
coaches will now dec de
whether the Highlanders
must forfeit all their games
or If the league wlll be played
ml us the SW s schedule

NBA Playoft Stand ngs

By Un ted Press InternatiOnal
East
f nals- Best of Seven)
w I pet
Bos on
2 2 500
Atlan a
2 2 500
CSem

wl pet
4 1 800

N y
Bait mo e

X

' 200

West
( Sem f nals- Bes t of Seven)
w I pet
M wke
2 2 500
Gidn S
22 500
wl pet
Los Ang
2 2 500
Ch cago
2 2 500
x d nched se es
Mondays Re sults
( No games schedu led )
Tuesday s Gam es
Go den Sta te vs M waukee a
Mad son W s
Ch cago a Los Ange es
(on l y games sc hedu led

( DIV S on

F nals Seven)

Best of I n f

w I

S Lou s

0

3

000

Utah
ana

0 0

lnd

0 0
Mondays Results
N o games schedu ed
Tuesdays Games
No games schedu ed
Wednesdays Games
Ken ucky vs Ca o na at Cha
lotte N C
(On ly game schedu ed

2 333

2

0 I 000 2
0 3 000 3

San Fran
Hou ston

3
J

C nc n

2

SanDego
Atlanta

2 2 500
2

500

3 250

1
1

2

Los Ang
3 250 2
Mondays Results
San Franc sco 2 San 0 ego 1
C ncinnat 8 Atlanta 7
Houston 4 Los Ange es 1
(on y games schedu ed)
Tuesday s Games
(All Tu"es EST)
Montrea (Stoneman 2 14} a
Ph lade ph a (Lersch 4 6 7 30

pm

Ch cago
Reu sc hel
P ttsburgh (Moose

0 8)
3 0)

New York ( Koosman 1 2
S Lou s (Cleveland 4 5)

I
1

Oak and a Ch cago postponed

an

1
I
1
I
I

I
I
1
I

1

:

~P~e
Parts 0~e~
113 W Second

' ·.

Yesl Yesl
1 Brand New
U S E•senhower
Dollar
FREE w th 1he purchase of
each pa
of Shock Ab
sorbe sa ou regular low
p cc

'

.

.

•~.1·
. .~ ~tlr·'
. {)~
·•

&lt;"

. •

,,, -~

E senhowe U S Do Ia
MUST

HAVE COUPON
Coupon Exp1res May 5 1973

wl pet gb

Boson
Ba moe
Cleve

3
2
2

0
0

M waukee
New York

0

2
4

De o I

0

000

All sizes
low priced

000
667
500
000
000

·BELTED

West

M nnesota
Ch cago
Kan C ty

wl pel gb

3

2

0 000
0 000
1 667

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Amencan League Stand1ngs

8

a

1
I
1

New Haven W Va

By Un ted P ess Inter-nat onal

•

pm

pos t

Wednesdays Games
M nnesota at Ca forn a n gh
Texas at Kansa s C fy n ght
C eve and at New Yo k
Oak and at Ch cago
Boston at M waukee
tonly games sc heduled)

pet g b
7.50
750

SAYRE
HARDWARE

s

r--·--·~~'!.'!'

I

ton y games schedu eoj;)

West

w

IA11Tmes EST!
mo e a De o
poned a n
Ba

demands

year s NCAA f nal was
000 watcl cd by 29 n II on fans
000 wl en UCI A beat f'lotlda Stote

Texas I 8 abe g 5 12 a l Kansas
C y Sp tfo tt 12 12 8 30 p m
Mnnesoa (Byeven 7 7 a
Ca fo n a S nger 6 6 1 p m

3

compa c t
dependab e
wa e e n ng un c an be
qu ck l y se
o mee your
am y s exac
needs
The e s even a
guest
pu shbu on
ja supply
ex ra Re ned Wa e for
gues s and o he unl!sua

[K.~st

pet

Mondays Results
Cleve and J New York
on y game sc hedu ed
Tuesdays Games
C nc nnat
Gu ett 9 0) at
A anta (Gen t y 7 0) B p m
Los Ange es t Downing 9 9 at
Houston Robe ts 2 7
8 30

r pped Denver 4'1 m tbe
B lly Cunnmgham establ shed Western semis
tv. o goals sm ce enter ng the
Am r can Basketball Assoc a
t on this sea son-a diVISion hUe
for Carol na and the ABA s
MVP award Now he s search
ng for an 1tem that has eluded
h1m for year s-c~ league htle
Cunn ngham was a member
of the NBA champ on Ph1la
dclp~1a 76ers m 1967 but that
team s pl3) off fortun es v.ent
downgrade after the t t e year
Carol na s gned Cunn ngham
and the Cougars mmed ately
beca ne a contender They
Psy k h e
fa led to w n a game 1n two
nh a b t ab e d u ng on y
n ne m on th s o each yea
prev ous playoff seasons but
In the spr ng su mm e and
thts t me the wheel of fortune
fa t s a p easan g ~n
spun then way HS Carol na took
se tl emen T he a pp oach
the d v s on htle and beat New
o w n e s a ve y se ous
ma te
The vl tl agers
York I I 1n the Eastern
empty
he
houses o a I
sem1fmals
,.
con en s and dese
th e
Carohna takes on Kentucky
ham e for hr ee mon hs
a 4 1 w nner over V rg n a m
AI e
he
depa ure
the d1v SIOn s best-of seven f
m
on s of ga on s ot wa er
ush n w h a t emend ous
na s opener at Charl6tte N C
oa
and conve I the
Wednesday mght The Colonels
lage n a he bo om of a
one two scormg punch of Art s
dee p
ak e
Psykh e
G In ore and Dan Issei could
e ma n s comple e y
subme ged fa a qua e of
nake his an explos ve ser es
a
yea
Wh en sp ng
In the Western Conference
el u ns he wa ers ecede
Utah swept San D ego r four
and
he
seH ement
sLra ght and now hosts In 1 ana
esu m es
Is no ma
chee tu app ea ranc e
the r sectional f nals ot l.!ner
Fo
ou
r.easons of
rt ursday n ght The Pacers
c ys a
ea wa e ca 882
lefend ng league champ ons
7525
Ou
automa c

IIECORD HOME CROWD
NEW YORK (UP!)
I he
ABA Playoff Stand ngs
Nat
onal
Broadcast
ng
Con
pa
6y Un ted Press International
East
ny announced Monday that the
( D v s on F nals Best of
UCI \ Mcmphts Stole NCAA
Seven)
w 1 pet f mt was walcl ed by the
Ca ol na
0 0 000 htrg :S t TV aud e e eve for a
Ken ucky
0 0 000
s hgle basketball game 38 I
West

Ca I
Texas
Oak and

Nahonal League Standmgs
By Un ted Press Internal onal
East
wl pet g b
P ltsbgh
3 0 000
New Yo k
2 0 000
2 I 667
Ch cago
Montrea
2 333 2
Ph Ia
0 2 000 2

Laker center collected 30
rebolUids m eontrolhng the
boards
Clyde ,Lee outrebounded Ka
reem Abdul-Jabbar 21 14 and
that helped Golden States fast
break that usually ended w1th
Barry gorng up for a twopomter
Roston Coach Tom Hernsohn
feels the Celtics have the edge
over Atlanta nee they have
the home court advantage n
two of the three remain ng
games Also he m1ght have a
physiCally flt Don Chaney for
Wednesday mght s f fth game
Chaney hampered by a pulled
gro n muscle played only e1ght
mmutes SWlday and scored two
pomts nme below hls 13 1
season s average
The Kmcks meanwhile
relaxed and wa1U!d for the
other teams U&gt; deterrmne their
fate
We II work out today and
maybe I U go up to Boskln on
Wednesday to look over the
Celt1cs and Hawks sa1d New
York Coach Red ljolzman

cunmng·ham namedMVP

Athlellc Conference \ames

man who saw hlS team lose
only 10 limes durmg the
regular season said he wasn t
down on the club because of the
setback

NBA playoffs
•
resume tonlte

!

Opus 20 20 33

30 - Turn ng Po nts 20 33
Cl 00 - Sou 33 News 20 Owen Marshall 6 13 Search 4 15
Love &amp; Hate 3 Cannon 8 10
1 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 30 - Johnny Carson 3 4 15 Madhouse 6 13 Moves Around
the Wor d Under the Sea 8 Conquered C ty 10
1 00 - News 4 13

the r f rst ever m Stanley Cup
competitiOn wh1le St Lows 53 wm over Ch1cago marked the
Hawks fJrst loss m theJr last 20
quarter11flal round games
Montreal Coach Scotty Bow

-

15 Sesame St 20

6 30-News3 4 6 81015 IDreamofJeannel3 Zoom33
7 00- News 6 10 What s My L ne 8 Truth or Conseq 3' Beat
The Clock 4 Anyth ng You Can Do 13 Know Your Schoo s 33
Elec Co 20 Sa nt 15
7 30- To Tell The Truth 6 The Judge 10 Pollee Surgeon J
Beat The C ock 13 Andy Gr ff th S Ep sode Act on 33
George K rby 8 Econom c Educat on 20
8 00 - Adam 12 3 4 5 Amer ca 73 20 33 Mov e Notorious

ty

GMACj FINANCING
992 5342
Pomeroy
Open Evemngs Tll8 00
TIIS PM Sal

Hodgepodge 20 Death Valley Days 5

6 00- Truth or Conseq 6 News 3 4 8

Yankees 3-1 m Mondays only
Amertcan League game
Bobby Tolan s t1e breakmg
smgle and a two-run smgle by
Tony Perez sparked the Reda to
four mnUt mnmg runs and
offset a three run nmth mmng
rally by the Braves Pedro
Horban came on wtth two on
and one out in the Braves
n nth but got out of the light
Sltuatwn by str kmg out pmch
h tter Oscar Brown and rehrmg
Ralph Garron an mf1eld out
Rench and Perez homered
durmg the Reds four run f fth
mn ng wh1ch gave them a 4-3
lead Tomm1e Hall was the
wmner while Joe Hoerner
suffered the loss
Jerry Reuss pitched a fivehitter and struck out e1ght for
the Astros who won !herr th1rd
game m four starts Reuss also
dehvered a be breakmg smgle

Stanley Cup play resumes

1 00 - SaeoftheCentu yJ 5 LoveAme ca nStyle6 Gambt
8 10 Password 3
11 30 - Ho lywood Squa es 4 3 Love of L fe 8 0 Bew tched 6

2 00 - Days of Ou L ves 3 4 15 Newlywed Game 3 M ke
Douglass 6 Gu d ng L ght 8 10
2 30 - DatngGame 3 Doctors3 4 15 EdgeofNight8 10
3 00
Another World 3 15 General Hasp ta 6 13 Love

C sa1d he let hiS cadd~e
talk him mto usmg a seven ron
when he had planned to use a
SIX tron and he was short with
his shot off the tee
I m stop1d I guess Snead
sa1d sadly Wilen you make up
your m1nd to do somethmg and
then change 11 that s when you
get hurt
N1cklaus blddmg to become
the ftrst fave t me Masters
champ and the f rst man ever
to wm 14 maJOr hUes made a
bnlllan t last moment b1d to pull
It out
Nicklaus had e1ght b1rd1es
Monday whJle shootmg a Gunder par 66 the best round of
the entire tournament But a
Fnday 77 that ncluded three
stra1ght three putt greens Iol
J

Reds make it two ln row, 8-7

8 30 - Jack La La nne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
8 55 - News 3
9 00
Paul D xon 4 Ph Donahue 5 What Every Woman
Wants to Know 3 Concentrat on 6 Capt Kangaroo a
Fr end y Junct on 10 Dr K ldare 13
9 30 - Eec Co 33 ToTel iheTruth3 Jeopardy6
10 00
0 nah Shore 3 S Columbus S x Call ng 6 Jokers W d
8 0 0 ck Van Dyke 3

2 00 - Jeopardy 3 S Passwo d 16 Bob Brauns SO 50 Club 4
News 13 Contact 8 News 0
2 30- Spl t Second 6 Search For Tomorrow 8 10 3 W s 3 s
00 - News Weather Sports 3 All My Ch dren 6 3 Secret
Storm 8 Not Fo Women Only 15 Green Acres 10
20 - Fash ons n Sewing 3

wm
Aaron whose only previous
U S victory m 13 years as a
tourmg pro was the 1970
Atlanta Class1c d1dn t have any
strokes to spare
In fact his VJCU&gt;ry was not
assured Wllil Snead was w1de
:.on an 11Hool brrd1e try on the
frnal hole of the tournament
Aaron watched that putt on a
teleVISIOn momklr and sa d the
only thought that went through
h1s mmd at that moment was
I d1dn t reliSh an 1tl-hole
playorr
Snead Sam Snead s nephew
held a two-stroke lead seven
holes from the end Monday but
went '""' the water at the par
three 12th hole and that was
1!

•

Lass e 6

10 30

13th hole where Aaron made a
b1rd1e 4
That s the reason you check
those things Aaron sa1d I
know exactly what I shot It
happens qwte often I foWJd the
miStake changed rt and SJgned
It
That s why they have the
rule
Aaron continued
I
don I th1nk a lot of people
really understood what haP'
pened the last t me
The last titne five years ago
Aaron wrote down a four for de
Vrcenzo at the 17th hole of the
!mal round Instead of the three
the Argentiman scored De
Vreenzo s•gned hiS card Without
changmg 1t and the extra
stroke was the margm by
wh ch Bob Goalby ljeat him to

1\ lorre•ll•' downpour
Monday afternoon wastled
out three Southern Valley

=---~=u

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4 - The Daily Sentinel , Middlepor t-Pomeroy , 0 ., April iO, 1973

Funds total made
All Middleport Village funds
a s of March 31 totaled
$202,023.77,
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate reported to Mid·
d le port Villa ge
Counci l
· Monday night.
Receipts and disbursements
from each fund a'nd the March

31 balan ce, respec tively,
.
follow:
Gene ra l , $4,124.61, 13,980.24,
!li0,488.91 ; cemetery, $331.23,
$625.73, $1 ,151.24; lire equip.
men!, no rece ipts, $180.93;
$11.45, overdrawn ; swimming
p oo l ~

no r eceipts, $77 .48 ,

$3,537 .53; pla nning c om rnission, no rece ipts, $13.96,
SIGNUP DAY
SYRACUSE - Si gnup day
In Syracuse lor Lillie League
and Pony Le)!gu t Is Thurs·
day; 7 p.m. at the new
fir ehouse. Little Leagu e
players a re to have $2 for
insurance, and Pony League
players are fo lake $-1. Adults
interested jn organizing a
.. basfball boosters club are
· al so invited to meet wllh the
.
. slgnup team Thu&lt;Sday night.

.

$306.63 ; street maintenance,
$2, 112.16, $2,023.28, $77.26.
Sanitary se wer. $3,966.55,
$3,120.88, $28,135.15; water ,
$6,534.33, $5,812.12, $25,251.04 ;

water me ter deposit trusts,
1160, $231 , $6,283.02; sanitary
sewer escrow , $848.42, no
disbur sements, $6 1,368.70; fire

holltse cons truction, no receiPts
no di sbursements , $11.99 ;
federa l revenue s haring, no
receipts , $100, $7,129; ge nera l

bond re tireme nt, no receipts,
no disbursements, $18,297.75.
Rece ipts .for the month
totaled $18,077.30 com pared to
disbursem e nts of $16,165.62.

· Harrisonville
. Society News
•

: Mr. Guy Bolin is spending a
·month in St. J ohn , Mich. with
his nephew, Frank Gra ves , Jr.
Mr _ a nd Mrs. Roy Ellis sold
their farm and bought the
·Smitly place ·on Back Street.
· Mr. a nd Mrs. J ess Carroll of
Kentucky bought the Hutchison
lot and moved in a trailer on it.
rdrs . Carrol Turner and
children have returned to their
home here from Columbus
where they spent the winter.
M~s . Bessie . Graham is in
Wes t Virginia where she was
called due to the death of her
nephel¥, Mr . Price.
Mrs. Eva Wa gg one r of
Columbus and Mi~ Clarice
Waggoner of California called
on Mr. and Mrs. Dale Williams.
They were supper guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Wa ggoner ..
Mrs. Golda Jones of Zanes·
vjlle, visited friend s here
recently and while her e Mr.
Mike Epple and Mrs . Jones
visited Ava Gilkey at . the
hospital.
The Alumni Banquet is
scheduled ·lor May 26 with
Lend-a-Circle serving it.
g it ..
Mrs . Alice Whaley of

Columbus visiU!d Lola Clark
and Fra nces Alki re and her
mother , Mrs . Gilkey at the
hospital.
Mrs. Golda Wyant is spcn·
d ing _so m e time wi th he r
daughter , Judy and fa mily in
T exas r ec up e ratin g fr om
recen t surgery.
Mrs. Ga l'y Gibson and son,
Mrs. Betty Bishop visited Mrs .
Sam Damron at the Holzer
.
Hospital.
Mr . Bill Clonch purchased
the lot on Back St. from Doyle
Hudson a nd will move his
tra iler a nd Mrs . Willard
Faudree's to it soon.
Mr.and Mrs. Doyle Hudson
have moved to..their new home
in Rutland.
Mrs. Louise Gilkey of Alhany
Visited her mother-iilalaw, Ava
Gilkey Friday afternoon.
·
Mr. and Mrs.Robert Clark
Sold one of their rental
Properties to Mr. Dingess of
Leon, W. Va ., who is employed
at the Gaven plant.
Mr. Dale Williams , who has
be~n ill, is much improved.
Mr. Phillip Kelly has sold his
Property and bought a place

Athens_JC' s will
·sponsor Olympics

Threats

NO CUTE CHICKS
COL UMBUS
Fo r
several years the lalk of th e
town at Easter time was th e
" cute little colored chicks

animals, took them home.
and the helpless lillie Infants
usually died wllhln a day or
two.

Ge ne R. Abe rcrombie,
Direc tor of th e Oh io
Department of Agriculture,
r eminds all Ohioans that
ther e will be NO dyed chicks
or rabbits this year, and he
warns anyone planning- ~o
sell them to think twice.
Legislation passed on July I ,
1971, stipulates that NO
person, firm, or c orporaUon
shall dye' or otherwise color
any rabbit or baby poultry . It
also states they may not sell,
off'er lor sale, expose for
saJe, raffle, or even give
away a rabbit or baby
poultry whi c h hu been
colored illegally.

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
Sig n for speed er s: " Please
kee p o ff the ga s."
r.'

r;

(%

W e like popovers, ex·
c:ept when th ey're neigh bors who pop-over· for a
cup of sugar, pop-over for
half-p ound0:: of,:, coff
ee .
¢

Taking a bri sk walk in the
m ornin g is something we'll
ne ver be acc used of stealing.
near Chester.
Mrs . Dprothy Sheets, who
was in a Huntington hospital is
slowly improving ,
The Lend-A-Hand Circle met
re cently with Mrs. Roy
Wiseinan .
NHL f'layoff Standings
. (By. United Press International
(Quarterfinals-Best of Seven)
w I gf go
Montreal
3 1 15 11
Buffc;~l o
1 3 11 15

1-

N.Y.

~

Bos·ton

\ ~~ 9

t

1 j .li i6

.

w I gf ga

3 1 16 8
1 3 8 16

Chi !=ag o
Sl. Louis

.

· S y ALLAN R. BRUCE
UP! Sports Writ er
BOSTON ( UP! ) - Police in
Maracaibo, Venez uela, are
keeping the 15-year~ld son 'of
Luis Aparicio under constant
guard because of threats that
,he would be kidnaped, the
Boston Red Sox star says.
Apa ricio, 38, said Monday
that a gang of extortionists has
threate ned to kidnap his oldest
son, Luis, if they are not paid
off.
"My son is 15 yea r s old,"
Apa r icio said . " I'm not · only
worried about him, but I worry
about everybody. I've got ' lour
mor e (childre n ) at home. t•
Apar icio, a major leaguf?r
since 1956, said he wa s firs t
informed ,.of the threats " about
a week a go when my wife
called me from Venezuela ." He
was s till at the Red Sox' spring
training ca mp in Winter Haven,
Fla ., a t the time.
~' The police don 't know who
is do in g it or wby they'r e doing
it, outside · of the money /'
Aparicio said. He did not say
how much the extortionists
were seeking,
Aparicio said his wife , Sonia,
received threatening· telephone
calls from the extortionists.
Aparicio said he had no plans
to return to Venezuela an~
would accompany the Red Sox
on their ro~d trip to Milwaukee
and New York. The s hortstop
played In all three home games
against the
Yankees last
weekend.
" I talked to the police chief
(in Maracaibo ) about an hour
ago," Aparicio said after taking .
part in Monday's team workout
af Fepway Park.
"H~ told me everything is
take n care of," Aparicio said.
"My son is under pretty good
guard now. They promise me
he is safe. He is under guard 24
hours a day. They say it is not
necessary for me to go horne. '.'

A DISCOUNT
.
O£PARTME"'T STOlt£

SHOP OUR BUSY LITTLE STORES
" LUDENS" BOXED

CHOCOLATE
ANIMALS FIGURES

SURGERY REQUIRED
ST . LOUIS (UP! ) - Defense·
man Ab beMarco of the St.
'Louis Blues will have to
_Wlder.go surgery to repair a
shouldir separation. sUffered in
the Blues' 5-3 win over the
Chicago Black Hawks Sunday
night. Dr. J.G . Probstein , the ·
Blues' team physician, announced the . surg.~ry would be
necessary to·repair the injurY; ·

r---------..
DUDLEY'S flORIST

FOR EASTER!

~-.eute

Ring Styl•
No. U

CHAIRS

For Their Basket-You'll Need

Now yo~ can b!Jy -~tha~
c;ornfortabiE!
La · Z· Boy
chair
you ' ve
always
dreamed of at our low
pri ces.

Authorized Dealer

MASON

FURNITURE
•·

Herman Grate
773-5592 :
Mason, W. \/a .

¢

ARTIFICIAL'
2% oz. Bag

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW!
•

Pink
low or Orchid

Knit To Fit -

family.

Ease. , Rutland.

Set of 2 men ' s suit
hanger s, 3 women's
dre ss hangers or set of 3
slack or· pant hangerS.
S1. 29 Values. Save 51.58.

TO

WOMEN'S JAMAICA SHORTS

John C. Scragg, Esther M.
l Scra:~R to Buckeye Rural Elec .
Coop Inc ., Ease., Rutland.
Clarence McDonald, Errima
to Buckeye Rural
Elec. Coop Inc ., Ease ., Salem.
Phillip W. Kelly, Lois Kelly
to Charles G. Sheets, Dorothy
Sheel.s, 1.3 Acres , Scipio.
Phillip W. Kelly , Lois G .
Ke lly to John Musser, Dorothy
Musser, 4. 7 Acres, ScipiO.
Rodney E . Sauer to George
E. Hackett Jr., Phyllis S.
flackett, Pt Lot I, Middleport.
B,enzo Menc hini, dec. to
Jacqueline E. Menchinl, Ernst
C. Menchini, Jennifer · L.
Me nchini, Aff . for trans.,
Pomeroy.
Jacqueline E. Menchini,
Ernst C. Menchinl, Debra K.
Menchini , Jennifer L·. Menchiili to Clemente Men ~hini,
100 Acres, Pomeroy.
Carl J . Duckworth, Sertha A. ·
Duckworth . to Clifford Hall,
Gertrud·e Hall, Lot 4, Crook 's
2nd. Add., Syracuse:
C. V. ·swartz, dec. to Carrie
E. Swartz, Mary O'Brien, Ores
Swartz, Harry Swartz, Aff. of

$

$22~0$294

PACKS

Wood Grain Finish

,,

24'' LENGTH ·

All METAL

ICE
BUCKET

PLANT
BOX
GREEN COLOR-

BAKED
ENAMEL

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$3 .00 •cldition•l

· ·. for ueh .
birthslon•

YOU'LL SOON NEED
SUNGLASSES
•

·¢

·Teens .
Womens ·
Mens

PERMANENT PRESS
"MR. LEGGS" BRAND

, Pomeroy

GIRLS ·TOPS

Trans., Poffiero,y.

THE NEWEST .Short Sl~eve Styles!

Carpenter

. Sizes 3 To 14

·News, Event
Mrs. Cecil Blackwood · and
. daughU.r, Usa Dye, spent a
vaca'tion in carabelle,, Florida
a nd Dotham, Alabama, ·and
Mr . Blackwood a ccompanied
them home and went back by
plane.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Mor
rison,
Cincinnati,
called
Elfie
Wood
and
Mr,
and
Mrs.
Arthur
Crabtree , while '1lf their- farm
here .
. Mr . and Mrs. Fred Keirns ,
Millfield, call~d on relatives in

Do You Remember Your Loved Ones
At Easter Time - . See Our'

ao'vs

CEMETERY
DRESS JEANS.·
·SPRAYS
Flare or 'Cufled .in denims. twills or
hiP sash. Every color he' ll want,
many, many blue denims. Regular
and slims. Sizes 4 to 18.

94

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FOR YOUR
LAD or LASSIE

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17

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hold from two to ·~·
· birthstones.

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A Big Variety Of
Types and Colors!

OTHERS

•••

•1.57 TO
•5.87

a

members whose tehns expire
June 30, 1973.
The new members are Miss
Te resa
Goldsberr y
o!
Pickering ton , Dewey C. Fuller
of
Cincinnati ,
George
Greenleaf, Irvin G. Lowery,
Dr. Robert Reese, Ned E .
Wil liams, an d Nor man H .
Ba ker , all of Columbus, and
Dr. Jacob See, super inte ndent
of Pe nta County Join t
Vocational School District.
The board voted to establish

.. ;·; .

..·.

'

'

MASON - ::._ The Rev . Chester Tennant,
pastor of the ;Mason Assembly of God Church,
off Route 33, e'a st of Mason, W.Va., announces
a missions rally "{orll"riday at 7:30 p.m.
featuring the Rev. and Mrs. J. Richard Dunn of
St Albans W. Va ., pictured at right.
· Rev. 'Dunn is a . grad ua"' · of the
Southeastern Sible College in Lakdand, ._Fia.;
and former· pastor at Weston, W.' Va. Tbe
couple is . preparing for the ~iss ion field in
Upper Volta, Southeast Afnca. They will
pres~nt a ~ilm. · 11The .Land of Mossi." The
public is invited . ·
·
.

a

..
"

I

,.•.

,

planning districts " to better
fa cilitate, career preparation

EASTER SPECIAL !

prQved the creation

or

tt1e

Crawford-Upper Sandusky and
Tri-Ri ve rs J oint Vocati ona l
Sc hool Distric ts.
The Crawford-Upper Sandusk y distric t includes the
Bucyru s and Galion city
sc hools, the Colonel Crawford
a nd Wynford Local Schools in
Crawford County ·a nd the
Upp er Sandusk y Ex empted
Village Schools ·In Wyandot
Coun ty.
The Tri-Rivers district includes the Marion city schools,
th e Elgin, Pleasant , Ridgedale
and River Valley Local Schools
in Mari on County, the Mt.
Gilead E xempted · Villa ge
$ chools, th e Cardington ·
Lincoln Local Schools and the
jlighland Local Schools in
Morrow County , and the North

'

'

e ,Big, 14 to 1
e MU.~~~~"~'~e!!ITS
D·lln.

• Sw" ' Mu1lc B o~e l n1lde!

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Union Local Schools in Union
County .
The board also granted a
"special purposeH char.ter to
the Our Lady of the Elms
Spec ial Education . School in

Robinson's Cleaners

..._

lui tas le·treals to add color and
tla11or to your b a s ~e t s 1 Pile ·em
on . ki dSlove 'em •
• Big J -lb . Bags!
• Regular and Spind.'

·SHlRl
FINISHING

,,'

~;;::~~ JE~~s!. - b~s!~.! :~!!!",_

'

four new·vocational education

Chillicothe, Lebanon , London,
Ma nsfi eld, Marion, Marysville
and' th e Southern Ohio
Correctional . F'a c ility at' Akron.
Three distri cts gr a nted
Lucasville .
The board ad opted a permissi on fo issue bonds for
resolution submitted by .fohn the construction of new claSBR. Meckstroth of Cincinnati , room facilities were Goshen
board president, calling for Local Schools of Clermont and
le gisl a tion whi c h
would Warren counties, $1 ,270;000 :
Preve·rft impOundm e nt of
federal education fundin g. The
board
urged
Ohio 's
co ngres s ional del egation to
"bring immediate attention to
the seriousness of the fa ct that
S.AME DAY ,.
the appropriations bave not
SERVICE
been approved for the current
In AI 9- 0ul At 5
year ·of 1973."
· Use Our Free Parking LOt
Potential loss of fund s to the
schools of . Ohio for the 1974
· school year woUld be in 'excess
1116 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
:or $40 million , board me'mbers

Dunn family to
conduct rally .
Friday_evening

IN MIDDLEPORT ·

The board designated the
North Canton City Schools and
the Canton City Schools as
se para te dis tric ts a nd a p.

Participating inStitutions are
s tate-operated pri sons at

'·'

'·

and Madison Local Schools ol
Lake County , $1,495,000 .

opportunities " for students .

inmates in Ohio's penal instituations," board members
said . " Penal residents who
wish to participate in high
school courses not offered in
the· institution to whic h they
arc assigned will be ellglble for
transfer to an ins titution which
offe rs the course t,hey desire!'

Ti m:t Be~w.e r ,
Sherry Hollon,
a feature of the

PINAFORE GIRLS of the Chester operetta. Front row , I tor , are
Sheryl Ables, Tammi Samos, Cathy Morris; second row, l tor, Renee
Wendy Elkins, Jan Smith, Carolyn Rowen and Elizabeth Neff. They
·
··
·
presentation last Friday night.

RALL•s

Education, to replace eight

s,.tate

comprehensive curriculum for

· James B. O'Brien, Rober t&lt;
C. O'Brien to Carl H. Platter
Jr., Kay Platter, Lot, Mid
dleport.
Leo Morris, Linda Morr'i s ll
Buckeye Rural Elec. Coop Inc.

WOODEN
HANGERS

94

. Visit Shopper's MarT Before You Buy!

Rin9 c.an 'be made to

Court St.

-

Walnut

A hug e collection . .Fabric s of cotton , polyester , stretch nylon,
blends in a wide array of solid colors, stripes, prints or
jacquard s. Sizes S-M· L-XL to XXXlg. Get y'our supply wh i le
our selection is complete.

Elegant wood grain
fini sh
with
large
carrying handle. Big
capacity . Compare at ·$4 .98 .

/

Transfers

TANK TOPS OR SLEEVELESS SHELLS

Polyester , stretch nvlon
in a rainbow of colors.
Re gular.· and x . Lg .
sizes !

