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United Press Iuternatiooal
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The. conviction of Lt. William L. Calley for the mW'der of
Vietnamese civilians has raised painful questions among some
Americans about the ~ibility of top U.S.leaders for crimes
of war, such as the M'f'Tii massacre.
. Must Calley alone bear the g¢l.t for what happened iit that
village during a day in the IndOchina war when old men, women
and children were slaughtered by Gls? Should the President who ·
sent him to Vietnam and the generals and others who run the war
escape all responsibility for his crimes?
To get at these matters that are tearing at the consciences of
citizens in all parts of ,the country, UPI reporters Wednesday
asked almost 600 Americans in 48 cities the following:
1.In view of the Calley trial and the issues it has ·raised over the
ultimate responsibility for wartime atrocities, do you feel it was
right or wrong for the United States ana its allies to have conducted the war crimes trials for German and Japanese leaders

Now You Know

VOL X

after World War II?
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2. If right, do you therefore feel tha~ General Westmoreland or
President Johnson (who was in office at the time of My Lai) must
bear final responsibility for ~ crimes for which Lt. Calley has
just been convicted?
The second question was raised in part because of a precedent
set 4uring the war crimes trials of World war II: Gen. Tomoyuki
Yamashita commander of all Japanese forces in the Philippines
at the clos~ of the war, was held responsible and hanged for
atrocities committed by his troops although U.S. prosecutors
never claimed that he personally had anythj!tg to do with the
crimes or even !mew about them. He was found guilty simply
because he was commander of all Japanese army, navy and air
forces where the atrocities occurred:
_
,Judicial Opinion
The implications of such a verdict, Supreme Court Justice
Frank Murphy said at the time, are those from which "no one in a

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POsition of command in an army from sergeant to general can
• escape ... Indeed, the fate of some future president of the United
States and his chiefs of staff and.military advisers may well have
' been sealed by this decision."
Approximately_four of every six persons queried said they
believed the Allies were' right to have tried German and Japanese
leaders for World War ~ crimes. They ,were. more.evenly divided
on whether U.S. leaders -a ge~ral or president or someon~ else
high up-should bear final respo~ibili~ for the crim~s o~ Calley·
Of the 586 persons responding tO quest10n one, 406 sa1d the World
War II trials were justified, 110 said the trials were wrong 'alld 70
had no opinion or were undecided. Responding to que~tion two,_201
persons'said Westn_10reland or Johnson sh~uld be held ~espons1ble
and 251 persons sa1d they should ·not bear the respons1b1hty. The
others greatly qualified their answers or were undecided.
Some responses:
~
· James M. Kefauver, 30, a Washington, D.C., lawyer, thought
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THURSDAY,

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
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AP~IL

the World Warn trials wer(l right but adaed: "I severely question
the validity of the Yamashita case. I think it went too far to ~y '
that a commander must be held responsible for everything that
goes on in his command whether it happened under his orders or
not. I would distinguish a war such as the Vietnamese war from ·
that conducted by ~he Nazis wliere genocide was involved." . ·
Dr. John s. Whitenedt Jr., 65, pastor of the. Bethel Congregationa! Church of Beaverton, Ore., said that the trials·of German
and Japanese war leaders were rignt and that Westmot;eland and
Johnson should be held responsible "because I am conyinced that
not only the My Lai massacres but many similar atrocities coutd
riot have helped but come to their attention over the past·years. '.'
"Calley, he's just an "excuse," said Michael James, 'll, of
Hartford, Conn. "I mean, ttie whole system'S at fault. Just l.iXe
Germany. You've g~tto question , you've got to do more than just
-buy the line."
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"If Calley is guilty, it means everyone connected is guilty," sai.d
(Continued on page 9)

Weather

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Devoted To The lntere&amp;ts Of The Meigs-Mason Area

NO. 246

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The first fatality in a powered
aircraft flight was Lt. Thomas
Selfridge, who died in a crash
. near Washington, D. C., Sept.
17, 1908, on a flight piloted by
Orville Wright.
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1, 1971

Low tonight in 40s and low 50s.·
Friday considerable cloudiness .
and much cooler with chance of
a few showers north portio11.
High Friday in upper 40s an.d .
50s.

PHONE 992-2156 .

TEN CENTS

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Middleport Will Run' its O!lJn Garbage Service
An ordinance providing for Salisbury Township off the
the establishment of a village · Route 7 by-pass, the subject of
operated garbage pickup n erous complaints from the
service was approved in its first Leading Creek and Bradbury
of three required readings by areas.
Middleport Council in special
Monday night council,
session Wednesday night.
meeting in another special
The session was the third in. session, unanimously voted to
the past week as the village place the problem of solid waste
attempts to solve the problem of disposal in the hands of Mayor
the Middleport dump, located in .c. 0. Fisher. The mayor felt

then that he could arrange for meeting was called.
Middleport garbage haulers to Also on Monday evening, Dale
use a landfill dump in nearby Dutton, president of the M~igs
Mason County, W. Va. The County Board of Health -atMayor on Monday evening was tending the meeting. as a citizen
given 15 days to work out the rather than in an official
details. However, on Tuesday capacity-had told council that
tpe mayor notified council that the Middleport dump had
he was unable to complete · an.., reached a point where it would
arrangement for the Mason have to comply with the law or
dump, and last night's special be closed. It was also disclosed

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HUnt Fruitless

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FBI Agent Mack Ellis of the Miss Price's coat and one of her
Athens office and local law shoes near the old Moore Castle,
enforcement' agencies today the house where she said her
apparently were without fur· assailant forced her to enter.
tiler ctues in Tuesday night's
alleged abduction and assault of
Miss Price remains today in
Miss Michelle Price, 21, a junior the Holzer Medical Center. She
at Rio Grande College, and was treated for mild scratches,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. bruises, exposure and a head
Thomas W. -Price, 148 Port- injury. She said she was forced
smoutl! Rd., Gallipolis.
at knifepoint to ljrive to West
Police still are without a ..Virginia to the old Moore
suSpect. Miss · Price described Castle. While there, her abher attacker as a white male ~uctor forced her to disrobe.
between 30 and 40 years of age. Later, he struck her with a
The FBI entered the case late brick and fled, she said.
Wednesday because it involves
After
regaining
coninterstate lines.
· sciousness,
Miss
Price
· Gallipolis Police Chief John managed to walk to the John
Taylor said Wednesday's in· . Gill farmhouse approximately
vestigatlon in the heavily one-half mile away, where she
wooded area in the Crab Creek· was given assistance before
Rd. section of Mason County Mason County sheriff's deputies
was fruitless : Deputies found arrived.

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By United PressluternaUonal

Big Subsidy Farms to be Bared

The public has spoken and The American
Legion, Department of Ohio, has been deluged
with re'quests to lead a concerned citizenry in
expressing total shock and dismay at the verdict
in the trial of Lt. William L. Calley, Jr., State
Commander Roger L. Smith asserted today.
The concensus of irate opinions is to the
point: ·How can we expect to offer our fighting
men .the protection and sueport needed in
Southeast Asia if they are to face trial and
charges for incidents such as occurred at My
Lai. Without condoning . the alleged My Lai
massacre, the fact that the enemy would seek
refuge behind the skirts of women and children
does indicate a totally different concept of
engaging the foe.
The American Legion calls upon all those
concerned to express their reaction by letter,
telegram or petition tO the President, their
Senators and Congressmen and to urge an immediate and impartial review of the Calley trial
and jury decision by the highest military
authorities in this land.
A battle cannot be won when our fighting
forces must wage a restrictive, one-hand-behindthe-back policy. Support for our dedicated armed forces, Commander Smith stated, is not a
part-time effort. Until they return home, they ·
need our total commitment and support.

WASHINGTON- AGRICULTURE SECRETARY Clifford
M'. Hardin has deCided to release the names of farmers whp got

big cotton, feed grain and wheat subsidy payments - more than
$1 million apiece in a few cases - in· 1970. Lower-ranking
department officials earlier had indicated, and a letter signed by
Hardin had appeared to confirm, that the information would not
be supplied this year. But Hardin told UPI this was the result of
misunderstandings, and said he never had intended to withhold
the information.
A preliminary tabulation compiled recently, which does not
name names, showed five large far:ms got payments of $1 million
or more apiece and collected a total of $10.3 million. All were
cotton producers. A dozen other big fanns, 10 of them cotton
, Producers, got individual payments of between $500,000 and $1
million.

Hoffa's Bid· Denied
WASHINGTON - LABOR LEADER James R. Hoffa, ordered td' serve at least 14 mon,ths more in federal prison, today
· faced a challenge that could remove him from the presidency of
the 2-mUlion-member Teamsters union. A federal parole board,
after a 75-minute meeting in Washington Wednesday, denied for:
the second time Hoffa's bid Jor parole from Lewisburg, Pa.,
prison,-whel'e he has served more than four years of a 13-year
sentence.for jury tampering and mail fraud.
· The,decision was expeeted to trigger an uttemptby Frank E.
Fitzsimmons, the Teamsters general vi~ president who has been
running the union in Hoffa's abasence, to win the presidency of
the nation's largest Union when it holds its convention in Miami in
July. Fitzsimmons said he would actively seek the $100,000-a-year
. job.
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SAN CLEMENTE, CAUF. -PRESIDENT Nixon summoned
leaders of the aerospace industry to the Western White House
today to promote jobs for 65,000 unemployed scientists and
engineer~,
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The chief executive, who reluctantly signed a bill recently
killing the Supersonic Transp(!rt, also scheduled a private talk
with Treasury Secretary John B. Connally.

.Warning to Doves.
WASHINGTON - FACED WITH A widening demand ;imong
pemocrats for a deadline on lhe Vietnam war, Senate supporters
' of the administration today launched a eounter-offensive against
potential presidential candidates who have been hammering .
away at President Nlxoq's Indochina policy.
.
. • Senate Republican leader Hugh ~ott, backed by other .GOP
senators, today warned "Democratic presidential hopefuls" that
their attacks on Nixon's policies will not go unchallenged. "We'll
~ s\.andlilg ready with full bore and ammunition to shoot down
irrellp0n8ible statements on the war"· Scott 8aid in reiJU!rks prior
to a planned round~obln on the Senate floor. ·

Clean-Up Time
Is Announced
Middleport village will
sponsor a "Clean-up the
Community" campaign
beginning April 15.
Middleport Mayor C. 0;
Fisher Is encouraging
residents to clean up around
their yards and homes. The
collection of trash from such
cleaning will be hauled away
free of cliarge by a village
truck. The scheduling of the
truck through the community
will be announced later.

YOUI'H AGAINST CANCER - The Junior Dt.takll ~ tbt Melp ())unty Unit of the
American Cancer Society, Youth Against Cancer (YAC's) are doing their bit to help inform the
public in the fight against cancer. In charge of the pqpter campaign are, left to right, Debbie
Ohlinger, Shelia Folmer, Diane Ridgway and Sherman Mills. The group will prepare posters
which will be placed in windows of local business establishrhents. Adults who wish to help may
call Mrs. Corrine Lund at 992-7531.

Jury Relived Every Hour
FT. BENNING, Ga. (UPI)- our deliberation," said Maj.
The C11lley court-martial jury-· -Walter D. Kinard, 33, of
"relived" the My Lai rrias· Columbus, Ga. "We gave Lt.
sacre in its deliberations and Calley the benefit of every
"could find no other" recourse doubt."
than to convict Lt. William L. , The jury of. six combat
!Jilley Jr. of murder, one juror officers sentenced Calley, 27, of
revealed Wednesday night
Miami, Fla., to life imprison"We left no stone unturned in ment Wednesday, two days
after convicting him of murdering 22 Vietnamese civilians at
My Lai on March 16, 1968. The
verdict and sentence can be
appealed through military and
federal courts, and it is subject
to review by the. secretary of
the Army.
Kinard, a decorated Army
airborne officer who served two
tours in Vietnam, said "every
hour of that operation (My Lai)
has been relived in a jilry
deliberation room."
'Looked For Innocence'
'.'We looked for anything that
would prove Lt. Calley in.
nocent," Kinard said. "I could

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find no other thing to come up
with than that verdict we
returned."
The jury, which ,deliberated
almost 80 hours spread over 13
days to convict Calley, returned
a life sentence after almost six
hours. The sentence required
five votes out of the six jurors.
A unimimous vote would have
been required for the death
penalty.
. Calley spent his third day in
the Ft. Benning stockade today
and seemed bound for the
Leavenworth disciplinary bar_racks by weekend.
,{)
There was a possibility h'e
could be granted a "deferment
from confinement" asked by
the defense that would give him
the same freedom of movement
on this post that he has enjoyed'.
for the last 18 months, living in
his bachelor apartment and
doing as he pleased.
'J'he formal request was made

by defense· attorney George W.
, La timer, but there was serious
doubt that Maj. Gen. Orwin C.
Talbott, conunander of Ft.
Benning, would -grant it, even
though Calley has been a model
of decorum. Premeditated murder normally is a non-bailable
crime in civil courts.
'I'll Do My Best, Sir'
The stubby former platoon .
leader was put in a stark two:
room cell with another officer
prisoner at the stockade here
late Monday on his conviction
of what the governJllent
charged was "summary execution in cold 'blood" of crying
and pleading women, children,
and old men.
The end of the longest
military trial in American
history came at 2:53 p.m.
Wednesday when a steady-eyed
but pale Calley ~arne to 'a we~k
(Continued on page 9)

TB Tests .Begin Mond,ay
The annual skm testmg
program, sponsored by the Ohio
Department of Health, the
Meigs County Tuberculosis and
Health Assn., and the Meigs
County Health Department will
get underway Mo~day.
The program \nil -run from

April 5 through April 8, and
from April12 through April 15.
This year students in the first
seventh, twelfth and special
education classes will be given
the skin test. Unless there•is a
written statement . asking
exemption for medical or

Depositories ·Set

Jobs for Scientists Wanted

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Legion Urges Letters, Telegrams

that Middleport village has
been cited to appear before the
County Health Board on
Tuesday, April 6 to show why
the dump should be allowed to
continue operations.
Last night, councilmen felt
they had two alternatives first, to engage an outside
collec'tion firm to c9me into the
community, or secondly, to take
over pickup service in the
community on a mandatory
basis and operate the Middleport dump in accordance
. (Continued on page 12)

Th~ Meigs County · C~m- Materials, Parkersburg;
missioners awarded bi!ls for Diamond Stone Quarries,
gepo~itories of active, inactive Albany; Richards and Sons;
and interim funds at their Ppmeroy, and James Me~ry
regular weekly meeting.
Stone Co., Bidwell.
The bid for deposit of all In other business the com- ·
inactive fun~s was awarded to missioners granted office space
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the Pomeroy National Bank at a to the Ohio State Selective·
ATHREE-Acr COMEDY, "RUBBERNECK," will be presented at 8:08p.m. Friday by
rate. of 5.1 per cent. :rhe:.bi.ds (Qr Service System,.Columbus. The
juniors in the Eastern High School Auditorium. J'aking roles are 1 front row, left to 1ight, Diana ·
deposit
of all active and interim state selective service board is
!}rueser, Anita Watkins, Debbie Pierce; second row, from the left, Larry Ritchie, faculty ·
funds were ·awarged to requesting all commissions
member and director; Barbara Ebersbacq, Julia Holter, Janice Boggs, Larry Stalnaker; third
Pomeroy National Bank, The thr_oughout t~e state to provide
row, from the left, Roger Karr, Randy Young, De'Mis Eichinger, Bob Caldwell, Doug Carr and
Farmers Bank and Savings Co., offtce space morder that two or
Rick Hauber. Directed by Larry Ritchie, faculty member, the plot revolves around the Wilkens
Racine ijome . National Bank more boards can meet at a
f!lmily arid Uncle Elwyn, played by Rick 'Hauber, and his unsuccessful bid for mayor of the
' and The Citizens National Bank. single administrative site so .
town for a 14-year period. He enli~ts the aid of Bobbie, played by Anita Watkins, to launch his
A bid for gasoline and diesel fOrk can be shared and handled ,
campaign. Unenthused about the campaign is Father Wilkens, played by Bob Caldwell. The
fuel was awarded the Texaco more efficiently.
Wilkens family then_unites behind a dummy, named "Rubberneck," running him for mayor.
Oil Co.
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Attending wel't~ Charles. R.
The comedy moves through the campaign and the replacement of the dummy in the campaign ·
!Bids on aggregates were Kar-r, Sr., ~o~ Cl~rk_. and
br Father Wilkens. The firi(ll scene ~rings the solution of the family's problems and the an· opened but not awarded . Warden Ours, commiSSIOners, ·
nouncement that Uncle Elwyn, weary of his carri!J8igns for mayor, will run for Congress. ·
~ SubmiTting bids were Tri-State and. Mt~rtha Chambers, clerk.
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religious reasons from a private
physician or a mil)ister, all
pupils will be skin tested in the
designat.ed grades.
Stude~ts known to be positive
reactors will not be skin tested
but wiq be x-rayed on the
mobile x-ray unit ~hich will be
in Pomeroy April13, 14 and 15.
A note only from parenl.,'! of a
student will be insufficient
reason for excusing •the student
from a skin test, unle'Ss the rirte
informs the student's teacher
that the student is a positive
reactor.
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Skin testing will be done at the
health' department offices on
East Main St. in Pomeroy for
adults from 2 to 6 p. m. on April
14 and 15. Residents needing a
foodhandlers card prior to 1972
should report f11r the skin
testing.
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The Ohio Department of
Health mobile x-ray unit will ._ '·
on the upper parking lot In·
Pomeroy from 2 to 6 p. m. on
.April 1~. 14 and 15. This is to
provide free chest x-rays fer
persilns who react positively to
skin tests. Therr is na ctaarg•
fur ·the, skin testing.

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· WIN AT BRIDGE

Y Tries Han~
as Declarer

__by Che~ Tannehill

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Bruce Wallace, Southern High's new football coach, ts optimiStic. It gbes without saymg Wallace, not-so-long ago a star
Middleport High lootballer, and later a standout defenstve
secondary performer at Marshall, wouldn't have accepted 'the
Tornado JOb unless he thought there was male rial to build. Even
so, Wallace has spectal reasons to believe hard work Will produce
a winning squad within a couple of years
Wallace bas a basketful! of natural enthusiasm for the hard·
:nose sport which began rubbmg off last autumn at S\&gt;uthern's
; junior high level where he coached. rt.ts-enthustasm ts carrying

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Opemng IL'ad-

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1\y Oswald &amp; .James Jacoby
"Today IS Apnl Ftrst, " remarked Y " How about lettmg me s1t South th1s once'"
"All mht, " r e p lie d Z.
"but we'll probably be

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rr WAS 58 years ag~ tills week that tbe oliio River- Cll
a rampage 111 the hJSIDricall913 flood. The picture on the left
,;.as the home of Mrs. Sarah Woodrum and her daughler,
Cora , the postmistress, as they stood on the porch on March
31, 1913 m Clifoon, W Va. On the right is the U~wellen
Williams home and general siDre as it looked on March 30,
1913. Wtlllams' son, Lloyd and granddaughter, Mrs. Denver
Blake now have a small grocery soore and post office m
~ifton. The two photographs are part of the collection of
Mrs. Ray Ptckens of Clifton.

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You older readers may recall that m the columns on
auct10n bndge , Z always sat
South Y was North and A
and B were always on detense
The very !Jrst hand found
them playmg agamst thell'
uld fne nds A and B Y got
to s1x hea1ts 1n no t1me and
-\. opened the queen of diamonds Y won m dummy.
d 1s c a 1 de d a cl u b and
promptly led the deuce ol
spades to hts kmg A had no
problem s about what to do
He p 1 o d u c c d the tin ee uf
Ihat su1t w1thout e1thcr undu e haste or protracted
stud y
" I should have star ted
play mg the dummy ) ears

New Haven Social Events

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Voice alo~g Broadway [
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still sneak off to Manhattan streetcorners w try
out new malertal and keep an intimale . oouch
with people .... Baldwm &amp; leps claim they
earned up to $200 a mght for their sidewalk
philharmomcking (they paid tax on that, of
course?) and assert other colorful background:
That Mike, gwtarist and creator of all thejr
material, once was a deepsea diver; Richard
says he taughthunself wplay a fiddle he plann~
ongmally as part of a collage; could be.
Out-of-oown newsmen cover111g a Buffalo, N.
Y., appearance of Sen. George McGovern up 10
our old home town managed w report solemnly
some words by Buffalo Mayor Frank Sedita, as if
the irrepressibly comtc Frank had trtpped over
his tonslls and llis sense of silliness: Frank
nbbed himself as "tbe best mayor money can
buy " and his wile as " the best woman who ever
walked the streets of Buffalo." .... Frank's a
polltical showman, a shrewd, forensic clown and
a drop-of-th~-hat singer ... Several years a~o
when we rec'd an honorary degree from Niagara
University, Frank 10 our hopor sang "When Iri~h
Eyes Are Smilmg"; and 11 11 were art Italian
banquet he'd've sung "When Italian Eyes Are
Smiling " n there were Arabs in his constituency, "When Arab Eyes Are Smiling" ,
He's one of the smartest professional politicians
111 that low trade.
El Marrocco's revival has been set back
until next fall wtlh a resplendent list of d~rectors
and members rangmg from real if impoverish~
nobility (a few who have s9nghUy Dun&gt;&amp;
Bradstreet recommendations) to the more
common if rich Americans . . Col. Serge
Obolelll!ky, 80, is the formidable frontman, J~f
Jones the elegant top workmg stiff, Joe Norban
of the lower-pnce dress business the chief
moneybags behind the ambittous resusCitation of
what once was the most elegant of Manhattan
playpens ... Manhattan's ready for a !rest new
uppercrust hangout, and Col 0. thinks his will be

BY JACK O'BRIAN
HE HAS MUSKIE STICKING
HIS NECK OUT .
NEW YORK - Sen. Muskie has a necklle
and shirt adviser as he ambles nominationwards: Bob Brager, long the haberdashery
expert at Browning'~ Sth Ave. Playboy's erstwhile skinny Hugh Hefner's showing recent
high-hie dimensions - a few new inches at the
b.unmy . .. And TV's Harry Reasoner's tailor
would like Harry w take a few mches off
demere, tumtum and hips .... "Portlloy's
Complamt'' pornauthor Philip Roth wid Rodney
Dangerfield he'd cast the no-respect man as the
father in the film verswn if he had his way ....
Lana Rawls wok one browse through hubby Lou
Rawl .; travel folders featuring geiSha girls, and
bopped a 7~7 to jmn Lou in Tokyo 1or hJS fourweek Oriental tour .... The Buster Keaton Fiim
Festival is not only a great-flash-favonte of
oldsters but, encouragingly, of youngsters roo
Producer Raymond Rohauer says it's not just
nostalgia but a plam reaction against cinematiC
sex and violence; hope he's right.
Elsa Lanchester invited Otto Premmger wsee
her latest flick, "Willard" ; asked Otoo w adopt
ber, wo .. . The French anti-&lt;.'DP film, "La
Conde," was banned in France but escaped to
become France's btggest ·smash. It will be
released m the USA as ''ConfesSions of a Blood
Cop" .... Frankie Laine claimed he IS "flattered"
Tom Jones is "doing" him even tho inutatwn IS
the flattest form of smcerity ... Why does that
remind us of Bobby Darin's firm promise he'd
become "a legend by the tune I'm 25" .. . Now
be's 34, doffed his ooupee, donned dungarees,
stopped blowing his own horn and substituted a
harmonica .
Couple of kids named Mike Baldwm and
Richard Leps were dtscovered singing on a
streetcornerby Vanguard Records and stgned to
a $280,000 contract, Vanguard alleges .... Now ll.
lhey're doing -college conc~ rts and claim they

'
83rd
Carl Edwards
.
thd
Ob
ed
rv
BIr ay Se

Easter Seal Income Needed

sPoRTS·MINDEDneoplehaveone-trackedm111ds,anaxlOm
proved conclustvely upon composmg the above paragraph.
Desiring confirmation of the spelling of "Kawasaki" the
Jap~ese _brand ~oiDrcy~le acquired by Wallace, I asked compatriot Hobart WJlson Jr .If he was fal1llhar wtth the word .
"ll iltsn'l round and doesn't bounce, I don't know anything
,about;it," Wilson rephed.

Helen Help Us\

ched a one-htlter and 'a nohttler
while stitking out 35 bailers in
38 inmngs. He went to training
th1s spring merely hopmg to
survtve the squad cut but was
Wid Wednesday by Manager
D1ck Wtlhams that he had
drawn the opemng day

The Warrwrs appear to have
the toughest of all tasks 11 they
hope to advance to the playoff
semifmals. They must beat the
MJiwaukee Bucks lour straight
t1mes It 1s an unlikely
happemng 10 v1ew of the fact
the Warrtars .have yet to beat
M1lwauk~e th1s season They
lost stx llmes dur10g the
regular campmgn and three

llmes 10 the playoffs

the San Francisco-Milwaukee
game IS at Oakland
The fourth playoff series,
between Los Angeles and
Chtcago, IS !Jed 2-2 w11h each
tea m havmg posted Its vtctones
at home The Lakers, because
of the home court advantage m
that ser1es, are favored fot·
tomght's fifth game desp1te the
absence of htgh-scor mg Jen y
West

Atlanta IS down three games
to one agamsl the defendmg'
champ10n New York Kmcks
after blowmg two games at
Atlani&lt;J and Phtladelph13 trails
the Balllmore Bullets 3-1 after
hav mg won the opener of the
best-of-seven series Atlanta
and Philadelphia are on the
1oad for tomght's contests wh1le

1

I

~

v1ctory over Rw A.T D. ·
Joe Taylor paced the wmners
wtth 36 pomts. Others m double
ftgures were Blame Henry wtth
29 p01nts , Tony Bass, 26 pomts;
Rick Turnbow, 21 po10ts, Dave

Denver, Texas
In ABA Playoff

t.ayer Eyes
• d Jta1'0r
z-..
w;:·zn Ln R ow
1

Garrell Jn

Good Effort
Over R oya}s

l

Mason Area

News., Notes

I

M-G-M Notes

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95

SPRINGFIELD

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lI r - - - - - - - - .

STARJ AT

'I

'I

Pete LJSke from the Denver
Broncos for an undisclosed
1ctran chmce

I

T·IRES

I

Pork ·Supplies ·.Will Increase

I

1st

'I

I

1

Old ash zone
• d Bar.«ain Days

SUGGESTED
PRIC~

Credit Terms Available.
Use Your Sunoco Credit Card.

us $1.78 •Excise Tax
50x13 Renown 4- Ply Nylon

B.W.

I

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·. .'J

,, I
I
''I

"I
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~,

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·t

seven mmngs as the St Louts

POmeroy. Ohto

•
"

.•

~

. ~

"WESTWARD HO"
THE

LaSalle Ace
Inks Contract

This Week ~s Specials: All good
d_ependable station wagons; vacation
t1me from Dodge City ...

1968 Dodge. __________ ____s2495
Polara 9 passenger V-8, T Fl&lt;te, p st,

p

br , air cond ,

equalrzer hitch, arr shock s.

1966 Rambler Classic. ________ s1295
6 Passenger, V-8, automatic. sharp as a tack
1966 Dodge. CoroneL:..
'&gt;hll.
_______' s1295,,,
9 Passenger, V-8, T-FIIfe. p. sl , new paint, ready.

1965 Dodge-Pcilara :._·________s1095

• 9 Passenger , VB.

T-FIIte, p sl , p br , at; cond , tots of

md es le ft her e

19n65 Jeep Wagoneer_ _____ ~ __s1095
6 Plfssenger , 6 cy l , 3 speed, p st, p br four wheel dnve
Ar e you ready?

1964 Rambler Classic._________SS95
6 Passenger, V 8, automaf te. very nrce

1963 Dodge Custom 880·------~95
6 Passenger, V 8. T Fllle, p st , needs a home

1963 Mercury Comet. ________ s175
6 Passen ger, 6 cylinder,

auto~atrc,

a ll yo urs.

Here is your chance to get ready for summer
· • • 11 you hive put off buying a wagon don''t
watt any longer. we have the car to tit your
need and pocketbook ...
•'

Call Bob, Wallace, Em er so n , Hilton or Di c k
for your transportation needs now ...

RAWLINGS
99

oo
·

DGE CITY

2·2151

992-2152,

_ye'ar~·-------~~~~~~~M~I~D~D~L~E~P~O~R~T~,~O~.~===~~

r

CINCI NNATI (UPf ) - AIIAmencan LaSalle forward Ken
I
Dun·e tt has come to terms on a
I
five-year contract with the
I
Clllctnnalt Royals lor an annual
I
salary reported to be tn the
I For Elegance 1n Ptpe range of $80,000.
Pleasure, Select a
I Smokmg
P1pe that Needs No
Royals general manager Joe
1 Breaking ln.
Axelson and he,ad coach Bob
1
Cousy met wtth thetr No I draft
I
chmce and hts former coach,
·
Tom Gola, in Phtladelph1a
I
422 Second Ave. t
Wednesday and reached the
GallipoliS,
Ohio
I '--.;;,;:.:;:;,::.:.:.;:.;;;;;;;.:;.._--1 agreement

