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'1',

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

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Grant made on hull

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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

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

••••••••••••••••••

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,...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

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'

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

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.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 .

�•
3- The Daily Sentlllel, Mtddlepori-Pomeroy, 0 , AprU 11, 1973

•ID new s t a d I•urn~ 8y~~~fJ'~i:::~~~:r~=ft~nal
'

2- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Aprtlll, 1973

EDITORIALS

No-Fault Working
Well in Delaware
There IS no fault automobile msurance and then there IS
no fault automobile msurance, and the questwn confr:ont

mg Jegtslators lll many states ts whtch of the numerous
plans proposed or m effect ts best- If any ts
Basically no fault means that people are patd directly
by thetr own msurer for thetr losses wtthout wathng to
detet nune whQ caused a colhston

One pomt of controversy however, has been the con
tentJOn of proponents of the Keaton 0 Connell type of no
fault, whtch was adopted by Massachusetts that the con
cept can't work unless tt bars the nght to sue below a
suttable ' threshold " In Massachusetts, for example, Jawsmts are rest ricted unless hospttal or medical costs ex
ceed $500
#
Lawyers on the other hand argue that a threshold tsn '1
necessary-t hat effective auto msurance reform can pro
vtde !1rst party coverage regardless of fault wtthout
abrogatmg legal nghts and shll reduce court congestiOn,
reduce premtum s and effect prompt payment of clatms
They are now cttlng Delaware's expenence as an
example
Compulsory no fault msurance went mto effect m Dela
ware on Jan I 1972, provtdmg a $10,000 economtc pack
age and no restnchon on the right to sue
Accordmg 1to the states 1nsurance commlSSJoner, 13
months later clatm s had been reduced by 70 per cent
and less than a dozen smts had been filed by Delawareans
Lihgatwn over medical costs, wages and loss of servICes has diSappeared , he reports except for out of state
drtvers and thetr passengers There has not been a smgle
known mctdent where the Delaware vtctlJTls were not patd
promptly upon presentallon of their btlls and the vehtcle
was msured as reqmre'd by law
In other words, when people are promptly and reasonaply retmbursed for losses m automobtle acctdents they
don t make unreasonable claims and file nUisance "
SUits

1

Dear E
,
Wtth your money or thetrs ? Even expert market analysts
have "gambled' themselves mtoa dark comer - HELEN

+++
E
Startmg small and workmg up slowly ISn't the worst way to
go Your folks shouldn 't object tf you do some educated gambling
wtth money you ve CLEARED on the stock market
And tf they follow your advtce to make a killing, maybe
they'll pay you a comm!Sston - SUE

+++
NOTE li'ROM HELEN If they follow your advtce and get
shot down, they mtght also take tt out of your hide

+++
Rap
I'm 21 and have been gomg wtth a fellow ftve years He JUSt
got home from four years of mthtary servtce Now he tells me he
had affatrs wtth women m two countries, but dtd not love them
He only loves me
I get cold all over thinkmg about tt
Could he make a good husband, after this? - HEARTBROKEN

25 per cent
Delaware's no fault auto ms urance ts worktng and can
well serve as a national model " says the commiSSioner
Hts stattsltcs suggest that tt at least bears lookmg mto
by other states

Heartbroken
A man can be fatthful m heart tf not m body as they say,
lonehness makes stran ge bedfellows
I doubt tf you spent four long years completely away from
males - without even once fltrting around If your guy went
farther than fhrtmg - well, Lt's over , he s back, so forget what
he shouldn t have told you m the ftrst place - SUE

.

Mags Thrive, Take-offs Boom
Ltfe ' may be gone but hfe goes on m the magazme
pubhshmg held
In this era of women s hberatton, 1t ts mtereshng to
note that one of the boommgest areas m the busmess IS
men s magazmes chauvmtst p1g diVIston
ConSider that a new one called Gallery ' a take off
on 'Playboy" (some say a carbon copy) sold a mtlhon
coptes of tts March tssue The latter however ts sllll
gomg well, along Wtth Om ' and tls arch nval, Pent
house
Soon to enter the competition \\Ill be VOir," whtch IS
French for ' see as m peek
But magazme publ!Shmg tsn t gomg enttrely to the
fleshpots Scheduled to debut m June ts ' Smgle ' whtch
, tts promoters say wtll focus on the mtellectual emotwn
al and practteal concerns of the 43 mtllton smgle , Wid
owed and dtvorced men and women m the Umted States
• as an answer to the sex on ented mags
Whatever happened to T\1e W o rm -~ll!lJl"f). p tgest' •
•

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Presidents: How
Do We See Ahead
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON !NEA l
' Some scholars of the preSidency get annoyed at mere
polilteal JOUrnahsts because they say that we durmg a
campatgn, don t tell the Amencan people enough about
how a candtdate wtll act tf he wms the otftce
: Ltke everybody else, we have our full quota of 1mper
fections But this partlcular complamt 1s unfatr on two
counts
In the first place, wtth all due resp ect to the scholars
there really ts no way to predtct spectftc prestdenttal
behavwr ori the basiS of pnor performance and known
tra1ts of character and personahty '
Few tf any people could have foreseen that the rathet
unexctlmg governor of New York Franklin D Roosevelt
would m 1933 and thereafter galvamze and gtve hope to a
despamng, depressiOn ndden nahon wtth astomshmg
dramahc flatr
No d1ggmg mto Lyndon Johnson's Texas background or
hts long years m Washmgton could have prepared us for
exactly the kmd of response he made to the Vtetnam
dilemma he faced m 1964-65
What scholar liberal or otherwiSe, would have told us
that tt would be Rtchard Ntxon, percetved by so many for
so long as a "Commumst fighter " who would make the
first stgmficant approaches to Pekmg and Moscow?
ObviOusly, what a preSident does m offtce IS the prod
uct of an mteractwn between his make up and expenence
and the sttuahons and problems he encounters-most of
whtch cannot be foreseen when he ts seeking offtce
I Yet, further m newsmen's defense tt IS not true that
they gtve no cues at all to a pubhc jookmg for gmdmg
Impressions
Before he assumed oQ;,ice Johnson had been fatrly well
portrayed by percepf!ve JOUrnaliSts as a man of roarmg
energy and out stzed ego who m hts days as Senate
maJority leader maneuvered, caJoled wheedled and bull
dozed hts way to successful management of legtslatwn
It was not too far a JUmp from that to a Johnson who m
the Whtle House, treated the preSidency almost as a per
sonal possesSion, drove funously for the passage of Grea t
Soctety btlls, managed and developed the Vtetnam war
.... as 1f he were a commander m umform planted m the map
" room
He was a natural-born mtervener down to the pomt of
; deSlgmng the tickets pohltctans would use to board bts
' southern bound Cornpone Spectal' tram m hiS 1960 cam
:~ pa1gn as Democratic v1ce prestdenllal nommee H1s com: ' mand of such detatls and hts enormous pnde were well
•, told stones 'fas 11, then all that much a surpnse when
• he would say, m mid war
'I don t propose to let North Vtetnam's Ho Cht Mmh stt
.. mSatgon'''
• As for Mr Ntxon, though there could have been no sure
forecastmg of htS conduct toward the Commumst world or
toward some economic problems many reporters took note
of the spectal trony that thts man who clearly loves polltics and government never m hiS life had gtven evtdence
• that he could master the art of 'human relahons" whtch
•• lay at their core
•
It was a pretty thoroughly known thm g that Mr N1xon
~ diSliked the ordmary- gtve and take of pohttcal contact,
• that he was pamfully tll at ease m small talk that he had
' to contrtve hiS performance at these levels
Agam where IS the real surprtSe when free finally of
the need to electwneer any mm e, the PresJdent throws off
thts uncomfortable burden and walls htmself off ?
Mr Ntx;on's mterest m politics and government IS at a
: level at least once removed from d1rect human lmks
' Though he can of course see all those connectwns he 1s
'i- .happy only when treatmg problem s m thetr more abstract
• form He IS a mover of ptece&gt; on the board who leaves to
oth~rs the translai!On of hts moves mto mot e baSJc human

+++

Hear HB
Whether your fiance makes a good husband or not depends
on many thmgs, but NOT on a couple of affatrs be enJoyed and
forgot, long ago
More realism, less Jealousy could help make this a good
marrtage - HELEN
Helen and Sue
My best fnend ts of a mmortty race I'm mtddl&lt;H:lass
Caucasian I have no preJudices, but I can't help the Jealousy I
feel when he gets five scholarshtps plus constderable other help,
and I, wtth the same achtevements, get no breaks for college
Sure I'm glad for hun He's a great guy, but even he feels
that he's bemg dtscrunmated FOR, while some of his whtte
fnends are bemg dlScrlJTlmated AGAINST
It's got to the pomt where If you aren't a mmonty or a
woman, forget tl, when the JObs, scholarships, etc are bemg
passed out I can't even get work to help put myself through the
Wliverstty, but my fr1end already has a JOb assured, m addttJon
to hts several grants
Isn't tt about tlJTle someone constdered the poor deprtved
mtddle-class whtte male? - ONE OF THEM
/
NOTE Employers scholarshtps boards - lake heed ThiS ts
a legtttmate complamt, and one whtch should be constdered
thoughtfully - HELEN AND SUE
--'---~

TIME LVQUOTES --.,---I

Thts busmess of JUSt
strmgmg thts thm g along ts
poor tacttcs There s nothmg
that could be brought out
that would be as detnmental
as lettmg thts thmg go on
-Sen Norns Cotton R
N H , urg•ng PreS&gt;dent

Nuxon t o act to clear up
the Wate rgat e

scand~l

Hardly anyone nowadays would argue wtth the value of high
school
whtch teach teenagers to drive automobUes wtth
some reasonable degree of safety
They have saved countless lives, driver's licenses and lll' surance-prenuum dollars I'm glad they're operational .in the
Metgs-Gallia-Mason area
But now another thought crosses the threshold of my mmd
(and thoughts have difficulty crOSS!Jlg such a high threshold)
Why not teach elementary-5chool children a drtver educalton
00
course for btcycles• If tt's not a viable classroom subject, why
not teach 1t on televtston - as a regular, scheduled program•
(Maybe tt's bemg done somewhere, but not on any local
stal!on, so far lis I know )
My mmd began to explore the posstbility when a gtrl-child
who stays wtth us named Shmybnte got P badly-bruised JBW and
lip a week or so ago
- ~
Shmybrtte, who fanctes herself the women's lib-frrst grade
answer to Eve! Kmevel, limped home wtth the sad story of
• acqurrmg a bloody mouth when her btke ran mto a purple truck
Further mterrogation developed that the purple truck was
parked at the lime
Although Shinybnte's pnde was hurt more than her facial
geography was damaged ( "They'lllaugh at me m school, daddy'"), I dld do a qwck flashback to some other b1cycllng lllctdents m my life
Shmybrtte 's older sister, Vyvyanne , had us at the pomt of
"Close the wmdow Dmnels gettmg drr.ty'"
pamc when she was about five, and dectded to do an Impromptu
head-ftrst dtve over the handlebars to test the comparaltve hardness of her skull and a concrete curb The curb won She llngered
m semt-consciousness for a whole mght before her bram dec1ded
to put tt all together agam
And brother Matthew narrowly escaped mjury, and bad a
btke nearlydemoltshed whenafrtendJostledhunmfront of a car
WIN AT BRIDGE
whose drtve~ fortunately was motormg along at a sedate 20 mph
at the tlJTle
I can recall, from my own babyhood, at least three senous
South, who had Jetllsoned accidents whtch mcluded a bad slud 111 some loose gravel that left
NORTH (D)
11
four clubs and a heart, a pennanently-5carred knee an attempted U-turn on a cheap
.
.K2
played the ftve of hearts wartlJTle Engllsh-!ityle bike that contorted the front wheel mto a
'II'J8 5
from
dummy East dtd the u
of
d
.AKQJ8 3
b t he could by duckmg and -turn
tts own an some bad brttses for me
and a plam
.AS
was m He cashed hts damn-fool "look-Mom-&lt;~o-hands" weave mto the path of a car
WEST
EAST
three spades and then had to that lifted me a generous distance mto outer space - and
.AJ8 3
.10654
lead away from hts kmg of brought me down accordingly
'II'K72
'II'A963
club~
Now, up to thts pomt, I've been discussmg plam, ordinary
.96 5
.1072
East and West diScussed btcycles But the advent of the ten-5peed super-charged low.K64
... J9
the posstbthty of beatmg the
'
•
sourn
contract by West holding JUSt emtsSloned bombs now on the market enable your very own
.Q97
two spades but agreed that seven-year-&lt;&gt;ld to whomp up a speed maxunum of 35 or 40 nules
• Q 104
the club end-play would have an hour And they're selling ten-!ipeeds, and all other kinds of
worked mespective of whtch btcycles like crazy these days - to adults and children alike
.Q 10 7 532
Wtth this. btcycle boom, and wtth TV stations desperately
defender led the smt'
East West vulnerable
They were r1ght about that seekmg somethmg "relevant" for ktds' progr)lmmmg that ktds
West North East South
and also about the fact that
I•
Pass 1 N'J'.
11 West had unguarded hiS actually wtU watch to offset crtlictsm of the gore, goofmess and
3NT
Pass Pass
Pass
kmg of clubs declarer could gunk that comprtses most chtldren's programs, why not a show
Pass
have played hts ace and to teach them how to handle thiS marvelous new (to them) mOpenmg lead- • 3
ptcked tt up but that un ventton, m a moderately safe manner•
guardmg of the club kmg
It would he a little much to ask some of the teachers gone to
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
rep r e sent e d West's best
•
chance If he chucked hiS padded postenors and fading eyestght after years m the blackWhen you expect a head
four and SIX of clubs and board JUngles, to teach the subject as a gr.ade-!ichool classroom
ac he take a couple of as
their the deuce of ' hearts course, but,tt sounds marvelously sutted to TV 1And wbo knows
p1rm when you have a sore South m 1g h ,t have gone maybe some adults who are caught up m the cycllng craze nughi
tooth ge t tt treated when wrong He dtdn t agamst the take a peek too
yo u have to make a pamful actual defense
•
dtscard make tt qUickly and
(NEWSPAPER EHTERPII:JS£ ASSN )
gracefully

co"""-

-

Game with Discard Squeeze
vJ:st

.4

South dectded to play dum
my s deuce of spades at tnck
one West mtght have led
from JaCk 10 He also de
ctded to take East s 10 wtth
hts queen and run hiS &lt;Ita
monds quickly

East drOpped the mne of
We m Congress dtstrust hearts as hts ftrst dtscard
as all Amencans dtstrust
and f o 11 owed wtth two
any PreSident who would spades West threw the deuce
suggest that only he knows of hearts and the four of
what ts best for Amenca
clubs wJthout any Signs of
- Sen Edmund S Musk.e torment but hts thtrd dtscard
D Me chargmg PreS&gt;dent presented a ternftc problem
N txon w z t h trymg to He fmally solved tt by chuck
establiSh one man rule
mg the seven of hearts

BY JACK O'BRIAN
ACAPULCO RUMORS ARE
A LAST RESORT
ACAPULCO (KFS) - A1month before we
arnved for a wmter collapse m the marvelous
Mextcan resort of Acapulco, Barbara Walters of
the "Today' show asked tf we'd mmd If she and
4-year-old daughter Jacquehne ]Cited along for
stmtlar anti-fatigue purposes, the reply was of
cpurse, and for a month we all planned our qmet
stay like any enthuSiastiC parents, our
teenagers would be along, of course, on thetr
sprmg vacatwns from Mtss Hewttt's Classes
'
And that IS the stmple background to a drab rap
Barbara Walters got from a syndtcated TVchatterbox whose constant problem IS getting
fhpped onfu her own hp-lash
By total cmnctdence Dr Henry K!Ssmger of
Nohel-prtzed probabthties finished hts no doubt
fnendly Vtetnam persuaswn, POWs all accounted for and headed merctfully home from
their tortures and travaJl , he, too, chose
Acapulco as hiS resort of ultimate recuperation
It happens also comctdentally Dr K!Ssmger and
Barbara Walters are frtends courtesy of thetr
positions as natiOnally known reporter and
mternatlonally known pragmattc pactflst
Parenl hettcally, let's note that Dr K's best
gtrl acknowledgely for several years has been
Nancy McGmms of Rockefeller-employment,
he even took her to Pres Nuwn's mauguratlon
hoopla whtch ts hke takmg a gal home to mama
to show off future pluperfect, mdeed Henry's
met the cool and mtellectual Nancy's folks, but
no one's statmg yet if the sohtatre wtll be forthcommg
But - Dr Ktssmger at thts pertment
moment had become one of the btggest glamor
stars mall the world Hts movements no longer
can be camouflaged as they were by early-Vtet
dtplomahc secrecy, so hts VIrtually lastmoment plans once the POWs headed home was
to return to the Acapulco he'd found such a
luxuriOusly recuperaltve place after past
fattgumg stretches , m passmg let's note
Henry's modesty m refusm g to horn m on the
mternatwnally televtsed returns or the ftrst - to
the last - beleaguered prtsoners
All clear'
t&lt;&gt; TV's queen

By Uolted Press Inlernatlonal

BY PAUL CRABTREE

A Flnauclal Whiz at 15•

At the same time there has been no mcrease m msur
anc£&gt; rate levels m Delaware and m some cases decreases Bodily InJUry 1ates were reduced as much as

&amp; THINGS

BERRY'S WORLD
Dear Rap _
• I constder myself an above average 15-year-&lt;&gt;ld wlto IS mterested 111 the stock market I analyze, study and arrtve at fme
predictions
My parents have perrrutted me to make mmor trades thw;
far , but tt Wkes money to make money "
My last predicl!on turned $2,700 mto a net of almost $4,100 m
two weeks, but tt was JUSt a prediclton - no money mvolved
Since I know what I'm domg, shouldn't my parents permit
me to gamble•- E J

Pro Standings

tnvta and her meffJcient lrtangulahon of mformatwn that Barbara Walters and daughter
were m Acapulco, that Henry Ktssmger had
arrtved in this premter playpen, and gettmg her
exerCise jwnpmg at wrong concluslons, she
mooed mto her bust-mtke that Barbara Walters
had used her four-year-&lt;&gt;ld Jacquelme as a
decay to cover some leermgly portentous
rendezvous abaft the warm romantic waters of
Acapulco Bay It was filthy pool Barbara's
plans had been made a month before, Henry's
on the spur of the POW homecommg whtch
hgh ~ned hts negobated burden It was an
exasperatmgly unhbelous touch of triVIally
tasteless JOurnahsm to hang such a sleazy use of
a lovely httle child on the transparent stuptdlty
of attemptmg to make an acctdental JUXtaposttwn seem planned, and JUSt a trifle dtrty
The cutrate coast tmttator of the credtble
Dorothy Manners, who took up where Louella
Parsons Signed off, was unable to dredge up
enough authentic tales of Henry-vtce-Barbara
to make a story Couldn't locate Barbara or
Henry nor could a flock of other more
responstble JOurnahsts who sweated out the
Kissmger uanonynuty", whtch was a small
funny JOke m ttself for Dr Ktssmger, an old
fnendly-professwnal escort of La Walters, had
learned Barbara was m residence at the stylish
and beauttful Plaza InternatiOnal Hotel, owned
by former Mextcan Pres Mtguel Aleman, and
stmply telephoned mvttahons to assorted lunch
and dmner But a good reporter could have
found them dmmg qmte openly, wtth fnends, m
a !ashton even Nancy McGfnnts would approve
thetr ftrst dmner date was at Armando s, agam
at Vtlla Demos a qutte marvelous Itahan
restaurant good as Rome's best, at the Loel
Gutnnesses, at Black beard's where Dr K ltked
the food well enough even to pose for a photo
wtth owner Cary Smclatr (It appeared m the
local glamor-ortented weekly Acapulco News
through the enterprtse of tts edt tor Mtke Oliver
who seems everywbere) Barbara was mvtted
along for dmners and ~arlles at prtvate
Acapulco mansions wtth Henry, all very open,
even had a couple of vtstts wlth yours qwtetmpressed But little Jacqueltne was not used as

The b1ddmg has be~n
West
North
East

It

Pass

Pass
2•
Pass
You South hold
.K65 'II'QJ74
K965
What do you do now?
A-B1d two no-trump Tins as
a force In this sequence
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner cantmues by
JUmpmg to four hearts What
do you do now?

• •\2 ...

New York County, which
covers the 23 square miles
of Manhattan Island, JS the
smallest c o u n t y m the
Untted States Smce 1638
about 3,650 acres of land
or a b o u t one-quarter of
Manhattan's area has been
added by man as he ftlled
bays and mlets The World
Almanac notes
Copyrigh t

©

19 73

:-..; , \\ ll !IHI\t!r F.nt e rpr l!,\e -I. ~Jo&lt; n

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
If you have somethmg up
you! sleeve, don t get Ill a
card gaQ1e
'

'

Television Log

South
1¥

Put aU the four letter
words together and you
can have a reasonable ap
proxtmatwn of s9me best
sellers

WED_r&lt;LESDAY,APRilll, 1973 •
6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6 News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St 20
Around The Bend 33
6 30 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 15 IOreamofJeannJelJ Zoom33
7 00 - New s 6 10 What' s My Lme 8 Truth or Conseq 3 Beat

The Clock 4 Anythmg You Can Do 13 Know Your Schools 33
Elec Co 20 Samt 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 the Judge 10 Poltce Surgeon 3
Beat Th~ Clock 13 Andy Gnfftth 15 Episode Action 33
George Ktrby 8 Economtc Education 20
8 00 - Adam 12 3 4 15 America 73 20 33 Movie Notonous '
13 Sonny &amp; Cher 8 10
8 30 - Hall of Fame 3 4 15
9 00 - Med1cal Center 8 Love &amp; Hafe 10 Lenox Quartet Haydn
Opus 20 20 33
9 30 - Turnmg Pomts 20 33
10 00 - Soul 33 News 20 Owen Marshall 6 13 Search 4 15
Love &amp; Hate JJ Cannon 8 10
11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 JO - JohnnyCarson3 4 15 Madhouse6,13 Movtes Around
the World Under the Sea 8 Conquered C1ty 10
100 - News 4 13

Thursday, Apnl12, 1973
6 00 - Sunrise Sem1nar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmtime 10 Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Amenca s
Problems 10 Patferns for Llvmg 13
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
6 25 1 Take Five for Ltfe 15
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News B 10 News 6 Pooeye 10
Rocky &amp; Bullwmkie 13
7 30 - Romper Room 6 Sleepy Jeffers 8 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo---10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
LassJe 6
8 30 - Jack La La nne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
9 00 - Concentratton 6 Paul 01xon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Capt
Kangaroo 8 Fnendly Junctmn 10 AM 3 Or Kildare 13
9 30 - Jeopardy 6 To Tell the Truth 3
10 00 - Otck Van Dyke 13 Dmah Shore 3 15 Columbus S1x
callmg 6 Joker s W1ld 8 10
10 30 - Ph1i Donahue 4 Split Second 13 Baffle 3, 4 15 $10 000
P.yramtd 8 10
11 00 - Sale of the Century 3 15 Gambtt 8 10 Love american
Style 6 Password 13 Elec Co 20
11 30- Bewlfched 13 Hollywood Squares 3 4, 15 Search for
Tomorrow 8 10 Sesame St 20
12 00 - Password 13 News 10 Jeopardy 3 15 Jack1e Oblmger
8

1 00 - All My Children 6 13 News 3 Green Acres 10 Watch
Your Child 20 33 Secret Storm 8 Not For Women Only 15
30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 Edge of N1ght a 1~ Dating Game
13
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hosp ttal 6 13 love
Splendored Thmg 8 10 Behmd the Lines 20
J 30 - Return of Peyton Place 3 4 15 One L1fe to LtVe 6 JJ
Secret Storm 10 MervGnffm8 Eye to Eye20, Phd Oon~hue
4

'

4 00 - Mtster Cartoon 3 Merv GnffJn 4 Love Amencan Style
13 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33, Huckleberry Hound Yog 1
Bear 6 Movte Undercover Gtrl' 10
4 30- Pethcoaf Junct1on 3 Andy Griffith 15 1 Love Lucy 6
Dame! Boone 13 Gilligan's Is 8 Olck Van Dyke 15, Merv
Gnffm 4

Bonanza 3 4 Mr Rogers 20 33 Andy Grtfftth 15 Hazel
8 Big Valley 6
5 30 - Marshall D1llon 15 Elec Co 33 , Gomer Pyle USMC 13
Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge-lodge 20
6 OO - News3 4, 8, 15 News6.8, 10 TruthorConseq 6
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4 15 ABC News 6, I Dream of Jeannie 13
Designing Women 33 CBS News 8, 10
7 00 - What's My Line 8 B1g Red Jubilee 15 News 6 10, Beat
The Clock 4 Elec Co 20 Course of Our T1mes 33 Truth or
Conseq 3 Let's Make A Deal 13
7 30 - 111 See You m Court 4 Hollywood Squares 3 To Tell the
Truth 6 Wild Kingdom 10, lassie 8 Beat the Clock 13 Zoom
20 Fltp Wilson 3, 4 ~:~ 15 Mod Squad 6 13 Democracy s
The dtfference between
Trumpet W Va Legislature 33
parrots and many polttlctans
- Flip Wilson 3 4 15 Mod Squad 6, 13, Nat1on~l
ts that tfte latter don't care B 00
Geographic
8 10 Mov•e Hamlet 20, 33
much for $1Jnflower seeds
9 00 - Ironside 3 4 15 Kmg Fu 6 13, Mov1es How to Save A
0
•
Marnage - And Ruin Your L1fe 10 The 300 Spartans" a
How many cars would
10 00 - Dean Marhn 3 4 15 Streets of San Francisco 13, Spring
Is Spec1al 6
be on the road •f they re
called those w1th a loose 11 30 -CJ ~~~~~r.,carson 3 4 15 Possession 6 13, MIJvles Men of
Fi1
Lady' 8. Never Say Goodbye' 10
nut behllld the wheel'
Roller Derby 4
,
(,l

I)

5 00 -

M.o1o• Leagu• Stand1nps
By United Press International
N.at1on11 Le.ague
East
w
I pet g_b
r lttsbQh
3 0 1 000
New Y"ork
2 0 I 000
1!2
Chicago
2 1 667 I
Phil a
1 2 333 2
Montreal
1 3 250 2112
St LQuis
030003
West
wlpctgb
Hovston /
4 I BOO
San Fran
4 1 800
Cincinnatt
2 2 500 Ph
San Diego
2 3 400 2
Atlanta
I 3 250 2'12
Los Ang
1 • 200 3
Tuesday!s Results
Ch1cago at P1ttsburgh (ppd
rain and cold weather)
Cincinnati at Atlanta (ppd cold
weather)
Philadelphia 7 Montreal 5
Houston 4 los Angeles 3 ( 1:2
Innings)
San Francisco 11 San Otego 2
(only games scheduled )
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All ltmes EST!
Ch1cago (Reuschel 10 8) at
Pittsburgh (Moose 13 10) 7

~~York

(Koosman 11 12) at
St Lou1s (Cleveland 14 15) 8 30
pm
Clncinnatt (Gullett 9 10) at Los
Angeles (Sutton 19 9) 11 p m
Atlanta (Dobson 16 IB ) at San
Dlego!Kirby1214) 1030pm
Houston (Forsch 6 8) at San
Franc1sco !Willoughby 6 4) 11
pm
(only Qames scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Monfreal at Philadelphia n1ght
Ch1cago at P1ttsburgh mght
New York at St Louts
Cincinnati at Los Angeles n1ght
Atlanta at San Otego n1ght
Houston at San Franc1sco
WHA Playoff Standln9s
By Un1ted Press lnternafJonal
tQuarterftnals-Bestof Seven)
w I gf ga
New England
2 I 12 10
Ottawa
1 2 10 12
Cleveland
Philadelphia

w I gf ga
3 0 13 4
0 3 4 13

--

Wmnlpeg
Minnesota

wlgfga
2 1 12 9
1

2

9 12

w
gf ga
Houston
1 1 9 6
Los Angeles
1 1 6 9
Tuesday's Games
Ottawa 4 New England 2
Minnesota 6 Wmnlpeg 4
(only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Cleveland at Phtladeiphia
Houston at Los Angeles
(onlygamasscheduied) 1

Arne nun Leigue standJngs

John May~ drove m four
runs ' Tuesday ntght, hammenng a lw{)-flln smgle and
two-run homer, as the Kansas
City Royals exploded for a 12-1
vtctory over the Texas
Rangers before a crowd of
39,464 m the opemng game at
new Royal Stadtum
Paul Splittorff pttched a ftvehitter for Kansas Ctty and went
th e d tstance tn 39 -d egree
temperature
Mayberry sparked a four-run
first mrung outburst, m which

E..t
w, I pet. g b
Boston
3 01000
Balhmore
2 o 1 ooo
'I•
Cleveland
2 1 667 1
De trot t
1 1 500 w,
Milwaukee
0 '2 000 21/2
New York
o 4 000 3'1o
West
w t pet g b
Ch 1cago
1 0 1 000
M1nnesota
3 1 750
Kansas C1ty
3 1 750
California
2 2 500 1112
Texas
o 2 ooo 2•12
Oakland
0 3 000 3
Tuesday's Results
Kansas City 12 Texas 1
Caltforma 4 Mmnesota '2
(oniygamesscheduled)
WedneSday's Games
Today'!I'Probable P1lchers
(All T1mes EST)
Boston at M1lwaukee (ppd,
snowstorm)
Baltimore (Palmer 21 10) at
Detroit t Fryman 10 3) 1 30 p m
Cleveland (Wt lcox 17 141 at
New York tStottlemyre 14 181 I
pm
Oakland (Blue 6 101 at ChiCago
(Wood 24 17) 2 15 p m
Mmnesota (Hands 11 8) at
Cal1forn1a (Ryan 19 16) 11 p m
Texas (Stanhouse 2 9) at By Uolted Press loternatlonal
Kansas C1ty (Busby 3 I) 8 30
Jerry West had tt when tt
pm
&lt;only games scheduled)
counted, but Kareem AbduiTh,•rsday's GO'mes
Jabbar didn't
Texas at Kansas CITy n1ght
That was the story of
Oakland at Chicago
Boston at Milwaukee (ppd Tuesday rught's Natwnal Bas.snowstorm l
Balt1more at Detroit Cleve ketball Assoctalton quarterfmal playoff round as the
land at New York
(Only games scheduled)
L.os Angeles !..akers downed
the Chicago Bulls, 123-102, and
the San Francisco Warrtors
AHL Playoff Standings
By Un1ted Press International upset the Mtlwaukee Bucks,
(Quarterfinals- Best of Seven) 100-97
Senes A
The vtctorLes gave both clubs
wlgfga
4 0 22 10 a 3-2 edge m thetr respecttve
x Nova Scot•a
Prov idence
0 4 10 22 series
West was the sparkplug for
Senes B
wlgfga Los Angeles, scormg 36 pomts
2 1 13 11
Boston
I 2 11 13 and adding 11 asSists as the
Rochester
Lakers beat the Bulls for the
Ser1es C
runth stratght time at the
w I gf ga
4 0 25 12 Fonun m Los Angeles West
x Cmcmnah
Rtchmond
0 4 12 25 got lots of help from Wtlt
Chamberlain, who had 29
Sertes D
rebounds
and 21 pomts, and
w I gf ga
Hershey
2 1 10 9 from Jtm McMilltan, who
V1rgtn1a
1 2 9 10 taUted 20 pomts
x clinched playoff senes
The Lakers, who squandered
TueSday's Results
Nova ScotJa 4 Providence 3 (ot) an 18-pomt lead led IIY SIX at
C•nclnnat1 5 R1chmond 4 (ot)
the end of tliree quarters then
Hershey 5 VIrginia 4 (ot)
broke the game open early m
(only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
the fourth quarter With etght
Boston af Rochester
~tratghl po1nts to ta~e , a
(only game scheduled)

L a k er,s Wln

;-; ••••••o·~::::::::::::::::::::-:·:
:;-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::,:,:,::::;:::::::::::-:
;:;:;::,,,,,,,,o ,,,,::::6::::::::::;:::::::::
:::::.::::::::::::::;::;:::··
ro
"o
o
o'o

•"

;&lt;

.

.-.,• ,::::::::':::':':W'-"·• :.:r • ~
OO . O.'

~

,-,-

Meigs Pony League launched

Woody Call, pre&amp;dent of the new Metgs Pony League Association, satd today scheduled play
will open June 1 With seven teams - unless an etghth IS found - all of them wtthin 10 mmutes lnp
of each other
Other offtcers of the assocl8tton are Tony May, Mtddleport, vtce pres,dent, and Gene Mttch ,
secretary
'
All games will start at 6 p m Further details will be agreed upon at the next meetmg on May
21
Rutland will fteld a pony team for the ftrst lime in several years thiS summer Managers Max
Whitlatch and Gary George of the "Rutland Pioneers" satd Tuesday 15 boys were stgned last
weekend
A tag day m Rutland will be held on a date td be announced, Whttlatch satd Uniforms and
eqUipment are needed
On the Rutland roster are Ray Wilford, Scott Napper, Bob WtUlamson, Buddy Dugan, Rtck
George, Mtke Tillis, John Thomas, Marty Dugan, Jbn Anderson, Randy George, Jeff Patterson,
Leslie Hayman, Stan Starcher, Jerry Matson, and Terry Whttlatch
()rgaruzatwn of the new Pony league stgnals the apparent demiSe of the Metgs-Oafha Pony
League which has functiOned for about 15 years and always mcluded at least one Gaiha County
team, Cheshtre
Last year 1t also mcluded Btdwell, Vmton, and Southwestern
Call mdicated Tuesday theoperung m the new Metgs Pony League schedule - an etghth team
- remams to be filled and suggested an apphcat10n from Cheshire would be gtven the fullest
constderation
Other teams m the league and thetr managers are Pomeroy PhtUtes (A-team), Call and Gary
Freeman, Pomeroy Reds (B-leam) Gene Mttch and Charles Hamilton, Racme, Htlton Wolfe, Jr ,
Syracuse, Mike Stewart and Ro!He Stewart, Mtddleport A, Dean Lutz and Jun Mees, and Mtddleport B, Tony May
'DISputes, if any, will be settled by George Nesselroad, Charles Marshall and Art Stobart,
comrmss10ners The schedule

J - 1. 1973
IlutlaDcl - OPEii
Pc.eroy 1 at Midclleport B
llacine at Syracuae
Middleport A at POMroy .A

JUDe Z6 1 1973
iutlaAcl - OPEII
Middleport B at P01118roy I
SyraciUle at llacine
Po11111roy A at Middleport A

JIIH .$, 1973
Pomeroy I - OPEN

Juoe

J - a. 1973
Hl.ddleport B - OPEIII
iUtlaad at Pomeroy II
P-roy A at llac:tne
Syracue at Micldleport 4
Juoe 12, 1973

Syracue - OPEII
iutlaad at lacille
p~roy B at Midclleport A
Micldleport I at P-roy A

J - 15. 197l
lacine - OPEN -Pomeroy A at P0111eroy B
SyracUH at Middleport I
Middleport A at iutlaAcl
J - 19, 1973

Po-roy A - OPEII
iutl.IDd at Syracuae
Midclleport I at Hicldleport A
Racine at Pomaroy I

:2,

Jtllla
1973
'
H• dclleport A - OPEII

iutlaad et P-roy 4
r-101 I at Syrac•e
iadM at Middleport B

'

29, 1973

P01118roy .tr='Ol'Eli
Middleport. B at iutlaDd
l!acine at Middleport A
SyraciUle at Pomeroy A

July 3, 1973
Midclleport B - OPEii
P011111roy B at &amp;utlaAcl
!lacina at Po•roy A
Middleport A at Syracuae
July 6, 1973
SyraciUI&amp; - OPEIII
!lacina at iutl1111cl
Middlepert A at Paeroy I
Po•roy A at Mldclleport I
'
1
JIIly 10, 1973
llacine - OPI!II ·
P0111eroy B at Pc.uoy A
Middleport II at Syraeiutlaacl at lliddl~rt A
July 13, 1973
Po.eroy A - OPEIII
SyraciUle at llutlaacl
Middleport A at Middleport !
P0111eroy B at lacine
Jllly 17' 1973
Micldleport A - OPEII
P011eroy A at lutl&amp;Dd
syraciUle at r-roy B
Micldleport I at kiM

commanding ~ lead
Bob Love led Chtcago wtth '1:1
pomts and Chet Walker added
25
The sertes contmues Frtday
mght m Chtcago
San Francisco's upset of
Mtlwaukee came about when
Abdul-Jabbar mtssed a hook
shot wtth seven seconds left
and the Warrtors leadtng by
only one pomt The WarriOrs
rebounded the mtssed shot and,
m a last-&lt;litch effort to steal the
ball, Oscar Robertson fouled
San Franctsco's Rtck Barry at
the fmal horn Barry made two
rree throws to account for the
!mal margm of Yl~tory
Barry, who fmtshed wtth !8
pomts, also made a btg basket
with I 14 remammg which put
the Warrtors ahead by three
pomts A basket by Jon
McGlocklin reduced the Warnors'leadto98-97beforeAbdulJabbar mtssed the cru ctal hook
shot Abdul-Jabbar, guarded
closely by Nate Thurmond for
most of the contest, managed
only 19 pomts, hts poorest effort m some tune
Golden State can wrap up the
senes Frtday mght m Oakland

ABA Playoff Standmgs
By Untted Press ln1ernattona 1
East
( DJYJston Ftnals - Best of
Seven)
w t pet
Carolina
0 0 000
Ken lucky
0 0 000

Major League Results

By United Press 1n1erna110na I

National League
Ctncnntl at Atlnta fppd cold )
Ch1c at P1ttsbgh (ppd ratn and
cold)
Montreal
000 300 01 1- 5 7 4
Phlla
004 020 Olx- 7 10 2
Torrez Gtiberl (5) Walker
(7) and Boccabella Carlton (1
1) and Rya n. LP Torrez (0 2)
HRs Montanez (1st) Breeden
( 1s J)
San Otego 000 020 ooo--- 2 8 4
SanFrancsc61000040x- 11 112
Corktns Ross (1) Mill er ( 7)
and Oavts Mar~ c h a l Barr
(6)and Rader WP Manchal (2
OJ LP Corkins 10 I)
(12 mnmgsl
Los Ang 000 000 101 100- 3 16 0
Houston 000 002 000 101- 4 8 2
Downtn g Rau (7) Brewer
(9) Culver (11) and Ferguson
Roberts York (8 ) Cosgrove
(9) Gladdmg (9) Crawford
I11l and Howard Edwards
Ill) WP Crawford (1 I) LP
Culver 10 ll

The

Dai~

Senllnel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty EditOr
Publ1 shed da tly e)(cepl
Saturday by The Oh 1o Valley
Publi Sh ng Company
11 1

Court 5t Pomeroy
-45769 Busmess Off tce
992 2156
2157

Oh10
Phone
Ed IOr 1al P hone 992

Secon d cl ass po stag e pa1d at
Pomero y Oh o
Nat•onal ad ... e rt s ng

r epresentallve
Gallag her

In c

Bot,mell

12 Ea st

5 1 New York Cdy New
Sub sc r pt 1on ra te s

42nd

York
De

by ca r r~e r wl1ere
ava table 50 cents per Nee k
By Motor Rou te where earne r
serv1ce not ailallable One
month 51 75 By ma d m Oh o
and w va One year 514 00
Snt months $-7 15 Tl1ree
mo n ths 54 so Subscr phon
prt ce •n ctudes Sund ay T1mes
ll ¥ered

Senttne l

,.------------·
Here's the Man
To See For •••
THE

BEST
j

I Lou Osborne
I
j

I Sem-s I

VALUES

I
I
SEARS
I C;:talog Merchant
I
I 220 E MaiM
Pomerov
I._

__________ _
PH 992 2178

LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Cmcmnatl , Manager
Sparky
Anderson
satd
today
lhe
Reds have
go t to get some httttng
from the bottom of the batting
order " which they haven t got
ten so far thts season
Anderson has been alternatmg Darrel Chaney and Dave
Concepcwn at shortstop, and

they usually bat seventh m the
batlmg order and Denms Menke bats etghth
ConcepciOn, who has started
two of the Reds' four games, ts
hitless m hve offlctal at bats
and has struck out three times
Chaney has starJed two
ga mes and has only one htt m
10 at bats

Wagner scores TKO in eiuhth
"0'
MIAMI BEACH {UP! ) knockout over Vern Mcintosh
L1g h~heavywe tght lnsh Btlly of Mwrm Beach
Wagner or Cleveland boosted
1 he 26-year old Wagner, who
hts chances fm a lttle bout wetghed
17Hif.!,
decked
agamst champwn Bob Fosler Mcin tosh 176'/,, wtlh a left
1uesday mght by ,cormg an hook m the etghth round The
etgh th r o und tec hn 1ca l 24 year-old Mclntosh got up at
the count of three and took a
ma
ndatm y etght-count standPomeroy Bow..Ling Lanes
Mornmg Glones League
mg m a neutra l co1ncr
Apni 3 1973
When clc tl on 1es umed ,
Standmgs
Wagner moved m and began
Team
Pts
Newell Sunoco
66 scm mg at wtll unltl Mcintosh s
Exce ls1or Ott Co
66 handler Angelo Dundee,
G1bbs Grocery
50
Dtck s Grocery
50 Jumped onto th~ rm g apron and
Spencer s Market
42 shouted for referee Eddie
G &amp;J Auto Parts
38 Eckert to stop the ft ght The
H1gh lnd Game
Jan
Jenk1ns 198
TKO was declared a l 2 30 of
Second Htgh lnd Game lhe eJghth round
Jan Jenkms 184
Wagner was ahead on pomts
Hig h Sen es - Jan Jenktns
538
when the bout was slopped, but
Second H1gh Sen es - Peg Mcintosh had won the fourth ,
Houdashell 460
Team Htg h Game - Newel l [J[lh and seventh rounds w1th
Sunoco 826
pumshmg pun ches
Team H1gh Sen es - Newell
Wagner ts expected to seek a
Sunoco 2321
l1tle bout wtth light heavy
Tr1 County League
champ F'oster m the near
Apn I J 1973
future Wag ner s record now ts
Standmgs
Team
Pts
II 5 1 Mcin tosh owns a 14-10
Dav 1s Warner Ins
98
record
Rawl ings Dodge
72
Gro Boys
68
Pomeroy Cement Block Co 56
H &amp;R Ftreslone
38
Mayer &amp; Htii Barber Shop 28
H1 gh lnd tvtd ua l Game
Larry Dugan 237
Second H1g h lnd Ga me
Larry Dugan 226
Thtrd Htgh lnd Game SAME DAY
Tie .. Larry Dugan 208 Henry
CI&lt;Jtworth y 208
SERVICE
Htgh Sen es - Larry Duga n
In At 9- 0ut At 5
671
Use Our Free Parkmg Lot
Second H1g h Sen es - Henry
Ciatwurlhy 577
Th1rd~1 er1es - Ray
Roach 54
Team tgh Game - Dav 1s
216 E 'lnd Pomeroy
Warner
933
Tea m H1gh Sen es - Dav1s
War ner ins 2797