•

Property

WOMEN'S SLEEVELESS TOPS

to

departmen t. o!!icial, all three
districts have a right to ask lor
a public hearing within the
next 30 days.
The history of state board
has been to approve recommendations by its superinte nd~ n t in revoc.~Jti on matters,
wlth few exceptions. And the
state cour ts, under " manda te"
by the legislature, have denied
a ppeal s aga ins t orde r s to
consolida te with no exceptions
in recent years.
In other business, the UP!
reported the state boa rd voted
to give state School SuperinU.ndent Mar tin W. E sse x a pa y
~ai se from $10,000 to ,50,000 a
year .
The pay hike for Essex,
effective July 1, puts him
$10,000 above the salary of Gov.
John J . Gilligan.
The Ohi o Board of Re gents
voted recently to poost the
salry of its new cha ncellor,
James A. Norton, to $50,000.
The boa rd gave final ap·
proval to the prison program
by granting a &lt;~special pur~
pose" c har~er to the state
Department of Rehabllltation
· and C9rrection.
The c ha rte r e na bles th e
departm e nt to pr ov id e a

Meigs

Choose From Hundreds

$ 24

According

•

I

eight persons to ~ Advisory
Commission for Voca tional' .

commodate a comprehensive
high school curriculum .

farmer , also

operates a seed and fertilizer
business. He is married and
has two children. .Farmers
and Traders Life offers a
complete line of personal life
insuranc e
and
health
policies.

PR.

a

member of . the

In precious lOki. yellow
or white gold.

Kautz, a

94

$

GRASS

For their E.l ster shoes
select from our budget priced;
collection. We ' ll save- · you
money on the newest styles ·it's
well known fact . .

Set with radiant birth.
ston~s ~one stone: for
eac;~

" Bat a" quality ... Made in
U. S. A . white, colors ,
plaid s. All sizes.

Boil s water for t ea , soup
or cof fee. Cord incl ud ed.

Madisou Loc al Schools of
or resources and adequate sa id.
The board also appointed Franklin County, $4,490,000,
fa cilities designed to ac-

Elementary and Sec ondary
Education and his assistant,
Dr. Doyle Shumaker.
Their proposal came a lter
the three dis tr icts wer e
evaluated duri ng the week of
Feb . 12. The ~ tate listed '!l
violations against Han nan
Trace, 22 against North Gallia
and 25 aga inst SouthwesU!m .
Dr . Shuma ke r sa id the
problems a nd s~ortcomin gs of
the districts were due largely
to the limi ted e nrollment, lack

and curriculum. None of the
three
districts
pr ovide
adequate
lea rnin g
oppor tunities for boys a nd girls ·
enrolled in these schools." .
Hannan Tr'a ce has , 712
st~dents, North Gallia 945 and
SouthwesU.rn 513,
The actiQn was taken upon
the recommendation or Slate
Supt. of Pubtic Ins truc tion
Ma r tin Essex based upon the
re com inen datio nS of J . E.
Br own , director , Division of

DALE M. KAUTZ
llale M. Kautz ol Pomeroy
has been elected to the Soard
of lllrectors of Farme~s and
Tra ders Life Ios-.ra·n ce
company of Syracuse, N. y .

CANVAS
OXFORDS

HOT
POT

MOTHER

'

CHILDREN'S

4 Cup Electric

White or Milk Choc01ate

Useful . Decorators

w I gf ga
Minn
22 9 7
spirit
and
enthusiasm.
ATHENS - The Athens
Ph i la
22 7 9
Each event viii be divided
Jaycees. will again co-sponsor
Monday's Results
competitive ( No games schedllled)
the Third Annual Southeastern into
Tuesday's Games
Ohio , Regional
$pecial t:lassifications, based on sex
Buffalo at Montreal
Olympics
for
retarded · and· age groups as follows: B-9; N.Y. Rangers af Bos·ton
childre n.
10·12, 13-15, 16·18, 19 and over. ·Ch icago at St. Louis
The Special Olympics will be We anticipaie lhat the par· Phi.ladefphia at Minnesota
,
. .
ABA RELOCATION
held at Peden Stadium in · ticipants in the 50 yard dash
NEW YORK · ( UP! ) - The
Athens, on May· 26, begi~ning and ot?er ~vents . of great
~ru~tees 'of
the . American
. at 9:30 a .m. Events scheduled popularity will be further sub·
Mondav··s Baseball R~sults
8re:. 50 yard d3sh, ,3oo yard divided·i~to ability divisions as .. By Un~~e~i~~s~ re~e;::tionaT Basketball · ASsociation . uhariidas h, standing long jump, soft de termin e d bJ trial times . Cleveland
001 001 OOt - 3 9 o mousiy ·a pproved .Monday the
· ball th. row , high J·urnp, 200 yard .submitted on the . applic.ation Nevi York
010 ooo ooo - 1 B 1 re]ocation o! the Dallas ftarr·
Strom ·(l . Q) and Duncan ; &gt;hise to San Antonio, Tex. The.
relay ( four participants) and · form . All events are subject to Peterson.· Mc Daniel (6) and
team will be · under new
440 yard re)ay (four par. can cellation or consolidation Munson . LP-Peterson 10·11 .
·
·
b d 1 k 0· f t Is E h
National League
management.
ticipan ls l.JP-··
.
ase on ac
en ran · ac
San Oiego
100 000 000- 1 4 1
These ~cOts will be offered ' child m~y enter three : in~ San Franci sco 001 010 OOx. 2 6 2
in th e Ohio State Special dividual .events and one r elay Caldwell, Troedson 17 1 and .
.
Davis ; Bry~nt p .o) and Rader _.
B
t "f 1
Olympics scheduled in June, event.
LP-Caldwell (0-11 . HR -Speier
eau 1 U ·
with the exception of the 200 · The Friendship School in 1st.
FLOWERING
yard r e lay.· The latter relay Marietta is co-sponsoring the Los Angeles OOQ. 000 l00--l
5 1
will be offered only in Athens Special Olympics Swimming Houston
, 00 000 OJx~ 4 6 1 .
.PLANTS
with the ex pectation of team Event, which i~ to be · held on ward .· LP - Hough lO-ll .
Easter Lilies
May 5. Events offered will be: H_R_- Wynn l2na) .
Hydranges
25 yard free style, 50 yard free CinCinnati ·ooo 040 004~ 10 4
Azaleas
style , 25 yard back stroke, 50 Atlanta
000 300 103- 7 9 i
The Daily Sentinel
·
Nelson, McGfothlin IBJ. Hall
Iyard back stroke,IIHl free style (8). Carroll (9), Borbon (91 and
· ·
'
·
·
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
relay. All these events with the Bench ; Morton, Niek'ro (5).
MEIGS · MASON AREA
59 N. 2nd St.
exception of the 50 yard back House .(8). 1HQerner 191 , UpCHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
. shaw (9) and Dates . WP-Hall
Middleport, 0 .
E~ee_c ,_ad .
stroke, will be offered at the 11 -0l LP-Hoerner (1 -11 . HRs ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
State Special Olympics. The Perez (lsi) Bimch (1st).
City Editor
Publ is hed da ll y e•cept
Swimming Olympics will start
Salur.da~· by The ·Oh io Valley'
Pubi1Sh 1ng Company . 111
at 10 a .m , at the Marietta
.
Court St ., · Pomeroy, Ohio ,
Y
.litc.A.,
located
on
Seventh
.tl5769 . Bus iness Off ice Phone
992 · 2156 , Ed i tor ial Phone 992 .
Street and · Glendale in
2157 .
•
Marietta.
The
Marietta
SecOnd c l.ass postage pa id 111
Pomeroy . Oh io.
Y .M.C.A. will be providing
- National ad 11e rl is ing
judges, timers, and life guards,
represenlat ille
Bo t l i nel li'.
Gallagher , Inc ., 12 Ea st 42nd
however each school should
St ., New Yor ~.Ci ly , New York .
send
suffiCient number .of
Subs c ript ion · rales : De .
· livered by c arri er w here
c haperones to help ' i~ dressing
available 50 c en ~ s per week ;
By flttotor Route where carr ie r
and guiding of their children in
serv ice not ava i lable : On e
•
the e vent itse lf. Further
month 11.75 . By ma il in Oh io
and W . Va . • One y(!ar $14.00 .
qu estions eonce rning the
Si,.; months $7 . 25 . Thre e
Olympics Swim Meet should be
months $.4 .50 . Sub sc r i pt ion
pr ice includes Sunday . T ime s.
r eferred to Dick Greten,
Sentinel .
Friendship School, Marietta.

LA-z-·e ov

As expec ted , the State Board
ol Education Monday voted to
·•consider revoking " the
charters of North Gallia ,
Hannan Trace· and SouthwesU.rn School Districts in
Gallia County.
According to United Press
Inwrnational a bo~rd spokesman said, " All three districts
are grossly below minimwn
standards in lhe critical areas
of quali fied personnel, in-'
structlonal facilities, ma terials

Aparicio

window or the cOmeri _
store .
P t ople bought these lillie

-

Board looking at_Gallia school charters

•
worrymg

and bunnies" for sale In th e

..

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, April 10, 1973

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4

EGO COLOR

3

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"'·115 " I

IICI:!.\ •1111

ca lor~

rt11 em ilnd ~ u r pu sa .
~ o w c lu td r enr E~ ch -

rod yP.II Ow
an•l blul! ·

a speci al
1-"'!"'~·~...c..· -~'•'II'II'',.'·.,·",.·".' •"'II'~- Send
message tq a

EASTER
(ABDS
specia l fr ie nd!

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN
MIDDLEPOiiT, 0.

.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::=:~:=:~ :~::::~:::::::::: ::::::;::::::;:;:;:;:;: ;:::::::::::: :: ::: ::::.::~:::::;::::: :: ;:; ;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;::;::::~:::::::;:;:;:; :;: ;:; :~:;:;:;:: :;:::::; :;:;::::=::::::;:;::::::·

this area on Sat\lfday .
Those fr om this community ,
who attended the 4-H Leader
Roundup at the Hocking Valley
Motor Lodge nea.'r Nelsonville
we.re club members, Cheryl
Lawson, Virginia Jordan ,
Les te r. J e ffers and Marc o
Jeffers and · assistant , Mrs .
Dor.sey Jordan .
Mr. an_d Mrs. Robert Ma\tox
were overnight _guests · of his
brother and s ister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs . Herman MattOx,
Charles ton , West
South
Virginia .
Mr . an~ Mrs . Murrell Bailey
have purchased a trailer home
and are living near the Earl
Starkey home .
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Frazier,
Gallipolis , visited her mother ,
Mrs. Goldi e Gill ogly, and
called other relatives in this
commwlity .

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Those attending_ a dinner in Hanng and daughters.
honor of the birthday of Mrs.
M'.s. Donald Crabtree and
Conard Ator at the home of Mr. Cinly, local , and Shirley Dean ,
and. Mrs. Ronald Whittington Larcaster, vis ited with Murl
·wer e ·Mr.· and Mrs . Conard Galwit:Y.
Ator • . Albany, . and Kristin
Nr . and Mr s. Lavern J ordan
Powell, Amesville.
. am Danny , loca l, and Mr. and
Guests of Mr . and Mrs . Joe Ms . David Uewelyn, New
McWhorter and family were Mtrs hfi eld , we r e Sunday
Mr. and Mrs: Robert Lich Bnd e~ning gues,ts of Mr . a nd Mrs.
son and Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy R.,d . Jeffers.

on

•
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two phones are better than one
... Io s~ v e yo u steps. 10 br ing mo re pleas ure . conven ie nce
a nd secu rity to your ho me . No w. fo r thal second phone you
rea lly know you ·n e e d . the re's a fasci n a t ing selection of
fun c tio na l, co lorf ul , cleve r. Crazy. soph islic a te d .. ne w-fas hion
o ld -fas h ioned designe r /d eco ra lo r telep ho nes in G e nera l
Te lephOne 's Ex te nsi o n Exlra va ga nza . Li ke th e STYLELINE®
te le phone ... Ihe phone th a t pu is the wo rks so lig htly in the
palm of you r ha nd ... ha nd sel, dr a l and reca ll bul!o n , too .
Cou ld anything be easie r (and co me in nine exc iting c olors, too)?
,.

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({!l([{jj_~~-

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3 HP
.20 INCH CUT

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....
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.

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.~

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ONLY

SHE'Ll USE PLENTY NOW ·AND
THE HOT DAYS .AHEAD!

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• •••••••••••••

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... •.•··· ........... .

Push Type

I '

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CRADLEPHONES are the very last
word In sophisticated styling ...
Mediterranean. Grecian Cameo ,
all
Brocade, Antique White .
resplendent with gold trim and
fingerwheels. Conversation pieces
righfoul ol another world.

Get ·Your ~uffy Now!

.

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••
.··································-·········

CANDLESTICK PHONE... . the new·

GIRLS 2 PIECE
.•.•

JAMAICA
SHORT
SETS ·

la s hio n old - fa s h io ned p h one
styled righ t out o! the. roar ing
twent1es in Black Bottom Blac k.
Whilfenpoof Wh ite and Razza ma·
tazz Red . Except tha t we did away
with the separate big old be ll bo~

.: .............. .......................•.•• .:.
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SIZE3 To 14 ·
Many, Many Styles!

94 $

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·'

TO

POMEP,'Y .

BAKER FURNITURE
M

0.

992-2848

Open Friday Until 8 p.m.
We Close at 5:30 Saturday

! ·. · ·&amp;TARLITE~ teleph'one is a pract 1ca1
:
:

A·· :
:

•
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•

luxury for "her room .·· Da inty h1gh·
style with · dial that glows . Id eal
-lor. nlgh l table or vanity lor after ·
dark dialing. or as a friendly..ad ·
, jus ~abte. l)rlgh t ne ss night light

................

':

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liji:l
GEriERAL TELEPHOnE .
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4 - The Daily Sentinel , Middlepor t-Pomeroy , 0 ., April iO, 1973

Funds total made
All Middleport Village funds
a s of March 31 totaled
$202,023.77,
Clerk-Treasurer
Gene Grate reported to Mid·
d le port Villa ge
Counci l
· Monday night.
Receipts and disbursements
from each fund a'nd the March

31 balan ce, respec tively,
.
follow:
Gene ra l , $4,124.61, 13,980.24,
!li0,488.91 ; cemetery, $331.23,
$625.73, $1 ,151.24; lire equip.
men!, no rece ipts, $180.93;
$11.45, overdrawn ; swimming
p oo l ~

no r eceipts, $77 .48 ,

$3,537 .53; pla nning c om rnission, no rece ipts, $13.96,
SIGNUP DAY
SYRACUSE - Si gnup day
In Syracuse lor Lillie League
and Pony Le)!gu t Is Thurs·
day; 7 p.m. at the new
fir ehouse. Little Leagu e
players a re to have $2 for
insurance, and Pony League
players are fo lake $-1. Adults
interested jn organizing a
.. basfball boosters club are
· al so invited to meet wllh the
.
. slgnup team Thu&lt;Sday night.

.

$306.63 ; street maintenance,
$2, 112.16, $2,023.28, $77.26.
Sanitary se wer. $3,966.55,
$3,120.88, $28,135.15; water ,
$6,534.33, $5,812.12, $25,251.04 ;

water me ter deposit trusts,
1160, $231 , $6,283.02; sanitary
sewer escrow , $848.42, no
disbur sements, $6 1,368.70; fire

holltse cons truction, no receiPts
no di sbursements , $11.99 ;
federa l revenue s haring, no
receipts , $100, $7,129; ge nera l

bond re tireme nt, no receipts,
no disbursements, $18,297.75.
Rece ipts .for the month
totaled $18,077.30 com pared to
disbursem e nts of $16,165.62.

· Harrisonville
. Society News
•

: Mr. Guy Bolin is spending a
·month in St. J ohn , Mich. with
his nephew, Frank Gra ves , Jr.
Mr _ a nd Mrs. Roy Ellis sold
their farm and bought the
·Smitly place ·on Back Street.
· Mr. a nd Mrs. J ess Carroll of
Kentucky bought the Hutchison
lot and moved in a trailer on it.
rdrs . Carrol Turner and
children have returned to their
home here from Columbus
where they spent the winter.
M~s . Bessie . Graham is in
Wes t Virginia where she was
called due to the death of her
nephel¥, Mr . Price.
Mrs. Eva Wa gg one r of
Columbus and Mi~ Clarice
Waggoner of California called
on Mr. and Mrs. Dale Williams.
They were supper guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Clair Wa ggoner ..
Mrs. Golda Jones of Zanes·
vjlle, visited friend s here
recently and while her e Mr.
Mike Epple and Mrs . Jones
visited Ava Gilkey at . the
hospital.
The Alumni Banquet is
scheduled ·lor May 26 with
Lend-a-Circle serving it.
g it ..
Mrs . Alice Whaley of

Columbus visiU!d Lola Clark
and Fra nces Alki re and her
mother , Mrs . Gilkey at the
hospital.
Mrs. Golda Wyant is spcn·
d ing _so m e time wi th he r
daughter , Judy and fa mily in
T exas r ec up e ratin g fr om
recen t surgery.
Mrs. Ga l'y Gibson and son,
Mrs. Betty Bishop visited Mrs .
Sam Damron at the Holzer
.
Hospital.
Mr . Bill Clonch purchased
the lot on Back St. from Doyle
Hudson a nd will move his
tra iler a nd Mrs . Willard
Faudree's to it soon.
Mr.and Mrs. Doyle Hudson
have moved to..their new home
in Rutland.
Mrs. Louise Gilkey of Alhany
Visited her mother-iilalaw, Ava
Gilkey Friday afternoon.
·
Mr. and Mrs.Robert Clark
Sold one of their rental
Properties to Mr. Dingess of
Leon, W. Va ., who is employed
at the Gaven plant.
Mr. Dale Williams , who has
be~n ill, is much improved.
Mr. Phillip Kelly has sold his
Property and bought a place

Athens_JC' s will
·sponsor Olympics

Threats

NO CUTE CHICKS
COL UMBUS
Fo r
several years the lalk of th e
town at Easter time was th e
" cute little colored chicks

animals, took them home.
and the helpless lillie Infants
usually died wllhln a day or
two.

Ge ne R. Abe rcrombie,
Direc tor of th e Oh io
Department of Agriculture,
r eminds all Ohioans that
ther e will be NO dyed chicks
or rabbits this year, and he
warns anyone planning- ~o
sell them to think twice.
Legislation passed on July I ,
1971, stipulates that NO
person, firm, or c orporaUon
shall dye' or otherwise color
any rabbit or baby poultry . It
also states they may not sell,
off'er lor sale, expose for
saJe, raffle, or even give
away a rabbit or baby
poultry whi c h hu been
colored illegally.

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
Sig n for speed er s: " Please
kee p o ff the ga s."
r.'

r;

(%

W e like popovers, ex·
c:ept when th ey're neigh bors who pop-over· for a
cup of sugar, pop-over for
half-p ound0:: of,:, coff
ee .
¢

Taking a bri sk walk in the
m ornin g is something we'll
ne ver be acc used of stealing.
near Chester.
Mrs . Dprothy Sheets, who
was in a Huntington hospital is
slowly improving ,
The Lend-A-Hand Circle met
re cently with Mrs. Roy
Wiseinan .
NHL f'layoff Standings
. (By. United Press International
(Quarterfinals-Best of Seven)
w I gf go
Montreal
3 1 15 11
Buffc;~l o
1 3 11 15

1-

N.Y.

~

Bos·ton

\ ~~ 9

t

1 j .li i6

.

w I gf ga

3 1 16 8
1 3 8 16

Chi !=ag o
Sl. Louis

.

· S y ALLAN R. BRUCE
UP! Sports Writ er
BOSTON ( UP! ) - Police in
Maracaibo, Venez uela, are
keeping the 15-year~ld son 'of
Luis Aparicio under constant
guard because of threats that
,he would be kidnaped, the
Boston Red Sox star says.
Apa ricio, 38, said Monday
that a gang of extortionists has
threate ned to kidnap his oldest
son, Luis, if they are not paid
off.
"My son is 15 yea r s old,"
Apa r icio said . " I'm not · only
worried about him, but I worry
about everybody. I've got ' lour
mor e (childre n ) at home. t•
Apar icio, a major leaguf?r
since 1956, said he wa s firs t
informed ,.of the threats " about
a week a go when my wife
called me from Venezuela ." He
was s till at the Red Sox' spring
training ca mp in Winter Haven,
Fla ., a t the time.
~' The police don 't know who
is do in g it or wby they'r e doing
it, outside · of the money /'
Aparicio said. He did not say
how much the extortionists
were seeking,
Aparicio said his wife , Sonia,
received threatening· telephone
calls from the extortionists.
Aparicio said he had no plans
to return to Venezuela an~
would accompany the Red Sox
on their ro~d trip to Milwaukee
and New York. The s hortstop
played In all three home games
against the
Yankees last
weekend.
" I talked to the police chief
(in Maracaibo ) about an hour
ago," Aparicio said after taking .
part in Monday's team workout
af Fepway Park.
"H~ told me everything is
take n care of," Aparicio said.
"My son is under pretty good
guard now. They promise me
he is safe. He is under guard 24
hours a day. They say it is not
necessary for me to go horne. '.'

A DISCOUNT
.
O£PARTME"'T STOlt£

SHOP OUR BUSY LITTLE STORES
" LUDENS" BOXED

CHOCOLATE
ANIMALS FIGURES

SURGERY REQUIRED
ST . LOUIS (UP! ) - Defense·
man Ab beMarco of the St.
'Louis Blues will have to
_Wlder.go surgery to repair a
shouldir separation. sUffered in
the Blues' 5-3 win over the
Chicago Black Hawks Sunday
night. Dr. J.G . Probstein , the ·
Blues' team physician, announced the . surg.~ry would be
necessary to·repair the injurY; ·

r---------..
DUDLEY'S flORIST

FOR EASTER!

~-.eute

Ring Styl•
No. U

CHAIRS

For Their Basket-You'll Need

Now yo~ can b!Jy -~tha~
c;ornfortabiE!
La · Z· Boy
chair
you ' ve
always
dreamed of at our low
pri ces.

Authorized Dealer

MASON

FURNITURE
•·

Herman Grate
773-5592 :
Mason, W. \/a .

¢

ARTIFICIAL'
2% oz. Bag

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW!
•

Pink
low or Orchid

Knit To Fit -

family.

Ease. , Rutland.

Set of 2 men ' s suit
hanger s, 3 women's
dre ss hangers or set of 3
slack or· pant hangerS.
S1. 29 Values. Save 51.58.

TO

WOMEN'S JAMAICA SHORTS

John C. Scragg, Esther M.
l Scra:~R to Buckeye Rural Elec .
Coop Inc ., Ease., Rutland.
Clarence McDonald, Errima
to Buckeye Rural
Elec. Coop Inc ., Ease ., Salem.
Phillip W. Kelly, Lois Kelly
to Charles G. Sheets, Dorothy
Sheel.s, 1.3 Acres , Scipio.
Phillip W. Kelly , Lois G .
Ke lly to John Musser, Dorothy
Musser, 4. 7 Acres, ScipiO.
Rodney E . Sauer to George
E. Hackett Jr., Phyllis S.
flackett, Pt Lot I, Middleport.
B,enzo Menc hini, dec. to
Jacqueline E. Menchinl, Ernst
C. Menchini, Jennifer · L.
Me nchini, Aff . for trans.,
Pomeroy.
Jacqueline E. Menchini,
Ernst C. Menchinl, Debra K.
Menchini , Jennifer L·. Menchiili to Clemente Men ~hini,
100 Acres, Pomeroy.
Carl J . Duckworth, Sertha A. ·
Duckworth . to Clifford Hall,
Gertrud·e Hall, Lot 4, Crook 's
2nd. Add., Syracuse:
C. V. ·swartz, dec. to Carrie
E. Swartz, Mary O'Brien, Ores
Swartz, Harry Swartz, Aff. of

$

$22~0$294

PACKS

Wood Grain Finish

,,

24'' LENGTH ·

All METAL

ICE
BUCKET

PLANT
BOX
GREEN COLOR-

BAKED
ENAMEL

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$3 .00 •cldition•l

· ·. for ueh .
birthslon•

YOU'LL SOON NEED
SUNGLASSES
•

·¢

·Teens .
Womens ·
Mens

PERMANENT PRESS
"MR. LEGGS" BRAND

, Pomeroy

GIRLS ·TOPS

Trans., Poffiero,y.

THE NEWEST .Short Sl~eve Styles!

Carpenter

. Sizes 3 To 14

·News, Event
Mrs. Cecil Blackwood · and
. daughU.r, Usa Dye, spent a
vaca'tion in carabelle,, Florida
a nd Dotham, Alabama, ·and
Mr . Blackwood a ccompanied
them home and went back by
plane.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Mor
rison,
Cincinnati,
called
Elfie
Wood
and
Mr,
and
Mrs.
Arthur
Crabtree , while '1lf their- farm
here .
. Mr . and Mrs. Fred Keirns ,
Millfield, call~d on relatives in

Do You Remember Your Loved Ones
At Easter Time - . See Our'

ao'vs

CEMETERY
DRESS JEANS.·
·SPRAYS
Flare or 'Cufled .in denims. twills or
hiP sash. Every color he' ll want,
many, many blue denims. Regular
and slims. Sizes 4 to 18.

94

94

AND

lOOK'
FOR YOUR
LAD or LASSIE

27 $' 87
TO

Goessler Jewelry Store

17

FINISH!·

hold from two to ·~·
· birthstones.

.$

A Big Variety Of
Types and Colors!

OTHERS

•••

•1.57 TO
•5.87

a

members whose tehns expire
June 30, 1973.
The new members are Miss
Te resa
Goldsberr y
o!
Pickering ton , Dewey C. Fuller
of
Cincinnati ,
George
Greenleaf, Irvin G. Lowery,
Dr. Robert Reese, Ned E .
Wil liams, an d Nor man H .
Ba ker , all of Columbus, and
Dr. Jacob See, super inte ndent
of Pe nta County Join t
Vocational School District.
The board voted to establish

.. ;·; .

..·.

'

'

MASON - ::._ The Rev . Chester Tennant,
pastor of the ;Mason Assembly of God Church,
off Route 33, e'a st of Mason, W.Va., announces
a missions rally "{orll"riday at 7:30 p.m.
featuring the Rev. and Mrs. J. Richard Dunn of
St Albans W. Va ., pictured at right.
· Rev. 'Dunn is a . grad ua"' · of the
Southeastern Sible College in Lakdand, ._Fia.;
and former· pastor at Weston, W.' Va. Tbe
couple is . preparing for the ~iss ion field in
Upper Volta, Southeast Afnca. They will
pres~nt a ~ilm. · 11The .Land of Mossi." The
public is invited . ·
·
.

a

..
"

I

,.•.

,

planning districts " to better
fa cilitate, career preparation

EASTER SPECIAL !

prQved the creation

or

tt1e

Crawford-Upper Sandusky and
Tri-Ri ve rs J oint Vocati ona l
Sc hool Distric ts.
The Crawford-Upper Sandusk y distric t includes the
Bucyru s and Galion city
sc hools, the Colonel Crawford
a nd Wynford Local Schools in
Crawford County ·a nd the
Upp er Sandusk y Ex empted
Village Schools ·In Wyandot
Coun ty.
The Tri-Rivers district includes the Marion city schools,
th e Elgin, Pleasant , Ridgedale
and River Valley Local Schools
in Mari on County, the Mt.
Gilead E xempted · Villa ge
$ chools, th e Cardington ·
Lincoln Local Schools and the
jlighland Local Schools in
Morrow County , and the North

'

'

e ,Big, 14 to 1
e MU.~~~~"~'~e!!ITS
D·lln.

• Sw" ' Mu1lc B o~e l n1lde!

•

••

••
••
••
••

Union Local Schools in Union
County .
The board also granted a
"special purposeH char.ter to
the Our Lady of the Elms
Spec ial Education . School in

Robinson's Cleaners

..._

lui tas le·treals to add color and
tla11or to your b a s ~e t s 1 Pile ·em
on . ki dSlove 'em •
• Big J -lb . Bags!
• Regular and Spind.'

·SHlRl
FINISHING

,,'

~;;::~~ JE~~s!. - b~s!~.! :~!!!",_

'

four new·vocational education

Chillicothe, Lebanon , London,
Ma nsfi eld, Marion, Marysville
and' th e Southern Ohio
Correctional . F'a c ility at' Akron.
Three distri cts gr a nted
Lucasville .
The board ad opted a permissi on fo issue bonds for
resolution submitted by .fohn the construction of new claSBR. Meckstroth of Cincinnati , room facilities were Goshen
board president, calling for Local Schools of Clermont and
le gisl a tion whi c h
would Warren counties, $1 ,270;000 :
Preve·rft impOundm e nt of
federal education fundin g. The
board
urged
Ohio 's
co ngres s ional del egation to
"bring immediate attention to
the seriousness of the fa ct that
S.AME DAY ,.
the appropriations bave not
SERVICE
been approved for the current
In AI 9- 0ul At 5
year ·of 1973."
· Use Our Free Parking LOt
Potential loss of fund s to the
schools of . Ohio for the 1974
· school year woUld be in 'excess
1116 E. 2nd, Pomeroy
:or $40 million , board me'mbers

Dunn family to
conduct rally .
Friday_evening

IN MIDDLEPORT ·

The board designated the
North Canton City Schools and
the Canton City Schools as
se para te dis tric ts a nd a p.

Participating inStitutions are
s tate-operated pri sons at

'·'

'·

and Madison Local Schools ol
Lake County , $1,495,000 .

opportunities " for students .

inmates in Ohio's penal instituations," board members
said . " Penal residents who
wish to participate in high
school courses not offered in
the· institution to whic h they
arc assigned will be ellglble for
transfer to an ins titution which
offe rs the course t,hey desire!'

Ti m:t Be~w.e r ,
Sherry Hollon,
a feature of the

PINAFORE GIRLS of the Chester operetta. Front row , I tor , are
Sheryl Ables, Tammi Samos, Cathy Morris; second row, l tor, Renee
Wendy Elkins, Jan Smith, Carolyn Rowen and Elizabeth Neff. They
·
··
·
presentation last Friday night.

RALL•s

Education, to replace eight

s,.tate

comprehensive curriculum for

· James B. O'Brien, Rober t&lt;
C. O'Brien to Carl H. Platter
Jr., Kay Platter, Lot, Mid
dleport.
Leo Morris, Linda Morr'i s ll
Buckeye Rural Elec. Coop Inc.