Tawney Jewelers

; TERmiTE
1 YOUR

PEPSI

I
I

ONE QUART

Freel

4%%

~~~~~~----~

·I

I
I
I

MORE-NOW

r

Swoboda Traded To
.E
. xpos.Ftor R ahn

.

EARN

Ca1dmals downed the New York
Mets, !2-2 The Mels made stx
etrors
m the game
two teams
Doug Rader had a two-run
Box Score
.
BEACH ATHLETIC CLUB - double a nd Cesa r Cedeno drove
Taylor 14-8-36, Turnbow 10-1-21
Smith 6-0·1:1,; Bass 10-6-26:
Henry 11-7-29, Hatrston 5-2-12·
Beach 3-3-9 TOTALS 59-27-145,
RIO A '1' D - Ball 4-1-9, .
Lamber t 19-15-53 , Fowler 5-3WAGONS
13, Faushatgh 4-2-10, Jacobs 102-22 , Wyckoff 0-2-2· Wells 2-1-'·
Hart 0-2-2 a nd 'Foul l-0-2"·
TOTALS 48-28-124
'

Snuth and Harry Hatrston, 12
pumts each
Ron Lambe1 t, Rio Grande
scunng ace, scored 53 po111ts m
a losmg effort Ed Jacobs,
another Redman, had 22 pmnts.
JIM VENNARI, Wetzgal St., Pomeroy, Cincmnatl Reds'
D1ck Fowler added 13 points
scout, was on hand Mohday mght when Logan and the Marauders
Beach
led 63-47 at hallllme
)angled in Middleport. He came specifically wtake ~ good look at
Bob Saunders Quaker SI&lt;Ite
Mark Shaw, Logan's strapping righthander, but also became
Serv1ce
Center forfeited the
interested in the Marauders' leflbander Tun Demoskey who came
consolallon game to Btckers'
, on in the fourth innmg to ptlch three excellent frames .
Bidwell M1lhng QSSC dtd not
Jim said the Reds ar~ about w complete arrangements for a
have enough players to fteld a
baseball c)inic in Cnarleston probably in mid-April destgned for
team.
baseball coaches of .fi'n levels, from little league through the
Referees dunatmg thetr
college level. Jim and other Reds' officials will be on hand to talk
servtces
last mgh t were Btll DJ
,,about and demonstrale what baseball is all about.
By United Press International lithsts
Underwood, Hmdu Henderson,
Ralph Wtgal and John Shupert
The Denver Rockets an~e Gene Moore had 26 'potnts for
Blame Henry, former Mar"
Texas Chaps play wmner-ta - Texas while Bob Netolicky and sha11 ace, was presented the ~'h
aII tontg ht at Denver.
Mel Damel•" each had 21 for the Most Valuable Player Trophy
I .
·
Bolh teams won Wednesday Pacers
Ron Lambert of RlD A T.D was
mgh t 111 the Amencan Basket- Charhe Wtlhams' 35-potnt g1ven the trophy for sconng the
'
ball AssOCia liOn regular season performance led MemphiS past most pomts
,.,..
,,
finale to he for fourth place 1n Carolina Steve Jon'es had 25 Team trophtes went to the
.. ST. PETERSBURG , Fla. h1story 10 the fourth game and the Western Dtvtston. They P010 ts and Wtlbert Jones added first three teams Jnd 1v1dual
.(UP!)- Ron Swoboda, one of drove 111 the tJe-break111g run meet 111 a one-game playoff 20 for the Pros wh1le Bob trophies were given to the top
GREENSBORO, N.C (UPI )
·the , key players m the New wtth a double m the f1fth and tomght to de term me the last Verga led Carohna wtth 25.
- The spectre of Gary Player
York Mets' "mtracle world last game of the class1c.
playoff slot 10 the West
V1rg1ma scored moe stra1ght
cast an ommous shadow over ·
Senes Vlctory" m 1969 but an Swoboda failed to w111 a
John Barnhlll had 29 pomts pomts 111 the fourth quarter to
the Grealer Greensboro Open
outspoken en lie of Manager Gil regular JOb m the OUtfield 10 and Bryon Beck added 28 as beat the Flondtans. Charhe
today as the rancher from
Hodges 10 1970, was traded to the spnng of 1970 and cnttctzed the Rockets beat the New York Sco~t led the Squtres w1th 29
Johannesburg went afler an
the Montreal Expos Wednesday Hudges throughout the cam- Nets and Don Freeman's 31- whJie Mack Calvm was high
almost unheard of feat of
lor outftelder Don Hahn.
patgn for cont111u10g to employ pmnt effort earned Texas to a man for the Flondtans wtth 28
strmging together three vtcto133
129
Swoboda, 26, was hailed as a the platoon system whtch
trmmph over the AI Tucker of the Flortdtans
nes 111 a row.
pOSSible future Mtckey Mantle contnbuted to the 1969 VICtory lndtana Pacers In the only and Vtrgmta 's George carter
"
Arnold Palmer, who passed
by" Manager casey Stengel He batted 233 00 a part-time other games, Memphts beat were eJected for flght1llg.
up this one to pracllce lor next
when he JOllied the Mets tO baSIS for the Mets last season Carolina 123-106 and Vtrginia
./
weekls Masters, is the last pro
l965. He had brief flashes of llhtle Hahn, 22, batted .255 10 82 stopped the Flondtans 131-123
w wm lhree consecu!Jvelybnlliance and batted 281 in 134 games as a rookte for the
The Nets, who f1mshed thtrd
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - Greg back in 1962 when wmnmg was
'games m 1967.
Expos
10 the East, played Without star
Garrett, turmng 10 his best per- not so lucrative as It IS ooday.
R1ck Baery, who averaged 35 Wednesday's Fight Results
formance of the sprmg, blanked Byron Nelson won about a dozen
-_contributiOns
Swoboda made
Important
· ht dUrmg
· the waft¥earsto the
Mets'
potnts a game agamst the By United Press Internahoaal th e Ka nsas c11y Roya1son th ree s tratg
Rockets thts season, and Manny CLEVELAND (UPI )- Doyle hits through the first SIX mnmgs and was pa1d off in war bonds.
~trekh run which resulted m
L k
Ba1rd, 164, Cleveland, stopped Wednesday as the Cincmnall
Player, one of four men to
Dove led New Mtke Pusaten, 157'1•, Boston Reds took
Tl1C g1e"•test }&gt;r&lt;&gt;gr• ess ''' tl1e yea ks. Sonny
their Winning the National
h
3.fJ G
f 't
t
11 f th
ld'
League pennant m 1969 and tieatment of breast cancer lias
or wit 31 pomts and Btlly
a
li'Pe rw cap urea o e wor s major
' then starred in the World come m 1cccnt decades Sur- Paultz had 26
(4); John Gnf!IO, 157%, New League VIctory.
golf championships, is the
'Senes. He batted
agamst gery, radmllon, hormone thorFreeman h1t 12 ;;tra 1ght York , outpomted Btlly Wagner,
Clay carroll came' on 111 rehef defendmg champton at Greens400
\he Balllmore Orwles m the apy, dru g the, apy, m combma- pmnts dunng the fourth quarter 160, Cleveland ( 10)
w pttch two scoreless frames boro. The way things have
ttnns of these methods arc used to help the Chaps stop the
and rookie rtghthander Sieve been gomg, who can say be's not
Senes, made one of the succes&lt;fully, a c~'0 1 dmg to the p
th W te D
LAS VEGAS Nev (UPI ) - Blatenck flmshed up wtth a the man w beat?
_greatest catches. m Senes Ame&lt;""" Cance1 Soc1ety
acers, e es rn !VISIOn 'Ken)·atta Hock'enhull, 228, San c1ean sate
1 m the runth.
A pair of the tour's "quiet
·.. --~---••••••••••••----••••••••••, D1eguj outpmnted Chuck
The wm was the Reds' mnth men," Billy Casper and Miller
t
Ohvera, 213, Phoemx (10)
in the last 11 outings. They play Barber, and its most talkative
-~e~~
_.the Pittsburgh Ptrates at Bra- competioor, Lee Trevmo, 11llght
SEATTLE (UP!)
Btlly denton"'today.
dispule any concession at this
'I
"D
I Schellha s, Renton, Wash ' Woody Woodward doubled point.
I'
I knocked out Ed Ostapov.ch, home the lj.eds' firsi run in the In an earlier day, so might 58-I
e·
I Canada (5) . (Weights una - fourth mmng off starter Ken year-old Sam Snead, wbo has
;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,tfio:;;AT ~ vatlable).
Wright. Their !mal two runs won thts ,tournament eight
came m lhe e1ghth off veleran bmes. Th1s bme around,
I
reliever Ted Abernathy.
however, another Snead is the
The Reds collected only six threat He is carlyle Snead,
I EAGLES GET QB HELP
I
I ' PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
hits to the Royals' seven and Sam's nephew, who fmally hit
11 he Philadelphia Eagles of the corrunitled one error to their the btg tune on hts own by
I
Football League Wed- two
I
nesday acqmred quarterback
winning two tournaments this
I Natwnal

If Not Me, then W
_ hQ?

r---------------------------1

he's Joe DiMaggw's "boy "
DtM agg10 , then a special
Bbte, 21, was ptl£hlng for asSIStant with the Athletics,
Iowa m the American Assncta- recommend aoother year in the
bon at the start of the 1970 mmors lor the boy and added,
season ·alter being hanunered "He's gol ooe of the greatest
all over the field m a few ap- arms ever seen."
pearances for the Athletics near · Blue was brought up by the
the end-oL-tlle 1969 season Athletics last Sept 3. and p1t-

B)./f,4C Captu •...es 11
7\T.G "'ournament
.J.
Beach Athlellc Club lor the
sec ond year 1n successwn ,
captured the North Galha Band
Boosters'
Ind ependent
Ba s ketball Tourn a ment
Wednesday mght wtlh a 145-124

In two ru1.s with two doubles
""and a In pie, leadtng lhe
Houston Astros to a 9-3 romp
over the New York Yankees ...
deorge Soone, on loan from the
asstgnment agatnst the Wasii- parent club, p1tched six shuoout
mmngs as Rtchmond beat the
mgoon Senators
Blue responded tO Wllliams' Atlanta Braves, 7-fJ.
announcement by str1k111g out
rune batters and allowmg one
earned run and five htts m the
Athletics' 6-3 viCtory over the
Cahlorma Angels' B squad . Don
· Mmcher, Sal Bando and Rick
Monday homered for the
AthletiCS
On other fronts Frank
Your regular payday
Howard drove m four runs w1th
savings plus our high
two homers to lead the Senators
rate of return will
to a 6-5 VIctory over the
make your savings
Baltimore, Onoles
DJCk
grow quickly ...
Bosman, the Senators' openmg'
day pttcher , shut out the Or10les
for stx inrungs before giVIng up
two runs m the seventh .. Ray
Otlp pl!ched a four-httter, go111g
PASSBOOK RATE
all the way, as the Boston Red
Sox beat the Ptttsburgh Pirates,
4-2 Wtlhe Star g~ll homered for
U1e Pirates
Btll Stoneman, a nother openJOg day pitcher, hurled seven
scol'eless mmngs m the Monlreal Expos' 2-0 triumph over
their Wmmpeg Whips farm club
Metgs County
Branch of
Sieve Carl ton, a big disapThe
Athens
County
pomtment w1th a 10-19 record m
Savmgs &amp; Loan Co.
1970, p1tched f1ve-hit ball for
296 Second 51

ening Day Job
'

· over, he believes.
.
his wmler and spr10g physical development program whtch JS
--_
paying dividends m thicker btceps, huskier thighs, greater '
strength, endur~ce, and speed. Bruce also 18 10 charge o! the
lly United Press lnternalional
sprmg track and field program where more phystcal.development
For the San FranciSco
ISm the making. Southern's f~rst track meet IS a triangular event Warnors, Atlanta Hawks and
at Kyger Creek High on Aprill4 with Symmes Valley the thtrd Phtladelphia 76ers- tt's w111
squad.
tomght or else there's no
tomorrow
. Wallace, a qwte eligible bachelor, takes his sports seriously.
All three clubs are wtthm one
It extends inoo his datly llv111g . Even hJS getting back and forth w defeat of ehminalion from the
,"work" in Racine has a sporting element, riding ime of his two N'a tJOnal Basketball Assoctallon
motorcycles (I haven't seen him behind the steering wheel of a playoffs and all three are
car for a long time).ln fact, I don't thmk he owns a four-wheeler . deftmte underdogs for tomght's
,His Ia lest two-wheeled vehicle is a Kawasaki geared up for the htll games
,climb which must be one of the greater dare-devJI sports extant
loday.

----------------------

P.T.A. MEETS
Vtrgmta Federation of Women's
The New Haven P T A. was Clubs held at the Greenbner,
called to order by the prestdent, Whtte Sulphur Springs, W. Va
James Moy, for thetr regular Mrs Harry L. Fmdley, state
March meetmg. Mrs Jack prestdent and her state olftcers
Hesson read "The Parents' wtth the capttol Distrtct Clubs
Prayer" for the devotwnal
servmg as hostesses conducted
HONORED - Wilham carleton (Carl) Edwards
They dtscussed vanous guns an actiOn packed , smooth
prepares wblow out the candles on a decora led cake dur111g a
available and thetr pnces The salimg, mformative , mlerestmg
dinner g1ven Sunday in honor of his 83rd birthday
prestd~ t suggested that the and fun fliled "Shore Leave at
ladtes present to talk th1s over the Greenbner."
wtlh the men before they made Mrs EugE!he Hester , Sr , Mrs.
any move to purchase any of the Paul B Powell, Mrs. Wtlltam
guns The organ1zat10n IS Russell, Mrs Paul Scally, Mrs.
planmng m gtvmg a gun away m Davtd Roush: Mrs Robert
the near future
Curtts, Mrs Dorsey L. Roush ,
Mrs. Sheila Goheen was Mrs Charles H Smtth, Mrs
ago."
chortled
y
appotnted
chatrman of the Edw1n Roush, Mrs. Glenn
Then he proceeded to draw
tJ umps, discard anothe1 club nommatmg comm1ttee A slate Roush and Mrs . Charollett
·
on the other htgh dwn.onrl , of nommees should be ready for Roush were in attendance.
MEET IN LIBRARY
The 83rd birthday of Wtlllam Syracuse, and Mtss Edna lead a second spade and li Se the April meetmg Thts ts
Mlner•vtlle.
wtth the queen Thts ltme A necessary so that the new of· The New Haven Woman's
I ton (c ar1) Ed wards was Edward·,
Care
•
•
was ready w1th the ace, led
observed Sunday wtth a famtly
Mr. and Mrs. Wtlham Kreisel Ihe seven of spades and ll fleers wtll be able to take over Club held 1ts monthly meetmg
Tuesday evemng March 23 in
dmner at the home of Mr . and and Claudta, Mr'. and Mrs stttmg East co II e c t '' d lhe the May meetmg
Prestdent Moy read a letter the club rooms at the library.
Mrs Robert Holstein in Elsworth
Edwards and settm~ tnck wtth the tack
from
Mr Theodore R Stevens, Durmg the busmess sesston the
~yracuse
chtldren, Helen and Patncia
'Just as I remarked eaJ '
Mr Edwards, a lifelong and Vaughn Klem , all of her." sa id Z You &lt;hc uld prestdent of the Mason County club moved to canvass the town
Galloway·, Robert Weedy , sttck to pulhn~ me m the de- School Board, accepting their lor the Amertcan Red Cross and
restden t of Syrac_use, was
clarer's sei:t I would neve1
pr~sented several gtfts du~g ').Ogan , Mr. and Mrs Roger have fallen for &gt;\'s flumme 1y 10vtlat10n to attend the Apnl 15 w asstst the Library Fund
the afternoon and a birthdeyWalls and Linda, Columbus, w1th the ace of spade,'!"'but - meetmg Mr Sievers satd the Dnve The annual club dinner
cake, 10scnbed "Happy Btrth- and Mr and Mrs Emmett· actually I would not ha ve board would attend as a body w1ll be held at the Upoowner Inn
day, Dad " was also enjoyed.
Edwards, Grove Ctty.
had to try for two spade The board members are m Parkersburg at whtch tune
Attend10g were Mrs. Myrtle
Mtss Ruth Wmgett Colum- h leks The clubs broke ~ 3 scheduled lo tour the school and Mrs. Hershel M. Perdue, SouthMcBnde, Mrs. Gladys Hayman, bus a granddaughte~ of the You had enough entr•es lo hold a panel dtscusswn wtth the weslern Dtstnct President, wtll
'
dummy to set the last ell b
,
Mrs. Rosa Marlin, Mr. and Mrs. honored guest, also called up for a spade discard Sl.ll t parents and teachers present conduct tnSil\llatJOn of new
Mrs .
Kenneth
, Orvtlle Crooks, Mrs . Elma durmg the afternoon from Fort by throwmg two clubs on the Pres1dent Moy also read the offi cers
letter
he
had
written
to
the
Thompson
,
chairman,
requests
' "
- Weese , Mrs. Eleanor Wmgett Lauderdale where she was ace and kmg of dtamond,
'
board
mv1tmg
them
to
the
reservabon
be
m
by
April
27.
' ani! ·' Robert, Mr and Mrs. va&lt;Jlllomng and several ne1gh- " R 1g tit as uS'\Jal, '"'d
Robert Holstem and chtldren, bors VISited w1th Mr Edwards poor Y 'I do need prac t1ce meeting He also stated that Mrs. James Pearcy, guest
smce the school board members speaker, gave a revtew of the
Dtana, Teresa and Bobby, all of during the day
at dummy play' '
(NEWSPAPER ENT£RPRISE A5SN )
were the guests of the P.T A. for book "The Sword and Swttthe evemng tha~y d1scusston chblade" whtch was well
I
of the controver between the recetved by those present.
Many persons may be
Mrs
Charles Stmons , handtcapped to a fuller and
I
school board a
he superm- Hostesses were Mrs. George
Tht• h1ddmg ha:'i been
I
famthar with the soory of the charrman, satd the above IS a happter hfe.
West
Nmth
East
South tendent to be excluded at the Ingels, Mrs Eugene Hester,
I
meetmg
Sr , Mrs Jerry Scott and Mrs. c1v1c-spmted mdtvtdual who question many people of Meigs It takes rehabilitatiOn centers
I ¥
Pass
2 olo
I
.,
By Helen Batte\
when asked 00 serve on ~ County w1ll be ask10g them- wtth modern equipment,
P ass
3t
Pas~
AI lhis ttme the 'meet10g was Charles Howard.
I
committee or perform some selves as they constder the workshops and home emYou South hold
This column Is for young people, their problems and .,\2 ¥AJ4 t fiJ ... KQJ753 turned over to the New Haven In addttlon to the hoslesses,
charitable act, always put the urgency of thts year's Easter ployment, restdent and d_ay
pleasures, their troubles and fun As wtth the rest of Helen Help
A- Jusl hut three hearts You Browme Troop 753 and the Gtrl members and guests present request in perspective by Seal campatgn to raise funds for camps,hospttals, and quahft~d
Us!, it welcomes laughs but won 'I dodge a serwus question with a are hcadmg rm a slam, but you Scout Troop 682 The Scouts were Mrs. PhJI Batey, Mrs saymg "If not me _ then rehabilttation servtces provtded professwnal personnel to help
want tu find uul JU st "here
opened their program wtth the Charles Dodd, Mrs. Dan Edbrush-off.
by the Easier Seal Soctely to ~ the crippled child, the str?ke
Hello Song followed by the wards, Mrs. Robert Gurtts, who' "'
TODA Y'S QUESTION
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
more :han 250,000 cnppled vtctim, the pard of heanng , the
Your partner tonti'nuer.; to four Salute to the Flag and the Mrs Tom Hoffman, Mrs .
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
youth With a speech defect, and
hearts Whal do you do n9w?
smgmg of "My Country Tis of Harold Rose, Mtss Rose, Mrs. where he underwent eye Children and adults
UNCLE SAM'S WILL IS HARD
'
A knowledgeable response thousands of others wtth Un-Thee " A play w1th a take off on D•vtd Roush, Mrs. Donald F. surgery.
PILL TO SWALLOW
Dragnet was done by the G1rl Roush, Mrs. Charles H. Smtih ,
Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs. Clifford anses w the quest10n when 1t 1s provable dtsabihties
So, the need is great, !he
Dear Helen :
Scouts called "Looking for A Mrs. Mark Ward, Mrs . Karl Yost and Gary Batey have been realized that the network of
I'm not exactly a teenager, bemg nearly 20 with a 24-year-old
GJrl Scout Leader " The Wtles, Mrs. John Wolfe, Mrs. spending several days m Easier Seal societies in the 50 cause worthy. By g1ving •w
husband and a baby daugh~r. But I Imagine this has happened w
Browmes sang the songs Bmgo, Paul B. Powell, Mrs. Fran Danforth, lllmms, havmg been states, the Dtstrict of Columbta, Easter Seals, one helps m!ke
tots of yolUig pe&lt;iple now that jobs are scarce .
Red Caboose and the Browme Reichert, Mr. and Mrs James called lhere because of the and Puerto Rtco, operates possible more than he thinks.
The answel'fl'eaDy JS, "y6U "
Tom JOined the semce when he was 17, ma10ly because he
Song All the scouts together Pearcy The annual bus111ess Jllness of Mrs. Batey's mother, largely wtth funds contributed
couldn't get •along wtth llis slepf,ather. When his four years were
Pvt. John D. Johnson, sang the song "Girl Scouts," mee tmg wtll be held on April 27. Mrs. J. G. Swillers,' who suf- by a generous and com- Send contributions to "Eas1er
passiOnate public 10terested 10 Seals, M1ddleport, Ohio."
up, we got mamed. We had it rough because of sickness, lack of stationed at Ft Knox, vtstted thus bringmg thetr program to All chairmel!'" .are reminded to fered a stroke.
good jobs, baby bills. Even when be worked 00 hours a week hts parents, Mr . and Mrs Paul an end
•
have thetr .reports ready.
Myra Roush, employed in sharing the cost of helpmg the
•
somehmes, we couldn't make ends meet
D .Johnson m Mason over the
The leaders of the Gtrl Scouts Election of officers wtlll&gt;e held. Huntington, and Jane Roush,
•
Finally the work ran out entirely, and we were desperale, so weekend
The Johnsons' were MISS Judy Goheen and Hostesses are Mrs. Phil Batey, employed in Charleston, spent
be went oosee the Anny recruiter He scored wellm llis lests, and daughter, Mrs Merlin H. Mrs Doris Gtlhspie The Mrs . John Marshall, Mrs. John the weekend wtth their mother,
~;oy promised him hJS old Anny JOb back, wtth a place for his Tracy, Jr and son, Stephen Browme leaders were Mrs. N1ta Wolfe candtdates for the club's 'Mrs. Velma Roush.
••
Weel&lt;end guests of Mr. and
Mrchael, who have been m Seelbach and Mrs Dorothy scholarships to a Wahama High
family wbve. So be Signed up.
School female student entermg Mrs. Johnny Roush wer~ Mrs. Dates to remember - Apnll, meet Thursday, Apnl I at lltll
Helen, they put him in the mfantry and in five weeks, he goes · Germany, w1ll arnve in Parsons
wVtetllam. He was fighting m 'Nam before. He's served hJS turn Columbus on Fnday evening The room count was won by the leachmg professton m West Boyd Wears and Earl Harns of Dtslnct Commttlee; 8, Round- Kntght's house, 2903 Pareisb
and wtll be met by her parents. Mrs. Hessons and Mrs. Hum- V1rg101a are to be present
Nttro and Edwm Roush of tables; 9, Good Fnday; 11, Ave., Pt Pleasant, 7·30 p.m: AII
there! And it was Hell.
1
They
will
stay
wtlh
her
parents
phreys'
homeroom.
RefreshPERSONALS
Charleston
Easter Sunday; 24-25, Camp 10terested J.R.'s and MembersTom says there's no way out But they promtsed him Isn't
Wliham
Chtsler Johnny Roush ts a medical Ldrs. Onentalton; 27, Counctl at-Large are urged w atlfld
honesty expected of our government any more' - WHAT TO 00' whtle her husband is on another ments were served to those ·Mrs
attend10g.
returned
home
dunng
the patient at Pleasant Valley Annual Dmner.
wur of duty .
floundtables - Wtll be held
Dear What:
AT
CONVENTION
week~nd
aft,
e
r
spending
the
past
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
Jeffers
Hospttal.
May
6,
ll!istr1ct
Commtttee,
9,
Thursday, April 8, at Kfj:er
Wnte w tbe congressman from your Dtstnct. I can't offer
E1ght
members
and
three
week
VlStlmg
relatives
10
Pittand
daughter,
Eh
Jones
61
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Uoyd
Roush
Mothers'
Day;
13
Roundtables,
Creek H1gh Scliool at 7:30p.m.;
1
much encouragement, but 1! anyone can help, be can - H.
Bella1re, Ohto, visited over the· guests of the New Haven sburgh and Carneg1e.
..
have returned home following a 15, Pioneer Day; 22, Pioneer Cub theme, Growing, Flyl'ng,
Dear Helen ·
Lester Ohlinger Is a surgical vacatiOn spent 111 Flortda and Day; 31, Memonal Day
Crawhng; ,Webeloes actl~ty,
I am a student, m charge of.selhng th111gs 10 the book soore weekend wtth Miss Stella Gress. Women 's Club attended the 65th
Mr . and Mrs. Ha,rry Walsh annual convenlJon of the West palient at Holzer Hospttal, Mextco
District Commttlee - Wtll Naturalist ; Boy Scout thetne,
and cafelena.
and daughter Hamett, VIsited
Camptng, Pioneermg C$1p
Thts year I have been threalened by certa111 kids to gtve them
m St. Pelersburg, Fla. with Dr
Equipment.
•
something lree.lll don't they'll gang up onme.l got beat up once.
• is
~nd Mrs Eugene Keig
Boy
Scout
leader
traim!f
That enough !
Miss 'Brenda Nollege, a
being held on Mondays at-the
I can't keep htdmg the loss much longer,.So It's etther get student of Century College 111
Columbta Gas Co. office at 7
caught as a thief or get mugged for bemg a fmk
Huntington, vtstted recently
removed.
The
butt
part
of
the
degree
F
IS
3
to6
months.
lf
you
pm
·~
By DEBORAH M. CONKLIN cuts, sue~ as, the ptcmc, are
I can't ask wbe let off my "job" wtlhout giving a reason· And wtth her mother, Mrs. Mary
bam as a high! ;; proportion of freeze 'ham, which really is not
Need of fmancial h~lp - . We
Agent,
Home
Econ.
often
more
economical
sources
Ext.
then I'd be afratd wgo home at night. Best des, I'm already guilty Nollege, over the weekend .
While hogs come to market of lean meat than are ham, loin lean meat than the shank part recommended , s.ore 11 no are now involved 111 our S . ~ E
of sleallng so I cap'tgo wthe prmcipal
Will
reportedly year 'round, an extra large roasts, and chops. Bacon is a
Brenda
The name picnic or cala 1s longer than one month to ( Sustatmng Member!bip'
What can I do' -SCARED
graduate from the ·college next supply ts expected to be costly source of lean meat, but gtven w the'lower half of the maintaifi quality.
Enrollment) Campatgn . dooct
Dear Scared:
week.
volunteers can help t@eir
•
' marke~d in the next couple of 1t IS usually purchased for tbe pork shoulder. It ~enerally has
call a bully's bluff and he sometunes ends up more scared
Servtce
Center's ,budget ; by
a
lower
proportton
of
lean
meat
~
months. Indications are tljat flavor and lexture·of the fat as
Allen rough. These fellows won't JulnP you if they know thetr
THE DAILY SENnNEL
telling the'story of scoutlng,and
:to fat and bone than does ham,
about 20per cent more hogs will well as the lean.
names are 'on !lie at the prmctpal's offtce, with JUvenile hall the ·
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helpmg to recruit workeri w
Rib end and loin end pork
DEVOTED TO
be markeled this spring than When selecting fresh pork,
- reit stop.
•
each make live contacts. !V-GMElt~l-~~~~1 ~REA
were last year at the same time loo~ for ,a ,light, graytsh-pmk roasts or chops have a htgher
Better yet, arrange with school authorities wllave the gang
M Dtstnct's filture ts at sta~ -CHESTI!R L. TANNEHILL.
That's why you've seen pork on color. '~;he meat should be fine proporlJon of fat and bone than
leader "surprised" 111 the act of extortion. If you tell the complete·· ···· ROBERT
e..cHOEFLICH,
Ed.
h
d
I
t
please help - the many ~oys
"specials" at very reasonable m texture, smoot an ve ve y, the center cut roasts qr chops. •
srory, you won't lose mu~li more than an honorary job - which
that are getting and want
Except
for
products
m
Ctty Editor
pnces, and you can exP.ct to and should contain inPvbi!Shtd
dally
· Ied II ec ks of It
scoutmg wtll thank you. i!'oo
you could do wttboull - H.
saturday
by The
Ohio e)(cept
valley see sue h f ea tures f.90 tmue for .1
..,rmmg
a Th e unopened cans, store all pork in
many want to let "George~ do
~r Jjelen :
Publlshtng Company, 111 the next two months at least. •bones should have red, porous . the · coldest part of the
't
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I am one of those conservation-fuindeil guys. Usually my ~fi':i ' i~sln.';~mo~\~(~ p~~~~
What's the best buy m pork? ceriters The outside lal should refngerator. Wrap fresh pork
Tri.SI&lt;Ite Area Co•nctl's ~-G­
father lS very understanding, but·we JUSt had a ftght. I feel we H2 2t56, Edltonal Phone 992- It depends. Prtces of some culs be while and relatively firm .. A loosely wallow some drymg of
M
Dtstnct chairman is ·Bill
21
sh&lt;;uld stop sending so many men w. the moon and get more
~~cond class postage po ld at of pork have greater ups and htgh proportion of lean meat to the surface . Thts retards
Kmght; comnnss10ner ts iyte
downs during the year than fat and bone is more desirable. spo;Iage. Plan to use fresh pork
concerned about cleaning up lbe old planet Earth. Dad thmks tbe · Pomeroy, Ohio
Dunsmore,
and distnct
Nat1anal adver11s1nQ
•-• wtthin a lew days 'after purbread should go for rockets and the pulitary, so we'll be world reoresentottve
Bolllnelll
others. Proce~se d cu •·
.. , sueh as A su1 table qua l't
1 yo f smo~.,..
execuhve is Chadds Hall. :
leaders. When I quote Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Conservation IS an G"la~her, Inc , I2'East 42na ready-to-&lt;!at hams; vary less andcannedporkcanbeselecled chasing. Use variety meats and
t
• New York City , New York
dunng the year than fresh cuts by usmg packer brand names as ground pork within a day or two
art In which a man has aD mankind for compehtors," he gets St Subscr1pt1on
rates:
~lOl l' th.m 52-Jmlhon AW\CI ·
afler purchasl~g Cured hams,.
a guide
huffy and says us radical kids are messing up the world. How can Delivered by carrier where of pork
t&lt;Mm nnw lh lllJ.!; n1.1y l'\"elltl~llh'
available so ctnll per week,
Some cuts are better sources The cut IS also an important ptcmcs, and bacon wUl keep one
lwH· t'.ml'l'r One~ 111 thu,'fi hft ln
111t'~ him atr~tight? - N~1'10N~ JA.!... ITOR
Bv Motor Route where carrier
t~ • lwo
weeks · under
service not available Ont of lean meat than are other gutde.
t'.Ull'('l 1\ lltl'.\' 's.t \ t•d. Tins ... ;,,ld
Dear N.J.;
month
Sl 75. By mlil In Ohio ~uts. One way to compare the
A
shank
or
butt
haU
of
ham
h(• mut'llst•d to unr in tw- ll\'
refngeFatlon..
"'
,... A UttJe at a time. Logical dtscusslons backed up wtth proof and W Va , One year St4,00
~· . a 1l~ th.l~~~~~~~~s and tno;lpl
If
you
want
to
freeze
fresh
lbout poQutioo have t'ltangCa the national attitude from a shrug to SIX month&amp; $7 ,25. Three c ost of different cuts of pork iS has had no renter CUI slices
lrt'.llmt•l
ll, ,\l'~·nr dmp: tn ~ lu•
months u so Subocr.pllpn t
ld
1 th
of th
ed A h k butt lid pork., remember that the.
deepCOil~!ll'li.Ithink your father will listen - tf you stop shouhng .
DEBBIE
CONKLIN
1
1
1
.\nu•m .m C'~ou''"'a St)lu•ly.: 1
pr ce nc udts ~un day T..Im
~··~'..JCeiolllc
lonDsle.llelr
. t ,JoOnlliyc..lejjei_.c.e:oslitin~ee...lrl!!e!l!mSJov!@l!J·!2J!~
si..!,;en
a~n!!!l!!!:or.£ll!..
e
comme
torage time at 0
ISenJor•• l
•
1
d
[ I

By Unlled Jlress Internallonal
Should Prestdent Nixon fmd
time w watch aext Monday's
American League opener 111
Washmgton, D.C, be may do a
llewtle take when the Oakland
Athleti.cs starting pttCher walks
w the mound.
Tbe name 1s Vtda Blue-and

'

Bucks,. Knicks And Bullets Can
• Fm
• als w•.t h wm· s Toni·ght
Bestevidenceiswtdemt~restamongtheboyspar!Jctpatingm G81D

SOUTII

.KQ4
¥AQJ 9854

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NORTII (ll}

• 109 2-·
¥ K 107
WE..~T

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3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , April!, 1971

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·Freel

APRIL 1-2-3

WITH M.INIMUM 10 GAL .GASOLINE
..
PURCHASE.·

•

'l \

. ~ND SAVE '100-0ifMORE
119.95 buys I gallon of Arab Termtte Control Concentrate
Add an Arab hose end spray Applicator and you're ready
to completely termite proof the average J bedroom home•
Saves you over $100 compared to the cost at callmg '" a
professional exterminator Buy Arab and do both you and
your home a favor Price may yary slightly

VALLEY WMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.

Otft·r May Vary At Parlicipaling Deal e rs

992-2709

MIDDLE

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· WIN AT BRIDGE

Y Tries Han~
as Declarer

__by Che~ Tannehill

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Bruce Wallace, Southern High's new football coach, ts optimiStic. It gbes without saymg Wallace, not-so-long ago a star
Middleport High lootballer, and later a standout defenstve
secondary performer at Marshall, wouldn't have accepted 'the
Tornado JOb unless he thought there was male rial to build. Even
so, Wallace has spectal reasons to believe hard work Will produce
a winning squad within a couple of years
Wallace bas a basketful! of natural enthusiasm for the hard·
:nose sport which began rubbmg off last autumn at S\&gt;uthern's
; junior high level where he coached. rt.ts-enthustasm ts carrying

tAK4
... AH4:l

EAST

.A 73
¥ 2
t Q J JU 9 7 2

•.7865
¥ 63
t H65~
... Q J9

· ·K tO &gt;

+

Vo1d
... 762

Both vu lnerah le

'J
West

2t
Pass

Nurlh

East

SotJth

'"'
2¥

Pas&gt;
Pass
Pa ss

1¥
6¥

Pas~

Opemng IL'ad-

I

1\y Oswald &amp; .James Jacoby
"Today IS Apnl Ftrst, " remarked Y " How about lettmg me s1t South th1s once'"
"All mht, " r e p lie d Z.
"but we'll probably be

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rr WAS 58 years ag~ tills week that tbe oliio River- Cll
a rampage 111 the hJSIDricall913 flood. The picture on the left
,;.as the home of Mrs. Sarah Woodrum and her daughler,
Cora , the postmistress, as they stood on the porch on March
31, 1913 m Clifoon, W Va. On the right is the U~wellen
Williams home and general siDre as it looked on March 30,
1913. Wtlllams' son, Lloyd and granddaughter, Mrs. Denver
Blake now have a small grocery soore and post office m
~ifton. The two photographs are part of the collection of
Mrs. Ray Ptckens of Clifton.

!
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You older readers may recall that m the columns on
auct10n bndge , Z always sat
South Y was North and A
and B were always on detense
The very !Jrst hand found
them playmg agamst thell'
uld fne nds A and B Y got
to s1x hea1ts 1n no t1me and
-\. opened the queen of diamonds Y won m dummy.
d 1s c a 1 de d a cl u b and
promptly led the deuce ol
spades to hts kmg A had no
problem s about what to do
He p 1 o d u c c d the tin ee uf
Ihat su1t w1thout e1thcr undu e haste or protracted
stud y
" I should have star ted
play mg the dummy ) ears

New Haven Social Events

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Voice alo~g Broadway [
I

still sneak off to Manhattan streetcorners w try
out new malertal and keep an intimale . oouch
with people .... Baldwm &amp; leps claim they
earned up to $200 a mght for their sidewalk
philharmomcking (they paid tax on that, of
course?) and assert other colorful background:
That Mike, gwtarist and creator of all thejr
material, once was a deepsea diver; Richard
says he taughthunself wplay a fiddle he plann~
ongmally as part of a collage; could be.
Out-of-oown newsmen cover111g a Buffalo, N.
Y., appearance of Sen. George McGovern up 10
our old home town managed w report solemnly
some words by Buffalo Mayor Frank Sedita, as if
the irrepressibly comtc Frank had trtpped over
his tonslls and llis sense of silliness: Frank
nbbed himself as "tbe best mayor money can
buy " and his wile as " the best woman who ever
walked the streets of Buffalo." .... Frank's a
polltical showman, a shrewd, forensic clown and
a drop-of-th~-hat singer ... Several years a~o
when we rec'd an honorary degree from Niagara
University, Frank 10 our hopor sang "When Iri~h
Eyes Are Smilmg"; and 11 11 were art Italian
banquet he'd've sung "When Italian Eyes Are
Smiling " n there were Arabs in his constituency, "When Arab Eyes Are Smiling" ,
He's one of the smartest professional politicians
111 that low trade.
El Marrocco's revival has been set back
until next fall wtlh a resplendent list of d~rectors
and members rangmg from real if impoverish~
nobility (a few who have s9nghUy Dun&gt;&amp;
Bradstreet recommendations) to the more
common if rich Americans . . Col. Serge
Obolelll!ky, 80, is the formidable frontman, J~f
Jones the elegant top workmg stiff, Joe Norban
of the lower-pnce dress business the chief
moneybags behind the ambittous resusCitation of
what once was the most elegant of Manhattan
playpens ... Manhattan's ready for a !rest new
uppercrust hangout, and Col 0. thinks his will be

BY JACK O'BRIAN
HE HAS MUSKIE STICKING
HIS NECK OUT .
NEW YORK - Sen. Muskie has a necklle
and shirt adviser as he ambles nominationwards: Bob Brager, long the haberdashery
expert at Browning'~ Sth Ave. Playboy's erstwhile skinny Hugh Hefner's showing recent
high-hie dimensions - a few new inches at the
b.unmy . .. And TV's Harry Reasoner's tailor
would like Harry w take a few mches off
demere, tumtum and hips .... "Portlloy's
Complamt'' pornauthor Philip Roth wid Rodney
Dangerfield he'd cast the no-respect man as the
father in the film verswn if he had his way ....
Lana Rawls wok one browse through hubby Lou
Rawl .; travel folders featuring geiSha girls, and
bopped a 7~7 to jmn Lou in Tokyo 1or hJS fourweek Oriental tour .... The Buster Keaton Fiim
Festival is not only a great-flash-favonte of
oldsters but, encouragingly, of youngsters roo
Producer Raymond Rohauer says it's not just
nostalgia but a plam reaction against cinematiC
sex and violence; hope he's right.
Elsa Lanchester invited Otto Premmger wsee
her latest flick, "Willard" ; asked Otoo w adopt
ber, wo .. . The French anti-&lt;.'DP film, "La
Conde," was banned in France but escaped to
become France's btggest ·smash. It will be
released m the USA as ''ConfesSions of a Blood
Cop" .... Frankie Laine claimed he IS "flattered"
Tom Jones is "doing" him even tho inutatwn IS
the flattest form of smcerity ... Why does that
remind us of Bobby Darin's firm promise he'd
become "a legend by the tune I'm 25" .. . Now
be's 34, doffed his ooupee, donned dungarees,
stopped blowing his own horn and substituted a
harmonica .
Couple of kids named Mike Baldwm and
Richard Leps were dtscovered singing on a
streetcornerby Vanguard Records and stgned to
a $280,000 contract, Vanguard alleges .... Now ll.
lhey're doing -college conc~ rts and claim they

'
83rd
Carl Edwards
.
thd
Ob
ed
rv
BIr ay Se

Easter Seal Income Needed

sPoRTS·MINDEDneoplehaveone-trackedm111ds,anaxlOm
proved conclustvely upon composmg the above paragraph.
Desiring confirmation of the spelling of "Kawasaki" the
Jap~ese _brand ~oiDrcy~le acquired by Wallace, I asked compatriot Hobart WJlson Jr .If he was fal1llhar wtth the word .
"ll iltsn'l round and doesn't bounce, I don't know anything
,about;it," Wilson rephed.

Helen Help Us\

ched a one-htlter and 'a nohttler
while stitking out 35 bailers in
38 inmngs. He went to training
th1s spring merely hopmg to
survtve the squad cut but was
Wid Wednesday by Manager
D1ck Wtlhams that he had
drawn the opemng day

The Warrwrs appear to have
the toughest of all tasks 11 they
hope to advance to the playoff
semifmals. They must beat the
MJiwaukee Bucks lour straight
t1mes It 1s an unlikely
happemng 10 v1ew of the fact
the Warrtars .have yet to beat
M1lwauk~e th1s season They
lost stx llmes dur10g the
regular campmgn and three

llmes 10 the playoffs

the San Francisco-Milwaukee
game IS at Oakland
The fourth playoff series,
between Los Angeles and
Chtcago, IS !Jed 2-2 w11h each
tea m havmg posted Its vtctones
at home The Lakers, because
of the home court advantage m
that ser1es, are favored fot·
tomght's fifth game desp1te the
absence of htgh-scor mg Jen y
West

Atlanta IS down three games
to one agamsl the defendmg'
champ10n New York Kmcks
after blowmg two games at
Atlani&lt;J and Phtladelph13 trails
the Balllmore Bullets 3-1 after
hav mg won the opener of the
best-of-seven series Atlanta
and Philadelphia are on the
1oad for tomght's contests wh1le

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v1ctory over Rw A.T D. ·
Joe Taylor paced the wmners
wtth 36 pomts. Others m double
ftgures were Blame Henry wtth
29 p01nts , Tony Bass, 26 pomts;
Rick Turnbow, 21 po10ts, Dave

Denver, Texas
In ABA Playoff

t.ayer Eyes
• d Jta1'0r
z-..
w;:·zn Ln R ow
1

Garrell Jn

Good Effort
Over R oya}s

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Mason Area

News., Notes

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SPRINGFIELD

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STARJ AT

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Pete LJSke from the Denver
Broncos for an undisclosed
1ctran chmce

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Pork ·Supplies ·.Will Increase

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Old ash zone
• d Bar.«ain Days

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seven mmngs as the St Louts

POmeroy. Ohto

•
"

.•

~

. ~

"WESTWARD HO"
THE

LaSalle Ace
Inks Contract

This Week ~s Specials: All good
d_ependable station wagons; vacation
t1me from Dodge City ...

1968 Dodge. __________ ____s2495
Polara 9 passenger V-8, T Fl&lt;te, p st,

p

br , air cond ,

equalrzer hitch, arr shock s.

1966 Rambler Classic. ________ s1295
6 Passenger, V-8, automatic. sharp as a tack
1966 Dodge. CoroneL:..
'&gt;hll.
_______' s1295,,,
9 Passenger, V-8, T-FIIfe. p. sl , new paint, ready.

1965 Dodge-Pcilara :._·________s1095

• 9 Passenger , VB.

T-FIIte, p sl , p br , at; cond , tots of

md es le ft her e

19n65 Jeep Wagoneer_ _____ ~ __s1095
6 Plfssenger , 6 cy l , 3 speed, p st, p br four wheel dnve
Ar e you ready?

1964 Rambler Classic._________SS95
6 Passenger, V 8, automaf te. very nrce

1963 Dodge Custom 880·------~95
6 Passenger, V 8. T Fllle, p st , needs a home

1963 Mercury Comet. ________ s175
6 Passen ger, 6 cylinder,

auto~atrc,

a ll yo urs.

Here is your chance to get ready for summer
· • • 11 you hive put off buying a wagon don''t
watt any longer. we have the car to tit your
need and pocketbook ...
•'

Call Bob, Wallace, Em er so n , Hilton or Di c k
for your transportation needs now ...

RAWLINGS
99

oo
·

DGE CITY

2·2151

992-2152,

_ye'ar~·-------~~~~~~~M~I~D~D~L~E~P~O~R~T~,~O~.~===~~

r

CINCI NNATI (UPf ) - AIIAmencan LaSalle forward Ken
I
Dun·e tt has come to terms on a
I
five-year contract with the
I
Clllctnnalt Royals lor an annual
I
salary reported to be tn the
I For Elegance 1n Ptpe range of $80,000.
Pleasure, Select a
I Smokmg
P1pe that Needs No
Royals general manager Joe
1 Breaking ln.
Axelson and he,ad coach Bob
1
Cousy met wtth thetr No I draft
I
chmce and hts former coach,
·
Tom Gola, in Phtladelph1a
I
422 Second Ave. t
Wednesday and reached the
GallipoliS,
Ohio
I '--.;;,;:.:;:;,::.:.:.;:.;;;;;;;.:;.._--1 agreement

Tawney Jewelers

; TERmiTE
1 YOUR

PEPSI

I
I

ONE QUART

Freel

4%%

~~~~~~----~

·I

I
I
I

MORE-NOW

r

Swoboda Traded To
.E
. xpos.Ftor R ahn

.

EARN

Ca1dmals downed the New York
Mets, !2-2 The Mels made stx
etrors
m the game
two teams
Doug Rader had a two-run
Box Score
.
BEACH ATHLETIC CLUB - double a nd Cesa r Cedeno drove
Taylor 14-8-36, Turnbow 10-1-21
Smith 6-0·1:1,; Bass 10-6-26:
Henry 11-7-29, Hatrston 5-2-12·
Beach 3-3-9 TOTALS 59-27-145,
RIO A '1' D - Ball 4-1-9, .
Lamber t 19-15-53 , Fowler 5-3WAGONS
13, Faushatgh 4-2-10, Jacobs 102-22 , Wyckoff 0-2-2· Wells 2-1-'·
Hart 0-2-2 a nd 'Foul l-0-2"·
TOTALS 48-28-124
'

Snuth and Harry Hatrston, 12
pumts each
Ron Lambe1 t, Rio Grande
scunng ace, scored 53 po111ts m
a losmg effort Ed Jacobs,
another Redman, had 22 pmnts.
JIM VENNARI, Wetzgal St., Pomeroy, Cincmnatl Reds'
D1ck Fowler added 13 points
scout, was on hand Mohday mght when Logan and the Marauders
Beach
led 63-47 at hallllme
)angled in Middleport. He came specifically wtake ~ good look at
Bob Saunders Quaker SI&lt;Ite
Mark Shaw, Logan's strapping righthander, but also became
Serv1ce
Center forfeited the
interested in the Marauders' leflbander Tun Demoskey who came
consolallon game to Btckers'
, on in the fourth innmg to ptlch three excellent frames .
Bidwell M1lhng QSSC dtd not
Jim said the Reds ar~ about w complete arrangements for a
have enough players to fteld a
baseball c)inic in Cnarleston probably in mid-April destgned for
team.
baseball coaches of .fi'n levels, from little league through the
Referees dunatmg thetr
college level. Jim and other Reds' officials will be on hand to talk
servtces
last mgh t were Btll DJ
,,about and demonstrale what baseball is all about.
By United Press International lithsts
Underwood, Hmdu Henderson,
Ralph Wtgal and John Shupert
The Denver Rockets an~e Gene Moore had 26 'potnts for
Blame Henry, former Mar"
Texas Chaps play wmner-ta - Texas while Bob Netolicky and sha11 ace, was presented the ~'h
aII tontg ht at Denver.
Mel Damel•" each had 21 for the Most Valuable Player Trophy
I .
·
Bolh teams won Wednesday Pacers
Ron Lambert of RlD A T.D was
mgh t 111 the Amencan Basket- Charhe Wtlhams' 35-potnt g1ven the trophy for sconng the
'
ball AssOCia liOn regular season performance led MemphiS past most pomts
,.,..
,,
finale to he for fourth place 1n Carolina Steve Jon'es had 25 Team trophtes went to the
.. ST. PETERSBURG , Fla. h1story 10 the fourth game and the Western Dtvtston. They P010 ts and Wtlbert Jones added first three teams Jnd 1v1dual
.(UP!)- Ron Swoboda, one of drove 111 the tJe-break111g run meet 111 a one-game playoff 20 for the Pros wh1le Bob trophies were given to the top
GREENSBORO, N.C (UPI )
·the , key players m the New wtth a double m the f1fth and tomght to de term me the last Verga led Carohna wtth 25.
- The spectre of Gary Player
York Mets' "mtracle world last game of the class1c.
playoff slot 10 the West
V1rg1ma scored moe stra1ght
cast an ommous shadow over ·
Senes Vlctory" m 1969 but an Swoboda failed to w111 a
John Barnhlll had 29 pomts pomts 111 the fourth quarter to
the Grealer Greensboro Open
outspoken en lie of Manager Gil regular JOb m the OUtfield 10 and Bryon Beck added 28 as beat the Flondtans. Charhe
today as the rancher from
Hodges 10 1970, was traded to the spnng of 1970 and cnttctzed the Rockets beat the New York Sco~t led the Squtres w1th 29
Johannesburg went afler an
the Montreal Expos Wednesday Hudges throughout the cam- Nets and Don Freeman's 31- whJie Mack Calvm was high
almost unheard of feat of
lor outftelder Don Hahn.
patgn for cont111u10g to employ pmnt effort earned Texas to a man for the Flondtans wtth 28
strmging together three vtcto133
129
Swoboda, 26, was hailed as a the platoon system whtch
trmmph over the AI Tucker of the Flortdtans
nes 111 a row.
pOSSible future Mtckey Mantle contnbuted to the 1969 VICtory lndtana Pacers In the only and Vtrgmta 's George carter
"
Arnold Palmer, who passed
by" Manager casey Stengel He batted 233 00 a part-time other games, Memphts beat were eJected for flght1llg.
up this one to pracllce lor next
when he JOllied the Mets tO baSIS for the Mets last season Carolina 123-106 and Vtrginia
./
weekls Masters, is the last pro
l965. He had brief flashes of llhtle Hahn, 22, batted .255 10 82 stopped the Flondtans 131-123
w wm lhree consecu!Jvelybnlliance and batted 281 in 134 games as a rookte for the
The Nets, who f1mshed thtrd
TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - Greg back in 1962 when wmnmg was
'games m 1967.
Expos
10 the East, played Without star
Garrett, turmng 10 his best per- not so lucrative as It IS ooday.
R1ck Baery, who averaged 35 Wednesday's Fight Results
formance of the sprmg, blanked Byron Nelson won about a dozen
-_contributiOns
Swoboda made
Important
· ht dUrmg
· the waft¥earsto the
Mets'
potnts a game agamst the By United Press Internahoaal th e Ka nsas c11y Roya1son th ree s tratg
Rockets thts season, and Manny CLEVELAND (UPI )- Doyle hits through the first SIX mnmgs and was pa1d off in war bonds.
~trekh run which resulted m
L k
Ba1rd, 164, Cleveland, stopped Wednesday as the Cincmnall
Player, one of four men to
Dove led New Mtke Pusaten, 157'1•, Boston Reds took
Tl1C g1e"•test }&gt;r&lt;&gt;gr• ess ''' tl1e yea ks. Sonny
their Winning the National
h
3.fJ G
f 't
t
11 f th
ld'
League pennant m 1969 and tieatment of breast cancer lias
or wit 31 pomts and Btlly
a
li'Pe rw cap urea o e wor s major
' then starred in the World come m 1cccnt decades Sur- Paultz had 26
(4); John Gnf!IO, 157%, New League VIctory.
golf championships, is the
'Senes. He batted
agamst gery, radmllon, hormone thorFreeman h1t 12 ;;tra 1ght York , outpomted Btlly Wagner,
Clay carroll came' on 111 rehef defendmg champton at Greens400
\he Balllmore Orwles m the apy, dru g the, apy, m combma- pmnts dunng the fourth quarter 160, Cleveland ( 10)
w pttch two scoreless frames boro. The way things have
ttnns of these methods arc used to help the Chaps stop the
and rookie rtghthander Sieve been gomg, who can say be's not
Senes, made one of the succes&lt;fully, a c~'0 1 dmg to the p
th W te D
LAS VEGAS Nev (UPI ) - Blatenck flmshed up wtth a the man w beat?
_greatest catches. m Senes Ame&lt;""" Cance1 Soc1ety
acers, e es rn !VISIOn 'Ken)·atta Hock'enhull, 228, San c1ean sate
1 m the runth.
A pair of the tour's "quiet
·.. --~---••••••••••••----••••••••••, D1eguj outpmnted Chuck
The wm was the Reds' mnth men," Billy Casper and Miller
t
Ohvera, 213, Phoemx (10)
in the last 11 outings. They play Barber, and its most talkative
-~e~~
_.the Pittsburgh Ptrates at Bra- competioor, Lee Trevmo, 11llght
SEATTLE (UP!)
Btlly denton"'today.
dispule any concession at this
'I
"D
I Schellha s, Renton, Wash ' Woody Woodward doubled point.
I'
I knocked out Ed Ostapov.ch, home the lj.eds' firsi run in the In an earlier day, so might 58-I
e·
I Canada (5) . (Weights una - fourth mmng off starter Ken year-old Sam Snead, wbo has
;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,tfio:;;AT ~ vatlable).
Wright. Their !mal two runs won thts ,tournament eight
came m lhe e1ghth off veleran bmes. Th1s bme around,
I
reliever Ted Abernathy.
however, another Snead is the
The Reds collected only six threat He is carlyle Snead,
I EAGLES GET QB HELP
I
I ' PHILADELPHIA (UPI)
hits to the Royals' seven and Sam's nephew, who fmally hit
11 he Philadelphia Eagles of the corrunitled one error to their the btg tune on hts own by
I
Football League Wed- two
I
nesday acqmred quarterback
winning two tournaments this
I Natwnal

If Not Me, then W
_ hQ?

r---------------------------1

he's Joe DiMaggw's "boy "
DtM agg10 , then a special
Bbte, 21, was ptl£hlng for asSIStant with the Athletics,
Iowa m the American Assncta- recommend aoother year in the
bon at the start of the 1970 mmors lor the boy and added,
season ·alter being hanunered "He's gol ooe of the greatest
all over the field m a few ap- arms ever seen."
pearances for the Athletics near · Blue was brought up by the
the end-oL-tlle 1969 season Athletics last Sept 3. and p1t-

B)./f,4C Captu •...es 11
7\T.G "'ournament
.J.
Beach Athlellc Club lor the
sec ond year 1n successwn ,
captured the North Galha Band
Boosters'
Ind ependent
Ba s ketball Tourn a ment
Wednesday mght wtlh a 145-124

In two ru1.s with two doubles
""and a In pie, leadtng lhe
Houston Astros to a 9-3 romp
over the New York Yankees ...
deorge Soone, on loan from the
asstgnment agatnst the Wasii- parent club, p1tched six shuoout
mmngs as Rtchmond beat the
mgoon Senators
Blue responded tO Wllliams' Atlanta Braves, 7-fJ.
announcement by str1k111g out
rune batters and allowmg one
earned run and five htts m the
Athletics' 6-3 viCtory over the
Cahlorma Angels' B squad . Don
· Mmcher, Sal Bando and Rick
Monday homered for the
AthletiCS
On other fronts Frank
Your regular payday
Howard drove m four runs w1th
savings plus our high
two homers to lead the Senators
rate of return will
to a 6-5 VIctory over the
make your savings
Baltimore, Onoles
DJCk
grow quickly ...
Bosman, the Senators' openmg'
day pttcher , shut out the Or10les
for stx inrungs before giVIng up
two runs m the seventh .. Ray
Otlp pl!ched a four-httter, go111g
PASSBOOK RATE
all the way, as the Boston Red
Sox beat the Ptttsburgh Pirates,
4-2 Wtlhe Star g~ll homered for
U1e Pirates
Btll Stoneman, a nother openJOg day pitcher, hurled seven
scol'eless mmngs m the Monlreal Expos' 2-0 triumph over
their Wmmpeg Whips farm club
Metgs County
Branch of
Sieve Carl ton, a big disapThe
Athens
County
pomtment w1th a 10-19 record m
Savmgs &amp; Loan Co.
1970, p1tched f1ve-hit ball for
296 Second 51

ening Day Job
'

· over, he believes.
.
his wmler and spr10g physical development program whtch JS
--_
paying dividends m thicker btceps, huskier thighs, greater '
strength, endur~ce, and speed. Bruce also 18 10 charge o! the
lly United Press lnternalional
sprmg track and field program where more phystcal.development
For the San FranciSco
ISm the making. Southern's f~rst track meet IS a triangular event Warnors, Atlanta Hawks and
at Kyger Creek High on Aprill4 with Symmes Valley the thtrd Phtladelphia 76ers- tt's w111
squad.
tomght or else there's no
tomorrow
. Wallace, a qwte eligible bachelor, takes his sports seriously.
All three clubs are wtthm one
It extends inoo his datly llv111g . Even hJS getting back and forth w defeat of ehminalion from the
,"work" in Racine has a sporting element, riding ime of his two N'a tJOnal Basketball Assoctallon
motorcycles (I haven't seen him behind the steering wheel of a playoffs and all three are
car for a long time).ln fact, I don't thmk he owns a four-wheeler . deftmte underdogs for tomght's
,His Ia lest two-wheeled vehicle is a Kawasaki geared up for the htll games
,climb which must be one of the greater dare-devJI sports extant
loday.