FREE 5 LB. HAM

gf ga

No games No g!mm1 cks

Durmg sprmg trammg both
Dave and Darrel were aggres~
sive at the plate," satd Anderson 'Now they have become
defensive hitters
1 can t blame them, ' satd
Anderson "It's tough knowmg
you " gomg to be playmg
every other day mstead of on a
reg ular basts
What I thmk I'll do ts play
one or the other for about 10
games m a row and see what
happens, satd Anderson ' Or
maybe I'll platoon them for
awhtle That was my ortgmal
plan thts sprmg
As for Menke,Anderson satd,
he's got a bat problem and his
arm IS still giV1ng hun some
trouble '
1 Meiilie has made two wtld

~~~::

Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

5%
ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
5 per cent per year pa1d on
Regular Pass book Savmg ~:
No M1n1mum lnt er e ~ t
from date o1 depos1 t to date
of Withdrawal Int erest
compounded quarter ly

~MEIGS

.

~'BRANCH
• Tl\e Athens. County
Savmqs 6 Loan Co

296 Second St
Pomeroy, Ohto
Al l Accounts Insur ed To
520 000 by FSLIC

I~' J

@,:'.'j

tn the Reds' four
Cmcmnatt was scheduled to
.,
meet the Dodgers here today . .__ _::
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
-

ON

USED CARS
WEATHER
WARMER .•

SHIRT
FINISHING

Robinson's Cleaners

I

w

Philadelphia
J 2 10 11
2 3 , 10
Mmnesola
x cl1nched senes
Tuesday s Results
N Y Rangers 61 Boston 3
Chtcago 6 St Lou 1s 1
Phtladetphta 3 Mtnnesota 2 of
BufJaio J Montreal 2 ol
Wednesday s Games
(No games scheduled I

·bottom, Anderson says

'

'

ll.atlend ac Middleport B "
Middleport A et lacina
P~roy A at Syracuae

e

Mtlwaukee and Balttmore at l&lt;ls Angeles
Crawford pttched two IllDetrmt- were postponed due to
severe snow storms and high rungs of scoreless rehef to get
the vtctory whtle George
wtnds
In Nattonal League action, Culver went I 2-3 and took the
Phtladelphta downed Mon- loss
Bobby Valentme smgled tn
treal, 7-5, Houston beat Los
Angeles m 12 mnmgs, !-3, the two runs m the fifth mmng
San ~'ranctsco Gtants routed helpmg BtU Singer wm hts ftrst
AI.. game for the Angels Smger
the San Otego Padres 11-2
struck out 10 and held MmChtcago at Pittsburgh, em
cmnatt at Atlanta and New nesota to SIK htts Bert
York and St Louts were aU Blyyleven was the loser for the
postponed because of cold 1\vms
Ed Goodson s bases-filled
weather
Steve Carlton atded by a trtple and pttcher Juan Mantil o-run homer by Wtllte Mon- cha! s two..-un double were the
tanez, pttched Phtladelplua to blg blows of a stx-run ftrst
its ftrst wm of the season as the mmng whtch earned the
Gtants to thetr victory over the
Phtlhes beat Montreal
i"ddres It was the second
Rookte southpaw J1m Craw
ford lmed a two-out double m straight vtctory for Mancha!
the bottom of the 12th tnrung to who had a il-16 record last
score John Edwards from ftrst season

Bucks upset ":R';d~""";eed hitting at

$t"'-

--

10 Royals batted, wJth a 2-run
Single before Ell Ktrkpatrtck
lofted a sacr1hce fly and
Mayberry scored on an error
Amos Otts, who had three
hits, stroked a lw&lt;K&gt;ut smgle 111
the ftfth before Mayberry
slapped hts ftrst homer of the
season, a 400-foot shot to nghtcenter olf reliever Btl! Gogolewskt
In the only other Amertcan
League game, the Califorma
Angels topped the Mmnesota
Twms, 4-2 Three AL gamesOakland at Chicago, Boston at

Ft~~:t -

!DIVISIOn
Be&gt;l of
East
Seven)
CSem•hnals-Bestof Seven)
w I pet
w 1 pet Utah
0 0
000
Boston
2 2 500 lnd tana
0 '0 000
Atlanta
2 2 500
Tuesday's Results
(No games scheduled l
w I pet
Wednesday's Games
x New York
4 I 800 Kentucky vs Caroltna at Chttr
Balhmore
1 4 200 lotte N c
(only game scheduled l
West
(Semifinals-Best of Seven)
w t pet
Golden State
3 2 600
N Hl Playoff Standings
M1lwaukee
2 3 400
By Untted Press tnternattonal
(Qua.rterfJnals- Best of Seven)
w I pet
wlgfga
Los Angeles
3 2 600 Montreal
3 2 17 14
Ch1ta9o
2 3 400 Buffalo
2 3 14 17
x chnched sertes
Tuesday's Results
w 1 gf ga
Golden State 100 Milwaukee 97 )( New York
4
1 22 11
Los Angeles 123 Ch1cago t02
Boston
1 4 11 22
(only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
w I gf ga
I
Atla nta at Boston
)( Chtcago
4 I 22 9
Ionly game scheduled)
1 4
9 22
St LOUIS

VALUES

HOTTER!

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

Jrd Ave.

Meigs Tire Center

Middleport

FREE 5 LB. HAM

EASTER SPECIAL
11

Beat The Meat Prices

Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL

A/13 &amp; B/13 &amp; E-14-.!23.50
F14 &amp; F15
•24.50 "~~
G14 &amp; G15---•26.50
H 14 &amp; H 15
•28.50
900x15 &amp; J-15 L-15-•30.50
SALE ON

FREE MOUNTING

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

Meigs Tire Center
700 East Mam Street
POMEROY, OHIO

992 21111

BOTH
PREMIUM
78 and
2 PLUS 2

OLD TIRES

CASH ONLY
•

FIBERGLASS
FIRST LINE
TIRES

PLUS EXCISE TAX FROM 11.75-13.33 PER TIRE

Sale Ends Apfil 21 1973 • Noon

"Beat the Meat Prices"

�•
3- The Daily Sentlllel, Mtddlepori-Pomeroy, 0 , AprU 11, 1973

•ID new s t a d I•urn~ 8y~~~fJ'~i:::~~~:r~=ft~nal
'

2- The Daily Sentmel, Mtddleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Aprtlll, 1973

EDITORIALS

No-Fault Working
Well in Delaware
There IS no fault automobile msurance and then there IS
no fault automobile msurance, and the questwn confr:ont

mg Jegtslators lll many states ts whtch of the numerous
plans proposed or m effect ts best- If any ts
Basically no fault means that people are patd directly
by thetr own msurer for thetr losses wtthout wathng to
detet nune whQ caused a colhston

One pomt of controversy however, has been the con
tentJOn of proponents of the Keaton 0 Connell type of no
fault, whtch was adopted by Massachusetts that the con
cept can't work unless tt bars the nght to sue below a
suttable ' threshold " In Massachusetts, for example, Jawsmts are rest ricted unless hospttal or medical costs ex
ceed $500
#
Lawyers on the other hand argue that a threshold tsn '1
necessary-t hat effective auto msurance reform can pro
vtde !1rst party coverage regardless of fault wtthout
abrogatmg legal nghts and shll reduce court congestiOn,
reduce premtum s and effect prompt payment of clatms
They are now cttlng Delaware's expenence as an
example
Compulsory no fault msurance went mto effect m Dela
ware on Jan I 1972, provtdmg a $10,000 economtc pack
age and no restnchon on the right to sue
Accordmg 1to the states 1nsurance commlSSJoner, 13
months later clatm s had been reduced by 70 per cent
and less than a dozen smts had been filed by Delawareans
Lihgatwn over medical costs, wages and loss of servICes has diSappeared , he reports except for out of state
drtvers and thetr passengers There has not been a smgle
known mctdent where the Delaware vtctlJTls were not patd
promptly upon presentallon of their btlls and the vehtcle
was msured as reqmre'd by law
In other words, when people are promptly and reasonaply retmbursed for losses m automobtle acctdents they
don t make unreasonable claims and file nUisance "
SUits

1

Dear E
,
Wtth your money or thetrs ? Even expert market analysts
have "gambled' themselves mtoa dark comer - HELEN

+++
E
Startmg small and workmg up slowly ISn't the worst way to
go Your folks shouldn 't object tf you do some educated gambling
wtth money you ve CLEARED on the stock market
And tf they follow your advtce to make a killing, maybe
they'll pay you a comm!Sston - SUE

+++
NOTE li'ROM HELEN If they follow your advtce and get
shot down, they mtght also take tt out of your hide

+++
Rap
I'm 21 and have been gomg wtth a fellow ftve years He JUSt
got home from four years of mthtary servtce Now he tells me he
had affatrs wtth women m two countries, but dtd not love them
He only loves me
I get cold all over thinkmg about tt
Could he make a good husband, after this? - HEARTBROKEN

25 per cent
Delaware's no fault auto ms urance ts worktng and can
well serve as a national model " says the commiSSioner
Hts stattsltcs suggest that tt at least bears lookmg mto
by other states

Heartbroken
A man can be fatthful m heart tf not m body as they say,
lonehness makes stran ge bedfellows
I doubt tf you spent four long years completely away from
males - without even once fltrting around If your guy went
farther than fhrtmg - well, Lt's over , he s back, so forget what
he shouldn t have told you m the ftrst place - SUE

.

Mags Thrive, Take-offs Boom
Ltfe ' may be gone but hfe goes on m the magazme
pubhshmg held
In this era of women s hberatton, 1t ts mtereshng to
note that one of the boommgest areas m the busmess IS
men s magazmes chauvmtst p1g diVIston
ConSider that a new one called Gallery ' a take off
on 'Playboy" (some say a carbon copy) sold a mtlhon
coptes of tts March tssue The latter however ts sllll
gomg well, along Wtth Om ' and tls arch nval, Pent
house
Soon to enter the competition \\Ill be VOir," whtch IS
French for ' see as m peek
But magazme publ!Shmg tsn t gomg enttrely to the
fleshpots Scheduled to debut m June ts ' Smgle ' whtch
, tts promoters say wtll focus on the mtellectual emotwn
al and practteal concerns of the 43 mtllton smgle , Wid
owed and dtvorced men and women m the Umted States
• as an answer to the sex on ented mags
Whatever happened to T\1e W o rm -~ll!lJl"f). p tgest' •
•

BRUCE BIOSSAT

Presidents: How
Do We See Ahead
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
WASHINGTON !NEA l
' Some scholars of the preSidency get annoyed at mere
polilteal JOUrnahsts because they say that we durmg a
campatgn, don t tell the Amencan people enough about
how a candtdate wtll act tf he wms the otftce
: Ltke everybody else, we have our full quota of 1mper
fections But this partlcular complamt 1s unfatr on two
counts
In the first place, wtth all due resp ect to the scholars
there really ts no way to predtct spectftc prestdenttal
behavwr ori the basiS of pnor performance and known
tra1ts of character and personahty '
Few tf any people could have foreseen that the rathet
unexctlmg governor of New York Franklin D Roosevelt
would m 1933 and thereafter galvamze and gtve hope to a
despamng, depressiOn ndden nahon wtth astomshmg
dramahc flatr
No d1ggmg mto Lyndon Johnson's Texas background or
hts long years m Washmgton could have prepared us for
exactly the kmd of response he made to the Vtetnam
dilemma he faced m 1964-65
What scholar liberal or otherwiSe, would have told us
that tt would be Rtchard Ntxon, percetved by so many for
so long as a "Commumst fighter " who would make the
first stgmficant approaches to Pekmg and Moscow?
ObviOusly, what a preSident does m offtce IS the prod
uct of an mteractwn between his make up and expenence
and the sttuahons and problems he encounters-most of
whtch cannot be foreseen when he ts seeking offtce
I Yet, further m newsmen's defense tt IS not true that
they gtve no cues at all to a pubhc jookmg for gmdmg
Impressions
Before he assumed oQ;,ice Johnson had been fatrly well
portrayed by percepf!ve JOUrnaliSts as a man of roarmg
energy and out stzed ego who m hts days as Senate
maJority leader maneuvered, caJoled wheedled and bull
dozed hts way to successful management of legtslatwn
It was not too far a JUmp from that to a Johnson who m
the Whtle House, treated the preSidency almost as a per
sonal possesSion, drove funously for the passage of Grea t
Soctety btlls, managed and developed the Vtetnam war
.... as 1f he were a commander m umform planted m the map
" room
He was a natural-born mtervener down to the pomt of
; deSlgmng the tickets pohltctans would use to board bts
' southern bound Cornpone Spectal' tram m hiS 1960 cam
:~ pa1gn as Democratic v1ce prestdenllal nommee H1s com: ' mand of such detatls and hts enormous pnde were well
•, told stones 'fas 11, then all that much a surpnse when
• he would say, m mid war
'I don t propose to let North Vtetnam's Ho Cht Mmh stt
.. mSatgon'''
• As for Mr Ntxon, though there could have been no sure
forecastmg of htS conduct toward the Commumst world or
toward some economic problems many reporters took note
of the spectal trony that thts man who clearly loves polltics and government never m hiS life had gtven evtdence
• that he could master the art of 'human relahons" whtch
•• lay at their core
•
It was a pretty thoroughly known thm g that Mr N1xon
~ diSliked the ordmary- gtve and take of pohttcal contact,
• that he was pamfully tll at ease m small talk that he had
' to contrtve hiS performance at these levels
Agam where IS the real surprtSe when free finally of
the need to electwneer any mm e, the PresJdent throws off
thts uncomfortable burden and walls htmself off ?
Mr Ntx;on's mterest m politics and government IS at a
: level at least once removed from d1rect human lmks
' Though he can of course see all those connectwns he 1s
'i- .happy only when treatmg problem s m thetr more abstract
• form He IS a mover of ptece&gt; on the board who leaves to
oth~rs the translai!On of hts moves mto mot e baSJc human

+++

Hear HB
Whether your fiance makes a good husband or not depends
on many thmgs, but NOT on a couple of affatrs be enJoyed and
forgot, long ago
More realism, less Jealousy could help make this a good
marrtage - HELEN
Helen and Sue
My best fnend ts of a mmortty race I'm mtddl&lt;H:lass
Caucasian I have no preJudices, but I can't help the Jealousy I
feel when he gets five scholarshtps plus constderable other help,
and I, wtth the same achtevements, get no breaks for college
Sure I'm glad for hun He's a great guy, but even he feels
that he's bemg dtscrunmated FOR, while some of his whtte
fnends are bemg dlScrlJTlmated AGAINST
It's got to the pomt where If you aren't a mmonty or a
woman, forget tl, when the JObs, scholarships, etc are bemg
passed out I can't even get work to help put myself through the
Wliverstty, but my fr1end already has a JOb assured, m addttJon
to hts several grants
Isn't tt about tlJTle someone constdered the poor deprtved
mtddle-class whtte male? - ONE OF THEM
/
NOTE Employers scholarshtps boards - lake heed ThiS ts
a legtttmate complamt, and one whtch should be constdered
thoughtfully - HELEN AND SUE
--'---~

TIME LVQUOTES --.,---I

Thts busmess of JUSt
strmgmg thts thm g along ts
poor tacttcs There s nothmg
that could be brought out
that would be as detnmental
as lettmg thts thmg go on
-Sen Norns Cotton R
N H , urg•ng PreS&gt;dent

Nuxon t o act to clear up
the Wate rgat e

scand~l

Hardly anyone nowadays would argue wtth the value of high
school
whtch teach teenagers to drive automobUes wtth
some reasonable degree of safety
They have saved countless lives, driver's licenses and lll' surance-prenuum dollars I'm glad they're operational .in the
Metgs-Gallia-Mason area
But now another thought crosses the threshold of my mmd
(and thoughts have difficulty crOSS!Jlg such a high threshold)
Why not teach elementary-5chool children a drtver educalton
00
course for btcycles• If tt's not a viable classroom subject, why
not teach 1t on televtston - as a regular, scheduled program•
(Maybe tt's bemg done somewhere, but not on any local
stal!on, so far lis I know )
My mmd began to explore the posstbility when a gtrl-child
who stays wtth us named Shmybnte got P badly-bruised JBW and
lip a week or so ago
- ~
Shmybrtte, who fanctes herself the women's lib-frrst grade
answer to Eve! Kmevel, limped home wtth the sad story of
• acqurrmg a bloody mouth when her btke ran mto a purple truck
Further mterrogation developed that the purple truck was
parked at the lime
Although Shinybnte's pnde was hurt more than her facial
geography was damaged ( "They'lllaugh at me m school, daddy'"), I dld do a qwck flashback to some other b1cycllng lllctdents m my life
Shmybrtte 's older sister, Vyvyanne , had us at the pomt of
"Close the wmdow Dmnels gettmg drr.ty'"
pamc when she was about five, and dectded to do an Impromptu
head-ftrst dtve over the handlebars to test the comparaltve hardness of her skull and a concrete curb The curb won She llngered
m semt-consciousness for a whole mght before her bram dec1ded
to put tt all together agam
And brother Matthew narrowly escaped mjury, and bad a
btke nearlydemoltshed whenafrtendJostledhunmfront of a car
WIN AT BRIDGE
whose drtve~ fortunately was motormg along at a sedate 20 mph
at the tlJTle
I can recall, from my own babyhood, at least three senous
South, who had Jetllsoned accidents whtch mcluded a bad slud 111 some loose gravel that left
NORTH (D)
11
four clubs and a heart, a pennanently-5carred knee an attempted U-turn on a cheap
.
.K2
played the ftve of hearts wartlJTle Engllsh-!ityle bike that contorted the front wheel mto a
'II'J8 5
from
dummy East dtd the u
of
d
.AKQJ8 3
b t he could by duckmg and -turn
tts own an some bad brttses for me
and a plam
.AS
was m He cashed hts damn-fool "look-Mom-&lt;~o-hands" weave mto the path of a car
WEST
EAST
three spades and then had to that lifted me a generous distance mto outer space - and
.AJ8 3
.10654
lead away from hts kmg of brought me down accordingly
'II'K72
'II'A963
club~
Now, up to thts pomt, I've been discussmg plam, ordinary
.96 5
.1072
East and West diScussed btcycles But the advent of the ten-5peed super-charged low.K64
... J9
the posstbthty of beatmg the
'
•
sourn
contract by West holding JUSt emtsSloned bombs now on the market enable your very own
.Q97
two spades but agreed that seven-year-&lt;&gt;ld to whomp up a speed maxunum of 35 or 40 nules
• Q 104
the club end-play would have an hour And they're selling ten-!ipeeds, and all other kinds of
worked mespective of whtch btcycles like crazy these days - to adults and children alike
.Q 10 7 532
Wtth this. btcycle boom, and wtth TV stations desperately
defender led the smt'
East West vulnerable
They were r1ght about that seekmg somethmg "relevant" for ktds' progr)lmmmg that ktds
West North East South
and also about the fact that
I•
Pass 1 N'J'.
11 West had unguarded hiS actually wtU watch to offset crtlictsm of the gore, goofmess and
3NT
Pass Pass
Pass
kmg of clubs declarer could gunk that comprtses most chtldren's programs, why not a show
Pass
have played hts ace and to teach them how to handle thiS marvelous new (to them) mOpenmg lead- • 3
ptcked tt up but that un ventton, m a moderately safe manner•
guardmg of the club kmg
It would he a little much to ask some of the teachers gone to
By Oswald &amp; James Jacoby
rep r e sent e d West's best
•
chance If he chucked hiS padded postenors and fading eyestght after years m the blackWhen you expect a head
four and SIX of clubs and board JUngles, to teach the subject as a gr.ade-!ichool classroom
ac he take a couple of as
their the deuce of ' hearts course, but,tt sounds marvelously sutted to TV 1And wbo knows
p1rm when you have a sore South m 1g h ,t have gone maybe some adults who are caught up m the cycllng craze nughi
tooth ge t tt treated when wrong He dtdn t agamst the take a peek too
yo u have to make a pamful actual defense
•
dtscard make tt qUickly and
(NEWSPAPER EHTERPII:JS£ ASSN )
gracefully

co"""-

-

Game with Discard Squeeze
vJ:st

.4

South dectded to play dum
my s deuce of spades at tnck
one West mtght have led
from JaCk 10 He also de
ctded to take East s 10 wtth
hts queen and run hiS &lt;Ita
monds quickly

East drOpped the mne of
We m Congress dtstrust hearts as hts ftrst dtscard
as all Amencans dtstrust
and f o 11 owed wtth two
any PreSident who would spades West threw the deuce
suggest that only he knows of hearts and the four of
what ts best for Amenca
clubs wJthout any Signs of
- Sen Edmund S Musk.e torment but hts thtrd dtscard
D Me chargmg PreS&gt;dent presented a ternftc problem
N txon w z t h trymg to He fmally solved tt by chuck
establiSh one man rule
mg the seven of hearts

BY JACK O'BRIAN
ACAPULCO RUMORS ARE
A LAST RESORT
ACAPULCO (KFS) - A1month before we
arnved for a wmter collapse m the marvelous
Mextcan resort of Acapulco, Barbara Walters of
the "Today' show asked tf we'd mmd If she and
4-year-old daughter Jacquehne ]Cited along for
stmtlar anti-fatigue purposes, the reply was of
cpurse, and for a month we all planned our qmet
stay like any enthuSiastiC parents, our
teenagers would be along, of course, on thetr
sprmg vacatwns from Mtss Hewttt's Classes
'
And that IS the stmple background to a drab rap
Barbara Walters got from a syndtcated TVchatterbox whose constant problem IS getting
fhpped onfu her own hp-lash
By total cmnctdence Dr Henry K!Ssmger of
Nohel-prtzed probabthties finished hts no doubt
fnendly Vtetnam persuaswn, POWs all accounted for and headed merctfully home from
their tortures and travaJl , he, too, chose
Acapulco as hiS resort of ultimate recuperation
It happens also comctdentally Dr K!Ssmger and
Barbara Walters are frtends courtesy of thetr
positions as natiOnally known reporter and
mternatlonally known pragmattc pactflst
Parenl hettcally, let's note that Dr K's best
gtrl acknowledgely for several years has been
Nancy McGmms of Rockefeller-employment,
he even took her to Pres Nuwn's mauguratlon
hoopla whtch ts hke takmg a gal home to mama
to show off future pluperfect, mdeed Henry's
met the cool and mtellectual Nancy's folks, but
no one's statmg yet if the sohtatre wtll be forthcommg
But - Dr Ktssmger at thts pertment
moment had become one of the btggest glamor
stars mall the world Hts movements no longer
can be camouflaged as they were by early-Vtet
dtplomahc secrecy, so hts VIrtually lastmoment plans once the POWs headed home was
to return to the Acapulco he'd found such a
luxuriOusly recuperaltve place after past
fattgumg stretches , m passmg let's note
Henry's modesty m refusm g to horn m on the
mternatwnally televtsed returns or the ftrst - to
the last - beleaguered prtsoners
All clear'
t&lt;&gt; TV's queen

By Uolted Press Inlernatlonal

BY PAUL CRABTREE

A Flnauclal Whiz at 15•

At the same time there has been no mcrease m msur
anc£&gt; rate levels m Delaware and m some cases decreases Bodily InJUry 1ates were reduced as much as

&amp; THINGS

BERRY'S WORLD
Dear Rap _
• I constder myself an above average 15-year-&lt;&gt;ld wlto IS mterested 111 the stock market I analyze, study and arrtve at fme
predictions
My parents have perrrutted me to make mmor trades thw;
far , but tt Wkes money to make money "
My last predicl!on turned $2,700 mto a net of almost $4,100 m
two weeks, but tt was JUSt a prediclton - no money mvolved
Since I know what I'm domg, shouldn't my parents permit
me to gamble•- E J

Pro Standings

tnvta and her meffJcient lrtangulahon of mformatwn that Barbara Walters and daughter
were m Acapulco, that Henry Ktssmger had
arrtved in this premter playpen, and gettmg her
exerCise jwnpmg at wrong concluslons, she
mooed mto her bust-mtke that Barbara Walters
had used her four-year-&lt;&gt;ld Jacquelme as a
decay to cover some leermgly portentous
rendezvous abaft the warm romantic waters of
Acapulco Bay It was filthy pool Barbara's
plans had been made a month before, Henry's
on the spur of the POW homecommg whtch
hgh ~ned hts negobated burden It was an
exasperatmgly unhbelous touch of triVIally
tasteless JOurnahsm to hang such a sleazy use of
a lovely httle child on the transparent stuptdlty
of attemptmg to make an acctdental JUXtaposttwn seem planned, and JUSt a trifle dtrty
The cutrate coast tmttator of the credtble
Dorothy Manners, who took up where Louella
Parsons Signed off, was unable to dredge up
enough authentic tales of Henry-vtce-Barbara
to make a story Couldn't locate Barbara or
Henry nor could a flock of other more
responstble JOurnahsts who sweated out the
Kissmger uanonynuty", whtch was a small
funny JOke m ttself for Dr Ktssmger, an old
fnendly-professwnal escort of La Walters, had
learned Barbara was m residence at the stylish
and beauttful Plaza InternatiOnal Hotel, owned
by former Mextcan Pres Mtguel Aleman, and
stmply telephoned mvttahons to assorted lunch
and dmner But a good reporter could have
found them dmmg qmte openly, wtth fnends, m
a !ashton even Nancy McGfnnts would approve
thetr ftrst dmner date was at Armando s, agam
at Vtlla Demos a qutte marvelous Itahan
restaurant good as Rome's best, at the Loel
Gutnnesses, at Black beard's where Dr K ltked
the food well enough even to pose for a photo
wtth owner Cary Smclatr (It appeared m the
local glamor-ortented weekly Acapulco News
through the enterprtse of tts edt tor Mtke Oliver
who seems everywbere) Barbara was mvtted
along for dmners and ~arlles at prtvate
Acapulco mansions wtth Henry, all very open,
even had a couple of vtstts wlth yours qwtetmpressed But little Jacqueltne was not used as

The b1ddmg has be~n
West
North
East

It

Pass

Pass
2•
Pass
You South hold
.K65 'II'QJ74
K965
What do you do now?
A-B1d two no-trump Tins as
a force In this sequence
TODAY'S QUESTION
Your partner cantmues by
JUmpmg to four hearts What
do you do now?

• •\2 ...

New York County, which
covers the 23 square miles
of Manhattan Island, JS the
smallest c o u n t y m the
Untted States Smce 1638
about 3,650 acres of land
or a b o u t one-quarter of
Manhattan's area has been
added by man as he ftlled
bays and mlets The World
Almanac notes
Copyrigh t

©

19 73

:-..; , \\ ll !IHI\t!r F.nt e rpr l!,\e -I. ~Jo&lt; n

BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
If you have somethmg up
you! sleeve, don t get Ill a
card gaQ1e
'

'

Television Log

South
1¥

Put aU the four letter
words together and you
can have a reasonable ap
proxtmatwn of s9me best
sellers

WED_r&lt;LESDAY,APRilll, 1973 •
6 00 - Truth or Conseq 6 News 3 4 8 10 15 Sesame St 20
Around The Bend 33
6 30 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 15 IOreamofJeannJelJ Zoom33
7 00 - New s 6 10 What' s My Lme 8 Truth or Conseq 3 Beat

The Clock 4 Anythmg You Can Do 13 Know Your Schools 33
Elec Co 20 Samt 15
7 30 - To Tell The Truth 6 the Judge 10 Poltce Surgeon 3
Beat Th~ Clock 13 Andy Gnfftth 15 Episode Action 33
George Ktrby 8 Economtc Education 20
8 00 - Adam 12 3 4 15 America 73 20 33 Movie Notonous '
13 Sonny &amp; Cher 8 10
8 30 - Hall of Fame 3 4 15
9 00 - Med1cal Center 8 Love &amp; Hafe 10 Lenox Quartet Haydn
Opus 20 20 33
9 30 - Turnmg Pomts 20 33
10 00 - Soul 33 News 20 Owen Marshall 6 13 Search 4 15
Love &amp; Hate JJ Cannon 8 10
11 00 - NewsJ 4 6 8 10 13 15
11 JO - JohnnyCarson3 4 15 Madhouse6,13 Movtes Around
the World Under the Sea 8 Conquered C1ty 10
100 - News 4 13

Thursday, Apnl12, 1973
6 00 - Sunrise Sem1nar 4 Sacred Heart 10
6 15 - Farmtime 10 Paul Harvey 13
6 30 - Columbus Today 4 Bible Answers 8 Amenca s
Problems 10 Patferns for Llvmg 13
6 45 - Corncob Report 3
6 25 1 Take Five for Ltfe 15
7 00 - Today 3 4 15 CBS News B 10 News 6 Pooeye 10
Rocky &amp; Bullwmkie 13
7 30 - Romper Room 6 Sleepy Jeffers 8 Rocky &amp; Bullwlnkle
13
8 00 - Capt Kangaroo---10 Sesame St 33 New Zoo Revue 13
LassJe 6
8 30 - Jack La La nne 13 New Zoo Revue 6 Romper Room 8
9 00 - Concentratton 6 Paul 01xon 4 Phil Donahue 15 Capt
Kangaroo 8 Fnendly Junctmn 10 AM 3 Or Kildare 13
9 30 - Jeopardy 6 To Tell the Truth 3
10 00 - Otck Van Dyke 13 Dmah Shore 3 15 Columbus S1x
callmg 6 Joker s W1ld 8 10
10 30 - Ph1i Donahue 4 Split Second 13 Baffle 3, 4 15 $10 000
P.yramtd 8 10
11 00 - Sale of the Century 3 15 Gambtt 8 10 Love american
Style 6 Password 13 Elec Co 20
11 30- Bewlfched 13 Hollywood Squares 3 4, 15 Search for
Tomorrow 8 10 Sesame St 20
12 00 - Password 13 News 10 Jeopardy 3 15 Jack1e Oblmger
8

1 00 - All My Children 6 13 News 3 Green Acres 10 Watch
Your Child 20 33 Secret Storm 8 Not For Women Only 15
30 - 3 On A Match 3 4 15 Edge of N1ght a 1~ Dating Game
13
3 00 - Another World 3 4 15 General Hosp ttal 6 13 love
Splendored Thmg 8 10 Behmd the Lines 20
J 30 - Return of Peyton Place 3 4 15 One L1fe to LtVe 6 JJ
Secret Storm 10 MervGnffm8 Eye to Eye20, Phd Oon~hue
4

'

4 00 - Mtster Cartoon 3 Merv GnffJn 4 Love Amencan Style
13 Somerset 15 Sesame St 20 33, Huckleberry Hound Yog 1
Bear 6 Movte Undercover Gtrl' 10
4 30- Pethcoaf Junct1on 3 Andy Griffith 15 1 Love Lucy 6
Dame! Boone 13 Gilligan's Is 8 Olck Van Dyke 15, Merv
Gnffm 4

Bonanza 3 4 Mr Rogers 20 33 Andy Grtfftth 15 Hazel
8 Big Valley 6
5 30 - Marshall D1llon 15 Elec Co 33 , Gomer Pyle USMC 13
Beverly Hillbillies 8, Hodgepodge-lodge 20
6 OO - News3 4, 8, 15 News6.8, 10 TruthorConseq 6
6 30 - NBC News 3, 4 15 ABC News 6, I Dream of Jeannie 13
Designing Women 33 CBS News 8, 10
7 00 - What's My Line 8 B1g Red Jubilee 15 News 6 10, Beat
The Clock 4 Elec Co 20 Course of Our T1mes 33 Truth or
Conseq 3 Let's Make A Deal 13
7 30 - 111 See You m Court 4 Hollywood Squares 3 To Tell the
Truth 6 Wild Kingdom 10, lassie 8 Beat the Clock 13 Zoom
20 Fltp Wilson 3, 4 ~:~ 15 Mod Squad 6 13 Democracy s
The dtfference between
Trumpet W Va Legislature 33
parrots and many polttlctans
- Flip Wilson 3 4 15 Mod Squad 6, 13, Nat1on~l
ts that tfte latter don't care B 00
Geographic
8 10 Mov•e Hamlet 20, 33
much for $1Jnflower seeds
9 00 - Ironside 3 4 15 Kmg Fu 6 13, Mov1es How to Save A
0
•
Marnage - And Ruin Your L1fe 10 The 300 Spartans" a
How many cars would
10 00 - Dean Marhn 3 4 15 Streets of San Francisco 13, Spring
Is Spec1al 6
be on the road •f they re
called those w1th a loose 11 30 -CJ ~~~~~r.,carson 3 4 15 Possession 6 13, MIJvles Men of
Fi1
Lady' 8. Never Say Goodbye' 10
nut behllld the wheel'
Roller Derby 4
,
(,l

I)

5 00 -

M.o1o• Leagu• Stand1nps
By United Press International
N.at1on11 Le.ague
East
w
I pet g_b
r lttsbQh
3 0 1 000
New Y"ork
2 0 I 000
1!2
Chicago
2 1 667 I
Phil a
1 2 333 2
Montreal
1 3 250 2112
St LQuis
030003
West
wlpctgb
Hovston /
4 I BOO
San Fran
4 1 800
Cincinnatt
2 2 500 Ph
San Diego
2 3 400 2
Atlanta
I 3 250 2'12
Los Ang
1 • 200 3
Tuesday!s Results
Ch1cago at P1ttsburgh (ppd
rain and cold weather)
Cincinnati at Atlanta (ppd cold
weather)
Philadelphia 7 Montreal 5
Houston 4 los Angeles 3 ( 1:2
Innings)
San Francisco 11 San Otego 2
(only games scheduled )
Today's Probable Pitchers
(All ltmes EST!
Ch1cago (Reuschel 10 8) at
Pittsburgh (Moose 13 10) 7

~~York

(Koosman 11 12) at
St Lou1s (Cleveland 14 15) 8 30
pm
Clncinnatt (Gullett 9 10) at Los
Angeles (Sutton 19 9) 11 p m
Atlanta (Dobson 16 IB ) at San
Dlego!Kirby1214) 1030pm
Houston (Forsch 6 8) at San
Franc1sco !Willoughby 6 4) 11
pm
(only Qames scheduled)
Thursday's Games
Monfreal at Philadelphia n1ght
Ch1cago at P1ttsburgh mght
New York at St Louts
Cincinnati at Los Angeles n1ght
Atlanta at San Otego n1ght
Houston at San Franc1sco
WHA Playoff Standln9s
By Un1ted Press lnternafJonal
tQuarterftnals-Bestof Seven)
w I gf ga
New England
2 I 12 10
Ottawa
1 2 10 12
Cleveland
Philadelphia

w I gf ga
3 0 13 4
0 3 4 13

--

Wmnlpeg
Minnesota

wlgfga
2 1 12 9
1

2

9 12

w
gf ga
Houston
1 1 9 6
Los Angeles
1 1 6 9
Tuesday's Games
Ottawa 4 New England 2
Minnesota 6 Wmnlpeg 4
(only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
Cleveland at Phtladeiphia
Houston at Los Angeles
(onlygamasscheduied) 1

Arne nun Leigue standJngs

John May~ drove m four
runs ' Tuesday ntght, hammenng a lw{)-flln smgle and
two-run homer, as the Kansas
City Royals exploded for a 12-1
vtctory over the Texas
Rangers before a crowd of
39,464 m the opemng game at
new Royal Stadtum
Paul Splittorff pttched a ftvehitter for Kansas Ctty and went
th e d tstance tn 39 -d egree
temperature
Mayberry sparked a four-run
first mrung outburst, m which

E..t
w, I pet. g b
Boston
3 01000
Balhmore
2 o 1 ooo
'I•
Cleveland
2 1 667 1
De trot t
1 1 500 w,
Milwaukee
0 '2 000 21/2
New York
o 4 000 3'1o
West
w t pet g b
Ch 1cago
1 0 1 000
M1nnesota
3 1 750
Kansas C1ty
3 1 750
California
2 2 500 1112
Texas
o 2 ooo 2•12
Oakland
0 3 000 3
Tuesday's Results
Kansas City 12 Texas 1
Caltforma 4 Mmnesota '2
(oniygamesscheduled)
WedneSday's Games
Today'!I'Probable P1lchers
(All T1mes EST)
Boston at M1lwaukee (ppd,
snowstorm)
Baltimore (Palmer 21 10) at
Detroit t Fryman 10 3) 1 30 p m
Cleveland (Wt lcox 17 141 at
New York tStottlemyre 14 181 I
pm
Oakland (Blue 6 101 at ChiCago
(Wood 24 17) 2 15 p m
Mmnesota (Hands 11 8) at
Cal1forn1a (Ryan 19 16) 11 p m
Texas (Stanhouse 2 9) at By Uolted Press loternatlonal
Kansas C1ty (Busby 3 I) 8 30
Jerry West had tt when tt
pm
&lt;only games scheduled)
counted, but Kareem AbduiTh,•rsday's GO'mes
Jabbar didn't
Texas at Kansas CITy n1ght
That was the story of
Oakland at Chicago
Boston at Milwaukee (ppd Tuesday rught's Natwnal Bas.snowstorm l
Balt1more at Detroit Cleve ketball Assoctalton quarterfmal playoff round as the
land at New York
(Only games scheduled)
L.os Angeles !..akers downed
the Chicago Bulls, 123-102, and
the San Francisco Warrtors
AHL Playoff Standings
By Un1ted Press International upset the Mtlwaukee Bucks,
(Quarterfinals- Best of Seven) 100-97
Senes A
The vtctorLes gave both clubs
wlgfga
4 0 22 10 a 3-2 edge m thetr respecttve
x Nova Scot•a
Prov idence
0 4 10 22 series
West was the sparkplug for
Senes B
wlgfga Los Angeles, scormg 36 pomts
2 1 13 11
Boston
I 2 11 13 and adding 11 asSists as the
Rochester
Lakers beat the Bulls for the
Ser1es C
runth stratght time at the
w I gf ga
4 0 25 12 Fonun m Los Angeles West
x Cmcmnah
Rtchmond
0 4 12 25 got lots of help from Wtlt
Chamberlain, who had 29
Sertes D
rebounds
and 21 pomts, and
w I gf ga
Hershey
2 1 10 9 from Jtm McMilltan, who
V1rgtn1a
1 2 9 10 taUted 20 pomts
x clinched playoff senes
The Lakers, who squandered
TueSday's Results
Nova ScotJa 4 Providence 3 (ot) an 18-pomt lead led IIY SIX at
C•nclnnat1 5 R1chmond 4 (ot)
the end of tliree quarters then
Hershey 5 VIrginia 4 (ot)
broke the game open early m
(only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
the fourth quarter With etght
Boston af Rochester
~tratghl po1nts to ta~e , a
(only game scheduled)

L a k er,s Wln

;-; ••••••o·~::::::::::::::::::::-:·:
:;-:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::,:,:,::::;:::::::::::-:
;:;:;::,,,,,,,,o ,,,,::::6::::::::::;:::::::::
:::::.::::::::::::::;::;:::··
ro
"o
o
o'o

•"

;&lt;

.

.-.,• ,::::::::':::':':W'-"·• :.:r • ~
OO . O.'

~

,-,-

Meigs Pony League launched

Woody Call, pre&amp;dent of the new Metgs Pony League Association, satd today scheduled play
will open June 1 With seven teams - unless an etghth IS found - all of them wtthin 10 mmutes lnp
of each other
Other offtcers of the assocl8tton are Tony May, Mtddleport, vtce pres,dent, and Gene Mttch ,
secretary
'
All games will start at 6 p m Further details will be agreed upon at the next meetmg on May
21
Rutland will fteld a pony team for the ftrst lime in several years thiS summer Managers Max
Whitlatch and Gary George of the "Rutland Pioneers" satd Tuesday 15 boys were stgned last
weekend
A tag day m Rutland will be held on a date td be announced, Whttlatch satd Uniforms and
eqUipment are needed
On the Rutland roster are Ray Wilford, Scott Napper, Bob WtUlamson, Buddy Dugan, Rtck
George, Mtke Tillis, John Thomas, Marty Dugan, Jbn Anderson, Randy George, Jeff Patterson,
Leslie Hayman, Stan Starcher, Jerry Matson, and Terry Whttlatch
()rgaruzatwn of the new Pony league stgnals the apparent demiSe of the Metgs-Oafha Pony
League which has functiOned for about 15 years and always mcluded at least one Gaiha County
team, Cheshtre
Last year 1t also mcluded Btdwell, Vmton, and Southwestern
Call mdicated Tuesday theoperung m the new Metgs Pony League schedule - an etghth team
- remams to be filled and suggested an apphcat10n from Cheshire would be gtven the fullest
constderation
Other teams m the league and thetr managers are Pomeroy PhtUtes (A-team), Call and Gary
Freeman, Pomeroy Reds (B-leam) Gene Mttch and Charles Hamilton, Racme, Htlton Wolfe, Jr ,
Syracuse, Mike Stewart and Ro!He Stewart, Mtddleport A, Dean Lutz and Jun Mees, and Mtddleport B, Tony May
'DISputes, if any, will be settled by George Nesselroad, Charles Marshall and Art Stobart,
comrmss10ners The schedule

J - 1. 1973
IlutlaDcl - OPEii
Pc.eroy 1 at Midclleport B
llacine at Syracuae
Middleport A at POMroy .A

JUDe Z6 1 1973
iutlaAcl - OPEII
Middleport B at P01118roy I
SyraciUle at llacine
Po11111roy A at Middleport A

JIIH .$, 1973
Pomeroy I - OPEN

Juoe

J - a. 1973
Hl.ddleport B - OPEIII
iUtlaad at Pomeroy II
P-roy A at llac:tne
Syracue at Micldleport 4
Juoe 12, 1973

Syracue - OPEII
iutlaad at lacille
p~roy B at Midclleport A
Micldleport I at P-roy A

J - 15. 197l
lacine - OPEN -Pomeroy A at P0111eroy B
SyracUH at Middleport I
Middleport A at iutlaAcl
J - 19, 1973

Po-roy A - OPEII
iutl.IDd at Syracuae
Midclleport I at Hicldleport A
Racine at Pomaroy I

:2,

Jtllla
1973
'
H• dclleport A - OPEII

iutlaad et P-roy 4
r-101 I at Syrac•e
iadM at Middleport B

'

29, 1973

P01118roy .tr='Ol'Eli
Middleport. B at iutlaDd
l!acine at Middleport A
SyraciUle at Pomeroy A

July 3, 1973
Midclleport B - OPEii
P011111roy B at &amp;utlaAcl
!lacina at Po•roy A
Middleport A at Syracuae
July 6, 1973
SyraciUI&amp; - OPEIII
!lacina at iutl1111cl
Middlepert A at Paeroy I
Po•roy A at Mldclleport I
'
1
JIIly 10, 1973
llacine - OPI!II ·
P0111eroy B at Pc.uoy A
Middleport II at Syraeiutlaacl at lliddl~rt A
July 13, 1973
Po.eroy A - OPEIII
SyraciUle at llutlaacl
Middleport A at Middleport !
P0111eroy B at lacine
Jllly 17' 1973
Micldleport A - OPEII
P011eroy A at lutl&amp;Dd
syraciUle at r-roy B
Micldleport I at kiM

commanding ~ lead
Bob Love led Chtcago wtth '1:1
pomts and Chet Walker added
25
The sertes contmues Frtday
mght m Chtcago
San Francisco's upset of
Mtlwaukee came about when
Abdul-Jabbar mtssed a hook
shot wtth seven seconds left
and the Warrtors leadtng by
only one pomt The WarriOrs
rebounded the mtssed shot and,
m a last-&lt;litch effort to steal the
ball, Oscar Robertson fouled
San Franctsco's Rtck Barry at
the fmal horn Barry made two
rree throws to account for the
!mal margm of Yl~tory
Barry, who fmtshed wtth !8
pomts, also made a btg basket
with I 14 remammg which put
the Warrtors ahead by three
pomts A basket by Jon
McGlocklin reduced the Warnors'leadto98-97beforeAbdulJabbar mtssed the cru ctal hook
shot Abdul-Jabbar, guarded
closely by Nate Thurmond for
most of the contest, managed
only 19 pomts, hts poorest effort m some tune
Golden State can wrap up the
senes Frtday mght m Oakland

ABA Playoff Standmgs
By Untted Press ln1ernattona 1
East
( DJYJston Ftnals - Best of
Seven)
w t pet
Carolina
0 0 000
Ken lucky
0 0 000

Major League Results

By United Press 1n1erna110na I

National League
Ctncnntl at Atlnta fppd cold )
Ch1c at P1ttsbgh (ppd ratn and
cold)
Montreal
000 300 01 1- 5 7 4
Phlla
004 020 Olx- 7 10 2
Torrez Gtiberl (5) Walker
(7) and Boccabella Carlton (1
1) and Rya n. LP Torrez (0 2)
HRs Montanez (1st) Breeden
( 1s J)
San Otego 000 020 ooo--- 2 8 4
SanFrancsc61000040x- 11 112
Corktns Ross (1) Mill er ( 7)
and Oavts Mar~ c h a l Barr
(6)and Rader WP Manchal (2
OJ LP Corkins 10 I)
(12 mnmgsl
Los Ang 000 000 101 100- 3 16 0
Houston 000 002 000 101- 4 8 2
Downtn g Rau (7) Brewer
(9) Culver (11) and Ferguson
Roberts York (8 ) Cosgrove
(9) Gladdmg (9) Crawford
I11l and Howard Edwards
Ill) WP Crawford (1 I) LP
Culver 10 ll

The

Dai~

Senllnel

DEVOTED TO THE
INTEREST OF
MEIGS MASON AREA
CHESTER l TANNEHILL
Exec Ed
ROBERT HOEFLICH
C1ty EditOr
Publ1 shed da tly e)(cepl
Saturday by The Oh 1o Valley
Publi Sh ng Company
11 1

Court 5t Pomeroy
-45769 Busmess Off tce
992 2156
2157

Oh10
Phone
Ed IOr 1al P hone 992

Secon d cl ass po stag e pa1d at
Pomero y Oh o
Nat•onal ad ... e rt s ng

r epresentallve
Gallag her

In c

Bot,mell

12 Ea st

5 1 New York Cdy New
Sub sc r pt 1on ra te s

42nd

York
De

by ca r r~e r wl1ere
ava table 50 cents per Nee k
By Motor Rou te where earne r
serv1ce not ailallable One
month 51 75 By ma d m Oh o
and w va One year 514 00
Snt months $-7 15 Tl1ree
mo n ths 54 so Subscr phon
prt ce •n ctudes Sund ay T1mes
ll ¥ered

Senttne l

,.------------·
Here's the Man
To See For •••
THE

BEST
j

I Lou Osborne
I
j

I Sem-s I

VALUES

I
I
SEARS
I C;:talog Merchant
I
I 220 E MaiM
Pomerov
I._

__________ _
PH 992 2178

LOS ANGELES (UP!)
Cmcmnatl , Manager
Sparky
Anderson
satd
today
lhe
Reds have
go t to get some httttng
from the bottom of the batting
order " which they haven t got
ten so far thts season
Anderson has been alternatmg Darrel Chaney and Dave
Concepcwn at shortstop, and

they usually bat seventh m the
batlmg order and Denms Menke bats etghth
ConcepciOn, who has started
two of the Reds' four games, ts
hitless m hve offlctal at bats
and has struck out three times
Chaney has starJed two
ga mes and has only one htt m
10 at bats

Wagner scores TKO in eiuhth
"0'
MIAMI BEACH {UP! ) knockout over Vern Mcintosh
L1g h~heavywe tght lnsh Btlly of Mwrm Beach
Wagner or Cleveland boosted
1 he 26-year old Wagner, who
hts chances fm a lttle bout wetghed
17Hif.!,
decked
agamst champwn Bob Fosler Mcin tosh 176'/,, wtlh a left
1uesday mght by ,cormg an hook m the etghth round The
etgh th r o und tec hn 1ca l 24 year-old Mclntosh got up at
the count of three and took a
ma
ndatm y etght-count standPomeroy Bow..Ling Lanes
Mornmg Glones League
mg m a neutra l co1ncr
Apni 3 1973
When clc tl on 1es umed ,
Standmgs
Wagner moved m and began
Team
Pts
Newell Sunoco
66 scm mg at wtll unltl Mcintosh s
Exce ls1or Ott Co
66 handler Angelo Dundee,
G1bbs Grocery
50
Dtck s Grocery
50 Jumped onto th~ rm g apron and
Spencer s Market
42 shouted for referee Eddie
G &amp;J Auto Parts
38 Eckert to stop the ft ght The
H1gh lnd Game
Jan
Jenk1ns 198
TKO was declared a l 2 30 of
Second Htgh lnd Game lhe eJghth round
Jan Jenkms 184
Wagner was ahead on pomts
Hig h Sen es - Jan Jenktns
538
when the bout was slopped, but
Second H1gh Sen es - Peg Mcintosh had won the fourth ,
Houdashell 460
Team Htg h Game - Newel l [J[lh and seventh rounds w1th
Sunoco 826
pumshmg pun ches
Team H1gh Sen es - Newell
Wagner ts expected to seek a
Sunoco 2321
l1tle bout wtth light heavy
Tr1 County League
champ F'oster m the near
Apn I J 1973
future Wag ner s record now ts
Standmgs
Team
Pts
II 5 1 Mcin tosh owns a 14-10
Dav 1s Warner Ins
98
record
Rawl ings Dodge
72
Gro Boys
68
Pomeroy Cement Block Co 56
H &amp;R Ftreslone
38
Mayer &amp; Htii Barber Shop 28
H1 gh lnd tvtd ua l Game
Larry Dugan 237
Second H1g h lnd Ga me
Larry Dugan 226
Thtrd Htgh lnd Game SAME DAY
Tie .. Larry Dugan 208 Henry
CI&lt;Jtworth y 208
SERVICE
Htgh Sen es - Larry Duga n
In At 9- 0ut At 5
671
Use Our Free Parkmg Lot
Second H1g h Sen es - Henry
Ciatwurlhy 577
Th1rd~1 er1es - Ray
Roach 54
Team tgh Game - Dav 1s
216 E 'lnd Pomeroy
Warner
933
Tea m H1gh Sen es - Dav1s
War ner ins 2797

FREE 5 LB. HAM

gf ga

No games No g!mm1 cks

Durmg sprmg trammg both
Dave and Darrel were aggres~
sive at the plate," satd Anderson 'Now they have become
defensive hitters
1 can t blame them, ' satd
Anderson "It's tough knowmg
you " gomg to be playmg
every other day mstead of on a
reg ular basts
What I thmk I'll do ts play
one or the other for about 10
games m a row and see what
happens, satd Anderson ' Or
maybe I'll platoon them for
awhtle That was my ortgmal
plan thts sprmg
As for Menke,Anderson satd,
he's got a bat problem and his
arm IS still giV1ng hun some
trouble '
1 Meiilie has made two wtld

~~~::

Just Highest
Interest Rates
In The Area

5%
ON PASSBOOK
SAVINGS
5 per cent per year pa1d on
Regular Pass book Savmg ~:
No M1n1mum lnt er e ~ t
from date o1 depos1 t to date
of Withdrawal Int erest
compounded quarter ly

~MEIGS

.

~'BRANCH
• Tl\e Athens. County
Savmqs 6 Loan Co

296 Second St
Pomeroy, Ohto
Al l Accounts Insur ed To
520 000 by FSLIC

I~' J

@,:'.'j

tn the Reds' four
Cmcmnatt was scheduled to
.,
meet the Dodgers here today . .__ _::
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _•
-

ON

USED CARS
WEATHER
WARMER .•

SHIRT
FINISHING

Robinson's Cleaners

I

w

Philadelphia
J 2 10 11
2 3 , 10
Mmnesola
x cl1nched senes
Tuesday s Results
N Y Rangers 61 Boston 3
Chtcago 6 St Lou 1s 1
Phtladetphta 3 Mtnnesota 2 of
BufJaio J Montreal 2 ol
Wednesday s Games
(No games scheduled I

·bottom, Anderson says

'

'

ll.atlend ac Middleport B "
Middleport A et lacina
P~roy A at Syracuae

e

Mtlwaukee and Balttmore at l&lt;ls Angeles
Crawford pttched two IllDetrmt- were postponed due to
severe snow storms and high rungs of scoreless rehef to get
the vtctory whtle George
wtnds
In Nattonal League action, Culver went I 2-3 and took the
Phtladelphta downed Mon- loss
Bobby Valentme smgled tn
treal, 7-5, Houston beat Los
Angeles m 12 mnmgs, !-3, the two runs m the fifth mmng
San ~'ranctsco Gtants routed helpmg BtU Singer wm hts ftrst
AI.. game for the Angels Smger
the San Otego Padres 11-2
struck out 10 and held MmChtcago at Pittsburgh, em
cmnatt at Atlanta and New nesota to SIK htts Bert
York and St Louts were aU Blyyleven was the loser for the
postponed because of cold 1\vms
Ed Goodson s bases-filled
weather
Steve Carlton atded by a trtple and pttcher Juan Mantil o-run homer by Wtllte Mon- cha! s two..-un double were the
tanez, pttched Phtladelplua to blg blows of a stx-run ftrst
its ftrst wm of the season as the mmng whtch earned the
Gtants to thetr victory over the
Phtlhes beat Montreal
i"ddres It was the second
Rookte southpaw J1m Craw
ford lmed a two-out double m straight vtctory for Mancha!
the bottom of the 12th tnrung to who had a il-16 record last
score John Edwards from ftrst season

Bucks upset ":R';d~""";eed hitting at

$t"'-

--

10 Royals batted, wJth a 2-run
Single before Ell Ktrkpatrtck
lofted a sacr1hce fly and
Mayberry scored on an error
Amos Otts, who had three
hits, stroked a lw&lt;K&gt;ut smgle 111
the ftfth before Mayberry
slapped hts ftrst homer of the
season, a 400-foot shot to nghtcenter olf reliever Btl! Gogolewskt
In the only other Amertcan
League game, the Califorma
Angels topped the Mmnesota
Twms, 4-2 Three AL gamesOakland at Chicago, Boston at

Ft~~:t -

!DIVISIOn
Be&gt;l of
East
Seven)
CSem•hnals-Bestof Seven)
w I pet
w 1 pet Utah
0 0
000
Boston
2 2 500 lnd tana
0 '0 000
Atlanta
2 2 500
Tuesday's Results
(No games scheduled l
w I pet
Wednesday's Games
x New York
4 I 800 Kentucky vs Caroltna at Chttr
Balhmore
1 4 200 lotte N c
(only game scheduled l
West
(Semifinals-Best of Seven)
w t pet
Golden State
3 2 600
N Hl Playoff Standings
M1lwaukee
2 3 400
By Untted Press tnternattonal
(Qua.rterfJnals- Best of Seven)
w I pet
wlgfga
Los Angeles
3 2 600 Montreal
3 2 17 14
Ch1ta9o
2 3 400 Buffalo
2 3 14 17
x chnched sertes
Tuesday's Results
w 1 gf ga
Golden State 100 Milwaukee 97 )( New York
4
1 22 11
Los Angeles 123 Ch1cago t02
Boston
1 4 11 22
(only games scheduled)
Wednesday's Games
w I gf ga
I
Atla nta at Boston
)( Chtcago
4 I 22 9
Ionly game scheduled)
1 4
9 22
St LOUIS

VALUES

HOTTER!

KEITH GOBLE FORD
USED CAR LOT

Jrd Ave.

Meigs Tire Center

Middleport

FREE 5 LB. HAM

EASTER SPECIAL
11

Beat The Meat Prices

Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL
Whitewall TL

A/13 &amp; B/13 &amp; E-14-.!23.50
F14 &amp; F15
•24.50 "~~
G14 &amp; G15---•26.50
H 14 &amp; H 15
•28.50
900x15 &amp; J-15 L-15-•30.50
SALE ON

FREE MOUNTING

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

Meigs Tire Center
700 East Mam Street
POMEROY, OHIO

992 21111

BOTH
PREMIUM
78 and
2 PLUS 2

OLD TIRES

CASH ONLY
•

FIBERGLASS
FIRST LINE
TIRES

PLUS EXCISE TAX FROM 11.75-13.33 PER TIRE

Sale Ends Apfil 21 1973 • Noon

"Beat the Meat Prices"

�•

I

·

- --- . "--

.;o~:.:o:
.....
··..;-,.,.,
'"'"'~""'~t;:j~·ll'J1!i!JR!tljm!illQI!j-.:~-!l&lt;l&lt;l1~~~'i!!9f'J
.,..,~.,,.
N;.,.,,-,
•••,~~o,a,o,~:w:-~:1

• - Thl' Daily Senilrel. !iliddle pon-PQm(&gt;ro) . 0 .

·i

;;::::;;:;&lt;;::,:=:::~~m.l'::w.&lt;':®.8;z,;;,:*'.::::..::.-r.:!!$..~:ii:&gt;.!W;~%:X:::m:&lt;W:::m;J,

Mansfield

I Ma~n eounp · News Notes J r~Ia:ys set

Today's

Da
de
Sport r

Saturday

o"uNc!N

I

I

I

I

I

I

1
::-

•

•

•

I

•

•

•

Orange Juice "'' • • •
Hunt's Snack Pac_ks ~UIT
Pie Crust Mix
Imitation Vanilla
Cream Cheese "''
,,wiss Cheese"''
JIFfY

AlP

•
I

ANN PAGE
I

I

•

I

=w

SUCED A&amp;EOo ._•

•

•

18•0%.25¢'

PIWIURT

Goober Jelly
Carnation Spreadables
Crisco Oil • • • • • -57c Salt ~~~~~~ • • • •
·wesson Oil • • • • • -83c Cut.Corn Beans
Tomato Sauce Hum

SM\Icm·s I

bd.

lac F
h F.rtes
. AAP
FROZEN
2~ ..,.,IJftc:
• 1t:"A
rene
~i?NuKwc~~.
•
•
ANN PM;E
'
·
. ~42' Macaroni &amp;Cheese Din~5~~8t

• • ~ &amp;4c: Jif Peanut BuHer • •
• • ':::: 10' General Mills-Cheerios
~~;o:- 26c Libby Tomato Juice • • ~37c: Regular Puddings~;~.
• • •~ 24c Mueller's Noodles F..2M'oN • ~44c: Tea Bags 8~~

_,R edmen·

OR MONTE •

I

•

•

•

•

pq. o189C
100

Mii~ or

Match Sale!
"Paaeaf1 , . _ .____ LUG!

Accutron ~ by

~ STALIC

-~

~:-.1'

a.
.
_IOIIIIDAOe~

•--r-

Tubo

•fl

~ CGN.ota. ~~~­

'Ne!Uti?Of&amp; ~ ~~:
'

00

$
for

ALL~ &amp;OOD

'!

SfJe.l, .

Biiu. &gt;:c_·

lb. S119

I

Rome Apples
CALIFORNIA

lb .

Asparagus

OR CHARCOAL STEAKS lb

CENTER cuT •

BONELESS • •

I

•

•

lb. ggc ·

•

•

--

lb.

Sweet-Corn

·Sulfa11 Dinaert
•
Jiffy
'*' "",• ! ...- "··
FisHticls _.. .;..,;;· •
Pofisfl Sa~sqe·:'~ • .·.

'

.

FliD:

•

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I

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I

59e

111fT PQIIQ$

I

I

I

lb.49C
'

FRESH

•

SWIF1'5. -

3 lb. bag

I_

California.Roast c~~~~.. 5119
5149
Cube Steaks.
Cross Rib RoaslcuT e;;.~~fg~UCK 1 h·5 ll'1
AU .Meat Franks.:=~~ •
·chuck Steak
All Beef Franks :iti. •
5P9
Chuck Steaks .
-~
Brown 'n Serve
Sausage
Ground Chuck
- $.
Braunsch.weiger -Chubs.
CVT FROM ~HUCK

5 .... 59c:

I

I

ANN PAGE

Jelly Eggs
l·lb.
pllgs.