WOODEN
HANGERS

94

. Visit Shopper's MarT Before You Buy!

Rin9 c.an 'be made to

Court St.

-

Walnut

A hug e collection . .Fabric s of cotton , polyester , stretch nylon,
blends in a wide array of solid colors, stripes, prints or
jacquard s. Sizes S-M· L-XL to XXXlg. Get y'our supply wh i le
our selection is complete.

Elegant wood grain
fini sh
with
large
carrying handle. Big
capacity . Compare at ·$4 .98 .

/

Transfers

TANK TOPS OR SLEEVELESS SHELLS

Polyester , stretch nvlon
in a rainbow of colors.
Re gular.· and x . Lg .
sizes !

•

Property

WOMEN'S SLEEVELESS TOPS

to

departmen t. o!!icial, all three
districts have a right to ask lor
a public hearing within the
next 30 days.
The history of state board
has been to approve recommendations by its superinte nd~ n t in revoc.~Jti on matters,
wlth few exceptions. And the
state cour ts, under " manda te"
by the legislature, have denied
a ppeal s aga ins t orde r s to
consolida te with no exceptions
in recent years.
In other business, the UP!
reported the state boa rd voted
to give state School SuperinU.ndent Mar tin W. E sse x a pa y
~ai se from $10,000 to ,50,000 a
year .
The pay hike for Essex,
effective July 1, puts him
$10,000 above the salary of Gov.
John J . Gilligan.
The Ohi o Board of Re gents
voted recently to poost the
salry of its new cha ncellor,
James A. Norton, to $50,000.
The boa rd gave final ap·
proval to the prison program
by granting a &lt;~special pur~
pose" c har~er to the state
Department of Rehabllltation
· and C9rrection.
The c ha rte r e na bles th e
departm e nt to pr ov id e a

Meigs

Choose From Hundreds

$ 24

According

•

I

eight persons to ~ Advisory
Commission for Voca tional' .

commodate a comprehensive
high school curriculum .

farmer , also

operates a seed and fertilizer
business. He is married and
has two children. .Farmers
and Traders Life offers a
complete line of personal life
insuranc e
and
health
policies.

PR.

a

member of . the

In precious lOki. yellow
or white gold.

Kautz, a

94

$

GRASS

For their E.l ster shoes
select from our budget priced;
collection. We ' ll save- · you
money on the newest styles ·it's
well known fact . .

Set with radiant birth.
ston~s ~one stone: for
eac;~

" Bat a" quality ... Made in
U. S. A . white, colors ,
plaid s. All sizes.

Boil s water for t ea , soup
or cof fee. Cord incl ud ed.

Madisou Loc al Schools of
or resources and adequate sa id.
The board also appointed Franklin County, $4,490,000,
fa cilities designed to ac-

Elementary and Sec ondary
Education and his assistant,
Dr. Doyle Shumaker.
Their proposal came a lter
the three dis tr icts wer e
evaluated duri ng the week of
Feb . 12. The ~ tate listed '!l
violations against Han nan
Trace, 22 against North Gallia
and 25 aga inst SouthwesU!m .
Dr . Shuma ke r sa id the
problems a nd s~ortcomin gs of
the districts were due largely
to the limi ted e nrollment, lack

and curriculum. None of the
three
districts
pr ovide
adequate
lea rnin g
oppor tunities for boys a nd girls ·
enrolled in these schools." .
Hannan Tr'a ce has , 712
st~dents, North Gallia 945 and
SouthwesU.rn 513,
The actiQn was taken upon
the recommendation or Slate
Supt. of Pubtic Ins truc tion
Ma r tin Essex based upon the
re com inen datio nS of J . E.
Br own , director , Division of

DALE M. KAUTZ
llale M. Kautz ol Pomeroy
has been elected to the Soard
of lllrectors of Farme~s and
Tra ders Life Ios-.ra·n ce
company of Syracuse, N. y .

CANVAS
OXFORDS

HOT
POT

MOTHER

'

CHILDREN'S

4 Cup Electric

White or Milk Choc01ate

Useful . Decorators

w I gf ga
Minn
22 9 7
spirit
and
enthusiasm.
ATHENS - The Athens
Ph i la
22 7 9
Each event viii be divided
Jaycees. will again co-sponsor
Monday's Results
competitive ( No games schedllled)
the Third Annual Southeastern into
Tuesday's Games
Ohio , Regional
$pecial t:lassifications, based on sex
Buffalo at Montreal
Olympics
for
retarded · and· age groups as follows: B-9; N.Y. Rangers af Bos·ton
childre n.
10·12, 13-15, 16·18, 19 and over. ·Ch icago at St. Louis
The Special Olympics will be We anticipaie lhat the par· Phi.ladefphia at Minnesota
,
. .
ABA RELOCATION
held at Peden Stadium in · ticipants in the 50 yard dash
NEW YORK · ( UP! ) - The
Athens, on May· 26, begi~ning and ot?er ~vents . of great
~ru~tees 'of
the . American
. at 9:30 a .m. Events scheduled popularity will be further sub·
Mondav··s Baseball R~sults
8re:. 50 yard d3sh, ,3oo yard divided·i~to ability divisions as .. By Un~~e~i~~s~ re~e;::tionaT Basketball · ASsociation . uhariidas h, standing long jump, soft de termin e d bJ trial times . Cleveland
001 001 OOt - 3 9 o mousiy ·a pproved .Monday the
· ball th. row , high J·urnp, 200 yard .submitted on the . applic.ation Nevi York
010 ooo ooo - 1 B 1 re]ocation o! the Dallas ftarr·
Strom ·(l . Q) and Duncan ; &gt;hise to San Antonio, Tex. The.
relay ( four participants) and · form . All events are subject to Peterson.· Mc Daniel (6) and
team will be · under new
440 yard re)ay (four par. can cellation or consolidation Munson . LP-Peterson 10·11 .
·
·
b d 1 k 0· f t Is E h
National League
management.
ticipan ls l.JP-··
.
ase on ac
en ran · ac
San Oiego
100 000 000- 1 4 1
These ~cOts will be offered ' child m~y enter three : in~ San Franci sco 001 010 OOx. 2 6 2
in th e Ohio State Special dividual .events and one r elay Caldwell, Troedson 17 1 and .
.
Davis ; Bry~nt p .o) and Rader _.
B
t "f 1
Olympics scheduled in June, event.
LP-Caldwell (0-11 . HR -Speier
eau 1 U ·
with the exception of the 200 · The Friendship School in 1st.
FLOWERING
yard r e lay.· The latter relay Marietta is co-sponsoring the Los Angeles OOQ. 000 l00--l
5 1
will be offered only in Athens Special Olympics Swimming Houston
, 00 000 OJx~ 4 6 1 .
.PLANTS
with the ex pectation of team Event, which i~ to be · held on ward .· LP - Hough lO-ll .
Easter Lilies
May 5. Events offered will be: H_R_- Wynn l2na) .
Hydranges
25 yard free style, 50 yard free CinCinnati ·ooo 040 004~ 10 4
Azaleas
style , 25 yard back stroke, 50 Atlanta
000 300 103- 7 9 i
The Daily Sentinel
·
Nelson, McGfothlin IBJ. Hall
Iyard back stroke,IIHl free style (8). Carroll (9), Borbon (91 and
· ·
'
·
·
DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
relay. All these events with the Bench ; Morton, Niek'ro (5).
MEIGS · MASON AREA
59 N. 2nd St.
exception of the 50 yard back House .(8). 1HQerner 191 , UpCHESTER L. TANNEHILL,
. shaw (9) and Dates . WP-Hall
Middleport, 0 .
E~ee_c ,_ad .
stroke, will be offered at the 11 -0l LP-Hoerner (1 -11 . HRs ROBERT HOEFLICH ,
State Special Olympics. The Perez (lsi) Bimch (1st).
City Editor
Publ is hed da ll y e•cept
Swimming Olympics will start
Salur.da~· by The ·Oh io Valley'
Pubi1Sh 1ng Company . 111
at 10 a .m , at the Marietta
.
Court St ., · Pomeroy, Ohio ,
Y
.litc.A.,
located
on
Seventh
.tl5769 . Bus iness Off ice Phone
992 · 2156 , Ed i tor ial Phone 992 .
Street and · Glendale in
2157 .
•
Marietta.
The
Marietta
SecOnd c l.ass postage pa id 111
Pomeroy . Oh io.
Y .M.C.A. will be providing
- National ad 11e rl is ing
judges, timers, and life guards,
represenlat ille
Bo t l i nel li'.
Gallagher , Inc ., 12 Ea st 42nd
however each school should
St ., New Yor ~.Ci ly , New York .
send
suffiCient number .of
Subs c ript ion · rales : De .
· livered by c arri er w here
c haperones to help ' i~ dressing
available 50 c en ~ s per week ;
By flttotor Route where carr ie r
and guiding of their children in
serv ice not ava i lable : On e
•
the e vent itse lf. Further
month 11.75 . By ma il in Oh io
and W . Va . • One y(!ar $14.00 .
qu estions eonce rning the
Si,.; months $7 . 25 . Thre e
Olympics Swim Meet should be
months $.4 .50 . Sub sc r i pt ion
pr ice includes Sunday . T ime s.
r eferred to Dick Greten,
Sentinel .
Friendship School, Marietta.

LA-z-·e ov

As expec ted , the State Board
ol Education Monday voted to
·•consider revoking " the
charters of North Gallia ,
Hannan Trace· and SouthwesU.rn School Districts in
Gallia County.
According to United Press
Inwrnational a bo~rd spokesman said, " All three districts
are grossly below minimwn
standards in lhe critical areas
of quali fied personnel, in-'
structlonal facilities, ma terials

Aparicio

window or the cOmeri _
store .
P t ople bought these lillie

-

Board looking at_Gallia school charters

•
worrymg

and bunnies" for sale In th e

..

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, April 10, 1973

••
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•• 37.t

4

EGO COLOR

3

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•

"'·115 " I

IICI:!.\ •1111

ca lor~

rt11 em ilnd ~ u r pu sa .
~ o w c lu td r enr E~ ch -

rod yP.II Ow
an•l blul! ·

a speci al
1-"'!"'~·~...c..· -~'•'II'II'',.'·.,·",.·".' •"'II'~- Send
message tq a

EASTER
(ABDS
specia l fr ie nd!

RALL'S BEN FRANKLIN
MIDDLEPOiiT, 0.

.

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;::::::=:~:=:~ :~::::~:::::::::: ::::::;::::::;:;:;:;:;: ;:::::::::::: :: ::: ::::.::~:::::;::::: :: ;:; ;;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;::;::::~:::::::;:;:;:; :;: ;:; :~:;:;:;:: :;:::::; :;:;::::=::::::;:;::::::·

this area on Sat\lfday .
Those fr om this community ,
who attended the 4-H Leader
Roundup at the Hocking Valley
Motor Lodge nea.'r Nelsonville
we.re club members, Cheryl
Lawson, Virginia Jordan ,
Les te r. J e ffers and Marc o
Jeffers and · assistant , Mrs .
Dor.sey Jordan .
Mr. an_d Mrs. Robert Ma\tox
were overnight _guests · of his
brother and s ister-in-law, Mr.
and Mrs . Herman MattOx,
Charles ton , West
South
Virginia .
Mr . an~ Mrs . Murrell Bailey
have purchased a trailer home
and are living near the Earl
Starkey home .
Mr. and Mrs . Ralph Frazier,
Gallipolis , visited her mother ,
Mrs. Goldi e Gill ogly, and
called other relatives in this
commwlity .

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Those attending_ a dinner in Hanng and daughters.
honor of the birthday of Mrs.
M'.s. Donald Crabtree and
Conard Ator at the home of Mr. Cinly, local , and Shirley Dean ,
and. Mrs. Ronald Whittington Larcaster, vis ited with Murl
·wer e ·Mr.· and Mrs . Conard Galwit:Y.
Ator • . Albany, . and Kristin
Nr . and Mr s. Lavern J ordan
Powell, Amesville.
. am Danny , loca l, and Mr. and
Guests of Mr . and Mrs . Joe Ms . David Uewelyn, New
McWhorter and family were Mtrs hfi eld , we r e Sunday
Mr. and Mrs: Robert Lich Bnd e~ning gues,ts of Mr . a nd Mrs.
son and Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy R.,d . Jeffers.

on

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two phones are better than one
... Io s~ v e yo u steps. 10 br ing mo re pleas ure . conven ie nce
a nd secu rity to your ho me . No w. fo r thal second phone you
rea lly know you ·n e e d . the re's a fasci n a t ing selection of
fun c tio na l, co lorf ul , cleve r. Crazy. soph islic a te d .. ne w-fas hion
o ld -fas h ioned designe r /d eco ra lo r telep ho nes in G e nera l
Te lephOne 's Ex te nsi o n Exlra va ga nza . Li ke th e STYLELINE®
te le phone ... Ihe phone th a t pu is the wo rks so lig htly in the
palm of you r ha nd ... ha nd sel, dr a l and reca ll bul!o n , too .
Cou ld anything be easie r (and co me in nine exc iting c olors, too)?
,.

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({!l([{jj_~~-

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3 HP
.20 INCH CUT

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ONLY

SHE'Ll USE PLENTY NOW ·AND
THE HOT DAYS .AHEAD!

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Push Type

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CRADLEPHONES are the very last
word In sophisticated styling ...
Mediterranean. Grecian Cameo ,
all
Brocade, Antique White .
resplendent with gold trim and
fingerwheels. Conversation pieces
righfoul ol another world.

Get ·Your ~uffy Now!

.

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••
.··································-·········

CANDLESTICK PHONE... . the new·

GIRLS 2 PIECE
.•.•

JAMAICA
SHORT
SETS ·

la s hio n old - fa s h io ned p h one
styled righ t out o! the. roar ing
twent1es in Black Bottom Blac k.
Whilfenpoof Wh ite and Razza ma·
tazz Red . Except tha t we did away
with the separate big old be ll bo~

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SIZE3 To 14 ·
Many, Many Styles!

94 $

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·'

TO

POMEP,'Y .

BAKER FURNITURE
M

0.

992-2848

Open Friday Until 8 p.m.
We Close at 5:30 Saturday

! ·. · ·&amp;TARLITE~ teleph'one is a pract 1ca1
:
:

A·· :
:

•
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•

luxury for "her room .·· Da inty h1gh·
style with · dial that glows . Id eal
-lor. nlgh l table or vanity lor after ·
dark dialing. or as a friendly..ad ·
, jus ~abte. l)rlgh t ne ss night light

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liji:l
GEriERAL TELEPHOnE .
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6- The.I&gt;ally Sentinet,Middleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., April!O, 1973

•.

Mrs. Reid Youngi~&lt;so;cv:lar,,_,_,l Masons
named president ICalendar I wel~omed
0if &amp;a den clu b
TUESDAY
RACINE LODGE 461 F&amp;AM
Tuesday, 7, 30 p:m . All master
masons invited.· Refreshments.
THE WSCS of Pomeroy
United Methodist Church

-¥
f I

gave meditations from Ideals Tuesday, 7 : 30~.m . Miss Grace
on Easter, presented several Campbell will present an
scriptures, and a poem "The
Easter program. .
Betrayal in One Solitary Life."
AMERICAN
LEGION
Seed packages were con- . Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
tributed by the members lor a 363, home of Mrs. Lula Hamp4-H Club.
ton , 7 p.m.
A demonstra.t ion entitled
"Eggs Anytime" waS given by
EASTERN Band Boosters,
Mrs. Richard Barton who 7:30 tonight at high school.
included several lY.himsical Discussiqn on band camp, tag
Easter decorations. She day and state trip; election of
co~secretariesi Mrs . Karl
Krautter, treasurer; and Mrs. displayed an Easter basket officers.
WEDNESDAY
Roy
Miller,
assistant made !Tom a bleach bottle cilt
in the shape of a duck with net
ORGANIZATION of senior
treasurer.
and
felt
deco(ations
and
citizens
club for PortlandVarieties of daffodils were
named in response to roll call several egg shaped plasti~ Racine area, Wednesday, 1
by the 26 members and three containers filled with flowers p.m . at Church of Latter Day
guests attending. Mrs. Miller and miniature animals and Saints on Racine~Por tJand
decorated with sequins and Road. All persons 55 or over
paints. She also displayed an invited. Pearl Welker and
arrangement o( decorated eggs Margaret Amberger of Meigs
on bare branches and several County Council on Aging sill!I
kinds of daffodils and nar- to be presen t: Cookies and
cissus.
coffee refre shments . For
Another arrangement transportation call 992-7884 or
featured·flowering crabapples, 992-7886.
Or SC 00 USe . pink tulips and decorated eggs
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
in a green t-eramic container p .m . Wednesday af the
PORTLAND- The Portland while another one showed American . Le gion hall in
P-T.O met Wednesday evening fl
.
Middleport.
owering peach as the
at the school with the background for daffodils and
MIDDLEPORT
Literary ·
president,
Mrs.
Shirley
Club, 2 p.m . Wednesday at the
'd'
tulips . .
J ohnson
preSJ mg.
The
For arrangements on display home of Mrs . Nan Moore. Mrs.
minutes .of the last meeting at the meeting, · four blue James Eule r will review
" Remembered .
were read by Mrs. Merle r1'bbons were awarded, along Stuart' s
Evans and the treasurer's WI'th one red one;· and Utree Dawn ", and .Mrs. J. E. Harley
report was given by Mrs. blue ribbons were given for will review :'Rough Riders" by
Grace
Furbee.
Christie specimens.
Virgil Carrington Jones.
Lawrence led the pledge to the
A dessert course was served
MIDDLEPORT The
flag.
by the hostesses, Mrs. Karr Amateur Garden Club of
It was announced that the and Mrs. Paul Baer. Mrs. Middleport will meet at 8 p.m.
flag provided by Twlla Buckley and Miss Jane at the home of Mrs. Eddie
new
Congressman Miller has Ann Karr assisted in the ser- Burkett.
·
POMEROY " Middleport
arrived and also a flag for one vmg.
.
I
~c assroom was provided by the
Lions Club, at nooii·;·Meigs Inn.
Racine American · Legion
All . members are asked to
· Auxiliary. The flag- previously .,.,
:::::::::::::::::=:~:::::::~:?.::~=r.::::f.::::::~:::::::~=:~:::::::
·
,. atten d .
CHESTER - Election of
officers highlighted the Alri!
meeting of the Olester Garden
Club held at the home of Mrs.
Horace Karr.
• Elected were Mrs. Reid
Young, president: Mrs. Pearl
Mora, first vice president;
Mrs. Ivan Walker, second vice
president: Mrs. Robert Wood
' and Mrs. Jean Summerfield,

Portland P-T.()
has 2 new flags

fi

h l

~:z~id.::;' ~~e t~:s~eer~:~ lili

Legion is now hanging in the
gym.
The recent skating party
held al' the Chester skate,away
· for all the school children and
brothers and. sisters was a
great success. .
Mrs. Johnson said $285 in the
Portland school fund when the
school was closed five years
ago, which has been turned
over to the ~chool board, has
been- returned to the school.
This was money that had been
· made at ball games and
through the sale of shirts, etc.
It was decided to use part of the
money for floor mats for all the
doors, to buy a deep fryer for
the kitChen, physical fitness
· records, globes and trophies
lor a field day.
· 'the ·milk bill of $9.75 for
needy students was paid.
The P-T-0 will also pay the
bus driver for the trip to
Fenton Glass in May. All fifth
and sixth grade mothers are
invited on this trip.
Final plans for the soup
supper.· and talent show to be
held April 6 were made and it
was voted to pay several small
bills for items needed for the
supper. The·school children are
planning · to give away an
electric ·broom and will use
donations to buy balls and bats.

Pomeroy . . . !1' PoMERoY chapter 8o,
\t Personal Notes :_,:.\!. ~"[.~~ngA;,c3~'PM~s:~sPo~~~

Spencer, and Mrs: Erma
Hendricks. For the party the
Middleport
senior
unit
provided 10 dozen cookies, and
two large boxes of potato chips.
The junior members of the
Middleport unit sent 16 pound
of peanut britUe, 36 candy bars
' and 25 sandwiches. They also
·PfOVided decorated napkins
and game p'hzes including
scratch pa,~. men 's handkerchiefs, lipstick, eyebrow
pencils, and 30 pieces of
jewelry .
The juniors also sent several
sacks of miscellaneous items

Five members of the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett · Post 128,
Middleport, assisted Thursday

The charter was draped in
memory of two members,_
George Baker and Mrs. Mabel
Sanborn at the Thursday night
meeting
of
Evangeline

wlth a community service
party at the Southeastern Ohio
Mental Health Cen ter at
Athens conduc ted by the
Eighth District. Mrs. Dorothy
Heck_er of GaUipolis, district

Chapter, Order or the Eastern
Star, at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. .
Mrs. Helen Milhoan, worthy
matron, presided at the
meeting during which time
attending
were
Masons
honored and given a special
welcome.

community service chainnan.
had charge of the party.
Contributing IS hours on field
service at the·party were Mrs.
Etta Will, Mrs. Dottie Will,
Mrs. Freda Clark, Mrs. Edith'

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 · Sun. 10 to 10

Church grou'J"11 rehabilitati~n

read from other chapters

USDA CHOICE

The Cheshire Chapter inspection date has been changed
to May 15 · due to the recent
illness of the worthy matron,
Kathryn Metzger.
It was reported that Mrs.
Glenna Crisp, an officer of
Evangeline Chapter, is home •
from the Holzer Medical
Center. Plans were made for a
blind auction to be held at the
next meeting. Proceeds !Tom
'this will go the worthy grand
matron's project for the Grand
Chapter of Ohio. Additional
knives will be ordered· for sale
by the chapter. Work sessions
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. George M. Zuspan of Mason, W.
in the basement of the Temple
Va. are announcing the approaching marriage of their
were set'!or every Wednesday
daughter, Alice Ernestine Zuspan to Mr. Herbert T. Harmon,
night with volunteers welcome.
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert T. Harmon, Sr., Gallipolis.
Following a report from the
The open-church wedding will be an event of Saturday,
budget committee, Paul
April14, at 5 p.m. at the Christian Brethren-Church, Mason,
Darnell was appointed to
W. Va. The Rev. James Lewis will perform the ceremony and
proceed with the installation of
a reception will follow in the church basement.
a telephone. Members desiring
The bride-elect is ,a 1971 graduate of Wahama High
to pre-register or make
School and is presently employed at the Point Pleasant
reservations to Grand Chapter
Medical Center. Her fiance is a 1971 graduate of Point
are asked to telephone Mrs.
Pleasant High School and is employed at the Amherst Coal
Milhoan, 992-5602 before
Co. in Huntington, W. Va. The couple will reside in Gallipolis
Thursday. _
following their wedding. ·
Roberta Circle will meet at
McConnelsville on Aprill9 with
a potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m.
OFFICERS ELECTED
SON IS BORN
There will be ·election of ofOfficers were elected when
Mr · and Mrs. Gene Abbott of
ficers at the · meeting and the Rock Springs United · Carroll are announcing the
secret _sisters will be revealed. Methodist Church junior youth birth of a son, Joseph Gene,
Harry Chesher, . worthy fellowship · met
Monday born on March 21 at the Laomatron, announced that in~ evening at the church. They \ caster Hospif&lt;ll. Ttte couple
structlon for new members will are Billie Addison , president; \ have ... two daughters, Lorrie
be held at· the next meeting. Fonda Rapp, vice president; \. Lee, seven, and Megan Lee,
Cake and coffee were served. Tracy JefferS, secretary; Pam four. Grandparents are Mr.
Evans, treasurer; Linda Part- and Mrs. J. W. Morris and Mr.
low, news reporter; Christy and Mrs. M. .E . Ab.bott, MidEvans, Tina Randolph, game dieport.
·-·····J leaders. Plans were made for a
• NAME OMfTTED
skating party. Fourteen
Mrs.
Rex
Shenefield
members answered roll can.
presented
several
piano
Counselors present were Mrs.
Mrs. Ernest Ruth recently Hugh Bearhs, Mrs. James .s elections at the -,~ annual

•

.

.USDA Choic.e

09..

GROUND ROUND•• 1~·~.1
·
a
9
e
GROUND BEEF. •••• !b~
•1
09
BEEF STEW ••••••••• ~b~. . ·
e
Braunschwe1ger•••• !b~ 9

party for the

DAUGHTER BORN
Dr. and Mrs. James D. Rice
of Gastonia, N. C. are an- ·
nouncing the birth of a
daughter, Karen Michelle, on
March 29. The infant weighed
.eight poWldSl nine ounces, Dr.
and Mrs. Rice have a son,

The Men 's Fellowship and
the Women 's Missionary
Society of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church will dine at
supper and meet together in
May, women of the church
planned recently , Mrs. Jean
Wright presided at the meeting
which opened with prayer by
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs. Roil call
was ta~en by Mrs. Es~ Wise
and members paid dues and
pledges. Mrs. Wright gave ""
article on " How to niustrate
Scripture''.
The program by Mrs. Iva
Powell was "The Miracle of
Howard R. Allen, general
manager of The Way Bible
Research Center at New
Knoxville ". Carman Evans
had the closing prayer . .
Attending the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Amber Lohn, Mrs. Laura
Schaefer, Mrs. Stella Curtis,
Mrs. Marguerite Leifheit, Mrs.
Tina Jacobs, Mrs. Bernice
Jeffers, Mrs. Bertha Parker.

Scott, age· five, and a daughter,
Catherine, three. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.

USDA CHOICE BEEF

·

AT NEW LOW PRICE

•

News, Notes

By The Piece
i

lb~

.

.

SUPERIORS
USDA CHOICE

SIRLOIN STEAK

.

Mrs. Melva Rice, Ashland, and
Joseph D. Rice of Gainesville,
Fla .

WIENERS

Florida 's· Finest!

SEE OUR

'

~~ '

ORANGES

Elegant .
After Five

5~b.

DRESSES ·

. /,...

'.......

'

-,. ' '

~--

ill~·lf
,, • '
_r,J!·-

·

TOP ROUND

STEAK

SIRLOIN TIP ROAST

# '.,..

- ·. ;,-.
.,.•. ·-

USDA CHOICE

¢

pkg_

.

......~

bag

lOLA'S

('\

lb.

~-....

USDA
CHOICE

$ 59

BONELESS

Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy

CLEAN

WELKER'S

RC COLA

We take your order
.promptly _ . _ and
cook food to your
taste. Join us for great
eating, modest prices.

Drop in Soon

Household

(SMALL SIZE)

.

AUSTIN'S

At the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
'

quart
.

bottle

Diet Rite Cola or Dad's Root Bear
16 oz. bois.

•

39¢

8

en er

Slender

TWO GREAT VACATI.ONS FROM
..
NEWSPAPER TOURS
HAWAII DELUXE $799
.

.

Departs every month in 1973. Let yourself go
in the Aloha Spjrit. We'll show you thundering
volcanoes and wind cave canyons on ·the most
fabled chain of islands in the world. See Kauai
Oahu, Maui, and Hawaii. Includes .air fare, ·
meals, hotels, sightseeing. Truly a great
bargain.

.Air Cruise to Europe. ·. Depa,rting
Sunday; July 8th. Returning Sunday,
.July 22nd. $995 plus $29 .tax and tips,
Travel by jet, ship and rail. Includes
a II ·tips and taxes, deluxe motorcoac;h .
for all sightseeing; first Class hotels,
twQ meals daily, baggage handling,
round trip jet from Ohio. This is the
tour of the year! See Lisbon, Madrid, ·
Paris, Amsterdam, London.
'

Produced and Directed by

RIOiARD LEWIS TRAVEL SERVICE
Call 992-2156 At
.The Dally· Sentinel ·
-

sitting service to be provided.
Refreshments:
REVIVAL, 7:30 e~ch evening
at Mt. Moriah Church of God,
through April 15, ·. the Rev.
Donald Combs, evangelist.
XI GAMMA MU Thursday,
home of Mrs. Rober!&lt;~ O'Brien
with Mary Morris co-hostess,
at 7:45p.m.
FRIDAY
YOUNG
Adult
Class,
Bradford Church of Christ, 7:30
p,m, Friday at the church.
PANCAKE Supper, Friday,
beginning 4 p.m . at Rutland
Elementary School, sponsored
by · Rutland Fire Depariment ·
and Auxiliary. Public invited.
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
, chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, 2 p.m.,
Friday, home of Mrs. Emerson
Jones, Middleport. Program
by Mrs. Dale Dutton. Roll call,
ari admired wo(l1an. Co~
hostesses, . Mrs . LaWfence ·
.
Milhoan, Mrs. Everett Hayes.
SALE PLANNED
There will be a rwnmage
sale Thursday and Friday in
the Coates building, Middleport, sponsored by the Rose
Garden Club.

.

· Henry Block has.
17 reasons ·why you
should come to us
for income tax.h~lp.
Reason 2.

great while we make a

error means you must pay additional .tax
'

.

· Mounting, Balancing
Federal Excise Tax!!!

. (j'•'
''

.

•

$12.50 Each

including cap a~d nuts

'

you pay only the tax. We pay any 'i nterest
or penalty.

•

•

6"

- 7"

including cap and

I
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Pomeroy, 0.

. Corner Second &amp; Sycamore.-Gallipolis, o.
Open 9 A.M. to 5 P. M: Mon. thru Sat.
5.7 Court St.

592-2851

·

·. Athens, 0

Only 6 Days Left- ·No Appointment Necessary.

l

I

D

nu~

- 1 ·t

•:•:::

z=
Q

N

•

HOURS
9:00A.M.
TO
·48 month
5:00 P.M.
Guarantee
Monday
BATTERIES
Thru
Saturdaj
$20:00
--l)pen Till
· TO
7 P.M.
00
12 volt

$25.

Friday

3
•

1- ''+, · ---

.

•
•
•

-

•

pts.
for

.FRENCH FRIES

$

GREEN GIANT

2
DONALD DUCK

•

~:~ 39~

SPECIAL! NEW SHIPMENT

..I.,

8-TRACK TAPES _ $
Popular, Country, Western

·.SAVE

39

·INSTANT RH.GER'S
COFFH CRYSTALS

EA.

SPt:C\Al

PI~[

WITH THiS COUPON

-------,

NORTH STAR

WHEN YOU BUY A
10 oz : Jar of

gg~ -

•J

$1 2':69¢ s::$

qua~rts~~~

'100

ORE IDA FROZEN

COFFEE
FROZEN · ORANGE ORANGE
"
PUSH-UPS
CREAMER -'" VEGETABLES JUICE

..•

4/$85
4/$96·

0

MEADOW MOOR

•

MULTI smE RALLY

304 E. Main .· 992-3795

ICE·
MILK·

''

500 ct.
boxes

.