----------------------

P.T.A. MEETS
Vtrgmta Federation of Women's
The New Haven P T A. was Clubs held at the Greenbner,
called to order by the prestdent, Whtte Sulphur Springs, W. Va
James Moy, for thetr regular Mrs Harry L. Fmdley, state
March meetmg. Mrs Jack prestdent and her state olftcers
Hesson read "The Parents' wtth the capttol Distrtct Clubs
Prayer" for the devotwnal
servmg as hostesses conducted
HONORED - Wilham carleton (Carl) Edwards
They dtscussed vanous guns an actiOn packed , smooth
prepares wblow out the candles on a decora led cake dur111g a
available and thetr pnces The salimg, mformative , mlerestmg
dinner g1ven Sunday in honor of his 83rd birthday
prestd~ t suggested that the and fun fliled "Shore Leave at
ladtes present to talk th1s over the Greenbner."
wtlh the men before they made Mrs EugE!he Hester , Sr , Mrs.
any move to purchase any of the Paul B Powell, Mrs. Wtlltam
guns The organ1zat10n IS Russell, Mrs Paul Scally, Mrs.
planmng m gtvmg a gun away m Davtd Roush: Mrs Robert
the near future
Curtts, Mrs Dorsey L. Roush ,
Mrs. Sheila Goheen was Mrs Charles H Smtth, Mrs
ago."
chortled
y
appotnted
chatrman of the Edw1n Roush, Mrs. Glenn
Then he proceeded to draw
tJ umps, discard anothe1 club nommatmg comm1ttee A slate Roush and Mrs . Charollett
·
on the other htgh dwn.onrl , of nommees should be ready for Roush were in attendance.
MEET IN LIBRARY
The 83rd birthday of Wtlllam Syracuse, and Mtss Edna lead a second spade and li Se the April meetmg Thts ts
Mlner•vtlle.
wtth the queen Thts ltme A necessary so that the new of· The New Haven Woman's
I ton (c ar1) Ed wards was Edward·,
Care
•
•
was ready w1th the ace, led
observed Sunday wtth a famtly
Mr. and Mrs. Wtlham Kreisel Ihe seven of spades and ll fleers wtll be able to take over Club held 1ts monthly meetmg
Tuesday evemng March 23 in
dmner at the home of Mr . and and Claudta, Mr'. and Mrs stttmg East co II e c t '' d lhe the May meetmg
Prestdent Moy read a letter the club rooms at the library.
Mrs Robert Holstein in Elsworth
Edwards and settm~ tnck wtth the tack
from
Mr Theodore R Stevens, Durmg the busmess sesston the
~yracuse
chtldren, Helen and Patncia
'Just as I remarked eaJ '
Mr Edwards, a lifelong and Vaughn Klem , all of her." sa id Z You &lt;hc uld prestdent of the Mason County club moved to canvass the town
Galloway·, Robert Weedy , sttck to pulhn~ me m the de- School Board, accepting their lor the Amertcan Red Cross and
restden t of Syrac_use, was
clarer's sei:t I would neve1
pr~sented several gtfts du~g ').Ogan , Mr. and Mrs Roger have fallen for &gt;\'s flumme 1y 10vtlat10n to attend the Apnl 15 w asstst the Library Fund
the afternoon and a birthdeyWalls and Linda, Columbus, w1th the ace of spade,'!"'but - meetmg Mr Sievers satd the Dnve The annual club dinner
cake, 10scnbed "Happy Btrth- and Mr and Mrs Emmett· actually I would not ha ve board would attend as a body w1ll be held at the Upoowner Inn
day, Dad " was also enjoyed.
Edwards, Grove Ctty.
had to try for two spade The board members are m Parkersburg at whtch tune
Attend10g were Mrs. Myrtle
Mtss Ruth Wmgett Colum- h leks The clubs broke ~ 3 scheduled lo tour the school and Mrs. Hershel M. Perdue, SouthMcBnde, Mrs. Gladys Hayman, bus a granddaughte~ of the You had enough entr•es lo hold a panel dtscusswn wtth the weslern Dtstnct President, wtll
'
dummy to set the last ell b
,
Mrs. Rosa Marlin, Mr. and Mrs. honored guest, also called up for a spade discard Sl.ll t parents and teachers present conduct tnSil\llatJOn of new
Mrs .
Kenneth
, Orvtlle Crooks, Mrs . Elma durmg the afternoon from Fort by throwmg two clubs on the Pres1dent Moy also read the offi cers
letter
he
had
written
to
the
Thompson
,
chairman,
requests
' "
- Weese , Mrs. Eleanor Wmgett Lauderdale where she was ace and kmg of dtamond,
'
board
mv1tmg
them
to
the
reservabon
be
m
by
April
27.
' ani! ·' Robert, Mr and Mrs. va&lt;Jlllomng and several ne1gh- " R 1g tit as uS'\Jal, '"'d
Robert Holstem and chtldren, bors VISited w1th Mr Edwards poor Y 'I do need prac t1ce meeting He also stated that Mrs. James Pearcy, guest
smce the school board members speaker, gave a revtew of the
Dtana, Teresa and Bobby, all of during the day
at dummy play' '
(NEWSPAPER ENT£RPRISE A5SN )
were the guests of the P.T A. for book "The Sword and Swttthe evemng tha~y d1scusston chblade" whtch was well
I
of the controver between the recetved by those present.
Many persons may be
Mrs
Charles Stmons , handtcapped to a fuller and
I
school board a
he superm- Hostesses were Mrs. George
Tht• h1ddmg ha:'i been
I
famthar with the soory of the charrman, satd the above IS a happter hfe.
West
Nmth
East
South tendent to be excluded at the Ingels, Mrs Eugene Hester,
I
meetmg
Sr , Mrs Jerry Scott and Mrs. c1v1c-spmted mdtvtdual who question many people of Meigs It takes rehabilitatiOn centers
I ¥
Pass
2 olo
I
.,
By Helen Batte\
when asked 00 serve on ~ County w1ll be ask10g them- wtth modern equipment,
P ass
3t
Pas~
AI lhis ttme the 'meet10g was Charles Howard.
I
committee or perform some selves as they constder the workshops and home emYou South hold
This column Is for young people, their problems and .,\2 ¥AJ4 t fiJ ... KQJ753 turned over to the New Haven In addttlon to the hoslesses,
charitable act, always put the urgency of thts year's Easter ployment, restdent and d_ay
pleasures, their troubles and fun As wtth the rest of Helen Help
A- Jusl hut three hearts You Browme Troop 753 and the Gtrl members and guests present request in perspective by Seal campatgn to raise funds for camps,hospttals, and quahft~d
Us!, it welcomes laughs but won 'I dodge a serwus question with a are hcadmg rm a slam, but you Scout Troop 682 The Scouts were Mrs. PhJI Batey, Mrs saymg "If not me _ then rehabilttation servtces provtded professwnal personnel to help
want tu find uul JU st "here
opened their program wtth the Charles Dodd, Mrs. Dan Edbrush-off.
by the Easier Seal Soctely to ~ the crippled child, the str?ke
Hello Song followed by the wards, Mrs. Robert Gurtts, who' "'
TODA Y'S QUESTION
Send your teenage questions to YOUTH ASKED FOR IT, care
more :han 250,000 cnppled vtctim, the pard of heanng , the
Your partner tonti'nuer.; to four Salute to the Flag and the Mrs Tom Hoffman, Mrs .
of Helen Help Us! this newspaper.
youth With a speech defect, and
hearts Whal do you do n9w?
smgmg of "My Country Tis of Harold Rose, Mtss Rose, Mrs. where he underwent eye Children and adults
UNCLE SAM'S WILL IS HARD
'
A knowledgeable response thousands of others wtth Un-Thee " A play w1th a take off on D•vtd Roush, Mrs. Donald F. surgery.
PILL TO SWALLOW
Dragnet was done by the G1rl Roush, Mrs. Charles H. Smtih ,
Mrs. Phil Batey, Mrs. Clifford anses w the quest10n when 1t 1s provable dtsabihties
So, the need is great, !he
Dear Helen :
Scouts called "Looking for A Mrs. Mark Ward, Mrs . Karl Yost and Gary Batey have been realized that the network of
I'm not exactly a teenager, bemg nearly 20 with a 24-year-old
GJrl Scout Leader " The Wtles, Mrs. John Wolfe, Mrs. spending several days m Easier Seal societies in the 50 cause worthy. By g1ving •w
husband and a baby daugh~r. But I Imagine this has happened w
Browmes sang the songs Bmgo, Paul B. Powell, Mrs. Fran Danforth, lllmms, havmg been states, the Dtstrict of Columbta, Easter Seals, one helps m!ke
tots of yolUig pe&lt;iple now that jobs are scarce .
Red Caboose and the Browme Reichert, Mr. and Mrs James called lhere because of the and Puerto Rtco, operates possible more than he thinks.
The answel'fl'eaDy JS, "y6U "
Tom JOined the semce when he was 17, ma10ly because he
Song All the scouts together Pearcy The annual bus111ess Jllness of Mrs. Batey's mother, largely wtth funds contributed
couldn't get •along wtth llis slepf,ather. When his four years were
Pvt. John D. Johnson, sang the song "Girl Scouts," mee tmg wtll be held on April 27. Mrs. J. G. Swillers,' who suf- by a generous and com- Send contributions to "Eas1er
passiOnate public 10terested 10 Seals, M1ddleport, Ohio."
up, we got mamed. We had it rough because of sickness, lack of stationed at Ft Knox, vtstted thus bringmg thetr program to All chairmel!'" .are reminded to fered a stroke.
good jobs, baby bills. Even when be worked 00 hours a week hts parents, Mr . and Mrs Paul an end
•
have thetr .reports ready.
Myra Roush, employed in sharing the cost of helpmg the
•
somehmes, we couldn't make ends meet
D .Johnson m Mason over the
The leaders of the Gtrl Scouts Election of officers wtlll&gt;e held. Huntington, and Jane Roush,
•
Finally the work ran out entirely, and we were desperale, so weekend
The Johnsons' were MISS Judy Goheen and Hostesses are Mrs. Phil Batey, employed in Charleston, spent
be went oosee the Anny recruiter He scored wellm llis lests, and daughter, Mrs Merlin H. Mrs Doris Gtlhspie The Mrs . John Marshall, Mrs. John the weekend wtth their mother,
~;oy promised him hJS old Anny JOb back, wtth a place for his Tracy, Jr and son, Stephen Browme leaders were Mrs. N1ta Wolfe candtdates for the club's 'Mrs. Velma Roush.
••
Weel&lt;end guests of Mr. and
Mrchael, who have been m Seelbach and Mrs Dorothy scholarships to a Wahama High
family wbve. So be Signed up.
School female student entermg Mrs. Johnny Roush wer~ Mrs. Dates to remember - Apnll, meet Thursday, Apnl I at lltll
Helen, they put him in the mfantry and in five weeks, he goes · Germany, w1ll arnve in Parsons
wVtetllam. He was fighting m 'Nam before. He's served hJS turn Columbus on Fnday evening The room count was won by the leachmg professton m West Boyd Wears and Earl Harns of Dtslnct Commttlee; 8, Round- Kntght's house, 2903 Pareisb
and wtll be met by her parents. Mrs. Hessons and Mrs. Hum- V1rg101a are to be present
Nttro and Edwm Roush of tables; 9, Good Fnday; 11, Ave., Pt Pleasant, 7·30 p.m: AII
there! And it was Hell.
1
They
will
stay
wtlh
her
parents
phreys'
homeroom.
RefreshPERSONALS
Charleston
Easter Sunday; 24-25, Camp 10terested J.R.'s and MembersTom says there's no way out But they promtsed him Isn't
Wliham
Chtsler Johnny Roush ts a medical Ldrs. Onentalton; 27, Counctl at-Large are urged w atlfld
honesty expected of our government any more' - WHAT TO 00' whtle her husband is on another ments were served to those ·Mrs
attend10g.
returned
home
dunng
the patient at Pleasant Valley Annual Dmner.
wur of duty .
floundtables - Wtll be held
Dear What:
AT
CONVENTION
week~nd
aft,
e
r
spending
the
past
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
Jeffers
Hospttal.
May
6,
ll!istr1ct
Commtttee,
9,
Thursday, April 8, at Kfj:er
Wnte w tbe congressman from your Dtstnct. I can't offer
E1ght
members
and
three
week
VlStlmg
relatives
10
Pittand
daughter,
Eh
Jones
61
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Uoyd
Roush
Mothers'
Day;
13
Roundtables,
Creek H1gh Scliool at 7:30p.m.;
1
much encouragement, but 1! anyone can help, be can - H.
Bella1re, Ohto, visited over the· guests of the New Haven sburgh and Carneg1e.
..
have returned home following a 15, Pioneer Day; 22, Pioneer Cub theme, Growing, Flyl'ng,
Dear Helen ·
Lester Ohlinger Is a surgical vacatiOn spent 111 Flortda and Day; 31, Memonal Day
Crawhng; ,Webeloes actl~ty,
I am a student, m charge of.selhng th111gs 10 the book soore weekend wtth Miss Stella Gress. Women 's Club attended the 65th
Mr . and Mrs. Ha,rry Walsh annual convenlJon of the West palient at Holzer Hospttal, Mextco
District Commttlee - Wtll Naturalist ; Boy Scout thetne,
and cafelena.
and daughter Hamett, VIsited
Camptng, Pioneermg C$1p
Thts year I have been threalened by certa111 kids to gtve them
m St. Pelersburg, Fla. with Dr
Equipment.
•
something lree.lll don't they'll gang up onme.l got beat up once.
• is
~nd Mrs Eugene Keig
Boy
Scout
leader
traim!f
That enough !
Miss 'Brenda Nollege, a
being held on Mondays at-the
I can't keep htdmg the loss much longer,.So It's etther get student of Century College 111
Columbta Gas Co. office at 7
caught as a thief or get mugged for bemg a fmk
Huntington, vtstted recently
removed.
The
butt
part
of
the
degree
F
IS
3
to6
months.
lf
you
pm
·~
By DEBORAH M. CONKLIN cuts, sue~ as, the ptcmc, are
I can't ask wbe let off my "job" wtlhout giving a reason· And wtth her mother, Mrs. Mary
bam as a high! ;; proportion of freeze 'ham, which really is not
Need of fmancial h~lp - . We
Agent,
Home
Econ.
often
more
economical
sources
Ext.
then I'd be afratd wgo home at night. Best des, I'm already guilty Nollege, over the weekend .
While hogs come to market of lean meat than are ham, loin lean meat than the shank part recommended , s.ore 11 no are now involved 111 our S . ~ E
of sleallng so I cap'tgo wthe prmcipal
Will
reportedly year 'round, an extra large roasts, and chops. Bacon is a
Brenda
The name picnic or cala 1s longer than one month to ( Sustatmng Member!bip'
What can I do' -SCARED
graduate from the ·college next supply ts expected to be costly source of lean meat, but gtven w the'lower half of the maintaifi quality.
Enrollment) Campatgn . dooct
Dear Scared:
week.
volunteers can help t@eir
•
' marke~d in the next couple of 1t IS usually purchased for tbe pork shoulder. It ~enerally has
call a bully's bluff and he sometunes ends up more scared
Servtce
Center's ,budget ; by
a
lower
proportton
of
lean
meat
~
months. Indications are tljat flavor and lexture·of the fat as
Allen rough. These fellows won't JulnP you if they know thetr
THE DAILY SENnNEL
telling the'story of scoutlng,and
:to fat and bone than does ham,
about 20per cent more hogs will well as the lean.
names are 'on !lie at the prmctpal's offtce, with JUvenile hall the ·
'
helpmg to recruit workeri w
Rib end and loin end pork
DEVOTED TO
be markeled this spring than When selecting fresh pork,
- reit stop.
•
each make live contacts. !V-GMElt~l-~~~~1 ~REA
were last year at the same time loo~ for ,a ,light, graytsh-pmk roasts or chops have a htgher
Better yet, arrange with school authorities wllave the gang
M Dtstnct's filture ts at sta~ -CHESTI!R L. TANNEHILL.
That's why you've seen pork on color. '~;he meat should be fine proporlJon of fat and bone than
leader "surprised" 111 the act of extortion. If you tell the complete·· ···· ROBERT
e..cHOEFLICH,
Ed.
h
d
I
t
please help - the many ~oys
"specials" at very reasonable m texture, smoot an ve ve y, the center cut roasts qr chops. •
srory, you won't lose mu~li more than an honorary job - which
that are getting and want
Except
for
products
m
Ctty Editor
pnces, and you can exP.ct to and should contain inPvbi!Shtd
dally
· Ied II ec ks of It
scoutmg wtll thank you. i!'oo
you could do wttboull - H.
saturday
by The
Ohio e)(cept
valley see sue h f ea tures f.90 tmue for .1
..,rmmg
a Th e unopened cans, store all pork in
many want to let "George~ do
~r Jjelen :
Publlshtng Company, 111 the next two months at least. •bones should have red, porous . the · coldest part of the
't
'
I.
;
I am one of those conservation-fuindeil guys. Usually my ~fi':i ' i~sln.';~mo~\~(~ p~~~~
What's the best buy m pork? ceriters The outside lal should refngerator. Wrap fresh pork
Tri.SI&lt;Ite Area Co•nctl's ~-G­
father lS very understanding, but·we JUSt had a ftght. I feel we H2 2t56, Edltonal Phone 992- It depends. Prtces of some culs be while and relatively firm .. A loosely wallow some drymg of
M
Dtstnct chairman is ·Bill
21
sh&lt;;uld stop sending so many men w. the moon and get more
~~cond class postage po ld at of pork have greater ups and htgh proportion of lean meat to the surface . Thts retards
Kmght; comnnss10ner ts iyte
downs during the year than fat and bone is more desirable. spo;Iage. Plan to use fresh pork
concerned about cleaning up lbe old planet Earth. Dad thmks tbe · Pomeroy, Ohio
Dunsmore,
and distnct
Nat1anal adver11s1nQ
•-• wtthin a lew days 'after purbread should go for rockets and the pulitary, so we'll be world reoresentottve
Bolllnelll
others. Proce~se d cu •·
.. , sueh as A su1 table qua l't
1 yo f smo~.,..
execuhve is Chadds Hall. :
leaders. When I quote Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Conservation IS an G"la~her, Inc , I2'East 42na ready-to-&lt;!at hams; vary less andcannedporkcanbeselecled chasing. Use variety meats and
t
• New York City , New York
dunng the year than fresh cuts by usmg packer brand names as ground pork within a day or two
art In which a man has aD mankind for compehtors," he gets St Subscr1pt1on
rates:
~lOl l' th.m 52-Jmlhon AW\CI ·
afler purchasl~g Cured hams,.
a guide
huffy and says us radical kids are messing up the world. How can Delivered by carrier where of pork
t&lt;Mm nnw lh lllJ.!; n1.1y l'\"elltl~llh'
available so ctnll per week,
Some cuts are better sources The cut IS also an important ptcmcs, and bacon wUl keep one
lwH· t'.ml'l'r One~ 111 thu,'fi hft ln
111t'~ him atr~tight? - N~1'10N~ JA.!... ITOR
Bv Motor Route where carrier
t~ • lwo
weeks · under
service not available Ont of lean meat than are other gutde.
t'.Ull'('l 1\ lltl'.\' 's.t \ t•d. Tins ... ;,,ld
Dear N.J.;
month
Sl 75. By mlil In Ohio ~uts. One way to compare the
A
shank
or
butt
haU
of
ham
h(• mut'llst•d to unr in tw- ll\'
refngeFatlon..
"'
,... A UttJe at a time. Logical dtscusslons backed up wtth proof and W Va , One year St4,00
~· . a 1l~ th.l~~~~~~~~s and tno;lpl
If
you
want
to
freeze
fresh
lbout poQutioo have t'ltangCa the national attitude from a shrug to SIX month&amp; $7 ,25. Three c ost of different cuts of pork iS has had no renter CUI slices
lrt'.llmt•l
ll, ,\l'~·nr dmp: tn ~ lu•
months u so Subocr.pllpn t
ld
1 th
of th
ed A h k butt lid pork., remember that the.
deepCOil~!ll'li.Ithink your father will listen - tf you stop shouhng .
DEBBIE
CONKLIN
1
1
1
.\nu•m .m C'~ou''"'a St)lu•ly.: 1
pr ce nc udts ~un day T..Im
~··~'..JCeiolllc
lonDsle.llelr
. t ,JoOnlliyc..lejjei_.c.e:oslitin~ee...lrl!!e!l!mSJov!@l!J·!2J!~
si..!,;en
a~n!!!l!!!:or.£ll!..
e
comme
torage time at 0
ISenJor•• l
•
1
d
[ I

By Unlled Jlress Internallonal
Should Prestdent Nixon fmd
time w watch aext Monday's
American League opener 111
Washmgton, D.C, be may do a
llewtle take when the Oakland
Athleti.cs starting pttCher walks
w the mound.
Tbe name 1s Vtda Blue-and

'

Bucks,. Knicks And Bullets Can
• Fm
• als w•.t h wm· s Toni·ght
Bestevidenceiswtdemt~restamongtheboyspar!Jctpatingm G81D

SOUTII

.KQ4
¥AQJ 9854

'

I

_,j
'

NORTII (ll}

• 109 2-·
¥ K 107
WE..~T

'

'

3- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 , April!, 1971

I
I
I
I
I
I
I

·Freel

APRIL 1-2-3

WITH M.INIMUM 10 GAL .GASOLINE
..
PURCHASE.·

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. ~ND SAVE '100-0ifMORE
119.95 buys I gallon of Arab Termtte Control Concentrate
Add an Arab hose end spray Applicator and you're ready
to completely termite proof the average J bedroom home•
Saves you over $100 compared to the cost at callmg '" a
professional exterminator Buy Arab and do both you and
your home a favor Price may yary slightly

VALLEY WMBER &amp;SUPPLY CO.

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------+-----·--1

•

. ' .,

I

'

�-'

.•

'

..

..

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' '

J; ,

'

'

5~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q.. April I. 1i11
4 -:-The Daily Sentinel, M)ddleporl-l;omeroy, 0 ., April I, Jt71

·Boswell, :
Tiallt Are

Pro Standing~
-

. ' • NHL

St~ndings

By Un ited Press ·lntemational

. East

NEW YORK (UPI)- Hoist of orthopCdic Slll'gery at the
• _,r-,~~N-ew
Bas ton
1 last year's 2--year-&lt;&gt;ld Bolk1J Center• at the University
York
'11\e Fag,
Montreal .
Thciroughbred champion and of Pennsylvania, and Dr .
Toronto
the early favorite
.next DonaldDelahantyoftheCornell
Buffalo
month's Kentucky Derby, un-. Veterinary Medical School. The
Detroit
de
f" ·.
,
ORLANDO, Fla . (UPI) - Vancouv er
rwent a JVe.,uur operatuln horse had been transported
Dave Boswell and Luis Tiant,
Wost
· Wednesday night as doc!llrs from his barn at Belmont Park
two of the Minnesota Twins, key x-Chicago
~8 ~;;\ '7~5 fought to save the ctllt's.life. ···-·!0" the· veterinarian a.« ices
pildlers at the stru-t of the. 1970 St. Louis
33 25 17 83
Hoist . The Flag's short but across from the track for the
season, were released Wed- Minnesota
' 28 33 16 72 brilliant racing car_eer came to operation.
~nesday and given the ap- Phila
hia
27 33 l5 69 an end early Wednesday at
Hoist The Flag, purchased as
Pitlsbu
2t 36 18 60 Belm I p k he he f
. .
.
portimity tocast about as free Los Angele
23 40 t3 59
on ar w n
rae- a year1111g m 1969 by Mrs,
agents.
Ca lifornia
20 51 5 45 lured two bones in his right hjnd Stephen C. Clark Jr.,for $37,000
Club President Calvin Grif' x-Ci inched div . 1!11 e
·leg at lhe completion of a was unbeaten in his six lifetim~
WPdn••dav'
R••ull&lt;
· pre para t Jon
" . f or starts and the onl y bl emish
· on
wor k ou t tn
filth, who placed the two veteran New York 4 Chicago 2
pitchers on waivers last -week, Boston 6 Montreal 3
Saturday's $50,1100 added Goth- his record came in the- Chamsaid he was unable 1o make a Buffal.o 6 Piffsburgh 4
· am Stakes at Aqueduct.
pagne Stakes at Belmont Park
n.t,o•l2 Toronto 2
.._
ti
ed
.
deal for elther. The cuts helped h~ A"9eles 2 Vancouver 2
we opera on was perform
last fall. He won by three
lhe Twins reduce their roster to California 4 f!\innesola t .
by Dr. Jaques Jenny, professor lengths but the judges
25 players.
,
IOnly games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
BosweII , 35, posted a 21)-12 Pittsburgh at Bulfalo
record for the Twins in 1969 but Phil a at Sf. Louis
fell to""3-7 last season when he !Only games scheduled)
had a ~ore arm. He was inABA st d. c
ba
. "d t
an 1ng.
.
vo1ve d m a rroom lnCl ~n . av United Press International ~
with Billy Martin, then""'man~
East
ger of lhe Twins during lhe 1969
W. L. Pel. GB
.
nd ' nd ·' b . c-Virginia
55 29 .655 ...
campaign a wou up emg Kentucky
44 40 .523 11
kayoed by the manag~r.
New York
40 44 .476 15
Tiant a native of Havana Floridians
37 47 .440 18
Cuba 1 ~as one of the best pit: Piltsburgh
36 48 .429 19
NEW YORK (UPI)-Dick outrageous conduct during the
·
Carol met
34 50 .405 21
Motta has made his second past sev~ra l years and in spite
chers in the American Lea_gue
West
monthly contribution to the of my constant admonitions,
in 1968 when he had a 21-9
Wost
Pet. GB National Basketball Associalion you have continued to conduct
recordandledtheleaguewitha &lt;-Ind iana'
~6 .690 ...
yourself during some NBA
1.60 earned run average for the Utah
57 27 .679 1 coffers .
The frery Chicago Bulls' games in a disgraceful manner,
Cleveland lndians. He had a 9-20 Memphis
41 43 .488 17
.357
28
3 54
coach was hit with a $1,500 fine culminating with your perforrecord for the Indians in
30 54 .357 28
. 1969 •·
x.TDexas
enver
Wednesday by NBA Commis- mance in the Los Angeles at
·'"d was traded to the Twms. He c-Ciinched div . title
sioner Walter Kennedy for Chicago game on March 28.
was sidelined much of lhe 1970 X· Playoff for 4th place
j'outrageous conduct" in his
campaign and wound up with a . .Wodnesday's Results
Motta received a technical
club's 10&amp;-98 playoff victory
7-3 mar~.
. ..
¥;.g~~~~3j311n~:~~~·~;: 123
over the Los Angeles Lakers foul 'after walking onto the
The Twins also announced Memphi s t23 Carolina 106
court during the first quarter of
that they have brought up Denver t32 New York 12 1
Sunday afternoon.
The fine was the second in the game and refusing to leave.
pitcher Sal Campisi from their I Only )-a:.;e;d~~~~ul~~
two months for Motta, who was He was ejected after failing to
minor league camp. Campisi Texas at ~enver ~rayo~
hit for $1,000 on Feb. 2 alter leave the court when "directed
had a 2-2 rectlrd and a 2.94
earned run average witll the. St. !Only game scheduled )
by Rudolph.
being ejected from a game.
The Bulls, tied 2-2 iil , their
Kennedy, in a telegram to
Louis Cardinals last season.
AHL Standings
By .United Press ln1ernationa I Motta, said, "In spite of my series with the Lakers, are in
East
W. L. T. Pis tolerant and reasonable treat- Los Angeles tonight for their
EXPOS-REDS SWAP
27291468 ment of your sometimes Western Division playoff game.
WEST' PALM BEACH, Fla. Montreao
27 29 1J 67
Providence
(UPI)_;The Montreal Expos Springfield
27 34 8 62
23 JO 16 62
Wednesday announced the trade Quebec
West
of utility Infielder Jimmy
W. LT. Pis
Qualls to the Cincinnati Reds Baltimore
39 21 9 87
36 26 7 79
for outfielder Stan Swanson. Cleveland
Hershey
30 30 10 70
The Reds immediately shipped Rochester
24 34 11 59
Qualls to their Indianapolis
Wednesday's Results
Hershey 5 Baltimore o
farm club.
!On ly game scheduled)

:tt~leased ·

••.

•:
•

W. L. T. Pis.
553. 147 1 117
4 1 11 107
41 · 22 13 95
36 32 8 80
24 39 13 6l
22 43 i 1 55
23 45 8 54

for

Chicago Coach

Fined $1,500

'fti

°

.'

the one:fnile race.··
After four races as a 2-yearold, Hoist 'lite Flag was found 1o
be suffering from sore shins and
was wi!ltered at Camden, S.C.,
iw'prepai-ation for this year's
big races, notably the Triple
o-ciwn for 3-year-&lt;&gt;lds which
includes llle Kentucky Derby,
the Preakness Stakes and the
Belmont StakeS.
He did not make his first start
as a 3-year-old
March 12
when he won a six-furlong
spring at Bowie by 15 lengths.
He then won again on March 20
in the $34,000 Bay Shore Stakes ·
at Aqueduct when he romped
home by seven lengths in I:21
flat for seven furlongs. His
time, despite the lack of competition, was the fastest
clocking ever at that distance
by a 3-year-old in New York.
Jean o-uguet, the Frenchborn jockey who rode HoiSt The ·
Flag in all of his races, also was
aboard the horse during
Wednesday's workout. He had
just worked five furlongs in 1:01
4-5 when he pulled himself up
sharply as he was being eased.
Cruguet then jwnped off 1mmediately .
"He slopp;ed so suddenly, I
just knew something .was
wrong," said Cruguet. "I can't
understand what happened. He
went along so easily there .was
never any hint of trouble during
the wOr-kout ... The track was

~-----------. .----~----------"""'-..

until

fhe Sp:ry Young

Cancer of the larynx st rikes

THINGS

Young fashions, tots to . teens. lead
'the way to· springtime fun doing
their own ·thing. Just pick your
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more men than women . With

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SNOWDEN VETERAN
Larry Snowden, junjor, ·is ·a
veteran member of the GAHS
track team . Snowden's name
was unintentionally omitted in a
story in Wednesday's Tribune .

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WINS DOOR PRIZE
Carol DeLong was the winner
of a door prize at a party
honori ng Elaine ' Barnhart
Saturday afternoon at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs .
William Larnhart, Pomeroy .

Reg. 5.95

BRITE BEAM

POCKET

HAIR SPRAY

•

79~

HOME

FACIAL
TISSUES

4.99

oz.

69~T0$3.49 l EASTER GRASS--~-- 29'

SAND. PAILS

~

HAIR
RAY

99c

BABY BEN
ALARM

TONIC

CHOC. DROPS.

"EASTER

MOUTHWASH
···-AMINS and GARGLE

REXALL
CHILDREN'S
ASPIRIN

.FAST

BEEF WINE'