.•. '

00

$

Asplrift

BuHerin
pkloof

79¢

Borden's
Cremora

'i ~":i
V1/"

u..... 69c

With
Thi•

btl.

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Coupo, { ·

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Good TltN ·S•t., April l4th At

All "-'P WE0'1 - Gols. Oi.. .

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.

5

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FREE!
Bu~ Two

Bath

~'"'
24c

W 'th

Thi•

Heinz
GREAT
AMERICAN Soups

'

.

Coupon

~

Slz• San At

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&lt;

COUPON ·rni1D

ALL
VAR.

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Good Thr1.1 Sat., ..a.pril l4'th Af
All AlLWEO's - Col1. o;...

5

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With

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_. G~:~od Thru S.'t., Apr il l ~ t h At
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&gt;~

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Bath Tissue

4

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With
rh;,

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On Your ,Purcha~_Df a ·7·oz. btl. of

Heaa 8
Shoulders

s. t., April ~ •+h At
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All ,.._&amp;1" WEO s - C11l$, !J i.,..

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MEAT o

.Robin Hood Flour

April 1-4-'th At

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Je"&amp;,~~~~

were presented by April Parsons and Yvonne
GrinStead Andy IW&amp;ch read a theme in regards to Conaervation.
Re!reshm~nts were served to the officers and following ~::
-bers an~ guests, Darren Marr, ~uzette Paugh, Yvome
stead Judy young' Anna Parsons, Marth~! Sh"':'""lrer. Leaders ..
' were
. . J udy Roach • Chloris
Marr' Lorrame Barnett, Mr:
Jl"esent
.
and Mrs. Jack Paugh.
·

. THE SM1'11WAPEHART POST American Legion Auxiliary
gifts and favors they fur·
wishes to lhank the foUowing for the
rty
.
nished for '!he Legion birthdaY pa :
~ ·
·
Greene's Hardware, Ben Fran!dln, Peoples Ba ' ~n .
Furniture, Tiffin's, G. c. Murphy, Ralrden's, 0. J. Momson s,
Point Office Supply, Sayre Hardware, Almedas, Central InHaven Furniture Haynes, Argabrite Jewelers,
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Elberfeldo, Shoppers Mart, ·
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ling All and Sonya's Kut 'N Kurl.
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Ben ch

CHARI.OTIE, N.C. (UPI) case, he says, if as some also h)ghly rated. And so is
-..a
.
A half-&lt;loten of the American II'edict, the series goes the lull - Louis DamP.Ier, who did not
~
~
Basketball Association's best seven games,
play in the Virginia-Kentucky
1 I U
: :;
By Ahna Marshall
&lt; players will he on hand tonight . Both Carolina and Kentucky series because of a foot injury,
Three Mason County ladies are candlda!A!s for Ma11011 County
:; for the opening game of the have potent reserves, but the but wbo could be ready by the
BeUe. One ol them will be elected at May Cllunty Hrmemakers
'~ .
By MILTON RICHMAN
~~ Carolina-Kentucky playoff for Cougars made more use of second game of !he CarolinaUP! Sports Edllor
"~ the Eastern Division title, but th em m
· th e regu 1ar season .
Spring t.uncJ.,on on May 10 at !he Moose H.allln Pt. Pleasant.
KentuckymatchupSaturdayat
They are Lcrena McCausland, Mrs, llonnie Waldie and Mrs.
MANSFIELD,Ohio (UP!)ATLANTA; Ga. (UP() - It wasn 't' the same t)lis time, and the man voted best of all thinks
For example, forward Ed Greensboro, N. C.
Ueulo Rrush. The lucky lady will r~resent the county at !he AslighUy-trimmedfield will be Roberto de Vicenw didn't expect it would he.
bench strength wiU be the Manning and guards Gene
The Cougars, who beat
Folk Festival at Glenville, JWJO 14, 15, 16and 17th.
on hand Friday aild Saturday
Five years ago, when he walked through !he airport here, deciding factor.
Littles and Ted McClain ave- Kentucky by one game for the
Mrs. Gus Douglass, Jr., of-Leon, is chainnan of the Mason for !he 42nd running of the chll!lging planes the morning after finishing the Masters, many
"I think the difference In !he raged 20 minutes or more per ABA east regular season title,
County Homemakers Spring luncheon.
·
Mansfield-Mehock Relays.
of the employes, even those who weren't especially golf nuts,
series will be the contributions game in the regular season. held a 6-5 'edge ove_r the
SEVERAL LADIES will be attending the Homemakers
The 1m event, won by San· stopped what !hey were doing for a glimpse of the deeply-sun from the benches," said 6-foot· Uttle and McClain both ave- Colonels 1n regular · season
Planning and Leadership training conference at Jackson's Mill, &lt;hlsky, had some 2,214 athletes tanned, aris!Dcratic-looking South American who suddenly' had 7 Carolina star forward Billy raged 9.6 points per game and play ..
Weston, W. Va . on April 11-13.
from 258 high schools compel- become thl' most celebrated figure in all SiJ&lt;&gt;rts.
Cunningham. who was voted tied for ninth in league
Carolina downed the New
'""•
but
the
fl
'
gures.
.
for
this
the
ABA's
Most
Valuable
statistics
with
120
st'llals
each.
York
Nets, 4-1, in their !Jr
. st
THE CHARLESTON AREA Spring meeting of which Mason .ur.e;
"That 's him'' .. . 11Th at's him/ ' they said, pointing to Roberto
County Is a part will be held April 25. The Cabell County year's event are down to 2,165 de Vic"enzo walking wilh his head up even though he had blown Player Monday.
Manning averaged t6 points plaxoff series and· Kentucky
Homemakers will host it in Huntington, Mrs. Ray Fox of ClifUm and 243.
the Masters only hours earlier by signing his card incorrectly
"Some time during Uie series per g8Jlle and .had a 4.6 beat the Virginla Squires, 4-1.
Three
finals
are
scheduled
to
1h
he
h
d
d
bolh
teams are going to he in rebounds per game average.
Is Olarleston area representative .• The group will meel at
and actually okaying a poorer score an
a rna e.
Huntingron Giilleries while the luncheon will be at Pea Ridge be nm off Friday afternoon,
He came through the same place again this time, and you know foul trouble and !he one that
Kentucky's top reserve is
including !he medley relay, the what? Nothing.
·
gets the JllOSt out of the bench Jim O'Brien, who came off the
United MethOOist Church.
two-mile run and the four-mile
Nobody seemed to recognize !he man who has won 187 lour· is going to win," said Cunning- bench Saturday and scored
THE PRESIDENT OF THE Mason County Homemakers · relay.
naments In hls time, more than Jack Nicklaus and Arnold
ham.
nine points in the fourth
To come in and
That would especially he the quarter to spark the Colonels
Council, Mrs. Ray Fox, has appointed Mrs. Vurl Randolph and · , ll'he olher 18 finals will be Palmer put togelher. Nobody stopped him for his autograph.
,
, past Virginpa in the final game
Mrs. Howard Garland _to the Bi-Cenlennial Committee, Mrs. held Saturday, starting at 1:30 . Nobody said a word to him.
see aU
VIcki Keefer, Carl Cook and Mrs. Kathy Olsen are advisors.
p.m..
Roberto de Vincenzo, who finished in 51st place in this year's
of the playoff.
that's !lPW
Sandusky, paced by defend- Masters, but enjoyed himself as much as winner Tommy Aaron,
One-time Cougar Wendell
NEW HAVEN - The New Haven Calendar "Girls" nearly ing 120-yard high hurdles maybe more, prefers it this way.
,
CONQUERS SNOW, AI.L
Ladr)er, who scored 39 points
for Spring
· tbe y rna de their entrance at the champion Jim Fantozz • will try
and
grabbed 20 rebounds in
broug ht down th e house when
wThat doesn't mean I don't like to win," says the affable,
COLUMBUS (UPI I _ Out
· -d..ay evening to become thl' first team to re- former British Open champ from Buenos Aires, "but other things Ahead ran through a blinding four games against Carolina
New' Hayen Woman's Club Showboat Revue&lt;&gt;n Satur
----~ •peat since Cleveland Glenville
f .
during the regular season after
at the New Haven The a tr e. E ac h person was dr ~ "' in .1965 and 1966. The Blue are more important to me now. Like being close to my aml1y, snow squaU Tuesday to capture being traded by Merilphis, is
,MaIn at Sycamore. Pomeroy
, getting good grandsons from my(wo boys, Hoherto and Eduardo, !he $2,400 allowance feature at · lr-;.--~~~--..:~;.;:·===:.::::;~
represent a month and one was attired In a Geraldine outfit as on
!he Flip Wilson Show.
·Streaks may find it difficult, and helping other people. Voluntarily, I mean, not for money."' Beulah Park and return $5.
·'
·
il
hOwever.
Fanto.Z
was
clocked
.
The Calendar "girls" were Cec Duncan, Jr., Cecil Duncan,
In his time, de Vicenzo not only has won the British Open but $3.60 and-$3.60.
1
. · Sr., Jack Flesher, Wayne Carter, John Thome, Rev. John
In 4.1 last year.
also other tournaments in places like Germany, ~'ranee , Holland,
Apt urn was second add
Haeberle, Phil Burgess, Rev. William DeMoss, Charles smlth,
Beshides Ohio, athletes are Belgium, Spain and even the U.S. back in 1952. Ma~y of hisfellow Ellie's Surprise was third .
Chuck Roush, Kenneth Thompson and Bill Gibbs.
entered from Michigan, Penn- prosstill consider him one of !he hestin the world, but whether he _; Dixie Donna and Abold ChorThere was standing room only for the rewe directed by Mrs. sylvania, 'Indiana and Canada. ever wins anythlug else or not, he seems destined always to be us combined for an fl-.7 daily
Paul (LaVerne) PoweU, assisted by Mrs. Eugene (Pauline )
remembered best for the blunder he corrunitted in nearby double payoff of $55.60.
Hester.
Augusta five year~ ago. .
.
_ ,
The_crowd of 3,078 wagered
0
Mrs. Paul Powell, piani$t, .accompanied !he groups
.
People kept talkmg about that lor a long bme. Some sbll do. $34o,690.
throughout !he show. The Top Ten danced while thl' Woman's
.t'
Johnny Miller's near boner on Aaron's score card Monday ·
Club members sang uStrike Up the Music" for !he opening
revived all the talk .
•
number. The Top Ten Dance tesm of Diana Able, Judy Needs,
~..;..StS
"Once in awhile I'll hear someone say 'this is theHuy. He didn't
MILLS HONORED
Helen Gurti.B, Martha Krawsczyn, Lora Smith, Lesa Dudding,
llC
sign his scorecard,' or 'he signed it wrong','' says de Vicenzo.
COLUMBUSr(UPI) - EastCheryl Circle, Misty Ward, Linda Dye and Karla Richards,
"Most of these who refer to it dim •t really follow golf !hal closely. ern Michi gan ·~ Woody Mills;
danced and sang several selectioJJB including Old Soft ShOe and ~Or
They don 't really know what happened ."
who pitched his school to a 0.2
Sta•nle ss mel. N~vy blue d l~ l . hl!i.
Calendar c la s si ~ . 14K !(old-tilled . $11 5.
While Strolling Through !he Park.
11
Any reference to the monumenial mistake he made in the 1968 victory last Friday over Ohio
Another outstanding act was by Mrs. William DeMoss,
Masters used to bother the otherwise even-tempered de Vicenw. University in the Huron's first
At first you te ll yourself. " What's a lew minutes oil ?"
ventriloquist, and Chuckie In "Time to Talk."
Despite an outstanding Not now, anymore.
.
Mid ~ American· Conference
B ut when you ca tch your wat ch cheating on y ou
Mrs. Eugene Hester, besid~ introducing the acts, ~ng
performance by Rio Grande's
" Before, yes/ ' he confesses, "especially when I was playing bi:isebaU game ever, has been
time and time again . ..
numbers including Swanee, Bill Bailey and Mammy.
Jack Finch, the Redmen of good . II I'd hear someone talk about it while I was playing, it voted the MAC Spring Athlete
That's when you wish you had an Acc utron wat ch.
The Dlng·A·Dong-Girb, all members of. the New Haven coach George Wolfe dropped a brokemy concentrationalittle. Nowitdoesn'tanyinore."
of the Week .
ttS l unin g fo rk move ment is guafanteed to _ke ep it
Woman's Club, sang and danced to "HeUo DoUy.'.' Featured in dual track and field meet to
Roberto de Vicenzo fr eely concedes \here has been a change in
Mills, a senior righthander
ta\lhful to w ithin a minute a month . •
this number were Mrs. -Jesse Ahel, Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs, Gary
host Cedarville Tuesday af. him the past five years; but says what has happened to him since from Midland, Mich., checked
So don ' t be led asl ray , See us and we'll sh o w you a
Batey, Mrs. Dan Edwards, Mrs. Jack Flesher, Mrs. R. G. ternoon, 80-17.
he incOrrectly signed that scorecard- "! did a stupeed!"- hi!S the Bobcats with four hits in
great seleCtion of Ac cution watches . ln .standard :
Greene, Mrs. Roher! Gurtls, Mrs. Jolm Hae~y, Mts , Eugene
Winter-like temperatures had nothing at all to. do with it,
posting his 18th career victory
cal~ndar , day/da te and special featu re mode ls.
Hester, Mrs. Robert Hickel, Mrs. Tom Hoffman, Mrs, George and snow hampered both
"The thing that has changed my life 111ese pastfive ye'\"S are at Eastern Michigan . He
F rom$~ 10.
Ingels, Mrs. J.)'d;u-shall; Mrs. David RoUsh, Mrs. Wayne Carter,
squads.
the years themselves, no\ what happened in that Masters," he struck out nine.
Mrs. Mark Ward, Mrs ..Karl WOes, Mrs, John Wolfe and Mrs. ·
The Yellow Jackets 36-man insists. "I'm 50 now . I've played more than 30 years and won
Debbie White.
squad captured ·nine firsts. · tournaments all over !he world. I can -tell you the thing I have
The truth -lovi ng tuning fork wat ch .
Mrs. Dorsey Roush tappe(l out some lively numbers with Rio's lfl..man squad claimed learned.hest is there is no way to stop !he youngiellows."
NAMED JV COACH ·
spoons.
· seven. The 17th event _ the
De Vicenw was the first to admit he had pulled a boner after
NEW
YORK (UP!) - Brian '
Other song and dance nwnbefs included ICing Cotton Jacque,
pole vault _ was not held, due !he 1968 Masters. He never du cked the press after the episode,
and the Kygerettes from Kyger Creek High School; Tea For T.wo, ..--to ·strong winds.
~
volilntarily offerip&amp; all. [he painful derails which enabled Bob Mahoney, who played part of
this season. with _the Cleveland
__"_ Jacque and Kygerettes, I Can't Say No, by Jacqueline Gabrlsch;
Finch captured ·the mile, Goalby to become the Masters' champ, and not him. ·
Dearie and Tlimbling Weed, Bunny and Blatr, by Jacque and
lhree mile and saG-yard events.. . When it was all over, though, he hoped the whole thing would Cavaliers of the NBA, has been
Donnie Gabritsch.
·
·
Other Rio firsts were picked up die. It never has, of course, and !hat tends to bother de Vlcenzo, appointed junior varsity coach
Debra Hunt sarig and danced to Five Fool Two, and Marne. byHarvey Brown in the 100 and who has done many positive things in his life both before and at St. John's University .
"
Mahoney,
24,
played
The New Woman's Club members consisting of Mrs. Ken- 221l-yard dashes; Bob !son, shot since the 1968 Maslers.
··
.
.
nelh (Donna) Thompson as the teacher, and Mrs. Mark Ward,
put and Dean Fausnaugh, long
"My name is good before I signed the scorecard wrong," is the collegiate ball at Manhattan
and also played professionally
Mrs._Geor~e Ingles, Mrs. KBrl Wiles, Mrs. Wayne Ca~ter and . jump.
way he puts it now.
Mrs, R. G. Greene, as pupiis, presented a humorous school day
Bill Canfield placed second
This las\ one was hls 14th Masters, and he had a great lime, in France.
'
skit. Another hwnorous skit was presented by club members, . in the three mile. Mark Bur· seeing and being with all his old friends although he was never in
Mrs. Charles Smilh, Mrs. Kennelh Thompson, Mrs. David Roush
well was second in the 441). serious contention in !he tournament itself'.
and Mrs. J. Marshall.
•
intermediate hurdles. Jim
Coming through the airp_ort here, they didn't make the fuss
Other song and dance nunibers included a Simple Melody Stewart wassecond in 'the high over him they did live years ago. Do you know something?
and Jada _ The Fireflies and this group Included Jackie
hurdles.
That suited Roberto de Vicenzo just line .
Ri&lt;lgway, Betty Wolfe, Cindy and Cathy Hof~nr AI"f' Fowler
· Friday , Rio will hos t
and Connie Bird. Martha Krawsczyn sang, Gunm~ a LitUe Wilmington College at 3: 30
Kiss.'' Donnie Gabritsch pfuyed on the born, "St. Lows Blues."
p.m., at Evans Field.
SNIDOW RETIRING
SUPERIOR
T)le entire cast concluded the show by singing, "Toot Toot
· Rio Graride will host the 1973
CLEVELAND (UP!) - De· draft, said he will pursue a
Tootsie."
Mid-Ohio Conference track and fensinve end Ron Snidow, a 10.. career in business.
TEEN QUEEN
Paul Powell was llcket agent Mrs, John Morgan took uP
field meet on Saturday, May o. year National Football League
Snidow made ~he decision to
tickets and Mrs. Paul Scally and Mrs. Frlmk Young, Jr. served
·
veteran, Tuesday announced retire · once before, jus't. after
.. ushers, The Stag~ Committee were Mr. and Mrs, Jack
he was retiring.
!he 1971 season, hut the Browns
JONES TRADED
Flesher, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey Roush, Mr. and Mrs, Kenneth
The fonner Oregon star, who convinced him to come back.
ST.I.OUIS, (UP!) - Cincin- was
Thompson, Mrs. Jessie Ahel and Rick.
selected · by
the
Snidow broke his leg in the
1b. 79c
nati Bengals defensive tackle Washington Redskins in the lhird game of the 1972 season
WHITEHOUSE
WiUie
Lee
JoneS
has
been
ac-ON PALM SUNDAY, Aprill5, at 7:30p.m. thl' Chancel Choir
!hird round of the 1963 player . and did not play again.
HOME MADE
of Mason United Meth~t church will present Hallelujah, What quired by !he St. Louis Cardi·
a savior, a cantata by John W, Peterson directed by Mrs. Nolan nals for an undisclosed future
3o3
(Lucille) ~ckhamer. Mrs, Christine Guthrie wiU be orgl!llist draft choice.
...
Jones was drafted in 1965 as
and Mrs. Ray Proffitt !he narrator. .
·
•
Eleven selections will be sung by thl' choir composed of Carol a future choice by !he Cardin·
Proffitt, Debbie Gilland, Kathy Test, June VanMatre, Betty als and was signed as a free
VLASIC-KOSHER
Co&lt;!le, Robin stewart, Carla McFarland, LaVera Yeager, Unda agent by Houston in 1967_, Cln·
Test Terri Proffitt Mary McFarland, Valerie Cadle, Roger sinnati selected hlm from
Hys~U, Connie G~d, Sally Ross, Ira Atkinson, Jim Proffitt and Houston In the AFL expansion
32 oz.
draft in 1968.
Lawrence Weaver.
The Rev. Clarence McCloud, pastor, announced thilt Easter
Food Buys
Sunrise service at Mason Methodist Church will be at 6 a.m. at
!Jle .church. Everyone Is invited.
dleport), The Fatmers Bank
,and Savings Co ., Citizens
FROM. HERE AND THERE' Mrs. David Dewhurst ol the National Bank (Pt. Pleasant),
20 OZ·69~
Pkqs.
Cherokee Homemakers ClUb has announced that the club will Pomeroy National Bank,
have a bake sale and bazaar on Saturday, April14, starting at Village Pharmacy, R. C. Colat
9:30a.m. at the New Haven Super Market.
Mel Clark, Welfare Finance,
Mrs. Dorothy Cartwright of Mason underwent surgery on
KRAFT-SLICED
BR-OUGHTON
Heiner's,Coca C.ola, Maso_n ~- ·
Friday at Holzer Medical Center..
, . ..
.
American
Bank, ,. and - ·pt. Pleasant
Mrs. Freda Turley of Hartford is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Building and Loan.
Pimento or 12. oz.
Kenneth Riggs and family in Hawaii. This malles Mrs. Turley's
Pkg s.
second trip there.
,
UNION CROSSROADS 4-H CLUB installatiOn services were
performed when the Union Crossroads +H met recently at Union
Church ai Letart,
' i
·
·
Mr
NABISCO ·
· Officers installed by thl' Mason CounfY 4-H Agent,
s.
12 oz .
Kalhy Olsen are Lisa Gilland, Bre!!da Marr, Doma Marr,
VANIUA WAFERS
Pkg .
Bonille Marr 'April Parsons, Gregg' jJarnett, DarreU Marr, Andy
IW&amp;ch, Sha.;. Paugh, Mike King, Terry Roush, Darla Roush,

iii

WHERE ECONOMY-ORIGINATES

'

•

5:-The DaUy Sentlnel,Mlddleport·POI!Iei'&lt;Jy, o., April II, 1973

GRAPEFRUIT
5 LB. BAG

'

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'

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"'J'

,

..
'

'

'

.·.
.'
';..,

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE
Reg c, Drip ., Elec. Peri&lt;

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PAPER
TOWELS
2 2PkgRolls. . 99· ~

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ALL
FOR
ONLY

ciualiiy 501 ~-ylon carpeting .wlth heavy foci m rubber pad, expert ta ckle·ss
installation. Choice o f colors . All wo r k guarat:lfeed . See Wendell Gra t,e for
this buy, or free esti.rnate on any carpet i n stallation ~

69~

2 lb.
CAN

uood at Rutland
Dept. Store
Expires : 4-14-73

.~ .

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,\

. RUTLAND FURNITURE
WENDELL GRATE

RUTLAND, 0 .

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Mansfield

I Ma~n eounp · News Notes J r~Ia:ys set

Today's

Da
de
Sport r

Saturday

o"uNc!N

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•

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Orange Juice "'' • • •
Hunt's Snack Pac_ks ~UIT
Pie Crust Mix
Imitation Vanilla
Cream Cheese "''
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JIFfY

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ANN PAGE
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SUCED A&amp;EOo ._•

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PIWIURT

Goober Jelly
Carnation Spreadables
Crisco Oil • • • • • -57c Salt ~~~~~~ • • • •
·wesson Oil • • • • • -83c Cut.Corn Beans
Tomato Sauce Hum

SM\Icm·s I

bd.

lac F
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FROZEN
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• • ~ &amp;4c: Jif Peanut BuHer • •
• • ':::: 10' General Mills-Cheerios
~~;o:- 26c Libby Tomato Juice • • ~37c: Regular Puddings~;~.
• • •~ 24c Mueller's Noodles F..2M'oN • ~44c: Tea Bags 8~~

_,R edmen·

OR MONTE •

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100

Mii~ or

Match Sale!
"Paaeaf1 , . _ .____ LUG!

Accutron ~ by

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CALIFORNIA

lb .

Asparagus

OR CHARCOAL STEAKS lb

CENTER cuT •

BONELESS • •

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Sweet-Corn

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5149
Cube Steaks.
Cross Rib RoaslcuT e;;.~~fg~UCK 1 h·5 ll'1
AU .Meat Franks.:=~~ •
·chuck Steak
All Beef Franks :iti. •
5P9
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Sausage
Ground Chuck
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Braunsch.weiger -Chubs.
CVT FROM ~HUCK

5 .... 59c:

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ANN PAGE

Jelly Eggs
l·lb.
pllgs.

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$

Asplrift

BuHerin
pkloof

79¢

Borden's
Cremora

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Tour Purchase Of /1.

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· Calgon Bouquet . . . . . . . . . ~ , . . ':~;~- 63c .
. Betty Crocker Can Frosting .. , .,'":t:'·51c
Brillo Scouring P,ads ~ . . . . . . . . , ""!q " 32'
Eagle COndensed Milk . . . .... , '!;:· 37c
Kraft Spaghetti Dinner . . .. : . . . ";:- , 33'
Keebler Rich 'n Chips .. .. , . :.. ::.;~ 61c

Je"&amp;,~~~~

were presented by April Parsons and Yvonne
GrinStead Andy IW&amp;ch read a theme in regards to Conaervation.
Re!reshm~nts were served to the officers and following ~::
-bers an~ guests, Darren Marr, ~uzette Paugh, Yvome
stead Judy young' Anna Parsons, Marth~! Sh"':'""lrer. Leaders ..
' were
. . J udy Roach • Chloris
Marr' Lorrame Barnett, Mr:
Jl"esent
.
and Mrs. Jack Paugh.
·

. THE SM1'11WAPEHART POST American Legion Auxiliary
gifts and favors they fur·
wishes to lhank the foUowing for the
rty
.
nished for '!he Legion birthdaY pa :
~ ·
·
Greene's Hardware, Ben Fran!dln, Peoples Ba ' ~n .
Furniture, Tiffin's, G. c. Murphy, Ralrden's, 0. J. Momson s,
Point Office Supply, Sayre Hardware, Almedas, Central InHaven Furniture Haynes, Argabrite Jewelers,
&lt;hlstr1eo, New
'
Stllfle ' (Mlddl rt)
Cohen's, Flesher's Texaco, Dairy Haven,
. rs
epo '
Ingles Furniture, Miller's Market, -KathynaVlS (Avon), Florene .
Elberfeldo, Shoppers Mart, ·
Finnlt-um (personal gift) '
ling All and Sonya's Kut 'N Kurl.
.
BowFavors ·~ere donated by CltizeiiB National Bank (Mid·

Produce Buys

CARPET SPECIAL
2 ROOMS AND HALL
ln . 1 d

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, 12'x15' Living Rm
es. 9'x12' Bedroom
J'x12' Hall

COMPLETELY I NSTALLED
WALL ro WALL
With Heavy Foam Rubber Pad

69

69'

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Magic Sizing Starch ~&amp;sc
With

APPLE
SAUCE

~Gal. 49~

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Extra Crisp

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Miracle Whip

Lasagna Dinner •

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-..;}' All Afl' WEO's - Cals. Oiv
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-:26c $.
Wesson
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pkg.
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With

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Facials .

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CATSUP 32 ~o~::99e

BUTrERMIL.K

Kraii~' Margatine

G·ood Thn.. S•t., Aprlf 14th At
All AlP WE0'1- Ce~ls. Oi• .

. $Qod 'Thru S:.. t.·.. April J,+th· At

LIMIT ONE COUPONrnia
.
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79¢

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PICKLES

Fobric Softener

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W£0 COUI'ON Y'&amp;fl

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three

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FffiCh con's

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IONEl!SS

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may decide ABA outcome

lOLA'S

MG~~!Jtvt.iM&amp;

Ou.i.elt-Oafa,

btl.

I

• ~4t Long Grain Rice
4~It Rice Chex Cereal • • •
::.15c: PostToasties· • • • •
~ 25c: Kellozg's Corn Flakes •
.:::13c Start Orange ·lt~J~ • • •' !:"-25c
Space Food Sticks
•::;:sgc

r-:---SOF'T--~

SVNNTFIELD

Chuok Roast

l~

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Invitation

Log Ca.bin Syrup
H~N!S tt:69c Hunt's Catsup •
~ 4t
BuHermilk Pancake Mix ~ 55c Kraft Mayonnaise • • • ~: 73c
Crisco Shortening • • ~ 93c Charmin Napkins • • •P-r~o·'36c
lona Sweet Peas .
&amp; ~s1oo Pam Vegetable Oil Spray ~ 98c
Campbell's Tomato Soup ~~:L13~ Biz Presoak
~ 7t
.Heinz B·B-Q Sauce o~6~s
6t .A&amp; I! Bleach •
• 1 ~rpL5t

"

.

Ben ch

CHARI.OTIE, N.C. (UPI) case, he says, if as some also h)ghly rated. And so is
-..a
.
A half-&lt;loten of the American II'edict, the series goes the lull - Louis DamP.Ier, who did not
~
~
Basketball Association's best seven games,
play in the Virginia-Kentucky
1 I U
: :;
By Ahna Marshall
&lt; players will he on hand tonight . Both Carolina and Kentucky series because of a foot injury,
Three Mason County ladies are candlda!A!s for Ma11011 County
:; for the opening game of the have potent reserves, but the but wbo could be ready by the
BeUe. One ol them will be elected at May Cllunty Hrmemakers
'~ .
By MILTON RICHMAN
~~ Carolina-Kentucky playoff for Cougars made more use of second game of !he CarolinaUP! Sports Edllor
"~ the Eastern Division title, but th em m
· th e regu 1ar season .
Spring t.uncJ.,on on May 10 at !he Moose H.allln Pt. Pleasant.
KentuckymatchupSaturdayat
They are Lcrena McCausland, Mrs, llonnie Waldie and Mrs.
MANSFIELD,Ohio (UP!)ATLANTA; Ga. (UP() - It wasn 't' the same t)lis time, and the man voted best of all thinks
For example, forward Ed Greensboro, N. C.
Ueulo Rrush. The lucky lady will r~resent the county at !he AslighUy-trimmedfield will be Roberto de Vicenw didn't expect it would he.
bench strength wiU be the Manning and guards Gene
The Cougars, who beat
Folk Festival at Glenville, JWJO 14, 15, 16and 17th.
on hand Friday aild Saturday
Five years ago, when he walked through !he airport here, deciding factor.
Littles and Ted McClain ave- Kentucky by one game for the
Mrs. Gus Douglass, Jr., of-Leon, is chainnan of the Mason for !he 42nd running of the chll!lging planes the morning after finishing the Masters, many
"I think the difference In !he raged 20 minutes or more per ABA east regular season title,
County Homemakers Spring luncheon.
·
Mansfield-Mehock Relays.
of the employes, even those who weren't especially golf nuts,
series will be the contributions game in the regular season. held a 6-5 'edge ove_r the
SEVERAL LADIES will be attending the Homemakers
The 1m event, won by San· stopped what !hey were doing for a glimpse of the deeply-sun from the benches," said 6-foot· Uttle and McClain both ave- Colonels 1n regular · season
Planning and Leadership training conference at Jackson's Mill, &lt;hlsky, had some 2,214 athletes tanned, aris!Dcratic-looking South American who suddenly' had 7 Carolina star forward Billy raged 9.6 points per game and play ..
Weston, W. Va . on April 11-13.
from 258 high schools compel- become thl' most celebrated figure in all SiJ&lt;&gt;rts.
Cunningham. who was voted tied for ninth in league
Carolina downed the New
'""•
but
the
fl
'
gures.
.
for
this
the
ABA's
Most
Valuable
statistics
with
120
st'llals
each.
York
Nets, 4-1, in their !Jr
. st
THE CHARLESTON AREA Spring meeting of which Mason .ur.e;
"That 's him'' .. . 11Th at's him/ ' they said, pointing to Roberto
County Is a part will be held April 25. The Cabell County year's event are down to 2,165 de Vic"enzo walking wilh his head up even though he had blown Player Monday.
Manning averaged t6 points plaxoff series and· Kentucky
Homemakers will host it in Huntington, Mrs. Ray Fox of ClifUm and 243.
the Masters only hours earlier by signing his card incorrectly
"Some time during Uie series per g8Jlle and .had a 4.6 beat the Virginla Squires, 4-1.
Three
finals
are
scheduled
to
1h
he
h
d
d
bolh
teams are going to he in rebounds per game average.
Is Olarleston area representative .• The group will meel at
and actually okaying a poorer score an
a rna e.
Huntingron Giilleries while the luncheon will be at Pea Ridge be nm off Friday afternoon,
He came through the same place again this time, and you know foul trouble and !he one that
Kentucky's top reserve is
including !he medley relay, the what? Nothing.
·
gets the JllOSt out of the bench Jim O'Brien, who came off the
United MethOOist Church.
two-mile run and the four-mile
Nobody seemed to recognize !he man who has won 187 lour· is going to win," said Cunning- bench Saturday and scored
THE PRESIDENT OF THE Mason County Homemakers · relay.
naments In hls time, more than Jack Nicklaus and Arnold
ham.
nine points in the fourth
To come in and
That would especially he the quarter to spark the Colonels
Council, Mrs. Ray Fox, has appointed Mrs. Vurl Randolph and · , ll'he olher 18 finals will be Palmer put togelher. Nobody stopped him for his autograph.
,
, past Virginpa in the final game
Mrs. Howard Garland _to the Bi-Cenlennial Committee, Mrs. held Saturday, starting at 1:30 . Nobody said a word to him.
see aU
VIcki Keefer, Carl Cook and Mrs. Kathy Olsen are advisors.
p.m..
Roberto de Vincenzo, who finished in 51st place in this year's
of the playoff.
that's !lPW
Sandusky, paced by defend- Masters, but enjoyed himself as much as winner Tommy Aaron,
One-time Cougar Wendell
NEW HAVEN - The New Haven Calendar "Girls" nearly ing 120-yard high hurdles maybe more, prefers it this way.
,
CONQUERS SNOW, AI.L
Ladr)er, who scored 39 points
for Spring
· tbe y rna de their entrance at the champion Jim Fantozz • will try
and
grabbed 20 rebounds in
broug ht down th e house when
wThat doesn't mean I don't like to win," says the affable,
COLUMBUS (UPI I _ Out
· -d..ay evening to become thl' first team to re- former British Open champ from Buenos Aires, "but other things Ahead ran through a blinding four games against Carolina
New' Hayen Woman's Club Showboat Revue&lt;&gt;n Satur
----~ •peat since Cleveland Glenville
f .
during the regular season after
at the New Haven The a tr e. E ac h person was dr ~ "' in .1965 and 1966. The Blue are more important to me now. Like being close to my aml1y, snow squaU Tuesday to capture being traded by Merilphis, is
,MaIn at Sycamore. Pomeroy
, getting good grandsons from my(wo boys, Hoherto and Eduardo, !he $2,400 allowance feature at · lr-;.--~~~--..:~;.;:·===:.::::;~
represent a month and one was attired In a Geraldine outfit as on
!he Flip Wilson Show.
·Streaks may find it difficult, and helping other people. Voluntarily, I mean, not for money."' Beulah Park and return $5.
·'
·
il
hOwever.
Fanto.Z
was
clocked
.
The Calendar "girls" were Cec Duncan, Jr., Cecil Duncan,
In his time, de Vicenzo not only has won the British Open but $3.60 and-$3.60.
1
. · Sr., Jack Flesher, Wayne Carter, John Thome, Rev. John
In 4.1 last year.
also other tournaments in places like Germany, ~'ranee , Holland,
Apt urn was second add
Haeberle, Phil Burgess, Rev. William DeMoss, Charles smlth,
Beshides Ohio, athletes are Belgium, Spain and even the U.S. back in 1952. Ma~y of hisfellow Ellie's Surprise was third .
Chuck Roush, Kenneth Thompson and Bill Gibbs.
entered from Michigan, Penn- prosstill consider him one of !he hestin the world, but whether he _; Dixie Donna and Abold ChorThere was standing room only for the rewe directed by Mrs. sylvania, 'Indiana and Canada. ever wins anythlug else or not, he seems destined always to be us combined for an fl-.7 daily
Paul (LaVerne) PoweU, assisted by Mrs. Eugene (Pauline )
remembered best for the blunder he corrunitted in nearby double payoff of $55.60.
Hester.
Augusta five year~ ago. .
.
_ ,
The_crowd of 3,078 wagered
0
Mrs. Paul Powell, piani$t, .accompanied !he groups
.
People kept talkmg about that lor a long bme. Some sbll do. $34o,690.
throughout !he show. The Top Ten danced while thl' Woman's
.t'
Johnny Miller's near boner on Aaron's score card Monday ·
Club members sang uStrike Up the Music" for !he opening
revived all the talk .
•
number. The Top Ten Dance tesm of Diana Able, Judy Needs,
~..;..StS
"Once in awhile I'll hear someone say 'this is theHuy. He didn't
MILLS HONORED
Helen Gurti.B, Martha Krawsczyn, Lora Smith, Lesa Dudding,
llC
sign his scorecard,' or 'he signed it wrong','' says de Vicenzo.
COLUMBUSr(UPI) - EastCheryl Circle, Misty Ward, Linda Dye and Karla Richards,
"Most of these who refer to it dim •t really follow golf !hal closely. ern Michi gan ·~ Woody Mills;
danced and sang several selectioJJB including Old Soft ShOe and ~Or
They don 't really know what happened ."
who pitched his school to a 0.2
Sta•nle ss mel. N~vy blue d l~ l . hl!i.
Calendar c la s si ~ . 14K !(old-tilled . $11 5.
While Strolling Through !he Park.
11
Any reference to the monumenial mistake he made in the 1968 victory last Friday over Ohio
Another outstanding act was by Mrs. William DeMoss,
Masters used to bother the otherwise even-tempered de Vicenw. University in the Huron's first
At first you te ll yourself. " What's a lew minutes oil ?"
ventriloquist, and Chuckie In "Time to Talk."
Despite an outstanding Not now, anymore.
.
Mid ~ American· Conference
B ut when you ca tch your wat ch cheating on y ou
Mrs. Eugene Hester, besid~ introducing the acts, ~ng
performance by Rio Grande's
" Before, yes/ ' he confesses, "especially when I was playing bi:isebaU game ever, has been
time and time again . ..
numbers including Swanee, Bill Bailey and Mammy.
Jack Finch, the Redmen of good . II I'd hear someone talk about it while I was playing, it voted the MAC Spring Athlete
That's when you wish you had an Acc utron wat ch.
The Dlng·A·Dong-Girb, all members of. the New Haven coach George Wolfe dropped a brokemy concentrationalittle. Nowitdoesn'tanyinore."
of the Week .
ttS l unin g fo rk move ment is guafanteed to _ke ep it
Woman's Club, sang and danced to "HeUo DoUy.'.' Featured in dual track and field meet to
Roberto de Vicenzo fr eely concedes \here has been a change in
Mills, a senior righthander
ta\lhful to w ithin a minute a month . •
this number were Mrs. -Jesse Ahel, Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs, Gary
host Cedarville Tuesday af. him the past five years; but says what has happened to him since from Midland, Mich., checked
So don ' t be led asl ray , See us and we'll sh o w you a
Batey, Mrs. Dan Edwards, Mrs. Jack Flesher, Mrs. R. G. ternoon, 80-17.
he incOrrectly signed that scorecard- "! did a stupeed!"- hi!S the Bobcats with four hits in
great seleCtion of Ac cution watches . ln .standard :
Greene, Mrs. Roher! Gurtls, Mrs. Jolm Hae~y, Mts , Eugene
Winter-like temperatures had nothing at all to. do with it,
posting his 18th career victory
cal~ndar , day/da te and special featu re mode ls.
Hester, Mrs. Robert Hickel, Mrs. Tom Hoffman, Mrs, George and snow hampered both
"The thing that has changed my life 111ese pastfive ye'\"S are at Eastern Michigan . He
F rom$~ 10.
Ingels, Mrs. J.)'d;u-shall; Mrs. David RoUsh, Mrs. Wayne Carter,
squads.
the years themselves, no\ what happened in that Masters," he struck out nine.
Mrs. Mark Ward, Mrs ..Karl WOes, Mrs, John Wolfe and Mrs. ·
The Yellow Jackets 36-man insists. "I'm 50 now . I've played more than 30 years and won
Debbie White.
squad captured ·nine firsts. · tournaments all over !he world. I can -tell you the thing I have
The truth -lovi ng tuning fork wat ch .
Mrs. Dorsey Roush tappe(l out some lively numbers with Rio's lfl..man squad claimed learned.hest is there is no way to stop !he youngiellows."
NAMED JV COACH ·
spoons.
· seven. The 17th event _ the
De Vicenw was the first to admit he had pulled a boner after
NEW
YORK (UP!) - Brian '
Other song and dance nwnbefs included ICing Cotton Jacque,
pole vault _ was not held, due !he 1968 Masters. He never du cked the press after the episode,
and the Kygerettes from Kyger Creek High School; Tea For T.wo, ..--to ·strong winds.
~
volilntarily offerip&amp; all. [he painful derails which enabled Bob Mahoney, who played part of
this season. with _the Cleveland
__"_ Jacque and Kygerettes, I Can't Say No, by Jacqueline Gabrlsch;
Finch captured ·the mile, Goalby to become the Masters' champ, and not him. ·
Dearie and Tlimbling Weed, Bunny and Blatr, by Jacque and
lhree mile and saG-yard events.. . When it was all over, though, he hoped the whole thing would Cavaliers of the NBA, has been
Donnie Gabritsch.
·
·
Other Rio firsts were picked up die. It never has, of course, and !hat tends to bother de Vlcenzo, appointed junior varsity coach
Debra Hunt sarig and danced to Five Fool Two, and Marne. byHarvey Brown in the 100 and who has done many positive things in his life both before and at St. John's University .
"
Mahoney,
24,
played
The New Woman's Club members consisting of Mrs. Ken- 221l-yard dashes; Bob !son, shot since the 1968 Maslers.
··
.
.
nelh (Donna) Thompson as the teacher, and Mrs. Mark Ward,
put and Dean Fausnaugh, long
"My name is good before I signed the scorecard wrong," is the collegiate ball at Manhattan
and also played professionally
Mrs._Geor~e Ingles, Mrs. KBrl Wiles, Mrs. Wayne Ca~ter and . jump.
way he puts it now.
Mrs, R. G. Greene, as pupiis, presented a humorous school day
Bill Canfield placed second
This las\ one was hls 14th Masters, and he had a great lime, in France.
'
skit. Another hwnorous skit was presented by club members, . in the three mile. Mark Bur· seeing and being with all his old friends although he was never in
Mrs. Charles Smilh, Mrs. Kennelh Thompson, Mrs. David Roush
well was second in the 441). serious contention in !he tournament itself'.
and Mrs. J. Marshall.
•
intermediate hurdles. Jim
Coming through the airp_ort here, they didn't make the fuss
Other song and dance nunibers included a Simple Melody Stewart wassecond in 'the high over him they did live years ago. Do you know something?
and Jada _ The Fireflies and this group Included Jackie
hurdles.
That suited Roberto de Vicenzo just line .
Ri&lt;lgway, Betty Wolfe, Cindy and Cathy Hof~nr AI"f' Fowler
· Friday , Rio will hos t
and Connie Bird. Martha Krawsczyn sang, Gunm~ a LitUe Wilmington College at 3: 30
Kiss.'' Donnie Gabritsch pfuyed on the born, "St. Lows Blues."
p.m., at Evans Field.
SNIDOW RETIRING
SUPERIOR
T)le entire cast concluded the show by singing, "Toot Toot
· Rio Graride will host the 1973
CLEVELAND (UP!) - De· draft, said he will pursue a
Tootsie."
Mid-Ohio Conference track and fensinve end Ron Snidow, a 10.. career in business.
TEEN QUEEN
Paul Powell was llcket agent Mrs, John Morgan took uP
field meet on Saturday, May o. year National Football League
Snidow made ~he decision to
tickets and Mrs. Paul Scally and Mrs. Frlmk Young, Jr. served
·
veteran, Tuesday announced retire · once before, jus't. after
.. ushers, The Stag~ Committee were Mr. and Mrs, Jack
he was retiring.
!he 1971 season, hut the Browns
JONES TRADED
Flesher, Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey Roush, Mr. and Mrs, Kenneth
The fonner Oregon star, who convinced him to come back.
ST.I.OUIS, (UP!) - Cincin- was
Thompson, Mrs. Jessie Ahel and Rick.
selected · by
the
Snidow broke his leg in the
1b. 79c
nati Bengals defensive tackle Washington Redskins in the lhird game of the 1972 season
WHITEHOUSE
WiUie
Lee
JoneS
has
been
ac-ON PALM SUNDAY, Aprill5, at 7:30p.m. thl' Chancel Choir
!hird round of the 1963 player . and did not play again.
HOME MADE
of Mason United Meth~t church will present Hallelujah, What quired by !he St. Louis Cardi·
a savior, a cantata by John W, Peterson directed by Mrs. Nolan nals for an undisclosed future
3o3
(Lucille) ~ckhamer. Mrs, Christine Guthrie wiU be orgl!llist draft choice.
...
Jones was drafted in 1965 as
and Mrs. Ray Proffitt !he narrator. .
·
•
Eleven selections will be sung by thl' choir composed of Carol a future choice by !he Cardin·
Proffitt, Debbie Gilland, Kathy Test, June VanMatre, Betty als and was signed as a free
VLASIC-KOSHER
Co&lt;!le, Robin stewart, Carla McFarland, LaVera Yeager, Unda agent by Houston in 1967_, Cln·
Test Terri Proffitt Mary McFarland, Valerie Cadle, Roger sinnati selected hlm from
Hys~U, Connie G~d, Sally Ross, Ira Atkinson, Jim Proffitt and Houston In the AFL expansion
32 oz.
draft in 1968.
Lawrence Weaver.
The Rev. Clarence McCloud, pastor, announced thilt Easter
Food Buys
Sunrise service at Mason Methodist Church will be at 6 a.m. at
!Jle .church. Everyone Is invited.
dleport), The Fatmers Bank
,and Savings Co ., Citizens
FROM. HERE AND THERE' Mrs. David Dewhurst ol the National Bank (Pt. Pleasant),
20 OZ·69~
Pkqs.
Cherokee Homemakers ClUb has announced that the club will Pomeroy National Bank,
have a bake sale and bazaar on Saturday, April14, starting at Village Pharmacy, R. C. Colat
9:30a.m. at the New Haven Super Market.
Mel Clark, Welfare Finance,
Mrs. Dorothy Cartwright of Mason underwent surgery on
KRAFT-SLICED
BR-OUGHTON
Heiner's,Coca C.ola, Maso_n ~- ·
Friday at Holzer Medical Center..
, . ..
.
American
Bank, ,. and - ·pt. Pleasant
Mrs. Freda Turley of Hartford is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Building and Loan.
Pimento or 12. oz.
Kenneth Riggs and family in Hawaii. This malles Mrs. Turley's
Pkg s.
second trip there.
,
UNION CROSSROADS 4-H CLUB installatiOn services were
performed when the Union Crossroads +H met recently at Union
Church ai Letart,
' i
·
·
Mr
NABISCO ·
· Officers installed by thl' Mason CounfY 4-H Agent,
s.
12 oz .
Kalhy Olsen are Lisa Gilland, Bre!!da Marr, Doma Marr,
VANIUA WAFERS
Pkg .
Bonille Marr 'April Parsons, Gregg' jJarnett, DarreU Marr, Andy
IW&amp;ch, Sha.;. Paugh, Mike King, Terry Roush, Darla Roush,

iii

WHERE ECONOMY-ORIGINATES

'

•

5:-The DaUy Sentlnel,Mlddleport·POI!Iei'&lt;Jy, o., April II, 1973

GRAPEFRUIT
5 LB. BAG

'

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'

,.

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"'J'

,

..
'

'

'

.·.
.'
';..,

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE
Reg c, Drip ., Elec. Peri&lt;

! ' '' .

PAPER
TOWELS
2 2PkgRolls. . 99· ~

.•' I '

-·

'I'

·,,
'"
~

With CCiupon

ALL
FOR
ONLY

ciualiiy 501 ~-ylon carpeting .wlth heavy foci m rubber pad, expert ta ckle·ss
installation. Choice o f colors . All wo r k guarat:lfeed . See Wendell Gra t,e for
this buy, or free esti.rnate on any carpet i n stallation ~

69~

2 lb.
CAN

uood at Rutland
Dept. Store
Expires : 4-14-73

.~ .

~~.

·····.,.,,
,\

. RUTLAND FURNITURE
WENDELL GRATE

RUTLAND, 0 .

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.·'·.,;

' 'I

·-::-

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&lt;., .

�1
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Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ;Aprilll, 1973

6- The Daily SentlnPI, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Aprilll, 1973

PTArmembers urged to

,i. SOCia. I

~:-~::&lt;-:!