EXTRA SPECIAL! SCOT LAD

,...

WHEEL SPORT WHE ......,.,
- EXITER

in a
mistake.
But if our
.

99

BOOK I\,1ATCHES

10 OUNCE
CANS

,G,H, &amp; J 78 X 14
G,H,J, &amp; L 78 X 15

W~'re human , and once

:: 59¢

MARK V BONUS BUYI

24.00

,.

LEMON
DETERGENT

50-lb. .$
bag

225 .
ca\oriCS

. ANY SIZE .

I

FABRIC
SOFTENER

DOG CHOW

LIQUID

...

AUSTIN'S...

PURINA

pak
. SPECIALI THRU SAT.

-

AUSTIN'S

g~~:n .89~ .

CARNATION

Saturday April 14th

MEDALLION MARQU.IS PREMIUM 4 ply polyester for strength
and smooth ride 78 series, 7 rib ·
will deliver extra mileage

59$

bottle

WINDOW
CLEANER

.

LIME
DETERGENT
quart

Adolph's Dairy
. -Valley

We're doing it again, your response. has been so great that
we have decided to continue our spring sale prices through

UP SALE!
AUSTIN'S

PAK
16 .OZ.

DISCOUNT TIRE

and insuran.c e.
Marshall Kimmel will discuss
services . of Bureau of
.Rehabilitation. Mary Bacon, .
coordinator, will discuss social
security and weliMe. Baby

59~

l-Ib.

lb.

NEW CROP

NEW HAVEN

agreement~

·ELM Hill .. ·- ·

Herman Carson, Long Bottom,

Fast Service?

~~~.................

BOLOGNA

ROUND STEAK

Like Quality,

Reedsville

ELM HILL

ANY AMOUNT

plans supper

Alice Ernestine Zuspan to wed

.

'

.

SUPERIORS

." '" We Reserve '!'he Right To Limit Quantities''

veterans thiS week.

annoWlcing their :Inspections.

USDA Choice Beef Lower Priced This Week!

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
. PHONE: 992-3480

for use as . game prizes at a

Severa1 invitations were

Masonic Hall. Most Excellent
master degree to be conferred.
John
Ray . Tubbs .of Refreshments.
Washington Court House
visited over the weekend with
THURSDAY
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
AFTERNOON
CIRCLE,
Norman· 1 Smith ' and Mrs. Middleport Heath United
Mildred Tubbs, Pomeroy.
Methodist Church, Thursday at
Mrs . Burgess Ferguson, the church. Mrs. M. L. French
, Huntington, is spending 'time will present the lesson entitled
honored her husband, Ernest, Evans and Mrs. Levi Partlo+. Grange banquet. Her name ·here visiting Mrs . D. A. "The New Age of Faith ."
and Mrs. Carl Buckley with a The group will meet at 6:30 was unintentionally. omitted
Dodson, Chester . while Mr. and Hostesses, Mrs. Emerson
birthday dinner. Other guests . each Monday evening during from the program mate(ial.
Mrs. Eroll Conroy are visiting Jones, Mrs. C. ·M. Hennesy,
the summer months.
their daughter, Rose, in Mrs. Crary Davis, and Mrs. M. included Mrs. Alice Foully and
Mr. an&amp; Mrs. Rome Sandy of
Nebraska.
C. Wilson. ·
.
Parkersburg, 'fV. V'l., Mr.'and
Mrs. Raymond Frank spentFESTIVAL DATE SET
ROCK SP!QNG Grange , Mrs. Garett Reed, Coolville·
the weekend at Chester with
Thursday night visit to the Ohio Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Kibble:
COLUMBUS _ A hangar at
Mrs. D. A. Dodson and Mrs.
Valley Grange .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lawrence
Rose
""--····
• the old Ohio University airport
Burgess Ferguson : The three
Better
Health
Carl
Buckley
and
Ann
Buckley.
will be the site of a two-day arts
.
LAUREL
Cliff
·visited on Saturday afternoon
Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
Mr.andMrs.HaroldJohnson
festival, May 12-13, sponsored
with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
the
hom
e
of
Mrs.
·
Allen
ha~e
moved
to
Belpre.
by the Hocking Valley CraftsTrussell of Bashan.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell men. State Representative
Here for a weekend visit with Elchinger.
MEIGS Co unty Humane Chevalier and family, and Claire " Buzz" Ba 11 , r R -9ls t
their parents, Mrs. D. A.
· ·
d th e Ohi o
Society, 7:30 ·p.m. Thursday, Garrell Chevalier of Mansfield, District,
an~ounce
Dodson a9d Mr. and Mrs.
Maynard Barr, were Mr. and Middleport Village Hall. Im- Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer of Arts Council grant of $500 that
portant business to be trans- Tuppers Plains. , Mr. and Mrs . is helping to fund the Sprmg
·
Mrs. Jack Conroy of Columbus.
acted and members· urged to Roy Reed and. daughters of
Festival.
attend.
Tuppers Plains, and Mr. and
The City of Athens is
MIDDLEPORT . Child Mrs . Zenith Chevalier of providing the hangar at no cost
MEETING CANCELLED
ConservaH.Qn League annual Belpr.e were guests of Mr: and to the group who · p1ans to
A meeting of the Past dinner, Seddon's Restaurant, Mrs. Edward Chevalier.
charge 25 cents admission to
.. Councilors Club of Theodorus Parkersburg Mall, i p.m .
·
1
·
adults
and free admission to
How G aciers Form
Council 17, Daughters Qf Thursday.
· children. The festival -. will
America, scheduled for ThursMEETING FOR parents of · G I a c i e r s ·are produced
·
include craft exhibitions,
day night has been cancelled. work-study studenis at Meigs w hen-. heavy_ s now s d urmg
· the wmter pile up more than workshops · and
demonThe May meeting will be held Hi h Sch 00-1 7.30
g
• ·
p.m. Thurs- they melt in the spring and strations, all to the .. acat the regular time.
day. Mrs. Erma Finch, Miss summer. Eventually the · companiment of · folk music
Stephanie Niemiec and Som snow at about 200 feet 'deep
Crow will discuss wage is Compressed into ice.
performed by local musicians.
:%::

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

.

Party conducted

12

pak

69¢
·

I

I
I

I

· WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A. 10 OZ. JAR OF .

I
I
I
I
I

Instant ·.

MAXWELL HOUSE•

I

COFFEE

SEALTEST

1h gal.

ICE CREAM

•

crt.

I

MARK V SUPER MARKET

AT

.I
I

10 OZ.

JAR ONll$
WITH COUPON

I
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MAY 5, l973-- .J

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6- The.I&gt;ally Sentinet,Middleport.Pomeroy, 0 ., April!O, 1973

•.

Mrs. Reid Youngi~&lt;so;cv:lar,,_,_,l Masons
named president ICalendar I wel~omed
0if &amp;a den clu b
TUESDAY
RACINE LODGE 461 F&amp;AM
Tuesday, 7, 30 p:m . All master
masons invited.· Refreshments.
THE WSCS of Pomeroy
United Methodist Church

-¥
f I

gave meditations from Ideals Tuesday, 7 : 30~.m . Miss Grace
on Easter, presented several Campbell will present an
scriptures, and a poem "The
Easter program. .
Betrayal in One Solitary Life."
AMERICAN
LEGION
Seed packages were con- . Auxiliary, Lewis Manley Post
tributed by the members lor a 363, home of Mrs. Lula Hamp4-H Club.
ton , 7 p.m.
A demonstra.t ion entitled
"Eggs Anytime" waS given by
EASTERN Band Boosters,
Mrs. Richard Barton who 7:30 tonight at high school.
included several lY.himsical Discussiqn on band camp, tag
Easter decorations. She day and state trip; election of
co~secretariesi Mrs . Karl
Krautter, treasurer; and Mrs. displayed an Easter basket officers.
WEDNESDAY
Roy
Miller,
assistant made !Tom a bleach bottle cilt
in the shape of a duck with net
ORGANIZATION of senior
treasurer.
and
felt
deco(ations
and
citizens
club for PortlandVarieties of daffodils were
named in response to roll call several egg shaped plasti~ Racine area, Wednesday, 1
by the 26 members and three containers filled with flowers p.m . at Church of Latter Day
guests attending. Mrs. Miller and miniature animals and Saints on Racine~Por tJand
decorated with sequins and Road. All persons 55 or over
paints. She also displayed an invited. Pearl Welker and
arrangement o( decorated eggs Margaret Amberger of Meigs
on bare branches and several County Council on Aging sill!I
kinds of daffodils and nar- to be presen t: Cookies and
cissus.
coffee refre shments . For
Another arrangement transportation call 992-7884 or
featured·flowering crabapples, 992-7886.
Or SC 00 USe . pink tulips and decorated eggs
WHITE ROSE Lodge, 1:30
in a green t-eramic container p .m . Wednesday af the
PORTLAND- The Portland while another one showed American . Le gion hall in
P-T.O met Wednesday evening fl
.
Middleport.
owering peach as the
at the school with the background for daffodils and
MIDDLEPORT
Literary ·
president,
Mrs.
Shirley
Club, 2 p.m . Wednesday at the
'd'
tulips . .
J ohnson
preSJ mg.
The
For arrangements on display home of Mrs . Nan Moore. Mrs.
minutes .of the last meeting at the meeting, · four blue James Eule r will review
" Remembered .
were read by Mrs. Merle r1'bbons were awarded, along Stuart' s
Evans and the treasurer's WI'th one red one;· and Utree Dawn ", and .Mrs. J. E. Harley
report was given by Mrs. blue ribbons were given for will review :'Rough Riders" by
Grace
Furbee.
Christie specimens.
Virgil Carrington Jones.
Lawrence led the pledge to the
A dessert course was served
MIDDLEPORT The
flag.
by the hostesses, Mrs. Karr Amateur Garden Club of
It was announced that the and Mrs. Paul Baer. Mrs. Middleport will meet at 8 p.m.
flag provided by Twlla Buckley and Miss Jane at the home of Mrs. Eddie
new
Congressman Miller has Ann Karr assisted in the ser- Burkett.
·
POMEROY " Middleport
arrived and also a flag for one vmg.
.
I
~c assroom was provided by the
Lions Club, at nooii·;·Meigs Inn.
Racine American · Legion
All . members are asked to
· Auxiliary. The flag- previously .,.,
:::::::::::::::::=:~:::::::~:?.::~=r.::::f.::::::~:::::::~=:~:::::::
·
,. atten d .
CHESTER - Election of
officers highlighted the Alri!
meeting of the Olester Garden
Club held at the home of Mrs.
Horace Karr.
• Elected were Mrs. Reid
Young, president: Mrs. Pearl
Mora, first vice president;
Mrs. Ivan Walker, second vice
president: Mrs. Robert Wood
' and Mrs. Jean Summerfield,

Portland P-T.()
has 2 new flags

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~:z~id.::;' ~~e t~:s~eer~:~ lili

Legion is now hanging in the
gym.
The recent skating party
held al' the Chester skate,away
· for all the school children and
brothers and. sisters was a
great success. .
Mrs. Johnson said $285 in the
Portland school fund when the
school was closed five years
ago, which has been turned
over to the ~chool board, has
been- returned to the school.
This was money that had been
· made at ball games and
through the sale of shirts, etc.
It was decided to use part of the
money for floor mats for all the
doors, to buy a deep fryer for
the kitChen, physical fitness
· records, globes and trophies
lor a field day.
· 'the ·milk bill of $9.75 for
needy students was paid.
The P-T-0 will also pay the
bus driver for the trip to
Fenton Glass in May. All fifth
and sixth grade mothers are
invited on this trip.
Final plans for the soup
supper.· and talent show to be
held April 6 were made and it
was voted to pay several small
bills for items needed for the
supper. The·school children are
planning · to give away an
electric ·broom and will use
donations to buy balls and bats.

Pomeroy . . . !1' PoMERoY chapter 8o,
\t Personal Notes :_,:.\!. ~"[.~~ngA;,c3~'PM~s:~sPo~~~

Spencer, and Mrs: Erma
Hendricks. For the party the
Middleport
senior
unit
provided 10 dozen cookies, and
two large boxes of potato chips.
The junior members of the
Middleport unit sent 16 pound
of peanut britUe, 36 candy bars
' and 25 sandwiches. They also
·PfOVided decorated napkins
and game p'hzes including
scratch pa,~. men 's handkerchiefs, lipstick, eyebrow
pencils, and 30 pieces of
jewelry .
The juniors also sent several
sacks of miscellaneous items

Five members of the
American Legion Auxiliary of
Feeney-Bennett · Post 128,
Middleport, assisted Thursday

The charter was draped in
memory of two members,_
George Baker and Mrs. Mabel
Sanborn at the Thursday night
meeting
of
Evangeline

wlth a community service
party at the Southeastern Ohio
Mental Health Cen ter at
Athens conduc ted by the
Eighth District. Mrs. Dorothy
Heck_er of GaUipolis, district

Chapter, Order or the Eastern
Star, at the Middleport
Masonic Temple. .
Mrs. Helen Milhoan, worthy
matron, presided at the
meeting during which time
attending
were
Masons
honored and given a special
welcome.

community service chainnan.
had charge of the party.
Contributing IS hours on field
service at the·party were Mrs.
Etta Will, Mrs. Dottie Will,
Mrs. Freda Clark, Mrs. Edith'

SUPER MARKET • Open Daily 9 to 10 · Sun. 10 to 10

Church grou'J"11 rehabilitati~n

read from other chapters

USDA CHOICE

The Cheshire Chapter inspection date has been changed
to May 15 · due to the recent
illness of the worthy matron,
Kathryn Metzger.
It was reported that Mrs.
Glenna Crisp, an officer of
Evangeline Chapter, is home •
from the Holzer Medical
Center. Plans were made for a
blind auction to be held at the
next meeting. Proceeds !Tom
'this will go the worthy grand
matron's project for the Grand
Chapter of Ohio. Additional
knives will be ordered· for sale
by the chapter. Work sessions
MASON - Mr. and Mrs. George M. Zuspan of Mason, W.
in the basement of the Temple
Va. are announcing the approaching marriage of their
were set'!or every Wednesday
daughter, Alice Ernestine Zuspan to Mr. Herbert T. Harmon,
night with volunteers welcome.
Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert T. Harmon, Sr., Gallipolis.
Following a report from the
The open-church wedding will be an event of Saturday,
budget committee, Paul
April14, at 5 p.m. at the Christian Brethren-Church, Mason,
Darnell was appointed to
W. Va. The Rev. James Lewis will perform the ceremony and
proceed with the installation of
a reception will follow in the church basement.
a telephone. Members desiring
The bride-elect is ,a 1971 graduate of Wahama High
to pre-register or make
School and is presently employed at the Point Pleasant
reservations to Grand Chapter
Medical Center. Her fiance is a 1971 graduate of Point
are asked to telephone Mrs.
Pleasant High School and is employed at the Amherst Coal
Milhoan, 992-5602 before
Co. in Huntington, W. Va. The couple will reside in Gallipolis
Thursday. _
following their wedding. ·
Roberta Circle will meet at
McConnelsville on Aprill9 with
a potluck dinner at 6:30 p.m.
OFFICERS ELECTED
SON IS BORN
There will be ·election of ofOfficers were elected when
Mr · and Mrs. Gene Abbott of
ficers at the · meeting and the Rock Springs United · Carroll are announcing the
secret _sisters will be revealed. Methodist Church junior youth birth of a son, Joseph Gene,
Harry Chesher, . worthy fellowship · met
Monday born on March 21 at the Laomatron, announced that in~ evening at the church. They \ caster Hospif&lt;ll. Ttte couple
structlon for new members will are Billie Addison , president; \ have ... two daughters, Lorrie
be held at· the next meeting. Fonda Rapp, vice president; \. Lee, seven, and Megan Lee,
Cake and coffee were served. Tracy JefferS, secretary; Pam four. Grandparents are Mr.
Evans, treasurer; Linda Part- and Mrs. J. W. Morris and Mr.
low, news reporter; Christy and Mrs. M. .E . Ab.bott, MidEvans, Tina Randolph, game dieport.
·-·····J leaders. Plans were made for a
• NAME OMfTTED
skating party. Fourteen
Mrs.
Rex
Shenefield
members answered roll can.
presented
several
piano
Counselors present were Mrs.
Mrs. Ernest Ruth recently Hugh Bearhs, Mrs. James .s elections at the -,~ annual

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.USDA Choic.e

09..

GROUND ROUND•• 1~·~.1
·
a
9
e
GROUND BEEF. •••• !b~
•1
09
BEEF STEW ••••••••• ~b~. . ·
e
Braunschwe1ger•••• !b~ 9

party for the

DAUGHTER BORN
Dr. and Mrs. James D. Rice
of Gastonia, N. C. are an- ·
nouncing the birth of a
daughter, Karen Michelle, on
March 29. The infant weighed
.eight poWldSl nine ounces, Dr.
and Mrs. Rice have a son,

The Men 's Fellowship and
the Women 's Missionary
Society of the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church will dine at
supper and meet together in
May, women of the church
planned recently , Mrs. Jean
Wright presided at the meeting
which opened with prayer by
Mrs. Mildred Jacobs. Roil call
was ta~en by Mrs. Es~ Wise
and members paid dues and
pledges. Mrs. Wright gave ""
article on " How to niustrate
Scripture''.
The program by Mrs. Iva
Powell was "The Miracle of
Howard R. Allen, general
manager of The Way Bible
Research Center at New
Knoxville ". Carman Evans
had the closing prayer . .
Attending the meeting
besides those named were Mrs.
Amber Lohn, Mrs. Laura
Schaefer, Mrs. Stella Curtis,
Mrs. Marguerite Leifheit, Mrs.
Tina Jacobs, Mrs. Bernice
Jeffers, Mrs. Bertha Parker.

Scott, age· five, and a daughter,
Catherine, three. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.

USDA CHOICE BEEF

·

AT NEW LOW PRICE

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News, Notes

By The Piece
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lb~

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SUPERIORS
USDA CHOICE

SIRLOIN STEAK

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Mrs. Melva Rice, Ashland, and
Joseph D. Rice of Gainesville,
Fla .

WIENERS

Florida 's· Finest!

SEE OUR

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ORANGES

Elegant .
After Five

5~b.

DRESSES ·

. /,...

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-,. ' '

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ill~·lf
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_r,J!·-

·

TOP ROUND

STEAK

SIRLOIN TIP ROAST

# '.,..

- ·. ;,-.
.,.•. ·-

USDA CHOICE

¢

pkg_

.

......~

bag

lOLA'S

('\

lb.

~-....

USDA
CHOICE

$ 59

BONELESS

Main at Sycamore, Pomeroy

CLEAN

WELKER'S

RC COLA

We take your order
.promptly _ . _ and
cook food to your
taste. Join us for great
eating, modest prices.

Drop in Soon

Household

(SMALL SIZE)

.

AUSTIN'S

At the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
'

quart
.

bottle

Diet Rite Cola or Dad's Root Bear
16 oz. bois.

•

39¢

8

en er

Slender

TWO GREAT VACATI.ONS FROM
..
NEWSPAPER TOURS
HAWAII DELUXE $799
.

.

Departs every month in 1973. Let yourself go
in the Aloha Spjrit. We'll show you thundering
volcanoes and wind cave canyons on ·the most
fabled chain of islands in the world. See Kauai
Oahu, Maui, and Hawaii. Includes .air fare, ·
meals, hotels, sightseeing. Truly a great
bargain.

.Air Cruise to Europe. ·. Depa,rting
Sunday; July 8th. Returning Sunday,
.July 22nd. $995 plus $29 .tax and tips,
Travel by jet, ship and rail. Includes
a II ·tips and taxes, deluxe motorcoac;h .
for all sightseeing; first Class hotels,
twQ meals daily, baggage handling,
round trip jet from Ohio. This is the
tour of the year! See Lisbon, Madrid, ·
Paris, Amsterdam, London.
'

Produced and Directed by

RIOiARD LEWIS TRAVEL SERVICE
Call 992-2156 At
.The Dally· Sentinel ·
-

sitting service to be provided.
Refreshments:
REVIVAL, 7:30 e~ch evening
at Mt. Moriah Church of God,
through April 15, ·. the Rev.
Donald Combs, evangelist.
XI GAMMA MU Thursday,
home of Mrs. Rober!&lt;~ O'Brien
with Mary Morris co-hostess,
at 7:45p.m.
FRIDAY
YOUNG
Adult
Class,
Bradford Church of Christ, 7:30
p,m, Friday at the church.
PANCAKE Supper, Friday,
beginning 4 p.m . at Rutland
Elementary School, sponsored
by · Rutland Fire Depariment ·
and Auxiliary. Public invited.
RETURN Jonathan Meigs
, chapter, Daughters of the
American Revolution, 2 p.m.,
Friday, home of Mrs. Emerson
Jones, Middleport. Program
by Mrs. Dale Dutton. Roll call,
ari admired wo(l1an. Co~
hostesses, . Mrs . LaWfence ·
.
Milhoan, Mrs. Everett Hayes.
SALE PLANNED
There will be a rwnmage
sale Thursday and Friday in
the Coates building, Middleport, sponsored by the Rose
Garden Club.

.

· Henry Block has.
17 reasons ·why you
should come to us
for income tax.h~lp.
Reason 2.

great while we make a

error means you must pay additional .tax
'

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· Mounting, Balancing
Federal Excise Tax!!!

. (j'•'
''

.

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$12.50 Each

including cap a~d nuts

'

you pay only the tax. We pay any 'i nterest
or penalty.

•

•

6"

- 7"

including cap and

I
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

Pomeroy, 0.

. Corner Second &amp; Sycamore.-Gallipolis, o.
Open 9 A.M. to 5 P. M: Mon. thru Sat.
5.7 Court St.

592-2851

·

·. Athens, 0

Only 6 Days Left- ·No Appointment Necessary.

l

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D

nu~

- 1 ·t

•:•:::

z=
Q

N

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HOURS
9:00A.M.
TO
·48 month
5:00 P.M.
Guarantee
Monday
BATTERIES
Thru
Saturdaj
$20:00
--l)pen Till
· TO
7 P.M.
00
12 volt

$25.

Friday

3
•

1- ''+, · ---

.

•
•
•

-

•

pts.
for

.FRENCH FRIES

$

GREEN GIANT

2
DONALD DUCK

•

~:~ 39~

SPECIAL! NEW SHIPMENT

..I.,

8-TRACK TAPES _ $
Popular, Country, Western

·.SAVE

39

·INSTANT RH.GER'S
COFFH CRYSTALS

EA.

SPt:C\Al

PI~[

WITH THiS COUPON

-------,

NORTH STAR

WHEN YOU BUY A
10 oz : Jar of

gg~ -

•J

$1 2':69¢ s::$

qua~rts~~~

'100

ORE IDA FROZEN

COFFEE
FROZEN · ORANGE ORANGE
"
PUSH-UPS
CREAMER -'" VEGETABLES JUICE

..•

4/$85
4/$96·

0

MEADOW MOOR

•

MULTI smE RALLY

304 E. Main .· 992-3795

ICE·
MILK·

''

500 ct.
boxes

.

EXTRA SPECIAL! SCOT LAD

,...

WHEEL SPORT WHE ......,.,
- EXITER

in a
mistake.
But if our
.

99

BOOK I\,1ATCHES

10 OUNCE
CANS

,G,H, &amp; J 78 X 14
G,H,J, &amp; L 78 X 15

W~'re human , and once

:: 59¢

MARK V BONUS BUYI

24.00

,.

LEMON
DETERGENT

50-lb. .$
bag

225 .
ca\oriCS

. ANY SIZE .

I

FABRIC
SOFTENER

DOG CHOW

LIQUID

...

AUSTIN'S...

PURINA

pak
. SPECIALI THRU SAT.

-

AUSTIN'S

g~~:n .89~ .

CARNATION

Saturday April 14th

MEDALLION MARQU.IS PREMIUM 4 ply polyester for strength
and smooth ride 78 series, 7 rib ·
will deliver extra mileage

59$

bottle

WINDOW
CLEANER

.

LIME
DETERGENT
quart

Adolph's Dairy
. -Valley

We're doing it again, your response. has been so great that
we have decided to continue our spring sale prices through

UP SALE!
AUSTIN'S

PAK
16 .OZ.

DISCOUNT TIRE

and insuran.c e.
Marshall Kimmel will discuss
services . of Bureau of
.Rehabilitation. Mary Bacon, .
coordinator, will discuss social
security and weliMe. Baby

59~

l-Ib.

lb.

NEW CROP

NEW HAVEN

agreement~

·ELM Hill .. ·- ·

Herman Carson, Long Bottom,

Fast Service?

~~~.................

BOLOGNA

ROUND STEAK

Like Quality,

Reedsville

ELM HILL

ANY AMOUNT

plans supper

Alice Ernestine Zuspan to wed

.

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SUPERIORS

." '" We Reserve '!'he Right To Limit Quantities''

veterans thiS week.

annoWlcing their :Inspections.

USDA Choice Beef Lower Priced This Week!

We Accept Federal Food Stamps
. PHONE: 992-3480

for use as . game prizes at a

Severa1 invitations were

Masonic Hall. Most Excellent
master degree to be conferred.
John
Ray . Tubbs .of Refreshments.
Washington Court House
visited over the weekend with
THURSDAY
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
AFTERNOON
CIRCLE,
Norman· 1 Smith ' and Mrs. Middleport Heath United
Mildred Tubbs, Pomeroy.
Methodist Church, Thursday at
Mrs . Burgess Ferguson, the church. Mrs. M. L. French
, Huntington, is spending 'time will present the lesson entitled
honored her husband, Ernest, Evans and Mrs. Levi Partlo+. Grange banquet. Her name ·here visiting Mrs . D. A. "The New Age of Faith ."
and Mrs. Carl Buckley with a The group will meet at 6:30 was unintentionally. omitted
Dodson, Chester . while Mr. and Hostesses, Mrs. Emerson
birthday dinner. Other guests . each Monday evening during from the program mate(ial.
Mrs. Eroll Conroy are visiting Jones, Mrs. C. ·M. Hennesy,
the summer months.
their daughter, Rose, in Mrs. Crary Davis, and Mrs. M. included Mrs. Alice Foully and
Mr. an&amp; Mrs. Rome Sandy of
Nebraska.
C. Wilson. ·
.
Parkersburg, 'fV. V'l., Mr.'and
Mrs. Raymond Frank spentFESTIVAL DATE SET
ROCK SP!QNG Grange , Mrs. Garett Reed, Coolville·
the weekend at Chester with
Thursday night visit to the Ohio Mr. and Mrs. Johnnie Kibble:
COLUMBUS _ A hangar at
Mrs. D. A. Dodson and Mrs.
Valley Grange .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lawrence
Rose
""--····
• the old Ohio University airport
Burgess Ferguson : The three
Better
Health
Carl
Buckley
and
Ann
Buckley.
will be the site of a two-day arts
.
LAUREL
Cliff
·visited on Saturday afternoon
Club, Thursday, 7:30p.m. at
Mr.andMrs.HaroldJohnson
festival, May 12-13, sponsored
with Mr. and Mrs. Stanley
the
hom
e
of
Mrs.
·
Allen
ha~e
moved
to
Belpre.
by the Hocking Valley CraftsTrussell of Bashan.
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell men. State Representative
Here for a weekend visit with Elchinger.
MEIGS Co unty Humane Chevalier and family, and Claire " Buzz" Ba 11 , r R -9ls t
their parents, Mrs. D. A.
· ·
d th e Ohi o
Society, 7:30 ·p.m. Thursday, Garrell Chevalier of Mansfield, District,
an~ounce
Dodson a9d Mr. and Mrs.
Maynard Barr, were Mr. and Middleport Village Hall. Im- Mr. and Mrs. Guy Spencer of Arts Council grant of $500 that
portant business to be trans- Tuppers Plains. , Mr. and Mrs . is helping to fund the Sprmg
·
Mrs. Jack Conroy of Columbus.
acted and members· urged to Roy Reed and. daughters of
Festival.
attend.
Tuppers Plains, and Mr. and
The City of Athens is
MIDDLEPORT . Child Mrs . Zenith Chevalier of providing the hangar at no cost
MEETING CANCELLED
ConservaH.Qn League annual Belpr.e were guests of Mr: and to the group who · p1ans to
A meeting of the Past dinner, Seddon's Restaurant, Mrs. Edward Chevalier.
charge 25 cents admission to
.. Councilors Club of Theodorus Parkersburg Mall, i p.m .
·
1
·
adults
and free admission to
How G aciers Form
Council 17, Daughters Qf Thursday.
· children. The festival -. will
America, scheduled for ThursMEETING FOR parents of · G I a c i e r s ·are produced
·
include craft exhibitions,
day night has been cancelled. work-study studenis at Meigs w hen-. heavy_ s now s d urmg
· the wmter pile up more than workshops · and
demonThe May meeting will be held Hi h Sch 00-1 7.30
g
• ·
p.m. Thurs- they melt in the spring and strations, all to the .. acat the regular time.
day. Mrs. Erma Finch, Miss summer. Eventually the · companiment of · folk music
Stephanie Niemiec and Som snow at about 200 feet 'deep
Crow will discuss wage is Compressed into ice.
performed by local musicians.
:%::

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

.

Party conducted

12

pak

69¢
·

I

I
I

I

· WITH THIS COUPON WHEN
YOU BUY A. 10 OZ. JAR OF .

I
I
I
I
I

Instant ·.

MAXWELL HOUSE•

I

COFFEE

SEALTEST

1h gal.

ICE CREAM

•

crt.

I

MARK V SUPER MARKET

AT

.I
I

10 OZ.

JAR ONll$
WITH COUPON

I
I
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MAY 5, l973-- .J

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8 - The DaUy sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., AprillO, 1973

••

Sentinel Classifieds
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WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P .M . Day Serore Putl icatlon .
Mol\d6y Oead ll ne 9

Cancellation -

tL

2 SIGNS
OF

m.

Co •rtctlons

W Ill be- accepted vn til 9 • -m . for

QUAliTY

Day Of Publicat ion

REGULATIONS
The PubliSher reurve:t. the
right to edlr or reject i'ny ad "!

deemed

Ob.iectlonal.

The

publ isher w i ll not be respons ible
for more than one Incorrect

insertion .