- SUNSET RIDGE CHOCOLATES • ORANGE SLICES •

.~-

PEROXIDE MILK of MlNERAL
Min~~~o~ 01[
2for 56c 2for SOc 2~~~SOc

40C

- CHOC. COVERED PEANUTS • CHOC. PEANUT CWSTERS

FILLED

·~~

Birth of Daughter

-

COCONUT BON SONS - MAPLE NUT GOODIES

FILLED

TOOTH
BRUSHES
Adult
2 for SOc

THERMOMETERS .

~~~(~~~

"2.66

Dilchers Announce ·

BRACH'S CANDIES!

I Pound

FOOT OINTMENT·
·~s - . . ~~- 2 to~ 1.30

M-31
MOUTHWASH

- ·-- ..-.~

They are Soft, ·
Cuddlely and Colorful.

&amp; NUT

FRUIT

,-

HOP IN AND TAKE A·LOOK!

•a••

EGGS

Keno Hidgt·

Goeuler's presents eV-erything that's
. New for Spring and East•r 1971.

PLUSH
RABBITS
•1 ·29 •o

JELLY BIRD

49¢ Klenzo

FEVER

•

49

3 0 1 0

Mr, and Mrs. Howard Young
of Paden Clty, Mr. and Mrs.
Garlh Smith of Long Bottom
were Saturday evening guests
of Mrs. Edith Osborne.
Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Bahr
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Cash Bahr of
Middleport, the occasion being
the observance of.Mrs. Shirley
Bahr's birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan,
Elaine, Tony and Mikel, cailed
on Mr. and Mrs. Edward Shafer
Sunday, to help · Mrs. Shafer
celebrate her birlhday.
, Mrs. Edith Osborne visited a
. day last week with Mr. and Mrs.
Emmet Stethem at MI. Olive.
Mrs. Clara Milhoan visited
one day last w~k with Mr: and
Mrs. Phillip Slllith at Pomeroy.Mr. and Mrs. Errol Conroy o(.
Akron visited a few days with
,.Mrs. Alice Dods011·,other guesfa
were Mrs. Mildred Frank and

::

16 Ol

4

E•.Martln. 2b
2 0 0 0
J. Martin, lb
3 0 1 1
2 0 0 0
Stewart, cf
Radcllff.lf
2 o o 1
Hatten , c
3 o o o
Settles, p
2 o 1 0
Crossin, rf
2 0 o o
TOTALS
23 o 4 2
Score by Innings:
C:all ipalis
001 000 ()-11 -3-1
Wellston
000 000 ()-(1-4-2
Winning pitcher, Perry
Lasing pitcher, Settles
Extra base hils - J. ~~~~:/:­
double; J. Davis, D. B
doubles. $talen bases - Ballard
12); Prose, Perry, one each ;
Huffman. Sacrlfltes - Radcliff
and Settles• .one each .

•

:

REG. 98'

PADDLE
BALLS

going the distan_ce. Settles
fanned six, walked four and
gave up only three hits.
Perry retired Wellston in
order in the first and fourth
innings . Settles got the_lllue
Devils out in order in the fli'St,
fourth and fifth innings. GAHS
stole four bases. WHS stole once
off Perry.
The Blue Devils' next outing
is Tuesday at Waverly.
Box score:
GAHS BLUE o·EVILS (t)
PLAYER-Pos.
AB R H E
Johnson, 2b
4 0 0 0
Davis,Jb
3 1 1 0
Burnett.ss
3 0 1 1
Prose. ib
1 0' 0 0
Perry, p
3 0 1 0
Ba'llard, If
3 0 0 0
Sheets, rf
2 0 0 o
Boone, cf
3 0 0 0
Perroud, c
2 0 0 0
TOTALS
24 1 j 1
WELLSTON ROCKETS (O)
PLAYER-Pos. AB R H E
Huffman,-Jb
4 0 1 0

.\

_

1

Concert
AtGAHS

APRIL 11th

L...t'
:
Jpprv
oai\1
asTER
Is
A
,
OU
I
'
INFAN'
fsfH'R_
usifE12-.
.

l

~

Stan Perry, junior righthander, allowed ·four
hits and whiffed 12 Wellston Golden Rockets as
Coach Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils edged
the host Jackson Countians 1-0 in a non-conference
game Wednesday evening.
.
ll
It was the Gallians' second consecutive one run
victory in two days. The Rockets dropped to 0-2 on
the year.
,

The contest was decided in
the top of the third inning with
two out. John Davis doubled to
left, and raced home with the
,. ._..-..........-.-.._... _.......... ._............
•
game's only run on a double to
center by Dave Burnett.
F.or skipping t~rough
Perry had the Gallians' only
Easter and all the good
other hit offlosing hurler Danny
tfmes ahead .. . we think
Settles - a second inning
tf:l ere's nothing nicer than
single. The Gallians left five
a spanking new outfit from
runners on base.
our collection of ;.aucy
Wellston threatened to score
fashions for the most
in the second and seventh inelegant little ladies and
'nings. ln the second, J . D.
gent.l_emen .
Martin led off with a double and
moved to third on a sacrifice by
Randy Radcliff, but Perry
fanned Terry Stewart and R.
•.-""· ,
Hatten ,to end that .uprising.
!(#~•:ti··;~.~
In the bottom of the seventh,
R. Hatten was safe on an error.
He moved to second on a
_t, ~
sacrifice by Danny Settles, but
"-\~'u~
Perry got R. Crossin on a
~
grounder, and fanned J . Huff\_~~0'"
man to end the game. Wellston
1(
.
,~\\
_ left six runners stranded.
oON THE TIN MlDDLEPORT ' ' _
Perryfanned12, walkedthree
..____________.___.....·i"'-~
ii
and gave up• four hils while

Calendar

lft PLUS APENNY!

f}
RUBBING ALCOHOL
2 f 84
~~-..;..pt....;;;.1111111°,_r.;;;..,;;.;.c---1 .AD HES lYE
TAPE
~I a,) ::::~:·::::: :::·
ASPIRIN
2 1.76
2 for 1.26
2 for
1

early diagnosis and treatment
Originally, an acre meant
the survival rate continues to the amount of land that a
improve, according to the Amer· man with a yoke of oxen
ican Cancer Society.
cou ld plow in one day.

ForTfitlittfestAMeCr
_
-;J ·

Mrs . Virgil Atkins was Road.
Green Thum·b Notes for May 7.
nominated fo r the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs' Mrs. Victor Nelson, civic Raking and fertilizing lawns
•
0 Ia
.beau ti fic atio n chairman, •and removing mulch frOJil the
uls . nding Gardener Award reported on progress being flowerbeds were among the
•"
"
~~~~~/r~orDay &amp;Ianting was made at the Harriso nville gardening tips for April
,.
n1·,ht
turmg f tte Monday _Grange Hall. She noted that she presented. 1
••
o
mee ong o le Rutland 1 d
. . ·~
Mrs. Victor Nelson presented
•
Garden Club at -the home of la measured the bmldong ,
,,•
"The
Trail of the Bright-Eyed
taken ptclures, and conferred
· Mt'S Jam N" h 1
•
·
e.s , te o_s?n.
with Carpers Nursery. Four Iris " ana Mrs. Nicholson
••
Mrs. Atkons quahftcations for yews will be u~ed ih land- showed cuttings of houseplants'
"
the ion
award ' gtven on both a sc~puv•
· the butldmg
· · which was
re
suitable for starting. Mrs.
••"
g al and state basis, were formetiy the Methodist Church Ralph Turner was auctioneer
revtewed by the club members . Flower beds will be made and for a house plant sale which
•
"
· For the Arbor Day planting flowers planted by Mrs. Atkins' brought in $11 .
•"
on-the last Fnday o[ Aprtl, Mrs. 4-H boys and girls who will d!l;o
A variety of iris was named
•
•
~~~sell
Ltttle
and
Mrs.
Atkins
handle
care
of
the
·
plantings
by
each of the 18 members
••
donate
a
flowenng
crab
during
the
summer
months
at lending in response to roll .
•
tree to be}lanled at the Forest The· club voted to provid~ 14 call. Mrs. John Colwell was a
•
•
Acre Park on the New Lima flowering crabapple trees to be guest. Mrs. Nicholson read
••
83c REXALL
pla~ted in Rutland in con' ''Mellowing" and Mrs. Chris
•
for the price of
•
junction with (he Rutland Diehl, co-hostess, . gave "Let
••
Friendly Gardeners civic im- Them Live'' for deJll)tions. The
•
59¢ REXALL
••
provement project. Support of Lord's Prayer, the club creed
Reg, 1.75 REXALL
·••
the "Let's Keep Rutland A and collect were given in unison
Blooniin ' Clean Town" project to op"n lhe meeting.
CONTACT LENS
•••
of the Friendly Gardeners vias
Mrs.
Everett · Colwell
1.25 REXALL
••
pledged by the.members. Each provided the traveling prize
••
I " x5 yds. or
one was given two p&lt;jckages of wotl' by Mrs. Dayton Parsons.
~m'"~
_.':
4 Pl .
1/ 2 " X 10 yds.
•
1
TIIURSDAY
flower seeds ~y the Friendly Mrs. Jonah Cotterill will
•
=S ~~
for
••
EVANGELINE CHAPTER Gardeners Club.
10 Gr. lOO's
'
.
provide the prize for the April
172, Order of the Eastern Star, . A tour of Wahkeena Nature meeting. Homemade ice cream,
••
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Preserve on April 28 was cake, coffee, mints and nuts
Reg. 53¢ REXALL
••
Masonic TemJlle, Middleport. planned, and a letter was read were served.
•
2.09 Clifton
•
Gly.cerin
LAURE!; Cliff Better Health from Mrs. John Reese; Region
••
' ··
. SUPPOSITORIES
. Club, 7:30 Thursday night home II director , concerning the
•
""""'",.
•
•.
~Adult. 12's
··- ......Ill
of Mrs. Clarence Curtis. Mrs. r egional meeting on April 24 at
•
•
Rutland.
She
asked
that
all
I
Paul Frick, co-hostess.
-.. -... ::.
•"
members contribut'e confor
••
REVJV AL, April I through tainers, plants; seeds, bulbs,
79¢ REXALL
April 10, 7:30 p.m. each dried materials , weathered
••
evening , Orange Christian wood or any other items related
55¢ REXALL
'
Church, near Athens County to gardening for a sales table at
i.29 REXALL .
line. Speaker each service the regional meeting . Proceeds
FUNGI-REX
'
•
public
invited
.
GREASELESS
3% 10 val.
will go toward funding the
••
FRIDAY
I n or
,;
.. Pint
publica tion of a wild flower
REXALL Timed-Action
RETURN
Jonathan
Chapter
,
•••
Nasal Decongestant
book and the Wahkeena Fund .
D.A..R.,_Friday , 2 p.m., home of Reservations are to be made
••
1
Friday night's Jazz Rock
•
Mrs. Dale Dutton. Rev. Stanley wilh Mrs. Joe Bolin by Aprill9. Concert, to•be presented by the
••
.. ,
Plattenburg speaking ; Mrs. Sixteen memb~rs plan to at- Gallia Academy High School
•
James Brewin gton, Miss lend .
••
Stage Band and Symphony of
••
Frienda Faehnle, assisting
A contribution was made to Swing, promises to be one of the
••
hostesses.
the Ge01·ge Thompson Kidney outstanding events of the 1971
••
•
SATURDAY
Minuteman
Fund.
spring season .
REXALL Brite Set
REXALL Mi-31
REXALL 5 Grain
•
••
BEAUX Arts Ball, Saturday, Mrs. Robert Canaday gave a
The concert will be held in the
CHEWABLE
9:30-12 midnight, Southern High report on the therapy program GAHS auditorium, beginning at
•
Multiple
•
School
Auditoriwn . Music by 0 . at the Gallipolis State Institute . 8 p.m . Admission will be 50
••
U. Quintet.
·&gt;
Four club members went to cents per person.
BAKE
SALE,
Saturday,
10
13 oz.
100's
!OO's
Pint
assist
a flower arranging
The concert, first of its kind
••
Size
,
a.m.
to
4
p.m.
,
at
New
Haven
.workshop . Sixteen of the by the instrumental music
•
••
Super Market sponsored by St. patients participated in the department at GAHS, will be
2 for
2 for
2 for .
2 for
Joseph's
Atlas
Guild
.
•
therapy program . Flowers and presented in two _parts. The
••
DANCE Saturday Meigs greenery were dona ted by Stage Band will present the first
•• ;-, Junior High, 8-11 p.m. Jays will Decor, Inc., Middleport.
half of the program of a Jazz
.L·.1n ':
A
thank-you
note
was
read
Rock
Concert.
.,.
"•
'"'t'
""'i ...
~. emcee. •'v ·• ·.
'
I
The second half of the"
from Mrs. Wesley J. Nichols for
••
~"'
SUNDAY
a donation on the highway program will be given by the
•
HYMN SING, Plants Mission planting project of the O.A.G.C. Symphony of Swing.
•
Church, at Racine near new Mr~ Adkins will prepare the
.Westclox
REXALL
The Stage Band will present
locks
imd
dam
site.
Bissell
•
the following selections :
••
B~others and other groups
Gallia Academy High School
.....
present. Rev. E. J . Griffith in
•
Fight Song , jazz style; The
•
charge. Public invited .
••
Funky Turtle, All About The
200•
2 ply
MEMORIAL dedi cation
Blues, Cinnamon Kisses, Cute;
•••
500's
3 boKes
Sunday . First
United
a special piano solo by Mark
Presbyterian Church, MidEpling, Prelude Burlesque,
REG. 39'
••"" dlepo~ t, 3 p.m., in memory of Mr. and Mrs. James Dilcher Opus'h; The Sponge, Walk Wild
are
announcing
the
birth
of
•
the late Rev. Howard Ruppel!
and Jwnp for Jennie .
•
their third child, a daughter , on
••
and the late Jeanette Waddell ;
The following selections will
Mar. 18 at the Mount Carmel
••
everyone welcome .
be presented by the Symphony
2FOR
Hospital, Columbus, weighing·8
•• ·
HYMN SING Sunday, 2 p.m.
of Swing: 'It
lbs. 9 oz., named Jennifer Sue .
Plan
ts
Memoriai
Church,
Get Together , Traces, Turn
••
Mr. ana Mrs. Dikher have two
located near Racine Lock and
Around, Look at Me, Spooky,
••
so ns~ Rhetl 1 five , and Paul, two.
Dam, conducted by Bisse ll
Close to You and Son of a
••
Paternal grandparents are
Brothers.
Preacher Man.
'
2·cell
••
Solid State
Mr. and Mrs . Clyde Dilcher,
MONDAY
..
••
Columbus. Mr . and Mrs. Alfred
POMEROY
Garden
Club
,
7
AUXILIARY
TO MEET
••
Lindsey, Albany , are the
p.m.
Monday
nig
ht,
Pomeroy
The auxiliary of the Bashan
•
maternal g randparent s ~ Mr .
•
United Methodist Church, social
Fire
Department will meet at
and · Mrs. Jam es Clark of
REG. 12.29
with
room. Guest night to be ob•
7:30
p.m
.
tonight
at
the
fire
Albany are great-grandparents .
•
.
7
oz.
batteries
served.
•
house. At the meeting, Mrs.
16
•
Jeanette Lawrence and Mrs.
••
Lerola Young will present an
•
•
American flag to the firemen 's
2FOR $ 2 . 3 0
••
auxiliary
on
behalf
of
the
•
•
Racine American Legion
••
Auxiliary, Post 602. riM mem•
bers and other inte~ted in••
WHITE RAIN
dividuals are invited to attend.
•

••

..

LimE GIRLS' DRESS COATS

Burnett Produces Run

Rochester at Qoebec
(On ly game scheduled)

..•

.

.

..

perfect, too. -He just seemed to • - - - - - -...- - stop and l got off. I walked him

By John Davis, David

•

..

SALE STARTS APRIL _
1, 19.7'1

-

Back-To-Back Doubles

Thursday's Games

,

~

disqualified ~irn from the first ·back tQ the. finiSh line and
Sidney Watters Jr ., .,~ ~he good this colt could have been .
place money of $145,000 for someone- called lor the ~Orse horse's trainer, added: "tilow That is prObably the saddest
Cl!USi!lg interference early · in · ambulance."
~0 one · will really know how part of the whole !hint;."

'.

.'

Mrs.
Atkins·
No.
m
inated
'
For Gardener's ·Award

Early Derby Favorite Breaks Leg
.

'.

•

�-'

.•

'

..

..

' !

' '

J; ,

'

'

5~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, Q.. April I. 1i11
4 -:-The Daily Sentinel, M)ddleporl-l;omeroy, 0 ., April I, Jt71

·Boswell, :
Tiallt Are

Pro Standing~
-

. ' • NHL

St~ndings

By Un ited Press ·lntemational

. East

NEW YORK (UPI)- Hoist of orthopCdic Slll'gery at the
• _,r-,~~N-ew
Bas ton
1 last year's 2--year-&lt;&gt;ld Bolk1J Center• at the University
York
'11\e Fag,
Montreal .
Thciroughbred champion and of Pennsylvania, and Dr .
Toronto
the early favorite
.next DonaldDelahantyoftheCornell
Buffalo
month's Kentucky Derby, un-. Veterinary Medical School. The
Detroit
de
f" ·.
,
ORLANDO, Fla . (UPI) - Vancouv er
rwent a JVe.,uur operatuln horse had been transported
Dave Boswell and Luis Tiant,
Wost
· Wednesday night as doc!llrs from his barn at Belmont Park
two of the Minnesota Twins, key x-Chicago
~8 ~;;\ '7~5 fought to save the ctllt's.life. ···-·!0" the· veterinarian a.« ices
pildlers at the stru-t of the. 1970 St. Louis
33 25 17 83
Hoist . The Flag's short but across from the track for the
season, were released Wed- Minnesota
' 28 33 16 72 brilliant racing car_eer came to operation.
~nesday and given the ap- Phila
hia
27 33 l5 69 an end early Wednesday at
Hoist The Flag, purchased as
Pitlsbu
2t 36 18 60 Belm I p k he he f
. .
.
portimity tocast about as free Los Angele
23 40 t3 59
on ar w n
rae- a year1111g m 1969 by Mrs,
agents.
Ca lifornia
20 51 5 45 lured two bones in his right hjnd Stephen C. Clark Jr.,for $37,000
Club President Calvin Grif' x-Ci inched div . 1!11 e
·leg at lhe completion of a was unbeaten in his six lifetim~
WPdn••dav'
R••ull&lt;
· pre para t Jon
" . f or starts and the onl y bl emish
· on
wor k ou t tn
filth, who placed the two veteran New York 4 Chicago 2
pitchers on waivers last -week, Boston 6 Montreal 3
Saturday's $50,1100 added Goth- his record came in the- Chamsaid he was unable 1o make a Buffal.o 6 Piffsburgh 4
· am Stakes at Aqueduct.
pagne Stakes at Belmont Park
n.t,o•l2 Toronto 2
.._
ti
ed
.
deal for elther. The cuts helped h~ A"9eles 2 Vancouver 2
we opera on was perform
last fall. He won by three
lhe Twins reduce their roster to California 4 f!\innesola t .
by Dr. Jaques Jenny, professor lengths but the judges
25 players.
,
IOnly games scheduled)
Thursday's Games
BosweII , 35, posted a 21)-12 Pittsburgh at Bulfalo
record for the Twins in 1969 but Phil a at Sf. Louis
fell to""3-7 last season when he !Only games scheduled)
had a ~ore arm. He was inABA st d. c
ba
. "d t
an 1ng.
.
vo1ve d m a rroom lnCl ~n . av United Press International ~
with Billy Martin, then""'man~
East
ger of lhe Twins during lhe 1969
W. L. Pel. GB
.
nd ' nd ·' b . c-Virginia
55 29 .655 ...
campaign a wou up emg Kentucky
44 40 .523 11
kayoed by the manag~r.
New York
40 44 .476 15
Tiant a native of Havana Floridians
37 47 .440 18
Cuba 1 ~as one of the best pit: Piltsburgh
36 48 .429 19
NEW YORK (UPI)-Dick outrageous conduct during the
·
Carol met
34 50 .405 21
Motta has made his second past sev~ra l years and in spite
chers in the American Lea_gue
West
monthly contribution to the of my constant admonitions,
in 1968 when he had a 21-9
Wost
Pet. GB National Basketball Associalion you have continued to conduct
recordandledtheleaguewitha &lt;-Ind iana'
~6 .690 ...
yourself during some NBA
1.60 earned run average for the Utah
57 27 .679 1 coffers .
The frery Chicago Bulls' games in a disgraceful manner,
Cleveland lndians. He had a 9-20 Memphis
41 43 .488 17
.357
28
3 54
coach was hit with a $1,500 fine culminating with your perforrecord for the Indians in
30 54 .357 28
. 1969 •·
x.TDexas
enver
Wednesday by NBA Commis- mance in the Los Angeles at
·'"d was traded to the Twms. He c-Ciinched div . title
sioner Walter Kennedy for Chicago game on March 28.
was sidelined much of lhe 1970 X· Playoff for 4th place
j'outrageous conduct" in his
campaign and wound up with a . .Wodnesday's Results
Motta received a technical
club's 10&amp;-98 playoff victory
7-3 mar~.
. ..
¥;.g~~~~3j311n~:~~~·~;: 123
over the Los Angeles Lakers foul 'after walking onto the
The Twins also announced Memphi s t23 Carolina 106
court during the first quarter of
that they have brought up Denver t32 New York 12 1
Sunday afternoon.
The fine was the second in the game and refusing to leave.
pitcher Sal Campisi from their I Only )-a:.;e;d~~~~ul~~
two months for Motta, who was He was ejected after failing to
minor league camp. Campisi Texas at ~enver ~rayo~
hit for $1,000 on Feb. 2 alter leave the court when "directed
had a 2-2 rectlrd and a 2.94
earned run average witll the. St. !Only game scheduled )
by Rudolph.
being ejected from a game.
The Bulls, tied 2-2 iil , their
Kennedy, in a telegram to
Louis Cardinals last season.
AHL Standings
By .United Press ln1ernationa I Motta, said, "In spite of my series with the Lakers, are in
East
W. L. T. Pis tolerant and reasonable treat- Los Angeles tonight for their
EXPOS-REDS SWAP
27291468 ment of your sometimes Western Division playoff game.
WEST' PALM BEACH, Fla. Montreao
27 29 1J 67
Providence
(UPI)_;The Montreal Expos Springfield
27 34 8 62
23 JO 16 62
Wednesday announced the trade Quebec
West
of utility Infielder Jimmy
W. LT. Pis
Qualls to the Cincinnati Reds Baltimore
39 21 9 87
36 26 7 79
for outfielder Stan Swanson. Cleveland
Hershey
30 30 10 70
The Reds immediately shipped Rochester
24 34 11 59
Qualls to their Indianapolis
Wednesday's Results
Hershey 5 Baltimore o
farm club.
!On ly game scheduled)

:tt~leased ·

••.

•:
•

W. L. T. Pis.
553. 147 1 117
4 1 11 107
41 · 22 13 95
36 32 8 80
24 39 13 6l
22 43 i 1 55
23 45 8 54

for

Chicago Coach

Fined $1,500

'fti

°

.'

the one:fnile race.··
After four races as a 2-yearold, Hoist 'lite Flag was found 1o
be suffering from sore shins and
was wi!ltered at Camden, S.C.,
iw'prepai-ation for this year's
big races, notably the Triple
o-ciwn for 3-year-&lt;&gt;lds which
includes llle Kentucky Derby,
the Preakness Stakes and the
Belmont StakeS.
He did not make his first start
as a 3-year-old
March 12
when he won a six-furlong
spring at Bowie by 15 lengths.
He then won again on March 20
in the $34,000 Bay Shore Stakes ·
at Aqueduct when he romped
home by seven lengths in I:21
flat for seven furlongs. His
time, despite the lack of competition, was the fastest
clocking ever at that distance
by a 3-year-old in New York.
Jean o-uguet, the Frenchborn jockey who rode HoiSt The ·
Flag in all of his races, also was
aboard the horse during
Wednesday's workout. He had
just worked five furlongs in 1:01
4-5 when he pulled himself up
sharply as he was being eased.
Cruguet then jwnped off 1mmediately .
"He slopp;ed so suddenly, I
just knew something .was
wrong," said Cruguet. "I can't
understand what happened. He
went along so easily there .was
never any hint of trouble during
the wOr-kout ... The track was

~-----------. .----~----------"""'-..

until

fhe Sp:ry Young

Cancer of the larynx st rikes

THINGS

Young fashions, tots to . teens. lead
'the way to· springtime fun doing
their own ·thing. Just pick your
favorite looks . We've got them all!

more men than women . With

Ensembles -( Coat &amp; Dress)

5.95 to 8.95

SPRING COATS AND
2 PC.. P~NTS DRESSES .
11.95 to 13.95
LITTLE GIRLS' DRESSES
3.50 to 8.95
INFANTS' WEAR!

LimE

Soda. I

BOYS'

2 pe,· &amp; 3 PC.
SUITS

Dress Them Up For Easter.

and Moe-

New Shipment of Spring Sandals, Tennis
casins· for the Entire Family.
'

New
Store Hours
Monday thru
Friday
9til5
Saturday
9til9

FrirJay

..

smatt bunnies flo tlleir

siiOppin' here
•

'\\\6 )

..-

fV-ff"

C\t

-'

Jarvis. ss

'

)EASTE-R

COSTUME ACCENTS

39$

'-Jer's. Jewe.
. lry ·Store

..Pomeroy, Ohio

§. ... .' 2 54~ .

lb.

CHOC. EGGS
1Q~UP

1

BASKETS

!

I

.

ALL

SIZES

------:--1 CELLOPHANL:_~e!t!_ __ 29'

OOCONUT

l RIT EGG COLORS----15'

98'

I Pound

RUBY LIQUID COLORS-'."39'

EGG
' Ladies'

RABBITS

nty HQSe.

2 FOR 25~

NEW LADIES'

•

Wreath$ __ ..;. __ 2.29-3.49

prays ________ .;..._ J,99-2.99

QUEEN SIZE

P~TY

FOR SPRING

Bibles _____ ~ 1.99-3•79

'J1

,

1'.

. .

1--------------.1.---..;,;;;;,_____
RALL'S
·

·· '

lliUSSBS------------::2.99

~,

259 AND UP ~&lt;\

Infants' Hearts ____ .;.._·___ 2.49
\

98~,PR.

HANDBAGS

·

S

· S~rofoam

•

.Stretch

SOLID aiOC.

~emorial

••
••

HOSE

$1.99

_

..;~;;.,--..;:

•

BEN FRANK.LIIN
Store Open 9 •.m. · ) p.m. Weekdays- 9 a.m .- . 9 p.m.
Store Hours : Saturdays·

.,
'

F'ive Types

1.90
Box of 10

1

TIMED •ciiOH
jl l COL~ CAPS~ ~S

1-:: -~~ ~-

2 for
1.50

j

3 piece
Stainless Steel

BUFFERED .
ASPIRIN
, .~·

2 for

2.10

CAPSULES

SSe

PERMANENT

~ 2for

MIXING
BOWL
SET

11

1.30

88c

"

••
•
••
••
••
••
••

CORDAWA~

~CORD

~REEl
~r
~·

•
•
••

•,

•
••
•••
••
•
•
••
•
••'
•

••
•••
••
•••
••
•••
•

:

·

'

out. as 1ou
nead

•

j

•i

~

=, .

SNOWDEN VETERAN
Larry Snowden, junjor, ·is ·a
veteran member of the GAHS
track team . Snowden's name
was unintentionally omitted in a
story in Wednesday's Tribune .

lt. No

tangling!

..

'~ ...... o ··· .&lt;&gt;
,.

~-·······"

···-·

.

today· sFUNNY

12 oz.

BEXEL
- ONLY
·'

•·5.25

•

DATE MATE
EYE SHADOW
The rugged, all steel cannisle• that cleans rugs •
· furniture • drapes - everything - deep down •
Eureka dependability, lifetime lubricated motor,
lor_years ,of superior service. Beautifully styl ed
"Misty Gold" metallic finish .

Model 738 A

'

REG. s1.00

$3995

Thn1 'ro
Elltn IJIII

-ING-EL-S-FURNITURE_ _

Eri,,

,o,

ONLY 49~

TOOTHPASTE
REG. 89*

ONLY

DATE MATE
•
I

REG. '1.00 BNLY

49 ~

REG. sug · ONLY 77~

UTTON 5c
1

i. ,,,.,.,

FUNNY ··" ,,, 11.00 ...
1 coch ou9•11al "f11nnr' ' "'td ~~~~~~J!•ll'
lo . Toda(\ fUNNY . 1100 We•t 'hu~
1 ~t . (l,.,tlo"d. Olrun U 1I1

~ :L,-...,;;;=~;;z;;;;.;;;.._ ----"""'---------------'- - ·· - --- -~--'

a~

-PAN-TY HOSE

CAKE EYE LINER

ARE OUR MAIN BUSINESS

Open Fri. &amp; Sat. Nights

' MIDDLE PORT

•

'

oz.

GLEEM

VHP VITAMINS
REG. $7.89

12

'

1.29

1.00

1
"· ,

reels cord

TUSSY ·
DEODORANT

ALUMOX

2.88

99c

29c

REG•

Automatlca_ny ·

. REG. 49.95 :VALUE

\:

\ III
I:

3.97

REX WAY

BATH
SCALE

LANTERN

RAD

REG. 1.89

WINS DOOR PRIZE
Carol DeLong was the winner
of a door prize at a party
honori ng Elaine ' Barnhart
Saturday afternoon at the home
of her parents, Mr. and Mrs .
William Larnhart, Pomeroy .

Reg. 5.95

BRITE BEAM

POCKET

HAIR SPRAY

•

79~

HOME

FACIAL
TISSUES

4.99

oz.

69~T0$3.49 l EASTER GRASS--~-- 29'

SAND. PAILS

~

HAIR
RAY

99c

BABY BEN
ALARM

TONIC

CHOC. DROPS.

"EASTER

MOUTHWASH
···-AMINS and GARGLE

REXALL
CHILDREN'S
ASPIRIN

.FAST

BEEF WINE'

- SUNSET RIDGE CHOCOLATES • ORANGE SLICES •

.~-

PEROXIDE MILK of MlNERAL
Min~~~o~ 01[
2for 56c 2for SOc 2~~~SOc

40C

- CHOC. COVERED PEANUTS • CHOC. PEANUT CWSTERS

FILLED

·~~

Birth of Daughter

-

COCONUT BON SONS - MAPLE NUT GOODIES

FILLED

TOOTH
BRUSHES
Adult
2 for SOc

THERMOMETERS .

~~~(~~~

"2.66

Dilchers Announce ·

BRACH'S CANDIES!

I Pound

FOOT OINTMENT·
·~s - . . ~~- 2 to~ 1.30

M-31
MOUTHWASH

- ·-- ..-.~

They are Soft, ·
Cuddlely and Colorful.

&amp; NUT

FRUIT

,-

HOP IN AND TAKE A·LOOK!

•a••

EGGS

Keno Hidgt·

Goeuler's presents eV-erything that's
. New for Spring and East•r 1971.

PLUSH
RABBITS
•1 ·29 •o

JELLY BIRD

49¢ Klenzo

FEVER

•

49

3 0 1 0

Mr, and Mrs. Howard Young
of Paden Clty, Mr. and Mrs.
Garlh Smith of Long Bottom
were Saturday evening guests
of Mrs. Edith Osborne.
Mr. and Mrs. Maynard Bahr
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Cash Bahr of
Middleport, the occasion being
the observance of.Mrs. Shirley
Bahr's birthday.
Mr. and Mrs. Blaine Milhoan,
Elaine, Tony and Mikel, cailed
on Mr. and Mrs. Edward Shafer
Sunday, to help · Mrs. Shafer
celebrate her birlhday.
, Mrs. Edith Osborne visited a
. day last week with Mr. and Mrs.
Emmet Stethem at MI. Olive.
Mrs. Clara Milhoan visited
one day last w~k with Mr: and
Mrs. Phillip Slllith at Pomeroy.Mr. and Mrs. Errol Conroy o(.
Akron visited a few days with
,.Mrs. Alice Dods011·,other guesfa
were Mrs. Mildred Frank and

::

16 Ol

4

E•.Martln. 2b
2 0 0 0
J. Martin, lb
3 0 1 1
2 0 0 0
Stewart, cf
Radcllff.lf
2 o o 1
Hatten , c
3 o o o
Settles, p
2 o 1 0
Crossin, rf
2 0 o o
TOTALS
23 o 4 2
Score by Innings:
C:all ipalis
001 000 ()-11 -3-1
Wellston
000 000 ()-(1-4-2
Winning pitcher, Perry
Lasing pitcher, Settles
Extra base hils - J. ~~~~:/:­
double; J. Davis, D. B
doubles. $talen bases - Ballard
12); Prose, Perry, one each ;
Huffman. Sacrlfltes - Radcliff
and Settles• .one each .

•

:

REG. 98'

PADDLE
BALLS

going the distan_ce. Settles
fanned six, walked four and
gave up only three hits.
Perry retired Wellston in
order in the first and fourth
innings . Settles got the_lllue
Devils out in order in the fli'St,
fourth and fifth innings. GAHS
stole four bases. WHS stole once
off Perry.
The Blue Devils' next outing
is Tuesday at Waverly.
Box score:
GAHS BLUE o·EVILS (t)
PLAYER-Pos.
AB R H E
Johnson, 2b
4 0 0 0
Davis,Jb
3 1 1 0
Burnett.ss
3 0 1 1
Prose. ib
1 0' 0 0
Perry, p
3 0 1 0
Ba'llard, If
3 0 0 0
Sheets, rf
2 0 0 o
Boone, cf
3 0 0 0
Perroud, c
2 0 0 0
TOTALS
24 1 j 1
WELLSTON ROCKETS (O)
PLAYER-Pos. AB R H E
Huffman,-Jb
4 0 1 0

.\

_

1

Concert
AtGAHS

APRIL 11th

L...t'
:
Jpprv
oai\1
asTER
Is
A
,
OU
I
'
INFAN'
fsfH'R_
usifE12-.
.

l

~

Stan Perry, junior righthander, allowed ·four
hits and whiffed 12 Wellston Golden Rockets as
Coach Jim Osborne's Gallipolis Blue Devils edged
the host Jackson Countians 1-0 in a non-conference
game Wednesday evening.
.
ll
It was the Gallians' second consecutive one run
victory in two days. The Rockets dropped to 0-2 on
the year.
,

The contest was decided in
the top of the third inning with
two out. John Davis doubled to
left, and raced home with the
,. ._..-..........-.-.._... _.......... ._............
•
game's only run on a double to
center by Dave Burnett.
F.or skipping t~rough
Perry had the Gallians' only
Easter and all the good
other hit offlosing hurler Danny
tfmes ahead .. . we think
Settles - a second inning
tf:l ere's nothing nicer than
single. The Gallians left five
a spanking new outfit from
runners on base.
our collection of ;.aucy
Wellston threatened to score
fashions for the most
in the second and seventh inelegant little ladies and
'nings. ln the second, J . D.
gent.l_emen .
Martin led off with a double and
moved to third on a sacrifice by
Randy Radcliff, but Perry
fanned Terry Stewart and R.
•.-""· ,
Hatten ,to end that .uprising.
!(#~•:ti··;~.~
In the bottom of the seventh,
R. Hatten was safe on an error.
He moved to second on a
_t, ~
sacrifice by Danny Settles, but
"-\~'u~
Perry got R. Crossin on a
~
grounder, and fanned J . Huff\_~~0'"
man to end the game. Wellston
1(
.
,~\\
_ left six runners stranded.
oON THE TIN MlDDLEPORT ' ' _
Perryfanned12, walkedthree
..____________.___.....·i"'-~
ii
and gave up• four hils while

Calendar

lft PLUS APENNY!

f}
RUBBING ALCOHOL
2 f 84
~~-..;..pt....;;;.1111111°,_r.;;;..,;;.;.c---1 .AD HES lYE
TAPE
~I a,) ::::~:·::::: :::·
ASPIRIN
2 1.76
2 for 1.26
2 for
1

early diagnosis and treatment
Originally, an acre meant
the survival rate continues to the amount of land that a
improve, according to the Amer· man with a yoke of oxen
ican Cancer Society.
cou ld plow in one day.

ForTfitlittfestAMeCr
_
-;J ·

Mrs . Virgil Atkins was Road.
Green Thum·b Notes for May 7.
nominated fo r the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs' Mrs. Victor Nelson, civic Raking and fertilizing lawns
•
0 Ia
.beau ti fic atio n chairman, •and removing mulch frOJil the
uls . nding Gardener Award reported on progress being flowerbeds were among the
•"
"
~~~~~/r~orDay &amp;Ianting was made at the Harriso nville gardening tips for April
,.
n1·,ht
turmg f tte Monday _Grange Hall. She noted that she presented. 1
••
o
mee ong o le Rutland 1 d
. . ·~
Mrs. Victor Nelson presented
•
Garden Club at -the home of la measured the bmldong ,
,,•
"The
Trail of the Bright-Eyed
taken ptclures, and conferred
· Mt'S Jam N" h 1
•
·
e.s , te o_s?n.
with Carpers Nursery. Four Iris " ana Mrs. Nicholson
••
Mrs. Atkons quahftcations for yews will be u~ed ih land- showed cuttings of houseplants'
"
the ion
award ' gtven on both a sc~puv•
· the butldmg
· · which was
re
suitable for starting. Mrs.
••"
g al and state basis, were formetiy the Methodist Church Ralph Turner was auctioneer
revtewed by the club members . Flower beds will be made and for a house plant sale which
•
"
· For the Arbor Day planting flowers planted by Mrs. Atkins' brought in $11 .
•"
on-the last Fnday o[ Aprtl, Mrs. 4-H boys and girls who will d!l;o
A variety of iris was named
•
•
~~~sell
Ltttle
and
Mrs.
Atkins
handle
care
of
the
·
plantings
by
each of the 18 members
••
donate
a
flowenng
crab
during
the
summer
months
at lending in response to roll .
•
tree to be}lanled at the Forest The· club voted to provid~ 14 call. Mrs. John Colwell was a
•
•
Acre Park on the New Lima flowering crabapple trees to be guest. Mrs. Nicholson read
••
83c REXALL
pla~ted in Rutland in con' ''Mellowing" and Mrs. Chris
•
for the price of
•
junction with (he Rutland Diehl, co-hostess, . gave "Let
••
Friendly Gardeners civic im- Them Live'' for deJll)tions. The
•
59¢ REXALL
••
provement project. Support of Lord's Prayer, the club creed
Reg, 1.75 REXALL
·••
the "Let's Keep Rutland A and collect were given in unison
Blooniin ' Clean Town" project to op"n lhe meeting.
CONTACT LENS
•••
of the Friendly Gardeners vias
Mrs.
Everett · Colwell
1.25 REXALL
••
pledged by the.members. Each provided the traveling prize
••
I " x5 yds. or
one was given two p&lt;jckages of wotl' by Mrs. Dayton Parsons.
~m'"~
_.':
4 Pl .
1/ 2 " X 10 yds.
•
1
TIIURSDAY
flower seeds ~y the Friendly Mrs. Jonah Cotterill will
•
=S ~~
for
••
EVANGELINE CHAPTER Gardeners Club.
10 Gr. lOO's
'
.
provide the prize for the April
172, Order of the Eastern Star, . A tour of Wahkeena Nature meeting. Homemade ice cream,
••
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Preserve on April 28 was cake, coffee, mints and nuts
Reg. 53¢ REXALL
••
Masonic TemJlle, Middleport. planned, and a letter was read were served.
•
2.09 Clifton
•
Gly.cerin
LAURE!; Cliff Better Health from Mrs. John Reese; Region
••
' ··
. SUPPOSITORIES
. Club, 7:30 Thursday night home II director , concerning the
•
""""'",.
•
•.
~Adult. 12's
··- ......Ill
of Mrs. Clarence Curtis. Mrs. r egional meeting on April 24 at
•
•
Rutland.
She
asked
that
all
I
Paul Frick, co-hostess.
-.. -... ::.
•"
members contribut'e confor
••
REVJV AL, April I through tainers, plants; seeds, bulbs,
79¢ REXALL
April 10, 7:30 p.m. each dried materials , weathered
••
evening , Orange Christian wood or any other items related
55¢ REXALL
'
Church, near Athens County to gardening for a sales table at
i.29 REXALL .
line. Speaker each service the regional meeting . Proceeds
FUNGI-REX
'
•
public
invited
.
GREASELESS
3% 10 val.
will go toward funding the
••
FRIDAY
I n or
,;
.. Pint
publica tion of a wild flower
REXALL Timed-Action
RETURN
Jonathan
Chapter
,
•••
Nasal Decongestant
book and the Wahkeena Fund .
D.A..R.,_Friday , 2 p.m., home of Reservations are to be made
••
1
Friday night's Jazz Rock
•
Mrs. Dale Dutton. Rev. Stanley wilh Mrs. Joe Bolin by Aprill9. Concert, to•be presented by the
••
.. ,
Plattenburg speaking ; Mrs. Sixteen memb~rs plan to at- Gallia Academy High School
•
James Brewin gton, Miss lend .
••
Stage Band and Symphony of
••
Frienda Faehnle, assisting
A contribution was made to Swing, promises to be one of the
••
hostesses.
the Ge01·ge Thompson Kidney outstanding events of the 1971
••
•
SATURDAY
Minuteman
Fund.
spring season .
REXALL Brite Set
REXALL Mi-31
REXALL 5 Grain
•
••
BEAUX Arts Ball, Saturday, Mrs. Robert Canaday gave a
The concert will be held in the
CHEWABLE
9:30-12 midnight, Southern High report on the therapy program GAHS auditorium, beginning at
•
Multiple
•
School
Auditoriwn . Music by 0 . at the Gallipolis State Institute . 8 p.m . Admission will be 50
••
U. Quintet.
·&gt;
Four club members went to cents per person.
BAKE
SALE,
Saturday,
10
13 oz.
100's
!OO's
Pint
assist
a flower arranging
The concert, first of its kind
••
Size
,
a.m.
to
4
p.m.
,
at
New
Haven
.workshop . Sixteen of the by the instrumental music
•
••
Super Market sponsored by St. patients participated in the department at GAHS, will be
2 for
2 for
2 for .
2 for
Joseph's
Atlas
Guild
.
•
therapy program . Flowers and presented in two _parts. The
••
DANCE Saturday Meigs greenery were dona ted by Stage Band will present the first
•• ;-, Junior High, 8-11 p.m. Jays will Decor, Inc., Middleport.
half of the program of a Jazz
.L·.1n ':
A
thank-you
note
was
read
Rock
Concert.
.,.
"•
'"'t'
""'i ...
~. emcee. •'v ·• ·.
'
I
The second half of the"
from Mrs. Wesley J. Nichols for
••
~"'
SUNDAY
a donation on the highway program will be given by the
•
HYMN SING, Plants Mission planting project of the O.A.G.C. Symphony of Swing.
•
Church, at Racine near new Mr~ Adkins will prepare the
.Westclox
REXALL
The Stage Band will present
locks
imd
dam
site.
Bissell
•
the following selections :
••
B~others and other groups
Gallia Academy High School
.....
present. Rev. E. J . Griffith in
•
Fight Song , jazz style; The
•
charge. Public invited .
••
Funky Turtle, All About The
200•
2 ply
MEMORIAL dedi cation
Blues, Cinnamon Kisses, Cute;
•••
500's
3 boKes
Sunday . First
United
a special piano solo by Mark
Presbyterian Church, MidEpling, Prelude Burlesque,
REG. 39'
••"" dlepo~ t, 3 p.m., in memory of Mr. and Mrs. James Dilcher Opus'h; The Sponge, Walk Wild
are
announcing
the
birth
of
•
the late Rev. Howard Ruppel!
and Jwnp for Jennie .
•
their third child, a daughter , on
••
and the late Jeanette Waddell ;
The following selections will
Mar. 18 at the Mount Carmel
••
everyone welcome .
be presented by the Symphony
2FOR
Hospital, Columbus, weighing·8
•• ·
HYMN SING Sunday, 2 p.m.
of Swing: 'It
lbs. 9 oz., named Jennifer Sue .
Plan
ts
Memoriai
Church,
Get Together , Traces, Turn
••
Mr. ana Mrs. Dikher have two
located near Racine Lock and
Around, Look at Me, Spooky,
••
so ns~ Rhetl 1 five , and Paul, two.
Dam, conducted by Bisse ll
Close to You and Son of a
••
Paternal grandparents are
Brothers.
Preacher Man.
'
2·cell
••
Solid State
Mr. and Mrs . Clyde Dilcher,
MONDAY
..
••
Columbus. Mr . and Mrs. Alfred
POMEROY
Garden
Club
,
7
AUXILIARY
TO MEET
••
Lindsey, Albany , are the
p.m.
Monday
nig
ht,
Pomeroy
The auxiliary of the Bashan
•
maternal g randparent s ~ Mr .
•
United Methodist Church, social
Fire
Department will meet at
and · Mrs. Jam es Clark of
REG. 12.29
with
room. Guest night to be ob•
7:30
p.m
.
tonight
at
the
fire
Albany are great-grandparents .
•
.
7
oz.
batteries
served.
•
house. At the meeting, Mrs.
16
•
Jeanette Lawrence and Mrs.
••
Lerola Young will present an
•
•
American flag to the firemen 's
2FOR $ 2 . 3 0
••
auxiliary
on
behalf
of
the
•
•
Racine American Legion
••
Auxiliary, Post 602. riM mem•
bers and other inte~ted in••
WHITE RAIN
dividuals are invited to attend.
•

••

..

LimE GIRLS' DRESS COATS

Burnett Produces Run

Rochester at Qoebec
(On ly game scheduled)

..•

.

.

..

perfect, too. -He just seemed to • - - - - - -...- - stop and l got off. I walked him

By John Davis, David

•

..

SALE STARTS APRIL _
1, 19.7'1

-

Back-To-Back Doubles

Thursday's Games

,

~

disqualified ~irn from the first ·back tQ the. finiSh line and
Sidney Watters Jr ., .,~ ~he good this colt could have been .
place money of $145,000 for someone- called lor the ~Orse horse's trainer, added: "tilow That is prObably the saddest
Cl!USi!lg interference early · in · ambulance."
~0 one · will really know how part of the whole !hint;."

'.

.'

Mrs.
Atkins·
No.
m
inated
'
For Gardener's ·Award

Early Derby Favorite Breaks Leg
.

'.

•

�.,

."

.-.

'

'

.·

·.,

..

I '

~

'

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., April!, 1971

Biogr~phy

....

~

T. Harry Williams' biography
of Hucy P. !.on~. the prominent
politician of Louisiana whose
~rasp for power apparently le~
to his assassination , was
reviewed by Mrs. Emerson
Jones at Wednesday's mee.ting
of the Middleport Literary Club.
Mrs. Jones rela ted the
·author's comments .on hong's
boyhood experiences including

•••

OUR MONSTROUS

'

'BAYER

Robinson's Cleaners

ASPIRIN Reg.
~CJH[t's;

1,89

SALE

WITCH
HAZEL

.::?. DICKINSONS
• Soothe Tired

Burning Feet

• Relieve Sun &amp;
Windburn
• After Shave
• Relieves Mo1quito
Bites
• Reli.eves Muscular
Aches ~nd much
much more

CAPSULES
lO's
Reg. 1.69

1

GREASELESS
Reg. 1.89

HI-THERM
-1 % OUNCE

.,t,,,..!l

eentral .air
·eondliiontna ·

~0'15

"•.,
.....................

.

·.

'•'

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..

:;:; -~- ~

;::

;;' "

JVS.T ARRIVED

,_

%oz.

• • BULBS FOR SPRING TIME PlANTING

·;• ~ GLADIOLUS:
DAtliAS AND AMARYLliS
•
.
•.•

l

1""'1:

~

77e

98c

• l CUII(S • 11 I

UQUID

59"

. .,_

PRELL

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

Imperial
Slle 16 oz.

"•'•••
...
. .., ~
, R., M'"
. _ '.
,__•0

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SYLVANIA
LIGHT BULBS

as~

X-15 ltiSTAMATIC
.,

ONE·A·DAY
VITAMINS PLUS IRON

67"

Alka-Seltzer
Tablets

19

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88

~·POI:AROID ~ F1tM·,

KODA~

'·
INSTAMATIC®

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X-15

3.88

CAMERA
.. in co mplete oullit.

ONE-A-DAY

KOD1\.\K

VITAMI'NS

CX-1~6-1~·

FILM

98

100'5

I

Regular 2.98

Reg.

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22.95

2.39

25's

99~

FOR

Eastman Color Outfit"

.

Reg. 3.39

2 33¢

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30'

1.08

lOO's

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25, 40, 60, 75 &amp; 100 watts

' 99'~~:g·

NO. 108

CHOCKS

75~

Vitamins With Iron

HANKSCRAFT VAPORIZER

lOO's

NO. 219

LILT SPECIAL
, I

Reg. 3.69

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Reg. 3.69.

WITH IRON
I

2.69

100's

STYLE
KIT

LILT HOME ·
PERMANENT

New
Look For
, Easter

1.29

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2.29

Come To Bunnyland!

PRELL

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.

.,

with

TO BE GIVEN AWAY BY

!J

f!.~~
~

Reg. ·.

REGULAR 9r

spray

(j&amp;&amp;Y•S14f;
.

PAINT-UP PARADE

'Reg . 2.00

1.33
2 ·oz.
Reg.

I70's

4-WAY
.NASAL SPRAY

08$al ' .

0.

•

for over

Q·TIPS

Reg.
1.19

TABLETS

Amana

··:

5 OUNCE
Reg. 1.09

Reg.
98'

1971 MODEL

WHOlE HOUSE AIR •
CONDITIONING.
•. INSTAtlATJON
IS QUICK,
.
EASY AND PERMANENT~

1.29

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REGISTER FOR THIS
AMERICAN MOTORS
SPORTS CAR

Chase Hardware

FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA '

SOLTICE

G.ENERAL
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Large 36's

1.33

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288

•

REG. 2.15

Ben-Gay

1

88 ~

I

RAISED WHITE LETTERING

Only

50 yedfs

DELTA BELTED

·Activities Set

I ',
I
I
I
I
I
I

OOAN'S
PILLS

NEW DeLI:.a. Tl RES! •••

·Katie's Korner

32 OI.
Case of ·
6 Ca,(IS

WITCH HAZEL
• After Bath Rub

NYTOL
TABS.

READY TO USE

·--

for Your Drug Neetls

airS and pareS
Class Organ.zed

SIMI LAC

•

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791

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1.5 9

CONTINUES THRU APRIL 3

I The Multi-Purpose Pr&lt;&gt;duct I
I Proven liy Generations of Use I

. 16 Ol

'

I

~-----------·

DICKINSON'S

122

BUFFERIN
TA·B Lns .
~
99
1CJH[t's

&lt;

'

I I

SHIRr· ..•
fiNlSHING

Jq.armnry

Vaudeville Days

·'

•
-(

his yew· I:IS 1::1 !-:a lcsruan wlwn he with 'the du·b collect. Mrs.
learned l&lt;! speak c1•1qucnlly. He F•IITcs l Ba ~ htcl , pro~r~m
gained the guvcrnship of c: lla ir111un, inlri.HJuCetl Mrs .
Louisiana, went to th~· lJ . 5. .lvncs.
Seriate, and .was preparing to . .- - - - - - - -..
I'Url for the presidency when he
was assassinated II.Y Dr. Carl
, Wei'".
.
,Members answcnl~ ro ll call
by naming (I politidc.m.
· The n1ecting w"s held at lhe
SAME DAY
h~me of Mrs. Thereon Johnson
SERVICE
of near Racine. At the conIn At 9-0ut At 5
elusion or the m~c ti n g she
Use'Oor Free Parking Lot
serve'() buffet refreshments with
"n Easter egg tree centeri ng the
table.
Mrs. 'Richa rd Owen presided
216 E. 2nd, Pome~ov
at the meeting which opened · !::::;::::~

Jillagt -

S

..

/.
•

Surprise Tributes Given Mrs. Simpson

p,

'.