"

,f,

The Pomeroy Elementary
School needs an additional 39
pints of blood to partlctpate m
the newly organized school
blood program of the Amertcan
Red ,Cross, 11 was announced
Monday night at a meeting of
the Pomeroy PTA
PTA members were urged to
giVe blood at the April 23 VISit
of the bloodmobile at the
school, 1 to 6 p m ,Fourteen
pmts were donated at the
February VISit of the bloodmobile, but the addttional 39 IS
needed to qualify the school
Once the school IS qualified,
any child, parent or grandparents of a student becomes
entitled to blood credtts as
needed The program ts
renewed /rom year to year
Mrs Ellen Johnson, Mrs
Judy Jewell and Mrs. Bill
McDaruel presented the report
of the nommatmg--conuruttee.
Elected and mstalled by Mrs.
Harry DaVIS, a past president,
were Mrs Earl Thoma,
prestdent, Mrs John Murphy,
second vtce prestdent, Mrs
McDantel, secretary, Mrs
Orval Wtles, correspondtng
secretary; Mrs - Charles
Goeglem,
parliamentartan;
Mrs Rtchard Rupe and Mrs
Wayne Chappalier, delegates
to MetgS County Council of
Parents and Teachers; and
Mrs Gertrude Casto, alternate
Officers elected but not

present at .the meetmg were
Mrs Jerry Ftelds, fu-st vtce
prestdent, Mrs Robert LewiS,
Mrs Thomas Werry, and Mrs
Linda stobart, delegates to
County CounCJl; and Mrs Lots
Pauley and Mrs
Troy
Ohlmger, alternates to County
Council They will be mstalled
at the May meetmg by Mrs
Gene Mttch, munedtate past
prestdent
Announced at the meeting
were the Pomeroy Elementary
School children whose entnes
tn the cultural arts competition
took ftrst place m dtVISton m
the county competition and will
now go mto state compettlton
They were Rtta Rousey,
collage, lleth Perrm, drawmg ;
and Jayne Lee Hoelltch , mustc,
poetry and waterbase

vacatlon begms on Frtday,

Monday, Aprtl :13
The fmanciBl resources of
the PTA were discussed and
due to the lack of funds, tl was
dectded to have a "bakeless"
bake sale Notes will be sent
home wtth all of the chtldren
asking for contrtbuttons
The Mother-Daughter Be-In,
a program on birth defects to
be held at the Metgs Juntor
Htgh School on May 10, cosponsored by the PTA and the
fdarch of D1ntes, was an-nounced The Be-In will feature
both
obstetnctans
and
pedtatrtcJans, as well as
representatives from the
March of Dlffies, and 18 an
effort of Otstrtct 16 Otrector
Mrs
Rtchard Vaughan .
Representaltves from PTA
untls over the several county
area of the distnct are expected to attend
Also dtscussed at the
meetmg was the alcohol and
drug abuse semmar to be held
at Ohto Wesleyan m August
Cost per student IS $30 Action
on sponsormg a student was
tabled pending results of the
"bakeless" bake sale
The attendance bariner was
won by the filth grade The
Webelos under the direction of
Jerry Colmer led m the pledge
an~ Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr, gave
devotiOns Refreshments were
served by the second grade
wtth Mrs Charles Gloeckner

April 20, and contmues through

as chalililan

Mrs

Goeglem

was

In-

troduced as the new Metgs
County Council prestdent
Agam dtscussed were plans
for the use of televiSion m the
elassroom

Mrs

Thoma

reported that two more sets
have been repau-ed and are at
the htgh school pendmg transfer to the elementary school
To date the televtston cable has
not been mstalled at the school
Mrs Thoma announced the
stxth annual Distnct 16 sprmg
conference to be held at the
Chesapeake School on April 28
She also noted that Easter

Kelly elected by teachers
Election of Tom Kelly as provtded by Mrs Wtlma
prestdent and an address by Parker and recorded mus1c
Kenneth Hunt •• asstslant was presented by Mrs Maxme
professor on the faculty lor Whttehead The Rev Robert
exceptiOnal children at Ohto Shook, pastor of the Mt
State Umverstty, htghllghted Herman U B Church, gave the
the annual dmner meetmg of mvocatton _ precedmg the
the Metgs County Educalton dmner served by the Easte~n
Assn Thursday mght at Band Boosters
Eastern Htgh School
A welcome was extended by
Other offtcers elected for the John Rtebel, supenntendent of
1973-74 year were Mrs Donna the host school Mrs Dorothy
Chadwell, Eastern Local Woodard , prestdent, had
School DtstrLct, president charge of the busmess meetmg
-.. eJect, Mrs Mi"rJorre Goett, durmg whtch time Supt Robert
Metgs Local "Sehoolo!Strtcl, Bowen diScussed the school
secretary, and Mrs Jean calendar lor next year Kelly
Allure, Southern, treasurer
Kelly IS on the faculty at
Eastern Htgh School
Mr Hunt m his talk to the 85
Metgs County
teachers
dtscussed soctal change and tis
role m behavioral differences
and atlltudes tn chtldren, both
Fmal plans lor parttctpat10n
negaltve and postltve He
commented on the negative m the Otstnct 13 Daughters of
aspects of Ylewmg too much Amenca rally m Marietta
televtswn, such as VIOlence, today were made at a meetmg
and of televlSIOn's mfluence m Tuesday mght of Chester
estabhshmg tdeas of the ac· Counctl 323, D of A
Mrs Mary Holter, counqlor,
ceptable codes of behavtor,
presided
at the meeting durmg
good and bad
Mrs
Grella
Suttle, whtch ltme a practice was
elementary supervisor for held The tllness of Mrs Opal
Metgs County, mtroduced the Etchmger was reported
The birthday anmversary of
speaker
Pm-ons for the meeting were Mrs Ertlla Cleland, deputy
-was o6served Mrs Cleland
was escorted to the altar by the
flagbearers On behalf of the
council, Mrs. Dorothy Rttchte,
chatnnan of the good of the
order commtltee, presented
her With a gtft Members sang
"Happy Btrlhday "
Purchase of two new chatrs -Attendmg bestdes those
for the club house was a)&gt;' named were Mrs Golda
proved when the Sew-Rtte- Fredenck, Mrs Opal Hollon ,
Sewmg Club met there Mrs Esther Ridenour, Mrs
recenUy Mrs Judy fotter Ethel Orr, Mrs Oorts Koemg,
prestded at the meeting hosted Mfs Dons Grueser, Mrs.
by Mrs Joan Hoffman and Charlotte Grant, Mrs Mabel
Mrs Carolyn McOamel
Van Meter, Mrs Zona Btggs,
Reports were gtven by Mrs Mrs Goldte Wolfe, Mrs
Pandora Collins, treasurer, Marcta Keller, Mrs Dorothy
and Mrs Evelyn Gtlmore, Lawson, Mrs Ada Neutzling,
secretary. A rummage sale Mrs Betty Roush, Mrs Hatlte
was tentaltvely set lor June Fredenck, Mrs Jean SumMrs Collms lurmshed the ttem merfteld, Mrs Mary Jo Pooler,
for the monthly auctiOn, wtth Mrs Thelma Whtle, Mrs
Mrs Shtrley Batty to furmsh Elizabeth WICkham, Mrs
the next one
Zelda Weber, Mrs Ada Morns,
Mrs. Potter and Mrs Lucy Mrs __Ada Van Meter, Mrs
Whtte wtll host the next Helen Wolf, Mrs Eltzaheth
meeting A dessert course was Hayes, and Mrs Margaret
served
Tuttle

Part ir;4rally
is planned

Club will buy
two new chairs

TO
McCLURE$

For Delicious Food, Soft

reported on March aclton of the
legiSlature parltcularly as 11
concerns
retirement

the

~-

•

~

~l Calendar ~

give blood in Pomeroy

teacher

Actmg as secretary for the
meetmg m the absence of Mrs
Nellie Vale, a paltent at Mount
Carmel Hospttal, Columbus,
was Mrs Oatsy Blakeslee,
tmmedtate past preSident
Frtday Mrs
Woqdard
represented the Metgs County
Education Assoctalton at the
Etghth Annual Seven and
Under Conference sponsored
by the Southeastern Ohw
EducatiOn AssociatiOn at Burr

Oak Lodge, Glouster, where
dmner speakers were Dr
Stayner F, Brtghton, OEA
Executtve Secretary; Donald
L Traxler, OEA Prestdent
Elect; Miss Babette Breuhaus,
OACT Executtve Dtrector,
Charles
Varney, OACT
prestdent ~lee! destgnee, and
Ohver Ocasek, OEA Execultve
Commtttee and state senator

Layette shower
was a surprise
LONG BOTTOM - A pastel
color scheme m a stork motif
was earned out for a surpriSe
layette shower honormg Mrs
James Anderson at the home of
Mr and Mrs Stephen Fmlaw,
Long Bottom
Co-hostesses for the shower
were Mrs Wtlllam Nease, Mrs.
Jack Stanley, Mrs Guy
Sargent, and Mrs. Fmlaw
Games were played wtth
prtzes gomg to Mrs. Tom Wolfe
and Mrs Mark Tannehtll
Others attendmg were Mrs.
Donna Nelson, Mrs. Charles
Bartels,
Mrs
Robert
Sylvester, Mrs Wtlliam Anderson, Mrs. Richard Poultn,
Mrs Oon Nelson, Mtss Jane
Qutvey, Mrs. Rex Cummings,
Mrs. Ed Baer, Mrs. Artliur
Nease, Mrs. John~ ·Mderson,
Mrs George Moms, Krtstin
Anderson, Jtll Nease, and
Heather Fmlaw
Others presenting gilts to
Mrs Anderson were Jane
Lyons, Jenmfer Menchtm,
Mrs. Karen Goms, and Linda
Weaver. Ice cream, cake and
punch were served

'

Mrs Mary Martm of Amencan Legwn Chtld
Pomeroy recetved the en- We If a r e Found a t 1on
_
WEDNESDAY
dorsement of the Ohto destgnated for tube~ulOSIS and
ORGANIZATION of semor
Oepartemental Etght and cystic fibrosis research; total
ctltzens club for PortlandForty for Central Otvtston to date for the all-partners•
Racme area, Wednesday, l
Chapeau at the April pouvior project ts $55
p m at Church of Latter Day
over the weekend' at the Pick·
Members have contrtbuted
Samts on Racme-Portland
Fort Hayes Hotel m Colwnbus 1,285 hours m volunteer work.
Road 'Ail persons 55 or over
A member of Metgs County
Mrs Martm reported on
tnvtled Pearl Welker and
Salon 712, Mrs Martm was plans for the Chapeaux Passe
Margaret Amberger of Metgs
endorsed last week by the Club luncheon to he held on
County Counctl on Agmg staff
Metgs Salon at an anmversary July 23 at the Hobday Inn in
to be present Cookies and
dmner attended by several Tole~o At that time Mrs
coffee refreshments For
state offtcers Her en- llerkley will be mttiated mto
transportation call 992-7884 or
dorsement ts effective m 1974, the club Reporting for Mrs.
992-7886
or whenever Ohto" eligtble to Myrtle Walker, who was
WHITE ROSE Lodge, I 30
submt! a candtdate
unable to attend, Mrs Marlin
p m Wednesday at the
Presentirg the endorsement noted that 367 dues have been
1
Amertcan Legton hall m '
on Mrs Marlin 's behalf at the patd
Mtddleport
pouv10r was Mrs Pearl Knapp
On nurses scholarship, Mrs
MIDDLEPORT Ltterary
Others
from
the
Metgs
Salon
Welsh
reported a total of $412,
'
Club, 2 p m Wednesday at the
attendmg were Mrs Eun1e considerably below last year's
home of Mrs Nan Moore Mrs
Brmker, Mrs Juha Hysell, ftgure
James Euler will rev1ew
Mrs Catherme Welsh, Mrs - Followmg the ntualls!tc
Stuart's
"Remembered
Rhoda Hackett, chapeau
openmg, chapeaux passes were
Dawn", and Mrs J E Harley
Chapeau Day at the Jewtsh 1n t r o d u c e d , Lou,. e
w11l review ''Rough Riders'' by
Hospttal tn Denver wtll be held Kramhenbul, Anna Krueger,
Vtrgtl Carnngton Jones
Mrs. Stdney Drenner
May 19
The chlidren Ann McCudden, Mrs Aichholz,
MIDDLEPORT
The
hospttahzed there wtth cysltc Hazel Elltott, Mrs Helen
ST ALBANS, W Va - The weddmg of Mtss Demse Lynn ftbr osts and tuberculosiS wlll Ktlworth, Mrs
Amateur Garden Club of
Bcrnetce
Middleport wtil meet at 8 p m Shortt, daughter...nLlllJ:.-&lt;md Mrs Clifford Shortt of St Albans, entertam the Etght and Forty Chnstensen, and Mrs Martin
at the home of Mrs Eddte and Mr Sidney Lee Drenner, son of Mr and Mrs Avery L viSttors, and there wtll be a
A dutch supper on Saturday
Dr&lt;lllner, St Albams, was an event of Frtday, March 2 at 6 p m at tour of the Au- Force Academy evenmg opened the pouvtor
Burkett
POMEROY - Mtddleport the Hightown PresbyteriBn Church The Rev Russell Ward on the Sunday lollowmg Mrs Berkley enterta!fie&lt;i tif
Lions Club, at noon, Metgs Inn offtctale&lt;j at the weddmg
Chapeau Day One of the her smte durmg the evenmg
The bndegroom IS the grandson of Mr and Mrs. Lee pedtatnctans at the hospttaliS wtth an Easter parade of hats
All members are asked to
Drenner, Pomeroy, and the late Mr and Mrs Stdney A Pickens, Or Sanford Avner, son of Mr The theme, "Busy as a Bee for
attend
Mtddleport
POMEROY Chapter 80,
and Mrs
Max Avner, '73," was carried out m the
llest
man
for
the
brtdegroom
was
hts
brother,
Mr
Max
Royal Arch Masons, stated
Galhpohs
table decoraltons for a breakmeetmg 7 30 p m at Pomeroy Robert Drenner Matd of honor was Mtss Elotse Ftscher, St
Funds for the Denver fast Sunday mormng Favors
Masonic Hall Most Excellent Albans
hospttal mclude $744 06lor bed were headscarves wtth bee
BOth Mr and Mrs Orenner are graduates of St Albans Htgh endowment,
master degree to be conferred
$90 90 • f or decorations Hostesses were
SchooL He IS employed at Royal Oldsmobtle, Charleston, W 'Va
Refreshments
tuberculosis, and $39 60 for Mrs Glaub and Mrs Ethel
The couple restdes at Dunbar_ A reception honormg the cysttc ftbrosts, both research , Spiker of the Franklm County
THURSDAY
newlyweds was held at the home of the bndegroom's parents
$82lor summer camp, $14 each
AFTERNOON
CIRCLE,
for
band and phone, $80 for
Mtddleport Heath Umted
Everyone
btrlhday parttes , $121 13 for
Methodtsl Church, Thursday at
cards wtth dtmes, and $90 for
Welcome
the church Mrs M L French
.fl.
clothmg
wtll present the lesson enlttled
Other reports showed that
"The New Age of Fatlh :•
•
Chnst1an
RUTLAND - Eleclton of }layman, Abby Mart10, Patty adequate toys , have been
Hostesses, Mrs Emerson
Brethren Church
Jones, Mrs C M Hennesy, offi cers and a musical Mttchell, Chnshne Clonch, provtded at · the Cleveland
Mason . W. V•.
Mrs Crary Davis, and Mrs M program htghllgbted the Kathy Lee, Timmy Gore, Enca hosptlal for chtldren wtth
Monday mght meeting of the Grate, Shauna Tackett, Carla cysllc flbrosts and Betty
C Wtlson
APRIL 8 thru 14
Rutland PTA at the Rutland Smtih, Rhonda Southern, Crocker coupons are still bemg
Pl&gt;eaker. Eugene Phe
ROCK SPRING Grange, Elementary School
Debb1e Morrison, and Ronme collected for a spectal project
Thursday mght VISit to the Ohto )If• new offtcers are Mrs Starcher
The Etght and Forty has
Valley Grange
Rose Carson, president, Mrs
Presenting solo parts In contnbuted $139 to the
LAUREL Cltff Better Health Roberta Musser, secretary, "Lowly Petuma 10 an Oh10
Club, Thursday, 7 30 p m at arid- Mrs
Joan Fe tty, Patch" were Patty Mtlchell,
the home of Mrs Allen treasurer Mrs Rose Patterson Ttmmy Gore, Sally Hayman,
Etchmger
presented the report of the Kathy Lee, Enca Grate, Abby
MEIGS County Humane nommahng committee The Mart10, and Angela Kennedy
Soctety, 7 30 p m Thursday, attendance banner was won by Others parbctpatmg were
Mtddleporl Vtllage Hall Im- the second grade and the fourth Todd Eads, Jeffrey Wayland,
portant busmess to be trans· graders
presented
the Bnan
Wilcox ,
Oebbte
,~· ~- i
acted and· members urged to program
MorTlson, Ronme Starcher,
attend
Oancmg wtth wnbrellas to Carla Smtih, Shauna Tackett,
MIDDLEPORT
Chtld "Ram drops Keep Falling, .. Kelly Brown , and Chrtsh
FLOOR MODELS'
Conservation League ann.ual were Kellt Brown,-S~ lly Clonch
DEMONSTRATORS'
dmner, Seddon's Restaurant,
GOLDEN TOUCH &amp; SEW"
Mrs Vwlet Grate prestded a•
Parkersburg Mall, 7 p m
MACHINES
the meeting whtch opened wtlh
Thursday
Thursday
devottons by the Rev Ketth
POMEROY LODGE 164
MEETING FOR parents of
Wtse of the Rutland Church of
work-study students at Metgs F&amp;AM ThursdayJ 7 30 p m Chnst The pledge to the flag
TO
OFF REG PRICE .
Htgh School, 7 30 p m Thurs· Work m EA degl-ee "'for one and officers ' reports Wf;!re
WHEN NEW
day Mrs Erma Fmch, MISs candidate All master masons g1ven
..,
CARRYING
CASE
OR
CAB
INET
EXTRA
Stephame Ntemtec and Sam mvited Refreshments
The very best at an astaundmg pnce t Wrth exclus ve
ELEANOR CIRCLE, 7 30
Crow w11l discuss wage
buil t rn speed bast ng and exc lusrve fu.ug~· pus h button
agreements and msurance p m Thursday at the Heath
front drop rn bobbm
Marshall Ktmmel wtll dtscuss Untied Methodtst Church
SAVE ON NEW TOUCH &amp; SEW MACHINES!
FRIDAY
services of Bureau of
For example Model 756.
MARY SHRINE , Whtte
Rehabtlltat10n Mary Bacon,
Mrs
Judy
Crow
ts
a
new
Shrme
of
Jerusalem,
open
coordmator, will d1scuss socJal
securtty and welfare Baby mstailalton of officers Frtday, beautician m the Beverly's
CARRYING CASE OR CABINET EXTRA
I
Home
of
Beauty
located
at
the
Sitting service to be provided 8 p m at the !OOF hall m
FANTASTIC
SAVINGS
ON
Pomeroy Busmess meetmg at corner of Fourth and Palmer m
Refreshments
DISCONTINUED
TOUCH
&amp;
SEW
MACHINES!
REVIVAL, 7 30each evemng 4p m wtth all offtcers urged to Mtddleport
Mrs Crow, marrted to the
at Mt Monah Church of God, attend Potluck refreshments
Metgs Htgh School teacher and
through Aprtl 15, the Rev foilowmg the mstallat10n
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band mother of two chtldren,
Donald Combs, evangelist
Do Spring Sewing Now - •
XI GAMMA MU Thursday, Sprtng Concert Frtday, 8 p m spectahzes 10 long hatr, uphome of Mrs Roberta O'Brten at htgh school Otrector ts Dr sweeps, wtgs and wtglets She
Easter and Proms On The Way!
attended two beauty schools,
wtth Mary Moms co-hostess, Tom Phtlbps
the Fatrvtew Beauty Academy
at 7 45 p m
FRIDAY
at
Fa1rv1ew Park, Ohto, and
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612
YOUNG Adult Class,
:::;'
Letart Falls, Thursday, 7 30 Bradford Church of Chrtsl, 7 30 the Curry County Beauty
,;:115 W Second 992 2284 Pomeroy
'
School m CloviS, N M She has
p m Members to brmg a pte p m Frtday at the church
........ ""
We 1'1ave a c redrl ptan desrgned to 111 your budge1
Rock Spnngs Grange mem·
PAI'\CAKE Supper, Frtday, \fOrked m the Hobday Beauty
oPpAOv!n
iiNGI·
O~
~~
We also have a hberal trade·m policy
hers VlSttors
begmmng 4 p m at Rutland Salon at Clovts, and Steppes,
REGULAR MEETING, Elementary School, sponsored Plaza Shoppe m Athens
• \Trademark of THE SlNGER COMPANY
Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM by Rutland Ftre Department
Thursday, 7 30 p m Refresh- and Amoltary Public 10v1ted
ments All master masons
RETURN Jonathan Metgs
inVIted
Chapter, Daughters of the
PHI LA THEA
Soctely, American Revolution, 2 p m ,
Mtddleport Church of Chnst Frtday, home of Mrs Emerson
covered dish dinner, m~ Jones, Middleport Program
stallatton of officers Thursday, by Mrs Dale Dutton Roll call,
GROUND BEEF
6 p m. at church Brmg own an adm1red woman , Co~
PORK CHOPS
table servtce Mildred Hawley hostesses, Mrs Lawrence
SLICED BACON
Installing offtcer
STEW MEAT
Milhoan, Mrs Everett Hayes

PT' A officers named

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
•

4th &amp; Locust

992-5248

Middleport,

P-

'

I

•

EASTER TOYS

2995 fO , 6000

••

.

(242)

Phone Us
Your Orderl
Slld&lt;t td lhMio n 01'... t Inti rt\111 111.....,. !"""nul I ,..;,.lo ....,,
8-CI' ... ~Io

Jo."' "' '"' ... • -n""

Aod Wh! o !Ooor

connie"

992-3502

(243)

-Sitff ler's Easter Shopping

LADIES' DRESS &amp; CASUAL
SPRING_AND EASTER

COATS

4

99

- Sttffler's Easter Shopping

PRICE~

J' •
•

00

PRICEb

$ 99

EACH

FROM

PAIR

FROM

Easter Shopptng GUid~

l'
I

REG. 11.39
VALUE!

09

$

PAIR

- Sttffler's Easter Shopptng

LADIES' NYLON DOUBLEKNIT

'

- Sttffler's Easter Shoppt'\9 Gutd e-

Ladies' Polyester Doubleknit

~IR $I

00

HANDBAGS

save

$299 $ ]00
TO

3 lb
5 lb
3 lb
3 lb
2 ib
2 lb

GROUND BEEF
CHUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
SPARE RIBS
STEW MEAT
ASSORTED LUNCH

- Shopping Gutde-

-Shopp1ng Guide-

Ladies' Easter
NYLON DRESS

GLOVES
Dress
La d tes
Easler
Gloves 1n regular ~nd lf.ot
wh1 te
length, tn nylon
Budget
.navy and be1ge
pnced

EACH

DRESSES

WE ACCEPT FEDE

GIRLS' UP TO DATE NEW
SPRING AND EASTER

COATS

3 to 6X and 7 to 1.4 '"{lew sprmg

styles and colors Budget pnced
perm pres s For spnn g and
Easter Stop your Stiffler Store
\and Save•

$299 $899
TO
\

l

EACH

Guid~

DOTIED SWISS

. TEE SHIRTS
Men s famous Frui t of the Loom
Bnefs and Tee: Shirts All s1ZeS
to~ qualtty budget pnced Shop
at your Fnendly Sttffler Stores

PKG.

,$278
OF 3

:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::•:•:;~::•:;:::::::,•:;:•:;::::::::::::::::::::,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,::,:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Ladies' F'lncy
BIKINI STYLE

B

lPANTIES

PANTIES
lad1es' laney btklnl st yle
panttes Wh ite and fancy
colors. asst styl es Budget
pr1ced at your Rrtendly
St1ffler Stores You save
money at St iffl er 's

TO

$100

'Campus
F STYLE

LadleS Campu5
panties In asst colors and
wh1fe small medtvm and
farge . XL large tn cotton
1and rayon
tn brtef and
elasti c leg
Fc;~mous

G1rls' up to date Budget Priced new
Easter Coats New spnng fabncs
budget pnced at your Fnendly
Sttffler Stores

,,

- Stiffler's Easter Sh.epptng Gutde-

BUNNIES &amp; CHICKS

_00
1

619 24 tnch tall stuffed Easter Bunn1es and
Ch tcks Budget pnced at your Fnendly
St1 fli er Stores

$

,'

EACH

Gut de-

- Shopping Gutde-

"

'

~ - Stiffler's Easter Shopping Gutde- ,

Ladies' Phil Maid &amp; Movie Star

HALF SLIPS

.
'

Lad 1es Phtl Matd and Movte Star
lad 1es hal f sl1 ps 100 percent nylon no
cltng S1zes small medtu m la rg e
Well ta1lor.ed Smart lor Easter, budget
pn ced

1

EA

Easter Shopping Guide-

GIRLS PRETIY PERM PRESS

-.

45 INCH FLOCK DOT

F AMO US F R U I T OF LOOM /

¢

SPRING AND EASTER

4 lb SHOULDER ROAST
lib GROUND BEEF
4 lb ROUND STEAK
2 lb STEW MEAT
2-FRESH CHICKENS

- St1ffler's Easter Shopping

::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::;:::::::

- Stiffler's Easter Shopping GuideSLICED PORK SHOULDER
BULK SAUSAGE
CHUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
GROUND BEEF

And Reddi Tied

''""~·~ - ,St_'_ffler's Easter Shopping Gutd ~

$ 99.TO$2299
EACH

Gtrls' new assorted spnng
purses, asst styles and
colors Smart for Easter
Shop at your F nendly
St1ffler Stores

Wide select1on smart new styles, asst
sprtng colors Budget pnced 1n vmyl ,
woven and reed Shop at St1ffler 1S and

$399TO $]99
pr

Ing Gutd ~

EACH

La d1es' t wo p1ece spring and summ er pant
su rt s budget pnced, smart styles 1n new
sprtng fabrt cs Yes, you save money at
SftHier s

HANDBAGS

Ladies' Woven Reed &amp; Vinyl

"e

$350

PANT SUITS

Girls' Assorted
NEW SPRING

- Sttffler's Easter Shopping Gutd~

Boys new Easter Polyester double kn1t
drE! ss sla cks ll are leg styles Ass t new
spnng colors Use our easy lay away plan

Reg $1 49 45 1nch new Flock Dot dotted
fabrtc s tn all new Spring colqrs
budget pn ced at your Fnendly St1lfl er
Stofes

LADIES' TWO PIECE
SPRING &amp; EASTER

Reg 59c lad1es Mycher seamless
nylon hose, new spnng shades S•zes
81!2 to 11 Stock up now at th1s low
pnce at Sftffler 's

DRESS SLACKS

SW ISS

- Stiffler 's Ea ster Shopping GUid ~

Ladies' Mycher Seamless

pr

Mens .a •n Hand and Reddie t ied men s
new spnng t tes for Easter W1de selectton
sma rt st yles new look fo r spr mg

TO

NYLON HOSE

Boys' Polyester Doubleknit
FLARE LEG Sl:YLE

NECK TIES

Reg $4 99 value Lad1es 100 percent nylon
doublekntt flare slacks, ladtes' new spnng
colors S1zes 8 to 1a Yes you save at
St1ffler' s

- Sttffler's Easter Shopptng Guid~

EACH

Boys' - Youths' Size

- Sttffler's Easter
ln - ~and

99
Easter Shopptng Guide-

GYM OXFORDS

Men's 4

$

Shopping

$199

Reg $3 99 lad1es' double knt t Polyester
Jama1ca shorts m new spnng co lors
Budget pnced stzes a to 18 Yes you
can save at Stiffler 's

FLARE SLACKS

''

PRICED
FROM

Reg' $2 99 men s youths and boys '
gym 'Oxfords For spnng American
made All sizes Black and white
low cuf Save now at thi s low low

Children's sprt ng an d Eas ter
footwear m new sty les for the Easter
parade new budge t pnces Shop
your Fnendly Stiffler Stor es

JAMAICA SHORTS

Gutd~

SHIRTS

Men s woven and knit dress and
sport shirts platn and fancy
pattern s Smart style s new
spnng co lor s Sizes small
med tum
large and Ex la rg e
Use our easy lay away plan

PAIR

FOOTWEAR

Reg $1 39 Famous N\ay Queen lad1es'
nylon stretch panty hose, petrte medt um ,
med1um tall and tall All new spnng
shades Stock up now at your Sttffler
Stores

FANCY DRESS

99

Children's Spring &amp; Easter

PANTY HOSE

1

Men's Woven &amp;

Budget pnced The new look
men s famous Sandy McGee
Footwear for spnng Ox fords
loafers and slip ons Yes you
at Sttftl er s Shop our shoe dept

FROM

~h&lt;J~

- Sttffler's Easter

UXt-ORDS - LOAFERS - SLIP-ONS
MEN'S SANDY McGEE

PRICED$

Men s new look flare and reg style 100
per cen t Polyester double knit dress slacks
m a w1de selecti on of colors and styles
Famous labels budget pr1ced

EACH

Easter Shopping

-Stiffler's Easter Shopping

Ladies' May Queen Brand
NYLON STRETCH

DRESS SLACKS

$3500

TO

FOOTWEAR

Lad1es Ht Brow and Charm Step
spnng and Easter fa sh 1on footwear for
Easter m the new look Yes , at Sttf
fler s you fmd h1gh fa sh1on at new
budget pnces S1zes 4th to 10

Men's Polyester Doubleknit
FLARE &amp; REGULAR STYLE

Smart styles budget pnced men s
Polyester doublekn1t sport coat s The new
look m ttme for Easter W1de selection
See these before you buy Use our easy lay
aw.1y plan

'
$
2800
TO
EACH

FOOTWEAR

Famous Bobbte Brooks and Russ
Togs, new spnng sportswear Smart
new spnng colors slacks blouses
shorts, coo rdmates Its Stiffler's for
sm art fashtons

- Stiff ler's Easter Shopp tng Gu1d~

SPORT COATS

Ladies' Hi Brow &amp; Charm Step
SPRING AND EASTER

SPORTSWEAR

'

Easter Shopping

DRESSES

Shopping

¢T0$

away

In Time for Easter Men's
POLYESTER DOUBLE KNIT

- Stiffler's

BOBBY BROOKS-RUSS TOGS
NEW SPRING&amp; EASTER

- ~littler's

79 3

Fancy decorat1ve Candy
F•lled Easter Novelt ies and
Ba ~ kets Bnght new budge1
pnced a1 your Fnendl y
Stiffler Store-s Buy on lay

Big Selection of Ladies'
SPRING AND EASTER

$3999
EACH

TO

Gutd~

Large selection of lad1es' spr1ng and
Easter dresses In Junrors, M1 sses and
Half S1zes All new spnng fabn cs and
sty les, budget priced at your Fnendly
S1t ffl er Stores

Smart st yles new Sprmg sty les All
new spnng fabncs Jun1ors. M 1sses
and Half Sizes Use our easy lay
away plan budget pn ced

-

SPREAD

GUid~

tiller's Easter Shoppi!Jg
..,~

DECORATED
CANDY
.
FILLED EASTER

Y, FRIDAY AND SA

''

GROUND BEEF
ROUND STEAK
SLICE;D BACON
PORK CHOPS
LARGE FRANKS

lib
3 lb
4 lb
2 lb
3

. F'ANCY

MIDDLEPORT

SHOP YOUR POMEROY OR MIDDLEPORT STIFFLER'S STORE THIS .,., ....

HAM SALAD

HAM SALAD
AND (241)
CHEESE

- STIFFLER'S EASTER SHOPPING GUIDE-

NOVELTIES &amp; BASKr-Tn
POMEROY

The Fabric Shop

~

'

Large selechon of Cuddly
Stuffed Ptush Easter Toys
In musical and color1vl toys
budget priced Lay away
yours now

$70

New beautician
is specialist

POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT

ASSORTMENT CUDDLY, STUFFED PLI,JSH

- YOUTH RALLY

$30

VISITATION MADE
Mrs L D. Hartinger and
Mrs T..eo Searls of Middleport
were m Ptketon Monday to call
at tbe Howe Funeral Home and
on the famtly of the late Mrs
Anna Margaret Oufheld,
formerly of M1ddleport Mrs.
Oulfleld, 63, dted Saturday at
the Ptke County HospitaL
CONCERT SET
RACINE - The Southern
Local School band wtll present
.a sprmg concert Fnday at 8
p m at the htgh school In
Racme under the dtrection of
Or Tom Phdhps

'

TIFFLER'S EASTER SHOPPING GUIDE-

Every Touch &amp; Sew
Machine on Sale

'

Drinks &amp; Dairy. Desserts &amp;
Prompt Service

Mary Martin wins
division endorsement

:?

•

'Cannon Royal Family
Cameo Rose No-Iron

SHEETS

Famous Ca nnon Royal Famtly
pattern no tron sheets A1 a new low
low pn ce at your Shiller Stor es
F1rst qual tty

72xl04 or
TWIN FITTED
' Bixl04 or
' FULL FITTED
MATCHING
PILLOW CASES

- Sttffler's Easter Shopping Guide-

STURDY TUBULAR ALUMINUM
GREEN AND WHITE

PATIO CHAIRS
Sturdy tubular alummum
l1ght wetght green and white
Paho Cha1rs and matchmg
Patio Lounger Budget priced
Buy on lay awav

$2.99

EACH

MATCHING_P_ATIO LOUNGE .......-:. EACH $

I

i

~~ .

�1
'

•

~

Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ;Aprilll, 1973

6- The Daily SentlnPI, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , Aprilll, 1973

PTArmembers urged to

,i. SOCia. I

~:-~::&lt;-:!

"

,f,

The Pomeroy Elementary
School needs an additional 39
pints of blood to partlctpate m
the newly organized school
blood program of the Amertcan
Red ,Cross, 11 was announced
Monday night at a meeting of
the Pomeroy PTA
PTA members were urged to
giVe blood at the April 23 VISit
of the bloodmobile at the
school, 1 to 6 p m ,Fourteen
pmts were donated at the
February VISit of the bloodmobile, but the addttional 39 IS
needed to qualify the school
Once the school IS qualified,
any child, parent or grandparents of a student becomes
entitled to blood credtts as
needed The program ts
renewed /rom year to year
Mrs Ellen Johnson, Mrs
Judy Jewell and Mrs. Bill
McDaruel presented the report
of the nommatmg--conuruttee.
Elected and mstalled by Mrs.
Harry DaVIS, a past president,
were Mrs Earl Thoma,
prestdent, Mrs John Murphy,
second vtce prestdent, Mrs
McDantel, secretary, Mrs
Orval Wtles, correspondtng
secretary; Mrs - Charles
Goeglem,
parliamentartan;
Mrs Rtchard Rupe and Mrs
Wayne Chappalier, delegates
to MetgS County Council of
Parents and Teachers; and
Mrs Gertrude Casto, alternate
Officers elected but not

present at .the meetmg were
Mrs Jerry Ftelds, fu-st vtce
prestdent, Mrs Robert LewiS,
Mrs Thomas Werry, and Mrs
Linda stobart, delegates to
County CounCJl; and Mrs Lots
Pauley and Mrs
Troy
Ohlmger, alternates to County
Council They will be mstalled
at the May meetmg by Mrs
Gene Mttch, munedtate past
prestdent
Announced at the meeting
were the Pomeroy Elementary
School children whose entnes
tn the cultural arts competition
took ftrst place m dtVISton m
the county competition and will
now go mto state compettlton
They were Rtta Rousey,
collage, lleth Perrm, drawmg ;
and Jayne Lee Hoelltch , mustc,
poetry and waterbase

vacatlon begms on Frtday,

Monday, Aprtl :13
The fmanciBl resources of
the PTA were discussed and
due to the lack of funds, tl was
dectded to have a "bakeless"
bake sale Notes will be sent
home wtth all of the chtldren
asking for contrtbuttons
The Mother-Daughter Be-In,
a program on birth defects to
be held at the Metgs Juntor
Htgh School on May 10, cosponsored by the PTA and the
fdarch of D1ntes, was an-nounced The Be-In will feature
both
obstetnctans
and
pedtatrtcJans, as well as
representatives from the
March of Dlffies, and 18 an
effort of Otstrtct 16 Otrector
Mrs
Rtchard Vaughan .
Representaltves from PTA
untls over the several county
area of the distnct are expected to attend
Also dtscussed at the
meetmg was the alcohol and
drug abuse semmar to be held
at Ohto Wesleyan m August
Cost per student IS $30 Action
on sponsormg a student was
tabled pending results of the
"bakeless" bake sale
The attendance bariner was
won by the filth grade The
Webelos under the direction of
Jerry Colmer led m the pledge
an~ Mr Hoyt Allen, Jr, gave
devotiOns Refreshments were
served by the second grade
wtth Mrs Charles Gloeckner

April 20, and contmues through

as chalililan

Mrs

Goeglem

was

In-

troduced as the new Metgs
County Council prestdent
Agam dtscussed were plans
for the use of televiSion m the
elassroom

Mrs

Thoma

reported that two more sets
have been repau-ed and are at
the htgh school pendmg transfer to the elementary school
To date the televtston cable has
not been mstalled at the school
Mrs Thoma announced the
stxth annual Distnct 16 sprmg
conference to be held at the
Chesapeake School on April 28
She also noted that Easter

Kelly elected by teachers
Election of Tom Kelly as provtded by Mrs Wtlma
prestdent and an address by Parker and recorded mus1c
Kenneth Hunt •• asstslant was presented by Mrs Maxme
professor on the faculty lor Whttehead The Rev Robert
exceptiOnal children at Ohto Shook, pastor of the Mt
State Umverstty, htghllghted Herman U B Church, gave the
the annual dmner meetmg of mvocatton _ precedmg the
the Metgs County Educalton dmner served by the Easte~n
Assn Thursday mght at Band Boosters
Eastern Htgh School
A welcome was extended by
Other offtcers elected for the John Rtebel, supenntendent of
1973-74 year were Mrs Donna the host school Mrs Dorothy
Chadwell, Eastern Local Woodard , prestdent, had
School DtstrLct, president charge of the busmess meetmg
-.. eJect, Mrs Mi"rJorre Goett, durmg whtch time Supt Robert
Metgs Local "Sehoolo!Strtcl, Bowen diScussed the school
secretary, and Mrs Jean calendar lor next year Kelly
Allure, Southern, treasurer
Kelly IS on the faculty at
Eastern Htgh School
Mr Hunt m his talk to the 85
Metgs County
teachers
dtscussed soctal change and tis
role m behavioral differences
and atlltudes tn chtldren, both
Fmal plans lor parttctpat10n
negaltve and postltve He
commented on the negative m the Otstnct 13 Daughters of
aspects of Ylewmg too much Amenca rally m Marietta
televtswn, such as VIOlence, today were made at a meetmg
and of televlSIOn's mfluence m Tuesday mght of Chester
estabhshmg tdeas of the ac· Counctl 323, D of A
Mrs Mary Holter, counqlor,
ceptable codes of behavtor,
presided
at the meeting durmg
good and bad
Mrs
Grella
Suttle, whtch ltme a practice was
elementary supervisor for held The tllness of Mrs Opal
Metgs County, mtroduced the Etchmger was reported
The birthday anmversary of
speaker
Pm-ons for the meeting were Mrs Ertlla Cleland, deputy
-was o6served Mrs Cleland
was escorted to the altar by the
flagbearers On behalf of the
council, Mrs. Dorothy Rttchte,
chatnnan of the good of the
order commtltee, presented
her With a gtft Members sang
"Happy Btrlhday "
Purchase of two new chatrs -Attendmg bestdes those
for the club house was a)&gt;' named were Mrs Golda
proved when the Sew-Rtte- Fredenck, Mrs Opal Hollon ,
Sewmg Club met there Mrs Esther Ridenour, Mrs
recenUy Mrs Judy fotter Ethel Orr, Mrs Oorts Koemg,
prestded at the meeting hosted Mfs Dons Grueser, Mrs.
by Mrs Joan Hoffman and Charlotte Grant, Mrs Mabel
Mrs Carolyn McOamel
Van Meter, Mrs Zona Btggs,
Reports were gtven by Mrs Mrs Goldte Wolfe, Mrs
Pandora Collins, treasurer, Marcta Keller, Mrs Dorothy
and Mrs Evelyn Gtlmore, Lawson, Mrs Ada Neutzling,
secretary. A rummage sale Mrs Betty Roush, Mrs Hatlte
was tentaltvely set lor June Fredenck, Mrs Jean SumMrs Collms lurmshed the ttem merfteld, Mrs Mary Jo Pooler,
for the monthly auctiOn, wtth Mrs Thelma Whtle, Mrs
Mrs Shtrley Batty to furmsh Elizabeth WICkham, Mrs
the next one
Zelda Weber, Mrs Ada Morns,
Mrs. Potter and Mrs Lucy Mrs __Ada Van Meter, Mrs
Whtte wtll host the next Helen Wolf, Mrs Eltzaheth
meeting A dessert course was Hayes, and Mrs Margaret
served
Tuttle

Part ir;4rally
is planned

Club will buy
two new chairs

TO
McCLURE$

For Delicious Food, Soft

reported on March aclton of the
legiSlature parltcularly as 11
concerns
retirement

the

~-

•

~

~l Calendar ~

give blood in Pomeroy

teacher

Actmg as secretary for the
meetmg m the absence of Mrs
Nellie Vale, a paltent at Mount
Carmel Hospttal, Columbus,
was Mrs Oatsy Blakeslee,
tmmedtate past preSident
Frtday Mrs
Woqdard
represented the Metgs County
Education Assoctalton at the
Etghth Annual Seven and
Under Conference sponsored
by the Southeastern Ohw
EducatiOn AssociatiOn at Burr

Oak Lodge, Glouster, where
dmner speakers were Dr
Stayner F, Brtghton, OEA
Executtve Secretary; Donald
L Traxler, OEA Prestdent
Elect; Miss Babette Breuhaus,
OACT Executtve Dtrector,
Charles
Varney, OACT
prestdent ~lee! destgnee, and
Ohver Ocasek, OEA Execultve
Commtttee and state senator

Layette shower
was a surprise
LONG BOTTOM - A pastel
color scheme m a stork motif
was earned out for a surpriSe
layette shower honormg Mrs
James Anderson at the home of
Mr and Mrs Stephen Fmlaw,
Long Bottom
Co-hostesses for the shower
were Mrs Wtlllam Nease, Mrs.
Jack Stanley, Mrs Guy
Sargent, and Mrs. Fmlaw
Games were played wtth
prtzes gomg to Mrs. Tom Wolfe
and Mrs Mark Tannehtll
Others attendmg were Mrs.
Donna Nelson, Mrs. Charles
Bartels,
Mrs
Robert
Sylvester, Mrs Wtlliam Anderson, Mrs. Richard Poultn,
Mrs Oon Nelson, Mtss Jane
Qutvey, Mrs. Rex Cummings,
Mrs. Ed Baer, Mrs. Artliur
Nease, Mrs. John~ ·Mderson,
Mrs George Moms, Krtstin
Anderson, Jtll Nease, and
Heather Fmlaw
Others presenting gilts to
Mrs Anderson were Jane
Lyons, Jenmfer Menchtm,
Mrs. Karen Goms, and Linda
Weaver. Ice cream, cake and
punch were served

'

Mrs Mary Martm of Amencan Legwn Chtld
Pomeroy recetved the en- We If a r e Found a t 1on
_
WEDNESDAY
dorsement of the Ohto destgnated for tube~ulOSIS and
ORGANIZATION of semor
Oepartemental Etght and cystic fibrosis research; total
ctltzens club for PortlandForty for Central Otvtston to date for the all-partners•
Racme area, Wednesday, l
Chapeau at the April pouvior project ts $55
p m at Church of Latter Day
over the weekend' at the Pick·
Members have contrtbuted
Samts on Racme-Portland
Fort Hayes Hotel m Colwnbus 1,285 hours m volunteer work.
Road 'Ail persons 55 or over
A member of Metgs County
Mrs Martm reported on
tnvtled Pearl Welker and
Salon 712, Mrs Martm was plans for the Chapeaux Passe
Margaret Amberger of Metgs
endorsed last week by the Club luncheon to he held on
County Counctl on Agmg staff
Metgs Salon at an anmversary July 23 at the Hobday Inn in
to be present Cookies and
dmner attended by several Tole~o At that time Mrs
coffee refreshments For
state offtcers Her en- llerkley will be mttiated mto
transportation call 992-7884 or
dorsement ts effective m 1974, the club Reporting for Mrs.
992-7886
or whenever Ohto" eligtble to Myrtle Walker, who was
WHITE ROSE Lodge, I 30
submt! a candtdate
unable to attend, Mrs Marlin
p m Wednesday at the
Presentirg the endorsement noted that 367 dues have been
1
Amertcan Legton hall m '
on Mrs Marlin 's behalf at the patd
Mtddleport
pouv10r was Mrs Pearl Knapp
On nurses scholarship, Mrs
MIDDLEPORT Ltterary
Others
from
the
Metgs
Salon
Welsh
reported a total of $412,
'
Club, 2 p m Wednesday at the
attendmg were Mrs Eun1e considerably below last year's
home of Mrs Nan Moore Mrs
Brmker, Mrs Juha Hysell, ftgure
James Euler will rev1ew
Mrs Catherme Welsh, Mrs - Followmg the ntualls!tc
Stuart's
"Remembered
Rhoda Hackett, chapeau
openmg, chapeaux passes were
Dawn", and Mrs J E Harley
Chapeau Day at the Jewtsh 1n t r o d u c e d , Lou,. e
w11l review ''Rough Riders'' by
Hospttal tn Denver wtll be held Kramhenbul, Anna Krueger,
Vtrgtl Carnngton Jones
Mrs. Stdney Drenner
May 19
The chlidren Ann McCudden, Mrs Aichholz,
MIDDLEPORT
The
hospttahzed there wtth cysltc Hazel Elltott, Mrs Helen
ST ALBANS, W Va - The weddmg of Mtss Demse Lynn ftbr osts and tuberculosiS wlll Ktlworth, Mrs
Amateur Garden Club of
Bcrnetce
Middleport wtil meet at 8 p m Shortt, daughter...nLlllJ:.-&lt;md Mrs Clifford Shortt of St Albans, entertam the Etght and Forty Chnstensen, and Mrs Martin
at the home of Mrs Eddte and Mr Sidney Lee Drenner, son of Mr and Mrs Avery L viSttors, and there wtll be a
A dutch supper on Saturday
Dr&lt;lllner, St Albams, was an event of Frtday, March 2 at 6 p m at tour of the Au- Force Academy evenmg opened the pouvtor
Burkett
POMEROY - Mtddleport the Hightown PresbyteriBn Church The Rev Russell Ward on the Sunday lollowmg Mrs Berkley enterta!fie&lt;i tif
Lions Club, at noon, Metgs Inn offtctale&lt;j at the weddmg
Chapeau Day One of the her smte durmg the evenmg
The bndegroom IS the grandson of Mr and Mrs. Lee pedtatnctans at the hospttaliS wtth an Easter parade of hats
All members are asked to
Drenner, Pomeroy, and the late Mr and Mrs Stdney A Pickens, Or Sanford Avner, son of Mr The theme, "Busy as a Bee for
attend
Mtddleport
POMEROY Chapter 80,
and Mrs
Max Avner, '73," was carried out m the
llest
man
for
the
brtdegroom
was
hts
brother,
Mr
Max
Royal Arch Masons, stated
Galhpohs
table decoraltons for a breakmeetmg 7 30 p m at Pomeroy Robert Drenner Matd of honor was Mtss Elotse Ftscher, St
Funds for the Denver fast Sunday mormng Favors
Masonic Hall Most Excellent Albans
hospttal mclude $744 06lor bed were headscarves wtth bee
BOth Mr and Mrs Orenner are graduates of St Albans Htgh endowment,
master degree to be conferred
$90 90 • f or decorations Hostesses were
SchooL He IS employed at Royal Oldsmobtle, Charleston, W 'Va
Refreshments
tuberculosis, and $39 60 for Mrs Glaub and Mrs Ethel
The couple restdes at Dunbar_ A reception honormg the cysttc ftbrosts, both research , Spiker of the Franklm County
THURSDAY
newlyweds was held at the home of the bndegroom's parents
$82lor summer camp, $14 each
AFTERNOON
CIRCLE,
for
band and phone, $80 for
Mtddleport Heath Umted
Everyone
btrlhday parttes , $121 13 for
Methodtsl Church, Thursday at
cards wtth dtmes, and $90 for
Welcome
the church Mrs M L French
.fl.
clothmg
wtll present the lesson enlttled
Other reports showed that
"The New Age of Fatlh :•
•
Chnst1an
RUTLAND - Eleclton of }layman, Abby Mart10, Patty adequate toys , have been
Hostesses, Mrs Emerson
Brethren Church
Jones, Mrs C M Hennesy, offi cers and a musical Mttchell, Chnshne Clonch, provtded at · the Cleveland
Mason . W. V•.
Mrs Crary Davis, and Mrs M program htghllgbted the Kathy Lee, Timmy Gore, Enca hosptlal for chtldren wtth
Monday mght meeting of the Grate, Shauna Tackett, Carla cysllc flbrosts and Betty
C Wtlson
APRIL 8 thru 14
Rutland PTA at the Rutland Smtih, Rhonda Southern, Crocker coupons are still bemg
Pl&gt;eaker. Eugene Phe
ROCK SPRING Grange, Elementary School
Debb1e Morrison, and Ronme collected for a spectal project
Thursday mght VISit to the Ohto )If• new offtcers are Mrs Starcher
The Etght and Forty has
Valley Grange
Rose Carson, president, Mrs
Presenting solo parts In contnbuted $139 to the
LAUREL Cltff Better Health Roberta Musser, secretary, "Lowly Petuma 10 an Oh10
Club, Thursday, 7 30 p m at arid- Mrs
Joan Fe tty, Patch" were Patty Mtlchell,
the home of Mrs Allen treasurer Mrs Rose Patterson Ttmmy Gore, Sally Hayman,
Etchmger
presented the report of the Kathy Lee, Enca Grate, Abby
MEIGS County Humane nommahng committee The Mart10, and Angela Kennedy
Soctety, 7 30 p m Thursday, attendance banner was won by Others parbctpatmg were
Mtddleporl Vtllage Hall Im- the second grade and the fourth Todd Eads, Jeffrey Wayland,
portant busmess to be trans· graders
presented
the Bnan
Wilcox ,
Oebbte
,~· ~- i
acted and· members urged to program
MorTlson, Ronme Starcher,
attend
Oancmg wtth wnbrellas to Carla Smtih, Shauna Tackett,
MIDDLEPORT
Chtld "Ram drops Keep Falling, .. Kelly Brown , and Chrtsh
FLOOR MODELS'
Conservation League ann.ual were Kellt Brown,-S~ lly Clonch
DEMONSTRATORS'
dmner, Seddon's Restaurant,
GOLDEN TOUCH &amp; SEW"
Mrs Vwlet Grate prestded a•
Parkersburg Mall, 7 p m
MACHINES
the meeting whtch opened wtlh
Thursday
Thursday
devottons by the Rev Ketth
POMEROY LODGE 164
MEETING FOR parents of
Wtse of the Rutland Church of
work-study students at Metgs F&amp;AM ThursdayJ 7 30 p m Chnst The pledge to the flag
TO
OFF REG PRICE .
Htgh School, 7 30 p m Thurs· Work m EA degl-ee "'for one and officers ' reports Wf;!re
WHEN NEW
day Mrs Erma Fmch, MISs candidate All master masons g1ven
..,
CARRYING
CASE
OR
CAB
INET
EXTRA
Stephame Ntemtec and Sam mvited Refreshments
The very best at an astaundmg pnce t Wrth exclus ve
ELEANOR CIRCLE, 7 30
Crow w11l discuss wage
buil t rn speed bast ng and exc lusrve fu.ug~· pus h button
agreements and msurance p m Thursday at the Heath
front drop rn bobbm
Marshall Ktmmel wtll dtscuss Untied Methodtst Church
SAVE ON NEW TOUCH &amp; SEW MACHINES!
FRIDAY
services of Bureau of
For example Model 756.
MARY SHRINE , Whtte
Rehabtlltat10n Mary Bacon,
Mrs
Judy
Crow
ts
a
new
Shrme
of
Jerusalem,
open
coordmator, will d1scuss socJal
securtty and welfare Baby mstailalton of officers Frtday, beautician m the Beverly's
CARRYING CASE OR CABINET EXTRA
I
Home
of
Beauty
located
at
the
Sitting service to be provided 8 p m at the !OOF hall m
FANTASTIC
SAVINGS
ON
Pomeroy Busmess meetmg at corner of Fourth and Palmer m
Refreshments
DISCONTINUED
TOUCH
&amp;
SEW
MACHINES!
REVIVAL, 7 30each evemng 4p m wtth all offtcers urged to Mtddleport
Mrs Crow, marrted to the
at Mt Monah Church of God, attend Potluck refreshments
Metgs Htgh School teacher and
through Aprtl 15, the Rev foilowmg the mstallat10n
SOUTHERN LOCAL Band mother of two chtldren,
Donald Combs, evangelist
Do Spring Sewing Now - •
XI GAMMA MU Thursday, Sprtng Concert Frtday, 8 p m spectahzes 10 long hatr, uphome of Mrs Roberta O'Brten at htgh school Otrector ts Dr sweeps, wtgs and wtglets She
Easter and Proms On The Way!
attended two beauty schools,
wtth Mary Moms co-hostess, Tom Phtlbps
the Fatrvtew Beauty Academy
at 7 45 p m
FRIDAY
at
Fa1rv1ew Park, Ohto, and
OHIO VALLEY Grange 2612
YOUNG Adult Class,
:::;'
Letart Falls, Thursday, 7 30 Bradford Church of Chrtsl, 7 30 the Curry County Beauty
,;:115 W Second 992 2284 Pomeroy
'
School m CloviS, N M She has
p m Members to brmg a pte p m Frtday at the church
........ ""
We 1'1ave a c redrl ptan desrgned to 111 your budge1
Rock Spnngs Grange mem·
PAI'\CAKE Supper, Frtday, \fOrked m the Hobday Beauty
oPpAOv!n
iiNGI·
O~
~~
We also have a hberal trade·m policy
hers VlSttors
begmmng 4 p m at Rutland Salon at Clovts, and Steppes,
REGULAR MEETING, Elementary School, sponsored Plaza Shoppe m Athens
• \Trademark of THE SlNGER COMPANY
Shade River Lodge 453 F&amp;AM by Rutland Ftre Department
Thursday, 7 30 p m Refresh- and Amoltary Public 10v1ted
ments All master masons
RETURN Jonathan Metgs
inVIted
Chapter, Daughters of the
PHI LA THEA
Soctely, American Revolution, 2 p m ,
Mtddleport Church of Chnst Frtday, home of Mrs Emerson
covered dish dinner, m~ Jones, Middleport Program
stallatton of officers Thursday, by Mrs Dale Dutton Roll call,
GROUND BEEF
6 p m. at church Brmg own an adm1red woman , Co~
PORK CHOPS
table servtce Mildred Hawley hostesses, Mrs Lawrence
SLICED BACON
Installing offtcer
STEW MEAT
Milhoan, Mrs Everett Hayes

PT' A officers named

McCLURE'S DAIRY ISLE
•

4th &amp; Locust

992-5248

Middleport,

P-

'

I

•

EASTER TOYS

2995 fO , 6000

••

.