RATES
For Want Ad Servic'

S cents per ·Word one Insertion
Minimum C,.,erge 75c
12

cen ts

per

word

three

consecut ive inser t ions .
18 cents per word six (':On -

secuHve insert ions .
25 Per Cent Ois·count on Pill id

ad s and !IdS paid with i n 10days .
CAj:tD QF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 for 50 word m in i mum ·.
Ea c h addit ional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge

Advert isement .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

.

table~.- QUARTER Horse and saddle ;'
organS, dishes. clockS. brass.
phone 992-3283 .
beds or comptete housettotds. 1
-4-6-6tp
Wrlfe M . D. Miller, Rt. 4,
•
PoRleroy, Ohio. Phone 992 -' SELF -CONTAINED
travel

•

1970 PONTIAC
12Jfl
Flrebird Esprit. Local I owner car. 350 V-8 engine. P .
stee r ing &amp; automatic tra ns .• AM -FM radio, like new white
leHered t ir-es. dark brown fin ish , bucket sea t &amp; bile vinyl
tri m . A sh arp one. Reallv loaded .
1969 CHEVELL~
11795
Malibu Cpe., local 1 owner car, dark grn. f inish, like new
white lettered tires, 3p7 V-8 power steering &amp; brakes
rad io, clean i nt.
·
· '

1·7-tfc
6271.
- - -- - - - - - --

PAY LESS - GET MORE !!
Bes ides our usual !.lock of
clea n , budget ~ pr iced used
furniture KUHL' S BARGAIN
CE; NTER now sells NEW
FURNITURE : ~pc . maple or
walnu t bedrooms $109; 4d ra wer che st s ( mapte or
wa lnut ) S25 .9S ; S-drawer
maple $30.95; Herculon sofas,
matching chairs S139.9S; 3 pc .
coffee step-table sets '$16.95;
slat.se.a t hardwood roc.kers
.515.95 ; s.s. oak straight
chairs , S5.SO ea . in quanti ties
of 4+; 7 pc. chrome di nette
S99 ; also, cloth -covered sofa
beds., swivel rockers, vinyl
recliners , ch i ld's rockers ;
sof~ s with matching swivel
r ockers . It pays to check with
KUHL ' S for your NEW or
USED furniture needs! USED
APPLIANCES Include large
sel ection
of
late.model
refrigerators $85 and others
from $.25 ( 1 gas) ; elect. or gas
drYers $35; auto. washers $45 ;
wr inger -type ; port . dish .
washer , used billiard table
$45 . Ma jar appliances are
GUARANTEED for 30 days.
KUHL ' S BARGAIN CEN . .
TER , Rt. 7 " at caution light, "
Tupper-s Pla ins. Ooen to 7;
closed MONDAYS ONLY:
ph one 667-3858 .
4·8-6tc

Pomeroy Motor Co.

condition.
priced
for6, quick
trailer. 22ft
.• steeps
good
sale; call af1er 4 p1m . 9492601.
4-8-6tc

Hemlock Grove Rd .. Rt . 3,
Pomeroy .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _4-_8-3tp

OFFICE SUPPLIES

997-6194,

.

and

H -3tc

-c-------

PANSIE S and c abbage plants.
Cleland
Farms
&amp;
Greenhouse, E. Main, Racine .
Geraldine Cleland.
3-29-tfc

I

lATEX.PAINT

From _tlre laroest ,.···-'
Bulldozer Radiator to the
::.manesr t1ea1er t.ore .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

For wood and masonrv
finishes.
'

3.99 gallon

•

FURNITURE

SMITlf NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

HOGG&amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO,

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

771-5554

Mason, W. Va.

Ph . ?92-2174

Card

Thanks

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

Notice

KARR'S.

!BARBER SHOP .

- -- - --

Real Estate· For Sale

TE1.L 8 1MO I

~INE 1

CAN'T

1V WALK

- GRAOtNc;

SEE: HIM·I'M SUS'{
~GHT NOW

•

PAPERS

Fl~T

"?

Pomeroy

Real Estate For sale

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

------

Wl4'i DID
'IOU EVIOR

5Q FPOM Tl-115

STOP

PULP'i LI ' L

ME.SS-CAME

DRAWING
IT?

CORPOPt.AL.
CROCK!!

TI4E. Pueuc

NO KIDDING!!-' I
DID&gt;l'T THI&gt;lK THE'i'D
ALLOW Ar-NONE LIKE
TAATARO&lt;.JND

GOT TOO.
SMART FOR
SUCH

DRIVEL-

LD05E.'.'

sl.;

- -----

=---.,..-----

THE

Mobile Homes For Sale

PUBLIC NOTICES

WISEMAN

·-

Your Right to Know

MR. 8/JRNS WOUI.O
ll KE TO SE:E. YOU 1
PIK!FESSOR

WHICH QN!;: DO
'IOU WANT ME

'5.55

- -- -- - -

For Rent

OFCOU~ ICAN
WALK A ~AIGHT

Repair; ~=::::===::::::====~
EXPERT
WheeJ AI'1g11menf

Em ploym en! Wanted

STOP

=-- - - - -

f'Rof.

CLATTER

M~Ei

SEWING MACHINES .
5ervic.e, all makes. 992 ·12~ .'
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
8: 30 a . m
to 12·00 Noon
Satur-day ,
1972 APACHE Eagle Fold -u p EXPERIENCED painter , InAuthorized Singer Sales and
terior and exterior. Phone.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.\
cafllper : Includes spare tlre , .
I'
985-3951 .
3-29-tfc
canopy and plast ic storm
3-20-30tp
of
window . Trailer ha~ been
-----,--,--~wir-ed for electric. 3 outlets:
'I WISH to extend my sincere WE ARE now .!ft~_lng orders for
Excellent condition, $675 . Call
thanks
to
those
who
On Most American Cars
992-5815 after s p . m .
Southern Tomatoes , peppers,
remembered me with cards,
sweet potatoes and onion
4-5-4tc
-GUARANTEEDflowers , telephone calls while
plants ; wi ll be in by May 5th
TWO parcels , ten and twenty
a patient at the · Holzer
Phone 992-2094
at least; James Ray Hill,
STAR KILLS rats quickly, sure.
acres; Darwin area ; phone 2
HOUSES
" NEW,"
3
Medical Center. Russell Little
110 Lynn St.
Letart Fall s, Oh io; phone 24)21f:;o lbs.. S1.69, Ebersbach
992-3029.
bedrooms ;
wa 11 -tO •wa II
family .
Pameroy, 011io
1
296L __. j
Hardware,
Sugar
Run
Mills·
,
4-6·4tc
carpet
;
·
total
electric ;
4-JO. lfp
Open I Til 5
~
4-8-lJk
. Pickeris Hardware, Mason .
basements ; large wooded
Monday thru Saturday
lots ; 2 car garages; ccustom
4-1·30tp ' HOUSE FbR".S ALE, 114 Brick
Ha s added a new service . we·
WE WISH to express our sin. NEW 2 piece tr aditional living
606 E. Main, Pomerov, o.
-----,c - - - kitchen ; c:alf 985-3595 or 992·
cere thanks to the many
are
now
fitting
· Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
room suite, with a extra high
5869.
friends and relatives who
LOTS for sale; on thester
MEN'S TOUPEES
hoose, 3 bedrooms, excellent
back Mr . Cha ir and reversible
3·28-12tc GARAGE ·repair , tune -ups;
were so kind during the recent .
water
;
phone
992-5248
till
3
location, close to schooi and
cush ions ; regularly $239.95, \
plugs, points and cOndenser ; 8
death- of our beloved son,
p.m . or 992-34.36. after 3 p.m.
cjty; contact Lou Osborne or!
now only -139.95. Your choice
We can fit you with a full or a
cyl.,
$17.95 and 6 cyl., SI4.9S t
s
ROOM
house,
bath
,
front
Joseph T . Caldwell , to those
4-4-6tc
oa II 992·5898.
c91ors .
Pom eroy
of
parlial hairpiece.
call for app_
o intment ; Racine.
porch, full basement · two
who sent flowers, food and
Recovery , 622 E. Main St.,
11 ·26-tfc
,
Garage,
Racine,
Ghio, 949·
Jots; S. D. Buski"rk,
341
cards. Special thanks to the
1969 PLYMOUTH Fury , 2 dr .
Pomemy, Oh io. Phone 992·
3611.
Page
St.,
Middleport,
Ohio.
Rawlings -Coats
Funeral
hardtop, air cond .• vinyl top, HOUse ···hy owner; 3 or 4
1554 .
4·8·30tc
4-8-JtC
Home and Rev . Merlin Teets,
KNAPP
quality
shoes
for
work
$1.100.
Call 446-3939 .
4-S- 6tp
bedrooms, large rec . room .
pallbearers and Edna Maxine
or dress; golf shoes, $19.99 ; .... _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __4...;
·6-Stc
large patio, modern kitchen, 6 ROOMS, bath, new gas fur - .luTbMOBiLE insurance beeri"
· Gaskill for the organ music. ALL EYE Make-Up products in
ca ll 992-5324. Bob Hysell.
in and let MICK shqw YOUJ
fully carpeted ; call 992-5248
Lost
your'
nace, 2 .lots, c.onnectlons for . cancelled?
Also to co-workers of G.S.I ,,
Koscot li(le on specia l th is
_4-6 -tf c GROCERY business for- sale.
until 3 p .m . or 992-3436 after 3
operator's
license?
Call
992what
he
can
do
for
you.
trailer Space ; call 1-304·773your kindness will always be
month . I would like to serve or
Building for sale or lease.
p.m .; No Sunday calls .
2966.
5341.
remembered. The E. L.
v isit YOl! - Please phone Helen
CLOSE OUT oo (41 1973 full size · Phone 773 -5618 from 8: 30p .m .
4-4·6fc
Barber-s Local 400 AFL-CIO
4·8-3tp· ·
6-15-tfc ' .
Caldwell family .
Jane Brown, M iddleport, Ohio
to 10 p.m . for appointment. ----~zig -zag sewing machines. For
992 -lll3 . .
4-10-ltp
3-20-tfc
sewing
stretch
fabrics,
--~---;--'----....:.
MODERN septic tank service,
4-4-tfc
buttonholes, fancy designs,
,.--;;;;_..:·'-' ---------------------,
24 hours, 7 days a week .
etc. Paint slightly blemished .
Phone 992·3954.
TWO week revival at Freedom 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
Choice of carrying case or
4-JOC30ic
Gospel Mission at Bald Knob s
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or CASH paid for all makes and
.a dults on ly ; on old Rt. 33;
starting April 15 at 7: 30p .m .
ter:ms available . Electro
phone 992-6294 or 992-6385
models of mobile homes .
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
Rev . Cecil Wise, Evangelist, . after 8 p.m .
Hygiene Co .. phone 992-7755 .
Phone area code 614.423-9531.
located at Crossroads •. Rt. 124,
Rev. L. R: Gluesencamp .
4-4-6tc
4-8- 12fc
complete fr-ont end service,
Pastor . Special slnglrig . The ---~-· 1J.tfc
- - - - - - -- 4....:
----=-~~tune up and bra'ke service:
public is invited.
TWO steeping rooms , one single 12) ELECTROLUX Sweeper Berr-y -Miller Mobile Homes ha~
Wheels
balanced
elec.
and be informed of the func 4-l 0-5tc ~ and one double ; available at
deluxe model. Cori1plete with
a lot to offer- when you start
tronically
.
All
work
"
tions .of your government are : - - - - - - Owner Transferrecj. Will ript refuse any
all cleaning aftachments and
once ; phone 992-5440.
Shopping for your Mobile
guaranteed .
Reasonable
embodied in public notices. In
YARD Sale, Friday a_nd
uses paper bags. Slightly used
reasonable offer.
Home. You can beat the high
4-8·3tc
that self -government charges
rates. Phone 992-3213 or 742Saturday on Larkin Str eet,
cleans
and
looks
like
new.
but
all citizens to be informed ;
depreciation
you'll
..
have
on
3232.
:--::-=-::-::-:-:-:--Rutland.
Will sen for $37.25 cash or
2 BEDROOM home, 1676 lin ·
this newspaper urges every
your home the first two years
2· 18-tfc
4·10-Jfc
citizen to read and s.tudy these
This is a great opportunity for some lucky
coin Heights, bath, basemen(ter-ms ava i.l able. Electro
by shopping for
late model
notices . We strongly advise
Hygiene Co., phone 992-7755.
· DOZER ·a nd back hoe ·work,
aluminut;n siding, storm doors
used Mobi le Home. We have1a
·family large or small. 5 bedrooms, completely
those citizens , seeking further
PAUL's AUTo··· PARTS now
and · ~in"dows , .hardwood
4-4-6fc.
.
ponds and septic t~nks, dithuge
selection
of
these
homes
informatioh , to exerCise their
carpeted, living, family and dining rooms, 2
· open for business In old
floors , newly refinished . Call
ching service; top SOil, fill
in stock now, and We 'll do our
r ight of access to public
location on Rt. 7 bypass ,
Tracy WbaJey., 992-3054. .
. UNCLAIMED freight 1973 8
large bathrooms; new kitchen with builtin cab.
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K EJ&lt;·
level best to save you money .
records and public meetings.
Pomeroy . ·We pay top dollar
4-10-Stc
track stereo, 4 speaker audio . So for an honest to goodness
,
cavating.
Phone 992·5l67
Kids can walk to grade school. It's an. older
for- wr-eck~d and junk ~uto &amp; - - - -- - - - ' -- system, will sell for small _ good deal stop in today at
Dick Ka~r. Jr.
.
house in an excellent location in Middleport.
balanceS82.50or pay S6.10 per
tr-ucks. O:Nner' . Paul Baird .9. J.tf
Berry-Miller Mobile Home
month . Call 992-5331.
4-Hlp
Was $24,000, but don't let that stop you, The
Sales , 70S Farson Street.
EXCAVATING, dozer, loade,
LEGAL NOTICE
,
4-4-6fc
GRAY
MANOR
Belpre, Ohio, phone 423-9SJ1
owner must selL (make an offer) .
The unknown nel!C.t of k in and OLD FASHIONED reviv~l sti ll
and backhoe work; septic
- open 7 days.
persons entitled to inherit of and
' 1tank·s Installed; ·dump trucks
in p·r ogress at the Pomeroy
APARTMENTS
A lOFT. MEAT or vegetable
4·5·6tc
from Alma Ohlinger will take
and
lo.boys
for
hire
;
wilt
haul
Wesleyan Holiness Church on display case with motor . If
notice that Lionel BOggs ,
Gallia Co.'s Largest
MIDDLEPORT
fill dirt, top soil, limestone
Rt . 143. Special services each
you can use it ca ll 949-3821, 10 X 50 MOBILE home, ex~uardian of Alma Ohlinger, an
atid
gravel; call Bob or Roger
Real
Estate
Sales
Agency
evening at 7: 30 p. m. Speaker
. mcamoAfP.nt nl'lr&lt;;t'ln . nn
thl'l
cellent
condition,
expansion
2 Furn ished Apts . with new ,
949 -3161, or write A. C.
Jeffers. day phone 992-7089 ;
4th day of April, 1973, flied his
and Pastor Rev : O'Dell
f.iving roOm , fully air furniture, with or without
B·r adford, Box 116, Racine, 0.
Office 446-3643
night pbone 992-3525 or 992·
petition in the Probate Court
Manley . ·Everyon.e welcome .
conditio('led ; phone 992-5905.
ut i lities, both have 1 or 2
45171.
5232.
within and for the County of
bedrooms,
both
on
ground
3-26-tfc
4-6-l2tc
Evenings Ca II .
4·5-5tc
Meigs and State of Oh io,
f~2-JJ.tfc
floor and have wall -to-wall
a.lteg i!t9 that It is necessary to
E;
M."lke"
Wiseman
446•3796
catpe
t.
Also
have
pr
lvate
1
1970
12
x
SO
HOMETTE
,
fur
•
2
HORSES
:
-1
registered
·
seU the fOllowing des cri be.d real
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
en tranc es and ' yard for
nished, carpeted, 2 bedrooms,
estate to pay the debts of Alma
quarter ; 7 years old, gelded,
E.
N.
Wiseman
446-4500
delivered
right
to your
ch ildren, i n ni Ce neigh .
Ohlinger,· and that the next of
was~~r
&amp;
dryer
,
un
$375. 1 gelded walker , 7 years
project. Fast and ea~y. Free
borhood.
kln and rersons entitled to
derp~nning , 2 sets of steps,
old , $250. Mus! se ll. Call 367·
:
.
inherit o and from Alma
estimates, Phone 992-3284
Phone 992-3863 till 3 p.m. or·
air . condltioner·; excellent . . .
7432 ..
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
Ohlinger are unknown . Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
992 -5944 after 6: 00.
condition
;
call
742·3807
or
i42·
4-5-ffc
985·3529.
.
.
:
·· Said real estate being situated
5258.
- I .
Middleport , Ohlp.
in the VIllage of Middleport,
6-11-tfc'
6-JO.ffc
County of Meigs and State of
·3 AND 4 ROOM ·furnisAed and '•toob ' s AQUARIUMS; fish~
4-8-3tc
-~---""""'Ohio .
1mfumished
apartments.
and svpplies; new location ,
REALTY
SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
Beginning at an iron 'p in at the
Phone 992-5434.
Ash Street, Middleport near
HOUSE FOR SALE : 2 or 3
REASONABLE
rates. Ph. 446
southwest corner of Harold
601E. Moin
~
Air _conditioners
4-12-tfc
park ; phone 99~ · 5443.
bedroom , all paneled; wall·to.
4782,
Gallipolis,
Jbhn Russell
Roushe 's tot : then ce riorth 26
\..
•
Pomeroy
....,
Furnace Contro Is
- -- - - - - - , , . . . - J.7.tft
Awnings
wall carpet,- forced air' f~r­
degree-s 30minutes west 132 feet
Owner &amp; Operator .
SLEEPING Room . oVer the
'
to an Iron ~in at the northwest
nace; 18, 000 · BTU air ·
5-12-Hc
Underpinning
HUMIDIFIERS
Wine
Store.
Pomero"y; f6Ai~Limesfone, ExcelsiOf&gt;
corner of HarOld Roushe's lot :
conditioner; . full basem,ent ;
EXCELLENT
LOCATION
thence south 63 degrees 30
references required ; phone
nice yard; city water. sewer
Hot Water H.,a,ers
Salt Works , E. Main St .;
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
1 level acre. 9 room home, 4
Complete mobile home
m inutes west 55.5 feet to a
992-5293.
Qas;
close
to
·
school.
and
Pomeroy
.
Phone
992-3891.
'
Complete Service
bedrooms. porc;hes , bath.
stake; then ce south 26 degrees
Plumbing
service·
plus gigantic
4-3-tfc
Located in Middleport. Price
Phone 949-3821
4~ 12 - tfc' • display
30 minutes east 132 teet to a
Nice apartment in rear to
of mobile homes
Electrical Work
$10,000. Phone 992-7109 ,
stake;· then ce north 63 degrees
Racine. Ohlo _
rent.
Large
storage
building.
always available at . . .
. TRAI LER , Brown's Trailer
30 minutes east 55.5 feet to the
Cri tt Br adfqrd
4-S..tc
yard
.
$18,500.00.
Beautiful
Park; phone 992 -3324.
place of beginning , conta ining
S.J.tfc
SPRING SP·ECIALS
INCOME PROPERTY .
17.100 acres in Sedion 29, Town
4-J-tfc
MILLER
~~---~
1, Ra.nge 13. .
. , : .
Nice apartment, 2 bedrooms, '
---~-·G&amp; E Appliance Repair; repair
The pr-ayer of said petition is
bath,
dining R, with 10
PRIVATE
meeting
room
for
on all laundry equipment.
for authorization and order to
MOBILE HOMES
1
sleeping rooms over. Ready
any organization; phone 992·
sell s.aid real estate .
.
refrigeration equipment and
to rent for immediate In·
1220 Washington Blvd. _
992-2448
3975.
In Carton ·
The persons first above
wiring ; . welding,
house
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
come. CALL TO SEE. Just
meritioned w'ilt further take
electr-ic
and
gas: Call 992-3802
3'
JJ
.tf&lt;;
Pomeroy,
Set Up, 134.95
noti ce that they h,ave-been made
$11,500.00.
or after 4: 30 p.m . call 992·
partie s defendant to said
2 YEARS OLD
6050.
OWN YOUR HOME AT LOW
TRA ILER , . Baer "s Market,
pet ition and that they are
3
beautiful
bedrooms
with
COST
see
Kingsbury
Home
3-21-301p
Syr-acuse, Ohio.
required to answer the same on For
1
or
Sales
&amp;
Service,
Inc.,
phOne
large
closets.
A
kitchen
that
or before the 12 day of , June.,
4-6· tfc
In Cai"fon
992-6256 from 2 to 7 p.m. or by
1973 ;
'
is a housewife's dream .
SEE US FOR :· Awnings, 'stormWAREHOUSE or ·slora ge - - - - - 110 Mechanic Street
uonet t:IOggs , Guard ian
appointment. 24' wide FURNISHED
Set
up,
$54.95
Dining room with double
doors and windows, carports,
bui.lding,
located
on
Rutland
2
bedroom
Of Alma Ohlinger as aforesa id.
furnished . Made by Skyline
apar-tment, adults onl·y ,
Sliding
glass
doors
.
to
patio.
marquees,
arum lnum Siding ,
St.
,
Middleport,
metal
POMEROY
(4 ) 13, 10. 17, 2-4; (5 ), 1, B, 6tc
Corp., . country's lar.gest.
Middleport; phone 992-3874.
Large living room with
and railing. A. Jacob, sales building. Call or contact Mrs .
. • • - Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
" Meigs County owne.d and
fireplace.
Bath . Utility--._ rep_resentative . for treeJ
Manni rig Webster , 992-2495.
4-6-ffc
6lLt
Pho1Je 992-2181
operated
."
Financing
room . Carpeted. Storm doors
· estimates, Phone Charla&amp; REA\. BUY
4-9-3tc
4 BEDROOM, 2 baths, beautiful
available. Set up on your lot
--~&amp; windows. Electric heat.
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V . '
3 RENTALS - I furnished . All
built-in kitchen, located in · NOW · READY ..,..... Blooming
ready for your occupancy. 200
NOTICE ON FILING
Level lot 100x120."S23,000.00.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
ne,a r courthouse. iNCOME
OF INVENTORY
Pomeroy ; . trailer space at
potted fl~wers , starting at
yards off Rt . 33 on County Rd .
SERViCE STATION
f2 -tfc :.
$193 .00
a
month.
Only
AN 0 APPRAISEMENT
Cheshire "on Rt . 7, water
SOc; hangmg baskets ; pansies
18. Quick delivery. Our low
$10,000.00
.
With
all
stock
and
equipThe s·tate of Ohio, Meigs DEAD Stock horses, cattle,
h
and cabbage ; Ready soon overhead will save you$$$. 12'
1
· h d
'
SEPTIC TANKS AROB!C :.
County . Probate Court
NEAR TOWN
ment . Lovely apartment
hog s, sheep. Reasonable
urnls e ' P one 44 6· 4060
Petun ias. marigolds, Col.eus, · and 14' Mobile · Homes
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN - ,
To the Administratrix of the . char-ge: . Call 245-5514.
.
after 5 p.m ., 446-l279.
·tomatoes, peppers, etc .; 1f4 off
available, Kingsbury Horile
3 BEDROOMS - Large bath ,
over. 3 bedrooms. bath, gas
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER ~ ·
estate ; to suc h. of the following
6
nice kitchen. basement, front
furnace, glassed porches,
2-28·30fc -'-- - -- - - - 4- ·6tc by the (I at ; Hubbard's Green - Sales &amp; Service, · Inc.
as are residents of the State of
SANITATION,
STEWART •"
and back porches. Garage.
hardwood floors . A STEAL
house.. St. Rt. 124, above park,
3-25-ffc
· Ohio, vix : the surviving
OH 10. PHONE 662-3035.
. ::
' two trailer lots. Syracuse, Ohio. .
- - - - - -- -- AT JUST $17,900.00.
Spouse, the next of kin, the
$8.000.00,
HOUSE AND
10-4-tfl
&lt;
beneficiar-ies under the will ;
NEW LISTING
4 YEARS OLD
Phone 992-'5693.
---:----:-...:_~
_
_
4__:
·3·
tfc
"
.
'
and to the at-torney or ahorneys
Curfew ReUs
.
10x55 MOBILE HOME . - And
HERE IS A BUY 4
EXCA'VA 11Nl7&gt; uozers, larg
representi'ng · anv of
the
---------4~·9-5tc HAVE . lar'ge assortment of
bedrooms,
bath,
large
living
lot
.
H"as
3
bedrooms,
city
One
of
the
most
famous
· and small; Backhoes and ..
aforementioned persons :
fl, ower~ for Easter and· every 1967 CHEVY Caprice, 4 door,
R., bar room . Large kitchen
water, natural gas, and Ohio
L~ders on track and fires; (
Elmer Davis , Deceased , curfew bells booms out from
at,ttomatic,
327
.engine;·
,call
occas1on. Smalley's Gift
and dining · are~ - loads of
Power. Asking Just ·$5700.00.
Pomeroy, · Oh io, Salisburv
Dum.P trucks - ~ Lo -boy \
742
-3344,
Roy
Ellis,
College
the tower of' Christ Church.
Shop, Chester, Ohio, phone
Township , No . 20827 . ·
L. o . T
cabine·ts. 11/2 acre of ground .
Serv1ce; Septic tanks in· '"·-.
Ave ., Rutland , Ohio.
Help
985-3537 .
. You are hereby notified that the largest college of Oxford
Storm windows &amp; doors.
ON
ROUTE
33
Vacant,
stalled;
George
IBilll •'
th•
Inventory
and
Ap 4-10-IOtc _ _ __ _ _ __ _4__:·8· 3tp
PuOi.ns ; phone 992-2478.
'
Close ln. $16,900.0(1.
r~ady for you to build your own
praisement of the estate of the University. Nightly at five PART TIME . Nati onal supplier
home.
Asking
$1500;
ll
t
rain
men
for
lo
cal
llf•
YEARS
OLO
w
i
2-9-tfc'
1965
FORD
Station
Wagon
for
aforementioned , deceased, late
sale or Jrade ; phone 949-3070.
typewrite r repairing . Wr ite : 7l SCHULTZ 12ft. by 70ft. fully
of said County, was filed i'n this minutes p a s t njne "Great .
RESTAURANT
ln. new addition. Level lot
~----carpeted trai'ler . Like new .
4-8·3tc
HARRISON ' S TV Service and
Court. Said lfl''J entorv and Tom" strikes 101 times.
Regiona l Manager, Box 25,
lOOxlOO
.
3
nice
bedrooms
W·
EAT
OUT
Your
very
own
Ca ll 992-3860 or 949-2951.
Apprais~ment · Will be
for
Serv ice Calls; phone 992·2522.
Glenshaw, Penna . 15116.
business. Good future with
clOSets . Very modern kif.
'
4-1D-6tc
hearing b,efore this Court on· the
·
2-9-ffc
4·8-12tp
1972 CAD. Coupe DeVIlle, vinyl growing tOwn . Asking Only
i!hen W. range. Bath, Utility,
'
12th day of APril, 1973, at 10 :00
.
top,
gr-ay,
climate
control
,
hardwood
floors
(some
$5,000
.00.
Will
take
lot
on
trade.
oc'lock A .M .
·
1
10 x 47 MOBILE Home , 26 ft .
ELNA a·n d Wnite :seWing
AM&amp;FM radio, low mileage,
carpeting), drapes included.
' Any person desiring to file
42 ACRES
.
self -contained
Concord
Machines ... service on all ·
exceptions thereto must file
perfect cond ition . Ph. 245· 6 ROOMS - Modern' kitchen
A n ice carport with storag~
camper . Phone 992·3954.
them at least five. days prior- to
makes . Reasonable rates .
5888.
and bath. Nice gas furnace,
room. THIS YOU MUST
- 4-10-3tc
,
the date set for hearing.
The SeWing Center, Mid- '
·4·8·41&lt;
barn, all minerals, and good
SEE S2L500.00.
12 ME-N NEEDED
Given under my hand and
dleport , Ohio.
---....,--,'--,-'-cfences
.
1962
22
FT.
TAG'
A
LONG
!ravel
Only
$19,500.00.
PROPERTY IS MOVING
seel of said Court , th is 30th day
11 · 16-tfc
trailer- , setf-contalned , sleeps 1972 HONDA saO .motorcycle,' 4
of March ·- 1973.
LARGE
FAST. LET US SELL
cy
linder.
many
extrasi
like
4. Phone 992-6960.
ManningtO. Webster
'
SCENIC VIEW - .4 bedropms,
YOURS.
Judge and ex -offi cio
' 4-10-6tc .new ; phone 985-3828.
WILL trim or cut trees, clean .
2 -baths, front enclosed and
HENRY
E.
CLELANO.
Sr.
Clerk. of sai d court
J.9·ffc
out basements, attics, etc.
fur
back'
porches.
Gas
F.A.
.
BROKER
·
·
.
SOUP'S 1 on , the rug that is, - - - - - -- - -- Phone 949-3221.
nace. full basement, 2 car
992-2259 if no answer 992-256t
By Ann B. Watson
clean
with
Blue
Lustre.
·Rent
'
57
CHEVY
'
2
door
hardtop
;
'55
3-11-JOtc
Deputy c;::ler-k
garage . Large river front lot.
(4) 3, 10, 2t
el edric
shampo·oer
$1.
Oldsmobile ; contact · Larry
for
Bargain
of
$10,500.00.
All
FULL OR
Nelson 's
.Drug
. Store,
Hubbard, Syracuse ; phone
NEW HOME
CALL
Pomeroy , Ohio.
992 -3364.
·
PART TIME
Mon.-Fri. Tii9-Saturday Til6
3 BEDROOMS Stove,
, refrigerator . freezer in •
Sentinel -------~ 4, 10-2fc
beautiful kitchen . Nice utility,
NEW 2 piece tradit ional ,liv ing
and closets. Only $16,000. May
room suite, with a extra high
Expanding company
PH.
take a lot on trade.
back Mr . Cha ir and reversible
needs twelve men to
- 1-cush ions;/ regUlarly $239.95,
NEW LISTING
work in ·Gallipolis and
now only $139.95. Your cho,i ce
I ACRE LOTS In Meigs
MAIN ST. IN RUTLAND
of colors . Pomer-oy Recovery ,
, school district. Have the wafer
Point Pleasant .areas.
WANTED - 3_;000 new pr used
622 E . Main St., Pomeroy,
JlH, 742-3191
taps and septic tanks in. Only
No
experience
tomato slakes ; ca ll John
Ohio. Phone 992-7554.
$2,000.00.
~----~
.
-_ McCoy , New Matamoras, 0 .,
necessary. ll) ust have
4-5-6tp
865 2280.
1
MINERS , 1
We Buy, Sell . 1
car. Call Monday or
DON'T
WASTE
YOUR
- - ' - - -- - - - - 4 - ·l-8fp
VAL.UABLE .TJME LOOKING .
Tuesday 9 til ~·
·suPPLIES
I I
: and Trade
I
SEE
US AND SAVE YOUR
CLEAN co pper , '4Sc lb. ;
1
.· SHOE LE.A THER,
I
·
GUNS
1
Radiat ors , clean , 28c lb.;
.
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD
BeltsHats
I
I
Brass. 18c lb .; Batteri es, 70c ;
GOROON B. TEAFORD
Ginseng $60 lb.; M . A. Hall,
I Buckets-Leg Bands 1 I
KNIVES
.1
ASSOCIATES
~eedsville, 378-6249.
992-3615 or 992.JJ2l
3-9.tfc
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
HUNTING &amp; FISHING LICENSE - ' - - - --'---OFFICE HOURS
8 : 30 a m .- to 5:00pm. Da ily ,

'

2r

PAINT SPECIAL!
Blue Ridge
Interior- Exterior

992 -2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

--

rtl

"
-~:::::;:=:========:;-;===========;-;===::=======
··

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

10 :D£Ff&gt;..E "lHE"
LIMITS OF tAIJGLJN;.E !