'•

of Long Reviewed-

The .Hocking · Are.~ School of Mm·iah Ch~cl. t. Taking the Hardway on· behalf .of her .class
Religion held for the past six r&lt;~u•·se wer Mrs . Mrytle prescnted ·lhe gift of money to
Sunday afternoons aUhe Mount Warren, Mrs. ·arriett Warner, · tl.le Rev . Mr. Jackson, and Miss
Moriah Baptist Church in Mrs. Sherman Butler, Mrs . . ~udy McCieod on behalf of her
Middleport was concluded· Ha•'l'ison Bentley. First Bapti~t· g1·oup presented the gift to the
Sunday with recognition of Church, Rutland; )Irs. Julius Rev . Mr. Key .
those completing the two McCieud,
Mrs.
Arnold . Closi~g remarks ~ere by
courses offered and a program Richards, Judy McCieod, and Mrs. Bernice Borden, director_ ,.
of poe try , meditations · and Mrs. Ervin Bumgardner, Mount of the school of religion for the
music.
Moriah , and Mrs. William Providence District; Mrs. Mrs. Arnold Richards and Smith, Forest Run Baptist Dorothy Lewis, president of the
Mrs. Allen Hampton were co- Church. '
Wo111en's _Auxiliary o f thecha,irnlen f~r the school . with
Mrs. Ri~hards had charge of Providence District; Carlos
, .:,·
Mr. Eddie Buffington, student the closing program with Judy Thompson of Chillicothe, the ') · ~· .
k~ U · U I I
al ·the . Kentucky Christian McCieod as mistress of Rev. Mr. Jackson, tht&gt; Rev . Mr.
•. !
:Co~
College, Grayson, ·Ky., giving ceremonies. Mrs. Buller gave a Key, and Mrs. Hampton.
TUESDAY WAS CLEAN-UP DAY on Locust St. in
. the keynote address on · the medley of poetry including My
The benedictior. was given by
Middleport. Den 3 of Cub Scout· Pack 245 spent time arter
Den 2 of Pack 245 Cub Scouts
"Christian Fellowship." study Gift, The True Atlas, Crossing the Rev . Mr. Jackson whil~\the . school clearing the area of debris as anotber phase in the
visited the museum at the
series.
the Bar, Absalom, my Ab· group was in a friendship "circle
national SOAR (Save Our American Resources) project. In
Forest Acres Park after school
'llhe · Rev. Samuel Jackson, salom; Mrs. Warren presented, to sing Blest Be the · Tie that
.
Tuesday.
They had a trea t at
the group were David Schuler, Jamie Scally, James Gheen,
pastor of the Naomi Baptist · A Sure Way to Keep Happy and Binds . Sandwiches, cookies,
McClure's Dairy Isle before
Gregory Knapp, Max Geary, and Randy Batey, a new cub.
Church, was instructor for the' Mrs. Warner, Your Portrai.t.
and punch were served. Mrs.
leaving for the park.
·'----course • The . 70's - OpAppreciation offerings for the Hampton served as registrar
They were assisted by their den leader •Mrs, Marion Francis.
Mrs. Frances Whittington and
portunities for Your Church. two ministers who taught the for t11e school with ·Mrs. Bowles
Cookies and Kooi-Aidwere served by Mrs. Francis when the
Mrs . · Jean . Thomas, den
Ennilled were Carl Williams, classes were taken. Mrs. as her assistant;
project was completed. '
mothers, accompanied Kevin
Julius McCieod , Arnold
King, Keith Doss, Dorsel
Richards, Mrs. Will Winston,
Thomas and Leslie Whittington,
Mrs. Oscar Hardway, Mount
Jr. on the trip. Games were
Moriah Baptist Church: Mrs.
played and a singspiration held
Susie · Venable , Mr.s. Lois
Mrs. Roy Spencer reminisced on events of Mrs. Simpson's life, before the youngsters returned
Roberson, Oscar Qualls, Mrs.
A surprise tribute to Mrs. Lavinia Simpson on her 76th
to Middleport.
•
Hampton , Naomi .. Baplijt birthday anniversal'}' highlight. I the Friday night meeting of the relating both the humorous and the somber times from her early
Church.
·
· Happy· Hustlers Class of the Racine W~sleyan United Methodist childhood.
Her musical inclinations, her interest in church and com·
Your Faith in This Mirror was Church. ·
munily,
her family devotion , were included in the commentary on
NAMES OMITTED
the course taught by the Rev.
Festured in that tribute was a poem written by Mrs. Simp·
people
and
places
important
in
the
life
of
Mrs.
Simpson.
·
Mr.
and Mrs. William T.
Henry Key, pastor of the Mount .;.n•s daughter, Mrs. Marian Knightstep of Columbus, in response
Married in 1922 at Beaver, Pa., to the late George Simpson, the Grueser were guests at a
to an invitation tot~ party honoring her mother.
·.f\
couple, their daughter, Marian, and a son, James, moved in 1933 ~well party Sunday at the
It was entitled My Mother : ·
"I have thought about my mother since your letter came last to Racine where Mr. Simpson opened a drug store. Mrs. Simpson -leport Church of Christ
has two grandChildren, Steve,.a student at Southern High School, honoring Mrs. Gladys Mowrey
HOSPITAL NEWS
week"THE CREATOR OF
who will move-to California next
and
Ali~ia,
who
attends
school
jn
Columbus.
·
Of
all
the
things
I'd
say
to
her
if
I
were
there
to
speak.
.
,.
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"
· Congratulatory ll)essages from ·Mrs. Sybil Miles and her week. Their names were
Holzer Medical Center, First
daughter, Mrs. Lee Jackson of Columbus, both formerly of unintentionally omitted from an
Ave. and Cedar St. General 1suppose I'd say she's gentle when She comes into my mind;
PHONE 992·5759
Racine, were read .
· earlier account 'o! the party.
visiting hours 24 and 7-8 p. m. Always soft and sweet and easy, never harsh and not unkind.
2~ 1 N. Second ~ve.,
An arrangement of roses from her daughter was presented to
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. _ ~rents only on She was pretty and She smelled good and it always seemed to me, Mrs. Simpson along with a lamb cake symbolic of the Lenten
Middleport, Ohio
Ca nce r of the colon nml rec·
Pediatrics Ward.
She surpassed all the requiremen·ts of What Mothers Ought To season made by Mrs. C\ll'tis Johnson.
tum st rikes Ame rican men and '
Apotluck dinner was served in the social rooms of the church. women about equall v an d is
BIRTHS
Be!
Mr. and Mrs. Khwaja A. Aziz,
The Easter program opened with a vocal selection "Alone in seco nd cml y to skin Cancer in
But th e American
Dark Gethsemane" by 1&gt;1rs. Garrell Circle, Mrs. Hilton WoJ!'c, incidence.
Athens, a son; Mr. and Mrs. She's forever effervescing with enthusiastic zeal
Cancer Society says almost
Sr., and Mrs . Simpson accompanied at the plano. by Mrs. Robert thr ee nul of four persons with
Herbert E: Skaggs, Ray. a son; Whether planning Sunrise Service or a Happy Hustler meal.
Mr . .and Mrs. John D. Wood,
Roush.
colon-rectum cance r 'could be
Jackson, a son; Mr. and Mrs. If the building needs repairing or the choir robes need replaced,
Types of crosses used through the years discussed during the shved by early diagnosis and
Larry D. Franz, Ironton , a son; If the annex looks bedraggled or the walls have been deiaced,
program included the Latin, the Celtic, the anchor, aud the prompt treatment. The Procto
Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Poloyn, If the pastor's house needs painting, if his salary is delayed,
triumph. The group sang "He Lives" and there was a Biblical exam helps diagnose the disease Carly.
Gallipolis, a son; and Mr . and
She'll be on the phone or on your porch to see your pledge is paid! quiz on Easter. It was noted that the word "Easter" means
Mrs . James L. Groves,
Goddess oi Spring and appears only once in the scriptures, Acts
Ewington, a son.
·
DISCHARGES ·
She can play the hymns or sing them, or greet each one by name; 124.
.Mrs. Owen Watson presided at the business meeting during
Miss Nellie Adams, Paul llistherwiththeAIITimeGreatsinthe church'sHallofFame!!
which time a donation was made to the George Thompson Kidney
Bearhs, Eric L. Crosier, Mrs.
Fund. A gill was also made to the church treasury . Plans were
'
Curtis Dalton and infant
Doing a takeoff of Ralph Edwards' This Is Your Ufe series, made to send Easter remembrances to shutins.
daughter. Carol Delong, Alva
Holsinger, Mrs. Olan Hysell,
Linda Mahorn, Mrs. Melvin I
Moore, Coby Pounds, Harold
70 Series Super Wide Tread
Featuring
Hickard, Sr., Robert Rob~rts ,
Tma Ruth, Mrs. Genevteve
Saxton, Mrs. Nellie Sayre, Mrs.-· An •\'l'ganizational m~e ting of
Thomas Scott, Mrs. Victoria the P irs and Spares Class of
'
For That Distinctive Appearance
Stacy and David Winkler.
the Bradbury Church .of Christ
Observance of "Vaudeville
~·
was held recen tly in the ~urch
Days", Cub Scout theme for
~'
By Katie Crow
I
Here's a distinctive tire in every direction ,
social room.
April, was planned at a ll)eeting.
from its smart raised solid white letters to
Prayer by Jerry Davis
of Middleport Pack 245 leaders
BA~QUET TONIGHT
its totally new level of performance. The
Tuesday a t the American
The annual All-Southeastern opened the meeting . Officers
The
guilty
verdict
handed
down
Monday
by
a
six
officer
jury
combination
of 2 Fiber Glass Belts over a
(i)hio Athletic League basketball elected were Sarah' Bechtle, against Lt. William L. Calley, Jr., for premeditated murder on Legion Hall.
body of 2 bias pli es of tough Dynacor high
Den assignments to groups
banquet will be held at Waverly, president; Kathy King, vice March 16, 1968, has brought red blooded Americans toJheir feet.
tensile rayon, r educes tread di stortion and
which will depict the different
beginning at 7 'o'clock this president; Jerry Davis,
It
seems
to
be
a
grave
miscarriage
of
justice.
Lt.
Calley
increases tread life.
evening. The affair will be held treasurer : Susie Shrimplin, certainly didn't ask to go to Vietnam. Sadly enough, war is ugly facets of vaudeville were made.
secretary-reporter,
and
Paula
·
Areas to be presented are
at Lake White ..
Haynes and Marty Nicholson, and causes extreme tragedy.
music , tumblers and stilt
What confuses me is the word premeditated. It is difficult to walkers. Present for the
project chairmen .
Sharon Roush was reported ill believe that actions of men in a combat war zone· are planning session were Mrs.
at the Holzer Medical Center. premeditated. It certainly seems, from all articles appearing in Jeanne Cart, den leader coach,
Bill Carter, the clas.s teacher, newspapers and other news media, that -Lt. Calley ts playing the Mrs . Jean Thomas and Mrs.
.
had scripture and the closing role of the scapegoat.
Milford Hysell, den . mothers,
prayer. A potluck dinner was
In my opinion the Calley incident should never have been and Milford Hysell, webelos
992-7161
MIDDLE PORT,
served
to
Davis,
Miss
King,
brought to trial. The military should have handled the situation in leader .
CERTIFIED 'WELDER
Miss Shrimplin, Miss Bechtle, a manner befitting the Army. Bulthe Army, through its action,
Portable Equl'pment
' Miss Nicholson, class members has lost prestige.
Shop or Field
and guests, Mrs. Bill Carter,
Chances to fol-m an all volunteer Army seem to have gone
Ph. 992-2511
Rick and Brett, and Kevin King. down the drain,
.
Frank Epple and Jerry Van
What protection do we hav~ \hat this same situation will not
lnwagen contributed to the happen again? The Army trains recruits to fight - kill or be killed
Locust St.
Middleport dinner. Games were played - and hands out the ammunition to perform deeds of atrocity.
"';,;,;;;,;;.;;,;,;.._ _,..,..._ . following the dinner.
There are many things that have happened during wars that
in all probability were as horrible as what has been described in
Lt.
Calley's case. What would happen if all things bad were
Pre-Season
brought to light? We would quite destroy our country.
Special!
It all boils down to the fact that if we are going to be involved
in a war (which weare) why not fight the war and get it over with.
Better still no war at all.
·
Personally I am feed up with action in Vietnam or any place
for.that matter that will take the life of a young man. As John M.
McKean, Captain of the U. S. Air Force (retired), stated in a
recent article, our prayers should go out to all those concerned ·
arid perhaps even for ourselves.
Join the

C b Sco ts V's't
Museum at Park

..

.'
'
·, 7~The Daily Senth~ei, 1Middlepo~t-Pomeroy, 0.: Aprii 1, 1971

..

.-

.•

•

. 6Reg.oz.·

ill

-~-.---~--------------- \ii

CONCENTRATE

Reg.
1.99

}29.

.

9·9~

CLAIROL COMPACT

w

..

·Foundation
Plus Powder

1.69

Shop now for Easter wl}ile 1].
selections are complete. m
Greeting Cards; Toys, ]
Novelties. Filled Baskets it
and
filling material. jj
Gills. Fine Selection of l*
Easter ~andy of All Kinds. ffi

.

vii

·,

.

:~:

-----------7-----·
I

Now

t
{, ..
·.:~

'

And the low cost of Aman~ air C:onditi.oning
may surprise you - especially if you. install it
with your furnace . Why cool just one room
when. for ius! a I itlle more. you can cool your
~hole house?
--

r

t:AS't: Tl:oRMS

F.REE E~TI~AlE

FOREMAN .&amp;
'

iiiiiOOLEPORT, 0.

~ 95 ·

21f2

~

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,:!,
EN,,FRANKLIN':l
:w

!;

.st.

PHONE ,
202 East Main
.992-3498
Pomeroy,Ohto
• OPEN FRIDAY~ SATUR~~y. 'NIG.HTS ~~~ 9

fL.!!...!i!!!!!!!!!li!!l!!l!'!l!!:lle!!!!!~"'!..l!!!:~~~~~!"!!I!':'~.i...-....;.......::.~~
· ··: :l'J
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.SAYRE. HARDW.ARE ~~
. , . 'FU
ITUR' E
' '

NEW HAVE

1

W VA

.

~:~~RANT

'•

;:::

10' AND UP

~~), ~ jjf!lllitiNI' · ltf;'ti If I

PRISTEEN

w

,

Reg . 1.75

. NET

• ,

882-2525

'

•
••'

' '
'

,

J•t----~~;,;;.;.:_;.._•_;.~•--..._...__~______....._......._.;..;...;...;,.;..,.J ,
.'

::

~

~-

E , All Sizes! All,fnJors! All 'Prices!
•,--~--~~----I

oz.

1.49

'

40's

Reg. t58 · .

99

~

FOAM BRONZER

Regular
Fine

Blue
'

'

I

TUBE

Light, Medium
&amp; Deep .Tones

Windsong or Beloved

I"

1

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·

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1·17.-. ~
1

•1.41

COTY

.: .:.. ~

KOT,EX

. ~egular and Super

Reg. _

Only

•

COlOGNE
SPRAY MIST

1

.s2.2S

. \ -•..:-••::.::·...~--_j
'

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ALL ITEMs ON SALE THROUGH A~L lrcl
·,.

,.

�.,

."

.-.

'

'

.·

·.,

..

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~

'

6- The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy. 0., April!, 1971

Biogr~phy

....

~

T. Harry Williams' biography
of Hucy P. !.on~. the prominent
politician of Louisiana whose
~rasp for power apparently le~
to his assassination , was
reviewed by Mrs. Emerson
Jones at Wednesday's mee.ting
of the Middleport Literary Club.
Mrs. Jones rela ted the
·author's comments .on hong's
boyhood experiences including

•••

OUR MONSTROUS

'

'BAYER

Robinson's Cleaners

ASPIRIN Reg.
~CJH[t's;

1,89

SALE

WITCH
HAZEL

.::?. DICKINSONS
• Soothe Tired

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• Relieve Sun &amp;
Windburn
• After Shave
• Relieves Mo1quito
Bites
• Reli.eves Muscular
Aches ~nd much
much more

CAPSULES
lO's
Reg. 1.69

1

GREASELESS
Reg. 1.89

HI-THERM
-1 % OUNCE

.,t,,,..!l

eentral .air
·eondliiontna ·

~0'15

"•.,
.....................

.

·.

'•'

. , .;.:.;.;.: cc;~::;::; ':::::::);.;:::::;:;:;:;::;':~.;:::::: ;:-:-' ·, · ·' ;.;:;:;:;:;.;.:. :;:::AA

..

:;:; -~- ~

;::

;;' "

JVS.T ARRIVED

,_

%oz.

• • BULBS FOR SPRING TIME PlANTING

·;• ~ GLADIOLUS:
DAtliAS AND AMARYLliS
•
.
•.•

l

1""'1:

~

77e

98c

• l CUII(S • 11 I

UQUID

59"

. .,_

PRELL

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

Imperial
Slle 16 oz.

"•'•••
...
. .., ~
, R., M'"
. _ '.
,__•0

-

SYLVANIA
LIGHT BULBS

as~

X-15 ltiSTAMATIC
.,

ONE·A·DAY
VITAMINS PLUS IRON

67"

Alka-Seltzer
Tablets

19

.

.

88

~·POI:AROID ~ F1tM·,

KODA~

'·
INSTAMATIC®

. Reg. 5.49

X-15

3.88

CAMERA
.. in co mplete oullit.

ONE-A-DAY

KOD1\.\K

VITAMI'NS

CX-1~6-1~·

FILM

98

100'5

I

Regular 2.98

Reg.

Reg.·
22.95

2.39

25's

99~

FOR

Eastman Color Outfit"

.

Reg. 3.39

2 33¢

Reg.
30'

1.08

lOO's

Reg. 2.15

25, 40, 60, 75 &amp; 100 watts

' 99'~~:g·

NO. 108

CHOCKS

75~

Vitamins With Iron

HANKSCRAFT VAPORIZER

lOO's

NO. 219

LILT SPECIAL
, I

Reg. 3.69

Reg. 6.95

89~

Reg ,
1.89

FLINTSTONE$
Reg. 3.69.

WITH IRON
I

2.69

100's

STYLE
KIT

LILT HOME ·
PERMANENT

New
Look For
, Easter

1.29

Reg.
2.29

Come To Bunnyland!

PRELL

Massengill
Powder
.

.,

with

TO BE GIVEN AWAY BY

!J

f!.~~
~

Reg. ·.

REGULAR 9r

spray

(j&amp;&amp;Y•S14f;
.

PAINT-UP PARADE

'Reg . 2.00

1.33
2 ·oz.
Reg.

I70's

4-WAY
.NASAL SPRAY

08$al ' .

0.

•

for over

Q·TIPS

Reg.
1.19

TABLETS

Amana

··:

5 OUNCE
Reg. 1.09

Reg.
98'

1971 MODEL

WHOlE HOUSE AIR •
CONDITIONING.
•. INSTAtlATJON
IS QUICK,
.
EASY AND PERMANENT~

1.29

·SUPER ANAHIST

REGISTER FOR THIS
AMERICAN MOTORS
SPORTS CAR

Chase Hardware

FLETCHER'S
CASTORIA '

SOLTICE

G.ENERAL
. TIRE SALES

Large 36's

1.33

!.

3 oz.

SEE THEM HERE•••

288

•

REG. 2.15

Ben-Gay

1

88 ~

I

RAISED WHITE LETTERING

Only

50 yedfs

DELTA BELTED

·Activities Set

I ',
I
I
I
I
I
I

OOAN'S
PILLS

NEW DeLI:.a. Tl RES! •••

·Katie's Korner

32 OI.
Case of ·
6 Ca,(IS

WITCH HAZEL
• After Bath Rub

NYTOL
TABS.

READY TO USE

·--

for Your Drug Neetls

airS and pareS
Class Organ.zed

SIMI LAC

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'REG.
791

Reg.
1.5 9

CONTINUES THRU APRIL 3

I The Multi-Purpose Pr&lt;&gt;duct I
I Proven liy Generations of Use I

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DICKINSON'S

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BUFFERIN
TA·B Lns .
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SHIRr· ..•
fiNlSHING

Jq.armnry

Vaudeville Days

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his yew· I:IS 1::1 !-:a lcsruan wlwn he with 'the du·b collect. Mrs.
learned l&lt;! speak c1•1qucnlly. He F•IITcs l Ba ~ htcl , pro~r~m
gained the guvcrnship of c: lla ir111un, inlri.HJuCetl Mrs .
Louisiana, went to th~· lJ . 5. .lvncs.
Seriate, and .was preparing to . .- - - - - - - -..
I'Url for the presidency when he
was assassinated II.Y Dr. Carl
, Wei'".
.
,Members answcnl~ ro ll call
by naming (I politidc.m.
· The n1ecting w"s held at lhe
SAME DAY
h~me of Mrs. Thereon Johnson
SERVICE
of near Racine. At the conIn At 9-0ut At 5
elusion or the m~c ti n g she
Use'Oor Free Parking Lot
serve'() buffet refreshments with
"n Easter egg tree centeri ng the
table.
Mrs. 'Richa rd Owen presided
216 E. 2nd, Pome~ov
at the meeting which opened · !::::;::::~

Jillagt -

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Surprise Tributes Given Mrs. Simpson

p,

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of Long Reviewed-

The .Hocking · Are.~ School of Mm·iah Ch~cl. t. Taking the Hardway on· behalf .of her .class
Religion held for the past six r&lt;~u•·se wer Mrs . Mrytle prescnted ·lhe gift of money to
Sunday afternoons aUhe Mount Warren, Mrs. ·arriett Warner, · tl.le Rev . Mr. Jackson, and Miss
Moriah Baptist Church in Mrs. Sherman Butler, Mrs . . ~udy McCieod on behalf of her
Middleport was concluded· Ha•'l'ison Bentley. First Bapti~t· g1·oup presented the gift to the
Sunday with recognition of Church, Rutland; )Irs. Julius Rev . Mr. Key .
those completing the two McCieud,
Mrs.
Arnold . Closi~g remarks ~ere by
courses offered and a program Richards, Judy McCieod, and Mrs. Bernice Borden, director_ ,.
of poe try , meditations · and Mrs. Ervin Bumgardner, Mount of the school of religion for the
music.
Moriah , and Mrs. William Providence District; Mrs. Mrs. Arnold Richards and Smith, Forest Run Baptist Dorothy Lewis, president of the
Mrs. Allen Hampton were co- Church. '
Wo111en's _Auxiliary o f thecha,irnlen f~r the school . with
Mrs. Ri~hards had charge of Providence District; Carlos
, .:,·
Mr. Eddie Buffington, student the closing program with Judy Thompson of Chillicothe, the ') · ~· .
k~ U · U I I
al ·the . Kentucky Christian McCieod as mistress of Rev. Mr. Jackson, tht&gt; Rev . Mr.
•. !
:Co~
College, Grayson, ·Ky., giving ceremonies. Mrs. Buller gave a Key, and Mrs. Hampton.
TUESDAY WAS CLEAN-UP DAY on Locust St. in
. the keynote address on · the medley of poetry including My
The benedictior. was given by
Middleport. Den 3 of Cub Scout· Pack 245 spent time arter
Den 2 of Pack 245 Cub Scouts
"Christian Fellowship." study Gift, The True Atlas, Crossing the Rev . Mr. Jackson whil~\the . school clearing the area of debris as anotber phase in the
visited the museum at the
series.
the Bar, Absalom, my Ab· group was in a friendship "circle
national SOAR (Save Our American Resources) project. In
Forest Acres Park after school
'llhe · Rev. Samuel Jackson, salom; Mrs. Warren presented, to sing Blest Be the · Tie that
.
Tuesday.
They had a trea t at
the group were David Schuler, Jamie Scally, James Gheen,
pastor of the Naomi Baptist · A Sure Way to Keep Happy and Binds . Sandwiches, cookies,
McClure's Dairy Isle before
Gregory Knapp, Max Geary, and Randy Batey, a new cub.
Church, was instructor for the' Mrs. Warner, Your Portrai.t.
and punch were served. Mrs.
leaving for the park.
·'----course • The . 70's - OpAppreciation offerings for the Hampton served as registrar
They were assisted by their den leader •Mrs, Marion Francis.
Mrs. Frances Whittington and
portunities for Your Church. two ministers who taught the for t11e school with ·Mrs. Bowles
Cookies and Kooi-Aidwere served by Mrs. Francis when the
Mrs . · Jean . Thomas, den
Ennilled were Carl Williams, classes were taken. Mrs. as her assistant;
project was completed. '
mothers, accompanied Kevin
Julius McCieod , Arnold
King, Keith Doss, Dorsel
Richards, Mrs. Will Winston,
Thomas and Leslie Whittington,
Mrs. Oscar Hardway, Mount
Jr. on the trip. Games were
Moriah Baptist Church: Mrs.
played and a singspiration held
Susie · Venable , Mr.s. Lois
Mrs. Roy Spencer reminisced on events of Mrs. Simpson's life, before the youngsters returned
Roberson, Oscar Qualls, Mrs.
A surprise tribute to Mrs. Lavinia Simpson on her 76th
to Middleport.
•
Hampton , Naomi .. Baplijt birthday anniversal'}' highlight. I the Friday night meeting of the relating both the humorous and the somber times from her early
Church.
·
· Happy· Hustlers Class of the Racine W~sleyan United Methodist childhood.
Her musical inclinations, her interest in church and com·
Your Faith in This Mirror was Church. ·
munily,
her family devotion , were included in the commentary on
NAMES OMITTED
the course taught by the Rev.
Festured in that tribute was a poem written by Mrs. Simp·
people
and
places
important
in
the
life
of
Mrs.
Simpson.
·
Mr.
and Mrs. William T.
Henry Key, pastor of the Mount .;.n•s daughter, Mrs. Marian Knightstep of Columbus, in response
Married in 1922 at Beaver, Pa., to the late George Simpson, the Grueser were guests at a
to an invitation tot~ party honoring her mother.
·.f\
couple, their daughter, Marian, and a son, James, moved in 1933 ~well party Sunday at the
It was entitled My Mother : ·
"I have thought about my mother since your letter came last to Racine where Mr. Simpson opened a drug store. Mrs. Simpson -leport Church of Christ
has two grandChildren, Steve,.a student at Southern High School, honoring Mrs. Gladys Mowrey
HOSPITAL NEWS
week"THE CREATOR OF
who will move-to California next
and
Ali~ia,
who
attends
school
jn
Columbus.
·
Of
all
the
things
I'd
say
to
her
if
I
were
there
to
speak.
.
,.
REASONABLE DRUG PRICES"
· Congratulatory ll)essages from ·Mrs. Sybil Miles and her week. Their names were
Holzer Medical Center, First
daughter, Mrs. Lee Jackson of Columbus, both formerly of unintentionally omitted from an
Ave. and Cedar St. General 1suppose I'd say she's gentle when She comes into my mind;
PHONE 992·5759
Racine, were read .
· earlier account 'o! the party.
visiting hours 24 and 7-8 p. m. Always soft and sweet and easy, never harsh and not unkind.
2~ 1 N. Second ~ve.,
An arrangement of roses from her daughter was presented to
Maternity visiting hours 2:30 to
4:30 p. m. _ ~rents only on She was pretty and She smelled good and it always seemed to me, Mrs. Simpson along with a lamb cake symbolic of the Lenten
Middleport, Ohio
Ca nce r of the colon nml rec·
Pediatrics Ward.
She surpassed all the requiremen·ts of What Mothers Ought To season made by Mrs. C\ll'tis Johnson.
tum st rikes Ame rican men and '
Apotluck dinner was served in the social rooms of the church. women about equall v an d is
BIRTHS
Be!
Mr. and Mrs. Khwaja A. Aziz,
The Easter program opened with a vocal selection "Alone in seco nd cml y to skin Cancer in
But th e American
Dark Gethsemane" by 1&gt;1rs. Garrell Circle, Mrs. Hilton WoJ!'c, incidence.
Athens, a son; Mr. and Mrs. She's forever effervescing with enthusiastic zeal
Cancer Society says almost
Sr., and Mrs . Simpson accompanied at the plano. by Mrs. Robert thr ee nul of four persons with
Herbert E: Skaggs, Ray. a son; Whether planning Sunrise Service or a Happy Hustler meal.
Mr . .and Mrs. John D. Wood,
Roush.
colon-rectum cance r 'could be
Jackson, a son; Mr. and Mrs. If the building needs repairing or the choir robes need replaced,
Types of crosses used through the years discussed during the shved by early diagnosis and
Larry D. Franz, Ironton , a son; If the annex looks bedraggled or the walls have been deiaced,
program included the Latin, the Celtic, the anchor, aud the prompt treatment. The Procto
Mr. and Mrs. Robert T. Poloyn, If the pastor's house needs painting, if his salary is delayed,
triumph. The group sang "He Lives" and there was a Biblical exam helps diagnose the disease Carly.
Gallipolis, a son; and Mr . and
She'll be on the phone or on your porch to see your pledge is paid! quiz on Easter. It was noted that the word "Easter" means
Mrs . James L. Groves,
Goddess oi Spring and appears only once in the scriptures, Acts
Ewington, a son.
·
DISCHARGES ·
She can play the hymns or sing them, or greet each one by name; 124.
.Mrs. Owen Watson presided at the business meeting during
Miss Nellie Adams, Paul llistherwiththeAIITimeGreatsinthe church'sHallofFame!!
which time a donation was made to the George Thompson Kidney
Bearhs, Eric L. Crosier, Mrs.
Fund. A gill was also made to the church treasury . Plans were
'
Curtis Dalton and infant
Doing a takeoff of Ralph Edwards' This Is Your Ufe series, made to send Easter remembrances to shutins.
daughter. Carol Delong, Alva
Holsinger, Mrs. Olan Hysell,
Linda Mahorn, Mrs. Melvin I
Moore, Coby Pounds, Harold
70 Series Super Wide Tread
Featuring
Hickard, Sr., Robert Rob~rts ,
Tma Ruth, Mrs. Genevteve
Saxton, Mrs. Nellie Sayre, Mrs.-· An •\'l'ganizational m~e ting of
Thomas Scott, Mrs. Victoria the P irs and Spares Class of
'
For That Distinctive Appearance
Stacy and David Winkler.
the Bradbury Church .of Christ
Observance of "Vaudeville
~·
was held recen tly in the ~urch
Days", Cub Scout theme for
~'
By Katie Crow
I
Here's a distinctive tire in every direction ,
social room.
April, was planned at a ll)eeting.
from its smart raised solid white letters to
Prayer by Jerry Davis
of Middleport Pack 245 leaders
BA~QUET TONIGHT
its totally new level of performance. The
Tuesday a t the American
The annual All-Southeastern opened the meeting . Officers
The
guilty
verdict
handed
down
Monday
by
a
six
officer
jury
combination
of 2 Fiber Glass Belts over a
(i)hio Athletic League basketball elected were Sarah' Bechtle, against Lt. William L. Calley, Jr., for premeditated murder on Legion Hall.
body of 2 bias pli es of tough Dynacor high
Den assignments to groups
banquet will be held at Waverly, president; Kathy King, vice March 16, 1968, has brought red blooded Americans toJheir feet.
tensile rayon, r educes tread di stortion and
which will depict the different
beginning at 7 'o'clock this president; Jerry Davis,
It
seems
to
be
a
grave
miscarriage
of
justice.
Lt.
Calley
increases tread life.
evening. The affair will be held treasurer : Susie Shrimplin, certainly didn't ask to go to Vietnam. Sadly enough, war is ugly facets of vaudeville were made.
secretary-reporter,
and
Paula
·
Areas to be presented are
at Lake White ..
Haynes and Marty Nicholson, and causes extreme tragedy.
music , tumblers and stilt
What confuses me is the word premeditated. It is difficult to walkers. Present for the
project chairmen .
Sharon Roush was reported ill believe that actions of men in a combat war zone· are planning session were Mrs.
at the Holzer Medical Center. premeditated. It certainly seems, from all articles appearing in Jeanne Cart, den leader coach,
Bill Carter, the clas.s teacher, newspapers and other news media, that -Lt. Calley ts playing the Mrs . Jean Thomas and Mrs.
.
had scripture and the closing role of the scapegoat.
Milford Hysell, den . mothers,
prayer. A potluck dinner was
In my opinion the Calley incident should never have been and Milford Hysell, webelos
992-7161
MIDDLE PORT,
served
to
Davis,
Miss
King,
brought to trial. The military should have handled the situation in leader .
CERTIFIED 'WELDER
Miss Shrimplin, Miss Bechtle, a manner befitting the Army. Bulthe Army, through its action,
Portable Equl'pment
' Miss Nicholson, class members has lost prestige.
Shop or Field
and guests, Mrs. Bill Carter,
Chances to fol-m an all volunteer Army seem to have gone
Ph. 992-2511
Rick and Brett, and Kevin King. down the drain,
.
Frank Epple and Jerry Van
What protection do we hav~ \hat this same situation will not
lnwagen contributed to the happen again? The Army trains recruits to fight - kill or be killed
Locust St.
Middleport dinner. Games were played - and hands out the ammunition to perform deeds of atrocity.
"';,;,;;;,;;.;;,;,;.._ _,..,..._ . following the dinner.
There are many things that have happened during wars that
in all probability were as horrible as what has been described in
Lt.
Calley's case. What would happen if all things bad were
Pre-Season
brought to light? We would quite destroy our country.
Special!
It all boils down to the fact that if we are going to be involved
in a war (which weare) why not fight the war and get it over with.
Better still no war at all.
·
Personally I am feed up with action in Vietnam or any place
for.that matter that will take the life of a young man. As John M.
McKean, Captain of the U. S. Air Force (retired), stated in a
recent article, our prayers should go out to all those concerned ·
arid perhaps even for ourselves.
Join the

C b Sco ts V's't
Museum at Park

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'
·, 7~The Daily Senth~ei, 1Middlepo~t-Pomeroy, 0.: Aprii 1, 1971

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CONCENTRATE

Reg.
1.99

}29.

.

9·9~

CLAIROL COMPACT

w

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·Foundation
Plus Powder

1.69

Shop now for Easter wl}ile 1].
selections are complete. m
Greeting Cards; Toys, ]
Novelties. Filled Baskets it
and
filling material. jj
Gills. Fine Selection of l*
Easter ~andy of All Kinds. ffi

.

vii

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I

Now

t
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And the low cost of Aman~ air C:onditi.oning
may surprise you - especially if you. install it
with your furnace . Why cool just one room
when. for ius! a I itlle more. you can cool your
~hole house?
--

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t:AS't: Tl:oRMS

F.REE E~TI~AlE

FOREMAN .&amp;
'

iiiiiOOLEPORT, 0.

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21f2

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EN,,FRANKLIN':l
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PHONE ,
202 East Main
.992-3498
Pomeroy,Ohto
• OPEN FRIDAY~ SATUR~~y. 'NIG.HTS ~~~ 9

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•,--~--~~----I

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1.49

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Reg. t58 · .

99

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FOAM BRONZER

Regular
Fine

Blue
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Light, Medium
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Windsong or Beloved

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Only

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COlOGNE
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ALL ITEMs ON SALE THROUGH A~L lrcl
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8- The !Jilly Sentinel, Middleport,Pomeroy, 0 ., April!, !971
The Bible's "Tree of Life" t·ause 11 is the food tree of
prob~bly was the date palm . I he desert and helps to reed
It is still a tree Ill life be· millions of people.
..

1:~~s~::r!::::~h:::l~n~~=~~~:il i

death of John Hoflner, )9, the Rev. Robert Smythe ofModesto, C~lif., 'for mer ficiating. Burial lil!S • in
Pomeroy resident, at a Modesto Lakewood Me(llorial Park at
hospital. Mr . Hoffner has Modesto.
resided in Modesto llie past 24
years . He was a retired
maintenance man .'
.,
Survi~. . ·-are ;'ihree sons,
INJURY NOT SERIOUS
Clarence M., of Modesto;
. Elmer L. of Moss Beach, and
CINCINN AT! (UP! )
Leonard L. of Columbus, Ohio ; Cincinnati Reds first baseman
a daughter, Mrs. Alyce M. Lee May apparently will not
Maddox, also of Columbus; 3 require surgery on his injured
brother, Herman Hoffner of left knee, but the ligament
Pomeroy , five ·grandchildren, strain will keep him out of the
and seven great-grandchildren. first two weeks of the season.
Funeral services were held on
March 17 at the Salas Brothers
,
AGREES ON $80,000
CINCINNATI (UP!) - AllAmerican LaSalle forward Ken
Durrett has come to terms on a
five -year con tract with the
Cincinnati Royals for an annual
sa.lary reported to be in the
CALL 992-2057
range of $80,000.
Pickup &amp; Delivery

La1,1ndry &amp;
Dry Cleaning

BAKER

.

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FURNITURE .
MIDDLEPORT,

I'

9·

HOME LAUNDRY
2nd Ave.

Middleport

In 1963 the 114-day ,New· Y01·k
City newspaper sltike, longest
in the history of the industry at
U1a t ·time, came to an· end .

..

frnllll

1111111

1111111

I April
I
12 and 3 _

and

I

9 AM · 9 PM

1

SATURDAY~
2 DAYS. ONLY 1

I

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L-------------------------------------~

Why Travel All Over, When You Can Shop One -Lot and See:
'

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.Mobile Homes· Galore!
.. ~

·' :. 'I. ... "'' ~ • ..,... ·~ • .,.

~· ~

..... ..

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I

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il

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OVER 40 HOMES
FROM ·WHICH TO CHOOSE
12'- 14'- 24' WIDE

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R. B. Addkison, 46, of Houston. ;,I thiilk it ought til go all the way
.tiJ ·the ·President." ':
·
'Nuernberg No P•rallel'
LeOnard Vainio, 32, a Butte, Mont., optometrist, ~id: •"i'bere is
no.connection between the two questions. I have mixed emotjons
about the Calley verdict. However, I think it was fair to c&lt;vJducl
·war t.ri$ against the Gerinans and Japanese. But Johnsob and
Westmoreland are not responsible. They were not connected with
individual crimes."
·
"I think the Nuernberg war crimes trial set a p~oper precedent
for brigands and international criminals," said author ilarnet
Kane, 60, of New Orleans. ''I have seldom read such a nallseatlnfl
example of iildividual, unnecessary bruta)lty-the testimony
about the kllling of babies, of children, of ypung women. But I
would hold responsible only the men ii1 the field, the men on the

1220 Washington Boulevard
BELPRE, OHIO
Ask Ernie ShulG, Jim Parrish or Lynn Shuler about a home for you,

''

they have reasonable cause to
suspect intoxication while driving.
- Rep. George 1&lt;: . Mastics, RFairview Park, i~oduced a
bill to provide $37 millllm for the
operation and staffing Of drug
treatment centers. fu Ohio.

JANE HAYMAKER

'

Sarah Willis of Glouster, Ohio
visited two days last week with
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Williams at ·
Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Wamsley
of Clifton had the following
guests over the weekend : Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Wamsley and
daughter of Newark, Ohio; Mr .
and Mrs. Norman Smith,
Detroit, Mich.; Miss Bonnie
Wamsley, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Roush and family
of Columbus.
Mrs. Benton Blake o( Clifton
fell at her home on Monday
m!rning and broke her llip. She
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center by Foglesong ambulance.
Harry Joe Van Meter·, a
student at Glenville State
College visited his parents, Mr .
and Mrs. Bill VanMeter at
Clifton over the weekend.

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., I CQ.n ·
tinuously I.

Colonel·
-

POMEROY, OHIO

NEWCOMERS JO
OUR COMMUNITY

.

WE I VITE YOUR ACCOUNT
COME IN AND SEE US! .

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VAN YL-ITE LATEX INTER I0R..
PAINT

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NEW
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standing ·1stex PJin; made with a new Acrylic Vinyl La·te)( Polymer .
ADAPTABLE for all
types of int!rior walls and '
ce.lflngs- ECONOM I CAL
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surfaces. use lap -water for
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GALLON

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Cepaeol

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.. .OUR COMPLETE
~-~AINT DEPAR TMENP'---"'

.992-~181

I
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· "EVERYTHI.NG IN HARDWARE"

now. MAIN

Pomeroy Gas
. Bills to Rise

. ,'l,

·Ebersbach ·Hard.ware.

\

EROY, ,- OHIO

BUFFER
IN
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LET'S G(J, .•
MEIGS COUNTY! I

Station Open
.24 Hours

Come.Join. In The Fun! ,
(EVERYBODY,CA" -BUY AT 'LANDMARK)~

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rlfPOSIIS NOW INSIJkfll fO S.11Jillll HY I II It

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Member Federal Reserve System

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OF OUR GREAT VALUES

patterns.

store Open Mon.
Sat. Until 6 f'.M.

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·ties, more in colors,

(

POMEROY, 0.

I

Register At Store
Or Ser.flee Station ·

House-to-house solicitation in
Middleport totaled $155.65 for ·
the George Thompson Kidney.
Fund, Mrs. ·Charles Kessinger,
president of the American
Legion Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett Post 128, Middleport,
said today.
In addition to the residential
canvass, the unit received $5
from Jack Bechtle, $2 from
Mark V, $5 from the Dorcas
Circle of the First Baptist
Church, and $43 from the
American· Legion Auxiliary of
-Post 128.

It's easy to put together
the right look with our
suits and sportcoats
plus - shirts, slacks,

~

· TODAY '
F'RIDAY
.SATURDAY

PRIZES-BARGAINS-REFRESHMENTS
.
.

LOSE UGLY fAT

DISCOUNT PRICES
THURSDAY·FRIDAY·SATURDAY

The Farmers .Bank
and Savings Co.

.

Everybody's Invited! ·

.

$156 Added' to ·
Thompson Fund

Join -the Celebration at LANDMARK.

CAN BUY AT LANDMARK
EVERYONE CAN!

troops."
should have got a medal. He
When the silvery-haired Ford, should be made a general."
53; finished the reading of the
sentence, _Cot. Reid W. Kennedy, the jud.ge, said c'risply :
.
.
"This coijrt is closed." ·
You can start losmg we1ght
,
. today. MONADE;X 1s., a tiny
Calley · w~llted slowly from .tablet and ' ea sY to fake .
the room Wlth hts attorneys ·to MONAD~X will help.curb your.
the defense. office, where 'Miss desiro for excess food. Eat less ·
Moore talked with llim.
. weigh less . Contains . no
He said goodby to his dangerous drugs and will not
attorneys and MiSs Moore who make you ne_rvous. No
· '
she nuous exe r ct se . Change
dtd not weep; and was ·taken by your tile .. . start today:
police to board a car for the MONAD EX costs s3.oo for a 20
stockade . On the ~idewalk day supply. Lose ugly· fat or
outside, he snapped a salute to your money will_ be refunded
a shouting crowd of 150.
with no q ~es t1ons .asked .
" They cruCified him" MONADEX " sold w1th this
· - ·"
. guarantee by: Swts..er &amp; ~Me
screamed one woman_. Wa r IS ~ Pomeroy &amp; Dutton Drug
hell. LL Calley killed 100 store--Middleport. Mail Orders·
Communists single-handed. He Filled.
·

BRUI;EADAMS

2:Going to Conference

•'

YOU

"Hard labor'' is an archaic
legal term, ar.."'fding to Army
.
law authorities, who ·say there
is no such thing ·in the Army
(Continued from pag ~ 1)
salute . before the court ·pres- •nymore as breaking rocks or
ident who llad just read the the like. He could be eligible for
sentence of life at hard labOr, patole in aboullO years .
dismissal, and forfeitunl of his . ' Mood In Courtroom
$773.10 monthly pay plus Calley's rusty hair was a .bit
allowances.
.
. rumpled as he ·arrived in· the
"I'll do my besl, sir," ·Calley 'red, white, and blue 'decor
said as the court president, Col. . courtroom where the trial
Clifford H. Ford, returned his bega~ NOv. 12. In the audience
salute.
sat his- girl friend, red-haired
His best at Ft. Leavenworth Ann Moore.
might include applying )limself The day before, he - had
at an opportunity to resume his tearfully told the jury that he
college ·career- he was a junior n·~ver wantonly killed a human
college dropout-ar taking up a being in his life and that the
trade inside the . correctional only crime he committed was
"to value the lives of my

University of Kansas student Daniel F. Evans said: "There are
many high officials, all the way til Johnson and )'lixon, who are
· just as guilty Of what was goiilg on. There are others ... faceleu
people in the Pentagon who are just as guilty."
· "At Nuernberg," said Mary Sonis, 55, .a Charlestlln, W.Va.,
'secretary, "we were convicting the leaders ~f a nation which

into thin air
when you pin them down
·in .a,Savings Account at ~

Mrs. Lillian Singer has heen
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital for a week.
Mrs. W. H. Foglesong has
been returned to her home in
Mason after heing hospitalized
at the Gallipolis Medical Center
for several weeks.
·Mrs. Nellie Zahr'1J(t has been
returned from tlfe Pleasant
Valley Hospital and is a patient
at Eleanor -Eidson Rest Home at
Letart, W. Va .
Mr . Earl Schwarz of Miami,
Florida, re(urned to his home
after several days visit with his
mother, Mrs. Nellie Schwarz,
who is ill . Mrs. Schwarz will be
93 years old May I.

ReliVed.

scene."

DOLLARS CAN'T

Mason Area

r ·.