(242)

Phone Us
Your Orderl
Slld&lt;t td lhMio n 01'... t Inti rt\111 111.....,. !"""nul I ,..;,.lo ....,,
8-CI' ... ~Io

Jo."' "' '"' ... • -n""

Aod Wh! o !Ooor

connie"

992-3502

(243)

-Sitff ler's Easter Shopping

LADIES' DRESS &amp; CASUAL
SPRING_AND EASTER

COATS

4

99

- Sttffler's Easter Shopping

PRICE~

J' •
•

00

PRICEb

$ 99

EACH

FROM

PAIR

FROM

Easter Shopptng GUid~

l'
I

REG. 11.39
VALUE!

09

$

PAIR

- Sttffler's Easter Shopptng

LADIES' NYLON DOUBLEKNIT

'

- Sttffler's Easter Shoppt'\9 Gutd e-

Ladies' Polyester Doubleknit

~IR $I

00

HANDBAGS

save

$299 $ ]00
TO

3 lb
5 lb
3 lb
3 lb
2 ib
2 lb

GROUND BEEF
CHUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
SPARE RIBS
STEW MEAT
ASSORTED LUNCH

- Shopping Gutde-

-Shopp1ng Guide-

Ladies' Easter
NYLON DRESS

GLOVES
Dress
La d tes
Easler
Gloves 1n regular ~nd lf.ot
wh1 te
length, tn nylon
Budget
.navy and be1ge
pnced

EACH

DRESSES

WE ACCEPT FEDE

GIRLS' UP TO DATE NEW
SPRING AND EASTER

COATS

3 to 6X and 7 to 1.4 '"{lew sprmg

styles and colors Budget pnced
perm pres s For spnn g and
Easter Stop your Stiffler Store
\and Save•

$299 $899
TO
\

l

EACH

Guid~

DOTIED SWISS

. TEE SHIRTS
Men s famous Frui t of the Loom
Bnefs and Tee: Shirts All s1ZeS
to~ qualtty budget pnced Shop
at your Fnendly Sttffler Stores

PKG.

,$278
OF 3

:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::•:•:;~::•:;:::::::,•:;:•:;::::::::::::::::::::,:,:,:,:,:,:,:,::,:,:,:,:::::::::::::::::::::::::::

Ladies' F'lncy
BIKINI STYLE

B

lPANTIES

PANTIES
lad1es' laney btklnl st yle
panttes Wh ite and fancy
colors. asst styl es Budget
pr1ced at your Rrtendly
St1ffler Stores You save
money at St iffl er 's

TO

$100

'Campus
F STYLE

LadleS Campu5
panties In asst colors and
wh1fe small medtvm and
farge . XL large tn cotton
1and rayon
tn brtef and
elasti c leg
Fc;~mous

G1rls' up to date Budget Priced new
Easter Coats New spnng fabncs
budget pnced at your Fnendly
Sttffler Stores

,,

- Stiffler's Easter Sh.epptng Gutde-

BUNNIES &amp; CHICKS

_00
1

619 24 tnch tall stuffed Easter Bunn1es and
Ch tcks Budget pnced at your Fnendly
St1 fli er Stores

$

,'

EACH

Gut de-

- Shopping Gutde-

"

'

~ - Stiffler's Easter Shopping Gutde- ,

Ladies' Phil Maid &amp; Movie Star

HALF SLIPS

.
'

Lad 1es Phtl Matd and Movte Star
lad 1es hal f sl1 ps 100 percent nylon no
cltng S1zes small medtu m la rg e
Well ta1lor.ed Smart lor Easter, budget
pn ced

1

EA

Easter Shopping Guide-

GIRLS PRETIY PERM PRESS

-.

45 INCH FLOCK DOT

F AMO US F R U I T OF LOOM /

¢

SPRING AND EASTER

4 lb SHOULDER ROAST
lib GROUND BEEF
4 lb ROUND STEAK
2 lb STEW MEAT
2-FRESH CHICKENS

- St1ffler's Easter Shopping

::::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::;:::::::

- Stiffler's Easter Shopping GuideSLICED PORK SHOULDER
BULK SAUSAGE
CHUCK ROAST
ROUND STEAK
GROUND BEEF

And Reddi Tied

''""~·~ - ,St_'_ffler's Easter Shopping Gutd ~

$ 99.TO$2299
EACH

Gtrls' new assorted spnng
purses, asst styles and
colors Smart for Easter
Shop at your F nendly
St1ffler Stores

Wide select1on smart new styles, asst
sprtng colors Budget pnced 1n vmyl ,
woven and reed Shop at St1ffler 1S and

$399TO $]99
pr

Ing Gutd ~

EACH

La d1es' t wo p1ece spring and summ er pant
su rt s budget pnced, smart styles 1n new
sprtng fabrt cs Yes, you save money at
SftHier s

HANDBAGS

Ladies' Woven Reed &amp; Vinyl

"e

$350

PANT SUITS

Girls' Assorted
NEW SPRING

- Sttffler's Easter Shopping Gutd~

Boys new Easter Polyester double kn1t
drE! ss sla cks ll are leg styles Ass t new
spnng colors Use our easy lay away plan

Reg $1 49 45 1nch new Flock Dot dotted
fabrtc s tn all new Spring colqrs
budget pn ced at your Fnendly St1lfl er
Stofes

LADIES' TWO PIECE
SPRING &amp; EASTER

Reg 59c lad1es Mycher seamless
nylon hose, new spnng shades S•zes
81!2 to 11 Stock up now at th1s low
pnce at Sftffler 's

DRESS SLACKS

SW ISS

- Stiffler 's Ea ster Shopping GUid ~

Ladies' Mycher Seamless

pr

Mens .a •n Hand and Reddie t ied men s
new spnng t tes for Easter W1de selectton
sma rt st yles new look fo r spr mg

TO

NYLON HOSE

Boys' Polyester Doubleknit
FLARE LEG Sl:YLE

NECK TIES

Reg $4 99 value Lad1es 100 percent nylon
doublekntt flare slacks, ladtes' new spnng
colors S1zes 8 to 1a Yes you save at
St1ffler' s

- Sttffler's Easter Shopptng Guid~

EACH

Boys' - Youths' Size

- Sttffler's Easter
ln - ~and

99
Easter Shopptng Guide-

GYM OXFORDS

Men's 4

$

Shopping

$199

Reg $3 99 lad1es' double knt t Polyester
Jama1ca shorts m new spnng co lors
Budget pnced stzes a to 18 Yes you
can save at Stiffler 's

FLARE SLACKS

''

PRICED
FROM

Reg' $2 99 men s youths and boys '
gym 'Oxfords For spnng American
made All sizes Black and white
low cuf Save now at thi s low low

Children's sprt ng an d Eas ter
footwear m new sty les for the Easter
parade new budge t pnces Shop
your Fnendly Stiffler Stor es

JAMAICA SHORTS

Gutd~

SHIRTS

Men s woven and knit dress and
sport shirts platn and fancy
pattern s Smart style s new
spnng co lor s Sizes small
med tum
large and Ex la rg e
Use our easy lay away plan

PAIR

FOOTWEAR

Reg $1 39 Famous N\ay Queen lad1es'
nylon stretch panty hose, petrte medt um ,
med1um tall and tall All new spnng
shades Stock up now at your Sttffler
Stores

FANCY DRESS

99

Children's Spring &amp; Easter

PANTY HOSE

1

Men's Woven &amp;

Budget pnced The new look
men s famous Sandy McGee
Footwear for spnng Ox fords
loafers and slip ons Yes you
at Sttftl er s Shop our shoe dept

FROM

~h&lt;J~

- Sttffler's Easter

UXt-ORDS - LOAFERS - SLIP-ONS
MEN'S SANDY McGEE

PRICED$

Men s new look flare and reg style 100
per cen t Polyester double knit dress slacks
m a w1de selecti on of colors and styles
Famous labels budget pr1ced

EACH

Easter Shopping

-Stiffler's Easter Shopping

Ladies' May Queen Brand
NYLON STRETCH

DRESS SLACKS

$3500

TO

FOOTWEAR

Lad1es Ht Brow and Charm Step
spnng and Easter fa sh 1on footwear for
Easter m the new look Yes , at Sttf
fler s you fmd h1gh fa sh1on at new
budget pnces S1zes 4th to 10

Men's Polyester Doubleknit
FLARE &amp; REGULAR STYLE

Smart styles budget pnced men s
Polyester doublekn1t sport coat s The new
look m ttme for Easter W1de selection
See these before you buy Use our easy lay
aw.1y plan

'
$
2800
TO
EACH

FOOTWEAR

Famous Bobbte Brooks and Russ
Togs, new spnng sportswear Smart
new spnng colors slacks blouses
shorts, coo rdmates Its Stiffler's for
sm art fashtons

- Stiff ler's Easter Shopp tng Gu1d~

SPORT COATS

Ladies' Hi Brow &amp; Charm Step
SPRING AND EASTER

SPORTSWEAR

'

Easter Shopping

DRESSES

Shopping

¢T0$

away

In Time for Easter Men's
POLYESTER DOUBLE KNIT

- Stiffler's

BOBBY BROOKS-RUSS TOGS
NEW SPRING&amp; EASTER

- ~littler's

79 3

Fancy decorat1ve Candy
F•lled Easter Novelt ies and
Ba ~ kets Bnght new budge1
pnced a1 your Fnendl y
Stiffler Store-s Buy on lay

Big Selection of Ladies'
SPRING AND EASTER

$3999
EACH

TO

Gutd~

Large selection of lad1es' spr1ng and
Easter dresses In Junrors, M1 sses and
Half S1zes All new spnng fabn cs and
sty les, budget priced at your Fnendly
S1t ffl er Stores

Smart st yles new Sprmg sty les All
new spnng fabncs Jun1ors. M 1sses
and Half Sizes Use our easy lay
away plan budget pn ced

-

SPREAD

GUid~

tiller's Easter Shoppi!Jg
..,~

DECORATED
CANDY
.
FILLED EASTER

Y, FRIDAY AND SA

''

GROUND BEEF
ROUND STEAK
SLICE;D BACON
PORK CHOPS
LARGE FRANKS

lib
3 lb
4 lb
2 lb
3

. F'ANCY

MIDDLEPORT

SHOP YOUR POMEROY OR MIDDLEPORT STIFFLER'S STORE THIS .,., ....

HAM SALAD

HAM SALAD
AND (241)
CHEESE

- STIFFLER'S EASTER SHOPPING GUIDE-

NOVELTIES &amp; BASKr-Tn
POMEROY

The Fabric Shop

~

'

Large selechon of Cuddly
Stuffed Ptush Easter Toys
In musical and color1vl toys
budget priced Lay away
yours now

$70

New beautician
is specialist

POMEROY
MIDDLEPORT

ASSORTMENT CUDDLY, STUFFED PLI,JSH

- YOUTH RALLY

$30

VISITATION MADE
Mrs L D. Hartinger and
Mrs T..eo Searls of Middleport
were m Ptketon Monday to call
at tbe Howe Funeral Home and
on the famtly of the late Mrs
Anna Margaret Oufheld,
formerly of M1ddleport Mrs.
Oulfleld, 63, dted Saturday at
the Ptke County HospitaL
CONCERT SET
RACINE - The Southern
Local School band wtll present
.a sprmg concert Fnday at 8
p m at the htgh school In
Racme under the dtrection of
Or Tom Phdhps

'

TIFFLER'S EASTER SHOPPING GUIDE-

Every Touch &amp; Sew
Machine on Sale

'

Drinks &amp; Dairy. Desserts &amp;
Prompt Service

Mary Martin wins
division endorsement

:?

•

'Cannon Royal Family
Cameo Rose No-Iron

SHEETS

Famous Ca nnon Royal Famtly
pattern no tron sheets A1 a new low
low pn ce at your Shiller Stor es
F1rst qual tty

72xl04 or
TWIN FITTED
' Bixl04 or
' FULL FITTED
MATCHING
PILLOW CASES

- Sttffler's Easter Shopping Guide-

STURDY TUBULAR ALUMINUM
GREEN AND WHITE

PATIO CHAIRS
Sturdy tubular alummum
l1ght wetght green and white
Paho Cha1rs and matchmg
Patio Lounger Budget priced
Buy on lay awav

$2.99

EACH

MATCHING_P_ATIO LOUNGE .......-:. EACH $

I

i

~~ .

�•

·8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April-11, 1973

Summertime adds drama to :'l' ' i' :;:'[' ' '::;;;;,,~,;::;;~·;;:;:;:;~~;z~,, , , , l Seed money for
~~
Tu;::;=~~.:
~!:1~nt
Nix~~.
v~~::r
t:i~:U:~
co:~~~:
g:~r;;m:t
·~
i
Hong
Kong
asked
travelers,. fun dimensions
COLUMBUS - Summertime
and good weather annually add
the dimension of drama to the

travel

picture.

From

a

recreation facilities ptobably numerous summer stock
lead~ the• way in number of presentations across the state.
attractions presented in the
"Texas," a spectacle as big
"great outdoors." The 1972 as the state, is staged annually

~~ a rural water and sewer grant program,
~;! givlng him his second major victory in a week
~!l in his fight with Congress over federal
~~;; spendlng priorities .
?:l
This was the first test of House support
;:;: for Nixon's drive to hold spendlng at $250
billion for the "c urrent year. The Senate last
:::: Tuesday fell short by four votes ln a move to
:~ overturn Nixon's veto of a $2.6 billion
;:;; vocational rehabilitation program which h ~
~'! said violated his spendlng ceiling .
::?
Nixon late last year ordered the water
~!;· and sewer grant program terminated as of
;::~ Jan. I, claiming there were other rural aid
;;;: programs that could he used for the same

i

Rationary.
The new C&lt;&gt;ngress passed a bill directing ·
N~\!LC!!ntlnue the program, ant!' this was
the measure he vetoed last Thursday,
claiming he was . not subject to such a
congressional order.
In a last-minute plea to !fouse members
to ovemde the veto, Speaker Carl Albert
said : "We are dealing with the authority of
the Congress or the United States to make the
laws of the land. The merits or the program
are too great to he caught up in the
destruction caused by a partisan power
struggle.

:~
~}

!l:
!f:!

!;!;

r
;:;:

beginning in the southern season saw six outdoor drama&amp;.. _!Jl Canyon, Texas underneath
Appalachian mountains in operating at special locati~ils the stars. Santa Fe, N. M. has a
;:~
western North Carolina, the in Harrodsburg, Berea, full-scale outdoor opera an an
;:;:
outdoor drama has exploded Pineville,
Bardstown, arena designed especially to
!!!!
lnto a ,fidespread means of Prestonburg and Whitesburg . meet the exacting needs of
::::
presenting entertainment with Among the dreams were "The such performances while
!;!:
Legend of Daniel Boone," retainin g
the
colorful
historic facts and fancies.
'!'!
These provide travel in~ ~' Wijderness Road " ' 'Job" surroundings of the desert.
::;:
•
•
centive from the frozen 'The Stephen Foster Story,"
Kodiak, Alaska, in a .com!!!!
.
~
reaches of Kodiak, Alaska to " Legend of Jenney Wiley, " and munity effort to recover ~rom'a I::::::;;:; :;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;::::::~:i:::;:;: ::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::~-::::::;!;!:!;!:!:!~::::::::::!:!:::i:!~!::::8::::~::::::;:;:;:;:~:=:::::::~:~~=:;;;::::::::::·
the sundrenched prairies of the ·"Little Shepherd of Kingdom devastating earthquake in
1964, carne up with "Cry of the
Texas panhandle and to the Come."
Ohio has its own outdoor Wild Ram ". which has become
ancient ruins of the pyramids
Last rites held
of central Mexico. They stretch drama in the Dover-New a regular outdoor attraction .
from the historic Williamsburg Philadelphia area where · each summer. " Unto These for Mrs. McElroy
area to the Polynesian Culture " Trwnpet in the Land " has Hills" at Cherokee, N.C. is one
rejected by the Senate last
COLUMBUS
( UP!)
Funeral services for Mrs.
been a regular affair the past of the earlier outdoor dramas
.
Center of HawaU.
month said " public interest
The state of Kentucky with few summers. A new drama promoted . From Virginia , Martha McElroy were held at 2 Former Cleveland City Council will come first" in his role as
modern rustic appearing state center is being readied in the dramatic sounds may be heard p. m. Monday at the United President Edmund J . Turk, PUCO chainnan.
pledging to work for "the twin
lodges
and
attendant Chillicothe area and there are on a !)ummer evening Methodist Church in Chester
"Consume r s and
rate
eminating from WiUiamsburg, with the Rev. Robert -Card goals of reasonable rates and
good service" was sworn in payers, as wen as utilities, will
" The Common Glory"; from officiating.
rl)ceive fair and expeditious
Attending fr om out of town Tuesday as chairman or the
Big Stone G.ap, "Trail of the
service
from the commission
were Mr. and Mrs . Roy Public Utilities Commission of
Lonesome
Pine"
and
"The
The Pomeroy Livewires Radford.
I
with the twin (!ol!IS of
Long Way Home" from McElroy t Donny, Usa and Ohio.
elected these officers at their
Turk, appointed th a six-year reasonable rates and good
The Bashan Bunch 4-H Club Redford, as well as many Janelle, Mr . and Mrs. Ray
March 24 meeting, president,
service," Turk said.
McElroy, Mr . and Mrs. term replacing Henry W.
others.
Mary Sue Durst ; vice met at the home of Mary Rose
In addition, many "sound Cha rles McElroy and son, Mr. Eckhart whose nomination was
president, Paula Eichinger; on April3 with 10 members and,
and Mrs. Jim McElroy, Jerry
secretary , Karen Coleman; two aqvisors, Mary Rose and and light" spectacles, s,ummer
theatre offerings and Shakes- McElroy, Mr . and Mrs. Roger
treasurer, Csthy Blaettnar ; Louise Pitzer, prese nt.
peare or music festivals Sti!watt, all of Morrow; Mrs.
recreation leader, Vanessa
Project books and money
RAVENA - John Lemul Friday at 3 p. m. at Ewing
provide their altradions in city Mary DeGroat of Fountain,
Folmer and news reporter, making
J:lrojects
were
Buchanan, Sr., 74, 620 W. Chapel with burial in Garden
Colo; Mr. and Mrs. Dayton
Kim Sebo held at the home of discussed. Kihl Bickers served parks as well as rustic outdoor
Spruce Street, Ravenna, died Cemetery at Shade. Friends
Alice Wamsley , advisor. There r-efres hments. The next amphitheaters throughout the Spencer, Buffalo, W.Va.; Mr. here Tuesday. Mr. Buchanan may call at Ewlng's Thursday
. land. If drama, music or plain and Mrs. Henry McDole of
were six members present.
meeting will be April 17 at the
was a former resident of Meigs evening. The body is now at
fun lures yoU to travel, your Toledo; Mr. allfl Mrs. John
Other items, of business home of Mary Rose. - BarColll!ty and a retired miner. He Wood · Funeral Home in
Rasp, Mrs. Gary Zimmerman
tr
avel
agent
can
help
you
pian
discussed during the meeting bara Coa tes.
was preceded in death by his Ravenna .
the tnos t economic but com~ of Fostoria, and Mrs. Milton
,included setting the· dales for
father , William and his wife,
prehensive trip, tailored to - Efaw of Athens. Pallbearers
· meetings for every two weeks
On March 28 the newly
Clarice Sinclair ' Buchanan in
were her grandsons., Elson,
on Saturdays and dues of 15 organized Five Point Bucks your liking.
1967.
If some other type of travel is Waidand Dayton Spencer, Ray
cents a meeting are to be paid . met at the home of Nicklois
He is survived by three sons, ,
WRITE, DON'T CALL
and Charles McElroy and
The projects that will be taken Leonard, advisor, with nine more fitted to your schedule or
Paul of Warren, Ohio; John,
Applicants for employment
Roger Stewart.
by the members were also members aild three visitors desire, perhaps one of the
Jr., Alliance, and Marvin of at the Middleport pool this
Newspaper Tours Ltd. package
discussed. Refreshments were present.
Ravenna;"one daughter, Mrs. summer are to send or leave
trips will be the answer.
served by June Ann Wamsley.
Election of club officers,
Ernest (Betty Jillle) Theiss, their written letters of ap-.
Details
on
these
are
available
The next meeting will be selection of projec ts, and
Oklahoma City, Okla .; one plication at Middleport Village
· April 14 at Alice Wamsley's. A naming of the . club were at this newspaper or· at the
brother, Ross, Altoona, Pa., Hall ' for consideration. Ap~
Our ?teiyhbor has been
hike is planned, weather discussed. Mr. Leonard led Richard Lewis Travel Service,
takino a thirst-qicl course
and 12 grandchildren.
plications cannot be accepted
Lazarus, Columbus, 0. 43215.
Jo.r yea-rs.
permitting. ~ Kim Sebo.
recreation and refreshments
Funeral se rvices will be held verbally, ~ayor John Zerkle
· '"said.
were served by Mrs. Leonard.
The Five Point Star Stitchers
The next meeting will be
J . L. officers were installed by April 25 at the Leonard home
Lola Walker at the April 2 when project books will be
MASON - The Wahama Van Meter, Lynn Kearns, Johnson ..
meeting with II members and passed out. - Nickey Leonard.
PARENTS VISITED
advisors, Pat · Holter, Eva
High School junior and senior Candy Jeffers.
Trombones - Holly Layne,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gilmore of
bands, direc ted by Gerald E.
Eb Alto Clarinets - Linda Brenda
Cooke,
Sharon Fox Lake, Ill. were weekend
Walker, Ann Radford, and
Simmons and Charles T. Roush, Jayne Ha-rt.
Froendt, Kim -Fields, Bryon guests of their parents; Mr. and
Clarice Krautter attending .
'
SERVICE
TONIGHT
Yeago, will be presented in
Bb Bass Clarinets - Teresa J ohnson, Patti Athey, Jennifer Mrs. Elza Gilmore and M~. and
Discussed was the club's Civic
Community
.
L
enten
services
concert at 7:30 tonight at the Purkey, Mary Jones, Dianna Oldaker. '
1 •.
Project, Boating ·and Water
Mrs .. Gardner Wehrung. They
will
be
held
this
evening
at
8
high
school
auditorium.
Senior
Johnson.
Baritones
Chuck
Adam~.
Safety, June 9, a ceramic cla_ss
came especially to see the
Bb Contra Bass .- Tracy Patty Clark, Dwayne Johnson. .infapl son of Mr. and Mrs. ·
starting April 21, and the p.m . at the Sacred Heart band personnel are :
possibility of registering guests Church.
.. Flutes - Lou Ellen Roush, Harris.
Basses - Lawrence Weaver, Wayne Kline, sister and
Linda VanMatre , Vickie · Oboe- Debbie Fields, J oyce Robert Jerrell.
at the Plan-0-Rama.
br other-in-law
of
Mrs.
Percussion - John Burris, Gilmore.
Spradling, Cindy Workman, Riley. ·
Jan Holter and Lola Walker
DRAMA PLANNED
Robin ' Stewart,
Mandy
Bassoon - Joyce Goodhite, Mike Ohlinger , Steve Carpresented slides on good
SYRACUSE
An
Easter
Howard, Beverly Roush.
· Terri Blackhurst.
penter, Mike
Foreman ,
manners, and refreshments
.Eb Sop . Clarinet- Sue Fox.
French Horns ~ Jeanette Phillipe Jerrell.
were served by Pat and. Jan drama; "Thou Art the Christ,"
Poor Halt!
will be presented at the
Bb Sop. Clarinets _ Dianna Oldaker, Cheryl Lewis, Pam
Alto Saxophone - Chris
Holter.
One of the most densely
Petry.
HQffman, Teresa McDermitt, populated nations in the
The next meeting will be Syracuse Presbyterian Church Harris, Vivian Woodrum
•
Trumpets - KentSayre t Rex Lesa Scott, Denise Werry; Americas, Haiti is also the
May 7_at the home of Lola Sunday at 7:30p.m. The cast is Diane Finnicum, Carolyn
Walker. The date for the club's to meet at the chur ch at 5:30 · Roush, Dianna Evans, Gayla Howard , Ca rol Circle, Judy tenor saxophone - Barbara poorest - a per -capita income of less than $70 a year
shopping trip to Columbus will p.m., when dinner will he Roush, Cher~l H.uber, Mindy . Leivjng, Cheryl Weaver, Mary Clark; baritone saxophone ~ condemns most of the popu·
Raynes, . Kirri Kn'ight, Ter;-esa - !&lt;"'.ox,. Keith Gibbs , Ge~anila Frances Wriston,
be decide!). - &amp;tephanie served to Cast members.
iation to lives of poverty .

Turk has twin goals set

Meigs 4-H Club News

John Buchanan died. Tuesdl_ly ·

Wahainil bands giving spring '?l?ncert tonight ·_

CHILUCOTHE - Delegates
to the 1973 Convention or the
Episcopal Church in the
Diocese of Southern Ohio,
meeting May 4 and 5 at the Neil
House in C&lt;&gt;lurnbus, will be
asked to make special pledges
to provide seed money for the
Kwai Chung Social Service
Center in Kwai Chung, a new
town of approximately 500,000
persons in the Diocese of Hong
Kong.
Meeting in Chillicothe
Monday
evening
with
delegates from 10 southeastern
apd central Ohio communities,
the Rt. Rev. John McGill
Krwnm, bishop of the dh&gt;cese.
expressed hope that funds can
be raised to provide fur·
nishings and staff. Estimated
need for the ·first year of
operations is $16,000.
The bishop explained that the
social services center will be
used for a variety of programs
to m{!et the educational, social,

Supper enjoyed
by church group
A potluck suppi,r with vocal
and instr-umental musi c
featured the monthly meeting
or the United Faith Church
located on the Route 7
Pomeroy by Pass. The mee ti ng
was held Thursday night at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. George
Coleman, Jr.
The three vacant offices
Were fl.lled b y Mrs . Rosemary
Samse I , secretarr·treasurer;
Kathy McDaniel, reporter and
Mrs. Dorothy Coleman, junior
class teacher.
Attending were the Rev._and
Mrs. Robert Smith, Mr. and

~
c

0

recreational and spiritual
needs or the people in the area.
The Diocese of Southern Ohio
is presently engaged in a
Mutual Responsibility and
Interdependence Relationship
with the Diocese or Hong Kong.
Delegates will also he asked
to reaffirm the goals and objectives of the Institutional
Racism project, first approved
by the 1972 Diocesan Con·

-

en

•0

vention .
A three-part resolution will
he submitted to delegates from
the 80 parishes and missions in
the diocese.
It calls for continuation of the
implementatiOn process, under

Cl

c

·~

u

way since last year's Convention; new research i.Qto
racism in the dioce~e and

0

•••• ....0

:z:

..0 -C'G

continuation of $100,000 in
funding to provide em·
powerment of minorities
within the di&lt;icese.

There are r nine resolutions

en
c

which, if approved by this
•
di ocese; will be forwarded to
the National Convention of fhe
Episcopal Church for its
consideration. That body
meets in Loui~ville, Kentucky
in late September.
Among other resolutions to
come before the Convention
are proposals to call for formation of a committee withln
the diocese to deal with
theological and moral issues in
today's . society ' to move the
date of the Diocesan Con,
vention from May to November
or each year' to express op· '
position to the proposed state
lottery and ·to urge members of
the Episcopal Church to seek
pastoral counseling and guid·
ance before seeking an

u

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Ill

....

abortion .

Mark V Super Market MIDDLEPORT

•)Hir

'. '

·Correction!
SCOT LAD

ICE
MILK

. lb.

•-

'

FRANKFURTERS

'

99e

lb.

Florida Fresh Crisp

CELERY

Mrs.

_qt
•
Jar

Smucker's Pickles

bCJ

SWEET

bch.

Stokely

Whole Kernel

303

CORN-~~~~--~~~~-

Yellow

cans

16 oz. jar

ONIONS .

Carnation

2

Coffee-mate-· .

lb.

69e

Florida Juicy
'

ORANGES

;

.Northern Facial .

200

TISSUES . .~~~~-

$

Nestle's

5th. and PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities

, ~:00 .to. 7:00
· Saturday 9 to 9

CHIPS.~.~~ .....

0

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CLOSED SUNDAYS.

12 oz.

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DAIRY FEATURES

CHOC. CHIPS ...p..kg......

A. ·

Meadow Gold
ICE Mll~. BARS

SPEtJAL OFFER!

1·
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D ...:..........·.~··· .

.

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&gt;-(.)
_.

Prices Effective April 11·18

3 lb;

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· ·_ · · - · · King

cz::

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••
••
••

-· ~ · (.) _

We Glad~ Accept Fed. Food Stamps

.
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can
Shortenmg ... ,-.-;-;...=.:.

MIRACLE WHIP
With 110 or more

Tucke~s

N

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KRAFT SALAD DRESSING

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..........

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69~
lb.

a.n•

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SLICED BACON

or,
More

•

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FROZEN FOODS SECTION TUES. AD
ITEM SHOULD RE~D:

WINDSOR

3 lb pkg.

Q

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BOILING BEEF

GROUND BEEF

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lb.

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This Week's Best Bee{Buy!

Cit

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-

Delegates attending the
Chillicothe
pre-Convention
Mrs .. Coleman, Carol, Bruce.
· . were
from
Chillicothe,
h
alid Mark, Mrs. Samsel, Mr.
and Mrs. !:.eo Hill, Sharon and Marietta, London, Portsmout ,
Brian, Mrs. Melvin Drake and Westerville, Athens, Xenia,
Sharon, and Mr. and Mrs. Luke Ironton,
Gallipolis
and
McDaniel.
Columbus.

-

· USDA Choice Lean

·~

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...
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IU

6.

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Matched G
Goblet, Tumbler
and Juice

POPSICLES
FUDGESICLES
1~ PACK 59~ ­
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·.....
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�•

·8- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April-11, 1973

Summertime adds drama to :'l' ' i' :;:'[' ' '::;;;;,,~,;::;;~·;;:;:;:;~~;z~,, , , , l Seed money for
~~
Tu;::;=~~.:
~!:1~nt
Nix~~.
v~~::r
t:i~:U:~
co:~~~:
g:~r;;m:t
·~
i
Hong
Kong
asked
travelers,. fun dimensions
COLUMBUS - Summertime
and good weather annually add
the dimension of drama to the

travel

picture.

From

a

recreation facilities ptobably numerous summer stock
lead~ the• way in number of presentations across the state.
attractions presented in the
"Texas," a spectacle as big
"great outdoors." The 1972 as the state, is staged annually

~~ a rural water and sewer grant program,
~;! givlng him his second major victory in a week
~!l in his fight with Congress over federal
~~;; spendlng priorities .
?:l
This was the first test of House support
;:;: for Nixon's drive to hold spendlng at $250
billion for the "c urrent year. The Senate last
:::: Tuesday fell short by four votes ln a move to
:~ overturn Nixon's veto of a $2.6 billion
;:;; vocational rehabilitation program which h ~
~'! said violated his spendlng ceiling .
::?
Nixon late last year ordered the water
~!;· and sewer grant program terminated as of
;::~ Jan. I, claiming there were other rural aid
;;;: programs that could he used for the same

i

Rationary.
The new C&lt;&gt;ngress passed a bill directing ·
N~\!LC!!ntlnue the program, ant!' this was
the measure he vetoed last Thursday,
claiming he was . not subject to such a
congressional order.
In a last-minute plea to !fouse members
to ovemde the veto, Speaker Carl Albert
said : "We are dealing with the authority of
the Congress or the United States to make the
laws of the land. The merits or the program
are too great to he caught up in the
destruction caused by a partisan power
struggle.

:~
~}

!l:
!f:!

!;!;

r
;:;:

beginning in the southern season saw six outdoor drama&amp;.. _!Jl Canyon, Texas underneath
Appalachian mountains in operating at special locati~ils the stars. Santa Fe, N. M. has a
;:~
western North Carolina, the in Harrodsburg, Berea, full-scale outdoor opera an an
;:;:
outdoor drama has exploded Pineville,
Bardstown, arena designed especially to
!!!!
lnto a ,fidespread means of Prestonburg and Whitesburg . meet the exacting needs of
::::
presenting entertainment with Among the dreams were "The such performances while
!;!:
Legend of Daniel Boone," retainin g
the
colorful
historic facts and fancies.
'!'!
These provide travel in~ ~' Wijderness Road " ' 'Job" surroundings of the desert.
::;:
•
•
centive from the frozen 'The Stephen Foster Story,"
Kodiak, Alaska, in a .com!!!!
.
~
reaches of Kodiak, Alaska to " Legend of Jenney Wiley, " and munity effort to recover ~rom'a I::::::;;:; :;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::;:;::::::~:i:::;:;: ::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::~-::::::;!;!:!;!:!:!~::::::::::!:!:::i:!~!::::8::::~::::::;:;:;:;:~:=:::::::~:~~=:;;;::::::::::·
the sundrenched prairies of the ·"Little Shepherd of Kingdom devastating earthquake in
1964, carne up with "Cry of the
Texas panhandle and to the Come."
Ohio has its own outdoor Wild Ram ". which has become
ancient ruins of the pyramids
Last rites held
of central Mexico. They stretch drama in the Dover-New a regular outdoor attraction .
from the historic Williamsburg Philadelphia area where · each summer. " Unto These for Mrs. McElroy
area to the Polynesian Culture " Trwnpet in the Land " has Hills" at Cherokee, N.C. is one
rejected by the Senate last
COLUMBUS
( UP!)
Funeral services for Mrs.
been a regular affair the past of the earlier outdoor dramas
.
Center of HawaU.
month said " public interest
The state of Kentucky with few summers. A new drama promoted . From Virginia , Martha McElroy were held at 2 Former Cleveland City Council will come first" in his role as
modern rustic appearing state center is being readied in the dramatic sounds may be heard p. m. Monday at the United President Edmund J . Turk, PUCO chainnan.
pledging to work for "the twin
lodges
and
attendant Chillicothe area and there are on a !)ummer evening Methodist Church in Chester
"Consume r s and
rate
eminating from WiUiamsburg, with the Rev. Robert -Card goals of reasonable rates and
good service" was sworn in payers, as wen as utilities, will
" The Common Glory"; from officiating.
rl)ceive fair and expeditious
Attending fr om out of town Tuesday as chairman or the
Big Stone G.ap, "Trail of the
service
from the commission
were Mr. and Mrs . Roy Public Utilities Commission of
Lonesome
Pine"
and
"The
The Pomeroy Livewires Radford.
I
with the twin (!ol!IS of
Long Way Home" from McElroy t Donny, Usa and Ohio.
elected these officers at their
Turk, appointed th a six-year reasonable rates and good
The Bashan Bunch 4-H Club Redford, as well as many Janelle, Mr . and Mrs. Ray
March 24 meeting, president,
service," Turk said.
McElroy, Mr . and Mrs. term replacing Henry W.
others.
Mary Sue Durst ; vice met at the home of Mary Rose
In addition, many "sound Cha rles McElroy and son, Mr. Eckhart whose nomination was
president, Paula Eichinger; on April3 with 10 members and,
and Mrs. Jim McElroy, Jerry
secretary , Karen Coleman; two aqvisors, Mary Rose and and light" spectacles, s,ummer
theatre offerings and Shakes- McElroy, Mr . and Mrs. Roger
treasurer, Csthy Blaettnar ; Louise Pitzer, prese nt.
peare or music festivals Sti!watt, all of Morrow; Mrs.
recreation leader, Vanessa
Project books and money
RAVENA - John Lemul Friday at 3 p. m. at Ewing
provide their altradions in city Mary DeGroat of Fountain,
Folmer and news reporter, making
J:lrojects
were
Buchanan, Sr., 74, 620 W. Chapel with burial in Garden
Colo; Mr. and Mrs. Dayton
Kim Sebo held at the home of discussed. Kihl Bickers served parks as well as rustic outdoor
Spruce Street, Ravenna, died Cemetery at Shade. Friends
Alice Wamsley , advisor. There r-efres hments. The next amphitheaters throughout the Spencer, Buffalo, W.Va.; Mr. here Tuesday. Mr. Buchanan may call at Ewlng's Thursday
. land. If drama, music or plain and Mrs. Henry McDole of
were six members present.
meeting will be April 17 at the
was a former resident of Meigs evening. The body is now at
fun lures yoU to travel, your Toledo; Mr. allfl Mrs. John
Other items, of business home of Mary Rose. - BarColll!ty and a retired miner. He Wood · Funeral Home in
Rasp, Mrs. Gary Zimmerman
tr
avel
agent
can
help
you
pian
discussed during the meeting bara Coa tes.
was preceded in death by his Ravenna .
the tnos t economic but com~ of Fostoria, and Mrs. Milton
,included setting the· dales for
father , William and his wife,
prehensive trip, tailored to - Efaw of Athens. Pallbearers
· meetings for every two weeks
On March 28 the newly
Clarice Sinclair ' Buchanan in
were her grandsons., Elson,
on Saturdays and dues of 15 organized Five Point Bucks your liking.
1967.
If some other type of travel is Waidand Dayton Spencer, Ray
cents a meeting are to be paid . met at the home of Nicklois
He is survived by three sons, ,
WRITE, DON'T CALL
and Charles McElroy and
The projects that will be taken Leonard, advisor, with nine more fitted to your schedule or
Paul of Warren, Ohio; John,
Applicants for employment
Roger Stewart.
by the members were also members aild three visitors desire, perhaps one of the
Jr., Alliance, and Marvin of at the Middleport pool this
Newspaper Tours Ltd. package
discussed. Refreshments were present.
Ravenna;"one daughter, Mrs. summer are to send or leave
trips will be the answer.
served by June Ann Wamsley.
Election of club officers,
Ernest (Betty Jillle) Theiss, their written letters of ap-.
Details
on
these
are
available
The next meeting will be selection of projec ts, and
Oklahoma City, Okla .; one plication at Middleport Village
· April 14 at Alice Wamsley's. A naming of the . club were at this newspaper or· at the
brother, Ross, Altoona, Pa., Hall ' for consideration. Ap~
Our ?teiyhbor has been
hike is planned, weather discussed. Mr. Leonard led Richard Lewis Travel Service,
takino a thirst-qicl course
and 12 grandchildren.
plications cannot be accepted
Lazarus, Columbus, 0. 43215.
Jo.r yea-rs.
permitting. ~ Kim Sebo.
recreation and refreshments
Funeral se rvices will be held verbally, ~ayor John Zerkle
· '"said.
were served by Mrs. Leonard.
The Five Point Star Stitchers
The next meeting will be
J . L. officers were installed by April 25 at the Leonard home
Lola Walker at the April 2 when project books will be
MASON - The Wahama Van Meter, Lynn Kearns, Johnson ..
meeting with II members and passed out. - Nickey Leonard.
PARENTS VISITED
advisors, Pat · Holter, Eva
High School junior and senior Candy Jeffers.
Trombones - Holly Layne,
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Gilmore of
bands, direc ted by Gerald E.
Eb Alto Clarinets - Linda Brenda
Cooke,
Sharon Fox Lake, Ill. were weekend
Walker, Ann Radford, and
Simmons and Charles T. Roush, Jayne Ha-rt.
Froendt, Kim -Fields, Bryon guests of their parents; Mr. and
Clarice Krautter attending .
'
SERVICE
TONIGHT
Yeago, will be presented in
Bb Bass Clarinets - Teresa J ohnson, Patti Athey, Jennifer Mrs. Elza Gilmore and M~. and
Discussed was the club's Civic
Community
.
L
enten
services
concert at 7:30 tonight at the Purkey, Mary Jones, Dianna Oldaker. '
1 •.
Project, Boating ·and Water
Mrs .. Gardner Wehrung. They
will
be
held
this
evening
at
8
high
school
auditorium.
Senior
Johnson.
Baritones
Chuck
Adam~.
Safety, June 9, a ceramic cla_ss
came especially to see the
Bb Contra Bass .- Tracy Patty Clark, Dwayne Johnson. .infapl son of Mr. and Mrs. ·
starting April 21, and the p.m . at the Sacred Heart band personnel are :
possibility of registering guests Church.
.. Flutes - Lou Ellen Roush, Harris.
Basses - Lawrence Weaver, Wayne Kline, sister and
Linda VanMatre , Vickie · Oboe- Debbie Fields, J oyce Robert Jerrell.
at the Plan-0-Rama.
br other-in-law
of
Mrs.
Percussion - John Burris, Gilmore.
Spradling, Cindy Workman, Riley. ·
Jan Holter and Lola Walker
DRAMA PLANNED
Robin ' Stewart,
Mandy
Bassoon - Joyce Goodhite, Mike Ohlinger , Steve Carpresented slides on good
SYRACUSE
An
Easter
Howard, Beverly Roush.
· Terri Blackhurst.
penter, Mike
Foreman ,
manners, and refreshments
.Eb Sop . Clarinet- Sue Fox.
French Horns ~ Jeanette Phillipe Jerrell.
were served by Pat and. Jan drama; "Thou Art the Christ,"
Poor Halt!
will be presented at the
Bb Sop. Clarinets _ Dianna Oldaker, Cheryl Lewis, Pam
Alto Saxophone - Chris
Holter.
One of the most densely
Petry.
HQffman, Teresa McDermitt, populated nations in the
The next meeting will be Syracuse Presbyterian Church Harris, Vivian Woodrum
•
Trumpets - KentSayre t Rex Lesa Scott, Denise Werry; Americas, Haiti is also the
May 7_at the home of Lola Sunday at 7:30p.m. The cast is Diane Finnicum, Carolyn
Walker. The date for the club's to meet at the chur ch at 5:30 · Roush, Dianna Evans, Gayla Howard , Ca rol Circle, Judy tenor saxophone - Barbara poorest - a per -capita income of less than $70 a year
shopping trip to Columbus will p.m., when dinner will he Roush, Cher~l H.uber, Mindy . Leivjng, Cheryl Weaver, Mary Clark; baritone saxophone ~ condemns most of the popu·
Raynes, . Kirri Kn'ight, Ter;-esa - !&lt;"'.ox,. Keith Gibbs , Ge~anila Frances Wriston,
be decide!). - &amp;tephanie served to Cast members.
iation to lives of poverty .

Turk has twin goals set

Meigs 4-H Club News

John Buchanan died. Tuesdl_ly ·

Wahainil bands giving spring '?l?ncert tonight ·_

CHILUCOTHE - Delegates
to the 1973 Convention or the
Episcopal Church in the
Diocese of Southern Ohio,
meeting May 4 and 5 at the Neil
House in C&lt;&gt;lurnbus, will be
asked to make special pledges
to provide seed money for the
Kwai Chung Social Service
Center in Kwai Chung, a new
town of approximately 500,000
persons in the Diocese of Hong
Kong.
Meeting in Chillicothe
Monday
evening
with
delegates from 10 southeastern
apd central Ohio communities,
the Rt. Rev. John McGill
Krwnm, bishop of the dh&gt;cese.
expressed hope that funds can
be raised to provide fur·
nishings and staff. Estimated
need for the ·first year of
operations is $16,000.
The bishop explained that the
social services center will be
used for a variety of programs
to m{!et the educational, social,

Supper enjoyed
by church group
A potluck suppi,r with vocal
and instr-umental musi c
featured the monthly meeting
or the United Faith Church
located on the Route 7
Pomeroy by Pass. The mee ti ng
was held Thursday night at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. George
Coleman, Jr.
The three vacant offices
Were fl.lled b y Mrs . Rosemary
Samse I , secretarr·treasurer;
Kathy McDaniel, reporter and
Mrs. Dorothy Coleman, junior
class teacher.
Attending were the Rev._and
Mrs. Robert Smith, Mr. and

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recreational and spiritual
needs or the people in the area.
The Diocese of Southern Ohio
is presently engaged in a
Mutual Responsibility and
Interdependence Relationship
with the Diocese or Hong Kong.
Delegates will also he asked
to reaffirm the goals and objectives of the Institutional
Racism project, first approved
by the 1972 Diocesan Con·

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vention .
A three-part resolution will
he submitted to delegates from
the 80 parishes and missions in
the diocese.
It calls for continuation of the
implementatiOn process, under

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way since last year's Convention; new research i.Qto
racism in the dioce~e and

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continuation of $100,000 in
funding to provide em·
powerment of minorities
within the di&lt;icese.

There are r nine resolutions

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which, if approved by this
•
di ocese; will be forwarded to
the National Convention of fhe
Episcopal Church for its
consideration. That body
meets in Loui~ville, Kentucky
in late September.
Among other resolutions to
come before the Convention
are proposals to call for formation of a committee withln
the diocese to deal with
theological and moral issues in
today's . society ' to move the
date of the Diocesan Con,
vention from May to November
or each year' to express op· '
position to the proposed state
lottery and ·to urge members of
the Episcopal Church to seek
pastoral counseling and guid·
ance before seeking an

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Mark V Super Market MIDDLEPORT

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SCOT LAD

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Florida Fresh Crisp

CELERY

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303

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ONIONS .

Carnation

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Florida Juicy
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200

TISSUES . .~~~~-

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Nestle's

5th. and PEARL STS., RACINE
'The Store With A Heart,
You, WE LIKE"
Right reserved to limit quantities

, ~:00 .to. 7:00
· Saturday 9 to 9

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SPEtJAL OFFER!

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MIRACLE WHIP
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ITEM SHOULD RE~D:

WINDSOR

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Delegates attending the
Chillicothe
pre-Convention
Mrs .. Coleman, Carol, Bruce.
· . were
from
Chillicothe,
h
alid Mark, Mrs. Samsel, Mr.
and Mrs. !:.eo Hill, Sharon and Marietta, London, Portsmout ,
Brian, Mrs. Melvin Drake and Westerville, Athens, Xenia,
Sharon, and Mr. and Mrs. Luke Ironton,
Gallipolis
and
McDaniel.
Columbus.

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POPSICLES
FUDGESICLES
1~ PACK 59~ ­
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11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., ApriiU, l!rr.l

Senators deny teeners
right to hard drinks

PUBliC AUCTION

,

3 DAY ESTATE SALE OF
ClARENCE M. SWARTZ, DEC., AS LISTED
FRIDAY. APRIL llat 10:30 A.M. ; SATURDAY APRIL
14al 10:30 A.M. ; . SUNDAY, APRIL IS at11 : 30 AM w
m1les east of Athens, Ohio on_St. Rt. so towards Co01~Jille.

T_urn on -Co. Rd . 53 at Barnhdl Sohio Gas Station to lott- J

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Gene~al ~&lt; and ~rdware store , car &amp; truck , farm
m~c~mery , anttques &amp; old furnltul'e . /W.my, . many
buddmgs full of very old and interesting items. Nothin
sh_own before day of _sale. Farm machinery, auto &amp; true~
w11_1be sold Sat. , Apnl 1 4 at 1:00 p . M. Sharp.
_Fnday , AprlllJ at 10: 30 A.M. sharp will start selling the
1tems from. the old general store- some Items sold i n tots
and h~rdware suppl ies: Log chains ; rope &amp; blocks; ~
larg': a·sst. of b?lts, cla!"lps, r ivets, washers. etc.; a tot of
mowtng machme sect1ons; horse shoes : c;&gt;il filters, gas
cans , e.tc. ; asst. of machinery chain links ; motor oil by
ca .se ; light bulbs ; hand tools, saws, wire brushes, screw
dr~vers , and man y, m~nv oth~r items; pa int &amp; oa in t
th1nner ; rubber-old roofmg ; asstst. nails, spikes, etc .; dog
food ; soap &amp; soap powders ; ll~o&lt;e stock spray ; a lot grease ;
c~ ble &amp; come-a.ID!'lgs ; screw jacks ; asst. of tractor hitch
pms ; tractor cush•ons ; s~lt for livestock ; fence-thargers ;
used power saws; spark plugs ; gloves, thred, dog collars,
new overalls, work pants, Wolverine work shoes ; glass
show case; .new grease guns ; anti -freeze ; carbide: new
farm tools like axes, post hole diggers. stove pipe. plast ic
but;:kets •. forks , rakes •. ·ha!"mers • . shovels , etc .;
evespout1ng &amp; trough ; p1pe fittings ; barbed &amp; woven
wire ; .as\'halt roofing paint ; a lot of baler twine
( Buc~eye ; auto elec . heaters ; 2 new gas engines ;
machinery manual s &amp; books ; asst rake teeth ; tractor
ca nvas cabs ; lantern &amp; lamp chimK'eys ; new fence posts.,
new rope ; rotary lawn mower ; new garden plow hand ;
garden .seed_s ,· 2 new Briggs~ Stratton gas engines ; hew
tar~ul1ns; •c~ cream coo ler ; pop cooler ; draw bars ; a tot
mow.ng mach1ne parts, and many other items. The above
i1ems will be sold Friday , April ~3 .

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Satur.day, April 14 at 10: 30 A.M. Sharp w itt finish selling
any 1fems lett from store. Also will sell balanCe of
Buckeye baler tw ine; red &amp; sweet clover seed by bag ·
alfalfa, sorgham, soya, &amp; orchard gras s seed by bag ;
horse feed, cracked corn ; several Ton terti lizer . 12-12·12 ·
5-10-10 ; 10-20-20; etC ; sack time ; new gal. roofing ; lot ne~
Oliver parts; HORSEDRAWN EQUIPMENT &amp;
MACHINERY: New plows, plow points, parts ; parts of
old work h~rness; used horse drawn ma Chinery ; braking
plows,-culhv~tors. single shove l plows; old riding mower;
old plows ; smgte &amp; double trees ; new mowing machi ne
tongues . Platform scales; gal. &amp; iron pipe; small seed
cleaner; ext. ladders ; garden tractor ; ant . ga spump; old
1953 Packard ; old seed separator ; work ben ch vise; gas &amp;
oil well .valves. etc.; used tools ; wire cable ; wall hand
drill ; good sickle bar w ··gr inder &amp; motor ; lot new baler
teeth; old Oliver' baler for parts· &amp; scrap ; J . D. baler for
parts &amp; scrap; riding mowers, rakes. tractors, binder ,
etc . for parts &amp; scrap. A lot of other scrap iron.