ELVINE¥-- IF SHE STARTS WAGGIN'
HER TONGUE MAW NEUER Wilt.
GIT MY VITTLES ON TH'TABLE

Business ·Services

400 BALES mixed hay. Phone

COR No Phooe 98l -4211 .
3·29-24tp

-.

•

----MIXED HAY, James A. Smith,

For Sale

1969CHEVROLET
11895
Station wagon. locall y owned &amp; clean inside &amp; out. V-8
eng ine. automatic transm ission. power steer ing , power
brakes, luggage rack , green vinyl interior with white
finish. Radio and all the extras.

per

For Siile

Wantr.rt To Buy
·ou:l furniture. oak

MERE ~S
AI "--T &amp;UX.IOH .•.

BALLe; 0' FIRE!! HERE C0f"¥1"ES ·

HOPE HE':;

NOT100
~UBY "TO .
BEE US.

AGENCY

YES , ..
WI·HCH MEAN5
., , THAT TRANSMISSION
WE'LL HAVE TO
PROBABLY
CHAMBER 15 WAV TOO
BUlLO A LARG£R OUTSIDE, '
SMALL TO HANDLE
NE XT 1'0 .
ONE, 15 THAT IT ?
THE JOB/
THE LAS

IF OOP 15 ON THE
BALL , VOU MAY HAVE
WUR PI.E510SAL1R
BEFORE VOU 'A:E.
REACN t=OR HIM,
PETE!

a

- '

wrevocab\4
in the
deed!

------

1

"HE~L"

'

HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

'

rcLELAND~

;===========-:._;

,.

B&lt;JT HOW'RE WE CiOH~A STOPQUEEt-1
ISABEllA FROM TAKIN' OVER NORlH
Ati' SOUTH /\MERICA.? HO.V THPlT SHE'S
(\01 lHE COMRADES T' BANKROLL
'
THE CAf'ER "?

------

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

Rent

.....1

- - -- - -

- -- -- -

Sale

SABRE TILLER
3'h HP
129.95

Virgil B.

TURF- TRIM MOWERS
3 HP
49.95

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

OHE RED 11"1~ !!:! lifE HAND
~T'Th'9
CQM~ADffi~
THE BLIS H! ME ·BACK 'SOON!

- -

- - -_.-;;,.
.
by THOMAS JOSEPH. .

tions
Opposed

to

1. Concern
of the

High
school

dance

17. Lieu tenant's

command
(abbr. )

agitated
11. Islands
. sout.h
.
of Sicily
15, Somewhat
palltd
18. Friend·
Jess
·
fellow

31. Friend of
the King
· of Siam
32. Campus
person-

34. Before
3-'t New Year

2:0. Fury;
brute

grandiose

in

force

Vietnam ·

Night"
·heroine .

$MONEY$

.

WANTED I

The Daily
I
992-2156 .

We talk to you

Stewart's Gun Shop

like a person.

1

WMP0/1390

'
---;;:-;

ON YOUR DIAL

------ .

I

MR. VANCE·

1

446-0677

·

Wf.lEN 'IOU FIND
NOT SHEL.LS
ON THE

..YOU Mi6HI SOSP£CT
A SQUIRRE.L HAS

j.
) )

10

BEEN AROUND l

1 '.

l

GROl.lND -- ~.A'rff./0

1------~---- ~

,.

Juccated by the ab9ve cartoon.

to
fish

~ITY

tiiFTY

PLAGUE

mel ~

NO! FIRH I HAVE.TO WAIT

FOR THE OPP0$1N6 MANAGERTO

COME 0\"EE: AND CON6RATUl!\fE ME

(dom-

,,,

ineer)
28. Peleg's
·son

29. Larda·
ceous
30. Roll
of
money .

' JU5T BRfAK IN! ...

u. .JIJ

DAILY CRYI&gt;TOOUO'l'~: - Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
I~
LONGFELLOW

it:

One Jetter simply stallds . for another. In this !'iample A is
used· for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. !'ingle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formali o? nf the wort! ~ are all
hints. Ea.cb day the cod e lt•tt('rs ar~ . different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
NZ .

' -----------1.

INSIST

An-wen l 'ood thai nu:~kt&gt;f ape• til(hl - SPAGHEnl

23.More

27. - it

I1

'

J•mble•,

mixture

EV 'U

KN0 GE G ·
EG

-.-·,;

Now IUTUllelhe circled tettera
to form the aurprlae ...-wer, ~

r l'lillll ·~~~~ AIISMII!n "r x xJ-r xxr

26. Swan
genus

· I

and

•

I " 0 · ·I.

ancholy
24. Theater
"box
25. Tobacco

....--...I------------·

I. I

ONNACY ,. •

•

(AaloW4!H totnorra·w'

and Hardware

Wanted To Buy

I I I

AMANDA PANDA

FOR

POMEROY

COULl:&gt; e!oE TWO
CAT&amp; MAKIN6 SQ.JNC'S
I...IKE A C'F(IJM.

1

'CARRIERS

i3.51 HOUR

[)

1::~~-~~-~~~~-~~;::l·

Wanted ·

-

Fl!'tf()'/' ( ]

. ality

chap

(3

"Twelfth

29. Chafe

19. Otiose

wds.)
8. Exalted;

19. Asian
country

22. Bouquet
artist
23. Smudge
25. Suave

9. Less

4. Dickens
character
5. Dpmestie ;
snug
8. Eye
7. Have as
a buddy

f/&lt;(1'''Rosary
bead

.-J , _

Yesterday's Answer

· (3 wds.)

Perform
diligently ·

_,IJ

Unscramble these four Jumblea,
one letter to each square, to
form · four' ordinary wordi,

word
3. Being an
untrue
loVer

Eric

&lt;

~lllJMID)1rn®u..J

DOWN
I. Whip
·'
2. Divislon

military
12. Check
Novelist

Wanted

Autirsalelr ·

33. Budding
M.D.
35. Prong
36. Succeeded
37. Spirit
lamp
38. Doctrine
39. COmpara·
live word

ACROSS
1. Ent..J ·
meralc
5. Expecta·

Pomeroy, Ohio

----------- .

Yesterday's Cryp(oquole: MONKEYS VEilY SENS!B}',Y, I:E ·
FRAIN FROM SPEECH J.,EST THEY SHOULD BE SE1 fO
EARN THEIR LIVINGS.- KENNETHGRAHAME
.
(@ 1978.Klng Fe.Rturel! Sy ndicate , ~·ne,)

GEQX
C.l V

VN

E V ' U·

C XB . - ZSOOR
-.-

_,_

•

---....,--·-,

'.

~·xv

G F. Q X 0

JSIBX ·O
,-

I

lW

-----.--

EG

VZX

V ~

J" EX

•

.,

,--

•

.

'

. '

�•

8 - The DaUy sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., AprillO, 1973

••

Sentinel Classifieds
Get
Action!
Sentinel
Glassifieds
Get
Results!
-

WANT ADS
INFORMATION
DEADLINES
5 P .M . Day Serore Putl icatlon .
Mol\d6y Oead ll ne 9

Cancellation -

tL

2 SIGNS
OF

m.

Co •rtctlons

W Ill be- accepted vn til 9 • -m . for

QUAliTY

Day Of Publicat ion

REGULATIONS
The PubliSher reurve:t. the
right to edlr or reject i'ny ad "!

deemed

Ob.iectlonal.

The

publ isher w i ll not be respons ible
for more than one Incorrect

insertion .

RATES
For Want Ad Servic'

S cents per ·Word one Insertion
Minimum C,.,erge 75c
12

cen ts

per

word

three

consecut ive inser t ions .
18 cents per word six (':On -

secuHve insert ions .
25 Per Cent Ois·count on Pill id

ad s and !IdS paid with i n 10days .
CAj:tD QF THANKS
&amp; OBITUARY
$1 .50 for 50 word m in i mum ·.
Ea c h addit ional word 2c .

BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge

Advert isement .

Pomeroy
Motor Co.

.

table~.- QUARTER Horse and saddle ;'
organS, dishes. clockS. brass.
phone 992-3283 .
beds or comptete housettotds. 1
-4-6-6tp
Wrlfe M . D. Miller, Rt. 4,
•
PoRleroy, Ohio. Phone 992 -' SELF -CONTAINED
travel

•

1970 PONTIAC
12Jfl
Flrebird Esprit. Local I owner car. 350 V-8 engine. P .
stee r ing &amp; automatic tra ns .• AM -FM radio, like new white
leHered t ir-es. dark brown fin ish , bucket sea t &amp; bile vinyl
tri m . A sh arp one. Reallv loaded .
1969 CHEVELL~
11795
Malibu Cpe., local 1 owner car, dark grn. f inish, like new
white lettered tires, 3p7 V-8 power steering &amp; brakes
rad io, clean i nt.
·
· '

1·7-tfc
6271.
- - -- - - - - - --

PAY LESS - GET MORE !!
Bes ides our usual !.lock of
clea n , budget ~ pr iced used
furniture KUHL' S BARGAIN
CE; NTER now sells NEW
FURNITURE : ~pc . maple or
walnu t bedrooms $109; 4d ra wer che st s ( mapte or
wa lnut ) S25 .9S ; S-drawer
maple $30.95; Herculon sofas,
matching chairs S139.9S; 3 pc .
coffee step-table sets '$16.95;
slat.se.a t hardwood roc.kers
.515.95 ; s.s. oak straight
chairs , S5.SO ea . in quanti ties
of 4+; 7 pc. chrome di nette
S99 ; also, cloth -covered sofa
beds., swivel rockers, vinyl
recliners , ch i ld's rockers ;
sof~ s with matching swivel
r ockers . It pays to check with
KUHL ' S for your NEW or
USED furniture needs! USED
APPLIANCES Include large
sel ection
of
late.model
refrigerators $85 and others
from $.25 ( 1 gas) ; elect. or gas
drYers $35; auto. washers $45 ;
wr inger -type ; port . dish .
washer , used billiard table
$45 . Ma jar appliances are
GUARANTEED for 30 days.
KUHL ' S BARGAIN CEN . .
TER , Rt. 7 " at caution light, "
Tupper-s Pla ins. Ooen to 7;
closed MONDAYS ONLY:
ph one 667-3858 .
4·8-6tc

Pomeroy Motor Co.

condition.
priced
for6, quick
trailer. 22ft
.• steeps
good
sale; call af1er 4 p1m . 9492601.
4-8-6tc

Hemlock Grove Rd .. Rt . 3,
Pomeroy .
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _4-_8-3tp

OFFICE SUPPLIES

997-6194,

.

and

H -3tc

-c-------

PANSIE S and c abbage plants.
Cleland
Farms
&amp;
Greenhouse, E. Main, Racine .
Geraldine Cleland.
3-29-tfc

I

lATEX.PAINT

From _tlre laroest ,.···-'
Bulldozer Radiator to the
::.manesr t1ea1er t.ore .
Nathan Biggs
Radiator Specialist

For wood and masonrv
finishes.
'

3.99 gallon

•

FURNITURE

SMITlf NELSON
MOTORS, INC.

HOGG&amp;ZUSPAN
MATERIALS CO,

Stop In and See Our
Floor Display.

771-5554

Mason, W. Va.

Ph . ?92-2174

Card

Thanks

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

Notice

KARR'S.

!BARBER SHOP .

- -- - --

Real Estate· For Sale

TE1.L 8 1MO I

~INE 1

CAN'T

1V WALK

- GRAOtNc;

SEE: HIM·I'M SUS'{
~GHT NOW

•

PAPERS

Fl~T

"?

Pomeroy

Real Estate For sale

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

------

Wl4'i DID
'IOU EVIOR

5Q FPOM Tl-115

STOP

PULP'i LI ' L

ME.SS-CAME

DRAWING
IT?

CORPOPt.AL.
CROCK!!

TI4E. Pueuc

NO KIDDING!!-' I
DID&gt;l'T THI&gt;lK THE'i'D
ALLOW Ar-NONE LIKE
TAATARO&lt;.JND

GOT TOO.
SMART FOR
SUCH

DRIVEL-

LD05E.'.'

sl.;

- -----

=---.,..-----

THE

Mobile Homes For Sale

PUBLIC NOTICES

WISEMAN

·-

Your Right to Know

MR. 8/JRNS WOUI.O
ll KE TO SE:E. YOU 1
PIK!FESSOR

WHICH QN!;: DO
'IOU WANT ME

'5.55

- -- -- - -

For Rent

OFCOU~ ICAN
WALK A ~AIGHT

Repair; ~=::::===::::::====~
EXPERT
WheeJ AI'1g11menf

Em ploym en! Wanted

STOP

=-- - - - -

f'Rof.

CLATTER

M~Ei

SEWING MACHINES .
5ervic.e, all makes. 992 ·12~ .'
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
8: 30 a . m
to 12·00 Noon
Satur-day ,
1972 APACHE Eagle Fold -u p EXPERIENCED painter , InAuthorized Singer Sales and
terior and exterior. Phone.
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.\
cafllper : Includes spare tlre , .
I'
985-3951 .
3-29-tfc
canopy and plast ic storm
3-20-30tp
of
window . Trailer ha~ been
-----,--,--~wir-ed for electric. 3 outlets:
'I WISH to extend my sincere WE ARE now .!ft~_lng orders for
Excellent condition, $675 . Call
thanks
to
those
who
On Most American Cars
992-5815 after s p . m .
Southern Tomatoes , peppers,
remembered me with cards,
sweet potatoes and onion
4-5-4tc
-GUARANTEEDflowers , telephone calls while
plants ; wi ll be in by May 5th
TWO parcels , ten and twenty
a patient at the · Holzer
Phone 992-2094
at least; James Ray Hill,
STAR KILLS rats quickly, sure.
acres; Darwin area ; phone 2
HOUSES
" NEW,"
3
Medical Center. Russell Little
110 Lynn St.
Letart Fall s, Oh io; phone 24)21f:;o lbs.. S1.69, Ebersbach
992-3029.
bedrooms ;
wa 11 -tO •wa II
family .
Pameroy, 011io
1
296L __. j
Hardware,
Sugar
Run
Mills·
,
4-6·4tc
carpet
;
·
total
electric ;
4-JO. lfp
Open I Til 5
~
4-8-lJk
. Pickeris Hardware, Mason .
basements ; large wooded
Monday thru Saturday
lots ; 2 car garages; ccustom
4-1·30tp ' HOUSE FbR".S ALE, 114 Brick
Ha s added a new service . we·
WE WISH to express our sin. NEW 2 piece tr aditional living
606 E. Main, Pomerov, o.
-----,c - - - kitchen ; c:alf 985-3595 or 992·
cere thanks to the many
are
now
fitting
· Street, Pomeroy, Ohio; brick
room suite, with a extra high
5869.
friends and relatives who
LOTS for sale; on thester
MEN'S TOUPEES
hoose, 3 bedrooms, excellent
back Mr . Cha ir and reversible
3·28-12tc GARAGE ·repair , tune -ups;
were so kind during the recent .
water
;
phone
992-5248
till
3
location, close to schooi and
cush ions ; regularly $239.95, \
plugs, points and cOndenser ; 8
death- of our beloved son,
p.m . or 992-34.36. after 3 p.m.
cjty; contact Lou Osborne or!
now only -139.95. Your choice
We can fit you with a full or a
cyl.,
$17.95 and 6 cyl., SI4.9S t
s
ROOM
house,
bath
,
front
Joseph T . Caldwell , to those
4-4-6tc
oa II 992·5898.
c91ors .
Pom eroy
of
parlial hairpiece.
call for app_
o intment ; Racine.
porch, full basement · two
who sent flowers, food and
Recovery , 622 E. Main St.,
11 ·26-tfc
,
Garage,
Racine,
Ghio, 949·
Jots; S. D. Buski"rk,
341
cards. Special thanks to the
1969 PLYMOUTH Fury , 2 dr .
Pomemy, Oh io. Phone 992·
3611.
Page
St.,
Middleport,
Ohio.
Rawlings -Coats
Funeral
hardtop, air cond .• vinyl top, HOUse ···hy owner; 3 or 4
1554 .
4·8·30tc
4-8-JtC
Home and Rev . Merlin Teets,
KNAPP
quality
shoes
for
work
$1.100.
Call 446-3939 .
4-S- 6tp
bedrooms, large rec . room .
pallbearers and Edna Maxine
or dress; golf shoes, $19.99 ; .... _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __4...;
·6-Stc
large patio, modern kitchen, 6 ROOMS, bath, new gas fur - .luTbMOBiLE insurance beeri"
· Gaskill for the organ music. ALL EYE Make-Up products in
ca ll 992-5324. Bob Hysell.
in and let MICK shqw YOUJ
fully carpeted ; call 992-5248
Lost
your'
nace, 2 .lots, c.onnectlons for . cancelled?
Also to co-workers of G.S.I ,,
Koscot li(le on specia l th is
_4-6 -tf c GROCERY business for- sale.
until 3 p .m . or 992-3436 after 3
operator's
license?
Call
992what
he
can
do
for
you.
trailer Space ; call 1-304·773your kindness will always be
month . I would like to serve or
Building for sale or lease.
p.m .; No Sunday calls .
2966.
5341.
remembered. The E. L.
v isit YOl! - Please phone Helen
CLOSE OUT oo (41 1973 full size · Phone 773 -5618 from 8: 30p .m .
4-4·6fc
Barber-s Local 400 AFL-CIO
4·8-3tp· ·
6-15-tfc ' .
Caldwell family .
Jane Brown, M iddleport, Ohio
to 10 p.m . for appointment. ----~zig -zag sewing machines. For
992 -lll3 . .
4-10-ltp
3-20-tfc
sewing
stretch
fabrics,
--~---;--'----....:.
MODERN septic tank service,
4-4-tfc
buttonholes, fancy designs,
,.--;;;;_..:·'-' ---------------------,
24 hours, 7 days a week .
etc. Paint slightly blemished .
Phone 992·3954.
TWO week revival at Freedom 2 BEDROOM mobile home,
Choice of carrying case or
4-JOC30ic
Gospel Mission at Bald Knob s
sewing stand. $49.80 cash or CASH paid for all makes and
.a dults on ly ; on old Rt. 33;
starting April 15 at 7: 30p .m .
ter:ms available . Electro
phone 992-6294 or 992-6385
models of mobile homes .
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
Rev . Cecil Wise, Evangelist, . after 8 p.m .
Hygiene Co .. phone 992-7755 .
Phone area code 614.423-9531.
located at Crossroads •. Rt. 124,
Rev. L. R: Gluesencamp .
4-4-6tc
4-8- 12fc
complete fr-ont end service,
Pastor . Special slnglrig . The ---~-· 1J.tfc
- - - - - - -- 4....:
----=-~~tune up and bra'ke service:
public is invited.
TWO steeping rooms , one single 12) ELECTROLUX Sweeper Berr-y -Miller Mobile Homes ha~
Wheels
balanced
elec.
and be informed of the func 4-l 0-5tc ~ and one double ; available at
deluxe model. Cori1plete with
a lot to offer- when you start
tronically
.
All
work
"
tions .of your government are : - - - - - - Owner Transferrecj. Will ript refuse any
all cleaning aftachments and
once ; phone 992-5440.
Shopping for your Mobile
guaranteed .
Reasonable
embodied in public notices. In
YARD Sale, Friday a_nd
uses paper bags. Slightly used
reasonable offer.
Home. You can beat the high
4-8·3tc
that self -government charges
rates. Phone 992-3213 or 742Saturday on Larkin Str eet,
cleans
and
looks
like
new.
but
all citizens to be informed ;
depreciation
you'll
..
have
on
3232.
:--::-=-::-::-:-:-:--Rutland.
Will sen for $37.25 cash or
2 BEDROOM home, 1676 lin ·
this newspaper urges every
your home the first two years
2· 18-tfc
4·10-Jfc
citizen to read and s.tudy these
This is a great opportunity for some lucky
coin Heights, bath, basemen(ter-ms ava i.l able. Electro
by shopping for
late model
notices . We strongly advise
Hygiene Co., phone 992-7755.
· DOZER ·a nd back hoe ·work,
aluminut;n siding, storm doors
used Mobi le Home. We have1a
·family large or small. 5 bedrooms, completely
those citizens , seeking further
PAUL's AUTo··· PARTS now
and · ~in"dows , .hardwood
4-4-6fc.
.
ponds and septic t~nks, dithuge
selection
of
these
homes
informatioh , to exerCise their
carpeted, living, family and dining rooms, 2
· open for business In old
floors , newly refinished . Call
ching service; top SOil, fill
in stock now, and We 'll do our
r ight of access to public
location on Rt. 7 bypass ,
Tracy WbaJey., 992-3054. .
. UNCLAIMED freight 1973 8
large bathrooms; new kitchen with builtin cab.
dirt, limestone; B&amp;K EJ&lt;·
level best to save you money .
records and public meetings.
Pomeroy . ·We pay top dollar
4-10-Stc
track stereo, 4 speaker audio . So for an honest to goodness
,
cavating.
Phone 992·5l67
Kids can walk to grade school. It's an. older
for- wr-eck~d and junk ~uto &amp; - - - -- - - - ' -- system, will sell for small _ good deal stop in today at
Dick Ka~r. Jr.
.
house in an excellent location in Middleport.
balanceS82.50or pay S6.10 per
tr-ucks. O:Nner' . Paul Baird .9. J.tf
Berry-Miller Mobile Home
month . Call 992-5331.
4-Hlp
Was $24,000, but don't let that stop you, The
Sales , 70S Farson Street.
EXCAVATING, dozer, loade,
LEGAL NOTICE
,
4-4-6fc
GRAY
MANOR
Belpre, Ohio, phone 423-9SJ1
owner must selL (make an offer) .
The unknown nel!C.t of k in and OLD FASHIONED reviv~l sti ll
and backhoe work; septic
- open 7 days.
persons entitled to inherit of and
' 1tank·s Installed; ·dump trucks
in p·r ogress at the Pomeroy
APARTMENTS
A lOFT. MEAT or vegetable
4·5·6tc
from Alma Ohlinger will take
and
lo.boys
for
hire
;
wilt
haul
Wesleyan Holiness Church on display case with motor . If
notice that Lionel BOggs ,
Gallia Co.'s Largest
MIDDLEPORT
fill dirt, top soil, limestone
Rt . 143. Special services each
you can use it ca ll 949-3821, 10 X 50 MOBILE home, ex~uardian of Alma Ohlinger, an
atid
gravel; call Bob or Roger
Real
Estate
Sales
Agency
evening at 7: 30 p. m. Speaker
. mcamoAfP.nt nl'lr&lt;;t'ln . nn
thl'l
cellent
condition,
expansion
2 Furn ished Apts . with new ,
949 -3161, or write A. C.
Jeffers. day phone 992-7089 ;
4th day of April, 1973, flied his
and Pastor Rev : O'Dell
f.iving roOm , fully air furniture, with or without
B·r adford, Box 116, Racine, 0.
Office 446-3643
night pbone 992-3525 or 992·
petition in the Probate Court
Manley . ·Everyon.e welcome .
conditio('led ; phone 992-5905.
ut i lities, both have 1 or 2
45171.
5232.
within and for the County of
bedrooms,
both
on
ground
3-26-tfc
4-6-l2tc
Evenings Ca II .
4·5-5tc
Meigs and State of Oh io,
f~2-JJ.tfc
floor and have wall -to-wall
a.lteg i!t9 that It is necessary to
E;
M."lke"
Wiseman
446•3796
catpe
t.
Also
have
pr
lvate
1
1970
12
x
SO
HOMETTE
,
fur
•
2
HORSES
:
-1
registered
·
seU the fOllowing des cri be.d real
READY-MIX
CONCRETE
en tranc es and ' yard for
nished, carpeted, 2 bedrooms,
estate to pay the debts of Alma
quarter ; 7 years old, gelded,
E.
N.
Wiseman
446-4500
delivered
right
to your
ch ildren, i n ni Ce neigh .
Ohlinger,· and that the next of
was~~r
&amp;
dryer
,
un
$375. 1 gelded walker , 7 years
project. Fast and ea~y. Free
borhood.
kln and rersons entitled to
derp~nning , 2 sets of steps,
old , $250. Mus! se ll. Call 367·
:
.
inherit o and from Alma
estimates, Phone 992-3284
Phone 992-3863 till 3 p.m. or·
air . condltioner·; excellent . . .
7432 ..
HOUSE in Long Bottom, phone
Ohlinger are unknown . Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
992 -5944 after 6: 00.
condition
;
call
742·3807
or
i42·
4-5-ffc
985·3529.
.
.
:
·· Said real estate being situated
5258.
- I .
Middleport , Ohlp.
in the VIllage of Middleport,
6-11-tfc'
6-JO.ffc
County of Meigs and State of
·3 AND 4 ROOM ·furnisAed and '•toob ' s AQUARIUMS; fish~
4-8-3tc
-~---""""'Ohio .
1mfumished
apartments.
and svpplies; new location ,
REALTY
SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
Beginning at an iron 'p in at the
Phone 992-5434.
Ash Street, Middleport near
HOUSE FOR SALE : 2 or 3
REASONABLE
rates. Ph. 446
southwest corner of Harold
601E. Moin
~
Air _conditioners
4-12-tfc
park ; phone 99~ · 5443.
bedroom , all paneled; wall·to.
4782,
Gallipolis,
Jbhn Russell
Roushe 's tot : then ce riorth 26
\..
•
Pomeroy
....,
Furnace Contro Is
- -- - - - - - , , . . . - J.7.tft
Awnings
wall carpet,- forced air' f~r­
degree-s 30minutes west 132 feet
Owner &amp; Operator .
SLEEPING Room . oVer the
'
to an Iron ~in at the northwest
nace; 18, 000 · BTU air ·
5-12-Hc
Underpinning
HUMIDIFIERS
Wine
Store.
Pomero"y; f6Ai~Limesfone, ExcelsiOf&gt;
corner of HarOld Roushe's lot :
conditioner; . full basem,ent ;
EXCELLENT
LOCATION
thence south 63 degrees 30
references required ; phone
nice yard; city water. sewer
Hot Water H.,a,ers
Salt Works , E. Main St .;
c. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
1 level acre. 9 room home, 4
Complete mobile home
m inutes west 55.5 feet to a
992-5293.
Qas;
close
to
·
school.
and
Pomeroy
.
Phone
992-3891.
'
Complete Service
bedrooms. porc;hes , bath.
stake; then ce south 26 degrees
Plumbing
service·
plus gigantic
4-3-tfc
Located in Middleport. Price
Phone 949-3821
4~ 12 - tfc' • display
30 minutes east 132 teet to a
Nice apartment in rear to
of mobile homes
Electrical Work
$10,000. Phone 992-7109 ,
stake;· then ce north 63 degrees
Racine. Ohlo _
rent.
Large
storage
building.
always available at . . .
. TRAI LER , Brown's Trailer
30 minutes east 55.5 feet to the
Cri tt Br adfqrd
4-S..tc
yard
.
$18,500.00.
Beautiful
Park; phone 992 -3324.
place of beginning , conta ining
S.J.tfc
SPRING SP·ECIALS
INCOME PROPERTY .
17.100 acres in Sedion 29, Town
4-J-tfc
MILLER
~~---~
1, Ra.nge 13. .
. , : .
Nice apartment, 2 bedrooms, '
---~-·G&amp; E Appliance Repair; repair
The pr-ayer of said petition is
bath,
dining R, with 10
PRIVATE
meeting
room
for
on all laundry equipment.
for authorization and order to
MOBILE HOMES
1
sleeping rooms over. Ready
any organization; phone 992·
sell s.aid real estate .
.
refrigeration equipment and
to rent for immediate In·
1220 Washington Blvd. _
992-2448
3975.
In Carton ·
The persons first above
wiring ; . welding,
house
423-7521
BELPRE, 0.
come. CALL TO SEE. Just
meritioned w'ilt further take
electr-ic
and
gas: Call 992-3802
3'
JJ
.tf&lt;;
Pomeroy,
Set Up, 134.95
noti ce that they h,ave-been made
$11,500.00.
or after 4: 30 p.m . call 992·
partie s defendant to said
2 YEARS OLD
6050.
OWN YOUR HOME AT LOW
TRA ILER , . Baer "s Market,
pet ition and that they are
3
beautiful
bedrooms
with
COST
see
Kingsbury
Home
3-21-301p
Syr-acuse, Ohio.
required to answer the same on For
1
or
Sales
&amp;
Service,
Inc.,
phOne
large
closets.
A
kitchen
that
or before the 12 day of , June.,
4-6· tfc
In Cai"fon
992-6256 from 2 to 7 p.m. or by
1973 ;
'
is a housewife's dream .
SEE US FOR :· Awnings, 'stormWAREHOUSE or ·slora ge - - - - - 110 Mechanic Street
uonet t:IOggs , Guard ian
appointment. 24' wide FURNISHED
Set
up,
$54.95
Dining room with double
doors and windows, carports,
bui.lding,
located
on
Rutland
2
bedroom
Of Alma Ohlinger as aforesa id.
furnished . Made by Skyline
apar-tment, adults onl·y ,
Sliding
glass
doors
.
to
patio.
marquees,
arum lnum Siding ,
St.
,
Middleport,
metal
POMEROY
(4 ) 13, 10. 17, 2-4; (5 ), 1, B, 6tc
Corp., . country's lar.gest.
Middleport; phone 992-3874.
Large living room with
and railing. A. Jacob, sales building. Call or contact Mrs .
. • • - Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.
" Meigs County owne.d and
fireplace.
Bath . Utility--._ rep_resentative . for treeJ
Manni rig Webster , 992-2495.
4-6-ffc
6lLt
Pho1Je 992-2181
operated
."
Financing
room . Carpeted. Storm doors
· estimates, Phone Charla&amp; REA\. BUY
4-9-3tc
4 BEDROOM, 2 baths, beautiful
available. Set up on your lot
--~&amp; windows. Electric heat.
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V . '
3 RENTALS - I furnished . All
built-in kitchen, located in · NOW · READY ..,..... Blooming
ready for your occupancy. 200
NOTICE ON FILING
Level lot 100x120."S23,000.00.
Johnson and Son, Inc.
ne,a r courthouse. iNCOME
OF INVENTORY
Pomeroy ; . trailer space at
potted fl~wers , starting at
yards off Rt . 33 on County Rd .
SERViCE STATION
f2 -tfc :.
$193 .00
a
month.
Only
AN 0 APPRAISEMENT
Cheshire "on Rt . 7, water
SOc; hangmg baskets ; pansies
18. Quick delivery. Our low
$10,000.00
.
With
all
stock
and
equipThe s·tate of Ohio, Meigs DEAD Stock horses, cattle,
h
and cabbage ; Ready soon overhead will save you$$$. 12'
1
· h d
'
SEPTIC TANKS AROB!C :.
County . Probate Court
NEAR TOWN
ment . Lovely apartment
hog s, sheep. Reasonable
urnls e ' P one 44 6· 4060
Petun ias. marigolds, Col.eus, · and 14' Mobile · Homes
SEWAGE SYSTEMS CLEAN - ,
To the Administratrix of the . char-ge: . Call 245-5514.
.
after 5 p.m ., 446-l279.
·tomatoes, peppers, etc .; 1f4 off
available, Kingsbury Horile
3 BEDROOMS - Large bath ,
over. 3 bedrooms. bath, gas
ED, REPAIRED. MILLER ~ ·
estate ; to suc h. of the following
6
nice kitchen. basement, front
furnace, glassed porches,
2-28·30fc -'-- - -- - - - 4- ·6tc by the (I at ; Hubbard's Green - Sales &amp; Service, · Inc.
as are residents of the State of
SANITATION,
STEWART •"
and back porches. Garage.
hardwood floors . A STEAL
house.. St. Rt. 124, above park,
3-25-ffc
· Ohio, vix : the surviving
OH 10. PHONE 662-3035.
. ::
' two trailer lots. Syracuse, Ohio. .
- - - - - -- -- AT JUST $17,900.00.
Spouse, the next of kin, the
$8.000.00,
HOUSE AND
10-4-tfl
&lt;
beneficiar-ies under the will ;
NEW LISTING
4 YEARS OLD
Phone 992-'5693.
---:----:-...:_~
_
_
4__:
·3·
tfc
"
.
'
and to the at-torney or ahorneys
Curfew ReUs
.
10x55 MOBILE HOME . - And
HERE IS A BUY 4
EXCA'VA 11Nl7&gt; uozers, larg
representi'ng · anv of
the
---------4~·9-5tc HAVE . lar'ge assortment of
bedrooms,
bath,
large
living
lot
.
H"as
3
bedrooms,
city
One
of
the
most
famous
· and small; Backhoes and ..
aforementioned persons :
fl, ower~ for Easter and· every 1967 CHEVY Caprice, 4 door,
R., bar room . Large kitchen
water, natural gas, and Ohio
L~ders on track and fires; (
Elmer Davis , Deceased , curfew bells booms out from
at,ttomatic,
327
.engine;·
,call
occas1on. Smalley's Gift
and dining · are~ - loads of
Power. Asking Just ·$5700.00.
Pomeroy, · Oh io, Salisburv
Dum.P trucks - ~ Lo -boy \
742
-3344,
Roy
Ellis,
College
the tower of' Christ Church.
Shop, Chester, Ohio, phone
Township , No . 20827 . ·
L. o . T
cabine·ts. 11/2 acre of ground .
Serv1ce; Septic tanks in· '"·-.
Ave ., Rutland , Ohio.
Help
985-3537 .
. You are hereby notified that the largest college of Oxford
Storm windows &amp; doors.
ON
ROUTE
33
Vacant,
stalled;
George
IBilll •'
th•
Inventory
and
Ap 4-10-IOtc _ _ __ _ _ __ _4__:·8· 3tp
PuOi.ns ; phone 992-2478.
'
Close ln. $16,900.0(1.
r~ady for you to build your own
praisement of the estate of the University. Nightly at five PART TIME . Nati onal supplier
home.
Asking
$1500;
ll
t
rain
men
for
lo
cal
llf•
YEARS
OLO
w
i
2-9-tfc'
1965
FORD
Station
Wagon
for
aforementioned , deceased, late
sale or Jrade ; phone 949-3070.
typewrite r repairing . Wr ite : 7l SCHULTZ 12ft. by 70ft. fully
of said County, was filed i'n this minutes p a s t njne "Great .
RESTAURANT
ln. new addition. Level lot
~----carpeted trai'ler . Like new .
4-8·3tc
HARRISON ' S TV Service and
Court. Said lfl''J entorv and Tom" strikes 101 times.
Regiona l Manager, Box 25,
lOOxlOO
.
3
nice
bedrooms
W·
EAT
OUT
Your
very
own
Ca ll 992-3860 or 949-2951.
Apprais~ment · Will be
for
Serv ice Calls; phone 992·2522.
Glenshaw, Penna . 15116.
business. Good future with
clOSets . Very modern kif.
'
4-1D-6tc
hearing b,efore this Court on· the
·
2-9-ffc
4·8-12tp
1972 CAD. Coupe DeVIlle, vinyl growing tOwn . Asking Only
i!hen W. range. Bath, Utility,
'
12th day of APril, 1973, at 10 :00
.
top,
gr-ay,
climate
control
,
hardwood
floors
(some
$5,000
.00.
Will
take
lot
on
trade.
oc'lock A .M .
·
1
10 x 47 MOBILE Home , 26 ft .
ELNA a·n d Wnite :seWing
AM&amp;FM radio, low mileage,
carpeting), drapes included.
' Any person desiring to file
42 ACRES
.
self -contained
Concord
Machines ... service on all ·
exceptions thereto must file
perfect cond ition . Ph. 245· 6 ROOMS - Modern' kitchen
A n ice carport with storag~
camper . Phone 992·3954.
them at least five. days prior- to
makes . Reasonable rates .
5888.
and bath. Nice gas furnace,
room. THIS YOU MUST
- 4-10-3tc
,
the date set for hearing.
The SeWing Center, Mid- '
·4·8·41&lt;
barn, all minerals, and good
SEE S2L500.00.
12 ME-N NEEDED
Given under my hand and
dleport , Ohio.
---....,--,'--,-'-cfences
.
1962
22
FT.
TAG'
A
LONG
!ravel
Only
$19,500.00.
PROPERTY IS MOVING
seel of said Court , th is 30th day
11 · 16-tfc
trailer- , setf-contalned , sleeps 1972 HONDA saO .motorcycle,' 4
of March ·- 1973.
LARGE
FAST. LET US SELL
cy
linder.
many
extrasi
like
4. Phone 992-6960.
ManningtO. Webster
'
SCENIC VIEW - .4 bedropms,
YOURS.
Judge and ex -offi cio
' 4-10-6tc .new ; phone 985-3828.
WILL trim or cut trees, clean .
2 -baths, front enclosed and
HENRY
E.
CLELANO.
Sr.
Clerk. of sai d court
J.9·ffc
out basements, attics, etc.
fur
back'
porches.
Gas
F.A.
.
BROKER
·
·
.
SOUP'S 1 on , the rug that is, - - - - - -- - -- Phone 949-3221.
nace. full basement, 2 car
992-2259 if no answer 992-256t
By Ann B. Watson
clean
with
Blue
Lustre.
·Rent
'
57
CHEVY
'
2
door
hardtop
;
'55
3-11-JOtc
Deputy c;::ler-k
garage . Large river front lot.
(4) 3, 10, 2t
el edric
shampo·oer
$1.
Oldsmobile ; contact · Larry
for
Bargain
of
$10,500.00.
All
FULL OR
Nelson 's
.Drug
. Store,
Hubbard, Syracuse ; phone
NEW HOME
CALL
Pomeroy , Ohio.
992 -3364.
·
PART TIME
Mon.-Fri. Tii9-Saturday Til6
3 BEDROOMS Stove,
, refrigerator . freezer in •
Sentinel -------~ 4, 10-2fc
beautiful kitchen . Nice utility,
NEW 2 piece tradit ional ,liv ing
and closets. Only $16,000. May
room suite, with a extra high
Expanding company
PH.
take a lot on trade.
back Mr . Cha ir and reversible
needs twelve men to
- 1-cush ions;/ regUlarly $239.95,
NEW LISTING
work in ·Gallipolis and
now only $139.95. Your cho,i ce
I ACRE LOTS In Meigs
MAIN ST. IN RUTLAND
of colors . Pomer-oy Recovery ,
, school district. Have the wafer
Point Pleasant .areas.
WANTED - 3_;000 new pr used
622 E . Main St., Pomeroy,
JlH, 742-3191
taps and septic tanks in. Only
No
experience
tomato slakes ; ca ll John
Ohio. Phone 992-7554.
$2,000.00.
~----~
.
-_ McCoy , New Matamoras, 0 .,
necessary. ll) ust have
4-5-6tp
865 2280.
1
MINERS , 1
We Buy, Sell . 1
car. Call Monday or
DON'T
WASTE
YOUR
- - ' - - -- - - - - 4 - ·l-8fp
VAL.UABLE .TJME LOOKING .
Tuesday 9 til ~·
·suPPLIES
I I
: and Trade
I
SEE
US AND SAVE YOUR
CLEAN co pper , '4Sc lb. ;
1
.· SHOE LE.A THER,
I
·
GUNS
1
Radiat ors , clean , 28c lb.;
.
HELEN
L.
TEAFORD
BeltsHats
I
I
Brass. 18c lb .; Batteri es, 70c ;
GOROON B. TEAFORD
Ginseng $60 lb.; M . A. Hall,
I Buckets-Leg Bands 1 I
KNIVES
.1
ASSOCIATES
~eedsville, 378-6249.
992-3615 or 992.JJ2l
3-9.tfc
NO SUNDAY SHOWINGS
HUNTING &amp; FISHING LICENSE - ' - - - --'---OFFICE HOURS
8 : 30 a m .- to 5:00pm. Da ily ,