;·:(@·; persons
re~;~di;~o~~
~~~~~e
among ::cfm~~~ ::~'::~~: ~~::~
25 to 35 years old," she an arrest without a warrant if

said. "Most cases are in the
By Uol ted Press Inlema Ilona!
'PHILADELPHIA - TWO PENN CENTRAL Railroad of- early teens and there was a
ficials who refused to identify themselves testified Wednesday report of two 10-year olds with
before a federal grand jury investigating the disappearance of $1 the disease."
The bill' is designed to permillion worth of th~ firm's boxcars.
The grandiury, holding its second weekly session, was trying suade minors to seek diagnosis
and treatment of the disease
to determine how 277 boxcars disappeared from the bankr~pt
without subjecting them to emPenn Central. FBI agents and company investigators have found
more than 100 Of them. A third man, who waited all day to testify,
also refused to disclose his name.
·
NEMACOLIN, PA. - A SEARCI\ FOR two coal miners
trapped 400 feet underground was abandoned Wednesday when
rescuers determined after five days Of exploration that both men
either suffocated or burned to death. Officials then decided til
flood the mine to extinguish the fire vvithout attempting to recover
the two bodies.
More than 150 rescuers using millions of dollars worth of
equipment had worked feverishly to attempt to contact Charles
Gibson; 64, and Richard Randolph, 63, until officialS announced
that tests showed "there was no possible hope for the men."
COLUMBUS - BffiTH CONTROL iiljections would hecome
mandatory for women receiving state aid to dependent children
un~_er a bill iiltroduced in the state Ohio House by Rep. Robert E.
Netzley, R-Lauta . The bill would require birth control infections .
to be provided by city boards of health or general health districts.
The shots would be of a drng called Depo Provera, which has a
three-month conltacept'le effect.
A mother, ii1 order to receive welfare payments, would have
to be a certified recipient of the drug. Netzley, who believes birth
..
control is a prime answer to the welfare probiem, also introduced
a So-&lt;lillled bill.which allows state aid for one illegitimate'cbild but.., _ &lt;'
cuts it off for the second or any subsequent illegitimate children.
COLUMBUS -~UBLIC OFFICIALS and others who bragged
about saving money while doiilg notlling to stop pollution will
eventually cost Ohio billions of dollars, Gov. John J . Gilligan said
here Wednesday. The governor, in an address to 138 wom!m of the
~,Qev~!a!Jd, Ca!!lolic Di~se, said Lake· Erie and the Cuyahog~J,
River were examples of the cost of ignoring prohlems.'
"There were public officials and others who bragged about
saving money llycdoing nothing to stop the pollution there ljlld
elsewhere in our environment'i" said Gilligan, "The result is ;t is_
going to cost us billions of dollars to clean up the environment
when these costs could have been nipped i~ the bud if those
.
responsible had met the challenge."

a

. ',.

I

Overn. iuht
Wire
"e'

News, Notes

:,. .

i'

'I.t

L@\ ({

(Continued frlBil page I)

barrassment at having to tell
their P.rent.S.
I
.
"Great Contrlbulioll''
·Treatme~i would be financed
by public health pro!"ams. tf
.,payment wer~ not fo~~commg
from the famtly o~ ~fitld. .
"This is a great contrtbutwn .
·to the young people of our
state," said Sen. Tennyson Guyer, R-Findlay .
"In a day when we'r~ talkin2
about IS-year olds voting, 1t's
ridiculous to requtre ·young peapie to wait until they are 21 to b!!
treated for this disease vvithout
parental consent," •said Sen.
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron.
sen. Robin T. turn~r , R-Marion, voted for th~ blll but e~­
pressed r~ervations. He sald
he objected to the trend toward
cutting off the ne!!fssity of minors communicating wi!h their
parents.
In ' other legislative activity:
- The House votCd 70-20 to
retUrn to the Judiciary Commit-

annihilated 6 million people and atteri\pted to eradicate an entire
race.. We were trying them primarily for the concentratlon camps
away from the battlefield. Calley was tried directly for his action
at the battlefield as an individual soldier.''
,
. "lwas in ravor Of the Nueplberg trials ~a11se at that time w_e
thought Gennan leaders as a whole had ·g1ven orders w·commtl
.atrocities a_gainSt the Jewish peopl~,"· $aid Mrs&lt; Wlllialli
Ungemach, 45, Of Pittsburgh. "Btl! in Vietnam I don't· think any
such orllers were eVI!r given by the Pfesident or General West·
morelan«&lt;. We always thought Americans didn't do thiilgs .like
that. Now we find we can. Maybe Calley is sort Of a seapegoat, but
somewhere along the line this must be stopped."
Diane' Petryk, a 1\Jichigan State University student, said, "I
don't think you can use one lieutenant as a scapegoat for the
aciions .Of a whole army.'' .
'
.
.

YOUR

r-----------------------.
--------------,
.
I
FRIDAY . I

.,

I,

c.ailey Case . ,

'fo------------------.

•

'·

·
·
•
By LEE LEONARD
A notiCe signed by Albritton questions abo~! P\l.rti.culars.
UP! Statehouse Rep1lrler
- appeared on the bulletin board
The Senate Wedne~ay unani., COLUMBUS (UP! ) .
Of the Statehouse press room · mously approved and sent til the
Remember the 2 per cent stating the bill had been "inad- House a bill authOrizing the
education income tax proposal vert.enUy" introduced and filed tre~tnuint of minors for venera!
that was'beralded Tuesday as a "iil error" with the Housederk. ' disease . without parental conpossible Republican alternative • He said be had asked--Rep, sent and absolving the parents
to Gov: John J. Gilligan's fiscal Keith McNamara , R.Columbus, Of liability for payment.
plans?
chairman of the House
The bill, sponsored by Sen.
Reference Committee, to kill Clara E. Weisenborn , RForget it.
the bill without referring it to a Dayton, was unanimously given
Not that it was a pr~mature standing committee for emergency status by the
April Fool's joke, but the spon- :·heariilgs . . Such requests are Senate, .eliminating the normal
sor, Rep. David D. Albritton, R- normally honored by Me- !HHlay waiting period if it is
Dayton, killed the bill Wednes- Nama~a.
signed by the. governor.
day
as - quickly
and
Asked LSC To Prepare
Mrs. Weisenborn said venera!
mysteriously as he had in- When the bilhwas introduced disease had beEl,n controlled by
troduced it 24 hours earlier.
Tuesday, Albritton was just re- the ~nd of World War II, but
Albritton, a former OI~mpic turning from a lengthy stay in "due to the promiscuity of our
lligh jumper, apparently waso the hospital. He said it was one young people it is ragiilg out of
sent into orbit by telephone calls Of a number of bills he had control again."
.
to his office when it was asked the· Legislative Service There was rus.tling among a
discovered he was sponsoring a Commission to prepare for him large delegation of school pupils
county income tax and an 8 per and asked for time to study its in the galleries.
cent tax on busine~ . ·
provisions before answering Mrs. Weisenborn said Montgomery County reported 500
new cases of the disease since
3 i
' {i' . , j l [
Jan. I, and that Los Angeles had

'

. 9-: The Dally 8entinei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April I, 1971 .
.,

Heralded ·GOJ?·:Bill With_drawn

:{

. '•.

'

\

POMEROY
.'

We Are Expa~~lng Our Veterina-ry ·o.ept.
SHOP US FOR PET AND

Ll¥ESTOCK REMEDIES!
We have
Antibiotics a~d. othe.r Veterinary
- ~eterinary
.
'

Health Care Products. May we help you?;

~,

�,'

•
(

'

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~

'-

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·
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·'

8- The !Jilly Sentinel, Middleport,Pomeroy, 0 ., April!, !971
The Bible's "Tree of Life" t·ause 11 is the food tree of
prob~bly was the date palm . I he desert and helps to reed
It is still a tree Ill life be· millions of people.
..

1:~~s~::r!::::~h:::l~n~~=~~~:il i

death of John Hoflner, )9, the Rev. Robert Smythe ofModesto, C~lif., 'for mer ficiating. Burial lil!S • in
Pomeroy resident, at a Modesto Lakewood Me(llorial Park at
hospital. Mr . Hoffner has Modesto.
resided in Modesto llie past 24
years . He was a retired
maintenance man .'
.,
Survi~. . ·-are ;'ihree sons,
INJURY NOT SERIOUS
Clarence M., of Modesto;
. Elmer L. of Moss Beach, and
CINCINN AT! (UP! )
Leonard L. of Columbus, Ohio ; Cincinnati Reds first baseman
a daughter, Mrs. Alyce M. Lee May apparently will not
Maddox, also of Columbus; 3 require surgery on his injured
brother, Herman Hoffner of left knee, but the ligament
Pomeroy , five ·grandchildren, strain will keep him out of the
and seven great-grandchildren. first two weeks of the season.
Funeral services were held on
March 17 at the Salas Brothers
,
AGREES ON $80,000
CINCINNATI (UP!) - AllAmerican LaSalle forward Ken
Durrett has come to terms on a
five -year con tract with the
Cincinnati Royals for an annual
sa.lary reported to be in the
CALL 992-2057
range of $80,000.
Pickup &amp; Delivery

La1,1ndry &amp;
Dry Cleaning

BAKER

.

'

.

FURNITURE .
MIDDLEPORT,

I'

9·

HOME LAUNDRY
2nd Ave.

Middleport

In 1963 the 114-day ,New· Y01·k
City newspaper sltike, longest
in the history of the industry at
U1a t ·time, came to an· end .

..

frnllll

1111111

1111111

I April
I
12 and 3 _

and

I

9 AM · 9 PM

1

SATURDAY~
2 DAYS. ONLY 1

I

.

L-------------------------------------~

Why Travel All Over, When You Can Shop One -Lot and See:
'

.

.Mobile Homes· Galore!
.. ~

·' :. 'I. ... "'' ~ • ..,... ·~ • .,.

~· ~

..... ..

·~

..... .• l

I

D
il

.

.

'

.,'•
:-

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OVER 40 HOMES
FROM ·WHICH TO CHOOSE
12'- 14'- 24' WIDE

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R. B. Addkison, 46, of Houston. ;,I thiilk it ought til go all the way
.tiJ ·the ·President." ':
·
'Nuernberg No P•rallel'
LeOnard Vainio, 32, a Butte, Mont., optometrist, ~id: •"i'bere is
no.connection between the two questions. I have mixed emotjons
about the Calley verdict. However, I think it was fair to c&lt;vJducl
·war t.ri$ against the Gerinans and Japanese. But Johnsob and
Westmoreland are not responsible. They were not connected with
individual crimes."
·
"I think the Nuernberg war crimes trial set a p~oper precedent
for brigands and international criminals," said author ilarnet
Kane, 60, of New Orleans. ''I have seldom read such a nallseatlnfl
example of iildividual, unnecessary bruta)lty-the testimony
about the kllling of babies, of children, of ypung women. But I
would hold responsible only the men ii1 the field, the men on the

1220 Washington Boulevard
BELPRE, OHIO
Ask Ernie ShulG, Jim Parrish or Lynn Shuler about a home for you,

''

they have reasonable cause to
suspect intoxication while driving.
- Rep. George 1&lt;: . Mastics, RFairview Park, i~oduced a
bill to provide $37 millllm for the
operation and staffing Of drug
treatment centers. fu Ohio.

JANE HAYMAKER

'

Sarah Willis of Glouster, Ohio
visited two days last week with
Mr. and Mrs. Uoyd Williams at ·
Clifton.
Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Wamsley
of Clifton had the following
guests over the weekend : Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Wamsley and
daughter of Newark, Ohio; Mr .
and Mrs. Norman Smith,
Detroit, Mich.; Miss Bonnie
Wamsley, Columbus; Mr. and
Mrs. Ronald Roush and family
of Columbus.
Mrs. Benton Blake o( Clifton
fell at her home on Monday
m!rning and broke her llip. She
was taken to Holzer Medical
Center by Foglesong ambulance.
Harry Joe Van Meter·, a
student at Glenville State
College visited his parents, Mr .
and Mrs. Bill VanMeter at
Clifton over the weekend.

On Fridays Our Drive-In Window
is Open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m., I CQ.n ·
tinuously I.

Colonel·
-

POMEROY, OHIO

NEWCOMERS JO
OUR COMMUNITY

.

WE I VITE YOUR ACCOUNT
COME IN AND SEE US! .

.

VAN YL-ITE LATEX INTER I0R..
PAINT

• •

I

•:

I

E. M,rn .St.

I

Vt
Ill .
.-~ W1gvvvv
..

'·

IMPROVED

NEW
'VANYt. - ITE - an
out ·
standing ·1stex PJin; made with a new Acrylic Vinyl La·te)( Polymer .
ADAPTABLE for all
types of int!rior walls and '
ce.lflngs- ECONOM I CAL
- one coal covers most
surfaces. use lap -water for
thinn i ng EASY TO
APPLY - by brush , roller,
or sp.fay DR ·I ES
RAP'IDLY in thir.ty
minutes leaving no un pleasant odor - GLEAN
EASILY - wash equip ment in warm, soapy water
- 1 SUPERIOR
WASHABILITY - dirt and
firfger prints wash off
easilv because the . new
·vanvl -i le h.as unsurpassed
water resistance .

GALLON

1.29

Cepaeol

85

VVV

)

'

.

SHOP
.. .OUR COMPLETE
~-~AINT DEPAR TMENP'---"'

.992-~181

I
\

...... , .. .

· "EVERYTHI.NG IN HARDWARE"

now. MAIN

Pomeroy Gas
. Bills to Rise

. ,'l,

·Ebersbach ·Hard.ware.

\

EROY, ,- OHIO

BUFFER
IN
. .-

LET'S G(J, .•
MEIGS COUNTY! I

Station Open
.24 Hours

Come.Join. In The Fun! ,
(EVERYBODY,CA" -BUY AT 'LANDMARK)~

·..

'New York Clothing House

rlfPOSIIS NOW INSIJkfll fO S.11Jillll HY I II It

•

.

.

Member Federal Reserve System

·'

'

OF OUR GREAT VALUES

patterns.

store Open Mon.
Sat. Until 6 f'.M.

'

.

·ties, more in colors,

(

POMEROY, 0.

I

Register At Store
Or Ser.flee Station ·

House-to-house solicitation in
Middleport totaled $155.65 for ·
the George Thompson Kidney.
Fund, Mrs. ·Charles Kessinger,
president of the American
Legion Auxiliary of FeeneyBennett Post 128, Middleport,
said today.
In addition to the residential
canvass, the unit received $5
from Jack Bechtle, $2 from
Mark V, $5 from the Dorcas
Circle of the First Baptist
Church, and $43 from the
American· Legion Auxiliary of
-Post 128.

It's easy to put together
the right look with our
suits and sportcoats
plus - shirts, slacks,

~

· TODAY '
F'RIDAY
.SATURDAY

PRIZES-BARGAINS-REFRESHMENTS
.
.

LOSE UGLY fAT

DISCOUNT PRICES
THURSDAY·FRIDAY·SATURDAY

The Farmers .Bank
and Savings Co.

.

Everybody's Invited! ·

.

$156 Added' to ·
Thompson Fund

Join -the Celebration at LANDMARK.

CAN BUY AT LANDMARK
EVERYONE CAN!

troops."
should have got a medal. He
When the silvery-haired Ford, should be made a general."
53; finished the reading of the
sentence, _Cot. Reid W. Kennedy, the jud.ge, said c'risply :
.
.
"This coijrt is closed." ·
You can start losmg we1ght
,
. today. MONADE;X 1s., a tiny
Calley · w~llted slowly from .tablet and ' ea sY to fake .
the room Wlth hts attorneys ·to MONAD~X will help.curb your.
the defense. office, where 'Miss desiro for excess food. Eat less ·
Moore talked with llim.
. weigh less . Contains . no
He said goodby to his dangerous drugs and will not
attorneys and MiSs Moore who make you ne_rvous. No
· '
she nuous exe r ct se . Change
dtd not weep; and was ·taken by your tile .. . start today:
police to board a car for the MONAD EX costs s3.oo for a 20
stockade . On the ~idewalk day supply. Lose ugly· fat or
outside, he snapped a salute to your money will_ be refunded
a shouting crowd of 150.
with no q ~es t1ons .asked .
" They cruCified him" MONADEX " sold w1th this
· - ·"
. guarantee by: Swts..er &amp; ~Me
screamed one woman_. Wa r IS ~ Pomeroy &amp; Dutton Drug
hell. LL Calley killed 100 store--Middleport. Mail Orders·
Communists single-handed. He Filled.
·

BRUI;EADAMS

2:Going to Conference

•'

YOU

"Hard labor'' is an archaic
legal term, ar.."'fding to Army
.
law authorities, who ·say there
is no such thing ·in the Army
(Continued from pag ~ 1)
salute . before the court ·pres- •nymore as breaking rocks or
ident who llad just read the the like. He could be eligible for
sentence of life at hard labOr, patole in aboullO years .
dismissal, and forfeitunl of his . ' Mood In Courtroom
$773.10 monthly pay plus Calley's rusty hair was a .bit
allowances.
.
. rumpled as he ·arrived in· the
"I'll do my besl, sir," ·Calley 'red, white, and blue 'decor
said as the court president, Col. . courtroom where the trial
Clifford H. Ford, returned his bega~ NOv. 12. In the audience
salute.
sat his- girl friend, red-haired
His best at Ft. Leavenworth Ann Moore.
might include applying )limself The day before, he - had
at an opportunity to resume his tearfully told the jury that he
college ·career- he was a junior n·~ver wantonly killed a human
college dropout-ar taking up a being in his life and that the
trade inside the . correctional only crime he committed was
"to value the lives of my

University of Kansas student Daniel F. Evans said: "There are
many high officials, all the way til Johnson and )'lixon, who are
· just as guilty Of what was goiilg on. There are others ... faceleu
people in the Pentagon who are just as guilty."
· "At Nuernberg," said Mary Sonis, 55, .a Charlestlln, W.Va.,
'secretary, "we were convicting the leaders ~f a nation which

into thin air
when you pin them down
·in .a,Savings Account at ~

Mrs. Lillian Singer has heen
patient at Veterans Memorial
Hospital for a week.
Mrs. W. H. Foglesong has
been returned to her home in
Mason after heing hospitalized
at the Gallipolis Medical Center
for several weeks.
·Mrs. Nellie Zahr'1J(t has been
returned from tlfe Pleasant
Valley Hospital and is a patient
at Eleanor -Eidson Rest Home at
Letart, W. Va .
Mr . Earl Schwarz of Miami,
Florida, re(urned to his home
after several days visit with his
mother, Mrs. Nellie Schwarz,
who is ill . Mrs. Schwarz will be
93 years old May I.

ReliVed.

scene."

DOLLARS CAN'T

Mason Area

r ·.

;·:(@·; persons
re~;~di;~o~~
~~~~~e
among ::cfm~~~ ::~'::~~: ~~::~
25 to 35 years old," she an arrest without a warrant if

said. "Most cases are in the
By Uol ted Press Inlema Ilona!
'PHILADELPHIA - TWO PENN CENTRAL Railroad of- early teens and there was a
ficials who refused to identify themselves testified Wednesday report of two 10-year olds with
before a federal grand jury investigating the disappearance of $1 the disease."
The bill' is designed to permillion worth of th~ firm's boxcars.
The grandiury, holding its second weekly session, was trying suade minors to seek diagnosis
and treatment of the disease
to determine how 277 boxcars disappeared from the bankr~pt
without subjecting them to emPenn Central. FBI agents and company investigators have found
more than 100 Of them. A third man, who waited all day to testify,
also refused to disclose his name.
·
NEMACOLIN, PA. - A SEARCI\ FOR two coal miners
trapped 400 feet underground was abandoned Wednesday when
rescuers determined after five days Of exploration that both men
either suffocated or burned to death. Officials then decided til
flood the mine to extinguish the fire vvithout attempting to recover
the two bodies.
More than 150 rescuers using millions of dollars worth of
equipment had worked feverishly to attempt to contact Charles
Gibson; 64, and Richard Randolph, 63, until officialS announced
that tests showed "there was no possible hope for the men."
COLUMBUS - BffiTH CONTROL iiljections would hecome
mandatory for women receiving state aid to dependent children
un~_er a bill iiltroduced in the state Ohio House by Rep. Robert E.
Netzley, R-Lauta . The bill would require birth control infections .
to be provided by city boards of health or general health districts.
The shots would be of a drng called Depo Provera, which has a
three-month conltacept'le effect.
A mother, ii1 order to receive welfare payments, would have
to be a certified recipient of the drug. Netzley, who believes birth
..
control is a prime answer to the welfare probiem, also introduced
a So-&lt;lillled bill.which allows state aid for one illegitimate'cbild but.., _ &lt;'
cuts it off for the second or any subsequent illegitimate children.
COLUMBUS -~UBLIC OFFICIALS and others who bragged
about saving money while doiilg notlling to stop pollution will
eventually cost Ohio billions of dollars, Gov. John J . Gilligan said
here Wednesday. The governor, in an address to 138 wom!m of the
~,Qev~!a!Jd, Ca!!lolic Di~se, said Lake· Erie and the Cuyahog~J,
River were examples of the cost of ignoring prohlems.'
"There were public officials and others who bragged about
saving money llycdoing nothing to stop the pollution there ljlld
elsewhere in our environment'i" said Gilligan, "The result is ;t is_
going to cost us billions of dollars to clean up the environment
when these costs could have been nipped i~ the bud if those
.
responsible had met the challenge."

a

. ',.

I

Overn. iuht
Wire
"e'

News, Notes

:,. .

i'

'I.t

L@\ ({

(Continued frlBil page I)

barrassment at having to tell
their P.rent.S.
I
.
"Great Contrlbulioll''
·Treatme~i would be financed
by public health pro!"ams. tf
.,payment wer~ not fo~~commg
from the famtly o~ ~fitld. .
"This is a great contrtbutwn .
·to the young people of our
state," said Sen. Tennyson Guyer, R-Findlay .
"In a day when we'r~ talkin2
about IS-year olds voting, 1t's
ridiculous to requtre ·young peapie to wait until they are 21 to b!!
treated for this disease vvithout
parental consent," •said Sen.
Oliver Ocasek, D-Akron.
sen. Robin T. turn~r , R-Marion, voted for th~ blll but e~­
pressed r~ervations. He sald
he objected to the trend toward
cutting off the ne!!fssity of minors communicating wi!h their
parents.
In ' other legislative activity:
- The House votCd 70-20 to
retUrn to the Judiciary Commit-

annihilated 6 million people and atteri\pted to eradicate an entire
race.. We were trying them primarily for the concentratlon camps
away from the battlefield. Calley was tried directly for his action
at the battlefield as an individual soldier.''
,
. "lwas in ravor Of the Nueplberg trials ~a11se at that time w_e
thought Gennan leaders as a whole had ·g1ven orders w·commtl
.atrocities a_gainSt the Jewish peopl~,"· $aid Mrs&lt; Wlllialli
Ungemach, 45, Of Pittsburgh. "Btl! in Vietnam I don't· think any
such orllers were eVI!r given by the Pfesident or General West·
morelan«&lt;. We always thought Americans didn't do thiilgs .like
that. Now we find we can. Maybe Calley is sort Of a seapegoat, but
somewhere along the line this must be stopped."
Diane' Petryk, a 1\Jichigan State University student, said, "I
don't think you can use one lieutenant as a scapegoat for the
aciions .Of a whole army.'' .
'
.
.

YOUR

r-----------------------.
--------------,
.
I
FRIDAY . I

.,

I,

c.ailey Case . ,

'fo------------------.

•

'·

·
·
•
By LEE LEONARD
A notiCe signed by Albritton questions abo~! P\l.rti.culars.
UP! Statehouse Rep1lrler
- appeared on the bulletin board
The Senate Wedne~ay unani., COLUMBUS (UP! ) .
Of the Statehouse press room · mously approved and sent til the
Remember the 2 per cent stating the bill had been "inad- House a bill authOrizing the
education income tax proposal vert.enUy" introduced and filed tre~tnuint of minors for venera!
that was'beralded Tuesday as a "iil error" with the Housederk. ' disease . without parental conpossible Republican alternative • He said be had asked--Rep, sent and absolving the parents
to Gov: John J. Gilligan's fiscal Keith McNamara , R.Columbus, Of liability for payment.
plans?
chairman of the House
The bill, sponsored by Sen.
Reference Committee, to kill Clara E. Weisenborn , RForget it.
the bill without referring it to a Dayton, was unanimously given
Not that it was a pr~mature standing committee for emergency status by the
April Fool's joke, but the spon- :·heariilgs . . Such requests are Senate, .eliminating the normal
sor, Rep. David D. Albritton, R- normally honored by Me- !HHlay waiting period if it is
Dayton, killed the bill Wednes- Nama~a.
signed by the. governor.
day
as - quickly
and
Asked LSC To Prepare
Mrs. Weisenborn said venera!
mysteriously as he had in- When the bilhwas introduced disease had beEl,n controlled by
troduced it 24 hours earlier.
Tuesday, Albritton was just re- the ~nd of World War II, but
Albritton, a former OI~mpic turning from a lengthy stay in "due to the promiscuity of our
lligh jumper, apparently waso the hospital. He said it was one young people it is ragiilg out of
sent into orbit by telephone calls Of a number of bills he had control again."
.
to his office when it was asked the· Legislative Service There was rus.tling among a
discovered he was sponsoring a Commission to prepare for him large delegation of school pupils
county income tax and an 8 per and asked for time to study its in the galleries.
cent tax on busine~ . ·
provisions before answering Mrs. Weisenborn said Montgomery County reported 500
new cases of the disease since
3 i
' {i' . , j l [
Jan. I, and that Los Angeles had

'

. 9-: The Dally 8entinei,Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April I, 1971 .
.,

Heralded ·GOJ?·:Bill With_drawn

:{

. '•.

'

\

POMEROY
.'

We Are Expa~~lng Our Veterina-ry ·o.ept.
SHOP US FOR PET AND

Ll¥ESTOCK REMEDIES!
We have
Antibiotics a~d. othe.r Veterinary
- ~eterinary
.
'

Health Care Products. May we help you?;

~,

�&gt;&lt;•

'

..

-· ·,

..
'·

•'

'

-

IO ~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April!, 1971

. _Bargains; Bargains; afid More ·Bargailts In Sentinel Classifieds,
Miller-'s .
Business Services .J

R.UBBER STAMPS

1\1\onday Deadl ine 9 a.m .
CanceiiDtlon &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a .m . f
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS

ma~e

to . REGISTERED black ·male toy HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts ,
poodle. House brok·en. Call
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
or Wilma Casto, Portlarod,
992-3591.
r
10-25-tfc
Ohio.
3-29-6tc --"L - - - -- -- - . ,HOUSE ,'R': 7 Byflilss . 5acres al
. 2-t2-90tc

For Sale

Phone 992-6048.

2:1-FOOT Laylon camper, self-

I he

OVEN
FRES·H
bakery
3-Jl -3tc
ads
contained. Excellent con produc1s.
Jimmy '~ Pastry
deemed
obie!:tional.
The
dition. Pnone ·949-362l.
Shop, N. 2nd Ave., (l&gt;idpublisher will not be responsll:lle
3-30 Jlc CONVENIENT bul secluded
dleporl. Phone 992-3555. · .
for mOre than one incorrect
building lots ·on T79 al Rock
·
3-28-30tc - - - - - - insertion .
Springs. Wi IIi in walking
.WALNUT STEREO - Radio
RATES .
di
Stance of Meigs . High
combi.nation
.
Four
.speed
For want Ad Serv ice
THE KYGER Creek Credit
SChool,
a 5 minule dri ve from·
5.cents per Word one in ser tion
Uni on wi ll accept sealed bids · i ntermixed changer . Four
Pomeroy.
Cal l or see HUI
· - MinlniUm Charge.7S c ·
speaker sound system, dual
un til 3 p.m., Aprll9, 1971 for a
WUte · weekends, or -a ft er 5
12 cen ts per · word three
voluine
control.
Balance
1968 Ch rysler Newport and a , $67 .'40. Use our budget terms . p .m . Weekdays. . .Phone 992 consecut ive insertions.
1964 Chevrolet Malibu . Said
18 cents per word s~x con ·
6887.
Call 992-3352.
secutive insertions .
ca rs may be viewed in the
2-3-lfc
4-l-61c
25 Per cent Dis&lt;: ount on paid · parking lot at t~e plant.
ads and ads paid w it hin 10 days.
Kyger Creek Credit Union - - - - - - 24 ACRE farm at Long Boltom,
CARD OF THANKS
.
reserves
the right to reject BEAUTIFUL Colonial maple
house with 3 bedrooms, dining
&amp; OBITUARY
stereo, AM &amp; FM radio , foUr
room , kitchen, living room,
: any or all bids . Bids may be

I have noted and follo;.eil
with great interest the op·
position coming from many
· quarters
to
the
Ad·
ministration's General R£venue
Sharing plan which I ~ave cosponsored in the House.
General Revenue sharing
would return $5 billion in
federal'lax dollars to the slate
•
$1 .50 for 50 word · minimum.
and local governments to use as Each
addit ional word 2c .
they see fit with no federal
BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge per
strings attached . Unlike special Advert
isement .
revenue sharinij whi~h conOFFICE HOURS
30a .m. to 5: 00p .m . Da i ly ,
solidates one-third of the 8: 8:
30 a .m. Ia
12:00 Noon
federal categorical grant-in-aid Sat urday .
.
proglams into six broad functional areas, general revenue
sharing will be new money and Wanted
will not affect ongoing MEN NEEDED to Ira in· as
semi -drivers. Train now ta
programs.
drive semi -tractor trailer s,
After flat fy rejecting the
local and ·over the road . You
general revenue sharing con- can earn high wages after
short training . For ap cept, these critics have en- plication
and interview, ca ll
dorsed two alternate proposals : 513-241 -5572. or write Safely
Oept.. United Systems, Inc .,
I. Let Washington assume the
c-o Motor Freight Terminal
entire welfare costs now being
Bldg., 3101 Gano Rd. ;
paid by. state and local gQvern- Sharonville, Cincinnati, Ohio
45241.
ment.
4-l -2tc
2. Allowing Federal income
U,x credits for state income A COUPLE of ambulat ory
pallenls . Phone Mason 773taxes.
5712.
. It is interesting to note that
3-3l -61c
each of these alternatives have ' - - - c - - - - very serious deficiencies and
Notice
would shortchange the citizens
GUN
SHOOT, Forked Run
of Ohio. · First, the tax credit
Sportsm~n Club, Sunday,
plan would serve to stimulate
April 4 at 12 noon .
3-Jl -31c
alate Income tax efforts by
permitting taxpayers to write
GUN SHODT every Saturday
off a proportion of the tax on
night at 6 p .m . near Racine
their Federal income tax . Planlng} /\ill. Assorted mea_ts .
Sponsdl'~d by Syracuse F1re
return.
Deparlmenl.
.c.
However, under a tax credit
3-31 -3tc
plan in Ohio, 29 per cent of the
tax credits would go to local SPEC IAL .Singing tor revival
services. The Robert Perry
governments where ·me needs
family of Jackson, Dhio, wilt
· are greatest while 71 per cent
be featured at the MI . Herwould remain with the Stale
mon U. B. Church Sunday
overnment.
With
general
evening,
April 4' at 7 p. m.
g
Fveryone is welcome.
reven.ue sharing, 55 per cent of
4-l-31c
.the funds coming to the State of - - - - - -- - - .
ld t
t· II "
HYMN SING, Plants Memor ial
Oh towou
au oma tea y pass
Church, Sunday, April 4, at 2
through" to l&lt;!'cal units of
p.m. Special music by Bissell
government to use as they see
Brothers and olher groups.
fit with no "federal strings
Rev . E. J. Grlflilh will conduct services. Everyone
attached. "
welcome .
3-3 l-41c
Compared with general
revenue sharing, tax credits GUN SHOOT. Racine Gun Club.
would shortchange Ohio's
Sunday, April 4, start ing at I
P ·~' ~Qg . 12, ,16, and 20·
•1citi~s, ,.,.l:&lt;&gt;.!~· ,co111!l!,e~ ,-- ~9.~
gii\!91'· --·
tOwnsfitps: .. ,' ·
· · ·
3-31 -41p
The second alternative that
.-has been advanced is welfare COINS. Bought. sold, traded.
federailzation • in which Uncle
Complete line of supplies,
Sam would take over the total
albums, price guides . Open
daily 5 p. m. to 9 p.m . and all
cost of welfare in the country
day saturday. Freasure Chest
and thereby allow state and
Coins, · U.S. Rt . 33 Soulh
local governments to spend this
I Pomeroy Road). Athens.
savings for other purpbses._ Ohio. 10 per cenl off on any
Estimates for FY 1972 show
supp lies with this ad. 3-26-61c
welfare spending at $10.3 billion - -- - _- - - - for all programs with the state• WILL DO tailor ing and
.
upholstery . Phone 992-3561.
and local share expected .to be
3-3l -30ic
$4.5 billion.
Non-federal welfare costs in MADAM MARY - PALMISTRY .
Reader
and
Ohio would total $121.8 million
advisor . Tells past, prese nt
or 2.7 per cent of the national
and future . I will tel l you ius I
what you want to know about
total. In terms of fiscal relief,
friends and enemies . I give
an obvious disparity in this
never failing advice on all
approach is the fac't that three
mailers of
life.
707 112
Wa
shi
nglo
n
Blvd
..
Belpre
.
stales - New ·York, California,
Ohio. Look for sign. For
and ' Massachusetts - would
appoin tm ent ca ll 421-9153.
receive ~I per cent of the total
3-24-IOi c
Federal
government
payment.
•
Mt. Hermon U. B.
The state of Ohio and its local REVIVAL,
Ctiurch MarCh 26 to April 4.·
, 'governments would be relieved
Rev .
Carey
Knittle ,
evangeli st, Cincinnati . Rev .
of $121 million in welfare costs.
Freeland
Norris,
song
Under general revenue
evangelist. Stories for the
1 sharing, however , Ohio would
children. Everyone welcome .
7:30p.m. ea ch evening .
' receive $212.5 million or 4.3 per
3-23-IOle
' cent of the total distribution of
national benefits. Fifty-five per
NOTICE OF
cent of this amount would be
APPLICATION
Case No . 20.476
passed through to local
Estate of MITTIE M . NEL SO N
governments throughout the De ce ased.
Notice is hereby given that
states.
Cla ir 0 . Nelson of Lang sv,ille,
In c.omparison ' to both Meigs County, Ohio, has been
alternatives, · general revenue duly appointed Executor of th e
Estate of Millie M . Nelson .
, sharing is a far more equitable dec_ea
se d, late. of Langsvi ll e,
t and efficie nt manner of Me tgs County , Ohio.
Creditors are required lo fil e
1, distributing fiscal relief to hard- their claims wilh said l id ucia.r y
( pressed taxpayet·s and local within fd'ur months . '
Dated thi s 29 th day of M arc h
governmenis,) n~ Qhio it \vould 1971.
. -.
F. H. O' Brjen
provide greater, and more
Probate Ju dg e of
immediate ass.istance · to local
said ·County
• governments lhan the . presen~
(4) l ,a, 15 ,Ji c
" welfare federalization and lax
credit proposal s.
NOTICE OF

Ohio.

chairs, indoor -outdoor carpet,
glassware, shoes. Hayman
Auction , Friday night .

3-30-31c

HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
3-30-3otc
ATTENTION ladies! Would you

like to try a wig on in the
privacy of your own home ?
You can . Just call us. We also
have the Mink 011 Kosmetics,
of
colJrse.
Koscot,
Distributors, Brown's . Phone

Middleport 992-5113.

No. 10470

Elizabeth Marie
Lawr e nce , Deceased .
ThC Almanac
Not ice is hereby gi Ve n, tha t
By United Press International Bo~nie L awre~ce, whose Po st
,
.
Off1ce Address tS Portland , Ohio
foday . IS Th ursday , April 1, has been dvly appointed as '
U1e 9Isl day of 1971
·
· Adm in istratri)( with th e Will
-·
,
.
·
annexed of the Estate of
fhe m oon IS between its new Eli·zabeth Mar ie La wrence tate
,.., phase a(ld £irst quarter
of
Meig s (OU!"!t;-. Ohio ,
.
·
deceased .
Dated th is
The murnmg st(:t'rs are Venus,
of

,-.
1
;
~

1
...

l

.-

Ma1·s and Jupiter.
·
1971
'the e.vening stcirs are M~rcu~
F . H. O' Br ien
Judge
of
th
e
Probate
Cou rt
ry and ·saturn .
Meigs County. Ohio
Those b&lt;Jrn on this day are
•
under· the sign of Aries.
141 1, B. 15. 31c

_

.I

•Russian composer Sergei
C" Rachmaninoff was burn April!

1813.·

' '

:i,,_ ...Onthis day in history:

¥

l

' \

'

•

'

In 185:1 Cincinnalj Ohi1i
h&lt;-'l(arl paying its fire- ' dcpttr l:
111~~1 a regvlar salary. Ordina1')&lt; firemen drew $(m a ycm·.
1918 lhd Hnyal Aii· F'tJr(;t

l•,undcrl
IJt·illurJ

Jl!llltflirilll

etnd· twu IJ\(!Ilths .
ht.'J.tU(P 1Jo11 ~IJirtg

tur~tts iu C:erunur,

l"rerw~a haiu·~ 111 WurJ;I

~---------. .

---WeJalk to, you

.like a person.

WMP0/1390
.
..
,,

12-31 -lfc

·

l lf2 bMhs, enclosed back
porch, wall to wall ·c arpeting,
aluminum siding, awning,
storm windows and storm
doors, Ci ty water . Sell[ng due

payment plan . Call 992-3352.
·
4-l-6tc

to ill heallh . Phone 614-985TWO GIRLS' spring coats, sizes
3938.
'
10 and 12 ; two pair of girl~
3-26-l2tp
sla cks sizes 10 and 12,· plu s
other items . Dne pair boys
permanent press pants size 6-ROOM house in Mon key Run .
Large lawn with space for
12, sl.im . All like new. Phone
trailer.
lmm ·ediate
992-7288.
possession.
Phone
992-2619.
4-l-3tc
GOOD Refrigerator $25. Cook

stove SlO. Reedsville. Phohe HOUSE, 6 rooms and

phone 742-5613.

378-6254.

-

16-FOOT skiff, good as new
{build by Weaver). 31h hp.

of

old

Shop,

_____ _

Mason.

fashioned

bargains, money -saving sale
specials ...

FUN- PRIZES
REFRESHMENTS
EVERYONE INVITED

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

4-l-3tc

9-23-lfc

- - - -- AUCTION -

WHEN' Each

Friday night, 7 p.m . Where?
Hayman's Auction House,
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7

Pomeroy

Middleport By -

pass.

2-7-lfc

Female Help Wanted
HOUSEWIVES, are you in need
of parttime year round work?
A No. 1 company in its field
rnay be the answer. No
collecting-delive ring or
canvassing. Call Gall ipolis

446-4146 or Pomeroy 949-3703.

Wanted To BI!Y ·
OLD furni tur e, dishes, brass
beds, etc. Wr ite M·. 0 . Miller,

-

RL 4, Pomeroy, Dhio. Call
992-6271.
9-l-lfc
-

----'--

HORSE saddle. Phone 949-2227.
3-30-31p

REPAIR

" Ditching . Electric sewer
cleaning." Reasonable rates .

Phone
John
Gallipolis 446-4782.

Cleland Realty

cepled. Phone 992-5641.
3-30-61c

- -- - -2113.

REPAIR . $3,500.

plan

&amp;Tapes

NEW

&amp;

Builders Supply POMEROY

Avenue - 2 story frame, J
bedrooms, ba th, porch,

2-21 -60tc

GANDY

SPREADER

BASEMENT HAS APART-

and

MENT.

n

1nsured- E .11perienced

TWO GOODYEAR wrinkledwall drag slicks, 900xl4, 7Phone 992-5663.

3 30-4tc

1967 HONDA 160. Also, 1952
Chevy 283, 3 speed. Ca ll 9926196.
3-30-31c

TH EI&gt;E PAN'ffi
NEVAH DONE

TH' MORE MUD .

PHONE 742 -3945

~~ ''{IJ~- ~~~

TloiAT BEFO'...

MUSHROOMS .

YO'lATS·'"

work Guaranteed

Burglar, fire and

'??-THASS

®

DEXTER, 0.45726

Insurance
'

Southeastern

·~~J, v.~~

TEAFORD

-------

SR.
Broker

WINNIE WINKLE

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

IF J!M NOT foEIN6 TOO NSSY,
JERRY, HOW COME YOU HIRED
A MODEL WHEN 'THE COMPANY
15 5UPPOOED 10 foE IN 5i.ICH
DIRE CIRCUM5TANCE6? .-.L..i

Meytag

Halo of Heat

4

3-26-6tc

LONG MY PEAR Mt56
WtNKfi.L..f'!OT WI'IH
WHAT YOV'RE
v.QRKIN6 ON 1

"rnoESTRJJCTO
WA!Oli:S

-- -- -- -- I
'1biJ C4Nr I
: Htii?T 'CM .' .

Dryers

Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat . No hot spots,
no overdrylng.
Fine Mesh ·Lint
F' i Iter.
We Specialize in

"J

(... Iii •'

/If tiC ,.,..,

MAY TAG

,,.

Red Carpet
Service

ALUMINUM car top boats, 10-

742-4211

· ( 'II ,

COAL, hmes tone . Excelsio:

BOWLING eq uipm ent: . One
man's and one woman's baiL

ex~llent.

bag and shoes, In

con di lion.

Will

Asking $10,500.00.

'!Oiil&gt; WAIUIUiRSI 1&gt;&lt;15'5
'TH' SEASON I'OR 'EM

GASOIJNE ALLEY

Y'IQ.ON!

and

He GpendG
the niqhtG
here! You
know ...

cloGe tel
hiG car!

....

painting,

&lt;-1

plas te ring , dry wall. Arthur

THE BORN LOSER

1968

BACK HOE and end-loader
work . Septic tanks installed.

HE'S FI~IN' T' KILl ~EMEMBER, PRJNCESS
YA, PVrlJA8"• I'M "'T~E K~OQS REGARD
ME AS IMMOIHAL '"
&lt;lONNA TACHtE
Y01J MUST HOT ~E -.J
HIM 8EFORE HE
TAKES AIM!

CADILLAC
BROUGHAM 4 DR.

George I Bill) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11 -29-lfc

-------- -----

Full power equipment including 6-way
seat &amp; windows, Climate Control air

conditioning, tilt steering wheel, ·AM-FM
radio, medium green finish with white
vinyl roof . Has all of Cadillac's fine
features &amp; equipment. .

Business Services
Sanitation, Stewar t, Ohio. Ph.

see a1 635 Oliver 51 ., Mid- .
dlep.f!rl.
3-3l -3tc

662-3035.
2-12-lfc

Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio

5-l-tfc

------

LOOK

I'URNISHEO and unlornoshed J96~ BUICK LeSabre ,· 2-dr ..
hardtop,

power

st~ering l

power brakes , air, '18,000
miles. E~cellent condition.
Phone 992-2288. ,
11 -10-lft-

10-1 8-lfc
- - - - - -3 ROOM. bath . furnished or
sc-rn i I~ rn ist:ed
~ partmenl. -----,,-.----'-..:...:.,.;;:=
Al, o. ? roofn. balh , furnished 1965 INTE~NATIONAL. lruc~. 1
r1pMimr:nt . Mulberry Ave.,
1800 ser~, gcod condition.
Henry Bahr . Phone Chester
Q85 3988 . .