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ANTIQUES :. Start ing Sunday, Aprill 5 at 11:30 A.M. will
sell the old house full of. antiques ·as listed: . China cup.
board w ,oval glass ; cropleaf · writing desk w-doOrs &amp;
drawers at bottom ; 2 very old wall telephones ; oak book
case w -glass doors ; ant. rockers; round walnut gateleg
table ; plank bottom chairs ; very old &amp; beautiful picture
frames ; ant. stands,· good solid ·oak round table ; ant.
mirrors ; so lid brass bed ; some an't. dishes ; old trunk s;
wooden cupboard w-glassdoors ; iron beds w -.brass knobs ;
ant. vases; old piano; organ stool; ladder backed cane
bottom rockers; a. lot ant, oil lamp~ ; ant. el~ .. !ar:nps;
square cupboard w-glass doors &amp; brass ·pl.! lis carving at
top ; sever~! old clocks ; miniature victrola ; old wooden
· beds . complete ; old dressers; old leather ·settee ; sew ing
machin~ ; chest of dra~erS; platform . glider roc~~r'i
Alladin lamps ; hand pamted lamp shades;· ant. h1g~
chair:; oak dresser W·brass pulls ; old tin ware ; stales ;
apothecary• jars; extra nice. larg e old spool cab inet; old
dye boxes ; 2 ant.. toy sleds; brass hames ; straw ra~es;
wheat cradle ; very old rug loom ; old desk ; harness v1 .se ;
cow bell ; ant. wheel barrow ; ant. Washer; school desk ;
flat Irons ; coffee grinder ; old pitcher ; iron kettles; a lot
stone jars &amp; ju·gs of all _s izes ; fruit jars w- ~~~ ·tops; 7 large
c1der barrelS; extra n1ce ant. toy wJ)gon w-h1gh wheels w.wooden box &amp; bed . origi11aL old: wood stove converted to
. gas; old kitchen cab inets, etc; a· lot of old col lector 1fems
. such as calendars, matCh holders, ink bottles, etc ; and
many, many other Items. This wilt be a very interest ing
sa le for you as many items go ba ck to the 1800s. Sunday
Sale, .April 15 at 11 : 30 A.M. sharp.
Remember General &amp; Hardware store will be sold Friday,
Aprilllat 10:30 A.M. Farm Machinery. car &amp; truck, and
other item·s will be sold Satur~ay, Aprll14 at 10: 30 A .M .
INEW MACHINERY, CAR &amp; TRUCK AT 1: 00 P . M.! .
Antiques &amp; furniture sold Sunday,. Apnl15 at 11 : 30 A.M .
Lunch on ·premises.
terms: Cash ,
Positive 10
Not responsible for accidents
Mrs. Wilma L. Swartz-Exec. of Estate C. E. Berry. AHy .
Auctioneer~ Bill Janes- Phone 592-2275 or 557-31111 or 557 )133

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MONEY

THE POMEROY GUN
CLUB house has undergone
e~tensive remodeling. Paul
Baker, abovf, president of
the club the past three years,
stands at the fireplace where
a seven-inch thick wall of
Ml&amp;tive stone has been built.
The attractive stone coverS
the width and length of the
entire wall. lo addition to
this unu!!lual wall the rooms
have been paneled, new :floor
laid, kitchen remodeled and
a new bar added. The walls
in the kitchen are covered
with &gt;marlite. The building
has ce1Jtral heat and air.
conditioning. _Bake r ob·
served that .the Pom~rOy
Gun Club has been in cona
ttouou~

SUE

ROMINE ,

praying for divorce fr om said
Sue Romin e on th e
grounds of gross neglec t of duiy

and ex.t reme cruelt y , c ar e,
·custody and . control o f m"irior
Children·. and other rel ief ; sai d
cause will be f·or hearing on or
affer the 91h day of Jun e, 1973 .
Kenn et h H . Romin e,
·
Plil inl iff .
J . B . O' Brien ,
his attorney
( 4) 4, ll, 18. 25 f 5) 2, 9' 6t
NOTICE ' OF
APPOINTMENT
• .Case No . 10896
Estate of Eva. 1·. Postal Molt

Deceased . ·
No tice Is hereby g i ve.n thai
Anna M . Ry th er of P. 0 . .sox
130, Pomeroy, Ohio, ha s been
duly appo inted Admin is trat ri x
of the. Eslale Of Eva t . Postal
Mott, deceased, late · of Meigs
County, Oh io,
·
.Cr edi tors are req ui red lo fi le
the ir claims with said f iduciary
within fo ur months .
· "
Dated thi s 24th day ot March
197 3.
'
Man,ning D. Web ster
Judg e
court of Comm on Ple~s ,
Probal e Division.

(3) "28 ( 4 j 4, 11. 31

Auto Sales
1968 DODGE Polar a station
.. wagon , 383 V8 , a ir con di1ionl ng. power steer ing and
brakes, very good cond i ti on;
51 ,300. Phone 247-2166 Roberl
Sayre.:";
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Wheels

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HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
. MATERIALS CO.

PH. 773-5554

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GENERAL TIRE SALES
N. 2nd AVE.

992-7161

MASON, W. VA.

BROUGHTON ' S.

SAIGON [UPI ) - Fighting tack wa s repulsed, the com.
surged today in ' the Mekong mand said, arld one Conlmunist
Delta southwest of Saigon with was killed .
. two heavy ·communist attacks .... Th e command said the
reported in . the Province ·of Comm un is ts committed 1'29
Chuong Thien.
cease-fire violations in the 24
- The Saigon command said , hours ending at n?on t!l&lt;lay, for
Communist forces penetrated a total oi!0,571 s mce the truce
a hamlet near Kien Hung, 120 began Jan . 28. The Commiles southwest of Saigon, at 8 munists have accused the
a. m. today but were driven Saigon forces ~f m~re than
back by local militiamen. - 40;000 violations.
Six of the militiamen were
On the diplomatic front, Gen.
killed and one woUnded, the _ Alexander M. Haig Jr., making
command · sa id , and two a four-day visit to Indochina
Communists were killed. --~ for- President Nixon to assess
Ten miles to the southeast, 15 the milita•y and political
rounds of 61mm morta r fire hit situat_ion, left Saigon today for
a militia ·outpost and wounded Phnom Penh after an overtw o of its d~fend e rs , the "night stay.

Super Sport

ROLL

Battelle hegins
-own energy _plan

,whose la sl known pla ce Qf
.rts !den ce is Rt .. l, Rutland ,
Otiio, and whose last .known
address is c: .o Fran ces Nelson .
Dexter, Ohio , is hereby notif ied
lhat on the 12th day of M arch •
197 3, Kenneth H. Romin e, being
plaintiff , t iled h is cpm pla int
aga inst her as defen dant in th e
Co m mon Pteas Court , Me igs
County , Qhio, Case No .. 15 ,2 47,
Avery

•

This Week's Specwl!

PUBLIC NOTICE
AVERY

~

MR.' VANCE
446-0677

Delta fighting
growing hotter

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_

New wagon wheei lights also
add to the decor in the maio
room. At the present ti.m e
the club has 33 members.
Most of the remodeling was
done by Karr Construction
and B3ker.
NEW BAR - At right is
the new bar added to
Pomeroy Gun Club house. A
wall was extended to make
the room larg_
e r and a new
bar added and the walls
paneled. That.!s Paul Baker,
l
president, at the bar.

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•

s3.51 HOUR

operation since 1900.

•

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"

Saturday, April 14 at 1: 00 P.M . sharp wil"t sell new
machinery: 1972 Pontiac Bonneville .:1 dr. har .!top w -v inyl
roof . air condition, only 8,000 miles - lf,"ke new. Good 1948
Dodge 16' flatbed truck. 4 speed fran .• good rubber w.
stake bed &amp; cattle racks . 2 new-5-' -.brU h hogs;· new Vicon
540 fertilizer &amp; lime spreader &amp; seeder - 3 pt. w·PTO; new
Dunham cultipacker ; new Utility Pittsburgh 3 pt. carrier
tift ; new Mohawk angle 3 pt. 5' blade ; 3 new baler accumulators ; 2 new 4' brush ~ogs ; new Pittsburgh tran sport NYD disc on rubber ; new 3 pt. 5' brush hog disc: ; 3 pt.
lA" Oliver 2 gang plow ; tractor boom ; new Pittsburgh 7' 3
pt. disc ; new Oliver 7' No. 82 mower w-tongu e for con - ·
ditioner ; ·Oliver 520 hay baler - I ike new used one season ;
new Farmhand 430 manure spreader; new Oliver 3 pC
cultivat.o rs; new 3 pt. f'riple K pasture weeder ; new gras S
seeder: draw bars·; several Oliver &amp; Int. mufflers &amp; new
parts ; new Int. rims - wheel s; tractor umbrellas; 4 new
high rift jacks ; new front &amp; rear tractor tires ; a lot Oliver
corn planter parts, etc. : Dunham di sc bearings, -parts ;
severa l brands rake teeth , plow ·parts, etc.; manure fork
~rongs; wheel for '66 or '70· 0iiver tractor ; new Oliver
plow pointS; small compressor W-elec. motor &amp; tank for
painting ; LilleSton rot·ary axle, 3 pt. UniVersal shafts,
whe~ls, etc. ; new Ottawa 12'' super chief post hole digger ;
new Ottawa 9" super chief post hole digger ; Oliver end
loader for 550 trader ; 8 Farmhand rake wheels &amp; shields ;
new Yazoo Dra~ster ~a- cart ; fro1;1t &amp; rea·r Ollv,~11 whe~J ..._
weights; new OI1Ver 7 mower minus some partS;' '45 ln1.
baler - in good condition; Ol iver cultivators - like neW ;
boomers ; HD 1/ 2 in. drill ; b~nchgrinder· w- motor- ; rip saw
. w.gas motor ; black smith forg~~ new Myers shallow well
· pump ; poplar lumber &amp; .many other items.

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Teen· said.
same amendment successfully .
age drinking iri Ohio has reAnd Sen. Thoinas A. Van last ye~r , was absent .
ceived at least a temporary
Meter , R-Ashland, agreed it
The senators, uneasy about a
setback in the legislative halls,
would be "hypocritical" to give roll ca ll , si'destepped it . When ·
although the Senate has voted _teen-agers aU rights and reto reduce the age of adulthood sponsibilities of adulthood ex- Ll. Gov . John W. Brown, the
presiding officer, couldn 't de·
from 21 to 18.
cept the right to drink .
·cide
the question on a voice
The Senate cleare.d the
vote, he called for those in fameasW"e Tuesday , ~2 , and
" You could have an Ill-year vor of a lower drinking age to
sent'it to the House, where Ule
old sheriff go out and arrest sta nd up.
dririking provision may yet be
somebody for drinking , and he
On the roll call vote on the
added .
can't eve~ drink himself, '' Y.a n , bill, .only Vf:in Meter. and Sen.
' Prior to·passing the bill, the
Meter sa1d .
·
Richard G . Reichel, R-MassilSenate voted 14-17 against the
lon, offered opposition .
proposai to allow 18-(o-211-year
Drive Rates Up
olds to purchase and consume
But Senate President Pro
alchoholic beverages.
Tempore Theodore M. Gray,
The chamber had J pproved R-Columbus, a n insurance ·
$
$
the dririking provision last year company owner and one of
by a narrow margin, but sev- three Republican senators to
12 MEN NEEDED
eral senators had a change of reverse his vote on the issue,
heart after statistics were re- cautidned that lowering the
leased showing an alarming in- drinking age would drive auto
crease iri traffic _accidents insurance . rat es for young
since the drinking age was people out of sight. ·
reduced to 18 in neighboring
......... -- ........ .....
FULL OR
Michigan .
"The trade-&lt;&gt;ff that the youth
PART TIME
The bill, sponsored by Sen. of Ohio are goirig to have to
Stanley J . Aronoff, R- face if thi.~ . amendment passes
Cincinnati, died in ~e House
is a shrinking of auto insurance
company
last year after being passed by
or raising of Ole premiums un- Expanding
·the Senate.
til they are prohibitive because needs twelve men to
It would permit lfl.(o.21).year of a minority of young people," _work in Gallipolis and
Point Pleasant areas.
olds to sue and be held liable Gray said ,
No
experience
for damages, marry without
parental consent, hold offic'l.S
Three Republicans joined II necessary , must have
and certain jobs, sign contracts Democrats in .supporting the car. Call 9 til s.
and perform a host of legBI acts low er drinking age·. Fo'u r
now limited to 21-year olds.
Democrais
joined
13
" If young people are voting Republicans in opposition.
in our elections, they should be
Sen. Donald E. Lukens, Rassuming responsibilities that Middletown, who offered the
go along with adulthood," Aronoff said..
Offered Amendment
Sen . Harry Meshel , D·
Youngstown, offered the
amendment to lower the
dr-inkiug age.
"I know it is not a popular
issue to bring forth when traffi c accident statistics continue
to rise/ ' Meshel said. \
But he claimed the Michigan
,statistics, compiled in 1971,
were misleading because they
did not include Detroit, which
COLUMBUS -(-U:Pl) - One of
Fawcet! said plans are being conll!ins 16 per cent of Michl·
the nation 's Largest r esearch consiqered for studies related gan's population. ·
institutes announced Tuesday to the, gasification of coal, ·deSenate Minority Leader Anit ' will spend $2!i million of its sulfuti•ation of coal , coal tlwny 0 . C•labrese, D-Cieveown money in a five-year pro- liquefaction and the production land, complained tavern
gram to find other uses for coal. of hydrogen from coal and owners
are
currently
and ease the energy crisis.
solar energy.
jeopardized by lfl.(o-211-year
" The solution to this critical
Desulfurization or coal would olds using false identification
energy s ituation lies in · the allow energy producing plants ·cards to obtain liquor.
prompt development Of domes· to ILSe c oal that WOUld allow it
"Why not do it the nice way
tic energy SOW'ces which ·meet to be used as a form of natural · and lOwer t~e drinking age ?"
appropria.te environmental gas . Coal liquel•ction would _ Calabrese asked . ..., used to.
s tandards and are readily . allow · it .to Ill) used_as oil.
· drink wine from tbe family
av•ilable for public con"A principle objective of our table when I was eight years
swnptiOn," said Dl-. SherwOOd enorr ·will be to work .closely
old ,"
L, . Fawcett, · pres ident of with industry and government
Sen: Paul R;- Malia, R-West·
Battelle MemoriaL Institute. to assure that our program and
ta·ke, argued · against the
Fawcett
said
hi s its results do a~vance energy amendment, claimiiig it would
organization would attempt tp te c hn ology . Th·e underlying
jeopardize passage of the rest
" develop
science
and philosophy is that · resulting
of the bill.
technology for the economi&lt;i discoveries and inventions wi'll
Sen. Donald L. .Woodland, D'
utilization of coal and hydrogen be utilized in a fashion that Will · Columbus, urged a reduction of
/
as energy sources to corn•·· be. most hennficial to the pub- the drinking age . "If parents,
pensa te for dimini shin g lie.
schools and churches haven't
availability of oil and ·gas ... "
"It_will be up to industry and done the job by the time they
."Coal is an. abundant domes.. go vernment, of course, · to · are 18, then it's too late/' he
ti c en ~rgy source and is of par- provide the massive funds
ticular inportance to th e indus· needed to carry these
trial and electric power needs technologies through the
,.. ,'' Fawcett said. " However, co mmercial
development
a significa nt research and de-1 stages and bring them into
velopment effort is needed to '• public use," Fawcett added.
advance coat· technology and
The prdjeet will be researchmake coa l a more useful and ed by scientists and engineers
widely acceptab le fuel.
at
Battelle's
major
·_115 W. Main . We Accept Federal Food Stamps
Pomeroy
"In our research: we will at- laboratorie,s her e and in
tempt to identify new or im- Ri c hland , Wash . j Geneva,
Open Mon. · Thurs. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.- Fridays 9 a.m. To ti p.m . - Satur·
proved technologies and Switzerland, and Frankfurt,
diiYS' a .m. to 8:30p.m.
·
· · ·
demonstrate their feasibility Germany.
and economy," he said.

·2% MILK
16 oz. bottle

99'

gal.

8
PAK

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conAGE
CHEESE

Good At Simon's

· 1 Expires:

4-14-73

2

lb.

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63'

49
.
2
1
WIENERS .............. ,.
e
BOLOGNA ...................... ~~:.. 69
· .
Skinless All Meat

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pkg . .

Folgers

Sliced Ali Meat •

COFFEE
3 lb.

can

259

,

Old Fashioned

~~~:At~:E~~...................~.~~- 99

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command said.

•

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

In nearby Vinh Binh
province , Comrn uni~ t troops
attacked a mflitia posi ti on 70
mil es southwest of Saigon
. shortly before sunrise today.

' ·. Repa.y no one evil fo.r evil, .
but take thought for what
is nobLe in the sight of
all. If possibLe , so far as
i! depends upon you, · live
Two militiamen were killed peaceabLy with ali.- RomUilS
and five wound~ but the at. 12:17. 18 .

WE HAVE

Small Size

EGGS

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Potatoes

.

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•

11- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, o ., ApriiU, l!rr.l

Senators deny teeners
right to hard drinks

PUBliC AUCTION

,

3 DAY ESTATE SALE OF
ClARENCE M. SWARTZ, DEC., AS LISTED
FRIDAY. APRIL llat 10:30 A.M. ; SATURDAY APRIL
14al 10:30 A.M. ; . SUNDAY, APRIL IS at11 : 30 AM w
m1les east of Athens, Ohio on_St. Rt. so towards Co01~Jille.

T_urn on -Co. Rd . 53 at Barnhdl Sohio Gas Station to lott- J

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Gene~al ~&lt; and ~rdware store , car &amp; truck , farm
m~c~mery , anttques &amp; old furnltul'e . /W.my, . many
buddmgs full of very old and interesting items. Nothin
sh_own before day of _sale. Farm machinery, auto &amp; true~
w11_1be sold Sat. , Apnl 1 4 at 1:00 p . M. Sharp.
_Fnday , AprlllJ at 10: 30 A.M. sharp will start selling the
1tems from. the old general store- some Items sold i n tots
and h~rdware suppl ies: Log chains ; rope &amp; blocks; ~
larg': a·sst. of b?lts, cla!"lps, r ivets, washers. etc.; a tot of
mowtng machme sect1ons; horse shoes : c;&gt;il filters, gas
cans , e.tc. ; asst. of machinery chain links ; motor oil by
ca .se ; light bulbs ; hand tools, saws, wire brushes, screw
dr~vers , and man y, m~nv oth~r items; pa int &amp; oa in t
th1nner ; rubber-old roofmg ; asstst. nails, spikes, etc .; dog
food ; soap &amp; soap powders ; ll~o&lt;e stock spray ; a lot grease ;
c~ ble &amp; come-a.ID!'lgs ; screw jacks ; asst. of tractor hitch
pms ; tractor cush•ons ; s~lt for livestock ; fence-thargers ;
used power saws; spark plugs ; gloves, thred, dog collars,
new overalls, work pants, Wolverine work shoes ; glass
show case; .new grease guns ; anti -freeze ; carbide: new
farm tools like axes, post hole diggers. stove pipe. plast ic
but;:kets •. forks , rakes •. ·ha!"mers • . shovels , etc .;
evespout1ng &amp; trough ; p1pe fittings ; barbed &amp; woven
wire ; .as\'halt roofing paint ; a lot of baler twine
( Buc~eye ; auto elec . heaters ; 2 new gas engines ;
machinery manual s &amp; books ; asst rake teeth ; tractor
ca nvas cabs ; lantern &amp; lamp chimK'eys ; new fence posts.,
new rope ; rotary lawn mower ; new garden plow hand ;
garden .seed_s ,· 2 new Briggs~ Stratton gas engines ; hew
tar~ul1ns; •c~ cream coo ler ; pop cooler ; draw bars ; a tot
mow.ng mach1ne parts, and many other items. The above
i1ems will be sold Friday , April ~3 .

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Satur.day, April 14 at 10: 30 A.M. Sharp w itt finish selling
any 1fems lett from store. Also will sell balanCe of
Buckeye baler tw ine; red &amp; sweet clover seed by bag ·
alfalfa, sorgham, soya, &amp; orchard gras s seed by bag ;
horse feed, cracked corn ; several Ton terti lizer . 12-12·12 ·
5-10-10 ; 10-20-20; etC ; sack time ; new gal. roofing ; lot ne~
Oliver parts; HORSEDRAWN EQUIPMENT &amp;
MACHINERY: New plows, plow points, parts ; parts of
old work h~rness; used horse drawn ma Chinery ; braking
plows,-culhv~tors. single shove l plows; old riding mower;
old plows ; smgte &amp; double trees ; new mowing machi ne
tongues . Platform scales; gal. &amp; iron pipe; small seed
cleaner; ext. ladders ; garden tractor ; ant . ga spump; old
1953 Packard ; old seed separator ; work ben ch vise; gas &amp;
oil well .valves. etc.; used tools ; wire cable ; wall hand
drill ; good sickle bar w ··gr inder &amp; motor ; lot new baler
teeth; old Oliver' baler for parts· &amp; scrap ; J . D. baler for
parts &amp; scrap; riding mowers, rakes. tractors, binder ,
etc . for parts &amp; scrap. A lot of other scrap iron.

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ANTIQUES :. Start ing Sunday, Aprill 5 at 11:30 A.M. will
sell the old house full of. antiques ·as listed: . China cup.
board w ,oval glass ; cropleaf · writing desk w-doOrs &amp;
drawers at bottom ; 2 very old wall telephones ; oak book
case w -glass doors ; ant. rockers; round walnut gateleg
table ; plank bottom chairs ; very old &amp; beautiful picture
frames ; ant. stands,· good solid ·oak round table ; ant.
mirrors ; so lid brass bed ; some an't. dishes ; old trunk s;
wooden cupboard w-glassdoors ; iron beds w -.brass knobs ;
ant. vases; old piano; organ stool; ladder backed cane
bottom rockers; a. lot ant, oil lamp~ ; ant. el~ .. !ar:nps;
square cupboard w-glass doors &amp; brass ·pl.! lis carving at
top ; sever~! old clocks ; miniature victrola ; old wooden
· beds . complete ; old dressers; old leather ·settee ; sew ing
machin~ ; chest of dra~erS; platform . glider roc~~r'i
Alladin lamps ; hand pamted lamp shades;· ant. h1g~
chair:; oak dresser W·brass pulls ; old tin ware ; stales ;
apothecary• jars; extra nice. larg e old spool cab inet; old
dye boxes ; 2 ant.. toy sleds; brass hames ; straw ra~es;
wheat cradle ; very old rug loom ; old desk ; harness v1 .se ;
cow bell ; ant. wheel barrow ; ant. Washer; school desk ;
flat Irons ; coffee grinder ; old pitcher ; iron kettles; a lot
stone jars &amp; ju·gs of all _s izes ; fruit jars w- ~~~ ·tops; 7 large
c1der barrelS; extra n1ce ant. toy wJ)gon w-h1gh wheels w.wooden box &amp; bed . origi11aL old: wood stove converted to
. gas; old kitchen cab inets, etc; a· lot of old col lector 1fems
. such as calendars, matCh holders, ink bottles, etc ; and
many, many other Items. This wilt be a very interest ing
sa le for you as many items go ba ck to the 1800s. Sunday
Sale, .April 15 at 11 : 30 A.M. sharp.
Remember General &amp; Hardware store will be sold Friday,
Aprilllat 10:30 A.M. Farm Machinery. car &amp; truck, and
other item·s will be sold Satur~ay, Aprll14 at 10: 30 A .M .
INEW MACHINERY, CAR &amp; TRUCK AT 1: 00 P . M.! .
Antiques &amp; furniture sold Sunday,. Apnl15 at 11 : 30 A.M .
Lunch on ·premises.
terms: Cash ,
Positive 10
Not responsible for accidents
Mrs. Wilma L. Swartz-Exec. of Estate C. E. Berry. AHy .
Auctioneer~ Bill Janes- Phone 592-2275 or 557-31111 or 557 )133

-...
....

C)

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MONEY

THE POMEROY GUN
CLUB house has undergone
e~tensive remodeling. Paul
Baker, abovf, president of
the club the past three years,
stands at the fireplace where
a seven-inch thick wall of
Ml&amp;tive stone has been built.
The attractive stone coverS
the width and length of the
entire wall. lo addition to
this unu!!lual wall the rooms
have been paneled, new :floor
laid, kitchen remodeled and
a new bar added. The walls
in the kitchen are covered
with &gt;marlite. The building
has ce1Jtral heat and air.
conditioning. _Bake r ob·
served that .the Pom~rOy
Gun Club has been in cona
ttouou~

SUE

ROMINE ,

praying for divorce fr om said
Sue Romin e on th e
grounds of gross neglec t of duiy

and ex.t reme cruelt y , c ar e,
·custody and . control o f m"irior
Children·. and other rel ief ; sai d
cause will be f·or hearing on or
affer the 91h day of Jun e, 1973 .
Kenn et h H . Romin e,
·
Plil inl iff .
J . B . O' Brien ,
his attorney
( 4) 4, ll, 18. 25 f 5) 2, 9' 6t
NOTICE ' OF
APPOINTMENT
• .Case No . 10896
Estate of Eva. 1·. Postal Molt

Deceased . ·
No tice Is hereby g i ve.n thai
Anna M . Ry th er of P. 0 . .sox
130, Pomeroy, Ohio, ha s been
duly appo inted Admin is trat ri x
of the. Eslale Of Eva t . Postal
Mott, deceased, late · of Meigs
County, Oh io,
·
.Cr edi tors are req ui red lo fi le
the ir claims with said f iduciary
within fo ur months .
· "
Dated thi s 24th day ot March
197 3.
'
Man,ning D. Web ster
Judg e
court of Comm on Ple~s ,
Probal e Division.

(3) "28 ( 4 j 4, 11. 31

Auto Sales
1968 DODGE Polar a station
.. wagon , 383 V8 , a ir con di1ionl ng. power steer ing and
brakes, very good cond i ti on;
51 ,300. Phone 247-2166 Roberl
Sayre.:";
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True Elegance in
Wheels

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Surface

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RO~L--4.50

HOGG &amp; ZUSPAN
. MATERIALS CO.

PH. 773-5554

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GENERAL TIRE SALES
N. 2nd AVE.

992-7161

MASON, W. VA.

BROUGHTON ' S.

SAIGON [UPI ) - Fighting tack wa s repulsed, the com.
surged today in ' the Mekong mand said, arld one Conlmunist
Delta southwest of Saigon with was killed .
. two heavy ·communist attacks .... Th e command said the
reported in . the Province ·of Comm un is ts committed 1'29
Chuong Thien.
cease-fire violations in the 24
- The Saigon command said , hours ending at n?on t!l&lt;lay, for
Communist forces penetrated a total oi!0,571 s mce the truce
a hamlet near Kien Hung, 120 began Jan . 28. The Commiles southwest of Saigon, at 8 munists have accused the
a. m. today but were driven Saigon forces ~f m~re than
back by local militiamen. - 40;000 violations.
Six of the militiamen were
On the diplomatic front, Gen.
killed and one woUnded, the _ Alexander M. Haig Jr., making
command · sa id , and two a four-day visit to Indochina
Communists were killed. --~ for- President Nixon to assess
Ten miles to the southeast, 15 the milita•y and political
rounds of 61mm morta r fire hit situat_ion, left Saigon today for
a militia ·outpost and wounded Phnom Penh after an overtw o of its d~fend e rs , the "night stay.

Super Sport

ROLL

Battelle hegins
-own energy _plan

,whose la sl known pla ce Qf
.rts !den ce is Rt .. l, Rutland ,
Otiio, and whose last .known
address is c: .o Fran ces Nelson .
Dexter, Ohio , is hereby notif ied
lhat on the 12th day of M arch •
197 3, Kenneth H. Romin e, being
plaintiff , t iled h is cpm pla int
aga inst her as defen dant in th e
Co m mon Pteas Court , Me igs
County , Qhio, Case No .. 15 ,2 47,
Avery

•

This Week's Specwl!

PUBLIC NOTICE
AVERY

~

MR.' VANCE
446-0677

Delta fighting
growing hotter

z""

.t

_

New wagon wheei lights also
add to the decor in the maio
room. At the present ti.m e
the club has 33 members.
Most of the remodeling was
done by Karr Construction
and B3ker.
NEW BAR - At right is
the new bar added to
Pomeroy Gun Club house. A
wall was extended to make
the room larg_
e r and a new
bar added and the walls
paneled. That.!s Paul Baker,
l
president, at the bar.

cr

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•

s3.51 HOUR

operation since 1900.

•

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"

Saturday, April 14 at 1: 00 P.M . sharp wil"t sell new
machinery: 1972 Pontiac Bonneville .:1 dr. har .!top w -v inyl
roof . air condition, only 8,000 miles - lf,"ke new. Good 1948
Dodge 16' flatbed truck. 4 speed fran .• good rubber w.
stake bed &amp; cattle racks . 2 new-5-' -.brU h hogs;· new Vicon
540 fertilizer &amp; lime spreader &amp; seeder - 3 pt. w·PTO; new
Dunham cultipacker ; new Utility Pittsburgh 3 pt. carrier
tift ; new Mohawk angle 3 pt. 5' blade ; 3 new baler accumulators ; 2 new 4' brush ~ogs ; new Pittsburgh tran sport NYD disc on rubber ; new 3 pt. 5' brush hog disc: ; 3 pt.
lA" Oliver 2 gang plow ; tractor boom ; new Pittsburgh 7' 3
pt. disc ; new Oliver 7' No. 82 mower w-tongu e for con - ·
ditioner ; ·Oliver 520 hay baler - I ike new used one season ;
new Farmhand 430 manure spreader; new Oliver 3 pC
cultivat.o rs; new 3 pt. f'riple K pasture weeder ; new gras S
seeder: draw bars·; several Oliver &amp; Int. mufflers &amp; new
parts ; new Int. rims - wheel s; tractor umbrellas; 4 new
high rift jacks ; new front &amp; rear tractor tires ; a lot Oliver
corn planter parts, etc. : Dunham di sc bearings, -parts ;
severa l brands rake teeth , plow ·parts, etc.; manure fork
~rongs; wheel for '66 or '70· 0iiver tractor ; new Oliver
plow pointS; small compressor W-elec. motor &amp; tank for
painting ; LilleSton rot·ary axle, 3 pt. UniVersal shafts,
whe~ls, etc. ; new Ottawa 12'' super chief post hole digger ;
new Ottawa 9" super chief post hole digger ; Oliver end
loader for 550 trader ; 8 Farmhand rake wheels &amp; shields ;
new Yazoo Dra~ster ~a- cart ; fro1;1t &amp; rea·r Ollv,~11 whe~J ..._
weights; new OI1Ver 7 mower minus some partS;' '45 ln1.
baler - in good condition; Ol iver cultivators - like neW ;
boomers ; HD 1/ 2 in. drill ; b~nchgrinder· w- motor- ; rip saw
. w.gas motor ; black smith forg~~ new Myers shallow well
· pump ; poplar lumber &amp; .many other items.

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Teen· said.
same amendment successfully .
age drinking iri Ohio has reAnd Sen. Thoinas A. Van last ye~r , was absent .
ceived at least a temporary
Meter , R-Ashland, agreed it
The senators, uneasy about a
setback in the legislative halls,
would be "hypocritical" to give roll ca ll , si'destepped it . When ·
although the Senate has voted _teen-agers aU rights and reto reduce the age of adulthood sponsibilities of adulthood ex- Ll. Gov . John W. Brown, the
presiding officer, couldn 't de·
from 21 to 18.
cept the right to drink .
·cide
the question on a voice
The Senate cleare.d the
vote, he called for those in fameasW"e Tuesday , ~2 , and
" You could have an Ill-year vor of a lower drinking age to
sent'it to the House, where Ule
old sheriff go out and arrest sta nd up.
dririking provision may yet be
somebody for drinking , and he
On the roll call vote on the
added .
can't eve~ drink himself, '' Y.a n , bill, .only Vf:in Meter. and Sen.
' Prior to·passing the bill, the
Meter sa1d .
·
Richard G . Reichel, R-MassilSenate voted 14-17 against the
lon, offered opposition .
proposai to allow 18-(o-211-year
Drive Rates Up
olds to purchase and consume
But Senate President Pro
alchoholic beverages.
Tempore Theodore M. Gray,
The chamber had J pproved R-Columbus, a n insurance ·
$
$
the dririking provision last year company owner and one of
by a narrow margin, but sev- three Republican senators to
12 MEN NEEDED
eral senators had a change of reverse his vote on the issue,
heart after statistics were re- cautidned that lowering the
leased showing an alarming in- drinking age would drive auto
crease iri traffic _accidents insurance . rat es for young
since the drinking age was people out of sight. ·
reduced to 18 in neighboring
......... -- ........ .....
FULL OR
Michigan .
"The trade-&lt;&gt;ff that the youth
PART TIME
The bill, sponsored by Sen. of Ohio are goirig to have to
Stanley J . Aronoff, R- face if thi.~ . amendment passes
Cincinnati, died in ~e House
is a shrinking of auto insurance
company
last year after being passed by
or raising of Ole premiums un- Expanding
·the Senate.
til they are prohibitive because needs twelve men to
It would permit lfl.(o.21).year of a minority of young people," _work in Gallipolis and
Point Pleasant areas.
olds to sue and be held liable Gray said ,
No
experience
for damages, marry without
parental consent, hold offic'l.S
Three Republicans joined II necessary , must have
and certain jobs, sign contracts Democrats in .supporting the car. Call 9 til s.
and perform a host of legBI acts low er drinking age·. Fo'u r
now limited to 21-year olds.
Democrais
joined
13
" If young people are voting Republicans in opposition.
in our elections, they should be
Sen. Donald E. Lukens, Rassuming responsibilities that Middletown, who offered the
go along with adulthood," Aronoff said..
Offered Amendment
Sen . Harry Meshel , D·
Youngstown, offered the
amendment to lower the
dr-inkiug age.
"I know it is not a popular
issue to bring forth when traffi c accident statistics continue
to rise/ ' Meshel said. \
But he claimed the Michigan
,statistics, compiled in 1971,
were misleading because they
did not include Detroit, which
COLUMBUS -(-U:Pl) - One of
Fawcet! said plans are being conll!ins 16 per cent of Michl·
the nation 's Largest r esearch consiqered for studies related gan's population. ·
institutes announced Tuesday to the, gasification of coal, ·deSenate Minority Leader Anit ' will spend $2!i million of its sulfuti•ation of coal , coal tlwny 0 . C•labrese, D-Cieveown money in a five-year pro- liquefaction and the production land, complained tavern
gram to find other uses for coal. of hydrogen from coal and owners
are
currently
and ease the energy crisis.
solar energy.
jeopardized by lfl.(o-211-year
" The solution to this critical
Desulfurization or coal would olds using false identification
energy s ituation lies in · the allow energy producing plants ·cards to obtain liquor.
prompt development Of domes· to ILSe c oal that WOUld allow it
"Why not do it the nice way
tic energy SOW'ces which ·meet to be used as a form of natural · and lOwer t~e drinking age ?"
appropria.te environmental gas . Coal liquel•ction would _ Calabrese asked . ..., used to.
s tandards and are readily . allow · it .to Ill) used_as oil.
· drink wine from tbe family
av•ilable for public con"A principle objective of our table when I was eight years
swnptiOn," said Dl-. SherwOOd enorr ·will be to work .closely
old ,"
L, . Fawcett, · pres ident of with industry and government
Sen: Paul R;- Malia, R-West·
Battelle MemoriaL Institute. to assure that our program and
ta·ke, argued · against the
Fawcett
said
hi s its results do a~vance energy amendment, claimiiig it would
organization would attempt tp te c hn ology . Th·e underlying
jeopardize passage of the rest
" develop
science
and philosophy is that · resulting
of the bill.
technology for the economi&lt;i discoveries and inventions wi'll
Sen. Donald L. .Woodland, D'
utilization of coal and hydrogen be utilized in a fashion that Will · Columbus, urged a reduction of
/
as energy sources to corn•·· be. most hennficial to the pub- the drinking age . "If parents,
pensa te for dimini shin g lie.
schools and churches haven't
availability of oil and ·gas ... "
"It_will be up to industry and done the job by the time they
."Coal is an. abundant domes.. go vernment, of course, · to · are 18, then it's too late/' he
ti c en ~rgy source and is of par- provide the massive funds
ticular inportance to th e indus· needed to carry these
trial and electric power needs technologies through the
,.. ,'' Fawcett said. " However, co mmercial
development
a significa nt research and de-1 stages and bring them into
velopment effort is needed to '• public use," Fawcett added.
advance coat· technology and
The prdjeet will be researchmake coa l a more useful and ed by scientists and engineers
widely acceptab le fuel.
at
Battelle's
major
·_115 W. Main . We Accept Federal Food Stamps
Pomeroy
"In our research: we will at- laboratorie,s her e and in
tempt to identify new or im- Ri c hland , Wash . j Geneva,
Open Mon. · Thurs. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.- Fridays 9 a.m. To ti p.m . - Satur·
proved technologies and Switzerland, and Frankfurt,
diiYS' a .m. to 8:30p.m.
·
· · ·
demonstrate their feasibility Germany.
and economy," he said.

·2% MILK
16 oz. bottle

99'

gal.

8
PAK

........ _
i

'' "ROUGHTON ' S

conAGE
CHEESE

Good At Simon's

· 1 Expires:

4-14-73

2

lb.

crt

63'

49
.
2
1
WIENERS .............. ,.
e
BOLOGNA ...................... ~~:.. 69
· .
Skinless All Meat

-

lb·.

pkg . .

Folgers

Sliced Ali Meat •

COFFEE
3 lb.

can

259

,

Old Fashioned

~~~:At~:E~~...................~.~~- 99

e

command said.

•

MIDDLEPORT, 0.

In nearby Vinh Binh
province , Comrn uni~ t troops
attacked a mflitia posi ti on 70
mil es southwest of Saigon
. shortly before sunrise today.

' ·. Repa.y no one evil fo.r evil, .
but take thought for what
is nobLe in the sight of
all. If possibLe , so far as
i! depends upon you, · live
Two militiamen were killed peaceabLy with ali.- RomUilS
and five wound~ but the at. 12:17. 18 .

WE HAVE

Small Size

EGGS

.3
doL

•

S~d

Potatoes

.

'

�•

.•

'

'
12- The Daily Sentinel. Mlddlel&gt;Ort-Pooneroy, 0 ., Aprilll, 1973

.

Po11eroy
.
.
Motor Co.

Want~!~~

CLEAN copper. 48c lb.;
Radiators . clean, 28c lb.;

Brass, 18c lb.: Betterles. 85c ;

1!70CHEVELLE MALIBU
S199S
4 OQOr Sedan, 32,000 miles by original local owner , V -8
engine, automaUc trans .. power steering. radio, good w -w
t ires, w,.,lte finish , showroom ctean interior. A sharp car
anyone will like.

Employment Wanted

For Sile

To BuJ

Gin.. ng S60 lb.; M. A. Hall ,
Reedsville, 378-62.o9.
3-9-llc

OLO furniture , oak tables,

Petunias. marlgolds, Coleus.
tomatoes. peppers, etc .; 1/ " off

by the flat ; Hubbard's Green-

house. St. Rt.

12~ ,

above park.

Syracuse. Ohio.

. LATEX PAINT

®

\fORE BIZNESS,

HOW MUCH

DO I OWE
'JE?