'

2r

PAINT SPECIAL!
Blue Ridge
Interior- Exterior

992 -2094
606 E. Main Pomeroy

--

rtl

"
-~:::::;:=:========:;-;===========;-;===::=======
··

POMEROY
HOME &amp; AUTO

10 :D£Ff&gt;..E "lHE"
LIMITS OF tAIJGLJN;.E !

ELVINE¥-- IF SHE STARTS WAGGIN'
HER TONGUE MAW NEUER Wilt.
GIT MY VITTLES ON TH'TABLE

Business ·Services

400 BALES mixed hay. Phone

COR No Phooe 98l -4211 .
3·29-24tp

-.

•

----MIXED HAY, James A. Smith,

For Sale

1969CHEVROLET
11895
Station wagon. locall y owned &amp; clean inside &amp; out. V-8
eng ine. automatic transm ission. power steer ing , power
brakes, luggage rack , green vinyl interior with white
finish. Radio and all the extras.

per

For Siile

Wantr.rt To Buy
·ou:l furniture. oak

MERE ~S
AI "--T &amp;UX.IOH .•.

BALLe; 0' FIRE!! HERE C0f"¥1"ES ·

HOPE HE':;

NOT100
~UBY "TO .
BEE US.

AGENCY

YES , ..
WI·HCH MEAN5
., , THAT TRANSMISSION
WE'LL HAVE TO
PROBABLY
CHAMBER 15 WAV TOO
BUlLO A LARG£R OUTSIDE, '
SMALL TO HANDLE
NE XT 1'0 .
ONE, 15 THAT IT ?
THE JOB/
THE LAS

IF OOP 15 ON THE
BALL , VOU MAY HAVE
WUR PI.E510SAL1R
BEFORE VOU 'A:E.
REACN t=OR HIM,
PETE!

a

- '

wrevocab\4
in the
deed!

------

1

"HE~L"

'

HEAnNG &amp;
COOLING

'

rcLELAND~

;===========-:._;

,.

B&lt;JT HOW'RE WE CiOH~A STOPQUEEt-1
ISABEllA FROM TAKIN' OVER NORlH
Ati' SOUTH /\MERICA.? HO.V THPlT SHE'S
(\01 lHE COMRADES T' BANKROLL
'
THE CAf'ER "?

------

ARNOLD
BROTHERS
o.

Rent

.....1

- - -- - -

- -- -- -

Sale

SABRE TILLER
3'h HP
129.95

Virgil B.

TURF- TRIM MOWERS
3 HP
49.95

Teaford, Sr.
Broker

OHE RED 11"1~ !!:! lifE HAND
~T'Th'9
CQM~ADffi~
THE BLIS H! ME ·BACK 'SOON!

- -

- - -_.-;;,.
.
by THOMAS JOSEPH. .

tions
Opposed

to

1. Concern
of the

High
school

dance

17. Lieu tenant's

command
(abbr. )

agitated
11. Islands
. sout.h
.
of Sicily
15, Somewhat
palltd
18. Friend·
Jess
·
fellow

31. Friend of
the King
· of Siam
32. Campus
person-

34. Before
3-'t New Year

2:0. Fury;
brute

grandiose

in

force

Vietnam ·

Night"
·heroine .

$MONEY$

.

WANTED I

The Daily
I
992-2156 .

We talk to you

Stewart's Gun Shop

like a person.

1

WMP0/1390

'
---;;:-;

ON YOUR DIAL

------ .

I

MR. VANCE·

1

446-0677

·

Wf.lEN 'IOU FIND
NOT SHEL.LS
ON THE

..YOU Mi6HI SOSP£CT
A SQUIRRE.L HAS

j.
) )

10

BEEN AROUND l

1 '.

l

GROl.lND -- ~.A'rff./0

1------~---- ~

,.

Juccated by the ab9ve cartoon.

to
fish

~ITY

tiiFTY

PLAGUE

mel ~

NO! FIRH I HAVE.TO WAIT

FOR THE OPP0$1N6 MANAGERTO

COME 0\"EE: AND CON6RATUl!\fE ME

(dom-

,,,

ineer)
28. Peleg's
·son

29. Larda·
ceous
30. Roll
of
money .

' JU5T BRfAK IN! ...

u. .JIJ

DAILY CRYI&gt;TOOUO'l'~: - Here's how to work
AXYDLBAAXR
I~
LONGFELLOW

it:

One Jetter simply stallds . for another. In this !'iample A is
used· for the three L's, X for the two O's. etc. !'ingle letters,
apostrophes, the length and formali o? nf the wort! ~ are all
hints. Ea.cb day the cod e lt•tt('rs ar~ . different.

CRYPTOQUOTES
NZ .

' -----------1.

INSIST

An-wen l 'ood thai nu:~kt&gt;f ape• til(hl - SPAGHEnl

23.More

27. - it

I1

'

J•mble•,

mixture

EV 'U

KN0 GE G ·
EG

-.-·,;

Now IUTUllelhe circled tettera
to form the aurprlae ...-wer, ~

r l'lillll ·~~~~ AIISMII!n "r x xJ-r xxr

26. Swan
genus

· I

and

•

I " 0 · ·I.

ancholy
24. Theater
"box
25. Tobacco

....--...I------------·

I. I

ONNACY ,. •

•

(AaloW4!H totnorra·w'

and Hardware

Wanted To Buy

I I I

AMANDA PANDA

FOR

POMEROY

COULl:&gt; e!oE TWO
CAT&amp; MAKIN6 SQ.JNC'S
I...IKE A C'F(IJM.

1

'CARRIERS

i3.51 HOUR

[)

1::~~-~~-~~~~-~~;::l·

Wanted ·

-

Fl!'tf()'/' ( ]

. ality

chap

(3

"Twelfth

29. Chafe

19. Otiose

wds.)
8. Exalted;

19. Asian
country

22. Bouquet
artist
23. Smudge
25. Suave

9. Less

4. Dickens
character
5. Dpmestie ;
snug
8. Eye
7. Have as
a buddy

f/&lt;(1'''Rosary
bead

.-J , _

Yesterday's Answer

· (3 wds.)

Perform
diligently ·

_,IJ

Unscramble these four Jumblea,
one letter to each square, to
form · four' ordinary wordi,

word
3. Being an
untrue
loVer

Eric

&lt;

~lllJMID)1rn®u..J

DOWN
I. Whip
·'
2. Divislon

military
12. Check
Novelist

Wanted

Autirsalelr ·

33. Budding
M.D.
35. Prong
36. Succeeded
37. Spirit
lamp
38. Doctrine
39. COmpara·
live word

ACROSS
1. Ent..J ·
meralc
5. Expecta·

Pomeroy, Ohio

----------- .

Yesterday's Cryp(oquole: MONKEYS VEilY SENS!B}',Y, I:E ·
FRAIN FROM SPEECH J.,EST THEY SHOULD BE SE1 fO
EARN THEIR LIVINGS.- KENNETHGRAHAME
.
(@ 1978.Klng Fe.Rturel! Sy ndicate , ~·ne,)

GEQX
C.l V

VN

E V ' U·

C XB . - ZSOOR
-.-

_,_

•

---....,--·-,

'.

~·xv

G F. Q X 0

JSIBX ·O
,-

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lW

-----.--

EG

VZX

V ~

J" EX

•

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,--

•

.

'

. '

�/

'

'1',

•

10 - The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., AprillO, 1!173

•

Grant made on hull

•

•

'

•

PRESENTED AWARDS - Students of Portland
Elementary bonored and presented awards Friday nig ht at
the vanety show staged at the school were, front row, !..-,
Danny Weddle, scholasllc, David Bryant, most progress 10
remedial reading; Richard Wolfe, c11lzenship, Janet Middle swart, scbolast1c, Leah Greer , remedial reading, Cmdy

Board hires

•

(Condnued from Page I I
Hoffman , Everette Holcomb,
Linda Hun ter, Mary Hysell,
Paulin e Hysell , Kathe rm e
Jacobs, David J enkms, Leo
Kenned y, Jr , J ean Kuhn ,
Linda Lear, John Lisle, Barbara Logan, Gregory McCall,
Lmda McManus , Robert
Meier, Maurita Miller, Phyllis
Miller, Willard M1ller, Sabra
Mornson, Stephame Niemiec,
Patricia O'Connor, Margaret
Parsons (half time), Mary
Powell, Emalene Pratt, Gary
Reed, Roberta Ri chardson,
Fred Ruth , Carl Saelens ,
Kathleen Scott, Ben Slawter,
Dorset Smith, Donald Stivers ,
R1cbard Sweet, Rebecca Tate,
Anna Turner, Victoria Vanek,
Gary Walker , Martanne
Watson, Joette Weber, Ann
Webster, Lucy White, Nancy
While, Wykle Whitley, Helen
Williams, Haron Wise and Carl
Wolfe.
New appointments approved
were of Rose Ann Jenkms,
Eleanor Balettnar, Jamce Schmoll- and Leola Hysell. Contlnumg contracts were approved for Jeanme Taylor and
Marvll\ McKelvey~
Non-certified
personnel
approved for one year were
John Beaver, drrector of transportatton; Eugene Hawkins
and Joe Shavormsky, maintenance ; John Scragg, bus
mechanic; Earie WoOd and
Louie Christian, custodians ;
Teresa Cremeans and Naomi
Floyd, bus drivers; Mildred
Long, Marjorie Davis and
VII'ginia Wears, cooks.

MEIGS THEATRE
Tonight,

April 10

WHAT'S UP DOC?
.

(technlcolor)
Barbara Stretsand
Ryan O' Neal
( G)

Colorcartoons

r..dults : $1 50 Children· 75c
Show Starts 1 p.m.
Wednesday &amp; Thursday

Aprll11 · 12
NOT OPEN

Issued two year contracts
were Tea Hatfield and Kenneth
Little, custodians ; J oyce
Vance and R1ta Hamm ,
secretanes; Leo Morn s and
Buster Barrett, bus dr1vers,
and Phylhs Enghsh, cook.
Not issued continumg contracts unt1l recommendations
ar:e made by supervisors were
John Ba1ley, custodian; Alice
Globokar, Lmda Jett and June
Yost, bus drtvers; Mary Husen
and Sad1e Car\, cooks
Mr. _ Hargraves gave a
report of cerllflcated staff
members who have contmumg
teachmg contracts as of the
1972-73 school year and another
on the contract status of non·
cerlll!ed staff members.
The report of certificated
staff members w1th contracts ·
extendmg beyond thiS school
year mcluded Hargraves,
supenntendent, Aug. I , 1971 to
July 31, 1975; Charles Chancey,
head football coach, Aug. I,
1969 to July 31, 1974 ; Russell
Moore , JUntor htgh school
prmc1pal, Aug. I, 1971, to July
31, 1974; Rob ert Morrts,
elementary prmcipal, Aug. 1,
1971 to July 31, 1~74 and Fenton
Taylor, :lssJStant h1gh school
prmcipal, Aug. ! , 1972 to July
31, 1974.
In other recommendations
made by Hargraves, the board
approved the extenSion of Leda
Kraeuter's leave of absence to
the end of the school year or at
a date pnor to that 1f she 1s able
to return, and a resolutiOn
supportmg the..ohtlo.sophy and
prmciples of th, Right to Read
program.
It was announced that
Hargraves IS acceptmg ap·
phcallons lor the poSition of
assiStant superintendent. It
was pomted out that the duties
of the assistant superintendent
be spelled out before the person
1s hrred and added just what
the board expects of the person
m this poSition.
Hargraves Is also acceptmg
applications for the basketball
coachmg position . He reported
that he has interviewed 24
applicants. The position is to be
filled not later than the May
meeting .1
_
The board d1d not adopt the

Have you tried
our Drive-in
facilities?

Evans, and ChrJSUe Lawrence, both scholastic; back row,
Brian Johnson, scholastic, Jeff Brolvn, citizenship, NICki
VanMeter, scholastic, Jarus Carnahan, band, second year
award, Lisa Warner, begmmng band and Tammy Cozart,
spelling champ. Absent was Lawrence Powell, CitiZenship
award
followmg resolution, but IS
willing, !ollowmg a meetmg
with the teachers assoctatJon.
The resol utiOn reads as
follows .
1- An evaluation procedure
1
for the professional staff of
Me1gs Local School DistriCt
shall be developed by a commi ttee cons1stmf of three
representatives of the ad·
mt ms tratwn
and
three
representa!Jves of the Me1gs
Loca l Teachers Association.
2 - Thts procedure Will mclude the followmg 1te ms
Purpose
of
evalua tiOn,
methods of evaluation mcludmg procedures for classroom observations by prmClpals , self evaluation, and
conferen ces with the admmtstratlon ; items to be Included m the evaluatiOn
process are use of evaluation
flied for diSmissal purposes,
teacher's access to his or her
evaluatwn file.
3 - The committee will
develop
the
evaluatiO n
procedure and submit it to the
board ;
the
board 's
representatives wtll meet w1th
the committees to arnve at a
flhal procedure.
4 - Followmg adoptiOn 'by
the board, the evaluatiOn
procedure will become a part
of board policy and effectiVe
for the dJStnct.
On a 3 to 1 vote, P1erce votmg
no, the board approved an
agreement with the Col\lffibus
and Southern OhiO Electric
Company to place, without
charge ,
th e
followin g
new apphances in the Meigs
H1gh School Home Economics
Department: three electric
ranges, one dryer, one dlShw ~sher , one refrigerator, and
one washer This ts m conhnuatJOn of a program 1n
operation several years.
It was observed that a
meeting w1ll be held Wednesday wtth the teachers and
Thursday With members of the
OAPSE to discuss collective
bargammg agreements. The
board also added the name of
Edward Lemaster to the
substitute bus drivers list.
Board member uon Mullen
stated that he was out of town
at the las1 meetmg and offered
a statement last night tn
regard to Wes Suns' statement
that the board had "one man
rule."
Mullen stated the board was
not."run by one man" and that
he would have offered a
statement had he been
available.
Board President Frank
Porter said , m regard to
making up the days caused by

More contrtbutlons have
been received by the Don s
Rmeha rt fund wh1ch by now
has been officiall y c)osed , Mrs.
Rose S1sson, co~ha 1 rman of
the drive reported Monday .
The contnbut10ns, whJC h
brought the fund total to
$2,053.54, came from the Busy
Bee Class of the Middleport
F1rst Baptist Church, Mrs
Rue! F m,.terwald m Atnens,
and Alfr ed, Clarence a nd
Margaret Gans. Serving with
Mrs. Sisson m the drive which
was sponsored by the Sacred
Heart Church Coun cil was the
Rev
Father
Bern ard
Krajcovtc

CLASS TO MEET
A
LETART FALLS coun ty-w1de class meetmg will
be held here Sunday at the
Umted Brethren Church from 2
to 4 p.m Glen Bissell will be
the leader Pastor 1s the Rev
Freeland Norrts. The public IS
InVIted

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature m downtown
Pomeroy Tuesday at II a m
was 38 degrees under snowy
sk1es

0

0

Area Deaths

Pa , Monday. She was
preceded m death by her
mother, Sevia Beaver Cline.
She 1s surv ived by h er
husband, John; two sons , two
daughters, two grandchildren
and three step-grandchildren;
her father, Russell Chne, Long
Bottom, and mne brothers and
sisters.
Funera l services will be held
Thursday at 3 p rn. at Ewmg
Cha pel Fnends may call there
Wednesd ay evemng a nd
Thursday until tlffie of serVICes
The body, at the Marcy
Funeral Home in Conneaut,
w1ll be brought here Wednesday

Austin Bukey, 71 , Long
Bottom, d1ed Monday evening
at
Ve te rans
Memortal
Hos pita l Mr Bukey was
preceded 1n' death qy hJS
parents, Wilham and Ora
Fogley Bukey; an mfant son,
three brothers, and two sisters.
Surv1v1ng are his wife,
Esther . Edww ds Bukey ; a
daughter, Mrs. Dale (Nancy)
Kreisel, Kmgston ; two sisters,
Ruth Mayer, Columbus, and
Anna Mae Lattm , Orange
Lake, Fla .; f1ve grandchildren,
and several nieces and
nephews .
Funeral services will be held
at 1 p m. Thursday at the
Ewmg Funeral Home with the
Rev Marshall Larimore offtclahng BUrJal will be m
Gilmore Cemetery . Fnends
may call at the funeral horne
any ttme .

I

Anna Duffield
the recent stnke, that State
Supenntendent of Schools
Martm Essex mforrned the
board that days m1ssed that
1
are not caused by man, such as
weather, floods, etc., up to fiv e
days do not have to be made up
by the student. However, a
stnke, must be made up, or
k hool foundatiOn money will
9e put in Jeopardy They chose
Saturday due to confhctmg
dates, Porter said.
The board recessed uniJI
next Monday mght and was
advised to keep the followin g
Mondays open m case other
meetings w11l be called.
Atte ndmg were Porter ,
Muilen, V~rgll Ktng, Pierce,
Hargraves and Lee McComas,
clerk.

HAURACHES
FOR MEN AND WOMEN

1

1
1
1

Austin Bukey
GRANGE TO MEET
LETART FALLS - Ohio
Valley Subordmate Grange No
261 here w1ll meet Thursday at
the hall at 7:30p.m Members
are to bring a pie Rock Springs
Grange will be guests.

Scores of customers are now \l n~tng
dally 1hto our spac1ous new autobank tac1ilttes t o cash checks, make
depostts and p1ck up money.
Auto Teller Window a nd
Walk -up
Window Open
Friday Evenings 5 to 7 P.M.

Foundation, Donald Ohlinger,
Harold Rose and Larry Parsons.
A proposal for necessary
unprovements to the Community Buildll\g was asked by
the Foundation Comnuss1on
for assistance from Council
With the Revenue Shanng
money . After long discussion
on prionties of improvements,
a mot1on by Carter was ap.
proved to remodel the entrance
of the Community Building on
Butler Street w1th new doors
and also new doors on the side
of 3rd Street, to replace wmdows on Layne St. These lffi·
provement.s are not to exceed
$1 ,000.
, Section 4 of the Livestock

r ------------------------- I

01
Fund received· mary
Baumgardner
Mary Baum gardn er , 42,
more donations Conneaut,
Ohio, died in Erie,

FOR
. SUMMER FUN •••
[

N!';W HAVEN - A $5,000
grant to begin construction of
a new fire depar tment
bu1ld1ng , a pro posal for
necessary unprovements of Ule
Commumty Buildmg, a change
in Section 4 of the Lovestock
-Ordmance and r uling t hat
riders of mmi-b1 kes and
motorcycles must .carry
pennission cards to ride on
pnvate property, were inade
Monday mght by New Haven
Town qounc1I.
Mayor John Thorne presided
and Councilmen present were
John Roush, David Sunonton,
Wayne Carter, Charles Sinith,
Recorder Jane Russell and
representatives of the New
Haven Recreation Park

Mrs. Anna Margaret Duffield, 63, Piketon, d1 ed
Saturday at the P1ke County
Hospital.
Mrs. Duffield, formerly of
Meigs County, was a graduate
of Middleport H1gh School. She
was the daughter of the late
Jacob and Flora Burchett of
Middleport.
Surv1ving are a son, Myron,
Cleveland; a daughter, Mrs.
Dorothy Sampson, Franklin
Furnace; five grandchildren,
and a sister, Mrs. Garnet
"Shaffer of Columbus.
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p m. Wednesday at th ~
Howell Funeral Home in
Piketon with burial there.

1
1
1

Or dinan ces pr oh i•b ltlng
livestock In city limits was
amended to permit livestock in
the c1ty limits with limitations
of acreage, and approved by
adjoining property owners.
Councilman Charles smlth's
motion to grant $8,000 to the
New Haven Volunteer Fire
Departme nt towar d the
begUining of the new Fire

Holz! r Medical Center
(Discharged)
Mrs. J ohn Nibert and son,
Cha rles
Weethee,
Lola·
Mourning, Terri Hall , Marjorte
Davis, Megan Rhea, Beverly
Waugh, Harold Frakes , Ronnie
Johnson , Wllt1am McCoy,
Ronald Wrlght, Joseph
Mrs. Donald Whaley
daughter, Nola Trimble, Pearl
Saunders, Mtchelle Pr1ce, Mrs.
Johnny ' Pope and son, Mrs.
Charles Ohlinger and son,
William Miller and Julia
Kirby.
(Births)
Mrs . Sh e lb y Pickens , a
daughter, Syracuse, and Mrs

br

J.