J.JJ -61p

ALREAu'f

DISAPPEARED?

WHAT ARE

I 11:!01..1GI-!T

·u. Prophet

12wds.)
13. Home run.
e. g.
14 . Ancient
times
15. Yorkshire

s1695
..

1966 CHEVELLE CONV. CPE.

'

11395

fln1sh &amp; blk . top.
1966IMPALA H:r SEDAN

n
11395

Middleport. Ohio

992-7034 or 1•268-1810

parts
35. Boortoh
chap

26. Bhout
28. Cleared
· a.s a

36. Verdl opera
40. Before
42. Subsldl ..

profit

30. "Stool
pigeon"

I'f'HJ.-,..

•

' ...

•

II

tongue
29. Hurled

1

V

I Now arrance
th~

V~

!etten

the

L:::::·I~~!:,2;~";;)!:,~~~~~-_•:u·llflled
~
bf the

I

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to ·form

PriUe SIN IIISW!IIen

(

cartoon.

I I XXX)
{AIIt,en

Paulo.
Jumblro• fLAKE

Yetterday'•

An•w~trl

IGLOO

PUMICE STURDY,

You'd u1y c h~~~~ wilh rltii-A SMILE

&amp;e.SIIiOn

rtver
· 44 . Worked
on copy

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One letter simply atands 'fO,r 1\nolher. In thl!t sample A
uaed 'tor the .three L's, ~ (or the two O'.s. etc. Single lelte~~~
apostrophes, the hmgth. 3nd 1tormuUon ot the worct11 arr all .
hinh . Each day thf' code letters
are dlfterent.
'

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ZC ·:H YR

IYMCT

ZR
WY F

G Y H R E

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A Crypto,ram quotation

'

, OPEN ' E.VES.
Tl LLB
.

. 1\RI ':\ 't:H.~_

YOU'D HAT a 10
GHOW THIS~

43. European

•

Dealer

"Where Your Dollar Buys More"
PH. 992-2126

t

,

39. Queu• ·

- '

Ch~vv

..

-n. Seer's

Pomeroy.Motor Co.
'i

oboe

preps

. (comb.
form)

MOODY OF '
Your

' ~-..;.o;i.":'"..: '"'" '"

'

and

24 . Sup·

port
3S. Wllhln

Chevrolet cars a~d trucks
-:--: You 'lllove our deals!

him

33. Clar1net

product

Brazil
37. New Guinea

$!29'5

les... WP h11ve new 1971'

Can cure 'your ills! Contact
today a,t . . .
. ·
Park~ Sycamore Sis . .
· ,

8. Bind in
bundles

1'.

by-

25 . Literary
work
27 . Pompey's

35. -

~ocal 1 owne~ car, blk. rin.ish &amp; red cloth interior, good
tt~es , V ~ 8_engme, autom'attc trans . &amp; p. steering, radi
0·
Ntce famtly car .

JEMO ASSCX:IATES .

artistic

I (.·u·.·,-.•,

22. Pork

32. Lazy fellow
34: Convened

Local I owner car, blk. vi~YJ.l\lferior with buc_ket seats, 4.
s~ed trans ., std. V-B engtne. good tires, radio, mar.oo

2~2 f::U. tn . 6 cyl. etlg.

own lol. ..

20. Dlrect

31 . Valley

1967 CHEVROLET2 TON CAB~ CHAS~IS
1239l
102" Cab lo Axle. new825x20 tires. 2-speed J xle, clean cab

don't own' your

16. Nobleman

container
23. Attire

Local_I owner car, _c,lean Interior, dark aqua finish, like
new ftres, 6 cyl. engtne &amp; automatic trans ., radio p
1
model &amp; priced to go.
.
. opu ar

Month~ payments too high,

7. Overly

chance

ondll!llllf l

\)nocramble theoe foor Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

2l : Chemlst's

1968PLYMOUTHVALIANT4DR.

Down payment too high,

12wd8.1
6. Approach

18. Man's

clean car today .

.ft

Luke, etc.

17. Take 1:1.

pi),P,K?'

Local 1 ownet 'car w_ith outstanding equipment of 4 speed
trans., std . '13-B engme, good .w-w tires, radio. See thi s

BECAUSE:

:";, Matth~w .
Mark,

!n,r ttiNIII/I.IINOIO

breed

f . Beast ·

nickname
19. Or. Nonnan
VIncent

1968 Chevy II ·Nova 2 Door

NEW HOME

3. Worohlped

river

'I

If You Haven't
Bought A

2. SioW
down
(2 wds.l

12. Sided with

A PLASTIC.
&amp;USI-I lt.i Tl-lf.

--;dJ'&amp;MJ]l~;lkat~osow~IJ.-1,.- .

new

supplies

{abbr.]

line

'·
(C lf71 Kin• Feature. Syndicate, Inc .•

over 30,
to t~e

1. Army "

goal

~AT?

Caaals,
for one

DOWN

8. Crossed thr-

NEVER
YOU DOING VOUt&gt;
ASI&lt;.
TO THAT
TWIG,
TRACY?

ADDISON

10. Anyone

4. "Luca.stn''

'3~95

-~~--

- - - - - , . . . , .- ·c

HAD POUCI-l

Loca l owner with less than 15,000 miles,
ComfortrOn air con dition ing, power
stee r ing, automatic trans., Astra front
sea t, black nylon i nterior. Beautiful green
finish with black vinyl roof . Radio &amp; alt
other popular accessories, outsta nding car
with fl ne features .

Crill Bradford

good shape . Phone 742-3633.
3-3l -51c

-----For Sale or Trade

WHEN YOU HEARD l:!i,.,

CHEVROLET
CAPRICE 4 DOOR

Complete Service-

leaf

DICK TRACY

1969

Bob TrUssell , phone Chester

3-3l-31c

Yootefday'o Cryplooiuoto: A[lMIRATION IS A VERY
SHORT•LIVED PASSION, THAT IMMEDIATELY DECAYS
UPON GROWING FAMILIAR WITH IT$ OBJECT.--JOSEPK

9. Pablo

46. Du.ngerous
drug

1. Pa lm

25-INCH RIDING lawn mower.
985-3929.

.f5. Commanded

, ACROSS

C. BRADFORD, Auclioneer

reasonable . Phone 992-5688 or

.

DAILY CROSS.,WORD

---'-----

sell SEPTIC lanks cleaned . Miller

Auto

Pon i Proy
RclcrC&gt;nct'l s
rl'f!Lun~d ' Phone- 99.2 6698 .
-\
3-23 li e

"

PURPLE·I!IREASr'EP HOOK-

Rutland, o.

Arnold Grate

$8,300.00.

12-13 fool. Lorenzo D. Davis,
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
Kingsbury Road .
bath, gas heat. .•_arge living,
3-24-301c
side por,ch and garage.

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

Phone 992-5434.

'-.

\1

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Pomeroy, Ohio
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
drawn man.ure spr-eaders . 12\
service. all makes. 992 -2284
16disc's. High wheeled wagon. RACINE
RURAL - · 4
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
John Houdashell, Minersville.
bedrooms, bath, ni ce kitchen
Authorized Singer Sales and
3-30-3tp with oven and cook units. Full
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
basement. Furnace . Carport.
' 3-29-lfc

LADY TO slay wilh person who
•s ill Good wages. Call 9921962 CHEVY 2-lon !ruck, •·
2646.
speed transmission, 2-speed
3-30-3tc
axle, V-81 16-lool flal, new
t;Ubber, $600 ; without bed,
1500.
Phone 992-6048.
.
For Rent
'
3-3l-41c
' '
2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
·His .. Pomeroy . Phone 992Sales
51 27 afler 4 p.m.
3-2-tfc 1966 TORONADO, all power.
$1500. Phone 742-4885.
•
4 ROOM, bath, unfurnished
4-l-6tc
house. 1650 Lincoln Heights. -~--------­
. Phone 992-3874.
1967 ' FORD Ranger pickup.
3·23 -tfc
Phone 247-2161.
3-30-61c
\.)NFUR NI SHED 3 · room ----,----;--apartment. Phone 992-2288.
1968 Gf\IC 1,.,on pickup, 23.000
_ _ _ _ __ _..:_l-~31 - lfc
miles. new tire~ camper top,
good
condil ion. Phone 992TWO OR lhree bedroom home,
2805.
Eldon
Walburn .
Cottage Road , Syracuse.
'
.3-28-IIG
,_ Adulls .only. Phone 992-5133. '
= - - - -- - -3:..:·2-lfc 1964 CHEVELLE convertible.
Good condition, 8-cylinder,
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
ro ma ric
lra-nsmission :
au
1
?·mile north of .new Meigs
Phone'
992-3917
.
·
tl igh .Scliool. Pho)le 992·2941.
3-5-Jfc
3·28-61p
npartments . Close to S(hool. •

LET MESi:E
IT, AUNT
PETUNIA!

TWO COWS, fre sh. Two horse-

SET OF one-row cultivators f6i'
Ford tractor, ju st like new.
Also,
Remington chain saw in
BARMAID. Apply in person. HI-

Ho Bar, Middleport.

.. ltll ~~ lilA, 1;.

LIKE TH' SteiN 6A'IS , 'lA
CAN'T HUI'!T 'EM! BE A
G&gt;I'!EAT WATCH FE~'!
CtCEI'!O!

OH, eotJT WE: WC1f¥T e&gt;E FOR

-~----

SENTINEL
CARRIER

),t. ~-

.,,

BUGS BUNNY

2 speed operation .
Choice of water
temps .
Auto.
water
level
co ntrol.
Li nt
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator.
Perm a-Press

Salt Works, E. Main Sl., 2 HOUSES - 2 bedrooms, bath, HARRI SO N'S TV AND AN Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
gas heal. Renled. Second : 3
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
WILL PAY tbp price lor nighl '--- - - - - - -4...:
bedrooms, ga s furnace, full
·9-tfc
992-2522.
craw lers and ea rth worms .
basement . 3 car garages. 6
6-10-tfc
Fife's. 711 So. 3rd Ave., SOU P'S ON, lhe rug thai is.
acres only $18,000.00.
Middleport . Phone 992 -5457 .
cl ean with Blue Lustre. Rent
NEIGLER Conslruclion. For
4-l -6tc____..e.l.ectric sha mpooer , $1 . Baker HARRISONVILLE - 4 rooms,
building or remodeling your
-,if-----,-- - - - Furniture, Middleport .
half bath, cistern water .
home, Call Guy Neigler ,
Outbuildings. Large level lol .
Racine, Ohio.
~elp Wanted
___ ____3_-3l -61c $7,500.00.
7-31 -lfc
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
'
'BARMAID
and part lime CAN DY MACHINE. 7 slots, A-1
working condition, S65. Ma-v
ASSOCIATE .
RALPH 'S
CAR PET
waitress. Phone 992 -9943.
be
seen
at
Certif
ied
Service
.
LAND
AND
HOUSES
Upholstery
Cleaning
Service.
4-l-61c
Station, Pomeroy. Phone 992-WANTED
Free
estimates.
Phone
9981.
Cafl992-3325
Gallipol is 446-0294 .
3-31 -3tp
c
3-12-tfc
3-26-6tc

WANTED

1./

Mayta~

Automat1cs

Musser. Phone 992-3630.
3-28-JOtp

110 Mechanic St.

, •• •

Big Capacity

Coolv il le 667-3041 or Tom
Hayman, Chesler 985-3509.
3-28-301p
PAPER -HANGING,

~

.

'

6-30-tfc

roofing

,., on

OFF TII.E BEARD
AND GivE M~ ONE OF THOSE
CREW CUTS

estimates. Call a·tter 5 p.m.,
collect
Dick
Hayman,

Virgil B.

trade.

"'"',.;, 1M ••t .~~~

insurance been
Securily Systems. Call Ray AUTOMOBILE
cancelled?
Lost
your
Adams 247-2055 - Mike
operator's li cense? Call 9920' Brien 247-2113.
2966.
3-17-lfc
6-15-tfc

3-l7-301c

space,

PAINTING,

-

IJ'L ABNER

J. OU.f bin - C. Inscore
Service Personnel

tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced
elec ·
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable

rates. 992-3213.

~

S~AvE

spouting service. Ri ·c ha rd
TO BUY OR SELL
Wilt, phone 992-2889
CALL US
3-ll -30tc
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
TREE -TRIMMING
and
Residence 992-2568 3-28-6tc
removal. Fully insured . Free

3-30-31c

inches wide ; $60 or

Garden

garage. $10,000.

seeder. Doubl e barrel
gauge shotg un. Hopkins and
Allen single shot rifle ; 1890
Winches ler.pump r ifle . Phone

247-2161.

Butternu t

, mi w

OLD WORK

All weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.

-- - - 3-30-61c RUTLAND - Depol Streel - I story cemen t block, ALMOST O'DELL WHEEL alignment
loca ted at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
NEW. 3 bedroom s, bath,
Complete front end serv ice,
KILL TERMITES and yard
porch, 2 ACRES. $8,900 .
11 ." King

-

_,

MASON COUNTY
. t.V. SERVICE

3-12-tfc

available. Phone 992-5641.

insec ts wit h ARAB "YOli·DO-·

'

Spouting, Roof
Painting

VACUUM Cleaner brand new POMEROY - Liberty Avenue O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
l l/1 story f rame.
2
1970 model. Complete wilh all
CommerciaL residential and
bedrooms, ba t h, porch ,
cleaning tools . Small paint
fndus lrial wiring. Phone 247basemen!,
NEEDS
SOME
damage in shipping . Will lake

$27 cash or budge!

'

;

Russell,

Middleport, Ohio.

..

Work

· 675-3482 or 773-5196

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.

.

to_;J..

Roofing &amp; Carpenter

All Makes &amp; Models
Also

Pomeroy

~

BANk

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Hilton Wolfe. Salesman
Sewing Machine left i n
Phone 949-3211
layaway . Bea utiful pastel Ca ll us for all your real es tate
color, full size model. Al l
needs. Inquire of our listings READY -MIX
CONCRETE
built -in buttonhole; over cast
before you buy,
delivered right to your
and fancy sli lch. Pay jus t
4-l-6tc
project. Fast and easy. Free
$48.75
cash
or
terms
estimates. Phon e 992 -3284.
available . Trade -ins ac Goeglein Ready -Mix Co. ,

WILL PICK up merchandise

Phone 742-4461 .

Radiator Service

Ph. 992-2143

Broker
Phone 985-4186

Company, Middleport.
and take to auction on a
percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.

TELEVISIOi~

hold -up .

L-~

lii&lt;E .1'0

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

.EXPERIENCED

.ALARMS!

fD

-L='~ - --

Phone 992-?094

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA .

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
. Smallest Heater Core.

..
HES GOT
HISSELF A
SWEETIE

- --

-GUARANTEED--

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

Stereos

.~-----·-

$5.55·

.;:ALSO
tlOUBLE - WIDES

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER O.R BOB CROW

BLAETTNARS

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobsteller Jr.

motor, good trailer, oair of
oa rs , anchor . Ready to go.

1971 DIAL &amp; SEW Zig -Zag

Lots

balh,

3-30-l21p

4· l-3tp

Flower

'

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

-----,--- -

..:__

SPRING
OPEN HOUSE
APRIL 1-2-3

Time You Ever Spent.

3-30-6tp

~-----

Reynolds

HERE IT lSI

------

Estate

·
3-30-3tc

LOAD OF 9xl2 rugs, till -back

-

APPOINTMENT

speakers, 4 speed automatic
changer, sepa rate con trol s.
Balance $80.99. Use our lime

mailed to Box 81. Gallipolfs,

' FIDDLE .DEE OEE -.IT'S PLAIN AS
TH'NOSE ON
'lORE F~CE

Wheel Alignment

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

io:CHAMPIDN
«VAN DYKE

EEK AND MEEK

EXPERT

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

end of Unron AVe . Make offer.

.

WHAT HAPPENT
TO TATER IN
KIDO'IGARDEN
TODAY

order . 24 hour service. Owain

·s P .M , Day BefOre P'ublicat lon

· · - right,
The Publisher reserves
By Clarence· Mill er
to edit, or reject ttnv

PAW--'IE'L~

tNfiUl::R GUESS

'

Real Estate For Sale

Pets For Sale

Notice

AD
INFORMATION
. DE-ADJ,.INEI
• WANT

-- Report

•

EHL

OTDD

'' "';1-. . . ,. •.. ... I

W Z ~· T

RIT

WMDDTF
'

-

' '

'

~·~F.-::
(&lt;I
. . . .. .

-~. !'--

~I

L. (~,.·
!'• \ ,

I

i\lL_,;
. ..
-

'

-·~ · -

... .

loJaorra~)

�&gt;&lt;•

'

..

-· ·,

..
'·

•'

'

-

IO ~The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0 ., April!, 1971

. _Bargains; Bargains; afid More ·Bargailts In Sentinel Classifieds,
Miller-'s .
Business Services .J

R.UBBER STAMPS

1\1\onday Deadl ine 9 a.m .
CanceiiDtlon &amp; Corrections
Will be accepted until9 a .m . f
Day of Publication

REGULATIONS

ma~e

to . REGISTERED black ·male toy HOUSE, 1640 Lincoln Hts ,
poodle. House brok·en. Call
Pomeroy. Phone 992-2293.
or Wilma Casto, Portlarod,
992-3591.
r
10-25-tfc
Ohio.
3-29-6tc --"L - - - -- -- - . ,HOUSE ,'R': 7 Byflilss . 5acres al
. 2-t2-90tc

For Sale

Phone 992-6048.

2:1-FOOT Laylon camper, self-

I he

OVEN
FRES·H
bakery
3-Jl -3tc
ads
contained. Excellent con produc1s.
Jimmy '~ Pastry
deemed
obie!:tional.
The
dition. Pnone ·949-362l.
Shop, N. 2nd Ave., (l&gt;idpublisher will not be responsll:lle
3-30 Jlc CONVENIENT bul secluded
dleporl. Phone 992-3555. · .
for mOre than one incorrect
building lots ·on T79 al Rock
·
3-28-30tc - - - - - - insertion .
Springs. Wi IIi in walking
.WALNUT STEREO - Radio
RATES .
di
Stance of Meigs . High
combi.nation
.
Four
.speed
For want Ad Serv ice
THE KYGER Creek Credit
SChool,
a 5 minule dri ve from·
5.cents per Word one in ser tion
Uni on wi ll accept sealed bids · i ntermixed changer . Four
Pomeroy.
Cal l or see HUI
· - MinlniUm Charge.7S c ·
speaker sound system, dual
un til 3 p.m., Aprll9, 1971 for a
WUte · weekends, or -a ft er 5
12 cen ts per · word three
voluine
control.
Balance
1968 Ch rysler Newport and a , $67 .'40. Use our budget terms . p .m . Weekdays. . .Phone 992 consecut ive insertions.
1964 Chevrolet Malibu . Said
18 cents per word s~x con ·
6887.
Call 992-3352.
secutive insertions .
ca rs may be viewed in the
2-3-lfc
4-l-61c
25 Per cent Dis&lt;: ount on paid · parking lot at t~e plant.
ads and ads paid w it hin 10 days.
Kyger Creek Credit Union - - - - - - 24 ACRE farm at Long Boltom,
CARD OF THANKS
.
reserves
the right to reject BEAUTIFUL Colonial maple
house with 3 bedrooms, dining
&amp; OBITUARY
stereo, AM &amp; FM radio , foUr
room , kitchen, living room,
: any or all bids . Bids may be

I have noted and follo;.eil
with great interest the op·
position coming from many
· quarters
to
the
Ad·
ministration's General R£venue
Sharing plan which I ~ave cosponsored in the House.
General Revenue sharing
would return $5 billion in
federal'lax dollars to the slate
•
$1 .50 for 50 word · minimum.
and local governments to use as Each
addit ional word 2c .
they see fit with no federal
BLIND ADS
Addit ional 25c Charge per
strings attached . Unlike special Advert
isement .
revenue sharinij whi~h conOFFICE HOURS
30a .m. to 5: 00p .m . Da i ly ,
solidates one-third of the 8: 8:
30 a .m. Ia
12:00 Noon
federal categorical grant-in-aid Sat urday .
.
proglams into six broad functional areas, general revenue
sharing will be new money and Wanted
will not affect ongoing MEN NEEDED to Ira in· as
semi -drivers. Train now ta
programs.
drive semi -tractor trailer s,
After flat fy rejecting the
local and ·over the road . You
general revenue sharing con- can earn high wages after
short training . For ap cept, these critics have en- plication
and interview, ca ll
dorsed two alternate proposals : 513-241 -5572. or write Safely
Oept.. United Systems, Inc .,
I. Let Washington assume the
c-o Motor Freight Terminal
entire welfare costs now being
Bldg., 3101 Gano Rd. ;
paid by. state and local gQvern- Sharonville, Cincinnati, Ohio
45241.
ment.
4-l -2tc
2. Allowing Federal income
U,x credits for state income A COUPLE of ambulat ory
pallenls . Phone Mason 773taxes.
5712.
. It is interesting to note that
3-3l -61c
each of these alternatives have ' - - - c - - - - very serious deficiencies and
Notice
would shortchange the citizens
GUN
SHOOT, Forked Run
of Ohio. · First, the tax credit
Sportsm~n Club, Sunday,
plan would serve to stimulate
April 4 at 12 noon .
3-Jl -31c
alate Income tax efforts by
permitting taxpayers to write
GUN SHODT every Saturday
off a proportion of the tax on
night at 6 p .m . near Racine
their Federal income tax . Planlng} /\ill. Assorted mea_ts .
Sponsdl'~d by Syracuse F1re
return.
Deparlmenl.
.c.
However, under a tax credit
3-31 -3tc
plan in Ohio, 29 per cent of the
tax credits would go to local SPEC IAL .Singing tor revival
services. The Robert Perry
governments where ·me needs
family of Jackson, Dhio, wilt
· are greatest while 71 per cent
be featured at the MI . Herwould remain with the Stale
mon U. B. Church Sunday
overnment.
With
general
evening,
April 4' at 7 p. m.
g
Fveryone is welcome.
reven.ue sharing, 55 per cent of
4-l-31c
.the funds coming to the State of - - - - - -- - - .
ld t
t· II "
HYMN SING, Plants Memor ial
Oh towou
au oma tea y pass
Church, Sunday, April 4, at 2
through" to l&lt;!'cal units of
p.m. Special music by Bissell
government to use as they see
Brothers and olher groups.
fit with no "federal strings
Rev . E. J. Grlflilh will conduct services. Everyone
attached. "
welcome .
3-3 l-41c
Compared with general
revenue sharing, tax credits GUN SHOOT. Racine Gun Club.
would shortchange Ohio's
Sunday, April 4, start ing at I
P ·~' ~Qg . 12, ,16, and 20·
•1citi~s, ,.,.l:&lt;&gt;.!~· ,co111!l!,e~ ,-- ~9.~
gii\!91'· --·
tOwnsfitps: .. ,' ·
· · ·
3-31 -41p
The second alternative that
.-has been advanced is welfare COINS. Bought. sold, traded.
federailzation • in which Uncle
Complete line of supplies,
Sam would take over the total
albums, price guides . Open
daily 5 p. m. to 9 p.m . and all
cost of welfare in the country
day saturday. Freasure Chest
and thereby allow state and
Coins, · U.S. Rt . 33 Soulh
local governments to spend this
I Pomeroy Road). Athens.
savings for other purpbses._ Ohio. 10 per cenl off on any
Estimates for FY 1972 show
supp lies with this ad. 3-26-61c
welfare spending at $10.3 billion - -- - _- - - - for all programs with the state• WILL DO tailor ing and
.
upholstery . Phone 992-3561.
and local share expected .to be
3-3l -30ic
$4.5 billion.
Non-federal welfare costs in MADAM MARY - PALMISTRY .
Reader
and
Ohio would total $121.8 million
advisor . Tells past, prese nt
or 2.7 per cent of the national
and future . I will tel l you ius I
what you want to know about
total. In terms of fiscal relief,
friends and enemies . I give
an obvious disparity in this
never failing advice on all
approach is the fac't that three
mailers of
life.
707 112
Wa
shi
nglo
n
Blvd
..
Belpre
.
stales - New ·York, California,
Ohio. Look for sign. For
and ' Massachusetts - would
appoin tm ent ca ll 421-9153.
receive ~I per cent of the total
3-24-IOi c
Federal
government
payment.
•
Mt. Hermon U. B.
The state of Ohio and its local REVIVAL,
Ctiurch MarCh 26 to April 4.·
, 'governments would be relieved
Rev .
Carey
Knittle ,
evangeli st, Cincinnati . Rev .
of $121 million in welfare costs.
Freeland
Norris,
song
Under general revenue
evangelist. Stories for the
1 sharing, however , Ohio would
children. Everyone welcome .
7:30p.m. ea ch evening .
' receive $212.5 million or 4.3 per
3-23-IOle
' cent of the total distribution of
national benefits. Fifty-five per
NOTICE OF
cent of this amount would be
APPLICATION
Case No . 20.476
passed through to local
Estate of MITTIE M . NEL SO N
governments throughout the De ce ased.
Notice is hereby given that
states.
Cla ir 0 . Nelson of Lang sv,ille,
In c.omparison ' to both Meigs County, Ohio, has been
alternatives, · general revenue duly appointed Executor of th e
Estate of Millie M . Nelson .
, sharing is a far more equitable dec_ea
se d, late. of Langsvi ll e,
t and efficie nt manner of Me tgs County , Ohio.
Creditors are required lo fil e
1, distributing fiscal relief to hard- their claims wilh said l id ucia.r y
( pressed taxpayet·s and local within fd'ur months . '
Dated thi s 29 th day of M arc h
governmenis,) n~ Qhio it \vould 1971.
. -.
F. H. O' Brjen
provide greater, and more
Probate Ju dg e of
immediate ass.istance · to local
said ·County
• governments lhan the . presen~
(4) l ,a, 15 ,Ji c
" welfare federalization and lax
credit proposal s.
NOTICE OF

Ohio.

chairs, indoor -outdoor carpet,
glassware, shoes. Hayman
Auction , Friday night .

3-30-31c

HOME sewing. Phone 992-5327.
3-30-3otc
ATTENTION ladies! Would you

like to try a wig on in the
privacy of your own home ?
You can . Just call us. We also
have the Mink 011 Kosmetics,
of
colJrse.
Koscot,
Distributors, Brown's . Phone

Middleport 992-5113.

No. 10470

Elizabeth Marie
Lawr e nce , Deceased .
ThC Almanac
Not ice is hereby gi Ve n, tha t
By United Press International Bo~nie L awre~ce, whose Po st
,
.
Off1ce Address tS Portland , Ohio
foday . IS Th ursday , April 1, has been dvly appointed as '
U1e 9Isl day of 1971
·
· Adm in istratri)( with th e Will
-·
,
.
·
annexed of the Estate of
fhe m oon IS between its new Eli·zabeth Mar ie La wrence tate
,.., phase a(ld £irst quarter
of
Meig s (OU!"!t;-. Ohio ,
.
·
deceased .
Dated th is
The murnmg st(:t'rs are Venus,
of

,-.
1
;
~

1
...

l

.-

Ma1·s and Jupiter.
·
1971
'the e.vening stcirs are M~rcu~
F . H. O' Br ien
Judge
of
th
e
Probate
Cou rt
ry and ·saturn .
Meigs County. Ohio
Those b&lt;Jrn on this day are
•
under· the sign of Aries.
141 1, B. 15. 31c

_

.I

•Russian composer Sergei
C" Rachmaninoff was burn April!

1813.·

' '

:i,,_ ...Onthis day in history:

¥

l

' \

'

•

'

In 185:1 Cincinnalj Ohi1i
h&lt;-'l(arl paying its fire- ' dcpttr l:
111~~1 a regvlar salary. Ordina1')&lt; firemen drew $(m a ycm·.
1918 lhd Hnyal Aii· F'tJr(;t

l•,undcrl
IJt·illurJ

Jl!llltflirilll

etnd· twu IJ\(!Ilths .
ht.'J.tU(P 1Jo11 ~IJirtg

tur~tts iu C:erunur,

l"rerw~a haiu·~ 111 WurJ;I

~---------. .

---WeJalk to, you

.like a person.

WMP0/1390
.
..
,,

12-31 -lfc

·

l lf2 bMhs, enclosed back
porch, wall to wall ·c arpeting,
aluminum siding, awning,
storm windows and storm
doors, Ci ty water . Sell[ng due

payment plan . Call 992-3352.
·
4-l-6tc

to ill heallh . Phone 614-985TWO GIRLS' spring coats, sizes
3938.
'
10 and 12 ; two pair of girl~
3-26-l2tp
sla cks sizes 10 and 12,· plu s
other items . Dne pair boys
permanent press pants size 6-ROOM house in Mon key Run .
Large lawn with space for
12, sl.im . All like new. Phone
trailer.
lmm ·ediate
992-7288.
possession.
Phone
992-2619.
4-l-3tc
GOOD Refrigerator $25. Cook

stove SlO. Reedsville. Phohe HOUSE, 6 rooms and

phone 742-5613.

378-6254.

-

16-FOOT skiff, good as new
{build by Weaver). 31h hp.

of

old

Shop,

_____ _

Mason.

fashioned

bargains, money -saving sale
specials ...

FUN- PRIZES
REFRESHMENTS
EVERYONE INVITED

Pomeroy Landmark
Jack W. Carsey, Mgr.

4-l-3tc

9-23-lfc

- - - -- AUCTION -

WHEN' Each

Friday night, 7 p.m . Where?
Hayman's Auction House,
Laurel Cliff on new Rt. 7

Pomeroy

Middleport By -

pass.

2-7-lfc

Female Help Wanted
HOUSEWIVES, are you in need
of parttime year round work?
A No. 1 company in its field
rnay be the answer. No
collecting-delive ring or
canvassing. Call Gall ipolis

446-4146 or Pomeroy 949-3703.

Wanted To BI!Y ·
OLD furni tur e, dishes, brass
beds, etc. Wr ite M·. 0 . Miller,

-

RL 4, Pomeroy, Dhio. Call
992-6271.
9-l-lfc
-

----'--

HORSE saddle. Phone 949-2227.
3-30-31p

REPAIR

" Ditching . Electric sewer
cleaning." Reasonable rates .

Phone
John
Gallipolis 446-4782.

Cleland Realty

cepled. Phone 992-5641.
3-30-61c

- -- - -2113.

REPAIR . $3,500.

plan

&amp;Tapes

NEW

&amp;

Builders Supply POMEROY

Avenue - 2 story frame, J
bedrooms, ba th, porch,

2-21 -60tc

GANDY

SPREADER

BASEMENT HAS APART-

and

MENT.

n

1nsured- E .11perienced

TWO GOODYEAR wrinkledwall drag slicks, 900xl4, 7Phone 992-5663.

3 30-4tc

1967 HONDA 160. Also, 1952
Chevy 283, 3 speed. Ca ll 9926196.
3-30-31c

TH EI&gt;E PAN'ffi
NEVAH DONE

TH' MORE MUD .

PHONE 742 -3945

~~ ''{IJ~- ~~~

TloiAT BEFO'...

MUSHROOMS .

YO'lATS·'"

work Guaranteed

Burglar, fire and

'??-THASS

®

DEXTER, 0.45726

Insurance
'

Southeastern

·~~J, v.~~

TEAFORD

-------

SR.
Broker

WINNIE WINKLE

FOR
HARTFORD,
WEST VIRGINIA

IF J!M NOT foEIN6 TOO NSSY,
JERRY, HOW COME YOU HIRED
A MODEL WHEN 'THE COMPANY
15 5UPPOOED 10 foE IN 5i.ICH
DIRE CIRCUM5TANCE6? .-.L..i

Meytag

Halo of Heat

4

3-26-6tc

LONG MY PEAR Mt56
WtNKfi.L..f'!OT WI'IH
WHAT YOV'RE
v.QRKIN6 ON 1

"rnoESTRJJCTO
WA!Oli:S

-- -- -- -- I
'1biJ C4Nr I
: Htii?T 'CM .' .

Dryers

Surround clothes
with gentle, even
heat . No hot spots,
no overdrylng.
Fine Mesh ·Lint
F' i Iter.
We Specialize in

"J

(... Iii •'

/If tiC ,.,..,

MAY TAG

,,.

Red Carpet
Service

ALUMINUM car top boats, 10-

742-4211

· ( 'II ,

COAL, hmes tone . Excelsio:

BOWLING eq uipm ent: . One
man's and one woman's baiL

ex~llent.

bag and shoes, In

con di lion.

Will

Asking $10,500.00.

'!Oiil&gt; WAIUIUiRSI 1&gt;&lt;15'5
'TH' SEASON I'OR 'EM

GASOIJNE ALLEY

Y'IQ.ON!

and

He GpendG
the niqhtG
here! You
know ...

cloGe tel
hiG car!

....

painting,

&lt;-1

plas te ring , dry wall. Arthur

THE BORN LOSER

1968

BACK HOE and end-loader
work . Septic tanks installed.

HE'S FI~IN' T' KILl ~EMEMBER, PRJNCESS
YA, PVrlJA8"• I'M "'T~E K~OQS REGARD
ME AS IMMOIHAL '"
&lt;lONNA TACHtE
Y01J MUST HOT ~E -.J
HIM 8EFORE HE
TAKES AIM!

CADILLAC
BROUGHAM 4 DR.

George I Bill) Pullins. Phone
992-2478.
11 -29-lfc

-------- -----

Full power equipment including 6-way
seat &amp; windows, Climate Control air

conditioning, tilt steering wheel, ·AM-FM
radio, medium green finish with white
vinyl roof . Has all of Cadillac's fine
features &amp; equipment. .

Business Services
Sanitation, Stewar t, Ohio. Ph.

see a1 635 Oliver 51 ., Mid- .
dlep.f!rl.
3-3l -3tc

662-3035.
2-12-lfc

Phone 949-3821
Racine, Ohio

5-l-tfc

------

LOOK

I'URNISHEO and unlornoshed J96~ BUICK LeSabre ,· 2-dr ..
hardtop,

power

st~ering l

power brakes , air, '18,000
miles. E~cellent condition.
Phone 992-2288. ,
11 -10-lft-

10-1 8-lfc
- - - - - -3 ROOM. bath . furnished or
sc-rn i I~ rn ist:ed
~ partmenl. -----,,-.----'-..:...:.,.;;:=
Al, o. ? roofn. balh , furnished 1965 INTE~NATIONAL. lruc~. 1
r1pMimr:nt . Mulberry Ave.,
1800 ser~, gcod condition.
Henry Bahr . Phone Chester
Q85 3988 . .

J.JJ -61p

ALREAu'f

DISAPPEARED?

WHAT ARE

I 11:!01..1GI-!T

·u. Prophet

12wds.)
13. Home run.
e. g.
14 . Ancient
times
15. Yorkshire

s1695
..

1966 CHEVELLE CONV. CPE.

'

11395

fln1sh &amp; blk . top.
1966IMPALA H:r SEDAN

n
11395

Middleport. Ohio

992-7034 or 1•268-1810

parts
35. Boortoh
chap

26. Bhout
28. Cleared
· a.s a

36. Verdl opera
40. Before
42. Subsldl ..

profit

30. "Stool
pigeon"

I'f'HJ.-,..

•

' ...

•

II

tongue
29. Hurled

1

V

I Now arrance
th~

V~

!etten

the

L:::::·I~~!:,2;~";;)!:,~~~~~-_•:u·llflled
~
bf the

I

..,_.wer, u

to ·form

PriUe SIN IIISW!IIen

(

cartoon.

I I XXX)
{AIIt,en

Paulo.
Jumblro• fLAKE

Yetterday'•

An•w~trl

IGLOO

PUMICE STURDY,

You'd u1y c h~~~~ wilh rltii-A SMILE

&amp;e.SIIiOn

rtver
· 44 . Worked
on copy

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTE :- Here'R how to l"Y•k it:
~XYD· LB~~XR

I• L 0 N G F E L L 0 W
One letter simply atands 'fO,r 1\nolher. In thl!t sample A
uaed 'tor the .three L's, ~ (or the two O'.s. etc. Single lelte~~~
apostrophes, the hmgth. 3nd 1tormuUon ot the worct11 arr all .
hinh . Each day thf' code letters
are dlfterent.
'

,;~-~~~~=~~§==~:;

.

E

'

.

ZC ·:H YR

IYMCT

ZR
WY F

G Y H R E

RIT

z!tt(c

PZHL

\

'

.. \

. \

IYPT ' MHDTCC

WYYL
EC

K Y L Q . '- P E F U E ~" T R

'I

E

APRIL FOOL~

\.~-­

A Crypto,ram quotation

'

, OPEN ' E.VES.
Tl LLB
.

. 1\RI ':\ 't:H.~_

YOU'D HAT a 10
GHOW THIS~

43. European

•

Dealer

"Where Your Dollar Buys More"
PH. 992-2126

t

,

39. Queu• ·

- '

Ch~vv

..

-n. Seer's

Pomeroy.Motor Co.
'i

oboe

preps

. (comb.
form)

MOODY OF '
Your

' ~-..;.o;i.":'"..: '"'" '"

'

and

24 . Sup·

port
3S. Wllhln

Chevrolet cars a~d trucks
-:--: You 'lllove our deals!

him

33. Clar1net

product

Brazil
37. New Guinea

$!29'5

les... WP h11ve new 1971'

Can cure 'your ills! Contact
today a,t . . .
. ·
Park~ Sycamore Sis . .
· ,

8. Bind in
bundles

1'.

by-

25 . Literary
work
27 . Pompey's

35. -

~ocal 1 owne~ car, blk. rin.ish &amp; red cloth interior, good
tt~es , V ~ 8_engme, autom'attc trans . &amp; p. steering, radi
0·
Ntce famtly car .

JEMO ASSCX:IATES .

artistic

I (.·u·.·,-.•,

22. Pork

32. Lazy fellow
34: Convened

Local I owner car, blk. vi~YJ.l\lferior with buc_ket seats, 4.
s~ed trans ., std. V-B engtne. good tires, radio, mar.oo

2~2 f::U. tn . 6 cyl. etlg.

own lol. ..

20. Dlrect

31 . Valley

1967 CHEVROLET2 TON CAB~ CHAS~IS
1239l
102" Cab lo Axle. new825x20 tires. 2-speed J xle, clean cab

don't own' your

16. Nobleman

container
23. Attire

Local_I owner car, _c,lean Interior, dark aqua finish, like
new ftres, 6 cyl. engtne &amp; automatic trans ., radio p
1
model &amp; priced to go.
.
. opu ar

Month~ payments too high,

7. Overly

chance

ondll!llllf l

\)nocramble theoe foor Jumbleo,
one letter to each square, to
form four ordinary words.

2l : Chemlst's

1968PLYMOUTHVALIANT4DR.

Down payment too high,

12wd8.1
6. Approach

18. Man's

clean car today .

.ft

Luke, etc.

17. Take 1:1.

pi),P,K?'

Local 1 ownet 'car w_ith outstanding equipment of 4 speed
trans., std . '13-B engme, good .w-w tires, radio. See thi s

BECAUSE:

:";, Matth~w .
Mark,

!n,r ttiNIII/I.IINOIO

breed

f . Beast ·

nickname
19. Or. Nonnan
VIncent

1968 Chevy II ·Nova 2 Door

NEW HOME

3. Worohlped

river

'I

If You Haven't
Bought A

2. SioW
down
(2 wds.l

12. Sided with

A PLASTIC.
&amp;USI-I lt.i Tl-lf.

--;dJ'&amp;MJ]l~;lkat~osow~IJ.-1,.- .

new

supplies

{abbr.]

line

'·
(C lf71 Kin• Feature. Syndicate, Inc .•

over 30,
to t~e

1. Army "

goal

~AT?

Caaals,
for one

DOWN

8. Crossed thr-

NEVER
YOU DOING VOUt&gt;
ASI&lt;.
TO THAT
TWIG,
TRACY?

ADDISON

10. Anyone

4. "Luca.stn''

'3~95

-~~--

- - - - - , . . . , .- ·c

HAD POUCI-l

Loca l owner with less than 15,000 miles,
ComfortrOn air con dition ing, power
stee r ing, automatic trans., Astra front
sea t, black nylon i nterior. Beautiful green
finish with black vinyl roof . Radio &amp; alt
other popular accessories, outsta nding car
with fl ne features .

Crill Bradford

good shape . Phone 742-3633.
3-3l -51c

-----For Sale or Trade

WHEN YOU HEARD l:!i,.,

CHEVROLET
CAPRICE 4 DOOR

Complete Service-

leaf

DICK TRACY

1969

Bob TrUssell , phone Chester

3-3l-31c

Yootefday'o Cryplooiuoto: A[lMIRATION IS A VERY
SHORT•LIVED PASSION, THAT IMMEDIATELY DECAYS
UPON GROWING FAMILIAR WITH IT$ OBJECT.--JOSEPK

9. Pablo

46. Du.ngerous
drug

1. Pa lm

25-INCH RIDING lawn mower.
985-3929.

.f5. Commanded

, ACROSS

C. BRADFORD, Auclioneer

reasonable . Phone 992-5688 or

.

DAILY CROSS.,WORD

---'-----

sell SEPTIC lanks cleaned . Miller

Auto

Pon i Proy
RclcrC&gt;nct'l s
rl'f!Lun~d ' Phone- 99.2 6698 .
-\
3-23 li e

"

PURPLE·I!IREASr'EP HOOK-

Rutland, o.

Arnold Grate

$8,300.00.

12-13 fool. Lorenzo D. Davis,
MIDDLEPORT - 4 bedrooms,
Kingsbury Road .
bath, gas heat. .•_arge living,
3-24-301c
side por,ch and garage.

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

Phone 992-5434.

'-.

\1

RUTLAND FURNITURE

Pomeroy, Ohio
SEWING MACHINES. Repair
drawn man.ure spr-eaders . 12\
service. all makes. 992 -2284
16disc's. High wheeled wagon. RACINE
RURAL - · 4
The Fabric Shop, Pomeroy.
John Houdashell, Minersville.
bedrooms, bath, ni ce kitchen
Authorized Singer Sales and
3-30-3tp with oven and cook units. Full
Service. We Sharpen Scissors.
basement. Furnace . Carport.
' 3-29-lfc

LADY TO slay wilh person who
•s ill Good wages. Call 9921962 CHEVY 2-lon !ruck, •·
2646.
speed transmission, 2-speed
3-30-3tc
axle, V-81 16-lool flal, new
t;Ubber, $600 ; without bed,
1500.
Phone 992-6048.
.
For Rent
'
3-3l-41c
' '
2 BEDROOM house, Lincoln
·His .. Pomeroy . Phone 992Sales
51 27 afler 4 p.m.
3-2-tfc 1966 TORONADO, all power.
$1500. Phone 742-4885.
•
4 ROOM, bath, unfurnished
4-l-6tc
house. 1650 Lincoln Heights. -~--------­
. Phone 992-3874.
1967 ' FORD Ranger pickup.
3·23 -tfc
Phone 247-2161.
3-30-61c
\.)NFUR NI SHED 3 · room ----,----;--apartment. Phone 992-2288.
1968 Gf\IC 1,.,on pickup, 23.000
_ _ _ _ __ _..:_l-~31 - lfc
miles. new tire~ camper top,
good
condil ion. Phone 992TWO OR lhree bedroom home,
2805.
Eldon
Walburn .
Cottage Road , Syracuse.
'
.3-28-IIG
,_ Adulls .only. Phone 992-5133. '
= - - - -- - -3:..:·2-lfc 1964 CHEVELLE convertible.
Good condition, 8-cylinder,
TRAILER SPACE on old Rt. 33,
ro ma ric
lra-nsmission :
au
1
?·mile north of .new Meigs
Phone'
992-3917
.
·
tl igh .Scliool. Pho)le 992·2941.
3-5-Jfc
3·28-61p
npartments . Close to S(hool. •

LET MESi:E
IT, AUNT
PETUNIA!