DOC

organs. dishes , clocks, brass
4-3-tfc =ASH -paid for all makes ario
beds or complete households. - - -- - - - - -models.. of mobile homes .
From the laroest
Write M. D. Miller , Rt. j, 3 NEW
ZiQ
-Zag
Sewing
,
"Phone
area code 6\j-423-9531.
1973
For
wood
and
masonry
Bulldozer Radiator
Pomeroy, Olllo. Phone 992·
on Most ".meriun C.us
machines In or1ginal factory
'
.4-13-tfc
tlnishe! .
.
:)mauesr Neater core.
6271.
carton . Zlg . Zag to make
Nath•n Bigos .
_;:-GUARANTEED1-l ·IIC
buttonholes, ~ew on bvttons. Berry-Miller IYtobile Homes h~ ­
Rodlilor SpeciiiiSI
Phone 992-2094
a lot to offer when you start
monograms, and make fancy
1970 DODGE POLAR A
.
$16!S
shopp ing for your Mobile
designs with just the twist of a
4 door. factory air, V-8 eng ine, autof'!latlc power st'eering
Pomeroy Home Auto
HOGG&amp; ZUSPAN
Home. You can beat the high
slngJe-dial.
Left
In
layaway
&amp; brakes, good W·W tires. radio. clean Interior, white
Open I Tll5
MATERIALS CO.
depreciation you~ ll have on
and never been used. Will sell
finish with vinyl top .
Monday
thru Sofurd.ly
your-home the first two years . 773-555•
ror only $.47 cash, or terms
MilSon,
W.
VI.
I'll.
992-217.
P~eroy
606
E.
M•iri,
Pomeroy, 0.
•
by shopping for a late model
2 BEDROOM moblle home,
avalleble. Electro Hygiene
used
Niobiie
Home.
We
have
a
~
adults only ; on old ~ ,~;
Co. Phone 992-7755.
huge selection of these homes
phone · 992-62'14 Of" &gt;&gt;&lt; ·~
4-11-6tc
' AUTOMOB1Lt: Insurance t&gt;ee.i ,.-::..
· ----------,
in ·stock now , and we' ll do our
after 8 p.m .
··
cancelled?
Losi
ycur
. POMEROY
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
H -12tc 3 ELECTROLUX Vacuum
level best to save~ you money .
operator's
license?
Call
m
.
So for an hone~t to goodness Auto
POMEROY, OHIO
- - -- - -- - Cleane" complete with at.
2'166.
good deal stop In 1oday at
L----~----------------...1 ' ONE bedroom apartment ; lde&amp;l
tachments, cordwlnder and
HOME
AUTO
.6-15-tfc
Berry-Miller NiobHe Home 1962 PLYMOUTH Valiant, good
I
for couples ; phone 992 -5248 or
paint spray. Used but in like
992 -2094
Sales, 705 Farson Street.
condition . Phone 092-3791.
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
992•3436.
·
new condit,lon. Pay $34.45
Belpre, Ohio, phone 423-9531 - - - - - - - - - • - l l -6tc locotedatCrossroads, Rt . 124,
4-1l -6tc
cash or budget plan available.
606 E. Main Pomeroy
WANc't.AD$
Notice
open
7
days
.
Electro
Hygiene
Co.
Phone
complete
front
end
service,
INFORMATION
4-Htc
ARE now taking orders for 2 BEDROOM home, 1676 Lin992-7755.
tune up and brake sirvlce:
DEADLINES
1972 CAD. Coupe DeVille. vinyl
Southern Tomatoes. peppers,
coin Heights, bath, basement,
4-1\ -6tc
5 P .M . Day B(!'fore Publication .
Wheels
balanced
elec -(
top.
gray,
climate
control,
sweet potatoes and on ion
Monday Deadline 9 a . m .
aluminum siding, storm doors
10 X SO MOBIL'f" home, ex tronlcally .
All
work
AM&amp;.FM
radio,
low
mileage,
and
Cancellation - Corrections
plants ; will be In by May 5th
and windows, hardwood CONTEMPORARY Modern
cellent condi tion, . expansion
guaranteed.
Reasonable
perfect
condition
.
Ph.
245·
Wil I be accepted until 9 a .m . for
af least; James Ray Hill ,
floors. newly refinished . Call
Waln·ut style $tereo-radlo ,
living room , fully air rates: Phone 092-3213 .or .7425888.
Day of Publication
Letart
Falls,
Ohio:
phone
247·
Tracy
Whaley
,
092-3054.
am-fm
radio,
4
speaker
sound
conditioned
; phone 992-5905.
REGUlATION$
4-8-ollc
3232.
2'161.
2_18_tf(. ' Stop. In and See Our
• ·10-Stc
system, 4 speed automatic
4-6-12tc -----,~--The Publisher reserves the
4-8· 13tc
changer. Balance $71 .32. Use
r ight to ed it or reject any ads
1972 HONLJ,.., :MN mororcycle, 4 MODE-RN septic tank"wvice,
Floor Display,
de .emed obiect iO'nal . The
our budget terms . Call 992cylinder, many ~xtras, like
pub li sher will nOFOe responsible NEW 2 piece traditional living
7085.
2.4
hours,
7
days
a
week
,
new; phone 985-3828.
Air Conditioners
.tor more than one Incorrect · room suite, with a extra high
4· 11 -6tc
SEWING MACHINES. Repel!'
Phone ~2 -3954.
GRAY
MANOR
3·9-tfc
insertion .
back M.r . Chair and reversible
Awnings
4-10-JCtc
service, all makes. 992-22a.t.l
RATES
cushions ; regularly $239.95,·
YAMAHA
c
ycle
175.
Phone
992·
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
APARTMENTS
Underpinning
For Want Ad hrvlce
now only -139.95. Your choice
'57 "CHEVY 2 door hardtop ; '55 EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
7689
after
5
p
.m.
Authorized Singer Sates and
S cents per Word one insert ion
MIDDLEPORT
;
of
colors .
Pomeroy
Oldsmobile ; contact Larry
4-11 -3tc
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.\
Minimum Charg@ 75c
and backhoe work ; septic
Complete
mobile
home
Recovery , 622 E. Main St.,
Hubbard, Syracuse: phone · tanks lnstalledi dump trucks
T2 cents per word three
3-2'1-tfc
2 Furnished Apts . with new
service - plus gigantic
. Pomeroy, Oh io. Phone 992- furniture , with or without
consecutive insertions. 992-3364
..
USED under counter dish - 1 d isplay of mobile homes
and io-boys tor hire ; will haul
18 cents per word s i K con ·
7554 .
4·3·121P
washer. Phone 992-2242.
fill dirt, lop soli, limestone GARAGE repair, tune-ups;
utilities, both have 1 or 2
always available at . . .
secu tive insertions .
. 4-5-6tp
4·11
-3tp
bedrooms,
both
on·
ground
al1'd gravel; call Bob or Roger
plugs, points and condenser; 8.
25 Per C~nt DiScount on pa id
63
FORD
Econollne,
pick
up
floor
and
have
Wall
-to-wall
Jeffers,
day
phone
992-7089;
cyl
.. $17.95 and ·6 cyl., $14,95 ;
ads and ads paid within 10 days . ALL EYE Make-Up products in
1969 VOLKSWAGEN camptruck with tool boxes. ExM1LLER
carpet. Also have private
night phone 992·3525 .or 992-: · call for appointment; Raclrie.
CARD OF THANKS
Koscot line on special this
mobile, low mileage , extra
cellent condition . No rust,
&amp; OBITUARY
entrances and yard for
5232.
Garage, Racfne, Ohio, 949~
month. I would like to serve or
Sl.SO for 50 word m inimum .
good
condition.
$1,995.00.
new paint. Phone 949-5953.
children,
In
nice
neigh
2·11·tfc'
:161\.
MOBILE
HOMES
)I:OU . Please phone Helen
visit
Each additional word 2c .
. Phone 992-3076 .
·
4-10•6tc
borhood.
-~---:=:"::"":
4-8-JO!c
Jane Brown, Middleport, Olio
BLIND ADS
1220 Washington Blvd.
- 4- P -6tc
Phone
992-3863
till
3
p.m.
or
'READY-MIX
CONCRETE.
992
-5113.
.
Add itional 25&lt;: Charge per
423-7521
BELPRE,
0
.
1965
FORD
Gaiaxie,
500,
ex9!2-S844
after
6;00.
4-4-ttc
delivered right" to ~our · ooze·R and back hoe ' wor k&gt;
Advert isement.
EASTER !lowers, Hanging
cellent condition . Clean as a
OFFICE HOUR'
pr:-o/ect. Fast and ea.sy. ree
ponds and septic t!f!l-nks, dltir
pin V8 automatic. Phone 9498 :30a. m. to 5: oo· p.m . Dallv. 1 AM qui fling business. I have · 3 AND 4 ROOM "furnished .-n~ · baskets and pots of mums. OWN YOUR HOME AT LOW
est mates, Phone 992· 3284.
c~ing service; top soli, fill
5953.
8: 30 a. m. to 12 :00 Noon
unfurnished
apartments. ;. lilies. geraniums, begonias
COST - see Kingsbury Home
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
dirt, limestone; B\&amp;.K Exrl
Watkins Products at reduced
Saturday.
and petunias. Pansies and
Sales
&amp;
Service,
Inc.,
phone
4-10-6tc
Middleport,
Ollie.
·
·
,
cavatln~. Phone 992-5367 1·'
prices. Adra Swick, LangsPhone 092-5434.
·
6-JO-IIc
4· 12-tfc · cabbage plants . Cleland . 992-6256 from 2 to 7 p.m. or by _ - - - - - - - - - ville, Ollie, phone 742-32'15.
Dick Ka r', Jr .
, ~~
Farms and Greenhouse, E. appointment . 24t wide 1967 VOLKSWAGEN, new re4-ll-6tc
Main , Racine , Geraldine
SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
9·1·11~
furnlsheCL Made by Skyline
built engine, new tires and
TRAILER . Brown' s Trailer
Cleland.
·•:
· IN MEMORY of Robert M.
Corp. , country 's largest.
new front end. RadiJ, Selling . REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446NEW Improved "Zipples," the
Park ; phone 992-3324.
·
4-11 -tfc
Cowdery.
"Meigs County owned and · because of schOQI _. Phone 992· . •782, Gallipolis, John Ru ..ell,
'I
great iron pill now with
4-3-tfc
ONner &amp; Operator.
Deep in the heart ll,es a picture/
operated . "
Financing
2048.
'
Vitam in C. Nelson Drug . · · · =~--~----,::1972 APACHE Eagle Fold-Up
5-12-llc
Of a loved one laid to rest.
available . Set up on your lol _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _4_10-Jtc
4-11 -Up PRIVATE meeting room for
ca·mper i includes spare tire,
In memory 's frame we shall
ready for your occupancy. 200
any organization ; phone. 992canopy afld plast1c storm
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
keep it,
yards off Rt . 33 on CQunty Rd .
SLEEPING
Problem?
•
3975 . .
wiridow. Trailer has been
Complet.e Service
Because he was one of the best.
18.
Quick
delivery
.
Our
low
.
Restless?
Get
Snoozer
3·11 -tfc
wired for electr'icity, 3 outlets.
Phone
9.o9-3821
There· is a link death cannot
overhead will save you SSS. 12'
'
Tablets
for
a
safe
night's
Excellent condition, $675, call
Racine, Ohio
sever,
and 14' Mobile Homes
sleep. Only 98c. Nelson Drug .
Crltt. BradtQI'd ·
992-5815
after
5
p.m.
·
Love and remembrance last
Market,
available,
Kingsbury
Home
TRAILER,
Baer'
s
.
. 4-1\ -ltp
4-1Hfc
nifc ·
'f orever.
Sales &amp;· Servic_e, Inc.
·
Syracuse, Ohio,
·
-·-3-25-tlc
.
Sadly missed by the family .
4-6-tfc
USED davenport . 125. Cali 985· - - - - - - - - - G &amp; E Afpliance Wepair' j repair·
.
. 4-11-ltp TWO wee_k revival at Freedom ~----'-3936 alter .4 p.m .
Gospel Mission at Bald Knobs FURNISHED 2 bedroom
on al laundry equipment,
..;,
$2995
4-\\ -3tc
starting Arri115 at 7:30p.m .
refrigeration equipment and· .JOx40 2 BR
apartment, adults only,
! •'
Rev . Cecl Wise, Evangelist,
house wiring ;
welding,· '\qx51 2 BR
Middleport; phone 992-3874.
$3595.!!
Rev. L. R. Gluesencamp,
electric and gas. Call 992 -3802
'
4-6-tfc HOUSE and 2 lots plus 9 ad$3995
10x56 3 BR
: joining lots- at Long Bottom ,
Pastor. Special singing. The
or after 4:30 p.m . call 99'212x412 BR
$3595
Ohio, under $3,000. Would like
public is mvlted.
6050.
4 BEDROOM, 2 baths, beautiful
110
Mechanic
Street
a 10' wide house trailer up to
4-10-51&lt;:
,.....CLELAND~
3-21-JO!p.
$3995 ' .
12x5l2
BR
built-i
n
kitchen
,
located
in
to
.
... .
'": ,
V2 payment. M. A. Hall , 378'
Pomeroy; trailer space at
' REALTY
.
$42951
' 12x56 3 BR
YARD Sale, Friday and
6249, Reedsville, Ohlo.
·
;Pomeroy,
SEE
FOR:' Awnlngt,
Cheshire on Rt . 7, water
and be Informed of the fUfiC :
·
'01
E.
Main
.
~
$4995·
·
4-11 -ttc
Saturday on Larki rr---s tr-eet ;-· furnished; phone 446 -4060
doors and windows, t•rports, , 'l"ix613BR
tions of your gov~rnm~nt are
'
--·
•
Pomerov
.
..,.
Rutland
.
after 5 p.m., 446, 1279 .
REAL' BOY
marquees. · afum'lnum siding 20x43 3 BR
. tmbodied in public not1ces . In
4-1.0-3tc
that Self.government chargeS .1
and · railing. A. Jacob, sales .
4-6-6tc 3 CAMP lotS for sale, run from
· 3 RENTALS - I furnished . All •
56500 :
railroad track to low water . ~XCELLENT LOCATION
a11 c;:itizens to be Informed;
representative. For freeJ Double wide
near courthouse . INCOME
thiS oewspaper urges every · PAUL's AUTO PARTS now HOUSE AND two trailer lots.
mark, 86 ft . wide at railroad
estimates·, phone Charlee
1 level acre. 9 room home, 4
$193 .00 a
month.
Only
citizen lo r.ead and study th~se
track, 400 ft. long and 100 ft. · bedroonis,
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V 1 Ali homes are total electric, :
open
for
businesS
in
old
Phone
992-5693.
pQrches,
bath
.
$10,000.00.
.
notices . We strongly adv1se
wide
at
low
water
mark;
0
completely furnished. set of
Johnson
arld SOn, Inc.
location on
7 bypilss,
4-9-5tc .
those citizens ;-seeking further
Nice apartment In rear to
NEAR TOWN
these
lots
are
good
and
clean.
3-2·111
steps.
V•" birch paneling,
'
'
Pomeroy. We pay top dollar
information , to exerc ise the!r
rent. Large storage building.
3 BEDROOMS- urge -bath,
no brush; level ; on Ohio ·River
right - of access to publiC
for wrecked and junk auto &amp;
house
-tyPe
doors. storm
Beautiful yard . . S1~,500.00 . ·
nice · kitchen, basement, front
· across
from
Pomeroy:
re c ords and publi c meetings .
trucks . Owner. Paul ·-Baird.
SEPTIC
T.ANKS
AROBi"C~
windows
.
From
$250.00
INCOME PROPERTY
_a nd back porches ... Garage.
'
.
Marion Reynolds, Mason, W,
4-5-6tp
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEAN·
down.
Delivered
Free:·
Nice apartment, 2 bedrooms,
$8.000.00.
• ·
·
A \OFT. MEAT or vegetable
Va. phone 773-5147.
EO, REPAIRED. MILLER
display case with ·motor . If
bath, dining R, with 10
.
NEW LISTING
4-1Htc
· -· ORDINANCE NO . 437
SANITATION,
STEWART.'
Many mor~ ·to choose frOm.
TO VACATE FIFTH STREET OLD FASHIONED revival slill · you can use it call 949-3821,
sleeping rOOM:\S over. Ready
10x55 MOBILE HOME ..:.. And
OHIO.
J?HONE
662-3035.
1
~in progress at the Pomeroy
IN.. THE
VILLAGE
OF
949 -3161, · or write A. C. 10 x 50, 2 BEDROOM" trailer,
lot. Has 3 bedrOOms, City
to renf for immediate in ' . . -· '
· 10-4-tfc
POMEROY, WHi"cH FIFTH
Wesleyan Holiness Church · on
.
I
Bradford, Box 116, Racihe, 0.
excellent cOndition, $2,500.
come.- CALL TO SEE. Just
wat~r. natural gas, and Qhlo
STRE'ET EXTENDS ·· FROM
Rt . 143. Special services each
45171,
Phone
Ravenswood
304-273Power
.
Asking
Just
$5700.00.
S\1,500.00.
BUTTERNUT AVE .NUE TO
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
evening at 7:30p. m. Speaker
4-5-5tc
3623.
MECHANIC STREET
lYEARSOLD
·
L-O·T
and. small; Batkhoes and .
''
and PaStor Rev. O'Dell
4-11 -4tc
3· beautiful ·bedrooms with
ON ROUTE 33 Vacant,
Loaders
on
track
and
tires:
Manley
.Ev~ryone
wflcome.
.
HORSES:
I
registered
2
.WHEREAS , this 5th day ·or
closets. A kitchen that ·ready for you to build your own
Dump trucks Lo -boy 1
3-26-tfc
Feb . 1973 , there has been
quarter; 7 ye'a rs old, Qelded, HAVE large assortment of · large
is a housewife 's dream.
home. Asking S1500.
,Service ; Septic tanks in -'
.•
presented to Council 1!1 Petition ~
- · .,...------~
$375 1 gelded walker , 1 rears · flowers for Easter and eve~y
stalled ;
George . (Bill)
Eastern Aye. Galli palls, 0~
Dining
room
with
double
RESTAURANT
' to vacate Fifth Street from T
old, 's2so. Must sell. Cal 367occasion. Smalley'-s Gift
Pun Ins: phone 992-2478. . '
Butternut Avenue to Mechanic
PH. 446·0175
••
EAT OUT - Your · wJry own
sliding glass· doors to patio.
Shop,
Chester, Ohio, phone
7432.
Street -in the village of
Large
living
room
with
business.
Good
future
with
.
2:9-tfc'
~-----~---,·:-'
.
4-5-tfc
985-3537.
Pomeroy, by all the owners of
fireplace . Bath . . Utility
growing town . Ai'king Only
4-10-IOtc;
the property abutting -on Fifth
room
.
Carpeted
.
Storm
doors
$5,000.00. Will take lot on trade. HARRISON'S TV Service and
Street in said Village of
HOOD'S AQUARTLIM&gt;: tish
Service C~iis; phone 992-2522.
Pomeroy, and
&amp; windows . Electric heat.
42 ACRES
and supplies ; new location, 71 SCHULTZ 12 ft .. by 70ft, fully
·
· ·
2-9-tfc
WHEREAS , _all or the
6 ROOMS - Modern kitchen
Level lot 100x120. $23,000.00.
carreted trailer . Uke new .
Ash Street, Middleport nur
property ownerS having an
Cal 092-3860 or 94~·2951.
park; phone 992-5443,
'
and bath. Nice gas furnace, . ELNA and ·- White . s_ewing
SERVICE STATION
Interest in land abutt ing said
4· I0-6tc
1-7-.t fc ,
With all stock and equip·
baro , all minerals, o~~nd good
Machines ... service . on all
·Street request 'Said vacation of
· -----~~
-·--~-said street, and
' ment. Lovely. apartment
fences . Only S19,500.00.
rriakes. _Reasonable rates.
10
47 MOBILE Home, 26 ft.
WHEREAS , it appears that
over . 3 bedrooms, bath, gas
_
LARGE
The Sewing Center, Mid·
tOAL,
Limestone.
Excelsior"•
uid Vacation will not be
selt -.Con,tained
Concord
turnace, glassed porches,
SCENIC VIEW- .4 bedrooms,
dleport, Ohio.
!
Salt Wor~s. E. Main St.,1
detrimental tO the general in camper.
Phone
992·3954.
H_UMIDIFIER~
hardwood
floorS.
A
STEAL
2
baths,
front
enclosed
and
11
16-tfc
~
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
1
terest of the VIllage of
4-10·3tc
AT.jUSL$.11,900.00.
back porches. _Gas F.A. fur - . ".
.
. , _.
Pomeroy .
ftc'
4-12Hot Water Heaters
NOW, THEREFORE be it
4 YEARS OLD
nace. full basement, 2 car WILL trim or cut .trees, clean
orda ined bV the Council of the
'' 1972 22 FT. TAGALONG travel HERE IS A BUY - 4 garage. Large river front lot. out basements, attics, etc.
Plumbing
Village of Pomeroy , Ohio, ,
trailer, self-contaif\ed, sleeps
bedrooms, bath, large living
Ail for Bargain of $10,500.00.
Phone 9.o9-3221 .
·
.Electrical Work
Sec . 1: That Fifth Street
SPRING SPECIALS
4, Phone 992-6960.
R.,
bar
room
.
Large
kitchen
NEW
HOME
.
J-11-30tc
·extending from Butternut
4-11 -6tc:
and dining area - loads of
3 BEDROOMS Stove,
Avenue to Mechanic Street in
112 acre of ground.
·said Village be and the same Is
cabinets.
1
refrigerator
treeler
in
1129.95
SOUP'S on, the rug that is,
hereby vacated .
31k
HP
Storm windows &amp; doors . , beautiful kitchen . Nice utility,
Sec . 2: That said vacation Is
clean with Bfue · Lustre. Rent
In Carton ~
Close in . $'6,900.00.
and closets. Only $16,000. May
for the best Interest or said
electric shampooer
$1.
Set Up, 134,95 .
Village of Pomeroy atld Is not
1'12
YEARS
OLD
take a lol on ·t rade.
'H61iSE in Long Botforn, ph6iie
Nelson 's
Drug
Store,
detrimental to the general In 992-2448
In
new
.addition.
Level
lot
NEW
LISTING
985-352'1.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
ter-est of the VIllage of
IOOx
100.
3
nice
bedrooms
W·
1
ACRE
LOTS
In
.
Meigs
· .6·11-tfc
Pomeroy,
4-10-2tc
Pomeroy
-·
. Closets. Very modern kif·
school district. Have the water
Sec. 3 ~. That there is good ,._.....;_ _ _ _.....,_ __...
1
3 HP
49.95
NEW f piece ti-aditional livin~
chen W. range . Beth, utility,
taps and septic tanks In : Only
Cause for vac·atlng said Street
In Carton
HOUSE FOR SALE : 2 or 3
·t
"th
a
e
t
a
hi
hardwood
floors
&lt;some
$2 ' 000 · oo .,
Sec . 4: that th is Ordinance be
room
SUI
e,
WI
X
r
9
Set
up,
$54.95
bedroom, all paneled; wall -toand rem a in in force from and
back Mr . Chair and reversible
carpeting) , drapes included.
'
wall
carpet: forced air fur after the earliest period allow.ed HOUSE In . Middleport, 2
POMEROY
· cushions; regularly $239.95,
A' nice carport with storage
DON'T
WASTE
YOUR
Commercial ·
nace;
· 18,000 BTU air·
by law.
·
9._ . JackW. Carsey,Mgr.
bedroom, bath, call 949-3832
now
only
$139.95.
Your
choice
room.
THIS
YOU
MUST
VALUABLE
TIME
LOOKING.
Conditioner;
,full
basement:
Passed March 5, 1~73 .
6il
Phone 992:-2181
or 843-2667.
ol colors.•Pomeroy Recovery ,
SEE 121.500.00.
SEE US AND SAVE YOUR
~
. oOnald Collins
nice yard; city ,.Yater,· sewer
4·11-6tc
622 E . Main St., Pomeroy,
PROPERTY IS MOVING · SHOE LEATHER.
Mayor
and
gas; close to school.
KNAPP ql!al ity shoes for wOrk
Olllo. Phone 992-7554.
, FAST . LET US SELL
KELEN L. TEAFORD
Localed
iO Middleport. Price .
WAREHOUSE" or storage or dress; golf shoes, $19.09; . .
Attesf:
. 4-5-6tp
YOURS.
. GORDON B. TEAFORD
110,000.
Phone
092-7109.
·
· building, located on Rut.iand
call 992·5324, Bob Hysell.
Jane Walton
.
4-5-6tc
,ER.
HENRY
OCKL.
E
ELRAND,
Sr.
ASSOCIATES
J. ' , I
J"
Clerk
St., _ Middleport.
metal
4-6-tfc Modern walnut stereo-radio ·
8
992·3615 or 992-3325 .
\
l ' 011 I Jn•ufJ j/,•,._
building , Call or contact two. ~--------­
combination, 4 .speed in 992 22591f
9912568
OWINGS
(4) 4, 11, 2t
Manning Webster, 992-2495. PAY LESS - GET MORE!!
.fer mixed changer. 4 speaker 1---·-__n_o_a_n_s_we_r__
· _ _' , _ ::.
·· N
--'.0'_.;..s_u_N;_D_A_Y_s_K_ _·: .....,_ 2
HOUSES
" NEW,"
3
fQII flU ISTIMA Tl
4-9-ltc
Besides our usual stock of
sound system, separate
bedrooms
;
wall
-f6
-Wall
NOTICE OF
clean, budget-priced used
Ca II 992-2635
controls. Balance $69.56. Use
carpet ;
total
efecfrlc ;
APPOINTMENT
furniture KUHL' S BARGAIN
our budget terms . .Call 992basements
;
large
wooded
Case No. 2090t
CENTER now sells NEW
7085.
, Estate of MERLE E . . R•JCE ,
rots; 2 car garages ; custom
FURNITURE:
3pc.
-maple
or
4·5·6fc
oeceased .
DEAD StoCk horses ,· cattle,
kftchen ; call 985-3595 or . 992walnut bedrooms $109; .4,
Notice is hereby given that . hogs , sheep. Reasonable
5869.
drawer chests (maple or QUARTER Horse and oaddle;
~dison Hobstetter, of Pomeroy,
charge. Call 245-5514.
3-28- 121c
Ohio , has been duly appointed
walnut) $25 .95; 5-drawer
phone 092·3283.
·
2-28-JO!c
· Ohio
Adm lnistrator of the Estate or , - - - - - -maple $30.95 i Herculon sofas;
4-6-6tp
. Me.-ele E. RIce, deceased, late
matching chairs $139.95; 3 pc .
of Meigs County, Ohio.
S "'
E"'
L::F-:.Cc:O:-:cN-:T:-:A:-:1-::Nc:E:-:D:---,t -ra vir
coffee
step-table sets $16.95 ; ~
. ' .
Creditors 11re required to file
slat-seat
hardwood
rockers
Owner Transferred. Wi II not refuse any
trailer,
22. ft ., sleeps 6, good
their_claims with sald flduciarv PART TIME . National supplier
$15 .95 : s .s. oa~ straight
condition, priced for quick
withJn ·four months . .
reasonable offer.
'
. l:
will train men for J.oc~l
chairs, S5.50 ea. in quantities - sale: call after 4 p.m;. 949Dated thIs 6th day of April
2
lpttd
typewriter
repairing.
Write:
1973 .
of A+; 7 pc. chrome dinette
2601.
· ChOice
water
Regional Manage., Box 25,
Manning D. Webster
$99 ; also; cloth-covered sofa
This is a great opportunity for sol)'le lucky ·
4·8-6tc
temps .
Aut
Judge
Glenshaw, Penna. 15116·. '
beds. swivel rockers, vinyl
family large or small. 5 bedrooms, completely
Colirt or Common Pleas;
weter
level
H·12ip
recliners, child's rockers; CORN : Phone 985·4211 .
Probate Division
control.
Lint
carpeted,
living,
family
and
dining
rooms,
2
sofaS witt! matching swivel
(•U 11. lB, 25, Jtc
3-29-24tp
Filter
or
Power
rockers . It pays to cheCk with
large bathrooms. new kitchen with builtin cab.
Fln Agitator.
~
. KUHL'S for your NEW or
!'trma-Prtss
Kids can walk to grade school. It's an older
KILLS rats quickly, sure.
USED furniture needs I USED STAR
M1yta1
21/ 2 lbs ., $1 .69, Ebersbach
APPLIANCES include large
house In an excellent location In Middleport.
H•loofHtat
Hardware·
,
Sugar
Run
Mills
,
selection
of late-model
Dryers
.'
Was $24,000, but · don't let that stop you . ·The
Pickens Hardware, Mason . ·
refrigerators $85 and others
·
·
Surround
· clothes
.
·
4-1-JO!p
owner must se·ll, (make an offer). ·
from 125(1 gas); elect. orgas
With gentle , even
dryers $35; auto. washers $.45;
heat . No ho' spots.,
no over(lrylng .
wringer. type ; ·9ort . dish - 196~ PLYMOUTH Fury, 2 dr .
Fine Mesh · Lint
hardtop, air co·nd ., V1nyl top,
washer, used bllliar.d table
Filler.
51,100. Call 446-3939.
$45. Major appliances are
Wt S•eCIIIiuln
4-6-5fc
GU"ARANTEED for 30 days.
•
MAYTAC
Office
446-3643
KUHL ' S BARGAIN CEN - G
- R-0-:Cc-E_R
_Y_b_u_s-in_e_s_s_t_o_r - sale:
CALL
T~R . Rt 7 "~!"caution light,"
BuilrHng for sale or lease.
Tuppers Pl.ants . ()pen to 7;
•.
Phone 773·5618 trom,8: 30 p.m.
closed MONDAYS ONLY :
E. M. "Ike" Wiseman _446-3796
to
10
p.m
.
for
appointment
phone 667-3858.
741-4211
E. N. Wi.seman 446·4500
no.trc
Arnold
Grete .
4-B-6tc
.
[ PH. 992·2156
Rullaricl .. 1
'

For Rent

lfE DASSENT
RUN OUT OF
LOLL i POPS IN

NARY A CENT-THAT'S fER
OOCTORIN' UP M'{
SORE TOE LAST .
WEEK

Wheel Alignment

Blue Ridge
· Interior- Exterior

l99,gallon

'

~.O.TRE 'otXJ
~lt.J!(JIV6, EE~ ~

EXPERT

PAINT SPECIAL!

Mobile Homes For Sale

,.

l

, 111'1 LOLLIPOP
JA R .IS GITTIN'
. LOW, SILAS

Business Services

NOW READY Blooming EXPERIENCED painter, ln potted flowers , starting at
teriof and exterior . Phone
.SOC; hanging baskets ; pansies
985· 3951.
'
and cabbage ; Ready soon 3-20-JOtp

1!70CHEVROLET CAPRICE
S2095
f-iT Cpe., local 1 owner car, &amp;r:k grn. fin ish, matching
green . Interior. tires show little wear, V-8 automatic
trans. , power steering &amp; brakes, plenty of comfort &amp; eye
appeal to \his car ,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

•

•

Sentinel-'Classifieds ,Ger Action! Sentinel Classifi~ds Get Res_'!'lts!_
2 S1AS
Of
QUAun

•

.

' •5.55

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

.

&amp;

~OT

ONL'i IS PRO~ESSOR ARID
AN UNINSPIRING "ECTURER ... WITH

~E ISN'T EVEN A GOO!&gt;

CHAPERONJ

HI S NEARSIGHTEDNESS ...

.

Sales

AT LEAST'

Ht='5 AN
HONt=!&gt;T
MAN!

&amp;

wr:

OFFICE SUPPLIES

-

· FURNITURE

=----

[J'L ABNER
HA1 - i
MIGHT•

I HAVE ll\IER"f
WITH
"CORPORAL a&gt;DCK"
TI-\E
COMIC BOOK-El&lt;CEPT
PROPER
THE FIR$T Of..IE COULD 'YOU RECREATE EQUIPMENT
IT FORME&lt;'
®

YEAH , BOSS', THERE' S

+-II

FOU~·UPOUT

BEEN A

'TH'

I'M AFAAID Miii:. ELUO'l'~
ATTI1UDE: Rt:FI.!:CJ&amp; l!IE
CITY'&amp; f'OLIC&gt;:i PAW. IT'LL
.651HE &amp;AMt. WfiEREEVf:R WE W.

L------------"

P1...,Q.NT~ WE1 RE ' WAY

BEHIND Ot\J PRODUCTIONl

·WINNIE WINKLE

lOOK AT lHEM lli1~

ENOUOH 10 BREAK YOUR
HEART. lHE FADED ARMY

WAI11NG- AND I\'15HIN&lt;7,
!IUT fOR WHAT?

I

WO: ~CST THAT BIG
ORDE~ O' PAP61&lt; CLIP.;
We: We;~ EX~IN '
F~M WOMfilAT

IN

S:~E

VI$.1TIN 1

H OURS ARE

ABOUT
OJER :

INCOI&lt;POFtA.TED!

HOLD ON.ARE YOU I
TO FIGHT FOR OUR
DREAM ... EVEN IF WE
HAVE: W IMKE IT COME
TRUE ON OUR.ONN?

In Memory

-------

Real Estate For Sale

,

\

Real Estate For sale

PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right

PUBLIC
WHOLESALE
NEW

Virgil B.
Teaford, St.
Broker

Know

Ohio

...

'

..
':

.. ,SINCE THE IR SKIN

l'M ALSO WONDERING
ABOUT THE. LENGTH OF
TIME A PL.E6105AUR
CAN STAV OUT OF
WATER {

.-,
.

""'v"

S MOOTH, THEV MAY
HAD TO IMM ERSE TH EM 5E.LVE5 PERIO[)ICALLY .1

MOBILE HOMES

.

·us

i

-

'

"

I • 1

storm-

11 o

'9Jf'f'ER WILL
BE l&lt;:fN/'IIN

:t . _

'M;'tJl'/
M\IJUTE.;,

For Sale

.

TRI.COUNTY
MOBILE HOMES ::

~-

~

-'
~

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

'

. !i --

....SIJT .WE ~l11'T GOT HO CHOfCE! ·
WE'RE STUCK HERE AT LEAST UHTIL
THE CHIEF COMES SACK! MfAI'iWHILE.
THE. 0L1 WITCH IS PROB'6LY MAKIH 1

HER MOVE!
Yesterday's Cryploquote!

ACROSS
I. - Beach,
Calif.

o.

t

SABRE TILLER

Real Estate For sale

like a person.

-'!1

POMEROY

WMP0/1390
ON _YOUR DIAL

Gallia Co.'s Largest
Real Estate.Sales Agency
Evenings Call

, The Dally Sentinel

1---'------:------'

-=-....,.-----·

RUTLAND FURNITURE R;~~-~~=·'

Edmond

sorrel
20. British
actress,
Patricia 21. I (Ger.)
22. Slaughterhouse

gem

36. - of

O'Brien

movie
30. Relat ing

to fish

23. F.urrow

I I

t cr

31. Com-

38. Corvin e

m3.ndcd
32. Engli sh

., cry
39. P ubl ica lion

boy's
school

24. - de
France

PUM/1

Wight
37. Encoun -

( t oll oq.l

I

-I I

I
I I 0

IWI'PLE

. ment
30. Level
31. Misrep 'resent
34. Sh ipsha pe
38. Play with (tan·

I

·

'

·

WHAT SHOOTIN!;;
A).j'IWHER'c MIO&gt;HT f:IE.

tJ

Now .....,..the cl"'led leUen
to form the 1urpriM &amp;NWer, u
outfnled br the oboYe ..noon.

ClJPiitl~'...~-~-M~"'~IIISWII~IInbl [ I I I I I I )
("-nnt•

J...,., ORBIT

talize )

MOnF

iUMNI

(3 wds.)

.

lOW)

CANTON

.... .
Auwen Could be •~ ~•,. .....&amp;ag , • .,..,_
lilcc a: dnula-."TTM·TOM" .

40. Bedeck
41. Ingress;

egress

.

ITS HAK\7

F'OR ME TO 00 ,
i?&lt;5f I'LL CE~TAINL'I
TR'f IT l

42. Actress

I WONDER HOW THE

Hiller
43. Make

OTHER TEAM FEElS ...

welcome
DOWN

'1. Gloomy

aura
' 2. Hip bones
· 3. Suffix of

nouns
4. Comic
strip

magician

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to w "o rk it:

i.

FOR

Balin

19. Wood

director,
Martin Favorite
of Amadis ·
Diva's
~'";:."~,.,C~'-";..;('"' renditi on
26. Extra.va- .

4

AGENCY ·

CARRIERS

Yesterday's Answer
25. Pub drink
33. Fat
27. 1949
35. Strata-

HJ. Actress

nasty
Less

adorn-

Ingels Furniture

WANTED I

We talk to you

14. Snarled

(hyph .
wd .)
28. Pain
29. Chin

•

•

10. Carmine

gant tale

r---------:===----------,
THE

·Help Wanted

.

9. P·crpetually.

Postpon e

. 1'1

·wiSEMAN

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
-form four ordinary wordt.

refu !le
8. Smart

Brave
Debark

CLEANING

Wanted

..

1. Winery

!!~~~;~~;~· r---.....,,~---&lt;n:.,•l6. Movie

TURF TRIM MOWERS

FenturC!I Syndicate, Inc.)

~lJ)]MffiM;-&amp;..~ ..-tJ.-J,-

6. Expect

. Assumed

For Rent or Sale

..

U.S.S.R.
city

"'-' ""l 6. Win sor ·

~

(@ 1'!)7:1 I&lt; in I(

5. Kirghi z,

~~~~~; heroin
name e

-

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

TO GET UP IN

LAUDER

by THOMAS JOSEPH

x

Furnace Controls

ClH, lT'S NICE

THE MORNIN' BUT IT'S NICER TO LIE IN BED.-HAl!RY

.HEAnNG &amp;

COOLING

•

IF THE
CLAYMOR!!';So
THERE, nL ;SoU!:

IN A ~COTT/'5-H

COUR-T 0' ~AI'J .
· r MAKe UNC~E
IA"j GtVe

IT LIP!

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW ·
· One leHer simPly ~lands for anothe·r. In this sa mple A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single le tters •
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hintS. Ea~h day the code le~ters are different.
·
CRYPTOQUOTES
CN L

JW A -

HZGVSM· ,

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12- The Daily Sentinel. Mlddlel&gt;Ort-Pooneroy, 0 ., Aprilll, 1973

.

Po11eroy
.
.
Motor Co.

Want~!~~

CLEAN copper. 48c lb.;
Radiators . clean, 28c lb.;

Brass, 18c lb.: Betterles. 85c ;

1!70CHEVELLE MALIBU
S199S
4 OQOr Sedan, 32,000 miles by original local owner , V -8
engine, automaUc trans .. power steering. radio, good w -w
t ires, w,.,lte finish , showroom ctean interior. A sharp car
anyone will like.

Employment Wanted

For Sile

To BuJ

Gin.. ng S60 lb.; M. A. Hall ,
Reedsville, 378-62.o9.
3-9-llc

OLO furniture , oak tables,

Petunias. marlgolds, Coleus.
tomatoes. peppers, etc .; 1/ " off

by the flat ; Hubbard's Green-

house. St. Rt.

12~ ,

above park.

Syracuse. Ohio.

. LATEX PAINT

®

\fORE BIZNESS,

HOW MUCH

DO I OWE
'JE?

DOC

organs. dishes , clocks, brass
4-3-tfc =ASH -paid for all makes ario
beds or complete households. - - -- - - - - -models.. of mobile homes .
From the laroest
Write M. D. Miller , Rt. j, 3 NEW
ZiQ
-Zag
Sewing
,
"Phone
area code 6\j-423-9531.
1973
For
wood
and
masonry
Bulldozer Radiator
Pomeroy, Olllo. Phone 992·
on Most ".meriun C.us
machines In or1ginal factory
'
.4-13-tfc
tlnishe! .
.
:)mauesr Neater core.
6271.
carton . Zlg . Zag to make
Nath•n Bigos .
_;:-GUARANTEED1-l ·IIC
buttonholes, ~ew on bvttons. Berry-Miller IYtobile Homes h~ ­
Rodlilor SpeciiiiSI
Phone 992-2094
a lot to offer when you start
monograms, and make fancy
1970 DODGE POLAR A
.
$16!S
shopp ing for your Mobile
designs with just the twist of a
4 door. factory air, V-8 eng ine, autof'!latlc power st'eering
Pomeroy Home Auto
HOGG&amp; ZUSPAN
Home. You can beat the high
slngJe-dial.
Left
In
layaway
&amp; brakes, good W·W tires. radio. clean Interior, white
Open I Tll5
MATERIALS CO.
depreciation you~ ll have on
and never been used. Will sell
finish with vinyl top .
Monday
thru Sofurd.ly
your-home the first two years . 773-555•
ror only $.47 cash, or terms
MilSon,
W.
VI.
I'll.
992-217.
P~eroy
606
E.
M•iri,
Pomeroy, 0.
•
by shopping for a late model
2 BEDROOM moblle home,
avalleble. Electro Hygiene
used
Niobiie
Home.
We
have
a
~
adults only ; on old ~ ,~;
Co. Phone 992-7755.
huge selection of these homes
phone · 992-62'14 Of" &gt;&gt;&lt; ·~
4-11-6tc
' AUTOMOB1Lt: Insurance t&gt;ee.i ,.-::..
· ----------,
in ·stock now , and we' ll do our
after 8 p.m .
··
cancelled?
Losi
ycur
. POMEROY
OPEN EVES. 8:00P.M.
H -12tc 3 ELECTROLUX Vacuum
level best to save~ you money .
operator's
license?
Call
m
.
So for an hone~t to goodness Auto
POMEROY, OHIO
- - -- - -- - Cleane" complete with at.
2'166.
good deal stop In 1oday at
L----~----------------...1 ' ONE bedroom apartment ; lde&amp;l
tachments, cordwlnder and
HOME
AUTO
.6-15-tfc
Berry-Miller NiobHe Home 1962 PLYMOUTH Valiant, good
I
for couples ; phone 992 -5248 or
paint spray. Used but in like
992 -2094
Sales, 705 Farson Street.
condition . Phone 092-3791.
O'DELL WHEEL alignment
992•3436.
·
new condit,lon. Pay $34.45
Belpre, Ohio, phone 423-9531 - - - - - - - - - • - l l -6tc locotedatCrossroads, Rt . 124,
4-1l -6tc
cash or budget plan available.
606 E. Main Pomeroy
WANc't.AD$
Notice
open
7
days
.
Electro
Hygiene
Co.
Phone
complete
front
end
service,
INFORMATION
4-Htc
ARE now taking orders for 2 BEDROOM home, 1676 Lin992-7755.
tune up and brake sirvlce:
DEADLINES
1972 CAD. Coupe DeVille. vinyl
Southern Tomatoes. peppers,
coin Heights, bath, basement,
4-1\ -6tc
5 P .M . Day B(!'fore Publication .
Wheels
balanced
elec -(
top.
gray,
climate
control,
sweet potatoes and on ion
Monday Deadline 9 a . m .
aluminum siding, storm doors
10 X SO MOBIL'f" home, ex tronlcally .
All
work
AM&amp;.FM
radio,
low
mileage,
and
Cancellation - Corrections
plants ; will be In by May 5th
and windows, hardwood CONTEMPORARY Modern
cellent condi tion, . expansion
guaranteed.
Reasonable
perfect
condition
.
Ph.
245·
Wil I be accepted until 9 a .m . for
af least; James Ray Hill ,
floors. newly refinished . Call
Waln·ut style $tereo-radlo ,
living room , fully air rates: Phone 092-3213 .or .7425888.
Day of Publication
Letart
Falls,
Ohio:
phone
247·
Tracy
Whaley
,
092-3054.
am-fm
radio,
4
speaker
sound
conditioned
; phone 992-5905.
REGUlATION$
4-8-ollc
3232.
2'161.
2_18_tf(. ' Stop. In and See Our
• ·10-Stc
system, 4 speed automatic
4-6-12tc -----,~--The Publisher reserves the
4-8· 13tc
changer. Balance $71 .32. Use
r ight to ed it or reject any ads
1972 HONLJ,.., :MN mororcycle, 4 MODE-RN septic tank"wvice,
Floor Display,
de .emed obiect iO'nal . The
our budget terms . Call 992cylinder, many ~xtras, like
pub li sher will nOFOe responsible NEW 2 piece traditional living
7085.
2.4
hours,
7
days
a
week
,
new; phone 985-3828.
Air Conditioners
.tor more than one Incorrect · room suite, with a extra high
4· 11 -6tc
SEWING MACHINES. Repel!'
Phone ~2 -3954.
GRAY
MANOR
3·9-tfc
insertion .
back M.r . Chair and reversible
Awnings
4-10-JCtc
service, all makes. 992-22a.t.l
RATES
cushions ; regularly $239.95,·
YAMAHA
c
ycle
175.
Phone
992·
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
APARTMENTS
Underpinning
For Want Ad hrvlce
now only -139.95. Your choice
'57 "CHEVY 2 door hardtop ; '55 EXCAVATING, dozer, loader
7689
after
5
p
.m.
Authorized Singer Sates and
S cents per Word one insert ion
MIDDLEPORT
;
of
colors .
Pomeroy
Oldsmobile ; contact Larry
4-11 -3tc
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.\
Minimum Charg@ 75c
and backhoe work ; septic
Complete
mobile
home
Recovery , 622 E. Main St.,
Hubbard, Syracuse: phone · tanks lnstalledi dump trucks
T2 cents per word three
3-2'1-tfc
2 Furnished Apts . with new
service - plus gigantic
. Pomeroy, Oh io. Phone 992- furniture , with or without
consecutive insertions. 992-3364
..
USED under counter dish - 1 d isplay of mobile homes
and io-boys tor hire ; will haul
18 cents per word s i K con ·
7554 .
4·3·121P
washer. Phone 992-2242.
fill dirt, lop soli, limestone GARAGE repair, tune-ups;
utilities, both have 1 or 2
always available at . . .
secu tive insertions .
. 4-5-6tp
4·11
-3tp
bedrooms,
both
on·
ground
al1'd gravel; call Bob or Roger
plugs, points and condenser; 8.
25 Per C~nt DiScount on pa id
63
FORD
Econollne,
pick
up
floor
and
have
Wall
-to-wall
Jeffers,
day
phone
992-7089;
cyl
.. $17.95 and ·6 cyl., $14,95 ;
ads and ads paid within 10 days . ALL EYE Make-Up products in
1969 VOLKSWAGEN camptruck with tool boxes. ExM1LLER
carpet. Also have private
night phone 992·3525 .or 992-: · call for appointment; Raclrie.
CARD OF THANKS
Koscot line on special this
mobile, low mileage , extra
cellent condition . No rust,
&amp; OBITUARY
entrances and yard for
5232.
Garage, Racfne, Ohio, 949~
month. I would like to serve or
Sl.SO for 50 word m inimum .
good
condition.
$1,995.00.
new paint. Phone 949-5953.
children,
In
nice
neigh
2·11·tfc'
:161\.
MOBILE
HOMES
)I:OU . Please phone Helen
visit
Each additional word 2c .
. Phone 992-3076 .
·
4-10•6tc
borhood.
-~---:=:"::"":
4-8-JO!c
Jane Brown, Middleport, Olio
BLIND ADS
1220 Washington Blvd.
- 4- P -6tc
Phone
992-3863
till
3
p.m.
or
'READY-MIX
CONCRETE.
992
-5113.
.
Add itional 25&lt;: Charge per
423-7521
BELPRE,
0
.
1965
FORD
Gaiaxie,
500,
ex9!2-S844
after
6;00.
4-4-ttc
delivered right" to ~our · ooze·R and back hoe ' wor k&gt;
Advert isement.
EASTER !lowers, Hanging
cellent condition . Clean as a
OFFICE HOUR'
pr:-o/ect. Fast and ea.sy. ree
ponds and septic t!f!l-nks, dltir
pin V8 automatic. Phone 9498 :30a. m. to 5: oo· p.m . Dallv. 1 AM qui fling business. I have · 3 AND 4 ROOM "furnished .-n~ · baskets and pots of mums. OWN YOUR HOME AT LOW
est mates, Phone 992· 3284.
c~ing service; top soli, fill
5953.
8: 30 a. m. to 12 :00 Noon
unfurnished
apartments. ;. lilies. geraniums, begonias
COST - see Kingsbury Home
Goeglein Ready -Mix Co.,
dirt, limestone; B\&amp;.K Exrl
Watkins Products at reduced
Saturday.
and petunias. Pansies and
Sales
&amp;
Service,
Inc.,
phone
4-10-6tc
Middleport,
Ollie.
·
·
,
cavatln~. Phone 992-5367 1·'
prices. Adra Swick, LangsPhone 092-5434.
·
6-JO-IIc
4· 12-tfc · cabbage plants . Cleland . 992-6256 from 2 to 7 p.m. or by _ - - - - - - - - - ville, Ollie, phone 742-32'15.
Dick Ka r', Jr .
, ~~
Farms and Greenhouse, E. appointment . 24t wide 1967 VOLKSWAGEN, new re4-ll-6tc
Main , Racine , Geraldine
SEPTIC TANKS CLiiANED
9·1·11~
furnlsheCL Made by Skyline
built engine, new tires and
TRAILER . Brown' s Trailer
Cleland.
·•:
· IN MEMORY of Robert M.
Corp. , country 's largest.
new front end. RadiJ, Selling . REASONABLE rates. Ph. 446NEW Improved "Zipples," the
Park ; phone 992-3324.
·
4-11 -tfc
Cowdery.
"Meigs County owned and · because of schOQI _. Phone 992· . •782, Gallipolis, John Ru ..ell,
'I
great iron pill now with
4-3-tfc
ONner &amp; Operator.
Deep in the heart ll,es a picture/
operated . "
Financing
2048.
'
Vitam in C. Nelson Drug . · · · =~--~----,::1972 APACHE Eagle Fold-Up
5-12-llc
Of a loved one laid to rest.
available . Set up on your lol _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _4_10-Jtc
4-11 -Up PRIVATE meeting room for
ca·mper i includes spare tire,
In memory 's frame we shall
ready for your occupancy. 200
any organization ; phone. 992canopy afld plast1c storm
C. BRADFORD, Auctioneer
keep it,
yards off Rt . 33 on CQunty Rd .
SLEEPING
Problem?
•
3975 . .
wiridow. Trailer has been
Complet.e Service
Because he was one of the best.
18.
Quick
delivery
.
Our
low
.
Restless?
Get
Snoozer
3·11 -tfc
wired for electr'icity, 3 outlets.
Phone
9.o9-3821
There· is a link death cannot
overhead will save you SSS. 12'
'
Tablets
for
a
safe
night's
Excellent condition, $675, call
Racine, Ohio
sever,
and 14' Mobile Homes
sleep. Only 98c. Nelson Drug .
Crltt. BradtQI'd ·
992-5815
after
5
p.m.
·
Love and remembrance last
Market,
available,
Kingsbury
Home
TRAILER,
Baer'
s
.
. 4-1\ -ltp
4-1Hfc
nifc ·
'f orever.
Sales &amp;· Servic_e, Inc.
·
Syracuse, Ohio,
·
-·-3-25-tlc
.
Sadly missed by the family .
4-6-tfc
USED davenport . 125. Cali 985· - - - - - - - - - G &amp; E Afpliance Wepair' j repair·
.
. 4-11-ltp TWO wee_k revival at Freedom ~----'-3936 alter .4 p.m .
Gospel Mission at Bald Knobs FURNISHED 2 bedroom
on al laundry equipment,
..;,
$2995
4-\\ -3tc
starting Arri115 at 7:30p.m .
refrigeration equipment and· .JOx40 2 BR
apartment, adults only,
! •'
Rev . Cecl Wise, Evangelist,
house wiring ;
welding,· '\qx51 2 BR
Middleport; phone 992-3874.
$3595.!!
Rev. L. R. Gluesencamp,
electric and gas. Call 992 -3802
'
4-6-tfc HOUSE and 2 lots plus 9 ad$3995
10x56 3 BR
: joining lots- at Long Bottom ,
Pastor. Special singing. The
or after 4:30 p.m . call 99'212x412 BR
$3595
Ohio, under $3,000. Would like
public is mvlted.
6050.
4 BEDROOM, 2 baths, beautiful
110
Mechanic
Street
a 10' wide house trailer up to
4-10-51&lt;:
,.....CLELAND~
3-21-JO!p.
$3995 ' .
12x5l2
BR
built-i
n
kitchen
,
located
in
to
.
... .
'": ,
V2 payment. M. A. Hall , 378'
Pomeroy; trailer space at
' REALTY
.
$42951
' 12x56 3 BR
YARD Sale, Friday and
6249, Reedsville, Ohlo.
·
;Pomeroy,
SEE
FOR:' Awnlngt,
Cheshire on Rt . 7, water
and be Informed of the fUfiC :
·
'01
E.
Main
.
~
$4995·
·
4-11 -ttc
Saturday on Larki rr---s tr-eet ;-· furnished; phone 446 -4060
doors and windows, t•rports, , 'l"ix613BR
tions of your gov~rnm~nt are
'
--·
•
Pomerov
.
..,.
Rutland
.
after 5 p.m., 446, 1279 .
REAL' BOY
marquees. · afum'lnum siding 20x43 3 BR
. tmbodied in public not1ces . In
4-1.0-3tc
that Self.government chargeS .1
and · railing. A. Jacob, sales .
4-6-6tc 3 CAMP lotS for sale, run from
· 3 RENTALS - I furnished . All •
56500 :
railroad track to low water . ~XCELLENT LOCATION
a11 c;:itizens to be Informed;
representative. For freeJ Double wide
near courthouse . INCOME
thiS oewspaper urges every · PAUL's AUTO PARTS now HOUSE AND two trailer lots.
mark, 86 ft . wide at railroad
estimates·, phone Charlee
1 level acre. 9 room home, 4
$193 .00 a
month.
Only
citizen lo r.ead and study th~se
track, 400 ft. long and 100 ft. · bedroonis,
Lisle, Syracuse, V. V 1 Ali homes are total electric, :
open
for
businesS
in
old
Phone
992-5693.
pQrches,
bath
.
$10,000.00.
.
notices . We strongly adv1se
wide
at
low
water
mark;
0
completely furnished. set of
Johnson
arld SOn, Inc.
location on
7 bypilss,
4-9-5tc .
those citizens ;-seeking further
Nice apartment In rear to
NEAR TOWN
these
lots
are
good
and
clean.
3-2·111
steps.
V•" birch paneling,
'
'
Pomeroy. We pay top dollar
information , to exerc ise the!r
rent. Large storage building.
3 BEDROOMS- urge -bath,
no brush; level ; on Ohio ·River
right - of access to publiC
for wrecked and junk auto &amp;
house
-tyPe
doors. storm
Beautiful yard . . S1~,500.00 . ·
nice · kitchen, basement, front
· across
from
Pomeroy:
re c ords and publi c meetings .
trucks . Owner. Paul ·-Baird.
SEPTIC
T.ANKS
AROBi"C~
windows
.
From
$250.00
INCOME PROPERTY
_a nd back porches ... Garage.
'
.
Marion Reynolds, Mason, W,
4-5-6tp
SEWAGE
SYSTEMS
CLEAN·
down.
Delivered
Free:·
Nice apartment, 2 bedrooms,
$8.000.00.
• ·
·
A \OFT. MEAT or vegetable
Va. phone 773-5147.
EO, REPAIRED. MILLER
display case with ·motor . If
bath, dining R, with 10
.
NEW LISTING
4-1Htc
· -· ORDINANCE NO . 437
SANITATION,
STEWART.'
Many mor~ ·to choose frOm.
TO VACATE FIFTH STREET OLD FASHIONED revival slill · you can use it call 949-3821,
sleeping rOOM:\S over. Ready
10x55 MOBILE HOME ..:.. And
OHIO.
J?HONE
662-3035.
1
~in progress at the Pomeroy
IN.. THE
VILLAGE
OF
949 -3161, · or write A. C. 10 x 50, 2 BEDROOM" trailer,
lot. Has 3 bedrOOms, City
to renf for immediate in ' . . -· '
· 10-4-tfc
POMEROY, WHi"cH FIFTH
Wesleyan Holiness Church · on
.
I
Bradford, Box 116, Racihe, 0.
excellent cOndition, $2,500.
come.- CALL TO SEE. Just
wat~r. natural gas, and Qhlo
STRE'ET EXTENDS ·· FROM
Rt . 143. Special services each
45171,
Phone
Ravenswood
304-273Power
.
Asking
Just
$5700.00.
S\1,500.00.
BUTTERNUT AVE .NUE TO
EXCAVATING. Dozers, large
evening at 7:30p. m. Speaker
4-5-5tc
3623.
MECHANIC STREET
lYEARSOLD
·
L-O·T
and. small; Batkhoes and .
''
and PaStor Rev. O'Dell
4-11 -4tc
3· beautiful ·bedrooms with
ON ROUTE 33 Vacant,
Loaders
on
track
and
tires:
Manley
.Ev~ryone
wflcome.
.
HORSES:
I
registered
2
.WHEREAS , this 5th day ·or
closets. A kitchen that ·ready for you to build your own
Dump trucks Lo -boy 1
3-26-tfc
Feb . 1973 , there has been
quarter; 7 ye'a rs old, Qelded, HAVE large assortment of · large
is a housewife 's dream.
home. Asking S1500.
,Service ; Septic tanks in -'
.•
presented to Council 1!1 Petition ~
- · .,...------~
$375 1 gelded walker , 1 rears · flowers for Easter and eve~y
stalled ;
George . (Bill)
Eastern Aye. Galli palls, 0~
Dining
room
with
double
RESTAURANT
' to vacate Fifth Street from T
old, 's2so. Must sell. Cal 367occasion. Smalley'-s Gift
Pun Ins: phone 992-2478. . '
Butternut Avenue to Mechanic
PH. 446·0175
••
EAT OUT - Your · wJry own
sliding glass· doors to patio.
Shop,
Chester, Ohio, phone
7432.
Street -in the village of
Large
living
room
with
business.
Good
future
with
.
2:9-tfc'
~-----~---,·:-'
.
4-5-tfc
985-3537.
Pomeroy, by all the owners of
fireplace . Bath . . Utility
growing town . Ai'king Only
4-10-IOtc;
the property abutting -on Fifth
room
.
Carpeted
.
Storm
doors
$5,000.00. Will take lot on trade. HARRISON'S TV Service and
Street in said Village of
HOOD'S AQUARTLIM&gt;: tish
Service C~iis; phone 992-2522.
Pomeroy, and
&amp; windows . Electric heat.
42 ACRES
and supplies ; new location, 71 SCHULTZ 12 ft .. by 70ft, fully
·
· ·
2-9-tfc
WHEREAS , _all or the
6 ROOMS - Modern kitchen
Level lot 100x120. $23,000.00.
carreted trailer . Uke new .
Ash Street, Middleport nur
property ownerS having an
Cal 092-3860 or 94~·2951.
park; phone 992-5443,
'
and bath. Nice gas furnace, . ELNA and ·- White . s_ewing
SERVICE STATION
Interest in land abutt ing said
4· I0-6tc
1-7-.t fc ,
With all stock and equip·
baro , all minerals, o~~nd good
Machines ... service . on all
·Street request 'Said vacation of
· -----~~
-·--~-said street, and
' ment. Lovely. apartment
fences . Only S19,500.00.
rriakes. _Reasonable rates.
10
47 MOBILE Home, 26 ft.
WHEREAS , it appears that
over . 3 bedrooms, bath, gas
_
LARGE
The Sewing Center, Mid·
tOAL,
Limestone.
Excelsior"•
uid Vacation will not be
selt -.Con,tained
Concord
turnace, glassed porches,
SCENIC VIEW- .4 bedrooms,
dleport, Ohio.
!
Salt Wor~s. E. Main St.,1
detrimental tO the general in camper.
Phone
992·3954.
H_UMIDIFIER~
hardwood
floorS.
A
STEAL
2
baths,
front
enclosed
and
11
16-tfc
~
Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
1
terest of the VIllage of
4-10·3tc
AT.jUSL$.11,900.00.
back porches. _Gas F.A. fur - . ".
.
. , _.
Pomeroy .
ftc'
4-12Hot Water Heaters
NOW, THEREFORE be it
4 YEARS OLD
nace. full basement, 2 car WILL trim or cut .trees, clean
orda ined bV the Council of the
'' 1972 22 FT. TAGALONG travel HERE IS A BUY - 4 garage. Large river front lot. out basements, attics, etc.
Plumbing
Village of Pomeroy , Ohio, ,
trailer, self-contaif\ed, sleeps
bedrooms, bath, large living
Ail for Bargain of $10,500.00.
Phone 9.o9-3221 .
·
.Electrical Work
Sec . 1: That Fifth Street
SPRING SPECIALS
4, Phone 992-6960.
R.,
bar
room
.
Large
kitchen
NEW
HOME
.
J-11-30tc
·extending from Butternut
4-11 -6tc:
and dining area - loads of
3 BEDROOMS Stove,
Avenue to Mechanic Street in
112 acre of ground.
·said Village be and the same Is
cabinets.
1
refrigerator
treeler
in
1129.95
SOUP'S on, the rug that is,
hereby vacated .
31k
HP
Storm windows &amp; doors . , beautiful kitchen . Nice utility,
Sec . 2: That said vacation Is
clean with Bfue · Lustre. Rent
In Carton ~
Close in . $'6,900.00.
and closets. Only $16,000. May
for the best Interest or said
electric shampooer
$1.
Set Up, 134,95 .
Village of Pomeroy atld Is not
1'12
YEARS
OLD
take a lol on ·t rade.
'H61iSE in Long Botforn, ph6iie
Nelson 's
Drug
Store,
detrimental to the general In 992-2448
In
new
.addition.
Level
lot
NEW
LISTING
985-352'1.
Pomeroy, Ohio.
ter-est of the VIllage of
IOOx
100.
3
nice
bedrooms
W·
1
ACRE
LOTS
In
.
Meigs
· .6·11-tfc
Pomeroy,
4-10-2tc
Pomeroy
-·
. Closets. Very modern kif·
school district. Have the water
Sec. 3 ~. That there is good ,._.....;_ _ _ _.....,_ __...
1
3 HP
49.95
NEW f piece ti-aditional livin~
chen W. range . Beth, utility,
taps and septic tanks In : Only
Cause for vac·atlng said Street
In Carton
HOUSE FOR SALE : 2 or 3
·t
"th
a
e
t
a
hi
hardwood
floors
&lt;some
$2 ' 000 · oo .,
Sec . 4: that th is Ordinance be
room
SUI
e,
WI
X
r
9
Set
up,
$54.95
bedroom, all paneled; wall -toand rem a in in force from and
back Mr . Chair and reversible
carpeting) , drapes included.
'
wall
carpet: forced air fur after the earliest period allow.ed HOUSE In . Middleport, 2
POMEROY
· cushions; regularly $239.95,
A' nice carport with storage
DON'T
WASTE
YOUR
Commercial ·
nace;
· 18,000 BTU air·
by law.
·
9._ . JackW. Carsey,Mgr.
bedroom, bath, call 949-3832
now
only
$139.95.
Your
choice
room.
THIS
YOU
MUST
VALUABLE
TIME
LOOKING.
Conditioner;
,full
basement:
Passed March 5, 1~73 .
6il
Phone 992:-2181
or 843-2667.
ol colors.•Pomeroy Recovery ,
SEE 121.500.00.
SEE US AND SAVE YOUR
~
. oOnald Collins
nice yard; city ,.Yater,· sewer
4·11-6tc
622 E . Main St., Pomeroy,
PROPERTY IS MOVING · SHOE LEATHER.
Mayor
and
gas; close to school.
KNAPP ql!al ity shoes for wOrk
Olllo. Phone 992-7554.
, FAST . LET US SELL
KELEN L. TEAFORD
Localed
iO Middleport. Price .
WAREHOUSE" or storage or dress; golf shoes, $19.09; . .
Attesf:
. 4-5-6tp
YOURS.
. GORDON B. TEAFORD
110,000.
Phone
092-7109.
·
· building, located on Rut.iand
call 992·5324, Bob Hysell.
Jane Walton
.
4-5-6tc
,ER.
HENRY
OCKL.
E
ELRAND,
Sr.
ASSOCIATES
J. ' , I
J"
Clerk
St., _ Middleport.
metal
4-6-tfc Modern walnut stereo-radio ·
8
992·3615 or 992-3325 .
\
l ' 011 I Jn•ufJ j/,•,._
building , Call or contact two. ~--------­
combination, 4 .speed in 992 22591f
9912568
OWINGS
(4) 4, 11, 2t
Manning Webster, 992-2495. PAY LESS - GET MORE!!
.fer mixed changer. 4 speaker 1---·-__n_o_a_n_s_we_r__
· _ _' , _ ::.
·· N
--'.0'_.;..s_u_N;_D_A_Y_s_K_ _·: .....,_ 2
HOUSES
" NEW,"
3
fQII flU ISTIMA Tl
4-9-ltc
Besides our usual stock of
sound system, separate
bedrooms
;
wall
-f6
-Wall
NOTICE OF
clean, budget-priced used
Ca II 992-2635
controls. Balance $69.56. Use
carpet ;
total
efecfrlc ;
APPOINTMENT
furniture KUHL' S BARGAIN
our budget terms . .Call 992basements
;
large
wooded
Case No. 2090t
CENTER now sells NEW
7085.
, Estate of MERLE E . . R•JCE ,
rots; 2 car garages ; custom
FURNITURE:
3pc.
-maple
or
4·5·6fc
oeceased .
DEAD StoCk horses ,· cattle,
kftchen ; call 985-3595 or . 992walnut bedrooms $109; .4,
Notice is hereby given that . hogs , sheep. Reasonable
5869.
drawer chests (maple or QUARTER Horse and oaddle;
~dison Hobstetter, of Pomeroy,
charge. Call 245-5514.
3-28- 121c
Ohio , has been duly appointed
walnut) $25 .95; 5-drawer
phone 092·3283.
·
2-28-JO!c
· Ohio
Adm lnistrator of the Estate or , - - - - - -maple $30.95 i Herculon sofas;
4-6-6tp
. Me.-ele E. RIce, deceased, late
matching chairs $139.95; 3 pc .
of Meigs County, Ohio.
S "'
E"'
L::F-:.Cc:O:-:cN-:T:-:A:-:1-::Nc:E:-:D:---,t -ra vir
coffee
step-table sets $16.95 ; ~
. ' .
Creditors 11re required to file
slat-seat
hardwood
rockers
Owner Transferred. Wi II not refuse any
trailer,
22. ft ., sleeps 6, good
their_claims with sald flduciarv PART TIME . National supplier
$15 .95 : s .s. oa~ straight
condition, priced for quick
withJn ·four months . .
reasonable offer.
'
. l:
will train men for J.oc~l
chairs, S5.50 ea. in quantities - sale: call after 4 p.m;. 949Dated thIs 6th day of April
2
lpttd
typewriter
repairing.
Write:
1973 .
of A+; 7 pc. chrome dinette
2601.
· ChOice
water
Regional Manage., Box 25,
Manning D. Webster
$99 ; also; cloth-covered sofa
This is a great opportunity for sol)'le lucky ·
4·8-6tc
temps .
Aut
Judge
Glenshaw, Penna. 15116·. '
beds. swivel rockers, vinyl
family large or small. 5 bedrooms, completely
Colirt or Common Pleas;
weter
level
H·12ip
recliners, child's rockers; CORN : Phone 985·4211 .
Probate Division
control.
Lint
carpeted,
living,
family
and
dining
rooms,
2
sofaS witt! matching swivel
(•U 11. lB, 25, Jtc
3-29-24tp
Filter
or
Power
rockers . It pays to cheCk with
large bathrooms. new kitchen with builtin cab.
Fln Agitator.
~
. KUHL'S for your NEW or
!'trma-Prtss
Kids can walk to grade school. It's an older
KILLS rats quickly, sure.
USED furniture needs I USED STAR
M1yta1
21/ 2 lbs ., $1 .69, Ebersbach
APPLIANCES include large
house In an excellent location In Middleport.
H•loofHtat
Hardware·
,
Sugar
Run
Mills
,
selection
of late-model
Dryers
.'
Was $24,000, but · don't let that stop you . ·The
Pickens Hardware, Mason . ·
refrigerators $85 and others
·
·
Surround
· clothes
.
·
4-1-JO!p
owner must se·ll, (make an offer). ·
from 125(1 gas); elect. orgas
With gentle , even
dryers $35; auto. washers $.45;
heat . No ho' spots.,
no over(lrylng .
wringer. type ; ·9ort . dish - 196~ PLYMOUTH Fury, 2 dr .
Fine Mesh · Lint
hardtop, air co·nd ., V1nyl top,
washer, used bllliar.d table
Filler.
51,100. Call 446-3939.
$45. Major appliances are
Wt S•eCIIIiuln
4-6-5fc
GU"ARANTEED for 30 days.
•
MAYTAC
Office
446-3643
KUHL ' S BARGAIN CEN - G
- R-0-:Cc-E_R
_Y_b_u_s-in_e_s_s_t_o_r - sale:
CALL
T~R . Rt 7 "~!"caution light,"
BuilrHng for sale or lease.
Tuppers Pl.ants . ()pen to 7;
•.
Phone 773·5618 trom,8: 30 p.m.
closed MONDAYS ONLY :
E. M. "Ike" Wiseman _446-3796
to
10
p.m
.
for
appointment
phone 667-3858.
741-4211
E. N. Wi.seman 446·4500
no.trc
Arnold
Grete .
4-B-6tc
.
[ PH. 992·2156
Rullaricl .. 1
'

For Rent

lfE DASSENT
RUN OUT OF
LOLL i POPS IN

NARY A CENT-THAT'S fER
OOCTORIN' UP M'{
SORE TOE LAST .
WEEK

Wheel Alignment

Blue Ridge
· Interior- Exterior

l99,gallon

'

~.O.TRE 'otXJ
~lt.J!(JIV6, EE~ ~

EXPERT

PAINT SPECIAL!

Mobile Homes For Sale

,.

l

, 111'1 LOLLIPOP
JA R .IS GITTIN'
. LOW, SILAS

Business Services

NOW READY Blooming EXPERIENCED painter, ln potted flowers , starting at
teriof and exterior . Phone
.SOC; hanging baskets ; pansies
985· 3951.
'
and cabbage ; Ready soon 3-20-JOtp

1!70CHEVROLET CAPRICE
S2095
f-iT Cpe., local 1 owner car, &amp;r:k grn. fin ish, matching
green . Interior. tires show little wear, V-8 automatic
trans. , power steering &amp; brakes, plenty of comfort &amp; eye
appeal to \his car ,

Pomeroy Motor Co.

•

•

Sentinel-'Classifieds ,Ger Action! Sentinel Classifi~ds Get Res_'!'lts!_
2 S1AS
Of
QUAun

•

.

' •5.55

SMITH NELSON
MOTORS. INC.

.

&amp;

~OT

ONL'i IS PRO~ESSOR ARID
AN UNINSPIRING "ECTURER ... WITH

~E ISN'T EVEN A GOO!&gt;

CHAPERONJ

HI S NEARSIGHTEDNESS ...

.

Sales

AT LEAST'

Ht='5 AN
HONt=!&gt;T
MAN!

&amp;

wr:

OFFICE SUPPLIES

-

· FURNITURE

=----

[J'L ABNER
HA1 - i
MIGHT•

I HAVE ll\IER"f
WITH
"CORPORAL a&gt;DCK"
TI-\E
COMIC BOOK-El&lt;CEPT
PROPER
THE FIR$T Of..IE COULD 'YOU RECREATE EQUIPMENT
IT FORME&lt;'
®

YEAH , BOSS', THERE' S

+-II

FOU~·UPOUT

BEEN A

'TH'

I'M AFAAID Miii:. ELUO'l'~
ATTI1UDE: Rt:FI.!:CJ&amp; l!IE
CITY'&amp; f'OLIC&gt;:i PAW. IT'LL
.651HE &amp;AMt. WfiEREEVf:R WE W.

L------------"

P1...,Q.NT~ WE1 RE ' WAY

BEHIND Ot\J PRODUCTIONl

·WINNIE WINKLE

lOOK AT lHEM lli1~

ENOUOH 10 BREAK YOUR
HEART. lHE FADED ARMY

WAI11NG- AND I\'15HIN&lt;7,
!IUT fOR WHAT?

I

WO: ~CST THAT BIG
ORDE~ O' PAP61&lt; CLIP.;
We: We;~ EX~IN '
F~M WOMfilAT

IN

S:~E

VI$.1TIN 1

H OURS ARE

ABOUT
OJER :

INCOI&lt;POFtA.TED!

HOLD ON.ARE YOU I
TO FIGHT FOR OUR
DREAM ... EVEN IF WE
HAVE: W IMKE IT COME
TRUE ON OUR.ONN?

In Memory

-------

Real Estate For Sale

,

\

Real Estate For sale

PUBLIC NOTICES
Your Right

PUBLIC
WHOLESALE
NEW

Virgil B.
Teaford, St.
Broker

Know

Ohio

...

'

..
':

.. ,SINCE THE IR SKIN

l'M ALSO WONDERING
ABOUT THE. LENGTH OF
TIME A PL.E6105AUR
CAN STAV OUT OF
WATER {

.-,
.

""'v"

S MOOTH, THEV MAY
HAD TO IMM ERSE TH EM 5E.LVE5 PERIO[)ICALLY .1

MOBILE HOMES

.

·us

i

-

'

"

I • 1

storm-

11 o

'9Jf'f'ER WILL
BE l&lt;:fN/'IIN

:t . _

'M;'tJl'/
M\IJUTE.;,

For Sale

.

TRI.COUNTY
MOBILE HOMES ::

~-

~

-'
~

UTILE ORPHAN ANNIE

'

. !i --

....SIJT .WE ~l11'T GOT HO CHOfCE! ·
WE'RE STUCK HERE AT LEAST UHTIL
THE CHIEF COMES SACK! MfAI'iWHILE.
THE. 0L1 WITCH IS PROB'6LY MAKIH 1

HER MOVE!
Yesterday's Cryploquote!

ACROSS
I. - Beach,
Calif.

o.

t

SABRE TILLER

Real Estate For sale

like a person.

-'!1

POMEROY

WMP0/1390
ON _YOUR DIAL

Gallia Co.'s Largest
Real Estate.Sales Agency
Evenings Call

, The Dally Sentinel

1---'------:------'

-=-....,.-----·

RUTLAND FURNITURE R;~~-~~=·'

Edmond

sorrel
20. British
actress,
Patricia 21. I (Ger.)
22. Slaughterhouse

gem

36. - of

O'Brien

movie
30. Relat ing

to fish

23. F.urrow

I I

t cr

31. Com-

38. Corvin e

m3.ndcd
32. Engli sh

., cry
39. P ubl ica lion

boy's
school

24. - de
France

PUM/1

Wight
37. Encoun -

( t oll oq.l

I

-I I

I
I I 0

IWI'PLE

. ment
30. Level
31. Misrep 'resent
34. Sh ipsha pe
38. Play with (tan·

I

·

'

·

WHAT SHOOTIN!;;
A).j'IWHER'c MIO&gt;HT f:IE.

tJ

Now .....,..the cl"'led leUen
to form the 1urpriM &amp;NWer, u
outfnled br the oboYe ..noon.

ClJPiitl~'...~-~-M~"'~IIISWII~IInbl [ I I I I I I )
("-nnt•

J...,., ORBIT

talize )

MOnF

iUMNI

(3 wds.)

.

lOW)

CANTON

.... .
Auwen Could be •~ ~•,. .....&amp;ag , • .,..,_
lilcc a: dnula-."TTM·TOM" .

40. Bedeck
41. Ingress;

egress

.

ITS HAK\7

F'OR ME TO 00 ,
i?&lt;5f I'LL CE~TAINL'I
TR'f IT l

42. Actress

I WONDER HOW THE

Hiller
43. Make

OTHER TEAM FEElS ...

welcome
DOWN

'1. Gloomy

aura
' 2. Hip bones
· 3. Suffix of

nouns
4. Comic
strip

magician

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE- Here's how to w "o rk it:

i.

FOR

Balin

19. Wood

director,
Martin Favorite
of Amadis ·
Diva's
~'";:."~,.,C~'-";..;('"' renditi on
26. Extra.va- .

4

AGENCY ·

CARRIERS

Yesterday's Answer
25. Pub drink
33. Fat
27. 1949
35. Strata-

HJ. Actress

nasty
Less

adorn-

Ingels Furniture

WANTED I

We talk to you

14. Snarled

(hyph .
wd .)
28. Pain
29. Chin

•

•

10. Carmine

gant tale

r---------:===----------,
THE

·Help Wanted

.

9. P·crpetually.

Postpon e

. 1'1

·wiSEMAN

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to
-form four ordinary wordt.

refu !le
8. Smart

Brave
Debark

CLEANING

Wanted

..

1. Winery

!!~~~;~~;~· r---.....,,~---&lt;n:.,•l6. Movie

TURF TRIM MOWERS

FenturC!I Syndicate, Inc.)

~lJ)]MffiM;-&amp;..~ ..-tJ.-J,-

6. Expect

. Assumed

For Rent or Sale

..

U.S.S.R.
city

"'-' ""l 6. Win sor ·

~

(@ 1'!)7:1 I&lt; in I(

5. Kirghi z,