INSTALLATIONf. ET
Tbe Philathea Society of the
Middleport Church of Christ
will have installation · of officers and a covered dish
dinner Thursday at 6 p.m.
Persons are to bring table
serviCe. Mildred Hawley will
be the mstalling officer.

Pleasant Valley Hospital
Discharges - Mrs. William
Litchfield, Pt. Pleasant; Mrs.
Thomas Crum, Glenwood ;
Eugene Hanes, Mrs . A ron
Br1ght, Mrs. Billy Cochran,
Mrs. Terry Bonecutter, Pt.
Pleasant; Candy Mayes,
Gallipolls; Wendell Edmonds,
LODGE TO MEET
Ashton; Floyd Boles, Leon;
Shade River Lodge 453 ,
Reba Meadows, Gallipolis;
F&amp;AM will meet Thursday at
James Johnson, Mason; Glenn ,
7:30p.m. Relreslunentswill be
Patterson, Gallipolis Ferry, served. All master masons are
and James Dunn, New Haven.
invited:

YOU VISIT, PARK FREE
PITTSBURGH

lllilens ,alionat
--c.CIHCINNA T I

hk

MIDDlEPORT
OHIO

Men 's brown leather .. . Women 's nat ural
leather . . Interwoven straps on vamp , in terwoven sling back, compo sition sole anq,
?e~,_Made in Mexico.
.

heritage house

MIDDLEPORT, OEIIO

l.....~:::=~==~~~~ljf~ns~ur~a~ne~e~~~~:_. ..J

225 N. 2nd

Your~""'-~ Store

CHATEAU BEAUTY SALON
2nd St.

Pomeroy, 0.

WILL BE OPEN FQR BUSINESS
STARTING WEDNESDAY, APRIL 11
Phone 992-7606 f01 an Appointment

injuries suffered in a single car acc1dent. According to the
State Highway Patrol, Mrs Hart lost control of her car on an
ICe covered bridge .

'

Elberfelds In Pomeroy
SHOP WEEKDAYS .9:30 TO 5 PM
BOTH FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9:30 TO 9

~ .
..............................

••••••••••••••••••

•
,...anE

OI.PY

~,

Begin your exc1t1ng new fashion season in th1s d:;~;~~::::~:~
outfit designed by lane Colby. f ashioned of 100% 1
from the printed plisse shut to the V-neck cardigan vest
the sohd cuffed pant this easy care seersucker group trave!,,l
,

.
See and buy from the completj! Jane Colby
Collection in our Second Floor Sportswear
Department. -

Elberfelds In Pomeroy

~

•

'

Mrs Margaret I. Hart, 45, of Galba County Coroner. said
402 24th St , Poin t Pleasant, death was caused by mternal
died at 6· 40 ~ .m. today In a hemorrha gtng due to a fracsmgle car crash on Rt. 3S, three tured skull and neck
tenths of a m1le west of the
The acc1dent occurred wh1le
Sliver Memonal Bridge.
Mrs Hart was enroute to her
Accordin g to the Galll a- job at the Holzer Med1cal
Meigs Post State Highway Center
Patrol, Mrs Hart lost control . The bOdy was removed to the
of her car on an tcr covered Wa ugh-Halley-Wood Funeral
br1dge. The auto jumped a home by the Gall1a Coun ty
guardrail and rolled over Volunleer Emergency Squad
tw1ce Mrs. Har t was thrown It was Galha's f1rst traffic
underneath the wreckage.
fatality tn 1973.
Dr. Donald R Warehime,
The Crow-Russell Fune ral

•

.e-

ent1ne
Devoted To The Interests Of The Meigs-Mason Area

voL.

xx~

NO. 252

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

WEDNESDAY, APRIL II , 1973

--

atergate
like Teapot Dome
WASHINGTON (UP! ) Sen. Barry M. G&lt;lldwater, RAriz., said today that ' the
Republicdn party may be
seriously hurt in the next
election and could lose the
White House in 1976 unless
President Nixon deals quickly
with the Watergate buggmg
case.
Expressing sentiments
stated earlier by conservative
Republicans -.but speaking m
far stronger terms
G&lt;lldwater said in an interview
with "the Christian Sc1ence
Momtor : "The Watergate. The
Watergate. It's beginRU\g to

smell like the Teapot Dome . I
mean there's a smell to it. Let's
get r1d of the !o.nell."
A conVIcted Watergate conspll"ator, James W. McCord
Jr., who was securtty chief for
the Committee to Re-elect the
President at the tune of the
June 17, 1972, break-tn and
buggmg of
Democratic
national headquarters
resumed testimony today
before a federal grand jury his fourth day before the panel.
A source close to the mvestlgatlon said McCord l)ad
given the grand jury records
showmg he was paid $3,000 a

By United Press International

Maude Taylor

Miss Maude Taylor, 92,
formerly of Middleport, died
Monday evemng at the
,Hillcrest Nursing Home in
Athens
Miss Taylor, a sJSter-m-law
of the late J . H. Sm1th, M1d- '
Imogene O'Neal
dleport posbnaster, was born
"
on Nov. 12, 1880 m Sparta
Mrs. N. E. (Imogene ) County, Tennessee, the
O'Neal, 90, d1ed Monday at her daughter of the late Josea and
Coolville restdence following
an extended 1liness.
Jane Webb Taylor
Mrs. O'Neal was born Sept.
She IS survived by a brother,
.8, 1882 at LitUe Hocking, the Jerry, of Sweet Water, Tenn.,
daughie r oI the 1a. te F ran k and andh several meces and
Mar y Colbaugh Scott. She - nep ews. ' .
.
h
1"1
Littl
Funeral
services
w1ll
be held
spen 1 er ear 1Y 1 e '"
e at 10 a. m. Thursday at the
Hockm g, a short lime, at Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
Cutler' and hved the past 24 With burial to be in the
years at Coolvtlle Her
.
'N
l
d"
d
R1verv1ew
cemetery. Friendshusban d , Noah E . O ea , 1e
th
1h
11
1
.m 1956 . Mrs . O'N ea1 was a may. ca a e 1unera orne
2-4 and from 7-9 p m.
I .11 U "ted from
Wednesday.
membero f the Coo
h vt e m
Methodist Churc .
Officiating Will be the Rev.
Survtvtng are four so ns, Loren Stephens, pastor of the
Layman, Punta Gorda, Fla .; Westside Church of Chnst.
Elwm, Palm Beach Shores,

GALIJA COUNTY recorded Its first auto fatality of the
year at 6:40a.m today on the Rt. 35 bypass. Mrs. Margaret I.
Hart, 45, Point Pleasant, died of internal hemorrhagmg from

pnng
MASON ~

The Waham•
•
Fla.; Clayton, of Athens •. andJumor and Senior bands,
Gordon, Little Hockmg; three
dU"ected by Gerald E. Slmdaughters, Mrs. Gladys Jarvis,
mons and Charles T. Yea go,
Coolville; Mrs . Delc1e Seckwill be presented in a spring
man, Parkersburg, and Mrs.
concert at 7:30 p.m . Wed-"
Aileen Welch, Cutler ; 15
nesday
In lhe
school
auditorium.
grandchildren , 42 gr eatThomas Weaver, a son,
Th
. ba d
grandchildren, 12 great-great- Rutland.
e Junior n will present
grandchildren; four brothers,
" II Scipio March." " utile
George Scott, Slate, W. Va,
Russian Swte," composed of
and Arthur, Thomas and Isaac
Ivan Sings, An Old Dance, and
Scott, all of Parkersburg; a Veterans Memorial Hospital
The Little Sparrow, and
SISter , Mrs . Clara SomAdmitted - Samuel Archie "Chanson and Bourree" by
mervllle, Parkersburg, and a McKmney, Rutland; David Frank Erickson.
,
number of meces and nephews. Jacks , Middleport; Howard
The semor band Will do
Funeral services will be held Russell , Pomeroy ; Loretta highlights from "Fiddler on the
at 2 p.m. FrJday at the Spencer Spencer, Pomeroy ; Paul Roof," ''Rhondo" from ConFuneral Home 10 Belpre with Gilbert, Quincey, Ky.; Celeste certo No. 3 with Lawrence
the Rev. Roy Deeter of- Bush, Middleport; Dorothy Weaver as soloist; " The
flciaimg. Assls110g will be the Dowme, Pomeroy ; Dottle Klaxton March"
Henry
Rev. Roy Rose. Burial will be Curbs, Racme ; Cheryl Moore, Fillmore, ~~Festive Cferture,"
in Coolvllle Cemetery. Friends Syracuse, and Jerry Jacks, "Shostakov1ch • Hunsberger's
may call at the funeral horne Pomeroy.
"Symphonic Dance No. 3"
after 2·30 p.m. Wednesday.
Discharged - Steve Eblin, from " Fiesta, " and "Sea
Leona Karr, Harold Kmg, Songs. "
Nara Jenks, Jo Johnson and
The pubhc IS mvited .
Edward Smith George Cummins.
·~

Edward John Smith, 82, West
Mam St., Pomeroy, d1ed late
Monday afternoon at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr. Sm1th was a meat cutter
who operated his own shop a
nwnber of years. Born May 'l/,
1890 at Charleston, W. Va., he
was preceded m death by his
parentS, his first wife, Freda.;
three sons, a brother, and a
Sister
SurviVing are his wife, Freda
Cheatham
Smith ;
f1ve
daugh ters, Mrs. Donald
(Marie) Amos, Lancaster;
Mrs. Wilham (Annl Beckel,
Columbus; Mrs. W1lham
(Martha) Shelton, Logan; Mrs.
Vernon (Ethel ) Coffman, San
D1ego, Calif., and M1ss Els1e
Smtth, at home; four sons,
Lewis, at home; Lawrence,
Rutland; Earl , of PomeroY,
and Edwin of Albuquerque, N.
M.; a sister, Mrs Earf (Cora )
Denny, Pomeroy ; 14 grandchildren, and several greatgrandchildren
Funeral services will be held
at 2 p.m Thursday at the
Rawlings-Coats Funeral Home
with the Rev Dw1ght Zavitz
and the Rev. · Robert
Bwngarner offiCiating. Burial
will be m Beech Grove
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home on Wednesday from 2-4 and from 7-9
p.m.

Mason wontan

Bands giving
Will, .;.
and · S
•
concert

ever ywhere.

WilE~

Building to be constructed at
the corner of Lewis and Second
Street on the Alex Quillin
Memorial Park property was
approved.
Council also enacted a ininj.
Hike and motorcycle rule that
no rider will be pennitted tb
ri de on private property
without the consent of the
property owners and hencefortb aU riders will be
reqwred to secure written
perm ission from property
owners. R1dets henceforth
must carry signed cards by
property owners. These cards
may be obtained at the city
bu1ldmg .

WASHINGTON- HERE IS THE OHIO VOTE during the
Tuesday House rollcall m which ~:epresentatives sustained, 225189, President Nixon's veto of a rural water-&lt;~ewer grants
program. A two-thirds majority of those voting was necessary to
override the veto. A vote for was for overrtde, a vote against was
to sustain the veto.
Ohio has seven Democrats and 16 Republicans. Democrats
for : Aahley, Carney, Hays, Seiberling, James Stanton, Stokes
and Yanik.
Republicans for : Latta. Republicans against : Ashbrook,
Brown, Clancy, Devine, Guyer, Harsha, Keating, M1ller, MUIshali,Mosher, Powell, Regula, J . W. Stanton, Whalen and Wyhe
APOTENT SPRING STORM HAS TURNED 1ts wrath to the
Northeast, leaving residents of the Midwest to dig out from under
mountainous snow drifts. The storm's death toll clunbed to 42
Tuesday as it moved norlbeast, spreading snow from the Ohio
and Tennessee valleys north to the Great Lakes and New
England. Most of the deaths were blamed on heart attacks
suffered as persons shoveled snow. Wisconsin reported 18 deaths,
Iowa 13, Minnesota and Missouri 3 each, and one each in illinois,
Nebraska, Pennsylvama, Maine and New HampshU"e.
The storm, m its trek eastward, lost the ferocity with which it
bad cripple&lt;\ much of Midwest. Floodwaters receded along the
Great Lakes' shores of Michigan and Ohio. More than 10,000
persons who fled their homes on the Great Lakes' shores a,
heavy waves battered the lakes' shorelines were left to assess
their share of the damages, estimated fn the millions of dollars.
Floodwater from Lake Erie receded today while emergency
crews continued to pwnp water from the streets o( Toledo, Oh1o.
Water had reached depths of two feet In sorn~ areas of the city

WASHINGTON -RALPH NADER CLAIMED Tuesday the
Environmenq,l Protection Agency (EPA) is bowing to Whtte
House pressure and w11l grant the auto industry a one-year delay
in meeting the 1975 pollution control standard. Nader termed the
'
EPA decision, to be made public today,
a sellout.
''Once again the concessio~aires w1thin the Nixon administration have sold out the environment and health of
Americans to the auto industry," he said. According to Nader,
EPAAdministratot William D. Ruckelsbaus "capiiulated to the
auto industry plain and sunple.': Nader gave no details on the
EPA decision. But industry observers were projecting the E PA
will try to placate the autp mdustry and the environmentalists
with a compromise wh1ch would gain the mdustry 1ts delay but
impose strict interlffi pollution standards.
PINE RIDGE, S, D. - GOVERNMENT NEGOTIATORS
were considering today an lndi'IR disarmament plan based on a
VISIOn of a Sioux religious leader that they hoped would break the
Impasse in the armed confrontation at Wounded Knee.
Assistant Attorney Gener!ll St;lnley Pottinger, a government
negotiator, said the plan raised questions over the secur~lles of
the weapons and explosives laid down by tbe Indians and arrests
of persons with warrants outstanding .
But he said the "new approach" was under study and would
be thoroughly explored. No further negotiations were scheduled
for today, the spokesman said, as the confrontation entered 1ts
43rd day by the American Indian Movement (AIM ).

-"
WASHINGTON- A HIGH !n'ATE DEPARTMENT official
believes Hanoi will try to achieve its objectives in Indo-china by
political rather than military means, despite the continued
Comm)l11ist violations of the cease-fife .
Marshall Green, for the past four years assistant secretary
of stale for East Asia, added bowever that it was always possible
that the Communists might exercise the more violent options
open to them. Green, who-has been designated U. S. ambassador
to Australia, save what he described as his personal views in a
speech to the Overseas Wr1ters Club Tuesday.

month , apparently to keep
quiet about the bugging.
The source descnbed the late
Dorothy Hunt, wife of former
White House consultant E.
Howard Hunt Jr ., who pleaded
guilty as a Watergate participant, as the person who
passed the money to McCord.
Mrs . Hunt was killed m an
airliner crash in Chicago Dec. 8
w1th $10,()()() in her possessiOn .
Expressmg concern about
the impact of Watergate on
Republicans, G&lt;lldwater said m
!1R mtervtew with the Monitor
in his Senate office :
11
Al1 of us who support Ntxon
are gomg to be on the lme m the
1974 election. When they say,

'Are you still supportmg the
President ?' I'd say, 'Yes, I'm
still supporting the PreSident'
And I'd say that even if . No, I
won 'I say that. l migh t not
support hlffi 1f 11 turns out he
knew about all thiS and kept his
mouth shut . But ! don't thmk he
knew about 1t "
Goldwater smd he s~nt word
askmg N~&lt;on to speak up about
Watergate and smd word came
back to him to the effect "I' ve
already done someUung. "
Goldwater smd that while
N1xon sa1d White House a1des
would be ava ilable to testify
before a grand jury, " I don't
think (that ) goes far enough."

District forum on
•
•
agmg IS May 11th
Semor citizens of the e1ght
countJes of Athens, Hockmg,
Meigs , Monroe, Morgan ,
Noble, Perry and Washmg ton,
may learn of services available
tp them and make -the1r needs
k.r'l own at the DistriCt Forum on
Agmg Fnday, May 11
Mrs Eleanbr Thomas,
chairman of the D1strrct
F orum Commlttee, sa1d the
!orwn at the Hockmg Valley
Motor Lodge In Nelsonville has
for lts theme "Local Resources
and Respon:nbihties ."
Thts ts one of eleven distriCt
forums being held 10 the sta te
tn
preparatiOn fo r the
Govern or 's Confe rence on
Agmg wh1ch will be held 1n
June
Prehmmary planmng was
completed at Marietta last
week . Attending from Me1gs
County were Clarence Struble,
Miss Lucille Sm1th, Mrs Vilma
PillkoJa , C. E. Blakeslee, Mrs.
Pearl Welker , a nd Mrs
Eleanor Thomas.
Semor c1tlzens and everyone
mterested m the agmg m ti&lt;e
e1ghkoun ty area should start
ma kin g plans now to a ttend the
event wh1ch will open w1th
reg!Stra!Jon and coffee from 9

The Meigs County Council
on Aging is Inviting applicants to be considered as
an Aide under the new Senior
Citizens' Program. This Aide
has to be knowledgeable In
developing and teaching
craft programs. One of the
Important functions will be
to set up and administer
various craft programs atthe Center. Present plans
also call for crait programs
to be located throughout the
county.
The Council on Aging is an
equal opportunUy employe r.
All applicants must contact
the Senior Citizens' Center,
Telephone 992-7886 or 992·
7884, no later than Friday,
Aprll 13. Applicants must be
available for v.ork im·
mediately.
!;!;!·:·:::;:::::·: !;!;! !·!·! ·!•'•!•!•!•!•'·'·! :·!·!·!·!·' !·!·:=:·:=:·

to 10 am and conclude at 3:15
pm
Each county w1 1l have
contact persons who w11l accept reserva tiOns and work out
transportation arrangemehts
The only cost of the Forum Will
be for the buffet lunch wh1ch
will cost $1 50

Landfill building
hi~

is accepted ~

Th e Me1gs Count y CommJsstoners Tuesday accepted a
b1d for the construction of a
building at the propdsed
sanitary landfill located off
Stat• Route 143.
The b1d accepted was &amp;ubml tted by Fulton Thompson
Tractor Sales 111 the amount of
$6 ,756.
'
The only other b1d received
was from D. Jo ConstructiOn
Co. , Pomeroy, for $9,200
The commJssioners 'al so
accepted bids for study on
bitummous mtx to be awarded
la ter fr om the Asphalt
Matenals and Construc\wn
Co ., Man etta ;
Ashland
Petroleum Co., Ashland, Ky ;
Koppers Co .. Inc., M a r~ etta ,
and D&amp;F Matenals Company,
Cambndge.

other busmess, ammal
claims were approved patd to
Robert Pamter, Pomeroy , Rt
3, $195 for the loss of 13 sheep;
Dorsel Btggs, Pomeroy, Rt. 3,
$208 for the loss of chickens,
and J ohn Hetzer, Reedsville,
$30 for the loss of domestiC
qua1l '
[n

'

The comm 1ss10ners also
approved an additional budget
request for the board of
electiOns m the ~mount of
$8,340
Attend mg were Charles R.
KMr, Robert Clar k and
Warde n Ours, commtsstoners ;
Wes ley
Buehle,
co un ty
engmeer, Rolland Crai)tree,
Mc1gs Coun ty
H1ghway
• Supenntendent, and Ma rtha
Chambers. clerk

PHON E 992 2156

TEN CENTS

•

•

IS

Home tn Point Pleasant will
announ ce fmal arrangements.
Four persons were InJured m
a truck-car acc1dent at 12:15
p.m Tuesday at the entrance
to the James M. Gav1n Power
Planl. Officers said a sem1
outfit driven by Kenneth Lee
Blankenship, 28, K1tts Hill,
struck rn auto operated by
Dav1d Da le M1ller
29
'
'
Wate rloo
Both dnvers complamed of
mm or IOJUr tes wh1le two
!lasse ngers m Mtller's car had
fr actures Charles Gates, 34,
ful celand, Ky sustatned a
lace rated scalp and fra ctured
nb and Edward Holbrook Jr
'
'
of White Oa k. Ky. suffered a
frac tured shoulder They we~e
Laken to the Holzer Med1cal
Center It) the Gavm Plant
ambulance.
Blankens hip was charged
w1th fa1lure to obey an
automattc trafftc stgnal
Le na Bell Williams, 50, Rt 2,
Crown City , was charged With

failure !!&gt; stop within assured
clear distance followmg a
traffic accident at 12. 30 p.m.
Tuesday on Rt. 7, one and eight
tenths miles south of Rl. 141.
The patrol satd the Williams
car struck the rear end of an
auto dr iven by James L.
Dutter , 22, of Massillon. There
was moderate damage to both
cars.
A single car accident at 8:15
a.m. on Rt. 327, three and four
tenths m1les north of Rt. 35.
Accordm g to 1nvest1gatmg
officers, J oe Richard Sargent, \
25, Rt 2, Logan , lost control of
h1s car on the wet pavement.
The auto left the highway
slnkmg a marker pole and
causmg rumor damage.
Another smgle car miShap
occurred at 4:40 p.m. on Rt
554, one mile east of Story's
Run Rd where John E. Lyons,
JOe Middleport, lost control of
h1s car wh1ch left the h1ghway
and htt an embankment No
charge was filed.

Canaday has
$500 dinner

tabs to move (I,

:::~
Wanted 10 reSJdent.s of the
lO t h Congressional DJStn c t
who w1ll pay $500 for dmner:
Delmar
A.
Canaday,
POIJieroy democrat, has
rece1ved an mvttatton from the
democra ti c ~ e na t on a l and
con gre s siO na l ca mp aig n
commi ttees for the $500-a-pla tc
dtn ner to be held tn Washmgton
at the Washmgton Hilton at G
p m on May 23 to k1ck off the
Democrattc 1974 campaign
The $500-a-plale dinner Will
honor
Mike
Mansfi eld ,
rn aJonty leader o[ the U. S
Senate, and Carl Alber t,
spea ker of the U S House of
Representatives. The black L1e
affa1r Will also honor chairmen
of the sta ndin~ ~om m 1ttees of
Congress The event will ()e
ded tcaled to Harry S Truman
and L) ndon B Johnson as well
as to other Democratic
leaders
The elabo rate mv1 tat10n
re c: e1ved by Ca naday as
ch;;urman of the dmner 1n thi s
d1stn cl ctlso contams a fl y
s heet w1 th Signat ures of
congressmen
Anyo ne wte1ested tn i:tt·
tendm,g the dmner 1s asked to
contact Canaday at 140 Lmcoln
Road, Pomeroy, phone 992262:l

Retirement
benefits
are urged
WASHINGTON (UPI )
President N1xon urged Congress today to enact new
pension legiSlatiOn to brighten
"the retirement piCture for
AmCn ca 's 'workmg men and
women " "'
He also called for more
generous tax deductions for
sell-employed persons who establish penswn plans.
The President recommended
among othec thmgs for the
ordtnary worker that a mlmmum- sta ndard should be
esta blished m law for pre:mrv·
mg the reti rement r1ghts of
employes' who leave their Joba
before retirement
There has been some recent
movement toward protectmg
pensiOn r1ghts of a worker after
he leaves a job, Ntx on satd But
he sa1d man y priVate plans st1ll
carr y overly restnett ve
reqwrements for age or length
of servtce or parttc1pat10n
before a person IS enl!tled to
rece1ve his pensiOn after he
res1gns or IS discharged from a
lOb
Two Bills Prepared
He said his proposals are a
reftnernent -of pensu)n reform
leg1slatwn submitted to Congress 11\ December , 1971, and
a r e based on completed
gove rnment studtes on the
pensiOn question and mform att on de n ved fr om
co ngress ional hean ngs on
pension reform.
The PreSident, m a message
to Congress, srud he would
submit m a few days two bills
-a Retirement Bl!nel1ts Tax
Act and an Employee Benefits
Protection Act
To protect older workers
parltcularly; N1xon proposed
that half of all penston ben&lt; fi tsearned by a worker be con(Contmued on Page 14j

OFFICERS AND COMMANDER - MarVIn Kelly , Adjutan t, Me i ~• Chapter 53, left ; OhiO
Department Commander Burch Fannin, center, and John C Bacon, Commander Meigs
Chapter 53.

Interest renewed in U. S. veterans
Commander Burch Fanmn,
Ak1 on, Commander o£ the Oh10
De partme nt of Di sa bled
Amer~cu n s (DAV ), sa1d there
ts renewed mterest m the
vete ran by Congress and the
Oh10 Ge ricral Assembly ln h1s
addre.s.&lt;; to " " assemblY. of
mem bers of MCigs Chapter 5:J
DAV and Its AuxJ har.y Monday
cvcmng
'
Followmg dmner served at
the DAV home on Butte rn ut
Ave Fannm saJd coopera tiOn
of vete rans orgamza twn has
tempora n ly halted propqsed

DELAY GRANTED
WASHINGTON (UPIJ Th e E nvironm e ntal
Prulectlon Agency !EPA)
today granted the auto Jndustry a one-year dela y In
meellng the 1975 antlpollutwn standards.
But the agency set. strk t
interim polluUon standard s
and ordered the Industry to
equip all cars sold ' in
Califurma 1n 1975 wit h
pollution control devices
: ·::.: .·:·: .: • : :•,•, :·.·: •'•' ·!·!·!·!·!·:

·:·:·:·:·!·!·' !•'

Six voc-ed 'ers
win medals in
regional tests
Six Me1gs I-hgh School \We-ed

students won medals tn
compcl1t1on at the VI C/\
Reg JOnol Trade\ Contes ts,
Saturday, at Muskmgum Jm nt
Vocatwnal Sehoul at lanesVJlJe

M1ke Corder, son of M1 and
Mrs Ch~ rl e s Corder of Wnght
St , Pomeroy , won a gold
medal and the n ght to parltclpate' 10 the state contes t
later Corder won hts ?'leda l m
lndustn al Electromcs He 1s a
semor m RadiO and Telcv1s10n
Repa1r
S1lver medals were won by
Euge ne
McK1n ney , arc
weldmg ; R1ck Mendenh a ll ,
ctrcu1try trouble shootmg, and
Bill Kennedy, indus tnal
electrontcs Bronze meda ls
\'. ere won by Paul Pullins, arc
v. eldtng, and Ed M1tchell ,
c1rcmtry trouble shootmg

THAT'S A No- NO
some Middleport residents
are usmg litter baskel• m the
busmess section of the commumly to diSpose of the1r
ga rbage collec twns fr om thm
homes, Mayor John Zerkle sa1d
today. The mayor warned tha t
residents domg th1s w1ll be
prosecuted

cuts m vderuns compensation

Columbus, mtroduced Com-

m many areas Congress and mander Fanmn, Omaha Beach
the President are 1•ethmkmg veteran ·of World War II.

the matter, he concluded .
He pomted to some benefits
amputees and ambula tory
handicapped ve terans may not
be ""' t.akmg advantage of, m·
d udmg a clothing allowance
and pa1d-up uuto tags. Jn.
ter pretallons of veterans lctw
by the VA and 1ts rating boards
were disc ussed, as were
available bun al allowances
Commtmder John C Bacon
uf the Mc1gs Chapter presided.
State Adjuta nt Beryl U Ward,

Fanmn and Ward answe red
que n es on vete rans pr0blems
foll0w 1ng adjournment. m ·
cludmg ma ny conce1mng laws
passed by the 92nd Congress,
such as mcrease lor 176,000
\Hdows of veterans, who dted
as a result of servtce-{'onnected
d1sab1hties
An attent1ve aud wnce of 30
expressed apprectahon of the
vts1lat10n by the Department
Commander and Adjutant

Eastern board
buys 3 busses
I

Three school buses, two 56pa ssenge r and one 48passenger, were purchase&lt;! by
the Eas tern Local School
Distnct Board of EducatiOn
Tue~da y mght. All the chass1s
were purchased fr om the
Mc1gs EqUipment Co
The 66-passe nger chassiS
cos t $5,483.95 and the 48passenger"$3, 799 95 Bod1es for
lhe 66-passenge r ve hicles were
purchased from Davts and Son
of Langsv1 1le at a cost of
$:1,941 70 wh1le the body for the
48-passenger bus was pur·
-eh~ fr~m the Wayne Co m
Cinctn nall at a cost of $3,440
The board named Jenmfer
Dean MachJr as a substitute
teacher m the d1stn ct and
granted a leave of absence
unt1 l Sept 1 to Fran cis
Benedum,
a bus mechamc and
'
dn ver
The lioard transferred
$488 38 from the General Fund
to the Title I }' und and agreed
to empl oy gra de school
secretan es for an add1honal
week or two durmg the, sum.
rner rn onlhs to catalog library
books m conJunctiOn w1th the
Title fl progra m
Granted lwo year contracts
by the board were these

1

teachers, J oe Bailey, Judith
Duduko v1c, Mary Mullens ,
Tom Kell y,, Nancy K~rby,
Wtlma Parker, Mark Venms,
Beatr1ce Douglas, Rose Jonas,
and Archie Rose Teachers
gtven three year contracts
were Donna Chadwell , Larry
Hemes, B11l Ph1lhps, Carolyn
Franz, Carolyn Smt th and
Dons Well
Charles Swogger was reh1red
as h1gh school prmc1pal for a
peru:&gt;d of one year, as he had
requested. Rehired also were
Larry Hemes, baseba ll coach
and assis tant basketball
coac h. Bill Philli ps, ~ead
basketball coach and ass1stant
foo tball coach, and Mark
Venms, junwr high foo tball and
reser ve baske tba ll coac h
These htrmgs were for one
year also
Cha nges 10 h1gh school
curncula were d1scussed and
bt lls 'were approved for
payment Attending were
board members On s Sm1 th,
Roger Epple, l 0 McCoy,
Howard Caldwell, Jr , and
Clyde Kuhn , Supt J ohn R1ebel,
Pnnc 1pal Char les Swogger ,
County Supenntendent Robert
Bowen, and Cle rk C 0.
Newland

Contest shifted
The Me1gs County Ptoneer m the three Me1gs County h1gh
and Historical Soc1ety Essay schools and Meigs County high
and Speech Contest wtll be """"l;chool students m other school
conducted Thursday, May 10, a dJS trlcis Cash awards of $15,
change so as to move 11 off $1~. $10 and $5 are provided m
E lecl!~n Day.
both the speech and essay
En tries 111 both the speech contest
contest and the essay contest
Cop1es of the rules may be
must be subm1tted to U1e secured by calling 992-3895 or
H1stoncal SociCty on 01 before cuntactmg ITietnbers of Lhe
Apnl 27
committee, mcludmg Mrs. Pat
The contest is open t1l Lochary and Mrs. Theodore T.
students m grades 9 through 12 Reed Jr .

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