TWO COWS, fre sh. Two horse-

SET OF one-row cultivators f6i'
Ford tractor, ju st like new.
Also,
Remington chain saw in
BARMAID. Apply in person. HI-

Ho Bar, Middleport.

.. ltll ~~ lilA, 1;.

LIKE TH' SteiN 6A'IS , 'lA
CAN'T HUI'!T 'EM! BE A
G&gt;I'!EAT WATCH FE~'!
CtCEI'!O!

OH, eotJT WE: WC1f¥T e&gt;E FOR

-~----

SENTINEL
CARRIER

),t. ~-

.,,

BUGS BUNNY

2 speed operation .
Choice of water
temps .
Auto.
water
level
co ntrol.
Li nt
Filter or Power
Fin Agitator.
Perm a-Press

Salt Works, E. Main Sl., 2 HOUSES - 2 bedrooms, bath, HARRI SO N'S TV AND AN Pomeroy. Phone 992-3891.
gas heal. Renled. Second : 3
TENNA SERVICE. Phone
WILL PAY tbp price lor nighl '--- - - - - - -4...:
bedrooms, ga s furnace, full
·9-tfc
992-2522.
craw lers and ea rth worms .
basement . 3 car garages. 6
6-10-tfc
Fife's. 711 So. 3rd Ave., SOU P'S ON, lhe rug thai is.
acres only $18,000.00.
Middleport . Phone 992 -5457 .
cl ean with Blue Lustre. Rent
NEIGLER Conslruclion. For
4-l -6tc____..e.l.ectric sha mpooer , $1 . Baker HARRISONVILLE - 4 rooms,
building or remodeling your
-,if-----,-- - - - Furniture, Middleport .
half bath, cistern water .
home, Call Guy Neigler ,
Outbuildings. Large level lol .
Racine, Ohio.
~elp Wanted
___ ____3_-3l -61c $7,500.00.
7-31 -lfc
HELEN L. TEAFORD,
'
'BARMAID
and part lime CAN DY MACHINE. 7 slots, A-1
working condition, S65. Ma-v
ASSOCIATE .
RALPH 'S
CAR PET
waitress. Phone 992 -9943.
be
seen
at
Certif
ied
Service
.
LAND
AND
HOUSES
Upholstery
Cleaning
Service.
4-l-61c
Station, Pomeroy. Phone 992-WANTED
Free
estimates.
Phone
9981.
Cafl992-3325
Gallipol is 446-0294 .
3-31 -3tp
c
3-12-tfc
3-26-6tc

WANTED

1./

Mayta~

Automat1cs

Musser. Phone 992-3630.
3-28-JOtp

110 Mechanic St.

, •• •

Big Capacity

Coolv il le 667-3041 or Tom
Hayman, Chesler 985-3509.
3-28-301p
PAPER -HANGING,

~

.

'

6-30-tfc

roofing

,., on

OFF TII.E BEARD
AND GivE M~ ONE OF THOSE
CREW CUTS

estimates. Call a·tter 5 p.m.,
collect
Dick
Hayman,

Virgil B.

trade.

"'"',.;, 1M ••t .~~~

insurance been
Securily Systems. Call Ray AUTOMOBILE
cancelled?
Lost
your
Adams 247-2055 - Mike
operator's li cense? Call 9920' Brien 247-2113.
2966.
3-17-lfc
6-15-tfc

3-l7-301c

space,

PAINTING,

-

IJ'L ABNER

J. OU.f bin - C. Inscore
Service Personnel

tune up and brake service.
Wheels
balanced
elec ·
Ironically .
All
work
guaranteed.
Reasonable

rates. 992-3213.

~

S~AvE

spouting service. Ri ·c ha rd
TO BUY OR SELL
Wilt, phone 992-2889
CALL US
3-ll -30tc
HENRY CLELAND
REALTOR
Office 992-2259
TREE -TRIMMING
and
Residence 992-2568 3-28-6tc
removal. Fully insured . Free

3-30-31c

inches wide ; $60 or

Garden

garage. $10,000.

seeder. Doubl e barrel
gauge shotg un. Hopkins and
Allen single shot rifle ; 1890
Winches ler.pump r ifle . Phone

247-2161.

Butternu t

, mi w

OLD WORK

All weather Roofing &amp;
Construction Co.

-- - - 3-30-61c RUTLAND - Depol Streel - I story cemen t block, ALMOST O'DELL WHEEL alignment
loca ted at Crossroads, Rt. 124.
NEW. 3 bedroom s, bath,
Complete front end serv ice,
KILL TERMITES and yard
porch, 2 ACRES. $8,900 .
11 ." King

-

_,

MASON COUNTY
. t.V. SERVICE

3-12-tfc

available. Phone 992-5641.

insec ts wit h ARAB "YOli·DO-·

'

Spouting, Roof
Painting

VACUUM Cleaner brand new POMEROY - Liberty Avenue O'BRIEN ELECTRIC Service.
l l/1 story f rame.
2
1970 model. Complete wilh all
CommerciaL residential and
bedrooms, ba t h, porch ,
cleaning tools . Small paint
fndus lrial wiring. Phone 247basemen!,
NEEDS
SOME
damage in shipping . Will lake

$27 cash or budge!

'

;

Russell,

Middleport, Ohio.

..

Work

· 675-3482 or 773-5196

SEPTIC TANKS CLEANED.

.

to_;J..

Roofing &amp; Carpenter

All Makes &amp; Models
Also

Pomeroy

~

BANk

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto

Hilton Wolfe. Salesman
Sewing Machine left i n
Phone 949-3211
layaway . Bea utiful pastel Ca ll us for all your real es tate
color, full size model. Al l
needs. Inquire of our listings READY -MIX
CONCRETE
built -in buttonhole; over cast
before you buy,
delivered right to your
and fancy sli lch. Pay jus t
4-l-6tc
project. Fast and easy. Free
$48.75
cash
or
terms
estimates. Phon e 992 -3284.
available . Trade -ins ac Goeglein Ready -Mix Co. ,

WILL PICK up merchandise

Phone 742-4461 .

Radiator Service

Ph. 992-2143

Broker
Phone 985-4186

Company, Middleport.
and take to auction on a
percentage basis. Call Jim
Adams, auctioneer, Rutland.

TELEVISIOi~

hold -up .

L-~

lii&lt;E .1'0

606 E. Main, Pomeroy, 0.

.EXPERIENCED

.ALARMS!

fD

-L='~ - --

Phone 992-?094

MEMORIAL BRIDGE TRAFFIC CIRCLE
PARKERSBURG, W.VA .

From the Largest Truck or
Bulldozer Radiator to the
. Smallest Heater Core.

..
HES GOT
HISSELF A
SWEETIE

- --

-GUARANTEED--

PARKERSBURG MOBILE HOMES, INC.

Stereos

.~-----·-

$5.55·

.;:ALSO
tlOUBLE - WIDES

SEE TOM CROW, GUY SHULER O.R BOB CROW

BLAETTNARS

HOBSTETTER
REALTY
GeorgeS. Hobsteller Jr.

motor, good trailer, oair of
oa rs , anchor . Ready to go.

1971 DIAL &amp; SEW Zig -Zag

Lots

balh,

3-30-l21p

4· l-3tp

Flower

'

Drive 36 Miles and Save A Bundle!

-----,--- -

..:__

SPRING
OPEN HOUSE
APRIL 1-2-3

Time You Ever Spent.

3-30-6tp

~-----

Reynolds

HERE IT lSI

------

Estate

·
3-30-3tc

LOAD OF 9xl2 rugs, till -back

-

APPOINTMENT

speakers, 4 speed automatic
changer, sepa rate con trol s.
Balance $80.99. Use our lime

mailed to Box 81. Gallipolfs,

' FIDDLE .DEE OEE -.IT'S PLAIN AS
TH'NOSE ON
'lORE F~CE

Wheel Alignment

40 Minutes of Your Time Can Well Be the Most Profitable

io:CHAMPIDN
«VAN DYKE

EEK AND MEEK

EXPERT

ATTENTION PROSPECTIVE
MOBILE HOME BUYERS!

end of Unron AVe . Make offer.

.

WHAT HAPPENT
TO TATER IN
KIDO'IGARDEN
TODAY

order . 24 hour service. Owain

·s P .M , Day BefOre P'ublicat lon

· · - right,
The Publisher reserves
By Clarence· Mill er
to edit, or reject ttnv

PAW--'IE'L~

tNfiUl::R GUESS

'

Real Estate For Sale

Pets For Sale

Notice

AD
INFORMATION
. DE-ADJ,.INEI
• WANT

-- Report

•

EHL

OTDD

'' "';1-. . . ,. •.. ... I

W Z ~· T

RIT

WMDDTF
'

-

' '

'

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(&lt;I
. . . .. .

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-

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--

12-The Daily Sentinel, Middleport-Pomeroy, 0., April1,1971

•

'

·shop At

El.berfelds In Pomeroy Frid~y ·and Saturddy

..

•

Registrations for par· . guestappearance in the show as
•
ticiPation in a talent show to be will John Lisle and Jayne Lee
staged on Saturday, Aprill7, at Hoeflich, both of Pomeroy.
•
the Southern High School in They will not .be competing.
'
.
Racine are being accepted by A variety of acts . will be
Mrs. Evelyn Cleland Young.
presented in the competition for
A veteran performer on cash prizes. First prize will be
A good time to
selecting )'our new Easter outfil. Women
Meigs County stages, Mrs . $25, second prize will be $15 and
Young is heading the show on there will be prizes of $10 and $5
behalf of the Racine Baseball for the acts rated in third and .
girls' a~d infants' wear on the 2nd floor. Men's and boys'
As.!lociation. She will make a fourth places by a panel of
.
.
judges:
wear on the 1st floor. And capable salespeople to help you
• Jim Mees will emcee the show
with a run·through rehearsal of
the particiating acts set at the
all over the store.
school on Tuesday, April 13.'
Officers, directors and em· Talented persons wishing to
ployes n1 the Pomeroy National entei the show should call Mrs.
A Special Purchase of
Bank and their husbands and Young at 949-3741, as soon as
Sale! Womens Regular 8.95
possible.
wives dined at the Orchid Room
in Pomeroy Wednesday night.
The occasion was primarily to
honor the lJ.)anager and staff of
the Rulland Branch which has
had a substantial gain over the
(Conilnued from page 1)
15 years it has been operating. with state requirements.
The event also marked the 99th
It was reported that the group
anniversary of the Pomeroy fell that an out-of-town firm
A wide selection of
A beautiful selection of womens spring dresses
National Bank which has been might increase rates too rapidly
print
s
.
so
lid
s
and
printed whip cream · jersey - cottons. Many
in business since March 31, 1872. and patronage would become
stripes.
styles to choose from in' misses and half sizes.
'Attending were Dr. tinct Mrs. 0 VOluntary", which could
Sizes 8 to 16
R. E. Boice, Mr. and Mrs. create serious problems since
Warren ,Pickens, Alfred M. some residents might not
Womens Regular 4.95
Elberfeld, Mr . and Mrs . subscribe and would resort to
For this week end :
I
Manning Webster, Mr. and Mrs. illegal ways tq.dispose of their
Eldon Weeks, Mr. and Mrs. solid wastes.
Horace Karr, Mr. and Mrs. Therefore, council decided to
Roger Morgan, Mr. and Mrs. accept the second alternative
Eo!ison Hobstetter, Mr. and and made plans for the start of a
Mrs . .Richard. Chambers, Mr, pickup service in the comand Mrs. George Hobstetter, munity beginning in early May.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Keney, Two more readings of the or·
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Griffith, dinance will be required before
Comfortable snap front dusters
100
Mrs. Joan Harrison, Mr. and the service can be launched,
On sale in the busy
Mrs. Hilton Wolfe, Jr., Mr. and and the village is still facing the
percent permanent press cotton. Short
Ready
To Wear
Mrs. Richard Poulin, Mr. and April 6 hearing before thesleeves ·- 2 roomy pockets· misses and
department on the
Mrs. Cecil Midkiff, Mrs. James health board.
2nd floor.
half sizes.
Nelson,, Mr. and Mrs. James
The village now will make
Anderson, Mrs. Bessie Hays, plans to purchase a packer
,
Robert Sylvester, Miss Linda
Weaver, Mr. and Mrs. William truck which will be used in the
pickup service. The three local
J. Hobstetter, Mrs. Edith haulers
who will be thrown out
Williamson, Mr. and Mrs. of work by the new service will 1~·~,---,-..,..-~---·..---·-------~--J
Save now in 'our First Floor Hosiery Department
Bruce May, Mr. and Mrs. David be offered jobs in operating the
Just Received
J•
on Kayser Pantyhose and Stbckings.
Grate and guests, Mr. and Mrs.
equipment, which will be
Woven Jacquard
Reg. 3.00 and 2.50 Pantyhose
James Hobstetter.
village owned.
Residents will be required to
Shop our lsi Floor Ac0
use•the service, with billing to
Big selection of beautiful
cessories Department and
Beautiful styles to choose from including
Reg. 1.35 Stretch Stockings
be done each month along with
woven lacquard patterns al
select the handbag, gloves,
-~Ce
the water and sewage charges.
a specia l low price.
scarf, Jewelry and bell lo
novelty straw derbies • flower cloches •
.a .,.. .a '
accent your new Spring
p ' llbo
'I
1
b ·
h If
Individuals or businesses will
wardrobe.
I
XeS • Sa I ors · a rge rJ ms • a
Reg. l.SO Fit-All Stockings
Straws . Wickers. Espana
hats. and whimsies- beautiful colors.
Com111unlty Good Friday not be permitted to haul to the
dump
after
the
new
system
Vinyls
.
Krinkle
Patents.
services wm be held at the
Pomeroy Trinity Church with · begins, since officials expect l-"';;::;:-:"'-:".::":".:-:::~:-::_~-'::7":~~-·-·-·~··--·-·-·-·~t.. -·.. -·,-·-··~·-·----·------~-··-·--·-·--..-·-·~-----_::::::::_':'--...,..~"'i",_...,.._,._ ....,~~==•wJ
Take advantage of the
the Pomeroy Ministerial the dump will not be operated
Lmle Boys
in
accordance
with
state
sale
prices.
Permanent
Press
Assoclallon In charge.
Services wUI begin at 1Z requirements unless the waste
noon and will continue In 25 is hauled to the dump via a
Group I Regular 29.95
1111nutes segments uatll 3 p. packer truck.
2 to 1. Strl~ - Big !lteording
to
rates
provided
m. with ministers using the
Sport Coa Is.
selection of solid colors ·
by
the
ordinance,
residents
will
seven words of the cross as
button down and new long
Year round weight
their subject. ~lnlsters be charged $2.50 a month' at
point collar styles. An
fabrics
laking part are the Rev. Bill their homes for the new village
excellent
selection .
Select a handsome new shirt in either
Perrin, the Rev. Robert Card, service. They will have pickup
·solid color, stripes or plaids in sizes 14 to
the Rev. Father Bernard serviCe once a week and will be
17 neck or small (14-14112 ). medium (15·
permitted
three
cans
a
week
at
Krajcovlc, the Rev. Arthur
15112 ). large (16·16'12 ), extra large (17Lund, the Rev. Robert Kuhn, the $2.50 rate. Businesses can
Boys Short Sleeve
17112 ). All are permanent press - well
the Rev. Stanley Plallenburg, have the pickup service on a
known makes and you can select your
one-time a week basis for $5 a
and Envoy Ray Wining.
favorite collar style and fit.
The public Is Invited to month or there will be a five day
attend at any convenient time a week pickup services for Group II Regular 24.95 ·
Sizes 3 to 6 and 8 to 18 in a
Then match or contrast a handsome new
businesses
needing
more
fine
selection of solid colors
Lighter
weight
Sport
during the three hour service
in
Four-in-hand
styles
or
Wembley
Tie
frequent
service.
Fee
for
the
and
stripes. Ideal shirt for
Coats.
and may leave al anytime.
spring
and summer wear.
ready
tied
ties.
Big,
big
selection
that
latter service will be $15 a
please you at first sight. Plenty of white
month.
Veterans Memorial Hospital
In accordance with the new ·
ties, too.
ADMITTED - Leslie Price, plan being followed by the
Pomeroy; Connie Kiser, village, the dump will be closed
Racine;
Fred Leifheit, at 4:30 p. m. Ibis Saturday,
Pomeroy.
April 3, to all persons living
• "Ruff 'n' Tumble" Utile Boys' Slacks
DISCHARGED - Sheila outside of Middleport. Mid·
Conkle, Mary Zerkle, John dleport
Flares and trim cut styles. Belled models · Half boxer waist
residents
and
styles
.and regular style with wide bell loops. Bright slriP.eS ·
Hunnell, Veva Whaley, Bessie businesses only may conllnue to
plaids
· solid colors.
Vaughan, Steve Riffle, David use lhe dump as they are in the
"
Miller, Ralph Parker, Russell present manner until May 3
larly 2.95,
This
2.66
Starcher, Dorothy Snyder.
when the village service will get
underway.
Another Shipmenlt
FIRE DOUSED
SINGER NAMED
SRruce up for Easter with a pair of
Pomeroy firemen answered a SYRACUSE - The Rev.
Short
sleeves.
these fine slacks in the mens
call to douse a brush fire near ,Ralph Hudson, son of Mr~. Myla
departmenl · 1st floor . Sot id colors .
Solids and stripes.
by CORNING
By Corning
the Whispering Pines night club Hudson, Syracuse, will be
stripes . plaids in flare leg styles.
All
permanent
Trim fits and wider cuts for the older
on Route 7 at 12:55 p. m. special singer at the preaching
Made !om an amazing new materiaL Unlike any dishes
press. Big selection
man
.
you've
ever used before. Strong . Lightweight . Oven Safe .
Wednesday .
service to be held at 7:30 p. m.
of styles for this
Sizes 29 to 50 .
Dishwasher Safe. Looks and feels like China in four go-with·
Friday at the First United
sale.
everything patterns.
Presbyterian Church here.
•

.u ·n, til .9 in .the Even•nsr-

·'

s,

be

COLVMBUS(UPI)-ARepub- sources, rather than create- a
lican-6ponsoreifstrlpmineregu· new reclamation division as
lation bill has been offered in . proposed by Lancione.
• · the Ohio House of Representa- Other facets. of the Welker
lives to compete with a stiff bill would:
measure introduced earlier by
- Increase from $300 to $500
House Minority leader A. G. per· acre the reclamation bond
Lancione, D-Bellaire.
a mine operator would be re·
"Our bill is much closer to quired to post. Lancione's bill
what will be passed than Lan- ,provides for a bond of from
clone's bill," said chief sponsor ~00 to $1,000.
Rep. Ralph Welker, R-Pome- - Increase strip mine license
roy.
,fees from $751o $100. The Lan·
The bill submitted Thursday cione bill carries a $150 fee.
by Welker, who is chairman of
Lancione's bill is currently
the House Agriculture-Business under study in the House Envi·
Subcommittee, is a weaker ver- ·ronment Committee.
sion of the Lancione legislation.
A Columbiana County man
It would retain the Division told the committee Thursday he
of Forestry and Reclamation in looked upon the strip miner$
the Department of Natural He· who worked on his 160-acre

Recognition
Given Branch

WOMEN'S
SCOOTER
SKIRTS

Garbage

SPRING DRESSES

Sale 1.88

SALE!

GIRLS' SPRING
COATS AND
ENSEMBLES

HANDBAGS
FOR SPRING

Beach Towels

Go d Fn•day
Set
Se

JUSt receive
" d a sh"1pmen
. t
f
w
s
.
H
t
0 omen s .pnng as

2FOR

15:oo

SPRING DUSTERS
Sale 4.00

MEN's • Young -Men's

VOL XXIII

Sale 191l

MEIGS THEATRE

LOCAL TEMPS
Temperature in downtown
Pomeroy Thursday at II a. m.
was 48 degrees under cloudy
skies.

Tonight . April!
NOT OPEN
Friday thru Tuesday
Apri,l2 . 6
WOOD STOCK
(Technicolor)
Running Time : 3 , Hrs .

inutes.

SHOW STARt'S 7 P.M.

lo

------------------ JUsf
Received
_ _ Another Big Shipment of

.
PARIS BELTS

Want Ad

NOTICE
GUNSHOOT, Broad Run Rod
and Gun Club, New Haven, W.
Va ., Sunday, April 4, noon Ill
4· 1·21c

For
men
and
boys.
Regular widths and plenty
of wide belts. Sizes 26 to 30
' and 32 to 50.
·

Mr. Wrangler Blue D~nim

HONDO FLARES
Waist sizes 30 to 40. Choose your correct length.
Fashion .styled with wide bell loops. ~~0 percent
cotton.

Fri., Sat. &amp; Sun. Apr. 2-3·4'

. 4.95

Dustin Hoffman.-

R

See the big selection of flare leg slacks
.for men and young men. Solid colors •
bold stripes • novelty patterns. Try on a
pair or two- See. how .they fit and how
comfortable- to wear. You'll like this
selection for school, sport and dr'e ss
, wear. ·

Mia Fi1rrow

·in.

JOHN and MARY .
-PLU~

COLO.R
· Michael Crawford · Cur·! Jurgens
·
Genevieve Gilles
In-

@r§~.~·

GP ·

COREUE LIVINGWARE

20 PIECE SET

3.66

19.95

Big New Shipment
I

Jerks Orion Dress Socks
Plenty of new solid colors, Heathertohes, black
and white in this popular Jerks tv orion socks
for men and young men. Fits sizes lOto 13.

-------------------------___..__,
Men's Over the Calf
'· lklnlon Socks

!;'fts sizes UHo 13. Over the calf for extr.eme
comfort and neat appearance. Solid colors- Jet
navy· Jet brown· Jet oHy,~"and_ dark grey. Come
in and select yours now .

' e 'Available in Toles, Gar·
men!
Bags, . 22"
Weekender,
Cosmetic
Cases. 26" and 28"'
Wardrobes for the
ladies.
,. , , , '
• F9r the men - Garment
Bags, 22" Companion,
Two and Three··· Suites.
Airway Luggage's fine
workmanship.
quality
detailing and exciting ·
styling is , by far the · best
value , in luggage today.
New· Shipment

Men's Orion Dresi
. Socks
.

.. One size fits sizes . 10 to 13. 75 per cent Hi-bulk
orion acrylic, 25 per cent stretch nylon. White,

Yqu _can set ypur shears anytime with a coin so they feet just
the way you like them - and they can be ~djusted to cut ·
varying thicknesses cleanly and r;omfortably! t.f different
sizes a~d styles from 3'"" scissors to 8" Trimmer shears
···'" ['--· .j,ncludlng hair c~tting and kllc!'fn ~hears.

black,' gold heather, gold, light · blue, 'kelly,
charcoal, olive heather, burgundy, . royal. red,
navy.

.~BE THRIFTY! SA JIE ALL OF YOUR SALESLIPS FROM
'

On

All NeiAJ Stock!

-------------------------- --------------------------

DOI,JBLE i=EATURE
'color

-·

..._,____.. . .__.___._. . . ____.._·_._
- ""-..,_ E_LB
_____--.....==L-=-- ,I, · POMEROY . .

AD Oblo River
With coai for
OVEC's Kyger Creek Pllmt, iaDk In lbe Oblo River Thursday
olgbtapproxlmately 50 yards northeast of the plaDI'sloadlog

dock. According to Lows R. Ford, KC Plant manager, the
barge Is situated In a posltloo where ll wm not interfere wllb
otber barges or river lraHic. Ford has asked the U. 8. Coast
Guard to place a buoy at lbe site. The barge Is expected to be
raised
bv officials 'from lbe Oblo River Co., Cincinnati.
.,.,. .,.. ;;-;~· · .,
• • •
. . . . . ·o ,.. ... ..
•• ... • • • .,., •
• •••
WZ:.:&amp;&lt;&amp;:~v!!!~~!).!~:.:::&gt;.:::~:w.~~~t".~~;:;:...:;:.,~;:;:.:.:..,.:::::o::::::...::::~.~·S:•::.«o:.:.§:::

FRIDAY, APRIL 2, 1971

POMEROY-MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

THIS IS HOW the area near the Enterprise United Methodist Cl\urch looked 58 years ago
this month during the 1913 flood. The old photograph is the property of Richard Finlaw,
Pomeroy.
r----~------------~-~-------,

! News ... in Briefs ! Advisers·
arum•ed
Unemployment at Six Per Cent
Captured
I

1.68

MEN'S
KNIT
SHIRTS

NO. 247

•

KNIT SHIRTS

MEN'S
DRESS
SLACKS

was."

DIEHL MAKES PRESENTATION - Meigs High School Principal James A. Diehl, left,
presents the 1971).71 Southeastern Ohio League championship basketball trophy to Waverly
Coach Carroll Hawhee during Thursday night's 22nd annum All.sEOAL baskethaU.banquet at
Waverly. See page 3for more pictures and report.

PHONE 992·2156

Middleport village council
will' meet in special session at
· 7:30 o'clock tonight at village
hall to ·consider a second
reading of an ordinance
providing for the establishment
of a garbage collection system
in the village.
Fir~t reading of the proposed
ordin~ nce establishing the
service was approved at a

2 for 100

Sale 14.90

"Most landowners, as soon as
somebody says 'stripping' they
get gold in their eye," he said.
"They doo't spend the money
to put the ground back like it

Lew Watkins of Dundee, representing the Conservation
Council of Ohio, opposed the
grol!fldS "it cannot possibly
meet the desires of those people
who are supporting it. "
He said seekers of other
metals invade after coal companies are through with the
land, tearing it up again with·
out a permit, bond or reclama·

iEN CENTS

Second Vote Due

Short Sleeve Shirts

SHIRTS -AND TIES

nent of the strict bill which he
said was too inflexible. He
!maintained landowners were as
much to blame for ravaged
Iland as were the miners.

Devoted To 11ae
Intern" Of The Meigs-MtJ&amp;On Area
' .

3 pa 1r 5•95
3 1 2 90
pa r •

3 pa Ir 3•50

MEN'S SPORT COATS

tract "as .an ally."
' . E.A. Hawk.of East Rochester
said fte and his wife ·were
. "friendly with them right
Iaway."
1 Hawk said before he leased
; his land, however, he required
:the operator to pay him $100 a
monlh, which was increased to
$400 ~ month when the first
piece of mining equipment was
moved onto his p~operty. He
also was guaranteed $25,000 be·
fore mining began.
"! told them if they thought
they could get enough coal out
of my •ground to meet those
terms, in thai consideration,
brother, you've got yourseU a
leassee," Hawk related.
Hawk appeared as an oppo-

KAYSER HOSIERY SALE

1.99 and 2.99

---

ine· Bill
elker

I"

'

Talent Show
Wanted·
--- Acts
.
-··.

•

•

•

•

..

By Uolled Press International

I

WASHINGTON- UNEMPLOYMENT MOVED back up to 6
per cent in the nation during March after two months of slight
declines, the government reported today. The rise from a
February rate of 5.8 per cent of the civilian labor force came as
th\aclual number of workers with jobs held steady.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics of the Labor Department said
last month's increase In joblessness occurred mostly in the 16-to24 age range -many of them eilher entering the labor force for
the first time or were rEHJntering it. The 6 per cent unemployment
rate In March represented a return to the January level, but was
still under the 6.2 per cent rate in December - highest in nine
years.
.}

.

.

Wires Chatter Calley
Dealt With Unfairly

.

By United Press lnterl}llllonal
Four telegraph printers at the
Western White House chatter
around the clock - a centralized drumbeat of national
opinion on the conviction of Lt.
William L. Calley Jr.
That outpouring of expression, the most voluminous
of the Nixon administration, has
been running 1IJO.to-1 in support
of the convicted soldier. ·
'And the communications
pouring into the White House
were but 'the crest of a wave of
nationaJ,sentiment.
A fifth Georgia draft board
resigned en masse Thursday to
protest the verdict veterans
groups demanded action,
several state legislative bodies

SAIGON (UP!)- The Communists said today they captured
five American military advisers
when they overran a South
Vietnamese base near the LaosCambodia border Wednesday.
The base was recaptured by
South Vtetnamese forces Tlrurs·
&lt;i!tY night, the U.S. command
satd .today. Spokesmen reported
the troops· made "very light
·
contact " WI'th the Communtsts
· d b k · to th
when th ey move ac tn
e
Adversary System at Fault
b
~ 1
ase.
'.1:'
COLUMBUS - AN INSUI\ANCE EXECUTIVE says the
However, U.S. B52s dumped
· th
defenders of the adversary system of auto inswance "are trying· 100 tons 0 I · bom b5 m
e
to maintain the very thing -liability insurance- that in practice surrounding area to stem the
effectively nullifies the theory of fault law that they believe should posslbthty of another Norlh
be preserved."
. v·1etnamese atta ck. MU'ta
1 ry
George Thompson, 18,
T. Lawrence Jones, president of the American Insurance spokesmen sat'd th e B52 s tr'k
1 e Pomeroy, who underwent a
· "'· d · ki
Association, called for a change to a complete, first-party no . was lh e four th m
'dney transplant Tuesday at
. s
t •wO
B ays
N
fault system in an address lo the 22nd Ohio State University In- aroun d F tre
uppor ase o. the Cleveland Clinic, is in good
th f
. h · 300 ·1
surance Conference here Thursday. "The cost of the accidimt is 6, whtc
ts , mt es nor o condition, according to word
hardly reflected specifically in the wrongdoer's premium," he Saigon and just 12 miles from received here Thursday night.
Thompson, who has been
said. "II becomes part of the overall loss statistics of the class of the Laos-Cambodia border.
A Snuth Vietnamese spokes- confined to the clinic since
drivers in which Ute wrongdoec. happens to fall.
•'The insurance company pays losses from the_fund that aU its man said · when government having both kidneys removed
policyholders create by their premiums," he added. "This in- troops reoccupied the base they recently, received a transplant
the bodies of 280 from his sister, Mrs . Wayne
cludes the wrongdoer, also his victim, also the guy on the other found
CommrnJiSts in the area. He Roush, of Belpre. He is exside of town who wasn't even in the accident." Jones charged said that because of the light peeled to be moved from the
"even in the most.flagrant cases of driver fault, i.t is_a myth to fighting "apparently the en~my intensive care section to a room
claim that the guilty driver pays the innocent driver for did not intend to hold the today. Mrs. Roush is also in
damages."
base.''
good condition following the
Two u s heiicopters trying to tr
1
din to Mr
. .
. • ansp an1• acoor g
s.
evacuate_ some 300 South 'Robert Thompson, mother of
Vietnamese soldiers and their George and Mrs. Roush, in a
Not Sure about Hanky Panky
American advisers from the ph.one call to Mrs. Robert Lewis
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -The foreman of the jury that con- hilltop base Wednesday were here Thursday night.
victed Charles Manson and three codefendants and sentenced shot down. U.S. spokeS!nen said Meantime, a fund drive on
them to die said Tliursday he knew of no sexual activities going on one American crewman was behalf of the young Thompson is
among the jurors. He called the juror who made such an im· kiHed and another wounded. · continuing. Checks are to be
plicatiori "very small."
Radio Hanoi in a broadcast :!fnt to the Pomeroy Post:
"We have our Inside jokes, .we I!UIY have played around a lot, heard in Saigon today Said Ute master, made out to the George
bill as for the hanky paitky, I really don't lu!ow," Herman TUbick, Communists "captured Ameri- Thompson Kidney Fund.
58, a morllclan, told a news conference Thursday at the hotel can adyisers and many puppet
·where the jury was confifled during the trial.
(SouthVietnamese)soldiers" in
. Juror William Zamora, wbo said he was saving most of his
. ·
mejlloriesfor a book lie is wrillng, contended on a television news
show that "in nine months people do give up and b~come what
they really aie;and somehow they are proptiscuous."
ARTICLE DEL4YED
COLUMBUS (UP!) _ Gov.
Due to heavy professional John J. Gilligan said 'today the
obligations, the Speaking of guilt assigned to Lt. William
Schools
article by Meigs Local . Calley for the My Lai massFour Months1 Only, 'on Job .
BOWLING GREEN 01-110 -Robert Bell, brought liere from Supt. George Hargraves that acre musi' be shared "by hi~
UCLA to beef up the athletle program at Bowling Green State appears regularly on Friday superiors, by members of Con· University, resigned as athletic director at the University will not be availa\Jie until later. gress, by the 'Administration....
___
and ·an of us who have tolerThursday after only four months on the job,
,
·
ated continuation of this awful
Richard A. YolDlg, 39, head baseball coach and assistant
war."
athlelic director, was named Immediately by ·BQSU president
LOCAL TEMPS.
....Hollis Moore to succeed Bell. Bell 'said he gave great con- . The temperature in downtown . "The conviction and sentenc.Blderalloo to his decision, "rut my philosophy and goallt for in· P.omeroy at 11 a.m . Frida~ ing of Lt. Wllliam Call y Jr.
iercoll~ilte athletics progra'ms are not compatible with ' tbe undeJ sun'ny skies 1was 42 _has .brought home 011ce again
sltulltloo at .Bowling Green." .
degrees.
to all AmencaM the horrible
.

"''h omnson

,.

/

'

voted resolutions urging
clemency, an ·Oregon woman
began a "ransom fund" for
Calley and a San Diego. Calif.,
high school girl was suspended
over a forbidden protest rally.
Some Support Verdict
Those who actively voiced
support for the conviction were
in the minority. Among them
was Texas slate Sen. A. R. Schwartz, in a debate on a
resolution protesting the palley
verdict.
r-- ·
Y
"He (Calley) may have been
doing his duly when he entered
the village," Schwartz said.
"He may have been doing his
duty when he rounded 'the
villagers up. But when he fired
into that ditch, he quit doing his
duty and was committing an act
· f $2
A
smt
or ,010 has been filed
of murder.
in Meigs Omnty Common Pleas
"You're trying to get this
Court by Dana A. Covert,
legislature to say that the six Pomeroy, aga·inst Charles
men who convicted Lt. Calley Wh 1
ee er, West Columbia, W.
violated some ethical code of
conduct themselves ,and that he ~;he sum is asked in comhad a right to kill those people.
pensation for alleged damages
"I share the guilt of a nation h
w
en a 1965 Dodge station
that continues a war in "'etnam
"'
wagon, parked in Middleport,
thai! consider unJ'ust. But J do was struc k and demolished by a
not share Calley's guilt. I'll be
d
car op~rate by the defendant
damned if any resolution of this
J
Senate or the Congress of the onln ~~h::· al:~!~s Shantilal G
u 1'ted stat
k
·
~
. ~s can rna e ~e Goradia,Pomeroy,filedsuitfor
gmlty of flrmg an automallc divorce from Rupa S. Goradla,
weapon into a ditch filled with B b
·
om ay, /ndla, o~ charges of
"'"''"''·~·; ·.,·.··.··w;....·.w...,: .•.•,.,.,.,., . •. gross neg eel of duty; Florence
,.......•.········~·-&lt;·&gt;.&lt;•.v.•.wm.•~....,.•.•.•.W. Carol Wells, Racine , was
FOOLISH· ZOO!
granted a divorce from Clyde E.
CINCINNATI (UPI) -The WeBs, and Cheryl A. Hawk was
Cincinnati Zoo was taken for granted a divorce from Roland
a fool more than 3,000 times K. Hawk, each on charges Of
Thursday.
gross neglect of duty and ex•treme cruelty. • .
.
Zoo officials revealed April
Fool's Day jokers made a
The divorce action by Kentotal of 196 prank call~ nelh Duncan, Brooks, Albany,
wishing to speak to a Mr. against Maudine Hettie Brooks,
J.lon, 117 for a Mr. Fox, 109 Fairborn, was dismissed. .
for Mr. Bear and 88 for ·Mr.
Wolf.
TAXES PAYABLE
The zoo also received
Personal property taxes may
queries for a Mr. G. Raffe and be paid now through April 30,
L. E. Font, among others.
· Gordon Caldwell, County
~«'f:&amp;:':.®.~~.W::::~.~.:c:t Auditor, announced today.

Sm"t AskS

F Or $2' 07.O

futil)ty of the war ·in Southeast
Asil!," said Gilligan. "Lt. Calley
has been tried by 'a jury of
his peers and sentenced under
provisions of military law.
" It is not our purpose to criti·
cize or question that verdict;
which will be under appeal, for
some time to come," he said.
"But the ovmiding meS;SBge in
t~e Calley trtal ts clear. If we
are to heal the' wowtds :which
beset the Am:erican peopl~, we
mustendourmvolvementtn lhe

Billwoodar~.sono!Mr. and

growth is dependent upon a
constant flow and utilization of
new Ideas generated by the
· employ~ In t¥111'}&lt;-pbase of the
business, company officials
say.
wood d 31 · · d th
ar •
•. JOtn~
e
commercial plastics ~lvtslon on
June l, 1966 as a tramee m the
shipping
and receiving
depar 1men1. Pr omo ted 1a1er to
supervisor, he moved up ·to his
present job ,as ~uyer in
Noy~~ber, 1969, His responSlbtht~es mclude the purchase of
· d
·
req~1re materla.ls a.nd supplies
ullhzed by the dtvislOn.

Mrs . William H. .Woodard,
Rutland Route I, hO ~n
awarded $500 in the year-old
employe suggestion prottam by
the Goodyear Company at
J

K

ac son.
.
Woodard rece1ved the award
for an ·idea concerning the
usage of tbree mil polyethylene
which is used as a carried and
top sheet of the spraypeg
materiaL Bill's idea, after
analyzing the vast •amount of
poly scrapped out when the
material is used on the press
line, suggested that the thinner
poly , the two mil, be used.
Trial runs utUizing the two
A native of PomeroL Bill is
mil polyethylene were made married , to the former Sue
without any problems and the Allensworth . They live with
engineering department ap· their two children, Marie, 3, and
proved the change.
Martha, 2 at 24010 Oak St., ·
The suggesllon is the first that Jackson.
Woodard had submitted · The four-year Air Force
through
the
Goodyear veteran served two years al
suggestion plan. The program, Pitburg Air Base in ' Germany
established by The Goodyear and two years at the Kirigsley·
Tire and Rubber Co. in 1912, Field in Oregon prior to at·
provides for a maximum award te ndin g Portland ·Slate
of $10,000. ·
University and the University of·
Goodyear's success and Maryland .

Buslness._,en Give
.
$394 for· ~eanup

·•

· Pomeroy businessmen have provement' which the comcontributed $394 in their project mittee wishes.
to raise funds for cleamng ' of
Meantime, Hobiltetter, who
business section streets.
. headed the acth•ity to get the
The streets were washed streets washed ;- requested
recently by members of the. merchants to refrain from
Pomeroy Fire ·Department and sweeping their sidewalk dlrt
In exchange for the service, 'and debris into the streets.
"If we sweep the litter into the
merchants from the total
donations contributed $300 to streets, then ih' no time the
the department to be .used for streets will be just as bad as
raincoats and other items. The they were before," Hobstetter
$300 contribution lo the said. '
depar_tment was the figure set
Contributions to 'the street
before collection activities from cleanir:: project \'•ere given by
various merchants got un- Swisher &amp; Lohse Drugs,
derway.
Marguerite
Shoe Shop,
Solicitors were Edison Gloeckners Cafe, · Elberfeld,,
Hobstetter, Kermit Walton, New .York Clothing, Chapman
Paul Chapman and Paul Simon. Shoes, City Loan &amp;Savings Co.,
The. ,ll)erchants committee L &amp; Z Shop, Ohio Valley
plans to retain the extra $94 for · Publishing Co., Goessler
war in Southeast i\sia and possibly some new Christmas Jewelry, Mullen Insurance,
decorations or any other im- Edwards Insurance , Mick
bring OW' boys home now."
Gilligan pointed out that Cal·
Williams Barber, Wehrunc
ley was convicted· of premedi· Damage Minor
1Bakery, Simons Store; Stif"-:a,
tated mur~er of killing 22 civili·
Minor · damage.s were Ebersbach Hardware, ·Farmen
ans whtle }tlherally hundreds of reported in a single car accident Bank &amp; Savings Co., G&amp; J Auto
thousa.nds .ave ..been ktlled · Thursday at midnight on SR 33, Parts, J, J;l. O'Brien, Attorney,
or matmed by _mlhlltry forces the Meigs County Sheriff's Moore's Store, Dr. T. H . ~.
Green Lantern, G &amp; G Cafe,
m s.outheasl Asta. .
Department r&lt;'borted.
Gtlhgan, satd thts must )Je
George William c nd'ff 26 Syb['l Ebersbach, April Smith,
·:taken into account..when .the Racine, Rt. 2, said uth~· ;ight Let ie Spencer, Pomeroy
. hme comes to deternme wheth· front wheel came off the 1969 Flower1Shop, A. D. Weed &amp; Son,
er he s~ould, in fact, serve out model auto owned by the Decor Cr11w, Crow, &amp; Porter, Elrlog
the ·rest of his ·me- at hllfll Corp., 'he was driving. There Funeral Home and Point!IY)
National Bank.
'
labor."
were no injuries or arre'sts.

G~i l~ ShI!Jred:
· · ·Gilfigan

.

id~:Wi:~$soo

.
men orne nd ch 'ld ..
,u;d"okl ~ a Ia~ r~n. R .
5
t ldep .h' ·
0 C -~ om~
15
· asst Y, r. ~ '
colleagues,
... It IS most
sorrowful that a few of our
misguided c' tizens should
1
10
choose
forget that the real
victims of this incident
. were the
;::'n:,women alld chtldren of My
~assity notwithstanding, the
Oklahoma House passed its
. . t d
secon d resoI ut10n m wo ays
urging clemenc .

lS
-

R ecovenng
.
•

seiu~gthebase.

special meeting Wednesday be entitled to three garbage
night. Three readings must be cans a week at that fee.
approved before the legislation Businesses would be charged
can become law.
$5 a month for a one time a week
pickup or could subscribe to a
According to the proposal, the daily pickup, five days a week,
village would operate a man- for $15 a month . Bills for the _
JEFF TYO, outstanding Meigs Marauder basketball
da tory collection.system inside service would be collected by
town . Residents would be the village and would come to
player, receives a trophy and certlflcate from SOutheastern
charged a flat rate of $2.50 a residents with their water and
Ohio League secretary-treasurer Jim Maines, Ironton High
month for the service and would sewage bilL
School principal. Tyo, a 6-2 senior, waa a member of o.he
SEOA~ Second Team for his play dlD'ing the 19ro-7l cam-

1

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