~~~~~; heroin
name e

-

ARNOLD
BROTHERS

TO GET UP IN

LAUDER

by THOMAS JOSEPH

x

Furnace Controls

ClH, lT'S NICE

THE MORNIN' BUT IT'S NICER TO LIE IN BED.-HAl!RY

.HEAnNG &amp;

COOLING

•

IF THE
CLAYMOR!!';So
THERE, nL ;SoU!:

IN A ~COTT/'5-H

COUR-T 0' ~AI'J .
· r MAKe UNC~E
IA"j GtVe

IT LIP!

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW ·
· One leHer simPly ~lands for anothe·r. In this sa mple A is
used for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single le tters •
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all hintS. Ea~h day the code le~ters are different.
·
CRYPTOQUOTES
CN L

JW A -

HZGVSM· ,

ZDL C H
0

NWQL
CLS~ t.G

CD

CNVS' MH

MLJV S M .

WGL

ZGLJXWXRA
•

GNWZHDTV:UL
PGLHNSLHH

DP

DQLG

CNL

ZWGEVSM

�•

· 14 - The Daily Senttpel, Mlddleport·Pomeroy, 0 ., Aprilll, 1973

".Food chains

Positions open
in action group

DIVORCE GRANTED
Caroline Deem has been
granted a divorce from Jimmy
Deem.

MEiGS THEATRE
Tonight &amp; Thursday

Aprlltl -12
NOT OPEN

see dangers
m· rollback
WASHINGTON (UP!)
Proposed legislation to roll
back food prices would "immediately bankrupt a subslantial portion of the food
chain industry, " the National
Association of Food Chains
contends.
The organization said in a
statement Tuesday that
supermarkets have a large
investment in food products
purchased at current prices.
" With industry profits
margins averaging about onehalf of 1 per cent on sales, there
is simply no way that inventory
losses resulting from a
rollbackfromrecord.highcosts
that have already been paid
could be absorbed," the NAFC
"d
ApparenUy it has not occurred to anyone in Congress
contemplating a food price
rollback that such action would
immediately bankrupt a
substantial portion of the food
chain industry and would be
nothing more than breaking
the thermometer that tells the
patient he is sick ."

sa~.

Friday &amp; Saturday
April13-14
LIVING FREE
( Technicolorl
Nigel Davenport
Susan Hampshire
( G)

FAT CITY

Jell Bridges

"IT'S TR

-

VALUES
·ARE
"'FOUND

AT

..
'.

' ...
'

...' ,.
'

"·-

...' .
'·

Miller visiting
in Wdkesvi/le
.

this Saturday

Congressman Clarence
Miller plans to visit the Logan
station of the Southeastern
Ohio Emergency Medical
System (SEOEMS .) this
Saturday, April 14, at 11 a .m.,
Miller, who has praised the
Objectives of the emergency
ambulance system, said he
-wantS to get a firsthand look at
the new vehicles and equip· men! being utilized in the
program.
Saturday
afternoon,
Representative Miller will
attend a meeting in Wilkesville
ro discuss the status of a
proposed sewer project for the
community and the surrollll· ding area. MiUer plans to meet
in · Wilkesville with officials
from both Vinron and Meigs.
· Counties,
as
well
as
representatives of the Ohio
Environmental Protection
·· Agency . That evening, Mil!er
will address the Ohio Farm
Bureau's Public Affairs
Council in Lancaster.

.

,

·

WASHINGTON (UP! )- The
a dminis tra ti on proposed
Tuesday tO raise the federal
minimwn wage from $1.60 to
$2.30 over a three-year period.
This is more than administration backers in
Congress have sought, but less
than some Democrats have
asked.
Labor Secretary Peter J.
Brennan presented the administration proposal before a
House labor subcommittee.
Brennan, formerly a New
York building trades· llllion
otricial,
had
supported
organized labor's drive -·last
year for an immediate $2 increase. Congress could not
agree on a bill and labor this
year proposed going to $2.20 an
hour in one year and eventuaUy
---~~ $2.50 an hoili" without a
stated lime goaL
Brennan said the wage for

-Rel.;.a.a....emenl

BAKER

The Pomeroy

i --

::: ::: : : : : : : : : : : : : ::: : ::: :::::: :=:,: :=: ::::::

Wage mmun·
• urns
to move ·u pward

sidered vested- which means
a person is entitled to the
lPG)
amount contributed to his
Show Starts 7 p.m.
retirement - when his age plus
the number of years he has
· p1an
par ti cipated in a pensiOn
adds to 50.
From 1/lat starling point, an
additional10 per cent of all the
benefits earned would be
vested each year so that the
pension would be fully vested
five years later.
Rising ve~led Benefits
The President said that
under this formula, the
proportion of fuU-time workers
1n private retirement plans
with vested pension benefits
would almost double -from 32
per cent "to 61 per cent.
Among participants over 40,
the percentage of vested
benefits would rise from 40 per
cent to about 90 per cent, he
-~said.
To avoid excessive pension
LOCAL TEMPS
FURNITUB
The temperature in down- cost· increases, the ·new· law
MIDOl£PORl 0.
town Pomeroy at 11 a . m. would apply only ro benefits
Wednesday was 40 degrees earned after the bill becomes
effective although the number
: Ullder cloudy skies.
of years a worker participated
in the pension plan prior to
enactment would count toward
Call No. 485
CharterNo.1980
National Bank Region No.4
meeting the vesting. standard. ·
REPORT OF CONDITION, CONSOLIDATING Nixon said, "This reform
. DOMESTIC SUBSIDIARIES, OF THE
would help to reduce Jhe
frequency and magnitude of
benefits l~ when pension
plans terminate." But he said
he was not yet ready to
recommend -as he said had
of Pomeroy In lbe State of Ohio, at the close of business on March 28, 1973
been suggested -creation of a
published in response to call made by Comptroller of the currency, under Title
government .. ponsored progra12, United Slates Code, Section 161.
m to insure workers against
suffering pension· losses.
ASSETS
Tax Deductions ·
Cash and due from .banks
- - - - -' - - - - - - $ 954,641:46
Nixon also said that emU.S. Treasury ~ecurjties - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - - 6,719,070.63
ployees who wish to save inObligations of other U.S. Gove~nmenf agencies
dependenUy for their retireand corporations - - - - - · - - - - . -- - - - - - -· 491,507.10
ment or to supplement employObligations of States and political subdivisions
.. 1,243,081.41
er.!inanced pensions should be
Othersecurities---- - . - - - - - - - -.
- - - 26,742.50
aUowed to deduct on their
Federal funds sold and securities purcha~ed
income tax returns arnollllts
Ullder agreements to resell . - - - - - ' - 975,000.00
set aside for those purposes.
Loans - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 6,437,561.64
He proposed that an inBank premises, furniture and futures, and
dividual's
contributions to a
other assets ·representing bank premises - - - - - 240,932.40 .
retirement savings program be
Otherassets - - - - - - - - - - - - - - 11,659.43
made tax-deductible up to a
TOTAL ASSETS - • - - - - - - - - - - -· $17,102,446.59
level of $1,500 a year or 20 per
LIABILITIES
cent of earned incomewhichDemand deposits of individuals, partnerships,
_ever is less, and that the
anq corporations - - - - - - - - - -·
- - - $ 3,831,026.11
earnings from investments up
Time and savings deposits of individuals,
to this limit also be tax-exempt
partnerships, and corporations - - - - - - - - 10,290,047.19
lllllii received as retirement
Deposits of United States Government
- - - - - - - - 97,0113.64
,,
• income.
Deposits of States and political subdivisions - - - - - - - - - - 1,342,996.61
In addition, Nixon recomCertified and officers' checks, etc. - - - - - - - - - - - - 44,351.90
mended that self-employed
TOTAL DEPOSITS - - - - - - - - . - $15,605,507.65
persons who invest in pension
(a)"Total demand deposits - - - - - - - - f 4,551,770.11
plans for themselves and their
(b) Total time and savings deposits - - - - - fll,053,737.54
employes should be given a
Other liabilities - - - - - - - - - - - -· - - - . more generous tax deduction·
TOTAL !JABI!JTIES - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Ulan Uley now receive.
"- RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES
Reserve for bad debt lo.sses on loans
(set up pursuant to IRS rulings)· - - ·· - - - - c - - - - '
$86,972.79
TOTAL RESERVES ON WANS AND SECURITIES - $86,972.79
· Veterans Memorial Hospital
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Charles
ADMITTED Equity capital-total - - - - - ' $ 1,244,397:53
Varian,
Jr.,
Hartford;
Patricia
Common Stock-total par value
200,000.00
,Hutton, Langsville; Owen
No. shares authorized 6,000
' Anderson, Racine; Renee
No. shares outstanding 6,000
Stone, Pomeroy; William
Surplus--- - - - - : __
700,000.00
Houdashelt, Syracuse; Owen
Undivided profits · - - - - - - - - - 344,397.53
Hawley, Syracuse; Luther
TOTAL CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
1,244,397.53
Glassburn, Bidwell; Iris
TOTAL IJAB!IJTIES, RESERVES, AND
Morris, New Haven; Grace
CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
$17,102,446.59
-,
Jividen, Raciqe ; HoUle Hayes,
·
MEMORANPA
Shade; Vincent Broderick,
Average of total deposits for the 15 calendAr
Pomeroy,
. days ending with call date • - - - - •- -· - - - - - - - - $15,585,253.15
DISCHARGED - Doris
Average oLtolalloan8 for the 15 calendar
Starcher, Nettie Moore and
days ending with caUdate - - - - - - - - - ·- - - - 6,400,900.:&gt;1
Esther Kissell.
Sfacy Keach

\_____ ..

PRICESDIP
Ullited Presslnteroallooal
RelaU beef, port and lamb
prices dipped sUgbtly In a
lew supermarllels Tuesday,
but the comblnallou of
stormy
weather· and
producers ' un~ertalnly
regarding consumer plans
caused prices to rise on Ughl
cattle shipments to Mldwestern markets.
Cattle prices were steady
to $1 per hundredweight
higher at niajor Midwestern
markets largely because
shipments were small. A,
spokesman
for
the
Agriculture Department
said ui Chicago the bad
weather and lack of Indlcatlon as' to consumers'
Intentions held : the shipments down.

.

Local Gallia-Meigs Commllllity Action .\8ency has
received official notice that it
would receive funds through
February 28, 1974 to operate its
agencies and programs.
Therefore, applications are
being received for the
foUowlng positions: one fuU
time secretary, two COUilly
aids and a director for the
Neighborhood Youlh Corps.
Applicants . having
any .
questions, call the Gallia office
of the CAA, 446-1760 or the
Meigs office, 992-5605.

'

3!:~.!::-::.":::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=AA::::~.::::::==.:····:::::::~

f~ational

Bank

. I, Maxille Griffith; Cashier, of the above-named bank do hereby declare
that this report of condition is true and correct to the best of my knowledge and
bellm.
"
Maxine 1GrUflth
We, the undersigned directors attest the correctness of this report of cOndition and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our
knowledge and belief is true and correct.
Edllon Hobstetter
Alfred M. Elberfeld - Directo,rs
Roger Morgan

CLASS INSTRUCTED
Joe Struble of Pomeroy was
in Gallipolis 'ruesday night to
conduct a two hour session for
28 senior class students cenlering around the topic of
hospital fires. Struble hit up
evacuation
procedures,
carriers, use of extinguishers
and th;n conducted a general
discus.•ioll on the topic. The
claas extends a vote of thanks
to Struble for the present&amp;Uon.

employes covered by the law
before 1966'should go to $1.90 on
enactment, $2.10 a year later,
$2.20 in 1975 and $2.30 in 1976.
Those covered alter 1966
would go to$1.80 immediately,
$2 a year later, $2.10 in 1975,
$2.20 in 1976 and $2.30 in 1977.
The bulk of the covered
workers are in the pre-1966
group.
Brennan also urged t!lat the
$1.3tl-per-hour minimum wage
for farm workers be Increased
to $1.50 immediately, $1.70 a
year later, $1.85 in 1975 and to
$2 in 1976.
Rep. John Erlenborn, R-lll.,
ranking GOP member of the
subcommittee and staunch
administration backer ,
sponsored the main earlier
GOP bill in the House.
It called for an increase in
the hourly minimum for nonfarm worke.rs to $1.80 immediately, $2 a year later, and
$2.10 in 1975 for pre-1966
workers and go to $2 .10 in three
years for pos'1966
workers ·
~
The farm wage increase Ullder
Erlenborn's bill would be to
$1.60 after two years.
Rep. John Dent, D-Pa., the
subcommittee chairman,
studied Brennan's prepared
statement prior to the start of
the hearing and Brennan's
appearance, and asked
Erlenborn : " When did he
change his mind? This isn't the
song he was singing last year
as a member of organized
labor."

Luigi's win
tourney game

lpl:TENDED OUTLOOK
Slowly moderating lempentnres Friday . through
,\lwailay wftb a chance of
ohowers about Sunday. Hlgh
Friday In the lower 50s north
81ld $5 lo 80 south, warmlng
to the 10s SWiday_ Lows iD
the 30s early Friday and In
the 40s &lt;orly SWiday.

The Luigi's Pizz;l basketball
team, which recently won an
independent tourney at Racine,
defeated Hamlin Volllllteers
101-85 Tuesday night in the
Hamlin Independent Tournament at Hamlin, w. va.
Top scorer for Luigi's was
Jimmy Noe with 27 points.
Other scorers were Ron
Ferguson 21, Mike Johnson 11,
Doxie Walters 15, Gary Fenderbosch 22, Dave Fife, 4, and
Rich Douglas, 3.
Hlgh for Hamlin was Travis
WeUs with 20 and S. Davis was
second with 18. Walters was top
rebounder for Luigi's with 23
and L. Clark was top rebounder
for Hamlin with 13. Luigi's wiU
meet BiD Miller's of Charleston
ronlght.

FINES REPORTED
Harold L. LitUe, 36, Mlddleport, was fined $10 and costs
by Middlelort Mayor John
Zerkle

on

conviction

·ot

' disturbing the peace. Also,
' Robert

McDaniel,

43,

Pomeroy, had his fine
suspended but was assessed
costs on a charge of falling to
yield the right of way. Eddie
RusseU Jr., Tuppers Plains
was ordered to pay parking
meter violation tickets and was
assessed costs of $8.70.

JURY SITTING
Jurors were being seated
today in Meigs County Common Pleas Court to hear the
case of Richard E. Wheatley,
·Athens,
versus
Rober.!
Snowden,
Rutland,
for
damages in the amolint of \i.l7o
alleged "in an automobile ac-

DEER KILLED
Sheriff Robert C. Hartenbach's Dept. reported a
buck deer was kiUed Tuesday
at 4:'45 p. m. when it ran in
front of a car driven by Bill
Allen Davis, Kent, Ohio.
The incident occurred on U.S.
Rt 33. There was medium cident.
damage to the car.

Weather
Partly cloudy .and cool again
today with chance of snow
flurries northeast. High from
mid 30s to mid 4os. Variable
cloudiness tonight and Thursday. Low tonight from upper
20S to mid 30s. Not so cool
Thursday, high 40 to 50.
'

NOW YOU KNOW
The 20 million Victory
Gardens in the United States
during·WW II provided nearly
40 pet. of aU the fruit and
vegetables grown in the
country - more than one
million tons, Worth $85 million.

Nellie JeweU of

'

·Michigan dies
HARRISONVILLE· -

Mrs.
Nellie Rowley Jewell, formerly
of this area, died Tuesday at
MOU!It' Clemens, Mich. Mrs_
Jewell, born in HarrisonVille,
was a retired school teacher.
Surviving are her husband,
Dr. James Harlan Jewell, and
several cousins here including
Mrs_ Elecla Souders, Middleport;
Glenn
Jewell,
Downington, and Mrs_ Hazel
Reed, Middleport. Graveside
services will be held at 1 p. m.
Friday at the WeUs Cemetery
with tile Rev. Charles Simons
officiating. Friends may call at
the Rawlings-Coats Funeral
Home from 7 to 9 Thursday
evening.

AUTOS DAMAGED
' were damaged
Three cars
and a driver arrested for
driving while intoxicated as the
result of an accident on
Mulberry Ave. in Pomeroy at
11:2lp.m. Thursday. Pomeroy
police sa.id a car driven by
Robert Hudnall, Albany,
struck the parked cars of
Henry Watson' and Geraldine
Grueser, both of Pomeroy.
Damage estimates ran from
mediwn to heavy. Hudnall was
not injured.
CALL ANSWERED
The Pomeroy E-R" squad
answered a caU at 4:27 p.m.
Tuesday to Long Hollow near
Pomeroy
for
Vincent
Broderick who was having
difficulty breathing. He was
taken to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was admitted.

M(!Cord got money to shut-up
on
executive . privilege
threatened another impasse in
the Sen~je _inyestigation of the
June 17 bilgging as well as
other espionage and sabotage
In .the 1972 presidential campaign.
Attorney General Richard G.
Kleindienst testified before a
joint meeting o.f three Senate
subcommittees ·that even in
cases of criminal charges, the
President could refuse to
permit an· aide ro testify before
Congress.
Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr.; DN.C., chairman" of the Senate
seiect Watergate committee,
pt'otested that, "! just don't
believe the President has the
power to see the laws are not
faithfuUy executed."
About two weeks ago, the
White House · said President

•

~

cessful meeting between South
Vietnamese and Viet Cong
negotiators aimed at plotting
the politrcal future of their
country .

" We have received reports
that , backed by the United
States, Saigon is preparing its
troops for an invasion of
(Continued from page 1)

Weather
Cloudy with snow mixed with
rain in extrem.e south today.
Partly cloudy and cold ton ight.
1,ows tomght in the 20s. Mostly
sunn y an d not as cool
tmnorr ow with highs m o~ tl y in

enttne

NO. 253

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OH 10

lnter~L'

Of 'l'!wiMeig.•-Ma,on Area

the 40s.

THURSDAY, APRIL1 2, 1973

PHONE 992-2156

TEN CENTS
I

.

'-""'ourt · sto
"~

'·

.

•

1smant In
. .

"

•

.

.... ,_

WASHING1'0N ( UPI) - The voted to extend it through midNixon administration is under 1975, only Co ngress could
a court order roday tn halt its abolish it.
disman tling of the Office of
Ad ing OEO
Director
Economic Opportunity (0E0), Ho'ward J . Phillips , appqlnted
which the Democrats estab- by Nixon to ph:. ise out the
lished as the central agency
agency, was ordered to stop
their "War on Povefty."
such actions immedia tely , and
U.S. District Co urt Judge • II of Phillips: past stepg in that
William B. Jones ruled Wed- direction were declar~d null ·
nesday that the President's and void by the judge.
dismantlement of the agency,
One of the major P.rograms
which has been wking place for
several months, is "unauthor. , affedcd· was OEO's financi&lt;Jl
ized by 13w, illegal and . in support' for ·local Community
excess of statutory au thority." Act ion progr&lt;.~ms in which
He said that 1 since Congress residenW of poverty neighbor.
had created OEO and recently , hoods are recruited int.Q anti·

ir

poverty project,s. Phillips haa. program, especial1y in the face
ordered . this ald terminated of a congressional mandate
next .June 30. I
that it shall go on," he ruled.
Th e ruJing, which the adIn Chicago, a similar ruling
mini ~ trat ion can appe;_JJ , has. wa s issued . Wednesday by
implications. beyond the Federal District Court Judge .
poverty program itself, in ~ James B. Parsons. He ruled in
volving the basic relationship a suit brought by a public
be tw ee n a President and employe union that only ConCon g res~. Jones in effect said a . gress c'ould rescind or curtail
president is an administra tor OEO progr'!ffis which it had
of laws passed by" Congress.
authorized. But he refused to
" An admini s trator' s . gra nt the union an injunction.
responsibility to carry out the
HOward Hirilmelman of the
congressioni)l objectives of a Lawyers Committee for Civil .
program does not give him the Ri ghts, which had brought suit
power to discontlnue that here against the dismantling, ·
::;:;:;:::;::::: :: ::::::::::: :::::;:::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::;. ;:::;:;:;:;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:~~;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::::_;:_:
.;.;
»

,.,,;' .

•

.'•

•

Fighting :rages

.

•

Knit Sweater
Cape

'

PORTION OF PARKING WT Bl.OCKED OFF - Sixteen parking spaces on Pomeroy 's
upper parking lot have ~en blocked off due ro the fact that the face of the wall near the water's .
edge has collapsed, however, the floor on the lot has not given away. The wat~r is too high at
the present time to determine how much the wall is really damaged . Pomeroy Police and
village officials are taking no chances however, and have blocked off the apparent dan gerou s
section. ·

SPECIAL PURCHASE!
DOMESTIC MADE, 100%
VIRGIN ACRYLIC. AVAILABLE IN
.

WHITE

NAVY
RED
BONE

uv;;;;;==:=&gt;:==:rii::::9,:B;r~7;11: Hartford
}
·
By United Press Inte~atlonal
,
... election
EARLY SPRING snowstonn whipped across central
AN

Ohio early today and lclt up to seven inches of snow in one area of
Delaware County and over five inches in Columbus .
The National Weat~r Service put out a travelers advisory
for central Ohio early today and predicted a chance of snow for
the eastern section of the state later today. "Terrible, terrible,
terrible," is the way Franklin County Sheriff:s Dispatcher Earl
Taylor described driving conditions. "Traffic is not moving at
all. The freeways are all clogged. It's bad, very bad."
WASHINGTON - PRESIDENT NIXON asked Congress

tod;,y to set federal standards for states to pay unemployment
-.

ONLY

$ 88

SHOP WEEKDAYS
9-.30
.
.
- TO 5 PM
OPEN BOTtf FRIDAY AND SATURDAY 9130 TO 9 PM .

such action would grayely
threaten the peace in Vietnam.
l.y Van Sau made the.
charges in a news briefing
which followed a s ixth unsuc-

•

grand jury has all the financial
records he had. In part, they
reflect these payments."

Second Floor

PARIS (UPJ )- A Viet Cong
S!iokesman charged today that
South Vietnam, backed by the
United States, is preparing to
invade Cambodia: lie said any

KILLED IN FIRE - Arthur I. (Sock) Kerwood, 77, died in a mobile home at West
Columbia Wednesday night. He live~ along . Above firemen inspect the rema ins of the
property.

month," the source said. "The

SportSwear DepL

answers including, he washes different than we do; you can
have four wives in his country; his father had three wives;
they eat with their fingers, and they never have snow , he
never saw snow until he came here. Shown with Ali are , front
row, l·r, Diana Smith, David Young, Brian Collins and Mark
Holter; second row, Jody Smith, Jerry Rucker, Baba Ali,
Vicki Carter on his lap, Ronnie Hensley, Larry Cowdery and
Jody Barringer; standing, Mrs. Grace Webe r, principal.

Invasion of·Cambodia is predicted

The North American box
turtle can support a weight 200
times that of its own.

Nixon had ordered his aides to
testify before a grand jury If
subpoenaed and also held out
the possibility of an Informal
arrangement with the Senate
committee for theii- testimony.
Sen. Howard H. Baker Jr.,
R-Tenn., the vice ch8irman of
the committee, told UPI after
the Kleindienst testimony tbat .
he "still remains optlmiatic"
tliat an arrangement cah ~ ~·
worked out for the committee
to get White House testimony.
McCord rePQrtedly told the
grand jury· this week that he
and other members of the
Watergate team were paid to
keep quiet"about t~ case.
· "He was getting $3,000 a

BLACK

INTERNATIONAL EXcHANGE STUDENT Baba Ali
from Ohio University visited Rlverview Elementary School
Wednesday to speak to all clas~es I through 8 and svend 45
mimltes.visiting with parents later in ·the aflernoon. Mr. Ali,
from_Nigeria, serves there with the governrhcnt. When he
returns to his native country he will be promo ted due to hi~
work in the United States. He has taught in Nigeria and is
studying international "relatiOns at OU. Seven first graders,
when asked what Ali had told them, came up with several

Now You Know

VOL. XXIV

ELBERFELD$
IN
POMEROY
.
__
,_

WEST COLUMBIA - Arthur I. lSock)
Kerwood, 77, burned to death .here Wednesday night when he apparently was
trapped inside his mobile home located
near the lower railroad tracks along'Rt. 62
at West Colwnbia . '
Tomancles (.Buddy Boy ) TUilslalle, first
person to the scene, made two attempts to
rescue Kerwood who was heard calling for
help. Tunslalle got hold .of Mr. KerWood
through the open door but was unable ro
pull him out of the structure. Trying again
moments later, intense heat and names
kept Tunslalle away.
It was believed Mr. Kerwood had
become entangled in something inside· the
trailer. The alarm was received at 11: 20 p.
m.
.
Tunstalle, who resides nearliy, "said he
had just arrived home when he noticed
smoke coming from the front secti on of
Kerwood 's home . As he went to inves tigate, flames began to penetrate the
roof.
Tunstalle suffered minor burns in h·is
rescue attempts.
The cause of the blaze, which
destroyed the ~35 home, was believed to
have been an overheated coal stOve. Mr.
Kerwood lived alone.
Ten Mason firemen were on the scehe
until 2:15 a. m .•.:J'hursday with Mason
Police Chief Kenneth Siders and Mason
County Deputy Sheriff Norman McBrayer
and many spectators, all helpless to save
the victim.
The body, burned beyond recognition,
(Continued on page 6)

IJevoted To The

'

WA-SHINGTON (UP!) - said Senate investigators have
Watergate conspirator James a witness who can corroborate
W. McCord Jr. gave a federal McCord's reported testimony
grand jury records showing he that former Attorney General .
was paid $3,000 a month, ap- John N. Mitchell, White House
parenUy to keep quiet about Counsel John W. Dean Ill and
the bugging of Democratic others took pari in a secret
·national headquarters, accord- meeting in February, 1972, ro
ing to a source close to the discuss plans for the Watergate
·
bilgging, This would dispute
investigation.
The ljOurce described the late MitcheU's statement that he
Dorothy Hllllt, wife of Wa~«~- diif not meet with McCord.
gate conspirator E. Howard
-The Washington Post said
HUll! Jr., as the '.'bag woman" about $70,000 in campaign
who gave funds t'o McCord. · funds were transferred in
Mrs. Hunt was killed in an apparent violation of the law
airliner crash in Chicago Dec. 8 last July from the same ac·
with $10,000 in her possession. count that financed the
In other developments:
Watergate bugging to former
- McCord was . to return to White House aide Frederick C.
the grand jury today for a LaRue a · close adviser to
•
•
fourth day of testimony. He has MitcheU.
been given immunity from
Meanwhile, a hardened
f:llxon adininistration position
further prosecution.
-The New York Daily News

Elderly man
..
dies in fire

compensation up to half of a worlier's weekly pay check and to
extend the coverage to about 635,000 hired farm hands.
Nixon, in a message to Congress, also urged lawmakers to
' amend the federal unemployment Tax Act to prohibit payment of
Ullemployment insurance benefits to strikers and the practice of
· denying benmits to nonstrikers .
'
BEIRUT- MUCH OF TifE ARAB world look to the st~eets ·
today in massive anti-American and ~nti·Israeli demonstrations.
In Beirut, youths chanting "with blood we will revenge you"
walked in procession behind the cofftns of three Palestiman
guerrilla leaders stain by Israeli co~ndos on Tuesday.
· Palestinian guerrillas carrying Russian and Chmese made
automatic weapons fonned an honor guard for the three as the
coffins left Riad Solh square, packed with a crowd estimated at
20 000, on the way ro "Martyr's Cemetery" just outside Beirut
ne'~ where the Israeli assass~ation squad landed from the _s~a.
The three dead Palestinian leaders were Kamal Nasser, official
spokesman of the Palestine liberation Organizati~n; Moha_m. med Yssef Najjar, a member of the orgamzation s executive
council, and Kamal Adwan, a leader of the AI Fatah moveme~t.
WASHINGToN- A rEDERAL GRAND jury's interview of
several key White House &amp;ides indicates it is expanding its investi~·otinn of the Watergate bugging case to other -political
·(Continued on page 6)
·

is today
HARTFORD , W. Va.
Volers in Hartford went to the
polls today to elect official:: for
another year . The polls opened
at town hall at 6:30a.m. and
will close at 7:30p.m.
Officials will be chosen from
two ticke ls selected at a recent
convention which set ~p slates
for mayor, recorder, and fi ve
coun cilmen on Citizens and
. Independent tickets.
Three present offi ce holders
seeking reelection, are three
co uncilmen who are can·
dictates on lhe Citizen; ticket.
Canditlates a re :
CITIZE NS - Mayor,. Charles
Black ; Re corder, Phillip
Purcelli Councilmen, Vernon
Grinslead, Donnie Fields and.
Carr oll Knight, all incumbents:
and Rupert Howard and Arthur .
I Buddy ) Gibbs.
INDE PENDENT - Mayor,
Pat Riley; recorder, Nancy
Kim es; councilmen, Ernest .
Ble ~si n g, Kenneth " Greene,
Fi-an ces J ohnson, Thoma s
O"Bryan and Donald War th..
Newly elected officials will
take office May 5.

SAIGON I UPI) - South
Vietnam was in the 11th week
of a [orn:ial cease-fire today but
the Saigon command said
fi ghting was still raging the
length and breadth of . the
country .
A Saigon command spokes.
man also declined comment
when asked about recent
speculation that Saigon might
send troops · to Cambodia to
help take Communist pressure
of Phnom Penh. He also would
not answer when asked if South
V1etn:Jm had a contingency
plan tor sending troops into
Ca mbodia , which is Url ·
dergoing the biggest CommlUlist offensive launched

I

Fruit crops are dead

: :~

Hy United Press Intert¥~tioilal

Farmers stood In the frost-glazed fields of the South ·

Wed1~csday, assessed a cold snap's effect:s on their fields
and orchardli and pronounced that what was expected to

heli copte rs fir ed ba ck at
Communist troops who shot at
be a b~mper crop h~d vanished in the overnight ehlll.
them Wedne13day in two sepaYet the cold air would not relent. Borne on au icy
rate incidents-one near Tan ::;: north wind , unseasonable c:old continued today, dropping ::::
Uyen, 22 miles northeast of
t.. temperatures helow freezing as far south as North
Saigon, a nd the other nc&lt;Jr Tay ... Carolina urad glazing field&lt;; with frost as far south as ...
Ninh, 50 miles northwest of the
capital.
damage to southern Dllnnls fruit .
The spokesman reported 128
&lt;:rops poured in Wednesday and cxpert.'i said the cold snap
alleged Communist truce
already brought what appeared to be the biggest fruit .~'.:·=. :
violations in the 24 hours en- -\_.-.:_::._. had
kill since 1953.
ding at noon today , bringing
the post-truce total to 10,699. &amp;
of last month, the Communists
were accusiilg the Saigon sidC
of more than 4.0,000 violations.
Since the Jan . 28 truce, ac·
cordin g to of[i cial South
Vietnamese fi gure s, 21,097
Vietnamese on both sides have
Pomeroy police investi ga ted car qriven by George Stobart,
the~e.
been killed, including 16,672 two acddcn l&lt;; Wednesday. Two 35, Racine, went out of conb·ol
I! hi"gh South Vietnamese ·communist troops, 3,643 'South
on Spring Ave. and went onto a
military source told UPr last Vietnamese military and 582 tlr ivcrs were dled to court. At 3
p.m. Wednesday at the corner sidewalk where it struck a fire
month there were no South civilians.
of Buttern ut Ave. cmd West plug, then into a wall, and back
Vietnamese troops in Cam·
Second St., a car driven by onto the sidewalk. The car was
hodia . This week, however, two .
Eri c Ritter, 25, Rutland, pulled · a total loss and Stobart, who
recently wounded South Vietfrum Second onto Butternut suffered a head injury, was
namese soldiers said they had
and struck a Car driven by cited to court for reckl esS
been fighting in Camb9&lt;iia.
opera lion.
'f\ley gave no details.
Two defendants forfeited William Peopies, 71, MansThe ·command spokesman . bond s and fiv~.. :.QthCrs were fi eld, Ohio . Ritter was cited for
said 139 Communist mortar " rined Wednesday night by fail in g to yield the right o/ way.
There were mediUJ!l damages
Veterans Memorial Huspltal
shells from dawn to midday Pomeroy Mayor Don Col linf
injuries.
ADMITTED ·- Ericka
today"hit in and around the
Ronald
Bosti c,
Point to bolh vehicles but no
'
At
6:19
p.m.
W
ednesday,
"
Hubbard, Syracuse; Leona
South Vietnamese ranger Plea!13nl, forfeited a $200 bond
KC:trr.. Pomeroy; Aaron Davis, ·
camp at-- Tong Le Chan, 50 posted for driving· while inMiddleport; Linda Brothers,
miles north of Saigon . The toxicated , and Eln\er Pickens,
Bidwell ; Nellie Price, Midspokesman said there were no Rac.ine, forfeited a $15 bond
·· CALLED TWICE
d~epo rt ; · Terry Teaford ,
casualties. Fighting has been posted for assvred distance .
The
Middleport
E-R
squad
Rutland, and Alfred McCoy,
Fined were Robert Hudnall;
heavy there for the past six
·
weeks.
Albany, $100 and costs and a answered a call to the alley at Middleport.
DISCHARGED - Mi.ttie
He said Communist troops' three day jail sentence ·for the rea r of Dutton's Drug Stor~
at
11
:30
p.
m.
W
ednesday
Nelson,
"Theodore Mitch,
Wednesday attacked Saigon driving whilL_i!!toJ&lt;,icated ;
infantry and ranger troops in Emmett Welch, Rutland, $5 where Alfced Mc Coy, 71, Rosemary · Wamsley, Ruth
Qu'ang Ngai Province, 300 and costs each on two charges Middleport, had become ill . He ' Smith, Gladys Gibson, Dwight
miles north of Saigon. Seven of Intoxication; Wilbur Larch, wa s taken to Veterans Bissell , Pauline Russell,
Communists and four Saigon Ripley, W." Va ., $5 and costs , Memorial . Hospital where he Ka i hryn Metzger,. Danie1
soldiers were reported killed In toxica ti on,
Terrenace "~::~ s cH.I mitted. The squad was McQuaid. Carl Pullins, Vincent
8:15 a. m. for Broderi ck, Pa•IIine Derenand !eve Saigon troops Carson, Reedsville, $15 and cali&lt;:llAoday
Paul
Sisson,
ill
at
his home, He berger, Clarice Koehler,
wounded, the spokesman said. · costs, speeding , and Wa lter
Military sources said armed King, Carpenter, $5 and costs, also was ta~en to Veterans Maxine Brumley and Rhonda
Memorial Hosp'tlil.
Hawley.
South Vietnamese air force Intoxication . ·
'""":·
.'
...

t.l~.~

!_,
:,·':::_:'::
: .

nort~~~~~:":\d:;eeze

,_~:,i'_:~

L~t~~~;~~~~f::€§£J
Drivers cited to ·court

five fined by

·said -Jones' rulin ~ w11uld seem
also to have a bedring on the
controver sy over Presjden t
Ni~On 'S imP9undmen~ or
refusal to spend -some $14
billion · In money voted by"
Congress for various· domestic
programs,
.
The Lawyers Committee
represented three separate
suits, one brought "by OEO
employes.• another by the
National Coun~il of OEO
loca ls, and the third by
Community Action agencies in
Missouri, Kansas, Kentucky .
and Massachusetts.

Lions planning
• •
•
•
JOrnt
pzcnzc

•

A joint picnic with the
Middl~por t-P omeroy
Rotary
Club was sel for May 16 at the
Rich•rd Chambers co untry
home when the PomeroyMiddleport Lions Club met for
a noon luncheon Wednesday aL
the Meigs Inn .
1\ report was given u
sign committee by We
Hoover, vice president, ""'·' waS in charge of the meeting.
He Said an inspection trip for
the placemen ts of the signs
which will denote the location
of Pomeroy in reference to the •
new by-pass was made by Lou
Osborne and Karl Krautter .
A film , ~~. Th e Buffalo,
Majes tic Symbol of The
Plains,11 was shown by Hoover.
It was provided by the public
relations depar"tment of
Colwnbus and Southern Ohio
Electric Co. A guest for the
meeting was Jerry Meder!,
DoVer, who was the guest of
Osborne .

Mayor Collins

at

Oerk oollects
$2,800 in fees
Fees totalling $2,800 were
collected irl the Clerk of Courts
office during March, Larry ·
Spence announced today. Of
the $2,600, the county received
$2,289 and the state $511.
During March 1,108 certificate of titles, 312 notation of
liens, 226 memorandwn copies
of titles, 1106 applications,
affidavits and assignments, 76
penalties, 24 duplicates and 9
salvage ·titles .were issu~td.
There were 156 auto in·
speetions, $468 in receip~ of
which $39 was the county's
share , and $429 the sta(e•s
share,.
'

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